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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-07-23 - Orange Coast Pilott HIQHl4 LOW70 CIAIT IDITIDN MONDAY. JULY 23. 1984 Irvine star Gary Fig u - eroa has plugged a big l eak In pololsls ·of- fense. Page Cl Coast A summer camp for re- tarded kids to open In Laguna Beach./ A3 We asked Coast resi- dents how they plan to survive the Olympics./ A3 California San Ysidro residents de- mand McDonald's res- taurant site become a memorial park./ AS Nation Nation's growth shows spurt, Inflation dormant./ A4 Gallup poll shows Mon- dale-Ferraro taking lead over Reagan-Bush./ AS :·:;:·:·:·:·:·:·:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::•:::::~::::::::;:::::::::::::::::. World Copenhagen's Little Mermaid gets her arm back; two drunken kids arrested. I A4 Marcos' police rout 18,000 rioters In Phlllp- plnes./ M Feature Seven galleries are linked for Art Connections '84 -the county's entry Into festivities celebrating the Olymplcs./81 Miss America may be having troubles but Mrs. America Is still making the most of her relgn./81 Sports Spaniard Seve Ballesteros out duels Tom Watson to win the British Open golf tltle./C1 It was a lost weekend for the Angels, who suffered a three-game sweep at the hands of the Boston AedSox./C1 The public will get a crack at remaining "premium" Olympic tickets begin- ning today./C2 Entertainment What's happening to network documentaries on televlson? ./82 Bualneu Irvine's Urgent Care Center of America, Inc. reports loss./85 INDEX Bridge Bult.tin Board B""neea Callfornla News Cl...ifled Comlca Crouword Death Notioet Horoecope Ann lander• MutulJ Fund• NatlonaJ News Oplnton Paparazzi Pola Log PubMc NotJoa 8pom at~Mneta T~ ThMt .... w ..... :=:... 94 A3 8 5 A4 cs-e EM C7 C4 ce 82 95 A4 A8 81 A3 C4 C 1-4 88 82 83 A2 82 A8 -- ORl\NGECOUN TY . CA LIFORN IA 25 CfNTS There she oes. ee Vanessa Williams steps down, says 'she supports Miss America pageant' appear as Miss America" since the photoaraphs appeared in the maaa-zane. She said she was "enrase<f" after seeing the photop-apbs and added. "I never consented to the publication or use of these photographs 1n any manner." connection with the photos was a.n applicatfon to work as a model. and not a release allowma sale of the photos. NEW YORK (AP) -Vanessa Willia ms, first black woman to reign as Miss America, announced today she would relinquish her crown at the request of pageant o ffi cials after nude Olymplc benefit lgnltes OCfever Rally at Knott' s ----set by Olympians of another era ----- By KAREN E. KLEIN OflMO.., .......... Although it won't quite match the flair and pageantry of the o~nina ceremonies, Orange County wtll tight up with Olympic fever this week as the torch relay brcczcs through on its way to the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. Orange County's official Olympic torch-passing ceremony is scheduled to be held Thursday in conjunction with a benefit show put on by the Southern California chapter of a group called the U.S. Olympians. The Olympians benefit show, at Knoll's Berry Farm, will include a parade of Olympic competitors, a barbecue and the exchaQ&ing of the Olympic torch flame as it passes by Knott's Independence Hall, accord- ing to Bill Leach, vice president of the local Olympians chapter. The chapter, founded an 1949. is the largest in the world, with some 700 athletes 10 its ranks. There .are estimated to be 61.000 athletes world· wide who have participatt.d in the modem games. Leach, 38. ofNcwpon Beach, \sone of those Olympians (the p-oup shuns the term "former Olympian"). Loach and his wife, Julie. competed an kayalcmg an the 1976 games in Montreal. They were the first married couple to maJce the Olympic team together, Leach said. Dick Beckner. a 56-ycar-old resi- dent of Newport Beach who com- peted in the gymnastics event in Melbourne, Australia an I 9S6. is another Olympian who will be on hand Thursday. Beckner teaches adaptive physical education for handicapped children in Orange. He also does some gymnastics coaching on the high school level, though he said many school districts are dropping their gymnastics program. Also participating in Thursday's ceremony are Cost.a MC$8 resident Ken Fuller. a cyclist who com peted io the 1972 and 1976 pmes; Pete Mehringer. a gold medahst in the Los Angeles 1932 Olympic wrestling competition; and Brian Goodell, of Dana Point. who competed an swi m- ming in 1976. All Olympic competitors arc auto- matic members of the Olympians group, Leach said . Although Leach retired from kayakingafterthe '76gamesand went (Pleue He OL YllPlAJlfS/ A2) NB cop's drunken driving trial set Respected officer could lose his job, et prison term BJ STEVE MARBLE Ot .. Dllr ....... ---- A hi&hly respected Newport Beach police offiCCT has been ordered to stand trial for felony drunken driv1na an connection with a car aextdent that seriously injured a '6 t-ycar-old nurse. Officer Michael Patnck Pule, 30, could lose his Job and be sentenced to state prison if convicted of the charaff. He was ordered to appear in Superior Coun July 30 for am ina- menL The officer reponcdly was cel- ebratina an anud patcd promotton durina the early-momina boun before the aciddent, aocordina to offictals. Pule wu am ted March 14 after has ~r al1etfdl)' IWen'od au lanes ot the n Diqo Freeway near Jamboree Road and rut off a vehicle (Pleue ... PfB OJ'•IC&R/ A.2) photoaraphs of her appeared an Penthouse. "I am a fi&hter," Miss Williams told a packed news conference, but added. "It would be difficult for me to She insisted that the only piece of paper she could recall s1an1na in "I fuJlr, support the Mass Amenca pageant, • the 21-year-old Mass Wil- (Pleue eee 11188/ A2) Poetnc In front of Knott'• Berry Parm'• Independence Ball are OC Olymplana 0.., ......... .., ....... u,llt Brian OooclelL Pete llehrlnCer, Ken Puller, Bill Leach and Dlck Beckner. v . Victim of bike crash critical Newport woman, 22, figh ts for life after h ead-on collis ion A Newpon Beach woman 1s fi&ht· mg for her hfc today after betnt cnucally inJured Sunday afternoon when she was thrown head-fant from her btC)cle after bemg struck by another bicyclist. Annene Francis Mesa. 22, suffered head an1unes and underwent emCTJ- ency surgery for brain trauma foUow- ana the freak accident in a two-way bake path on Seashore Dnve an West Newport, according to Newport Beach Officer Rack Bradle). The woman. ndtng a three-speed beach cruiser westbound on the btkc path. was struck head-on by another b1qcl1st. Steve Roger Carlson. 21. of Costa Mesa. Bradlc) saJd Carlson. poll~ saJd. was nd1ng 1n the opposite d1rect1on on the beachfront bake path when he ac- cadentall) dnfted mto the other lane. knockang the woman to the ground. He "'as nol an1urcd Bradle)' said the woman hat her head on t~ paYCment of the bike path She "'as rushed to the Fountatn Valle\ ( ommun1t) Hospital trauma center °"'hert she underv..ent emcra- enn surge!) She was confined to the hosp1tars intensive 1.are un11 this morning. according to a spokes°"'oman Netthcr b1c~cl1st was weanng protective head gear. An mvcstiga- uon of the atlemoon crash continues toda\ Business meetings pursued By JERRY HlRSCB Of ... Dlillr ,.... 14111' Local hotel and restaurant man- agers are looking to cap1tahzc on the growth of the Orange Coast busmcss d1stnct a.-. the count) ·s finanClal center and tum the area into a pnme spot tor small convenuons and busi- ness meetings f or cumple. the Westin South (PleaH 11ee COAST/A2) Wayne Airport loss would hit our pocketbook Chlneee Tlaltor Yin& Xln, a male at&at panda. drtee otf after ta•tna a dlp ln Illa new bome lD dleClllDa Pa.Won of tlae Loe Anfelee 7.oo. Two 3·JeU-ol4 pudu an oa loua from tlM Peopl '• Repabllo of China ln ~ctlOD wttb the upcom':8 UUllerOlymptca. Som 11,000 fanaatood ln Une for awuat• to .... the Paad•• Saturday. If no1w--weaf) opponents ol fohn Wa}ne 4.1rport pre"atl~ and the field were closed to all air traffiC' 11 v.ould cost Oranse Count\ 's econ omy approx1mattl) $40' ni1lhon m annual revenues and 5.200 JOtx with a S 120 milhon payroll. an C('Onomtl analysis of the a1rpon has concluded The analysis. prepared by a pm atr consultina firm. also detemunC'd the a1rpon. du"C"Ctly and 1ndtrectl). an· nually pumps 1n $648 m1lhon to thl' local economy Accon:hna to the analysis. the count}·~ cconom' v.-ould soar to ~arly $2 balhon 1f th~ airport expansion env1s1onC'd by th<' Board of Supervisors ts romplctcd The economic assessment focusan' on the aupon'i 1mponance to th<' county's economy was com- m1ss1oncd as a pan of the en· vtronmental documentation re- quired ~fore the Board of uper- V150n can embark on a W1ck-ran11n1 S 191 m1lhon plan to enlarsc and 1mpro"e the agina and ovC1'CTOv.-dc'.-d aupon terminal Supcrv110n are c11"C'Ulatm1 a ~"C'n· volume Ct\V1ronmental 1mpaci tatf'- rMnt. mast~ plan. land u oom- pat1b1hty procram and other matenal relatC'd to the a1rpon ellpanllon Tht board propo~ to 1nat11llv inl-rtaw- JEFF ADLER Focus ON THE NEws thl' numhcr ol da11\ commcn:1al Jet dql8nurts at John \\a) ne A.1rport from the culTC'nt 41 -fltght hmtt to~~ t11ghtc. and then to 7 J flt&ht or hc\ond an the l 9QO\. rrtpared b) Economics Research .\c.\OC13tC'S tht study conclude John \\ayne A.1rport plavtd a central role an tht' dc\Clopment of thr countfs C'Conom and "contnbutes ~ubstan- 1111 economic ~nefit ··to uscnofthe airport. mamh rt'Stdt'nt travelen and lc1\Urt and bu inc s t111vcl h al~ points out that alm<>&t half th<' pnmaf) CC'Onomac ~fits oh.ht airport ~ &o thf r11aes cl co John Wa,>nt .. ""°" -Irvine. osu Mc~. Ncvopon Bnch. n Ana Hc1 h1' Santa Ana and 1 usun. (PleaN ... AdPO 1'/d) A2••or nge Coast DAil. Y PILOT/Mooday, Jul~ 23, 1984 Marine corporal in' scandal' will get honorable discharge From 1taU &od win report• Lan,e \pl Kandi Clark. "'ho5(' rclat1onsh1p to a Mannl· pilot I~ lo hc1 lo"cr\ coun -mant:tl will be hono111bh discharged from tht' corps. "l want to get out." Clarl "iatd "lfs;a shame lhev d1dn't11ccommo- <btc her desires l:ist fall b) doing the ~me thing the} 're doing now." $8td her allome\ Michael R O'Neil of CWlnta An.a .• Clark. n. will be honorabl) dis- charged for "conduct ad\ rrsel) af- fecttng thl· good order and d1sc1pline I CONTINUED STORIES of the unn," said her commandina otlker. l.t Col. Robert T Sarlnoflhc Manni.' lorps Air Statton (Helicop- ter) "' Tu st in She would reuun full veterans' benefit\, unltkc her liance. Capt. John Moul tal . 27. of the Marine Corps Aar Stallon in El Toro Mouhak. a lc-g.al aOiu~ oflker, wa~ rnurt-mart1aled Juh I J and d•~· nm~d. the eqUI\ alent of a dtS honorable dt!><.:harge Since Moultak 's d•~honorable dm·harge t!I considered a ftderal offenSt'. he will bl' prnented from pract1nng law or 11)ing for a 1·nmmerc1al air l'arr1t•r Hts court manta! 1s bc1n1 appt"alcd throUJh m1htary channel~. Clark had tncd to get out last fall so she could marry Moultak aark s~ud she'll ltkel)' fill out the papers toda~ a ncJ take some of her remamina 60 days of leave until the discharge is prooes~. No wedding date has bttn set with Moultak. fratem11a11on ~tween an officer and an enlisted person has Iona bttn t.aboo tor Marrnes, m ainl)' to prcvt"nt fa~or1t1sm or the appearance of 11, 00ic1als sa) NB OFFICER TO FACE TRIAL .•. From Al dn,cn h' Ruth l>1d,,, ,1 \l1\\1on \ ll'J11 n u1 \1' \\ho \\ ot\ dn' 1 n~ IHHlll' IJtllo.\ \ulkrcd head inJunn, brnlo..c:n 11h~. a fra1..1ured l'oll.ir hone and numl·rou~ (U( "Whl.'11 her r:ar t11ppt•d .rnd rolled into thl' ..,an Diego ( rcl·i.. "h 1rh runs along'>1de the frl'l'\\J\ Puk su!>taint•d moderatl' lnJUrll'\ Polin• ,,mJ a te!>t talo.cn t"o hour!> after the at·ndent n.·H~aled Pule had a hlood-alcohol l·ontent le' el of 0 20. doubk the le,cl at "htLh onl.' 1s pre~uml'd legall) intn\11.·atcd 1n (alt- tl1m1a Pule. "ho reportedh made effon, to aid lhl.' 1n1ured "'Oman, >w,1<, .tpc\tcd at tht' scene of tht• al.·c1dcnt h) < aht(1rn1a H1ghwa) Patrol nllicerc; During a preliminar) heanng .... tm h rnnduded last fhur!.day, two t HP offac~. a witness to the acci- dent and a forensin tox.olo~ist testt· fieJ against Pule. who 1s being reprc!>ented b' attornc' Paul Meyer The pre-tnal heanng started last June but was dela)ed when the pro~uuon had d ifficult) gcttmg the results of an independent alcohol breath test administered by the New- port Beach Police Department, ac- cording to Deput) D1stnct Attorney Derret·k Johnson John~on 'k:ltd the hreath test. given to Puk nearl)' four hours after the accident, was administered for New· pon's own internal investigation. Pule was suspended tor six weeks followutg the accident and is assigned to a desk job. He t!t free on his own recognizance. l nt1I the accident, Pule was a highly regarded officer. He had an unblemished record and was being considered fOr a promotion to the pohce det~tive bureau. authorities ~Id. Dach filed a S2 m1lhon damages claim against the Ctt)' of Newport Beach last month. The claim was denied by the Ctty Council. COAST SEEKING CONFERENCES ••• From Al C. oast Pia la t<, dtrellrng 11!. marl..eting l'ITorts to compan1e!> in<. htcago. Ne-.A. York Jnd in the San Franc1!>CO Ba} \rea to attract busmes!.. according to \te\ l.' Hugh es nat1onal !>ales director. "\\.e al"'a's ha'c some sort of group al the hotel .\lot ofn used to he lorn I but \Ao 1th all the hotel!> 1n the area. "e arc nn-w C\pand1ng ··Hughe<. said Ru.,1ncss meeting" no" mal-.c up nearl) 30 percent oflhl' holl'r, annual sales. he .,aid To help the Inc.ti hutl'l-. \\ 11h their marlo..ct1ngl'11orts the 'Jl.'''POrt Bl.'alh .\rea <.on' ent1on and \ l\tnr<, Hurcau has '>pl11 olllrom the "\e..,.ptlrt H..irbor .\rea ( hamher ol < nmmer1.c tu tx-coml· a nnn-pHillt n>rporatwn reprc'>cn11ng the hotl·I, Jnd re<,· taurant' in In inc ( m\a 'Vte~a. I agunJ lkaLh and '-l.'wport Reach. Tlw hurl.' au ha~ taken up tt•mpnrar~ rl''>1dcnu.· Jt '\e.,.. P<'rt C en tcr. "om pit· men ts ol the In inc< o "h1k 11 fJl\C\ mont•\ for ii ne" hl.·Jd4u,1nl.'r\ "\.\ t' arc.· tn 1ng to ~di thl' "hole area as a des11nauon for business meetings and con,cnt1ons," said Linda Bran- non. president of the bureau. '\!though the bureau carries the name ··Newport Beach" promi- nent !~. Branno n e>.plaincd the purpose of the bureau t'i to sell the "hole four-cit\ region to busrness tra"ders · · "W e arc u!>ing Newport Beach hetau'>c 11 1s recogn1Lable and is a '>alcabk commodity. It makes sense tu U!)t: what you have." said Brannon. \\ho .... ori..s for the Balboa Pav1lhon. fhl' Wes11n·s Hughes agreed . "( 11\ta ~esa 1s not a maJOr selling point '>O "c haH to bill ourselYes as the. "t'wpon Beach area·· When 1alk1ng to meeting or- gan11er... however. Hughes stresses the good points of Co\ta Mesa 1n \elhng his hold "W e are" 1th in wallo.ing dt!>tance to about 14 mo' 1e lheatt>r'> the shop- ping renter the South ( oast Reper· tor) fhl'atcr People really don't need a car when they come here. We will even arrange transportation to the beach." he said. As well as selling the area, the local visitors bureau organizes conven- tions for business meeting planners. The l 4~member bureau ts attending many of the far-flung conferences to advertise the area as a business meeting center, Brannon said. This month alone the bureau planned to work two conventions. the Meeting World meeting in New York and the Wo rld Congress & Expos1uo n convention. also 1n New York. "Meeting planners go to these trade shows to find destinauon that woO ld be attracti ve to holding these con- ferences." Brannon said. To entice planners to hold their conferences here. Brannon shows them pictures of the area, talks about lhc 6.500 hotel rooms available loc..all~ and offers to pnnt conference schedules and other matenal for the planners. Brannon said OL YMPIAN.S RALLY AT KNOTT'S ... From Al on tC<.ll h1ng at C uruna dcl \1ar High School Julie went on to train for the 1980 game!>. he ~1d There was '>Orne hoycott tal~ as earl\ a'> four or h\t~ months before the offiual<, annoumcment "Leach rl·1.allcd But Julie did not take the bo\COtt rumors <,enousl) .;;he had po\tponed her ,nfkgt• l'dUlatmn 'o \hl: rnuld dt:' ote m11rl· t1mt• to pr<it'ttnng. he -.a1<l 'Ahl'll thl' l nllt'd Statl''> an- n11unuu 1t "ould nut lOmpctc 111 Mo\to\\ l1.·.1c..h,a1d Jultc:wa\dc"a•;. tatcd · It \A.J' ltl..1· h,1, ing J 1.ha1r pulled out Imm undtr hl.'f and nut C' en he1ng ,1hlc lo get mad at the: pcr.,on \Ao ho did tl .. hl· '>3t<l !'<u" l l'a1.h u1mfXll'' in <i nun· Oh mptl C\l.'nt called thl.' triath..ilon \'.Im h Ill\ oh t'' <,wt mm ing. htl )ding .ind a mJralhon racl· Jultl· ha\ n:t1rt·d !rum tompct1t1on Rut both of them remain active in the Ol)'mp1ans group. raising funds for athletic scholarships throu~h their non-profit Koroibus Foundation and speaking about their Olympic ex- periences throughout Southern Cali- fornia ··.\ftcr )OU go through an ex- perience hke competing in an Olym- PK Games. you want to put some- thmg back.,. Leach said Leach strongly believes the Olym- pics should not be "caught up in politic!> and bureaucracy." he said. In fact. the Olympians sent out welcome lelters to I 53 countnes a week before the ~o' 1ct~ announced they would bo)rntt this year's games "\\. e "anted to assure them they would be welcomed ..warmly to Los \ngclcs." I each said As ti turned out tht• letter\ were not enough to reve~ the bo)COlt,dec1sion. But the Olympians were able to provide housing for some of the families of athletes who will compete this year. And they have formed a ··spirit team" made up of athletes who toured Southern California schools last spnng telling children about the Olympics. "It was eight years since the last (Olympic games). A lot of those kids never saw an Olympics:· Leach said. Thursday's ceremony will ~1n about noon. Leach said entertam· mcnt. in the form of the "Game of Games" show. will be take place later in the evening after the barbecue. The Olympians Benefit Show, beanng the theme ·The Best in AJI of Us ... costs $35 per person, including use of Knott's rides and attractions. For more information. call Patsv Marshall at 827-1776 · AIRPORT IMPACT ANALYZED ... From Al I !<me' l'' I hl.' report f.1i1, 10 llh'll· t1nn lhilt the holhcd 111 oppm1t11111 ln the u1nt1nul.'U operation ,rnd t'\ l'ntual e\pan.,.on nl the.· ,111purt :..il'o '' 1.entercd Ill tho'l' Jll'iJ\ l:lu\e\l Ill th1· a1rporl th.it dnl\t till' ~rt·atnt ~·11· di1-. 1.''>rl\'t·1alh 'l''' port fkach and \,1n1a \nJ I k1gh1' ''h•l h <Jrl.· locatcd 1)(•111\' tlw f11j.!hl 11.1111 111 1.kp.1rt1ng ll'llllll'I\ rh1.· '\OJ ,1uc <11rp11rt a1.u>1d111g to !ht• report pro\ Ilk'> l.tl d1111·, tor nrnl.· lOnlITTl rl 1JI .inti u1mm11t1·1 .111 ~Jr· nrr'> thrl'e go\crnml·nt .1i1.nc..11.' o' t'r I 110 .11 rport·rl'l..i ll•<l hu\I nl'\\C'> a n<l rent'> 'PJtt' for I he h<-nhing of m·arh I 000 pnh1tc .11rrrat1 \II told. thl.· .urport .rnd tht ahmc..'· nH:tlllOl\l.'d bu~tnC'>'l'\ lllfl'l th lOO· tnhutt'.'d S14~ 7 million 1n rt'\.t"l1Ut"<, to thcrnunt} el.onom\ in \4l)1 a1.\01d 1ng to the rcron In .idd1l1on lht: a1rpon pro\ llkd S t10ti JOh\ and an annual pa\ roll of SY.:! !! m1llton fho!ie f1gure\ thl'n ""ere addC'd to what tl\c tomultant\ t~rm "1nduet·d impact\" 1.kfined 3'> an t'~t1matmn ol what J0ct '' \Ub~qu<.'nt rounch of ,pcnd1n~ had on the Inc.al l'COnom~ \n 1nduu·d impact would Ile. fo1 c\amplc ho-.A. an a1rltnt mt'lhJnll emplo\.C'd at the a1rpon "J'X'nt h1<, Wt't'kh p;nl h<'c.. k for hoi1'i1n)l food and grnxh .ind \l'n 1n·, 1 h<' rnmultants <'~l1mah· the total rt"\<'OU<' gt•nrr.nrd int hl' c.. ounl\. hot h d1ret t and iridun·d. ""a" SM~ m1ll111n in I l.ll< land pro\ 1delf a 1n1al of l.l 'i 't4 111h' '"th ,1S174 m1ll111n p;nwll \I Ci'I l11~h1 .. lhc rt'.'J'<lrt proJC'Ct'i tntal r1•,rnul'\ of SXl.l'\ m1ll111n .111 n11,1lh I \ \,p 1oh' Jnd an annu<1I r.nroll of fl~ il.l' mtlltun Wht·n till' !11 J'Cll! l'\J).lll\11•0 " 111111pkll'd '" 111\JtJ the clon11m1l· 1mpat·1 would Jnlount 10 $1 9~ h1ll1on and acrount lnr :'k .,,, Joh'> and J p.1~roll totahng ~,:-~ S m1ll1on In tl·rm~ of percentage\. the airport no" , on,111utc" about I 'i pt•rt'l'nt ot 1hr lounl\., total ctonorntl. attl' ti\ .rnd lompnsc'> about I pern'nt ot the 1nh mJrkl'I II the airport o.pans1on r~ u1mpktt•d John Wa' nl' \irpon "111 ..inount for 4 S pcrr~nt of all econ· omit 1Ht1\lt\ and I f)(rl.·cnt ot tht• total Joh market. auurding tu f-RA 's PWJt.'l'I 1<111'1 T hl' repon note\. ho"-l'" n . that 11 lht• Jlrport "'ere do.,..•d 1t would not l'11m1n:.i1c all the ctononuc al.·t1•.it) a~<.0<:1a1cd w11h the airport. "M ul.h of the t•conom1l al11v1t ) -.A.ould he 'ih1ltcd 10 other airport areac,, hut a 'iubstanttal ponion "-Ould remain 1n the Orange ( ount\. !.tudy area·· the anal)Sts ackno"'k·dgcs. The repon also concede\ that the largc"t .-,han' of direct revenue~ at· tnhutt.'tl to the a1rpon in thl' \tudy. c.. unl·ntlv tst1matcd al SI 01 m1ll1on annualh for \'l'>ttor ~rv1Ce!>. might not bt'.' latrl\ regarded ao; rclattnj d1rc<.tl\ to the airport. "It <.an be.· argut·d th<.' ,ti.,1tot ser' t{e intlu,tn \hould not be n:twrdctl as an 1mpat1 of J\\. A. c,inn· mn\I of thl"~ '1'>1tor' would \till "1\1t Orange C ount\ "1thou1 J W ''-1n 0J)<:rat1on." th<' r<'port o;1atc'\ ()th<.'1 ftnlilfl~\ rt•lattnl( lO the a1rpc.1rt'., <,landing 1n the t:oun t~ ·., n onnm\ inl lud<' • 1 ht· nint· a1rl1m·, ..en 1ng John \.\ .t\ n1 ·\1rpon ha'e Jn t''lt1matt•d IM' rnll 111 S4 ' l rrulhon "'1th t:m· pl11H't h\•ni.·fit, llllaltng anoth<'r \4 (1' n11l11on f mpltt'H't'\ ll>\.('INI 1n lhl\ estimate are flight crew<,, marketing. tic ke ting and freight pcr'ionnel. main- tenance and passenger sen ice crc-ws. ramp opcrattons. skycap<; and other a irline sen 1ce employees •The commercial atrltne'> spent at>ou1 S2 per pa!>senger 1n local advcrt1S1ng dunng 1981. a mounting to SJ I m1lhon. • ome 20 million gallom ofJet fuel were pumped at the airport dunng I ~83. generating an estimated $20 m1l11on m fuel purchases However. on!~ about 12 perent ol that total rl·mains in the local c<.onom\. a., pa) roll for personnel. pumping cost!i and o ther related sen tees. •In-flight meals cost airline~ Opt'I aung at the rurpon $350,000 in 1983 •The fi ve a1rpon conc.es!l1ona1rcs pulled in an estimated SS 65 m1lhon in 1983 •Rcvrnucs from rental tar aaen- ue'i dtr~tl)' related to a1rpon act1v1t) amount to an est1mf\ted $20 5 million annuall) while revtnues from taxi fare-; are pegged at $747.500 a year •Ciround transpon ,_, vinis and \.'lvcd ttmr for bu sines~ travelen who rl· 1de 1n Orange Counl) and do not ha"e to commutt" to other local a1rpom bt'.'cau\C' of lohn Waynr l\1rpor1 amount~ to SI 0 8 mdhon Jnnu11lh . • I ra vet through the :urpon hy 1t•s1dent bu!>1nC'sS tta"l'ltr f&lthtates thr c"<pon ol SI 5 billion in goodsand X"f'\'tll.'S annuall) •'tate and local ta\c~ rurrcnlh grneratt'd hoth d1f'C'Ctl ) and indirectly :it John Wa\.'nl.' l\irpon amount to S 7 2 ~ mil hon annually and would in1 rraw 10 U 21 H m 1llton per )~Ar 011 tht· 'l ll1ght-pcr-Oa' k\tl Clearing and warmer Tuesday Coa•tal Ponlond,Oi Pf~ =:'3'01, Reno Alclltnoncl ..,.....,10 111.-SI "-l••>PO Salt llll• C.ly SonAnlonlO SMDlo90 SM f fanGlll;:.O Siii\ J\len,P" SI Ste M11tle S-ttl9 S/lrowpon SIOl.I•'• Spoli- S)lf-Toe*• lllCtOtl .. ' IO I 71 I •l ., I '° 71 I " 70 u .. 711 6$ .. u 62 13 " .... t3 f " f t3 1 Extended ·-~~ ~=: C0t0._ TulM Wullln01on Wlehlle w1Ht•8.,,. Wlln1lngt011,0e 14 f 82 1 " . 83 e 82 7 S~r1 ,._, F"'rt .. Snow Ooc:UMd....,. StallONry &..,. Nlghl 11nc1 motnlng tow Clou01 wllll moelly "'""Y elternoont Hlgl\a ,_ 70 11 IM~ to IOI In lht ~~ l o-• 68 to 70 Temps Albllly Albuq\lefquot Arn•rlllO Anchbtege AllMtta Allenlie Cily .Auetlfl 8allltnof• Blrrn<nghetn 8111T1Wdl 8-llooton 8ultlllo &irhngton. Vt CMP9' . CMllMton,S C Chafleeton W V Cl\lnotto,NC Ch9yenno Chicago Clncinnell ~ Columble,S C HI l.O 86 87 87 63 12 113 ee eo 83 es 77 70 17 74 8l 811 ,, 67 eo s1 64 65 ., . .. 89 65 87 77 53 82 7S 85 64 81 81 87 53 93 74 .. 13 65 8l .,. ee ,._..., Woefw S-.C• HOM IJ S Oeo< 01 C-'' Tides TOOAY M.-.S1P11<11 "' ,. Sec:ond '°"' II 11 Am 1 NUIM!le 86 85 Secona "'911 II 11 pm s NewOOMN 91 74 TVHOAY N.-YOf1' 83 7 t F•<al IOw 1 H ~m 0 Norlolk,VI 81 71 7 t f'11si n.gn a23a m 3 Oklehoma Clly "' SeeondlOw 12 211m 2 Omeha 96 73 Secononion 8$4 pm 6 OrlAfldo 811 70 Palm Ss><lnQ• DI 1' Sun .... tOday al 8 O• pm rlM Pt111110llptlla 112 73 Phoenix llO 71 l ueacla~ ., ~ se • m end Miit ega1n • """~ 81 63 800pm Pon .Me 83 eo Moon Mlt at 3 •7 Pm ,._ llO•"' t 208em T....oa1ano .. t••l4!11pw .. es .. &t II 73 65 eo 12 eo 15 71 llO a2 811 8$ llO 81 61 65 t2 M 74 47 11 72 TS 54 es ee 78 67 llO 78 llO 74 ea 111 14 72 SURF REPOR T 82 70 LOCATION 80 60 HUllllngtOll 8-:11 93 88 RI._ Ji«y. Newport IS 85 40th Strle4, Newport 91 73 22nct SI,_, Newpor1 74 70 8'1boo Wedge 17 15 ,..,.. 8eecto 12 73 Sen ci.m.ni. 64 78 Wet• lOf!IP.17-418 llO 77 s ... ~ ADt.111> - - - ~ 2·4 1·3 1 3 1·3 1·3 1·2 2-<I ONCT10 •• 11 ,, ,. ,. ta ,. Two UC! schools get large grant~ The UC Irvine School of Physical Sc1rnces and the College of Mectic1ne are both the recipients of two large donations. Hitachi of Japan. in its first gift to Pair deny beating youngl>oy A C. osta Mesa couple charged wnh severely beating a 5-year-old boy with a leather belt pleaded not guilty today in Orange County Supenor Court to felony child abuse charges. Teresa Barreda. 26, and her ltve-in boyfriend. Benedict G1lano. 49. "'ere arrested May 6 in their Sunnse Circle home after an anonymous caller notified the Orange County Social ·services Agency that Barreda's son. Mano. mav have been beaten. The pair· were ordered to appear at a pre-tnal hearing Aug. I 7 m Supcnor Court. according to a court clerk. G1lano's Jury trial was scheduJed for Sept. 17 and Barreda's for Sept. 24., the clerk said. an Amencan university, 1s gJving a $600,000 grant to the medical school to aid the research of a premier biochemistry prore·ssor. who will start at the Irvine campus this fall. Hhachi's gjft. made by Hjtachi President RyoJ t Yokayarna. and the announcement of the professor's CONTINUED STORIES I_ appointment at UCI was announc• last week And. as part of a program to a higher education. the Harris Cor has donated a $275,000 comput system to strengthen UCl's physic science general research program. MISS AMERICA ..• From Al hams said tn a firm voice. At no time during t'he news conference did she lose her poise. With her• announcement, Miss W1lltams' crown goes to the first runner-up, Suzette C'harles, Miss Ne"' Jersey. She will serve out the remainder of Miss Williams' term. which ends in September. She was the first of the 57 women to hold the crown who had been asked to step down. On Sunday. in an 1nterv1ew wtth The Associated Press. she had said of the furor: "I don't want to say 1l''i making me feisty. but it's making m e "ant to move on." Pageant execuuve director Albert A. Marks Jr. told the Philadelphia Inquirer that Miss Wtlhams will nc be permitted to attend this year show, nor will there be any acknow ed~ement of her reign. Pictures • Miss Williams will no t appear in tt Miss America program. Marks satd Pageant promoters said the photc graphs. published 1n September Penthouse. violated her contract n garding morals and upholding lt pageant's image Miss W illiams said the picture some depicting her in intamate sexu; scenes with another female mode were to be artistic photographs. nevc to be shown publtcl}. and that she we told she would no t be 1dent1fiabl1 he also said sht' didn't recall s1gnin a release for the pictures. Trains collide; 1 00 injured NEW YORK (AP)-Two Amtrak pl)ssen~er trains crashed head-on today in "a major accident" on an elevated section of track, and officials said scores of people were injured, at least two critically A parallel track had been closed for maintenance. "It could be a bad one. A lot depends on just how fast it was going," said John McLeod. an Am- trak spokesman in Washington. He said each tram carried about 160 passengers, addmg that he did nol Just Call 642-6086 D•llY Piiot Dellvery la Guer•nteed ... JAi, r•M'.ley tt Y< 0. ~· "'11.,. your PODOt ti~ ~ )() t " It DelOI• 1 pm •nd •l'U' C(J()y W'll ba ()l!l't. ..... fllld know tfboth trams had been moving before the crash. "We have a major accident. mul- tiple injuries, no fatalities," said fire Department spokesman John Mulligan. He reported six scnous in1unes and 100 to 125 minor ones. "Upwards of I 00 mmor injuries" were reported. said Ellen Weiman. spokeswoman for the c1ty·s Emerg- ency Medical Service. "A doctor is going up in a cherry picker to treat a partial amputee." said Jim Kerra. executtvt' director of the EMS. who was at the scene. H reported four "multiple trauma victims in all. "It sounded ltke two big truck h1ll1ng each other." said Jerry Vt! cov1cb, owner of J&S Hardwar Corp. across the street. "Two or th re blasts ... boom, boom boom!" The Shorelmer. o ut of Bosto n. an the New England Zip, out of Wast ington. crashed at about 10:45 a.m . a the Sixth A venue bridge on the He Gate ltne m the A.stona section of th borough of Q ut-ens. said McLeod. What do you like about the Dally Pilot? What don't you like? Call tb• number at left and y<e1ur message wtll be recorded, transcribed and dellverec to the appropriate editor. The same %4-bour answering service may be used to record letters to the editor on any topic. Contrlbotofs to our Letters column must include tbeh name and telephone number for verification No circulation calls. please. Tell us what's oo your mlnd. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. l. Schw•rtz Ill Publisher Clrcul•tlon 714/142-4333 c1 .. 11t1ed 9dvert11lng 714/842-5178 All other d•p•rtmenta 142-4321 MAIN OFFICE 3JO ~ftl 811~ St Co4te Mou CA Me~•"-"-Bo• 156() IA*I M8MI CA ~ Copy•>Qht t963 <>•"98 Coas• ~"'O Com911>~ No ...,... SIO<lft UlllhOnt _OI,_ ll'lellet 01 10\oe<llle mentt llef.,n mey ~ •IP'OOUtoO w.thOl.I• te>OCllll i>et· nl!MIOl'I OI CO(lyrtghl 0Wn81 ""'•u•O•r IOd Sunooy II ,.-no drJ not t~•rv• yOUI < u11y by 1 • m caH balo.• 10 II rr 8nd YOVI -~ "''" l .. Mil"vPte<J Ch.zy Oow•llby Aoaemery Churchmen Clrculetlon Tet.phone• M t 0.••'111' c ...... ,v ""'" to.cm Edllor and Ass1stan1 Controller to 1he Publisher ltephen F. Ceruo Pro0ucuon Mlf\6~ DONlld L Wtffleme Cucullltlon Menage. VOL. n, NO. 205 Your Silent Partner. WALLY McCONAHEY Manager When • death occur• In tM famlly you need to m•k• a lot ol rlgtlt decisions. You need to understand what la bat for you and how much you can afford. Call Pierce Brothera when you need ua. Pi.rce Brothers Smith• 827 Main StrHI Hunll~on Beach. Calif 92648 C.U: IHI fmPierre Brothers MOAT\JAAI I CHAP LS • ..- CEM TEAIES MAUSOLEUMS ALL 'AITHS CAEMATIONS 12 It ie 17 IO 'O .. ~ ' 1 4 2 • II 7 I 2 0 1 4 3 1 ' 3 7 I , • Ir Ir II' , r - 1d p. !r al ll s l- 1f e I• s ·-e ;, 11 I, r s g • e .. s j \ I Swim program has openings A backyard swim program sponsored by the South Coast YMCA has opcnin15 for cla!lses scheduled to bcstn today Th~ two-week sessions meet for 30 minutes a day in the morning. Monday through Fnday, at locations m Laguna Niguel and San Juan Capistrano. Oasscs are available for water babies (up to two years of aae), pre-schoolers, bepnners, advanced be&inners and 1ntennediate level swimmers Each class needs a minimum enrollment of three and a maximum of sax students. For more m fonnat1o n and reg1strat1on call 831-9622 or 495-0453. Chamber to meet Tuesday The next general meeting of the Corona del Mar • Chamber of Commerce will be Tuesday at Hem- mingway's Restaurant, 2442 E. Coast Highway, at noon. For more information call 6 73-4050. Eatlng dlsorders mulled A program for people with eating disorders 1s being offerred by the La~una Beach Free Chmc. lnd1v1dual and group counseling 1s available for problems such as over- eating, under-eating, anorexia and buhm1a For more mformat1on call 494-9428 Saddleback •etll reunion Saddleback High School Class of'74 will hold m 10- year reunion at 7 p:m. at Hilton at the Park in Anaheim on Sept. 8. The reunion committee still needs the names and current addresses of classmates. Cos.t for the evening 1s S30 per person and reservauons can be made by calling Teresa Bell, chairman. at 957 -11 1 I. Open house in Irvine The USC Orange County Center, 2361 Campus Drive, lrv10e, will hold open house on Tuesday from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m., to introduce its Fall courses. Logjam in Huntington Why, there were 80 man7 8Urlen on the 80uth aide of the Bununiton pier th.la weekend, you could almost walk to the Santa Ana River Jetty without getting your Orange Coa1 DAILY PIJ..OT IMond , .My H , 1914 A.a " feet wet. Hundreda of wave rtden wait ln the aurfllne for a .et u thousand.a of more aed.ate beachgoen thronged to county aanda. Summer camp for retarded -- boosts ability By SUSAN McCALLUM oe-o.r,.......,. Vic lei Su be is about lo ha-.-e the most m.axifta mmer of her life. Sbe will finally be able to let bet children · · paie an the swunmfoa. hWna, picn.ick.ina a.o.d pby· mcy COJOY so much. And she wiU, for once, have some ume to henelf. Her su f<>1ter children have Oo•11's SYDdto (mentaJ re&ardauon).and wwilhendtbem lo a day camp for excepuonaJ children lhat bas JU.St been opened in Laguna Beach by the W1er Sea.I Society. To Suba. ofM1ss100 V.ejo. the camp is a1odJe:nd ''It's somelhin& that tbc south county bas needed for a long ume," Suba said. "I'm really .exa\eld that lbey"re finaU~ having someth101 for our kids at a reuonablc price.• The camp, to be held weekdays t.hrouab Aus. 31 at Laguna Beach High School. was dcsi&ncd by the society 10 be like summer recrcauon proerams for normal children. but highl} structu~ and supervised. ··we're focusing on ab1hties, oot disabilities," said Sharon Fmsterbrush. a spokeswoman for Easter Sea.I Society. 'They wtll do swimm~ bowltQs. cooking and other things. all adapted to their physical and mental abilities." Finsterbrush sa1d the camp was oru.nizcd in rc1pon1e to requests from parents of special children throughout the county for a low-pnccd camp with a good curriculum for their children. When u was announced this summer, 11 filled up m two days .. Jan Bugalskl. program director for the camp. said .. 1 talked to people down thCfC (school administnton in south Orange County), and they felt they were meenna t.bc needs. They wercn•t mecung as much of the needs as they should.·· She said $50 per child pays for t.bc da.tfy recrcauonaJ acuviues such as ans. crafts, sports and pmes, recreational therapy, two days a week of swimming. two days a week of bowling and three field trips. The children, from ages 8 to 18. will be taken to 01.d C~nyon Nature Center m Anaheim Hills, a beach cookout and to the Orange County Fairgrounds f.qucstnan Center. Graduate level courses to be offered will be Business Taxation, Education, Engrnccnng, Library and Infor- mation Management, Nursing, Public Administration. Safery and Systems Mana~ement, Business Management for the Arts. and Continuing Education. Representatives will be present to discuss vanous goals and ideas of 1he1r programs. For further information or reservations. 752-5505. call "What are you planning to do to survive the influx of people that will come with the Olympics?' Another feature of the program is mus1c therapy, in which children make mu.sic togethu wtth SJmpk instruments such as tambounnes and cymbals. '"To du.ldren who arc retarded or rruJdly retarded, music as a very good therapy for them," Finsterbrush said. Eyesight lecture on Tuesday A lecture on Radial Keratotomy, surgery for near- sightedness, will be held at the Newport Center ljbrary Community Room at 7 p.m on Tuesday. Irvine resident. Dr. Seymour Kem, one of about 200 phys1c1ans in the U.S. who perform this operation. will be guest speaker. The lectures are free and open to the general public Reservations are requested as seating 1s hm1ted. Call 751-1534 and ask for Maf)one. WESA announces speaker Dick Body, telev1s1on personality and mot1vauon speaker, will share his new goal-setting insights as guc~l speaker at the Newpon Beach Chapter o f WESA. the 1ntcrconnecuon. on Tuesday. Jul} 24 Jobmry Johnson developer Orange Cyndi Kudelka crecllt clerk Gardea Grove The meetins, open to business and professional men and women. will be held at 6:30 p.m . at the Dove Restaurant. 1660 Dove St . Ne"l>Ort Beach. For more information. call Launl' White. associate director. al 536-1517. ··We're going lo leavr and go back to ~uth Da- kota.·· "It's all up there (1n Los .\ngeles). not down here It "on't bother me Dlvorce seminars scheduled Women's Opportunities Center. 28 11 Mam St.. Irvine, 1s sponsonng a series of seminars entitled .. Do I Want a Divorce," On July 25 and August I, 8. and 15. The seminars, at 5:30 to 7 p.m .. will attempt to aid part1c1pants in the dec1s1on-makmg process of determin- ing if divorce 1s a n~ssary step and the consequences of such a deetsion. Other topics will include legal implica- uons, beliefs about mamage and divorce, emotional factors. and child custody. The fee 1s S25. Call 856-7128 or information and reservations. CALENDAR Monday, July 23 Jim Duffield lndaalry sapervlsor Mira Loma Sandy Burnham psychiatric tttbnlclan Fullerton • 6:30 P.-m .. Costa Men Planning Comml11loa. Cit} Hall Council Chambers, 77 Faar Dnve, Costa Mesa. • 6 p.m .. Irvine Ruell Water Dl1tricl, Board of D1rectors, District Offices. 18802 Bardeen Ave., Irvine. 'Tm talong a 'acat1on. home to Mira Loma I'm not gotng to work 1f I can hel p 1t." 'Tm going to sta} at home as much as possible I'll do all m} watching of what O l)mpic C\Cnts there arc on TV and sta\ off the • 7:30 P..m .. lrvlne Tra.a1portatloa Comml11ioa, Cit)' Hall Council Chambers, 17200 Jamboree Road. Irvine. roads.·· · Pair seized in Valley heist linked to other robberies? Law enforcement officials are try- ing to determine 1f two men arrested last week after alle~edly robbing a Fountain Valley savings and loan are responsible for a senes of other robbenes an the area. The two Orange County men were J&1led only 90 minutes after they allegedly held up the World Savings and Loan Assoc1atton on Harbor Boulevard in Fountain Valley. police LapnaBeacb A locked garage reportedly was forced open and the vehicle inside damqcd an the 2500 block of Mon· aco Dnve Sunday afternoon. Nothing was rePorted missint • • A rcsidenual buralary reported ID the 1600 block ol Sunset Ridge Sunday afternoon resulted ma loss of S40 e.a1h Sunday afternoon ••• Two malewh1tejuveniles rePorted· ly assaulted the shopkeeper and took cloth111j wonh $32 from a busmes.s in the 600 block of South Coast H•ah· way early Sunday afternoon • • • William hul Go~n. 22. and Wayne MattMw Ehas, 26. wcrr ettcd for lewd conduct an He11ler Park early Sunday momil\I.. ••• A fiaht deteribtd as btina between numerous "punkm.. and "htavy mtt.al" advocates wu rtPone'd S.tur- ' said. The two suspects-David Robcn Ellis. 34. of Cypress and Jarnes Lee Jones, 41 , of Westminster -were arrested Thursda} afternoon on susp1c1on of bank robber). parole v1olat1on and po'isess1on of a con- trolled substance, accord mg to police They were apprehended and the money was recovered, officers sa)'. when they auempted lo enter an day night at V1ctona Beach. Police dispersed the combatants. who vowed to return No arrests were made. • • • Anthony Case} Nealo n. 3S. wa'i arrested on a charge of grand theft Saturday n1&ht m the 800 block of Glenncyrc Street after a witness rcportedJy saw the suspect earlier at the scene of a crime in the 600 block of South Coast H1&hway The alleged stolen property was ruovercd. Bail for Nealon wa set It SS.000 • • • Randy Marku Cobb, 28. wa .. am"Slcd for dnvm1 under the 1n· nuence of alcohol late Fnda) niaht at Goff St~t and Park Avenue and rclealcd on S l .SOO beil. • • • Tn:y Manhall Poe, «. wa'\ ar- l"e$\cd 1n the 800 block of Bluebird Cuyon Dnvt for dnvma under the influence of alcohol Fnday ni&ht and relea~ on SI • .SOO baal. · apartment com pie:\ in the ~.ioo block of 15th Street 1n Westminster that one of the men had been lnown to frequent otlicers said De sen pllons had been pro\ 1ded b) ~1tnesses and sa' mgs and loan em- plO)Ce'i The suspect'i. who were lodged in Orange Count ) Jail, are believed to he invohed m other cnmes tn the area. accordmg to officers • • • Nadine June Connor. 25. was arrt1ted o n a warrant for assault and battCf) and held o nS5.000ba1I Fnda\ afternoon ID the 1100 block of Lquna Can)on Road • • • C1othma worth S5 70 wu rcported stolen from a business tn the 1400 hloclc of South Coast Htghwa) Fnday m ornina. Pohce have no susp«ts • • • Je~lry and sweaters worth $3,000 were rcportcd )tolen from a vehicle parked m the I 500 block o( South Coast Hiahway Fnday momina. Bantt.ncton Beacb A bu~ar broke tnto a res1dcoct on thl" 6~1 blocl of Canterbuf') DnH and took thrtc antlQU<' 1un~ v.onh S 1.500. JCW!rf') worth $500 and a $500 com collC'Ct1on The croo., •pparcntJy entered the hou"' b\ fon-101 optn a luchcn wtndow • • • ' I Also, each week will be "themed" for actiVlUes. One suggestion BugalskJ gave was a Mexican fiesla week. Much research for these theme weeks was done by Vicki Lynn Heard, a Buena Parle woman who has been confined to a whcelcha1r since an accident several years ago left her a quadrapl~c. She studied about 40 countries for informauon to use 1n the theme weeks. -1 cannot use a pair of setssors, color. cook.. perform simple household duues I can organize a party, tnp or group or something of this nature very well" Heard, 3 7, said Fmsterbrush said "she was so excited to be doing tJus She's bad nothing to do for the past years.·· BuplskJ added that Heard said "I haven't felt this worthwhile smce I've been in the hospital." Albert Avilez worker wltb disabled America.a veteru1 Hacienda Helgbts Jody Witt housewife Balboa blud Twenty children were admitted to what Sugalski calls the "pilot program .. this year. She said she hopes to expand the fi ve-week program to a full summer program next year. The Suba children v.o uJd probabl} love that. Suba said the} are aJways ask:ing her ~When arc we going to camp. Mom? When are we gomg"'· ·Tm takjng a 'acat1on '"I'll Sta\ at the beach. at Balboa .. · probabl> to Laguna Beach.·· Hearing Tuesday on Joaquin Fwy. Public hean ngs are scheduled along the Orange Coast this we« as state and count) transportauon planners begin work on an en' 1ronment.al impact reportconccm1ng construcuon of the proposed San Joaquin Hills Freeway. The first of the rwo sessions will be held Tuesday in the mulupurposc room of M1ss1on VieJo Hllh School. 2505 Chrisanta Dnve, M1s.s100 Viejo h will be followed b) a Wednesda) session at University High School. 4771 Campus Dnve, lrvme. The heanngs begin at 7· JO p m Brace Bartley food service worker Hantiagloa Beacb Mary Railings boauwife Miuioa Viejo Both sessions Wlll be preceded at 6 p.m b} an open house to allo" interested panics to view exh1b1ts and ask planners qucsuons about the project, which would extend from the Corona del Mar Freewa) at Jamboree Road in Ne,...1>0n Beach to the San Otego Freewa) near Jun1pcro Serra Road ID San Juan Capistrano 'Tll Sta\ at home and do nothing 1n particular I'll watch 1t on TV ·· .. I'll do absolute!\ nothing to a\Old ll r ni going to be ~orkmg al the Ol}mp1cs. doing food ser- ' ice at the long Beach convention center·· Planners are hoping to gather comments on social, economic and environmental wues that must be included Police were hrought out to H unt- ington Lanes. 1958~ ~ach Bl'd . when 11 was reponeJ that 5e\eral people on the roof of the bowhng alle} were tossing bottles at passersby. Th~ hooligans, however. "'err gone "'hen officers am ved. • • • The owner of a car chased a man o n a bicycle who he thought had broken mto his parked veh1c k .\ stereo unit was taken from the car. parked on the 300 block of7th Strttt The car o.,. ner told pohcc the suspected culpnt escaped on a beach (ru1ser Fountain Valley .\ resident of the I HOO block of Euclid StJ'ttt rcpo unda)' that someone rt'movcd reen from a front w10dow m his horn~. took a Sony color telev1s1on set and Oed through a sliding rear door The televmon wu 'alued at $300. and damaae to the screen was esu mated at $25. ••• .\oother rn1denl of the 11 JOO block of Eud1d Uttt rcported ~un­ da) that someone pned open the dnver's door to bu~anze her whne 1981 Volksw•n Jetta Thl' loss mcluded sterro equipment worth S359 • • • A resident of the I I 600 blod of Mangold "'enue told poh~ that earh Saturday somrone slas~ seven radial lJre1 on ht~ two can, parked 10 his dn~ .. Y-The vandal\ lefl nones painted Wlth vulpr me The dam was esu mated at $51 • • • Someone entered an open PfalC Saturda\ on the IOJOO block of La Sombra.and itolt' a bro"n metal tool ho\ Tht' lo" wa\ Mllmatcd at SI ~~ • • • .\ r~\1dt'nt of thC' Q800 Ne)\ k of 1n the project's en\lronmental documef)tat1on ,.. tuf1COn A \enue rt'ponC'd that som('o one slolc his I Q8 I \~pa ffillt (u scooter Saturda) while ll was parled ID an open prage on the Q(>()(l blocl of Toucan Circle The loss ~a" e'ill· mated at S 1.685 • • • Someone entered a g.arag~ on the 16000 block of Wh1tC'Cap C'trcle and stole a tool bo), a sander. a saber c;a" and s,afet\ o;hoc\. a resident reponrd Saturdn' Th~ lo'i'i was esumated al $44' • • • Entenng through a dogg1l' door tCI th~ garaee and an open door trom the garage, ~meonr burglanzed a home Saturda\ on the 16000 hlod:. ot (arleton Strttt The loss included Jewelf) worth $630 and a tcle' 1s1on ~t worth $300 • • • .