HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-09-04 - Orange Coast Pilot'
I
1'ff',OAV ',(-Plf MUE-f I l'HM .. ----
ORANGE COUN r V C A l If Ol1NIA . • ·~
.6~.,.000 atte~d ~eagan ki~ko
. ,
~ ~(eSident Opens fe-e eCtiOil Campaign an::•:;icc,,i'!~~n~o~&X>P~~~n!:erc
tth h It~ 11 1 ' Mil S p k within the rally' fenced ground • W . q \:lay f_sl Y 0 _ e quare ar with another 15.000 unabl togcnn.
• ..., Some of the backup wa) caused by
~~,i!!;L2fJ.D~RM~··~·. ·.,
Ptesil:lent Ronatd Rtapll': look.in& o kick oft his fall r'C-\CIC\:UOn cam·
paian bcfOrc a tton&ly upp<)ctive
audience. found one Monday at Mil
Square Park in Fountain Villey.
Roanng cheeu of .. Four More long lanes at a1rport·st>le metal
Years!" arcetcd the president as he detectors. which were used to strccn
made campaiJn promises of wurtd nU those w!\o tetcd the talt~ am.
pe.1c.c and economic prosperity if he ii M'iny of those who could not eel into rc~lccte<f Nov. 6. R~pn also ustd . the rally "remained in out ide :park
ttic occasion 'to· ~but an Afi-CIO. areas and watched the · presidenua1
offic1al's.critic11m of his tax p<>lkic~ motorcade along Euclid Sfrttt.
··rd ao,e to see ilia,.. r r, •
u3dauon .. NadttA.aid. You....,.
the Democrau can M c IMir _.
PIJlft ikickofr11p New "°"' .... * :Labor Day Parack aod die a. publieans can ba vc tb'cir ltictolf nlr
m Fountaan Valley.. ·
In 1980. Oranat. Gouaty Yoe.I gave~ Reapft. Ifie~ m*"1Y
of ny counl) an the DltJ08 • •
o ma.Jor 1nciCkat1 ~ Moe. ~ ... -·"""'A2)
f......-..::_ UBI1¥-~· ---
A former Irvine employee
faces charges of trying to
rip off his old company.
·/A3 ·
:.:·:·:·:·;·:·:·:·:~:~:·:·:•:<•:.:·:·:·:·~:.:·:·:·:·!·;:·~'{·
California ·
A missing 3-year-old girt
has been found un-
harmed./ AS
Nation ·
Two killers wlll be ex-
ecuted this week In
Florida and Louisiana un-J ~s appeals are granted.
/A4 ·.
The next space shuttle
wilt be crowded -with a
record seven astronauts.
/AS
A Ct),lcago printer will go
back to work as usual,
even though he's $40
· ·mllllon richer after win-
ning the state lottery./~
World
Rioting greets the de-
cision of South Korea's
president to visit Japan.
IM
:•:!:•:::~:~:!:!:•:-:·:·:::~~::::~;:;~~:!:::~:;;r.~::::::::::~
Mlnd&:Bocly
. . ... . . ;
Poor habits during a third~
of your llfe -while you' re •
sleeping -could hurt •
your health./81
• If you have vision prob-
lems, even subtle ones, ..
you're more than likely to ·
have vision-related com-
plaints about using a vis-
ual display termlnal./81 r
Sporta
Vince Ferragamo and the
Rams had a day they'd
like to forget, as Dallas
rallied tor a 20-13 victory.
/C1 -' Biii Barnett, a Laguna
Beach resident and
coach at Newport Harbor
High, la the new national
water polo coach./C1 .
The Angets tried to put on
e reffy, but fetl e oame
short at Cleveland. /C1 •
Bualneu
Jack Link letter credits
talks with his dad, Art, for
his bualneu auccess./85
Entertainment
Bo Derek '1 alzzllng
"Bolero" hits the screens
without a ratlng./831
INDEX
Bridge
C11tfornl• New• cauamed
COmlel
Cf OllWO(d
DHth NotlOet
Featur• Horoetope
Ann l:eMerl
NatlOnll Newt
~ PubAcNot ...... T~·
ThMttrl Wttthtr:t----~-=-Wortd Nftl
Al
M
C4,.1
Al
C4
81
B2
C5
82
A4
A7 ae
C1-3
13
3
a?. A4
words,
summer
I
heat
Heat can't melt
victory sptnt
at Reagan rally
BJ PBD. SNEIDEDUN
a. .............
The campaJ&D promises comm&
from the prcsJdcntia.I poc:hum oo-
da~"iat Mile Squarr Put were nny,
but the weather was just plaan bot.
Many of those Who trdked to the
Founwn Valley ~rk io bear Ronald
Reapn tiek off his fall re-election
campaa,gn wtSCI) carr\ed portable
cookn ~ v.1lh Chilled drinks
and pienac food. Other parched
Rcapn fans had to wait an long lanes
at the refreshment stands inside the
rally arounds .
But according lo one. E>Ubhc Safety cmpl~ce o rorked ihc event. the
worst Imes rcsW1cd from under-
cst1mau \he turnout. Appattntl),
there were not cnoU&h pan.able totlcts
lO accommodate the SO 000 or mort pcoole at the part.
You haU IO ~I SOl'I'). 100, fi
Setfct Scniicc men •ito Wat
s eatma out the labOT Da> heat an
suit and ucs ~'lth ndio pl an tbc1r
can and wat -Wkics and w~
lcnow5" t sort of ns under
~it coals.
Firr officials said the) treated only
about 17 casn of heat elbaus1ion,.·a
modnt total.. con~1denna the tul1l-
out. . ; ulL Fouotatn V-allc) Fire Bat-
...,,..._...., ..._.u,111 talio""Chicf Bob McVcy ob9crvrd,.
rally ln F011Dtaln Valley Monday. AD estimated· 65,000 . •·ffad this gone on loqer, hke tbc US
people Jam:Dled lllle Sqaan Park. (Pleue eee SUlf1fY / A2)
From coast to coast on Labor Day.
Mondale and his runnilla matt,
Geraldine A. t::erraro. campaianed
COgether for IS hours. soundina
themes they hope will rc'\CBC the
public opinion p<>Hs and prcven1 a
second Reagan term.
On the West Coast, Mondale was
11.rccted by two former rivals for the
.
D owntr~gmars weekend ~
' . . "'
By TON\' SAAVEDRA
Of .. Dellr .........
-An apparent drowning at Cry t.al
Cove State Park Monda) wa the onl)
accidental d(ath rcponcd in the-
Orange Coast < dunna the sunny,
three-day Labor Day v.cckend that
auncted more than a m1lhon un·
bet hers to 1ru bcache .
Li1fquards along the Orange Coun-
ty coastline id 1t \\'IS smooth sa1hna
throUl)tOut lht weekend. with fow
major incidents to sp<>1I the lazy
mood of the holida).
State ~nd local p<>tiCt' rrponed
there were no fatal traffic IC("ldent on
Oranac Count} f~ys or Oran
Coast hiahwa~ . ·
The otncrw15e perfect weckend wa
marred, howc\er. by the apparent
drownina of Corona re idcnl Mark
Cady, 18. Cady 'wa pronoun<'ed dead
at 8:31 pm. after doctors 1n the
emergency care unit of H 1cm-
orial Ho p1tal worked in ,·a1n tor
rtcarl) 90 minute5 to f'CSU$C1tate him.
Cady was taken bi) bctiropt r tot~
~ewport Beach h~1taJ from Cf) tal
Cove where lifc'luarch Oran c Coun·
ty paramed1(; and me IX'ach rs
had ·applied cardiopulmonary rc-
suscitatton to the tttn~. "' Jack Roggenbuck, hfcauard uJ)cT·
visor for the ta bcac~ said ttseue
v.orltcrs v.erc notified around 6: 30
(Plcue MC DROWJfING/A2l
Sµpervis_ors ignore public,
wOmen voters'· study·finds
' .
,.
I# k .J' II
Democratic 'rice-pre.tdendal candidate Oetald..lne Fenaro
paa.iti for a ... at with her rianntna mate Walter
Mondale. eecoDd frOm rt&Jlt. and Sen. GUj lb.rt, ~o..
rlaht. abOttly befon they apoke at a Labor Day rally ln I.-.c Beacb llODday. .
-
Fo L~~ ON TH[ N£"s
i '\
Arson
pr9bed-
·n NB 1 I
blaze
·"
. '
I at
!CY. cler for 50 .ye 1'$
.. Balboa I land store. till c lied
·ll lililina's. lS.,yeJirs aau.-~~~=
Shc1s Uf' l ved by her son. Or. John ~uld1na. of Gi1cnJ le; her dau1hter.
Mary Ann Teasd le, of Idaho; and 1~0 brothers.
·The memonal sen ice will be held
at the Zont& Club, 2 to I 15th L, in
Newport Beach. A pnvate interment
will tnkc place at · Fairhaven •Mem·
oriul Par}' in Santa Ana.
DROWNING MARS HOLIDAY WEEKEND ...
From Al
-p,m 1hat a swimme1 hatl bCcn pullt'd
from the water. . · ' he began to founder. The lifejuard informauon·was available this mom·
stations had closed about 30 minutes int
earlier at the beacli between Corona 1feguards along other Orange
.
· Fair skies with patchy clouds . .
Coaatal
Tl des
lOOAY ~<HIO lo. 12 00 pm 3 0 8-ond lllQrl • t 12 p m 4 5 8\i(t '"OIOll Vt c~
Wf9H .. OAY Char ... too.S C l"IRllOW 131 a l'ft 0 I (illttlttlOI\, W V Ftrct f\lgll • e 21 e.m •.2 Cllartolla.N C ~d io.. 11>8 pm 27 (;~
9-'ld Noll 1 oe p m. ' 1 CNct00 •
..
.. 47
ft 3t .. 74
11 eo eo eo
-1\. "' 83 70
Rogicnbuck said 'Cadv was ap. parentl~ swimming "Ith a"fncnd, 19-'
year-old Ro; Brown of R1'fe~idc.
. anc;l wa~ returning to 'lhi: ~horc when
de! Mar and Laguna Beach. Coast beaches reponed th,c weekend
An autopsy is pending to determine • was otherwise cal.m. ·
the exact cause .of dcat.h. No funhcr · ·About 265,900 'bathers visited o~
-8un Mii tOOay ti 1;14 pm , rlMI g=::ii
Wadneaefay '1 t.H a m. "encl Hit 1911<1 ,._, .. , • C •
94 70
.. 82
93 eo 83 u 74 60
85 74
ange Coast ·bcache~ on Labor Day.
SUNNY RALLY ... From Al
The visitor bi'eakdown Monday fOr
area beaches was: Huntington State,
36,000; Huntington City, 45,000;
" Bolsa Chica. 42.600; Crystal Cove.
12,300; Ncwpon-Cdrona I 00.000:
and 40.000 Laguna.
wa er cannons o coo peop e o .
Overall, a pleasant holida} picnic
atmosphere prevailed. AJong wnh ice
chests. many of those at the rally
brough,t blankets aQd lawn chairs
which proved handy because the
bleachers at the park filled quickly.
minu c \\Oall to get in was not
uncommon. ·
Vendors hiked up and down the
lines, -setting American flags -·s 1 for
small ones. $3 for larger ones.
. . traffic deaths for Los Angeles and
Orange counties in the first 60 hours
oflhc holiday weekend. according to
Asso:ciated Press repons. No freeway
deaths were reponcd in Orange
County, however.
at 7 141) m ...,..\HTI.,.~" ·
Moon ri..10011 at • 11 pm., Nit at' ~bu1,0ll
1'02 p m anC1 rlMt 901ln Wlld~ay •t Concord.N,H 5:00 p "' Otllh·FI worin
0.YIO!l o.n-
Temperaturea =,~,00'* O\ilulh •
~. Allatrta
All1ntlc;C1t)' Au.1111 aa1um0r• BlrrnlnQham ~~ 8ofM Bolton
lulfllO
eo " ae 89
79 13
80 73
89 80
92 ..
7t 38 83 ••
78 54 78 55
Et P1t0
!VtnhUI•'
FaiflNnkJ--~
Extended
" 84 73 10
11 .. 100 191
st •2 .. 111 92 57
~ IQ
ltD 1·2 ,
1
' I 1·2 1-2 sw.i1 dll'eC11on: IOllt-t The rally gates were, to open at 8:30
a.m .. but Reagan fans converged on
the park even earhcr. By '8:45 a.m.
Ion$. slo"'-moving lines had formed
behind the handful of airpon -type
me~I .detectors set up to screen
"Got the winning colors here -
red, white and blue." barked one
salesman.
1 Purchasers·could not have known
that a boduU offrce flags was waiting
on the other side ·of the metal
LocalJy, police and CHP officials ·
reported about 135 arrests for driving .. ---------------------------------------~~1;~~~:~~i·~r:~i~; ~1~~ Reagan's Mil~ Squ~re rally-(PJeueeeeRALLY/A3)
65,000 AT REAGAN RALLY ...
ll'rOmAl
day's rally, accordlng to pohce and
fire officials.
-' Orange County and Fountain Val-
ley firefighters tr,dated twq people
wtth angina attack:s and another w1th
a cut ftnger: The three victims all
required hospital treatment. Seven-
teen cases of heat exhaustion were ·
reported but lhcy required only first
aid at the park.
Oran~e County Sheriffs Lt. Wil-
liam Miller saJd he was not aware of
-any arrests ma<le in connection with
the rally. But he said some of b1&
deputies estimated the crowd to be
even Jar~r than the president an-
nounced.
"One of our men in a helicopter
· estimated 80.000 to I 00.000 people.
and somebody on the ground said
S0,000 to 60,000 so I guess I'll say
there were 50,000 to I 00,000 people
there ... Miller said. ·
FQ_!1ntam Valley Sgt. Larry
_ Gnswoki said only one minor traffic
accident occurred on the major
streets surrounding the rail).
Although there was heavy traffic
congestion during the morning hours
as people amved for the rally.
Griswold said the streets were back to
normal traffic ~eve ls J0ust an hour after
the ralJy concluded.
"They got out a lot quicker than
they got m," Gnswold said. "I don't
have any explanation for it ."
At the rall y. Reagan offered an
:.ipbeat message. pledging continued
neacc: and ptosperity ifhe is elected to
.1 second term . .H~ did not mention
his opponent. former Vice President
Walter Mondale. by name. but argued
.
that the state of fhe nauon has
improved since the Carter-Mondale
administration ended almost four
years ago.
"Today," the pte5ident said. "of all
the major industrial nations of the
world, America has the strongest
economic growth: One of the lowest
inflation rates -only one•third of
what it was four years ago~ the fastest
rateofjobcreation -61/2 millionjobs -
in the last 19 months; and-the-larges
increase in real, after-tax personal
income since 1973." -
105.4 million in July. ·
But an Associated Press report said
the president did not mention tha\Jhc
unemployment rate is 7.5 percent.
JUSt 0 of a point lower than the 7.6
percent rate Roogan denounced as a
"dtprcssion" when he launched his
1980 campaign.
Donahue and othcr·A~-CIO of-
ficials argue that, total employment
numbers notwithstanding. workers
a:re-wone-off-1harr1hey ere four
years ago because of the lo~ of well-
paying JObs in heavy manufacturing
during the long recession of 1981-82. He -1lCCused a high-ranking AFL-
CIO leader of"distorting the facts" in And they note that the roster of
charging that Reagan's tax policies 'unemployed totaled 8.5 million· in
are beneficial to the rich and that July. compared to 7.8 million in
unemployement is growing worse. Reagan's first month in .office.
Although Reagan did not identify In his speech. the president also the labor leader by name. deputy press secretary Pete Roussel said responded to Donohue's criticism by
R . asking. "When he accused me of eagan had added the attack to his plotting to destroy the unions-does
speech after seeing AFUIO SCC· he know I'm the only one everto hold
retary:treasurcr Thomas R. Donahue this office who is a lifetime member of interviewed on the C-Span cable . television network over the weekend. an ~FL-CtO unio~? l was six times
The laborlederation1 which claims pres1de~t.o.f my um on an.~ l~d 1t in the
about 13 million members. has first stnke n ever called.
endorsed Mondale. Reapn was referring to his days as
"It's hard for me to understand a Hollywood actor, when he headed
how someone in his position could be. , the Screen Actors Guild.
as unknowinJ as he seemed to be At the Mile s_quare rally, the
about the nauonaJ employment situ-president also outlined "four great
ation," the president said.· Reagan goals to build our tomorrow."
added. "He (Donahue) might like to These included sustained econ-
know that there a~ more people omic growth without inflation. as-
employed today than ever in the surance tha'l the nation will remain
nations history." "forever prepared for peace." an'd
Total employment hit a record commitments to "rich traditional
I 05. 7 million in June. t;ut fell off to values" and to chaning new frontiers.
SUPERVISORS RAPPED IN STUDY ...
From Al •
pubhc bcanngs are not open forums.
but rather legal formahucs "'h1ch do
not influence policy."
•\'otes are seldom explained.
"Citizens anending board meetings
for the first time are astoundeo at the
speed ~ith which agenda items are
decided··
•Super' 1sors react emotionally to
te~t1mon> rather than listening and
weigh.mg the evidence. "Speakers
~ho expres-; •.ie"'s shared by the
supenlsors. or those with whom they
can 1dent1f\. are commended and their statem.ents are accepted without
quesuon Speakers who are con-
sidered opponents are cross-ell.am-
ined or lectured by supcn 1sors ..
Howe" er. supervisors hold quite a djfferent view of both the report and
how they are perceived b~ the public
"They made their stati-ment I
v1gorousl) disagree "'1th 11." said
Supervisor Bruce 1'ie'>tande "Slam-
ming 1t. (the public hearing procc.,sl
the way they did was a gror;r; misdeed
to educating the public··
.... , Supervisor Roger Stanton labeled
i1 WE'RE LISTENING
the report "assumptions" that were
unsubstantiated by any scientific
means. "I scot them a letter asking
about their methodolOJY. but they never responded:· he said.
The two board members also
indicated they feel they arc respon·
s1 veto the public and said their office
doors always are open to consti-tuents.
In recommending that the board
adopt more than nine maJor changes
1ri the public hearing process.
Podolak urged supervisors to give .
c1t1zens "respect. courtesy and the
opponun1t> to make their pitch"
wi thout being interru pted. "We can
onl> suagest change if they want
cffecU\e citizen panicipauon." she
said.
Among changes suggested m the
league report arc:
•That cntena should be developed
for \Clectmg items to be placed on the
consent calendar. which in turn
!'!.hould be published to keep the
pubhc informed. Certain budget
Items and maners of policy should
not be carried on the consent calen-
dar.
•That rules regarding public hear-
ings should bt widely available and
routinely enforced.
•That 50 percent of nil board
meetings should be held at night to
allow greater participation by the
working public. Also, agendas should
be posted for public inspection at all
public libraries and city halls around
the county.
•That the board should establish a
30-minutc oral communicatiops
period at the beginning of each
meeting to allow any member of the
public to address the board on any
matter .•
•That those who wish to speak at a
public hearing be permitted to phone
in iheir names to the clerk of the
board before a meeting and that s1gn-
up cards would be available at the
time of the meeting to preclude
having .to stand in line at micro-
phones. Names would be called in the
order in which they were received.
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Tell u1 what's on your mind. ,
ORANGE' COAST •
Daily Pilat
H. L. Scl')wartz Ill
Pl1bhstier •
RMemary Churchman
Conrroller
Stephen F. Carazo
wt.,,, Proovctton
Donald L. WHllam1
C rculet on
Manager ~;I'"' .-...oo Manager
..
VOL. 77, NO. 248
bargain for GOP at $60, 00
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
01 tM D•llJ Pu.t at.an
When all the bills are totaled.
Monday's Mile Square Park rally may
end up costing President Reap.n~e
elec.tion committee $60,000. That's
about $1 a head for everyone who
attended the Labor Day rally in
Fountain Valley. ·
But Orange CQunty Supervisor
Bruce Nestande, who provided the
cost estimate, believes the Re·
publicans got a bargain. ·
Nestande was chairman of the
event. which drew what he called a
record turnout for an Orange County
political rally.
"No question. it was a bargain,"
Nestandc said the day after about
65.000 flocked to the county park to
see Reagan kick off his campaign.
He pointed out that the president's
appearance was covered by local and
national television news crews. Buy-
ing time for politifal l\ds would have
cost much more than the rally~s
expenses. he said.
Nestande said the rally's planners
had to work extremely quickly to tum
an open. weed-filled park area into
fenced rally grounds equipped with
. bleachers, a sJ)Cll.kers' platform and a
press platform. Power and phone
lines also had to be connected on the
grounds, and.airport-type metal de-
tector had to be set up to ~recn those
attendm,the ra)ty.
In addition. Nestande said, Reagan
s1,1pponers used telephones, hand-
outs, mailers and advertisements to
alert county resident to the rally. Still.
the campaign planoers were un-
prepared for the deluge.
.. 1 would say the crowd response
was beyond anyone's expectations,"
he said.
The supervisor sa.1d a cautious
predict ion of 30.000 people was madc-
by the rally planners, who feared it
t'.ould look like a failure if JU St 20,000
attended. ,_
As it .turned out, approximately
50.000 were admitted to~ the fenced
rally area and perhaps 15.000 were
turned away at the metal detector
entry points.
Nestande said another I 0.000
people in cars were turned away at
parking. lot entrances because th~re
was no more room.
The supervisor said on~ of those
turned aww was his own soo Brian.
who arriveo late, hoping just to hear
the president's speech.
Nestande said the success of Moo-daf s rally may actually· have hurt
Mile Square's chances for hosti_na
future political events. The super-
visor said other candidates may not
want to have their turnout compared
to that of tbe Reagan rally.
He said that if the planners had
known how many people would try to•
attend the Labor Day even~ they
would have enlarJed the fenced rally
area and set up more metal detector
entrarice5.
The Reaaan-Bush '84 committee is
expected to reimbuse several govern-
ment agencies for expenses associated
with the. rally. -•
Fountain Valley police Capt. Bill
DiNisi said hisdepanment would bill
the committee roughly $3,500 for
police costs. Fountain Valley officers
handled traffic control around the
park.
The city's public works department
wjll seek about $1 ,000 for placement
and removal of street bamers and
temporary no-parking signs. accord-
ing to Wayne Osborne, public works
Qircctor.
-The re-election comminec had
already deposited $2.834· with the
county to cover park permits,
ponable rest rooms, ranger expenses.
speed bumps and fencing~ acco~ng to Bob Burk. the county•s manage of
public property permits.
