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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-08-01 - Orange Coast Pilot, TOMOWW: WARM OA ANGE CC UN T Y , __ Newport~ drug.case-to be .refil~d Prosecutor will try a nother court-afte r chief. judge hassle produces notoriety By S1'EVE MARBLE Of h D.-y "94 Stlllt A county prosecutor said he wrll refi k charaes rn a contro,crs1al SID m1llioa Newport Beach drug case but he will do so in another court to avoid Irvine 'drug fund~ backed By PHIL SN~IDERMAN Of ... Delly .... tWt The lrvine City Council has agreed 10 set up a special account for mone}' scrzcd in narcotics anvest1ga11ons and plans to use these funds 10 bolster future dr.ug enforcement work an the crty. Traditionally. cash and other assets confiscated rn local drug rnvestiga.- uons arc turned over 10 .state and federal narcotics official!>. But lrvine police Sgt. Leo Johes. who supervises the department's drug invcstrga11ons. said recent state and federal rulings allow some ofth1s money to be returned 10 local depart- ments. Although the city has not received any such .Jll!oca11ons yet, Jones said he wanted a fCfrmal Irvine account in place. along with gurde- lr nes for use of the monC'}'. a conlhct Deputy Drstnct Attorney Dercck Johnson sard he 1s concerned about the publicity over the SJO mrllron mariJuana se11ure and worries that. 1udges at Harbor Municipal Court in Newport Beach ma> lccl a~k""ard handling the case. ' "h's not meant as a slap at any of the Judges" Johnson added. "It's Just that the} probably would feel uncom- fortable with a case Most or them are privy to the facts and opinions .. :· The drug case was drsmJssed last month after Harbor C'ouri Judge Russell Bostrom rufed Newport Beach police conducte<j an illegal search ot a 45-foot vaeht where live tons of marijuana were found. ·The Judge tossed out felony charges against three Santa Cruz men who allegedly smuggled the boatload of contraband north from ( olombra Bostrom said he believed po)tre officers ma}' have hcd and chwfgcd their testimony during the court proceedings. The JUd'e fi led an affidav11 Tuesda} outlining his susp1- c1ons that police ollicers commatcd perjury and po~!>tbly obstructrd JUS· t1ce and destroyed evidence 1n the case Judgt' Christopher Strople. the pre\1d1ng Judie of Harbor Coun. asked the Grand Jur) to rnvrstrptc the allegauons. which he described as serious. Perjur) and destruction ol e-.1dencc arc felonies John~n u1d he will U')' to rdi~ drug charges aptn t 1he Santa Crui men an Ccntnal Mun1c1pal ourt tn n ra ~ na ~ h~rt JUdJts ma) not have bttn e\pos«S to the ··press CO'\era~ and all the tall.." on &he Cbe. Because of the unusu~ circum- stancC'i surroundina the ca • John· son said William Nelson. 2S: David ( hu-. :!8: and Vactor Lucm1. 35. (Pleue tee DRUO/ A2) Hodel ~egiris _ tour of ·West Local officials hope to change his mind on off shore drilling -----By ROBERT HYNDMAN OtlMO.-, .......... Interior S«retar) Donald Hodel embarli;ed W~nesday on a month- long tour of the West that wall talc htm to Orange County Aug. 31, to discuss proposals to Ir n a mor.uonum on. offshore 011 dnlling. tto(l~I tofd the A"ssociated Press Wednesda}' he looks forward 10 the heann~ an C'ahfom1a He suggested that funds could be used to buy com mumcauons equ1p- ment or vehicles for use in local drug investigations. He 'said undercover (Pleue Me FUND/ A2) o.., ......... _, ....... a..- Aerlal view of Fluor •lte ln Irvine, earmarked for "moet preatiglou• multi-me complex in Southern California." "I'm alwa}s an op11m1st. and I alwa}'s hope that "'e wall be able to resohe -.ome1h1ng b~ ncgouauon and conscnsu'> rather than confronta- tion ... he ~1d ·• "' this point. cvcry-bod~ l'i m a listening mode ... Hodel plan to conduct town hall meetings m I~ (allfom1a coastal commun1llt'S to hear comments on a prelrmtnal) agreement to lcaS<' off- shore stte<, tor orl and gas de' elop- ment $340 million Fluor"sale OK'd f' A Huntington Beach tow- ing company owner plans to go to court to fight the suspension of his busi- ness permit./ A7 Entertainment Debbie Allen is dynamic In the Los Angeles revival of "Sweet Cha~lty.' '/83 Bualness A venture group has been formed in Orarge County to put deals together ./BS ··~1---New company plans to turn Irvine acreage into highly 'prestigiuus.mtxed-use complex' ' - By PHlL SNEIDERMAN Of IM Delly l"Mol It.ti The spacious. grass) areas sur- , rounding the familiar &reen-glass Fluor Corp. headquarter"i rn lnme have somcllmes been refcrn:d to as the most expcnsl\e lawns rn Orange (ounl}. The sale: of those la" n' and the hurldmgs atop them has been con- duded. Fluor officials announced Wcdncsda). The Fluor '>rte at Jamboree Boukvard and the San Du:go Frce- "a' wa'> purchased for $340 m1lhon b} a partnership 1moh rng Oallas- ba..ed de, eloper Trammell (row Co and Boston-based Winthrop hnnncaal .\ssoc1ates Under the term'> of the sa~. Fluor 1h1s "'eek recer -.cd S305 mrlhon The rema1nrn~ SJ5 m1ll1on will be rc- ce1 vcd alter Jul} ll. 1<>86. ··upon confirmation ol dcvt•lopml'nt right\ b) tht• cal} of In. rm• " Fluor 00ic1al\ said Last 'pnng. when Fluor and Tram- mcll (row disclosed plans to de' dop the land wrth ~otel~. ollico buildings and rctarl shops. some \II} oflinals d1'k.lgrccd o-.er what legal~ can he de' eloped on the Sile Beeau~ ol trallic constraints. In inc,., lrmllrng some de\elopmenl an the popular area adJaccnt to John Wa) nc .\1rport In recent months. Fluor and Tram- mell Cro"' have been meeung ""llh the Cit}' and with representauves of ncaghborrng busine!>ses to rron out d1fTerencc' O\ er the dl'' clopmcnt plans .\t a pre<,s conference \\-edne~a}'. Da'td S Tappan Jr .. Fluor chaarmaq - and chief t'\CCutave officer, '>aid oft he land ..ale and de.,.dopmenl squahble .. I won't den} it's bel'n a some'A-hat bumfl\ road ·· But ht• added. ··we thin"-. the spmt of coopcra11on 1s real and genuine and "l' l'\JX'CI rc'>olu11un ol thrs l'>'>UC rn 1h1s tall'ndar }t:ar." \\ 1llram l ant• a managing partnt•r \\llh Trammell C'rO\.\ 1n Orange Count). described the f luor land purcha<;(• a\ ''the laf'tlc'it real e\tJtl· transactton Trammell C'ro"' has done 10 date .. Lane said the compan\ plans to turn the Fluor acreage 1n10 ·:1he most 'prest1g1ous mr\Cd-use compleJ1. 1n Southern ( alrtom1a ·· He did not .innounce a date for constru~11on to bcgJn - Fluor. an cngrneenog-end construc- t ion and na tural resource manage- ment firm. wall continue m busanes'i opera lions al the Ir' rne l'Ompltx . hurl I bet"'l~n I Q74 and 11181 It includes a l(}..c;101) corporate to>Aer. ~" four-stor\ office building' and a nne-.-.tol) concour~.-on the 14 8 acre '-1 ll' l lndCf the terms Of lht• \ale nuor hJ\ leased all of the n1s11ng '>lrUcturec; tnr S 'O m1llton per 'ear The com- pJn\ •'> -,uh-lca\ang atlou1 ~O pt.•rccnl (Please aee FLUOR/ A2) Dunng the mor:ith he also plans to , • .,,, lndran r~nauons wildlife refuge\. "'''d horst' adopuon centers. an-heolog1cal \tie'\ and ~" national park\ C )range ( oasl rel.1dcnts and elected 01fa·1a1., "rll meet \\ Hh Hodel from 4 to 11 am ~turda' .\ug 31. at the '\r)li"POrt Beach C II) ( ouncal chambers . .-.aid\\ ilham 5<.hrcrber an jtdc tu Rep Ro~rt Badham R· "'l'"P<ln Beath Flt"l.'tt'd leal.lrr' "111 address Hodd lnnl'l'tntng thl'H npfl<1li1t1on to plan\ that "ould Of'K'n •q ..quart' mill-.; ol 1x:t·an floor oil lhl· Orangt• ( ua-.1 tor oil drilling ( Hht·r, lllJ\ .il.ldre" Ho<ll'I. hut mU\I rt'QUl'\I l)l'rmt\'>100 1n \\flltng lhrough Bddham' 1llfo:e 'x.hn:1~r -..11d I 11\al kadl'r' Jrl' encoui-J~ang (Please see INT ERIOR/ A2) INDEX Boating Erma Bombeck Bridge 8 1 8 2 84 A3 Freeway fee meeting canceled Eastern.Freeway study continuing Bulletin Board Business Classified Comics Crossword e>eath Notl~s Horoscope 85-6 C4-6 84 C6 ca cs 82 A8 8 1 8 3 A3 Altern~tive routes proposed by homeowne rs"- will be.considered in bid to ease traffi c crus h Ann Landers Opinion Paparazzi Play Review Police Log Public Notice s Sports Televlson heaters Weather C6-8 c 1-3. 8 83 A-1 .... .1 ...... "'t Gou II __.'-8) JEFF ADLE R • "" n "'"" "" 'I OCtt "'991 "'1:1 Of 1M o.+1r l'llol 11.ft tenatlvety scheduled today to 1 ht• Orange < u~nt). Board ot consider compromlsea In a legal Su pen 1<,1m decrdt'd Wednesda} 10 dispute over a freeway fee ballot lOn11nue wtth an r~cpth stud~ of measure hU bHn canceted. the \ arrnus routes tor the proposed Assistant City Manager Paul ta\tl·rn Frce"'a>-which "'ould ~krrt Brady Jr. uld Mayor David Baker In inc anti pass through North Tustin and Councilman Larry Agran met and L t·mon Hcrghtli Wednesday with proponents of In '(It 1 ng to approve the '>l'<:und the "Right-to-Vote" measure phu'>l' 01 thl· l>tudy. supervisors agreed to n.irrn" the number of frcewa\ and members of the groups that SC't:llon' or hnl.:<. under consrdcra11on ~~-+.-1:Wta.....C1181•'91NJ..-Wiµfesi~~r-i.._-mo>m·-g311r11KT) lloo~.!O Including SC\ cr~T adopted, the ordinance would alternal1'" routing-. proposed b) area · require the Irvine City Council to homl'O" nt'r'> who turned out in lor('e (Pt-.. ... CANC&L/A2) al thr morning mccllni. How tra~matidare deffierits to Fountain Valley hospital? Trauma center director ~tsputes c riticism. but says facility wfll work to regain status Imagine ~u·re an\.ol-.cd ma 1raffic acc1den1.nt '1 a.m. You're rushrd 10 the nearc\I ho,prtal emergency room w1th~nou, tnJunci.. Medical c'~rls \a) )'OU must receive attcn11on w1th11l the crucial "&olden hour·· alicr an tnJUl)' occu"' Rut 1h1 .. ho,pllal lnck, the equip. mcn1 anJ 1cchn1c1an<1 nchlcd for a quack evalun11on ot')<our an1unc~ l thr hour nt> 'IUrJc:On l'i on dUI} rh1 ho~p1tal d(~\n 't h;n c l·nou h ol \our hlood t)Pl' The goldrn hour -and \011r hk ,., \lrpprna ii""' f hi\ '\Ort ol \(Cnano pmn1p1~-d ' hN•hh con: C\lle"' tn f'll'\'\'l tor , r,•at1nn nl J 11 auni.l '~111\'r ' ,t,•m 111 Or.1na~ t ount~-----~ . ' Thev reasonrd that the nenn.·~1 l'mcrgcnf~ room nl1ght nnt al"'a)~ tx· lhl· he'! pla<:c to care for \ rctrnn of hfe tlircatcn1na m1une ... tn'tl'lld the) argut:e. the chances of \Un 1' al rm- pro"c wht•n thr -.1C11m " rn._cn 10 ;i ho p11al equ1ppt"d to h:mdJc £)1nrcu- larl) S(r1ous &nJurrc'I -e' t•n 11 11 rs 11 lrw more rmlc' a~a> Ollic1als at I nunia1n Valle) < om- muOll} Ho'>pttal were monp the mu\I rt"\\l\l' in l'llf'u"'' trauma n •n1cr i.talu'> \nd \\hen the Oran~\' ( ounl) '>)\t\'n "·" 1:'11Jhl..,hi'(1 in 1"80. r ount:1111 \ .1lh:·' < ummun11' "a' one ot lht: h11w1tab ~£L:tc:J \inn• thl'n I • 1111t1aan Vaill'\ Com· mun11\ ha.,c,11111 IJ Jl\J1nn1 ·n. \lh1: '>~Stl·m·., bus1c\I l't'ntrr. handlrntt 40 pc:rcent of the count\ 's trnumo la\C'>. an• ludina 'rctrms 0(1rallit: autdl·nt'I \hoo11n&' Jnd \tah rng' 'i1m c I 4MO tht• hospital hn' tr\'atl•<l mun· than 1 000 lrauma p:\llenl'i Rut lt1\1 '-'Cd. ·~ oun1,11n \ .1llc' ( ommuntl)' oOrual'i ~el\' ,1u.xkl·d Ill Jearn that rl'' IC'-" team had&•' l'n the: ho<iptl:'ll onh a I 1lkJ11\ c\tcn'1on ul u-. tr:mm:a <'rn1er Jl''11tn.11mn In rnntrast. tJ( Ir' inc ~kd1u1I < cntl·r in Oranl!.l' rc•H'l\l'd .1 onl· ~ctir ntcMron M""on < ommunm IJO'-· p11al in Ml\s1on \ 1qo·.1nd \\c\tcrn ~kd1, I (enter rn \: nta \n.1 t\"\t:I\ cd .full t\lll•\l\Or traum.;i l\'nlt r l\·nffi~ • 11on Ttie lillh hmf'11,tl \n hcam ~kmm1JI iu, \!rnpp.·ll 11u1 111 th,• ' '>kill ~ I mioturn \'all,., < nmmuntt\, J\f· ti"'a 11' 11r\' n:butti ~omi.: ot' lh~ .\mong 1h11\c Jl1gnmcnl!i l•llm1natl'.'d Imm lurthl·r lOns1der ation "l'rl' tho!>t: p:i-,sang doses1 to resrdcntral dc,clopml'nt'i 1n East Tustin Orange ;rnd the 'A-estem portwn-. ol In tnt' Thl· Ea:1tan Frl't'\.\J\ j\ propo~d "'ould lrnk tht• Rt' l'r\rdt• ~ rl'C\\3\ an Anaheim Hills \\Ith lht' \anla \n.1 Frcc"a' Ill r ustan. Tran~portnt1on pl.inm•r\C\pel·11h,· lrcc"a' tu be built l'.lrh m thl' ne\I lt'.'nlur\ Jl a -.mt ran~ang Imm ~~~O II• Sl6U n11ITion - Su pen 1\or\ al\o ordcrt'd Jd d111onal '' ud\ of an alternat" e rou1- rn1t prooo\c<l b' area rc~rdt:nl PHIL SIEIDEllAI Fo cus ON THE NEws rl'' 1c" lctim '> conduo,1(10\ ' l·I tht' aho W' th'·' "'ll m.ili.c >Ah.1tl''cr r111n·dural change, ·'''' Mn· ...-.n to ,on1111m· '"a ·1r:wm.1 len1t1 MC'3n· "h1k wunt mcdtCal c'pcll~ '°' h.'\rJcnt' \l\ould not Ix' "an u1 tx·1n t.ll.l·n to fountain \ itllk' lor ,,,., 1- mcn1 \111l lhl' \IUlh ha\ l '"I ·' ,h, do\\ \l\ \•f thl hO'i,Jlll3i • Dr \.\ 11l1am l oompwn. th\' ht"t" 1al\ '"r'" tor of traum~ ~r' ''\' "11J J ount11n Valin ( oinmurul' ' will "'.l' "..aunncd h' th\ rcp.u1 \\t thin!. "r run nne ul th,• he \ traumJ H'n\\''' 1n ttw \01101" ·• h ~11J r h ' ,,., '""' w ... l ondrn:tnl "'" ph\\l\llll\\ .1n1.I ,, llOl\lll\8 nur~· au f Ple&M ... TRAUKA/A2} -------~ \1rthelk Hn111t.., \\h1dt \\11uld hillo" tht• e\lt'll\11•n 111 tht: L1guna I fl't:"a' 1t1 "an11Jgo ( .imon RoJJ lonnl"ll lll lhl' ( 1Jrtkn < 1t1•l t: I rt'CWJ\ along. ~anlt~u C. re.:"-. 0 J nJ ,nnn'-''' ll\ tlw R1H'r\rdl· I rt'C \\J\ along HlrnJ ar:i~ ( 1 \ f'l'>U ll1 l J 11\1 \n\ .. Th"'' ,1 JX>tl'nllalh "'''l .lltl'rna- t1H· ·· ctimnwntt:d \uix•r\ l\t1r Bruu: 'l''-IJnd,· "h11~· J1<,trtd tJt..''' an mu\h ul thl' \luJ, jrl'J an mat..ang ,ull 1ht· \ll·lJllcd Rrooi..., .\ltt•rnall\\ \\IHllll h\: 1ndudt'd 1n th\· 'IUlh "'<''landl· .uldl·d that hl' !'Clan l'' lhl· nc'' freC\\J\ "needed to rreH'nt gridlut i..·· on ulunt\ road<, JnJ <..11d 1ht lrl'l'"a' "11uld mmc tralf Jrnu11J rfh· u1unl\ ratllt:r tn.:ln th rough H'St1.kn11.t1 n~·1ghhorh1w1d' ··Thl'rl' "'II ht• nti n&$1ng fhl· larh ·'"II t.ltdak and a prdern•d ahl'rnd- 11, l' "'ill rl·-.ult a'> lhl· data dictate'>. · hl' ...i1J \mong the numcrnu'i homeo"'ne~ \\ho C\PfeS'>l-d partKular lO nccm\ o' ,·r ttw propo~-d frl."t'-wa~ roulc was Ir ' int rn1de-nt Mtl.l' l eonard rcp- fl''l'nt1ng the '\lorthwood Homc- 11\l m·r. \\'>0\.1a11on l C'111Mrd 1old -.up:r' 1-.ur\ one of the p1up.1~·d .ilignmcnh the Pete~ (a- n, 1•n \\ a'h \henmc:-nt "'ould foret• d1a'"' ll., ''nn nl thr l '''of Ir. rnC'·s c •l·nl·t.11 PIJn Jnd 'hnuld be re- t lHl,1dnl·d ~fr al'<l J'llo.l'd that the lru "a' tx· ~cpl nil nearb\ L oma~ K1ll11l In rd.1ll0J.1.l.lfill]l!'"'' lrq~·-'t-pktrt-­ nrn~ rnanagC'r P.1 ul lrdand f\'4Ut:\ll'd thal lall'lul l.Un\llh:r<1t1on hl: @.l\l'n Ill 10 .1ltitnml·n1 1ha1 lultnv.<, thC' (om- (Pleaac aee FREEWAY /A2) Marine gets life· in El.Toro base barracks killing 8)' TEVE MARBLE Of flle Deity ""4 It.II \11 11 I 11111 \l,111111· 11111"K11.rl "J' "'nt, nli'\l 1t1hk1n pn,nn V. t'tln,·,J,I\ ,\ll\·1 aJm1111n • he lolkd .i kll11v. \f:mnl• \\hn \\:I( ITC'lptnJ m1h1:1n 1 n' \·,11~11'" unr;n ,-1 ,1 11·" 1111l '' • 111 "" thi' ha" <pl R1,h,11~l 1 Plum ,., l.11.111\ ,1.1hlx'\I N ( "'''\ 111 lk1 I 1n ll ~I· \,•;ir-0ltl \h1n(" n,111' < .,.. h'"'' ~' ":t' lnund 'J'1 .l\'kJ 1n h" """'""'' \1,tf h ~I :1, urding In m1t11ar. 11111, , .. 1, \ n11h1;i" 111di' \\'111\'nl\'\I J'tum· "\ttt'r 'A.~lnN.I ' 111 n dl\h11n1•r:t"lc.- d1" h.11 1.. r\'Ju, 1111n 111 pn' .11, h11 k•tll-'1 ~ 10 ~\. •t4'1 tllm~ I\ ., t~I ~ - , 11ntin, nt• lll for hl1· ..ard \jartnt' \11 l'l' Jll~: I 1),1\ I\ If » "111 \(·rH' ht'I hk term at 1 ,-.1 q·nv. or th I c-dc ral ~n111·nt1ilr) an Kun..:i' l);i, 1, ... -ud l~umnh'f rl ·.1,ft'\l 'ulh\ 1 uc\<ll\ 111 ''· ""'n' ~m :tn :an11 tn 'hifl!''' 1h.11 hl" "·" f"Jfl 111 a u1n,p1titt' 1n a "h,·ow 1h.11 ,11tk1.t<d mm1.· than I ~OU an f\.'\\toll lull(I\ l>J'.'' 1d • fllli, 1.11\ ~·ht·', ~'rrtlt"n and 1no1h1·r \hu1nr 1tl 1ll "h,1m >Anrlo.t"d 1n th\• l'Q'.('' ltnlln\--c:' \C'Cltun -"~r,, \\111 t..1n 1th 1•tumm,·r 111 m1'°'p- pq1Jlf'A,ll f'.l\f111l l11nd' In.!.!' c tl11n 10 fl"<flll\ h ~ 0 \\0 runf\f\\'11\\1\\ lkr· II\ .11 • ' I w t1, Ill th a11 JI fP\ Rt' llAt /A.2 .. \. '* oranoe Cout OAILY'PILOT/Thureday, Augual 1, 1995 County clerk-recorder split . cons ideredby. supervisors Warm, clear·weatlier con tin ties . Souttt.m Calltornla wlll be warm and alear through Friday HC.Pt for eome cl<>Ydt alon~ the coaat during the night and morning hourt, tht National Mthtr S.Nloe aald. Tt\t F0ttcttt fOf 8 p.m. EDT, Friday, Aug. 2 0 By JEFF ADLER ... DMf ......... Al lhe ~ue \ of Oran County (1{rk·~ccordt.r ~ Branch. the Boa.rd of Supervisors agreed Wednes- day 10 study the ~as1b1lity of sphttina the much·m&liane<I offi«". Supervisors voted unanimously 10 ,(!nut the County Admin1nra&1ve Office to study the "meri&S" of d1vidin1 tbejo1nt offices into separate de~rtments. • Jt is my opinion your board hould aive serious consideration to separate the functions of the countx clerk and the county rccotdcc, • Branch. the elected clerk-recorder. s~ud in a lettor to board Chamnan ·Woma n s entenced 'inReagan bilking LOS ANGELES (AP) -A Judge sentenced a 76-year-old woman to three years and four months 10 prison • for trying to bilk President Reagan on the sale of his $1.4 million Pacific Palisades home. Ann Yarbrough and her 61-yeat- old husband. James. were both in- volved in the scheme. but Deputy District Anorney Al Botello sawf she was the mastermind. Thomas Riley. Branch added that 1 f tbl-board wert to qrec. he mtcndcd -'O ~SJJI' hi pos1t1on as county clerk .. ,o c-0ncc11- trate m y enet'I}' toward the f ur1her development of the rteorder's office and to •aAm serve as Oranae County n:corder" The Clerk-Recorder's Office hns bttn under fire thl"QUJhout much of I 98S by Supenor Court ~udges an'd the County Admin1strat1ve Office. which round dcfic1cnc1e~ 1n the offices' operations. Clerking operauons of the JOmt office focus on superv1s1ng clcl'k-s assiined to SuperiorCoun and hand· ling the massi,•e amounts or lepl documentsand lawsu11S ftled daily m the Coun Cler'k's Office. The Recorder's Office is respon- sible for recording and filing other ki nds oflcgal documents such as trust ·deeds and other records relatin~ to pe~naJ proper1y as well as birth. death and marriage cer1ificates.. Om-Recorder operatio ns were criticized in March when the County Adm mistrative Office completed an internal audit recommending 1 S7 changes to increase morale, better serve the public and to improve operations, which in some cases had fallen far behind legal requirements. And in June, the county's Superior Court judges voted lo assume control over many court cler.ks that tasks ~' . dn~C'll} related to courtroom Opet· at1ons. Judges 1 ked that the transfer of luthonty be completed bcfo~ the first orthc year. County Counsel Adnan Kuy~r explained that for supery1sors to spltt the office. Branch would have to resitn his SS9,42S·pcr-ycar post or awa11 the expiration of the clerk· n:coroer's four-year term in 1986. · J( tbc board and Branch aareed to press ahead with the split before his term expired. he then would have to be appointed by supervisors to one of the post~. Kuyper said. FUND ••• .From Al investtgatorsalso may require large sums of "flash money" when arrang· ing purchases with a suspected drug dealer. l!.ast Decelnbcr. lrvine narcotics officers seized aJmost $200,000 from a local home wh'ich is suspected of being a center for cocaine sales. Jflhat money is determined to be associated wilh drug sales. lrvme may receive a cut. J ones said. The money would be placed in the new account. U nder 1uidclines approved Tues- day by the cowncil, the Irvine city manager is the top ad m inistrator with ·authority over allocations from the new d rug seizure account. Hight wlll ranot from the 01 alt~ ~echee to 88 downtown Ind up to 9e In the Inland vaJleyt ~night lowt will be In tht tlOt Along the Orano-Coat U wlll be clNr 'hrough Friday bUt tome low c:klade along the coast during latt nlaht and early cnotntno houri. Hight both dl)'9 at bMc:hel 10 10 f4. Lows es to $8 Hlgta Inland valtf.yt Frldty 90 to 9e Lowt tonight 82'1o 88 From Point ~tlon to the Mexican Bord« and out 80 mitt• -lnMr water•. wind• weet to aouthW9tt 10 to HI knot• through and Friday. Wind waVM 1to2 feet. Southwett 1"4lt 2 to 3 f .. t. Some tow cloud• ~Ing and morning hour• othetwlH clear through _Friday. U .S. Tempe Surf Report alD ....,. 1-S llllt 24 , ... 2-3 ,.., 2-3 flllr 3.,. ''" 2-3 ,.., 2-4 ,.., Tldea TOOAY 8-ld IOw •-c>apm • 2' 8-'<l"'gl'I 10 13P m 6' MIOAY o'.7 F1r1! IOw 5 19 '·"' Flt~ll 11:50am •• s IOw •:47 p.tn. 2 1 ~~II 1Q;51 p,m I .I Sun Mii tod1y II 7·$4 P m • 11- f rldly at I 05 • m ln<l •11 -ou> a1 7 &3 MOOfl loefay al 1;57 pm, Mii DRUG CHARGES TO BE REFILED •• : pm ~ Friday 11 I 9 1 m Ind ,.._ ~ II •tepm homAl ~robably will be asked to show up at coun instead of being rearrested. MeaQwhtle, Newpor1 Beach Police Chief Charles Gross said he welcomes a Grand Juq; investigation into the aflegattonshat members of his . department perjured themselves in coun "I welcome any unbiased in- vestigation that will bring the facts to the public." Gross said Wednesday. "I have re viewed the record and I believe the officers acted appropnate- ly and honestly." said Gross. "And that'$ the only conclusion that'll ' come out of any mvestigatfon. •• Gross repeated his cnt1c1sms of Bostrom, claiming the Judge appears to be prejudiced agamst Newport police. "There arc a· series of incidents where he appears to be overly concerned with the enforcement practices -0f his department," said. Gross, who did not specify to which incidents he was alluding. .. Our perception led us to disagree with him. That's all. I don't sec anything horrendous in that." Gross said. "He overreacts." In his affidavit, Bostrom noted that a rusted mooring sign on the dock where police discovered the yacht was rc~inted less tha n two hours after he ordered it photographed for the court record. The legibility of the sign, which ~~~ a~fs~~,i~0t~~ d~~u~::ri~~ TRAUMA CENTER DISPUTES REVIEW ••• Police apparently became suspicious From Al of the boat because it had oversuycd • from outside Orange County. County the mooring li mit. officials. who oversee the trauma But City Manager Bob Wynn sajd it system. declined to disclose the exact was a coincidence that the mooring criticisms leveled at Fountain Valley sign was repainted by two city Community, other than to say they workers the same day Bostrom or-related to the q uality of patient care. dercd1t photographed. But Thompson was not as reticent "Our sign shop personnel painted it to discuss the review team's charges. as pan of o ur regular pier mainten-He said the evaluation team ance. They weren't ordered by any-claimed Fountain Valley p~s1cians on.~ to paint it." Wyi;in .~id. ordered too many or too few tests, retain its trauma cen1er designation and has hired two outside consultants to study its operation. "We re looking for some guid- ance." Thompson said. ··w e want to see if we need to do things different- ly." -f n addition, the hospital is expected to have an opportunity in the com ing weeks to counter the review team's findings. · everytfiing (cited by the review team) is fixable.·· John G Wes1. an Orange-based surgeon who helped organize the county's trauma system. said some of the review team's findings were arbitrary and involved SCQ:>nd-guess- ing a physician's j udgment calls. FLUOR SALE OK'D •.• . Both of •.~cm a~ w1lhng to tak~ a including X-rays. CT scans and !~e-detector, the ctty mll:oager said. peritoneal lavage procedures (a check They a~ an honest, upnght bunc.h. for abdominal bleeding). According lfth~ police ~~d put them up to this, /'JO Thompson, the reviewers sug- they d say so. gested some physicians ordered extra Although Fountain Valley hospital officials are displeased with the evaluation. Dr. Robert Bade, medical director of the county's Emergency Medical Services office which over· sees the county's trauma system. said. "I think they (the reviewers) did an extraordinarily comprehensive Job. I was most impressed." • He also said the study would have been more meaningful if the same personnel had reviewed all .four trauma centers. County officials confirmed that not all review team members studied each hospital. Reportedly, the most critical comments were made by a surgeon who did not evaluate West- ern Medical Center or Mission Com- m unity - the two facilities that received full two-year · trauma From Al of the facility, and additional tenants flTC being sought. The adjacent Fluodand covered by the purchase includes 122 acres jn two parcels bounded by Jamboree Boulevard. the San Diego Freeway -11nd the San Diego Cre,k. The ·developers aJso may acquir.tt a 25-acrc Sile bounded by Michelson Dnve and the San Diego Creek. For Fluor, the land sale will generate after-tax cash proceeds in 1985 of $225 million. Fluor Chair- man TapJ?C!n said vinually all of these - funds will be used to reduce the company's debt. A spok~swoman forthe Grand Ju7 tests to earn more mopey. said a!1 10\fest1gat1on of Bo~trorn.:.s._ "But o ur surgeons are paid accord- allegat1ons would be confidential. She ing to the shift, (not per test)." the said to her knowledge, though. the trauma director said. "We explamed Grand. Jury has never refu~d to this to these people, but they didn't mvesllgate a mailer referred to II by a seem to understand ... ccr1i fications. . county Judge. He said the review team claimed "We weren't head hunting." Bade insisted. He claimed the study was a routine pan of a n overall plan to upgrade the trauma system. He said outside reviews are "one of the best teaching tools." But West ~·nted out that trauma systems are I tively new, an~ so is the process-reviewing them. H e claiQ1ed regular aluations like the recent one are essential if Orange County's trauma system is to be improved. FREEWAY STUDY CONTINUES ••. From A l mon Tustin-Irvine border. "Such a border would allow for maximum land-use planning... the .city's plannin~ chief explarned. Before voting to authorize the ~ond phase of the study, board Chairman Thomas Riley noted that the hearing had been delayed a week because of the intense interest on the pan of area homeowners and the absence last week of Supervisors Bruce Nestande and Roger Stanton. whose respecuve d1stncts would be affected by the freeway's alignment. "We all thought it was a slam dunk ... and we were surprised (at the interest and turnout)." Riley ac- knowledged. INTERIOR SECRETARY IJEADING WEST .•. From Al Hodel to stop in Newport and Laguna Beach on his way to an afternoon meeting in Oceandside to fam1hanze himself with the beaches that could be adversely affected by ol'fshore oil drilling. "We'll meet with his advance people to point out on a map where specific cove beaches are 10 Laguna Just Call 642-6086 D•llJ Pilot Oetlvery I• Gu•r•nteed Moftde1 ''oeMY H I'°" on ,,.,. ..... yt;A/#"'""*°" ~ lO 0 "' Ull ~· 1 0 1Z1 .,.., '/f1o/I '°°1 """' 0. ....,.., that he should see," Schreiber said this morning. "A lot of these cove beaches cannot be seen from the h1a.hway." While elected county and local cit)'. leaders arc strongl y opposed to 011 dnUing ofT the coast. a group of Republican congressmen from Cali- fornia arc pressuring Hodel to open even more tracts for lease than those allowed in the tentative plan. The current compromise agree- ment calls for opentn$ 1.350 square miles off the California's coast with the remainder of the protected 58.140 square miles remaining under a morat6rium until. at least. the year 2000. Before leaving on his tnp west. Hodel said at a news conference that he was looking for "hands-on ex- penence ... to make better informed JUdgments" about the 510 m1llton acres of public lands under his jurisdiction. Meanwhile. the House of Rep- resentatives passed an Interior De- partment appropriations bill Wednesday that, for the first time si nce 1981 . excludes a ban on 011 exploration off the Cahfomia coast. The measure. which passed 270 to 143, will next be considered by the Senate. MARINE GIVEN LIFE .•. From A l Investigative Service by prov1dmg evidence against Plummer Plummer was arrested on susp1- c1on of murder the day after Bemgan was found dead with a severed Jugular vem and anery leading to his heart. PFC C A Meacc, the third Manne involved in the payroll scam. was sentenced March 12 to a bad conduct discharge. confinement to hard labor for one month at Camp Pendleton. forfeiture of $200 a month for five months. and reduction to pnvate. At the lime of his death. Bemgan was descnbed by family members as an mtelltgent but restless man who was d1s1llus1oned Wlth the Manne Corps . which he JOtned 1n 1983 after droppm& out of college. Family members said Bemgan planned to return ~ome following his discharge and re-enter college. What do you llke about tbe Dally Piiot? Wbat don't you like? Call tbe number at left and your me11a1e will be recorded, transcribed and delivered to &be appropriate editor. The same U -•oar an1wert.n11uvlce may be attd to record Jettert to Ule editor on any topic. Contributors to oai: Letters cohamn mast include t111elr name and telephone namber for verification. No circulation calls, ple11e. Tell us what'• oa your mind. "aren Wittmer General Marntgef • Circulation 714/1424313 Claaelfted advertlalng 7141142-5811 All other depertme nta 142..u21 MAJ'C OF"9CE 330 W. llty" CO.It Me.a CA ~ &OOr-8o• IMO C.0.11 ,,._ GA 9'6'8 Nrcloly-~f I '°" 06 "" ,.._ yO<JI eopy by 1 1 m c.-be'O'• Frank Zlnl E<'•IO! Roeemary Churchman. Con1rolltr C:OO,.OM 1163 0.1"119 Coe91 ~ ~ No ._ --Mlll!...,. 9d!!Ohlj ,...,,., Ot -·-,_'--91f\....., Dt ·•~4"1 W>l"<M ~I*· -°' toC!Y''Uhl - 10 1 m •ncl ""'" c~ ..,. Dt-..0 ~latlon TelapMM9 Robert L. Cantrell Produc11on Men11ger How.,d Mullenary AdVtf1111ng OirectOf - Oon•ld L. Wllllame C1rcu1a11on Mana per Peoor 11ev1ne ClaNitoed Oirecaor . • ' a the Fountain Valley trauma center staff called in too many consultants. Th9mpson insisted the use of such consultants was justified. Asked iffountain Valley is likely to lose its trauma center designation. Bade said, "I don't think it's going to get to that point. We've been re· assured by Fountain Valley that "The system 1s working," he said. "It's just a matter of fine tuning it. We're revitalizing a very good sys- tem." Thompson said some of the cnt1· c1sms were rooted simply in a difference of philosophy or ho'ip1tal protocol. He noted that the review team came primarily from county or university hospital settings, wht re medical procedures can vary signifi- cantl)' from those at a community hospital such as Fountain Valley. which is owned by doctors. The trauma director claimed the evaluation team members did not properly read some patient records. 24 bee swarms destroyed in . search for Kern's killer bees He was.also pointed out that the team BAKERSFIELD (AP) -Govem- stud1ed only records fro m 1983 and a ment agents found 24 swarms of wild few from earl} 1984. bees on the first day of the eradication Thompson acknowledged, how-order aimed at preventing the spread ever. that stnce the re view penod. the of African "killer bees." day on a IO-m1le radius of the discovery. which was three-quarters of a mile southwest of the town of Lost Hills in Kern County. hospital has made changes 1n its State Food and AJricuhure Dircc-Kem County Agricultural Com- trauma center staffing afterdetermin-tor Clare Berryhill issued the order missioner Robert Edwards said that in$ that some physicians who were Wednesday to kill all the wild bees in SS percent of the homes in the area skilled surgeons were not necessarily a 50-mile radius of where the coun-were searched. For the other 40 miles well suited to the demands of trauma try's first known killer bees were in the SO-mile radius, the public was duty. . found. asked to report wild bee swarms and , __ H_ie _sa_i_· d_th_e_h_o.;..s..:.p_ita_l _is_a_nx ... .i...;.o.;..u...;..s_to ___ T_h_e__,a& ... e_n_t_s _c_o_n_ce_n_t_ra_t_ed_W_e_d_nes_-_nests to county officials. . lunch 11130 •m to 2 100 pm sushi, steak and seafood dlfln•r 1130 pm to 11130 pm ·1 h•PPrhour 1_:30 pm to 8130 pm 8uahl•r All you·~•n-Nf from our femoua euahl bar durlnfl the h•PPY. hour • ''' our cla .. lc ' C.lltornl• ltoll, •nd r•IM • toet'f to the c ltet.t $10. Combination Dinn~ A l11eclou• comblnallon plat• fhaf Include• tempura, clttcken, • cltolce ot t•llowtell or or•t•r•, rice, mleo NHIP • •ttdmorel $1J. • ~. LBU LLETIN BOARD ---~---~--=---""=='= B~setiall card sJ:iow at college · The first annual Summer Baseball Card and Spons Memorab1ha Trad1na now will be held 'aturday. not Sunday as previously announced, from 9 a.m. 10 4 p.m. an the Golden West College c~nter. . The show 1s presented by Communny Services at Golden Wc•t College and will feature a kid's auc11on at I p.m. and a dealer's auc11on at I :30. Admission is SI at the door. for more anformation. phone 891-3991 . Na tural ld•tory g r o up meets The Irvine chapter of the Natural History Foundation of Orange Cou nty ~ill hold a breakfast meeunf Saturday from 10 a.m. to noon at \he Natura History Center. 2627 Vtsla del Oro. Newpon Beach. -Those interested 10 local fossi ls. shark teeth. preh1slonc camel bone~ and other an1fac1s should contact chapterpres1dentJean M11lcra1559-l 106or the ce nter at 640-7120 Crulse night l n Laguna Hlll• Going Plr.ices Trl)vel in Laguna . Hrlls n presentang a "cruise night" at the Laguna Hills Holiday Inn Aug. 13 from 6 to 9 p.m. Major cruise line5 w&JI be available to give enthusiasts . an opponunity to view the 1985 fall/wanter and 1986 cruises. · Transportation is available from the Leisure World area. For fuAher information or to make transportation arrangements. call 586-6220. Servicemen'• e%es to meet The newly formed Orange County chapter of EXPOSE (Ex-Panners of Servicemen for Equality) will hold a mee11ng Sunday at I p.m. at the home of Collette Sfreddo, 75 Summerstone. Irv ine. Funher informauon on the group may be oblatn~d bycalhngSfreddoat 786-1470orCara Lou WiOer at 786-3346. Lllllput Pla?en audltlonlng The ulhput Players will hold auditions for their touring educational llleater Sunday. Actors and actresses Wlll be asked to present a prepared two to three-minute monologue. Performers wishing to aud1t1 on should call the company at 731 -2792 Friday or Saturday from 4 to 6 p.m. to receive an appointment time. The troupe is based an Tustan and will perform in Orange County for 90 percent of its shows. PWP to hold benefit dance Parents Without Partntrs South Coast Chapter will hold a fund raiser Wednesday, with praceeds going to members' children. Special entcnainment will be provided. RSVP to Jerry Berry. at 951-0450. The cost 1s SIO per, person. College offers coolcl.ng class If' ine Valley College will ofTer a cookang class Wcdnesda) from 10 a.m. 10 12 30 p.m. 10 Room A301. . .. Chef Wendell Phtlhps will teach pan1c1pants to prepare quick and easy summer meals. The fee 1s S 15. For rcg1stra11on and funher 1nforrnat1on call the college at 559-1 3 .t 3. Stop-smolcl.ng course ln HB A fo ur-week "Freedom From Smoking" course will be ofTered from 7 to 9 p.m .. Mondays and Thursdays from Aug. 14 to Sept. 11 at the Kaiser Permanente Medical Offices 10 Huntington Beach. The course, dt)s1gned to-help people quit smoking by the folinh session and to be free of ci~arettes for life. will be sponsored 10 conjunctton wtth the American Lung Assoc1at1on of Orange Co unty. The co~t is S35 and includes eight sessions. a relaxation ta~. maintenance manual and other materials. Toose interested 1n the course must pre- register b} calling Kai ser Perman'tnte Member Health Education Depanmcnt a1 978-4093 Thursday, Aug. 1 • 7:30 p.m .. Irvine Planning Commlulon. C11~ Council Chambers. 17200 Jamboree Blvd. PoucE Loe • .... : Romance under the sun Laguna Beach teen-agen Shawn O'brlen. 14, and Ka•ey Clark, 15, enjoy their moment toaether atop a Laguna Beach cliff. Pacts for firefighters, welfare workers OK'd By JEFF ADLER Of the Dally Piiot llen FollO\\.tng wee.ks of 1ntcn\1\\.' lontrall talks. the Orange Counl) Board ol l)uper- v1sors and union negotiator\ rcprC\Cnt1ng bolh rnunt) lircfighter<; and "'elfare eltg1b1ht~ worker'> ha\t' '>ettled uuts1and1ng contract d11Tercnce'> UPt'r' 1sors 'oted 5-0 \\.cdne..Ja) 10 ra111\ nc"' l.\\-O·\car pacts"' 1th .. up .... e11arc chg1b1l11~ \1.-0rkcr\ and count~ firefighters the laM of the county'<; 11.00<l cmplo,ccc, ICJ re3lh agreement on a OC"-contract \.\el fare cltg1b1lt1\ "'ork('rs alrl.'ad\ ha' c 'Otcd •o rattf} tht" ·t\\O-~l.'ar contract that call'> foe a total 10 75 rx-rn·n1 pa' increase Salanes for cltg1b1ltl\ ""orkcrs r:inge'i from S 13.524 wS19. 764 annuall) ~kmlx·rs of 1he count)'<, tirclightl'r'i union narrowh '01cd '.'.('dnc'ida\ to approve their ne"' coniract. which offers pa) 1ncre$lSCS of aboul 4.5 pcr\.ent during cal·h ol tltt: pact's t""o \ears. 'lego11a11onc, ~1th cl1g1h1ll1> "'orker\ .... ho \I.Ork for the mun I\·., ~oual Sen tles .\gene) \I.ere b) far the most troublesome for count) ncgot1ator'> Beside' a pa) 1nlr<'USC' wMkcrS' dl'manded a \lrullural lhnngc 1n pa) equ1l\ cla1m1ng that cl1g1b1ltl) ''orl..Ns \\.Cf\.' undt>rpa1d for their Jobs 1n rOmpanson to othl.'r count} cmntmel'' Dunng lhl· Luurc,c ol nego11a11ons. talks \\.ere brokL·n uff tor sc,eral "'cel..s and p1ck('ls marched around the Hall of .\dmin1s1ra11on 1n Santa .\na l 'n1on member<> \.Otcd tu reJCll lhecount~ ·s 1n111al oOernf IO 25 pem:n110 Jul~ and <.Ch<.'dulcd a stnl..e \Ote Ho .... cH·r a \lrtkl' date ne\cr was set " . .. °'•co... OAILY PILOT/ThurNtay • Moriarty stan·il to get $9_50,000 ~ven if in priso~ "" --Consulting contract was signed before he sold his company By tbe Auoctatecl Preas Bant..rupt fireworks magnate W. Patrtck Monany has a S9SO.OOO consutuna con- tract w1th.h1s old Orange County firm and. will conunue 10 be pa1d even 1f he 1s 111led for bribery and mai1 fraud. 11 -.as reponcd Wednesday Monan y. who has acknowledged debts of at leas1 S 11 5 m1lhon. wJll be eam1na SI S0.000 this year. followed by SI 00,000 annually for the ne~t Cllght years under the terms of has contract wuh P)'rotronics. accord an& to newspaper accounts. Monany 1n:cheduled to be sentenced 10 federal court Aua. 26 afier.s>lead1ngf,u1hy tn March to seven counts of mail raud, laundering campaign gifts and brib:ng politicians to the City of Commerce. He faces a maximum of 35 years m prison. The trustee of Moriarty's Chapter 7 bankruptcy filing 1s looking into the businessman's agreement with his former company. Anaheim-based Pyrotronics Corp .. and a scnes of loans to Monanty from Irvine-based Consolidated Savings Bank. .. The trustee 1s a"'are of the consuhang aarttment an~ aware of all the loans 10 Monany and has clc»t usociatn from Con$011<S.1~ Savinss -plUJ lots of propo~d loans -and the trusrtt 11 1n\.tit1p11na. .. satd Dean Z1ehl. lb~ pan· ner of trusttt Richard Pachulski. Ouarantt!cd paymentsof$8.