\ I 'i-\ear-0ld bo} reponC'd that M>mrone stok his bronze Sch"mn fiH•-spced b1C'\clc from his Pl"I$ on the I flOO(} blocl of Canhou Strt"<'t The loso; ~as esumatcd at $150 • • • ~mcont' entered an open garage Saturda\ mommgon the I IOOOblocl of( amcllia .\ venut> and 'itole a Bngs and trauon lawnmov.-cr The lo"" "a'i estimated at SJ 7S Coeta Meu .\ "mdow of an equipment room at Orange Coa'it College. 2701 Fa1 f'.-1e"" RoaJ. Y..as pned open earlier th1i. month and Sti 800 worth of '°und equipment \\'&S \tolen from the thcatrr bu1ldmJ ~"eral amphflcn.. an equ.ah1er and 3 \tcreo con"°le wcrc stokn • • • Th1t'"e' cut a front v.ind0w tCTttn at a home on thr M>O block of Wt> .. I 18th ttttt rnda' and 1ole S2.~ wonh' of valuable"\ 4.mon1 the item\ l"l"l'Oned m1\s1n \W'rc • t~~phonr f't\.·\>rder tele' l\IOD !let and \trreo • • • .\ S250 bin-ck ~as stokn from a garage at a home on the 2100 block of Pacific .\' enue Sa turd.a) • • • 4. homr on t he 2200 block ot i\ 'a Ion Street was broken into un- da\ and a teleV1s1on set. 1ape player and IBM typewnter were among the ttem~ stolen. The loss was placed at S J.Q50 tn the burglan Thieves ap~ntl} Fntered the residence b) pn 1 ng opt"{! a locked rear door Newport Beach .\ Los .\~les man reported the theft of two p1ettS oflu&PIC from his Camero parked 10 the 1400 block of "lewport Boulevard Sunda)' • • • A Newport Beach man rcportcd the theft of a stereo valued at $300 and a S 100 camera from his home in the 200 block of 33rd St1ttt unday • • • >\ u lendora man repon('d the theft of about $5.000 10 auto parts from his Mercedes par\ed at "6th and Sca- ihorc Saturda) • • • .\ Newport Bnch man l"t'ported the theft of a 1977 Olds valued at $3.000 from the 3200 block of Balboa Saturda' • • • A Garden Grove wo man reported 'IOmeone broke the window o(hcr car parked in the 3100 block of lr"'IM IC\ ~tc.al her purse 1n 1dt The~ wu 40 C"tnu in cash 1n the purY • • • A Newport Beach man rtpOl1Cd the thef\ of an auto stctto vaJued a1 S from h" Met aides 1)911lcd I l I lO I Do\e • • • A Lo Ansel~ •"Oman rcponrd t~ theft o( her pune containa~ SJOO ca h and S 1.200 in JC'W'tb"y from pool at the Nl"W'PC\rt Marrion tur· da) A' Or~ Coetl DAILY PILOT/Monday, Jury 23, 1984 U.S. 's growth show·s gains; sans inflation WASHINGTON (AP) -The economy grew at an unexpectedly strong annual rate of 7.5 percent this spnna even ai. inflation remained in check, the government reported today. The growth fiaurc relea~d b) the Commerce Department for econ- omic act1v1ty 1n the Apnl-June quar- ter was sharply higher than the prcltmtnaT) estimate last month of .S. 7 percent. Today's rev1s1on followed the pat- tern the economy set earl> 1n the year -confoundina eAperts who persist in predJcung slower growth as the recovery from the 1981-82 recession begms to lose steam Growth in the second quaner was slower than in the first. which -was revised today to an astonishing I 0 I percent annual rate -matching the best performance in three years. However. both growth 'rate~ were well above what economists had predic ted. Onginally. the com.ensus forecast was for growth belO\~ 5 percent in each quarter. Growth. as measured b) the gross national product. the total output of goods and services, turned in a performance in the Januan-March penod unmatched since a· s1m1lar I 0. I percent increase in the first quarter of 1981 Of\en such strong gro'Wlh at this stage of an economic recover) would s1gnaJ a return of 1nflat1on But that has not been the case this year The goverment reported toda~ that a GNP-linked inflauon measure -was nsmg in the second quarter at an annual rate of 3 2 percent. lo-wcr than the 4.4 percent rate posted in the first quarter The smaller ancreaSt' was attnbuted pnmanl) 10 food pnces. which dropped 1n the '>ccond quarter after nsini sharp!) in th~ Januaf)- March penod. Many economists have exprei.sed concern that the strong growth bemg shown by the economy could eventu- ally choke off the recovery by inspir- ing heavy business and consumer borrowing. which would dn\e up interest rate) and tnaaer inflation However, while interest rates havt' nsen. inllallon has remained in check. Thr Commerce Depanment repon said that thr Wong GNP gain for the second quaner resulted pnmanh from an increase in final sale!> - \l.h1ch increased at a rate of 10.4 percent compared to a '6 percent increase an the first quanc.>r Personal consumer )J'.K.'ndang ""as al~o up dunng the period increa~ang at an annual rate of ti 9 percent. compared to a 4 6 pern·nt pal't' in 1hc first quarter Cap11al spending h~ bu<,am'!.scs rose at a strong 20 7 JXn:t:nt ratc about the same as the 20 6 percen1 pace turned an dunng tht· lint thret· mo nths of the \Car But hou)1ng construct10n po)led only a 9 4 per- cent artnual rate of increase 1n the second quarter, do'Wn from the 21 3 percent rate in the" pre' 1ou!> quancr. reflecting higher mortgage mterc't rates. Beforc adjustment for 1nfla11on GNP rose at an annual rate of 10 9 percent 1n the second quarter. reach- ing a level of S3.646 tnlltnn. after increasing 14.9 percent in the fim quarter When 1nOa11on 1s ta~en into al- count, GNP increased at a 7 5 percent rate from Apnl through June to a level ofS I 64 tnll1on Citizens in Israel · head for the polls TEL A VIV. l)racl (AP) -Because of lsraers many poltt1cal pames and lls coaltt1on S)Stem. 11 could take more than a month after toda) 's election for a ne"' government to be formed "'o pan} in the nation's 36-}ear h1stOC) has e"er ""on a clear maJont~ ol 61 '>eats in the 120-member Knesset or parliament. and this ~ear \I. Ill be no ntepuon The most seat~ l''er \I.On b\ a single part} was 10 1969 ""hen the Labor Part) led ln (1olda Meir "'on 56 ~eat~ In 1%1 11 took Pnme Mm1!>ter \1e nachem Begin 36 da)'i to form a governm('nt and in 1977 11 took ham ,4 da\S. Israel \Otc~ b) paper ballot. and although prelim1nar) results will come in w1th1n hours of the electJOns. thl) year full official returns arc not cxpected to be available unul Aug. 6. State telev1s1on w1U be compiling and broadcastmg its own projections. Once the results are released. lsraers President Chaim Herzog. a Labor supponer before he took the non-partjsan ceremonial post. 'W11l consult 'W1th the part\ leaders and tnHte one of them to form a go.,,ernmenl The part~ 'With the mo')t l\ne'St't )Cats alwa}'i ha) recea' ed the an\ 11a- t1on. but 11 1~ not mandator. .\ pan~ w11h fewer seat<; hut more promise~ of suppon from !>malkr partae'> wuld get the nod. For e'ample Lakud\ ) 1t1h.1k Shamir had o nh 4fl <tcal~ 10 50 or Shimon Peres' ·Labor Part} whtn Shamir was cho~en b} the president to form a new go\emment without elections after Begin resigned last September Early Bird Dinner Specials 16. 9S 4 -Prime Rib or Fresh Fish .,-Complete Dinner w ith choice of I --,.--. ., soup or salad and dessert ~ ~ 1 4to6PM , ON '(!!f"!:~J 1 Days I Week! BALBOA 801 E. BALBOA 673-7726 Fast Closing! Flexible Terms! Affordable Rates! Our Oe~ible terms •nd •ffordab1e r•tes malct> it Hsier for you to qualify. We help you move in sooner, too ... by d~ing your to.n faster! Finance your home the Gre.t AmeriCcJn way. Start today. PhoM for ~•ils and current r•tes: '> Fountain Valley (714) 963-7736 Laguna Beach (714) 494-7541 Great American r 1r~t Saving.\ B.ln" ... , ... c~·· aa.mber o.ne toan.t attractlOa. tile Uttle llermald wu Yletlm of nnclale OTer weekend. 2 drunks return arm of mermaia COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) -Two youths who eurrendered "with one arm, two hangoV«s and lots of apologJes" ended the mys- tery of who had sawed off the right arm of the Little Mermaid, Den- mark'• most fame>U9 statue, pollce said today. The two 1a.year-otd Danes ad- mitted they had cut off the bronze statue's 16-lnch arm with a hackaaw at a drunken prank early Sunday morning. Their names were not dltctoeed by a duty officer, whO saJd they were charged with vandaH.ztng public property and were reteued pendJng trtal. The gap In the Little Mermaid's arm -from her shoulder to the hand attached to a stone where she perches -sp811ced 24 hours of "Who-done-it .. speculation and drew thousands more Danes and tourists than usual Sunday to the statue In Copenhagen Harbor. "They sald that, after sobering up, they reaJlzed that to many companions knew about tt that they didn't have a chance," the offloer eald. "We aJready had received • couple of tlpe, so we probabty would have tound them today anyway." The vandallem was dllCOWfe.d et 2:30 1.m. Sunday by a ~ atroltlng on the d•aerted Langetlnle pier where the statue WU placed fn 1913. It WU the aeoond deltructtve attack on the statue. The mermaJd'a head wu severed In 1~. and It ha never been found. A new head wu cat at a bronze foundry where the .tatue spent four montht undergofng repllJrs. The character of the Little Mermaid wu the creation of Danish author Hans Chrtstlan Andersen in an 1837 fairytale about a mermaid Who saved a prince from drowning. but was too pure to l\&ep him from hl& bride waiting ashore. Since then, the wistful flgure has become the symbol of Denmark. When the statue turned 70 last year, the amb....Oora Of 2'4 na.. tlona turned out to With tHtr ahaOPY birthday. Police in Philippines disperse protesters MA 'ilLA.. Philippines IA Pl - Pohce used tear gas and truncheon'\ to disperse 18.000 ant1-go\ernmen1 proteslc~ toda~ shonl~ before Presi- dent Ferdinand E. Marcoc; addre<,scd the opening c;ess1on of the ne"' "'Ja11onal .\ssembl\ Marcos told the asc,embh "'h1rh include!> the larg<"st oppos1t1on lat 11on since he disbanded an Amt'man -;1ylc congress and imposed martial law in 1972, that hi'> emcrgcnl} law- making power~ make a return to man1al law unncccc!.~a~ Carried away At least 1 l of the anti-Marcos protesters were treated at hospitals for minor fractures. bru1c;es and gas inhalation but there were no 1m- med1atc repons of arrests as police hroke up the dcmonstrauons, stased ,11 a do\\ ntown plaza se1rcral miles from lhe a'>sembl~ building. In his speech. Marcos said demon- \trauons were a "ncce!>sary part ofour democratic life" but contended they were being infiltrated and manipu- lated b} ( ommunast subversives. Sculptor Harry Jackaon &l•e. a lift to Newport Beach'• Pilar Wayne, wldow of the late actor John Wayne, durtn1 unYeUl,oi of Jack.eon'• 21 -foot bronse eculpture of the Dtlke on honeback. The artwork la at a Be-.erly HUl1 office of Great We.tern 8avtn11. . NATION Congress back in session; election-year issues looDl By the A11oclaled Pre11 WASHINGTON -C..onarcs~ returns to work toda} after a three!'-wed break for the Democratic convention to face election-year issues on wh1d Pruiden t Reagan and Democratic nom10ee Walter Mondale ure an d1rcc oppos1t1on. One 1s the S1mpson-Mazzolt bill that would rewrite 1mm1grat1or laws in an effort to cut down on the flow of illegal aheni. into the United Suitt~ Other contentious questions to be settled include whether the United State• should provide covert aid to C IA-backed Nicaraguan rebels, whether l purchase more MX missiles and whether federal aid should be withheld frorr colleges and universmes that practice d1scnmination. FU% heart arteries bloclced HARDWICK. Vt. -An autopsy has shown that Jim Fixx. author of th~ 1978 best-seller "The Complete Book of Running." had senous heart d1seast that led to his fatal heart attack while Jogging. "He had serious heart dl)l'a~t affecting two major arteries to the heart. The) were complete!) blocked on · said Vermont Chief Medical Examiner Dr Eleanor McQu1llen She added tha besides the heart problems. F1xx ""as in "tine e'cellent !>hape" She said hl apparent!) didn't ha\C any 'Warning signals that accompan~ a hean auad .. , .UH apparent!)' didn't kno\I. ofh1c; cond111on Moon likely to get menial job DAN Bl JRY. Conn. -Because the Re1r . Sun Myung Moon i.peals a Imo'> no English. pnson officials say the leader of the Unification Church"' Ill mu~ hkcl) get a menial JOb while he sen es ume at the Federal Corr~ctwna lnst1tut1on. A pnson classificat1on team was to 1nterv1ew Moon toda) lt determine what !..ind of work he will be doing for the next several month). rht pnsoncr's ca)e manager. a counselor and an ed ucational reprt•sentat1\e wal decide on the Job, ~aad Warden Dennis Luther. Moon arn.,,ed al tht' prison latt Fnda) night to begin serving a prison term up to 18 months for ta\ e'a'>1on Coleman crime links sought CHICAGO -ln\CSllgators plan lo retrace Alton Coleman's trek aero'>' the Midwest to determine whether the former fug111ve . accused of murder anc kidnapping dunnga seven-week spree. can be linked to other unsolved cnmt'\ Cases will be reopened 1n states where police belie\ c the 28-)ear-old Cole mar traveled. FBI spokesman Tom Baker said Sunday from Washington. DC "What's going to happen no"' 1s a 101 ofJunsd1ct1ons are going to loo!.. back o' e1 unsolved ca~s." Bal..er said." It's logical to do so when you ha' e an 1nd1\ldu 1 ltke Coleman " Floods cause death, evacuatlon LAS VEG.\S, Nev -Thunderstorms flooded cit} inter">eCtJOns \I.Ill racing waters that swept cars away like toys. 1-.llltng one man and lea1. ing up lt three others m1ss1ng toda}. while 450 people evacuated from Moapa Valk' homes sought refuge at Red Cross shelters. The O\erflo"' from the Mudd) Ra\ er spread into up to 150 homes an the valle). 50 mile!. northeast of La• Vegas. Hundreds of people were evacuated. and hghtnang knocked out pmH'I 10 about I 0.000 customers o n Sunday. including Nellis ·\ ar Force Rase CALIFORNIA Retirement home blaze hospitalizes 60 LOS A.NGE L ES -Ten people. 1nclud1ng sen·ral clderl~ ...... omen remain<"d hosp11altzed toda) after more than 200 resident<; ned a lire thJt erupted an a 1:ons1ruc11on site and roared into their 12-stor. rt't1rcment huml·. Sax'' of the 212 e' acucc<; <iul1ercd smoke inhalauon an the tire late l)unda\ hut mos-t of them ""ere treat<"d at thc scene or ta~en to hospitals for ohst·r,ai1m1'>. Fire Department <tpokesmen 'ia1d The fire wa\ ohu'ip1c1ous ongin. l'<o one was burm·d in tht' hla1c \\ h11. h 1:aused an c~t1matt·d $755 000 in damage to thc condom1n1um ton<tlrul:taun '>atc. thc Fickett To""er<; retirem<"nt re<>1dence and -windo\l.S ofa hualdang at the F1r\I Bapt1\t ( hurch ot Van "lu)'> anoss 5herman Wa~ . Shots fired near Olympic Village l OS .\.NGH f'> -Polite 'ia) 1t "'as probabl) a fe"' nmd\ drunb \\hn lired_.,hot~JUSt a block from the Ol)'mpic Village at the l Tn1\ ero,at) of ~outhcrn ( altfornaa. scnding polact• scramhllng into their 01\mptl (,ame!'' '-l'tunt\ rt'sponsc Dozens ot oOicer'> ~warmed into the area and scalcd nil ah11u1 l'lght city block~ before police determined earl) Sunda) that someone had '>•mph fired shots into the air outs1d<" a pool hall. Lt. Forrest Lt>Yvall1:n. nCl'UllH' officer of LAPD'!> Olympat \Ccurll\ tas~ force at fapos1t1on Park t·alkd till' alen a "real-life st.ramble" Pasadenans cheer the torch LOS ANGELES-Pasadena \.!ewers watched the Ol)mp1c Torrh Rl'la\ with a practiced e~e and deemed 11 "better than the Rose Parade." capping J weekend that brought the eternal flame to Los Angeles for the first time '1mt• 1932 About a m1ll1on people watched on Sunday alone as the rela} lelt the o;;an Fernando Valley and threaded its wa} through suburban Burbank. Cilcndak Eagle Rock. Pasadena. Alhambra. Arcadia. ~I Monte. Wh1tt1er. lndu'>tt) and San Dimas. About 400.000 of them gathered m Pasadena. cheering. wa' ing httle o\mencan flags and sending up thousands of balloons as the runm·rs passed b} on Colorado Boule\ ard. route of the famed New Year's Rose Paradt• Brink's robbers still at large _ l 1KIA H -Police hoped 10 ha\ e read~ toda~ compos11c '>lctt he'> ol \l•flh ol the men su!>pclted of part1c1pa11ng 1n a Bnnk·s armored \an robbt·n on .1 rural h1ghwa)' that ma\ ha\e netted as much as $5 millton. E\<""'llnev.cs and the o,eller<, or thrl'l.' \Chicles used In the Thursday heist were helping de\ elllf' composite s~etchcs of s1' to eight suspects. said Mendocino Count\ Shen ff, Lt Ja~ Miller. The robbers have been dcscnbed as males in their fate 20, t11 earl~ 30s. standing between 5-fcet-7 and 6-feet-l, Miller said. Most \.\c'11· weanngJCans ...... h1te T-~h1rts anu red bandanas. police said Bride arrives on camel-back ~o\C R .\MCNTO -Traffic halted. pedestnans 'itared and children "'hooped a\ Tern Tobin tra \.Cled to her wedding-on the ball.. ot a camt•I. \1' Toban. of Los .\ngclc'i. said she cho!>e the unusual mode of transportat1or 111 honor the outh o\!>1an trad1t1on of her fu ture husband. Baksh1sh Singh (1111 She said h1'> nickname for her -Rota -means camel in PunJab1 A~ tran1t backt'd up behind her. -;he clung to a ~addle horn and attempted 10 ""a' \\lilt the animal's rolling Slndc. She rode the camel from a nearby parking Jot'to th1· tree-o;haded 1.ard of her parents' home. where the wedding was held Jturd:t\ WORLD ' Mystery Soviet truck departs BONN. W<.·~t Germany -W<"!.t G<"rman police esconed a So' 1et trud .. 10 the East German border early toda}. ending a I 0-day standoff o'er electron it cqu1pmenl and other cargo wt11ch the Soviets insisted was "d1plomnt1t baggage." The Mercedes truck headed for Moscow. instead of 11~ original destination. Geneva, Sw111erland. less than 24 hours af\er Mosco" howcd to West German demands to open the sealed trailer. West Ger man Custom'> nod Finance Ministry officials checked the labels on the 207 bags and carton' 1 n\1d1· the rig apinst an inventory provided by the Soviets, but did not open tlwm According to the Soviet ltst. the containers carried radio transm1ttero; and receivers and coding devices as well as other ~oods for furnishing ,1 nn' building at the So\ 1ct m1~s1on 10 the United Nations in Gcnrva Priests, nuns refused visa• M>\NAC,l o\, Nicaragua -T he lefhst Sandinista government. "'-hllh ha' C\pcllcd 19 pncst~ and nuns stnce 11 came to power, 1s now dem ing '1~' to members ol ( athohc reha1ousordcrs 1ry1na to get into Nicaragua. ·\rrhtw.hup Miguel Obando> Bravo SG)S "for the moment I have rcg1<1tered ~·,en rn<,\'' \I.here the) ha\t.' dented v1su to pne ts and cert1un nuns to entcr the t.ountn :· Obando) Bra.,,o. the head of the Roman Catholic Church 1n "J1C'aragua. told rcportt'r\ 5unda:r He s:ud the government a1ven no e'planat1on' for 1urn1n~ down the' 1\3 request!. Returned bodle. 'not lU8eli soldiers' TEl A VIV. lsracl -Thrtt bod1e1 handed over by S)nn dunna a pn\one1 of war exchanae last m o nth "were deflrute-ly not lsrneh soldiers." the: m1ltt.in rommand announced today Syn a releaS<'d six lsraeh pmont'rs nnd <.'1'1\krt~ conuuninJ five bodjCI on June 28 an cxchanac for 2Q I Synan r,old1rrs and l(l other ynan c1tr1cn • The Israeli arm y spokc!)m3n'!'> office" '\:tad two of lhl' caskets conuuncd the bodies o r arm y Lt. Zohu L1p'l<'h1t1 and 111r force (apt i\haron Katt. but the o the r thrtt hod1e! "did not hrlona to hracl" anJ tht1r 1dent111e\ \toett un known. --------------------------------------------- .. • Miss America says she feels 'violated and angry' ·it's obviously my own fault. but I tru~ted the photogr-a-ph_e_r_' --- NEW YORK (AP) -Vanes~ Wllhams. who has been asked to qutt as the reagnmg MISS Amenca, says she's gone "from shock lo de- prcss1on" lo feclina ''violated and an'1)'" ao the 10 cia)'5 ~nee sbe learned lhal Penthou~ magazine would publish nude photographs of her "I don't want to say it's making me feisty, but 1t's mWQJ me Wint lO move on," Wilhams said 1n an interview with The AsSOCtaled Pr~~ Sunday. Williams was expected to an- nounce late thi morning whether she will a,ive in to the Miss Amenca Paieanl's request that she tum over her crown to first runner-up Suzette Charles, Miss New Jersey It " the first umeaoyofthe 57 wom~ to hold the crown M' been asked to Sltl> down. Williams refu~d to S&)i what hn dcc1 ion would be. but hn mother, Helen, dcscnbcd the 21-ycar-<>ld beauty queen as "a fi&hter." "If sht decides to contm~ to bold the crown, thcy'IJ have to lake it off' her head," her father, Milton. uid. .. My peno al d lion is )CS. .lht lhouJd fiaht." ~t ecuth·e director Alben A.. Marks Jr. told the Pbiladclphia lnqujrer that Williams wiIJ not be permitted to auend this )ear's show, nor will there be any acknowl-cd~ent of her reign. Pactu.res of Willi.ams will not appear in the M.i11 America propam, Marks wd. nt promows the Pboto- sr&I , publilhcd m Scptc:n)bct"t :Penthouse, violated bet c:ontl"Kl "°" aard•n.a monb and uphold.ins t11e rsi . allup poll: Mondale-erra:ri Williams &aid the ~~ tcmc depicun& her in i.numaa: ~ scxnts with aoOtber fanaJe ~ wen lO be anis.tic pho\Olfaphs. ncvc:r fo be shown publicly, &IMS that U: ... ~ told lhe would nol be ideJliti~ She alto said abe dido't rccau IPI ... a ~lease for the picnua. "I think it is a violatioo o~:z ri&b " said Williams. t'be fiM woman to wear the Mila AmCriC:a crown ... It's obviously my own fatlk. but I trusted the pbotasraphet ... eutptlMd by .,,. ~ l'illUltl, idd-lno Utat they_,..~ to be ao.. Monet•. on • fllNn9 trip In northern Mln~a. attrtbUted the ,_,.ta to the ~IOn ... , thlntc tMAmericM ~ ~ tM wtldom of out Ucket, and above all a m .. IQe that went OYt from t tie conventJon," M aakt. A week •Per. a GalJup poll taken for Newsweek gave Reagan a 4M3 ~ down from a ~7 Reagin '-d In a .,mllar eurwy In lat• June. Both pollt had error margins of 4 ~ta. San Ysidro residents demand McMemorial Park at death site SAN YSIDRO (AP) -Plans to reopen the restaurant where 21 people wercsla1n in the nation's worst single-day mass murder have been put "on hold" following community protests against the idea, a McDonald's Corp. spokesman ~ys. "Whatever action would be taken 1s on hold," said Bob Keyser. McDonald's director of media rela- tions. "The concern 1s for the people, not simply for business." Keyser added he has ··no idea" when the company would make a final dec1s1on on the future of the franchise. situated on the main street in this predominantly Hispanic com- munity of 14.000. Monetary pledges. meanwhile. poured into a fund set up to help the A tourlat from Loa Anaelea takea photo of hla wife u •he poeea out.Ide San Talmo McDonald'• reataura.nt. RotJ nsor rs GO FOR THE BEST! v1ct1ms and their families, operators of the fund said Sunday. On Thursday, a day after the massacre, McDonald's spokesman Chuck Rubner said the company wanted to reopen the outlet because. ··we don't want to leave an empty shell as a reminder of this tragic incident." But the plan sparked protests among San Ysidro residents. who want the restaurant razed and re- placed with a "Memonal Park for the Innocent" in remembrance of the men. women and children who died at the hands of James Oh ver Huberty, 41. Before he was fatally wounded by a police sharpshooter, the heavily armed Huberty killed 20 people Wednesday and wounded 20 more. A 21st v1ct1m died Thursday. Eight of the wounded remain hosp1tahzed, their cond1ttons ranging from good to scnous "What has happened here 1s hor- nble and "e will not forget it.·· said James Da\.1s. 29. who ltves with his wife and infant child I 11: blocks from 1he restaurant. "'This wall haunt us the rest of our laves:· "We want them to bulldoze ll down and build a mcmonal park. To reopen this (restaurant) would be a mistake. This has left deep scars on our town Noboch will eat here." said Dans. a part1c1i}ant in a "eekend candlehght vigil held outside the establishment About 50 people panicipated in the subdued protest. carrying hand-let- tered signs in English and Spanish. with phrases such as. "We Are Hurt.'' "Our Community ls In Mourning: Please Respect Our Wishes," and "McMemonal Park." Peuuons circulated at the demon- stration drew 1.400 signatures. The pet1t1ons, which will be given to San Diego Mayor Roger Hedgecock. ask that the restaurant be do~ forever "It's our custom to memonaltze the dead." said Glona Salas. a Hispanic leading the petition dnvc "We have nothing against the com- pany. but the)' have enough money to open anywhere else." Clyde Leech, the director of the fund for fam1hes of the VlCUms, said Sunday the nationwide response bad been so great that he was forced to open two more telephone linesdunng the weekend. COLLECT THE WATERFORD CRYSTAL - 1984 OLYMPIC MEDALLION , ONLY AT ROBINSON'S. The .~um mer Game) u:1/I won be here .. celebrate their arrrv11l with uur ~'.Herford 1984 Olympic Med.Jl/1on, the first m J numbered l1m1ted ed1tw" Olympic collector senes. Full lead crystal at its finest. Crafted 11) .irti~m 111 Ireland as .J fimng commemoratl'fit of thu h1stonc t.'1.'e'1l. IX~terfnrd Cr-vswl /984 Olympic Med.JI/um with nbbon and gift bo,, .ft, 2 1/8" dzamtter. S40 Robinson's Waterford, 14 i ,.,. ( ·''' ( • ~"· •I I '· • ,, 11-c /YKJ ( ), .. ,r, H) <.>RDI R. < \l I TOI I f RH H HOL'R' 1·800 l4S llSOI ''I>. RU~"'ll'' \kllUl\11-' TtH \\11Rl(A'-E\.PRl'' < \Rll ( >. r''"''' •r'ld w, .. , 'hn ~ 11• rr111nr. Ort/~ , .. R111't'lw"1' """' &. ,,;:.Y;: I'" 1" C'lt• ( 1 Y~l I f>irJ~ .,J,.J "' > ,._ ..,,,.. "'' 11 drln~d ,., I"' 1 "1"'/n ( "'"''' ~' lno 1 1¥ ( ""'"""" .lrl1trr1" 1dd $4 drl1tf¥""t , h.J•'ltf n,.•,.J.r tht-( o1/1ln"11J .kln'f"""I ""'"' l I At Chiapcl's studio, she aid. be a keel her to do nude shOU. .. 1 wu I btt curious. but J didn't know if I wanted to take the cb.a.nc:e." She wd she did it antt be aaured her they would onJy be~ ~r bet'. qr a contae1 sheet. she said: ~.' , real I y Lhn llcd about them. I d.idfl t want an)ooe to see them." Someume later, be asked her to po~ wttb another model .. io • silhouette an form. He u:suttd us that both of us would be wiidt:D- ufiable. •• ~Ln ;\ ® Fashion Fabrics ~ lT.1-\_ and other things FACTORY SURPLUS OUTLET Open To The Public STORE HOURS: Mond•y through Frldey, 10:30 am -8:00 pm Seturday, 10:00 am -4:00 pm COSTA MESA 743 BAKER STREET One Bloclc W•t of Brl•tol (714) 957-1214 PUBLIC INVITED -FREE SEMINAR How To Buy That First Home, And A Second One, And A. Third, And ... A t low interest rates and using little or none of your own money. Introducing America's Best Money Maki1g Seminar * How to start without cash * How to legally cut your income tax to zero * Ho" to find 7<Po -JOO'.'o financing * Ho" to bu} propert} for as little a~ $100 down * Learn si mple, easy ""ealth techniques M.tl ............, millionaire, well-known author and lecturer has taught thousands how to acquire real estate using simple, step-by-step formulas. * Ho" \\Omen can gain financial leverage and independence * Much. much, more ... • FREE 2 HOUR LECTURE • How To Financially Survive The I 980's J07o of Americans Can Afford A Honw With high interest rates and inflation gomg craz~. man) people are g1\ mg up on the idea ol e'er o"mng their o"n home. much le" the \..hance of buying ome an- ' est men I pro~rt) G1¥1ng up 1s the "orst thing \OU can do There are sull v.ay m to- da) ·, econom' to buy propert1C"I, ll JUSt take' c;ome kno" ho". Ho~ Mark Harold~n Can Hdp A fe" 'earc; ago. Mark Haroldsen staned bU\ mg income propen1es usmg very httle of hie. o" n mone) In only 48 monthr, .he had made O\ er S 1.000.000 through real e-.1a1e in\.e,1mentc; He kno"s hov. to make money m toda' 'c; market 100 It is really no diferent no" than II "as then. His methods work. Thouc.andc; of people are usmg them today B«onw WtaJLb) or Buy Your flm Homt \1ar~ Haroldsen wants to share his ideas \\Ith you He has perwnaJly trained a group of 1ntru~"'10~ m his ~hod" One of th~ m\tru1.:torc.. an ID\iCStor h1m~lf. is go- in to be m )Our town this week. He wilt be gi\ins an ab\Olutely free 2 hour ~inar on real estate investing. Dort dw ho HOGn Yoa WlD I.a"': • Wh~ real estate in~tead of aold, ih-cr or 1ocb • HO\\ to find barpin in .. est.mtnt pr pcrtics • How to bu) propa11es v.ith OP t (other people's mo~y) • How to !own you tnromc tax to rcro \ * How inflation will help you * Creati"e Financing Techniqu~ * Should you <iell. or keep buymg Pan of 1h1., free l'o\O hour scmmar wiJJ be de\.Oled exclu'1"eh to answering your quesuom. so come prepared 10 ask them. ~e will not ln to c;ell \OU another h'gh pnced ~mmar \\ e "'" tea1..h vou hov. to "Financaally Sun1"e the t980's." Over 50,<XX> people ha' e already attended these ..emmars and are prof111ng tremendously. There 1s no obhgauon on 'our part and the ~mmar 1s open to the pubh1.. Mar~ 'our ~alcndar and plan to au end one of 1he c,,emmarc. m 'our area. Bnng your fnendc. and learn together hov. to sccurt your financial future Free Seminars In Your Area Are ONLY At The Following Locati ons and Times: Wednesday , July 25th 12 noon to 2 p.m. or 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the Holtday Inn ot Costa Mesa 3131 Bristol Avenue Costa Mesa . Callfomll ' ... ''The profess,onals ... are frJRhtened of Res an bee use they know how competent he ls politically. , Ethnic trends mean trouble for GOP in '88 ">AN FRANCIS( 0-Re- publicans who~ hon2ons are hm1ted to November have little cause to be alarmed at the v1s1on of Democrauc harmon} that emerged last week from \-1oscone Center For one th mg, the Democrats .idvert1sed that they are unified to the h:ft of the Amencan political center. This has given President Reagan an oppo11unity to capture the center ground, where general elecllons are usually won. ror another thing. Democratu: unit} reflectsconcem about Reagan more than comm 1 t men t to Walter F. \.oiondale. Many Democrattcdel- egates reahsucally acknowledged that their party's ticket, even wnh Rep. Gerald me A. Ferraro on it. seems to have only an outside chance This view was most evident among ·super delegates," member.. of Con- gress who served as delegates b:,. reason of their office and who provided thedcc1s1ve margrn tn securing Mondale's nomination. Even though Mondale gave an effec- u ve acceptance speech, a number of these professional pohucaans shud- der at the thought ofa Mondale- Reagan match up. "The professionals 1 n here are frightened of Reagan because they know how competent he as politi- cally ... said Rep. V 1c Fu10, a moder- ate California Democrat who saw . Rea~n operate as governor. "The less ideological you are. the more you appreciate Reagan as a poht1cian " But Republicans who look beyond November have reason to be fnght- ened. too. The performance of New YorkGov.ManoM Cuomoas the convenuon keynoterisa reminder that the DemocratshaH·an 1m- press1ve candidate 10 the wings. <\nd the break through selecuon of Ferraro enabled the Democrauc Pan\ to leapfrogtheGOPon a" ulnerabk potnl. Republicans lag behind Democrats 10suppontng1ssuesof1mportance to women. and Reagan did his party no favor in 1980 when he forced it to abandon its longcomm1tment to the Equal Rights Amendment. However. more Republican women poht1c1ans hold positions of visible influence than do their Democrauccounter- pans. and it was w1dely believed that the GOP would. in 1988. become the first party to put a woman on its national uclcet. The Democrats have beaten them to the punch. The insp1rat1onal speech of Jesse L. Jackson also should be a womsome 'i1gn to Republicans who look beyond 1984. Jackson proved a flawed can- didate and too radical for man) 'oters, but he v. as a pioneer who blazed trails into a poht1cal landscape that as inhospitable for Repubhcans. It ma\ well be thatJad.!>on\ 'aunted \Oter-registrauon effort!>" ill be equaled this year b~ a Republican counter-dn\ e among ~outhern whites. But in the long run. Jackson's cand1dac} should pa) Democratic d1v1dends. It has turned on black voter turnout. which was slow!) 111creasingevcn bcforcJackson Lou CANNON increase of perhaps three m1ll1on Democratic votes. Hispanics. now 5 percent ofthl' electorate, arc the fa!>test-growing ethnic group in the Unitrd States Depending on how far Congress goc\ in granting amnesty to illegal 1mm1- grants who have been lt vmgand worlc.inghere. this rlectoratecould double wt thin a few vears ltts expected to increase-to about 8 percent of the total by 1988 regardless of what Congress does. In some states. notabl:,. Te>.as, the future 1s ltkel) to resemble the recent past, which does not bode well for Republicans. WhenGOPGov Bill Clements lost to Democrat Mark White in 1982. Clements received a half-million more votes than he had 1n winning four years earlier. The results reflect both the state's dynamic populauon ttrowth and in· creased political part1c1pa11on b) blacks and Hispanics. The President's strategists have a dutiful appreciation ofTexas. home state ofWh1te House Chief ofStaff James A. Baker Ill and a fam iliar ground ofoperat1ons for Reagan adviser Stuart K. Spencer. Reagan 1s far ahead m Texas today. but his operatt' cs would be delighted with one-third of the H1span1c vote and almost an) black votes. This ma~ be enough for Reagan wh o 1sa hght ~ear ahead ofMondak among white' otersand alwa)s runs "'ell in Texas Whether 11"111 be enough for the next Republican presidenual candidate is quesuon- able. The same H1span1c-blc.ck equation should also boost Demo- crats 1n Cahfom1a. where Republican strength is exaggerated b) Reagan's homestate populanty. None ofth1s 1s written in stone. Republican pollster Robert Teeter. a shrewd observerof polttical trends, believes that tt will be difficult for Democrats to restore their basic coalition of working-class whites. minorities and Southerners. The Democratic unity feast concealed basic differences but did not re\olve them But tt 1shkelytobed1fficult for Republicans. too. after Reagan De- mographic trends offer more comfon for the Democrats than their 1984 pres1dent1al candidate. And Mano Cuomo 1s waiting m the wrngs. Reaganism of tbe Week: After Reagan spoke at a .. Captive Na lion!> .. ceremony last Monday, he was ques- tioned about Ferraro's statement that he was "not a good C'hnsuan" and replied. "I feel very good right now, There was a pnest here w1 th us who JUSl told me he think!. I'm a good Chnsttan." / } ....... I / .. Profes'i1onal pol1t1c1ans estimate that blacks. now about R percent of 1he national electorate. could become 11 pertent of the total In 1988 -an Lou Ca.anon is a syadicated columnist. "\Ot\11, FaJS ! ,,, OOI ~M ~ YAu. ~T M'tID \F Wt JOlM TH1 PflRN ! " II Traffic~narls along PCH causetf DY dastardly plot The people behind Proposition A may be keeping lights out of synch \omct1mc back I wrote a ~on of 1ongue-1 n-cheek ar11clc about traffic ltght '>}nchron11a11on on PC'H from Hrookhurst to Seal Beach Obviously. \omeone had made a mistake. I rearoned Lights. at least according to the example set by the rest of the rnunty. are not supposed to be wnchron11ed. I remember a t1 me \Cveral yea~ ago when. 1f you drove north on Harbor Blvd . jU'it abovc the Santa Ana freeway. tht• r 1ty of .\nahe1m had a \1gn that told \OU that 1f }Ou mamtaincd a '>J)(ed of X number of miles per hour. )ou'd make all of the lights green It "-Orl..ed' The speed ~hown on the "J11 was changeable according to traflic llo" II \OU sla\ed ORANG[ C 1A5T Daily Pilat '1 #'["! /',.,.,., J.tt f lf'Wl' ,.,.,Al J'lc. ~wtt n • ., ~·-i u .... •·"'....., l"'P ,.ttt~,.~,. t no• 1" \IA Y~ lo. 11t I • I at the speed indicated )ou·d c;ail nght through Anaheim wuh nar) a stop. Why can·1 we do that now'1 It seems a fa1rl} simple matter to me to start at one stop light. make a note of the time that it takes to reach the next one at a specific speed, and time that next hght .fO that 11 turns green jU~t as your car amves at that m tersect1on. I made some comment 1n my article that perhaps the powers that control traffic lights were knuckling under to the 011 compames (start and <;top dnvmg uses more gas) or to local business (when you stop. \OU notice bu 1nesses located at the inter ~ct1ons) and I a\\ure \OU thal th1' H. L Schwartz Ill i. it\* t)(" Chary Dowellby rd I \I 1"1 A-~lll'l' r ,,, .. r 1tH•~t.,., Frank Zlnl ""'~'/II lft:f'4 f \1if1U Tom Tell •It f r1olO• ) was meant tn jest There ma) have been some n1ggltng doubt caroming around in the baclc of my head. but I didn't really believe that there was any truth 10 my statement. Apparent!). some peoflle do be- lieve that there's more to this traflic light thmg than gross ineflic1ency. r got a letter from a man in Laguna who says that the lights on PC H in his area are very far from synchronized. He wasn't as lucky as me. m tha1 he had to write to the governor tn order to find out who 1s responsible for the hghts on POI. I only had to call the city of Huntington Beach. He feels that my statements about local busi- ness and the 0 11 companies are nght on target He also foci!> that the people behind Prop A have a thumb 1n th1" pan1cular bowl of <;0up I Its reason- ing goel. along the line<; that 1f the people 1n charge make It~ difficult to get from herl." to there. !>topp1na )'Ou at every ha.ht. causmg traffic jtms. cruung cond1t1on'i that make you take three umcs as long to get to work or home from work as 1t should. that you'll vole for the thing oul of shccr fru~tr.Hton I'd hate to think that suC'h a thing 1!> P<mtble. but you know. there JUst ma hc ~me merit in that thouaht. Srforv wt go any further. let mr l'lar1f~ m) \t1nd1ng on Prop A. BILL HARVEY I don't know. I was born in Washington. DC'. and was exposed to 1d1ocracy at a very early a~c. Some of the thing~ that I 'iaw going on in th e name of govern- ment were so stupid as to be ludicrous. As a direct result, I learned to avoid all thtngs poltt1cal. unless they affected me personally. The only thtnj about Prop. A that would affect me 1s the increase in sales tax. but then. I can't afford to buy 100 many things anyhow. I can see good and bad on both sides. I'm for rthcvmg congestion. but what 1f the thing causes mort congestion? I'm aaa1nst the tax mcreasc. but I'm for better road As fort he tnun. I havcn"t ndden on a train since I wa~ a mere lad in 19<16 I'll probably never ndc th as one I will make one ixmt1ve statement ho"-ever If I teamed beyond an:,. doubt that the pe-ople ~h1nd Prop A wcrt responsible for the screwed up traffic hahts in our county, I'd do all 1h1nas humanly possible 10 have them banished to l.Xv1l's Island for a thousand yea~ or life. whkhever caml." lir'\t. Thosr hght~ affect me-peN>nall~' Coloma111 8111 H•r"~Y Ufltl Jn Hu~JJ Bt>•c.l. L.M. Bovo Eating- s fulltline occupation Humans have devoted 90 percent of their time on earth to feeding themselves solely by hunting and gathering. They didn't st.an to farm until just the other day. relatively speak mg. The agriculture boys say most food comes from only J percent of the earth's surface. They break 1t down: 71 percent. oceans; 24 percent, moun· tains and deserts; 2 percent. trees. That leaves 3 percent, groccncs. \an )Ou give me the truth. the whole truth and not hang but the truth to the followina quesuon? Who's buncd m Grant's Tomb? Sorry. You forgot Mrs. Grant. She's buned there. too. fit'!>! infectious d1~asc known to man wa" lepro ')- Onl)' the male robin inss. 't ou may rcprd the monarch of Great Bntain as Queen Elilabcth II. But in Scotland. 'he's Elizabe1h I. Scotland was not a part of the Un1ted K.Jna.dom wben t~ onainal Elinbeth I was o n the throne L..,\f, B-0)'(1II•1yodlC11re4 col•mDlll. U P. VIC r AZIO Democrat JACK AID EISON Senator backed African pipeline Hatfiel~ pulled strings for a lleged arms m er c h a n t WASHINGTON -Sen. Mark 0. Hatfield. R-Ore., whose ~lection effort is supported by peace and nuclear-freeze groups, has used his considerable influence in Washing- ton to promote an oil pipeline project hatched by an international arms merchant. Hatfield, chairman of the Ap- propriations Committee, has con- tinued his nelpful efforts even after being warned that the Greek muni- tions dealer, Basil Tsakos, had a criminal record. In fact, Hatfield's string-pulling occurred at the very time that Tsakos was trying to sell attack helicopters to Iran from his Washington office, in apparent viol· ation of U.S. law. according to a document obtained by my associate Corky Johnson. I have also learned that other well- known Washington figures, including CIA Director William Casey, were involved with Tsakos' pipeline scheme. Hatfield was introduced to Tsakos about two years a~o by Carl Shipley, a prominent Washmgton attorney and former member of the Repubhcan National Committee. Shipley bad been working with Tsakos and his American partner, Joe Rosenbaum, a friend of Casey and a former in- telligence agent. on the idea for a pipeline across Central Africa from the Red Sea to the Atlantic. This would allow Saudi Arabia to sh1p its oil ~ the United States without having to send it through the Persian Gulf. Shipley said he disengaged from the project when he learned of Tsakos' alleged criminal record in Greece. Shipley gave Hatfield an intelligence report, contained in CIA files and marked "strictly confidential," which summarized material taken from Greek government files. Tsakos "was given a sentence of imprisonment for 45 days for withholding and pilfering of (Greek) government fringe benefits and funds," the report stated. h said he also was sentenced to jail in Athens for the "st~ing of foreign funds." Tbc report also accused Tsakos of dealing in .. black market" anns through a Geneva company, and of exporting antiques illegally. The re- port also said TsaJcos bas used forged passports for his arms dealings in Europe, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Argen- tina and other countries. None of this, apparently, deterred Hatfield. The two men and their wives socialized regularly at private dinners in Tsakos' Watergate apart· ment and the Hatfield home in Georgetown. In a lengthy interview with my associate, Hatfield said he became interested in the arms merchant's trans-Africa pipeline pro- ject as an alternative to p<>ssible U.S. military action in the Maddie East. Hatfield confronted Tsakos with the derogatory information. Tsakos reportedly was funous, told Hatfield the report was false and produced a document that showed be had only one minor traffic violation. Hatfield asked his attorney to check out Tsakos. and was told that he was "clean." Meanwhile, Hatfield used bts clout on Tsakos' behalf. He pho ned Energy Secretary Donald Hodel and asked him to give Tsakos and his pipeline project personal attention. Hatfield also lined up an appoint· mcnt for Tsakos with Exxon Presi· dent Howard Kauffmann in New York. A company spokesman said Kauffmann met-with Tsakos only bccau~ Hatfield had asked, but that the pipeline project has not been given scnous consideration. Last November, Hatfield discussed the pipeline project with the president of Sudan, Mohammed Oaafar Nimeiri. who was visiting Washin,s· ton. Nimem promised to meet wtth Tsakos and the pipeline reprettnta- tive in Sudan. where the pipeline wouldswi. Hatfield outlined his d1scuss1on with Nimetri an a two-pqc letter on Senate stationery, addr sect to Tsaxos. Tsakos sent the letter beck and asked the senator to ~ddrm it to the Trans-African Ptpehne Co Hatfield oblipi. Sour-ca said that Hatfield was also informed about a lawsuit between Tsakos and his panncr Rosenblum 1n whtch plans to pay offU. offiaals and former offic1aJs for then help on the oipeline pmJCCt were ditc"U icd , ,- , laity Pilat MONDAY, JULY 23. 19~ 'P.M. Magazine' hea a unique •r•t•m for mlxlng'local and natlonal 1torlea. 83. Scrutiny lnten81fta1 Into our nation'• banking •Y•l•m. SMwhyonP91981. Art community linked to Olympics More than I 00 local amsts are displaying their works this summer during An Connccuons '84, the only Orange County-wide cultural event planned in response to the Olympics. Supervisors as the county's arts- coordinating body. exh1b1ts we're showing people in qra~ge and Los Angeles counties that significant art as being produced here." added Domt Kirk Fttzgcrald. coordinator for Art Connections '84. Sponsored by the Orange County Ans Alliance. An Connections '84 features seven concurrent exh1b1ts through Sept 9 at locations easily accessible to all residents. Nixson Borah. Art Connections '84 committee chairman, said ansp1ra- uon for the event stemmed from enthusiasm generated by the Olympic Ans Fesuval in Los Angeles. She said that all the featured anists lave, work or ma1nta1n studios an Orange Count} The act1v1t1es also coincide with the 10th anniverary ofOCAA, desig- nated by the Orange County Board of .. We're excited about this op- portunity to emphasize the excelltncc of Orange County's an1sts' work with the Ol)'mp1c spint in the air and eAtra tounsts in our midst," he explamed. (The Orange ( oast 'enues tor "Connections" are detailed m a ~paratc SIOr). belu" I The network of .. 1sual excitement opened ~llh .. Dra~ing ~ Personal .. Through these complementaf)' CLOSEST CONNECTIONS Themlnlmallat theoryof~ It~ durtng '*Poet Mocs.tn ~nerlema•· attheetttnow G....,...at the l.