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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-08-16 - Orange Coast PilotI HIGH87 LOW70 COAST f 011111 -- THURSDAY, AUGUST 16. 1984 - 0 A ANGE C OUN l Y C A LI F 0 A NI A 2 ~ C t: N T ...; -- .De ·Lorean found innocent . . . U f d t k was unanimous. , nanimous jury vo~e in s au oma er u.s. District Judge Robert "7.""--:--"':'":""::---:---:-::--=:--="""'~==--~. ----:---Takasugj commended the counsel for not guilty on all 8 conspiracy counts . exccllc:nce. --------..-------·---"-"!""------...,-.......... The De ~rean Motor Car Co. was based in Jrvioe and employed 2.600 that promised him money to save his ·"workers at one point. When the failing car company. executive offices were clo~d in late If found guilty, De Lorean could 1982 following De lorean's arrest. have been sentenced to 6 7 years in workers were left confused. LOS ANGELES (AP) -John Z. De Lorean today w~ found innQCCnt on all counts of conspjring to dis- tribute $24 million worth of cocaine in a government "sting" operation . Coast Sheriff Brad Gates gets his hoped-for helicopters as supervisors OK a re- cord budget./ A3 A county couple sue - Amway Corp. for$10.5 mllllon./ A3 California Mass murderer Christopher Wiider's vic- tim say she's broke, job- less./ AS Nation -Pan Am sfrttre grounded after court In- junction./ A4 GOP ready for conven- tion, but worry about TV coverage./ A8 World Red Sea mines claim 17th vessel as efforts to find 'sowing' culprits con- tinues./ A8 · Warplane fires, m1s tanker target In Persian Gulf./A4 Living Likeasportsclub, The Computer Experience lets eo le workout at terminals and develop in- putting skills:/81 And persons who cuss at VDT mistakes can Join Computer Cursers of America and get the of- ficial oath./81 Sports Pete Rose Is expected to be named player-man- ager of the Cincinnati Reds today./C1 Major-league baseball owners unanimously ap- proved the sale of the Minnesota Twlns./C2 Less than a week after the end of the Olympics, Communist countries plan to stage their own games./C3 ;!:!:!:!:::~:;::!::::::::.:!:~::!:::!:!::::::::::;::~::!;:;:~:=:-=:i Entertainment ABC Is rolling In gold today as the Nielsen rat- ings declare the Olympics the most-watched event ever./83 Business Don't give up hope If It appears you can't afford that home or Investment property ./88 INDEX Bridge BS Bulle11n Board A3 Bustnesa· 86-7 Cellfornla Newt A4 ClasaJfled C7-10 Comic• 85 Cro11word C9 Death Notices cs Horoscope C8 In the S«Vtce A7 Ann Landers 82 LlvlQQ..,..~~·~-.=~==B=!;27 ~utua Funda v National New• A4 Opinion A8 Peperaul 91 Police Log A3 Publle Notl<:e8 CS-8 Sporta C1·5 Stock Marketa ~ Tetevltlon B3""4 Theater• A2 W•thet •s Workt Newt " prison and fined $185,000. The jury An auction at the Irvine site was Newport swimmer's death in ~ounty jail remains a mystery Coroner's report says more tests necessary before answer known By STEVE MARBLE OfllleO.-,Notatelf Tbe death of a 22-year-old swim- mer from Newport Beach remained a mystery today after the county cor- oner announced a microscopic exam- ination would be needed to determine why Grant Richard Cooling died after a short stay in Otange County Jail. An initial autopsy on Wedne!day proved inconcJus1ve, officials said. "There is no preliminary cause of death at this time." said Orange County Sheriff Lt. Richard Olson. Olson said Coolin• was cooperat-ive and that his brief stay at the county jail was without incident. He said the 22-year-old collapsed a short time after eating lunch with other prisoners. Cooling. a champion swimmer at Corona det Mar High and Orange Coast College, died Tuesday after- noon about J 2 hours after bemg arrested for failina to appear in court on a speeding ticket and an expired vehicle registration. The 6-foot-5 athlete and bustness student had been fightin& a case of strep lhroat but was in superior condillon and swam about 4.000 meters a day. accordina to Mariorie Cooling, his mother. She said sherifrs deputies told her they suspected her son died of heart failure. Cooling was arrested on the traffic warrants after being questioned early Tuesday by a security guard at Leisure World in La~una Hills. He apparently was sining in a spa talking with a friend when the security guard approached him. It was unclear why the security guard questioned him and why the guard then contacted sheriff's depu- ties, who apparently turned up the traffic warrants during a routine record check. Marjorie Cooling said her son ~nd his friend were talking and relaxing after attending a concert Monday evening at Irvine Meadows. Cooling was to stan his senior year at use this fall and was interested in pursuina a career in the car business, friends said. He and • friend had started ttieir own car detailing enterpnse during the summer months. Don Watson. the swfm coacb at OCC. said Cooling had talk"ed infor- mally of returning to the rommunit) college this year to be captain of the swim team. Watson said Coohng was considerina dropping out of USC to save money so that he could attend an Easa Coast business school the )Car after. There was onl one balanced federal budact 1n the pa\\ 2-0 years. In 1969 a~ budl<:t sarptus f'C$Uhcd from a ta~ sure.ha!& 1mplcmcntcd in the tast~:yca «~n1 l:.vndon Johnson's admin11tration . The tu wa dc~iancd to rai money fbr the Vietnam war cffon. • · What, if anythin can be done about the runa"'•Y deficit and a national d bt that is appr hi a new Trca ut') Deparmcnt ceilina of more than SI .S tn11ion? One of the propoSfil solutions "'•II on 0 lifomiA's clc:ttioo ballot · November 1n the f1 rm of balan('(d bud et IOIUlll\C, Pro 1\IOft S. l ~t held in Dcocmber and more than 500 In a seeminaly prophetic statement solemn faco by the pto5tCutOrJ. people showed up for a chanoe to bid made days before De l.orean's arrest. :tJ)e vttdict. which was considered on oftlce furniture. automotive Jhop "'J. Bruce McWilliams • a ewpon a iriumpb for De Lorean and a bluer equipment and office supplies. Beach rtSident and president 'of De · defeat for the f.O~ernment's c:oo- A Newpon Beach attorney rep-Lorean's U.S. operation stated,·· It 1s trovenial .. stina' optratiom pto-~ntina a .Jroup of investors even altogtther likely thaa John De Lorean gram. was announced in a ,amlned put up a SI00,000 in good faith someday will become the most writ-counroom. money in a bid to pure hue what was 'ten-about ptrson in the bi.story of the There was a hush as ~•ktsuti lcftof,hebankruptcarcompany. The automoth·e industry." . · acceptrd the verdict form from die money later was returned to the The verdict was greeted with tears JUry fort'man. a white-haired maa. unnamed investors. and hu~ by De Lorean 's family and .:. (Pleue eoe D& LORltAJf / A2J . . ~ of color ln Coeta lletaa'• South Cout Toirn Center. T~e picture wu taken from the San Diego Freeway. Convict fails in ~ -oc Jail escape wo guards attacked In.Balboa rapist's Wieder position on Jarvis IV: No position at all Harriett Wieder By JEFF ADLER Ol .. Dlllf ........ Although Orange County Board of Supervisors Chairman Harriett Wieder spearheaded efforts thts week to prepare county government for a bu<iJet crunch should the Jarvis IV inillativc pass in November. she said Wednesday she plans to rematn neutral on the controversial measure. "Our purpose is not to take a position,., Wieder said as she gavelled ~ closed the county's three-day budget # session ... It's to wait for the voters to tell us what they want to pay for... . Wieder added that she thou&ht it would be 10appropriatc for any public official to take a position on the tax- slashi0$ measure, an off-spnni of Proposition 13 desl&Jlcd to close loopholes m the pioneering propeny (Pleue eee WlltDltR/ A2) Colombia crash draws U.S. scrutiny of two survivors Stjite epartment monltoi:s myst_e_ry-=---- ffiat claimed life of Laguna Beach m_a_n __ By DAVID BISHOP O..,,?WM C-1it1 Mlltll U.S. State Department offictals confirmed Wednesday the} arc monitonng the status of two i\men- cans who wert arrested in South Amenca followina a m) stcnous plane crash that l1llcd a Laguna Beach man. Details about the death of Stephen KiREN KLEIN - CAMPAIGN '84 Lee Sadler. SS. of Laguna Beach remain i.kcrch) a month after~ was killed 1n an airplane crash ma remote region of Colombia. talc Department. U.S Embassy and Colombian officials refuse to say much about the crash. They declined to sa~ ~hat Sadler. who reportedly had ties to the CIA. may have been doing in that South ~mencan coun- •.3 .. try and won't identify the other men connected to the incident. Richard Weeks of I.he State Dcpan- mcnt confirmed that a second un- identified man was killed in the crash and that t~-0lher A~r\Qlns we~ hospitalized and remain m custody by Colombian officials on char&cs related to violaung Colombian air spatt. One of thrct other men apparcntl'li was from Orange County. Weeks would not reveal the names of the two surv1\·ors in custody in (Pleue eee llYSTBRY I A2) " ~ . e JU ' d r: , ma und thm re d tbe n:l ··w e the J ury ... find John D. De l.oron not ualt) of count one.'' s he continued to re d the not 1u1h)' verdict, cisht o t them an all. De Lorun·, "ifc, mO<)rl mtmn f er· 11re. fell into the rm o f her mother, Rennta and the '" o women burst mto tears Sob from the De Lorean sup- porters es:-hoe"d throu h t he counroom u the Juror\ W<."rt polled j ndividual. The \Ctdict was reached at IO:JS a.m but "asn't anno unced until at\er n09n. De Lorean appeared tu be liJ,htin& back tears in the counroom lfr bur~t into tears as he left. At the local FBI headQuarte~. la" .cnf rttmcnt offichls dis )'Cd :SS pounds of e. chnfgi t t De Lo.run. dcspe tc for monc) to \C his fiuhn Nonhcm lrel nd r compan> from bankruptcy, h d entered into a dru& deal that nctuall) w~) .a n FBl·Dn:ia Enforct"ment Ad· m1nistrat1on .. s11na" operation. The men who told De Lorean they "'ere sm.uuler& and dope dealr"' were really government gents playing roles in an elaborate charade that wt\ recorded on audio and video 1Apc:1., • Two co-defendants wert charged with De Lorean -William Morpn Hetnc~. an admmed drug smuglcr. and Stephen Lee Arnnaton, who detlvered cocaine to the undercover agents. Both eventually pleaded gu1I~ l) John De Lorean RAPIST FOILED IN JAILBREAK TRY •. .' From Al Saugu~ whc:re he had bel!n ~ntencc:d by Los Angele~ Count\ authont1es. This lime. Gonzale~ U\ed a simu- lated gun to gain his freedom from the.- courthouse holding area. T he fakt! gun was made from a 'anet> of matenals and "was' el'\ rcah\li( and looked very much li ke a weapon." Byham ~1d. Whrn a dcput) opened the solld- ~tecl door on the holding cl'll to deliver Gonzales' lunch. Gonzales atabbed her arm and. brand1-;hing the WCjlpon. too).: her ke)'s before running out. the marshal said Then. he stru~k a second deput) 1n the mouth as he ran down a back ha llwa) lO"-ard a pubhc hallway. Gonzales was O\erpowcred and rearrested an a first-floor public hallway b) about IOdeput)· marshals who were alerted to the escape attempt by the shOUJb of their col- leagues, Byham said. The deputy struck by Gonzales, a female who the marshal declined to identify. was transported to We' m Medical Center m Santa Ana where she was expected to be treated for l uis_ a bump on the head and several loose teeth, according to the marshal. He said G onzales will be charged w1tb attempted escape, battery on a pohce officer and aggravated assault with the use of a weapon. Gonzalt':!t was convicted Feb. 24 on multiple rape, burglary, robbery and assault charges in the rape and beating of a 2S-year-old BaJboa lsJand waitress. He faces a max.imum 16 to t 8-year prison term on the charges with sentencing scheduled Monday. Dunng his first trial, Gonzales testified that he felt compelled to escape from the Jail because jail life had become unbearable. MYSTERY CRASH DRA \vs U.S. EYE ••• From Al Colombia because he )<ltd he had no both men killed were buned on July told not to say anything. He wouldn't authorization u nder the frdnal 29 b} a locaJ priest in the small town reveal who told him no to discuss the pnvacy act. of Nazareth near the crash site, accident. Weeks ~ad Wedne!>da> ihat the d1plomat1c sources 10 Colombia re-"I'm Just doing what people telJ Colombian ,\ir Force notified tht> poned. me," he sa1d. Fair skies and high clouds due Coaat&l Tldea ~ M • Dulu'lh litnwc:I< u SI Ell'-TOOAV 90iM 83 11 e~ hcond """' 'o:a p"' .. 5 loalOll t3 70 , .. ***. ~IOw 0 702pm 2 I lkl!laio 81 :; =WI ~VI .. fllllOAY c... u SI OtMO~ Flrtl ftigll 12 4-lam 4 0 CNt!MlOll,S C ... 71 o ... ,, ... ,.al IOw 8 55a m 111 Cflel1M1on.W V " ... HllrtlorO Seoond1191 I 37 p.m 4 S Charlolla.N C .. 12 ~ SetondlOw 11 09pm 2 1 CNlyenM • 80 5t Hotlolull; .. CllQgo ., es HouMon 9vn MCI 1008)' 11 7 3t p m , ,,_ Clneonfl•U .. 81 lncllnllpolle Fndeyalt 1h m tn0M1aege.oe17 31 ci...i""° u 13 J ..... -..... p-m COlumllle.S C ... 71 J1d111or111111t Moon rl-1CMM1 el 10 30 p m , .. ,, Columbu1.0ll .. 117 M-. l'ricUly et 10 42 am. eno ,_ 19e111 al Conc«O,H H II ISi • It p m o.n ... F1 W°'111 ... 71 Oeylon 83 "· "-'-.. ea Temps O.Moan. ts 75 0..rQll .. . , IS 67 17 70 .. II eo as IO 80 75 S) 17 62 ,, 63 .. 82 t1 62 II 7S .. 71 17 .. .. 71 83 u 71 61 UAltlodl ~ ~a..ell ........... Mpi..81 l'N NMft'flllt ...... on..n. .W.YOtk Nortolll, Va Oklanome Cllt Omelul Orlllndo 1'.im 8l)flll0t ~Phi• ~x 1'1111~ "°"' ..... POttltlnd ,Of. ,.,~ :::l'&r, ~ Alc;NnotlCI I a--ro Stl- 81 "91• T ll'ftP4I !ell l#• Ctty SM .MIONO San 0oeoo ..,,,r_ SM Juen.P A S1 S1•M-a..ni. Stir~ Soovr. ,.,._ Spoil-9)'1'-TOf)tll9 r~ . TulM WNNnoton - aaa 1-3 1-3 1-3 I 1·3 1-2 2-3 .. 17 .. ., " .. 17 .. .. 17 .. IO ., ., H IS .. .. .. 13 12 .. " 17 " 15 11 .. ., t2 ... t2 11 .. IO 13 ., ti 17 .. IS t3 13 92 •• .,0 n 70 70 .. .. 71 '~ • 70 u u 11 10 ,. ,. ., .. ta H 13 t1 .. .. .. " .. to 78 71 .. .. 74 M n 51 I I .. 15 61 17 13 73 72 71 College district plans to shift KOCE to private foundation State Depan ment of the incident on Sadler's son Sean said Wednesda)' He did indJcate that at least one of ....Wly JO _ _ __ 1.ha.t hti father was "':helping. -a few-the crew members was from Oran&e By PHIL SNEIDERMAN ~ oilmLa.od Richard Olson ~prov-As pan of the gradual reductJon in The '"'in-engine aircraft crashed fnends" m Colombia. C'"ounty. He-dentctnits father worked or111eo.,.,....•wt in_g,andGeorgeRoddaJr.dissenung.. distnct funding for KOCE. the on takeofffron, 11 clandestine a1mnp He s:nd the ftl mcty .,.h,.,.,ad.....,ttt-:e.+.iv"'t•d•.._.a_ ... ro,..~_.t..,~..,le ... ~ ... l.ct._a_s a _fo_rm_e_r_U-.S-.-M---a...;ri;._n_e_-.C_,,oast Com-mumty CollegCDlst..,._n_ct--'Tl-1-c...,fu""a ..... ndatiou was csmblisb'ed as -trustee!! Wcdnesda1 u ight app1o•cd a m the remote GuaJtca regJOn ot death ccrttficate for tus father from 1 "' trustees have set in motion the a community aroup wtth a goal of $9 1 m11J1on d1stnct budget that Colombia according to South Amen -. Colombian officials and that they afind pi 9°6t aor A9ir America in Vietnam transfer of ownership of public tele--raismg funds for support of the includes a S 1..5 m1lhon aJJocatton for can sources Its 1de nt1ficat1on were told the body was buried in ro'!' I 4 to 1 7h4 acnd he owned a gas vision station K(){'E., Channel so. to television station. the station .. numbers h_ad been painted O\ier l'<o Colombi'a 1·mmedi'ately \....o.-ftuse no station on Nort oast Highway in ~ La Bea h a pnvate foundation over a 30.monlh cargo was tound on 1he wreckage. e mbalming services were available. iguna c · od The second body found in the He said he knows who the other Air America is known to be a front pen · wreckaae 1s still unidentified and members of the crew were but was orpnizatlon for the CIA, according KOCE,nowoperatedbythecollege Four ll1ore candidates join Mesa race for city council to a spokesman for Soldier of Fortune dist net, is based on the camvus of WIEDER ON PROP. 36 ••• From A l 1 maganne. Those who knew the Golden West College in Huntington Sadlers -said family members had Beach. mentioned CIA ties on several oc-casions. CIA officials refuse to say The st4tion will continue to carry ~reform 1n111atl\l'. "Proposiuon I J ''as not all that bad and 11 has !>ho"n us how to run government more d1ic1t>nth." she added . · -. The measure. "hich \\Ill appear a .. Propos1t1on 36 on the fall ballot. would require 1he refund of an estimated S 18 to $20 m1ll1on in excess propen~ taxes in OranRe Coun t~. according to Count> AdministratJve Officer Bob Thomas. Besides the tait gjve-back. the measure wouJd cost an additional S4 3 million in administrative costs and would require voter approvaJ for fee and tax incrc~~scs as well as restructunng how property 1s valued and assessed Wieder is the first of the five-member board to announce her position on the measure h h Sadl h d some college district programming. w et er er a tics to the but the move is desioncd to or.11dually mtelliJencc q,ency. .,. .,.M Weeks sa.id. while the State Depart· eliminate the Oow of district dollars ment is monitoring what happens to that have helped the station operate since November 1982. 1he two Americans 10 custody. no The plan to transfer-the PBS efTons a.re being made to return the two men to the U.S. station's license to the pnvate KOCE A spokesman for the federal Drug Foundation was approved Wednes· Enforcement Agency in Washington. day night b) distnct trustees, who D.C .. Con 0ou-gbcrty. said the agenC} also govern Ora nae Coast, Golden had no knowledge of the Colombia West and Coasthne colleges. incident. The proposal was adopted in a 4-1 Four candJdates for three seats on McFarland's did not seek re-elecuon the Costa Mesa Clly CounciJ met the in the Nov. 6 ballouna. extended deadline Wednesday for Candidates mectm& the first filing fiJing nomination papers, brina.ina deadline last week were incumbents the field to 11 . --Donn Hatr.n:"and Enc Johnson. 63 Throwing thcar hats into the coun· as well as 'p1a~mng Comm1ss1oner5 cil race were: city golf course operator Charles Markel, 4S and Clarence C Harry Green, age unlisted; Jeweler Clarke. Also fihng last week were Std and fonncr mayor and councilman Soffer, Douglas Yates 39 and Davr Dominic RaClh, 66; drapery consult-Wheeler. 29 ' ' ant Mary Hornbuckle, 41: and busi-Nomination papers pulled by four nessconsultant Christopher Steel, 43. other Costa Mesa res1dcnts were not ., vote, with trustees Conrad Nor- dquist, Armando Ruu. Nancy The deadhne was extended from returned by the final deadline last Friday because of Councilman Ed Wednesday. -BALANCING ISSUE ON BALLOT ••• From A l Along with lowenng intcres1 rates. a balanced budget would rehabilitate the housing 1ndustr;. Danncmcyer predicted . "Man~ people who can't quahf) for housing loans now because of 14 percent tnlerest ra1es would be able to." ho a 1d "[thin~ restonng the .\.mencan dream 1s si1mifican1 .. The proposed am-endmem does oot specif~ t>\3Cll~ ho" Congres~ would be aOIC lO rctn IO lhe 1mpos1ng deficit. .\nd 11s proponents ad..no"l- ed~r that \l.h1le the amt'ndment ha'> gamed popular :.upport, carr)ing out ·the amendml·nt'-. prm t\IOn'> \\Ould be difficult. Pres1dcn1 R1.·;ig_J n for on1.• ha<, supponed thl' arnendnll'nl dm c And )Cl 1hc delil II<, piled up during Reagan's admtn1\tra11nn Jrc lhl' high- est recorded 1n I ._, h1.,11>n. Groups organ11t.•d Ill 11ppo<.l' tht> state in111atl\e ha\1.' '"'> ha'>tt' argu- ment!">. First tht') d.11m th(' propo'>cd amendmcn1 \llould n111 rl·alh ac- complish \I.hat 11 'l't'>0111 111 do and 11 could e'en \l.Ur,l·n t '."I thcal con- drnons Ro~ L .\<;h . a Ln' \ngck., ,n,cstor • who 1s 1hc torml·r d111:t 1or of the Office of Managern'cnl and Budget tor the Nixon and Fhrd adrn1nl\tra11on\, said aJJ good consen at1' c' \ho uld be opposed to the 1n111a11,c ••\\-e do need fi\(al lonrrot .... hUT this 1s not the v.a' tu do 11 ,"' lia1d .\<;h , .:. -who 1s co-wnllng 1hc hallo! oppo'>t· "·tio n argument to the: 10111a1" e His opposition 1c, ha~·d on '>C' era I '&><>ints. including. •The amendment l ould Jn\e conr,ressional -;pcnd1nJl underground Just Call 642-6086 D•llY Piiot Delivery It Guaranteed -Congress could mandate state and local govrrnments and businesses to can) out programs and services It cuts from the federal budget. • o\n amendment requmng a bal- a nced budget could give every clllzen the ngbt to file lawsuns agamst the government chaJJengjng its methods of tait1ng and spending and would gne any fedt>ral Judge the ab1ht)' to set national taxauon or spending pohcy. •Escape hatches included in the amend ment g.i"e Congress the nght to raise taxes to compensate for overspending. .\ second major argument ag.ain)t tht> amendment centers around con- 'illtullonal la". A group called Cah- fom 1an!"> 10 Presen. e the ( o nst1tut1o n. formed b~ Sacramento lrgislat1ve analyst \\i alt Pontynen. claims that a (Ons1n u1ional con"ent1on could tum into a boon for special interest ~oups \I.ho might use the convenuon to introduce new reltgiou!">, economic or poht1cal amendments to the Con- !>lltuuon "There s no guarantee that (tht> con,en11on) could be held to one .-.ubJeCt ·· Pont)nen said. "In 1787 the con,ention was g.t\.Cn specific... m- c;truct1ons to re" 1se the .\rucle?iof Confedt>rauon .\nd the first thing the\ did v.as to draft acompletel~ new document - the C onst1tution.' Holding a con\enuon would be upla~ 111g: Russnm roulme-" wnh groups that "ant to mer~e church and ~tctte ban abomons. introduce an ~conom1c bill o f nghts or change the L S government to a parhamrntaf) .,~stem. Pont~ nen said. .\sh's and Pontynen's arguments arc suppon ed by const11uuonal at- torneys Lawrence Tribe of Harvard and GeraJd Gunther of Stanford. And all agree that the lengthy rat1ficat1on process (1t could take ·nine years, Pontynen said) would aJlow Congres to delay spending cuts until raufi- cauon takes place . Dannemeyer's press secretary, John Sheik, said the constitutional roulette issue 1s "a red herring." First of all, he said the conventton could be hnuted to the balanced budaet issue, a claim disputed by Gunther and Tnbe. And even 1f other issues are brought up, Shelk .said, all amend- ments must be ratified b> 34 of the states before tl wins approval. "That's a very long process. If people were opposed (to any ad- d1t1onal amendments that might be introduced). they could easlly block them." Sheik said. Finally. Ash pointed out that not all economists agree that a balanced budget is always a good thing. "The budget system is set up so there sho uld be a surplus 10 good years and a defec1t 1n bad years," he said. And the argument about balancing federal finances JUSt hkc personal finances arc balanced is a bofus one . he added. "Just about everv md1v1d- ual has a mortgage and credit cards," he said In fact. studies have shown that the percentase of average 1nd1v1dual bor- rowing 1s greater than the same percentage of federal borT0W1ng. "lf we took away everyone's mortage and cted11 cards. we'd be severely hm1tm1 their buyana power and lowcnng their Ltv1ng standards significantly,"' he said. What do you like about the Daily Pilot-> Wbat don't you like? Call tbe number at left and your me11age will be recorded, tr101crlbed and dellvered to t.be appropriate editor. The same U·bour a.nswerln11ervtce may be u1ed to record letters to tlle editor on any topl<'. Contributors to our Letters column mast lnclude their name and telephone number for verification. No clrtulallon calls, please. Tell us what's on your mtnd. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat .'L. Schwartz Ill Publisher Clrcul1tlon 714/M2-4m Ctaetlned idwertlefng 7f4/M2·587t AU other department. 142-4321 MAIN OFFICE :SlO Wet' 811y St Costa Mes. C4 M.a •Odt 8o:J I Costa ,,.... c,& 92 16 Clrcul•tlon Te .. phon•• I ftaHMary Churchman Controller Stephen F. Carai'o Produ ltOr'I Manage' Donald L. Wlltlam1 C1rcu1a11011 Manager *NOW THROUGH LABOR DAY WEEKEND * 20% OFF ALL POTTERY SALE INCLUDES: • POTIERY • REDWOOD TUBS • SAUCBRS • WIRE BASKETS • BARRELS • STRAW BASKBTS ,I '' • AND POTTING SOIL TOOi ~A M~U N G----' S Newport Nur ery and Garden (Between MacArthur and Jamboree) • FAEE • Locel Delivery O~n Mon •hru Sat 8 30·$ 30 Sunday 00·5 30 enter 1500 1 COll1 highway • newpott beaeh, cal fornla • (714) e44·9510 'Showcase' due in Turtle Rock The City of Irvine Perfomung Ans Section Will preset;'l .. Sunday Showe.a .. on Aug. 26, from 3:30 to 5!30 p.~ .• 1n Tunic Rock Community Part, l SunnyhHl Drive, Irvine. The .. Hiah ·~ocicty Dance Band " will present an aftcf!1oon of entertainment fcaturina jazz and swing classics from the JO's and 40's, waltzes, tanaocs, cha-cha's and novel.ty tunes. Vocalist Terry Allen is fcaturtd.'. F Cost 1.s $3 per person for a late afternoon ofdancina. or more 1Dformauon, call 660-3643 or 660-3928. Caa.tJlne conference .aid oat All available tickets have been sold for the sixth annual Coastline Community Colleae Conference for Women. Colleac offici Is ~id rcaistration was closed after more than 800 tickets were sold. The conference will be held Saturday at the Westin South Coast Plaza Hotel in Cost.a Mesa. Parent Nlgbta aclJedaled Huntinat~n Beach Union High School District will hold Pl!"nt_ N1Jhts on A~g. 22 and 28, from 7 to 9 p.m., in the auditonum of Huntmaton Beach High School 190S Main St. ' Planned to as~ist parents to become knowledgeable suppon panners m the educational plannina of their students, the presentations will be made by Dorothy Crutcher, director of auidance, and Jean W ocsner, career education resource specialist. Parents and students are invited to attend either meetina on the most convenient date. For more information, call 964-3339, Ext. 202. Clul•tin•• card• avallabJe A varied selection of Christmas cards is now available tbrouah the Leukemia Soc1ety of Ameriea. Tri-eouoty Chapter Office, 202 Fashion Lane, Suite 21 S, Tustin, 92680. A wide pnce ranae covers cards appropnate for business and personal u!JC. Gold seals noting a donation to the Leukemia Society are included in each order. The holiday card proanun helps support vital leukemia research a.s weU as patient aid and educational and community service programs offered by the Leukemia Society. The Tri-<:<>unty Chapter serves residents of Ora.nae. Riverside and San Bernardino. Counties. Pand-ralsen--set meeting , .J-ProresstonaJs tv fund raising, planned givma or resource development are invited to the next National Society of Fund Raising Executives mectina on Tuesday, Aug. 28, at 11: 30 a.m. at the Grand Hotel in Anaheim. Guest speaker for the meeting will be Merritt JohnsonJ... executive vict president of the UNited Way of Oranae U>unty. Johnson will discuss "Developing Your Board of Directors," Cost for the luncheon'is $12 for members and non- members. For reservations, caJI Jim lngolio, commuruca- tions director for the American Lung Association, at 835- LUNG. Flna.nclal •emlnar scheduled Fullenon Monaaae~nd-Escu>w Company's will hold a free seminar on ''The Many Ways to Finance Pro~rty" on Tuesday, Aug 28. at its offices at 905 S. Euclid St .• FuUerton. Space 1s limited so call early for reservations at 870-4411. Boapltal .et. CPR cJau St. Joseph Hospital ofOranae wiU sponsor an Infant and Child CPR Oass on Thursday, Aug. 30, from 6 to 8:30 p.m. This class is important to parents of infants or children on monitors as wcU as a.nyone who may babysit with infants or small children. -~--...-. ........... 11ir Tenf "- • $1.09 billlo budget win board OK 1bt Ora C.Oumy rd of! • Piil fimmana touches on the co nty's tta.d Sh09 billion l S Wedncsda), appro the pardlQc two troi hclic®tcn for the "ff's ~ Al , upervtson ~ to bm: additional medicl1 personnel t the county J1lil and •PP.!Ovcd two new IOcla1 5CrYlCC progntms for the mentally ill As upervison condudcd th~ days of oo the spendi plan for the coming year, they 1umed lheit attention to those items they bad dd'crred cuber 10 week for funhcr consideration. The biuest expenditure cam~ when the-board voted '4al to apPf'Ove a $1.6 million outlay for I.be purdWe of two ustd helicopters that Shenff Brad Gates id Wlll enhance his department's bility to fisht crime 1n the unincorporated areas .. Jn recommending approval of the apcodiwre, Sueprv1sor Bruce Ncstande pointed out that cities with population~ smaller than that of the unincorporaled county and comprising fewer square miles routinely Ute belicopttrs for police patrol "h's an optional program that uncquivoc&Uy, without question, will ve lives," Nestande said. He asked the purtha$.e be e1emp1ed from the lpitndi..a ·frteze supervisors have imp<>5Cd until after the fall election. when votcn will decide the fate of.tu-s•ashina Prop- osition 36, better known as Jarvis IV. Boe.rd Cbairma.o Hamett WiedcT voled ·~-tht . expenditure after iodicatioa bcr support fOr the beticoptCr prosram. Wieder said sbc could not support tM be~ purchase because of the frec:zc exeaiption. ' '"It's IRPTOprtatc to ronaratulatc the sheriff, .. q11ipPed Supcrvisorllalph Clark after the purdwc was approftd. "He has an army. be h.u a navy and now be u air force." Tbt bud~t now tentatively approved by Lbe bo9rd toials-Sh09 btJlieA, e 19.1 percent lftCfCMC~tbe°S919 million 198>.&4 budatL The bUdget must be~ before Aui. 30, the statc-mandaled btidaet deadline. -~ ~S apR!Ofld superi'Uon d Wednesdays bud-t session lncl-. •The h1nn1 of a pbysaaan and three otber rorrcctional medical services personnel to auamait 1he mcd.lcal staff at the county jail as reeommcudcd by I.be county Gn.nd Jury. Total cost $163,336. •Establishment ot a noo-hospttal acute care psy- chiatric facility to house patients who require prycbiatnc -but not medical -care. Cu~n.tly, such petic:nll ~ hospitalized at a hi&ttcr cost to the county. Supervi budaetcd the~· but will not authorize expend.i of funds until the need for the program and projedtd county cost-savings arc better-documented. •Establishment of a transitional liviDa center ot proiram to provide less expensive. more appropriate care for penons in a st.ate hospatid or ibta filahatt<arcfaeility , in remission from a mental illnessorforpenonsin da.iSr ofbcina re-hospitalized for their conditions. Cost SS0,000, . Concerts canceled· Concerts fcaturiDJ Don Williams t~ •t the Pacific Amphitheatre m Costa Mesa and· Fnday at Greet Theatre 1p Los'Anlms blvt been post . The deCay was caused by illness in the sinacr'• WD.i.ly accord.in& w a spokeswoman for ffie two ltieatcn: The cost is SS per person and pre-registration is required. Call 771-8040 to register. Tranquillty on the beach Jean and Lee Fart. of Kortbrtqe eajoy riew and tranquility at Relater Park in Lapila. The Pacific Amphitheatre concert has bOcn rescheduled for Oct. I 0 and the new date It the Greek Theatre will be Oct. 12. Senior bowlers to meet The "Swingers" Seniors Bowlina League, comprised of members SQ-years.-old and older, and members of Costa Mesa Seniors Oub, wdl meet at Kona Lanes, on Monday, Sept. 3 at I p.m. OC couple sue Amway Corp.for fraud For more information, caJI S48-2729. Allege firm won •t buy back items 'CALENDAR , after inducing their purchase By tbe A.soclated Press Thursday, Aug. 16 • 9 a.m. Oru1e Couty Fair Board, MemonaJ Gardens Building, Oranae County Fairgrounds, 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. An Oranae County couple bas ftled a SlO.S million lawsuit apmst Amway Corp., one of the nallon's lafacst direct-sales companies, alleging fraud and misrepresenta- tion. • 6:30 p.m., LapDa Beacll Board of Adjutmeat, city council chambers, SOS Forest Ave. • 7:30 p.m., Lapu Buell Cable TV Committee, Community Center. 374 Leaion St. Jeff and Gnssell Banlett claimed in their Orange County Supcnor Court suit that Amway refused to buy back some of the $50,000 10 unsold products the couple bought between 1979 and 1983 while working as Amway "direct distributors," their attorney. David G. Vest. said. Pou cE Lo G UCI auditor shot to death in office, termed suicide A UC Irvine auditor was found dead 10 his office on campus Wcdocs. day from a sinaJe buUet wound in the head that investiptors believe was self-inflicted. a college spokesman rcponed. David M. Donley, SI, of Mission Viejo was found by a fellow worker in Ne..,Ort Beach An open window at a home on the SOO block of Beaonia A venue provided an entry point for thieves wttd"reached in and stole $80 fiom a nearby counter Wednesday. • • • A Kawasa.ki motorcycle, valued at $8001 WU Stolen from Jn enclosed a fim-Ooor office ID the school's administration build1n1 shonly after I p.m., according to UCI SPokesman Joel Don. Campus police said it appears the death was a suicide. Don said officers found no evidence of foul play but that an autopty will be performed by lnine The buraJary ofa residential aaraac was reported Wednesday on Spar- rowhawk.. The loss induded a Jack- son tourina bike worth SI ,000. • •• Stereo equipment worth mo~ than $400 was ~ported stolen Wednesday afternoon from a vehicle perked on the 19000 block of facArthur parkin& area on the 2400 block of East Cout lii&hway Tuesday oi,tht. Tbe motorc~tleowner _is_•~bl~n_e_nde...;.;.._r_a~t~_.,.wucw~~WM» ---th bUSJn Boulevard. the county coronor. Donley did not leave a suicide note, accordina to universit)' spokesmen. Donley was the manager of financial and operation audits and had been employed by the st.ate university since June I. 1981. more than $400. • • • Stereo equipment wonh mo~ than $400 was reported stolen Tuesday Crom a Volkswaacn Rabbit park.cd on the 17800 block of Gillette Avenue. A baoJi , ·Dlant re_ported tolen Wcdnc!day evcnina from a restaurant on the 4600 <block of Bamnca Parl.wa)·. Titc I between SSO and $200. A television 1etanda 'idco ttc rCcordcr, both wonh an csumatcd SI ,600, wert ttpOr1td stolen Wedo • day at 10 a.m. from an apanmcnt in thecompl at~19 n pn Vest said the Banletts went heavil) into debt and monaa&ed their home to buy coo.ugh. products so the} could distribute Amwa} mcrcbanduc. Accordina to the complaint. the Banletts were tnduccd to buy far more products than· they could scU because that was "the shortcut to success' at Amway. However. the Patterwns said the Banletts' allcp-• ti-On "'ere untrue. The Banletts felt "the) came under the spell of tome people v.bo v.cre highly persuasive," Vest said. ... Acc:ord- tnl to the Pattctsons and Amway's literature. bea>mina a direct distributor is the be.all and end-all of tbe operation:· The Banletts still possess $20,000 worth of Amway food bars and other discontinued products. Vest said Direct distributors arc responsible for consumer sales and rtCTUiuna new disuibuton. the suit said. Ou'CCl distnbutors ta.kc commissions from sales made by distnbutors they sponsored. The suit cl11ms the Banlctts also were assured by a M1ss1on Viejo couple. Harold and Dorothy Patterson. who arc co-defendants ID the complamt. that the) "could not possibly lose any money" because Amway would buy back all unsold mventory. Officials at Amway's Ada, Mi ch .. headquaners could not be reached for comment Wednesday. Amway. wnh annual sales of more than SI .S billionin t 982. was founded by Rieb ~~os and Jay Van Andel as a means of selling foods and deaning products directly to consumers. apparently ~as made through a rear sliding aJass door. La&una Bea.ch Louis Alfonso Garcia. 20. was arrested for dnvtna under lhc m-fluen~ of alcohol 11 Magnolia .and Aster Strttts Wednesda) afternoon and relca~ on S l ,SOO batl • • • An as~uh and battery by a suspect known to the v1ctim was reported Wednesday n1Jht. The mc1dent al- legedly occurred on Aug. IJ inside a room in the 1400 block of North Coast Hi&hway. Ba.ntinfton Beach A video cassette recorder and Jewtlry wonh about SI ,SOO was t.llen from an apartment on the 63000 block ofBrookhurst StrttL The croo entered tbrou&h ao unloc..k.cd slidioa Suspect facing court on child molest rap ,, L <\ fontrtr-Costa M~ man ~a' scheduled to b( arraiJJled today in Harbor Mumc1pal Coun on ch~ that he repeated!~ molested t~o airls vis1nna their arandmothcr·~ ( 0 ta Mesa home last summer. Grqor) Dean Stttlc. 30. wa arrested Tuesda\ momina by C'o ta Mesa and Huntington Beach poh~ while pedaling his blC)Clc near the Hununaton Beach pier. He was booled into Oranac Count} Jail in lieu of S2S,000 bail. 1t was the second time Steele was a.msted on SU plCIOD that he molested a S-ycar.-old co~t.a Mesa prl at the house next to hi fbrmcr ruide. t le, -.hoi unempto~cd, .. now liv~ m Hunungton Beach. Cha~ in that case Y.:ert dropped b} the district attorney's office in Man:h because of a lack of cvidcn«. Co ia MC$a lt. Tom Lazar id tttlc was apin arrested this week on allcpt1ons that he molested the airl a well as her cousin, who was tlien a )ears old. The old.er airt, uow 9, lives in Loui iana and recently told her mother about numerou all ed inci- dents with Stccl~ ~bots described by police as a fncnd of the airl's srandmother. The parents, vacationina in Ora.oar County, filed a complaint with COila .Mesa police. &Wsdoor. Foster home rejected ~--..~after sex abus charge • SPECIAL ALE' HOURS FRI 9AM -IPM SAT 9AM·8PM UN 10AM·8PM MON 9AM·8PM TUES 9AM • 8PM . LIMITED TO STOCK ON HAND SKI CLEARANCE Hurry. Don't Miss These Savings! ·./ ; . J ~ , , .>I ._, ~--I ' , Super Savings Sale! UP TO • 0/a· OFF " * INCLUDED IN OUR SALE * NEW '84-'85 EQUIPMENT JUST ARRIVED _SALE STARTS FRI AUG 1711 1:1011 ROSSIGNOL SM __ _ FP _~ EAGLE .. STS · FALCON S-3 ESCORT ATOMIC SENTREK HEAD SL SC LIST SALE 310.00 _154.88 SAN MARCO LIST SALE 300.00 .. -_149.88 AXl ·R _____ 299.00 _. _179.88 290.00 __ 144.88 AX· 1 269.00 _161:"88 275.00 __ 168.88 AX .:22 239.00_144.88 -265.00 -164.88 250.00 124.88 185.00 -92.88 235.00 285.00 270.00 NORDIC A 117.88 770 235.00 _ 148.88 169.88 SALOMON LIST SALE 162 88 SX70_ _ 180.00 _119.88 . SX60 __ i_. ___ 180.00 __ 119.88 ----- ROSSJGNOL•HEAD• -2•0.LIN•ATOMIC•PRE * SPECIAL BONUS OFFER * F~ fHE 5 DAYS Of OUR SALE. WE'LL GIVE AN ADDITIONAL 10% OFF OUR ALREADY LOW 84-'85 SKI PRICES IF PURCHASED WITH BINDINGS LISTED BELOW ARE ONl!Y A COUPLE OF EXAMPLES OF OUR LOW PRICE-S ON ALL OUR NEW 1984-85 SKIS THAT WE'VE JUST RECEIVED ROSSIGNOL STS 84-85 REG. 280.00 BOOTS 84-85 SAVE ON NEW INVENTORY NoRJJKA r &4. 