Lt. Rtchard Olson said the cou ty
Sheriffs Department wouid not ck
any reimbursement for law enfo ce-
ment at the pa~k during the raUy. j
~50®'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
M O ND AL~ SAYS REAGAN 'UNCARING' .. '.
From Al . ·
ing supporters in Memll, Wis .• (pop.
9,502) Mondale recalled that the late
radio commentator H. V. Kalten-
bom. a native of Merrill. had reported
Harry S. Truman's defeat premature-
ly in the 1948 presidential election.
"I loved H.V. Kaltcnborn," said
Mondale. "but he was wrong. These
pundits that say we are going to lose,
they are wrong. The people know
what's going on and we are goina to
win it."
Mondale and Ferraro's campaign
day was marred by low tumourfor a
Labor Day parade in New York. and
NB FIRE ... From Al
Road .. according to detective Bob
Stephens. It took 20 fircfighte~ about
I 5 minutes to control the blaze.
Newp0n Beach Fire D.cpanm.cnt
Paramedic Paul Schneider strained
his neck while fighting the blaze aQ.d
was treated at Hoag Memorial Hosp1·
tal. in Newpon Beach. for the injury,
Stephens sai.d. He was later released
in satisfactory condition.
A renter. Larry Backus, 43, was
living in the home when the fire
staned. He lef\ the home )USt mo·
ments before ttfe fire was discovered
by a neighbor, Stephens said
The blare apparently began at two
or possibly three different pomt~ in
the home. Stephens said. One fire
broke out in a utility room attached to
the kjtchel1 and a second one staned
an the garage, on the other side Of the house.
"This is definitely not an acladental
fire. from cvery1hina wc!ve seen so
far," Stephens said. ~here was
nothina in either area thit would have
caused a fire -no elccuical wirint.
noaasolirte."
This fire was unrelated to a recent
blaze op Doroth)' L.ane. a fire depart-
ment spokeswoman said. The urher
fire may have been caused b>' de·
teriorauna attic insulation. fire 111·
.vestiaator said.
tcphens said there was no insula-
tion 1n the atuc of the Commodore
Road home. The manner by wh11;h
the fires were t.ancd hu not yrt bttn
idc1ermincd . •
by a late arrival and a faulty...!!'tcro-
phone m Lon11. Beach. ,.k
There. the ·crowd of about 4,000
waited four hours for the two can-
didates to amve. As Mondale spoke.
his microphone went out inter·
mittently, and a listener in the
audience fell ill and req~ired emerg~
ency medical treatment.
lo New York. Mondale and Fer-
raro marched at the head of the
-parade, but a relattve handful of early
nscrs tumed out at 9 a.m. to watch the
Democratic ticket march t<>acther
down Fifth A venue .
Campaiio aides · said the parade
was left on the schedule--Oesplte the
likelihood ·ot a small crowd so that
Mondale .. $ core suppon in the North-
est and among union members would
be ef1lphasized on the traditional
kickoff day for the fall campaign.
It was a different story in W1scon-
sin1 where chectinJ and clappina
residents of Merrill hned Main Street Q
five deep as Mondale and Ferraro
rode by in an open 1958 Ford Fairlane
convertible under sunny skies.
• . {
Free cancer
tests r>ffered
. F~ canct'r ree~ina tcst• that take only 1~ minutes
are 1va1l1ble at Anaheim Mcmori I Hosp1U1l, 111 l W, La
Palma Ave., by appointment. .
In order to obtain an appointment. you mutt attend
the educational session at the ho1p1tal on Friday. Sept. 7,
from 10 to I l a.m .• or 2 to 3 p.m., in Oauroom B,
· The screenina tests will include brcas~ tb):toid. rcclal, ticm~uh. PAP and pelvic. Also, te5ticut r. prostate, and rectal with hemoccult for men.
This proaram is hosted by the Community Health.
Education Cenfer and sponsored by the American Cancer
Society and the City of Hope. Call Andrea Man~.
director. at 999-606S, for more infonnation.
Recoveey group to meet
- -
CoN I1 r-cut 11 S 1u~1Es
RALLY .••
From Al .
dctccton, riaht ncAt io the rtad)·
. R ~ h •iin th t ':YOU
could pick up nd wave 1n front of the
tclevi ion cameras .
osc attending the rtlly were
vinually unanimous m the1r support
ofRcaaan. ·
Steve Ricca, a 27~ycar-old cnainecr
fro01 Fullenon, had a simple expla·
nation for his attendance at the 1'llY
with Jirlfriend Karen Oama. ,
. .. lJUSt wanted to see the president,"
Ricca said. .
Asked if he voted for Rcapn in
1980, Ricca 1aid, "As l matter off act,
J didn'L At that time, J thou&ht John
Andenon was a better canaidate. I don't think that any more. ··1 think Reapn's done a good job.
Saddleback,.. Community Hospital. 244SI Via He aot more accomplished tha.n I
Estrada, La_auna-Hill i sponsorina a weekly Mastectomy ~thouaht he would. The economy's
Recovery Gro~p. open to all women free of charse. • bett.er. and I think _we're in a ~tter
T.he sessions. designed to offer encouragement. s1t1on to deal with tM Re s1aos
infonnation and resources to meet individual needs. will now."' ·
be held at 6:30 p.m. on Wednesdays aod are led by a ·· Inside the rally arounds, tables
medical social worker. . were set up for distribution of
For mort infonnation·. call Nina Nestor at 837-4SOO. e&m{)&i&n Literature for local Rc-
Weight education classes set
Free behavior education classes to assist in we1aht
loss and maintenance are now available in.Huntington
Beach.
Jim Sisley and Tonia Cooper will be interviewing
prospective panicipants on Friday, Sept. 7.
For a personal computer analysis and class regis-
tration appointment, catl 842-7363 or 842-0498. A
separate class for men will be available. .
Service program• announced
Western Federal Savmss is hosting Community
Service Days, Sept. 13-1 S. in its Newpon Beach Office, 4
Corporate-Plaza at Pacific Coast Highway. ·
A series of programs has been arranged io cooper-
ation with Hoag Memonal Hospital, The Anhriu~
Foundataon. and the Newpon Beach Police Ocpanmcnt.
TubJectS include hcanng screenings. anhritis, prevcntmg
back paJn, retirement, health, fitness and nutrition, and
home security.
All residents arc invited to attend. Refreshments will
be served and thcr:c is no charac.
Fall Storytlme to begin
Storytelling, games, crafts and other prOJCCts will
await children when Fall Storyt1me begins Sept. 18 at the
Costa Mesa Library, 1855 Park Ave.
Two weekly sessions for 3-6 year olds will be held at 1
p.m. Tuesdays and 10 a.m. Wednesdays.
Rcgistratio'n can be made by calling 646-8845.
Singles to rally Sept. 24
Acclaimed as "one of the laJJest _µtherings of singles
in Orange County," and spothahnna Madelaine and
Dominic from KNOB-FM98, a pobhc rally is slated from
1 to 10 f;.,':!;, on Monday, Sept. 24, at the Westin South
Coast P Hotel in Costa Mesa.
The "Orange Count)' Singles Scene" sllll has a few
exh1bttor spaces available for the Joint community college
and specialty group-sponsored event that comes complete
with displays and information on prosrams for sinJ)es.
For more mfonnat1on, call or visit Coasthn(
Community College. Qffice of Communit)' Services.
11460 Warner Ave .. Fountain Vallc:y, 2•1-6183.
Laguna golf tourney slated
The founh annual golf tournament sponso~ by the
Laguna Beach Chamber of Comm.ercc will tee off
Tuesday, Sept. 25 at The Links at Monarch Beach. Entry
fee is $45, including golf, can, dinner at the Hotel Laguna,
trophies and prizes. Play will be limited to the first 100
reservations. For infonnation call the Chamber office,
494-1018.
MADD to aponsor 'Dry Run'
The Orange County Chapter of Mothers Against
Drunk Drivers (MADD) will be having its second annual
IOK "MADD Dry Run" in conjunction with the Newpon
Bcflch Police Employees Assoetatton on Sept. 29. The
scenic run wtll stan on the Back Bay road at Ncwpon
Dunes and proceed nonh along the Back Bay Ecological
Reserve, end mg back at the Dunes.
The IOK run will stan at 8 a.m. The two-mile "fun
Run" will stan at 7:45 a.m.Entry fee isS 10, whachincludcs
a T -shin, 1f prc-rcaistered by Sept 24. It 1s SS for the race
only.
For more information. call 838-MADD
pubhcan candidates, including Nolan
. Frizzclle and Gil Ferauson. both
running in local Assembly races.
Another booth paired Reagan's
name wtth that of Rohen Doman.
The fonner con&ressman is hopina to
unseat incumbent Jerry Patt~rson in
the 38th Congressional District (Cen-
tral Orange County). Patterson 11 the
only Ocmocract 10 the county's
congressional deleption, and GOP
officials have taticted his seat as one
they would like to take over this
November.
A sian at the table said, .. Reagan
wanu Bob Back." Indeed, Doman
mented a scat on the pres1dential
platform at · Mqnday's rally and a
mention in Reagan·~ addrw.
Another busy table was the one
where .. Fritzbusters" T·shirts, but·
tons and bumper stickers were selling
almost as well as µic cold drinks.
The-se carnpa1gn souvenirs arc a
takeoff on the ads used for the hit
movie "Ghostbusters." wath "Fntz"
Mondale -taking the place of the entrapped &host. . "'---~
"We did fantastic busmess with
lhe-se at the Republican convenllon,"
said Linda Koch, president of the
Pcpperdine University chapter of the
College Republicans. She and some
other club members had traveled
from Pcppcrdinc's Malibu campus to
Fountain Valley to continue their
Fritzbustmg campaign.
A few anti-Reaaan folks did sneak into the rally.
Mary Yunt. executive officer with
the Oranae County Central Labor
Counctl, was there with rcprcscnta·
tivcs of local workers affahated with
the AfL.ClO. That union 1s suppon-
ing Walter Mondale for the presi-
dency.
Yunt said she and her colleagues
.. 1 ...
A Hunttnaton Beach resident wa•es a Reacan sign.
were at the qlll "just to tell the
president we don t qree with some of
his p<>l.acics." • •
Mcmbersofher p:oupJield up signs
charginJ that several thousand mem-
bers of the Seafarers lntefnational
Union may lose their jobs because of
Reagan administration policies al-
lowing imports of ccnain foreign
goods.
But during Reagan's address. the
union members were standing behind a platform for .press photographers,
and it 1s unlikely the pl'C$ident could
sec them.
Other ltcagan opponents included
members of the an.11-nuclcar Orange
County Alliance for Survival, who
demonstrated on Brookhurst Street
outside the rally. ·
lnside_the rally ~ounds_. members
of the Pomost soc10-pohttcal move-
ment held banners expressing sup-
~n for Reagan. But the) also called
upon htm to reDOUJlCC the 1945 Yalta
agreement that gave R!ss1a control of
Eastern European nauons
On the main platform. speal..crs
such as A·ngels owner Gene Autrey
and actor Mike Conners spoke
favorably about Reagan. . .
Charlton Heston. who 1s active 1n
the Screen· Actors Gul.ld ·which Re-
agan once headed, qu1ppcd, "I voted
for Ronald Rcapn before any of you
did. He was my presid nt>-befo be was yours."
The president's daughter. Maureen
Reagan, played cheerleader, rehears-
ing the crowd in shouts of '"Four
More Years" before her father's
arrival
U.S Sen. Pete Wilson told the
crowd. "h's time America had at~
term president agam. One term Qf
Jimmy Carter and hjs vice president
was enough But America and the
world need four more years of this
pres1dent." .
Gov. Gc<.vge Deukmejian was
equally effusive. "It's always a great
pleasure to rc<:cive you here in
Caltfoma," the ~ov~or said to
Reagan. "Now, we're going to 5Cnd
you back to Washington for four
more years.··
When the president's speech was
concluded, hundreds of ~. white
and blue balloons were released
behind the platform.
·Then. Wlth the noon sun hot
overhead, new lines formed as the
Reagan fans filed ouiof thc rally area.
homeward bound.
. Tuesday. sept. 4 ...., .......... ~ .......
o.117,....,.._..,,~...,,_ Pree enterprlae thrl'RCI at the Republican
The few antl-Rea&an demonatraton were &reatly outnumbered at the rally. rally. No meettn11 1cbedaled.
Pou cE Loe
Fired employee arrested
·on Irvine theft charges.
Coast Highway and rclea~ on
Sl.500 bail • • • Stereo ~u1pment wonh an esti-
mated SI .8QO "as reponcd stelcn
from a rt'i1dence in the 1900 block of
Tcl'T) Road \aturaa) b) unkno~n
'SU.SJ)CCtS • • • • A. ~allet wuh airline ud.ets ~onh
-
the park mg lot wt th a motel cm plo~ cc:
when police arrived. • • • Pohcc and firr officials bche' c
lrom an mdustnal business on tbt'
~ 500 block of Mam Strttt • • • .\ $300 camera was reported stolen
<\aturda) m the burjlar) of a liome on
th< 15'00 block of Nantes Ci~lc.
Frtn \\IS made through a window. . . . ,
Irvine police arrested a Santa Ana ~ man Sunday for aUcaedly trying to
steal propeny from the bu iness that
once employed him.
• Police said the incident occurred at ~ about 10 p.m. in an industrial
bµsincss complex at 2301 Campus
Steven James Raby, 27, allcaedly
used a key to enter the busincss. then
bcpn loading his car with such
equipment •s a television let,"' a
cassette player and a calculator,
p01ice said.
amve<j they reported that they found
Raby 'putll!lf equipment from the
business an his car. Officcrsdctcnnmcd Rab)' had been
fired from the business a month qo.
He was arrested on susp1c1on of
commcmal buf'l)ary and pla~ in
Oranie County Jail.
S 1.400 was reponed tolcn S.turda)
afternoon from a 'chicle parked in
the 1300 block of Catalina ~trttt • • • Richard Manin Thomp on. ~O.
arson was tbccausc of a small tire that
w15 staned m the laundf)' room of an
apanmcnt complex at 104 M1'i'i1on
Dri,e, The fire v.as C\t1ngu1sheJ b~
residents with a garden hose. Pohce
said tv.o matchbo~ had appartntl~
been placed beneath a cardboard bo,,
which 1n tum'wa placed near a df'\er
The fire lo was undetcnnmeJ
\omeont' stoic a toolbox v.onh
mort than S 1.000 from a Chevrolet
Camaro parked Saturda~ on Sv.ttt
Ram • • • \ 'uzul1 motorncle v.as stolen
F nda' from a garagt on the 17600
block of Manchester 4. \ enue. but it
wu ~co\.t'rcd later after an officer
53~ a ~outh pu h1na the motQr'C)dc
do"n the strcct. The 17-)'ar-old boy
v.as amstt'd on suspicion of stcalina
the motornclc
• Dnve.
' ; · N~rt Beach
A camera and a lens valued at $200
were stolen from a duplex on Beacon
Bay over the weekend, though there
was no sian of forced entry. • • • A 21-ycar-old resident of
Lochmoor Lane told police she was
"asleep Saturday morning when a man
wcanna a HaJloween ma le entertd
her room and stood be idc her bed.
The woman 1Crcamed and nn out oi
the room into her tiAC'kyatd, here
he hid for more than 1n hour before
·telephoning police. The man dad not
make any threats or di play a weapon
dunna the incident. • • • Thieve who cntett'd tht Aam1nao Bo\ltiquc, 2721 E. Coa t Hwy. over
tlic weekend stole $1 ,77 'w •M of
othi!\1-Thero WI no "" of rormJ
entry 1n tht th ft. . . ' The offices of Wal ham O. Oeffc~)'
:af\(S fhtc other busine scs t 3700
C<ampus Dri'e "ere bu lanzed t·
unta) n1 ht. mo t of th m cntcrt'd
W1lh the u or Ill ' kc • The· ..
A security guard became suspicious
and called police. When officers
OefTeney office, in suite I 06, reponcd
a telephone answerina machine
valued at $1 22 had been stolen. The
other offices reported either un·
known loss or no loss.
~a Beach
Fire invHtiptors btheve omconc
deliberately stancd a fire that cau5C'd
minor damaae to a m1dcnce 1t 2938
Roun1evel T-1 ~ Sbonly before S
p.m. Saturday. Laauna Beach police
officer Richard SCap1n amvcd fint
and used a dry thcm1ca& e•t1nau1 her
to put out the fire on an uterior
sta1rwtll before help from the Lquna
Beach and the Oran& C'ount)' fire
acpartmenu amvc:d. No IOJUO
w re re~ncd nd $1.0001n dam
co the'&Uide~ owned by Ray Ut1n,
wa imated
f ••• David Randolph ndcrson 22,
wa 1rtt1tC'd on Et Pasco uftt
Monday afternoon and charged tlb
batter) and :11vina false mformat1on
to 1 t>bhce offim. ltc released on
s 1 .. soo bail.
•
was arrested for po~~ss1on of man-
1uana for ..ale and po~ss1on of a
switchblade knife Fnda)' afternoon .
He was relca~ on $7,500 b:ul
CoetaMesa
Irrine
A home b1,1rslaf' otturrtd o'er the
v.cckend on Rcdonda. Enm v.as
made throuah a rear w1ndo~. and
JCWlcl') of undctcrm1nt'd \llur: wac,
taken. • ••• • • • Jev. lcr) worth $4, 700 was reponcd ,\ condoman1um was burglar1zt'd \tokn late last month from a home on
over the "'ttkcnd on Lake Plne'i. the 17200 block of Candlebcra. Entry·
Enu; was m de throu,ah a kitchen miaht ha\ e been mede throu,ah a real ~1ndo". and TV and sterro equip-c tatc sales lockbo\. mt'nt w s stolen.
Han ·na plan; ·..,.~h about $300 Huntt.nitoo·Beacb
wett stolen from out idc 1 home on mconc burned the ropes at-\1omin v~v. t. hip a 'la,..e ~llow hchum balloon
• • • to tht roof of Straw Hat Pina, 6920 'Omeone ~ma t\t"d a ,.,indo 10 J \\amcr A'C-. and the $740 balloon
bu rue the PICtiUte Go_ 17955 ·' 'am~hc-J rM\lme undav.
S ' Park Cirdc. v.h1lc the shop "'" _• • • · cl ·~ o'er the •tt .. cnd. \ual aids Buratars n~ a ~n lrom a
of an undctermim"d , alue wcn room 11 the Friendship Bnch Inn,
t ten I 122 h 81"'d.. and stoic a
weJd1n n '-alued a\ SSOO and 100
120an ca h.
lh1eva
valued at S
ID thC 17
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t OAfLV PILOT fTu
Shuttle sheds ice,
ready for return . .
By HO ARD BENEDICT
-,..~wrn.r
CAP . NA VERA~ f-1 . -01
CO'<'ery•s tronauts suc~cssfully car-
ried ou1 •,:operation le ubt': today,
di lodain the grcatCT pan of a pc~ky
blod: of ice from"thc Ide of their
orbitina hip-.th a nudse from tbeir ·
S():;foot mechanical arm. · ·
Mi ioq Control said 1~e liv~inch
acicle till clingin.a to a "-Ute water
rt wa Mt a ha1ard. and the crew
red to ren~m to Eanh Wedne -
:f'he ice never po~ a threat to the
1rs ih t woUld debi)' the huu1c·
nut flight. •
"We got most of1t," stronaut Jud)'
Resnik reponed af\rr commander
Henry Hansficld had 11ngcrly au1ded
the arm out of the cargo bAy and O' et
the port ide to get at the ice. He
opera led from a remote station in the
cabin. ' •
· A picture televiStd live to Mis fon
Control 111 Houston 'howed th.al after
lhe initial tap with the end of the arm,
a large hunk of the i~ h d bttn
knocked off. .,
..
---
Nn TION
-- ----
StorrnY weather b.lanket
Eastern and Gulf states
By A lattd Pru1
Thllndcrstonn erupted from tern Georgia to sou~em New ErlJIJahd
today and fl n~d out we t over 1tates Ion the Gulf ofMex.1co as fara stem
Texas. Showers nd thundct'5tonns also stretched from Mn~nCJot.a·to efl!etn•
Nebraska. but skies mnaincd part I)' cloudy over much of the rest of the nation.
Today's weather fol'CC1lst called for \howtr and thundel'ltorms sca.ttcr~ Q~er
the Atlantic Coast and Gulfstate5. Showe: rs were also ~ttercd over}X>n1oni of
the upper 0Mt bkc and Jl~ Pa~ifi N~rthw~t •• and pat.ebb of
thundel'S(orms covered 1he wuthcm intcrmount:un ~on.~
Teachers •trike 1n •even •tate. "
stronauts. But then:· was concern
that th bi& chunk migh1 fall off
durina re-entry and damage Dis-covery's tail. requiring lengthy re-
·The blod, melted down to about
half its size l:fy overnight heating. had
measured about 15 inches in le~th
and about 9 inches at its widest Potnt Mondale, Ferraro operi e&mptalfn lo Wlacoaaln •..
San Francisco's 3,800 teacher1 threatened to w•I~ off the job but Ch!caao's
24, 700 instructorugJU<t to open classes under an expired contract a~ stnies ~Y 4 600 teachers in ven state today Ciisrupted schoo for 99,200 pupils. llhn~1s ~as hardest bit by the walkouts with morc than J,200. teachera _on slnkc in
, eight districts. Strike continuC<t in Michipn, LOu1s1ana. Indiana. Penn·
·Sylvania. Washington and Rhode l land. School opens Wcdn~y.for 62.6~
children in San Francisco. but the Oassroom Teachers A SOC1'Uon said ll
couJd call a strike today without "significant" movement toward a new
contract, uid Judy Ocllaroon)CJS , union president. Teachers wen: expected to
report fot an orientation session today.
before the operation. ••
Florida; Louisiana
ki}iers facing death
By tbe A11oclated Press Thursday mormng. He lost anot~er
. round an his legal battle to stay alive Two convicted k1ll_ers, one Monday night.
sentenced to death for slaying ~·s two Dobbert was sentenced to die 'in
young children. face the electnc chair · 1974 for the ~.l.L 1971. slaying of
this week unless courts btock. their · tus 9-ye.ar-old daughter, Kelly. He
executions wilh last-minute action. also was convicted of sccond:.degree
Earnest Knighton Jr. will die 1n murder in the 1972 death of his 7-
Louisiana 's electnc chair shortly after year-old son, Ryder Scott.
m1dn1ght tonight unless the U.S. In the Lou1jiana case. Knighton
Supreme Court steps in. He was was on probation for robbery and car
convicted of lhe 1981 lulling of a theft when on March 17. 1981, he
service stauon owner. gunned down Ralph Shell, the owner
Ernest John Dobbcn Jr. is sched· of Bossier City servi~ station, in a
uled to die m Aonda's electric cbau robbery that netted $641.85.
