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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-08-02 - Orange Coast PilotI .. • -- 1:11111811111 -- THURSDAY, AUGUST 2. 1984 --------- 0 H AN ( • E: (. () lJ N r y c A l Ir 0 H N I A 2 5 cf: tH s Dana Hills' Steve Hegg wins tliegold ftJ cycl- lnJ(as the U.S. medal ta1lycllmqsto29. Page Cl Coast Caged bridegroom dis- covered on PCH./ A3 Search for the suspect In a murder at a West- minster car lot has reached dead end.I A3 California Former President Ford's son Is handcuffed after- aJlttgedy trying tp,_ take . Q,1)"'1pic sign'./ M . Nation Instead of Ice cream, •Johnny' gets draft regis- tration notice./ AS ·Mother of McMartin Preschool youngster tes- tlfles./ A4 World Ahljacked French jetliner ls roctted by explosion, but 46 passengers, crew safe./A4 Poles urged to stay sober as part of Russian vodka boycott.JM Living For a true test o~ togetherness there's nothing llke a six-month cfamlly tour of the United States/81 :;:;:=;;---:;:.:;:.:.~x·>:·:·:·:.N:Y:«Y~·!-'..:·:·:;9 Sports Tom McKlbbon, a New- port Beach resident and an assistant U.S. women's sculllng coach, has kept Olympic press- ure In pecspectlve./C1 The Angels await a show- down series with first- place Minnesota after completing sweep In Oak- land./C2 . :·:·:·:·:-:;r-:;:::;:;:::::::::::::;:::.~;s:::::::::::~:::::~~;: Entertainment A new three-dlmenslonal film process Is drawing oohs and aahs at 01$- neyland. /85 1 :::::::;:::-:::::::~::::::::::::::;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:~=:;:::::;-;:;:; Buelneu Tradltlonal life Insurance has outlived lta.useful- ness, aaya one Industry executlve./87 82 »O A3 87 A4 _:NB man ]aile-d in mu~der after motorists witness 'dumping~ . -. BJ STEVE MARBLE · .-: they have been unable to locate a ... Deir .... ...., , body. A Newport BCacb man wasarre5ted Bruce Bradley Ralph, 57. was taken Wednesday on u pici of murder. intocustodyafter~tnenesidentified although hoinicide investiaators said him as the man they saw, stand in& TiCket .· snafu at Coto --Games ~ Shoottng competition only had space· - for 700 spectators By STEVE MARBLE ... .,..,....... . Several thousand upset Orympic ticket holden found tbemselve-5 drinkioa, free coffee, eai.ina fj sweet rolls· and k.tllinJ time ><-Wednesd'Ay instead of viewing one of the fiqal events in the modem pentatb'ton ·at Coto de Caza. . The Los Angeles Olympic Orpniz- ina sold more than 7 ,000 tickets to the five-event pentathlon competition but only had space for 700 spectators - at the jte :of the shooting event Wednesday momina near Miuion Viejo. · · "We never expected this many people to show up," said Don Silvas, a lAOOC spakcsman ... In the entire history of intemauonal competition, a shooting event has never drawn more than 400 people." Silvas said orpmzers thought they had played it safe by aJlowina room for about 700 spectators to the hal~­day shooting event which was fol-~wed Wednesday cvcn1n1 by a running event and .finally the closin1 awards ceremony. But nearly 4,000 ticket holders arrived promptly for the sbootint ~YCQ1 only to discover they would miss all or most of the competition. "I think it really cauaht them off- auard. •• suggested Robert Payton. a public relations .1pakesma11.. for Coto de eaza.-.. rt was a case wfiere a lot more people showed up than ex- pected." . In an ct'Tort to pacify the anJry crowd, Coto de Caza terved free (Pleue eee THRONGS/ A2) Long line for tickets t6.Games By JERRY BUlSCH OfhDl!lr ........ The Olympics are pl~na ·Santa Claus for the Hickory Farms food store at the Newport Beach Fashion Island shoppina center. . lfit wasn't fortbe weather, Hickory Farms would think it was the heiaht of the Christmas ~son .~th cus- tomers Jammina the shop. lt bas the good fortune to be 1ust one door away from the Orange Coast's only Olym- . pie ticket center. . Hjckory Farms, 'ike the ticket center, is doing a booming busine . One for the Italian• ncJlt to a body prawled off to ihe Side of an Irvine road that leads to the county dump. The. bod~. however, m eriousty disappeared before Irvine Police ar- rived on the scene. Motorists uavclina &Jons · Bonita C4nyon Road on WcdnC$day re.: ported the iahtina and told in- vcsuaators that the bOdy was lytDJ next to an ·oranae Mercury Capn. Every day this week people have been Jinan& up in front of the ticket outlet as early as S a m. -five hours before the center's 10 a.m. opcnin~ said Bob McKinney, the center s assistant supervisor. The average wait is at least fotir hours and people who don't make 1t inside the ticket outlet by 6 p.m. go (Pleue eee LONO/A2) ·Modena pentaWoa team mem~ M•ul•. Oaalele of Italy cra11ee the fhilah JI.De of tbe ,,000-meter race at Coto de ca.. to wtD UM told medal for blmwtf. in the lDcllYldual competition and cllDc:h tbe aold for Illa team lD oftrall competition Wecln-4.ay. Por complete co•ence of tbe pentatbloo eTeDta. Me Sparta. Paae Cl. 'Black Friday' traffic · . in doubt Frftl ltaff .... Win reports Traffic contuwcs to be li&bt in ~Couruyd&lri..,~U.~¥Jm~·-==_,_,,• ....-local llUlit omcials woadcr- ini if .. Biack Friday" will be u bad as fmt thought. Fndly afternoon traffac ~vcn wins any medals even Y..hen tberc isn't an Olympics and offici.ali were womcd that the combination of the commuter traffic. ~cral Olympic cvmtiin the county and a night Ansel baseball game at Anaheim Stadium cou.0-really-sum traffic up -cs-peciaJly. in the northern pan of tbc county. But no they arc making no prcdiction1 .. We att ready for an~thina. .. said Califonua H1~way Patrol spo ·cs-• man Officer R1ck0 Stt\lcns. "People expccted the traflk to be ~ble and 1t 1 li&bter-thao notmaJ 10 v.-e not-makingany~icti lunn~ .. siUesS:lt,.'On'tbet.dif . (Pleue eee IH...ACK/A2) Olym_plc U_pdate . Storer TV to pay up for outage By DA VtD BISHOP Dlllr ..... C.11 ' nfllll Storer Cable TV. Inc. and its subscnbers 1n South Oranse County were plagued by problems th ts week. · but company officials say they have now corrected the trouble. . Cable TV officials said they have their -fingers crossed" that no more trouble "'ill arise -at least not for the remainder of the Olympics. nd to compensate "icwers. the cable compan' announ~ that cu.,- tomers will rUcl"e one full da 0 \ credit on their balling for the SCTVH'C they didn't ~\C unda). For customen w1th baste cahle ~f"1cc ($9 per month). that mean a credit of JO cents. •· o amount of monc~ , f.Oing 10 ma\c up for v.hat hap~ncd.' tort'r rPleue .ee STOHR/ A2'l -A d<ly _i~ the life:. JEFF ADLER OC gir-1 get~ silver for dad-~s birthday C7·9 ee co . OC supervisors look at their jobs - NEWS B~CKGROUNO .ll.E cs 82 ce 82 81·2 87 A4 AO 81 c~ C1'"6 88 Each ooard member has own approach to knott problems • .. . .. . - -. . . • THRONGS APPEAR' AT COTO .•• P'romAl Hot weather afte~ early clouds co cc nd \Ir t roll to fl n unable to vtew the rompctiuon. explam~ Dick Bolt11\&hou , presid nt of th Coto de Cul resort TtC'k"et holden lso were offered a refund though it was uncl r today whether any spectators had taken the LAOOC ~Pon that offer. ''They asked people who were watching to step back and ha'e a cup of coffee to let O\hers watch. Some went for that an'd some didn't," BoltinJhouse said. "Unle you're a real shooting enthusiast. it's not really that much of a ~pectator sport anyway," he added. • The pparcn1 out.up, ho\\-evcr. forced om~spcetators to " ll from early mom in to S p m. "hen lhe runnin pon1on of ihe pcnunhlon was t.agtd. The modem pentathlon. h1ston- colly only a minor footnote to the bulk of Olympic compct1t1on, ~as 'drawn huge cro-wds in Orange County and. until theshootingeveht Wcdne . day. there was amplt" room for all tic~~t holder;). Silvas said an information booklet distribute<t to all pentathlon ticket holders stated that only a small !l':'mberofspec~tors would be able to OC GIRL GETS THE SILVER ••• F'romAl .. atch the shooung tone ume. He id fans were reminded of that u y t Heri Parle in Irvine where lhe swimming portion of the- pentathlon was held. "We did the best we "could rullder the circumstances,'' ilvas said. ""After the first relay tn the shooting we 11 ked people to mo' c back so othen could see and most of them actu Uy dia. "'The positive thin&. I suppose. is that o many people are intere~ed in pentathlon," he ~id. "If you have to look at the negative side. it's that we h d some real problems.·• : Man) Ou sere. who e 43rd birth-1nd1v1dual medals will take place, he count;y who score highest .. da) is Sunday. said "a silver medal 1s -;aid. • Marty Dusserc said he has .. mixed a silver medal. In aymnastics. your Pam 81leck.anothermembcrofthe emotions" about that rule. created whole eustence is based on what U.S. team. has Ii with the Dussere some years ago to even out the another person'simpress1on of you 1s. · familv for the past )ear while she has com~tition because Soviet women It' not how h4gh you JUFAP -0r h-Ow-tmnC&-in-Huttt~ Beach. Htt--had oominatcd tnt~mal:l-Onal-gym- Coutal .,... " .. ao.ion ., " luftMo ..... thlttinQ10n.~ H ~ o... ./; •• n CMrlMlon.W .. n70 Cll#\Ollt.N C •H ~ .,., &4 ~ 16 12 ~II 13 72 • ~ ,, 10 Co!Uml>la.I C .. '2 Columtli4.0fl IT ~d.H.H. U 69 ~f'IWOl'll'! 94 70 o.ttoti es .w o.n-u .. O..MolnM ee M Oe1f°" • .. .. Pulu1ll 71 '° DP-"U 1~-.. .. 72 f'elrbenl! I 71 &e raroo 11. a Fltcle1lfl ..,. 48 ......., _________ Ota11d~ .... Tldea lOOA'\' Second """ 127 pm u SecoNIOW IJOpm ,. "'IDAY J'"lrll lllOf\ 2''3•1'11 40 '1rlt IOw ,,, '"' ti .._..~ 320pm u 8-odlOw 10 23prn 12 9vn Ml• todty ec 7 53 pm ,_ Frldey at I OS I 111 lltld -IOllfl 11 T 52 pm.. Moon Mii ii 11:H p I'll., ti-Ftielly IC1021m. G'MtF• 12 13 ~d . '° 17 ._.. .. .. HotlOlulll 17 76 ~on to 12 ..,..., ,.polle 16 , , J.et.ton.MI M fl Jeclleonvllle .. 16 ~ 17 47 K-C:1ty II 86 LH V-O-100 11 Lill .. Aocli .. 71 ~~-Mge!M '3 .. -· ., 72 1.ubtloclo 17 es MenlC>IW• .. 7 , M11m1 8Mc11 H 12 ... .,.... 17 .. Mpi...St Peul M 71 I e=====::;:Co~--... Nt!!>'llle ' 11 70 r • 4 ...., Oflef:;;,na'·---.,........-·tt 1'0 -- . . fast you run. It's subJect1vc. parents, who live in San Jose. are nasties for so long. "It (low scorin&)is very upsetting at staying at the Dusscre's home during But. he said. for Michelle, the the time, but it all evens <rut in the the Olympics. . second youngest member of the U.S. Temps ..u H ea 94 97 ,..._YOl'k N 71 Norlolk,VI 17 11 OliltllOIN City '1 17 Su RF REPORT end," Dusserc said. . Although Dusserc scored in the top Olympic team. pulling off a silver Du~re and the parents of other cigh.t on both the bar and floor medal is quite a thrill. . Orange County gymnasts have been exercises, she will not compete in the "If she does get to compete on carpooling -to UCLA, where the individual medal finals unless one of Sunday, I'll haxe a terrific birthday competitton is being held. They will the other Americans is sick.or injured. present. But for now, I've got an early make the dnve again I;nday and The individual competition is lim· present and I'm very happy to settle Sunday, when thc .cpmpeution f9r .. 1 ited to the twp gymnasts om each withthat,"hesaid. LONG LINE FOR OLYMPIC TICKETS.· •• Prom Al . . " eo 13 5e 78 70 12 75 85 71 .,. 72 n • M a 01Nha 15 70 Of!Mdo 17 74 . ' home disappointed. If the) want tickets, they will have to start over in line the next day, McKinney said. i'e<>ple were using .the . s~oppang center's courtyard pauo fumtturc as chairs for a hne that stretched from the ticket center to the stores across the width of the mall. They should have some officials there wh"o can decide to sell some tickets if no one is showi~ up," said Ibarra, who was hoping io buy some baseball and morewrestling tickets. BLACKFREEWAYJUSTGRA Y ••. ' "I just teH people to get here as early as possible. We arc selling 1.600 tickets a da) and are domg the best we can," he said. "It is crazy. We are telling people ~ua ctnmceiheymrgbtnottettn. ~ We have been here since June 7th'and only in the last week has it been so busy,'' Mc~nney satd. McK.inne said the success of the American lympic team is behind the surge in ticket sales. The office will remain open between I 0 a.m. and 6 p.m. throughout the Summer Games. Several hundred thousand tickets are still available. Wednesdayaftcrnoon,hundredsof La Palma resident Marlene Jarvi started standing line at 8:30 Wednes- day morning and was suit in line at 2 "lf 1 can get the tickets~ it will be worth it, .. she said. "I }\ave a cousin from Finland who isMthe Finn.i5h team and will throw thejayelin so I really want to get track and field tickets," said Jarvi. Jose Ibarra of Milwaukee was not pleased with spending his vacation standing in line. "I went to the wrestling in Anaheim and it was bener than haJf empty. Meanwhil~ in an effon not to lose their valuable places in line, people were taking turns dashing into the Hie!Coty Parms for food airefiffi'Cs"h- ment. "We arc selJiog anything people can grab and eat. Our sodas are beang cleaned out really fast and we are selling a lot of Beef stick and cheese," said Lolamay Smith, a clerk at. the food store. She attributes virtually all of the increased business to the people in the long Olympic ticket line near the store. FiomAl • with Cabfomia license plates, usuaJJy is dnven by Bradley Kaye Ralph, the 18-year-old stepson of Bruce Ralph. The youth reportedly has not been . DAY IN SUPERVISORS' LIFE ••• seen smce he left his place of employment in SaAta Ana on Mon- day. -STORER CREDIT ••• From Al they act as a "housekeeper" for the state, she explained. "But what I like: best 1s adminas- trauon. New approaches to better ma~cmcnt. That's why I'm govern· ment. ' Wieder said. Conv~ly, she noted that what she likes least about her office 1s th• supervisors' quai.1-jud1c1al role. an which they act as Judges on land-use and zoning matters. "It's a tremen- dous responsiblity to determine whether a law has been implemented properly. The law is so complex," she commented. The supervisor's offical day begins at 7:30 a.m. and averages about 10 hours, six days a week, Wieder estimated. Often a working day begins at bteakfast meetings with officials from cities in her district, such as Hunt- ington Beach. On one morning, Wieder met with city officials from several cities to discuss transpor- tation projects to be included in a 15- ycar county transportation plan. Then, following a mcetmg with staff members. Wieder was off to a luncheon meeting of the Orange Coast Assoc1at1on. where she was a featured speaker. Back at her office that afternoon. there was the scheduled interview with a reporter followed b) a meeting with the president of the Rossmoor Homeowners Assoc1at1on, an unin- corporated section of W1edcr's dis- trict. "I'm their chief of police. the garbage collector and everything else," she noted. Still later that same day was a meetin4 concemmg an international women s group, a bnefing on the next week's board agenda and a county Bu1ld1ng Industry Assoc1at1on din- ner. On oth'Cr days. Wieder might be found attend1ni meeungs of the South Coast Air Qu~hty Manage- ment District: the C'ahfom1a (oun1y Supervisors' Assoc1at1on. the Local Agency Formauon Comm1ss1on. of which she as chairman. or the Inter- governmental Adw1ory Council on Education or the Nattonal Dnnkmg Water Comm!ss100. both of which she was named to by President RcaSl.an. "li's a pace you go." Wieder said of her JOb. "lfl ever had to slow down I would miss it It keeps me honed." In spare moments. Wieder said she usually can be found 1'Cadmg some of the myriad papers and reports con- cerning county issues that cross her desk every day. Becau~ of hCT busy schedule. Wieder said she doesn't get to spend. ei:iou.gh time with constituents I!" h~r, dtstnct. :Tm always 'complaming because I'm not out in the district as much as I'd like to be," she said. But she added she doesn't let her schedule interfere with what she termed her .. .top prionty," her grand- children. "I'm a crazy grandmother. It's my top joy and we malce ume for that. What loses out 1s being with our sociaJ friends. I tlon't do the things I used to do, like play golf." the supervisor said. •"l hold this office because I hke and get satisfaction from it," said FirsfDistrict SupeTVlsor Roger Stan- ton. "I like 1t because you get feedback almost immediately on how well you·r~ domi up here." A supervisor. Stanton explained. 1s a "personal representative of (his) constituents and 1s to make dec1s1ons in a manner that reflects the desires of those constituents." He called 1t a difficult and diverse job. As an aide scurried in seeking approval on some .papers, Stanton said he spends about 60 hours a week working directly on matters before the board or related issues. "It's hard to cut the political from the personal. Even when you're with fnends and trying to relax. you're discussing issues:" To underscore his point. Stanton said he has been approached by constituents seeking soluuons to problems while standing on the s1dehnes watching his son play soc- cer. He said he has tned to emphasize a personal touch m his first term on the board ... People don't want posturina. the)'-want responsiveness. They want a direct approach to what's hap~nina ,,. Investigators did not say whether and honesty, .. the supervisor said. they believe the body seen by motor- Constituents will find Stanton at-ists en the roadside, was that of . h Bradley Ralph. tending meeunp, lune eons or "Right now we·rc trymg toJipd the breakfasts an h1sd1stnct when he's not car." said Muir. who noted the r's behind his desk m the Hall of Administration. license plate numbe . He said the car y as black louvers An average day m1~ include two mounted in its rear window~ . or three meeungs wnh constituent Anyone with information should From Al area manager Martha Corrales said, "I just hope it will help people to understand we are tryina." On Sunday evening, a fuse blew and the cotire system went out of order for about four hours during pfu11e time covera$t of thej>l"it day of Olympic compet1uon. ! The compan~·s switch00ards were deluged w1th .calls from unhappy customers. On. Monday a ".completely dif- ferent. unrelated problem" occurred with a new receiver, Corrales said, and the S 15.000 piece of equipment caused intemuttent outages throu&fl. out the day for the company's 24,000 subscribers. groups. at least two mcettnp with contact Irvine police at 660-3737. vanous county agency chiefs or .----= 1••1i•iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiijiiiiiiiiiiiii--department directors, meetings with individual constituents wno· have· *.JUL na l'HROtiGH J;ABOR DAY w••KEN. D-. specific problems plus appointments s.-. with other supervisors, their staff members or other city, state and federal officials. Frequently. there are luncheon or breakfast addresses to community groups Of civic groups, aftd he said he alwayVfinds time to speak to high school civics classes. Despite the busy schedule -which usually includes at least two nights each week and one weekend day - Stanton said be tries to reserve Sunday for his family. "I have a family and four young kids. You know, you have to have some time to yourself." Stanton said he often is accom.. parued by wtfe Karen on his vanous outings around the county. "She is an unpaid public servant. Much of the duties fall on her shoulders: she really does an outstandingjob." Matters appearing on the agenda for the weekly Board of Supervisors meeting can take anywhere from several hours to go over with staff on up to issues $0 large or important that a week ofpreperation time is needed. he said. · To keep up with the great volume of reading on county matters, Stanton said he has taken to reading in odd places. He even keeps a microphone plugged into a special tal)e recorder in the dashboard of his car so he can a1etate letters or memoranda as he· dnves. Nevertheless. Sl)'S Stanton of the workload. "I've never found It a burden at all " Fnday; Profiles of Supervisors Ralph Clark. Bruce Nestlnde· and Thomai Riley. • 20% OFF ALL PO.TTER Y SALE fNCLUDES: . • ROn'ERY • REDWOOD TUBS • IAUC•RS • WIR• BASK•TS • BARR•LS ~ • STRAW BASK•TS • AND POn'INQ SOIL TOOi Just Call 642-6086 Wliat do you llke about tbe Daily Pilot? What don't yoa like? Call the number at left and your me1111e wlll be recorde41 trenscrlbed and delivered to the appro1rlate editor. Tbe same U-bour 1n1werln11ervlce may be used to record letters to tbe editor on any topic. Contributors to our wtters column must lnclade tllelr name and telephone number for vertflcallon. No clrcalatloa calla. please. ClrculaUon Tetephonea :_j Tell as ~bat't on.your mind. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. L Schw•rtz Ill Publisher Lorne aruchet Advertising Director Roumary Churchman Controfl r . • Ji t.pMn f: .. C.•1-_..oo~d L.WUll1rn1 ProducflOJl Circulation M~nager ~~nager • . .. • . . AM LING ' Newport Nursery and Garden Cent.er • FREE • l:ocal 094 very ·j ~ • ... Big Band SOu d slated for Irvine Orange ~ountY, rnu tc lovers of the 811 Band era will warm UP. their sw1na kill at the Irvine Manott Hotel on Sunday. Au&. 12, from 4 to 7:30 p. m. Spon_sorw by the Newport Chapter of the City of Hope, this "ln the Mood Dance .. will feature Oral!JC Coast Collcae·~ BiJ Band, under the d1rcctfon of Or. Charles Rutherfo'r<ty director of mustc. Pay $10 at ,th~ door. 1 • • This is. the.kickoff for the Glenn Mtller Salute Benefit Ball, fc~ttunna the'Teit B ncke orchestra and luminane of the Sl.>ina Era. - · . Hiahlittlt of the evenina will be an official tribute to MaJorOlcnn Mtllcrby an Armed Forces Honor Guard in recognition of hit contributions to the morale of WW 11 ~.S. ~rvjce personnel and his dedication to duty that cott him has hfe. Tickets .. and reservations for the benefit can be obtained by callina SS 1-9343. A tax-deductible donation ofSSO includes dinner. entertainment and dancina from 6 to 11 p.f'O. Black uc optional. All proceeds will go to the Caty of Hope Cancer Center. For more information.I. call James Altieri at 6 73-8584 or Vickie Sacre at 7$4-789Y. • Women '• Networlr. to meet Darlene Hanson will spc~k on "Vibrating to the Right Ca.rctr Throuah Nwneroloat' at the weCan Women·~ ~etwork monthly dinner meeting at the Sheraton· in NeWp<>n Beach on Wednesday, Aug. 8, at 6: I 5 p.m. Dinner cost to non-members who are invited is $20. Information and reservattons may be obtained by callina 786.,6563. . WcCan is a six-year-old business women's network-!ltl organ1zatton and membcnhip is open to anyone interested in a career-oriented network. In addition to the monthly dinner meetings, s~1al nctwork.ing meetings are held at the .Sheraton on_the fourth Wedn~y of every month. Additional actav1t1cs for members include social events, special semanatJ and a yearly weekend retreat. r For more information, call Virginia Trela at 6S0..8000, Ext. 421 . . . . Antl-rablea clinic scheduled A ncighborhooo. low cost anti-rabies vaccination clinic has been scheduled for Aug. 9 at the Irvine Animal Care Facilities, IS 129 Sand Canyon Rd .. Irvine. from 7 to 8:30p.m. . All dogs, four months ofage and older, arc required by state. count)'. and ctty ordinances toJ>e.vaccinaledaaain rabies. Cost of the vaccination 1s $3 per dog. ljctnses .,,.u also be available at the cli01c site. • For more information, call the Orange County Animal Shelter at 634-7287. Management program The USC Oranac County campus will hold an information session for the "Ccnificate in Management Effectiveness" and "Movina Into Management" pro- grams for women on Saturday, Aug. 11 , from 10 to l.1:1Q a.m. The programs arc for women in the business world. The eight-month course covers business commu01ca- tions, accounting, finance, mathematics. computers. busmess law. human behavior. strategic planning and marketing. The campus as located at 2361 Campus On vc. lrv1lle. at tt\e corner of Campus and Von Karmen. For more mformataon or registration. call 752-5505. BUJbJeu women to meet The lrvmc Chapter of the Amcncan Business Women's Assoc1auon will meet Aug. 14 at the Irvine Mariott Hotel, 18000 Von Karman Ave., lrvmc. Social hour will begin at 6 p.m. wtth dinner at 7 p.m .. a~d program to follow on "Education and Career Advancement" Yolanda Morales Dickey , guest speaker, 1s. project director of the Adolescent Day Treatment Center for Westetn Youth Services and is involved in prevention and treatment of child abuk. She 1s a licensed famil) therapist. 1 Carol Altman will be vocational speaker. ' Employed women in this area arc eligible for membership an ABW A whose goal is to help women in business advance through education and increase com- petence by uwadina professional skills. For membership mformation. call Manlyn Coote) at 838-1022. or Anita Acmingat 6]3-4885. Thuraday. Aug. 2 • 7 p.m .: HwitlD1ton Beacb City Sc~ool Dlatricl Board of Tnateet, Closed session, Education Center, 204S l Craimcr Lane. . • 7:30 p.m .. Fountain Valle)' Scbool District Board of Tnateea, Education Center, 17210 Oak St. Pou cE loG Life de.tee to free th bddeeoom froaadlie caae dealfned by bla frlen6. ' Cage won't bar couple for m~trimony Friends abandon -----imprisoned gr oom .. on Coast Highway -- By lERft.Y HIRSCH Of 11M ~Not Sl811 03\ ad Garrcn's fnend!> were so de- termined to ~eep him from getting mamed this Saturday they had the 23-)car-old groom welded shut into a cage wnh no way of escaping. They then left Garrett on the Pacific ·Coast Highway roadside an Ncwpon Beach Wednesday morning w1th a ·•Gettmg Matned" sign next to the cased groom to let everyone knO\\ what a m1~take he was making. ·He was freed about I 0:30 a.m. b) amused Newpon Beach firefighters usmg theJawsofL1feapparatus they uwal1¥-£ave for people trapped in wrecked cars. "They have redefined the statement, 'wt th f ncnds hke these who needs enem- ies?' It was pretty uncomfortable." said Garrell, who hvcs m Orange. · "I guess the chams and the cage were meant 10 signify mamagc," he added. It all started at Garrett's bachelor party Tuesday night. The aroom and 12 friends had just amvcd home after a night of watchma mud wrestling at the Trop1cana to a welder who sealed shut the top three b8T$ of the cage. Garrett was then trucked to the Pac1fic Coast Highway just north or Superior Avenue where he was dumped. The cage was placed upriaht next to the road and then Garrett's fnends took off. "They cloaked the caic so that people couldn't see when we were Qn\lng here.'.' Garrett said. . photos of themselves ncxtto the cage. Thcv thought no one would believe them "'hen thcy10Jd the story. "I am JUSt getting over a divorce and I thought it was pretty funny." said Officer Johnson. Officer Dave B) mgton was summoned to the scene b> Johnson. "What he said was that ·..,ou arc not go1na to believe this. It 1s a male "elded shut mto a cage.' .. B)1ngton said. "The next gu> who is getftng mamed I know what I am going to do.'' sattt B)angton. He wasn't the ofl!y one to think thaL "I am goin1 to save 'the cage for the next guy who lets married.'' Garrett said. Polic~ ·were treating the incident as a collqe prank. Santa Ana welder Dan NcaJc cha.rfcd the party onl)' SI 5 for weld.mg tbecqc together Tuesda) and sealing it this morning. "They came by (Tuesday} aftrmoon \\Ith the~ taped the way they Wa.rited it and asked 1f Lwould do iL .. Neale said. "I am glad I didn't have friends like that when 1 got mamcd." he said. The cage stood upright for ncarl> an hour before a motonst Oagcd down Newpon Beach pohce officer OOUJ Johnson and told him there was a maQ an a cage on the highwaj. ··~~~M~ped~dtookp~ur~bm -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ no one offered to help. l guess the) didn't R i fi ~ ti Want to spoil the fun for the IU)!>," said eg ster re J.Orces evacua. on Garrett. Garrett. a .physi cs student at Cal State · Fullerton. seemed onl) mildly upset over By tbe Alaoctatecl Press record b) putting out today's morning the prank. but wished has buddies would ed1t1on ~veral houn late. nave aflcast given him a textbook 10 study Flames feeding on rolls of ncwspnnt The blaze brokc-out at 10: 19 P..m. to the while caged. Garrett had a test today. AroareRd th.rouifi' The bascmen.t o,r the Santa . basement of Ute one-story buildi~ -and His fiancc, Robin Bruce of Irvine. was na egistcr newspaper building. chum-destroyed I-ton rolls of newsprint valued •t considerably less pleased. , ing out thtck smoke that forced 200 $500 dollars each. Several bundretl rolls "l think she knows 1 was kidnapped," ~mployees to flee. · were stored there but the" total damqt Garrett said. ,, The onJytQJury Wednesday naJht was to couJd not be 1mmcdiatdy estimated be- Contacted shonly after her bndegroom ·s a firc~ter who was treated for e~aus-cause the basement remained off-limits.. release, Bruce would only say. "f am not tion. said Pcputy Fire ChiefB1U Recd). said Jim Robinson, manaain& editor. going to commont on it... The Orartgc Count)' newspaper ma~ed The cause of the blaze was not 1mmcd1- Newport police at the scene said it wa!I to prt1se~e tts contmuous publication ateh kno~n. one of the funniest pranks they ha\e seen an - the city. Three officers took turns snappsng -;:;..._ in Hollywood "When we got back to the home where --------------• we met the)' grabbed me and chained my OB ITUARIES feet toacthcr They stuck me m this cage in a garaac," Garrett explained. He was gi ven some cushions and a sleepmg bag and spent the night m the black metal gage, which as about 3 feet by 3 feet by 6 feet. Garrett was awakened early Wednesday morning, he docsn' know when because his watch was taken when he was caged, and was fed breakfast The "friends" took Garrett. cage and all. Aircraft nolse today Service held for Emelia Hendriks The aircraft n6t• level at Merine Coi'pl Air Station In EJ Toro may lncrew due to fletd earner landing ~ice today (Thurlday) ftom 1 to 4:30 p.m: · : . Landing. pract1Ce Is also echeduled for A~. 1, 8 and 9, from 5 to 9:30 p.m. Funeral services v.crc conducted Wedncsda) for Emcha Angst Hcndnks of Costa Mesa, who died Monda)' at H~a Mcmonal Hospital. She was 82. -• Born m Chicago, she had worked as a secretary for the federal government before her retirement. She had hved 10 C'osta Mesa for five years and \\IS a member of the cit.., 's Golden T1men Oub. Mrs· Hendnks 1s survived b)' a son. \\-aync R Hcndnh of Costa Me$L Also .. surv1\ mg are four grandchildren Services were held at Pierce lrrot.hers Bell Broadwa} Monuar) u> Costa Mesa. Bunal /fS'scheduled for Mount Emblem Cemetery 1n Chicago noon and released on S t.000 bail. Bicycling bandit holds up Fountain Valley film booth former roommate also owes ham b3{k, rent • • • .\ rcs1dcnl of the Cesa del Sol apanmcnts. 21661 Brookhurst St rcponed that someone dumped motor 011 on his front porch and smashed an his front door and mail bo,, males of the \!Cli m found the fro nt door standing open but there "as no loss rcponed • • • Th1e,es pncd open a rear sliding • • • " t "7-~car-old1u~enilc was arrcsteJ b~ police on susp1e1on of fo~ry Wednesda:r mornina at Laauna Fed- eral c;a, 1ngsand Loan. 3 I O Olcnncy~ lrttt Inine . . . , Pohce are looking for a b1ke-ndm1 aunman who robbed a Fountam Vall~y film processing booth Tuesday -and may be responsible for an earlier holdup. The clerk told · police a man on a dark-colored bicycle approached the booth and d1spla)ed a blue steel handaun cove~d b} a white towel. The robber was descnbed as a Hispanic mao in has late 20s or earh 30s. about 5-10. 175 pounds. with black wavy hair. a bush) mustache .\ 28-\car-old woman bche'ed to be a hOplifttr \\as apprthended b) S«unt) auards at Mer"') n's <1cpan- mcnt store at the 10tcrs.ect1on of .\dam A'enuc and Brookhurst glass door at a home on the l '00 block of \\1mblcdon \\a, l"Cr thl weekend and stoic Sl.4.'t> "onb 01 \aluables . .\ "atch. camera. phone rec~rder. T\ and kt pec; ""rt among the items stolen The 1h1c,c\ al'o tool.. two hter bottlc ol Coke lrom the rcfngcrato,.,._ • • • a. man "'ho ac;kcd to look at the .\stereo \\Onh more than $400 \\b <ttolcn from a locked \1crccd~ ~n1 that "as parked on the t 7000 blocl ol Co"' an. The thief smashed a wtndO\\ to gt't into the car Fountain Valley Detect1vc Darryl Nance said the most recent holdup occurred at 4•47 pm. Tuesday at the Photo West booth. l 7~S4 Magnolia St. The man demanded money but "no checks or change.'' Nance said. After obtaming an und1~loscd sum. the robber pedaled away soutllwcst on the bicycle. · .. and dark sunaJasscs . " Nance said a bandit with a similar descnpuon robb(od a Huntinaton Beach photo oootti about two '\\eeks aao. TV and stereo equipment ~nh ·$828. Hundnfton Beach · A $200 stereo unit\. 30 record~ tare . and • katcboa~ ere t~en from a red To)ota truck p~uked on Pacific Coast Highwav near lnJ Street. ' • trttt. The \\Oman alleaedty tool a can\& shoulder baa and filled n with clothina. . ' .. . . o\ stereo unit v.orth $600 wa tal.en from a 1984 VW Rabbi~ p.uked in a carport on the 400 block of t1antil A\enue. • • • Owncn of Main Street Hair \o . 205 Main St . told police that a pnor tenant removed a.bout $1.000 wonh of mirrors t-nd.causcd d~ma c to plumbina anl1 el('(tncal equipment at the htfp. Coeta Meaa handgun~ at Grant Bo)s. 17~0 . 'i-"- pon 91"d .. waited unul the clerk" hll "as helping ham "'as d1m acted and th~i'f made off ~th a 3~2 re' oh'?r Tu~a). The .u pect wa de nbcd as ·c aucas1an , m has 20!.. 5:foot· l I 160 to 190 pound \\llh black curl~ hair. Newport Beach . _ A C\\port Bnch v.