85 1 TRIDENT REG. 270.00 OUR PRICE 21988 I ,4, ~· (84-85) ZS-FLOW Z PRO SPORT REG. 255.00 200.00 180.00 OUR PRICE 209.88 169.88 99.88 Pan'Am . strikers Carriers blaming''R:!Ban grounded !~~!~~.asse on pay k Nf.W \'ORK l PJ -Vo\liina to " hut do-.n the \\-'Orldi" unions for thousunds of Pan American Wortd Airwa) cmplo)ee ht cd a' urprise trike ove1 a freeze 1n pensions that grounded eight flights before a ('Ourt order nt their member bade to· work today. Pickel at airport nationwide came down late Wednesday after U.S. District Judie Joseph M. Mclaughlin in New York mued an injunction ordenng the Tran~port Worker) Union's 6.000 members back to work, said Victor Diaz, of the union' air transport division. "We have a court injunction, so we 'Ae'rt abiding by the law," Diaz said A telephone operator for Pan Am in New York confirmed today that all operations were normal. The strike. called at 2 p.m. Wednes- day by the TWU. forced the cancella- tion of eight of the carrier's. SOO datl} flights. Pan Am spokeswoman Pamela Hanlon said. All of the flights were either to or from New York. she said. The Teamsters, the Air Linc Pilots Assoc1atton and the Union of Flight Attendants said their members would honor TWU picket hnes. At New York's Kennedy Airport, TWU mechanics and cargo handlers began walking out at 2 p.m., along with passenier and reservations clerks represented by the Teamsters, and about 70 workers set up picket hnes outside the airline's terminal.. Ms. Hanlon said Postal worken carry1na protest igm~ outside post offioc aero the nation blame President R gan for a contract 1mpuse with the U.S. Postal Service-, but say they are in no hurry to io on stnkc. "We think: Reagan is the whole problem," 1d J ck Pan1«"a, prts1dentot the Cincinnati local of the American Postal Workers Union. "For the first time since I've bttn involved in the union, which has been 11 year , the secretary of labor got involved in our contract nejoti tions," Panzeca said. "That tells us Mr. Reagan is sayina 'l his !s.our P<hitton, take it or le vc it."' 1 he final contract offer by the Posta! Service included a three-year pay freeze for current employees and a two-her wage system that would require that new workers hired after Aua. 18 be paid an l\eraae ofS 17,000 -23 percent less than the current average of $23.000. Kidnapped tot need• medlclne .. ... YORK. Pa. -Eight FBI agents and 11 ctty detectives searched t~y for a J;.w k-old .airl who requires special care for a digestive problem after she was kidnapped from her cnb in a home. authorities said. Lindsey Smith disappeared Tuesday allemoon as her mother. Chandra, napped tn a nearby tx-droom. police id. "We have't heard an¥th1ng about any ransom: ~e ha\e no \uspects. We have leads that we are tracking down. but I am not at hberty to disclose them at the prco;ent time,-: police ChtefWilliam Hose said Wednesday. "Condos stlnk • slgi:ts remaln '. AUSTIN, Texas-An ar.ue homeowner has the constitutional nsJlt to pu1 ·up s1gns sayinJ "Condo Stink':. in plain. view of a new multiptc-unit project overlooking his propert), a state judge says. Grant Lannon last fall expre sed his ire over a three-story, 18-uni t condom i n1 um adjoining his home b:t erecti n~ signs an his backyard that said "This view will iet worse" and "Condos Stink. · The developer. saying the signs were preventing him from selling the last 11 units, went to court to make Lannon take the signs down. Although Hughe\ won a temporary inJunct1on last week against Lannon, the tables were turned on Wednesday when State District Judge Juan Gallardo ruled that the homeowner could keep the signs. Yellowstone. bears gets support YELLOWSTONE NA TlONAL PARK, Wyo. -~tter writers from across the country are appealing to Yellowstone National Park officials not to destroy bears responsible for two recent mauhngs, one of them fatal. Gary Brown, assistant supenntendent and the park's bear management spec1altst, said Wednesday the letters have been "p1hng up" on his desk for the past four days. A Swiss camper was let lied at a campsite near White Lake on July 30 and a boy was mauled at a developed camps11& at Grant V1Uage Aug. 5. 6,000 fans vlslt Elvis mansion Bad Brie • MEMPHIS, Tenn. -As Elvis Presley tapes played 10 the background 5,000 fans carrying candJes filed solemnly past his grave today on the seventh anniversary ofh1s death to show "respcet for the love he gave us." "For me, it's brl. n~ b1· g been almost 22 years that I'm 10 love With Elvts, even in death," said Mane-EJizabcth Izzo, a fan from St. Tropez, France. As police blocked off a section of · the fQur-lane Elvis Presley Boulevard, a brief memonal service was held at 11 b h . p.nr. Wednesday before the faithfui_mardted e quarter-mile up the circumr--ro u a . a .. drive~y ofyraceland, Presley's former home, to_view his grave. . COVINA (AP) -It was a cheesy situation all around when I CALIFOR NI A 22,000 pounds of French Brie LAX tu ed d ~ went mol<:ly, melted and dribbled cop rn .PWJJ "w .ace Into the gutters. · LOS ANGELES -Officer James Pearson. arrested for invei.tigauon of But "now the big stink Is over creating a bomb hoax involving the Turkish Olympic team, was twice turned who pays for the meSI. down by the Police Department on medical grounds before being accepted, The Brie, valued at $40,000, records show. The c1v1I service records. however. do not cite the specific was finally hauled off Wednes-medical reason Pearson, 40. was in1t1ally turned down. Phil Henning, assistant general manager of the cit) Personnel Department, on Wednesday would not day. It had sat In a trailer truck say what the reason was The records show that Pearson twice appe~led before since Its dellvery Aug. 6 to a city Medical Review Panel agreed with him in March. 1975. He went to work Pacemakers Inc., a food dis-in 1977 tributing company 25 mites __ - of Los Angetes. ~J·vJsltors 'cause own problems' · iTaTi!~~·~:.u~et~d~al'\tS~~ SAN DIEGO -.\mcncan sen icemen v1s111ng Tijuana make trouble for ._. themselves because "the) let themsehes be taken to places in Ti)uana where Claiming tt was rotten. "I could they shouldn't go." the head of Tijuana's polace force sa)s Tijuana Police teU by the amen and the Cmdr. Salvador Aiu1rre Sanchez. responding to allegattons that some of has temperature," he said. officers abuse v1s1t1ng Amencans. said Wednesday that man) of the problems By then, hOwever, the delivery are caused by rowdy U.S. military personnel "looking for acuon." While truck had dropPed the tr; and vowing to rid his depanment of any rogue officers, Aguirre said members ofh1s ktft. Hotweatherearllerth week department have on repeated occasions rescued U.S. sen·1cemen from melted the cheeee Into drip-dangerous s1tuat1ons in bars and nightclubs. ~':en~":'~o=at~~~teO:: L!ttle Richard seeks royalties bloCks away, and several em-LOS ANGELES -Little Richard. the rock 'n' roll star of the 1950s who ptoyeea of a business acrou the gave up his music career to become a minister, has filed a lawsuit seeking street. millions in royalties he lost 10 a disputed agreement he signed in 1959. He and The ltate Health ~rttnent members of Don and Dewey, a duo that once opened for him paraded in front declined to move the C8ftll\ and of the .Hol.lywood offices of ATV Mu~ic Corp., one of several defendants in the .... !awsun Little Richard filed under has real name, Richard W. Penniman At Tallerlno fl natty got a private firm issue 1s an agreement Little Richard signed m 19 59 waiving all cla1 ms to to move the cheese. royalties from his records in return for an S 11 ,000 lump-sum payment I • ':>/· '. ..y__.._,..,,_ '·"' . ":' ~ REG SALE ROSSIGNOL OVER V2 MILLION DOLLARS IN MERCHANDISE ON SALE Friday, Aug. 17, 10 am to 9 pm. Saturday, Aug. 18, 10 am to 6 pm. Sunday, Aug. 19, 11 am to 5 pm. lltiaotlltl Adnn119t lltsttGtMI ITS lltsSlfHIFP llts~MtSl!I S220 $275 S300 $310 S119 15 S115 t5 s11tJ~. • 6,000 Sq. Ft. Showroom lncreasel Slit 95 1985 SKI PACKAGE Yllkl Super G YO!kl llef!Rhger VllklGu ... Yllkl L .. 1111- Yllkl Soll YO!kl Ttglf Jr Velkl HIPP• KHtleDH KHtltFWI Kastlt llX· Tta111 KHllt Sport"lt Kntlt P'rt ll1Stlt"'4• VOL KL "36 S3AO S260 $266 "50 S220 $130 KASTLE $210 95 St17 95 S20t 95 St5• 95 Slit 95 S6l 115 S135 95 Ka111t llX Jr lltctt t1111 ll.tsl Ulft Sit O (11110511 nu GI DY NAM IC S325 sm FISCHER EL AN S29 sm t:i S3t5 5tto H 12 ~ sm n 2R!'J Slit II BLIZZARD BOOTS Weinmann Reg $260 .$1 09.95 Dynaflt 3F Comp $149 95 Reg S320 • Trappeur Concept R $109 95 Reg. $199.95 • Oachstein V3 $139 95 Reg. $240 . . . • Jr. Ski Boots $19 95 Values to $150 ,. • SKI CLOTHING 20% to 70% OFF GLOVES Rog. $36 . .... $9.95 •RISSOGNOL-AOVAtilTAGE SKI •'tYROUA 170 BINDINGS •TOMIC POLES •MOUNTING & HOT WAX S349 VALUE NOW $229.95 BINDINGS ~ Salomon 737·637 737E Marker M40 M35 .... Tyrolla 170·280·380 ..•.. 40%oFF 40%oFF .40%oFF FREE DRAWING FOR .------s~t: s------~·~~,,_.------~--~ -YOUR CHOICE S~ORT HAUS OF SKIS! 111' N W..OftT I LVO COSTA '1 SA CA tUJJ (114) MS-4110 \ The first 200 p ople to nt r our tore Wh n thl giant sale et rts t 10 am on Friday, Aug 17, Wiii b llgibl to nt / our drawing for th skis. You'll v t out gUOO cnanclim to lt\l o t :.t ..... ---'lii--' -------- Wilder's kidnap victim ·says she~s broke,jobless Mass murderer kissed Risico, told put R1s1 o on pl nc home from Boston. For 20 hours, she kept her her to write a book atiout adventure freedom C'f'Cl from authontie . . When she amvtd in Los An I , "I couldn't cry. My mind was just so -blank. I thouaht. ·1 can't cry. I don't care. I'll just go shoppina .... LOS ANGELES (AP) -When Tina Marie Rt ico walked into a police station four months ago she carried with her a horrifying account of her kidnap and torture by mass murderer Christopher Wilder. Now, broke and joble , the 17- year-old is trying to put Jt all behind her. "I care, but I'm not going to worry about it. You can't ... brood over 1t the rest or your life.'' she said in an interview. Risico said they passed dozens of police officers who never recogn11ed them, and ate only at Mc:DOnald's drive-in restaurants. She told Wilder stories 1lb0ut herself and drO\lc most of the way .to take hc"r mind offthinas. "When you're risking your life, wondering if you're going to Jive the DCJ(! day. or whether he's aoina to kill you while you're sleeping or some- thing. you stan to think about who's who in the zoo," she said. She bouJht S 100 in lingene at a Hcnno$1 Beach hop. , Later, she wal~cd into the :Y-omutcc police station. No book or movie contract has matcrialiitd and even if one does, "il will take so long to get lhe money," Risico said, addmg she hopes pub- lici ty will land her a job, ~rhaps as a receptionist or a salcsgu1 near. tile beach. Risieo said she thanks that Wilder, who later fatally shot himself during a • struaglc wllh a New Hampshire state trooper. fell in love with her durini their nine-day cross-country tnp. • "I know he never wanted to hun Before his death April 13. Wilder i WORLD ;i~c~~.~ ~~ ~rtin) to me in •he first Jet fires oD Persian Gulf R1s1co recalled watching Wilder. 39, shoot one woman point-blank tanker but m.isses target and seeing him stab another young t woman and dump her, sttll alive, · · · along a count!) road. She said she By Tbe A11oclated Pre11 drove Wilder's car while he savagely attacked a iirl in the back scat. Although 5he wa1ted nearly 20 hours after Wilder released her before she notified police, investigators say Ris1co was brainwashed and have not her charged her in the nationwide crime spree that may have involved 11 rapes and tonures. At least four of the v1ct1ms were killed. An unidentified warplane fired two rockets at a Palastani tanker en route to.a Saudi Arabian oil loading terminal in the Persian Gulf, but the rockets missed and the tanker escaped undarnagtd, an official at Pakistan's National Tanker Co. said today. The offietal, reached by telephone in Karachi from the Pakistani capital Islamabad, said the M.T. Johar was attacked Wednesday near Shah Alam Shoal, 12 miles from the island nation of Bahrain. The Pakistani news agency, monrtorcd in KuwaJt, said the 89,000-ton Johar was some '60 miles northeast of Qatar when the attack occurred. This area -east of the location reported by the tanker company -is the same region where Kuwaiti tankers were attacked by Iranian warplanes-earlier this summer. Recalling Wilder's farewell before he put her on a plane back ~ Los Angeles brought tears to R1s1co s eyes Koo marr1es tradlnd •tamp IJ·~-during the interview. published in e ~u · Wednesday's Los Aneeles Times LONDON -Amencan-bom actress Koo Stark. the former girlfriend of "He told me to klSS him on the Bntain's Prince Andrew, has married an heir to the $76 million Green Shield check. He said.: All you gotta do. kid. trad10g stamp empire. Stark, 28, who once starred in soft<ore erotic movies is write a book,"' she said. "It was and created headlines worldwide when she and Andrew, now 24, slipped out of heartbreaking. JLwas so sect1men Britain 11ndufalse names in October 1981 to vacation'frrttwearibbean,-On tal." Wednesday married Green Shield heir Timothy Jeffries. Stark wore white for Authoriti~ say Wilder tortured her wedding to the 21-year-old Jeffries. and scitually abused the tcen-aaer at a San Diego motel soon after he Rio"'"~ W'Onen• Jn Belfast abducted her from a shopping mall in --S suburban Torrance. Wilder claimed he managed a modeling school and wanted to dnve her "Just around" to BELFAST, Northern Ireland -Hundreds of Proteslant militants threw gasoline bombs and battled the predommantly Protestant polic force early today in what officers said was one of the worst such riots in a decade. In the Shankill Road district, about 500 Protestant rioters set two shops afire, and erected barricades and ignited them. Others ripped up paving stones and tore down concrete lamp-posts, smashing them into chunks on the road and hurting them at police. take some photos "To me. I totally re~et that 1 was such a geek that I d1dn t find out 1f he were really the manager of that place," she said. She said her rough life helped her SoatlJ African• bovcott school survive the ordeal, Her mother, she · " · .. sa1d, was often on ~elfare and would JOHANf"ESBURG. South Afnca-Tho~sands of high school students leave her to nde wt th motorcycle boycotted class rn black townships today in a new surge of unrest over what clubs. they consider inferior education fot blacks, the govemmeot said. Two black "There's something inside of me universities and another for mixed-race students also were hit by boycotts over that I knew ho~ to pla> along." she separate issues. Edgar Possclt. spokesman for the Dcpanment of Education said. "I know he never wanted to hun and Tra101ng, said today about 19,000 students either were boycottmg or me and do an) thing to me in the first missing classes because the government had suspended schools in trouble place." spots. You've got connections that can save you money. 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Huntington Beach • 9811 Adams Ave. ,... at Brookhurst St. . - Al But will televised GOP conventien play in Peoria? DAL (AP)' -Rcpubli o wb?T)'tPJ over how television wiU m!&Jtt take the pre ident's re-election .. The arntcst threat, as I view it, to leaders, ishing up President Re· play next wctk's OOP convt.nuon for_Ented, lbc re.election of Ronald Reagan and Fahrenkopf said ~the American Gary Hoi~sm~. the RNCs di~tor people would act a "aood show" if of commun1eat1ons. ha Uia. w.e those who m ke the decision• in don't have controvcny, w~ don t television allow. His bia wolT)', he have a fODtest, but that doest?. t mean said is "whether or not it aocs out we cant put on a good show. qan's I 84 campaign platform, a.re and about energirina loyalist1 who Those issues -and not the OcoracBushisnotdomesticpolicy;it -----------'--------------=-~ sperrina over nuances an writing the is not foreian policy," Fahttnkopf CREMATION S.riaJ At s. ... Mo•ataJne or D ... rt The Neptune Society offers a simple and dignified cremation service with dissemination at aea, desert or mountains. Our literature tells the complete story of our society .. The Neotune Society 474·E. 17th~-. Costa Mesa, CA 92627 CEM '( ) BKR. l• 714 646·7431. 24 HOUR SERVICE No s.wb.n will call NAME ~------------------- ADDRESS ----------------- CITY ------STATE ------ZIP __ pany platform -were uppermost as said. ..The arcatest threat is over- a made-for-television convention confidcnoc by those in ttus room and was t.akina shape in the Auaust heat of throughout this country who att Tex . Tho convention bqins Mon-charged with the responsibility for day_. voter motivation and voter turnout." Today, Republican moderates He laid out plans for tbe ~any to were makina another attempt to spend a ~ord $20 million on resurrect suppon for the EqualRiahts exhaustive effons to set Republicans Amendment in the · pany platform. to the polls. Such a move tailed to attract a Sen. Charles Percy of Illinois, a seconding motion in a subcommittee. e4!1Y moderate in a tou&h re-election The president's dauabter, !_14bt apinst liberal Democratic Rep. Maureen, was lobbying for the Paul Simon, took one look at the amendment. but the Los Anacles platform drat\ and disassociated ove~ the air." Meanume, the. 106 delept~on_the The three commeretal networks Platform Commmec sat an n1.nc ~en abandoned their customary pvel-to-on the staae of a nearby audtt~num gavel coverage of the conventions and went over their drafts wtth an th15 year, and ABC opted for enter-· audience of only a fe~ dozen re- tainment over politicians ·durina a porters and P.arty operatives. prime-time balf·bour of the Demo-The emerg1na ~ocumcnt ~as mov· cratic convention last month. ing toward the nght ~t a time that The convention master plan calls R•n b.as been tr'.Codma toward the for tiahtl)' timed two-hour~ prime-polittc.al center, with olive branch~s time sessions. Lona, windy speeches on nuclear anm ~ntt:<;>! and even h11 are out, Fahrenkopf said in an "never say ne:ver dec111on not to rule interview. · out any tax increase. Herald Examiner reported she was himself from it rebuffed early iri the week in a Percy deplored the pledge to ap-· d. s ' · meetin• with platform officials. point only judges who oppose . Another Re ea "We have been wotlcina on this on abonion. behalf of a number of our women "Havina been to a great many officeholders and candidates. I· don't conventions, I would not feel that a ' h • b • consider it over yet," she said. "So I convention is a cross-section of the vessel 1t· y mine cenainly wouldn't sit here and say typical mainstreJm of America or the we've lost." . maintstream of the Republican 'P ting polls showing Reagan lead-Party," Percy told reponers in Spring-c Cy · in~ Democrat Walter F. Mondale by field, 111. "This convention tends to be · AJRO, Egypt (AP) -A priot '8iled into the Gulf ofSuezandjoined I • .i. • R ship struck an underwater mine in the an t'ntcmau·onal tior"" "'"eking to· clear or more pcrcenw.ge points, c-somewhat more conservative." --. publican Chamnan Frank J. Fahren-All was moving toward the nomi-Red Sea and suffered-severe engine the Red Sea of explosives. . lcopf Jr. bru$hed off the ideological nation, withoutoppositionordissent, damage, shipping experts said today. A spokesman for Lloyd's Shipping skirmishes between moderates and of Reagan and Bush in a single call of It was the 17th vessel reported Intelbgencc in London, which conservatives when he reported to the the states Wednesday night. Reagan, damaJed by exelosions in the water-monitors shipping movements party's aoveming National Commit-back in Washington from his Cali-w8:f smce July · worldwide, said Mobil Oil Co.'s tee on Wednesday. fomia vacation, will arrive that day he report came as the U.S. London office reported that the · Election day over...confidcnce was and accept renomination Thursday. transport ship Shreveport, with four Mobil Swift tanker picked up a on his mind. minc-huntin~ helicopters aboard. distress signal from the 11, 765-ton --------------------------1.---_...;..----------------------------------, Cypriot motor vessel Theoupotis-. The signal indicated \ the Theoupolis struck a mine Wednesday night at the south end oftbe Red Sea, just north of the strait that opens into the Indian Ocean, the Lloyd's seokes-- man said. He spoke on condition of anonymity. 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Large 100% cotton. flat weave towels in plaids and stripes SAVINGS SERVICE SELECTION S~ TISFACTION LAYAWAY • MONOGRAMMING• GIFT CERTIFICATES• BRIDAL REGISTRY• CUSTOM BEDDING . WHITE SALE SAVINGS AND MORE EVERY DAY! ·~~H~tington Beach, 16672 Beach BIVd. · 24321 Ave. de 11 Carhtta, Laguna Hiiis ~J~~~F~o~~J.~ lbnbla ,.,,.., Ctr.,' 142-4112 · la OlhieM rtna&1, Std of~ NIH1 lal, ISS·IHS SATURDAY Downe • Huntlngttn 811ch • figuN H1U1 ·la Joll1 • l1ktwood •us V1g11 •Menlo Perk• Mon1ct1ir • Northridg1 •P111d1na • SUNDAY 10·6 Pl1c1nti1 • Pleasant Hill• Puente Hills• R v1r1id1 • Santa Monica• Swd10 Cary· Sunnyv1l1 • Tortance • W. lo1 Angeles . The spokesman said the ship reported severe ena.ine damage. No further details were available im- mediately. The Shreveport made the trip from the Mediterranean through the (()().. mile-Iona Suez Canal and today joined the U.S. ship Harkness and four British minesweepers and a British support .vessel in the Gulf of Suez, the northwestern fork of. the Red Sea . . About ioo_A,sncrjqt~J!C~nnet•re­rcponed to be involved 10 the effort to clear the huge sea -1,450 miles Ion& and up to 225 miles wide -of explosives. In Paris, an Iranian exile opposi- tion group, the Mujahedecn, today claimed Iran's Organization of Mili- tary Industries had been involved in a secret project to produce sea mines since the start of the year.The group said information about Project Sadaf {Oyster) was received from sources in the Iranian army. There was no immediate comment from Iran. The statement said the project is overseen by the most senior authorities of the ~me of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeiru, including Presi- dent AJi Khamenei. It said Iran also had bought a large quantity of mines from abroad. U.S., British and Egyptian officials said that apart from locating-anl1 dismantlina mines, they want to determine who sowed them. . One o!-.the divers on board the wooden-bulled Gavinton told As-~ Prea p!rntograpber Don Mell: ''The biggest problem that we face here is that we don't have any idea what we arc looking for." Officials are unsure who is behind the explosions in the Red Sea, or what kind of devices have caused the blasts. There arc many different kinds of mines: mines that float on the surface and arc detonated by contact and mines lbat sit on the bonom of the sea and arc activated by metal. Floodln6 . closesolf deserts By Tbe A1soclatecl Preti Rains w.ashed across parts of the West already reeling today from floodwaters fed by 2-inch downpours in less than 90 minutes, as workcrews sou&ht to reopen highways in Cali- fornia and Utah closed by rockslidcs, mud and waist-deep water. In California, Death Valley was virtually cut off as au but one major road was closed by floodina that turned the Mojave Desert into a sea of mud, Dick Rayner, chief ranacr at the Death Valley National Monument headquarters in Furnace Creek, said Wednesday. A tornado, accompanied by hail and strona winds, ripped up fenoes as it sliced throu&h a sparsely populated area of ccntraf Utah Wednesday, the National Weather Service said. Sev- eral highways remained closed today as tloodina remained in the south· central pan of the state. In Utah, the Beaver County sheriff's office closed state road t S3 up !lUv~r Canyon, a popular rec-r reat1on site, after 2 inches of ram fell ' in 90 minutes Wednesday afternoon, said sheriff's dispatcher Olen Buf· finaton. Buffi.naton said a rockslidc covered about 500 yardt or lhe biahway. The road remained clOICd early tOday. The Juab County sheriff's office closed a stretch of U.S. 91 between Nephi and Levan Wednesday when more than a foot of water covered lbc highway, Sit. Gary Loftran said. A tornado tore through a field aouth of Mantiin central Utah Wednesday afternoon, SA.id Richard Prin&lc of the weather bureau office an Jt lake, rlppina the tops oft' of aomc fences. In C•hfomia. the atonn bit hardest in deat"n areas, .dcvastatina RidJC· crest. 1 communny"Of lb0uf'22.000 aome 110 mil rronhcast of Lo AnJtles. BolhJJl&I midi~ R~ l - wcrc clo~. a11d on l<lm trcets children \\Cn1 raRin on mncr tu l. - IN THE SERVICE SSgt. Cory gets course honors 3 Out Of 4 Kids Can't All Be Wrong! The Sauerkraut Bunch h's true' 3 out of 4 kids have pref ered the new Saurkraut doUs from Zapf of West Germany. And it's easy to see why. They have a delightful head of • polyester hair, life·llke huggable textile bodies, and soft vynyl arms and legs that don't become unraveled and are easy to clean. Their eyes gently open and close. But most of all . what they gtve is years of love. Sure they cost more Come see why! 85 9 6 Dolls Of The States By Royal Thest charming CreclllOOS 14-111 det9it young and old 'alike Each I urures a costomedt!picting tht states hertiage and color Once rrae. thty f\11'1 come a !ht state's flag and an educabOnal saoD relabtlg In I ts ling inf Of manon Such as the hi5tory of the ~tatt, state flou.w. state bird and manyodler fascinatW1g ~ts and details These Mt the gifts for klch or collectors1 s324s --ia Ortnge A7 State receives esta e funds D AN ALDRICH HEADS FAIR UC trW'9 ChMcillor D.n ~kfrlch hM b9er\ ..,.,.,. dMllr- an of tM 191.t"~ ind Scout Felr, fPOIMIOl'9d by the Or~ County COunoll of ~ ~ .Scou\a of Amertca. AQI 2 THAU OAADE I • We are proud to have .om. one of Den Aldrtch•• atatua In the community in this polltlon." Mid Bob cum. or ttteScouta' Orange County CounoH. "I'm confident we wll ~ .. of our progrem and fUnd-raltlng ~ with him at the hekn." COMPUTD L.Aa a COMPU'TQ ASSISTED llCST'RUC1'10N PAGE SCHOOLuec.,.. The fair, to be Mid at An8hllm Stadium on Sat., NOv.17. wlfl feature exhibit• Md steoe actl" by explotera. Cub Ind ~ Scouta from ttproughc)ut 1he 8AllDEI llOVE COSTA MW OU. 12111 Buaro · 867 Vlct«ia St. 1510 W. Almond Garden Grow, CA 92MO Costa Mesa, CA • ~·CA fl.e (714) 971 .5533 1714') 14%·0302 (714) 171-2075 . . . OUR OTHER STORE .. NEWPORT CHll· ORENS BOOTERY IS NOT AFFECTED BY THIS SALE AND CONTINUES WITH BUS .. ESSAS USUAL WESTCLIFF SHOES ~ . WE ~fU TO OWN l OPERATE OUR "NEWPORT CH DRENS BOOTER'r' W SHOES FOR THE FAMILY 1052 IRVINE AVE • CORNER OF 17th STREET "WESTCLIFF PLAZA" • NEWPORT BEACH f ASHION ISlAHO WHICH CONTIUS WITH BUSIE.SS AS USUAL All Advertistd Merchandise Subject To Prior Salt e 1 e SALE TUMS Cub · Check VU -Mast.Card AU SALES fNl SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY AmUST 18tb 10:00 A.M. MEN'S SHOES FLORSHEIM® DRESS SHOES One of the truly great names In QuaJlty lhoea for men. Still a good aelectlon of Sllp-Ona, Ties, and Wing Tips. Shop todayf Savel GROll» I , • Regular 52M to 69 .. Sale 3211 to 3911 GROll» D Regular 78" to 86" Sale 4911 GROll> fTI Regular 9814 to 109'5 Sale 5911 CASUAL SHOES Remaining stock Includes the finest namea In men's casual shoes Clarks. Cole Haan, Aorshelm, Baas and more Regular 49ea to 75 Sale 2911 to 3911 NEWt 1984 HOLIDAY HOUSE SLIPPERS By GROSVENOR• Ane quality leather .tippers . . ~ b g variety. Great Chr1stmu gifts for men. 1/1 Price CHILDREN'S SHOES All of our SaJe shoes are from regular stock. Famous names: Buster Brown, Lazy Bona, Keds, Little Capezio and many others. Hundreds to chOOM ... but ... at these prices they'll go fast. GROtl» I FOR INFANTS-TODDLERS SIZES 4 thru 8 Regular 116 to '32 Sale 811 GROtl» II FOR DRESS-SCHOOL Sizes 8-12 • 121/2-3 Regular '18 to '36 Sale 811-1211 GRQtl» II GIRL'S SAfl>ALS Sizes 4-1 2 • 121/2-3 Regular '16 to •33 Sale 811 RE MAINING STOCK CANVAS-SPORT ~lzes 4-8 • 81h -12 • 121.h-3 . Regular 1 17 to '28 I 711 t 1011 ABOUT 100 PAIR HOUSE SLFPERS SIZES: TODDLERS AND CHILDREN'S Regular •a to •13 Sale 111 to 4" SHOES FOR MEN -WOMEN -CHILDREN 1052 IRVINE AVE • CORNER OF 17th STREET WESTCLIFF PLAZA • NEWPORT BEACH WOMEN'S SHOES RDWNNG STOCK DRESS SHOES Select from NaturaJIZer, Uf..Str1de 9 . west. Calico, Glorla Vanderbln and more And 1i%ee 5'~ thru 10. TheM 8hoee are trwnendous valueal Shop Today1 Regular 134 to •54 Sale 911 to 2411 REMAINING STOCK CASUAL SHOES We've slashed prlcel on all of our cuual ah08I again. Broken alzee but fantastic savings. Select Clarks, Bua. Sebago. Jacques CoMn and other top names. Regular '24 to 152 Sale 1211 to 24" SEBAGO* DOCKSIOES* CLASSIC LEATHER BOAT SHOES FAMOUS MAINE CRAFTMANSHIP Regular 4991 Sale 24"· PRE-TEEN FASHION LITTLE CAPEZIO~ SIZES 5111 to 8% Regular 138-'4 1 Sale 1211 FABULOUS SELECTION NEWt 1984 HOLIDAY HOUSE SLIPPERS By GROSVENOR 1 SALE HOURS MONDAY thru SATURDAY 10:00 A.M. 'tll 8:00 P.M. CLOSED SU D~¥ PCH traffic DJess blaZDe d • on the people at Caltrans • =ro tbe Edjtor. ~ Tbjs letter is in reference to Bill ' Harvey's column (Daily Pilot. Jul} 23) titled .. Traffic Snarh Along PCH Caused by Oistardly Plot" t have been hopin1and prayin& for · some time that ~meone traHhng PCH from Newport ·ecach to Seal Beach would have access to the news media and public!) comment and oomplam on the out-of.sync mess we &O through twice a day, five days a week. By the tame I get to work evef) day travehng from Newl'On to Seal Beach I feel like declanng war on Cahrans and their stupid employees. I am quuc sure a I O-ycar--0ld could do a better JOb of regulating the traffic lights. And about once a month I pass a Caltrans truck on PCH an the fast lancdoang 2S mph. They arc not even aware of the rule "Slow Traffic Keep To The Right." A fellow employee made severaJ calls one day trytng to get to the bottom of this problem and was told that Caltrans is responsible for regu- 1--;___-1J1tmg the li&hu. He miked to. a so. called "1entfeman" there resultmg 10 tittJe or no satisfaction or sympath) -and as the conversation coded - threatened to put a sign up on PCH with this guy's name and number so that everyone concerned and upset ' n~sary to have two bicycle lanes from Hununaton Beach to Seal Beach plus the bicycle trail alona the beach? I seldom Stt these being used. Therc is plenty ofland from Newport Beach to Seal Beach to have three !ants in both directions, or if they don't want to go to tbe expense of making a third lane, Just have no parking between 7 and 9 a.m. and 4 to 6 p.m. to alleviate the traffic congesuon. A pa111cular city in Texas puts oones down for two hours in the a.m. malclng three lanes going into the city and vice versa in the p. m. On the Corona del Mar Freeway going north there are two lane~ and fot a short distance JUSt before ll intersects with the San Diego, they lined off the right side and made one lane which creates a huge bottleneck. This is also the same situation aosna in the opposite direction where the Newport Freeway intersects with the Corona del Mar Freeway. It makes one reaUy wonder about the engrncers who arc designing our roads and f~ways. And why do they make a nght hand lane so short? In some areas (PCH and Seal Beach Boulevard) they could make ll three or four umes as long. allowing the cars turning nght to move over sooner. but we all know that trying to help the flow of traffic as not their aoal ---+-I o"""vcr the traffic suuauon and out-of· sync signals could caJI and file their complaint. It is. needless to say, a tittle bit ridtculous when a city has Theo w~ have the moto~clcs and {ow traffic signals anct you cannot w~OOint1S to 30 mph 1n the fa -..;....,,...,_.,.-~~: _driv~ throuah the cny without stop-_ lane 1n a S~.Jll.P.b z9I)S. in ~ddmon to pin• at every signal · the -Sp_nd~oon,..d.rl.Ycrs 'i!.bo · l cannot .com~hend wh1 every· hJ":e no JeSUnaU~n other than to one tries to make at as difficult as cruise the streets and highways at 25 possible for people who arc trying to mph while traffic in front of them gets ael to and from work. They take all completely ~ut of sight. It w_ould help this land, then landscape a huge area a great deal if people would just make in the middle, make bicycle lanes on somewha.t of an effort to keep up with both sides oflhe road, or hne off both traffic. It just appears that everyone as sides of the · road and make 11 out to get us working taxpaying untouchable. and we end up wnb two cit.1zens. I on~y1 hope you will not let lanes going in one direcuon when we thas subject die. could have had three Why 1s It M. DEMPSEY "lfth reisanlrr futabl command nominator-In th live of ful men, tt I that th y t up when they tall down.·· ·I PAUL HARVEY columnln -Paut HARVEY Nixon • r~gains his spot iii SliD The political crucifix.ton and resur· recuon of Richard Nixon is a secular miracle. He suffered p_olitical defeats for governor of Cahfomia and for pres a· dent of the United States which might nave caused most profession~ poli· ticians to crawl in a bole and btde. He came back lo be elected prcsi,,..J dent in 1968. Following the media vendetta wbkb deposed him in 1974 there appeared no way be could survtvc, certainly no way bis career could be revived. But he did and it was. R1cf\ard Nixon is a survivor. If there is an irrefutable common denominator in the hvcs of successful men, it ts that they get up when they fall down. And qain and apin: Those who merit a place in the sun arc those who -urf' abte-TO 1JICk' 1hetmelv6 up, dost themselves off and keep on keeping on. Lincoln did. Churchill did. And Richard Nixon. His counsel on foreign aff.airs and political strategy is sought again by official Washington and by unofficial audiences as diverse as the Economic Club of New York, the students of Chapman College in Orange County and the American Society of News-- paper Editors. The lancr audience jammed the banquet hall of the Washington Sheraton lQ overflowing. SpcaJung without notes. he mesmeriud the audience with loa.ic. GOP campaign needs a strong shot in the arm --- Somehow over the last I 0 years Mr Nixon has learned. with a paucuy of rhCIQnc. to reduce complex cons1der- at1ons to sh1rt·slccve English: WASHINGTON -Ronald Re- agan is running hke a df) creek.. That assessment -a reference to the old Herald·Tribune's commen· tary on Ike's campa1gn in the fall of 1952 -comes from one of Ronald Reagan's strongest supponers. It as difficult to disagree. Clearly. the White House and the campaign were knocked off balance PAT BucHAJIAN by the Ferraro selectaon. Following assigned "surrogates .. for insurance Mondale's upbeat final convention -to carve up McGovern -Ronald mght, Reagan tore out of the White Reagan has no one House and across the country as George Bush's retainers male no though th ts were I.he final week of the secret of the fact that the) will not campaign. and a Gallup PoU had pcmut tum to play dobennao suddenly shown ham dead even. The pmscher to the Reagan admin•S· Democrats have gone so far left, he trataon. Which as swell for George declared. they've left Amcnca That as Bush an 1988. but not much help for the rhetoric of late October. not late Ronald Reagan m 1984. No one else Iuly. an the Reagan entourage ha~ shown Subsequently. Reagan and George any aptitude or enthusiasm for the Bush have engaged one another an a Job. spintcd debate over whether or not Secondly. the Deavenzed cam- Reagan has a secret plan to raise taxes paagn run to date -footage of in 1985. Each time the president rules Reagan at Normandy, Reagan an out new taxes, something -or Chana. plus balloon drops and bucolic somebody -talks ham into leaving scenes of America, happy again. - the door slightly ajar. need to be complimented by an Now, the damage done as neither "issues" campaign and an .. attack" permanent nor fatal. The official campaign. campaign does not even begm for a Between Reagan and Mondale month. and polls show Reagan up 20 there as an immense ph1losoph1cal points in Connecticut and 14 an gulf on defense. Grenada. defeating Michigan, both ~tates indispensable Communism an Central Amenca. to a Mondale·fcrraro victory space-based defense. Supreme Court 1 L.M. Bovo ------- "The United Stales wants a rclaxa· t1on of tensions; the Soviet Unaon needs one." "Cuba is costing Moscow $IS million a day; for any nat1on to gobble up other nations eventuates an acute indigestion." Paal Harvey 11 •_!J'.Odlcated columm1t. More money means cheating's more likely Our Love and War man has made a study of extramantal affairs. He says the chances a husband will adventure out in this man:ier relate directly to his income. If morality has anything to do With u. that doesn't show up 1n the statasucs. They indicate, simply, the more money he makes. the more likely he'll cheat. Q Aren't we rapidly running out of I 8·to-24·year-olds'? A. You might say that. for emphasis. By 1995, the number of U.S citizens m that age bracket will be down by 23 percent. Interior designers will tell you the first thing that registers on you when you enter a strange room is color. The Queen of En$1and as never late. Or almost never It as not 1nc1dental to report here that there arc JOO clocks tn Buckingham Palace. 