~n• a.ch School of Art. ~mtxed rMdta lhow by30 Orano-County artiitt fak•M often whlmak:al look at the 11iell II ~··~that haedomlnated tbedeefgn wortd for the lat 50YM1'9. "Poet modern!am lmpflea that .... can be• bore andthat**embelllhment 11noe1n,•· ~ antor AlilY Jacobi of the eoftool'•deelQn ~t. Much of the thow attack• the Bauheue Scho()t ot Oellgtl Which It r~ble for euct'I thngs albnpUsffc . chromefUt'nltureandateet andgl ... ~. Some ot the ob)ecta featured through Aug. 4.,. parocsa.ot clothlng and ex~omemental furniture. ''Post modemltm la against theharth, purftanlcal Umltatk>nl of orthodox modem atyfetuehutnt•· oation91 Bluh8ue, '' J.cob explllned. ''Pott tnod· emltm lepturahtk:-ft'aaurreel. punkilh. ~ tat, ed9ctle.nd moddngly mtntmaJ." The~at222t~CanyonR*ere opentromta.m. to4:30p.m. weekdayaandfrom~ a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturdays. ,. . " The aeethetlc potentlal ot vtdeo. ntm. thd4lend audio laa:>M 11 exptored In'' Art Trantmtalor\t" at the Newport Harbor Art Muteum thrOUQh ~t. 9. Curator• P•ul Schimmel and Ellen 8reltman have tnctuded Nlectk>na from the bualnese and tndustrtal workft .. ..,. .. thelt't community ln thetnformat. vtewlna area wtthln the Lyon Room at the mueeum. "Thia muttt-medlaetK>W demonstrates the artistic excellence~ ln vtct.o, fthnand elide show productk>n ... 8Chltnme4 lakl. TM mueeumat ISO SM Clemente Drive, Newport Beech, llope11 TueedaythrougttSunday from 11 a.m. toSp.m. • • • "SOme of our Belt: An Eclectlo SelecUon of Contemporary Paintings'' by 20 local artlttl-u famoua aaCreig Kauffman and Tony Delap or less weU knownwch u Don McKinney and Desiree Aller-may beaeen at the IMne Flne Am Center. ''lnftldy, we lnWKted to haVe a theme to narrow the polelbHftlM.'• ~ HelenSteQel. ''But I found • I wueUmJnattng •oeltlnt ettt.taWho dtdn't flt the ttteme.SowecMctded on• tuMl)'featurtng the most con.lttenttygood.-ttalt. •• I Thedlwne f9Pl'Mentatfon of p.tntlng, styte, fMdla,content lrld ICale mtiy be teen untU Aug. 22 at • ~1 Walnut Ave., tmne. The~teropeoaat9a.m. \ anctdoteeat9p.m.Mondaythroughfhursctay,6p.m. f:'ridayand 3 p.m. Saturday. V1s1on" at the Mills House Visual Ans Complex. 12732 Mam St, Garden Grove William Riley and Tom Dowling curated the show fcatunng 30 anists in the first maJOt drawing surve} done an the county an I 0 years It may be viewed until Aug. 28 "Orange Count> Sculpture. Source and Process·· at Chapman College''> Guggenheim Galler)' 333 N Glassel! St . Orange through July 30 shows not onlv the finished -works but also the rreame process thorugh d1spla}S of dra""ings photos and plans used in ere at ang a sculpture .. In Full ( olor" has been curated by V 1c1ona Kogan 10 showcase 140 color works b} local photographers through Sept. 2 at Bowers Museum. 2002 N. Main St . Santa Ana Among the 14 anms featured will be Mihoko Yamagata of San Juan Capistrano who Ii ves pan of the year in Japan and V1v1an Hahn O'Sullivan from V 1etnam. Three d1mens1onal furniture, miniatures. dioramas and fiber an become "Ob1ects as lllus1on" at the Orange Count} Center for Contem- poraf)'. 3621 MacArthur Bh d .. Sant.a Ana. "The t) pes of 11lus1ons we're deal- ing with are those of the heart. mind and eye." said Richard White. co- curator wnh Richard Cederqu1st of the exh1b1t that closes Fnda). Contnbutors to Ans t.onnccuons '84 include Pacific Bell. Southern California Edison, Deepwater Chemical. Orange County Advcnas- ang Federation, Alpha Beta. the Irvine Co.. Gibraltar Savings, Gardner Fulmer Lithographers. Northrop Corp., Disneyland, Plus Products. Laursen Custom Color Lab and Blake. Moffitt and Towne. . Art Connectlona '84 attee are No. 1. Chapman ColJtC• Guaenhelm Gallery in <>ranee. No. 2. llllla Boue V...at Arta Complex. Garden Gro•e: No. 3. Bowen 11..-• ._ Santa Ana. No. 4. <>ranee County Center for Contemporary Art in Santa Ana, No. 5 . 1"lne Fine Arta Center. llo. 8. Newport Harbor Art Mueum in ,Newport Beach and Ko. 7. Laguna Beach School of Art'• Ettinger Gallerle11. Beauty title makes her resume special Deborah Wolfe Af'~ Mrs. America speaks out to encourage country's 51 million married women for a d1' ane reason." she sa .. s "\\ e as ->.mencans ha\e a special purpose in this "orld "\\hen people become pas!>C about patnot1sm and "'hat this count')' LAS VEGAS. Ne'. (APl -In the past decade Deborah Wolfe has been a paramedic. firefighter. ambulance dnver. singer. dancer. actress. beaut) contestant and helped her husband build the famil y home with their ov. n hands. She recently added the 111le Mrs. America to a long and vaned resume -and is now traveling the count')' speaking out on issues facing the country's 51 million mamed women The striking 27-year-old brune11e from Huntington. W. Va. who rep.- resented her home state 1n the Miss U.S.A. Pageant in 1978 and the Miss .c\menca Pageant an 1979. isn't sh) about spealong her mind meam. tht'~ ·re sho-wmg their 1g- <ihe sa~s she 1s for equal nghts for noranct' H1stOI) has sho~n us that \\Omen. but not the amendment "'-hen a count')' falls awa) from 9ocrs "'h1l'h she ""'-Orl..ed hard to defeat.. la" and the people become and1f- "Our nghts as ~omen are God-.. terent and lat). that soc1et) alwa)S g1,en:· c,he said dunng a recent stop crumble!> 1n lac; Vegas. \\>here the Mr'>. ~menca " omc people want to sta) ignorant Pageant is held annuall) ·Tm not for and that makes me angr)." she sa)s the const1tut1onal amendment be-·'The biggest thing God gave us was cause we alread) ha\e la~s on the our free agenc):· books. It's the atutudes that have t0 She aligns herself with the pro-life. be changed." anti-abortion factions and says she She's bullish on Amenca. a ha""\.. has man) ga) fnends on the m1htar) and proud of her "I 101.e the-m. but not their life- country's role an the "orld -"a st,le." patnot 1f you will." ·she sa~' her Mormon faith has "I bche\e our count!) "as founded 'itrcngthened her mamage to Kam Delly ..... ,.......,,.,.. I(_ \\olte. a Huntington police officer she met at an accident v.h1le ~orking as a paramedic fi,e \cars ago \\olfe also runs a fam1l} greenhouse -works at t"'-O secunt) JObs and has become a "full-time bab\ sitter" since she won the 111lc 1n Ma}· His long hour.. enable her to attend both Marshall L1nl\·Cr- Slt) on an acting scholarship and ta\..e classes at the Charleston C'on- sen a ton of 1\-1 us1c. "here she 1s stud) ing opera Wolle has two sons. \.11chael. 14. and James. 15 The '-"olfes ha\e a daughter. l\ngela. 2 "h1ch he de- ll\·ered at home She describes her husband as ··a good fnend -I'm awfull) blessed to have him .. and credits \\ olfc "•th turning her hfc around follo"ing an emo11onal breakdo"'n an llr'7 .. When he came along I ~a~ reall~ a mess:· she recalled. "I had no pnonucs. no foundauon. I'd lost a gnp on an) fanh I had. M) heavenly father didn't gne up on me. He sent .,_,1m to me at a ume "'hen 1 reaU)' needed him·· · It "as \\ olfe who encouraged his ~•fc to enter the Mrs. Amcnca Pageant "hen she stumbled onto an entn blank a ""eel before the Mrs "es·t \ 1rginaa pageant. ~s the 111leholder she ~•II rep- resent .\menca's mamed women in the Mrs. of the World Pageant in Honolulu next No"cmber. Meanwhile. she wants to spend the remainder of her reign malong A.menca·s Mrs more aware of their role "" e·re the hub of our soc1et\.'' she sa~s proud!~. ··.\nd to me:that's <.ome1h1ng 'en special ·· Laughter is medicine Young comic-on-wheels makes light of paralysis EL \.10!\ITE I ~Pl -What happened to Eddie Batres 1sn·t 'en funn' -being paral~zed belo"" the chest b} a drunl dnver But rnme(h has become a bag part ofh1s hfc :is he leeps other; laughing The ~ l-\ear-old aspmng lOmed1an-on-"heels was •struck b' a hit-and.run drun\.. in I%~" ht le ti! 1ng to help thrct people trapped 1 n'>1dr their o.:ar The accident left him parah 1eJ belov. the l hc't hut Batres ha" found a wa~ to adapt to hie in a "hc-ekhatr b' mal..ing 11 funn) For C\ample the Fl \tonic \OUth might come on wnh the lollo"ing .. , ou·,e prohahh no11ced I'm Hispanic. If \OU than!.. ffil' hcing 1n th1\ "hl"Ckha1r 1s gang-related, 1t isn't I "a' hit h' a Tl"111a .\nJ oh "hat a feeling •• Batn.'' hcgan ll'n,11 . .knng an entertainment carttr after hl' tncd .. ,ut \omc .. ,1 h1\ 1ole\ on a Cni"ers1ty of Southern ( ahlMn1a gting-\h<'" t~ pc audience "I got up there and ad-hhtx·d IM '-l'' en mtnule\. and the' loved It" Batres re\.'alkd · ' Michael and Amanda Elam, left,-entertalned Ann Van Hlel and Shelly Stot.emberg Mm-Linda Tavlln with brother Oda Ta•lln found ln the French tradltlon on Baattlle Day. pied the winea Oown ln from New Orleana. many Cajun delight. were within her reach. He al'>o u'e' humM I<' \UP I' e e' Cf\ da\ hfc. which can C"as1l~ get him J .. )" n II he lets 11. he <>aid Oui, the people celebrate holiday Guests wear French colOt=S. feast on Cajun delicacies --- By ANN CONWAY ~,...C•• 41*"" ··Mywayofhavanaan office pany (1nclud1"-a host ofout-of-officc pals)1 to celebrate Bastille Day in the Frtnch trad1t1on." said New Orleans-born Dr. Mtclaael Elam of the annual July 14 ba h held 1n his Corona dcl Mar home. "In France. the Basttllccelrbration signals the bca1nn1naofhohday-cveryonc closes up shop and heads for the St " Elam said. AC'knowledaina that the demands ofh1s Cosmetic ura,cry Medical Group m Newport preclude taking htsgcsturc of arautudc that far. Elam ~)'She docs plenty to make up for It ··t pour the finest French wines-Poutll) Fu1sse. Montrachet. and White Bordeau'\-toaccompan) nn C:vun feast.all Oown in from K. Paul's of Ne" Orlean~ ... Elamsatd. Elam 's guests concur the feast 1s a groaning board of C:vun delights worth> offennesstt Wtlhams-shnmp rcmouladc, Blackhn red fish. and red beans wtlh nee Shark. red snapper and shnmp were done to pcrfccuon on a huac mesquite anll Dcs3cn was mounds of fresh summer hemes. Weanngenscmblc ofc1thcrsohd red. whncorblue (a tnbute to the French flag), the I SO auests dan<"C'd to the Dmeland !Ound of the Jury Barta band until the "'tt hours. Shanna the ambumet of Elam 's ncwl)' deroratcd FttnC'h Mediterranean home wett' h1' 1ntcnordc~1gncr VlDceet J1C41oart (of Pam). C1lriltt.Dt Tomasic, Mary Aollf> and Dr. Roy Mor.ID, Panl and Or. G.-orat Brennan. E1trellil.a and Dr. Fred Bubwit1 and Dr. lra Levloe. EnJO'ttn& the gracious hosp1taht) ofElam's w1k Ami.Ada "ere Darl111 and Jolt.n K.Dorpp {formerown"" of the Good Earth)" 1th daughter Tami (a former Mm Newport ~ach ). Jou Manti ( o" ner of Funoso ot Laguna). Lhlda Tavllll (' e"' act1 \ e in Young Re- publicans of Orange Count\). James Polakof, pro- duction managcrofEhlm's nev. b0-minutecosmct1c .. urger)' 1dco stamng Ph\lhs Diller &allay and Dr Rkb rd Harwt ll, Coan le and Rlcllanl 0-Uetle ( ncwh mamcd. thC'\ met at the Basu lie ba!.h la t year). Jtaa and Job.a ltlq (he de' doped Paet"Seucr Home,). Gloria and Dr. Jack Daboln (from Palm rnnas). Merv Hecbt (of HC'thl 01amond and ( 1rttnfield lav. offiC't"'i ml..\ ). and hrothrr. Jot(v.tth Lyau) and Victor (with Sttpb.nl~ I Avlla, own~r. of El Ram:hno rrstaunint~ P;1p.1ra7111~ edllt'<1 h\ [);11/\ P1lo1 ~h Ir fdlfcir \ 1d., l>t\'11 .. .\ tin.• on m' "heekhatr went flat an the ele\ator at school one da' There "a!' a girl ne'\t to me who loorcd \CT) um:omtortabk about11t. So I smiled and said. ·Ha~ \OU eH•r wonden-d what 11 would be hke 1f you stepped on a natl and \our leg ~I flat"'" Batrt's. a studeift :ft Rio Hondo College. said the most 1mponan1 thing that has happened to him since bi accident I\ h1!> relat1onsh1p v.1tb another accident victim. Beck' "1l .\ITC'rt\. 24 ""ho has bttn a quadnpleg1c since she hat a rttl and brole her ne'Cl "h1le bod} surfina 10 months heforc" h1\ acc1dC'nt The t~o met dunntt thcrap .. at R ncho Los Am Hosp1tal in f),,)"''nc' &trr' crtdits lhe1r d~p fnendsh1p v.11h hclpini him 10 ma1n1.a1n a pos111' c outlool Batrt\ al\<l ha\ m-c" c-d htlf\ from the firrf l&htcn tn El \fontc v..ho raised mone) to bu' him a sptttaJl}-eqwooed car and built a custom11C'd home for him behind -hil P3rl'nts' hou!><' The man who hit Batre .. ~" ro two months in jail on a m1~emeanor drun~en dri' "'' con'.actton. Batn:s Wl2l bothcl'C'd ~" the fact thu the man nc"" ~nt rondot noes to him. and ~1 he tdcphonro him one niJht · I rcmcmhn'tclllnr him I dtdn't hkc:--.hat he h.addont to me." ~·d Batrn "We never mC'l, but he told me that n11ht he was SOIT). and I forpvc him·· -''for the thl"C'e accldC'n• '1C'llnu Battt"S tried to ist. hl' hu nC''C'r hC'ard from them .. d I \ 82 * Orange Coast OAJLY PILOT/Monday, July 23, 19S.. Faith gives her courage ·to handle life's burdens Dt:.AR ANN I neverthou&ht I'd be wnuna tO )'OU, but the letter fTom 'Lo~ Angeles Oner· needs an an$wer lkr motherconv1occd her that God hadg1ven her a hand1cappcdch1ld as a punishment for 50me temble thins 'he had done. My mother had the ~amecruel philosophy. I was mamed only two yea~ w~n I ~•tmtdo'Wn wllh polio. We had a lx'auttful I ().month-old daughter al the time W1th1n a tc"" months l was paniall\ pjralyzed Sevt'ral weeks into m~ · therap) I '>uflered a tembk setbad. ( )ur child died from sudden cnb dt'alh .\gaino;t doctor's orders. I tx"l·ame pregnant again I had a m1scamage in the sn;th month Dunng tho~ tembk da\s m} mother''>earh prcaching( .. You mu<;I hJH' done !>Omethinga" ful to de- 'l'f\ l0 th1s"l cunt1nued to haunt me \\hen I "'cm to the hospttal to ha' e lhl' dead bab' removed from m) ~Id' a bt'au11ful inudt.>nt changed fll\ llh.· I am nol ( a1hol1c but a nun at thL· l11"p11al \.\l'nl ""1th me tn the opcra1- 1ng. room I "'asgrogg)' and must ha"e 1all-.ed a great deal. Even toda~. I can wt· hcr s-weet face hend1ngo-.er me .1 nJ I can hear hN words ... You must tx· somt•one special for the Lord 111 ha\C g1.,cn )OU such a burden. He .... 111 not forsake yo u 1fyou trust him" "ihe was nght Today we have three Lealle Catalano CATALANO-ZEBROW Leslil' \.fane Zchro" daughter 111 '\'-1lllam and Bc' erh Zebro" ofC osta \.frsa and Daniel .\n1hon~ Catalano "ere mamed in a June Io reremon~ tn 0.,1. John the Bapt1sh ( hureh. ( osta Me~ The bndt• 1\ a graduate ot Estanua High School and l l( In ine Her husband 1s the sun of Anthon) and lole Catalano and is a graduate of Palms Springs High School and UC Irvine. The~ are res1d1ng in Hunt- mgton Beach after a wedding tnp 10 Hawa11 AtH• LANDERS magn11iccnt 'h1ldren They would not be here had our first child Ii' ed She would have been more to care for than I could ha" e handled dun ng the first monthsofm) illness l\.ttpd1shangout the great advice. .\nn Weallneedit Youarclo-.ed. and eons1de~ a personal friend h~ man)'.even though)ouarf'onl~ j name m the paper -f-AITH ~.\ \\- ME THROl GH DEAR F AJTH: Tbuk you for sbaring your upllftlog story. We cu all use more la1th a.ad your letter Is a fine testimonial. As I have said before, when God closes one door, He opens another. • • • DEAR <\NN LANDER~ I am a well-educated woman in my m1d-30s Overt he years I have developed the hab11 of using language l am not proud of. (Most I~ four-letter words and street-type ru!>sang I picked up from peoplt at work.) I wanttockan up m~ act The best Julie Thompson THOMPSON-WALKER Hunungton Beach residents Jultl' Wal~er and Richard ( R1ro1 Thomp- son exchanged v.cdd1ng 'ows 10 C ah a~ Bapust ( hurch on June 23 8111 and Norma Wall-.er arc the par.;'.nts of the hnde. v.ho chose a designer gov.n h~ Chiarmonte \.\llh pnncess SI) ltng <ind a sweetheart neckline Three ofhrr sisters. Joan McGuire as matron of honor. Jovce O'Bncn and June Charles were bndal attend- ants. Others were soronty sisters. <\m\ Halstead. Janet Combs and (re •cov. er •ing) the act or process 0 er . n g. of returning to a re C V I • more normal condition NCPA AntboQ.•" T. Bober, MS. MJ'CC (Lic.:i~) ~ewport (hmeeJing & Pwyddlg,y A88oOa.&es 115 1 0ove~~m :"Je'WJJOrt Beed\ Ca. 1JaJrance Aaepted m 4> gn.1s 10 ••••••••••••• • IT'S TIME FOR A LITTLE ROMANCE! • • LOX~ • ; (c•N~E~ ; •. T. V. 's Hottest Video Dating •. Show Will Be Interviewing • Outgoing Singles At • • ~ • • ~ • • If you are outgoing, single and dying to • • be on T.V. join us for a fantastic Happy • • Hour!!! • . •• MONDAY, JULY 23rd From • • 5:00 -7:00 P.M. • • Baxters 1s located at Birch and Jamboree 1n ; Newport Beach -( 7 14) 863-1600 • (Love Connection Office:: (213) 659 6210 • ••••••••••••• W1)'•odo1t, I believe, is to sub utute ordinary words for the offensive one'> I can't remember what I used to say when I wasarowiog up, or what my parents said when they were fru s- trated or angry, but there was nod1rty talk or swcanng in our home. Can you or your readers rec- ommend some old-fashioned words or phrases to help me conquer a habit l hate?-SOAP FOR MY MOUTH IN ONTARIO DEAR SOAP: Maybe I am mi1- iakea bet It seems that la &Jae la1t fin yean there bas been more v.tgar langu1e aroond tlLan ever before. Speecb pattera1 area matter of bablt ud If you wut to lallDder yoDr lan1uge, 111bstltate words are the bHt approach. Try these: Ob, 1boot! Cbeeae ud cracken! Gosh darn it! Holy Smoke! Gee Wbb! Glory be! Jlmlny Cricket•! Fiddlesticks! Ob, fadge! Ballfeatbers! Honefeathers! Foo-doo! Ob, 1ugar! Sbocb! I 'II bet the teea-agen wbo are reading thl1 are screamlag with laugbter. Pretty sauare, eb? . \ . Isa/coho/ism ruining your life'' Knowrhedangersignalsand what to do. Read the booklet. "Alcoho/Jsm - Hope and Help." by Ann Landers. Enclose 50cents with your request and a long. stamped, ~If.addressed envelopetoAnnl.anders, P.O. BoA I 199 5, Chicago. II/. 6061 l Cheryl Rubenhall and Clonn Gibson. Flower girls were the bnde's nieces Leshe and Megan O'Bnen and a niece of the bndegroom. Lindsey Brooks. Cameron Walker, the bride's s1ster- m-law. was in charge of the guest book. The bndegroom is the son of Dick and Sally Thompson of Huntington Beach. His best man was Roben Thompson and Billy and Danny Thompson. his brothers, Rick Glenn. Dave Harroll. Cory Funk and Mike Karkut were ushers. Andrew T hom p- son, also a brother, was candlelighter and an usher. - The couple graduated fro m Hunt- ington Beach High School. Thom p- son was an All-American basketball player at Stanislaus State. He will teach and coach basketball at San Marcos High School. The bnde 1s a graduate of UC Santa Barbara where she was affiliated with Delta Gamma soront) She will also teach school to San Marcos where the couple will make 1he1r home after a lnp to the Nev. England states. KUSHELL-SIGLER .\nthon~ ·s· Pier 2 Restaurant to Newport Beach was the settmg for the Jul) I wedding ofSherT) Gwen Sigler and Charles J Kushell JV Per- forming the ntes was Robert Jordan Ross of Newport Beach. Their parents are Mrs. Arthur Watkins. Irv ine: Jay Sigler. Fullerton: and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kushell Ill of Scottsdale. Anz. Maid of honor was Kim Sigler. the bride's sister. and best man was West Campbell of Yakima, Wash. The bnde is a graduate of Univer- sity High School in Irvine and ts an alumnus of USC. where she affili ated wi th Alpha Chi Omega. The bridegroom is a graduate of i\nzona State Un1vers1tv. affiliated wnh Sigma Epsilon. and ·received an M.B.A. from the Umvers1ty of In- diana. The newlyweds, who live tn Rye, N. Y., are employed b> Ogilv)' and Mather in New York. where she is an account executi ve and he is an account supervisor. HIGGINS-PAYNE Mary Beth Payne of Huntington Beach and Jeffrey Higgins of Foun- tain Valley were married June 30 m ceremonies at Bethel Baptist Church. Santa Ana. The bride. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Payne of Huntington Beach. wore a floor-length gown wi th tiers of lace tnmming the back. Her veil was lined with matching lace. Her attendants were Julie Hames. Deborah G 1andalio. T herese Groth and Sel ma Gelzh1ser. The bndcgroom. son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Higgins of Monaca. Pa .. was attended by Rick Goehnng. 8 111 Berger. Bob Payne and Dan Pa)ne The couple greeted 150 guests at a reception 1n the church and then left on a honeymoon to San Diego. The} arc at home in Fountam Valley. The bn de 1s employed by Harbor Municipal Coun; her husband works for Rockwell International. How to submit wedding news The Dail> Pilot wan ts )our wcxl- ding and engagemen t news. To help you submit the required information. forms are available al the Dail} Piloi office. JJO W 8aJ St . Costa Mesa. For weddings. on/} a blad and while photo of the bnde 1s accep- t.Jhle Sna(Xhots. Polaroid and color photos can ·r ~ u<;Cd The photo must ~ submmed no later than three weeks after the ""roding. othe"4-tse 1r "11/ not be publ1shro . Engagcmem mfomuwon 1~ to be' suhmllled at least ~vrn wcch b<'fore the wedding Forms and photo~ can be dropped otr Bl the office or mnilcd to thr '4-edding Orpnnment. Dail} Prior. P 0 Bm 1560. CosUJ Mesa. rali( Q)(>2f> . . Stars under Big Top Beverly D' Angelo and Linda Blair {left) join Herve VUleclialze u performen in the eighth annual "Ctrcua of the Stan," airing tonight at 9 on CBS, Channel 2 . Documentaries on television becoming a vanishing breed By FRED ROTHENBERG NEW YORK -Are network documentanes becoming an en- dangered species? rankings. a~ the major reason wh) documentanes are 1n trouble The networks le.now they c~n reach larger audiences with pn me-ttme news- magazines that mix 10vest1gatt ve reports with the broader personality profiles and trendy pop-culture seg-- ments. November. February and May It past programming practice 1s an) guide. documentanes at all three networks y,jJI be scheduled on throw. away nights. such as the low-view. ership holiday periods. Pam Hill. execu11ve producer of ABC News' "Closeup" documentary unit. says the long-form broadcast has fa llen on hard times. but ifs not near extinction yet. "It's a struggle:· said Hill. .. T he pendulum on documcntanes aiways ha!. swung back and fo rth. although r ve never seen 1t as low as the last year and a half But I reall) do believe the pendulum will swing back. If it doesn'1. I think the genre will be 1n danger" Ms. Hi ll said governmental watch- dog panels in Washington. ultimate- ly, might decide whether the news- magazines are satisfyrn g the networks' obliga tion to use their airwaves to discuss important public- afTa1rs issues. Hill said she pushed for the longe1 programs for "both idealistic anc pragmatic reasons." The 1dealtsrr centered on "my behef that 1t ts o grave importance to target the ki nd! of issues that change the quality of hf< or affect the way our children an growmg up." In the 1984-1985 season. Hill said. Then she adds: "I also wanted tt su rv1 ve." She added that "the networks bear the public respons1b1ltt>" and haH' alwaH found room on their enter- tainment-filled schedules to do some hard-h1111ng 1ssue-onented programs "that don't make mone,." In the 1984 election· )'ear. t\BCs documentaf) time was cut m half 10 St\ hours CBS, "'here the high 'itandards for documentanes "ere 1mpnnted b)' Edward R. Murro\.\. has sv.i tched its pnme-11me ne\.\S emphasis a""a) from the <,10gle- subJec1 show. ABCs documentar) allotment will return to the pre-elecuon I 0-12 hours. and. to a sharp contrast to TV·s trend toward shoner segments to meet the pubhc's shoner a11entton spans. "Closeup" will ha-.e as man} as three three-hour documentaries The first. i.chedukd for ~ept 4. "111 focus on the detenorallnl( state of the nauon·s public 5chools 'i)Stem One point this program ..... 11 address Ms Hill said. is ho" TV itself "has sha11ered aucnt1on spans" and ha-. produced a <;elf-fulfilling program- ming need for "e,er <;honer burst~·· The corporate folks at ABC. hke a CBS and NBC are never happy whet documentanes receive their usua m1croscop1c ra11ng·s. The ABC bras deetded that concentrating the three hour documentanes in fewer night '-"Ould be better than ha\ln$ 10 lo" rated hours. depressing pnme-llm• audiences for I 0 ntghts. "The~ would disrupt less hours: Hill acknowledged. . At CBS. onh 8111 Mo\crs. in an occas10nal hour-long documentar) and on some of his "Crossroad" seiments. keeps Murrow's legacy ali ve. "8111 shares our concerns ... Hill said. "He's one of the few in our mdustry still targeting the major issues of our lime." .\BCs othn multi-hour broadcast.., "'111 be on nuclear power. tc:ntatl\eh scheduled for Mart·h. and one n- am101ng the underclass to America ne.>.t summer. The documentar) unit still will conttn ue to produce a kw one-hour programs. such as the "Closeup" on the Supreme Court to December. Notice that none of the programs will be shown during the fiercely compet111ve ratings sweeps months of .\not her recent de' elopment af feeling 1nteres1 10 documentanes 1 that audiences ma} feel they're get 11ng their serious issue!> through th• lenses of the ne1wori..s· entertain men d1v1s1om.. The movies. "The Da· After" and "Something Abou Amelia." were the highest-rated pro grams of 1983-84. "TV mo\'leS. even the ones that ari well done. deal with sex and viol ence." said Hill. ··That docs no diminish our news obligauon It mform on today's more profounc news issues.·· Raungs. the kind that show up at the bottom of the weekly Nielsen ToNIGHT'S TV U JOKER'S WllD CI> TWIUGHT ZONE Q) EHTERTAINMBfl TOflGKT Cl) MOVIE ... * ''Thi Selrc:herl" ( 1956) John WayM. JeltrlY Hunter. fDFAONT\H ~ GREAT PEAFOAMAHCE8 (C)WOVIE u 'Ii "Contrlct On Cherry Street" (1971) Frri Slnatra, Verna Bloom. ®MOVIE ** "WMilngth" (1983) Robert Carridine, Chw1e Currie. Cl) NIGHT OF AT LEAST OHE OOZEHSTAAS (%)MOVIE * • • ·~ "Summerllme" ( 1955) Katharine HepbUm, Rolllno Brazzi. -1:.30-u TIC T~ DOUOH (l)CAHNOH Q) P.M. MAGAZINE -t.00-tJ ()) QACUS OF ntE STARS DQIMOVIE **'4 "Child Bnde Ot Short Creek" ( 198 t) Conrad Bain, Ctwlstophef Atkins DMOVIE *** "Wllklng Tiii" (1973).loe Don Biii•. Elizabeth Hart.min UNEWS I:=" ~ EV9ING AT POPS lll EH1iRT AMtENT TOtlBHT m XPOSE: THEY'RE Kl.1MB OUR CHllOAEH (O)MOVIE ***'"' "The Bride Wort BleC:lt" (1967) Jeenne MorMl.I, ~ Brilly. ())MOVIE **'...\ "The Ctlelllnge" (1982) Soot1 Glenn. TOINro Mltune. -HO- (f.l MOVIE • ** "X·15" (1981) 01vld Mecl.-i, Chattee 8ronton 0 P£0fl\E'8 COURT <ID NOT NECOSAM. Y THE NEWS -10:00- l l~ 8allBrANT£M I WON> INTOllAOE TAXI WIQTUNQ t MOYE .. 'A ''The Ult Ametan VlrQln'' ( 1982) L.aM9nCI Monoeon, Dfane Frlnklln I)MOYI! tt14 'My T111or" (1913) c.r.n ~ Mitt Lattwl -10:30- -11:00- fJ 0U([)9 '8 m NEWS 8 SAT\RlAY NIGKT U AOWAH l MARTIN'S~ m THE JEFffRSON8 g) SOUO GOU> HITS TO THE MANOR~ INTMACYAlE MOVIE • "Humongoul" ( 1982) Janet Julian, Dlvld Wllllcie. -11:30-fJ ([) MAGNUM. P.I. DCllTONIOHT 10 N!JC HEWS HtGKTUNE IN SEARCH Of ... m ARCHIE BUNt<ER'S PlACE g) STAEET8 Of SAN~ fa LATENIGHT AMERICA ~=UB * t 'li "Losln If' ( t982) Tom Ctulae. Jedele En Haley -11:36- IR1MOVIE * t 1.li ~TN SuMvcn" I 1983) Wiit• Matthlu. Robin WUtllms -t2:00- D TWlJOHT ZOHE D EYE OH HOUYWOOO UMOVIE ••• "Ring Ot Pmion" (1978) Ber-""=.== TIDE OF THE NIGKT 9 MOVIE * **'"' "The Perllll.x V'tW' (197') WllTtn Beatty. Paull Prentlll (%)MOVIE U "King Ot Comedy'' (19821 Rob- ert DI Niro, Miry LIWll. -1t30-D QI LATE NIGHT WYTH DAVID l.ETTERMAH 9 A.LFAED HfTCHCOCK PAESE.N11 I L.A. TODAY FO#AH & MART1N"8 LAlJGK.4N LOYE. AMENCAH STY\.E P9l80NAL flNAHC( -12:40-' ([) HARRYO MOVIE .. • "' 10' ( 1979) Dudley Moort BoC>et& -1~46- (C UOYlf U 'Ii '9-1 Fnencb ( 1982) &.-1 Alynolda. Goldlt HIM\ -1'00- 0MMITf'Y HOUYWOOO ClOSS. M"'°1tCTOM ll&BCIENT MEWi -1:a- CI> MOVIE * "Bnde Ot TN GonKa" ( 1951) Blf- befe PfY'on, Lon CNnty Q) AU. IN ntEFA.Mtl Y Cl) MOVIE H "Welcome Home, Johnny Bm- tof' (1971) Mlrtln Lindau. Jtnt Alexander. Qt AOWAH l MARTIN'S~ CO) THE POlECAT8 -2:00- fJ ()) CBS NEWS NIOHTWATQt !~NEWS ****"The Gay O!Yofe91" (193'; Fred As11Kt, Ginger Rogn. (l)MOVIE • "Enclleu Low" (1981) Broolte Sllleldl, Mlt11n Hewitt. -2:40- lC)MOVIE ** "Hot T-Shlrta" (1977) Ray Hol- land. St9()hanil Llwlor -2:46- :])MOVIE * "Goin' Al TN Wr(' ( 19821 Dir Wiidman. Dlborlfl Vin Rhyn -3:00- C!l CHICO AJ«J THE MAH Cl) MARCUS WEl.BY. M.D. -3~ 1f)MOVIE u "Strange Bttw" (1983) Dlw ThOtnu. RICll Morllntl -8:30- (!) FAITH20 -4:00- (!) CHICAGO'S FIA8T REPORT !i:acon **'"' "Spring Brellt" (1t83) DIW Kl*!, Sttw aa.tt. (%)MOVIE H * "Stete Ot TN Union" (19-48 Spencer Treq. KlttllMI Hlpborn \;4:10- (C)MOVIE ***"' "Moonlghllng'' (19a) Jn my Irons, Eugene ~I -4.:15- LONE 8TAA BAA l OAIU. __..__ (!) nil tiDPm -4:4f- in the Dally Piiat 'P.M. Magazine' a diff'rent show for diff'rent folks Unique reality program blends locilind syndicated talents By JERRY BUCK A'T......._W...., LOS ANGELES -"PM. Maga- zine" is not only the grandpa of the current generation of reality pro- gramming on local stations but as possibly the only syndicated show that's different from city to city. Each of the more than 80 telev1s1on ~Lat1ons that broadcast •·P.M. Maga~ zme" takes the raw matcnal 1t receives from Group W Productions and constructs its own show. The idea 1s for each station to make .. P.M. Magazine" its own creation b}' using local talent as the hosts and adding local stones to the ma:< of features, special repons and an-depth surveys of lifestyles. trends and controversial subJects. ----- among the top five in raungs a~ong all syndicated shows, but he admitted the ratings have eroded m rcceni years. "ft was number one for~ long time " he said, .. but at hasn't slipped to th'e point where we're in trouble. h 's still very successful. It generates a lot of revenue. h 'sgomg to be arou~ for a lonJ time·· He said it's still first in ns lime period on KPIX. "It seems lake 1t stays strong on the stations where they produce a lot oflocal stones and promote 1t heavily," he said. The mechanics of the synd1cat1on 1s that Group W send!> each station 25 stones a week. The stones genera!I) are timeless. But in the event ol a major news development a stol) can be quick]). put together -as they did when Princess Grace died -and sent to the stations b> satell ite. ' f ..... \ One man's family ' • -l I In add1t1on. a different magazine show is broadcast by each of the five Westtnghouse stations (the parent company of Group W) -but 1n this case it's called "Evening Magazine." The feature stories produced by the Westinghouse stations form the nu- cleus of the matenal that becomes "P.M. Magazine." But each of the subscribing stations also contnbute the best of their locally produced stones. In return, each stauon submits one story a week. of which the best are selected. "We encourage them to submit everythtng because they ma) have stumbled onto a unique charac- ter or story," said Resing. "This show really plugs the Stallons into the community. It gets them involved with local people. local events." Robert Engman eta.re aa Captain Von Trapp ln "The Sound of Mualc,'' opening a two-weekend run Thursday at Orange Coaat College. Bia M!Ven children are played by ( clockwiM!, from upper ~ht) Kurt Decker, Crtatln Morten1tOn, Mara Landaman, Tiffany McMllllon, Laura 1.ater, Rita Delano and John Decker. "It's a unique way of combining national and local feature stones ... said George E. Resing Jr .. senior vice president of Group \\ "No other show is done lake this.·· Each station also receives what Resing calls "a wild card.·· "These are stories which ma) be racier." be said ... The) might be of interest tn the bigger c1t1es but not in thesmallercities Or. say. the) ma) be about a personaht) who's on CBS and maybe only the stations that are C BS affiliates would be interested We know that New York isn't interested an stories about barn dancing." Unfortunately, t~ey're both on our side. It originated eight years ago as a local magazine sho" on West- inghouse's San Francisco station. K.f>IX. It wasn't long before each of the company's stations was produc- ing its own version. Finally. it was syndic~tcd under the name "P.M. Magazine." Resing. who was general manager at KPIX at the time. said ... There's nothinj new about the concept ~f a magazine show, but our execution was. We did it all on video tape. we did everything outside with no studio work, we used bnght young peop.l~ as hosts and we used flashy ed1t1ng techniques. ··11 set the pattern that's been copied by many other realit) pro- grams across the count!). It was innovative then. but the local news shows began to pick up our tech- niques and have diluted the form." ResmR said .. P.M. Magazine·· is Resing said he often provides financing to help out a local station with a good story or uses Group W's clout to get a star needed for a local story. . "This has created a whole indus- try:' he said. "This has created a place to learn television. h's been a great starting place for a lot of people. It's given jobs to a lot of people across the country because about 1.100 people work on all the versions of 'Evening Magazine· and 'P.M Magazine ... ln•ex•pen•slve* '(in 1k spen s1v} nol high 1n price reasonabl e c1ass1t1e<1 .._ .._,. adverhs1ng -· rm• Class1f1ed Advertising 642-5678 DUDLEY MOORE STRATEGIC GUESTPSHlAYR EDDIE MUR *BEST* DEFENSE · Now Playing COSIUl(U . ., ... COSU lllUA OAAllGl .. ,_ .. .... •Molt• ,,...,r,,.,.,,..,.,__""',,., .... fWUflll~Sll~ lmmJ . . 011A11C>1 S•..,...' • Q<!' WU~ffl P..::&< , ... ,,.,, 1J ~ .. ~ .)Fl No Pryor engagement for princess TheyYe been~ at, picked on and put cbNn. But rnv in time bthe odd to get even! LOS ANGELES (AP) -Prompt- ness may be a virtue, but a director's speedy work apparently cost Rich~rd Pryor a chance to converse with royalty. Princess Anne of Bntam was to have met Pryor on the set of his new film, "Brewster's Millions:· when she stopped by Universal Studios dunng her recent visit to Los An~eles. But director Walter Hill. working ahead of schedule. had already com- pleted the scene the pnncess was to have viewed. ANAt£N 639·87 70 Stadium Or-In BREA 990-4021 UA Movies 4 Their·time has come! COSTA MESA &46 5025 ltM 854-8811 Edwards Mesa Edwards University COSTA MESA 540 0594 ORANGE 637 0340 UA South Coast AMC Orange Mall Instead. she met w1th Pryor's co- star. John Candy -and b), at least one account was not overly distressed by Pryor's absence. "l don't think she even knows who Richard Pryor 1s," sa1d BllJIA PARK 821 4070 Buena Park Or ·In El TORO 581 5880 ORANGE 630911 Edwards Saddleback UA City Center SOUTH COASI OOllT SttllO 'IMOStmtm• (N) I I\ l lO 5 ~. I 00 IO 15 ~6 1111 11 so lfl 00 SOUTH COASI 11 301":~ ri~ .... ,. UM I Mt * IRVIN£ • ..... '"•• I "c.o. .. m.•m llllOOC9llCI ............. I II ,...., mom \ 111C* ·-INl IOCJ00\11' 100 '°' 10 4 lHOI• I Mo• 1•01\ I I~ 9 ~ OUOl I y llO)ll1 If.SI ocm&Sf m oil~• I •l IO(I( ..... Sl(~f "'' 0 ·~ • ·~ t 11tACl OOlB• SHP!O 'lllCISYllllTBS • fP5 I * WESTMINSTER • CKMA WlSI --·~~" -.... n1ms ~'('P5) I I~ l 4~ & 00 SI~ 10 10 UMllUO Clfl:MA MST • ..,.. Oil & M ... _,,.. 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Ii I•• •1 IH "II *El TORO • V l e t I mmo 5AOOlfBACll '··' ' SAOOlEBACll SAOOUBACll SAOOll BA "' SAOOI £8ACll. ~a1 ~uo "M 111'£l1 1Ml ~tlAlf (5) 11 •I I> J •I b 00 8 00 P 0C U~llJIO I • lllCl11C l*W$ (1'51 I I ~ . . ' flt IU I Sfllllrlil!m ..... '. ~ SlWllJOO ~ll!MSICllS 1!'51 I C' ~ ' " ·-, . SHiii l M WJll llS IP5 I "' \ ., \ I uw. >• • llSSION VIEJO • VI£ 10 TWIN ., I 1 t Vl(lO !~IN '•· '"' t , . ~ ..., ..... IJO 6'90 11()111 Ill~"" •sr O(FOISI 111 .. . ' ' VIUO MAil ~'IOIS· l"'I c•.. l \l111 H \ ,,... JOO IO ~ 49~ 6lN UM I HI Vl I() MAU , .. 1&$1 sn•oro· IP51 •• ~~ 110 ... ,, ...... • 'C I 10 !C U!llll• V( I() MAll OOlll SltllO H '., 11 .._ lllli. (1'15) ~ •istot 'Sl• ftl1I. '"' ..... 14' UC IOI\ ,.-. 01 .uMIO "lC If IQC l ANAHEIM Pacrf'lc s Anallelm Onve In 879 9850 tr'mM Edwards Saddlet>ael< 581 5880 * F'OUNTA1 H vAUlV Family Four 963 I "307 FOUNT AJN V AJ.J£V llMNE Edwards Woodbndge 551 0655 ·~ C1~ome 634 2553 * SAH'TAAHA Edwards Bristo >40 7444 Pac11\c s Fountain Valley * l5nwn Dnllt' 1n Q62 z451 ao-.. - ..... -·-= .... .... _ "" .,.... .. ·-- . "'-" ::"\\) SMl•ll-~ .v ~. .. ..... .... ..l":'l ... •"9" .... ~"' .... , ·""""'" !'wt ·~ .. .. lt ·-•• , • ....., MADtC:::: ,..1'! • • , >e...ri .... ~ ,. "1S--••1trr• Y !..ea 4tJ.4lt,: • ·-··'°'"--........ ,.,.., '.r-- "A wonderful movie." -G•ry Fr•nkhn, KCISS·TV !~~.: G9\ ,.. ... ._._ . ..,. ... . .,,,,., ___ .. _. ____ ..,._._. .. ...... ···-_ ...... WA El TOllO ~ Mp\hfllw Eo-a-r..,i.r- ~ S339 ~· 6Jol ~' COST a lllSA S6 ')8eO MSTtNISTffl fCIWl'llS FOUllTAlll ~AU.(l A 'ob Vttml ~-I ·• 893 !::>41> 979~1f' I • I'"'• ,,_ COITA•U ~ #•G@@~j, 'N....,. • """""' llM'll OM.cl( "°~ ,,.,, "' C'l'l'MSS "'<IOI"~ ~'" l't"~•'m 66CI ~ ~~· -..~, ~ r >i: -ct....,..-, •<ttll"'tfD fC41 ''°"' f .044l..-11t "LIKE NOTHING YOUVE SEEN SINCE 'THE WIZARD OF oz·:· W\11< 1<.1•' '\t THE NEVER ENDING STORY ..,... . .,,. ... _ _,_o . --· -- AMKlll \tad•um (}t In hl5 770 COSTA llUA hh11rO\ (.". ~ Ctnlrr qlq 4141 "'f OUlf1 All WAU [Y I 1m1lt I Ou• %j I 01 IUUNiT°" ICH W¥!lfl Cl! In u ~91 ... I 3ward\ llll!Yfl\ I, ~.,.'It ' ---· LA •ADA ... ,, ... ,, fi I blJ MSSSOI WIX> l du ril\ •If'!<' * ~ 11Q<I , ·oa.IG ' ,, , y •n•~· b.,a '!>" •sooa w ld•• "' ~ll~l!\1 1,4 1U• M'llWCSTtl UA Wr\lm•!IS!'1 M11 8CI J '.11:1 • DOLBY STEREO I Video press kit a boon to movies LOS ANGEL~ (AP) -for dec- ades.. Hollywood publicu" bave bttn hyped films to t.be pnnt media wuh rums or wntten copy and still photographs. Now, lbc advent of the .. video Pf'C kit .. is creatmg a whole new 1 nd ustry. umes tbt a.ir tune •-c •ere Ff UM before. w more than the c1p011UR we'd ~ from just a 5traiJht iaw• ~·iew.' she uid. Among the rrutJOr studios. Para- mount LS the sole major holdout 1n the trend to prov1dan.& canned promo- tional video matcnal about new filmi. for u~ an TV broadcasts. The ltils, which cost $70,000 ID S90.000, arc uted ou television news shows and also Miow up u "Jillcn" Gil pay and cable stations. . Many arc produced by 1ndepm- dent companies such u Wesapw Productions, which bas put t~ about 40 such kits. An electronic press kn generally 1s a videocassette comaining two or three segments d1rectl) from the film , each a minute or so 10 length: a couple of 'it.ar interview~: and at least one .. fcaturette" running eight to 10 minutes. COMPLETE SPORTS DAILY In the Eltz.abeth Landon. 'ice president of pubhcit} for 20th Centul) Fo~. 1s gencrall} credited for producing the first video press kn for .. Taps:· an December 1980 ··we found we'd get two or thrcc Daily Piil THIE LAST STARFl~R (PGJ At 12:20 2 40 S 00 7 :30 10 10/70 MM 9EST D£F'DISI[ , .. , Al 12·15 2 .15 4 15 6 :15 1 :1S I. 10 U lUX VAY THIATaES GRDllUllS (PGJ Shows •I 12 30 3 :00 5 30 1 :00 a. 10:30 No l"uMs IMOtAllA IOllG & n.. n.JECTRIC Oll£AlllS T ...... elf a... (PG) PGJ At 11 :45 1 :45 $1\0WS •I 12:00 2·30 3 4S ~ 45 7 45 I. t 4S 5 .00 7 30 a. 10:00 N o ,.HHI I 10 MM llEVEa atDl•W STINIY._,~ Twili1111t ~one (f'G) G---.. P11i. Co-f'eaft1n- St1r Tre« UI, Tlloe Surtll For Speg C~J Norum ._..,DIRE Ol'TME c;' 43'£•' u J 2 J ~3.:A~~: ~ =•pelc?! ) Yo1u=-~-=o~" ~e(fl) =~!;';I 4 ·00 ,,oo • ·00 10 00 lllEV£R DIDHIG STOaY (PG) U :11 2 1S 4:15 6 .1$ 1 ·15 .. 10:1,5 m:sT 0€PW al (IQ Pl1H Co-Hit Uncommon Valor(fl) DRIVE IWS CINI•• U.... 11 fRH U.... llfe!M/0-IM Wll•Yl 1 JI ........ "IT'S A BWCXBlSl'Elt A LOIJ..APALOOZA, A Cl.A.WC." ....... __ ,..,_ 7 EmFLE /JP 11/JtJm " VI ~"" ti" Ill(., ... ,,,.., ) '\)" •• ti' .... 41111!.,."/) 4QS1o11\'i'• ..... ~ # • 1·~ J ')i• 10 11Wllll':"4 •1'~11,•IW:io MU ,AIC. 11'\IRL~!t>•"'lill•I ' J )lll U mv~ -~. 'if.lft .. : .. ·• • .,_ -.-o-• I NOW PLAYING I J COSTUIESA f<Jw~rds Bn<aOI )4() 7.UC FOOllTMI VAU£Y f ionly ~°" 963 1107 GAMEllG..avt fe!War~>Nr:<.'ll<ooo ~""°' OIWIG( AMC ()~M.» 637 (D40 •·LMMJ --•:U• OIWtG( ·l»<r 0r¥ 6JH <>-. ·-............. I l'll.UJllll I,, ~;"' f 1 '1 __ .......... ____ _ '"" ·-~ ...... ~.,,, -•M EW Tll. TDIU C» DCQI'' <Kl " ' W (l(l@Y Sit llfO '!II iOO 'lO ltlt l 'EUCTRIC DUAMS" (PG} I 00 310 S 40 8 00 1010 "BAC OR PARTY" (R) I 00 J 2~ 5 SO 820 IO~S ·~Of 1l£ fDDS'' (R) 12 •o ? •·l .. C 6 •o !! .~ 0 s " •• "B[ST DCffNS[" (It ) "Tll. llUPfTS T Al([ llAINTTAlf' ({il 1 3f 2 30 • J5 Ii 10 .1 ~ J '0 ~ ; ~-8 ·~ ~ r,c -.. -l•"Yl-1 ._ ...... llm3 --·-----... ,,... .. ~ .__,. ·~·~ ..... .._ ---...... --..~ _._ ''llJWIA DE All> Tll ltWlE <» DOC11" (K) 100 3JO 61IO l lO IO SQ "Tll: LAST STUflGlfTUtt (PS) 111 CO.. Bl SlllllO : Jt 1oc ~ 30 JOO tOlO "BCST DEfU'5£" (I) : •• •• • •• .. ~ u~ 1oc~ .., "T~ S£ca£Tf' (K) ''IC 00,QC I 00 •••(i• PACIFIC DRIVE ·IN THEATRES• * CI NE-Fl SOU ND• At that symbols ... , sound lluect to your AM C8f * r1d10. II no rtdto with tceaSorv position, ltnnt your own AM ,..,...._ ALL OPEN DUSK Start 7 30 Ch11drenUrtder 12 ALWAYS FR£E •J~tJ:!jtfii311::!.!~,~r. l.~ .. ) t .. ~~~lll!!lt!fl~l.1 • * SUPUSWAPMUTSlfc £VffY SAllSUN • • C1;;:.;.i..=.,;,.;;:;..:.;;;...;.;;;.i,.-.;;;,;;;=~ n. 1ur s1:s111»1nr <PSI I ·t•"!N) '1AC111.m ~•Tr <1> "14 rs t Tll 1111 oar· (1 ''1[$1 llfOIS(" (I) "IJS ''\llCIJMJll YALm" (I) ORANGE ~ ()141 U1 WI 'Or9tt ._.AaF.,lllt"C. • • SUf'l•SWAPMUlS* IVH't SAl&~ • • rucmc ..... (PC) l'\.US ...... (PC) Lo HABRA .. ~~., 11 • ,~ .. ~~~Or~""ll"~;;;Col;;;;'';O;A;l;L;V;P;IL;O;T;J;M;o;nd;;r;;•;J;u;ly;2;3;·;';"8;•;,. .................... "".'.'.'."::".'.:"7::".'.'.: ...................................... ~================================== GORDO by Gus Arriola Gi\KFIELD VOO !>1.EfP ,-00 M OCM , GARFIE.LP ~ONIE''f1ME5 I PO CEEL &AV A600~ SLEEPING SO M UCM 0 0 0 by Jim Devis WMA'f WITM ALL TME IN50MNIA(5 IN CMINA 0 0 ~ ~~~~::'.__'L~!·~-f="~~~r--:e~~l:--~ 71 ~ irM OA~? Tiit: t "A.ttlL\' CIKCt'S BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) by Bil Keane , . ._ .. "look, Momm y! Some little green whiskers!" "I hate Mondays." .tti\R.tti\Dl'KE by Brad Anderson DE:\:\IS THE .ttE:\i\CE , <~ j ·n -'"""'' ... , ......... . ! [ fr. • I ·• "Hey. Mr Snyder ... catch the ballt'' .ttOO:\ .ttl'l.1.1'\S PEi\'\l'TS ~ .. ,,,,:mtl/lW .. UJ' tVIL rl<!W ),ode m. faM.. • ..... __ .... _" ~ ·......._-·-·-\...· ' . • UJ, .ju.at; .AM. ,&,.d,,. V\oL "'"-~ /')'UCL, .UJt.t~t Hank Ketcham • by Ferd & Tom Johnson by Charl es M. Schulz BRIDGE ANSW£RS Tt) BRIDGE QUIZ Q.1-A,,i. South. vulner1blr , you hold: +KJ984l! 'V 7 0 9~ +843 Parlno?r 111''"' the b1dd1ng with II. dcim1 nd bid ur tv.o he1rt1. Whiat Jo you rc<~pond1 A.-You h.1Yt' ::i lunl(, broken ~pad" ~ult. bu! !hill it not lhe tun\· tu 1how it . When parl nt•r UIJt'n~ with a forcing t wo hid, your rirsl re8p0n•ihillty I\ to !ell h1fll ,,..h .. th.-r ur not ~OU hS\l' ,\ J.IO~ltlYr r··~pon .. \I S1ru·t• 1·ou rlun't, ro•'Jlund lWO no lrurnp Q.2-fo:11~1 \\\·~! '-Ulnt'r:1hlr. "' .... t/Uth 1'<)\J l1<Jl!1 Att!l7:1 ·· AKH:;.i +762 Th" l111td1nK ha ~ proret·riC'd South \.\'e•t Sorth t:a.1 I I • IJblt> I'••" ' South you hold: •AQ9' 7 AJ10 0 8S3 +K 92 The biddin,11 has proccedtd: Saulh We•t North Ea tl I • Pa11 t <:> Pa11 ' Whi t do you bid nuw'! A. -It It a clott dec1aion betwt t>n a rebid or one •pade or 11 raist' to t wo heart-. Tht>re are ma ny probltn1s thait could arist' if yo1,1 in Lroduce your sp•de 11uit Sup pose. ror e11amplt. t hat p11.rt ner would takt a pre rerenrt' to t wo clubs. If you now bid two h.iarts. you art' li huw1ng 1111 unbalanc"d, liOml!'what tlronger hand. (Jn t ht whole. the 1mmt'd1ate ra1s(" to t wo ht"a.rt' s hould keep you out ul trouhlt• Q.<1 -!lot h vulno•rahll', a~ \\'hJt "'llfltl du ~·ou lakt'' Soulh y'1u hold. A .-l l"'t•ldon1,,.1~rtop11$S •KQ953 /..\.l098 0 82 +AQ p.irtn1·r ~ !uw lo·1 ~·l penally T hf' bidding hall pr(l(:t't'ded douhl•· 11,·1th J d1\trthu1tonal So11th \-\'est Norlh f:a1t h.111(1 T his 1o; l'~pl·•·111.ll y tru<· I • f'a111 2 • 3 0 if )'oU hdYt' ,, \Ult! In the ? 1·n('my 'Ult. ht>t·au•" _v1111 will lft'll'r ht' ahlf' lo ntturk dt'elart'r·s trump holdinl( Bid t,,.o diamonds Q.3 -!11lt h vu!nt'rahl1'. :1!! SHOil \l.'h11t 11clion do you takr '! A.-llad tht're been no in terv('nlnl( artion. your hand would b1· !("ood enough for a i(amt• try of t'ttht>r Lhrt•l' h1•:1rt~ nr thret· ~p11dt~ Now, CHARLES GOREN howrver. you cannot arrord to bid three sp1des only - t hat would be a µurt!ly com petlllv.: act ion. Wv would take ou r cha ncel and jump to !Our 1p1de1, buL Wt' ,,.nn't crlliciie 1 lil'•mr try ol thr .. e hearts. Thr important point is t hat you n1us t makfl aome po1i tive move with y<•Ur hand Q.5-Neilher vuln .. rablt', as South you hold: •AK782 ~KJ 0 953 •Q82 The h1dd1 ng hall proceedrd: North Ea1t So .. th Weit 1 -:1 P••• 1• Pa11 z -Pa111 ? \\.'hill do you bid now'! A .-You have found your t'ight card fit. On this t e· 11ut"nre p1.rt ner guarantees a six card ~uit. You hav• good .support and tht' valu•.s ror game, !iO JU mp to foLlr ht!arts. Q.ti -As South, vulnl'rllbll', you hold : •816 'V 5 O AKQ1062 +AK8 Th"" bidding has procet"ded : South Weit North Eut I O P111 2 • Pa11 3 ~-Pa11 3 '"' Pa11 ' What do yoll bid now·t OMAR SHARIF A. -J,ump 1hi(t1 t rt' u11u m•dr with one of two t or ha nd11: wht'r .. you h1 fi t for parlnt!r'.'I suit where yo1,1 r xuit 1, sutta1ni ng Siner p1 r r1.n 't hllYf' anyt hin11 d111mo nds and very lllt club1. hi1 spadeli n1us· good. Bid three spad.-11. I st't t he s1.11t. then prob• whe1h .. r you s ho1.1ld s.:ttl t he small slam or wht' p11 rtner·s lrumpl are ("nough for a grand. Ubv ly. you wi ll cue t11d rlut t ht• next opportunity Hive )'Olli been r\lnaie to da\lble tro\lble? Charle• Goren ilelp fO\I yo11r w•)' throu1h the 1 ol DOUBLES for J"!DI •ad ukeout. For a copy 1 DOUBLES booklet, 11 .85 tG '1iorea-fJ011~ care al thl1 1tew1,.J"!r. 801 259, Norwood, 076'8. MU:e chMk paJ t• NflWljNJ"!rboekt. by Jell MacN• The CDGmof'ishhawk Guide ~ tl"e. Home. Computer StepQT\e.. Locate~r computer. 