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Hurryt Offer Runs: Thru September 17
Bush· raps
Mondale on
faith issue
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Vice
President George Bush says Walter
Mondale is "trying lo make some
political hay" and raising a "born
again concern" in charging that
President Reagan 1s m1X1ng religion
and politics.
As Bush <?fficially opened his
campaign Monday, he was dogged by
questions in New Orleans and lhc
Chicago suburb of Lemont, Ill., abo~l
Reagan's reltgion-and-polit1cs re-
marks to a prayer breakfast in Dallas
two weeks ago.
D1sm1ssing Mondale's cnticism.
Bush said:
"I don't think he's JOing anywhere
w1lh -those charges. J ve heard 1t -
bleaung out there -and I don't
believe It an(i, I don't think th~
American people are going to be put
off the track by 1t."
Bush also inched closer to a debate
with DCmocrauc rival Geraldine,
Ferraro. "I'll make that decision
pretty soon, maybe in a week or so,"
Bush said. "I'd look forward to it ... I
. ' .. . .
f TU.rnplie •hootlng• alarm motorlsta
STRATFORD, Conn. -Thrtt shootings at motonsts within a mC?ntJ:i.
one of lhcm fatal, have lef\ ton collectors and motonsts on one ~fthe nahon s
busiest highways womed they could become targets,ofthe seemingly random
attacks. A couple who had been fixing their car Monday were fi~ at as they
dove for cover when they spotted.a revolve~ being hel~ out the w1~dow of a
van state police spokesman Lt. Kenneth Kirschner satd. J"he two wcrt not
hurt. On Aug. S, a former congressional aide was fatally wounded in the head
by an unknown assailant. And on Sunday. a bullet struck the rear of a car and
grazed-the leg ~fits driver. -.
Girl, 6, slaln by mother
DAYTON. Ob10 -A woman awakened by the sound of someone trying
to break into her house fired a gun at lhe kitchen door, ~e sh.ot killed her
6-ycar-old daughter who had wandered into the line of fi1'C, police said. Angel
Wilson died Monday at St. Elizabeth Medical Center less than two hours after
being shot once in the FJ:!est with a .22<aliber gun, police said. The mother.
Darlene Wilson, was not charged.
TeJetlJ_~n draw• record pledges
LAS VEGAS -HiJhligbted by calls from both President Reagan an_d
Democratic presidential candidate Walter F. Mondale, the Jerry Lewis
Telethon drew a record $32,074,566 in pledges for the Muscular Dystrophy
Associatton. The pledges, from millions of viewers across the United St.ates
and Canada, represented the highest amount ever pledged to a televised
charitable event, association officials said after t.hc telethon.ended Monday .
The total, which will bc.Jinahzed later in lhc week, toi;>ped the previous record
of $31,498,772 pledged in 1981 . ~h~n 210 televi_Slon stations carried ~he
telethon. This year's show, the assoc1atJon 's 19th national telethon, was earned
by 194 stations in the United States and cable television in Canada.
.Alrplane hit by lightning
· WASHINGTON -Lightning struck a Piedmont Airlines Boeing 737 as
it was unloading passengers during a severe tbunderstonn ~t National Airpon,
and six workers who fe1t a shock were taken to a hospital for examination,
authorities said-Airport spokesman Dave Hess said the plane bad just landed
on a flight from Charlotte. N.C .. and passel'\gers were debarking wh~n the
lightning bolt struck the plane's metal skin at 6:43 p.m. EDT Monday. None of
lhc passengers was i nJured, he said, but six workers who were standing near the
plane on lhe ground felt a JOit and were taken to nearby National Orthopedic
and Rehab1ht.auon Hospital.
Two saved In IJre: tb.ree dJe
CAL 'S CAMERAS expect there will be one."
VISA • MASTERCARD Bush planned lO m~t today with
LOS ANGELES-A passerby and two helpersbravcdb1llowtngflarnes to
save two young boys from an inferno that engulfed a motorhome. killing an
elderly Utah couple and a little 11rl returning from a Labor Day campmg tnp.
···If it hadn't been fpr those $Uys, J hate to think what might have happened.
They saved my son's life," said Irene Winter as she waited Monday at Sherman
Oaks Bum Center where Travis Manno, 7, was bospi\alized in stable condition
\ltith smoke inhalation and bums on his shoulder, back ·and head. The
motorhome. traveling on Interstate 2101.hrough the San Fernando Valley,
caught fire when its gas tank ruptured Monday. Paul Madsen, ~6. bis ':Y)fe.
• AMEIUCAN EXPRESS. 1770 NEWPORT Bl • COSTA MESA federal agen1s trying to crack qown on
DINERS • CARTE BLANCHE (71 •) &•&·9313 drug smuggling across the border, and
· Elverda, about 60, of Salt Lake City . ._nd their great-granddaughter, Misty
Black. 3, were killed, said coroner's investigator Donald Messerlc. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ then fl y to College Station, Texas, to = address.students at a political forum
at Texas A&M University. ~ Pilot, wife tilled in crash
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Later in the day he was traveling to
Houston for a stop at the Johnson
Space Center where he was to talk by
radio telephone with the space shuttle
astronauts
Jackson fans
support for
Dems' ticket
NO RFOLK. Va. (AP.)-The Rev.
Jesse Jackson is urging support for the
Democratic presidential ticket, say-
ing that President Reaen's record is
.. a threat to our future. \
Jackson, beginnina his campaign
on behalf of Walter F. Mondale.and
Geraldine Ferraro. said Monday that
the Democratic uckct reaches out to
all people while Reagan's base 1s
"narrow. nch and arroaant."
"He says things arc better." Jack-
!ton ~id of Reagan. "He's talking
about the yachts on lhe lop, we're
talking about the boats on the
bottom."
Jackson. who unsuccessfully
sought the Democratic presidential
nomination, spoke at a rally Monday
before about 3.000 people. a
redomm .. ntly black audience at
orfolk's Scope coliseum.
Hts crowd was was smaller butJUSt
as enthusiastic as Qnc he addressed
here in Man:h, when he was cam-
paignina in Virginia's Democratic
prcs1dent1aJ caucuses
Listing I 0 reasons for his support of
the Mondale-Ferraro ticket, Jackson
hla'lted Reagan's hondhna. of social
1 ues. fore11n policy nnd the fc<tcral
deficit.
Reagan has dealt ~tb3ck to civil
n&hts and public educatton. Jack~n
charat'd. •
"Reapn's record 1~ a thrtat to our
future," he 1d.
Referrina to poll which show
Reapn leadina Mondale by a m\/ch
u 27 point~ Jatkson told lhe au-
dience: ··oon't let the hoo~ts of
RUBIDOUX -A twin-engine plane taking off from Aabob Airport
crashed durin$ takeoff, ktUing lhe pilot, who owned the airport, and bis wife.
Aavio Madanaga, 73, and Bertha Madanaga died when the Piper Apache
crashed mto a cow pasture at the end of the runway Monday and burst into
flames, said their grandson, Donald Kcuenng. 26 who witnessed the crash. The
plane "cleared lhc ground, pulled up abruptly -which is extremely unusual
for a twin-engine plane to do -banked to the left and impacted on the
ground," he sajd. "It exploded 10 a ball ?f fire."
Mondale wins UFW endorsement
BAK.ERSFlELD -Walter Mondale's bid for the presidency was firmly
endorsed by the United Fann Workers on t.he final day of a three-day
convention which also adopted constttutjonal chanaes to expand membership.
''Do everr,thing you can on your ranches and in your committees to elect
Mondale, ' UFW vice.president Dolores Huerta told members Monday. The
union, which claims more than 100,000 members, met throughout the Labor
Day weekend.
Crash ~llngCalllomlan• probed
STANLEY, Idaho -An investigation was to start today into a holiday
weekend light airplane crash in a mountain area near here, which claimed the
lives of four California residents. Two couples were killed when their airplane
crashed Monday near the Indian Creek landing strip i'nthc Challis National
Forest. The wreckage, which 1gn1ted a smaU fire, was found on Pun'o Creek,
about two miles northeast of the Indian Cr~k landing stop.in a-pnm1frveerea
in lhe Challis National Forest, said Valley County Sheriff Blair Shepherd. The
victims were identified as Jim Lee, SJ. and his wife. Charlotte, 4S, of San
Ramon. and ViriJI Wayne Grove. SS. and his wife, Eloise Grove, 50, Castro
Valley.
WOR LD
' ... Pblllpplne. typhoon death• mo!Ult
. .
MANILA -Government workers and air force planes stepped up rescue
and relief work today as the death toll in the worst typhoon to hi\ the
Phlllpp1nes in 12 yeai" so red to •~. officials said. Nearly 26 inches of rain
also inundated central Korea over the wrekend, ~u ina tht worst floodina in
12 years and lullina 130 people, th~South Korean National Disaster Relief
headquarters reported today. It said 47 people still were missina. The Home
Ministry e timated property damaie 'at $48.4 billion from ram that
Korean• protest Hwan Japall trip
• EOUL -Shout in.a anti-Japanese slopns. about SOO students
demonstrated today at Seoul' Sungkyunkwan Univcnity •Jilin t President
Chun Doo Hwan's trip thi~'ftek to Tokyo. The tudcnts tned to charsc oft'
campu : bu1 were held h..'lck by about an equal number of riot police, witnc
~id. tudents hurlrd rocks and police replied with tear ps. The confrontation
ca.me af\cr a cam us iym.po ium on Korea.Japan rclatJons. A tudcnt lead r
said ~"eraJ thou nd tudcnts from other univcnittt and college in the
capital city of Seoul had' planned to take part, but Police kept them fh>m
approachina unakyunkwan. • Rcapn hor mt1m1datc you. We
l'in v.in:· • ,s.__:._. __
He st1d Re n's mafltn of\ 1ctory · N1.~ua prate.ta •er1al •ttac~
1n 19 O wa le than the namber or ~ MA AGlJA, N1cara ua -The lcru t l'dinist.a government has n1
unl"l'l!Sleted bl~dts in • vcral Sta!cs. · the Un1trd tales not protc111n1 the cnal attack of a military hool and
Jac:k'°n likened vot1n on Nov-:0 viii near the Hontluran bOrdtr. The note nt Mond y to . rctary of uuc
to oin ry hOppr ~rge P ulii laamcd turdaf at&ac.k b fo\lr irpla anda:hth
• If )OU ~ton'l ~o lfl>Ctt)' 'hopp1n was the product of"thc polcm1 of tenon If\ <'&ITlcd out by the ao~crnmcnl or
)OU will tan.c,' he said ... If )OU t the United ·1a1c aaa1n t N1 ua •• Thc~1lot and two other people aboird
Reagan ou·11 ha\.C chcc nd butter the helicopter wcrt l:illcd, a were two duh~ and rour ch1Jd~n on t.hc ground.
but no mtal. You'll till ~Ulnc. let' r>cfcn Mm1 tcr Humberto Oncp 1d unda) the helicoptr,:r pilot wa "tall
upr<)rt Mondalc.·f·crr:1ro. lt't umt and blond" and .. could be i onh men n.1
• He said he al rould
fora chan e." . Honduran
• • t
• • •
•
Seven's~ crowd in space shuttle
SPA CENTER, Hou ion (AP)
-A huttl flight an October waU
ha\C seven tronaut on rd -
the mo t ever an pace t'one umc on
one cran -but crew members
believe ahcycan mana ea long a the space toilet work .
The 4 l·G mis ion as set for launch
Oct. l with five men and two worn n
on board for eilht days an orb1L Plans
call for the first paocwalk by an
American· woman, the launch of~
satcllite-usina the robot arm, the first
flighC of a Canadian astronaut, ·a
demonstration of telhte refueling
and a high-latitude orbital path that will carry the shuttle Challenger over
the Soviet Union.
Mission commander RobCn Crip-
pen told reporters at a news con-
.
S11:1atra
·~Jsked ·
his life'
TORONTO'-.(AP) -Frank
Sinatra risked his life when he
appeared at the Canadian Na-
tional fah1bition durina a violent
electrical storm, conrert or-
ganizers say.
"You don't go out and stq_nd 1n
a puddle with a live m1cr0Phone
in your band dl.trina a thunder-
storm," Winfield Stockwell. scn-
tral manager of the exhibitton,
said Monday. "I'm surpnscd he
Sta ed."
g.oclcwell was responding to
complaints from fans about the
brevity of Sinatra's program here
Sunday ruahL
-
..
.
fcrenoc Monday that.. vcn people as
1 to be crowded.. nd 1d the crew members ··ha,c to be very
conscious not to ct an each other's
way."
Astronaut lon A. McBnde, 41~ the
pilot on the flight. h d a more pcc1fic Others on the crew mclude:
conoem. A seven-member crew -lly Ride, 34, Amenca's first h wd be fine, he said in an mter-woman m space, v.ho will be 11u1kmg
v1e1f, as long as the toilet works. her SCCO'}Q flight and who will
If thr toilet faib, he u1d. ''it could specialize m operating the robot arm.
be rather unp!fasant with that many -Kathy ullivan 33. who will
people.'' • • · ., make the fil'5t spacewalk b) · an Th~ muttletoilethufa1le<ton IOof >,.merican woman. t~e 12 fli&hts, and is av~il~ble for on~y -David C. l..ttstma, 3S, ,,_.ho w1U lttstma to.Id rePQiter at the
hm!ted use ~n th~ m1ss1on now in be M . Sullivan's partner 111 the Johnson Space Center that the trans-or~1t by ~scovery because of a "paocwal~. · . fer of thcfuel&s potentially dangerous build.up of 1c~ on a waste vent. -Marc Garneau. 35, ~ Canadian ·•if not done properly" because the
Crippen.said ~cdoubted the shuttle navy commander, who 1s the first rocket fuel "extremely volatile and could caf!Y a much bagger crew. from his nation to fly in space. could explode. . . , .. ' • . ..
_"1 ,. Jo •
GrOC"'ery prices fa.If i~ Aug':lst
· By tbe Aasoclated Press , · h~ads ·an ccon~mic. foreca~ting firm Butt~r rose 1.2 percent after Jump-•
Grocery prices, reversing course in Washington. "We dJd have a run-ing4.6 percent in the previous month~
from the pn:vious month, dipped 0. 7 up in pork prices last month, but that Charles Shaw, an aanculture econ•
percent dunng Aug~st, according to was seasonal." omi.st with t~e U.S. Depanment of
the monthly Associated Press mar-,_Pork pnces skyr~keted an a~crage Ag.n~u~ture 1.n Washington, said:
lcetbaslcet survey. or 14.9 percent dunng July. This past .. Tbas 1s the ume of year when milk
Dunng ~uly. _pnccs had surged 3 month. they dropped 1.9 ~rcent. production and therefore the amount
percent. pnmarily because of a JUl!lP Chopped chuck fell 4.2 percent dur-of milk available for the manufacture
an th~ pnce of pork chops ~nd butter. inf. AufuSt. of butter, cheese, what have you.
In th~ latest survey, pnces fell in 'We 11 also, come to sec some declines scasonall¥. In addition. we sev~Cille~ao ave~aJ_e of3.2 percent. downward pressure during the next have the 'milk diversion' program
They rose tn ~ve ~1lles an. average of few months because ofttre-bourrriful which 1s 1n plaee, cutting back on miltc 2.8 ~rccnt. Pnccs in one ctty, Boston, harvest thiS"ycar. Perhaps m the (AP) production." remain~ unchanged: survey that n\ay have already A third factor. he said, is the
This time around, pork chops -started," Evans said. -current, mcrcasin1 consumption.
and chopped chuck -fell. Butter A drop in com and soybean prices Seth Diamond. who follows the
prices climbed ~ but more slow-would tend to lower pncc$ for meat rndustry for the investment finn
ly. and other foods, he said. Sbcarson Lehman-American Expr
And oranie juice was more ex-"I think it looks qurte good," be m New York, cited a severe freeze in
pensive, while egg prices continued said of the inflation picture ... These Florida earlier this )Car .that cut the
their decJine. figures arc reassuring in the sense that season's estimated production of
"I thmlc food prices are stab1hzmg.. nsina food prices would be a trigger orange juice concentrate by about 37
I don't le.now 1f they actually went that could lead to higher pnces in the perccnL In addition. he said. orange
down," said Midrael K. Evans. who second haJfofthc year." Juice demand was up. ·
'
--;' 2 Tbe 41-G epace •little crew .et for an October Jlawacla w:lll
conalst of (from left. bottom row) Robert Crippen. Patil
Scully-Power pd Ila.re Garneau: (abc»Te) Da'rid LHA••,
Jon Mc.Bride~ Sally Ride ~d Kathryn SQUJY&D. •
Abduct~d girl, 3, u'l\J.~
UPLAND (AP) -A 3-}ear-old
girl. abducted during a ~cckend
outing with her family, was dis-
covered 24 boun later at a shop-ping
mall 25 iniles away, wearina new
clothes but apparently ··~u cared
for." poHcc sa1d_Monday.
·Yesenia "Jenny" Cunel of Ontario
disappcattd at 5:1 S p.m Sunda}
from Upland Memorial Park. Her
family searched for her 4S minutes.
'.
.: .
then called polioe, said dispatcher
Emily Bolcchowski
·Police said a doctOr eUIDJ.oCd ilie
gjrl Monday night and found no
· e"idencc that she bad been llCXually
molested; They v.ue invcstiptiDf
the disappearance as a ~
and were hc)puia to question a man·
about 30 with sboulder-leDglb blond
~r. , -
· II
•
on
t -;
-
1a
0
•
eat
nd
it
nd
he
ao
n't
1ix
cid
to
lSC
ur
Ut
)U
t>e
lD
i)C
l&
-
Suicid~ .s~Ows Problems •
of living on military pay ·
By SCOTT KRAFT ._......,,_.,_,
:i he su1dde of n· m\) ~Jleant')
son who though\ thinas mi1ht be
easier with "one lcu mouth to feed"
points up problem~ raced b> fam1ltes
tryin1toget by on military paychecks.
and relief agencies say they help tens
of thousands of ~rvice families e"e'"' week ·
'"The most common problem we
sec 1s_Just not havmg enough food,"
said GeorJc Baxter. dire(:tor of -\m'\}
Commtlnsty Scrvkes at Fon Leonard
Wood in Miss<luri, where 25.000
ol<sien art stationed. ·
"It 5eems like ~ny people ru(l out
Of money JO buy .food, l •day Of lWO
before payda). matnl} be'aus<" the~
have difficulty managina their
money J my~lf gel caught some-
times. Youjusl have to cal sparse!) to
get through 1t ...
An Army Emergency Rehef office
at Fort Leonard Wood maintains a
food pantf), makes loans jlnd grants
nnd offers financial counseling for
families that -repeated!> run into·
trouble.
The agenc~. along wath the Na\ y
Relief Soc1et) and the Air Force .\1d
Sot1ct} as a prn ate organization run
on the contnbuuons of m1lltal"\
pel"SOnncl .\II three make intcrcsi-
frct loans and grants to service
fam1ltes.
<\rm} Emergenq· Relief, which has
69 offices on bases in the Unncd
States and 44 overseas. says at
pronded about $21 muhon in as-
Ststance to more than 60,000 people
last )'car. In $.i>. ~cars. !he. amount of
mncy aiven out has quadrupled,
according to the agenc~
"We're cssenuall} the .\rm) 's chu-
1l\ ... said retired Col Leonard Har-
mon. an agenc) spokesman. "Our
m1o;s1on lS to help .\rm} people who
ha' c linannal d1fficult1e•., and I th1nk
we do a good JOO of ll •
The ~av> Relief Soc1et} '>'Orkin&
\\oath the "'1avy and the Mannes. also
provided about $21 m11l1on last )Car
to 81.000 people. said retired Manne
Lt Gen. E.J . Bronars. soc1et} presi-
dent. He said he citpccts at least that.
amount will be ghcn out this )Car -
I
each )car.
bout 23.000 Manne Camp
Pendleton, an O\:~ans1de, Caht., ¥>ere
helped b> the Red Cross and Na"'}
Reheflast year. accordm& to Staff at. Transfer) ~em to create.the most Terri Dunn. And the Family Service ~cnous ftn~nc1a1 pr~blems. for people Center at the U.S Naval Station m ~n the Sfrv1ces, officials said. . San Dicao prova.ded coun1elin1 and
That s what happened to Army Sgt. financial relief for more than S0.000
Johnnie Hollc)'s famil). Holley's sailors and their families
wife, Jennifer. •f!d their f~ur \·oung At Georgia's Fon Bennana. where
children moved in June lron'I Wc)t about 25.000 soldiers are on acuve
German} to Fon Ord, near San dut't .\rm\ Emer&ency Relief
Francisco Ho1le), now stationed an budg~1., abou1 S35 000 a month in
South Korea. planntd to JO•n them relief mone\ and can request more
ne~t }eac . '>1mpl\. b~ · calling agcnc) hcad-
But m C ah~orn1a promised hous-quarters
1og was una\a1lable funds from th~1r If a famih needs mone\ and there
bank account were held up an transter is n qucsti'on of ellg1b1ht>' or qualifi·
and their car had~'t arn\'~d Mrs cations. thl' agency regulations say the H~lle) re<:e1~ed an interest-free loan bendit ot the doubt goes to the soldier
ot S 1.300 from Arm) E,mcrgenq and his tam ti). • • R~hef as _well as three days worth of .. fhe bottom lane is 'that the
lbOd on h''e separate occasions pn,atwn ofthe ram1l) 1s paramount.