360 at Windsor, 250 at Balmoral and 160 at Sand-nngham Q What's It like to be hypnouzed? A. If you've ever dnven along a bonng road and you've suddenly been surpnsed to find yourself at your exit, you know. Orso says Dr. Herbert Spiegel of the Columbia College of Physicians and Surgeons. It's a sort of trance induced by the steady focus of your attention. You rematn tn total control but screen out irrelevant distractions. In Nahuatl, the ancient Aztek language. the word for "wife" was a set of syllabics that translate "one who is owner of a man." Q. ln the song "Waltzma Matilda," an Aussie sees a "Jumbuk" come down to take a dnnk of water. What's a "jumbuk"? A. A sheep. What. you can·t name the only four men in professional baseball with palindromic monikers? Meaning their last names are spelled the same forwards or backwards. Try: Dick Ncn, Eddie Kazak, Truck Hannah and Toby Harrah. Worldwide interest in blue Jeans was on the rise anyway, but some markct.aOJ experts claim it was that "Urban Cowboy" film which pushed blue jean sales out of s1ghL The whole cast was so costumed. A tenth of Boston IS city park. It's not extraordinary for a tennis player to lose five pounds dunng a match. Rapid reply: Yes, a riled Texas homed toad can indeed squirt blood from the comers of its eyes. L.M. Boyd u a 1yadlcattd coJam11161. Moonies, CIA connect in Nicaragua further. the Republican Pany has appointments, racial quotas, tax cuts in Ronald Reagan a campaign man· Ga> Right~ etc. The deep difference narrowly focused campaign depends aier's dream. a personable and popu· between the two needs to be Both groups appear to be working on keeping the disparate c1ements of lar incumbent president. an un-emphasized in pohtacal spe«hes and the Democratic Pany happy -or at cciuatcd communicator presiding te1ev1s1on ads against the Sandinista government--JACK teast not so unhappy that they might 1l mtton at peace dunng an .\nd who is going to do the attack vote for Reagan or 'Stay home on economic boom that exceeded his number on fnt1 Mondale that Fntz Election Day. · •own expectations Running against Mondale did on Gary Han -and WA~HIN(, TON -In the Central Democratic staff member p1ec1ng the A .. DEISOI These contentious constituencies him as the .. first mate on the Titanic." Mondale. fe1Taro and Cuomo are Amencan hinterlands, it 1s some· total picture together as too great to be Ill -blacks, Jews, Hispanics. tabor, the Number Two Man an a rejected already doing on Ronald Reagan? tames difficult to dtsunguash the neaJccted Any thought that this women, Southern populists and bluc- and discarded adminaMrataon. who as "Ford1t1s." that 1'i what 1~ wrong. ClA .. , operatives from the Rev. Sun fcstenna problem w1ll go away if collar ethnics -have their own far to the Left of the country, and who one Reagan aide said the other night Myung Moon's disciples. They ap-ignored is foolish ." conOicting goals and demands. Mon- appcars and dresses lake the 1uy who Which is a way of saymg that pear to be work.mg in harness against The "total pacturt" of Moon's One oontra leader, Fernando ."El dale needs all of them to win, yet directs you to the nght room at the Reagan ·s re-clecuon campai&n is now the communast·taanted Sandinista ac11v1t1es 1n Laun Amenca 1s not Nearo" Chamorro, told my auoc1atc every time he appears to "tilt'' toward funeral parlor. b 00 .. R clear. But there 1s no doubt that the that as early as 1981 , CA USA rep-one aroup, he risk' alienitina one or JnSlcad of floundering around on controlled Y "m crate e· rcaame in Nicarnaua. Ko~n messiah -now in prison for rescntativcs sent him on an all· nfore oftbc re t. ahc defensive. the Reagan adman1s. pubhcans. whose hallmark is moder-This troubles at lea t one Peniaaon income tax evasion-ha e~tablishcd expenses.--pa1d tnp to the United Barely a handful of political leaders Ulltton should be test marketing the ataon, devoted practauoners of the analyst. now stationed in Korea, who a solid presence 1n the rcaion, with States to try to unify the Nicaraauan interviewed by my reporter Norman sort offaU offensive that will lead to a pohtacs of Lcomprom1sc, consensus has warned the Whttc. House that the ties to riatn·w1na lf'OUP' and U.S.· exile vo~ps. Kurz hone tly feel that Mondale will philosophical tnumph and• mandate and conc1liallon Such Republicans CIA·Moonae connection oould cause supported aucrrillas. The aitliO of supplic to tbc rebel carry their states, even with the as oonvincma.as the 44-statc victory make better dinner guests at po sible pol!tacal daf!laic to P!C 1• My usoc111c Jon ltt Anderson by Moon's Unification Church has dramatic boost l\e save the tickcl by four ycan ago Gcorgrtown panics than do Re-dent Reagan s rc-electtoo ~mpatgn. reporu from Central Amcnca that escalated since Conaress cut off C IA pickin1 Rep. Geraldine Ferraro as hi What, then. 1s the problem? aganit~ who tend to bnng the . Th~. analyst's uooffic~! memo. • CA USA lntemat1onal. Moon't Politj. fund in.a for the contra . Thcadminis. runnina mate. The first is that Ronald Rcaaan. argument quickly to the 'houung u~ed Potenual Probleips. has been cal front. ha representatives workina tration bas been anemptina to Westerners arc convinced -and like John R1uins of lhe Redskins a level. But thcpolitJcsofmoderation 1 lipped to my aSSOCtatc Donald in proarams that help the CIA in its "privatitc" it war qainst the Sand· rightly'° -that Mondale. who did few years ck. is bean& called on to of httlc use in a fiJhH<rthc·fint h. Goldbcl'J.. "contra" war against the nd1n1na ini tas and " apparently willina to poorly 1n the rqjon'a ~nmarics. has carry lhe ball every smaJe play. He is winncr·take·all. political brawl whkh ."Current Moonie _involvement government. work With Moon's people. all but wri1tcn them off. Sout~mc aJmo t without a vi ible uppomna is what every presidential campaign with 1ovcrnmcnt oftk1als. contra: AUSA maantaans a pubhctty of-Footnote: A Unification Church upmscd pessimism about tbe cast. Where Ei5enbowcr h d Nixon to inevitably becomes. tors and arantce (to. Central ~en-nee in Tqu galpa, \he HondW1U\ pokcswoman dcruro that the church chanceso(lwo N.90hcrnlibc:l:als..~· '-AL"--- carve upStcvcnson wh~Naxon had ca)couldcrutca m&JOrJCandal, the apiJ.aL,.b1.1uu. n~ i &i"ia-...-· ... 'I bat-~ a liai ~itaipinstoncof111own1 ow -and John Connolly and htrltt 811t llaaaa Ii • 11li4lct1 -M?mo ams ··n:n16r'iftivitae anCf in the field U t\ rovid cash activ1t1es in Central t\mmca. Jimmy Carter. in t 980. Robert ~le and a dozen other coldmlll•t. rol~ become public knowlcd It ~U and other aid to Honduran·bas.cd MONDALE'S I SION: For Two Tuans had faani.hopcs for the unac both the left and lhc naht in Nae ra uan contras and Hond n Walter Mondal whote political Democratat ticket in that key lite. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilot Pl,.~-· , Of uw , ... Al JJO 1111 .. t rt., i Cetta AO.tr-~ t • !!>ii) WY CA 116111 H. L. lchwartl UI Frenlc Zlnl UANl!ltng f 0 IOI Tom Tilt Cif, Of Crelg lheff Soot•• (\JIU)I f attacking the admtni-tration." naht-wana pohucal J!.O"'Ps· Many carttr has been built on the fineart of "If the c1CC1ion re held today. The memo continues: .. If effons anti.S.ndin1sta 1uemllas wear rtd coalition buildina. the supreme then:' no doubt we'd lose Texas. and art not taken to stop their arowina CA USA T-shirts wath 'a map of lbc challcn i1 •t harad. Onl) 1f be can without Tuu 1be ~mocrats can't influence and weed out cumnt world on them. maintain the prcnnou unity that h wan," said Sen, Lloyd Bent.en. add· Moonae inyolvcrncnt an aovcrnment. But CAU A and Its affiliate, the thieved at the n Franc1SC'O con· aria loyally, "but we have a chance." the president stand a good chance of Rcfuacc Relief Jttedom Foundation. vent ion will he tand a chance of House Majonty Leader Jam Wriaht bc1na portra)'cd in the mtdi1 as • pro\i1d mo~ lhAft T,.sh'iiu to rcbe 1jnaR oald Rea n. --~~~1d~·-""··~· soina to u~h1ll all the , poor. naivt incompetent who 1 group TI1cr, also funnel upphcs 10 Mondale 11 p1nn1na ti11 fioptS on way, Ferraro would not h.tvc t;CCn m ttrona on adco1oay and weak on ref ugce famalic 1n tuw near contra hUlc more than t o dozen 1tatn that first c:ho1C'C .... But wtltn the quar· common Knsc. ~· amps-nd pa tor trtps h R'.bcl 't>Uld 11ve him .. bare mljonl) in th tcr'back calls ttfe pla), f 10 block .. T~r llkcl1h00d of a rcponer or a leaden to the t n11rd S11t1e!\ El«te>ral 11 • ut c~cn 1h1' downfi Id .. ) Curse rs transmit mistakes 'fHE'i !al\'i I ~ YOU ARE \JMAI YOU EAi . " . . I Dtfteient ofter mar geln propettr t hat -m• to be •out of re.ch.' Bl ST 16 19M 'IMhounol °''"'plo~ moat-w8'clt1d TYever ... D. Computer clu Ives.owners : . e:x:per1ences Members ca11 try different m a chines whlle staff helps them learn, comparie By SUZANNE FREY PeoP°lc who ha' e invested m home compu'tcrsare often frustrated ~use they are not getting their mone)'° wonh out of their machine . They are tired of pla),ng' adeogamcs and tbt computer often ends up adly collectingdu tinacor:naofthehomc. At least that's been the observation of three Orange Count) computer cngjoeers,and the) ha"esctout iosolvetheproblem.OnJune I. the) opened a bus mess which onl) 41Cllsone product: help to those wan ti to learn more about computers. The Computer Experience near South Coast Pla7.a m Costa Moa. as pattemedaftera poFticlub. Manager Steve Hudsone1plawbowngo1 staned: .. As one of the owneB wa PlaYJng r-:-:==:::;;:;;;:;;:=-.-., racquetball at a club one da). the i4ea ~him r.Wu:whal~l1knmbs•.--~ similarplaccwherctheycanplaywith computers." The result isa computer club that's unique m Southern Cabfomia. and maybe in the whole natton, according to Hudson. For a $249 one-time-initiation fee and an S 18 monthly fee. members have un· limited ac:cess to c.omputen, various software packages, computer litcraturt and a knowle~eable staff.-';;~~~~~~;f:I ~~Wtlifitnat lJS OllCOf 8 kind wearcacJub;wcarc..n marl arcmat~~ ........ ,.... ·M:c '1ii . -• . ,. tu~Wt --r· nor~ we a sc'noollliat oiUyteiCtics - classes. .. Hudson sa;,s ... lnfact. theonly Uiiog weselli-membersWps: we don't sell computers or any software.·· To-et1mmatc the fearandconfusioo many people feel about c.omputcrs, me STEVE HUDSON 2,~squarc-foot fonnercomputttstorc is designed togj"ea relaxed. wclcomingatrnospberc. ltis pa.intcchnshadcs of white, gray and rose and hasacomfon.able loungeara surrounded by green plants and computer literature. The 21 computers, mainly standard versions by Apple and IBM. are in individual •<frk booth5 to insure privacy. It is similar to a reference library. Members l'C5Crvecompu1CB for as long as they want and check out the appropnate software. Racki of . cducationaJ map.zincs and books Ii ne the v.-'8.lls, and sc" en staffers arc avllllablc toansv.erqucsttons. Hudson said that about half of the 200 member$ O\lt'D computers. Man) want to maximize the potential of their equipment bu tare afraid of expcrimentinawith it. t . "The most common problem people have lS fear of the madunc 1lldf," he said ... They think that lfthe)' loud\ the wrong ke)'. thc"'bolcthing is goi~ to blowup""" AJaa oben, president oflhc club and one of a ts thr'CC owners said. --=-==-IS hene¥meon handicapped? "The support system out thert 1s sun ply inadequate. P~ple oft.en art frustrated when they can't sol\' e their problems b) reading the computer -manual or by going.back totbcretatler . ..:.:":---------~.·-- Clubmemhetl oeAp~ profCSS10nal wri1Cr..put it thinmy: ··1r s thesameaswhenyou buyaplantata nursery, take it home, put 1tfo the garden. and it starts to tum yeUow. You take a leafbad.: 10 the nu~man Any honeymoon requires special planning. If either one, or both, newlyweds has a physical disability, the happy experience can tum into a dishearten- ing chore, and worse yet, cause disappointment and severe dif- PAPARAZZI --- faculties 'if the accommodations prove to be inaccessible when a blissful couple arrives. But now there is some help. The current issue of"Thc Itinerary: The Magazine for Travelers with Physical Disabilities" features de- tailed mformallon on 16 accessible honeymoon sites "If one or both newlyweds is disabled." Elizabeth Zywick.1, pub- lisher, ex plained, "detailed planning of an accessible wedding trip 1s cssentia} for a happy beginning to the marriaJC and a good vacation. . "It 1s best to be armed "'ith information conccmmg accessibility and the special needs of your, or your spouse's, d1sab1lity before you v1s1t (PJeue .ee TRAVEL/82) who says; It might be nematode • butt!t~n again ... " . Loren Smith.a roofingcOJ\tactor.Jo1ncd tbcdub~usc retail stores and self-help manuals lacked~. translator: ~me~y right there to tell me what lhinp mean.·· He said the one-on-one tutonng at Computer Experience is "ideal" for his needs. But members join fora variet} of reasons. A retired. 74-yiar-old man (Pleue Me COMPtJTER /82) o.., ........... .., ..... c--. lllcbelle and Jim Daffy 1reet Pamela Paul and buba.nd Dr. ~coliD Paul while J a ctce Brian carter and wife Marty chat with Jactce Daniel Brice and wife, depa'1' DA~ Brl . Verdict: Balboa Bay Club party was a brief success . County's Women.Lawyers Dedicated nurse sor~yabout inadequate care EKO toncc. I thought of you m bil I ICan a fireman's uhd hap • boot .11~inaashowcrtoa whccl 1r p:iticnt. l lhen tncd to repair a malfunctioningchC$t tubt. but had to top bttausc Mr. O. in 360 was vomih Five ntinutcs latcca fl"C$h pgst-opm 328 was hcmorrha&in I oouldn 't locate a doetor. ihc) were all in surgery. No beds v.~ . vailable in special ca.re. so at was up TRAVEL BLISS? ••• P'romBl )Our uavel ~nt or ~JO~ )OU male localC$ listed include San Fran- your own arrangement . ci~. Las Vep, Ohicqo, New York .. Many hotels ha'e honeymoon City. New Orleans. Wuhinaton, packages, and many of these roman-O.C.: Colonial Williamsburg. Va.: tic cxcursiops can be found in Boston, Disney World, Hawaii, 'handicapped-equipped' rooms. But Barbados and St. Thonas Island. m0$t '!l'·et ag~ntsa~ not kn~wled~~ Grand Canyon and Yellowstone na- tb!c. _m .. serv1r.s chents with dis.-tional parks. Quebec and Lake Louise abahucs. • • · ID Alberta. Canada. The fca~u.rc tor). ID th~ Jul)-The same anfonnation 1s equaJly Auaust ~·u?n of · Th~ ltmerary ,·aluable to an) disabled traveler ...:... Mapzmc hJ~hghts '~ned hone)'-married or not -who rcqwrcs moon sates within a wide range of ·acce-ssible accommodations accord-l~t1ons, climate, pncri and ac-ina to Zywicka, who has published the tav1t1es ava1lablc magazine with her husband since Each description prov~dcs data on 1981 . He's a fonncr n~pcr cd1- the number of . acccss1.b_lt: rooms, tor, who bas been disabled for 21 rcstauran~s.. parking facahues.. rates years. and they have traveled ex- and spcaal honeymoon packages. tcnsively Sl&ht.seeing ~d. more. Details ~n: Any dmblcd ~rson may obtaan a included for andmduals watb hcanng free CO{>Y by wnung to: "The Itinerary and visual disabihta~ as ~ell as for Mapxane," P.O. Box 1084, Bayonne. persons in wheelchairs. N.J. 07002. The ~ne is publish- • . 1omctost pth bkedil)g..l~ s blasted for not tatting a chcmo drug t~ 1)· tOa.m. b}·adoctor~ho oouJd not un6mtand what rd been doini II mom in Yourbaclrubwa onmymind I ch«kcd ordcn. lied m lab report • uan f USC'd blood, ve p:un mcdi· cauon. cball#d colostomy and applied d.rcssin . · vouarcpeying$.S7Sadayforyour private room. Ml'l. R .• but today you cd bi-monthly and subscriptions are available only by ma.it at $6 for one year or S 11 for two years. "!~10 .. t •• lAllDEIS did oot get the care you were entitled to. . Weare hon-uafTedand there were a'llunusu lnumberofcmergena 1 •P9l<>Jize. WeVt'Ork rotatina hifts, weekends and holida) but it i) never enough. I alwaya SC? home feelina auil~ because I dido 't provide the qualit) of patient care Istrivetopve . Wh> do RNs stay in hospitals? ' Manydonot.Moraleislowandtbe burnout level is high. The situatiQn wiU get better only if we support our state organa1.1tions in the fight for a voice in staffing and prof~ional input. QUality nursinacarecan occur onlyifnuncsjoin forttSanddcmand it. I. foronc, am sick and tired of apologinna -R.N. IN PORTLAND, ME. DEAR R.N.: Anyone wbo 11 •• dedieated ud bardworklll1 u yoa Deed DOt apolop&e. Atttbereuyotberopbd oat llterea1*1t tk Deed for aanea te demand ktter care for tbd.r pa- tients'? Qr la~. topic too laot te 1Wadle1 ••• DEAR ANN LA~DERS: The girl Let a gift of diamonds show her how you really feel. Let the diamonds speak for you in their brilliance. Let them speak for themselves in the language of love. PENDANTS 1/10 ct 10 pl. 11• ct 2.S pt. 112 ct .so pt. REG. S 200 REG. S 400 REG. $1600 NOWS 12.S NOWS 280 NOW SIOOO EARRINGS 1/• ct TW REG. S 32.S NOW S 200 112 ct TW REG. S 800 NOW S .SOO 1 ctTW REG. S3CXX> ~W S1800 ------- All diamond earrin~ and pendants 30'7o off Pendants include 14K gold chains. All jewelry is J4K gold. Offer ttpires 8/31 /84 KIRKJ~ Costa Mesa Harbor Center (7W) 545-9485 Canoga Parl • Eaale Rock • Manha11an ~ach Riverside • Thousand Oals F"" uf1 ~ ai.wr A.a:ow1tJ ~ 9C).4ay no-1ntem1 or 1&U. )'QI 10 ~ ~Visa md Amcricu bpnL Al llClllS-iub,ta co~y l"lodua ~Eat.reed co Sllow Druiil. AMERICAN JAZZ REVIEW: 1•IOAYS , /ULY 10 AUCUST JI Make a lunch date with Fash- ion Island and celebrate an American tradition. Join us at our Jazz Concerts beginnin8 ar rz and 1 o'clock. An Amen- can Jazz Review-part of Fashion Island's special, year- long promotion focusing on the Ameriam lifestyle. Located in the Bullocks Wilshire Wing- • AUGUST 17-Vocalist Stephame Ates • AUGUST 24 -Steve Hof- stetter •AUGUST 11-Toni Mar- cus and Al Maitland with Quest et ettnMJ MaK"US, Robiru.on s The Bff»dwiry, BcilJuds WI/Shire 'M>i1 Bl.lffums CMit 70 fine MOte m ~ Ju I off htifte Coast H1ghMlfl betwttn MacAnhur ~nd Jam· boree Blvds. In Newport Be1eh -------- ICE SKATING LESSONS a EMance your child a poise and posture A plan"90 progrem of lesson• with trie Intern•· 11onally famous le• c~ .. · ... , 1Mrn1no method gives~ Of ~ur ctuld wholetOme. PIHltlly ... tCIM tn comfOft&I* su~.O 111rr~ New Skaters Welcome I r,···------·--·-··~ } t5.000FF : ..... =,~ .. f IM WH t l .,_,_..,..__ I t A 1 t_.. . t ~--···········---~ REGISTER NOW • •n \'•N• C.ater I 1101 ar r BIYll. taNHa.Ca.8H (714) ., .. lunac:anocr~can vcaboul S61,000ifhcgivesuphist opacks day. The figurcoomes from a atudy made by Pohcy Inc. of Ma hu· setts.-THREW •EM A WAY IN l970(0Hl0) DEAR~INWtUCll .. 1 ud It'••~ oae. I'm la favor of tlckDC lM ublt f•r UY IOL Tbubf rd8rtu. ..... Got those v.'tt/dilJI bell b/Ut'S over rost ..• 111es11i~t ••• wbattowe.~ ••• and otberdetalls? Ana Landm "New Bride '1 Guide" wi.IJ help. Fora copy. sent! 12 plm a lo~ ~If. . . a~sJampedmvel~(37 C%DlJ postaii) to Ann La.Dden. P.O. Box 11995, CbiClf60, llJ. 60611 •• COMPUTER CLUB ••• Prom Bl just wants to find out what computers are all about without the expense of buying one; a 12-ycar-old wants help with bis homework; a secretary wants toretrainhersclfforwordprocessing;andacomputerscienceprofessorat UC Irvine wants to learn as much as be can about various personal computers and software without having to pay for each program. HudsoD says many mem~ are business representatives~ in one case, 14 from one company-who want to learn bow to use theu own colJ!P&llies• computers more efficiently and train their employees on_,~,.,......~--- differentsoftwareprograms. · · · ' - The manager perceives the bigest benefit with Computer Experience to"bc that it "gives thcJ.>ublicsomc.thing that most retail stores. schools and · compi.uei~lacesifiuioiofter: namJ)''UpcncDCJ! iri nS!ngcomPuius --- and expcnmentingwitb diffemlt softwareprogramnn m1Jtrlnmiedway ... -- The club has no waiting time, Hudson says. Members can reserve a tutorandacomputeruptothrcCdaysinadvance,buttheycanalsowalkj~ without any previous appointmenL It is open from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. on ..__ weekdays, 1 Oa.~m to 5 p.m. on Saturdays and noon lo S p.m. on Sundays. The club nsosu~jj.d iniu 10weekstha&.Cohenudltistwo partners, whoa computereugineersatdiffen:ntcomputercompanies, plan to open IOlnoreclubs throughout California within a year. "WeofTcraoompJetesupportsystcm,"hesaid ... lfyoudon'tbavea oomputer.wegetyouupandrunningwithinaobour.Andifyoudobavea computer you will always, always need help." ****•.DAILY STAGE ENTERTAINMENT***** The L.A. Cast of Bl!ATLEllANIA • AUG. 18-21 Th• Modernelr•• with Paula Kellr, .Ir.• AUG. 22-26 ADMISSION SHOW HOURS Adults $4.75 Monday· Thursday _ ! PIHi N SeniorCtllell5(60&over)SlllMon -Tlus Friday -fPl·l1 .. CMdren (6·16 yrs) _auo SatUtday 1r ._.11 ,. Children J!Jndef 6 yrs ) FREE Slllday 1! ...... ., ft• . AIR CONDITIONED COME EARLY ft1 STAY LATE n ,-E/MCONVENTION CENTER ACROSS FROM OISNEYLANO 800 W KATELLA •FOR INFO CALL 714) 991-1900 , • '# Olympics ABC 's personal best Games replace 'Roots• as biggest ev nt as recoJid 80 million viewers watch LO ANGELf.S (AP) • AB ""s weekendcdAu~ 12.NBCwassccond Olympi covcrqc, Hice Ammca's ~in with a ratl!ll of9.6 and CBS was athletes, came home a winner a at tliard with 8.9. The networks say th1 beca~e the most-watched event ever m~ns that in an average pnme·time ~n a llh&!e network and wrapped up minute 2•.9 ptteent of. the nation• its ~nal night with tfie b1ucst Nielsen TV home' were tuned to A8C. • ratana of the Games. The Olympics coverage once again .. ABC, collectlng gold every n"iaht of · took the first seven places in the Top ~e 1984 Los Anacles Summer Olym. t O. Sunday ni&ht was first. finishing Pl~ csttmated that a record 0 nearly five nuings points ahead of million people saw ~11. or pan of the second-place Monday night. The Games. It Sl i~ 97 m1lhon people saw other niJhts: Wednesday, third: the Sunday mfht clo ina ceremony. Thuriday and Saturday, tied for rhe overall rating for the Games was fourth; Tuesday, sixth; Friday, 2.545. seventh. rhe Sunday ni&ht ending,_hke the NBCs "The A-Team," as it was ~reworks over the Mcmonal Col-last week, was the h~est-rated ISCU~, erupted With a rati!1J of 28. for Opposition Show. CBS•s • ('.agney 8t the h1ahest of the event. The closma La~y" was ninth (jt tied for ninth last saw Ca~lo Lopes of Portupl wan an • week). and NBCs "Riptide" was n II, nd N s .. Summer unda), u ...... A 01)1Jlp1 cove for the ond wed: pulled the net•'Ork'1 .. Wqrld News TohiJht" into tint J)latie rnong the evcmnj news how . CBS was seond and NBC was lhird. The ratings: ABC 10 4, CBS 9.S and NBC7,6. Herc arc the week' 20 top pro- pm1: l, Summer Olympic , Sunday, ABC. a ratina of 28.9 or 24.2 million households. 2. Summer OlympiCli., Monday, ABC. 24. l or 20.2 million. · - 3. Summer Olympics, Wednesday, C, 22.5 or 18.8 million. 4. Summer Olympics, Thursday. ABC, 22.0 or 18.4 million. 4. Tic-Summer Olympics, Satur- day, ABC, 22.0 or 18.4 million. • 6. Summer Olympics,· Tuesday, ABC. 21.S or 18.0 million. 7, Summer OlymplCS, Friday, ABC:, 20.4 or 17.0 million. · upset victory in the men's marathon . 10th. and . the joyful, singing, dancing, ABC told advertisers prior to the 1-;:========:;::::::::::::==========::&::::::1 senumeq\al fare-well and the fi~-Soviet-led boycott that it eipcctcd its works sal~te to past Olyntp1cs. prime-time ratin&S would be 25 each ·"BUCKAROO BAN ZAI IS THE VEltY ODDEST The rat~na~ mcasu.re. the pcrcentge night. I~ met or exceeded that aoal on GOO" MOVIE IN ·MANY A FU LL MOON." of the nallon s 1.8 mtlhon TV homes three nights and most other ni&hts Y tuned to a particular telecast. were very close. -Richard Corliss, TIME MAGAZINE A~~ said people in 90 percent of all ABC also used the Olympics to its tclevmon households saw some or all advanlaJe to promote its new sum- of the coverage. The Olympics cov-mer sencs, "Call to Glory." In the eraae replaced the ABC miniseries eight-city overnights Monday "Call 'R.o_ots" a the most-watched event on to Glory" got a "27 rating and a 44 Your only hope Is Buckaroo lattul. a smgle network. "Roots" drew an share. TIE ADVEKl1MES OF ac:lience of 140 millon in January The least-watched show of the ~t 1977. • week was NBC's "Summer Sunday . ABC ran over its network opposi-USA." The five lowest-rated show~ t1on for the second straiJht week, but (expanded to six because of a tie) jn its· ratings were slightly lower and descending order were: CBS' "Good- those of CBS and me ightly night Beantown" and NBCs .. The hi&her tlian the previous w Master," tied, CBS' "Falcon Crest," ABC bad a network averag of 24. 9 the CBS movie ••Avalanche Express," in the A.C. Nielsen Co. survey for the the CBS movie "Watershtp Down" -~~'~beers' gets triangle --·ws ANGEL~ (AP)-When laSt we saw Sam and Diane they had split l.lp; Here'• more bad news for the -. ~m,-baTten~n NIJC& ·"Cheers." · Sam, played by Ted Danson, is gettina a rival for the affections of Diane, the waitress played by Shelley Long. Kelsey Grammer is joinina .. Cheers" in the fall as Dr. Frasier CraJ)e. , lUXlMY THfATlfS Fnt Twe llM'911 ......... * OILY 12.75 U.._ MetM UDDAWW ..... ta) S l'tows at 12:30 ....,._.3~00 61Joe:oo • 10:H ..... ~ltAtlll(lt) AT 12141 3 r0S -5:21 7:45 • 10:01 alll Murray Oen Aylcroyd ~ .. '", Sl'tows at 12:21 2:40 4 :SS 7:2S t :S0/70 MM •lttlllU• (N) Sllows at 12130 3:00 S1lO 1 100 6 10:30 TMa LAST llllOIAllA ..... a Tiie STAIUtff1H1''1Elt (N) T ........ Deem (Pia) At 121'4) 2 140 1 100 $l'tow1 tt U :OO 2120 7:30 10:20/70 MM S:O~~::g ~JO:OO UWJ@;l2JwAv::~~ .... i,H J DRIVE-INS m~ STADIUm a m 1111 lhtr!lt l!f!! Sttf"'"' llUCllUUtOO UllZAJ s "'8) "'"Co-Hit T1111olli.11t Zone ~ ~ .. ('N) "UI Co-Hit SlxtMn c.nc11es (ll'O) .. A WOllAll IN R£D• (~1S) And "CLAll" (R) Qltl!llUJIS (N) fo4e¥erEnd ln9 Story (PC) .aT ~l'ENIE ... , I .. ll'Vlllt llNDllNO -------At 12:20 4 :05 7:•s STORY (P9) 11 :J O llllOIAllA .JOMS tae TopSecrtt(PC}2:10 1:4 0l:SO l :OO ~CN'~CN) 1:00 Ii t :SO 1:10 6 10 :20 Wltl't St1yln9 AllH (,G) YOU -CAN WIN A "CINDERELLA" EVENING WITH THE SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY Saturday, September 8, 1984 All Ground Transportation By Gold Medal Limousines Your Private J et By Custom A via ti on To San Diego Dinner At Tuxedo Charlies Restaurant Before the Concert PRESENTED BY - 2n d Prize - A "Miracle Morning" At KDCM tD!l.t Club St. Tropez H •h on . -3rd Prize - Dinner For Two At The ROYAL KHYBER ------------.--------------------- CUp aa4 Mall Tt IOCM, llO Newport Ceatu Dr,. • 110, N..,ort Bead tzMO -Muat Be 21 or Over -Deadline, Auiust 27, 1984 -Winnen Selected By Random Orawin1 Rulee and Rerulationa Availabli From Cont.et Sponaon NAME .AlDDRESS LISTEN FOR COMPLETE DETAILS ON KOCM FM 103.1 --~~-~------------~~~-----~-~ laily. Pilat .: ....... __ .. 1m1 ·-T-C-'-E3ll STAATS FRIPAYI ·-854-8811 Edw11ds Uninrsrty C-Dt Atrou ,_ UC1 ~ 634 2ss3 suna AM S..0-7444 SYUf".Y City Center tdw~rds BristOI I~ blzllll...,_ NOTICE OF SCOPING A PUBLIC MEETING WILL BE _ HELD TO HELP DETERMINE TOPICS TO BE ADDRESSED IN AN ENVIRONMENTAL: IMPACT REPOATEOATHETALBERT VALLEY CHANNEL PROJECT LOCATION CITY OF HUNTINGTON BEACH CIVIC CENTER, ROOM B-7 2000 MAIN ST. (Junction of Main-Yorktown) HUNTINGTON BEACH. CA 92&48 DATE THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 19M TIME 7:00 P.M. ---- (002) _.........,coo1 > TAlBE"T VlllY CA.HOM:L.8 10011 Hwr>~ ..... !0021 T ..,_, f0051 ,aunt_ y...,. ....... 0 MTNDNO... I MSINSfTE2 I // // The County of Orange Envtromental Management Agency win conduct a scop ng meeting to help determine the Issues~ be addressed by an Environmental Impact Report on the Talbert Valley Channel Project tnvq(vlng the Huntington Beach Channel (001), Talbert Channel (002), and the Fountain Valley Channel (005) as shown above. The EIA scoping meeting Is scheduled to afford an opportunity for the publlc to team about the project currently under study, to advise the County as to the feasibility of this projeCt and the proposed alternatives, and the anttctpated envtromental lmpacts of these alternatives. The County will consider all wrltten comments received In response to the scoping not;ce and all testimony received at the teoplng meettngs In deciding the lssu that wlll b8 covered In the EIR. Failure to parttclpate In the scoping process or to comm nt on the ecope and content otthe nvtronmental document ahat1 be CCH 1sldec eel agreement with the project dma iption, tist-of posstbte atgnlffcant enwom..itel mp.acts and other teoping matter. contalneditn tNI nollce on wtlleh no comment la rec:ei'Yed. It Is anticipated that approval of the project oOOtd have an mpect on the followtng environmental t.cton: L.andform. water q ty, biologtcil r..courcee, land Ul8. transportat on/clrculatk>n eyltemt and h~. • r But what'• ln1lde? Peter Gimbel and El&• Andenen cheer the newe that one of the two ..tee they were after baa been foand ln the wreck of the Andrea Dorla. The Mfe will be opened to~t darlnj( a apeclal live broadcut at 8 o'clock on KCOP, Cfiannel l:f. Enter a wot1d beyond your wildest imagination where aQYJhing can happen. BREA 990.a?I UA Movie~ 4 COSTA MESA 631 3501 Ed.wards Harbor Twin ........ ti -- NOW SHOWING! IRVll 551 0655 Edwards Woodbltd&~ '"''"'"' l'l•r I ot c.,..., MSSKIN ftJO m 6220 Edwards M1sS10n Vieio Mall SD r rrr 10 Cl Y.., ""' ORANG( 637 0340 AMC Crance Mall 1 • .i .. Se .. l"'< ... WESTWISTll 895 5333 UA WtslllllnstH Twin 0.IW.llW0t(4wtm R TIJID 581 5880 ORAMi£ 634-3911 MNOl 879 9850 Edwards S4dditbacl UA City Center Pac1hc Whelm Or In I l0ttR•, Ito<•'"" 1111 .. C.Cr~•· r..,1111u- STAITS FUAY AT UA 11>¥1$ I -Buena Park ., ., ... hn u 'Ml'\.£ llAlt" (II) 160 )IO \•O 100 IOI ,,..,,.. z.oe l• ,,.~ ... - l• ..,., .. A1 Ao*""' "RMl&Of TK !ODS" (II} ll 1'l l JO OS 6 4Q 14S 10 '.IC "llD DAW CP'$-U) II In.IT SIOIO lllO l• SlO aoo IOlO "NIPU Ulr' (I) fl In.IT STllllO I 00 l JO 61111 llO IOSS "BUCKAROO BAICZAI (PG) "Tl( MJIAN If 11£D" (PG-13) 1 °' , 1 ~, , , no • JO 'JO a lO 10 JO "ET DEFDIS(" (II) IOO U OIZO "JOY Of SD" (I) BO 6JO 1010 "ltED DAMC" (PG·ll) 11 00t8• Sllll llJO )I)(, \lO ~,., "fii LlSf iTWiifiii" <N> "DRlAM SCN'E" (P'G-13) H\ •\ U S 6 4~ 12l$ us ass "STAI TIO I: M SlMCtt Fm SPOCX" (PC) Zl$ U S 10~ •4 .o EVEAY THURSDAY 2 ADULTS fOA THE PRICE OF ONE! Ch'9Jt I• S,.• LM ...... C1rto14 Du..-lr11 I S,C. E~ts. * CINE·fl SOUND' At these symbols pnt sound dirlC1 to your AM car radio. If no radio with accmory position, brine your own AM ponaMe. ALL OPEN 7·30 Start DUSK Children...,,..., 12 ALWAYS FREE Fountain Volley • (C)MOYE •••• Supennln .,.. (1913) crv. toplw RIM. Alc:M'd Pryor. -12:00- TWIUOHT ZONE l:::iTHAEEO" t •~ "B«t• A Widow" (19et) Vlma ua, P9tw Mclntry. (!) ll>EPfJaNT NEWS MCKE Of THE flOHT MOVIE t ~ "A Vf/f'/ Mlttlng Ptrt0n" (1972) Ev. Arden, Skye~. -12:30-0 QI LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN • AllfB HfTatCOQ( PAE8Sfl1 llSTOfL.A. TODAY AOWAN l MAR1W8 LAUGtMN LCM. AMENCAN STYLE PACIRC PROFLE8 MOYE •••'A "Sophie'• Qlolce" (1982) .....,.. Strtep, KM\ Kh. . -12:40- B (l)MOYE ··~ "The Omega ...... (11171) Chlrfton Helton, Anthony Zetbl. -1:00-eYOYIE ®MOVIE ***~ ''Olottl" (1NO) 0.. Row- llnda, Jotwl AdMlel. -2'.311-mWOYIE * • ~ "Thi fltllntom "*-" ( tte) 0., Fredlrtcb. COiien Qny. •MOW! . *•'A . .._,. (19$5) Edwwd 0. Aolboft. th Foell. flOHT OF AT LEAST ONE OOZENITAAS -tOO- ,. ~ ....,.,.,.. (1050) Jon i5'~.w. •• 'A "Gunn" ( 1M7) Ctalg S1eYlnl, Edft'd AM'rtl. -tal).,,. ~AITH20 ~~ at.en." (1983) Tom CrulM, Atbecc:a DIMomly. -IS- ·111 ,HfR< P[ ['J 11wl < [NP/llVI BUJ' lD (r, Storrrrlfj DAN Hff>AVA 'J • A..)T N D JE t'Jl'JIFf P. 8£ • p, l ,.,j t,., r It JI l/\C.,I W' [) 111111 H-'Hl MANES Mu~.c by lf NNI[ Nl! HALf5 ....,..ocna C> Tf~· STARTS FRIDAY! ANAIDf 879·9850 PK1hc Anahttm Or In fl TORO 581·5880 LA .. ADA 523 1611 Edwards Saddleback SRO Gateway 5 l 1110 14 Al lletl..... A r •1 Al ~_, Ylt• 8R[A 529 5339 Mann Brea tUfTINGTON BOCH 848 0388 -Edwards Huntington r., 51 ...., • .,. .. «to M M & lits BtDA PARK UA Movies 8 LA HABRA (213) 691 06j3 AMC fast11on Square .. "'""""''•' .. _, ""'99 " NEWPORT BEACH • f(wr<Ja T 10 • 6 lMCI OOllY S1Ul0 ltt-• .._DIJ,M ,...... TOl'll .. DOlll" <Nl 644 0760 -7.U. ,__. "...wl Olll5 SIOIY- 6 4S. 10 .lO (rlil ·na WI SUlflMl"IJ" t'CI ·~ ,.,.. IM(tl«l ·na uu• .-"'' 11 lO HS SIS HS 10 IS 7SI 4114 l2Jt e HI tow" ccNm "IUCUIOl IMPI" ,.) ~t.!,:h .. llOJ ''Sl•ttoo 7SI 4114 S'~ lHCIO TO"" CCNTCA 101 eao.· Ill UO 710 IOS ""UCKlOI HIYY" (I) 7SI 4114 I lO S 10 too SOUTH COASI DCUl SllllO ..... u,. "'Nflf tJllt' (I) -..... ,. 10 •ot.61~ S46 7711 ... ''°1040 SOUTH COAST .......... INI •••11 llO JU&• II~ ltJt ,,..,..., ..... ...U.te."' ~61111 ... sou lH. c.aas' ... ........ ~6 1711 • fRVIHl • .. -. ' .. OOllY Sl(ll0 llDIA• crcm ..,.n"'" 6~ 111 IOlO •Ill MMll\l'IM OftmJll• (N) 4 IWI OCXll $1£~0 •" UO 100 IOOt • WESTMINSTER " Clfl.MA MST • ''° OlllT sn•o ... -... .... .. (N) ~-100 J1' \tO 1 00.1111~ ltl·1'JS ttSO 11500 CINCMA WEST ·~· ... ........ 1 mms fOfl'QtT BEACH 6'•·0760 Edwards Newport llr-1 C.-•• ORANGE 634 2553 C111edome c._..a SA r., • COSTA MESA • EDWARDS 11#1* ' ._ ~' l 102 HARBOfl tWI" " ..... ..... 631 JSOI HARBOfi TWIN ...... .. 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IJUHO VIC)() t~ , •••• ••h r.r (IW;i\ .. U uo mo YllO MAll ,. f•t It • •• RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY, llC. r. n. a..t 0t , .. Llf• 1t22 HAllllOl avo .. cosu fllSA -541-1156 TREAT YOUR FAMILY TO A NICHT AT THE MOVIES POR ONLY 5• EACH call 720-9266 VIDEO EXPERIENCE NEWPORT CENTER llWDI ,IC he AAaheim Or.tnl7Ul$0 .. (ihf¥Cb WMithtMi99 3SI 06S5 .-A UA Mo 4 LMINICACM ' 99GWl ( dwards So Coast l•una m 1711 \ .. GORDO BOOU MORNING', FERN. MOW A6001'. A <'RINK Of WATf f',Uf'f Lf fRlfNP? by Gus Arriola by Jim Oavls THE F AMIL y . BIG GEORGE · by Virgil Partch (VIP) CIRCUS · by Bil Keane ~ ' ~ . "Wish WE lived here in Elfreth's Alley. Mommy would let us play in the street." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson "This gentleman Is look Ing for a 1952 Studebaker hubcap." MOON MULLINS PEANUTS HE~E COMES ™E FANTASTIC FORWARD ROMNIN6 OIVE ... T MBLEWEED f·•C. ~ "What makes you think that maybe l'M not the leader?" by Ferd & Tom Johnson by Charles M. Schulz FOllOWEP 8Y TME FANTASTIC MIPAIR lURNAlOUND~ by Tom K. Ryan &ff, I P'UNNO ... rV&NE= A"OOf IN' AseM1 • , DAILY PILOT CHARLES GOIEI \\'F.ST • KJ85 ~Q2 ~ J97·U + 10 9 SHOE BRABBLE .. How to Lo5e a Bunch of We\ght." . ~ R. Drabble 'Tfl' ~,. l' 11mpl '1om I ame Tb Eat ·an.(th\nQ 'fa.> want.,~ t.1me 'ioo-wam:;.--.-..-.. .. - 1 -r-1oP ' ·1 nr' TAf l i • _J I 0 FOR BE'ITER OR FOR WORSE T'~~RONG­ HER -IM So 1 EMSffi'Rf\SSED . DR.SMOCK j:'M SO c::>eSPeRA.,...6, l,.AS1"" NIGH.,...~ w eN.,.... .,...0 A SINGL.t;S &A" FOR 6~eKS! HOSE IS HOSE by George Lemont by Pat Brady COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, 88. Different app roach may g a in prop erty that's ~out of reach' If you've spoltt"d a home or investment propcn} that \Cems to be just outside" your financial re;ich. don't give up hope. Even propen1es which are pnced as "firm" may not be all that firm. Sellers v.ho have decided the} want $ J 00,000 for a &i ven piece of pro pert) and hold firm to that J)ncc. may be Wllhng to sell under "softer" terms than the)' onginally anticipated. The individual v.ho thinks he wants SI 00.000 cash ma} be willing to settle for a small down pa)ment and an interest rate lower than you would have to P3> a financial inst11u- tion. A great deal of proper\) 1s sold by "seUer financing." There are any number of reasons why individuals want to sell property and some reasons for selling cause people to settle for a softer set of terms than they had onginally-anuc1pated. A seller ask.mg $100.000 cash for property Wlll cause most buyers to go to a financial institution for a loan. The monthly payment on a SI 00,000, •year, I 2 percent loan is SI I 0 I, and Vour total cash outlay over 20 1cars would be $264,000. If the aeller is w1lltng to carry an 8 percent note for the same amount of time, the monthly payment v.ould 9e $836 for a total 20-ycar outlay of RALPH Scorr $200,000. B'y reducing the interei.t rate from t 2 percent to 8 percent. you ha\·e saved $64.000. As you can sec. even though the setter was firm on his a'tking pnce of SI 00.000. b> negotiating a favorable interest rate you have effecttvety reduced the pnce of the property_. Maybe your seller needs $1 , I 00 per month for some purpose. This may be how he amvcd at has original pnce and terms. You might offer to pay SI, I 00 per month at g percent interest on S 100,000. You'll ha\e the property paid for in I 2 years rather than 20 years and your totaJ cash outla} would be SI 58,000. Seek professional assistance in determining cash Oow . tax conse- quences and mstallment payment provisions. .Ralpb Scott is • urtlfJttd pobllc accoutot practicing Ia Newport Bucb. ::F:luor ·subsidiary to acquire assets of Nat ion al Zinc Co . St. Joe Minerals, a subs1d1ary of Fluor Corp. in Irvine, announced a defimtivc agreement to acquire the fixed assets of Nauonal Zinc Co . a wholly owned subsidiary of Inter- continental Development Corp., fbr approximately $16.5 m1lhon. St. Joe aJso agreed to purchase National Zinc's inventones and ac- counts receivable The acqu1s11ton increases St Joe's zinc capac1t> b> 55 percent enhanc- ing its pos111on as the largest inte- grated zinc producer in the lJ nited States. --.---• ~auonal Zmc's electrolytic re- finery, located in Sanles"ille, Okla. has a capactty of 55 .000 tons of zinc a year. "The acqu1stt1on provides an e.x~et­ tent fit with our existing zmc-m1ning and smelting interests domesttcatty and abroad," said John .\ ')\lnght. cha1rrnan of St Joe "It enhances our prodm.1 mix by introducing a v.1der range of 11nc products and postt1ons us in all the pnnc1pal markets for z1m · St Joe's Monaca. Pa . plant cur- rent!} produce!> :nnc metal. 