}331 month to Moriany are stipul ted in the 111ttmtn1 "'hether or not wrvices are actualJ) provided. • ·:The in1b1hty or Monany m rrnder 1itrv1ces to the company by reason of absences. incarceration. tcmpora~ or pan1at illness. diubili•y or 1ncapac1· t)' .shall not terminate this agrttmenr/" the contract states. - Nor w1ll 1t "con tituk f11lurt by MoriaT- ty to perform his oblipuon5. ··th~ cofttract S3)'S • .. We regard that (provtSion) as be1n1 htahl> unusual and ~ arc 1nvcstiPUl'\g. • Z1chl said. Accoraing 10 P)'rotronic offic1\ts. Moriarty insmcd on the contract. dated Feb. 6. an return for his rclinquisb1ag contraJ of the firm six months •So· Sitt ""eeks after tl\at ·sianing. Inter- national F1~works-Co. of America bo\4ht controlhng interest in Pym.lroJtic Corp .. including Moriany's consultin_r. conttac\.. The new chairman of Pyrotron1 Donald Cnvellone. said that "I wouJd not be pan) 10 signin& the agreement. We 1nhemed the contract." He accepted the pact. CrivelloM salit. because Monarty wo uld not nave sold tbe company without 1t. O.C to keep deputies injail staff posititms By JEFF ADLER Of .... o.., Pllet ..... Following the ad' ice of the County A.dm101strative Office. Orange County ~upervisors agreed Wednesday to contmue 1 the practice of staffing the county's ja1l- ~ystem with traaned sheriffs deputies rather than lesS<ostly corrections officers. Superv1sol'S voted wtthout comment to accept the report prepared by the County Admi nistrative Office following their June request that the issue be studied as a cost- sa' ang measure. . But board members also directed the Count} Admi'nmrauve Offi ce to continue 10 1den11f) Jqbs an theJatl S}Stem that can be performed by c1,1han emplo}ees at a cos1 sa' 1ngs to the count~. "C.1ven the questionable savtng.s 1n salaries and benefits for the corr«t1onal officer class1ficat1ons. 11 does not appear prudent to consider a con\ers1on of de put\ positions 10 the current correc11onal prO- gram in Orange Count y.'' the s1l-page repon concl uded. ".\11h1s po1n11n lime tht C .\O concurs w11h the shenfT tha1 1here should not be a large-scale conversion of sworn (depul}) pos111ons 10.non-sworn " One explanatton for the rc«>mmcn- dation noted the trouble the county has hid recently 1n recru1t1ng sheriffs deputies. If the county has problems attract1na quah- fied candidates who want to ~ shenff s deputies. "it does not appear reasonable to eitpect to attract a pool of quahfi~ candidates (for) lower-payi ng jobs." the repon sta1es. Among other considerauons. the! ~Pon pointed out that a 1983 study focusang on the same issue found that in other JUrtsdtcttons emplo)'tng corrccuons of- fices. the emplo)ees' union fought for'l1'1e same p:l)' and fringe benefits as h1gher•pa1d deputies cla1m10g the) performed hke JObS .\lso because the pa~ was not equal corrections officus "often re!S1st or ref~ 1n,ol"emen1 an qudhnuatl noH. stoppm~ fights or subduang pnsoners 1n the ia1ls ·· the report prepa~ for the count) b\ .\ nh ur Young and .\ssoc1ates states. The County .\dm1n1strauvc Office rev ommenda11on noted tbat wtthtn the J>tit fi,e _>ears. a number of Jail duties Pft\tOU<,- 1\ assigned 10 shentTs deputies ha' e been turned o"er to Cl\ 1han personnel at a co~t SS\ ings. Hostages' kin -urge appeal to ca \\ .\\lfl '\l(,fO~ (.\PJ -· f-rustrated ..... 11h more 1han a 'carol qu1c1 d1plomac~ rcla1n cc; of \ml·man') l..1dnappcd 1n Lcha· non arc asl..1ng the\.\ h111! Hou~e to consider a publK appeal 10 lhl' Lap1~>r'> ol the <,l'\Cn ho'itage<i 10 engagi: 1n tall..\ for their rtlea)l' .\mong lhO\l' no\\. rail\ 1ng c;upport for such a mo' l' an Wa<;htnghin arl' fam1h memller\ ol Da \ 1d Jarnh<,cn thL' Hun1- 1ngton lkalh man \\.hll I') manager uf lhl· .\mcman l Ol\l'r'>ll~ ol Aearut Hosp11al and one of thl' Sl 'en rl.'ma1n1ng hostage<; Jacob'i<'n'<i sonc,. E.m 28 of Hun11ng1u n Beach and Paul. 26. of \\1.'\lmin'>lcr. htl'l' lobh1cd the \.\ h11e I lou'il.' and Con- grt·c,s1onal lt>aderc; for a ircalt'r l·Oort 10 bring ahoul thl' rclca'c nt 1hl.'1r fathl•r and thl' otha\ in raplt\ ti) C'ath' Jaroh\t•n. ex- " 1fl· nl 1hc ho!>p11al admin1c,1rJIPr .tl'io ha!> 'oH.:cd trus1ra11on O\l'r thl' gm crnmcnrs Jppari:nt inac11on on lhc ho.,1agc \llua11on ··Qu1et d1plomaq has 11\ plan• hut 11 ha\ no1 goucn rcsults 1n 'i()() da)'i · \inn· 1he tir.;I ot the 1..·apll\l.'S. l ', L'mOU\\~ J)Oltllcal otlicer \\ 1ll1am Bull.le' \\J~ abducted 'aid Pc~) Sa~ \.\ cdnc<.da' \J\ ·, bro1hcr. 11H1rnalt<,t T l.'rf\ .\nder-;on "·" l.1t1nJpp1:d on a lk1ru1 street 1n \,fard1 '\\c arc asking them 111 1.lll.. tu the ,.1ptor-; and tind out 11 thl'h. 1,n·1 <,1imc olhcr "a' .. ~a' 1old rl•porlcr\ lollo"tng a \.\ h1tl' Hou'ic ml'l'ttng \h•dnl·'lla\ ~a\ and \l''l.'n llthcr htl\lag<' ll'latl'i.'' ml't lot t u't o' 1..•r an hour '~ 11h K(llx'rt < . ""111JO\.\\ Ill i•lll1 l'lllr\ . . ... Mcfarlane. the president'~ na11onal secur- 1t~ <id' 1scr The) said the} !>t•ll hope to m<.'et v.1th Reagan The relati"es said the\ got no 1nd1cat1 on that adm1n1strauon otlic1als kno"' "'here the t..1dnapped ..\mencans are or \I.ho ts holding them But ~3) said the~ argt'd a pubhc \IJtcmcnt that lhe admin1strat1on \\.a~ \.\ tlhng 10 engagt' in direct talks 1n hopes 11 "m1gh1 flush something out from their l J(HOr\ .. \\ h11t House tore1gn a1Ta1r\ spol.e<.man E-d,,ard DJcre11an and 1-..arna Small publiL ci11air<. officer tor \1cFarlane declined rnmmL·n1 on tht• propo~I \a, <..lid \h F.1rlanc 1nd1ca1cd 1hat "thr\ "'111 lCln· ••• sider 11 .. .\lthough urging con\1dcrat1on of strong er action thl.' ho~1agc relall\es said tht"' "'ere plt'ased b\ their meeung \\llh tht• national secunt\ ad' 1ser and ""ere morl· modera1e in their l·omment!> than Tuesda\ \I.hen a\ 'W!1d "\,\ e're asl..ang the admtnt'i trat1on to 'ilop being SJ>('ctators on lhts 1\i.ue and <,tart being participants .. \.\ cdnl'sda' she said. "\\e arc lool>.tng not to be cncm1es of the admin1strat1on but 10 \\.uri.. "'''h the admin1s1ra11on:· she 'ktld "\.\c \\3ntC'd to kno\.\ that our con~m., "'Crt' \')c1ng d1rcctl~ pas~d on to Pres1den1 Reagan and I feel 1..onfident 1ha1 Mr \kFarlane ""'II do that and \\Ill senoush l on-.1dcr \\.hat "'l' 'u~t''>lt-d ·· \omconn:H1'il'd $Xlltl in damage to on th\' I 700 hloci... ul Candle llC'k I JOl' • • • \ \\)mf)u t<'r ..... onh $5 000 wa .. I Mesa man critically·hurt · ~in motorcycle smashup · \ m.troon R1..•a1..h ( ru"1..'r 10-,pccd hu,"Hk \\\lrlh \200 \\,I\ f{'pOrll'J <.tokn trom an unhx l..cJ g,1ragc ''' a honw in thl' 1·100 hlod nt < 011r1n1..'\ ~l·dn1..·,d.1' • • • ~om1..·111t1.. -.1uk '""n Lar \peal.er' lrom a lll.·111-c I 'HI' Dodgt' Dan p.irl.1..-d 10 Iron) ol J h1lmC 1n th1..• '1)0 hl1l\ I. ol ..\nana l.'<irh \\l·dnl.'\dol\ a hou~ on 1h1.· 2 "('o(l hlud of Pebble Dn\e b' .. ma'ihtng 11ut J gla .., door Jnd remo' 1ng a llmL'l door .\n unl..no""n JffiOU{ll 11t 11..·\\df\ \.\.l~ t.1i..1..·n • • • 11.. v.eln. .... onh S \ ',.1 "'J' \lnkn \hlll'n trom ~umma l echnolog1c' lnl 'tJ(l(I Atr\ h ~1rt•1..·1 • • • \ andal' \hOI tiut l\.\O officr "''n Ju\\' a1 R 11.. h Jnd Rare Motor C ar' ~00"1..•,1 ( 1'-l't H 1gh9.&\ Pohl'C \81,• th(.'' andal' U'>l.'d a RR gun ·- A Costa Mesa man remains in 1 serious condition at Fountain Valley ~ Community Hospital today after losina control and crubina hi1 motorcycl at Bay Stftet and New- port BouleVl(d Tt.leldl)'motnina. I Accordina to police reports, Dick Henry JWJt!ll, 33.t . was . ttavclina north on Newi>ort lj()uJev'ard weav-ina in and out of traffic at ~ approac:hina 80 mph when he clipped Fountain Valley Thieves entered on unlocked car at the Olt's parking lot. 16 200 Brookhurst St.. and 'lolc a SI 00 Motorola beeper. • • • '\omonc used A weapon to mash a \1.ar window at Manc C"alendcr''i I R88') Brookhu"t t .. and 'itOIC' a rada'I-' detector valued at $27S • • • 8urglarc, u~ a kc> to unlod 1 ~lie at a rc"dcncc 1n the 17000 block of \an Bruno and tolt S6 77 CoataMaa \ H1ra11on1n1 Ma m1 th.•al·h ~oman .,..a, 11pprt'ht'ndtd lor 1.1cal1ng SN I 2 8Q 1n clothtni from o Bullock\ dcpanml·nt c;torc in South Ct)3<,I Platia Wl'd ""'Kfa} hl· ~•a u1kl'n into C'tmod' nnd the item\ ,hf" 1tk: t•dl \tole "'~rt n.·co\1.'rl·d. • • •• h11rJl.1r 'tnlc uH·r SN.~tNI in -fl't\\ Ii\ ,11111.1 ~M~ R 111111 .1 HtllW ' 1 Volkswagen van soulh of the Bay Street intersection. He was was thrown to the pave- ment while his motorcycle slid &Jona the street. ~ He was treated at the scene by paramedics and rushed to the Foun- tain Valley Trauma Center with possible internal irtjuries. JWJens and his friend, Mark Ed- ward Richardson of H unti OJtOn 10 the 1500 block of Mc~ Vl•rdc fa<.t rucsday. • • • •\ m:in was arrc'itrd 1n tht' 400 hlock of <\rliniton for sohnt1nj.\ .1n undl·rcovcr police offit.-cr to l'ngnge rn n lrwd sc~ual act Tucsdth a(krnoon La;una Beach .\ Lo ..... crC'ltfTDr1H rec;1dcn1 ralkJ pohrc: a1 I 15 a m \.\-cdnl.''ido' complo1n11\g of a prowlrr .out\1dc omrcr, re pond1n1 drtermincd lhl· ~u~pcct ..... ~, wnll-.1na about nt1cr bc1..omina 111 a1 :1 p.1rt> ne\t door. • • • T"' o th1e' ~ toq l.. S 50 \.:\ h trom \outh ( 03\t Htgli ~ th • '1c 11m lnld pohlC \.\ rdnl.'o;.d.1' • • • \ "lorih < "·"' ll 1Jh"'a~ bu\ln''" "'a' buralar11l(I \\.,•dnl.'-.da' \\Ith it ~puth.•d lo~' ,,1 ~""· ., . . . . C'am,·ra ~'llUIJHl\\'111 ' ilm'\I t S41' "'•I' ,tiikn ~,-,, ,, -..tu' on< 1knnn~· Strt'\'l l~l' 'II I• I 1t 1, f\fllll'\' Beach, l\ad started racing at the• 10terscct1on of Newpon Boulevard and 19th Street, police said. Neither oflhe men was wearing a helmet. Althouah no other Utjuries were reported, the Volkswagen van and an Audi sedan sustained minor damage as a n-suh of the crash. Newpon Boulevard was closed for over an hour whtle police investipted ·the accident • • • f\\O 1u .. cntlt•\ rntl·red the garage ot a Mnnnlo Ort\\.' homl.' and ~1ole a <.urlhonnl 'nh1t'd al $2~0 tlw '1('t1m \atd PPltll.' ~1..·r1..• unahll' In 1111.111..· 1h1.· \U~fX'L I\ Huntlnaton Beach C1,mkning hllll\ ,, 1 \ \1..I :.i 1ad1tl hc:ddtnll .ind lurn11un· 'aluL'll n1 S1 ()(XI \\l'f\' l\'punt•d mMtng lrnf11 thl' Jar.i~t· ofa hom1..• an th~· I "'OCl hlu1.. ~ of Lat..l• T u1..·~ta' • • • \ MJl k PoN·h~· 4 '0 T 111 he• '-.t.1,·cl :>1 s ,,, ono .... a, \tokn .inJ a hlt11. It. .ind • ~h11~f>(lNhcQll l.i \u\ta1n1.·dS llO Uam!l . urfh e1larni "'t1..·m ''h1k t lh ~\'!'\" r.1r~1.'\.l tn lhi: ltllj'l(lrt ,,, an 1~nnll'M 1n 1h"· ~tlt)O hk .... t.. ut 0111 JJll ~ 1..'lfl1-r\dU\ , • • • \ S400 tar c;tH1..'<l "a-. '101l'n tmni .t bl~I. \ol~\"'utirn R.lhh11 parked 1n lr~int 1it J home 111 thl· ~no bl<x·i.. 1..•t \.1J tn \\ 1..•dm·"Kla ' Newport Beach T hll'\ ln'n-.1111..•1, "l'r1..· ,1111..·,1,·d lln \U\PI\ tt>n 111 mJl..tng a lnull un- f(.'tl'\Onahk n1ll't' A.111 "'·'' \l't al SI ~110 tor ca, h .. . .. .\bout SI ~o 1n ,n11h "1ic; 1akcn torm a rci.ilknn~ on 1h1..· 10<1 blod of '~th !\trL'(.'I Thi.' 1h1l'f appart•nth cntert'<.I 1hc rc\1Jcnn· umkr thc pretl'n't' of ""n(I a h.Hhm11m • • • Ji.. \\l'h \ \\.Orth S \ X20 ",\\ \IOIC'n Imm a r,·\IL11.•nC',. 1\11 th,· too hltx 1. ot ''11h \1n.•1..•1 Th''"' '"'r,• no "P.n' ol County n1an dies in Irvine crash \ "l·H\11111,1 '\n~hltm man \'8' kilhl ,11rl\ tc"I.'~ tm,'ht-n 1>1<'11..l I r,, . .,..u, 1n It \lnl' "'hl·n h1..• "''t ••t1111•l •it l11' 1...1r 11n th,• h tlrl.'' Road , "' th1..· < ahhlrnta Utgh .... :n P:ttrol fl'f\\Ht1..•d • s ~ M1•~1n, """' k1ll1 I 111,11iuh "hl'll 11 ... 14·11 Aim i.. '"'1..'P1..·1l 111l &th· ,'\II r11.1d .1IHI "illn! .. '\I "''h ,1 u:11J 11 Ill ... 11J ll IC l 1' / . from .1 d~ '>('r drav.t 1 '" a r1..·~1dcnn• Mexico City police probe ex-OC wo1nan 's 1nurder \ll \I< 0( 1n (\Pt-p,,hlc.-are 1nH 'it1ga11ng the murdrr 111 a IMmcr 1 )rangl' (. ounl\ ""'oman "h1i\1..' bo(.h "a' lound b} her mu1.1c1.rn lxl\lncnd tn the apanmcn1 the} i.h.m·d Laur\'11 \nn Marchant 'I J natl' c tif an1a •\n:i ..... noforml.'rh danrcd 10 dioru~ hoc~ 1n Mot(.'O t 11\ d1l·d h) \trangulat1on (.'arl) Monll.1\ .rnd nlll' Jl'o ha\l' tx•t•n raped poltu 'atd 1 lcr nudl' h<'Ki' \l3S found on till lloor 1..11 the: bc.•dtclOm 1)fthc ap:mm1..·n1. "'htl h \I.a' r:in<.n\ t..C'd \bn1.n•l fcrnan1..k1 t\Jrr.1iian 11 OHl\IC'l3n "ho c;.11d hl' It\ 1..•J "'Ith \1011\ t\;1n1tor2 \l.'ar' 1old f"'h,l· lhl· '1t 11m .th' a" t0<il.. care not II' kt 'tranlll'r' 1nt11 the an11rtml·n1 Fernando Rarratran c;a1d hr fo11nll the hod' Jhcr rtturning horn v.or~ t1nd c:alll·d .1 lricnd (,f Mar\'h.rn1 I h, lnend 1hc n calkd nohre Polin· "''-'fl' C'hCl'l.tng ho\\ lht· 1..1111..1 ttaincd ,•n tr.intc .ind "'heth1..'r rohl'K'n "'•" 1n,11hcd Thr\ '31d 1hen-"'II' C'' tdl'Ol< the t..1llC'r had b<-c'n dnnlon · ht-1•1 :1nt1 'mol.1n~ mat1 1uanu ~fore l.llJlh .HIJcl>.tng Miarchant \n olfo 1JI C1f 1hr l ~ Em '' 1dC'nt11tcd and toot.. , hargc of the h\iJ\ Fire victims said strangled M 11 PIT \~ C altt I \Pl-..\ grnnJ- nh11h,·1 .. n,I '"''' 1. n,1dl\.UJhtcf' 1n- 1twlh 1houah1 l.1 kl! "' .1 tirl thai \'4 1.'f'll thrnuah th,·ir h,inw \\l'r\' 'tranJkJ. a~orlhna '" 111Ji1.. ,,,1, Th4· "unu.n .\ -wn otlllS ~h1klr"·n' 1,uh,•r H..lm1..·,h C h.1111p;mt•11 '· 11.,., 1..lt1..'d 10 thv lin.· I lw \>IU""-'"' ht\\k.nh •1..•n \ 1'h'lllHO\'\lh11I ff•l"Jilll' "' 'I found un ht\ ckllh<"' 1(J' \11lp1ta' Poh1..1..' < htd Jim 1'1.lurl"I' ~utnfl'."' 'h"''<'d J1 q•n1~, n . ( hampoint'll I) .ind twr arnntt d.1u1h11..·r, ()" \ 1111 i .ind \m1. HI h.-.1 ~ 'ltr.ingkd acct'\rl11n1 \\ th ,,m1.l l Iara l ••UO\\ { nron,•r !> O\lk(' I ,. ' 1 '"h.• ~1 1 • l\tf\' .. marl.' .111111 11S tiw11 ,,..,\,., · •\ I ,. FORECLOSURE SALE***. ~ 10 n #""°"' Yo.,. HotH To Yovr &...1! PRME -NEWPORT BEACH HOM£ -'O' BOAT DOCK 5 BEDROOMS+ MAID'S QUARTERS -60' WATERFRONT LOT 401 NORTH STAR LAN£. NEWPORT BEACH. CAllfORNIA • TO 8£ AOCTIOH(D ON S~OAY, AUG 4. at 3 00 P.M. (SOlD ON $lTE) this &OtpollS 2 \tory mtom deh1H homt haJ 1vtttt11~ Muter bdrm $Ulle wilt! fireplace, 2 1&r1t walk 1n closets. ll11t deMt bllll. SUI* 1ourNI krtchcn with brktst rm; lonnll ~lliftt '°°"' l•m~y 1oom w1t11 hreplaet, 4 bathrooms. laundry & SlOflC• room, secunty sY$1em: dr~ wallpape1. carpetinc.& hardWood floors; 60' bflck patlO wrth Bal-8-Q and Spa; Member ol Dov' Shorn Comm Assoc (3 prtvate beacht$), •nd other lmtftitits too numtfoU1 to ment!Oft ~PECT Sit & Sun .. July 27 t 28 ltom l 4 p.m., & 1 hour before aucbon. O(POSfT: Sl0,000 Cishtef's check Call for bfochure. •• Ph9ne Answering System 0~6FONee-TAD-112C by Radio Shack Save •51•• 8800 Reg.139.95 Answers with your taped greeting, then records callers' message. Remote lets you re- view yourmessages from any phone. CaJt Monitor. #43-247 ' FBI break~ u·p alleged plot to s~uggle arms into Iran WA HINGTON(AP)-An Arm} officer. fo ut other men and u woman y.'ert arre t~ 1n thrre Slates today by the f81 on chara of plott1na to muaate weapons to Iran. Announc1n1 · the result\ of an undercover investi11tton, FBI Di rec· tor William H. Web terand Customs Comm1ss1oncr William von Raab said the allcscd conspirators antendt'<J to purchase a variety of U.S. m1 sil«. incl uding the Sidewinder, TOW anti· tanlt. Harpoon. Sparrow AJM-7 F. Sparrow AIM-9 M and PhOenax mas.s-ales. ~ They also were said to be stekJn& the French Exocet mm1le a\ well as miscellaneous rts for the F-4 'ct By Radio Shack Save •100 Reg. 3".95 Buy now at 25% off! Comb filter processes the signal Increased picture detail. --Wireteaa infrared remote for handy armchair control. Cabl~Heady tuner. #1~231 OlegoMlly meeeured. 8etWlel lor """°"' extra SC~15 by Realisoc- Save •60 .·7995 ReQ. 139.95 1m:rofl. ant lud1na IO f.4 c naanc,, nd oth er m1hlal') equipment, 'iUCh B'I a mot'lalc ho~patal. The complaint charg~. the six an tended to l)u rcha~ I , I 40 TOW antHnnk m1 s1lc~ at a total co t df $9 120.000 nnd that they would provide an aircraft to Oy the weapon~ and p:ins to lrun. The arrcsb t>Ccurrcd 1n norida. l uhfornil) '11 nd Viraan1a, apparently before any weapons were actually sen t to Iran. Those token int0 custody. and another man s11ll souiht, were charaoo wt th con piracy to violate the arms export control act rather than with 1nd1vidual viol· at ions of the act. Big stereo listening at 43% offl Listen to 'tapes, record "'"-.;;;:::::::t.::=s:S:!l_~~~~ off-the-air Of "live" with built-in mikes. Stereo- 'Ntde9 enhances stereo ~ alism. #14-785 8ett•rie .. IC1fll Color Computer System ....... ....... ::::::: 1-Piece Touch-Tonet TRC-412 by Realistic Cut 25°10 5995 Reg. 79.95 Place antenna on roof. plug 12VDC adapter into lighter socket, and you're on the air. With travel case. #21-1506 "Mini" Car Cassette By ReaJlstlc9 HALF PRICE Reg. 59.95 Save $30 and start enjoying quality crur sette stereo! Mounts easily under dash. 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Telephone ET-120 by Radio Shack 40°10 Off 1495~~5 At this price, buy two or three! "Hangs-up" on any flat surface. Touch-Tone dialing. Adjustable ringer. White. #43-503 . Brown, #43-504 Superhet Radar Detector Road Patrof XK TM by Mlcronta Save 1191s ~ =.= •40 Reg. 159.95 On CffJUne• Detects speed radar even around corners and over hilts. #22-1608 Not-offered Whet• prohibited U.. mey be ~ b'f llafe Ot local lew 45% 2995 Off Reg. 54.85 Booster dramaticaJly Increases power output, 5-band equalizer leta you booet °' cut responae up to 12 • dB at exact fr9quenclee. F1vHtvef LED power rMter. 112·1866 -~-· .. Bids readied for last link in U .s. 80 superhighway By tbt A11od1ted Prest SALT Lo\Kf:. ( IT y -Utah h1Jh~ otlic1a1 .. will o~n bads next week on the la~t hnk 1n In ten.tale 80. completang~he 2.907-mile h1ahway from Trancck. N .J . to San Francisco. 1he fi~t coast-to-coast interstate h11hw.ay. 81d~ on the final four-malt ~ecuon will be oPCned Tuesday at the Utah Department or ~Tran.~ponauon cafeteria. officials ~•d U 00 T hopes to have the main stellon of road open by Oct. 19. 1986. The contract. expected to exceed S20 million. • will provide a SI 3.000-pcr·dll{ 1ncen11ve for earl y completion. with a laraer JX.,'llahy for lateness Pentagon 'fink' glven poor job •ppral-1 WASlllNOTON -A. 'Ernest Fitzgerald, who disclosed aircraft cost overruns and then fought a 13-ycar legal battle to regain his Air f~rcejob, has rC<.'CIVcd & very poor JOb appraisal that has supporters believe mar Signal efforts 10 lire ham. F1l1$erald had been re1Mtated 1n 1982 to the JOb o management systems deputy 1n the office of the Air f orce assLStant secretary for li~anc1al management following a federal district cotin-approved scttl~mcnt wa~~ the Air Force. Hisjobappraisal was released Wednesday by the ~rUJCCt on M1l1tary Procurement. a Washington-based public interest group which often ser~cs a~ a "middleman·· between tbc press and Pcniagon employees who wish to disclose examples of wa'ite or fraud hut who <to not waJll to be known a~ a .. whistle blower." Alaska governor predict. uoneratlon J UNEAU. Alaska -Gov. 8111 Sheffield, after tes11f) ing he did not steer a state office lease to a cro ny· or lac about at lo a grand JUI")', pred1ct~d that a state Senate panel considering hi s impeachment will exonerste him. Sh.effi~ld. accused of i.teering the $9.1 million lease to n political friend and ca mpaign ~upporter and lying about it under oath. wrapped up his testimony Wednesday before the Senate Rules Committee. Summauons were scheduled today. Convlct returns after 14 years RALEIGH. N.C.-Fourteen years ago. Ray Samuel Brown walked awa) frqm his native Asheville to start a new life. Tuesday mght, Brow,n stepped back onto North Carolina soil from California to return to the prison from which he had C5i1pcd. His return ended a 10.year extradition battle by state officials ·ho wanted Brown brought back for his escape in 197 1 from the pnson at which he had ~rved one ) car of a I 0.year sentence for breaking and entering. l 38 deaths llnked to Ford tran•ml .. lon• . WASHINGTON -Congressional auditors said today that at least 138 people have been killed in connecuon with .allegedly dcfcctjve Ford transmissions since the government agreed 41/1 years ago not to order a recall of 1he-can. Rep. Timothy Wirth, ()..Colo .. who ordered the investigation by the General Accounting Office. said the findings show the number of aeaths per number of vehicles on the road has increased steadily, contrary to past claims by the Transportation Dcpanment of a "significant decline" an the death rate. Winh accused the National H1ehway Traffic Safety Administration. which is within the department. of"playang a numbers game" and misleading Congress as to the seriousness of the safely problem with the 1970. 79 Ford cars, of which there are an estimated 16 mil hon still on lhe road. CALIFORNIA Rose Bird'• w.,-cheat $460,000 SAN FRANCISCO -Embattled Chief Justice Rose Bard has nearly half a million dollars to fend ofT attackers who have spent most of their money. according to a newpaper report. Bird, who faces a battle for confirmation an November of 1986. has more than $450,000 an her treasury, the San Francisco Chronicle rcponed Thursday. The conservati ve groups opposing her have raised a total of.. more than S l"m11Jion but have already spent most of 11. the newspaper "81d. Acid kldnap trial under way SAN BERNARDINO-The man accused of kidnappin~. attemptan~ to rape and pouring acid on a teen-age girl does not match the vic11m'sdescn pt1on of her assailant. a defe• attorney coo tended as his client's trial bc&an. The first day of the Superior Court tnal of Jack Oscar K.in~ 65, also included testimony from a paramedic who said parts of Cheryl Bess face dissolved as he rinsed sulfuric acid from her head on Oct. 21 1984. Farm worker's jackpot coate11ted .,,./ LO ANGELES-A lawsuit filed in Super10( Court may decade whether an unemployed farm worker who picked nine Winning horses in a row at Holl ywood Park should reap the SI million jackpot. The contest's underwnteri want tl).e court to decide if Rodolfo Sahagun should get the money. claiming he v1t!.ated the rules by subAl1ttingmore than one entry. "The money 1s mine. I won'1flilr and square. Everybody knows that. Somebody 1s going to have to pay me," Sah}lgun contended Wednesday by telephone from his Carlsbad home in San Diego County. Holocaust mu•eum fundlng applauded LOS ANGELES -Gov. George Dcukmejian's dec1s1on to approve $5 million in state funds for a proposed Museum of Tolerance recaivcd praise from state legislators and officials of the Simon Wiesenthal Center for Holocaust Studies. The ball "puts on record C'ahfomra's recognition of the importance of the lessons of the Holocaust. and its commumenl to ensunng that such tragedies never again befall any group of people," said-Rabbi Marvin Hier. the dean of the private center named for the famed Nazi hunter. Rock Hudson prepared for AIDS therapy LOS ANGELES -Rock Hudson is in good spirits as he 1s being prcJ>!lred lor th erapy 10 combat deadly AJDS and his cond1t1on has been upgraded from scnous. to fair. off~ aL UCLA M.c.diuJ Center ~y. Hospital spo1'esma.n Richard Elbaum said Wednesday that the 59-ycar-old star has been deluged with cards and flowers from well-wishers but is not allowed visitors because he wa\ resting to regain ha s strength. ; WoRLD Tutu to defy ban on •ervlce11 JOHANNESBURG. South Afnca -Anghcan Bishop Desmond Tutu told.about 1,000 moumeff"&l-il" funttal today-thlt that he would defy new-tr.m~ on public sctvices for .victims of racial unrest. However, today·s funeral for three blacks apparently did not violate the reaulations. In Helsinki. Finland. fomgn m1n1sters of the I 0 Common Mark.et countnes aareed to recall their ambassadors from South Afnca for consultations to protest that country's racial pohc1es, a Common Market statement said today:• The statement said the ambassadors would attend 1.1 meeting to discuss what measures miihl be taken to protc~t apanhcid, South Afnca's system of racial searesation. The foreign man1'1ters were an Helsinki for the 10th anniversary of the Helsinki Accord~ on human nghts and European sccunty. Syrian ne.,,. -.ency bOmbed BEIR LJ r -lrnn°'1 official new agency ~ys a powerful cxplos10C\ shook the government-owned Synan news aaency building in the Synan capital of Damascu!t. The Islamic Republic News Agency, monitored 1n Bcirut1 quoted 11s corresPQndent in Damascus as sayan~ hea vy black smoke billowed rrom the bu1ld1na Wednesday. hut dad not mention casualties or aivc other dctJails. J•pan l•nd•llde death• reach 28. TOKYO -1 he death toll from Ce landslide: climbed to 26 (odny afkr re~uc worken found the hodies of th re~ missing elderly people buned under ions or mud. a pohcc official :ud The official ~ad the last body found was 1hat of a 60-)ear-old man who wo'i buncd under~ feet of mud afier t)\e landlsade la~t Fnd:.y drmoh!thcd a nunina home. He satd the three bod1 were the last rcma1nana people mas'lina from the nursina home. Thr JandU!dc "wept down on 1he nurs1na home la\t Fnday evcnina. damaa•na S8 other home and bu1ldmf.S on tht ou1 karts of Nap no City. 112 northeast or r okyo Kore.11 op,,a.JtloAJ>UtTcoavenm ·tol ll . ..:. The oppo Hton New Korn Dcmocrauc ~Pany opened 1t1 t'On\'tnt10n today tnd f'ltdltfl 10 lt&t\l fl r &!\(> i>e>hllca.1 freedom of di 1dent ltader Kam r> 'Juna. placed under house arrc t on the eve of the coni rentt. I he rnnvcn11on rc~lcucd Lee Min Woo. Kam·s choice for the t~O-}C r Qaet)'. ~tdt"M')'. ovtr a nvahimd'rd:nc Krm Jae K v..ana. The \'Oh: was 411~35'4. ,r ·'I.. , ., .... • .. \ Orange Coa I DAILY PILOT/Thureday. A11gul11, 1815 M , TAKE· AN .EXTRA - ~THE ·r1CKETED PRICE . * j OF Al.READY REDUCED .. MISSES, JUNIORS, MEN, YOUNG MEN AND KIDS FASHIONS, SHOES -AND ACCESSORIES, THURSDAY THROUGH JUNDA Y ONLY. s•M 4 "' . 85'9At CWF rHE ORlllNjL PRICES! . , .. (EXTRA 1/3 OFF WILL BE TAKEN AT THE CASH REGISTERS.) SHORTS 5.33 TO 18.QI. All already reduced shorts from Plaza. Sportswear BO's. Focus Sportswear, Juniors. Petites. and Women Orig 12 00 to 30 00. ticketed price 7 99 to 26 99 Extra 1 3 off 5 33 to 18 08 BEACH SEPARATES 4.00 TO 17.34 All already reduced co~er-ups and swim separates from Focus Sportswear. ( Sw1msu1ts nol included. I Ong 8 00 to 35.00. ticketed price 5.99 to 25.99. extra 1 3 off 4.00 to 17.34 ACTIVEWEAR 2.00 TO 23.33 All already reduced summer actlvewear from our Sport swear BO's, Plaza. Juniors and Women's collections and Focus. Orig. 5.00 to 48.00, ticketed price 2 99 to 34 99. extra 1 /3 off 2.00 to 23.33. T-SHIRTS 5.33 TO 12.00 All already reduced T shirts from Sportswear so·s, Plaza , Juniors. Petites. Women's and Focus. Orig 13.00 to 24.00, ticketed price 7.99 to 54.99, extra 1 3 off 5 33 to 12 00 .. SUMMER COORDINATES 6.32 to 36.63 All already reduced Sportswear 80's, Plaza. Focus Sportswear. Women's. Juniors, and Petites coordinatP groups. Ong 13.00 to 74.00, ticketed price 9 49 to 54 99, extra 1 3 off 6 32 to 36 63 . CASUAL PANTS 5.69 TO 33.34 All already reduced casual pants from Sportsw ear BO's, Petites. Women's. Plaza and Juniors Ong 12 00 to 67 00, ucketed price 6 49 to 49 99. extra 1 3 off 5 69 to 33.34 DENIMS 10.00 TO 20.00 All already reduced denim sportswear in Sportswear 80's and Plaza Sportswear. Orig. 24 99 to 40 00, ticketed price 14 99 to 29.99,... extra 113 off 10 00 to 20.00 DESIGNER SPORTSWEAR 8.99 TO 1 o,.SC) All already reduced designer and famous maker sports wear in our V. I. P., Focus, and Petite collections Orig 13.00 to 199 00. ticketed price 9.99 to 149.99, extra · 113 off 6.99 to 104 50. SWEATERS 4.00 TO 28.67 All already reduced summer sweaters in Sports wear eo·s, PtcmrSportswear a11d Petrtes 0r1g 13 00 tn---- 53 00, ticketed price 9 99 to 39 99, extra 1 3 off 4.00 to 26.67. BLOUSES 8.87 TO 28.87 All already reduced blouses in Sportswear 80 s. Plaza Blouses and F>eutes Orig. 12.00 to 53 00, t1cketed~e 9.99 to 39.99, extra 1 /3 off 4.00 to 26.67 · SKIRTS 8.87 TO 20.09 All already reduced Sportswear BO's and Plaza skirts Orig. 13.00 to 58.00. ticketed price 9.99 to 29 99. extra l /3 off 6.67 to 20.09. DRESSEi 15.41 4'0 40.20 All alroady reduced sundresses and cotton dresses. More in Misses. Orig. 29.99 to 68.00. ticketed price, 22.99 to 59.99, extra t /3 off 15.41 to 40.20 JUNIOR DRESSES-8.32 TO 20.00 All already reduced styles Orig. 28.00 to 48.00. ticketed puce. 9 49 to 29.99. extra 1/3 off, 6.32.ito 20 00. DRISS•S 15.00 TO 10.JO - All olready reduced soft summer and famous maker. dresses Orig 29 99 to 122 00, ticketed price 22.50 to 89.99. extra 1 /3 ott 16 00 to, 60 30 \ .. A ccEssORIEs HANDBAGS 4.67 TO 34.66 All already reduced leather, fabric and vinyl handbags Orig 14 99 to 78.00, ticketed price 6 99 to 51 99, extra 1 3 off 4 67 to 34.66. FASHION JEWELRY 3.33 TO 19.99 All already reduced necklaces. earrings, bangles and p1m>. Ong 9'.00 to 50.00, ticketed pnce 4 99 to 29 99 extra 1 /3 off 3.33 to 19 99. WOMEN'S HOSIERY .66 to 13.99 All already reduced hosiery. casual socks and bodywear. too Ong. 1.25 to 32.00, ticketed price 99 to 20.99, extra 1 3 off .66 to 13.99 •. SUMMER ACCENTS 2.68 TO 9.32 All already reduced wraps, shawls, neckwear, belts and sunglasses for women. Orig-. 9.00 to 24.00, ticketed price 3.99 to 15.99, extra 1 /3 off 2.66 to 9 32 JUNIOR ACCESSORIES 1.32 TO 5.99 All already reduced earrings, necklaces. bangles. belts and handbags. Orig 3.00 to 16 00. ticketed price 1 99 to 8 99. extra 1 3 off f 32 to 5 99 ' SLEEPWEAR 9.37 TO 53.59 All already reduced sleepw ear mcludmg designer Orig . 21 00 to 124 00. ticketed price 13 99 to 79 99 extra 1 3 off 9 37 to 53 59 ROBES AND LOUNGEWEAR 10.71 TO 20.09 All already reduced -robes and loungewear 1nclud1ng designer. Ong 20 00 to 86 00 ticketed price 15.99 to 29 99. extra 1 3 off 10 71 to 20 09 1Des1gner r~bes and. sleepwear only 1n Del A mo. Glendale. Sherman Oaks. Beverly Cen ter, Downtow n Plaza. Century City Newport, Fashion Valley. Santa Monica. Anaht>1m I SUMMER COLLECTIONS 4.66 TO 29.99 All alread y reduced misses and 1un1or shoes till by your favori tes Orig 14 99 to 70 00. ticketed price 6 99 10 44 99. extra 1 3 off 4 66 lo 29 99 DRESS SHIRTS 8.86. TO 9.99 'I All already reduced fuli cut and fitted des1gnel dress <>h1rts patterned and long sleeves Orig 26 00 to 31 SO ticketed price 12 99 to 14 99 extra 1 3 off 8 66 tn 9 99 NECKWEAA 5.33 TO 6.66 All already reduced ties in silk, polyester. wnnl .md more Ong 10 00 to 16 50. ticketed pr1u• 7 99 to 9 99 extra 1 3 off 5 33 to 6 66 UNDERWEAR 1.,99 TO 5.98 All already red.uced briefs, l shirts, A shirts .ind ho1o•rl> Orig ~00 to 10.00. ticketed price 2 99 to 8 99 e'tra ..__,.. 1 3 of{ 1.99 to 5 98 . . SLEEPWEAR AND ROBES 7 .33 TO 23.33 All already reduced men's sleepwear. p.!1am.is anrl llghtwe1ght robes Ong 16 00 to 60 00. tick ttl<l 1111 <: 10.99 to 34.99 exfra 1 3 off 7.33 to 23 3J SPORTCOATS 80.02 All already reduced summer c;portcoot Orig 125 00 to 165 00, ticketed price 89.99, extra 1 3 off 60 02 MEN & vouNo MEN KNIT TOPS 5.93.TO 13.19 All c1lready reduced knit sh11ts for men and young men. Orig 12 00 to 28 00. ticketed pricP 8 99 to 19 99 ex tr a 1 3 off 5 93 to 13 19 • \ SHORT,S 8.57 TO 14.51 All already reduced shorts 1n our collections Ong 18 00 to 3() 00. ticketed price-+2.99 to 21 .99, extr.J 1 ~ ntt~- 8 57 to 14 51 . · SPORTSHIRTS 6.59 TO 13.19 All already reduced sportshirts for men and young men Ong l8 00 to 32 .00, ticketed price 9 99 to 19 99 extra 1 3 ott 6.59 to 13 19 ·SWEATERS 10.88 TO 18.4 7 All already reduced men·s sweater Orig 35 00 to 42 50 ucket~ pn<:e. 16 49 to 27.99., extra 1 3 off 10.88 to 18 47 SLACl(S 9.89 TO 16.49 All already reduced casual and contemporary slacks Orig 20 00 to 38 00, ticketed price 14 99 to 24 99 e~ira 1 3 ott 9 89 to 16 49 MEN'S SHOES 8.65 TO 33.29 All alrea~y reduced styles by your favo11tes Orig 20 00 10 92 00 ticketed pn~e 12 99 to 49 95 P.xtra 1 3 off 8 65 ta 33 29 HEALTH-TEX 1.99 TO 7 .91 All already reduce<! Hl· .J th T t'' for rwwllor ns inl,rnts todrll1'rs boys 4 to 7 ,m<I q1rls 4 IO 14 011u 3 99 ln 18 00 ticketed price 2 99 to 11 99 r>,tra 1 3 off 1 99 to 7 91 KNIT TOPS 2.6~ TO 7 .99 A-II atreartrrec1on>c1 knit topc. for 1,1cldlt•rs boys 4 to 20 rnd girls 4 lo 14 Or1y 6 00 to 19 00 t1l k11tt'1~ p1 '1..• 3 99 to 11 99 e'trct 1 3 off 2 63 to 7 gq ROMPERS 3.34 TO 5.35 All already redu t•d rom1>ers for toddlt•r-., 1ncf q11li., 4 lo '.1 Orig 1 O 00 · 16 00 ticketed pr t • l 9q :c I 99 1•\ • 1 I 3 off 3 34 • r ]5 SHORTS 2.17 TO 5.35 A ,11(eady red11 •• ,, .,1 rt for toddlt>r"> , 111.., 4 10 14 011a VO 10 1500, tit.kt• • 1 ~ tl<l extra f 3 o .. 2 1 7 to 5.35 OSH-KOSH CLOTHING 5.33 TO 7 .99 A , J,readv rcdut 1•0 o ... ll Kosh playv.oeJr t r • t "., r 1.mts toddlers hCt\. J to 7 and girls rt 10 ll• ('200to 165011dt '+'lt11ct>7 99 to1199 ,,.,,. 1 3 off 5 33 to 7 lj-, JELLIE SHOES 1.99 All already re ced • -.hoJs for girls Or 1q ~ I~• tic keted price 2 99 t '• 1 l 1 3 off 1 99 WOVEN SPORTSHIRTS 3.33 TO 6.66 All alrPady reduced "" vP-n spon sh1n s for huy<. 8 1< ~n Oriq 13 00 to 18 00 t 1 k1•H'd price 4 99 10 9 99 11"1rc1 1 3 off 3 33 to 6 66 8 TO 20 BOYS' PANTS 9.33 TO 11 .99 All already reduc~d stvlt'<. for hoyc; 8 to 20 Orig 18 00 to 25 00, 11ckr.t~d p rirP 13 99 to 17 99 ,.,,r 1 3 off 9 33 to 11 99 • All swimw ear. HagQ<tt bttlt IQOP pants lor mf'ln L~VI .. Bendover pants, Ccnt11ra rir shirt Van Hf'U"-(!n rane on tOt'le and Levi's 501 and 701 1eans not ITTl htd~d in the sale Intermediate mar downs mnv have been taken Selection will v1trv stor to store Sorrv no phone, mail or pttcial nrt1ers will hr. 1ai... n • ............ -----; .. ~--... -....,. ·r -~~ } l l J ,_ - .. I A.8 Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thuractay. Auguat 1. 1985 ConserVattie group nlapS .• ~ campaign to oust . Shultz WASHIN<JlON (AP)-A a.ruup of lt.:ad1n1 conservatives, includina st'vc.-ral former U.S. ambassadors, kids off a campa11n today 10 oust Sccre1ary of State peorge P. Shultz, da1ming he hns betrayed Prtsident Reagan's commitment to confront rommunism around the globe. But Shultz already has said he will figh1 to k~ep tns job. "I love-combat," ~uhz has said. "I am tl Marine." It 1~n 't known whether Reagan will be paying attention, as he has showo no sign of dissatisfaction with Shultz: But con~rvatives said they hope he will realize his administra1ion is l>adl> off track 1n its foreign policy. The anti-Shultz move will be launched today at a one-day con- ferenct' of major conservative or- gan1za11ons, 1nclud1n$ the Moral Ma- iont) the Conservative Caucys. the Conscrvattve D1ges1 and the Com· m1lltt for the Survival of a free 1 Con~ s. Tfieirlist ofirie va ooes is Ion~. says Paul Erickson, a top aide to Richard Viauer1e, publisher of the Con- serva1ive Di&est and a leadma backer of the dump Shultz move "Georac Shultz is lookina for areas of accommodation with the ~viet Union," Erickson said tn.<n inter· view WedncSday. "He Is willing to accept sttbility at the price ofliberty." Enckso.n said the conference may appoint a permanent commi55ion whose objective 1s the ouster of Shultz. . Among those scheduled to partici- pate .lo the conference were three recent former Reagan administration envoys: David 8. Funderburk, for- Qler ambas~dor to Romania; Evan Galbraith, former ambassador to France.and Charles M. Liche~stein, a dejepu: to the United Nation~ unttl last year. Also on the scheduk were Sens. Mnlcolm Wallop, R·Wyo .. Steve ~ymms, R·ldaho and Rep. Phil Crane, R-111. . Erickson said more 1han JOO con- servative organizations were rep- resented and thaf-.jt was the largest gathering of conscrV:rtt-veuinte they helped elect Reagan in 1980. Erickson said conservatives hold Shullz respQnsible for keeping Caner admini.stration liberals in the State Department. for technolgy sales to Pekijlg. for ·Rea~im's decision to continue recognmng the unratified SALT II arms control treaty with Moscow. propQsals to send military aid to Marxist Mozambique and for failing to focus attention on Soviet violations of arms control treaties. -· Shuttle's crewmen studying the sun CAI'('. CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)- Challengcr's astronauts st1~d1ed the sun's stormy atmosphere ·and flew circles around and fired an electron beam at a sma 1 satellite toda)' as they sped 1hrougll an invisible elec- tromagnetic ocean. . The satellite fly-around tests co~ld give scientists a better understa~d11:ia of the complex processes occumng in the ionosphere. a layer · of Earth's atmosphere which transmits radio signals ~round the &to~. The data will acfd to a harvest of scientific information being reaped by the seven astronauts as they continue their study of the sun. stars. .galaxies and the atmosphere. Uganda prime jninister sworn in Moi.t of the day was devoted to astronomy, with astronauts Karl Henize. an astronomer, and Loren Acton, a solar physicist, aiming Orattenger's telescopes at the sun. They focused on the corona, an area of high speed winds of solar gases surrounding the sun. "AMPALA, Uganda (A P) ' - Paulo M~v.anga. who was vice presi- dent and defense minister under the ousted Pre~1dent Milton Obote. was sworn 1n today as prime minister of the milltar) g~vemrnent that seized power 1n a couf> fivetlays ago. He said a new Cabinet would be narned soon. In Nairobi, Ken ya, a source at the World BaAk said the bank ·was evacuating us foreign employees and their dependents from Uganda and temporarily suspending projects there becau11e of instability following the coup. More than 300 other foreigners - including 62 Amencans -who were evacuated from Uganda reached the border town of Busia, Kenya,. Wednesday and described wide- spread looting. random grenade at- tacks, and reckless gunfire by soldiers followmg th~ coup. Government. offices aru:s-many store·s that had been damaaed by looters remained closed today, but banks reopened for the first time since last. week, offering l~i:nited servi~s during a two-hour business day. Obote, 60, fled to neighboring Kenya when the coup occurred Saturday. The military council has demanded that he return to "answer for his crimes," which the new leaders say include human rights abuses and attempts to capitalize on. tribal con- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---. ructs within the military. Muwanaa said in a speech broad- cast on Radio Uganda that the rest of the new Cabinet probably would be announced by the end of the day. Muwanga said that Lt. Gen. Tito Okel)o, t~ new head of state and (f\ainnan of the military council, told tlim the objective of the coup was to bring peace and unity to the country. "We want U~nda to thrive," Muwanga said. 'We most stop 1he bloodshed." Muwanga, m his 60s1 was credited with engineering Obote s return to the presidency in a 1980 election that was widely criticized· as being rigged. Mono Lake dedicated .. Ancient tufa •tand guard over Mono Lake near Lee Vining, Calif., where.Mono Baaln National Fore.t Kenic area wa• dedicated. Tufa I• llme.tone.-createcl Interaction ofo1 calcium and carbonate in.the lake'• water. They hope to learn what m~han- 1sm govctns gas dynamics on the sun, a key to unlocking mysteries of the · s4n and other stars as well. ~nize and .Acton were still hampered by the inability of a $60 million tracking mstrument to lock firml y on the sun. Four telescopes are mounted on the device. Three of them, using indepen- dent, less accurate tracking systems, were able to zero in on the sun and one of them on Wednesday recorded a large nuclear explosion on the surface. r-------------------1 i PAnER~0 ~ECI URE 1 ·congress cliur~inglJutlegislation I HOME DRESSMAKE.RS •• SancttonsagainstSouthAfricadra:wnup, Corp.hadopted,31?