()man rcponed the thcf\ of $130 wonh o,f cassette ta~ Crom her Pot'S<'he 10 the I 000 block ofSantia ~ ~~nc~a). Someone brok" into the c•pon ach ll) H II Wcdn ) momana but noth1 wa taken, pohcc re- ~. .. . .. l wo adult,s ha't' been arrnted. ·charged with steahng more than S400 trom an 1ndustrv on Arm trona "H i • • .\ ~adent of Lucero West rcpont'd that c;omeone entered his parked 'chu;lt' W'Cdnesda) and stole has car \tcrro. 'alucd at appro'limatcl> $400 • • • .\n lf' inc man was arrested ye tei • d:t~ charged with having Sl,696 wonh of outstanding traffic ... arruts. • • • \omt"One took radio, a l>ricfcuc and a y.aJJet from a residence on the ., I 000 block of Mac Mhur Bl"d. Wedncsda> afternoon . Victi;rn of lrvll}e crash lden t ifi d . - Explosion rpcks hijaCkedjet But all 46 crew members and passengers reportedly safe on runway In Tehran ., ... :AINda &cu Hijacter& ofan Air France Jetliner IUITCDdemt today at Tehran airport and freed their -i6 hos ei af\CT an ~plosioo and fire in the amnft's ·· cockp &, mdina a two-day htiackina onlcal. officials in lnm and .Paris id. .. AU puseq rs and crew AR well," 11id a Te~ ai.rpon official an a ~hone interview with The A,.. tocaated Preas in Beirut. Lebanon. He -~ke on condition of anonymity. . A.it France coofi.nned that the boatgeS -all male. 44 .Pl naers and t4c pilot and co-pilot~ were safe and bad been taken to lht airport infirmary. . Maunrc Bouh , an Air F net 'l>'.OkC$man in Pans, rcp0ned, " fhe hijackers surttndered to the Iraninn authorioo The hijackini • ove.r, the passengers &eed and the pirates surrendered." The cockpit explo ion occurred at 5: 10 p.m. local time (6:40 a.m. POT) after aU the passenaers were out of the aircraft. accotdina to Iran's offici l Islamic Republic New Agency, monitored in Cyprus. The Bocin1737 with 64 people aboltd bad been commandeered two days before on a flight from West Germany to Pans. One Iranian official said it was not clear what caused the,explo ion. He satd the explosion sW'tcd a fire that Tehran R (.ho ttPoned early today the plane' pilot:O Jean Nicol. told lran1an. omc1al br. radio .that the Ar1bio-sp('1kina h,Vack~ had set explosives throuchout .. most parts of the aircraft" and wett "ready to blow it IJP·" The radio, 1n a ·broadcast monitored in London, id the hi- jackers took one PO nier outside the aircran and indicated they would execute him. ·Children• ShoP8 503 ·oFF ' Sinatra, Martin termed 'bullies' Original Price .ON SUMMER MERCHANDISE 642•5262 G Id N t h t bully." also reprimanded the state 0 en ugge i Oiv1s1on ofGammg Enforcement in th I fl the dccts1on Wednesday. Wf gam ng ne · He said division 1nvest1gators wett after casino Incident more lenient m their questioning of the entertainers than they were with casmo employees. Ht said Sinatra ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) -and Martin dad not have to offer Gaming violations dunng a game of sworn testimony but four casino blackjack played by Frank Sinatra employees did dunng the 1nvest1p- and Dean Manin will cost the Golden tton into the Dec. l, 1983 incident-1 Nu~t hotel casino "$25,000. the In their sworn statements, tPle Wntcllff Plaza Ca mo Control -Corflmission has employees said Martin and Sinatra ruled. threatened not to perform in the 1120 lrvlne, Newport Beach Commissioner Joel Jacobson, who casmo'stheaterunlessblackjackdeal-ii==============·=====•=:.iiiisaii1diSi1inaitiraiaicitcdiiliikiei"ianiiobinioixiioiuis~ ersdcalt by hand from a smgle deck of cards. Under state regulations, casino employees deal from a plastic shoe that holds eight dccls of cards. ) 'i' ,. Rob1rJSoh's ~ . IN _-lUST TWO MINUTES, YOU COULD WOK ~'YEARS YOUNGER;' THANKS TO IRMA SHORELL. DISCOVER IT FIRST AT ROBINSON'S, WITH A SPECIAL OFFER. i With "Years You~er," you can wqtch years of lints smoot~ aw4y nght · btfort yo.r eyes Tht t tct starts m ltss rJ,.,.,1 tu.'O mm"tes, and ~sts up lCJ 5e'L'en hours .. tncredtb/ef r 1h1s wondrous new fiqutd cremt concentr<lttS On the wrinkles and puffiness .iround the eye area. It's w.iter·based md fragrancefee, so · you may u~ 1t with other Inna Shore// skincare treatments al well as most ma1or morsturtzers. It 's easy to app'J; then, for conrm11mg hours of lookmg "l'ears >'?>unger," simply wash your /ace and reapply. You 'II love the beaut 1ful results! Added mcentzve: we'll include fl bottle of lmia Shore/l's remarkable Formula for Cleansing and her znstant·actmg Sheer Motstt'rt (which helps prolong the ejfectzvmess of new "}tars Younger'/ as a bonus when you purr:hase the . 50 fl. 07. bottle of "rears Younger." S40. Got a couple of minutes! Come find out 11bout remarkable netlJ "l'ears Younger" in Robinson's Cosmetics, 11, Anaheim, Mission Vie10. Newport and Westminster. To order. call toll·free 1-800-345-8501. ( • Tile casino and four employees were charged wilh dealing cards by hand, deal in one of tM-eard~ face down to Martin instead of face up. and with allowing Martin to cut the deck by hand ralhc:r than by inserting a card to show the dealer where td cut. At least three of the four employees told investigators that the enter- tainers were loud and Bbusiv , they feared that they would lose their jobs if they did not do as Sinatra and Marun asked. Sinatra and Martm denied in- timidating casino empl.oyees. McMartin mother testifies LOS ANGELES (AP) - A boy . attending a pre-school where teachers allegedly molested ~tudents danced around his home chanting the "Naked Movie Star" song, a ditty prosecutors allege accompanied sex games with teachers. his mother testified. The boy. who attended the McMartin Preschool from age 21/z to S, had nightmares and asked his mother not to leave ham at school during nap tame, the woman testified Wednesday. Prosecutors contend the nap period 1s when the seven defendants, who 'Cface 207 oounts of rape. sodomy and cltherabuse. committed much of their alleged acts. Her son, now 8, would awake at night and be '"screaming. violent I was not able to calm ham down," the mother testified at the prehmanary heanng of chief defendant Raymond Bucke~. grandson of ~hoot founder Virgm1a McMartin, another defen- dant. Buckey is charged with four counts agamst ihe boy and another 93 counts against 37 other children. Four other parents have testified at the hearing called to determine 1f he must stand trial on the charges. Dozens of cjuldren have said they were molested by former teachers and photographed at the school duri"I games called "Naked Movie Star,' "'Naked Boob1e Star," "Naked Lady Movie Star," and "The Hollywood G.11mc," accordin4 to prosecutors. The mother said her son bcQme anxious about stayinJ 81 the school an the afternoons "He didn't mind staymg for lunch but he did norwant to stay for the naps." NA TION ------ Greenpeace divers.plug chenil~al plant pipelines: By eta At ted Pr 1 • TOMS RIVER, N.J. -The Om:npc oc cnvironmenw Jt9UP tool< Its prot tat a chemical plant into the Allan tic Ocean, usjna diver1 to block P1 that daschargc w stc into the water, but the company uted divm of 1ts'own to free the pipe officials said. Gtt npeacc spakesman Brian Fiuacrald u1d that use of divers to blo<:k 13 oft he SO outlets of tho pipe that.carriesc~~m~cal~rq · Cib -Geigy 3,SOO feet into the oce n was a .. symbobc action.. Ctbe"'Ut:t spokesman Chari Keane said about 4 million ptlons of matenal pour , 'I from a lO.mlle. 28·inch·wide pipe. Keane said the flow in'o the ocean i$ 199 percent water" and thcrt is no proof it hanni the environment. • YeUowwtone bear maul• woman YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK; Wy_o. -HundrcdJ of-.cret of Yellow tone National Park were closed toda)' whlleranaers stafeh~ form• ~1r that mauled a hiker whose lifeless body was found oear her campS1te, o 1cia1 s said. The body of the woman. whose identity was bcin& wi!hheld pe.i'td na notification of famtly, was discovered Wednesday near White .Lake tn the central P-Ort1on of the park, Park Superintendent Robert Barbee said. ll was the fil"$t l>Cir.rclated fatality an the park ince 1972 and only the fifth SUlCC the par I( opened 1n 1872. offic1aluaid.. · . lf u•band, Wife dle 'WltlJln an hoar C HICAGO -A woman who had JU St returned from visiuna her husband of 51 years in his hospital room returned to h~r own room, and at the euct minute her husband was pronounced dead, herheart&lso stopped. ~he woman died an hour later, hospital 5taffers said. "She arrested at the exact ume that her husband was pronounced dead -at 9:09 a.m .. " &aid Joy Clich, head n~ of the C-Oronary care unit. "h was an ccnc thin~ and nobody on staff can bebevc it." ~ . . . Reno hotel theft •a•pecm held RENO -fhieves used hotel keys to,steal thousands of dollars in credit cards, travelers checks and other valuab~s from guests' rooms in at least l S hotels. according to Reno pohce. Three suspects are in custody on ·charaes of burglarizing hotel rooms over several months by usiog keys they ba~ kept after check.in& out of downtown.hotelst polioe said Wednes<lay. Police wd a rash of hotel and motor vehicle bur&lanes began around May. The hotel buralaries confounded police because oh lack o(forced entry. Bradshaw said. Custom• beef• up manpower " WASHINGTON -l])e U.S. Customs..SCrvice is increasin11ts manpower to stop cocaine and marijuana smuaafina, particularly alona"South Aorida and the OulfCoast, a customs offic11l Yys. Jn fiscal 1983, 4,731 pounds of cocaine and more than 2 million J><>unds of marijuana were seized, ~th a combirled $treet value of more than S3 billion, said Customs Commissioner William von Raab. Von Raab told a House subcommittee the se12ures represent only a fraction of the ille14l drugs entcnns the oountry and said customs bas decided to add 80 new people to its Maritime Patrol. Sixty of them will be in the Southeast. Shu_tt{_e~ stolen, recovered ... .. COMMERCE-A $100,000 gold-plated engine pan destined for a spece shuttle disappeared from a broachina com~y here and was recovered at a , uthoritieffeicb~-1biwrnaderkwuarrcstcd:1be-patt._ a main engine turbine shaft, disappeared from the Pioneer Broach Co. sometime between Friday and Wednesday, after Rocketdyne Corp. sent it to be worked on, Shaw said. · Apartment bla•t leave. JS homeless LOS ANGELES-Fifteen people left.homeless by a natural gas explosion that engulfed their Hollywood apanment buildina in flames were being cared for by the Red Cross as authorities investigated the cause of the blast An 81- ycar-old woman suffered back pains and a 21-year-old woman hurt an ankle in the explosion and fire late Wedncsdav. Nmetccn companies of fircft&hters . ·found the two-story Wilcox A venue complex fuUy engulfed m flames after an explosion at 8:55 p.m ., said Ftre Department spokesman Henry Amparan. The flames were doused 1h 18 minutes. -· . Brink's r9bbery velllcle found ,. UKIAH -The FBI says 1t thinks 1t has found the fourth vehicle used in a daring robbery of a Brink's armored t01ck two weells aJO that netted $3 to $5 million in cash. The 1971 Ford van was found Tuesday ma ravine near Reno, Nev. and is being examined for finierprints, FBI Special Agent Bill tenBemd said Wednesday. Like three other vehicles used in the heist, the van was bou&ht from a Santa Rosa owner who placed a classified ad in a local newspaper. The buyer gave a false name, address and telephone number, authorities said. Balanced U.S. budget by 1990? _ SAN FRANCISCO -With a little help from Congress, the Rcqan administration might perfect its federal budact balancinJ act before the end of the decade, Treasury Secretary Donald T. Regan fred.icts. Regan said even without tax increases; government coffers wiU swcl by more than $70 billion next year. In five years, the government will be llkina m $I trillion in revenue with no change in the tax system, he said. "My simple way oflook:ing at It, as a businessman, is for heaven's sake, isn't that enouah to spend? Why do wt htve to increase taxes? I don't think we need new taxes," Regan told reporters Wednesday before a lunch-tune spcccb to the Commonwealth Oub of California. , · State seel:• jobs I or teach en SACRAMENTO -State employment officials announced they will set up special procedures to help find Jobs for teachers, in response to a request from the state schools chief. Kay Klddoo, director of the Employment Development Department. said Wednesday his agency would try to match up une~ploycd.teachers with jobs through~ut the state. He agreed to help Bill Honig. supenntendent of the state Education Department, who said there la or will be a shorta&e of mathematics, science, special education, btlingua.l and substitute teachers. · Tourism a ba•t la SalJ Diego S~N D.tEGO -Touris~ is bia business in San Diego, but it's not booming this summer, and mdustry leaders say it's because visitors· a.re worried about crowds and congestion from the Olympic Games in Los Angeles. "I don't know of anybody in the tourism industry that is benefidna from the 01rmp1cs," said Bill Thomas, director of marketing for Sea World. "Somebody s got a lot of Southern California people hidden s0meplace." Businesses and theme parks are fctlina the pinch fTom the downturn in visito!'S, says Hamet McNamara, a ccrcha1rwoman of the city's Olympic planning comm1t~ce. 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Men's Sh~s. 1i1. 20% OFF ALL KIDS' NIKE AND BLAZER SHOES. 14.40 TO 24.00 ehoose from an assortment of all children's active shoes by· Nik,. and Blazer. Reg. 18.00 to 30.00. Children's Shoes, 58. 20% OFF . ALL MEN'S NIKE AND CONVERSE SHOES.·18.00 TO 42.40 A terrific selection! Our entire stock of men's active shoes by Nike and Converse. Reg. 2Ct00 to 53.00. Men's Active Shoes, 284. - HOUSEWARES LOO off: Ice bucket from Sheltonware, 3 colOrs, reg . 18.00 . . • . . . . . .... 1.• LOO Oft: Striped barware from Shettonwar&, double old ~ or bev«ages, red -0r white, reg. 18.00 •.•.•....... · .•.•••.... •• 10% off: Al~barware in sets of 4, 8 patterns, reg. 10.00 to 15.00 set •.•...•... 5.00 to 7.&o ElCciudel decorated barware. 21.11 oft: .fai'berware electric fry pan, orig. '70,00 ............. ' •.•. Iii -............ 19 ••• 41.11 • .. \• LETTER S ----- .; JW ~ 11Jµst be evaluated wl t-h aa eye to pros, cons To w Editor: remember that Orao County rcsi· The city of New~rt ~ ch has dents also take their bu ine55 to other nevcradvocatcdclosinaJohn Wayne areas. Atrport, as the kad-1n parqraph of Neither docs the stud)' addreu the your July 23rd article seems to potential diminution of property 1ndt~te. As a matter of fact. the city value--w?rith would result from has indicted its accq>tance of a massive airport expansion. Nor arc ~sonable expansion. under certa.in the physical alid psycholOllcal cffccll etrcumstances, of John Wayne Air-. on residents. and tchoot children; .~.,-._..,.,DOn. · • ~cb are-revealed in tho &-Additional 11rport fac1bties, botl'i vitonmental Impact Report on the at John Wayne and at other locations.. .i. have been considered by tbe city of master Plan, included in )our article. Ncwpon Beach in rec<>&niuon of the While there are certainly economic .,....__.-vneed.sofOran GolUl'Y~.airuavc ~~ted ~th an airpof'h Money Jeav1na Orange .through there arc also ncgauve impacts that John Wayne Airpon is not addressed must be considered in the overall tn the cconomac analysis referenced . evaluation ofJohn Wayne ~irport. . . •• in your article. While visitors brina Evelyn R. Hart business to the county, one .snust Mayor, Newport Beach '• Artlcle errs ln.·deplctlng goals To the Editor: " never meet the projected demand for The board and members of the air travel to be placed upon il Airport Work.in& Group of Oranae Second, the article, while wwn1 County arc deeply disturbed by the lyrical about the benefits of airport ~~le wh1ch ap~.in the July.23 expansion, says nothtoa about tbc cdinon of the Daily Pilot, reaardina economic and socta.I costs which th.e economic benefits ofJohn Wayne " must be mcUJTCd in such expansion. Airport ExP,&ns1on. . Acquisition and demolition of 1,015 We arc disturbed f<?r two pnncapal homes, street improvements, and reasons. F~t, the Airport Workina relocation payments don't come Gro~p. which !'CPteSCDts 2~,000 cheap lo the last analysis expanding "noise-~ residents," docs not . ·. . . ' desire or expect to "prevail 10 closing a facility ~t. •s desun~o bcco!"e the field to all traffic,·· &Jld. thu&, by obsolete 'IVllhin .1 s years 1s nothmg implication, to rob the county oflbe more than throwmgaood money after , econoinic benefiu of such activity. bad .. That is not our aoaJ or our policy, and It JS \heref?re our ~uest t.ha~ any to say so coostitut.cs _inuponsible fu1ure-repo~~.on ~ .volat1l~ issue journalism. We have, rn numerous seek to dcpacrour pos1uon as 1t truly written policy statements and con-is, and to depict. the facts of airport versations Wllh Pilot reporters and . expansion uncbcumbcred by editors, depicted our aoals as: (I) rhetoric, subjective assessments, and control of expansion at John Wayne less-than-half truths. Airport; and (2) devclop'l\INlt of Thank you for. your attention to additional airport site or sites to take this matter. the burden off IW A. which even the BARBARA LICH MAN county's oY.tn Master Plan admits can Executive Director CM police win couple's praise To the Editor: We have bved 1n Costa Mesaaoana 33 years, brou&ht our cliitdrei\ up here and seen our town arow. My point 1s 1 am so thankful for such fine officers as John Smith and Tom Boylan They. at 4 a.m. May 8. brought us the dc vastatma word our dauahter Sherrie Lee was killed m her truck. They came in. sat with us, gave OC 's water woes all too real To the Editor: • _ Your July 17 article titled ·water Woes a Problem That Won't Leak Away" by Walter Burroughs was nght on target. The trans111on from early Orange County's water supply bemg obtained from all local groundwater to toda} 's dependence on water imported from distant watersheds of the Colorado River and Northern Cahforn1a has been dramatic indeed. As late as the early 1940s all of the County's water demand was quenched from local sources. Now more than 75 percent 1s imported, and an an average year, about half of that 1s stored undcr-grou~d by the Orange County Water D1stnct for later use. · There as one statement made by Mr. Burroughs however, that should be clarified. He said, "Until this year, the Orange Coast has been able to fall back on surplus water from the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (DWP). Now there's no such t)'llng as a surplus" While 11 is true that DWP 1s deepl} involved over its continued use of water from the Mono Basin and Owens Valley. tt 1s not true that Oranec County has had access to surplus water from the~ sources an the past DWP's Los Angeles Aqueduct has provided ·water only 10 the City of Los Anaclcs. 11ever to Qrangc County -However. the problems facang Or- ' ltJllC County the C tty of Los Angeles and the rest of Southern Cahforn1a arc virtually thes:ame. Water demand IS tncrcasing -and the water Supply is dccrcasi~ It's not a pretty picture! The water the city of Los Angeles loses from 1he Mono Basin ht1pt1on (if any) will have to be made up from other sources. The Metropoutan Water District (MWD) will soon lose more than half its cnutlement of Colorado River water upon comple- tion of the Central Anzona Project, probably by 1985 or 1986. The Northern California State Water Pro- ject is presently incapable of trans- ferri ng enough water to Southern California to make up for the losses. The governor's water packaae cur- rentJy under fire in the legislature could partly allcvtatc the shortfall, when and if1t is approved . All in all, I salute Mr. Burroughs for drawing attention to a problem that definitely won't "leak away." Solu- tions arc costly and involve political compromises that in recent years have been hard if not impossible, to obtain on a statewide basis. Water conservation. wastewater recla- mation and even dcsaltma are all part of the solution. But, completion of the State Water Project to its onflnally mtended capacity 1s essential to Orange County's continued pros.- pcnty. Without 1t, .everyone living and wortma here, cnJoyana the good hfc. better keep prayang for rain. GORDON .El.SER Information ~fficcr Oranic County Water Distnct Dldl~ Pilot welcome11 ieaaen'.comm,at8 ORANGE COAST ~ailyPilat 0 f . .. --. - . -' I • I _f ( - / .... RICHARD Co HE• - Hung ----up -an school ~BA~pray~r WASHINGTON -Someone once said that aiven an infinite number of monkeys and ~n infimte numberofty~writers, sooner or ~ter you'll iet 'Hamlet." And pv.en cnouP.> rope and enouah presidential candidates extolling the family, .G~ and middle-class values, you will 111 ihe end a.et Coo~ to hana itself os;i the school prayer wuc. It has been done. Leave it to Rep. Barney-Era1_1k CO.- Mass.) to notice that Congress as now danahna at the end of its own rope. It was Frank, your basic liberal, who pointed out that the so-alled equal access bill would not only allow •tudents to voluntarily pther m sehool before or after cf asses for prayer," but would allow all kinds of other groups to do the same. Frank . mentioned youn1 Trotskjite.s ~~~Ill oxymo~nJ and PY:rights act1v1sts, but he ?1.ilht also have cited any and all relia.ious cults -Harl Krishna, Scientol~ - which a whole lot of people find erthcr threatening or obnoxious. "l think it's woQderful " said Frank who sup- ported the' bill. "But I'm surprised at some of my allies." Frank, of course, was rcfcrrina to conservatives and others who have been ~lumping for years to get God back into the schools. J.ust exactly what this expression means, I leave to you since any God worthy of the name is not. aoing to be challen&ed ~Y a hall morutor<for his pass. What ts meant, of course, is organized prayer and that only incidentally has to do with God.,. but evetythiDl ~do with providing children with religious values -values some parents do not want their children to get in school but which some poliuc1ans ansist they get anyway. U.S. ~eet's show.of power The.re would be no problem with that if, as politiCians are now insist- ing, we were all one family. But we arc not. We are a nation, one composed ofj>eople with marry reHgiQn~ ~Qd tots o~ople who have no reliJion at all. And even many people who do have religious beliefs totally consonant with those expressed by a school prayer think nevertheless that tbe government has no riJht fostcrina them. This may have been the view held by the Founding Fathers wbo. old-fashioned liberals that they were, amended the Constitution to separate church and state. may have overplayed hand w ASHING TON -Durina the Lebanon civil warlrthc U.S. Sixth Aeet appeared o the coast of Lebanon in jmposina amy. Carrier planes and the battleship New Jer- sey's b111uns pounded Syrian coastal positions with virtual impunity. This.caused intense consternation inside the Kremlin. intelliicnce sources told my associate Lucette Lainado. Apparently, the Sovieu felt that the Sixth Fleet brouaht more. firepower to the scene than they were able to provide their Syrian sur- roptes. Thouah the Lebanon intervention ultimately ended in humiliating fail- ure for the United States, the Soviets learned a lesson from the U.S. power play. - Now they have reportedly taken drastic measures to counter the threat posed by the Sixth Acct. Hiahly classified intelli,aence reports indicate that the Krcmhn has provided Syria with a network of lethal, lona-ranae. surface-to-surface missiles capable of blowana U.S. warships out of the water. Pcotqon sources have identified the missiles as the latest and most sophistiqted 1n the Soviet arsenal· "sborc·t~sea m1Ss1les., with a nat tra1cctory hke the crutsc m1ss1le,'' a 150..mile ransc and a shon reaction time. They have just been deployed ilona the Syrian coast. What this means is that any naval craft in the eastern Meditemnean can be sunk. . • uln naval warfare reaction time IS what really count1:,'1 one well-placed source expJained. "This mjssiJe Jives the Sixth Fleet very limited reaction JACK AID£1SOI time." Earlier, the Soviets aJao ruabed to Syria several SS-21 't , with a 75- milc nnic and a 1 S-minute reaction time. Accordina to a secret Pentaaon weapons report, the SS-21 is a ground-to-ground missile "mounted on a transporter-erector-launcher, .. which aives it mobility. Even mote ominous, "the missile payload may consist of a low-yield nuclear, chemical or (conventional) war- head." • Apparently, the Kremlin stratcgjsts weren't the only ones who were upset over the presence of the Sixth Acct off the Lebanon coast. Syrian President Haf cz Assad was also reported to be dismayed by Syna's 1nab1hty to defend itself adequately 1p.1nst the deadly poundina by Sixth 9cct auns and planes. He sttrctly ncaotiated WI ·~e Soviets for the anti~ship nui._ system whose deployment \¥111 make . any replay of the Salb Fleet's show of strcnJth Clllttmely riskr.. The new missile system, meanwhtle, aives the Syrians a we&Pon that can be used not only defen avely but ofTen11vely. TILTING AT LANCE: Re· publicans were deliahted with Walter Mondale's appointmcot of Bert Lance as his general campaisn chair- What, no weekend'? . . Q. Didn't Russia used to have only five da)'I iD llJ ?' • A. For 11 y yes. from I 919 to- 19.ac!~ Sov1ctt us.tel a Revolution· ary ndar -five days in ea b eek. ix wteks in each month. Tfl\le . . vocabul ry to 50,000 words? No? Wan IA your lifellm you will 1f ty "cal. .. Av Ja~nete man mov U\le tim~J in h11 hfe. A\lct1 Amencan. l4 t1m • "'· 1 • man. They hope it will co-opt any Democratic attempt to make the so- called "sleaze factor" a campaiin issue. In every congressional debate on One Reapn administration scan-school prayer, some consrcssman dal the Democrats bad hoped to use tells what it was like to be a member of was \he Securities and Exchlnae a minority religion and attend-a Commission cue apinst W. Paul school where there was orp.ni:r.ed Thay(.T', who resianed as deputy prayer. He felt intimidated, and defense ICCJ'Ctary in the face of wondered why the school, which i1 to c~ that he had illeplly Jiven say the aovemmcnt, did not respect "insider" informatiQn on stocks to his own reli&ious views -wb)'. it Jent }\is frie das. '.fbayer denied the its buildina for what wu manifestly a chaJJCS, bul qwt anyway. religious purpose. Usually, Conarcu Lance has been identified u a listen1 respectfully and then votes for bcneficiaryofoneThayertip. He was school prayer anyway. It is comfon- one of several investors who ina, when you arc in the majority, to purchased a total of I 06,000 shares of know that youra will be the prayers common stock in Campbell Taaaart recited. · .... shortly before it was taken over by the Now, thouah, Congress has moved Busch conjlomerate. The early bi.rds forthriahtly to give the majority the J>!id S2S to $30 a share, and Busch perspective of the minority. Under offered to buy Campbell Tqaart the bill that awaits President Re- stock at $36 a share. agan's sianature, cvel')'. sort of polit1- Accordina to SEC documents seen cal,. rcliJious or ph1losophical or-• by my associate Tony Capaccio, pmzauon can have access to the Lance was not one of the Tha1er schools. This is wonderfully demo- group that 101 the inside infonnatton cratic in princ1ple, but 10 practice it is directly As the SEC investipton bound to scare the dickens out of pieced it toSCther, Thayer called plenty of parent$. I, for one. can not Auaust Busch UI, chairman of B~h, wait unul a student tells a parent that on July 6, l 982, and allegedly ~s-he wu late comina home from school cu.ued the Campbell Tqpn 11~u-because he paused to don a utrron allo~. On the same day, .tbe •n· robe,arabhLStinklybeUsandaueoda vesuptOt\ say, he ~!ed Billy: Bob meeti ng of the Denounce Your Karns; a DaUas ICC'Ul1ttct btok~·-Parentt SOclety. • The next day or so, ~rdina to tn fact, I cannot wait until Marx-S~C ~!"e~~ Ham.• improperly isls, socialiua, py riahts ac:t.ivists, d1sclosed m1ormatton on t~e . Hasidic Jc.ws, bOm..qain Christians Campbell Taaaart IUeovcr to Wal· and anythin& else you can think of liam 0 Billy" ~athit, • fo"!'er New meet at the lotat achool and entice YorkJcurunn!nabackwho11now~ children to lary a bit afttr class. Atlan\I a.ecunties broker. Mathai Unku this country ia awepi by an allejdly boU&ht JI.~ aham of epidemic of tolerance envi io~ CamPbell Taaart. which he then 1e>ld only in the bibHcaJ reference to the • for a ll~,l~lJ pn)fi~ 1 dJ lion. lyina down with the lamb. Mattu1 &lao improper Y a-parents Will be IC'l'Umina bloOdy closed" the inside information to murder. ~lldcrnandtoknowwhy .. 01ber ~ru who then purcl\ued their tax·'dollan are bcina ·spent to CTI st~ the. SEC charaa. One.of uppon reliaions or ideolotks that ~ose other persona,. Lance, wbo they.find rcpw.h , _ ··purchased S\lbltant1~l a~unts . of The answer wdl be that t aut1ed . CTJ sµxk b&led on d11CUS1ion1 with "Vath an effort to use the ools to MatbtJ," aocon1ina to lhe E docu· fos~cr a ~onty rcJiaion. And once ments. • pobtiaan surtcd down that road -• Tihou&h there at no c den~ to once they were no lonaer consent to 1 Utatt.anc!C knt'! lh ldvacc he let lhe ' hoot do their Iba t aot rrom Maths wu \laniCCJ, • chutth and the family I.ht' ~, doalmcn1sm•ke dear that Lance LI a ancftd a mine facld of conDictina Poleflt1al vmness In lhe cue. rclmi6u bdiefl. ofTcndin. the ma· Footnole: Math lhrou&h h JOnt\ instead ofjus1 th mt'nont Wllblnaton ano~. ikelincd 1lo • They put out enou h rope to ' comment. Luce aanotid repeated thttn Iv It was qunea year. h was attempt ta,et h 1 comment. an elt!ciaon r, JMJt • ..... "" CMte Ir CO}llllalll, col1mal1 ' .. \ - .. Critics applaud Burford --··--action ~'Patriot'· ~.arrying .weapo~s ' LOS ANGELES (~ -A man who followed an Olyinp1cs bus while c:anyina homemade explosive de· ~ices in the back ofhilcar apparently intended no bairn to the nine foreicn athletes aboard, police say. John Steven Blackwell. 38~ to in eiU&atonthat be viewed "protect- inaathfetcsas his patriotic duty," said · police Lt Dan Cooke. The district attorney on Wednes.- day ch~ Blackwell, a resident of suburban Reseda, with six counts of possetsina a destructive device and three counts of possessina martial ans throwing stan, said Lt. Dan Cooke. There is no indication so far "that Blackwell attempted or intended to harm lltlY athlete," Cooke said. The homemade explosives, which polioe said they found in the back of BlaCkwell•s car, :•are not classified as hiib-explosive· devices," but can cause damqe, Cooke said. He added that a similar devjce wu later found in Blackwell's home. • Blackwell was arrested Tuesday after a bus driver reported being .followed by a car after departlnJ the Olympic Villa&e at the University of SOuthem California. COolc.e said. The • bus was carryina four athletes from Francie, two from Japan and three from Italy. Police stopped Blackwell's car and discovered in the back seat the · explosive devices, martial arts batons and throwing stars, Cooke said. Blackwell was held in lieu of$200,000 bail, the lieUtenant added. ~President promp~ed by Nancy • SANTA BARBARA (AP) • Ptrii· dent Reapn, prompted by bis wife, says he's doin1 everyt.hinj be can to penuade the Soviet Union to~ anti-space weapon talks, but a White House officiaJ maintains Moscow isn't seriously interested. Duri.na a brief picture-takin1 session at the president's isolated mountaintop ranch, Reagan was uked Wednesday w~t be could d!:Uo • lure the Soviets to the barpimna table to discuss anti-satellite weapons. . Standina outside his relatively •' mOdeat, wl)1te adobe home, the : president paused for a moment before answerinJ: His wife, Nancy, siandm1 at his side, pz.ed downward and • mumbled softly, ''DOina everythina wecan:· ~ · Reqan quickly replied, "We're 1imna everythina we can." Meanwhile. back at the Santa Barbara hotel that 19dges the press ' corps. National security . Adviser . : Roben C. Mcfarlane had told re- : poncrs that receqLJ>CSSimistic state- • ment1 emanatirijlrom the Soviet ' Union cast doubt on . Moscow's intention . • McDonald's re~onse discussed · SAN DIEGO (AP) -Police Chief Bill Kolender called a news con· feren~ today to addra.s questions mat have been railed about \he pohcc "responte 10 the July JI mUMCR at a McDOn1ld's re taurant in San Yaidto. . . Reaulu of an interual review into DIC p0lice o~t on, lnclUdin& tbe mObilizauon of the SWAT unit, woUld be dtlcutled ai tbc news ronttrence, Mid police ~an Bill Robinton. · Three aurvivon of the attack have publicly di1~~ed poli~ contentions 1ha1 Jaron Oliver Hubdty killed or woundeCS all hll vrctlm• Within the ftm ten minutes of 1 J7-tniftu~ shootint &PM-Othcn bl\'e id police w ~ atow in mobiliiina the SWAT unit. .OFF THE REGULAR PRICES OF OTHER LEADING STORES ON THESE B·ACK TO SCHOOL SPECIALS SAVE 34°/o TO 46°/o SENSATION TOWELS BY MARTEX 9 .34 Bath, Compare at 16.50. l\fow an additional 15% off our everyday low prices. You can afford to treat yourself to this towel of luxury. 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AAD ATTENTION to· our "Newport Chlldren'• 8ooterf' In l'uhton laland ••• which 11 not aftected br thl• .. 1. 1nd contlnun with buetneea u u1uall Our entire etock of N811onalty AdvertlHd Ir.and Name 1hoee 11 on Nie and ucrlffCed ••• at Nnaatlonal CLOSE-OUT PRICE81 . -. ----------------------Reg u I a r Store Hou,. • SALE TERMS • DAILY 10:00 'tll 8:00 VISA • MASTERCARD THURSDAY 'tll 1:00 · CHECKS· CASH CLOSED SUNDAY All Sal• Flnal Well Over 1250,000 wort" of fine qu•ltty •hoes for the entire f1mU, -: • ·• price .,..hed for JMMEDIATE LIQUIDATION ••• Nothing Rffef'Yed ••• Nothing Held lack •. ~ EV!RYTHING 0018 ..