11nc Oll1de and zinc dust. Fluor 1s an engineering and con- structton and nattsfa+.re.ttun:~s com· pan}. One blstead of 256 A &la~ble optical wavecutde fiber developed by Corning Glau can carry over 1,000 phone tranamlutona 1l~ultaneoualy, compared to the atandard twiated copper wire cable at left, which contalna 258 pain of wtrea to handle the aame number of tranemlNlona. Bank of Newport's earnings told Bank of Newport's President Ronald L. Rodgers has reponed mid- year figures ren~t total as.sets of over S 166 m1llton and a stockholderequ1t) to total assets ratio of8.9 percent In commenting on· the report. Rodgers said that Bank of Newpon recorded a net profit for the penod of S201 ,000 and that stockholder equ1t} to asset rauo was substantially above the national average for all banks. Bank of Newport is headquartered on Coast Highway at Avocado, across from Newport Center. It has two branch offices located at Dover and Sixteenth in the Newport Heights area. and oilffie Lidcr Peninsula at 32nd Street and Lafa}ette Avenue. Harvey named exec at Irvine Doelz f·rm I . Stepbea Harvey is the new vice president of manufactutj~a for ~II Networu, Inc. of Irvine. Harvey has 10 year~ expe~ncc ·~ plannrna manufacturina strategies for high technology prod~ct ~s vie~ prq1dent. ~e ts responsible for domestic and offshore producuon, m~tu~1na pu:c~a.s1!la. inventorycontral, planning. a scmbly, product testand sh1pp1ng. He 1s101n1~ the finn af\er serving as director of manufacturing for Comf.ater Aetomatl~D I industrial products division. Doclz is entering into ful -scale producuop. testing and shipping of its product line, introduced at the Interface '84 how in tas Yeps last March. • • •• Amerlcu DlversUled Capital Corp. of C~s~ Mesa ~as announ~d three · promotions. Pblllp W. Thrane has been name<l vice president o(arch1tccturc. Geor1e C. Carato will be director of traimna and development and Rou ld L. Bartbolomew has been appointed aeneral counsel for ADCC and Amer_tcu lveralfled SavLD11 Buk. Thrane. who has been responsible for projects throughout the United States. Canada, Europe and the Middle East, wilJ be responsible forcreatmaa build.mg design philosophy, developing new buildmJ techniques and monitoring projects nationally for ADCC. He recently moved to Costa Mesa. Caruso is a registered apartment manager and cenificd property manaJer who wilJ be responsible for training and professional development .of Amencan Diversified's {>roperty manaaement, development and financial personnel. Caruso 1s a recipient of the National A11odatioa of Home Ballden'• Golden lUm of I.be Year award an<i of -th~ Pmident~ ai1lin1uisbed ac~vement award from tl\e MeJtlfamUy Hoe11nJ AuodattoD 1»f IJ.Unols. Bartholomew., ofNewpon BeacbJ has served as senior vice prcSident, general counsel and a member of the board of directors for Fa r West Ftnanclal Corp. of Newport Beach. ADCC 1s a affiliate of American Diversified, a financial services and development company with activities naJionwide. • • • Stepbea A. Kwlto1kJ has been named seruor vice president for Ultra1n tem1 Capital Group and Joseeb T. "Ted" Klng1ley has been appointed senior vice president and chief fi nancial officer for Ultra1y1tem1, Inc. of Irvine. Kwitoski is responsible for ·arranging project financina for Ultrasystem's engineering and construction projects. He joins Ultrasystems after I 5 years with t he Bank of America. most recently as Vlce president and section manager of cnerir industry in Los Angeles. Kingsley has spent the past four years as corporate vice president for finance and ch1effinancial officer of Science Applications International Corp. 1n La Jolla. Ultrasystems concen- trates primarily on design, construction, ownership and operation of power and food processing plants and alternative energy projects. • • •• Karlee Nevil has joined Sancbei Talarico AltOC?latet of Corona del Mar as an assistant planner wt th the firm. Nevil will be responstble for environmental impact anaJySlS. land-use planning and development processing. . . ._ . Elolt e Travels has moved froin Forest Avenue an Laguna Beach to more spacious head9uartcrs at VUla1e Fair Mall on South Coast Highway. The ------------------------------------------------------·~nq~iaJ1zesincru1~sa~wu~ro~uctedint~~~u~uthe d1rcc11on of owner EloJae F•lmer. The firm's new owners arc Mary Jean and UTE BIEAKlll IATESRll AllEllCAI. "'·'" 11n 111p11f 1h1· { I l 111,1·,1mc.•nt m 1rk1 t I. )ur t11 "hll· nl~ .1ppro.1d1 '" c..;(), ,,, tu ~uh Anwn1.111s,,,1111.!' \\1•r1 tlw 11.111011' l.1ri.: ,111\ ll'I" \ou dc.·h·rrntrw tlw1r ''%l' ll'flll .inJ r.111 c.''' ~1\in~' 111d l...111 '"'" "'''r S ~! h1ll11•n 111 Th.· 11111rt• vou dl'Jll"ll •. m,f 1lw l11ni,:1•r \PIH , .111, han~~· c\uKklv C.111 our mll-frn• Rate Hot· l11w ,If l~\:)t .. 27-KSil wt•c.•~day bcrwcm A.1m .ind 8rm Or\ mr .my Amcr1l.lll Savm1r1 off Kc .1,'t'I' 1 h.11' '' h.11 11 1.1k1•, 111 nfi1 ·r vnu h1ch 11 ran, tlw mort· you 1'.trn v1ddl l1111w..,1111·1111•rr-•mm11tt·.,ltl 1·rh1,,,,,,. l\utd11n1d1·l.1~ h1•,,n,,l ,Ill''' r.111·~ Iii A('('lu • ru II mi• /111111 I~ I '" If)./ '""' \14/.•rm11r.1I f'< ri 1/1, /or Mrh "rthJra1A1.1l Anniuil \1tl.I ""1•1·d n" comf>t•un.li"tt ••hr• "''"' •r r• l</r un J,~•1r fM rh< orr11r trmi Ahot • •citr, "rid imJ lt'Tnl• u1'11r• r rn clianp .. •IMMI """'' \ ,,,,.,,, l'l•IHtJ ""cu S/1)(1,[-)('I AMERICAN SAVINGS ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION ITTIKESlll lllElllTY. ., COSTA MF. A GAROf-1' GROVE HUNTl'-GTO, BE CH N2Q Bn~1ol IZ 141 ( Cr"'~ BIHi 7 1 f ,J A\e Y7Q Q 00 -1~ 6'9(l ~ 2222 VJrpl Webb, new Laguna Beach residents and educators with an extensive background of travel. • • • --f>adfic Mutual Llfe ln1uruce Co. of Newport Beacn hu presented its Group Insurance Star Award to Katltleen W. Carlaoa of the Atlanta group sales office. The award recogruzes professionalism, personal growth, commul'lity involvement and sales ability. • • • Herb StocklD1er, an engj.neer with Costa Mesa's Martl.D & Saunden, Inc., is the new $Overnor of Fouden Dt1trtct of Toa1tmuter1 lnternatJoaaJ. He will administer 207 clubs in Oran&e. Riverside, San Bernardino and Los Angeles counties. Stockinger has spent 14 years in Toastmasters and trained hundreds in communications and leadership skills. He received the organization's Distinguished Toastma,ter designation in J 980 . • • • Mr. Peepers, !)ptlclau has selected Tbe EnJlander Groap of Newport Beach as its advertisang agency. The com~ny, which has six stores an Orange and Los An&eles counttes, plans to ex~nd to I 0 stores by early J 985. • • • Ptck Sy1tem1 of lrvme has announced major management chanaes, inclu~ selection of Frank M. Petyak as nanonaJ sales manager and Pbllllp Earl as director of project management. Petyak had been western rqjonal sales manager for Seacom General, while Earl u a veteran PICK programmer. Leaving the firm i~ vice president Wayne W. Wdlenmeter. Pick is beginn1na volume shipment of its multi-user PC-XT system for IBM personal computers. • • • Utility Spect.U1t1, lac. has established a Mission Viejo office to meet an increasing workload in Orange County and surrounding areas. The firm designs and coordinates installation of ps, telephone and cable utilities for developers, municipalities and government agencies. D.L. Clemen•, the company's chief executive officer, will staff the office with project manager Greg Bat1ko. Man31in& the office wall be Jim Morrow, formerly general manager of a utility management firm's corporate offices. • • • Olan Markstrom of Newport Beach and Palm Desert has been appointed sales representative for Sliver Sandt Racquet Club, a PaJm Desert resort community. Markstrom was previously with Sommenet Realty and E. Goerse MardcoJa Group of Palm Desert and with Private hvestmeot Groapt of Corona del Mar. Seahawk Oil reports · increase in revenues Seahawk Oil lnternauonal, Inc .. an mdependent 011 and ps exploration company based in Newport Beach. reported results for the second quar- ter and six months ended June 30, 1984. Second quarter net income rose to $67,534, or two cents per r.hare, on revenues of S809,S79 from a net lo s of$2.367 on revenue ofS375,422 for the same period last year. For the six months net income was $93, 129, or two cents per share, on revenues of Sl,421,051 versu net income of $53,21 4, or twq cents per Share. on rcvenuei ofS902.'2 I 9 for the fi nt half of J 983. Included in earnina,s for the first 11x month of 19&4 is an extraordinary gain from the settlement of a debt of S54. 96 I. ur one cent per share. "Oil and gas sales for the first half of 1984 increased to $1 ,243,165 from $724,537 for the same period last year, contributina 10 our belief that I 984 will be a profitable year for Sea hawk," Robert S. Friedenbers. president, said. Last month, Scahawk acquired an addit ionll 18 pcrocnt interest in the F.ast Rhoda Walker Field in Ward County, Texas, from Monsanto Oil Company and assumed operatormip of the field. The acquisition intiUJCd Scahawk's interc t in the field to 31 percent and added substantially to the company's oil and au restl'VQ. Sensors sales soaring in Irvine Indexing taxes is Reagan' S most controversial proposal Wh t 1s mcomc 11. indu1 ? hppana quictl) into our fOn· iousness -ecemin ly from no. where -is this concert President Reagan inmt1 is essent1a to his entire tax p~m. and which is pliuina the White House and Con.arc . It is 4lated to tum into one of the mo t controversial features of the Reagan era. Yet, de pite &encral i~orance and befuddlement, andexinf 11 sched· ulcd to bqin in January 19 S-only months from now. The principles underlyina indcxina arc relatively simple. Its proponent.I arauc that It would halt "bracket creep. .. the phenomenon that 0«urs when the pece of inflation h,oves you into hiaher and higher tu brackets even thouah your actual income docs not buy more &oods and services. Under 1ndeiuna.. the standard deduc- tion, personal exemption and tax brackets would be automaticall)' ad· justed to prevent bracket crttp from takina place. he JRS benehtJ trom nfb11on and d n't deny u. The Joint C'"ongrcss1onaJ Committee on T • tion has estimated that for every IO percent mcrnsc m nominal anco~e, tuesnse 16.Spcrcent. Thus, the IRS receives more revenues even when lAXcs arc not directly raisclt To illustrate, if indeiuna were an effect, the IRS would lose an esii· ma\ed S6 bilhon in ·I 98S, S 17 billion m 1986 $28 billion 1n l987, $40 bilhon m 1988 and S6S billion in l989. . No won<ler the controveny over indcxins when our ~vcrnmcnt faces such enormous deficits. But indexing would affect every one of us, as taxpayers. Here's how indexing would work: The base for indexinJ would be 1983. Every year, from 198S on. each tax bracket. the standard deduction, and the personal exemption woutd be ad1usted to JCflcct the increase 1n the Coru.umu Pri<% Index (CPO for lhc prt\ ous fiscal y r o ~ erthe sc )Ur of 19 3 Althouah 1ndexU1J s slated to belin next January, mcm of )Ou would nol noltcc the cffea.s until )OU filed your '8S tax return -mcanin not until April IS. 1986, Suppose. for instance. that the CPI increases by lO ~ra:nt over "1e base year of 1983. The st1ndard dcduc· uon, now S 1,000, would automata· c:ally become Sl,lOO -10 pcttent plu the prtvlous Sl,000. Jnduana al o would mull in adJU tment in the actual brackets 'lmqine a inglc taxpayer in the 18 percenl bracket, which at this time means an income of at least $10.800 but not more lhan $12,900. The amount of tax, accordin' to the Internal Revenue Service, is $1 .203 plus 18 perunt of the amount over SI0,800 • . But w1lh the h)"pOthetical incrtt~ Ultr~systems to build power pl&D.t Generators ~n Maine will be fueled with UPs ANO DowNs a.nu MMA Bain of Amenca .... c.Jrtorn.a First Bank t.00 Crocker t .00 F1rat Interstate t .00 Lio~• Banlt Ca11tomle t.00 Secun!X O.nlt t .00 Sunutomo a.nit t .00 WetlaFa~ t.00 I I LI AtnerlClln Sa111nsi1 1.11, Beverly Hiiia S.Yl!!i• 10.00 CalltOfn•• Federal t. 10 t.00 Columb a Sallings UI Do-My Sa.,.!!ia t..21 Far w .. t Sav•!!SI! t.OI Fld•h!X Federal us Flrat Nationwide too Jnlbraltar Savi 1 too Glendlle Federet t .00 Gi.at American t.ot 0,..1 Western t:10 Home Feoeral S.Yl!!i• t .00 ... SnVIA Po1TE1 New video camera TJaU Canon e1ectroD.lc color .UU camera, 8tU1 Video System IM18, wu teat marketed dmlnltlaeOIJlllplcO-•• by tbe Jap-.neee Oi'm. Uallke CODYeDti6Dal eamer:u, die clnlce nora and traumltl ~~e .ta a ~ dlU. Canon aa11 lt pla.u to market •t•tem to :DeW8 Of'C&Dli:a~OD.a 90llled.1Jle Dezt year. • I: OVER THE COUN TER FOR CALJFORNIA RESIDENTS ONLY IS INCOME PRODUCING REAL ESTATE PART OF YOUR INVESTMENT PORTFOLIO? Fredricks Fund II $7 .600,000 SUBSCRIPTIONS FOR 7 ,600 LIMITED PARTNERSHIP INTERESTS $ l ,000 PER UNIT MINIMUM INVESTMENT FIVE UNITS (SS.000) m \ ' On the , • NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS JllURSDlfS Cl-OSIMC P.llCES I WHAT NYSE DID ------ ---------- - NYSE LEADERS ·-=-~ = -~-= -=------ - NEW VORI< (AP) -~le' WtO~d•V price ind nft c:tf•~• of IM 1~ moll 1dljv NtW York IOC:k Ellchenoe luuu, tr1c:i l\oO net1on1llv 1 more lh•n H FlnCJ)Am J 496, ... ~. -HtwlellPI. 1:612, 39'9 -1 Amtr Ta. T n 1.~J· ~" t Avco Corp 1· 11 • S't> I hamo Int • '" + ~ ~It Ulll ·mi <4V• M I, 9, I Iii + mE•oreu 6?, '9 ~I Paper 17, 5 f 1 11rllLvn 865, l Y, ~ OS ,7 U~ • ~~:!~n', ,~;188 j~~ _ !~ en I ,I 7~ I ~uon 6ft.~88 4i\\ -J; I UP s ANO DowNs ---------==----- NEW YORI( (~) -Tne following "'' shows lht New York 'Sloek E•CMllOI stocks and w1rninb that nave OOM up 11\e mo'' JncLdown u.. most -.~~on percenl or chlnve r~rdlen of 'YOllPM for ThUrsdav . .-c;urltles lradlmi below $2 are Intl· • Net and percentage changes •r•' Jh• d •net between the orevli>us CIO$ no orlc1 end TnurMSa'(j~l o.m. e>rlct. N•rne Lint Chg Pct I Teidl Ind Jlw I ~. Up n·2 2 Unlo Corp 61/t ,,.. I UP 6.7 3 LIL o PfS 46 6111 Up 5.4 t ~IL ~o pfP 121,. lh Up 14. 4 L o pfU 19~ 211'2 Op 4. '5ub~vr;H ;""2 V> Up 12 IL o 0 1 ~ I'-1> 1 . ' ~aV I 2 t-e + ~1 8 ~p ' 16 IL Co l>fX ~ w.. Uo to 1 L Co • <L I UP l Sun,lal~~ 1~ + ..,_ MP t 1 PSlnd 'tlze>t • r + P f 1! ~Manville I' , + ~ 1> . 1<4 nllOrlll 4 • + 1' Up 7 lf hoelOW.l! n S'4 Vi Up .5 1 YtC.ILt: _I) 7'-'I ~ UD .6 1 L co .PfV 16 11/• Up I ~ lthtr Fds 9lli 3.4 Uo . ~11.Q ,~ ~ Up . ren ~ 1,.. UP .0 OI= s l l'I• Up .S lecl Assoc ~ ''• Uo 4 lobMar 5'°' ~ Uo 1 oldN gt 9-\t ~ UP 7 u uave~hoe 731• \') UP 6 i Name I FlnCPA !II pf 2 ClnG 10.7Pf 3 EIQlnNall <4 JmpCpA;n J USShol CtntVIPS ' MercaotSt FlnCpAm pf AmCentCD J Toots RoU 1 TeJ<aslntl 1 HIShear 1 Newe>rkRs I OhPw 716pf 1 PanAm wt l ~e:~a:'' t 1h~t~1 v'oPetrt all' Mfg ~ gi?rNug WI Meit~Fd WnAlr Lin DOWNS Last Cl')O 16. -3 sa"' -61'1 IC'ft -la 619 -2Jl, - 1 13\f> -I 5<4 -3?• 3'• -'• •'·• -263_. -I~ 12'"9 = ',t '• -~. 1/2 -3 '• -~. -~ I~-,, 4~ -,. j l' -1. l'I -2 1• -I 21 .. -... -..._ 2l'I -21'1 -.. WHAT AMEX Om Pct. 1~6 1~·1 t· ff 6.~ l 4.1 I <4. 4 • 4. 4 4 -------- NEW YORK (AP! Aug, 16 1 AMEX LEADERS ' I NASDAQ SUMMARY ---- NEW YORK CAP) -Most active OYe(· ·the~counter ''°'k' SUPPiied bV NASO. N1tm• v lu Bll Asked }_hv. ~r.erSc , i: ,: v, ~~ +'~ i=!rxec. , t . ~ '. -in ~ucr1 • 1n \41 + 1/)1 ando11 • · ,,.. , -• ppltC , 2~ i. -:-1 ~agate 7 • l ~ '•. -~ nlgan • ~ 61 -G bsnG 4 , 24 24~ -lf't Emuhc s 4 4, 13 131'> -s GOLD QUO TES ----------- ----- : M ETALS QuoTES c~-------><o-~ - That's an apt description of.both busine and businesspeoplealongtheOran Coast. Tok ptra kof where companie ar going and which peopl ar helping them get ther .ju t wat h 'Cr dit Lin ·-every day in tl1 Bu iness ctionofyourn w llilJ~ .. t.. I Padre m•n-s1•r Wllllam•AY• he'll appeal any •uapenalon. C2. Ml1eourl m., ..._ l•lent to au,..... In Big I lootbelll l!'f• yw. C2. 'Big Apple' welcome f or ·o1ympi~ heroes Scaffold accident dampens the spirit of cheering throng NEW YORK (AP)...:;_ Amenca·s Olympic medal winners got an "i'n- crcdiblc Big Apple welcome'' Wednesday. but the exuberance of their Wall Street ticker-tape parade was dampened when a scaffold rail collapsed, injuring about 65 spec- tators, five seriously. Some of the inJured "showed the Olympic spirit,•• said Ma)or Edward Koch. "They were worried (the accident) might interfere with the parade.·· The 221 athletes followed a line of )ellow balloons and paper flags leading throuah the Financial Dis- tnct's "Canyon of Heroes .. toward City Hall. OQ)) Koch. who said Americans had "over 200 new stars in our Ila&.·· esttmated that "more than 2 million people lined the si&walks and looked out the buildinas" at the Ol)"mpians. Police were skeptical of the mayor's crowd estimate, but said they had no immediate fiaures of their own. The city's. papulatio~. is just over 7 million. hospital after the parade. .. They mis~ the parade. so I ntod to come and sec them," 1d B~land. 21, of the cw York Cit} borough of Brooklyn. Police and tnesscs Dtd a wooden scaffold fronu around a buildi~at 195 Broad• ) pve :ay, 1Q>tll1n& some of about 200 people 1lo were . staodina on the struoturc onto the street. Several ere carried on ~tretchee',\ to ambul.a.nct ,. which strugled to pass throuiti the dense cro•ds. "Kid~ ere climbing up (on lhc scafl'oldin and 1 heard a loud crackin.§. and the) fell down on 1op of people, 'said Jeanne Daousto~ tatcn Island. v.bo wu tandin& beneath lhC structure. "The co~ were Just looking and the~ didn't stop the crowd from g01 up, she complained. Members of the U.S . water polo team wa•e to the crowd durlDC the ticker-tape parade ,.,..,....... for Olymptana Wedn~y ln !few York. The pololam captured a all:Yer medal. . Cheering crowds 10 to 20 deep lined Broadway durin& the hot, humid noon hour, and office workers. threw ticker tape. computer cards an~ hundreds of thou$ands of make· believe gold mcdaUions from thcti windows. .. Thank you for tbJS incrcdi ble -I mean incredible! -Big Apple wel- come,•• Mary Lou Retton. gold medal gymnast, said at a City Hail c.crcmony followin& the parade. Another Olympian, boxer Mark Breland. vmted the injured at two Alice McGill1on. police spokeswoman, said two polioe oJ:. ficcrs had seen about four ~ on the scaffold before the acadent and asked the building engineer af they had permission to be there. The engineer said they were employees of the buildina. and the officers left. she said. (Pleue Me OL TllPIC/C3) Hcilosna -·m~itCh ' for Petry Tiger right-hander logs 15th victory with eight-filtfer DETROIT (AP)-Getting Detroit nght-nander Dan Petry to admit he's havmg a whale of a season for the Tigers 1slike pulling teeth. But Doug DeC'ances. the Angels' third baseman. isn't so timid about praising Petry. and the Tigers' 8-3 victory Wednesday night backs him up. DeCinces thinks Petry. who makes his off-season home 1n Anaheim Hills, nght around the corner from the Angels• ballpark. 1s am .i>I the American league's best for a number of reasons. "Petry was aood tonight," said DeCinccs, who nonetheless belted a solo homer off him. "He·s always got command of his pitches. Petry had good stuff when he came up (to the major leaJues). Now he's a complete pitcher Wlth good stuff. "Before he was more of a two-pitch pitcher. Now he cuts his fastball, sinks his breaking ball. things like that. I admire him. I think Dan's good." The tw(} teams were to conclude their four-game sencs this morning. Detroit right-hander Jack Moms. I 5-8, met the Angels' Ron Romanick, I 0-10. "There·s no 'ace' and there's no 'stopper'," snapped Petry, who im- proved his record to I 5-S and tied Moms as the Amencan league's winningcst pitcher. "It's a team umty thina. I felt like I was sort of scuffiina through the whole mght. "That happens a lot, though. You have to battle and let the guys get some runs for you." -It was the first time since Aug. 2 that a Tiger patcher had held the opposition to fewer than four runs. "He pitched tough and he was aggress1_ye," Detroit patching coach Roaer Craig said. "That was a game we needed to win." Tom Brookens' three singles drove in two runs and Dave Bergman's two tnplcs drove in three to provndc Petry with more than enouah offense Petry. who has a five-pme winning streak over C.lifornia dating to Ma> 23, 1982, pve up e1aht hits over eight innings, walked one and struck out five. Willie Hernandez pitched the ninth inning. Tommy John. 7-10, worked the first six innings for the Angels. {Pleue eee AJllOELS/C•) USCtralns at UC Irvine Lured by thrtt open practice fields, USC Coach Ted Tollner has moved his Trojan football team to UC Irvine to practice while the~ at US is allowed to arow again after an Olympic tramplina. Fmhmen and community col· ICF tran~fi rs ba~c already check· cd in and arc practkina twice a day at UCI while veterans an: due to rtport Friday. Two..a--Oay p cticcs will be held at 10 a.rn. and ~20 p.m. ~ginnina Monday. The practaoe arc open to the pubhc. The squ d put on d Au 23. ,.,..,....... Angel ahortatop Dick Schofield applla late tag to Detroit hue-runner Howard Jobnaon, who •tole aecond bue daring fourth lnnln1& Wednaday nll&bt. For sale: One used scull West German crew leaves LA minus gold medal shell ByCURTSEEDEN OflheO.-,Notl""" Those West German rowers who lef\ Los Angeles Wednesday without their quadruple scull were in the same boat, so to speak, as most other Olympic rowers. The West German quadruple scull won the gold medal at the XXlll Olympiad at Lake Casitas, but the oarsmen didn't have the air cargo fare to ship the 40-foot shell back to Gennan) But according to U S. assistant rowing coach Da"e Grant. very few countries planned on returning with their boats for the same reason the Gennans couldn't -it's too ex- pensivt to do. The West German) crew's plight has drawn considerable attention. particularly because it captured the gold medal m the quadruple sculls The oanmen had intended to sell the bOat after the compeuuon, which according to Grant. was the plan for Da•eGrant nearly all rowing teams 1n the Games "Even the United States eight was sold," noted Grant. who is also the dean of students and crew coach at Orange Coast College "And New Zealand sold us eiaht to UCLA " The West German boat 1s wonh an esumated $6,400, but the rowen v.ere reportedly try1na to sell it for much less than that. The cost for shipping the boat back to Germany is about Sl ,500. "It's going to be a hard boat to sell:' Grant said. "because it's such a a particular boat and most colleges here simply don't use quads. They'll probably have to find a pnvatc club." A group, m fact. headed by Rael Ryan-Lambert. who is a former rowing coach and oarsman. and Ed Stotsenberg, a Los Angeles accoun- tant, ts now trying to raise enough mone) to return the boat to Ger- many. "These ro"'ers arc tradesmen back in Germany." Ryan-Lambcn said Wednesday. "They d1dn 't get enough money from their government to send the boat back. and the) can't afford 1t themselves " Orange Coast College. despite be1Jl$ JUSt a commumt) college. 1s considered a leg.at1mate ro"'1ng po"'cr on the West Coost But the school couJdn't lend a hand simply bccau~ the college doesn't need the scull. "We have alread) bought tv.o Empachcrs and we'"e already had two g1 ... en to us as pfts." c'plained Grant. "rm kJnd of urpnsed m~ body didn't w•nt to bu) It•• The West German scuHen' \<ICtol') at Lake Ca 1tas on Aug. 5 was that country's only aold medal 1n row1na. He's expected to take over team immediately ST. LOUIS (AP) -Pete Rose will be named playcr-mana,gcr of the Cincinnall Reds today and wdl take over the team the next day. Reds spokesman Jim Ferguson said Wednesday. · R"osiliis~been acquired from the Mont.real EllPG' to replace Vern Rapp as manager, said Feriuson, the Reds' vice prni&nt in charge of pubbetty. .. We're coofirmina that Pete Rose will be the manager of the Reds." said Ferguson, who was here W1th the team. "Both he and (Reds President) Bob Howsam arc tn full agreement. · He'll be pnmanJy a mana~er with "Some pinch hitung and playing in an occasional game "Pete made n specific be wanted it that 'Na)." A new conference was to be held m Cincinnati today. "at wbJch ume fuU details of the arrangement will be announced." Ferguson said. William J. Williams.. owner of the Reds, said that "Pete Rose 1s our manager. After certain thou&hts, we J'' st decided dns was the way to do.tt "Pete is goani to be our player- mlnaJCr for the rest of the year. I've thought about Pete coming back as a coach or a man~ for a long. long time. I think 1t will be very good for our club. Pete IS avccab1e. It IS a terrific opportumty.' The Reds were given pemuss1on to speak to Rose by Expos President John McHale. thouah Rose dented it Wednesday. Rose's wife CMOI said talks between her husband and How- sam have been go1n1 on for several weeks. "I've known they've been talking about it for several weeks." said Mrs. Rose. "but 1t wa n't supposed to be released until tomorrow (toda>) .. Rose's wife spoke to Rcu ... en Katz. the pla)er's -sent. earl~ Wednesda). then said. "The' had a fe" things to PeteRoee wort out. I wasn't supposed to say anythjng about It beaux Pete told me Hows.am wanted .10 keep It as a surpnse." Reached at her home m suburban Cincinnati, where she is expectina a baby. Mrs. Rose said. -It 1s the most wond.crfu1 ncv.s wc·vccvcr had. This makes ne't )car easy instead of being in doubt." Rose. 43. signed wjth the Expo as a free agent on Jan. 20. 1984, but has been used on a part-time bas.is as he pursues Ty Cobb•s all-llme maJor league htt record. The most prolific switch-hitter in history started the 1984 season with 3.990 bits, 201 shy of Cobb's mark of 4.191. Through Wednesday, Rose had appeared in 95 games this sea.son. batting 259 Wllh 72 hits an 278 at bats. One of the most popular plarers ever 10 Cincinnau. Rose broli;e anto the majors with the Reds in 1963 and spent 16 seasons with the club before s1gn1na with the Philadelphia Phtlhes as a free aicnt tn 1979. Rams to keep Kemp, dump Christiansen The Rams~~ the) 're going to lick v.1th Jeff Kemp as backup quar- tcrbacl: to ~ctcran Vince Ferrapmo. Coach John Robinson said \\ ednemy that Jeff Chn ttansen. a reserve quarterbacl acquired from Cincmnau tv.o weeks ago. v.111 be traded or v.at\<ed No grudge match, but it does feel good Fonner Dodger Fernandez pitches MetspastLA I - SPOR TS BREAK - ---- WilliaDls says · he plans to appeal any suspension From AP di pate S,\N DIEGO -Dael Wilham • 111 manaaer of tbe San Diego Padm. s.ays he will appeal any uspension by the Nauonal League office for his part in Sun<Jay's beanball war and subsequent brawl with Atlanta. Speaking to reponersafter Tuesda> nighl' l-2 wm over Ph1ladelph1a, the coach abo had strong ~ords for Braves Manager Joe To~. who said afkr the brawl that Wi!!::ms i: "an idiot ... spcll 1d1ot wuh a capital land §ii.. W1lhams with a small w." D "I sec that he's able to spell now." Williams said. "The only thing I'll say 1s that he staned It, and he got the last sbot in "s far ' as an) thing else. I'm available an)' lime. any place. I won't be int1m1dated " W1lhams would not deny repons that he instructed pitchers Ed Whitson. Greg Booker and .......__--.. .. Cra1~ Leff ens to throw at Pascual m• Perez after the Braves' right- hander struc.:lo.. Afan Wiggins with the first pitch o(the game: The bean balls sparked benc.h-cleanng brawls in the eighth and ninth innings 1n whach 16 players. coache:> and managers "'ere eJet.tcd. Fines and possible suspensions have not yet been announced. "We had to show them that the) couldn't 1nt1m1date us," Willlams said ·'They started the whole thing. If I'm suspended. Torre should be, too. I'll definite!)' appeal." Quote of the day Don King, boxing promoter, on the difference between promoting a rock concert and a boidng match: "You ha~ to~ Houdini to work out the details of a (Mlchael) Jackson tour. By comparison, you Just have to get the boxer• In the ring and pray one of them doesn't knock the other out qufckfy." Slzy Chick scores Los Al win Say Chick, the odds.on favorite, ~ "Dailed d own her fifth victory in six career . stans Wednesda). a three-quaners,length v1ctol) ov.er secqnd choice Eas> Ausun in. the Faberge Futurit) at r.os Alamttos Race Colirse. _._ · uty Chick., ridden by Jerry Nicodemus, took home her b1qest paycheck ever -the $362.520 winner's share m the third leg of Los Alamitos' Tnple Crown for two-year-olds. The race was balled as a duel between S1xy Chick and Easy Austin. the two fastest qualifiers. but Stx) Chick took a commanding lead early 1n the 440-yard race and held the lead easily The winning ume was 21 56 seconds S1xy Chick had qualified in the fastest time 'A tth 21 79. whale Eas) Austin ran 21 80 S1xy Chick now has won $579.000 in tts quanerhorse racing career after winning the first leg ot the Tnple Crown -the.Sun Country Futunty -and finishing second 1n the Dash for Cash Futunty "' burehearly naJ y dro\'t In thrtt rum• and •• GI H nl ppcd tx•ntn fim mn n ith a lhrtt·run double to l~d AtJanLD to 7-3 llnumph over rau-bUt£h in a Nauonal Le aue aame Wcdnc~)'. The e rl\ explo ion pro\ided (omfort bte cushion for Bra'c~· ria,ht-handcr St~ve Btdro laa, 9-6, \\hO worked five 1nn1n for hi third v1ctol) in the four game$ he ha$ started ••• In othtr NL pme Wedncsda)'. lefi·hander Du fled r bt-lttd a pme-wmmng, t-.o-:run iniJc, dd~ a double nd a triple and scattered nmc tuts throuah eiaht innm.ss. guiding Montrtal to an 8·3 victory over San franci co at Candlesuck Park Tlm Wallach, fonncrl) of U01vc~1ty High and Saddlebad. College. slugged a three-run homer 1n the saitth innina ... Bob K.Dtpper and two relte\ ers combined on a Sill-hitter and Mark Bailey drove an three runs as Houston defeated Chi- lllqrph7 cago. 6-:?. to extend the Astros· 'A1nning streak. to six games Knepper, 12-8. !>truck out four and walled two 1n ')even innings to record his th a rd consecuttve VICtOI) ... Brad Guldeo nfled an RBI Mn&lc ~1th two outs in the 11th inning to gJ\·e C1nc1nnau a J-2 tnumph over Bruce Suuer and St Louis Carmelo Mar tlnu h11 a bases-loaded smsle with one out 1n lhe ninth inning to gi .. e San Diego a 4-3 \ 1ctOI) over Ph1ladelph1a Tony Gwynn kd \\Ith a tnple oil Al Holland, 5-7 the fourth Ph1ll1es pitcher. and after a pair of walls and a stnkeout \1anmez slap~d a single to left to 'Aln the game \\1th the \tCtor). the Padres retained their 9111-gamc lead O\ er Atlanta in tht' \\-est D" ISIOn and eA panded 1hcir ad .. antage to 12 games over the third-place Dodgers. Lansford extends streak to 18 Carney Lansford had a home run and a two singles \\h1le e'tend1 ng his hnttng streak to 18 games Wednesday as Oakland crushed Baltimore. 6-1 . '-"tlh rookie Curt Young scattering 10 hats Lamford. batting 370 an has streak, rammed has ninth homer off Dennis Martinez, 4-7, as the second batter of the game. The A's scored two more an the fifth and chased Martinez while taking a 4-0 l~d in the sixth. In other American League ~ames. rook.le Joe Cowie won for the fourth ttme an fivr dec1s1ons and Dave Winfield smgled m the go-ahead run in the founh annang as New York edged Seattle, 3-2 . . Don Slaugbt sluggeQ a two-run homer and George Brett added a two-run smgle as Kansas City ralhed for sevell runs> in the sixtb.Jnnang to take a 1 l-8 uiumpb from Boston. . Rick MUiling hit a three-run homer and scored tbree runs to help snap Minnesota's three· Lau or game winning streak as Mil· waukec defeated the Twins, 8-4. Mike Caldwell, 6-10. won his second straiJtbt after losing rune LO a row ... Larry Parrlsb led o1r the 10th inning with has 20th home run to propel TeAas to a 6-5 .. 1ctory over Chicago .. Joe Carter drove m the wannangrun an the bottom of the I 3th with a lane dnve off the glove of left fielder George Bell, givmg Cleveland a 4-3 victory and a sweep of a doubleheader wuh Toronto. In the first game. George Vukovich drove an four runs and Andre Thornton slapped three run-scoring singles as the Indians pounded out 19 hats tor a 16-1 victory. ilENNIS Sl·IOIES Sl'Cl~iS \\'IE1\I~ Fru 1irmii1n11 w11h any racqutt purchaK Prlnct Graphite CompRt11 s16soo $123.88 Prlnct Precision Graphite RtQ Sl3SOO $109.88 Head Arthur Ashe Competition Edge55 7 88 Rti 590 00 • Donnay Mldwood}S Rc11 s1a oo ~ss .88 Head Graphite Director TXD R~ 53000<' $214.88 Yonex R·22 Rtll SIS 0 $ 106.88 Wl11on Heavy Duty Optic Yellow Balls $ 1. 9 9 .. 4 \\~\il:l~Sl{I A_Ll Demos 1/2 OFF KIDDER Red Line RtQ S400 00 $299.88 KS Kevlar R•a s2go oo $211.88 KS Honeycomb R111 S20 SOO $153.88 Kidder vest 53 Rtg s~3 gs 7 .88 CONNELLY Shortltnc Graphtt« Rq s3g500 $278.88 Shadow Rte sJsooo $279.88 Tum lip R19 S28SOO Connelly v11t Ras $51 DS $227.88 $38.88 Open dally Monday·frlday 10.9 rvu.1•row c1az1Tos ~xir 17CMl7J NIKE Odyssey Mtns & lad1H $4 l ~ S849S .88 Avenger Mtns B·Qradt $ l 7 • 88 RtQ S32 9S Oceania Mtns 1Ad1H !<ids Rtll 524 95 Burt Bruin RtQ 529 95 Terra Trainer $16.88 $19.88 Mtns &ladl~ $42_88 RtQ SS9 9S Shark Leather $29.88 RtQ 536 95 Shark Nylon 525.88 Rti 532 9S New Balance 444$23 88 Rea S48 95 • HII<ING BOOTS Lava Dome Rt11 s4g gs $19.88 Approach Ria S6Q gs $24.88 PMS Euy Hiker $&9 S8 Ria SIOOOO • PACRS Wlldcrnu• bperlence Graduate Day Pack ~ s2gg5 I $19.88 Btke Padt Rtt Sl7 g5 30% OPP $13.88 SI Mltctcd Packl, Baai. a Tents ....,... .. -.. ~-..... -.. -__ ..,. _ _, __ ...... 1/2 OFF ALL LADIES SWIMWEAR Sassafrass • Artna • Ramns • Sptedo 1/2 OFF All MENS FASHION SWIMWE AR Norflttt • Ca1ch1t • C.undfl< •Ocean Pacific 1/2 OFF ALL FASHION SPORTSWEAR Norllfel • Stubbits • Su11'hnt • Wh1101aQ uplo 25% OFF Selected Running & Tennis wear RUNNING SHORTS $6.88 25% OFF Hltcttd SPORTIF SHORTS 1/2 OFF ALL WARMUP SUITh upto 25% OFF ~lected Bodywear Danskm • Flualard • C..rushka • Marika Morey Booft~ Mach 7-7 SS?.88 Rrt $72 gs Churdilll Makapuu Ftns Ret Sl2 SO $24.88 Morey Boo9tc ~·:: 50 $5.88 Saturday 10 e • Sunday 12·5 OIASGB OWPOaT llAC.H I H lf_aw II 1 ,.. II.iii-• ~ IH11U .- Lake algn t -Tound choice JNGL WOOD -rl Jones lhe m-tim-round dratt ~h01ce oflhc Lo n cl Liken, h ncd onc-y rcontract with the Nntionol ~ kctball oc1atton team, it was announC'Cd Wrdnc da). Jon~s. a 6-11. 21 .pounder from the Univci; 1ty of tht D1stnctofCotumb1a, wa the 23rd playerSC'lcc:ted an the June Jrafi of collcgi I players. A four-tame NC A 01"1 ion II All· m 11 n, he vcraet<f 28.6 potnt:i; artd 9.7 rebounds per pmr 5 mor. .. We'rr. delighted 10 ha\C him ... ian and feel he's a vaJuable prO'iJX'Ct for the futurt.'' said takers• General Manaacr Jt:rry West. Said Jone'\· "I'm \'try happ) to be a pan of the Laker\ franch1\c, I'm ready." h1mever they c3ll on me." Jones will auend the Laker..' rookie camp at Lo)ola-Marymount Unt\t'rs1ty next week Meanwhile, the Lnkers announced that George Singleton, a 6·8 forward from Furman who was the club's third-round pack ha-. 111 ncd a one-) ear contract to play with Valladolid 1n ~p3m. Raiders vying for final pots '-,ANTA ROS:\ -The Los Angele\ s Raider\. alter 1.11tting thL·ir roster to the 70-• • t man limit for the Nauonal Football League • preseason. face future cuts in their of· fen!>1 .. e hne and dcfon\1\C backfield. coaches said Preparing to return to their El Segundo faciliucs. the Raiders were faced Wedne\da) with I 3 pla)ers '}tng for nine or 10 !>pots on the offens1\C line In the dl'll-n!>1ve backfield. the compct111on 1s less widespread wath 11 pla}er~ competing for eight spots Raiders Coach Tom Flores hopes to pare the candidates 1n those po\1tions after the Ra1der!i pla) M1am1 in their third t'Xh1b1t1on game at the Coliseum Sunday. In the Raiders· receiver corps. a broken '>houldcr suffered b) backup Cahan Muhammad has opened up at a spot at wide rece1\ er Sam Seale. an eighth-round draft Lho1cc and Canadian Football League \eteran Waddell Smith are expected to baulc 1t o ut for the pos1t1on. Lendl upset victim in Toronto Owners OK Twins sale Expansion issue put on hold at baseba ll s ummer meeting PHILADELPHIA (AP> -Ma1or·lc:iguc ~scball o-.ncrs, at a bnef 1ummt-r meetina Wednesday, unani- mously •pproved Jhe ale o( 1he Minn~ot• Twins . to Minneapolis bankinJ ext\:ut1ve Carl Pohlad. and in· dicated a group seekan& 10 brina a team to Tampa. Fla .• ma) have helped its cau~d b> cooperattn& in the sale. Pohl1d purchased Calvin Grimlh·s S2·ptretnt hare of the Tw1n5 for an e umated $32 million and bought another 42 percent of the club's stock from H. Gabnel Murphy through the Tampa Bay Baseball Group, a group of businessmen who aareed to sell Pohlad the shart they had purcha9ed from Murphy for a rePorted S 11.S m1mon in Apnl. "The Tampa Bay group cooperated 100percent1n the effort to leep the Minnesota ~wins in Minnesota," Pohlad told a news confc~nce after the ~le ~as approved. "Crnainly. they have the best intert'St of baseball at hean." Pohlad added. , \fter the owners' meet in& behind clo ed doors. Sandy Hadden. secretary-treasurer and jCnerat· counsel of major league baseball. sa1(1 Commissioner Bowie Kuhn had comm~nded the Tampa Ba> aroup for ats cooperation and "suggested that all concerned remember that 10 the futun.•." A\ked 1f that helped Tampa's effon to win an e\pans1on team. Hadden replied "You might call it a brownie point." Meanwhile. Amencan and Nauonal League owners took no official action on a feas1b1lity st ud y of expanding to two 16-team leagues, ~aying they preferred to wait until after they have negotiated a new contract with the baseball pla)ers' union The old one expires Dec.. 31 . White a winner in Florida meet TORONTO-Francisco Gonzalez ol ~ Paraguay used his powertul serve to upset top-seeded Ivan Lendl of Czechoslovakia in the second round of the Pla)er's FORT LAUDERD"-LE. Fla. -Olympic silver lnternat1onal ten ms tournament Wednesday. medalists Amy White. Jenna Johnson and Mark Stockwell Gonzalez blasted seven aces while defeating the took a step up to the gold-medal level Wednesday in the defending champion from Czechoslovakia. 7-6 (7-3), Unned States Swimming Long Cour~e National Cham- 6-4, in oneo[lhfee upsets in thesecondround. pionshtps. . -• -·-. Other upset victims included fifth-seeded Johan White; a 15•ar-old University H igh student, won _Knek_ who fell 1:.6. 7-5, (>..{} toJellaw Ameni;;as:~~~-""',._women's 200-rnetcr backstrok,c io '' 14 95 lohnson Win!tsk)'. and No. 10 Joachim Nysu om <>f weden. J7, ofsanta Rosa. claimed the women's 100 free tyle i.rt '· "'ho was bounced 6-4.. 6-1 bf American Scott McCain. 56 36 ·and Stockwell, who swam for the Australian Third-seeded J 1mmy Connors safely advanced Olympic team m Los Angdes. took the men's I 00 freestyle w11h a 6-2, 6-3 victory O\er And) KohJberg. an 50.38. White and Stockwell won silver medals m those Televielon. radio events at Los Angeles. while Johnson, who woo an Ol)mp1c gold in the 400 freestyle relay, took her individual sit ver med.ti in the I 00 butterfly. ,..._, TELEVISION 6 p.m . -PAO FOOTBALL Pmtoorgh at Dallas In NFL pre-tea.son game, Channel 7. 