Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-07-09 - Orange Coast Pilot• c•11m11 MONDAY. JULY 9, 1984 0 RAN GE (, 0 u N T ,· ( A L H 0 i~ N I A • . •• Laguna Beach council members approve budget that Includes 'hir- ing• goats for fire preven- tion./ AS We asked passersby what their favorite -and least favorite -time of the week might be./ A3 Nation A new study shows Americans are llvlng longer these days, but heart disease remain far and beyond the nation's biggest klller .I A4 Probable Democratic presldentlal candidate Walter Mondale remains mum on his choice for vice president./ A4 World CIA suspected of using private planes to smuggle arms to Central American natlons./M Bob Dylan's concert In Ireland Is marred by viol- ence after tavern proprleters refuse to serve drinks to rowdy fans./M Feature Orange County' sentry In the Olympic Arts Festival boggles the Imagination of visitors to the Newport Harbor Art Museum./81 The cartoonlst-conserva- tlonlst known as a "duck'sbestfrtend" has been honored with a commemorative postage stamp./81 Sporta John McEnroe Is the king of Wimbledon again after putting Jimmy Connors away on Sunday ./C1 Newport Harbor High product David DeRuff upset the apple cart at the U.S. Olympic rowing trlals./C1 Willie Mays will miss his first All-Star Game aJnce 1954 -he says he hasn't been Invited to Candlestick Park for Tuesday's game./C3 Entertainment It took many. trying years but Pat Morita has finally achieved stardom In the movles./83 Bulneu Irvine Co. president Thomas Nielsen honored by leaders In construc- tion Industry ./BS. INDEX Bridge Bulletin Board BuslMM C.."ornla Newt Cl .... fted Comlca Croeaword Death Notloee FMturM HelpYourMtf Horoecope Annlandtn Mutual Funda Nattonal Newt =~ Pubtk>Notlole 8portl Stoek Marttet1 T~ Theeterl Weethtr Wortd Newt 84 A3 84 A4 C5-.8 84 C7 C4 81·2 82 ce 82 85 A4 AS 81 A3 C4 C1-4 Be 82 83 A2 A4 _Qil platf o m makes spla Tall as a 55-story butldlng, this monster making Its home nine mlles off coast By 90BERT BAJ\UR °' ................ With a huse splash, a 22,000-ton offshore oil platform as tall as a SS- story buiJdina was deposited Sunday onto the ocean Ooor about nine m iles off the coastline of Huntinaton Beach. The 720-f oot-taU steel monster joined two other offshore oil facilities -Ellen a nd Elly owned by SbeU Califomia Productio n, Inc. -in the Beta Oil Tract. tilt u~rd. The tower was launched into the Watb this, the platform -UAdcr its ocean noor at 11 :31 Lm. when it was own momentum, slid in10 the water, winched off a bar&c and slid into the ~the~ beckwarck. sea with about a 100-feet hiah foamy · The bilaest oft'sbott oil tructwe SJ>lash. ever built at a West Coast shipyard. After welders torched it free it from the platform will be anchored 300 foet its plates on the bar&e. the offshore deep into the ocean Ooot in~ 24-foot structure named Eureb edacd slowly steel J>ilino. forward until its center of pavity Until that opC,.tion is conduded caused its skid plates on the bmJe to in about a mo11tb, the platform is , ._ ............... c...... Shell OU Company'• 22,000-toD platform la cltrpoelted with a aplub lD the ocean off the BaattaitoD Beach cout. . Sellout crowds for Masters Pageant By JERR:Y B1RSCB according to pageant spokeswoman °' ... cw,....... SaUy Reeve. The SI st edition of the J>a&eant of That continues a streak for the the Masters opened to sellout crowds pageant which bas sold every seat in Lquna Beach last weekend. since 1960. Papnt o~zers reported that "'It is $(>in& so well that we just can't every scat in the 2,662-seat Irvine believe tt. .. she said. Bowl was sold out on both Satuiday" Attendanceforthe l...agun:a Festival and Sunday nights. ln fact. the of Arts, of which the Papnt of the pageant is sold out through Aus. 26. Masters is a pan, is 10 percent above o·c Fair jammed; opening weekend attendance rises 100,000 people visit Mesa event; shows ·packed' By &.AREN E. KLEIN Of ... a., ........ Attendanoc during opening week- end at the Oranac County Fair, which totaled more than 100,000, was up by 16 percent over last year, deliiflted fair officials reported today. .. The grounds have been full and our entertainment shows have been "'packed," reported an enthused Jill Lloyd, public relations spokeswoman for the fair. The JG-day fair under way at the county fairsrounds in Costa Mesa. began Friday and ends Sunda1. Orange County Sheriff's Depart- ment officials reported no major problems during opening weekend but said they made about 140 arrests over the three-day period from Friday to Sunda)'. Most of the arrests were for alcohol or drug-related offenses. a sheriffs depanment spokesman said. Saturday's crowd of 41,716 fair- aoers made for some bea vy traffic along Newport Boulevard, according to a Costa Mesa Polioc Department spokesman. The neighborhoods sur- roundina the fairgrounds were lined with cars pa.ricing there to avoid the crowds and parking fee on the fairgrounds, the spokesman said. Some of the residents of College Park, the neighborhood d.im:tly across Fairview Road from the f.air- grounds, aot an unpleasant surprise Saturday when they found their guests' cars, parked on the streets, had been ticketed. A restricted parking permit system was recently implemented in College Park, where neighbors have com- plained about noise and oarkina problems from the Paci fie Amphithcak'C on the fairgrounds. However, one Costa Mesa offiocr said, the residents said they did not know police would be ticketing cars without pcnnits over the weekend, even though the system is in effect at (Pleue Me OC PAIR/ A.2) Was aerosol can scare really just so much hot ozone? . llcmember the cyclamate tcare? And red dye No. 2? Product paranoia in the mid·l970s started consumers radina the fine print. WeU, accordina to some in the aerosol industry, the lcienlific theory _that aerosol sprays WCtC deslroyina the protective ozone 1a,.r was just one of those IC&reS, but a sroundleu one bred durina the heyday of tbe environmentalists. The nuroCatbon ban cost a. 700 jC?be throuab<>ut the nation and S 1.5 billion in retOOJina ~ ror 30.000 Dl'Oductt, M)'t Aet'Olbl All ID its Apnl l914iuuc. Ian Oeder, operations vico prai-dent for 1 Santa An1-bucd aciolol maker MBL Industries. conttndt new studies show the ozone laytr ilft't vanishina af\ei' all. He thinks tbe flndinp debunk tM 01one theory tint catabli hcd by UC AIDIEA Alnso1 NEWS F Ol LOW UP Irvine chemistry professor F. SbciWoOd Rowland in 197S, an 1dta tbat rcccived utioowide attention and bdpecl put the cam~ on tbe map II I ttnOUS racarth ttlStitution. A N1ti<mal Reteartb Counal study ill\led in febnw'y tbows Rowtand·1 computer model dido 't coasid8 vari· abks that ould throw oft' hi concludina equation. id Otckcr, (Pl ...... A&R080L/A2l ....... .. last year, Reeve said. .. The artists are selltna stuff like hotcakes. One anist sold $2,600 wonh of an the first day. People arc really happy and they are buyina." Ree'le S&ld. C~ebrities attendana the pap.nt and the Se.tival over the wedmd ind"1cd iTom Poston of the Bob N~ television sliow and TV . game show hosts Tom Kennedy and Peter Marshall. Reeve said. "We never know who else lS tOina to show up.·~ she saJd. In adchtion to the famous papnt, which uses hvc models to rc-<:reate the scenes of dassic ariWorU. the festival fcl.tures t.bc ,_,-orlc of nearly 165 lQC&J artisuand ~The (Pleueeee PAOSAft/A2J CilbJlet•M. lJ,\. of ... Cl-eate .... eom. 1M1P •diil an eu of oorn from Ml Racer _gets, Bond's Aston Countian pays / $80,000 ~ ,.___ •Gotdflnger' car A Cypress race car dri'ftr who admires James Bond bid sao.~ .. Sunday for cxrrs spy car. a pay AstoD Martin DBS with retnldablC machine suns and. bullet :J'°P Dick Barbour, a 1980winner in the 24 Hours of 1.ananS, bouaht tbc cs made famous in the movie .. ~ fui&er," frOn:i auctioneer Rick c.ole durina the 14th annual Newport Beach CoOector Cat Auction. Barbour tOld the Allociated Praa ne bouaht the car .. becaute I love James Bond movies the best of all" It was one of four such Alt.on Martins made foe~." the 1964 Bond film swrina Sean Con- nery and Gert Frobe. Other features in the car include: •Revolving bcense plate mounts W1th French, Swiss and fJlcJish plates; . •A prop radar tradcin& system; •An oil-slick lauocbcr. •A eear-ps or smoketcreea blow- Yalley school board turns ack on youth club appeal BJ PBIL INElDERMAN ............. 4'::· Fountain Valley boot Di trict :·:ttu5tccs haw decided not to inter· :·:"enc in a ttnt hike dispute between :: district staff memben and .lb Boy and GiflJOubofHuntinaton Valley. Oub offic1als took thCU' case to lbe tchool board after tea.min& tbear rent for a wina at Bushard School would be increased from S2S8 to $2,200 a .. month. :-Club officials arsued that the steep =. tncreast may force .them to taJsc .... -- memben.hip fees too h ab for many members. Assistant Superintendent Jack Mahnken admitted the pro~ incrcue is 06drutic," but he aid the new rental nte would only ofTtct the district's own cosu for operatini Bushard. Without tbe incre.ue, tbc district would be underwriuoa the club, he said. School Board Prnidcnt Roger Bctaen asked the distnct staff and the Boys Oub to resume negotiations. He - 1ugested the staff look lnto a 1lidrn1 rent scale that would allow a aradual inete*lt over several yeara. .. If you feel the boa.rd is opposed to the Boys and Girl Oub., you're mistaken," Bclaen said co residenh Who poke in support of the club at Thurtday's meet1nJ- The Boyt and Garis Oub bu been mitina a w101 at Bushard School since 1979, payma $258 a month under a five-year lcae. Bushard is in HuntinJton Beach but i1 pan of the Fountain Valley School District. . PAGEANT OF MA TERS ••• From Al exhabns include paintings, etchings. sculptures, hand-blown glass and many other an1suc works. Adm1ss1on to the festival ~und!I al 650 Laguna Canyon Road 1s $I for adults and as free for children. It opens at 10 a.m and closes at 11 :30 p.m. daily. Other festivals of the scven·wcek celebration include the nearby Sawdust Festival, which 11 more artisan oriented and the An-A.fan, a fine arts festival also on Laguna Canyon Road. L.aauna Beach vistors can take a shuttle bus to the festivals from the downt9wn shopping areas of the city and thi beaches. The open air trams run continuously from the Laguna Canyon and downtown sites from I 0 a.m. to midnight. BOND CAR BOUGHT BY COUNTIAN ••• From Al • pursuers' tires; •A hydraulically CA tended ram- ming bumper; •A roof that flies off for a fake ejector scat. .. Tht' rnof d<lt"\ fl y ofT but the ejector seat and the tire slasher - those were special effects done in the studio.·• Also added in the studio was the smoke and tire from the machine-sun barrels. which peek out beneath the front headli&bts. .. Those arc props," auction spokes· man Joseph Mohna said. However, the revolving plates, smokescreen or gas blower, oil spiller, tack spitter, rammina bumper and bullet shield all actually function. OIL PLATFORM ••• At the time it cost $60,000, Molina said. From Al caused by a brcabng anchor cbam. It amved on the coast near Huntington Beach at about 11 p.m. Friday. Up to 60 wells will operate from Eureka. It also will accommodate livang quarters for about 80 workers. Oil drilling from the new platform is expected to start next May. A Shell spokesman said the two existing Shell facilities at the Beta field have produced about I 0 million plJon of oil so far. Shell spent about $71 million to lease the two Beta tracts off the HuntingtOn Beach coast, wb.icb the spokesman said proved to be the only commercial suoocu in the Outer Continental Sbelflease sale No. JS of 197S. . Tests indicate the tract contains about 150 million pl.Ions of re- coYerable oil, the spokesman said. "To duplicate this car today would cost a quarter·million dollars;• be said. Cole, who previously auctioned off such notable automobiles u tbe Batmobile and the Beatles' Bentley, described the car as "The greatest movie car of all time... . Biddina started at SS0,000 and, was raised in SS,000 increments until it rcachedS7S,OOO, wbenit was raised at. $1,000 increments. OC FAIR CROWDED IN MESA ••• From Al all umes 1 he residents apparently had neglected to pass out guest parking permits to v1s1tors. Paramedics reported no accidents or scnous medical emergencies over the weekend other than the ~calh of a carnival employee Fnday night. The employee, 44-year-old James Rayen Recd. died on the grounds. apparently of a heart attack, spokeswoman Lloyd sa1d. A fellow employee discovered Recd 1n the south cast comer of the fair parkmg lot. where equipment is stored, about 12: 15 a.m. Saturday. Paramedics said Reed had prob. ably died of a heart attack about three boon earlier. Another employee said Recd had been complaining of chest pains earlier in the day. Recd. who traveled with Carnival Time Shows. the carnival company, was from Downey, Lloyd said. During opening weekend compcti· lions, the Costa Mesa branch of the Future Farmers of America, made up mainly of Costa Mesa High School students, took a first place in the professional landscape design com· petition. Their entry, in the Designer's Choice Landscaping d1v1s1on. swept ahead of professional landscapers' best cffon.s to win. Lloyd said. Grand champion animal awards will be given out during competitions Tuesday through Thursday, Uo)'d added. Ton,ght's entertainment Lineup features Donny and Marie Osmond performing in the Arlington Theater at 7 p.m. and again at 9 p.m. Tuesday is Senior Cituen's Day at tbe fair, wnh $1 admission for seniors and entertainment by Les Brown and his Band of Renown in the Arlington Theater on the fairgrounds. AEROSOL SPRAY SCARE PHONY? ••• t P'romAl who Jost h11 JOb in I 976 when the Los Angeles finn he worked for bad to consolidate as consumers quit buyina aerosol producu in droves. "Without those studict," Gccker contended, ••there is no scientific evidence to show the ozone layer 1s be mg banned." To call "all wrona" the math model that predicted ozone's disappearance w1th1n 100 years "1s a poss exaggera- tion." Rowland said in his own defense. The new findinp only show the rate of depiction 1sn t as great as first predicted, the researcher said. "All the models indicate ozone is going away," Rowland said. He says the looming danger 1s even evident now. A Swiss university reponed this month an the scientific magazine Journal of Geophysical Research that their I 983 ozone sam· pie "1s the lowest they've had in 55 years of measurement." Rowland said. Aerosol 1ndus1nahsts are m1s- antcrprctmg the new findings "to give flurocarbons a clean bill of health," said Myron Uman, director of the National Research Council's en· v1ronmen~I studies board. 1n a telephone interview from Washing- ton. D.C. Rowland's theory ... 5 still nght. .. he said. but the fresh research shows ''at will take us a little longer to get m Just Call 642-6086 trouble. If we continue to release (cbloro-flurocarbons) indefinitely, we won't get into trouble for I SO years." The trouble stem• from cbloro- flurocarbons reactina with naturally occurring ozone 40 to SO kilometen above the earth. The reaction is eatina up the protective shield that ftlten out cancer-ausina ultraviolet light rays, Uman explained. · The protective band is just out of reach of nonnaJ scientific instru- ments, be said. lt'1 beneath samplina ran'e by satellites but above the reach of airplanes. As a consequenoc, scientists use laboratory lascn or computer models to predict how fast the complicated, 168-chemical reaction is takina place. Scientists assume the ozone'"1obbl- 1ng reaction will allow in more sunlight and heat up the earth, affecting climate and weather pat- terns. "We've Just barely bqun to look at its affect on climate," Uman said. "There is no reason to be sanauine about the problem." He 1s a member oft he committee that issued the study caJJed "Causes and EffectsofChanaes an Stratosphenc Ozone," a biennial update for the Environmental Protec- tion Agtncy. Gecker believes the theones arc less than conclusive "We almost destroyed an industry and dtrew 8, 700 people out of work," he qid. The media-driven steamroller rc- sul led in a 1 978 ban three years after the tint discussion of ozone danger surfa~. .. I don't undcntand the reaction myself but it did harm to me," said Gecker, a foundjng member of the Western Aerosol Information Bureau based in the City of Industry. The lobbyina group traveled throughout the state tryina to defend the persecuted propellants asking for more time to prove the hypothesis, he said. Aside from displaced workers, Gccker said consumers lost an effi- cient, economical product. The pump sprayers which have replaced aero- sols on cosmetic counten have a "tendency to be overused," making aerosol s~rays cheaper, he said. Only in the United States are flurocarbons banned for use in acro- tol products. They arc still used domestically in rcfriacration and foam products, &ivin& cushions thcar bubbles, Uman said But thear use is unrestricted elsewhere. "If industry convinces politicians there's no danaer anymore, the nte of production will ao up dramatically," be said. Flurocarbon use was proliferat1na when the EPA instituted its ban. What do yoa like about Ute Dally Pilot? Wbal don't you Uke? Call tbe number at left and you mesu1e will be recorded, trtn1crtbed and delivered to &he appropriate editor. Tbe ume U·boar u1wertn1 Hrvlce may be used to record letters to tbe editor on uy topic:. Coatrlbuton lO oar Letten column m1111 Include tbelr ume ud lelep~He Hmber for verlflcatloa. No clrcalatloa aatl1, plea ... 1'eU •• wba1'1 o• yoar mlad. ORANGE COAST D1i1JPllat H. L. Schwartz fll Publiahet Cltcvlatlon 7141Ml-4m Ca..tfted edftfttelng 714/142.an Al .eMr depettmenta M2"'4121 MAIN OfF1Ca D> V\Om..,.. c.. ...... CA. .... .n-llo'll IMO C.. W.. CA t:l'ae Clrouletton , ... ~ Chaly Dow_...,, Edit« end Alelttant 10 the PubbNt ""°" er.,.~ At.-...... L..,_~ ..... ,. ......... ,.Cerao PrOdllCllOn Maflll09' Morning fiog will chill the air Coaatal • ~.~~ '"°"": ~~ W•M-CcMd...or n w .. ea tO •• ,. .. " ., 17 ,. nu N M 11 11 .. 71 .. ... .. fl • .,, .. n 2 " .. M II 11 IO 71 IO 17 '' ., " " 11 ,. .. '°' 11 72 '° fl .. Eztended SN>wef• A.-i ,.,,, .. , "'°""' Occ~..,.s1.i10NtvA..r ~ w .... ~· 'fOAA VS OIOI OI C-Ct Tides Temps T7 M TODAY U II ltciond IOw 12'.83 P-11\ 2 I It 70 8-ldlllgtl Utpll'I. t) 71 5t ""'°"' 7' II l'lrte IOw 2 •7 Liii -01 100 ?2 ::':1'r llOa.m 11 M ...... 1Upm U t3 72 s.c.ono 11111'1 • °' p '" u : : lklrl MU IOdey •I 1·07 p m , ltlM loo Tu.cllly If 6 .. Lm Md ... 9'11n 111 M 107pm 72 : Moon rlaM 11 & 22 pm ..... ill 2 .. ..771 U am T~ end ..... ~ II 12' 1 6' pm DNCTIOM ,.., ,.., ,.., , .. ,.., ,.,, '"" °"" ........ _, ......... hellllr An Orance County fire eoilne goe. into action near Coal Canyon blaze Sunday. Coal ·can yon fire .controlled after 580 acres blackened County firemen blame bottle rockets close to any residences. From its origin, the blaz.e burned across a hillside, jumped across Coal Canyon Road and pushed into the Oeveland National Forest just over the River· side County line. for season·s first major brush blaze By STEVE MARBLE Of dl9 O'!'J NM SUllt Weary firemen had won the upper band over Orange County's first major brush fire of the season early today and anticipated the S8~acrc blaze would be contafocd by nightfall. The fire, driven by stiff winds through the brushy hillsides and ravines near Coal Canyon, was caused by bottle rockets apparently fired into a small canyon just south of the Riverside Freeway in North Orange County, fire spokeswoman Jody Greenhalgh said. By Sunday afternoon. about SS I firemen, 49 fire engines. eight bull- dozers and six air tankers were at the scene. The firefl&htina team bad been cut to about 300 firemen. 27 engines and four water tankers by early today, a spokesman said. A county fire official ~timated the blaze was 90 percent contained by sunrise today and 5aid the job should be complete by evcnina. The ~re is the laraest of the young season an Orange County. A fire ID late April blac\ened 7S acres ID Laguna Niguel and charred two expensive rid1eline homes. County fire officials consider any blaze laraer than 500 acres to be a major fire. The Coal Canyon fire never came The brush in the unpopulated area was ripe for fire because of the extn· dry winter and the lack of major brush fires in the area last iason, fire· fighters said. There were three minor injunes reponcd amoog the bu&c number of fircfiJhters. They were treated at local hospitals and released, said Green- halgh. The winds that were a problem Sunday when they austcd up to 2S mph died down by evcnin1 and had vanished early today. Temperatures reached upwards of 100 dearees as firemen fought the blaze Sunday. Valley council eases pressure on masage parlor ordinance ' By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Ot•Oally ......... What sort of technique can ~ defined as a massage? That unlikely issue 1s the basas for a new cu y law that has received preliminary approval from the Foun· tain Valley City Council. City officials said the law was prompted by the opemna of busi· ncsscs offenng treatments such as "acupressure" or "foot reflexolOjy." If the treatments are JUd&ed to be a form of massqc. the businesses would have to adhere to Fountain Vllley's 1tnct massaac par1or ordi· nance Under this law, City Attorney Alan Bums wd a local ma parlor operator mUSL submit to a back· around check and must meet various hniene and trainina requirements. Tbe 11mc Jaw defin m • in part. u "rubbina. stroluna or knead· mg" the k.in. Bums said no bu11n hu opened tn Fountain Valley under lht mu parlor 1uidelincs. Tht confusion occurred m:ently whtn a city lie.en insptttor wa uncertain whether an acuprcuwt business in ~hich ncady pm urc i1 applied 10 the kin would faU und r the ma ordinance. The new law allows a penon who pract1c a.cup urt or a 1imilar 1«hniqut 10 ubm1t a written tatc· , mcnt dcscnbma the technique and assunna city officials it is not a musaac. If the description i1 accepted, the technician would have to pay a city bus1he s license ftt but would not have to adhere to the strict proV1sion1 and additional fce1 of the musagc ordinance. It 1t 1s laterdetcnnmed the person's technique diffen from the written statement; euhe can be denied the massaac pennit required for con· tinucd operation. The proposed law •1 approved last week. by the City Council. h rCQuircs approval in a secx>nd council rcadinaJuly 17 before it becomes law. Happy ending in stolen car case at Disneyland By "e Auoc~IH Prea It was u if Merlin had waved his mqjc ~nd for an lndiarui man who made a last-minute trip to Dito neyland't Maa.ac K.in,dom and found his son's ttolcn car amona 12,000 Others jammed in I Wkina lot. "He was ndina ln 1he 1ram in the parkina loa. and he uw thi1 vehicle tb11 lookcd like hi• son's whicle that bad been stolen two weeks aao Ln Oall11 Tcua:• Anaheim at. M~hael Muf\lhy 11 d Sunday. Odan Thunnan, of New Ca•tle, lndilnl, WU headed toWatd Dia- n yland'• front pee tutday ancr· noon when he poucd the car. He tt>&umt'J 10 1ht car 10 confirm n wa the 1974 Plym lulh he sold 10 h 1 19· • yeat"'°ld aon.. Tony, several month ago, said Disney spokeswoman Debra Garron. Thurman, 4'-4, alerted Disneyland secunty auards who liked out the car u Thurman cttjoyCd th.t 11\emoon insiC!t the amusement park.. Garron said. "They eventually detained n\il' male. juvrnilcs. two from the Dallas area and the othm loCIJ."' Murph) uid, ad~iDJ tha1 the Teut yout wcrc lo4&Cd in juvcnJlc bill and thl' other three wcro rcteued to their paren1s. 1 hurman hadn't intended to n Ot neyland turd.ay, Garron 111d, .. It "' 1 • 111t·m nu1c ch1nsr in plan• >t he 1d. , Hoag health program Council stalls set on Kuen Tuesday LB plan for ~e ·:·Stayina Healthy" proaram of Hoq Mem9rial second units Ho p1tal in Ncwpon Beach will be featured on UC lrv1oe'1 radio proJram .. Back to Basics" Tuesday. , Janet Kelly, R.N. and dittttor of community education at the ho pital, will apeak on the KUCl show at BJ DA V1D BISHOP 8:30 a.m. Kelly also will discuSJ the hosp1ta1'1 speaker's .,_,...c.,, ''"' bureau, freedom from amolcina prosram and other Jt'a back to the drawina board for a propotitd chan cd.ucatJonal offcrinp. in th catfs l>ualdina codes for conilNciion of second The "Stayina HeaJthy" series pruents free monthly units on midenlial lots in Laauna Beach. seminars opn various health i,ssues. A at.aft' report proposed the city comply with a nate-- mandated provision for tce0nd uniu. known u ''Granny Aats." by lddina ao additionaJ reslricuon to lbote already laid down by the atate J..eiislaturc in 1982. Iaveaton to meet tonlglit The next meetlna of the Oranie County chapter of Inventors Workshop International Education Foun- dation will be held toniaht at the Great American Sav1nas and Loan Associauon conference room, 23S88 EJ Toto Road, El Toto. The purpose of the meetina 11 to inform inventors and other innovative people of the necessary steps needed to set a product market ready. Call Pat CrinnelJ at 661.0184 for further information. Early workout claa 9et The South Coast YMCA is ofTerina a workout class for early nsers at 27781-8 La Paz Road, Laguna Niguel, beginnina Tue1day at 6: 1 ~ a.m. The workout includes conditioning. warmup, muscular toning. flexibility, relaution, streogtheoina the abdominal muscles and the back. The class will run Tuesdays and Thursdays until mid-September. Cost is $2S for members and S30 for non-members. For more information and registration, phone 49S-04S3 or 831-9622. Dr. Elliot Kushell. professor of economics at CaJ State Fullenon. will speak at Tuesday's meeting of the .-rinerican Busmen Women's Association, scheduled for lhe Irvine Mamou Hotel. Bu.sincu or employed women are eligible for membership. For information on the group or the 6 p.m. meeting. call Manlyn Cooley at 838-1022. The at.ate &>tovision calla for second units in midentaal areu to be for rentals only and be sold, that new floor space not exceed 10 percent of what already nists, and that new conruuction adhere to currently exlstina buildinacode regulations in the CJty. The only addition proposed by city staff was that property proposed for a second unit be owner occupied. That proposal was sent back to the Planrung Boa.rd for more consideration when the City Council couldn't reach a consensus. Cities have 120 days from the time the first application for a second unit 1s submitted to either pant approval of the application or to adopt its own ordinance with special provisions for the second units. The city bas had only one application which was denied becau~ it required a zoning amendment. "h's been in effect for a year and there's been no bta rush of applications." said Councilwoman Bobbie M..i,ptil\1 who sua,est.ed sending the measure back to a joint meetid.$ of the Plannina Commission and City Housina Comn'llttee. Councilwoman Martha Collison said she was concerned with "limiting our situation before discussing it" and qreed the matter needs more discussion. Councilman Neil Fitzpatrick made a motion to put the staff proposal into effect but it failed for lack of a set0nd. No date for the JOant meetmg has been set. Surf er Injured Body amfer Chrla Connelly la ruhed to Ba.f Memorial llo9plta1 ln Mewport Beach after ln.Jarln.C hlmeetf lD the 8Ulf at 8cotcbman'e CoYe 8anday a:ftmDOOA. Be wu treat.eel at for back 9traill aD4 wu relea.ed later In the day. Bez enlla.Dceme.at tal.k at OCC "What ls your favorite or least favorite day or time of the week?'' Goats join LB fire prevention work on hillsides .. Enhanctng Your Sexual Relationship," a tw~hour lecture for couples. will be presented Tuesday at 7 p.m. in Room I 12 of the Counselina and Admissions Buildioa at Orange Coast Colleae in Costa Mesa. Shirley Lampcn, a psychotherapist and lecture in human 9Cituality at OCC, will conduct the proaram. The rqistration fee 1s $10 and further information is available at 432-5880. Beauty tal~ .et for Halon "A Beautiful Me" demonstration designed for people aaes SS and older will be· held Wednesday at I I a.m. in Northwood Community Park, 4.S3 I Bryan Ave., in lrvine. Hairdr'esser Howard Schultz wilJ teach participants about hair care and crcatina easy hairstyles at home. The monthly health and beauty demonstrations include tips on skin, nails, makeup and clothing. Paal SUrfeUred Further information about the workshops can be La~ B~ obtained ~ calling Michele Bats at lhe Senior Center. • J likc weekdays because 660-3889. ) it 's more quiet here (on lhc 8nl' Berjmu •phllterer St~Jm. Sweda .. , like Sunday because I -go to church and go to my dance club. I don't like Saturday because t can go out Jogging. but too many things take up my t1mt and keep me from 1t.'' Rangen plan open lioide beach) and I can read lhc papct. I don't like week- ends because a lot of people come here." The Trabuco RJlnacr District Hcadquancrs is inv1una all county and city panners, local merchants and rcSident.s to an Open House celebration Wednesday from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. The headquarters was recently moved from Santa Ana to its current location at 11 47 E. Sixth St., Corona. For ..-~~~~ questions or comments, phone 736-181 I. Better Breat:IJen meet 1n HB Pacifica Community Hospital in Huntington Beach will host the next meeting of the Better Breathers Oub Wednesday in the Carmen Yuppa Conference Center. 18819 Delaware St. These1sion. scheduled from 3 to 5 p.m., is intended to help lung disease pauents learn more about chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. CaU Annette Grepon at 842--0611 for funber tnformation. Monday, July 9 DuLe~r compater ualy1t CiDcluatJ Duet Maya enel"I)' 111neyor Costa Mesa • 6:30 P.·m., Costa Meta Plamaia1 Commts1loD, City Hall Councd Chambers, 77 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. • 7:30 p.m., Newpori Baell ctey CoaDdJ meetlq,. "Any day I have to ao to work is my least favorite day. But Fndays arc fun. "Every day is cool be- cause I JOI the Lont Jesus. I just cruise and just sec what he has for me every day." City Hall, 3300 Newpon ,Plv<I., Newport Beach. PoucE LoG Woman forced into van, raped at Newport party A 22·y~r-old Newport Beach woman was raped early Sunday mom1na by a man she had met earlier Saturday night at a perty. The woman had aone to a party at a friend's house in the I 00 block of l<tth Street about I l p.m. Saturday. She met tht suspect and danced with him. Later that niaht. he asked her iflhe would like to 10 for a walk alon~ the beach but the woman declined. A short while later the JU1pect, described as a white male, about 6 feet Coetalleu A man ~bt>td four 1ett of tools ftom the Sc1rt department store, South Coast Plaza Mall, Friday_ and made off with S-435 worth of merchandise. • • • An unlocked prqe provided entry to tbieves at a bom on the 900 bloek of Valencia tMt Satun:t&y. A brand now paint sprayer, valued at S-2,399, •u reported stolen. • • • C. h tpU and a pan of cookod lamb atokn from a refntrrttor at Mike's P!ace. l S76 Newport Bh d,. aometim last TbC money hJdd.en in the pan Of meat lO keep it re from bui'J)atl. \be ownn. told police. Th 1 wu pl ••$JOO tall. 160 pounds and with blond hair. asked the woman if she "would like to go out and do some (ooaunc)." accordina to pohcc. The woman once apin declined and told the man about her boyfriend to discouraac his advances. About I a.m. the suspect took the woman by the arm and walked her outside. "The victim was not afraid because she fell several people at the party knew the suspect," police reported. The suspect rcPortcdly told the woman, "give me a chanct b«aust 1 am a nice IUY·" The suspect then ins1sted the woman accompany him to his van parked on 33rd Street. The woman did so "not wanting to make a scene," accord in& to police When they reached the-van, lhe suspect pushed the woman inside, locked the door and raped her. When he was done he ht up a ctprcttc. and let the woman JO. She called her boyfticnd who called p0hoc. About $900 ~ of lumber qa from a residence in Woodbri The stolen ftom a construction ite at loss wu estima~ ll mott than 2900 Bristol t. late lat wee S 1,000. • • • Thieves removed a banicade at the Jewelry and other ptt'l()t\IJ belont- Cantetbury Bui~,_ Corp. '1 aitt. inp. ~ taken by burata~ from a While the residents I~ their Northwood ~ Tbe tn~~ home oa the 3200 block or Iowa -.J>Plrently btotc U\ thro\&lh • shdina Street wu bural~ last week. n ~door. • • -. o~n door proVJded cntl)' 10 lhe Police in tipted a oomptiint that a lh1ncs. who o'° $42 tn IOOIC poup Of juvetiiln weft finna fire- cbanp. • • • Cf'Kkcn -pioaibl bottle rockets -meooo pried open a windo at 11 pa can TbC poup of )'041\1• the Newport Ha~ Animal Hot.pt· tft1t thouah, wa eone w~n pattol· tal, I 2S Maa Drive, hardly but no man amvc.'d.' J was reporud. Jrfta• Foetal.a va11., A vidto ctPC'ttc rte0tdcr and a video tt e1mm re sta~n Th vcs snatched the pur.t ofa 2 • r-oki hou cletncr •h1 - By DAVID BISHOP Dlllr,.. C:cn c t 1 Increases m the city clcrt ., salary, 1ft9t0CY1' fees md appr:oval of a plan to use a<>ats for fire ~ention wa-c all ---GK'd as the Lacuna Beach City Council approved It l 984--8S city budaeL The maJor portion of the total S 16. 