• r.,-1rd1 ... of coet or anr IO,N that mat be lncurredlU If rou or anr member of'"-famllr need• lhoM •• -. now 11 the tlmelll THIS ts THE PLA<;Elll Terrific qulttlnG bualn ... prlctll on every pair of iftoM-and ~·S"°' earlr for beet ... tectlon. SHOES FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY AT COST! NEAR COST! BELOW COST! SHOES FOR MEN SHOES · fo11 MEN SHOES FOfl WOMEN . SHOES F011 WOMEN COLE-HAAN® -. KEITH HIGHLANDEFP BERNARDO• 9-WEST~ AUGUST 3rd 10:00 A.M. · OP~ 'TIL 8:00 P.M • SUNDAY-AUG. 5th 11 :00 'tll 4:00 .SHOES FOR WOMEN NATURALIZER® CLASSIC SADDLES . CLACSOSRICoo,v .. ADNDLE 1 1184'1 TOP SANDALi,S 9 WEST dr ..... up Iha Callfornla ac.na. A 11andout brend of 1hoa .. quality with Thie ... eon, toP casual Hne. We have From high heel pumpe and uncfal• to 1mart drau-up styling. Medium and high Whit• and colors In poput.r flats and tiny tiny wedge hMll. SAVE. heel pumps. White, blllcil and fathlon ChOOM Numbef Ona: Btue and Bona or "' White Bucke, Tan Suede. SAVE heals. Cloleout Prlc:ell colOra. E•callent 1tze ... ec:tton. ~ _ _ ifQlat S3TfifS17~· . 4 Rqlltar .Ul~t-orll---RtgutarS39 tD W . Sala 22•• .. 28'' Sala 22•• •• 2811· Sala 22•• ... 2811 · Ona of our blgg•t "repeat" ute 1hoel. ~~~V£4. ~ Sile 3911 ~~-~ES~S~~~HO~~·t~1~~•br -S~849'' . Group 1 -. m• m•tar A broad Mlactlon of Stlp..One, Tl ... ln CLASSIC. SLIP·ON :~Y1<'~~:;:.nplu1mutadtona1.st1op fm1ar Sall 82'' R~ul•r to $59N ~'ATHLETIC" NIKE•• ADIDAS• "ESPADRILLES" CALICO® LIFE-STRIDE® Sala 36'' Group 2- The cream of the FLORSHEIM line Six popular 1tylel .. Slip.Ona. Taule Sllp- On1, Plain toa and much more Rr.ie 49~i•i tORSHEIM IMPERfAt1e The n•m• HY• It. all. ChooM· from Wlngtlp1, Sllp-On1, Cap toea SAVE Regular $18" to $109" Sale 5611 to 7611 "KENMORE-"CORDOVAN" WtftS" ......,.110. Sale $108 FLORSHEIM ROYAL IMPERIAL• "RITZ" SLIP-ON ~ Sale 82" FLORSHEIM~ CASUALS FLORSHEIM queflty FLORSHEJM 1tyl- lng. "Virally" 1 great Hddle shoe. "Slrtlda" • 1m1rt lie Plu1 other 1harp model• Aef ul•r $57" to $87" Saia 361• • 44'' "WEEDS" CASUALS BY FLOASHEIM R~ul•r $49" to $14" Saia 3211· 10 4211 DEXTER® MEN'S QUALITY CASUALS A popular priced llne ot ~ual1 Now at a 1en1at1on1t sate prtce11 Sala 2411 WALK-OVER® TOP LINE CASUALS Sala 32'' VISA * MASTERCARD WELCOME SPERRY• TOP!"SIDERS• "ORIGINAL" LEATHER MOC BOAT SHOE CHOOSf: llOWl·UVY :-:~·r Sale 36 88 'MAPLE' MOCCASIN ~ ~ Sala42~1 LACE OXFORD Regular 159" CllOOU: UVY-Ell ' Sala 42'' CANVAS-BOAT.SHOE .. C.V.0 ." "SEA-MATE" WHIT£~ UVY . ~· ma:.'ar _Sala 19•• JOHNSTON-MURPHY• "AFTER HODRS" TIIE ut nun 11 MEl'I CASUAL SH~ re1u11r Salf~ 44 II SEBAGO H11duw1 "ROAMERS" BLACK·BROWN LOAFERS Sala 4211 WORLD FAMOUS CLARKS• DESERT BOOTS • WALWEES AND OTHER BREAT STYLES R9Qu1•r $50 to $75 Sala 32 11 ·4411 Entire line of actlva •POft and cuual wear. 11\oe1 .. repriced to NII. JACQUE-COHEN• BROW SA BOUTS• Yeei In .. yNr out ... a Calllornla bulc fallhlOn cuu111. Natur•l. navy, rad •net brown. Big Hlactlon. Regular $22" to $38" Sala 1411 to 2611 *TENNIS* Ret1lar 12l.S28 Sala 1611 NIKE• WIMBLEDON ADIDAS-ROD LAVEA.cHAMP STAN SMITH-FINALIST ., DEXTER• LEATHER LOAFERS Went • qui111y leather loafer at a budget Regular $2211.t0-$43'.' prlea7 Hare'• your an1W91' • Sala 1 ~ •• to ia•• , ;r~ .. Siie .. 1 e•• SHOES FOR CHILDREN . INFANT TODDLERS ' SIZEl·3-8 WHITE HIGH TOPS GIRL'S DRESS AtVw SM IPS28 Sate,JO" .. ~ "SMALL FRY" SANDALS -81ZE84·12 BUSTER BROW• LAZY BONES • Apats ReglW $18 IO $20 Sale 888 SPERRY. TOP-SIDERS LIMITED QUANTITY Regular 134-139 Sale $21~' ATHLETIC CANVAS &fZEI: 4.J • 1'11·12 m~-a · av.-1 IOYl-CllU KEDI • ,.,.KEDS llK! • Wll.DCATI IUKI • WEZIO · Regular 117 to 138" Sale 911 to 19" GIRL'S DRESS-SCHg(ll SIZUIVt-12 EXCEUEIT SEl.ECTION All NAME BRAIDS Aes;w $28IO134 . Sala 14" GIRL'S DRESS-SCHOOL CASUALS SIZES 121/t ... INCLUDES BASS Aes;w sa eo S38 Sale 16" MEN1S -WOMEN'S -CHILDRE'N'S GROSVENOR® HOUSESLIPPERS Rlular $38 to $40 ala 2411 Gloria Vanderbllta Ch<>ON from baalc black and l*ga and 'brown tone• Cluelc dr•• pumpL Sala 2911 FROM AECW!..M STOCK OVER 300 PAIRS WOMEN'S .DRESS 'N CASUAL SHOES Every palr repriced again alter our famo~ W•tclltf Sidewalk Sale. Now eY9n great• Mvingt In thl• broad Mlectlon of flret quality 1hoes.:. . m~:~g . Sale 14'' < -=-154 Sala 1811 CLARKS~ "LADY PADMORE" "CONTfMENTALS" Traditional e.1uaJ1 by the world lamo<i1 maker. We've Nie priced thalla 1h081 for a wealcend Mllout Ju1tR1celv1dl Newl 1984 Fall-Wtnterl SPORT * CANVAS MEN'S WOMEN'S CHILDREN'S 12 STYLES· HUNDJIDJ.TO CHOOSE SIZQ: 8-12. 13·3 NIKE• TRETORN Regul• $18-$35 Regular $13-$35 Regular $9-$12 KEDS • ADIDAS 911 to 1988 -· 711 ... 1911 511 • · 711 Whatllar you wear thal. 1hoe1 for aettva 111 1pgrt1 or Ju•t plain old cuual wear 1----------r-------------t-----------t don't m111 th• NVlng• .,._ ____________ ..,._ ______ -I G.H. BASS a CO. MAINE MOCCASINS WEEJUN•· WEEJUN TASSLE Sala 44'' ENTIRE STOCK . LEATHER HANDBAGS 1/2 Price HANES• PANTYHOSE Regular 311/4" Sale 211 · MEI'S INTERWOVEN• DRESS SOCKS Regular *311-$3" Sale ·l 91 Regular $19 to $33" Sala 1211 .. 24'' . -' I·· TRETORN TENNIS T Sala~ R.91."ler $34 to $38 ~ala 22•• BERNARooe Mtdlu11 hnl '"" 111dll. "'l:~ar Sile 2811 --- · NATURALIZER• "MOCCASINS" Medium heel comfort and walklng 1hoal. Glove leather 11pper1 Threa top etyl" In e&mel-aAG..navy color• -· - 81111~ Sala 3211 150 . UOo Bau or Oct Barefoot" . .BASS® FOR WOMEN WWUNS • SADDLES LOAFERS ' DRESS.UP CASUALS 10 IDLES TO CHOOSE Regular $40 to $49 Sala 24'' .. 3211 BASS~ THONGS-SANDALS :a~~34 Sala 1911 SEBAGoe "DOCKSIDES" LEATHER BOAT SHOE BRO\ft·NAVY-TAN SUEDE Rtguiar '49" Sala a2n-:- SAVE •111 ON EVERY PAIRI SPERRY• TOP-SIDERS• LOTHER MOCCASINS -BROWN·RED·NAVY . WESTCtl .. fF FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY AT THIS .. LOCATION . ONLY WESTCllFf· PWA , ' 1052 IRVINE AVE • CORNER OF .17th ST I . -·-~,"~ ---·NEWP.ORT BEACH , ' \ WEST-CLIFF PLAZA ~-_, ______ __....._ . .._ _____ _ . ... -.. WI Wiii r.111• Tt Ow1 I o,_.i1 0... fEWPGIT Dallll'l IOOIEltY • F1IM• llllM THURSDAY AUGUST 2 1914 A NLANDBl881 ENT!IRT AlllllENT •t • BUSINEll 117-1 Why joint ~~~tody does ~ta ways war. . . By CHANGING TIMES TM ............ Sole custody of children is still the norm in divorce cases, but joint cuatody is beComin' more common. It has a lot to recommend it. but mwna it work can be difficult. ProPonents of joint custody cile evidence that children who lose m~naful contact with one P.rent af\ei' divorce suffer from a loss of sclf- ateem and f_rl the wne aricf, anaer and depression t.hit commonl) occur when a parent dies. Children who maintain close and frequent contaet with both parents acncrally adjust better to the divorce, encounter fewer social and schola tic problems, and have .a better self· 1ma1e, hi&ber self~stecm, and .even better health than those who don't. Joint custody can help east the fetlinp ofloss, failure and d1srupuon that ~nts, ( pccially those wnhout daY·to-day contact wath their chil· dren, often have. Joint custody actu· ally come in two main types: JOJnt legal custody and joint ph)'51 1 custody. • · Patents with joint legal custody continue to share the aame rich ts and responsibilities to ~rticipate in de- cisions affcctin1 their children a they did dunni marriage. But the children actoajly hve with only one parent, most often the mother. c_.as etherness found amily to4rs states . Newport foursome's historical tttnerary lined with f riendshlp so we decided to do somcthina nice were slow aoina. some brid&es too for ourselves," Napier recalled. narrow and· some tunnels off limits ·•we leased our house, Susan took a because of the propane ti.lei they leave from. her real estate job with earned. · Paul MacMilhn Associates and we "We were really fortunate to miss aot penntss1on to take the bOys out of all the ncar-traJ.C<lics of weather," 87 CAROL MOORE Newport Hcl&hts Elementary School. Susan $Aid. "While Wt. were on a ferry CN .. Dlllr,........, As we traveled, J taught them EnJ)isb, in tbe Outer Banks, we beard we just "lf you weren't patriotic before, a. =::~f'ft;df.ee math and history took missed four tomados and we missed trip like this sure proves th•·basic two more in San A1:}JOnio. · Indeed, the boys now call them· • nature of people is willininess to ao selves "Ycbels." "In tbc North Dakota Badlands out of their way to help you... there bad been a nuge hailstorm the That's bow John Napier of New-"We started out as Yankees favor-night before. The melted ~llcts we port Beach sums up the six months ingthcUn1on,"cxplainedChad. "But found tbc next day were still the size his family just finished travclina by affer sec1na so many Civil War of golffufls." · • motorhomc across the United States. la!11d1 ~thrks.whe~e.thaleafiriu~ battcric~are Basically the Na_piers ·followed "Even in New York City, where we su in e~r ongm ng PoSJtaons springtime as they drove along the were the most leaty 1oin&m "he said, . and lca~mna about the . noJ"thc.~ Sunbelt, through the Peel> South, up "we found friendly people and a ~rofittenna. we '.?t a new 1lpprcaa the East Coast and aeross the north- • • u; ,J;;,--R· uon ofthettbe --· -~m-:t.•••· ....!.i..: -· -1"\n.,i..-• ~1'tftlstte•~tbe "~_,., t'Vtr The mali~lc at Vicksbura, -~cs """" op.rm "' .... ~ an -JUSt a 20 nunutc bus nde from the Miss. was a tvnical stop for the family Ontario. b~~ _of Manhattan. We s~nl days who did thd[ close-up explorina by "We don't like bureaucracy any- ... TilltinJ museums, the Emptrc State bicycle more than anyone else.'' said Napier, Building and Harlem." · · • "but we have to give hi&h marks to Inspired by such books as "Blue The history of flight was another our national park system. They are all Joint d ~ision making s usually limited to m~or areas. uch s re~i~ou trairu edu t1on and medical care, but 'mitralso include othm. Parenti nor:mall)::&pcll thiw out in a deuuled written Joint-custody urecmcnt. If parents can cooperate, they cao work· out their own informal JOlllt· dustody arranacmcnts that often bear no resemblance to the offiaal custodJ and visitation qreemcnts in their divorce decrees. Day-lo-day dlttd~ decWoJ1s arc made by the parent with Whom the Children re llVI but the other ~t usvally lw the fiibt to' ~d a gn1ficant amount of ume wnh the children Under sole cu tody the non- custodial parent has no right to arc in any decision-~ and need not be consulted on anflhin,g. Joint physical cu1tody is con- Hiab~a~s" and "Travels with trail they followed,. tourina KittX well preserved and the staff.,. arc Charley,' Napier, an English-teacher Hawk -on the-""Clo/ inspire · ' · · ,.~,,-_ _......., at Edison Hiah School, wife Susan Outer Banks ofNorth Carolina, space nifical'lct and helpful suaestions for ru~~r:-na=:-artffiimiiiOilktb'of tuur..,_tww:ki_. ot and sons Chad. 12, and Oay, lO, centers in Houston and Florida and tourists." covered 15,200Jiiilcs in 32 states \be Space Museum in Washinaton, "And our service academics are since Feb. l. • D.C .. where they saw lunar modulct. . another source of pride," added "We'd had a couple of financial Their own orbit of. the country Susan. "We visited all of them and reverses and my position as a coun-proceeded relatively smoothly especially enjoyed the sprina dress selor at Edison had been eliminated, although some humped backroads parade at Annapolis." Fine and Dandy signs end her . silence ASHTABULA, Ohio (AP)• - Esther Border had trouble com- municatina with ~ople she met until she decided to tcac'h some of them her second lan,uaae. Now shes hav1n1 a ball with all the new friends she's found. Bordcrl. S7, ofK.iogs~iUc, Ohio. 'has been deat since she was a child. She has retained the normal speech she lea.med before her wotld went silent. Her main problem has been undcr- standin& those she talkS with. When she learned a1"T1ccn~ager that he was lo ina her he.aring, sh enrolled in a siin languaae school in TuC10n, Ariz., so she would have an ahernativc means of communicatina with people. · J~uic McTrusty, a social worker ' at the Day Tratment Center of the Mental Health Clinic of Ashtabula County, said Ba:ukr .. a widow, wu involved in an ·outreach proaram at the center, • .. One of her complaints wu that she wu depressed bcauw 'he spent eo much time alone an btr a.,.rt· ment.0 MoTrusty said. "We have tt\1 day activitiea prosram where people tocialize and we encoutqtd her to • become in volvcd. "She said it was eo hard for her to unckntand othcn So then we started talldna about her ian lana~ and abou ltlChina at to otben ana he was thnlled at the proapeet. " he slal'Uid 9(ith Kvtn ftudent and now there art about 20, The stucknts have nonnal hearin1 abalit)' and are leam1na 11n1 f'or their own interest." Donna Onf'ftib, one of her a studcnU, as 1 victim of cerebrll palsy. I u to tct teased a lot Mc:autc of my hand1cap~nd bceame shy • she .said. '\(Mn. B<>rdet) has done a lot for m c brottah• me out of tbat hell -llove b r tor It:· " When they weren't campina or visiting relauvcs, the Napien made occasional "un•uthorizcd stops" sucb as thcm{avorite ovcmi&ht on a parking lot above a bay of lobster By Katy Brooks Uotted Staie. ID a YiAtace motortiome. traps at Pel aquid Point, Maine. "That coastal V'ICW was ~ery im- pressive, even for a Californian ... Havin& discovered that most CJ ties "arcn 't back to-back like Costa Mesa and Newport Beach;' Chad and Clay made use of the open roads by readina -.. twcnJy-ssx. 300-pqe books," re- ported Ch.ad. They also learned poetry. "the old-fashioned way, by heart· as proved by Clay's rec1iallon of John Masefield's '"Sea Fever" and Chad's of Hamlefs soliloquy. And they kept journals in tra· d1uonal, black-spcclc.lcd writing books about wn divina and bar- ricuda in Aorida.... skiing in ~ Mexico and thcrr unpressions of Ntapra Falls -"much better .seen f~om the Canadian sjde.'' Plus they were actively i~volved as chief a.as DUmpen and intenor main- tenance crew for the vintqe 2f-foot motorbome. "Travelina like this, you either become closer as a family or you don't continue the trip. You get to draw back and reassess your values," Napier said as the family nodded in aarcemcnt. Usually too busy to be bomesiclc.; •1.be Na,uers admiuN1 they_wc:i:--- "realJy deliahted to find some c.ili· fomia license plates in CbarlcStoo and be able to talk about surfina IPiti with those travelcn." • · •. Such camat'lderie maf dral't' tbaL back out on the r'CMld apin.' '=; =: · Or a repeat trip may be n~ since each ?IJapter bas a d1&mzi favorite locale-New York City.foe Clay. Washuiaton, D.C. for ~ Louis11na's Cajun country for SUSllt and Crested Butte. Colo .• for John. t - ., Goldgj,v:en before races I Cutting costs good policy for nonsmoker~ - •·1mmorta:h e." h's not the lat~ promi from a California auru. Nor is al the newest irad in h Ith food . '" 1t• an w pqlicy offe~ by ITT Life Insurance Corporation that cuts prcmhlm cost m half for ph)'sically 1iinonsmok . • The notion that people ou&}ll lO be rewarded for h lthi r lifc5tyles in the b~nd·oow rather than the here- ' afta is catching on w1th American ansuren. 1 n 196:4, after the U .S Surgeon General publicized the dan&crs of mokinc, one fone insurer, State Mutual in Won-ester. Ma~ .. lowered . life-in urancc coau for non mokcn Today most mruor insuren -bout 200 of them -offer premium discounts of lO percent 10 20 pcn:cnt for folks who nc'<er smoked or quit for at least one year. • One company, Pacific Mutual. no longer ••actively seeks· to ansurc smokers," according to medical di· rector Beatrice Arpno. -Further. agents periodically remind clienb \hey can get 20 percent to SO percent discounts by aiving up ciprettei. reducmg weight, blood p~sure aftd cholesterol level . A small but groWlna numbcroflife- insurance firms are prompting people off their duffs. USL's "The Exerciser" . policy aiV1 ubstantial discount to pc<>ple who work out for at lea t 20 minuies a day three tim a wee Health insuttrs arc also acttiQJ into the he ltb·promotioo act. espoclaUy for holden of corporate ~oup.health policies M01tly, they don by piovid· ang he Ith educauon, not policy discounts. Health h bits pay off for the insurer as. well as the insured. State Mutual fi'ldS death rates of nonsmokers arc half that of mokcrs.. Amona the lifc-insurana: com· ranic that offer fitness discounts: TT Life, tale Mutual Life, USLife, Executive Life, First Colony Life, Manhattan Life; Unity Mutual Life, Octidental Life. Monarch Life, Spnn&field Life, Pacific Mutual, Amencan Insurance Dynamics. merican Insurance Marketers. Cali-'"m i.. P\l!Mfir '"~ll"lilfW"t ~~. You've come how far, It's not by chance lone that more youn • woin n arc 1moldfl8 the5e davs. l'n ome po.pular women's mipiine , c· rclte ad take up about 15 petcent of all adverti ina apace. ac.cording to OT. Viraima L. Em tor. as oc1atc ~rotessor of cpidemiolOJY. at the ue San Fran• CISCO. The leading romen's mapzme, carried cip~ttc ds as rar b ck as 1931, she rcpons: But .only recently have women -and their hare of the market -looked so lovely in the to~cco industry's eyes. • While che number of male smokers has droppe4 sharply s.ince 1950. from SO percent to 37 percent, the dip for duh women n a 1 33 pettcnt to 2 pcrocnt. And until lhc late •70s, women 20 d under conthtued to hght up th 1ncrcas1 f~qucocy, thoutf,h rotes have mcc started to lip. A qu ncr or more of teen· girl now mokc. a higher percrntAge than t~n e boy , Nor will the trend disappear. Ernster cites a confidential Federal Trade Commission repon outlio10Ja deliberate advcni ing stratt-iy to attract "new ataners" -1.e. to cncoufliC womert to smoke. · "J he companies violate their own. standards," she · y1. "The official industry position is. 'We don't want kids to smoke,' but almo t all mok~ ins is established by midteens." Women have also come a long way d r of snllbuth. premature labor nd mt increa . In 1he1r quest to hook the you and 1mpress1011able, ci arcne dvcrd5ers oontinuc to t that lighun up will make women xier, more tophistiaued and, explollln th t fusppcr-qe belief that moki flouu the double st3ndard, more liberated. . Now they've even added health and fi1ne11 to the smotccr'1 im&Je. Youna men and women playm1 volleyball. towelin1 off in the locker room. pausina after a hard dlne.e workout -all with ciprcttc in hand -convey the illoaical message thJt ciprctlei ymbohzc viaoro~s aoOd health. • Forget spoonful of s~r Tell childie~ about 'Secret place' in contracting tuna cancer -a n~ of about JSO percent since 1950. The disease will 'roan overtake breast cancer as the leading c.ausc of cancer death amona ·American women. Emster says. In ~vcraJ bellwether states, ch as Washingt9n and Cali- fornia, it already 1~a~. 'Given the decades lung cancel'~ to develop. women should com~ a lot funher in When it comes to tak..ins:medicine, pasition is everythi~ Stand up, swallow and stay st.andma for at least 90 seconds. say doctors in Copen- h n and London, who have tested conditions that speed a ·pill safely down the C60PhaJeal highway into the stomach. Supine swaltowers ·in- vite gullet irritation from tablets that slow down and disintqnue in mid- course. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have read and reread your reply to .. U PIC1," the mother whose 6-year- old dauahtcr had been molested by a 6 l ·year..olc;t "pillar of the c:hur.ch. • He wascbaraed and conv1cted, as be well should have been, f>ut your attack on lhe neiahborwho refused to testify $inst him was offbase. Sbetoldtbemother, "Jfyouhad been doina your job, your dauAhtcr would not have been molested and the man would not have aotten into trouble." • I qree, the woman bad a big mouth and should not have attacked lhe child's mother, but basicall~:was RJGHT! If the mother bad aware ofber child's wbereabouu. that awful thina never would have ha~ pened.. Mothers should know where their, children are, with whom andias oearfy u possible, what thiy arc doina. Unfonunately, too many A11 I.AIDERS lazy to take ca.re of their youngsters. In this day and .. , it pays to trust no one. We read daily about fathers. stepfathers, brothers. unclesand cousins se:\uaUy abusing children. Why then, dtd that mother believe her little am was any safer with the old goat across the street? secret until I was 19. When J finally told my boyfriend, J felt as if the wei&ht of the world bad been lifted from my shoulders. . Please, Ann, remind mothers everywtie~ to educate their children about tt\ese danaers. Yo\! have print· ed several letters on thissubject and I applaud ~very one. For too long child molcstattbn has been bushed up because it isn't .. nice •• Believe me, bet.DI baabed up. b1tncUoa 11 vl&al. All clllclren abolt.ld lte told tut UaeJr bodies a.re private property and DO one aboald be allowed to toucll &Item ID "secret places" -and U anyoae tries, tlley aboald set away from daat peraoa at once and tell Mommy and Daddy all aboattt. • • • . trus grim department as the smoke~ grow older. In addition to mongaaing their lungs. notes Ernster. women smokers run special nsks. If they decide to take birth-control pills as well as smoke, their chances of heart attack will rise I ().fold. if smokers RCt prcanant, the And drinking at least 31/2 ounces of water helps th~ medicine 10 down. Place ptll an mou1h with some water, tilt head backward and swallow. for liahtwaiaht capsules, tilt bead for- • ward: the capsule will float to the back of the mouth. Gulp and it's ione. the niJhunarcundsYatl suffered all. DEAR ANN: Your reply to "Maw those ycan wc~n 't ruceeither. Maw" was probab!y thouaht up after Ofall thecrusadesyoubave abarddayattheoflice. J had tolauah undertaken, I feel this one is the most when you bou&ht that teen-aaer's 1mpona.nt. ~tsu. -BEEN story that the pliers that fell out ofher THERE JN SCO DALE · purse were used to pull up her jeans. DEAl\SCOTl'SDALE:TM_.. rm 24. When I was in h1atuchool · bve done a spleMN Job of brtqtai we UJed pliers u roach clips when we School daze hits first-time student dlltnbJec:tHtofdtedoset.fte smoked pot. What's"MawMaw's" . mottlmportut~puat1eu• address?! have some oceanfront . Rcpnnred by Request: llkeep~llHsefeemmaleldoa property&nOhiol'dliketoscllher.-This .. column ~uld be. entitled, L.'J'kk~{UHMll_-q.__MISSl~lfl>I FAN · confessions of a child entcnna school leantotalk)UoaWt.emdetof DEARYAN·T11e1coijaoacfe4f --ror l.befirsrtime Mwaocordma 10- _ ----mothers-erebusnbewbercorarctoq Let's face it, the mother was stupid andcareless-orabyimallynaive. Little girls are notsafe with males, period. I know. When I was S, I was mole!_~~n~oftbe most res~ men in town. foever told a soul because I didn't think anyone would belie'le me. I kep\ lh1t nasty ltttle- comfor1ablea.boetautqaaJ.-s· reaaoubleto~e. Yoa'ret.beolllyoae adults, "has n~thing to worry about.:• cni.._tu718bJec:twldlO•tfear« lto41ffttfoae4lt.-My..name JS Donald and l don t ~~--::----~~~~----.-------_;_...;;.;;;;;=~~--. know anythins. ~ ·, 76 YEARS OF QUALITY EDUCATION ,, .. · t"' ~-,. INDIVIDUAL ATTENTION ~; ~ /~ , \bY -teaches;• who carel -. // STUDENT LEADERSHIP •· 1 IMrnlng to be rMPQnllble '°' others. ~no r..ourc«utMU and Initiative CURRICULM pnMdtng 1 atrona found1t1om In bu.c: lktlll end the .. 3 RTI." PHYSICAL EDUCATION unttll\g 1 strong mind With 1 llrong bOdy tOf 1 well·rounded 1nc:Jlv1dull PRE-SCHOOL /. KINDERGARTEN gets your child ott c;n the right roed, under g.vea your chlldten ~le trlflllng 1n the beet aupervtll<>n, with the Pfopet' toys phorucs, reeding, writing end erlthme11c. end equipment • to test them 1.11 their 11vea AGE 2 THAU GRADE 8 COMPUTER LAB & COM~UTER ASSISTED INSTRUCTION PAGE SCHOOL SINCE 1908 GARO£N GROVE 1211 Suero Garden Grove, Calif 92640 .. (714} 971 5533 COSTA MESA 65 7 Victoria St Costa Mesa. Ca hf 642-0302 . . ORANGE 1510 W Almond Orange. Cahf (71 4} 978·2075 • A New Concept f1ont ~nti-Sli_p SaJ.ety Th~ Sof cy M~ ... Step oo co campus in rh1s smm slip on mocassm . _ Taup;P or~ butttm>fr alf. ... ···'·,,.,.,... SIZES s 6.10 • ~ _M_._. ·••M•-··5·10 -~Lili~ SHO~S --- ' 99 Fashion lsland, Newport Beach 759-9551 AMERICAN JAZZ REVIEW· fJIDA YS c.. /UL)' 10 · A.UCLISI3J RUFFELL'S- UPIOLSTEllY, llC. r. n. tat Of '• ll• 1922 .... avo .. COSTA EA-SU-11~ Clll &'2-5871. Pur • few words to work for you. I have new underwear, a new sweater, a loose tooth, and I didn't sleep last ni&ht. I am worried. What iftfie school bus jerks after I get on and J lose my balance and my pants rip and everyone lau&hs? What if I have to ao the bathroom before we Jct to school? What if a bell rings and everyone goes into a door and a man yells, "Where do you belona'r' and I don't know? . . What if my shocstrina comes unued and someone sars· "Your shoestring 1s un"ed We'I all watch while you \Jc u"1 What 1fthc trays in the cafeteria ar~ roo taU for me to reach? What if the thermos hd on my soup IS on too tight and wbcn I try to open it. it breaks? What 1f my loose tooth wa'nts to come out whtn we're supposed to have our heads down and be quiet? What if teacher tells the class to go to the ~room and I can't go? Whatlfl act hot and want to take my sweater off and someone steals it? , What ifl splash water on my name tag and my name disappean and no one will know who I am? What if~ send us out to play and all the swinp are taken? What do I do? . What 1( the wind blows all the 1mpanant papers out of my hands that I'm supposed to take home? What if they mispronounce my last. name and everyone lau&hs? · What lf my teacher aoesn't ma.kc her O's bke Mom ii'Ujbt me? • · What if I spend the whole day without a friend? What if the teacher gives a seat to everyone and I'm left over'! What if the windows in the bus steam up and l won•t be able to tell when I get to my stop? • I'm justaJittle kid but maybe rm smaner than I think I am. At least I know better than tQ tell a S-year..old with a loose tooth who bas never been out of the yard by himself before that he ha~ "nothing to worry about." IF CREMATION IS YOUR PREFERENCE Call THE NEPTUNE SOCIETY 'The Neprune Society brought cremation to Orange County-in 1974 Today we prOIJide more Hrvicn to 0rall9f County fam1lie5 than any other organtUtion We offer cremation wtth burial a1 Ma, 1n the moun1ains, or 1n the desert and our complete setVICe costs about one rtlth as much .u a conventl<?nal ground burial The responae to our •er111Ce has been extroord1nary1 We m.w 28.000 ~ber11n Orange County, and in our nin« year history we have Hl'lled owr 7.000 famiha. If you have any questK>ns regarding crema1ion. please call us at: 646-7431 •••••••••t•H••u••••••••••••u••tt••••utt••tt••••••n••••••••u••••••••ut•t•tttttt••••••••••••tUtttUtUt••••••••f"••••••••"' .. Please 1ei}d free Information to Name ------------ Address -----·-------- C11y Mail to· THE NEPTUNE SOCI 474E. l;t .. Strect Con. M .... CA t2'27 lt NEn\JNC OFFICES NATIONWIDE Make a lunch date with Fash- ion Island and celebrate an Amencan tradition. Join us at our Jazz Concerts beginnin8 at 12 and 1 o'clock. An Amen· can · Jazz Review-part of Fa,sh10n Island's special, year- long promotion focusing on the Amencan ltfestyle. Located m The Broadway Pirie - Ba in 01v~21c Winner! • AUGUST 3-Bob Redfield Band Located 1n the flu/locks Wils"1rc Wmg - • A(./Ct.JSTKJ-.Bill Baker •AUGUST ·77 _Vocalist Stephanie Ates 4' •AUGUST 24-SteVe Hof-· ste r . . • Al../CUST JI-Toni Mar- C:us and Al Maitland with Quest t Netmarn Marc.IA, Roblnsotl'1t, The B~-ay, BullOCb Wilsh 'te and B<J.Hum Ovei'[Q. fiM stata m ~ Jint off P1e1f1c ( H1shlNay lxitw n M1c rthur ,r;a ]im· boree Blvd lri 'potf SellCh ' We are .. luting our two Olympic Ice.lion 1tor" dunno the Otymplca The Original Outlet at Olympic and Sant• la conveni.rttly tocat~ to many Olympte event• The Weal LA locatlc>tf on Olympic at Fed«al la clOM co UCLA and • othar Wt1t11de event•. All 1oe1t1on1 now have beautiful dealgner fatmca, bHlc fabrics, patte<n1, trlmmlnoa. and t.. . notion• ar dltcounc prices Our gold medal ALL BUTT•RICK PAn•RNS NOW s1· 47 EA .. utetpeople wlll chMrfully hefp you at all SEV. ....,,..,,__..__ EN 1ocat1on1. 11ch one a cool oula from the Otymplcel • TMOU8ANDI a TMOUIANDll GOLD M•DAL FABRICS • con• • ~ • PlMll * l•ta * !IOftl.1111 IUCll, IUCM, llllEJ '84~. ll r Wroo 1Ncs How to .submit wedding ·news Tbe Daily Pilot wants your wed- dbJI and engJ11ement news. · Tb help you submit.the required information, forms are 1v1ilable at the Daily Pilot offlce, 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa. For weddinp, only 1 black and white photo of the bride is accep. table. Sn1pshots, Polaroid and color photos can't be used. The photo must be 1ubmitted no later th.In three weeks after the weddi1J6, otherwise it will not be published. Engl!6ement mform1t1on 1s to be submitted It least seven weeks before the wedcling. Forms ind photos can be dropped off •t the ofli~ or mailed to the Weddin1 Depanment, Daily Pilot; P. 0 . BoJC 1560, Costa Mesa. Q/if. 92626. ·cusTODY ••• From Bl raniement as likely to be. Moreover, most mental health professionals say · it's very important for children to remain in the same schools and maintain the same friendships and nei&hborbood ties. -r o make children feel at home, and to minimize shift.ins belonainas from house to house, many joint-custody families have duplicate supplies 'Of toys. clothes and other items. Because each parent has to. main- t&Ht a residence large cnouah to accommodate the childr(n, joint physical custody is more expensive than sole custody or joint legal custody. Occasionally, children stay in one home and pare nu move in or out. But such a setup nonnally requires three rcsidenCCI. and most parcnu can't afford it. · Joint physical custody also can be difficult for children if the parcnu' livina conditions differ areatty after the divorce. Joint custody won't wark unless parents can communicate and coop- erate about their children. That means separatin& their roles as pareou from the hostilities of· the marrilJc and divorce. Mott vcatre crucial to the success of any joinHustody arranacment. It donll't bode well 1fthe mother wants t6 dump the dtiltmn on the father part of the time or if the father wanu to ijSC the children as spies to nmn1tor their mother's behavior. Arranacmcnts, csp;toiaHy JOant physical custody, can also be strained or even destroyed af a parent must work Iona boun or make frequent • busness trips, or if he or she moves out of the area, remames or stans · .... , "a:nothcr family. • In many cases, mediation. coU"nsel- ina or other psycholoaical support services are hclpina courts identify parents with a Sood history Of cooperation and communication re- prdioa their children despite their ph>blems with each other. The Joint Custody Auociation (10606 Wilkins Ave., Los Anacle1 90024; (213) 475-'3~2) tw available · 1 thick peck.et of matenals on joint custQ<ly. includina sample provi1ions for a joint custody qrecmcnt. The ptckct co ta $30, but there i1 no cha~ for individual ~uc u for specific information. ~ -...... u Yf6~~ ~o~-~ -· .----..... JlllJMll 642-5678 ... .. Cordless Telephone-44% Off ET~byRad~SM~ . save •ao 8995 Reg.179.95 Programmable· Securtty Code soo:root r~. Twe>numbif' memory difal1ng and last· number touctwedjaJ. Unlver- saJ diaJ. #43-267 FCC·regmerect Not for com ~ P9"Y·l1ne "89 M«nory *kup_banery extra OU6FONE TA0-11-i by Radio Shack .save •&o . 11119! Voice-actuated answerer records incoming messages or deliVers announcement only. Includes announcement, · message tapes. #43-314 FCC register9d. Not for COin Of ~IM UM. RMlole ban~ extra •Auto-Stop •Tone Control Half Price ·2915 :Is Hurry In today and save $30. Frts easily under any dash ot' In g!ovebox. Locking fast-forward and balarl'Ce control. 8 watts. #12-1803 16-Num~r Phone ~emory-Dialer OU6FONE•-100 by Rad~ Shack 40°10 Oft zges -~s Fast, one.button dialing of often-called or emergency n~ bers. Unive(Sal ~al system, memory/dialing l,.ED. #43-279 FCC regittered. Memoty beekup battery extra. Not for COin or perty-ltne UM Clock Radio With Battery Backup Chronomatice-233 by Realistic . Cut 27010 7aa~-Battefy--~~Pm-. •ecta•Tiine~. And Alarm Functlorua lf AC F Save $10.07. Wake to AM/FM radio or buzzer alarm l:arge dispfay wilhnrnoaimmer, SJeiP &no sno0ze. Fradio features lighted djal and ~AFC, 3" speaker, earphone JS~. #'12-1540 Memory~ bettety extra PC-2 Programmable . Pocket.Computer ·· TRs.80" by Radio Shack •••ocioooe • lJJ wwa.rcoc;;;c w••••• mW :II CD 151 lil ClltC -Gl • • • • • ::r:>a>a>G:I Ci) OCO•• •• • CD & CIC Cii:) G:l cEI m • • • • S•ve '25-Stereo Car BOOster/Equallzer Slim-Style Portable Cassette Recorder Deluxe AM/FM Portabte· Radio By Realistic Cut 42°/o • Flv•Blnd Equellzer •Fader Control 3495 . . Reg. 59.95 • ., .-Expands dynamic range and gives you · precise tone control. Fits under most daShes. A'lfHe~ LEO power meter, fader. 112·1865 3188 Reg.41.95 Auto-stop, auto-levet, tone control, aux input. AC/battery q»tatJOn. 114-1010 ~··tr• Saw $7.07. Side- mounted controls. high sensitivity and ceramic ftl· ters fc>f great reception Earphone. 112-602 B&twyextra .. Save '3-:-Compact LED Alarm Clock LCD Quartz-Accurate Stopwatch-Save '10 Deluxe Moving-Magnet· Ster~o Cartridge ·20~ Off 1195 By Mlcronta 330/o Of I . ~ R47XT by t)Cl$hure 0 ---,· i ·t "IT'S A 81.0CKBlfilER, A LOU'.APALOOZA, A ~C." _.. ..... ,..,, ........ •"" ,,,. TVl"'LE u1: ooom "::.:. - ' .... -··· . ~IOI l!W ... Of! #IC llf 11111'11,, »:# A~CJl<M# ~l\ll ll)9Wl'i!M l'llPSOf :. llM(Jllll QOllCI 110'.i, fM lllGllll 1Jt1tl[Hlllfl!DI • , OtllllMI ·--111.IClll/O&Q!A.IUJJ Qrl!J llW IUOl.m--.llhlU'llJllf. ,,._., .,. mg~s--........ .__ .. ~ ..... ···· .., ____ ....... ·-·----·~ ....... _..,,._ .. _ NOWPLAYN3 ·--........ ·~ ....... :;. .... er.---'$ lfn.tDD9 na.---- • Cllf'IA •IA £, .... ,9"11<>1 \.oG ... .... 4 OIWICt MICI>.-. ...... &ll~. 1 .... Ol!MGl A~c;.n..r .. o•~. ...... lHEIAST STARflGHTER 'Fannie' clo•lng in Laguna Mark Turnball, author of the ._ew maalcal ''Talea of Fannie Keenap, Better Known•• Dora ~d... Mrenadea Jed F«>eel.an (dCJltl and Carolyn llUler, wbo •tar ln tbe ab ow. Flnal petformancea will be •••en tonlCht tbr«»uih SaturdaJ at the pl&J• boaM. 806 Lann• Canyon Road, wltb ticket information a•aJlable at 494-0743. ABC going for Nielsen gold with early Olympicrepqrts . First .competition. opening day ceremonies ~~:'Ds.!.~~~iu:i·~ m~cr ropel network to to s ot In TV ratin s "The CBS Eve~a N~ kept •ta t-~------====---*'-......t;:=--=-~----==--------_. ~th-a-1'allnt"Of &.0.7. ,,. · ··Herc arc -the week'·~ 20 top pro-LOS ANGELES (AP} -ABC U.S. t~ ~ttended, &.nd a 24.4 rating grams: apparently is oo its way to a two-week at Mun1~b in 1972. 1. Summer Olympics, Sunday, ratinas bonanza after two huge vie· . Th~ Su~day com~uuon of fin_als ABC, a ratina of 24.3 or 20.3 million torics in the Nielsen ratinas for the mswimmmaandcychnaandopemng households first day of competition and the rounds for the well·reprded U.S. 2. Summer Olympics, Saturday, openina ceremonies of the l 984 men's basketball, volleyball and 1Ym· ABC 23. 9 or 20.0 million. Summer Olympics at Los AnJeles. nasties teams had a ratina of 24.3. . 3. :'Simon & Simon." CBS, I S.9 or Sunday's start of competition was This represents the percentage of the 13.3 million. first in the prime·time ratings for the. nation's 83.8 million TV homes 4. Movie-"Wben the Circus Came week ended July 29 and its coverage tuned in. Its share was 44 percent of To Town" CBS, 1 S.2 or 12. 7 million. oftheopeningextravaganzaSaturday the audience tuned in to TV at the s. "Th~ A·Team," NBC, IS.I or was a close second. The next highest time. 12.6 million. :... · proaram trailed far behind. · The openin• day ceremonies. a 6. Movie-"Child Bride of Short ABC estimated that 80 million colorful, musical celebration of Creck,u NBC, 14.8 or 12.4 million. people saw the first meeting or-the America, had a rating of 23"9 and 48 7. "Circus of the Stars." CBS, 145 athletes Sunday and that 75 million percent of the audience. or 12. l million. 0:!."!.c.. ·=.::. ·:::..-=:-peoplesawsomeoralloftheopening. ABC's coverage of Thursday's 8 ... Magnum, P.1.," CBS, 14.3 or == .==.::i .... a record audience for an Olympics "Olympics Gala" tied for 18th place 11.9 million. r-'-._...,... ._.,. opening. and its Friday-m.aJtt preview of the 9. Movie-"MlStress of Paradise," 1 ::;:•:',..::::::::;;::;;c:.-:~===-===~ ABC handily took the week as it Summer Garnes 1n Los Angeles was ABC, 13.8 or 11.S million. " nearly doubled llS network average 31st. . IO. "Riptide," NBC, 13. 7 or 11.4 from its tl\ird-place finish the Despite its victory, ABC mustered million. COSTA MESA UA Cinemas 540-0594 CYPRESS Cypress 828-1660 FOUNTAIN VALLEY Fam11¥ Four 963-1307 ORANGE UA City Cinema 634-3911 1.J@Aji:;i Stlows SIM1 It Dusk ANAHEIM Pacrfic's Anaheim Onve·ln 879-9850 previous week. NBC fell from first to only three shows in the Top 10. Last-11. "Family Ties," NBC, 13.4 or ~nd P'fte and CBS was third. place CB"S had four programs and 11 .2 million. · Qvcrall. viewcrship made an NBC had three. 12. "Hill Street Blues," NBC, 13.0 enormous leap after a summer low Other shows in the Top 10: CBS' or 10.9 miJlion. the previous week dunng the time of "Simon &. Simon," third; the C BS 12. Tie-.. Cheers," NBC, 13.0 or the Democratic National Conven-movie .. When the Circus Came To 10.9 million. tion. Town," fourth; NBC's "The · A-14. "Scarecrow&. Mrs. King."~. ABC bad a network average of 15.S Team," fifth; ihe NBC movie "Child r2.8 or 10.7 million. in the A.C. Nielsen Co. survey. NBC Bride of Short Creek," sixth; CBS' 15 .. "The Fall Guy," ABC, 12.7 or had 11.3 and CBS had 11.2. The · "Circus of the Stars," seventh; CBS' I 0.6 million. networks Sl!Y this. means.that in an .. Maptum, P.I.," eiahth; the ABC 16. Movi~-.. Twirl," NBC, 12.3 or averaic pnmc time minute 15.S movie .. Mistresst>f Paradisc," ninth; 10.3 million . percent of the nation's TV homes and NBC's "Riptide," tenth. 17. "Night Court." NBC, 12.2 or were tuned to ~BC., . ~ The lowes_t-rankcd proaram of the · l 0.2 miJlion. The network s ratmas should chmb was NBC news magazine show 0 Sum-18 ... Olympics Gala," ABC, 12.1 or much biaher after it has a full week of mer Sunday, USA." The five lowest· I 0.1 million. Olympics t>rosrams on the schedule. ratedsbows1ndesc:endin1orderwerc: 18. Tie-.. Alice,'' CBS, 12.l or 10.1 ABC avef'IUd a ratio& of 24.8 in ABCs Monday Baseball Pre-Oame million. prime time at the Montreal Olympics Sbow, the CBS movie .. The Rose," 18. Tie-"Trapper John. M.D.," 1n 1976, the last Summer Games the CBS' .. Four ScaSQns.'' CBS'· .. Buas CBS, 12. I or 10. I million. •n 1'0llO • lllWl'Olll 111ooo !J'l\IJI •*1.A .... .. .... ,. .. , ---~ ._.... ...... ....... 0-... Jlllfl~lll i;.A GARDEN GROVt Edwards Westbrook 530-4401 FOUNTAIN YA.U.EY Pwric·s FountmV- Qnve-ln 962-2481 ''LIKE NOTHING YOUVE SEEN SINCE 'THE WIZARD OF OZ':' Unfortunately, they're both on our side. , .......... c.. _ .. , , ............ .... --tno _,. _ • ....._... •u..._...,,. ...... c.--.... ..,. ._~,.,., ... w·~ .,..7ll0 ·~ .... m~ ..... .... -.. ....... , ORANGt ·--·--c-.. -• Jtn • .....,..,..,.. ..... , __ • lllG...._.a.<:CC11>1'10'<•,_.l.....,... ... , n--AMC Orange f.Ull 637-0340 * NEWPOftT BEACH * 10 • 6 IUO. OOl&I 11Rl0 .._OO&Tll ION Of oooir· <PCI I I\. t-• 10 W 6 ll!Al• SflllO Of USI SIWIQO'U IPCI '" 11~ It I~ ~Ol5Mlmlft ~ .. ..., lllJ( ,.. (PC) ..... lw1 I IS t "1 • SO. COAST PLAZA • TOWN CENmt It '•• ..... .,. nf lASI SIWICIKTO 1P1; ,,_ S1~1• ll 4Sl4\l4\ 1~1 41&4 >• ,11 11' lt1t TOWN C(NTcR \D ••• ... "-' ,,._ l'.11 41&4 JOWff CENTCR IA~Ot ,_,,, I t I~ ~ ~ IO'•• .... ..., ....... 1~1 ..... I ... I S1~11J .. TOWN C(NT(R • •St IUlllSl I t H~ I &I~ ~ ·~ H~ J~ s ~I• JOO lW\.lbr(I) I IS 401 II~ I lO 1040 USO TOGO SOOTH COAST "Ollltmrm· "'' •••• IJO J4SIOOll~1020 12• I Jtl ._ao•nt IOfU._."' 11 IS no uo UQ IHI #JUHi • IRVIHE • * IRVINE * ••l""'-"',. '-••IL . 19JJUS -~Of 111 ll:llDS 111 OllC.11 ' CltOlll"S M CCUCM .. -cf') I )l •OO 10 4~ CilMA wtsf · ·-C-0 HI JU~ • COSTA MESA • COWARDS ...... ' ...... ~6 JIOl HARBOR TWIN - ~ ... -611 l~I cmo• • •11 DIJ£1Cll ' c•> 11(1 HO Ill KMAll KV (Pl) h Tllott I IS t JO .. £l TORO • SAOOUBACK-...m Tm-nr I 0 I •• " 1115, us. us IC) '' , ... ., 'UST n.-.mr CN> m SHO 2 IS. 6 20. 10 10 ------SBOIOOO SAOOllBACK 'llOll Of I I .. .. II( IUDS (I) I " .. I 10 I \ I ~ II m ~uo 11~1• 1co SAOOHBACK "ClllOI, a..'S :~~:~;·. cmcMllOnar' "' ~II '.1110 I JD )JO HO IJO tll. , .. ., •••••• m ~•ao SAOOt.lBACK ' .... .... .,, .... . sa1 ~m SAOOl l8ACK p '•• ... I,..,._ u1uao Piia 19\furet> II 0 l• 4 IS , ltJO 140 IOC\ lHO 1000 'QIOSJmlOS Ml I 4 ~ UO I .n 10 4~ U~11J• -"''-. 1 IS H~ 110 1010 U'9. >• , MISSION VIEJO • VI( JO T WIJC· lll•U f STOlf IM> 600 IOI IV1' :iu1111· ") 11~ 1• H\ •• ltl\ W~fl( ltJJH• ,, ' ThE NEVER ENDING . STORY ~. ..... 'I M• ... ..,.o A4AttMt I ~ PA*''• .. ~l..( W AHY 0---.............. -...- A1W11t LA~ Stadium Df·ln SRO Gateway 639 8770 S23 1611 cO!lA EA llSa VU Edwards C.nt111a Edw1rds Vieto Center 979 4141 TWiil IJ0..6991 -fCUCTUt WAUCf ~ family fOllt SYUfY City 96J.1307 C..ttf 63H5S3 .__ -sMJAMA {dwlfds Uni~tn1ty Edw~rds Btillol &541111 54~7444 .,,.. .... '°1WISTll Nit fas.biOll UA Wutlllinstlf Squate -<213) '91-0633 fll'!' &U<>S46 •OOUYITIMO .. 'THREE CHEERS FOR 'NERDS I' -J<"Ck Mathews, USA Today ~. AIWDI Slldi11111 OI' In 639-8170 ll£A UAMo;iea4 99<M021 11.0APAa 8*a.,,. °'"' 1214010 COSfA'tJSA UA Solltll Cont ~94 RT~ Edwa1d1 s.odleblek S815880 ·-Edwards Un1wers.ty as.c sa11 OaAIG AMC Or1nie Mal 637~0340 mMlil UA Cit1 Ce1tlet 634 3911 WUTWISTB UA W tmlftSfet &U-OS.C6 DUDLEY MOORE SlRAlEGIC GUEST SlffAYR EDDIEMURP *BEST* DEFENSE ........... ,.""" .... "'1'11119"'--' Now ·Playing INA 111'9 •sn..n. -.ihl'lll.I ~~ l~c.m mm &•11 -91 ----= ,_ . --' - JAMIE LEE CUlfTIS .~ c THOMAS HOWELL 1• • /'A TRICI< wAYZE Disney unveils newfi m prqcess New' AusSie'·actor e I pace in :ra~ehotse 'film 'Magic Journey1 adds thtr9 dimension to Disneyland show BJ TM A1Ndated Praa • Walt Disney innovators have brought a new dimension -third dimension -to a film currently beina hown at Disneyland, in which tome new techniques have been employcd. ~ & Muelc inaken BJBOBTllOM • nma ,.._...., l.OS ANGELES-The late t hot IC'tOr from Aunraha is o more Austrahan than Amencan·born Mel Gibson. He is Tom Bw'linson. who was bOm an Toronto and lived in New J~ney and Henfordsblre, EnaJ:and. But in this ycai's earlier impon from Down Under, e.nie Man From 1\0WY River," and the fortbcomina .. Phar 49,•• the : 21-year-otd BurUnion seems like a natin of Australia. Jndttd, he ha lived there from the qc of I 0. But11nson was here to bclp 20th Century Fox launch the American release of .. Phar Lap," which al.ready has made be~ its oost in Australia. .JIMP l:airis not euctly a houseliola name in the United States. But racina fans don '1 need to be told wbo he was. Burl .. Thinas jumped out mort in this movie than 'in the other 3-0 movies· I've seen," ·Travis Raniq. II, of Panorama City. said of "Maaic Joumeyst a l S-minute 3-0 film about chddrcn livin1 out their fan· Wies. "I wanted to dodge when the " witch seemed to come out, and when they showed the fish swiromina, I felt like tryina to reach out and touch Pam Bard'8 and Stan Thronebeny head the nppo~ cut of .. The 8oa.Dd of llaalc. •• entennc lta flDal weekend u the Orance Cout Coll~e aammer maatcal. P'lnal per- formance. will be &IYeD tonlOt tllroU,b Sud&y. wt th Information· a•allabJe at 432-alao. Some track hmorians pq Phsi Lip as the pnlfSt racer in htStO'I:i~ homely cheltnut from New tnd; thr__horse became a national hero with its astou ndfoa come-from-the· ,..;..:.=.::.::;:::.=....:.:..:.....:.~.=.::.:::....:;::.......::::.:.:::.;;;.:.:;;;.;_~~..;;;.;.;-------::-----..-. outside finishes. Phar Lap won 37 races in threeyears-14consecutivc· ly. . one." Attractma si~ilar praise was Modern 'Mr Keen another new Disney shon film, · • ''American Joumeya.' Phar Lap came to the UnitfdStalef 1n 1932 to win the SI00,000 A&ua Cahent~ handicap, then the worfd's richest. Shortly afterward the cham· pion died under mysterious circum· stances. When Swale died unel- pected.Jy this year after winnina the Kentucky Derby and Belmont Stakes, spons writcn cited the perallel to · But that l 9-minute prbduction was · • • T v • ~~~.i~afi~~~-~;s~~':ro~~~st~ ·ln·sp1res . series viewer. · Both processes were created by 9., JERRY 9•1~ Walt Eltas Disney Enterprises, the ,;T,,,..._..,.., "'-• desian division of Walt Dianey Pro-LOS ANGELES-Here's 1 case of duct.ions life imitatmsan and an imitatina life: Phu lap. -1 hope lo hit a home run &pin. It's a Tom 8urlinson who plays Pbar 1ood fcclin1 to lcnow that except for Lap's strappcr (~ndler) Tommy you, that mother and dau&bter may Woodcock., admitted his early educa· never have &otten in touch with each tion about 11ones had been lackina. other." 0 1 bad been on a horse twice before Shulman •was the inspiration for 'Snowy River,"' he said in an inter· --19 out of 20 Kids Prefer Our ·Sauerkraut Bunch· You Wiil, Toof In "American Journeys," which an old rad.io show, "Mr. Keen, Traecr cost SS.9 million, nine cameras were of Lost Persons," inspires Lloyd set up in a perfect circle for sbootina, Shulman to become a missing per· aimed upward into mirrors tilted at sons in\lcstiptor and be in tum ~ •1es, -11.id EllCCNtiYe-insphft ilru~m~ series, ''Finder of LoSt Loves," according to view. "J found myxtf ptayina a Sal lanucci of Aaron S llina Pro-tegrodary )OUnt manwbc>-W beee·-L---- uctions: Bu~ c sat • e ve on and around bones all bis life. Producer Ran y BriJbt. .. Finder of Lost'l.oves.'• aid.if&he.mcw ffimo4. . •• · · conventional techniques; •it would proaram lfu1 l used to thin~ wbat. bave cost $1.S million. fantastic way to make. a livina," The movie, narrated by 14 people Shulman said. "I nevcr.thou&bt that from various pans of the country, • someday l would be do1na that kind presents 60 see~ views of the ?f work. In fact, I call. m¥ ~mpany country, from the Grand Canyon to Mr .• ~n. Tracer of M1ss1na Per· the Statue of Liberty. This film sons. --• replaces, .. America the Beautiful," a Sh~lman, s~. has spent 24 y~rs circte-Vision movie viewed by 7(} -trecking-lost persont-mosttpeeift- million people, accordina to Disney cally, lost IQved ones. He reurutes officials. ~others and so~ or brothers and In "Mqic Journeys/' Director slSters who haven f seen e&c;b other Mumy Lerner said the uae of 70. for decades. He est mates be rlound millimeter film is the movie's bis m~re than 8S,-06Q peopJe,. · brcak1hrouah. . I look for chent.s . with an e~o-.. . . uonal need to set in touch wtth Seventy-m1lhmet~r fill)l helps somebody," he said in a telephone produce a cnsper, b~ahter ·~aae on interview ... A lot of people don't the screen than .. you I~ see tn most know where their mother or brother other 3-0 films, he said. or daughter is. I solve so many of The movie was filmed with two these problems and every time I do I cameras, whose lenses were pos-get a tremendous penonal fcelina. .. itioned at different distances ranain11 Shulman said he bepn by traetna · ·-from 21h inches to 100 feet a pan. Two mis.sin& persons for banks and in· projectors project both imap on top surancc compani.cs bUt found it too of cacb other, but viewers wearin1 im~n21. polarized aJasses ~ only one 1m· • I usually feel that next JO the pression. person I'm look.in& for and. the person "Maaic Journey" ponrays children I'm work.ifta for, I'm the person who cxperiencina the fantasies of fiyin1. cares the most," be said. '~I feel like be1na in the ring with circus per-1'm-patt-ef the family fonners and ridina a merry-go-round horse into outer space. .. Then I 10 on to another case and "A wonderful movie." Guy ''~nkhn 1'1(85. TV •All NEW •All NEW•All NEW• 1'1e.1f11: Anllleim Or. In &7'-98SO •com EA Cdwar4s Harbor 631 3501 -COSlltEA EdWlldS So Coasl Plw $46--2711 aT"mo Edwards s.ddleback S8l·S880 ... Edwards Uftt.e<sit1 8S4.a&ll . , STAR'rS TO MORRO ' . Edwll'ds So Coast ~ l.apM 497-1711 -aaMll ClneclofM 634-25~ MSMGTtl 1'1e.1f1C !hay 39 Dr;ht &91 ·3693 -.SlWISTO UA Wat1111nsttt Tm 195 5333 .,._.rm· •DCUT STBlO played by Tony Franciosa is not Fortunately I was taken in "hand by a · ybastd on Sb: 1 tt · He said loved <Shes usually ~ome ·1.CPID1 •fel'l"enT f lost '--·use of divorce and broken bushman who tauJbt me cvetYtJiina ~ needed to lcnow. families or because someone leaves .. 'Pbar Lap' required an entirely home. p.fter an araurn,cnt. . different style of ridina. •• he con· A ~1mple case that •.Qu.icldy solved tinuod. "I also had to make aood costs about SSOO, he said. Touaher friends with Bobby the bone that t:ases ~n run to $2,000, but the plays Phar Lap -his real name is avcrase is less than St,000. Shulman Towerina Inferno. Some people say sat~ clicn\S-;)ay~f-t.be-tliafboncn.rte!umb;14on'I Ullo so. cstunated cost ·~ advance an~ I hadn't seen Bobby in eight months noth1n1 more until the person is when we met ap1n. He knew me found. immediately and went ri&ht back to "IfJ don't find him," he said, ''they bis old tricks." · don't pay." • For the new film, tbc actor had the Shulman added: • If everyone help of Tommy Woodcock himself. ~nows whc~ everyone . t~r care The veteran is still active in Austral· about 1s, that s a good fcehng. ian racina at 78. He 5 beffi raised by~ ~by~ Hunted ~ a boy~ating IJger Md adopt~ by a bumbfing beer named eaoO . .. Who"d hoYe thought. the ~le could be so much ftal1 ·. ANAHEJM ~"¥:,1n-~6 COSTA MESA Edwards Cinema Center 979-4141 • COSTA MESA UAC1nema 540.0594 La MIRAOA ~ ""'* ,. .. l• .... -h .............. .... -.allll.LI,., r ,_, 11JO 1~ t41 , .. t~ UUI "°'""*'!11 llJC 11'> •1' llO 110 It ORANGE Stadium Dnv.-ln &39-8no ._ 11111 -Ill IOft( fl ... tlCl "' tot' ~11'10 100 llC •• I JO IHt ~·---·· I t• ~· l•tte 11• lASISl---llln t• ,. t• IUI *PACIFIC ORIVE·IN THEAlRES• Fountain Valley * MISSION ·. 'I.ARNER . :JJ i' it.~ .r.I ·THE SYMBOL OF ·ACCOMPLISHMENT Our.New Cellular Phones Aren't For Everyone. They are for people "ho ha'e achieved · · unponance throuah efficient pLum an<I old·f~ hard work Pe<'9 who recogruu the ,afue or rn$tMt com· mi.ruc.a.uon. Th~ "ho kno" th.lt ume is mone} ... and a phone CA.II lost. rs an opporturut} !Ost \ If you att one of these proud a.nd la'l few. ""-e irwitt you to take a frtt. o Obligation, demonstr tion C'\t )our home or office. . Chtt.k th ~ ~ turc I 0 No waiting for open hn 0 Unequalled P"\ia 0 Conf ercn II from > r c:a'll D C&arny equal to ) our ph n 0 Du~ab . compaa t:I wt number oth r randard f (714) 770~.a..1 S&l• •s.rvt n complam nt t\) ("M d dialm nd a h ~ or many CIJLLVLAll cl'' IB!IBRATIORAL Jon ' In· phone Company/ field Blvd . Irv1ne CA. 9271 _ . :.· } GAF\F1£LP, l K~YOO LIKE TO MAVE FON ••• } . I ... I ~~__......__~......,! r .. T H E Ft\MIL\' · C.'IRCUS by Bil Keane "Daddy took us window-fishing !'' MARMADUK E ' by ~rad Anderson • "I'm worried! Marmaduke has been good all day. and Luther is a nervous wreck!" MOO~ Mt.LLI NS by Gus Arriola by Jim Davis BIG GEORG... by Virgil Partch (VIP) ' DENNI S THE MENACE Hank Ketcham "DoN'r V.ORRY ~·sear A RO.AST IN irfE OVf)i." by Ferd & Tom Johnson CAUGHT IN IMF. WIVES ,A~E \: ~ T~E B~BoNE" ab OF OUR c;.11mS:- t{M? you Huss,ANDS A~E LUCl<y' To HA'IE WoNDE~FUL WIVES NAT ION ~ PEl\Nt;TS SEE MARCIE? HERE I AM STANDIN6 IN FRONT OF TME EIFFEL TOWER ... L lk'E' us ' ,.___, t:::J SIR I DON1T WANT TO LOOt<'. AT 'fOVR VACATION PICTURES AT Tllll.EE O'CLOCK IN TME MORNIN6 1 I ~VE JET LA6, MARCIE . l CAN'T SLEEP ... l'M STILL ON PARLS TIME ... l'M READV FOR LUNC ..... .. by Charles M . Schulz • ( 0 n: ARE MORE QlJAL • On detcn e., choosing 1he r h1 ui1 to attack is ofl~n only part of 1he probkm. f quttlly 11npot· tant is \ltbu:h card you leud No't1h·S.outh con· du~tcd a rou1inc auction to an acceptable ~amc. Th~contract "ould have bttn virtually a laydown h d there been no wa~ted ~aluc in dub\. With nothini to 1u1de him, \\'c\t chose 1he ace of dub\ 3\ h1~(opcnlng kad. S HOE ... 1 r G1~E A~, r<oz . DRl\BBLE When c,lumrny ppcar· · ed, rwo thinas were ob· viou : tr was fuule to continue club!>: and tf1e defender:. would have to act their trick in • huriy, because the diamond ult on the tabl~ offered a rich source of discards. It ~as al o clear the only suit thai offered any hope for the &£erue was "hcans. So West shilled to • the ace of hearts and con· 1inued with the jack-~'( had to fi.nd you with the ... K·IO "of heart, par1m:r!" l)eclarcr covered wilh dummy'~ queen and Iris 10 became 1rlck-mak· Ing (our-odd. West's analysii. wa!> nght as far l!I tt went, but 11 did not go far enougb! If West 'find the ritht h1ft at md: two, he need find his partner with no more.. than K-9 of hearts to defeat the contract. The \\'innin,defen~c at trick two is 10 ,shift to the jack of hearts ... (A low "FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE . ~ t '"1 F1Ne, MoM, f M f-V\VING A G'Re:f\I TtMe! WE~flSHI~,~ WeNr lo"fte. tcCJ PtN • 1He Bef\Oti AN'THe. W~SLIDES -·· FUNKY WINKERBE~N COE'~ IN ! I'VE ~E.D lmD~COU~ COMPU'fE.R / WE'LL HAVE. A MARRIAGE Uc.EJ.& IN N01M ING FLA'r ! DR.SMOCK HO~"E IS HOSE J • I heart i'> no good-dcclar· er smtply plays low from the board.) l!ast capture, dummy's queen w11h th~ l king and returns the ulL..' Now declarer' 10 is tra~ ped by the combined~ • East-WC$! cenace. fry it. For lnrorrnatlon about Charles Gortn '• at ne.-letter for brldat l " playtra, write Goren Bridit lAUtr, 1909 C1n.' namlnson Avt., In .. oamlnson. '.J. OI077. : . by Kevin Fagan by Lynn Jo~nston CAA I Sf~ HERE FORE.VER'?Y by Tom Batluk . by George Lemont by Pat Brady "\ \_ Financial ·planning firm opens in·NB WI.Ilda L. Hen r1er has oPcned a financial plannins firm in Newport Beach. Henllber1er l'taUclal Servtce1 is l001ted at SOOO Bll'ch St. Suite 200 in Newport Beach. Henhbergtr is a certified financial planner who has worked with To!D Hllpermer 6 An~lates of Newport BeaCh, and one of only two women an Orange County admitted to. then. Rep1try for FlaaadaJ P1a.uln1 Practltlolten, a national organization that promotes industry e~ccllence. Hershberger is a member of the group's screening committee, as well as a member of the IDteruUoDal AHocladOD for F'tullcla.I Plamali& and the Oru1e C...~ Pn.feuloaal°Aa~ocla'1 • • • • Reae MeW.. broker for her own Newport Beach company, a.te Mellla, Realtor, has completed a course making her a member of Tiie NatloaaJ wtttate of Exdaaqe Coaselon. The NeWJ>Ort Beach resident is a member of the C..ta Mna Board of Realton, an orpnization she served as ~etary­ tteasurer in 1983. She bas also been a director of the Callforala Ceadl of' ReaJton and secretary for Tbe Womaa'1 Coadl of Ballen. Her continuing education efforts have qualified her to be a member of the ·Real Estate Certlfkate IDltihlte. MeUon has also entertained as. an actress and sincer in New York City clubs, on radio and on_ television as .. Magic Mellon." . . . . . ~ hree L. Balla.rd bas joined Cox Ir Bud' Advertltlas Co'. of Newport )each as administrative coordinator for media services. She is responisble for TCS~~."OUI. M iDJt ICbedulin&-and ~t of---.dveftismg for vatl _ accounts. · · .... • · 1 • • • Tim Bawtllorae has joined Tiie Coraentoue eo,,. of Irvine as a client ~rviccs representative, with responsibility for assisting builders and ~vclopcrs with financina for their commercial end industrial properties. The lrvine resident was formerly a loan officer with Sbeanoa/ American Express Mortp1e Corp. -- MU TUAL FUND S • ' .. , ~OMPLETE NY~E COMPOS TE 11Wt8AC~8, a 'Whale llf.e 'insurance no longer good • once ltucnsitive uuuranoe industryu ITT. Insurance Corp. chief says uansronlled Into a con umer-driven new methods give higher return !~~~~n ~:.~~UC:= aj' Joy Dee AaU.001 around 2'band the prime intetcsl rate 10pbisticated fot consumer w To. Dllf""c:.111,••u• . hovered around S,.. As tbeec:onomic compcnsaie.knowingcompan1 will '•Traditional life insurance has pictu.R c~. eonsumm bealan alwafi keep around !he. older ylc outlived its usefulness," says Robert demandina diffemit policies. Poh~ fo~ those who hesitate to faoe MacDonald, Pf'(Sident of IIT Life lhstead of meetinJ the compct1-con 1na ini~raoce OPtJ<>ns. ln nncc Corpontion. tioo, MacDonald said, ttaditionalists He SttS lhe market as incnasinJly Instead of "whole life" policies, in in the insunnoe bU inas arc figbtin1 --sqmeoted Ilona cltis liocs, wuh which part of the premium goes back with litigation, lq!slation, and lower income sroups optina for more toward pure in urancc. pan towatd charaes of unprincipled en: tza4itional insuranc.c &JCDls, hither comPJny overhead and profit. and t.rcprcneurship. Despite their efforu. income earners mov towards pan to a casb-valuefund. MacDonild new insurance ofTerinp like uni venal fio.ancia1 planners, and middle clus advocates a lower-rate "tcnn in-life are ~nnina to take off. In 1981. 'Aorken usin1 the convenience surance." . these policies ~ade up only 2~ of ~nters developed by financial in· With this policy, a customer -gets sales. It is predicted that they will be st1tut.1ons. pure insurance and invests the dif-greater than 25~ of sales in l 9S., Banks wiU be natural vehicles for ference. Money-that would have MacDonald says. . life insurance sales, MacDonald earned a rate of return under a whole MacDonald concedci that· as the rt!&intains. He finds it amu iqa that life policy of around four percent is placed into. higher yi~tdina invest- ment areas.""· Though traditionalist$ in Alabama ooce introduced him. as "the anti- Chrut of the insurance industry," MacDonald insists that be is only movini with economic trends. Try-ina to push whole-life policies today, he says, is like tryina .. to sell Vqomatics in a Qwsinart society ... Airlines -~et pass~nger reccir<:f NEW YORK (AP)-The nation's airlines carried a record 318 million passenaers in 1983, an 8 percent increase over the ~vious year. and the ind ustry posted its best safety record since the stan oftbejet qc, the Air Transpon Alsociation says. Scheduled ·airlines also broke re- cords for air carso, U.S. mail carried aild .. revenue passenser miles" -the number of payina pu1engcn per mile, the Washington-based ·trade sroup said in iu annual rcpon. The airlines showed an opentiQa profit of.$310 million on revenue of S39 billion, afttr three years oflosscs that neared SI .S billion, the AT A said in the report ~y. However. became of hilb inlCtCSl peylDCnts OD lbci:r heavily mortlMl'd fleets. tbc airlines combined ti.a a act. boUom-li.ne lkm of S 188.1 million ia 19'3, down from 1982's ·disastrous net Jou of S9 I 5.I million. -The difference belv."eeD operatina and net results is tbat 'lbc former n opesatina expenses ablrlcr.ed ~· tick.et revenue. Tbc net results m- clude 'peyments for taus a.ad unere&t · on money borrowed to fimna: multi millionedollar jetlinen. Spcakina Wednesday before a mectina of the Orange Coµnty . ·chapter of the International Associa- tion for Financial Planning, M~ Donald warned that too many people in the insurance business act as if ''any cbaJllt is for the worse." The revolution shak.ina the industry is likely to leave them "drownina in their own inertia," he added, if they don't respond to the realities of Ooat~intcrcst rates and a continu-lllillY"~nliDI infijtiona:ty Pi~ Consumers are not the dumb recipients of inferior products that many in the industry ~vc them to be, MacDonald said. Whole life insurance polices were once accepted by the public because they offe~ a good deal when inflation sdycd .. Bued OD rciults dm\Qa tJ:le = I moaths of 1984. the opaatiDg ·ta year coWii itiida « uceecs s1-~,,._ ' billion. ... aid AT I\ Cbainn.111 Paul - I~tius. .. tftn net profits, aff.ec:icd by nsina COltl indudina incn:ued . interest expenses. will 6e far bdow th.at ficUre and far below the 5 percen.t net profit aWsin of U.S. ilMlustry." ln 19u the profit marsm - revenue minm all costs uad P9Y9 menu-was o.a pcn:QL In 1982 it was a ~tive 2.0 pe:rcnL . ... tokai Bank Announces . . . ----- ·Bonus #1 We'll give you 1h% of.your in- stallment loan amount as a bonus. '>b.J asn apply 1t toward your first ~. ex take rt an cash Say, tor exartiple, you .~ $15,000 Right <tNiff, your S75 ahead! Free and clear! Shopping tor a car, home improvement lonus #t We'll g~ you a rate that's Vt% b(low oor regular installment loan rate~ you arrange for automatic payments from .a Takai . ex personal ? Toka1 Bank ha:S all the right anS'NCfS c pet1t~ rates Personal attmtion Quick dec1s1ons. Terms tailored to your ~· And our Doubl~ Bonus .. ·. a Tdk.ai Bank exclusive c~ to us for the foN<ost 1oan you're loolong for. Come ~ soon, though Our Doub~ Bonus offer ends on ~t. 30, 1984. ~~~ IDKAIBANK ~ · OF CAUR>RNIA ..__ lht 'WClf1dwide HUntlngton~ (7'14) 963·5651 tngllwood (213)67<4~ Newport kach (114) 646-5064 HCrmoM leech Pasadena ,..,.Def My (213) 823-:9281 • lldottdo lach . (213) 373.9509 Sen Frlhdlc:o <'41S)~ . ..,.*CltY' • ~~<213).112:..u-~Q..--....---:--(818) S70=6390-~ ....___..;;~~.s1~~· ., • • , I • • • On ~~ the ... • ,• ' Name i ~er Ind 1111 Latz ~er ow $f oNA i LIL o pfX t Nt~~R' ~:,~~wt i~rman N I lnl: I ~v lnvHt Ion Pict A lffn lrx; _ 4 ~Yin 1.30C>f t al'let>Svc oPl>erl ~~cme~~ ~II Ed ~.SOof beftM>n• ~~$Ptr 1 ffiasur'1C ' 4 MvenLE n S Sonat WH AT AMEX DID NEW YORK (AP) Aug. 2 AM £X LEA Of RS • ,, ••• ~ • t GoLo Quo T£ s MET ALS Quons That· s ~n ap,,t description of both business and~ · business people along.the Orange Coast. To keep track of where companies ar going G\nd which people are helping them get ther .. just wat h ·er ditLlne· -everyda tn the Bustnes sectionofyourn w DlilJPjlDt ----~~ . , .J ,. Dana Hills cyclist throws away.skis, w\ns pursuit event - By BOWAaD L RANDY ._..... ...... ~ CARSON -He gave up skiing and a possible gold m~l in the Wanter Games to emerge as the· individ1tal pursuit bicycle racina champion of the XXJllrd Olympic Games. • Steve Hegg gave notice ofthif\a.s to come when he set an Olympic record In bis first appearance Monday, then continued to win as he cut down rider after rider to emerge with the gold medal Wednesday at Cal State Domi- nauez Hills, here. ~· The Dana Hills resident defeated ~.Rolf Golz of West Germany for the -aold with teammate Leonard Harvey • : : Nitz capturing the bronze. • .. It's very nca~ to win;• Rea said. -.. My grand kids can look bac\ and .know I was theJuy lo. win the first track gold med in cyclina for the United States. .. I had a· hard tjme sleeping last niaht I bad a slow motion dream that I was makiti& the best run of my life in a downhill ski run." • When he was competing in skiing be defeated downhill gold medalist Bill Johnson several times. But when :! e took up cyclina for · training .. • purposes and found he could be -oompetitive, U.S. Coach Eddy ';• Borysewicz told him he could count on one band bis chances in cycling. He also told him it would take both '' ~hands and both feet in slciin.g. "I di~'t come here ~h1!1kl!'~ I . would win the gold~dal in and1v1d- ual P.ursuit," Hegg admitted. ''Now we have a real aood chance in team -~pursuit and Harvey wants a gold :.,.medal and heck, I'll take another one .. •too" • .. Golz told him after the race he wouldn't have won had the race been hcld1o Germany. "I thouaht that was kind of rude of • ... him, but I told him this is ·Los -Angetes, not Oermany:· -Heu started cycling five years aao " 111• ano credi&.s his father Edward as the .. • onewbosgot hir moovated. "He.iot •: ... me out of bed every mo{nina at 6 :::. o'clock to train and he helped a lot. :::! "The fans really helped out there today." · Hegend-Nitz will ride on the four- . man1J.S. team pursuit squad that ' btpn competition tOday. Stne Beg & Yea fan _ride - • I * ill"., Piii THURSDAY AUGUST 2. 1984 •m1tr.ade wide receiver Preaton DenMrd to BuH•lo. C2. ====::t. ............. wltfl Twine. C2. Trouble Rhead? ~· pololsts looktrigf orward toSpatnafterroutofGreece By ROGER CARUON Ot ... Olly .... atalf MALIBU -Every United States water polo pt.yet agreed as be prepared for these Olympic Games that first~ round foe Spain would rate as a loaicaJ participant in a medal round game. And Coach Monte Ni~kowski did Wednesday, after h.is te~m's 12-S triumph over Greece in the opener. the snuallon goes even deeper than tha1: . ' -Anuming the US and Spain advance to the medal round as t~e top two teams from Qroup B. they•u carry wtth them into the second week's action the results of their particular first-round' encounter. · Jn other words. if the United States advances as the No. I .team f~om Group I} with a victory ovc:r Spain, the , Amcncans will be two points up on the Spanurrds, as will the No. I entries from Group A and C. · Every wm carries two points with it. a tic is worth one point and a loss 1s no points. When the final medal rou.nd . game has been played, the team with the most points is the 1old medalisL U.S. do~sBradl. Jo-4 : MALIBU -It -wa another ~ for the United StateS water polo team this monuna. here at Pcppetdmc University before 5.000 faM. but a , second-half rally ignited thC Amcncans to a UM victory over Brull 10 send them mto Fndafs . 'contest with Spain ¥ti.th a 2-0 rcoord . . S~n also advanced with an unblem11hed mm afteraeHingpas1pe kyGrccce.12-9mapmetiedat. 8 'in the fourth Quarter. Ml.\nucl Esu.ane soored ix goals fbr Spam. ii v1~ ham t S in two pmes hwas2-2at halfbmewath theU.S game slowed b)' a 2-for,.l I performance from the fiefO.includ1ns .fwo lost chances on 6-on-.S snuat1ons. . Peter Campbell. the Universny H.i&h l)f'Oduct· on the U.S. squad. was instrumental in both ofttte Americans· first-half pl • driving and passi_ns off to Terry Schroeder for an easy shot from the f11J1t tn the first period, then ~g "'itb .a nice pus to Gary Figueroa in the s.econd quarter with the U.S. a man up . -By ROGER CAIW50N Whether Nitzkowski's gold-medal favorites haa thai on the1~ mi.ods. or if th~ were just tryina to get used to anticipation. It feels good to set away with a win." competing tn an Olympic Games for the first t,!me since · Looking toward Fnday's major confront.atioo •itb 1972. one thing was cenain in their 12-S victory over Spain before another sellout crowd at Pe~ine Greece before 5,000 fans -the U.S. and must e:A.ecutc University. Nitzkowski was impressed with.Spain s bCltll better. of 19-goals., but also noted that the Spanianb are without ~Spain rolled in its opener with a 19-12 victory over their top aoalie for the Olympic Games with an e:ye injury. Braiil, bursting to a 5-1 lead m the first 3¥• minutes and "W~ understand he may never play again," wd had a nine-goal effort from Manuel Estiarte, conside~ by Nitzkowski, "and that's really a blow for them." manr, as the world's best ~ooter. The big question for Friday will be whether the U.S. 