10 p.m. -IOWUNG: Amateur tour, Channel Enka Hansen. at 14 the youngest swimmer an the women"s 200 butterfly, stole some of the attention from the Olympians by winning her event at the lnternat1onal Sw1mm1ng Hall of Fame pool. 56. RADIO 10:30 a.m. -BASEBAl..l: Angels at Detroit, KMPC (710). Other winners Wednesday were: Brett Beedle of Los Altos an the men's 200 breastroke in 2:18.73; Dan Veatch of Rockv11le, Md .. m the men's 700 backstroke m 2:03.43; Chnstopher Rives of Houston m the men's 200 butterfly in 1 01 05; and Polly Wande of Fon Washington. Pa .. an the women's 200 breastroke m ~·35 51 COLLEGE FOOTB ALL Is this MisSouri' s year? Wi t h 40 returners, Tigers expected to off er c h a llen ge_ KANSAS C ITY. Mo (AP) -The pain that npped through the heans of Nebraska fans everywhere when the final seconds ticked off the Orange Bowl clock was not eased a b1 t when the backfield went on to sign pro- fessional contracts wonh an esti- mated S9 million J s Tom Osborne e" er to win a national champ1oosh1p for the Huskers? Bob Devaney dad 11 twice. His taciturn successor held the No. I ranking from August to January and came within one heart-stopping play ofbeattng M1am1 an the Orange Bowl for an unbeaten season and a nauona1 title. It would seem that 1f Osborne was ever to win a national champ1onsh1p. it would have been last year. with such gifted operatives as Mike Rozier. Turner Gall. Dean Stetnkuhler and Irving Fryar But it was not to be The Huskers arc back to ti) again this )'ear with a ne"' cast on offense but nine starters back on defense. It will bean uphill fight. Some observers feel this could be the year M1ssoun breaks through to the top of a Big Eight Conference which has been dominated for decades b~ Nebraska and Oklahoma ~few gJ\e Oklahoma State. behind new head coach Pal Jones the nod as Big Eight favonte. But most con- ference eApens figure the Sooners and Cornhuskers have held sway an the CdM poloists score 3-2 win f Big Eight long enou'h to remain the favontes or co-favontes until they are 1n fact dethroned. For the past three years. it's been all Nebraska The Huskers ha"e put together successive 12-1 campaigns and haven't lost to a Big Eight o pponent since 1981. "We're very proud of the fact that the University of Nebraska football team has won the Big Eight cham- p1onsh1p and challenged for the national lllle the past three )ears ... sa)s 0 borne "I think. we have a chance to win another 818' Eight champ1onsh1p." De!ip11e the absence ol some of the tmghtest offensive stars the Big Eight has ever known, the H uskers are not barren of talent. Fifty-two lettermen return. including 12 starters. Jeff Smith, a husky. speedy senior, as ready to take his tum after playing belund Rozier at I-Back. Smith scored two touchdowns m the Orange Bowl when Roi1cr got hun. Who to replace quarterback GiJI? The most likclycand1datc is fifth-year senior Crai& Sundberg. - Ma soun is comin& off one of its most satisfvma seasons in many )Cars. The 'riaers fini hed 7-5 and beat Oklahoma to tie for second in the B1g Eight. Returning arc multi-ta!· ented quanerback Marlon Adler and (Pleue Me TIGERS/CS) Commercial offers pouring in for Retton CHARLESTON, W. Va. (AP) - Mary Lou Rctton's gold medal is shinana even bn&.htcr u commercial ofk come tn non· top. says her aacnt. "We·ve had 70 offers in the past 72 houB,"sa1dJohn Tractta ... But wc·rc not ru h11i into anything." Offers for the Olympic a)'mnas\Jcs tar from ·ainnont in ludc ap~r­ .anc on numerous telcv1 ion sen and even chan~ to tar an a how e ~i lly wnuen for her. Traett.a said. • pons lllu tnted. appeared on t he Toniaht how and met Pre idcnt Ragan. She's fa t bC'com1na one of the· country·~ mo t rec~n11cd face , and 1dm1L~ tha t "my ltfc h chanacd · ovemiaht." Other potcnttal commerical endeavors for the tttn-a~r include dditJonal m inc rov , '1C\t\ dnnk advertisement and appc r- anee on other vanety hows . "We onl)' want to identify Villh the best products,'"sa1dTraetta, "ho sa) the off'en will be partd down to s•~ or fc althouaJt he rtf u d to namt-the rompani .. We al ~nt to kctp hcrC'ommt1· mc111 to a m1111mum bccau h 1 • tall tnun1n as I mna t nd plan to rompc1c an the future. , •• nt 10 ktcp .M If)". Um' 11" Uh1 •• ti said Ora19eout DAJLV PtLOT/ThUrwdlly Al•• 1t 1.. Cl Boating returns to normal Wuh the 23rd Olympi d now history, yachtina ctivity in Southern Califom1a seu back to normal this weekend. r A heavy calendar in Orange Coun· ty will feature 1 race from Long Beach to Dana Point Saturday. The race is co-ponsored b~ Seal Beach Yacht Oub and Dana Point Yacht Club. . Dana Point will be doubly busy . Satu~y with the Anniversary Resat· ta of Capistrano Bay Yacht Club. Perfonnance Handtcap Racing Fleet and Midaet Ocean Racina Class yachts will sad ocean courses and dinahies will sail inside. the b3y. In the Newpon area. Bahia Corin- thian y acbt crub Wtl stage the Sth and 6th races of iu AngeJman Senes on Saturdar.; Newpon Harbor Yacht Club wtll host a one-design regatta Saturday and Sunday. and Lido Isle Yacht Club will conduct its annual All Girl Rcaatta Saturday Dove b,unting season to open Sept. I Tra ltlonal hot spo s should produc ideal condttlons and consistent hunting J11 NIEMIEC Southlandcrs 11re geann up for dove hunting as the season gcts'1ndcr waySaturdaf.Scpt. 1. Tbbwcek 1 ligJ'lt ratn won't have too much of an effect on local dove numbcrsasthewatmerwcatherwill help kc:cp these erratic flyen from m1gratin1out of Southern Califom1 . There should be fair to good shootina in most areas ovtr the lona holiday openins. with traditional hot spots producma consJStant huntina. The limtt is l S mourning dove. and the season wdl run throu&h mid· October. Hunters should pre.scout their huntinaspots this season before headinaout on opeoingday. With the extreme heat and v~ dry conditions in the fields, dove will be bunched around available feed and watering holes. Traditional flyways will lso hold a •ood number ot bud dtJrin the evemn flightsto roost. Ou1000Rs Thundcrstonns tn the Im penal Valley ndovermtoAnzonawill reduce the whitcw1n populations drastically, and only a ftwofthesc tarae do"'e will be found ina s.botiunncr'spmebagat thecndof thedaf1hunt.Acoes tosome m0suhootin areas,huntcrnre huntina areas migln also be rcstncted warned tom e ure theu harvesus due to flooddama1e to road sand 1156 kept cool and that the b1rdsarc some fire closures an the foothill area cleaned as quickly u po s1ble after whtch arc ttnder dry. · • the hunt. All shooters in the field must have a Do not leave the small heart inside valid huntina license and shotguns the dove's bre t, as this or&An can must be pluged to hold oo more than cause even cool meat to spoil in a few three rounds. Those transponina hours. It i also importaotto make .dove acrou state lines should leave ~urc that all loose fcatherurc not one feathered win11n tact foridentifi· · touching the mcai(it will also taint cation, . the taste of these delicate birdS). Out to the e~treme heat found in :There is usually a lot of ~tandfo~ round tie wamna lot the bitduo O)· overw thin lhofaun "'* Make urc that the barrel of lhe di()f.IUn 11 kepto 1ofchedt11ormud orth wbodonotbavea~ p odout)"tlfortheoperuqda) of doveseason. lhcn s tome IOi>d oounaavailable at the neatb)• Tcjon R&neb. This huee ranch located about 1 Yzhoundrive from OraJ\fC County produces aome fine oouqaover.fieldsforlheunat· tachcd hunter and bis family. This sem .priva&e huntina is by ad"".&net rcservatlOn only and burners arc tprcadout over k>tl of acraee 10 insure JOQd ~UDDln& for all For information on huntina t.bt Tejononadatlybasitdunna\hedovc season caJl Don Gctvct at the T e,,on Rancb(80S)248-6774or(80S) 32 7.S48 I. The ranch isa aoOd pl&c:iC to leach younastttsthtenjoy:rnecu :. found inaood birdshootins. Communi s t coluntries preparing for own games TIGERS ••• ~C2 40 OlbCt lct1ttmer1 Mirr. • ICfUOf' coUJd be cbalteftled by redWrtJumor Wama Sri12 TheT11tfi ~ ._ us ttxtb utloMlb' ...-ahc run ud 12th aa aotal dd'eatia. ""Out tlllcnOr ddm• e liDe lboukl be: betttr. bUt OUT Piii nllh and pMI dtfeo1e mua co.ne ~" )'I eo.cb Waneo Powers. .. We re doter now to lbeina a lfQl football lam than we•ve ever been'" Oklahoma lw all 'but abandoaed its pWiS to.a:ap thelr()UAd~QI bone orreme. 1'he Soooen Just can•t 1«m lO recnut a aak:aled cnou,sh ~to make IOOd lln other formation. So tt'I beck lO the 'bone for &he MB, WhO ··UY lbef c6ildn'11 happier. 'Quandblek Duily Brad- ley. orqinally recruiied lO ND &he washbone, C'lOUld ~ •• me Bw .. Ei&hl'' mOSl oroducth e li&ftaJ-c,ller. Runnina baCt Spencer ~illma say some Sooner oblervm. could bunt nto nauocaJ promiDCMt. In other Southern California Yachtina Association areas: ''I think the WJlbbOne offense is the patest rusbina offense ts ever ~n utilized an footb&ll. .. says Okla· boma COICh Barr)' Switzef ... And rve always -anted to have the ability t do thipgs in the pamnapmefrom a wishbone strucuure as the bate offense:· LONDON (AP) -Less than a as "alternaltvt Olympics," even countries will compete in nine Olym· The Soviet SJ>Olt' Commintt said Oklahoma tatc returns ~t '-" .._....L ..... di week after the glitterina finale of the though the) were hurriedly planned pie sports ranain& fro~rack and field Wedncsda)' tt did not know wbe-thcr sunen uom a defense that ranbd L.one hKtl vect11 CMI -Ont·dttl01'1 summer Olympics, Eastern Europe is after the Kremlin announced its to yachtini, the official Soviet news Romania -the onl~ War:saw Plc1 No. g nationally apinlt the rush and 0it,,,.ion"""· S.turdtv, SYnc1tv. responding with its own international Olympic bovcott in May. citing agency Tass reponed. country to defy the Los Anaeles No. 9~· nst the score. But at don not Navy .YllCtll Club Lont e .. ch -Women'• ; So · ffi 8 000 b J' J '--tnvlttlbltl ""'"'· s.1urdev games for some 40 nations, including security constderauons. v1et o 1c1als say , at letes boycou -would attend. MOICOw ~urn coach unmy ouulOn, Santia Menlca .. v the 14 who boycotted Los Angeles. The pmcs will be held on over--1,000 more than competed in Los said in May it was nay:ioa away from who migrated to Miami and ...as s.nre Monlct vecnt CIUb -Auou.i •r•m The ••friendship 84" pmes, to be lappina dates. stanan1 today. in the Anaeles -will take part in the pla Los Anatles because the Americans rcplaclcd by long-time Co boy IS$l$o rece <ThOrPI s.r1a Ho 21. S.turdev staged in six Communist countrie , Soviet Union, Poland. Czechoslo--openma an Moscow's Lenin StacJtum could not auaraotce of security for its tut Pat Jones. G.,:-"::~~~ .. 1;'C./'ub -SldMv arc shrouded in uncenainty. wnh vakia, Hunpry, Bulgaria and Cuba. Saturday, four years after the Soviet athletes. and 13 aUies followed 1uiL .. We'veaot quite a bit of e1perience Mtrtne YacM c1u1> _,,no1t·11enc1ec1 Reo•tt• neither a complete list of parucipants Women's Jrack and field opens in capital staacd the l 9800lymp1ad th.at AthleJes from Romania. the only: on defense and unless ~ find tkMI *'''· ~v nor a confirmed schedule. But or· Prague today with two Olympic gold was hit by a U.S -led boycott. Uncoo· Soviet Bloc nation io dd'y the somethina quite unuSu&l our COD~ s... °'"' pn12ers ms1st full compcutions will medalists competing. U.S. spnnter firmed repons have spoken of an boycott. will apparently not take pan ocptS will remain tbc same, .. said coroneoo Yectit Club -Mot¥ Minion e.v be held, with their athletes vyrng for Alice Brown, and West German shot Olymp1c-stylc flame lo mark the in the Moscow g,lmes. Jones. 36. c"'s':;:W':i~~=; ~!.: so11ne. Httrd. world records. putter Ciaudia Losch, organizers said occasion. · Romanians athletes and c:oecbcs, Iowa State ..m be lookina, to C•=~~'V!~, s.~e1e~ Pro·Am s.t>ot Some Western athletes, includmg Wednesday. More than 230 women Tass listed panicipatin& Western rcturic':fJ'omefrOm Los ~Jes with replace pass.happy quanerback R ... 11 •• sundtv Olymp~c !'"~SU. repon~ly ac· athletes from 19 countnes will take nations. all of which took pan in the 53 m s, praised their iovcrument David Archer, wbo pUscd for 2.21 '1 San oi.oo Cru!Mf AtlOdetlon -Cllrt•ttftMft ccptcd iovttallons. part in the three-day event. Ol}'mpics. as Austna. Brazil, Greece, for what one reportedly called the yards last year. However. bis favoriie-Cht~to;:iCl.:!,,'°:'1c~~de~ ser1a. The Fnendsbip hosts are taking In Moscow. men from the Sov1et Denmark, Italy, Canada, Finland, .. catcgoricaUy political .. docision to WJCt. junior wide recover Tracy Sulldtv. care, however. not to bill these pmes bloc, nincWestem and 30 developing France and Sweden. attend the Olympics. Henderson. is back. ~~~~~~~~~ii;i;m;;jijii;ii~~----~---~~~~~----~~~~jiiiiiiiji~ -=-~~-- r :::=:~~~~~~~~~~::-dt ONLY CTR-80 by Reallstlc9 .. Cut 360/o Enjoy the new Fan TV season and football action w,lth a vMd color ptct\nt Replace your indoor or worn-out outdoor anteona with our new ~ SuperCok>r Special and see the sharp picture and brillJant c:dor your let Wll designed to deliver. Improves black-and-white Tv. too. Al9o con.~ h._fi system to pull in a strong FM stereo signal with full channel . W•swept 60° elements pull in maximum available signal on every ltdon within range. Gold-alodlzed finish fights cooosion. PreuMmbled-lnltall It yourself and save! 115-1711 . . , By Realistic ~-....:. •···· @lympte aftermath a letdown LOS ANGEUS (AP) -Post· OlYm.pics life will be Dullsville for a wtrik, according to psycbolocists. FrttWay traffic will teem .. one. . thCTC·u be less to talk about 1.1 the office or store and we~ no lonacr be able to forset our troubles by watch· ina )ounssten a.o for tbc aokt. And for tbc athktes. lhC'tt's a real world waitiot out thcTc now that the: cheering has stopped. "We worUCl ounclve1 mto a real fever -ud evcl)' dai it beCame more ud mon inlmte, Umvenit of Soutbcm California ssis&ant Profes10r of Psychology Scott Fraser wd Tuesday of the 16-day Summer Games. .. E"erytbina was JOin& posithe," he saui. as Amencans piled· up medals. freeway traffic eased and e\ICO tJle SmOJ""lOOfl hike. -By compamc)n ... normal" life just doeso•t seem the same now. Fraser noted. . ... The two weeks set us up so It seems worse now than we tbouaht it was before. It's not 1oina back to normal," Fraser said. When Juan Antonio Samaranch, president of the International Olym- pic Committee, declared the Games officially closed Sunday: ni&ht. many of t.bc DQtly IOQ.(ro. people at LOI Anseles Memorial Coliseum uted. "Ob, no! No! .. ••1t's hard to put in words the feelinp of the last two weeks.·• wd Ellen Randall of Marina deJ Rey. "The fcehnJ is ) ou 're almost eu- pbonc about the whole thina. My husband and I keep sayins. 'What will we do tomorrow? ... Fraser and Mehrabian said the sense of loss would be putjcularly peat for thox who orpnized the Games. Rich Perelman. press chief for the Los An&eles Olympic Orpnizin Com mi nee. wd the enormity of tbt years-tons effon -and the size of the los -bad not yet hit most wo~crs "But we'll come era hinadown one oftht9e days.'· Perelman s.aad dunna dismantlina of tbc 1.AOOCs Con· venuon Cent~ press offices. And tlie compctiton are goina to find life duller -ahboU&h ftHcd wt th new challcn&cs -as they trade cleat" for careen. OLYMPIC •.. From Cl \ . . Ct O~ Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursd y, August 6, 11 84 E:r-Olympianspraise Budd, .chide Decker LOS A G (AP) -o former Olympian Zola 8udd in a kncr lO .. learn, gro" and cfil'' from her rolli1Jon with U •. runner ~ Decker durina ao Olympic final, a.nd chide both ~er and SJ)eetltors for unp iou nC$ . Fonner Javelin thrO\lrcr Kate Schmidt and h•&h jum~r Debbie Brill made thear ttmark.s in an open letter to Budd, which was printcc:l'in the Lo Angeles Times today. Brill was on the Canadian team, and hm1dt was on the U.S. team at the ANGELS ••• Prom Cl yicldrna l 0 hits and four runs, three of themcamed. The v1c\.Ory. coupled with Oeveland's sweep of a tw1-n1pn~r from Toronto, in~ the Tige~· lead to nihe games over the Blue Jays in the AL East. The Anaels remained l''l games back of Minnesota in the AL West as the Twins were defeated by Mil- waukee. Brookens' two-out RBI single m the Tigers' second gave ~troat a 1-0 lead. Gary Pettis' tnplc in the third scored Dick Schofield and tted lhe ~e. The Angels took a 2-l lead an mning later when DcCinces led off with bis 15th home run. The Tigers took the lead for good m their half of the fourth. Chet Lemon staned the rally with an tnfield single, went to second when Kirk Gibson drew a waJlc and scored on Brookens' sin&le lO left. Gibson took third on the play and scored as Howard Johnson's crounde1 forced Brookens. The Tigers got an unearned run 10 ll:ie sixth that gave them a 4-2 lead. Gibson and Brook.ens hit successive one-out singles, and Gibson went to third as Johnson's grounder agam forced Brookens. Gibson scored on second baseman Rob W1lfong's wild I.brow lO first tryint to double up Johnson. Lou . Wh.haket doubled olf 0n- Kaufman in the Detroit seventh and scored on a pmch-tnple by Bergman. u~mer Oam in Muruch. ""ti hm1dt finished third. The letter .Jso referred to cnticism of audd for JOirun the Btlll h Olympic team sin~ her native South Afri 1s not llowed to participate in the Gamrs. bsohcd her offauh. . Budd uffcttd cuts on her l and heel, fini hing SC' en th in 1hc rnce. "The ulhors of th1 note have o.pcricn~both. Ourcon mi that so mucb h sh ppcncd to )OU t such The lcner read : Budd, 18. was roundly booed by the Los Angeles Coliseum crowd after she and Decker colhd«l Friday durina the 3,00Q..meter women's final. Decker fell. was injured and had to leave ttie race. Sti.e later blamed Budd for · the mi hap, althou&h officials "Some of u have o~rvcd nd some have upcrienccd the joy und cxh1lanuion that can come from 1he Olympic Games. Few n 1majlne the emotional pain one sufftrs from the denial of our pau1ons at such a level, whether it's due to injury, or illnoss. or a lragic accident. such as the one you suffered through in Los Angeles. you"8 , n n be difficult to ort at all out. "Your talent 1s obvious. You b.a'c ~many )e rs ab d to train nd to compcte,anditmll) not msonow, but the reward are infinite. "We f; el hke apolo1'iz.ing for MJry Decker's Jack of gradou~ne . , for the otherwi e polite Coli ~um crowd boOina. while it was vou who had the b lance and strength "to continue. and Barbor ~b crou coa.atry meet Newport Hatbor Hi&h's second annual alum· ni cross country meet w1U be held Saturday Sept. I at Manners Park 1n Newport Beach. The meet t~ open to all 11'3dulles and fnends of Newport Harbor Hia.h. Three races will be held - a nov1ce two-mJle race for bc'&inning runners; an open three-male race ior the women's varsity at Newport Harbor and more C:XP.Cneoc:ed women runners: and an open thrcc-m1lc race for the Harbor Hi&h men's vars11y and expcnenced men runners. The first race bqms al 9 a.m. wtth the other two stanins at 9:30 and I 0. Interested runners may phone Jim Newkirk at 675-6736 for funber information Doable. tea.ab toarname.nt The Qranac County Bar Association will hold a doubles tennis tournament on Fnday, Aug. 24 at Los Caballeros Racq,uet and Spe>rts Club, 17272 Newbope. Fountain Valley Dtvmons include open, A. 8, and C-D One nu:mber of the team tnust be a member of the Oran&e County Bar Associauon. · Fee 1s $25 per team. Trophies and T,shtns will be awarded and rcfnshments wt.Ube available. .. for mo~ infonnat1on. phone K.attn Banoff ~ at the OC8A at 838-9200. e I e I .. Outdoor racquetball tourney The Hunlln.ton Btach Communll) S"crv1i:es Department ""'II hold 11s \ttond annual Thrcl:'- Wall Racguetball Classic to be held Sept. 22·23 u thr ~Edison Communuy. Cenw. 21377 Magnolia A\e., Huntington Stach. The outdoor tournament offe~ c:1gh1 d1v1Stons. including men's. women'\, m1~ed and senior doubles. men's women's, Junior and senior s1naJes Deadline for entry·~ 4 p.m . Sept o. Registration 1s available at 1he Hun11n11on Beach Civic Center. 2000 Main St. Each entrant will receive a I -shin, and trophies will be awarded 10 the fim through trurd-place finishers 1n each d1,1s1on. Entry fee as S 15 for ingles and $25 per double~ team. For more mforma1ion, phone 536'.5486. Ha.atbJlto.n Beach Dag football The Huntinston Beach Communrt) Services Department is accepting reaistratton for )'Outh flas footbe.11 leagues. . leagues for tint throuah' ct&hth pders 'arc scbtduled with pmes set fot Saturda)S·bcain- n1n1 Sept. 29. Games will be pla)(d at Murdy and Edison communitr centers. For more tnformat.ton. pbooe 96().ij9S or 960-8870. • • __ __, • If you thought Camel would never make a light smoke. here's unexpected news: Camel Lights. It's a light, mild smoke, and because it's a Camel, you know the flavor is great. See for yourself. Enjoy Today's Camel Lights. And be ready to have your mind changed. TODAY'S . CAMEL LIGHTS Its a whole new world. ... for cnurc n uons that h v tum bl d nd tnpped over mlnsl>' 1mple l uc -aJlow1 you~ rt lo pur&ue her pa ion "But net 1t as not our re pon • b1lity 10 apologize for anyone w can onl) urge you to trnnsund the pccubant1c) of th•~ I st yeur, and ao on to team, grow and benefit f rum all that sport h•s to offer -~ very clear and mca~urable approach to life. "The very best ofluck to you." "Sincerely, Kate Schmidt and Deb- bie Bnll, qtympians.'' l . Fan .claims Reggie Smith assaulted him TOKYO (AP) -Former maJor leaguer Reggie Smith of the Yomiuri Giants was ques11oned by police Thursday aftor a baseball fan lilt<! a complaint against tiim claiming tnat Smith assaulted him in a pre-game scuffle Wedncltday afternoon · Masab1ro Suzuki. 21. who filed the complaint, said the former San Fran- cisco Giant hit htm in the face causing injuries rcquinng one week of treat- ment, according to newspaper re- ports. · Smith. 39, insisted 1hat he hit back in self-defense after he was attacked from behind by unidentified baieball fans as he entered Yom1un's Korakucn Stadium in Tokyo for Wednesday night's game against the Hanshin Tigers. Pohce refused to disclo~ the content of the questioning bcca.1ise. &hey said. the case is still ui\der mve~t1gation. Smith. who blasted a three-run homer to lead the Gian1s to a 5-1 victory over Hanshin, reportedly told police that he was surrounded by several dozen heck~in Hanshin fans as he tried t<>1enter the tad1um. Yomiuri Officials said Smith hit Suzuki. a Ti&ers' fan.• to protect hi son Reggie. Jr., who accompanied the . P1a)er to the ballparil., Kyodo News . -Service ttported. Warning : The Surgeon General Has Oetermin d That C1gareue Smoking Is Dangerous 10 Your Heahh. .. Did Wyche intimidate Hunley? Coach sat Hunley could et hurt If late. say~player's mother TU ON (AP)-;J'he mother o Ricky Hunley. a former University of Anzona linebacker drafted this year by the · Cincinnati Bengali, says Bengals coach Sam Wyche called her and s~ted Hunley could &C~ hurt intentiooall) b} teammate 1f tte reported to training camp l•te, a Tucson newspaper reports .. The Arizona Daily •Star said m today's editions that Scarlctte Hunley said Wyche called her twice the same day at work in late June, about a month before Benpl rookie traini~ camp was to open, July IS. Hunley is the longest first-round ho1dou'l in the Benpls' 17-year history. He's been out 33 days. Scarlette Hupley said she recalled Wyche's exact words. "He said, 'Scarlette, there's one thing that bothers me with Ric~y not reporting to camp. If he comes m and works hard to get a spot after camp starts, the defensive player also workmg hard to get. that spot has . friends on the offensive side and he could get hurt.' " "Mr, way of interpreuna that." she said. • is that he 51id Ricky could be in an intentional accident." Wyche, reached at the . BenP.lS training camp Wednesday ru&J.tt. said he called Scarlette only to 10fonn Ricky when camp would start. "I call all our players," Wyche said. "Ricky was one of the players I called. His phone was disconnected in Ari- zona and I had to send him mail as to where to 'Fport." Wyche ailed Scarlett.e's Hunley'$ statement about a possible in.Jury, "R1d1culous . . . no one ma.Ices remarks like that. h's.insane." . ··As far as me ever saymg or implying that~ it's not true," Wyche said. ..Scarlene-bas reCalled state·. men ts n.ot quite true. There never was th.at implication made." Wyche said the conversa1ion was different from-the way Scarlette recalls. "She wanted to know what's going on," Wyche said. "l comforted her that he (Hunley) bad a good man (Howard Slusher of Beverly Hills) representing him. I told her if he held out it would hurt his chances." Zoeller ·wtthdraws fromPGA BIRMINGHAM,Ala.(AP)-U.S Open champion Fuzzy Zoefler, suf- fenng from a chronic back 'problem. withdrew from the 66th PGA Na- tional Chamfionship today~ Zoeller to d tournament officials back pain prohibited him from com- peting in the first round of the PGA. Zoeller, who beat AuBtrallan Greg Norman for the U.S. Open crown at Winged Foot two months ago. was unable to pract1cc Wednesday. He underwent medical treatment late Wednesday and again this morn- ing, but remained tn severe pain. He was scheduled to start first- round play with Seve Ballesteros of Spain, the British Open champion . and Masters tule-holder Ben Crenshaw. . PGA ofticials said an alternate ~ould be named. Club pro Larry Webb of Chandler. Ariz .• took the lead amona the earl) starters when he reached the tum on the 7,-145-yard Shoal Creek Club course m 2-34. Webb, takmg advantaJe of calm c-0nditions of early morning. birdied the sixth and eighth holes. The forecast called for temperatures in the 90s 10 the afternoon. with hiih humtdity and a chance of thundershowers. Wnh only a handful of the 1 SO.man field on the course, Jay Haas was 2 under par after six holes; Chip Beck was I-under after seven. Hal Sutton. the defendina cham- pion. parred the first four holes on the hilly. trcc-hned, 7, 145-yard cou~ designed by Jack N1clclaus. Teacher gives lesson to Dane .. MAJOtll LIAGUI ITA.HDtNGI AIMftcU LMtUe WHT DfVINCUC ·MlnnttOll .... Ctilcaeo IC1n111Clly 01kt1nc1 ,. W I. Pct. Cl 62 16 SU • '1 • SU l~ M '1 . .U7 •Ir) SI 61 417 •YI SI 6) .479 5'it .w 67 .~ ,.,.. katllt ""'' S2 " q) ll IAIT DtVtstOH Ottrolt 71 43 MS Toronto 61 51 m t 11111mort •2 s1 .m u IOtlOll ., 57 S21 15 Ntw York '2 17 .S21 15 Mllw1u11.. 52 " uo 2' CllffttllCI 51 70 421 27 w ...... .,.. SC... 0.lrOll I . .,_. > N1w YO'\ ), S..1111 2 Clf"tiand 1•·•. Toronto lo) l11<0f!CI Mrnt. 13 lnnln11) Oellllf!CI 6, lalllmorl I T1aat 6. C:lllCeeo 5 < 10 lnlllnlnl Mllwaulr.11 I , ~Ole' 4 KlllMI City lJ, lotfOll I ,. .. .,..~ A""" tltomanldl 10-10) •' OllrOlt .... (Morrla IHI TOl'onto !Sit l2•4J at OeYllanf (l'a<, 3-tl, <n) MIMMOI• ISmllhlOll 12·tl 11 Bolton IC1tmtn1 7·41. (n) 0.kllnd (SOf•Mtn •· 111 11 l11Hmor1 101 .. 11 12·5), lnl S..1111 <11re>111 7·•1 •' N-York INletlro 1•·61, (n) K1nu1 Clly (l.llbr1ndt •·S) II TIXH (Matot\ l·tl, <nl ,,....,.. Oamtl ~ •• lalllmort, tnl Toronto •• ClllcffO, (n) Mllw1ukM It Cltlllle"4, (n) Mlnnet011 at lotton, (nl S..lllt 11 Detroit, (n) O.klanel II N•w Yorll, (n) IC1n1H City at TnH, (11) Natlonal Leawe WHT OMSION W L ~ct GI San Dltoo 71 " .597 All1nl1 •2 51 .S 17 f 'h ~ '° 61 "' 12 HOUSIOl'I 60 62 4'2 l2°"J Clndnnall Sl 70 m 21 S.11 Fr1nclac:o •5 71 • 2•.., •AST DfVtSION Cl\btt 70 ~ .5'3 ,.._York '6 Sl 5'4 2111 PNlldelohla 62 SS • 530 6'h St. Loula St 60 4M 10\'J Montrtll SI .. 4'2 11 PllllNtfl 5 l " 42S lf w ...... .,..sc... N-York 3, Dedeer'I 2 MontrHt IL San Frtl'ICIKO 3 Atlanta 7, ""lttOuroh I Cincinnati 3, St. Louis t (11 IMll!ot) Houaton 6, OllcHO 2 5111 Ottoo 6, PNll<Mlotlla J T .. Y'• Gamel PnllldelPlll• (Otnny •·31 11 San Olffo tOravlCkv I·•> Putat>unJll (Tudor 7·1) 11 . All1nt1 (Mahler 1·7), (n) MontrMI (Lt• ll·ll 11 S.11 Frelldsco (Llctv 0-1), In) '"*V'• Gemes Pllllldtlpl\11 •I Decletn. (n) Houlton 11 Ptll\burth, (n) ClllQllO 11 CtnclMetl, (II) At11nt1 II St. Loul1, (n) Montr .. 1 11 Sin Oleeo, tnl New Yon 11 Sin Frencltco, (nl AM81UCAN LEAGUE T'9en I, AnM1 l CAU.10tlNtA O'"°"OfT "911fi d Wilt°"9 21) Lvnn r1 OtCnaJO R1Jll111 db ltfllqut 11 sconirs 10 Grldl 1111 Narronc Sdloflldll MC9rnllll Plcclollu T ..... Mrlllll 4 0 2 1 Wllll1kr 2t> 4 0 I 0 Tr•ml dll 4 1 l 1 G1roev 10 • 1 1 I lertmn 10 • 0...1...0 NPar'11c • 0 0 0 Hlfndon If J 0 1 0 RJ_,tt 1 0 0 0 Lemond ) 0 1 0 ICGIOsotl rf 1 1 O O lrOOkns 11 1 0 0 0 HJhMnlb 00008111eru J:J JI J T ..... 1c--....-.. llHllDI 52 1 l S 0 I 0 3 0 ) 0 2 0 2) • 0 0 0 n 1 o • 1 0 0 0 4 l l 0 n 2 o f'O 3 2 ) l 0 1 0 0 0 0 :M I 14 ' ~ •I 100 Oii-J Ottortlt t10 •1 lb-• Game Wlnnlne RBI -HJohnson (7) E-Wllfollt, SConlen. OP-<1ntornll 1, O.trolt-a.-4.oe-<1Hfornll 4, o.troll I. 29-Ptllll, wnrono. Wlllt1ker. ICGll>son 31-P-'111, ler9m1n 2. Hllt-0.Clnc.s 1151, Lvnn (IS) Sl-SConltrt (I), HJOMson (I). s-aroo111111. "' H ••• .. so Cellf9rnll Johll L,7-10 6 10 • ) 1 K1ufmln ,., 2 I I l Curll a I l 3 ' l U.ndltl 2·3 1 0 0 0 Ottortlt Pllrv W, 15•5 I • 3 l l Hernend1 l 0 0 0 0 T-2M A-13.f.tO. MA.JOit LIAGUI LIADIRS ~LM9Ue ) l 0 0 s 0 . BATTINO (215 II Diii): Wlnfletd, N- York, .JU; AMlllntllV, ......, York, .a..o, Hrtlek, Minnesota, .l2S; E1lltr, Boston, llS; lalnn, ClllcaOO, .312; 1C1m11, ~ York, Jl2J ltloken, laltltnort , ..312 RUNS. OWEv1n1, Bolton, 93; Armas, los!Ofl, 11; I Utllf, Cle~nd. 71; RHtndlnOn, 0.kland, 77, Wlnfllld, New York, n ltBI. IClntmln, 0.kland, H, AD1vls, SMlllt, '2; Ann.•, Botton, It; EMurrav, lllllmore, 161 lttc., Boston, 16. HITS. Glf'Cla, Toronto. 147; ltlP11111, l1ftlmof't , 16', MllHllOIV, N-York, 14S; E11ler, loaton, 142, Winfield, N-YOfk, Ul. DOUll.ES LAParrl1ll, Tuai, 32, Gar· cla, Toronto, 2', Cowen1, S..ttll, 21, OwE11•ns, lo1ton, 21; Mlttlnotv, Ntw York, 21; ltlPlltn. e1111mor1, 21. TltlPLES· Mo..Oy, Toronto, 13, Collins, Toronto, 11; U1>1111w, Toronto, t; 1CGlb1on, Oetroll, I; Owtn, Salttlt, I HOME ltUNS. Armaa, loaton, 33; Kl119· man, O.kland, 2'; LNParrl•ll, Ottroll, 27. MurPllv. Oektand, 25, Thornton, c11v111ncs, 2S STOL.EN IASES ltHtnd1non, Otllland, 41; ~a, Melfl, 42; Colllns, Toronto, 40; Butter, Cll•ll•nd 31, Garcl1, Toronto. 3' Na..,_LMtue IA no~o C2ts 11 1.1111) GllWVTWI, "" DINO, ..Ut RI¥, P\llQurotl, , Cnn, Houlton, llt, kndbtre, Cnkaoo1 .llf WHhlntton. Allenl1, 111 • ltUNS Se,..,,, Cllleffo, '3J Wltlo1fta Siii DllfO, IO, ~. Pll~. 11 Gwvnn, .. n OlffO, 17; Crut, Hou&lon, 7S. Rll OC.rtw, MOnlrul. M, Jl).lvl1, CMuto, 17, kllrnldl, Pnll~, 7l." H•rMndl1, Ntw Ywk, 70. UOll~. Sal\ Frantll('O, 70, Mvl'nt>Ntv, HOU&ron, 10, Mur!llly, Atte1111, 70, HITS GwYM, S.11 D•et01 1 ... Sen4Wt, Clllelto, 15'; Sl""'91, ~ •• 161. Cruz, Hol.Kton, 10; Wvm.. ftlltaburth, 160 00\Jlt..IS: HuOl>ard, AU111t1, U , Rain· "· MontrMI, 26, Sandbeft. Cl!lc.oo. U Out1\em, Clllc.loo, 25. ~ Sll.°"4t U; Slrnutl. Ptlllldtfot!la, 25 T•IPLl?S: Sl~t Chlc100, 16, Samuel. l'Mlld9lllhl1, 1', Cr11a, Houlton, 10; 00!'111, Houston, 10. CRWl\CMfi, Hout· ton, f, Gwynn, S.11 DltoO, '· McG .. , Stl.Ouls, • HOME ltUNS M;/tpfly, At111111, 27, GC.rter, Monrr..i, 23. Sctll'l\idt, Ptlllldll· Piiie, 23, MwsNI. ~.JO, 4 .,. tted With 11 STOLEN BASES Slmull, Pnlltclelllllie, 5'; Wl091M, SI~ DlltlO, $1, lt1 ,,._, M411·- lfeel, 46; llt.OUS, ClllCIMall, •I; N\Wlllon, N-Ycl!'k, U PITCHING 110 Cllcl1lon1) ~tdlffl, Clll-eno, l~I. 2.'3, PPtret, Atlaflll, 11·4, 3 7', Orotco, New YOfk, l·J, 2 OS; Certton, PhllldelOlll1, ll•S, 3 01,'Dartlnt, l'(Jw Yorll, 11·S, 3.7'. STlltllCEOUTS VlllN.INt9, ~. 111 , Gooden, Ntw YOl'k, 111. ltv1n, Hou~ton, 147; SOio, Cincinnati, 136; Carlton, Phllldtl· Phi•. 126. SAVES: Suiter, St. Louis, 31; Holland, Pnti.dtll>l\11, 2S; WtSmltll, Clllc100. 25, Orosco, Ntw YOl'k, 25; Goi""· S.n Diego, 22. NATIONAL L&AGUI Mm 3, ONearl 2 NIW YOAIC LOS A.NGILH MW11$nd CllPmn 20 l c:kmn 20 Hrnndz lb Fosttr I( Strw°'*1 8roolulb Slnllna as Fltz..nctc Glr'dnlr P FrndetP Hodeelc T ..... nrllllll "''"• 5 I 1 0 Sax 211 • 1 l 0 3010 Andftnu 2111 1 O O 0 Guerre< rl • 0 O O :J l 0 0 MarWll If • 0 l 0 3111 Mldndoct 4000 • 0 l l Yletlr c • 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 lroQ 10 4 0 2 0 3 0 0 0 RIVWI 3b ) 0 0 0 4000 Sdolclllll 1000 0 0 0 0 V11tn111 P 2 0 0 0 3000 BrwwerPh 1000 1010 How11P 0000 J4 J S 2 T.-a Ja 2 7 I Sc-.W.,._ tMwYtnl * 1• IM-J U.Anellel Ill ---2 Game WlMtne RBI -None E-MWibon, Rivera 2 Loa-New YOl'k 10 Loe A,..... 6 2&-etodl, Six. Hocie- Hll-Andtrlon m. Foster OIL sa-su (26), MWllton (3') $-Andenon. lit H R•R H SO. 7 2·3 s 2 1 l l 1 2 0 0 0 l 1-300001 • l • 3 2 I 0 0 ,.,.,,,, t.urnament (It T.,.....) S.C..R.IUM~ s ' l 0 Fr1ncl1CO Gon111t1 (PlflOUIV) dtf IV1n L.lndl (~ldlol.lov1kla), 7·•. •·•. V1n Wllllllky IU.S) dtf Johl11 Kriek (US ), 3·6, 7·S. •-O; Scott McCain (US ) def JOIClllm Hvstrorn 1Sw9den), ...... 1. Jimmv Con· nors (US.I clef Artlitv ICOhlblrg CU.S ), •·2 6-J; Ellol Tlllsc:Mr IU.S.) Gtf Liff SIW11 tU.S.l. 6·•, 6·2; P1t ~ (Auslrll·ll def. Jotln Sldrl (US.). •·•· .. I, 7-6, Kevin Curran (South Altlcal dlf. LArrv St• I <U SJ, 6-4, .. 2; H41nr1 Leconte (Fra~) dtf. Slotlodln ZJv01lnovlc (YutCK!evla), 7·6, 6·4; Jos. LoPtl·Metao ISPalnl Mf. Gtann Mlcnlbat1 CClnadl), 6·7, 6·2, 6·3, Jlrnlft'f Arl11 (U.S.) o.f. Gr" Holmes. 3·6, 7·6, 6·2, JOflll McEnroe <U.S I dtf Mark Edmonson CA1ntr11l1), 6·2, 6· I. Grand .-rt1 toumanwst (at 0-Cttv, Ohle) ~ R--Slftlltt l rla11 Ttachtr lU.S.l o.f. Mldllll Morttn..n CU.SI, 6·4, 3·6, 7·6, t..lbor Plmek (CUdlOllOnkl1 ) def Merell Fr"· min (U.S.), 6·3, 6·2 • l'1nt •IVlld Deulllel Stan Smlth-S.ndV Mlvtr (US I dtf Bred Gllbtrt•Clllp HOOC)tr (US ), 6·2, 3·6, ... ,; SCOll N10tl·ltn Ttlltrman (Us ) dtf Jim GurNln·lt1ndV Nixon (U.S ), 6·4, 6·4 ArM 9'ff Nlutb LAGUNA l•A.CH GOL' A.SSOCIATIOH A fl1ltflt .,._..., GraM; •s-<itoroe Fow~ 66-tl E. Reolooll I,,...,. '5-St1n lowtll; 6t-Vlc HartNtuoh, ~Arnold Carlson ( ........ U-01111 Morrow, •S-01v1 Slland, 6'-<Noble PtlUllps D l'Ultlt .,._John Mlllt, '7-0on Ren111r, 61-Theron Oemerr1, Wllt11m 8ucklty, Romen Caton I '""'' ~arrett F1111n, 71>-Elllot Lifton, 72-Georoe Waker, I rick Mckie NIW~T WOMSN'S ASSOCIATION l!Mt9tleMI T""""*" ( ... , ... "Scr'"*le'') 31'-'I -Vlrtlnl1 Ol1n111 (N-POl"I lllCh Club), Astrid H1tv0f1011 (Nt.wPC>rt ... en Club), P11 l vrorn (91rctl Hiiia CtuO>. Ptl•Nl1 Brown (ltlvervltW CluO). Pete Rose's statistics P(te Rose wdl become the playcr·nunager of the Caodnnali · Redf foday. Hen: are his )car4>y-yc.ar 1uit11t1cs. J 9S4 \Its thtouah Wednesday: Year AB R H HR RBI Pct J 963~inc1nnati 623 I 0 I 170 6 41 .273 I 964-Cincinnati SI 6 64 139 4 l4 .269 l 965.Cincinnati 6 70 I J 1 209 1 l 81 .312 1966-Cincinnati 6S4 97 205 16 70 .313 1967-Cincinnau SSS 86 176 12 · 76 .301 1968·Cincinnati 626 94 210 10 49 .335 1969.Cincinnau 627 120 218 16 82 .348 1970-Cincinnati 649 120 ·20s IS 52 .316 1971-Cincinnati 632 86 192 13 44 .304 1972-Cincinnati 64S 107 l98 · 6 S1 .301 1973-Cincinnati 680 11 S 230 S 64 .338 1974-Cincinnati 6S2 I 10 l8S 3 SI .284 1975..Cincinnati 662 112 2 10 7 74 .317 1976-Cincinnati 66S 130 21 S t 0 63 .323 1977..Cmcinn.ati 6SS 9S 204 9 64 .31 I 1978..Ciocinoati 65S 103 198 7 S2 .302 1979-Pbllidcfphia 628 90 208 4 S9 .331 1980-Ptuladelphia 65S 95 I SS I 64 .282 1981-Philadelphia 431 73 140 O 33 .32-S t 982-Philadelphia 634 80 172 3 S4 .271 1983-Phtladelphia 493 52 121 0 4S .24S 1984-Montreal 278 34 72 0 23 .259 Totals 13342 2081 4062 158 1232 .304 Pete Rote Career Records AU-time records: Career Hits -4062, 2nd all-time. Games Played -334S, 3rd all-tame. At Bats -13,342, I stall-time. Singles -3064, 2nd all-time. Doubles-717, 4th all-time. Total Bases-SS23, 7th all-time. Runs Scored-2081, Sth all-time. 200 Hit Seasons -10, 1st all-time. ConsccutiVjGamcs Played-74S, I 0th all-time. and 6 78, 13th all-ume. '· Consecutive Game Hinina Streak -44. 2nd all-time. Del Mar "W•ONllOAY'S •ISULTS (1fll ef 4J·dlY .............. inwfln9) fl•ST •AC•. 6 fUt'IOnCI\. Romantic ltoman CPncvl 14.20 UO 4.00 N1tlv1 UprlM (H1wtev) 7.IO 6.00 Bold 01me CMcC1rron) l.20 Also raced loo Hulton E1Q11lr1, Ote>I'• Cour10t. Lov.'s Venturi. Accrual. Time 1.11 l/S HCOND R.ACI. 6 fllf'IOl'lllt Run Slros (McClrronl 10.20 UO • '° Down R1noe (Nlet1) 10 20 I 00 lroedWIV WO/t6ef CFOJI) '20 Allo rac.ecs L1111111 Hiiie<. Lower lntll· lion, Mr C1c.a11Wt1. Go Go oetion.1r, Wllc!Qlen Driver, Soec:~ Doller Ron Ptr· renoslll Timt 1 12 3 s U DAILY OOUILE (S·Sl PllO S5'.0 TH•D RACE. l 1116 moiel Wtrd C CSil>o.1111 '00 • 00 3 00 l ite IM 8uc:t. (P111Qy) UO 3 00 FOi' Hlmself IHawN<fl .. 40 AllO rited TardV Cllolce. Prooer Selec· hon, Sti r Snow, lrl\11 S'G111I. Tlmt 1M'2 --• U •XACTA (6-7) Plld 11400 flOUllTH' RACI. 6 f\KlOngs Malllrltll (PedrOll) V .20 t IO' 7 .0 °'"'" FINI <McCarron> 4 20 3 40 WoolV Min (Llohlm) S 20 AllO reoec:t Aorll Thullcler, Cr11llv1 Pursuit, u111anlk,·Ttll N•n. oar11111 Oouoet· 11, Curvle 81v. Hurt AGiow, F1w11t1oue, Rlbor•tt• • ' Timi : 1'12 2/S. ~"TH RAC•. • lunorios Record Catcll (Sllmllr) 3'60 1S60 1 tO London Cron CPtdroz1I 27.tO 10.00 Au•tlllll c.w (Plllc1v) ) IO Also ~· lns.1rdlof, Et>onv 8ron11. More Action, Ron 1 N1tUf'1I. Overotv. Seo• SPlrtt. Time I.Of 115 U •XACTA (4·71 Plld Sl.695 ~ Slxnt RAC•. I 1116 mills A •ltflt ldll (McClrronJ 1.00 3 60 3 00 Ooodltll<k (Slblllel l 40 2 IO RobenJlv <Toro) 6 to Also rlCld· Stleket11, F11111ttn, Tim1111 $alnt Cldll111, Conwv1111m. Song For Mv F1tw Time 1''4 saVUfTH •ACI. °"' m~ on turf AcQUfslllon (Sltllllel 24.00 12 40 9 tO FltlulOuS Oed (Hawlrt) 6 20 • 20 P1trldi N\CFIO l~kerl 7 60 Abo racied Twlll'I Tornado. V1lllt, AQCMmlc, Thi Nub, Matdl Winne<, Yl!IOw Marmalade Time l.34 215. "' U IXACTA (1-21 Pl.CS 544000 U ~ Wt (S-6-S-4+ l) paid SI •s 00 wltll 10 w1nnl119 tlck1t1 Cflvt l'IOflftl Total carrvover POOi' 113',619.IS llGHTI4 RAC•. 4 ful'lonts LomH COllveresl HO 4 00 3 40 1nc11oenoo• (Me11l 1.-• '° I lg Eric (Lamal!Ct) '20 Also rececl Pretenaor. Somet1111111 GortaOU•. Water Into Wl111, Geronimo J Time. 1'10 215 NINTH RACI. 7.,, t11rlong• on turf MlllflO ISll>lllll I 20 UO 4 00 G11>11no (C11t1"'"I •to 3 40 ,8aldlle Fllel (N\cCerronl 3 40 AISO read Port 01rwl11, Rlcll Wiison Qvot1tlon Marks, 8old Cross Time 1.2' 2 S SS Ix.ACTA 17·6) Plid '81 SO Allelldlnce 17.713 Les AJatnlM W•ONISO.AY'S RISULTS Cf'lrlll ef '2·"""' ___... 11 meet!rie) 'lltST •Aca. 400 Vlrdl • FJQJI ~ (9root1) ~ 4.20 2.10 Pett-n ~911 cec1wer-.1 tt '° t.» A1urt Glt1no (H Gerc.11) 3.JO AIM rtclld Somlo-Tllvmus. 01nc1V ,,,._. lut. Or I~ O•vs P-rotlt, SI• N Sill. Nett.ral Mite.; Time 20. 47, S2 UtACTA (1·71 Pl•d '210.IO. SICONO •ACI. 350 Vlf'd• Snt1kv Troullle CCrtaOll') 3.40 3.00 2.20 0111 Talent (BelltllY) 1020 UO Awesome APOiio CH1rmon) uo "'so rlCtd LISH EHV Sloe, El Ber Rero, Mvrts Pot Of Gold, Awrldllc. Time 17.'3 TH .. O RAC•. 