·111,anamend-mclud1ng$3b11l!onfor lsra~l.forcach _ . ment to an In tenor Depanmcnt year and a one-time SI .S b1lhon shot I · I along with the fatest compromise on budget appropriations bill eliminating all but of emergency economit aid. I I -i500 milhon of the $7.9 billion Egypt would get $2.1 billion each I REG ISTE·R FQ R FR EE DRAWi NG I WASH INGTON (AP) -Like a But Amencan firms would be per-previously authorized for subsidizing year, plus$500 million in emergency ' I I dam bufsting, Congr.css is giving final mined to make new investments in plants that conven coal and shale into aid. NEW llJK/NG SEW/NG MA CH/NE .approval to a flood of legislation. South Africa. liquid and gas fuels. Action and panisan rhetoric con-1 r 1 • I adopting billions of dollars in money Leaders in boih houses said they A House dispute over howw pay tinued on tne fa11tt bill as both the I Need not be present~ at time of drawing I bills. drafting sanctions against South would press for a final \lOte on the for billions of dollars of water projects Senate and House agriculture com-· I Retail Value '399" I Africa and working to~ard another compro111ise before Congress ad-nationwide snarled a bill that also mittees worked to Jjnish long-term I . I fragile compromise on a deficit-journs. would stan the flow of$27 million in legislation to replace the one that I EVERY.THING YOU 'VE AL.WAYS I fighting budget. However. conservatives. including direct but non-lethal U.S. aid to the expires at the end of September. WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT PATTERN Wednesday's torrent of leg1slat1ve Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N .C., have raised ant1 -Sandin1sta Contra rebels 1n · The ~nate COf!1miltee edged. near -I FrTTfNG ANO u~ // I aClloru~.a_s...iJ)w:red by the desire to the possibility ofa Senate filibuster to Nicaragua. completion ofa bill. But Republicans I nr;.nii:; ' clear the way for both houses to stop the sanctions. In passing a supplemental money warned it mi$ht be vetoed. The I AFR~ID TO ASK. "' .....J adjou.m for their month-long Augu·s1 President Reagan has consistently bill jlppropriaung nearl> S 14 billion measure runs billions of dollars over I I vacauon by the end of the week. opposed sanctions against South for the current fiscal year ending Sept. budget because it attempts to.guaran- Money matters dominated the , ~frica in the past and it was nol clear 30. the House made changes in a tee that major segments of. the farm I I agenda, wnh both hou~s movtng whether he will sign the mejlsure. conference rc:pon negotiated earlier community will receive at least their I I rapidly on authorizing and ap-Private bargaining sessions con-with the Senate. current levels of income over the next I I propriallng the funds tha1 fuel the unued on the shape of the federal That stalled Senate cons1derat1on four years. I I federal government. budget accompanied by now fami liar of ihe measure and left 1n question Dole warned that ifa bill accep).able House and Senate negotiators predictions of both failure and sue-· whether 1he differences could be to him did not emerge from commit· I \ I called for an immediate ban on the cess. , resolved by the end of the week or tee he might bypass the panel and I Thousands ~ I sale of South African gold coins in the Senate Budget Committee Chair-would remaip on the agenda until · bring up his own legislation on the I have paid $8 \ ... I United States as ~hey a~reed on a man Sen. Pete Domenici. R-N.M.. Congress returns. Senate floor 1h1s week. I to attend I package of economic sanctions aimed reponed "substantial headway" as Before taking up 1he supplemental. ln the midst of the legislative flurry, this clinic. MR. OLEYAR 1977 at pressunng the Pretona govern-negotia1ors tried to salvage a deficit-the House approved 262-161 a two-" t~c Senate did not neglect 10 adopt I never before I PROFESSIONAL DESIGN CONSUL TANT I ment IC? end Its policy of racial reduction package of spending cuts. year. $2S.4 billion fomgn aid lt!gislauon appropriatmg S 1.6 billion I offered for I segregation. "P:. few major issues remain un-authorization bill. to pay for the cost of running I PATTI RN I The compromise also would bar resolved," Domenici said. It was the firs~ time in four years Congress over the fiscat year begin-1 only $3. Do J , I the.export of_ U.S. nuclear technology But Dole said earlier Wednesday Congress h~s manag~d to pass such a ning Oct. 1. The money 'is some I not miss th1"S" I to South Afr:ica. !l5 well as the sale of the only hope remaining was for a bill and get 1t to President Reagan for $728,000 less than appropriated for event. j compu~er materials used to enforce "watered-down, i'«>thing budget." his signature. The bill au1horizes the current fiscal year and 10.3 I I bank loans also would be forbidden. effectively abolish the Syn1hetic fuels years in aid to other countries, budget request. I FI TT I NG I the racial PQhC} of apanheid. New The House, meanwhile \/Qted to S 12. 7 billion for each of the next two percent less than President Reagan's I I .r--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~r.iiiim--iiiiiiiiiiiiii--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii----iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimii : I CLINIC ! 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In~ sizes S to XXL , is pleased to announce the opening of early Kindergarten Classes. AGE-4 yrs. 9 mos. A Christian Developmental Program for children not quite ready for Kindergarten. Afternoon Daycare will be available. . Prince of Peace luthern School, 2987 Mesa Verde Drive, Costa Mesa, is an established elementary school, K-6, serving the area for 24 yea rs. Additional information, call 549-0562 : Clip this ad and receive 2 free pattern I : r-------.---t"-----.hlslgns to each person attending. F 1 I I Morning Class 10 AM -Evening Class 6:30 PM I I • BLOUSES ... sizes 8-20, 38-44 Tell your frjends about this Ad. l I L---~~~A_1_1_c_1a_s_s_e_s_ld_e_n_t_1c_a_1.~~~~~I : ANYONE WHO S£WS AT HOM E WIL.L GAIN MUCH I VALUABLE INFORMATION AT THIS LECTURE. I 6 DAYS ONLY! (11 Claaaea) I I I I I I by Graff, Jodi, Teddi, Greenecastle • PANTS ... short & average length, sizes 6-20 by Graff, Koko, A.M. and Teddi ALSO FEATURiNG ... Jewelry, Handbags, Clogs, Thongs, Shoes, Colognes .. I I I I I I I I I I I I I I Mon. Aug. 5th HOLIDAY INN TuH. Aug. Ith HOLIDAY INN Harbor Blvd. Wed. Aug. 7th QUALITY INN 7555 Beach at llt Fwy • I .. MANY RAUTIFUL EllMOIDIRED ILOU8E8 FROM PHl.LIPINE8 I I I 1850 S. Harbor Anaheim 1111 1 Fwy Fullert~n I t Buena Park I I Thure. Aug. Ith . Fri. Aug. Ith lat. Aug. 10 I I c~~J~~D 8AD~~..'ACK HbUolY1lN I I (Fomi11r1y Holiday IMl 1660 e. 1st St. 3131 Bristol I Cal·Hliwallan Fa•bloa•.----- s1Nce 1962 I 3737 W. Chapman Santa Ana '1 '°& I Oran e Costa Mesa I 9'47 N Euclid TM City 9--:---__......._ __ ~ _______ ...._______ ANAHEIM Shopptng .Cent• I / Sewing Machine Compllment1 of... ... I < 1•11 Btk• s ·or L• Palma) P~~~~J:e I PALS SEWING CENTERS I P~~40~~1!6 .. ~on.-Frl 10-9; I •ORANGE MALL ··WESTMINSTER MALL I Mon ·Sat ·10·6 $•tj 10-6: Sun 12·& I • BUENA PARK MALL • HUNTINGTON BEACH I \ ( . • • .c . ~ •~·t::::=======~~!!!!!~ -!!!I! ---------------------------~ ~ .- ,---~~ ... I 'l..J ) As seen In Vogue Veta's INTIMATE APPAREL, '"C. 1031 //WIHl AVENUE . NfWP'1f'fT HACH. CA f2HO ii642-11g1 .. Chantelle PAR'S 20% Oft · Beige:,. Whlte-8/Sck B-C-DCups ,;.... \ ' . H~ teaChei: retUr~ing to N 1caragua to lielp the poor By ROBERT BARK.ER . • Of IN 0.-Net ..... I I Pat McC'ulley wants to make one 1h1n1 clear-the Umted States as the best place in the world "This as the best place to lave , 1hert's no two ways about 1t," the S6- yeor-old Huntanaton Beach vadc !chool tcachcr said. "But I still want to have at do \he right thing. No' country as perfect." Where this country 111 wrona. McCulley claatns, as its policy towafd Nicaraaua. McCulley has vasted that troubled Central Amencan "ataon twice and .. he's go111'fapin Sunday for a two- wttk yisit. · · ··1 tfi ink the American people need 10 know that their tax money as going 10 hurt th e poor country people, the health workers and the teachers who arc helping them. "The contras (counter revoluuon- <lnffl arc going to kill anyone who 's going to help the people." It's McCulley's hopt to take a vklco recording camera to the country. interview people and bring,. their toraes to the Amencan people. She plans to offer the film to the tclev1,1on networks or to \how at at vanou1 service clubs and orpnuations But. there's one catch -she can't afford to ~uy one, she said. She said if «ny donors would lake to loan her a CGmera for a couple of weeks, they can le•ve a f1)essage for her at school distnct headquarters at 964-8888. McCulley, a Huntington Beach resident and a teacher at Oasler Middle School, is going to Nicaraaua with about 20 other members of tho Witness for Peace o~oization - a group. she said, that as dedicated to helping the poor people of the cou n lt)'.5idc. "The peqple elected Daniel Ortcp and 11 is a perfectly lcamm~tc aovcm- mcnt. . -"It's youn& and makes mistakes, but al's done so much to improve literacy and health riahts. These thinas were never ever done under (fonncr preStdcnt) Somoza, who we backed completely. It's time the people baei a chance,'' she said. McCulley said she has no official connections, but became involved in the country after reading several poems by Ernesto Card~nal. the present minister of culture. Towi~g operator-to fight loss.of business permit !Sy ROBERT BARKER Of .. 11911r .... ""' Huntington Beach towina com- pany owner Dale Bark.head plans to go to court to-fight the suspension of bis business pcnn11. Birk.head, 33, said Tuesday city officials arc violating his civil riahts and that he's had to lay off all but one of his employees. He said officials acted to close. his business last Tuesday without advance wamina. But police officials said Birk.head's firm, Huntington Beach Towing, has violated regulations by failing to maintain a storage yard for im- pounded cars neitt to its office. That discrepancy was noticed durinl a periodic inspection, according to Sgt. Jeff Cope. Several other companies, in addition to Huntingtqn Beach Towing, ~were closed for the sam~ violation, he said Tuesday. Cope said that storage yards arc required to be located next to com- pany offices because of problems in the past with "unscrupulous" com- panies. • He said some past operators have been kn°'fll to store vehicles secretly, causing p'roblcms with stolen car r:eports, the reclaiming of autos and the chargjna of"outragcous fee• Cope also said Birk.head sh, .lid have been aware of the requirement because owners are given a packet of information and i:;cgulations when they apply for a business-permit. They are urged · to read and understand them, he said. Cope also said that Birkhead viol- ated ordinances on another count - t}Jat he failed to request permission from the chief ofpolice to move to the firm's present" location last October from a service station in the city. Birk.head claimed that other com- panies don't have.,' storage facilities next to their offic:cs!...~ity Couneilman Bob Mandie, who bas a towing agreement with the city, keeps his company's impounded ca.rs at a site away from his Main Street head- quarters, Birk.head said. Cope said that Mandie takes can to hi~ Main Street office tint and then takes only can that can't be kept at that site to his Crystal Street yard, which does not have an office. But Birkhead claims he has pic- tures to prove that the Main Street lot is empty. Statements to the contrary are "phony and bogus," he said. Birktiead's attorney, Wallace Davis, &aid that Bu1thead's due process protection apparently has been v1olatC<f6ecausc the cit}' allcg~c:t­ ly acted to suspend the permit without notice. "Ordinarily businesses find out what's wrong and jet a chance to remedy it. l can't behevc this has been happening," he said Retired teacher Louise Kroesen Fu'leral services we re held Teusday for Louise Allen Krocsen of Costa Mesa. a retired teacher who died Thursday in Newpon Beach at the age of82. Mrs. KrocSt"n, who was born an Indianapolis and taught for many years in the Burbank school district. - was a graduate of UCLA and a chaner member of that um versify's Kappa Theta sorority. She beJdnged to St. John the Baptist Catholic Church in Costa Mesa and was a member of tis bndge group ~he as surv1vtd by her husband. Kci\t{.eth P Krocsen. and three daughters. Suzanne Mane Ab~n of Costa Mesa, Kathleen Louise Slovak of Upland and Cyn thia Ann Ra y- mond of Houston. Also surva vang arc a sister, Theresa Allen Smith of corona del Mar. along with 12 irandchildren and four great grandchildren. Services were held at St. John the Baptist Church under the direction of Pierce Brothers Bell Broadway Monuary. Interment followed at Pacific View Memorial Park . John Stanfey Pl~ki · Services were held Wednesday for John Stanley Ploski of Costa Mesa, a longtime rcsidcru ofthe Harbor Arca. who died Sunday at Costa "'Acsa Memonal Hospital. He was 74. Mr Plosk1 was a retired master sergeant an the ·Manne Corps and served as an acnal photographer in World War II and the Korean conflict. He was a member of the D1sabvled American Veterans and St John the Baptist Catholi.c Church 1n Costa Mesa. He as survived by his wife , Eve; a so n. John S. Ploski Jr.. and a daughter. Sandra E. Ploska. all of Costa Mesa. Also surviv1n$ are a brother and half-sister. both an Con- necticut. A Mass of Chnstaan Bunal was held at St. John the Bapttst Church. followed by interment aJ R1vers1de National Cemetery Networks reject NatioJ?wide contrftception ad pot raids NEW YORK (A P) -The thrtt theme is too controvcrsa~I. said set Monday maJor tclcvasion networks have George Schweitzer. vice president of either rtjected or resisted broad· communications for CBS Broadcast WASHINOTON (AP) ---Fedcrnl. casting a 30..second public service Group. Birth control 1s covered '1n state and local law enforcement announcement that promotes con· news and public affairs I P.rograms. agents plan to swoop down on traception. the &roup sponsoring the "where both sides of tht issue arc manJua na fields in all 50 states next advertisement said Wednesday. discussed," he said. Monday in a massive effort to the Dr. Lucila KJcin, immediate past An. ABC. spokcs'!'an said the spot eradicate cannabis crops, govern- prcsidcnt of the '-'mcncan College of con~acts with 11s gu1dchncs for public ment sources ~ad Wednesday. Obstctncaans and Gynecoloaists, said service announcements becau~ It The sQurces. spcakina only on she was di~ppointcd at the response came from a trade orgamzat1on. cond111on tl\ey not be identified. said from the networks, "which could rathe r than a n onprofi t. the raids would likely take several contribute so much to an attitude of ph1lanthrop1c group . .and because 11 da}'s and that officers would use scitual rcspons1b1hty .. d1'1Cusscs a controversial issue. Birth machetes-and other hand tools but The announcements are part of a control should be treated an the news nat chemicals S 100.000 campaign to~ounter undue or an a paid advertisement to ad-The Ju,t1ce Department as coorda- concem about the safety of contracep-vocate a pan1cular pos111on. said the nauna the cffon. the souTCCs said. uon. she said. ABC spokesman, Jeff Tolvan, direc-Dcpanment spokesman TcrT} East- ·The tele vision announcement tor of busmess anformauon. who land. asked about the planned raids, ponrays a girl sayana she intends to be added that a final decision should said: "I have no comment:-'' president, a woman saying she plans come within a week. The sources ~ad Justice Depart· to. rttum to school, and a prcanant ~un B\~k. an NBC spokesman. mtnf officials arc womed that w11h woman say1n1. "I intended to have a )11d a dcc1s1on as citpcctcd next week advance not acc. the mat1Juana family bu\ not this soon" Public concnn about contraccp-growers would quickly harvest the An 'announcer 51ys "Nothing tavc pills has followed publicity about crop5 before law enforcement agents changes any intentions faster than an side effects such as he~n ~ttack. amve. unintended prcanancy. Unintended stroke and blood cl<?ts. KJe1n saad. But Some 300 to 400 officers wall ~ preanancics have ri ks, areater !"Ski 1fa healthy woman as youn&erthan JS used in the optrataon, the sources than any of today's contraccp11vct. and docs not smoke, she has less than said, with most of them from · state The American College of Obttctn· one in !00,000 chan~ of fatal and local aacnciei1. . ciansond· Gynecoloaists wants yo u to complicataons from b1nh control Mo t of the plots are on pnvatc have the facts. For your free booklet pills. she said. lands, but some are on public prop. call 1·800.INTENOS." Then a The nsk of dyina from ~omplic~· eny, includina remote U.S. Forc~t wom3n on camera ~ys, "I intend to 11ons of prqnancy. such as 1nfecuon,1 Service arcas. call. now" stroke and hemo~haac • is about 2v Last Fnday, an an action that will CBS rtJeC:ted the spot because ats 11mes that. she 'Wd. affect future raids but not nc't week's plans. the Orua Enforcement ~dm1n- 1 trataon filed an environmental im- U.S. bustnessman'slawsuit asks $4 00 ri1illion from S.ovlets pact statement 1n the offic11J federal Rqislcr, which lasted thl'e'C altcma· tavcs for crad1ca11n1 man,uana. The methods include uie of man- u.ar tools. he&' 'I machinery or con- troversial hcrbacid D dm1n1"' lO ANO l E\ (AP) -An Cirqol1an, 6,ran1 mcd1cal1upply trator John C. Lawn can choose one Or1ng1 Co MERVYN .. . • starts Frid~y at 9:30 a.m. • many limited quantities _ _,_• not all_sizes may be available in each grouping - • colors and-styles limited to stock on hand, 'SO shop early for best selection! • 1n our Huntington Beach store women's sportswear NOW IO JUNIOR TANK TOPI .....•.•.•.... 1• io JUNIOR TOPS ....•.••.....•....•• I.II 1• ACTIVI CO·ORDINATEI ......••• I.II m JUNIOR TEE IHIRT8 ............. UI . . 'lff1 MllSEI' BLOUIE8 .•...•.......• UI 51 Mt81E8' PANTS •................• i.11 11 JUNIOR BLOUIEI •...•..........• I.II M MtlHI' TEE IHIRTI ........... _ • U1 104 ACTIVE CO-ONMNATE8 .' ......... .. 203 LARGE 8IZI TEE SHIRTS ••.••.•••• I.II . 71.M181E8' •NDl~EA8Y• PANTS ..• 1.- m~PANTI ••••.....•......•• I.II IO LARGE 8IZI IHtRTI .••.......•.••. ._. 171 M188EI' PEfllE CO·ORDINATEI •• 1.- 31 MllHS' SKIRTS .•...••..•.••... 11• 43 JOG SUITS •......... ~ •.••.. _ .... 11• womens' dresses NOW 30 JUNIOR DRESSES ........ -. --..... .. 45 Ml88E8' DREUE8 ......... .; ..... ,_. maternity wear NOW 15 MATERNITY TOPS ................ ~ 50 MATERNITY PANTS •.............. 4.. llngerle, loungewear NOW 21·TA.NK TOPI ....................... ek 11 BIKINIS a BRIEFS ....... -.......... tit 11 BRAI .......•.................... Iii¢ 11 SLEEP9HIRT8. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.11 17 LOUNGERS ......•..........•.... 2.11 34 BRAS .......•................... 2.11 11 HOITE81 LOUNGERS ........••... 4• 51 IUPI a CAMISOLES ...........•.. s• 21 UNIFOMI TOPS .................. S• 11 GOWNS ......................... t• 31 H08TE88 •............. -...•..... 7• 11 COM•NO COATS ................ 7 • 22 LOUNGERS ..... ~ ............... t.• 20 ROBES ..... - . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 •• women's acceaaor~e• NOW 127 FASHION PANTYHOSE ............ 2k 13 HAIR ACCllSORIE8 ............... 41¢ 291 PANTIOX •.....•................. 41¢ ISICARVl!e ........................ 41t T7 IHOel (ACCESS. DEPT.) .......... ... 41 FASHION HATS .................... ... Q TIQHTI ••••••...•.•..........•... ·* Infants and toddlers NOW 11 TC>OC>laR 80YI' TOPI ........... ~ 1.-,. 'D TODDLIR GIRLS' ._OUIEI .......• 1.- 11 RAIN90W 9NT'R"' aHOSI (GIRL.I Dll"T) •.....•.•........... 2.11 11 N'ANTI' Dfmll r. .............. S.• 11'TOODLaR 80YI' 'AJAMAS .•...... s.• ~uys tor boys MOW 47 UTTLI 80Y8' DMll 81•Ta ....... 1• •aeca90H'L:M.V.DM .... TI .. 1M 11 UT1U llOVI' ACT'lft PANT8.: •••• U1 • -.ova• ACTIVS.PANTI ......... ..... • 8IQ 90Y8' DMU ll•TI ...... -.... rt 8IQ 90YI' DM81 PAN'T9 ......... ... 11 8IQ 90YI' IUOl.I 90Y PANTa •..•. 7 M 11 9IQ 80YI' MUICLI ••Tl ....... ... buys tor glrls NOW 221 GIRLS' DMU IOCKI ••••. -.••.•• 4k 11 GIRLS' SUNDMa .IACKIT8 . -..••• - 21111EOll~ ••••••••••••.••• C1 LITTLE GIRL.I' IHORTI • • • • • • • • • • • 2.9 W1 GIRLS' TOPa ••.•••.•••.••...••••• 2.9 •HEAL TH· TEC• PANTS, 4-IX ••.••.• a.II • alG GR.a' TOPI ..•.•..•........• a.II 11 UTTU GIRLS' TOPI . . . . • • • . • • . . . . a.II Ml UNICC>Mt CL~ aHORTI, 7· 14 .•• UI • lllG OMLI' ..................... UI TfROU IA8. 4-IX ............. · ... ...-. -'9---1 21 GIN.8' CA8UAL PANTa ........•.• U1 511-..................... ,. ..... . 22 alG GIRL.a' DREIUI ..•...... _ ••• 1 • 22 UT1\.I Gal.8' DRellEI ... -...... ... buys for men NOW ~ PRllfT' TEEi •••..•.•.............• Ilic. 115 BAIEaAU. JPIEYI .•.. -......... lk 171 COLLAR IARI .................• 1• 170 YOUNG •N'I SHIRTS ........... 1• 111 CAMmlUDQe CLAHICI"' IHiRTa. : UI .. YOUNG •WI FASHION 11•n1 .•• UI • l/ll.V. ~ ltlRTI ............. 4M 77 l/ll.Y. ~·· •.•..•.•.... UI 104 8/llV. POLY/COT. SHIRTS ..•.... 4.81 W'7 L/8LV. YOUNG •N'S SHIRTS •.••. SM 11 YOUNG •N'I FASHION PANTS ...• 1 • 81 JACKETS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15..tl shoes for the tamlly NOW 155 WOMEN'S JAZZIERCIH,_. IHOEI _ 3• 18 BOYi' IANOALI •.•...•. -• . • • . . • . U1 S7 WOMEN'S JAZZ-STYLE CAIUAU •. U1 151 WOMEN'S llUSHROOMS• SHOES . I.II S1 CANDIE'I• CASUAL.a ............. ... 48 •Wa SANDAL.a ...•...•.••. -.••• t• 1S7 WOMEN'S CANVAS CASUALS .•• 11.- 11 GIRLS' MEAKER SHOES . . . . . • . . . 12.11 147 •N'I HIPOPPOT AllUI• IHOEI . 11• for your home .. NOW 'D BA TH RUGS ..................•.• 2.9 1• IHl!ETI .....................••. 5.11 13 BIDIPREA.01 ................... 12-9 21 COMFORTIRI ................ _ . 2!1.11 I housewares NOW '37 NAPKIN RINGI . -.....•...•..•.... 211c 73 PUCIMATI ........ ~ ............. - 17 DESK CLOCKS .•............... _ . 1• n MUG UTI 4·.-C .................. I.II 11 TACO IETI l ·PC ............. : ... U1 2S DtNNERWARI HTS 41-PC ........ ._. Jewelry buys NOW 211.AMlrtGI. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1..11 120 IAlllRINGa. . . . . . . . . . . . • . . • • • . . • • I.II 40 IAM*GI ........... .,, . . . . . . . . . . a.. • MICKLACll ............••••.•..• 2...11 toys, toys, toy• NOW 1• ITAR WAAS"' FIGURal ••..•...... 1.R 118TRAWMY IHORTCAKS-DOU.a ... ti ITAi' wua· MNCOR llONaTD .• , .. ' \mcncan bu inc 'man wtfo 1 11un1 rmpon oompeny Ill Mo o .for l~ oflhcmaftcra.»:da)'.1N1iun1~riod. lt\C vaet Union and·~ new paper uan but wa OU led from the Soviet Thr ~tatrmt'nt ,1n descnb1 "'t LI ntington Beach 98 11 Adams Ave. llVelli• for $4()() m1lhon a ked I naon last v.·1ntcr amid alltpllOnS mlnjuana crop ptqble(n 1n the nit• nu • • fc4eral JU~ Wednt'~ay \0 declare thA1 he us. llY. • ed States. said there ~t:te reponed at Brookh rst St the Soviet fOvt'mmtnt an default for Grqonan. has calltd tht' s1&ht1np af iomt 14.000 ~lot an tht' , U . , n~t 1n,~rran,.._th_c_l1_w_,_u_11_. _____ c_h•_'lt'.:;.__o_f -''P""Y_1n-"--lud_1c""'~ ... u-'----48 C'~Uguou' ~tc'l '.!!n...:l.:!83:::_ __ ~===================~::=-:::==:;:===:::::=========:::;::;:=!--, • l \ ' J Badham getting buin rap on oil drilling issue ~ep. Bob Badbam has been about as popular as an oil slick since the California congressional delegation cooked up a deal with the Interior Department to open 3, I 00 square miles of Pacific Ocean bottom to ex ploratory oil drillia&. Badham has, in the past, done his best to earn his constituents' disapproval. In nine-years representing the 40th District, he has distinguished himself as one of the leadingjunketeers in the House of Representatives. He is frequently absent when bis colleagues vote. Highlights of his record include neJoliating a land deal bet ween the lrvi ne Co. and the Mannes and helping Liberian adoptee Sam WiJJett ~t his United States citizensh_ip. His bigge~t contribut.Jon to the preJCrva~on of the umon may be his stcadfast"support fof Republican initiatives, part1cularly those emanating fr6m the White House. r ~ So it is ironic -and unfair -that some of those who have sent Badham to-Washington five times have turned on him when he finally took on the adminis-- tration on their behalf. · Well, "took on the administration" may be a little strong. But at least Badham recognized that the compromise sought by the White House and the Interior Department and acceded to by his legislative branch coUea~ues was not one the folks at home wouJd bless. It doesn t appear that Badham put up much of a fight, but he disassociated himself from any involvement in the compromise. For once, it seems, Badham is getting a bad rap. At the Laguna Beach City Council meeting Tuesday flight, Badham was the objeci of some pretty horrible fantasizing. One woman sugges~ed he should be drawn and quartered, though she admitted she'd be happy just to see him out of office.' More rational rabble-rousers suggested his effigy should be hung from an oil rig and burned. _ J>erhaps _these people were operatin~om memory. Badham, it turns out, is a born-again oil • drilling opponent. On Nov. 2, 1978, Badham told _the Daily Pilot he would not o ppose oil drillin$ ofTthe Southern California coast because "the alternaltve .. .is having the lights go out." At the time. the Interior Department was conduc.t- ing hearings in San Die~o on a federal pla n to lease offshore tracts. 26 of which were between Dana Point and San Diego. (It is an interesting sidelight that Sen. Pete Wilson, then the mayor of San Diego, was among the leading opponents of offshore drilling then. Wilson was a key figure in the current compromise to lift the moratorium on oil exploration ifi selected areas.) Badham's record indicates the change of heart. is at least the second he has experienced on the offshore·oil issue. As a member of the state Assembly, he was the author of a bill to renew and exte nd a ban on oil drilling within three mile~ of the Southern CaJifomia shoreline. There are p)enty of reasons to criticize the minimalist version of representation Bob Badham provides. But on this issue, he was outnumberoo by his fri ends. -LETTERS Nation needs offshore oil to lceefi fuel prices down Io 1h1: I <l11ur It 1~ hard to hl.'l1l'\t' th.ti alter a decade ot crnnum1l d1srupt10n there are ~till thoM' who an: tigh11ng offshore oil drilling along our<:oa\t as headlined JO }'OUr Jul} I ~ l'tht1on lia"e the) forgotten the long line~ thq waited 1n to huy oh'rpriccd gasoline', An· the) h;ippy to pay their higher utility h1lls'10rdo thenust not reali1c that 1hcr1: 1o; a relat10n~h1p bct..,.ec:n the cn'I of lhl'tr encrg)' and the production 111 ml and natural ga' off their 'lhor~·,·1 Just tht• few well' we have tx-en able to dnll \o far ha '-'l' \tah1hzed or even lowered these pnC'es. Becau~ ~all co'lt'I, whether tor production or transpon. arc based on the CO\t of enersy .\nd our increased pro- duction of 011 coupled with recenth develo{X'd oil production 1n Britain Norway and Mexico. have fmalh broken OPEC·., enslaving hold OH'f us. ()Pf< \ml monopoly allowt•d 11 to L.M. Bovo --~ raise its pnceo; until mo'it of the world economic<:; \ank Third World as well as industnal11ed ones. with the result that the world cou ld not afford to bu:r the expensive 011 to \llmulate the cconom}. ~ less 011 was purchased from OPEC. causing a glut. Rut now. with lower 011 pnces. world econriln1cs are staning to re\ 1 ve and the glut will not remain for lr>ng. And as 11 tal..n many years to dnclop a produnng well. we had ~ttrr not wan until we fall back to reliance on O PE< Do these protester\ rea lly want to put the control of their energy cos1c; hacl.. into OPlC'-; hands" Do they want more degradation of Third World economics where the people arc already living in ahJCCt poverty? Or do the) realh not sec anything but their narrow \H'v. nt .an •offshore oil rt(l'' It "a wondt·rml·nt' < 10l DIE JI Sf PH Ne .... port &ach All eggs aren't equal v1,uali1e a ~tretd1 ot coaslhnc with thOU\.'lnd., and thou~nd~ ~I m·sting ArCtt<' tt'rn~ If )llrn 1akr thl' <'lilt" of one 3nd put lht'lll at a far d1st:inl·c thr mo1hrr 1ern 1nqmably will rl·wan11r thrm a hrr own Nob<><l)' kn o\\-\ flow ' ' ORANGE COAST . Daily Pilat .. \lbcrt f 1n\tl·1n didn't t,1lk unttl he •~4~an nW • f hat .1n1m.1I ~1th th1' finrst hair IS thr bat l .!t1. Bo>d Is • 1yodlut~d colrmDI t. ,,_,. ZJl\I Ulor Tefft Teet ,......,.,,, Don F.nley Ctty fdllOf Cr ... INff ~·_., to do anything." • LARRY STIRLING Aaeemblym&n ON TH£ R1 GHr ·oo~~ ~~· 1U SELL .... WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY .... ~ ...,,.. ........ -.,., Group ~~ judicial • worries 1. way off You will perhaps remember that Mr. Norman Lear. the fabulously successful telev1s1on producer who gavr us Archie Bunker, discovered a few years ago m the M<>.ral ~ajority and other such organizations the killer bees of American constitutional democracy. • California's afire; while men, materiel cool heels He managed to frighten a lot of people who in other confrontations with the vicissitudes of nature and htstory had shown fonitude and hope The president of Yale actually warned 18-year-old freshmen of the ha1:ards of the Moral MaJority. caus· ing them to smile condescendmgly as they would have if they had been riddressed by an agent of the \Woman's Christian Temperance Union. By ASSEMBLYMAN LARRY breaks out at Camp Pendleton. SnRLING another pnvate contractor is sent What tomfQOlery! Each year Cah· and so on un1il there arc no private forn1ans. indeed Westerners. contractors lefi. blithefully stand by while m1lhons of During the high fire season, as dollars of property and some lives go. many as 50 fi res !lave burned out of up in smoke. control simultaneously. Any one of Like ancient tribesmen bowing to which could use most, 1f not all, the fate, it appears that we bchcve the fire aerial resources we have available. g()d simply chooses its victims and we Howevrr. the private contractors will are po~erlcss to do anything. not let other agencies such as the Nothing .could be further from th.e California Department of Forestry or truth. While we. of course. can t the stand-by cap:tbility of the Cali- prorecr everything anct everyone alr fornia Air National Guard be called the ume. ·we can certainly do much to light these fires except JO the most better 1han we dQ now. outrageous cases. To search ou.t the origins of our Our second player, the California -annual fir~ sacnfice. ~e must .. ~s in Department of Forestry, has al- most public debates, cherchez the ~ tempted to lake advantage of the ec-0nom1c interest. In this arena there availaSilJty of surplus aircraft to are three major competing ~layers. ,create an "orgamc" air wing to the The first and most actt ve 1s the all-CDF for savings in cost and 1mprovc- powerful contra~t firefighter!>. These ffil'nts in control and resPonse. are swashbuckling. mostly ex-m11t- Laf) guys who ny a ragtag air force of During 1he earl y 1970s. the U S. -motley genre. They, so far. arc the big f:?cpartmcnt. of Def en~ gave 55 winner~ in this tussle. They have (Jrumman. S-2s to the C DF. Every lucrative contracts to maintain and year the c. DF attempted tQ get an operate their plane'i. They work six appropriation to convert the S-2s to months a year and apparently spend be organic operational aircraft. They the other six months successfully "'ere eventually able to get enough politicking -againsl any oHler a~ncy funds to. get S-2 a1rw~~h} •. but only being able to easily compete with on condition that the p1lot1ng of the them. While they are the big wi nners, aircraft was contracted ou~ even we are the big loser~. though they are state-owned aircraft The private contractor!> ha"e sue-And finallj. the Air National cessfully defended the most ngorous Guard. The \ahfo rn1a Air National interpretation of an 01herw1se totally Guard (CANG) has 30 C-130s in a app,ropnate federal law which wing. All of these are capable of being precludes competn1on by current and reconfigured to fight forcst/bru~h former military equipment w11h pri· fires. vate enlerpnsc. The fact that most of However. only fi ve conve rsion kits the contractors ny ex-military aircraft CXISl JO California. Why'> Beca use lhe purchased at -below cost doesn't seem private contractors block the avail- to phase them. ability of more conversion kits, thu~ Thc taw worh something like th rs. blocking the funher use of the C-130s. A fire breaks out 1n Ventura. A In addition, the pri vate conttactors onvate contractor is sent. Another have backed a 12-hour approval process with three approval stages. thus cffcctivcl-y blockmg -the avail- ability of su~craft for all buf the most dire extremes. , The way I first learned of the C-130s' availability was through a cons1ituen1 call. He asked me to get his Boy Scout troop a-ride to Hawa11 for a weekend. Aficr f stopped sputteri ng, he indicated that 1t had been "done for years." Well, my questions stopped the trips to Hawaii wwith theBoy Scouts, but whether these aircraft have been put 10 better use 1s not clear. What better training for combat suppon ope.rations could there be 1han fl ying close air-support missions for ground forces tryu~g to save the lives and .propeny of the people of California. None! And, 1f1t'i.good for the Air Guard. how about · A",.my Guard helicopters? Couldn't they be equipped to do wa ter drops'> Of course. And if the Army Guard helicopters could, how about I.he regular Army and Marine aircraft? ·'°Vv'ell... comes 1he srandard response. "that's very expensive." That particular response angers me most. If they're too expensive to use, ~en they're darn sure loo expensive not to use. With this approach. we could have a better-trained force and more protection at nearly the same price. Lives and propeny would be saved. As a former active military offi cer myself, my feelings were best summed up by what a young Cah- fom1a Guardsman said to me. "I Joined to help. Wh y can't I help?" -Why ca n't he indeed? Please write your congressman and ask the same quesuon. The tack now being taken -in huge two-paie advenisem'cnts by.Mr. Lear's organization -has to do with the process by which judges are selected 1n the Reagan adminis- tration. People for the American Way (the organ of Mr. Lear and . his brothcrs-in-fnght) is so mixeo up on the whole matter of judicial selection that Jts message is a hodgepodge of contradictions. The boldest headline in the ad reads. "Imagine 1f the Far Right had veto power over our Judges. They do.'' Question: Who 1s designated by the Consttrption to nominate federal judges'! Answer: The president. With the advice and consent of the Senate. Question: What docs it take to qualify as Far Right? . Answer: To share the views of Ronald Reagan. Question: Who shares the views of Ronald Reagan? Answer: A majonty of the Amen. can people. · Question: Does that make the maJOnty of the Amcncan people members of the Far Right~ Answer: .Res 1psa loquttur (Lattn for "the thing speaks for i1sctr'). The Amencan Way defines as good patnotic Amencans those who agree with the decisions of the Supreme Court on any issue relating to civil rights. the separation of church and state. abonion. and one-man one- vote The comm11tce's statement reads, "Our founding fa thers sought in the language of Thomas Jefferson to 'bind men with chains oflaw' and set up checks and balances mtended to promote the powers and perogat1ves Larry Stlrliag 11 an AH~mblymaa of the legislative, executive, and for Saa Diego's 77tb Dl11trlct. Judicial branches of government." IRS wants to pore through bank records to find cheats That happens to be the view 1dent1fied w11h American con- servatives. read 1he Far Right. The noti on that Thomas Jefferson would have pt{mitted the Supreme Court to wake up one day and protiouncc unconst1tut1onal a display of the Ten Commandments on school property, uneonstitutional the authority of states 10 regulate abortion, and un· const1tut1onal electoral districts de· fined by other cnteria than popu- I \\. \~lll NC1TON -'lo law-abid- ing ta,.pa)cr like'> a tax cheat But 'hould the Internal Revenue Service or the Justice Dcpanment be allowed to snoop through C\oel") American's bank records in search of ch1sclcro; or white-collar criminals'! Th1\ Big Brother approach is c-<act· ly what the IR'5. the Justice Depart- ment and the FBI arr proposing fhey want accc'i\ to rernrds kepi hr, the so- calll'd ·.,upcrv1sory agencies • -the Federal Rc~rvc System. Office of the ( omptroller of the Currency. t-edcral Depo~lt lnsuranc;e Corp. and Federal Home l oan Bank Board These agcnc 1cr, obtain md1v1dua1.,· bank record\ ai. a rouline pan of 1he1r m1'is1on 10 protect the cu!l tomcr\ of financial 1nst1tut1ons Our reporte~ tcwart Hams and Donald CroldberK ha"e learned de- ta1\} of thrw proposed tumover'i of contidcnll31 informa1ion to the Ju~­ t1ce Department and the revenue~. One plan wa<; l3id out in an 1n1tmal ~tratt'i)' document OK'd la,1 )'CM by IRS CommHmonC'r Roscoe Egge r Jt The purpo'OC of the propo\al to fct<J the IRS data colic" ted b) other a&enc1e~ 1~ "to obtain tu information of a ~1g.n1fican1 nature that " d1 • rnvertd by other f('der-.il agencies dur1n• the course of lh<.'1r rc11pcc11vc inveM1aa1ions.'' at·cordina to the document Th1\ ~ounds laudable enough at fif'\I aJance. But ii ~a pen~ to run head-On into the o h Amend· mrnt which proh1 ii\ ··fi~h1na ex· pedll1oni." b}' governmrnt aaenc1es. and requn-c\ that lhe fed\ have "probable cau\('" IC> btltcvt' thltr'l cnme has been comm1t1~ bt-fm they n,i n act 3 warrant to \tare h .a Cllllt'n 1 horn(' o r rumm &e lhrough h1'i P:lJX"I'\ llndC'r th(' IR\ plan, "!:\\ 1nfor· mat1on of 11 '>1gn1ficant nalllte 1hot 1~ • JACK AIDEISOI and JOSEPH SPE AR d1stovercd dunng invesliJalions or examinations by other federal or- ganitat1on~ could be furnished to the (Internal Revenue) Service.'' ' An IRS spokesman said the tax- collecting agency has already ap- proached several of the supervisory agencies, but that no agreement has yet been reached. He insisted that the plan would merely $ivc IRS an "inde, .. of other agenc1ei.· act1v1 t1cs. not ··cane blanche" access to their filc<i. lfa targeted individual objected. a 'iubpoena would have to bt issued before IRS agent$ could prowl through the other agencies' record-.. hr u1d. Another document -an aaree- mcnt among the Jus1 icc Department. the r Bl and ~vend rcaulatory ~n­ c1c., -propo~11 amend1na the R,&ht to r 1nanc1al Pnva9 .