'We bad thcol'portunitics," said Nitzkowski. "Figgie can put a lid on Estiarte. ·(Gary Figueroa) m1ssed two cripples and we bad a couple "You're not going to hold · "cautioos Nitzkowski. of one-on-nobodys. · "You just try to ~uce his output. bis team was sdecied "But it didn't surprise me. Jt's our 6!$t Olympic game to match out with .the teams we· playing. Tbey·ve got since I 972 and it took some time to settle down." Estiarte and one of the most ex · Qff.en.scs in the !!!~~~~~~:;;;~~Sc;broeder ~ an ~ u.yi~:~·~· ;;~~==~~'.:::=~=;~i:~:ilUi~ik~~1 .. We've been in the village'(USC).for a-week With a lot·of ~-... VoLLEYBALL U.S.te•m • survives big scare By BOWARD L. BANDY .,_... ...... o.ltr Not LONG .BEACH -When the U.S. women's vollevball team turned it on Wednesday niiht. il was all over' for the Brazihan team· in action of the XXIJlrd Olympic Games at Long Beach Arena before a scllQut crowd of 12,033. A .... sluggish U.S. team Jost the first two games to the BraziJians, then scttJed dowD' to win the next two, sending Jhe match into a fifth and deciding game. The scores were I 2-I 5, l-0-15, I S..S, 15-S, lS· 12. · ·•we 1ust turned it on," said leader Ao Hyman who had 22 lcilJs during the match, mainly with the setting of Westminster's Debbie Green. "We have been in tight corners before but our coach has prepared us well.·ll's kind of funny when we get in a situation like this, we seem to always play better. "AU of the tcam!.arc tryinf to key on us and cut us clown. Jf 'm not woric.ina hard to generate the power, maybe that was the case tonight in the first two games, " said H~man. .; "I think this was a good test for us. We needed it to build our confidence under·prcssure. We had to fight and go for it_ We needed this match. It was a positive experience for th,e players,"" Coach Arie Selinger said ... "We turned tbjngs around and (Pleue eee SCARE/CS) McKibboil .shuns Olyinpic pressure Sculling coach has put Games in perspective ~ By ROGER CARLSON -·oe ... a..,,...._ LAKE CASlT AS -The prcuurcs -built-in and otherwise -have occn mounting on Unilrd Sta\Q roWc:rs since the XXlllrd Olympiad began on Monday. but Tom McK.ib- bon is one individual who's enjOyinJ himself. Tom McKibbon. a Newport Beach resident and an assistant U.S. women's ·scuJJing coach. bas a back- p-ound which includes four years at umg 1Jcach State, national cham- pionships iruin&Jcs ( 1968), doubles ( 1969 and '70), tlie EuropeJn Cham- pionships go~d medal in 1969:-the Royal English Henley doubles gold medal in 1970, I I ycan on the national coactring staff and five times an Olympian . His rower, Joan Lind, came home with the silver medal at the Munich Games in 1976 and he's been in- ducted into the First Interstate Bank's Rowing Hall ofFame for his efforts in men's doubles. Despite bis success. Mc.K.ibbon bas never really found'mucb recognition. at least in the United States. Io Europe -well. that's another matter. Like water polo, soccer and even team handball, rowing is very visible. · When McKibbon teamed with John Van Blom in 1970 he was an instant celebrity, because it .was the fint ti me an American entry bad..cver .won the coveted Henley crowa in an event that began an l839. ~·we reaUydldn't know what iffelt like {tObc a cefebnty) unttf we were an Vienna, .. he sat-s. ''There was front page coverage in Austria. Mexico City and MOSCQw," recalls Mc.K.ibbon, 46. "And. it's very P<>pular with the Australians. It's our culture, I guess, the ~ bucks.·· Along with big bucks are big winners in American culture and McKibbon admits the dilemma, but be bas things in ~pcctive. The coverage is here. now, WJ.th the 1984 Olympic Games in prop-css: but there arc pitfalls. because success seems to bejudaed on the number of- aold medals won. . · ..There's a lot of pressure on our rowers because America wants a winner," he says. 0 lf you're an Olympian, but just average (as an Olvmpian) they don't want to bear it.~ (Pleue eee llc~1'/C3) . . GrUeli~gpenta~hlon .rea~heS-conclusi~n tt1adale, - , · l d about 30 seconds on my nin. but at tellyou,wereallywantedthegold.lt's ·M1JJJin ~et Italy s Ma&a a captures in tvidual title; ~a~n·t good enough to earn a bron~e ircat to win a me<1a1 when you 1ive - ds '} d ind1v1duafly. BunhewholcOlymp1c IOOperccntandwcdid.I'mproudto d I ----Unite tates team gets Sl ver me al idea IS to give your best effort and I be at American." . e ens 9e -------gave m> best. Sweden had the toua,hest luck on • By HOW AR. 0 L. HANDY "The JOY and pleasure I got out of at closi"' day with one shooter d1~ chute some 40 yards from the fioish wa& in my teammates· performances. qualified for st\oot1ng twice at the ._... .. t11eo.11y,... hne when the Swede faltered, to "win We arc three men competing alf our same target. Then in the 4.000.meter It was a scene easily reminiscent of • the individual title. Rasmuson made lives apanst each other and we came run. Rasmuson. who had held the a battlefield with boches strewn all it to the finish hne to place second. together to win the silver medal. individual lead most of the compeu- ovcr the premises at the finish line of -then rol1apsed. "I feel like it 1sa shared victory. It is tton. staggered and hit 'I post in the 1he 4.000.meter run as the three-day, The U.S. had a good da> and really bagger than the three of us. We chute 40 yards from the fimsh hne five-event Modem Pentathlon con-finished second to the Italians an the were wanning for our country. We and fell behind Italy's Masa.la. Carlo ~eluded Wednesday. team cQ.._m~tit1on Grcg Storm won won the medal for alJ Amenans. Mas.sullo fimsbed third in the indi- The Olympic event at Coto de Caza die shooting with a 198 out of 200 people l don't ~ven know. And ifs a v1dual compellt1on with the another was ended wnh therunaftercompeu-mark in the morning and finished beautiful feelln~" said Storm. ltallan. Pierpaolo Cristofori, I Ith. tion in horseback rid in~ fencing (St fifth in the· individual competition. "This is one Of the moments 1n my Tbe run was a handicapped e"cnt ma~es), swimming (300 meiers) Greg Losey was 13th and Dean life that will be comma back to me. with the point ~dtr going first d and shooting. Glenes.k placed 18th overall. Involvement an spons helps you to others handicapped to theeittent that Italy's Daniele Masata ovcnook "l tied my lifetime best in shoot-understand your$CIC--. 1fthey won the race. they would wan Sweden's vante Rasmuson in the ina." Storm said. "I've improved Losey wa$ brief in his feelinas. "I'll • the,indlvidual competition. · U.S. gets first G_reco~Roman wrestling g~ld medSl American llar waved apin in triumph at Ca State OOminauez HillusSteve Heu won a aold medal in cyclina. whale Steven Fraser of the Unattd St.a~ won tbe Olympic sold medal in the l 98'~EK>und (90-k!lo) G~Roman wrtithnl compettt1on to aJve the tiome team 18 total aot~ me.dais after Wtdnesday't compctt· ti on. • . In o'ther medal final :- • Rom~n11 9COrcd two' pcrfe(t 10s in ttlel>ptJonal exerci '?n rpmc to a Id medll in tht Olympic women's team umnasti competition at Pauley. Pavilion The Unuctl States, with thtte I won the Mlver. it finish ever in the event. China fini hed third for the bronze. · •.At the Anaheim Convention Center. Fra r defeated Romania' lhc Matci on pointl. Fra r became the fint-tvcr Amerkan medalist in Grtt<>-Roman wrestling tfy orina the last point in a 1-1 uc. Earber, Italy's Viecnio Maenu )YOn the sold 1n the Olymp1 106- pound C•S-lolo) category. Wce>n·Kte Kim of South Korea defeated Sweden• Kcntolle Johansson -in the final of the C \6"1-W'&nd (62-kUo) compcut10n. • •At the Prado 'Retrrauon rcJ Malcolm oo r n Bmain• finf aold medal afthe Gam • takana firu f')la f n th I pu: lhrtt 1t1on . ... sma11·bore nflc compcttuon. 'Switzerland' Daniel Nipkow too the silver medal while another Bnton. Alistair llan. won the brom:c. •Daniele Ma la WOil.itai ·~ • .ond cold medal of the Olymr-1cs. tLIOnt the m~m pentatlilon with a bunt of peed in the final event, the cro ..country, that outdt ianccd vantc Rasmuson otSwcdtn. · Ra mu n tttcd for the Iver an the event. MIDAL TOTALS ~ awerdM ll'W'OUOll WtclMMav'\ t#MI ti IN HM SU1W1wr ()l'(fTllNo wfttl '11Ufttrt, .... ...... ~ ,_, ..... ,.,........., Wftl~y ~ Ila!¥ ()fMt lltil lll •u.lf s ..... •tmeflla ,,andt "*1Mdl ... 0 I I T ll ' t 1' • l • J l • I' l I • 1 ' I 1-4 • J . ~ I J . ' O" l • • . \., ' . • • • l I I • 1 D D • • a • ' ; • I ' ,. . .• . . Dennard traded f~oDl Rams to Bills for defensive back V ckovlch, Tribe eln Tigers G rg Vcato~ld1 bl sted t\\00 solg • home ruiu to k ahe combined lh~·hat mtthtn of &eve Farr and reliever Ernie Ca nd le d evclnnd to .4-2 ,;1tlory O't'cr Detroit Wedncsd ) night. ~ ukovich hit hi first home otlhc nil.ht in the $CCIOnd ann1n after · romAPd te hort top l'om eroo• cfropJ)C'd hii. roul fl y along th l ft field hnc. Vukovich then slammed ~2 p11.cb into the upper deck in rigt!t field for his foU11h home run 1n tht st\cnth 1nnin ofTTigcrs' starter Dan Petry, l4a5 .• The Rams tntdcd vtteran wide ~ EiJ ce1\"CJ' PrcSton Dennard Wcdne$day to the c • Buffalo Bills for defensive back Chm Wilham\ and an undisclosed future draft cho1ce. Dennard. 28, sianed as a fn:e aa~nt out or the University of New Meitico in 1978. started 64 pmc an sut years for the Rams and became the teams ninth· leadina receiver all~timc with 189 rcccptions for 3.068 yards. last year, Dennard c:aoAbt 33 ~s5CS U>r 465 }'ards •.nd ff vc touchdowns in l lstartini a ianQlent-.. , In other mcrican wauc action Wednesday, f oronto gamed a game on the Tige~ f Dam110 Garcia snapJ>(d a l·l tic with a 1 run-~orins sinJle m the llcventh • innin& and p1nch·hitter Eral• Wbitt blasted a two-run homer m the~ig.hth 10 pace the Blue Ja>tto . ' a 4-1 victory over Kansas Cit>""· .. Cal Rlpkea Jr. and Wayne Gron clouted two-run homers and Storm Davit scattered seven hits Wilhams, 25, was a second-round draft choice by the B1Us in 1981 oui ofl.ousiana State Un1vcn1ty and bas played both free safety and cornerback dunng h1 lhttt ycan wtth the club. Last season. the ()..(), 197- pounder started five pment free safety and had three uitercept1ons last year. Vad.o•tcla 10 &h1more·~ 7-2~in o,crTeus The Rams acquired W1lhams with hopes that he will fill in for AJl-Pro free safety Johnny Johnwn, who broke two bones in his ankle last week and 1s CApec.ted to m iss most 9fthis season. . ./ .. Salomt> Baroja'I combined with two relievers 10 scancrnine h11sas Seattle stopped Minnesota's winning streak at five pmes with a 5-1 "1ctor'). The loss also cut the Twins' lead overlhc Angels to Just ahalf-gamc an the AL West ..• Pbll Nlekro won his 13th game and Jltn Griffey'• three-run homer highlighted a live-run fir'\l innmg as &he New York Yankees coasted to 7-3 win over Milwaukee. Nielt.;ro. 13-S. scattered fjve hits m po ting his 281 st career victory A tremendous three- run homer by Ron Klnle m the third inning sparked the Chicago White So;\ to a 5-3 victory over Boston. Chicago took a 4-0 lead in the third on J(jnJe's homer off Bob Ojeda (9-8), which h~nded on the left field roof. The two-out blast scored Harold Baines, who had singlt'd, and Gree Lazln1kl, who walked. The Rims stdl have five veteran W'lde receJ\ ers al their Cal State Fullerton tram1n~ camp. Hefln Ellard, . George Fanner, Drew Htll, Otis G rant and Gordon Jones arc all compelln& at the position. Muhammad out lndeflnltely . Layoff doean 't hurt Martina SANTA ROSA -Los Angeles [iJ Ra1ders backup wid.c receiver Calvin •II• Muhammad. who suffered a broken bone NEWPORT, R.I. Martina E3 Navratilova, refreshed by a three-week, post-Wimbledon vacation, won her 39th consecutive match Wednesday m the first in his left shoulder blade dunng practice Monday, will hJcely be on tnJure,d reserve when the NauonaJ·FootbalJ League club opens the rcguJar season round ofa women's tournament here. Sept. 2. . Muhammad suffered the injury ma tratning camp cot)lSlon Monday with linebacker Matt M1Uen. NavratjJova, ranked No. l in the world and seeded No. l an th1s tournament. defeated South Afncan Jennifer Mundel, 6-1, 6-2. SbereQ..uired only 39 minutes - to d1Spose of her left.handed opponent. . · Navratilova started fast and faltered onl} brieny apiost Mundel, whom she defeated in stnught sets in the Wim~ledonquaperfinajs lasJ.¥..cai. ~2\'Qll.bCI ~ two servlCIC games at fove anobrolce Mundel in the fourth and sixth games. Dr. Roben "Rosenfeld told Raider officials Muhammad would be "out at least five-to-six weeks," according to a team spokesman. The Raiders report no news 10 the cases of three mi56tng Pro Bowlers, as well Navratilova, who is 129-2 since January 1983. broke Mundel rwicc in the second set. • lwhacker-~ to ass a physical ex.am and is s111l 1)9.ndering .retuement; ughi end Todd Chn~tensen never reponed to camp and hopes to renegotiate his $235,000 saJary. and defensive end Howie Long has now been out of camp three days Thjrd-sccded Wendy TurnbuJI of Australia also advanced to the second round by beating Ann Hendrick.sson, 6-3, 6-4. (at $1 ,000 p_er) in an attempt to renegotiate his $175,000 salary. Chnstcnsen and Long were first-time All-pros last season. Dodgers fading _quic~ly . San Diego applies finishing touches to a sweep, 4-3 SAN DIEGO (AP) -The San Diego Padres' Kevin McReynolds has quietly become a one-man wreck- ing crew against the Los Angeles Dodgers, climaxing a 7-for-10 series with a 4-for-4 performance Wednes- day njg.ht. McReynolds drove in three runs with a bases-loaded single, a solo homer, and run-sconng double lD the eighth as San Diego swept the three- game senes with a 4-3 ¥\Story Wednesday mdlt "I've always hit well against the Dodgers m the mmors and the majors:· said McReynolds, who is hining .462 against the Dodgers this year with four homers and 12 runs batted in. "I'm 10 a streak now hke I was in Las Vees last year," McRey.nolds added. ' Every ume I go to the plate I feel like I'm fOtng to hit the ball hard somewhere.' The quiet outfi elder's loud night helped San Diego win their fifth consecutive game and eighth in their last nine outings to maintain tpcir 811? game lead over Atlanta 1rrfhe Na- tional league West. The Dodgers. meanwhile. are a distant 13 games back. ''I hope to tell you I'm happy." smiled Padres Manager Dick Wil· hams. "They're a loose bunct1 of guys and I'm not surpn sed wtth anything the(re doing now They 're havmg fun. Alejandro Pena 11-6. got the first two outs an the eighth inning before Carmelo Ma rt 1 ne1 s1 ngled . McReynolds then lined Pena's first p1tcb to the center-field fence to 5COre Man1nez. Cra11,, ufferts. 1-3. pitched I 'fl mntnfS in relier of Ed Whitson to gam the victory. with Rich Goss.a,ae re- cording the final two o uts for his 21st save. Mike. Sc1oscia ended a 52-tnmng strina dunng which the Dodgers had failed to score an earned run when he led ofT the second inning with has second home run to put Los Angeles ahead, 1-0. SCJosc1a's bla~t also ended a string of 40\'J shutout innings by the Padres pitchen. . McReynold tied the game with a bases-loaded sinale in the bottom of second. then put the Padres on top. 2· I, m the fourth wtth ht 15th homer. The Dod en nt ahead 3-2 in the MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS Amerkan LM9Ue WEST DIVlSION W L ~ct GB Min""° la AMlts Cnlc.oo KanMH City Seattle Oaktanci Tu .. So4 so 5" So4 SI 514 , Sl So4 416 l l'> so 56 477 5 SOSI 4636 4604441 45 62 42 I 10'n Detroit Toro11to B11tlm0<e Boat Oii Ne"" York Mllwauk" Clevela11d EAST DIVISION 71 34 60 4S sa " S4 so SI S2 47 60 •S SI WICIMMlars Scwes Afteills 6, 0.ktalld 4 Saallle s. MIM1$0le 1 8attlmore 7. TuH 2 Clevl4end 4, Detroit 2 TOf'Ollto 4 Kansa' Cllv I New York 7, Mllw1ukee l Chicago S, Bo''°" 3 TM1r1 Gamfl 676 571 11 547 13''> s 19 16"1 49S " '39 2S 437 25 Mln""°la (Viola 11·91 al AMlls (SlalOll 3·5), (II) Cleveland (8lvleve11 10·41 at O.tro1t (Morris 13·71 M1lwaultH ICandiotti 1·11 al New l'orll <Guldrv 9·1) C11) Fr1dlrs G- MIMHOI• at A11911•, (n) Clevlta lld al New Y0<k. 2, (l·nl Ka11sH v 11 Oetroal (nl TexH 1 8ostOll. 1111 Tor011to at Ba111mor1, (nl Chica at M•lw1ukH. Cnl Seattle al Oakland. 2. (I nl Natlonal LHeue WIST DIVISION W L Pct. GI San Oleoo 64 42 604 Atlanta 56 S 1 S23 8''1 °"9ln Sl 56 411-13 Housl011 SO SI 463 IS Clnclnr111t1 •S 61 425 19 San Fra11elsco 40 63 3U 22' > EAST DIVISION ChlcaQO •1 '4 New York 59 43 Phl,!adell>fl•• S6 ... St. Louis · S3 S3 MonlrHI SI S3 Plttsduron 46 4 1 WIClnesclr;'s ktt"IS San 01990 4 Dedew1 3 St Louis 11 New Yon. 7 Ch•UOO S. Pfl leci.!Pflla 4 Pittsourgn 4 ~trHI o CitlCIM alt '· Sall Fra11C1SCO 3 Atlenta 6. HOUSIQll 5 • TMaV's Gamfl Sii S71 1 S3I 41' soo 11~ •llO 9 ) 430 'i4 MontrHl CSm•th 9·1111 Chicaoo C~utcl1f· t\_7·1) New York t01rling 10 31 at P 1ttsbvroh (0eLIDl'I 4·7), (n) Sell FrallCIKO (Krultow l ·I) at C1nc1n· 1\1111 (PHIOf'I 3·SI. (II) Phll110t11>111t (lt1wlev 3·J) at SI LOU!i • tCoJC 5•1), 111) Frtc1ars Games l>Metrl ., CThclMetl, (11) Montrul •I Chlcego New York a t Plllsl>urOll, Cnl Sift Frenclaco " At•ente, <11> fl'hlledelPh•a ti St Louis, C11I $en 01"0 at HouSIOft, Cn) MAJOR LEAGUE LRADl!RS Amertcan LMtue 8A TTING (250 et bait) Wlnfleld, N- York, JSO; Matt11111tv, New Vork, lAO. Hrbelt, Mlnn.aota, .331; ltk*lfl, ktllmore, .ll4, EMurrev, 11111more, 1 ~17 RUNS· Ow£ven•, losron. H . RHlflderson, Oekl111e1, 74. ~fleCi CifYNM, 7G,i MoMl>V, TorOlllO, 70, RIP'klft, e.thl'TIOA, .. RBI. Ktnemaft, Oekt.nd, '11 EMYrrav, 8tU "*!i 11, AOh •· tttt, 7', lt1tt. 8ott0l'I, n , ArmH, 8oaton, 14 HITS ~1111191V. New Voti11, IJI. ltl!M<tn. 8a1 mott, 111; Gerda , Toronto, Ut E.1&1w, &oston, lt4 Wlnl•t4CI, N-Yori!, ID OOUal..ES lAParr stl, Tnn, 2' Coat• c;a, Totorito, 'l7, ""-'' l'tiv, New Von, 17, c-•· s..11 , i., Llmll'I. Ottr°'4, 26 Tlt!A..E.$ MolMv, T• •o, U Calllm, TorOflto, 11. UP•fltw, ToronlO, t, o,.. , S..toe. •. KG1tnon, Detr91t, •• RLew. ClllCHO. • ., ... "'-.. '""°''· • Lat'lll•IOll, Seellle. 120, HQU9h, TtitH. I IS Siieo, TOf'OlltO, llS; Nifjlro New Yorlt., 112 $AVES. Qu~n-. KanDs Cllv. ?7. "Fir'!lln Mll-ukee 23, Caudm, Oeki.na 21. Hernal!Oez Oetr04t 21. R01v1s. M111111· lOla, 19 Nanonal Lueue BATTING (250 11 bal•I Gwv1111, Sall O~ .344, SalldOerll Chieago, 331, Oer111«, Ch•ceoo. 319, Cruz, HoultOll, 313, 8renlv San Frallci~ 312 RUNS Sandberg •• ChlCaQo. 7S, Samuel, Pnlledlte>flla 7l Wlll(i111' Sa11 01990, 71, MurPhv, Atlanta, 69, Oerll•er Chlcaoo, 6.1, Gwvnn. San DieOo, 68 RBI GCarter, MOlllrHI. 71, JOaVll, Chicago "· SC11mldt, Phlllldefphl1 6.1 Murohv, Atlanta, 6S. Sandberg, Chicago, 6S HITS Gw'i'nn, Sen Diego, 1S2, Sandber11, Chicago, 143, Samuel, PnlledelPhla, 136; Wvn111, Pittsburgh, 126, Cruz, Hou•t9n, 12S DOUBLES Hubt>ard, Atlanta; 7', Ral11· n, Mo111rea1, 24, Sandberg, Chicago, 2A, GCarttr, MonJrffl. 23; S.mu.t, Phlledel· e>flle, 13 TRIPLES. Sandber11. Chlcaoo, 1,, Samuel, Phltedelphla, 14, Cruz, Housl011, I; Oore11, HouslOll, I; Gwv11n, S.11 OlegO, I, McG", StLoul5, 8 HOME RUNS MurPIW, Ati.nta, 24, GC.rter, Molltrnt, 21, Sdlmldt, Phlllldel· l>hla, 21, MarsNll, Dedeen, 11, Straw· berry, New York, 17 STOt..EN 8MES Samue4, Phii.dell>llla, SO; Wlfflns, S.11 Dleoo • .U; Ral~, Moll· tree l, 3', Redu1 Cl11elnnatl, 36, O.r11ler. Clllc;aoo, 34 PITCHING (9 dec1~0115l: Oarl•t'lll New Yor11, 10-1, J 27, Soto. ClllCIMali, 11·•. 3 n. Orosco, N-York, 1·3, 1.99. PPerez, Allenl•. 10-4, 4.32; WhltM>ll, S.11 D•eeo. 12·S, 3 46 STRIKEOUTS Goodell, N-York, 165, v.i.a.ue1a, °""""' 157; Rva11, Hov•ton. 127, Soto. Cl11el1111at1, 119, Carll011, Philad414· Pnla, 112 • SAVES Sutter, StLouls, 27, Holland, Phll1ci.tph1a, 22. LeSm1th, Cnlcaoo, 22, Gouage, S.11 Doeoo. 21, Oroaco. New YC)(tt 71 AMERICAN LEAGUE Aneeili 6, A'i 4 CALtFOANIA OAKLAND C1rew lb Schoflld" Lvn11 cf OeCnc5dh Downing II Pettis ct B111IQUZ rf Grich 2b &00111 c PICCIOIO 3t> ab r II bl 1b r II bl 4 0 I 0 PhllllPUS 4 0 1 0 l O O O Lenafrd lt> • I 2 O • 1 2 0 Morgan 1t> 3 0 O 0 • 0 2 I Weg,,.r u 0 0 0 O 4 0 2 1 Boehle lb I I 1 2 1 0 ~ 0 IC ll'IV!Tln lb 3 0 1 0 3 1 1 0 OHlll u 0 0 0 0 3 2 I O Muronv cf 4 I O O l I I 1 Burgh, dh 2 0 0 0 4 0 0 2 Alrnc>ll If 4 1 I 0 Heath rf 4 0 I 2 Tetti.tOll c ) 0 0 0 E"•allC 0000 M01vls Ph 1 0 O 0 Jl 4 10 S T .. lls U 4 7 4 ~· by I""'""' ~ 110 210 010-' Oelllalld 020 000 020-4 G1me W1n11111g RBI -PicclOI0.(21 E -Sch<MHrld OP-Oakland 2 L08-Calilorrua • Oaklllnd s 28-L \IM, L1nsford 38-Lansford HR-600tll 121. Boehle 141 S9-AlmOl1 131 S-lk>onl Schofllld ·~ c...,..,..· H A E9' H SO Jlltln W 6·9 1 1·3 4 l 3 1 LS.~1 I 1·3 I I I I Oeldlncl Krueverl...7-i-'37·) • • • s 1 COllrOY 1·3 • I I 0 I 7 1 1 Atherton S Conroy oltdled 10 4 otllef"S Ill 5th 1 • WP-t<rueger 2 T-1S4 A-lt,9" . NATtONAL. LEAGUE l'•dNI 4, OOdOtn l LOS ANO•LH SAN 01100 atlrllbl abrll.,. 4 I 2 0 WIOOlftl 2b J 0 0 0 4 0 0 I Gwvnn rf 4 O I O 2 O I 1 Garvey lb • O 2 I I 0 0 0 Ntlllff 3' 4 1 I 0 l OOO IC.ttlMOYc 4000 I 0 0 0 ~rtlru If ) I I 0 4 I 1 1 Mdtvlll cf 4 1 4 J J 0 2 0 Tmt11t11 n 3 0 O O 101 0 WNltoft' 2000 • • 0 0 """1rY Oft 0 1 0 0 J010 Leff 1111 1000 1 0. 0 4000 3 1 1 0 • ,. 2,. , .... ir.._ n 4 t • IClin .. ""*"' . Uil A..... tit ta --J oe... ..... 1111-• Game Winni,,. 11!81 -MdttVTIOld$ 191 E-ltfvf\"I, APeM. Wloo!M Alld«SOll DP-sa.. Dle90 J LOe-t..ol A~a S. S.11 D•toO I 2 nor..ux. A~. Mcll!eY'nOlds. HR-$CloKla 121, Cu take o er first In NL Eaat Angels hope to reg•in le~d Twins neXt after se es sweep trims. deficit to a half~game First place will be at sukt once again wften the Anaet ~ welcome the 'Mannc~ta Twins for the fint of a four-same ~ries toniiht at 7:30. The Twin~ own the lead in the Americat'l Leaaue West by a half·&ame following W~nesday'' loss to~ Snule, coupled with the Angeh • 6-4 victory over Oak.land, t!Vhich completed a series weep of the A's. DEL MAR -Pretcnsor, ndden by E Hoogie Drcdcr, o pened up a long early~ , lead and needed every inch of it to hold off the f ast-clos1 ng Private J ungJe at the wire to The Angels have the added ineentive of revenae after the Twins $wept them last weekend in the Mctrodome. frank Viola (11-9) faces Jim Slaton (3-5) in the opener o the series, which will mark the final time the two teams will !tt each other the remainClcr of the season w1n the Graduation Stakes Wednesday at Del Mar. By fin1sh1ng a head in front of Pnvate Jungle, Pretensor won the first race of his career and pve Drexler has first-ever stakes at this seaside ract track The favored Histonador, ridden by Chris McCarron, In W«tnesday's win in Oakland. Ansel outfielder Fred Lynn was one of the keys to the~ttack. Lynn, Al last a full-time player agam, says being on the field every day is the key to his recent hot streak. · "To sat when you're healthy, it'.$ hard to Jet the finished third another I¥• lengths back. · In his previous stans. the 2-year-otd colt finished fourth m a maiden race and fourth to Saratoga SiA an the Hollywood Juvenile at Holl ywood Ppk. rhythm going." said Lynn, who sin&led and doubled to score two runs in leading the Anicls to the victory over Televlalo~. radio TE&.aYl8ION Oakland. Earlier tn the year, Lynn was platoonina in the outfield a!ld batting primarily against right-handed pitchcn. Sin~ bJS return to full-time status, Lynn has raised his av~ back over the .260 mirk and went 8-for-13 qainst the As i n three aames. 1-2:30. 4-9, 9;30-11 p.m. -OL VMPIC GAma : Wo"*"'• basketball (U.S. VI. t<orM); 0bo~; cyellng; men'• gymnastlcs; fowlna; ~: ¥tater pOlo (U.S. ve. Brazil), Channel?. "I never doubted that I couJd bit them (Jcft-ba.nden)" said Lynn, ''but it•s tough to hJt them wben you don't play. I can hit any pitcher, l?_ut I've got to be in there every day. Now that I know I'm going to play. it doesn't 1114tter wbo they throw. When I do see a lefty: ifs no bia deat:• • Oakland's Bill.Krueger was the second left-handCT in 10 .a. attMt tour Chann9' lh 1be-Angck have. dcfeaJcd-"(oOJ.ttl¥ Jobn-aavc se. RADIO ·7:30 p.m. -8AIEUU.: Mlnnwota at Angell, KW>C(710). • . the _An,fe~s 71/J strong innings to pick -up bis S1xth victory apmsf nine defeats. "I know he (Krueger) can handle thts," said Oakland Man~ger Jac.~e Moore. "He JUSt had control problems today, and It s because he keeps worryirtt'-about his mechanics. But he should be out there worryu)g mo~ about pme situations. I have all the confidence in the wortd He'IJ be able lO"WOrtc-thiS'out.- ·r ' • FNOA~ITV 8·11 Lm., 1·2:30.-· 4-9, 9:30-11 p.m. - OL YMPtC GA.11£1. Channet 7. _..,_ ..•. _ lAs A&amltos WIOHISOA"C'S RESULTS tlOltl .i fl·ftltlht wal"lit"*W ,,,_.., l"IAST RACI!. 350 vards EHv Night <E Ga rcia I 6 40 4 40 3 20 Ser1om1" Bebe (P1u11ne) 1020 6.60 Mark 011 F1v0<1te IBroollsl 6 40 Al!oO raced C•Drlce CoPv. KIP l(jp Hoorav. Rich N Ouslv. Cllarmlt'lll Native, Two 111 Thi Tffl>ff, Naturetle, Sonic KIP. Time 1113 S2 EXACTA (7 I) peid S87.00. SECONO ltACE. 400 vards. Jll5 Bedulno (Ruiz) 11.00 3.40 3 00 Hv EHY Jtv (CardOll) 2..0 2.60 Co11tesH Copy (Zufall) 4.40 Also racld· Sofllv Into Summer, Ature Precloua, Offlca B Glrl Time 202' THIRO ltACE. 3SO v1rds Grave Yard Shift (Hartl 9 20 4 40 3.60 The R1mblit'lllarnbler CTrd sure) 4 40 l 40 Se>eed Doctor (Cardoll) UO Ati.o •acid l.olloorla, Ml11I Marcut, Sw"' Agony, EHV Jell Pride, Tlmelo RUN1roulld, 01111 II. S.wtooth. Time. 17'1 l'OUltTH ltACE. 350 nrd' S.mue4 Pta ICreaoerl S 60 2 40 2 40 lfiwerearlchman (8rooksl 2 IO 2 20 I Have II (Cardoza) 4.60 Al$0 rtCed Plullder N Gin. a. Sure True. All,Ex1>111ws Paid,~ Januerv, FresllO Bar 80. Paoe Ro.,..1, Nttive Quar· tar Time II 43 $l EXACT" (I ·9) palo snoo FIFTH RACI. 400 vard5 R1m1>1111"'av (Hartl 640 4 20 2.40 Toa•IMA(O.tomba) 3200 720 Tough GUVl tPaullnel 2 20 AllO raced KIDtV• TrMsure, Ramblln Nvml>h, Sams A~I. Mv Kltlv Glrl, Boin E 111 t10 Gem Time 2014 U IXACTA (6·1) paid '312.30 SIXTH lilACIE. 400 vards. Lad'I' Caballel (W1rd) 2010 S,40 360 No Polley Limit (lerdl 3 00 2.4() Lentv• Pollcv (Ha rtl 2 IO Allo raced Pauls Orcma11, Brockmeyer, Touch Of Good, Beoaro•as. Utt1e Miss Brooke Time 19 93 SEVllMlf'H 9'ACE. 3SO verd• Loise Ea~CrHverl 840 440 300 L.eot Black Bear I Treasure) I 20 S IO Ju1rnk• 0011 IP1lken1011) S 60 Also recld Hotabolt, Hot Stock, How· rich, BU9•1ou Miller, V11kOft R1mt>w. LHtr CharQe Tlmt 1711 u IEXACT'A (3·1> Daiei sn '° EIGHTH ltACI! 400 verd5. Muter SUn'Wner CT,..srl 4IO 280 240 A C1ndv Man.1CrH11er l '20 2 IO Krecti.tr Kas (Hirt) • 2 90 Also raced Ole11es OKar, Ima E•IJll Time If t9 n ~ta< Slit 17·1·4 1·314•4) Pll•d '3 17! 20 #1111 six wlMlne lidleta (s111 Mrsaal ,, Piek Six COftsolat•Ofl Piie! s 130 20 Ka)'elll• (McCarron> • 40 4 IO Fairtv Fur~s (Pl11eavl s 40 Also racect: Desir. Me Hot, TretewtllY Belle, Wind Walk, Min Or10011 Fiver. Bernoca, Vatet1Cla, l..ou Lou Bille, Anot~ Tootsie, 81111 t<tw"· Time 1 ll 4f S Fll•TH It.ACE. 1 111• m•lff Ward C ISll>olle) J7 00 2S 60 1160 B•I• The 8uclo (Pe«oza) 21 40 11 IO Crime Fr" (Mell) • 9 40 Atso raced. Edie's R...-, LI"'"'°"' L.Oo.H. Ill Naluol Form. TflumohanllY. Oevl111t Dane.er, .Mlkff Calico, Ruft The Galuy, Jolly Josh, SM Can Tome 1.~ IS EX.ACTA 13•4) Nld al.11100 SIXTH RACE. 4 fur~s Mlleorlle (Plllcavl 610 360 2IO FrellCh Melestv IMceerron> 300 2.60 While CkMJd (Snoemakerl 3 IO AIJC> raced Oalskv, Restaee. Shlrlev'1 Steve R., Savour. e11ck Gl1t1Pll Time: I 10 41 S. SE VI NTH ltACI. I II 16 ·mlln on turf Go Dancer (McCarr011) 4 40 2.IO 2 40 Pin Puller (Hawley) 4 00 210 Tiii Beto"" (C11t1111da) 3 00 Alao raced: PIHMnt Power. MHMr1. Invoke, Clrcie of St..i Time: 145 115 IS UlACTA 16·5> 1>11ld Ml SO U f"tCK SIX (t-2-11-3-4·4) i>alo '27,m.IO with five wl11111118 t~ ... (lhl horses) S2 PICJI Shi COllSCMallon Da:d U Sl.60 wllfl 13' WIMll'ICI tickets (nve horsat). •IGHTH RACE. 4 tuMt>nes Pre1tn50I' (OrHler) I 20 S-20 l 40 Prtvall JUltllle (Mell) 4 00 4 00 H storied()( (McCarr011l 2 IO Also raced Kev E11ecut1ve. Death TreD, Rlllht COii, Sliver Strike, A Ml Ml Gusti , M.J ., Delight Time 1 11 4/ S NINTH RACE. 1 lf14 mlllS. H~ar (PlllCeV) J 40 2 10 2 40 Jua11 8erref"t (Toro) , 4 20 3 60 Cal Ml Mister (Mini 3 40 Alao raced Home Court Rulll'ICI, Lot Portales, Frlvollu lmo, t<eno Hiii, lmPUlatve· Iv. A F ast Peace Time 1 43 2/S. • U IXACTA (4·0 Piie! $SO.SO Attenda11Ce: 14,576. Womtft'I teut'Nlmtnt (It..._,_,, IU.l flint It_. S'""'9.• Merline Nnratilova CU S) def J41nri•lef ~ tSOUth Afrlctl, •·I, •·2, Wendy Turfttlu!I IAustt'ali•) tlef AM HelldrkkHOll cu s ), •·l. , ........ Stc9lld lttulllf Slnlilta AMI Minier (Auslra •> def. Atvcla MoullOll (US J, 7•5, 4•4, Kim Stltl'W'ntll tu S.l cMI. Mtrctlla Mfiker (Netllttiendsl, 2•6, ,.,, , ••• LH Anlonootls cu s) dll LIH SHiii CU S ), 4··· 7•5, •·l wllfl 1~ wln111no Ucl\~~,;,..;rws=.:.>.:..· ---- MINTK ltACll. 350 v•rdl. lkt Thi VIiie CLt ckt'CI l 00 2 60 220 VII 8 .. 1.1x CRUIZ) 24 IO 10 60 Lark1 Freckle (Hermon> SAO Alao recld Stralto•c; ltoeket, Connlta AllMC(, Hurrefl FOf Me, ROCkll ••r Moon. Ouollcate Al, LocMI Alrnt CfllcX.J. F ... h/l"I Time, TllN llU U IXACTA (4 91 paid 17220 Alltnden<e S, 1'1 Del Mar J WIDMESDAY'S ltHULn • 171'1 tf O ·dtY II~ ,,,......, 1'11HT RACa. 41\ f1.1rl0nllt. leer .. EHie IMcc.fr_.,) 110 .t 20 J ..0 C Cra'9 IOrteoal '" 4.20 Tiii hbt CP!ttc.ayl • 4.tO A r.ctO I'm Gu~.vtn, TreD• Nf'• Low, Loni's Lenle, Win lold, ,.,.,.. • f.fM&ttf, Kinn Art Comlnt La tt1tM 'Tlrf. 1:11 ICONO ltAC8. 6 f C'vottrCfl <Plncey) Rtohl TIV I H) Luc~ V Doc I OelNO Alto ra Bat Aroia, • '' r, Sfll9d ._, Tlmt 1 lO 315 n DAM.V ~· ..... 1Hltt0 It 4C. t ti NA monev IMdetl tTIW'Wtll MY It) N .. Nll'N 1 Tom WttM>ll 2 Tom ICll1 3 Frtd C°"'ie' • AlldY ... ft 1. Greg Norm11r\ 6. GI Mor'etn • 7, Mft CreMl'le,., t Mertr. O'Meua ' ,. « JKotlMn 10 Jactl N ._ Vt ti. G1rv Kldt n Crall Sta \) Dtlf\4 CWerCh 14 eruc. L1et1k1 IS. COftY Ptv n " JK_k lteMet 11. Curl a Stranot 11 Scofl 1t W avnt L l'f1 n llllft Nlllilllflh' 21 Hal 1ut1on n M111 trw1n n Furay 1 'l AYlkO Okamoto S174,f3S \I S.llv KlllO s 111,577 • Pat Bracttev · s 1a,m s. Jufl Inkster S1'S.2'04 4 Amv·A1eo11 Sl52~ 7 Na!lc;Y Losiel Sll\,N) I Donna Whitt Sl<i.25' • JoAme Cerner Sf:J,132 10 ~· Miiier $13.234 11. l...el.lr11 Rinker 112,..0 12. ls.th Oa11i.I 1111,'70 13 Lauri Petlf'aon s1•.060 14 Hollis S~ t7UO IS Judy Cl9'9Al-f'll-------inAjO 14. Ro.le J°"" -,71. .. 2 17. Ktthv Whitworth S70,2SJ It. Jt11 SfeciftelUOO U7,531 IJ: Cllrla JoMson US,171 20 Marl• Floueras·Ootll 164,131 21. hrb IUllkOW~Y... ,..,034 '22. Saltv Lltlle SSUfS 23 Jo A1111 Wunam sst,220 24 P1lll Rli.10 $5',0S2 2S Sllvlt Bertolacclnl $55,5$2 TNs .... , tl"oUt ....,.., SAN llEltMMOtNO -tlo 8Mr L.alr.t, Grllfl Vallav I.Alie, CretON Lall•, Santa Ana ltlver, Santa Ana RIYW (10Ull1 fort!). SAN otaGO -Cuvat'MCI Lake, Qoane Pond, San 1..ul• Rev River. KERN -Kern ltlver (loAll Pow«• llouM lo Oemocr1I Dem. KIU Powart1ouM to Latia 1'8belfe) TUL.AAE -Frtema11 Cr•, ICtfft River (Fairview Dem lo KRJ Powernouu, Jotlnaonclale ll'ldOI to Fa1rv11w Dam), Tult River tsoutn for1I of mtlft fortll MAD•llA -San JOlquln Rivet !middle fork), St.,.. ..... tlltf L.allt. INYO -Beker Craek, Bio Pine CrM, llthoo Creek (IOwer. mlddle, south and Intake II), ~°" Creek, lftdetlelldellCt Creek, Lake S.brl11a, Lone Pint Cl'Mk, • Rock Crlft ltke, South Lek•, TabooM CrMk, Tlnemene Cra., Tuttle Cr•. MONO -8rldgepo(1 ltlMl'YOlr, autll· eve CrMt<, Convict er.-, Convict 1..tkt, DMdmen Crllll, Ellery IAkt, GeotM Lekt, Gian Creetc, Gull Ltkt, Cr1111 L.ake, • Green Creelt, June lalr.t, lH VI""'° Crtell, l" Vlnlt'lll CrHll (south tortO, llllt. Walker River. L..ul'ldV Ltke, Mtrni. Lake, Mammoth er•. Marv !Ake, McGee Crffll, Miii C...ak, Owens Rlvtr Chnron Crou1t111 •NI Bio SOflllfl), ROl>lriaon Creek, Rock CrNk (PttadlM Came> to Tom'• Piece, Tom's Pia« Ul>'lrMtll to Rodi Creek Like, ltoc.ll Creetc Like to the end of Iha road), RU111 Creek, ~ CtMtt. $10d1No ualle, $ttaoher~ er ..... Sfltrwln Crlell, Sltver Ltke, Swautef CrW!I, TIOll 1..tk1, Ti'vmbul Lair.a, Twltl i..a .. • l rlOOtPOrt (UCKI« .aOd IOwtr), Twlft L.ak• Mammoth, v1r11illla Crtell (~ and IO-), Vlr11lftie Lall.JS (UOP« and io-trl. • WeU.er ltlver CChrh Fltt C~ to town of We er, l.At'llll ~ Cemlt· ~ erOUllCI to Sotlora Brldoe), (if\h, Pena doubkd with one oua and moved to third An teve Sa"'' 1naJc. with Su takma second on a throw to thel)(ate. Ed Arncluna hit a 11ounda to first and Pena beat teve Garvey's Utrow home. x moved to third on the pl.a) and stortd on Ken LIJ'ld· ttaUl"S 51C'flfite Oy. HOM& ltUNS Armu ilollOll 11, Kfno · ma11. Olklend, 1'. l(llllt, clikaoo. t• Mv!rfltrv, 0. , 1', Tnotnton, O..el nct n M<Jt•~ 115), 5-Witolll• 111-t.MIOr .. ~ S.llY ~IOt 'Gerclel II 24 HIO; Fe 11. PnM 1 warf ~~·--=-~ 1m Aannery walked 1n th-t KVcnth. as crtficed to $CCOnd . aooli: thard·on a lfOUndout and ortd on ·aarv • tun to tic the pmc. $TOLEN IAS s R~noeraon, Oellfaftct n , ......._.......,a. Bull«, Citvt ncl. '1. GarQa, Toronto. ll.Colllnt Toronto, ~ITCHING c• cMC111cln11 Lu i T lo, 12•2 J 09, lft TorOfttO, '' •, 2.11, f'llfy, Oetroo. 14•1. 2 N. CiOa ott' la111more 11 • 2 4.J, N roLHlw Yor._ '3 s. J 1 TltlKfguTS Witt, ........ 1)4 .,. a. ...... .. ,......l..11 ... I • '*"' W~IMlll ltfftmW,2 3 .... u. t-2..0 A " ....... $0 l • cf 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 • .. O•"""' 1 >. nc. ~Mceerronl Ltaa 119 L 14\l'bUt Oil...., I A. o r m.~.M.....,in.,,~-----.-:.--..... A bes Tilf'ii 1 .. "' SJ IXA<.TA lMI &SJ SO .. llOIMTH aACI.' furlOllt1 s tor uror (Cltndl 11.00 •AO • I le,.. lltl •11 , ge1Cotet DA LY PJLOTnhufldty Augull 2. 11M Q ' OLYMPIC GAMES ~ - --~ .& --= - - .McJYa~ara 's l lJs equal U.S. silver Marina High graduate earns a pair ~~,i,a . had perfect score in lhe of perfect scores; Romania taK:es gold R~!