350 v1ro1 Truckle F11r (Crao«l lllO 6.0 UO There Got$ Amtler IH. Gire!.) 3'0 2 .0 Mlt Laurel (Hermon> 500 AllO r 1C9d DUI' 1 tron, Maggie Mot iOll, Jamm1n. L• SoPll•I ltvon, lionoe RICIUesl, FOllOW Tu. N\1994" Ml;m Timi llOO '°""™ R.ACli • ...0 V1rds Slav Chick CNlc~a) 3 00 2.JO 2.20 E11v Aualin CHlrtJ 1.0 160 Molld G1me CP1ullllel HO A•SO f lCld RHI Sw .. t N EHV, IC Ptv Jll, Arlt111 , Mlto I( ... l.¥'el LA "''''· LOOlllll For P-. COOi ltidtf Time': 21 S6 U aXACTt. •HI et44I 111• "'™ RAC&. 350 v..-o~ Gr1no '"'-(LIOAY) n 20 2SAO \040 Lldv earreo Go <Tr11wr1l 4.20 3 .0 Bun• (lroolt)' "20 Also rlQIO E11v l(lp, W1lct\me FIV 8y, OICll•va c~. NII Llrnetltl, Ma~llt. Ont ClllllCt To W111, Su1W hlll Sectet1rv Tlmt 1112 U a-XACT A IH I Hid sm Olt SIXTH •ACE. lSO Vlfdl. 81ndollnrv (Hart) s '° 3 .o 2 60 K .. va Coffet <Creeotr> 3 60 160 Sllvtarkln <TrMll'I) l 20 AllO rlCed; Sllolll ECIOI, Vind"' Polic:V Flllltll Nlllt, Moon Wl'\Hltr Ttme. 11.n . SIVINTH RACI . ...0 Vlfd$ • Sover1111n Elo11t (Zufelt) 10 20 • 60 2 IO Pwfec:t lt.-Jt (ltulz) 3IO 2 40 Tiit Ftlllvll CLICklVI 2 40 Alto r1ete1 FIV•lllJ P1uem. Pr .. Of HH~. LudlY L••f, Tu TUii Jolln, Recon· llOller. Timi. 21 tt U IX.ACTA CS·•> Pllcl "200 llGHTH ltAC•. 400 YlfO• Tl11y Tvkt (Hart) 10 t0 •to l .O Lotll EIM (Cr9'"") 3..20 2 IO Kid ChrOml lH G1rcl1 I 2 to Atso rK9d ,...,,., Sllorl. Vldo, Pass fl To Nvt. FOllV1 8111d Timi 20 07 U IXACT A <•·•I Pl•d '51 lO S2 ~K SIX 17-7-7+~'1 Hid Sl.ltOlO wotll .O wlMl"ll tocktt• (ftYI f'IOnes) l2 Poctc Sl• conaoiauon paid s7S 00 wun 650 wlnn1n9 ridl1I• Cfour tlonlsl. NINTH ltACI. UO Y1rdl Min N\lel\lv Marv ITrv ) 4 to lAO 2 40 LOOM! Powder IP enton) 7.0 J IO Oont Hold lack (9tnt...,1 UO 1,1so reced C1rvx. Ctnttna Y Ravo, Blllv 81ue J11n1. Supr1m1 Scl!Ollr, LI N1tura1 Time 22 0. TINTtt RACI. '40 vardl KllP Me Polled CMVllil 3000 lUO uo Kie" Jn~C1roo11) 2UO 15 40 Jelltn Ma IE Garclll UO Also r ceo l old SIO(tner. H•oNal'ld Lv11a, Fire Ma Flrit, Foa"' Proav Arc En Clll.. Tht Wn To Go. Soect1cu11r Pau Time 120I S2 IXACTA 17·•1 Pl•d S2'1 .0 A lltf!CllllCI 11,(m ---- QjO) OL~GAMllS MIEDAL WIHNIU """"-MaN ......,....1 ... GOl.C>-f'tlll-IOl1M, Franc. SIL VER-8-V"90, SwtOtn BR~Z.I! P!lllltH Rlltowd, Frl."a ..._ .. fl. --GOL~~ ... Sii. 'VElt-fM Ult, WGI Ger• m.nv att0t'l1E~l9!Wll Cw,...., al't -... ........ SMr'e GOU>-Jten-.Fr1nco1t Ymout, Frel'a SILVElt-MarCD .Marin lfa!V UONZE-Peter Wel!WOlk, ,_,.. Votll Ttatft,_ GQLD-llllV SIL VER-Wllll Gtrmtny 8RONZE-ftr.11ee TeemSQn GOLC>-OllV SILVER-France IRONZE-'tOINl!la T-1 ... GOl..C>-We&t G4rmlnv SIL VElt-Frt"C:e UONZE-ll1tv WOMa• ~,.. GOLD-Luen J~. Chinl SIL VEll-<Of"l'llll Hl!lltch, Wft! Ger· l'l\ll!Y lltONZE-Oorina VICQl'Olll, 1t1ly T_, .. GOl..C>-W•t Germanv SlL ve lt-«omeftla BltONIE-Franc. Klnll~ Tllun, Ott 11-E.dmonton, Sat , Oct 1)-VlflCOUV9r, Sun, Oct l~SI. l.oub, TUii Oct, 1..-.1 W1$ht,..ton, Thu", OC1 11-11 MonlT•l, Sit., Od 20-et New York 11111\deo; Suft . Oct 21-t Clllcaoo. Fri., Oct ~t Edmonton, Set, Oct. 27-t WlnnlPee, Mon , Od ,,._., WlMIPee, 1Ned., Oct l'-1 V1ncouvw Set "'°" )-Toronto. Mon , HoY s-<111t1110. Fri , Nov f-euff9IO, Sun, NOY 11-1 N-Yorll Rl !!tlln T~ NOY l>-e• OUIO«. wees.. NOY 1 ........ 1 Toronto. Set . Nov 17-PltttOurllfl. Motl., Now 19-<etpnr, Wf/4., Nov 21-~ JerMlv, Sit , Now 2.......WlnNPll, Tuet.. Nov 21-Wtnn>ote ~-, NoY ,._V•n· couvet W1*1rldly#1 •auc:ltetaa BASSllALL ~ ....... 1U'N$AS CITY ltOYA~~ .lw:SY OMI, "'9rtU., llO I._......, CO!ltract Sw Idled l'f'IM Wiii. Clftd'llr, ft'lfft lfll 1S-csav 101t1e 21-dlY t and_. him to OrneN of ... AmlrlCM AIMdalllft tor tellal\ ........i&.- PH•LADELPHIA PKILUEs-fl'!Mllf C"9r1ea HudMll, lllkNr. lft ... l,.Y diaatllld , rt!\"OeC:t!'fe to ~ t 14. BAIKST8AU. ....... ....... A .... rflla CLEVEL.ANO CAV~LIER$-S1tM4 lton AnOlntn, torwn_ to I mYlll-.,.., aintnK:t. lte!tetiM RllCIV NIM:*Jlfl, IOrwttd INDIANA PACER$-Cul K.-ww Nan, lorwlf'4. LOS ANGELES LAKEllS-$ltMf £at'I Jollts, <*I•, to I OM-YMr Cllfllf8C1 A~ rtlel G«lt'9I SINlllofl, forwtr4, hi._ llened to Olly wltfl VI....., Ill SHI/\ flOO'nA.LL ....... , ........... Ct.EVELAND BltOWNS-W-11ttd Doll Jones, wide recelvtr, •net lllD H cor· ~ ICANS.U CITY CHIEFS-W11"9d Lowis HI~ llllbacJI«, and Erllle Gool&bY, ~Mell ABC gets a pat on the back ------tt? BEENEY &42-IH50 MARG U ER 1 T E 1 ___ AD_E_N __ _ ~LAWN­ ltt'T.OUVR Mortuary • c.m.tary c,.,.,,., OfY the netspan of volleyballcr Flo Hyman. The tears of wrestler Jeff Blatnick te.25 GISI« Ave C:O.ta MeM 540-555-4 Camera workOf 0 ympics receives some special praise •And Daley Thompson in his T -stun that on its front thanked American for a wonderful Games and on its back asked: ··But what about the TV covcraie?" ELLEN BEENEY. MORTIM!:R EARL. passed Auaust 13, ADEN. bom July 13. 1984 in Ccs\a Meea 191$ m Sidne-y, N~. She is survived by p~ away Au,ust her dauab1er Jcuce 14. 1984 in Lona L. Schaeftr and a Be.c.h, Ca. Durinc -------granddauahter Deb-BJ DAVE GOLDBERG ... .,~.,..., Jf pictures are wonh a thousand word~, ABC did a aJOriou job in brinaina us the xxm Olympics. Becautc three d1ys after the fact, it is the pictures that made 180 hours of vicwina memorable. Some were planned, most we~ spontaneous, ~d all reflected the skill and pt"Qfc~sionabsm of the m)'!lad cameramen and directors who handlco the Games for d:ic network. \ Daley Thompson's point was the same one m_adc by Juan Antonio Samaranch-the Amcncan Olympics was concentralina too much on Amencans. But for Amencan aud1enets, who saw Americans winning a preponderance of the medals, ABC was doina just fin!r the network's researchers c timate that 180 million people tuned an at IS da)'S that concluded 11aftitt....tilll'll •• bie, both of I.rviM. Put pruident (1977-78) ~public.an Women• Club of Cc.1a M-. and • member c.o.i. M- Sr. O~ Cub. Fu- neral IK'\ica San&r· day A\llUll J 8. 1984 at l :PM at Pit:r'te 8tciL Bell 8roldW&1 Chapel. ~ Draa. B•ll Broadway onuvy. Di ._..-tied AdvertJ 842·5874 If••• ... , .. .•..•... ,, c a a Q$ ACTTTllOW ....... "8lJC M)11C( AC1'1T10U9 .,_.. '1Cnnout ....... NAM! eTA1'111SJin' Pl8JC M)TIC( PICTITIOUa .,._.. Mm eTATDllWT Mm ITA'nmWT The~ pertana .. P'ICTlnoutl Wn ~ 0nno9 CcMt MAm •TATDS>n 1 _ __;"8.JC~.;;.;.;;..,;.M)-...;..TIC(-.--._ n. ~ ~ •• Thi followtng '*'°" • dOinO ~ • P1Cm1JOUa aueMUa ~ nA.nmNT .................... A•"'19t re. n 30 The '°'°"""O ps'ION.,. -n, .... ---· ~ ~ dolna ~ • ~OOULAA Offtef DE-MAm ITAftmwf The toiOll4l'IQ ~ II ....,,. ... ...,. ~· ' ' bueinW •· ~ ovvw -ncTmoua.. ..... L£\O£O vtS~S cos. MOlBE..RAV IUSH PAO-$IONS, t215 Swee.c Lw. The toloWtng pef'IOn .. dofno bullrlW. Sec>Mmw .. ,.... f{ A YOUR !YU OHLY, MAm ITATW U.ITA1'DmM'f TOM 8T.AINED OLAH OUCTI~ .. Fw Of~ ~e..:n.Cdl HMO dotngbul6Mel• . L.EOEHTt.APA Ea. 1901 11n lrW'le A11t , Cott• The~ !*'°" .. 2900 TM~ P9f'IOf'I II WOAKa 515'A P-..n11. eo.ta ~ .. , Callf t2'2e Jutly 8'-own, 1215 ~ &rAA MARINE. 854 W Newpott 8'lld Ste 231, ~T.-== ~S ~~TU. 170t ~·Coll•Wea& calf ~P ,uaus:£"5 l€1'o cc;=:~~ ~er~D/?.· .~'t:, ~~e.cn.c.lf. b: =~1c. c:o.t• ...... eor8~;:'~~ __ Ml.JC_. __ M>_Ta: ___ AcpWlk:Aft ,C:O.te~ tt.,.,. A""" c.M. Huni· &Mtman.OcJuGlu lro-VICC.S,M1tW A.It«• •1. tat~"~Poln99tua Cot-det CoataMw.Cellf 128241 EdWatd DeOectler. 18471 AoOett Young, 8201 In-J 9MI llftlll(. 8ani. AM.. ncml0091U8Mn A 12828 ~·ir~1 .. cer• et l neurenc e .SanlaM&.c.ttlt2704 ..... Calft2t21 Thie tH.lttMet le con-ColYille, f:ountan Veltey,dlenepolla. Hunllnoton caift2704 ~•TATl SwanLMec ,2.245 not Wfllt* Av.,,~. lnc.J HevllCla eotp 2t00 Mr, Gt~ P...an-TnorMI C llW!on ducttd by It! lndt'1ldulll C WO& IMctl, Celt 112$441 Tilla bUain41N .. con-The to1ow1ng ps'90f'I 11 Aet>ublc Ave., c:Ma ~ ti.v.ton Beedl. C.llt, lrtltol Scr_., "'* iic-2<M Uno, 2e1t W Aurrxa • '· Thia «atement *• llltCI Debra L)M F11 Thie bul ,,... 11 con-Thi• bvtlnea1 la ~n· ducted by: 1111 lndMdull dOinQ ~ u : 92121 • .,,. :C... ..._. Cellf mie s.nta An• CMit t27CM •l!h Ille Col.lntt Clwll Of Or· Thie ft8'ement wu hied ducted by • generel ducted by. an lndMdual francea M. MM*I EVERETT F WOLPOW Thie llini ta coo-Tl'lia but~.. la COft-af109 ~ on .My 2t, Wllh the County CWll of 0r: P8t1Mllhi9 Rober1 Young TNe Ital.,,.,.. •M flied EN'TEIU'RISU, 1901 ,....._ dUCtlO by ltUICMlnd & wtlia oucted by; 1 corporauon dl.leltd Cl'/ en indMdl* 1118"' ange County on .My 2t, Jl.ldy Brown n. ttat..,..,t w• tlltd .wlth the County Olettc ol Or· "°" 61Yd . Coat• ,,.._, • r M entrlMn. '1.-. ~etY Ore10hen P....-n-. 1'111411 1118"' Thl9 11aternen1 •U ltltd W!lh the County Cltt1l of Or-tn09 County on ~ t . Cailf 92827 T t tW :sent 11no Published 0renoe Co•t '21"41 w1ttitt1eCountyClet1tofOr· eno-County on August II. 11184 Ev9r.tt F. wo11pow. 2.204 ththeCountyClel1cotOr-11Wftt1"':.~C:ot0r- Thit ttitemet1t ._ llled nu ttatement wu tiled Daily Piiot Auguet 2, 9, 1e Publ•thtd Oranoe eo..1 ange County on AIJQIJ•t 7. 1118-4 f'2Ula 1<aMct1CouruB.uH1bfa. CodntyonA"O 1.11114 .,. County on .Ntt 2t. #!111 , .... ~ o.·Oll Of· •Ith lhe County Clertl of Or· 23. 11184 Dally Pllol Augu11 2, t 111, t984 ft2S2ID Publlltled Orenge Cout Cl!lt ll0&33 P'ZSM11 lllM 119 County on .Mitt 11, = County on Juty Ill. ' TH-114 23 ,......_ f2S22'71 Publllhed Orange ~ Deily Pilot Augu.t 18 23, 30, Th.It bualn... It con-PubbNd °':r. Coat ntWM 1t8"' ntem7 ---------Publlthed Orange Cou1 D111y Piiot Augu11 16~. 30. September e. 11184 ducted by an llldMdulol DaDy Piiot Augutt • 18. 23. Publlhtd Or1ng9 eo..i ......, .. _ •c MftTICE ally Piiot Augutt fe. 23. 30, September 8. 11184 TH-228 Evemt F Wotpow 30. 1984 ....... ....... DatJy Piiot August 2 • 16 'ubtlllhtld Orenge eo..1 Publlthtd Orel'Qe Coell r..-.i nu ..... 1C 89'>temw 5, 11184 TH-232 .... IC NOmCE Thia statement wu filed , ,,..~., 23 11164 • • ' DallY PllOI Jiuty 2t. Augult 2, ~·~, P,':~July 2t Augult 2. IM.n r~ TH·201 ... -. 'II #Ith the County Clet1I or Or-• TH-1111 '· 1•· 11114 · ' · TH 182 '1CT1T10U9 .U.,..11 RCTmOUI IUl•H Pdll.IC NOTICE ,tCTITIOUI 8Ul*Ell : County on August 2· MUC NOTICE TH·1&11 • NAM1 eTATIMUfT NAMI eTAT!MINT ftCTmOUl IUIM.18 M*a 8TATlMIMT f~ --------• ·-1c MnflCE d Tl'le !..~ .. peraon• •• Tl'le ro11ow1ng peraon ia Pl&.IC NOTICE NA.Ml nAn.wr ™ ie>11ow1ng pweon• .,.. Publlatled Orange eo..t N011Cll!'.~ Ml.JC N>TICE "8JC NOTICE r~ "" OinO ..,.,.,,...., doing butlneea.. The followi.ng S*ton8 alt dOinO bua6neea U: n..11u Plot A st t . 18 23 ...... ,......, Al~ CHECK & AS· SOMERS LANDSCAPE 'ICTTTlOUl ltUIMll OOlng butlntaa u RAPID INDl)S'TRIAL SER---1 1 U01JI • • • NOTICE IS HEREBY 1 NOTICI 0. fllC11T10U8 ltUaMll rlCTIT10U8 9UIMll SOCIA.TES, 711 W 171h ~ne', "~If ,.2w70311t, Senti ..... ~f...._!!,AT!WHT Bl'H dlttrlbutofl Inc , VICE.3500 MO«e St, Sente 30, IO~ TH-221 GIVEN thet • a.nwei Mu-. TRUIT'U'e SAL.I NAm ITATUllNT NA• ITAT .... NT 8trMt. Unit E-11, Coate ,.. .,., • • ,,. .....,_u.,, PeflOnl ate :M01 w MacArthur 8lYd An&. C&llr 112104 nlelpet Election wtll be held 0 ...... ...,.. ... _-..._11 TM fOlowlnQ penon II The foloW!ng peraotll ant ....... CA 112127 John L Somen. S30ll w dOlng ~ •: Calif 92704 ' cwence Banll•. 18223 In IN City of HYntlng1on L _..c'OMo'Vii ... ~ ~ N doing buair-. u Robert John Entrikin, tat, Santa Ane. Cellf 112103 ANCHOR CONSTAUC· Bun Huot Tao, 23447 San Jecinto. Fountain Vel-fltlll.IC NOTICE a.ch on tueecsay. the 8th MJ. M0.1111/C &alAU THR!AOI, 10302 AUNT JENHY'S CHICKEH 4922 Mangrove St., Covlnl. This butl,,._t It con-TION COMPANY, 33M5 IB ctimlnllO BUlllo, t.aouna ley. Cell! 112708 day of No-..mber, 111&4, for YOU AM IN DEFAULT Lurline Dr , Huntington "100ND ~~ SUIC_!..• CA 111124 duc:ted by an lndMdual Diena. DaM Point, Cdt Hiiia. Caltt. 112653 Clarence Benke 'tCTI'TIOUI .uaMll 1hef.!.,~~(of'llCM3) • ......:...__of UN0£R A OEEO OF TRUST, IMdl, ca.it t264t • ,......._........ ......... -· Ronald Fredrick ·Knerr. Jonn LM Somer• 11211211 Tl'lla bulln• .... con-Thia statement WU filed NAMI ITATlmJff ... ,..,_ ..._........ 1112 Sandra J Krebe. 10302 t2t00Yol ..,._ J 1..., 1_,.,. 14804 Flotlle Rd • La Thia statement WU flied Anl C Sheriff. 33845 18 ducted by a oorpotatlon wtlh the County C1ert1 of Or· The loltowlng persons.,. oftheF~~y·~) ·(full 1.-m ~~~JAyN~'VJE 1 AC- wrllne Or • Huntington e • ...., oy -· _.., MlrlMJI, CA 80638 Witl'l tl'le County Clerk of Or· Olene, D-PCMt, CaJJf Bun Huet Teo tn09 County on AuglJll 2. dOlng bul!MM u · ......, -· OUA ltedl Calll t2t4f Dc>Ye. Sult• 100. ~ Ttlomu Wolff 420 Pico anoe County on Augutt 2. 92821 Thia '1a1erMnl WM flied 111&4 HECTOR'S PAINT a for • City Clertl • (FUI TK>N TO PROTECT y ~Thte' bualneu ,, . con-BaootlTl'll 'Cball!·. 112880. •• co' n Boulevwd .• aania Monica. 1118"' . Rotlwt S'-'"· 338e5 18 llrlth the County Clertl of Or· ,_ BOOY SHOP. 1630 Pomona ,.,..,,F~of. CltyFOUITYr=~--(Ful ~~~ ~~8~~~ ..... _. ·-Ind ....... ·-• 1 u .. ne1 • CA to40t1 ,-.-. ~ Dane Point c.if Coun A t Pu......... °':'r. ,.___. .. ..,. ID ,.._,. u--,.._,.. ... -· EXP' ... -.,. -· ,,,....... d . .-......... t • . • enge ty on UQUl1 .,._..,.. ...._, .. • ""'9 .. ..,_, ...,.." t-m of F-w Y-J IF YOU NEED AN ,,_ lertdr• J Krebl -Yol·~-:.~· L COf'POflllc a •on LOUii J Leemhula. 311 Publllhtd Orange Cout 928211 tllM •Delly Piiot August • 18, 23, ~2821 -...._ tolowlng ...... -·----NATION OF THE MATURI ~ ••••-t wu ..._.. .. ..,.. .,..,, Promont-Of. w . .._._..... ........., Piiot "''""'"1 0 111 23 Thit t>uelneaa Is con-30 1"•• H 1 oo ez 2008 .,,. ,, __ .,_ ... -·-· ,,_ T""• t t ,.._.. _, .......,..,_,,, ':t:"1 .....,.... •• · ' ' ,_ • ...., ec or m • ...... _.. .._ _______. ....,. ..._ OF THE PAOCEEDIMQ ............. ,.,.__..,,. ......... Or-.... 1\8 emen ....... Baoch. CA ll2eec> -'U, 1984 . ducted by 111'1 lndMduel Publ·~ Or~ TH-215 ... __ ..._._A-,. __ .. __ .,_ .,. .,.._ .... -OU ..,,,..,,.......,..,,..._,..., tht"--r-.-.."~01"'-TH-217 ,....._.,.._... _ _, ...,., _ _,,. ••. ,._... .. _ -ont.._b_._._,....__ AGAINST YOU, y enge Count)' on Juty 1J .,.., ,,. _.,, ..,_,. ..,.. Th•• t>utln••• 11 con-....,._, ..,_... Pt • 23 -Celll 112!27 ..--,,. ....,. .._.... 111-' • anoe County on July tt. ducttd by • general pert-Thie ttatemenl WU flied Dally lot Augult v, • ..... Hector Gomez Shall exlttlng City Ct\8l'tef ~~LO CONTACT A LAW· "2lllM01 11184 tleflh•p rta.IC NOTICE ;;. thec!:"tyty~~ ~: Sec>tember 41• 1* TH·230 P\B.IC NOTICE Thia 1tetament wu tlled Stctton 300 be emended to INT-EAST A TE TRU6T. Publiahed Orange Cout P bllthed < f= Loulll J ~11 FICTTTIOUI llUl*HI 111~ ..... , •• .,. MnTil'C• FICTITIOU9 SU91NEU #lttl N ~ ~ of Or· r9mOW ttte rnltsUOn ti. 8ERYIC!' • C.U. C)ellyt 1 p~~28, ~121 "'•~Plot "•"'2'~--2 ..... .!.hl!!~~ .}'Or~ NAMI ITA,......, -..... r-...,. ""'-.. NAMI! ITAl'f'MBfT ll'I09 Cou~ Of\ Auguat 2. ring I person from letWlg tomla eotpor*IJon. 'ia ~ t . 1~ ,..... _, ._, .._. wtui .... .,.,.,..,,, -..-.. .,. ----111M . · more tl'lan two conaec:utlw =•td Tnm• UnclW the · · Th-HI II 1e 11184 anoe County on July 24, · Tl'le lollO'#lng peraont are D!~blpllhed11o1 .... ~~at 2• 11eo..t. 1... ~~~..... do'fhelng buf~~uperaona. 8lt maoa terms u 1 City _Coundl t IVI ~•bed OMd Of TH-164 1984 dOlng buelneea u -_,, ..._-v -.. -IT ....... ~ ~ Coat bet? VE& Of NO. Trust ~ W9Ulfll to the MUC NOTICE --Nll--IC_f«J_TIC£___ Publlahed Orenge nsc:: e:,,.tu! TIO~ H ~:R~:~:. 23' 11184 TH· 1113 . ~.":::::::: s.:r.v~~E::;~· ~::. Diiiy PMt Augutl ~. 16• 23• Shaff •ldltl"\. ~ power of -contained In ---------Dlllly Piiot Auguat 2, t . 18, t585 W Commonwealtl'I Ho A·l10llOI 112713 30, 11184 Sectloo 310 300 and 403' Mid OMd of Truet WIU. ~Tmoul.UllNUI K-U0t5 23 ti&4 •1'3,Fullet1onCellf 112833 In the Superior Court of PhyllltSctlmlOt,225Apt2 TH-2111 and Sectlont 'SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION NAm eTAftMINT NOTICE OF ' Th-1llO Joyce A Pogue, 911 N Ml.IC NOTICE the State of Celllomla. for Pomona, Long Beech. Calif ~~~'~:!:to TO THE HIGHEST BIOOE" The lollowtng J*tOn9 et• DE "TB OF Adlen1 Or . Fullerton, CAllf NOTICE OF tl'le County of Orange 80803 Pdll.IC NOTICE pwml1 the appolntmeni of FOR CASH (peylble at the doing bualneea .. ~ 112632 In tl'le Matter of the Ettll• Nine Schmidt, 225 Apt 2 the City Clettl by the City time Of .... in 18wful mon9)' AHULT8 UNLIMITED. FERN UPCHURCH Pl&JC NJTIC( Joyce A Pog1.1t1 DEATH OF 01 Lou 1 E Jo 8 E pH Pomona, Long Beech, Cellf. ACTn'IOUI 9UltNlll AdmlnlstratOf, aub~ 10 of the ~ted Stal•°' by 1 8&01 Seuhor• L.ene. N9W· AND OF PETITION Thi• ttatement wu llled JOYCE GEE SMITH D'"'"GNA. r>aeuad 80803 MAMIE ITATl•NT •.vvov·• 01 t .. _ ,....., -...... CUhler • c:hedl drawn on 1 port s..cn. Cellf 112eeo TO ADMINISTER '1CTITIOUI •UllMHI wtth tl'la County Clerk of Or-Not~ls ;;;:.;; given that Thia bu1ln"t 11 con-The tollowfng peraona are ;;t[h d':tles' .. 1-;:;'ci' ~ atat• or natlonel bentl, • Robin Helene Llpaet, 385 NAME ITATIMINT enge County on July 111. AND OF PETITION the underatgned wlll NII at ucttd by· en lndllllduel doing buelneea •· preecnbed by ordinance? atat• or 19dtrel cr.dlt un6on. HMther Pl , Legun1 leacn. E S T A T E N 0 . Ttie lollowlng l*800 It 11184 TO ADMINISTER Private Nie, to the hlgheet Phr.la Schmidt D!LTAIMINER, A JOINT VES or NO ~!~!a ::.0'-::t~ ea: Calif 112851 A-1U3f8 doing bullneea u "50llO ESTATE NO. __ ,.beat bid<*. tub ....... to Th. ltatemenl WU ftled VENTURE aaeo 8olu Av Sl'lall x1a1:,;1ty Cl\ertef ..... ..,.., ....... "'Obin H Llp .. t T I I h MINNEY BROTHER'S Publl•'"..,. Oranna c~•at .,..,, ,..... tl'l t ..... Count C.._... f O ' • • died In the state of Cd-" 0 a e 1rs ................. Al2 .. 367 confirmation of Niki Su-,,. Y ._ .. or-tNwe W•tmlmiter Calif s.ctloo 311 ,__..._. Tl'llt tte1emen1 •U llled • SCUBA SCRUBBERS, 211 Dally Pilot July 28 Auguat 2. " per1of Court on Of •fler the County on August 2. 112883 ' lll'ld SectlQna 300 ~ fomla) 1111 l'lgtlt tttll Md with the County Clefk of Or· bt•nt>flc1ar1e1. cred1-~ Beec:h. Cellf 112tle0 11. 16. 1984 T o a 11 h e 1 r s. 20111 day 01 A~ 11184, 11 1 4 Delta Savi~& Loen ,.._ which provide'"' an elec:1ed lntereet con~ to and anoe County on July 111. tort, conunaent c:redt-Joaepl'I Edwin Minney, ,TH-t85 benef1"'an-. creditors , ...... _ ...... of DA 10 SILVER· F1520SI ........ t..... tom1 C ...._ _ ___.._.. now held by It under Mid 11184 ... h 211 NoftJ'I Stat Lene. '"-· .... "" ,,. .,.,_ ....... ""'" • • Of· City Treeaurw, .,. .,, _ _, Deed of TruaHn the propetty ,1IOlll tors, and pel"IOnt w o pott BMctl. c.itt 112eeo a nd conungenl c:redt-TON LAW CORPORATION. Publllhed Ora~ Cout prxetlon, eaeo Bolaa A11-to permit the appo111tment of hettnafter ~-. · · Publ'-'*I Orenge eo..1 may be o therwise Tl'llt butlneu 11 con-PlmlC NOTICE tors of JOYC E GEE :2 L wu:'~lr• Blv~iat:'!r ~='August · te. 23' enue. W•tmlNter Cellf the ~ l'reuurw by fhe TRUSTOR: MICHAEL A.. D.tly Puot J•'"" 28 A•""••t 2 , mterested Ill the will dUC1ed by an lndMduel S MITH ka JOYC E • °' · TH-213 112883 City mmlltretrx. aub}eet CONOvrn """D PATRICIA 1• _, -,,-Joeapl'I Ed.in Minney 2MN a Callfornl• 0010. (213) WIUlam e Krall 34411 I0119P'OY9iOrtheCltyCoun-s CONOVeA ... HUSBAND' •. 1 llll4 or esl.ate of. FERN UP-Thi• 1111_..1 waa tiled ..tnci °' G SM 1 TH aka 311 -7511, an ngl'lt. 11111 end 8111111C MnTICE PaHo Flamenco. Sin cit. 11r1th dutlea Md J)OWW9 WIFE • TH-178 C HURCH wHh tl'le County Clwtl Of Or· l'UIUC I.AU J 0 y C E ELLEN Inter•• ol Mid decMMd et r..-.i "" Clemente, Calif 112772 prMCtlbtd by Ofdlnance? BENEFICIARY· ALBU· --m-... -1-C-""""_'""_c __ , A peUllo n has been ano- 11 CounlY on July 28. Of' N,_l<>MAl. SMITH and persons Ille llmt of dMth end ell ihe NOTICE OF Tl'lll butlnetl It con-YES Of HO OUEROUE FEDERAL 8AV· ruut... ""1 ~ Cilcd by BOYD B UP 1llM "'°""TY who may be othe~·""'"' ~~.~'· .. ~end'· lnln~~-101 ~! 1'.f'U•Tlft IALI ductPauled !>YHJOint ¥9f'lp ~'1__ Shel exlltlno Crty Cherter INGS AND LOAN~ ---------I . '211..,_ 1001t1 I ' ---...., ..,_, .,.., -YOU AU .at ot.JiAULT " owe. r-·t Section 310• wlltc:tl now aet9 TION FICTmOUl.U..._n CHURCH m the Su-Publlahed Orange Coelt Notice1anerebygi¥9f'll.ha\ interested ln lhe will the C9rteln reial property UNDEtAOUDWTRUIT Thla«atemeM.,.. tiled outthepower11ncldu11taol Recorded Januery 11 NAlll8 ITATllllDIT pcrio r Court of Oranae Dally Piiot Augut1 2 I . 1e. ""'tuen\ to eectlon 1ta1 of and/or estate· eltu•1• In the City of "*" DATID 11"9M•lll I with the County Clet1I of Or· the City Clet11, be ameodied 11112 u tn1tr no 82-01741t Tl'le IOllow\"" ptrlonl .,. c 23 ....... ,,.... . Parll County of ()fange, ::.! Inge County on July 111. 10 lnctude edd•tlonel "*"" dOlng butl-•• ounty r~quuttng .1_.. TH 111• tl'leCMICode.StateofCd-A petition has been State of Calllornla, penlc:u-1111 UNl.111 YOU TAKs 111a.. mum quelltlcatlonl '"' lhe ol01Tld11Recordalnttlto'· SHERM CO, 2504 w. that BOYD 8 UP-• "'torn11 Ille un<teu+gned wlll filed by WALTER lar1y Clelcnbtd u lollowt ACTION TO '"OTICT nlOlll pot1tlonofCltyOe111 lnctucl-tic. of the recorder of Or· MecAr11'1ur BlvO Unll E.CHURCH b e ap-~11~.~~ng .. ~~~c:::.'h JOHNK.IPPmtheSu.to-11r1t • :u"ICk.~·~ AeedlWriehl lngtl'lrMyewaol*11111=~1Y=•:.:;:; Santi An1 Calif ted I DllDtlC MnTIC( ,....... Cou ( 0 LOT 107 ol TRACT NO. OU.... ... .. •x IOO GlianMffe woo e11,....lence? YES Of • Lucinda Oulll•no, 241732 pom a1 persoadna r~ ""' day of Augutt. 11184, 11 1 00 penor rt o range 1211 In tl'le City ol &«ta IALa. If' Y .. '"'ro .... '"' • Lquna hech C•llf NO ....... de1crlbH tl'I• followlno vta Liner•. MllNllon Vleto. represen.Late thuve ~te ,· fteTITIOU98U81HHI ~~:1d0~:~~1= County requeswng,,.,it, County of Oreno-. :\Af,.t~1/M 0~' /::.auf ' · Sl'lalle1119tlnoCityGhlt'let pr~RHotl3 ofT'9Ct Calif rruna r e es... o NAMlllTAftlRNT been ttored end wtllch ere that WALTER JOHN State ol CalllOfnla, u per ,ftOCllDINQ AQAINIT Publllhed Oreno-Cout Sec:tlon311,whidlnowMtt 7082 lntheCltyofNnpor1 Bernerd 8t1ermen. 2504 lhe d~t'nt The peti-Tl'le lollowtng peraon ts loc•ted at Public StOf.,.., KIPP be appotnted as mep recorded tn 8ook 21, YOU YOU IHOULO CON-Dally Piiot July 241, Augott 2, out the powers encl dutlea of e..cti County of 0r-w MacArthur 61\-d Unit E ti h _, dol~ bullneae u -..-Pana 44 of Mltolllaneoua =i... II, 18, 11184 the C~t Tre1turer, be • -.,,...• · on requsta aut onty Inc 2085 Placentia Avenue personal representa-.. 7,:. In 1 ... ott•-of 1 ... TACT A LAWYlft. TH-tet ·--d 10 1_ .... ·d• t .. -_.. Stile or Clflfomt1, u pet Senti Ane. C1llf C NTACT LENS SER· In tl'le City of Coate M... ,,.....,... ,,. ...,. ,,. COMPREHENSIVE REO ... ~. '"'"' , .. _.. dtd I 8ook 26f Thi• butlnHt It con-to adrnin.ltter the es-VICE COMPANY, 3333 County of Orenga. State oi t1ve to administer the County Recorder of Nld G dltlonal minimum quellfl· map recor n • ducted by • oenrMI pen· ta~ under the lnde-Brl1to1 St, Costa M .... California, the abandoned estate of JOYCE GEE County ~~!i \~~ uui: :t:; Mt.IC NOTICE c:et1on1 '°' the poel11on of ~=I~~~~~ nefshlp pendent Admin11-C.llf 112&28 good•. cl'lattlM °'personal SMITH aka JOYCE EXPECTING THERE-followtng dM<:ttbtd deed of City Treuurer, lncludlng 1 Oftloa of the County ~ Ll>Clllde Oulllano ,, f "'_.-"-Bernard Simon. t1711 ,.....-., deecttbed below In ' FROM ll'le Northerly 15.00 ltult WILL SELL AT PUBLIC NOTICI Of' combination of educetlon d f Id C t Tl'lll 1tatement wa1 llled trawono ~ .. tes~t Tanagef' °' Coat• Men.,. . .,......., 1 G . SMITH , aka1 .. tofMld10taagrentedto MAftlHAL .. IAU and expwtence In en arM corer 0 H ouny Wltl'I tl'le County Clerk ot Or A hear1nj on the C1111 11241211 ' ll'le manera o . J 0 Y C E E L L E N the Orenge County Aoocl AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST raleted to nacat manage-PARCEL 2 An epputtenanf 11199 County on July tll. petJUon will be held on Thia bu1lneH 11 con-~1."'ri1ed~:.'7' ..;.,c!.;'; SMITH (under the ln-Control 011trlc1 by deed r• ::D!t~I,.:~ ~SI~~~ Pl•lnt::f· ~~RDALE ment? YES or NO :::::=~OU: 1118,,. ,_ Sept 5, 1984 at 9.30 d~~ :;'~tvtdual Ible. 3 chair. ciock CM, mat· dependent Adman is-~1:r~~·451~~ money of the Unlttd Stat•) A.SSOCtATJiNs ~PHO.I~-~ ~1~C::~ ': ~ .. r:; out Lot 12 of Treat No. 70i2, PublllMd Or"'"""" co.at A M ln Dept No 3 at Tl'llt 11atemen1 wu filed treu. Ura. toot cl'lst, 11 bu. trallon of Estates Act) Record• . • all right. llUe end lnt.,..t d • n t . and II 00 Pm . In ll'le City of Newpon -..,... 7 C ,.._ On mite con~ to end now held CAMPBELL, SUE ANN · · e.c:t1 County of ~ Delly Piiot Jvly 28. Auouat 2.. 00 IVIC ~nter ve wltl'I the County Cllftl ol Or· Dianne Slone . 4 Chelr 3 The petition IS set for • mo<• commonly llnown by II under Niki Deed ol CAMPBELL /a/ALICIA M WENTWORTH Stele 'ot Celltomla. • pei II, t6. 11184 Wnt, San1.a Ana. CA anoe County on Augutt 2. cneat, tble. maur .... plctre, heanng in Dept. No 3 u 1421 FranlcHn Street, Trutt In the property herein-8Y virtue of• writ IMUtid City Cler1c ofthe City ~ recordied In 9oo11 211, fH· 163 92702 1118"' --1 4 bxa 700 c· . Ce Or &«la Park, Calllornla aflw deec:rlbtd· on b'9 11 11184 by the Su-of Huntington e.c:tl. CA p 23 to 25 tnc:IUtlW ---------· IF YOU on n:v--1" to Pub"• ....... or:r--~' Landlord reMf\'H th• wt IVlC nter • fl)( lur1her Information TRUSTOR· COSTA MESA per1or Court County of Or-Oeted August 1, 1984 M~ M. In t"9 Dint IC """'TICE °""""--~ ---........ ""l'I bid ' the .... West, Santa Ana, CA contact ROSEMARY PROPERTIES LTD Inge Stete of Califomla Publlahed Or•f199 Cout Oftlcl of thl eow\ry ,. --'"-\.UL.I--""'--· ---~ iJ'UlUJlg of the Ody Piiot August • 18, 23, P~r~ mU:1 be mllde 92701 on September 5. TERESA YORK. Co•11• BENEFICIARY WIUIAM .Jf>Of\• 1 Judomanl entered Dally Piiot AUQUll II, l8, corder of Mid County. rtCTmOUI llU,_11 pf>UUon . you should 30· tllM with cean only and~ fOf 1984 at 9·30 AM ecutrlx. (Siii) 422-llOll J KENNEDY TRUSTEE 1-20-84 In favor of CUL· lll~ The ltteel addreea MCI NAflll ITAft NT either ap~ar at the TH-220 at the time 01 purctl ... All IF YOU OBJECT tor 1Term• of':::"~~:; FOA MARY V KENNEDY IA: VERDALE COMMUNITY Th-211 other common dea6gnatlon Tl'le lotlowt""' per90n1 ere ..... cl'lued""""aer .. otd u u money REVOCABLE INTERVIVOS ~SSOCIATION U luclg!Mnt of the reia1 pr~ hereln-dotng t>uel,.,.;a u hean.ng and SI.ate you P\8.IC NOTICE r.-·and mu:1t;; removed at the granting of the Stet• on conftrmetloo of TRUST :redltor encl egaln1t lbove de~l.bed 11 GAEAT EXPECTATIONS, Jbje'ctlons or hle wnt-tl'le ume of pureh ... Sale petiuon. you should~:~~:;:.~ Recordedll/11111 In book JOSEPH H CAMPBELL. aunt IC ..,..TIC( purporttd to be: 324 Ot•o. 4501 Birch St Sult• 110 t~n ob~uons with the ~OUNTYCouttT IM.lb)eet to prior cencelletlon either appear at the cued by M"'1o-Of Truat 142141 page 1833 ot OfflcleJ sue ANN CAMPBELL u r~ ""' Newport e.c:t1. CA 1124183 ""--8Mch Calif 92880 i...-f h h ....,...'"',...,.. In tl'le event of Mttlement ' -.... Record• In the offlce of the IUdgment debtOB, lhowlng The .. ~necl Trull• '"'W;;'.h & SturglN Inc . Call· oourt IA" Ol't' t e ear-71IO Ctvk Cefttet betwMn lendlord encl obll-hearmg and state y ou Deed on the property '° Recorder of Orange County; • net btlance of $1201.10 FtCTTTlOUl .UIMn dl~d'ii:blllty for foml1 eorp. 4501 Blrcl'I St. 1ng Your appearance Of. W"t gated party Dated tl'llt 11th & obiecttons o r file wnt-=~or: ~!c,°' ~t Nld clMd of trvl1 deacrlbee actuaily due on Mid !Udo· n!~ITngA:=1.,. lncorrectneea of the at= Sult• t 10. N9wpot1 8Hctt. may be in penon o r by lent• Ane. CA. '2701 t8th d1y of Augutt. 11184 ten ob,ecuons with the p operty 1 be ao1c1 la the tollOWlng property ment on the d•t• of the te.-doing butlntlt u : llddrMI end other oommon Cellf 112tle0 your attorney Petitioner MARGARET A Public St0f8Q9, Inc Lend· t i...-f th h r a•.. o.._ ..... ~ wrl Lot 35 8lodC "F" of Tract tuence of Mid wrll, I have ERB NC dealgnetlon This bu11ne11 11 con· IF YOU ARE A BARNETT lrxd cour IA" ore e ear-....,aoro .... ato.,.. n t· e12 .. ~m19Rec:ordedln levleduponlllrloht.tltltand THE BERNAU U H, Thebeneflcwyunderuld d ......... by • ,~rvvatlon ~-1 e VERNON Publlthad Orange COHI mg Your appearance Ing Ind wtll be rec.tvecl at 8ook 20 P-1 and 2 of lnter•t of Mk) JudOmtnl 2827 Cllob St .• Newport ....__ .. ofT I~ .... .,,.,..., .....,.,.._. CREDITOR '--r'"-· the 1ror ... ld ottlce a1 any • --In 8Meh Cellf 112880 ,,,_. ru1 • reuonV1• Rtch1rd A S1urglll. Sec or a cont-BARNETT Delly Piiot Aug1111t II, 1e. may be m person or by time alter tl'le 11,..1 publl-Mltolllaneou1 Mepe In the debtOfl In the property Kethleen Bernauer, Inc bructl °' deteu In the obll- retary ingent creditor of the c ... No. 0-2231411 11114 your attorney I I oftloa of the County Re-the County ot Oranoe, Stat• e 1 c s oat1on1 MCUr~ lheteb~ Tl'll• etatement waa filed IN't'ased you must file IUMMONI l'AMll Y LAW) Tl'l· 185 c:et on '*90 • corder ol Nld Orange Coun-of Callfomla. deectlbtd u Callfomla, 2 2 1tob t .. hef'etofrxe uec:uted and ct..'. witl'l tlM County C1«11 Of Or • MOTICll "lou heft been IF YOU ARE A 0.19d thlt 20th day ol ty Calllorn11 lollowa NttWl>O'I a.ch, Cellf. 926e0 !Mired to tl'le underllgned a ange County ,,., July 1A your claim with the auect. TM OOUf1 ""'' d9ctde C REDITOR or a cont-Ju~ 11184· • .. (II a atr•t eddreu Of LOT 12, OF TRACT NO Thi• butln•H 11 con-wrttten Declaration of o.- 1t8"' ourt or present 1t to aplftat rou wlthcM.lt '"' Ml.IC NOTICE sngent creditor of the g~Rl~OR~irJ~TON LAW common dHl9natlon It 111152. AS RECOR0£D IN d":.~!:n =t~MI-teult encl Detnend tor Sele, '2IOl'7 th __ , -n ~ hMfd u,._ ,ou ,._ d --~...1 t f I E shown lbOYe no w1tranty 11 BOOK 283, PAGES 311 TO · and written notice of br..crit p .., ,,,,.,i04 COHI "' pc•rsorwu repb. "'""'° • aoond wltMn • .,.. "-ed ITATIMINT °' ece~. you mus I e 8y LOYAL A WEAV R given .. to Ii completan41U 42 INCLUSIVE OF MIS· dent d ol eltctlon t ht ~ PtvA ;.;y >~ AuO<•~t 1 u1t1ve appotnU'd y the tfw ln'°"9Mtttoft below. WITHDRAWAL your claim w11h the AttoFMY at L•• or correcineu) • • Tiie CELLANEOUS MAPS. IN Thia ttatement wu llled ~ndera!Ontd to 0 =:--~ 6 it 1 tA "r1urt w 1th1n four llyOU.tahtoNe6Cthead· '"OM'AfllTNlftlHll' rourt or present 1t to~2 Wllthlra Blvd , Suite benetlciaryundefMldOeed THE OFFICE OF THE OR· Mtht~ty~~of~· propertytoMftsfyMldobl- TH 1111 mr,n thll from the date vice of an IUOfM)' In ll'lla ONftATINOUNOlft the pt-rsonal represen LOIA= CA llOOlO ol Truat. by reuon of. ANOE COUNTY RE-~ ty ly • ga11ons; and ther .. tter ltle ' ' f I matter. yOU should do 10 ,ICTtTIOUI • brMCtl Of defeult In 11'\e ot>U-COR0£R, CALIFOANIA underalgned ce.uMd Uld ---------"J 1r1t WU&n('(' 0 et-promptly eo 11'111 yeur wr11· 9UIMH NAiii tall Ve appointed by the ROSE ARY TERESA YORK g1tlon1 MCUfed thereby COMMONLY KNOWN AS '291014 notloeol bf.al\ encl '...,. "*1C MJTlC( 11•ra u p m vtded in Set--ten reaponae. 11 any may t>e The IOllOWlng person hu court within four Co-Gecutnx ol the •t•t• neretol0fee11ecuted and ct..'. 38412 CLAREMONT. IRVINE. Publllhed Orange Coat llon 10 be Aaoorded ~ 1, ___ ..... _...__11 U11n 700 ''' tht" Probate ltled on time 11r1th<lrewn u a oer-111 part-months from the dat.e 01 Mid dee.dent l11*td to the unct.ralgnecl • CA Dally Pilot July 28• Auou11 2• 1984 u lnltr no 84-11"3i r.,;,• ... "":": .. :-":. , .. _..,. of C1tllfornla AVllOIUSted he aldO ct.-'* lrom the pw1nershlp op-( r . ( I Publltned Orang• CoHt written OedltatlOn of 0.-PrO•p•cllv• bidder• a. 141, 1118-4 of omc... ~da • , .. , .. .. , '-"-'V mandede El tnt>uma, ... er111ng under the t1c:111~1 o 1n;t ui.suance o et-Delly Piiot Augutt 9. 10. 1t, leutt encl Demand 1,,, Sale. thOUkl tef• 10 Section• TH· llO Said aele wilt be made """JWlnO ;.-...,,., • ThP l•mt' for f1Ung decldtf oontra Ud. a&n _. Oueineea name of DESIGN ters as provided m Sec· 11184 and written notloa of bfMCtl 701 510 to 701 MO In· v.lthout cownent "' :.:;f. ~:f: &1::"~ ~ • • J l•1ma will not ~xp1~ dtenc&a • -qw Ud. CARPENTRY 11 t053 w taon 700 of the Probate Thf·212 encl Of etectlOn to ceuM ,,,. clultve, ol the Code ol Clvll ranly.~orlmplled,,. ... • 71 r N ~101 to four months tMpOftdedentrode10._. := Coat• M ... CA Code of California und«alQMCI to Nit Mid Proceclur• frx prOVlalona P\llLIC NOTICE g81'dlnQ lltlt. pcunelon, or :tr-·,.._.._;!HIM ~ ''''"' th•• datr of the ~ue~ lntorMadeft Que Tl'le hctltlout butlneH The Lune for hlmg Mt.IC NOTICE :.~ ~ .. :=--~~~ ~~t~-;~h.= FtCTITtOUl .U._n :::"~en::::':Y:::: !W$ hf" rtn no llo! •b1ve 1t ,. wte11 .. ...-IM namUtetarnt!'llOf the Piil· clam\S will not expire a-JMU uncleraigMd cevled uld encl the llabll•ty ol defaultlng NAMI ITATKllUIT note(•) or other obllgetlon . .. _., 1 ,.,,,_,, 170 Y(J MAY EXAM· adwtoe of en •t9*'MJ 1n lNI neren•p wat ltled on Feb 25• pnor to four month MOTICI Of' notloa ol breech and of etec>-bidden The tolloWlng pertona ere eecured by Mid Deed or !--... ~ ?~_.; ~_,.,. r f. t~ f1I k~pt by ~J'9" .. ~-_!*. enrulH) ~IL'.,~0~:~'1 Or· from the date of the.> "'8UC IAU tlOn to be AeGorded W /8.4 lftheaubjectoftl'lttM)ela ~no~ M Trvtt. wtth lnl.,.tt end -.. .,~,, ,._.,.,....,. ,,_. ,_ .... ,. ... Of' NftlONAL u lnatr. No. 84-094811. of !Ml property end It has no WEST COAST CON· °'her auma .. Pf'Ovlded '>'-,. ,,,,,.. t~ u_#"l1rl ft yw &rt! a ._.,.1.,1,_,"anJ,fMJM ult Name end Addr ... of hc•anng noUC(' above. "'ON.tn'Y Mid Oftk:jel Aacof"da atr•Uddreieototnercom~ VERJIONS, 9211 w Baker therein PfUt edvtn0ea 11 "'~ ~ • ~-V'""' 1nt11r ... tl:d In MM tt1 llfM. the PMaon Wlthd•••11: YOU MAY EXAM 11011l I Satd .. lewlllbemaM,t>Ut mon detlgnatlon. csnctlOna A..,.. Coate Meae. c.111. t/IY. und., the 1enna1'*.1 ~,,,,,. !'#-" ,..,_ e.•..at~ ''f'N may ., U.Md ..._ ...,._ Aobtrla rn-T. tr~::"i.~.30CA tNE the f1Je kept by Hot10elahef'eb)'gl\'9nth11 wltllOut CO\'en.Mt or ..,. to ltt loeatlon "'~ be~ a2t28 end 1n1 ... 1 on Mlf\ aO-,,..,_A# -.. ..,..._,..,.. .._.. ~, purauent to MC11on 1HI ot ranty expreuor~,,. talntcl lrom the Mtttt1t11 St...,. e. OTOOie, t12 "~ v•noet and plut ffft "''*""'' ".Mlfll fl'"' " 'fl'"' lhf-X· • .... __ .., .-... 112707 the court If you ar •the CMI Code, Stet• ot Call· oa1dinc 11111. poue111on. or Offloa upon requeet. PAOP· Del Vlei. 11, Corona. Cellf. ctuiroetendelCPetlMI otihi c,..,_,..~ ~ '"' '"'"1.ilnr r,r ad minis-.....,.. 11uMdlat1J1Mnte, ll;nec:t Rob«t T. Outnell mtcN'ttftd in the ~-rornta. the uncltrtlgnecl Wiii ancumbrancee. to pay the ERTY SUBJECT TO A!· lt1720 Trv11 .. end of the irutt• tr.v..r '" "J'"I , ... ,.. •l· d• •• ,. ... .... ,.ii tll O•~bplfr"'o1 ... ~ ... a;o:. ~. 16'. I.I.I«' you may S('rve NII ., public .... by OOITI· ,..,,ffl prlnclpal Mn of DEMPTION • REFEA TO ., ..... Otoole eteeltd by MIO Deed Of ,_ --e. ...tta, fMtJ , .--,, ' h petlllYt bidding Of\ tile 2•th the"°' 1) MOUNc:t by uld CCP 7211010 Thia 1t1tement wu Ned Truat fhe Htll'l\eleid P~ ~mlQlt r.,.._ VAr"? ""ti.,. X"'~llJf' ,....._....... ,..... 23. 1184 upon l I' ~>Cc.'<.'Utor or day of ~ugoat. 1118"', •t o.ct ot f\191, With lnl.... NOTICE 18 HEAll'I' #Ith the County Ctefk of Or· amount of Mid obltoal'- l ,...,, '"~t ;.t ' ,,,., ' rlf' :lltlmi '*"~. atvJ ~ 1~ "" Tl'l·?OO admmlatrator, or upon 10·00 O'Gtodl AM, on the a In Mt<! not• provided • .o-GIVEN th•I on St9ternber .,. County Of\ JUiy 111, lndu<llnQ but not llmlteo lo ' 1• ,., r U th ch.ti oourl 1-roTHi'liiPOND1.NT1 th• attorney ror the~ ... Where aaJcl prgp-~ 11 eny. under 1he 20. 1184, at 21>0 ,o'CIOdl 1914 the unoald ~ of tt1e "" '1tli ,.,,,,,,of ~. • TN peddeMf "-NM • rtaJC NOTICE t'>CK'Utor or admutll-arty h•• be9r'I ltOfed end tenne ot aaJd o.ct of Tna1, i-M. at MAMHAL I o,. ,... obllgedon, advenc., ,_., --------1 A ,,..._ .......,... ,.., d f 1_ with wtiloft ere located et Public ...._ Cf111roee Md~ FICE. 4801 Jatnbol'M BNd Publlahtd Orange CoM1 ~rqtund....-ottl'le "8.JC MJTU w.. i rm mu"',...,.,....,,,...,....... ITATDllWT°' trator, an lu: ltrxae-. Inc: 112 ... 1Jtffrwyof1he Trwt .. end of the Atn 101, City Of Newport DeltyPllot~2t;Augut12. Truatee atltletltNOflNtlal ll )'(N I ta.I ,....... ...... • .. .. WITMCMAWAL th c•ourt with proof of Roed In the Cit)' of !MM, 1Ntt• ~ed by tald Deed Betcfl. County Of Orenge, •• , •• 1118-4 P\lbllcat'ton of WI NotlOa Ill ACTITIOUI a.,... oaUcc " fill11 "' ... ... ..... .... ... ... ,,.. PMTMIA... rvk'e • wrltwn re-County of 0r.,., Stal• Of of Trult. Seid ...... be Sl•tt of C.itfomle. I..... TH•111 -.~ 13. MAim ITA 1111 t--and •-i. _,_ 4lft ':il:'... °"AATINO UMDCA UC8t ~t.aun• that you Calltorflil, ,,.. abendoned t"6cl on Augutt 11, 1tM at elpubl!O~_!!_t .... ,~ 8.ics _,. W11 be l'leld Oft Tl'letoflOwtne.,.-.one•e ···~ .. -~, ,. ,..,..,,._,. -... PICnnout q . ._ gOOdt,dlattlMorl*'IONll 11.00A..M.atltleOfflOaaot•b'dcler,tor_.1n....,... Stptembttl,ttM 1000 dCMObullneM• ~' CJf IN .... ....,......... IUIM ..... d • lal noU of "'°""y ... lbedbeiow;ln COM,ftlH!NllVf RIO mon9)'0fU.UnltledStltee, rtaJC NOTICl am. It IN~ Awit INltAACTIVEi IA.I.II WU or of u... ti·.......................... . th Uhn of an lnven· thelMttnOf MANAOEMlHT. Utll .. tftertgnt,tl~~-= ------·· enttll'IQelottleCMo~ AND MARKETINO. 1701 UON or littWnta rntn· ........... ..,,... fr. Silltton llU wry nd •PP"' mcnt TIMlo Coll • Fr10g. bed, Alcaldll, WI• 150, ~ °' MkS judgmerit ~ • ,,.._ ... _ --IMOQ . aoo E. Ctlepnwi A¥e .. llrd\ ~GMICll\ Ceiif u--...1 • 1200 ......... ,., ...... ,,, wt IWl'l••ftr*llpett. -l ptctre,t(bnl,4b••·d\elr tellfotnl9~ ltle ~-.ow,,,. MAmeTA1'DmlfT Of-CAWllllWtl'"---.-' .:~~~ on,.. ... .._ .. 1111~1."'ett1t~""" crs.p.nniertftlOoo of ta l.loro A'rel'dtc0 •450b AttlleUmeoftftetnftlll-'Y.oraornudlUl!lnOI• T,,.f°'°""'OpetMtt•~br~-T";;M ~Cl I McV~ 2Mtl auu -.o ot the""-'" ~ • .,..........,.., •tl#ll It nctlttoua lh lltlON or ~ Landlord rtiMn" the pwbllcaUan Of thll notice. ~be~ 10 MtlllY :tOtnQ ~ • Deed ~ 1ng -... SMnden.. ~· Ntg;.iet, fomla Probe~ Code. ,.,,., .... ...U, .., t11t1,.u1 name cit counl.I menuon tn, -M to bid 11 lhe ..,. Ille '°'al emount Of u. un-Mid uecutlon. AP'=X• .u .. 1no VIO 0 RIN· &dOr ... and telephone c.Jlf t2UT Attorney for ~ti · .... ....., ...... ....,. IU•LD "' OONITl\IJC· ton 1200 nd 1"00 ~ PUt lftUtt ti. INde ,... ~ .... ot*-WATUllNl.MUM llD A. fA~I. 420 Clhal'-" OlfCle numoar .. IOI ... ~ 0.., A '3IO 1 tt M i., Ille ..wt. l1w TIOH GO It 1IOI H '" With (;Uh Ol'tl'f end ptlO rot ptlon Mand by lhe etKMt Ht R>A EACH l&OO Of lrac-d:. Anaheim. Cdf t2t0t A~, 8U1 231 ta eepe eow ~ NtgUet. lt()rier ~ttf ...... • 11 , 1.m1 Mt, CA 1 ut th C11llCornla 11IM11me of pu«NM All a.rt~ Oted at tNM and ttonUlttflOf tor tranmr tac· Jolln 0•1• ao. 3110 cettf 0 , nl •' 11101 c.tit t2fn Warru E. ClHdH· tf""""'Y•~·• fr.e flCUlloue tin 1 ~b.lt OOd ~f00dt1rootd• ..tlml!tld CIOlllt 94*-. ~end !uatlon oooe Avti . Newport ltectl. p14-.1.aao1, .. ~,,,; INtinMI 11 CO!'