\ct a 1978 faw rcquinng that individuals be notified whenever their financial records arc an en to any government a enc> flerc' what the 1nter-aacncy aaree· men\ tates· "ihe ilmcndment would permit the traMfcr of fin ancial informauon lawfully 1n the po '\Cn1on of one aove mment outhonty (,uch :" a ~upcrv1sory agency} to another aov· cmmenl authority ( uch as the Justice Dc-pertment) for a law cotorcement purpo..c w1th1n theJuri5d1ction of the rcce1V1ngau1hontt • -and here' the c:ruc1al ~icker -without nolTcc R> thC' ~u\lomrr " The ttonok' for the OT't>Po\81 1\ somewhal baffling. "When cus· lation. requires years of hard study tomt~ who are 'v1ct1m'i' or who arc and ignorance of the life. thought and otherwise uninvolved in the writings ofThomasJeffenon. suspected criminal conduct. receive But concretely, whal arc we talking notice under the (law) upon transfer about'> Whether Mr. Reapn and hu. of their financial records fo the agents arc up to unconst1tut1 onal or Justice Department, 11 caused un-~ntradit1onal mischief in asking necessary confusion and concern." about the views of prospective Footnote: Frighteningly enough, Judges? Such an observation might the proposed change m the law may havt bttn defensible before thr not even br necessary. One banking Supreme Court hccame the principal official told us that the pnvacy act 1s pohcy-maker. a runnina exegete of regularly circumvented. Regulatory con titutional meaninJ. a standing agencies tum over complete record'i constitutional conventton. Bµt given already, withholding only the names.. that the Supreme Coun has become a UNDER THE DOME: Sen. Jesse leg1sl11i11 ve tnbunal, t\&n ll •s precisely Helm~. R-N.C., and Rep. Joe Barton, an attempt to restore the balance of R-Texas, arc out to scuttle a 1972 tax power lhat the Reagan adm1nss- ruhng that lets women who have trat1on 1s engaged in -by looking for aoort1on'i claim a dependency ex-1udges who respect the con<1t1tut1 onal cmptiOQ for a fetus lhat hves even boundanes of power as !1pec1fied in a bnefly putc;1dc the womb. Internal cons11tut1on 1hnt assians 10 lcg1s- Rcvcnue Service Com nuss1oner _ la1urcs, not 10 the Supreme Court, thr Roscoe Eger Jr. has propo~d a respons1b1hty to le&islate. change that would require such The apocalyptic mes ic of Nor· women to prove that an attempt was man Lear clo~~ with the sen1ence, made to save the.hfe of the fetus. "The fate of our 1hird branch of Helms and Barton want to go furt her, aovcmmcnt is .l'langina 1n tht bttl· thouah. and outlaw 1he depcndenr ance.'' Here he i absolutely ~t. exemption for anyone who ha an He m1&ht have acme funher end said. abott1on . "The fate of const1nuional aovem· \ONSUMER R PORT: A pns.-mcnt IS hanging in the balance." oner in the federal corrttt1ono.J fa. ~-cause eitherConarc$Sand the smes cility at Grady. Ark .. has wntten to a" aoina 10 reaipturc the ria!\t to complain that prisoners \li1th vc-govern. or el~ the Supreme Coun nereal d1'C'ases are allowtd to handle will continue to act as the surrogale veaetablc aro-Nn On the pnson's for America's COn'\C1enet. 16,0QO.acrt farm. which are <1h1ppcd ' to Arkansas ~hools and ho pitals People for Jhe All\Cncan way a~ T~e Grady pe~ poke\man stud he hc~t ofTura1na the c;enate to back such th1M\ the 'ompla1nin1 inmate may 1u<hc1al reforms as Mr. Rcapn en· have been out in thr §Un 100 Iona. "I v1\1on,. by ~ndina men of 1ntqruy can u1rnrc the people of Arkansa and and Kholar'\h1p lo the court who the rcnoftbe nation that no pri~>ncr 1htn~ tbemsclv K:rv "' of 1M w1th any form of vcnerc.il d1 kasc C onwnulllln rather tban 1mpro"1 comes DCM any of the crops we hip on J OUI "hr 'I.Id J•d A.•d~f'IOO Hd Jo «1111 ~·r WIJll1m n,,. il(ly II • 1ylHll~•lftl ltUJ'Gdlattd rtJ/IUIJAlslL r11l_ti _ - l · v· r His notion -a family rega _ttain the ocean ALMON LOCUIEY Stan Miller of Seal Beach 1s a yacht designer, yacht racer ~nd yacht bro- ker. He both makes his living and takes his enjoyment from the Sport of yacht racmg m which he is a competent skipper. F.or all of that, Miller believes that yachting should be a family affair - not just a sport of the wealthy. He has been involved in yachting for 30 years. · Milldts current undertaking 1s what he chooses to caJI the Family Sailing Regatta, scheduled Aug. 11 in conjunction with the Long Beach Sea Festival. '· '\ \ • . El ENTERTAINMENT 1124 8U81NE88 85. . - Boa tin onunti LONG BEACH -More than 100 brand names arc represented amona the boats on display at the Amencan Boatin& Jubilee '85, an in-the-water show at Sborehne V1llaic Manna now in progress through Sunday At least 100 boats, both power and sail are '\t the docks while add1tJonal boats are t>cing are on exh1b1ted at the adJ_accnt marina park. Equipment dcaJers and manne service firms fill booth displays in the shore area. Southern Cahfom1a.dcal- ers ate offering special clearance prices for this midsummer sale. according to Bob Swan, show chair- man for the sponsonng-lSouthem California Marine Association. Special features at this Jubilee include: Free introductory sailina I '°ns tiy l etnified 1nstructon Demonstration rides on some ~t models. Dnlwina for a one-Wttk trip to Tah1t1 for two -entry coupon free wiJh each paJdldm1 1-0n • Free nde on the hordine ViUase j Carousel with each paid admission. Shoreline Village Marina 1s located on the Lona Beach watetfront at tile :1 1nters«>t1on of Shoreline Drive and ·s Pine A venue across Shoreline Onve • from the Long Beach Convention Center The show 1s open from noon to 8 p.m on weekda)'sand from IOa.m. to 8 p.m . on Saturdays and Sundays. Adm1ss1on 1s $4 for adults, $2 for children 6-12 with children under 6 ; free • .................................................................... i.-• Distress signals . must be replaced Boat owners are reminded that ·di&trcss signals obtained in 1981 , or earlier, have expired and must ~ replaced before lcav.ing one's point of departure. The federal law, requinng all boats 16 feet long or over using coastal waters to carry approved signals. also use" to extend signalling ume. · Donate the expired flares to the U S Coast Guard Auxiliary or Unit- ed <\1a1ec; Pnwer Ciouadrons for train- ing purposes Ignite expired flares on land in a~ authonzed and approved area. .. The regatta will provide an op- portunity for everyday sailors of boats under 30 feet in length to engage '1n racing," said Miller. Ted Turner and Dennis Conner need not apply. .. An event ofth1s type 1s something new in yachting," says Miller, 59, about the regatta which will begin at I p.m. Auj. 11 in Long Beach. "It's the ideal opportunity for the regular boat owner. who may be a little in- ....,. _____ -Tnandates that these signals must be Contact local pohcc or fire officials for their advice . No nos for' dispos1 ng of flares: . timjdated by owners of large yachts. to try his hand at racing. . replaced 42 months after date of manufacture. Boat owners are urged to inspect the expiration dates on all hand-held narcs, smoke signals or launched signals. Acceptable methods of disposal. including those manufactured 1n 198 L or earlier include: R~tain the expired flares for "first Don't Jettison the signals over- .board. Don't activate marine flares in·• nonemergency s1tuat1on in rqulated areas. Don't dispose of llve flares in the household trash. Don't launch meteor signals in i areas of hJgh fi,_dangcr .• ''Esscnually, the common sailor can race in our event. Yacht club affiliation is not required. There will be easy starts and easy rules," ex.plained Miller .. Each family team must consist of one man and one woman-married or single. No entry fee 1s required and pnzes hke vacations a nd cash wi ll be awarded to the winning crews. · Winners take all In top photo, Mike Pinckney (center) won the Al~rt Solland Pe~tual, beln& prea- 50th Fl~ht of the Luera. Bottom left: Coast Guard class offered "We·re expecting a himout of about 100 entnes this year and we expect to expand in ensuing years.'' PAPARAZZI ,ented by ttlll Ficker ( ht) and the Tom Webster Memorial Trop y, held by Peter Barrett (left) u overall winner of the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce'• Allyaon.liunn (left) receives trophy for flnt girl to flnl•h Laser rtcefl'Olll Marcia Bent.a. Bottom right: Don and Chrla Quinn show off thell· .trophy for youngest boy• to flnlah Sunday'• race. Tllc U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary •s offerin~ a saihng and nav1ption class in the hbrary of Valley High School. 180 I S. Greenville, Santa Ana, bcgln- ning Aug. 26. Classes w•U be held .from 7 to I 0 p. m and will be conducted by Aotilla 15-1 The class will last 12 weeks.. 1 lnqumes can be inade by calhng 962-07::!0 or 554-1559 Newport Museum supporters descf-ibe 'Ex-Site-meJJ.t' By BETTY PORTER Oally !'ht C«reepa....,t "Excitement 1s when I got on a motorcycle and j umped over 35 cars in Las Vegas and lived to tell 11." said actor and producer(and former child evangelist) Marjoe Gortner. . For sculptor (and first Smithsonian artist-in- res1dence) Fred E versley, .. Excitement was my first one-man show at the Whitney Museurn in New York.'' "Publishing 'A Girl Like Me' was excitement," said author, movie wnter and productr Sandra Harmon. Among her fi lm productions is "Promises to Keep" (starring Robert Mitchum) and her book "Elvis and Mc" -with Prtacllla Presley-will be released in September. Celebrities Gortner, Eversley and Harmon were guests at "Ex.-Site-ment.," The Newport Harbor Museum of Art's second Summer Celebration held Saturday on Pacific Mutual grounds and attended by 1,000. It was an citc1ung evening with exciting people. international food, entertainment, Horace Heldt Jr.'1 The Musical Knights Band (with singer Jody Ooovan), dancing under the stars. hve and silent auctions (with the persuasive stacatto spiel of au..ctioneer Gortner). and N HAM exhibits entitled ··Amencan Architecture" and "Future Furniture." (Net proceeds were $75,000).' In keeping with the "Ex-S1te-ment" them.e. ~uests were asked, "What was the most ex.cati ng event an your hfe?" Here are selected answers: "I can't decide -either 11 was meeting my husband years ago or meeting Tom Selleck in Hawa11 last week" -Belllnda Barnett (honorary commit· tee). ··excitement 1s 'Ellesse' ·• -Ba rney Barne tt· (honorary committee) (Ellessc is the boutique he is to open at Fashion lslctnd). "Ex.citing was mectmg Prince Philip and his remembenngme when we met again" -Pat Nelaser "I remember 1t well; it was my marriage to 'what'i -er-namer -er Pat -Carl Neluer . " exc1Ung? -the birth of my first son. Benjamln -lrvmc Mayor C. Donald Ba ker. "The arriagc of my daughter (last week)"-:_ Marllyu lelaeo. " .. Being sworn an as Assistant Secretary of the Air Force ( 1968)" -Tom Nlelae~. Jhe lrvrne Co -,_ ----~ .. fhc.-<hy I lttnded at LAX (I% I) becau!IC I was- staning a ne-w hfc 1n California" -Michael Na1Uer, ( orona del Mar "The day I landed my husband. after a s1x-)ear courtship .. -fashion designer Lou Nadler. "A night 1n Bangkok" -a ··fnend" of Kristina Gustafson. Balboa Bay ( lub. "When I was six. }Cars old. I near~) drowned at lrvmc Park and that was excitement'" -Keitb Lumpkin. Balhoa Island. "Becoming a grandmother" -Lllllan Lumpkin "A 'Lloyd Masse) Day· set up as a surprise b} 44 fellow-contractors in Portland. Ore. was a real 'tear- jerker' " -Lloyd Massey (he remodeled former President Nixon's San Clemente Western White H ouse). - "A surprise first-cla'iS birthday dinner-dance my husband gave me" -Barbara Massey. "Having a son (Markus) after 12 years of desperately wanting a child" -Fellcla Mlndte. committee member (husband Bob was in Israel) ··Ex.c1temcn( 1s toaight's dessert (strawberry trifle)" -Mary Dell Luca s. · "Excitement as the $60,000 (or more) we hope to raise here tonight for N HA~;!:' -Gloria Gae Schick . party co-<:ha1rman (ccr<:hairman Judy Slutzky was 1n Greece). · The honoral) chairmen of the event were AnnMarle and Ronald Foell. In add111on to the Barnett's, honorary chairmen included Lucllle and Albert Adams, Berdie and Harry Bubb, Nora and Charles Heater , Sassy and Roger Luby, Joe and Robert McLain, Michael and Robert P erkln1, Floss Schumacher, Marlon and John Martin Sbea and Nancy Zlnain.eyer. Members of the working committee (m add1t1on to Mmdt) jncludcd: Alison Baker, Jackie Ballard, Meg Bauman, Sandra Belglt, Ann Bishop, Docile Bodavitz, Vick.le Bowlnkle, Heather Campbell, E.G. Cbamberlln, Linda Gllbow, Marilyn Hansen, P ete Johnson, Rena Koppelman, Kareo Kashner, Brtd1et Lehman, Chris Marshall, Sue McGowan, Nancy Meyer, Carol Pastore, Jane Pence, Dee. P erkins, Bobbi Porter, Susan Porter, Ardlate Rel1, Suzy Riley, Lynn Rogers, Sandy Ryan, J acque Scbmltt, Mary backleton, Peggy Spaulding, JackJt Teatmen, Phyllis Wallace, Or. J ay M. Young, Claire Zmak and Dee Heller. Pa¢iran1 ,~ t'C111t.'d O) Dail> Pilot t) le Editor Vida Denn. Marjoe Gortner kept 1,000 gueata bldd.ln&. Bill McNeUI and Marilyn WUu&m.. ' ~ Fred Evenley and Sandra Harmon. lDl!Oto at !!&bt), Whit Prance. \ . ' . I l ------..... ' 0rang9'Cout OAU.V PILQT/Thw.01y. Augu•• ,, 1985 elend:~r-af--tohaeeO throws up a s~Oke sci;een , DEAR ANN resta~rant w11\dows !.4Y1'li· ''WJ!"'''..C~ nt>ed~ • 1'!11 to do O\t'r mrkuchen ahd add u buck porch. No reply. W11h the grncc of God and the 'ICCurily ~opk's LA~DERS· 11 an convinced n lot of folks whouren t employed eould ltnd I urae al trudespcople to descend on <.'on~1cu1 We compas!i1on I wa-sghcn a·wam1na.and notarrc ted. l told Nonh<'1rohnaand l JOb 1rtheywantedthem Wenc~plcntyofworl.t·rsin ntl'<hou.Thcp11:k1n1Hrcc\cellent -30.YEAR myw1fc:1ll11bout1tandshc1 funou!l l wanttotellmy ~un: WI h you would a.... D nbury. tam ford. Bndacpon. New Ha ven Hanford RESft)LN l m1n1~ter but I nm tooashnmed. If my children and <iuit tryma to put the 11 Oreenw1~h. We)tport and do1ensot othcl'lbwni. 10 • . wrandchildren find out I will kill mytclf. "lobacco industry out • Connectu:ut. J>EAR. REA~ERSIN CONNECTICUT: Cao U1J1 be How Iona do the} keep tho$e film~'! Do they ever Po~t ofbustnt1). A lot of I .... DEIS w~ have a artal need fort'lectncal contractol'\and Crut . If 10-w~y . Couttllcul I• one of cbe mo l-MHllfuJ ICtU'T ofshophfiers tn the stores'> Any chan~ of th ts lolb c.Jown here de· LAI ekctnc11rnr.. cab1nctma~e~. cupcntcr\, mnwn>. staltl lo Utt ut1lo11, ud ll ba• DO •tale lacomt tax. Aay rnc1dcnlgcltll~8'" the newspaper'! Pk1m· put my mind al pend on It fora plumbcrs, 1ur-cond&UOOIDIU:chnu:1nm.. rcfrigcrauon re· 1loswu1 ouc thtrf'? I am baffled. • . I _ ~OSING SLEEP AND KICKING MYSELJ h"ng. . pa1rpeople.sheetrockartddrywsllcontracton.andaho't • • • 1~5f>Hi~DELPlllA ~ Don'1)ouknow1obacco1sagififromGod?Hepve ofothcttradc JM.'Oplc. · OLAR ANN LANDER l d1datemblethinga LF u ff Ub u.,theplanttobeusedandenJOYed SolayolT,lnd y. You lfyouphonesomeoneaboutrcmodchngyouthomr ~:oupleolmonthugoandampa)'ingforitw1thagu11ty DEARKICKINGYOURSE : yougoco w • arc getting to be a real bore. -RALE IGH REAOt::K or bu1ld1ngan add1t1on. you wall be lucky 1fhc rctur "' )lllll ,on!.C1t'n~e. slreplcss nightsand the stan of an ulcer. warlllDl,)'Ou can~copworryloga~?0' belDgCabl~I~ DEAR RALEJGH: Your ar1umeol 11 ridiculous. God call. much less comes to look at theJOb. I wa' ma Ph1lndclph1u supermarket and took a can of 01Craclled. It won l happen. Also, ve neve~ ear 0 1 also gave u1 poison tvy Last night I spoke w1 th nciihbors who want to ha \-C uabmca t ( v:1lue under $6) off the she If and put 1 t in my score dt1playlog plccare1 of sbopllflera. · -• ~ • their 500-foot dnveway paved."So fatthey have bcl·n pocket I had the money to pay for it. I must have been l1111etu few 1e11loD1 wlCb a counselor or your DEA RANN LANDERS: We read an awful lot about unable to get anyone to bid on 1t. Last month t lcfl t:rar} Well. anyhow. they caught "'e 10 the act. A hidden minister. You l!,ffd to unload yo11r guilt and Jtl tbl1 unemployment, yet I haveSttn plenty of 1gns 1n messaRCS wnh an nnswerinRservicc for a house rcmodi:kr camera took a pu:ture of m~ and tam mortified. unfortunate incident behind you once'llnd for all. ANDERS-REOA.l'f Came L. Regan exchanged wed- ding vows with Mark T. Anders 1n SI. Bonaventure Church in Huntington Beach Jul)' l-3. The Rev. Michael Hams. pnnc1pal of Mater Dc1 High School officiated. The couple greeted their $.Uests at a n.:cepuon m the"Golden Sails Hotel m Long Beach after the ceremOll)'. Mike and Ann Regan of Hunt- ' n$ton Beach are. the parents ..of the bride. She wore a Mori Lee gown st} led wtth elbow length puffed sleeves tnmmed w11h apphque roses· and a square neckline bordered with sca llops. &ad work and clear sequins on rose apphques were strewn on the bochce and the lace tnmmed chapel length train .. A matching vei l and blusher veil were also studded with clear sequins. Mark Regan. the bride's brother. was rmg bearer . The bridegroom 1s tht' son of Richard and Ohv1a Anders of Rancho Cordova. His brother. David r Ahders. was best man. and ushers were Paul Anderl>. another brother. Brian and Rob Regan. brothers of the bride. and Tim Brooks. After· a six-week tnp around the continental U.S. and southeast Can- ada. the couple will make their home in Fresno. She is employed by Fresno and Oov1s Unified School D1stncts as a substitute teacher. and he is a scntor 1n Fresno State's physical therapy program. BRANS.. BOPPER Cindy Regan. sister of the bride. was maid of honor, and bridesmaids were Patty Regan. sister of the bride. Beth Anders, ·sister of the bride· groom. Yacki Bane and Susan Ebel. Mr. and Mn. Anden The bluffs overlooking Big Corona Beach in Corona del Mar was the setting for the June 23 wedding of Robin Toncttt' Hopper and Charles Norris Brans. A reception followed at Jasmine Creek, and was attended by 100 guests. Amy Regan. another sister of the bnde. was junior bridesmaid and The bride 1s lhe daulthtcr ofRoben All SEATS 82.00 AT: MEii (lllL~WllllR• (TIES I WEI) UDO (WEl)-U•VElllTt (WEI I Tllll)--fMT• VlllfY (WEI I Tlllll) llllllWIT• (TIES I Wll)JIEITl•ll (lllLY EIOEPT ... •TD ITIEIWllE) . .. llTillAL WIPlll~ EllOPUI YICITill WILL IE IT FILL PllCE • 11111 .. , ..,... ''UCI Tl TIE fUIW".,. 121M. wt. we, 1-. 1•11 '"' edwards LIDO 6 73-8350 lllEWPORT Bl.VO AT VIOO LIOO ... BHlll fmll" (I) "ST. 8.SI fW" Ill ... ,...,. .._n.t WO. 1111, 11121 laJt II.ti edwards TOWN CENTER 751 ·4184 BRISTOL & ANTON AC ROSS i ROMS COAST Pt A/A " .. , r f '"" 1 0 MOVIES UOlftM mwlllT ... WWII'. (PC-111 lbll, 1111, 1111. 11•. 1•11 ''l• ... .ar If CIAZY" IPCI 12tH , 21q , .... 1111, llH JI• I TIMI llllY lllal ''Tm RACI CAalMN • "UCI Tl TO TIE fUTWf" II ... I.......... tl:M, 1111, Ml, •11. llln lrM, ... (Pl) (PC) edwards SOUTH COAST PLAZA 546-2711 BR•S'O, & SulllFtOWlF-COS'Ar,JlSA , ·, ' ' • • ;;r ,. ..... "TIE MM WfT1I • IED S." '"' UT'\.~ "f..wl HCANI" 71 • ITllll , . ._,, (PC-11) 1• J1H , .... lsH, 11141 1111, , ...... ltto , ... Jtll, llJt Nl,ll:H .... lllll(Pl-11) .....,. ____ __......_ 12.tO n.. 3:00 ____ ...... _.,, • Tllll *" nan "E.T. T1tf IUO J;q , 1111 111 UTUTfllHTIW." IPCI 121JO J:tt. liJI. l:M. , .. II "IT. Ea...1 F•" flJ ll;tl, • "· tiJt .,) "Tllf -=-s" (I) :ti. I 0: I .. ,Alf llDfl" 1ii1, 1:11. lllJI (II ''MAI MO IEY• TllU•f.Ulllf" (N-11) lllQ, 2J II, 4: II, l 1JO, 1:41 ll;tl eawards CINEMA 546·3102 HARBOR BOULEVARD AT AOAt.AS COSTA MESA Olm Ol&ll S2.SO Tl l:OO . UTIOIUl LUIP•'I tia, ...... ''tUllPUI HCANI" f PC· 111 1111. ttJt. to:n edwards HARBOR TWIN 631-3501 HARBOR BOULEVARD AT Wll SON COS TA 1t1ES> • TUCI ltl.IY ITllll "COCO." fl'C-11) lief, l1H , IO:U u "11lVfUDG" IPC-11) l:M, ~II. l!I0, 1:41 ""PAU lttDH" 1111 Iii.JI. •JI. 112• "UMM"jl l . MI.., "Tllf •nan .... (PC-11) m '* "TME MM WfT Olf IED lllOf" 1 PC lite, 2:U, •M :0 tlAI tO:H 4 TIMI NllY ITlllH "f.T. TNE UTHTEllEITllAL" 1N U1JO, J:M, l :H. 1111. ltJH edwards MESA 646-5025 llEWPORTBOULE\IAROAT 1g•HST COS TA MESA 'Tilf COOMfl" All "A VIEW TO A llU" (PIJ HATS ...__ n._ u .oo -w.-11 ,, ........ '"" edwards~OUNTAINVALLEY 839·1500 BROOKHlJR\' A.' (»lllul" 10u111• ''"'ta, l I' .. .,._ ... , .. , 121• • ..,,, llJI "u.81ST-I" I Mei 11111 (I ) '2 IO edwards WESTBROOK 530-4401 .Vf ','111 1111~'(1'(&\Tr,J fll4("''"""'' ',&RO[jj (,AQ~( edwards UNIVERSITY 854-8811 :u1PuS OR WEST o~ '.:J, ,[R ACROSS FR0'-4 u<.1 "Tilf MAI WIT1I •IH ... "IPCI ''m llUWE•Y IJD' WU.l.a ILL IUn (PC-11)· 12141,2 .... wt 1111, Ii.II, tlllt HM 1111, Jtl'-till ltll , 1111. ""'. 11 .. I TUii Y Ill "Tllf IUCI CAul.JIM" 11111, 1111, "II, i 111 1111, I ... (Pl) "Pill ... " Ill 2111,IM, 11141 "uml11T-l" tMI. ....... (I ) "LREll RlJf JfAJI" "TIE -l''IPCI "flfTCI" (Pel "llLIEUDO" (PC-111 12:11, 1146. 1:20, 1:00, IO:JO "OPltllll" CPI) (ll&fl) Tm.WO UM a.PT llUfUI Ya&tnll UT'\. u.etl'I "f~ IACATIOll" "E.T." PC l21JI, ,,J, .:J. Ml,l 1H hll,JM,I .. 1111, lllJI (pt·IJ) "ST. BMl'I F•" Ill Jitl ..... 1 ... , .... "ntf •AVE• Y IJD" (N-11) 12iJI, l 1JI, WI, lite. I .... lltH UTIIUL UllPMl'I "fUIOPEM VACATIOI" 11H ,JM,I ... 11 II. tllJI (Pl· 11) edwards EL TORO 3:00 ..... llAI .,. TIMMEW" (PC-111 llllO, l:tt. •110. 1111, l 1JO 10:.. • "E.T. THE UTUTEUHTR.IAl" IPG I ll:ll , 2:•1. 1111, l:JI, 1:41 "Tllf MU WITH ONE RfD lltOf" !PC I, J. I, l, I: II .. (I IORORD AT IW1>;Pf AK'>~LA/A 581·959i0 El ORU "U11111n ._ t" l t • I TUii Ill.IT ITDIH ..... I .... .,.. <•l I "~''(N-11) "rM.f ..... Ill • 12:41, J: II, ltJI, t:OO, IOI.JI 21AI, 1;11, tlla s:uo Tll. l 00 llUYITllU "E•Ull fO(lfP" (II "THE ~fl" "Tllf ll.ACI 1111, , •••• 11111, •: ... l1U I CAUl.Dm" (NJ 1:00. ''"· lllH "flfTCff" IN I 12111, lrll, •111 \... , .......... l;Q l1M. l1JI, 11111 ~ edwards VIEJO TWIN 830-6990 SAN DIEGO >WY TO LA PAZ 6 CHRISAlllT, "4ISS10lll VIEJO "E.T. THf EITUTfMf.ITllAl" IPCI "Tllf MAI WITH OflE IED lllOf" I PC 1 ......... 11111 ''lll.VHAll'' 11:M.21H ,IJOI l1JO, 10stt IN-Ill "IACI TO FUTUlf" IPCJ 12:11, JIOl, l 1JO 1100, 101to "MAI MAI IH•fPC·lJJ TIUllf-·· 11141, 1111.•llO 111', l1JI, ..... edwards SOUT H COASTLAGUNA 497·1711 SOUTl•COAST HWY A! BROADWAY ,AC.uN• Bl&CH "TIRIUCI CAUlHll" (NJ 1• .... It.. ""· llM. INI IN-11 ------12,!0 Tll , oo-------' e<Jwards CINEMA WEST 891 ·3935 l S 'ltl NS'[ R & • •:.01 OE lllWlS T >'t[S T!lllNS T[R "IACITITW fUTUll(" ,,., IJ:U , J:t•. l :q , '411, lllJI llUt ITlllt -"TW IUCI CAUt.IMI" ., ............ ... llM, ... ,,.) ._ ______ .,. Tll. uo --------1'' ''MAI MAX .,. "TM llUUIU llO" TllUllDE-" 1'8-11J IN· 111 IJltl, 2111, '46. 1••1. NI 12111, 1111, till \.. 11.... IHI. IJJI, 1•11 Mr. and Mn. Brana and Janice Hopper of Corona del Mar. She wore an antebellum gown made oflayel'S oftloral lace tnmmed with sattn ribbon ending in a fuH tram. She wore a. matching wide bnmmed hat. Honor a_uendants were Elyse Thomas and John Brans. brother of the bndegroom. The bridegroom 1s the son of Joan Brans of Corona del Mar and Robert Brans o£8ermuda Dunes. The bridaJ couple are graduates pf Corona del Mar High School and he is a June graduate of Cal Pol y San Luis Obispo with• a B.S. degree in aero- nautical engincennll. .. After a weddtng cruise to Me xico. the couple are re~dents of Houston where he 1s a aeronautical engineer with 1.B.M. PESTOLESI-SEBASTIAN Thomas Pcstoles1. son of Dr. and Mrs. Robcn A. Pestolesi of Hunt· ington Beach, claimed Diane Sebas· tian as his bride ma July 13 cuemony an St. Mark's Church in Santa Barbara. A reception for 300 guests followed at UC Santa Barbara Fae· ulty Club. The bride 1s the daughter of Mr and Mrs. Thomas Sebast1an·ofSanta Barbara. Joni Sebastian,· Patty Charest. Marcie Wuns. Pauline Holl· inger and Carol Pestoles1 were her bndal attendants. The bridegroom was attended by Danny Moorhouse, Mr. and Mn. Peatole.I Mike (1u11e. M;ke D'Allessandro. Steve Sebastian and Irving Eastman. ·Aller a wedding trip to Maui. tht' couple are residents of Huntington Beach. She 1s with Hoag Memorial Hospital. Newpon Beach, and he 1'> employed by Estancia H1gh School. Society's ayer-organized Jn reading the paper rcrentl). I realized how organized we have become As m)' C}'e!i scoured the headlines. I sa\I< where the (DCi R) Depression Glas!. Roundtablc was meeting, the (PMS) Pre-Menstrual Syndrome Support Group wa~ havmg a do. the (REACH) Rcsp()nd Early and Control Hypertension was <otaging a program and a (STAND) Start Ta king a New Disc1phne meet- ing was open to tht' publtc. lfthert"'> a problem. thcre·s a group to solve 11 I ha"e the feeling 1f )Ou ha'e a hangnail. within hours you could put togethu a charter. slate of officet"s. nauonal aOihatton. an aux· 1har). a telethon. a SJ m1l11on b_udg~t and chapters in J7 states. Probably no one has become bcttcr organ1ied than the ranks of men and women who are 11) or out of mamage For some reason . 11's a cond111on that needs a lot of support to get through 11 Parents Without Partners ong· 1nally started as an organ11ation of widows and widowers. Now the mcmber.1h1p 1s diverse and incl udes divorced men and women and single parents hy choice What brought all this to mind was an mv11a11on m} husband and I rece1vt'd to become membeN of the Goose and Gander. a Society for the Preservation of First Wi ves and First. Husbands. (SPFWFH). Their motto 1s "fidelity and friv- olity forever," and their membership 1s up to 217 m 21 states. the District of Columbia and two foreign countries- Their creed is simple. They intend to remam loyal. committed spouses because thev believe that such com- mrttcd couples have more fun . live longer and are more producti ve. Thei r meetings are social events m which the sole purpose is to celebrate their good fonune in having chosen mates wisely. On a quest1onna1re. they asked 1f we would like to attend a "fall affair" 1n New York City I'm sure 11 doesn't mean what 11 sounds like. Right on the heels of that inv1tat1on came a letter from another group· Second Wives of Amenca Dcmanc1- mg Equality (SWADE). This group is less social and more concerned wi1h the lack of nghts for the se~ond "1fe. They want some lawi. changed or at least some of the inequ1t1ci. righted. The man's home is his castle-is a myth according to them . W1fey No. I can latch on to a second family's home. W1fcyNo. I can break a will. she can collect a disprop()r- tionate &hare of the divorced father's net income. As to children. the second wife has to dispense discipline 10 two doses: one normal for the children of their union and one kid-gloved for the stepchildren. (They are seriously thmking of a splinter group: Child· Abused Stepmothers.) The membership has grown at an astonishing raiC for SWADE. PoSS· 1bl> because there are 1.300 remar· nages each day. Also the current divorce rate for fi rst marriages 1s nearly 50 percent and second families have a divorce rate of nearl~ 65 percent. I've always felt guilty for not joining fomethmg. Afier reading through all this. the onl) group I can relate to is thl' Dcprcs'>ion Glass Roundt.able. It would be nice to meet someone more depressed than I am. Avalon and Huntington ha,.bors receiving funds State fund~ to 1mpro-1•e facil1t1cs for boaters ha"c bet'n awarded to the c111es of Avalon on Catalina. and Huntington Beach by the Californ ia Boating and Waterways Commission- at Its July 19 met'ting in Oceanside. The comm1ss1on approved a $500.000 loan to Avalon to make 1mpi'Ovcmen1s at Avalon Harbor and a $370.000 grant to Huntingt~n ------ • Meat dept . to accommodate boat orders • Fresh produce • Fresh fleh & ealade • Barbequed m eat cooked to order • large selection o f Imported beers & wine• • Open 8 :00 AM to 9 :00 PM dally 500 South Bayfront • 673-8580 Beach tor ne" construction at 11<. e>.1s11ng boat launching fac1lit) 1n Huntington Harbour. The Avalon project will mcludl." renovating the Avalon P.1er. replacing the boat hoist on C'abnllo Mole. and adding dinghy dock-s to relieve crowded cond1t1ons. Renovation of the pier and other improvements are expected to be completed m 1986. Due to the high number of boaters using the liuntington Beach boat launchmg facility. th e city plans to use its state grant to prov1tle ad· d1t1onal parking New boarding Ooats. hghting. and landscaping will also be provided at the new parking lot site Construction 1s expected to be completed m 1986. State funds for the Avalon and Huntington Beach projects and other state-funded boattng facility project~ arc den"cd from the gasohnc tues paid by Caltforn1a boaters. RUFFELL'S · UPHOLSTERY ,., T1tt ...... , .. Uh 1122 waot ttn., cesu·•u -541.usa /'August Super Saver Sale 2 for 1- .. Shop Early for best election! Something Special feminine fas hions ·wr Sf'{'c~lllt' 1n f,oh1om for the Mloy Figure Ill' 4· 13 250 E. 17th Cost~ Mesa Hllgren Square 645-5711 ~-- J)-~------.&-~--------~--~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~.._~~~~ ~~ ---~~-.. ,,, .... • I - • Del>bie Allen spl~ndid -in LA· 'Char~ty_' revival By Cl:IRISCRAWFORD Delfr,._.C.,,.111111~ " wcet Chanty," current!~ 1n re- vival for the Los Angeles C1v1c l.i~I Opera, is gaming renewed fame w11h the preSence of Broadway and 1cle· visio n star Debbie Allen. In 1966, director-choreographer Bob Fosse (''Cabaret," "Danc1n'" and others) sta1ed "Chanty" for wife Gwen Verdon with assistance from an all-star team that included Neil Srtnon (book), Cy Coleman (music) and Dorothy Fields (lyrics). After 20 years and two more notable leading ladies in the mean- time (Shirley Maclaine in the movie, Juliet Prowse onstage), the popular musical is back at the Los Angeles ·Music Center with Allen in the htle role. • Allen probably is best known as dance teacher Lydia Gran1 on the TV =show "Fame," where she also has :served as choreographer-director and, as of last season, c<>-producer. -Yet she is equally at home on Broaday -here she starred in "Raisin," "Ain't Misbehavin'" and the 1979 vcrsJOn of"Wcst Side S1ory" as Anita. -Now Allen has brought all of that · talent and.experience to her current role of Chanty Hope Valentine. offenng a dynamite performance as :the dance hall hostess with a heart of -gold. mu~1cal comedy. Tht role of Charity 1 Jemand1ni. with the lead actre s onstase most of the show, performing in si" big production numbers. YC'fAllcn ap. pears to have limit! s eneray and cntnus1asm to mutch. C<>-stynng as her boyfrie~ds nre Mark Rupert, who plays nace but neurotic Oscar, and Mark Jacoby as the suave Italian movie star V1ttono V\dal. Jacoby's role 1s the smaller of the two, but he makes the most of tt, displaying excellen1 comic timin11.- 0f the dance hall hostcssc (all outrageously funny 1n their comic toOghness). Babe Neuwirth and Al- lison Wilhams shine as they team up for "Hey. Big Spender" and "Baby, Dream Your Dream." Another sta"dout 1n the supporting cast 1s Irvine Allen Lee. who plays the sly preacher Daddy Johann SebaSllan Brubeck, leader of a cult that nw.cs 1azz and religion. An exceptionally stnking set. bnght colors framed by polygon archways, 1s provided by Robert Randolph, who created the same visual design for the original pro- duct1'0n. The onl y problem here is that tus twinkling sign board only partially lights up. leaving U\e ·au- dience to guess wha1 1he changmg- words are. .. .. . Orange Cout OAILY PILOT/Thuraday, AUgUl1 i , 1118 11 TV Lis TING S _ John Ratzeol>er1er (left) and Georce4Vendt break into a clance while deecrlbln.C 8&.m'• M>ftball aame acalnet a iroup of Playmate. on .. Cheers" tonlCht at 9 on l'fBC. Channel'· • WllD WOALO Of FNJGAL OOUMIET DEOO AT LAAOE -~~ ** "The Hot Une" (1989) Robert r~· • * "Cheec:ll And Chona'• The Cor-lican Brothn" ( 1984) Cheectl Mw • In, Tommy Chong. -1.tO-l L~ HEPIUAN NllJ TRACY lWUlHTZONE 1: •• * "Mort Amer'ICln Gtlllftl~' (1t1, Acri Howwd. PaA IAMC. l=~LON) **.,. "Slr9ltl Of Br-" (19M) ~ Chell Pn DilM Lsll "tlDUOVIE H i. "Red Olwn" (1te4) Pltrlclt Sweyze. c Thonw Howtl. MOVIE * "Ctnnonbll IUI II" ( 1te4) 8wt Aeynolda, Dom Del.ulle. -a:ao- • .=, And for her Los Angeles staJe =debut, the actress has 1wo d1s- =tingu1shed mentors from the ori$inal =show. Fosse and Verdon, supervising · ' the production and choreography, -respectively, have teamed with direc- tor John Bo~ to recreate the "Sweet Chanty" continues at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion. 135 N. Grand Ave .. through Aug. 31 at 8 p.m. Tuesday through Sattl rday. 7 p.m. Sunday and matinees Wednes- day and Saturday at 2 p.m. Call (213) 216-6666 for ticket information. H t,\ URlde The High Countty'' ( 1882} Rlf1dolph Scott. loll McCra 8 tll MOYE ~ = Y TB • P.M. w.GAZIE • Q • ' Debbie Allen .. "Summer Of lnnoctnce" (1978) Jan-Michael Vlnotnt. Wlllllrn Katt . Old-'Vice' boostsNBCtoanotherwin -t.00-1 =:SIMON Ne#8 . MERV~ TBl<O By FRE D ROTHENBE RG U T ............. WrtMf I01h consecut1ve pnme-tame v1Nory and 13th an the last 14 weeks. of sets m use that are tuned,n dunng the time period.I Last week. "Dynas- ty" ranked 57 th ou1uf62 shows w11h a 7 I rating and a I :! 'hare MASrENllECE TlEATAE PRAISE TlE LON> IAAETT.A and 1l'le canceled "Double Trouble .. 1-------.....::::::~--=.__;_ ___ r.:=============. -both shows competing against ·· D) nast)" -were Nos. 5 and 7. re~pccu vely. C BS' ··1<a1c & Al he" was Sl>.lh and NBCs."Choers" wascaghth. NEW YORK -How hot is NBC's -.. Miami Vice?" So hot that the third broadcast of its two-hour openmg episode ranked No. 3 in the ratings last week and performed bet1er than when the show was first repealed last January. Figures released Tuesday by the A.C. Nielsen Co. showed "Miami Vice" only trailing repeats of NBC's "The Cosby Show" and "Family Tics" and leading the network to its Chevy's new 'Vacation' _ top grosser HOLLYWOOD (AP) -"Eur<>- pean Vacation." stamng Chevy Chase. debuted as the No. I movie at the box office over the weekend. grossing $12.3 million to edge Uni- versal's "Back to the Fu1ure'' out of the top spot. . "European Vacation," from Warn- er Bros., played on I. 546 screens for an a verage of$7,975 per screen. "Back to the Future" grossed $9.5 m1lhon, boosting its four week total to $66. 7 million. Falling one notch to third was the · rerelease of Steven Spielberg's 1982 hit. "E.T. -the Extra Terrestrial." The Universal release brought in $5 m1lhon over the weekend and raised its two-week total to S 19.2 million. Disney's "The Black 'c auldron'' debuted last week and the $4.2 million grossed over the weekend put it in founh place. "Mad Max Beyond Thunder- dome" was fiftb over the weekend with $3.6 million, fo llowed by Col- umbia's "S1lverado" and 20th Cen- tury Fox's "Cocoon," bo1h with S3.2 million.' Herc are the top seven fil ms at the box office over the weekend. with distributor, weekend gross. number of screens.. total gross and number of weeks in release. I. "European Vacation," Warner Bros .• SJ 2.3 milhon, 1,546 screens. $12.3 million, first week. 2. "Back 10 the Future," Universal, $9.5 million, 1,508 screens. $66. 7 million. four weeks. 3. "E.T. -the Extra Terrcstnal," Universal, $5 million. I, 701 screens. S 19 2 million, second week in re- reldsc. 4 "The Black Cauldron," Disney. S4.2 milhon. t ,276 screens. $5.4 million, one week. 5 "Mad Max Beyond Thunder- domc," Warner Bros., $3.6 m11l1on. 1,412 screens, $25.8 m1lhon, 1hree weeks. 6. "Silverado." Columbia. SJ 2 m1lhon, 1.179 screens, $3.2 m1lhon. S 15 I mil hon, three weeks. 7. "Cocoon." 20th Century Fox. S3: 2 mi!liO(!_. 980 screens. $52 m1lhon. six weeks. · Its ell In the name of science. 00--1· ....... ,.,.., ... , IPG-13)-. A lHvmAl flCMIE ..... ~e ··•~• NBC researchers say 'lince Nielsen has been measunng national ra11ngs an 1he last 25 years. the network has never won 10 weeks 10 a row. Since the end of the traditional pnmc-t1me season April 21. NBC has won every week e:\tepl for C BS. victory in May when "Dallas" ended its season with the death of Bobby Ewing. For the week of July ::?2-28. NBC had a 12.6 rating 10 CBS' 12.3 and ABC's 10.2. After 44 weeks, CBS leads with an average rating of 15.6 to NBCs 15.4 and A BC's 14.0. (A rating measures the av;ra~e percentage of the nation's 84.~ilhon TV homes tuned to a network during a given minute of pnme time.) Gerald Jaffe. NBCs vice pres1deo1 for research proJects. said NBCs summer surge was ant1cipa1ed be- cause the network had)USI completed us best regular season in 15 yt"ars and has an abundance of the type of programs -s1tuauon comedies and action-adventure shows -that per- form well in repeats Shows that annuall) suffer the worst case of summertime blues are ··we don't ~et the benefit ot these high-rated serials 1n the wanter, but don't suffer the penal!) in the sum- mer." said Jaffe The 1nab1li1y of pnmc-t1me ~rials to do well in repeats ha'I affected their synd1ca11on performance. "Dallas." for example. 1s a raungs busl in s' nd1ca11on in man\ markets · Mcanw,hlle. BruadLast1ng maga- 1.1nc reportcll 1h1s week that media mogul Rupert Murdoch·s deal to purchase 'e' eral Me1romed1a TV sta11om included an option allowing him to drop "Dynasty" repeats. T he escape clause was inserted because of Murdoch'<, .. concern o'er per- formance ol pnmc-t1me soap-. an c;ynd1ca11on ." Broadcas11n$ quoted a Me1romed1a 01Tac1al as 'la) 1ng. 4 s1 week·s Top Tl!.n 1llu'>tra1ed '1cwers· summer prett-renLe for corn- ed) and acuon reruns. Se'en of lhe favored shows were comedies. "Cosb) ·• ranked firsl "'llh a ~0.1 rating. "Fa mil) Ties .. had an 18. I and cos· .. Newhan" tied .. M1am1 Vice .. with a 17. 7. NBC's "Facts of l 1fe" Rounding out the Top Ten were (BS' "Cagne} & Lacey," in ninth. and CBS' "Murder. he Wro1e," tn 10th. "M1am1 Vice.~' which ranked 46th tor the regular season but was building strongly, has been in the Top ft.>n all summer. One industry baromet~ of populanty is the cover ofTV Guide and this week 11 featured Don Johnson and Philip Michael Thomas. the stars of the styhsh, music-filled cop show. The bottom five shows were ABCs thea1ncal movie .. The Main E' ent," in 58th. followed by C BS' "'A1rwolf," ABC's mov,.ie "The White Lions," NBC"s "Punk) Brewster'' and NBCs documentaf) on pension fund~ In 1he evening news compet111on. the ··c AS Evening News•· won again \\llh a 10.7 rating. ABC's "World ews Tonighl'' took second for the fourth consecutive week with a 9.4 rating. The "NBC Nightly News .. had a 9.2. · the serials. CBS isn't even rerunning 1-:::;iiiilliiiiiiiiiliiliiliil~~TI~~C:!~~~=~·······-~ "Dallas" or "Falcon Crest," which is I LUX RY rHfATIHS the regular compe1111on for "M1am1 F1n1 r-Matin" Show1n11 * Vice," while ABC 1s taking a beating ONL v S2.75 Unltis No11tf with 11s "Dynasty" reruns. · . DRIVE -INS :1:~~c; With its original episodes. "Dynas- ty" was the No. I ranked series with a 15.0 raung and a 37 share (per<:entage NOWPL.AYING •MU M11Y •""""• ~19\tlt MMrAM ,. ~ ....... , ... 0i ..... .,, .c)70 MllArAllll UA "' ~~ ....., •c.tA•SA 1 .......... "" !lo!() 1444 (l TOllCI fo•.ero,_~~ ~· '181111 •f-1AlllHUO ,.....,,,,, 'l6J l)(ll ~flt 10-.. .,..,. ... ~..iir r ....... \\!~ • •1.AllMM o\Mtf--· .. , 06J:I lllUIOll VIUO !lhflrdsV•l..., IJOellO •OMl!Gl ,c- U•1m lllWlll l"ootlt•l)- lntln U.Qt WUT11111f1JI UA IW ll)(M6 PALi 91110«911 C•U 12 25 4 so .. t ·2l St. f:lmO'I l"rre (A ) 2 :40 .. 7 ·15 'LETCH (PQJ 1·10 s 15 .. 10·00 A Vtew T o A Kill (PG) 3:05 .. 7 :30 GOOfHU (NJ 12 405·401.10:30 f;11plorer1 (PG) 3:10 ... 00 cEnTURY crneoome Q 634 2553/Ch1pm1n & S.1111 Ana Fwy Wall Dl1n•1'"• a&..ACk CAULDltON (PG) t 2:00 I 55 3 :50 5:4 5 7:35 1:25 I 70MM lllADlllAX • ..,. ... 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' * COCOON ... 111 IT~"' MIUiCICMIMON.,. -*YU CIT WOU 1"" • • • • • ... t a • I IM Oronge Coast DAILY PILOTIThureday, August 1, 1985 J , FUNKY WJNDRBEAN • THE PAlllLY CIRCUS \\Billy's pushin' his ears together so he can't hear me." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson "" • ,.,, ••• , .. ·""'4-•'• 4 "Really! I think buying this little car was a mistake!" DRABBLE D£o.r Ro.\ph , 10dG\"' l 'm \ti Encs\o.f\d . Ser{, 1'=1 this ple\CE -the ~l"tS~ GARFIELD J1 (AM CAT, MEAR ME. ROAR., .. l AM TOO e.u ro IGNORE ,. MOON MULLINS PROPPING 'T~f SOBJECT. .. 'fES, IF THE'Y't> HAD f:Lt;C TRIC 6'1.ANl<ETS WHeN 1 WAS YOUNG J1D NEV~R HAVE GoT MARRlfD . JUDGE PARKER CONSIOERINU l<>W MANY WOMEN CHILOel~H. rr WCAJLD ee Ol~ICULT 10 lltEMEMeER ONE IN PAATICULAA WOULDN'T IT? ' • by Tom. Batluk DOONESBURY 0 0 BIG GEORGE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP) SHOE ~e~~~amr£ OF WMITE·OUr 'fOU ~lED.~*fZ· ---i . .. by Garry Trudeau \..,l<b I • AL6llC1' SOffOS., • rM Ii/ • 18$HA. ' by Jeff MacNally 1 tl::~.rr -rn1~K ~e·u.. e.vaz Al'JVST Tl' '™E WoRP ~ · ,........