~ifns~:~ia~~~:s:bo. ~h7~ From AP dla'/L~tc:lles in the vault and Simona Pauca, l S, on LOS ANG finish mce 1l won a bronze at the the balance beam. ES -Romania l 948 London Games. . • Tbe Romanians began the night sco~ two pe!'f:ect 10, Wednesday JuUanne McNamara, 18, a M~rina with a ..,45-Point margin over the night LO an cxc1t1n,g optional exercise High graduate who now. lives in Americans .after Monda¥-'+..com- Pro&raJ1l apd. for the first time, won Houst~n, starred for the U.S. tea. m by f.ulso""exercisesan. d pulled away toa an Olympic gold medal in women's ti rfl f o ·~ team gymnastics, edoina the un,·t-"' co ecuna pe ect scores o I m the ull one-Point advantage after tl'le S ..... """' unevt!)..bars and floor exercises, but four aparatus events. tatea by one point. hcrtumblcfrom the balance hean! on • The Romanians compiled 392.20 "China won the bronze medal for its· the 6CC<>nd U.S. event of the rught Potnts, the United States 391.20 and firsl-eve~ Olympic p~e in women's vinually ended any chance for an China finished with 388.60. gymnas~ics COf\lpehhon. . . American victory. McNamara's tumble came after ao The salver also was Amenca's best o crminute dispute among judges oyc;t the mark for Kathy Johnson, 24. of Huntington Bench Her .spnrkhns rouunc finally was &Jven a 9.6, but the dcl )' may have hun McNamana's cone nttation. ''I had to wait up there an awfully lo,ia tim~" McNamara said. "The only thing is I we up there thinking. But that's the way it goes." U.S Coach Don Peters of Hunt· ington Beach said he did not fllt a protest on Johnson's score and-he had no idea why the judges took so Iona to decide the marl( However. Peters said he did file protests over the. scores received by Pam 81leck, JS, of Garden Grove, and on the vault mark IJ\·en Traoee ala\ era, 17. of Walnut Ci!ek. Peters id that while the dispute at the balance beam had broken the tJ team' momentum, it was not an excuse for defeat. "'We lost. ~he Romanians limpl)' beat us.• he wd ... The Romanians did a better jc>b-. Overall, 1he.SCOf11'1 was very faii." Peters had been bitterly cnt1cal of some marts sjven me Americans in the compulsory exercises. The Americans were elated b)'. their silver medal finish and \\'ere gaven a 1tandini ovation by 9,60S faM at UCLA. Julianne McNamara (left),· a graduate of llarllia High, ·~rfol'IJll on the mie•en ban -where ahe ~ed a ~ clariDC tli_! women a Olympic ~ ~uttca final• a t Pauley Pa.Won. At n,ht. Ecaterina s&abo of the Wl.nnlng-aomantan team, dllplaya ber akllla on the balance beam. • T~a,xtOµ t8.kes advantage of second chance --. . Irvin e rower a dva nces in repechage; Bigelow reaches semis in single scull~ By ROGER CAR~N with her teammate, Julia Ueer, and it °' .. ~,.......,, was good for a founh-place finish in · LAK.E CASJTAS -U.S. rowers 'repcc.hage, which puts the U.S. t5oat came through with qualifying efforts in Saturday's finals. . Wednesday here in the 1984 Olympic Also qualifying for a finals berth in Games -including Irvine resident women's competition was the U.S. Cathleen Thaxton -and more boat of Abb).' Peck, Patricia Spratlen, Orange Cwt area products were Janet Harville, Elizabettr"Miles and underway this morning in further Valerie McClain-Ward in the four attempts to qualify in their particular with cox. This ~oup swept to a races. for the,semilinals. winning 3:23. 70 m the second--re- Thaxton, a 27-year-old in the · pcchage, w~. sent the top two in women's double sculls without cox-each to the.fin~s on Saturday. swainJ .PUt t~her a 3:f9.~ effort John Biglow, meanwhile, the Unit- ed States' representative in men's single sculls, qualified for Fnday's semifinals, leading his pa.Plicular repechage with a 7:21.47 clocking. Four--iime worta champion Peter- Michael Kolbc-ofWest Germany won tne second repccbage and Kostan- tinos Kontomanolis of Greece won the third repeehage. , It was a da)' of redemption fot Ihaxton and Geer, after being disap- pointed with earlier activity. · "Our stroke rate was what iJ should have been, bl&.t we just weren't relaxed," Thaxton said about her first race, which led into Wednesday's repechage. "'There's a big difference between rushing through the peas and relaxing." Her coach, Tom McK.ibbon of Newpon Beach, said some of her practices went well. but that they were looking for the easy speed. · - .. When it's ngbt it looks easy to the crowd. It's an easy feeling." con- tinued Thaxton, a three:.time Olym- pian with Point Loma High and Stanford Ulfiversity backgrouml. Apparently things went better for them -they improved from Mon- day's clocking of 3:30.91 with their 3:29.40 effort. but there is still a definite gap between them and the -rest <>f -the field. which will include heat winners Romania (3:24.28) and Norway (3:27.87), along with We~ne~day"s repechage leader (Holland). wbt~ firu~cd m 3:27.51. · Thaxton and Geer were fourth after 500 meters, in a duel with Austria and GFeat Britain. but neither of the latter entries could pic1rup on the AmerF- cans at the 750 mark or at the finish. Billow turned it on with a whop- ping five-second victory over his nearest rival, Gary Reid of New Zealand, puttin1 stock into McK.it>- bon's theory that he can do It when it counts. B1glowwasthirdat SOOmeters with Puerto Rico's Juan Felix setting tpc pace, but by 1,000 meters the Ameri· can had t.aJcen the lead by a two- second margin and eased away with the Puerto Rican fading to third. McKIBBON SHUNS PRESSURE ••• From C l . he'll be back. A sheet metal teacher at Long Beach City College. he has a situation where be works nine months a year, then has the summer free. As a coach, his proudest moments surely revolve around Joan Lind when she won the silver medal at the Montreal Games in 1976. Lind broke up an Eastern Bloc of rowers with a four-second margin over Elena An- tonova of the Soviet Union to get the silver. She was just .65 seconds from winning the gold medal. .. 1 get goose bumps reahzang what SPons can do for you,'' admits McK.ibbcn. who found himself torn between the roaring crowd and his own family at Opening Cercmonit s in Los Angeles. Blood's thicker than water and McKibbon found himself hurdling the wall and sitting.with his wife and son. Mau. at the Coliseum. '"That thnll only happens once m a ~ife­ t1me." he says. Missing from those moments were. of course. the So.viets, 'f.ast·Germans and Cubans, among others, and McK.ibboo admits it hurts. "lt's a tragedy," he says. '"Sitting and talking with them at the Olym- pics is a pan of tt. It's thtngs you can't · put in textbooks. First we made. the error (President Jimmy Caner's de- cision to boycott the Moscow 01~­ pics in 1980 because of the Soviet's invasion of Afghanistan). Now, Mos- cow perpetuates it. Tht Olvmp1cs 1s really no different than· AT&T. there's politics everywhere. But. the only way you can hurt us 1s with Pohttcs." Some came -like the Romanians -and McKibbon says there's sttll a price to be paid by them fqr the dccisioa Ncvcnhclcss. tbey'ti here. and probabl) wtll go hom~th evcryttung McK.ibbon and h ort have to offer -J1terall) aru figu• rativelffhe shirts and 1ackcts ofT'the1r backs. • Mesa's Gorski rides Into ~mts Meu' lldv'8a:id 10 the lenlifinab of .. J,ooo..meter print compniuoe at die Oly• ptC V,clodtome here QD lhe cam .. pua of Cal SCate Domanaua Hilla WedOHday a&ona witb teamnwe Clson Va.tis Garski defeated Gerhard Scbeller.;0f We11 Gctnwly Ill bit quarterfinal ride. while Vail ad. vanccd as he beat Marodo 0. Altllndte Of A3CDUU. Gor:skl meeu Tsutomu Sakalnoto of Japan and Vailt goes ap!QS\ V emct Philippe of ·France in two of lhe th1'le bats. Finals in the spnnt will be Na on Friday follOwtD& odly•s tein .. finals. · , ........... SCARE •• _._ From Cl that's what it's all about Things arc going to get better. We haven't played the way we can play. Next time you'll sec a stronger team . .. One other time we played along and npt too well in the beginning and· we~ down 2-0 to Cuba. We won that one and played Cluna the next day and won, 3-1," said Sclinscr. At one point the U.S. was down. 12-9 in the final game. "Two things were needed at that ~int. First was to calm the team down and then set into a rhythm. They were playing everything to one side and we had to throw the ball to tb~outside. That built our confidence up. We got with it and it woTk~" said Selinger. The U .S. ran off the final six points. One key to success for the team lS \he sening of Green and the kills of Hyman when the two go to the net . h'salmost as tfthe others sav, when in doubt i o lo Green and Hyman. Brazil's Vera Helena Leme says there 1sn 't much di ff ere nee between the U.S. and Ch ina. "The tealn that win •s the one that pla}s better. Qf coU'rsc, the U.S. has all the Cf'O\\d SUPPorting at. They are going to do all the) can to http beat you." That ma\j:hup w11J 'OOMe Fnda~ night u 8:30. U.S . POLOISTS OPEN WITH ROMP ~ •• From Cl . Wearlnl his patrlodam AllJD Jolmlon a.aee email U.8. O~a u bllDden wblle be pnparee to compete ln the rapid nre pletol e•ent. ~ Groin injury sidelines Moffet John Moffet, former Newport Hafbor Hish star and a junior at Sta~ford, who entered the XXlllrd Olympiad as the world rccoro holder in the l ()().meter breaststroke, has scratched from today~a prclims in the 200-metcr btea tstrokc, a ca uahy of a aroin iajury on s~nday. Moffet, a two-time Otympian, suf· fen:<! he strain when he snapped his own worlCI tteora widi a time of t :02.13, but on h11 &tCO~d or third stroke after the wall, an snJUfY that hid been bOthcrina him, clmc full° cycle. I • ., Moflft, a Costa Mesa res dent, wanted to wim_. but doctors advistd q.ain t lt_. ftan"I he would ~ffcr further inJUry. · With MoO'cr out, the United tat ' left Wlth ju t one entry tr\ the 200.. meter brcuutrokc, Richard Scl)rocdcr, 22, of nta Barbara .. . . / Estiarte divulgtd that he has been offered a position _with several Italian profe sional water Polo team$.. as well decisioh.· .... . ' I .... L -· • ' .. ,, , • JUUi OLVMPIAD Medll Tetlla •• .,~ w.. ... .,,, t't'9nlt •• Ult ~ OIYmolel wf1'I countrt, fQld, 111vtr, lltONt .net ...at rneda won: • ,. • 't tlllittd ltl!M " I ,. Ctllnl ' , • 1J W..to.rm.ny , 3 • 10 C.NIClll , , 1 7 llllV • 1 1 • OAetlr •In 1 1 • • AAnlr•la • t • 6 ,..., • , 2 • • , . , • • ,,.la ........ • 2 2 • HetNrllal'IOt • 1 I • J • • • • k!flnfld • 1 1 t 1ou1'1 Kcne 1 • 0 1 lk'a&I • 1 • '1 ~ • 1 • 1 fllwu • I ' I .... tum ... • • 1 Nonray 0 0 1 , Tawa11 • • I I , 0 0 1. I W ..... Y't mecl8' Winnen • CYCUNO .... ,.,..., ......... ~· OOU>-St.-.e Hen. O.na Point SILV.lt-ftolf Goll, Wftl Oermell't HOHZl-Ltonard Harwv Nltt. s.cta- menlo WOMaWS OYMNAITICS T..m,.,_ GOLD-ttomanla 111. vait-unttld state. HONH-<tllna MOOa•N ,.NTATMLOM Teem,INb GOLD-ltalY SILV81t-Unllld Slatet lltONZl-flranc. ........... , ..... GOU>-Oen .. Miia.ie, llaf't 111. veR-S'tante •nmut0n. s..oen lltONH-<aft!M MeMullq. llelY IHOOTnlO MM'• lmll· ........ J ~ GOLD--Malc*r\ co.er, ~I ltf SILValt~nllll Nll*ow, SWln..1end lltONZl!-Alltalr AJen, ~-t lttlaln W8IOMTU"'"9 ''•hlllMI GOLD-Yeo Jine¥uene, O*le Slt.VER-ANnl Soald, Romerlla • IROHZE-Jounl Gl'OMl&ll, F N. •KO-ROMAJe WRUTUNG • Kllll'M9I GOLO-Yanr.o MMnu, ltW't SILVl!lt-Markua Scherer, Weal Ger· many . • INtONU-twu s.lla.-JllMft_ 0.......,,. . GOLO-W.on·kw Kim, Souttl KorM SIL V&R-K.,,tola JolWlnuon, SWNlfl lltONZ-Huoo OlebcN, Swlturtend ,. °"""" GOLO-Sl.....n FraMt'. AM ArW. Midi. SILVER-Ille /Mlel, Romenla IRONZE-Frank Andenlon. Sweden ,.,. )>'- Maws IASKSTIALL- UnttM States 1M, UrvtiNY 61 UNfTWD STAT81 -Alford H H 6, Wood 0-1 2·2 2, l!wtne 6·f s-7 17, fl1lmine l-1 0-0 ;. ~oMrtton 3-1 N f. Jordin MS 2·2 16. ~ M 1-1 >. Konc.k H H 6, .,..... S-7 t-t '2, MUlltl 4-1 s-s u. ~ 7-t H "· Turner M t-2 ., Total&: 41·7' 22·26 104. UltUOUA Y -l.OMI I· lf I· 11 1', L.arrOM 1-2 2·2 •. ,..,I larroa 1-2 M 3, Nuntl Oomaltl 1-1 10-14 12, RUii INnO •-13 t-2 10, ,....,. Shaben 0-1 0-2 o. "9fllld0 st .. nero ... S-6 11. ,..,..,,. Melt M 0-0, Tito MoAfio 0-2 0-0 0, Mltnont Crlwa 0-J H 0, ,reUlnl 1onon1 0-2 H 0. Totall: 21-63 21·'4 61. Halftime: U.S. •• Urueua't 37. ,outed out-None. •~nlled State 53 (Tlld•lt 10), Urutu.v 23 (L.ocaez, Nunei Goft1a1H 7). ""'*I-United Stal• ff !Wood fl. Uruouay U (P91ftedo St...-o Sl. Total Fou~nltecl Statea JO, Urutuav - 26. Ttc11n1Q,,.......ew1ne. Men's attncintla ttatv YutOllevla Auatrati. lr•d Ef't'PI W•t<Hrmanv O...WA W L "9 2 0 • 2 0 • 2 1 • I I 2 0 2 0 0 l 0 °"""' UllhldStatn SOein 3 0 • ,,. 115 3 • ,. tf1-fft- Ollna C.l\Na Uruoua., ,,.nee 1 2 2 214 JOI 01 2 2 271 152 0 2 2 1• 211 o 3 o o 152 m w ..... .-.~ Au1tr1ll• 61. Wnt Glfl'TlllllY 66 C.nad1 121, Clllno IO YU90llavl1 100, E9YP1 6t United Statea 104, Uruouarv 61 Soeln '7, Franca 12 Wemen'I ltllftdlnel W L "9 ,., ,A Unllld Stain 2 0 4 I.. 102 SOUtl't Kon• 2 O • 12'2 114 Clllna 1 1 2 121 130 Caneo. 1 1 2 121 121 Auatralla 0 2 O 111 1• YIJtOllevla 0 2 0 107 1'1 w....-v-11c- No Hmll ICMdultd T ... .-. OMMt SOull't KOf'M VI Unllld Stain Clllna va Y~vi. Canacl• YI Auatra!l1 • )<::: Vtlmlll ....,....,.. ........ Unllld Slatft w L "" 2 0 : traz• I 0 KOf'M I 0 2 Ar""llllll 0 2 • Tunetla 0 2 0 ...... llely 2 0 • JHell I • t Canada 1 1 2 Chine • 2 0 l!w.t I 1 I I w......-..... No metcNs M:MlkAld T•Y't MlttlMI Uni!• Sta .. vt Seulll K.,.. E~ vt. Clllnl J4IHft Vt lta!V trazlw T~ ~ "" ... .. " fl '5 21 a 11' If ,. 101 .. .. 216 n n • u n w .......... (et~) """'" S1lllM 12. Of'Ma I United Stet• 2 2 5 >-'12 or.-. 0122-5 United Statea acorfM; Vareaa ), FIOu- eroe 2, J. C.mobll 2, ltob4fhon 2, SdWMdW 2, SW!ldMn I GrMCe ecor1ne· Aronll 1, CaoreJos I, Stalfleltla 2, Stief~ 1 w ..... .-.sc... GfWll A ~YU90Mevr. IJ, C.111Cla 4 Holland 10, Clltne I Gtwll • S0.111 1'. arul 12 United Slataa l2, Gr.-. 5 .,..c ltatv is • .s.oen 5 ,,....,., SdlMI* 1:30 a.m.-Japen va. Auatr1ll• 10 a.m.-4t•IY va. WHt Germany 1:)0 o.m.-c.neda VL ChlM J p.m.-YU90llavi. VI. Holland 7:JO p.m.-9ra1ll vs, GrMC9 f o.m.-SO.ln va. Unllld Sl1t11 ... w.,,..,1 wmneltkt (et hull¥ hvllen) • l'LOOa ax•Rctsas 1 Eutwlna Subo, Romenlli, 1'.'5, 2. JuleMI McNamer•. kn Ramon, 1'.fO; J. MMY Lou RaOon, Falrtl'IOlll, W.Va, IUS; 4. LAW• cu.tlN, Romant., 19.70; 5. MkMll Ouuerr1. Garden Grove, IUO; 6. Vlou QtuN Zhou, China, If.SS, 0ttw Am1cam: 1 ~mlll tlledl, Garden Grove, 1'.SO, 10 Katllv JoM&on, Hunttntton teed!. 1' •s. IS. Tracee Tai.vera, Walnut CrMk, 1'.AO VAULT I. (tit) Euterlna Szabo. RC>l'Mnlli. IUO; Mary LOU ltttton. Fairmont. w Va .• IUO, 3. Lavlnlli AoKhe, Roman .. , IUO; 4. Trecee Talavera, WalnUI Creek, 1'.10; 5. (tlo) Cl'llfl Yoneven. China. IUS; tllou l'lne. China, IUS; Kalh't JOllnlOft, Hunt· llWIOft teecl\, IUS. Otller Americans: 11. Julianne McNamar1, kn .. "'°"• IUJ· 13. Mlc:Nlll Duawra. Garden Grove, 1'.561 16. "•!Mia llltdl, Oardlll .Grovt, If.AO. UN•Y•N IARS 1. Ulel Ma Yentlont. Clllna, IUO, Jutlenne McNamara, Ian ltetnOll, IUO; J. MMv Lou Rttton, Falrtl'IOllt, w.v a .• 19.70, •. Olol Wu Jlenl, China, 1us1 LaUf'• Cutfna, Romani.. lUS; Mlclleltl Duuerrt, Gvdan Grow. lUS. Otlllr Amertc.na: I Kalll't JCIMIOft, Hunllntton leed\, IUO, 13 Tract1 Talavera. W•WIVI Creek, ,, 20; ,, "'"*' llleck. Gll'clall Orov1. 11 .0 IALANC• HAM 1. ~ Pauca. •oment•. lUO. 2. llc::atwlna Szabo, Romenr., lt.10, J Wu Jlalll, Clllna, IUS; ' Ult) Kalll't J~. Hunflntttn lald\, IUO. /Mrv Leu R1tl0ft, l'elrmont, W.V•. 1"0; • <tit> fM YaMonl, Ollna, 1UO, ~ Slanullt, Romeni.. 1uo. Ot• ArnerlaM It '8mtle lllldl. Gardll\ Grove, It.JO, 17. J\llleMI MCHemlfa, Sen 9'amoo, 1' OJ; 24 Mldllllt Outwre, Gardan Orove, ii.II; N. Tracee Tall'ttra, Walllut CrMk. IUO ALL MOUND 1. MMv LOU Rttton, l'alrmont, W, Va, 79.011 2. l!catWlna St*. Romtlflla, 71.7$, l. Laur• Cutlna, Roma"'8, 71 ~ a. JUllaMI McNamere...1, Sin ltllf'llOll, 1U01 I. Ma Yanl'IOftt, gilfla, 71.201 6. KelflY Jol\MOll, Huntlfttten laleh, 71.10. . Olllet AmefQM; 12. MlcMllt Duulrft, Oardtft Orow, n .U1 16. Trec:M Tela'tWa, Welnut Creek, n .10. 17. ftarnell Iii.etc. 011dll\ orove. 16 • TIAM STAM.DlMOS 1. RCWNnla, In 10, 2. U11ttld Sia._, 8'1.20, I. Cflllla, ..... • Wtat 0.l'l'llft't, m .1111 ~~7U01 6 J1Nn, J7671, 7. °"9t lrll•ln, YU I 1-#lllarlafld, m JO, '· IN1t1. J7~. 10, / ~-)\. ......... c.,.....,....,_, , HICM~ •. C."'41) J " 'J, Soulft ~ortt • , ... .,, ...... • 11.m -Oomlllrca11 It vs T II t • m .-U!lllM St•t• •• tral't Olymplc schedule , IO>CINO Cat I.A ._,. A,...) t1 a.m.-> •.m. -"'.nm. 6ofl0 e.m. -l'r.nrnt CYCLINO (at DelNllW• H .. ) 10..m.·3 p.m. -Stlrlnt Mm~ '""' """"'. llflc:.llOn .,.,~ .. GYMNASTICS <at UCL.A> 5:30-UO •.m. -MM!'• •U·ar.ouno fin.ta HANDIALL (It C:.. State '""'11n) 11 a.m.-(men) o.nmark va. KOi' .. 12?0 p.m.-(mtn) Wt1I Germany "' SM In 2 e.m.-<rnenl Unllad St•IH va. Swtcltn 6:30 o.m.-<men> v~i.vlli va. Ja.-n t o.m.-<men> Rom.tnle vi. lataat ,..JO p,lft,-(l'Mfl) Swfl~ncl va. Aleetla ROWING (et ~ CUltll,, Olal) . 7:30-10!30 e.m. -Men'• and women'• wntflnela SHOOTING <• ,,_ '9fl. Ob Niii}. -, am:-4 p.m. -SmeJHIOl't rifle, lllAI ll06lllOM; ll•Pkf-flrl ' pl1t01; Cle't tervet-tkeet SOCCIR (It htMIM) 7 o.m.-<ott• Ra va. 1111v SWIMMING (et USC) 1:30-H:JO a.m. -Pretlml In men'• a ""· 200 brfflbtrOlta, 400 frM retay· women'• 100 butter11v, 100 t>rM1t1trok1, i06 freoatvte. 4:\S-4 p.m. -Final$ VOLLIYIALL (et '--a..cfl) 10 a.m.-(mtn) EO'tPI vt CNna Noan-(l'MI\) Ir 1111 YI T 11111119 6:30 p.m.-<menl hNn"' ttal't 1:30 p.m.-(mtll) l<Of'H VI Unllld States wm-.-~LO (at P'llJI .._., Maall) Ut a.m.-$Mlll va. Greece 10 a.m.-trazll va. Untied Stat11 1:30 p.m.-ltatv n Au1trllla 3 o.m.-Jeoen v'-Weal Ger~nv 7:30 o.m.-Vuooa11vla vi. Cl\fna f p.m.-<anadla VI. Ho"-lld W•tGHTLll'TIMG (et U.•·ManmeUM• WettcMltwl 11 a.m.·I p.m. -MlddltWllOllll 2·4 D.m. -Mlddlt'#llOllll WllESTLING • tat AfteMlm) noon-3 11.m. -Prt1lm1 ancl 1tmlflnal1 6-t~ p.m. -Prellma and flnala, some event• YACHTING (et Ltlte ... di) l:acl p.m.·6~ p.m. -Tlllrd race. Mven da- 0 ~~·Rtmln WNStllnl Cat A""*"' CMll"""" eantwl IOS.S l'OUNDS O...MMal Vincenzo Maenu, llalY, die. Mllrllua Scherer, Weal Gtr~,,.,, lH. ~Medlll lku10 S.llo, Jaoen. die. s.1111 tor•. Turkav, 7·l I l'IMI ~ Ktnl AMll'uon, Swldln, dtc. o .. ·J1 JUll, Soulll KOf'H, 10-3. l>U l'OUHDS .. GnMIOA~ . Kefltotll Jonanuon, Sweden. die. Douo YHla/"taMO., 3·2, 4•'-AbclUf'ralllm Kuzu, L.lncOln, Nib., l>VI ~IAIM Weon·KM Kim, South K0t... olnllld Hueo Dlttache, Swltzerland, 1 56, •·O. o...-...· Kim die • .JoMMIOll on criteria lteftZI MN!al" Dlttadlt die. Kuzu I·• ,. '9tce Y•ta die. .. nit, IS•) 1ft l'OUtlDS • Giid MNlal Stew Fruer, AM Arbor. die. Ille /Niii, ltCH'Nftla. 1-1 Oft c:rllerla .,._.,...... Frantt Andtnlon, S.,.csen, cllC Uwl Sec:M; Weal Germany, s-. ,. "8Q Ceun dee. Po11d11 4-2. ·Friday •AlllALL (It DPd9tf S dlVm) • I etn.-tCOta va. Ca~ • •.m.t-Nlcareoua n Jao.n IASK8T9ALL (•t tfll ,wum, _... .. , '• m-twomen> Auttrallli va.·KorM 11 1 m ~(tMnl China va SMln a. • UO 1.m -<womtn> Ca oa v.. Vuto11111i. •JO 11.m -tmtn> United Statea 111 France · I ,.m-1women> UnltH Stato va. China • 10 • m-fmen> Can1<11 vt. UrutUn IOXINO Cet '-A '"'11 Al'IN) 11 all\,•2 Pm. -,.rt!lrna 6·fl0 D m .-PrtOrm CYCLING (at~Hlh) • 10 1 m ·J 11.m.. -1er1111 ltl'lllfillllt; • .... met., '""" "'"ult Mm!• afld llM•• IQUISTRtAflt (at AIUlll) 11~ un.·2:)0 PJn, -TIVM·4•Y tvtnl lumDlllt '"' ,.HCINO • (atL ...... dl) t 1.m ·S 11.m.-Womt ·'a lndMcl~ fOlt ..-111tna, men'• "n Pftlilm I• 11 P IY\. -'t)°OIN!l'I l"dMdu.. foll ttna1a • -.. -GYMNAifiCS. ·- <at UCLA> l:»-11>.m. -women'• all-around flnata HANDIALL Cat Clll 119te ,ullart9n) 6.30 om -(womtn) Vuootlavl• vi. AuWI• • I P.m.-!wCH'Mnl Clllna va. Wftl Otrmanv ,..JO 11.m.-Cwomtn) Untied Stat" va. l<Ot .. ,..LO HOCK•Y Cat a11t &.ea Al*lell I a.m.-(women) Un111d Sl•t• YI. Hoftlnd US a m..-(mt11) C.nada va. Kef!Ya HS , P.m.-(mefl) lrllaln VI. Hew ZMlend • , o.m.-(mtll) H•nd VL Pald•l•ll SAS p.n\,s"'{women) Wt1t<Gtnnanv Vt Canaela ROWING (at LUI C.'"8a. OIU) I· 1o:30 • m, -Meft'• and women'• ""'" (7tf't lllrouotl 121h Plaen) SHOOTING (at ~ l'atk, CllMI H .. > f am.·• p.m. -Air rlflt, 0.'t IM""t• ..... SWIMMINO (et USC>· 1:30-11~ e.m. -Prtllma: W0"*1'1200 lndlvldual mlcl!W, 400 medley rttav, man'f 200 t>uttlrfly, 100 becutroka, 1,500 trw rllav 5·7 o.m. -Flnel• TllACK AND ,..LD (at LA CtlMum) ,..30-1 p,m. -HtcitatlllOn < 100 llurdlls), trlllle lumP •~llfYlne. man'• 100 flrat round, Heptfllltton (fllth lumo>, men'• 400 hurd191 tint round, woman'• allot pyt QU.tlfylno, women'• 400 first round, men'• 100 a«olld round -• "'"' I\ Wtlltttllfftnl Cat ~-MM W'N.,_ 67.1 KILOGRAMS t veo '11119YUP Yao, CNn1, 320 ~Ito· 9r•m1, 10S lllOUllCI•, 2 Alldrll Joc;act, Romellla, 312 s. Mt J Jounl Gronman, ,tnlatlel, )IU, "9 ' O..n W v._ OrNI lfltaln; JIO, 613; 5 CllOP Taira, 111an, JOS. 672; 6. Yal4nlllot kmt, J1 n, ~.s. "'· ,Otller "m•rluna ' IJ, Oonatd Allrlllat\'lton, CUHrllno, 277.J 6tl • Mtdef1' hnt8tNon cat ca• c.u> 4MDtvlOUA'-SCOll .. ... • 1, D1nltlt Mlluta, Ital.,, IMf oolnta; 2. Svant• lta~. Sweden, J,45'; l eeno M111WllO, llalY, 5,406; • ltlchard PMllPt, O~t lrllaln, S.391; S MlcNll St0tm, Artl119ton, Va., U2St" ,.aul ,(Nf, ,,.nee, S,217 • Other Atnertcant: 11. Or1t I.OMV, kn Antonio, T1ue, 5,151; 11. o.tn OitnMk; Sent• Marl•: s.•s. · T•AM ICOllll 1, Italy (Danlell /Maala, C.MO MllUUIO, ~ Cr\alvforl), 16,MO 00lnt•1 2. Unit• Id Stein (Mk:Mtl St0tm, Arhlon, Vt; .Or .. L.oNv, SM Antonio, T1u1; O..n Oltntlk, Sent• ~rial, 15.561; J Franta, ts.5651 '· Swfttarl&nd, IS.M31 S. ~lltco. 15,m; 6. Waat Gerrrmny, IS,029. • •· 11 1>.m -women'• toO flrat niund, Hfflall'lloft (allot PUI), mtll'I to0 tint r-·--L/ ?Ollm walk flNI. Htcltathlon (200), wornt11'• '"°' out flnat, ~·· 10,000 flrat round VOLLEYIALL (•t L.tlle ... di) 10 a.m.-<womenl KOtH v1. Peru N~lwomen> C•naci41 VI. J•oen 6.30 11 m.-(wom.n) lrHll VL France UO pm -<women> Unilld St•IH vi China WAT•R l'OLO (at ll'IH I llnt, Maiau) I.JO a.m.-Jacian va. Auatr•ll• 10 •.m.-llalv va wear Germanv 1:30 o.m.-<anao. vs Chine .a p,m.-Y11t2.1r.vl• VL Holland 1.30 P.m.-lrazll YI. Gr~ t P.m .-Unllld StatH v1, SNln WRBSTLING Cat~) Noon-3 o.m. -Pr.Um•, aemlfln•I• and flnall In four Greco-Roman WllOlll clalNI , 6·1:30 o.m -Prellma, Mmlflnala and flnal1 In four Greco·RC>l'Mn '#119111 c1a .... YACHTING (at U.. ... dl) 1:30-6:30 111.m. -Four1h race, MVell l»Uff. . l'leld Hoctcev M•N 0r-.1 N1tlltl'landl 3, ....-zu .. IMI 1 Pakl•t•n J, Ktnv• O GrHt arllaln ), Canacle 1 WOM•N Austrella 2, W11t Germany 2 Unllld Slatea •· Canada 1 SflNf9nl <at..,.,. aMrMtllll c;.Mar) MmH'S IMAL'-·aotl• a"U lllN~LS 1. MMiDtm coooer. Greet 1r1111n, I, 1n; 2 Oa!\le4 Nlt*O'#, Swltterlllnd, 1,1'3; 3 AU.n A.1111«. Grut lrttaln, 1, 162; •. Kurt HlllatlllHnd, west Germany, li_!s.t; s .. lo ArM G.m L:llla, Olllmarll, 1,1>11 6. Oltnn Dubl•, '°'' ltnnlne. Ga. 1, 111. Othlt Amerlc•na· 15. Edward Et1tf, Moroa11to;rn, w.va., 1,142. OfVmllk NC«d1 UCH•RY ~·a Oout>ll FIT A -Darrt Pace !United St1t11l 1'76, 2.511 oolnl• Women' a Dou.b4a FIT A -LU.M lt\'Oft (United Stat11): 1'76, 2,.,,, TaACK AND ,..LD Mlft ( •'l«lh In mttws) 100 -Jim Hl1111 (U.S.)· 1f6t, US. 200 -Tommi. Smltl'I (U.S.) IHI, 1U3 400 -LM Evans (U.S l: 1HI, 43.16 . toO -A~o .Ju.nl0t-CCulle); 1'76. 1:43.SO 1500 -KlodloOt 1<11no <Kenval: lHI, l::M.'1. sooo -tr1ndan Foater cunlled Kine· dom): 1'76, 1):20.Jt. 10000 -UHi Viren (Flnllin<I); 1m. 27:JUS. Marathon -Waldlrmar Cr.rptMlll (laat Germany): 1'76, 2:0f'.SS. 20k wfll -/Munzlo Oamtllino Cll•IYI: ltlO, 1:23:36. 50k walk -Hartwlt Geuder (EHi OtrrMllY)! lMQ, 3At:2•. 110 llUrdltl -Roel MllbUl'n (U.S.): 1'n, \J.24. 400 hurdle -Edwin Mo ... (U.S.): 1'76, •7.64. acJllO 1teeo4edlaM -Andier• Otrellrud (SW9dln): 1'76, l~.ot. 400 ,,_y -United Stain: IHI and 1'72, 31.1'. 1600 ..... y -United Stata: IHI, 2:M.16. HJ -Gerd Weult (l!HI Germany): 1tl0,U6mtlera. PV-Wlad'tllew Ko1•kltwla (Polalld). ,,.., 5.71. U -loO ... mon CU S l: IHI, UO T J -VIUOt kne'tlv CUSSlt): IHI, 11.Jt S,. -Vladtmlf Kllti,,_. (USSlt)• ltlO, 21.35. OT -Mac WllltlM (U.S.)! 1'76, 6121 HT -Vurly Sedvtlll !USSR). 1'90, IUO. JT -Mlllloa NalMtll (Hu11Hrv): 1'76, • M.51. o.c.1111on -lruce'Janner (U.S.): 1'7,, Ull oolnta. """"' 100 -AllM9rtt lt>cnter (Witt Otr· man'(): 1'74, 11.01. 200 -lerbtl Wocktl (,.,, Germany).· ,,.., 22.03. 400 -/Mrll• Kodl <Eul Garman.,>:• IMO, ..... toO -Aadtlde Ollzartnko (USSR): IMO. 1:53.'3 • 1500 -Tal'(aM KHallklna (US.Sit): ~1te01 UU6. 1000 -Not PftvioullV MIO /MratllOn -Not PflYICK11ly Mid 100 114.wdlft -Vw1 Koml .. ova !USSR), lte0,1254 400 llurcAll -Not twlwloual'f hitld. 400 raiav -l!ut GenN'IY 1'90, •1AO 1600 ralay -•• ., OenMl!Y: tf76. ).IU:J HJ -Sara Slmeonl (Italy)' -ueo. I '7 me•trt LJ -Tatv•M KolMkOVa (USSlt)I lflO, 1 °" P-llone ~ (IHI ~y) ..JllO. 12.41. DT-lv..iti Jalll , •••• OtrlftefW): "'°· "" JT -/Mrla Colon ICUINlll 1te0, .. '° HtcltatlllOll -Not lll'Mo\#llY fllld • ......... ................ ...... -...... .. .. • • , ..................... . McKee, Buchan triumph ·Steele also earns. win in Win 1 ers yachting event LONG BEACH {AP) . ...:.. Ameri n skipper Jonathan Mckee and cmv Clrl..Buchan._~ho last year became the fint in U.S. bis oey to captuni a F}yina . Dutchmap world cham· p1onsh1p, w their race Wednesday as com.petits n coatinued in vcn Olympic yachtinJ eta sea. Jn the Wind,lh<ICr class. American Scott Steele surprised v.ith a victory. Steele .was ranked JU t 22nd in the European pre-01¥mpics. The wind wu blowina +5 knou when the 1:30 p.m. startina time arrived, p0stpom the starts of three of the four-race circles. However, the wind bcaan to pick up to 10-12 knots and within 45 minutes. all the claues had bcaun. Jorae ZarifNeto of Brazil was first in tlie Finn class after an eiahth-place finish the previous day. American John Benrand who won Tuesday'• firtt-day race, only to be diaq__ualified for tacking too close to a New Zealand boat. odly ipanaged a fifth place on Wednesday. .. · • In the 470 class, Spain'• Luis Dorcste won to move into the overall lead in a class th4t bad been billed u a bcttle amona New Zealand, brael and the United States .. The Norwesian team of Daa Hilf- dan Uslerud, Borre. Skui and Stein Lund Halvorsen finished fint in the Soling. after comina in 11th on T~esday. . · · llias Hatripazlis of Greece, with an excellent port tack start, led from start to finish in the Star cla.ss, Bahia CorinthlaD Yacht Club will bighlipt the. weekend yachtina ac- tivity in Orange County thts weekend with its annual Newport to Coronado race starting Saturday. The race features Intemattonal Offshore Rule, Performance Handi· cap Racina Fleet and Ocean R!cina Catamarans in a race down the coast to San Diego. Coronado Yacht Oub 11 tbe host at the tcnrunal end of the race. Newport Harbor Yacht Oub will conduct ats August One-design Rqat· ta Saturday and Sunday with action on both in.side the bay and ocean courses. Capistrano Bay Yacht Oub will feature Performance Handicap Rac- int Fleet yachtsin. the fifth race of its . ocean Racina Series bn Saturday. Only action in the Los Angcles- Long Be&ch A.tu will be the continu-ation of the Olympic Yachtina Games off the Long Beach break- water. In other Southern California Yachtina Association areas: . .Janta MoDlca Ba)' Kina Harbor Yacht Oub -Santa Barbara to Kina Harbor race, Friday, Saturday, Sunday. Santa Monica Yacht Oub - lntraclub race, Saturday; Racey Ladies Race, Sunday. Windjammers Yacht Club -24- hour Sabot marathon, Saturday, Sun·· day. Su Dteao Coronado Yacht Oub -Finish Newport to Coronado race, Sunday. Silver Gate YachtOub-Jacktnd Jill Race, Saturday. San Dieao Cruiser Association - CCYC Fall Series, Saturday. Oceanside Yacht Club -Rorick Series, Sunday. Mission Bay Yacht Club -Sun-downer Series, Sunday. .1 North and l.DlaDd Santa Barbara Yacht Club -S Santa Barbara to King Harbor race, Friday. Welllake Yacht Club-Westlake Junior Repna, Sunday. . . .. ' Ex-swim star 'humilI by ceremonies exclusi From AP dlapatcbet LOS ANGELES -Mark Spitz, the swim star who won an unprecedented seven aold m at the 1972 Olympics in Munich, said Tuesday _ was "humiliated" by his exclusion from the · Angeles Games' opening ceremonies. · I ad to buy my ticket,"·Spitz said on.a KABC show. "I don't think I should have been ... I paid my dues." Spitz said he was "very much humiliated by the situatton." Rich Levin, spokesman for· the Los Angeles Olympic Ora,anizina Committee, said Spitz "wasn't involved because he was ipvolved with.ABC" as a commentator during the Gamesr . Donna De Varona.-another U.S. Olympic medalist in swimming who is an ABC commentator. at so was not invited to participate in the ceremonies, Levin said. ' . . ~ Btelandrat . bis.· effort a -'9' U.S. boxer looks : . di Arabia lnveatlD1 in aporta S ANGELES -The presence of a 'Saudi t soccer team at the Olympic Games reflects in ·ddJe Eastern country's vast increase in In nt in sports. the Saudi Arabian Olympic ·on Center said Tuesdar. · Arabia, whose team 2 years ago didn't . . - . Flrat Lady rejecta a boz lunch SANTA BARBARA -The truth Wlll get out eventually, so here it is: First Lady Nancy Reagan apparently rejected the Official Olympic Box Lunch that she was given for sustenance dunng the helicopter trip with President Reagan back to Santa Barb,ara after the opening ceremonies. But as she is the First Lady, she got her way. The foodlttvice personneJ·at the University of Southern California near the Coliseum quickly packed her a roast beef lunch to go. Fever aweepa most of realden~ LOS ANGELES -Jn a very infotmaJ poll. 76 percent of the people who called the Los Angeles Herald Examiner to say how they--recf i&out the Summer Games said the)" ve caught Olympic fever while the other 24 percent said the spint has passed them by. U.S. women wi eam handball opener From AP cUapatcbet . Cynthia Stinaer and Sandra De La Riva combined for nine goals in the second half to lift the United States to a 25-22 victory over China in the openi°' round .of the women's team hJDdbaJI competition Wednesday ni&ht at the Olympic Games at Cal State Fullerton. In other pm es, Ok-bwa Kim scored seven aotls to lead Korea to a 23-22 victory 'over Austria. and Too many ~ommercials make the sports events look more like fillers By DAVE.GOLDBERG ~ ..... Wf1tw Anyone who wonders why ABC would fork over S225 million for the ri&hts to televise the Olympics only has to correlate it with this fact --attendance at the U.S. s~r team's first two pmes has been more than 140,000. In other words, if it's the Olympics, people will watch events that for 31/i out of every four years arc be&Jina for fans. Not only soc~r. but horses rompm-over obstacles, cyclists racina • the clock around an oval, volleyball, rowina. shootina. modern pentathlon and Qrcco-Roman wrc$thng. _ _ -: And they'll get particularly interested if, as is the cue tbis year, the home teMn is winnina. Unfonunately, ABC has marred iJs cov- craae. by: • . · -Sellin& so much commercial time that it sometimes seems like the spons events are filJen between commerc)als; -Chcertcadina and ethcrwise intrudina on Olympic drama that could stand on its own merits; • __:. Choppine caused by the over· abundan~of commel"Clals. If Keith Jackson and Diucr Phelps think the officials disrupted tbe flow of play m Wednesday's U.S.-Uruauay b&sk:etbill cam~ what about interruption' in midair by Diet \.Oke? 6 ' * ~ -tt I Tu .t.y ni,aht's telcca t of the U.S. men's amaahct·tcam't victo~ typical of ABCs overkill.. It was one of those Olympic: moments that U'lnacends tclc\'1sion. Thai it anyone walchina could citch the joy of aix )'OunaAmcrican an thc\r up t v1ct0ry in one of tho ·' ' Dagmar . to give made a penalty shot with I :06 ltft Germany. via a 20-1? victory over West tookrii~~ 1 tes, trailing 20-17 with 13:20 left, left. Leora Sam Jones' goal with 4:46 The Ame Riva, Carmen never lost the lead as De La scored in the fin t and Theresa Contos each . to seal the victory. · Stihgel;Jed the United States with seven goals, Jones added six, and De La Riva had five. J1anping He and Weibong Zhang each scored four goals to lead China. Korea. which trailed Austria I 5· 11 at halftime, tied the game 22-22 Wlth 3:28 leff. Kim then scored the winninS'goal a minute later. West Germany lost a chance to ue Yugosla\ia when a shot by Connna Kunze with 30 seconds left hit the top oftbe goalpost and bounced away. 1,200.000 t 0e • PDot A1.1gut.t 2. Th ... 20\ .. { 1.000.000 ... 2.962 22.342 . 5-41 . .. 21. •.... 3. 33.505 12,342 ' DEATH Noncf s ------ Tl\ONCALKY OSEPHINE TRON· CALEY, beloved mother ot -Antonio (Vera) Trancaley. of Loi ~"'Conaet­ ta Antl.sta, of -New- port Beach, alao JW'Viwd by 3 arand- dal.tlhten. 2 cra.nd- IOJ\S, 11 pat IJ'&l\(S- childrem and 6 l!'Mt- gttat-erandchildren Visitation Auaust Z. 12Noon to ~PM at the Harbor Lawn Mem- orial Cha~l. RoMry and Mass of Chri.ttian Burial at Our I.Ady of Mt. Carmel Catholic Church, Friday August 3. at lOAM. lntermemt Calvary Cemetery, Lee A:n- geles. Harbor Lawn Morruary. I)irector3 )40.~~54 • PACIAC VIEW MORlAL PA9't< Cemetery • Mortu1ry Chapel • Crematory Pacific View Dnve NNpOl't Beach M4·2700 McCOMl'ICK MOltTUA)tV 1795 UQuna C1nyon Aotd ... una a.act\, Ca 92651 49 •• 9415 ... ' "8.IC M>TICE .. a a C7 -PllllC NOTICE 642-5678 • .. r $2.17 per day ~I:! .,.,. DAR.Y PlOT SERVICE DIEC TORY '*-the IAVIN!! MIAAOA ~the HIJNTIHOTON BEACHCOMBER~ Wedneedayat no...,_ c:twoe4 CALL TOOAYll Ul,_LW ' Yow Diiiy PUot ~Directory ~tetlve . IU·4U1ut.lll • z a e • lr••l•r ...... ValanJa•.. b &Jutanb, al. Apr?anh, Val · &f!!!!Uah, Val. aca H AuHuta1at1 Lest Feaa•.. 30M Belt Wu... lllO 111 ..... Ill ~-.. • ... Cenu •eJ Ila nu celil .... Ult Cetta .e's.-im ..... rt Inc• 1111 hatab lt07 SPIRifOXL READINGS Lott. Whft• Cockatlel RE-CARPENTER. framing HUYDY /lltll ...... ...,.,..., .... -.....,.lllioiii-......,ioiiiiiiili , ________ '!!'