But at '>'as still d1tlicult to tope. 1 he • The tam ii\ snould not be allowed to
oldest bo\.. Danny. 13. took at suffer." sa.ad '\orman \\1lllamson, ol
cspeuall} hard. his mother said He tl'll' emergenq rehef staff at Benning
collcc1cd cans tor a penn) apiece tu An annual fund-raising dnvc col-
hclp bu~ food for his sister and lee ts aboul S 150.000 to help sollders
brothers. and !.everal times he told ~as. at Renning. and the base commissary
mother that things would be ~ue:. 11 takes in S8.000 to $9.000 worth ot
there was one lcs mouth to teed. food stamps each month •
Then on Aug. 24 Dann~ hanged A.rnvang at a ne'>' post 1s the
hunself. roughest time for a famil). W1I-.. It \\.as hard for him to crnde.~stand ham!>On '>aid Man) lower-paid
wh} this "-IS happening to us, "1rs. '>Oldicrs arc !inane aall} strapped when
Holle} said. "I g~~')S he JU'lt d1dn'1 the\ arn\l', and the most common ha.~ c the pauence. -reason for a loan l!> to help a tam ii) Weare tr) mg. hone'\tl). to find an "-llh lts first month's rent and utilll\
answer •• said Fon Ord c,po kesman dcposm. ·
Rodger Murph)_. "faef}unc 1s 'er} "Let's face 11 a c,old1cr who mal>..es a
interested in scc1n$ that tht'> does not mo\e trom ll\l'rseas back to an\
e"er happen aga10 .. This touched installauon it ~going to cost '>ome
home wnh a lot of us. out of pockl't tunds." Walham\on Murphy and other m1htaf} officials said.
say the problems the Holk) family Last wel'k President Reagan
faced..Jre f!Ot u~~ommon. _particu, i>fOposcd a v 1 percent across-the-
Tan) 1n regions "-Ith a high co~t of board Jncreasc 1n the pa) of m1htar)
h\1ng. personnel and other federal em-
.. " hen people move into the· ployccs.
Montere~ Peninsula area. a high -cost Mlifal) pa~ begins a1 S5 ~ ~ 60 a
area. and the} go out on the cconom) monttl for ne"' enlisted recruit'> and
and on their own, things will be real rises to $800 or more for a sergeant.
lean forthe li_rst ~~w months u!1t1l the) But the rates \ af)' "-ldel~. dejx•nding
get on their teet. Murph) said. on rank and length of sen ace. and
Each month about 40 fam1hes at they do not include housing allo'>'-
Fon Ord .rece1\e a three--Oay food anccs provided for m1htar; personnel
suppl)' from Arm} Communtty Ser-hving ofTbase
vices. Arm} Eme~gcnc) Relief at the In addition. families forced to pile
base g1v~s more than $1 mtlhon -mov1ogcxpenscson top of an alread)
most m 1ntc~st-frce loans ·and some sizable debt "can create an emerg
m grants -to military personnef l'n<""'" o;a1d Ba:'(ter.
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-~ ,,
., . ....,...,.
Re~mlng to mother ship
The aircraft of the U .s. aerobotlc flylna
team roll into a military command C·6 ••oalazy" at Rheln·Main Air Baae, Ger., to
return to the \.!J .S. from international
competition in Hun&ary. where they won
the world champlonablp: •
Century-old telescope used-
by space shuttle scientist
Used for Antartlc exploration aboard
ship for which Discovery ts named
telescope with him on a sledge
Journey across lhe polar ice Sir
Richard said the telescope was first
camed aboard another British ship
with the same nam'e on an Antarctic
tnp in 1875-76.
---
( APECA.l"oA.VERAI. Fla. (.\P)-
D1sco"ef) crewman S1e1.e Ha'>'ley as
stud}'ing the stars from space with a.
telescope more than a century old that
was used aboard two research vessels
for which ihe shuttle was named.
Ha'>'le}. an astronomer. obtained
the brass telescope through The
Manume Trust of London. which 1s·
restonng one of the "essels near the
fo\\er of London ·
Ha'>'le' and his '>'afe. astronaut
Sall} R1d·e. \IS1ted the restoration sate
last \ear. and he askt"d the 'trust's
d1recior. Vice <\dm1ral Sar Richard
Bayly 11 he could carry a souvenir
from the ship mto space
Sir Richard borrowed the telescope
from the Scou Polar Research In-
stitute an Cambndge, England. It will
be returned to the institute af\~c
flight.
Sar Richard said Hawley was
enthus1as1tc about "looking -at-the
nars with the same telescope tha1
Capt. Robert Scott used •·
Scott commanded the Bntash \eS-
sel D1SCO\er} -the one being
restored -on an c:ilpedit1on to
Antarctica 1n 1901-04 and earned the
~lso aboard the shuttle arc three
bone china dinner plates that are
replicas of tableware from the
1901-04 Discovery Journey. Royal
Doulton. which made the ong.inal
plates. made the COP.1es After the
current flight. the~ will be displayed
on the restored ship. in the Smithso-
nian Institution in Washmgton, D.C..
and m the Sir Hcnf) Boulton Galler).
Stoke-on-Trent, England.
The rephcas arc decorated wi'\h the
emblem of Scott's eiu>ed1t1on and
with the official flight patch design of
the curr;cnt shuttle flight •
WWII.Veterans thank pilot
who gavethem 39 more years
LONG BEACH (AP)-lt was long
ago and far away. the da) that a
bloodied Lt. Robert Woliver looked
out of the flak-blasted cockp11 of has
lost B-29 bombe.r and saw Capt. Art
Shepherd coming to sa'e him o'er
the blue Pacific.
There was a reunion Saturday night
at the Queen Mary. and Shepherd
received a recent photograph of JO Shepb"d led the plane back to lwo
aging ex-ere"' members. balding and Jima. The men bailed out of the
paunchy from h ving the lives he crippled bomber and Shepherd shot 11
saved. • to pieces.
"We owe this man 39 years of our The anscnption on the photograph
h"cs." said Wolaver. ..You can't read: "We owe you our laves··
rcpa~ a debt of this magnnudc. For Woliver got the D1stmgu1shcd Ser-
many )ears. I felt I was laving on vice Cross.
borro"'ed lime" Corbly said the B-29 wasnpped b> Without Shepherd. Wohver said. anta~aarcraft fire at about noon.
the bomber crew's 20 children would seconds before 11 was to drop bombs HUNTINGTON
SAVINGS JAMES A. LENNERTZ, M.D. never have been born. . on Osaka. Japan.
Woliver and command gunner From his plex.iglass bubble atop the
Herb Corbly, two of the-10 crew plane. Corbty saw the explos.an and
members from the B-29 Caty of fire. Corbly remembers grabbing his
Osceola. were on hand at the World girlfnend's picture and~"making m}
War II Night Fighters Asoc1at1on good·byes."
ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION ANNOUNCES THE REOPENING OF HI S OFFICE
I ...... ~ .. •nt41n \ oll•v llr1rM'h
1·• ti Hr••·~hu"l, ~nunta1n \111•• •714 1 !It.I '*"•'
• ....,,.1.nd ( •nl•r Bran< h
t'l"'-ot l~a<h Hlvd . """'',,.""'Hoch •71 41 ~ • 1t1
""•In IJlfH• ~; \4.,,,.., "• .. Hune1"'toa ..,..,.b. C~U t &41 ~
•If h.-•™" r.1~ twit .,. Ii'-• re Lit droJM to '1 , uru1l l.-la"""
tt>tOU~ (.._ t . ola
,.,~,tr•lf' l•r \u~ m•h' 1 .. 11., IA.AalH n
rsuc
FOR
FAMILY PRACTICE
'IN
HUNTINGTON BEACH
meeung to thank Shepherd for has The Oak tore awa> much of the
acuon on June I 1945. plane's nose. killed Capt. Arthur
Shepherd and now-dead radar ob-Behrens in his seat. Woliver. then 20.
server Arv1d hulberger spotted the had his left arm shattered by the flak
cnppled plane while on a flight from and was left with a bleeding face and thcarlwoJ1mabasetocheckthcradar I bl nd di-A
Office Hours By Appointment (7141847-8544 in their P-61 Black Widow. a state-of-tcmporan Y 1 c ~"eye. The instrument panel was the art fighter introduced near the end shredded like s.paghetu. be recalled
___________ :__ ______________ __JL .... -------=====::;::;:=============-'-o:..f_t_he:..w__::.ar..:.. __________
1
Freezing air blew through a fivc-by-
s1x-foot hole in the let\ side of the
cockpit.
It's Not Too Late ·to Enroll In Classes at
ORANGE
COAST
COLLEGE I
More Than 60 "Late-Starting" Classes Will Get Underway on
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 10
Hie ~:e-St"rirng cl~~!.e~ ~re <.1esrgn('Cl c,pec1f1c~lly for ~rson!. who!.t-vC'lcat1on plans or famrly
omni1:rriena m~ac rt 1f'l'lposs101e 'or tiern to t>t'g1n scnool rn·Augus! Thf' cr~s-.es are otf~re<11n
~uCt Sl•tl;ect ,Hf't\S tlS ~CCOL.fnt1ng ~ntnr po/Ogy OUSlr"t"SS 1nformc>t1on systems ~conom1C~
Eng rsn 'ooCl seMce m"n"gement gP g• ~pt1y 111story num~n111e~ •riter1or Cles1gn. ph110sopny.
p 1rt c.1 e'lCt' Ph r royy rel•q o !. tuC11Ps ..oc10109y. ;mo spPeC'1
The Ciasses are Six , Nine, and 15·Weeks In Length
RPg 1s trarron VJ1ll Be .Conauctf>d September 4-7 1n OCC's Admissions Office
" Tue~aav ttir 1gt htJrsa~y trom S ~ m to 7 pm
' F di1y tram 8 a rr to 2 pm ..
For Registration Information, Phone 432-5772
...
. ,
1/1238 "2 + nt• per mo.
,,.., ,_. JOO.ZX. Loadfld with T·bar. A1r-cond1t1on1no.
stereo cas ene, {>CIWOf w;ndow1, and many ot,..r feMUt
60 mo cJo•td end lease. cap cost S1S.742; down P•'I·
mtKJt 11372 72 cash or trtdf (Ser. 023~tJ1J
All can ~b/tct to ior ,.,.
N I II • A N
Ill Daw 1tNet. NC"llipor1 a.ch • n4 •13:M300
... •
,
Woliver sat in shock as the cnpplcd
bomber rolled out of formation and
spiraled from 27.000 to 10,000 feet.
"We went nyingotr:• he recalled. "t
wasn't cxactl} in control of things
God was."
He pulled the plane out and, with a
small compass and a bank-and-tum
indicator. started a dcad·rcckomng
Ota.ht towards lwo J1ma
torbly remembers that two
Japanese Zeroes lost them in the
clouds as they headed out over the
ocean wnh 186 hundred-pound
napalm bombs still m the bomb bay
They flew four hours, without
knowmg their speed, hitudc. lo-
cation or fuel rating, Nobody thouaht
of d1t{'hing, uetal "we ran out of fUel
or I ran out.of blood," Woliver said.
But 11 was then that Sherhcrd and
Shulberger 1n their P-6 dubbed
Mtdruaht Miss picked up the S.29's
coded radar emergency ~1inal.
"We were waving ni. him and
yet11na him at almost a!t if he could
hear us: "'Hey, he), come back, little
Sheba," Corbly recalled .
.. t tric-d to nash an SO to him Wlth
the (cmeriency) lamp I couldn't
remember m) SOS. (But) hct'ould tell
that we \\Cre tr)1n1 to Oa h htm
iomethana"
. ·1 he liahtC'r came up on thr ri&ht
\1dc of the Dreamboat, tans for a 8-2~. saw no damaic and peelci1 off.
Woliver, s~rappcd in his chair. be·
came frantic.
"I thou ~\'Fool fi'-htcr JOCkc , h~'
JU t buuan us. Can t he e we're an
trouble?.·"
Then hcphcrd ame up on the
plane' lcfl ,.,n ·
··He coutdn'\ sec the phot bccau
pt, Bchmi lun\"rc<S aown in he
at and he C'Ouldn't h h d bcclu~ mo 1 of thaa ¥. one
an-.wa) "'Corbly said.
The fl&htcr rolled Jen 1nci kJ the tntk('n 6ombcr ~to I o J1m1
•
Gqv~rnor hasn't
muc9:~ay over .
legacy he leaves
Prevailing mood
has btg influence
on a~tlbns taken
Newly-compiled crime stausucs
. arc the most Jraphic evidence )'Ct that
it's impossible for a California ao ...
crnor or anyone else who watches his
term to pmiict what his most lastma
legacy will be.
Ronald Reapn, for one, sttll cam-
paigns as an advocate of famil)
stability and traditional values. But
has an) go~crnor ~f any state signed
laws that did more to change Amcn-
can family life than the ones Reapn
OK'd? .
Under Reapn, California became
the first state to sanction abonions on
demand He also signed the first no-
fault divorce law, a legal loosening of
the family structu~ that has since
been adopted bl 48 other states.
And Reagan s successor? Reviled
for years by his Republican oppo-
nents for bis choice of judaes who
were "soft on crime," Jerry Brown
may fO doWI) in history as Cali-
fornia s arcatcst crime-fi&htina gov-
ernor.
That's the upshot of new statistics
from state Attorney General'l:bn K. Van de Kamp. Overall cnme ppcd
7 .6 percent between 1982 a a 1983,
Van de Kamp reports. The drop was
even larger from the pc;ak cnme year
of 1980 to 1983, at l 0.8 percent.
The re4sons for the drop? "Fac-
tors ... fr6m tougher sentencing to
more soprustjcated law enforcement
methods.. and prosecution of career
criminals," Van de Kamp said.
No one looklna at the statistics has
iiven the credit to Brown, any more
than Reagan acts the blame for high
divorce rates. But that's where much
of the rcsponsib1hty lies.
lf there's tougher sentencing and
better law enforcement, it's because
of the jud&e5 Brown appointed. "'ho
now make up more than half the
• California judmary. And Brown
s!ift~ the landmark detcrrnmate
scntencina law which lets potenual
cnminals know preciscl) . what
sentence they'll serve if caught and
convicted.
Not that cnmc prevention was a
top prionty of.Brown's, any more
THOMAS
Euas
than loosening the family ~tructure
was a Reaaan aim. Bwt neither man
felt he could afford to veto immensely
ular bills that had passed the
stature; regardless of personal
nas. And now there's George 'Deu-
kmejian. This governor wants to be
remembered as a crime fighter who
secured the water future.of Southern
California.
But so far, he's been able to appoint
only one state Supreme Covrtjusticc
- a replacement for the only con·
scrvativc justice he inherited from
Brown and Reaaan -and bis water
plans have been stymic<t., m the
Lqislature. .
And so. ironicall)': Dcukmej1an
may go down m ~1story slm~ly as tt}c-
governor who restore some
semblance of quality to ahfornia
public education. ·
Never mind that DcukmcJian has
been a tougb-mmded budget cutter
who certainly didn't antend &ivmg
large ancreases to any scamcnt >of
education. Even as a le&islator, his
votes did not mark rum as a notable
education supponcr.
But by. the time ·he became aov-
emor, California's educational quah·
ty and its per-student spendin& had
bottomed out, with thcfublic finally
'realizing the impact o 16 years of
systematic frugahty on the
schoolroom.
Dcukmcjian couldn't resist the
pro-education ude any more than
Reagan could fight no-fault divorce
or Bro\\-n -could stop the risina anu-
crime feeling that has not yet reached
ltS peak. .
And so this governor, like his
predei:essors, now·sccms li.k"ely to be
remembered m the l'bnJ. run for
somellullJthat rcall> wasn. this doioa
and ccrwnly never ranke<t as his top
prionty.
Tbom11 EIJH J1 • Sui. MOilie~
bHed colamal1t oa 1i.te lnue1.
..
..
..
O.al N••• G•hP C11.c:e90 "''
,,
• .. I . "' ,..,
nJ n1orethan
toptherl Ing ntt·
L.M. 8010
·Genteel
dates • a only,·
please
Q. If you go one mt1c at 30 mph. how
fa~1 must )Ou io the second mile to
a'erast" 60 mph for the t~iln?
A. Am told it'& impossible. sir-:. ' .. . Onh one person out of four tD
Montana li..:es in a C'lt}.
Q . Whal v.'&S Erle tanle) Gar·
dner's first m)steTy story th PCf'f)
Mason?
~. ··i:he Ca~oftbe Vclvet Cla\lt>"$ ...
Jn 1933. Gardner" pUblimer
gcstcd Mason mi&ht make a ood
series hero. So Garoner l'CC)Cled · m.
What prompted C&Yc dwellers to
•tattoo their skiAS -and tattoOS So
back that far -"'as about the same as
what prompts schoolkids .to wear
letter swcaten. So says a stucknt of
human foibles.
Your vacation this )car was typical
of the national average. if )OU drove
)Our car SOO miles
~
The butterfl) ·s sen~ of wte 1s
1,000 times more sensitive than the
, honeybee's. Wouldn't l>e any trick at
all for a butterfly to dttcct a ttaspOOn
of sup.r in a bathtUb oJwater.
A' craat cost oh nC"" car -"ath '
\u.CS -wou\d be lns than S4,SOO
Riddle: :s ou•tt on an
inhabitcdonlyb:n otrtbcs,thc
ud the T J'Uthen. The Liars al
lie, the Tntthtn IC tru
You come to.a fort in the lane.
route leads to safcl), the other
dangrr . .\native sits n~rby. If )oun
allowed onl one question.,. wb.31 can
) OU IS • the nati'\ e to kam which path
leads to safety? Tr) ht): "Whi.ch •'8)
v.ould another member of your tri
say lca~s to safct) T'
Your arm, 1f normal. makes 27
diffettnl movements. The best
111iticiaJ ann )OU can act.onlj"makes
c;n:. Foi-eign-pOlicy· guideeXplaiils world affairs
An ordanan loaf of bread is uued
more than 200 times ~fore 1t gets to
last Fnday which made the snef of ~our tabll". Enlightenment can be yours for $6.95
or the time it takes to read this column
WALTER
Bu11oucas
There's· a new book out. Accord ma
to 1ts advance ~ublicity, the chairmen
of both polit1ca.l panics have en-
dorsed it. It is alleaed to cjve the
reader a better grasp of public affairs,
of the USSR, of the Mid-East, of
Central America and of oil and
eneray. ·
According to the reviewer there is
an invaluable ISO-~gc guide that
cxplajns the issues simply, in a non-
partisan, welt-balanced manner. '
In any event, itcosts$6 95 from the
Foreign Policy Associauon. I doubt
that you want to send for 1t. Actually,
there is no need to do so. I have
ordered it; so. after I have received
my copy, I will be telling you some of
its conclusions. So at's my $6.9S of
which you will get the benefit. The full
name of the book is "Foreign Policy
Choices for Amen cans."
At any rate, with the Democrats
claiming that the Repubbcans want
to put us into war and the Re-
publicans emphaswna that all recent
wars have been staned by Democrats. And they have to keep on maklna
I'm pretty sick of these charges and loans to sta)' in business.
counter charges. I ima&inc you arc, :rhe result of all this is that abou~ a
too. l~trd oflhe $AVtngs and loan assoc1a-
• • • • lions may end up in the red this year. Yo~'ve probably been follo~ina But don't worry.
the dismal ne~s .about old savanas If you have an account an a sa ... mgs
and loan assoc1at1ons. These arc the and loan, you should remember that
ones that m~dc mortaaae loans at o the FSLIC(Federal Savings and Loan
fixed rate of interest. In order to keep Insurance Corp.) has insured it up to
enough funds on hand to make new $100,000. I don't have that much an
loans they have to pay, 1n many cases. any savina.s and loan to worT) about,
more for new money than they can but I don't think u's necessary for )OU
cam an interest when they lend It out. to worry because I .(jon't think many
of them will be goina broke. There
were a few big ones last year which the
FSLIC bailed out. To a"'oidjust that,
there will be quite a fcv. go,cmmcnt·
assisted merge~ and liquidations this
year and in 1985 But because things
~~ Fe'al(y going well for the econo.my
in general, I rcfu~ to worry about 1t. l
sugcst you do the same. That is,
refuse to won). There are so man) ·
other problems ahead that tf )'ou want
to worry, please worry about them • • •
One of the saddest new stones of
last wee!. wu the death of the
dau,htcr of Dr and Mrs. Lionel
DcS1ha She was killed when a
pnvate plane collided wnb a com·
mcrcial airplane near San Luis Ob-
ispo. The da_u~ter, Linda. was a
darhna g.arl, ~ 1t has been a temble
hock for their f nends and for her
local high school classmates. There
was a memorial ma sat St Joachim's ..
her relatives and friends e .. en more
pC>JJMDl.
• • • This same v.cck was a rcall) sad
one. As I probabJy have told )OU I
took my undergraduate work at the
University of Washinaton in Sc.attic.
In the fraternity house v.herc I hved
was a younisterthrce years my JUn1or
~born I called Little Brother. He gttv.
up to be an tqually charmina man.
Last Thursda).just minutes before I
was to leave for Haq SS2 Cub's
Western Barbecue, I &ot v.ord that m)
aood friend of 60 ycan had died.
So you will plcasc foraive me. I
don't feel very scinulJatina as I try to
wn~ this Scarchlilbt. So. no more
toda) q1 try to do better next v.·cck.
Walt~r BV1'006b & th Pilot'•
lou&6-l'flblhber.
Jae mate for life.
Q. Cro"d scenes filmed earl) in
this centun sho" almo t aJJ men
Y.Ort hats. iio"' come the) 've stop.
pcd?
.\.You wcrt out of uniform dunna
World War 11. ifyou didn't have)'our
hat on. Most homecoming Yeterans
rejected headgear thereafter.
Q. An) ment to the claim "c might
nm ha'e been first to land on the
moon 1f Charle~ Lindbeflh hadn't
been first to ~lo the Atlantic?
A Maybe. Lindbergh bad.ed Rob-
ert Goddard "hen others stofftd.
Goddard fathered rod:eU).
L .M. Bo.~d
eool•zrualSJ.
a syadic•tH
American financier tied t9 N icaiaguan dope smuggling
Sources say Robert Vesco was invqlved
in trade w.ith profits of $~5 billion
WAS\ilNOTON -Federal a&en· Kooistra's account of the Ve o-
cies have amassed volumes of Nicaraguan connection is laid out Ui a evidcn~ linkina fupttvc American aovernmcnt report marked
financier Roben Vesco to a mam-"sensithe." It was obtained by m}
moth drua smua&Jina operation an associate& Donald Goldberg and
unholy alliance with N1caraauan Corky John on. Herc is Kooistra's
government officials. My ource . sto~1stra had bt'en smuaaling
the profits from the tllicil dru traOic ha'lhtsh f'rom Iran to We tern Euro~ have excffi!ed S2S billion. -firsthand evidence comes from a . for two years when hi partners were
fonnerV o sociateanthe h m ' arrc~ted Accordin to Koo1Mr1'1
Jnu Kooistra. a European dope tatemcnt. he CS<'lpcd wuh $2 million
smuglcr who Otd to the Bah mas 1n to the Bahamas, where he \\
1981, one Jump he d of the law. appr chedb)'abaamanforlonaumc
lJuttd into 1 trap by u .. C\l tom Prime Minister Lynden P1ndh .
rvice enu. Kooistra ,umcd Kooastra aot pcnn11 ·on to optratc 1n the hamas. state's evidence and allo d to At about the same time. Koo stra
plead suihy to rclatav l minor met Vesco. ho h\'e4 nearby and s
ORANGE COAST
D~ilyPila~
...