· lll1 •t oovrt a111Hrl•H namt '"*'11 C*' • E.A 8 weroo Is, end mutt IMI rtitno¥9d •• end~ 11164. ao • 1 '" I _., T"*M Oy. • par1· lt5 Towe Cealer "' u1 • Ill .., .,.. ,.. ntriNt WM on • t .. , • t • 8 .... ttw tltne of purtMM .... To mt~ opening JAMEi c. 8VHAM Thie bull Oe1• ~ to 1184 ,.,._ .a In et Of -1 ro ••HU lllbfK110 pHor canctlltllOn btd you may Cd (Jl4\ MerltlM. 0ranoe County Dy: etl INT( LSl'"ATft T o.ty R Drl~t CW..,.... FIL 0 '1 t4 lr l " the f*ll Of Mitti.ment 770441& Olted l-1~ ~ Meo OE£O lf1MCE Thie t ... llled 11 tlll Floer, Cot!f LU ... MA.Net\ c... H and -tlunt101to B atlt betWMn lOrd end ()()Ito °"'* 711/M Pliintlfr• Atton"'Y Tllll atement ... fti9d • c.atomla CICltpOr• Cour!tJOettlofOf· MHI lr.&11.owM.°""'1 the er.on Wll "'"""' tA •.. ,ed tr tdll'llelllll Q.OMPFIEHEN!UVI •'IO ITANUYP11..DIOn u.c.cxmr,~flfOt· ...... """* ~ on .My 11, C titH A.D.& T•I') L W 4 1 ~ 71 ,. IU I&!• lttl'I 1 Of~. ~ MAHAOlM!HT !!!~~w.:;a 1n09 COUnty on M1 H 8y:.....,. A ,, ia. ....., ... -• tMMCA 11• c ,., • • "'* • . ~ ..... .f -_ aw ~ ,... rubltshed O r•n1e .CA.-~ Pobl11attd Or.nit IOfd ByC BtuOe....._,. 9Mdlo A Milt EDM~ co.at Coast D•1ly Pilot P Ot C.O t "'-C t Coat& Dally Pllo& P1.1 P\11! hM °' • C t Pub Of•no-co;o1 Ofll'IOll Pw~ Orange 2. Aui:ru .. t 16, 17, 23 ~.~ '· t 11 OeltY il01 • l • A l 1• ti .. Daty Dtlly Hot 4, t . 11 Deltr . I 23, I. I ,, Dtlf)'Pllot ' e~ ... _ tllfl'll'M a, J U Ill , , n 1.U ,114 1 e.t 1t Jll 17 ThF200 Tiil> 1 WTh!OO a.Tl\. 130 "' Cl .. THE DAit Y PILOT ll·~IED OFFI " ~ 110 HS Telephone "er~ ire: 1onday-Friday 8:00 A.M.·5:30 P.. 1. · Bu~ine&& Counter: Mondav-Fridav 8:00 A: 1 .. -s::~o P.M. DEADLINE Pl"HUC \TIO~ DE \Ol.l~E \londu~ Saa. 11 ::m a.m Tut·~chn \J,,,,. I "'(I .. :., I'·"'· \\ t•rl1w:-.da ~ Tut••... l::rn 1•.m Thur cl:\\ \\ t••I . • ''f' ' •.. ,' p.ru . Fricfa, ·1·1 • ·)() 111r:-.. ,;., p .m. Saturdin :-\unda~ ERRORS: Fr1·,1,.,, '1 ·()(1 p ,). I , fll. Fri :~:00 p.m. Cht>c·k your ad cfatl~ anfl rq,ort error immt•diatel~ Tht• J) \II.\ PILOT aaburnei, liat,ilih for tht· firi,t inrorrt"<·t inst>rtion onh·. CLASSI FIED 642-5678 Bn111 ftr lalt ...... 111 lalt Gtaeral Ctaeral _J.lll llLE 11,210,000 Incredible expansive 10 room home on tip of Lido! Located on 3 full lots! Exposed beam ceilings, library, rec- reation room w /fireplace, & ex- pansive glass opem to lush gardens & pond. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR i 1 •••• it '), ... ' "-4 H f'l.. • .. I 01 let Us Help Y 01 Sell Yo.ar Property! Tht Daly Pilot offers you Uis exact size ad on cu "Pidtre Pate" weekends for Just '25 per day, or 2 days for '45. Submit a picture, or wte'I photoiraph It for you at a mininal chlrce. CLASSIFIED ••• READ FOR P1fOFI GE 1c.Q-Q1no ------ ' ' ' 'H: Macnab -Irv me Pllll.91 ... 3 8d 21A ba, dbl gar. oom- mvnlty pool 1127,500. 11111LITI011ll with OOod 3 BR. Ht ba home. 1199,500. • .,...., ... lltr 141-llH IRWPUll Upgraded B~ Bay atN horn. on a d.ep 130 foot lot. Perfect for empty .,...,., or YoUno P'<>- fua1ona1a. Su~r for entertalnlt19 Of quiet llv- lng. Full pr1ee •1euoo. 7~1-3191 USE THE DAILY PILOT •••AST llSULT•• SQ.VICE -~·~-DtlfeJOIY ---~~~~:r.:-::~~,_,,.-,,...,,.-,rr-iir-"'1 fo'or It t• u tt • r\lt>• 'uU !42-5671 r 642-5678 BEST VALUE IN NEWPORT! fURNlSHEO Of UNFURNISHED HEALTH CUJBS TENNIS SWIMMING. plu\ mu<h mort• Sorry. no pe~ Model~ ~ ~ae..:ia.s.. ,700 16th Sh I (~t OowrJ 642-Slll ptut tM IRVINE MIRROR and the HUNTINGTON BEAC~OMBER every Wedneeday at no Plra char~t CALL TODAYll UIFl.1.111 Your o.Jty PllOI SeNk:e Olt9Ctory R~tatlv. 141·4al1 tat. IH a a z $ A - D ler I•• lir••l•r ---- .... _~ 1 ..,.. ltatab Wu t• A.ut aace•nt1 3002 8111 Waat.. 9100 R~l WaatH 9 • p Wut 9100 Bel Wa .. 9110 lijJplt!!!4 -l1IO l.W ... ti_ IOI -ew'• ...... B f"IU•fl Ptto-t -n-ud . _latalt Ill •Spkttu.l ~-:Ad---I ~t;:i; IEfr&t&UllTAIT Full time llCtnMd RN for ln111rancaPhOMWork-.No MXITToPPlNS wlJ'.ft'O' Fem to ahr 28' 2ba M hM/condo In °'~Co. CMlNB 17th I Newport vf90I' .. Card RMder• ~LA1}~6t allfled per wanted. Mutt do NEWPORT BEACH buay . Newport Beach Mlllngl .. plhr/bom.I• :11~~":1~·~ n ~amolutr..ta52.501; ~81ll:~Jf.2.! -Newet-1ooo-22oo--..ct n. eut..J>teMOl &. Mura: -~n~:., qu ~rat WOOL l tlav. ,. "GU tooi:;r..,. ror .. pllltle eurgeon with . Ma-1758Wkda)IS--. yr Old•. , ... _ In. I i..t.t-uttt. E'iM. 7!&-7971. lil11n ftr amptepkg, ate, 875-8900 ef&-2495 or e3Hl&4 P.S>rtunltyll81·1'f11 own tools ~33 chal'"°1ng ';"eer o __.Jencit In drculetfricJ hekpg & n1:i1, errrii. Mat/F rmmt wanted to.,.., .... . Ull OFFICE SPACE for t9111, Lttt Ir.... 3004 ASSISTANT TO EVERY· GllllEI portunny? w. are I~ & tcrubblng. Prevloul .1111 W&Yll Mutt drive. Cer avall. w/mature M/bac:Mlor In ldMI location for retell or ONE o namic small Exper. fUll or part time Ing for • frlendly mature ex P · n • c • • • •' Y • tlllll ILll Non-smoker. Refs. Cati Balboa S300 mo. utn ~ car offk:.ea.Grtatttonta;eon a~lsl Y seek• Cuhier/Receptloniat enthualutlc, ex-844-1240 11 Interviewing for Jr Gall, 720-1230 or 2BR 2BA •ft e. 875-1154 I lf9r.M~~W Bay Baker at Bn.tol. High fOtJND ADS experlen~~•tary. wanted for Fuhlon . perlenced aulatant to Pro/Jr Program Ofreotor. 873-9192 r..m• lhf beaut hM In ' " • • traffic a~. 540-3668 Full time poaitlon o.. Island retall atON. Mutt Join our team. Non-General Offic. Applicant• must b• llllUL AllllTAIT NB, ~.t pool. clMn'g Ofiln ltitall ff 14 PRIME LOCATION Ar>-ARE FREE aired aklll• Include:· High be avail for eve. a wknd amOker. ~595 UL FllUY (1/P) energetic, organized, FO/BO 0 th 1 lady.~. 84M557 280 SF. 176 w 16th St. prox. 850 eq.rt. ·Busy energy. excellent apell-hra. EOE 844-5070 DENTAL ASSISTANT Construction office hard working. Reieumee P 0 rans. M/F n4tnkr ahr Costa CM. $225-4275/mo. See Coat• MM.I atiopp'g ctr. Ing, outgolngper10nallty, U UIH Ortho. &Nlatant part/full ~~ed In L~~a N,..,.,. ;~;~~~ =~~:r1en~;~ :~~~32 Call Bobbi Mesa apt Pv1 rm s2ao Mgr Ste G 851-8928 Ca I I 8 4 2-9 4 O O • Cal·, word prooeaaT Ing, &4 dlc· FIT or PIT muatbeableto time. 497-2484 or toar WoyoeoodrowamH•o'may,-on"' nd -~. Cont-MEDICAL ASSl~TANT,· 845--49M' ""1 52&a . 10 12noon or 2-4pm taphone. oe pay ex-• 497 .... 724 Kathy • • ., _,.,., -· or"" • AllPllT UU • 142 H ll celtent benefit• for right work Sat & Sun. Other 4921 Birch St, Sul~• 110, Burt Campbell. 1171 FIT. exp«., front l"°6edc M/F to ahr w/mat/F lmmac Two 150 eq ft prof otca Shop/Stor.tOfftce apace. • lndlvldual. Send lettef & houra to be arrTn. DENTAL ASSISTANT Newport BHCh, CA Jambor• Rd. N,B ofc C.M. 845--9700 lg 3br duplx'~ blk to bch w/wndw view 2381 Cam-800 sq ft. lg dOOf, reu. resume to: QUANTUM Apply In person. erm Part-time. FUN office. 92860 or .-nd ,_,,,,., GIRL FR.IDAv •--tti. Me& Eda P12n Par!Ot now '400 inc utll 650-7483 pua Or 121; trvtne. Cor-C.M ... C-2 548-7249 PO BOX 8708-434, New-Rima Har1 dware. 28H 842-7998 752-1363 • "' .. _ NB 2nd PIM fr land. Fem ner Cempua & Von Khat· • CdM dlX auit ... AC, ampl FOUND a small blk/wtlt por1 Beach, 92658-1708 Harbor B ,CM 1--------=· :p~u~~p;::. r~~g& ::=.~%":. Bdrm w/own bath. Xtra man, Incl Rec.pt, Ana prkg, trom $225. 2855 E. lo~ haired d~ vie Mr-wanted-quality baby care CHIROPRACTIC uSlatant lllTIL AllT/IECn lllEUL IFfJOI 2025 Newport Blvd Ste F. PIT poalllon• Oay1 & nice ~00 847--0715 1vc, Conf Rm & Coffee. Cout Hwy. 875-6900 not a/Talbert -230 8 mo baby. TfW Lag Hiiie no exp neceuary. WIU 1001 for Newport BMch de-Evenlnga. Appfy 410 E. 1400/ea 752-2484 la• I lal Found: Cockatlel-Grey -Exp and ref1 required 650·2273 Our busy family dental of-velop4W. MU9t be profl-LlfElla•1 17th St. CM NB Yg pr2oBf Mhteeit• r~ WT 17 .. IT D• 1•• r I ZIZO w/yel face. wte wnga. Vic 830-7887 842-7950 CLOICW. flee Is tMrchlng for a fun, clent at typing, flllng, ~ "" New....,. 8Mch Lunch & rmmt. r " nr ""'' . • • tata I 2400 E PCH COM bright enefgettc person Ph<>M. and •l!*lenee In '"' &ttn•11t Dtn~'Ratuarant needt $350-$400 831-2142 2 pvt ofcs & lrg Sctry/Rcpt 2000 SF 11000/month s.«.5480· Baby1ltter nMded my Fut growing co. in O.C. wltfl dental aNlatlng ex-AIR AIP and 10 key. Exp n•t •l •t t,., .. ..&&. re•.vw.•lble help. MUii Oen Vu, 2Bra, pvt bath, w/ -S7eetmor8kl MM2Ge 3975 Birch, Newport home. mature!own trans-~ C~R7Ct~10~~ ~. ROA preferred. w/ IBM/PRC • plua. • ,. ""' be"'1i"'; over. Cell Oayt lg 1Uf\dect(. AbOVe the mOIT1ft 111111 Beach Agl 541-5032 F~y~~ ~ol~::.ab sr:. ~~:l'i ;rh::: eves pertOn. Must type 55 Immediate openln,jl for e75-4US Crown Vafley Community ~llm- Atche·a 645-3281 Carol lrvlne, phone anaw. re-CM 3aoo.,., tt with 0 .. 1..... Mariners park area, E·Slde 8s0·50n wpm and have good ~~llRolfl~,n~97·88..... E Park In Laguna Nlguel t f tli pd '"" ",,_ o B h 11 N ..., "' ••• IEIEUL IPFIO curr«1tly has 2 IWlmMlng Newport 8Mch CPA firm Prof. fem. reep, con9ider· ~ . con . rm, u ' a parking, 45/aq It (lrvlne/ over) N. . BABYSITTER WANTED p one pe<aona ty. on-"'-·-•1 mind ... Mlf ata1t-pool 11'--uard po91tlona h .. opening for per-ate, wanta _unfurn bdrm aecretary MrV. 250--0277 Westley N. Taylor Co 848-8590 or 673.,..112 FIT my home. OWn trans-smoker pref. Call 714 DENTAL RECEPTIONIST ..,...., .., -.. avauit>i.~ In addition to 1T1anent, full-time reoep- w/kJtch. prlv. or aml apt In 144-4110 FOUND Kitten Blk/wht 7 portatlon GRANDMA 851-0517 Mlchelle ~ND ASSISTANT needed tor 1 person otfc. performing llfeguard ttoniat w/prlor U· ~~~~~~,:~·7~~~~ FILL IEIYIOl 11111 wtt6.,.! 1r1ee8., 82~ood home PREFERRED. 751-9624 GLEU/TYPllT E~!;~~:n~:i. ~:~~~~ry = b1:::1,;g~~n= duttea, incum*t• cot-P«lenee on IWltchboatd. {rFuhton llland laat HCtatat1 3 ~ " .... UIYllTTUI IEEl•t With excellent typing & legal background helpflJI. lec:t f .... Inform patront PleaHnt working at- Prof. male ah rent w/ume '6<>c:.an Vlewl SPitu I ult A£lbiR6S FOUND Male Black Lab .. apelllng .aklUa.. Self atartel' 845-9351 10-2pm of pafk regUlatlon•. ad· moaphare In a .busy, pro- NB, Oakwood apt S250 YHEEXECUTIVEOFFICE AdYlce In All-Matt81'1 & WhlteonChett 631.1030 F/P-tm-d~ya-.evea-wknd1 w/good abliltlel for de-IESIOLfll mlni1terfltst...idandmay ftulonal office. Win be mo-Wkly OK. 631-6843 110 Newport c.nter Or. CounMllng 1815 So. El Charlotte• Sitter• AQcy tails& organizational pro-5pm-4am. Wiii train, apply GOURMET FOODS . teach awtmmlng c1 .... trained on • Rolm Ctt Shr beaut 4Br FV pool Suite 200 Camino Real, San Clem. FOUND: Male merle/wtlt 420 62nd St, NB 845-3748 JeclJ Excellent company 7am-noon. 2274 Newport t 10-S 15/hr. Call Andy and ...ist In tti. d.velop-Punctuality, front onic. home. 1325 + utll. No 14'-4412 Uc'd. 492-7296 Aust Shep mix & •ma blk BABYSITTER WANTED In l>en9flti. Send reeumeto: Bl, CM Sealark Motel. ffe-1339 for Interview ment of public aquallc appearance a~,.._ Terrie. rablet tag 5473. mv Newport Ten'ece hm. Shella Lawlor Help wanted immed for programa. CertlflcatH latlon• U<HI• are moet Im· :,~·53~~4 ~kg. Lndry, SCRAM· LETS 644-3658 oCcuionaJ ....... Chlld CBS MagazJne Mll mO hme cteanlng aervlce. required ·Advanced Ufe portent Excettent Mitty .::--.,--:::-:--,..-;--=..rt Office apace for leaM FOUND M Blk mixed lab, 3yra & t 9yr1. Sgl mom. 1499 Monrov11 Ave. -~•110EI Own tranapo 845-0H1 Saving, CPR. 11t Aid. c 0 m m e n 1 u r • t • n ttl1 Waate4 2 Cannery VIiiage Lo· ANSWERS R f 642 9355 Newport Beach 92883 _,...,"' (WSI reqUlred ptlor to w/experlence & abllltlea. cation. 850 aq ft. Fr... num.oui cat• and kit-e areq. -~ag Opening, Dal Mar aru, for HOSTESS WANTED Mon-teaching swimming Call or ai>PIY In P«ton to: Prof'I Fml looklng to share atandlng, alngle story Eldeet _Knife lens avallable fo< adop-BARBER or BEAUTICIAN Companion/lite l\Mtleep-full-time domettlc., llv.o Fri 11:30 AM-2:30 ~M. clUMI). COLEMAN & GRANT apt/houM In CM/NB/HB bulldlng. lmmed. Oc-Grope-lmpoM tion. Newport BHch with following for Ing In exchange for prlv out. Experienced only. Hourly wage + tips. Ttle 5020 Campus Or, Newport ar ... Pie ... call cupancy UOO mo SPRING Anlmri Shelter e.M-3658 exclu9IYI S.C Plue aree room wrrv prtv Nth. Laundry.1r~ng .. g91'MWAL Quiet-Woman Aeetaurant AoP4Y Immediately Beech 75~11 COLLECT (314~8i-6424 875--4918 Brllllant Idea .t-.art--t·. FOUND: Rabbit, brn/wht, ulon. 545-1892 NHr BHch. Mature, houeeclean ng, clothH 840-7440 Toni/Barbara · No r81Um89 11111111111 ..._ .,,_, Vic St A d mutt ilke doga. 538-0921 care & Hte cooking. Cati · WAITlla ltnlq fer Office Space To put mON bounce In · corner · n rew1 BOOKKEEPER exp'd, F/C Barbara, Mon-Fri 2-4pm (11W,11 .. 114t 7-3:30pm 3pm-11:30pm I.I I sta•ttt1.H on Buer&Brlatot, yourwa1erbed,addall1· Rd/Clay St. N.B. for local CPA firm. Ollmlmtl EOE(819)7~339 Hotel 3:30-7:30pm.Goodwork· • • · • Jll 5"4()..3ee8 tie SPRING water. 642-3885 lntereetlng & challenglng i1-n••y *l&Llll UY OLll* Ill If U&lll Ing condltlon1• Small lll•t I rtttl If rte• Found SABOT -CF 8808FV client mix. Reeume to: Seek r:;Ml;d lllYll/ILIEPJllf Pettor1nel Dept. Conval11eent HoapltaJ. IHll olll QZ-1110 8~!J,~N:~i°:5o1~~ T~:': ~:';d~~. ·~l~hfo~ 830--0168 5pm-8pm BAC, 6819~ Dr, NB 1nd1v'::ua1 w/excellent IPUATll Frtll ltlk Olm ~~~f~~':!~::' '*' o.c. Fal~nd•. tr Ql•llOl, 840-5557; 840-3878 Clueltled ed. 842-5878 FOUND small Dog, blk typing altllta. Shorthand • Niii train. FUii time. Need 4 Day work WNtc FIT, Santa Ana, CA '2701 PleaM call 9-&. ~ 1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;OiiiiiiiiiiiP':iiiiiiiiiiii=:=::1 w/brn mrklnga. Vic. BOOK KEEPER wanted plua, heavy phone con· own car. Salary, mltage. guest cneck In/out. Poet Nurajng -Baach a Slater, H.B. for architectural design tact w/vendor• 549--2988 Call 494-2280 (&-5 M·F) charg.. to computer. Fot01her Countyoppty'• Alm 847-732'4 firm. PIT. Experience Counter help pit, Mon·Frl lllYlll Typing 40 wpm, com· call our recorded mMAQ8 FIT PM & Night lhlft, CNA II HOROSCOPE SYDIEY o •••• Found; Smt btk poodle. req. 714-645-1791 SUPER SANDWICH 875 tor N.B flower shop. Full or puterfexllper0. prl "!&, Afflr~.~~~~M/F ~:~~B~~t catarac9 on both eyea. COLE T.Y. IALEI Paularlno, CM 545-4887 PIT, 645-7845 I Ir• benefit•. denial & medl-M~nolla/Slatflf', HB/FV Counter help ~rt-time, llll l ITOH OLlll PIT llexlble hr9 M-F LIFEllUll cal ln.urance. 642..ao"44 I 84 -3320 llUT 00111111111 full-time. GARV'S DELI P/tlme. Varied hn, beh I••"" thru October. To as p/hr. IFFIOI At -1 Found : TI n y SELLCABLET.V. 752·5401 arM844-7575 12to2pm PIT Tu.a-Sat IVM only. &M-0311afUpm """" York1hlre/Sllky Terrier l lN NEW.POORT .B,EACTHV DlmlWI ' Mutt be f"°"llltr w/.-C. LIQUOR CLERK Progrnalve community I Vic N_.. d & Ell'-HB ftU' I I E c Offloe e •-I food & .._, mental health, atrono ..... an •• • P C i. SC • row r •· reg .. ter, n .,....., FIT, Exper Pref. Good telephone reception, 1··········••11_!963~-80~7~4-----11 looking for a few good rivet• hr tlan hoot. perlenc:ed to .. 111t man. environment, atert pay 875.U84 ~~· -·----i. °'~ ........ di t I I ApplY: 16835 Brookhurtt, ager In pr .. tlglou• ... •AAA ..a 121 --_, ... Friday, August l i LOST white cat w/green A rec. ;,~ ·~ ~:i~P 8~· F.V. "2-3312 Newport Beach office .,........., lab l&IU WllTll t a lkilla, M. p . ,.. ARIES (March 21 • .\pnl 19): Elements ofttmmg an~ luck ride with ~~ll~Oc~~:, ~ o~~g~ N~l~ to 5pm. E.O.E DELI COUNTER HELP 840-e040 Mrt. Pen~ Mon-Fri 9am--4pm Seactltt Motel. 1981 So. aumeo-Connle Sell, 132 E. you -you_get needed matenal and income potential increases. You View Dr. REWARD CAMPANION B:30am-2:30pm. Daya, HOTEL Cat Hwy, Laa. Bch. Apply 19th St., COtta Meaa could be offered lucrauve contract. Read sma)I pnnt. define terms. 844-1358;752·9484 Llv ... ln for well educated 842-52971839-9170 ev.. ,!!UT//TITillll WPlllYI .... Oltrt/lelt ltMft In perton. 404-9117 IPll/&llW IUYlll rtfuse to give up something of value for nothing. LOST· Blue & Gold elderly couple. Prime, Have aomethtnQ you want "" FIT, 3Ptn·11pm For App. Ml\INTAINANCE MAN full graveyrd, awing, F/Pt. TAURUS (April 20-Ma> 20) Cycle high. you'll be at ~ght place-. McCaw. Reward. Vic. eunny 2 Br NB condo to Mii? Claaalfled ed• do O!W:~~nl~I~~ t~a1~t~: 1655 s. Cout Hlgn-time tOtM exp Pf9f~ Exp. pref. 540--1177 element of ~urpn~ will work 1n your favor Take in1ttat1ve. make Nwpt Bch/C.M. 873-1218 S700/mo 875-8181 It we41. t"42·5179. TIMES Clrculatlon De-wayLaguna e.ach E.O.E. tn apt matnt. a&-e/hr. PUTTill ~rsonal appearantes and appt:als. Study ~nes message for valuable Lost Dog, German partment In our door to Hotel T1L lllllllm 17.50 to •tart wtth maJor hint. What appears 10 be a d1sappointmcn1 will actually prove to be Shepherd mix, 18 yr mte. Clerks door new~r tale• IWITlllUlllfll, 1'2·1111 rag, OOfl>. Alt., ... , U.S. cause for celebra11on nda medication Univ. CIRCLE K·MARK£TS ~rogram. GuarantHd Baacn reaort. Hrs Mon· l&llOllJIT cltlten•, hlgh-1ct1001 GEMINI <Ma) 21-June 201. Looi. behind scenes. get ideas on Prk, IN. 78&-4848 ourty w~ plus Wed. 3pm.11pm. Sat.• ~•only. C'al!UPM. Paper realtze "OU l3n ~in Lhrough written word Be ready for change, Lft•t·. G-m s~. Mix. mlulon. oura: 4pm to Sun. 7am-3pm For app, Exper. In .cryllc nalla. Inion Viejo 495-3315 ; ... .. 9pm. Training 11 1555 s. CoHt Hwy, BHch arH 3 daya. HuntBch ~890 travel, variety intens1 1cd rcla11onsh1p. ~ecret meeting may be pan of Female 5 mot. d. Multi '1> •l provided. Pot.ntlal to L1iJuna e.actl. E.O.E. _813-7219 or 641-3-450 p_,.·tlme evenln •·Good unusual scenano \ 1rao pla} ~key role ctr. Thur 8/t pm. Vic r 0 ~!.: NOW HIRING earn $300 plu1 per..-. M 1 M 11 1 '0 CANCER I June !I-Jul\ 22)' 'A-1sh comes true with aid of family Avocado. CdM 875-8842 rl For an Interview. call: lllUPUIT .ALll •r ne •c an °; ex· earning potenllal. Aall fOt '--957 23S1 ext 1204 PIT Hra flex. 845-<4553 ~Fri 87• .. Af PIY7 -eam aR~ "~-Gall 813-9421 mem~r Y ou get ~hat \OU want b\ utthzing diplomacy. Focus also on Loat gld frme reading ,-J • · Mon-Fri I .....,931 "'"" ....,.,, domestic adjustment po~s1blc change of residence Lunar position &tt':l~~g~i:""32nd ) y I CASHIERS I OLEllS h1ghhghts romance pcr-,ua'i1on. idealism. ab1hty to win fnends and 1• _, /interviews dally from 11 ·00 influence people REWARD for contents of l a.m.-12 noon at 1390 LEO (July 23-Aug 22J: e\ura of m ystc7 dominates-persons 1n tan tmef~u7en t9rom30 c:North Pacific Coast Hwy., "h h I " d d d d y 'II , driveway .......... to : •i paces are ·~pre'~ intngue an. ascinate . ou get view pm on Thun. 819. At 935 behind scenes. }OU II learn seuct and you II pan1c1pate 1n clandesune Victoria St. c .M. NO Laguna Beach (on PCH & arrangements P1~cs figures prominently. OU!STION8 ASKED. Viejo) VIRGO (Aug. 23-~pt 22)· Focu'I on travel, distance. communica-(71'4)241-1002 497-2878 Call I 714 J 494 9233 for more into tion. ab1l1ty to earn mone\ b> descnbmg your own feelings. sm blOnd.twtlt ttm. poo- Rclat1onsh1p grows stronger rcsponsibtlll) Increases and you'll nave die ltlm btwn Magnoila & chance for greater financial rewards Cancer native figures promt· Banning 912·1150 nentJy. . tnnab . Ll~RA (ScP,t .23-0ct. 22)' Reach beyond what appears to be aliNilNilili!iil~ ...... 1Plfliiii'"" lumtat1on. You II~ aided by obta1n1ng "e,ma informauon." Interest UlllTI/ ELI in the occull is highlighted -you'll mctt faS("tnahna individuals 1t Outcall ONLY W-9189 •aily Pilat ·· · · ·· · · · · ··, 1pecial pthcnnJ or confcren1.:e l\nes figure~ prominmtly. T SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov 21 ); You need not hans on to lo 1n.g F.m.lel pref. Model• and snuation. It is time for c.hange and you'll know it. Focus on public !acotU. (213) 188-1914 lllElllTE llAIAIEIEIT OPPOllTUlln affairs, spcciaJ interests. lqal nglm and permi sion . Gtt to heart of l1tlM11 m.auers. have frank d1scuss1on with "special" memberofoppos1te ~x -;ni~MMJ'.mm,r AMl't:Mi\'t' t'reativ~ telf'ph«>n~ SAOl'M'ARJUS <Nov 22-Dec. 21): Famtly ttlat1onsh1ps arc Extra lnoome lAlamer'• emphas1ud. Focus on employment. $pec1al services. pcopk who rclv WOf1d. KMen MMW It ~ o for retail adtf'rti1ln upon you, care or~., Keep resolutions conccm1n1 diet. late -niatit lamt•nt phon~ rootn. · ptr\i r kill• a snacks. nutnuon. Cinccr Aquanus persons figure promanently. .rtultJn 4111 CAPRICORN (Ott. 22·Jan. 19): Emphasis on 'pcculatton. 1 • mutt. Top dnll•r -hn .. e plu ocitemcnt. luc • ph~1cal attraction, ab1ht> 10 succc fully utilize ~a;;fi~ff81 .. ~ oonu'I. ~ ... nd ,,.,uin~ &m powcnofptDuasi()n. Focuo,alwon ch1Jdrt>n,chamm.t,andmten~1fied r1°', r,:,1.,,_"1a: n relauonsh1~. Gcmana. iattanu~ person,· play 11ruficant roles. 1 1 ... AQllAIUU (Jan. 20-fch 18). Patience 1s nca. nry-um~ 1s on •I u >our si~r..and )Ou can anordfitu phtay wrd""e"' a.am . Check dett1b. t>el~iMIMl•1i1lan1Mlii1mmr a•-ueouine pnnt. rt"movc u cty aL lcctmal mnam1Jht need CIRCLE K ri• tmrnlld fUll 1 'al ancnuon vr re 1r. Q~10 fiJurcs an \Ccnano. nmt ••Ill•~. PISC (Feb. l • rch .2( > Empham on mo,tment. 1ra,cl. Ba.it ~ge of 10 , ls11 • tdcphonc c II . frooi rtllli\c~ who plan to \·1 1t 10 near tu cure. :~r:=:~ ~In~ pothght humor. fttn mmmumti11ton. 1lltn ;1 to make \.rvljW, ua Si1kW 1114, • roncc inn~ , 1tt1n • V1 ,, ll 11tnrau pcnorn 111 C} roki. 842·7702, m 10:. pm • .. District Manage rs If y~ tn1oy worlung with young boy• & girl• ond deik 1ob• ore not for you, (OM1dtr a career in the new1pop-.r cucwlo lion field. Thi' i' o u111qua po;ltion w1ltl daily chollt"91l & reword• Ovr Gptning1 ore 1mmed1ott. Applicant\ muit ho"'41 a van, \IOt10nw09on or tr1Kli • We offtr on .. (tli.t\t solary with a bonu\ pion ond ooi ollowon<t. Wt ho~ on uc.li.nt benefit pion that mclvdel hospl· tolilot1on 1nwronce, lib•rol vocation ond holiday\, Candidate• mv'I hove o dnir• to be \\/Ht •lul Ol'ld bl willing ~o wot~ ho1d If yO\I think you ho .. t the quol1fk ohon;, pt.a\• apply 1n penon to the Daily Pilat MOndoy lhrv Friday 9 I 1 om Of '7 " pm -.. - • AGES 11-14 EARN tJ> TO $75.00 PER WEEK . We now have I~ o,pe111~1Llgt...J.Qlln& ~tr beavers to secure riadeiS for Tht Orange COasr· Ol1ly Ptlot. Our -ttewt start al NO p ~ and 1 wort unlJI 8 30 p m weekdays On Saturday, we lwo~ a lew more !lours You will urn many lrt11$ and llfllts, aloftt with earn1111 your own money , 1 • there is no dellwennc or collecbon 111volved. , II you are inttmted, pleaw tiff Mr (Ill (714) 548-7058 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Game VIPS 5 Vacuum 9 Pill bottle 14 La Scala hlghlighl 15 OiaboUc 16 Spear'• kin 17 Bakery Item 18 Talking bird 20 Being 2t A Caesar 22 Horsewomen 23 Turt'I ulde 25 Former gold COjn 27 Easy job 29 Sllppery 30 Whe<e Bangkoll was 34 Fond du 38 Formulate 38 Inasmuch as 39 Mayors a g 4.2 Kln<I 43 Toned down 44 Meadow 45 Rank (tennis players I 46 Vletory 47 Used to t>e 49 Powel' unite 2 3 t4 42 •• 4 5 1 Learned ones 5" Social event 58 AsSIStance 60 Fabfe 81 Treacheroos 63 --Instant 64 Footpath 65 --even keel 8e Eight pref 67 Fed the pot 68 ' No refunds" 69 At no11me poet DOWN 1 Rebuked 2 Biol out 3 Play opener 4 Rich labnc 5 Valuable stones 6 Preclude 7 Greek range 8 BPOE member 9 Hair braid 10 MetclleA 11 Concerning 12 Acidity 13 Authorizes 19 Beg 24 Floats 26 Split 28 Before prat 30 "-emf" 3 1 Lack of beauty 32 Tract un't e 7 PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED 33 Arizona city 34 Table parts 35 Sl'lelt~ed at sea 37 COt'lleu 38 Piek up - 40 Chewing IOblC co portion 41 Not many 46 Caution 48 Allotment 49UM • •• 50 Mideast pe11k 52 011etJOy 53 Ha111na 1•119 54 Hammett dog 55 Forest plant 56 Colt society 57 ·· baited 1n - 59 Studies 82 ' -Wiid Rose" ® 1984 SCIROCCO S NO t M119~ (Sitt 5{11.l 1 I '99 down 242.Hl•t .. tu snuc1 1101.00U!! ol8 " • CE L T 0 P 13 ti<St Aud 5•"3 "'O c,Afl 12 39() 1984 IMPULSE SE C9 '78 Grl!Mda GNa, 4 dr, od cond Fem c:.r. ale. pls plb, eto 12000 oeo 875-0241 '&4 OT Muatq Conv 5 O Blk·•ll Jt1r••·8,000 m $16,.000-Pam SSC>-4329 ·79~ula i800 obo · n Bot>c:.t. • apd, 1oo1t1 a runs good $795/obo Celt 5-46-9158 •ti 5pm Olba..U. 27 16 2 ClJTlESS SEDAN Tm Air Cond, CrulH (303748) ..... -~ USED CAA SAi ES 18401 8eacn Hunt Bet\ a.1-rro1 1983 DELTA le I c:yl, AIC P S Pl8 t33"311) ..... EftLNG USED CAA SN ES I ) • BUENA PARK FOUNTAIN VALLEY 81 FWY. -' ' 0 ~ er ai SANTA ANA EDINGER 22 FRWY . O o c( w Q) WARNER PACIFIC OCEAN 0 CHICK IVERSON 0 Chevrolet• Porsche• Audi 441 E. Cent lhrJ., l1w,1rt leaoh 113-0100 Highest Quality Sales & Service HOUSE OF IMPORTS DIAL MERCEDES 7141637-2333 Alongside the Santa Ana Fwy. In Buena Park 0 RAY FLADEBOE HONDA # 11 A1t1 C11ter Ir., lni11 In The Irvine Auto Center 830-7600 Complete Sales, Service & Leasing G) ORANGE COAST JEEP /RENAULT # 1 In Tht Wist For 111• J1tp Salts For 8 Ytars (.~ OOln2e: ~~~~Tee coast • LEASING ,___ -~ .-mt;:,~~:,.Lvo • ACCESSORIES DEPT ~ ·-. 549-8023 0 THEODORE ROBINS FORD U.S.A.'s # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer Modern Sales, Service, Parts, Body, Paint & Tire Depts. Competitive Rates On Lease & Daily Rentals 2088 llnor lml .. Oesta lhsa 142-0010 "140-1211 0 SOUTH COUNTY VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU 18711 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach (714) 842-2000 SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE Orance Countys l11ent VolkSWaetfl/lsuzu Dealer m We Will Hot Be Undefsold PARTS DEPARTMENT OPEN SATUROAY G RAY FLADEBOE VOLKSWAGEN #20 lit• Ctlter Ir., lnl11 In The lrvlne Auto Center 830-7300 . Orange Countys Newest Volkswagen Dealer Complete Sales, Semce & Leasing IRVINE 0 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2121 ..... ., lh~ •• Onta .... Over 23 Years Serving Orange County Sales • Service • Leasing 546·1200 Special P1rts UH 546·9400 MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM -8:00 PM SATURDAY 8:3CtAM -~PM SUNDAY 10:00 AM -5:00 PM 0 STADIUM PONTIAC We're New -We're Dea/Ing AcroH from the Big A on K•t•ll• Juat Weat of th• (57) Or•ne• FrMw•r Sales • Service • Parts • Body Shop on Premises l11h1i• 2226 E. lattlll 311· 1111 G BILL YATES YILISW&lll • NISCIE • PEllEIT SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE 12112 ¥1111 1114, 111 .1111 01,litr••• 493.4111 111-aoo SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO 0 BAUER MOTORS BUICK -JAGUAR -ISUZU Complete Automotive Needs SALE$ • SERVICE • LEASING Ane Selectlon of Quatlty Uted Vehldee # 1 BUICK DEALER IN ORANGE COUNTY 2925 HARBOR BLVD. . COSTA MESA 171-2500 0 RAY FLADEBOE LllOOLI IEIOllY .111111 1110 # 11 htt Ollftr Ir., lnl11 In The Irvine Auto Center 830-7000 G CREVIER BMW SALES • SERVICE • LEASING "Where Professional Attitude Prevails" lpedetlzlng In Europeen Detlvery. IJ1oelent lelectlon of New and car91UHr ~ UMcl 9MW'• atwaya In •tock. 835-3171 208 W. 1 at St., Santa Ana Corner of Broadwey & 1et St. Ck>Md Sundays $ .. ,.,G •• !!;~.~!~G•••r• IJt G UNIVERSHIT 0 YNDOALDSMOBILE OJl~so~~!~~~~ ~~~~,!TS Overseas Delivery Specialists . 1001 Ou.II Bl. -RflUle Dlv,.lon PARTS DEPARTMENT OPEN 2880 Harbor Blvd. @ World's Largest S816ctlon of 0 sATURDAv MORN1No1 Coata Meaa 540•0713 Mercedes Benz "" BMW -ROLLS ROYCE 133.9300 1540 Jamboree RG. 3 Blocks So. of 405 Fwy. Newport Beach 840-8444 w.. · l.wll& • P11t1 • s.-. · ..., S... Ctassahed. advertising is your best choice for help an selltng the items you no longer need. It's Quack and inexpensive, and the Pilot reaches potential buyers who live in this area.· Call today Daily Pilat . classahed ads phon 642.:-5678 caum IDITIDI THURSDAY. AUGUST 16, 1984 ORAN GE COUN TY C A LIFORNIA -25 CENTS ~olombia / crash draws U.S. ey~ State Department monitors mystery. that claimed ltf e of Laguna Beach man By DA vm BISHOP D.., .... C.11 ... 1 ..,.,, America followina . a mysterious plane crash that killed a Laguna Beach man. kilkd in an airplane era h in a remote ment confirmed that a second un-authoriution under the federal umbers had been painted Oler, 0 region ofDeColombia. Us· E bas identified man was killed in the crash pnvacy act. cario was found on the~ tale ~rtment1 • • m sy and that two other Americans were Weeks wd Wednesday that lhc The ~nd body found in IM and Colombian offictals refuse to say ho pitahztd and remain in custody Colombian Air Force .notified tne ~ as sttll unuknlifiCd and much about the crash. They declined by Colombian officials on chaf&C$ St.ate Depanment of the madent on both men killed werc·buned on JUI) to y What Sadler, who reportedly related to "iolatin& Colombian air Jut30. 29 a... local · · th had ties to the CIA, may hav• "'--n On f h uJ' a pncst in e small town .. vi;11; space. e o t rec other men c twin<n•ine ai...-ft -~'---' of ----"" nc•.. lb te doina in that South Amen'can coun· 1 fi Ora r ....... ""'a<NKU A£1U1;W ... e 5t • ap~rcnt Y was rom n-Count". on takeofTfirom a .. landcst1ne ··--np d1plomatJc "''"'_, in· ,..-'tom1.t-try and won't 1·dent1'fy the other men a,. Id .... ' " ...... ....., ... """"' """' VU! rc-tta.s wou not rc11cal tht names in the remote Guaj1ra rcgaon of parted connected to the incident. of the two urvivors in custody in Colombia.acconhn toSouthAm---· 1· • c--'d Wcd--..a- U.S. State Department officials confinned Wednesday they are monttorina the status of two Amcri· cans who were arrested in South Richard W-ks of the State Dcn~n-C I b' ~ h · ..... tr 5 son .:Klln sai uQIUA} .... ,.,.. o om 1a ~use e said he had no _.~an source . Ju 1dentificat1on f Pleueeee 1Cf8TSRY/A2) ------mlll!l--------------------~----~--.... ml!lll----------~~--.-.ii .................... iiii ' ... ·--...... --------- Details about the death of Stephen Lee Sadler, SS, of Laauna Beach remain sketchy a month after he was Coast Sheriff Brad Gates gets his hoped-for helicopters as supervisors OK a re- cord budget.I A3 A county couple sue Amway Corp. for $10.5 million./ A3 California · Mass murderer Christopher Wiider' s vic- tim say she's broke, Job- less./ AS _QC Jail death still a mystery Coroner·s report says more tests necessary befQreanswerknown BJ STEVE MARBLE Of ... O.., ....... The death of a 22-year-old swimr mO' frOm Nevr"PQtt B'each .mnained a • -ParrAm"Mrtker~ groundect aftercourt In- junction./ M ~~'CUWitJ (9[-~-.c>•,.....= GOP ready for conven- tion, but worry about TV coverage./ AS World Red Sea mlnesclalm 17th vessel as efforts to find 'sowing' culprits con- tinues./ AS Warplane fires, misses tanker target In Persian Gulf./A4 Living Llkeasportsclub, The Computer Experience lets people workout at .... --terminals-and develop In- putting skllls.181 And persons who cuss at VDT mistakes can Join Computer Cursers of America and get the of- ficial oath./81 Sports Pete Rose Is expected to ~named player-man- ager of the Cincinnati Reds today./C1 Major-league baseball owners unanimously ap- proved the sale of the Minnesota Twlns./C2 Less than a week after the end of the Olympics. Communist countries plan to stage their own games./C3 Entertainment · ABC Is rolling In gold today as the Nielsen rat- ings declare the Olympics the most-watched event ever./83 Buaineu Don't give up hope If It appears you can't afford that home or Investment property./88 INDEX Bridge Bulletin Board BualnMS Callfornla New• CIUSlfled Com lea Croaaword Death Notloel Horoscope In the Service Ann Lander• Living Mutual Fund• N1t1onat Newt Opinion Paparaz.zl PoUceLog Publle Motleel Sport• Stock Marketa Tet vi on Theatera Weather Wortd Newt B~ A3 88-7 A4 C7-10 85 C9 C5 ca - A7 82 81·2· 87 A4 AS 81 A3 CS-8 C1·5 ee1 83\ 83·4 A2 A5 ae annoutk:ai a 1itRJ\J!it5Ufli eD111- i nation would be~~t..tfm1ne ~ why Grant RJchatd Coolin& died after a hort Slay lD Ora'hge County Jail. An irutial autopsy OD Wedoesday proved inconchmve. officials said. ''Tbtfe is no preliminary c:auae of death at this time,.. said ~ County Sheriff LL Richard Olson. Olson said Cooling was cooperat- ive and that his brief stay at the county jail was without iocidenL He said the 22-year-<>ld collapsed a or1 time aft.er eating lunch with other prisonen. Coolini, a champion swimmer at Coron.a dd Mar Hieb and Ora.OF Coast College. died Tuesday after- noon about 12 hours after bem& arrcstcd for failin to appear in court on a petdina tic ct and an c•JKred ~!IU('k • • ~-J,,..~ •~tterhul of color in Coeta. Meea'a tkMitla Cout TOWD CeDter. Tfae picture ... taken from the san Diq&o Freeway .• The (>;. oot-5 atbktc and ~ student had been fialitin& a case of (Pleue eee .JADw/ A2) College trustees approve KOCE's license transfer Non-profit group to et Channel 50 within 30 months By PHIL SNEJDERMAN Ol .. 0.-, ........ as a birth, not a death." Furniss added, "I'm much more encouraged now than I've been Lil the last r8 h'lddtM:t•m·~uaded wewi1l look back and say this was a landmark dcc1s1on." The stauon president sa1d the ehminallon of college district funding wdl make the station less vulnerable to uncenainllcs in state funding for community colleges. He said the 30- (Pleue .ee KOCE/ A2) Bantett Wieder _....__ _____ ~~ Wieder position on Jarvis IV: No position at all By JEFF ADLER °' .. ~ ......... 1--A:Jmouu-Orana .(;ouo&} Board of . Supervisors Chairman Harnett ' Wieder spearheaded efforts this week to prepare county government for a budget crunch should the JllVls IV 1rutiativc pass in November. she said Wednesday she plans to rem.110 neutral on the controversial measure. "Our purpose is not to take a position ... WiedcT said as she pvcllcd closed the county's three-day budatt session.. ·:If$ 10 waitfor the voters to tell us what they want to pay for." Wieder added that she lhoup.t tt -.ould be inappropri•te for any public official to take a position on the tu· slashi°' measure. an off-5Pf\na of Proposition 13 dcsiancd to close loopholes in the pioneering property (Pleue eee 'W'mDltll/ A2) Coast Community College District trustees have set m motion the transfer of ownership of public tele- vision station KOCE. Channel SO, to an independent foundation over the next 30 months. KOCE, now operated by the colleae district. is based on the campus of Golden West College in Huntington Beach. Arizona police grab $148M in cocaine The station wtll continue to carry some college district pr<>vammma. but the move is designed to gradually eliminate the flow of district dollars that have helped the station operate Slncc November 1982. The plan to transfer the PBS station's hccnse to the pnvate KOCE Foundation was approved Wcdnes~ day ni&bt by distnct trustees, who also govern OranJe Coast. Golden West and Coasthne colleges. The license transfer 1s subJCCt to approval by the Federal Communications Commission. "This is not gloom and doom for us," said William Fumi~s. president and general manager of the station. "lf anythina. it's the n:venc. I sec this ' - Two suspects from Orange County captured !n Southwest's lar est drug s~iz_-u_re __ _ GLOBE, Ariz. (AP) -:--Cocaine with a street value of $148 million ~s found after Gila County deput) Shenfrs stopped three pickup trucks near here, heriff L)'man Peace said today. Four men, two from Orange Coun- ty, were arrested and held under SS00,000 bond. Peace said the U.S. Dru& Enforce- ment Administration advised him the haul -l,680 Pounds of cocaine -"was the largest ever in the Southwest." "Cocaint usuall) 1s sold in pack- ages about the size of a postagt stamr. and here,., have three pickups full. · Peat-e told a reponer. He said deputies had been upped that packaies apparent!} contammg dru had bc'cn loaded into trucks about 11 Lm. Tucsda) at a pri"atcl) owned landing strip for mall planes nearYouna, a mall c:ommunit) ma sparsely populated mountainous a.rca i of central Anzona about SO mile south of here. Peace said roadblocks -.rrc estat>- -- KAREi KL£11 CAMPAIGN • 84 lished on all roads lcadma from the area and the trucks v.erc stopped about an hour later on Anzona 288 some five miles north of tht S.lt River cros ing; He identified them as James &rlC's. 24, of ApachC' Junction, and thrtt C'ahfom1ans. Robn'l Krogsluncl 41. of Garden Gro,e: Charles Lqer. 38. of Chino. and Ronald R~enhour. 13. of Westminster. . . Peace said a rc~n of the aJTtSts and sc12urc was ~lthhcld untJI toda~ "because v.c didn't rcaltzt the \'aluc and v.cre gucs ing at -.hat we had" until federal and tatc authonues amvcd and complete!'d their chccu The four v.tre &i'en an in1ual ap~arancc m Justice of Peace court. whtch docs not accept felony pleas under Anzona law County Attorne) Robn'l Duber satd a probable<au~ heanng -.ould be held within lOdaH. The four ~ere being held 1n tht county j ail on charges of posscss1on of coaunc. cocaine for sak and trans- portation of cocaine. Peace declined to sa) where thr plane came from or v.hetbtr It had landed or dropptd the oackages He said the area has se'cn),.pn111tt airports which a.re bas1caJI) the result of a rancher USJ!\$ a bulldozer to le" el the terrain for his ov.n plane. Pcaet said there v.as no su~ uon that the rancher who owned the landina stnp wasin"'ohcd A2 * Ofange Coat OA1LY P1LOT/Thutlday, Augu11 16, 1984 1 seek 3 Mesa council seats . . \ I F:our candidatet for three u on the Cos1a M · Oit)' Counot met th cxatndcd deadline WodnCsda)' for ftlina oominauon pen.. bringmg the field to 11. Ha_fT)• G~ unli11cd; JC." ct Dominic R tt, 66; drapery nsult· ant Mar> Hornbuckle, 4 l: 1 CS bLt • • n :1consuh1nt Christopher Steel, 3. dtad.linc last week were incumbent Donn tWl. SS, and Eric John n, f>J, as reU as Planning Commi 1ioners Otartcs Markel, 4S, and Olrcnce C. 01.tke. Also flllna la.st wcett were id Soffer. OOu&lu Yatea, 39. and Dave Wheeler. 29. Fa r skies and high clouds due Throwina thcir hats into the coun· di race -were: cuy iolf coursc operator The deadline was e.ucnded from la t Frida). Candidates meeting the fint filina ~~~~~~--~~~~--~~~----~ ·-. ~ ~~L DEATH CAUSE AMYSTER~ ••• 1esvmAl strep throat but was an supenor J(onditioo and swam about 4,000 e&ers a day, aecordJna to Marjone C.oolina. his mother. • She said shenfrs deputies told her Llr~~~~spcctod her son died of heart r..