7 million ~ was adopted m June but the council delayed~ several issues until the full five-member~· was a Councilman Roben Gentry was abtentat ihc June budlet session. Joe Edeallofer e.ngillff r PurlGoeld Ulerapbt . Lido Beacll, New York City Clerk Verna Rollinger was granted a 7 percent pay increase Rutan and Tucker, the lep1 firm hired to represent the city. was IJVCD a 2.3 percent in~ in its hourly fee. The counaJ also acx:epted the CJty ~s recommendauon to eliminate a separate fee tchedulc for code enforeemcnt by the lepJ firm. wtuch means code coforttment procedures will now cost the city the new rcaular hourly rate of $90 instead of the fOTmcr code enforcement rate of$65 an hour. Qty Manqtr Ken Fran\ said the changes would bnna the attorneys' roes in tine with wbat other Oransc C oumy ci ucs arc Pl>in& and that the increased code enforcement fees woUJd amount to about S4.000 more m costs 10 the cuy based on last year's expcnencc Grud Rapids, Mlcllllgu "I hi.e Sunda) ~use I set a chance to spend time tn my church. whctt I can fellowsl\il). l don't hke Monday, because it's a day of adJustment." "l hke Sunday, because it's a day of rest and relaxat1on when I can do what l want. 1 can have 1 httlc fun. I don't hke Mon- day because it's the bqin- ning of a new week. I have to scheduJc all the lbinp I want to do and I have·'\& count days until lhe neJtt Sunday." Goats will be employed by the city as part of a ptlot firebreak program to be&in along a steep hillside area of the city north ofTopofthe World, Frank said. NnlC thousand dollars were appropnalcd by council from anticipated reserve funds for the program. which.will also workers and mecharucal removal of fire-hazardous brush. Also approved were expenditures for new eittenor hghttnJ at city hall (S 1,300). expected to pay for ittclf through CnerJy savings Wlthtn a year. and a weed abatement plan for ett) propcny (S3.000). Frank announced that a cont.ract settlement with the city's mun1CJpaJ workers bad been reached.. IJVllll then:,i a S percent acro~~board mcrease sumlar to what pohce department employees asreed to last month. Nqotiations toward a contraC't senlcment with 1he oty's fitt department emplo~ arc contmumg, Frank said. Counal mcm also approved a $43,.SOO Com- Ema Aaclenoa 1tadent Jeu Ferpsoa ~tired munity Asststan~ Fund budget that was altered to provtde an addtuonal Sl .000 to the Laguna Be.ch Chamber Society Society representative Dr. Joae Jones told council that the orpn1zauon is attnlClln& pubhaty u It oclebrates Its 25th lnOJVCf'S.IJ)' tlus year and need.s S.S.000 to match pnvate funds al!Udy committed.. Jones said the money is needed to spur corporate donations this )cat that would enable them to continue rn future years without city subsidies. El Toro SJdDey, Aa1tralla "Friday n1&ht at 11 There's al"ars som('thing coing on that s fun . I don't like Monday at 6 a.m., because I ha ve to go back to work." "I hke weekends because my daughter works through the week. I hkc 10 see my daughter. 1 don't like Monday, because it's the fim day of the week." Council membcn dCCJded to reduce ns Commun1t} .\ss1stance conunacncy fund from $600 to SI 00. take $500 from the staff recommended allocauon to lhc l.quna Beach Museum of An. and increase the Chamber Music Society's allocanon from $2.000 to $3,000. putting ar~ncs tn her car m lhe Von's parkina lot. 16201 Harbor Blvd. The purse. stolen from the sbopp1na cart. contained SSO m cash and miscellaneous items • • • Someone cntc""'1 a cloSC'd and Jocked bu11d1na at 181440 Am1stad t.. and stoic $5.032 m computer equipment bclona.ina to PhyStOlogte Reps Inc. • • • Burglars enttrtd a 1984 To"ota Cclica parked m the 16000 block of Canbou Street and stole cash. Jew- elry, clothinaand aud1~v1sual equ1p- ~nt valued at $.S,22.S • • • A mov1Cl()(r said when hf came out of the Family Four Theater complex Sunday ht found his 1982 OJdsmobilt Cutlass J&Cked up on boxes and the lcf\ wheels and tire tolen. • • • .A patient 111d he lcR his wallet at a medical chmc at C)qJO Talbert A\-'C. and that It \tr~ eone when he returned for it 20 minute later. h contained $7 10 rash and miscellaneous ncms. he told PollCIC. Newport Bea.ell A Newport h man left his wallet on the ftont mper of ht car parted in tb JOO blOC'k of Jasm1nt and dro\'C a 1) nd.t)• ancmoon. TM •'llkt bad $20 ID it but ch«lt of the area b the man latCT ID the day did not tu"' up the •"alle1 • • • way cmplo~ at Fa bton 1 1 land l'q)Oned the theft ofbtt . let nd '247 c: h from h r puiw 1n an empto ker at the ckpanmcnt tort unda)'. • • • lh then of a t I v 1 on to tlutd at S600 I A N(wpon Stach woman rtportcd ,\ and S 1800 1n kwcll) from her home 10 the 100 block of Ba)--..ood Sunda> • • • A Ne~pon Beach man rcponed the theft of a 1982 Cadillac S1lverhawk "alued al $35.000 from ~ Island Dnve Sunday • • • .\ Laguna Niguel ~"C.nan reported the lhef\ of an auto slel"l"O valued al S 1.000 from her Men-cdes parked &o the 1500 block ofGalu) Saturda). LaCuna Beach Electronic equipment of unknown "alue was reported stolen from a rn1dencc 1n the 400 block of Anita S1rttt Sunday momina. .... Kat' Lynn Mc:Ca hn. .B. and Ma,Prcl Blanche Jopson, 35. were etted for public nudity t.arly Sunda) momma at Diven Cove ••• Four unidentified male ~hite adult uspects arc beina souaht for a reported assault and 6ancry At Calhopc trect beach early unda) mom1na. • • • Twtniy.fhc dollan wu ~ncd stokn from a punc i1U1de a l"C"lclmcc 1n the 200 block of Rub trcct Saturday afternoon Ywhtk \be .,,cum V."IS u.lctp • • • A vch1cl bu~I')' 1n w 700 block of Nonh C t lii&h•-a)' rnuJtrd 1n ttic lo of SlOO:·cnh t rd.a) afternoon • • • .4 WJ tn rt'J)Orttd v.h1tc male U) ltl OUl Vol and vai>dalizt tht wood- en •• ter" tatut at 1212 uth Coist Hiahway turday . monu caus1na apro·umatdy S2SO in clam- • • • 1'1an \\ ll~nC' ftarry. 22. wa cha with bit and run and dnv1ng under tht influcn~ of alcohol earl) Satur- da) momma at Laguna Canyon and El Toro Road He was released on Sl .500ba1I • • • ~ min rt'poned that he •-as kicked 10 the face b) an unknown assailant with a hca' ~ boot early unda) momina tn the 100 block of Moun- l.110 lrttt Ba.ntt.ncton Beach A resident of the 19100 block of Delaware SltOCt reported uoda) that someone broke into his botne durio the pt.St week throuah a..&ont w.n- dow. The lo included SS30 1n h. • • • A man told polioc Saturday nllht that someone stole lus red 19"79 Chevrolet Luv pickup with I olates from the area ofhci6 Cow Ht&hway and Majn we Tbe I was estimated at $2.000. • £S M 0rMge Coot DAILY PILOT/Monday, July t , 1984 • Fast Closing! Flexible Terms! Affordable Rates! NORTH OAKS, Minn. (AP) -A week before the Democratic National Convention star1s, Walter F. Mon- dale i1 tayinaout of si&ht and kcepiQ& quier about hi1 search for a ruonina mate. The apparcnr Democratic pi dentiaJ nomm~ had no pubhc a pea.ranees scheduled today and w conllnuina pnvat.c preparations Ci r rhe convcnuon which bqms July l6 in San Francisco. As the convention .draws cJoscr, speculation about the No. 2 1pot on the ticket has been inten ifyina white Mondale and his aides remain reluc- tant to publicly discu s the selection process . .. The only person who knows what'• going on is Mondale," said John Reiltyl ~ Washmgton attorney and senior-Mondale adviser who .is oversceina tbe vice presidential can- didate search. Last week, Mondale wrapped up a serie1 of interviews at his suburban Minneapolis home with seven poten- tial candidates -three women, two black men. a Hispanic man and one wrutc man. While no further mtervaews arc scheduled, Mondale has left the door open to name someone who has not come to Minnesota for an interview. Our Rexible terms and afforct.ble rnes makr it easier for you to qualify. We help you move in sooner, too ... by closing your loan faster! Finance your homr the Great American way. St.rt 4 today. Phone for det.ills and current rates: DYLANFETE A DEBACLE SLANE, lreland(AP)-About 100 rock-and bottlc-throwin& youths who garhered for a Bob Dylan concert smashed windows, sec cars on fire and drove police back into their hcad- quatters before baton-wielding rein- forcements dispersed the mob. Living eanin&• Fountain Valley (714) 963-7736 Laguna Beach (714) 494-7541 Great American firsr Savings Bank Joel Ellste of Laurel. Miu .. modela the lateet ln reptile apparel. He .. ,.. llYlnt eurlJl&• will atay clamped on bl• ean until he remo•ee them. Police said 18 people were injured, . and a police spokesman m Dublin, 35 J k hit • L · KC ;:i~~~~uth. said rour people were ac SODS a In A police spokesman said the Sun-• day rampage apparently began when KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -another sell-out crowd at Arrowhead a villaae pub refused to serve drinks Superstar Michael Jackson and four Stadium on Sunday nighL to some of the fans. The concert · of his brothers ascended cent.er staae The concert, the last of three in before 40,000 people went on as in a swirl of lasers and a bunt of Kansas City that have opened tbe scheduled without f~rther mcident, a sparkling explo?ions to complete the Jacksons' much-ballyhooed I kity police spolc.esman said. first stop of their concert tour before Victory Tour, began 111 10 p.m. CDT --------------------.....1.....-----:---.-------=----=--------------------1 as Michael, Jermaine, Randy, Tito and Marton Jackson stepped off a platform that lifted them to the middle of tbe stage, Jaden with 375 . . What to do if you should ever SDlell nat11._.al gas. • ~ If you 've eve r had a whiff of natural gas, you know it's not French perfume. But thats one big reason it's so safe. We add the smell to natural gas (which is normally odorl ess) so yo u ca n detect even the slightest leak A slight odo r near an appliance usuall y means a pilot light is out. But if you have any doubts, just call us. If the smell is strong, open the windows and doors. " , [)onl li ght any matches or tum anything electrica l on or off. not e\'en the Iighl';. Any elec tri cal S'rvitch -·~ cou ld cause a spark ~~'!~~~..-- Alert everyone in your home and get out. Alert your neighbors nearby. Th en. call th e Gas Company. (But don't use the phone in you r home). If the ga<; odor is ou td oors it co uld be even more se ri ous than a lea k indoors. So call us right away. ,. ,.. Even if you don't sme ll gas. we hope 9 o., yo u'll keep safety in mind. (.A Never sto re any flamm ab le materials near a gas appliance or you r gas meter. ~ GAS Bil\. If your burner flames (range, furnace, water heater) are leaving soot deposits or giving off an acrid odor, call us immediately. Be careful with unvented room ~----; .-. t=J~U .. : ' . ' . . . " . ' . ·1·' I I i ( heaters. Th ey can cause fire , asphyxia- ti on and deadly fumes such as carbon monoxide. If you're not sure if your heater is safe, call the Gas Company. We11 check it And be careful where you dig. Gas lines are under your property, so call us before you excavate. We'll help you find them . Please keep these tips in mind. By using natural gas safely and . efficiently, you11 be keeping _ your gas biJI as low as possible. And thats nothing to sniff at 6 SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA gas COMPANY ' tons of equipment iJ\cluding about 200 high-powered spotliahts. Fans jumped to their rect, applaud- ing and screaming, as Michael, dressed in a sparkling white shirt and glove and shining black pants, started the coocer1 as he had the previous two nights, sinf.ng "Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'. ' a cut from his rccord- brcaking album "Thriller." The music was preceded by five blue, yellow, green, purple and pink creatures with glowing eyes -the Jacksons called rhem "Kreeron People" -that waddled on stage only to retreat as one was slain by a swordsman. Randy Jackson, who kJIJs the creature. said in an interview that the opening symbolizes a sense of "vic- torf' the brothers hope to convey to their audiences. "We wanted to shock everybody, surprise everybody.'' ?id Randy ... I think the best expectation is the unexpected." After the operung numbers Sun- day, Michael Jackson repeatedly shouted to the crowd>·· How do you feel?" - Each time the crowd responded with a frenzied, "Great!" Germ tests inH&waii HONOLULU (AP) -The U.S. Army conducted open-air bioJ~cal warfare simulations in Hawaii durina the 1960s, usina bacteria that could harm hospital patients, the elderly and people sutcepul>le 10 disease, a newspaper reponed Sunday. The public never was told of the rests and state officials were told only that the Army wanted to conduct experiments on meteoroloeical con- ditions on Hawaii bland. The Honolulu Advert1ser 11id. ff the true nature of the tests had been known. the state probably would have rejected the Anny's request to tuse the site. said state forester Libcn Landaraf. The Advcniacr $lid the military has admiued conducfin& suth tests. An Anny spokesman, M.;or Donald Maplc1 11id o~n·a•r biological t~una an the United tatcs WIS topped io~l969 • Accordina 10 dcdauafied test ~ Port• obtained by The Advcniser undtr the Frttdom of f nformation A.c:t. lhrtt t>P.Ct of bacteri WCtt used In the Hawe111n aesu '"(Some~plefrom Los Angele )con lderOran,geCountytobea vut wasteland as far as culture Is concerned. ·• Law should be hard on drunken drivers, not young drinkers Like so many modem social move- ments for reform. such as en- vironmentalism and consumerism, the crusade against drunk driving has begun lo ta.kc on unattractive aspects of moral arrogance. militancy and intolerance. Take, for ex.ample, the sudden national clamor for a 21-year-old mandatory drinkina age. to be im- posed upon all SO states and the District of Columbia with a slash in federal highway funds the penalty for refusal. Though President Reagan is expected to sign the measure, it appears to be precisely the son of Father-Knows-Best, federal im- periousness that Reagan was sup- posed to bring to a halt. On first glance, the logic behind the federal law seems compelling. Some 25,000 Americans arc killed every year in highway accidents related to drunken driving. Hundreds of thousands more arc injured and maimed. A disproponionate number of those responsible arc under 21. Erao, if Washington, D.C., and some two dozen states wiU not outlaw drinking below that AfC, the Federal Government should unpose hs su- perior wisdom and morality on the recalcitrant jurisdictions. Unfonunately, experience and the collective wisdom of the states on this question arc almost certainly su- perior to that of lhe federal govern- ment. Take America's campuses and college towns. Jn and around those student communities are congreptcd more than l 0 million young people, perhaps balf under 21. Routinely, f!lany of them drink beer, wine or liquor, as a matter of custom, habit, rites of passage, etc. A fedcrally- m~dated state.law.sudde.nl y making their consumpllon illegal 1s not JOing to make teetotalcn of petty criminals. ~cy will have friends buy the beer. wme and liquor, and instead of drinking it in taverns and bars, they will consume it in homes. dorms. apanments. fraternity houses and - as 17 years old do today in states where the drinking age is 18 -while driving around in automobiles. How wiU that reduce accidents? Rather than appreciably reducing traffic deaths from drunken driving, the federally-mandated laws wall make co-conspirators and petty criminals out of thousands of bar- tenders, bar owners, waitresses, liquor store salesmen, liquor store operators, parents who look the other way -and. of course, that 22-ycar- old young man who serves as regular purchasing agent for the whole crowd. Has anyone considered the inequi- ty of th.is law, in tcnns of sex discrimination? Any review of the statistics on drunken drivinJ will show an enormous dispanty between ~age girls an_d teen-age boys. My own wager 1s that the statistics wiU demonstrate that a 22-ycar-<>ld man is far more likely to be the culprit in a fatal drunken driving episode than a 19-year-old woman. Why, then, per- mit the 22-ycar-old man to drink, but not the I 9-year-<>ld woman? The trend here is doubly disturt>- ing. Once again, the country seems to be moving away from the idea of individual accountability and ~ sponsibility. lf we wish to go after drunk drivers, go after drunks who drive. Find anyone caught with "an)' .. ljquor in bis system, who is operauQl a°f'lehjcle. Suspend the license of anyone drunk beh10d the wheel. Confiscate the car, or impose a hu$c fine, or anyone caught a second time. Jail the drunk- en driver who kills or maims. But, to attack drunken driving, by tcJlin& the sailors of the Sixth fleet home from the Mediterranean who don't even own a car. that they can't spend shore leave in a Norfolk tavern, makes ne~ther good sense, nor good lcgis- lauon. Patrlclt Bocbao t. • 1yadle11ted col1111JJ1111.. . : $3 lM endowment spreads controversy- Some of the projects looked suspctously like junkets. not crusades for democracy WASHINGTON -The Endow- ment for Democracy is off on a quixotic crusade to spread th~ood wordaboutdemocracythto out . the world-with a multi-mil 100- dollarpune from the taxpayers. Despite its laudable purpose, the endowment appears to be spreading more controversy than democracy. A still-secret draft report by the General Accounting Office rai1es questions about the endowment's operations and responsibilities that were left unanswered when it was rather haphazardly created last year. The GAO noted, for example, that U.S. ambassadonexprcssed senous doubts that the endowment would be allowed to function in cenain coun- tries where it would seem to be needed most. They also fea~ it would duplicate existina programs and miaht conflict with U.S. foreign r:_>licy. One task force concluded that •a new U.S. proaram to aid democ- racy abroad was not needed." My associate Donald Goldbera has been investipting whether the en- dowment is worth the SJ I minion it 1s tryinJ to pry from the taxpayers. Here arc h.1s findings: -Some oft he prOJCCts funded b)'. the endowment look suspiciously hkc high-priced junkets, not serious at- tempts to spread the aospcJ of democracy. The endowment dispatched one bipartisan delcgatiQn of earnest do- gooders to the Caribbean and Europe. Did the apostles of freedom visit countries where some enli&htenment on the principles of democracy is sorely needed? Not on your life. They wentto Jamaica, where the beaches are invitina, the people free and the government already demo- cratic. They also stopped by such solidly democratic capitals as Stock- holm, Brussels and Paris. The del- egation even brought the message of democracy to Geneva, capital of the world's oldest democracy. -According to the draft GAO report, some projects discussed by the endowment's supporters are already being funded by other agencies. -Though the endowment got a grant from the U.S. Information Agency , it haughtily informed USIA officials that it would not be accoun- table to them for the money. -Should the endowment have something to hide, the public Wlll have a hard time findinaout: The endowment is exempt from the Freedom oflnformation Act. -At least $20,000 of endowment money was spent to help pro-govern- ment candidates in the recent elec- tions in Panama. Another $2 million was proposed for the AfL.CJO's Free Trade Union Institute, whose direc- tor, Irving Brown. has been identified by former Cl A employees as having done undercover work for the agency. These expenditures have raised suspicions that the endowment may be a front for the ClA. Footnote: Brown denies he has ever worked for the ClA. FBl'S FARRAKHAN REPORT: Now that the Rev. Jesse Jackson bas belatedly renounced Louis Far- rakhan, the Black Mulsirn leader should fade away. His anti-Semitic incitements and insurrectionary inferences, mean- while, did not go unnoticed by the FBI. But after quiet consideration, the FBI h.asconcluded that Farrakhan never stepped over the line between constitutionally Juaranteed free speech and cri~nal behavior. In a report last month to Sen. Jeremiah Denton. R-Ala .. the FBI said it could not initiate an investiga- tion ofFarrakhan 's public threats against Washington Post reporter Milton Coleman. C1t1nJ the attorney general's domestic .s«unt) Juidelincs. the FBI stated:" An 1nvcst1gation can only be Jac1 AIDEISOI . inillated agams1 groups or enterprises comprised of two or more persons ... not 10dividuaJs." It added that the bureau "1s not presently 10 possession of any information which would warrant an invcstiftuon ofMr. Farrak.ban'sorpruzation, the Nation oflsJam.'' The FBI said its Chicago office tried to interview Farrakhan but "his attorney, Lewis Meyers Jr .. refused to allow the interview." PEOPLE JN THE NEWS: Mem- bcn of Congress and their staff aides have long complained about their inability to comprehend the econ- omic patois habitually used by Feder- al Reserve Board Chairman Paul Volcker. Now it turns out that administration officials have run tnto the same lanauaac bamer. Dunng the recent rescue effort to saveContmen- tal Illinois Nauonal Bank & Trust. Voltk¥huddled rqularh "1lh of- fiC1als from the Trcasuf) and the office oft he comptroller of the currcnc)'. One of them. asked 1fhe could recall anything Volcker had said during the high-level meetings. tho~t a moment and replied. .. r can't rcmeinber anytbina he said that I understood.•• -Sbonl} after he retired as chairman of the U.S. Postal Service board of JC?vcrnors.. Robert Hardest) was conStdered for a post as part-ti me consultanttotheboard. The gov- ernors spiked the idea. Some of them thought it nught look funny to have a former governor as a pa.1d consultanL even for a modest S 15,000 a year part time. But Postmaster General W1I· liam Bolgcrsagned Hardesty aboard anyway on hisownauthonty. CONFIDENTIAL ALE: Ourem- bassacs overseas take 1 rcahst1c view of the information they get from their secret sources. Foreu.mple. a State Department report on the situation 1n Laos, classified ··secret,·· has this caveat: "There are occasional reports from some sources about mfighttng among the top leadership over the relative priorities ofonentauon toward PC'king and Moscow. Most of these souroesstrike us as unreliable, 1f not 01ght~.and "c suspe-c1 the\ arc purve}orsor' 1cttm offabncattons ·· Jad Alld~rsoa Is• SY11diea1HI cotrunaist.. Power of music moves Didl¥Pl1ot spiders to love welcomes When an amorous male spider drops by a female seider's abode to coun her, he docsn•t JUSt jump on the web and head for the center. That would be suicide. She'd think him a captive insect and devour him. In- stead, he 1tands at the web's edge and st.rUms a little ditty on the silken suspensfon cord. When she fttls his musac in her ~ be slips into somCthin& comfonable. or whatever. "watered stock" from one meat peddler in panicular named Daniel Drew. He'd buy 1,000 head, for example, load them up with salt, and dnve them to the yards within a few days, about l 0,000 pounds heavier. lncidcolllly, claim now is 99 percicnt of the commercially raased fa:dJot cattle have time-rcleue hormone pellets implanted under tbe akin of tbctrean. Some cattlemen took their beeves Ask the fellow on the neJtt stool to lhe watctjn, troUlhJu t before sale what Knute Rockne taupt. No. to add wci&bt. Vic got the term beside. football. He should say ORANGE COAST DlilJPilat H. L khwett1 II ~ ChaQDowelltJ Edllor end AIMtMll 101tie~ ,,..Zlftt ~teCdltot Tom Tait Coty E.dilOf chemistry. Chanel No. 5 was not the fifth perfume Coco Chanel turned ouL It was desiin~ted "No. s·• in rcfercn~ to her binbdare. Auaust S. She held it to be her lucky number. The U .. million" is one foJlowed by nine ttroes.. The Bri · b "'rilillion" ts one fOUowed b 12 zeroes. It's a difference wonh noting. if )ou're nqotiatina money. althouah as John Jacob tor 1V Rid.•• A man who hu a million doUan as u well off u if be 'fitrc ncb." The British refer lo a one followed by nine lCtOC$ as a .. miJ. liard.'' When PrCsident Roritld R makH a ~h. it's immtdiatdy sent -.ortdwidc in 36 la.QPltl!C:S. In the lingo of the pat railroad era. those men who checked out the frei&ht cars for hobon were called "knockcn..·· Three out or four homicides com- mitted by ~om~a att tommittcd in thtiro n bom The temperature of a i k PQCh treeo NCS much as 20~ F. above normal What Hatti)' i a .. pun'"? And hy i at u n1 aat>c~ ··t.wi.-, ~. Has to be bed to be JOOd. Considcf tJu . Q ... What ~ou call a row of nbbill wal ina wards"? A. ""A l'K'tdi ba~hne:· Curiou 1 n't it. that the quickot N)' to get to lbc badt of tht chYJ"C'.h as l..M. B•Td I.I • 1 -..tlntt'd to wal" '" throuah the front door'? coluul•l t .. Smart money's OD tb.e county Social clubs cater to those with high IQs Some of the people that Aon aod I know 10 LosAo.,&eles thi~ that ~·re preuy ruoc folk. Ri&Jit up till the time that they learn that we live in Hunungton Beach. Nol all. but some of these people somehow equate hvlll& ID 0ranF County lO m•i.a& in Crow's Landing. Tbeyb.aveamental image of a penon who li"-es in Ora.o,e CountyspcndingthedayWithb.is thumbs snd undcrtbc Strl&J5of'his ovcralh. a baseball capon the .. or bis head and a piece of st.raw sud in bis teeth. He. of counc, ~ers&artla con venation and amwenall qua- uons with "Yup .. or "'Nope. .. They consider <>ranee County to be 1 vast wastdaDd as far as culture is oo~and tbe•"-.entF 0ruee County rc:sident to be pcrblJI om: 1tcpahnvc1hat.)evdofintellect ........ ... required tofeediiiGcf~ People who live in the very hi&h cost a.reasof t.he coun(Y are. ~ps. exempt by the very fad that they must be wealthy, or how could they afford to ltve in those areas? Being wealthy hlntsat at least some form of intdJect, and perhaps even cultute. But tbeil there·, always the posst"'bility that the wealth was inherited. On the other hand. 1fthcsc people had wealthy parents. they'd have been born in lA. Wouldn'tthey? Have you ~CT run into one of J)lese -1\oher. brighltr; more csthctic-thin-.. thou creeps? The one's who moved to LA from some other part of the country arc pretty bed. the one·s wbo .,ere born m LA are wonc, (natl ve Californians. don't you know) but by far the worst arc the ones who moved from Oran~Counry to LA. Thcy•ve madcadrastac mtSla.kc. but there's no wayyou'recvergoingtoget them to admatiL Apin, please note. these people are m the vast minority! But. the ncx t timeyourun-.c.rossoneofthem, you ·u be armed. Orange County DOW has, and bas had for a little more than four years, its very own chapter ofMENSA! For those three or four people out there wbomaynot know.,bat that is, MENSA is a soci.a1 club whose only RiQuircment formcmberlhiptsan IQ in the top two percent of the genera] population. The most asked question about MENSA seems to be what IQ docs 1t take to get in? In very aeoeral terms. it takes 132. Different tests are scored differently. and the two u:su that MENSA adm1nisten(st.andard tests. by the way: MENSA has no test of 1ts own) require a soorc of 132 on one and 14800 the other. There are presently more than 900 members in the county. We also have our own chapter of INTERTE.L! INTER TEL is a sort of super MENSA. They only accept people who soorc m the 99th per- centile. MENSA accepts two people out of a hundred, INTERTEL accepts only one out of a hundred. As would be expected, there are far fewer membersoflNTERTElin thccoun- ty. only about 20 or so. but we do have a chapter. lfthassounds h~e fun to you. try th1snextonc. We have people who belong to l.S.P.E.as~-ell' l.S.P.E 1sa sort of super duper INTER TEL Tbeacro- n) m stands for"lntemauonal So- caet} for Ph1losoph1cal Enquiry" aod tbcenlJ) requirement is. hold onto your hats. 99.9pcrccntile. That'sone person 1n a thousand. Asa matter of fact. th1sclub1salsoknownas .. Tbe Thousand." There 1sn•t really a chapteron.S.(>.E.as suth. because at last count there were only four members 1n the county. but as memberslupgrows, there surely wdl be. l've attended IC'Veral MENS.A fu nct1ons (there are more than 30 pc:r month) and 1t wasn't at all what I ex~ed. When you first walk in, you m11Ju be attendinaa meeuna ofw Tucsda)' Nl&ht PokcrOub. Every- body looks pcneal) normal After a whale )'OU bqin to detect a m.arvdou.s senscofbumor. Lotsofjokes. lotsof laaab . Tbett are a few members, gcnerallr reviled by t~ o~ '*bo arc addicted to pun tinore t.hcm. Tbe pwi>oX of these clubt seems to be to t toaetbcrand have a aood tame. eryhattouttosave the world. Not only that. but 1 didn't ICC one paJOD with his thumb& 1ucked uodcrh1sovCTall U"IPl- lf )'OU find occasion to~ thi• information on 1 mob f'rom LA, be Pl"'JllltW. They ba ''Ca cha__ptcr tOO. and it's • lhu oun. Tbey a.bo ha\e mort smot. more tnftk and h. c.1 111 aw,,.,...~ '"' ,. H•fD4•8eact. Ae Orange Coast DAIL y PILOT /Monday, July 9, 19~ . '' i.r; .<: I .. , \ f I t I I • . . . ' •' ·' .. [' -· 'I ! I I l.. '7 . • .,~ Since 1885, Great American has been helping Californians own homes and save for their tomorrows. Here in Orange County, you've known us for the past 50 years as Laguna Federal, a friendly neighbor ready to lend a hand. In that time, Orange County has certainly grown and, with your help, we've grown too. We're now more than $5.5 billion strong, with over 120 offices statewide. And as we've grown, the familiar red, white and blue soaring symbol you've come to know has taken on new meaning. We've become a full- service savings bank, able to offer you all the traditional services of a bank, as well as those of a savings and loan. With this change comes a new name. One that reflects our size, our strength, and the wider range of services we now offer. We're Great American First Savings Bank. An old friend, bringing new ideas in banking to you. With a wide selection of checking accounts. Insured ......... money-market investment accounts, FSJ,JC both short-term and long-term. Real ............ ,'-.__C., estate, home equity, and home SMp .... 111100.fDI improvement l9ans. Auto financing Great never change. Like the / and other installment loans. Personal lines of credft. Credit cards, insurance services, retirement plans. Stocks, bonds, mutual funds and annuities. Even business checking and lending. A great new way to bank. Yet with all these expanded services, some things will friendly, dedicated people who serve you. The convenience of branches and 24-Hour Tellers statewide. And the assurance that your funds will always be FSLIC-safe with us . A trusted old friend. With a new name. erican Gl• --First Savings Bank UNOH The Great New Way to Bank. Serving the communttles of Anaheim Hills, Orange, Woodbridge, El Toro, Laguna Hiiis, Mission Viejo, Laguna Niguel, fountain Valley, Huntington &.ach, Balboi Peninsula, Balboa Island, Newport Beach, Laguna Beach, Monarch Bay, San Juan Capistrano, Capistrano Beach and San Oemente. chKk the Yellow P~ for the of fa nearest you • £3 RE VIEW • ---- -. Aim of artists- is bewildering NB museum shows can stretch viewers' minds to fullest By SUSAN MONAHAN Dellr~ "I had no11hen acquired the technique that. I flatter myself, now enable5 me to deaJ competently with the works of modern artists ... There is the intense 'By God!' that acknowled&es the power of the ruthless realist, the 'It's so awfully sincere' that covers your embarrassment when you are shown the colored photograph of the alderman's widow, the low whistle that exbibi~ your admiration for the post- impressiorust, the 'Terribly amusing' that expresses what you feel about the cubist..." Things may not have changed that much in the more than SO years since W. Somerset Maugham provided this thumb- nail fuide to "modern" art in "Cakes Md Ale.' Durina a recent press tour of "Ac· tion/Prccision: The New Direction in New York, 19Ss.60" and '"The FiJurative Mode: Bay Area Painting. 