_ ~ 'l --___,;~~~~~~ by Chartes M. Schulz All I H'AVE TO DO rs PUT MY MIND TO IT.. IF '(OU START PVTTIN6 YOUR MIND TO IT. WE'RE ALL IN TROUBLE ~ A 6000 MANAGER NEVER RESORTS ;(~j ~~ -~-~ _.J! .. \ ~ .. ,. ~-· -{{p "It'• ••nd aoup." BLOOM COUNTY by Berke Breathed I ' ff'j A BOX fJf CltX.IXRT!~ IN 1Ht ~ ~ ltfCMN1Uf . .RI( Mf/NU.., t.EN~ff 11J6effl6/f. DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham "t)o l NEED ™E SEAT B~L1~ l ecr MYAIR &.G : EIJ6Nm\f'O I~ a"t \€aS"t 1000 '"i£o.((> o\d • tln d 1hE.'i' '4£.VEr fEPort -t~ Prok.s~~I \Uflstlln& r~~lts by Kevin Fagan 1Jh£n l c;.f.i hofl\ e.' 'L'm 600f\o. \cJ?5 the GC()l)t'\d • '(our fr i Er\ d, t-lO-NElk 0 / by Jim Davis PERMAP~ I SHOOLV COH~IPER A CAF\f ER CHANG! B·I by Ferd & Tom Johnson HA! THAT'S TH' 0 BEST P,ART, UNCLt WIL(.l~Vt: IHAT IN r ROSE IS ROSE MWNTAINS EVEHTUAU.V DI~, JIM90 / BRIDGE Both vulnerable. North deal~. NORTH • Q98• .J 16 0 AK5• + K•2 WEST EAST +JI0732 +A S <;1 4 ~KQI0 3 O J32 0 1078 •AJ:>3 •Q I088 SOUTH + K 6 1;?AJ9852 0 Q98 • 97 r Tht• bidding: North Eut outh We1t by Harold Le Ooux ! ~ ~:: ~ ~ ~::: 4 c:· PaN PHI Pa11 LET ME OECK MV f:'lL.E. Qn.n1nu lead· Jack of +. MR ORIVER I llJI::-..--....... ,,. " ' Tht olher playera In tht game heaved a !1gh 6f relier whtn Tht Visitor cut Trump Coup Tommy F'lr~l. 1nc-f' The Vi!llor did not know ht>w bad a player Tommy was. the opponenla upect.ed lo tcore ha.ndaom1ly on lh• rubbtr. And t.h'y did not run th• risk of having Tht VI It.or double Tooimy on what 1eemed hke a bundle of trump tricks. A1 readers of thlt column < art aware. when faced with a bad · trump br ak Tommy became tran / MNSllflt.Y, .,,.Kl~.# / : by Pat Brady -------.-- TOO MAN'i' TRUMPS • formed into a demon o( the game and made the most miraculous plays. As 1t turned out. the locals were soon burned. The 'i1s1tor bid an ag· gresaive four hearts when he really 'ihould have paued. With Tomr~ . .r's knack for butch~ring partscorea OMAR ·SHARIFF that could have resulted In a couple or hundr d polnts tor the defenders. Fortunately for Tommy, trumps were 4·11 Tommy played low from the table to the firal trick, Ea t. ct\.lcked and the king won. A low apade to the ei&ht lost to E11f1 ace. Eaet. 1hJft.ed lo a club, Weat grabbed hu ac.. and returned the 1uit. to the table'• kins. The HVfln of trumps WH run and. when that hold, Tomm.Y boamed Eul wa1 mark d with the remain 1ng trumpa. Tommy ruffed a cJub, returned to the. board with thi kins of diamond• and ruffed a apt.de. lb erotatd to the ace of dlamondJ to ~uce the hand to this posit.ion: •Q ~6 0 $4 ·-• 107 • - ~-~•Cl !!_ 0 J 0 - CHARLES Go1£1 ·-0 AJt 0 Q-· - •Q Now Tommy led the queen of 1pa~1. and Eut •a• a dead duck. Diacardlng would 1impl7 postpoot malttrt, to Eut ruffed with the quHn. Tommy uaderrufied with the dinel Eaat ~dted with hle maater club, but T mrny alufled Ml que n or dlamon and rulfed In dumrny. When he l•d a diamond from th table. Eaat'a K·10 ol trumpa were trapped in froDL O( dtt'larer,.'1 AL Tba ~fenUra' econd ttump trick had 'vaniahtd ln to thin air. ,_ -----~. t noe Coat DAILY P1LOTIThurlday. AugUl1 1, 1085 '91 COMPL~E NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONI, • Ri;agan ~s tax reform be discussed today Venture grOup forms in county. . . PreMdcnt Ronald Reagan'~ tax reform plao will be the SUbJCCt or a free public scnunar today from S:30 p.m to 7 30 p.m. 1n the Hermosa Roo,,.,, Dou_blctrec Hotel 1n Orange. Co-\Ponsqred by Beam ud Auoclak1 an Orange and the .. Big Eight" accounting firm ofDeloJtte, H11kln1 ud Sells, the seminar 1i. called "In Seu cb of Tu Reform: Polltlc1 or Economies?" ~ Wllh a ~pccial emphasis on how tu reform may affect real cstaw, the seminar will include presentations by Oeloittc. Haskins. and Sells partner~ Gerald Lu&tky and Da.n Bolar. Lutzky 1s the accounting firm 's national industry director for real estate and Bolar 1s a ta>. panner in the Costa Mesa office. Lutzky said he will focus on ht!) belief that regardless of the outcome of Reagan's· proPosal. real estate will remain a "very favofllble and viable" investment opportunity Beam and {\<,i,ocmtes. co-host of the seminar, 1~ a reaJ estate and propen) management firm which manages l Portfolio of more than S50 m1lllon 1n Cahfom1a real estate. According to Jim Beam, chairman and CEO of Beam and Associates, the seminar 1s aimed at increasing people's awarenes~ ol how the president's tax plan mi2ht affect them. • • ••• The Oruge County Advertl1ln1 Federation holds ltS .. Bu} A Dnnk and Get To Know ... " today beginning 5;30 p.m. at Ravels ta Tbe Re1l11ry Hotel, 18800 MacAnhur Blvd., Irvine The Ad Club will honor ~atrlcll Mulcahy, president, Mulcahy & Associates Marketing. • • • • The Huntington Bcacb Straw Hat Restaurant will be celebr;iting • a grand reopening on Saturday, 1n which proceeds will be lumedover to the local Cystic Fibrosis Foandatloa. ''The Cystic. F1bros1s benefit IS Our way o( helping the many children and young adults affi1cted with CF in our community," said George Cruz, Straw Hai,owner. "This isa great idea forcoUectang the much-needed money. I couldn't 1mag1nc a better way to raise funds for the CF Foundation than by going directly to the public ... Cysttc F1bros1s 1s caused by a defccuve gene that 1s earned symptomless and undetectable. by approximately 10 m1lh on -one 1n 20 -Americans. Local residents are invited to take part in all of the fes11v111es. For more information. contact the local CF office at 520-96 71 or stop by the Huntington Beach Straw Hat at 18922 Beach Boulevard at Garfield . . . ' The Orange· County Chapter of Jnternallonal Auocialion for Financial PlanDlng Inc. meets Wednesday for a shirtsleeve sess1ona1 10 a.m. and luncheon at noon 1n the Newport Sheraton. Local bu sinessmen see area becoming a center for e n t re pren eurial activities The Orange ( ount} Venture Group hu been tormed recentl) to provide opportumt1es. among en trcprencurs. small bu!.in~S\Cll, ven- ture capitalists and service organ11n- tt0n~ It •~ planning to be affihated w11h 1hc national Assoc1at1on of Venture Capital Clubs. ti;tembers of the group will consist of local entrepreneurs, venture cap1- Lahsts and ·Jhe entrepreneunal in- frastructure. such as certified public .accountant' patent and ('orponue auomq~. hanker~. pn"ate trT\C\tor•., public rclj111111\ prok~'>•on31,. n>n· \Ultan1' ttnd managcm<nt l0Un- d1dale'> The Orange Counl\. Vt'nture (1roup l'i one ol a grow1n1 number ot '>uch group~ that ha't bttn ~pnnging up across the count') 1n the pJ~I decade to put together de.1h According 10 L.(. Hobb., of Hobb'> Development ;1(ssoc1ate~ one of the founding mem~rs of tht Orange 'Eggs-citing eggs-position• < ount> iroup .. Orange Count) ha'I the pote11t1al of bec<>nHn& a m•Jor entrcprenc:u11al and venture capital lenter. \\c have tnc cnt~prcncural taknt. u\ ..... c.-11 ,1'J the ca p11Jtl lll'IO ~'' KC'I thl\ tAlcnt 1hrwc) on. The purpo~ 1n forming thl\ JTOUp IS 10 hnna together 111 ;an informal at· musphcrc the human expertise ana proper re!>ourc~ 10 make 11 happen.·· fht Oranie Count) Venture Ciroup will meet once a month at a luncheot;i bc-g1nnini in ')cptt'mber. "1th !>pcc1al C'\.C'ning meetings or ..cm1nar~ i.chedulcd as appropnatc Founding membe~ of thC' Orange (. ount) Venture Grop include Jo~ph J Rtl\'i.O, pre-s1deot Bas\O &. .\s!>OC1atcs, John Blackbum. ln'"es1- Lunch 'ipeaker will be Barry H. Lawrence of Finley, Kumble, Wagner, Heine, Underberg,.Maoley & Casey, who will discuss "How to Evalaate a Real Estate investment -A Plea1are or a Nightmare." · Call 660-8686 for more information. The callfornia Egg Commluloo la touring California with a 20-foot egg carton to promote lta product with con•umera. On Wedne9Clay, the carton ••• at the Stater Br.othen Market ln Fountain Valley where John Pankratz of the commtuton prea- ented Gerry Su.laa of .Fov.ot&ln Valley with a freah eag. Egge are a $400 million a year industry ln C&llfomla, 11th on the list of agricultw:al production. Harbor park.work begins The MM uses a modular design to allow va nou!I aspects of· municipal resource management to be stored separately Ul the computer. or as pan of an integrated S)'Slem. The moduk'> a'"allable include .Budiet. Account'i Payable. Accouts Receivable. lnH~n­ tory. Equ1pi;ncnt Pa)roll. Pc:rm1tc; and several others. The amm1s Company of Ne" port Beach and Metropolitan Life In- surance Company have begun con- struction on the second phase of Harbor Corporate Park in Santa Ana. n1gh1. almost 50 percent lower 1han the usual "'eekday rate. • • • The 33-acre development site is at the corner of Harbor Boulevard and Sunflower A venue. and 1s a part of the South Coast Metro area. Phase JI will include five two-story bu1ld10gs totalling 153.000 square feet. • • • The NewPortcr Resort hotel in Newpon Beach is oITcnng a special summer wcckda} rate of S79 per The discount rate IS one orscveral special promotions the Newporter 1s offering to "reintroduce West Coast res1dents0 to the luxury hotel. which overlooks Upper Newpon Ba)'. ac- cording to a pres!> release. • • • McDonnell Douglas Computer ys tcms Company of Irvine has annotJ'nced the marketing· of a new ~un1c1pal Management S}stem (MMS) designed to be u<ied bS city governments ( oi,ta Mesa'i. M!)I Data <.. l1rpor- a11on has introduced two compull•r o;oftwarc products intended to alien~ user\ to cr-eatc their own. cw.tom . '>Otlwarc program!> MSI Scon:plan and MSI UB<\lil( are both des1gcnd for u~ with MSI'\ hand-held data collct11on terminal'> • • • NEW YO~K (A~ -The foll~wlng list Ii T!V'l91e>C l ~ l M Up f i ~ Buttes Gas 1hows Ille New ork St~k >CChanoe A CP ~ I~ Up f J11me1wav 1tock1 and warrants that ave oone up A(.coWrld s Up Anacomp the most an~ down the mosl fased on '! ~ M Corp 1h 2¥1 Up ~ SunshMn f:'W.' of c anoe reoardleu o volume I oldnNuo Yi' ft. + )" Up .6 Am SLFla °' edmtf~v. t ln~Harv S. 6of u" r I C11r1er Wall ~/~ur ':J trading below S2 are Incl-1 ~ hart~o 'h , ... Up .3 11 v1StoraoeTcn -~ . et a percentage chai:::.es are lhe ,,., '11 UP li 12 lnllRecl s d enc• .):,tween Ille Prev us clOslno IJ... UP 13 NwslSllW price and ednesdav•s 2 i:>.m price. FedNat MIO 1 Up 14 ~IPacCorP s GnMorr E s f'• UP .2 1i owle~fo UPS H Shear ..... Up .2 I Mark lrl Nam. last Chf. Pct ~annaC~ I Up SI 17 Hazellabs m amOlr I s "'' UP 11 Lenva11nd n Ind I Wa noco ~ .:i~~" i R:fAlr wl UP 1~.~ lg r~rlnd pf {" ~ Up I H-. Up a ta Gas ?l.io UP 9' ~Inter Jack ~ UP s. ~ laPwU 19 ?Oof J elter llld 1. '• UP ··~ 2 vanev Ind V Co 11 J. UP 1. DOWNS ~Rowan ''• Pei N~.{r, ~111 UP 6 Name LISI C1y i eankAmer f asln rl 14 ~ UP 2.~ I MliSouUt w'I -'I ~ I~ 4 4 Mclean wl 8 ~r~~ pfC 3(, p,. Up a wll of 11.1 -1/• ·~ S Clevpk 2 23Pf ~ ~levPk I U pf W'• -I/• ~j yo~nMIO wt 10 ecom8oal r ''• 'h ,,.. Up UP t 4 l•vepak 11 ~ -1'"' ,, u I Ind OTC UPS & DOWNS NEW YORK <AP) -The following 1151 11 1hows lhe Over -the -Counter 12 slock1 and warrants that have oone uP 3 lhe most and down tl'lt most based 011 4 oercenl of change for Wedneldar. 15 No securllle1 iradlno below S2 or 1000 16 sfiares are Included. 17 Net and percentage chenoes are me 'l dlfferenct t>elwHn the prevlo11• closlng l price and Wednes17p~ lasl or bid Prlc•. i wa'lt..'r7;~u un 11111-'16 Che_ UPPct~. S Adaclabs 21.i. ~ UP 4 j Tot'1Astl ~·. , UP ~ ~ ~RFY CP 1'> 1h UP A~!~:~t' et ~ 1 :~ ~g · Amcol gv 411• >.i. UP .4 . ! Cardin n un }''' ~ UP 4 i Ma1tor v ~ 1h Up 1 1 1 Tll wt 1,;. ,., UP 19'0 AlarnoSJtv 4l • l,. Up 11l·i 1 4 I eiecrafl CallbreCp I~ "-UP 5 Ve111ruLabs GNI Nuclr '• UP 14. 6 ComrceBCP pf LifeSclen '• Up 1-4 1 APPl<lDant ~~~~~J~ l 1 ,. 8g 1 1:· t ~r.~~Bo R~~~l::~n 1 111 1 ~ 8g 1•:6 J~ lJr3¥'~~rz s A1lttcphtlnl ~ ~ UP I 3 j2 Am onllr Tll Cc r ~ .... Up 1 :i 3 NY $Ill> s 0101onle1 ''l "-UP 1 . 14 ~omdlolCP Pr1rno1nc ~ -''• UP I . 'J ,,,_,tMem Alfacttl h 14~ I'., UP 11 1 omsle><kGrp ~laarSuro ' ' • ~ UP 11 • 1 NetwrkEI omedMed l• "-Up 11 I 1, Datum Inc 11nredlnc ,., '• UP ll 1 l Cplrcrall MlrulRecEq 21-, + 1 • UP 11 1 1 LandmkS.v DOWNS I Meoalech Name LT'' Ctto Pel 2 ~nlntSev Comerce~p 9 -4 §:! 17 ', 3 uckntll f>olvmer sh i'., -'., 6 24 lchemps ProtectLI s 1 ·•• -'ll• 13 I ~s WnHoldlno J,, -1•. ~ -,, ~ -21 .. ~14~ ~ d '• -\\ '" -'• '• -~ '" -\t !>\'I -1'. 6 -" .... , 2 , • ...... -1'• 2~? -'. 1 ... -1,. 12"e -'• 1 -1~ 23 • -2 " f H B n 57 ~ 1 ll 46 4S H 43 4 1 38 3 J H 36 12 8 12 I 11 7 111 II I Ii' J 1 8 l 1 6 94 g~ ; 1 1! .\ nc". uimpu!ersoltwan: l·ompan) ha'> been formed in Laguna H1lh under the name PROMOD lrfl PROMOD will marl..et it~ .. propnetaf) \Oft~arl· cngtnt>cnng en- vironment .. in the Orange-< ·oai,t area The firm is a JOtnl venture of thl' markt:ttng lirm ol Bndgc .\~SOt 1atc~ Inc. in Laguna H1lh and Lhc GEJ ( 1roup a ')'.,tl"ftl'> and ,on ware de- \ eloper 1n .\.1chcn German\ ••• lhc ~11\\1on \ •CJO land~aping nm1ract1nglompan) ofSouth ~horcs has a"'ardeJ m put'lhl relation!) cun iract 10 Kerr & .\\\oc1atc-s. a public rclatH>O'> jnd <1dH:rt1\1ng firm 1n I lunungton Beach. rnrnb Oranie Nassau. Inc.: T1moth)' P. Ha1dins.er. ~ West Vmtures~ L.C Hob~. generaJ partner Hobtb Dt'vt'lopment Auoc1atn: John . Mc.lntyrc "'cc president. Union 8.lnk Andre~ P. Pflu~. J>O°*r&; ( u Michael A. Reapn PAtt~. Delo1ttc. lfa~l1nsand Sells.:, RonaldJ. ~peyer Speyer Service~: muc:I 8 Swne attome)'. Lyon & Lyon; Philip Strau~ prC11dcnt.. Mul11plu Tctb· no log} Inc : and N 1ck Y occa. ll• tome} StradhnJ. Yocca. CarlM>n It. Rauth. To find out morr. 101emted pu- sons can wntt to: The Oranat County Venture Group. P.O Bo~ 72 2. NtwJ>?n Beach. C .A 92658. Japanese dominate Fortune 500list NEW YORK (AP) -Fonunc maga11ne on Wed"nesda) released its annual hst of the SOO largest 1ndus- toal corporations outside the United States Japanese companies took the _ largest share ever. with 150. Great Britain's 75 comperues tooli. a collec11ve second place in the 1151. which appears in the Aug. 19 1 sue appeanng on newsstands Aug. 5 Fonu~ satd in e prc-relea9t sbte-ment. _ German} was third. with 55. fol- lowed by Canada (35). France (3•), Sweden ( l8). Swmerland and Italy (I :2 each} and .\ustraha and South Korea ( I 0 each). · Bnush and Dutch-awned RoyaJ Dutch-Shell Group of CompanlCS. 'Bnush Petroleum PLC' and ENI of !tal}' retained their respective pos- 1t1ons of last year as the top three corporations But Toyota Motor lorp "as fourth up one posiuon and pushrng Italy's I RI into 5th. Japanese companies. with 14 n~· comers. accounted for 15 percent of lhe tntcmauonal 500'S total sales. wh1k O\erall business ··regained momentum" in l 9tw, wnh sale up 7 ~rcent and profit<. up 65 percent.. Fortune said \fter thfCC' consecutive )e3N of dt:cl1ne. 1983 had seen a 37 percent n<.t.' 1n profits Mone) losers dropped trom ~) m IQ83 to 6Cl tt ~ • , . • . 4 -1J - ~~=ooo---.....------·~----~._.. .... __________ .,... __________ ............................................................. ~ ... --11111111~~ Ohr ... W.a Utt 0.. t·~ ... Stock prices increase NlW YORK (AP) -~tod pnce<> rose 1n active trading Thursda} a'i tradcr'i an11c1pated the news ofth1s afternoon·, agrccm,·nt in ( ongress on a budget proposal. . • Brokers said investors wt·rc encouraged by signs that agreement wa> near on a plan 10 cut the federal budget deficit Nt:"'!i came late in the session that House and 'Senate conferees had settled their difference~. WHA T AMEX Orn WHAT NYSE DID NEW VORK (AP) AUG. I PrtY Ad~::r T~~ dl2t ~~ ,, ~::~wa· s AMEX LEADERS GoLD QuoTE S M ETALS QuoTES N!:W YORK (AP) Aug I PrtY Advanced Toda~ daln vecllned i~r 611 nch nged 414 otal~uu l , N•w~gM New ws NYSE LEADERS NEW VORK !AP) -Sales, 4 p.m; price and net change of the rlflttn most active New Vork Stock Exchange l uues. trading natlonattv-at more than 11 Harne YOIU~ i..ast Che. Pan Am 1.916.SOO 1v. + lolt MldSouUt • 1 I ~ -11. EHtnAlrL ,i4t !h* 11/• AhmanHF 1.703, t'h Vi UnEnRes I. • 2V. IBM I • I 'h 11-\ WnAlr Lin 11,7 ~ ~ Amer T& T I, ,2 2\'~ -'• BankA~er l. . ls:\4 -'I• T••l!S " "m· ~Ve J "'· AMR or I, •• l ~ Revntdln~' 1, , 9 '"' B~lng s • 49'h 1~ ITT Corp • 33Ve '• UAL Inc , 1 S7~ 2~ Dow JoNES AVERAGES NEW YORK (API -f-lnat Dow-Jones averages J~,,. l t~d, 1356]2 ,36'f 90 ~1«9 c:m .6H~W l'rn 696 1s 104 94 692. 1 .13+ H~s l Ull 1S7 1l 15' 14 lSS. .96-0 6 Stk SS8 21 S63.40 SS.. 67+ 3. lndu• 9,835, Tran 9,S471.~ Utll• 3 464 • .JW 6S Slit 2Z,M6,IOO NASDAQ SUMMARY NEW YORK (API -Most ectlve ovtr -the-counter stocks suP911ed by NASO. La~Of N•m. VOlul Aslred Ote. MCl 1,117, 'I:! Comoeq 1. , 11'·• nvHll 1. , 17'1' + '·• ~BHr ff if 411 ·16 UJ 32 -YI t51uonc 72 400 ~,..., + ~ tntel 709, I/~ + ~ tgph S 61, 'I') -11. J!'onvgt • ill·I ~ t ·~ ~etlMI 61 . I '• MBt S I '• famous lab<il~ ... ) .... •) I . -The Rem• elgn holdout veteran llnebeeker Mel oww. C2. Dena Point •rlathlon luree top· •thletea Sunday. C3. over-the-line: . . An ol(l game· is revitalized . With$$ offered, sport ~s popularity is on the upswing By HARON FRUTOS Of I ... Delly ,... l4MI It used lo be o'er-the-line sollball ·was pla}ed b} man) and taken senously b} le~ BL!l with ma1ty tournaments offer- ing bai purses. 1he state of the spon 1s changing. Tournaments dot Orange ( ount} 's parks and beaches e"el) few wce"s. and the number of teams patt1c1· pa11ng reaches 50 to 75 regularly. The 7-1 1 Summer National Hunt· 1n&ton Beach Pro Champ1onsh1p. S(.heduled ~pl 14-15 will mark one of the fir..1 l•mes pnze mone' will be ·offered 1n a outhern Cahforn~~ the=llne tournament. And c;ponc;ors are slowly finding over·the-ltne 1s an under-the-budget commodtt)' -Rus Johoson. founder and presi- dent of Southern C altforn1a Over- The-Linc. 1s the; nngJeader-promoter- prgan1Ler o( over-the-lme 1our· nameots Ten years ago he gathered a few teams and pul together an impromptu round-robin challenge. . spectacle. He has to ltm1t the num~r of teams pa toura.arnent. and 1s busy scheduling coed JUn1or. novtce 'and open tournaments "lfit (o"cr-the-hne) had ~done rt&ht. tl would ttave been on TV already~· Johnson said. "The mar-· ket's thett' for 1t. but nobody's dtSCOHrcd It )el." Ne,t·year-Johnson said he's &01ng to "show" his tournaments to dif- ferent corporattons and sec what 11's wonh. He figures he's got a much bigger draw than either pro volleyball or surfing. and already one maJOt sponsor 1s penciled 1n for bnch tournaments. "I don't want to create a monster'," Johnson said., ''I JUSI want to marW the spon." He' hasn't had to do much scllin& in Orange County A I read)'.. h{_grpn1zestoomarnem in Hun11ngton Beach, lrv1ne, M1sst0n VteJO, Sant.a Ana and Orange. Last weekend. Johnson set up has ponable table-top at Mile Square Park in Fountain Valley and oversaw 15 three-man teams The tournament attracted players of all ages. from I Q--year-olds to 45- year-olds. A team compnsed of Manna High 'itudents fin1sbed sec· ond in the novice d1v1S1on. • . D.-y ..... ,._... br T°"' 1(- KeD Yoongblood of Bontinaton Qeach eye. the pitch from teammate Tim Freseniua in an over-the-line tournament. Toda) Johnson has an ans~enng machine which cames the latest date. ttme, and Joca11on of Johnson's next Johnson said the populanty of over-the-ltne -is a culminauon of a lot of things'' but attnbutes 1tsirowth (Pleue .ee OTL/C2) Area duo strikes forgpld Evans, Herrington lead South women to volleyball crown Special to lbe Daily Pilot BA TON ROUGE. La. -Oranp,e Coast area products Julte Evans aud Broq,ke Hcmngton stole the show in the women'<> volleyball fi11ali. Wednesday as the West women swept to their founh crown at the Narional Spons Festival. Evans. an outside hitter from P.epperd1nc Un1verstty by way of Newpon Harbor High. had 21 kills. and Herrington. an All-American prep at ( orona del Mar H 1gh with the · Unlverstt)' of Pacific hl·r next stop, contributed 14 kills The combmauon pro\ed too much for the South ~omen as the West look a 15:9. 6· I 5. I I -I 5. I 5-1 I. I 5-8 decision. Stacy Buck of 1 ar1ana added 10 kills for the West. Also contributing .to the West's gold medal efTon was Lara ..\sper. a sentor at Ncwpon Harbor High. who has earned All-C'IF honors the past three ycats. Meanwhile. 1n softball, pitcher~ Jur1my Moore of Mountlake Terrace. Wash .. and flla Y1lchl' of Ha)'ward. punctuated 1he1r dominance with 1~ same kind ofawei.ome performances they had prm· 1ded all week in men and woml•n's play. Moore and V1lchc spun 1-0 shutouts Wednesday night. adding gold medals to their collec11on of records Moore who pitched the festival's first perfec1 game on Sunday. b~ely missed another 1n the gold medal µme. g1v1ng up a single wtth one oul in the seve nth and final inning afier rettrtng 19 straight batter' a\ lhe West defeated thr Nonh "Sure. I was th1nkwgabou111. but I JU St wanted to-get the win." hl' said The htt wa'> a single b} teve Larson to nght field "It was an inside rise ball off his hands,'' Moore said He strut'k ou1 the las1 two batters. giving him 18 in the champ1onsh1p victory. a single-ga me record for the festival He fanned 5 1. another men's record. 10 ~01ng 4-0 over the five day\ of contpc11t1on Y1lchc. a 4-0. l',tC'ndtd hcrstnng of scoreless inning' 10 57 1n p11ch10a the North to v1t·tory over the East 1n the women's champ1onsh1p contest. berfounh stAught I ·O victory Her 62 stnkeouts was another fc\ttval re· cord. Included 1n her \Inna wa~ a 21- inning "•ctory over the South 1n a game that decided a llerth rn the champ10Mhtp game V11che said she shook ofT 11 case of nerves at 1he c;rnn of the game. relaxed and go1 herconfidem:c ood. "I k11c~ we could do 11. even tf 11 look 22 1Mings," she said. ' El-;cwherc. Danny Monning.116-l I center from the Untver11tyofKan$;1s, scorl.-d 19 points Wcdnesda)' ntJhl to lead the Nonh to an RI· 77 victory over the ~ou1h 1n the men' gold medal bas~ttball inme "Wt: werr thtn"tn& gold all _the way," ~td Monn1nJ .. Thai·~ what \oach {l 4r1"Yl Brown and all the ~chc~ ~uc !Ml'ttngall \lrC'Ck -·~c·rc he~ 10 Wtn the aold ••• Bmwn I!. Mannina·, clwch ul Kall~ Thc men·., b1on1c \Ir,\ wun b} the U.,1. "h1ch llcJt the 0-~ We\I Q7.q I ~·hind 17 po1nl\ tn \hdton fon('\ ~ - Ron Romanick G~ve ~ 'W' to Angels' 'bench' Reggie gets break to help snap 5-game losing skid ·--_, - OAKLAND (AP) -R~~te•Jackson. one of the brg guns on a lol\9Cd Ang'els' bench Wednesda} night. hit a sharp grounder to '>hon stop in the eighth inning and became one of more than .:?O 000 people at the Oalland < olt'>eum expec·11ng a double pla)' .. Baby. I was going to be out. Doci. lfredu get an 'L' for 1hat?" Jackson ~u.1 of the error b} ..\lfrcdo Gnllin \lrhtch set up the ..\ngelo;' breakthrough to an 8-5 victory. onr ~h1ch ended their fi,e-game lost nR streak Bob Boone broke a 4-4 11e "'11h a ~ingk c;conng Ruppert Jones from second ba'>e. and Rod Carew followci1 w)th a p1nch-h1t RBI single. the 2.9941h hit of his career The .\mencan League West leaders added two runs in the ninth on Doug DcCinces'. 12th homer of the }ear The Angels butlt an earl y 4-0 lead ~llh 1he help ofBnan Downtng's n1n1h homer J..it !..son. who~ career home run total 1s 520. along" 1th Jones. ~ho hao; 17homers1h1!> seaM>n and ( are~ all came on the bench m the game. 11nffin who has pla,ed excellent defens1\e ha'>l'ball and alsodrt\Cn tn 50 runs for the A's this sea'ion. "'as charged w11h two errors in 1he game. Thi.' "L" in the box store was pinned behind the name ol Rick Langford 0-4. although he allowed onh l\\11h1t'i1n \ l-\1nn1ngs ofreltefp1tch1ngand ~uu lcJ hJ\l' been oul of the eighth 1f(inffin had rkJnh handled Jack\on'<> one-out bouncer. .. 'I hat'<, part ul the.· µme. I c,ttll hail a l hance . w get out ol thc mnmg ti I got the next baller to hat the hall on the ground But I feel \Cl) good no~ aboul thl' ~a' I'm thro"tng. I'm 'en confident of m) '>ktlls again .. Langford said alter perhaps ht'> Ol''>t pt.·rformanc.c 'itnce coming back from .. a1ou' arm. trouble , R'l.ln Romanick gave up homt'r'> b) Mike Da' ,., Brul'c ·atx:hlc and Duc,t\ R..tker but 11ic: .\n_gcli. nght·hander allo~ed onl)' lwQ other hm 1n 8 1--' 1nn1ng'> and earned ht'> I 'lh '1ctol) He 11ed l'.c~ 'r ork ·s Ron Ciutdr) for mo'il w1ni. tn the kaguc Friday•• Game Minn.ota at...-.. TkM; 7:30 p.m. ;None. Radio: KMl>C (710). .. , couldn't spot m} shder hke I usuall} can:· said Romanick. 13-4 deS<:nb1ng his home run patches "It .,,'3<; ltke I v.as putttng it up on a tee for them on all three homer\.. • The Angels' d1.,1s1on lead shrunk to 21 : ~me<; ~tth the losing stmik covenng four gamt"!> · in Toronto and the opener of the '\ 'ssenes which ends toda'. Second-place t.._.ansas ('m also won \.\.edne\da' night Third-place Dakland fc.>11 fiv e tx·h1nd .. ..\ l hamp10n.,h1p te..im 1"i hke a hea")we1ght champion v. hen }Ou'rc \tunned b) a hard punch. )OU h;l\e 10 run and hlO'lg on·· Jackson said .. If >Ou l·an hang on }OU can be a champion. "Champions come hack " .-1 Dodgers may have clinche.d NL 'title' ~A assured of division c rown if ~trike occurs l OS .\N(1ELE:...~ (AP) -The Los ..\ngelcs Dodger<; ma)' ha \e clinc hed the National League We\! .. tttle" Wcdnesda> night -by lo<,1ng 10 the ~an Franusco Giants. 7-S Of cou™-'. 1f a baseball stnke is avC'ne<f ne'I week. the Oodge~ haven't won anything. But 11there1sa litnke, they're 1~. 1hank!> in pan 10 thl' San Diego Padrcc; and Ctnnnna11 Reds. "ho al\o lo'>t All 1hrce con1eriding team~ -lhl' Dodgers. Padre' and Red' -haq· live game\ remaining tx·lore the Tucsda) strike dcadlim· The ~om the Dodger'i can do ,.., 58-46 (.558). The best the Padre<; can do i.~ 59-4 7 ( 557) .\nd1hclx·o;1thl'Rl·ll\l,rndo1s 57-46 ( 553) 'Tm not CH'n thtnlon~ <thou1 a tnke:· sa id Dodger Man._igcr Tom Lasorda. rcfustng the buu4ue1 ... :·we JU'ltwanttogooutandpla~ W'-'dun't even know 1f the~ will he a ·\lnke Nohodv know<;" The Ci tan ts. of cour<;e Jrl·tl'1 um- cern1ng themselves about .1 JX'nnant only about escaping the ba«<:mcnt 1n the National League Wcs1. And thcy'vcgo1awny togo1odo tha1 Bui ManaRcr Jim Oaven1><>rt 1s at lcac;1 ToaJ6JJt'• Game No game ICheduled. FM>AY'S GAME Dod9•n at Clncl!'lnatl (doubleheader). Tlme:3p.m . TV: None. Radio: KABC (790). rl'lt'>htng what he can "It feels jood to win an}ttmc. c!>pec1ally alter loMn~ the first two (games of the Sl'rtes). • he said. "We hie~ the first two. then came back to ''i111on1gh1." The Ci1ants pounded out 14 hits. l u., \ngcles sLartl·r Jerry Reuss. g. 7. 1ook 1hc loss after lasting less than three innings. Bill Laskey. 5-11 , earned the win; e"en 1hou~h he was wild-he walked li\e 1n s1i. innings. Scott Garrelts hurled the final lhrc"C innings for his l'lgh1h \a\C: "I definttel\ was out of control." .. aid Laske). who al"O gave up four rune; on ""' hi•-two of them homers b\ Ken'Landreau\ and Mike \ctO'iU:l "l:m a COl,ltrol pitcher. but I c;trugglcd a1 times. mentally and ph' 'i1c:ill)'. I m11ttrtl 100 hard on m~'ielt "But. I'm nnt u<;ed to p1tc·hmg ~11h lead'" 0o4Cer Steve Sa.z doe. a balancLn& act after being taken out of the play by the Olanta' ,,,......,.... Joel Younit>lood at aecond durlaC eecond lnnlng of •edneaday'a game. Management's latest proposal called •cockamamie' • EW YORK ( \P)-The ba~ball pla)CI"\' In 3 rare apl)(aran c at the po H. n.~ ~1ad~h.lll, hu"C'H'f l.1tC'r \;lid that v.ac. untrue O\t'r i I \ m1lh1ln th.ti ~•lartC\ 1ncrca cac.:h union formally rcJCCtcd the owners late"it pncfina. former union chtef Manin Mtlkr and th.ti thl· o~nl'r' '\l'rc ~•lhntt h> mal.:e their 'ear SI nHllK>n "ould tx· 'uhlractcd from the rontract pror,osal Wedne$day. calhna 11 now an .idv1ser to the unton. AC'tU'iC'd the pt'n'imn 1u0Jl')c.nl rl·trna1.t1'e to 1~84 pt·n .. wn ,ontn~utt<m . "(ockamam1e ·and charama manaacment wt th owner\ of rorga1n1l'g lkte1tfull} on the 1'>'>11<' ot 1 h<' ll~ncr' nudC' their pt·nc.1on propt\"tl Thl tm ner' lhl·m .... ·hl'' prt'J1ct annual bctnJ "dC<'Cttful" by ncgott una to a wnx "s.o ' plllyer ~n ions. 3 key ltCm 1n thC''iA.' tall\ l uc\dJ\. t\ln(l ti tu ;i hl'd&l' ag.itn\t 1nlla1ton nl ~I.Ir\ tnU't'.I..._., Clf S '4 rt1tllmn but the} al~ lack1na 1n integrity as to be unbehe.,able. · Miller ..aid \J'lat fi"e )t:llrs ago. \lrhcn 1hl' plaH·r \alam•, 1 hC' pla\C'f"\ ha,c he>cn a long an ha'' .t "11an a1h1tr.a1mn propu~I on the tahll' W11h u Tue~ll)' tnke d le looming e\-Cr C"Uf'!Tnt pen ion plan wa' n4ott:lled, lhC' ''~0 annual ('l\'n\lon cnntnhutton ol SMl m11l1on. or th.1l mt,hl ,ll'l l'\'3~ lhal fiaurt' l 'nder the pla n, clo r. no new talk\ ~ere hcJuled bct~etn \tdt"'> a ~ tho\ )'hateHr ~a ncsottatcd in about one-third ol N\C'hall' annual 1nnm1t• ti ..alann l1 ttl incf'C'<& h' S '4 mtlhon, the: ml)Or league pla)'ers nnd th 1r club ownen, I <>8S ~ould ~ re1r&lc11ve 1n I Q84. tit' ~•ti he trnm a SI I htllton nct"orl. f\ rnntra\'1 that owner' wnul~I rcdulc their ~n,1on contnhu- who huve lx-cn meet ma since In t November to no~ found that to ~ untryc "l'nl tnhl t•lkct in I 1~1(4 1 hl o~nc,...· I qM t1'ln h\ \'I m1ll1on tn \4 rn1lhon. If pla)Cr\ repl cc o ontrnc\ that cxpirc.d Dec. 31. The two · "It 1 Don fchr' duty. under la~ t~ ,outt1hu110n w;a., SI ' '.I m1llmn, anl11hc:~ ha\c: ..alanl''> 1nl rl.1~'\l h\ a, mu h '!i Sl8 m1lhon 1n 1de '>ltd they would speak tod y to detcrmtttc bars.i1n with them." 11ller · 1d "Out a<i a ntlcn .. 'd .an tnl'rt':t'<' nt ahout SI n m1ll1on to ~"' a )t'ar. lhl 1l1o1. net"· Jl<'n'1on contnhutton »o:oulJ ~hen and 1f talh wl)uld N.> re umcd. ron!.ult1nt. I ~o not havttu M) commatmcnt 1' mill inn go do"n to "''thi('lt Don Fchr.-ac:un ~UU\ d1r«tor of the '°-.ad\ the union. and I 1o1.1ll conltnuc tu do \t .lb~ s;am~ t1m1.•. tH>1o1. \ct. 1l~r\U\ \a1tl Ma<'Phatl 1t1 the-nfu'iot n o~r tttm- MIJOr Lc.aaur Pla>c~ A soc:i1t1on. 1d 1hat "tn thJl. But I l(h 1 ~ them (tht owne") that 1ha1 lh1·1r rm mar\ lOn1.crn ~.1' w m<a.,_l' the a1 "'II\ aro\4' he'..: u'!iC' 11 thl'tr < urrtnt propc> I t ~n~\\ftol~thcrnwhat\lr(bclievetobctruc:. unlc\ that propo~l 1.1.a repud11tl'd. I "°'~d g.11111· linall(1,1ll\ ,1,1hl1~ 0"111·" J'fOJC'O that "<'rl' 11~C'\'J't<'1I, thC' J)fn ion contnhution f<Sr Jh11l IS that iht p ~11 ~, tnt<fc: W1th , the h:tve nothtng 10 do Wtlh lhl"m " \alJnl"" ma\ lm"n":t'C no mnr(' th;m :t tOl.11 Cit 1Q?(4 \\' Uld t\;ih' Mi'IUI\\~ lb nl) 1l 11ll ion • knowlcd c th:>t "Ct;' proha~ly \lrOuld dnH' • Mtlk:r id that l.tt M"'rha1l the o~nl'" SI\ mtllhin .1nn11. lh thwuih I 'lit!( h' hf'('a" '10\'t ~1larn·.-, ro • h a~1ut S m1lh n th:tt thepan1 funheropan ch1l'I hara.11ncr then "'thdrt'" thl· 011100~1 r'~" ,,, o"ncr,,1\l..l'dthn1ti1re'<'n I m1llhln H'M '• l .. ' . . Orange Coul OAILY PILQT/Thuraday, Aug\ltt 1, 1985 J;.f.Je ules. ei - ,.. over-.the-J1~ne Ovcr.thc-hn b s1m1lar to of\ball. The ruki. of the • sport vary according to tournament, oraani1~tion 'nd skill lcveb Over-thc-hne uuhu hminaand defensive skills, 1nd rtqUU't good \)'n,hrOnlZlttOn In the lktd. The basic rule~ fum1 hed by outhem California Ovcr-1'hc-Linc founder Russ Johnson: •There arc three players per team. and each team petches to its own ~tters •There 1s no bascrunning. •field site varies accordina to location of •lour- namcnt (beach or arass). Grass tournament fields are 60 feet wide in the hape or an isosceles tnanale. •Fielders arc placed in front, middle and b ck pos1uons, with the stronaest player &cncrally positioned in the middle. • •The batter 1s ,&iven only two pitches to hit and can only be credited with a sinalc or a home run. A single is any hit which Jets past the front and middle players, while a home run 1s any hit over the back player's head (within the playm& field). It is assumed the baserunncrs are safe on sinaJcs (tt\rce sinfles load the bases), and the most advanced "runner' is called out on a fielding out. Runs arc scored 1n the same manner as softball •Games last five innings. •There IS an I I-run mercy rule. .. •Cleats (rubber and metal) arc allowed on grass fields. •Gloves arc used in arass play, barchands on sand. •A slow-pitch"softball 1s uS(d in beach play, white rcaulation softballs a~ used on iuass. Johnson usually gives clinics pnor to his tournaments to allow even the fan the chanct to learn the sport. OTI;. • • ~rom-Cl ­ to the-add1uon of d1vi1ion1 for wom and ch~n. "EvtrYOnc--in the family can play," John50n uid. Since over-the-hne 1s a varaauon o{ baseball and sof\ball, it calls for a cenain amoum of physical ab1htr.. h 1s ideal for persons who are arcn t 1n top shape. however, as bascrunnin11s not req_uired. Stratcay is an Important part Of thC aame, but hitting IS the bread and butter of the aamc. "ln softball. people play lor the team. They say 'a walk's as aood as a hit' and walk a lot. They ao home and say 'Gee. I was three for three ... three walks,'" Johnson said. "We know people love to hit. In over-the-line, they have a minimum offive times at bat per emc, and in a tournament where you re auarantccd four games. that's at least 20 at-bits. People love it." Johnson added. Over-the-line tournaments were first o~nizcd about 3S years aao in San Diego, where the sport now attracts 2SO teams for the San Dieao World Tournament. Johnson's largest tournament was . held at Belmont Shore in Lona Beach about six years ago when I 7S teams took pan, but he's expectina the biggest at Huntington Beach. Anyone interested in over-the-line tournaments or obtaining more information can phone Johnson at (213) 630-2298. DellJ Ntt ,.._. llf T-'n IC- A laD Moore: keepe eye' on ball while walUn& "People love to play anyway, but for turn at bat lD o•er·the-llne tourney: when they see they can win all that Dennt• ChrlateDMn coniaecta to adnnce phantom runnen ln recent o•er-the line l&J!le· ,, I SPORTS BREAK ~ --~--- Tiger Stadiu1n abuzz over pilot's low-OyiDg tactics From AP dl1p1tclaes DETROIT -The Federal Av1atton a Administration wd Wednesday that 1t has learned the identity of the pilot ofa Lear )et that swooped low over Tiger Stadium with a boom that fnghtencd players and fans . But the agency refused to ~ve any other information about the incident that disrupted Tuesday night's game between the Detroit Tigers and the Kansas City Royals. "We have identified It as a Lear 23," said FAA spokesman David Hobgood at W1Uow Run A1rpon in Yps1lant1. "We have identified the pfanc and the pilot involved." Hobgood said all other information on the incident would have to come from the FAA's Great Lakes Regional Office in Chicago. Chicago FAA spokeswoman Mar.ione Knz., sai<i, "All we can tell you nght now is that it's under invesugat1on .. She declined further comment Detroit police spokesman Officer Wayne Roberts said he had no information on the overflight but said the department has no authority in the matter because of the FAA's exclusivejunsdiction. The game was in the top of the sixth inning shortly before 10 pm. when the plane. Jet engines flaming, roared over the stadium and sent a wave of fear through the players and the 34.261 spectators. · .. It scared the devil out of me." said T1~rs Manager Sparky Anderson after the game. "I thought 11 was crashing into the stadium ... Quote of the day Robert Lepelletler, a horse player from Alexandna. Va .. explaining how he kept his cool after collccung S 11 . 702. a record payoff for an exacta wager at Charles Town Downs in West Virginia: "I don't have anything to s~nd the money on. I ltve next to then \Cr What do I need a swimming pool for'?" 49ers hit with rash of injuries ROCKLIN -Five veteran pla)'ers. [iJ 1ncludmg Super Bowl XIX starters Kee na II Turner and Rand) Cross, suffered inJunes 4 • Wednesday in the San Francisco 49ers' morning practice session All fiv(' are expected to miss at least a few days of practtce Three of the injured players were linebackers - Turner. Todd Shell and Fulton Kuykendall. Turner JlUlled a calf muscle. and he could be out of action up to a week Shell sprained his left shoulder. and Kuykendall \pra1ned his left knee Offens1"e guard Cross Jammed his left wmt. and defCns1ve lineman Jeff Stover suffered a hip strain. The 49cr-;' first National Football League cxh1- h1tton game 1~ ~ug. IO against the Los Angeles Raiders. : PRO F OOTBALl l----~~ - Backman llatthe .. llarpby ~ Mets closing in on St. Louis The race 1n the Nauonal League East ii .11ghtened up some more Wednesday when the first-place St. Louis Cardinals lost and the runner-up New York Mets won, tnmming the difference to just two games. At Shea Stadium, Wally Backmaa knocked 10 two runs and Ed Lynch won his first start since July 13 as the Mets defeated Montreal. 5-2. to sweep their three-game series. Lynch. 8-5. who had been hospiulized for stomach problems. allowed }ix hits. struck out three and walked one 1n five innings ... Meanwh1le, at Wrigley Field, Gary MaUbew1 hit a three-run homer and Ray Fontenot and Lee Smttb combined on a six- h1tter to lead the Chicago Cubs to a S-2 victory over St. Louis. The Cubs Jumped on Joaquin Aad11Jar, 17-S, the major league leader ti) victories, for four runs before tbe first out in the first inning. Andujar gave up a tot<rl of five runs, four earned. in five inr)ings before he was relieved by Bob Forsch ... In Atlanta, pinch-hitter Gerald Perry singled home Terry H•rrr. who had opened the 10th 1nn1n1 wtth a double. to give the Braves a 5-4 victory o"er San 01ego. Dale MurJ>by's 27th home run oft he season. a drive over the right-ficld fence i.n the eighth inning. had broken a 3-3 tie before tbe Padres rallied for a run in the ninth to make II 4-4 . . Pinctr- h11ter Steve Kemp lined a two-out RBI single in a two- run 10th inning as Pittsburgh ended a St'Ven-game losing streak with a 4-3 v1c1ory over Ph.1ladelphia at Three Ri vers Stadium ... Glenn Davis' three-run homer and John Mizerock's three-run double powered a I 3·h1t Houston attack and led the A.stros 10 a 9-2 .. 1ctor, O\ er C1ncinnat1 at Riverfront Stadium. Martin sh~lng improvement ARLINGTON. Texas-Although his • cond1t1on has 1mprcwed. New York Yan- kees Manager Billy Martin 1s expected to remain in the hospital unttl the weekend and possibly longer. Martin. who suffered a punctured lung as the result of an tnJ CCt1on for back spasms by a Texas Ranger team doctor Sunday, entered the hospital while his team went on to Cleveland for a fi ve-ga me series with the I ndiaris. According to those to spoke with him Tuesday, the ailing manager sounded subdued and somewhat dl'pressed. However, Martin is now being allowed to lea vc the hospital for brief periods during tllerday. .. He ha<i been put on a mild activity program," said a spokesman for Arlington Memonal Hospital. where the S 7-year-old Martin 1~ resting. Martin , who directed the Yankees' 8-2 victory in Cleveland from his hospital bed Monday night, showed "continuous improvement.'' according to the spokes- man Rams solve on~ c. holdout problem - Lineb acker Owens ag~ees to terms; four still unsigned , From AP dl1patcbH 1 he Rams rcsol vcd unc of ti ve player-holdout problem\ Wednes- day. reaching an agreement with veteran linebacker Mel Owen\. Term\ of the JTIUl1t-ycar \:On1r~1 'Y.C'rr not announced Entering llt<t fifth year, O""ens .... 