!!'!!"!""!~'!'"ml~---.... _ _. ______ OCEANFRONT Newport Advtoe In All Matter9 & WARD $50 Nr 21st & eicper. Gen'I conat. full Time wlfrlN1e ben- --------1.,._ ....... 1 2 BR 2 ... f-2 8' 2 Ba. frplc, gar, S57225 .. 2 BdB • pJetlo, no petaSt $550/mo 1 Bd apt. Encl clau A Clean, quiet $650-CouC nNlinRg. 18815 SC~~ Senta ane CM 849-3898 knowt.dge. $10. p/hr. eflt1. 495 i . 17th St. C.M. W'"*· Balboa laland 2·er ......,,,... • ..,.., _ .. $595/mo 1at & tut,: M-.. amee ger, clOM to beach, ntc. S1250 87~888 emtno .. 1. an ,...,, ptua. can start lmmed. ...., ......... , m T ... ..-Lc..,;...n:;~=-~ a i;A_.Jll · S4pt 10 rm, totally r9dec0feted curt ~ -673-77.!Z....~ . ...qu,.katloll. .. LIC'O..J92·129e Puuula 301 93't·ns! No~~ otft:~ n (~1•>~3-0M2 s1 -=reo.~sse<tryw: 2er ~:~2 ,::~ .. rt· ~=,~~;' N:~~ ni.4:.oo9'8m 'i~,1• 2to1 •SP!ntua1 Psychic. Ad· ESCOift/IDD!L! UIPIT tltllWk suonv. x..Ray PA~APTS w/ln walking '535 831-3871 $425/mo 642-5"4 M1·1IOI CdM GRill ROOM Y\IOI' 6..,C.IULSead«• Outcalt ONLY 135--1 ~ eicp pret.rr.d 842-7198 IM~p;...,..,_.,... .... ..,.I oft bdl 1 & 2Br $975. . Bath UM Kit Den LR Put, preMnt & futute. TOPW ElCprd. lmmed. • muat lllHl11I liH.&Xrnm. sa 5&$950844-2811 2BR 1350 mo .. utll, no Lga 1bdrmonV1ctorl1,nr $475 · 84<M255 675-249Sor831-8984 Femalespref Modeltand Mvatructt.l3l-4402 _...1....._ no peta. Mawr. ~. Qulet-28' 1~Ba w/1rplc. 1 pets or weterbed1, Infant Nwpl Ave/ Harb<><. Super f8corta. (213) 888-1984 CHART HOUSE RH· s.aru1 ~• ...... Quite, eecure. block to bch. Avail Aug pref. only. 1BR 1300 mo colld $445. 851-9528 FEMALE rmte wented taurant In Dana Point Opening, Del Met.,...""' 1ot1 Newfpot1 &4&-1373 15 $975/mo 131-.38045 + uttt. "° pet• or water-r-Cond •kt ao e.aut apt °" Balboa. SCR•M-LUS .......... needs per"'*'*'i. ~ 1u11-t1me. ~· M-- !!!!iii!i. :;;!E7~ bed• ~_mt 2•so uicury 0· wa 0 · Gar, rtp, 1 blk to bch. n O =I .. 011 time bookkeepet For out. ~ only. dtr2 bdrm ftpl, ~ Bl C.M Cat Plaza. frpl(;. elegant IN NEWPORT BEACH '300, Kelly 873-1443, Uf a ._ appt. c:a14~1 ;93 Laundry. Ironing, geiwel F.um. 281 14>& ao:; to g8(. patio. no pets. AYI THE SEVILLE rrench dra. AIC. In-home A r .. t pteoa to llw on the ua. 875-709-4 Iv mag ANSWERS fX5N NCAISe l'IOUMClunlng, clothee bdl A>--....._.... _. 911. $925. mo.~ Securny. 2 Br, 2 be, 'gpper Baw Private Major Company e•nand-CHILDCARE/DOMESTIC care & Ute coot!lna Cd . ,.--.~ • ..._ "' · 2 Br 'W/gar. carpets. lncldl W/D, pvt club ~l~bhouaH' ' & health ltatall WaatH ztot CoNln. Hazel Ing to 0 C. ern. Catt-M-F W011t, evall~ble to l cou-Bafbet&, Mon-Frt }~pm P*. el'ld D*' M50. 2~5 ctftJ •na Z7H drapes built-Ina. fenced w/tennla eta, pool1, jK. apu, 8 tennis courts. ], Wanted· t BR apt yrlY vtc:i.o. Atful t714 997•5729 pie. Nr Npt Height•. lrg EOE (819)753-0339 La ~.7;;: coltect 16drm bmr apt wtth yard ~/patio Water pd sauna, beaut dee. club poola cioae to bualneaa Balboa lstand Local ref-CELLO Rtl w..-t SI 2br apt ~ncl. a..s.eo51 --kitchenette $400 Incl 838-4120 Call 1·5PM hse. mucil more. $835 . • 873-7994 SkatebOltda are not un-!f_ w-ref'• nece9N1Y. ~, .. !ni:!!i~~~;:i utlla. call •ft 8 556-90945 2819 Sant• Ana J' $805 mo lncd• most utll'a. St OG-Airport, Faal'llon erenoee common In certeln parts APPT SETTERS: P/tlme help wanted. Good Albans. days 638-0405, Island, oonvenienl ihopl of my towr1. I was aur-~ •100 1 week. Clerks pay. Must had car • ..... W *N~ ~~g11• lndry $850 eves 731· 7528 on sight W&ml tUOUnLY pri.d one dey to ... • Guaranteed + comm NEEDED IMMEOIATEl y Femar. pref 986-1300 pvt bet\, pool, .-::urtty, 2BD 2 ba +den, eec ~--....... student all!I""' Good ... ___ _,__ · 12 entry level~· · .J.1600.. mo MJn Rent°' reni.I oHtQe open Mon-No pets 833-8974 NrNptttetgnt. lrg bright a 3 B.cSroom Home for Eic-.. _-. w ... ' p • ....,. ... v........ • ftllng •Insurance o.xeroic ORIVER~roaa CCMJntry, IHH. 831-8250 OR Set 1-5 PM 810 BaJcw Sl. airy 2br apt, children wel· Singles 1 & 2 Bdrm Apart-eoutlve Femlly of 3. Lo-•longeld• her board Wiii traJri. No Miring: long term aaalngment, Calif. lie req. MacGregor 842-1802 241-1275 •OIUL Nim* come. avell lmmed ~750. mente & Townhouse• cetlon should be Within. White aM pushed her Call anytime. 751-3008 Cotta M ... Ar.. call YllCht• 1831 Ptacentla, tU lnci 645-8051 rrom $680 (Alk about 10 mne radkia of Cotta CELLO now to 1t111 • Coste M... lprtanb Ua1 Clean 28' 18a wlpetlo. Off Brand rww 1 Bd & 1 Bd _u_ furnished apta, c:omple1e Meaa. Peraonal and Bat* l1111rl1a tn. Ptrhl VICTOR ELECTRICAL -' stl"Mt pt1tg '500 OY9 Tloft Condos Starting at POOL fireplace, pvt patlO With TV. linens & utan.Ila, rafereno. upon r~uest. Lest i ft.U 3004 150 I day pi t . Poaa. flt. .TEMPORARY SERVICES CONT .. "CTOR W... hb.M IHI MS-OT14 e~ 83l-146e $850 r«tt to ~Call X-LG 2BR $635 · must be rented fOf ahot't call (714) 842~21 and At:&lldOMd:;ao;abt;teeo Must know marine & 4341 Bl ch ate 105 Np1 L.ook""" tor"" _ ICl9d iBR 16:. ev:lt s:pt ii. EASTSIDE ~f\t cheery Rusty 831•12 Eutlldano pet1557-28-41 term or longer) On Jam· leave oeteJla With LIM 13 k tt nd fresh water Mt-u,a ~ S .. ,. expet1t1 S850/rno. Call &7~ 2Br 11L be, /p, """'h, •LARGE 1bdrm, c1rpet1. PRIME autal..._ 2""·. din boree Rd et San Joequln Gtey On Week.......ta can moodom~• cet ~2 ~ • liable trens Apply wkdys Beac:h 5&-4520 olfloe men for a emalt ol• '" ,....._ d s oo ""' "" Hiiis Rd. 650-2055 ~i · g omea • .bet. 9 am, 438~ 17th St. flee Boot<wOtt< l bllllng eft 5 pm wtcdya 2.n d flr $ 6 5.0J m o 'T5' & pool • A{lt rm, ~ g&f, Cfpt1, drpa 14~1100 (TO $1500' MONTHLY). Beautlful gentle golden leb CM. OWi nPIST to glV9 to CPA monthly. 2 8' 1 bl yMr1y bayfront 840-0997 6'4 3618 aft 3:30 S565/mo 5-49-2330 ... 1 yr old male, ONLY TO am IECUll"-YW Pef'IOfl, eicperi.nc.ct "" KnowtedQe of electrlcel upper duplex Vlewl E-SIOE N~ ll'g 3Br 2Ba I UU &PT Pvt 1 Br lrplc. pool. patio, THE BESTI 640-2314 v-generalofflcepro<*ture. part• { equlptment Ou191. nrepiaoe, )uat r• 1750 ..QlrtlQt lfld ncd Qood..W..aldaJoca1JoQ. 3 Be gar. No pets 399 w Bey Carattl fer Exp only need appty. neeO.o tor olftoe aJPPOrt ~· PIT ok. Cell mo4il.a. new paint. 642-4834 &75-7396 1•1r Ba. patios. O!W. bit· St S545 • 650-8357 Ital 2112 F'ound 2 Ooga; Bk leb 591-aoo7 In Santa Ana. Muet tYP9 for eppt 8·30-3.SO c:wpet, wellP9Pef, appll., Ina. Kida OK. 2-sty Avail. - -G . Spacious ~1ngle one female & Chow/lhep mix &ITI TllU SlllTU 50 WPM and enjoy bUly &424482 etc. No garage. 873-5-429 1br 1be new carpet/atOYe now S695 mo 850-3&69 STUNNIN Large 1 & 2Br & two bedroom apts. Parrot YG yellow nape. female HB 984-3456 Opportunity for lnduatrl-t=honel. Dutlea ln-'"e,....NG_RA..,..VE-=-R,...,-trophy--.,,... lrj bale. chltd OK $450 -2Ba grdn apt, pool $465 Very tame, talkl, ous vounn,..,..,..,.. Jn e• c a _..,,.tlon flll""" "raver .,,_,_ FuH Tl-Chermi....prv2brfrplendk .. ""177 su--" $475/mo 2 Bd 1bl Close & S585 710 W 18th St 11~1.w/ ..... -u: .. u... ' -• ...--.. &--r-... ' ""' • • ...,.,,_... .._ ".,, .. -... -· .,.. "" •• pending euto neat dept. copying. malling ..... pref. Noedt Trophy& En-msmo. annual. 30&'A to lhOPI. bUHI, & -., .... , CIOIOI NC $475 873-3 FOUND ADS Rapid advencemen.t. lltereture and oYerllow r.~ Co .. 170 E. 17ctl Coral (213) 277-2120 1BR Utl Pald-prtble "1>1-achoofa. wm; nn $510 + $200 dep E-Side 2272 Maple Want a selecilon of great Slngle car gar O< 1t0<ege. Mu.t have vaJld drtll9r'e typing. Calt Mt O.Vld, t.. ulle 117 Coeta 831..()921 TiL IHllEllEIT hvtng? We can ofter any-Easy alley 8CCMI $50 IRE fR£E lie. Call Mr. Johrlaon 073-0850 ,_Meaa ______ -Paluala 2'1fl 2 Bd 2 bl Condo. 1550 alt, a;2 llOI thing from 1 small apt to 343 cabrlltQ 548-9518 0 ft S34-o494 COOKS, flexible In,,.,., EXERCISE INSTRUC- alr/cnd 2cergar nucpt -• a4BdhouN lfloolllngln ll It t b f c u AUTONEHICLE neceuary. BBQ ••P-TORS $12.50r hr. Wiii pBR 2ba. frplc, patio, agl MC gate. $775 ~1858' autltul amall complex CM. NB. or t;iB think of UI rURNISHEO or et a I 3 : MAINTENANCE helpful. Contact Ron tf9Jn. 1198-809 pr, .,.., beach bay. • llrlt for--thet ch~ of 1260 sq it offlqe apace. Requlreexp'd-Jndlvtdueito 3-4PM 8312110 M50/mo Y"Y ...... evall 2Br 1~Ba &10 Joann now renting 2 bedrooms. ideal Jiving UNFURNISHED Retall/wholeaale for rent. Ul·llll mllntalll flMt of Co. care. · -Fabfle & ~ d t/1. no P9\1. 873.0125 Adult• preferred. Small $850/mo Areptaoe, all TSL MANAGEMENT $480/mo.1at,laat & dep Wuh, WIX & general Counter-Mm! maneg~. tr1butor needa lndl¥tduel Ll K " ~~ pet 0 K 845-8-453 bullt·I~ Avocado &42-1603 HEALTH Limited par1clng, no mfg. melntenance required. frndly, reep. dep, det to work PIT In a.mple U LMge 2 bd 1 be IOW9f NB REAL TY 875-18-42 CLUBS T£ NNI~ Apply 890 W 17th CM F nd· bird In e--11 Ana Futi-tlme M9-29ae or I all t • d . La Igo n dept. See Roger et Coun.-r B• Duplex near 9Ctlools no pets' TIL IUl&IEllEIT between 9em-3pm. ou --'' CIHn•ra·320 Legion, try Ufe Oeelgne. 151 Awcedo CdM S725 mo S550/mo 631~8155 · M2-U12 ~tfiield SWIMMING plus Heights erea-cell BookkHpar-Conatruc-Lag Bct1494-8450 K&lmue H7. Coate M ... d 842·1053 wwcm mulh mou~' Sorry 2 rooms, fully fum .. gmd 540-t023 to Identify tlon. Payables end gen· CUSTOMER SERVICE 9AM-noon. ••Ut1UT1 t1 n I M d I floor, $400. Npt Bch. eral ledget experience r• •--------.,.. n-r£ s o n 8:30·5PM 848-2474 Found Chllda bicycle quired for Newport REP-FIT!Mldeealeepoe-Food prep Nirvana Natural Beautlful garden apta, oar-open daily q to b Pleue Identify 682-3258 BMch realdentlaJ and In· ltlon, boating Industry Fooda 1231 N Coat Hwy ~~' BB~5 ~~~ ~ d ~~ ~ Mm2~ ~: Found Golden 11b-yng dU11rlll developer. s.iwy knowtedQe preferred. For LIQ Bet\ e.twn t-2 M-F SYDllEY 2Bdrm/1Ba $830 00 ground level S250/mo. mete. Bear St Coate commeeurete with •11.· r,~~~1= r:i~ FOOD SERVICE AlTEN0- 301 Avocado 642-9850 CALL &45-,53e3 M ... &40-2314 perlenc:e. Send reeume ANT· part ti"* hours 241 w Wiison 631--0960 Apartments FOUND· pu tan Shep with salary hlltory 10 Dellvery pereon PIT evell. Daye & nights. Mutt 0 DIOITIYI Simi ml vie :f:f & Edward.. Westfield Companie• needed-mutt Mva gOOd be 18 yra. Rlicqu9tbell I.RR WISTSllE 4-PLD Newport Beach So. 1rv1rw. phone anaw ,... H ~ 842.91eo 964_9485 4750 Voll Karman 11a driving record. Cell World, "2-1374 uk tor 2Br 1ea. carport, lrg patio 1700 lbth Street capt.. cont rm, utH pd. ' 101, Newport BelCtl ca 833--1884 Mol'lty .··········••IJ yard 725B w 18th S5&5 (at Dover) eecretary Mt'I 250-0277 FOUND s.t of keyM:Orner 926&0 of Aamlngq/Albatroaa ------~ . ...,,.-Cl k 11 .. 1. leac• 2740 642-5113 lntenordellonflrmha.lof· 7/30M&-28871ct.nt~ BRICKLAYE'RS HELPER; er s P'ri4ay, A.ap1t 2 ARJES (Marctr 2 f:'Aprtt -19): Dag deep for inforrnauon -yo u c;:ouJd bit jackpot. Sccnano highlights mystery. intngue, secret s)mbols and a special accountmg.. Focus on romanlJc involvement. crcativn y. ability to ,et to heart of matters. Gemini. Sa&Jttanus persons pla) key roles. TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20); Go slow. h1g.hhght d1plomac). rrahze that llft represents genuine token of affection. Spotlight on public relations, cooperative efforts. 1>9ss1ble partnership. marital status. Keep resolutions concerning that "sweet tooth." GEMINI (May 21 -Junc 20) You gain add1t1onal 1nforma11on concerning work, and1V1duals who share your ideals. One )OU aided in past is now ready to return favor Don't pemut pnde to hamper prosress. Pisces. Virgo natives figure in unusual scenano CANCER (June 21-J ult 22): GoQd pi99_n aspect ~POth&hts. ch~. travel, variety, children and specu\auon. You arc going to win despite thoseYiboclaim, .. You don't ha\cachance" You now are the upset l.:1d wbo wins friend , pins populanty and 1s vindicated. LSO (July 2).Aua. 22): Study Cancer message for valuable him ~pite rcsuicuons, you malce progress and can successfully complete ssianment. You'll have w1der audience, you'll bend of burden. cash flow will resume and property proves to be worth more than onginally ntidpetcd. VIRGO (AUJ. 23-Scpt. 22): You get proverbial second chance -"ttnon can be conq:1.Cd. shon trip may be necns.ary to complt'te mi 1on. Strive for &realer independence of thought, action. Mem~ of ~te sex ii loyal, aids in getuna to heart of matters. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Learn by teaching. Focus on gcllina t )'OLI need, locatina lostan.icleund mwna "final pa)·mcnis .. You ·~ICOCICG t.bJQuch unonhodox procedures. Flamboyant individual docs wdt'cventually fuJfjU obhption. \VJltch Aquarius! '900RP10 (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): You will be ai ri&ht place at crucial mornenL Travel indicated, popularity increU«. you also become more aware of body~· Trust your own judgment. What sccmC'd 110&1 WiO be recovered . Gemini plays key role. SAGnTAIU (No'" 22-Dcc. 21): Look behind sccneJ for ~ lndividu&l who kcep1 ••out of ight" wtJI cmerae. w1ll offer !::rand i• sincere. You have rare OPJ?Or1Uruty now to rebuild, revise to;Pc~~emouonal finaaci.al si,ibility. IC«p cy n Scorpio! ' CAftU0011rit ( n.Jan. 19): Pressures are relieved. travel 1s snade ~bile. romance nourish and you'll be very popular. Be ready ha vane1y,of~pc_~s.1tt id;cas on paper, ttahze )Ou can in vii wnttd wont. Qemuu. VUJO natives play key role AQUAJUUl(Jan. 2~Fcb. 18). Y~ o~ercomc ~bstltles, you have 1~ ID ulcrtue eamtnp. Oomesuc adJustmcnt 1s part of n no. fOMald mdude dlaDl.e of residc!fU due to hohday or vacation tta\ICI. You rtimve J>ft wbkh h lps bri&hten '1mound1n . piilCBI (Feb. 19-Mtrch 20): An wcr are fourid Wlth1n -l'101d llCilll pcnutbcd • ou "de innucnocs. Accent intuition, r.p1ntual -. 5 pan wluch could include education nd U>>rl. -voe!Jt 'th _n "' ch 1he :mniont and u coOld be u a hero. ) ______ __. N rt B _ ... N flee 1\lblelLldo Vin~· Must bl dependable. '650/mo 2 Bd 2ba •Pt. ewpo eaui o. Ideal for draft pereon-n/a Found: Whit• dog wffh l.D. good tra_na. 875-3175 Incl gar, yard. patio. New-880 Irvine Avenue S300 mo 833-a5a• Newport Beach Anlmal ~=-.,,_~-........ -- port Beech ~ty 875-""' Shelter. 844 3656 BUSY CANDY MFO Meda 1&42 dya 9&<>-4614 •vet (at 16lh) 2 LARGE OFFICES full & part-time help. $950 4 Br 1' .. b• t-"'--= 645-1104 w/wlndow view Near LOll:Blond-Gold•n rat ~PPly at llland Sweet ,. .,............... O C Airport. lrvlne male Red COClar-Gabe Sh()p, 440 E. 17th St .. w/rec rm W/d hkkp.crpt aa Zerox, aecretarlal & Reward 5.45-3808 Af5 C.M (8AM-12Noon) Prlv pk w/c:hlld play area 11 ,__,...,....,.. ____ .,..-_,_,....,.... pool.b-bell Close 10 all phone ens. MN eva · LOST Brittany Spaniel In CAFETERIA-Line Servet 19858 Bustlard Sundeek, view of pier. $450 •a/mo. 752-0980 ll'le College Perl< ~rea Caahler & Manager'. TSL MANAGEMENT encl gar $&50 225 La llW lfFIOl ILlll REWARD ~41--069& Apply 17481 Redhllf et 8•2-1603 Paloma Call collect Orange County Airport LOST CAT. male long l'lalr MacArthur. 7131 & 811, 837-7918 ., .. comer of Rehlll & crUl'n cir w/blue 9Y9I 2-4pm Employ" .,,. DELOE 2U 11& IMal Brlaiol Xlnt vt1lblllty. Nr Avocado old CdM tranc.aak for Pet Kohler. 1 mil• to bMctl. ffPI. encl 0 ly 2 It left 1200 R9w. d Pia ~II &73"'4858 gar . d/w, blt-1n1. amk 1280 mo-uU inc1. 1160 a;p n "' ea · r Oer 0.tJlllng/plell-up de-alarm balcony wet., pd 538-102& eq. tt & 1950 aq. ft. Wiii L04atl Fem Wt Bull Terrier livery FIT. Must be neat & -1650.. '536-'™9.att 5P~ F\H~Tlhta "IJdrni w/ISia. =~ t~,:;.=!!~ve BLJ;l/C)e .,~Al •. ~~~:~~ly.c~~-m: CIRCLE K·MARKETS () ~~NOW HIRINC GlSHIERS I CLllll Interviews dally from 11:00 a.m.-12 noon at 1390 North Pacific Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach (on PCH & Vie Jo) -Ca T11 4J 494 9233 for more.iiiiO--El.gen! 925 1/f 1Br Cf)ndo Kitch priv, Ill pvf hm nr R & H INVESTMENTS Just altered.S4S 4158 •di Hunt Mrbf, _ 1~ n-S C Ptz.e for Clean r,i1at>1e 111-1111 p..l.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliii. amkra, no pets. poOl/jec. ~ 540-4791 nr bch S850mo &40-7829 PllTUlll IFO, llJTI "'---=---:-_ RoomS250mo. nrtt,lutl WATERFRONT In LIOO L•tHI IHck 2741 MC Avell 8/1 Colt• MARINA VILLAO! 2er fBe ocn vu. walk 10 M .... Gd toe. 831-8559 Balcony Eievator, prl· bch, N. end, beam cell W•tellff, NS. 1225 Incl v•l• entrence. Fully $900 yr bull 497-4801 ulll. Woma.n only, non-cpt'd Furniture optlOnll Latua lltttl 'IS2 amoker. call 048-$559 C.11 87Me24 R;; t er 16• conao lttt t,! el1 s~~~~ !c.!n ~ wuher/dryer. pool, Jae, If.AWi lllTD. otfloet MOO f:. Of· ciubhouM •tept to*"' Wkly I •• •• fl N . ~ .. $575/mo 1., 1 t 1 MC ,.., a... now av .. 1. ca ewport .... ion depoeit. 493.,4:. :1n&r:n Colot TV, laland. '40-075_5 • ll!J!I! luc~ 7•t 2274 ~ .. ~~.C.M. Ct.:~ Clean epedoul 28r 1Ba. ·=--------______ .... ,.., trptc, o•. w/d. Xlnt 1oc l•-11 ~e~~~ taoo u.. e7M912 Aot ltatab IHI .,.,P'eJ*o.ttc.87tleoc> EASTBLUFF epecl<M 1 NftP()t1 on ti; 6'ICfi Bdrm, pool, pl•H•n• S Br, 2ba. fulty furn, · UllU llAll · .,.. No f)ett 1425/mo ~. ful OClMn ~ fine CoU1 ttwy loettlon 844-4787 Aug 20 \hN Aug '2t '900, Mii dOwntown Sl50 eq Hu,~ YU, et bell, lg 157 ... 1elor7H-1172 ~~· 3br, 2be, • Olf, IOry. ON 8 CH. ~38' f7M700 yrly 11175 84~·2423 2 av able NOW r0t 3 ~__,· ~---=-----' vie. 3 br. 2 ba. klfy, SW: ·~,.:~~IAP s;:~'~i~~· ~~1~':2.:.::3 Room WI~ .mtano. for C.MeMCoa 24• Walattront ,. 1 d 1 Ot 2. Key to Prtvate bch 11t s-110, igatage ~-.Y 8 Laguna '1 ~~ lutab IHI kr 075~912 .. Laguna "-"Y 9 1800-8F iiooolmonth ~/ml> 1 Bd 1ba .Ol. 1 lmAU 87 81rch, N••port from Good 2 .& s Bdrmt, uoo-s1000 Aot &41-6032 loeatJOft. wkly on & Off I bMcf'I 121 W. Prime ..-. ID , .... Cd toct-rtcw ~ .... J.lon.~·~----~~..ill IU-11U N r District Managers If you .njoy working wilt\ young boy11& girla ond de1k joba ore ... not for ~. consider o ca'"' n If\• l'lhnpoper c1rtvlo ttOf'\ field. Th,, ii o unique po"hon wilt! doily chol~ & reword1. Ovr opon1ng• ore lm~iate. Apphconn mutt hoV9 o van, 1rotionwogon or trvd1, We offer on ••<tllent '<!lor, ft. o bonus pion ond gen ollowonce. We hcr't'9 on ena"-nt benefit plan thot lnclu<ka ho pt- 1oll101ton inturonc-e, ltberol vocot•on ond hol1d~1 Condldot.1 muil hove o de\lre to be wcc~ful ond be Imo to wort.. hord. If yov th you ho....t the qu I flCOtiom, pftOM opply in person toi --th 330 W, Bay Costa Mesa, CA 92626 • .. ii Newspaper . KlDS-~ARN GREAT TRtPS-ANltrRIZE-S! AGES 11·14 : EARN .. TO $75.00 PER WEEK . • We "°" havt ls Oj)tflllllS for yoe,. up btawen lo secure rtadtrs fof The Or,,.e CNst , Dady Pilot Our ctns Jllrt 11 3 30 p.111 and work 1111ti I 30 p lQ ......,,.. Oii S.tvrday, 1Wt wort 1 fn lllOft houn Y041 .. urn many tnps l1'lf pr11a. alone .. 111 wninc rout own mo11t1 , • . • tllert rs no dtl!Ytt"' or colllcboel lllYOIWd. H you '" 111terested. p1use can Mt. Cart • (714) 548-7058 .. ACftOH 1 Marnpulate 8 Exc:ludino 10~- 14 Concur 53 Partook ot 54S Infield apot !17 Fastanet ISO Spc>ngeft 12 Ct1tQI PREVIOUS PUZZlESOLVED 1!1 FIU1e't kin 11 Helen· 1 home 17Sall~t 18 Mlehtgan footballer 20 Ending fOf oc:t o 21 Mortgage 54 Al the peall 85 Nat "l(tng"' -se wau af1 17 TV progrlm U Advised 69 ln<:anlltlOn DOWN Worn away 1 e.. •kin 2 nttlnert 2 Eskimo hut 25 Journey 3 Yearning 28 Lengtll unll 4 Zodiac: tlgn 30 Oftc:Ont1nue 5 Nom - - 34 Eval\19 one I Meanest 3!1 ~ttted 7 Dark poet 3 7 S~able I Coin of P•u 38 Mouthtut t $epMate 311 Loaler 10 Putt Of ctup 4 I OrNdlul 1 1 Bone-dry 12 AuehOfl "'Otd q Inhabitant ol 13 Loolced avet IUM 19~1ited 43 "Ha\19 1 -I' 22 Spe;n, etc ~Drama 24 ~~tllr -spwc:I•-7" t,,.,,- 48 To the poont 21 CllWge 41 Statute 27 Ttie 99f11ty SCI TMtn 28 Deinhlf !12 unco ..... ed 2t Actresl V41fl·- 14 17 31 Remain !11 Com,:nandment 32 Ent1Clf 53 Stretch over 33 0.tchar~ !14 An1m111 38 Uproar !15 - -ol p1n• 1 40 AllrllCted U11le • 1 SmaM coin 56 Chime 4;J SJO<!deN OI !17 S1nJeu eg-rlCiietu'e--51 Pig"ityie 45 Wat""'ays !19 M 1 Gwyn 47 Otta e1 At.eft 49 Humiliated 83 SPotlt ptue " 12· 13 THEODORE I ROBINS fORD Hle>O .. AlllO-lll\'l"I CO\U~l'\A b4l (1010 BtUS'roL A'! IDIRG!Jt m SANTA AJIA Ml·OllO , Bill YATES I VW-PORSCi·H tS~r 4i00 4'1-. ·•'.. -----COHHfll CHEVROLET "',. ~ ' I t • I .. ~I ' r-. \ '.~ ,. - S4b-1200 II CONVERTIBLE. orig OM*. )(Int Shape l2tOO 080. &45-2205 aft 8pm '711Musaq~ NewMtc:tt ...... • AutQ. we. more .l(74~) $3318 . BILL~ TOYOTA 1°920~ D..ctl -9'2-<>129 75 Mutllang n ~ v-t. A.IC, PIS, IM. bnmec. llA ... M llONllAC S l A 0 • U l\'l BUENA PARK 0 CHICK IVERSON ·. Chevrolet • Porache • Audi 4G E. least hJ., l~ert .... ~ 11MIOO Highest Quality Sales & Service 0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS DIAL MERCEDES 7141637-2333 Alongside the Santa Ana Fwy. In Buena Park 0 RAY FLADEBOE HONDA # 11 ....... , Ir., lni•• In The Irvine Auto Center 830-7800 Complete Sales, Service & Leasing ~ COST~-MESA MITSUBISHI -------2833 Harbor Blvd. Coste Meaa 540-4491 Sales• Service• Leasing 91 FWY. EDINGER FOUNTAIN VALLEY WARNER o--THEOD01'.1E ROBINS ~ FORD U.S.A.'s # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer Modern Sales, Service, Parts. Body, Paint & Tire Oepts. Competitive Rates On lease & Daily Rentals IMO lbrMr lh•., hsta.lna 142-0010 ., M0-1211 0 SOUTH COUNTY • VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU 18711 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach (714) 842-2000 SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE . Ora..-Countys lMaat Volk~/lsuzu De* m We w• ttot a. Under10ld PARTS DEPARTMENT OPEN SATURMY . G RAY FLADEBOE VOLKSWAGEN -#20 lllte .... , •., lni•• · 1n The Irvine Auto Center 830-7300 • Oraflie Countys Netml Volhwattn Du/tr Complttt Slits, Semct & LtaSlnt -- 22 FRWY IRVINE .., 9 CONNELL CHEV-AOLET 2121 .................... Ovtr 23 Years Serving Orange County · Sales • Service • Leasing 548-1211 . $,.a.I Pw U.. 541-1411 MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM -8:00 PM SATURDAY 8:30 AM -8:00 PM SUNDAY 1~ AM -5tOO PM 0 STADIUM PONTIAC W•'r• N•w -W•'r• O..llng Acron from the Big A on Katell8 Jut Wnt of the (57) Orange Fr .. wey Sales • Service • Parts • Body Shop on Premises Aaallel• 2221 E. l1t1ll1 111-1111 G BILL .YATES YILllWllll • NIUIE • PEHEIT SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE 12112 , ........ , ..... _ ,.,..., ... 411-4111 117-4IOO - -- SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO ' .. 0 BAUER MOTORS BUICK -JAGUAR -ISUZU CompMte AutomodYe Neede SAL.ES • SERVICE • LEASING Ane 8elecllOn of Quilty u.ct Vehldee # 1 BUICK DEALER IN ORANGE COU'fTY 2125 HARBOR BL VD. COSTA MESA 179-2500 0 RAY· FLADEBOE U..U ID•IY '&1111 ISIZI #11&.ttO.•••.,lnlH In The Irvine Auto Center 830-7000 G CREVIER BMW. .SALES • IERYICE • LEASING "Where Professional Attitude Prevalla" lpedeallng In luropelft DI..,. lxoelaftt lllH...., of New llnd ClllefulJ..,.,.,.... UMd llMW'a lllwaya In atoctc. 835-3111 · 208 W. 1at St., Banta Ana ._ Comer of Broadway & 1st St. ao..d Sundays 0 .ALH G ..,!J.E~~~GPARl& IR .. UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBiLE GJl'!,~';!~~~c!,~!_~TS Overseas Oellvery SpeciaJl1t1 _ H9NDA · 1001 Ou.II St. -R...,. DI~ ~~t:~ -2910 Harbor Blvd. IT\ World'• Largnt ~tlon of IT\ BMW -ROLLS ROYCE Coate Mesa 540-0713 'CJ ·M833-er~ Q 1540 Jamboree Rd. 3 Blocks so. of .as Fwy. - - --- Newport Beach 840-8444 .. r . --Wes · ltaslll · Pw · ltnlce . Wt .. - Classified advertising 1s your best choice for he!P-in selling the items you no longer need . It's. Qu ick ·and inexpensive. ana the Pilot reaches Potential buyer Who live in this area. C811t6day. QailjPila& , • ... , ' . . , • C-DUllY 1111181 --------- -- -- ---- THURSDAY, AUGUST 2, 1984 ORANGE COUN r V . CALIFOF~NIA 25 CENTS --------- NBmanjailedin mu:tder Irvine police can't find a corpse after motqrists-wttness 'dumping' -~y.have been unable to ..local~ a. By STEVE MARBLE . Ot .... Oellr.......... . . nextto a body sptawtedofTto the side . of an IMne road that leads to the county dump. • The· body, however, mysteriously disappeared before Irvine polict ar- rived on the scene. Ralph was rcponedJy seen, by wit-ed on sa:spk1on of murder He 1 nesses standinJ at the rear of the bein held at the cwpon b ly vehicle, 11ccordang to police. · Jail. Poli<% invntiptOrs have been 'Un-Pohoe did nOl •y_ h6w lbe linked able to find either the car orthe body. Ralph to the Donna Canyon Road lrvJnc Lt, Al Muir said it is assumed . sighting. lnvestiaators also dido) say lbebody;waw~d~ r . wnetheHhcff left then was d{iven from the area: oo the roadway where the motonsts pana Hills' Steve Hegg wins the gold Jn cyc1- tngas the U.S. medal A Newport Beach man was arre ted Wednesday on suspicion of·rn er, although hoa:nicide inveii.igators id Bruce Bradley Ralph. 57, was taken Ulto custodr.ifterwitn~tdenttficd him as the man they saw stan~ing Motorists traveling . along Bonita- Canyon ·Road. on Wednesday re- ported the sighting and "told in- vestigaton that the body was l)'µtJ n,ext to an orange Mercury Capn. Ralph wa5 picked up for qucstton-reported seeing the body. . ing at his NeWp<>n home later Muir saud the Capri. a 1976 odcl Wednesday and su~Qucntly book-(Pleue Me llURDER/A2) _ taily_cltmbs to29. Page Cl Caged bridegroom dis- covered on PCH./ A3 · Search for the suspect In ·a murder at a West- minster car lot has reached dead end./ A3 California Former President Ford's son Is handcuffed a.fter all~edy, trylqgtQJ~ lymplc sign./ M Nation , Instead of Ice cream, •Johnny' gets draft regis- tration notice./ AS Mother of McMartin Preschool youngster tes- tlfle~./ A4 World A hijacked French jetliner Is rocked.by explo!Jlon, but 46 passengers, crew safe./ AA Poles urgectto stay sober as part of Russian vodka boxcot~./ A4 :·:·:·:;:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:::;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:: Living For a true test of togetherness there's nothing like a six-month · family tour of the United ·States:/81 &ports · Tom McKlbbon, a New:. port Beach resident and an assistant U.S. women's sculling coach, has kept Olympic press- ure In perspectlve./C1 The Angels await a show- down series with flrst- place Minnesota after compl&tlng sweep In Oak- land./C2 Entertainment A new three-dimensional film process Is drawing oohs and aahs at Dlj- neyland. /85 .. Ticket · snafti at· Coto Games Shooting competition only had space for 700 spectators By STEVE MARBLE OttMOellfNetawt . Several thousand u~t Olympic ticket -holders fou nd themselves . drinkins ~ooffee..--eattng fiee<sweet-- rolls and killing time· Wednesday instead of viewing one of the final events jn the modern pentathlon at Coto de Caza. The Los Angeles Olympic Organiz- ing sold more than 7,000 tickeu to the five-event pentathlon competition but only bad space for 700 spectators at the site of~ th~ shooting ~v~nt Wednesday mornmg near Mission Viejo. "We never expected thls many people to show UP.," said Don Silv!ls, a LAOOC spokesman. ~In the enttTC history of international competition, a shooting event has never diawn more than 400 people ... Silvas said organizers thought they had played it safe by allowing room for about 700 spectators to the half- day shooting event which was fol- lowed Wednesday evening by a running event and finally the closing_ awards ceremony. But nearly 4,000 tick.ct holders arrived promptly for the shoqting event only to discover they would miss all or most of the competition. "l think it really caught them off- guard," suggested Robert Payton, a public relations spokesman for Coto de Caza. "It was a case where a lot more people showed up than ex-pected." . ·In an effort to pacify the. angry · crowd, ·Coto de Caza served free (Pleue .ee THRONGS/ A2) Long line for tickets to Games By JERRY HIRSCH Of ... Dellr ......... The Olympics are playing Santa Claus for the Hickory Farms food store at the Newport Beach Fashion Island shopping center. · . · lfit wasn't for the weather, Hickory Farms would think it was the height o{ the Christmas season with cus- tomers jammina the shop. It bas the good fortune to be just one door away from the Orange Coast's only Olym- pic ticket center. Hickory Farms. like the ticket center, is doing a booming business. One for the IWlana ,.- . . -' 'Black Friday' traffic ·in doubt ·Experts hedge bets on Olympic effect on OC, LA freeways · . From staff ... •!rf repNta Traffic continues to be light in Orange County 4urin tbc Olympics, ~laCk Frida?' Will bC u b8d ._; first tbo~t. Friday afternoon _traffic 1le'ftTS wins any medals even when there isn't an Ol~pics and officials were worried that the combination of the commuter traffic.. several Olympic -events in thecounty a.ndanish1 Angel baseball game at Anaheim Stadium could really gum traffic up -es-- pecially in the nonhern part ~f the county. But now they are making no predictions. • "We arc ready for anything;" said C-alifomia Hi~way Patrol spokes- man Officer Rrck Stevens. ..People expected the traffic to be terrible and at is liahter than nonnal s0 we are not making any predictions. It isanybod)''s~. lt woft't be blld if (PhHe .. aAC&/A2l ChiklreD blamed in RB blaze Fire mvcsugators suspect children playing WJth matches ignited a Wednesday ni&ht blaze that caused $55.000 damage to a Huntington Beach home. Huntmgton Beach Fare Depart- ment spokeswoman Martha Werth said the blaze occurred at 6: 13 p.m. at a two-story detached home occupied by Yogesh Pankh ... About 25 fire- fighters from Hunttngton Beach and Founwn Valley were summoned to extinguish the sccond~larm blaze. Bu•lnesa Traditional life Insurance has outlived Its useful- ness, says one Industry executtve./87 Every day this week people have been lining up in front of the ticket outlet as early as 5 a.m. -five hours before the center's I 0 a.m. openinf, said Bob McKinney, the centers assistant supervisor. The average wait is at least four hours and people who don't make it mside the ticket outlet by 6 p,m. go (Pleaee eee LONG I A2) Modern pentatblon 1-111 member Muala DanleJe of Italy croua tile fJnlah line of tile 4,000-meter race "at Coto de Casa to win tile told medal for blmtelf tn the . tndl .t d uAl compeddon and cllnch the fold for hta team lo o•erall competldon Wectneeday. For complete co•enae of the pentathlon e•enta; 11ee Sporta. Pa&e C 1. W cnh Slld damage as confined to the second story.and roof areas of the ·home. She sa1d mvestigators behevc children pla)tr\I with matches tn an upstairs closet caused ~c fire. Dam- age was estimated at $40.000 to the structure and SI S.000 to the contents No one 'was •OJUrcd m the blaze. Wenh sa1d. ~~~~~-. : A day in-the .life: =~::.Board ~~ OC sup·· ·erviso·rs Callfornla News .. A4 ClasMfted CM 1 k t th • •" b - - hFF ADLER News BACKGROUND =~~::... . ~ o~ a e1r JO ~· Help YOUfMU 82 i...... f o c • BOard roles in cc>unty 'ovenunent. · d HoroscoP.. .< ce Each board member mc~~rs 0 ran ounty I scnbtd what life i hkc on the Hall of Ann Landert . 82 ofSupervison-early. But there, any Administration's fif\h Roor and dc- uv.tng 81_2 has own approach imtlfF1tY 1n '7'c way each supervisor .1 d h"' da 1._ • ll'Tlnl... h·s or h-r b"*"" workday tat w .t n averqc "' 11-1a.c 1n Mut~I Fundt JJ7 cs ... 1 ... y.a" 11\tHftofa' optrvisor. Thc1rob!ICrvl· National New• A4 to Knotty problems en The elected leaders of county uons foltow in articles appcanna Opinion A8· · h · ffi aJ d · toda" and Fnda". · P•patazzl 81 1 Editor'$notc: Tb1sutbefintof1wo government vat t car ° Cl uues •BOard chairman Hamett Watdcr. Pc'let Log A3 tone! cktailit11 how Orange r,'ounty :A~n ~~~: li=~~~~~ Second Di trkt uperv1 r and the P.ubtlc Notlcee C5-e su~rvison.,.'1!,~,!heir jol •~d pent--~ dcc1 tons the bOard hands down first woman ~ttd to '~ rd Spotts . • ..,.. C1·5 the1rr1mc .. 1"'!4'}Urucet111.c •.UVA Even th ir oonccpu n of t 1 di u thcmulti-fM:icttdnaturcor Stock Mar.k•t• ,. 88 " board c~11rpuan Ham~u Wittier . supervisor i up~ to do van ' a upcrv1 r' Job ~hen a N to re1evia.on · 84 and /st D'}tnc.' Su~rv1sor Rbeer each tailonna the 42.·02-a· r JOb define her po$t. Thee~ 84·5 tantlJn. fn'day 1 orriclc will look r to sutt a personal vision aJld 1ndiv1d· Board mcmbc •~ minis· W•ther A2 the rem 11211t1 tbttt mem~rs.of rhr pasan tlY. ---~1rl they ha ~ leaastau\Lmlc... W~ w-------+-,-M. board In intcnic the 1t ti a qua • ud1c1at bod and l hdaptan lhcsamcforthcfivc the supcn1 (Pl -=----DAY/AS~ OC girl gets silver · f ot dad •s· birthday '-• ' . . . . .. .. - CoNTINU£O STORIES ------- THRONGS APPEAR AT COTO •.• Prom Al co .and w l rolh; to fan' un bl 10 view the competition, explained D1cl: Boltinghouse.~ 1dent of the Coto de Owl resort. Ticket holders al50 wc:rc' of'krcd a refund thouJh n wa uncle r today ~hethcr.any pcctato~ had takm thr l:.AooC up on that offer. ..... They · askM people: who were watchina to step back and have a cup of coff'cc to let others watch. Some went for that and somt' didn't;• Bo1tinJhou5e said .. . · "Unless you're a real shooting cnthu ia\t, it's not really that much of a spectator sport anyway," ht' added. The modem pentathlon, histori· cally only a minor footnote to the bulk of Olympic competttlon, ha' drawn huge: ~rowds in Orange County and. unttl tht>shootingevent Wednc • day. there was ample room for au ticket holders. . Sirvas said an information booklet distributed to all pentathlon tid;ct holders stated that only a. small number of spcctatOI"$ would be able to OC GIRL GETS THE SILVER •.