'bu cant nu~ it -it·s the $900 ltx:>kend that·6 J:un stari~ at pu since Christina~ DKi\BBl,ll If ~~1"1>1(, IO "ll" 1 NU.Dl.™ 1o ~-i. 1il<N 'lOO ~01( ~' 111 t'UNKY WINKERBEi\N (Jl.AW , 1 WANT (,.'()() 1t> &IVE OUT 1ME!>E. F~E COUPONS W11M EVER<.> P11.1A <,>OU DE.LIVE~ I DK. S.ttO(.'K YOU c::ioc-ro~s ARES S O KNO WL..6-PGe:Af!l>L.ES Aeo u-r GOURM.e:--r FOOD ANC' FINe: WINeS , ve:RN/ 1,..-COME!iS W11""H "f"He' -re~Rl1'"0RY, KJPPO "llf1:1l"l~ by Kevin Fa> l<lE-LL, 1"~1 bOt• Wl1"°'11 ~A~1>i&I 0 ' ,. by Lynn Johnsl f'N''r'J(J ~~ WHOUCLO'Tf OLDEftlCo, " 'i ~ . ) by Tom Beti by George Lemc l 'l ':tlBl.Eft EEDS by Tom K. Ryan JUDGE PARKER by Herold Le Do ·- PA~N! -I uUS'f GOTT7\ L.f'Afll\I 'ml'-AL.PHAl'!?T. I WHEN ~AN. ANO Aeeev DRIVE O\IER TO THf LA NE SCHOC\.., THEY ARE (:,REETED BY TME MEAD · M ISTRES S 1 A.$ I SA10 , MP! eENAOICT 1S ~mNG JN THE CQNFEF\ENCE ROOM INITH CAALA1 PERHAPS I 'D BETT~ HAVE HIM COME OUT TO MEET YOU ~IRST, MJllt. °"IVl!A ! l 'LL6ET HIMt ' • -- 1a lly YJlt'~ VI' a or \l'tr lOl'I '" c• 1n h1· '1r .. t lor ·for lh..r :ou1J OU'> g ln l.t t find DUf' ltlt'll ,, hi11 1end lu.·· P.O. NJ, a bit ~lly ran on uk ux CREDIT LINE Beaudette earns Coldwell award AJ Beaodette, a senior sales consultant in the Newport Beach offices of ColdweU Buker Commercial RHI Estate Services, ha~ received the first Kenneth A. Brown Memonal Award Named for an associate vice president who died about a year ago. the award is presented to the salesperson io the office who best exemplifies the high professional standards Brown was known for. Beaudette is an industrial sales and leasing specialist and one of the office's top-producing salesmen. • • • Jim Doody and Richard H. Cbrls&opber have JOined B.J. S~wart Advertising and Public Relations, Inc. of Newport Beach. Doody 1s ass1sta~t an director while Christopher is an account executive with the agency's pubhc relations division. As assistant art director, Doody is responsible for all phases of advertising artwork. from concept and design to layout and finished art. He DOODY BEAUDETTE CHRISTOPHER SILVER was formerly art director for The Sanborn Co. in Newport Beach and a staff artist with Barton Advertlslag in Costa Mesa. Christopher is responsible for all facets of public relations acitivities for vanous chents. He was former~y marketing media specialist with T.RW ~formation Services Division ~n Anaheim. and was an account ellecut1ve Wlth Eck11 Advertlshlg and Deslp m Irvine. • • • R. Barry Stiver IS the new investment marketiOJ. associate for run, Thorn & Co.11 Newport Beach office. Silver is responsible for acquisition and disposition of income-producing properties on behalf of com - mercial/industrial developers and financial institutions. He was form~rly vtce president of acquisition for Birtcher American Properties and president of Irvine-based Western Pacific Commertcal Brokerage Co. • • • Costa Mesa-based American Diversified Savings Baak has added new faces to its staff. Costa Mesa resident James W. Washlagton Jr a banker and data processing authority. has joined ADSB as senio~ systems a!Ulyst; ~cbael E . Regan, a venture capital and investment banking executive, has ~omed ADSB as syndication manager. Attorney Kathleen Dlane Simmons has Joined American Diversified Capital Corp.'s legal staff in Costa Mesa. Washington was formerly product manager for Imperial Automation ~f ~osta. Mesa. w~ere he introducted the microcomputer-based bank adm1ntstrat1ve terminal system . Regan is a co-founder of Entertainment Financial Corp., a Los Angeles venture capital and investment banking firm. Simmons was for~erly associated with a Las Veg.as law firm. ADSB 1s part of the A.mencan D1vers1~ed family of financial service. real estate an~ te.lecommunicauons co~panies. ADCC is a real estate development. rehab1lttat1on and mortgage banking firm. • • • Basso & Associates of Newport Beach has been chosen exclusive advertising, marketing and public relations firm for the Canadian-based chain ·of Grandma Lee's restaurants. The chain is expanding into the United States. and Basso & Associates is responsible for ranch1se and creauve development announcing the restaurant's am val in the United States this summer. where 11 will debut in the Laguna Hills Mall. • • • James D. Bohanon has been promoted to vice president and regional manager of the Pacific region of the hospital d1vis10.n of Homua Inc .. the Louisville-based health services company with offices in Newport Beach. The appointment will be effective next month. Bohanon suc~eeds Paul A.Gross, who has been promoted to president 0f the hospital d1v1s1on. • • • Lenac, Warford, Stone lae. of Newport Beacli has been chosen to direct advertising and public relations programs for Security Etcb lateniational, also of Newport Beach. Security Etch develops •. manufactures, ~n~ markets property-ideniification systems to deter ~mo th1e.v~s: Age!'cy ~nnc1pa_I Ralph Lenac will supervise Security Etch advert1singact1v1t1~s. Wllh vice president of public relations Robert Fisher and Jean Braun handling the public relations. • • • • Seven new group vice presidents have been nam~ to the .electro.n1cs marketmg group ofWyle Labo~a~'!ries of Ir:vine. All appointees Wlll contm.ue in their current areas of rcspons1b1tity. They include: Joseph A. Adamc1yk, "!Ce president and Rocky Mountai~ regional director; James. R. Bo~too, vice president and director of marketing; J . Mlcbael ~ickers~n, v1c,c president and director of operations: Kenneth W. -G~ebel, v1~e president and Southwest regional director; James C. Hunt, vice president, cofl_lpouter products mmketing development; Seth H. TTaveller, vice pres~~ent and gr~up controller: and Vlaceot Vlllaoo, vice preside!'t of ~lltary marketing development. Wyle develops and markets electrop1ccomp<fnents and systems. • • • Michael Bower and Associates of Huntington Beach has been selected to handle advertising and publtc relations support for South Coast Corporate Center a commercial development by California Pacific Properties of Costa Mesa. The center. a $130 million project being develope.d on 13.5 ~cres at Bristol Street and the San Diego Freeway m Costa Mesa. 1s slate~ to m.cl~de three six-story office building. a hotel and a two-story financial building offering a total of more than 400.000 square feet of space. • • • Laguna Niguel resident Jan Pollock has been named ass1stan~ vice president. loan officer for Pacific Regency Bank in El Toro. She was previously a loan officer wi th Valencia Bank. • • • • Collaborative Design Associates, a commcmal interior design and space planning firm in Irvine. has been htr~d hy Bay Cities National Bank to design the interior of its headquarters building m Redondo Beach. • • • Psomas & A11oclates, a civil enginecnng and .land planning firm wuh offices in Costa Mesa. has nsen nearly 100 pos1t1ons 1n the 1983 ranking of~he top 500 professional design firms m the United States. Psomas 1s reanked .40 among the top 500 firm~ listed • • • Sanla Anita Development of Newport Beach. a commerc1al/industnal development company. has purchased 12.5 acres 1n Cemtos from San Francisco-based American Forest Products. The site will be used for a three· building distribution center totahng 271.300 ~uarc feet, slated for completion in November. OVER THE COUNTER • Orarlge Coast DAILY PlLOT/Monday, July 23, 1984 85 COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, Be Screen test Raearcher Dr. Imdad Iman demon•trate. the use of a new 90ftware package unveiled by the Calma Co., a •ubelcllary of General Electric in Santa Clara. The program enables engineen to put a robot through lt8 pace. on a computer ecreen rather than by trial and error on the factory Qoor. Urgent Care Centers' net loss decreases Urgent Care Centers of Amenca . Inc .. in Irvine has reported a net loss of $139.359. or 2 cents per share. for the first quarter ended May 31 o n shares outstanding of 6.544.000. For the comparable period last year. the company incurred a net loss of $365.::!4 7. or I 0 cents. on shares outstanding of 3.645.000. Manage- ment fee revenues for the quarter amounted to $2.658.229 compared to management fee revenues of$ I 3.4J6 in the first quarter of the pre' 1ous \ear. · Paucnt re\ enues generated at a'f1 Read1Care Centers were $3.551 ,62 \ UPs AND DowNs UPS AND DOWNS NEW YORK (AP) -Tl'1t foll9wlno list sl'1ows 11'1e Over-lta-Counter stocks and warrants 11'1at have gone uP the mosl and do·,,.,n 11'1e mosl based on c>ercent of cl'1ange for Frldav No securities trading below S2 or 1000 shares art lnciuded. Nel and percenlaoe cl'1anoes are !he difference between the Previous clo"no bid prlct and Friday's lasl bid price. UPS 1 Pro~:::'e La/.'., c'l. ut''i5.6 2 ICNwk wl 2~ ~ UP 15.0 3 BncT• CV 143/• l:i.4 UP 13.S 4 Bloc1'1m 2''• 'I• Up 13 3 S Doran 2''• 11. UP 12.S 6 NLamP 21• 11• UP 12.5 7 AT&E 4l4 1n UP 11.8 8 Proflnvl 2~ 'I• Up 11 8 9 EnCnv wl 711, J4 Up 11 5 10 Pancrel 21'1 ''• Up 11 1 11 GowQnd 2 3-16 UP 103 12 Park01'1 16''1 11"1 UP 10.0 13 Moree un 5~ 1-7 UP 9.8 14 SolrS un 53,,, ,,., Up 9 5 15 CobRsc 41'1 ~ Up 9 1 116 PeekPll. 3 'I• Up 9 1 18 Scan Tr 911. J4 UP 8 8 7 UnvTr wt 3 i ''• UP 9.1 19 Unifi 91'1 J4 Up 8 6 ~o LsrmdCP 311. t .,. UP 8.3 , 1 ResEXP 3"• I/• UP '3 22 Telcrtt s ~ UP 1 j~s Frev 3i,., t '• Up 1 .. Coona 7'• ,., Up 74 NIBus un 3l • '• UP 7 1 Name 1 PolrOI s 2 Auxton s 3 SalCPI 4 Kavi:>ro 5 Ealln1i 6 SFlmE• 7 te1co 8 BloRsp wt 9 CellPd l'1 to Consul 11 Ril1ys 112 Ventrex 3 Sc1'1akE 14 YorkRsh IS Enero s 116 FinNw h 7 NestSv Jg Amlnll 20 ~\\".:.,~ jl Ul~O ~ ~l'i~' 4 MdwAlr 25 FSvWls DOWNS La)I Cho 2''2 -l.,. 7 -2 2'• -~ 2~ -~ 2 , 2 -• ., ,,.,, -3'• ' -1\ 9J,. -p .. 71,. -1~ )3i. ~ ·~ ~ 4'"t :lo. 31 • 1'2 5 ~ 21•2 lti 6l • 1 •• , 1'· 1~·:~ 1 ~ '., . ., . ' ~ ... ,.,, 1 Per Off 23 I ~ n2 21 7 2~ 7 ~<»8 18 3 17,9 15 2 15 1 14.3 14.0 13.J l3·g 1~ 0 llll t .8 l.~ 1 . I 1 1 1 .8 and $I 09.860 for these pen od). respect!\ el) First quarter results reOect no n-cash e11.penses charged against operations of $313.<>S::! re p- resenung deprec1a110n and amort1za- t1on of acquired inta ngibk assets. Dennis G. Danko . president and c hief executt\ c officer. said. ··~ c anticipate that re' enues and cash flow will continue to improve as a result of increased patient uultzauon to o ur Read1Care Center net.,..url<. and gro.,..th 1n operating proli t margins at the C\ist1ng and acquired centers ·· He added. ''Management 1s )Ul · cessfull} integrating the :il.'.qu1n:d California and Nevada lndu~tnal Medical Cltnics into the com pan}. and to date. we have been able to reduce overall operating costs at the acquired centers b; nearl}" $1 million annuall\. • ~'MUTUAL FUNDS l - How safe is our b&nking system? Your chance!) of losing monC) 1r you have a ~poi.it of up to SI 00.000 10 an insured bank or insured i.av1n~ ~md loan assoc1alJon are JUSl i&bout 1cro And this includes not onl} saving.~ and checking accounts. Alw insured are: Chnstmas sav- ings and other open-account ume deposits. uninvested trust funds. ccn1fied checks. cash1C'r's checks bank travekr's checks; and all other deposits "rece1"·ed by a bank rn its usual course of business." But wh1k our individual accoums ma' bt safe. the stabili-tr :of our nataon·!) banking system IS OoW under greater scruuny than al any time since the catastrophic depre~sion of the 1930s -and n~tfull~ so. The scrutin> has intensified as more and more fnghtening details are re\'ealed about the shaky stateoftheConunen· Lal Illinois National Bank of Chicago -once the eighth largest bank in the nation. 1984 is onl} half gone. Yet 41 banks have already failed, according to the Federal Deposit lnsuranace Corp .. against 48 in all of 1983 and an average of only four a }ear between the 1940s and 1970s. So far this }ear. three savings and loans have closed and four ha' e been merged with the assistance of the Federal Savings & Loan Corp. In 1983. the figur~ were six and 46 - not bad in companson. The rate of failures 1s acceleraung. however, and that womes every responsible source. Continued de· regulation of the banlc.ing system 1s unleashing new and unknown com· pellt1 ve forces that might bnng down less competitive and poorly run inslltut1ons. · No cnllc with any knowledge contends that our nation'!> banking system faces collapse~ But no cntic d-en1es that problems do exist ... The regulator) agencies have the power to pre\'ent the kind of collapse that occurred in the Great Depression ... observes Andre" Carron. a vice pre s ident a t Sh ea r so n Lehman .\mencan Express and for· merh on the staff of the Brookings lnsuiuuo n "Still. problems e'-•St that must be addressed in the nnt year or two or the stab1lm of the system could be threatened ' Fo r instance. there's un- cena1nt' "hethcr the solution to Continental l ll 1no1~ "111 appl) else.,.. here." In Conunental's case. the regu- lator~ ha' e infused 1nte nm capital to g1' e prospect1' c bu~crs ttme to assess the situation. The FDIC has assured the bank's depositors of full protec· uon. Steps ha'e been taken -and more w11l be. 1fnecessar. - to stop a run on the bank that would threaten to topple 11. But amon~ the pro blems to be • ( Snvm Poma faced in com1fi$ years are ways to ma.Ice sure the insurance funds arc adequate and safe. The FDICs cluur- man. Wilham Isaac. believes that our current method of charging for premiums encourages nsk-t.akingand doesn't fairly distnbute respons1- bilitv At this ume. insured banks pay 12 of I percent of their as.sets into the fund every year. One proposal ~·ould have banks with a rating of "3 .. or above pay higher premiums. Tbe best raungs a.nd the o nes that appl)· to most banks are "1" or .. 2 ... SaVlngs and loans pay sim ilar premiums mto the FSLIC each year. and changes in these premiums also are pr-0posed. The FDIC fund totaled SI S.4 billion at end of fiscal '83 against insured deposits of S 1.3 tnlhon. The FSLIC which insures about 80 per- cent of all S&Ls, had $63 billion against $600 billion in deposits. Plunges in the prices of man} bank stocks and the persis~ce of rumors that vanous banks a.re tn trouble show that confidcnoe 1s wavering. The culpnts arc easy to find: massive foreign loans and fears of losses on those loans; nsmg interest rates that could jeoparchze more loans; uncer- tainty about the effects of deregula- tion m these circumstances. But Carron sums it up neatly: .. It d~n't matter what the resources of the funds a.re. The T rcasuf)' and Federal Reserve back tbem up and I can't imagine a case in which the) wouldn't pa) off depositors if the funds ran out of mone) .. Burroughs opens Irvine facility Burroughs Corp. opened a ne". 60.000-square foot facility in the Irvine's east mdusrn.al complex. T~ 19 Morgan St. fac1hty will bt- pan of the e~panded systems de· 'elopment group. which current!) has operations 1n M1ss1on VieJO. Santa Ana and the Cit) of Industry The new facility will alleviate overcrowding caused b; growth m employment and wtll in1t1a!I) house 245 software programmen and sup- pon personnel The pnmaJ) Burrough's product rn (Jrange County is large systems hardware and software support ., , On the , • OW.fl. ialn 1..•U ci.. MOllDAY 'S CLOSING PRICES Dow JoNE S AvERAGES WHAT NYSE DID NEW YORK (APJ Jul 23 Tod~ 1u: ,,! NYSE LEADERS UPs AND DowNs NEW YORK (A.P l -Ttll lollowlng 11,1 show• lhe NttW York Stock E•chllnQI: stocks and warrants thet have 11one UP th• mos! and down the mos! O•Md on percenr of cha~ rei;iardle•s of volume tor Mondav. No ~urllles tradlng oelow 12 are Ind· -Vded. Net arid i>ercenlage chllnges .1r• Jhe difference belwHn the previous CIO$ nQ price and Tvedav:'u~f·m· orlce. Name Last Ch~ Aleen Inc 1111 + If• UP 9. Uo 1. l Tjnka CorP Jl l"-+ ,,, ~onllllCp 31.li 1 ,,_ ( 1 LFd 7l.lo 1"1 S ~la EIK 11'1' !t\I u:"''l UP 6. -UP 6, Up 6. MesstvF ~ 'It ! TransO Fifi I"' "' I M"IOffsn n ~ V. Mo ! Home ~ 'It 10 Cn~ 1 •SOI 'l \loc 111. UP i·· UP ., UP . -UP . 11 WnUn l•PI lj" " Uo 4.7 - lj ~avnhEP A l l,lo 1 ·~"""' •1 l •• 14 SNH 3.16o1E 9=1\ ~ UP '·! ; UP 4, .. Up '· • lS Te•EsT PIB 'll'I" ttl 16 Varco ''• 1.lt 11 LIL Co plW 111 ~ UP 4.! • UP . ' ~~ :I 'I LIL Co irlV IO''t ~ 20 RPC Eno " ~ '·'Ii UP . Up . UP , 1 Peabodv 11~ '1• 21 Meu bl Tr 11. 2j PantrvPride \'"' + IA! UP .1 • 2 Sreven1 JP 1 ~ + \\ Uo .1 , 24 ln\llCO Con> 1S1/t + '") 25 Park+-len 26).ll + 111 Name l Ctre11a ' 2 RB Ind J LehVallru:r 4 viManville s Alrbn Fri 6 AmCen1~p 1 Loulnd •O I Muronv It .4.llll!ilh p 10 FalrCom 11 lntrstB111kr '! Kauf erolttl 1 Grunl•IFln n 14 HorltonCo IS Plen Resrcn 16 Fo•Sla Pho! 17 ~olne 'I ~aCo n 1 Wll\hlre 0 11 10 Thom 11\d 21 .4.cme Clev ~} ~~m~s~\l l' ln1olrRsc n S KenalCo OOWHS La11 Cho 11111 -\ff.I l"' -" l'f -"• -,, lS'lt -10\t ''• -~ s~ -1,.. j"• -!" 7 -6'· 11 l-. 10111 ,,,, 11 " 4~ -~ ''" -~ 1 1~ -~-61'9 -'/3 17111 -'''• 3''1 -'• ,, ft -'"' l4l,..,-\ 13~ -,,,, ~'"' -~ 11 ''• -l~ t -: WHAT AMEX DID NEW YORK (AP) Jul. 13 ... ,~ .. Declnlll!d ¥ncl'len~>11d ot•I !!sues New h ohs New IOW5 Todllt m • 71 UP .4 UP • Prev. .. w 'I .. NEW YORK -Sate\, •v pr ce anCI net cho.noe of lht! 10 mc»I eel va American Slocli:. E•chan1• 11sue1, tradlni! na!lonallv 11 mor1 Than 1 Wan11Lat18 6".700 2•'t• -I 0omeP1r1 1s'n·~'°° , 11·16 -1·'' V"b>llm 1 'i m -1' TIE Comm 1 ,J 10. -~ YankeeOG , 1 1:i.i. Mich Genl , ~ 'I• Actlonlnd I •, 1 'f.I i ~ Anthem\ 79, ~ -~ N•I Peren1 66. 'l ~ + '11 P•lrOLIW 61. l YJ + 'I• NASDAQ SUMMARY GOLD QUOTES METALS QuoTES ' That" s an a pt d es c ription of both bus I ness and bus in ess people along the Orange Coast. To k eep tra k of wh er ecompanles a r e golng a nd whic h people are h e lping them get the re.jus t watc h 'Credit Line· -eve ry d ay in the Bus iness section of your n ew Daily Pirat I Kathy Whitworth lope s.m lnud •• wlnnlng•t goHer. C2. Ram• ottenelft guard Kent HIU ende hi• .. .., holdoUt. ca. U.S. shooting star Former UC Irvine •tandout Gary Flaueroa bu atven the United State. team a ~lg lift °""' .... ,._ _, .._ __ ~ •lnce makloC up Ilia mind to end Ilia tbree- year retirement and rejoin the 11quad. Gary Figueroa has plugged a big leak in poloists · of ense By l\OGER CAl\UON Of ... O.., ........ •The site: Pepperdine Universlt).'. where the 1984 Olympic Games will be held m wattt polo. •The time: May, 1983, as the U.S. team. under Coach Monte Nitzkowslt1, competed m the FlNA Cup, seven games m eight nights against ei&ht of. the world's l>Ht. including the Soviet Union. •The result Two wms, two losses, three tics -founh place. behmd the Soviet Union. West Germany and JtaJy. •The problem: Lack of outside shooting and not enough end-to-end speed. •The solution: Gary Figueroa. The problem. of course. was that Figueroa. a 1980 OlympLan and former UC Irvine standout, had retired from the game when President Jimmy Carter decided the U.S. would not partictpate in the Moscow Games. "At that pomt(l980) it looked very doubtful I'd ever play •'"· chances WCTC cenamly very shm," admits Figueroa. But he found himself lured back. His wife, Margaret. is the daughter of UC Irvine Coach Ted Newland, business associates were aware of his role in 1980 as th.e. team's No. l punch. and many 1980 teammates WCTC on the current squad, as well as the same coaching staff. "Marpret was suppon1ve," says Figueora, "and my folk~ too. All of those things entered into it and I ~ary F~aeroa made up my mmd at Peppcrdane." So, after three years. F1gueroa made bis return, and allhou&b the improved p lay of teammates Peter and Jody Campbell and goalie Crata Wilson have been obvious. ll's aho obvious that with Figueroa the U.S. goes 16-1-1 in three ma1or 1nter- natJonal tournaments in Europe in recent action. The leaks m 1983 have been pluued. "'The thinJ about Gary," says Nitzkowski, .. ,s that be is a very bard plaler to read. It's a God-given talent. He s the world's best spontaneous shooter." Figueroa realizes his assets. staung: "J like to try some different thinp, to create some thiqs that plies don't expea." Niu.koww takes it a little further. .. He'• so unorthodo• iG b.ia ooti.111. and be bas lbe confidtnce ln blmldf to do the unexpected. He opeiu lhi1l&S up and really 'mates• Doua &wk (another dnvcr ltl the U.S. 11tack) because cverytime Gary does IOCDO- thina. everyone else 1umps. ··Even when he m1sxs . . • like 1p1nst the Russians tn the Tuntp'l.m Cup, he definitely had the attenuon of the Soviet p11e. •• Fi1ucroa'1 full-time prepanation since the first of the year has brou&ht him withtn a reasonable facsimile of the total player be was when the ?ryCt was pulled out tn 1980, and the Salinas rcs1dcn t admtts it bas beeo touah rn some aspccu, but not all th.al difficuh ''This tum has been throuah a lot and there are a lot of scan that I missed, so for me, it's kind of neat comma 10 fresh," says Ficucroa- "For three years I hadn't done any swimmmg, but had l)layed some basketball and JOlf, .. be adnuts. ~ months of traminc four yean qo wouldn't be that much because it would have been Just weckendl, but now, especially since March .. :· Since March the tramin& bas beco bard and consistent. Nevertheless.. rll-UCfOl'S role is somewhat different this time beaux of the team's bcutt bal&nce. "He was reoctved back with open arms." says Nitzkowski, -but be realiz.es has role is different th.an in '80. He 1sn •t as centcr-sta&C as be was, but what be pves us is what we have to have, wh.icb is pc1 imeter speed aod out.side shoo~ And, be'• at his best when we·~ playing the better teams. .. The Ou'&Oin& Faperoa. whole smile will knock your socks oft: agrees. (Pleue Me GAaT /C2) Countdown for Olympic Games continues Athletes arriving by the thousands for ~he opening events this weekend LOS ..\NG Elf\ ('\Pl -..\thh:tec; and Journalists are pouring 1n b) thl' thousands. flag'I and banners color the urban landscape, and Olympic electricity is flowing After six year'i of planning. the first Summer Ol)mp1cs on .S. soil 1n 52 years -and the first e'er staged by a pnvate organ1zat1on -open Satur- day under a cloud of politics as "'en as weather. From tin} Andorra to war-scarred Lebanon. from farms, armies and aristocratic bloodlines. a record 7.800 athletes from 141 countries are set 10 compete. covered b} a record 8.200 JOUrnahsts It 1,1.111 all happen against thr backdrop of the So" ict-led bo~cott 1n' olv1ng man} potential medal win- ners. last-minute litigation and con- cerns about terronsm. The weather has been a concern all along. but some earl~ arn"als ..aid 11 was even \1.-0rse than the~ expected. "We're surprised to find It's hotter here than where we JUSI left .. Mohammed Rcdwan Khan. the Egyptian team coach. said. It was 96 then. in the midst ofa 12- day heat wave which sent temperatures as much as 12 dcgree'i above normal. A si milar heat wa ve during the Angels complete a lost weekend Ojeda' s three-hit s hutout lifts Bosox to sweep of series By RICHARD DUNN o.., .... c.,. .......... As the Olympic torch continued its Journey through Southern California this weeltend, the Bosto~ jkd Sox were blazing through <-f'naheim Stadium. The Red Sox concluded a three- gamc sweep Sunday with a 3-0 victol) behind left-hander Bob Ojeda. who shut out the Angels for the second time in his third stan against them this season. It was the founh straight loss for the Angels, who arc fortunate enough to still maintain narrow leads over ChtcaJO and Minnesota in the inept Amencan League West. Boston. o n the other hand. has won six of seven and finished its road trip 7-3, but remains in no-man's-land in the East, a distant I 71h games behind Detroit. "I'm sure ilad to see those gu ys leave," Antel Manager John McNamara said after Sunday's white-wash ... They've given us fits all year " Boston's wm pve the Red Sox a 9-3 marain over the An$cls as the two teams completed their work against each other this season. On a day when starters Jim Slaton and Ojeda were locked in a p1tch1ng duel before 30,551 fans, two of Boston's sluggers accounted for the only runs of the game wt th the long ball. The Red Sox got the maximum out of only six hits, while stranding JUSt three runners. Dwight Evans and Tony Armas supphed the only of- fense needed from Boston's six hits as each homered. Slaton and OJeda matched each i<>ther for five innings before Evans went the other way to hit a low- outstde fastball from Slaton for a two- run homer .. The pnch to Evans wasn't a bad pitch." Slaton explained "He JUSI dnves the ball well that way. But. I guess, 1t wasn't such a &ood pitch after all." he added. managing a laugh. The homer came after Slaton had retired 16 in a row. He ~ot two quick outs opening in the mning before Wade Boggs broke the stnng with a sharp single to left. Evans then took Slaton over the fence to give the Red Sox the only runs they would need. Slaton admitted the pitch that Armas crushed was definitely a mistake. "The one to Armas was a bad mistake -it was a stnught change. nght down the middle and up ... Slaton said. "It was Just a terrible pitch. one of those P,ttchcs you hope he pops up, instead. On another day, Slaton may have (Pleue .ee A.NOEL8/C2) -.... .... .... ~ ~ ~ -----OQS) Games could make cond111ons .. in- tolerable" for the athletes. said Arthur Lessard. meteorologist in charge of the National Weather Service of Southern California. The mercul) dropped closer to the normal mid to h1gh-80s in the middle of last week. but the forecast offered little hope that would continue. A year ago. the Los Angeles area suffered through .. one of the hottest summe~ in the last decade ... accord- ing to the weather service. and the 30- da) forecast covenng the 16 day~ of the Games calls for above-normal temperatures, with less than a 30 percent chance of rain. Smog 1s another unpredictable factor '\ stud} of the Jul) 28->\ug. 12 period revealed that there were onl) two first-stage smog alerts -hea") pollution considered enough of a health hazard to cancel high school sports -downtown during the past five years. But there were 21 days offirst-stage smog alerts through Jul) 15 -the worst smog problem m a decade - Se•erlano Balleeteroe of Spe.ln bolda aloft tile trophJ ':&; winntna the Brltlab Open at St. Andrewa. Scotland. Dodgers (8V2 back) hope to get it together LOS ANGELES -The Dodgcrs are hop1n1 the fncndly confines of Dod&er Stadium will get their act toaeihcr. After sphtun• a four-pmc scnes with the St. Lou11 Cardinals over the weekend, the Dod&cn find them- selves tratlin& the National Lequc Wcst-lcadinaSan Du:10 Pad~ by 8'11 pmcs and they're hopma a bncr s1~­ pme sencs at home can aet them in SCI!· Tht' Dod&cn. idle today. take on Allan\I in a thrtt-tame ~t. then host C1nann1u ror three mort befol"t' 11oin1 on the road ror two week\ Me.anwh1lc, hauinJ too many hit· ten al one position tsn't the kind of problem that keeps m"or lcquc manqers awake 11 n-aht. But the emCTJCncc of rookie third baseman Terry Pendleton ccn11nly has thrown a monkey wrench into St. Louts Manaicr Whitey Hcnoa's best laid plans. "I am't even thanlc1"4 about Jtllina him out of the hneup. • Hen<>s ,aid after Pendleton stroked two hit,. includtna the pme-W'lnner. tn a 7.fJ Cardinals victory over the Oodaen Sunday. When tht C'1rd1n1l\ traded Ken Oberkfell to Atlanta earlier thi, month. Henoa said Andy Van Slyke was 1om1 to be his rqular third baseman. But an 1n1ury to Wilhe McC'ttt requami movutj the versatile Vin lylcc to the outfield When Onie Smith went on the 21- day disabled hst with a fnactu~ wnsl ~ndleton was called up from lou1s"Ule to help shore up the infield The 24-ytar-old Cahfomia natJ\-C has responded to the charcr with nine h1U m hi, first five pmc • mcludina a 2-for·4 ~rfonnanct apinst the Dod1en on Sund.a) Hcm>a wants Van Sl)ke in the hneup -prcfetabl) at the hot comer -when Snuth and MC'G« return "Andy has too much 1b1hty not to ptay every day." he 111d. "He has so much potential to be a p"t"at bitter. .. And Andy was sure h1mna the t.11 good today,' he said after the~e. Van l)kc homered off swttt Akjandro hna 1n the fi h 1nn1na. Two 1nn1np later. he 'parked a $i1-run 5t Louis ralh h)' doubhna off the &)o\e orR J Rc\nold 1n deep nsht "I don't lno~... Henot ~1d 'Ma)~ l'll kt <\nd,· plav a httlc bat and industnes have been urged to reduce em1ss1ons. Although man} athletes ha"e ex- pressed concern about sm~ the top official of the area's air quaht) board. Dr Thomas Heinshe1mer. said tests have determined that 11 should ha\.C little or no effect on competition Nevenheless. events that require the most sustained act1 \-II\. such as the marathons. ha"e been schedukd for the earl) e"enmg v.hen smog levels are usualh low. "There's some finger crossing ... said Harl') Usher. vice president and general manager of the Los l\ngelcs Olympic Organmng Committee. "but it falls in areas that arc out of our control." Terronsm in a pohticalh volatile area. with 26 events spread over 200 miles, ma} be equally hard to control. but more precautions at least can be taken To protect the athletes from an incident similar to the Murucb massacre 1n 1972 that left 11 lsraelt athletes dead. the Ll\OOC 1s re- ponedl~ pa)tng in excess of SlOO m1lhon for secutit) The pncctag includes state-of-the-an detection gear. soph1st1cated robots and a fl«t ofhelicopto~ some of1hem specially equipped v.1th infra-red night scopes. The St} le and color of se-cunt) uniforms was a dosel) guarded secret to kt>ep potential terronsts from copying them. With a security force of 18.000 - four times the size of the Los Angeles police force -the costs are hkely to eitettd the S 123 million Montreal spent for protection 10 1976. Bogey on 17 ends Watson's dream Ballesteros takes advantage to win British Open title ST. ANDREWS. Scotland (AP) - The roar on the 18th green said It all Sevcnano Ballesteros had snaked in a I 5-foot putt and Tom Watson. one hole behind. knrw that h1'i dream of a record~ualhng sixth Bnt1sh Open title war; O\ er at least for another year o\lmost predictabh . 11 was the \-lC tous 17th hole. the 461-)ard. par-4 "Road H ole" that deo;troyed Watson's hopes With the title secmingh heading towards a Monda) pla,of'r after an exciting nip-and-tuck. finale bctwttn t~ 4.mencan and the Spaniard. Watson 1nexphcabl}' overh1t his sec- ond shot at the most crucial stage of the match. After a strong dn \-C to a good pos111on on the fa1rwa'. his 2-iron shot flew across the road almost out of bounds and landed n&ht neAt to 3 stone wall Watson kne"' his chanC'C had nnually disappeared on the hok that had dashed the hopes of ~veral other playen before him. "1 wasn't quite sure what club I wanted to hit and 1pushed11 to the right on to the road The ball ran up about two feet from the wall and ' in a hurry and Ten) pl•> a ltttk bit. I JU"it don't know .. t Louis sent I 0 men to the plate in the ~venth apinst ~na and loser Bob Welch, 6-11. Mike Jorscn1'Cn op(ned with a walk and he moved to thtrd on Van Style'\ double. Both sro~ on Tito Land- rum's s1natc .. f\CT a pa ball and a 11cnf1cc. LandNm IC'Orcd to tJe tht' pme at 4-' on panch hitter Stc\-e 8raun 's I p1na double to ten .. fttt I IJ'Oundout and an mten~ t1on1l walk to Tomm\ Hen, Pendleton drove 1n the w1nnina run rcstncted m) bacltsw1~ ·· he said The two-time defending champion did well to chip to within 30 feet of the pin but missed the putt and took a boge) 8} then. Ballesteros -who had euher been in the lead. JUSt behind or level with Watson for most of the day -had putted on 18 to edge ahead one last time at 12 under par. •· .\s the crowd roami. the popular Spaniard clenched his fist, punched the air and smtled broadl) Now Watson needed an eagJ~2 to catch the pantard. He dro"e "A-Cll but could not chip in from <n yards and the title went to Ballesteros for the second 11me "Sc"e pla)ed vef) well today I JUSt did not ha\C thC' fed \o ~ 1t." satd the \4-\.ear-old two-time defendma champion Ballec;teros. who won the Open for the fir<>t time in I Q79 had not won a tournament all vear and was naturally C'C')talll HC' had st.aned the day tied for SC\'Ond With We-st c~rmany's Bernhard Langer at Q-under-par. two strokec; ht-hind Watson and youna >\ustrahan Ian Baker-Finch Rall(':'titeros said he wanted to win for his mother Carmen. who had flo,.n O\-C"r from p11n to watch htm pla) tor thr first t1me e"er \.\hen I holed the last putt, I was so (Pleue Me OOLP /C2) U.S. falls, 9-6 J ulit' ~hephcrd scored three &Oil\ ttl pa("( .\u~tBha tO I Q.f, v1cton O\-er the United tales Sunda) in the final, of the FlNA women's world water polo ch.am- p1on.sh1~ at Hent.qe Park in lrv1ne 4.f\cr a 4-' balfume dc.adloclt, Au,traha broke o pen the de· fen~1\e bltt.lt' W'lth five tce0nd- half aoalsas tM Un1tcdStatct was unable to cap1tahrc on thru powtr pit) opponun1t1e 1n the final qua.ncr. lt>adm1 ~ Unued &ates wnh tM> aoats was Therna Bree on. Marla m1th. Maruttn O'Too Y ob.nd.a Ga.~n and 1monc LaPa) eachtd added a aoal for the u. C2 OftngeCout DAILY PILOT/Monday, July 23, 1984 Leftover OlYmpic ducats available LOS ANGELES {AP) -The ~nenJ public will act a crack today at prcnuum Olympics tickets left over from the "1nvuation..only" Tacket Faire at Sama Aruta Park. offictals tald. About 40,000 Southern Cah- formans. scl«·tcd at rctndom from the Los Anacles Olympic Orpn121ng Committee's computer mes on people who had already ordered tickets, were invited to the weekend sale, but vendors said it appeared 10me tickets would remain. GOLF •.• From Cl excited. l almost lolled m) caddie with my hand," !>aid an elated Ballestero' ··1 so ncarl) m1s)Cd 1t It war, a difficult putt But the dmance v.as nght and 1t Just dropped 1n from the hp.·· I ron1call). the 17th hole had gn t:n Ballesteros more trouble than Watson m the previous three ro unds Ballcsteros went lo the hole 11ed with Watson at 11 under par for the tournament. "I was vef) pleased to make parth1!> ume because I'd had three 5s there " said BaJlesteros."l told my caddie I'd have to finish with at least two 4s to have a chance because I thought Watson would definitely make par on the 17th. "The birdie pun on the 18th was the most important putt of my life." More than I 00.000 tad.cu -many of them to such premium events as the OpcnmJ Ceremonies. the trad. and field finab and thc women's l)'rnnast1cs finals -were bcm& off~d at face value dunna nine two- hour sales penod'I Fnday. Saturday and Sunday. Customers were linuted to pun::baSt'S for two individual events For eumple, they could buy two sWlmmin& events. or one swimm1na and one track and field event or the OpemnJ Ceremonies and a single swtmming event. For evenh cl ass1f1 ('d u "premium," such as Opening C er- emonies and women's g)'mna'ittC'i finaJs, purchascB were limited to t"-O tickets each. For even~ classified a~ "scm1-prem1um"-track and field t"vents and <;0me of the earl)-round basketball games -purchasers were limited to four tickets apiece Karen Browning of the Hancock Parle d1stnct of Lo~ Angeles was "thnlled" with her two ticket'> to the women'5 gymnastic finals and four for track and field . Meanwhile. at the round-the-<:lo<.'k ucket swap meet at tht: the A1rpon Park Hotel in lnpJcwood. whcrt' vt"ndors were asking up to double th e fa~ value for tickets, business was slow last weekend. "There arc too many ~Hers, too few buyers." said Soll Colah, a ll<.ket agent from Bomba). India. who said tickets 1n his homeland have gone beggJng since the announcement of the Soviet-led boycott of the Games. A superb paint job ... only $320! \rrin.111s brlU"1•rn,11 r11111c rn and su 1/11 cn1'11ust pnwud b\' f lr.,11a11z.. ( umparr tlltr qmilrt.Y n•rtlt otl~o-s tlmt cost 11mc/J "wr1 1-lrqawz ra•n1 mc/udrs n rlrnr top cont lrlu rltr rxpmm•r '"'f"'t'tS rlir 1-lr.nnn= pnrnl ]Ob If"" nmnzin,11 ""'"' ffl SJHO-/mt tj Wiii br"~" rn thr coupo11 be/on• wm,flrt n11 ndd1tumnl SMJ ofl1 r---------------, I Special Discount $60 off! I l'rncnt th" •••Llf"'" """'\HU nrJ<r """ I I k!(Jll/ p.unt 1oh .111d r''""' .1 ~>Od"''""" I .. n 1h< , 11:11IJr '"" s.Hlll t""' / 1n11trd 111111 •lffrr < ),,, "'"/'"" f'' P"'"' 10/1 I 1,t11 11-,., ... '" p Olympians have NBA players vote to win gold JDedal From AP dl1p1tdle1 PHOENIX -The U.S. Olympic r1.I men's basketball team t'i now 8-0 an ex h1b1t1on p mes against pickup teams of vacationing National Baskcthall Association p1ayerfi. and Coach Bobby Knight '3ys "It remains to be seen how good we arc." But the NBA players who ha ve been oppoi.ing the Olympians sa} the) 're a cm~·h for the gold. With the Games set to open this week m Lo!I '\ngeles Knight said ··1t all comes down to how well we play against the compct1t1on there. The NBA team hu !>Orne good pla)ers. but could those guys go out and beat Spain and Ital)'' V..e don't lJloy. Could we beat Spam and Italy'> I don't know yet " Saturda)' ·., 84-71 win b~ the Ol)mp1ans. however. lelt N B.\ people con\1nced that the Amencans arc read) .. The' ha\l· to be considered the lavonte~:· 'ia1d Coach Pai Rile' of the Laker'> ··The road that(_ oach Knight has them going along 1s well-timed Bobb} hasn't let them slip for an 1n~tant The>'ve ncH~r been '>lopp~ or shodd) The) ·ve continued to 1mpro"e and progress as a team." Portland Trail Blazer forward K1k1 Vandewcghe said the Olympians "should go off somwhere and form 1he1r ov.n pro team They're that good I thtok they got the gold medal won right now." "They will be an excellent representative tor our country, especially with Coach Kni&ht." said Lakt'rs guard Earvto "Magic" Johnson. "I pfayed agatost him two years when I went to M1ch1gan State. He'<) always coming at you and he's always got them playing in his system and that's the ke). "I don't care 1f he's coach mg an Olympic team. a Rec team or a Bo) ·s Club team He wants to Wln and he can mold a team that wants to win his way" Quote of the day Jim PelnMr, reflectlng on hf• forced retirement from the Balttmore Ork>681: "ft r .. ny bOth«• me to think I may never throw a home-run pitch •n." Czechs take Federation Cup ~i\O PAULO. Brazil -Hana Man-~ dhko"a and Helena Sukova teamed to beat Australia's Wendy Turnbull and Elizabeth ayers. 6-:!. 6-2. Sunday to lead defendtog champion C'zechoslovak1a to victory to the Federation Cup tennis tournament. billed a~ the Davis Cup of women's tennis. The two countnes had split the opening two s1n~es matches, making the doubles event the deqding contest. Mandhko"a. ranked third 1n the Y.orld, and Sukova. ranked 16th 1ook ·the lirs1 '>Ct 1n JUSt :!6 mtoutes Whitworth gets milestone win Katby Wbitwortb surpassed Sam n Snead as tht: v.1nntogest professional golfer cHr Sunda" pamng the firil hole of a sudden-deaih pla)offto defoat Rosie Jonea 1n the Rochester lntemat1onal LP(,A tournament at Locust Hill Countn Club. Jones. who lost the t S. Women ·s Open a week earlier v.11h a bogc) on the final hole. hit her approach shot at No. I into the left rough. kit her chip about seven feet shon and m1sr,ed the putt b~ inches For Hall offamer 'Wh1tY..onh 44 11 ""a' the first victor) on the LPGA tour \tnce the 'Women's Kemper Open to March 1983. It wa'> al\o her 85th 'ICtOI) in an LPGA career stretching back to 14 58 and broke her out of a tie Y..tth Snead that she had rnllell mainly a creation of the media Snead 1s credited b)_ the PGA with 84 profc')!l1onal v1ctonc'> Scott Hocb fired a 4-undcr-par 66 to run awa} with a five-stroke victor; and his M:cond Quad C111e'> Open tournamen t title He picked up $36.000 to the event at Coal Valley. Ill. Khllman amacb 28th homer Dave IU•amu'1 28th home run in the Ill founh innina &epn an O kJand comeback ~unday and BW Almoa's lcadofThomer 1n the seventh pve the A ·s a S--4 victory over Milwaukee tn Amencan Lcaaue acuon. Bill Kneser, 7-6. allowed only five hats over &111 1nninS1. aiv•ns up only a ~male m the than! af\er Milwaukee c.oUcctcd four hits in a fuur-run, second-anmna rally . . Jn other AL aames, Clllf Joltuo1 cracked a th~run homer to h1ghhght a five-run fifth inning and power Toronto to a S-3 victory over Seattle. John· son's homer. his 10th. was bis fourth in his past 13 1t·blt1 .. Willi• Randotp• hncd a sinalc to n&ht with two outs in the ninth innin1 and Bobby Meadam scored from first when n&ht· fielder Tom Bnuwa1ty allowed the ball to act past him as the New York Yankees pined a 6-5 vic- tory over Minnesota . Gr~ Pryor and D~I M•tley stroked QflllU two-run singles m a five-run fifth inning that sparked Kansas City to an 8-4 romp over Baltimore. Don Slaa~t rapped two singles, a double and a tnplc to contribute to the assault'. . Neal Heatoo pitched a three-hitter. allowing no hits over the final 6111 1nntogs. and George Vukovich hncd a two-run single m the dec1S1ve sixth toning as Cleveland defeated the C h1cago White Sox. 4-1 . Dan Petry and WUUe Hernandez combined on a four-hitter and Dave Bergman smacked a home run as Detroit completed a four-game sweep of Texas wnh a 2-0 win. Carlton in 11th place ln wins Steve Carlton pitched two-hit ball a over eight innings and moved into I I th place on the all-time major league list m victories as Philadelphia beat Atlanta, 6-2. Sunday. The only hits allowed by Carlton. 9-4, were a two-out double by Dale Murphy m the fourth inning and a single by Glen Hubbard in the eighth. when the Braves scored on a wild pitch ... In other National League games, Darryl Strawberry'• tic-breaking, two- run homer in the top of the eighth inning sent the New York Mets to a 7-6 victory over Cincinnati . . Joel Yoa1blood drilled a homer. double and single and pitcher Mike Krakow had two bits, including a run-scoring double, to lead San Francisco to an 11 -S victory over the Chicago Cubs ... Ed WbJt1on and two relievers combined on a fivc- hitter and a pair of early Pit· tsburgh errors set up San Diego ..__........,_. runs as the Padres scored a 5-1 Carlton victory over the Pirates 1n the first game of a doubleheader. Doug Frobel'1 one-out double off Rieb Go11age drove in Tony Pena wi th the winning run to the 11th mntog as the Pirates rallied for a 3-2 v1ctol) 1n the second game ... Joe Nlekro pitched a five- httter and his Houston teammates battered five Montreal pnchers for I 0 hits as the Astros defeated the Expos, 6-1 Andretti takes Michigan 500 BROOKLYN. Mi ch. -Determtoed Mano Andrelll, holding off charging Tom Ill Sne"a o'er the last 20 laps. won the crash- filled and 1nJur;-marred M1ch1gan 500 b) less than a car-length Sunday The race, Y.h1ch took neilrl} four hours to run. was punctuated b) a !>Cnt:s of wild crashes -including one in Y.h1 ch Chip Ganasss was cnt1cally toJured The 27-}ear-old from Pittsburgh. Pa . suffered se,ere head inJune'> and poss1blc fractures of the lower extrem1t1es when he tagged the wall on lap 148 of 250 while racing at high speed through tum two of the two- mllc. high-banked oval Televt..lon. radio TILn'lllON 8 p.m. -BAUBAU.: St. Lout. at New York Me1a., Channel 7. ftADtO 8 p.m. -BAIDAU: Seatt .. at Angeli. KMPC (710). ANGELS. • • P'romCl p11ched well enough to win. But. Sunday, II was JUSt another case or &ood pitching, but lack of offense by the Angel hitters. OJeda did not walk a bauer 1n has three--h1t, routc--gomgctTort. On Apnl 23. he blanked the Angels. 2-0. at Fcnway Park. But that one was ram· shortened to six innings. "Sometimes you have no control over things, like when thin~ are going well the balls down the hnc arc si x inches foul and when thinas are going bad, they're fair," Ojeda (8-7) said. noting that things are going well for him now. .. I thtok that was a key today, getting my breaking pitch over. Both you and your catcher have to re- cognize what's going good for you on a particular day and do it. "Ricrue (Boston catcht'r Ge~man) mixed them up real good. he called a great game." Ojeda allowed a lead-off single to Juan Beniquez 1n the first inning, then proceeded to retire 13 stnugbt before Mike Brown lined a single to nght w1th one out m the fifth. Beniquez ga ve the Angels their third hit with a sixth toning stogle, but OJeda finished by rctinng 11 in a row. Meanwhile. Evans continued to feast on Angel pitching, lif\ang his season average to .354 against them, including fi ve doubles, three home runs and 14 RBI. That was after an O- for-10 start against the Angels this year . .. I don't know what my lifeume average 1s in this park. but ll isn't good. So it was real nice to have a good senes here.'' said Evans. who also doubled 1n the first inning and opened the ninth wuh a single * ANGEL NOTES -Can a llllt11< wllh 17• cerftf home runs 111<1 27 Ml fer "''' MllWW't have or.. "t>eit swing ever?.. Aoe>er11<1ttv T.ny AnnH th1n1<s '° On his llOme run ~.,., Armes Miid. , " WH • cri.~·UP .,.., high H• !Jim S..fllll wlS tn<ow1no P<•ttv OOOCI •ff d•v eno wlS trying to '"t Ille ours~ corn.r even• time I d have to sav this " tile Ohl swing of mv cerMr AnQet ~naoer Jetwl MeNam.,.. "°""'t •-•• too conc11<ned •bout his ctut>'s l•ck of hllllno "I IN! lllet tllev wlM nit I cen•t t>eti.ve t"•t our t>elldut> w ill 11<> throuofl en entire vffr like t,..ls, · ht Mt>d •tier Sun<Mv's oeme If t~e wu 1nvt...ino more we COUid oo. we would Clo II Tnn One nltten) hit eerlv Defore the ga,,..., tnev nit 1n the lt>attlnoJ ceon with (Mtlno coaehl Ren Falt1V -tl'ltv'•• rn llv worked nerd As tong H we're In first l>l•ct. we cen eHord lo t>e 1>1lltnt The otht!' clubs ere t>ealino Chk.100 end Mlnnnote -we r.1ve to consider ourselves 1ucky.. The Anotl·Slettle 111me toniohl Is Kl'ltdul.O tor a o'clock, •lier Ille US Olympic IHm mHts a IHm of coll~• ell·1ters, which it set for 520 . Proo.I* Pltchlno metchUPS for the lhrM ·111me Hrlts with Slellle; Miil• ~ <•·•> •• Mlh Witt (10-7) tonlohl. •d Vande hr9 16·9) will OP00'4 Go.