JACK
. AIDEISOI
al&0 mak1na pa)mcnts to the prime
minister throuah his baaman.
Kooistra and I Ve~o ISSOClltC,
Adolph Loia. went into dope dca11nt
tn the Canbbcnn, including the sale of
Bolivian cocaine to d1stnbutors in the
United tat .
Vaughn and officials 1n '1caraau1
~as stnt bad; m cash b) a Nil"lraauan
ambassador us1n1 the diplomatic
pouch.
As funher e\ 1dencc of aua,hn's-
and thu Vesco's -relationship to
h~ officials in Manaaua, Koo1~
ad Vau&hn at one point proposed a
manjuana &muuhnJ opcranon that
would &n"olvc tile N1cl\raauan mini
ter of aaricul\u~
Koo1 tra' tale ma) be challcn ed.
but other source hl\C provided
·detail about \'eS(O that lend at lea t
some crtd1biliU to his claim . For
• ample:
1cchnol<>s>· equipment into Cuba
from the Unttcd States.
. -
\
' ton
'
:t
-:-cat
lnd
.. it
and
the
do
ln't
lJl
and
. to
u~
ur )Ut
OU
br.
n
be
n
•to
iltt
hat
Ptt'c ~ r
p.le
l"\C
\01 or
Od
of
• 11
'
Ge ..
• I
...
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
\\Is there any hope of a teachers' strike
this year, Mommy"?"
by Gus Arriola
BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP)
~y;y
if~J.(~ . . f ..-.· le · n"' l} . h I
"What! No ants2!"
M-'BMADUKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank. Ketcham . c, ... .._ ...... .,,_,.,.
~I
"Why would Myer's be calling me? ... I don't
need an eye exam."
MOON MULLINS
I
f
f J J1 ·~ •
t ••
.PEANUTS
• IF IT WASN'T FM YOUR eAROEN ,WE.'rJ SU~E
HAVE A LOT Cf HUNGRY 61.JGS AROUND HE~E.-
I I M nlE ONE 1t IHO
FAILED LAST YEAR
by Charles M. Schulz
FASTEN VOUR SEAT Bal: MA'AM ... MERE
I COME A6AIN !
----.,....~-...,...---~--, Get:: .• l'U. NEVeR FORGei r-:--, --~=:::--;
1Hf PA'( Wr; ME?f, SEVEl\l-
1l=el\I VEARS P60J ••• M"(
Fll':Sf~t:'S WE~ •0-~~-_..,,;:.--'-~ ............ 7'-
R> ~ ro, KINP SIR! 11
ANUHIS?
-
------~ . ----
' TOMl\ff DOES l'I AGAll'i
' Nonh ~oulh vufo.-rnhh'. ~outh
1!C'l1 I '
NORTH
• 1086
A976
I) J8,.
+·A 104
~•:ST
+AS
QJIORt
¢ 1-053•
•:r\Sl' '
+BIU
• + Q9H32
Vold
~K 7
•QJ76Z
SOl JH
+KJ
KS3t
• .O AQ962
+KS ·Th~ luddinit:
South \\'..it
I N1' l'a'Ja
3 'V l'aa's
PaH Ob~t .....
...
, 11rtt. f.'.a1tt 2. 2 . .. .. ...
Pa 1 Pa••
Opt'n1ng lc.,1d :' An· or •
Wht'n your 11ppont•n l 1' Tru11111
Coup Tomm_v. lhl' ~•'>t''' thinic to do
SHOE
CHARLES
GOREN
"h' n you lal'I! look1n1 Ill a hunrh of
trultlp 1md heo IA dt•thtrm.r. 11 to
"ll'll 11u1t-t•y Into the• rugh . Trum11
Coup Ton1Rl). ,vou muy rC'mt"mbt'r .
!!I that arnu111K pt>r$on "Pio Ourf!I
'llmple h11nd aflt'r $1mph1 h11nd. onl
to· becomt' 1 111atler of l1!thnu1ut'
"hen ·fac••d 14 ll h :s ha~ trump hrt-11k.
'l'he, fart lhttt hi11 th11tr1b111ton w:i1
not 1d.-:il did not pr1·H~nt T()mmv
lrom opt•nlnu om• no 'trump. Wt• l
rould hardlv tw hlanml for th1nkln1C
th11l th· ruhhoi•r wu11 •houl to pn for
h1'> winter 1t;l;ind v<tralion. Artt•'r all,
hi11 nartner had.hid ;it ltw two-lt"vf'I
und his hand ratl'd tp produce four
.. lritk on its o" n. ..
Wt•'ll lt·d thf' .act• or hi partner_.~
un~nd t·ootinut'd with hj~ rtomuin·
tnl( .. pad1•. l'ommx won tht' kinic 11nd •
\·onhrm1·d the· truu1p J)()sition by
tJ,h1nic tlr1· kJnl(. Now ht• wa., rn hi
l'lemt•nt.
fll' rro~ t>cf to th.-~t<·c.• of rlub'l nnd
r1nc-.~t>d I ht• 11ueen of diamonds.
Wht•n thl' king lf'll undl•r tht• ace.
FOR BE'ITER OR FOR ft'ORSE
FUNK~ ft'INKERBEAN
DB.SMOCK
HOSE IS HOSE
l1f .. wu begmnlnK tn auum" a roay
glow. lie rBJhl'd lhr kinir nf dubs.
trO!IM•J lo ltll' j&t'k Of dhamondf! JRd
ruHt'd th 10 uf club . Wtit'n Wl'st
followl'd 11u1t. tlM-cootra('t bt·came i
r1nch.
l>1•dan•r lt·1J. one of hi' !food
diamond•· and West. down to
no• hinK but four trumps. w•s• for'c.-d
tq rurr hiirh. 'l'urnmy did not mak~
thtt mistakt' of overrurfinl{ -hl"
!;turfed th .. table':. last ~pade. When
Wtts( C'{lntinurd with :a trurllp honor:
Tommy 11llow•d him to wi,n tht'
Lrick, WC'•l wa.s now lorrf'd to lead
nwny from hi'I lO 8 of lrurpp'> into
dummy''! A 9 11•narl", and .Tommy
lo$t' only two &runt1> tratk!! und tht'
act' or 'lpadt: .
. .
f'o~ tnformftion ab.u&, Charin
Coren'• new ne•111etter for br1clee ... ;
players. write Cor'("D Bridie Lettn,
1909 Clnnamln oa Ave. Clnnamin·
ton, N,J. 08077.
..
by ~eff MaoNelly
'by Lynn Johnston
JCANT
Wf\IT.
. by Tom Battuk
WE UKE 10 MIX 11' OP !
by George Lemont
by Pat Brady
by Harol~ Le Ooux
•
_,
'
.
•
ruESO y SEPTEMBER 4
ANN LA DERS 112
T.V LISTINGS 83
BU81NE88M
·Strain of VDT,jobs.starts·.with eye~
'We have Neanderthal.vision
for do•ng computer age work'
By n~t yearsom"C 3S m1lhon Amencan)~worlfwiU
include pcckmaawa) at computer video display tenmnals.
"And at least half of them will suffer headaches,
eyestrain, blumd to double\ JSton and even permaAent
nsion problems." said Tod R Davis. O.D .• a behavioral
optometnst.
The National Academ)' ofScience'sdeta,ile<j repon.
··video-Di plays. Work.and Vi ion," ~onfirrned that
VOTsdo not cause disuses or pathologies of the e)es.
But few people rtad the final section oflast )Car's
report whictf said that those who already have v1s1on
problems-some of them very subtle -arc very likely to
experience vision-related"omplaints when us1ng a VDT
Mistress
tu_rns quite
~ontrary
Editor's Note: This 1s rhe founh of five installments
dealing '41th the ela11on and dis:Jppoinrment of extra-
marital affairs ~ • Sue had never------------·-:--•
read, "All the Good
Ones are Mamed"
by Manon Zola or
Melissa Sand's ''Mis-
tresses Sun 1 v:d
Manual." It never
even occurred to her
1.1101
ALciz1
that she might need •••••••••••• the advice and sup-
port of others involved in impossible romance with
married men "
Sue "as a most unlikely candidate to become -;n~olved with someone else's husband. .
• Davi • whol\C practice 1s Coron del Mar, added
that other re earchers repon about halfot all VDT
operator , even under the bc'it working conditions, ha-. e
complaints about vision-related symptoms.
"The way the VDl workc;tauon iurran$ed can ha\e
a bi& 1mp:ict on vision complaints, .. Dans said. '"Simple
teps such as eliminatinulare from the surroundings and
refl«tlon . on the terminal ~reen can help a lot. ·
"Another th ina that makes ad1ffercn~ is to place
VDT screens. if~ss1blc,sotheopcrator.can IOQk up
occasionally into a dmanl space 1nstead-0f a nearby wall
for,. isual rchefbreaks " • • .
ls there a b3s1c source of VDT -related vision complaints?
•·Problems people ha\e wnh their vision wbcn using
one are tied to somethina optometn ts call 'su tained
nearpomt task' -visual "ork done for a prolonged period
(two hours daily)atadistanceofless than arm·s length."
. .
This t)peol v11ualta k 1srelat1"el) nev.. 0 \ 1sr.aad.
·•up 11nt1l ac:tntury ago v1rtu II) all work required
distance vmon, bui thatchan d~llh industnaliuuon and universal-cduC'lt1on.
••Huinanvi 1ondevelopcdtousurt ur.tval-10
s~tpme,encm1c oropportun tiesat~atd1stancn· ·
Optometnc research points more clearh as umc guc:s b) to
th1sdispanty betwttn our dist.an e \i ion prcfertnccc and
the need todoncarworle as the source of a high percentage of vision irrcaularit1es.
• "The effort 1i take1 to do near vision work is
. .sianificantly &rcatcf'than the efTOrrrequ1red fordistan~ .~ork,an~ when ptOplearen't up to all that etTon. 'is1on·
complaints ri\C, performaf)ce dro~ and pcTmanent
conditions stJch as m)'opia (nearsightedness) and
astigmatismof\en follow.
"In a sen~. we have Neanderthal-. ision for doing
computer age work. ·
"Videod1spla)scomplicate the problem in mao}
She belteved in the promise of perpetual happiness in· Helen Rose shows atudlo photos to Billie Hanaon and Shlrley_Schn.ltzeY. a truly committed relat1onsh1p and respected t~e
tnstltution of mamage as the vehicle through..w.hich this
could best happen.
She knew that getting in-.ohed with a mamed man
was dumb.
And then she met Jake. •
.
'Once upon
' SUP.port. and his m1ldl) fl1n.aUOUS manner W8S JUSt e e •
Jake, clearly mamed and 12 )ears her senior. was her · d •g ·
irumed1ate s,yperviS<?r at ~ork. He offered fnef)dl) a -es1 n ·
t1t1llating enough_ to keep her interested. Sue had been
wtthout a lover for about six months since she had broken t 1 h d
her long term engagement a es s a re Sh~ really did reC<?Jntle her o~n vulerab1ht). but had . .L ,
overestimated her ab1htj·to remain in control. What had
started out as a mutua bargain between them quid.I)
exploded. Rose's Hollywood is-----'An Affair to Remember' Jake made 11 quite clear from the slart that he had no
intention ofleaving his marriage. Sue had thought this was
OK; that with Jake she could temporanly fill her
affccuonal and sexual needs. This was also a need) time in ·· 1 thought the> were kidding." said Designer Helen
Jake's life, and for a shon ume their rclat1onsh1ir seemed Rose. ··A Lana Turner-t>pe gown for Miss Piggy?'
wonderful. Rose, who won an Oscar for her fashions m ··The
Sue had actuall) thought ... to herself. .. of course. that Bad and the Beau ul" stamng Lana. made 1t up when
Jakes's wife was luck) that 1t was she who was his .. other shep iscovert;d It a a genume reque t.
woman" and not some "typical mistress who was out to A ··woman-size" replica of Miss Pigg> 'sdresswill steal a husband " Perhaps 11 was b«au e of the . impossabiht) of be one of those modeled &pt. 28 when the Laguna
permanence. or perhaps because of it. the chemistr) the} CommmeeofOranKeCount} Ph1lharmon1cSoc1ety
set offm each other became overpowenng. presents a fund-raiser at the Ritz-Carlton
Sue wanted more from Jake It no longer seemed Other fash1onsto be hown wtll be costumes and
enough for him to profess love from 8: 30 to 5:00 "eekda ys gowns Rose created for celebn tics dun ng her 23 >ears at
She had become obsessed with him in much the same wa) MGM studios. mcludmg Mary Martin, the late Grace
that people become obsessed with other addictions Kelly, Ellzabe&b Taylor (a favonte others). Lauren
She began to make demands. -Bacall and Lena Horne.
Jake responded in prcdlctablc styre. He told Sue 1ha1 The lunctleon h~ been tilled·· .\n .\ffa1rto their affair was over. Surely, he had cared about her He had even loved her in• very special wa). But after all. he Remember" and should cena1nl) recall moVle
reminded her, he was already mamed to Leshe. and for memories for the 500expected to attend the elegant
whatever reasons, did not choose to end that rclat1onsh1p. show m the elegant hotel as Rose delights them with
Sue had been a tourist tn Jake's hfe. anecdotes about her career and Hollywood fnends.
What had started out to be a fantasy without Helen, whonowhvcsin PalmSpnngs,and her
consequence turned out for her to be a plain old ~d love husband for more than 50 }Cars. Harry Rose, were at the
song. Ritz-Carlton last week to check over the facilities that
Married men can risk being emotionally genero1,1s w1 II showcase her designs and to select local models. .
because It usually costs them very little. After dodging workmen in the ballroom and
Jake was an exception. At least. on the surface. 1t determmmg how man> minutes 1t would take models to
seems like it co~t him his marriage. reach the ramp (thu . how man) interest mg stones to f Dr. Alg1u1 is • mamagc. and famil;, rhcrupist in tell). the Roses and Philharmonic members were off to
Goronadc/Mar Shcwelcomcs)ourrespon~s ff you wish lunch at Monique'sm outh Laguna. a reply, plea~ cnc/o~ a swm~. sclf~ddressed en .. ·elope . .,. ~
Wnte her c/o D3'1y 1'17or. P.O. &-.: 1500. Costa Mesa The party in~ludedBlffieH~senandSlafrle~
92626. -« Scbnltzer, co-chamnen of" A ff air to Remember.
,' HELP YouRSELF
---__ ------
1KnoWledge
!speeds cure
Give doctor a ll t h e facts,
get a satisfactory answer
BRENNAN
CASSIDY
LaareJLtve ay, Kay Wlttmaek and Joan Hanson.
.. We had such aareat time." said Hansen. "\\e were
all 1ntngued by the storie she told.··
Rose ~1d that as a
0
child she \\as rarcl~ "'1thout a
_.,,.. ....... ., ...... I{ .....
Award-winnlnc Holl,...ood destaner Belen
ROH hold• .. Lena Borne coetumed" doll.
pencil or crayon and a sketch pad. At 15 she went to high
school at night taking a busmesscourse and spent her
daysat theCh1caao ~cademyofFineAnswhere hew-a
the youngest m hercla s She·was voted the most
"unlike!} to succeed" because she ~f uscd to emulate
top des.iiners of t..bat era.
' Thi )Ounggirlv.cntonwtthhersketching-
designin1 mil hon of dollars wonh of costumes and
winmnga number of Oscars for which she wa ..
nominated IOtime
PaP3razz11s tdltcd by D3i/.v Pilot t) le Editor\ 1da
Dean.
w )s,lcHmona ~n refuu,y Whithrnult ma
con tan1d'forttoU)tocl rup hau511•1ctearto n
with." •
fhenaturcottl\e rorkpcopledochan wbent
icucomputer.OaVJs dded. "'M nypeop eavo1ddoina
work that fo~ them t.Q do uncomfortable, prolo
near-vision t.ask1 •
.. An order taker, fore mp • ho Orb ith per
has to leok from a form to a uiJ thtn tear pan and • deli~ er font' no f)ther desks. ntn ~vcn walk to the
w rchou~~ion.all) toch an" ·1ory... · · •
•Thtnthecomputcr m\'CS&ndcha t1'c 11 ~~b
· -AtcJephonehcadsctn u.enhcm10thc1rd .
Da i uplained .. The~ Qe"crlook up from the VDT
screen bccausull their infonna11on asoa the d1 p )' nd
usuall> opponunit1c to loOk upfora-momentaref~ and far between."'
The er com plication) in volv1n1 C) e mow:·
ment abiht1 e abilify to use both e}cs together smoothlyands1i\tul~ncousl1.and wh t Oavisdcscnbes
as very complex ··eye a1min1and posturing skilh•'' which
arc deficient m man) people. . •
For most people, low-po-. er. focus-relaxing lentcs
prescnbcd spccificall) for their visual capabilities and for theiro~n computcrwork..stat1on can htlpdeal witb the
problem. For those with ccruun vision skill problems the
answer may be visuaJ therapy to dc\;e]op the rnilicnce
needed for the4cmandsof .,or\;, accordin•to Oivu..
How can ~u 1ell 1fyo have VDT-related vision problems~ .
"The signurr easy to 1pot," said Davis. -cspeciaJJy
the direct symptom such as burning. itching., v.·atery, •
pullina or 1mtatCd sensations of the C)~ or beadac"hes.
momentary blurred or double vision or difficult> seeing
clearly at d1stanccsaf\Cr prolonsed VDT work. '
"People who v.---ear ~&SICS to clear their distance VlSlon
may find their prescripuon is actuallu c&U5ina problems
when they usu VDT."
Many vi ion-related Symptoms are much less direct
and obvious. ruulung laf'&CI> from the 1ndiv1dual ba" ina
to distort theirpostutttosec the screen better or to overcome a visual distortion. /'
"Neck, . houldcr or back tension or pa.in. pain 10 arms.-
• wrists or shoulders, increased nervousness are all siJlls of
postural problems." Davis said. •·The visual effort
required of the VDT "-Orker also takes its toll in fatigue and
lowered on-the-job perfonnancc. Many people go home
more ti.red than they ~ecd be eaCb evemng.
.. This i related to higher error ntcs and reduced
speed and efficiency as the day goes on. Other problems
include the TCHr sal'oflcnt"rs when reading and in pu ttina a
documenL Even tncrca.scd absenteeism has been hoked to this problem."
Dr. Davisoflen a guide to help idenlif) VDT-related
vision problems which includes a symptooucbecklist and IAiOrk t.atl<>n arra.niement retommendatioru.
"lfyouaren't usin1acomputcr)et, )"OU \Cf)'li eh
will be soon. If -you have VDT difficulties. the problem you
arc havingprobabl) isn't v.1lh thecomputer,tt's more
liketf with )OU.·· he warned.
Poor sleep
habits ·hurt
Choose a good positlon
for a third of your Jire-_____
•
t OAILV PILOT /Tu 984 ... -
HELP YouRSELF
----~--~-~ :U~r.dy petS~1:1aiid.es· more St~ess~resistant
Commitment. challen g
. ontrol are m ajor traits
Ask mostpcop!C'wh:u they thinlabout stre"s-thf
bu boo of the• Os-nd they're t.-en<un to tell) ou
somcthioa bod. trt m kcs )Ou s1d:. h wrc l s tbc
immunesy$tem, gives people heart auacks,raises the ri It
ofcancet.Siressrunslikea tru k ovcl'itshelp.less ., u.·um<1 ..
· That's the populai impre~ 1on. lt 1ca .. e,·u~ with u
problem: What to do'? Anyone who lives in a mabk
Amcncancity.gocs to school or hold lJOb has toac:al \\1th
stres.s: it corncs with the temtof'). But the anu tress ~·an~
mak~ it seem that nothing hon of retiring to rum I •
Vermont could l..~p people health}.
Now, however. there 1~ a more hopctUI wa> ol luok 1 ng
autress.Accordmgtothisnc\\ \iew. it':. not Just what
happens toyoU-lhat's mtponant. but ho" ~ou handle 11 II
you try to master stresses instead offeeltng helpless and
o,·erwhelmed by them. the> don't have to be bad for your
health. •
Overtbe last eight years.City Universm of "'cw York psyehol~st Suzanne Ouellette Kobasa and bcr colleagues
have studied what they call "hard)" pcrsonaht1e!>. People
wbo seem especraJI~ st re -resistant.
. Their research shows distinct. mea!.urabk persona ht\
traits that buffer the negauvc eff«ts of stress. It h.clps ·
explain why one executive gets severe headache~ or pa1 n'
in his chest. while bis office neighbor weath~ the ~me
pre sures tn perfect healt h.
ln carefulstudiesofhundrcdsofpeople. the> have
found that personality can mal.e the crucial difference For
e xample:
-Ifyou~re under a lot ohtre)s. a hard~ persona ht~
may do more for your health than exeretse or a strong
constitution. ·
-Stress-resmant people can have several Type A
u·111ts"athout1h1ihn kofhc:mdase sc
-for people with ht h·pin urdobs, famil) uppon
isk s helpfulthan 11\nerrc ourte,, ln I: ct. <;()Ille' pcoplurc
more likely to l>K'ome 1ck 1f\he~ have tight·kntt t1 m1li .
-: the mepcMnaluvtrall helpe11C'(utl\t'.
I.a"' }crs. hou'>l.•wive:., arm) offiu.·n!nd college tudcnts-
. andprobablvthcre tofus-dealwnhstrt · 1 hcre\good news. too If )ou've had trouble ~·np1og.
and fell overwhelmed b\ hfe's unc\pcctcd challenge!., you
don't have to accept a vlcttm 's fat~" .t hl·rc arc wu)t. to
change from he I pies to hard\.
The notion that all ~trc:.~ make\ )OU std. ignores a lot
of what w~knowab6ut peoplc. lta-.sumeswe'reall
\ulncrableand pa~ 1ve1n thcfilccofadven1ty. But what
about human re 1hencc.1nit1at1Hand crcat1v1ty'! Man~
come through penod~of ~r~s w1tti more" physical and
mental' 1gor than the) had before.