195~ .. at the Newport Harbor Art Museum, a member of the group echoed the bewilderment of Maugham's prota1onist The man noted that Al Held ("Ac- tion/Precision") named his paintinas "Un- tidcd" and sugested that this indicated that Held himself had no clear idea of what he wanted to depict. Paul Schimmel, curator of NHAM and "Action/Precision" disaJreed, saying that ~sturaJ abstrac- tionist Held dad have a subject in mind and on the canvas. Still, an imponant issue was raised because the paintings, which arc on exhibit tbrou'11Sept.9, represent Oranae County's partic1pation in the Olympics Arts Festi- val. AS I 00.000irant from the Irvine Co. and support from the National Endowment for the Arts have provided the financing, but the paintings will have to bejudaed on their own merits. The q_uestton of what lM anist is painting 1s less likeJy to be asked about the work in "The Fi,urative Mode." The human figures in this exhibition give even the casual viewer an easily identifiable . subject. But when ttus exhibition is compared to its New York counterpart. it seems obvious that the artists on both coasts painted from life as they saw or imagined or remembered iL This is especially apparent when the similaritie5 between Joan Brown's "Girl Sitting" and Held's paintinp ~ con- sidered. Despite the descripttve title and the human figure in Brown's work, it strongly resembles one of Held's tbickJy painted, earth-hued abstrKtions. So actually, the question becomes not whether the artists have .painted some-· thing, but why they chose to express themselves as thex did. Jn the case of "Action/Precision. · it was possible to ask two of the artists this question. Norman Bluhm and Alfred Leslie attended the tour. and in separate interviews, they gave some insights into their own directions. Parallel bands are a leitmotif in Leslie's paintings. They nol only provide a focus, but form the subject, as in "Flag Day," which Leslie did, in fact, paint from an American flag. "A lot of things in that picture are remnants of what wcni_on before," said Leshe. In has earlier work, he explained, "paintma was aOO..ut an expression of color." But he eventually found this approach too restrictinJ and he cast around for a way to broaden his work. Tiny utility has its fans PAPARAZZI But 18 users of gas company in Indiana get higher rates OGDEN, Ind. (AP)-When gas customers in the tiny town of Osden have a problem. they go right to the top - they call the president of the gas company. "'I have to be available 24 hours a day, 365 days a year," says Don Miller. president, sole shareholder and only full-time employee of Snow and Ogden Gas Co. Inc. "When people need heat, rm responsible for giving them all the heaMhey want." Mjller's company serve5 18 residential customers in Ogden, about 40 miles east oflndianapolis. It has two gas wells, one drilled in 1880 and another in 1940. and thrtt miles of pipeline. ' "To the best of my knowledge, it's the smallest public utility in the United States," said Miller. 50. a plumber .. David Park'• .. Bather With Knee Up .. ta part of "FUuratl•e Mode .. ezhlblt at Newport Barbor Art Mueum for Olympic Art. Fati....t. "In the '50s ... all pamters were trying to reinvent painting. It was JUSt after World War 11 and there was a feeling of squalor," he explained. Some artists saw a need to maintain control of their work in order to keep from being overwhelmed by despair. And, as he put his own ideas on canvas, "the bands remain as an anchonng element." Bluhm uses color and aesture the wa)'. a poet uses verbs and nouns. And 1s 1s far from being a coincidence. "I love poetry and I read a great deal of jt." said Bluhm. adding ihat many of his pamtmas were named by his fri~nd. poet Frank O'Hara. Like poetry, bis work 1s often a startling combination ofpa1nstakJng technique and flamboyant emotion. The impact of "Sunstorms" would be unbearable if the orange wasn't carefully relieved by yellows and greens. And "Jason's Voyage" 1s well named, because the hazy gold and white does convey both richness md movement. However, Bluhm claims that he doesn't have a way with words ... I caJI that one 'Jaded Silence'," he said of a stunning abstracted landscape. '"Tbat sounds like you're going into a Chinese ~W'&nt." It sounds fuppant until you talize that thealibassessment 1s precisely; Blu}:lm is trying to avoid. "Y C$, I thin v mist makes a statement. No ani na a painting -he parnts ... But Blubm's paintings -and those of the other artists in "Action/Preetsion" - can only be inkrpreted·~ a potnt. They are not vague. but rather deliberately open- ended. ··1 prefer my unknown to my known," said Bluhm. "If you really find the answer, then -,yhat the hell are you doio& here?" B I MONDAY. JULY 9, 984 ANNUNDER8ml CO.CIM BUSINEllM Protecto Of ducks honored Stamp recalls Darling WEST BRANCH, Iowa (AP) -For SO ~ears. eveiy waterfowl bunter in the nation has helped realix a former editorial cartoonist's dream of creatina "a puddle forevtty duck. .. The U.S. Postal Service last v.eek honored Jay N. .. Di~.. Darling's contribution to conservation and wildlife by i.ssuina a 2Ck:cnt P<>Staae stamp commemorat- in.J Darling's 1934 dmp for the first Fedtral MiJJ:atOf') Bird Hunting and Conservation stamp, wb1cb aJl waterfowl huntCf'S must buy.!'""-:'_,_ ___ __.~~~-- Proceeds from the fed- eral stamp, which is usually called the duck stanrp, have 1enerated some $284 million durina the last half. century. The money bas been used to purchase 3.5 million acres of wetlands habitat and create 187 na- tional wildhfe refuges and more than 100 waterfowl breed.inc areas. "I shudder to tbJnk bow little of that land there would be if Darling hadn't stepped in when he did. The best friend a duck ever bad -that was Jay Darlin&" said David Lendt, director of information at Iowa JAY DARLING State University and the author of a biogral)hy on Darling. Darling, who died in 1962. was an edilorial canoonist for the Des Moines Reaistct' in 1934 when President Franklin D. Roosevelt fapPcd bun to serve as chief of the Bureau of Biolos;ica.l Survey, the forerunner of the U.S. FISh and Wildlife Service. In his federal post, DarltOf battled poachen and toughened bunting season rqulauons. but his mos:t lastina contribution was his creation of a duck stamp to force buntcn to rcplerusb the supply of waterfowl · The first dude stamp was a pale blue etchiftf by Darling of two mallards in fbgbt. The etchin&, utlcd .. Mallards Droppina In," will be reproduced on the new 2Ck:cnt stamp. That first stamp cost SI and was a reqwred purchase for every waterfowl bunter an t~ nation. Toda)', all waterfowl bunters are still required to purchase a duck stamp. which now costs $7 . .SO. The drawtngs are done by anists chosen from a national competiuon. Last Tuesday, Presideat Reapn declared National Duck Stamp Week and accepted an etching of the orjginal stamp to mart the $0th anruversary of the federal wildlife conservation program. Kip Darling, a grandson of Darting, p "e the president the etcbina at a White House ceremony. at which this year's stamp was unvetled. h shows two Amcncan w\dgeons by artist Bill Moms ofMomsomery. Ala .• who~ de5ign was selected from among 1,582 entries. Ross Harrison, superintendent of information and education for the Iowa Conscrvauon Comm1ssaon, saJd (Pleue Me DUCD' /82) who bought the company in 1973. 1--__:. _______ ..;..;.;._~;::...,-- ''l'm governed by the same rules and regulations as Carol and Richard Flore turned out to honor Ralph Leatherby u did Ted and Joan Fuller with SylYl.a and Bob Mapel. Indiana Gas." Miller said last week from his office an Cadiz. That means that when he apphed for a rate increase. which he received earlier this year, be had to buy legal advertising in newspapers to announce the rate request. Then the PSC sent representatives from its accountina and enginecrina departments to inspect Miller's books and operation, said Grq Crider, an attorney who represents Miller. "He has all the problems and headaches of a m~or utility," sajd Don Engcrer, a member of the Indiana Public Services Commission cnaineerina staff. "But he's ktepina his system in aood shape ... Miller does the maintenance, meter reading and most of the bookkecpina for the utility. Last Christmas Eve, "when the wind chill was 60 to 80 below zero " Miller spent 12 hours thawina out the rqulators that control the flow of ps from his wells. On Christmas Day, he had to replace a frozen ps meter. ··1 don't take days off durina the winter," satd Miller. "I'm just a plain old country boy. I've aotta be outside where I can see what's aoina on -the snow. rairtand wind -but it took me until J was 40 to realize that." Even thouah Snow and Olden 1s showina a prc:>fit. its rates remain low. It cha~ SS".20 on the fint 1,000 cubic feet of ps and S~ per l.OOOcubic feet after that "It's 3S to 40 perocnt cheaper than Indiana Gu." said Miller. But Miller's market is shrinkina. He had 32 customen in 1973 when he bouaht the company. Now, houses have been tom down and customcn have moved away. leaving bim about 20 cus\omers most of the time, dcpcndina on whet.bet the)' are ~yina their bill . Miller 1 not one of now and den's customcn. sance he live outside it ranae. "ltco t m SIOOtohcat my house with hcatinao1l la t winter... Miller said Wlth a laugh ... And 1 own a aas company." Leatherbys double fun at 'Y' salute Julio Iglesias was seen ----but not heard at luncheon It was a a.rut niaht for the Leatherby family when the YMCA Federation held the first~vcr fund- raiscr at \Mnowly opened Emerald Hotel in Anaheim. Ral~ Leadte1'7,CEOofUnicarc Insurance Co., was the rccipie,nt oftbe first .. Friends of the YMCAAward,' whdclusson,R...,andwife won the evcnina's pand prize offi ve ni&hts at the Mau.na La.ni Bay Hotel oo the Bia I lana of Hawaii. Colette Jaciebt won \he ... noaial&ia" prirc of the ev ninawhcn hcapproechtidbaridladcrWMQ Hennuwithaphotoeraphofhimttlfthathc·hld autoaraphect for her in I 9S2 hc.n Colcuc qs a tudcnt at the Univet11ty of Oklahoma. He ilrccd to re-stan the photo, with the admonillon ... h. aoina to be a much shakier ianature al an l ter!" ~en Ray WatMllan4 Robert naorD bad tood reuon to be laappy at T buqut. •1 Amona those ancndina the black·tieevcnt ~ committee chairmen Tem idHll. Ra1 Was-and llobtn Fl .. r II; Tem and Ka~ Makolm (Kath)''s violetandro scquincddttu•-a thcprcttt t wn of the evcnina). J.._eand Ttm hea~SupeMsor TtmandEmmaJueRlley,ircllittellu(hc's d ianint thc new YM buildina in Newpon Bcac:h)and~ tlHll;Dortaan<lJaekii ~f.Jelli(f m lhcRS&aurantofthc me name) nd cant DelllM • )lvll and BM...,_, and the uu -llett,Grwe,I dlu4b..,,. 8arMRM8oom rch U'ltedthepen whi~ hu~ndJlm,dittetorofthcOra Coast Y . was in charge of the evening's program. Oh drat! J.UO lg· IHlu was at the lunch· eon. but he couldn't sang. He arrived at the Pnncess Restaurant in Los Anaeles following a d~ntal appomtmcnt .. He'lo'aSchann· Ln.J," said Dr. Beverly C. Mwsu. professor andc.hairoftbc ~ panrheut of Ped1atncs at UC lrv1nc. She was one of the 30 women from the Southwest ban& honored there by Bullock's for outstand- •na~nal. pro- fessaonal and volunteer achievements • • • "JulioandAqte DR.BEVERLYMORGAN Dickinson P"e us our "Be Bcautiful" av."ards-an cnaraved Orrcfors crystal bowl. Mme ts on my hereat UCI" ~razzii ttlitodb l)k 1tor with ronmbtJtion b} GlorU ZipJcr. J"' .. : .• D RANN LANDERS: Recently )'OU pnntcd a lener Crom a m n in Ten cssoe. Thewriterc:aJJed his ou1- of-wedlcx1tarandchilcl "•ht de ba tard." You labeled thearandf'1thcr .. lcadina ~ntcnder (or the Garbasc Mouth of the Year Award:• My trusty Webster's Dictionary deflnesa bastard as "an illegitimate child." and th t'swhat the tram I)\' dauahter brouatu home. So next umc, aet the faC1lill'&i&ht bef o~ you call someone a garbqe mouth. - MARIEINN.Y. DEAR MARIE: Accordia& to Uae ~ree dJctlourtes I coulllted, a bastard 11 lDdeed u oat-of-wedloct clalld. Ba& tile common Ha1e takes oa clearly pejorative overtoaer. .. obaos.· 1001," "1parloa1," .. debued" ud "of lDferlor qullty." hrt)ermore, I am 1are yH laave beard die word a1ed u a 1yaoaym for a ao-soodalll, a penoD or low cllaracter, a acoadrel. I doa't bow lf ~e daapter was a tramp. I do bow llae laacf a cllild oat of wedlock. Tbe mu wllo wrote was dlttctlDg bis anger al tbe lDDoceat cblld. Wblle tbe word "bastard" wu tecbalcally correct, It was Heel lD u ln1ullillg and degrading maDDer. In my book the mu Is still a garbage mouth. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS. A woman wrote that her Jogging. work- out-nut husband was so wrapped up in himselfand his body. he didn't have lime for the kids or her. She HELP YouRSELF A11 l.uDEIS wondered lfsheshould leave the -.maniac. I lhotJ&ht you'd bcdel- u.sed with let ten but I don't recall a 110gleone. I resolved the same problem years ago but the resentment lrngers. All the lonely hours came togetherond formed one bl.lge lump in my throat. When I reahzed this was aJI the~ was going to be I asked myself the famous Ann Landers questions: "Would I be better off Wlth him or Wlthout b1m?'' Coward that I was (and an insecure Catholic bestdes) I opted for "with bim." h 's been a sad hfe but the choice wasmme. Toobservcrs,oursappears to be a sohd mamage that produced six children but my hcan knows the truth and it hurts. I've come to the conclusion that too often the wrong people get together to start with. I can tell that lady from experience. tt's not much fun living with someone who's in love with himself. -BENN THERE IN BUF- FALO DEAR 8 .T.: It may be 1mall consolation, my dear, but at lu1t lt'1 ~· •n body lie'• preeecvplect wtda -ud 801 IOIDNM clJe ... P.....,.~M.mme4oa&fromtlle 91ealaallla. mue a poor mice, bit yoa 1&aye4 wlUa It l.IMI laad 1b cllhlrtt. So llllle ~e bat of It. Swallew Uae lamp ta roar tUMt ud ~era .. • ways C. eitCJact aome ulttfaetloa aM eve.Joy oat of Wt. Y Oii •oa•t hJ II•• ol• yoar ~•rea are bet U Ibey are aclolffttllh or 7oa1tt, &Mymeddareadatte11- &loa. lf Dad IJ preettepled poudlq ~pa•eaaeat Ud l"IJDPlDI lroe iHy ~•'t 1ettla& md from lllm. I llate to ..... nu. br.tea Nc:Ord bat"-'• coutl'y IJ petMttcallJ Qort of vola- &een. (NoiMMt)' wut1 to do uyQJ.a1 Wl&M9t,.)'uymereudlt'1aptty.) C.tact die RM Cr0s1, SaJvadoa Army, ,..r d111rc~. M•pllall, lilomes for~ qe4, UptMue for tbe BllDd, die vetau's Mlpltal. Tllere ll ao better way to pet mea.alat IDto )'Otlr ur~ tbu to llelp dlote wlilo are less fortaete. After alJ IJ ta.id ucl doae, tbe Oely tbbaJI we keep forever are die oJtet we give awn. • • • .. Sexual ITecdom .. presents• chf. ficult decisioQ for rtt~ and their parents. Ann LandetS offers down-to- earth ad vi~ in her new booklet, '"H,gh&hOQ/Sexand H ow to Dul With Jr-A Guide for Teens and Their Parents.'' For each booklet. send 50centsplusa Jons. stamped. self.addresM:d envelope to Ann Land- ers. P.O. Box 11995, Chicago, ll/. 60611. Raynaud's patients find warm climate beneficial DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I'm 36 and have been suffenng from Ray- naud's disease. We hve an Boston. Comfortable 10 the summer, I begin to feel bad as soon as the cold weather sets in. My fingers and hands get white and waxy I give up smoking and wear gloves when the weather changes. but so far, no help. I've asked m y doctor about PETEI Sn11c10H1 moving to a wann ch mate. He says he come by at his promised time to take doubts if 11 will help. Meanwhile. all I me home. I sat outside and my fingers can do is suffer through the wtnters. and feet must have been frostbitten. I My fingers tum blue, then become h · I Id h di white and red. My husband 1s willing was an sue great pain cou u Y walk. to move south. but I wonder 1f it's After marriage I lived 33 years m worth 1t Mrs. L Chicago and Raynaud's really hit me DEAR MRS. L.: I ad' 1se some hard. I have lived an South florid.a 21 Raynaud's pattcnts to tr) It. Often It years. Only once when the helps. Here's an example that 1n-temperature dipped to the low 30sd1d d1ca1es that warmth may prevent the my finger (ma.10ly the mtddle one on spasms 10 the blood vessels: the rif!t hand) and pon1ons of my DEAR DR. STEJNCROHN: l have "~e:l~ ~~nite hne of dcmarca- a theory that wcanng shoeskatcs that tion where the flesh is numb and waxy arc outgrown and too 0f:t can cause white wh~ the normal flesh color Raynuad's disease I'm 6 now, but m leaves off. I'm so glad to hve an South my late teens I used to go ice skaung m . Denver. Sometimes my father didn't florid.a. It has helped my anhnus, -----------~ too Mrs. R. Watch for Kids ~ /; UllITT llSUIAllCl C°t), ~ Non-smoker .,'a' ~ Rates cf!fb 831-n40 441 Otd ..... por1 Blvd. ..... por111Mcf1.Ca. • • • DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I am 25 years old and still suffer with acne. I have constant breakouts every week. I feel like a 16-year-old. ls there RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY, INC. F• the lest tf Yu Lh 1922 IWl8lll M.Wt .. COSTA El -541-1156 Early Bird Dinner Specials 16.9S Prime Rib or Fresh Fish T Complete Dinner with choice of ~.. soup or salad and dessert iiia~ 4 to 6 PM ~THE PENINSULA l •• ,. I W11k! BALBOA 801 E. BALBOA 673-7726 DONNY & MARIE OSMOND July 9 Monda)' 2 Show~ 7 cJnd Q PM LES BROWN &: the Band of Renown July IO Tuesday Dancing 7 to 11 PM anything I can do to help clear my skin? Could a dermatologist help? Ms.W. DEAR MS. W.: Why arc you so surprised? Acne can occur at any age. But there's surprise on my pan, too. How is it, suffering as you do, that you haven't asked for help from a doctor'? Like many, you mar still believe that ''nothing will help.· You 'II be happy lo know that many new drugs and treatments have broken down acne's stubborn re- s1stancc to improvement. My guess 1s that you'll be a happier woman afer a few visits to your family doctor or dermatologist . • • • DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I'm concerned about my young grand- child. Several times the past year she's fallen very hard and pa.sscd out. Her doctor said 1t was temper -holding her breath caused it. But several weeks ago it happened again. She was "out" for at least two minutes. The doctor prescribed phenobarbital. Is It possible she has epilepsy? Mrs. B. DEAR MRS. 8.: lt's possible. She'll need EEGs (enccphalograms) and other tests. Ask your doctor to refer her to a neuroloost. i' •• FOR MRS. 0 .: The only sensible way to lose is to be on a nutritionally sound diet. Otherwise, you can get into trouble. Whal do I think of your proposed diet of bananas and nuts? I'm not being "funny" at your expense when I say l recommend it only for monkeys. Better follow your doctor's diet plan. THE EASY SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR KDCM tDB.t FMSTERED Extra Smil PAY 1.00 AT TIME OF SITTING FOR A BEAUTIFUL 5X7 COLOR PORTRAIT • Reg 4 00 . No appotntmenl necessary JC Denne • Add t 00 fOt 2 Ot mott CMdren togethtf I I •One 5x7 portrait per child !Tom OflQNI pa~age •Select from 1 variety o1 poses and beckgr04Jn6s, THE PORTRAIT ITUOtO •See our ltlecllOn of mtny portrait packages t• At Portrait Studio Only: Sa\19 60% on M19cteo ponralf atudlo framt1 Offer valid July 101h through July 12th J.C Penney Co .. 2300 Harbor Blvd, Coat• Mesa. CA 91768 ' 10 00 • 1 00 2 00 6 00 Charge It on J C Penney, VISA or Mastercard ~MOVIE *** "The Roed WMtor'' (1981) Mel Qjblon, 8rucl Spence. ~ i CtlCAOO'I FNT MPORT CBEICOTT MOVE ** ''Hln'y T*Y'° (1882) 8rucl Dim. Hellr1 ShMr. """' ... I'° CartooDJat•aJa1 .. Dlna" Darlt.q•a O,ht for wjl4Ufe couenado• bu bMaD.oaored 1rltb anew pmtal 8tamp. DUCKS' FRIEND ••• homBl the federal duck stamp has pto'ICD such a success that stat~ bclan to issue their own venion1 in l 911 . .. Hunters don't object to (buyina) these stamps. They know that purchasina hcenscs are tbe only way they can auarantee that ... their_ re- sources will be con "'ed. Ha:mJOn said. . Oerbna used his canoona 1ynd1-~tcd to 130 new PIJ>tt'S Nat onwide by the now-de CU net New York Hera.Id Tribullt. to act the contcrvati~n me~ acros 10 Americana. While most of bis nearly 20,000 ~noon1 were pohtic~l 1n na•urc. DarhnJ was awarded h1111CCC>nd Pulilltr Pn1t in I YO tor 1 canoon with a ~nscrva· lion theme. Lcodt said Darhna wu "lS to 40 ye.an a.bead of bis lime·· WJlh has contetV1tion t>fTorts. "Oaflina used the exprcuion ·a puddle for cverY duck' in cor- respondcnco to friends.. Thete were the daya when people were talk.in& about a car in every llfllt, a chicken in every pot. Dirlirij blew if the ducks weren't healthy, the ecol~l balance we out ofwhadc and in t1mt. cverythina would ~ aono -you could foraet the prqe_. lhe car, the chicken. you could '°"" ever)·· lhina." andt said. Heeere•a •..• who? Johnn1 Canon cloean 't look much lllle hla aue.t, Tom Jonee (aboTe), deeptte ht• open-ehlrt •tyle, bat be \toa a better job lmpenona~ Willie 1'e190n in a duet with Jullo1 fCle.IU (below) on a par of recent Tontibt Show Prot:r&m•· MTV carries ads for rival rock network LOS ANGELES (AP) -The USA Network. seek.ina to lure viewers to its "Night Ai&ht" rock video show. is runnin• ads on rival MTV: Music Television. ProclaiminJ that "Night fli~t" is "more than JUSt music television," the JO.second spots show a viewer getting up and switctung channels. "I believe this is the first time this type of campaian is being done anywhere," USA Network spokes- man Jamie Padnos says. THE MOST POWERFUL LEGEND Of All IS BltCK IN A NEW ADVENTURE. -,!!~ or..slLu mo. • NOW PLAYING MN9 -... P'IOlc s ,,,.,,_,. Eo.atOI ~ MIC OrW101 Mal °"""'~ ~,, 637~ COITA... .,_ ~ ~ hlal E-0. WllCdlrlllfl UA CC, C.-. ~74" 0.-561-c.M 13'.Jil I B. TOii> LA 11Aa WUlmaTfA E""'9* SIOdlllllOI MIC f ..... ._.. l'lotc I Ho-Wlf • 511.sllO •t-41D °""' "' ., .. POWT• VAWY ~,__Vally I» '500 mi UA *'-99Mtl22 HOLt:YWOOD (AP) -For actor Pat Monta. kno-..n to television audiences " Amold on "Happy Da~s." it's taken S2 yean to land a m~or movie role, but then the Japanete·Amencan entertainer is used to bei°' a late bloomtt. Then at l I he finally learned to walk, only to face new hant hjp; orld War fl. He U) that a "well0meanin1 FBI aacnt .. esconcd l.lm from the hospital to an internment camp with other Japanese Americans. Morita, cn\jcally acclaimed for his ponrayaJ of the mentor, Miyagi, 1n the new movie, "The Karate Kid," was stricken at aac 2 with spinal tuberculosis and was hospitalized for the nut pine years. Jn a way, Morita .ayi. his illness made the camp experienc:e Jess harsh on him than on othen. . The actor says he s~nt seven of those years lyina pTOoe 1n a body cast. .. When one adjusts oneself to beina 11 years old and just ecstatic to walk and be with my parents, whom I never knew, suddenly that big bad out ide world couldn't mean a whole Don't Miss The Party! "Chiotic, Shameless and wetJ funny." ---(lllrt ClllQOf 51111 l NOW SHOWING -~ttWDt 639·8770 Stadium Or-In AIWOt 772-6446 Brookhurst BREA 9~021 UA Movies 4 COSTA EA 979-4141 ·Edwar4s Cinema Center COSTA MESA 751·4184 Edwards Town Center IVINE 854·8811 Edwards University LAGIN talS 768·6611 Laguna Hills Mall and the OW& 637-0340 AMC Orange Mall C.MGE 63.4·3911 UA City Center WESnmtSTO 895-5333 UA Westminster Twin WDTWISlU 891-3693 Pacific Hiway 39 Of-In 1f tl M FllrlJ C!Jlf @{fj}l(}Jfllw NOW PLAYING A PAR.UOml P(IURl -~- "'' L~l• 1\.,\. ,,~ ....... ..__. ·-=·· SIX-TRACK [l]IDOLBV STtREDr PRESENTATION • ...... WllJo • WlSTMICSTDI f-~ll"!lll Eo.l'OlV-,..,,tU ..... •'l!S l220 119 1l3S .,.,....<e:at"Ut-o-' .. ,......_ ..... ~ .,.r"'TD''"'m-- lUXURY THIATRfS \&''ALK· INS * Fin1 Two MirunH Sllow•• * yy, ONLY SUS Ulllm Netn eurt Reynolds CANNOflaALL RUM It (PG) Sllows •t 1 2:50 3:0f 5:25 7:45 10:05 Robert Redford THE NATUllUU. l'PQ) Sllows 1t 12 :OS t :40 S.20 1:00 .. 10:30 TOP SECRET (PG) Sllows 1t 12,10 2:10 4 10 1 :10 1 :10 - .. 10:10 CUlllUINS (PG) SllOINS 1t 12:30 3:00 S :JO 1 :00 a. 10:30 No Pines Blt~r{:.Lm Aykroyd C RS(PG) Shows at 12:25 2:40 4:55 7·:>5 9·50 70MM IMOIAllA ~ a Tiiie T ..... 9' .... (PG) SllOWI It 12,00 2:30 S:OO 7:30 a. 10 00 No P'lllll / 70 MM «;i rE£1\ U ;I 2 J r.:.~H ~ =: ..... i.. ) nc "°" °" ••a.1 WMICH Vlu.A~ (IQ STAil T•aK Ill Tiie . . . s-'Cll FM ---(N) 12.00 4.10 8.15 Sllows 1t 12:30 2 :30 16 candle9 (PG) 12:00 S:OO 7:30 10:00/70 MM 4·10 & 8:15 ORIVE ·INS :~~ STADIUm ~ sn.UTS CW l'llta (ftl) Plus Co·Hlt 8r11gl11' (PG) Dolly ~1rton Sylnller Staton• ltNtM:SiOME IN) Top Secret (~~) GaDIUINS (PG) Phu Never Sav Never At11n (PG) No PHH\ STAil THK Ill TM s.tdl P:M s.edl (PG) ,..u, Firefox (PC) D•rryl H1nn•ll ~(f'G) Sl•llll' C1l'dlu (PC) .. lot \0 me," Monta ,-. Followang the 'NV. M rita wot'Ud th computcn and didn't try to bttak into show busnlCSS until be wu about 30, bqinnma 11 • 'taftd.up comic at a Japanese niabtdub in Sari Francisco. In lbeJCttenctedi1 for""Tbe Karate Kjd," Morita -who ado~ ~ name Pat years aao -.-reverted 10 h11 ruJ fir11 oamt. Noriyuki. "I wan~ to honor my fatber'Ud mother," be '*Y'· .. Unfonuna1ely 1hey didn't quate live Iona eoouati to see their Nonyuk.i accomplilb any· thin.J in life. l f.\Je$ 11·1. a way of pa}'lDI a small tnbute, •>'•~ thanb lO them." • "Th ln•ll• -Jn • rt. .,, .. ,,,,, ,.,,,. ,,,..,.,, _,,,,, 7,.,.,.,, nMI GtEMLiNS IPGI (\ AIWDt 639 8770 0. TORO 581 5880 ~ 63-4-2553 Stadium Dr·ln Edwards Siddltback C1nedome ~ 99()·4021 tllfllliTON BEACH 848-0388 WDWTO 891·3'93 UA Movies 4 Edwards Hunt1naton Pacific Hiway 39 Dr· COSTA MESA 631·3501 ~ HBA (213) 691-0633 -.StmGltl 891·31J5 Edwards Harbor Twin AMC Fashion ~uare Edwirds Ctnema West •cosu rEA 7514184 MISSION VD> 495.5220 ._ 551-0655 Edwards Town Center Edwards Mission Yte10 Mal Edwards Woodbridle • DOL8Y STEREO The popa>m~ In.,..~ The nucs .. on dae 9CIWL WIEJl 119-9151 El TOii Sll·Sllt ... 04-2553 PACIFIC ANAHEIM DR·IN EDWARDS SAOOLEBACK CKD<*E 110 tto-4121 1m1£ aswau una • s.tt-ltM UA MOVIES 4 EDWARDS llWF.RSllY EDWARDS BRISTOL COSTA IW tlt-4141 U mulA SU.1111 IESIWID .._. EDWARDS CINEMA CENTER SRO GATEWAY 5 UA WES1WCST£R 11!1:!: wtSTlllSm • PACtfC HIWAY 39 OR.f4 • 891-3693 NOW PLAYING 70MM How did USA &Ct MTV to run the ads? It dido 't. But MTV inducies local cable services to offer lhe channel by aiving them ad time to sell, and USA 1-------------...:._----------------------------i simply went to the local operators in the 30 largest markets and bought the time from them. "We have no comment on this whole thing," an MTV spokesman says. ln•ex•pen•1lve • •11n lk epen' 1lv) not high In price: reuoneble. cllMifled ......... •dv.rllllng -· ..... Classlfled Advertising 6<42-5678 ..,... .. _..al ......... "'-cy. ............................ ................ I I fl'••• Joe.• -i.-.1 ......... ~T ...... .~ -......... ................. ., .. ---~ --~....,, ........ -... , ... ~ ... - --WI Ira .......... , .... Ollila ... ........ UN914 ·--·-- I • NEWPORT BEACH • 10 .. ' lMCll OOllY $lllll0 .._.-SlM IOfl( Of DOW' ('N) I IS llO 600 llO 104S 10 1111116 rtACK SIElllO '11M nDll:M SMCll FGI woc:a· <NI ..._ IOOJOQSQOllSUO f-*:I lWollo.t(llPC'I-• •gmu· (I) 100 •oo 1100 • • SO COAST PLAZA • !!!..at&. lOP 1lCllr cPCl ''""' H S I JO '1ll IOlll twlr.S 'IAClllOI l'tlfr (I) •llloon 100 t IS .._ .... •..01 • COS TA MESA • "°''"'' ·-5«-ll02 HARBOR TR ·--Ul J~l HiliBOR f w~ ...... -illl~l ._ .. ,. ..... • > • -..01.-(N) 6~ IOlS *llf .... ·~ OOllY Sl!llfO .. M UM1t 1r ('N) S IS I 4S ID IS -·crc1 6t'O l IS 10 IS • LAGUNA BUCH • ~~CO.!.~ .. -~ ttM7ll SOOTH COAST • El TORO • SAOOlEBACK \0 •• , ,, (t '•• •• ~l~IO • ror llCllT" C"Sl ll t~ HS t45 ,\0 '~ 10\0 su••ttt SAOOl£8ACll M POPI Of 01.,,, ~~ti) I ••••• 100 JI~ \JS l lO ion ~•1 ~o su••* SAOOlCBACll CaM M EllO!r 10 '•• • IZ ~ 111 t i\ I • ... '}I; ~ ~ 10 JO l"I ~I ~to lHnttt SAOOlCllACK ' .... . . , .. . ~I~ SADDUBACll '\D ••1 •' n f•t •• ~I~ SAOOl.£8ACll ~ ... , .. fl ••••• ~I~ c.woaM1•r I!~ l JO 4 ~ ~·= l'\.l 1100 '"l $2.W • ltl vosi.1t11· tf'l 1110 ~ Jt\ St\ II'" • SU••He .... "'' I !<: l tS 400 ~I~ l.IO 10•; • MISSION vruo • Vl:IO TWIN '' . ., .. ,. ,., ci ....... 1)0'"° VllO ·~ , ...... .. , .. ~. IJO "'° vtiO MAll ,. f ., '• c-·-mmo VUI MAH '"SI•-·· IUIOl ftl ftCI" CPCI u• ais '"~ "lW SECl£Tr (PS) l2 30. 2 35. HO. U~. 9 05. II I~ loMIRAOA ~ -.. . . "IAClllm PUTT" (I) l2 40, l 05, s JO ·~· 1025 "HOT(I("" ('PC) lll I ~ "fOOnoosr (PS) U~ H~ lttt "'$l • ll.al ....... f'I) 111 1'• ...... ..... !.,.Siii f• fnl tw .._ Giit IUO, t~ ~-1.lt ltte ~n. S(CEr' ) 12 30 2 ~. 4 40. 6 •S • 8 ~ lOSS *PACIFIC DRIVE-IN THEATRES• Fountain Volle-, ~L!.U; -· . . &cJT £VtRVfMINO' 'fMA'T COOL&'> ~~18LY HAPPEN 'TO YOU MA!I ALRE.APY MAPPf.Nf P T H E FAMILY CIRCUS BIG GEORGE by Bil Keane .. . . , . • , .«· •• " . 1_, 1 by Gus Arrlofa by Jim Davis by Virgil Partch (VIP) ( : BRIOGl -~ CHARLES GOREN Q.J-EuL·Wf'tt vulnerable, a1 South you hold: •t c:::>AXQ87f! 0 953 +tt Partner opens Lbt bidding with one club. What do you reapond'l A. -There ia a possibUiLy your· aide can make alam, which 1ur1uta you ahould start with ooe heart. However. we take a more practical app~ch. and think you should bid lour heart.. Partner needs a perfect hand for you to make 1lam. Againll that, there is the pos1ibilit.y ht hu a minimum opening bid and the hand ac. t.ually belong• to your op- ponents at a spade contract. The jump to game, in that case. could make It almost impossible for them Lo enter the auction. Q.2 -Both yuln1rable. as South you hold: WEOCLY l&IDGE QUIJ hu the t'JtaCl carda you need •J7n Qt OK816S +Jt5 Cor It. We don't fault you one The biddln1 ha• prOCffded: bit f ,yov dfclded to l.ap to. Nutt. Eut Soat• . aix spade . However. we t • DWe 7 sllrhtly (avor the •lower ap-WhaL action do you take'/ proacb of ulclnf for a~a. JI 4 .-Not only do you have a pattner ahowa two aeu in hand with little Jn the way of respoOM, confirm you hold defentt. but your lenrth In all the a~es by a.king ror spadH could detract from kinga. That ml1ht puL part-partner'• de(ensive poLen· ner in the position or being tlal. Jump to three 1padea. able to bid a irand alam. Over the take.out doub~. thia Q.3-As South. vulnerable, action 11 preemptive. you bold: +48752 OAKSS •AK72 Partner open• lhe biddin1 wiLb three hearts. What. do you bid now'/ Q.$-Both vulnerable. as South you hold: +QeS <::1 872 OJ7f2 •731 The bidding has proceeded: W eet Norila Eut Soat• J NT Obie P ... 7 What. action do you take? A.-lt ls aeldom right Lo tell a player never to do tom• things. but here's a piece or advice you can bank on: I +Q763 c:::>KQ85 0 4972 +A The bidding has proceeded: A.-First of all, we are definitely going to play the band at hearts: the question is only at what level'! Even if partner's hand ii u good u seven lo the A ·K Q. he raies to have one loser in the side suits and one trump. possibly two iI things break badly. We are going to be craven and settle for a mere four hearts. You might consider jumping to five hearts lo invite part- ner Lo bid a slam if his suit is solid, but if he doesn't.accept you are probably overboard. Never pull partner's double of a no trump bid on a weak balanced hand. U you don't think that partner en taJce seven trick• on defense. bow can you expect lo make eight tricka on offense without ruf· fing value1? Partner has told you he expect• t.o defeat one no trump. Believe him and Nerti! Eut 8Htll Weet 1 NT Pa• 2 • Pa• 2 o P ... ? What do you bid now? A. -Although a gTand slam might be in the offing. we don't know how you can discover whether partner SHOE Q.4-Neither vulnerable. u South you hold: ! et~ CMfCK QJT 'TME ~E~ NEW~ .. ),.. -'~ ~ c~ic+< •. -. r. ' .1'' pass. "I guess he's juat not • joiner." Q.t-£11t•Weat. vulnerabl· H Sou~h 1~q holdi + 7 O 483' O An0'7e--.ct'8 The biddinc haa proeffded: to~ W ett Nertll l':ut l <> ow. l <> , ... ' What action do you take:.' A. -From partner'• action. eeena clear the hand belon1 to 'jour opponent., ft onl becauee they own the majc suits. &iat the level by bit ding thrM diamonda. That 1 not an attempt Lo get t game, but rather an effort L dlscouraie Weit. from con t>etlng acaln. The three-leve could be a lit.tleo uncomfo• table for him . Have yoa beea naaa1q u to doable trouble? Le CM.rlea Gwe• belp yo. flD your ••1 tln ... tlte •u ef DOUBLES fw peMltk ud cak ... t. Fera e.,7 ef ~ DOUBLES M.klet, M D •t.85 .. "G ..... -o.u .... can of tMe ... .,.,.r, P.(J Bo.a 259, Norw.... N.J 076'8. Mab da~ payabl t.o Newapa~ by Jeff MacNell~ "Guess what Kittycot's got in her mouth?" M ARMA DUK E by Brad Anderson DENN IS T H E ME NACE "Uh-uh-no water polo games today!" MOON Ml:LLl ~S P EANUTS TUMBLE WEEDS I I .... - oH> You! l CANTAKe:A MINT AS W~LL /JS ,ANYBoDY, BUT THIS IS GOING TOO F~ ... V4 AAU6M ! I CAN'T ST~MC> IT!! ' Hank Ketcham •RUFF LIKES 0/ER~. BUT lbr Il:x; JUST OON'T GIVE A HCXrr. " by Ferd & Tom Johnson GET You~ 700LBo)( OFF MY MAk'EUP /r...~ IAS'l-E ! --~~~~~~~ ....... LUCY, WMY DO vov Pl.AV THIS 6AME? by Charles M. Schulz 11 61~LS JUST WANT TO MAVE FUN '' by Tom K. Ryan BRABBLE 6o6.'f~ OUlK KNOW~ 1 ~U~l' M'I ANKLE ~ ~E eR\~~ Mt lOOKlf.~~ l~t(T nv~i 1"00lHIM(,'? by Kevin Fagan FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston OH .. I GUeSS U£.LL IS IHRf ONE WR{,GIR I ORRElOfW? HAVE HIM Bf'tCK F UNK't' WINKERBEA ~ by Tom Batiuk DR.SMOCK SAY, ANN, PO we HAVE! Ne.CK e>oL-15 FOR A 19~6 N\ONS'f"6R? I SUPPLY I J UDGE PARKER -1WE 'LOOK,fM .ONEHAMD'~­ A DRAMA1lC. FL.OORl&H 5(.t)4 P6 1Ml5 I~ A MUST FOR. '™E ~~IRE. OF fH) AIR GOrP%Rl51 ~ HI~ SAL.I. ~I~ f N~IRIN(; f'IO.Jf. IJ&UAU.(,> l~DICA1'Eb A Hl&HPOIITT OF l~IW AND I A~ 5lV4 I 500UL.D B€ c.ALJ..ED 00 SPARINGW.~ 1t> UMf'f ~ u~ OF rr 10 OOL..c..> ~Int,) OR 51XW 11ME5 A ccn:.e:rrr ! by George Lemont WEN AeeeY Teu.s ~M A80UT HEP\ TALK WITH eOTH SHE ,4.l..50 SAlO THAT &-E WANTED YOU TO TAKE HER eACt<. TO SCHOOL eeFORe FIVE euT YOU INSts-fE'D SME 60 TO --DINNER WITH YOU 1 by Harold Le Doux MEANWHILE, CARLA'S FA'n-tEJI' HAS AA!'\IVEO 1'T THE SCHOOL l DO NOT KNOW HIM WHAT DO 'l'OlJ KNOW F'lilltSONALLY, M" Ae()VT THE ~E,_ eeNAOICT ... 9UT HE ~ MET MV MAS AN l!XCELLENT THE HEAOMl9T"es5 ANO 9V$11!. HE IS STUNNaO eY 'TME &eRIES OF wee TOLD ev CARL.Al OAU(;HTER lN "!PUTATIONf TOWN, Ml99 Tf;MPL£TON • • I I !, II y r r- s D D ,. it ~ e I I t .. • Industry leaders pay tribute to Thomas Nielsen Southern California construction industry leaders honored Thomas H. Nielsen, president of the Irvine Company, at a m~or dinner ben- efittiDf the City of Hope Medical Center and Beckman Research ln- ititute. A native of Fullenon, Nielsen was presented with the ''Spirit of Life" award from the Oransc County Construction Industries Alliance for the City of Hope by honorary dinner chairmen John D. Lusk and Gen. William Lyon, both former honorees. Lusk, chairman of John D. Lusk & Sons, Irvine, is the Alliance president and Lyon, chairman and chief ex- ecutive officer of the William Lyon Company, Newport Beach, is the current president. Five hundred in- dustry leaden attended the black tie aala at the Newport Beach Marriott Hotel. endowment chairmen were James M. Peters of J.M. Peters Co. in N~n Beach and Ronald R. Foell of Standard-Pacific Corp. in Costa Mesa. COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Co111puter firlll 111ov·~...,.