-Z.lwl (9·7l Tue'41Y •nd Jim a.am. (9·9) wlH lece lllfl llomenldl (9-9) Wtd~MS•v. the llnel 111me ·-----------,,,j ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111.-~~-ofllltl'tomfttlnd RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY, INC. for the Rtst of Your life 1922 HARD BLVD . com .-u -!141·115' Bettor get ready. Del Mar opens Wedllesday. . - ( ~ n111c I >.1\ ., 1111h "f;i1 .m .1\ ., \X'r,llll"• f11h 2) .tll\I '•-..:p1 c111lx·r 12 .ii I \·I ~1.11 :'-.1 d.1\ .11 I \:I ~1.11 111,1Lt· h,1\ \\htlt• rlit· ,,m '"llll'' lr'll l't· rlw •l.1fl 111 11111tl1t·1 ...:w.lr '111111m·r t\11wr11 .1\11111·-1 l111N'' ,111,l 1•, h·,, I• 1t1ll· 11f H111· ,kll''· 1'.ill11\ tlrt•rt\11111" t11,l f.1,1 111111'' 1t1.t h1i.: 11111,li Ill lllll\0 f ,ltt'' l'\1•r. ,J.1\ l'\ll'J'I v. lwri· rlu· r11r1 llll'l'I' rite .. urt T111· ..... l.1\ f .,,, r "l·. ~ f' 111 ( ll'lll'r.tl .1J1111,,11 111, Hur \\lid1· \• ·11'r1· lwlj H111! rlw h11r't'' i.:1·1 .111 I'''' 2 Ji "'lt·111"r' ''~ .t11d 1\\1·1. ~I 1111 "t't'~ 111 t )!•~~1 .. r.111 . Tl'llll'lll 't'I rl11 rt' D I Ma 11.1\' (.ill ( ,,,.,1i •. 11111 I 1ht111! 'l~'l 1.11 tu·. 111h 4 \ 1.111111! ,l,1\' l't·twn·11 e r r tl t'11 ,11 k ''"''''·, ,, rid·· \mtr.1L Make hav \\~1ile the sun ~hin<.''· Juh zi;.'x-pt.12 I' GARY FIGUEROA--SHOOTING ST AR ... From Cl .. , do enJO)' playtog agatost the better teams." sa\S the one-ume Su nn y Hills High · (Fullerton) star. .. And our offense t'> a little d1fferen1 now with a lot more hole play from Jod\ (( ampbell) and Terry (~hrocderl. I'm relca<iing for passe~. pnmanly to <.et up. rather than JUSt shooting. "The 'lt)k of offensec; allow for more kid.ou t~ at two-meters and it's d1tta11ng the 'll}le of play. The dnver doc•m't have the same function as before ' "'it1ll. there is a need for motion." Although he's 27 now and usually 1 n the 'icnou-; art of real e!ltatc, the 6-0. 170-pounder can have fun with you. BOATING ~~~--- too. For instance, he'll tell you with a deadpan expression. "I was surpnscd there was still a spot for me." But he's also a straipH-shooter. and offers some ms1ght into this team's personnel and chances for a gold medal. "Ten) (Schroeder) 1s a gentle strength on this team and Joe Vargas is a fireplug. Craig Wilson 1s good at times. too. I've never played with a more talented group than this one. here at Cuesta. l really feel we're 15- deep, even though we can only bnng 13." A~ arc all of the American players. Figueroa 1s looking forward to play- Clipper Cup Series teams announced Newport Beach yacht represented in Hawaiian race By ALMON LOCKABEY Olllty f'llol ... tltlt Wrttlf ~1x 'iouthcrn t 'altfom1a yachts. one from Newpon Beach have been \elected on three tcam'i that will represent the lJ ~ 1n the Pan Am Chp~r Cup ~me\ off Honolulu 'tartto& Aua 4 I earn 1.:apta1n lkn Mitchell of C alifomrn 'acht tluh <;a1d the teams ha vt h<'C'n dC'\1gnatcd Red. White and Blue. al.rnrd1na to their lntcrnauonal Oil shore !{ult rat1 ngs On thC' Red tt"am arc .\rtem1\, a Williams wins Paul W1l1111m' of Balboa Yacht l luo. wtth his w1ft' Etll a crew. won the L llman-R Rqatta Sunda). out o( RH ()a ve Ullman. st\t'Mll 11mt'5 na· 11onal chnmp1on in the Lido-14 dH!.. 1n11ugura1cd tht' re aun 14 ~cnr'i nan lur < la\\·li ... ulor\ uni\ Peterson-51 owned by Arthur Emil, New York. N Y . General Hospital, a Farr-40 owned by Tom Walinski. Honolulu. and Sidewinder. a Rcichcl- Pugh-43 owned by Charles Short Ill. San Francisco. Revenge. a Nclson- M a re k-4 I owned hy Wayne Willenberg, Rancho Palos Verdes is the Red team ahemate. Heading the White team is John Arens' Frers-51 Tomahawk out of Balboa Yacht Club. He will be teamed with Checkmate (ex-Bull- frog), a Peterson-SS owned by Monte L1v1n15ton, Del Rey Yacht Club. and Camouflaac. a Frers·'4-4 owned by Al Schullctz. Hidden Hills The White team alternate 1s Richard Rogers' Sovercl-SS. The Shadow. from Lo, An1teles Yacht Club On the Blue team arc Bnivura, a Frers·-'6 owned by lrv1n1 Loube. Oak.land. Monr'()(W1ngalc's Scarlett O'Hara. OaltJand. and Brookt' Ann. a Nelson-Marek-41 owned by Larry Harvey. Palos Verdes E,tatcs. The alternate 1s l1bali1 Flash. a Pcterson-48 owned by An Kam11uJ1, Honolulu. .. fhesc upcr1enccd nnd well· rounded tcam1 have bttn select~ w11h the intent of the U S. Again winn1na th•~ out~tand1n11enc,," .aid Jim Kilroy lJSYRU 0 0,hort' 1 tam Comm11ttt , h1urm1n mg in the Olympics. with suppon from the packed stands. "We've really never heard that. evcn at Irvine, it's going to be kmd of fun to have th e home town crowd. "This team 1s pla)ing well and has strong todiv1duals wnh a total purpose in mmd. We've been through so much. but I really don't think we're gotn$ to have a problem .. Will It be a less than thnlhng experience. should the U.S. be forced to settle for something other than gold, such as silver? "That's definitely true,·· says Figueroa. "If we play our best and enJOy, we'll should win the gold. But you never know. someone might play unbelievable." FLIGHT OFLAZERS SL~TED I, MAJ<Ht LIAGUI ITAHOINGI American Lat.u• WUT OIV15ION W L li'ct Oa .,..., Cfllueo Mtnnet0te 0.kland S.tllltt l<.tl'l•H Cit~ Ttu• •• 47 510 .... 5001 47 " .,. , ,., 41 U 415 31/J d S4 4SS 51,, " SJ •Sl s ) 40 $1 .oe 10 Detroit Toronto 11111more •o••on New York Mllwaull.tt Clevelt nd •AST OIVIMON " ,. 51 ,. S3 44 " " 45 4t 4l S4 41 Sl $unc11V'• kett1 Bo•IOll ) A11914• 0 Ot lroll 2, Te .. , O Cltvtl•lld • C111caeo I Ntw Yori< • Mln,,.•011 S l(en•es cu,, I ae1tlmo<1 4 OU t•lld 5. Ml•weul\M 4 T0ton10 S. $ .. me l Te&l'f't 0t"'9t 9 l4 ,,.,., 20') ,. 24 1 s .. 111t IMoOre • 11 et Aneeh 1w 1tt 10 11. '"' Toronlo CLH 11 •1 •no Gott S·O 11 1C.1n•H cu~ 111,ac• 10·1 1no Wiii• 0·11 1. (t•nJ Ot tro11 IMorr·s I? .i el C•eve'e"d CBlvltven 9 JI (n' Ntw Yori< tGu•orv 1·71 11 Mllweu•M <Sutton l ·I) (nl Betttmort IBOOO•ct.tr IO•l l I C TtxH !Meson •·I I 1n1 O•kl•no <Burrl1 t ·4) 4111 M1nneao11 IBulcller 1·61 1n1 Tv•MltV'• O•mes S.11111 et Antilla. (n I Detroit " Cttvt l•nd. (nl Cl"tlc1110 el Botton. <nl New Yori< e l Mllweullff (nl 8elltmore et Tutt, CnJ Oakl•nd " Mlnneaot• Cnl Toron10 et 1C.en1u Cllv Cnl Nattonat L•aou• WEST DIVISION W L Sen OltQO S. 40 Allenlt SO 48 Dodetr• 49 SO Hou11on 47 SI Clnclnne tl 41 S7 Sen Frenclsco 31 st New York Chtcego PhiltdelOIHt Montrnt SI Louis Pittsburg,, RAST DIVISION SS 37 S4 41 ~ ., 47 " 47 so 42 S6 SunclllV'I Stwt\. SI LCM.Ill 7 Dodeerl 6 l"C1. SIJ SlO .,~ 480 411 3'9 1 ,.,., 10 16 11 ., , , l, 9 ., 10 '1 16 $e n 019110 S·1 P lll1burg,, l·l (HCon<I game. 11 lnn1n111 I Pllli.oetonl1 6. Allenta 1 New York 1 Clnclnnell • Sen Franc11co 11. Cl"tlcego 5 HOU•lon •• MonlrHI I T~V'• Oa,.,,.1 SI Loul• I Horton S· 11 " New Yori< (Terrell 1·7) lnl Chicago <Sulctltte •·II et Plllladtlohle (l~awlev 3 II. (nl Tllffdl'f'I OtmM Allltlla t i Dod9tr1. (n) Pllt\l>urgh al MonlrHI, lrtl St Louis et New Vork (11) Chicago et PhlledtlPhle, (n) Clncl""'" 11 S9'1 01190 !nl Houslon 11 San Francisco, Cn) AMERICAN LEAGUE Red Soll 3, Aneets 0 80STON CALIP'OltNIA Boo11s lt> OwEvn\ rt Rice II Armes cl Euler on 8uci..nr 11> GtOmenc Berrell '21> Guttrn u Tetal• all r h Ill •II r h Ill 4 I I 0 Btn1ou1 II 4 0 1 0 • I l 1 Wilfong 11> l O 0 O • 0 0 0 Lvnn cl 4 0 0 0 • I I 1 Ot Cnc s 31> l 0 0 0 • 0 I 0 Ownng d" l 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 MC8ro<' rl · l 0 I 0 l 0 0 0 Scon1rs 11> l 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 Boone c l 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 P•CC•O•CH\ 3 0 0 0 ll l 6 l Totals 1' 0 l 0 kw•..,~ ••• ..., 000 002 100-l c.llfomlt 000 000 000-0 G•~ W1rin1ng R81 OwEvans 1101 E-Geoman LOB-Bos1on 3 Ca llforn1t J 2B-OwEva ns HR-OwEv•ns 1191 Armes (271 S-Wlllong IP H A EA H SO Boston o .. o. w. 1 CtllfOn\lt 0 0 0 0 Stelon L.J 4 9 T-1 St A-JO S5l A"991 aver•"9' 8ATTING Al A H Hit 8tn•oue r 163 n S7 S Rll l"C1. 23 JSO 27 296 11 m 3 290 10 259 4S 1st 32 2S7 17 2SS 46 24S nm 26 131 S2 219 Cerew 247 31 73 J Brown 99 13 2' 6 Scort•t" 31 l 9 I Narro" IS 7 22 l OtClnc9' 321 47 IJ 11 Lvnn 2'6 fl 76 11 Wiifong 188 II 48 3 Rt Jtel<son l06 •2 7S IS P11111 2'7 .. 10 1 Gr1c,, 190 2'1 44 9 Oown.ng l06 3• 67 11 P1CC10IO 101 13 11 I 1 20I 20 104 16 1'9 S 16S 8 oot>t 270 20 SS I Schof•t •O 216 2S 4S l Ro Jeck1on 91 S IS 0 Ttfals Ull >tS 7H 15 l4I .l4S Sencntr For sen Corl>ttt l 1M AtH Wiii llomentck Jol"tn l(eufman $lat on Curtis 1<11011 LaCorlt Swan 01ner• ht•b Savn Keulmen l"ITCHINO 11" H II SO W·L EltA so 4' 19 37 6·2 1 .. 16 ~ 14 3 10 I I 2 20 40 J 34 1' 20 1· I 2 23 12' 11S 31 ll 9 7 2 7' 9 , 10 1 1 O· I 2 19 1431.'l 1)7 6(1 111 10·7 lSl 1S21.i ISO 42 S6 9 9 J.77 1l21':J lSS l6 l? S·I 3 II )7 34 13 23 1·1 •JI 19~ 103 73 26 3·4 4.U I I• 3 4 O·O S 63 19' 1 25 I 2S Z 1 6 OS 16N'> 30 11 13 I ·2 6 7S s e o 1 0-1 10 ao 11 16 9 s 0-1 900 ..011 to1 v2 410 ••·47 ua '>a ncllti 9 Corl>tll •. An• I 1<11011 I HATIOHAL LEAGUE Cardlnab 7, Oodeen 6 LOS ANGELIS ST LOUIS $1• 21> Stul>b\ II> AAen•o' rt Mer'""·' HOOIO'I P Bream 011 Lt "d"' cl SclOIC•I C Bl•!Of or lltvera JI> BAuo l on Andt1n u APtna o WtlcllP lltuu P WllltfllOlf Tttal1 ell r II Ill 111 r l"t Ill • 0 1 I LoSmotn 11 4 0 0 0 ~I~ I SU11~D 0000 s I I ' Herr 21> J I 0 0 • O O O Pnolln lt> 4 1 1 l 0 0 0 0 Por1er c 4 0 I ? I 0 0 0 Jorgn1n II> J I 0 0 ) I ? O VanS•v" c• J 1 1 I 4 I 1 I Lenorm rt 4 I I 1 o o o O Se>e•tr u 3 0 0 0 • I 2 0 Cot. o 1 0 I 0 1 0 0 0 8reu11 Ph I 0 I 1 1 I 1 0 L von1 pr 0 I 0 0 2 O 0 O Htnorc1< rt o o o o 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 it '14 4 Ttt .. a S<.,. b\I '"""'-' ) I 1 I 1 L" Aneeltl OOl 100 011 -4 11. Levi• 000 010 6011-1 Geme Winning IUll -Ptndltlo11 ( ll E-JOl'gtnH rt. l'llvera OP-$1 Loult 2 LOI-Lo• AriOtlt• 10, SI Louis 4 26-1tlver1, Su. Ven Slykt, Brtul'I, POl'ter Sclo1clt )11-Slubbl Hll-VenSJvll.t l•I $-AP•"• S11tltr SF-Su Iii' M It llt H SO L"ANtlott ...... ,,. Wtld'ILt II lttu" Hooton SH.Min • s M 3 l•J 0 I 0 • , 0 0 • 3 0 0 Co~ w 4·1 I 10 4 4 , I 0 0 l 0 0 0 l 1 SutterS.n 1 • t I A ... 111 ptlt~ 10 l D;tlltn In 'th Wll'-Alleni .. 11o.-C111 Pl-klotelt T-2 '6 A-1'.$2S DOUILIS LAl"1trl&ft. Tuu, M OW· Cia. Toromo. 2$, ~. Oeirolt, U c-•· *"'• t•. tM. Tnea, 22 ~11~. lffw York, 22, Trammeill, De· troll, 22 Tllllli'LIS Mowb'f. TOl'Oftlo. IJ, CCllP11a Toronto, ll, Owen. S..1111, I, UP&l\aw, Toronto, I KGIDIOft, O.lrOlt, '· ltLa•, ClllCafO, • HOME ltU.., Kltlo"'•"· Oeklend, 21 Armu, toalOft, i7, Ktltlt, Chiu~ n , TllOrnton. Cle¥tland, 21, AOIVI•. S.alllt, 20, l!M4.trrtv 61111mott , 20 STOLEN IASIU ltHtNtt\Ofl, Otll.laNI, 41, ,....._, Aflelh, fl. lulter, Cltvtt.IMI. >01 Oarela. toronlo, 2'. COllll'lt , Toronto, 2l PITCHING ~ 0tcl110n•) LNI, TOf'OftlO, 11·2, 2 n; S11-lt, '°""'"to, 11•), t JI; _.,.,.,., Ottroll, I>·•· ).00; llvltven, Cltv ... l'ld, f ·3, 3 16, CallGlll, Oeklal'lf, 1-3, 271. ST1tl1(EOUTS Wltl, ........ 112. Lenotton, S.11111. Ill, H0\11111, THH. 106; St1101 TOf'onlo, 106, Nlftro, N-York, 105 SAVES. Oulsant>trrv. ""' ... '""· 25; Flnotr•, Mllwauto. .. , n. Cavdltl, Oekllftd, 20; Httn.ndt1. 0.lroll, 20, lt01vla, Minne• JOit, " Nattenal LMtue BATTING (2l0 11 ~It) 0-1111. S.01'1 OltoO. l5', S.0114Wo. Ollcato, ..nt. With • lnolon, Allonle, J24, Oornlor, Chlc190, m , Cruz. Hou.ton, .JU RUNS $am11t1. ll'fllleo.toflll , ... S.OllO· t>oro. c111caeo. "· Wleotna. k n Oltoo, ... Oornlor Cl"tlcaeo. '3, Murotw, Allanla, '3 Rel GCtrter, MonlfNI, 6t, SCl\mldt, Pttlleootpnl1, "· JO•vla, ChlCffO, t2; MulnPhrev Hou•ton. S7. Sartdt>ert. Clll· CIQO, 57 HITS. Gwvnn $an Oleeo, l:M, Stndt>OrO, Crtlc.go, 1?9, Samutt. PnlladtlPt'lle , 126. Wvnne. P1tt11>urgrt, 11' Crvt. Hou1lon. 114 DOUBLE$ Hulll>tro, Allanlt, 22, Samuel. Pn•i.o.tl>tlle. n. GCeritt, ""'>ti· lrH t, 20. SanOt>erg Clllcaeo. 20. • ere 11.0 wllll 19 TRIPLES Samuel, PllllaOtltl>flll , I~ $an<11>erg, C,,lt.1190, 13; Cruz. Houaton, I . Gwynn, Sen Oleeo, I. Cltevnold1, Hou1ton. 1, MCGM, SILoula, 1 HOME llUNS· Mur1>11v. Atlanta, 21 Schmiot, Plll11e1t1on1a. 21, GCarttr. Mon 1r .. 1, 19, MlrWll, Dedeln, 17, Slrew· 0trrv, New York, 1S, Virgil, Phllaotlollle, IS STOLEN BASES Samu.I. Pl"tllaelelotllt , '6, Wloglnl, San Olago, .0, lttdut, Clncln· natl, 3', Dornier, Chl<:tC>O, ll. 1'111,,.,, Montre11, 32 PITCHING " OKl•lon1l. Oroaco, N- York, I ·?, 1.12, L.. Montreal, I•·•. 2 71, Oartlt\G, "'-YOf'k, 10·3. 3 24; Soto, Clneln• natl, 10-3. 3.S6, I"-, C>Metn, 11·4, 2.V STltll(EOUTS. ~. N-York, 1S4, v~. ~. 14), llyen, Hou•ton. I IS, Soto, Cincinnati. 113. Cartton. Pt'lllaOOI· l>tlla, IOI SAVES· Sutter St Loul•. 23. HOiiand PttllaeltlOhla. 2 I. Ldmltl"t. C1'tlea90. 20, OroKO, New 'font. 20 Gouaoe S.Ori 0~.11. HolVWMd Park SU NOA V'S llUUL TS ("tt'I 9f '7-dtv """~ mM!IM> flllST ltACR. 6 lurlone• WOOO• Lakt (Oll"t•Y) t60 460 3 IO W"tmount SQutrt <Gutt ) 4 IO 3 60 A.POPIUV (Meza, s 00 Also raced E XClu•lvt Ari•, Matafao 8u1lt>tu CllOOI, Eao Etsv. Fool Mt Time: 1'10 1/S SIC~D ltACE. 7 lurlQng\ Corlclou•neu IMa111 6 40 l IO l 00 Sier Snow 10.la nouuavt) '60 • 20 OQ·ltoonev (Vti.nzuela) l 40 ~Flnl•lled ttrsl 011out1illtd eno Placed ti"ltrO Also racoo Oull• Ponk Rev Pr1oov OoclOf' Foolt, Aflclonaoo Ward C Time 1 n 1 s 11 DAILY OOUILE t8·11 0110 '34 00 THIRD RACE. 6 luriong\ Aun• Sl.i I Hewi.v 13 40 S 00 l 60 Ta111.111 Rest 1ve1en1ut·•l l 40 160 1ncu1>U\ c o.itnouuave I 3 60 Al\O ractd FtrvHcert Kt Pa•v• But •erl•v Coo1 V1c1or1e COt1cor0t C••u T•mt 1 10 • S U EXACTA l.t·)l OeiO '109 00 FOURTH RACll. 6 > luroOt>Qs Btut Seu I Sll>llle I 2• IO 10 00 Stnior Stnalor IP1oro1e 9 00 Ce1t1><>11111 COrt1111 At10 recto s111nr.n """''' C 10..0 Sevour T1mt I 16 • S SS EXACTA <f-11 0110 '511 !>O FIFTH ltACIE. I • m1tn 011 turl 8trloct lll CMe111 9 00 S 40 Gooo es Olamonoi tMcC1rronJ S 00 Oom Orllnoo (LtOheml Atso raced Metor Htnrv Oeil>v Time 1 41 l S $S IEXACTA 15·3l Paid \126 00 SIXTH ltACE S', turlOrtg, Fiesta Leov (Velenzutle) S40 l 10 2 60 Here Comft Love IOIMvl 4 20 3 20 Hvoro Jtl (Hewltv) S60 AllO raceo Jubilff Jent !owH I Ceo10t Stakes lo Won, Hewellan Miu SP•t nOtO Liu Tl~ 1'()5 $S EXACTA 1·21 oe10 sSI SO SEVENTH RACE. I I 16 m llH on turf tr on LHOtr !Sllmll• 16 00 1 00 l 20 Tw1n'1 Tornaoo P1nce v S 40 l 00 WHlern IMcCerronl 2 40 A.llO rac@O Ac10tm1c Pex '" BttlO, Circle of SIHI T me I •I lS IEXACTA 6-4 01•0 s 193 SO n l"ICK SIX 1 •• S· 7·61 oa •O s 107,,27 00 wlll"t IWO wl11nlng llCktll (SIX r'!OrsHI 11 Ptck SI• con1011110" pa id s 1 .... 00 wllll 1 t• winning llClo.tl• !five llOf'\H) EIGHTH RACE. I • m ilt\ Prtclslonlll (MCCrnl 9 40 S 80 Prince True (Velenzutle l J 10 Maltsllc Sr'!Ort IH1w1evl Also raced Office SHker Wllll ll'lade Million. Tlgl'tl\ Timt 1.S9 4/5 IS EXACT A <6·51 p110 s99 !>O NINTH RAC•. I I 16 m lltl Goldt l'I Friend !Vlnzll I 40 'S<:ult PIHH IOtloadlllOl Prtorlnl COru lerl Also recto Sier ol Dewan La rk Cnemuu:eoo Vpsllon Grtnot>lt T1mt 14.l I 5 l ao 340 960 s 40 l 60 Laftyttlt tncur,lon. SS EXACTA 2., Pa •O nnoo A tt@ndence •1 031 U.S. Pro Championships let arlM!N, Min I OU. n.t'flftll SlntM• Atron 11.rlCk,lt ln IU ~I o.i Jtmmv Aries <US I 6·4 6·3. Joit·Luls Clerc IArutntlntl Otl Miki LH Ch IU S I 7 6 6 J. Anorn Gomez <Ecuador) Otl Gulllermo v11u IU S I 6 1 • • , •• SIMH!fttl Slrltllt1 Cterc dff Gomtz •-• •·• l(•I<"'''" O•I Slorll, 6·l , , •• l'ederatlen Cup ( ., S.0• "'*· .,.. ... P'INALS CzKMU1¥1iille 1, A1ntHll1 ~ Anne Mlrtler (Au•tr.i11 l 091 Helena Sukov1 CC1ec110ttovtkl1l 7 S. 1 S Htna M1no1111.ov1 (CIKl'IOMovekta l Nt E thetletl"t Saver• (Au•lretlt l, 6· 1, 6·0 ~ Malldllkov1·Su11ov1 rc recl"tot1011111111 ~ W~v TutM>u" Saven IAuu retle l .. , .. , o... ...... OA'IWY'$ Loatl• ,....._, lteO) -!IS 1noter1 M 1Mlnacu9e,"" Mflllt, '2 ,,..io.1111. 1 rott. ""'· Jl c.!lco kn. n ''no ban. 1.ut mec)l.9"11, 1J acutol'I, I ....... .,.... N•WIJOtlf LANOINO INIWrHrf ..,dll -IOI entlen tl """' • 11 lllr• r1cuda 11 llOnllo. 2 vtnowtall. • r11('1> 11•1'1. t H mAdlMtl 6' "''" tllaMOut Olympic Games hlatory Track and field medallata ~WI ••l•·MmTlllt ltl&..AY 1"1. 1'9dr ....... I OrHI arlleln l0.111d ~. Ha.rold MeelnlOtfl, VlclOI' O'ArCV, Wllll.m M · _...,,Ill), •24. 2 Swodton U11en MIJ/fl«, Cllorln Luther, Turt ,..,uon. Kl'IUI Llndbore>. 47 6. Ol~llflocl Gormonv (Otlo ltOl\I', Mu Herrman11, Erwin Ktrn. "lcllarO lt1u). 1t1L Alflwen I Un1ttc1 $fttH (Cl!Mln f"Mtdock, J.cll. ~ Sctloll. LOl'ln M4ir0\ltofl, Merri• Klr11.r.evl. 42 2, l Fr111Ce (ltot>t TlttrO, lttN Lortln, It-Moynon, Emile AM Kl\ln), 42 6; ) SwtoOtn (AtM HOlmafrom, Wllltem ia.ltr•Mll'I S¥tll Malf!'I, Nh Sal'ld· slroml, 42 t ,,.,., ... ,.. I. UNttO Stalea (Fr111CI• Hunav. LOUii Clerkt, Loren Murctllto<1, Altf.O l.aconrf>. '1 O. 1 Gr11t Brila•n (Herold A11tt11em.. Wtlltr lte!>fflrf Ltnc:eiot ltoVlt, Wlllam Nichol), 412, 3 Hotteno IJKOll hot, Halll'lcut Broo•, Jt n oe Vrl"· Marlllu\ ,,.,., oon '"'"' 411 1'18, Am.-..m I United Stal" (Frank W\lkOH, Jarntt Quinn, Cl\arlts aorell, Henrv ltu1ta111. 41 o. 2 Gtl'manv <Georo Ltmmws. 1111c11aro Corlt, Hul>trl HOUbtll. HtlmulPI KornltJ '1 2, l Gr"t arllaln <C vrll Giit, Ellls Smoul"ta, Weller ltll"llltitY, JICk Lon<lonl. 41.1 1tn. L.e1 .._.. t UnlltO SlttH (lto11tr1 l(lewl, Emmett T09plno, Hector Over, Frenl\ Wvkoffl, 40.0, 2 Gtrm1nv (Htlmull"t Kornlg, Frl.Orlcl"t Htn<Wlx, Erich Borcl"t~ver. Arlhur JOllllll), 40 '· ) llt!Y (Gtusaoe>e CH lt lll, lluooero Martoolll. Gal>rltle Salvlt ll, Edoaroo Toettll, •I 2 ln6 • ..,,., l Urtll.O Sltl9' (JH.M Owen•. Ralon Malealte, Foy Ortl>Of, Franll. W'flloffl, )91. 1 lletv (Ortzlo Mirian!, Gianni Caldll'lt, Ello ltaonl, Tutllo Gonrtlllll, 41 I, l Gtr· menv (Wiiheim Lt lcllum. Eric!\ Boretlmever, Erwin GIMmolller, GtrO Hornl>trverl 4 I 2 1'4t.~ I Unlleo State. <Norwooo larnev" Ewtll. LOOf'IZO Wr'91'tt, Harri'°" 0111aro. ~In Patton), .0.6, 2 Grn1 8rll1ln IJOl!n •re,,., Jonn GrtQor'Y, All•l1lr M.c.Cor • GUOdllt. Kennell\ Jontil, 41.l, l 1111v (Mk'l'tlit Tllo. Enrico ~vceor>I Antonio Slckll, Ce rio Monll), •IS. ltn. HelMl*I I Ul'llltcl Sltllt (F Doan Smlll"t, Her· rllOfl Olllaro, Llnov lltmlelno, AllOrtw St•nlle!Ol. 40.1; 2 So"'ltl Ul'llon <8or1• Bf"i"Mll Open (at St. Andrew•, ScaMnd 176 Stvt B•''"leros '1 I SOO 69-61·10·69 211 Bernl"taro La ,,ger «1 470 7 I ·61·61-71 Tom Weir.on, S4 1 •70 71 ·61·'6·73 111 F•eo CCMJe><H SH 140 70·69·1•· .. Lennv Wedtr.1ns U S 740 70·6'·73·69 2t2 Nici< F1•00 '11 )07 Greg Normen S21 301 213 ~r~ McCumDtr Sii S90 214 Hugh BtootC1'11 s 14,"3 1111 Btlltr Fll'ICll SI• "3 Gr er.am Mtr\11 s 14 6'J R or11n ll alftflv s 14 6'J Sam Torrenct II• 643 21.S Andv BHn. Sl.777 8 111 Bergin SI 717 !Ct n Brown Sl,177 Halt Ir win. SI. 777 Sa ndv Lvlt , '8,117 Peter Senior $1,777 Lff Trevino, Sl.777 Fuu v Zoalltr SI 771 ,.. 8tn Crt n111aw SS.OOS Peter JacobH n, SS OOS Tom 1(11t, sS,OOS Git Morgen, SS,OOS Cort v Pevln sS,OOS Paul Wav SS,OOS 117 Terrv Gett SJ.IJS Jel~ Gonze1t1 S3 13S Craig SleOltf'. S3.13S 2N Rou Orummono SJ.377 Bernero Ga~acl"ttr Sl.377 Jonnny Mm~ U 377 Jec1< N1ck1tu1 SJ.377 Pntt.o Perlo.in Sl 377 lit JOH Mar•• Cn1r\ s? 199 Oe v10 Oun~ '2,199 JtvH111 nm Jemts H19gertv S2 199 Gavin Lt •itn10n. J2 m Ewen Murrev, S2.t9t Tommv Neke11m S1 899 Ma,,uet Pinero U .199 290 Merk Jt mts, s2.S04 Martin Poxon, '2.504 Nlctr. Price, S1 504 2tl IH O Aoki, '2.270 Mtnutl Ctltro, S?,210 Roger Ct11Pman. U.no Boo Cl"terle•, u no Ot vld Fro1I '2.2?0 1'1 Rtcllerd Boxell sl,9'.13 John Cn11111 Sl.933 Howard Clerk s 1,933 ,., BtN Lor.gmuor, s 1 613 M1~otmMtcl(n1 11613 Em11;0 Roongutr s l 613 O•v'O lllun11 l I 613 2'• s11>u•o Fu• k, 11 soe 1tS JOM Garl'ft l I 00 Ga•v !loch \I 430 m A•C• Htrtma11 i i 430 Neom•c•11 Otek SI Al() Quad Clt1e1 Ooen (ti (Ml v ......... ) 1" Scott HOCll s.3' 000 111 George Arc11er i 14 t ll Vert<.t HHfner 114 93J Ot Yt SIO('ll.lon.s u tl) 1n Curt Bvrum.S7 tOO Ciarv HtllO.rg \1 600 l7J T C Chet> M 700 274 lttndY W•lkl11• SS 200 Brtll u-sS.200 Lll'ldV Miiier U ,200 1 111 Celftt,$5,200 Jim Gallaol"ttr .U 200 WoodV llad<ll.irn,IS 100 l7S Mtkt Morla!' '3,100 1 1" Kre1t.,1 U .200 C l"tr It "'9ff!f U 200 1 11 Sanoar I.UGO OtMla W•~ U 200 Oan Htl'OorMln. tJ. JOit lttd HYcllOii. '3 '°° Vt JoM Adamt,U OIO ltOll Slfee11., S1 OIO Tim North.U OM lttn or..,.,,n -Oan Croonoir•• JtOIO 111 ._ ..... ~,1 - Lon H•rlklt,Sl 4IO Deott '"'·"'* Grier-'-t i 4IO Ired a"'9nl,'1 4'0 Frtnll '°"""·'"' JOI\ Chaff"·'"' looev StrMte,..,. L Ttn l roec•.1"9 Gtr\I P ""' "" L .. lt1Mtor,St9t lt!At Coc:11r1n,SM ,,,.., .... , OC'll I "" 'I • 69· .. ·76·69 61·1•·7•·67 14·67·11·70 12-10·10·7? "·66·71·7' 10-1•·n·61 74·12·61·11 .74-74-66· 70 71-69·7S·6' 7S-7l·66-71 1•-11·11· .. 1S-61·10·11 7S·11·71·67 74· 10-70·71 10·67·15·13 71-11·71·71 72 ·IS· 70·'9 67·13·13-73 69·71-74·72 71-71·71·13 71·H·71-6' 73·72·69·71 11-7•·11·10 69·71-76·7! 15-70-70·11 11 ·11 ·6'·11 10-14-72·12 7S·71-70-7? 1'·11·61·11 73-73-73·'9 10·71·12·16 11-n -n -13 7]-71-73-72 71·H ·72·72 14·10·13·12 11-14-11·11 10·11 ,~ 74 71·11·1'·11 10-13·72 1S 10·14·13·13 74-73-72-71 11·1•·13·13 1S·11 ·72·11 11-1•-70 7S 1S·73·70·7l 16·72-70-7) 71·74·73-74 71·71·1S·74 14·7• 11-n 61·11·19-16 12·12-1•·1S 7•-1• 69 76 73·7•·71-75 n n 74 1~ 7• 11 1• 70 7S-73·10 11 10-13·7•·11 12·16·10-11 61 ,, 66 .. 71·0 ·'6 ... 64·•1·6f·11 64 " 11 70 10·66 ., ... 71 61·6' t S ,, .... ,s 10 71·6S·6' 1J '7·6'·'1·11 .. -70·'7·•• ...... ., 1l 61· 11-'1 " ... ,,on 11 •s ,~ .. ,, ., ... 70 .... ,.,, ... n·n ·.,·10 "•7·6'·70 ,, .. , ... ... 72., .... .. '°' ....... .. ,, ..... ,. 10 70-6l-t1·14 ...... ,~ 10-••·tt• ,. ,.. .... n.,.._.,.., .... ,..,. .. 10-n-.. 71·••-6' ,, ,.. ... ,. ... •1·n·•1 n 11·10-'1·10 11 •• 61 11 ...... 71.71 7, ,, .... 70 6S·70·7> t1·1lo71 •• fOlletYtv. Levan Ktlvevtv, L.n111 \anec111, Vladimlt Ml'tervtvl, 40.J, J. 1111,,..f'; (L&UIO ZMtnOI. GIH Ver..-. Ovorov Caanv1 ..... Gol0ove1wl), 40 S ltM,M•1bll'lllt I Unlltd $1tl9' (Ira 111\urdllton, L.Aemon (tne, W Tllano laluw, ltooett ~t-), >t J. 2 ~lot Ul'l6oll (lot1a Totwrvtrv, Vlodlmlr ~llarvfY, Laonlcl ..,_,.,..., '1'"'1 l(Ot'Q¥olovl JIU, :J Wftl <HtmoMv ILotllor Knor1er, ~rd ~. Heinr Fuflertr Manfr.O Ottmot). 40J '*· "-I Wnl ~rNl'IY (..,.W Cullmonn. Annin Herr. Wt!ltf' Melllandorl, Marlio LI"" l, 1' $. 2 Soviet Urtlofl I Gultnlll Kow nov, Leonid Btrllf!VtV, Yuri K-vltlOv, EO'Ylft OtOM), 40 I. ) Gr11t Britain (li'tltf' ltocttord, OnlO Jofte\, OovlO SaNJ. Nav111t Wt>ll~I .a 2 I ... , T•v• I Ul'llltcl S••tt• (0 P1ul Dr•vton. :Oert lO A..,worth ltlcl'lafd St~. ltooert Hev") >fO, 2 PcMano (Al\Orlll ZlellMlll. Niell1w Man.al<, Marle n Folll, Mar1111 Ouozle"), >f ), 3 France IP1ut G«ltv•v Btf'naro L1ie1tl>tVf' Cl•UOt Ploutme• Joeolvn Otlocoufl, )9 ) , .... Me•kt ClfY 1 Unlltcl SltlH ICl"tarltt Gr1t11t, MtlVI" Penotr Ronnie 1t1v Smith, Jtmes Hlllffl Jt 2, 2 Cut>a (Hermea ltamlrtt, Juen ~'"'· P1111o MOtll"· enrlque lflouerot41 :amuel, 31.l , 3 Frence (Gorero FtnoYll, Joellyn Ot!Kour, Clavo. Ploutmal, lt~r a.moue")· 3' 4 I '72, Mllftldl I Unlleo $111" ( L.errv Blaek. llo0tr1 hvio<. Gtrtkl Tints.ti', E«NrtrO Harl). )I 19, 2 Sovltl Union (A.lehanor KOl'lltlvull, Vlaolmlr LOYtlakl, YUl'I Sllot, Vatary lortOY), 3' SO, 3 W"t Gwmonv (JOll1I Hlractlt, Kerltlelnz KIOtr, v.m.ro Wuellt<er KMiu• Ellt), ll 7t 1'76,,..,.,.... 1 UN!tcl Statt1 (Harvev Glanca, JOl'ln Wt1lav -'-· Miiiard H•mPIOf\, SleYon ltlGOlcll.1. 3'.33, 2 EHi ~many IMll'l+rtcl ICOllot JOf't Pfeifer IClaV'·Oltt"' KUl'rtl. •1exanoor Tlli.mtl 3' u l Soviet Union (Altaonotr AUlntn, Nllloial Ko4etnokov vurlv SllO'I•. V11trv lortO•) 3' 71 I ... Mtecaw I Sovie! Union (VlaOlmor WY.Kt ttVOY. Nlltolal Sldorov, AltkM~ Allllnln. AnOrtl PrOllofltv), ll ?•. 2 Poleno (l(r1vu1o1 ZwOlll'ltlll, Zenon Llc1111r1kl, \..elltll Oul'lftl. Marten Woronlnl, llll; > Frtl'IQI (Al'llolM ltlcflerd, Ptacal larre. Petrick Barre, H.,mal'\n Ptntol. •.$3 Grltt MoOOv,1991 Botl EHIWood,19'1 Tom Ltt\man.1ttt Tom Valentlne,s"' M C1teevecc11l1,St9t 119 Mll<t McCullough,SSfO VlctOf' lt"elaOO,SSfO Oavlo Ollrln,sm GreQ Fa rrow,SSfO AnO'Y Nortl"t,SSto Aoam Aoam•.SSto Jn cu00.ssto Jim He11tt S470 J ae• Sprto In 1470 Gtt>t Saver\ IA 70 Jtfi TPIOm .. 11 $470 l'(OO Cur M70 John Horne 1470 Ptul A!•"llfr SAU Ctvoe 111890 w• AMOf'•O Ceroe S..U Gr19 Powtr\ s.u.t J~ M1lchelt SA« B•uct F•el•ner '430 Brven Nortorl SAJO Gery Krutr11tr Mn Ot 't Oouglan un 111 ,., 114 Jolln Sla ugnttr M I• Cn1 ROOr19uez U I• KC Llto.I~ m M1cl"ttt1 Cunn1no,s400 6'·70-71-71 73·67·69·'9 70-69·61·71 61·71·61·71 73·6'· 70-69 71·61·69·72 7'-65·61·70 69-69· 71·70 ,, ....... 10 13·'7·70-69 71· .. ·69·70 70·'1·72-10 •7·11-70·11 11-67·70-11 10·69·6'-n ...... 71 .72 70·71 ·'6·73 72 ....... 71 71·'9·'7·7• n-61·69·17 72·67-69·73 10·69·71·71 7?·'6·70-7) 10-10· 73·69 72·67 ·61·7S .. ·13·69-1) 77·67 n n ..-- 11·10· 71 "77 14·67 69 ,. 71·67· 1S· 10 77·69·70·7~ 61 121613 LPGA tourna"*1t (II ltldlesttf, N.Y.) 111 Kt lhv Wrtll•IYlh, IJO 000 1'(0•11 Jone• 111 .000 1IS Ctlh• Marino s 13 000 111 Pel 8raO'f• JI0.000 Lt" Youno '10 000 -Laur· Pet~son U .167 Mvre Van HOOH It 167 BtlSV l(ong M 1'6 1tt Donne H W"11t U ,)00 Ct ll'lv Mor .. SA JOO 1to Joanne Carner SJ.JS. A ltt1nl\arOI SJ,JSS Jane 8te lOCll. SJ lSS 1'1 8tlh Daniel. S?,733 1<a111rvn YOUl'lil S2 133 Sa nore Hevnta S1 732 192 Amv Belli S2,2lt Jat>tl Andef'•on S2 219 Jo Ann Wesl\tm, S2 211 Otlt Eg"411'19 '2.211 193 Chris JOt'tnson. s 1.101 C MonlCIO!TltrV \1,101 S Btrtolacclnl, s 1 107 Beckv PHrson. 11.101 Karl"tv Beker. SI 107 Jane GtOdH, s I 101 1tS s.,. F ooieman SI 37' Vtc"I Atvartr S 1 316 PtllV Ht Vt\ \I .376 Ptll R1110 SI 376 Pat Mtver1 s I .l16 ,,. SP>trr· T urnt• S 1 Ito Terr LUCl<llur1• SI lt6 Bt lh SolOmo,., l I I~ B••trlfY o...... s I 196 1'1 M F gvt'ai•Oo1t1 SI 0.7 Jene Crt ll... 'I 0.1 Ktv IC.tnf'edv SI 0.1 Btv .. tv Klan 'I 0.1 S.nv L•lllt s I 0.1 Joan Jove• 1t1t OtllC>lt Ha• st1t Oewn Cot n1t 0 Ari\ Larni Stlt MlndY MOort l tlt ltuth J•1s.n st1• M.,v 0.ICK'ICI stll Donna Caoon., it" Marttnt Ht9" M It Marlene Ftovo. 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'1 '1 ,. ,~ 7) H 7J 73 1S 11 1l •• 11 H · 7S 1' ot ,. ,. ,. 7) 1• 1) TS 7S 76 15 10 ,. 1J n 14 11 11 '' n n 1S 1\1S1) 1 S 7S 14 1• 1s n ·n 1• It 1\ 71 7S ,, 10· 1S ,. n n ,, n II 71 13 7• ,. 1•-15 " 7• 7S· 16 14 73 7•·7S·77 1• 13·1•·11 71 ... 1S·7' 11·1S·1J 7S ,,. 74· 15· 7S n ·71·7t ·1S 1'·1S·13·1' '7·7l·1?·7t ,,.,, . .., n 10 • n 11 1)· ,..,..,. 1$ 1•·11·1• 11·1S•1$•1S 11°n 15.n 11 n -1•-11 7) ,., u ., n ·75·19·n 1• , •• ,..,, 11· n· 1'1· 1• 7! n-1M• ,.. ,.. ,.,.11 0 76·7~ ""~ ,, ·11 80 74 •·70-80•7\ 80 7M~ 11 Otange Coat OAJLV PILOT/Mond Mldtl• IOO lat .,...,.... Mk!l.l • ltt•lll'• o1 ttlt MICTll"" SOD llldl"Qt ract, wlll'l IVN of c.t1. laPt ~-•'Id w1nnar·1 1""'" ,...., "',,..... I MatlO A,.,,ettl, LOit T -eoo-C•t-1 210. 112A2 1 Ttm SMva, MerOI ..C•C..'"""1, 190 ' lttct. ~ •• Mercl"t NC·C•n•or1h 150 • CiordOn Jot111COC•, Me<Cll ..C•C•· worth. 250 S ltooert Gutrtero C~t ~c,n 14C·Cot•ortl"t. 150 • P1ndl0 Con er, March 14C·C•worttt, , .. 1 Jokrttt>y ltu"'-"orO, Merell l4C•C0t• "'°'"'· '""' I l<.t v111 COHll, Martt1 14C·CotWW111, , .. • Geoff l rltltlam, Av•"•'"· Mal'Cn 14C-Coswonn. 24 10 OtMv ~Ivel'!, L0t1 T·D ·CO.• WOfltl fAI 11 JONl9 Garu, Ma•ICO, l•olol'Cll ...C:- CoswOl'lll, 161 12 Olea Sif'llOI\ Maren .. c:-c .. wor111 tft ll Scoo Bra,,ton. Marc,, l4C·Co1wortt1. Ul 1• li't•t Me••....,. EH1t M •Pontoa<. 141 1S T0t>v lattenllauwn Mere" a.te · Co•wwth. 23S 16 Bia Altl.IP. Aroo JM 1S-Cotw0t'lll 11• 17 Dor• Ot lv trr1no Marc11 ..C· C<>1wor1tt. 214 11 looov lttl\el Maren ...C•Co•wOf'th, 211 It Al Holl>e<! Mara-. UC c;o,wOf'lh, 20t 10 M"l'I-Anortlll Marcl'I MC·IO- Coswortll. 201 ?1 Mowov Holmtt Marci\ a.c: ·C<>1· wortl'I 2'17 21 A J Fovl, Marett 14C·Co••orll"t. 206 23 Garv Banenttau .. n Ma~ch ..C· Co1wortt'I, 201 24 Otnnv 0n9a1, March ~-C<>1worl,,, 117 2S Se>ikt Gtlllt'lau'8" Maren t?C·COI wortll 1S9 2, Al U"ser Jr Marci\ l4C ·Co•worm. 1•1 17 Chlo Gtl'ltU• Martll 14C·Cotwor1h. 140 • 2' Sten Foa Marel> IJC·Cot-11'! 112 1' Ptut Kruae« MIV(1'1 13C·Coswon,, >O Al Un1tr M¥Cfl MC ·CMWO(lt'I n 31 Cl!tl If •P '""'"'' PC10-Foro Sl l'2 Sieve Cl'IHM'r, Marcti IX·Cl'lev ,_, li I3 EO Plmm. Maret> 13C·Cl'to¥rOlel, n Chrl• Knt•ftl, P rlmu••Coawortrt, wttl!dr'eW orlor 10 rea o.. 10 ....,..., OtvmDk Twd\ R•v TODAY 6 • m -0toar1 Sa" 01,,,., t.30 e.m -Arrive O<'tltrlo Noori -Arrive CorOM S.30 o.m -Arr•vt Mvrlllll 7·10 o.m -Arrive ltanctlo C•ll'or"i' 1:20 • m -ArrlYt EscondldO. remain over"1gt11 '.. 1VUDAY 6 t m -DJo.,.1 Etcon0.00 I 10 • m -ArrtYt San o- 120 om -ArrlYt LI Mew • 4S om -Arr ve Cflule Ville t 4S Pm -Arr•v• Coron•OO I 15 e m -"'""• Le JCl'la ,...,,.,, ovtrnlllf'!I WIEON•SDAY 6 a m -0-rl Lt J~a 1 SO t m -Arr "' Sa" 0 tQO 11 SS 1 rr1 -•rr .,. Camo F'9nclleton USMC t>ait 3 30 p m -Arr vt $en Clfme<'llt 9 IS Pm -A" vt Nt•OO" !MIC" I It e ..,. -A•• vt C<nt• Mna ,,,,...,,, ove<n1gnt THUIUDAY • e m -0.01' • Cot•• 111\t'W I • ,., -Ar• vt S4onte At>t 9 40 • m -Arr-vt Ant "f "" 11 SS t m -Arrive CVO<H\ 2 40 om -Ar•·•• Fulltfll>" 120 pm -Arr•vt Norwa o. 11 JO a m -Arrive Lono Beecn remain overn1gn1 Loc.attons to< J: r •o.. Julv 11 t no Saturday Julv n '""" tit •MOUnC.0 •' e 1411er time Water De6e WOMRN'S f'INA CUii' (~) A111tnllt t , """'" Sftlft 6 Au\l•t 11 2 2 ) 2-t UniltO State\ 1 l 1 ~ •u&ira •I KO••no S-0 J Ht "G•t v Peri.es 1 M '' I lhvner I US Kor•no Sm•I., 0 Too1t l B•t<i>or Gt KOll I Lt Pa,, I °"*' kwt Tne Ntll'ltf '"°' )0 Ne... Zn ano , ICO'ISOlll•onl HA.SL RASTIEltN OIVISK>N W L C.f' G• II" '°" Cl"t•ClllO 9 1 U 1t ~ I I Cosmos I S 2• 23 » 10 Tl)(OtllO I I 11 1q 10 •1 Tamot Ba. 6 10 27 JI 20 ~ WRSTEltN OlVl~N W L Gii' CO.I .,_ l"n II t l>COUYt • IQ )0 2~ 26 .. M1nnt1ore q 26 1• 71 71 $•" O•l90 • • 2• 21 n ... G-Bev • Jl )I 2~ •1 .,.'"" IQ n ~ 27 "' S w 00·""•\ •f"t •-•rde-0 ~o· a '•9..1latt0'" iO' ov~,,,,,,,.,. ,...,r\ •o~ir oo .. ,, to" a \hoo'Ou' ..,,ct~v •~ O"if 00"""' oo ,.. fo• .,..,.,..., • 'COf'l"O w tt't a ""'a• l""l""l~w. o• •f'l•N Of'" Oa"'" • No IJOl'lus 00•"' s twa•a.a 'Or c•t''"" o• \"<>Olou• ooe•\ ~v·sS<-. No game' K'*'.i14'0 T .. V'• Ga-. NO g111l"'lt\ K lltOJltoO W..nM 1rafn.adllMa IA.Ma ALI. ~L.1991M 0 All.LAN0 4 1-PltetO Mlllt TMr•1 1111Cfltf' on Iha acllvt rotter 0oll0flt4 Cll•I• CoOltoll P•IC~ 10 TKOmt of IN l>actfl< Cou t LtHvt MallitMIL""" ~T LOVI~ CAltOINAl 5-fl\ectd GWlll It~ calciM!' Otl Iha 1$ Oav O "'1>19<1 1.11 A(HYt lH 01M¥ Coa Dltc:IW $AN DIEGO l"AOlt s-<: .... ue Gt .. Hetr \ Dltct>t< ,,_ LH VeQn °' ,,,. '"8c.H-< C °''' L MeUt llOOTa.Al.I. ... .._. ....... L_ CLEV(LANO a1t~N$-Wll'led Jlrl\ ,,_., ""'°' rKllV'tr ~IC1'ler0 lltOC!"t llllolCleell"' '"° C"'111 ~ "°""' N<CM'TOI 11'0 o.rt«t ~ ~· ... lleCtl' AMOullClle 11\ot J~ ltll'YN!ltft I'll"· llil'lt IMIC:k. Jflll li.vtooci. ll~tt • MIO '"*"-' WtollWNMI, "911' end WOl\,/Mlf'l!y lafl ~ HOUST~ OILlttS-si.. to lt\ltl '"'9 Mtfl"t' 'O a !ell' _, C*lltKI PHILAOIL,.MIA lAOLIS-Sltt'lff TtcM "*""91 llCkll •o a 1tr'-"' -· ....., C'9tltr-" 11'1TTMU1t0H UE£t.••~¥Wtl ..... MlU ~. ~t.tt ..._, SCIO!! ScNlll•. -t!Klllt ~ w ..... Ttton...Mft --r~ SAN FltANCIKO fKlt We'""° o.r.. '0.11• IKl>lt $'91190 ,,.,,, ~..,... -.. 111<.ll.lt, 11111 Mike ~ ~..,. llfllfl"tefl Cyclists missed chance Olympian believes bOycott hurt U.S. more than Soviets LOS ANGELES-U.S. Olympian Mark Gonk.1 from Costa Mesa D)'I he and tht other members of lhe cycltna team suffered more fro the 1980 boycon than the Sovieu will from thetrcurrent refusal tocompc&.e. Gorski was on tht 1980 team that stayed homt wbtn President Junmy Caner ord.cred a boycott of the Games m M°"'ow. '"For cyc::Jina and other sporu not cons1dCRd as popular an the Urutcd States, the Olympac Games is a onc:e- 1n-a-hfcume opponun.at)' to be io the spotllaht. ·• said Gorski ... to oompne for recoaniti.oo after a lot ofhald •-oft and dedJcauon." Oo the ot.htt band. ht said, "lo the Soviet Uruon, East Germany aftd other Eutern European nations. life as a cychst aoes on at a h.tgb level. Olympics or nOL" Ramon to be eqa.uhecl LOS ANGELES -Dtd you bear about .. ? Offioals want to squash any base- less rumon dunng the Games. so the Olympic Secunty Planruna C.Ommat- tee and the Los Anateles Count) Comm1uaon on Human Relat>ons have let up a Rumor Control Center. .. We've developed a network of oommunnycooiacu to venfyordeny rum on." said l.J.ooel Maruna, spokesman for the county oom- missaon. The ~nter plans to deal mott.ll wsth reports of dcmoostratlons., po· 1ucal parades or pol.Jee policies. and will not answer questions about any suspect.Cd acts ofterronsm. Martano wd Aid from the oppoeltlon A.RCA.DIA -Lucinda Grttn of Gmat Bnuun. a favontc m the thru- day cvtnt of the Olympic equesuun com~uuon. Sttured her mount from an A.ustnhan ~ho wants his tc~m to beat hers. "'1 s.old Regal Realm to her follo•- ms. a three-day C\;ent al Fon- tainebleau. France. 1n 1980.'' said Men &nnen a mtmbtr of the .\ustrahan Ol)mp1c team With RegaJ Realm. Ms. Green "on the 1982 world title and she'll 'be ndmg him 10 the Oh mpics &nnett. who was on the 4-ustrahan three-da) team which won a bronze mtdal at the I Q76 Games in Mon- treal. observed "I don't think the horse rtmemhers me an)' more Hill ends holdout with Rams .\II-Pro offensive guard "'ent Hill ended a t"C>-<ia' holdout when ht rcpon ed to the Rams· traming c.aau> at Cal late Fullerton and practiced Sunda' The ·Rams announced no fines for the 27-year-old Hill. a six-year vet- eran who has been a starter for the team SIOC( the eighth µme of has rookie season. Htll practiced with the club Sunda'. The 6-5 ~60-pounderwhowantsto re-negotiate his current contract With the Rams which will pa\ him the relauveh modest sums ol S 140.000 this \tar and SI 50.000 in IQ85 The Rams also announC'C'd that free-agent "1de recr1vcr Gordon Jones had signed a ne" contract and reponed tu camp He was due to rract1cc toda' after ta~mg a ph-, ical e\am1nat1on "1can .... h1k l"O ~<'' 'eterans re- mained holdouts Oftensl\c tackle Jad.1<" \later and linebacker Jim C-olhns. both in the option )CU of their contract,. have not reported to camp Jn other ne.,.,s. ~ond·~ear runnina had. Enc Dickerson m1~ practi~ for the ~ond conS«ull' c da\-wuh a mild cal( of tons1ht1s. Rescr'e nm- 01n1 back Dwayne Crutchfield also mts5td practtcC'd Sund•) With a "ramed th1&h muscle Christensen •till Raider no-show ~.\NTA RO A ( ._P)-Two maH-ma playen . two mino r tnJ\111~ and th.rtt pla~cn relea~ lo\Ctt ~ ""'°'" worth' uem5 from l~ Lo .\ngc~ R11dm' trainina camp un<U)·. ttll 1bxn1 wicre tllht end Todd C'hn11en\Cn (Yoho has not bttn an communicatton walh the Ratdcnl and hncbeckcr Ted Hcndncks (u- pccted back todlJ or Tuesday) Hun ~T'f defensive bKu Lcatr Hayn (bru'jc:d tln&b) and M1k.t Dava' (5traincd ham1tnll&), bua th art e~pccted 10 mta • muumal amount of pnruct Gone werr wtde rece1vt:t JtR'York (Cal State F'ulknon). quanerba John Ropn rYaltl llnd runn1na Lam H<'•ltr t ~n101'\1) C4 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday. July 23, 1984 -~ l Ovett arrives in LA Steve Ovett of Great Britain. a aolld medal candidate ln the 800 and l ,500-meter runa of the track and field competition. arrlvea ln Loe Angelea for the upcoming Olympic Gamea. which begln Saturday. HORLACHER WARREN LU (BUD) HORLACHER. 48 years old, died Jull 16 m Oranae. Cali Survtwd by dau&}l· ter. Valeri• Ann~ H o rlacher pu•nu ~_. and Gladys Horlacher, brolhu. Robert Wayne Horlachc:r. 1latera, Loretta Horlacher. Donna Brady, and Patrlcia Holland, w\d many ne1ce1 and nephews. Memonal services Thursday July 26. 1984 at 1 PM at Arlington Mortuary Chapel, t.n Rwenide with prt· vate lntennent Lake Shasta. Cabf Arlmg· ton Mortuary Fu- neral Di recto rs. 698-1011 PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetary • Mortuary Chapel • Crematory 500 Pacific View Drive NewPort Beach 6•4-2700 McCORMICK MORTUARY 1795 Laguna Canyon Road Laguna Beach. Ca 9265t 494.9415 HARBOR LAWN· MT. OLIVE. Mortuary • Cemetary Crematory 1625 Gisler Ave Co11ta Mesa 540-5554 PIERCE BROTHERS BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 1 10 Broadway Costa Mesa 6•2·9150 NOnce I ACTmOU•..,..... ,ec'fTTIOU9 eu-.. N0110I °" INVfTlttQ MAim aTA ,....,.-Y NAMI IT ATIMIWT MM1tW. '8 IALI 11D9 The f()llowtno pereon le TM kJlowtne P9fWOfll WI T"'119 AOCk Vi.ta HOfN- Notac. 11 ~y (11_, INltlOOlng bullne9 II dOinC ~ •· OWMr't Alln., ~ V-. the &owd of Trvatw of the NEW~T MAAKETINO A~IAHAOOA COM· Jarry Wright, OIMm'rt. Mo. Huntington hach Union PAOOUCTIONS, 30 U MUHICATIONS, 1 ... ..._. 410 711 High SChool Otalncl wtll r• Cwot> St , Newport 8Moh. P<I" BtYd .• St. 140. co.ta ty wt111of111 ~ oerw _.., tMdll tw euppty· CA t2eeO Meea. CA 92'27 ._..., on JuM 4, tN4, by Ing M11ntanenca SatvlCe Aon A ~· 3015 Rudolt>h J~ 20061 tM Superior Court. (Jlldoo Work PrclCIHlng [qutpment CatOb St. 8Mcfl, LIW9Gn Ln Huntington ment "''.,.., on ·~) M1i9t1ng Of 9QU81 10 Ille CA 9~ Beadl. CA 92648 County of Orange. •tate ol ~tlone on Ne In the Thi• t>ueln... 11 con· Robatt £ Naw911, 47 •I c.lltof'*. U90n a Judamlnt omcia or Mid dletrlct duclact by an Individual FWtlafd. Antlllelm. CA entat9d In feYOr Of l'urtll Bid •h•ll bl clurly Aon R Melltng Hugh StlPN• ~11 233 Roelc v .... Horneownwt A-. marked "Mllntananoe Ser. Thlt 1111ement wa llled WoodCr99k Aoao. n • "" IOQletlon 11 fudgl'Mnl crwdl- vlca • Work Prooe11lng With the County Cl«tl of Or· Ing, ILL. 80090 t~ and . 191lnet Jwry EQUll)ment Bid #571". ad· anga County on July 12, lhl• butln... le con-Wr t u iuooment o.bt~ d,..., to Attyn e: Rowl9y, 1984 ducltld by; a llmlt~ pannat· Of(•, anowtng a Ml belaN» Purc:t1..ino Menaow, Hunt· ,._ llhlp of ~.187.18 actu.lly due on lngton 8Mcll Union HIOI\ Pua>llth9d Or11iga Cout ~ Johneol• Mid judgment on tN data of School Dl•trlot, 10251 Deify PllOI July 18. 23. ao. Thi• 1ta'*"49nt WU fUed ""i..,enoa of Mid IUCU- 'Vontlown AYI., HUlltlngton Augual 8, 1984 wl1tl the County c.tl! of Of· tlon, I he~ leYled upon all 8each, CA. 92Ma lllcf r.. M. 73 ang.e County on July 10, the right, tltte end lnt ... t of ~YM at Of befOf'e 3.00 tf8.4 Mid ludQmant <MblOf'(I) In p m . July 3 t. 1"4. It whlctl "9011, IM property In tM County of uma and piece bid• wlll be Publlen.d Ota~ Cout Otanga, State or Cellfomla, pubtldy °'**' and reed PUBUC NOTICE Dally Pll01 July '"· 23, 30, dtterlbed .. rottowe· !ect1 bid lhall rem .. n valid Augult 8. 1984 M~76 Unit t2, Lot 3, Tract 1&92. lor • perlOd of 45 d•Y' 1tter NOnca Of1 nlOOf'oed In Book 422, P1191 the dat11peclftld for the re TRUIT'la'I IALa PtB.JC NOTIC[ 1.1. Otnotal Rec«de of Ot· celpt of blOe LOM No. 71 1ng1 County. California. the Boafd or Trull--41m-1/1.IKAI flCTmOU8 IWelM!ll Commonly llnown u 24 lhalt ~the** Judo-Of lhe T ... No. K-1-..... ITATR•NT RuetHng Wind. lt'\'lna. CA QUlllty of equipment on.rid UNIT coo. H TM follo'#tng per.an• .... Property IUbjeet to ,.. and rlletWI tt11 right 10 r• IUPt!RIOR T1Tl.E dOlng ~,_ u demptlon • refer to CCP jaCt any or Ill bide end to a«AVICI., I.NC. G I R DISTRIBUTORS 729 010(bl Wal\1'8 any lrregul11tly there-.. duly appointed Tru•I• CORPORATION -PA r10 Pro•pactlv• bidden lo under tile followtng de-BELLO, 3837 E. Pacific lhould ref9r to ~lone Sig~ Allyn E Rowley ecrlbe<I 0..0 of tNll WILL Cout Hwy . CO<ona del M11. 701.5t0 to 701 8&0, In· PurchUlng Maneoer SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION Calif 92826 clUllYI, of lhe Code of CMI Publlehed Orange Coaet TO THE HIGHEST BIDOER Ruth Marquez J . 345 Proc:.oure for provtelone Dally PllOI July 18, 23 t984 FOR CASH ANO/OR THE Promontory Dr Eall. New· governing the llflM. eon- M·71 CASHIERS ~ CERTIFIED l>Of1 BMc:tt, Caltt 92MO dhlone. and .n.c:t of the._ CHECKS SPECIFIED IN JOf'ga H M .... 345 Prom· end lhl llablllty of o.faultlng CIVIL CODE SECTION ontory Or Eut, Newpor1 bidders, 2924h(peyablallthetlmeol Beach,Callf 92MO NOTICE IS HEREBY -------tC---Ille In .. wtul money or the Thi• buelnan II con· GIVEN th1t on Wad .. Augutl . P\alC NOT E United Stal .. ) all right, lltle ducted by 1 corporation 8th, 1984. at 2:00 o'clock LIGAl. NOTtCr and lnternt conveyed to Ruth Marquez. Vici PrMI· p.m et 4ll01 Jamborel 81 .. and now held by It undef d.nt Newport 8Nch, CA .. City of NOTICE IS HEREBY Hid Dead ot Truet In the Ttil• etatament Wll Ried Newport 8Nch. County of GIVEN that the tollowlng property tierelnefter di· wttti the County Ci.<k of Or· Orange, State of Callfomla, I llama or found or .. Yid ecrlbe<I: = County on July t1, wlll Mii at public auctlOn to ~~~h~-~~1.: TRUSTOA WILLIAM 9 Iha hlghlet bidder, for cUf'I ..._..' CHARLES LEKAS '1IOM7 In lawful money of the Unit.cl City of Coal• M ... for • BENEFICIARY. UNION PubHehed Orange Cout St•t•. aJt the right, tlU. ll'ld S*'lod In a1eoete ol rilnety FEDERAL SAVINGS ANO Dally Piiot JulL 23, 30. lnter•t ol Mid judgment \:~·~a~ lO Spd Schwinn LOAN ASSOCIATION Auguet 6. 13. 19 debtor{e) In the above 0. .. ......_ ... , Boy'• Rid 10 Spd RECORDED JllllUll'f 26. M·81 ecrlbed property, or '° ....... ,..... 1982 u lnttr No 82-02735-4 mueh IMreof U ~ be BI c y c I•. Boy•·• S II· of Offlci•I Records In the of· Pla..IC NOTICE necMNly 10 aatlafy Mid IX· vet/Gold/Blue t Spd. Sear. t1 1th d Fr .. Spirit Blcycla, Boy'• flee of the Recotder of Or· K-t2I04 ecu on, w accrue Red 10 Hufty Blcycla tnge County; ITAT'DmNT ()fl lntar11t and ooate. Boy's R!r' ~ 10 Spd• Mid deed ol tru11 CS. AaANOOl-NT Ofl Dltld. Juty 9, 1984 Blcyda, Boy'e Blue lO Spd tcrlbll Iha lollowing prop-UM Of1 =-H=-la&I ~~H~··B~ 3 ~I~• 97ARCEL 1: Unit 81, .. au~nr.ou..:.. Attom.r AOnnoulMl•ll* Ulm ITA,......., The folOW4no pereonl • .. ,.._~-...... t<iMac [HT["""116 ta7W .._,eoat Mte CAt2t2t Ted 0 ..... 8'S&I ... Verde, Montc:Mlr. CA 111, The Yan Oano. It =·Colt• ....... c Thia l>V91MM II 001 duct.cl by. • oan«tll pei Ml"lfllp T.c!O.W Thia etatament ._ flM wtth IM County Ca.ti of Q = Coutlty on ~ 1 9 ,.. Pu~ Orange Coe o.11y Pliot July 23. a Auoutt e. 13. 1914 ~ flUIMJC HbMtQ NOTICE 18 HEAH GIVEN that a putJltc htel'll wllt be held by the Pl.nnll Commllllon of lht City Irvine on Augult 2, 1"4, 7 ;30 p m or • aoon tnar .,,.. .. ooaalt*. In ti lrvlna City Counc ChambeB. 17200 Jarnbon Interim CMc Center. WWI California. on lN ptopoa1 1rv1ne IC*1mant OeY.io mant IOfMmlnl ~ the Ctty of lrvtna and TI !Nine ~)' fOf apei ment1 flAanoed ltlrouotl ti Orange Couoty Mult'-'am Revenue Bond progr11 Agrearnente are being r view.cl fOf the followft tpaltlnlnt projactl: C0<111 Court, Columbl1 Cou1 Wlndwood Glen, Wlllo• and Northwood Partc. It le requaat.cl th1t COi' ment• With regard to It ab<wa publlC helf1ng M fc w11ded to the P11nnl1 Commlllk>n prtor to ti public helflng data fl further pwtk:utan abOut tt publlc hearing, p4eela 0 MG-3M5. Publlahed Orange Coe Delly Piiot My 23, 196" ~ YlllOw 6 Spd. Sell"•~ shown on that oartaln Con· The following pereone 11U1 ltYtne ltfd. and Girl'• GrWI 3 Spd J C domlnlum Plan In Book hlYI abltldoned the UM of J~ CA. ,_ ACnnou9 ~ Penn.y Blcyele 11790, Pege 1091 to 1118 the Flctllloue Bu11n111 M~ County MAim ITATIWJIT NOTICE IS FURTHER ~~.of~~t~al~ Name PEPPERTREE eys.1>19hon~ty cJ:;=:--· GIVEN thll If no owner ap.. f la~ 28 1ye78 aod HEIGHTS, 2964 Santi Ana Published Orange Cout A~MOR MOATGAQI pMTI Ind prOYll hi• own· orn . ~: eOo.t 11640 AY'MUI, Coat• Meu, CA Dally PllOI JI#( 18 23 30 ""' 10 "J " M_ ....... _ 8l'IC 8'9hlp ot the property within r9-fecor • 92628 1994 ' ' ' "" ...,...v_ Mven (71 dayt tollowlng the Pmgee 940 to 987 ~. The Actltlou• Ekillf"IMI M-ee Sant• Ana. CA. 92704 publtcetlon of thl• Nolloa of OtnciaJ Records, In the Of· Name referred to aboYI wu Morton ~. 5413 V the tltle thereto ehllt vest I~ llce of 1118 County Recotdll' flied In Orange County on fltalC NOTICE FUght, Stnta Ana. CA. 921( Archers seeking a little attention the finder, lfll'MW• be one, or of uld County, August e, July t9, 1919 FILE NO Chere D. Aaenk*. 5418 V In the City of Coate M .... In 1978, u defined In tM Dec· F119086 NOTICE IMVITINQ INDI Fl!QllJ, Santa Ana. CA. 927( whldl eaM tM property l11a11on of Reatrlc11ona, ,.. Dal F. Lueon, 3 toe Notlol 11 hereby given tNlt Ar"nulfo Herrera. 241f lh•ll be told al publlc IUC· corded In Book 11784. Monroe Wiy, Cotta Men, the 8o1rd of Truat .. of the Lagrlma, Mlallon \flafO, C, tlon al a time ind d•I• 10 be Pages 139• to 1431 In· CA. 92828 Huritlngton B11eh Union 92892 ennouneed elusive. or Oftlclal Record•. Don Wada. 23 te College High Sct10o1 Dlatrlol wtH ,. Marlaa Hetrwa. 24788 l.J DATED 7/ t2/e4 In the Otfloe of the County Avenue. Coat• M .... CA ~¥9 eeelld bide for IUPP'Y· grlma, Miiiion VlejO, C. R.E. NETH Recorder of Hld County, 92828 Ing SCIENCE CLASSROOM 02992 A CHIEF OF POLICE and any amendment• or an· Jamee Wida, 23 l5 Cot-FURNITURE meeting or Thia t>ualne.. le cot PublleMd Orange CoHt neutloria thereto, and teoa AYIOUI, Colla M .... equel to the IC)eClbtlona ducted by: a ~ ~ BALTZ BERGERON SMITH & TUTHILL WESTCLIFF CHAPEL 437 E 17th St Costa Mesa 546-9371 Delly Piiot July 23, l9M located on that certain rMI CA. 92828 on file In the omce of Mk' nerthlp. M.78 property described 11 Lot 1 Ann Wida, 2315 College Dletrtct Arnulfo Harrer• No money. no exposure in this Olympic sport; American team strong LO~ \ '-C,LU." I \Pl -The problem. a~ ( oa<.h John \\ ilham' and ht" team "ee •l. 1" that to mo'>t ~nwncin'> three of thl' Y.Orl<l\ lx''>t·kno""n ar<. ht·r<, 0tfl' R ohm Hood Wtlltam Tell and C up1d I t'"' ha H' hl·ard o l Darrell Pace. R1t I. ~tt\.tnne\ and Rulh R u "'c who '-'111 ~ \hooting (or lhl g11ld al the \um mer< >I~ mp1c (ramt•\ • Tht· IJ\l ttml' "'l.' rnm pl.'l<.'d in lhc Ol}mp1l' "'e got .1houl 611 '><.