In 11f15 Dr ~obasa became mtcrcstcd m people who
~ta\ health~ understrl'c,!> She d hercolleaguc)dt."Ctded to
100'1 fi~tat h1gh-powl'rcd bus1ne~e \t.'<:utives-widely
viewed as the walking \\<Ounded of the stre~~ wa~ They
found agroupof1ekphoncc.>.ccut1ve., whose hie l'xpencnr~s. on the standard 5lah:. would ha\e put them at
high mk fortllnc-.s-but wbo \\Crl' \till in good hc:ilth. So
the~ asked tht.• question What \.\asspel'lal about them? '
· Dr Kohasa thought some pcople rr11ght be able lo
handh: stress w 1thout bct.om1ngan\lousandarouscd in
thdirst place-and without stan1ngthe !>ptral that leads
to tllne~s !:>a thr rr~an: hl·rs l'hl'l'kl·d ou I three maJor
personaht~ 1ra1h that ~cml·d mu!".1 ltkcl~ to help:
(I) Comm11mt.·n11(1 i.cll. \\urk, lamtl) and orhcr
1mportJot \alurs. ,
( 2) A !>l"nse of personal rnntrul oH·r one's It fe ic...
(3) Theab1ht} tosel' lhangl' tn one\ hfe a\a challenge
to master ' .
The) ~w the\l' thrl'l' · ("·;· -rDmmnment. control
and challenge -as the 1ngred1en ls of ps ychol<>gJcal
hard• ness. Hard> people would be able to face change wr th
confidence and self-de term 1na11on. and the eagerness of
in&l'h n asopponunuy.
lnoontra t, le hardypcrwncouldfeel hen tcd,
thrtatened or.help! 1n the face of an) mljorchalkn c to
the tatusquo
With the '.\Uppon t.'fllhncm ~II'\ medical director.
Dr.Robcn ·
t;tilkcr, Dr. Kobasa recruited hundrd:bofmtddlc-and
upper-level citecuuves. As he followed th~epcople over • ·----~~-;
the ne~teight year ... she~whowthcy handled various
work and home prcssur~. .
When thccomputeranalysii> wasdone, 1t turned out
that the healthyc~C'(uttve were not younacr, wealthier,
h11hcrQn thecaret'r ladderorbettcr-«lucated than their
colleagues who became lltd: under strc\s. 8ut one
difference clearly counted: They were hardier.
The st re std but healthy e'<c<:utivcs were more
committed, felt more in control. and had biaaer appetite
for challenge. In fact. on some mdicalors the h,:althy -
cxccut1vesshowcd twice a!, much hard1ne
These personality trail!. were their most potent
protection again t stress.
Though the telephone executives were a
homoge,oeous lot-mostly male. middle-class, m1ddle-
aged. ma med and Protestant -Dr. Kobasa and her
colleagues have found that harcjmess protectllall kinds of
people from stress. • The~ found 1t. for example. in a contmu1ngstudy of
women. Four)ears ago. the> distributed hardiness
questionnaires to hundreds of women m their ·
g)necologms' offices They found that those who were
more helpless than hardy had de\eloped more illnesses.
both mental and physical
Important a!, hardme!,S is, tt'snot the only way people
fight stress. Social support, c>.ercise and a strong ·
constitution can all help. BuUiardiness, or a lack ofit. can
change tho way people use these other resources. B10log~ 1s
not destiny. A hardy personality, they found, was more
1 rtant than a strongconst11ut1on.
American Healtb Macame Servltt
H y URSELF
- - --HOME MQ\t[f~S .· • • d. .. _
A REAL KILLER Some i~fectious . iseases s.erJf?US
. . . Virus most common-d1sca~s.. which can be caused by these special ca~s With mt~ven~us somethtngmaperson sgenettc mak.e-
lnaWorldwhereweapona _ ~ctena include pneumonia. bladder drugs, m add1t1on to top1caJ omt-up.
becomemoredeadlyandmore • and genera lly n eeds infections, osteOm)elttts. _which af-ments. . You need.a germ togeun infection. lnh . wtth ssl d 1 ~ _ . fects the bone. and mcningu1s. which For people with a typical case of but you also need susceptibility umane ~pa . ng ay. little or no treatment ~ff«ts the brain. g~nttal herpes. treatment now con-Toda i n I ts are looking to a am reluctant to suggest one that wlll ER•• Many diseases. although not mfec-s1sts of top1cal 01 nt!ll~ts and saJvts. numJ'er ~f e fa~:ors to find out why endwarforever. ""' t1ous themselves. become com-Although no medicauon has been some people are susccpttblc to some
ltls,c;atled,."HomeSlldeaand }OIBECI( Ques11om. about mfect1ous dis-phcate<n>ecausc of infecuons. Wtth developed to prevent rccWTCnces. we diseases and not others. One of these MQ.vtes. eases arc ans"'ered b) Thomas C some cancer patients. whose immune expect a p1U to bcco~e available soon factors might be interferon. f know I know Whatklndo1 Ccsano. M.D. professorofmed1cme systems have been weakened. for to help heal each indlVldual attack. .
)pkt 'ldst ' t 1 fllctl th t at the UC lnme Medical Center. · example. any mfect.1ous disease is If you suffer from herpes, the only Interferon 1~ a natural substance m f:dot~?eut°f:.n~:bout~tg 8 Q. Wbat are •1J~tious diseases? capable of becoming quite serious. way to avoid transmitting the disease the. ~y·~ .-r.1mmune basyst~~-Y'e ,,_ • • • • is to be cautious during acute behe".e u_u e11eron com ts in1cct1on
When peoP'e show up for a war, y~ ~Imply pull down a large Where do tbey come from, and are episodes. In other words, either and aids m recovery.
screen and show plcturee of a d90 chasing sUcks, chlldren mooning tbey all serious? Q. I understand berpes isamong the ref ram from sex or use condoms. We are find mg that. h)cc insulm.
oneenotheratthepoot,momcomlngoutofapubllcreetroomwtth ."' Infectious diseases are those most common lnfectJou disu ses. QI bl d•d• •Inf ... mterferon maybenaturally defic1ent
toUet tlsssue on her shoe and dad squfntJng at theaun mouthing tran!>mitted to people from animals. Exactly bow prevalent Is it? And bow f·-. mognettbs. als etbr ~r .. ecso"mo!sr~avesoryn in certain people. We also think that T I h 11 it Id the en~ 1ronmen1 or other people dangerou's? ..... ... ... ... ... f obacenltles. h nk ow many ves wou aave. __ ,.-· . ...--""" lnfe1.ttou!I agents include viruses. , A. In Orange Count}. we ~t1mate why I'm more sasceptible to them pauents tak.tng large q uanuttes 0
Frankly, ldon'tknowhowsndesand movtesgottobesodeamy. bacteria fungi and parasites that 50 ~rcent of all people are Uw1 otber ~pie? cenam drugs have; defiaenctes m lkn~myhusbandoevermeanttoharmanyonewlthours.Allhesald Depending upon the lause the infected with herpes. T\pe 2. or A. To this day. although we know mterferon. For this reason, some
was, 'Ooeaanyonewant to seethe 500sUdes on our weekend In the disease 1s treated wtth antt-\. rral. gem ta I herpes. now affect'> IO to 15 some people are more susceptible to cance~ patients may be susceptible to
Smokies-?" an~HhenextthlngyouknowFredwascomatoseand ant1b1011c. antt-fungal or antt-para-percent of all adults. The others have cenam 1nfcct1ons than otherf1)Cople, mfections.
Marge was hold Ing lee cubes over each eye to remain conscious. !>1t1C mcdica11ons. Type I herpes, charactemed by fever we don't fully understand the reasons Because we can now manufacture
-Thecameralteelflalnnocent -untJlftlsloaded. Then ft becomes The most common mfcc11ons are blisters around the mouth. why interferon in test tubes, we c.an
absolutely lethal. Noonelssafefromltsproblngeye. tf you are eating the '1ral ones. They include the At UCI Medical Center. we are Some people get bladder infections regulate the amounts of interferon m
a ham eandwlch where the fat unravefs from your mouth Ukeyour '• common cold. chicken pox and man> mostconcerned wtth herpe!> sufferers often. Other people get pneumonia the body in the same way we can
lnteetJnesunfoldlng lt'saUthereonfilm lfyouarelytrvaonthebeach other d1Sl'ases that are so mild that who require hosp1taltza11on for the each year. Many people get certam regulate insulin in d1abettcs. Using
' • "• patients often don't seek 1reatmcnt dt~asc. These ~pie. amountmg to I diseases whrle others don't. interferon in Lreatment 1s strll ex-
lnyourbathlng sultand your body haagfven waytograVftY, providing for them perc~nt of all sufferers. have little or It's possible: that some people have penmental however. To date. we've lh~ for 8 thousand ants, ft belongs to the ages. Bactcnal 1nfl'<:llons. on the other no resistance to herpes. and as a weak bladders. lungs or other organs seen interferon benefit some cancer
Everyone worries about how they can protect themselves and hand genera II) make people s1d• result the disease can sprcaq to the It'!. also possible the problem relates patients. but fail m expenments with
thefrh<>me8fromaggressorsJnawar. Whathomedoesnothavelts enough to sec their phys1c1an ~omc rest of the bod' Currently. wt: treat to nutnt1on. the environment. or AIDS patients. ·
own stockpHeof home movies and slides? With a sign In your window,
• 'Thfs houee ta protected by a projector and 1,500 slides of a science
f alr project Showing the birth of a compost," .the entire netghborhood
can sleep at night. . •
lnournefghborhoodtheotherweek, Walter said, "l'mgoingto
show my alfdes again of our trtp down the Colorado River. Bring .
Dramamine."
"Youdo.''saldmyhusband, "andl'llshowyouourhomemovles
of rump shota of 300 wildebeest In Africa which we chased for 18 miles
In the dust."
"You wouldn't," said Glenn. "Then I have nocholee but to show
my alldee of an Eydie Gorme and Steve Lawrence concert out of doors
-at night with the wrong ASA and my lens cap on.
We an held our breath. Was this to be the end of the world as we
knew It? .
Finally Walter aaJd. "So, It's a lot of troub4e setting It up. Let's jus1
play some trMa."
Remember, cameras don't kill people. Negatives do.
OUR -MfNU
I AS fRfSH
A5QUR
EA FOOD
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DrinkLng and.swimming don't mlx
DE.\R A "lN LANDERS Y.,e hear
a great l'l"lany wammgsabout the
danf.crsofdnnkmgand dm mg. I
<ton t thmk I ha\eevtr seen 3!l)'thmg
in pnnt about dnnk1ngand sw1m-
m1ng
54.·vcral weeks ago I was ha vmg-a
wonderful 11mcat a pan). M}
hu~band suddenly came over and
said "We have to leave," and
mumbled !.Oml'thingabout a po~stblc
drown mg. I rnuld tell he wa'i tr) mg to
break !,Orne bad newsgentl}
~urcenough .11 was m) 20..)ear-<>ld
broth~r. Ru:k Justtheda) before we
had been p1rn1dong together and he
s"am clear across the lake and back.
Hcwasanexccllentsw1mmer But
that da} he had been dnnkmg. He and
some fncnds were playmg m the
dramp1peofthe lake. The girl wtth
him (alsodnnkiog)dove throu~ the
drain. Rick realized shccouldn t
make 1t. so he dove in after her. She
died ofa broken neck Rick was
drowned.
The moral of the story 1s this: If you
arednnking. stay out of the water. no
matter how many people arc w11h
you Drowningshappen very fast -
and often.excellent swimmers are
\ 1cums. No name. please.Just -
HEARTBROKEN ~IS
DEAR SIS: nank you for the
warnln1. This ls tbe flnt time I have
dealt wltlt tbls subject ln lite colamo.
You may laave saved some lives
today. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was
interested in the letter from the
person who was sick and tired of
· getung invitations to church wed-
dings from couples who had been
livinJ together for several years. She
said 1t was ludicrous to see these
women dressed like virfmal bn des-
some of them preanant.
A11
lo DEIS
I, too, am happy wben H•e·lDs
marry. Bat contrary to wlaat muy
people believe, lite sarvlvaJ rate of
tlaete marriages ls Do better tlwl tbe
otben. • • • CONFIDENTIAL to Lotlag tb•
Speaking for myself: I a.m always
pleased when the live-ins get married.
It solves many problems for us. such
as do they sloq:> together when they r-:::::================:::::;=====;;;;::----1 are guests tn our home and what to Battle Wida Grief: Please pay atw •
tJoo to tbe words of Ute reUgloas
pblloaopber, Soren 1Uerke1a.ard. He
nld, "Despair la oenr altimately
over tbe exteru.J object but always
over oaraelvea. A &lrl loses ber
sweetheart and she deapaJra. It Is not
over tbe lost sweetbea.rt tlaat sbe
mourns, bat for what ber Ute will be
without blm .... "U you cu andtr-
staod aad accept tbJs, yoa will bave
made Ute flnt step of a long and
dlfflcalt joarney.
Last week! Perm Sale!
Stylish savings
-for the best in you.
.__.......,_ __ ,,,, S4G Nova Perm, now $29.50
ReGIS HAIRSTYLISTS
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
...
1.
;
1#
say to ourteen-agers when they ask 1f
we thmk it's O.K.
Some 1nv1tat1ons to these weddings
are engraved and the affairs are
elegant-so 1f you don't send a gift
you are a clod. If you don't attend you
area prude
My own feehng1s: I'm glad you arc
getting married, but please leave me
out of the fa rce. I'm sure a lot of your
readers share my sentiments. -
THERE OUGHT TO BEA LAW
(MARSHALLTO WN. IOWA)
DEAR MARSH: It ml&Jat aarprlse
yoa to know tbat most retpoodents
did not share your sea ti men cs. Tiiey
felt tbat live-Ins who married sbould
be treated as any otber couple. Of
course all those who wrote were Hve--
lii1, s ae coald laardly expect diem
to be objective. ·t>
-. . . . ..
I t's not afways easy torecosnize
love, esr>«ially the first time around.
Acquaint you~Jfw1th the 1u1de-
Jmes. Read Ann Landers• booklet.
"LoveorScundHowto Tel/the
Difference." Fora copy. moil 50ccnts
and a long. self-aqdresscd enYcJo~
with your "'CIUCSt to Ann /Anders.
P 0. Box 11 995. Chma10. JJ/. 60611.
OFFICE VISITS ••.
From Bl
anyway, th1sarcen carwa~drivtngcrratically all the way from an Francisco
and he finally ran 1nto me on 18th Street and ... etc."
That's not a very efficient way to lY that you were in an auto cc1dent
and hun your sho ulder. Other detail of the atxident may help to dtqnose
your problem by the d tor should ask about those~er penincnt 1 ue .
If you pend larse amount of time describina fact that arc not
pertinent td the diaano is and treatment o f your ~ituation . they )'ou only
detract from the quality of .co mmunication. •
. You have the opportunity to contn bute to the quality of )Our health
re by conci but thorough communication. It gives the doctor a "'ttcr
and clearer chance to efficiently communicate the nature o f )our problem a."<J 1u. treatment.
Proper ust of the time will allow for your addition I question to be
an red.
The o bJC<'tlvc ts rcso1ut1on of a health p roblem or advice m hna
wtth an ailme nt. Yo u hould leave with a drt:rra~lcvel ofanx1el) bout
)Our 1tu1tion . And you ~hould lea v"C wuh an iflcre:ntd lt\el of
undcrstand1n1 about how to dcah vuh n .
The po nt i that 1t'snotthc numbcrofminutesthc d0Clor Pc.ndu n the room with )Ou that counu. It' the quality o f the time •.. arc) ur con('tm
II~~ 1 ted? Do ou have dv1tie and anfonnation 10 bnna )'OU ck on the
~ to rttO\'Cf)· nd return to good health?
nyou lcavcs.ayin •'Gee. that didn't take a Ion 11mc ... but I 01 lot
out of1t:0
' -
farm/ nd ~mrticn mtd1 rnr m ..
' ~-
l
J
)
'AARAR .
Ml~11",._.W
hen '' an X· tcd film not rated film' When n's not rated
a is the cos.c wuh ••&lcro:' an rottc
d\ enturc from Bo and John Derck
that opened Frida) m 1,022 lJ.S and
an· dian thcatcn.
"Bott'ro," d nbed m radio d~ as howing more of Mg. OereL.l.b.!!n_cV.u......,_-...,.. _______ _.,_ ___ _,~""""~11 Playboy m .zine 1 , w1 not ha "Ca ··I he film is lo~ c IOI)' nd
rating from the Mouon J>icrurc A • there' lo\emaking in the film:· he
---.:--t-'iUCAa.1.1°on of~mcrica CIHsific.atmn &. added '"Hut we-dun'l d111'1k it'u dnw
Ru ting~ Poard. movie or a pomograph11: mo' ie. •• ·
Cannon Films. wh1~h proJuc d Cannon, "h1 h j I'° da~tribuung
"Bolero," dl!Ci<led not io seek ihe "Bolero" thr<lugh its newl> formed
rating becau~ of unoflk1al w<>rd that Cannon Rclca 1n1 Corn. alrC'ad~ has
the film would earn an X -a begun a ma 1vc print and bro3d a t cla~sificat1on tha1 makes itdifficuh to adveni ang c: mpa1gn for the S7
book a film into first-run th<4tm and mtlhon. 110-minutc film.
to promote 11 through ordinar) chan-"Botm>" WH "nttcn and directed
nel5. · b)' Derck. and produced b} M~
Cannon'is not an'MPAA signatory Ocrck. who sta~ a~ an d~enturc
:. ~nd therefore has no oblig:uion to ~king I 920s he1re .
Coleman ol)ly a bully.when:acting
troubk I wu auracted to fanta.,,,
and I created pmes for m\s.clf.
By BOB THOMAS ........... .._.,..,
LOS ANCiELES -Dabne)' Col-
eman has been the perfect picture of
an overbearing. boonsh bully in his
movies an.d TV series. "Buffalo Bill ...
But underneath aJI that bravura is a
shy and reserved man
"It's true:· said the actor as he
chain-smoked cigarettes and drank
cxpresso before lunch at a St)hsh San
Fernando Valley cafe.
... I think most good actors are sh~:·
he continued ... Wbcn the} aren't
pla)'in& their rolcc;, they"re withdrawn
and rescn.cd rm thanking of actors
hke Rohen DeNiro. \l Pacmo.
Marlon Brando (,ene Hackman.
Jimmy Stewan ha!> said he thinks
shyness 1s cc;St•ntial to an ·actor. Certain!~ Henl') Fonda was a slly man.·• .
Coleman\ r~\Cr> e was hardly no-
uced in such mo\.1es as "9 To 5" and
..Tootsie." And his shyness cenamly
1s not 'isible in his current roles in
a\ Jant .. onda' dentt t hu band m
"On Golden Pond."'
Is there an) Buffalo 8111 in D.ibnc)'
( oleman?
' ··1 \I.Ou Id hope not," Coleman said.
··1 would hope· that the ant1thcs1~
would be true."
. "1>REAMSCAPE. IS .
111£ N~SURPRISE.
OF THE SUMMER." ___ ,_
Bo Derek puffa on c1&ar In .. Bolero.••
"l'V'C been shy all my life. Maybe u ·
stems from being the last of four
children. all of them vcl') handsome.
including a brother who was T)rone
Power-handsome. Maybe 1t's bccau~
m\ father died when I was 4. I was
e'\tremel) small, just a little gu)' who
wu there. the kid who created no
niversal Pictures· "Cloak and Dag-
aer." Yes.. that\ ··roles," He pla)S the
straight.$) mpJthet1c but unbelie' '"' father of Henr> Thomas. a ndeo-
game frea~ \\ho claims to ha'e
COSTA MESA
Edward> T! .Nf1 Center
751 418A
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
Eaw ~ r t l'll''r.!'
839 '500
IRVIN(
Edwa•ds Univers.tv
8S48811
lA HAIRA
AMC f a~n 5QU<1ie
691 0633
C9 t«NA .
CJ) TIC TAC DOUGH
(0) IA8EBAl1.
THATGR.
MAXTRAX
MOVE
•'• "Criss Cross" (11148} Burt Lan-
casl«, Yvonne De Clf'lo
-8:00-11 CJ) AFTEJWA8H i=TUM *** "W~ Tt.¥ur" (~) Kalhltlne Hepburn, Spencer Trtcy
G 9 *NEWS ClOSEUP G JOKER'S W1.D e ENT!RTANIENT TOllGHT
mMOVE
.t t ~ ' Go Naked In The WMd '
( 1961) GIN lollobtigtda. -Atlthony
Franciou. fD tltNA m 12 O'CL()Q( HIGH
CC)MOVE -: ** "Dell Ot The Century' (1983) ~ SlgourneyWtlYW
* • ·~ 'The Bur*• • (1981) Art"'1n"/
Hopms. Rictlard Jordon CS CHER: A CELEIAA TION AT
CAESARS
Cl) MOVE * *'1 "The Key'' ( 19S8t Wilham HOi-
den. Trewr Howwd
~ MOTOAWEEJ<
-10:00-G AEIMGTOH STmE omeNEWS G RETURN Of THE SAINT flllOOMCH.D .
Ir~ A TB.EV&SIOM
m10X1NO
(C)MOYIE
Cl) IUP9l>EHT NEWS tm MOYE
t t t "'Fii 0t The Roman Empire'
(Pll'1 t of 2X1964} Sophia Loren. St•
phtn Boyd
(C)MOYIE
**'~ "Angelo, My Low"' (1983)
Angelo EVlnS, Mdlael Evens. ~~..OOUONLY
*'* * ~ "'Mrilttan' ( 1979) WOOdy ~. 01ant Kti1on
-12:05-**'"' ~1w·· (19821 John1 Belushi, (l'f MOYE
TOltllro Mlfune * t "The Star Chlmbet ' ( 19831 ll>J lil09E Mic:Nel Douglas Hal Holb<()()I(. * * "Six Weeki ' ( 1982) Dudley
Moore, Mary~~~· •• !~~=-WITH DAVID
e ltDEPENDEHT NEWS "' --. ,.._,.,,,..., ) NOT EOIAM Y THE NEWS 8 ..,.nr;w tfT""""""'
( MOYIE PfeEN1'1 l'Hf&Tll&O • • t t "The Tin Orum • I 1979) ROWAN a MAAT1N'8 L.AUQK.IH
DaYld 8tnnttt, ~Winkler a» MOYE
-11:00-• + t t ·Duel At Oi1b1o ( 1966) e a (I) o a m NEWS JlnlM Gamer. Sidney Port• 0 TAXI • raa 8TYlE o NJWAN a MAATWSUUOtMN -I ~AoeAMEJICNf ID THE JEfFERSOH8 • 90U) GOU> HrT1 -1:00-8 MOYIE fD THE G000 NEJOHIOA8 * * , How... I Spent Aly Summer
STANDIGAOOMONLY Vacation (1967) Robert Wagn«. ( 8AOTHEA8: MINOL.E88 Peter Lawfol'd.