• Cooling was arrested on the traffic 1 wtrrants after being questioned early Tuesday by a security ~urd at ti Lelsure World in La•una Hills. He apparently was s1tt1n1 m a spa talking wuh a friend when the security guard approached him. h wH unclear why the sccunty guard questioned him and why the guard then contacted shenfrs depu· ties, who apparently turned up the traffic warrants dunng a routtne record check. Mat}one Coolina said her 50n and his fnend were talkin& and reluina after attcndina a concen Monday cvenin1 at Irvine Meadows. Coohng was to start bis senior year at USC this fall and was interested in pursuing a career in the car businen1 friends said. He and a friend hao started their own car detailing enterpnse dunng the summer months. i KOCE LICENSE TRANSFER ••• l'romAl . month trans1t1on penod will give the ~tation time to develop add1ttonal • funding sources from viewers and corporate sponsors. The license transfer proposal was adopted in a 4-1 vote, with trustees Conrad Nordqwst, Armando Ruiz, ~Nancy Pollard and Richard Olson approving, and George Rodda Jr. dissenting. .1 .. , guess a lot of people were afraid ... we wo11ld dump KOCE," Board ; President Nordquist said. "I really In early 1983, about 100 teachers Ruiz and Pollard, pledged to make and administrators r~eived layeff KOCE self.sufficient. notices because of state funding cuts. Last sprina. KOCE funding was Teachers and some community addressed in a report by Evans members argued that the district Manag.ement Services, a consultant should not continue to spend money hired by the board. The Evans report for the television station while recommended the gradual transfer of classroom instructors were being laid KOCE's license to a private group off. such as the KOCE Foundation. During the 1983-84 school year, The foundation is an independent Tides Temps ~-~·~ '"ONTI ~ 'itff/ Wtttfl-Cold.,.. Sllowtr& """ F\ifttfl Snow OccluCltO,..Sl1ho"l'•&.p Ha-' W .. Nl 9-we lfQO V$ Ofol :• C~f' t HI&.. • ~ :: Extended 18 eo . . .. 18 " Ill 13 71 13 10 11 et .. 17 .. Ill ... 71 • &4 .. 1i IO 61 e7 e:3 .. •1 83 63 tM 71 .. 67 .. 5e .. .,, u II • .. 82 H JS 19 •93 78 68 Patchy i.tt lllQht Md lllOl'flinO tow .. 71 GtollCl6 llflCI too -Hie GOU!, ouw-.. 72 w!MIW Hlghsrqtngfromtnelllldto H '' llPf* 70. _. ~ to eo. ~ 11 ti .. ~ i.ow. a to 72 16 &7 IT 70 18 68 10 611 IO IO 71 13 17 62 17 93 18 62 ti 82 91 76 .. 7) 17 ... -" 71 ts 7S 1t 6' ..... .. 10 11 ra 81 YO 11 10 .. .. :: ~ ., " 1• 71 .. .. 11 70 .. 1J IO ft 11 1t N 10 .. 14 "' ,. H II .. .. .. u 13 et u Q .. ea .. .. 11 .. .... " 51 17 .. II IO "' ,.. t2 71 It • 02 .. u 74 ... .. IO 71 13 " 11 11 A; : .. 61 11 17 13 ., 13 73 12 72 18 71 · didn't want to do that. I wanted to reduce the college district's expen- ditures. This is an orderly way to do that." =: District funding for KOCE became ... , major issue in last fall's college ·district board election campaign. KOCE te()Cived about $1.9 million non-profit community group, staffed from the college district, accordin,g to by volunteers, which helps raise Furniss. The station also rcc.e1ves funds for the television station. funding from viewer pledge drives, As pan of the gradual reduction 1n federal grants and other sources. It district fundina for KOCE, the will run its next pledge drive AUJ 18 trustees Wednesday night approved a ~irio.~1f'.26·witbagoalofraising ~:c1lud~~1!is~.s~M:~~at:t~:ontlfu: Construction firm fined after In the last election cam~ign scv-the station. KOCE's total 84-84 eralcandidates.includi~gNordquis~ budgetwiUbeaboutS6million. fatal accident in Santa Ana· :.MYSTERY·CRASHDD 4 WS U.S. EYE •• ~--t ,, Buil<:fer:s_ofalO.story)ote.lwherea 'toda)'.forcomment. -.. l"romAl &l"& · · construction worker wa~ Jc.illed last Wllbrecht said bis office has rco- that bis father . was "helping a few members of the crew were but wa; for the Cl.A: · , · -m1:>n°!_ have. Qee.n cited. for seril!m · <>,nun.ended !hat lbe Donlan Cwl>~ ~~:--'-~'Iii, .uuF!-.i~ · ~t.to.sa}'.~l!e wo11tda't $adief Wai a for.mc~MannC:......:~fety v10Jat1~ns and slapped with. paY $:-11,_400 in !!nes ~Evans aoou He said the family had received a · reveal who told bun ho to.discuss the and pilot for Air America in Vietnam fines of nearly Si 4.000... . 5335. uontin ~Slin wliJ\stven of _.death cenificate for his father from accident. · from 1964 to 1974 and he owned a gas A 2~·year-old construction worker the I 0 cnat1ons. . . • .. -Colombian officials and that they "I'm just doing what people tell station on North Coast Highway in was killed July 24 at th~ Granada The most senous of the cuauons were told the body was buned in me," he said. Laguna Beach R.oyale Hometel construcuon site on were leveled at Donlan. The firm was Colombia immediately because no He did indicate that at least one of · Oyer Road off the Costa MC$8 cited for lackina a proper support ,embalming services were avatlable. the crew members was from Orange Air America is known to be a front Freeway in Santa Ana. Joseph San-system for the multi-ton fl&or panel He .... id he 1..-ows who the other County He deni· -...1 his f:ather wor1..ed organization for the CIA, according tangelo of Pomona was crushed by a that fell and for not prohibiting _. IJJ• • ~ .. to a spokesman for Soldier ofFortune 20.t~n concrete panel which fell three workers from being underneath the .--------------------------· magazine. Those who knew the stones. panel when it was bcina lowettd into WIEDE 0 Sadlers said family members had The Ralph W. Evans Co. Inc of plact. R N PROP 36 mentioned CIA ties on several oc-Glendo.ra, the general contractor on At the time of the accident, the huae panel was being lowered into place on the .sixth· floo~ official& satd. San· ~~lo ~i'Jedl' 'Waf Rl"D~ w w"'bTntlle sla JeU: ---· Another citation against Donlan for allegedly failing to install wall panel was tenned a "willful, repeat, serious" safety violation. Wilbrecht said. He said the company had been cited in 1982 for the same violation while worlc.ing on a different project. From Al . • • • • casions. CIA officials refuse to say the prOJect. and the Donlan Corp. of whether Sadler had · ties to the Buena Park were cited for 10 safety tax reform 1nttiat1ve. .. Proposition 13 was not all that bad and it has shown us how to run government more efficiently... she added. according to County Admmtstrattve Officer 800 Thomas . Besides the tax give-back. the measure would cost an additional $4.3 million in administrative costs and would require voter approval for intelligence agency. violations by the state Occupational Weeks said, while the State Depart-Safety and Health Administration. ment is monitoring what happens to Don Wilbrecht, an OSHA regional the two Americans in custody. no manager in Santa Ana, said work on efforts are bemg made to return the the uppc;r floors of the hotel has been two men to the U.S. halted until a number of cha nges are Rain leaving Coast The measure, which will arpear as · fee and tax increases as well as Proposition 36 on the fal ballot, restructuring how property is valued would requtre the refund of an and assessed. Wiederinlreilrsroftlre estimated S 18 to $20 million in excess five-member board to announce her property taxes in Orange Count}, position on the measure. A spokesman for the federal Drug made by the construction comparues. Enforcement AS!!9._ in Washington. He-estimated the changes would take -o.-c::COiilJOu ertf. saTOUie agency another week to complete. had no knowledge of the Colombia Both companies have a right to incident. appeal the c1tat1ons and fines. Spokesmen for tbe two construction companies could not be reached LOS ANGELES (AP) -Fictce rain that unleashed flash floods across the dcsen and briefl)' cut power to thousands in Los Aoaeles won't be ~k this weekend, but lipter sho\41crs and sticky, humid weather will remain. Remnants of Hurricane lsellaoom· ing up from Mexico will create the humidity, while a current of dry air from the north will stabilize con- ditions, said Dave Cooper of the National Weather Service. But there doesn't appear to be any· new tropical storms on the horizon this weekend, he said. Los Angeles will have fair weather with highs in lhe mid·"SOs Fnday. rising to the 90s in the valleys. Lows tonight will be in the 60s. ·BUDGET-BALANCING ISSUE ON-BALLOT .•• iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiL== From.Al Along with lowering interest rates, a balanced budget would rehabilitate the housing industry, Dannemeyer predicted. "Many people wbo can't qualify for housing loans now because of 14 percent interest rates would be able to," he said. "I think restoring the American dream is si1m1ficant." The proposed amendment does not specify exactly how Congress would be able to rem in the imposing deficit. And its proponents aclmowl- ~e thaT while thC" amendment has gamed popular support, carrying out the amendment's provisions would be difficult. President Reagan. for one. has supported th e amendment drive. And yet the deficits piled up dunng Reagan's administration are the high- est recorded in U.S. history. Groups organized to oppose the state in1ttattve have two baste argu· men ts. First, they claim the proposed amendment would not really ac- complish what 1t sets out to do and It could even worsen U.S. fiscal con· ditions. Roy L. Ash, a Los Angeles investor who is the former director of the Office of Management and Budget for the Nixon and Ford admm1strat1ons. said aJI &ood conservatives should be opposed to the 101tiative. "We do need fiscal controls, but this is not the way to do It," said Ash. who '' co-wntina the ballot oppost· · uon afJument to the iniuative. His oppo11t1on 1s based on several . points, 1nclud1ng; • •The amendment co uld dnve congressional spend1na underaround Just Call 642-6086 -Congress could mandate state and local governments and businesses to carry out programs and services it cuts from the federal bud$et. •An amendment reqwring a bal- anced budget could give every citizen the right to fiJe lawsuits against the gove(Jlment challenging its methods of tai.ing and spending and would give any federal judge the ability to set nattonal taxation or spending policy. •Escape hatches included in the amendmClll give Congress the nght to raise taxes to compensate for overspending. A second major argument against the amendment centers around con- stitutional law. A group called Cali- fornians to Preserve the Constitution, formed by Sacramento legislauve analyst Walt Pontynen, claims that a constituuonal co nvention could turn into a boon for special interest tp"Oups who might use the convention to introduce new religious, economic or pohtical amendments to the Con- stitution. "There's no guarant~ that (the convention) could be held to one subject," Pontynen said. "In 1787 the convention was gi ven specific in- structions to revise the Articles of Confederation. And the first thing they did was to draft a com pletelr new document -the Const1tutton.' Holding a convention would be "playing Russian roulette" with groups that want to merie church and state. ban abonions. introduce an economic bill of rights or change the U.S. government to a parliamentary system. Pontyncn said . Ash's and Pontynen·s ar:aument s are supported by constitutional at- tomeys Lawrence Tribe of Harvard and Gerald Gunther of Stanford. And all agree that the lengthy ratification process (it could take nine years, Pontynen said) would allow Congres to delay spending cuts until ratifi- cation takes place. Dannemeyer's press secretary, John Sheik. said the constitutional roulette issue is "a red herring." First of all, he said the convention could be Limited to the balanced budget iss~ .a claim disputed by Gunther and Tribe. And even if other issues arc brought up, Sheik said, all amend· ments must be ratified by 34 of the states before it wins approval. "That's a very long process. If people were opposed (to any ad- ditional amendments that might be introduced), they could easily block them," Sheik said. Finally, Ash pointed out that not all economists agree that a balanced budget ts always a good thing. "The budget system is set up so there should be a surplus in 'ood years and a defec it m bad years.' he said. And the argument about balancing federal finances JUSt like personal finances are balanced is a boJUS one. he added. "Just about every mdi vid· ual has a mongage and credit cards ... he said. In fact, studies have shown that the pcrcenta&e of average individual bor- rowing 1s greater than the same percentage of federal borrowing. .. If we took away everyone's mortage and credit cards, we'd be severely limiting their buyi ng power and lowenn~ their hving standards significantly. · be said. Wbat do you llke about tbe Dally Pllot'! Whal don'& yo11 like? Call tbt number at left and your mcssaae will be recorded, tran1crlbed and delivered to the appropriate editor. Tbe Hme U ·ltour an1werln1 servlct may be used to record letters to tbe editor on any topic. Contrlbutort to oar Lettert column mull Include tbelr name and telephone number for vertflcauon. No circulation calls, please. Tell us wb1t'1 on your mind. ORANGE COAST Circulation 7141142-4333 Cletelfled ltdvertltlng 714/M2·587' Alf other department• 142-4321 Daily Pilat --. AoMmary Churchman Controller I MAIN OPf'ICI .. . l • .:~1 . * NOW THROUGH LABOR DAY WEEKEND * 20% OFF ALL POTTERY • • • • ·~ • • "'• • • • •-••·•-.-.a-_ .. ..,.._ a .. SALE INCLUDES: • POn"ERY •SAUCERS • BARRELS • REDWOOD TUBS • WIRIE BASKl!TS •STRAW BASKl!TS •AND POTTING SOIL TOOi Newport Nursery al)d Garden Center (Between M1cArthur and Jamboree) •FREE• Loc1t Delivery Open on thru Sat 8 30·5 30. Sunday,R 00·5 30 EJ 1500 east eout highway • newport beach. callf rnla • (7H) 644·9S 10 ~ - • I ~l " , . I 1 I \ ' f 11111111111 THURSOA V, AUGUS f' 16, 1984 -ORANGECOUNTY .-CALIFORNIA -25 CENT S Sheriff Brad Gates gets his hoped-for helicopters as supervisors OK a re· cord budget./ A3 A county couple sues Amway Corp. for$10.5 mllllon./ A3 Calif om la Mass murderer Christopher Wilder's vic- tim say she's broke, job- -fess./ AS Nation P-ari Am·slfifcer&-: . ---t grounded.after court In- . junction./ A4 GOP ready for conven- tion, but worry about TV coverage./ A8 World Red Sea mines claim 17th vessel as efforts to find 'sowing' culprits con- tinues./ AS Warplane fires, misses tanker target in Persian Gulf./A4 Living like a sports club, The Computer Experience lets people workout at terminals and develop in- putting.skills./81 And persons who cuss at VDT mistakes can join Computer Cursers of America and get the of- ficial oath./81 Sports Pete Rose is expected to ·be namettp1ay&r.:rnan- ager of the Cincinnati Reds today./C1 Major-league baseball owners unanimously ap- proved the sale of the Minnesota Twlns./C2 Less than a week after the end of the Olympics, Communist countries plan to stage their own games./C3 Entertainment ABC Is rolling In gold today as the Nielsen rat- ings declare the Olympics the most-watched event ever./83 Business Don't give up hope If It appears you can't afford that home or Investment property ./88 INDEX • Bridge BS Bulletin Board A3 Business 86-7 California News A4 Cluslfled C7-10 Comics 85 Crostword C9 Death Notices cs Horoscope C8 In the Service A 7 Ann Lander• 82 LMng 81-2 MUfUll ~~=::::::s==87 National Newt A4 Opinion A8 Paparazzi 81 Polle. Log A3 Public Not!CU CS.6 Sports C1-s Stock Market• 88 T et9vlalon 83 Theatera 83-4 w .. thei A2 World Newt AS e 1acras raws .... interest Nature's art at the Ait8 center Sundown, u eeen ~ the structure that will be the Orance County PerfonDJnC Arta Center, proTide. a Newport swimffier's death in county jail remains a mystery Coroner's report says more-tcsts·necessary · before answer known By STEVE MARBLE OftlleD.itr ......... Cooling, his mother. She sajd sheriffs deputies told her they-suspecte<Urer son--died of·hean - failure. Cooling was arrested on the traffic warrants after being questioned early Tuesday by a security guard at Leisure World in La~una Hills. He apparently was sitting m a spa talking with a friend when the security guard approached him. (Pleue eee JAIL/ A2) State Department monitors incident involving LB man 87 DAVID BlSBOP D111J .... C.1 ' •1 I U.S. State .Depanment o.ffic:Ws confirmed Wednesday they are monitoring the status of two Ameri· cans wno were arrested in South America following · a mysterious plane crash tlW killed a l..quu .Beacbmaa Details about the death of Stephen Lee Sadler, SS, of Laguna Bach (Pleue eee llY81'SllY I A2) By PHIL SNEIDEBM.AN Ol .. Ol9f ....... Coast Community College District trustees have set in motion tbe transfer of ownc!S!iiJ> of public tele- vision station KOCE. Channel SO, to a private foundation over a »month period. KOCE. now operated by the oo1Jqe district. is based on the campus of Golden West College in Huntm&ton Beach. The station ~ill eontinuc to carry -- some collqe district PJ'Olf8Illmin& epattertna of color ln Co.ta 11esa•• Soath Cout Town Center. Tfie picture wu tfken from the San Dletio Freeway. but the move is designed to gradually eliminate the flow of district dollan (Pieue eee KOC&/A2) Barrtett Wieder Wieder position on ~Jarvis IV: No position at all ····-. ='~~~~!\ Although Orange County Board of Supervisors Chairman Harriett Wieder spearheaded efforts this week to prepare county government for a budg.et crunch should the Jarvis IV initiative pass in November. she said Wednesday she plans to remain neutral on the conuoversial measure. "Our purpose is not to take a position," Wieder said as she pvcllcd closed the county's three-day budeet session. "lt's to wait for the volerS to tell us what they want to pay for: .. Wieder added that she thou&ht it would be inappropriate for any public official to take a position on the tax· slashinf measure, an ofJ-spri.na of Proposition 13 designed to close loophoJes in the pioneering property (P1eue eee WIBDBR/A2) The death of a 22-year-old swim- mer from Newpon Beach remained a mystery today after the county cor- oner announced a microscopic exam- ination would be needed todetennine why Grant Richard Cooling died after a short stay in Orange County Jail. An initial autopsy on Wednesday proved inconclusive, officials said. "There is no preliminary cause of death at this time," said Orange County Sheriff Lt. Richard Olson. Arizona police grab $148M in cocaine Olson said Cooli~ was cooperat- ivtt and that bis bnef stay at the county jail was without incident. He said the 22-year-old collapsed a short time after eating lunch with other prisoners. Cooling. a champion swimmer at Corona del Mar High and Orange Coast College, died Tuesday after- noon about 12 hours after being arrested for failing to appear in court on a speeding ticket and an expired vehicle registratton. The 6-foot-S athlete and business student bad been fighting a case of strep throat but was in superior condition and swam about 4,000 meters a day. accordmg to Marjorie Two suspects from Orange County captured in Southwest's largest drug seizure - GLOBE. Ariz. (AP) -Cocaine with a street value of $148 million was found after Gila County deputy sheriff's stopped three pickup trucks near he«. Sheriff Lyman Peace said today. . Four men, two from Orange Coun- ty, were arrested and held under $500,000 bond. Peace said the U.S. Drua Enforce- ment Administration advised him the haul -l,680 pounds of cocaine -"was the laraest ever in the Southwest" "Cocarne usuaUy is sold in pack- ages about the size ofa postage stamp and here we have three pickups full," Pea~ told a reporter. He said deputies had been tipped that pack.ages apparently contatnina drugs bad been loaded into trucks about 11 a.m. Tuesday at a privately owned landin.g strip for small planes near Young, a smalJ commumt} in a sparsely populated mountainous area of central Arizona about 50 miles south of here. Peace said roadblocks wett esta~ lishcd on all roads leading from the area and the trucks were stopped about an hour later on Arizona 288 some five mlles oonh of the Salt River crossing. He 1dent1fied them as James Earles, 24, .of Apache Junction, and three Californians. Robert Krogslund. 41 . of Garden Grove; Charles lager. 38. of Ch.mo, and Ronald Redgenbour. 23, of Westminster. Peace said a ~rt of the arrests and seizure was wtthbcld until today ..because we didn't realize the value and were guessing at what we had" until federal and tate authorities amvcd and completed their checks. The four were Jiven an iniual appearantt in Justice of Pace coun. C~n we balflnCe the budget by f or~e? Californians' ":Ote In NovemJ>ei:.m_ay_resu-=lt=----- ln calling a constitutional convention Balance the bud~t. There was only one balanced Sounds simple. Any home federal bUdget in the past 20 years. In financial manqer does it. Ju<Jt equal 1969 a small bud&et surplus ~suited out the crCOits and the debits and from a tax surcha e im cmentcd in don't ~nd ni<m · • earn. Jl>hnso1f admini tralion. The ta But the federal aovcmmcnt, for all was dcsianCd to raise money for the but one of the past 20 )~•"'· has not · Vietnam war effort. been able to follow that mingly What. tf 1nyth1na. can be done simple course ofactaon. about the runaway deficit and a And, to pro' e it there i ·a S 172 national debt that is app chlfll a billion budaet deficit Pttdictcd A:>r new Trca ury ~ent ceding of this fiscal year. • more th n S l.5 trillion? In fact, the Congreuional Budatt One of the proposed solution ~ill Office hu sa.id Ui t trnolh1na is aone on Catinmtta• election ballot Uiis abOut the mountina bu t defcdt. 1t November in the ronn of a balan cd could run s hi&h a $2 billion b bu t 1ntt1athc. 19 9, nly fl rs from no . .. Pta 1tton S. et it ' appro\'td, '· KAREN KLEIN CAMPAIGN '84 . . . which does not accept fcJony pleas under Anzona law. Courtty Attorney Robcn Duber said a probablc-ausc hearing would be held within l 0 days. The four were being held in the county jail on charges of possession of cocaine, cocaine for sale and trans- portation of cocaine. Peace dechned to say where the plane came from or whether ii had landed or dropped the packages. He said the area has several pnvatc au-ports which are basically the result of a rancher us~ a bulldozer to level the terrain for his own plane. Peace said there was no ugcstioo that the rancher who owned the landina stnp was involved. t 18, 19~ . KOCE LICENSE TRANSFER ••• hoaaAl ~l ve helped lhe 1\ation operate WlCC No\-cmbcr 19 2. The plan 10 transfer the P~ JtlltiOn's liocn~ to t~ pn' te K E Foundation wa approved Wcdne$- day ni&ht b) distnct trustees, -.ho so govern Oranse Coa t, Golden est and Coastline collqes The proposal was adopted in a 4-l vote, with trustees Conrad Nor- dqu11t, Armando Ruit, Nancy Pollard and Richard Olson approv- ina. and Gcora.e Rodd.a Jr. diuentina. odda did not oppose the license c.raruftr but dt arecd with the OnanciaJ formula mociated with ednesday'i plan, • di.ilriCt •Pokes.- man said. District fuod1QJ{ for KOCE became an i~ an tut ratl's cott di trt board cl«tion campaian. lo early 1983, numerous te chm nd admtnistrato~ ~ ved layoff notices be<:au~ or cut cts an 1tate f1i1ndina for community colleges. Teachers and some community members araued that the district should not continue to spend money for . the television station while classroom instructors were beina I id off. Durina the 1983-8.it school year. KOCE rectived about $2 mtllton from the college district. Tbe stauon also receives fundin& from viewer pled&e drives, Jr&OU and other sources. (The station will run it1 next pledgednveAug.18-26. wilhaaoalof 0 rllsin& :s 120.000). In 'ihc last clcct1on campaign V· era.I candidates. mctudina Nordquist, R uu and Pollard, pied cd to make KOCE 1elf-1uffic1cnL Last prin KOCE fundina wn addressed in a rtport by Evans Manaiemcnt Services, a consultant hared by the board. The Evans report recommended aradual dive111tutt of KOCE. with transfer of the 1tation's license to a pnvate aroup uch 11 the KOCE Foundation. Ai"pltt of the gradual reducuon in district fundina for KOCE, the trustees Wednesday niaht approve<l a $91 million district budget that includes a SI .S million allocation for the station. MYSTERY CRASH DRAWS U.S. EYE ••• J'romAl rtmain sketchy a month after he was The twin-engine aircraft crashed killed in an airplane crash in a remote on takeoff from a clandcsune a1rstnp ~on of Colombia. to the remote GuaJrra reglon of ' State Department. U.S. Embassy Colombia, according to South Amen- and Colombian officials refuse to say can sources. Its 1denuficat1on much about the crash. They dechned numbers had been painted over No to "¥ what Sadler, who reportedly cargb was found on the wreck.age. • bad ues to the CIA. may have been The sec.ond body found in the doina in that South American coun-wreckage is still urudenllfl!d and try and won't 1dent1fy the other men both men killed were buned on July connected to the incident. 29 by a local priest io the small town Richard Weeks of the State Depart-of Nazareth near the crash site, ment confirmed that a second un-diplomatic sources in C.Olombta rc- identified man was killed m the crash ported and that two other Amencans were Sadler's son Sean said Wednesday bospitalizcd and remain m custody that bis father was "helping a few by C.Olombian offictals on cbaJ"&es friends" in Colombia. related to violating Colombtan air He said the family had received a S)»ce. One of three other men death certificate for lus father from apparently was from Orange County. C.Olombian officials and that-they Weeks would not reveaJ the names were told the body was buried in of the two survivors tn custody lD C.Olombia immediat,ely because no Colombia because be said be had no embalming serviecs were available. authorizallon under the federal He said be knows who the other pnvacy act. members of the crew were but was Weeks said Wednesday that tbc told not to say anything. He wouldn't Colombian Air Force notified the reveal wbo told him no to discuss the SJate ~nt of the inCtdenl on acadcnt • J{Jty 30. -.. rm ]ust doina what people ten It was unclear why the security guard questioned him and why the a,wi.rd then contacted sherifrs depu-ues, wbo apparently turned up the traffic warrants dunna a routine record check. ... Marjorie Cooling said her son and his friend were talkina and rel.axina after attending a concert Monday even.in& at Irvine Meadows. .WIEDER ON PROP. 36 ••• From Al JO reform iniuauve =· "Proposmon 13 was not all that • ._d and tt bas shown us bow to run tovemment more efficiently," she added. The measure, wtucb will appear as Propos1uon 36 on the fall ballot, would require the refund of an estimated S 18 to $20 mtlJJon to excess .Propeny taxes in Oranae County, according to C.Ounty Admirustrativc Officer Bob Thomas. Besides the tax ai ve-back., the measure would cost an addiuonaJ $4.3 million in administrative costs and would require voter approval for fee and. increases as well u re5tructurina bow property ts valued and assessed. Wieder is the first of the five-member board to announce her Position on the measure. me." he said. He did indicate that at least one of the crew members was from Orange Count). He denied his father worked for the CIA. Sadler was a former U.S. Manne and pilot for Air America in Vietnam from 1964 to 197 4 and he owned a gas station on North Coast Highway in Laguna Beach. Air Amenca is known to be a front organization for the CIA, according to a spokesman for Soldier of Fortune m.,azine. Those who knew the Sadlers said family members bad mentioned ClA lies on several oc- casions. CIA officials refuse to say whether Sadler had lies to the intelligence agency. Weeks sa.id, while the State Depart- ment ts monitorin& what happens to the two Amencans in custody, no efforts a.re being made to return the two men to the U.S. A spokesman for the federal Drug Enforcement Agency in Washinaton. D.C.. Con Dougb~rty, said the agency had no mow.lcdit of the Colombia inodent. Cooling was lo start his senior year al use this fall and was intel"C$ted in pursuina a career 10 the car business, friends said. He and a friend bad staned their own car detailing enterprise during the summer months. Don Watson, tbe swim coach at OCC, said Cooling bad talked infor- mally of returning to the community colleae dus year to be captain of the swim team. Watson said CoolinJ _was cons1derina dropping out of USC to save money sot.hat he could attend an East C.Oast business school the year after ''He will st.ill be our QpJain this year. It's not much but it's a gesture of respect," said Watson. "Grant will be the (honorary) swim team captain this year." ·BUDGET-BALANCING ISSUE ON BALLOT ... · Jl'romAl Along with lowering interest rates, a balanced budget would rehabilitate the housing industry, Dannemeyer '"f)redicted. "Many people who can't qualify for housing loans now because of 14 percent mterest rates would be able to," he said. "I tbmk restonng the Arnencan dream 1s s1tntficant." The proposed amendment docs not specify exactly how Congress would be able to rem an the imposing · ~cil And its proponents aclmowl-edJe that wh1le the amendment bas '-&ained PoPUlar support, carrying out "the amendment's prov1s1ons would be difficult. • _, President Reagan, for one, has 1 'upponed the amendment dnve • And yet the deficits piled up dunng Reagan's admin1strat1on are the high-est recorded Ul u .s. history. ""' Grou~ oraamzed to oppose the ~te irutialive have two basic argu- ment&. Fint, they claim the proposed amendment would not really ac- -coml)lisb what at sets out to do and 1t could even worsen U .S fiscal con- ditions. Ror L Ash.i a Los Angeles investor who 11 the ronncr director of the Office of Management and Budaet for the Nixon and Ford administrations. ' said all good conservauves should be opposed to the 1mtiauve. "We do need fiscal controls. but hi1 is not the way to do at." said Ash. 'who is co-wnllna the ballot oppos1- 1'tion arsument to the 1n1t1allve · His OPJ>?S1tion 1s based on several ~.poinu, 1ncludm1- ' •The amendment couJd dnve • ~npessional spending undervound . -Congress could mandate state and local governments and businesses to carry out programs and services it cuts from the federal bud~et. •An amendment requuing a bal- anced budget could give every citizen the right to file lawsuits apinst the government challellJlDI its methods of taxing and spending and would &l ve ao y f edera.J judge the ability to set national taxation or spendin& poltcy. •Escape hatches included m the amen~ment give C.Ongress the n&ht to nuse taxes to compensate tor overspending. A second maJOr argument against the amendment centers around con- stitutional law. A group called Cah- fomiaos to Preserve the Constituuon, formed by Sacramento legislauve analyst Walt Pontynen. claims that a constitutional convention could tum into a boon for special interest JrOUps who might use the convenuon to introduce new religious, economic or political amendments to the Con- stitution. "There's no guarantee that (the convention) could be held to one subject," Pontynen said. "In 1787 the convention was given specific in- structions to revise the Articles of Confederation. And the first thing they did was to draft a completely new document -the Constitution.· Holding a convention would be .. play10g Russian roulette" W1th groups that want to merse church and state, ban abortions, introduce an economic bill of ri&hts or chance the US. government to a parliamentary system, Pontynen said Ash's and Pontynen's aJJuments are supported by const1tut1onal at· torne_ys Lawrence Tribe of Harvard and Gerald Gunther of Stanford. And all agree that the lengthy ratification process (it could take nine years, Pontynen said} would allow C.Ongres to delay spending cuts until ratifi- cation takes place. Dannemeyer's press secretary, John Shelk, said the constitullooal roulette issue is "a red herring." First of all, be said the convention could be limjted to the balanced budget issue, a claim disputed by Gunther and Tribe. And even if other issues arc brouaht up, Sbelk said, all amend- ments must be rallfied by 34 of the states before it wins approval . "That's a very long process. If people wert opPosed {to any ad- ditional amendments that might be introduced), they could easily block them," Sheik said. Finally, Ash pointed out that not all econom1st1 agree that a balanced budget is always a good thing. "The budget system is set up so there should be a surplus in food years and a defecit in bad years,' he said. And the argument about balancing federal finances just like personal finances are balanced is a t>osus one. he added. "Just about every individ- ual has a mortaaae and crcd.tt cards." he said. In fact, studies have shown that the percentase ofaverage indjvidual bor- rowina 1s areater than the same percentqe of federal borrowina. "If we took away everyone's monage and credit cards, we'd be severely hm1un1 their buying power and lowcrin~ their livina standards 11an1ficantiy, • he said. a Fair skies and high c ot;tds due CoutBl ~-~-~ '"'~NTI ~~ Wt""-Coia._.. ... 70 ., n ... 70 ., )0 .... :: n ., Q .. 7t .. .. • ., .10 .. n '° 71 11 71 ts l'O .. ,. tJ 14 ... , .. .. " aa Q .. Snowt1• ~ fu1,.1 Snow Oc~•d..,.. Sta•i011ttt ...., NetQlll ¥w•9* 9-w• N()A4 V $ °"°4 el Goo-.. t 12 D .. u .. .. u .. .... I& 61 17 .. N IO '3 71 Tl dee TOOAY 103 p.m 702011! ~am lilmaroa .... 4lloaton 2 l;/flalO llwtingtotl. VI fllllOAY ~ fWtl hlO'I I) 44 • lfl 4 I ChMlletOfl.S C FnllOw I H e m ll~on.WV a-.d fWOI' 137 Oro 4 I Clwtotle.H C 81oondlo• ·~01'1\ 2 ~ . ~ 5"" 11te today at 7 38 O m , ,_ CtnclnllaU l'flday 111 11 • m a/Id eett ~ti 1 31 Ctew141"4 p'" ec.im1>11 s c Moon ,,_ lod.., e1 10;30 p "'1 -~ °" f l'!Uy It 10 4 2 I m ll>d lllM ~ I Col'lclald .N '4 e 11 pm Dl"-1'1 Worth ---------DllytOtl Otl'l-Temp• 0. Moon. 0..10.1 15 .. .. .. ., 1t ., 70 II n .. 17 u .. ... 7t .. .. .. 12 IO st 17 93 .. 11 D D ... 11 .. 11 .. IMI ... 71 13 11 .. 12 85 Tl .. 13 DulliUI llP-E~ FalrNnlil ,.,to ,,.,.., Otend~ OtllCfdl. Har11~ ........ HonoUo.t Holallon ~~ Jldl.-.Mt Jlldl_,..., ""'- .. 17 • '° IO 71 17 17 .. ti ti .. 17 .. t3 11 17 10 .. SI IO 63 12 u 12 12 71 n .. 71 7J A' t2 " .... t2 .. 12 74 .. .. 10 n Q .. 11 ., 11 .. 17 .. .... ., 17 nu h n u 12 " 71 Construction firni fined after fatal accident in ~51nta Ana Buildcrsofa l~tlotel where a ~TOrco mall. Atthetimeofthe.a<:cidmt, thebus. construction work.er was killed last Wilbrecbt said his office has rec: paJl,CI was being lowered into place on month have bcco cited for senous ommended that the Donlan Corp. the suth floor, offiei.a.ls wd. San- safety violations and slapped with pay S 13,400 in fines and Evans about tanaelo reponedly was staodma fines of nearly S l .it.000. $335. Donlan wu hi1 with seven of below when the slab fell. A 26-year-old construction worker tbc fO citations. Another citation aga10st Donlan for allegedly failing to install wall panel was termed a .. willful, repeat, serious" safety violation, Wilbrecht said. was killed July 24 at the Granada The most serious of the citations Royale Hometel construction site on were leveled at Donlan. The finn was Dyer Road off the Costa Mesa cited for lackina a proper support Freeway in Santa Ana. Joseph San-system for the multi-ton Ooor panel tangelo of Pomona was.~sbe.d by a that fell and for not prohi&iting 20-ton concrete panel which fell three workers from being underneath the He said the company had been stones. panel when it wu bem& lowered mto cited m 1982 for the same violation The Ralph W. Evans C-0. Inc of place. while working on a different project. Glendora, the general contractor on --------------------------• the project. and the Donlan Corp. of Buena Park wert cited for 10 safety violauons by the state Oc.cupauonal Safety and Health AdnunlStration. Don Wilbrecht. an OSHA regional manager m Santa Ana. said work on the upper floors of the hotel has been baited until a number of changes arc made by the construction companies. He estimated the changes would take another week to complete. Rain leaving Coast LOS ANGELES (AP) -Fierce rain that unleashed fl.ash Oood.s across the desert and briefly cut power to thousands in Los Ana~les won't be back th1s weekend. but hJhter showers and sticky, humid weather will remain. RemnantsofHumcane l~llacom­ms up from Meiuco wtll create the hwnidity. while a current of dry aJr from the nonh will stabtllzc con- dallons. said Dave Cooper of tbe National Weather Service. But there doesn't appear to be any new tropical storms on the honzon this weekend, he said. Los Angeles w1ll have fair weather with highs in the mid-80s Fnday, nsing to the 90s in the valleys. Low• tonight will be in the 60s. Both companies have a right to appeal the citations and fine~ . Spokesmen for the two construction compani~ could not be reached iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~ *NOW THROUGH LABOR DAY WEEKEND • 20% OFF ALL POTTERY SALE INCLUDES: • POnERY • Rl!DWOOD TUBS • SAUCl!RS • WIRE BAIK•TS • BARRl!LS • STRAW BASKl!TI · • AND POnlNQ SOIL TOOi -. Just Call 642-6086 Wbal do you like about tbe DaJly Piiot? Whet don't you llke? Call tbe - number at left and your me1111e wlll bt recorded, trao1crtbed and delivered to the approprlete editor. The 11me t4·bourao1werln111rvlce ma)' bt ated to record leaten to tbe tdltor on uy topic. Cootrtbatort to our Lettert column mast laclude their name and telephone oumbtr for verlflcelloa. No clrcalatlon call a, pluae. Tell u1 wb1t'1 on )'Oar mlnd. ~, . ._ ____________________________________________________________________________ ...., 08'fy Piiot o.llYefJ 11 OuarentMd ORANGE COAST Dally Pilat H. L. Sctlwertz Ill Publisher Aoeemery Churchmen Controller teptten F. C•ruo Pr0duct1on ariagcr Donald L. Wllllam1 Circulation Manager ' Clrcutetlon 714/M2.oOU ClaMln.d ednrtlalng 71A/142.....,. AJI other dep911mente 142-4321 MAIN OFFICI :aJ0 W I Cotti ..... CA M •I M VOL 17,N0.229 • ... - AM LING ' s Newport Nursery and Garden Center rBetween MacArthur and Jamboree) •FREE• ocal Oehvery -----~{---l Open Mon thru 'Sit 8 30·5 30. Sunday 9 00·5 30 1500 ea t coast h ghway • n port en. c1hforn 1 • (71•) &4•·9510 • t • I