·rnnd\ on tek" l\1on. • McK.innt·~. the reigning "'orlc.l champion, said "iunda} But, then. thev are n:altsts. Thn know the big buck'> that flow to mcdal-winn'ing boxers. basketball pl:ncrc; and 01ht•r\ will detour around them "Thl're\ no m o nn tu bt· made in this '>port... ~aid Pace. a la1d-ofT electronics techn1c1an For the past two }cars. he has been training for these Ciames while hts \.\lfe. Beth <\nn. worked a~ a hairdresser. Walhams was the gold-medal ""inner at M un1ch tn 1972 .\\ear later. he turned pro- \Ort of "I "'a" "' 1ng 1n a one-bedroom. $ 140-a- m onth apartment auachcd to a garage, .. he ..aid "The pru tour Y.as t""'o o r three tournament' a \ear II }OU won them. ma\ be 'OU tOuld make $5!X). $I 000 I paid the rent h' c;1s,n1ng a promottonal contract" "'Ith a c;pon ing gooJc. firm Not that Pace minds the anon) m1ty th:n goes -w1 th the re la II\ c '>olitude of archer) ··You do th1'> because vou hke 1t. becau!.e it's a pan of> ou. not hccause ) ou can someda) tum pro and make a lot of mane) at 1t ... added the gold medah~t at the 1976 Montreal 01\ mp1cs and t\A.O·t1ml' "'orld champion. ·•Others e' entuall~ can gel the true 'alue o ut ol the1r medal<. If I 1urncd pro. I'd malo.c JUSt as muth mone' a' I du as an amateur. \.\hKh 1s nothing .. Be">tdes. he addcJ ... the o nh \!o3\ I'd tum pro 1s 1f Rick did .. · ' The" ha\e been "'al'> '>tnCc the mtd·ll170s. .\t last ~ear·, "'urld c hampwnsh1ps. the) finished tied for first place The uc had to be broken h) the number ot IOs -hull's-e)e arrows. One of Pace·., houn<.:ed ofl an arro"" 1n lhl' 10 and landed 1n the 9. That gaH· the tttle 10 M cKinnq To most people. archel) 1s that sum· mename dtvcrs1on w11h a S'i bow-and-arrow set bought at the local to;. stort: But despite what looks hke a lot of soph1st1cated para· phemaha -sights and s tab1ll1crs on the $700 bow, and $18 carbon-graphite arro""s - there's not a whole lot of difference hct~een that and world-class competttton. "You ha'e to stand up there and shoot an arrow at a target That's all there ts to 11:· Pace said Except that he and his team ma tee; tend to hit the bull's-e-.c 99 ttmes out <.>f I 00 "That'c; 1us1 practtce ... he said And conccntra11on ··Th1\ isn't a 'ph)s1cal' .. pon like. sa) g;.mnasttcs. Y.herc the com· pe11t1,e lifespan of an athlete is onl) a fe"" \Care. "here an Ol\mP•t compe11tor ma\ get u ni\ one \hot at a medal .. R owe ..aid l't&.IC NOTICE of Tr8C1 No 9090. as per Avenue, c09t1 M.... CA Bide ah•ll be elaarly Thi• 1t11ament w• Ill map recorded In 8ooll 368, 92828 m a r k • d S C I E N C E with the County Clw1i ot O NOTICE PtgeS 15 and 18, Mia· Thia bullneu wu con-CLASSROOM FURNITURE 11"91 County on June t :O~!:: Pla..IC NOTICE oellaneovs Mapa, tn the Of· ducted by• genar., plftnar· Bid •581 addrllMd to: t984 Notl<:e ~her_._, nfYlt'I thlt ltce ol the County Recorder ehlp Allyn E Rowley, Purchulng ~ ..,, • 01 said County Del F L.areon Menager, Huntington 8Nch Put>llthed Otenga Coe the Bolrd of Education of NOTICE OF PARCEL 2 An undMded f°hts etatement wu flied Union High School Dletrlc1. Diiiy PilOt July 18, 23, 31 ttie lrvtne Unified School 1"UlnE'S IALE 1tS4th triter"t 1ri and to all Cou c 0 10251 Yorktown Avenue. Auguste. 198-4 Olstrtct ol Orange Courity. T.a. No. F-'17 of the real pr,..,..,..y cs.-with tCouhe tynty J~k,. 01 1,..:; Huntlnnton Buch. CA M·l CaJlforrita, wtll receive Mal-NOTICE ..,....... • anoa n on u., "· ..... • 00 scribed .. LOI I on tile MIP Publlehld °'111199 Coast 928.48 Ind reoeMld ., Of ed bids up to 2 PM on YOU AltE IN Dl!FAULT ot the above relereoced Delly PtlOI Juty IS, 23 30 before 10.00 1.m . THURS---------- the 3rd dly of Auguat, 19M, UNOER A TlflRO DEED OF tract. 1ogett>er ...tlh aH im· Auguet e 19M DAY AUGUST 9, 19&4, at P\llJC N011C( at wnlctl time llald bide wiM n.UIT, DATED Octobaf 21, provaments lhe<eon. e•· M·JO .which time and piece bide __ ...;;.;=..--..-...--- be publicly OPl'*2 Ind read 1llO. UNLlll YOU TAKE cepllng therefrom Con· will be publlcty opened and F1CTTT10UI ~II for A1ph1lt. Concrete, ACTION TO 'AOTECT domimum UMa 56 through PlllllC NOTICE rHd In Bldg C. Rm 381 MAm ITATIWJIT BllCktop and Slurry eo.1 YOU.. PftOftlATY. rT MAY 119 Inclusive located thll'• Eech bid lhall ram.Wn Yllld The followtng pw90fl Paving Bid condition• and N IOU> AT A ~ on ' NOTICE Of' lor a perlOd of 110 days 1rter doing buaineea U: tnstructlonl and bid tOf'me IALI." YOU NEID AH EX· PARCEL 3 An excluaNe "'UlnE'I IAL.1 the data epeclfled for the r• G. LURIE & ASSOCIATE. may be Obl .. ned II lhe Of· ,LANATION Of THI ..-nent appurten1n1 to On Augult 8. 1984 ., <*Pt Of bid• 1253 Logan Avenue Unit I flee of Flacal Support Set· MAT UR r 0 F THE euct1 unll tor the uaa and 11·00 1 m FIRST AMER~ The 8oar'd 04 T""'911 Coate Mala. CA. t2to2t vlcel, 2941 Alton Avenue, PAOCEIDINO AOAINS T occupancy ol thOM portions CAN TITLE INSURANCE th .. I be the Iola Jud9e of lhe JIQI c. Smiley, 17 u Irvine, Catifomla The Ola-YOU, YOU IHOUU> CON-of the restrlcled common COMPANY, • C1llfornl1 qu1llty of equipment offered Aoundhlll OrNe. Hunt~C trlct ·~ea the right to,.. TACT A LAWYER. area designated In the Dec· COfpor1tlon u Tru1tea, Of end reMfVel the right tor• 8Nch, CA. 92649 )eel any or all bide or to On Auguat 9, 1984. at larauon ol Reatrk:tton• and Succeuor Tru1t11 or jaCt any or all bids and to Thia bualneee le COi waive any lrregulartti.. or In· 10 00 A M . E1ectiange shown on the Condominium Substituted Truetee. of th•t waive any 1nagul1rlty t"9re-duct.cl by· 111 lndtv+duel lormalltlM In any bid• or In Tltlenolde<e Inc. u duly ap-Plin tor sueh unit certain Dead of Truet ••· lri Jed< C. Smttey the bkldlng. pointed Truetee unde< and Eltoeptlng theretrom all •cu ti d by BREND A Dated. July 22, 19S... Thi• 1t1temant wu '* Irvine Unified purtu1n1 10 Dead of Trull oil, gas, mlne<ale and other SCHABARUM. an unm11· Allyn E. Rowley with the Counry C1«'k Of 0 School D11trlc1 recorded November 12, hydrocarbon 1ubat1nc11, rled women. and recorded Purchaalng Managet 1nge Coutlty on July 1 .... Rolland H. Upton 1980, u Intl No 148•2. In together with the right to ax· September 8, 1983 U In· Publlehed Orange COH I 1984 Deputy Superintendent booll 13830. page 839, ol plOre for and e1etrao1 aame, 1trum«1t No 83-397093, of k>111y Piiot July 23, 30, 1964 Publlahed Orange CoHt Offlcl1I Records In the otflce below a dac>tti of 500 1 .. t Offiolll Record• of Orange M~8 Deity Piiot July 23. 30, 198.4 or the Courity ReoOt'der ot from the surl.ce of aatd County, C111forl'll•. •l"ld --------- Publlthad Otenga Coe Diiiy Piiot Juty 18, 23, a M-88 Orange County, State ol lend. but witl'lout the right of pursuant to tl'llt oertaJn No-P\BJC NOTICE ---------CaJKornl1. Eltecutld by R aurltce entry. 11 r~ In tloe or Delau11 thereunder __ ;,,.,,;;.;;..;..o-.....-..-...--._ Augutt 8. 196" M·l CARL SHANER and RUTH Deeds of Record r~rdld Aprll 8, 1984 U In· NOTICI INVfT1MQ 9m>a E SHANER, WILL SELL AT YOU ARE IN DEFAULT etrum«1I No fM· 143177 of Notlol 11 hereby given thlrt P\llJC NOTICE K·12M4 PUBLIC AUCTIO~ TO UNDER A DEED OF TRUST Otflclal Record• ot Hid the Boetd of T"*-' of tM -------- PlllllC NOTICE WEU.I fAl'QO 8AHK HIGHEST BIDDER FOR DATED 1119/82 UNLESS County, wlll under end Huntington Baact1 Union NATIONAL ASSOCIATION CASH lpayabll al time of YOU TAKE ACTION TO pur.uant to llald Deed of High School Olltrict wt11 r-. NOTICE Of' aala In llWful money ol the PROTECT YOUR PROP· Truat Mii al publlc .uctlon celWI IMled bide !Of eupply. 8UUC TflANlnR United S1a1111 a1 the Chap-ERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT fOfcuh, llWful money of tM Ing IBM MICRO COM· (he. 1101 .. 107 U.C.C.) m11"1 Avenue entrlllCe 10 the A PUBLIC SALE IF YOU United Stat11 ol Amll'lce, a PUTEAS • ORDERING TO WHOME IT MAY CON· CMc: Center Bulldlng, 300 NEED AN EXPLANATION euhlll''• check P•Y•l>MI to AGREEMENT rM9tlng or CERN East Chapman Avenue, Or· OF THE NATURE OF THE said Tru1t• drawn on a equll to the ~UOM Notl<:e II hereby given lo ·~· C•lllOfnla 111 nght, Ulla PROCEEDING AGAINST ltlte or nation .. bank, • on '"' In the omca of .., the ~editors of ONE HOUR and lnteraat con..-.yed to YOU. YOU SHOULD CON· ltate or federal c:r.cllt union, ~rlct. CLEANERS, INC a Cell· Ind now held by It under TACT A LAWYER O< a 1tat1 or lldtral .. vlnga Bide 1h1ll be claerly fornla corporation, Trena-aald Deed of Truat In the 25 Or1nge Blouom ltld loan aeaoct111on dOfN. mancld IBM .,.ICRO COM- te<or(I). wnoM blninMt Id· property lltuated In Hid Irvine. CaJllornle clled In thl• ...... at the PUTERS • ORDERING dreu 11 •122 B1rranca County and St1te oeterlbed ·111 a atrett addr111 or m1lri 1ritr1ric1 lo Flret AGREEMENT 8ld 1542 ao- '1CTTTIOUa ..,... .. MAm ITAT'lmWT The follOWtng per.on clo4f'l9 bualnall aa: (A) SOUTH COAS M~OIA SERVICES II SOUTH COAST CO'- MUNICA TIONS JC) COF RIGHT (Dl AIA All, 41' Pearce •C, Huntll'IOIC Beach. CA. 92649 Wlllll m Brien Wac dlngham. 4841 Paeroe ft Huntington Beach. C• 82649 400,000 view Torch Parkw1y, lrvtne. Courity or u common d111gnet1on ol American Tltle lneur1ne. drllMd to· Allyn E. Aowtay, Orange. Stall or California, Loi 19 of Tract 8238, u property ts lhown above, no C<>mpeny loc:at.cl II 114 Purctlulng Meneger, Hunt· that a bulk tr101fer 11 about P4lf MIP rec0<ded In book warranty Is given u 10 111 Eat Flflh S1r .. 1, In the City lng1on 8eeot'I Union High to be made 10 JUNG 236. Pag11 2• to 31, In-completeneu or correct· ol Santa Ana. Caltt0<nla, Ill School Oletrlcl, 10251 WOONO KIM and KEUM cluelve. of Mlecellaneoua rienl ·· The beneficiary thll right. tltla and lnletll1 YOf'ktown Avenue, Hunt· HEE KIM , Tranel1r1e(1). M1p1. lri the otflce ol the under said Deed of Truet. by conveyed to end now held lngton BMc:h, CA 92Ma ltld whoM t>ullneu addr111 le County RecOf'der ol .. Id reason ol a breech or default by It undlf aald Deed of reoeMld at Of before 10:00 740 Cienega Drive, Full· County In the obllgallon1 MCUrld Truet In the property lltu-Lm .. niURSDAY, AUGUST erton, County of Orange, Thi street addreu and thereby, heretofore tie· 1ted In Mid County Ind 9, 196", 11 which time and Thi• bu1lne11 le OOI duct.cl by an lndMdual Wllll1in Brien Wu dlngham Thie 1t1tament wu Nt with the County C1«'k of 0 anoa County on July e. 1tl ,,... LO\ ·\NC1l I£'.'\ ! \Pl -The Olympic lonh rcla., o;urgcd \unda' along Pasadena's Ro't' Parade route. -wht·rc.· ·..ioo.ooo spectators r hl.'crcd \.\aH·d lttlk ·\mcnran flag"> ;lnd rcka-,eJ thou\.indc, of h,1lluon'> R' da\ .., l'nJ 1n "ian D1ma,, around J m1ll1on pcopk 111 \l'\ l·ral 'uhurb'> had spcnl part o f\undJ\ "'atthtng tlw l'tnnal llaml: on 11' 1ournn from< •ll'l'll' "It'' ht·ucrthjn 1lw tx·-.11{11'>(; Paradce,cr ..aid c,craldant' ( 11.tll'\ 31'. ol Pa,.tdl·na ·rm hl'rl' 111 tal.e .i P•l l\Jll' 111 h"1on .. Koreans ll1ay unify in '88 I()\ \NC1l Ir 'I (\Pl -\outh Kon·.1 \\Ill takt: "th<' lir<.t prar t1<.,ll nppor1un1t"" 111 an1t1att.• new tali.., ""1th North K orea fi.11 lhl' formation ot " 1oin1 tc.'am 111 tom pelt' m lhc 19XROl\mp1r <;amt•\ in 'lroul the prcs1dcntol the ()eoul Ol~mrm < htl.'ln111ng < nmm1ttc.'e Rho 1 JC Won c.:11d ~unda\ R11t tn dn '''m 1awd Prl.'"• mten 1ew. Kho 1n<l11 a1cd that <1 l<1l'k ol "mutu.11 tru,1" between thl' '""" "orea\ \t1ll 1rt1pedt1f \Ill h .10 1n1t1at1ve Hl' tkd1ned to u1mnwn1 on a thrl'atcned \<1vt<'l hl0< h<>H 1111 o l tht· ~·oul < 10tm1•<, hut ~tre .. sed that t•vt•n rnt•mht·r n<itmn of tht· Ol)mp1t tarn1I~ .. ,.,·ohhgt·d to lakt• part 1n the Olymp1' < i.inw' 111 :lt < nrd.tnll' "1th lhl' lcttt·r and the <,pant o f the c >hmp1l < ha111·1 .. "'Thl" l'Oltrr t\.ort'an people:'' tnmrntllt'd to r('\: 1\ln1.1t tht 1111hk 'Pini of 1hr 01\ mp1t• rncnrnwnt ;Jnd lll'al thl' d.11n.1gt· 11101t tt•d n n the< l1-.mp11 mCI\ t'ml·nt h\ thl'I \mcrtl an <ind \o\.tet J h<l\1oth t1 I tlw 19Xlt C1,1mc\ 1n \1n\~O" .ind lht• 1 ·1~4 ( r.\!TII'\ tn I°' \n~wln .. I{ h Ot' 'i.111 f r ht• ( lh ntpll ( tiHlH'\ ·Ill' ... t11rnm for h1111ttllll' 1nit1•tlwr , 1111ntnt'' "'1th dilkrcnl 11koln1t1r\ \\1· hope lhl' \rnul ( 1ilOll'<, ""'II 111,11..1· .1 l(ll'.1t , •111t11hu1111n ta• "'orld pt•aa l' a11d t.i thl 11n1I\ 11111u1 p1·11pk \Ji., 1nh nd 111 l;ilo.r th1 1n1t1.11" 1· tor rl'npt•111nr, 1.11~' l\\lllt \.1111h "cir1-;ll \d lt'nt'\t r 1111 tljlJ'Of1 ltllll\ ,lf1\1'\ State of Callfornla, 92835 othef common dnlgnallon. eculed and delivered to the State deac:t1b.cl 11: plaoa bid• WIH be J>Ubllcly The rcla\ turned onto c o lorado Bo ule' ard The property to be trana-If 1ny. of the rMI property underslgried s wrtttan Dec· Lot 131 of Tract No. 2:M 1. Of)eMd and read 1n Bldg. c .. around I pm . pa'>I a wwcnng sculpture of ferred Is located et •09 S d .. erlbed •bove 11 1aret1on of Oelautt arid o.. aalhownonamaprecordad Rm. 381. Publllhad Orange co. . Auoctat1d Read, Brea, purported to be I 7902 marid fOf' Sale. and wrttlen In Booll 78, Pagaa 3 and 4 of E.adl bid lhall retM!n Ylllkl 'The Thinker'' h\ Rodin. outs ide the Norton County or Orange. State of Splcewood. lrvlrie. CA notice 01 breach and of e141c. Mleoellaneout M1pe, In the lor 1 partod of eo dl;Y9 after Dally PllOt July HI. 23, 3 August 8, tta.4 <;1mon Mu'>t·um · California 92715 lion to cau1e th• under· Otllol or the County ~ thed1t1~fortha ,. f 1fteen·\l'Jr·nld \u\J n "il.i' 1 t... nf Pa\adcna Sekl property 11 delcrlbe<I The und8<'•1oried Trustee. slglled to NII said property corder 01 .. Id County. catpt of btdl. --------- ~1 hJ nJcJ nl' lo llHl'.lr nld J ohn Babcock of lri g-al aa All etock tn dltclatmsariylfabllltylorany to satlaly llJd obtlg1tlona. E•c.pt 111 Oii, gaa ltld The Board of Truet.. PtBJC ll>TICC trade fixtures. equipment lncorrectne.1 of ll'le street arid thtlfeaft~ the under· olhar hydroc1rbon1 end lhall be the**~ of u,. -------"'-- ').in Manno J\ .1 c.oundtrUlk blared the and good wtll ol lhat Dry addr111 and other common stgnedceuaedseldnotlolof minerals now and hereafter quatttyofaqulpmlntoftwed F1CTITM>Ueeua.lt ()I~ mpll lanl.irr Clearilng buslneu known .. dntgnatlon, II any ehown brelCtl and of a1ec11on to be In, on and under that Pllt of and rlletWI the l'lgh1 to,.. MAMI ITATEmlltT Thl' OhmpH "-l'tghnorc. ( ommt1tee dt~· BREA PLAZA CLEANERS heralri recordedMerch28 19Mu .. ldlandlytngbe!Ow a ~th tact any Of .. bid& and to Thaf~pereone• tn .... ut•"' ai...·1ut "')()() hcl1um·l-1ll"d halloun<; end located at 409 SA•· Saldeallwtllbemade,but lristr No 84-128171 of Of· ot5001M1betowt"98Ulfaol WlllveanylrregullrttyU-. dolnobullnaaa•· 1' ~u "' ~ 11oetated Road Brei Courity 'Nlthout covenant or war· lletat Recorde In the oftlol of of Mid land, but wfthoul any In KAAEMER PARTNERS. and\mJllfour·tl\ .. \l\·lnthl1ag,tolhccrowd 101 Orange State of Call-r1nty 111pr11Sortmplled r• the Rec-Order ot Or1ng1 r1gtltofar11ryusionMldtand Dal.cl July22,19&4 Hermitage Lane.~ "\\ l' Y.t:H' 1nundatl'd" 'oluntt'er Aili lornta gardtng lllle pc>IMlllOn, or Courity Of within Mid top 500 feet Allyn E. RoiMey Beach. Calif 92890 Hotlhl.t\\'wttc.lofthl·dcmandlor1hehalloon~. The bulk trensler Wiii bl encumbranc:.e to pay the Satdaalewtllt>emaoa but tMleof fOf any purpoae Purc:tlalng Maneger JllTIH T RountrM. consummated on 01 al1er rematri1ng prlnc:lpal sum ot w1ttiou1 ~ant "' Wit· whateoever. u r...,-..d In Publllhed Orenge Cout Hennltage Lane, ~ Y.hlth \JX'llalllf\ rl'h:a\eJ J\ the runners tl'le 10th day ol Augu1t lha noll(l)MCuredby aald rentye1epr1t1orlmpllld,r• IMDMdlotheHallCom-DaltyPHotJuty23,30,19&4 8Mctl.callf 92890 p3\\l'd 11984. and clatm1 m1y be Dead of Trust wnti 1n1er111 gardlng utle pollMlion or pany recotoed NoYarnbar 5, M-90 D.rr.. A Butler, 32• '-" hl·n lhl· rda\ mo\ t•d d<l\·~ n (ah lorn ta llled et WELLS FARGO thereon "provlOld tn said encumbranoea 10 p.y 'the 1954 In Boo« 28et, Page Atta Laiguna. Laguna S... u I I I 1. \1 I . d .. 1 h k BANK. N A Eacrow °'9art· note(s) advan<lM ti any remaining prtndpal 1Um of 240 or OtflC:lal Record• Calif 92MO nOll l'\<lll •1l" l nt)rl: qutppc t In maril Re Eacrow No und1tthlterm1ofseld0eed the noll(s) MCUrld by aald The etr .. t 1ddr1H or flt8.IC NOTICE Rober1 H ~. t2• ,,., l'' t:n bt:ttt:r than tht· Rme Parade beCiiUst' 6•3·4836. 660 Newport or Truat ,..,, Chergaa and deed of Truit. With 1n1ar111 0111et common de11Qn111on NOTICI """'*° _,1 =~ .. Dnw. Tuetln. CM t t \ tt>msng dO\!o n nn \trcet .. Ctrile< Dr Ste "1280 •o~panl ...... IMtrueotef tcherHTt~1tb .. y --~~ ~~~ld,fnoaten prouvt<lednd~. adt...,: ofto !9..ld 1~~W1t~~~ Notlol 11 hereby gtven thlrt Robert E. AndarlOn, m In -\rcad1a. Jnotht•r ~<M>.<XlO people "4ewpor1 Beach. Counly 01 '"' ..., ...... ·--· • Y· u• -,,. ""' ...... ..... "'·-~ IT of the Ea Orenga State ot C1lllornia Deed of Truat termi of .. Id ~ of trult Said Nie wlll be midi the Board o Nit... =u• Wey, Newpo gathn~d. and up 10 I lJ 000 1n .\rcadta rller. 92~ ' ' Ttie 10111 1mount ot the fll8 chargaa and expen-without oovenent or w11· Huntington Buell Union • c.itl. t2eeo as the runner\ left tlH· "ian f-crnando Valle\. All ctatm1 must be re· unp1ld balance of the obit· of 1h. Truet~ and of the ranty.1xpr ... Oflmplled,u High School District_...,.. Thie buelna11 le 001 !lurbank polite n·portt:d .i.ll<.>Ul 50.000 peopil· oatvld at thla addr ... by the gallon aecured by thl prop-tru•t• crMtld by Mid o.«I to title, po...ion or en-~O= ~M~LA~ =by: • general I* gatht'rl'd along thl' mute. (ilcndak had up to :.d~~or~~~:~n!~!\'t~ :!~ ·~~m::, ~~: of ;~::;1 .. 1e wtn be held on =:.!sa:T:nc: :;!~ := ARD MOBILE CLASSROOM Jamet T. Aountrea 'i() 000 and thl' rl'la\ "3~ running latt• 1nctudN the tranefar of '*'"'and advancet 1t tl'll Tueadmy Auguat 7 l984 et note or not11 MCIUl'ld by meeting "' aci'* to the Thi• •t•tament •• Ille Hqu0< llOenM, In wnlch cua. time of the lnltl1I publlC&tJon 1 30 p.m' In the lobby 1o ihe Nld Deed of TrUl1, to wit: 0~":,-:d' O:.r: In tfle With theCounCounty 2"1'J of 01• 111 c111m1 mutt be received ol the Notice ol Sall I• bulldlng 1ocated 11 eo1 138,385.51. plUI the fOllOw ''itd, ,11 .. 1 be 'ciaarly = ty V'• uty -------------------prlOr to the date on wnldl S7~~·~~1c'·ryun..._· ...... South Lewi• StrMt, Otange, Ing .. umated ootle, ••· merkad DAIVliA SIMU· ,._. Britain's Cram to miss Games? l O"l{)()N (\I') -\lt''t' Cram. the "'"llrld I SOO mett:r\ drnrnp1on 'ti.Ill pull oul of the l oc. .\ngcle., Ol)mp1t. < 1Jlllt'\ 1f ht> 1,1111 111 unahlt to 1ra1n tn the da>' t11nc anordin@.to J Hnt1\h pr<'c.~ rcpnn \unda} The l ondon \undu' Pl'npk rt·1x1rn·d ( ram d' "" 1ng lw had -.cl h1m'>(.·lt a de.ac.lltnr t o prcl\l' ht\ fttne\\ Cram ha' bct'n to ld w rnt u1> "'h1k ,1n 1n1urcd ankk '" trC'at1•c1 Y.tlh ll C' path lk ha\ h<'rn unahk to 1ra111 "nu· tlw ankh' Ot'( amt' '"'olkn .1tfrr :1 1.000 meter\ ralt" 1n lJm· hurgh ~otland 1;11,1 T U('\.\1.1\ Tht• "·"('ar old Untl\h 1unnt·1 '>aid ·I'm hop1n(l l11 rc,11tTI<' trnintnjl \l11nd.n nr J Ut'\· tl,H and lit rr1 .in XOP rm·1rr' ttrlll' 111al at m ' lcKal t luh l:Ht•r 1n thr \.\.!'<''-· • It 1h.11 projttdm jLOt'\ "'<'ll hl' ''ill fh out to I "' \ nttt'lt•\ on I rnt:n ,.rnt t ht• n('\\ 'P3flC't the llquor ltoenM 11 1r1n1-,,. .,......, .. ..,.... ......, CA 9288& l)lnMI and edVlnOM 1t lhe LATOAS ANO MOlllE Publllt'led Or ,..~. lerrld by the D19lf1ment of Deed ol Trutt heretofOfa U · At the time of the lnltlll llrne Of tfle Initial publtcal~ Ct.ASaAOOM Bid l&78 ad-Dally Piiot J~a St A~ ~,::!n ~·~~ acuted and dall....,ed to lhl publlc:atton ot this notlQI, of thl• Nollet of $111 dNIMd to: AflYn !. Aowtay, Auouet 8 13 ltM • lran11er.-111. 111 buatMU ~ o!..:'~":O °!>: the total amount of the un-1 727 00 --net TO ~ Meneger, Hunt· . • .. ..., -mand paid t>al111Ce of the Obl6-._. . •-on Baeotl Union HIQfl n1mea Ind addr-UMd lor S .... and I written ~~Id by tha •bo~ YOUf'R~O~••T s-:hool Oletrtct, 102' 1 ---------by TrllnlMror(•) for the lhf'91 Notice ol DafMilt and [lee· .._.....,_, deed ot truat and -... ............ YOfttown AYanUI, Hunt· rueuc NOTIC[ r,:;9 tut 1>191. " different tlon to Seit The undarliOMd •ttmatad eoat1 1xpenaaa.. UNDCR A DlaD Oft TMllT. 1 on IMCtl CA 92644 and ---..-...-..-.;.;..;;.;.;.;;;;__ C'~:o~c"'L! .... ER& :::',,~ 9f1ec1~~0 ~ .... 0..10 and aovenc.11Mt.93014 DATID .... ,,.., 11 t.S. ~ 91 o, '*°"' 10:00 Pecnnoue .,.. .. ,..,.. ,.. .,,..,.. -TM total 1ndlbtadn9al UHUU YOU TAK AC· 1 m TUESDAY AUGUST 7 ..,._ nATWT 65e8 Sani. An1 Canyon be r.aordad In lhl county ~an •tlrnate on~ T10N TO fl'ROTICT YOUI' ,.,. .. ..-Uma .,,d The lolowlf'8 penon Rold Anlhllm, Calltomla ~ the '9111 prooerty le Ille opening bid 19 ~ "'°""1'Y, rT MAY .. ~ bide .. be ~ do6r'CI ~.: S T 0 N ! C A E E K IOc*led mey ~ OblllMd by ca&ltng IOLD AT A ~ ......_ ~and raed tn c A(Sfl4£TIC8 Of Nb CLEANERS 4250 Bantnea Deta June "'9 1914 (7141 38~837 or (213) • YOU NOD AM l'D'U• ~;t1 ... POAT HACH, 240 NRpo Untt ·p· INlna Calttomla [Jictlenol Tttllnold4n tnc e:n.41e5 Iha dey blfor9 Ille MAnoet tW ne NATwm &c:fl bid INI ....... vlld c..,.., °' U20. ~ w 0 0 D 8 R I 0 G f .. Mid lruat• .... 0, THI PROCllDIMO .... _.....of eo ..._ ...... hectl Callf t2MO CLEANERS 4722 Bwrancwa 18811 8rookhuret StrM1 Dltad July 8 t98A AQAIMIT YOU YOU "" 1 ...-:::......., ;;."~ Al~l111 L Oongou INlne Cllllfoml• Fountain Vllllay, CA 92709 SUPERIOR tlTLE SEAVICE I MOULD CONTACT A :,~• .;;-·-,. 2 I 162 Shaw Ln .. Huntlnf'O D•llCI July 8. 19&4 (7141 N3 !2~ INC lAWYUl n. ~ of T"*-9 IMctl, Cellt 12t4t Jung Woong Kim 9y· Aoaa M111la Slnee u Mid TruetM "M'T AM[~ TITLE IN• ef\1111 be tM toll Jlldgl of the Th.. ~ II OOI' K~ HM Kim Published Orenga Co .. 1 9y TD SERVICE COM· SUAANC! COM,ANY qu111ty of equipment offwed duOted by an lndMdUlf Publlltled Orange Co"t Daily Piiot Juty 18 ~ 30, PANY 191"1 a Caltfomle CotpoidOn end r...we ti. l1gM co,... Albwttna L. ~ Oattv PllOI Jufy 23 tN4 1914 By SI~ M Armen ... A-. Jea n n • L l a • r I a • leGt eny Of al bide Md to Thia ltatameM ... t11e M-85 M-87 1111en1 Secretary Aul"°"* Offtolr -iva any ln'egUlattty n.. with tfle County Clartl of O. _._ 901 South L.aw11 St , Or t 14 [1191 Rfttl at,_ In anoa County on Alt 1i 1nga. CA t2888 Santa AM. CA t270 t Dai.ct .My 22. 1"4 1M4 (714) 38~700 (714) 651-Utt ~ l Aowtay r-. Publlehld Ottr1ga CoM1 OATIO .M f , ,.... '°"'~Man.oar Publllhed Or-. OClel Oalty PllOt July t8. 23, 30, PubfttMCI ()fa"• J°:1 'ublllMcl Otante Ca.t Deity Pll04 .My H , I< Daily Pilat t984 Ody PllOC NI'( • • • Dall'r ""°' JtJky n . IO, ,..... AUQU81 I , ts 1tM M &4 1H4 u.U M~H M4 h1ll1m .Hht<'c• 1111 rl11rt11· .... 111 .1lf;111 ..., Ii\ \nn I .~1Hl<'r..., . ' ' • I, L • I 1 A .. I· d r· J. • It >. y ii ~ It .. .. II • •• ct ~ " .. •· .. ly '· .. J '· •• ,.. .. r- el .. )( .. .. at 17 • I. 4 , 4 e ' ... '· I• I· d .. •• • ., ), 6 J. a. 9 n I· d ,. ~. ~ at ). 2 T II y 1 n .. ,. d .. -4 0 It ), • e ., '· 1 ' 7 t ·. d I It I, ) • t , ca ...... _ ... m.....,.ltr ..... 11...,lt....__ :-1 .. _ ... ~l•;;;;.;;;,;W;;;;;•;....._ ltutt ltr lilt 1 ..... t11 lilt llMU1 a.... 1111 B'Han Vat.~ an.. Vda.lt .. ..... iiia1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil;iltl~a..ii;11a••a-•1•'"• ltural lMI ...... 1t1c~ lMI UDIUll Piil • &it. ... ilii .;:..,.,=.=~ ..... ::i~~~i:!===~~ ..... 1~~~...-,,;::;;---.1!!!!!..!!!!!!...J!!! ~ -· -.... For ~ and your ft'l.-rtecl A beautN 24 • eo " 28R $595 oute (Ape Cod 28'. P'tatoet Al<lge Oynuty lllllEll USTSllE COSTA •El l 5 beautiful 3 bdrm <.'Ondo townhomes ready Lo build Includes working drawings etc Readv to pull pemuts. $249.500 zon.ct fOt hortM •tc. ehlldr•n. oo.an vl•w 2 Bath highly upgrllded tile Ba, WOC>cl nn. Hew 11800 GM.ct OOf'llll'n. Chain llnk reno., box "°4'M+ 3 rentafa. p,_,, home. L..wQll IMng -cstn-cptldrpa. uMd bfl<*. AQ1 ~1521fl58-M61 •• ,.... e OroM ~ 12120 pt Ing & kltc:iwl .,. .. wtth grOrw No peta 946-25M ,_,. «c. 1 """ tr.... mo 905 & m T~ t 11y on ldoeed 2218 Plaoen i. • .. _ 2bt din. rm hOUM. OPEN Terr Pr<lC*1Y la CllMr am '::""elf~ t .. Ullll--a.., St 24M2TS lublle 1, 2 Of $ OC2AH HOUSE. 20G11 Cyptw, 1350,000 n•t. Ownr ~Ag~ ~j Brend MW 2 & 3 8d oon-~ 3 Bdr fWMIM. ~ prvt oedl Al .... Jm VIEW do&. !Ml tl1 ......,_ S.A. He6ghta. 545-2947 494-0154 · dOl-Oholoe ot carl)9t1 MWfy ~ed. trMh utll pd lmmd..e oo-a;;;GJG;tp;t:r1£ &oflcl...,...._Nwprt S925tue> 942·9558 pelnt.. bMutftUI llPtl. loCa ,.. ............ $3.50 e&,-CMi. a.,"'* ...,_,_ .6AJ._ FlllHorlll (71~ Of room tor en~ --..--, • -........ --.-IOUl&llUYYllWI UlguNI 8eecfl ~ ~ 1111 MESA VEAOE 38r 28e + $2850/mo 1 r IM. AQt Mk:teprvt 18' EndP9tt0 Poat. l380~1 Panofemk: vt.w ~ nur main beach ~ ,t;t;;; ape $1200 Ind 8:::: & 944-0927 Al utll pd trnmed oo-Aoom In lrV hol.9e C:M ,.,..,. 811 13 1-1211 put Cat.tin• 1-.nd from s 182•000 497-MM offtoa b1d9. steco.ooo. = :! pet.I Then ~ cupency k45 15 t-CM24 kite """ w/d -..."' "'* 1& rn. P.O. thlt Y«Y 1t1rKtlY• 2 OUAINTCOTTAOE~ 81nGNndyRnr87M181 831 r289 .._,.. UDO ISL£ 4br oootemc>. --· ~&296..151"*6 12.0tql't. OllUCI SPILLER Bdrm home AMdy to be deep Bid lo penoramtc • ......,. Sctwlurn. drMWtle LA. -·-• AoMf M1..eas2 moved Into wtth tant .. tlc vw °' ertl<>Y ooey bct1 i.e... P!!r l REASONS TO MOVE 'Pl 12400 mo. e75-<t1IO M86Jmo 2 8d 1'M>e E~ ~ ~ ~ P'M-UI•' _..._ potential lor added Im-1 v n g -I 1 e 4 . 9 o o --•--1350 renta thtl been Plid llld9 iowmou. Ike new --1· ,_ IM'9 & -. ..--. --provement Make th• 714-952.0718Barbmaig .,..,.._......... ...tllOe .,. .. crptd o. Ocean view ex•cutlve laundry room, 91r, plnge9nter.te:2-5180 tine Coall Hw, loc:9lb\ ~&'Mft}( of Costa Mesa flttt atep to bet1• IMng FM Ul.I 11gn can home, H V Hiii 4 Bdr. petJo/yerd, on tiw roui.. ~ w.a nw downtowft. .O aq ~-~-~~~~-11111111--llliiiiiiiii_, Pr1Qedatalowl395,000. l l!)!!t ~ l I N9wpot1Center 14,792SF •IH-11ll* ~~YO rm, dining rm, ... y frMWay .cceea.---.== ~ ft.11PPIUOltqft, MarveJous6 Brbayfro nt.78'onbay.pool. 646-7171 1~1UlffUll AlrponAtM17,290SF N9wtyredone3t>t 2blhlN ua.n~/mo Aot 212t0r9ngt MN•--Pn'claftDCotp ~pa 100' boat space $4.850.000 Toteltyr~"°"99+ Trnt he4 FHMqlH S650 w/updatad kltctl & Tl&.~ M!-1111 Witty ~ now.,_.. t1M700 Charming Spanish 3 Br 2 Ba on 45' lot. lrg untt Frustrated 1'1Y9llO< 112·2222 gar kid• <* 53Mt90 P~-0: oc..... vt.w. Lge 1 bdrm on Vlc:ioria."' ~~&'IP Cdof TV, PRIME AETAL ,....._, uya give It 1way 8Mt Atty tea top ·High. beautlf\JI Nwpt Ave/ Hwt>Ot &AC* ""'--room. Bl, OM .....,, * cond., deck. courtyard, pwr & shp $1 ,100.000 $183 ooo Bkr 1eo..aae2 ldutdal ~n 13'19 3 81 2 Ba. turn cw not. cones ..... , 851 95...... 2274 ~ Btwd.C.M. S1100/mo. 645 1m Be f I 3 B . s~ choice 2bdrm s 2 8 5 0 I m 0 A g t . --• CV 646-7445 aull u · r. 2 Ba, playroom. fireplace. 11HOPlllllTI I~. R & D o. Greet hmeup<latedkltctlw/yrd e1a.1111 MESAPtNES2950H8r1a •CdMdb......_AC,_...,. beam ce1hngs Xlnt f anancing. $420.000 With pe.n of mofltt\ly IM8e 1~~~~ ~ 4 kid gar too $560 Sharp bMctl bY ow BEAUT!~ 8ac:h $475 prttg, from 1225. 2-.s f.. going towwd the down lnduat °cmpix. (U~1 E & 539-8190 Beet Riiy I• ~ kltch $4~ 18dnn '515 28drm &e76 1--COIS Hwy. ~ UYllll HIVE UYHOIT COllO pymt wt*1 you~ op-F) 1M Sq, ft otc, hMvy Top notch 3"-4bdrm 3ba ,.,..t & utllt at 53~~ PRVT paUo, pool, 'Pl latab BM Llilatdal J etty & Bay view. newly decorated Mai tlonth113bdrm,2~bath parkl'1g, dlvlsablt to tam apot •lwetbar trplc Best Alty tee TOParM.qui9C,nop«1 a.ti.la • Kai. 2 Br. 2 Ba. 40' patio. $695.000 rHldance with mini 1750 aq. "·unite. LarQ9t kid p« 1100·1 53M190 Mt-2 .. 1 * .,... mra&. 'l!IM...,.....,..,.""'"'_•_,.. .. ocean Ylewt Only • few units avall. 962-6533 BMt Rlty r.e ~ Md loYely Big Shr 3 br •lpool $300 -. 1~ 9q N in i ,I. blocka to the be•ehl Canyon townhorne, 3 BR, Nloe 2Br 28a. No pell, Jim 650-1138/~ '560fmo. 3017 8 Or· llH U llOll OCUIFROIT 1se-1501 L.h fer Lit lfiO Dua Pelat den, 2t,.\ beth9 + large Avail api:>rox Aug 1. .,.. es1..et21 "-ean & Jetty v i"ws mar1·ne room 4 a WIW1 ....... patio. S1850 ,.,_mo $525/mo 1eo-1•18 °' CdM 1 llr $300 wtc mo 3 -,,..,,..,........,,..,,·,........_,,,,,,...,...,,..___,.. V\.' "' • • r . 3 bdrm With MUtral d«:or ~------.. FabYlou• Ooeenfront lot Searldge Oen vlaw UNIOUE HOMES 942-7528 ~wttndl 8d Hae $too wei (213) 20oo SF i1000/momh 3 Ba, 3700 sq . Ct .. car parking $1 .285.000 end grMt io.n.. corner ,..,... CdM. pf1oe reduced f0< 2br·2bl·den-pool-•P•· 875-e000 592•1511 or 971•2440 3915 Birch, Newport lot olOee t IChootl Now s • I e S 1 • 2 O O . O O O ten ct-i)fof dec.wld retng Nice olMl'I 28r 28e condo 8eec:fl Atll 541~ UYlllE PUCE UYFllllT · 0 · -476-0418 or 875--0812 24941 eunriee S1150 mo Lata Au f2ii wlfr!Q. Good location. EJl6de C.M. llCUdlo, 8V8I.. ---· ----- Spectacular bayfront dplx. 2 Br. 2 Ba up. ;,t~~~-:· fi(,~fS •~--..~ llUIFlllT bf<*«870-tl93 EUYrnCJ11e26dffn2&amiCI ~m11 ga941.e103 ~~:::'~*:: c:'.£$1.,':':-C- 2 Br. 2 Ba down. 2 boat spaces. $1.250.000 RMJtora.ers.eoOO lira. Penln. Pt. lot 45·x202· IC>-II Ttn S500'•PC>OltimervSoCo POOL. ftrepteca, PY' pdo Ind. uttea. ~...2()45 N. TIJb Co proved for 4 oondol cw Abdnn romng aatate 2C Ptze tod8y 539-8190 X-LG 28A 1835 ..._.11 Ullll IUOl llLLSllE 235K Md C>Mllng! Npt .. tate. saso.ooo. Agt Icy lie pool 4 the Mel Beet Atty... EutlAdeno peta5S7·2941 ~ 8ctl 3 8d 2 be -------- Panoramic ocean & city view. 5 Br 3 Ba. laJMl lli&d HM Sho:~~=~• 67~777 pluah . dHlgn S 1000 C•••iaiw PV11 Br. frp6c, pool, S*Jo, =~~1~ 0:-= !s,"':' :-O- spac1ous e ntert.ammg home. $1.100.000. geo ll lxcUaft liii S3Mt90 Beet Alty... U~ 2411 gar. Nope. 399 W. Bey. w-N T.,eor Co. UM ... • 79'on bay rm 4 100· boet · _ I a u.:L "4.H St 1545 860-«)57 f .t.t--_, · c Cod :mer 3 8Br. PoOi oai1y 11·3 101 WILL TUii u t...... ....,. 3bt 21& p;e;; IOCatiOn Quite 281 cott type aca-..._.,, :r,ma 3 bathl "'api.c. VII Lido Soud 87a.7873 $3.300.000 M.A.I equity 2682+12be'. atth dbl ow. :"/" park .,.. Patio, wlgar. leundfy. ~ petto a.au. 1t1t ••"U•••tl *l In muteuulta •priced tor on 314 unlta Low cost am fncd yd., adltl. no d, pool j8c llOCW-Qaf· M25 + S500 MC depo A;;g ™ now m quick Nie aaSo,000 OllmY Y1UJ11 condoa unoar oonatruc.-P9t• $595 8-48-2ee1., ege Sl200 557.2900 S23 credit di 942-3099 ' 3bf ~ Pen homa. SPIRITUAL AEADtNaS LJll IUl.n T w o I o t I • tlon S, Bard. C1y. Can~ 3 91 2 be dup6p encl Y9fd PENTRIOOE COVE QUlt9 beed'l loc. S&.50 wk. Advto. In Al """"9 & BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR t.l• fl.,.,,,,i. O•-.• "II B 67'> (>lbl 7• l•-comm'llrHldentl11. rented .. 11Pta. Hu 5 yr W9hfJdyr hkup cbltcl <*-28' 28a. apllt...,.., trpa, E~~&38t dptx 8~ eoun.lno. 1115 So. EJ INVE8T IN YOUR KIDS I •· -Reuonable. Leu.op-ftn.nclng. Wiii conald« pell $e95 557 2382 w/d 2 car gar W/opeMr apt. Y' petloL CernR> AMt., San Cl9m. =rMI eeta1e In RIYer-e .. lllffl m HIT tlon. Agt 873-3777 home In N.B.-T.D '1-no -poot, IC>l 1950 SM-9200 ~·tr!, ~S~S = ~ :=.svu2&a:em; ~Cl. '482-7'2M Ax-• .-........ at .,...per nice 3 Br,t1mUy ••JFlllT Ranch land Principal• &e25 get• 3bt 2bl trt ha T xtrM 4 3 .......... A~_._ .. 24• - , LIZ . --.....--•••• room "E"Planonlovely Ctnaaulllaa 1022 -only553-teeo appllmoddecorkldp« ......... STUNNING lMge 18dnn ... .......,.., __ , ,..., •• -. M&.ooo. GrMl rentatl. greenbett. Large patio ch!!=tlVI m HOUM: -··-· u w..... 11•• <* cool pool 53M190 Vaf~ uu gwden llPf, pool $4e5 MAUI. bwA,. COftdo~ 1111 IW c:all tl84..S200 CalHornll ....,,,. balcony, Immediate .... " . .., 111..-& N Beet Alty fM ·-..-... --R.lty ,...... 3BR 3ba gBIO«I dng, ,... Spacloua own•r'a unit c D 2 ea;m 2 car gw ig; 710 W 18th SI on .. _ ---· _., _... . avlllllblllty. Submit on turedN~et.O.CHOf'M ov•rlooklng undy WANTED DISTRESSED Beautiful lrg 5Bdrm, kltdi,petlo.'pvtSt .• ~. I ....... ~ n .. a p.p.(7 M)4es.2319 ........... . 1/2 ·--... m ·--ctlffdr9n and pet•. Leny & Garden. pp 876-11713 beech. V9()&nt . lmmed. ESTATE ON WATER AG1 playrm & goodlea on S800. 942-0291 u ..... OCEAHFAONT ~ <~.~ •• "":" ~ -"99 Oyer 94•..e200 poue11lon Juat re· 963-5321 Any price. Rhodesia H BMct\ nr IMO/mo 2 Bd G l!pt. awA~~M5C>- 1.0t1 Of lutdoul peril Hke IOUllllUYllW modeled TradH ac-lataJi OCMn87S.54&4St100 ,artanh PuaiaW lnclgar,yarO,peUo N9w-$1260~ lend. Not In Senta ANI lrHIHI. Mnl J ~ oepted. 808 So. Baytront. Cuual old. town badl pad pon Beed\ AMhy 876---------Of•I IHI Helghta.Prtv11e.Secur1ty wttluten .. n-nt. AaklnX u 1s.ooo.11asafuaiaW upper $300'• billl tree 1942dyl99G-4814 ...... lntalatl W(l1t)•1-1111 p:t•. HC>ttM OK. Room btertal8'atfl Owner/ gt 84+9513 W... bJ.Ut walk to wa119a 53Mt90 . Pniua.la 2117 ·•mUll Aue .:CS="'~~':'~ ... m .. ,r.~. LIDO -5 Br. e·~ bl, ram-Ziii Best RltyfM Upper duplu furn. 2811'MJalnMC:Utltyoom-IMI SCRAM-LETS ... t0< '395,000. c.11 for P t P J ,..._ rm, den, rec rm, 7 yr new, 3 8d apadous lMng room, LOVELY OLD SPANISH 4 OCEANFRONT 2 8d yr1y ptex rwllt to HB p6er Al CdM J 6iG to 6Ci\ tar appt. C&ll now ~2313. -... I .,a. O..,letetJ •car gar, 873-7787 dllhwutier. gar Avail 8d h par11 Ilk bacil l800 mo ...... 873-0067 ~ greet ooeen evell. Stw 38r 2'Mta.. Pref ••~ ...... ~~~ ..... ...i 3Bd2~:n~epleoe.~t& rt••4i•IM.SMl,OI01 LlllllU SeptS900818-792..e570 y1~dUO:u .1-u·1 or cen .. Ml Jiu MU viewsas0(213)432-1333 n/lkrlilmS'7071CM043 IUWnt.I\~ •~~iiJI~~~~· clean. aparkllng pool, laaMtllall0-"11 StOOOODOWN SummerRentaJLtlBl3bt 9e3-090211kf0<JlmS s'ANDCAST E !f!!!!I!! ....... COM 2br, near bch, a..ctl·Greln R 2 I ' 2be.blt in .. wld-<2bl gar L "'-"-rv .u. nlll'f'OMr, S380. Ext 217 OaUn-lnfwlt '!~~~~~~~ beeutlful yard. large -Int"" I Ellh 3 Br 2 Bl. lrg playroom. 81111000 wk 87s.9528 PRETTY 3BDR HOUSE 281. 2Ba. pool, rrp6c, wet· YIWIE S5J-52S21873-200e TANGLE .: lot S 149,500 •• lurn . only $400,000 8111 n •" Ed Ing a r 1 n d bar. wtd. mlnut.. to Aher ~ to ""I -.. ILlffl-llW usn• llYllE lYUIE IJl·HOO Grundy Rltr 87S.8181 c.n ..... llu 2lU Spmgdle $850 994-4961 FUhton la or bctl. Lwa ~ t & 2 Bdrm lwlury CdM GAEAf AOOM ter'I lad story of ... llllULnll. Lot90xt7Swlthgood3 Bd IUCllllPW IEWUYFlllT Cameo Shores ocean lniH :;~ Sl~ ~ ~~1~~ ~5UM of~~ ::;*" wtttt .::: MPll LUI! 2 ba home. s199.ooo. •20111n With dock. 3 er 2·~ ea view. 3 &•den. 3 a.+ se: 21%L wOOOiUUooe RMlty C:S...20eo + P<><* •enNa. .m•-~ ..... ~~ow _....__ 3 bd ltJ ltlar•I• lltr • 3311 Flni.y $.425 ooo Pool $2650/mo Agt tab ......:...... Gae ..a&A ..---.-roommate ...m.s ·1• • • ..,.._...,... rm..-ldunlt •••.Jl-Large 4BRowner•unltla '"t 673-3777 · 87a.ne1 PARK VIEW PATIO Elf ·--: _... l280 +t2utlfumCM lttllk•twotoTANGLE." on quiet greenb.i1 with -&• vacant plu1 1 .3R o.-1 '"'V HOME. Facing par1( & .o-trt From San ~rwy Clc>ee to bc::h 549 0404 r.,. endOMd ywd &. 2 ladled rental OlvOf'oe!IOIAUlllTMU,IM l!!J!!.! lt.U 2lit jlioent to lam pool lldty 2 BR & w/;;;e:n POOi 1 ~;:, We9t to '*~c:r':;-~ lovely patio.. Convenient ,_.,._____ toroea 1&1e & low prioe oflHome/Ouptex 5109 S... txm gate guarded 786-9790 or 857..056 tennis court. E.-y aoow McFadden to ~ ~ c!:to~ ~o~ PMt, ~1 & Mure ::~':i'ngne:' =~r~ :.6:'·000· Hurry on this anore ownr/11gt S4!>-2947 Harbor Aldge 3 +3 Elegant 4-5bdrm 3be tiu ~~~f-2~.x.lt VIiiage. (714)89a.51H S3-40 mo 87S.9643 87S.24t5 °" 831..aM4 Beach Tennie Club. Aarnir u-... H ocean.C1talln1llkevtew. frplcwe1bar&a/cdblgar . ,_;. ,,, __ ... rm Large uaumabt9 loan at -•i..c llULTY .,_ r1.&A community pool. spa, kldtp« S1200 539..Sf90 Af11!!n11 Vaf. Latu! llM~ Fem non amoll•. lhr ___ , _______ .... .....,_ 11.5%.Land may be 111·1111 1201 llWI tennis. 760-1489 Best IN ' m:""TC ocn vu Wat to Laguna Bctl, MW oc:w.-FOUND: Bwtt Hound. purch&Md for S25,084 ~--0-...-..01 "--11 •111 l Large' BR ownen unft la •-----._.....r-'-"-..1 1m••1 laJMl lalaJMI nll bch N end b.m «*I &¥'9w~ Muat be~. otdt*lwttt"*9, Vic. Def wtth 10% n and A.ak "" vacant plua 1 BR CS.. -.... --SeoO ~ 497-4801 nee1 ....., peta. ...,...,. M« C.M &4$-.3780 n ::\ • • .... E teched r9tltal. Olvore. ltatral Z202 Call ua regwdtng ll'VIM CHARMING 2bt 1ba-llt9 & yr mo. 497~7 __ • __ . -----~l·:~~·~0~al~O~L€~ S10l,llO owe ~!!,12~~. Total toroee we & low prlcia ol Sn dOM 2br hme i5&) Leues alry-frpl.priv aun deck· STUOtO No kltch, N. end, Fem to lflr w/2 ottwa: F<Uid: brownlatt ktn.,., OABOLT. Many many .xtr11 tor that reheb.-l~pc-. 549·2042 $288.000. Hurry on thll fncd n prvt • kld1/pet1 .in:ffi yrly S8SO 213-2n-2120 we.Ill to bc::h S375 utlta 3BR condo. t blk from hdlled fa09. Beectl & GE 1sQ-Q100 ---·--- 1at time buyer. Cleen 2 onel woo't tut 539-8190 ~ I 1 W... Ind. yr t>..i. 497-4801 beectl Call 875-e068 N9wtand, H.B .. trw to BR. 1~ BA condo In a Eutsldectlarmlng38drm, DUTU llULn Best Alty,.. a so, r I Pnbua.la 271'1 • ..,., ..... Hit FemM9 * beeut hie In good hc>rM, &e$-1221 ::,~=;,gs:.-:~ ~~ t~~.;.~bl.f~·.~ 111-1111 281w/gar&ywd,E.1Mde ea ty I NI09 sfudlO. Yrty U!O. NB .... pool, dwl'g FOUND: moneiy, OWi* I ~H~~,;::..~uyer on OEVl~~~STATE 0 PElllSIUn. 18'~~~~~. 786-1172 ~~~~~ M~to':;,.~~ ~~J::J •••••a•-·..... • ... -.-A caantront cottage. ._...,1 .,._..__ Furn Id ....... pd...._. Found:Whtt9do;wttttl.O ...... -· IUI ..... --E·tide 3bt 2ba-fr pl-tam $420.000 with saeo.ooo --.,...... Ctnu Ml... nu . • . .... _ . .-........ ~ Beectl Anlrnlll • UNITS In EASTSIOE rm-aa.um 9.45 Uklng lllUmable. Agt 87~777 ....... -IN NEWPORT BEACH jac E\lllfyn 651·1982 Shetter &44 316e C.M.wtthgoodrentall\le-S129.900egt 831-5737 Rare SI~ Level 'Paula' .IAMlllUl.n Cleen. tpedol• 281 2Ba. Agreetp&aoeto!Monthe Prof""''°* 38r 28e . t Wiii Ida I M PllP aa11Mft19 3880 Mk:netlon Drtw rrp6c, gar. wld S650 IM Upper Bay. Private ,,.... Badl ,,._ _. CM LOST F/b6Ktl leb 10mo'a.. v°';/de h!,. : Cl~ UllA ISU umm llllll IWIO qui.t cu de sac lmmac-··---· lrvlne 875-<t912 Agt clubhoua.. & tlHllh '225 + Ya -uU.;'· HM red colar, vtc: of 19th St paper on NM. 10 1x·1 A Valentine c:uatom bYllt 2 houMI on lge lot. 3 br + $285,000 fee Coutal 11'/llMllJ Reeetve thb 3bf 2ba mod PATIO APTS wlln W91klng IC>M. 9 tennll eourtl. 7 84M139/646-1MI MIG C M 7 3 1. 8 9 3 4 / groee. A.eking $250,000 horn• In an ••cellent 2 bf. Perr.ct for lnll9ator Comm/rllt 754-7474 tyte pool time /llPC* & of the bctl 1 & 2Br &e75, pc>ota, Clc>ee to bu9lneel. loet: lilm Ptt Bull wt wlbr c.u 831_1400fordetalla lagoonlocltlonandlM-or extended family lal.MabUU ~blQ-VS75053'9...190 sa7s&$850644-2etl OC Airport. F11hlonOul11Uta.bteMJFw3Br3 reiarlege&tal.TMl&tha turea 5 bdrm•. 4'~ bathl Super bUy at S189,000 llllOEI Tl UU Elegance 1bound1 In Belt Alty t• It:. •--"•• 191and, <:On\lenlent ~ bl P9r\ Bctl twn. 50 yda REWAAo MC>-5389 H.B WAH R•RONT and II oompletety re-.Call today 759--1501 Detached 3br 2'Atba 3bdrm hie ehllfa g..ii.y ,,,.. .. ..,... .,.,. on tight OOMI\ & bay.'"*· dee:tt. tiOMI '!I lac. decorated. Extentlve Condo Open bMrn cell. er optl fur/unf $850 Tunle Rodt View dramatic tAd ik In IOMt W/O, ow. $340 mo L 0 s T : (RE w AR 0 ) RE•L EST•TE woodWOn< compllmentl ~Lii Ml90 .. __. ott.. .__ Peters 2 Bd den 2~ be.. rm. wa • c · 1255 Ole>. AVI trtwned. Keeeehound (SHAVED ,. ,.. and apacloul rooma. For-• form Oln, frpl, mini ocean ~· •u •1 ·-w/d 1r1g 11550 e'Ja..m pool Immediate oc-Slngliel 1 & 2 8dml Apett-eJS-3380 aft 8/WMdl FOA SUMMER) tight grmy '31·1400 al llvl + large 11\1, U10m loen, ownr wtll Twnhle for Jr Exec 2& · cupanc:y S-425 651-0424 ment1 & Townhou'" bOdy/dark ma rklno•. --------~lty r~°::'h aonken carry 2nd 1205,000 28a hkups prvtpetlo Lg Univ Park-detached 1br lba ttv lr1gwtr pd no from SMO (AM about Reapon rn'W'M910 atw 28r -· toa4IP Me-1640 --------we1 bat. Ideal f0< 1,,.. 4~---~ Agt/ownr831-5881 1v&'oiningi ba16"46-3981 lmmec 3&-den. 2'..\Ba, petllc::tMn alr'OI adult-fumllhedapta,c:omplet9 28awlge,r Utlnc:IS375. l ... ltl 2 dOOfloutdoor recr .. tlon ~ lam rm. l!l>I. be9tn <*I s..25 5-48-354<> with TV. llnenl l ut.,..., Waltt. to bctl. 875-0888 PentUb Jilt P ....... l"lttt.W. and ent•rtalnlng. SEAVIEW38r28a, 24 hr lal... $900 942-3153 mustbe,.,,edforlhor1 Sl'lrnloedwloondolnSC EllllTl/111' B,1 1 .._ .1..1-• .,._......., aa CourtyBld entry and • teeurl'Ji Low down, low Pta1a1ala Z217 Wlllll•I 1BR CAPE COD term or IOnger). On Jam-pica.,... n/amtt no'*' --•r...,. ..,., .... , ""UI Gl•/Ltft G Very cute $425 Elltde. t>0ree Rd. at San JoeQuln s2~"'~"'2•75 .... Outc111 ONLY 83M198 latace I tfflee, 1 latg9 allp + aide .tie.., prtc.. I TAX DEDUC-•UYFIE• BHutltul Warmington Avall riow 645--9628 Hiiis Rd ~~ " , ... meg "---fr S.CUrlty l)'ltem. Owner 1141. TION(819)729-15t8 Gorgeou1 381 2a.. All townhome, 2 Bdrm 2 ea , a.a.a 1IOO lntab ...... Bil~ OJj. 4114 -,,.., .. "' Ilk•~ to mil• ottenl 8;';,~ ~~·~ 2!:'r:~ SUPER SHARP cuatom amenltlea, 2 1t0<y. Yrty over'loc>klng adun PC>OI & 2Bd 1 ~ ci gar.a/c:,tnhM .....-xn&;Uel!OP:elld) ~ ,.,, lwHf will Offered II S1.250,000. teched garage& 1 ac>«:lal twnhome. 2Br.illbl, den, i. s2100/mo. 875-<t912 ape. Obi garage wtttl st ii•. S 5 8 5 C Ir o I 1 yr •tum. rodl/Bonlta high vo1ume.'gc1 loc.,::; ....Wertrl4t.r.tl c.11831-1400 air conditioner with •Ir 0Yef1'g 81Q Cenyon goll Agt.AvallAuguat 1 opener. Drive by 22 94 598"48.tty64S.91e1 Canyonlch.,..3or4bf cllente6e.&42..a519 ............ MJl,111 paclfter. located In a courM. A.cs.to S299K Clover, then call Lola 2bdr l'Abl Twn tl~vt 3t>Or 2ba gw"9't11 lalndry 8"-5258 aftT 5pm ,._ • -\\-1\TI Hf HONf Coate Meae complex wlterma ~owner Charming cottege 3 8d 2 &7a.75"44 S875/mo patl~•-no p«a &e25 + rm-dish wulHg pr1 deC:tt Need 3 or' Bdrm home tn laftl••t 0 S b• lndk. 2·~ gar.yrty --s150 831-e1ss a~=..i-•• I HOM( .. a.c. thlt'I very dealreable. pan •II un 1·5•t34 $1300 67a.7oe& •f 8PM Woodbridge E1t1t....:3br dee> 543-7510 So Orange Co begin-........ 1 1111. Piil 1127,IOO REAL ESlATE Too good to be true at Sealaland(Ford& 3be lrml IV/dr+ tmly rm· 2bdr 1ba wtw ~t dfl>I pr1 $500/mo .1 Bd 1bl ai>t nlng appox Sept t We ~e;g ...,,,;a I AVEI An11lou1 ••lier 831·1400 -only S95,000I 94&-7171 Jamboree) 8&2· 1873 Certal ••• Jiu un brktst nook-dbl gw-ywd-gat cl/qt E-alde lplx $650 8CfOe9 from beectl Good ha~ 2 aml ~ '°' lmllll ~ (71•1 c=1owtoM11qulckty TWlm~'l 2 Br 1 91. trPIC. lrg 1mmacs127584&-1018 11t11ut • ~ 942-9733 IOCa~';;'e:"~ f:\4~•1: ~ na-1114 :~n~., bed~~ .lllT LllTlll Liii sundeclt, nic. yard, c:toee Wll•IMI -&pm & wlmds TIL w91•w11 aft Sat .My 2t (819) -Hlst_ortc:_thea ____ too _____ t new · cspetlng, energy BHt value In Harbor ~o bctl: 111~7 : / •vall Home on quite ~.ac 2 Bdrm 1 bl, garage, lam-7 5 5 • 9 7 e 5 or ( 2 1 4) tor Mile/'-beck by ee- aav•ra. South Co11t WI.,.., AIU I •---L .... Ridge Astumable 6%~~54 1 m o 2br. den. 2ba.atrlum. lrpl dry l*up, no p«s S575 M2·111J 228-0923 for JamH t&bilfled ~°' 25% P1au llH Call now BMutllully decorated 3 aal • ...W• S185,000 loan Almoat Ilg torm din lg kite. Incl gar. mo 842,..987 Avail Aug t C>-1ux 281 Byrnee I T.C end t...oa ..... II~ Bdrm home M11ter Huntington Gl\dma& 2,000 aq It of comfort and A pair ot CdM deals bach oen., UIOC tee. leue 2 Bdrm encl 9&r c:rpta condo Muet ... to IC>-Studlo/bac:helor llPt want-ment cndtta. '°"' t 0 8 I bdrm aulta tiu edjolnlng Beaut. redec 2 & 2 Ba luxury In thi. Ideal I~ pad S350 bllll pd 2Br ott $975 mo 540-2879 drps in w W"*>n n0 P"dlte View of Hatbor ed ,,_ 911 119 prof avell tor pun:hw money ~:l2!ir.!!I patio. Airy atrium and Condo Will 'help cation One yMt home PCH $890 539-8190 -peta· $550 831-e212· Xlnt amenltlea.. Sec:urted owr 35 (~ under A9kAng 1 1 ml; $110,000 (y4J4EE:1 brick patio. Pro· wl llna nce Owner warranty provided BaetRltylee La~ltM~ 224 parkl~ Call vatarta S350 840-3te4 NNN.._. Bttr953-1220 ... --------1 ... 1ona11y 11ndacapec1. 84s.1241 ()( &:J1.ose1 159.1501 Rig:;;rm;o;:;; 29dr. aen. 2 Bedroom. 2 batti No c213)21~211 Owner ready to move • a.111110 2bl l'IOme Ocean .. peta. patio, frplc.. dlhwlh WANTED Gerege In CdM WTllll priced to Nit at ~~.500. Imai l Spacloua oceenvlew, 3 19501..._ 498-383.8 tM E 18th St $700 mo 8achetor 112 btt to the for amall ~bench & Well located eo.t• M... ITlnTIUll bdrm. 3 t>a. awtmmlng 28118&. 1981 M....._A~ beedt ~7 .. ..::._170. 1315 •torege Tom84Q.1061 1-~!"'!!'~,.. .. .---. poo1 home wtth 3 Bdrma, 673 .... 00 pool. dbl car gar. 12500 l;Ert lffc~ Dlt _... v ...-.-2 bathl and brand new (714') <n wtth thl• 2 Bd.2 y, bl mo Tenet• wtM cooper-Frig. no peta. $.475 for 2 lftl fw .. le. .... aolat eyatam Thll ptop-Brentwood modal In ate to lhOW property for 2 rm. 1 ba. OOlY lido S1em1 Mgmt 941·t324 EASTBLUFF liPedou9 1 Ital 1112 ,_.fta&'t _.., la now vacant and Aborlake Woodbridge. lale Call Steve 973-1373 lale home, aparktlng 2bf 1bl c:ri>t drpea stO¥a l/Bd .. rm,~~:... ~~/mont Sci TO~ 111t & 2nd -., Light and airy with lovely Claoan. nftl pelnt. c.rpeta.. ,_ --........ ., ---1Mt lhe owner la G«tl~ 1 bit wallcOYeflnga Nice patio Channing COM 3bt 2 be drapee & atow w/mlcro pr'fV fti: ldtt• pref-no ~787 724 J8INI St Robt ~ NH/CM ~~~rn,•onty 1199,500. T1wa1111 Cotteged1n11nctryrm-no Frp11C.ell0fpat1o,dblgar. pet• 9~10 UDO view 5'* oeiux eo.taMwen-nu RE""*-BdReliftOB .SElECT Loweetl)(loedtn~. peta $1100 7$0-1184 11400 mo ..... No 2BR1ba.encl gartige 279 cust l8t.2 tgbetha. LM tala f t42~171 545-0e11 $ SElECT 2 Bdrm, 2'At ba, ell 83e-8722 Jotln Meeln-peta Pt!oM tor 1pp1 & w w1t1on. Apt G St250 IM 97~9 WANTED· P90f* neec1ng aonntRri.cs -------•I PROPERTIES aw1r1,newcrpt1.gar• toah appt 8U·0880 or M 6-18t9. $475/mo. sUXCL Oi¥k5f ;ound pvt TO Sa a1o.ooo up r-n~ Pl!; .