PASSION Q -11:30-g 8EST Of L.A. TODA y
(!)MOYIE ~OPEN TtHHl8 -U~!!Mriey On M)-8aclc '{19571
· D Qt TOllGHT i;""~ Mitchell. JICI! Al.ber1aon
0 ODOCOUPlf u~ "The Mlrlde'' (t970) LUSll G 9 *NEWS NIOHTUHE Mict11t1 Jlmll Wixted G MOYIE (%)MOYIE
t * "Stdftindtr 1 119771 Miehell t t '11 ··Oenltl' ( 1983} Timothy Hut-~~ Gortner • • Ion Mandy Patdin
• e STAEm Of SAN RWC900 D HEALTH F.J:-
• lATBIOHT AMENCA G HOLLYWOOD ClOSSJP m 100 CUii -AH a MARTWS lAIJOK.IH llllNW Q """" _ 12:00-lnWACY FU
11 (I) MOYIE -1:40-**'~ ··r11omW111'0 (1981) Glynn TUI'· <:SHWll'Y SHANDUN0 ALONE IN
I 19831 "*'· V"iriterrt 6-denll VEGAS
" TWlJOHT ZONf 8 m OH HOUYWOOO
• H£WPORT BOCH •
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MISSION VIEJO
[dwards Misc.on V1e10
MJI 495 6220
..... ' ......
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HARBOit TWIN ...... ... ORANGE
C.•IY Center
t)JA 2553
BUENA PARK
Pit1I c s Buena Park
Or ve In
821 4070
tmANGE
SI d111m DrlVf' In
6398770
OCUISM (~1111111 AllDllO COllfllT" (PC)
""' no s10 100l
* SO. COAST PLAZA •
TO"" C£NflR .. ,., ....... .. -·~1 ....
TOWN CCNTCR .. MOO .... (PCI
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TOMt CCNlER 11JfOID HS lflS.Ul
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TO~ CtNHR ~lllS lOIH~ n '•• ..,,.. R ASlt'Olll (PC) ., ._ 11$ JU..\ 1$ HS ti$ II• aa u.. s.i Sn SHO IUOO
SOUTH COASI .... Uflt
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SOUIH COAST -TU111t INl h•• IJOlOUOll,ltlO ~.,. UM•Ut
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~ -
witnesst'd a murder.
He al<;o ponrct) s Jack Flack. a
ficttonal world-class spy \\ho makes
an appearance whenever Henl') finds
himself in. dire trouble. In the opening
sequcne~ Flack parachutes into a
So' act compound. cooly dispatches
armed guards and a female sp).
escaping wtth a satchel full of secrets.
··1 played the rcal-hfe fathe~
straight. as a down-to-canh. colorless
person whose performance as a father
leaves something to be desired.''
Coleman said "The SP} "as some-
thing else Since he was a figment of
the boy'c; 1mag10ation. I routd male~
him as tlambo)'ant as possible
"How nice to pla"t t'M> nice guys
after seven bad gu)S \.
The baddest was Bufialo Blll 81t-
tm$er. the talk-show host with no
'-!Sible redeeming quaht1ies. :and
main character of the short-h' cd but
much chemhcd "18(' sen~. The
sho"' lasted 26 segments.
··sun l\al was a coin flip. a 50-50
proposition," ( olcman remarked.
· \\care all awan: ot the ns~s. bu""'e
made no compromises 1n the charac-
ter of 8111 II ..-.ould ha"e ~n \Cr>
nice Jf11 had la\ted four or live )ea,;,
8lDA PAllll
UA Mowin 8
952 4993
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turnlGT~ lllACH SMTA Ml
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AMC f ashl04I SQu•re Edurds c.sia
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WALK· INS* ~~YTn~ ~ * DRIVE -lNS :~:_:
:r~~:~: Slftrrl[Jfl[)I UM::i s 113 t1B·X•J11Il6J 114 uni!~~!, )
but r QW en proud of \\hal.. \\ e U.U,h.---+--Rob Lewe
OXAUlD eL.~
~UI At 1:10 l t lS
$: 1S 7·30 I. t ;lS
c unt ltutwooel
TIGHTilOf'tl (R) S,..ow1 at '2.JS 2:)5
S•20 7 •IO & 10 •15 .. Brando n r an1loff I"" BC pro-
gramrT\1,ng chief) told me the cancella-
tion "-3S the t6ughest decision he e'er lit 0 0"1nf pd_uJ e111 Murray oan Ayllroya
mack ...... thC'actorsard .. The~how"Was '----JH""'nows at 12 30 c~ aavGaG• 01' TM&
NODS (IQ "'us
POl'tc)''I (R) in the lo..-. 50s (of rated shows). and 1 :00 S·30 • oo s11ow1 at u :u 2:40
th.at doesn't cut 1l tn the networks' ___ .. _1_0_1_0 __ ~.,_'_'_'_'_7_'2_s_•_=_1_01_1_o_M_M_
ph1losoph) Our fan!! are fanatical.
but the) ·re not the people who
normally watcp TV ··
Now in his :>Os -he'd rather not
specif) b«ause 1t could lose harn roles
-Dabne> Coleman·s career failed to
1gn1tc until he pla)ed the infam.ous
Ma"t or Merle Jeeter 1n the late-night
soap opera satire. "\.fal') Hartman.
.\1al"'t Hartman:· He found his niche
as an unlo,ahlc male '" ••1'Jonh
Dallas Fort ..... ··q To 5 .. (as the mean -
boss). sofler11ng his image some\\ hat
• El TORO •
SAOOl£8ACll -...cMl' (1'111
'D 1 •• •' SH O 110 UO ~I\ 11$ 9 I~ 1 1'"' ' f4 S ~ I• J 00 m mo 300
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ct
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ea•os 1rc1
10 :JJO \ ·~ 100 I IC I ~I• JCO
INCMJUIA '°'91ES • Tiie T__. elf 0.-(NJ
5110"'1 •• 'z 100 2 : 30 5•00 7:30 .. 10•00
IN 7 0 MM
GllatUMS(N)
· ~us T fie NtytrSIMlint
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1211$ Z 10 4 OS 6 •00 ("G) I OS S IS Plus Co-Htt
; 7 5S & t SS & t 25 iroolloou (PG)
DRIVE tllS cw ... U... ll FRU Uftlm .. IMllO• IM WUt" 1 ll fl•~-·
"MD DAMf' (K-13}
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loHABRA ~N A , .. '" , ... ,,..
WARNER .. -·:
...
,,,..,......
What'a tn· a ~Uid.rle? ~ ·
Dr Pepper fan• hi -th~ack.9on, Mia., area have been
p'Quled recently to find circle. of Middle Eutem writing
OD the to1>9 of the popular eoft drln.k ca.na. The drink• were
canned tn Re.erve, Lau-and the wrltl.na llata the content.a.
The can• were aheduled for ove neaa alitpment but ended
ap •ta1ina tn the u .s.
.
GE official elected
to Emery Air board
Erner; Air Freight (orp Tuesda}
announced the election of John ~
Stanger vice chairman and former
p~1den1 :ind cluef e~ecu11venffittr
of General Electric Credit Corp .. to 11<.
board of directors
"Mr Stanger. who "as the archnect
of (1encral Elcctnl'·., extreme!\ suc-
cessful d1ve~1ficauon into tinanc1al
~rv1ces. provides a financial and
tn\CSlmcnt perspective that ~i11 he
important 10 the future gro" th of our
NEW '!'ORK (APd -The following lisl shows lhe ver ·lhe·Counler slocks and warr•nls 1na1 nave gone up lhe mosl and down lhe mosl based on percenl of chanye f~r Friday No securities• rad ng t>elow S2 or 1000 snares are Included. . M•' and percenr•~t changes are the di erence belw'3n he previous closing bid 1>rlce and Fr dif' las! bid price. • P S
1 N•me Last Cho Pc1 Frey, '2 + ., Up 333 2 Pan c un 6' • t 1 • Up 25 O 3 Fanon 4';, '• UP 24 1 4 Mlzlou 4 7 16 + 13· 16 Uo 2l4 s ArtEx un 21 • + l Up ~.2 ~ (•l>Crb 2l., t ', Up 2
8 Pana I ch r • l UP 22 2 PaulPI '. + 1' , Up 19 7 9 Chn«j,CPI ~ .. + I, Up i: 0 10 Nov un I ~ + 2 a UP 9
MUTUAL FUNDS
----- - -- -
•
company."' C ha1rman John ( l: mt'f')
Jr said.
'itangerJOmedGECC 1n 1947aficr
graduating from Har-.ard Colkge
w11h an .\B 1n governme01 and
economics. He was named prc'11dent
and CEO of the financial ~"ices subs1d1a~ ofGE 10 1975
GECC toda~ •~ the large!tl c.h-
"ers1fied finance compan~ an the
lJn11ed States.
11 ArlE>j.fif 2~ t .... UP 111 12 ONA I 4J. 1. UP 119 13 Primo 4 + ~ UP 1 5 14 Provsn 5 + '• Up 17 f IS US Enr 4', + ~. UP 16 Perfdla 3l· + l Uo I~ 4 17 SunSL s IP• + 1 , UP IH 18 AdvMSv 31, +~~ Uo lr 19 NI Como 16\'e UP 10 mrllnf 6' ., + • Up 1 0 21 nlmed T,, + 11. UP I 7 22 BJomlld . + • Up 1 .s 23 ONA Pun UP 1p 2• Nova Ph 31 ~2 + ~ UP 1 4 25 RosesS s 21 + 7 • Uo 12 0
°&WNS Name ll Chp Per 1 Psvcns -1, ~ 42 9 2 TflCEn 2'• -1'1 ~H 3 A MFd 4 -1, 4 BarfOfl 4 • -'• 150
..
' j •
.,.
'
...... , .... -.
I
.. COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, 85.
He likes 'ni .he kincls 'efbttslness . . , .
Ent repreneurial s ptrtt was kindled
early during J ack Lfnk letter's life
' By JOY DEE ANTHONY
Oellr ,.._. C•" .. ,~,
As a child. Jack Lmklcttcr was
always allowed to ~it in on informal
boord meetings given by has father.
An.. in their home. Often these would
involve bysmess fiants like the
president of Bank o Amcnca or t~c
founder of Farmer's lnsuran~.
Today, hecrtdns much of the succ s.
of has t osta Mesa real estate-based
compan> to that early absorption of
an entrtpreneunaJ spant.
"Dad was an rad10/tclev1s1on and
was ver; investor-oriented," Linklet-
ter said. He was the kind of person
"who would bet on personalhaes. A
guy with an idea would come sn and
dad would,. financially back it That
was·h1s mddus operandi"
In busme~s no" for 25 years,
Lankleuer says a bag chunk of his
firm'"'l cle'liv11y hes m storage facilities.
The company alw builds bakenes.
bank~. preschools and ice cream
parlors. Add1t1onally. 11 takes part m
ranch subd1v1s1ons and was once one
oft he largest co~/calf operators 1n the
United States.
Toda). Lmkleuer says he's in-
volved an ranching mainly for
pleasure. The firm's subdiv1s1ons in
Northern Ca11fom1a have had to face
''absplutel a dead dodo market," he
said. Economic growth 1s continuing
but luxur; markets haven't >et rc-
oounded to an} great extent.
Exactly ~hat lund of things the
7,000 Lmklcncr storage customers
placcin their fac1ht1es. Lmkletter
commented. 1s "tncrcdible." In-
surance adJustors and pohce depart-
ments store bloodied and dented
bumpers which must wait for re-
appearance 10 coun trials. Bread
manufacturers store deliver;' trucks.
Fathers and sons store model train
sets. Husbands and waves pay for a
communal storage. facility ...as ..wcll as
1ndl\ 1dual unats. Then. when. ant1c1-
pat1ng a divorce. they often sneek
11ems from the communal area anto
thcac 10d1v1dual units. "each thanking
they 're pla}mg a game with the
other:· Lmklcller says "It's a real
cro'>S·...Cl'tton of~hat life as." he adds.
'T\C al"a\S laked nachc kinds of
5
6 7 s l~ 12
13
1• IS l~ 18 19 20 21 n ~~ 26
I Game Col Ola TSR ~mPShP om PC/ An~co o Bill n~s ·C•ro as IPL Sv MllrTcn
WMlcr Clrcon TndrLv Hypanx Pancrel Sllvlls fJ~ SI EdCmo Aus iron GttNuc
I:
'
15~ -2~ ~ 1p 2 , -~ 1 0 12 -·:;I 12 7 4 , 12 2 2 • '• 10.~ 2'. ~i 4'n l8·o
2 • If! 3~ lt ~ m 4''> .,,
4l .. ,,, ff
4>, . .,
5 ,
I g l s ,,
Jl-. :i. 9.1 2~ u s· • 2~ • 8.7 8 l . 86 4 • 111 B 21.
bu~1nesses... •
A new niche for ihc company as
mobile storage. Customc~ include
oven.cJs electronics firms,· depart-
ment stores wanting layawa) facili-
tie • and big bu)ers of seasonal goods
who purchase cheaply in the off
season and re'lp profits later on.
Li rill letter ha~n in business and
how business. pi1Jctically . swcc
babyhood. For 20 years, he appeal'ed
on the networks daily. As a host of a
talk show in the '60-s called "Here's
Hollywood." he's interviewed enter-
tainment greats hke Red Skelton and
'Spencer Tracy.
Interviewing gives you a hcense to
ask almost anything ~ou want fr6m
almost anyone you want. Lmldetter
says whert discussing the sheer joy or
it.
Has favonte interviewees were not
the up-and-coming starlets whose
superficiality he quickl> grew tired of,
but the established ~rformcrs who
were wilhna to reveal those qualities
which set them apart from others
As a bronze sculptor. Laguna Beach
resident, and appreciator of the ans
whose works have appeared at the
Laguna Arts festival. Linkletter ISJUSI
ending a tenure as president df the
Laguna Beach Museum of An.
Thoog.h he doesn't think of himself as
a group-onentcd person. Linkleller
has also served as the intt'mauonal
president of the Young President's
Organazauon and founder of the
Orange Count> chapter
"People who kno\\. me well arc
surpnscd." Linklcuer said As inter-
national president 1n '77-'78. he spent
50 percent of his lime with the Jl,l'Oup.
It all started one day when singer
Pat Boone got 1n a Jam. Boone was
scheduled to speak to the L.A. VPO
chapter on ··The Business of Sho~
Business" and a~ked Linklctter to
pinch hi! when a conflict arose He
agreed A. lavorable 1mpress1on of the
Young President's Organ17a11on "as
formed duran~ roundtabk d1s-
cuss1ons following the tall.. He "as
amazed to sec financial \tatements
and product literature bandied about
as eitecu11' es discus~ their pe~onal
ObJCCtl\ es and the maJor bamcrs 10
ach1e\.1nti them
Linl..letter chose to get 1moh ed an
' PO. he explains. for l\.\O reasons
bas1calh For one "11 \.\as like a
cont1nu.ang school. or a continuing.
nununng arena " "<\nd the other
thm~. that ma> sound funn}. 1s a level
of 1numac> that would surpnSl'
someone not an\ohed an 11 Here arc
heads of companies that \\.Ould real!>
have a level of candor .... uh each
other."
Most people who lead oompan1es.
Lanklcttcr savs. tend to isolate them-
J ack Llnldetter
sches. to view thl'm'>(.·IH·~ a\ re\pon·
sibk for the rnntinulng morale
Fear'> arc bolt led up. "l hl·~ 'rl' not
mchnec.J 10 go around thl' rnmpan}
and sa' 'I ')melt a ~olt on thl' ~ll'Jl'
becau<,t thn l(·el ii tht'\ <.ho" a think
m thl'lf armor. \hl' troop ... \\Ill lall
apart ...
fello'o' pn.·:.1dent\ lullill tht• conti-
danf\ roll' "h1le C\dud1ng thcm-
selH'\ "hene\l.~r a.group d1<.c.:U\\lon
m\ohe~ do'>c u>mrx·utor'> In other
"ord~ the} re1a1 n integnl\ '' h1lc
pro' 1danga forum lor cntreRrcnl·unal
issues. Lanklettcr 'la~'
L1kew1sc thl') ht•lp the thildrl'n ol
fellow member\ Olll'n .1 \Oil or
daughter fall'> to ..cc the parent a' .1
sunic1cnt role mo<lcl ">oul't\ too
may lack enough heroic hgure'I.
Lmklettcr enJO)., helping gro" n
and nearlv-grown ehalc.Jren ol mem-
bers discover "hat 1t 1~ the' rl·alh'
lo\e do1ng,_so thcv won't wand u in a
golden cag~ oil cir own making.
.\ rnmpany president. tor mstance.
might ha"c rcall:,. made it an terms of
"ealth and prestige without having
e\crdi.;co,cred somethmg he has fun
doing .\n) d1scuss1on of the matter.
I 1nkle11cr sa) s. generates a lot of beat
among'\ PO'ers.
fo1 L1nklctter. a blend of an. tlu,11lc~>:> and family, with pnonties
dearl) six"C1lied each day. makes hfe
lullilhng. He has cut do...,n the size of
h1scompan' to allow him to deal with
1hc non-pcr<>onnel issues he hkes best
lk doesn't do a lot of ".\tlas
">hrugg1n&" he sa\s. in reference to a
'o'urk h~ novelist Ayn Rand. but he
docs sclctt onl\ those business ac-
tn 1t1~ "hu:h a·re devoid of enough
~o"crnmcntal interference '8nd ha.,~les to allow maximum pleasure.
Rising coff e·e .pricestrigger
increases for export quota
LO"' DON (AP) -.\n ancrease an
the world pnce of c.PJlce triggered an
1mmcd1ate mcrcasc an expon quotas.
l1Tc tmemauonal C"'offee Orgamza-
uon announced Monda>.
The 1ntemauonal coffee trade,
"alucd at about SIO b1lhon a )ear,,..as rc~ulated b> the organ1za11on that
adjusts the eitpon quotas up or down
when the average market pnce
reaches a certain level.
One'Of>those levels. S 1.45 a pound.
was reached Fnday. according to the
organization. made up of 73 coffee-
produc1ng and con<>um1ng govern-
menl'>. \o the global C\P<>n quota lor n:achcd at the end of May.
the Octullcr I Qg3 to September 191\4 Price~ ha\ e smce nsen sharpl)
marketing }t'&H "as inc.:rca\Cd b~ une trader) said. pushed up by the hea') rm I hon hags to a to ra I 0111tt":mrttrornnr-+bmo1i1yT111m1g~tttlr.11ar1't-r<dlf'e""• ... enlonpewdHl~a~stt--... w•ceH-k
b?PM Cofle-e 1s sold to I ~.:?-pound following news of fro~t damaic to lhe
bags Oo....,cnng trees that will produ~ the
The glohal quota 1s d1sJphull·d I 985 coffee crop1n Br.ml. the world'<>
among the: nrgan11at1on's producing leading rnffcc eitponer
mcmbcr<i. ~h1ch togcth{'r account for In Parana, Bra11l's third most
about 99 per cent of "orld coffct• important l'offce-producin' state.
shipment\ agronomist Nair Campos said Mon-
Thc 1ncrcac;c m the quota counh.:rs da~ that 28 percent of the state's
the cut 1nggcn·d 111 June when pncc., expected 19&5 harvest of S million
were falling from thl ')(.'vcn->ear peak bags was lost That as 20-25 percent of
of SI 50 a pound that had bl-en the country'<> total coffee production
B-1 program full speed ahead
PALMDALE. Calaf. CAP) -The
fatal crash of a B-1 A bomber last week
will delay tcslln& of cruise missiles
from 8-1 bombers. hut other aspect
of the controversial bomber pro~m
will proceed as scheduled, oOicials
~~ .
The B-1 B "' scheduled to he
combat-Jeady b) 1986. and plaM for
al\ first test flight 1n October will
rcmam the same. accord in& to Under·
secretary of the Air Force Pete
Ald(ldge.
The n.ew bomber looks much like
' OVER THE COUNTER ,_ ----_ ---
the onitnal R-1 ·\but oo~h an una\
of technological ad,ancc\, including
radar ab orh1ng matcnalsdcs11nt"J tu
foal Sov1c1 air dclcnl>Cs. •
Oesr>lll' la'>t Wl'dnc\da' ·, aa'h of
tht prototype an tht' MoJa\C l>c ~n.
the manufacturt·r. Roc.:k\\~·11 lnter-
nallonar Corp . dad not canctl or alter
plani, to un' cal tht· fir\t production
model B-1 Bat m plant here toda~.
The !:\8-ton. four·cniin~ ~wang
wmg hom~r ~a' al"io dtfll~ tl'd toda)
1n large new.,papcr a<hc1t1smcnt'
from acrospan· rnnttactol'\.
L>e\~lopment of tht> ~I. begun in
I <no has been surrounded by sharp
dehatc.
The ( ~mer administration. amid
cnt1c1c.m that the bomber was ex-
pensi\;e, lacked maneuverability and
that us JOb could be done by cx1 tina
R-52 , shelved the ~I in 1977. But
Pre 1dcnl Rca~n gave tht" program a
new lta~c on life.
The I tou c and Scnaee approved
Reagan's request for $8.3 balht>n for
34 R· I pin nc~ in fa seal I CJ8S.
...
..
--..
On
the
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: W H~T NYSE Ow
'
NEW'V
NYSE L£AOER S
-. . . . .
WHAT A ~ux Dio
NEW YORK CAP I Seo 4
Toc:t.a1r AMnced 14
Dedfned m ¥nctlenG80 1 otaliuun I New highs 12 N~IOws 3
Prev, de •
' AMEX LEADERS '~-~~ -
Co lo QuoTES
~-~----_---::=~~---~
That,sanaptdes riptionofboth busine sand
business_people alo11 the Orange Coast. Tok p track of
wher~compantesaregoingand which peoplear h lpin
therri get there.just wat h ·er di t Lin ' -· r. da in th
,.Busine~~s .cti?.nofy.ourn w Daily PilQi
•
• -. • I ..
I • \
-
\ . .
CffYOflfl\'M
ti dA) Of CAIJPOMAA NO-nc:. llMTIMCI _,.