111 report to train1n1camp todl). ending a holdout that t>eaan Monday when \'ett'rtns were required to report 10 tra1nin1 camp at Cal State Fullenon A first-round draft choice from M1ch1pn, O""cns. who suinds 6-2 and wc1ahs 224. has been a starting out 1de linebacker for th(' past two sason He wa\ the team 's 1h1rd • lead1na i.ackler la t year The Rams still must !i1an nartt(lg nose tackle Grea Meisner and their first-round draft choice. defensive back }erry Gray Safety Ivory ull) al!oO I\ w1tholJ1 a cnntract but the Ram~ ha Ye said they w1ll traJ& bull or put him on wa1 vcn The Rams still have not spoken with their big-name holdout. Enc Dickerson. who has said he will not come to camp unt1~ he acts a th e- .. earcJ1 ten~1on to his present co Thl' Rams also cut Da-.1 own. a wide receiver from evada-Las Vegas. and Francoise W1k. a form~r haskr1ball player from Long Beach 5tate fhe} were the first pln )ers cut by 1he Rams \1nce 1ra1n1ng lamp began on Jul) 14 The rnts redu<:ed to 82 the number of pla)e,.., 1n camp * Raiders to scrimmage OX!\IARD-~scrimmage ln\olv - ma ~lected .. etcram of the Los An&elcs Raiders and Dallas ( owbOy wa\ ~hedulcd for todu y a1 the R;11der.,· tra1nintt camp here. .. h's a chance to sec: 5elected pla)er\ 1n \pcutic drills and i.1tuat10n$," \31d f{a1der ( oach Tom (1 ore!.. 1 n an- noun<.·1ng the third scrimma&f' be- t'-"l't'n the two 1eams, hut the tirst in H1I\ 1n1 vet(' rans C)u<tnf'.rhacks ,Jim Plunkett and M rt'~ 11'14>n~ hiufhack· Marcu, .l\llcn •.ind t1tlw1 't'll'f.ln' "111 not oar11c1 . - Mel Owen• pate. l lorei. '81d. The dnll, he eitplained. wa., mo'ltl y for )'Ounacr plavcrli. • Linebacker Boh Nclwn remained out of <'amp in a \alary dispute. but ftore., pra1\.Cd Jack Sq1.11rek. the fourth-~ear man who 11 play1na 1n Nelson's 'lpot There were no playecfrclcased. but 1hc R~udcn did add qu1ntrbaek Bohh\ Frn\Co rrom n Jose tatc Ual\ crm~ prunanly "au • calnp 1hro .... 1•1," :1tcord1n, 10 f101t'\ --t a e tr money ..... PETE ROSE COUNTDOWN CloabJI UJOD Ty Cobb What Rose did Wednesday: He went 2 fo.r 4· with a third-in- ning double to drive in one ru~ and a single, but the Reds dropped a 9-2 decision to Houston at Riverfront Stadium. Young talking with Buca LOSANGELES-QuarterbackStevc EE Young and his attorney are scheduled to •II • meet with the Tampa Bay Bucaneers on Friday for their "first rcaJ negotiating session" toward a contract. Young's attorney said Wednesday. • Youna, whose status as a member of the Los Angeles Express of the United States Football League is under debate, will undergo a physical-e_xamin~tion and meet with members of the Bucaneers coadimg staff, said his attorney Leigh Steinberg in a telephone interview. Generals, Gamblers to merge? NEW YORK-Reports that the New EE Jersey Generals and Houston Gamblers of •II• the United States Football League would meric were rckmdled Wednesday after the · league announced a news conference to feature owners of the two teams. · "I heard it was aJI signed, sealed and delivered," said Gamblers quarterback Jim Kelly from his home in Houston when asked if a merger was the reason for today's news conference in New York. "We're going to be playing in New Jersey." Cllppera deny Walton deal on LOS ANGELES -Talks conunue on m a trade that would send center Bill Walton . from. the Los Angeles Clippers to the Boston Celtics in exchange for forward Cedric Maxwell, but the Clippers have dented a published report that the deal is nearly complete. Balboni'• blast alnke Tigen Cli ppers' Geoeral Manager Carl Scheer said Wednesday that the two National Basketball Associa- tion teams are still far apart. and he denied that a trade has been worked out. .. Steve Balboni hit a three-run homer to •. snap a 2-2 tic in the ninth inningand D&DDy Jackson pitched a six-hitter Wednesday as Kansas_ City defeated Detroit at Tiger Stadium, 5-2. In the ninth, Geor1e Bretl drew a walk and was sacrificed to second by Hal McRae. Fran White was given an intentional walk and then Balboni ~umped on the first pitch, driving it into the second deck in left for his 21st homer of the season and his sixth in the last seven games ... In other American League action, 8111 Schroeder hit a two-run homer and Jaime Cocanower scattered nine hits as Milwaukee beat Texas, S-2, to complete a sweep of their three-game sencs at County Stadium . _ .. In the Kinadomc in Seattle, Jim Presley rapped out four hits, including a two-run homer, and Gormaa Thomas homered and drove in three runs to lead the Mariners to a 12-3 romp over M inncsota. Presley had two singles and a double to go with his 23rd home run of the year ... In Ocveland, Tom Waddell, making his first major-league start after 97 relief appearances, pitched six strong innings and Pat Tabler had a ba~-loaded double as the Indians snapped Roa GaJdry'a personal 12-gamc winning streak bydefeatingthe New York Yankees,, 6-S ... Je11e Barfield drove in three~ns wih a pair 01 homers and Rance Malllalb and Geor1e BeU added solo blasts as Toronto survived a three-run homer by Baltimore's Cal Rlpkea and defeated the host Orioles, S-3 ... Dave SU drove in a run with a sacrifice fly with one out in the seventh inning, liftina Boston to a 1-1 tie with the Chicago White Sox in a game called after seven innings by rain at Fcnway Park .. The rainout will be made up today as part of a twi-!liaht doubleheader. • The Boston Globe, quoting unnamed sources, has reported the two sides have agreed in principle on a Walton-Maxwell trade, but that contract concessions and salary restructuring must be worked out. Scheer denied any deal has been made. "The Globe story is absolutely false," he said. However, Scheer reported that the Clippers "VOuld trade Walton if conditibns arc acceptable. Angele reactivate Pettis Gary Pettis from the disabled hst Wednes> The Angels reactivated outfielder • day and optioned right-hander Tony Mack to Edmonton. Pettis was placed on the 15-da} disabled hst July 5 with a sprained lef\ wrist, missing 26 games. He was injured June 30 in Kansas City while flagging down an eighth-inning dnve. Mack, recalled by the Angels July 25. made his maJor-league debut Saturda} in Toronto and was tagged with an 8-3 loss. Television; radio TELEVISION No events· scheduled. RADIO No events scheduled. Seaver won't let emOtion get in way Hlirler ·shootsfor- 300t h win Sunday in f a mt liar city BOSTON CAP) -T6m Seaver of the Chicaao White Sox expects 1t to be emotional. but work will come fint as usual when he shoots for his 300th major 1caaue victory Sunday against the Yankees in New York. _ "I have areat memories of my )'cars playing In New York and I'm sure there will be New York Mets fans and Tom Seaver fans t~erc Sunday, but my work comes first." Seaver said Monday. "I'm sure it will be an emotional day, but you can't let It set to you," the 40-year-old riaht·handcr said. "There's a storybook touch to it. I remember how tremendously cm~ t1onal 1t was on open1n1 day 1n 1983 when I returned to the Mets in Shea Stadium. 1 "However, I'm a v~ d1sc1phned individual when I JO to the mound. Yoo have to controJ emotions. not ict camed 1way. When I ao ouf<then:, my wotld become much smaller-rrom the raihni 1n. "l have 1flc1.11ncc to the people I \\Ork (or now. fwould've hkcd tO Win No .. lOO in C'h1c110. but 1(1l ~Qul(ln'~ be Ol1t·a10. then New orli:.' Rath.C'r than face rnuntl~11nd1 .. 1d- ual interviews that would ''interrupt my work." Seaver met with sports writers and sportscasters for a "i8iny day news conference less than 24 hours after he earned career victory No. 299 in the Whuc Sox· 7-5 decision 1n 10 inninas over the Boston Red Sox A three-time Cy Youn& Award winner 1n the National Lcaauc, owner of a no-J\itter and one of the all-time stnkcout artists, he said he hopes to act No. 300out of the way quickly and get on with his 19-year major lequc career. "There's no question that No. 300 will rate as one of the hi&hhahts of m)' career, but I haven'1 sat back and thouaht what 1t means to wm 300 aamcs," he said. "Riaht now I can reflect on and enjoy thouahts of indiv1du1I pmes. Reflection on 300 victories will come ancr I'm throuah p1tch1na. "What I 1pprec1tte m'O t naht now .u 1h1t' I m I 00-make that I I 0-pmt! over 500 1n my carttr. That 'VS an awful lot " With al99-t 8911fctimc rtcord and J,492 stnkeouts, D\'Cr said ·•1 $till IO'Vt' to Pilch, Jo"c tbe competition:· "The 300th 1s not a aoal I set for M) •If .and I'm nor qu1tt1n1 af'\er 100 .. :' Ile ld 11tcz Nu.. 299 Tuc5da)'- niaht. "It is a b1 point In mr. career. hut I'm oina nn frnm there • ~; • m...• e. • ' 1 • • • .. • FoR TH£ REcoRo '---_ ~ ~=====~========:__'_z::-=·==~~~~======~~~~~~~~~~~ HQrse racing --~ -- ~ t I ,, MAJOtt LEAGUI STAHDtHOS A"*1can L~ WIST DtVISK>N AitM1 l<•n•uCnv 0.kllnd C111<100 S111tlt Mlnntiott T .. .,. W L ,ct, Ga 11 ~ no $4 45 so 21'; st ... uo 5 4f •7 510 6 ... S3 475 f'-2 46 S3 4'S 10''1 )t '2 * "~ • Toronto Ntw Vork Oerroll Boiton 81ltlmort Mltw1uk11 ,,..,,.,.no EAST DIVlSIOH ... 31 SS 44 S3 " 52 ., SI .. ._. SI 32 .. w...._.,.,keres .,.., a. oui.no s Ken~• Cltv S, O.troll 2 Mllw1ukM S, THH 2 SH llle 11, MIMllOll 3 Cllvtllncl 6, Ntw V0tk S Tor011to s. Btltlmon > 1''l , . .., 10·., II.,. •• ll Chlceoo L Boston I (tle,.r1ln, 1 lnnln9•> TNIY'' Gem.• All9ll1 (Lu90 J·ll 11 Oaklln4 (COOlrotl 1·11. 12 IS om Chlc.1110 lNelson 6·5 Ind Lono 9'-01 e t Boston (NI-7·6 Ind Lolllr •• ,,, 2. I n New York (Pljlflro 10-11 11 C....,tllnd ,(smith O·O), n Toronto <Flier 2·01 11 B1t11mor1 (01vl• S·6l n l'rld9V'1 G-Mtnntsote 11 Afte9b. n M1tw1uktt 11 Ottrolt, n Belllmort 11 Cltvtland, n TuH 11 Toronto, n Chlc.190 11 New York, 11 l oston 1t Kann• Cttv. n S.e tttt at Oakland, n Nattonal LeatNe WUT DIVISION W L ,ct. Ga '*""'' SI 41 516 San 01'90 S.. 47 S3S S Clnctnnell 52 '6 S3l S'"i Houston 46 SS 4SS ll Atllnt1 ._. SS 444 14 Si n Frtnel~ 40 62 Jn lt\'a EAST DIVISION St Louis 60 31 New Vor• Sf 41 MontrNI S6 46 Chlc190 S2 47 PnlladttPlll• 45 s.. Pllt•t>uroh 32 " WIClllHCllV'I kWet Sin Frenclsco 7, o.deWI S Ntw York 5, MonlrHI 2 Chtc190 S, St Lout• 2 612 S90 5'9 m 455 327 2 6 ....... ISll') 21 P~etes 4, Phll1~Pllt1 3 < 10 lnnlno') Hou•ton 9, Clnclnnatl 2 Atl1n11 s. San Oleoo 4 ( 10 lnnlr19•) Teellv'• Garnes St Louis CCox 12·6) et ChlCllDO (Sand· "'°" 5·41 Phlllci.tol'llt (Dennv S--11 et Ptttsburoh IM<Wtttl1m1 S·7), n Houston ti<-1·11 11 Cincinnati (MC'G1ff1111n 0-0), n Sin Dleoo (Hewkin• ll·J> 1t Atlante (Smltn 6·71, n 1'11d1V'S Gll'Mt o.-n 11 Clnclnnetl. 1, t·n New York et Chlceoo Montrtel et Plll•t>urgh, n Sa" Francltco et At11nt1, n Se" Dlt00 II Houlton, n Pnlleo.11)1111 et St Louis. n AMERICAN LEAGUE Aft911s I, A'I S -._ .. Lll'ORNIA OU LAND 'T .,, ..... Oow11lno If 4 I 2 J Griffin u Grleh 21> S 2 2 0 MurPllv cf ltnlQUI It> . 4 0 2 1 BOCl'ttt lb D.Cncs 3o 4 1 1 1 Knomn dh Brow" rf 2 O 0 O Oulekr It RJont• rf I 1 0 0 MOevlH I Llneres 011 2 O O O Heath 3b J1ck•h dh l I I O Ttllteton c loont c S I 3 1 OHlll 21> SchOflld " 1 1 0 0 Cerew Ph 1 0'1 I Gtrber u I 0 0 0 Perils Cf 4 o I o Tltlll J7 I ll I T .... a Scer9 bv """"* ab r II Ill 4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 I 1 1 • 0 0 0 4 2 2 1 4 2 1 2 3 0 0 0 2 0 1 1 3 0 0 0 l2 s s s C.......... 110 JOI on-I Oeldencl 000 011 IOI-S Game Wln"mv 1te1 -eoon. (6) E-Grtffln 2, SchOflelo DP--01kllnd 1 L08-Celllornle 9, Oektelld 2 28.-..Grlc.h, Boont HR-Downing (t), Devis 119), Bocnre (7), O.Clnc:H (12), Beker (13) S-Sc:llOfllld, Downing, HHlh, 81nlQvtl " HltE1taaso Cetlflnlla Romenck W,ll·• 11·3 s s 4 1 DMoort 2·3 0 0 0 0 Otkllncl 8lrt111 4 6 4 3 3 Lnofrd L,0·4 31-3 2 2 I 1 M<Cl llV 1 J 2 2 0 CYouno N 2 0 0 0 Blrt111 i>llC~ to I llllltr In IM Stn T-250 A-'20,?93 Dana Point lures top triathletes W11h a roster th al includes cnathlon ·s nauonal champion. the rcigmng Hawaii lronman champ, the No. I-ranked women's prof~s1onal and a former world record-holder of international fame, the Dana Point race of the U.S. Triathlon Series (USTS) on Sunday has all the cle- ments of exci ting competition. Scoct Mohna. tnathlon'$ un- disputed national champion, tops the hst of professional tnathletes signed up to compete. Moltna won nine of 11 races on the USTS c1rcu1t last season -every race he competed m -and has v1nually dominated the spon since 1982 when he won his first U TS race -the Los Angeles regional in Long Beach. This marks the first time the Los Angeles cvtnt has been held at Dana Poi nt. It is the only senes race in the Lo Angeles vici nity and has already drawn one of the stronaesl field of the season. · The stantng ume for the compct1· uon will be 7 a.m. at 'Doheny State Beach. pcclltors arc advised that pa rkina 11 hmtted. Identical rwins Sylv11nc and Pa· tnd a Puntous also come 10 the race as defending champions. They took firs t place in Lon' Beach . last season. crossina the finish line ~1dc-by-s1de in a fashion that the French Canadian pair 1s famous for )lv1one Y..OO the prcst1 .. ou ultra· d1s1ance (2.4 mile· I 12 m11e·26 2 mile) lronman triathlon 1n Kona, Hawa11 lut Oclobcr for the second stra1aht )Car. The Puntous pair will be the main compc&1t1on fac1na top-ranked Joan· nc l!mtt of Palo Aho. who 11 l for Jon the LI T this season. postina wins 1n San Francisco. ,.f~n11 ond Balli· m~ . • The other womfln to watch 1s lliwn ROt'of'NewZtalind. 1 former world rtC'ord-holdcr 1n the women's rne1111J\on and winner of:..th 9ll Bo ton and New York marathons More •polU, JMle C8 I 0 3 4 h NATIONAL Ll(AOU9 Llntt LHtue Al•StWlrt .C:W.ntl 7, Otideera S MA~s lll•lt·Wlr· ... J S~N ,UNCllCO LOS ANGl ... l ~ Tt11tMY 1•r11111 11trllllll (et N•'** H..-11> YOMO!clcl TrllfO 211 C01v11 rf l.eonardtt caro•ll lo Adems3b 0Gr""111 Trevino c Urlblu LH klVP ~Oii r.1rrtlh P 5 I , 0 Duncen u 5 1 I 0 TM!ttlt'a Oemt 4 • 0 0 C•Olll )b J 1 I 0 1 )0 0 m -O<Atn v-NlltOntt v, - S O O O Leneln ct J 2 t J IO•tf 01 Norwalk ·LOllO ••ech ,_,.,. h rnt S t J ) Gutrrer M 4 0 I 1 ,.,._.,,, G- ., , 1 0 •rock lb 4 0 I 0 1 )0 II m -Cl\e~w• .. ,..,. INOTIE ' 0 0 0 Ml"llll rt 4 0 0 0 II bOth IH ITll IWIVt Oftl IOU , lllOtl'ltl' ._ .S I 'O Sct6tc.le t 1 1 1 1 wltl Ill 1>11veo ~turoev 11 11 • m) ~1)4 k•~ JOOO s.ctMNITturMY 4 0 1 0 lttuH I 1 0 I 0 let 11111 °"'*"'t Lll 1 0 I 0 Pow .. o 0 t 0 t WtclMIMV't Sc-. I 0 0 0 Metso. llh I 0 0 0 £n ttlct. Gerdtn Orove 3, Vorl>4t Linde 1- 0 0 0 0 CHl!IO p 0 0 0 0 (V0t1>1 Lino• lllmlnatld) 9•1tor Ph 1 0 0 0 ,...._,., 011ftt ~~:.: 1)11 ~ g : ~ S 30 P.m.,. -EHt•kM Glf~ GfOlll "' Howttl 11 0 0 0 0 North Mtullwl Vitlo (IOstr t llmlnelldl Tttell 40 7 14 1 r .... , )2 5 I S S JO om "~1:tfn':!!{'4.,n ~s EellllOI ktrt llY lllnll'9I •• 5111 ,.,.lldte• JOa llO 000_ 7 Gerdln Gro••·N0tth Mlaslon Vleio winner I.es .,_.. •l llO IOO-~ <NOTE If llolh t11m1 hive one lou , G•,,,. Wln11ifl!I ltBI -1.,_, .. 0 (7) / •nother o•mt w1t1 Dt Dllyld $eturoev •l t OP-Sall Frencltc.O 2 LOB-San Fri"· Pm I ~ltce> t , Los A"""' 7 2~~rwo I "" •• G •s .. lt-L-rd 7 f 1') L.ndrHu11 (7) ,,. .. A U l1'·11·'1Mr·--) SCIOKI• 141. Trevino (l) !-Cebtll, Lelkev 111 S:::.:';-=--1 '" H " la aa SO WldllndlY'a klff SMl'l'WKIKI Lnkl'Y W,5· 11 Gerrllt•S,I Let~ • l • , • t 4 I llltuH L,1·7 2 t • 6 0 I Powell 2 > I 1 1 2 cu~ 2 o o o o o COl11 2 1 o 0 o 3 HOwlfl 1 I 0 0 0 1 Rtuu oltc:l\ld to J 111111h In Jrd 1nnlfl!I HB~rown ll>Y lileunl T-2:,. A-4S,"7 MAJOR LEAGUI LliA~ American LN9U9 BATTING (2.0" II Otts>-Brett. K1nM11 Cllv, .JSJ, It HtnOll'IOll, New Vol'll, .3S2, lo09s. Bo.ton. ,.., LKY •1111mor1, 322, lodl!t . Olkland, .l20 RUNS-It Hend«IOll, ~w York. 17, Rlttllen. 811tlmore, 74, Whltektr. Oetroo 72, Molltor, MltwaukM, M, M D•••s. O.kllnd, '5, Wlllflelcl, New Vork, 6~ RBl-Mallln9tv, Naw Y0tk, 79, E Mur rav. Bt lllmort , 71, Rll>ktn, 8eltlmore. 71 8evtor, lffw Y0tk. 67. I< Gl1>1on. Detroit 67, Rice, 8011on, 67 HITS-BOOOI, Bolton, IJS, Wiison, Ken· Sii City, 124, G1rcla, T0tonlo, 123, Whit· Iker, Detroit, Ill; P ~ldlev. Seettte, 122 OOUI LErMltt1"9tv, NIW Vork, 31, Buckntf', Bo•ton. 21. Booes. Botton, 27, G W1lktr, Chic-. 25, COOMf', Mllwl l*M, 24, G1tttl, Mlnnetote, 24, M D1vt1, O..k· llnel, 24 TRIPl.ES-WlllOn, K1a~1 Cltv. ll, Puckett, MIMHOll, 10, 8utllr. Ctevtland, I, COOi*', MllWlullM. I, P 8redtev, S.ettle,' HOME. RUNs-Flsll., Chlceoo. 11. G Th0ml1, Sfflltt. D, Presi.v, S..ttle, 23, D1, Ev1n1, Detroit, n , Klr19man. 0.kl•nd, n . STOLEN B~Sl!S-R Htneltnon, N- VOfk, 47; 8utle<, Clevllenel, Jl; Wltson, Kensas Cllv..31; ,..,.,, Artelb, )0, COlllns, Ollltand, 25; G1rcl1 , Toronto, 25, Mc>Mbv, Toronto, 25. PIT,,,CHING (I dtcl•lon1)--8irhM , Oak· llnel, 1·2, l.2', GulcVy, Ntw York, 13·4, J 09, ltll'nltlkir, ........ ll·•· ,,..,. SID«t119111, Kensas Cllv, 12·S, 2 IS, Cow· tev. NIW Yor11, f·4, l •. J Howell, Oektend, f ·4, 1 OS, Key Toronto, 9·4, Ut STRll<EOUTs-8tvllven Clt.,,.._nel, 12', Morris, Detroit, 116, F 81nnl1t«, Clllce90, H9; 8UNll, Clllca9o. 113, Witt, Af1911b, 111 SAVES-QulMl\l>trrv. K1nS1• <Irv, 24, HtrAatldtr, Detroit, 21, J Howell, Oe klllnd, 20. D. MMre, Aneels, It, RloMlll, New York, 11 Nanon.I LUgue 8ATTING (240 •I btla)-Mc:GM, St Loul1, .345; Guwr-, Dedeln, .l27, Herr. St Louis, »3, Gwvnn, 5111 Dleoo. .JOS, P•rker. Clnc.lnnetl, 301 RUNS--Murphy, Atlanta, IO, COltme n, • SI Louis, 71, Rel,,.., MontrH I, 71. Gwf. ,.,.., Dedeart, 70. Slndl>tro, ChlceDO, 61 RBl-MurOhv. Attente, 71, J Cieri.. St LOUIJ, 7t, Htrr, SJ Loula. 74, P..MU£. Cincinnati, 1 t G WlllOn, Pttlladllot\la, 66 HITS-McGM, St . Loul1, 125, Gwvnn, Sin Dlt00, 121; Hlfr, St Loul1, 117, Pel'ller, Cincinnati, 11s. Muronv, Atlanta, 111. Sanclt>ero, Chlc1g0, 111 OOUBLES-W1H1Cll, Monlrtet, 26, Gwvnn, Se n Dll90, 23, Hern1nd11, Ntw Vori. 23, Htrr, St. Louis, 23, 6 are !ltd with 22. , TRIPLES-McGH, St Louis, 12, Rein· es. N\otltr111. I, Slmvtt, Phll1011D"11, a, Coleme n. St Loul•. 7, Gtaddtn San Fren· CllCO, 6 HOME RUNs--MUl'Ohv. All•nl1. 27, GUWI'-, o.-n, 2l, Horner. Atlante, 20, • ':: "ll. St Loula, 20, P.vktr. Clncl,,,,.11, 19 STOLEN aASEs-<Oltmln St Louis n. McGM, St Loula, l9 LOCltl, Chlc.eoo. Je, Reints, Montr111, JI, Rlelu•. Clnclnnetl, 36 PITCHING II Otcl•k>n•l-Franco, Cln· clnnall, 9·1, 2 2', ~.New '1'0tk, 16·3. us. H•wklns, San Dleoo. 13·l. 3 11. Henl!llM, o.ctMr1, 11 .J, l.•1; Andu11r, Stlouis. 17-S. 2 u . STRll(EOUTs-<ioodln. New York, 173, Soto, Cincinnati, 149, Rven, .Houlton, 1~. VllenllltN, o.itew•, 1n , J Deleon. Pit· llburClfl, 116 SAVES-llHrdo" MontrHI. 2S. Lt Smlth, Chlc.eDO, 23. Go•~l>I. San DllOO, 21, Power , Clnclrw'lltl. II. Sulit!', At111111, 17 E s O>•trl<I '2 l, Dllltlcl 2• 1 <Gr .. ClllH k of Huntington ikac.h went l tor 3 11\d OoUll EuDtl' of Huntl(lflton a..c:11 wM tl'll wlnnl"o octcMr Dlllrlc:t '2 Dllva eo1ln tonlOht 11 , 301 WlfW'I teumameftt (II MtllNttaft a..dl) StcllM •IUNI SAMlel .. Anne Ivan lU.S > def. W¥'d¥ TurnDUll lAullr.+let. "'1. •·•· ... J, L1ur1 Glfcl«Nlater (US.) def Alvcl• Moulton lU S >. 6·'· ... ,, 8tlllna 8unet <Moneco> dtf Etsuko Inoue (Jeo•n>. •·O, 6·l , Svtvle He nlk• !West Germ1nv> oet. SUsan Ml1t1rln (U S.), 2·6, 6·2, 7·6; PHnut LOlll• (U.S.) def 1t19l1111 Mlfllkove (C1echoslo· ••kl1), 6·). 4·6, 6·3; Ros11vn Felrt:>ank (Soutll Africa) dtf. SoPlllt Amlec:h <Fr1nc.11. 7·6, 6-2. en .. Buruln tu.s > dll. Gree.I Kim (U.S). 7·6. 6·4, h th Herr (U SJ dll Lori McNtll (U.5.), 7·6, 6·4, Hana MlndUkove <CrldlosloY1kle) Olf Oebb1t Sotnc.t (U S.), S·7, 6·2, '°'· C1r1l1111 B11S81t (C-"1411) Olf Tint MocnlrUlll cu s) DMo ... ftlfllnt N•W,OaT LANDING (NtwHf'f ... di) -S4 •Ml«• 175 "nd bin. 3 sc.ulol11, "6 mM:ktrll, 6 rod! n111 DAV•Y'S LOCK•lt (.,..,,_, a.di) -203 ~1 3' Dll'recudl, 25 bonito, 2 vtllowteA, I lllllt>ut, 24 c.etko bin, 465 "nd bits, 6'0 mec.ktrll, 6 rodl 11111. TMaWMll'ltreut~ I.OS AHG•LH -Bio ltOdl CrMt<, 8-uel Cenvon Creak, CH telc Lekt, Jeck'°" Like, Pvremld Leke SAN a•ltNAaOtHO -Bio het Lelle, Green V111ev Like. Jenkl Llkt, Siiverwood Llllt. KlltN -Kern River (tram Democ:r1t Di m to KA I PowerllouM, •oretl Powlf· hOUSI 10 Otmocret Dem, lsalltile Dam to lorlll Pow«hOUse encl KRJ PowerhoYM to L1k1 l~blllal MAO&lllA -San J OICluln lllvtr (Middle F0<d), Sot'11« Like, St.rk-lftlf' L.-t TULAltl ~Ory MMilow Crffll, FrH · men CrM , Ktrn River (aovth fork, Felr· vi•"" Dem to KR3 PQwlrt'loUM and Jenn· IOl\OM ~'"' to ~.JrMw..o.mt. ~ elld Lower P-mlnl CrMt<, Tull River (north end aouth tork• of meln tor• elld Cider SloH ertel INYO -81ktr CrHll, Bio PIM CrH k, Bt•hOo Crltll (tower, middle, aoutll 1no lnttkl ll). Georges Crltll. lncltoenOtnc;t CrHll, Ll kt Sel>(lne. Lone Pine Cree«, North Lekt, Owen1 River (btlow Tlnem.1111 ltoell Crllll (from Rock CrHk to tht end of tM roeo), lloclt CrHk Lekt. Sf\Clclhtrdl ,,. .. , So\;tll Lake, T •INOM Crlltl, Tlntmth• Crtlk, Tuttle Crffk MOHO -SridQtoort RtMrVOlf. 8 uck. t v• Cree«, COllylct Crffll. Convict Lekt Dt1d1Nn Crfflt.. ElltrY LIU. G~oe l..lkt, G!Ks '""'· ~-~. GrNn CrH k Guff Lekt, June L•kl. Lff Vining CrHll, South lork of LM Vining CrMtl Lllllt W1111tr River, Lunelv Lake Mamie L11<t, Memmotn Cretll, Mlf't Lella, M<:GH CrHk. Miii CrMk, Owena River (81 Banton Crou1r111 1np Bio Sorlfl!ls>. Robinson Crffk, Rock CrMll (from PertdlM CemP to Tom's Ptact encl Tom's Pleet uostrH m to Rock Crltll Lllltl. Ru1h CrMk, Saddlt· l>IO CrMk, Slddltl>llo Le kt, Sherwin Creeil. Sliver L•kt. Tlooe L1kt, Trumt><Jll Lake. Uoe>er Ind Lower Twin Llktl 8rldoeoort, Twin Lekt$ Memmoth. Vlr· olnle CrHll, UPPff' encl Lower 'Vlroinle Likes, Walker lllver (fronn Chrl• Flat Cemoeround to tht town ot W1lktr •n<I Llevltt Meeoow• Cemoerouno to Sonora Bridge) c A ME:XICAN --t ... ____ ~--..... =="'------------ IMrtl ,.,fW.. • ltt .._ •MIW. La.I • MaN'S eASK•THU.. l'tHAI. Nottll "· South 11 WQMt1r.l__eASl(ITUL: "INAL \®ll\ 65 Jilt " M•N'S son14LL "NAL Wtll I, North 0 WOMlrH'S SOl'TaALL "tNAL Nortt1 I, E11t 0 • WOM•N'S VOLL&YaALL "'NAL West Oii South IS.-t. 6· IS II IS IS· II IS·• (Cl'lllft01QnShlO) NO(lb def EHi t· ts 15·0 11• IS U·I IS '3 111\<rd lllKe) WOMaN'S WATElt l'Ol.O ,. ltlllfld ~Ill 12. EHi 9 N0tlll 6 W"t 6 Sllltll aeund E .. 1 12 N0tth 9 West 1, Sout'1 3 MIN'S ,SOCC•lt North I, e•st 0 WC>ft"BN'S SOCCllt !H I I Nortll 1 eAHeALI. "IMALS Sout11 2 West l (cn.tnok>nllllol North 16 EHi 5 (llllrd Alla! NFL extllbfflen KMdUle SATUtlOAY's GAM• Hou"on •S Ntw York Gli nts et Canton, Ol'tlo "ltlDA Y, AUG. t Clllea9o 11 St LOUii SATUltOAY, AUG 1' Hou"on 11 lt- S.n Frencl\co et lt•klw• Bliffeto et .0.troit Cllvet•nd 1t San Dleoo Green aev •I Dettu K1n~1 Cltv e t ClnclMell Mlnnaaot1 et Ml1ml N1w OrlH n1 et Ntw Enolend Nt w Vork Glenll •I Denver Phll•dltohle 11 Ntw Yorto; Jt11 Pltttt>uroll et Tem1>1 Bev S.1111e 11 tndlenaoooi Wunlnoton 11 •ll•nte WedMMllY'I trMMlctlenl .aA.HIALI. """1cM LMllU4t ANGELS-Ac:llvelld Gerv Pettit, out· lllldlr C»tloned Tonv Me<k, oltc.Mr, to l!Omonton of tM Peclflc Coe" LHllvt CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Actlvetlel lot> J1mts. Pllciler C»tloned .Mark Gllbtl't. oulfttlcMr, IO 81iffelo of tne ArMnQn A n ocJ11lon CLEVELAND INDIANS-Actlv1tld ltOY Smltll Pt!Chtr Sant Jett BeAlrt, ollcMf', Ml!M of Hit "'-'i<M AHOCiehOft Nallfllllu..le CHICAGO CU85-PUl'Ch1Sld thl c.on- trect of Oeve GumPff't oitCMr, tronn low• of trit Amtrlcen Anoc:latlon C»tlonecl SltYt E noel, ottc:n.r. lo IOWI l'OOTIALL N•llenlt l'Mlbll Lllt1U41 BUFFALO 81LLS-Walvtd Perrv Hartnell, offemlvt nntmen NEW ENGLAND PATRtOTS-Sloned Trevor Mltlctt, centtr, Ron Ptltl'Mfl, 11c:t1e. end Nick Ltewtllvn. ouaro Alltta.d Luthtr Henson. nose t~cllle Annou11C1<1 tl\lt l ot> Mocertkl I nd Frid ltlef'tarch offentl-.. ltntmen. ltfl 1r1lnlr19 camo NEW OALEANS SAINTS-lt ... •MCI Grt9 GrHtv cMlentlve bKk encl R00tr Tevtor, ~~v• ••ckle ST LOUIS CARDINALS-SlontO D1nnv Pl11m1n, WIOI rect1var Ulllflad Stetft l'Mlbll LMllU4t PORTLAND 8REAKERS-Announc1<1 thll 111 39 P11v1rs ere frM eoents dvt to llM cluD'I lnet>llltv to mH t Its oevroll HOCKIY A,,,_.!Utl "Klltv LMllll BA LTIMORE Sl<IPJACKS-Announct<I the rellrement of 8ennett WOif, Otf1n.em1n N1tteMI HldttV LMeut DETROIT RED WINGS-Slonld lltv St•Ulk, r'9111 w(r19 TORONTO MAPL..E LEAFS-~ 111111 Wtlllv end G1rv MU.Olm oe· ~ p E Wm a 1·acat1e1n that fcNJ IHwmd l'our i.1 /dl'fl Jrt'anu Wm poSfOXf mtn <J "<>rid oj uttmatrhtd tltgona Wm o ll()l'Oft IO tht t'COl/f \ff\l(Qlf porH oj call un u Pritt<.l'JJ crutu at th' Da1h Pilot s "~'Ht .... ----~-------ENTRY FORM DAILY Pll~>T 7 Nlf.HT M ICAN RIVIERA CRUI •: re f'rllH ""'' 1~111 Ill lhr \tf'aoe111 ,,,.,,,.,.Ct.-for r ..... , romplf>tf' tlw ""'" (or,. eM wrw/ II alM,t •1!/I I "<II ,.,,_.,,, ,_'Ji,_"' tPH,..,.,.I .,,.,t /"" tht,.._,t I: I l .i "' ,,,. ,,,,,.,rJ '"'" ''"''""' I ,.Hrt -- 4 DD/U ~~-----•N I f'UO\ E ----,_ • ._ ..., n. r ' '',... - A-rtt Of P•1rrwt11 0 I tr1n I ~ l.~ 01-11<1.stl 01mo. lll:s . 04--1210!> O~nlClf ltti~.• · 0 6 ,,.,_-I.JI j() 0 I •~•; f()J Or> CHFCJ. f \Cl OSE t> 0 fll[C I CIHRCC nJ \H 0 ll"'t 0 \l~TfR( \If/I ··1HIH \tT fl ~ f.\ flHl • er ll't It/RI '''·'' lfl ---~ ... ------' t ·summ.aries Ott Mar .... MWnlllil W•C*UOAY'l •HULTS WIDNHOA.,., ••SUL TS 11'111 .. '1•eY ._......,._ MM'll!el ""' .. "'"""' ................. ,.n •AC•. 6 futlOllOs ,.JT aAcl. HO ... , .. OM Solo ~'ft l'WOll) JIO 140 240 Juw Fw l4•• <,..ul!lltl .... 160 ,. M .. Et ,.,. {\11191\tueltl 600 JM ttl11 llCtlt IC¥d0ul JM J40 Fl,_. NOtlll (LIOl\eml 4 ~f~Y Kla"I (kdJ Time I 11 llS • SICOHD aA.CI. 6 turlCHlfl $1 ... llt/\t MlfftOrY (LOllWI) ~ uo uo SUITlf'IWlr I! l'hctf olct ( Sl••tft• I uo 0 0 llldM O.wn IMeul . uo Time 1.12 st O.AaY oOua1.• l7·11l N'41 '1140 U COMSOt.AnoM DOUeLS 17·41 h-4 IS 20 TMiaO bea. I 111' m.,.. Oii t..rl ltlvtf Fenw CP111c.1vl 320 i.o 1 tO P1'1n<a• C1rlolt <Torol llO HO Soft Dawn <'°"'C.,ron> Tirnt I~ 1/S U •XACTA () 61 Pl t4 11100 HO "ouaTH ltACa. • tur10n111 Queen of Mlredor (Ol•VlrtU 7IO ~00 HO Vur Oetermlllld <Cntldsl 28 IO 1000 Praper Me (V11tn1utlll l 00 Time I 12 l'll'TH ltAC•. I 1116 mill\ L• Vtrne's 810 Mic (Olivares) 9 IO 4 00 2 liO LOIClld Deck (\leltfllUttl) J 40 UO Baroeln Betconv !St Mert1'11 3 60 Tlmt 143 l S 15 IXACTA (I 101 oe•d 111 ~ Time 11.tS• • t.60 a2 IXACTA 11»1 Nici Ml.GO i.C~OND ltACI. Sflt verelfl UOOf And Ft iaty (Llc:kl'Yl 100 , ... uo oreen wino COICltf'tcllMfll 720 uo An.111 FHture ICarclo11) HO Time 11 n n IXACTA. 11 •> .. io S7060 TH•O aACI. »0 Yttcb CMnll<lld llUlt (Hefl) Wlll"""'O T .... 10 WO-I Alldliwl l1Wftl Time It IS l'QUltTH uc•. 440 v•rdl lt1IS8 A S.Ull !Hart) SounCllllOOCllomt (~ ttltoll) Slutrtlle <Crt•W l Time 11 S7 S2 IXACTA l•·l l h l<I MOO 11.l"TH ltAC•. ~ verdl. Hot We•t I 11.,1) Ftv •111 Jev (TrNSUl't ) Jett ttd!i•llO ANllf (Cr•ew> Time 22 17 uo J.20 2'0 )40 JIO .... . 2 .... 1l0 110 Ut 110 t 10 27AO •• 4-10 uo uo 1.tO U IXACTA (7·1J Niel ltlM UO UO l lO 2UO 1'411 SIXTH aACI. ' furionv• HIQft Neturei (Sofll ) Ll\l_Motll (H1w1tvl C..Pli!n's Clllnel (lllllil\tuelel T 11'\e -A 1 ll 5 14 00 4 IO 320 )00 260 u o SIXTH aAc•. &ilO ..,.,.1 111•' tn "4tr Cro"'"' ICrN11Wl EllY Gfent (H Gerct.l W•M•lltl ltldl (PllkenlOll) TimrtUO -660 ~ n •XA.CT~ CH O Oltd l!l.20 ••V•NTH •ACI. MO v ... oa SEVaNTH ltAC• One m·~ OCl turt Snv BrlOI (Me11l 14 20 • 60 2 20 VIClorv Oelll ICltdaM) l.AG .2.AO uo l.IO uo UO; Oeilv ausv (Torol HO 120 Envle Oe Aire <Sttvenu 2 10 Jul\Olmoood ( Lltlltv) . EH Y tr.c1!n.tton Two (H~l T•me 1.35 t ~ IS aXACTA 13· l) oeld Slot so Time 21" n l"ICK SIX t 11 4 f ·J I 9 10·31 Pl•d '60,163 IO to one wlnnlr111 tlektt ll•A honest '' Pick SI• contolltlon PliO 17•2 20 to 12 WIM lrlQ llcktts (love hOraetl 12 UACTA ll·7l H.d 111..«I. •IGHTH aACI • ..0 yW$ Ima Mlr>CIOC (TfMAUl'I) ltt911 •urnor (Hert) ti to 7.20 ~ 1740 4 20 uo llGHTH aACI. • furl0tl9• 80l9tl' Mlllte (Mell J 700 ?60 140 2'0 uo 360 Solvency (~Mcntlll) Time 21 M U l.llACTA 17·4) NICI,,,. " Little Rid CIOuel P•nc.1\fl Liv 4-C (Orteoe Tome 111 1 S NINTH ltAC•. One mot 12 fl>tQ< Wt !4·~-7-S-S·!). lllJlllCI )131 .. to•ll w1nn.ne tldtttl (MX nor-) 11 PIO. Sb•~· ·-"Id u 1 eo 10 ns '""""t.no t ielk.i• < hOrMI) _, 1 NIN'"4 •Aca. "° ord• Frenn .. Meoeten tMC'Cerron1 • 60 300 240 Cl'lorllte ~ (Pldroul 960 00 llvt Smollev ISt1ven1) 7 to Time: 1.31 215 SS llJlACT A IS-II OtlO 1110 SO S2 DAIL y oouai.1 IS·ll Olld 120.IO Attendenc1; 11.135 E11v Slnd5 IH G1rd1I ' · 660 lme Jue Too !Harmon) ~ICko Ster Cl rookal Time 27 23 S2 •JtACTA 17·1) oeld Lll,20 Attendance s.o Speedway riders ready for qualifier"'; gates opening at 6· 30. • Spcedwa) motorc)cle racing at Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa resumes Fnday night as cyclms conttnue preparation for the Aug. 23 qualifier. The the rounds of qualify- ing le.ad to the U.S. Nauonal Cham- pionship. Huntington Bcacb'sAlan Chnsu.n 1s the leading po1ou ndcr in loold.oa ahead \O the q ualtfysng rounds. wb h bcitn m Auburn Aug. 17. Cbnst1an assured hsmsctf of e lead by finis hing th1ro at the Coeu Me.a speedway last week. Fnday·s racmg bciins at 8 wnh ,,:OU ;LL MAKE THE'·:· BEST CHOICE WITH OUR BETTER SELECTION 0 11ou8eot mnpo; la..,. iMJ MERCEDES ,,, '" a I f • I I I ) ,,_,_ . ,_.., . ,, __ ......... ---.. '-•"-. ........... ._,,... PUBLIC NOTICE STUDY RESULTS AVAILABLE WHAT'S BEING PLANNED? REASON FOR THIS AO WHAT'S AVAILABLE WHERE YOU COME IN PUBLIC HEARING \ \ \-=--"' ____,,_"'_ '" \ .. " The C11~un11ngtor> Be•ch propases 10 improve Brookhvrst Stteel from the Talbert Channel to Pacific Coast Highway The proposed c_onatrvc~10 con11st1 ol wtdentng 500 feet ol roadw•y from lour six lanea.. 1nc1vd1ng ttie bridge sp•nn1ng T •lber. h•nnel B~ tween the channel and Pacific Coast Highway lhefe wlll also l:>tl bike paths and pede1trlan sidewalks The pro1ec'i •S toc.at9d w•lhtn Ina Santa An• Ba 1n FIOOdpla1n and margin•lty alleclt lhe degraded weU•nds to ttl4! N!t ano •at of tl'le pro1ect Siie Th• Cth of Hun11ng1on Beach hH ttvdteel the elfecll this pro1.ct m1g111 tieve on the environment Our stud ... show that 11 wrll not s1gn1f1Gt1n1ly •llec:Mne qvaltty of Iha .,.v1ronment Tl'le repart tn11 ekPl•tns why 11 called an Environmental AasH~ment Thia notlOe 11 to Inform you ol the avallat>lltty of the Envlronm-"tll AtM .. ment tor you1 review The Enwonmefltel A1sessment for the 1mprcwemM1 of Brookhurll Street w .. 1pprov.a by the f!eci.ral Hl;h· way Admln111r•t1on on July 8 1H5 and 11 avallable In lhe Oevetoe>ment S.vte .. Oepanment City of Hunl· 1ngton Beach Hours era Monday through Friday 8 00 AM 10 500 PM II yOY ha~ any comm9nll reg1rd1ng IM pro1ec:t, p~ 1ubrn1t th«n 1n wrlf\ng to Olene 'I' et en 91arsu,. "*M· lant Plannet Oepe,,m9'11 01 O.v91oprmtnt S.rvteaa City ol Huntington Beadl, 2000 Main Str .. 1, Hunl· 1ngton BMch. Ca1ttorn11 92'48 All comments mull be svbm111ed by ~vou•t 30 11M16 ., .-..-. \ "· .. I • I I mr• i Oen. JO Oullara. • Ad.t n,,.~ ~ 1nu·i 't.trh . lout rw po111011 ul pa\mfnt tf'fundabk. • Adclltional li:nM IM1 be pure~ for 12 00 ra\·h • l'ru n rnutl be lllCI~ m IM ad • I.I."'' 11111 '\pph 111 th" 11·•1 ;•tali'. rrnt•I or ~Ip wanttd cluaillcationl or au1omobJ" pm"J ov"r t :?OOO • \\'11l11lilt omh to 1•m<1J~ p1rt1 .iJ1rt11 '• ~l~ rMtCbandiM. ~---. --:--... ~ ~ --r·-,.. "".'9 --". -. ·---J... ----~ TM DAii. Y Ptl.OT R!Al>LIHll ClAS&lflED QfFIC£ HOURS Fl!~./ oOH If!:!~'°! ,...,,_..,..tA M ~ --•"' 8()()AM ~OON ~~ = • :: ...,_C-.tt Mf' ,,.'" ' ' .,.. &OOAM •OOl>M • l :l ~ ----·"'i· -. . . . , . . -. GE 159.9100 ------- IEIT If TIE WIST SlflOI Nicely bUllt ~ Bdrm home on an e"1ra taro-lot. Thia home le located In a very desirable west aide area. Great opportunity tor the 111 time buy« 848-7171 THE REAL ESTATERS let U1...., YM Sell Y •• p,.pertrl C111 Clu1tfW, 642-5678 for information & surprisingly low cost. 0 ,..,,,..,~ ..... ,' D' ,... •ow• tt"iJ,.,.b ed .,,,, I• t.. """'. ··OV'"' ""'" .. ~' I W £ B H E R I II I I I ·I S A S 0 1 I I I r I I 1 A 0 U l [ I I ~ 1; I U')tTEY I I I I I~ "'~ 100<'/l/Nl!jl .... .,u ,.. ... llh'Qlnl WPlll\ b~lllll "'"" ClolfW!1 • H1r rn(lllO Wiit If yOU c•" 1 •""'" ,,,. •'119"•...., on• C.OLDWeu BAN~eR ~ ..,. ....... 11 12,111,111 tie moet br .. tht•klng 10- cetlon ~. YtNr own gated contemporary mansion IUfrounded on 3 tides by ocean. All MW, exqulella In ~ da111ll. 4 BR. e baths, ' fir• plliOMJ ........ I M•tttlM4 1• tll4 J>•lel •M ..... ll••n , .. •t •iw• "-tt I,.,.,.,.. 20 roflo -,. ,._ ,,_ ·~ ,, ... .. .i..tt ... '" ...... ,, •• tlw .. ...,..,,. I .... •••r •• ,,, •1111 ·~ ""•• - Call 642-5678 ' Orang , lelt!LUW 1111 ltlt Wu t.. Slit IN WMW! iiiiiL iiiiTm IANl<INO --=-==~c~~~;:::====~~=~~=~-liiiiililiiiiiiiiiiiii----...................... iM" --1AU1•111111 h.nl l.OLt cS.p. • .. wk &o I cte.t Yid" ~IT ..,,,, -_ 1 .,. -IUl. llflll Ula LU & WOC>n.8, "'"'18 111'1 ':~.:=rt~~ lnNI C .. 2tS.5»MZ1 -:~ t«i fr.. ~Oftlqil~tM ••••••fl• now b ~f."'P· In~ db, r;:d·=· tettort Pnon. & eecny C•Ofornla '*'-el.• !Md• llll llU federal Otpo1h In· Suoc ... tut eaent With Pff, prwf .., Q)IVI (714) 1 lkllts. Detlori t1tp. help.. Ing mu1tl-11ete ~lal *1 W•tern Sa-tingt, ,_rt tlnw W 11 tr• In-JIU Tml PAY &ltMCe COfP "-Im.. Pfotninem co ..U 90-Auto a.i. /-f f\11, !llfowth pollllon. Send' HrvlcH or1•ntzatlon, on• 01 CeJtlornla'• lead· <:ludet 8at & Sun. IRV1N£.' PAIT 191 NI ~ ~-411 °"' ~ ~ eoent ... LUtmt tm1' . J rMWM to: AO 31•. = hu • pert.time Tel* 1"9 llnaflCl•I lnttltutlQfll AAHCH FAAM!RS MAR-:>Pt>ortunlll•• avellable lnturence Dept. fhe ~r.~ to aUlde lo• AftJ ~ r::--· ......._ £.(pd ~d. front 1-~ftiiiiiiii'"~t' "'lo p 0 Bo ...... i. hM an Immediate open. " ptvmable c... -· ........ -.... .._ *"' _._ -· 1 · ,..., I, . x ' . ,... .. ,IQtl avalla~ In OUt lne tot • C"'1f Typiat In KET.~ •• 2$51 IMne With the LO$ ANG!l(S entry ...... INSURANCE ,.., .... Cof'I. , 2PM ~,,. ..)' :::::: .,_ ---·- Colt• Mete. c.. 92921 Corona Del Mlf office. °"' Co.ta hoteM btanch Aw. COita ~ .. TIMES CirciulatlOn oe. Cl.!RK '9qUlf• the 106-ti~ aupply of buyen • .,... ~ '"' I --.., ... AIDE, ~In PfT, ,ueitt Prevloue teller U· Dan~. pan,,...,t In 04'f doOf 10 •'IOWttto Twpm· and dAc:Uon Pt'OV!ded HtltbOr etvd, c M. "n:. ~~,. tMICMrln_,..lcnt rm/ ...... l*tenc.ltpreferr~ '°' Tl\tt It en ent~ ~ poe.. MITILlflellllT dOor ~ao.er ...._ ~ • •-•iwu ~ -----~ ,.,. "'•PERS,......._ "'" con·•-.·•'--........., .... ,. .. 11 .. ,~ y .... , ~ t..__ ~"ram O.uarantMd • FemDWI"" with..-...... --• .....,. ...... .._,,. ~L~ "'",..,inter• --/WI -+$250 mo .... 5-2357 ..,......,.,..,,..._....,. ""'" °" .. , -n ,,.. • a:..-.lum''• --to Pltftctc T~•· <:lo lot~ tot -~• • ''~' Kip Conner •t (71•1 vanou• tyJ)ta of lo.M, 'Of I~ B9'ch Qeneral fly wage plue oom-_,, Almu -.. 7 8 E ........... lL A.NIMALHOSPITAlneec:t• 780·t200,or1t09bvand ~arlngteala.1•t•loan pr~b. Wtdtd-vt •••• mlaalon. Houri'. 4PM to •X t~bel& • -1th t.. CA . .,.. I C«'Mft ng.dc1WJ.w .......... -1 flp/t wtlltltt&awknd <:Om~ an ai>Pflctillon doc:uMenti, melr!teln ct. P*\ded duti. not nee. tPM Tr•lnlftQ la munlctltlon 11t11 8&e 1l7, Coll!• Meea. ~,.,., 457.0150 M-F.~tYP&at· kenMI peraon. hper cNMo buslneu hour• pattment niea .. wt11 .. 4'4-3531 PtOv1ded Pot911tl&I to • ~ be conedelldoul '2127 8ALE.8-Two Reel E9f... ' 7 nMdtd Appfy In fl9'tOn Other general duti.1 Dentat/Ortho Aeoac>t awn $300 ~'*... ' •H•ntNe to <Set• I S•l•pearaon• ~ fof 111iii1ii1•m•m"~11iii1ii••m• Mon-Sat blWn 1pm & CAllfORNI' Typing of 50 wpm It,., s--.ltt .,.,L ~ •~A 'or en lnleMeo#, call: M • TECHNtCIAN 1n our ·IOeal FU!""-o.n.ou. •pm et •ao I! 17th St CM n QUlr.O ·A.q.d, ·~8 g..2~8 ,_,_.., '57-2.311 ex.t. t204 l,,.;tenca Otpt rou Wiii Commlealon apt1ts COMt 53.....a2 llllllDflUL FEDERAL W• offer competitive 5en1a1 llllUL.,,.lm .~~:'i!'nti:,r:U...ne. ll•rtl•IT Propert1eat7S.~10 mllm..,.. IUITllUl(I ) 31 .. ,,P-~1 ,.,.._ .. H~ ularlM, and •"~lent ·I.I.&. (Int .......-.. 'llty , ..... ,._ on..,Ml .. t•t•loane tor Vet hCeOlt1ll 4 n.... _.,. ~~.......!.!.-"!..,~ Proar1iMJw Cotta Meaa -_. ~ tM!Mfttt. Fot Interview 1ot general Pleet In CM. ..._, .. ,Ml ,....,....... • "'-dng oon"191.,_l.tve plue Set eeneftll ;;tn• Entf'y leoMI poeltSon tor,.. ~ ~ ,.-_;: offlcie needt atchltectuta.I Corona o,t' Mat, CA 82 25 ~ntmtnt. pleeM tall 8om. front oHloe .,,,,... aon ... Ing time ..n-~ lntYr*'Ce on 4'6i$411 cent gfftd/ student w/ ..._."""'.-• -• letk;ia Tampa at: ._....... ploymen1 wtlh vwlety In FD I c owned proPerty 1YP!nO ekllla. word pro-time. Swtino,.., 16. ctr.n.m.n with QJ>er. In An ~ual ~unity Ool>ty to QIOW w/pt. act. lhaU 'llllOftc TNa ~ • Aevlft of Pt'oPettY tor RECEPTIONIST plf __...... .......,. .. lnt'I oll & p/hr. Call tor ept)t. type V construction. Emp~ (lH~ llt-41ll 546-8344 Wiii ~ In the day to adequate eowr~ BootlkMC*. bllllng tor ~"' l.;;t;d Newport 530-1230 btwn 10-5 Salary <:ommeniurate BMutv (11,. lit ,.TI1 DOMESTIC POSITION dav toutlneof a .,.,y buty • Melntelnlfl9a tlck-ler. Medic# Offlee 54&-•11• g:tet.' Pert time -.. ... tut.•-wl•lll*· Cati 850-5175 ............. • --tie drlvl ........... ~. Dutlee will Include I t ,...,.....-, ....----.. , -em • ng. ......, g, oHlot tu.Pt>IY ord«lng a • ~,:;.~:, ;-;:,t llllmJlllT ~~•II Debb •. time, ml* ~ oqoes • &llllTUT 1111111 for N.8. aculP1ut~ nail l'D(IJ WESTERN ~:!'.nlda~~I~~ e~ ln\l9ntOfY, flllng/logglno/ report• hly 10, •mall orflee Hr• drMng rec. EnthuMlttJc lot ""1'0l'age In Cotta ahop. Rent or com· UI\ ft avail. to ltay Ol*nlt• waretlou91ng matttleft, • Computer Input 9em-4pm. ll1• typing a lllllTAIY I wiling to leetn. Gfowdl ~ 4aya PM. r• mi.ion 64~ 18 S'VINGS wl'*1 needed, lot edd'I mall room acttvtti.. ltt• ld•t• mu1t ri...,. ap.. ltllng. Star1 ~ C.il For t>uey Trewf ~ Potenllel, benefttt ..ii. ~1~ln=:wred BEPARTOFOUf\FAMILY ft P41Y Salary open. kitchen dutlH . end e>roprlete exl)erlence Suvlew Flnenclal, Mutt ~ Jt1nt typing Ruby't Olnet, e,lboa ltkils .. -=-==-:-=~:=--::=,..,...,,,=·~ 7 Yr Old need• lovlng EQual Oppot1unl1y 780-1883 photocopying Employee bnklng 11 a plut. Max.I-87~ 1ldltt, buty phorle up·, 976-9028 llllf fl&IT ATTENDAHl'S.THEATER NANNY, prof. Mom-' alto..,.., ..... courter mum Mlary .. S18,000. knowledge of bkkplng. ITTERIAIDE t.m for Cuhlera-Snack Bar. Dad need houMkeeplng, Cletleal llml-llUtl ut1':3 ernploytrt ~lele. p/yr The F 0 .1.C. often a llOIPTlllllT WIH ttaln trevel bullneaa. dlaabled cnud tlftlnQ req .. ....,.,, Apply Stadium Drive-In t>enenta lnctd MW c.r, IWITllllUI IPI flor retell atore, Or~ & Val Calif. dr!Ywl lie. great t>enente paek&Qe. 0 C Alre>ort eree Ad. Celll •1tC9'>t~ Only on Fri. Hrt 1-ewn. ttM,1ng s;:· I you ere loOldnQ for extt• Theietet t501 w. Katella. paid vacetlont, good Part T1IH 1 L A dellverlea HMvy tttt· reqd Good benefit• fnciudlng Dental & Villon Agency Medi recep-btwn 2·5pm. 95~ t , S40 p/wk _ 2:30-tpm, ~ ~·-~.'; Orange. After 5:90PM 1a1wy .. Uve out, flex hrt. M•!Of O.C. firm hU an Ing, good drMng tecord peckeoe. Apply In~ coverage 11 you woutd tlonllt. PleHant pro-15 p/hr ~ age to to ~ like ~l/TO MAINTENANCE Ref1. teq. Nwpt Bch lmrned oppty for en I Call 6"2-s&aa lor llPC>t. tam-4pm llke more Information teMlonaJ phone \lolce/ SECf\ETARY· Nat'I nrm pref OU1golng Reta. Lag. Mouni.ln. Knottl 9'rrY Part-time ,,__. ,_..,......... 55&-8080 Lois 9-5 lndlv. to "'O\ltde relief lot DRIVE'... for •~-1 ... .._ Tm al.Y... ... pleue <*I pet'90nnet, •t aPl)e9lenct, Muet be or-n .. r airport. mature, Nig. 951-1 t7• Ferm, or Win Pl"IDe end ._. ........... ..h. 1 1 ""' ...... .,,... 11•,.J ............... --976-5400 EOE genlnd, accurate Mff· non-tmkr. 20 flex. A....,oa, Cell ua rtOWI W• maintenance poatlon, lllllElnl the c e o Per -llverlet. Neat appear· -~71 .. 12~:"!'.:.. ttartw. Typt 85 wpm. hra, 18 hr. 641-1771 Marty ~nnDTS haw MY«111 ooenlnQ9 lft exp'd lndlvldu.i required Full Time manual s>09tlng etor/ree.ptlonltt & ofter ence, Od drtvrno record~ rvlne ., 4'U..,~ 1 INTERIOR DESIGNER · c 0 n tact_~ A.'! 9 • 1 '11"UI\ c .M , H.B. or P. v, for wash, WU' & general Journals ledgert & Ban~ support lor our ci.rlcel bring OMV record Start r OW::O/I& FlllAY Educetlon, good 1klll1, 9Ml-5pm. 5~ ' ll•nUT /p. 11IH ... 