+carport ti.... 77e.t880 Nwpt T9n Twnl'IM 3 bf, ...,_..,approx 100 aq, fl No credit...,. ~ P9MltY -:===;;;::::;;:-=:;;;::::;;:~~--:-~~-__,~ WAI.BT le/.,. DOLPHIN PROPERTIES 381 28a trn1 dlw ape 2BR 1~t,:· 2~ Or· 2.,. be.. trptc, petlo, 1 car AV911 8/1 UdO .... .,_, o.ni.c., AaeOcno en,7311 -... 1,...... 12~ 2Br 28a condo. Den. x:c· -r s12'50 ""--..... ... mo by. gar & Cfpr1. QOmm pool r:,.. lt.ndlna Alie torl'lr'-r-=---r---,m~ 0 ,_..,_ ·-· ol .... '°"' or•o...W -d• he ...... ,..., ._ ·-"' ..... d. I c A 8 H E L r I r I I I " A G R I I ' I I I I 1 ~-....0--TN_E.....-K...,A...-fl .... .:.· ,..,., ~IO""'-'•.., . I I r I .~ ~~~-:,: J~! ·~· dMI ~ i.l<ft :I ==i F=:'i =T=i=A =i=· "=r::I ! $.:·::.~.;:::; ,.,. ,. ,. __ , P•t•I $1 •o --· ..,,,_, Jo.Ann. Blilr. 7se-oe 19 S850 mo ... ISs.0292 St-97~131'3 I.~ .. lr'!! ... I --•••••• LU --... ""'. u " " Sa1/Sun/Mon t-7 ...... ---r.-nu.s -.....--.. Slen'•Mgm1941-1324 ._1 MMM.....i•l<I\.•"""" 2Bttbe.no-no-"'4 BotV\19M•Cl'fl I"-.--. .-.. A nee dMn C unit In M Walktolhoe>e.beectl.,Bal. ""' . ...,.--......-...-_... ....---~-,Ym.oeoornr......, FILl./1mNY 3BDR 28A Y d t I l\lm $.550 plmo OMd Oii OCEAN VIEW APT. 2M 1 t 1'9t .. /oftc • 150 a.I. excellent lnllcM location. P'er. '-'YI,.._ 38t/2be ar • rp • 4 Bdrm 3 8a. tamlty rm AYI tit 831 ... 156 2be. nawC*pettng, ...._ -/W'y 873...tl03 PllT/tm-~~ ..!.".!. •vallable. -.211Bat8f8'1W943 r:'!=~~ ~=""· 114M'T~· 28 2 e 2 Ory,_. 1 ~8"eo9 ~ ()ppof'tunltlea avaflat»e ..,.._.,..,__ -~ ..,.....,. ··-• r .,. •· atory .-.s:esQrmo.1tcM!Ole D•luae otc 1pece wtttlthel08AHG£LES 144-1111 ==~~. 3 8dml 2" .. Ba. e Y"I MW, pOOI Imo Bob """'4lvM.. Pool, ~· w/d , .. , WloompuS rm.' 1llO tq TIMES ~ o.. llk• new ... 25,000, IOw dbl att 99' WloC**, Kooc:> 131 12M S?M IN 8JS-49 2 AQt 111111• ..wl fl 17156 , ..... ~St, F1 pertl'Mht In our dOor to oown ~ aso..1toe yerd. bft·lna. Matt ~ 4 Bdrm + maid 1 ~ 28t 28&. gi11r. no pets. 28a 1e. wtowpon & petto "'Y (unltl 0 ~ FQ 11450 Ooor nu..,._ .... Me, 9V1.. new flra IOdl Olk tW'l\ly rm dlNnO rm 1912 W~ •4 S100 J'Mrly 5-41 MIU p/mo groe&, ll2w&S33 pr09ram. Qu.arantMd .. .,..,..... A,,.anow.teNliM bMullfulfy d.corated: S$3.5 '31-3171 S1epa to tt19 ~ I 2 LA9'G! OFFICl8 houf'Y -0-pg~ BANK OWNlO 4 19'. Ta~ Ml· 1• .-.. 1pa, ~ H11 E -. -... • 2 fwtndow ..._ NMf mla9ton. ~ ... '° • ~ "°' -ac>t. P"'1 bdrm, be. pvt PMto w 9pm Tra1n1no 11 illiliiil!iP.-.-...-..---0 NL Y 2 1I .I0 0 . 38r 1'.a. dpC& In 8A "'9 '3000/mo l(oop yrd, oar .._,, nr. Ind Yrty $1000 plmo ......... 0 C AlrPOrt, trvln• prcMl:tfd. ,._.,, to It ·-"" rm, .~ ftnanoeda112%1nt.-. 0. fncd.-172Stmo+ 131·1211 '825 ltlCMMI prof wfW'l'llylQ-...as Z.,H, Maetatlal & ---.-w_..... •an._ oceat1 -· Cel8*tr MS-a3n • ,.. ~ .. ..v ...a -.. -.,._ .... - CM> Ha. poo1, .,._PM aw*:.:C-s~ ~ 1111tt .... 11Hll a. Sbdr 2be ~laundry LllllY-'450 ea1mo. 1u.-.o F«.,, 11• .... a11; P'tr In ""arded J:~ ,.., 4tw, 2 -.oc.. poo1. rm4lltl ~ pn deci 2 ledrOOft• 2 betll Mr..ae1.i 1104 w of,=: ..... ..,....... SBA 1W dbl oar\ fhod trp4. 2 09'/opn S4070I 1750 CU ... 155 deoofalon moo.I .~ .. ... .. ... OfACa HELP •• .000 ~ on ~ rs saoo .... .u 155 ~ .... ~ '* a-"' howe, Pod. ..,.. ..,,.. °'"... Coun1)I Alrpcwt °'*-........... U ... LIT ~lade lay"'°"'.I 51·HH comfortable decor GoodW.icte~311r 13t-4No 171.00 .,.., com. d flWilll' ~be a.- wa• n ;--a.. ...a Of,_. 300 !. ca.~ H r 28a. den 2771 wlbltN. lllldl Olk SS$O 1~ a., pdoa. OIW bit· V'9w 3 bf, 2 be.. tdry. f1#, ~otl -~ ~b4Uty,.. toms ..W......, & • ,,~~\~Ji~~(.''"''' IN I' r r I' I' r I iiiiMttW. 87S.13.31 Mon-Fn Mpm Lew.NO No~ ••ooo $3M1to 8-1 Alty... Ina ll()da()t( 2-ecy AWll Oecll. ~· ~ bctl AWi ;-~ & 1tiO ~ft'= "~ .....,_, ~ OWH .... WlllT!. .. .-f~ ~ ...... In SW,,.Mgmt 1•1U• Lioo ISL! ' ..... *' now seMmo '60-1216 l/15yrt,S1200&U·~S buldtod.CompelftM ~ :::;:..,"~ I ~~'~;:'~N;wt;' ''""' I l J I I I I ..... ....._"lb L.llQUM lwfl A !Met 38r 28a. pool, IP9 Hor1ft clWmnQhmon~<*lr 1 .llNllbut WESTClff tlr ConOo t9'11t .._ ~ ColT Or•ry 1ii1 l .... l"J~~ buyl Owner1Ag1n1 . CM.Pool1YC a12001mo •t ewii111 t1eooagn1 Cort wlnaturel WOOd. POOl,nopetalil&Olmo A&HINVt:STMENTI lAlmnA..,ec..ii....._ ..... UYI &uwn 18 ltetllftt ..... lllJ _,._ 9814131 5*'reMgrn1 941·1!24 !cneOl~ltnal44·tolO '41& IS1.e&21 AY911no.r 17'MMO 111.... 140-,_ '~~~~~~---~~~~~~..i.--=~~~~- C8 Orange Cou1 DAILY PILOT/Monday. Juty 23, 1984 ..-.lb l•r i•• llre•larl !M!!!!!!!!!!I.!!!!!.-&m a 111"1n Certrz " BIALTI Nue~ PJaaMa1 l)7!•1 ltmtt Inn FCn: (ogoe ~ Cetpent 8eNtoe I llusltla..1..._ AMl!AICAN HANDYMAN OnSe1i:Va6' bf Spic;;; em W-stone . . 111l&U." .... ft1111 Typtng/WOfO Pr~ng --------· Ada. .te. r.--tlon tO a-.1. "'-~'" ryd .. ......_ & Gl:I I m inc Mirror doort-carpentry foodl for tM tlgtltyt. Call Blook-conc~Stl.ICCO Awrege Room 129 • ._.._ ~ Q All buSl'*8 IChOOI l p«· $217 d ~'ii'i-t0t2 ~7."'""''i.t.980 ~alllta~(n ..... /rnngt plumb-palnt.gtau.fene• Enid 5ff.Oe37 Rer1. F,.. .. t 6-4~12 Material•. M2-o.4.42 tNi'P:~~:;=Jo:: eonal pro~• 151·10.1 I per ay :;~· ... mtt profMllonal• 83S-3050 •Ltlco-;~~~-~~~?RO tut .... H I PAINTER NEEDS WORKI &48-7310 That'• ALL you pay tOf __ lnt/Ex1, ctltJnot • ...tin oab lttll Wta•tW Cltaalat 3 llnee. so daye ., Arw • Rtpelrt rm;;; p;tQ path; !I ROBIN'S CL NINO .... , MYlll* (2e) yrl exp .. wonc gu.,. •• WHITE wiZXRd In the Reeurl.et"G~lng etc. No 0Job to0 em.ii: fllll Carpentry Paln1ng Repalra Sl!AVICI! 1 thOf'OUQh~ CLEAN l !XP!AT Davia Painting "4-3837 OuaJity Roofing: Sr. cftG;i WINDOW WASHING DllLY Ind • S&S 831...i1et A-.. Mickey 536-0MS 10 yreup. alt PhaMI Incl IMn hOIJ.. 540-08 1 Ovtr1 T·2151~2• exi>«730~1353 RC't Painting la-air dltc. Ret1. L.tc. 048117. QUALITY" 831·2025 " . Topped/removed. Clean-mobile hm tenlof di• CLEANING I wh t I d Le e.•29 -EXTERIOR 85PEcl~LISTS K. "'nkt &.45-0193 A1tt Dttallla_J Orlveway81, Sp~C!.•walk~. up. new lawnt 751-3478 count #RC95S-.293 PTL t>Mtt StuO.:t w/l!c. ref: ITUVlll "aaLlll lie. 953_.293 PrL R!P .. IR s---•a1tat*200 • OP. WllMW WUllll PILOT * 86UTR eOXSt XOfo Patl~. P• ..... Lied Clten Up1•T,.. Trimming I yrt ex.p. u .. 5'41J·a857. .. .... .. _... -.. Bttt rat .. 7 dyl. DETAIL.ING Haod wuh l Aon 556-003-4 Yard Malnt.•Haullng Competlw Rat• for all 11111111 llYIH •• • Top Ouallty Work· i.te Fr .. Mt. 30yrl axp. 831·1083 SERVICE wu. By appt. 751-IJ.4$ 1 cm• can MIKE eSO.UM typee of oomm. oon1t & ExpertlH HouMkMplng Orange Co. Original Int/ext Rel/Comm. ~ 770·2725 an~lme Walt i-~ .......... -.------ r .. ld. repalre. 20 yre Oepend1b1t/Tru1two11hy Student Mo-.. Tneured rat .. Lio. Ken 831-6-405 REPAIR Speclali.t-$200 & ar• 1t1aaac1 D.ECTORY =ttla~ Mom w/;:;<ty ChlldhOOd Commerolal/Rteldtntlal exptt 751--3882 Ito. Wt bring 1upplltl and Lie T12~.M1-8-'27 1 ... Free tit. 30y1t e1tp. Mtk•'• Yard Malnt. f,.. pkAt the IRVIN! MIRROR end the HUNTINGTON BEACHCOMBER~ ~ ~ wtll beb~ emr Landtcape Malntenancie r -D.-.al 1• vecuum Khty M1 .. t10 NEWW ----· St ''IS'la! 1 5 w-1 I r et an other will Stnll le ...,.pen ._,,..re "yr1 exp .,..,.....,.. or11gt 770-2 2 an~tme .. t trtm, clten up. Haul ng. beby91t_:r. 6. nlghw 7 chi • fty9/fM. 1-2e ~ 20 o;:, ":-~:..: Gen. melnt · e:•ct1ca1: Homec:te.nlng By JOOI. lanlit Ln'tcn ;~F~/AEUoVXCt y ttratt Low prloN. 815-3930 Wtldnttday et no •xtra ot\efget CALL TODAVll d•YI. . 846-1131 C.att11ten MoW-::.ra ~~tcape plumb. Craig~ 119 .:t= ~":~:-Llw tni." CNX'1. eRRX'. M~ ar,:: llY'iTllUll ltatt Law ... ., stntH lutral 0 0H OAU" lte• It &Ill QUALITY HouMCltannlng needed tor home care Expert Walloovertng In· RV Storage Spacea avall li..,_,. __ ...,.._!'I'-.-,... UNSUITS HEREI Body 11t cCXS8 CONST COMPLETE GARDENING StrvloN A to z. We'w Got thorough, rellable. local •7&-02M ttalletlon. RM.I Conault· ~ Anza Ber-Ide VIiiage: Stat• llw ~u,,.. that all Btautlfut Salon 22311 ~odeMng&NtwContt Malnt-Clnu~T,.....Sod ThePertonlorweryJobl ref1 Pat•97-325'4 Palatial antAulgnmt.581-8590 300 E.Coaet Hwy. N.B =~=-~I=~ AllfllLllS Y OUf Oelty Pilot B<ookhurlt HB 963-9079 forComm.lAtlld Lto'd, 111~1 e..e.7310 Retlabte, h<>Mlt, rMtOO-RICH RD siNoR1s FARTMINQ INTERIORS 973•1331 Mon-Frt a~m t.bor and mattrlall mu1t leat •atat. lneured l bonded Com-JUST US 3 We handle all Repalrt, Painting, Drywall, able exp loul couple Newpor1 Cuttom Painting HANGING/STRIPPING I dltn be llotnMd. Unltotnltd ~Dlrwtory Atpreeentattw ltm pett11Ye rat• 751-3tl32 your ~I landac:aplng & etc FrM eltlm•t• Ample rtfl 873-7227 18yraofheppycu1tomera. VISA-MC 873-1512 n ntt .,, contractora the>Yld 10 Zimm«:! Gt MaJn-llllm •111 OHST. g~.,1a111ntd115.5t1~2t').~1Area Gery 6"5-5277 PTL Ltc 280&4-'. 875--0383 NORMS WALLCOVERING epalttd Fair Rat•. atat• In their actwrtltlng. tenanoe from TOP TO Rtmodtl/R'::,an. comml S_.. ~ $ERV/REPAIRS for your ITllVlll lOTIElllS RAINBOW PAINTING FrM E1t 10 per rott Call Cal &42-8789 ;~~r~~to~~nt!~~ ~~';y BOTTOM. 833...f5591 and , .. Id Llc'd, bonded, LANDSCAPE & CLEAN· home/but. Reu no fob HOUSEIOFFCCLEANING Quallty la our poll~ #330988 780-7211 I I Grondleat 558-60Hwlth 142-4121 tit. IOI Up 5 Yr •• 'lper tree ett to sml·f-ett '"50-~3'" C8't us In your cteanlng 650 ••~6 JEFF L'-• • Tt tjlatat e::tr Ca•iatt •Uia1 Int. For •t 552-9142 Dave ieo-9077 ....... u ~ ~ rolell e.48-7310 ""'" ........ •1a1ttr/~lr Franki m~Repalr any q~tton1. Contrae- -EXTERIOR· TOP QUALITY EDIS p ERING • I 1 & 2 II tor'1 State Lloentt •N.w eabln•t•. refacing, !;! Crttalat LANDSCAPE SERVICE Baalia~ work for yours FrM •t · .. lnalll atlon. ne Board, 28 Civic Center Europe kitchen•. formtca Tree trim, L•wn Matnt etc D h p JOBS & Hta11k1l• l1mct1 Ref'• Dale 6"8-5837 Neat Patchtl & T11ttur• phones. ett. over phone. Ptua. Room 890, Sant• XccoORti d SVcs-low rat• tor am bUt/lndlv Call Un Gw 978-8885 countertop• ~9-5747 ... y Oogtl $10·115 free eat Juan 5'48·9443 m Alefioid Sec:ty:m11iout1 Int/Ext. free Nt e.45-8258 8 yre •xi>. e.42-9220 Ana. CA 92701 (GROOMING SCHOOL) · SMALL MOVING JOBS bkkplng,errandt,orgenl Hse Painting, tnt/ut. Pl I Wltl1a1/l1a .. tlla1 CABINETS & CARPEN· Teachtt,21yrae1tp. Shrubs/TrM Trim. Cpmpl MIKE6"6·1391 zetlon.836-9t5!5-brochure Quellty at lowest retea. •• •I TVltmct TRY. Small Job•. repalr1, 5-'8-28-'8 gardening. comp<.ittlve HAUL-MOVE-REMOVE Free eat. Dave 8-'2·-'583 H lu 11 f ll0-1171 TV SERVICES Fr .. eet + Bulld/e:=od·. sw ... It, tree e1tlmate1 &'45-2003 prices Chuck &'42-2873 L I •--.a SERVING N 8 c u 0._ITl•ln ,,..... _.. " Furniture, Traill, Tree• tta HITICll Hse Painting . Intl.XI. . .. ...... . some good TV'• for ule. ,.,..., bath, ofc, rm add, pello Car~atrz llHtrical Tree Trtm. Cleen-Upa 983-5415 NORM -Ouallty at 1owe1t ratet. CdM, Irv .. H.B. F.V , Pete 8am-7pm 548-8057 knock• often when yol :~'t.'sti:~ ~~~~~~ Xii Pfi .... of Remoa;llng, PUllU IUOTllO Yar~~·~~·7~~t~llng Dumping-Hauling-Moving ce~~1~T7~t~~~~~~3 Free eat. Dave 6"2--'583 Dfeln• clMr trom $ 15 ute rffult-gettlng Dall) Fences. Patio's, Painting Oualltyworl<, ,, .... 1. P.U./Detlwry. Beat Rat• Repair reuoe11. dl1p, etc. 1.T .. u.,..t.•.1.lt_m_c.•---• Piiot Ct111lfled Ad• tc Aatl1•n Reu. price. e.41-1990. •25513 968-7"4()1 Ba .. ~.. Free 911. 2-'hr. 831-1083 Liaoa1la1 llllFIELI PAllTlll. Anytime M&M 8"42·9033 IWln llW ::.,the Orange Coaa S.C.fntwfu AnUQu• BEST FOR LESS ELEC. CONTRACTOR free Bili tfieReUred HouMhoid LT HAULING -MOVING Int/ext. tr .. Mt. Lou! ref &pen Service & Repair Typing, Word Prooeulng. Phone 642-5678 & Paintings. Public whole Pat10t. Deck•. Fencea. tit. Quallty work guar. Handyman also llte haul-Garage & Yard Clnup1 FIOll LlllllllE 10yrte1tp. bOnded, lneur. 31 yra exp. 18 yr1 In arM. Fut, frltndly HtVtoe. We .... pr1ott. 873-9235 12yr exp. Oe\19 6"8-2990 #3783-47 Steve 897-7183 Ing reaonablt 751-9039 Jon 8•5-3192 811J/91M 139 #457730(71-')83&-e911 Lie #409035 98-4-8919 P-U & dt llver. 875--5712 .:.~ •• ~w~u~tt4~iiiiiiiiis~1:00:-l~~~-~~~~~~~~~--r~-s~1_00~~.,.~ •• ~.~ .. ~ •• ~~s~1~00~1~ •• ~.~w~.~ .. ~.~-:s~100~1~.~ •• ~w~a.~tt4~~s~1:oo:it:1~.1~1~w~.~ •• ~ .. ~~s1~00~:==:=::::=:::==:!!!!!!!====!! *• Hlml *' MECHANICS UIYllTTlll IEElll ... k Pitt•-•• Ptn•• llllEOTOR Houtek • houttmen A s .. h 00 Is 0-Ins Ir u .. I 1· 0 n s Full time 8am-5pm Mon· WOOD& METAL Adtt.. f/t-i)/t eva/wknd1 Permanent part tlmt poi-Yr/rd church pr&-lcil,1tr1 F II ~ k & • " g; " Fr1, no aummer help ac-FABRICATORS Charlotte't Slttert Agney ltlon Mon 2 pm to approx ASAP exp. pref. Sal neg. ~ ·C ;rg~j coo d • Appty 3112 Pullman St, & DRAFTSMEN to approx 5:30 pm. No 000 GROOMER exp In all DOMESTICS 642-8142 oepted Start 5'. p/hr ELECTRICIANS 420 82nd SI 6"5-3748 8.30 pm. T~ 10:30 am 556--6335 or 556-7787 ~ o: I o~ E 0 :/p ~·~ t • 6 4 2. 4 3 21 _eo.t __ •_M_ .. ______ 1 be a part or tNI gr~ng ...... hl1l4 lltaltw exper nee Apply pen-breed1-Fult time with own No fM M1 Dee * IEllnUY * high-tech mobile medical Now Hiring 873-81'00 nyuver 1660 Ptac:entta, equip-busy 1hop-cat1 ....-,,_..,,...,,....-----~ 3 0 9 fltld. The lnteraeci Corp. 1~B""A,....N""'K""'t"'"'N""G______ Cotta Mesa 96'·5550 trom 8 10 5 In.dependent ln1urence t S"6ctng tndlvtdual with hu current opening• for cake decorator Agency hu opening for • L . ex good typing lklll• (IJO exp•rlenced manufac· TELLERS PIT cake decorator IRIYlll lloenMd nre & cuualty o ls • WPM), word procetllng turtng l)el'M>nnel In Irvine needed flex hr·Mlght needed 10< ofc furn de-produotl' Min. 2 yMra •x~ltne•. Ablllty to to develOp end produce Full & Pan-Time train-cell bob 67s-9191 llverlea Knowledg• of experience. Personal & manage bu•Y work load n.w medical moblle eye-O.C. a L.A. 642-5788 comm•rclal llnH. Re-in our new commercial tema. Call (714) 281--05•0 A par1-tlme and three full· CARET AKER. realdtnl f0< aume only to CHRISTIE & real tttete offioe In lhe 1oacheduleamlntervlew. llmepo1ltlonaavelleble Newland house & DRIVERS-crou country. ASSOCIATES. 4019 For thMe P<>91tlona, you d Y d & h Cellf lie req. MacGregor W t I Pl SI 203 Pacific Travel School School opens Sept. 10th John Wayne Alrpon area. Auto groun s. er ouse Yachts, 1831 Plecentle, ff er y toe · e , good communication A~TO wtll perform betlc teller melnlenence, In ex-Co ... e M-· Newport Beach, Call· 0 lkltlt a mutt. function• and 818191 change for apt. Rel•. '" --fornl• 92660 -111 WHT CA HIER cu11omera wl1h routine adults pref.. no pet•. Ealbllshed utes company rli -tranaac11onund apply to Board of seeks energetic reliable llSllE UUI (lH)lll-1000 problemawtthouteloM Trualees, 19820 Beech people to market pret-SI0,000 + ~ Aerobic Eierctte lnttruc S 12.50/hr. will train. Work own area 772-58" 7 Experience preferred, with xlnt working conditions. Many tnnge beneflt1, Incl retirement "4()/week, no weekend•. ealery com- mersurate with ex- l)el'lenoe. Cell Tina supervision or eddl11ontl Blvd. H.B or Iv msg et tlgloue natlonally known Newpon Beech firm ex· training. You need 3·6 962-5777 by Aug. 3 productl pandlng tales staff If you month• u •teller tre.lnee CllllER • Guar $7 /hr + comm possess good telephone or equivalent tnduatry • 4 & more hr ahlMe communication 1kltl1 and 610 E 17th S1, Santa Ana , Ca 92101 -----Aerobic: lnttructort for alt womens epa $3 50 hr + comm aten 5"4()-8276 experience Experienced, full or pen • Med & Health benefits can ute a 6 figure In- For Immediate time Ceahter I Recef P-• Exp pref'd, but wlit train come. We work from Answering Service-Tele- phone operators 3-1 l lhlft 362 3rd St. Laguna Beech t lon1st wen led or Cell Ed 55&-1000 6am-1pm or 1pm-8pm In cona+oeretlon, pleate Feah1on 111and retall ---------1 b d I t • pleatant envlronmenl ORANGE cot Nn i ONL y PR/V ATE .-fCCREDITED TRAVEL -tGENC>' SCHOOL ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST & Fl!EST PRIVATE SCHOOL NABERS CADILLAC s op Yen cmp e • an alore Must be available Florist needed lmmedl· tic tt II J h No experience necesa-app e on or ca o n for evening end weel(end a1ely No experience June between 9 AM and 3 hours EOE 6"•-5070 necessary Must have car er Y Ce 11 George Amtfle&n Airline Sabre ComPUter Training PM weekdays. for an 675•2335 4•6pM Anderson al 675-0-'50 interview appointment IClerlcel Mature person for lllTElllOll IECOlllTlll MORNING, AFTERNOON. EVENING CLASSES Aatt Mgmt & Stitt pos- itions evall Xlnt pay. ben· efltt & adv opport Apply In l)el'son only et JOELS -SC Pill. Tile City, or W•tmlnater Malt 2100 ltarMr lh4 Cettaltn smell 1mpor1 firm-Gen Fl t or Pit counter help for CALIFOR.IA off duties-type 50 wpm drug store Experktnoe on Werner near redhlll preferred 675--0150 Decor /art sales for creellv• lndlv , flex hrt. wlll train 499-t 461 Call (714) 543-9495 Grades K-8 714 /540-9100 FEDERAL 966-0202 GENERAL OFFICE 2700 Harbor Blvd DECORATE INTERIORS pan time. Mon-Wed-Fri, It l•THll PWT UUI Transpor1a1ton•Caietena•E:Klende<1 Day Coate Mesa. CA 92626 Color/dHlgn P/T to typing, flllng, etc NB (714) 5•8-2300 st an Wiii train 775-5«7 olc Ask for Carolyn Exlen1lve Knowledge Re- quired Retell experience preferred 6'5--0210 1557 W-. Mable. Anaheim Phone 774-l0S2 Cler ks ., \ \1 CIRCLE K-MARKETS ~~ !) J ~ 1'1 NOW HIRING r::;''-/ ~ / CiSN1ERS I CLERKS 1 , Interviews daily from 11:00 ~1......._· _t.a.m.-12 noon at 1390 ';> I --i ~North Pac1f1c Coast Hwy . "Laguna Beach (on PCH & V1e10) .a 71 4 494 92J3 lor more into Equal Oppty Emplyr wun-umn101U CdM 6-'0-1900 Tues-Sal 1um • IAllOHllT Acrytlca, wraps, etc. CdM 6"0· 1900 Tues-Set IOOllEEPEl/&1si1t So. Org. Co. Restaurant. 5 days per Week Include• weet<enda. 71-' 897--0365 Lo place your mMUQe bel0<8 the reading public, phone Dally Piiot Cleatlfi.d. 6"2-5678 HOROSCOPE ~~-------==----- SYDNEY 0MARR Tuesday, July 24 ARIES (Marlh ~ l·A.rml 19) What c;cemed a los1 l'ause "''II be revived. Vis111ng neighbor or rclatl\ c "'tll suppl\ ke). Emphas1' on action. drama. uhtl1t\ to kt go of what had been a losing s1tuat1on Burden 1s rcmo' rd mon· people are dra"'n to ~ou. ~ou'll be popular and could be t11rting \'Ith fame TAURUS ( .\pnl 20-\1a\ ~0) "Jew <1pproach bnngs Ol'lC\san- linancing 'itrco;1; tndepcndc.'.'nct' lreat1\.1t'. 1maginat1on You'll get what \OU "'ant. member ol oppos11c \<.'\ "'111 proq~ instrumental Long- \tandi ng drh1 "'t II hr repaid Leo figure'> prominrntl\ GEMINI (\la\ ~I June 211): ( yclc high. 1n1u111on I\ on target Judgment hit' rn.1rk <.ind \OU II be at right pla1.c a1 cruCtal moment Emo11on'i dorn1na1t· memher!-of opposite SC\ arc dr 3\o\ n to ,·ou and you'll enJO' lu\uf\ nt lx·1ng <,polled·· Cancer ~quanu\ per'""' ligurr prominen1h CANCER Uunl· 21 lul\ 22l Look tx·h1nd Slene\ tor ..inwrr\ 'ou·11 h.i'c mun· 111mn \ou'll he more popular. \oc1al illll\llll'' '"II atcekratc 1-..el'P rc,11lu111>rl\ 1.nncernrng diet. nutnuon "'eight '11u'll lx-\Cr) mu1.h a\A.arc llf appearance. bod~ image LEO Uul\ 21. \ui 22> ~1.-,h come~ true in unusual mJnne1 Re.-.1nct11Jn<. an: ldll'd Jll \IOP' arc out. ~ou get green light m rt'\ ll''~ re' 1<;e anJ r1.·huJJJ nn nrnrc Sllltahk base R o mam·e • .., h'aturnl \n1rp10 .\qua nu' Jill.I .inother Ll'<> "'ill pla) prommcnt rnk<. VIRGO! \u~ ~I ~t·p1 221· D1vt:r')1f). male tnqUtn(''i. g1'c lull pla\ 10 111lelkltuJI 1.u110\1I~ You gain hy "-nttng. b~ 1mpnnting ~our n"'n <;t\ le h' 111\1\trng on 11 ut h J' rontrasti:d to c.:lcvcr C\ as ions hx uc; on promo11t1n pm<lun10n. larccr. t1b1ltt)' 10 take c harge of \O\H o\A.n dC~t I J) ~ LIBRA (~l·r: ~ 1-0rt 22) Domestic adjustment 1~ featured. tra .. el 1c; .tl\o a dl\ttm t pms1b1l1t\ Focus on d1plomac), lu>.ury. romanct'. 1.:dulat1on Jnd rnmmun1Cat1on Long-distance call aide, in clanf)tn~ \IC"-c; r au rue;, Co)lurpHI JOU another Lt bra play kq role~ SCORPIO cc >ct ~I Nt)\ 21 l: Define terms. <.teer clear of scheme\.. realize that ba\ll 1"ul''> can no longer be 1gnor~ Focuc; on pet~. dependent\ and l'mplo)'mcnt ()uec;t1onc; rc-gard1n3 health "-tll he nnc;""ered. '"u II I.no\\ "'ha1 \hould Ix· done and you'll be 1.apablc of dmng tt SAGITTARll S 1 "'o' ~~ l>ec 21) Comm:tmen11~ made. accent 1c; on partnerc;h1p puhhul\, mamage focuc; on ph)t.1cal anracuon re\pon<;1b1lth. rcal11.mnn that potential urn he trcmendou) Older ind•" :dual l~·n11<. tlt.'ncfi 1 of e \penencc ( apncom natl' e figures prom1nc.·rith CAPRICORl'I 1f>c-1 ~2 J.rn 11)1 Rcalh bc~ond current npeltl· 11onc; lnd1\.1dualo; "·ho \h.t1c \our 1onl:nn' "-111 be 1n tou1h" and hccorne \Jlu:tbl 1 .1l11c'\ l>on't he.-linrnrd h) tho~ ~ho latl 1niag:natwn faith. Joh "-111 be completed and \Ott'll r('tCl\C crcd1t lon3 overdue AQUARIUS (Jan 10.fch I a)· Be trad' for nr"' 'It art. accent I independence. romance cournge ol rnn\ u:t1on\ 't ou'll ha\t" rare 645-7261 ........... IELIYEllY GENERAL OFFICE for Full time for local de· llverlea Xlnt driving re- cord required. Cell Per- sonnel. (714) 863-1200, Newport Stationers Inc. ltliYl'J ,., ... Min wage llfua mileage. Flexlble hra. Apprx 2 hrs p/dey, Mon-Fri. Cell Georgine 6"6-0203 IELIYEllY PElllOI FIT position avellebte. For person lo dellvtr airline tickets lo Orange Co. end Long Beech area. Mutt have own 1ren1portetlon end good driving record. Sherri (7 1') 850-1111 growing Const Co Relax- eel atmosphere. Full time 5-'8·8089 llllllDRHSElll Beautlful Coste Mesa salon looklng for oper- alora w/cllentele or renters Cell Kathy Flynn. 5-'0·3855 HAPPY FAMILY need• energetic retpon women, non-smoker 10 care for 3 JANITOR part-time. com- mercial exper pref. 6'42·-'887 wtlnd• ok Legal S9Cfetery lltagatlon e11perlence, non-smoker. Newport Beach, Fashion Island area. Greenbaum & Greenbaum. 5'46-3733 LOT BOY wanted, pan· time Call Newpon Vespa e.42-8870 Melntalnce blgd/docks. Accepting eppllcatlona call tor appt M-F 9·5 6"2 .. 6"'4 CARDEN OF HUNTINGTON BEACH A Private School Emphasizing Academics Carden Curriculum Pre-School -Grade Eight Open the year around 6:30 A.M.-6:00 P.M. For further information r egarding advertising placement in the Schools & Instruction& Directory -call kids. My home For de- tells call 6"5-21-'6 11111 SC .. OL ITllEllT or older PIT anewerlng phones. minimum 11<1111 required. 8'0-3917 l1l1tt1Hot Expertenoed In all ph .... of maintenance Beach eree-Re1ort hotel Hollywood production Demonttetora wanted Laguna Beach Cell company Interviewing people from S bay area for water end bot ting TRAVEL 497.3014 OlJ.IFOHI& llT INTI UUIH 688-1441 721 Utica, Huntington Beach Edith Hanlon, Director Lois 642-4321 , ex t 30 9 ~·: aattey documenlrles. beer-po1etoe chip end designer 1es1 com- Guys g 1tie1e 18 & older 10 Couple or lndlV. lo manage ~on~~·~~ a~~~k~M l ~··············••K~===~====~~=======~ uct to out of town bull-operation 5 Yrs exper Im nesaet & summer re-w/aprlngcre11 hardware 5100 B 1 W H 5100 W SIG merclala.213-460-4017 lntrvw In Hollywood/must be 18 bck ground rolls sons, tuch aa Colorado. Must be ebte to Install & i.:::&..::.:::~-_.,...,.. ... ...,.....,....,......,...__.___ t J aat BtlJ aalH L eaaemble aprlngcre1t llEoAJllUIC Lake Tahoe, and es hardware. Rel• req. vt Newa dteler looking for PT: Earn s1 200/mo only-no HP nee. Vegu 650•2870 lor Chrl1ttan School. Apply 2nd 8111tt Learn butl· hra/wk. Tina, ( lO·Noor HOUSECLEANERS F/I & p/t neeeded. Own .0 rv•ElllEICE IAUIEI 18835 Brookhurat. F.V. neat In advance. MUST ~ Manager· Factory outlet THE DAILY PILOT la now 982-3312 be eall-1tarter. MUST Tues-Fri 740-2053 needed Trana/lodge f 1 di I 1 1 d trenepor1etlon, Engtth apeek1n3 C.M area $5/hour 42-744-' provided call Mon to Sun retell store or e et accepting •PP lc•t on1 Mechanic, turbo up have prev oua home e- 953_82_.7 clothlng tn Cotta M.... for District Managers to preferred. Clean Ind•· llvery exi>er. Call 6"2-I••••••••• Store 11 part of an e1t· supervise newa~aper pendent •hop In S.A. 80151759-0630 2• Hr9. PART-TIME. Vaned hOIJr IEllTAL IUISTAIT pending 17 store chain carriers. Must have van. Good pay & benefit• .• . 10 Include early A.'°' HOUSECLEANERS F /time position for quellty At 1ee1t 3 yra e•p In ladles wagon or ptck·UP Good Exp'd need only to apply. NOW HIRING Weeltenda. Must have de PIT, hrs flex N.B./Balboe area Cell 8em-5pm. R DA for quellty ortho dlecount clothlng en· salary. mileage allow-ANOtAL PORSCHE EXPER SALES PEOPLE pendeble vehlcle (ama pr ecllce. Laguna Sch vlronment Stlary bued ence, company benefits 957 _3900 Balboa Realty 673..,a700 truck. ve n. • t •II o 786--0094 E f 494 8555 on exp. Full benefll1 end bonus opportunity. _ wagon) to aaalat ntw1 xper pre -package Equal Op· Apply ln person et Delly MEDICAL OFFICE-Laguna paper dealer tn lrvlo HUU:)l:KEEPPER to asals1 elderly lady Lite house-DENTAL ASSISTANT ponunlty Employer Send Piiot Clrcuietlon Office. Hiiis lnternl1t needl ex-OPARIMotNir'a Hell)el' for tree Must be deptr enlhualatlc ROA wanted work 213_.31 _5_,5 resume 10 Can'de 330 Wet1 Bay. Coate l)el'lenoed medical 8111. loving in home Nwpn Bell deble. Contact Gre ror general practice In Fashion•. 8140 Sunl1nd Meta Monday lhru Fri-Prlmarlly front office. but 8"2·9309 Hyde Monday thru Frida Newport Beech 2 years 1 Sell wllh EASEi Ave, Sun Valley Ca day No PMne ca111. some back office de-beMeen 9:30 and 10·3 experience full time It's e BREEZE 91352 Allenllon E O.E alrable Salary nego-OlllEll Tllflll am only &42-'321 631·•236 Classlfied Ad1 842-5678 Edw OeSouze tleble Celt 170-3870 • ==--=============~=================~ ---------lmmed openings 1vell In 11•1 W PllmR Santt Ana ofc No exper. District Managers If yov en1oy working with yovng boy\ & girl\ ond desk 1ob\ ore not for yov consider o coreer 1n the new\poper c1rcvlo- t1on field This '' o vmqul' po\lt1on with doily challenge\ & rewords Ovr opening\ ore 1mmed1ote Apploconh musl hove o von. stot1onwogon or truck We offer on ew.cellent solory with o bonus pion ond gos ollowonce We hove on ~•cellent benefit pion thot mclvde\ hosp1 tol1&0l•On 10\uron<• liberal vocot1on ond hohdOy\ Cond1dote' mv'' hovl' o dewe 10 be 'uc<eufvl ond be willing to work hord II you th1nli. yov hnve !ht-q11olifoeot1om pl.as~ apply 1n ptrson 10 the Daily Pilat Mondoy th•u f 1•doy 9 11 om 01 'i 4 pm 330 W. Bay Costa Mesa , CA 92626 wanted Muet have color nee wtll train x:nt tn- phologrephy klilowledg• come For appt call Mini-lab exl)el' P<ef o ne Jonathan. 662-58-« Hour Moto Photo. 18050 Culver78i~5~rvlnt, I Ollllll HPT __ __ Several people nttdtd to Have you read 1od1y'1 lake orden In marketing Cl111tlltd Ada? 11 not. dept no expel' nee:. $860 you're mlulng lh• bell mo. For Interview call Mr bargains In townl Morrlaon, 682-58-'3 Daily Pilat LAYOUT ARTIST PART TIME Orange County dally newap.aper haa an operung for a quick layout artist. Candidate mWJt be able to work well with sales peopl and meet dally dead- lmes Basic knowledge of camera ready art. lYJ*Zll'\8· .na th~ cape.bWty to mark up layouta f« production a must. Additional pro)eda may include flyers. brochures. map1 and ulea pres- ent.atJon vbua.la. 1·2 yeen experience Mwspaper prefarred. Send resume to; • PllOHllll Anew ave exp pref or tra11 Fle1t hra NB 780-8305 PlllPIUTll Answering ltfvloe exp· preferred, bu1 wllt trel1 Call e.42-1 403 for appt PllOLllOI Sell to bullntaMe wh need What you Mil, °' l'Z Lfll Pl"I Guaranteed wage c: comm. 8!12·912!1 anytlm PIT Driver hom• d• newepepen. Own oar. Hra.tnltt ~/rno+l5 booua. Call M2-t015/ 7!1a-oe30 24 hra. lnm111111 P1H -1wt ..... M ,,. .. ...... .,,. ......... , ....... ....., ..... INllT I Tlil.ll, 141-7111 llMPTIOlllT ReMarctl company ,,.. O Co Airport nHc 1omeone to an1w• PhOnta. Ille, type Mw be d-.:>tn<ltblt l • ,., lttrn«.133-042& 'stcond chance .. Errors <lln he rectified 1 PISCES ( Fch I Q-Mdn h 'Ol f-ollo-w through o n fir 11mprr~'\tom Ge\ prof('~<;tonal C\Jl11;it1on ot land. rc<tl l'<,tatt'. home <;ire~' ~<"run13 rcmovr '3fel\ ha,.mh an<l take \IX\ 1al ~arc "hctc plumb1n1.L I\ ron\('fned ( Jnu:r \q11:1r1u\ nat1 \CC. ti gun· 1n 'il rn.mu and" ill~· ··on "our \1dr ·· -. _ _ -_, __ _ OR~. 'GF. COA T DAIL\' PILOT P.O. Box 1&60 Colill Mesa, CA 92626 At nllon: Lia &Nth '· l ~. ---I..~-~------- D 3 ) , 3 ( ) I !) r • I, 2 !) If • , It It n " ... y 0 Daily Pilat · PART TIME \-lotor Rou It> .\ v a i lab le 'ewp<>rl Bt>ach area, 1hree hou~ per day. Earn approx. 600 per month. CaU I I :00 10 l :OO l'\1. CIRCULATION DEPT. 642-43:! 1 EOE ORANGE CO AST DAILY PILOT 110 W BAV ST ·COSTA MESA C A 9767& '•I J A I J .. ~ "'.i ' • ~I '. W AGES 11-14 EARN lP TO $75.00 PER WEEK We now havt I~ ocien1ncs tor yount uetr benen to secu" rudets '°' Tht Orance ~st Dally Pilot Gitt cmn "!ttfl at 3 30 11 m incl work until a 30 pm ~ys On Saturday. we work 1 few mort flours Yoe-wilt tarn many t1lll'S and pmn, alone wrth ear111na your own money thefe rs no Oellwennt Of collechon 111YOIYed H you m interested pee~ caff Mr lart Alt(A CODC (714) 548-7058 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROU • 1 Roman god 5~ 9 Batt>er • need 14 In• renk 15 in pe<aon 16 Fregranc. 17 Donate 18 Llkeneu abbr 19 Plu<:kMlf 20 Applier 21 Land body 23 Fiji coin 24 Robert W 26 Wind 28 Citizen sutf 29 Depart• 33 Tribe units 38 Destined 37 Keep O\.lt 38 Engl~ noise 39 Chur~ heads 40A1111~ 41 AsW911 H .t2 Adl ... SIVH 43 FOl<l 44 Legum.s 48 South«n COfl· 1tetlet1on 4 7 Fixed amO\.lnt •8 Germ.nta 52 Swiss crty 2 .. II 55 Mothef-OH>earl 57 Steellte 58 Discharge 60 Iraq s foe 61 S1eetbeem 62 Go sideways 83 Jula Verne character 64 Birdhouse 65 Strong alloy 66 Whack 67 Agitation DOWN 1 Wiseman 2 Mount 3 Itinerant 4 Oevraung 5 flllliah 6 Waah hghlly 7 80-M shape 8 Deputies 9 Sink 10 Soupcons 11 -Beaury apple 12 Foratotten 13 Chunk 22 Defrauds 25 -All Right "fllh Me 27 We11n front 29 FrHats 30 Org1n slop e 7 PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED 31 FDR's dog 32 Worry 33 Auditors abbr 3• F100f covering 8fft 35 -W1lhams 36 Sod• - 39 Apparent 40 Elastomers e Q 42 Ike s rank •3 PrlOr to pref e 45 Package •6 Negative phrase 48 Play •9 Peasant shoe SO Gladden 51 Fastener 52 Mrs T rumen 53 OOOf 11gn S• Boorish se Complement 59 MOfay COHHliL CHEVROLET :.'011..trt••r fi:' 1 I c AST \ ,, ... :-. \ 546-1200 WlllY USED CARS & TRUCKS COME IN OR CALL FOR FllE UPUISll Cormler-Oel.Jllo CllftlUT 18211 BEACH BLVD. HUNTINGTON BEACH a.1-1111;..a-aaa1 WIWllTY• CWIROUll See Ronekt Oll09 I DAIL y PILOT /Monday, July 23, 1914 C7 'llO CMc 5 epd4o """°'' cond S4000 pp emftrn cesa 549-9574 or 5-49--1000 ilua ' ' We're Dealin' oo Rabbits. GTl a. JeUa 'a. Scirocco&. Qu&ntums fl Vans AT OR BELOW STICKER! Also 11.1~ 100~ FINANCING AVAILABLE on approved credit. See UB today . . '71 VW BUS. engine under WWTW\ty H..-t,..,_ I. bfuea $2350 Leevtng country Outc:ll 1a1e 673-5364/645-3210 '79 VW SCIROCCO Bleupunkt Stereo C...n-, Air Cond., 1436\#GH) 13181 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA ..... ....... BILLY A TES VW.POP.SCHE i j ~ 48 0 c ~ '1 : ~ :. -----· -- < : \I >I I I \( '70 MALIBU, good oond S500 OBO &d-364 7 '79 CMYette btll9 x-cond vet"/ deen em/fm ~ stereo $2650 673-1529 '79 Monza. 20K ml. JCltrt c:ond, needs eng WIClft. s 1000 080 650-2e38 '82 Camero l.28 ... tipd, 311( ml. .,,.,., /W tn4WOOf'I Int, Jdnt cond 18200 w 644-9111/~ '82 8 Cemlno VI, ln'W'MC, xtras. 16K ml ..... ~ bed $8000 firm ~ COf>fNEll CHEVROLET '-" I l.1 r: • · r •1'-l\\I~'· I S46-I 200 = Bit b06Gt XsPEA W8H 5'**" Edition. Extra Nice ($4lSPQ) '2288 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 19202 8Mctl 9$2.Ql.2'1 ,.,. ·n Ford T -ent townlandef. IMther. '*- (836SEV) S2'l88 BILL MAXEY TOY OT A 19202 9eeetl "2-4821 1920~ 8eld1 M2-o&29 ="'--=-=----,.---·12 Red Trww Aln mint oorl0-18,000 mi-1 OWN• Q>00----~7-­·~ 714·752·1651 M4-4627 eft • S TA. 0 I J '\., We'reN9w We're Delll ng 71 W•S· lt lt .......... ,.,,,. hct'IU...• ....... I I BUENA PARK ..J ·~ 0 CHICK IVERSON Chevrolet• Porsche• Audi W E. C.ast lwJ., le.,.rt haoll llJ-0100 Highest Quallty Sales & Service 0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS DIAL MERCEDES 7141637-2333 Alongside the Santa Ana Fwy. In Buena Park 0 RAY FLA DEBOE HONDA # 11 l1t1 C11fer Ir., lm11 In The Irvine Auto Center 830-7600 Complete Sales, Service & Leasing G COST A MESA MITSUBISHI 2833 Harbor Blvd. w ID -- _, 0 .... Cl) ii 91 FWY. en SANTA ANA EDINGER FOUNTAIN VALLEY WARNER 0 THEODORE ROBINS FORD U.S.A.'s # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer Modern Sales. Service. Parts, Body, Paint & Tare Depts Competitive Rates On lease & Daily Rentals 20IO larlMr lhtl., Oesta lesa 142-0010., 140-1211 0 SOUTH COUNTY VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU 18711 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach (714) 842-2000 SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE Onnet Countys Larcest Volkswqen/lsuzu Dealer m Wt W1U Not Be Undersold PARTS [){PARTMCHT OP£N SATURDAY • G RAY FLADEBOE VOLKSWAGEN # 20 lite Oelfer Ir., lnl11 In The Irvine Auto Center 830-7300 Orange Countys Newest Volkswagen Dealer Complete Sales. Ser~1ce & Leasing G STERLING BMW -ROLLS ROYCE 1540 Jamboree Rd. Costa Mesa 540-4491 Newport Beach 840-8444 Sales • Service • Leasing Formerly Roy Carver 22 FRWY IRVINE LAGUNA HILLS 0 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2121 ...... , lhtl., ....... .. Over 23 Years Serving Orange County Sales • Service • Leasing 541-1200 Special Parts U.. 546-9400 MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM -9:00 PM SATURDAY 8:30 AM -6:00 PM SUNDAY 10:00 AM -5:00 PM 0 STADIUM PONTIAC We're New -We're Dealing AcroH from the Big A on Katella JuetWeat of the (57) Orang• Fr~way Sales • Service • Parts • Body Shop on Premises Aa1h1h11 2221 E. litella 311-1111 G BILL YATES VILllWAIEI • PlllOIE • PEllEIT SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE 12112 Valle leatl, la1 J1a1 01,1str111 411-•111 137-4100 G) UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE HONDA · 2880 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 540-0713 3 Blocks So. of 405 Fwy. MISSION Vl~~°lJ g '8 0 SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO 0 BAUER MOTORS BUICK -JAGUAR -ISUZU Complete Automotive Needs SALES • SERVICE • LEASING Ane Selection of Quality UMd Vetllciee Ii 1 BUICK DEALER IN ORANGE COUNTY 2125 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 979-2500 0 RAY FLADEBOE LllGILI IEIGllY .111110 IUD # 11 l•t• Ge.ter Ir., lnlH In The Irvine Auto Center 830-7000 CD CREVIER BMW SALES • SERVICE • LEASING "Where Professional Attitude Prevails" Spec:lall1Jng In Europun Deltv9ry. E•cellent lelectlon Of New and caretuHy prepered UMd llllllW'• always In stock 835-3171 208 W. 1at St., Santa Ana Corner of Broadway & 1st St. CIOMd Sundays DAILY PILOT ORANGE COAST CAR GUIDE Rune Every Monday And Thuraday 842-4321 Class1f1ed advertising 1s your best choice for help in selling the items you no longer need It's Quick and inexpensive. and the Pilot reaches potential buyers who live 1n this area Call today Daily Pilat classified ads Phone 642-56 78 ' -. ~.... .. ... ' HIOH84 LOW70 COUNTY IDlllDN MONDAY , JULY 23, 1984 Irvine star Gary Figu- eroa h as p lugged a big leak In po/olsls ·of- fense. Page Cl Coast A summer camp for re- tarded kids to open In Laguna Beech .I A3 We asked Coast resi- dents how they plan to survive the Olympics./ A3 Callfomia San Ysidro residents de- mand.McDonald's res- taurant site· become a memorial park./ AS Nation Nation's growth shows spurt, Inflation dormant./ A4 Gallup poll shows Mon- dale-Ferraro taking lead over Reagan-Bush./ AS ;;:-:;:;:.:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:::::;:;:;:::::::~::::::::::;:::::::::: World Copenhagen's Lit tle Mermaid gets her arm beck; two drunken kids arrested. I A4 Marcos' police rout 18,000 rioters In Phlllp- plnes./A4 Feature Seven galleries are linked for Art Connections '84 -the county's entry Into festivities celebrating the Olymplcs./81 Miss America may be having troubles but Mrs. America Is still making the most of her relgn./81 Sports Spaniard Seve Ballesteros outduels Tom Watson to win the British Open golftltle./C1 It was a lost weekend for the Angels, who suffered a three-game sweep at the hands of the Boston RedSox./C1 The public will get a crack at remaining "premium" Olympic tickets begin- ning todey./C2 Entertainment What's happening to network documentaries on televlson? ./82 Business Irvine's Urgent Care Center of America, Inc . reports loss./85 INDEX Bridge Bulletin Board Bull,,_ CaHtornla Newt Claulfled COmlca CrOOIWO<d ONth Notion Horoecope Ann Landers Mutual Funcia Natk3nal News Opinion Paparazzi Polloo l og Pubtlc Notices Sport• Stock Martceta ToleYtllon Theeters Woath« Woddlng1 Wo<td NOwa ·' 84 A3 85 A4 C5-8 114 C7 C4 C8 82 85 A4 AO 81 A3 C4 C1-4 88 82 B3 A2 82 A8 OR ANGECOUNTY . CA LIFOR N IA 25 CENTS Coast woos business traffic Irvine. Mesa. una, Newport to b enefit from push for conventions In Harbor Area By JERRY HIRSCH ness meetings. Ofa.o.,,......,. For example. the Westin South Local hotel and restaurant man· Coast Plaza is directing its marketing agen arc look.in& to capitalize on the effons to 'companies in Chicago, New growth of the Orange Coast business York and in the San Francisco Bay district as the county's financial Area to attract business. according to center and tum the area into a prime Steve Hughes, national sales director. spot for small conventions and busi-"We always ha ve some son of Olympic benefit ignites OCfever Rally at Knott's set by Olympians of another era By KAREN E. KLEIN Ot .. Dolltf ......... Allhough it won't quite match the flair and pageantry of the o~ning ceremonies, Orange Count)' will light up with Olympic fever this week as the torch relay breezes throu&h on its way to the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. Orange County's official Olympic torch-passing ceremony is scheduled to be held Thursday in conjunction wilh a benefit show put on by the Soulhem California chapter of a group called the U.S. Olympians. The Olympians benefit show, at K.nott's Berry Farm, will include a parade of Olympic competitors, a barbecue and the ellchanging of the Olympic torch name as it passes by Knott's Independence Hall. accord- ing to Bill Leach. vice president of the local Olympians chapter. The chapter, founded in 1949, is the largest in the world. with some 700 athletes in its ranks. There are estimated to be 61,000 athletes world- wide who have participated in the modem games. Leach. 38. ofNewpon Beach. 1s one of those Olympians (the p-oup shuns the term ··former Olympian"). Leach a nd his wife. Julie. competed in kayaking in the 1976 games in Montreal. They were the first married couple to make the Olympic team together, Leach said. Dick Beckner, a 56-year-old resi- dent of Newport Beach who com- peted in the gymnastics event in Melbourne, Australia in 1956. is another Olympian who will be on hand Thursday. Beck.ner teaches adaptive physical education for handicapped children in Orange. He also docs some gymnastics coaching on the high school level, though he said many school districts arc: dropping their gymnastics program. Also panicipating in Thursday's ceremony arc Costa Mesa resident Ken Fuller, a cyclist who competed in the 1972 and 1976 1J.3mes: Pete Mehringer, a gold mcdahst in the Los Angeles 1932 Olympic wrestling competition: and Brian Goodell, of Dana Point, who competed in swim- ming in 1976. All Olympic compcti1ors are auto- matic members of the Olympians. group, Leach said. aroupat the hotel. A lot of it used lO be local but with all the hotels in the area, we are nowcxpandins.·· Hughes said. Business meetinas ·now make up nearly 30 percent oft he hotel's annual sales.. he said. To help the local hotels with their , marketing ctTons, the Ncwpon Beach Arca Convention and Vistors Bureau has splitofffrom the Newpon Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce to become a non-profit corporation reprc:scnting the hotels and res- taurants in Jrvinc. Costa Mesa. Lat.una Beach and Newport Beach. the bureau has taken up temporary residence at Newport Center, comph- ments of tbe Irvine Co., while it raises money for a new hcadquaners. "Weare tryina to sell the whole area asadcttinallon for business meetings and conventions:· said Linda Bran- non. prcsi&nt of the bureau. Althou&h the bureau cames the name ··Newpon Beach.. promi- nently, Brannon explained the pufl)OIC' of the l>U:reau is 10 sell the whole four<ity reaion to bu.sine.. 1ravelen. ··we are uling Newport Beach because it 1s recocnizablc and is a saleable commodity. It makes sentc to use what you have." said Brannon, who worts for the Balboa Plvillion. The Wcs1in's Hu&hcs aarced, "Costa Mesa is not a major sellina point so ~ have to bill ourselves 11 the Newpon Beach area.·· (Pl-oeeCOAST/A2) Victim of bike crash critical Newport woman. 22. fights for life after head-on collision A Newport Beach woman is ftaht- 1ng for her life today after being critically injured Sunday afternoon when she was thrown head-fint from her bicyck: after being struck by another bicyclist. Annette Francis Mesa. 22. suffered 'head injuries and undel'Wt'nt emcrs· ency surgery for brain trauma follow- ing the freak accicknt in a 1wo-way bike path on Seashore: Drive in West Newport. according to Newport Beach Officer Rick Bradley. The woman: riding a three-speed beach cruiser westbound on the bike path. was struck head-on by another bicyclist. Steve Roger Carlson. 21 . of Costa Mesa. Bradley said. Carlson. police said. was nd1ng 1n the opposite d1rccuon on the bcac.hfront bike path when he ac- cidentally dnfied into the other lane. knocking the woman to the ground. He was no1 1nJurcd. Bradle) said the woman hn ~ head on the pavement of the btk.c path. She was rushed 10 the Founu.in Valley Comm unit) Hospital 1rauma center where she underwent emerg- enc) surge~ She 14•as confined to the hospital's 1ntens1\e carr-un11 this morning . according l o a spokeswoman. Neither bicyclist was weanng protcct1"e head gear An 1nvcst1ga- 11on of1he afternoon crash contJnues ' toda). OCman's death said suspicious .\n autops~ scheduled today was Cllpected to cast light o n the death of a 59-~ear-old ln·1nc man whorcponed- 1~ died under suspicious c11"C'um- stances. tn\•esllgators reported. Although Leach retired from kayakinaafterthe '76gamesand went (Pleue oee OL YllPlAlfS/ A2J Poelng In front of Knott'• Berry Fann'• Independence Hall are OC Olympian• Dolltf .......... ~ _... u,M Brian GoOOell, Pete Mehringer. Ken Jl'uller. Bill Leach 1111d Dick Beckner. C11ff1on E. Sm11h Jr was fou nd dead in his l !n1\ers1t) Parle home Sunda\ afternoon b} a son, Irvine Sgt . D-1ck Bov.·man said The death 1n1uall\ 14·as reponed as a homicide. Bo"·Tnan said detectives consider the man·s death 10 be susp1c1ous. NB cop's drunken driving trial set Respected officer could lose his job . 'get prison term By STEVE MARBLE Of .. O., ........ A hi&h!Y rcspc<:ted Newpon. Beach police officer bas been ordered to stand trial for felony drunk.en drivina in connection with a car accident thlt seriously injured a 61 -year-old nurse. Officer Michlel Patric.k Pule. 30, could lose his job and be sentenced lO state prison if convicted of the characs. He was ordered to appear in Superior Court July 30 for arraina- ment. The officer rcponcdly was cel- cbratina an anticipated promotioo du.tin& the carty-momin, hours before lhe a<:ciden1. aoooi-dina to officials. Pule WI! arrntcd March 14 after his car aUqedly IW'Crved acrou all lanes of the San ~cao Freeway near Jamboree Road and cul ofT a vehic~ I Pleaoe -NB Ol'l'ICSR/ A2) 4'W"I ,-1 Chlne.e 'rialtor Ylnf Xia, a male liut P"Jlda, drl• oft after talr.l.nc a dip In Ill• new1t-.1a•Cltlna Pa..tJIOD of U.. Loe Alopl .. Zoo. Two s-~d pa""a• an oa lout from tile People'• Repclbllc of Clllaa la Cl ... -wltll tile ........... :! SIUIUller OlJlllplca.-. 11,000 fw otoocl la Ila• for mlanllle to -.I-tit• Paadae .. IU'day. • I Wayne Airport loss would hit our pocketbook If no1sc-"'('8~ opponen ts of John Wayne A1rpori pre\ ailed and thC' field were closed to all air traffic. 11 would cost Orange Count) 's ('('On- omy approx1ma1el) S40J m1l11on in annual revenunand 5.200Jobs '4'1th a S 120 million payroll. an eronom1c analysis of the a1rpon has concluded The analysis. prepared by a pn\atr consulting firm. also detC'rm1ncd thr airport. diT'CC'lly and 1nd1rcctl~, an- nually pumps 1n $648 mtlhon to thr local economy. According to thC' analysis. the countv's cconom\ -A'Ould soar to nearly S) bilhon 1f tht airport expansion c-nv1s1oncd b) 1he Board ofSupcrv1son is completed. The «0nomic •ssessmen1 focusing on the airpon's 1mponan~ to tht coun1y·s tco nomy was com - m1ss1oncd as a pan of the en· vironmen1al documen1a11on rc-- qu11"f'd before lhe Board of Super- visors can emblrk on a v.'ldt·ntn&Jn& $191 milhon ~Ian 10 enlaree and improve" the q1ng and overcrowded airpon terrrun1I. Supervisors art C\l"C'ul1t1n1 a stven· volumt environmental 1mptct state- mtnt. mastC'f plan. land uSt-com· P1t1b11ity proa,ram and ot~ matcnal related 10 the 11rpor\ e pans1on. The board propmtS to 1n1llally 1ncrea\( JEFF ADLER Focus ON THE NEws thr number of dail) commercial JCI drparturc:s a1 John W•yne A1rpon from the cumnt 41 -nillht hmit to 55 n1gh1~ and lhen to ) J n1ah1.s or beyond 1n the 1990s. Prepared hy Eronom1cs Research A.ssocatcs. thr study concludes John WaynC' A1rpon played a cxntral role 1n the development of lhe county's economy and ··contnbutes substan· t1al cconomtc benefit .. to uJCnofthc 11rpon. ma1ftly re11dcnt travcknand lclSurt: and blwnus tnvekn. It alto poul O\ll lhat alm01t half the pnnlll')' ~oniic benefits of the ~rport accrut '6 lht cities dolesl to John Wayne A1rpon -lmne, Costa Me51. Newpon 8cacb. SULlll Ana He11lh1~. Santa An• and Tustin. (Pl--AIJU'OllT / .U) • A2 * Or nge Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. July 23, 198'4 Marine corporal in' scandal' will get honorable discharge From 1tafl aad wire r~porta l .llllC ( pl KJnd1 Clark. who~ n:lat1on)h1p lo "' Manne pilot led tu her luvt'r's court-mart1al, will ~ honor.1bly dm.hargcd from th.: c<>rps "I want to g.:t out." Clark said. ··tt'su shame they didn't accornrno· date her desires la!