__ offices t o Irvin e Able Computer JIU _.. 75.11• square feet of indUArill ...... their new COfPOQ.l.e beadQum • The Irvine lndusui&I ~­C05UI Mesa.~ 10 • Ellis Commercial~ an.., Able Compuler's ~ • I m 111 spans a scven-yur period. :willa dlll total transaction amowuilll IO Ill> proximately SS millioo. · 'lk c:om-- pany was represcoicd by bra'°' Ronald McDorWd. John Sulbeftlal and Brad Schroth of Grubb ct ~ Newport Beach offioe. Able Compoter, designer Md manuf.actum-of commuoM:attoel systems, Ynll move frocri' its Plaad corporate headquantrs in lrviw W SepL I. The buildina. Which is be~·Qllo' tom«sianed t)y Birtcher Pacific. Will feat u.\-e a 1,000-square·foot auditorium, modUlar wOrt anm, Ud expanded pilot uaembly faciJitie&. The "Spririt of Life" is the most pttSt.!fious honor given on behalf of the City of Hope. The construction industry bas been a major contributor to the medical center and research institute which conducts propams of care rendered without charge to the patient, scientific research and medi- cal education in the mlJor diseases such u cancer and leukemia. A Who's Who of the industry were in attendance includina Karl 0 . Beraheer of the Berabeer Company, E.G. and James Warminaton of Warmington Homes; Pat Poss of Poss Constructors, Harriet Frizelle Harris of Ridgewood Development Inc., Roland Osgood of Irvine Pacific Co., Donald G. Zellner of Zellner Com- munities, Inc., Kathryn G. Thomp- son of~ & C Properties Inc., Kenneth Lcvantbal of Kenneth Levantbal & Co., Jack Hartung of Ponderosa Homes, Phillip J . Reilly of Mission Viejo Co., RandaJl E. PresJey of Presley Companies, Anthony R. Moiso of Rancho Mission Viejo, Erich Goodbody of Wells Fargo Bank and Ralph Smith of Western In- surance Associates. Niel!CD. whose career includes two years as assistant secretary of the U.S. Air Force for Financial Manqement in Washington D.C., was recognized for his service with the postina of the colors by an honorauard from March Air Force Base, Riverside. Oen. William Lyon, left, and Geoqe Luk flank Imne Co. Preetdent Tbomu 1Hel.8en and hi.a wife, llarllyn, u Jlflelaen recei•ee the 8plrlt of Life from the <>raoce Coanty Comtnletion lndaatrlea Alllance for the City of Hope. Grubb & Ellis Compay it mt lar&nt indcpendeDt, pubtidy. held real estate services fii"m in tbc United States with a network of 64 oftioei nationwide. Joining in the a~plausc for Nielsen and his wife Marilyn. were John B. Parker of Equidon Companies in Irvine and Henry T. Seaentrom of CJ. Seaentrom & Sons, Costa Mesa. Journal chairman was Joe Manin of Martin Advertising in Tustin and Nielsen bcatQc president of the Newport Beach based company in January 1983 followina four years as senior vice president and one year as vice president in charge of the company\s community development division. The Irvine company owns, develops, mananges and farms 68,000 acres in the heart of Orange County..known as the Irvine Ranch. The City of Hope Medical Center and Beckman Research Institute make free care and lifesaving research available to patients with cancer and leukemia, bean, blood and lung diseases; diabetes and other heredi- tary and metabolic disorders. Ad- mission is by . referral from phys- icians, hospitals or health qencics. Computer problem• prevented today• a atock transmiuion **THEMOST ** ,, 0 0 COLUMI INTHE WORLD! .... ~ .. lll ttM~llCOln· n1e114lt . IOll'I••"•'•· ton1eone l\H -~ ...... IMI~ "'"-..... 0t of· ....... -..YflfttM~tiaeftlle .,.., ........ ,._(. ... ~~ ~ OW~,.....wlf\IMMlp --,... ..... eneii ...,._ .. ,.... .....,...., ... ........,. ... ._ ........ _... ........ .._.,..._.....,.. CLASSIFIED ••• llllJPllt . 842-5878 NEW YORK <AP) -The followltl9 llst lhO WI lhl 0vfr-th1 -Counter 1tod(1 and warrant• that hlYI QOnt UP ttie moat and dl<YW~thl moat ~ on Plf<:ent of Frldav No secur~"frJ ng bek>w s2 or 1000 11\arn are 'I~ ft: and !*'cent~ dlllnees arJoJhe g~ r>r~ .~'rrT:v·• 1as1Pf,Td~1ce. 119 9 10 u 1' lS lt ll Pct. n Up 20.0 I UP 167 8~ 1t4 4 Up l ~ Up I :6 UP l ,6 Up 11 l Ko~ MICCPI Rlldvn un CtvFd pf VII ram 81TchG' lnRObo U8kS8 Waxmn ~~w Summa CrftHou Patte11 Peek Pk ~pf RamteJt Seellnc Name The Great American Great loans. Great rates. And a great $100 cash rebate if you act now! ~s ' • GREAT LOANS. It's summertime. And ii the livin' is easier than ever with a loan from Great American. loans for cars, boats, RV's, mobile homes, even airplanes. Loans for installing pools, spas, or patios. Home improvement loans, vacation loans . "':': most any loan you need for Great American summertime living. GREAT RATES. Phone today to di!>cover our low rates and ••• affordable terms. Choose a 8 8 8 •• •• • · ' competitive, fixed-rate loan. 8 Th. •••••••••• Or our new Controlled 8 ' COUJ>on Entitles Se Variable Rate, which 8 •rer to• combines the best of 8 both fixed and variable 8 rate plans. Either way, : you'll enjoy this summer 8 more with money to 8 spend ... including an 8 • extra $1X> cash rebate if • you act now. Call today! • • • I Phone toda r • ~et details y. 8 and todan rates: Cut out this valuable : Orange Counfy coupon for your $100 • <Call co11:•634 • cash rebate! • '••• • •••••••••••••••• : Creat American --First Savings Bank lUllH ~ lS.S 'Uion in A • Mott th.In 120 of ' ' ' On the -----~ I I , • • Dow JoNES AvERAGES , .. . . . . . ..,, ... Advanc.d OedlMd ¥nc;ntno.d otallnu•• New lllOhS New low• Nam• l Guardnln 2 EAL wtO 3 HRTlnd n I ~.ReolsCP s:r;,~·3~, · fi''icldl Sir st ennt. IL o PfX 11 Aleen Inc 1 Amrep Corp 1 Cook Unit 1 ~ILCo pfV 1! Y~acLd 'l vaftroEnr ~ AIMo~"f. s i ~Hiii an ~ l~tf,pf n Vallev "fnd Ster1rig8na:i Mar nu cen.;1111nv NatSeml $ Na mt 1 Gearlllnd 2 RB Ind 3 MuwvF 4 FalrCom 5 NutrlSvs 6 Pan Am 1 Beker Ind ~ Anixter WlnterJa k l Homestd~ln n l McOrmlnl wt 12 tmpCpAm 13 Alrbn Frt 'i Conw Pow 1 Wstn Union l TOKOCP 1 PanAm wt 18 SwstForesl 19 r:ortd Alrw i ransc9Eng entrnOala ATI~P KanebSvc Loferpe n ! PSNH J.4Se>fG WHAT AMEX Om NEW YORK (AP) JUIV 9 AMEX LE AD ER S l ' tt .. • • • • PrtY. dell~ J~ and nat cllanoe o ht most active Arnerlc;an Stock E xellano. iuuu, trading nallona llv a t more ttian s1 ~~me~r!~a ~·,l: 2J:.! -.,.. Gulf an g l ¥, lh~ -~ Hou llTr 4, 611'1 -~ Oel!M<I I. ~ -Vt Anthem s l~, 1 ~ + '-" TIE comm ~ 1 'h -•t. NHamp 88 1 · 54:.; +21~ Amdalll 11 -Vt iffi}11J!llljjMlllifl NEW YORK. (AP) -Most active OVf[• -Illa-counter stocks SUJ>Plltd bV NASO. Name Volum 81~ A•ked Cl'IG. MCI s l,4ft' ~ 6tilt -~ convgl 1 , l \\ lf!• -~ ~~d ~ 1: 1 lm~~ 1 s-n t 1 ~ A:~°§ m: 2 ~ 2lv· + i ~v,~if Yi: I >4 li~ + V. IK 279 I ~ 1 ¥1 -14 CllvFt<I 26',IOO ~ 1' + 11.'t Go Lo Quo TES M ETAL S QuoTE S That's an apt description of both business and bus iness people along the Orange Coast. To kee2 track of where companies are going and which people are h elping them get there, just watch ·credit Line' -everyday inttie Bustness section of your new llilJ P• .... Abad-boy? Not McEnroe He keeps his cool and lets racquet do the talking WIMBLEDON, England (AP) - As he lifted the impressive Wimbledon trophy high above his head, John McEnroe smiled and the packed, sun-drenched Center Coun crowd smiled with him -perhaps more than ever before. For the third time in his glittering career, the 25-ycar-old New Yorker came, saw and conquered his foes on the grass of the All England Oub. But this time, there were DO antics, no tantrums, no rudeness. His bad-boy image seemingly be- hind him, McEnroe's only weapon was his loosely strung. green and black. mid-size rack.et. , It proved deadly. "I think all the constant talking about my behavior when I came over seven weeks ago was unfortunate and unfair," said a relaxed J.P. McEnroe in the interview room in the bowels of the All England Oub after winning the trophy and a cooU.149,000. "I came here to try to be the best tennis player I can and hopefully people will see that now." and overwhelmed Jimmy Connors 6-1, 6-1, 6-2, in the most one-sided final since World War II -without q_ucryina one line call and without a smgle word to umpire David Mercer -dispelled that theory once and for all. He may not have made the crowd lauah a la Connors or Gerulaitis. But that's not McEnroe's war. The only entertainment he provided came when racket and ball connected in perfect hannony. There were the usual warnings and fines -Connors for un- sportsmanlike conduct. Lendt for verbal abuse. But. for once, McEnroe stayed out of trouble and got on with what he docs best -winning. ''I could have disputed a lot of calls but 1 decided to let my tennis do the talking." McEnroe. clad in T-shirt and jeans, told the Wimbledon press corps. It certainly spoke its mind as Connors -and all who went before him-werecrusbed by the defending champion's all-court game. McEnroe, the fint American since Don Budge in 1938 to successfully defend his title, stayed calm io the final. Last month at the French Open. hc-ttrsf control and paid a severe price when he managed to lose to I van Lendl after pulverizing the Czech in the opening two sets. , ...... ,11 Biii 8uch8n win• the Baxter Bowl to hlghllaht . •rM ulllng. C2. DeRuffnarigates some rough waters, becomes ·01y111pJan BJ ROOD CAIU..SON °' ............. As Y~ Berra will tell you. -it ain't over 'til n's over ... ' Dave DeRuft a product o( New- port Harbor Hiab and a member of the Uniled States Olympic rowing team, can confintt ·1uch thou&l'lt$ - after teamina with John Strotbeck of New Jersey to record a stunnin& victory in the challensr races recent- ly. "We were both last-minute cuts," says DeRufT, .. and yes. 1t hurt. Our coach. Kris Korcn1owsk.i (whose de- cision it was to So with others) recommended that we row together because he recogmz.cd our styles were similar, not that we bad that arcat a chance of winning the tnals." DeRutT and Strotbcck were beaten in their first beat, but at still wasn't over, and the followma day qualified for the semifinals wtth a victory in rcpechage. then stunned the same team th.at wtuppcd them in the opener, clockina 7:0 I for the 2,000 meters. The camp boat was beaten down the stretch when DeRuff screamed at his partner, "We can catch ~ we can catch them!" • With 25 strokes left it was even, then the camp boat faded. ..We knew they were fast." recalls DeRuff. ... But we decided not to race them in the fint beat because we bad more ~ comin.g.. ln rct.rospect, it was a smart move because we didn't show what we bad. Dan!DeRaft So DeRuff bas made tbe pade for t.br Olympic Games Cbesinnina July JO at Lake Casitas) and with it comes the satisfaction. .. I slept fine thtouah the Ythole week of raciJ1&. I -was ~calm. But afterward. -ell. I didn•t sleep for two nicbts. I wenl to bed tbal n.isbt ad just layed their and Aiied." says the 21-ve:ar~ The theory that the attorney's son from Doualastoo needed to rant and rave to fire himself up for the big occasion bad been bounced around from tournament to tournament ever since he came on the scene as a brash young upstart. But the way McEnroe outfought With the temperature over 100 on court -and a cool 88 in the shade - every ounce of energy was needed against Connors, and McEnroe knew it. By coincidence, last month's French final also took place on a (Pleue eee llcltNROE/C2) John McEnroe bolda ap hi.a reward for Wimbledon Ylctory. When we went Oying by th«;r didn't really have a chance to rcaCL .J' Aft.Cr. tbe trials. . Korzcniowsld came up to me and aid. 'You tnow Dave, sometimes rt•s aOod to be cut.• ~ -l>ealJn/CS) One sweet return for Joe Altobelli SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Joe Altobelli is returning to Candlestick Park a lot happier than be left it. He'll be wearing a World Series championship ring for baseball's S5th All-Star Game Tuesday night. AltobeUi said as he prepared to leave the Orioles, now third in the AL East, and assume his AIJ.-Star duties. Gwynn, Darryl Strawberry and Ryne Sandberg. back into the orgam.zation where he learned to manage and things went arcat forbim," says Johnnie LeMastcr, one of the few current Gtants who played under Altobelli. The Baltimore Orioles' manager. who will be in charge of the Amencan League team, hasn't been to Candlestick since late in the 1979 season when he was fired by the San Francisco Giants. The NationaJ League club gave Altobelli his first managing job in the big leagues in 1977. The American League broke an embarrassing I I -year losing streak in last summer's All-Star game, pounding out a 11-3 victory. The 1984 squad includes seasoned All-Star ~ormers such as George Brett, Jim Rice, Rcgic Jack.son, Rod Carew. Eddie Murray and Dave Winfield, along with yOUl!J.er stars like CaJ Ripkin Jr. and Mike Boddicker. The pitching talent includes 19-ycar- old ~t Gooden, the New York Mets' stnkcout ace who is the youngest player ever selected for an All-Star game. Altobelli's staff includes 45-ycar- old Phil Niekro of the New York Yankees. The Giants finished fourth in the National League West in 1977. They were a pennant contender in 1978, when Altobem was named NationaJ League Manager of the Y car, but then dropped back to well under 500 in 1979. "Common sense-wise. my first job as a major league manaaer was a tremen- dous experience. It was very iQtercstill§ and very exciting. I have no ill feelings,• The National League club managed by Paul Owens of the Philadelphia Phillies has a hittang attack featuring veterans Dale Murphy, Mike Schmidt and Gary Caner and youngsters Tony Most of Altobelli's managerial train- ing came in the Orioles' fann system. and he returned to the BaJtimore organization on Nov. 12, 1982 after Earl Weaver's retirement as manager. The Orioles beat thc_Phillics Jo the World Series last fall. "I dou'bt 1f r'IJ ever forget 1978, .. Altobelli said. "We woo 89 games and were io first place for about ~ months." He added, ~1 doubt if I'll ever forget 1977 or 1979. either." "I was tickled to death for Joe. He got J>od.aer Stne Su 41Yee for ball, bat be coalCln 't come ap with It and St. LCnda' • ........... Darrell Porter wu credited with an RBI bue bit in an 8-6 Cardinal win. Dodgers blow five-run lead LOS ANGELES (AP) -St. Louis Manager Whitey Herzog used t'!very available player on has roster except one pitcher, and the Cardinals escaped with a l 2-inning. 8-6 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgen Sunday. The Cardinals. after trailing S-0 tn the first inning. rallied to tic the score 6-6 with a four-run ninth. They broke the tic on David Green's run-scoring s1 ngle in the top of the 12th, then added an insurance run. "I used everybody and so did Tommy (Lasorda)." §aid Herz°'. "I had two waJkjna wounded in there," he said, meaning Creen, who bad a sore foot. and Willie McGee, who had a strained hamstring. ··And Green is the guy who •ot the hll, .. said Herzog. "When you get down early hke that.'' Herzog said of the early 5-0 deficit, "you've got to use your players to get back into the game." The ~ers missed an opponuntty to gain a game on the entire National ~uc West. ··A loss is a loss." satd Dodaer Manager l.asorda, ''but 1J's a shame. We just have to go out after the All-Star break and forget about it and we have to play up to our capabilities. "We had a five-run lead. wc,blew it. and we should have won 1t." Ken Howell inherited a 5·2 lead from starter Rick Honeycutt in the seventh and was relieved in the ninth by Tom N1edenfucr. who sumndered the threc--run blast to Van Slykc. his third homer of the season. Elder statesmen speak up Jackson, John, Lynn sparkle to help Angels s plit at Boston BOSTON (AP) -Two.of baseball's cider statesmen -slugger Reggie Jackson and pitcher Tommy John - combined to help the Angels to a split of Sunday's doubleheader with the Boston Red Sox. Boston, which had a five-game winning streak stopped in the nightcap. won the opener 3-2 on Mike Easler's tie-breaking bases-loaded single with one out in the 10th inning. but the Angels came back to take the nightcap 4-0 on Jack.son's slugging and John's pitching. Jack.son, headed for his 12th All-Star game in San Francisco Tuesday night, belted a three-run homer and John scattered eight hits for his first. shutout since 1982 as the Angels salvaged the wmdup of a four.game series and snapped a five-game losing streak. "He battled and I battled and I caught up wtth tum." Jackson said after evening a score with Boston rookie RogerOemcns., l-3, who struck the 38-ycar-<>ld slugger out his first two times at bal "J finaJJy won one. He had challenged me four or five times with good pitches just above the waist and on the inner part of the plate. It was the same thing. fastball all day.It surprised me a auy that young bad that kmd of control. He can fO home and tell his family he ~ent after Rcg.ic Jackson.· "Any time a left-bander comes m here and wms. he·s doing well." John said after bis first complete game since May 12 and his first shutout since bcmg traded by the New York Yankees to the Anacls on Aug. 31 . 1982."I thmk you have to just pitch with your strength in this ballpark.·· John. a sinJcerbalJer, said. rccallina a two-hit shutout in Fenway a few years aao. Jack.son's fif\.h-innina homer was his 14th of the season and 492nd ofbiscarur. It moved him wtthm one of Hall of Farner Lou Gehna and gave him l.478 RBI. moVl ng him past Bally Wilharns into 25th place on baseball's all-tim~ list. The split dropped the Angels mto third place tn the Amcncan league West. one pme behind first-place Chicago and three ten-thousandths of a pomt behind Minnesota. The 41-year-<>ld John. 5-7. walked two and struck. out one in hurling tus 45lh career shutout. It was saved in the fourth when right fielder Fred Lynn went beck to the low wall m front of the stands., timed bis leap perfectly and caught Bill Buckner's bld for a home run as he tumbled mto the seats. The A.ngels took a 1-0 lead m the second annana on singles by Rob Wtlfong. Jerry Narron and Gary Pettis. With on~out in the fifth. Lynn doubled and held sccondu Doug DeC1nccs hned a single to ~ntcr. Jack.son foUo~ wt th a towcnng shot mto the Boston bullpen tn nabt-«ntcr for his 22nd lifeume homer 1n Fenway Park.. In the opener. Jaclue Gutterrez started the Boston I 0th wt th a single off A~ls rc~icvcr Luis Sanchez. 5-2, and moved to second ,when IJWl&ht Evans was hit by a piW1. Jim Rlcc grounded what appc.attd to be a pmc-winnina s1nsle. but Gutterrez slipped and fell after roundtna thud and was an cas) out on bnn's throw to catcher Bob Boone. Selfridge he shot from the hip LOUGANIS NEAR-PER;FECT, PLATFORM BERTH SECURED I must confess. I never really knew George Selmdac. the one-time suc- cessful prep bascba.11 coach who directed Costa Mesa Hi&h's baseball team to the 1962 CIF 3-A cham- pionship and spent most of the last IS years or so with the reputation asa hard-nosed official. Anyone in the kl'lowwu well aware of the fact you didn't mess with Sclfrictae. Shut up and play ball was theaeneral oonsensus. His passlnalast week bcc:ausc of a hea.rtattackbro\llht forth a column be wrote f Of this newspaper in tho early '60swhen it was known as the Olobc-Hcrakt. As was hi demeanor, thecolumn was a harcs.tuttcr. aimed at youna- 1tcr1 who wcren ~t qu.i tc makina the vade It was timely then ... and maybe it is now, in somejnstances, sohett is ffhathchadto11y. Keep in mind, 1.ake to heart only what applies· Dear athlete, You stink! You arc autJess. You do not have what it takes to wear the name athlete. YCSt you like the crowds and the &Jory, but you do not wear the word athlete well You are lazy! You arc self-centered. You will not sacrifice one nunute of your caoccntric life for the aood or someoocelsc. Youwartheuniform well, but you fail life. You have learned to yell atjust the rW\t time. and )'Ou know au tho standard words that typify what you think is an ~let.e. But wben you are asked to put out a little e1lta, you off' in 1 comer and feel that you are beinapenecuted. A famous co.ch onoc id to one of his pupils, .. SOD, IOdOIC that door." The boycloted tbc door and every doorintbebu:ild.in&. Thi inn athlete. ~ Where has your tt\thusiasm aone? You)ustsccm to beaoin'-throu,ah the mot1on5, lf someone i1n t tcllina you RocE1 Cilue1 -I PREP SPORTS ·. .; what to do and when to do it. you do nothina. You ha~ too much money and a late model car. You wouJd nthcr have• lirl friend with piltsofba.iron Mtd.iny nee than cam your &ctteraward. You arc ovcr-mommyied and ovcr·f.cd. You will not study. You Mil DOl rcspec:t your pattntl. You U not bq> > 0\11' mouthahutlnc lnolhtrwOl'ds. mydca.rathletc. you afe the typical y~uthof toda). ls thtJ reell~ tho ki od ofli fc you want to lead'! l have a few 1ugacsttons which you won't take. but you miaht read them just fOr !ticks. I.,._,.. die~ eet.U. Try u ma your~ for somettuna other than watchina comtnerical ~ Read! Y ~ I said read. You know that assipment you bad in your fttshman year. Now that you~ a senior. you mi&ht be able to handle iL f .W SM car. Ute the money to buy a bicycle. You will be u •na mu9Cles you never knew you bad be(orc. Tboee tblt run up and dowa )'OUr lc:tbooc iDS1ad of your rear end t.AtteMMielhMedia'.._ ............. .. ~ ..... ,.... ........ .... u .Y tbat' uactly ti id. ThOIC pcop&e Ytho tit tiCT'OIS from )'OU at the danncr table. Tboac pcope -.'ho put thcdotba on your bKk and the pasc in YoUr hair. (Pleue .. ULPaIDOS/Cll INDIANAPOUS (AP) -Wor1d champion Grq Louaanis, sconna seven perfect marks of 10 on his fim two dives, firusbccl first and Bruoc Kimball cla.uned second Sunday 1n the mcn•s platform div1na finals as the U.S. Olympic tnals condudcd. Louprus. 24. ICOfcd 659.16 points in bccomina the only United States diver quahfyma for Los Anaeks on both lhc pnnat>oard and platform. . ( I . . ... _ .. .-:..a "( kept thankl lO m~I . ·v~ s<>t to put 1t UJteu9';1, auu Loupms. who won a sih-cr medal on the platform at 16 in the 1976 Olympia and •ho finished first 1n both evmts 1t the 1980 Trials. but missed aoina to the Moscow Ol)mpics bcea'* of tbe United tatcs boycoll. ··1 really wanted to be on the t~ tn both events," said LA:nlpnis. wbo bas incbcatcd he probably would end bis divina career af\ir this yearn IW' ofOl:ymp· -Coach ROtl O'Brien's team from M ' ·on Vtc,o.. led after eacb of the I 0 rounds in revc:nina his April to K.tmbalt 1n the •ndoor natiOoals. He ~ 90i111 into the final round, l*t ~with a dh-c that pve him three IOI and four 9s. Tbc ttvme 3\t> IOl'DCl"l&ult tuck 'Onh 9S.a due to its l .• dqrer of difftatlty. . The three perfect marb p~ ~ ~Y ~ in history to ~•"e lOs from all Judies on a dive lD tA&erMlional compc:t1t1on. 12 for the day and 29 foi his four rounds heft. • Swale's death still a big mystery after three weeks • LEXINGTON, Ky. -h's been three weeks since Kentucky Derby winner Swale ~ died. and the people who worked with tbc colt wish patholosists could find the cause of bts death. · .. That's the only consolation we could have'' said Philip Gleaves, an assistant to lrainer Woody Stephens. Although more test results are expected Tuesday there bas been no explanation for the colt's death at Belmont Park after a liaht momina gallop. .. We've found nothing," said Dr. George Mayton of .the .equine toxicology .department ~ Cornett Uruvemty, where pathologisu have been ttUdyin.g tissue samples ftom the animal Dr. Helen Acland of the University of Penn- sylvania's New Bolton Center, who performed the autopsy on Swale, said the chance that be suffered a stroke were .. highly unlikely ... During the autopsy, pathologists expected to find a visible causew>f .teath -such as a ruptured aorta. But "the hear;t was beautiful, .. said Robert Fritz the veterinarian who pronounced the horse dead: "There was no cerebral hemorrhage. no blood m the spinal fluid, nothing abnormal." Fritz said pathologist ran into a problem when they discovered that some of Swale's organs had been discarded the day after the autopsy.1 They wett apparently thrown out by a maintenance worker after sample tissues were taken from them, he said. Track vetennanan James Hill said discarding organs was not unusual after sample tissues we~ taken. But Fritz said the absence of the organs prevents the double.checking of any leads. Despite not knowing what killed Swale, no one in Stephens' barn believes foul play was involved. H E W P 0 A T SHlpYARD CLEAN & PAINT BOTTOM $6.50 Per Foot Labor Only STEAM CLEANING $45.00.hr. YARD LABOR $40 .00 Per Hour Brown eecapea the dog house Darrell Brown's IOth-innin& sjlljle Iii with the ba loaded drove in the winruna ~n Sunday and")avt Minnesota a 4-3 vtctory over the New York Yankee to ~c& the Twins within a pme of American League West I r Chicago. Brown avoided Mianaaer Billy Gar- d.Der'• dogbouse with his game-w1nner. He was supposed to bunt on w pitch .. Bud BJack to$$ed a .three-hitter and Doa Slaapt hit a th~run homer to lead K.anw City to a 6-1 victory over 8aJ ti more ... Jim BeatUe, pitching wilh JUSt two day1' re t, tamed Toronto on threohtt in a tlit-inningsttnt, and Keo Pltelp• and Barry BoueU each drove in two runs to lead ,.., ~· -. • -"" ~ ... ''· ))I Seattle to a 7-1 victory over the Blue Jays ..• Mike Reatll drove in three runs with a sinale and homer and Dwayne Mltrpby also homered, his I 81h of the season, to le.ad Oakland to a 4-1 victory o ver Milwaukee . . . Jerry Gudov Ralraton tied the game with a leadoff homer and Harold. Balau hit a tie-breaking, three-run shot, as the Chicago White Sox defeated Oeveland, ~-8, for their seventh consecu~ve triumph . . . Texas built a seven-run lead and survived a pair of costly errors to nip Detroit, 9-7, as Bobby Jones, Donnie Scott and Buddy Bell drove 10 two runs apiece. Winner F~ T~, 9-8. went six innings, giving up six runs on six htts, but was hurt by four unearned runs in the sixth. ~ser Doug Bair. 4-2. making his first start after 24 relief appearances. was knocked out in the third inning. Watson, Peterson edge foes Tom Watson and Greg Norman agreed l!I on at least one point concerning Watson's playoff victory Sunday in the Western Open golf tourna ment. '"I made everything I looked at," Watson said after he'd dropped a breaking,. 25-foot birdie putt on the third hole of a sudden death playoff. It was bis tbir~ victory of the season and his thi~ ~r triumph in this old event. "I had a great f~lmg with the putter, a very hot day with the puner," said Watson,iho ne-putted for par seven times ... Jn an LPGA tou mentl in Toledo, Lauri Pe&eraoa successfully fi ght a swing problem to repell a cballenJC by cy Lopn. 'I lost my rhythm. I started ovcrswmginJ. I was lucky 1 got it back," Peterson said after rolling m a six-foot birdie putt at 14 that gave her the permanent lead against Lopez. Peterson finished at 278. two strokes better than Lopez. Amy Alcott was third at 285. M c ENROE. • • From Cl scorching hot day. ")was conservmg my energy for the tennis mat<;h. J wasted a lot of it in Paris getting angry with myself and it hurt me." said McEnroe. "I've played good matches when I've gotten aniry but 1 thmk it's certainly better m the long run to keep thrs way, calm." Th~ nearest the notoriously fiery Amencan came to losing his cool on Sunday was a long look al the baseline when a Connors ground stroke ap- peared to go out. and a pause for reflection when he was foot-faulted. Earlier in the tournament he glared at line j udges and had the occasional excha nge with the umpire. But always he bi t his hp. went back to his mark and continued with the game. Wallach'• homer helpe Ezpoe Homers by Tim Wallacli and Gary - Carter and Pe&e Rose'• two-run ainaJe hiahli&htcd a seven-run second innina that powered Montreal to an s .. s victory over Houston Sunday in National League action. Wallach a product of University Hiah and Saddleback Coll* returns to action Tuesday nWit, playing in the All-Sta; game in San Francisco ..• Jerry Kooamaa, backed by Von Hayes' three-run homer, pitched a four .. hit shutout as Philadelphia beat Atlanta, 7-0 ... Bruce Berea_yl and Jetae Oroaco combined on a six- nltlcr and OlllUQ' Jleee and Dar- ryl Strawberry each drove in a pair of runs as the New York Mets completed a five-game sweep of Cincinnati Reds with a 7-3 tri- umph. Chicago remained a half.. game behind the Mets as Rick SutcWfe won his fourth game since joining the Cubs three weeks ago and Gary Woods added a two-run homer in a 6-3 victory Wallach over San Francisco ... Pittsburgh snapped a four-game losing streak as Dale Berra'• run- scoring double keyed a two-run seventh inning, leading to a 4-3 victory over San Diego . Allen boasts of Wrangers' win TEMPE -Although Arizona Wranglers Coach GeorJe Allen has the Ell benefft of 20.20 hindsight, he says his 4 • club's victory over the Los Angeles Express was anything but a fluke. The 35-23 decision here Saturday night gave the Wranglers the Western Conference championship and sent them into Sunday's United States Football League title game at Tampa, Fla. "We worked hard au week gening ready for this one ~use it was a champion~hip game. Now we go on to the btg one and we deserve it," Allen said. The game's starting time was switched from 12:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. MST to avoid the midafternoon beat. However, the temperature was I 00 deg.recs at kickoff with 29 percent humidity. "LA talked all week about how bot it would have been here if we played in the afternoon instead of at night," Allen said. "But if this game had been played at the time it was originally sch,cdulcd to be played ( 12:30 p.m.), it wouldn't have been a contest. We still would have won." Wrangler runnin~ back Tim Spencer, who scored three tou~hdowns, said "our conditioning rcall}' came through m the fourth quarter. We were definitely Phlladelphli oa•t8 Stalllou PHILADEJ..PHIA -Kelvin Bryant £!] rushtd for I Sl yatds and two louchdowna II as the Philadelphia Stan took advantage of • • early mittakes by the Birmm&ham · Stallioouo roll to a 20-l 0 victory Sundar and earn their second 1traiJ)tt champioo1bJ_p berth 1n the United States Football Leaaue playoffs. The Stars, who lost last season's championship game to the Michjpn Panthers 24-22, take an I S.2 record -lncludin& a pair of plauoff viet0riet -into thi~ year's title aameSunday in Tampa, Fla., against the Anzona Wranglers. Jim Kini win• endurance run AUBURN -Jim King of NewPort m Beach, who finished Saturday evenina in a course-record time of 14 hours, S4 minutes, won the men's division of the Western States 100.mile Endurance Run. Bruce LaBelle of Davis, was second in 1 S:-48. Judy Milkie of Anaheim finished 20 minutes ahead of three-time champion Bjora Austerheim-Smith early Sunday to win the women's division. Milkie's time was 20:04, and Austerhcim-Smith from Sacramento, was second in 20:24. ' The 100-milc race is run from SQuaw Valley, near Lake Tahoe, to Auburn in the Sierra toothills. 1, 100-mlle swim finally enda NEW ORLEANS -Two French a swimmers ended a I, I 00-mile swim down • the Mississippi River from St. Louis to the Louisiana World's Fair on Sunday, and one collapsed from exhaustion soon after leaving the water. Bu~ lhe swimme.r who collapsed, Bdiard Bourgom, 54, a mechamcal engineer from St Etienne France, later visited a press reception and officials said he .apparently suffered no severe afteT~ffects from the SWlm. SELFRIDGE ... From Cl 5. QaJt trying to prove Juat bow obaoxlou you can be. Pull your pants up. What ever happened to the word courtesy? You think it's great to ~ock down ladies in the street, speed in your car, and neck in the sand · at the beach.Grow up little boy, you look like Elvis Presley 1n short pants. Sophomores Derrick Brown (5-8) and DcsiHa.zely(6-5), two who apparently were not in the Seahawks' varsity plans this winter, have trans.. fcn'Cd to Westminster High under Coach Dick Katz. 6.Attend scbool and do tbe best job you are capable of doing. Your· -~e "Yes," confirms Katz. "We have some exciting news. "They can-play and fit right into our club," continues Katz, who'll carry five sophomores and a freshman on his varsity, in addition to two starting seniors and three others in support roles. "When these sophomores arc seniors we feel WC are JOing tO be a very good club." conunues Katz. "And, wc'renotwritingoffnext year." 4 Jimmy Connors Brown and Hazely came to Ocean View as freshmen, along with Ricky Butler, a 6-S prospect who is reported- ly not invo.Jvedand is set to continue at Ocean View. - HAUL OUTS TO 75 ' -75 TONS/Marine Scale "The offi cials were no better than last year." he said Sunday. "but I like my actions to speak louder than rn} words. h's an honor to be put 1n the same category as Borg and Laver and all those people." has delighted the crowd with some magnificent tennis - and kept his temper wnh o fficials" The even more respected BBC television com- mentator Dan Maskell described McEnroe's level of skill and concen- tration as "nothing short of fantas- tic." buddies may think it real cool to flunk everything, but let me clue you. They aren't going to be down in that ditch with you. They'll be over in the next one..Buddy,you have got to have a sk.ill today. You have got to have something to offer this world. Get wise! Set some goals for yourself. Long-range goals will not change many times before you reach many of them. But be going somewhere, not to the nearest guner. Rick Wilson, who also tranfen'Cd to Ocean View last year and was an all- league selection, rounded out what became a four-player package that Brown's father laid on the Seahawks' doorstep. 