• From Al Many Du stre,·whose 43rd birth--ind1v1dual medals w11J take place. he day ts Sunday, sai4_''a silver medal 1:. !Mild. a s1lnr medal. In gymnashcs. your Pam Bi leek. another member of the whole existence is based on \\-hat U.S. team. has lived with the1)usscre another person's 1mpress1on of }OU 1~. family for the past year while she has It's not how high you 1ump or ho\\ trained .m Huntinfton Beach, Her fast you run. it's subJCCll'Vt'". parents, who live m San Jose .. are "lt(lowsoonng) 1s very upsettmgat staying at the Dusserc's home during the tame. but at all evens out in the the Olympics. · end." Dussere said. Although Dussere scored an the top Ousserc and the parents of other eight on bOth the bar and floor Orange County'gymnam have bten exercises, she wlll not compete in the carpooling to UCLA, where the individual medal finals unless one of ·-competition is being held. They wiil the other Americans is sick or in1urcd. make the drive 3gain Friday and The individual competition is lim· Sunday, when the competition for ited to the two gymnam from each t h lh .shoottPa at one time. He id f ns \\Crc ttmmded of that Tuesday at Men I Park in Ir\ inc where the awunmm poruon of the pentathlon was held. .. We did the oot we could under the circums1Anoc :· 1tvn 1d. .. After the first rtl.Dy tn tbc hooting we ked l)CC!plc to novc back so othe1'$ could $.Ce and most of them actu lly did. "The po itive thing; I suppo~. is that so man~ peoplt are intere,tcd in pentathlon: he said. !'If )OU have to look at the neptive tde, it's that we ha~ some real problems " country who score highest'. Man> Dus5cre said he has "tnaxcd emotions"" aoout that rult, created some years ago to ~en out the competition because Sl'.>vaet women had dominated international gym· · nasties for so long. But. he ~id, for Michelle, the second yo ungest mem~r of the U.S. Olympic team. pulling off a silver medal is quite a thrill. . .. If she docs get to··cornpete on Sunday; I'll have a terrific birthday present But for now, I've got an early present and I'm very happy to ~ttlc with .that," he said. . • LONG LINE FOR OLYMPIC TICKETS •.• -. t Jl'romAl -~ --.------ Hot weather after early clouds Ttdee TOOAY 227p"' ,_l.50pm flllOAY 23J•"' 8 31 p"' 320pm 10 23p'ln Sun NII 1oc.., at 1 53 p m t1-Fftcl8)' el I 06 .-n •r>IJ M41"9MI Al 7 "62 pm MOOll Mt& •I 11 JI p m , ,_ Frl<IAy •1 102am • • Temps HI I.• .es oe 114 17 " eo 93 se 71 70 82 7& 05 71 17 72 73 • .. 82 .. ti 61 ~-..;.--'C 66 14 12 ea 71 70 .,, 5-4 .. 12 u n 11 10 ~--" 7! l'T 10 ; . Extended :! ~3 :: ft .. 16 .... ,. eo " 12 ~~ a 91 83 71 •9 ,,.ille 64 t2 u '°· 91 4$ 64 17 76 90 12 •:i 11 19 71 • 15 ., 47 ee es 100 79 .. 71 t3 .. • " 72 ., 05 .. 71 15 82 17 .. ee 11 I' 70 92 70 .. ,. 97 15 ti 97 95 70 IT 14 • 109 •1 S...DllVO •• " .... ,.,lildecio 107 te S.., JUM.P I' .. 50 81 Ste Me(le ., " s-ma 11 57 Stl~ II 72 81oU• Fiiia ., 71 8l)OQM et l.t 8yr.,.. N &O Topekt et 12· Tue.on to se TU!M U 70 Wttlllt1gl011 to,. 71 Wlcllil I 19 1.t Wllk ... 9arre 71 72 Wl!INneton.O. 7t 70 .. 65 17 72 11 6t Jl 61 IO If ., ff ~ ~ 11 q " ,, to " .. 1• t5 .. • .. 10 13 75 ,' home disappointed. Jf they want tickets. they witl have to start over in • line the next day, McKinney said. people were using the shoppmg Theyshouldhavesomeofficialsthere BLA-CK FREEWAY JUST GRAY ...... centef's courtyard patio furniture as who can decide to sell some tickets if chairs for a line that stretched from no one is showing up," wd -Ibarra, From Al the ticket center to the stores across who was hoping to buy some baseball the .Jidth of the mall. and more wrestling tickets. pe~ple keep taking mass trans1t.-he La Palma resident Marlene Jarvi Meanwhile, in an effon not to lose said. Tr<\nsportation Commission. congested traffic patterns, but it's goaog to be a lot more lnterue. "I just tellpeopleiogct here as early as possible. We are selling 1,600 uclcets a day and are doing lb~ best we -~" _ _.__ ___ can." he said. __ . ~stawu:rtltedUJis..uta:Unndui DUJ&'"-luinll!c~atuS~:..J.301.L.!W:J.Jeiad.unJJ:t;.:i.s-:.._..l.I hruei;ii~r -llv~a~luua~baicle<-¥pl ... a~ce~s._..i A....uliffACr900ple .. It 1 s 0 ot . l_ook i ng as bad as day morning and was still in line at 2 were taking turns dashi'ng into the evc'l'.one anttc1pated. It. will be p.m. Hickory· Farms for food and refres.b-heavier than a normal Fnday after- -"lf l~an get ihe~i.s.-it ~ mcnt._ noon traffic but not impossible,'' said "People have been really good about rehevmg some of the traffic. They are taking mass transit," she said. " .. .I still feel that on Frida the honeymoon is goin.J to be over -a little bit," Roper said. • .. It is crazy. We are telling people there is a chance thex., might not getjn. -W~bavebeen etesi1fcerune7fhand only in the last week has it been so busy," McKinney said. McJ(inney said 'the success of the American Olympic team is behind tbe surge in ticket sales. The office wiJJ remain open betwaen I 0 a .m. and 6 p.m. throughout the Summer Games. Several hundred thousand tickets are still available. Wednesday afternoon, hundreds of worth it." she said. · ''W-e are ~lting ...ariViblrig people -·~n Btct'leyoftfieOfcillgt:'Ct:nmt}"" "I have a cousin from Finland who can grab and cat. Our sodas arc bcmg 1s on the Finnish team and will throw cleaned out reaJly fast and we arc ~ the Javelin so I really want to get track selling a lot of Beefstick and cheese," MURDER and field ticketsJ." said Jarvi said Lolamay Smith, a clerk at the • • • Jose Ibarra 01 Milwaukee was not food store. From Al . ~ - pleased with spending his vacation She aruibutes virtually all· of the with California license plates. usually standing in line. increased business to the people in the 1s dn ven by Bradley Kaye Ralph, the "I went to the wrestling in Anaheim long Olympic ticket lin·e near the 18-year-old stepson of Bruce Ralph. and it was better than half empty. store. The youth reportedly has not been ---------------------------------------1!111 seen since h~ left his place of employment 1n Santa Ana on Mon- _: Qrangc_CoupLy n:Stde.fil.S_plannin& on tak1ngttft1rcars toO!ymprc events in Los Angeles County~ should not be fooled by the hght traffic here. "1 would expect 1t to be signifi- cantly heavier than a normal Fnday commute," said Dave Roper, deputy district 'director for the California Dcpanment of Transportation. "I'm not sure it will get back to the Friday has been dubbed "Black Fn\iay." because-more than 90.000 people were exj)ected to attend track and field events at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum while thousands more jam the area for swimming and boxing competitions at ihe nearby Sports Arena and at the Univeni!Y of Southern Califomil. Roper, !low.· - ever, previously said be doesn't think Friday wilJ be as black as once feared. day. ,, lnvesugators did not '>ay whether and honesty." the supervisor said. they believe the body seen by motor- DAY IN SUPERVISORS' LIFE ... From Al Blaze damages Register bulldlng they act as a "housekeeper" for the state, she..explatned. "But what I hke best 1s adminis- tration. New appr_5>aches to better manaf,ement.Tnal'S why'l'm govern- ment, ' Wieder said. she was named lD by President Reaaan. ~1t·s a pace you go." Wieder said of her job ... lfl ever had to slow down I would miss it. lt \t~ps me ,tloncd." Consutuents will find Stanfon at-1sts on the roadi.ide was that of By the Associated Pre11 tending m-t1n'"'· l;Uncheons or Bradley Ralph. · , · ...... f1"' ··R ·gh · t t fi d th Flames feeding on huge rolls ... f breakfasts in his district when he's not 1 t now we re rymg o '" e " beb d h" d le · h H 11 f ' car," said Mu.ir. who noted the car's newsprint roared through the base- Jn is cs 10 t e a 0 hcensc plate number 1s 952UZT. He ment of The . R..oistcr newspa~r Administration. ~o--said the car possibly as b1aclc louvers building late Wednesday. forcing 00 ~n average day m1~t fncJUOe two mounted1n its rear window. ~mployees to ilec--u 1tnck smoke or three meetings with constituent Anyone wlth information should fi11ed CliCtirJe"onc-s\ory buildmg. . who was treated for exhaustion, sa>d Deputy Fire Chief Bill Reedy. The newspaper managed to preserve its ·continuous publication recol'"d by putting out today's mom· mg e(fition several hou_rs late. Cause ofthe"btaze-wal""not 1mmcdi· ately known. ConvC'J"SCly. she noted that what she likes least about her office is the supervisors' quasi.judicial role. tn which they act as jupges on land-use and zoning matters ... It's a tremen- dous responsiblity to determine whether a law has been implemented property. The law is so comptex,''3he ln spare moments. Wieder sa1d she usually can be found reading some of the myriad papers and reports con- -cerning county issues that cross her desk every da,. Because o her busy schedule, Wieder said she doesn't get to spend t'nough tame with constituents in her district. "I'm always complaining because I'm not out m the district as much as I'd like to be," she said. groups. at least two meetinp with contact Irvine pohce at 660-3737. ¥ The only in1urywas to a flll'efighter various count Y agency chiefs or iiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil..;.__ department directors. meetings with commented. ~ The sur>crv1sor's ·offical day begins at 7:30 a.m. and average$ about 10 hours. six days a week. Wieder estimated. Often a working day begins at breakfast meetings with officials from cit,ies in her district, such as Hunt- ington Beach. On one morning. Wieder met with city officials from several cities to discuss transpor- tation projects to be included in a 15- ycar county transpertation plan. Then, following a meeting with staff members, Wieder was off to a luncheon meetmg of the Orange Coast Associauon, where she was a featured speaker. Back at her office that afternoon. there was the scheduled interview with a reporter followed by a meeung with the president of the Rossmoor Homeowners Association. an unm- corporated section of W1eder's d1s- tnct "I'm their chief of police. the garbage collector and everything else.'' she noted. Sull later that same da) was a meetm' concerning an 10teroat1onal women s group. a bnefing on the next week's· board agenda -snd a count} Building Industry Association din- ner. On other days. Wieder might be found attendtn~ meet1ngi. of the South Coasf' Atr Quality r..janage- ment District; tht' California Count) Supervisors' Assoc1at1on. thr Local Agency Formation Commrss1on. of which she 1s chairman; or the Inter- governmental Advisory Council on Education or the National Dnnking Water Comm1ss1on. both of which Just Call 642-6086 D.UJ Piiot .. OeUvery ,. OuarantHd But she added she doesn't let her schedule interfere with what she termed her .. top priority," her grand- children. "I'm a cnrzy grandmother. It's my top joy and we make time for that. What loses out 1s being with our social friends. I don't do the things l used to do. like play golf," the supervisor said. •"I hold this office because I like and get satisfaction from it," said First District Supervisor Roger Stan- ton. "T Like 1t because you get feedback almost immediately on how well you're doini up here." A supervisor. Stanton explained, is a "personal representative of (his) constituents and ts to make decisions 1n a manner Uiat reflects the desires of those cQAtl(ftuents." He called 1t a difficult and diverse JOb As an aide scurried in seeking approval on some papers. Stanton said he spends about 60 hours a week workmg directly on matters before the board or related issues "It's hard to cut the polit1cal from the personal. Even when you·re with fnends and trying to relax. you're d1scui.ssng issues." .. To underscore his point.' Stanton said he has been approached b} constituents seeking solutions to probl~ms while standing on the sidelines watching his son play soc- cer. He said he has tned to t'mphas1ze a personal touch in hi' tint term on the board. "People don't want postunng. they want responsiveness. They want a direct approach )o what's happen ma • ind1v1dual constituents who have specific problems-plus~pomtmentr with otker supervisors. their staff members or other city, state and federal officials. Frequently, there arc luncheon or breakfast addresses to community groups or civic groups, and he said he always finds time to speak to high school civics classes. Despite the busy sc~ule-which usually includes at least two nights each week and one weekend day - Stanton said he tries to reserve Sunday for his family. "I have a family and four young kids_. You know, you have to have some time to yourself." Stanton sai<f he often is accom- panied by wife Karen on his various outin~ around tht' county. "She is an unpaid public servant. Much of the duties fall on her shoulders; she really d~ an outstanding Job." Matters appearing on the agenda for the weekly Board of ~upervisors meeting can take anywhere from several hours to go over with staff on up to is~ues so large orimportant that a week of preperat1on time 1s needed, he said. "To keep up with the great volume of reading on county matters, Stanton said he has taken to reading in odd places. He even keeps a microphone pluaged~nto a special tape recorder in the dash'board of his car so he can dictate letters or memoranda as he ~ri~. ' Nt'vertheless. says Stanton of the workload. ''I've never found 1t a burden at all." Fnday Profiles ol .Su~rv1sors Ralph Clark. Bruce Ncstsnde and Thomas Riley • Wba\ do yo.,.llb about the Dally Pilot? Wbat don't you like? Call tbe number at left and your me11a1e •ill be recorded, 1r1111crlbed and delivered to tbe appropriate editor. The same U -bour an1werta1 service may be used to rttord letters to the editor on any topic. Contributors to our wtter1 column must include tb~r name and telephone number for verification. No clrculeUon c,u,, pleve. Tell us what's on your mind. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat · Clrcutetlon 714/M2-4m ClaHlfled edvertlatng 714/M2·5871 All other department• 142~ MAIN OFFlCI 330 W• .. f II , CC.• WD CA lh 14dt-"°" 1 CO.•• ...... H. I.. &chw•rtz Ill Publisher Lorn• Bruchet · Advert1s1ng Director Stephen F. Cerazo Production Manager Ao1•m•ry Churchm•n Controller Donald L. WIU11m1 C1rcula11on Manage •JULY 28 1'.HRGUGH LABOR DAY WRlfKDD • .. . . • 20% OFF ALL POTTERY SALE INCLUDES: - •.POTTERY •SAUCERS • BARRl!L • REDWOOD TUBS • WIRE BASKETS •STRAW BASKETS AMLI.NG ~S t • Ne~port Nur 'ery and Garden Center (8 tw • FREE• .. Local 0 hvety· .. " .. Dana Hills· Steve Hegg, wins the gold In cycl- ing as the U.S. medal tally climbs to 29. · PCJg_eCl Caged bridegroom dis- covered on PCH./ A3 Search for the suspect In· a murder at a West- minster car lot has reached dead end./ A3 Callfomia Former President Fordiis son Is handcuffed after allegj(fytrylng-to ~· Olympic slgr_l./ M Nation .. _ - ~ Instead of lce~r:n. •Johnny' gets draft regis- tration notice.I A5 Mother of McMartin Preschool youngster tes- . titles./ A4 A hijacked French jetliner Is rocked by explosion, but 46 passengers. cre_w aafen4" Poles urged to stay sober aspartof Ausslanvpdka boycott./ A!_ Living • For a true test of · togetherness th&re's nothing like a sut-month f amlly tour of the µnlted States./81 Sporta . Tom McKlbbon, a New- port Beach resident and an assistant U.S. women's sculling coach, has kept Olympic press- -ure In perspectlve./C1 °The Angels await a show- down series with first- place Minnesota after completing sweep In Oak- land./C2 Entertainment A new three--Cllmenslonal film procesa Is drawing oohs and aahs at Dls- neyland. /85 BuaineU Traditional fife Insurance has outlived Its useful- ness, says one Industry executlve./87 INDEX Erma BOmbeOK Bridge Bult.tin Board BulhlMI lfornla Newt Ctualfled ComlC8 CroMWOtct OMthNotlcM HelpYourMlf HOf'OICOPt Ann Landtft Living • Mutual Fund• National Newt oPTnJOn P..,.razzJ Polleelog Put>ttc Nottoee Sport• 8t0Ck Mart<et• TtttYtllon • ,.,...,.,. WNthtr WOl1d Newt 82 ee A3 87 A4 C7-9 Be C9 •. C5 82 ca 82 81-2 87 A4 A8 81 A3 CM C1..S ea 84 IMAj A• . .. f 1111 HllTlll .. .. Ki e 1n s~Spe .ct • ' ere's n«» 0 .. Ticket snafu at Coto Games Shootin competition only had space for 700 spectators Jb. . .nJal!O.la.t.ILBJI.£-~-----~~ Of .. Dtllr ....... Several thousand upset Olympic ...ili:ket holder::s folUl"'=iliemselvts driiOOiii~ co1l'ee, catml1ree-swcet rolls and kilfin_a time Wednesday instead of viewm1 one of the final events in the modem pedtathlon. at Coto de Caza. The Los Angeles Olympic Orpniz-. ina sold more than 7,000 tickets to the five-eve&l -pentathlon -~ · · but only had space for 700 spectators at the site of the shootins. event Wednesday momins near Mission Viejo. · .. We never expected this many people to show up," said Don Silvas, a l.AOOC spokesman. "In the entire history of international competitfon, a shooting event has never drawn more than 400 people." Silvas said organizers thouaht they · ha<t played it safe by allowins room for about 700 s~ctators to the half- day shooting event which was· fol- • lowed We<lncsday evcnin& by a -running event and finally the closing awards ceremony. But nearly 4.000 ticke1 holders arrived· promptly for lhe shooting event onty -w discover th~y would miss all or most of the competition . .. I think it really caught them otT- guard," .s.uucsted Robert Payton, a public relations spokesman for Coto de Caza. "It was a case where a lot more people showed up than ex- pcct.cd. '' In an effort to pacify the angry crowd, Coto de Caza served free (Pleue eee TBRO!f08/ A2) Long line for tickets to Games By JERRY HIRSCH . Of .. Dll9f ........ The Olympics are playing Santa Oaus for the Hickory Farms food store at the Newport Beach Fashion Island shopping center. Ifit wasn't for the weather, Hickory Farms would think it was the hei&ht of the Christmas season with cus- tomers jamming the shop. It has the good fortune lo be just one door away from the Oransc Coast's onl)' Olym- pic ticket center. Hickory Farms, like lhc ticket center, is doina a booming business. Every day this week people have been 1tnina up fh -front-of the ticket outlet as early as 5'a.m. -five hours . before the-center's 10 a.m. opcninf.: said Bob McKinney, the centers . One for the Italian• assistant supervisor. y.-.a--ta ... ,. .___ be II J The average wa11is11 least four -u pell WAOD ~ mem rau • hours and people who don'1 ma.kc it Daniele of ltalJ cnue. the flnlab line of insi~hc titkct outlet by 6 p.m. go the 4,000.meter race at Coto de ca.. to (PleueeeeLO!f0/A2) win the ,,Id medal for htmwlf ln the A day in the life: OC superviS-ors -. look at their job-s .. .. ' JEFF ADLER lndl.tdaal competltlo and clinch the 1old for Illa team ln oftJ'all competition Wed.n~. For complete co•erace of the pentatb.loD ~· eee Sporta. Paee Cl. .Newport Beach. man reportedly seen near dump 'Black Friday' traffic in dOubt Experts h e bets on Olympic effect on QC, LA freeways From staff ... wire repor&a Traffic continues to be b&ht m Orange County duriog the Olymp leaving local transit officl.lls..wonder· • in& if"Black Friday" will be as bad as first thouabL Fnday afternoon traffic neven wins any medals e"en when there isn't an Olympics and officials ~ womed that the combinauon of the commuter traffic. SC\letal Olympic events tn the county and a ni&ht A natl baseball ganf? at Anahc1g1 Suu~ium could rtally aum traffic up -es· pccially in the no·nhem part of the county. . But now the} art makmg no pttdictions "We art read)' for an}thtng," Said (Pleue Me BLACK/ A2) OC gii'l get~ silver for dad's birthday • 4 ,. - , THRONGS APPEAR AT COTO ••• ho Al Tacket holders al o were offered a refund lho il unclear today • ether an) 10!5 b d ken the LAOOC up on that offer. ··1'h_ey ked ~pie who were tchma to 1t~ back and have a cup of coflCC 10 let others w ten. Some went (or: that and some didn't," Boltiftlhouse·said. "Unle s you•re a real hooting enthusiast, it's not really that much of a socctaror POi1 anyway,'' he added. The modem pentathlon, h1ston· cally only a minor footnote to the bulk of Olympic competiuon, ha drawn hu1ccrowds in Oranae County and. untilthelhootingc-.tnl Wedne · day, there was ample room for all ticket holders. Silvas said an information booklet distributed to alJ pentathlon ticket holders stated that only a mall n1U11ber of spectators would be ble to . - "We did the best -e could under the circumstan ," Silvas 1d. "After the first relay in the 5hoo&ina . e a kcd people to move back o others could sec anCI inost•of them ICtU llyd1d. "The positive-thins. I SUWo'C, is that so manr people are interested an penllthlon,' he $Bid ... If you have to look at the negative ide, il's that we had me real problems." OC GIRL GETS THE SIL VER •••.. FromAl ' ... Many Du sere. whose 43rd birth-·in~h igual medals .will take place. he day is Sund y, said ··a silver medal 1s said. I liver medal. In gymnastics. your Pam Bileck. another member of the whole existence is based on what U.S. team. has Jived with the Dusserc a~otherperson~s 1mpress1on of you 1s. family for the past'year while she has ll snot how.hiah yOU-,tUrnp or how -._:ttamed m-ttuntlniton "SHch. Her fast you run, it's subjective. parents. who live m San Jose, arc "~t.(lowsconng) is very upsettm&at ta>ina at the Du scrc's home during the ume, but 1t all e~ns out in the the Olymp1cs. end," Dusscrc said. Although Dussere scored in the top Dussere and the parents of other eight on both the bar and floor Orange County gymnasts have been exercises, she will not compete in the carpoobna to UCLA, where the individual medal finals unless one of competition is beina hdd. They will theotherAinericans1ssickorinjured. make the drive again Frida)' .ans The individual competition is Liw- Sunday, when the comj)ctition for ited to tbC two aymna~ts·from eaeh I country who ~ore hi&hest. · Many Dussere said he has "maxed emotions" about that rule, created some years ago to ev.cn out the competition because Soviet women natt Ciominatea international l}'m- nastics for so long. But, he said, for Michelle, the second youngest member of the U.S. Olympic team, pullina off a silver medal is quite a thrill. .. If she does get to compete on Sunday, I'll have a temfic birthday present. But for now, I've lOt an earl¥ present and I'm very happy to settle with th.at." he said. LONG LINE FOR OLYMPIC TICKETS ••• Jl'romAl " home disappolntcd. If they want ticlc.ets, they will have to start over in line the next day, McKinney said. .. I jtHt tell people to get here as ear_l y as possible. We are seUmg 1.600 tickets t_day and are doing the best we -~•n, •• he-taid..- "lt 1s crazy. We arc telhn& people there is a chance they nii&ht not get in. Wehfve been bere'S10ceJune 7th and only in th~ last week has it been so busy," McKinney said. McKinney said the success of the American Olympic team lS betund the surge in ticket sales. The office will remain open between I 0 a. m. and 6 p.m. throughou.t the Summer Games. Several hundred thousand tickets a.re still avatlable. Wednesday afternoon, hundreds of people were using the shopping center's courtyard patio furniiure as chairs for a line that stretched from the ticket center to the stores across -the width of the mall. . La Palma resident Marlene Jarvi started standing ltne at 8:30 Wednes- day momma and was still m line at 2 pm. . . "If I can get fbe ti~kets, it will be worth 1t/' she said. "I have a cousin'from FmJand who lS on the Finni!h team and wiU throw the javelin so I really want to get track and field tickets.t" said Jarvi. Jose Ibarra or Milwaukee was not pleased with spending his vacation standing m line. "I went to the wrestling in Anaheim and 1t was better than half empty. They sh9uld have some officials there who can decide to sell some tic1ccts if no one 1s sbowina IJP, •• s11d Ibarra, who was hoping to buy some baseball and more wrestling tickets. Meanwhile, in an effort not to lose their valuable places in hne,peoplc were taking turns dashina iato the Hickory Fanns for food and refresh- ment. "We are sellinJ anything people can grab and eat Qur sodas arc being cleaned out really fast and we MC stlting a lot of Beef stick and cheese," said Lolamay Smith, a clerk at the food store. She attributes virtually all of the increased business to the people in the long Olympic ticket line near the store. . DAY IN SUPERVISORS' LIFE ••• P'romAl they act as a .. housekeeper .. tor the state, she explamed. "'But what I like best is adminis- tration New approa.ches to better manaf.cment. ~hy-t'mjOVcrn­ ment, ' Wieder said. Conversely. she noted ·that what she hkcs least about her office 1s the supervisors' quasi-Judicial role. in which they act as j udges on land-lfSC and zoning matters. "It's a tremen- dous rcsponstbllty to determine whether a law has been 1mplementod properly. The law is so complex," she commented. The supervisor's offical day bcgins- at 7:30 a.m. and averages about I 0 hours, six days a week. Wieder csumated. Often a working day begins at brealcfa.st mectanp with offictals from· cities in her district, such as Hunt- ington Beach. On one morning, Wieder met with city officials from several cities to discuss transpor- tation project' to be mcluded 10 a 15- year county transportation plan. Then, following a meeting with • _Jtaff members, Wieder was off to a luncheon meeting of the Orange Coast Association. where she was a .featured speaker Back at her office that afternoon. there was the scheduled interview with a reporter followed by a meeting with the president of the Rossmoor Homeowners Assoc1atJon. an unin- corporated section of W1eder's dis- trict. '- "I'm their chief of police. the garpage collector and cverythang else," she noted Still later that same day was a meeting concerning an international women'sgroup. a bnefing on the next week's board agenda and a county Buildina Industry Assoc1at1on din- ner. On other da)s. Wieder m1gh1 be found attendinJ meeungs of the South Coast AJr Qualit) Manage- ment Distnct: the Cahfom1a County Supervisors' Assoc1at1on; the Local Agency Formation Comm1ss1on, of wfuch she 1s chairman. or the Inter- governmental Advisory Council on Education or the Nauonal Drinking Water Comm1ss1on. both of which Just Call 642-6086 she was named 10 by President Reaun. • - "ft's a pace you go ... Wieder said of her JOb. "If I ever had to slow down I wou1d mtSS it. It keeps me honed." In ~pare moments, Wieder said she usually can be found reading some of the myriad paper_s and repons con- cerning county issues that cross her desk every day. Because of her busy sd!edule, Wieder said she doesn't get to spend enouah lime with constituents m her district. "I'm always complaining because I'm not out m the district as much as I'd like to be," she said. But she added she doesn't let her schedule interfere with what she termed her "top pnonty," her grand- chJld~n. 'Tm a crazy grandmother. It's my'top joy. and we make time for that. What loses out 1s being with our SOClal friends. I don't do the .thmgs I used to do, lilce play golf," the superviscir said. •"I bold this office because I hke at1d get satisfaction from it." said Fmt DHtrict Supervisor Roger Stan- ton. "I like it because you get feedback almost immediately on how well you're doinJ up here." A superv1sor. Stanton explatncd, is a "personal representative of (his) constituents and is to make dcc1s1ons in a manner that reflects the desires of those constituents" He caHed tt a difficult and diverse JOb As an a.tde scumed m seek.Ing approval on some papers, Stanton sa,id he spend$ about 60 hours a week working directly on matters befol'e the board or related issues. "It's hard to cut the political from the personal Even when you're with fnends and trying to relax, you're discussing issues." To underscore his point, Stanton said he has been approached by constituents seeking solut1ons to problems while standina on the sidelines watcl)ing his son play soc- cer. He said he has tned to emphasize a personal touc,h m his first term on the board. "People don't want postunng. the) want responsiveness. They want a direct approach to whal's happening and honesty," the supervisor said. Constituents will find Stanton at- tending meetm~s. luncheons or breakfasts in hisd1stnct when he's not behind his desk in the Hall of Administration. An average day m1~t tnclude two or three meetings with constituent groops, at least two mcetin'5 with various county agency chiefs or department directors. meetings with tndiv1dual constituents who have speCJfic problems plus appointments with other supervisors, their staff members or other city, state and federal official1. •.• Frequently, there are luncheon or breakfast addresses to comrnumty groups or c1v1c groups, and he said he always finds ti{tle to speak to high~ school civics classes. Despite the busy schedule -which usually includes at least two nights each week and one weekend day - Stanton said he tncs to reserve Sunday for bis family. "l have a family and four ·young kids. You know, you have to have some time to yourself." Stanton said he often is accom- panied by wife Karen on his vanous outin~ around the county. "She 1s an unpaid pubhc servant. Mu$i of the duties fall on her sbouldeFs; e realfy does an outstanding job." Matters appeanng on the agenda for the weekly Board of Supervisors meetmg can take anywhere from several hours to go over with staff on up to issues so large or important that a week of preperatJon time 1s needed, he said To keep up with tht areal volume of reading on county matters, Stanton said he has taken to reading in odd places. He even keeP1 a microphone plu&&ed into a special tape recorder in the -aashboard of his car so he can dictate letters or memoranda as be dnves. Nevenheless. says Stanton of the workload. "I've never found 1 a burden at all." Fnday Profiles of Supervisors Ralph Clark, Bru~ Nestande and 1'homas Riley. Wbat do yoa lib aboat tbe Dally Pilot? Wbat don't you Ute? Call tllie oamber at left ud your messa1e will be recorded, transcribed ud dellvertd cot.be appropriate edltw. · The same it-boar an1wertn1 t ervlce may be u1ed to record letten to Ute editor on any topic Contributors to our Lelten colamn mast loclade tllelr name and telephone •mbtr for verlflca&loa. No circulation c11l1, ple11e. Tell aa wbat's on your miJld. ORANGE COAST Circulation 714/M2-4m Clatllfl.cl 1dwertltt119 71'1M2·M'71 All othef departtn.ntf M2...Q21 o::i Piiot "'1 .. ou.r.ntMd Daily Pilat H. L. Schwartz Ill Publlaher Lorne Bruchet • f'oum•ry Churchm•n Advert1s ng Director Controller ( MAIN OFFICI ~W• '°°'- • i r A ·-QC • w a l .. • Hot weatherafter early clouds Ti dee TOOAY s-.11111;11 27ta.m.. .. u 6--'IOW I JO pm I I PM>AY flrSI Ngll UHm 40 RrttlOW 831pm 13 SeconclW 320pm. IS '-'Cllow 1023pm u Sun ... !Oday et 7.63 pm, ,._ Fl1dey et I OS• m 91'41 .. II ... •I 7 62 pm Moon •II •I 1 I SI pm. ,_ '""Y •110t•m Temp 16 94 .. 63 71 n " ., n .. IO ,, .. 12 T1 ... ., 63 1• •• .... n N '° ., .... 11 Tl '° " .. 1t .. 11 Plltatlurllh tt 76 Portletlci Mt t7 47 PortlWld.Ot ... ,.Pr~ 100 71 ~ .. 71 fleaiocfCllY •l .. """' .. t 72 llllldwnoN 11 H a--10 • .. 1t SILOUll as 12 81 Petil-T tmPe 11 .. 8111 U.• City M 11 5-\ MIOl'llo 82 70 t2 70 .... 71 11 n " 11 " 70 ., ,. ,. 10 tt H 71 .. 11 .. to • n M " " .... " . " ,. IO .. .. 71 ti .. .. 70 N 7t Teen girl stricken again By tbe AHoclated Pre11 · ~admitted Monday to Manin Luther Hospital in Anaheim . A 15-year-old girl, who became the Tiu: tccn...ager suffers from ·lupus object of a custody dispute when her erythematosus, a disease conven- Jetiovah's Witness mother refused to • t1onally treated by blood transfusion. allow treatment orner daugliiCr's A Jehovah's Witness, however, be- discase by bloo4 transfusion, has Ii eves blood transfusions arc for-~been rtadmitted to a hospital. bidden by the Bible. - A week after being released. In June, Melissa was beina treated Mehssa Acosta of Los Alamitos was at Santa Ana Hospital Medical Center, which cared for her {n accordance with her mot.bet•• rc- liJious beliefs. · But after her father, Arnold Thomas Aco ta, sued. for joint custody to bave some control over his daughter's-medicll cam, she wu rushed m critical condition to Martin· Luther. where several blood trans- "fus1ons were Jiven. ~ff Wij~~---------------~ BLACK FREEWAY JUSTGRA Y ••• From Al ~ . California H1fbway Patrol spokes-about rehevina some of the traffic. .. ... I still feel that on Friday the man Officer Rick Stevens. They arc taking mass transit." she honeymoon is going to be over -a ··People expected the traffic to be said . little bit,'' Roper 51id. temble and 1t is lighter than normal Orange County residents ~lanning so we are notmaking any predictions. on talc.log their cars to Olympic events Fnday has been dubbed "Black It is anybody's guess. It won't be bad 1f 1n Los Angeles County should not be Friday,'' bc<:ause more lhan 90,000 people keep taking mass transit," he fooled by the light traffic here. · people were expected to attend track said. J "I would ex~t it to be SJJDifi-and field events at the Los Anjelcs ··1t is not looking as · bact as cantly heavier than a normal Fnttay Memorial Coliseum while thousands everyone anticipated. It will . be commute." said Da"-e ~oper, depury more J&rn the area for swimmin& and heavier than a normal Friday after-district director for the California boxin& competitions at the n~y noon traffic but not impossible," said Department ofTransponati6n:"l'm Sports Arena and at the University of Sharon EstcrleyoftheOraogeCounty not sure it WTll get· back to the Southern California. Roper, how- Ttansportation Commission. congested traffic patterns, but ifs ever, previously said he doesn't think · "People ttave been really good ·going to be a lot more intense. 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