>t fall by doing the same thing they're doina no~ ... s~ud her attomn Mu:hac:I R O'Nctl of Santa Ana · Clark .:?.:?. will be honurahl> dis· lharged for "rnndul't advcrSt-1) al~ fcct1ng the good order and d1M"1phne of the unit " ~1d her commanilina officer. Lt (ol Robert T rlc11 of the Manne Corps Au S1at1on (Jfehcop. 11:r) 111 Tustin. She: would retain lull veterans' benefits. unlike her fiance, C~pt. John Moultak. 27, oftht· Marine ( orp ·Air Station in El Toro Moultak. a legal allrurs otlicer, was l'Ourt-martialed July 13 and dis· missed, the eqo1vaknt of a dis· honorable discharge Sance MouhaJ.. \ dishonorable discharge as rnnsadered a federal offense. he wall~ prevented lrorn practicing law or ll)ang tor a rnmmt•n.1al air earner Has 1:ourt· martial 1s bctn& apptaJed through military channels. {'lark had tned to get out la~l fall -.o ~he could marry Moultak Clark said she'll likely fill out thC' papers today and take some of her remaining 60 days of leave unlll the discharge as processed. No wedding date ha~ been ~el wuh Moultak. f·ra1crn12a11on between an ollkcr and an cnhsted person has long been taboo for Mannes, mainly to prevent favonusm or lhC' appearance of at. officials sa~ Two UCI schools get large grants r Ill' l ( If\ 1nl' 1.i~huol ol Ph\\ll<ll \l IL'nll'~ and thl· l ulkge ol \kd1nnc afl' both thl' 11.'l lplt'nt' l11 l\Hl lilf&l' donattun'> I 111.H ha 11! Japan 1n 11, llr\t gilt to an \mc11lJn lHll\l'fC,11\. '' g1,ang a $ti00,CX>O grant tn the mt"d1rnl \Choo! to aid th1.· rel>t:arch ul J prcm1t•r hHK. hL'llll'>ln prolt-s.,or. "'hu "'di -.tart .1t tlw In 1m· tam pus th•!> tall lltt.id11\ gill. mad1.· h' H1tarh1 I CONTINUED STORIES 6-.______ - Pa es1dcnt R \OJ• \ oka)'ama. an<l lhl' announcement ol tht: professor's appo1ntmcnt at LICI wa'> announced last "'ed. Dr. Masa,asu Nomura "'ho had taught at the l 'n1,t•rs11> ul W1scon- '>tn. t\ "one ol thc top 5<.'1t:ntl'llS m the "orl<l ," acc..ordmg to Nobel laureate. Paul Berg, a "itanlord l ln1vers11y b1ochcm1st11 protes\or. Nomura·s "contnbut1ons tu molecular b1olog) and genetic c..henmtrv have been magni11c1en1," he said. .\nd. as pan of a program lo aid higher education. lhe Harns Corp. has donated a $275.000 computer S)stem to strengthen UCTs physical science general research program. Coupled with exisung equipment. the new Harris system wall provide ~uppon for existing research pro- grams and enhance new interest areas. such as providing an advanced program in computer graphics. NB OFFICER TO FACE TRIAL .•• From Al dn,t:n h' Ruth Dilks a \.ltss1on Vtl'Jo nur.e "ho wa~ dn\ ang home Dtd'> sutlercd head tnJUrtl's. broll•n nh\ a fractured rollar boni: and numerous cut "hl'n hn car napped and rolled tnto the ~an Otego Creek. whalh run' alung-.1dc the frecwa~ Puk '>U'>lJ•Ol'd mo<laatc IOJUrlC\ Pollet· '>atd J lt''l taken twu hours after the ac.:c1dent rt:\'t•alcd Pule had a blood-alcohol 1..untcnt leHI ol 0.2U. double the ln l'I at which one as presumed kgall~ 1ntox1ca1cd in Call· fom1a Pule "ho reportcdh made dTons 111 .i1d the in1urcd "Oman "as arrested al the scene ol the acudent b) Cahfom1a H1ghwa) Patrol officers Dunng a prehmmaf) heanng .,.,h1ch concluded last Thursda) two CH P office~. a witness 10 the acci- dent and a forensics toxol0$1St tesu- lied against Pule. who 1s being represented b) attorne) Paul Meyer. The pre-trial heanng 'itarted last June but was dela)cd when the prosecution had difficulty getting the result~ of an independent alcohol breath test administered by the New- port Beach Police Department. ac- cording to Dcput) D1stnct Attorney Derreck Johnson Johnson said the breath tec;t. given to Pule nearly four hours after the accident. was administered for New- port's own internal 1nvest1gation. Pule was suspended for six weeks following the accident and as assigned to a desk JOb. He lS free on his own recognizance. Until the accident, Pule was a highly regarded officer. He had an unblemished record and was being considered for a promotion to the police detective bureau, authorities said. Dicks filed a $2 million damages claim against the City of Newport Beach last month. The claim was denied by the Caty Council. COAST SEEKING CONFERENCES ... From Al - \.l, hen talking ll• met tang ur- gan11t:r\. ho"l'\ er Hughe!> '>lrt''>~' tht• good p0tnh ol ( O'>la \fr~ 1n ~elh ng hi\ hotl'I '\\ l' ar~ "'than ..... a1~1ngd1stJnce tu ahout 14 mo' •l' theater<, the '>hOp· pin1,t 1..cnll'r the ~outh C ua-.1 Ri:pcr- ton fheater l'eopk rcalh don t need a tar "hen tht\ come ht•re \\I.' "'111 eH·n arrange 1ran\purtat1on to the ht:ath."' he said .l,, wl•ll ac; \elllng tht· itrea the lotal '1)1tur'> bureau orga012cs conven- taun., tor business meeting planners The 140..m<."mber bureau 1s attending man) of the far-Oung conferences to ad,crt1~ the area as a business meeting center Brannon said This month alone the bureau planned to work two conven11ons. the Meeting World meeting an New York and the World Congress & [xpos1t1on convention, also an New Yori>. "Meeung planners go to these trade shows to find desunauon that would be attractive to holding these con· ferences." Brannon said. To enuce planners to hold their conferences here, Brannon shows them pictures of the area. talks about the 6.500 hotel rooms a"·a1lable locall) and offers to pnnt conference schedules and other matenal for the planners. Brannon said . OLYMPIANS RALLY AT KNOTT'S ... From Al on teath1ng at ( orona dl'I Mar High 'ichool Julie w1:n1 on to tra111 for the 1980 games.. he '>aid ·There was \ome bo~cott talk as earl) as four or li'e months before the officials announcement · Ll.'ac.h recalled Rut Julie dad not take the Oo\COtl rumorc; '>l'rtoush She had postp0ncd her wlkg1: education so she could de' ote more lime tu practicing. he c;aad \\. ht·n thl.' l n1ted "tall''> an- nou nc.. rd 1 t "<>u Id not compete in \.iosc.·o .... Lt:alh ...aid Julie \.\a\ de, a•,. lated "It wa., ltkc ha' ing a rha1r pulkd 11u1 lrnm undl.'r her and not l'\·t:n hc1ng abk to get mad at the pcr1,on "'ho did 1l." ht• <ia1d ""o"' I 1:a1..h compt·t{''> in a non- Ol\.mp1L c\tnl lallcd the tnathalon wh1c..·h IO\ol\C\ \wtmmmg. 011..vchng . ind a marathon ran· Julie ha-. rrun·d from compc1111on. But both of them remain active an the Olympians group. raising funds for athlc11c sc.holarsh1ps throu~h their non-profit Koro1bus Foundation and speaking about their 01) mp1c ex- penences throughout Southern (ah· fornia. "After you go through an ex· penence hkc competing in an Olym- pic Games. you want to put wme· thing back ... Leach said Leach strongly believes the Olym- pics c;hould not be "caught up in poh11cs and bureaucracy." he 'Wild. In fact. the Olympians sent out welcome letters to 153 countncs a week before the Soviets announced they would boycott this year's games. ··we wanted to assure them they would be welcomed warmly to Los i.\ngele')." Lea ch \atd Ac, 11 turned ou t the letter'! were not enough to reverse the boycott decision. But the Olympians were able 10 provide housing for some of the families of athletes who will compete this year. And they have forincd a "spant team.. made up of athletes who loured Southern California schools last spnng telling children about the Olympics. "It was eight years since the last (Olympic games). A lot of those kids never saw an Olympics,'' Leach said Thursday's ceremony wall ~n about noon. Leach said entertain· ment. 1n the form of the "Game of Games" show. will be take place later an the evening after the barbecue. The Olympians Benefit Show. bcanng the theme "The Best an All of Us," costs $35 per person. including use of K.nott's rides and attractions. For more information, call Patsy Marshall at 827-1776 . AIRPORT IMPACT ANALYZED ... From Al Hu"'e' t•r. the rq>ort IJd\ 10 nwn · tann that tht• hnth<.·d nl opposataon tu the lOnt111ut·d operation and e' l·ntual c:<pa nw>n ot the airport al'>o 1., ll'nlercd 1n thow .Hl'<t' dii\C\I lo the a1rpon thill dl'ft\r tht grcatnl ht·n · l"lil\ l'\JX'ualh 'l'"' port Bt·arh and ~an ta \na lle1gh1' \>.hll h .in· lm:c.ited ht.•111" thL' t11ght f).ath 111 departing JL'tlanl'f\ 1 hl· ~114 ·•l n .JJ rp11rt. aH md 111g 111 the rcpon. pr()\ 1dl.'\ laullt11:\ for n1nl' 1.omml'fual and uimmutl'f atr laf· ncrc;, thn·c go' 1:rnmen1 Jgem 1e' ll' er I !JO ,11 rport-rcfalcd hu-.1 nl'c;w, .and rent'> \pa1.t· tor the ht·rthan1t ol ncarlv l .000 pn,at1: am·ralt \II told tht• airport and tht· ;1ho'L'· mcnt1onnJ hu\tne'>'IC' dtr<'l ti~ llln tnhutcd S245 7 ma I hon an rncnun to 1hr count\ ec.·onom)' an I ~X \ .Hwrd- 1ng to th(· report In aclc11t1nn tlw a1rpon prm1ded ~ OOti J•>h' .and .111 annual pa) roll of $'12 X mtlfuon ThO\t' figure~ thrn \H'rr .1dckd to whJl thl' l<>nsulta lll' lnrn 1nd11u·<1 impact'> ... defined a' an e<ot1m.111nn of .... hat allcch -.uh\C.'qucnt r11und., ol \pcnd1n3 had on 1hc lc11.al l'conmn~ \n andu<.cd 1mpall .... 011ld ht· 1111 t·~.1mplc how an a1rhnt· ml'lhan1t L"mpltncd al the ,111port '>fl('lll tm \\.C:-Ckh paH hl'l k for h111"11\y, loot! ,1nd goodc; and \('I\ llt"" I he <on.-.ultant\ l'\11111,111· thr tut.al fl"'enuc ~em·ratcd an !hr lnunt\. lloth darco and indun·d wa\ SMM mill1tm 1n I •n< \ Jnd prnv1de<l a tot.al of 9 'i74 1nh' "'"h JS 174 m1ll1on pc.ivrnll \I <.~ t111tht\ lht• rt•port prn1t·1 t'> towl rnrnul'\ nf SKll' million .in nualh· I ' 14, 1oh, and an annual raHoll of S2l!J 'i million WhL·n tl'lr .11rport np.tn\11>11 I\ l11111pktnl an • I '141 1. t hl' n 11n11rn it 1 m pal t \.\t1U Id amount 10 SI 'JX hdhon and Jlcount tor 28 "'5 I JOO\ and a pa~ rull totallng $5.:!-5 m1lhon In tnm-. 111 pt·n t•ntattt·\ the a1 rport llll\\ lllll't\llUll'\ ah11ut I '.' JX'flent of lhl· \llUnl\ ... llllal l'U>nnm1t act I\ ll\ and tompn'>C'> Jbl>ut I pt•rc..·1:nt ol thc 1uh markt:t II till' ;mport i:\pan .. mn ic; u1rnpll'tL·d J11hn \\.nm· \arpurt \\all anoun1 Jor 4 ..., f)l'flt'nt of all l'lOO· omtl att1\ll\ and l percent ol th1: total Joh markl'I a1.rnrd1ng lo ER ·\·., PfnJCl t 1on\ T hc report note\ howncr. that al thl' airport "l'rl' timed 11 "'ould not l'lammatl' all the l't11nom1( <11. 11v11' a'>,ol 1;11ed "''h th!.' airport ·Much nf tlw t'l0nom1t act1v1t~ "nuld Ix' \haftl·d to other airport .area'> but a \uh,tantaal portion ~ould rcmaan 1n tlw Oran1w < ount' 'ilUd)' arra." tht· .111al\l\l'I Jlknowkdge'I Thr rqx>rt al<i<1 u1nt·1:dl'\ that the largc\1 \hart• nf d1 rC't I rl'' t:nue'> al· lnhutcd 10 1h1.· aarpon in lhl' ~tud't , urrrnth t'\llmated at S IC>J m1ll1on .1nn11all\ for \ 1.-.tll>f ~nll'c'I. might not be fatrl} fl•g..1rded a\ rcla11ng 1ltrn 1h tu thr airport 'It l,111 ht• <Hi(llt'd tlw 'l\tlor \Cf\ Kl' indu\ln 'hould nol Ill: rl'g•.mkd ,1\ an 1mpal t 111 .I\\. \ '>tnn· mo., I of lht:1ot• \ l\atol\ "1111111 \1111 \ 1\1t <>rang1.' Count\ "'1thnu1 J~ \ an u1~rt1l1on." th( fl'pt1n \tJlt\ <lthr1 find1111t\ rt'latan" 10 1ht• .11rp11rt ' \ldndanp Ill 1h1: lt>Unt' \ l'ton11m'r tndu<k • l hr· naOl' .11rltne\ Wf\ ing John wa.,.n1· .\1rtx1n ht1vl' an c\11m1ued ('la\lnll nl \4l ' rn1llton with em· plmct· ht'nefit'i totuhntttnothcr S4 .6' m1llt1111 I mpln.,.ee' covrrcd an thl\ estimate are flag.ht crew~. marketing, ticketing and freight personnel. main· tenance and passenger o;er\ ace crewo; ramp operauons. skycaps and other aarllne service C'mployeC's. •The commercial aarhne'i spent about $2 per passenger 1n local adven1sing dunng 1983. amounting to S l 1 ma I hon. •Some 20 million gallons of Jet fuel "'ere pumped at the airport during 1983. generating an estimated $20 m1ll1on in fuel purchases. However. only about 12 pcrent of that total remains in the local econom) as payroll for personnel. pumping CO!ils and other related services. • tn.tl1gh1 meals cost :urlmes opcr· a tang al the aaf"{X>n $350,000 in 1983. •The five airport conCC'Ssaonaares pulled an an estimated $5.65 m1lhon an 1983 •Revenue~ from rental <.:ar aacn· l IC'i darcctly related to :urpon act1Vll) amount to an c'it1mated $20.5 million annual!\ wh1k revenues from tau fare.-. arC" pegged al S747,500 a year. •vround lranspon savanas and ~"ed tame-for business travelers who re 1o1d<' an Orange County and do not hin<' tu rnmmutc to other local a1rpt>rtc; OC't:au-.c of John Wayne \1rpor1 ;1mount'I to SI0.8 ni1llton Jnnuall'<. •Travrl through 1he a1rpor1 h) rr\1dcn1 busmc~s traveler\ fac1hta1c1, the "''port of$ I 5 balhon an aood~ and \Crv1ees annually •Suue and local ta~c~ cumntly grneratcd both directly and 1nd1~c1ly nt John Wnync Airport amount to $72 ~ m1l11on annually and would 1n~ rea~ to Sn I X m1lhon ptr ycu t thr 7'·0t~hl·pN di1\ level , Clearing and warmer Tuesday Coastal POl"l<lllCl.0. P.o~ ==1'c.ty ~ Richmond Sect-to St LOUlt St Pel•hmpa Slit Lillie Clty Sen ANonl<> SMOleQO San FrMCIACiO Sen Julin.P R St Ste M•rle s .. u .. Sllrewpoo Sioux ra111 SpOll-Sy.- T°'*I Tuc.ori t9 t2 IO eo ,. .. 13 61 er IO 10 70 ,. 6t ·~ 73 TO 13 13 81 IHI 14 75 72 86 56 Ml ,. 86 81 12 ei 93 1' IHI 70 8• 57 ., ... 95 t3 93 71 Extended •• ~~ ~=:: c~'PT Tl.II .. Wu1u110100 WIGlllta Wllll-Barre W~mlllgtoo De 9• " 82 73 " 17 13 .. u 71 Njgllt llnd motnong low C10uC1a With motlly _,.,y 1hetnoon1 HIOfll ,_ 10 II lhe _,_ to IOI "' ,.,. v-.y. L-51lo70 Showef• "-' ""'"" Snow Oocaioeo..., StaflOIWy-.. .._,., ..,.... SeMce N0M VS o.ot OI ea-wee Tides Temps All>lny Alo..q..-que An'llflllo AncllOt -9941 Allenla AllllltlC Cit) AUii~ 81111mot• BlfmlnQl\111• 8IM!Mdl BolN BoelOll eu11a10 8urllnQton.V1 Cell* Ch.n.aon.S C Cllll'IMton,W V CllarlOlle,N C c~ Ctlic.io<> ClndnNll Clewllnd Coiumbla.S C HI~ ti 117 87 113 92 t3 t1 eo 83 t5 17 10 97 74 81 119 91 117 80 57 8-4 es 81 119 Ill e9 " er 71 53 82 73 95 8-4 81 159 87 53 93 7• Ill 113 8!1 81 ... ti Freeway accident N 63 ... 59 91 73 u eo 92 eo ~ 71 90 e2 u es 90 e9 81 SS 92 &6 74 47 ,, 12 75 M 15 ee Mpl .. 81 Peul N&lll .... NeooO.IMM ........ on. Norf0411 VI Okl.lllom1 C•ty OmeN Orllndo P atm SP<inOA P11lla<lelpn11 Ptloenl• Piiie~ P0<1I ,Me 114 ,. a6 115 91 ,. 83 7' e1 71 94 7' et 73 89 70 99 71 82 73 90 79 81 113 113 eo 78 57 90 711 90 74 811 111 SURF REPORT 94 72 82 70 LOCATIOff eo 60 Huntington a..cti t3 ee Alwf h11y. Newi>o<1 H 115 40lh SlrNI, Newpot1 91 73 22rid St1N1. Newpon 74 70 a.lt>oe Wedge 87 66 Laguna 8MCll 92 73 Sen Clement• 8-4 78 Weter l«nj:I 17-N to 71 s ... Olrec110tl IOllll1 FttSI to• Fttll ll!Qf' Second IOw S.cofld ""'" TOOAY 11 12 • m II 11 pm TUEIOAY 147 •m 8 231 m 12 21 am 6 ~4pm Sun Hit IOdl'( •I 8 0 I p m rlMI Tofl(la, 81 ~ !>8 ~ tn ""O Mii ao•n 81 800pm Moon Mii •• J 41 pm ,,_ •111•n at 208 • m Tuesa•• aroll Mlt 114 ~,pm ffa OMl!Cn<>H 2·• 1111 1-3 •• ., •·3 1111 1·3 1111 t.3 ,.., 1-2 fall 2·4 lllf A Wettt Loe Anaelea woman waa lnjared Sanday evenlng when ahe loat control of her car on the northbcnmd San Dteco Freeway near the Edwarda Street overpaaa In W eatmlnater. CHP offlcera aald a rear tire came apart, cauatng her 1971 Mercury Couaar t~ld acrosa the freeway, atrl.ke a curb and flip over. The woman, Laine Chrlatoper, 61, waa taken to Humana H09plta1 Weatmlnater for treatment of cuta, brulaea and a back injury, CHP offlcera aald. Trains collide; 1 00 iiljllred NEW YORK (A P)-Two Amtrak passcnicr trains crashed head-on today 1n "a ma1or accident" on an elevated section of track. and officials said scores of people were injured. at least two cnt1cally. A parallel track had been closed for maintenance. "It could be a bad one. A lot depends on JUSt how fast it was going," said John McUod. an Am- trak spokesman 10 Washington. He said each train earned about 160 passengers. adding that he did not Just Call 642-6086 Dally Piiot Dellvery la Gu.,anteed M;,. .;u, I IQly " 'f"" 00 "'°' "'••ft "°"" ~'* b1 ~ YJ' m ca•.,.,.,.. Ip m •'Ill ;f:Wr COOy woll b;I ~·"'~ know 11 both trains had been moving before the crash. "We have a major accident. mul - tiple injuries, no fatahl1es:· said Fare Departmenl spokesman John Mulligan. He reported sax senous 1nJunes and I 00 to 125 manor ones. "Upwards of 100 manor m1unes" were reported. said Ellen Weiman. spokeswoman for the city's Emerg· ency Medical Service. "A doctor 1s going up 1n a chcrT) picker to treat a partial amputee:· said Jim Kcrra. executive director of the EMS. who was at the scene He reported four "muhaple trauma" v1ct1ms in all. "It sounded hke two big trucks hilling each other," said Jerry V1s- cov1ch. owner of J&S Hardware Corp. across the street "Two or three blasts boom. boom boom!" The Shorehner. out of Boston. and the Ne .... England Zap. out of Wash- ington. crashed at about I 0·45 a m at the Sixth A.venue bndgc on the Hell Gate lane •n lhe Astona section of the borou&h of Queens. said McLeod What do you like about the Dally Pilot? What don't you like? Call the numbe r at left and your message will be recorded, transcribed and dellvertd to the appropriate editor. The same 24-hour answering ser vice may be used to record letters to t he editor on any topic. Contrlbuton to our Letters column must include their name and telephone number for verification. No circulation <'&lhi, please. Tell us what's on your mind. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. L. Schwertz Ill Pubhsher Clrculetlon 71'/642-4333 Cleaatned edvert11lng 7141642-5178 All other depertment1 642--4321 MAIN OFFICE 330 Wnr a., St c.>lt.i ""bot CA I.I• •!lfl•-80. I "6() Co41a Mf'WI A ~' h/6 Coor''ll"' l'l&J Ota"Q" Cour Put~ ~ .. n, ~u 1-1 tl"'oft -l•aloont tl()l()f .. I "•He< o< • .,. .. I .. "-'• ,,._""' may i... "'P'l><lucf'(! •••"001 "*' .. ' P4>• fNMIOI' Ol CO()y•ogt>I °"'-S.lu<1Jey Incl Sunoa, II ,,,., 10 no• rte.... ~ cnp, o, 7 • m o:.M !ltlOft IO ~ m end your CCI(>'( ..,. l>Ol •'""• .. <t<l Clrculatlon Telephone9 Chazy Oowellby Editor and Assistant 10 the Publisher Roeemery Churchmen Controller S.Cood ClaM ~·~ Pl"1 11 C~ll M • r eO!Otn..t IUPS 144 8001 Sut>tcttOllvl\ 0) '-"""" $4 7~ mootnly by ml< Ml c,o monthly Stephen F. Caruo Proouc1ioo MenaQef Oonekt L. Wllll1m1 Clrculallon Man.get VOL. n, NO. 205 Your Silent Partner. WAU Y McCONAHEY Manager When a death occurs In the family you need to make 1 lot of right dectalont You need to underatand what la belt for you and how much you can afford. Call Pierce Brother• when you need u1 P•co Brotners Srnllht 1527 Main Street Hunll~on Beach Calll 9215<48 Clft: -tSSt WJPierce Broth IS MOATUARI I CHAPELS CEM T'Rtl!S MAUBOllUMS , ALL FAITHS CA!MATIONS ----------- ~ HIQHl4 LOW70 MONO AV, JUL V 23, 198'1 lrvJnestarGary Figu- eroa has plugged a big leak Jn poloJsls ·of- fense. Page Cl Coaat A summer camp for re- tarded kids to open In Laguna Beach./ A3 We asked Coaa1 resi- dents how they plan to survive the Olympics./ A3 Callfomla San Ysidro residents de- mand McDonald's res- taurant site become a memorial park./ A5 Nation Nation's growth shows spurt, Inflation dormant./ AA Gallup poH shows Mon- dale-Ferraro taking lead over Reagan-Bush./ AS :;:;:;:::.:;:;:;:::;:;.~:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::~:::~=:=::::::.:::::::: World Copenhagen's Llttle Mermaid gets her arm back; two drunken kids arrested. / A4 Marcos' pollce rout 18,000 rioters In Phlttp- plnes./ A4 JI' ea tare Seven galleries are'llnked for Art Connections '84 -the county's entry Into festivities celebrating the Olymplcs./81 Miss America may be having troubles but Mrs. America Is still making the most of her relgn./81 Sporta Spaniard Seve Ballesteros outduels Tom Watson to win the British Open golf tltle./C1 It was a lost weekend for the Angets, who suffered a three-game sweep at the hands of the Boston RedSox./C1 The public will get a crack at remaining ''premium'' Olympic tickets begin- ning today ./C2 Entertainment What's happening to network documentaries on televlson? ./82 lrvlne's Urgent Care Center of America, Inc. reports loss./85 ldge Ii.tin Board alneea llfomla Newt ualfled lea ouword th Notk»a Ofe>ecope nn L8nderl Mutual Fund• National Newa Oplnk>n PaparauJ Polloe Log Publlc Notlcel Sport• Stock Marketa TtNMak>n Thutera WMth« Wedding• WOfld Newa 84 A3 85 A4 C5-8 84 C7 C4 ce 82 85 A4 A8 81 A3 ~ 01 .... ae 82 B3 A2 82 A8 e 1 e 1 Olympic benefit ignites OCfever Rally at Knott' s set by Olympians of another era By KAREN E. ltLEIN Of .. o.lr ........ Although it won't quite match the 11.air and pageantry of the o~nina ceremonies., Orange County will tiabt up with Olympic fever this week u the torch relay breezes throu&h on its way to the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. Oranae County's official Olympic torch-passing ceremony is scheduled to be held Thursday in conjunction with a benefit show put on by the Southern California chapter of a group called the U.S.. Olympians. The Olympians 6enefit show, at Knott's Berry Farm, will includt a parade of Olympic competiton. a barbecue and the ex~hanging of the Olympic torch flame as it passes by Knott's Independence Hall, acc:ord· ing to Bill Leach. vice president of the local Olympians chapter. The chapter, founded in 1949, 1s the largest in the world, with some 700 athletes in its ranks. There arc estimated to be 61,000 athletes world· wide who have participated in the modem games. Leach, 38, ofNewpon Beach, is one of those Olympians (the FOUP shuns the term "former Olympaan"). Leach and his wife, Julie, competed in kayaking in the 1976 games in Montreal. They were the first married couple to make the Olympic team together, Leach said. Dick Beckner, a S~year-old resi- dent of Newpon Beach who com· peted in the gymnastics event in Melbourne, Australia in 1956, is another Olympian who will be on hand Thursday. Beckner teaches adaptive ph).'Slcal education for handicapped chddren in Orange. He also docs some gymnastics coaching on the high school level, though he said many school districts arc dropping their gymnastics program. Also participating in Thursday's ceremony are Cost.a Mesa resident Ken Fuller, a cyclist who competed in the 1972 and 1976 ~es; Pete Mehringer, a gold medahst in the Los Angeles 1932 Olympic wrestling competition; and Brian Goodell, of Dana Point, who competed in swim· ming in 1976. All Olympic competitors att auto- matic members of the Olympians group, Leach said. Although Leach retired from kayaking after the '76 games and went (Pleue Ne OL TllPIA1'8/ A2) NB cop's drunk driving trial set Respected officer could lose his Job. get prison term BJ STEVE MARBLE Of .. o.lr ........ A bi&hl~ respected Newpon Beach police officer hu been ordered to stand trial for felony drunken drivina in connection with a car accident that seriously Utjured a 61-year-old nune. Officer Michael Patrick Pule, 30, could lose his job and be sentenced to state priton if conVlcted of the ctw,es. He was ordered to appear m Superior Coun July 30 for alftina- ment. The officer reportedly wu eel· ebratina an anticipated promotion dunna the early·momina boon be(orc the accident, accordina ao olfic:iala. Pule was arrested March 14 after his car alleeedJy swtrved lctOSS all lanes of the San Dicao Freeway near Jamborft Road and cut off 1 vehicle (Pl-... ... n orncaa1 Ml • f 11111111111 -- OHAN<1l < OlJNI 'I <Al If OHNIA ;.>~ CfNTS e eras Poem, In front of Knott'• Berry Farm'• Independence Ball are OC Olympla.u ....................... UllM Brtan Goodell, Pete~, Ken Faller, aw Leacb and~ Beckner. Newport woman critically injured in freak accident A Newpon Beach woman is fiabt- IDJ for her life today after beioa cntically injured Sunday afternoon when she was thrown head-tint from her bicycle after being struck by another b1cycbst.. Annette Francis Mesa. 22., suffered head mjuries and ~nt emera- ency SurserY for brain trauma follow-ma the freak accident in a two-way bike path OD SeasboR Drive in West Newport. according to Newport Beach Officer Rick Bradley. The woman. riding a three-speed beach cruiser westbound on \he bike path, was struck bcad--On by anot.bcf' bicyclist, Steve Raser Carlson, 21, of Costa Mesa. Bradley said. Carlson, police said, was rid.in& in the opposite direction on the bea.cbfront bike path when he ac- cidentally drifted into the other lane, k.nocbna the woman to the around. He was not injured.. Bradley said the woman bit her bead on the pavement of the bike path. She was rushed to the Fountain Valley Community Hospital trauma center where she underwent cmers- ency Sw.F')'. She was confined to the bospn.al s intensive care unit th.ts morning, according to a spokeswoman. Neither b1cychst was wearing protective head gear. An mvestip· uon of the afternoon crash conunucs today. Coast beckons business -traffic By JERRY HIRSCH Of_o.lr,... ..... Local hotel and restaurant man· agers are looking to capitalize on the growth of the Orange Coast business distnct as the county·s fin.anaal center and turn the area into a prime spot for small conventions and bust· ness meetings. For cumple. the Westin South Coast Plaza 1s directing its marketina efforts to companies in Chicago. New Y ort and in the San Francisco Bay Area to attract business, accordioa to Steve H u&hcs. national sales director. "We always have some son of group at the hotel. A lot ofit used to be local but with all the hotels in the area, we are now expanding," Hughes said. Business mecungs now make up nearly 30 pen::ent of the hotel's annual sales. he said. To help the local hotels with their marlcet1ngeffons. the Newport Beach (Pleue Ne COAST I A2) Wayne Airport loss would hit our pocketbook Chlnme Ylaltor Ytnc ma. a ..ie Omt ,. .... drt• off att.r taldq a dip 1a b.19 ... taw ta ti.c••· Pa.won of tile Loe AJaael• ZOo. nro s-,_....1c1 pend•• an ma loua from tJae People'• Repabllc of CJtlu ID ~ma wta tile apcom';& Sammer 01J11lplm. a-e 11,000 fw 9tood In llae for mlD•tel to ..... tile ....... S.tuday. If noise-weary opponents of John Wayne Airport prevailed and the field were closed to all air traffic. at would cost 0ranae County's econ- omy approximately $403 m1lhon in annual revenues and S,200job$ with a S 120 million payroll, an economic analysis oft.he aill>Ort bas concluded The analysis, prepared by a pnvatc consultina finn, also detcmuned the airport. diftct.ly and indirectly. an- nually pumps in $648 nullion to the local economy. Accordina to the analysis. the county's econom) would soar to nearly $2 btlhon 1f the airpon C1pa!WOO eDVISlOoed by the Board of Supeni.son is completed Tbc economic assessment fcxus.ina on the airport'• tmpcJl'ta.nCC to the county's economy was com· mi oned u 1 pan of the en· Vtroomanal documentation re· quired before the Board of Super- viaon can cmbart on a wide-raQllna $191 million {Man to cnlatJt and unprove the 1111'& and ove1et0wded airport terminal. Supcrviton ~ dn:ulatana a aven· volume environment.al imp.ct tat~ mcni, master plan, land uae oom· patibility propam and other material rtlated to the airport expansion. Tht board prol)Otn to 1n1t1ally i ncreax ) JEFF ADLER Focus ON THE News the number of daily commercial Jet depanures at John Wayne Airpon from tht current 41 ·flllht limit to SS fltlhts and then to )3 ftiahts or beyond 1n the 1990s. Pre~ by Economics Research Assoaatcs. the stud)' concludes John Wayne Airport played a central role 1n the development of the county'• ttonomy and "cootnbu\n subl1an· ual eronom1r benefits" to U9Crs of the airport. mainly rcsideot travckn and kisurt and busancss travelers. It allO points out that almost half the primary economic bencfits1>ftbe a111>0n aOCNe to the citiea d t co John Wayne A1rpon -l~ille. Cos\a Mesa, Newport Beach, Sa.n\a Ana Htlahta. Sanll Ana and Tustin. (Pl __ ... ADt.POllT/A2) , ; A2 Orange Coast OAIL Y PILOT /Monday, July 23, 1984 San Bernardino asks state aid to repair storm damage By dte .Usocla\H Presa Of ................ San Bernardino County officials say their storm-ravaged county is a disaster area and have asked the state to fund a cleanup and ~habilit.ation. The mquest came after a week of thunderstorms caused $3 million 10 damqe to roads and property, main- ly at Bia Lake. Needles, Forest Falls and inc Palms. "We're asking the te to fund the cleanup and tet some S all Business Administrauon help m." said Sheriffs Department spokesman Jim Bryant Stormy weather continued Sunday in other parts of Southern California and in Nevada. bringing fierce rains, flash floods and a 5.000-foot-high tornado. There were no reports of major damage or injury but the storms forced several road closures. In neighboring southern Nevada the storms left one person dead. I 50 CoNTINUEO SroR1Es homes flooded and l 0,000 Nevada Power Co. customers in communities northeast of Las Vegas without elec- tricity. The weather service said afternoon and evemn.g thundershowers would continue over inland Southern C..ali- fomia for the neltt few days. with low clouds and patchy fog along the coast dunng nights and early mornings elscwbere. Highs will range from the low 80s to 90 in the valleys Tuesday after overnight lows in the 60s. Mountain highs will be a bit warmer, from the mid· 70s to low 80s after lows in the 50s. Deserts will top out from the m id-80s to I 02. Desert lows will range from 62 to 72 overnight eitcept for lows near 80 in Death Valley. A tornado was sighted Sunday by a U.S. Border Patrol flane in the Imperial Valley area o southcastecn California, but it did not hit any inhabited areas. Imperial County shentrs dis- .,atcber Lon BorJon said the Border Patrol radioed the ~port to the lm~al A\aht tower · The~ was a funnel clowd seen northeast of Mt. Signal, west of Calexico," Borjon said. "Tbe len&lh of it was S,000 feet." C.aleitioo police dispatcher Maria Garcia said she was also notified of the tornado siahtinJ. but the~ we~ no reports of it hitting anyone or anything. To the nonh, an San Bemardlno County, an early afternoon mudslide shut down southbound lanes of Interstate 15 in the Newbef!Y Springs area, about 20 miles east of Barstow. California Department of Trans- portation crews diverted traffic flow and cleared the mud away Sunday night. California Highway Patrol dispatcher Tine Schmitt said. lkcausc of road flooding in Barstow. fire crews had trouble reach- ing a two-story home that caught fire. NB OFFICER TO FACE TRIAL ... From Al dnven by Ruth Dicks, a Mission Viejo nurse who was driving home. Dicks suffered head injuries, broken ribs, a fractured collar bone and numerous cut when her car flipped and rolled into the San Diego Creek, which runs alongside the freeway. Pule sustained moderate injuries. Police said a test taken two hours after the accident revealed Pule had a blood-alcohol content level of 0.20, double the level at which one is pres~med legally intoxicated in Cali- forrua. Pule. who reportedly made efforts to aid the injured woman. was a1TCSted at the scene of the accident by California Highway Patrol officers. During a preliminary hearing which concluded last Thursday, two CHP officers, a witness to the acci- dent and a forensics toxolo$ist testi- fied against Pule, who 1s being represented by attorney Paul Meyer. The pre-trial hearing started last June but/ was delayed when the prosecution had difficulty getting the results of an independent alcohol breath test administered by the New- port Beach Police Department, ac- cording to Deputy District Attorney Derreck Johnson. Johnson said the breath test, given to Pule nearly four hours after the accident, was administered for New- port's own internal investigation. Pule was suspended for six weeks following the accident and is assigned to a desk job. He is free on his own recognizance. Until the accident. Pule was a highly regarded officer. He had an unblemished record and was being considered for a promotion to the police detective bureau, authorities said. Dicks filed a $2 million damages claim against the City of Newport Beach last month. The claim was denied by the City Council. OLYMPIANS RALLY AT KNOTT'S ••. From Al on teaching at Corona del Mar High School, Julie went on to train for the 1980 games. he said. ..There was some boycott talk as early as four or five months before the officials announcement," Leach recalled. But Julie did not take the boycott rumors seriously. She had postponed her college education so she could devote more time to practicing. he said. When the United States an- nounced 1t would not compete in Moscow. Leach said.Julie was devas- tated. ''It was like having a chatr pulled out from under her an<t not even being able to get mad at the person who did it." he said. Now. Leach competes m a non- Olympic event called the triathalon which involves swimming, bicycling and a marathon race. J uJie has retired from competition. But both of them remain active in the Olympians group. raising funds for athletic scholarships throuJb their non-profit Koroibus FoundatJOn and speaking about their Olympic ex- periences throughout Southern Cali- fornia. "After you go through an eit- perience like competing in an Olym- pic Games, you want to put some- thmg back." Leach said. Leach suong.ly believes the Olym- pics should not be "caught up in politics and bureaucracy," he said. In fact, the Olympians sent out welcome letters to 153 countries a week before the Soviets announced they would boycott this year's games. "We wanted to assure them they would be welcomed warmly to Los Angeles,.. Leach said. As it turned out, the letters were not enough to reverse the boycott decision. But the Olympians were able Lo provide housing for some of the families of athletes who will compete this year. And they have formed a "spirit team" made up of athletes who toured Southern California schools last spring telling child~n about the Olympics. "It was eight years since the last (Olympic games). A lot of those kids never saw an Olympics," Leach said. Thursday's ceremony will ~n about noon. Leach said entertain- ment. in the form of the ''Game of Games" show, will be take place later in the evening after the barbecue. The Olympians Benefit Show, bearing the theme "The Best in All of Us," costs $35 per person. including use of Knott's rides and attractions. For more information. call Patsy Marshall at 827-1776. COAST SEEKING CONFERENCES •.• From Al Area Convention and Vistors Bureau has split off from the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce to become a non-profit corporation representing the hotels and res- taurants in Irvine, Costa Mesa, Laguna Beach and Newport Beach. The bureau has taken up temporary residence at Newport Center, compli- ments of the Irvine Co., while it raises money for a new headquarters. "We are trying to sell the whole area as a destination for business meetings and conventions," said Linda Bran- non. president of the bureau. Although the bureau cames the name "Newport Beach" promi- nently, Brannon explained the purpose of the bureau is to sell the whole four-city region to business travelers. "We are using Newport Beach because 1t is recognizable and is a saleable commodity. It makes sense to use what you have," said Brannon. who works for the Balboa Pavillion. The Westin's Hughes agreed, •·Costa Mesa is not a major selling point so we have to bill ourselves as the Newport Beach area:' When tallong to meeting or- ganizers, however, Hughes stresses the good points of Costa Mesa in selling his hotel. "We are within wallc.ing distance to about 14 movie theaters. the shop- ping center, the South Coast Reper- tory Theater. People really don't need a car when they come here. We will even arrange transportation to the beach." he said. As well as selling the area, the local visitors bureau organizes conven- llons for business meeting planners. The 140-member bureau is attending many of the far-flung conferences to advertise the area as a business meeting center, Brannon said. This month alone the bureau planned to work two conventions, the Meeting World meeting in New York and the World Congress & Exposition convention, also in New York. "Meeting planners go to these trade shows to find destination that would be attractive to holding these con- ferences:· Brannon said. To entice planners to hold their conferences here, Brannon shows them pictures of the area, talks about the 6,500 hotel rooms available locally and offers to print conference schedules and other material for the planners. Brannon said. AIRPORT IMPACT ANALYZED •.• From Al However, the report fails to men- tion that the hotbed of oppos1t1on to the continued operation and eventual eitpans1on of the airport also is centered in those areas closest to the airport that derive the greatest ben- efits, especially Newport Beach and Santa Ana Heights, which are located below the Otght path of departing Jetliners. The 504-acre airport, according to the report, provides facilities for nine commercial and commuter air car- riers. three government agencies. over I 00 airport-related businesses and rents space for the berthing of nearly 1.000 pnvate aircraft. .\II told. the airport and lhe abovc- mentioned businesses directly con- tributed $24.S. 7 million in revenues to the county economy in 1983, accord- ing to the report. ln addition. the airport provided 5,006 JObs and an annual payroll of $92.8 million. Those figures then were added to what the consultants term ''induced impacts~· defined as an est1mat1on of what anects subsequent rounds of spending had on the local economy An tnduc.cd impact would be. for example, how an airline mechanic employed at the airport spent his weekly paycheck for housing, food and goods and services. The consuhants estimate the total revenue aencrated in the count). both direct and tndured . was $648 m1lhon in 1983 and provided a touil ofQ.574 1obs with a S 174 mil hon payroll. At 55 Oiahts, the report project~ total revenues of $893 million an- nuallv. 13, 342 JObs and an annual payroll of $239.S million When th~ airport expansion 1s completrd 1n , 1990. the economic impact would estimate are 01ght crews. marketing, amount to SI. 98 b1llton and account ticketing and freight personnel. main- for 28. 7 51 jobs and a payroll totaling tenance and passenger service crews. $527.5 million. ramp operations, skycaps and other In terms of percentages. the airport airline service employees. now consututes about 1.5 percent of •The commercial airlines spent the county's total economic activity about $2 per passenger in local and comprises about I percent of the advertising dunng 1983, amounting JOb market. If the airport expansion 1s to $3.1 million. completed. John Wayne Airport will •Some 20milhongallonsofJet fuel account for 4.5 percent of all econ-were pumped at the airport during omic activity and 3 percent of the 1983, generating an estimated $20 total JOb market. according to ERA 's million in fuel purchases. However, projections. only about 12 perent of that total The report notes. however, that 1f remams in the local economy as the airport were closed. 1t would not payroll for personnel, pumping costs eltminate all the econom ic act1v1ty and other related services. associated with the airport. •In-flight meals cost airlines oper- "Much of the economtc act1v1ty a ting at the airi.><>rt S3SO,OOO in 1983. would be shifted to other airport •The five lllrport concessionaires areJs. but a substantial portion would pulled in an estimated SS.65 milhon remain JD the Orange County study an 1983. area." the analysis acknowledges. •Revenues from rental car agen- The report also concedes that the c1es directly relat.ed to airpon activity largest share of direct revenues at-amount to an estimated $20.S million tnbuted to the airport 1n the study, annually while revenues from taxi currently estimated at $I 03 million fares are pegged at S 74 7,SOO a year. annually for v1s11or services. mitV>t •Ground transport savinas and not be fairly regarded as relatlnJt saved time for busmcs~ travelers who directly to the airport. reside in Orange County and do not "It can be argued the visitor serv1cC' have to commute to other local industry should not he regarded as an airports because of John Wayne impact of JWA ~1nce most of these Airport amounts to $10.8 million v1s1tors would \till v1s1t Orange annually County without JWA in operation." •Travel throug.h the a1rpon by the rcpon states. resident business travelc~ facilitates Other findings relating ~e the export ofS l.S billion in aoodsand au·pon'!. \tandtng 1n the ,~unty~serv1ccs annually. economy tnclude: •State and local ltites cumotly •The nine a1rhneo, serv1n' John generated both directly and u\directly Wayne Airport havt> an estimated at John Wayne Airpon amount to payroll of S4l 3 million w1th em-$72.S million annually and would ploy~ bcnetili totahng another S4.63 increase to S22 l .8 mm ion per year at m1lhon Fmplo\l<'t''I co~ertd 1n tht~ the H -Oiaht·pct'-da)' level. 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LAI ee 91 87 83 92 83 ee eo 83 Ill 17 70 97 74 11 et 91 61 80 57 M 86 81 911 ae ee 85 87 n 53 82 73 85 ... 11 " 87 113 93 74 ea 83 85 11 &4 ea Freeway accident .. . .. 58 .. 73 85 80 fl2 eo 915 71 eo ea 81 811 90 89 81 $$ 92 66 74 47 91 72 711 $.4 85 ee 78 57 90 78 90 74 ea 81 114 72 82 70 eo so 93 ee 65 85 91 73 74 70 87 86 t2 13 ... 78 80 77 TOOAY ~ 7 4 S4N:oncl IOW 11' 12 a.m. 2 ! ee 65 Sacon<llllQll e:11p.m 6 • 11 74 TUIHOA'f 83 71 First tow 1"47 a.m 0' 81 11 Artt lllQh 8·23 • m 3.• :: 71 S.condl&w 122Um 2.~ 89 ~~ Second high 8·54 p.m. U :; ~~ Sufi .. ,, 1odey et 8·01 pm .. ri.. 90 79 T....Oey et $·58 1 m alld Nit 901W1 a• 81 83 8.00 p.m 83 80 Moon Mlt" 3;47 pm .. rl-ega1t1 •· 2:oe a m. TUWO.y elld .... el 4 s 1 p.m SUR F REPO RT 1111 .. CTtOI 2-4 ,. 1-3 Ill 1-3 ,. 1-3 Ill 1-3 ,. 1 .. 2 Ill 2-4 Ill A Weat Loe An&elee woman wu lnjured Sunday evenlng when ahe loet control of her car on the northbound San Diego Freeway near the Edwarda Street oYerpau in Weetmlnater. CBP offtcen Mid a rear tire came apart. caaam,her 1971 Mercury Cougar to akld acrou the freeway, atrike a curb and mp over. Tbe woman, La!De Chrlatoper, 51, wu taken to Bnmana Boepltal W eetmbuter for treatment of ca ta, brulsee and a back ~. CBP omcen Mid. Marine corporal in 'scand8.l' will get honorable discharge From staff and wire reports Lance Cpl. l<Alndi Clark, whose relationship to a Marine pilot Jed to her lover's court-martial wiU be honorably discharged from' the corps. "I want to get out.•• Clark said. "It's a shame they didn't accommo- date her desires last fall by doing the same thing they're doiog now," said her attorney, Michael R. O'Neil. of Just Call 642-6086 Delly Piiot Dellv.ry I• Guaranteed Monda~ F r>d81 II yOV 00 nol have your Pllpet by 530pm calbet0te7pm •n<I you1 copy Wlff be ~ed Santa Ana. Oark., 22, will be honorably dis.- charged for "conduct adversely ~f­ fecting the good order and discipline of the unit." said ber commanding officer. Lt. Col. Robert T. Sarles of tbe Marine Corps Air Station (Helicop- ter) in Tustin. She would retain full veterans' benefits, unlike her fiancc, Capt. John Moultak. 27. of the Marine Corps Air Station in El Toro. Moulta.k., a legal affairs officer, W1 court-martialcd July 13 and di missed, the equivalent of a di honorable discharge. Since Moult.ak dishonorable discha~e is considen: a federal offense, he wtll be preventc from practicing law or flying for commercial air carrier. His cow martial is being appealed throu& military channels. What do you like about the Daily Pilot? Wbat don't you Ulte? Call tll number at left and your message will be recorded, transcribed and dellvere to the appropriate editor. Tbe same U-bour answering service may be used to record letters to di editor on any topic. Contributors to our Letters column must Include tlael name and telephone number for verification. No circulalioa calls, please. Tell us what's oa your mind. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. L. Schwartz Ill Publisher Clrcu .. tton 714/142-4333 Cleealfled edvertlalng 714/M2-M78 All other depertmenla 142-4321 MAIN OFFICE 330 Wnl Say SI . COiia MeM CA Mail •Odr-8o1 1S60. CO.._ Mese. CA 92626 Saturday •11<1 Sulldey H you 00 not receive YolJf copy by 1 a m caM t>efol• 1 O a m •nd V01J1 copy 111111 Ile o.11-tld Chaq Dowetlby Roeemery Churchman Editor and Assistant Controller SecOllO CUI ~ege paid It Colte ...... C.JlOrnla (UPS 144-800) ~hon by CMr• M 7S mon1Ny 1>y mew S6 60 monthly Clrcu .. tlon Telephonee Meet O.•noe County "'"' I0-4m to the Publisher ltephen F. Ceruo ProdocllOO Mln&g9f 0-ld L Wiiiiam• C11oul1t\Ofl M1naget VOL. n , NO. 205 Your Silent Partner. When a death occurs to the tamlty you need to make a lot of right declttona. Y<>u need to understand what la beat fot you and how much you can afford. Call Pierce 8ro1herl when you need UI. PletQe Br~Jh«t Smith•' 021 Main StrMt Hunt~on Buch. c.lif 92848 Celt •• WlPierre Brothers r AU.FAlniS CREMATIONS '