223·21ST. STREET NEWPORT BEACH Qummei~ .goQad u\AeQonge OJt ':;JettuNM Coif, de .:Po1tl<: Oft (~~iQQed C\JirJ.y~i.~ • (714) 675-2550 DINNER tMaO{, Chtr~e11 in the CDofltsh uUoMrll. ~i119ot1beltl!i<>.s. Cucutnbetc goQad crnd gugo~ '.:B1t0wt1ed ... ~ototoes OR :Poor lied ".Whttr6i.~l1 Cynf hio . ..AtJor.ndo. Q1topPS and ()Jt011ge uttdrJf QCoOf1d Cl1ompogflr gouce OR :Qoost :Prtltnr gi/!{loitl oe CB~ CBo!tde001se. er"~" J\leu: CoMnts .. Qti\it1g CRP.on.~ ond -i>otat~ ~yotu1oi.~ • C'10<'dote .Qoob~e ott CJ 'IPS" CReMi~ in .<.:!(>110011 Olt r,ttrmn Ob CaMttnP.P 17.95 Towa Center, f,osta Mesa • Rcscmtioas 7'1-2820 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil. It was not clear JUSt who had drawn up such a list of all-time greats. but not one member of the attentive press gathering was prepared to disagree with the champ. The "new" McEnroe brought glow- in~ tributes from the often hostile British tabloid press. which in the past has d ubbed him "Mac the Mouth.·· McEnroe. said the Sun. "behaved like a true champion:· T he Daily Express. re mind ing the public that McEnroe was "once the prince of petulance," agreed he was "on model behavior d unng the champ1onsh1 p." The respected Daily Telegraph said it was "a remarkable end to a remarkable two weeks tn which ht' Even Buzzer Hadmgham, chair- man of the once staid All England Club, felt it necessary to issue an end- of-tournament statement about it all. Surely with a certain New Yorker in mind. he wrote: "Relations between players and ofticials have been very much more relaxed. It would be surp rising if tempers did not flare once m a while when the world's greatest tennis players meet in the world's greatest tournament. but everyone is agreed that these have been happy cha m- pionships." A superb paint job ... only $320! Srr,,tq 11 br/~1,;,,g ... romt ;,, 1r111i Jff tllf ttrrsjun paintrd by £lc911n~. Compart our lfUal1t.Y wit/J othen 1IJ1Jt con m1u /J mllrt. Eltnan::. n•tn me/mus a rlrar top roat /Utt tlH e...;prmivr imf.!wts. The E~eg11~1z paint job is an nmar:i1111 Mlut "' SJ RO-b"t [,vo11 bring m t'1r toupon brlow WJugtt '"' adJiriomd $60 off1 N.!(JNl-W/>ORI R<>l'Hl'A Rl>,C()Sf A Mf\A ("/4J.'i4H --1(1 r---------------~ Special Discount $60 off! I rrnt"lll tl11• 111upon \\hen \•t11 nnkr \UUf I I kJl""' p .11n1 1oh ~nJ h '•C'I\<' .i SllO ,11,..oo nt I uO rh.-tCl(lll.i~ 111" U M> JI"« l 11mrrll flmr 1tf/n ""' rt1H,...1 ft••''""' jH ~ 00 I•\ 'I... p ----------- Athlete, you arc driving many good men out of coaching. You are preventing other good men from entering the profession. I hope I have shocked a few, disguested a few, bored a few, and made some of you laugh. But, if one kid reads this column and says to his mother, "Mom, I'll do the dishes tonight," I'll go on coaching for another year, anyway. * * * Well, as J said, George Selfridge wasn't one to mince words. Surely, there are few who around here who would fit the description, but then again. maybe there's something in there for a lot of folks. He died at age 58 and was to be cremated today. with his ashes spread in the Pebble Beach area by his eldest son. Kris. * * * Here's a twist-Ocean View High· s basketball program has LOST two players who have decided to transfer. Transfers seem to always pop up in the Sunset League-but seldom have they come Westminster's way. .. Maybethin~arechangin&"says Katz. "Our discipline and academics are excellent and maybe those things have something to do with it" Eric Schurman, a 6-4 senior, figures to start after a junior varsity season following his transfer from Mater Dci. "It's interesting that these two will possibly start for us as sophomores," says Katz, "but they weren't even on the varsity at Ocean View. If you ask people around Orange County they wouldn't know who they are. They're just two young men who really love the game." One rumor circulating has been that other transfers to Westminster • are in the works-but Katz says that's news to him. · Mike Tracy(6-7}wasa newcomer · to Westminsterin February, but the senior figures on the junior varsity level, according to Katz. Olympian Buchan · wins BaxterBowl b) A.l.i\lUI\ Lv\.~AJ>h. l D~Not ....... W'*" Olympian Bill Buchan of Seattle continued bis winning ways in the International Star Oass Saturday and Sunday by winning the Baxter Bowl, one of the most coveted Star trophies on the West Coast, in a three-race rcptta out of Newport Harbor Yacht Open house atBallyYC Newpon Beach's Bally Yacht Club on Coast Hia)lway is inviting the public to iu nut open house Saturday and Sunday from 10 1.m. to 6 p.m. each daf. · ActlVlti W1U include a free harbor cruise with free bot d*, drinks and cntcru.inmcnt, accordina to Jerry Hatfield. commodore. • The atneral public i"i invited to uul)C:l(t the Lancu--6.S Powcrwlcr and other Lancer•il and powerboats offered to Bally Yacht Club membm and cunts forchantt, Hatfield said. Bally Yac-bt Glub wucsiabh1hod in 1983. It 1 locattd at 3101 w. C t Club. Buchan and his crew Steve Erickson recently won the Olympic yacbtina trials in the Star Class and· will represe-nt the U.S. when tbe- Olympic Yacbuna Games get undd- way off Lona Beach July 31. The Baxter Bowl honors the late Bill Baxter, a Newport Beach sail .. maker, who was lnstrumenw itl getting the Siar Cass started in Southern Caluomia. This )'Qf 1 ~ ptta drew 31 entries. Runner-up in the rcaatta was Vince Brun, San Dies<> Yacht Oub. and third was Mc Lauahlin. South Cout Corinthian Yacht Oub. ETCHELLS-21 -I. Wild Irish. Tim Hopn, Newport Hart>or Y0, Z Shy, Don Bever, NHY<;i l . Prowc Rick Hawthorne, NHY\... SOLING -l. Gaston Of'.liZj Balboa Yacht Club: 2. Dan Cra:!fl~ Alamitos Bay YC; 3. Steve ~· BYC. : LJC)0·1'4 - 1. hut~ Sou\11 Shore YC; l. Seo~& S'mpsonl..Udo Uk YC~ l. Chad Twl<'hellt:UY\i. LASER -I. Lew KOWC, BYC Worth Houahtoo. NHYC; 3. N~ Panon, NHVC. , SABOT r-I. Fabian Rouuet IJIVC. Rob Mamt. NHY ! . ~---:--;:::--:--=:-----:::--:;~~--::=;::-::=;~=:~H:!!,!11hway. Anckrana 01 DOnaaa, NHYC. .. " ,. . p " " • p f "' .. ~ • .. .. .. "' . .. .. .. ~ . • .. . . .. ~ . .. Cl •ays stirs up IDore controversy Hallo Fam er says San Francisco IATHER.TON(AP)-W1llic May" who helped make famous the san Franc1tco 011nt1. ovm1zcd baseball caps and All.SW' pmes, will not be at Candlestick Park for Tuesday's battle bttween the National and American tea1ues. fnatead, he'll watch the yearly aame on telev11ion from bis Atherton home. It will be the first All·Star pme MAJOR LIAGUE STAND&NGS Arnerlcaft L .. _,. WIST DtVI~ W L. l'ct. Ga Cnlceeo MlllMllOI I Melh Otklancl t<anMa City S.atl1e THll " «) 52• 43 .i 512 I " •2 512 1 '3 •S '" l J9 '3 '76 • «) .. 455 6 31 49 '37 71'1 Dttrolt Toronto htttmore Boston Mhaull.M Hew York CllY.-nd I AST DtVIStON S7 27 so 34 46 39 0 '3 39 47 J6 46 33 .. Sul*Y'• Safft .67' .StS .5'1 .. OJ .439 402 7 ll'h " 19 20 23 aoston 3·0, Afteltl 2·• ( 1i1 eame 10 lnnlntl) S..1111 7, Toronto I "8naM Cltv 6, lalUmora 1 Oekl9nd 4, Mltwauk• 1 MIMetOt1 •. Nft York 3 C 10 IMl11111l Chic.to 9 CleYllerld I T111a1 9, ~troll 7 TMIY'a Gamn Noni ICMduled T-*Y'• Game All-Star Game 11 San Franclaco N•tlonel L .. tue ...._ ') WIST DIVlWStONL. i-ct. oa San Diego 49 34 5'0 Atlante 46 •1 S2f S Dedelr'I •S 43 S11 6 "'1 Houston 42 45 4113 9 Cincinnati J9 • .441 12 San Fra.ndaco 33 SO .3'I 16 IAST 04"1~ N-York 17 34 .SIG cnic.oo ., 3' .m ..., Ptllladetphla 4S 39 .5.16 3 'h SI. L.oula •2 ,_. ... 7'h MonlrNI 41 43 .Ale 7\.'i Plttaburllh 32 52 .311 16'h S41ndi1Y'• ~ St. Louis I, o.-n 6 m lnnlnoa> Montreal I, Houston S Ptllladel.lll'lla 7, Atlante 0 Htw Yortl 7, Cincinnati 3 Plttlburvh 4, San Diego 3 Chlcevo 6, San FrenclKO 3 TtdlY'a~ Noni IChedUled T_....Y'sO- A•·Slar Game et San Francisco AMERtCAN LEAGUE Reel Sox 3, A.n911$ 2 l"tttn GAMe CALl,.ORHIA llOSTON 1b r II bl Pllllld 4 1 I 0 8enlqu1 If 4 0 I 0 MC&ron rf 4 O 1 I L.ynnr1 1 o o o O.Cncs3b • 0 I l Ownnvdh • 0 O O Grlctl 2b 3 0 I 0 RJ0"1 lb 3 0 0 0 Carew lb l O O O aoonec •oo o P1cciolO H 3 I 1 0 ReJk1t1 pt1 1 0 I 0 Wilfong u 0 0 0 0 Gullrrz u OwEvru rt Rice If Armaad E111ef dtl lueknr lb Ne•man c Geornanc Hoffmn3b Jurek lb Barre112b Miiier lb llHllbl s 0 1 0 '2 2 0 s 0 2 1 • 0 0 0 s 1 2 1 • 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 • 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 2 l 1000 1 0 0 0 T...n 3' 2 7 2 TMlh 37 3 11 3 One oul when wlnnl1111 run SCOf"ed ScerebY ....... ~ 000 000 020 o-2 &ftt.n 011 -000 1-3 Game Winning RBI -Easler 14) L.O&-<allfornl1 9, Boston 10. 28- MCBrown, DwEvans, R~. S8- Pelll1 (U ). SF-0.Clnc:.s ... " It llt •• so ~ Romanick L.Sancnl l L. ,S-2 Zahn ...... • 2-3 I 2·3 2 0 1 2 2 2 • l 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 Hunt 7 2-3 6 2 2 4 5 StanleY W,S-6 2 1·3 1 0 0 0 2 Zahn pitched 10 1 batter In the 10th H8P-OwEv1ns bv L.S.nche1 WP-Rom1nldl. T-US. A-0,000. Aneets 4, Reel Sox 0 SICONO GAMa CAL.,OftNIA BOSTON abrllbl Pettis d 4 O 1 1 Gullrn u Cir-lb S 0 1 0 OwEvn1 r1 L.ynnr1 2 1 1 0 Rlcelf O.Cna 3b 5 I 2 O Armas d ltaJltlt'I dfl ' l 1 3 Ea...,. dtl l«liQUl " 3 0 2 0 ludlllf lb Wllfone 21> 4 I I 0 Allenson c Narron c • O 1 0 Jurek 2t> Plcclc*> 11 4 o o o Hoffmn lb T..... U4114 T...as Sc:webY ...... •ttrllbl 4 0 0 0 • 0 3 0 4 0 I 0 4 0 0 0 '0 I 0 3 0 1 0 • 0 1 0 2000 3 0 1 0 no 1 o c..... 010 .. --4 .... 000 -000-. Game Wlnnl1111 RBI -P9tll& (2). OP-California 2, Boston 2. LO&-<allfor"la 9, Boston 7. 28-l.Ynn, AllenMHl. HR-lteJacklon (W . ~ H It Ill H SO c.INetftll JoMW,s-7 9 I 0 0 2 .... ClerneM L..3·3 4 1-3 9 4 4 1 S Oieda 2 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 CIMr 1 0 0 0 1 0 JJoMson l·l I 0 0 1 1 Crawford ' 2-3 0 0 0 1 O HaP-t.vnn t>v Clemen'-WP-JOl\ll, JJoMson T-2.31 A-34,612 NATIONAL LEAGUE C.rclMb I, Docllen 6 STLoutS L.OS ANOIL.S Hrllllt .-rlllll lOSmllfl If 6 0 2 0 SH 2b 7 1 1 0 Herr 211 6 1 2 1 Andean u S 2 2 1 Lelldrm rf 4 O 1 O Gutrrar rt 6 1 4 O t4endrcll rl 1 0 0 0 Martl\U S 1 ) 2 SI.Piii'• 0000 MldndOcf )111 Alatrf 0000 ynonct 3000 DGrMft lb 6 1 2 I VH91f' c 4 0 1 I OWnMv "' 0 1 0 0 Sclotdl c 1 0 1 0 VOftONll• 0 0 0 0 SN* lb • 0 1 1 McOMcf 6 2 3 0 81tuUIOll 1 0 0 0 Porlll' c S 1 2 1 IUwrt >el 4 0 2 0 AHowOb I 0 0 0 WNlftcl Oii 1 0 • 0 VnSlvk 31> 4 I 2 • .. tlor ~ 1 0 1 0 OSftllll!U 5121 ~·· 1010 Horton• o o o o Howell P o o o o SMi1r 111'1 1 0 0 0 Nle<lnfur D 0 0 0 0 Keotrllrt11 o o o o H«thlsr P o o o o &rumrllfl 1000 lrHMPll I 0 0 0 .Alleo o o o o z.cllrY P o o o o areun on 1 o o o Vall 1>11 1 o o o L.alltl p 0 0 0 0 lt\ICMt p • 0 0 0 Jor9Nft 111 , 0 1 • T.. 111171 T.-"''°6 s..w ..... ... .. ..... -. L•ANlllt -.. • ..-6 GtfN WIMlnl HI -DOf..n (4), •-.Howe. o~oe Meete& t Loe- JtLaul• M. LOI Antltn 1). 2~. H1t-ven.SNM m. 5-How... ManMa. s.i.a w~. 0Stn1t11 IP MllllltMIO ........ 1 7 s s 0 0 ~ KIWtlrw l 2 0 • • a AMII t I 0 0 0 0 1.alltl • t 1 1 ' 0 ltUCW t 1 • • • • lultetW.H , 2 0 • I I ~..:.:. 1 t 0 • • 1 ~ 6 ' I 1 ' , ........ 11~) t I t 2 • ' ~ • ' .. 1 t • ' ...,......, lM ' ' • • a ~L:W t s t I 1 1 Lalttl .if(Nd .. ) ..... In ~ ~I ~ IO t llMltll"I "' II, H~ eUc'*9 la 1 N!Wt Ill " IK-'HOf!Oft t T-J:W '4 M) he's missed ioce l 954 Wby1 "J wasn't invited," he Mid in a phone interview with the San Fran- cisco Examiner. "I probably shouldn't say ll\)'thina bCQuJC I don•t want to cause any trou~le... u\ you would think that ifa auy pliYCd in 1 town for many yeArs and 5tilflivcd in that same town. that somebody Al-Star rotten ( .,.,.....y nltlltt. Stfl "l"lftC)tce M\llUCAH Ll'4CWS .,,. UMvlt unc. Parrlan, Dtlrolt c ltOd Carew, ,-.119al1 11 L.ou Whitaker. Detroit 28 Gaoroe Bretl. Kan111 Cllv 3B C•I ltlllken, .. lllmor• SS Chet Lemon, Detroit OF 111 ... 11 Jedtaon, Anvels OF Dave Wlnlllld. N-York OF ,ltCMn D111 QulsenberTY, Kan111 Cuv, Plllt Niellro, New Vorll; Jedi Morris, Detroit, Mike Boodldler. Baltimore. lllldlar<I Dotson. Cnlcffo, Dave StllO, Totonto, 811 CaudlM, 0.IUatld; WlUle Hefnandel, Delroll lteMrWS Al Davia, S..llle, 181 DaYa Envll. MIMeloll, c. D1ma10 Gercla, Toronto • 21, Don MltllnoleY. New York, OF, Eddie Murray, 81lllmore. 18; AnGra Thornton, Cle'llland, 11; &uddv 8111, Texas, JI; Alen Tremmetl. Dtlroll, SS. Tonv ArmH. Sos· ton, OF. Jim Rice, aos1on, OF, llllckev Henderson, OF, Jim SUndl>«V, MllweukM, c. Mlneoet -JOI Alt0be411 (lallltnore) MATIOMAL LIAGUI .,,.... L--. Gery Caritr, MontrNI C Steve Gervev. San Diego 11 llVM Sandt*V, Chicago 28 Miil• Sdllnldt, PlllladelPN• 38 Oull Smith, St. Louis SS Dartvt Slrawtleffv. N-Vorlt OF Tony GWVM, San Dlaoo OF Dale Murllfly, Atlante OF Jll'ltdlen Dwight Gooden. N-Vork; Fernando ll1len1utla, Dod"9f'I, Charlle L.e1, Mon· treal; Marlo Soto, Cincinnati; aruce Suiter, St. L.oul1; Jnsa OrOKo, New Yortl; Rlcll Go&iage, San Diego, Al Holland, Plllladel· Dhle R.-wt Tim w.a.cn. MonlrMI, 38; Juan Samuel, Phllede!Pllla. IF; .JodY Davis, Clll· c.evo, C; Bob lrllllY, San Francltc:O, C; llaf... llamlrft, Attente, SS; Jernt Mumllnrev. Hous1on. OF. Miit• MarlhaU, Docloers. OF, Clllll Davia, San Francisco. OF; Tim .R•lnn, Montreal, OF; Keith Hernandez, New York, 18; Ct1udell Walh· 111111on. Atlanta, OF. Tony Pena. PllltburVfl. c. Men•oer -Paul Ow1111 (PhlladetPhll J Al·S'-r Game '"""' P'HI wlnnar1 In the MalOr L.a•9U9 be~H Al·Sttf ga!M (Nellonal Lhwe led Iha .., ... 3'· 11· 1) l~Amerlcan, •·2 1'34-AIT*'lcan, 9·7 1'35-Amerlcan, 4· I 1936-Natlonat. •-3 1'37-Amerlcan. 1·3 19»-Netional, 4· 1 Im-American, 3· 1 1940-Netlonal, •-O 1941-AIT*'k:.ln. 7·5 19A?-AIT*'lcan, 3-1 190-A,,_lcan, S·3 l~N•ll-1, 7-t 19"5-No oeme. 1946-Amerlcan, 12·0 1947-Atnetlcan, 2· I 19't-Amerlcan, S-2 19"9-Amerlcan 11·7 1950-Natlollll, •·3 ( i. lnnlft9S) 195 ._....11ona1. 1·3 1'52-Nellonal. l·2 (5 IMl!llll. rein) l95)-H1tlonal, S-1 19s.t-Amerlcln, 11 ·9 19*-Hahonat, 6-S f 1? ~5.l 19S6-+l•llonal, 7·3 1957-AIT*'k:.ln, 6·S !~American, 4·3 195'-Nallonal, S·• 1959-AIT*'ICan, S-3 l9'0-N1tlon1I, S-3 ,,.....,,lonal, 6-0 1"1-Natlonal, S·• C 10 lnnlnos> 19'1-TIM 1·1, rein 1~11ona1. 3· l 1"2-Amerlc1n, 9·• 19U-Hallonal, S·J l~allonat, 7·• 1'65-+lallonal, 6-S 1'66-Hallonal, 2· l no 111nlMsl 1'67-Halional. 2-1 (IS lnninOI) 196&-Hetlonal, l·O 19'9'-tQtlonal. 9·3 197o-Hallonal, S·• (12 lnnl~) 1971-Amerlcan, 6-• 1972-+latlonal, •·3 110 lnnl11111> 1973-Halional, 7· 1 197A-N1tlon1I, 7·2 1975'-Nallonat, 6·3 1976-Natlonal. 7· I 1977-ffallonel, 7-S 197 ........ •llonal, 7•3 1979-H•llonal, 7·6 1900-Hallonat, 4·2 191l-Nallonat, S-• l9lt-H1tlonal. 4-1 lter-Amerlcen, 13·3 Wlmllledon Cha~ (at W1mllledel\, I,..,..) Melt'•,... John McEnroe (U S ) def Jimmy Con· nors (U.S.), 6-1, 6· 1, 6·2 Met!'•~ ,..,., Fleml1111-John McEnroe (US.) def Pat c.sl'l·Paul McH1mee CAuslrella), 6-2. S-7. 6-2. 3-6, 6~3 W9'MW'1 Sfntlet Martina N1YrallloYI (U s ) Oii Ctwil Evert UOvd (U.S >. 7·6, 6·2 ._., Devlltea Pam Shriver-Martina NIYfllllOYI cu.s I, def. K111w Jordan-Anne Smith (U.S.), 6•3, 6-4, Mixed~ John L.toYCI (8rltalnl·Wlf'tdY Turnbull (Australia) ci.t. Sieve Dtnton·Kathy Jorden <U 5.), .. ,. 6-3 Lldlet' .... ,. Me41ua Brown (U.S > def ltoblfl Whit• cu s). 6-2. 7-S.. JS ...... ..,. MM'• SIMllet 51111 Smith (US) tlei. Colltl DlbleV CAustratla), '°'· 6-3 JS ... ..,.MM'.~ MartY llletMn·Sherwoocl Stewart (U.S.>. def COlln Dlblt4t (AUW •l·J•lrM Flllol (CMI), 6-J, 1"4. lo-I • llltf# INYt' ...... Mark krJt1rnent1 <Aua1rt111). def, Sleftll KrUQW (South Africa), 6·4, •·•· ,.,, ...... !ten'.,..... f'ldty lfown•ltobOY WafM (U J.I. fef. Merk Kretamenn (Aut1ralle)·Jo111n I~ (Swtdall>.L1:6, 6·4, 11-t ,.....,. ........ A.Mabel Creft (arnaill), ft9f l!INI "•-IMC!! (SOulfl Alt"IClll, 1<6, ~ .. 2 ... ..... .,.,..... Car K~·Sl.-Nnlil llletle (U.S.), o.f. VIC10r11 Mhl<llU.,..l.w' Se~o (S0¥let Union), .. ,, J-1, "''- wou1d find 10mcthan1 for him to do dunng the day of the AU·SW aamc ... Ciaarus po\c an Duffy Jcffinp d the t m h d offered M1y1 " ome vet')· .: pecial tickets.•· but wd Carl Hubbell had bceo picked to throw out the fint patch , eotn· mmiontina the SO\ti anniversary of t~ pmc •hen ~ suuck out six tlall of Fa men in two ionings. Stu Miller, the pitcher aJ.ka;edly blown off the mound dunng the 1961 All·Sw pme in Candlestick Park, will join Hubbell oo the mound. Jenn1np said. In addition, tht hon.or!!)' captains wiU bt formtr Detroit T!ltr Hank Green~ for ~ Ammcans and former Giant Willit Ml'Covey for tbe Nationab BOth CIJ)tains were selected by the lcque offiott. This is tb~ lat.Ht an 1 ,ICJlCS of inciderits in wb1ch Mays has stim:d up controversy in mljor JeqUe baseball. In J 979, outaoina comminioacr Bowie Kuhn banned Mays &om. ISlOCiatina with lbe major Jeaiue team' after the Hall of Farner bePn doina promotional work for Bally Olympic Games history WOMEN'S SOO KAYAK SfHGL.IES 1941, L. ..... 1 Keren Hoff (Olf'tmarll), 2:319, 2 Alida ven oar Arlder·Doedlf't• (HollaNll. 2:3U; 3. Frttll Schwl1111I (Austrl1), 2:32.9 1952. HetMl*I I. SYllll Salmo (Finland), 2.IU, 2 Ganrude L.labnarl IAustrlel, 2:111. 3 Nine Savina (SoYlll Union), 2.21.6 1"6, Mllbellml I Yetlsavel• DemenlYl'YI (~)el Union), ?:119, 2 T'*'esa Zlf'tt (WHI Germenvl. 2 IU, 3 Tove Sobv (Denmarlll. 2:22.3 1'60, .. ..,. 1. Antonina Slrldlna (Soviet Union), 2:0U, 2. Theffte Zeni (West Germany), i:ot.22. 3 Oanllla Walkowiak (Polal\d), 2-10.46 I,.., Tellyo 1 L.vudmlla Khvldolyuk (Soviet Union), 2:12.171 2. Hiide t...auer (Romania). 2:15.35; 3 MaN:la JOMS (United Sl1l1S). 2·1S.61. 19'1, Mexico c:nv 1. L.VUdmlla Pllnaveva KhvedOSYIHI (SoY· let Union), 2 11 09; 2. Renato Breuer (West Germanvl. M2.11; 3. Victoria Dumllru (lllomanlah 2 13 22. 191'2. MuNdt l Yull• lllvaoetllmkava (Soviet Union), 2.~ 17, 2. Mlekl J NolH CH<*arld), 2:00. 3 AAna Pfeffer (Hungary), 2.'05..50 1'76.~ 1 Can>la tlrtoW <East Getn'lefty I, 2~1 M. 2. Tatlllne KersllullOYI (Soviet Union), 2:0l.Gr; 1. Kiera lllalnel (Huntarv), 2;0$ 01 '"'· MMc.w 1. alrw11 Fltdllr (East ~V), 1:57.M; 2 Venla Geshe'I• <lulNrlt). l:StA. J. Mlonlna MelnlkOYI (SOYlet Union), 1:SU6 WOMIWS Ml KAYAK l'AaS IHt, ltM'lt l soviet Union. 1:54.76; 2. w.1 Ger- mMY. 1:56..66; 3. HlNWY. 1:11.22. ,,.., Tene 1. Watt 0erm91\Y, l:SUS; 2. Unli.d Sl1tn (French"9 Fox, GtorlaN Pwrtllrl, 1:5'. 16, > Romania, 2:00.25. ,,.., MPJc9 Qy 1 Wnt GtrmlllY, 1:U.U; 2. H\Jll9arY, 1:5UO; 3. Soviet UnlOll, 1:5U1. ''"' Mlllllldll 1. Soviet union, 1:$150; 2. Eal Ger- manv. 1:500. 3. Romenla, 1:55.01. "76,,.... 1. Soviet ualon, 1:SUS. 2. ~. 151 6'; 3. Eul G«menv, l:Sl.11. 1Ml.M91ceW 1. EU.I Gen'Mnv, 1:.0•; 2. S.Vllt Union, 14'.91, 3. HUftNIY, U7.fS. MEN'S 1..000 SfHOL.IS 1'l6, a«1ln I Gre90r HredeltkY (Austria). 4.22.9, 2. Helmut Cammerer (Germenv), •:2U, 3 Jacoltul Kruler <Holland), •:lS.1. 1941, L..,,.. 1 Gert Frldrlkuon (Swlden), 4:l3 2, 2. Johln Frlclerllt KobberuP (Denmark), •:39.9; 3 Henri Eberhardt <France). •:Al • 1952. HebMlll 1 G«I Frldflksson (Swedeo), 4'f17 9, 2 Thorlald Stromberg (Finland) •119 7. 3 Louis Gentols CFrenc:a>. •:20 I 1'5', MelbeUnll I Gerl Frldrlkuon (Swedlf't), • IU; 2 Igor Pluarvev (Soviet Union), • 1S.3; 3 L.a.01 Kin CHunvery>. • 16 2 19'0, R- I Erik Hensen CC>enmarkl, 3:SJ.O. 1 tmr1 Szolloal (Hungery), 3:54.02. 3. Gert Frldrlksson (Sw9*>. 3:55.n I,.., Tlllva 1 ROif Peterson (Swedef'I), l 57 13 1 MlllalY Heu (Hunearv>. 3:57.lt, 3 Auret Vernnai (Romen.al. • 00.77 Lonn•• Smtih. Denver, vs Frank MonlllOtl'I· lrY. Ptill•detPh•I . 12 rouncll. E SPN Juntor Wetterwe1ght ChamPlonshtP, litll vac1n1 SUndev Jutv 22 At Les Cruces. N.M.. Pan Arneflcan C11111r. L.oule Burke, Lil Cruces, N.M., vs Cnarllt "Wflltt Ll11nlnln9" Brown of New Jarsev. su~r IHtflerwelehts. HolVWOOd Park SUNDAY'S RESUL. TS (.S6tll et 67-deY fhereutlltnd meettne> FIStST RACE. 61'2 furtongs Emit Kine (CHllneda) •2.80 16 40 9 60 WanlazH (Pedroze) 00 3.IO Shlrley's SllYI R (McGurn) S.20 AIM> raced: St~lbOOY L.ett, Emmel Kev, Petllnv Wlsll. J1m Man. Pvr1mld lolls TlrM I 16 • S SECOND RACE. I I 16 miles Ster Of Dewan (L.IOham) 20 40 10 00 6 20 Cowmll !Olivares) 16.60 10.«l Famllv Fox (Poarc1> • 40 AISO recld Cflh11y, Kev To nie Arc, Gita Clrcle. CharelM Siar Roger Gummo L.af1v1111 L.ark, L.1 ver,,.·s 8111 Mac Time: 1 '3 11 s.. n DAIL. y oouaL.E 1•·9) Paid S629.IO THlltO ltACI. 6 furlongs. Don 8.'s DMT"tHI (Pdrz1) 7.20 3.20 2.60 Prlnoen L.urultah (V1len1'*8> 3.60 UO Rein On Mv Paracll (L.lotiaml 3 «l Abo raced IN:lulalllon, Miii EIH. Gatll1 Tl!M' 1'09 4 S U EXACTA (5·61 paid Ml SO f'CXMTH ltACI. 6 fur'°"9s Saratova Six CCord«o) 7 40 3 40 3 10 PrlYlll JUl!llle (~za) 140 2 20 H11torlador (V1len1uetal 320 Also raced Prelensor, SllYer Strit>.e. JuslOl'IOflhe«IOYI Strul My Sl\lfl, Prince Of L.lllht, Just Once Mo«• Time 111 U IXACTA U·ll paid Sl7 50 1'1''TH RACE. l Ill mlln Dalby (O!'teoa) IUO 7 '° S40 Socrallc (Mc:C.arron> 3 60 3 20 Goldell E (Hawley) 6 '° Abo rac.ct Golden Souvenir, Cerro Pinto. E•aon Do"'"'· .nJmood The Stone Time \ .. 2/S as lllACTA 12·6) P&td $16100. Sfxnt ttACE. • tunon9$. SOKa Envov (PlnUv> l..20 UO 2'0 hcMIYe Arts (SMemakerl 600 360 Ooodle.MCk (Meza> 2 IO AIM rltmd Are11C Ac• T H ~. L.edll. Stln CadY..i. Circle Rownd. "9ntafa Pirate. G•~ De L.'ltau, FMUleU• _.,Inca. Tknt· HO 3/S IS IXACTA (Ml P&IO $59.50 MVINTt4 llACI. 6 l\lrlO!lllL Ml LI~ (Mc(.,ron) 9 40 S.60 UO DallCe Siu (Hawtey) UO S 60 WI~~ Ml•IOll (Vallnzuete) "° Alro receCf: Solid SOlrll, ~t, C'-"'4 Dencr. ~ au.c-Quack. Tlme 1• ''" U UAC'TA 12-21 NICI ti" a at P'tCK IUt (,.S-4-J-2-21 Miii 116,097 60 wlftl 12 w~ llO.at\ Ill• ....,. ... ). U Piel Six COMOlallon -.. "'1210 Wllfl 40f wtnfti!'ll lidlata (ftYe Ilona). llOMTM 9'•CI. I 111 ml-. MomentTolw (CllPl'M) MO 4.60 ~-Mllttirt"lt 10..llDUUllyel SM Ut L.udlv Llltkv LuOLv <C.,._.> ue AIM rKM °"'Cerri..·~ ..... Allwalon, Aelr.!M Mitt 0... t Utf\t, ~· Tlme lM JI). II IJUliCTA U<ft .... IWA ..,,. llM& ' ..... _, ... 1MI, Meldcll CllY 1 Mlhatv Hell (HufttatV), UIU.J; Aleksandr ShaPWeMO ($0YW Union), 4:03.SI, 3. Erik Hansen (~), •:OiUt. 1'72. Mullldl 1. AltkMnclr ~O (So\l'llt Union), Nl.06; 2. Rotf Pelenon (Sweden). 3;49.JI; 3 Gaze ClaPO (HUlllJllfY), 3M.JI. 1'76,~ 1 1tUdioer Helm cE .. 1 Germenv>. 3· •. 20. 2. Gau CMPO (HuneefV), 3:Al.M, 3 v..a. Dll>I CRom.ntel, 3;19.'5. lMI. Melc9W I ltucfloer Helm (Eall ()ennany), 3 41 n, 2 Ataln L.a1N1 I France), 3:50.20. 3 Ion Slrtaoe.nu (Romenla), 3·SO 49 MEN'S 500 SINGLES 1'76, M9lltrWI l 11una Dlbl (Romania), lM •1. 2. Zott1n SllanllY (Hunoervl. 1:<16.fS, l. Rudlvef' Helm IE•" Germanv>. 1·4'.30 1-.Mneew I Vi.dimlr Parfenovldl ($oY,_, U,_), 1.43 43, 2 John SUITM9I CAustralle) lM 12, l. 1111111 Oll>I (Romania), 1 '4..90 USFL lllavelb Artuna 35, Les AftelMS D Sc9r"ellY~ Lo~ A119etn 3 1' 0 6-23 ArltOl\I 7 1 0 H-35 • Fh1 ...... LA-FG Zendeias 25, 4'06 Arti-Sclenc:w 4 run (Corral klckl. llt.31 s.c.... ...... L.A-ffel\on 11 run (llf'tdtlas kick) • ., LA-Helson 1 run Cllf'tdelas kldl >. N 1 Arlr-5-lcer 6 run (Corral ltlck), 13.Jf F-111 ...... Arlz-L.ono I run (Corral klcltl, 40 Art1-Sl>encff S PIH lrom L.andrv !Cor· rat klek), S:'6 Arlz-eo.IMr 5 run (Correl klcil) 12:05 L.A~Y 20 PISS from VOYftll (P&U felled), 13:40 A-33.1• GAME STATISTICS L.A Finl OOwns It Ruslln·yards 31· 1'3 Paut1111 vercis 90 Return vards 107 P11sn 7-2•-2 s.Cks &v 1-S Pullts .... Fumblll·loit 0-0 Petlllltlls·vann '"'° Time~ Pouet•lon 29-.Je INDtVIDUAL STATISTICS AIU II 37-176 153 5' 10-21·2 4·3' 4·41 1-0 S-41 »..22 RUSHING-Los An9*\, MaCk l•-ot. NelM>n 11-n. Yount 2·24, warren 4·9 ArlZON, Soencer 11·9', LOlllJ 13-.0 Boe!,_ ._ll, Lenctrv 1·1. Dennison 1·2 PASSING-Loa Angel... Young 7·23·2-17', P9nrldve 0-l+o Arizona. L.anorv lo-21+ 151. RECEIVING-Los Al>Oeln, HerMv 2·27, Scoll 1·1'. MKt. 1-2• Gunn l· 16, Towl\MI 1· lS, &odd.. 1-s Arl1ona. Willia 3·60. Cle,_ 2~. JoMIOlll ~n. Rldcer 1-11. L.ono 1-11, Soer'Cllr 1 • s. MISSED FIELD GOAL.s-None USFLllla~ CON,.UINC:I CMAMPtONSHMt'S ._....c...,.Q l~I PftllacMIPll•a n. New J~Y 1 8lrmlnet1em » TernM aay 17 (f'IMlll ""~ 20. a.nnl.IWll'fam 10 ....,.c. .. _ (Semlflftell) L.111 Mei1M 27, ~ 11 () OI) Arlione 17. "-'Oil 16 " ..... , Arl1ona U . L.ot ....,..... D \JUL a.Pr1 ... S..Y .,,,...... ..... ""~ "" ArllOM. s •.m ln1ttn1liouJ, which runt a cuino in A Oadtic City, .1. Duriaa the 1970.. Ma>" was u iM caster of contro\"trl)" when rumon ciradated that be demanded ett ~~from a .. Willie~ DI) •at Qt uck lha t never place.; .. Anybody wbo lmowa baeball knows tbal you can't ttt tbe mtlte &ate,• Mays said .... DeYet aMed Cot thi entire pte, u people bift 18:id t.htouab the yea1. .. There were abo controvmies in- volviq Old-Timcra pmn that he didn't anend. W....,_Ollllt (at Olll .,., .. , a•Tom Walton. sn.009 71•·1'-,._. Gt• Not-. MUOO •J't-71·7.,_.211 Mat11 O'M9f1, w.-71-71·71-10-213 SCOfl Hoctl. ,.... .,..,,.,,....... 0,., w..,..,,., '1,... ......76-11-:115 • T.C.Ollft,114.AOO *"1·1 .. 1i-211 DeRUFF Joe""'*'· t12... ,.., ...... ,s-ne . • •• GaorMlurnt,$12,M n-•n·11-at •-Cl ..,.Ct...naw,t \t.AOO 75'-10-7•·~ '•- L..tlnCt T" ~c:a. m,a •n·74S-~1" .. But there was a time ~ I wm ""'' CodW1911, $10,AOO ,.73.n-1.-219 CortY Pevln, s10AO 11-n·n-1._.., wonderin&." LorW11towta. tUOO '7-n-7>-7>-2'0 DcRuR: who is (>:12. 190 pounds. ~ .. =-~ n:~t;~:i will be in Ph1laddphia until JUiy ·~ Scott Slmototl. MAGO "·7HN6-291 then after a brid siopovcr io lbie Loi Mat11MceumMr,MAOO 11-11-11-,..-291 =!es for unironn. _fiui:!tit'soo. IO Deva o.rtn. w,a •11-n-n-ltl Curlb s1ranoa. ... 12-12•-~2'1 elcy'wbere trauuna W1 cxmuauc c;.-S1Mrs,1uu 1H0-n-1......,,, Cot another 11 days tid'Oft ~ VencmHl9tnll',13,t16 1'-7 .. 7)·7>-m .1.-Ql V~ Jim K.,., 13,916 n-1 ... n-n-m to UK yinp1c e.o~y.13,916 n-1..., ... n-m "We'vesuneda new~" erect Btvant, IUl6 •75'-72·76-292 says DcRWf: •'lea.i'iD& ~ GIMotwen, 13,tU 72..,._7•71-%J2 oa.... r ...._1.-, GarY~d.ll,916 1s.-10-Jt-n--m down. ~t now m ,_, IOft, Hal 5'itt011. 13.916 •1Ht-~ doina our reauiar .,oft. loed. liftin& Freil COl.llllft. IU\6 6f·7s-Jl-76-2tt and n>Vfi ne twice a dav (about 2() Mw1I L.ve • ..,.;m 7J.-70-7S-75'"-1'3 .._ ., TOf"t wflskapf. u.m 1NN1-,._m miles). But bY tbc tiroe we eo Lon Hlnlile. ai.m 76'-10-n-1.-tn~r--in::.:.;uley we'll 1tar1 to taper apin ... Nick Pr1m, 1u12 a.-11-1s.-1.-m Ahho .. .-.. at one time the U.S. Cel Ptete. 12.312 D-7•1'0-7.-293 ..... Cert FontMn. S2,Jl2 71·15-7H>-2n Coichin1 Slaff' dictn•t C'VCD ""°Pirc MIR CelcaveccH, 12.312 11-1•11·n-m OcRuff and bis par1Der. lbe~7-• o.Mv EdWWdl, S2,ll2 '7·71-77-J't-m Old S•-t-..i; ~ 10 LAntlla °""*"'· '2.312 •1s-11-~ ... .., ......_. ,,,.._. Doneld, 11• u-n-n-16--2" make the team. utr ays ~ Jlmsan-.11• n-1•7t-1S-2N ,.-~.-....:.--... ~-ltov~.11.a ,,., .. , .. ,..,_,,. c:antsuc:ce91a ~..,., ... .,_ ... -•11111.U JonnCOOlt, 11AO 72-72-7•-71-2f5 taaee. w-. Wood, 11AO ,.1.-n-17--29S .. The boat tbal ._limDd 10 ut bu er.ctF•xon.11.• n-11-n-~m ......_ .......;,.. in· c..---and wa ~ Tawtl, .... 71-71·7S-7......n5 Ul;ll;U .--..... -....- A1 C•u•1. l \AO ,._75'-JH._2'5 CIODSlstently in the&-... of'...nou. HowardTwUtv,,1.w 1Mt-,.1'-1M pn:-Olympacs. .. says J)dlufF -we =:vs:.=r~l~ :::~:::: Cltpect to be at leul in 1he m-boal LMnard Thomoln, 1'1.099 7J-71·7H7-2'7 finals. if~ put cverJtbiQa ~ ... M111a 1te1c1."" 7s-n-n-~ OcR··"'s "-=taiouncf iildudcs eooeovct."" n.-n-7r75-29t wa u. Frri Fulnr. "'4 n-u-n-1A-2t1 football (ti&bt .Cl . and track (hw- KM Gre.1, mi 11-n-7'-1....m dies) at Ha.rt>or and some basic Gavlll ~. m1 1r1'-Jto.1.-m . Ru~. mi 11-11-,,...._.,,, fundamentals leari:lieid lberc rem.am A1t1tY Nor111."" n-1•n-t1-• with b.tm. OlveEldl•• ... ..,. 10-7•75~ .. Coach (Bob) H•a.-and Jeff Plat UndMY. llM ff-75-7....----..,. PautAJin.w,.,. n-n-1 .. ,._• Ptcrox were reall~ inspiratiom.I 10 Chris Perrv."" 76-71-71-TS-• me." says OcRuff ... More than anv· Phi Hanc:oclt."" •n-1s-~.J01 -.:-' lob sn-r.r."" 74-7'-71-Jto.-lOl thing. they m.adr me ~~ve m lob Glider. sm 10-1.-n-,._m m~tf. that in persisted and &tayed at euddY Gardner. 11s2 n-n-1'-77-.JCD it l could be~ at anything. Georve ~.am 71-74-n ·n-304 RllldY wat111m. sa:n 72·75-71-7'-304 .. Really. 1 considCT them more Miki SUlllvan, 1132 n-n-to-~* fnends than coaches. Coach Hailey Allen Mllleir. 1116 6f-71-G-7S-l05 f th fi I ta--"' -A-SalPVll H~. "°' 14-11-•11-• was one o c rst con ... ~ uu;-r 1111Y Tuten. saoo n -1s--12-1i-m the tnals (through bis dad). .. L.PGA~ (at T .... , Oflle) L.-• Pettnn a -n-u-n-m NancY LoC11 n -•6'-n-no Amy Aldi 71·7S-~.111. Vldlt Sinvietn n-n-11-11-206 Therese Heuin 10-12-n -11-216 Patty sn.e11n 11-n-n-11-216 Manene Haoe "-n ·11-1s-m Vicki Fervn n-n-n-11-ae Slay Knv 74·71·71·72-• Joe.n119Carnr n -n-n-n-m AllceMAlf "-70-7S-7S-1" ~o.11Y 61-6'·76-1.-m Caroll Olarbonnlr 7S·l4-71-70-2'0 ~ Turnr 72-71·7•·7>-1'0 Jull lnkstr 10-n-1•1t-2'0 Jud\' Clrk 70-74-71-7S-2'0 Dftltlie Mean 76-71-72-72-291 Muffin 5-lcer·Oevtn 6t-,...7t·7t-291 Myra V..i Hoos 6t-76-7t·7t-2'1 Sul Foolemn 70-72·n ·77-2'1 L.or1Garkl 10-n-n~m ledlv PMon n -76-n-n-m Sonnie Laur 75-7•·71·72-2'2 Kathv Dou9'lrlV n -n-6t-7>-292 Colleen Walkr 6t-74·74·7S-292 Bart> 8unllwsJ<v n -n -11-11-m Doi Germn 7•-76-70-7>-29'3 a.th Danll n -1s-n-n-m cnov Hll n -n·7•·7A-2'3 OeRulf •as with the aold-mcda.I w10nm1 eights at the Pan-Am G3JTles mVcncz~andwasinlhc 1981 UC Berk~ boat which took the TbamC1 Cup_ So. ht bas been-uound., .and knows what it ta.kt'S. Although he wasn't p1dccd for the C'lghts. the pam without cox.swalD appear to be wlor~ma<k for b.tm. "h requires a lot more thoo&bt without a coxswain." explams Oc- Ruff. "but I ctlJO)' u because we have more control over what we do. It rcquun communication and a coherent raot pl.an ... Now. as traimng continues. plans arc s1mpl) to focus on technique, in addluon to building strength. Pett\I HaYI 71·75-71·76-2'3 Jan St.oNnltl 70-7•-n · 76-2'3 When 1l comes down to l.bc mom101 of July 30, chances are DcRuff and Suotbcck woo•t be considered solid meda1 contend.crs- wb1ch 1s probably the best~ that could happen to them. Bccaust as DcRuff will certainty • Marta F1ouWU·Oo11 n-76·73-7>-294 Jeckle lnKtl 10-n-11-n-,,. Mlndv """"' n-12-11-~2'4 AIHandrl llellW'dl 76·7•·72·7>-2'5 Sa1v L1t11 n-1s-n·1.-m a·Chervl Stcv 10-n-1.-n-m 0eoora11 SklMr n-11-n-7'-m SNlllot Hmln 70-71·7 .. ~2'S er..o. Gtcbmttt 11 -n-n-10-m Conni« CNttm n·7•·7S-7S-297 Marv Haltfm 75·7•-n -1.-m Penn• Plz n-n-n-~m ~Ertl 75·7'·74-7>-2'1 ea111v """'' 1'-n-1s-n-m MMv Owyr n -n-1•-n-m Dele Evotnv 74·71-n ·n-2" llvwtev Div' 13·7•-73-7'-2'1 Pia Nltsin 71-75-n-11-291 Sharon laN'11 72·77-7'·7?