2~ Mr'Vlclngofcar1&truck1. rec.~termeareeros>-•taft Sucee11ful ce('-$4.00Jhr. Apply Mon-Fri 5,. eiq:im necx4eHry, ..no U9t be eltpefi.nced. ~ 7 ~to: -3457 Bilch-St, portunlfy with ectrv• ~14at9-Wlll ~pftor t.i.. at Mester 8h.lliprfnt:"234 trYlne Co. Miele• retUme. 1137 S.yslde Or, ............ Plft n.. H•ve good typing akllta. llll'U.U • TB.mlllTm Suite #125, Nwpt Bch. large Co In Newport phol)e exper.. type Flldlet CM. 540-•174 mature FfT .per900 with Coron• Del Mar, 92825 Homeo.wnera Anoe. Be P«aonai* and heve PllJ.:::' cotes c:9llng -t..o. 82858--1708 Beech. Send resume to •Swpm .ccoretety, xlnt N • bkkpg. oert I ofc 1111n1, wttndt lncldg Mon & nice appewence. 5 days So Callt com-Pt(Mded. 14 lO 110 per: lm •-·-PO Box 11381CM92827 telepbon• mannerl1m. oou~~Rc~~,,:.~pert typing. phonet, com· .alWILIT SALIS Tuea. se. plhr Call per wMlc (1 1AM to 2PM) p.i,,y ,-. to hlr• and hf + comm. & ~ ......... good oral & written com-putor, exper~ helpful. 75. p/day plut bonus. 873-8170 9am-51)m Celt Lind• 87S.2311 treln ....,.,., potential liP'--Work In C.M, Call ~ Wheel Allg!vnent, Brakea, IUILll Ill munlcatlon." Mon·Ftl, " t Im e · Be U' It roma 1 glr1 offloe. 201--9..00 Sell Jew•lry at O.C 9 to 5 WEEKDAYS pMcai,ra. Mutt beowr 11, ~• 751~1!0 btWft •. Tune Up. Newport Tire Monday night only hl'I plday. Cornpen1at1on cieaner.. Cd 84-4-~~2 Guardlen Angel mutt be Swapmeet, Sat & Sun llOEPTmlt SEm/IE•99 HNI appearance and t-t pm Mon ltlN F1t. Ctr, 3000 e. Cout Hwy, 3-10pm, exper req. $6. p/hr. PIM.M contact HUI.I~ experienced In large Mutt have cu Call lor Computer Compeny. vr' MUST BE ABLE TO GET ... ___ ---------- Corona del Mer. e.t&-7i44 Of ... &-1208 ~ n S 1anIfIe1 d , Cornmlulon +Company problerna. Thia la a FfT Dawn, Friday A~. 2. Good telephone INWIMr, Ex1>«'d Mtchboerd, front ALONG WTTH THE ,...,..._ ...,_,_ Banking .. ,..... 1,...,,5800 ext. 75.tt or Beneflts.&98-23SSP.M. position w/lo1t of O\lef-btwn12-2PM.751· 397 ~~-~lltrl ·,~!' deek,type50plus,eom-PPOSITESEX.lfyca,.,. hr.+bonl.al6CMS2IO •• In•--·-,,,,.._, time Applteent• mutt • •--•••... ""-·.., Al). 5-p/hr. Pllt• HI*.• plut. llPOrtl minded and cen T ede ....... ., ofd •hlft tot -·-· acoeptlng,>s>pllcatlon1for "vco FINANCIAL SER-HllJIUUIOUll h•veelltherlghtenawert ..._,__ C.M.64S...971 • lrvtneMfg/Deeign ltart lrnmed .• aall Mr ~.:.,E'odlH with. 1...-aTill FfT bu• pertOn. Flne din· VICES. 820 Newport Knowledge of MWIAQ. Call to quality. ~8-6358 o apenct 3-4 hra Mon-llOln/TYPllT Lydia 2~ S.t•751-4010 ed. 142..697t 1111111111 Ing exper. Apply btwn Center Or, N.B. EOE-Leona. Home Fabric Ctr, H•IRDRESSER & n~ Wed-Fri. aftn1 w/Older Candidate to handle i---------A ae1t .. tar1., to aaltt In 10am-5pm, TREES, 4.40 54s,.5120 or apply In pet· ,, .___,,.... phytlcal able tedy the de>r'-ment 1 eon-He 11 o trope· Cd M OLllll TYPtlT eon at 17111 & lrvtne, N.B. t1~~ ~-7!:',..F~!°" w /vl1lon Impairment hHvey phone, mutt ,__. 873--0910 _.., ~· .............. lag. Beta. 558-9851 days poteNgood lyplnglkltls, trot~ for owned 3ood grOW1h J>Olltlon In F/O .-&llPll non-1moker Newport Rer.::&atate propert)M. OU'J Fiii Tl•T Operation• Dept. at Cor-MP, p-"", f Mtaurant HAIRDRESSERS want~ LIW IUAIO Beech. Phone tot 1n1er-Need9 to Independently A porate Office of re1-.,, ""' to nn new Hair .Studio In ey Strell Import I, quail-view. Jen 752-8522 ,.,..,ch & compile dete. 11111 .1111 taurant chain. Position e1tpet. nee. Avall. lmrned. COM. Station• to be fled applicant• on1v need You'll elto be r•ponstble r9<1ulres xlnt typing 1klll1: 67M5n lea .. d. Richard Daya •1>9ly. Car provided, ror eet•blllhlng tickler & lll•EIOlll T uper. w /word pro-FILI ILlll 759-8933/Evea 497-8272 salary o4t0otlable. Apply llllng aystem• fOf this oesslno a piu.. Vatled Per1 time nu.... a ........... 1_, 1..,. ...... 11 -t..t In perton Mon-Fri. btWn budget dept SELL IY gener11 offl<:e dull••·. · '"""' _,..,.ng .. r •11n1lm4't 9-5. 64S.5287 ~ • Mtnlmum 2 years bank-20-30 Hrs p/wlt to •tart ctoeument1 for CPA firm ~th aome client• tor t-------- lng •xperienoe In• note TELEPlllEI Wiii develoP Into full time In Nwpt Bch. 850-2nt. cozy talon In Huntlneton .-S dept. Of loan dept. position. Apply tn peraon Mk 1°' Sanely 9-5 Beach. Mary 891-7048 iq>er. In quallty brick •Muttbeconaclentlous& PIT or FfT. Chotc. 01 9am-"lpm,at; UlllnLllT work. n.-cled lmmed. •ttentlve to detall. houri 11 yours. Call T. H. Tiii at.lY 11111 llO, · FllllllllL rent yout own private fotSo. Org. Cty. Muon-- • Strong verbal & written At ioc I at•' Te 1 •"' 1lU2 IHltftt A UVRaft••• roem w/balcony, bullt-ln ary firm. 493-1123 ah. 5 comlTIUfllcatJon 1111111. marketing 953-6870 "· WUI 1 ... cllentele, In Newport 91111&1. USISTllT ·~~~i~: oum. 11.Jr.:o111 aoa11nm11T1Y1 Beech.M5-3-41a · 1th Hmlt~ x-Aay Permft metJoo la• must. lemlllw with r9COMtruc· HOUSECLEA~ERS. run or tor busy Ortnopedfc Of· • GOOCl lYi>lno lkNl1. tton. Muet be eble to reed OllUOTlll NH d ed Io r d I 1 p I a y per1 . time. Own transp. flee ruH time. ~8824 For mo;. rnform•tlon. plant. Own truck & tool1. .D.t.C. Is IMklng full time edvertlsl~ ..... •t rapid· Engl. •pl(g. 6"6-3079 IEllOIL am PIM.M. call FDIC Person-Work In Org. '& L.A. collectort In the lrvlne ly .upand no loc:el dally HOUSEKEEPER M·Thur, ature. front ofc, FfT. Intl nel (71•)875:5400 Counties. Cell btwn atM to perform eontlnu.-ne'#8'>8')« AggreaalVe, cooking & help w/Ohtld Med· CM. 8cic ofc exp Banking 7-8:90am or >Ti>rn only. ous col1ectlon effort• on Mlf-<llacipllned lndivld-E-slde CM ~990 rvef. 5-48-T73e 1 ...... ~ 954.-3317 delinquent ac:coonts. M uals may earn excellent ... ~·-partotourllQuldatlonyou Income (salary i' com-l1•ntrtllle...trns BDlM '1 n11•1111 OUllD-.UWlllS Wiii be Involved With con-mtaalon), beiletlta and Hoorty to start. Piece work • • II . The lrvlne office of the FIT PIT Perm1nent. tacllng borrowers by advancement opportunl-to fOllow. Contact Scott, 11 I Federal Deposit In· Crown Hardwar•. COfona phone to rNOlve delln-ty. Anancial, f19W99aper Sandatman 542-8455 Call BenJamln, 5"&-4333 •wan.ca.. Corp. tlaa del Mar . .81.3=Z800 qwenc:y probleme. ¥~ °' agency expeJlenoe urMfY worker lot Chrl$- lmrned. openlngi tor pet-••••ios wlll review borrower• 11... nece11ary No phone INST~LLER/WARE· t I an Church . e v. '°"' With the following P 1 -:-7.. ....... & recommend ec:tton u calla Send tesume to: HP10USECotorx O.C. tnterlof " •XI*· 1rt t me"' _...._., nec:eaaary You posaeaa Attn; Howerd Mullenaty ant Int driving r• per~. Sun AM/PM & • Min 2 yrs banking exp«. CHILDCARE: NANNY knowledge or conl4.ltn« cord. 714/557..()150 ~:iMc~ c!n":'~ In a note dept or loan Mature, educet~ n-srnkr credl1 col~lon pract~ IUlll OllST lnturance Marilyn Plefoe 5"9-3217 dept to care for 1 yr Old In So. & procedures as welt •• hn IHelt • Ablllty to type min . .40 Laguna. Live out. exper a tamillarlty with collection l&llY ftLIT P·tlme~O-~ ...-iy. For Hiii CUii WPM refs required. 681-8061 laws. This position ,..... SIO W. laJ ltrfft appt· 963-5&47 H.8 count« & phone lot draft- • Strong verbal & written qulrea iclnt verbal & writ· "'-· 1&.o...... la. tll2l 1ng & grllC)hlc ~- commun.lctitlon lklHs Cter1cal ten stcm1 Previous bank-_.ta .. .., Sell lhlngs rest wtth DatJy Exp not nee. wttllngness Banjllng expw. Is required IUll TYPtlT Ing Of flnanoe exper a Piiot Want Ada. to learn Important Start tor th1' potltlon. Maxi· If you're a ae1t-11arter and plus. Ple&M tend yout S4 hr Apply Mutw eiu. mum Mlary wlll not P · flexlble about Job assign-resume to F 0.1.c .. attn: : • • • •• • • • D . 1•11 P1•111-' Cproinstt;... M2~. I _FUUS2~!,7A3 ve, oeed $20,000. plyr and ments. the F.0.1.C. hat a Personnel. P.O. Box ... .,....,_,,,.., wlll be baaed ltrldty..on Job for vou. -Ouf dlvlelon 7549. Newport BNch. prior.ell!* & ~ucatlon. of benk llQuldatlon cur-Ca. 92653-1549 EOE HOPT/llm lot ltVlne Martcetlng Of· genlzetlon. Mutt have proleallonal phorle man- ner, front office appeer- anoe. type 55wpm ecr eurately, xlnt t>enent1. 558--4781 uan111m tmmed. opening, full time. typing. oertl otc dutlea, bkkpg .xp. helpful. MOANING SUN SHIRT co. 831·3-t~ llECIUTill SITE DIRECTORS· $5- A .p/hr, 25-30 hrl pM M on-Fri afternoon• (tome earty hourt avafl). ReQulrement1: 21 yra plut, 2 yrs exp. l'1 rec- reational prc>Q.r•.m. 12 unit• c:Ompteted rn ,., reetlOn, early childhood educ1t1on or releted area • ACTIVITIES LEADERS· S3 50...$4. p/hr, 20-25 hr p/wtl Mon-Fri. mornings Of aflwnoon1, Requlr• ment1: 18 yra Old plus, pr9'11. exp. w/)'Outt\ CS.. tlrable. wlll train ORIVERS:.$3.SQ-$4 p/hf Mon-f"rL flex. hrt R• qulrernents: 21 yrs Old plus, able to obtain Class II dr1Vel'S 11¢. Wnt freln. Contact Rene or Rlcit at Newport-Cotta Mesa YMCA. 642-9990 The F.D.l.C. offer• a gt"t rently has Of)8nlngs fO< l&TA llTIY .• -• FH TUIS : bonuaranu..!....eedsS;:-..J>'~ Xln&t benefit•~· lnelud-....,.,.1 cie(lc typist who .,... ..... • ....... ~ .. Ing Dental & VIiion peck· awrege typing IPeed• 111 train '5 p/hr start, Fun e 111.l ...._ F• I ._ M t • Sat. AM lhltts. We tr.in 1.,,,.-91-8-11------ age. 11 you would Ilk• 50WPM. The r:o.1.c . of· time, Q1owl1. companv. • -nu. ~ • Fllllllt : Quality people wtH have •Hw••i ••• •s more lnform1tlon, pleue re,. a gre1t benefllt 545-811 •If · H " h Sch I J H h e>ppty lor advancement ---call pereonnet et packagelncludlngdental • youarem ig 00 or r . ig : Callah2prn,631-3339o; tulltlrne.SeeSteve.H.W 97>5"00 EOE & vltlon coverage. If you O.ntn1tl11 Wtlttr •and would like to earn $25.00 to • 631-7909 Wr~ht, 126 Rocheeter would Ilk• more lnfor-oonng ·~ prel, Skylight .• $50.00 m commissions and more each e PllT_t..____ St • Costa M ... $2.17 per day Thal't All you pay lot 3 Hnea, 30 days In the DAILY Pl OT SERVICE DIEC TORY Specialttn 64S.8645 ;;8~~~~g:rtonnel. at • week-gtve us a call. You can work • 2 posmon1 avail P/tlme SAUi DlllSELlll : PART TIME m the afternoons and : 1 Photo Lab 8-42·2172 Toy Store SC pfua F/T- tericalflLI ILll~I art tt-..... r.__ coun--' • evenings and still have time to enjoy e . 2. warehOUM 898--0290 PIT Exper 754-156 t " ..... _, -_.. • W ff l e Must be del)endabte, d• SALIS CUii he Federal Deposit In· ors went~. Help boyt • your sum.mer. e o er comp €\te • tall minded Hunt. Sch tut•~ Corp. hu six and glrl• 1ollclt new • training and provide transporation • Hlgtl Sehl students pref Full time, oon.cientlous b I ti lh I well gtoomed P.,ton. opening• 10< Ill• cierk• su ecr P on• on e' • plus great prizes, trips, and plenty of• NT PERSON/INTER-refs will be checked To quellty you muit heve paper rout ... Must enJoy • MONEY! This lS not a paper route .• IOR PLANTS Full & part Costa Mesa Stat1oner1, 2 yrt exper. In n11ng. tort· WOC'tllng with 10-13 yr • d . d k Co • urne Must have own car 210 e 17th St, c M Ing & cheeking a11 forms *'·Early evening hourt • an ·~IS not seven ays a wee . me 71,.1557..0150 of docurnent1tlon Exper. wort< da)'9/ flexlble hrt. • help us get new customers for our : le99e<>Pte In e bank's nota dept. Is• eoic:i1"fr,:_ ~~iey : newspaper and have a good time • Ptrttfl11 llH~ httl Tt•ll WY plu1. The F.0.1.C. oft.,. a d Co d • a quaint Bed & Breakfast Enthullastlc full & part gr•t benefits p•ckege 6-42-4321 eltt. 206 • while you're oing it. me out an • hotel on the oceanfront Is time sales pee>ple needed lncludlng Dental & Vllk>n NAiil ll&ST : see what we are talking about and e 1oo111ng tor run time meld fOf s tennis & ectlve coverage. PteHe call IAILT ftLIT • you'll be glad you did. Call today and • Salary S4 p/hr start. SportswHr Boutique pettonnel. 975·5•00 • e 873-7030 located at s c Plaza EOE •start tomorrow! Call Mr. F.arl • 0 tlfi_.... 1.__A1 wtth •mlPOlll • 548-7058 or 241 -8432. • P/Tllrtltllerltmr ,:1~1:'d a~~p;;1~nce People wtlo need people lhould al'Ways check the Servtce Dlrec10fY In the DAILY PILOT rand MW dell In lrvlne e ORANGE COAST DAIL y PILOT e Hlll'dout Promotional Me· please call Robin at • • terlal Newport Pier 54> ,,..., need• good help lut It • 330 w 8Ay Str-. eo.11~CA92627 • Saloon on pier 675-620e PtY' to call us flnt. Appty • AH EOUAL Ot'PORT~ITY EMPLOYER • _. -----· -- In'*'°"· 55M510 Al. ·-········ ••••••••••••••••• Went Ads Call 6-42-5678 ______ ..,......._ • Friday, Aapst t SYDNEY o •••• ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19): Answers come from within - solutions arc found as result of meditation and dreams. Prottct priv.acy, keep promise to one who might be oonfincd to b<*ne or bo.sp1tal. Pisces, V11J.O natives fi&ure io unusual scenario. TAURUS (April 20..Ma) 20): Wish comes true, nnpbasts on emotional fulfillment and victory an oompetitton. Love rclauonship grows stronger. Financial picture bnghtCT than onginally antmpated Cancer native plays outstanding role. GEMINI (May 21 ·Tunc 20): Focus on achievement. prcitigc. promotton. Project can be completed. you'll rccea.vc credit Ion& overdue. Commumcatc: desires, ideas. needs. Don't permit pndc to block progress. Aries plays paramou~t role ... CANCER (June 2 l·JJJly 22): tress ·independence, crcauvit)', communication_Emp~.sls.Ofl-t-Fave pubhetty. cducauo~.~tton of spiritual values. You'll get to heah--of' matters where. romance is concerned. Leo figures prominent!). LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Take side roadS, avoid direct confront.a· 11ons. Family reunion figures prominently, mtu111on scrv~ as reliable guide. You'll learn by sharing. teaching. lnd1v1dual who helped you m past is again ready to prove loyalty. · Vlll~O (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22): Apparent defeat ts transformed into victory.'Si>otlight on public rdat1ons. special agrttments. legal affair&. serious considerauon of manta! status. ExcellCTit for purch~ of wardrobe LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. :!21. Maantam stead) p:{ce. don't rush to Judgment. Lunar emphasis on health. employmen1. pets., depen<kntt. Keep recent resoluuons conccm1ng exerpsc. diet and nutnt1on. Scorpao, Taurus persons pla} s1 gn1ficant roles. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-No' :! 11 Sccnano f11ghhghts ad,enturc. romance and travel. Get "1ews on paper. d1Sttm mouves. reahzt )'Our own worth. Status quo is shaken. and this change 1s to vour advantage Love relationship will m1ens11) SAGITTARIUS (No' 22-CXc 21 ): Ma1or domestic ad1ustmcnt figures prominent!}. Focus on home. ~uni}. fam1l}. long-ranF prospects Property ts involved, get expert appraisal 't ou'll ~m through d1plomaq Libra nata\e pla}s outstanding role CAPRICORN (Dex :!2-Jan. 19) Pauence becomes tremendou<> asset Pia) waiting game. reahze tame tW>n your sad~ Focus on tnps v1s1ts. definition of terms. Streamline techniques Get nd of superfluous matenal Pisces figures prominentf) AQUARlt:S (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Th ts can be \.Our po\lrer pla\ da'' Spotlight on achae\ cment. respons1b1llt). power. autho nty. m one' and lo,e. You are in dn,er's seat Fa,orable la~ d on funher ele,at~ prestige Capncom pla) s role PISCES (Feb 111-Man.·h 20): Stud) '\qua nu) message for' aluable htnt. Take 1natia11"e. be confident. lnow that Judgment and 1ntu1non are on targct You'll ~nsc pulse of public )Ou'll be at nght plact at crucial moment / IF AUOUST t lS YOUR BIRTRDA y )OU arl! )CnSltl\(' IO)'al mood). ha' e gourmet appetite and po'i'i1t>lc' d1gest1\.e proble m You can ha'e tremendous \uccess in dealing~ 1th publtc. espcctall) women Your mother has had more influence than your father -ll ts not unul.ual for )OU 10 sacnfice 1n order to help those close to you ~pee 1ally re lat I\ es. Cancer. C"apncom pef)Ons pla) 1mporunt roles in your life. You ha\C flair for showman hip. )'OU understand ,a.Jue ol ubhc1t . No,·cmbcr will be memoral>1e for ou 1n 19 S ------'"-'----- .} l 11 Antique Pew Fool Sole mah<>Q trim, 80" Wide SUO . .,73-3735 or ~2-925• 1n 8 pm -\ ChlneM ROMWood Cornar Chalre w/mother of P"'' lnley seoo pr ' 8'0-aee& ~ranch Country repro Oln-tno M1 wt• 1tra1tbck1 & 2 1rm ohra I.Ike new s 1500 152.oeeG -----HUOOLI! Oureble kldt furn a, .. , ~yl Bunk ~· $400. [)eej(}cn..1 1350 e1C 7to-M73 -I Uf rHllTlll LES 957-8133 Movtng· MUii ..U entire 1-!ouMflold trom e.d• to AntiqUM Cell 751-NM 0.,•I ~9038 !vtt SACRIFlCE ~. IOV'8 '"'· cott .. & end tabfea All •lnl cond tit 1200 DIMES A LINE WANT · ADS -I IMPORTANT NOTICE TO I PRIVATE PAf'TIE8 Stlll your Item• for $50 or leu In our f•mou1 OIMeS-A-LINES pub· ' 1111>«1 nch S•turday In the Daffy Piiot DIMES-A-LINE ad1 mutt b• pr•pald IO mall or bllng thMn Into th# Dally PllOJ omc.. Be 1ur• to Include your phone num,,.r or ad- d,..., In your Mi, haw. a price on MCh Item it no abor.vlat1on1. Sorry. no J!!"",.,.,.,Clal ad1, garage .. ,.., pro:dU<», plMtl or •nlmal• .,. acc.,,t•ble. DEADLINE: 12 Noon Frtd'1 Coata Me•• Office 3IO WMt 9aJ ltreet Coeta MNa. Ce. 12129 f•kM 1111 &46-•U5 ~~~::::::'~-~~~~~~~~~~~~ LARGE SELECTION OF NEW & USED &MW SI LllllUOIUW VOLUME SALES SERVICE & LEASING 3870 N Cllefry Ave LONG BEACH (No Cherry •xlt-405) (114)11f.lll0 Tr.0.-IN Welc:ome OPEN Sl!VEN OAYS A9d ~ '81 320!. 5 •P••d . eunroof , bl•uJNnkt, e lr 720·8180 llP&UTI lllWUI 01!1.IVEAY DEPARTMENT McLAREN'S BMW M·f IHI t , S-S 1111 t 8288 Euclid St Fllll«t04'1, CA 71•.fe0&300 213··~ 1-9701 .. l ' .. ~ ................................ liiliiiill.iiim. .......... ~ ............ iiiiiiiiiiiiiii.illilllllllil ... liiiiiiiiiiiliiililiiliilllliiiiliiliiiiiiiiiiiililiiilliii•st•'--....... ,~ ............................. rl..--------~~~- 1 t. ........ ...,.11 /UGMVll llMA MPMO .... ComPIJt., NO 01·•504-C>t11 NOTICI CW TMllTl n ULI YOU AA£ IN Ot~Ul T NOEi\ A OfEO M UST ATE.D 8111/11 LU$ OU T Al<I ACTION TO AOT£CT YOUA '"OP· ATV, ff &i!AY II! SOLO AT PUBLIC IALe. IP YOU UD AN VCPLANATION n.! HATUAI Of THl AOCfi.DINOS AOAIN9T1 OU, YOU SHOULD CON .. ACT A LAWVER. On 8/1/H at 10 00 A M l!N[f'ICIAL MANAOt• &NT CORPORATION OF. Ml!AICA .. IM duly IP- ted T""1 .. unOtr and r111an1 to o..ci of Trutt, orded on 8117111 .. ument no 2~. Book 1410'. Paot 707, of Of&lal di In the oftlCI of IN d• of Otano-County, 11110,nle, •xeout•d • by: RY W S!ORAVU AND LBERTA NI SEOAAVE8, tband and wtf•. WILL ELL AT.PUBLIC AUCTION 0 THE HIGHEST "OR ASH. (j)tytble et tlnw of In lawful money of the nlted StttM ) et ChlS)man v• entranc• to Civic t., 8ulldlng, 300 E hapman Ave., Orange, CA I rlghl, 111i. end lnt.,•t onvey9d to and now held y It under Mid Oe9d Of rull In the proC)9r1y tltu• ttd In eald Coun~. Call· ()(nll . deectlblng tM 1#14 l'lefeln LOT 33 Of TRACT NO 7, IN THE CITY OF OST A MESA. COUNTY OF RANGE, STATE OF CALI• ORNIA.i AS PER MA'·RE· ORDEu IN BOOK 247, AGES 49 AND 50 Of: MIS. ELLANEOUS MAPS, IN Ht OFFICE OF THE OUNTY RECORDER OF AID COUNTY • The atrMt addr ... and tl'IW common a..iona11on. I any, of t,....,.... property eacrlb•d above 11 urported to be· 34H ANT A CLARA CIRCLE. OSTA MESA, CA 92820. TM undertlantd Tru1t11 19ctelme eny ll&billty '°' any noonec:tntll of the ltfMI dreu and otl'lef common .. ,~ellon. If any. 9hown S&ld Mil wtll bl m-61, but tllOut oonvenant °' war· anty, exprMt or Implied, r• ardlng Utt., poeaaeelon. or umbflOOll, to ~ the emalnlng pr1nctpal tum of hi note(•) MCUred by llld of Tr111t, with lntar .. t l'lefeon. u provided In Mid te(e), edvanoee, If any, ndlf the terme of IM DMd Trullt, ! .... Ch#QM and ~ °' tlll-1'Nlt .. end I Ille trutll CfMted by Mid .. d Of Trull. IO·'lllll: 15,903.93. TN blnettotaty undat Mid of Trutt 11er.iofor1 u · utld and ci.tlvered to the ndlfllOntd • written Dae· ttlon of Dlfeult •nd Ol-and for Sala. and a wrttten otloe ot Default and Elec- tcm to Self. The undl(llgned Mid Notloe of l)e.. tult and E*11on to Sell to reoordld In IM oounty ere the rlll pr~ II led. . DATE. 7 It 1185 MMUICIAI. MAMAU· NT C~ATIOM Of MIRICA • uWI f,_1"...t Y: ltff&QTATI TMl8T D llltVICI, INC., • t, .....,. It. •"""'1 Ac· nt I~. a N. Y1t1n Aw.. •• IMte ne, CA 1210I (71') ,..,, Publllllle:I OrwflOI Cout Illy Piiot July 18, 25. ugu11 t , 1995 · Th-159 • J • o; ge eo ... OAILY PILOT/ThUrloay, ~ \, 18'5 C7 • ... _ 1. 2. s. 4. e. •• 1. ··-•• 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 1&. 1e. 17. 11. 19. 20. 21. 22. 2'. 24. 25. 29. 27. 21. 29. 30. 81. a2. S3. 34. 35. 88. 31. SI. se. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 4&. 48. 41. .... 48. !O. 51. 52. 53. &4. SS. se. S7. 61. 58. 80. 81. 82. 83. 94. 86. ee. 87. 81. 88. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. n . 78. 11. 71. 7t. eo. 81. 82. as. ... 85. ... 17. ... •• to. 11. t2. 93. ... 95. te. 17. 91. ... 100. • Clolc*1weet 11. at...._ Avt., H/W Comer pet ltd. 2128 • Goedel1•• 8t. at..._ AVl9., NII 00mlrpet8~d. 2128 Golden•llt 81. It..._ Ave., 8/E Comer pet Std. 2128 Gotdlf1....a 81. et 8'eW Ave., SIW Comer per 81d. 2128 ~ 11. et '«d Or., NIW Com. pet 8td. 2128 Oold9nw..e It ... ,onl Or., NII CorMr per Std. 2118 GOfd«twt 8t. at Ford Or., 8/E Comer pet 8td. 2128 ~-It. et Ford Or., 8fW Comet pet 8td. 21'28 Goklen" "" 8 It ltitty Or., NII Cotner pet 8td. 2128 Goldef1•eet 8t ... a.tty Or., 8/E Conw I* Std. 2128 Ooldll1...,. 8t. et TUCIN Or., N/W Comer per Std. 2128 Goldll1._t at. at Tucena Or. SfW Comer pet ltd. 2121 Goldll1w•t 8t. at HunttngtOiOt...S. Apt. Entr8nce, N/W CotMt per Std. 2128 Golden ••t 8l at H\lnttngton Orl!Mde Apt. Entrance, SfW Comer~ Std 2128 ~--St. .. w..,., Aw., NIE Comer per Std. 2128 Ootderwl•t It. at Wtrn« AV9.1.~fW Conw per Std. 2128 Ooldel1w•t 8t. et Hell A\19., Ht" Comw per Std. 2128 Goldel1Wllt at. at Hell Ave •• NIE Corner per Std. 2128 ~It. at Helf A11e •• 811! Corner per Std 2128 Goldenweet 8t. It Hett A11t., 8/W Corn« per Std. 2128 Ooldeo'#llt St. It Valentine Dr .. N/W Cornet per Std. 2128 GoldtnWllt at. at v~ Dr .. NI E Comer per Std. 2128 Oolden'Wllt It. It VIMnttne Dr., 811! Comer per Std. 2128 OoldMweat St. It Vllentlne Dr •• SJW Corner per Std. 2128 Goldenw.t 8t. et l.Mehnt Dr .. N/W Corner per Std. 2128 Goldel1Wllt 8t. 8t ~Dr., SIW·Conw per Std 2128 Gcldelctteet It. at 8tot..wood Or .• NIE Comer per Std. 2128 Golderwt 8t. et 8tOliewood Or .• 81! Corner per Std. 2128 Golden...e It. et MoFMden Aw., N/W CorMr per 8td. 2129 ~Wiit 11. at Mc:Fedden Avt., SI E Comet per Std 2128 GoldenWllt 8t. It McF~ Ave.., S/W Comer per Std. 2128 Golden.-8t. et Btu~ Dr., N/W CorMr per Std. 2128 Gofden'Wllt St. at ~ Or., 8/W Comer per 8td 2128 Gofden.-8t. 8t Ox1orcl'Or .• N/W Corner per Std. 2128 Ooldenweet 8t. et Ox1ord Dr .. 8/W CorMr per Std. 2128 Oxford Dr. It YOt'kaNN Ln •• SIE Corner per Std 2128 Oxford Dr. at Yorklhlt9 Ln .. 8/W Corner•per Std. 2J28 Vlctorle Ln. at Oxf«d Dr .• N/W Comer per 8td. 2128 Victoria Ln. 8t Oxford Or., NIE Comer per Std. 2128 Victoria Ln. at Oxford Dr., 81£ Comer per Std. 2128 Victoria Ln. at Odotd Of., 8/W Comer per Std. 2128 Vlc1orle Ln. at AJeundt1a Dr .. N/W Corner per Std. 2128 Vlc1orla Ln. et "'8undtta Dr., NIE CorMr par Std. 21~8 Vlc1orla Ln. at AJex.andr'ta Dr .. SIE Comer per Std. 2128 Vlctona Ln. at Alexandrll Dr., SfW Comer per Std. 2128 8olu AYe. at Victoria Ln., N/W Comer per Std. 212A Bol .. AV9. at Vlc1orta Ln .. S/E Comet per Std. 2128 Bolu Ave. at Vlctorta Ln .. Ramp. #1, 8/W Corner per Std. 2128 Bolla Alie. 8t Vlctorte Ln., Ramp #2, 8/W Corner per Std. 2128 • Vlotorta Ln. et can~ Or., NIE Comer per Std. 2128 Vlctorta Ln. at Canterbuty Or., 8/E Comer par Std. 2128 Vlctorta Ln. at Cumbwtand Dr .. NIE CorMf per Std. 2128 Vlctorta Ln. at Cum~ Dr .. SI E Comer per Std. 2128 Victoria Ln. at Hallfax Dr .• BIE Comar per Std. 2128 Vlc1orta '"11. It Halltax Dr .. 8/W Comar per Std. 2128 Halifax Dr. at HanoYw Dr .• SIW Comar per Std. 2128 Hallfax Dr. at HanoYw Dr., ~/E Comar per Std. 2128 Mcfadden Ave. 8t Hanowr Dr .• N/W eon. per Std. 2128 Mcfadden Ave. et Hano¥tr Dr .. N/E Comer per Std. 2128 Mc:Flldden Ave. at SaltbUry Ln .• N/W Comer per Std. 2128 McFadd«i Ave. •ta.bury Ln .• NIE Comar per.Std. 2128 Brookhwlt.St. 8t Gldletd Ave., SLE..Comer per Std. ~128 BrookhUrlt St. 8t Oatfteld Ave.., S/W Comar pet Std. 2128 Brookhurlt St. at Adema Ave., N/W Comer per Std. 2128 Brookhutlt St. et Adema Ave., NII! Comer per Std. 2128 8rookhunrt St. at Adwna Ave., SIE Corner per Std. 2128 Brookhunt St. at Adame Ave •• S/W Comar per Std. 2128 Brookhurat St. 8t lndlaMpoli. AYe., N/W Comer per Std. 2128 Brookhufwt St. at lndlanapoll9 Ayt., NIE Comer per Std.·2128 Brookhurlt St. 8t lndlanePola Ave., SJE CorMr per Std. 2128 Brookhurtt St. 8t ~ Ave., S/W CorMr per Std. 2128 Brook.htnt St. et Atilflta Ave., N/W Comer per Std. 2128 Bfookhcnt St. 8t Au.rt& Aw., NIE-Comer per Std. 2121l Btookhurat St. at Atlanta Ave., SIE Cornet per Std. 212.&"' Brookhurat St at Atlanta Aw., S/W Corner per Std. 2128 Brookhur9t St. It H9mltton A\1'8 .. N/W Comer per Std. 2128 Brookhunrt St. 8t Hamftton Ayt., NIE Corner per Std. 2128 Brookhurwt St. at Hllf1Wtton A\1'8., SIE Comer per Std. 2128 Brookhurst St. at Hamltton Ave .• SIX'/ CorMr per Std. 2128 Brookhunrt St. It BMnlng Ave., N/W Comet per Std. 2128 Brookhurat St. at Banning A.,. .. S/E Corner per Std. 2128 Brookhunrt St. 8t BannlnQ Ave., SIW Comer par Std. 2128 Brookhunrt St. at S.... Entrance. NI E Comer per Std. 212C Brookhunt 8t. at S.... Entrance, S/E CorMr per Std. 212C Brookhurat St. 8t Buahard Aw .• N/W Comer per Std. 2128 Brookhul'.9f St. It S... Entrance. S/E Corner Per Std. 212C Bulherd s..m. Aoed atTelMn Dr., ~IE Comer per Std. 2128 8ulhwd SeMce Road at Telt\an Dr .• SJE Comer per Std. 2128 8ulMrd SeMce Road at Warburton Dr .• NIE Comer per Std. 2128 Bwherd ~ Road et Wwtiurton Dr .• SI E Comer per Std. 2128 Butherd St. et Woodaewn Dr .. NJE Comer per Std. 2128 Buthard St. at WOOdlawn Dr., SIE Comer per Std. 2128 Butherd SeMce Road at lnnabrodt Or., N/W Comer per Std. 2128 Buthatd SeMce Road at lnnabruck Dr .. SIE Corn« per Std. 2128 8uthard St. at Flound«'a Dr., NIE Comer per Std. 2128 Bulhard St. at F1oundet1 Dr., S/E Comer per Std. 2128 eu.hard 8«vtce Aoed at V•ardo Dr .. NIE Corn« pee' Std. 2128 Bulhard St. at Bue Dr •• NIE Cornet pee' Std. 2128 Buthard St. at Bue Dr,, SIE Cornet pee' Std. 2128 8uthard St. at GerlWd A.,.., SI E Comer per Std 2128 I ~-~~~~~,~~=-==~~=-======-~'----___,.;~-~~-----~~~-~--J -• .. " wmp8'1n\ ~""" Lump 8Uff\ L..vmp&lm LumpSUm LumpSwT\ Lurnp 8&lm UJmp~ ~&in Lump8um Wms>SUm Lump Sum Lum9 Sum LumpSwn Lump &.Im Lump8um Lump Sum Lump Sum Lump Sum Lump Sum Lump Sum I.ump 8um , Lump Sum Lump Sum LumpSOm I.ump Sum lump Sum Lump Sum LumpSUm L41mPSum lump Sum Lump Sum Lump Sum &.ump Sum Lump Sum Lump Sum Lump Sum LurnpSum Lumc> Sum Lump Sum Lump Sum Lump Sum Lump Suet' l.umpS\ri Lump Sum Lump Sum I.Ump Sum Lump Sum Lump Sum · Lump Sum Lump Sum Lump Sum &..ump Sum Lu~&lm Lump Sum Lump&rn l.umpSum LumpSum Lump Sum LumpSum l,ump Sum LumpSum Lump Sum Lump Sum LUmpSum Lump Sum Lump Sum Lump 84.lm Lump Sum Lul'l'\l) Sum Lump Sum Lump Sum LumpS-um Lump Sum Lump Sum Lump Sum Lumi>Sum Lump Sum Lump Sum Lump Sum Lump Sum Lump Sum Lump Sum I.ump Som Lump &Im . -Lump Sum Lump Sum Lump Sum I.ump Sum Lump Sum Lump Sum Lump Sum Lump Sum Lump Sum Lump Sum Lump Sum lump Sum •Lump Sum l4.1mpSum Lump Sum FTn-180 ,. ., .. , l ' • • Orange ~llV PILOT /Thursday, Augu1M, 1985 .. .. \ MUC llJllC[ "8JC ll>nct: ·~}~:-~~~~l(..;~=s;;::T ...... ~ M.-.. M ~ C?lJ OT r.l° AO'IMYWMT .. twdlilUJ ,..._ lll9f M ~ ITATWmWT ::ott1 M..a •t the~ Of ......... ...., .._ ........ ..., .. • .... ........ TM fO!IOw!no '*'°"9 .,. 1'19 Cit~, n Frlt DrM, lllat .. Jflf'r t, fMt. CMM: ..... .._. ,.....,ty d06tlO bUllnW u: =o.te . Calltom11. \lnlll ........ u.a ........................... ..,..... WESCO, 30&1 LA Joi!•, IM hOuf Of l'.00 ~ .. ....., .. c..--.. Ca9-..... ,........ .. ,. ... a.c. sv·~ O, AntM!m. CA 82IOI ~UGUST •• \M6, •t .mld't ..,. "-' ..._ L-r ._ ..-.. • •111 • • •' Wett Coelt 911.ldt>tallno. lime they will be opened, ,_... '*' ~ • 11 tt •H•re:ll'I te I••· k\C , 1 Calllomla corpor-)l.lbflely tnd rMd .ioucs Iii. UK 111. Mr ....... .... .._..,__. ,.,.., lie 1tion, 333 CIYIC c.ntw DrfW 1'19 Council ONmbett SMl- 1981 strike revisited _ lnt .......... ......., lft I ,......_ r1111•1t1R et W•t, s.m. Me. CA t270 I tel P'oPOAll thall t.er Ille lM ~ ,....,. DWrtd ~of~ Wttll Tiii• bualn••• 11 oon-htle of the WOc1t &nd the ~_, lft .... .. ........ IM ""'4Ht Afettt 11'1 4Net.0 by I OOf~tlon ~ Of tlle bldO&t but no IM,........._.'*' tMI Chenie itUfHMt· to ft W•t Cotti 81ndblattlng,• other dl1tlngl'ltNno mlfkt .......... ...e tie Wttll .._. U.l.Cf. 141" IN l1 C"' tnc , O.Yld Q u,., Preeldent ~ny bid r«*vOd aner the ......._, ...... "'caw... ti•n-u..1 wttf!Mt • Tllll 1t•t«ntn1 waa flted IGhoOvlod cloelnQ time tor Indians· Brett Butler product of the turmoll °"Ill.,... •• '"'~ lftt • ... .,_. ...._ #Ith 1heCoun1y CIWltOf Of· the,....,. ot blcft en111 b& < l ~ \ ~l \ND(.\l'l-W11h muJorkaaui." latretl&ft. ''°' loa ,_, ReeldHt A1ut 111 Moe County on ~ f4, -..umed to the blddef i;n-pla)l'r\ on \lr1~C' mu.Jwuy throu&fi 'he: 1981 • •'"'' A111, Cellfor11I• c-.. 1N5 °'**' 11 lhalt be the IOle SC"\On . ..\1l.::in1a ti."kvision 'ilOllOn WTBS 81tt. a oWm 8ftd .... 0... RC).85-0031 ~ ttepe>nlllblllty Of lhe bldci.r .. Mftdef.,.,."' w-. '°"" Oat• Juky t8. 1915 UN a 11wpo, • ..,..,_ 10 ... tn.tll{Old tar9Ce1Yed turned 11' ba!.cball· tt • ~., OOf'tMld Publill'lod OnlnQe Cout At uw, m CMG c.w nro.-11m1 hungr) caml.'ra~ toward ._,. ...... ~ te tM )ejly Piiot My 25. Auguet 1 °"" WMt. lel'lta AM, CA Mt of plans, 8podal R h d d d u.a.-oe~., .Mtlo9. J. 1965 ll70t PrOYllk>nl eno flddll~ to it.' mon an ma c a ., ..., •• .-._..,, lft or T11-1eo Publi.tled O.ange eo.t G4!Mf•I ProYll6Qn• to 111e star of Brett Hu tier Dell)' Plto1 July tf. 18, 25, Stendard Spoclllc1ttlon. Rtl'hmond "-3S home OtA TH NOTICES ------~uove1 1, 1M' !MY be pbtalt)od 11 tn. Of. to the .\tlan1a Brnve'i' ._ ______ Th-_1_52 ~~:'.~t~~ (las\ A-\..\ affiliate. and ENGLISH Beach Club of Santa P\8.IC NOTICE lornla. upon nonrel\ln<ltble Butler wa!. 1hc )Oung !.tar Robson Er\illsh passed M onica; Director of P41Y"*'I of 18.00 An Id· of that teaOJ. Becaulle full Good c ----tan H06· 'teTmOUe MleMH dltonal ct\Wge ot $2 50 wlll WTBS' <fgnal was camt.'<.I away peace Y Ill ~~' .. .._ ITATUmNT bO made 11 handled b)' iNll " has sleep Tuesday, p1tal Med1ca.I Cent.er; TM following~·· Plans. epoclfleatlona sna by cable SHtems acros~ a....-__.::-=:;,i....__, JuJy 30, 1985. He was member of the New-~ bualr1ell 1a. other contrect document• the· counti). a lot of 8utler the beloved husband port Harbor Yacht B ADEN COURT AS-. m•k:''° be examined •tthe people saw Butler 1n action. mos1 notabl} and best friend of his Club; the 552 Club of ~'.A~~·1~~~6:.~ ~ :~8:~1'l~~ Atlanta owner Ted furner. w 1 fe. Alice, dear Hoag Hospital, and CA 92e26 Ind SpeciftcatloN w111 not "It ~as quite a different s11un11on The father of Robson Jr . the Cahforrua Club m George w Cettllaml. bO' mlllod unlOM the ad-i--------•-------- L ....... _ ... a Ann... and Los An~eles An ar-31322 Monterey SlrMt, :11tlonel $2.50 charge It In-DI-IC NOTICE l't&.IC NOTICE w.:u.u ~ _ · Sou1h Lagun., CA 92677 :;tudfld with payment r UUL Victoria Jean, de· dent an weU known Norm Nowell. &21 Ca.lie Eechbldetlallt>emadeon 1211z. • cW:n and coet FICTlTIOU88UatHEH voted father·in ·law angler. Mr. F.ngl.Lsh Hkl~. Sen Ctomen1•. CA the Pr~ form . .,_., MftdoUll0.00,'"ltlefonn NAMlllTATUIENT of Melarue, and lov· was a past presC 1dent 9~ F Celtllaml, 585 i~ t~::i"":o:=t~ ,. • caeflW'• °' oentftod The 1o1tow1og peraoo111• mg grandfather of of the Tuna Jub of ....,_ F>face, , ............ Boech. end lh•ll be 11CCOmpanled m.ctr made peyable to ttle dolog bullnea ••: A al Lf ed •~ •• ,-2ac _.,.....-___ ._._.., II.I . ~rnont o4 .luattce, FOUR 0 SERVICES, 1760 David, Christopher v on. ne mov ..., CA 9 ....,, 0y • cartlli.d or .._,_ • l)f 8119W•wed 14ffOty, on ., Monrovle A11e .. A·20. Coete and Michael. Balboa m 1967. . This butlnou I• con-etWJC* or 1 l>kl bond t0t not Mforo A~ 14. 1-. All Mesa, C:A 92627 Pn f l The fanuly would ap--duoted by • genetal '*1· ... thin 10% of tM llmount l'ldltl•ncy petttton m., be Pocket Pro Systems, Inc., va t.e anu y services • nersn1p :it tbl. l>kl. IMde payat>le to lttllcf" In lteu °' • coet bond. 1 Callfoml11 C'OfPC)rltlon wall ~ held a1 Sea. prec1ate memortal Gooroe W Celtheml the City of Colt• Meea. No OthorwlM the property This bu1lneu 11 con-Mr. English was born donations be made to Thi• 1tetemoot was flted propo111 •h•ll ba con-••be edMlnletrat!YelY for· ducted by a corporation an Los Angeles, and Hoag Memonal H~-wtlh t~ty 1Y ~2 ~~ ~..!n':W":= lllt.d s--t to 11 IJ.1.c. Pocllet Pro Sys1em1. Inc . 1 al d 'tal 301 N Newport Moe on v_, ' l>Y _., • 1 • tw, IN wW be cl1t1111d IOm McRae, Secretal)' was a oy gra uat.e P1 • • F-7 =-i. or bfddet 1 bond. itf accctrdlnt to law. Thi. 1111ement wu Iii.cl of U.C.L.A. He served B 1 v d .. New Port Publllhed Ofenge Coeet No l>kl th.ii b& contldored lnlorMe.I pattlOI lfteJ ftte _.th the County Cl«k of Or· with distinction as an Beach, Ca 92663, Diiiy Piiot July If, l8, 25, ""*'It II made on• b'-'1k 1 ,etttkM'I for remlnk>n ., enge County on July 3. 1985 ff. in th U 'ted Coron a r y & August 1. 1(185 lotml'Utnl9hedby theCltyof 1111ttgettonottorf94twewlth '290474 o acer e ru . _ Th-143 ~· MOM and II made 111 IM Rnlcfel'lt Aeo.nt 11'1 Published Ofange Cout Stat.es Army and re-Pulmonary depart-rtll.IC M)TIC( accordance with Hie Cf\af,. pureullU 10 11 Dally Pilot July 11, 18, 25. ceived the Legion of ments or the Boy :>roYllion• of the PTopoul u.a.c. 1111 end Z1 CFR Augusr 1. 198~ Merit-decoration. Mr. ~uts of America. in K·W14 ~~!Icier· muit be Ji11.1Ma1u1 •lthoul m-Th·l40 En ),_._ ·d t Ueu of flowers flCTTTIOUI .,..... . ll'ltl • ~ end coot bond. DIDllC NOTICE g A:U• was pres.I en . MAim ITAT'lmWT lcenlod .. requir.d by tew. lllotldent A1ent 'In ,..UUL of Engllsh & Lauer, • The folowlno peraone _ ~TM City Council of the cew,. -------- Incorporated in Los Donald B. Ayres. resi· ljoing b1'91neee u: ~rof ~t~=-~ C-.: R0-85-0031 RC~~~llNl!H Angeles. He was the dent of Newport OAK TREE PLAZA AS-l>ldL lgh Dete: July 19, 1985 NAMI! ITAT1!MPfT · f SOCIATES c/o GR. Men· Published Orenge Coa1t Regional Director o Beach. Passed away t 18120 er'ootthurlt Tiie Contreetor •hall Deity Piiot July 25, Auguil 1, TM following l*l<>rll ere the ~y Scouts of Ju I y 2 7 ' 1 9 ~ 5 . ~Sult• 14, Fountain ;r"~.;!'~7ro-trfr':O: 9, 1085 ~~ ~w~ c8:NTER IN· Amenca. Area Direc-SUJV1ved by tus wife ...... ley. CA 92708 ~ of the Clilllornla Th·182 COME TAX SERVICE. (2) tor of America Red Mary Allee; daughter, ~Gerald M c~::-Ye. 2::: (..lbof ·Code. the Pf' .... alllog , ________ TOWN CENTER TAX ANO Cr~· Vice Pres1dent Nancy De Young· son ~~2630 · ' ·ate end ICale of wegee... PIJJLIC NOTICE FINANCIAL, (3) TOWN ~ ---f h ' J ' .-A ~2630 tlbllahed by the Clty ot CENTER FINANCIAL SEA-and vu-a:tor O t e Donald Ayres, r.; Mleheel L Lapin. 800 ~le MON wtllch ere flted NOTICE TO VICES. (4) TOWN CENTER PACIF1C VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery • Mortuary Chapel • Crematory 3500 Pac1ftc Vtew Dm1e Newport Beach 644·2700 HARBOR LAWN· MT. OLIVE Mortuary • Cemetery Crematory 1625 Gisler Ave Costa Mesa 540-5554 PIEACi BAOTHERS BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642·9150 eight grandchildren. 3-gonlac ~venY92•25 . Corona del #11h the Cit)' Clerk of said CONTftACTOfll FINANCIAL GROUP. (5) Roger De Young, Jr. \4at, A" v :::11y, and lhall lor1elt penal-CALUNQ FOR atos TOWN CENTER INVEST· "-v Thi• bu11n .. 1 11 con· 1i.. pr..cr1bed tllefeln tor School 0111rlct. NEW· MENTS, 650 Town Center Douglas ~ oung. jUC1ed by: • general part· 'IOllCOmpllenc:e ot the said PORT ·MESA UNIFIED Drive, Suitt 1850. Cost• w i n d y G e r d a u ' lOr'hlp . ::ode. SCHOOL DISTRICT Mesa. c.Jilornia 92626 Donald Ayres,111, ~h~}-~nwu Iii.cl EUENP.Pt9NNEY,Ctty BldOeedllne 200o'ciock Oa11ld S Holm, 34 Bruce Ayres Douglas ... t .. -•eoun• _,ty C1lric of Of c--. Ctty o4 C.... ..._ PM of the 16th day ol Georgetown, Irvine. Call· AU · .... lh .... • Publllhed Or•noe Coast ~uou11. 1985 lomla 92715 Ayres, . yson Ayres inoe County on July 23. :>ally Piiot July 27, August 1, Piece of Bid Receipt Charlel B. Newbury, 2058 and Victoria Ayres. 1985 F1l2dOO 1985 Purchaslog Dept, 2985·8 June Place, Anaheim, c.11· Pnvate fa.nuly mem-Pu ....... ..__. ,.,,. Coast SaTh-913 Street, Coat• Mesa. CA tomla 92802 . . UIQO_, voange Prolecl ldentlficetlon This bustn .. 1 11 con· orial services were )8'ly Pllol Augost t , ~· 111, Pl8JC N(}TICE ame: AIR CONDITIONING ducted by • general pen. held In heu of l2. 1965 ~T VARIOUS DISTRICT LO· nersh!P flowers farmly sug-Th-lfl3 K-1MOI ATIONS (ANDERSEN Davids Holm gest <.'Ontributtons to AOWR'Tl~NT CHOOL) This statement wu flied· f'talC NOTICE NotMle la ._..., .,_ Piece Plan. are on Ille with the County Clertl of Of· the U S C. Com· lll•t on .IUIJ 1, 1MS, urchaslng Dept . 2985-B ange County on July 5, tM5 prehens1ve Cancer NOTICE t1,IM.OO U.~. cwnncy •• Street. Costa Mesa. CA F210Mt Center P 0 Box INVITIHQatDI Mll&odetCoeta.....,C .... 282& Publlahed Orange Oout 80220 'Los . Angeles NOTICE f IS HEREBY !orn1e ffom L41te FemMdo NO TICE IS HEREBY Dally Piiot July 18, July 25. Ca 90009, H ' 3 IVE N the t 1 ea I e d Oet*M few ~ of t1 IVEN that tha above~ August I , 6, 1985 · • or oag :>topou11 lor lurnlshlng ell JIC •1. Ally P*'M" dMlr· atned School Olatrlct tor Th-162 Memorial Hospital ebof, ma11rial1, equipment, -"I to,.._ the men. In ange County, California Cancer Research 30 l 1ren1portat1on end auctt IM Unhed lt.tM Dlatrtct ting by end thrpug,f\ 111 ' >tiler facllltlel u may be re-Court lft order to cone.et ernlng Board. flereln· Newport Blvd, New· ~ulrad for THE IMPROVE· 1M pi'obeble CM1M few thle tier referred 10 • "DIS. port Beach, Ca 92663. ~ E N T O F S A N T A ..ea-, MWt tie wtttt ltle RICT". will rlOIM up to p a c I ( i c v I e w 'NA-DELHI CHANNEL ~ ...... "' ~ t not taler than the •bove-~-ortua:-J.:._ Newport ~~i~M c'b't'~~F~~~18fv ~~. 1210t, ~t~!1~ot':8=t~:; :: De3Ch, lJU~tors c:o1 TO TRINITY DRIVE wilt Ian•• An•, Callfornl• he above proJect More temllloe ere getting the CM1pl1'9 "bug" this ye er. If )'OU h•v• • CMlp&f that'• not getting ueed, NII It now with a Claaiflod Ad. )ln .. e mc:tanl 1h1&1 l ctl furnf'r brou1'ht tell'' 11,1011 down to Richmond and gave 1he R1t.•hmond Rravcs a 101 of cxpo<;urc." ~Ht.I Butler. no" the regular l'.t"nlrrfieltkr for the < lt•\eland Indian!'. "People around the country got 10 know about u before we C' en got to the big leagues " When the camer.i!> cau~ht up 10 halll. Hu tier wa!> wog1ng a battle v. 1th Wade Bow. now of the Boston Red ~>.. for mr International League batting title. Bogg) won th(' title. 336 tu ns. but Buller IA3\ named Mmt Valuable Plnyer after scoring 9"\ run!>. <>teahng 44 bases and walking 101 11mes. • ... And he had 1hat name. which reminded Atlnnta residents of Clari. Gable's character in ··Gone With The Wind.'. When the maJOr league playe~· stnlc ended with the All-Star Game on Aug. 9. butler was promoted to Atlanta. The fairy tale went askew thl' fdttowing ycnr. when Butler hll onl)' .2 I~ an 89 game'> .ind "ii'> '>cnt bad. w K1chmond But hc rnovnl up Ill '>Ii.I)' 10 1983_. hat11nf ~ltl Ix-foil' hctni l1t1Jed to the I ndian~ for pitcher I t•n'Barkcr at 1he end of the scawn Butler. no"' the lndtan'i' un1o~rc'>t'n· tatavc find' h1m)Clt looking baC'r to 1981 and ih1nl>.1ng about minor lca1uc1~ a'I unuthl·r ma1or league plu>crs' !ltr1ke loom~ "I 1hink thJt &he minor kague ballpla~er h,1, Ill than~ tha~ a s.tnke would benefit h1~ ll\ n hallplaycr funhcr on down the hn<.'