-JOO llOSl'V SMl1tt 72·71·7•·7._300 K11?1v Poslltwl 74·7•·7•·~300 Deep ... ft1Mftt DAV•Y1 LOQ(O t .......... laMOI) · -t 7S ~ 1 bllrracu<la 115 '*'''° S ..... I. ' t rodl fill!, IS cailco l>IH, SU Mind 1>111. USl mec'tlef'e4 agree. n arn't over '111 it's over. :; Rosberg wins Dallas race de~pite heat DALLAS (AP) -Kcke RO$ber& overcame a mvnad of problems Sunday to WlO a race mark~ by torrid heat and a delenoraung track The ~1vc FUln . ..,ho won ~ world champ1onsh1p for his William$ team 10 1982. inherited tht lead Wlth IO laps to go in the mausural Dalla5 Grand Pm .. then ran off to an easy v1ctorv Rosbcra staned t1ghth on the arid and qu1cldy mo"cd his car lhro'Ch the leaders B> lap IQ, he was second bchmd polc-staner Nigel Mansell of England 11 tool.. the frustrated Ros~ stcam10110 tbc 100-dcarec beat. until lap 36 to get b~ Mansell's Lotu •• :· "The track was brcak.t~ up, but 1htrc "-IS one problem. Niad Man· stll. ""ho dro"c stupidly, below For- mula One standards. We don't block tn Formula One. You let wtcr CIJ"I throuah. It was bad behavior." Rosbcra later los.t the lead 10 \.be Mclaren of Alatn Prost off~ bul • stayed dose behind and ~ \he top pot for aood when Prut i*llOd a concrete tiamer, broke a tire nm and had to park his car. .. , can't ) I wa wcutali1= •"&).but luck m) q ... said. "Then 1 bad to be C:ardul. h'1 \'ery easy to makt 1 mistake after two hours ut \here. "We ·u criticize the track. but we·~ only~ about afCty." KCCPi bi conc:cn1tation in tempct"&twn over l 00~ aad oo the narrow ~ tale Faar Put araut, ~ by crvmbbne ubO&lt aDd ~ bis fint r1CeOf1tM --·-I.Ad lhbtoflua GntMI Prh C4 Ortnge Coat DAILY PtlOT/Mooday. July 9, 1™ Fans votea Wltll 1leart, nothead 6 4 2 M'lmOU9M IE•M M lft'DlllU!JllJ , MamlTAN. IT MAmftAN ... r The ,..,..,. ,.,._, .. Tiie ....... ~. ......... dollla~• JOlMTOH ADV!fm8. .. OAlll ,ARNI, fl( Carew.Jae son. on'tbelong in American League lineup BJ BAL~ ,,,..,.. .... SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -When Commi .1oner Bowie Kuhn returned the All..St.a.r ballot to ~ fans in 1970, it wu a master stroke by a man whose work for the last 16 )'t'&l'I bu aooc tarseJy unapprrciated1 eJpecially by lhe owners for whom he toiled. With the help of Oilletle, which underwrote the ballotina. Kuhn pve the AU-Stat Game back to the fans. reasonina that this event was. after au. created for them in the 6.rst place. Nearly l 08 million votes cast by the baseball public unce 197(,J testify to the fans' interest in the election process. American diving team Memben of the U.S. Olympic dlYIDC team include: Bottom row. left to rtaht: Kelly McCormick. Chrl• Seufert. Wendy W ylanji. Michele Mitchell and Gree There i , ho...,evcr, • ~or problem with the sy tem and the only ona wbo can contct it arc the people doina the votiQ&. It can be summed up in two word Pay Attention. n I teammates Rqgj.eJackson and Rod Carew will 5taJ;1 for the Amcfican ~ue Tuesday nt&hl, and while it's entirely appropnate to bave these two basebe.ll le&end.s on hand for any All~tar assembly, they hardly belon& in the st.artina lineup. . • Jackson ll in the twiliAbt of an awesome career. one which no doubt will lead him some day to the Hall of Fame. But with a su.,.,2SO batting average. be hardly rates as an All.Star staner, cenainly not ahead of Boston's Jim Rice and Rickey Henderson of Oakland, who open on the AL bench. What's more1 Reggie's time these days is spent almost entirely as a des1pated hitter, not in the outfield where he must rlay Tuesday ni&hL Carew wit start at first base for the AL He bas received more votes than any player m tustory, 32.603,104, a remark.able achievement earned with seven LoUCanla; Top row: Ron Merriott and Bruce Kimbell. Wyland, Mitchell and LoUCanh train out of Mlulon Viejo. Dlv-lnc competition atarta Aue. 5. Sullivan. wins by two laps He survives heated duel when Rahal b reaks down CLEVELAND (AP) -Danny Sullivan would have preferred to wm 1t some other way. "You'd rather win a race by racing with somebody and passmg them strong, but like all of us, l'll take a win any way I can get It," Sullivan said Sunday after surviving a duel with Bobby Rahal to win the Budweiser Oeveland Grand Prix by two laps. The victory, his first ever on the Championship Auto Racing Teams lndy-<:ar etreuit., meant $33, 150 to the 34- )ear-old dnvcr from Louisville, Ky. He won It because Rahal, who bad ta.ken the lead at the 29th lap ID the 88-laprace, broke down si.Jt laps from the end By then. only Sullivan and Rahal were on the lead lap, so Sullivan's Coswortb-powcred Lola T-800coasted easily 10 a two-lap tnumph over runner-up Chip Ganassi. Michael Andrett1 -whose father. Mario. was the pole slller -finished third. Sullivan averaged 118.734 mph 1n the 360-kilometer (220-milc) race on a 2-48-milc. 12-tum road course at Burke Lakefront Afrport. Though lhe race had been held twice before, with Rahal winning it in 1982 and Al Unser taking it last year, the distance was reduced from the 500 kilometers run in previous years to cut down on the attrition rate. Fifteen of 28 cars were still running at the end of Sunday's event. Nonetheless, two cars that held the lead for much of the day -Rahal's and Mario Andretti's -broke down. Andrctti led for the first 27 laps and was in contention until ignition problems with his Lola T-800-Cosworth brought him to a halt on the 50th lap. Rahal, who moved in front on the 29th lap, suffered transmission problems with bis March 84C-Cosworth on lap 83 after mamtaimng a lead sometimes amounting to only a few yards over Sullivan from the 50tb lap on. Rahal and his crew wcrt tasting victory when the transmission broke down. "Until lhen, I was very happy," the Dublin, Ohio. resident said. "The gearbox j ust broke, when l was five seconds ahead of him." Sullivan said he felt sorry for Rahal. but not for long.. .. All of us arc racers and I think all of us feel the same." Sullivan said ... There's about a milli-sccond of pity for them, and then there's all that elation that comes with 1t." Aside from Sullivan. beneficiaries of the mechanical troubles included Ganassi. whose second-place finish matched his best ever ID Indy-car competition. and -------------------Michael Andretti. U.S Olympians rout NBA stars IOWA C ITY. lowa (AP)-U.S. Olympic basketball Coach Bobby Knight found a wtnning combination to start the second half oflus team's cxh1b1tion game with a squad of Nauonal Basketball Assoc1auon stars. "I think we were able. at least m this game, to find a combination that worked very well for us in starting the second half. 1 thought our play m the second half was very good.'' Knight said after the Olympians trounced the NBA team. 92-71}. Knight's first-half starters ~Patrick Ewing, Yem Fleming. Michael Jordan. Sam erk.ins and Wayman Tisdale -were not able to stop c stars, who built u leads of as much as six points be re scnling for a 43-4~ halftime advantage. In the second half, Knight re~taced'~wingand Tisdale 10 the startm& ijncu~ wttfi Alvm Robertson and Chris Mullin, and the winnmg combination was born. "We had tried to set it up so we started with the lineup that we thought would be a good one for us, and then we changed 1t around and came back with a <;onsidcrably altered lineup to start the second haJf because we were look.inJ for a lineup to do specific things -maintain defensive pressure. F.t movement offensively and not get hurt on the boards.' Knight said. "I think it's a game of attrition here at Cleveland," Ganassi said. "l think what put it together today is we had good, clean (pit) stops.'' Most of the leading cars pitted twice dunng the race. Rick Mears. who drove out of the 23rd pole position. fought his way up to finish fourth, and Roberto Guerrero was fifth . Total pnze money exceeded $355.000. Setting the •tage Work.en tulde tlae Loe ADC.ie. eou.-m INCln conatnactin' tlae ataae to be ued for 1 betuna champion hipa. But be is hardly the best first baseman in the AL thiJ year, not wtlb Eddie Murny'1 1motina bat canyina Baltimore and Don MlttinalY. one of pn:iciou few briaht tpotJ an a dumal New Yor\ Yanbe season, ., What happened, o( ooul'IC, is that Jackson and Carew were elected on reputation, not on their current aooompUshments. The same th~ essentially occurred 1n the National Leque vote when Datryl Strawbcttv of the New York Mets was named the st.artina riibt fielder. Strawberry was blessed with an en&llll.ia name and earned Rookie of tht Year honors with a torrid ICCOnd half last season. But be bu struaaled for much of this season. History teaches us that democratic: principles are constantly under attack and must alway1 be r.rotected. The best way for the fans to bang on to their Al .Stat say is to study the statistics a littl~ more carefully before punchina out that ballot. Next time, vote with your head, not your bean. Last All-Star game in SF was disaster Sudden gale wind blew Miller off t h e mound in 1961 game SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Tbe last time baseball's All.Star pme was played at Candlestick Parle there were seven errors, a sudden gale blew a pitcher off the rubber, 9~ fans suffered heatstroke and cries were heard to ship the national pastime to RussiL It was 1961. Roger Maris had 33 of bis record 61 homers when baseball paused for the first of two .. midseason classics" that summer. He was joined on the American League squad by si.Jt other New York Yankees -Mickey Mantle, Yogi Berra, Moose Skowron, Tony Kubek. Elston Howard and Whitey Ford. The National League boasted a lineup that included Hank Aaron. Willie Mays, Roberto Oemeot.e, Warren Spahn and Sandy Koufax, all eventual Hall ofFamers. The Nationals scored twice in the 10th inning to beat the Americans 5-4 as six NL pitchers held the AL hitters to four hits and struck out 12. Three weeks later, in Boston, the second AU-Star game ended in a 1-l tie when rain halted play after nine innings of a forgettable affair. But the first ~me that year will be remembered forever as the one in which Stu Miller, San Francisco's lanky junkbaJI pitcher, balked when he was jolted by a gust of wmd in the ninth inning. Miller's balk -he claimed he was nudged by a 60 mph blast -was the first ofhiscarcer. It set up the tyina run and capped a day that one scribe called .. an exercise in inefficiency." The game stan.cd in humid 81 dcgrcc weather, and 22 of the 44, l I 5 fans succumbed to the heat by the second 1nnm&. five with apparent heart attacks after climbina "cardiac hill'' to the ballpark. "It was a perfect day, the best day I'd ever seen at Candlestick." said Miller, who gained the victory when Aaron. Mays doubled and Ocmente singled in the l 0th. "We were s1tt1ng in the bullpen, nice and warm, then about the seventh IDning the wind started lric:lung up and it got cold. It was like two different days." recall~ Miller. who will throw out the first pitch along with Hall ofFarncr Carl Hubbell at Tuesday's All-Star Game at Candlestick. Fifty years ago, Hubbell gave one of the game's finest performances when he struck out. in order, Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Jimmy Foxx, Al Simmons and Joe Cronin. As the wind and chill settled into Candlestick in the seventh inning in 1961, the pitchers in the bullpen tossed blankets ovt>r their feet to keep warm. Dust storms swirled around the infield. Napkins, hot dog wrappers and cups whipped across the stadium. Al K.alinc, who took over for Mantle, complained that "even running for a ball in center field fine particles of sand get in your eyes." The Nationals led 3-1 after ciJ!lt inninp, but the Americans were threatening in the mnth with one run in, Maris on first and K.aJine on second when NL Manager Danny Murtaugh brought in Miller to relieve Koufu. Bernstein captures funny car showdown MILAN. Mich. (AP) -Kenny Bernstein defeated nval Don Prudhomme in a funny car championship showdown to capture the International Hot Rod Associa- tion's Eighth Motorcraft Northern Nationals at the Milan Dragway. . Bernstein, 39, of Dallas outgunned Prudhomme at the start of the quarter-mile race Sunday to win in 5.81 seconds. Bernstein defeated Jim Head. of Columbus, Ohio, to gain the final, while Prudhomme edged fellow Granada Hills resident Dale Pu Ide, who earned the No, l qualifying pos1t1on Saturday. Let Shephard of Arlington. Texas, captured lhc pro stock lltle in a 1984 Camaro for his fourth straight tour victory. • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D INO COMftANY, U loutt. leeott loul•• ~~dll ..... 10l.LA ...... c.I Mlr,Celf, toa1 ~ ~on. n Ndwd A .........._ IHClttOOmDeitaiHCofone dll 1450 "9cado "'°9d....a...J Mw, Cellf, ....... ~ Clll, WR ,,. ~ .. oon-Donald c. ..., __ ~ ~ ~ 11172 LA Pnder't. Yort ....,..,_ Joftnlcon Lindi. Cellf • .,... TI* ~ -!led TI* buelfMet II OOI "'""the Coun\Y Qll'k Of Or· ~by. • .,...,,.,..,,. = County on JUM 7, ~A~ nant TI*~ ...... PublleMd 0r.,. eo.a wtt1t the Coun'Y an"' o Oelly Plot June 1f, 21. Nf1 lnOt County on JuM 2,t, 1914 1114 M2t PI07' r:11:.;1•1•1m·~.1••1•m•i13 ~ -°'T .. ~ BEWLEY ALLBN, "8.IC llJT1C( dfed •t Newport Beach, California ..,,_ n11m 'ff July ~. 1984 at qe ~ TM fOIOWlnO ,.,._ yn. He la survived by ~=-~ON ATI his daughter Betsy LETIC C4..U8. t.216 L..,e (Jim) MKKenzie of Canyon Road. Latut Balboe bland, eon laeCh. call. '2161 John (Carol) of San ~ Ultt1ltfll, ~ Marino; grand-=-Nlgual, children Nick (Mary) Thie ~ la oo C•rpenter of ~by:anlncMdUal Kahuku, Hawaii, =-:.~~ flll Terranc.-e and Stewart with the Coun1Y C1ertt of C Carpenter III of : County on JuM Kailua,Hawu,An-1 nm. drew Carpenter of Publllhed Orange eoi Numa ta, Jap an; Ody Piiot June 19; 21, J\ Hadley Carpenter of 2, t , tte4 Balboa Island, Ca.; M: Suaan Allen of Eureka, Ca.; Sharonl-__;..;;;;.;;;.;..;.-.-.-._..._ and Scott Allen of ~.~:¥': San Marino. A mem-The to1owfng.,....,. 1 orial lel'Yice will be doll1Q ~ • held July 10, 1984 at K & 8 L.EASINO CO .. ,. llAM at The First :=sa°'·· AllaMn, Ce Friends Church of HowWd c. tca,eot. ~ Whittler, 13205 Fox Or., P\llar10n, Qa Philadelphia Rd, ~ Conaulllnl o. Whittier, Ca. 90601 In pon1on. A ~ Cc lieu of flowers the pardon, 13GI Fox Dr~ Pl family bu eatab -etton. Celt. NISS Thia bualneaa .. 00 liahed the Bewley dUC'9d by: a oanertll pe Allen Memorl•l ~ FUnd. 1n care of the HowWd c. K.eytor treuurer of 'lbe First TI* ~ .... Frienda Church of wtththe=~~< Whittier. A major = benefict.ry of the ~ Oranoe ~ fund will be the o.1y PIOt June 11, a. _,. • Heifer Project, ad-2. t. 19&4 miniatered by Mr, M Allen'• lone tim e friend Veterinarian & _ ...... =_.........,..--.,_ Minister, Gordon PICTmOUeMlll•• Hatcher. The project MAm ITll,m 1n places livestock and The foloWtnO l*90n providee training 1n ~:::.r-a':EtPI ti anJ.ma1 care 1n de-SE.RVICE. 21172 lr4*ttlu veloptng countries St722. Hunttngton .... around the world. In-C.itf. 92M8 te.nnent will be 1n Vk:tOI' Manuel Levee Ro.e Hilla Cemetary 21372 8rookhurat St. und •'--""---'-722, Huntlng1on .... er \UC ~.....,.. Calf. tH4t of Pacific View Thia bualneM le cc Mortuary, Newport ducted ~an lndMdUlll Beach. Ca. ~ ~ .. ftl GA.J:Nf:3 wtttt ttie County can °' < JOHN LENNON = County on Jw'9 GAINES, •1e 3 It\ PMr1 years of ~aguna Publlltled Oranoa_.Co: Beach. Died July 6, o.ly Piiot June 1( ku, ., 198-4. Survived by bil .2• 9' 19&4 M parenta Mark and rtaJC llJTICf Vlclde Gaines; mter _ ............ -.--.---..- Heat her Gaines; .,...... COURT grandparents PhyW. "" eALRIMA, f>avtd1e of Santa couwn °" OUW Barbara. Buzz G~ 1n tN ~ot°' the of A.rcadla, Eunice ~ J08IPH JAC Knui.on of Sioux ~ CNnol of Name Falla, South Dakota. No. A 1231N Memorial S ervice OADEA TO SHOW CAUf will be held '.l\ae.day FOA CHANGE OF NAM ll.&.u July 10 1984 C HAALEI JOIEI ....... &, ' JACK80H ,_ ... a pc at Pacific Vie w tlonlnthlacourtfotan on Chapel, 3500 P8Clfic allowlnf.,.f.!!ltloner V1ew Dr, Caona Del ~ ~ u.'C Mar. Intammt fol. 80H 10 CHAN.U JOeE lowin1 at Pacific BROWN View Memorial IT IS HEABIY ORDER Cemetary 1n c.c..ona '** ... ,...,. .......... c del Mar. F.uloo to be ::cw.~ =~O' = delivered by Rev. ment No. a at 700 ti Richard Schumm, of c.nw DrM w-. 891 St Paula Lutheran ~.~~AJ Ch urch, Lag un a and then and ._. lfl BMc:h where his fam. '**-If 9tf'l th9y he\19 • • il _...__ In MkS pedtton tor d*'08 y are m111::mua •• nllfM ahould not be gm lieu of flowers. dona· IT IS FURTHER otdel tiona can be made to tt'8t a copy °' tt11a order the Heart/Cardiac =-~~ Raearch in care of a ,,..~~ Miller HospAtal, 2801 ~. In' AtlandcCa.~ Blvd, Loni ~ =.::.-: Be8ch. 90801 ~ 10 the day Of al6d he HAMOll LAWN-"'Yi.t.cs June 14• 1* FRANK DOMIHICHIHI Mort:; =••ry ....... Of the Crematory Pu=: ~enoe Co 1625 GISier Ave. o.lly PI04 .--11, H. J Colt• Mesa 2, •• , ... 540-5554 .,.. MLTZ ....... ...,.. a 1V11ILL W9TCU'I' CMANI. 437 E. 17th St. Cotta Mele 648-9371 " n••••pen•a ve• •tlft. ~· ltY) not nigh •~ ptl~•: reHonabl•. ~-.... BUYll OLYMPIC COii. Coins can be pu chased lhrough ye local post office 11 at part1e1pat1ng banks and coin de ers acros the co, ''V Or. wr1te to US Mint, 011ml Coin Program P.I Bow 6766 San Fri C1$CO CA A101 tbe ope1ll.DC cenmonl• of tile l fNM luelfled AcNertlslng Olympic Oam• Jaly 28. 1..-..._-.e==M!:::. 2=..U==78::::=t.;.;.;;.......:...2::...=...-:..~ .. • , •• I. '· • ' '· • .. ,. d I'-'· .. " ly :I .. .. .. I !2 If. ,.. Id t-7, • .. ty 16 • ,. Iii If. Iii H. ~- ~-.. ,.... 1- ., If- 7, ta llt lly ll I " G ... ti. ... fl, n- ad ,,_ 7. ,. lit ~ 24 ;o In "" rt- llC lfl !3, .... .,. fly of Id. ad 10 "' ot. rel * .. •• .... HI .Ky .35 E t• ur Id ~l- 1n 11(. ) n . ~I -· .. NI.IC NOTICE I . . . ... . . ' .. . . ., . '. . . '. ' 'I Pacific Travel School 6tO E. Pdl St.. Seoc. Au, r:Fj EM Ca. 92701 OIANGE COUNTY'S ONLY PllV ATE lfCCIEDfTED 'RAVlL AGENCY SCHOOL MOANtNQ, AFTERNOON. EVENING Cl.ASSES C•ll (714) 543-9495 .................... .._. ........... Ml.JC fl)TIC( Forfurther information regarding advertuing placement in the Schools 4 lmtructiona Directory -call Lois THE DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS Telephone Service: Monday-Friday 8:00 A.M.·5:30 P.M. Business Counter: ~1onday -Friday 8:00 A.M.-5:30 P.M. DEADLINES Pl Bl.l<:ATIO~ OE DLl'.\E \londa~ Sat. 11 :30 a.m. Tu.-.. da, \Ion. l ::JO p .m. \\'t>rlnt>~cf1H Tut-!t. l::JO p.m. Thur~rla' · \\'t>d . l::JO p.m. Frida' Thur'>. t::m p.m. ~alurrla' Frida~ :J:OO p.m . ""'unrla' Fri. :~:00 p.m . C:A~CELLATI01' & CORRECTIO~S: ( ann•llalion., and t·orr.-c·lion~ ma\ lw marl.-on 'amt' dt>actlin~ a~ ahO\ ~­ Plt'S'>t' a'k for a t•anc·f'llal ion numht>r "ht'n c·an1·1•lli11~ ) our ad. ER ROR : Orange Coast OAllV PILOT/Mondey, Juty I, 1tM THE ~EAL ESTATERS 642-5678 _ ... rwpo. SS25K. o.. Palh Pto1>9'1I .. 1151....,., LB ~ S lllt9 IO bCf'I Zbd 2%be nr nu 1255.000 flnanc:lng '220,000 lOt<.% open 1un 12·5 480 ft41by ...... 7925 5 Bdrm 3 bdi poot home F-renc::b doon. 9'Cyllgh ... femil'/ room. rwcw.uon '¥ O~H= 1~ ~~==~ ~ .OOOI Huge 1005 8onNe Doone T•-Bautlfufty ~ corw '°' lel'GC9'*1 by rec•. lrVlne T•race. • n d ma In u In ed Rog9n.. s.s-a .. tMtr COM. Fentastlc 'Mw day S20l.500. 1811 Ordwrd Mt• w/tlrepteca. luxw· & night. Greet ~ DrM. Santa Ana Heights lous beth wll!pe. plus 3 mem tlOma. eo.Mel•ll ( o t t SI n l I An I er·1 end tarnMy room to 11 1oc Coot ~ Aw)833-tn3/55&-4912 FantMUc: ft'dd tlr\lldng bteca. 3 Bdrm 3ba IH l•I lncld1 mottler4 n-la• ,~CA~~~ qu1r11r1 w/1~. en-CCU'91w.2Br 28a.9'11it· tnnoa 0..:Jftra1p"'* ..... POOi; ...... BEAl/TIFUl• bdfm hc>ml. bdrm IUl1e & beth Gar· Ftnc avail, Full prtc. ('h ..... 1% In t --In 2 bath&. Sec. -. f'c·k ~our arl dail~ und rt>porl ~1r:s_-;;,0Ne1t..,:_ ga.3e1ro-wtthl0fl. ~;~11 ~= errors i m mt-d ta I t>h. Th.. D .\ 11. \ Ask for s. 5t'1·2121 or f:'r:: ~ ~ ~ -=-°'=644---=-....,7'"""4,...24_ Bh __ _ PILOT a~~unw!t liabilit ~ fortlWTir~t 855-23"43 -... 1 Bil E. of Jem-GREAT LOC. ••~to bcfl inc·orr«>c·t inst-rt ion onh. CISTI •IA Piil l>orMIPCtt 71SCM745 1r1~:04;';;::g CLASSIFIED 642-5678 -1121,111 l.._.,PLL 0wner sr3-1m --------... -------SAVEi Anxloua Hiier lnQome unlta/owner-uaer, HARBOR Vt~ HOMES 1--------..... lt1 Salt , ..... 1es laJe priced low to Ill. WUI ~ ~~ ke~· 3 Bdnn, 2 ei., lmrNCcond. f'tmUC fl)TIC[ ,....., ...... ......_ ...... .....,......, __ --. ............ -..;;;;;;;;;-.. __ , help with IOw Int.,. · · A a au ma b I a Io an . --------!--====-==:::-Intra! lMZlntral 1112 financing. CIHn. 4 lOMownMS-225& 250-1022or&ow-7220 rtaJC fl)llC( FIC~A:=raa lilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiimiiiil••liiiiii1 :!C:t:'~T!'3i telii... lffi UDO. 5 Br, g~ t>a. r.m- ACTmOUe .,_18 The following per90n II Coat Plaza Area. Cal ~Y rm, den. r« rm, 7 yr new. MA.Im aTATllmlT ~=:be AGEN-UN ISU now. ~231 rwnodelld hOml 1n Eat 4 car gar, &73-n&7 Thi folOwlng penon 11 A Presttg1ous Bayfront Villa, 6 Br. 7 1;, Ba, Ilda Costa Meea. • Brd 2 L91 Ill.I dolngbullnemas: CY, 8600 Werner ver1U1 I ba Owner/agent SlOOOOOOWN CALIFORHIA CREATIVE 1171. Huntington BMdl. pool. spa. arge boat docks. $4.850,000. S19t,OOO. Open SaVSun 3 Br 2 Ba. 1rg pleyroom, PUBLICATIONS. 14252 eu.. Cltlf~7TllUQIO Tenakl. 9n-5370 tum., onty $400,000 Btll ~~ ~· A-159• lnltne. eeoo wwner A~ • 179. Chamung Spanish 3 Br 2 Ba on 45' lot. PIPIUI ••I 'IN -Grundy Rftr 875-e 1s 1 c.rot J. utt1e. 309 Onyx. Huntington BMctt. c.itt courtyard & lrg deck. pier & slip. LIFT llllB. &and,.. 2 & 3 Bdr con-=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 811bol 116end Cellf 92ee.2 91647 .. 100 000 • Thia tx1a1,.;... ·11 con-This bu9tne1e ta con-~I . . · do9. 1 ml to beech. DI llT mfr ducted by:"" lndMdual ducMd by:.,, lndMduel a;-'~~"':~~ $10,000bonuL &42-9558 " ..... C.ot J. LltUe AOf\l6d Taneka Be t f I 3 B 2 Ba I f . 1--\IChed ,..._ & a--''"" 8y Owner Meal V«de 4 NEW LISTING! Thie tt9t.m.nt ... ftled ™' .. tement Wll,.... au I u r. . p ayroom. irep~~. * ~ .;;,-; &rdm 2 b• S 152K 2 Bedtoom. 2'A t>sth, den, w1tt1 tt1e County an of Or-wtth "',!~ ~~ °'11• beam ceilings Xlnt fmancmg. $420,000. --. , ~ •• __. In 1 mottvetllll ~1 torma1.-.i.... room. com-.,. County on June 19. lf'Ol1 ...,.,... .. ~ on ....,,. ., _ .. _ ...,....,_, .. ft-.. 1164 1964 Co1ta Meea compMx mfl mSI minty pool & 9C>ll. Gre.t ,,... Pub411hed n......... "= .. that'• V9fY dellreebte. J. 'LIT1 condltkln. $185,000 Publllhed Orenoe eo.t Deity Piiot ~25~.Juty 2• 9, -Yltll MM UYFlllT OHM Too gooct to be trw at LM IEILR ~~June 25· July 2· 9· 1e. 1164 Jetly & Bay Vlew. ne wly decorated Mai only $95,000l .,..7171• X:.::: ';~ ~ lll-l• · M40 M43 Kai 2 Br, 2 Ba, 40' patio. $695.000. yHr Spaci ous 3 --------THE REAL ESTATERS BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR : r .. ·. ;) . _. "'• k e, • t· ,,. llWPllTllUI MYIM,IOI THE REAL ESTATE RS IO .... I._, ........ I l __ t'_r_l_1'_j_c_r_t; ~ tAo9 :-.. -::. ~ ------........ ~ -..... .._ ...... , .... • bedroom. 2 beth l'lofM +---------· I 2 l:*lroom In _,..ate ----....... bultdtng.. ~ ~ Home/Oup6ex. 5109 s..- tal.,.. on a 50X100 lot. .nor. ownr/llQ1 MS-2&47 Flreplace, bullt-ln1, -·-- torcecl .. heel. Owner --· mey rMfY 2nd T.D at Dlatrua triple• 3-2-2 lnterwt onty peyments. Bdrms. $&50,000 400 E 1189.000. eau 631-1400 Ocean"°"' &73-3m for o.11111. OCEANFRONT OUPlEX ~<\11 HI Ht1'1 ... ~ .... ·-· REAL ESTATE ln-ellO Xlnt IOc l ltnance. 1404 W Oceanfront 973-7873 , PllCl IOllTlll hos N B¥ront, a.i 1a1 Open dally 2-$PM OI• tered 11 $950,000 Cu. tom l'lof'M. ~· ~com­~· wldock Stephani. Bernerdy. Lido Rlty 673-7300. ~7050 ., ce Ortf9I Cout DAILY ~ILOT/M~. July •• 1884 • •••llt l•u 1100 lt11rt Prt1 HIO IHut Uafual1~.. Bta1u Ualaralt~ .. ·· Ptala la 2llf Dau Piiat 2TZI l•••tr C1-11cl1l lallat11 Or1. fllf ••It Waat BY own;; 12xUIE'Xii. LR. SI 1U1 Ctrtaa ••I •u 5122 Cttta .... 2lZ4 11 Charming t b•droom, ltatall ZIOI ltatala 1111 ;Prlnt:d :1\rria wrlG .-.. ... .-.. .. -..--- +add/rm. adull & no pet II P&llWlY mlront Hoomo, yr1 n .. r marina. 1450. Balboe P9nln1Ula +12 blk 18048 R:r&;; FO 17K. Wlh train, wy m IMJllpel park C.M. $28,500 A . 1 w vi.w on PCH 2bdrm abode rlt• lovely 3 Brdm 2 ba IN, dplx,fUtn 2br 1ba-no 4H-94U Noon..apm to aand 2 Ot 3 Sdrm't 1240 1q ti · · Mta 1·2K per month .............. IWet ~9 0( 984-9229 ~ 10 oc.a:mantlc 4 COUPl••lllngi.a up-lownhouM ~-•Iona! ltereot 873-0H7 I t .... L 11io 1500 wttly 85CM243 Ag«it s41-eos2 554-3801/8314639 VARIOUS LANOUAOE8 ... ._ance on r dat•d kltch 1715 at factl!t191, convenient lo-It:.. • UiU U • • ,. T On-<*! beet• IUllLUf PAii Calald:J~it.3 =/ 53M190 Beat Rlty f• oatlona 1450+MC .,._ti Ill .. .,. 1111' cab' fikup POOf BAL ISL.. ELEGANT 3 Br SMALL OFFICE ground IUm ULH .:"~~ ApplY lrYIM A bMutlfUI 24 x eo ft 2BR bl 2 ~ ulllt. "--· • zm depoelt. 875-9588 U25. b& moSU: ™· no c.O.. to bch No peti hM, -8, ttept/bdl, ..... approx. eoo lq. ft. NftpOrt &Moh, ..... or un'1n.ct sGnool Dletrtct 2 Bath hlghly upgrlldlld ruap\..... ~· •j_,.,_• .,.. I Ill ..n M .. Verd9 3 Brdm 2 ..... P•ta. Matur• adulta. '410/mo H0-2875 ~ ~tdy.146-8333 Avall 8/t. Udo lal9 .,.., aai.. Owner poor hMtth. 29'41 Alton lrvlne home larQ9 IMng • din-rn .... nga. .. •""r-2 Bdrm enct gar crpti -. Qutet MCUr9 Fr• atandlnQ. Alk fOt 875-2787 After 5~ PM ' Ing & kltchan atM with S395,000. c.11 Catalina d""" ns W W~ nO tam rm, lg petJo $1200 1991 ~ 84&-1373 2 Bdrm 1 be with CdM 1 Br~ Wk allo 3 Si.v., 973-13l3 .. W .. ' DU .,,...ee3--_ _,1o..4..,.--.,..-.,..---:::-:--:-famlty room off anck>Md Condo Salel & Rentals .,..... · • 2812 S.ang 1-4S79-2t80 · beckyard dahMh« gar Bd HM ~ Wk (213) ~ ut ,.. .. Boet Mechenle '9ffabl9 pofCh Alloalr cond. (213) 510-1102 pet.a. $5&0. 831-8212 Pocket~ 3bdrm2be AfUlltatl, Uaf. 1540 no Pet-847~lf3 · 692•1588 or 971•2..0 ~N~~~~ 110 808 Int&= twdwOticlnQ indMdual: Call Agt. 640-5937 ltatah 2BR 1 ~BA petlO, an 2 car gard9n apot mom'a kttctl Extra nlc9 2BR 1'ABA ElaicM C.M. studio, avail. ampl9 p6I &/c 87~eo0 want9d for " up, In 911 pf\&MI of boet c.JltrclaJ gar., atove, Dft'7· pool, klda pool $515 53M190 leatral ftll frplc, patio, g• .. 1575. 8116. Nr bMCtl &. ~ g, ' Beach Souwnlr'' m-.> malnt. & reipalr. Mutt b9 seoo mo. &42-vo 4 ea.t Rlty t.. H0-3521 Pvt ywd, pttlg. 1700/mo. UllU IDOi magazine adv•r11tlng ftulbl9. Oood r•f• • Prtf!!!L llSO IHHI hrallk .. 3 Bdrm 2~ ea. e yrs,,_ ~ta for2 ':.In ,:derl Incl. utlla. 842-2045 fln9 Coet1 Hwy location concept. AMdy for mar-must. 875-eoec> N9wpof1~ont Pf11n9 dbl an. oanioe w/OJ**: reutala ~o:. 2nd m! For r:; WWlll PENNINSULA· ,,.., downtown. S850 lq k•tlng. Fan~t~l'owttl omc:. bkjg. 11,eoo.000. yard. bit.ma, Matr .utt•. V•IML UH Info plMM can·tM IMn--YIWIE LIDO ISLE ft. app $1.30/eq ft . pot91"1Ual 87 lllUEIPIH BlllGrundyR1tre7s..ts1e1 liDN llJUi Ziii :;,1~1:.;=:.9· SUpard:J 177! 3bdrm egW554-e732 N9W 1 & 2 Bdrm luxury ~uty= ~OOCorp. itrtt'-"' we Miid Mlpl Buey omc:. lanat PnJ USO 2 Br szm,,_ 1158/Wk. lll lllmf 142· 1111 2b• pool htM off Brode· laJHa -.>ta In 14 plana. 1 Bdrm. Agt ug. 87M 181 T .D. I ffZI r9q\11Na mature, well or· .' --avail Wint• Call ...,.._ hun1 gar/ahop deUllla at p la ,_ •707 2 Bdrm and TownhOm91 Shop/Stor9/0fftce 8Pao9 gan!Ud peraon tor gen- ."_.. (818)«6-57&8 3BR 2BA $700 mo. ~ 53Mf90 Belt Rlty fM ft aa.. • + poola. t9nnla, water-U5, 300. 800+ 1q "· I.I IAmEI aral omc. dutlel Entry ~ltlfuf 1~ of 1 owner Ct1tl it11 2114 18th ind CrHtmont. 1Ldroom. 1 Lth. Walk falla. ponda. G .. paid. leatalJ tt C. M ... C-2. 548·7249 lerta .. I O., a.1• level acctt/pbl• & ~~r~!.~ur•_ SS0.74770<548-4022 lut leec~ U40 tobMchS625. From San Otego Frwy lkart U01 •CdMdlxault ... AC,ampl SpedalfzlriQln1at&2nd accta/r.cbOOkkMC>lngln .._.a• ac fut9ide 2 bdrm, ctwm-a • 845-8324 d~ Nor1h on e..cti to : prttg from $225 2855 ~-TO'tSlnc.1$49 mfg/aal9sorlent9dofflc9. ~~~~~~2~~· Ing nxar. xlnt loeatlon, lrg 3~M~~~.1:~~ 528:rm ~ ~m. ~~ cenu ... .., HU McMc~~dd9'\ and 't!~wtond 2~~ '~ ::· oP'~= co.it Hwy. 975-ftoo . Robt. Sattler NH/CM -'Lota of opptnty for a aetf· crnr. aii.y acoesa, luah si.rr u... t 841 1324 I, , n prea ._..... a 9'\ to ~ n RE Brot<ar Bd AMltcn atan.t In • c:ong9nlal Lett llr LJt 1400 yard, fruit tr .... Auum. • """m • Mlghborhood. nr ooeen 2 Bdrm, 1 ba. POOi, &Ck, VIiiao-. (714)893-5198 ., .. 2.40.3157 aft 5 M·F lda1trlal 642-2171 645-0811 non ., mo k Ing at .. Owner may c arry. 3 Brdm 2 b• nou... Pool, & all lctlla. Grdnr lnctd. bHnll,2 per90na, no peta. I t &::L~ •7.az F•m•I• rmmt• NWPT lnt1lt nze moapMra.$a.e<>toatat1. FabolouaOOMnfrontlot 1135,000, PP. Op•n dblgar,apactoua,rmnt 11200.p /mo . Call Lae$715mo.650-0473 U.w ... r • ._CREST ocHn vlewWANTEO:P.op19nelldlng TFI ·CM. Call 8·4 CdM. price rllduoed for Sit1Sun648-1481. a .. 1 $1050/mo 2094 12·21&-9,(213)858-e892 •Y1UllLIWl* S3e<>/mo 831-s458 CM3800eqftwlfhofflo9a pvt TO ISS $10,000 up.· 645-2842. •a I• I 1 . 2 o O, O O o B 1 al or (714) 850-3810 Cetta •eu 1124 & perking. .45/eq ft No credit ..-, no penalty. __,,....._.,.........,........ _______ _ 47&-0-416or875-08t2 BuL leack 2140 aTILmof ........... IT 1eR .,.75 ,..,_,, d Lbg91 2 bdlrmld2 bad ..,h t•h· All F9m&l9ahr3BR2BAN9W· W.N.T.CoW-4910 0....IM>tlANoc:813-7311 CHILDCARE & Lit• -s -. --a, rpa. tna nc • wa ra, port Condo walk to bch HaekMC>fng P/T Matur• FOR SALE BY OWNER .. 2 BO 2+ 12 BA ,lttach dbl 142-1111 llAll llW 1111111 range. lndry. 2188 Mapl9 newfy d.c. lge walk..Jn S340 mo e-75-9643 Aaatuc .. tatl 3002 •••• ...... SliO ~for 2 achool .• ctlll· PLEX LOT 1 160,000 gar9, am. fenced yd., Townhou ... 2 br 2~ be -.>t A. Lv m8Q 646-5282 cloMta, llled batha, pool ' SPlRITOXC READINGS -dren ~ Lovely atr•t 1 bk off adulla. no peta. 646-2661 4Br 3B• 2 atory •X9C O/W, atv,. gar. frplc:, i 2 Bedroom 2 bath No w/beau1. lndtcpd crtyrd. Female to ahare 4Br Advice In All Matten & *HITAL IYllllllT -=-..,.-·..,......,,..----,--...,..--. 17th. Drive by 336 ewe SS95 mon. hYM. Mau Vlf'd9 IOc Child OK. $850. pet tlo ·frplc dahw.ti Encl gar, lndry, BBQ. condo In EASTBLUFFS Coun..Clng 1816 S El Cterlcal. lm!Nd. opartlng C.b<IUo or eall 675-4333 •--~I ._ 1...L-..1 S1200/rno. Avall now ~7 1661"t~eth St i825 · Quiet 1dult Uvlng nr $245 75M282n20-1328 Camino RM.I San Coi.m for PIT WOl'tc. 15-20 hra _.... •••'11.--Call Urry 5•&-5882 Agt · · ocean No peta. 1895. . · · PIT P!Maant Cotta M..a pr wk. Send r.euM9 to lifter IJU .. Jt ... Gn111l 2202 Kid pet ot< 4bdrm 2ba 2BR 1ba. encl. gar9. 279 (714) 64&-1755 FEMALE to ahare NB Lie d 492•7298 General Praotlc. With Richard Prlc9 I. Aaeoc .• Pvt gatlld comm, X1ra lge BARGAIN HUNTERS $275 mod Dvtn dWahr nu W Wllaon A t G hOUM 1333/mo + u1Ha. Grut Patlenlt. We Mele 1590 S. Coest Hwy, II 18 '°'.· 11 12000 nra1. 13% Luxuriouarentalkld pet NrOCC3br2b141amhM9 crptacoolpool53M190 64s,.1819 "'751~ f.!~aaalMc• 74 Call K•vln or Dave 1 eating ROH with U · LagunaBMch ftxlld auum 1219000 ot< a deal 11 SS95 lie mod bltnl updated d.eor 8ea1 Riiy f• · ·--e.4e-8545 Lv m8Q d ' • Mak off 2• Bel I dwahr beach a rea $e25 at 2BR 2B.A frplc gar 1825 ST 010 WITH FIRE-SCRAM LETS pan 9d unctions •x-Community s.tYlc9 Coot· • •· mon 539~190 Belt Rtty fee *llM1t0* IP&llUM llUI 446 H'amllton • C M PLACE s.-50 Furn, want to bc:h "'50 • P«tk:e to compi91• our dlnator.Challenglng po9-1Wal 2Bdrm bungalow w/lrg 875-9797 · Bkr s.tma 497-174" Non-amoker 873-2008 ANSWERS INm 831-1420 ltlon w/Matcn of bimM 646-64S73 or 559-511 1 11101m .a._, 4Wnt )'9rd N• plult\ carp9t· I •---L pma, 557-5252 (•X1 211) •87 Camero. r9blt 327 v..a. bk1h d9fect• foundation IHUltU 2 Br w~g::. u~~,;!;sld• ., ... ., •h .. , Ing, dbl gar. comef lot. 5 2 Br upstalr9 "'101mo no ..,.rt .._. Ulguna e..cti hM, p<V1 Oige9t . Utual auto, cuatom: tire, mega, Energ.tlc. Mii-organ. Loi 'or __ ,_ 9---... 1 1 ... CdM •AAl'O/mo '"' 1r le .. ..__ blk1 to aandy bMctl. petsrets req 352Vlctorla room, bath, antranc• Patch. T._...... paint '3000. 131-41196 gOod tpHlll\O tkllla, ...... ..,._,"' Df, ,....,., ru. 9CI0-6331 645--8161 S3501a1&1ut497-4391 ,.,...., abllitytocoordlnat•fund (8Qrlc:ultural), 6300 aq h S....r I Wf•r llt.a 1to ltaf fH $375 1 Br Trtr quiet lldUll ESCAPED ralalng ec:tMtlM a IYIU9t. ~:11M:. tirviti;: lutals Ooalrabte 2bdrm 2ba trl s~.~~ k2~ 2b~ '.:~5 pttk. no peti G .. paid. ~ature:~shr~t o:::,:r~h:Zt~r~~I~.~ IOOlllTlll IUll Exolnt beMflta. To b9 BIVd 173,000 or S60.000 .IAOlll IULn crpta awl• 9ncl i., too to w!ves ~9~90 a..~ 140 Cabrtllo 873-7787 IN NEWPORT BEACH 1a-:Y S52S 64s-&557 g movi. w.. ao bad. It Lita accnt'g expar.: CUh conaldered Mnd r-.ime aHcaah. PllPIUll&IEllDT mid $500'• 53 ·8190 Rltyfee 3 Bdr. 1~ ea. O/W'a. AgrNtplacetoll~onthe M/F ·nr F~lon lslend wun't releaMO. II ES-c:i•.;:•c:=: ~~:JftXn•f:e: ~J 114/llM1l~ e:: ~~ Bdr 1 ea, Baat. lbr .. U ft42 r~t~!·d .blt~~·95~~·~1: ~l~~~~ue~:y & P~I:~~~ S..poolullfuld-48cfr~Q..~' CAPED. S~~~~~1Jo~~~1m., -:::9,...,,26~27-=-=~..,..,...,=~ Traditional lalha l1lu• 2206 huge fenc:ed patio, gar-421t bOCi( 36r, F.R. 2ba. nu 645-8646, 850-7275 apaa, 8 tennla court•. 7 ·gar ener *v1~1t~a1 c=~:ac,:! Cell 557•5511 · CONSTRUCTION SECTY Realty E'--ant 36f wntr mtl ,Od( age, S875. Call Craig gray cpta $2000 mo. u501 2 B 2 b pool•. CIOM to bual""9, N.B. WOfklng dependable Put, prwnt & future. s..ttlng motlvat9d lndlvtd· ._ 631 12ee ~guaon & Hllhn R.E . .., mo. lovefy r • OC Airport, Faahlon M. Ideal location. Pool, 87s-2495 831 8964 ual w/xlnt typtng lkllla & 631· 7370 frplc dWlhr gat opt'I S850 .. 842-1183 or 831-o935 townhouH, frplc, all ltland. convenient ahopa Jae., tennla, view. Vwy O< .. Aerobic Exerc:IM lnstruc. gen'I ofo lklttt, heavy reMrVe onty at 539-6190 bltlna. Oya 8•2-1803, on tight. Pvt rm & ba. Avail. 7120. ,.... $12.50/hr. wtll tr81n. Work ph<>neoontectw/vendofa BMt Rlty fee lniH 2144 .v.. 842~1 S390+ dep. 875-~ own .,.._ n2-5847 Mt-2188 Two prltM loU on corner. Cfttal .. l lbr IU2 For MJe 0< rent: 2 Bd 2 ba JIL 911T SlnglM 1 & 2 Bdrm Ai>•rt· Prof male, Htg Hrbr ANIMAL HOSPITAL In CM COUNTER PERSON C 1 n n • r Y v 111 • g • c&lll a.El KIDS & DOGS WELCOME San Juequln condo. Cell Bach w/khc:h, EalcM. ~tlo. "'-nta & TownhouaH Condo.1 blk bc:h, MC fOlJIUI\ ADS Miida full-tllM k91"1MI LB CIMnerl , Apply In par- S350,000 873-3777 Spactoua OC9anvtew. 3 4 Br 2 ba 2 patlol. 339 Hazel 831--0880 Cath cell. car port 1415. from S880. (Aak about gurd, .oar. pool, t91"1nla, 1111 P•raon Mon-Fri. Call aon 320 Legion St. Claaalfl•d Ada ire Iha bdrm 3 b• awimmlng CabrlllO E-elde CM. 1 Btl Rancho San Juaq Condo 8~ 160 Iv mag fumlahecl apta, comptet• W/O, 1425. mo. George, ARE FREE 54S-.371M btwn 9am-epm 4M-84e<> anawer to a 8Yccea1ful pool, 'dbl cat' gar, '2500. off 17th 1950 875-4333 View. 2 bd 2 ba.derl. Ava1i Brand new 2 & 3 Bdrm with TV, llMna & utenalla, hm (213) 592-3701 aft. 7, AllWllm -------- garage°' yard .... , tt'a • mo to month Of 1 yr Marcil to your phOM 10 now. I 1, 150. 844-5687 condoa, c:holca of c:arpM, = :;-1=:, ~ = Wk 213< 532-5300 ext 288 Cal·. IBM better way to tell more laau Call Steve, pteca a fast...cttng a.... IEITILI gar, $925/up. 842-9558 bor•Rd.itSanJoaquln Prof. man to anr w/~ Nitlonel PhoM Service To ~mJ?~ ... peopet 973-t373 alfted ad. 842~7• Call UI regarding lrvtM Brand new condos. 1+ Hiiia Rd. yr prof .. 3 Br 2ea Oltm 142-1171 hu lmtMda.te poeltton. Cluatv9 ool9Ctabt9 .. gift leeMI '°"· 2 er. 2 Br+den. s.c. 14'-1100 "°':' .. ~,P'· ~0n· tor opart mJnc:1ec1 i.c:ua.. "..,.... e.utlfUI t>eara. bldg. Rental office open pat ' .._.. ng _... All ahlfta. Xlnt aatary l ballooM, CMalmaa dee- Mon-Sat 1·5PM or COfM NB pen. "' Udo, .=1 bonuHa. EOE (714) oratlona l omamentt. by 810 Baker St, C.M. .,..., 15e<>/mo. 647 788 Found· S..Utttul Or/wh 250-0355 F/t, Mon-Fr1~14.lhr SYDNEY 0MARR 241· 1275. From $875. •2Br 2Ba BLUFFS. MW dya. 875-5557 eY9I kltt91"1 vie 20th & Fuli.rton -=-="-='""':-=""....,..,..='""°"'"='"-~ to ltar1 5.45-52n decor. pool, patio, frplc, Rm I .,. fum horM N 7/5 845-2573 ASSIST ANT /STYLIST. HOROSCOPE Deluxe 3 bdrm. 2 ba. carporta 1450 No pe1a · n .,,. · r muat b9 lie. Work wtth a CUSTOMER SERVICE dlahwshr . ....cl. garag9, 833-1853 OR 752-5822 Back Bay, w/d, rmcrowv, FOUND: Hampat9r 7/5 toppro~al.Guaran-HOSTESS: lmm9dlat• lg. d-*. pvt ldry rm. 3 Bd 2 C muat aee, S3e5 850-831• Brn w/wtlt atr1pe & b911y. tMd commlulof\ educe-op•nln~1t Orang• '750 No peta. 831-45155. be ondo In N9W-s ah NB......... • Vic. Penn Pt. 873-5689 tlon Cofone ~ Mat Coun"" EX.cutlve port cr .. t Obi gar, patio. ummer. r ·-· veg-• · ., Oefux• Elald• TownhOUM wahr/dryer hook-up e'tarlan, non-amkr SSOO FOUND JULY 4th, Emer-875-6531or871-9051 Terminal. reQUlr• nMt 2br 1'A ba. no pe1a $850 gr"t locatlon. &1200/mO 1•1 & lut. refa 64&.2108 aid Bayblk Kltt91"1 on bch. Auto -.>PNranc9 and OOOCI 2548 Orano-842-2520 6 Kamalii Con I 1 ct S •c u r I t y AUTO ~nallty • wlll train Ttaesday, Jalf 10 . • DI 2Br tr IC di TSL IWIDllT lar19t1 fer 494-.8571 d)1, 780-8528 App~lnpwaon. UCO Air. ARIES (March 21 -Apnl 19): Travel plans should be reviewed, 3880M~Or1ve d~. 2 p/tioi f0<w2 8!~ MJ.1111 ltat IHI eVN BOOKKEEPER ~th~~!~P::~ W•Y possibly de1ayed. Check detatls, be positive concerning reservations. aona. No pe11 $e26/mo slngl• Garage Coat• FOUNI) m•I• blk/brn language and ultimate goals. Aquanan helps make wish come true-if Univ. Park lovely 3 bdrm 2 388 w Bay St &42-0481. $980 Exctuaiv. N9Wport M ... s~or only. S70. Doble. mil• blk/brn mix M h .... _ DECORATE INTERIORS ... ;t ~ou ga n s rpn'se packa~e ·s d b• condo, dbl gar. r90-Tower condo. Dix 2Br mo .·,.1 Tetrl« f9m blk/brn/wht uat aw U'**'°9 In Color/d•t*Gn. PfT. to you w .... • 1 · u 1 ue. r•1tlon lac. No peta. Eatsk:I• 1 bdrm, small but 28• on bay w/OC*ln vu & · "" Fox Terr Mix l•m brn auto deal9tahlp account· •tart. Wiii train. n&-5447 TAU US (April 20-May 20): mottonal involvement is featured, 1950. mo. 54a-0397 cozy. Nitural wood full aecurlty 973•3504 Offlct ltatalt .,.1... Shep male Golden Ing to do computer lmput could ultimately prove rewarding. Be aware of checking account. beam1&cablneta."'15. ••, Re ' f t G and r9cel'Vabl9 coti.c-DECORATING /ART balance. anthmc t1c. Focus on taxes. credits. r~urccs of o ne who WOOOBROIGE 3 Bdrm 851·9526 LIDO VIEW Spac: delux 1160 ..,, A. Nor1h CO:ta trvr, .m awn rt tlona. Salery com-SALES PIT FfT Cerw TownhouH H\ Bath cuat 1Br, 2 lg batha. LM --. Dane pup, ma.le bm/bfk m.naYrataw/~ opportunity 495-97&4 makes numerous promises. Gemma. Virgo. Sagittarius persons ft,gure saeo mo 559-9539 E aide 2Br, 1 Child/no s12501 .. 87&.-8359 M ... 95c per a/ft. Top Chlhuahoa. male btk Twr !xoeii.nt WOl'tclng con~ prominently. :------:;:--~--rr-:T1peta. Go .... 2583-F loc, gd park'g 540-leee ml•, fem blk/brn/wht dltlon & fl1r!Q9 b&Mflta 11.al'm PUWl GEMINl (May 2 1-June :!0): Stud y Aries message for vaJuable hint. Latu• leack Elden S525 831-3871 Prime w. Oceanfront, yrty 1817 w .. tcrltf Ortw. NB SMltl•. mai. blk/wht 40 11ourt par w.-Mon: PIT F!Twlll train. Caft Stress diplo macy. timing. stn ve to restore harmony on homefront. ~ VieW pool. 2br E·ald9 dptx 2 bd 1 ba, ~ac:r S~ -:no~ J~ Sher• 3 Room furnlah9d =La.t,f::,· ~~ Fri. Contac:1 ShatOn for Jullt 84&-32t2 Emphasis also on legal papers. pubhClty, possible clash of ideas. Family 2~ba Inc utll. 11350 mo. IOOO eq. ft w/gar9 875-9111 Of 831-45285 office, ground floor, W9t 844-3e58 · &p90lntlTMN'lt IDTILAllllTll'I be II k d be .. Ferguaon & Hahn R.E. $625. 842-7404. bar. r.,rldg. 1250/par • ..,,......-.......,..-----mem r w1 ma e ma1or concession an you must a aracsous 842•1183 0< 831-09'35 YDUILLU aon. maximum 3 ~-ltound· Small black male NABERS Newport BHch. ADA wtnner... I L::1. W9 lllTAIT. 2BR 2BA • • 1125-1990. Call b9tween S;ao-~:30 dOg Nr San Mlguel NB pr•f•rr•d. ltnmtdlate CANCER (June 21-Jul> 22): Be wary. avoid rushing, refuse to be f"'"" .._. ... $645/mo 2 Bel ,.,.., ba Agent 931...ceeo M-S 646-2474 759-017~ opartlng. 4~ day&. Ben-~~~~:~~~~r~.~a:~~h~~!~~h ~~~~~rr;~:e;o~~ ~s:curo~~~us~ 3~d~-.'~ = ~~io~.,'to kjzh~: Saa c1...... 17ff S=L~;::~:oocv.:-i~ .. F=h~.~ w:~.~~ CADILLAC = :;. Lunar spotlight on pets, dependents, employmentand safety measures. come 87~0 Ag t 1923 Pomona 1lr, iL. vi;; llOO"tmo. Avail. 111. Udo••...... SMlt•. 644 3658 LEO(July23-Aug.22):Scenarioh!lhlightspersonalacruevement. Tl&.UN11911T Secorlty & dMnlng cs.-FrM ttandlnQ. Mk for F nd y bk>ndG« lllllarW"" Fr~Ull~*tcttn- money, love, advancement. professional appraisal. This can be a 3i.!:t1 ~°'~for 141·1111 pe>ett. 431-36& Ewa Stwa, 978-1373 rhep: :! Vic. Eucf:~ ........ tel pr9Ct1oe lookl"I for power-play day' Style is 1mpnntcd. v iews. opinions arc vindicated. n • g ·Ag t 5 • 9 ;c LGE 3 Bdrm grnd fir. 2 ba. I IDWllft 111TD Talbet1164-e391 an 5 714/540·9100 uparitnOtd, MOtlVtted You're going places, c hansma spark.Jes and you'IJ win fnends and 982-9817 patlO, ....cl gar, nr Hbf a::ch ™ room tor NtiWPOf1 C....t• full Loat 7/3 tM/brn Shep '*-Pllonlet. 4-dy ... Ulfluence people. 3Br. 2'ABa. 200" off PCH. Wllaon Shop'9, 1190. r91"1t. 217 33rd St., fMW· WWle 7141844 8800 mbc Vic. Newport a..ch' '"e-a--bY91_,...t1_ar.......,..wan_t_lld_ln_m_y with altttftat• lat AM. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22): Deal has been consummated 7aa-.7eo 1 or 548-5e08 port IMch or e7S-'700 ..,.. 648-1ooe or (1)H&-2827 hOtM, NB. Twlnt 1 moa ~AfY~·2 Ne.port whether ornot you a~ awa~ of It. Get out of ru l, don't linger. know that HUQ9d~:~., ~·, F= MESA PINES 2HO Herta L.aoun• loh. FUrn, pvt 91"1t, LARGE OFFICE W/Wlndow LOlt: Fi.MALE TORTOISE 7am-4rm Mon-Fri. Begin by embarkina on new trail you'll ult1matcly emerge victonous. Stnve Ui,oo ~32181-6 BEAUTIFUl 18drm 1575 a.. n/attr, bUa/prof 40+. vltw. Neer o .c . Airport, l.lguna 8ch 497·&454 Augut 20 8f3.T954 .. 11.m r: d d" '--d h . d be •• d t ....... d f , __________ LIKE NEWBach $4711 Pool, T.V., utll Incl lr91M. Z«ox. MC!telerill ---------1-----------N1At.tahlft. Wlfftteln ...... aor wt er au 1enoe, 111va en onzons an .,a o U'C" n o 38t 2~ea w/boet lllp. PRVT patio, pool, ape l350/rno •M-<>411 & l)hont .,,., ""'· avall. Loat:Fwn gold.n r•trvr ...... 1t1a141 ~ ...,.. · · · wnnusRZctrde23~n2~) Sh . . hjehl"ahtcd d Uo Secu~ 1)1 ·~200/mo TOP ...... qul91, no 1>9'• Pteewlt kit pf'I $450.mo. 7112.()980 713"' 22nd' hnta ~· Now Hlrine 873-1 ~~~M.~.,~ pt. t. : • Ort JOUmey IS ~ I . 'Iii ~ 11 can a 121 "., 4pm Ml-1447 trd ea:· c J A~ NEWPORt CEHTl!A Ave AEWAAD 842-<l 1 BMutlful rww a.ion In noon. likely to be involved. Be direct, independent, creative, W1 na to &et to 4 Bdr 2+12 ba, patio, dbl POOL. fir-'-, pvt patio ~ .. 1286. 546-6"' Fun Svc EQc:utlve Sult• PtrMUll Jiii =a.tchnowlnt•· 04IPAfCH TMINH ~n of matters wtth loved one. Avoid heavy liftina, indicate c.u gar a 9001. x-t.G'iP 8136 as&O-tn6 l40-6470 tor •tab. 8tyt1et Ut• o-i * woe1l. C.M. willi.naness to pioneer a prOJCCl. Relative wtll communicate unique l1200/M0.4M-742t EMttldenoJ)9taS57•2841 Roomlnlgthtt.'400".MO. 11_1.,..._ &M rte1.N2-ltOI eao-1110 ,_.,uest lnctd• utlf. Hr bMctt. r .... ,.,... 011011 ...... · 23 N 21 Be ( · h t. .,Thtlet 3br 2be hlM STUNNING 1.MQ9 18drm 873-2113 t73-IOOI 5IO 8q. Ft IUITT·UITllTW Oom.help:ttudent nda SCORPIO (Oct. • ov. ): aware o mventorr.. c ec .. cumnt $1711 w/dbt gar Of Sbt garden apt poo1 t4t6 3011 a H.,bor Blvd CM 101111 M 14()..llOO TUM-kt 11-.1n hMtceeplflQ ~ market pnce1. Know your own wonh. stress quality ind value. Sb& 2 '1ry hme w/frptc 110w'1tth st Room unf\lm, CdM. 1315. Hart>or·lak• CtrH•r: l40-1IOO OUt1nQ tell yr, '60-"7741 Intuition is on taraet, you'll locate ar11cle that had been IOit.. m1ssing or dbl oar 11100 Info at =r.::: pk.la utH MaJe/Fem. Non (ec:roee frOM Fedoo) 111 I. 'MPll ILWI r,;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;::;;m:;;;;;;:===...:~==-••m;;;i:;;;;:;- 1tolen. Money isavad1blc. you 'Uknown and have reason to celebrate. ll3M 190 ._. Nty fte . VILLA Mt:utlU' emotier O.Vld, 720-1532 14 + 12x40. Qtklt. poea. flLLllM Clerks 8 G....., • •rus (N 22 "'--21) P 1 . . b lidi 8 I'"' urwt 2Wrm IWM famUy compta, 28' 28a. ...... ~w.._. 0 ft• red &1. a.t..2 6 A II .1'n ov. -~. : opu anty increus, 0 y :::d decor w/mod bttnt O/w, cat1>9t, dr•p... .-: em Agt.(819) 729-"'5 o; 111-1111 1snnt ~vails, soc1&l inv1t1ttons multiply and you'll be mott soujht· 11_ ,100 •• 53t-t1to ~tmo.'~!!'· -~,. uu • (114) ts0-3311 t..,. ., ... , .. after k.id on the block. Be •-are of body imaae. keep ruoluuon1 ---..... -.... WklV rwrt11e now •V9il concm:una die!.:_~etaht.. nutntion. Timi nt wiU be on t.arvt. .. , My,.. pd. uoo depoalt 1140/Wtl 1. up Co6or TV orange eou~ Atrpon1ji;i;ii£fir CAPRJCOnn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Some rqulauons. delay•. ..... U7S/mo No~ 2324 pflOMe In room ' .... new bulld-11 ratri<:tlon1 actuaJly work in your favor. Know u. bide )'Our time. N;W Jlr filLt gueta:d Eldon APt 1 2·• tll 2274 T.4458ivd CM. =tot~~'::, outline aoats and keep .. secrt1 .. appointment Scorpio nati\le helps _., oomm poof, etc on1y21U1M1ett 1~ jiiiiiiiiiiiiiil cllrlft fiiJa.nci.aJ pttturc. also aids t.bere emotioru att com:crned. 12.1.00 A8t 492~ , • tt.t 1uo.a n. Wiii · AQUAJlWS(Jan 20-Fcb. JS): Bercadyforchan,e, travel. varietyJ. .-111t1aw•1 APARTMENTS to •ult. Comp•t1U¥• •a ability to make wtshcs come true. Romanc:it i1 hifhc~ted. member 01 1-""'.-...;a_....... a.a11 e.autttul a.roen Ai>••· '*"11 lrOMt co-:op. 8Hflt oood iooklno. .......... .. ~lot. cMcka. ape. No . now-p w • • • ....... ~ llMecttve ..., opposite IU doc, care. W111 try to please Ind wil mild)' .eek )iOUr CW m OrMG*.. pett bey, JulV 1·21. 2 Ir, 2 ba. ,,,.... young Illy for ~ approval.~' ideas on paper!. submit fonnat..1ugesdon.s, ~ 2 ,,_.., Id/be, tldrm/11A8a H-45 .-0.t.IWkatUOO.or • nlon•hlP Aepty wllh PUCB'S(Feb.1 9-March.lO):lndividU&l)OU11:1$pec10~n ~rto mirrored cloMta, a/o, 21d(m128a '65S.Ml6 S650~lwlit.11M415or •OitCIM.-nl• pt'°4o P.O IOX ~ lcaitimate b&rp1ns focus on 1.1' objCCU. IUlUI')' 1,tems. pll~O furrutu.rc. PoOf, apa, tennlt, bMUtt-391 W Wlt90tl 831•5583 l1&-M 1 MO "'Ee AIHT NWs>t ~ t2M3 Dome1t1c adJUSlment orcurs, will proYe btneficial and m11)'1l 10C'lude M ~lll•t• petlo, no pate. fh• fut"' drew In lh• BALIOA 1 ldf ept1 •t W/ttlolt tltTTI ...... filll 1ummmer hohday f'ftldcocc. t..ibna fi1urc1 prominently. 1176 •'Vall 1110 IM¥9 WMt ••. • 0111y Piiot beach IUO•l400twll Mr¥ 11111t• 111 Oovtt Dr NOW lllllC mu1ave ~1-012~ a..-.i M . '42·M71 875-t102 • &ult• 14 fit e, a1-31S1 ~~~-~~~~~~~~---------~--~~~....L::=::==:..;._.;..~==::J...;;..;.;..;__.~....;..~--------------.u::======~~~~========~!!- llUllll Exper, min 4 yra. Apply In per90n. 1871 Placentia, eo.t• M9M GREAT OPPORTUNTIV. Aallt needed ror buty heir NJon In NB. Lie req'd, 831-1390 mTlll Apply wlln LOVE'S BAR- 8-0UE, 304e Btiatol, CM H~..-& care for elderty couple 5 dy9/wtl. Ref1. Cell eft 7pm &U-8421 HOUSEKEEPER LIVE-IN. Meture Femele In good health. Able to Orlve. Salary, r~fl required. 495-8989. llllPI/ ... Ull ~ for NB fam. MU9t be meture, apMk Eng & drlw own cer 720-18'8 Very b;!.uy Circ:ulatioa Office hu an entry le•el clerical J"Mition Hailable for the right penon. Experience d•ired but will train. Position includea anawering pbonu, filiq, typing and data proc:eMin9. Applicant ahould be neat. like to work with people and ha•e a .,-ltin attitude. 40 hoar work week, Monday-Friday. Start.iq salary ia 1950/moath. Coocl eompuy benefits. Apply in pe~, Monday-Tbgnday. 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. Aak fer-Mary or Eileen. THINGS TODO Yi . fii car --=2. readW::--:r. ~':ler ptanfs ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT 330 West Bay Street Costa Mesa, CA 92627 -4 read the -.~-~-.: _ 5. she>C>Ptnl - ...................... ······ ......... . TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACAOU 1 vtt.i flukts 5 0..'1ttKll 10 Bllhop'•-t 14 MMttot>en 15 VIUlttng btodl te GIYe llght 17 tncome torm ti OoYemecl 1t Healthy 20 Collection 21 Mlnlehwe 22 Bat Mn'lng 24 P.,lilyleel 28 Kind of M\d 27 MooM'tkln 21 Moat bttef 31 Ff\111 34 Stir up. COiioq, 3S Oldeuto 38 TMeltN9Y 37 Appllee rat to 31,.._ - 39 Mtwloe lnl6gnla 40 Peeoe '°""' 4J Be pl'oper to 42~~ .-. Operet• 45 PIMelltl .. Flegl IO We!Oht \lnl'9 62 POOf pleyers I • 14 • 63 And not 64 Flnel notice 55 Bui• pl'ef. 57 Pond: PQ9t 58 Ho P9'1 59 - -.., and .. eo -dtxl1 e 1 P9tltloned e2s.ca 83 Brttlltl gun DOWN 1 -book 2 MontrMfl Fon.m,e.g. 3 PunltlW 4 Hwden 5 HW9h cry • PuMtlle 7 Pane elrport • Suo., ' Relief organlza. lion 10 Shocked 11 --Peril 12 """ 13 Pnc:Mr 21 Roof piece 23 Wound 25 One'• per.on 28 Dull aoundl 28 Tender apotl 21 Pwtlyf)M 30 WMd party .. • 7 PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED 31 Altrlngent 32 Put f0t1h 33 Of perching aongbirdl 34 OeYour 37 Of a mllltaty Id- encl 31 &Mgln 40 Tetchld • 1 Baked goods 43 8cheOulld • • 44 a.ms 48 -almond 47 Awt!werd 48 European Ian· ouaoe 49 Untrained 50 Swlndtee 51 Fetner Arab 52T~ 58 Elllfl one 57 Wrong pr«, Daily Pilat LAYOUT ARTIST PART TIME Orange County daily newspaper has an operung for a quick layout art1St. Candidate must be able to work well with sales people and meet datly dead- lines. Basic knowledge of camera ready art, typsizmg, and the capability to mark up layouts for producllon a must. Addillonal projects may include flyers, brochures. maps and sales pres- entallon visuals. 1-2 years expenence -newspaper preferred. Send resume to: ORA ,(,l. COA~l OAIU PILOT P.O. Box 1560 Costa Mesa, CA 92626 Attenuon: Lisa Smith Daily Pilai PART TIME '.\1olor Ro ule Available Ne~port Beach area. thrf't> hou,.., per day. Earn approx. 600 per month. tnU I I :00 to 1-:00 P\1. CIRCULATION DEPT 642-4321 EOE OR ANGE COAST DAIL V PILOT llO W RAY St •CO'>TAMlSA C.A 'f1J.}f •t I 4 .!\ • ~ .. t "--I I Y • •I ... A~ 11·14 EARN lP TO $75.00 PO WEEJ( • .. .. """ l~ tf'ftdlP. ... ,_. .... -...n ..... ,....,, ... "" .... Coale Dli!IJ r.t °" at ll l JO • .. .. --tlO .......... (IJI $Minty, .. w\' llw _. llo.fl Y• ..... _,,, ... ..-. ....... ,.. ... •• • la ......... C.-llOI ~ • ,. .,. ..... ca1 • Urt SUMMER HELP GM Wat91 • ,,.., unuMd '100 '32-144 Letge Boalon f.m. I ' ~ l40 541).0114 COMMEll c.-tfVROlU '-"'.'-11 , '• ' I r-' ,. ~ ....., so .. 1200 Bill YATES VW.PORSCHE ep.41:,c c'f; 4~ NABERS CADUAC LARGEST SELfC1lON of .... model. low ...... Ced-.c. lrl SOI ,,.. 11 Catlfomlal See ue todlyt 540-1111 WOILl'S UllDT 2600Hetbor1Mi. ..... lllZ COSTA MESA •um• QnnMt lffr 111 •.g;;,-.c;;o•rv'""a""'1""'r -c·1.•a•1i;.1c9, Pfe-owned GU uld d wht/red Int 12500 Y1ntege cluelC to current ~ 1210 Cell tft ep.. ~ moo.ta avaiteble Leau.,,.,..... ~1c.m.ro.ret11t121 v..e. M llD 11111 =i ca= ~":I'; 100~~~ '74 NOVA.,..,_, Good Newport 8elicll cood ~1c;-S 1IOO ID-I• •n MONTE OAN.O "Wlllllll" w .. .,~,.. ~ ) ( ' 0 CHICK IVERSON Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi 441 E. least ..,,, 1..,.rt ..... lll-OIOO Highest Quality Sales & Service 0 COMMONWEAL TH VOLKSWAGEN "flaml/y Since '53 Brlatol at Edinger In Santa Ana <W) 548-()22() ...J FOUNTAIN VALLEY ...J 0 .... (/) ii: CD 91 FWY. EDINGER SANTA ANA • 5 WARNER ~ CD 0 THEODORE ROBINS FORD U.S.A. 's # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer Modern Sales. Service. Parts, Body. Paint & Tire Oepts. Competitive Rates On Lease &.Daily Rentals . 2MO larMr 1"4., hsta •sa 141-0010., M0-1211 SOUTH COUNTY VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU 18711 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach (714) 842-2000 SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE O!anee Countys larpst Volkswacen/lsilzu Dulet m We Will Nol Be Undersold PARTS OCPARTMENT OPCN SATUROi\Y -.. IRVINE LAGUNA HILLS 0 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2121 • .,.., lhtl., .......... Over 23 Years Serving Orange County Sales • Service • Leasing 546-1200 S,.a.1 Plrts Ult 546-9411 MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM -9:00 PM SATURDAY 8:30 AM -8:00 PM SUNDAY 10:00 AM -5:00 PM 0 STADIUM PONTIAC We're New -We're Dealing AcroH from the Big A on K•t•ll• Juat Weat of th• (57) Or•nge Freew•r Sales • Service • Parts • Body Shop on Premises 714/385-1919 0 RAY FLADEBOE HONDA G RAY FLADEBOE VOLKSWAGEN #20 lllte hlfer Ir., lnl11 In The lrvlne Auto Center G BILL YATES YILllWllEI • .. IOIE • PEllEIT SALES• LEASING• PARTS• SERVICE #11 lllte C.lftr Ir., lnl•• In The lrvlne Auto Center 830-7800 Complete Sales, Service/ Lessing 830-7300 Orangt Countys Newtst Volkswagen Dealer Complttt Sales, Stmct & l taSJng 12112 Valle Reatl, la1 .l1H o.,lttr•• 411-4111 111-4800 +· + Class1f1ed ti The Ultimate Experience ' .1 ./ MISSION VIEJO •. SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO 0 BAUER MOTORS BUICK -JAGUAR -ISUZU Complete Automottw Needs SALES • SERVICE • LEASING F1ne s.ctJon of au.itty UMd Vehlctee I 1 BUICK DEALER IN ORANGE COUNTY 2125 HARBOR BL VD. COSTA MESA 979-2500 0 RAY FLADEBOE UICILI IEIOllY .lllllU lllD #11We0.lter Ir., lnl•• In The Irvine Auto Center 830-7000 CD CREVIER BMW SALES • SERVICE • LEASING "Where Professlonsl Attitude Preval/s " lpecletldftO In l!uropeen D•::J· Exe1ll1nt lelectloft of New end C8NhlNy pnpered 8MW'1 mwa~ In stod<. 835-3171 208 W. 1•t St., S•nt• Ana Comer of Broadway & 1at St. CIOMd Sunde~ Clas~ifted advertising 1s your best choice for help in selling the items you no IQ..nger need. l.t's quick and Inexpensive. and the Pilot reaches potential buyers who live in this area. Call today. Daily Pilat class1f1ed ads Phone 642·56 78 • HIGH80 LOWM 11m1111111 MONDAY JUL 'f 9 1984 Cout . Laguna Beach council members approve budget that Includes 'hir- ing' goats for fire preven- tlon./ A3 We asked passersby what their favorite -and least favorite -time of the week might be./ A3 Nation A new study shows Americans are llvlng longer these days, but heart disease remain far and beyond the nation's biggest klller .I A4 Probable Democratic presldentlal candidate Walter Mondale remains mum on his choice for vice president./ M World CIA suspected of using private planes to smuggle arms to Central American nations.JM Bob Dylan's concert In Ireland Is marred by viol- ence after tavern proprleters refuse to serve drinks to rowdy fans./A4 Feature Orange County's entry In the Olympic Arts Festival boggles the Imagination of visitors to the Newport Harbor Art Museum./81 The cartoonist-conserva- tionist known as a "duck's bestfriend" has been honored with a commemorative postage stamp./81 Sports John McEnroe Is the king of Wimbledon again after putting Jimmy Connors away on Sunday ./C1 Newport Harbor High product David OeRuff upset the apple cart at the U.S. Olympic rowing trlals./C1 Willie Mays will miss his first All-Star Game since 1954 -he says he hasn't been Invited to Candlestick Park for Tuesday's game./C3 Entertainment It took many. trying years but Pat Morita has finally achieved stardom In the movles./83 Bualnea lrvlne Co. president Thomas Nielsen honored by leaders In construc- tion Industry.JBS. INDEX Bridge 8'4 Bulletin Board A3 ...... 84 Cellfomla Newt A4 Cluatfled Cs-8 Comlel EM Croeeword C7 Death NotloM C4 ~ttne 81-2 Help Yout'Mff 82 Horoecope ce Ann Lander• 82 Mutual Fund1 85 Natk>MI NN8 A4 ~ A5 p~uzl 81 Poblog A3 Pubtk: Notloel C4 Sportt C1~ Stock Mar1<tll Be Ttlevttk>n 82 Theat.,. 83 W•thet A2 Wortd Newt A4 Oil platform make$ splash Tall as a 55-story building, this monster making Its home nine miles off Huntington By ROBERT BARKER oft' the coasiline of Huntinato~ Of .. 0-.,....... Beach. With a huae splash, a 22,()()(}.100 The 720.foot-tall steel monster offshore oil platform IS tall IS a SS-joined two other offshore oil facilities story building was ,deposited Sunday . -Ellen and Elly owned by Shell onto the ocean floor about nine miles California Production, Inc. -in the Beu Oil Tract. The tower was launched into lbe ocean floor at 11 :31 a.m . when it wu winched off a barae and slid into the sea with about a 100-feet h.iah foamy splash. After welderi torched it free it from its plates on the batse, the offshore structure named Eureb ~&lowly forward until its center of pavity caused its akid plates on the barse to tiltu~ W1tb du.. the platform -unda its own mome.-tum. slid into the 'W'lter, sendi the ba.rac blclcwards. The ~lltll offshore oil structure ever built at a West Coast shipyard., the platform will be anchored 300 feet deep into t.be ooean Ooor in by 24-foot steel piliop. Until that operation is concluded in about a month. the platform is . ... ......... .., ...... ~ Sh~ OllCom,.Y'•22,000-ton platform ladepoelted wttla aspluh In tbeocean ofttbeBan1IJl&ton Beacbcoaat. Man kills himself at BB cemetery A young man killed himself with a single shotgun blast to the chest Sunday evenina after holding ~lice at ba~ for 40 minutes outside a HunUpJton Beach cemetery, authon\let reported today. An emplo)'ee at Good Shepherd Cemetery, 8301 Talbert Ave., sum- moned patrolman at 8:2S p.m. after he had been confronted on the cemetery grounds by a man carrying a sawed-off shotgun. Police cordoned off the cemetery at the intersection ofTalbcrt and Beach Boulevard and vainly tried to talk the man into living himself up and tumina over the shotgun, saidcHunt- inf.ton Beach SJt. Dennis Martin. •After refusrna to come out for about 40 minutes, our SWAT team OC Fair jammed; opening weekend attendance rises 100 ,000 people visit Mesa event; shows •packed' By I.ABEN E. ILEIN Of .. ..., ....... Attendancic durina opening week- end at the Orange County Fair, which totaled more than l 00,000, wa~. up by 16 percent over last year, delighted fair officials reported today. "The JJ'OUnds have been full and our entertainment shows have been packed,•• reported an enthused Jill Lloyd, public relations spokeswoman for the fair. The 10-day fair, under way at the county fairgrounds in Costa Mesa. bepn Friday and ends Sunday. Orange County Sheriffs Depart- ment officials reported no major problems during opening weekend but said they made about 140 arrests over the three-<lay period from Friday to Sunday. Most of the arrests were for alcohol or drug-related offenses. a sheriffs department spokesman said. Saturday's crowd of 41 , 716 fair- goen made for some heavy traffic along Newport Boulevard, according to a Costa Mesa Police Department spokesman. The neighborhoods sur- roundin& the fairpounds were lined with cars parking there to avoid the crowds and puling fee on the fairgrounds, the spokesman said. Some of the residents of College Park, the neiabborbood directly across Fairview ""Road from the fair. pounds, got an unpleasant surprise Saturday when they found their guests' cars, parked on the streets, had been ticketed. A restricted parking permit system was recently implemented in College Park, where neiJ,bbors have com- plained about noi!C and parking problems from the .Pacific Amphitheatre on the fairgrounds. However. one Costa Mesa officer said. the residents said they did not know police would be ticketina can without permits over the weekend. even though the system is in effect at (Pleue .ee OC P' AIR/ A2) was aerosol can scare really just so riluch hot ozone? Remember the cyclamate scare? And red dye No. 2? Product paranoia in the mid-1970s started consumers readina the fine prinL • Well, accord.in& to some in the aerosol industry, tbe scientific theoty that attOIOI sprays were dcstroyina tbe protective ozone layer was just One Of thoee tcarel, but a VoUndJeu one bred durina the heyday of the environmentali1cs. The fturocarbOn bU cost a 700 j<?~ throupout the nation and ~ l .S billion in retoohna COila for 30,000 oroducts-says AtrolOl,..., in its April l9Mi•~· tan G«ker. operations vice Pf'Cli· dent for a Sant.a Ana-beted 8elQIOI miler MBL lndu trica, con\enda new studies lhow the ozone layer isa-i vanishi~ after all. He.'lhiftb the findinp cldNM 1M 01one theory first established ~ UC AID REA Alo.soi NH\S Fol LO~UP Irvine chemistry profeuOr F. SbCtwood Rowlud iA 197$, AA ideia that received Mlioawide at1Clltioo and htlped put tbe campu,a on me mapuaterioUl~.-iNliola. A NatioMI R1111rda aw.:.= lalued in Fdrw'y ....... ~ter model didll 't caalida ¥Iii-.... &hat ....... ....... ... ..... ....... ... Olclls ..... _ ...... , was called out.," explained Martin. .. But before they could arrive, I.his unknown male turned the shotgun on himself." Police said the man WIS dead by the time officers could reach him. .. We bave no indication why he commited suicide,•· Martin said. Police found a green station wqon they believe tbe man may have been drivina parked at the cemetery. The car was rcaistcred to a· man identified IS Robert Reynolds but officers cautioned that they bave yet to determine the dead man·s identity. AB~at tbece~todaj said the aun-totina ~ apparently took refuae near a particular pave muter. ffedid not knOw whole pave it was. ~ ........... , 1\\\ • .,_Cl ........ ........ oi ... rr...Ma . ·.. . beint kept in place by tup Uld by buoyancy tanks that a1lOW it IO *Y U~l while the heavier, botlOm end links into about 700 feet of water. Manufactured at Kailer S1eer1 Vallejo Marine A.inbly Yant. me SJ 00 million suucture puled under- neath the Golden Gate Bridec OD a Crowley Maritime Corporation ba,..e on July 4, a day after problems were caused by a bfeak:ina anchor chain. Board to mull . . Berger future Marina Htgh•s principal topic of raging dispute Huntin&ion Beach Union Hiab School mastees are 10 take actioD Tuesday n.isht tbat will decide whether Dr. Paul Be:rpr' will be bM:t IS a principal at Marina Hiab Sc:bool The trustees will meet at 7 p..m. at district headquarters, 102S 1 Y orttown Ave. Berger was removed u Marina Hiab principal by Superintmdent Jake Abbott became the super- intendeilt said be Md loll c:ocl6denoc in BcrJer's ability to provide imtruc- tional leadenb.ip and for aDeecd unwillinsness to confront personnel problems. I Berger WU pnxutcd a list of options and decided 10 kx:ept early retirement, officials said.. Many parents froro the north Huntiglon Beach school have rallied to the side 61-year-old Bcraer and are demandina bis reinstatement. What the lnlSUlCS are a.pieeled to decide is whether to appoint Jeannine Lucas, ~ usociatc. principal at Hunt.illltOn Beacti High. to replace Berger at Marina. , .. . .. .. ' .. ... .. • ... .. :· .. . . •. •. •. •. •. •. :· . :: . . :: .· . :: ·. :: :: .. · .. :: . . • ·: L: Valley school board turns back on youth club appeal District's rent on Bushard School facility boosted from $258 to $2,200 a month increue over 1evera.I ~an. "lfyou feel the board i• oppolCd to the Boys and Girls Club, you're mistaken," BelJcn uid to residents who spoke in support of the club at Thunday's meeuna. By PHIL SNEIOERMAN OlhOelr ......... Fountain Valley School 01strict \ru$tet'\ have decided not to inter- vene 10 a rent hike dispute between d1stnct staff members and the Boys and Girls C1ub of Huntington Valley Oub officials look then case to the school board after leamina thc11 rent for a wing at Bu bard School would be tncre&Kd from $258 to $2,200 a month. Club officials argued that the steep increase may force them to raise -' membership fees too hi&h for many members. Auut.ant uperintendent Jack Mahnken admitted the pro~ increase is .. drastic," but be said the new ~ntal rate would only offset the district's own oosu for opentina Bushard W1tbou1 the increase, the d1s1nct would be underwritina the club, he said. School Board PTe11dent Roger Bclaen asked the distrkt staff and the Boys Oub to resume nqottations. He suucsted the staff look into a 1hdlng rent scale that would allow a gradual The Boys and Oitls Club has been renuna a wina at BushlJ"d School since 1979, payma $258 a month under a five-year lease. Bushard 1s m HunUnJtOn Beach but 1s ~ of the Fountain Valley School District. In March, Ass11tant Super- intendent Mahnken not1fied the club that the district planned to 1ncrease the monthly rent to 29 cents per square foot, or $2, 900 for the club's I 0,000 square feet, when the current lease expirct in October. Valley eases pressure on massage ordinance The follow1n1 month, Mark Chow. the club's 6ecutive director, wrote back. saying the club would be wtlhng lo pay $300 per month, plus mainten- ance and utihty costs. Mahnken countered the followin& month with an offer of $2,200 per month. Bcheving the neaot1.1uons were at an impasse, the club distributed f\Jers\ about the proposed rent increase, • contacted the news media and asked to discuss the issue directly wtth the school board . By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of ... 0.-, ..... lteft What sort of technique can be defined as a massage? That unlike!~ issue ts the basis for a new c1ly law lhat has received prehminary approval from the Foun- ta1 n Valley~ C uy Council. City officials said the law was prompled by the opening of busi- nesses offenn3 treatments such as "acupressure" or 0 foot reflexology •· If the treatments are judged to be a form of massage, the busmesses would have to adhere to Fountain VaJJey's stnct massage ~rlor ordi- nance. Under this law, City Attorney Alan Bums said a l~I massage parlor operator must submit to a back- ground check and must meet vanous hygiene and training requirements. The same law defines massage, 10 part. as "rubbing. strolung or knead- ing'.' the skin. Bums said no business has opened in Fountain Valley underthe massage CONTINUED STORIES parlor gwdehncs. The confusion occurred recently when a city license inspector was unccruun whether an acupressure business tn which steady prcuure 1s applied to the stun would fall under the massage ordinance. The new law allows a person who praC11cet acupressure or a s1m1lar technique to submit a wntten stat~ ment describin& the technique and assunna city officials it is not a massqe. If the descnption is accepted. the technician would have to pay a city busine1s license fee but would not havt ro adhere to the stnC1 provisions and additional fees of the messaae ordinance. lfit as later determined the person's technique differs from the written statement. he or she can be denied the massage penmt required for con- tinued operation. The proposed law was approved last week by the City Council. It R'QUires approval ID a second council readinsJuly 17 before it becomes law. Jay Stout, a member of the club's board of direaors. said a revised state law should allow the club to use the school wins at no charge. Mahnken said the school district's attorney has determined the law docs not apply to the Boys and Girls Oub. Stout said funds now raised by the club arc being set aside for a new center in Fountain Valley. The club's Fountain Valley center was recently displaced by a new construction project. Stout also contested the costs the district claims it must pay to operate Bushard. Mahnken said the club's rent was initially low because of ao exchange of servioet arrangement in which Bushard students would have use of a nearby aymnasium managed by the Boys and Girls Oub. But elementary classes were halted at Bushard in 1982, and the exchanae of services no longer occurs, Mahnken said. de FAIR CROWDED IN MESA •.• From Al all times. The residents apparently had neglected to pass out guest parkmg pcnmts to v1s1tors Paramedics reported no accidents or senous medical emergencies over the weekend other than the death of a carnival employee Fnday night. The employee. 44-year-old James Rayen Recd, died on the grounds, apparently of a heart attack. spokeswoman Lloyd said. A fellow employee discovered Recd in the south east comer of the fan park.mg lot, where equipment 1s stored, about 12: 15 a.m. Saturday. Paramedics said Reed had prob- ably died of a heart attack aboul 1hrcc hours earlier. Another employee said Recd had been complaining of chest pains earlier 10 the day Reed. who traveled with Carnival Time Shows, the carnival company, wa~ from Downey. Lloyd said. Dunng opening weekend compct1- uons. the Costa Mesa branch of the Future Farmers of Amenca, made up mainly of Costa Mesa H1itt School students. took a first place m the professional landscape design com- petition. Thear entry, in the Designer's Choice Landscaping d1 v1S1on. swept ahead of professional landscapers' best efforts to w10. Lloyd said. Grand champion animal awards wtll be given out during competitions Tuesday through Thursday. Lloyd added. Tonight's entertainment lineup features Donny and Mane Osmond perfonmni in the Arhnaton Theater at 7 p.m. and again at 9 p.m. Tuesday is Senior C1ttZen's Day at the fair, wt th SI adminion for~n1ors and entertainment by Les Brown and bis Band of Renown m the Arlington Theater on the fairgrounds. AEROSOL SPRAY SCARE PHONY? ••• From Al who lost his job in 1976 when the Los Angeles firm he worked for had to consohdate as consumers quit buying aerosol products in droves. "Without those studies." Gccker contended, "there is no scientific evidence to show the ozone layer 1s bcma harmed." To call "all wrons" the math model that predicted ozone's disappearance within 100 years "1s aross exagera- tlOn." Rowland w in his own defense. The new ftndinp only show the rate of depletion isn t as great as first pred1cted. the researcher said. .. All the models indicate owne is going away,'' Rowland said. He says the loom in& danaer is even evident now. A Swtss university reported ttus month 10 the sc1enufic mapzme Journal of Geophysical Research that their 1983 ozone sam- ple .. is the lowest they've had m 55 years of measurement,.. Rowland said. .l\erosol industrialists are m1s- 1ntefl)rellng the new finding.s "to IJVC flurocarbons a clean bill of health." said Myron Uman. director of the National Research Council's en- vironmental studies board. in a telephone interview from Wash1ng- 1on. D.C. Rowland's theory "is still nght ... he said. but the fresh research shows "1t will take us a little lonaer to set 1n Just Call 642-6086 trouble. 