. Butler c;a1d. "M)' 3dv1ce would be lor them · w go along with whatc' er we do, although the .. 1r1~c wouldn't aOec.·t them a1o far a!> not playing baseball ng~! now. But 1t will afTcc.·t ~hc.·m do"(n the.· line. \ ,trike aho could work to the minor· · k'Jsuer•; tx·ndit. much .t'I 11 helped him in I '181. Butkr 1oa1d. "11 u pcr'>on 1s a ha,c.·ball fan ln.gcni."ral. hl· "''II be intrigued not onl} with the players (on c.tnke) hut looking .tt the talent that will be 1.·om1ng up 1oomcda) ... Butler ~1d Arlington Park burns Cause of fire unknown; trac){'s future s haky I "O lardighters suffered slight tnJuries. but about I. 900 horses in a stable area SC\eral l\undred yard~ from the gr~ndstand were never an danger. authonucs ~1d . . Jo~eph F Joyce. Arlington sch1cl e>.ccuta'e offia:w and a mcmt>Nof the group that bought the 58-~ear·old track four years a~o for a reported $20 million. said he would like to sc~ the foc1ht\ "me Phoen1>.-hke from the ashes ARLINGTON HEIGHTS. rn. (AP) OOinals of Arlington Park race track, which featured some of the greatest hor$CS of the la!>t half-century. S3)' the~ don't know tf they will rebuild following a mult1m1lhon-dollar fire that destroyed the grandstand and clubhouse. The cause of the fire was unknown. It began · early Wednesday in the track's Post and Paddock C'luh on the western edge of the course and spread to the grandstand. said fire Capt. John Lcligdon. Thi: track's general office!>. housed in the grandstand. also were destroyed. But he 'saw oo de<.·1s1on had bttn made on whether to rebuild. the cost of which he estimated "ofT the fop of my head at about $I 9Q milhon .. Becker opens with Teltscher H AMBURG. West German) (AP) -Wimbledon champion Boris Becker will take on Eliot Teltscher Friday in the fi<St match of the U.S .. West Germany Davi'> Cup ctuarterlinals. organizers an· nounced today. After Becker. ranked No. 9 in the world. plays the 12th-ranked Teltscher. Hansjoerg Schwaier. ranked 391h. will play Aaron Knc kstem. who holds the No. 23 spot 1n the world rankings. Meanwhile. the mass-circula· t1on newspaper Bild quo1ed De· feosc Mm1stcr Manfred Woerner as saying tharBccker. 17, will be subject to We'>t Germany's mili- tary draft. The newspaper said the tennis star could report to active duty an 1987. Jo>cc said the ma1or concern was the M'heduled Aug. 2'S runn1ns of the fourth Budwc1ser·Arlangtoo l'vlt.lhon, Lb.e. first thoroughbred race in North America to offer a SI million puf\c. It as run on grass. .Secret construction on'Cup'boatbegins S.\N FR.\N('ISCO (AP> -In deep secreC). con1otrucuon has begun on Boat o I of the SI 0 m1lhon St Francis (,olden Gate (hallenge to recapture. in 1987. the America's Cup from Australia's Ro) al Perth Yacht Club. The first aluminum cuts were made t"-0 weeks ago at Stephens Manne Jnc. 10 Stocl-ton. A photographer who """ent io the boat)'ard !>aid he wasn't allowed to see a thing. And Oakland naval arch11cct Gary Mull splayed his hand') o'er a computer rcptoducuon of the hull. For the lirst t1mc 1n the rup's 133 year saga. the Aussies. astride their ~1ngcd·keel .\ustralia 11. wrested the treasured S}mbol from lhC' Ne" York Yacht Club on Sept 26. 1983. off Newport. R.I. It was a black moment for the Yanks-a break 1n the longc~t winning streak in sports history. The cup was unbolted from its nallowed place of honor and handed over to the Auss1eo;. Hysterical with Joy. the~ bore it off to thetr homeland down under The "inners have been sucking 11 to U .S yachtsmen ever smce. . even an TV commercials promoting Australian tounsm. Goes the taunt. '"If you still d8n't know where Australia is. it's where the America's Cup is." 0 CHICK IVERSON 0 THEODORE ROBINS FORD OCO~NELL CHEVROLET o s00th County~ Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi 441 E. hast..,., •• .,.rt ltHll 171-0100 Highest Quality Sales & Service 0 NABERS CADILLAC @ -2100 HllllOR ILYD., COSTA IESA (114) 140-1100 (213) 111-1211 • Best Prices • Convenient Location •Great Location •Super Service • Courteous & Knowledgeable Sales People Slits Leas ii& Remis WE'IE IULlll AcrOM "om -. 'A' on l(atefle, Juet WMt of S1 (Orange) frwy 0 CREVIER BMW "" SALES • SERVICE • LEASING fiiJ//11 ·'Where Professional A ttltude Prevails ·· apectall1lno In Europun O.llwory. E•cellent Selection of Now !Ind oa,.tullr properod UNd BMW'• always In stock ... 835-3171 208 W. 1•t St., Santa Ana Corne< of Broadway & lst St Closed Sunday• GSTERLING SAUS -SEntCE -WSllC -PAIT$ Overseas Delivery Specialists PARTa-OEPARTMEHT OPEN IATUAOAY MORNINOI BMW -ROLLS ROYCE 1540 Jamboree Rd. Newport Beach 840-6444 G) JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS 1301 Quall St. -N•w C•r Location 1001 Ou•ll St. -R•ul• Dl~l•lon 0 World0s LarQ(Jst Selection of 0 Mercedes Benz .A. . 833-~ Wes · l.t&UIS • Parts · ~ • WJ Shf U.S.A.'s #1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer Modern Sales. Service. Parts, Body, Paint & Tire Depts. Competitive Rates On Lease & Daily Rentals 20IO larMr lh•., C.st1 •111 142-0010., 140-1211 o COMMONWEALTH VOLKSWAGEN @ 'FAMILY STORE SINCE '53' ~ Sale• -S.rvice -Leuinq IH-0110 IN wrt'A ANA ~---· 2121 lfrMr lh•., Its!• Itta Over 23 Years Serving Orange County Sales • Service • ~easing 546-1200 Special Pll'tl UH 546-9400 MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM -9:00 PM SATURDAY 8:30 AM -6:00 PM SUNDAY 10:00 AM -5:00 PM • ALES • LEA ING • SERVICE • PART •SUBARU OF ANAHEIM We're Not the Biggest, But We're the Best! at 91 Frwy and Harbor Blvd . 1221 N. Harbor Blvd (714) 772-9800 Anaheim, CA 92801 (213) 924·2367 VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU CALIF'S :: 1 a LARGEST VOLKSWAGEN DEALER NEED WE SAY MORE? Pans Open M·Sat 8 • 5:30 Sat 9 • 4 p m Service m-Frl 7:30 • 6 pm 11711 BEACH BLVD HUNTINGTON BEACH -114/ 842-2000 0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS l~C . ~ LONG TERM LEASES * COMPETITIVE PURCHASE PRICES • HUGE INVENTORY CE> dial MERCEDES A 213/714 637-2333 Next to Santa Ana Fwy (5) on Manchester/Beach Blvd. 0 BILL YATES YOLISWllEI • PORSOIE • PEllEIT SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE 12112 ¥1111 .............. 0119fstr111 411-4111 117-4100 G ORANGE COAST JEEP/RENAULT # 1 I• TH 'W11t For ,,,, }Hp Sills For I ,,,,, r' 001n2e • SALES r Loast • SERVICE nu "•11•0111 •~vo • LEASING · s:4~ • ACCESSORIES DEPT G UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE HONDA 2880 Harbor Blvd. Coate Meaa 540-0713 3 Blocks So. of 405 Fwy. C) BOB LONGPRE PONTIAC Oran9e County's Ofdtit & t.arocst Pontiac Oealershlp at IH<h 11\/d & IN Gltrden Gt~ Frww.y f7t4 892 ... lt f7t4J 6M-2IOO We perform all Pontiac warranty wot"lc, reeardtns ot wne~ you orlgln.-lly pu~hased )OU' c.ar OP8M llOllDAY llVml .... UNTa .... P.M. J f' . ~ lerYlng~wport lw"1 Cotti ~Hufttlngtonlelch, lrvlM,L19'1n1 ~'-taln Vlliy end ..,.._Of18t9C•utf '-/. '-I ~ 0 ~ "' ' A . • • : :. • • • -. . . ar es to e ID Coast A Huntington Beach tow- !ng company owner plans to go to court to fight the suspension of his busi- ness permit./ A7 California Mono Basin National For- est scenic ar-ea has been ~dlcated ./ A8 Nation Six peoP,le -trrcludTng an Army officer -were arrested In three states today on charges of plot- ting to smuggle weapons tolran./A4 World Uganda has a new prime minister -Paulo Muwanga,_who was vice president and defense minister under the Presi- dent Miiton Obote, ousted in r coup last weekend.IA& cBoating , Yachtsman's notion is to put a family regatta In motion in the ocean./81 Sports Angels get back on wln- ning track in Oakland, but Dodgers derailed by Giants./C1 Entertainment Debbie Allen fs dynamic In the Los Angeles revival of ''Sweet Charity. "/83 Business A venture group has been formed In Orange County to put deals together./85_ INDEX ·Boating Erma Bombeck Bridge Bulletin Board Business Classified Comics Crossword Death Notices HoroscOf,>e . Ann Lan~ers Opinion i Paparazzi Play Review Pollce Log Public Notices Sports Televlson T.heaters Weather B1 B2 B4 A 3 BS-6 C4-6 B4 C6 ca cs 62 AS B1 B3 A3 C6-8 C1-3, 8 B3 B2-3 A2 ots e ID --~ -• 1M!lyNif ....... _, ..... ..:.-- Aerial viewo,fFl~or alteln Irvine. earmarked for .. moet preatlgloua maltl:uae complu ln Southern California.•• I 1 $340million Fluor ' I saleOK'd .. ~ew company plans to ~urn Irvine acreage into highly 'prestigious mixed-use complex' By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of the 0.ily Pflo( ls.fl The spacious. grassy areas sur- rounding the famn1ar green-glass Fluor Corp. headquaners tn lr"1ne have sometimes been reforred to as Jhc most expensive lawn., tn Orange County. The sale of those la"'n" and the bu1ld1ngS atop them has been con- cluded. Fluor officials announced Wednesda\. The Fl·uor s1tt' at Jamboree Boule' ard and the San Diego Frce- wa) was purchased for •$340 m1ll1on b} a partnership 10' olv1ng Dallas- based developer Trammell C'ro"' Co • and Bos 1 o n -bas~ Win throp Financial Assoua1cs tinder the terms of the sale. Fluor this week received $305 million. The rcma1n1ng SJS m1lhon will be re- ceived afler July 31. 1986. '"upon confirmation of development nght~ b} the City of In 1ne:· Fluor ol)icials said Last spnn~. when Fluor and Tram- mell Crow d1'iClosed plans 10* ... elop the land with ho1el<., office butld1n~ and rc1all shops. <.ome ut~ official<; disagreed O't'r what legall) can be dC\eloped on the site. Because of trallic conslra1nts. In ine 1s hm1ti.ng some de"'elopment uethe popular an:a adJacent to John Wa) ne Airport In recent months. Fluor and Tram- mell Crow h!ne been meeupg with the CH) and with representatives of" netlhbonng bus1nesse'I to iron ou1 d1 fl1 rences o'er 1hc dt"\elopment plan" -\1 a prc<;c; conft"rence V..edne~da\-. Da' 1d S Tappan Jr .. Fluor cha1rma"n and chief e\ecutl\ t' officer. said oft he land \ale and dc,"elopmcnt ~uahole. ·· 1 won "t drn) 1t"c; been a somc" hat hump' road·· But he added '"V. c 1h1n~ the \pint of i.:oopcrat100 1s real anJ genuine and "l' l'\pclt resolu11on ol 1h1' •~'>Ul' 1n th1\ lalendar 'car·· \.\1ll1am Lani.'. a managing partnl·r "1th Trammell Cro"' 10 Orangl' C ounl\. described 1he Fluor land purrha'>l" ac; ""the lari~e~t real l''ilalt' transacuon Trammdl ( ro" has done to date ·· Lane said 1he compan~ plans to tum 1he Fluor acreage iot.0 '"the mos1 pres11g1ous m1 \ed-use t"omple\ 1n Southern C'alifom1a ·· He did not announu.· a da1e for cons1ruu1on to begin Fluor. an engmeenngand constrUl· tion and natural ·rl'!>uurl'l' manage- ment firm. "''II con1 1nUl' 1h business operations at 1he Ir' 1ne comple,. buil1 be1"een 1974. and 1981 II 1ndude'i a IO-,tol) l'~lrporate to"'er "' four-ston otlin• butld1nttS and a onl'-'>lll~ rnncour'>t' ol'l thl' I~ li acre "te l oder lhl' tt:.rm'> ol 1ht \.lie Fluor hac; lca~d all ol lhl' e\l\llOg .. 1rut:turl·~ tor $10 million per war The rnm- pan' 1'\ ~uli-ka\1ng about 20 perlent (Please see FLUOR/ A2) New court sought after controversy over chi~f.jlidge By STEVE MARBLE Of tN O.ily "'"" ·-" ~ount) prosecutor said he will refile charges in a controversial S 10 m1lhon Newpon Beach drug case but he will do so 1n anothercoun to avoid a conflict Deputy 01 tnct .i\nomc) Dercck Johnson said he 1s concern~ about the pubhc11~ over the S 10 mtlhon manJuana seizure and worries that" Judges a1 Harbor Municipal Coun an Ne9.oort Beach may feet awkward (Plea.e eee DRUG/ A2) Interior chiefJ begins his.tour Loca l officials hope j -~ -to change pis mind on off shore drilling By ROBERT HYNDMAN OtlheDelly ...... 118111 I ntenor Secret.an Donald Hodel embarked V..ednesda)" on a month- long tour of the West that will take him 10 Orange Count~ Aug. 31 to discuss propo..als 10 hft a moratonum on offshore rul dnllmg. Hodel 1old 1he -\ssoc1a1ed Press V. edn~a\ he looks forward to the hea nn~ in ( altlorn1a ··rm al"'a~\ an optimist. and I Jl"'a'" hope that "'e "''" be ab1e to rcsof\ t" \Om<'th1ng b~ negottatton and con'>t'n~u'i rather than confronta- tion · ht• s~11d "-\t 1h1\ point. ,t-very- hod' 1\ 1n a 11\lening mode·· Hotkl plJn~ 10 l<mducl town hall ml'l'lln!l' 10 12 <. alttom1a coastal •l)mmunilll''> ll hl•ar,ommenh on a prl'liminan Jgrel·ment 10 leaw 6fT- 'hort· \Ill'' tor <>1! and gas de' clop- ml'nl Ounng thl' mt1nt h hl· al'iO plans to '1\11 lnJ1an rt·..en a11ons. "lldhk (Pleaae Me INTERIOR/ A2) Freeway fee rneetins;. canceled Eastern Freeway stlldy continuing An Irvine Ctty Councn meeting tenatlvety scheduled today to consider compromises l(l a legal dispute over a freeway fee ballot measure has been cancektd. .AUi1tant City Manager Paul Brady Jr. said Mayor David Baker and Coundtman Larry Agran met . Wednesday with proponents of the "Right-to-Vote" measure and members of the groopg that have challenged its legality. If adopted, the ordinance would require the lrvlne City Council to {Pleue ... CANCEL/ A2) ' Alternative routes proposed by homeQJNners will be considered In bid to.ease traffic crush By JEFF ADLER Of lhe D•llJ l'flot lteH The Orange Count} Board ot ~upcr"' l'>Or<; decided Wednesda)' to cpn11nuc..· \\-Ith an in-depth stud~ of the 'a nous routes for the propo~ Ea~tl·rn Freewa>. which would skin Ir\ 1nl' and pac;~ through North Tu<.t1n and l c..•mo n Me1ghts In 'Ot1ng to appro'e the ~>cond pha~ oft ht• c;tud). 'lupcrv1sors agreed to nnrro"' thl· numher of freewa\ sections or llnl-; under cons1dera11on tYom 800 to 20. 1nclud1ng se"'eral altcrnat1H~ routing:. proposed O) area homeowner., who turned out in force at the.· morning mCl'llng. \mong tho~c al1gnOH'nl'> cl1m1natc..•d from further tom1der- a1ion '>'l.'rl' thme pa~'iing i;lo.,c..·~1 10 reo;1dl·n11al tlc\l.'lupment' in fa,1 Tu,t1n Orange and 1hc wc'>!ern portion' ot lr~ne fhc L a,1crn ree"'a' ,,, pro~i~d "011 Id It n ~ 1 he "l'rs1dl' I-rl't''-' a' 1 n -\nahe1m Hill' '' 11h the \anta \na FrCl'\1.3\ 1n r U'iltn Tran .. portat1on plannl'r' c\pct t thc frt:e"a' 10 tx· hu1lt t•arl\ in thl' lll'\I Cl'OIUf\ JI a lO\I ranging tlt"\iSl ~ '211 to S lMl 01111100 ~UP\'n 1\0r\ ah<' ordl·n·d .. ad- d1t1onal \tud\ ol an altt·rnattVl' rout 1n1t prof)(l\t;d h' arl'.1 rc,1dt·n1 \.1 1lhdlc Broll~'> \\hKh "11uld lullo" the e\ICO\HJn of thl' L JgunJ rree~\ to \anuago l am on Ro.id umned Ill the (iarden ( tr<l\ l' r rt'l'\\a\ alon~ \antiago ( reei... and lllnnt•t.1 to the R1,l'r'>tdl· hl'l'"a' along. Blind and (i\p<iu~ l·an~on' '"Th" 1<; a po1l·nt1alh "I\(' alterna- 11,e."' commentl·d 'iu~n !\Or BrU1.:c '\il'\tJndc "'how d1,t11t I IJ~l'' 1n muc..h of the \IUd~ Jrl'J 1n ..ll1~~1ng \ure the .,o,allcd Broo~' \hcrnall'l \lllluld tx· 1nduded 1n thl' -.1ud\ "nlJndc added thJt h(' h<.'11e' l"\ the nl'\c trccw:l\ '' Ol't'dt•d to prt'' ent ··gndk1rk" on lOUO\\ r~d' Jnd ..:i1J thl' ln'l'"'a} "'''uld m•l\C lrallil · around the counl\ rathl'I th.111 through rl''i1den1 1al nt•1ghoorh1){)(1, :·Thal' ""ill be no ngg1ng Thl' larh v. ill d1tt.11e and .t orcfan•J Jllt.·rna- 11\t' "'111 rl'\ull J' thl' data dictates." ht \did \m1\ng 1ht: numerou!> homeo" oers "'hu l'\flrl'\\t'd particular concern '" t'r tht propo'il'd frt'C""il) route was Ir' ine rt'\ld<'nt M1kt· Leonard. rep- rt'\('nl1ng lhl· Nonhwood Home- 1\\\nc:')'> \.,.,cx1Jt1 un I t•nn.1rd told \Upef\ 1i.o(S one of the pn\l"ll"l"J ,1hgnmrnl\ 1hc Peters (a- n,110 \\ J,h \hgnmc..·01 \\1>uld fof"C't' Jr.l'lll fl\ "100 lil tht· l 11' nf In inc'<, <.1l'ncr.tl Plan and 'hould be rt .uin\1Jl·n·d t-~k al'-<' J'ilo.t.'d that tht· trcr" a' hi:· 1'ept on nt"arh' l oma'i R1d~H· In rt-iJll'J ,ommrnt~. In int" ')·plan- lllOtl managl·r Paul lrcldnd reque,ll'd thJI larctul u1n<>1dt'rat1on-bc g1v~n to 10 allgnmel\t that folio"-~ the m m (Please aee P'REEW A YI A2) How traumatic are demerits to FOun~ain Vall~y hqspital? P111L S1£1DEllAI Marine gets life in El Toro·base barracks killing Trauma center director disputes crtttctsm. but says f aciltty will work to regain status lmaainc )'ou"rc invohcd 10 n traffil accident at 1 a.m. You're rustled to the nca~t hospital cmc'lcnc) room with \CnOu'I IOJUnc'i. Medical cxpcns \II)' )'OU mu<1t receive attention within the crucrnl .. golden hour .. af\cr an tnjUry ()C('Uf\. Hut th15 hospital lacks the t'qu1p- mcnt and tcchnicinns nCt'Jcd for n quick cvaluatton of your tnJunc . At thl'l hour. 00 SUrit:On IS 00 duty 1 hl<i ho11p1tal doc11n't .b&\c enough of )Our hlood t}J>C The aoldcn hour -and )our ltrt'-1 ihpp1n1 a"'" • Thi) ~1rt of sccnano prompted ht' hh ~art• c\P.Crl'I 10 pw•\ for ac1u1on ol 111rounla c;-~ntl·r '>"cm in t";aniac C oun~ , Thev rca~ned that the nt'art'~t cmergcnC'} room might not alway be the ~st place to care for "1ct1m<i of hft'-thrcaten1ng tnJunc" Instead. the' argued. the Ch:ln(CS of Ur\IVll tm• prove when, the '1rnm 1 ~akc-n t'o a ho p11al equ pp(-d 10 h-and~ pan1cu- la rl) !>CflOU'l IOJUflCS -C\cn 1f II ,, a lcw more m1,cs ll"'ny. • Official$' at f·ounrntn Vnlh!) Com· muntt) I lo!>p1tnl "-ere am,1011 the mo t agarc'l'lt\C 10 pu"'u1na traum~ n~ntcr statu\ \ntl y. hen lh 0 n~,· Count) S)'St~·m Y.,1, Mt11hh\httl 1n I ~80. f ountain \ .1lle\ Commun11\ Y.I\ On\' or th Uthl'lll\I .,,, t\~ \1m:c then. r1111nta1n V lie~ Com- muMt\: ~ .um·J.1Jl\t1~11of\ \llw '>)Stt'm·~ bu~1e4't center. handling 40 percent of the count}·., trauma c..·a\e'), 10l lud1n1'1c11m\ of trallic an·idcnt!>. shoo11n1 and \tabb1ngs Sinn· 1~80 the ho'ip1rnl h11o; 1rc:ue<l more than J 000 1rauma p:i11cntc; But hl'it ""t'd.. f oun1a1n \ alle\- ( ommunit' uffiual<i "'l'n.' \hod.cd to learn th.la rn 1l•" lram had 11\ rn thl' ho'lpllal (~nh ta 120-da"' r\tCn\lon uf 1111 trnuma lCntcr dc'l1tnJt1on. In ronlri\sl. l l( In inc Ml·d1ral C. 1.·nter m Orunae r~CI\ l'd a one-~car c~tl!n!i10n M1s!>1on ( ommunit) ltos- pital ul Mi~~1un V1eJO Jnd V..l'\t...rn M,•\hlOll< cntain~nt.a .\narn:n'tJ lull hH>-)r3r tr.tu ma ccntu l'rrt1h,·a- tiun. The lif\h ho\p1tJI \n.1hc1m Mcmonal. ha' Jroprx'\.I out ol thl' ,\.,tl'm • Qunt.110 V.illn ( omruun1l\ of· Ii, ..ii~ t h hu.ltm "4\flW ol 11\t: -- • Focus ON THE NEw s rt'' IC"' team'\ coodu,100\ \ t't lht·~ .al~o \J\ t~) "'Ill m.akl· v.hJIC\l'r Frocn lift and wire reports prO\\"dural l h.1ngt•, arl' O\'\('\\.'.lf\ It> \n LI l 1110 \1.annt tuql\11 .1 1 "·•' \.'ont1nul' ""a trnum.a. tl'Oh'r \kan· wnll"Otcd tc' ltk 1n pn"'n \\ ('Jn,•\(1,1\ ""htk. rnunt~ nll'dttal C\f" rt' \a) ath·1 :idm1111n ht· lo.1llcJ a tl'llo"' fl''>tdcnts 'hould not ht· "'ar' 1\I being· M11nnt · "tiu "'•" hdpin& m1h1ar' 1.1kl•n to f 0\1n1<1rn \ alll'\ tor lrcJt· 1n,~11a:itc\f' un1.i\t•I .1 j')3\roll \\"',1m m,•nt tm the lx1"~ · • "'ttll 1h,· <\tuth h;1' ca\I a \hathi" <pl Rt< h.lf\1 l Plummt•r latnU~ OH'r lhl' ho'lp1tnl 'tahtx•tl Pf< 1-.t•, 1n lkmg.in .i 21 1>1 \\ tl11, m 1 homn'l<1n th(' h11\p1-\car old \1.11 n\' n.111~ v. ho!K' tx"l<h t,ll'Hfm•J.tnr oltrauma\l'f\ltc '>.11d "a' lound \flHt\.\kJ 1n hi\ hair.11~" I ollntatn alk·, Comm unit' ' \la1l \IJrt;h ~I u:urdina 111 "'mll11an "a' "'ltunftcJ .. ·h~ th,· f\'Jl'lrt ·•\\, 1tlt\ tal' think Y.\' run ont' ul th.r lx'\1 trauma \ an1ltt3..!).JU\lf\' '.'>C'nlt'ntcd Ilium· "'"'''" tn tht' l11untr\ ··ht' "'11d nw1 \\ t·,fnr'-(1.1' I<' a ,h,honurahk fh,· n.''J'"' \\ uttkh!~ lt"\I h' dt'1. h.iittt f\'d11\11on II\ 1"11' at, 1111 ph' "'tan' a11J ,1 It .iuni.1 nu't\4.' .111 1,•1tuf\' "i II J\;I' :tn\I .Lllnv. :.n't' .an,I • . f.P ~ TR.AUMA/ A~} -• .... tiJW.,,,'fll 14•1 1,w-. 'ofttd '-fttrtt\ • ""1 Pq1Jll·r Da\I,· lh "'111 -.Cl\t' h1' hie term 11 l l.i,,·n"nrth ~cd<."'fal Pcnitcn11a~ 10 "-.10,1'1': l>.1\ ... \31() . l'lummt'r pkadeJ iuilt' Tut"\da) "' \tahhing. fkmpn and to chafJC\ 1hat ht· v.a' ~rt \lf .1 l<ln.,p1ran 10 a '>lhl·nw thal rnllt-c tt'd molt than l.~(ICl IO NHOll fund ... l~\.I~ 1d n 1fo·1a1, behe'r Berrigan and anoth<'r \l,mnc. all nl whom worked 1n the l'\J\.l'' linantc wction v.crc \.\.1\rltng "II" Plummt'r to m1~p­ pr1lflrtati:-fla\ roll fund . In an effort to rn1u,t h1.-. O"-O ~uni hcm<"nt Ber· np" • Jt<'<'d 111 h~lp ·t Na, 1 ln"·'ttit.'ltl\t ~n ": ht pro\1Ji1.11 f P1 eee li!IAAlftg/ A2l . ~ , • Orange Ce>a1t DAILY PILOTITnurlda~. August 1, 1985 DRUG CHARGES TO BE REFIL~--- homAt hanJlan1 the ca • _ ··1&· not mnnt ... a ,l3p 1 n) or the Juda ~ ·• John~n ddcd. .. h .!.JU t that they probabl) w<>uld fc ·I unl·om fortablc ~1th a Cll\C Mo~t of chem arc pri") lo the l.1(h nnd optnaon~ ... " h dru t.'IW wu~ d1 mi' (d ha t• month nfttr 'thtbor Cou(l Ju c Ru II Bu trom ruled Nt"~JXlr\ Beach polu:c cc>nd Ul tt<d an 1lkpl \Carrh ol a 45-fO<Jt yulht where five ton) ol man1uan1 Wl'n: lound The JUd&c to wd out fdon} l harac~ asgnanst thn."l' \anta < ru1 mc:"n who allc&cdl) \mugalcd the boatload of contraband north from < olt1mb1u Bo trom \tl1d he bd11.'vl·d Polt<'e ollicer\ mu> hu ve lted and l·hanged their tcs11mon> during the mun proceedings. The.' JuJel filed an affida \.ll Tut'.'~d) outhnan~ ha~ suspa· c1oni. that polt'c ufficeri. n>mm11ed perjury and p<w11bl> oh<itrulled JU\· lice and dl'1troH-d c.'Vtdt'.'n~ an thl.' 3$C .. JudSl' C hmtupher 'ltroplc the rl•\1dang 1udgl.' of Hartk>r < ourt Judd'e Rua.eu'eo.trom ked th<.' C1rand Jun 10 1n\e t1ga1l' • c Jllc1.t11on\ v.hadr hl' de-.tntx'd a' ~nou' Bostrom. claiming 1hc )Udgl' appear\ . Pl'rJUr} and dc,trul twn ol to be pn.·1ud1ced against 11./ewport C' tdc:"nce nn.-klon1c' police John\on \aad hl' "''" Ir\ tu refill" .. There an: 11 senco; of anc1dcnb drug charge\ Jgaani.t the ~ama C rut "here he appears to be overly mm rn Central Mun1c1pal Court 1n concemc<1 wnh the t:nfon.:cmcnt anlJ .\na where Judges ma~ nol ha\.e practices of thlS dcpanment," saad bl-en l.'\poscd 10 the ·•pres\ lO ... eragc Gross. who did not specify to which and all tht: 1alk' on 1hc ca~. 1nc1dents he was alluding. Becau!>l' of thl· unusual l'lrlum-"Our ptrct'.'ptaoi> led us to d isagree stance' 'iurroundang the caSI.'. John· wuh ham. T ha(S all. I don't see son '>aid Wilham Nl'l'ion. 25: Da' ad anything horrendous in th1u." Gross Cho). 28. and Victor Lucina. 35. said ... He overreact!\ ... probabl} will be a\kt'.'d to !ihow up at In hisaffidavu. Bostrom noted that coun ano;tcad of being rearrested. a rusted mooring sign on the doci.. Meanwhile. Ncwp()rt Beach Police where police discovered thr yacht was Chtt'f( harlc .. urO'i'i \alO l~c "'-Clcomes rrpainted less than two hours after he a Grand Jur: tn\.CStagatlun 1n10 the or0cre<rrrphotographcd for the court 'alleg;:itaon' 1ha1 member!. of has record. depan1m•nt rx·rJured thcmsel\ C) in The legibili ty of the sign. which -court hmtts moonng to 20 mtnutes. be- .. , welcumt: an} unh1a.,i:d in· came an issue in the drug heanng. "es11ga11un tha1 "''II bnng 1he tact'> 10 Police apparently became suspicious the public .. (iroS!. '>Std Wednesday. f of the boat bccaust at h~d -overstaycd -"I ha\ e rn _icY.t:d the record and I · . the mooring liroiL ~ . bclane thl.' oflu:~r'> 3lted appropriate-But City Manager Bob Wynn said at I)' and honest I) " \aid Gross ... .\nd 'was a eo1nc1dcnce that the moonng that'c; the: onl) conclu\aon .!hat'll sagll was rcpamted by l'WO cit y coml· uut of an) 1n\~l.t1ga11on workers the same day Bostrom or- Cro" repealed hi~ cr111cal.m'> ot dered at photographed. •. ..... FLUOR SALE OK'D ••• From Al ol the ta cil1ry. and add111onal ll'nanb are being sought. · . The adjacent Fluor land CO\.l.'red b\ the purchase 1ndudc\ 122 acre-; tn 1wo parcels bounded h} Jamboree Boulevard. thl.' \an-Daegu Frce~a) and lhe 5an Diego Creek The sate bounded by Michelson Onvc and the San Diego Creek" Pollce Chief Charles Gr.on '( >ur\lgn shop personnel paantl.'d It a\ part of our regular pier ma1ntt'.'n· ancl.'. The> weren't ordered b\ am· one to iman111," Wynn said. .. Both ol them are walling to tak.: a Ju: dr~ctor." the cit} manager said. "They arc an honest. upright bunch. If the police had put them up to th•~. they'd say so." A spokeswoman for the Grand Jury !>aid an investigation of Bostrom's allegauons would be confiden tial. She !.aid to her knowledge, though, the Grand Jury has never refused to inve~tagate a matter referred to 11 by a county judge:. Woman sentenced in Rea~an bilking LOS ANGELES (AP) -A Jl.ldge sentenced a 76-year-old woman to thrtt years and four months an pnson for trytng to bilk President Reagan on the sale of hrs S l.4 m1llton Pacific Palisades home. Ann Yarbrough and her t'J I-year· old husband. James. were both m· volved 1n the scheme. but Deputy Dai.tn<'t Attorney Al Botello said she was the mastermind. "She likes to bask 1n the-ltmelight." Botello said of Yarbrough, who waved to n::poi:ters prior to sentenc- ing Wt'.'dnesday. "She was able to trick and Oim-flam not only common people. but intelligent people who run ban lung 1nstitut1ons ... ... ___ .Qevelopcrs also ma~ ac:quare a 2.5·ane For Fluor, the land sale will generate after-tax cash proceeds 1n 1985 of $225 million. Fluor Chair· man TapP.?n said vinually all of these funds will be used 10 reduce the comwm~bL James Yarbrough received three yean probation from 5upcnor Court J udgc E' e.a.:u E.JUrhJ c. ... FREEWAY STUDY CONTINUES ... FromAl · mon Tustan-ln.1ne borda "!)uch a border would allo"" tor ma>.amum land-uc;e planning.." lhl· c1l> ·s planning chief explained ~fore \Ollng to au1honte the sel·ond phase of the stud>. board < hairman Thoma~ Rain nutl·d thJl the heann~ had been dda\l·d a weel. bl.'lau!>e "ol thc 1nlCO\l' 1ntl~rc\t on thl· part ol area homeo" nt:r'> and the ab!.encl' las.1 · "eel. of Supcn l'>llr'> Brule 'estande and Ruger S1an1on "how re'>f)l'lll\C d.1<.trnl\ "ould be al1Cltl'd h) the freC'-'d~ \alignment "\\l· all thought 11 '"3!. a slam dunk .ind "l' "ere surprised (at thl· 1nten.·,1 and turnout)" Riln ac- k nm\ !edged · _INTERIOR SECRET ARY HEADING WEST ... "" From Al refugee;. wild hor..e adoption 1.cnter~. archeologacal '>Ill'\ and \I\ nauonal park\. Orange C oa\t rt·s1dl•nt~ ;ind elettl'U ollic1ah will meet with I lodd from 9 to 11 a m ~~Hurda>. Au~ 31 at the Newport Rl.'alh (it) ( uunlil chambl:rs. '>Jld \\ alllam ~h.rl·1bcr Jn a1dc to Rl'P Rotx·rt Aadhdm R· l'oew pon Beath E:leued kader\ "111 .iddrl''>' Hodel con1.ernang tht•1r 11ppos111on tu plan' that "nuld orx·n 'i4 '>(luare mall''> of • 0<:ca n l1nor off lht· <>ran~l' ( oa'>t tor oil dnll1ng CANCEL .•• From Al obtain voter approval before Imposing new ~veloprnent fees 10....be1p pay for three proposed south county freeways. Oth\.'n ma> aJdrc\\ Hodel. hut allowt·J 1n the tentall"c plan. mu'it reqot•st rx·rm1\\lon an writing The turrent compromise agrel" through Badham·., offill' ~chmher ment nail\ for opening 1,350 square \aid. mil~' oil the < aldorn1a·., coast w11h Local lt'aders art· t.·nrnuraging lhl' rt:mainder oft he protected 58.140 Hodel 10 ~lop tn Ne" port and LagunJ '>quarc mile~ remaining under a Reach on h11o "a' lo Jn Jftl·rnoon moratorium un1tl. at lea'il. the }car meeting 1n On·and\ldl· to lam1han1r ::!IJ<lfl ,. h1m'>t'lfw1th the tkalhl''> that niuld hi.' lklurl· k·a\ 1ng on h1o; trap we\I. ad\ er">eh alTcl'ted h\ otl.,hcm· ml Hmkl \a1d at a nl'"., t-Onft:rt'ncc that drilling · · hl' "3'> looking lor .. hands-on e\- "\l\.t '11 ffil'l'I "Ith h" <llhaml· f>l'rll.'nll' 10 make bcner informed pcopk lo p111nt out on <1 m<1p "'hl'rl· 1udgmrn1 .. about thl.' 510 million <;pcettic CO\l heache\ arl· an I aguna atH''> 01 publ1l land\ under hai. that he \hould see ·· ">lhrl'thl•r \Jld 1un'1dtd1nn tha\ morning .. \ lot ul thl'\l' lll\I.'.. McanY.htk the Huu'>t ol Rep- hcachrs lannol Ix \l'l.'n lrom the rl'\t'ntJll\l'' pa\scd an lnirrior Oc- h1gh"Wa).. partml·n1 ;1ppropraat1on'> ball \\ h1k t'll'lll'<l uiunl\ Jnd lol,tl lll\ ~ t:dl'll'\lb\ that for 1he fir..t tame lc.:..1dL·r, .m: '>trongl) opposed 10 oil '>Intl· t Y8 I l'\dude'i a ban on 011 dnll1ng on the rna'>I. J group of nploralaon utTthe ( alifom1a coast Reruhhcan congrl''>'>nll'n lrom ( all· r hl' nW.l'>Url' wh1lh passed 270 lo fom1a arc prcs'iunng Hodel to t>pcn 14 l will nt''\I Ix• con~1dercd bv the l.'H'n mor1: tratt~ for 11.'a~· than tho\c \t.>n~lt' - Brady said the parties werf unabteto reach acompro~ol'\. MARINE GIVEN LIFE the matter. so today's c ncl · • • • meetmg on the Issue w rom A 1 . c~ . l'' llll'Olt' aga1n ... 1 Plumm1·1 · TM legality of the "Rlot1t-to- Vote" measure ls now scheduled for COf'Hlkt«•tlon Aug. 8 In Or- ange County Superior Court. The l111t1·11url 111 ~::!tJIJ a 111un1h for fhe mun1h' Jnd rl.'duct1on to prt\atc -council la tcheduled to meet at 6 ~.m. Aug. 8 to 8'1opt the measure or pt.ce It on the Nov 5 ballot, ~-tM court rules the meatUrelalnvaOd. l'lurnrnc.:r ""' arrl'\ll'd on ''"Pl uon of murder the da\ alter lkm~n ~a' lound dt'ad wath a""'' crt.·t.I jug1-1lar \l'ln and ant·n. lead1n~ to h1\ hl·art PF-< < .\ \frace thr third \1J11m• tn\11ht:d 1n tht: p;nrull ~am Wil\ 1o~ntenu:d \.larl h I~ 111 a bad u1nduu d1<.eharg\.' toofincmcnt 111 hard Jabhr lnr nnl.' month JI < amp PC'ndlelnn \1 the 11me of his death. Berrigan "'·" d~·\utbcd h) fam1I~ member\ a' .1n antdlatt.l'nt hut restless man who "a' d1~1llu<,1oncd with the Manne Corp' "htlh he Joined 1n 1983 after df11pp1ng nut of college I <1m11\. ml.'mbcr~ \aid Berrigan pl.mnl·d lO rl'turn home folloY.1ng h•'> d1,t h;ir~l' and rl'-t'ntl.'r college • " Just Call 642:.6086 What do you llkt about"\be Dally Pilot'! Wbat don't you like? Call tbe number at lt'ft and your me.Hgt wtll be recorded, truserlbed and delivered to the appropriate rdllor Tbt same U ·hour·answcrto11uvlce may be u1td to rttord letters to the rdltor oo a ny topl<'. Cootrlbuton to our lAtten column must Include lbelr name aod telephone number for vtrlflc11Uon. No elrcul1tlolfcal11, please. Tell "" what'• on your mind I • ,. Dally Piiot O.llVery re Guaranteed M_,., 'r 4Ar II ff!oJ ; not ~ ..... ,,,,.., ""'f>'I" "' ~ 30 Pm Cl&li bel:>t• 1 D m .no roo.-COC>y ,. D" ,,..._9(1 I ...... .,., -~ r '"" 00""' «-·-coo. lty 7 .. ,., "'' llr'O<• 10 • ""rd .,tu '°'~ .. 0-~trd Ctrculallon Teleprfltno "'<* Or •'9' Ccu<>lw .... , ~ l ,_H..,.i ....... • i~A~~E Daily PilDf ) Karen Wittmer t 1 a1 M1tn.;il') • Frank Zlnl1 f (J I r Robert l . Cent,..11 F rOd\J •J()(I MllflftgP• Howerd MuUenary A !verttsing ()jrf!tlO• Donald L. WIUlam1 C11c;11t• l.Attrt I tit PeggJ Bl.vine Claf>6•l·el1 Otr C10f Circulation 7141142-4333 Cl•••lfted advertl1lng 714/142:5171 All other department• 142-4321 MAIN OFFICE . • ,. w .... i ea • .,, Cot•• ..,~ • ~ i ~ r • r Cot!&........ " VOL. 71, NO. 213 '• . . . .. 3 2 2 • Warm, clear'"weathei:continues S01Jtt1etn 1forn1 I be wtrm nd c:I ar UV°"Gb fuClay except tor tom. cloud• •IOnO the cout Outing the night and morntno houra. the NatlOnel w .. th« Servte. aald. H1gl11 wlll range from tht 70t at the buchea to 88 downtown and up to 9e In the Inland v•lleys Ovtrnlgh IOWt wlll be In th• 801 I Along the Oranoe Coast It win be c!eer through Friday but aome low cloud• a.long the eout oorlhg late nfjht •nd eerly morning hourt Hl~hs both daya at beachet 70 to {4 Lowa 6510 68. High• lnla.nd ,,.1i.y1 Friday 90 to 96. Lows tonl~ 62 to 66. From Point Conception to the Mexlc•n Bord and out 80 miles -Inner watera. wlnda w .. t to southwest 1 10 18 knots through.and Friday Wind waves 1 to 2 fH t. Southw.at •wells 2 to 3 feet. Some low clouds evening and morning hours otherwla• clear through Friday. U.S. Temps • lltlle~ l(Jyrovtlle HI Lo bS M " 80 H 18 • • 5-4 101 •• 9A .. 16 711 113 91 ,, 71 u ao 79 57 S9 75 79 15 AIO""¥ IYbuqW<q.,. Am.,tltQ MeftOI. Al141nll AllWlllC O•ly Aulltfl 81111-• 17 7S 7t 86 ., 75 ~ M1e"" &Mell .............. Mc>lt·SI P .. ~ N .. llv1He NewO.leen• NewYOlll Norlolll 11• Oili.ttollle C.ty C>melle 89 N ee ~~ ~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~...,.....~ ... nwt\jll_ ._,.,~ 800M eo.1on 8'111.ie> et 17 to 71 I!! ~ • S4 et IO es 111 u 52 OtlandO Pltll~ "'-" P•lllllU<OI\ Portlllnd .,._ " 85 101 " IO 71 1~ Calif. Temps .. 12 lloQI\ 19'* IOI 14 l\nute ...011'9 al 5 .,,, . "' . S 7 B•i.e(tl'll!<I 8' IO Surf Report .. LOCATION "''"'"'41'°"-. R•-Jelly Newpofl aar .,.... 1•3 ,.., 2 3 .... c~ c11er••on s.i:; CNt•1onw1,· Cl\ettotte N C Ctleyetlne Ch<C;eOO C1nc1nna11 CNl..-...0 Columbut .Pit ConoOfO.~H Ollltn·FI Wann Oeyton 113 77 Por11ano0t Pr~ 17 7S 62 Eu•el<• 07 59 81 FrHno II 112 401n Str-N...,POI, :nna s11 .. 1 Newl>Olt 8alO<HIW911Qe legll'\IEINcl\ Senci.m.nte 2·J ,.., 2·l .... " 71 .. 70 7e ~ 61 llO :::t'c.11 Aano RlcnlftOllCI " 70 71 91 01 02 71 lotl ""II"'"' ... 81 69 QMIAnCI 73 llO 43 "-"'-• 11 51 14 Red 81ul1 71 12 )-4 .... 2·3 ,.., 2·4 , .. , •• ,.,,_ 97 o.n-0.MC>IM9 Delron Oululh EIPHO " 97 74 .. 71 14 72 51 100 ,. ao ea 11 es 71 51 .. 68 73 .. 115 69 75 58 ·n ae 111 •9 81 50 7e 52 10 5t 82 S4 ..-tt o.i n 13 .. t5 72 92 73 SI louia 8t~e Tan>pe Se11 La11eC1ty San AnlonlO S...Juan,P R S..10. Shf41YllPOt1 Spoiiane SyftlCUM Topel<a TUC-' -tM 96 90 70 OS 12 13 87 oe IS ~ooo C11y 73 01 78 SKl•m<tf\to ao 55 70 Salon.I . 12 51 15 5.,, °'4lgo 11 1, 16 San Fte11'11CO 12 58 SI Sll>Cklon • 18 ~7 76 Hl{lll IOw le>< 2.a "°"'a .nd1no •I 5 p m Sia &ar11ow 101 &e 52 SIQ &.et 711 J9 97 llllllOI> 113 47 10 Blythe 106 78 Swel dwec:1.on -.1-1 Tides TOOAY • 06pm 10 13pm F"'OAY 2 1 8 I F .. rbanU F.,00 Rag11111 • Gren<! l\aolela GIHlflHt He<tle>td Helene HonokllU HOualon ~ JacilaOft,MI JD _,¥\lie Jur-. K-Clly l.MlltgU Tulaa WUlllnQton Wlc:hltl ·: 07 71 C.lalln• n Ill> M Lono 8M(.I\ 78 84 72 Monrovia 90 llO f •"t low Ftllllll{ln Second low Sec;ond n1011 5 19 am t160am 4 47 pm 10 51 pm 01 44 2 I 8 I Monie(~ a 1 50 Ml W11-. 72 llO Extended -pOl't e .. c11 10 83 OnletlO 89 82 Svn sett •od•r at 7 ~ pm . ,_ Frt0a1., 6 05 am and Mii llQ•lft al 7 53 om " 52 13 .. 102 .7• l'Alm•ing. IOI 10 P~• 88 59 A.-akle .. 511 San B«n.,OlnO 91 so San Gab<... 18 8 t San JoM 19 llO Sallie """ 80 93 s.nte Ct.u ' 70 55 T.,_ lllllley S 40 Moon flMI IOOay ••• 57 0 m .. ,. Frtday at ti 311 am and ,._ llQ..., el 9 ZllDm TRAUMA CENTER DISPUTES REVIEW .•. From Al from outside Orange County. County offil·1als. who oversee the trauma '>ystem. declined to d isclose the exact cra11c1sms levt'.'led at Foun1ain Valley Community. other than to say they rdated to the quality of patient care. But Thompson was not as reticent, to discuss the review team's charges. H~ said the evaluation team claimed Fountain Valley physicians ordered too many or 100 few tests, including X-rays, CT scans and peratont'.'al lavage procedures (a check for abdominal bleeding). According 10 Thompson. the reviewers sug- gl·<,ted '>ome ph)sicians ordered-citira ll'"' to earn more mone) -• "But our surgeons arc paid accord· '"ti to thl' '>h1ft (not per tc'it) ... the lfjumJ director ..aid. "We explained thl\ to the~ people. but they didn't \l'l.'m to under<;tand " Hl' ..aid the review team claimed thl' F ounta1n Valle) trauma Ct'nter 'tan <:alll'd an 100 man> l'On'iultants. Thomp\on an-.1sted the use uf such rnnsullJnl\ wal. JUStafied Thompson ~1d some of the cnt1 - c1sms "ere rooted samph 1n a d1ffercnte of ph1losoph) or ·ho<,patal protocol lk noted that the re\-acw · team caml· pnmaril) from count) or un1\t:r!>ll) hospital setting!.. where nwd1lal procedures can var) 'i1gnifi- tilntl> from thOSI.' at a community hospital C\uch as Fountain Va lley. wh1th "owned b> doctor'>. rhe trauma director .claimed th<:< l'\aluauon 1eam mcmhcrs did not propcrl> read some patient records. lk wa'i aho pt>1nted out tha11he team '>lud1cd onl\ record<, from 1983 and a le" from earl) 1984 .Thompson acknowledged. hOY.· C\er. that '>ince the re\ 1ew period. thl' ho'>patal has made change'> 1n its trauma l·cnter '>taffing afterdeterm1n- 1n~ that \Orne ph)!.ll"l3ns who were '>killed \Urgeon'> werl.' not necessaril} "ell 'iu1~d to the demand\ of trauma duty He said the hospital is an\lous to lunch retain at'i trauma center des1gna11on and has hared two outside consultant~ to study its operation "We're lookan~ for some guid- ance." Thompson said. "We want to see if we need to do things different· ly." In addition. tht'.' hospital 1sexpccced to have an opportunity in the coming weeks to counter t~e review team's fi ndings. Although Fountain Valley ho'ipatal officials are di~pleascd with the evaluation. Dr. Robert Bade. medical d irector of the count} 's Emergenq Medical Sen ices office which o"er· secs 1hecoun1y's trauma ')'>tcm. said. "I think the} I the ft'\ 1cwcr'I) did an c\lraord1nanl} comprl.'hensl\ e Jt>b I v.a., mol.t 1mpre<,scd" "Wl· wcrl.'n·1 head hunting." Rade insastcd Ht' claimed thl.' slud\ "'-U'> J roullnl' pan of an o'erall plan .to upgrade thl· trauma S\>Sll.'m He 'i<!ld ouhatle re\ teWS are "One of the be<,t tt•arhang tools." · . .\sked 1t'Fountain Valle;.,., hi..cl> to I.use ns trauma cenll'r dc\1gnat1on ijal!t-said. "I don't thank 11·-. going to get to that point. Wc'vt• been rt:· a!.surcd b} Fountain Valk) thal ever} thing (Cited b> the re\ 1ew team) " fixable ·· John G .. Wl.''l. an Orangl·-basl·d surgeon who helped organ11e 1he count} 's trauma system. 11a1d '>Orne of the rt:v1ev. team's fi ndings Wl'rl' arbitrary and involved second~gul' ... '>· ing a phys1c1an's judgment calls Ht' also said the '>tud\ v.ould ha'c been more mean1ngfuf 1f the '>aml.' personnel had rc\11.'wcd all four trauma centers Count) officaalsconfirrtied that not all rl.'v1ew team members studard each hospnal Reportcdl). the mmt cntacal comments were made by a surgeon who dad nol e"aluatc \\ic~l­ ern Medical Center or M1s!.1on (om- munit) -the two fac1ht1es that rece1 vcd full t WO·}l.'ar trauma ... n·ni fie at ions Aut Wt:\l pointed out that trauma '>~'>ll'm' are relall\.CI) new. and so as . lhl' prtX:I.''>'> for n:v1ev.1ng them He da1mctl regular c\.aluauons lakt• the reccnl one arl.' essential if Orangc ( ount' \ 1rauma wr.tcm as to be improved. · .. fhl· "Y"ll'm 1~ working, .. he said. "It'<, JU'>l a matter of fine tuning ii Wl··re fl.'\ 1tali11ng a vel) good sys- tl.'m" Bee eradication begu-n in Kern B.\1\.£.R~HELD (AP) -Go,.em· ml.'nt agents IOund 24 swarm\ ot wild hl'I.''> on the first da} of the erad1ca11on ordl·r .11mrd at prt',en11ng the spread ut .\tracan ··1.1ller bees." \tatl' f-ood and Attnculture Darcc- tor < larc Bernhall issued the order Wl.'dnt•\da\ to ioll all the v.1ld bees an a SO-mile radius of where the coun· tr)\ firs1 known killer bees were tound f ht: agl.'nt\ rnnccntrated Wedncs· du\ on a 10-mile radius of the d1~rn,cr}. which was three-quarters ut a male '>outhwest of the town of LO\t Halls in Kern Count}. Kern Coun1y >\gricultural (om· 1llt'>~1oner Robert Edwards said that 5, pcrrent of thl.' homes m the area \\.ert• sear<'hed For the other 40 miles •n the 50..mile radius. t~e public was a1ol.ed to report wild bee swarms and nc\t\ to rnunt) oflicaals r d""ard'i said that of lhe 24 swarms found tnduding one an a domestic h1"e set out as a trap. 21 were dcc;tro}ed. The otherthrtt were 1n the \\:111'> of homes where dismantling would l'X' 10\0l\.ed an eradicating lhl'm lk '>Jtd the~ swarms were g1,en pnont~ on laboratol) 1est1ng. dnd "'-Oulu be quid.I) killed II the -.ample'>" rnniaincd an.,, kilter bees. sushi, steak andseaf~od dlnne' 11 :30 am to a:oo pm 8:30 pm to 11 :30 pm hepp~hour 8:30 pm lo 11:30 pm All rou·c•n· .. t from our f •m01a auehl IHlr durlnfl th• h•PPr #tour· trr our cl• .. lc C.llfornl• lfoll, •nd r•I•• • toeef to tit• ch•f •l $10. Combination Dinner A luecloue combination pl•t• fltet lncluilee tempura, chlck•n, • cltolc• of r•llowt•ll or oretera, rice, min eoup • •ndmor•I $5. 3355 VI• Lido. Newport BHCh • 1714} 875-0575 ~ . r