1f we contmue to releue (chloro-fluroca.rboM) indefinitely1 we won't get into troublt for 150 years." The trouble st.ems from chloro- flurocarbons reacting with naturally occurrina ozone 40 to SO kilometers above the earth. Thereactioo iseatina up the protective Shield that filters out canccr-<:ausina ultraviolet liibt rays. Umao explained. The protect1ve band is just out of reach of normal scienttfic instru- ments, he said. It's beneath samplina ~by sateUtte1 but above the reach of aifl)lanes. As a consequence, scientists use laboratory lasers or computer models to predict how fast the complicated. 16&-cbemical reaction is taking place. Scientists assume the ozone-gobbl- ing reaction will allow in more sunhg,bt and heat up the earth, affCCllng climate and weather pal- tems. "We've just barely begun to look at its affect on climate," Uman said. "There ts no reason to be sanguine about the problem." He 1s a member of lhe committee that issued the study called "Causes and Effects of Changes in Stratosphenc Ozone." a biennial update forthe Environmental Protec- tion Aacncy. Geckcr beheves the theories are less than conclusive. "We almost destroyed an industry and threw 8, 700 people out of work." be said. The media-driven steamroller re· suJted in a 1978 ban three years after the first discussion of ozone danger surfaced. "I don't understand the reaction myself but it did harm to me," said Gecker. a founding member of the Western Aerosol Information Bureau based in the City of Industry. The lobbying sroup traveled throughout the state tryin& to defend the persecuted propellants asking for more time to prove the hypothesis, he said. Aside from displaced workers. Gccker said consumers lost an effi- cient, economical product. The pump sprayers which have replaced aero- sols on cosmetic counters have a "tendency to be overused.·• makmg aerosol sprays cheaper, he said. Only 10 the United States arc flurocarbons banned for use 1n aero- sol products. They are still used domestically in rcfnieration and foam products, aiving cushions their bubbles. Uman said But their use 1s unrestricted elsewhere. "If industry convinces poltt1c1ans there's no danger anymore. the rate of production wtll go up dramaucall)'," he said. Aurocarbon use was proliferating when the EPA mstiluted its ban. • Wbat do yoa Uke aboat tl1e Dally Piiot? Wbat don't you llllt? CaU tbt number at left u d your me.use wUI be recorded, transcribed Hd delivered to &lie appropriate editor. ne u.nH U ·lloer auwerlnt Hrvlce may be Hed to rttord lettert1 to tbe editor oa ut topic. Coatrtbatora to oar Lettertl col•m• m11t lllclude U1elr name aad ceteph"H nmber for verlficatloa. No ctrcliladoa c.111, please. fell at wlaat'1 OD yoar mind. ORANGE COAST Diiiy Pilat H. L lchwatta Ill Publisher Clfoulatlon 714/M2-4m ca..alfted edwettlelng 11•1Ma-ee11 AM oth9r cl9pertmentl IC2-4121 MAIN OWICI l30~1ty II CO.e ........ C4 foUll9C»WI lo. IMO C:0.11 M-. C4 t2e,. cnue.u. T•phenee ChaQDow...., Editor and All'Stant to the Publ!lhef ,........., ChUt'Ottman Control I --- •t Jh IID '· C..W ,.,Odli.:lion MINQlr DIMINLW-...... Ot!MSIOI M~ ... : Win lilt H ------ Morning fog will chill the air Coutal • ~.~'•ONTt ~ W•m-COld..-.r n .., .. ., IO 4t 7t .. .. 17 11 71 ., 71 . ... 17 71 .. 11 :: ~ 11 .. 1$ u " .. ., .. n IO 71 IO 17 7t 11 74 .. 11 11 ff 1()1 77 72 10 71 .. Eztended &nowett Raif\ ,Mt•t Snow Occ"°9d_. Slationatya. ._.,.. W•llW S.Wt HOAA V 6 Ottll Ill C.0-W<t Tide• Temps 17 12 ~ .. ..,. 70 .. NMllYll!e 100 n .....,°'.,,,_ 74 M ..._Yon n 12 Nottolk,V• ., 71 Olll9hOIM City IO 12 OmlN 70 IO~ 97 If ,.,, ~· St "7 TW~ .... ~ t3 $4 l'ltlt&ugll. n t3 l'Orllllnd.M9 11 43 Ponl#ld,Or ,,. S4 Pt~ TODAY n r, leoolld 1ow 12 u p m : 70 8-td Ngll 1 22 p m 2 1 n 7S 69 NltOAY 74 11 'lrf4 IOw t 471 m -0 7 100 73 '"',..,, t110. m a 7 M ~: ._._low 143p111 U • IMeond lllgll • 04P Ill. .. te a 8W1 Ml• toMy .. 101 PM.,-.. ?S ..... Tuetdty 11 I 41 am Md lltl -0111'1 II too 107pm 72 ::. ~ , ...... 6.22pm ..,, *' 24' ;: 56 am T~ .rid -..-el I 2t 12 H pm 11 53 to 71 to 74 n ... 14 70 93 ,,. SuRF RcPORT !! 51 -7t 103 11 .. ,. ., 72 IO ... 93 71 17 10 75 17 ---- Cl 2·11 2 ... 2-4 2 2-4 1·2 2-3 ...... dlfeot!On. IO\ltllWMI County firemen blame bottle rockets for season's first major b~sh blaze close to any residences. From its oriJin, the blaze burned across a hillside, j umped across Coal Canyon Road aod pushed into the Oeveland National Forest just over the River- side County line. By STEVE MARBLE OllNC)elrl"llotli.lf Weary firemen had won the upper hand over Orange County's first ma.JOr brush fire of the season early today and anticipated the 580-acre blaze would be contained by nightfall. The fire. driven by stiff winds through the brushy hillsides and ravines near Coal Canyon, was caused by bottle rockets apparently fired into a small canyon just south of the R1vers1de Freeway in North Orange County, fire spokeswoman Jody Greenhalgh said. By Sunday afternoon. about 581 firemen, 49 fire engines, eight bull- dozen and six air tankers were at the scene. The fircfiahtina team bad been cut to about 300 firemen. 27 enaines and four water tankers by early today, a spokesman said. A county fire official estimated the blaze was 90 percent contained by sunrise today and said the job should be c-0mplete by evenina. The ~trc is the laraest of the you~g season in Orange County. A fire tn late April blackened 75 acres in Laguna NiJuel and charred two expensive ndgeline homes. County fire officials consider any blaze tarier than 500 acres to be a major fire. The Coal Canyon fire never came The brush in the unpopulated area wa.s ripe for fire because of the extra- dry winter and the lack of najor brush fires 10 the area last season. fire- fighters said. There were three minor injuries reported amona the huae number of firefiJhlCTS. They were treated at local hosp1tals and released, M11d Green- halgh. The winds that were a problem Sunday when they aust.cd up to 25 mph died down by evening and had vanished early today. Temperatures reached upwards of I 00 4earees as firemen fought the blaze Sunday. OC racer buys 'Goldfinger' car for $80, 0:00 at auction A C)press race car dnvcr who admire!> James Bond bid $80.000 Sunday for 007's spy cer. a ara.)' Aston Martin 085 with retractabJe prop machine guns and a bullet shield. Dick Barbour. a 1980 winner m the 24 Hou~ of Lemans, bouibt the car made famous in the movie "Gold- finger," from auctioneer Rick Cole durin& the 14th annual Newport Beach Collector Car Auction Barbour told the Associated Prc:u he bou&ht the car "becau~ I love James Sood movies the best of all." h was one of four such Aston Martins made for "Ooldfinacr," the 1964 Bond film starring Sean Con- n.cry and Gert Frobe. Other features in the car includ~ •Rcvolv1na license plate mounts with French . Swiss and Enalish plates; •A prop radar tracluna system: •An oil· lick launcher. •A tear-ps or smokescreen blow- c-r; •A tack sp1tkr to blow out pur1ucrs' 11rC$; •A bydrauhc:ally c:xtendtd ram· m1na bumper: •A roof that OiC1 off for a fake CJCCtor sat. ··The roof docs fl y off. but the ekCtor se1t and the urc sla hcl - those were pe<iat cffi u done in tht studio." Isa added in the Wd10 ,.,a1 tht mo'-c ind flrr from 1 machinc-aun ml h ell ~ u1 btntath the front headlights. "Those are props," aucllon poke~­ man Joseph Molina said. However. the revolvrns plates, smokescreen or gas blower, oil splllcr1 tack spitter, ramm1na bumper ana bullet shield au actually_ function. At the time it cost $60,000, Molina said. .. To duphcate thi car today would cost a qua~-mdlion dollan," he said, Cole. who previously auctioned off such notable automobiles 11 the Batmobile and the Beatles' Bentley, descnbed the car as "The arcatcst movie car of all ume:• 81ddin1 st.aned at SS0,000 and was raised in SS,000 increments until it reached $75,000. when it wu railed at $1 ,000 in~menu Happy-ending in stolen car case at Disneyland By t~ AJ.odaa.4 Preti It wu af Mcnin tiiif wa ta till mqk wand for an Indiana man who made I last-minute trip tO OIJ. ncyland's Mqic Kinadom and found his son's stolen car amona 12.000 othm jammed in a parkint IOL ••He was ndina in the tram in the pa11Un1 lot. and ,be •• this 'icbiclc that looked like hi ton's vehicle lhll had been tolen two weeks aao in 011111, Tuas,'' Anabel m Sat. Mtehacl Murphy uid undly. <>dean Thurman, of N"' Hit, Indiana. ~ ... headed 1oward Ois- ne-yland'1 frona pte S1uurday after· noon when he .spoutd the car. He rrtumed 10 tht car to confirm u wa the 1974 Plymouth he told to hi• 19· year-old son, Tony; tCVtnl month qo, 111d 01 ncy spo~ onw.n Ocbta Garron. Thurman, 44, alcrud Oitncyland sccunt y auards who t.akcd ouuhe car a Thurman Cl\IO)'fd the aftmioon inside the amusement park. Ganon id. "They eventually detamed fivt male ju~crules. two &om the Da1lu atta and the othrtt local," Murph)' H d, addtllJ . th~t the Te-.11 youths w re lodacd tn JUvcntle hill and the othtT thrtt were rrteutd to t 1r pan:nt • Thurman hadn't intended to v1 11 D nc)ltnd turd&•, Oarron id. HIOHIO LOWM M ONDAY JULY 9. 1''84 Cout Laguna Beach council members approve budget that Includes 'hir- ing' goats for fire preven- tlon./A3 We asked passersby what their favorite -and least favorite -time of the week might be./ A3 Nation Probable Democratic presidential candidate Walter Mondale remains mum on his choice for vice president./ M World CIA suspected of using private planes to smuggle arms to Central American nations.JM Bob Dylan's concert In Ireland Is marred by viol- ence after tavern proprleters refuse to serve drinks to rowdy . fans.JM Feature Orange County's entry In the Olympic Arts Festival boggles the Imagination of visitors to the Newport Harbor Art Museum.181 The cartoonlst-conserva- . tlonlst known as a "duck's best friend" has been honored with a commemorative postage stamp./81 Sporta John McEnroe Is the king of Wimbledon again after putting Jimmy Connors awayonSunday./C1 Newport Harbor High product David DeRuff upset the apple cart at the U.S. Olympic rowing trlals./C1 Wlllle Mays will ml8f his first All-Star Game since 1954-heaayshehasn't been Invited to Candlestick Park for Tuesday's game./C3 Entertainment It took many, trying years but Pat Morita has finally achieved stardom In the movles./83 ·:·:-;:-:·:-:·:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·~::;x·:·:~;::' ; Bulneu Irvine Co. president Thomas Nielsen honored by leadera In construc- tion Industry ./115. ~!~Y.:·;::!:~:~;::·:!~::::::::::::;s!;:~·!:!::;::!<~.::: I INDEX Btldge Bute.tin Board ...... C.tffomlaNewl CIMelfted Con*a Croaaword 0.th NotlCM . F•tur• ~You<Mlf Horoecope Ann Lander• Mutual Fundl Nettonal Newt Opinion Pepttuzl Poblog Pubttc Nolloel 8p«t• 8todc M 1 T~ ThMW'I W•ther Wortd Newt M A3 M A4 CM M C7 ----c. 81-2 82 ce 82 85 M A5 81 A3 c. C1-4 ae 82 83 A2 A4 esa .s ....,.... ...... ., ..... c.e- 81lell OllCom,_7'•22,000-toD pla~qna ladepoeltedwttJa &8J)lubba tbeocean offtbeBanU.,.... B•cll eout. Man kills himself at HB cemetery A youna man killed himself with a sinaJe sbotcun blast to the chest Sunday evenina after holdina pc:>lice at bay for 40 minutes outside a HuntanJton Beach cemetery, authorities reported today. An employee at Good Shepherd Cemetery. 8301 Talbcn Ave., sum- moned patrolman at 1:25 p.m. after he had been confronted on the . cemetery JrOUDds by a man carryina a sawed-off sbotaun. Police cordoned off the cemetery at the intersection of Talbert and Beach Boulevard and vainly tried to talk the man into aiYina hitritdf up ud rurnina over the sbota11n. said Hunt- i~n Beach SJL Dennis Martin. After refusana to come out for about 40 minutes. our SWAT team OC Fair jammed; opening weekend attendance rises 100.000 people visit Mesa event; shows 'packed' BJ UREN E. u.EIN Ol .. Olllr ........ Attendance durina opcnina week- end at the Oranae Cou~ty_Fair, which totaled more than 100,000, was up by 16 per'C)Cnt over last year, deli&bted fair officials reported today. '1be pounds fJave been full and our entertainment shows have been packed," reported an enthulCd Jill Lloyd, public rclations spokeswom•n for the fair. The IQ.day fair1 under way at the county fairarounas in Costa Mesa, began Friday and ends Sunday. Oranae County Sheriff's Depart- ment officials reported no m~r problems durina opcnina weekend but said they made about I 40 arrests overthethrec~y period from Friday to Sunday. Most oftbe arrests were for alcohol or drug-related offenses, a sheriffs department spokesman said. Saturday's crowd of 41, 716 fair- aoers made for some heavy traffic alona Newpon Boulevard. accordina to a Costa Mesa Police Depanment spokesman. The neiahborhoods sur- roundina the fairgrounds were lined with ca.rs perkina the.re to avoid the crowds and parlrina fee on the fairpounds. the spokesman said. Some of the residents of Collqe Park, the nei&hborhood directly across Fairview Road from the fair- arounds. sot an unpleasant surprise Saturday when they found their auesu• cars. part.ed on the streets, had been ticketed. A restricted parking permit system was recently implemen~ in CoUege Park. wbcTc neiahbon have com- plained about noi.se and parkina problems from the Pacific Amphitheatre on the fai1grounds. However, one Costa Mesa officer said, the residents said they did not know police would be ticketina can without permits over the weekend, even thouab the system is 1n effect at (P1eue .. oc ., A.Ill/ A.2) Was aerosol can scare really just so much hot ozone? Remember the cYdamate lcal'e? And red dye No. 2? Product pannoia in the mid-1970s 1taned conaumen rcadina the fine print Welf, accordi~ io tome in the aerosol iiidustry,-the lcientiflc theory that aeroeol apnyt were detuoyine the protective ozone la)'CI'. was JUIC , one or the>M tea~1 ~t a pundleta one bred durina ine 1\eye11y of the environmentalists. The fharocaft)on ban ClOlt I 700 .ioba 119teu~t lhe nMioa and S 1.$ billion in moolint COIU for J0,000 producu_ •YI ACl'OIOl Af/l i• iu April 1914 illUe. lu Gecker, operatiom va prai. dtnt for a nt.a A....-eect •oeol miker MBL Industries. c:oneendaMW studies lhow the ozone la.)W ._, vanishina after all. He thinu the fiNti=1=n• a. owne theiofY first e"8 bf UC AIDIEA-- AHLSOI was called out." e~plained Martin. "But before they could anive, this unknown male turned the sbotaun on himself." Police said the man was dead by the time officers could reach him. "We have no indjcation why he commitcd w1cide, .. Manin said. Police found a ~n 1iation WllOO they believe the man may have been driYina puked It the CC1DC1a'y. The car was rqiste:rcd to a man identified IS Rohen Reynolds but officen cautioned that they have )'Cl to determine the dead man's i dentity. Aoan~attbe~today aid the paa-totina man apparntly took tefu&e near a particular .,ave ~-tfe6taotknowwt.0eepPe It was. 22,000-ton rtg joins two oth ·in Shell tract BJ ROBERT BAlll.Ea °' .............. With I huae 1p1Uh. I 22,0oo-ton offshore oil platform as tall as a 5S.. story buildina was del)Olited Sunday onto the ocean Door-about nine miJel off the coastline of Huntiosloo Beach. The 72().foot-tall steel momta' joined two other offshore oil facilities -EDen and Elly owned by SbeU California Production. lnc. -in tbe Beta Oil Tract Tbe tower was lav.ncbed into the ocean flOOr It l li) f &.D:L WtiQ lt WU wincbcd oft' I ba,.e and slid into tbe water with I splash. After welden freed it from I.be buF with ~ I.be oftibore structure named Emeb edead llowly forwant until its oeoter Of pavity caused ill skid pla1a OD the buwe to tiltu~ With this, the platform -under its own momentum, slid into the water, tendiQ& the butt sboOtiQ& t.ckwalds .. ., if it were squirted out like a srape teed," said I spolceanan Tbe biaest oftibore oil structure ever built at a West C.O.St shipyard. the platform will be anchored 300 feet deep into the ocean floor in by 24-foot steel pili Until:-. e>peratioft is c:oDCludcd in about a month, the platform is beiaa kept in oi.,;e by cnmes aDd by ~ tanb that allow it to stay u~abt while the heavier, bottom end suiks into about 700 feet of' water. Manufactured at Kaiser S1ed's V allcjo Marine Assembly Y ltd, the s 100 million stnacture pe-4 UDder- neatb the Go&dCD Gale Bridae OD July 4, a dal after probkms wereca'uled by I brain& ancborcbain. It anivcd OD the caut near untiaaloa. Beecb at ~wOIL/A2) • Orange Coat OAIL:.Y PILOT/Monday, July 9. 19&4 Walley school boarid turns back on.youth club appeal District's rent on Bushard School facility boosted from $258 to $2,200 a month month. By PBU. SNEIDERMAN. Of ... ~ "--~ b officials araued that the steep increase may force them to raise membership fees too high for many members. Fountain Vall9 School Dlstnct tNstees have decided not to inter- vene m a rent bike dispute between district staff members and the Boys and Oirls Club of Huntington VaUey. Club officials took their case to tbe ICbool boa.rd after teaming their rent for a wma at Bushard School wouJd be increased from $258 to $2,200 a Ass11tant Supennteodcnt Jack Mahnken admitted the pro~ inCJUse is "drastic," but he said the new rental rate would only offset the district's own costs for operatin1 Bushard. Without the increase. the district would be underwriting the Happy ending in stolen car case at Disneyland By ~e Auoc:iated Presa It was as if Merlin had waved his magJc wand for an Indiana man who made a last-minute trip to Dis- neyland's Magic Kingdom and found his son's stolen car among 12,000 others jammed in a parking lot. "He was riding 1n the tram m the parking lot, and he saw this vehicle that looked like his son's vehicle that had been stolen two weeks ago in Dallas, Texas." Anaheim Sgt. Michael Murphy said Sunday. Odcan Thurman, of New Castle, Indiana. was beaded toward Dis- neyland's front gate Saturday after- noon when be spotted the car. He returned to the car to confirm it was the 1974 Plymouth be sold to his 19- year-old son, Tony, several months ago, said Disney spokeswoman Debra Garron. Thurman. 44. alened Disneyland security guards who staked out the car as Thurman epjoyed the afternoon inside the amusement park. Garron said. "They eventually detained five maJe juveniles, two from the Dallas area and the others local," Murphy said, adding that the Texas youths were lodged in juvenile ball and the other three were released to their parents. Thurman hadn't intended to visit Disneyland Saturday, Garron said. .. It l"8S a last-minute change in plans.," she said. The car, meanwhile, was released to Tiwrman at the request of his son, Murphy said. d ub. be said. SChool Board ~ ident Roacr Bel&en asked the distnct staff and the Boys Oub to resume neaouations. He suaacstcd the staff look into a slidina rent scale tbat would allow a gradual increase over several years. "If you feel tbe board is opposed to the Boys and Girls Oub. you're mistaken," Belaen said to residents who spoke in suppon of the club at Thursday's meeung. Jay Stout, a member of the club's board of directors, said a revised state law should allow the club to use the school wins at no cbarae. Mahnken said the school district's attorney has determined the law does not apply to the Boys and Girls Club. Stout said funds now raised by the club arc being set aside for a new center in Foununn Valley. The club's Fountain Valley center was recently displaced by a new construction project. Stout also contested the costs the distnct claims at must pay to operate Bushard. Mahnken said the club's rent was imtially low because of an exchange of services arrangement an which Bushard students would have use of a nearby gymnasium managed by the Boys and Girls Club. But elementary classes were halted at Bushard in 1982, and the exchange of services no longer occurs, Mahnken said. He noted that the Girls and Boys Club of Fountain Valley-Huntington Beach, a separate orgamzation, is payinJ 2 1 cents per square foot for space at Wardlow School. Mahnken said the Girls and Boys Club reached that rate over a P.Cf'iod of years and suggested a similar plan might be work.cd out witn the Boys and Girls Oub. OC FAIR CROWDED IN MESA ..• From Al all times. The residents apparently bad neglected to pass out guest parlung permits to vlSltors. Paramedics reported no accidents or serious medical emergencies over the weekend other than the death of a carnival employee Fnday night. The employee. 44-year-old James Rayen Recd. died on the grounds, apparently of a hea11 attack. spokeswoman Lloyd said. A fellow employee discovered Recd in the south east comer of the fair parkmg lot. where equipment 1s stored, about 12: 15 a.m. Saturday. Paramedics said Reed bad prob- ably died of a heart attack about three hours earlier. Another employee said Reed bad been complaming of chest pains earlier in the day. Reed. who trav('led with C.amival Time Shows, the carnival company, was from Downey, Lloyd said. During opening weekend compct1- uons. the Costa Mesa branch of the Future Farmers of America, made up mainly of Costa Mesa High School students. took a first place in the professional landscape design com- petition. OIL PLATFORM .•• Their entl). in the Dcsagner"s Choice Landscaping d1v1s1on, swept ahead of professional landscapers' best efforts to win. Lloyd said. Grand champion ammal awards w1U be given out during competitions Tuesday through Thursday. Lloyd added. From Al about I 1 p.m. Fnday. Up to 60 wells operate from Eurkea. It also will accommodate living quarters for about 80 workers. Oil dnU10g from the new platform 1s expected to start next May. A Shell spokesman said the two existing Shell facilities at the Beta Field have produced about 10 millions of oil so far. Shell spent about $71 million to lease the two Beta tracts off the Huntington Beach coast, which the spokesman said proved to be the only commercial success an the Outer Continental Shelfleasc sale No. JS of 197S. Tests ind1cate the tract contains about 150 million gallons of re- coverable oil, the spokesman said. Tonight's entertainment lineup features Donny and Mane O!lmond performing an the Arlington Theater at 7 p.m. and again at 9 p.m. Tuesday is Senior auzen's Da~ at the fair, with $1 adm1ss1on for senior~ and entertainment by Les Brown and his Band of Renown in the Arlington Theater on the fairgrounds. AEROSOL SPRAY SCARE PHONY? ••• From Al who lost Ills job 10 1976 when the Los Angeles firm be worked for had to consolidate as consumers quit buying aerosol products in droves. ·' "Without those studjes," Gccker contended, .. there is no scientific evidence to show the ozone layer is being harmed" To call "all wrong" the math model that predict°' ozone's disappearance withm I 00 years ''is aross exaggera· tion." Rowland sai in his own defense. The new findinf_:' only show tbe rate of depletion isn t as great as first predicted, the researcher said. "All the models indicate ozone is going away," Rowland said. He says the looming danger is even evident now. A Swiss university rcponed this month m the scientJfic magazine Journal of Geophysical Research that their 1983 ozone sam- ple "is the lowest they've had in SS years of measurement." Rowland said. Aerosol andustnalists arc mas- mterpretina the new find10gs ••to give flurocarbons a clean blll of health," said Myron Uman, director of the National Research Council's en- vironmental studies board. in a telephone interview from Washmg- ton, D.C. Rowland's theol) ··1s stall nght. ··he said. but the fresh research shows "it will take us a little longer to get in Just Call 642-6086 o~ ta Gueranteed MOndl) FnClly • ,au oo ,.,. ..... ~~tty •JO p m wcw-7 p m .,., ,_ O/J/111 .. .,. ---, .... ~. trouble. If we continue to release (cbloro-flurocarbons) indefinitely, we won't get into trouble for l SO years." The trouble stems from chloro- flurocarboos reacting with naturally occurring ozone 40 to SO lrilometers above the earth. The reaction is eating up the protective shield that filters out cancer-<:.ausing ultraviolet light rays, Uman explained. The protective band 1s just out of reach of normal scienufic instru- ments, be said. It's beneath sampling ~e by satellites but above the reach of airplanes. As a consequence, scientists use laboratory lasers or computer models to predict bow fast the complicated, l 68<hem1cal reaction is taking place. Scientists assume the ozon~obbl· ing reaction will allow in more sunlight and neat up th~ earth, affecting climate and weather pat- terns. "We've Just barely begun to look at its affect on climate," Uman said. "There is no reason to be sanguine about the problem." He is a member of the committee that issued the study called "Causes and Effects of Changes in Stratosphenc Ozone," a bienmal update for the EovltonmentaJ Protec- tion Agency. Gecker believes the theories are less than conclusive. "We almost destroyed an industry and threw 8,700 people out of work," be said. The media-driven steamroller re- sulted in a 1978 ban three years after the first discussion of ozone danger surfaced. "I don't understand the reaction myself but it did harm to me," said Gecker, a founding member of the Western Aerosol Information Bureau based in the City oflndustry. The lobbying group traveled throughout the state trying to de~nd the persecuted propellants ask1Dg for more time to prove the hypothesis, he said. Aside from displaced workers. Geclcer said consumers lost an effi· cienl, economical product. The pump sprayers which have replaced aero- sols on cosmeuc counters have a "tendency to be overused," malcing aerosol sprays cheaper. he said. Only 10 the United States are flurocarbons banned for use tn aero- sol products. They are sull used domestically ID refngerauon and foam products, giving cushions their bubbles. Uman said But their use is unrestricted elsewhere. "If industry convinces pohucians there's no danger anymore. the rate of production W11l go up dramatically,'· he said. Flurocarbon use was proliferating when the EPA IDStituted its ban. What do you like about tbe Dally Piiot? Wbat don't you llke? Call the number at left and your meanie will be recorded, transcribed and dellvered to Ule appropriate editor. Tiie aame U-boar aaswert.Dc service may be 11ed to record le&ters lo lbe eclltor on uy topic. Contrt1n1tort to oar Letkn eelema-matt laelade their name aad telepboae a.mt.er for vtrfflcatlo11. No drc•latlon cal11, please. Tell 111 wbat's oa your mind. ORANGE COAST llilJPilat H. L. Schwertz 111 Publisher Clrculetlon T14/M2..Q31 Clanffled -.ttet11elng 714/M2""71 All othw ~ment1 IU-4121 MAIN OFFICE 3JO ""-e.v fl Coe!• ..._. CA .,._I lddt-. loll IMO ~ .._ CA 129H )'till • ,.,. "'°""" ~ tepy Dy 7 • m. Gal Df'Oft TO 1 m ano ..,, C100Y d be--- Chay Dowatlbf Edit()( Ind Assistant to the PubllShttr Roeematr Churchman Controller -----~ ~L.WllUM CIJC\liatlon .,,., ~orning fog will <::hill the air Coutal •··~·~' ,flONTI: ~~~W•m-C06d...., 11 ., .. 12 IO ... 11 OI .. t1 17 11 11 H ..... ., .,. .. 11 16 t4 .. 1• 11 .. 1' II .... ea .. 11 IO f1 IO " n t1 " " 11 1t .. 1oe n 72 90 .,. 54 Extended SN>wett R.i f'Mit•t Snow OccUIH..,..SlabONllYa. ~ WMN1 lllw• ..04A US Ollol OI ~· Tide. Columbua.Otl Conoo!O,N H ----------0...-Fl Wonh Temps Oeyton ~ Dee~ HI ~ OettOlt 72 62 Duluth 14 70 El Puo 92 84 ,..,oanu 84 57 F.,go as to 'leGll•tt 71 58 Otll\O Aapkla 99 75 Or•IF ... 71 64 HW1for0 77 la Mpll-81 Pmul 70 48 Mllh'fille ,~ ~=~ 13 12 NorlOlll. Ve t2 71 OkllnOtN City eo 12 °"""' 70 IO OrianOo 17 17 Palm 8Pflngl 69 47TW~ 19 ee Ptloenla &3 IA Pltt•t>urah 77 .., Portlancf.Me 11 '3 POl'lland,Of 74 a."'~ ., 53 11 IS .. 71 " 100 " t3 .. 11 100 72 118 71 72 .. TOOAY 11 8-dlOw 1U3pJll. 70 hcond "'°" 1:22 p"' .. MIOAY ., 73 ,lrlt IOW 2 47 &JI\. ..07 }= :!:o::'iow • 20&.1'1 '1 I 42pm. u 13 hconCI hlglt ICM pm I.I M ~ .... lode)I ... 07 p.111., , .... ... ~at641a.m llldMte~lt 12 I07p.m. 66 Moon rlMI •• 6 22 p.m ...... ei 14' 15 a.m ni.dey and ,._ --et l.H '5 pm a1 ee H-.na 80 " HoN*ilu 85 51 ~on 10 sa Inell~ 73 5e J"'*-.Mf· 88 62 JeCklOflvllle 93 54 .iu- IO 71 80 74 71 64 M 70 93 74 SI 51 IM 71 103 ., SuRF REPORT 112 M KlonaM Clly 71 61 LMVegae ., 81 Utile Rod< 17 58 t:.:-7• IS .._ ........ 71 "-· .... -72 IO MIMll '-" MllWMlllM .. 71 t2 72 IO 14 ., 77 17 IO 75 67 -~ - Mii 2-1 2-4 2-4 2 2-4 1·2 2-3 SWiii dlnlc:llOfl; ..,._. ~ .......... ., ......... ...., An Oran&e County fire engine goe. lnto action near Coal Canyon blase Sanday. Coal Canyon fire controlled after 580 acres blackened County firemen blame bottle rockets for season's first major brush blaze close to any residences. From ill origin, the blaze burned across a hillside, jumped across Coal Canyon Road and pushed into the Oeveland NationaJ Forest just over the River- side County line. Bx STEVE MARBLE Of 1M Deltr Not llllff Weary firemen had won the upper hand over Orange County's first major brush fire of the season early today and ant1c1pated the S80-acre blaze would be contained by nightfall. The fire. driven by stiff winds through the brushy hillsides and ravines near Coal Canyon, was caused by bottle rockets apparently fired tnto a small canyon just south of the Riverside Freeway in North Orange County, fire spokeswoman Jody Greenhalgh said. By Sunday afternoon, about S8 I firemen, 49 fire engines, eight bull· dozers and six air tankers were at the scene. The firefighting team bad been cut to about 300 firemen, 27 engines and four water tankers by early today, a spokesman said. A county fire official estimated the blaze was 90 percent contained by sunrise today and said the job 'hould be complete by evenin&- The fire is the larJest of the youi:ig season an Orange County. A fire ID late April blackened 75 acres in Laguna Niguel and charred two expensive ridgeline homes. County fire officials consider any blaze larger than 500 acres to be a major fire . The Coal Canyon fire never came The brush in tbe unpopulated area was rlpe for fire because of the extra· dry winter and the lack of major brush fires in the area last season, fire- fighters said. There were three minor injuries reported amona the huae number of firefiJhters. They were treated at local hospitals and released, said Green- halgh. The winds lhal. were a problem Sunday when they awted up to 2S mph died dowta by evening and had vanished early today. Temperatures reached upwards of 100 degrees as firemen fought the blaze Sunday. OC racer buys 'Goldfinger' car for $80,000 at auction A Cypress race car dn ver who admires James Bond bid $80.000 Sunday for 007's spy car, a gray Aston Martin DBS with retractable prop machine guns and a bullet shield. Dack Barbour, a 1980 wi nner in the 24 Hours of Lemans, bought the car made famous an the movie "Gold- finger," from auctioneer Rack Cole durin1 the 14th annual Newpon Beach Collector Car Auction. Barbour told the Associated Press he bought the car "because I love James Bond movies the best of all." It was one of four such Aston M1tt10s made for "Goldfinaer." the 1964 Bond film stamn1 Scan Con- nery and Gen Frobe. Other feature' 1n the car include: •Revolving hcensc plate mounts w1th French, wis and Enahsh plat.cs: •A prop radar trackina system; •An oil·slick launcher; •A tcar-1&1 or amolacrcen blow· er: •A tack p1 ttcr to blow out PUl'lUCfS' tirtS' •A f\y<frauiacally ciuendcd ram· m1nlbum~r; • roof 'that fh~ off for 1 falce CJtttOr IC'al. "The roof don ny off. Out lt\e CJCCtor seat and the tare sl her - those Wert sptdal effect donr an the tudio." 1$0 added 1n the 'tud10 wu the smoke and fi rt from the mach 1 ne1u n ml . ~h1ch pee out ht-nt'ath the front headlights. "ThoseaYeprops," aucuon spokes· man Joseph Molina said. However, the revolving plates. smokescreen or gas blower, oil spiller, tack spitter, rammina bumper and bullet shield all actually function. At the time it cost $60,000. Mohna said. "To duplicate this car today would cost a quarter-million dollars.·• be said. Cole. who previously auctioned off such notable automobiles u the Batmobile and the Beatles' Bentley, described the car as ··Tbe areatest movie car of all time." Bidding started at SS0,000 and was raised in SS.000 increments until 1t reached S7S,000, when it wu raised at S 1.000 mcrements. Heat wave ontinuiqg with near-100 temps Southern California continues to bake under a strona summtr sun that will PU5h temperatures past the JOO. dearec mark in the vallc)'s and de ns Tue.day. the National Wutber Ser· vice Sl)'I. Fair wuihcrwill prcvtil over most of the rqion, althouab coutal area will continue to have naaht and mom1n1 fog and low cloudii fore· castcn id. ltigh aJona the coa1t wtll be near 7S with to between S and 72. Further inland. ternprra1urn wUI n from 70 ovt'm1 hr 10 bct-..tto and 9~ Tuesday. Maximums wdl be near 100 in the San Fernando San Gabriel and San Bernardino valleys after Iowa near 6S toniabt . Partly cloudy af\emoon aDd•cvc-, oina houn with a few heavy Ouailldtr· &bowers from Mount San Jacinto southward are forec:at for the moun· tains.. where biahs will reach 92 after lows to SS. Fair weather m the daetu Will bt int.cmiptcd by panw do\Mlineas wt th a few htavy af\Ctnoon and cvtll!n& 1hundcl"lhowcn near the mou11ta1n In tbc 10u!.htm daerU. Tbe mtteur')' wm ttttch frOm 91 lO 108 after D etnilhl krirt fr.n 61 IO 7 •