Alt H U. & NOT!Ctl Y COM~ANY, BY• Mld\Mt IN1 be,.._ Ptantrff. HERB Rl T.
auar, ft glonal Cr•cllt catV9d tl'1 CttY C1ert1 ot TH
Ana t, Haltw/Cllandlat \ha Olty ot !MM. Deflnd&nt: A!Ct4ARO H ·~~~-tot ru SIMONI and 00 8 1 the County Of Or ;-tM.,.bllle•,'I-0nn;e c..t ..,w. 10 an Ole Ma nar Of u. t• Promenade,
, ~. CeM o.6WC 7!411 ofMUf'M.YKARPMAN, 0.. f2T7~
' poNtlOft Ii end d IUMMCIM cWd •-Wll '9 oon-
T·111 ~ and \1!111 MOTICm Y• .._ ..._, NOt~ ,_.,Of*!tl'llt dUCtac:U1r.anlndMOu.I
nec;•n1ry 1r11refor, 11 euM. ,.......,..., ...... tM ~ Wiii Mii tt T~ .. C, ~ PfO\'KMld In !hi oonmact ...-iet ,... ........,. ,..., Ptt~t• --. to Ule hlQMtt ... tament flled
docun1an11 for Al.. TON --. .._,......,. tM,.. end belt blddtr, eutlfet to With the County Clefk Of Ot·
A ~ Ma Merl II.a PAAKWAY EXTlN ION 14 ~ WftNn • .,., ..... oonfltmattoft Of ... Iii· anga county on Augutt 14,
by 0.\'14 Normln ltofln In P\8JC NOTICE T 0 MU I AL AH DI AD V.. tr.,.,...den ...... perlor Court. CW! cw .n.r the 1914 _
the luf*IOf Court 01 Or· ~IA.0 J J~ With If wt.rl tof!!l!!c theed-t4tll dlL_Of ~lambat, natU
anotCounty requaetlng thlt crn OI' 9'VN ll>OUl'ttnanoea !Mrtto, Jn VtOI ol en attorMt' in ttUI 11M, at tM offfoe ofJf/MI ~ Or.,.ea.t
DeVld Norm9ll JJrown be.,_ CA.UfOIUIA etritt -aocofdanoa with the matt•, ~ou enOUld do IO L. Aubel. Jr , Attomev at 8~ Piiot AUOUlt 21.:. ~· ·pclnljd u pemonll rep-NOTIC•..vmMQ8IOI ~~ltont en 11111t tl'l9 prompttv to II* your wr1t• L.a.w.3-432Vla0oono. Nftt. tell~3 11, ttM
Wtltlv9 to .Omlnl tt tfla NOTICE IS HEREBY QIVEN omot of the Olr9C1ar of Pub-ten rt1P01*1o tf eny, mty be port 1 .. ch, CA' tHIS. T • 111
o( the clececNtnt. The ltlet ....,., bldl wlll be tie Worlla. filed Ot1 tlmt • ~ of Ot~. Stitt of .,_ •c Mft-J1C[ ~ f'91QUAIU ~ <**1 by the cny Claf'k r:; OAT! OF OPIENINQ 10$: AVllOI U.ttd Ila lido d Callfoin all the rfoht, tltla l""-! __ ,-uuu.....,-.....-nu ..... .....,_ __
to lldminlltar I • ..t... the City of IMM c.Jifom • lldt Wiii " "°"* •I the mtl\Clact.. £1 ~mt; Pueda and lnt9f91t of Elttt• In end '1CTmoul BUllMIH
under the lndlpelldtnl Ad· fol' f\lmlltllno Ill P&ant labor omc. of the Clfy ~ ol JM o.cldlt contr• Ud. lln ""' to ell the Qtlr1aln ,... P'GP'. .... ITAftMINT
manlatretlon of e.tat• Act ..,...io. .,,.,.,.. 'ioo1• City 01 lrvtne ~ttd at dlltnQla a"""°' que Ud. ,.. tnv altua!eO In tN Clij of llla foOoWlnO pwaona .,. A l'Mlarlna on Ow peUtton ~ aiooUea. tr.,.: 17200 Jamborff Rotd. epondt dtntro de 30 61-~ Qrov., County r:" dolnQ ~.,.
Wiii be hillCI on September pottatton • ulllltll9 ind all 1rv1 n a , Ca 111 or n I a L.d la lnformaclon que <>nnoa. Stal• Cf c.lllomla, Ul'llTED CAl..ll'O,.Hll\
11, 1NA at 930 A:M In oU. lltmt and laalltlel 92713·9576. until 200 PM llgut ~detetltledallol-REAL STATI SE.AVICE8 ~ No 3 11 100 CMo th f on SEPTEMAEA 12, 11M, 11 lf rou Wlttl to""' the ao-ll)WI. to-wit: • Centtt DrlYa W•. &.nta necHttry are or' .. wtlldl time and plac9 bldt ~ ot an '"°""' 1n "* An unclMCStd 1"2.f~ louth Pointe. ~
Ane CA 92702 ptOlllded In ~Mc;:g.;r wlll bt publlcty OS**' and m11t• )'OU ~ Oo IO lnllrtltt In Lot 40 of T'11Ct ~ Hltta, CA 128~
1F0 YOU oa.iECT to the ~C:-WALNUT AV: rMd Aloud, &id• ttllll bt prompil'f eo thlt Y04K wrlt· 1717•1*tMPr9Qpfdedln 2.Jc:•pd D1I• Streed,
QIAntlnQ ollha 1)9titlon, rou EHUE' BfTWEEN FRAN-1ubmlttad In 111lad ten rtep<>nM,11f eny, may bt boot 55, paoee t & 11, M an~~ ~2'88:
lhould etttw ~ .. 1111 CISCAN A'iD KAZA N "'~ rnartc41(1 on the l!led on time CllaneOua M.-. Aecordl Thia bu•I::. le con-"-'tno and ttaia you obi.-t 0 g a ·1 h 1 r w 1 t ti • p • out~ • BIOS FOA AL TON SI u.t9d 0.... dcttar ti ol Ofanoa Count)' • ed by: lndMOuaf
Uon1 Of ftlt Mttten actac-purtenanc;" tnerato In PAAl<WAY EXTENSION· 1·5 conM)O 49 un tbogado tn more oommonty llnown AlcNwd·c:. Str9tcf
llOne with tflt court i.tcw. ·~ eccordllnCe wttll' the T 0 M u I .. L A N D s . •t•,MVnto. ~ hacltrlo at 13211 H .... SI/wt, Oar· :rNa •t t t ._.. the hailMO· Y<Nf .,,.,..._ nee ION 1k I the Ao-a.-4/AD-M-6 .• lnmtdlatamente. de .. t. den o~. CA • • • emtnt ... 1-.
enottN)'belnpenonCM"bY =oft\i.Olr:.ocJPut>-LOCATIONOfTHl!WOf\K: m1nart, a11 rHpv11ta Tttm10(taieeulllnlew-tll~tynty~Of~ ~ anomey lie: Woril• Thi WOf1l to bt partonnld eecnta. ti he)' lllQuna. puede fut money of IN Unit.a .on UOUI' •
• IF YOU AAE A CREDITOR DATE OF 'oPENINO BIDS: htrtundtr It ~ltd In the .... rti;ilatrada 11*7\po Stat• on_ confirmation of 1 •
Ot • contingent cndltOt .or Bid• wtll bt reotlYld et the City of IMM, County of Or· l·TO THE DEFENDANT· A tall, ot per1 eutl end b.... Publlahad r-~ 'l!"'8 the decalltd, you mutt Ille 1f1C1 I theClfy Cltrll of the 1ngt et ALTON PAAKWAY cMloomplllntllubtenfl1ecl ~ evldtnotd by note... ..,.._.._ u1
)'OU( d.itn With Iha COUl'1 Of gl1Y :, lrvlnt loeet9d at BETWEEN 1-5 (SANTA ANA by the pelntlff egaln1t you. It cured by M0'1oaigt ot Tnm Ots'Z, Piiot AUQUlt 21, 21,
preaent 11 to tha peraona1 17200 Jamboree Road F R e E w" v ) A N D you wr.n to Cl.r.nd thll law-Deed on the Ptoperty eo tembar •. 11, 19r1118 r9pra1entat1ve IPQOfnttd by I r v I n 1 c a I I I 0 r n 1 i MUI ALAN OS ROAD I~ THE autt, you midi, With n IO "IOld. '500 00 to be c»-•
th9 court within lc)uf montlll 927 t3-95•75 unlit' 2 00 PM CITY OF IRVINE day1 atter ttll• eummon• It 1>9'1tacqwtttl bid _ Pllll.IC NOTICE
from the date Of n,.t la-on SEPTEMBER 12, 1984, .. DESCRIPTION OF THE MtWd on yOl.I, flit with ttllt Bide or on.. to be In writ·
tuancia of i.rtert u prOlllOad wtllcll time and piac. bid• WORK· Thi wort! to t>t pet· cour1 • written reaponM to Ing and win be reotlv9d et f1CTITIOUI 9UllNlll
In Section 700 of the wlll bl publlcly oPtMd and formed al'lall lncludt bl.It not the complaint. Unleea )'OU the llforaaald office 81 any NAMI ITATIMINT
Probate Code of Clllfomla rMd aloud Bid• lhall be bt limited to Rtlnloroa Con-do, yoi.Jr default wlll be time •tter the nrst publl-The tolloWlno per90n1 art
"JM time tor tlllng claJm• wfll 1 ubm1111 d 1" 1•11 ad Cf9t• Bo•. Gr.ding, Excev• entered on appllc.atlon of the cation h«tol and ~ doing butlntll .. :
not txi>lr• prior to lour envelopet mMktd on the lion, t1rlplng, Curb & Gutt• plalntltl, and thll oour1 may date of ule. PROFESSIONAL SEA·
monthlfromlhedataofthe outlldt, "BIOS FOR CoN1ructlon,ttc enter I Judgement~ Otttd lhl• 27th day ot VICES, 31W1 Uppet 32nd
hearing notice lbo\11 WALNUT AVENUE COMPLETION OF THE you for Iha rellel4emandtd AugOat, 1914. SttMt Newport le.ctl CA
YOU MAY EXAMINE the LOCATION Of THE WORK: WORK All ~ II 10 be In the complalnt, Which .l.lNOA KAAPMAN 02983. •
file kept b)l tht court. If you The woril 10 bt l*fonMd c:omplet~ In 1 totaJ ol 180 could raeutt In gwnlallmant Admlol•tratof of 11'9 e. Tony O.ard Cutlefofte,
.,... 1 peraon lnt.,...ttd In hereundef la tocat.O In the WC>tttlng daye from 11'11 dlla of wao-. telclno ot money or tale of Mu"-Y l<.lrp!TIM, De-I 11 ',. Upper 32nct St,...,
the eateta, you may MtW City of trvlne, County ot Of· IC)tdlltd In the Notice to prOC*1)' « other reltl r• • mued of Mid ~ a..n, CA 92883
U90'I \ha executor« admln· enge on WALNUT AVENUE Prootlld A two-lane MCtton Q~ In the comolalnt. Jamee L Rubel, Jr, At· Thlt bualnnt 11 con-
tatratOt, Of upo11 the at-BETWEEN ,RANC1SCAN of roedw9y mult be oom-Dettd: .. 17, 1914 'l_omey It l..8w, 3'32 Via dUcttd by· an lndMduel tomey let the txecu10t Of ANO KAZAN pitted and operi to trarnc by LEE A. BRANCH, Cltrti Oporto, N9¥rport BMctl, CA Tony Gerard Ca1tlet0f'la
admlnlltratet, and ntt with DESCRIPTION Of THE Maren 19, 1985 Failure to By: B. Rudltit,Oeputy 92983 Thia 1tatement wu lltad
the CCM.111 wltll prool of llf-WORK Thi wont to be par-complete 11111 WOf'tl by Mt MICHAn. ,, eHANO, At-Publlahtd Orange Cout wlttl the County CWk of Or-
lltea, a wrttteo requeet 1tat-f~ ahall lncludt but not date wlll reeult In the City tOf'M7 • Law Otlly Piiot September -'· 5, ange County on Augult 9,
Ing thll you ~· apedal be llmllad 10 A.C PAVE-...-rig llquldtted damag-n1•CraneMw lloultvard. 11, 1984 19M
notice ot !tit nung of an In-MENT REMOVAL. CURB •In the amount of 1100 00 luht al TW-188 ~
ventory encl appr~t Of A N o G U T T E R pet c:altndll day until the TOn'anDI, CA tCllOI Publlahed Ofanga Cou1 •lattUMtaetof thtpet~ BOWMANITE LAND ~ lanae art complete 1nd (111)'10-19&1 · P\BJCflOTIC[ OeltyPllo1Auguat21,21
tion1 or aocountt mentioned SCAPING AND IRRIGA· OC*1 to trelflc: Publllhed Orange Cout FICT1l10UI ....... September'· 11, 19M In s.ctlon 1200end12006 of TION AWARD OF CONTRACT· Dally Piiot Sec>tember-' 11, NAMI ITA~ T-18'
theCallfomlaProbateCode COMPLETION Of THE The ~ r9Nf\IM tilt 18,25.1984 . Tht--.....,_....,.....,11...,. _______ _
Knln O'COftfttl, 1aa L WOAK All wor1I 11 10 bt rlgllt, alttt-openlng bids, to T·t87 doing~~--PlBLIC NOTICE
Fow1tt IL, luttt 1IO, &anta c::ompletad In a total of t35 rtjee1 l/IY Of all blda, to Hf TECH INTER-1----~.;...;.;.;...;.;.;.,;;__
Ana. CA t270I working deya lrom ltlt dat• waive lily Informality in 1 PtaJC NOTICE NATIONAL. 18021 Sic Park FtenTIOUa 8U191EH Publlahtd Or•nge Coat epec;jflad In the Notlot 10 bid, to mua ..,,.,di In I~ Circle &Alt E2 ~Y CA "~ IT ft...,.
Deity Piiot Stpttmbtr 4, 5', Proceed, wttlc:tl lnc:lude Ult 11\ltr•t of tilt Owner and to l C,., natl MOTICI 0' 92714 e ' ' The foltaWtngA peraoM art
ll, 1984 Tw·ll9 required m1lnt1nanc1 ~~~~~\~*G~'!:RANTEE TRUal'Ea'lllUe CARr."ETC. 1802 Sky crorngw.lne11aa:
ptt1od •u• BONDS .,_ ..... bd ... 1 T.a . ..._ ,_..... Park Clrde. SUlta E2 lrvlnt SPECTRUM CIRCUIT DE· AWARD OF CONTRACT ,..,_ · .,,..,., 1 ... e I YOU ARE IN DEFAULT CA 92714 ' ' S GNS 121 M R Dr
---------Thi Owner re-ve1 the ba •ccompinled: by a UNDER A DEED OF TRUST, Richard Junior H n· ~-.cf eoisolpley , PlELJC NOTICE right, 1fter opening bid•, to cert~ed or caah~ 1 ~ DA TED OCTOBER 11, 1982 derlOll, 132.27 Acoro Pi!,., Kevin Patrlc:lc Moore, 8287
---------reject any « 111 bld1, to or Y 1 COfPOfl 1 tur-., UNLESS YOU TAKE AC-C«rhos CA 90701 Mt. Rlpley Of., Cypreu, CA
1 111U wel¥t any Informality In a ~tie°i 1111 fonn tuml~ 1TION TQ PROTECT YOUR Mk:tlMI T Hardman 4027 90e30
NOTICI Of INTWNDE> bid, to melct 1wardt In the Y 1 wntr u guaran 11 PROPERTY IT MAY BE Aobei1t Dr . Santa AM CA Dive Scott Douglu, 9788 ~"AND · lfltar•t of the Owner and to that Iha bidder '#Ill, If an SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. 92702 ., ' K1thlttn Dr , Cyi)r ... CA
L..1.AKUCI< ,.jec:1 Ill othtf bid•. award le made to him In ec-IF YOU NEED AN EXPLA-Thlt butlnau 11 con-90830
Notic.lahll'ebyglwntllat PROPOSAL GUARANTEE ~d=-"'"11 thtlyletYnl of NATION OF THE NATUR~ ducted by:. geriarll part-Thi• butlneu 11 con-
LYOH&LYON.Traalferor.of ANDBONDS:e.dlbldlhall I •• prompt llOUrt OF THE PROCEEDING narlhl duc:1aclb paf1nttt
811 W 8th St, 3'th Flo«, bt accompanfaa:-by a i'on.mana~~ty':' AGAINST YOU, YOU ~dJ Henderson Ktvln~·:-oora
City of Loa Ange611, Call-otrtlfltd « cuhlar t chtCk naurance 1 -SHOULD CORT~CT A LAW-Thlt atatament wu IOtd Thia 11atament w .. ftltd
lornl,,, Intend• to ... I certain or by • corpon.tt auret)' turance, execute 1 contract YER. with 1111 County C1er'k of Or· with the County Clartt of Or-
ptrsonal property to: bond on the lonn IUn\lthad ~ r:u;:~m~! On September 28, 1984 at enge County on July 23, ange County on Auguat 15,
WALTER E HELLER & by the 0wntr • guaranttt for the lmlthful .........._anoe 9 15 a m , Pacific Rt-19M 198• COMPANY Intended Tran ... that tba bidder wlll, It an .,.. '"""' conveyance Cofpor1tton a f211111 "1121•
'-• (LAMor). of 105 Weal ..,,.,d .. made to him In ac-01 the cootract and 1°' tilt ~Callfoml1 corporltlon, 'u Pu o Publ lhtd o Cout
Adami Street, City of Ciiio-cordanoa with the term1 of pa~t 01 clal"'T of m•· duly appointed Trutlff Dal~'=~~~ · D .. ~ Piiot A::':: 21. 2.8 cego nl\nola and tnat aakl tlla bid. promptly ttCUrt ttr 1 men tnd abortrl under and purauant to Deed Stptembtr" 11, 1984 September-'· 11, 19M
Intended Tra n tltr .. Woriunen'1 Compenaatlon ~~ .. ~~~~-"~In°' ofTrv11rtCOfdtdNovembtr T-183 _______ ..;T._-,,;.;18;.;.5
lLtnor). WALTER E Insurance and lleblllty In-............ s """"' ...... ... an ... 1982 .. lntt No.
HELLER & COMPANY In-euranoa. execute• c:ontrac1 emount 0 ' not Ille than ten 82-387928 ol Official ~ 1---------PlmJC NOTICE
tend• 10 11111beck to. llld In the required form ano percent (l0%) 01 the amount COfdl 1n tilt otflol of !ht . P\B.JC NOTICE ---------LYON & LYON TrlNif9rOt l\lm\,lh Mtllfac1ory bonc1I ol tlle bid The FallllfUI P•-County Recorder of Orenge F'ICTTTIOUa IUSINEll
(L .... ). the Mid ptr90flmi fOf the lalttlful pwfonneno1 tormanoa Bond shall be not State of ca11tomla uecuteci FlCTTTIOUI 9UaMN MAiiie ITATEMENT
property. a G9f*al delc:f1p-of tllt contrac1 and fOf the '-lhen one twndracl par-by L«lltt M Ratk<*ll aka MAIR ITA~ The fQ!lowlng peraon9 art
t>on of which II .. lollowt. payment of clellN Of ma-Otr'll (l00%) of. the total L0111tt May Ratk()ll(I WIU The lollowlng perlOl1t .. dOtng butlneat u ·
to-wit: NBI WORD PRO-ttrl1lmtn end labortrt amount of the bid prlc:t SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION dotng bualllttt u · LAS C ASITAS /loS-
CESSOR· AND PER-thtrtund• Seki ct1tCk or amecl"' Ille contract Thi TO HIGHEST BIDDER FOR DOG TRAINING CENTER SOCIA.TES, LTD , 11X>OO
IPHERALS and toc:eted at bidder"• bond lhall bt In an Labor Ind Malarlal• Bond CASH OR CHECK AS DE-OF ORANGE COUNTY. MacArttl\Jr Boulevaro. &th
3200 Park Ctrtttr Or amount of not Ina tllen ten lhall be not tell than one SCRIBED BELOW (payable 1896 Orenge Avenue. Coatt Aoor, lrvloe, CA 92715
111170, City of Coeta M ... percent t 10%) ol lhe emounf hundred l*Otr'lt I 100%) 01 11 time of aalt In ltwful Mesa. CA 02827 • Cultu Anoc:lat .. , Inc.,
C.lllornla, tnd that Mid aalt of tilt bid The Fllthful Per-\ht totaJ amount of lht bid money 01 1111 United Stat•) JoMph Glalanella, 189& 1 9 O 0 O M • c A r t h u r
anes i-«>ec:ll tranMCtlon 11 formenc:e Bond ll'tall be not prlot nlmtd In the contract 11 the front entranoa to tilt Orange Avenue, Coata Boulevard, 8th Floor, Irvine,
to bt con1Ummettd on tnt leel tflln one hundred pet· PREVAILING RATES OF O I cs Or an g 1 C 0 u n t y M ... , CA 92627 CA 92715 (State of In-
11th 01y of September, cent ( 100%) of Ille total WAGES In acc:ord1nce with CourthouM, 1oc1tad on Thia bu1lnau It con-c:orpor•tlon C.lllomll)
1984 at 111• office of amount -of the bid prlot the provlllona ol Section Sant• Ant BIVd between <fueled by; an lndlvlduel Tni. bu.alnau 11 con-
. named 1n the contrect. The 1n3 ol tht Celllomla Labor Sycamore St & 'erotdwey Joeeph Glaltntlla ducted by. 111m1ttd partntf·
DEATH NOTICES
SPAULDING
CLARA ANNETTA
SPAULDrNG, passed
away Sept I; 1984 at
Glendale Hospital,
born m York Center.
Ohio Mrs Spaulding
was a )t'Weler for 5-0
vears ~nd former
ownt>.r or Spaulding
Jewelry Store on
BaJboa island. Mem
ber of Zonta Clu ,
Nt>\li p1Jrl BcaC'h
Surv1vt'd by her son
Dr John Spaulding
of vlt-ndale, Ca, and
daughtN Mary Ann
Tt·asdalt· of Idaho,
.md two brothers of
Calif Mt•morial ser-
v1c·1 ::. W l"U n esda y
SPpt 5 198-1 at :~·30
PM Zont,1 Club
N""" purt flt.at·h Pn·
v,111 inh'rmPn\ Fa1r-
h H 't'n Mt rnnr1,ol
Park. Sdnla Ana
&ovt-rn Mnrtuarv.
Clcnda!f:., DI Dlrt'<0
t·
mg
McCORMICK
MORTUARY
t 795 Laguna Canyon
Ao ad
Laguna Beacll Ca
92651
49-'·9-'15
HARBOR LAWN·
MT OLIVE
Mortuary • Ct'metary
Cr~matory
1625 Gt'l"r Ave
Costa Me~a 54'0·5554
PIERCE BROTHE"I
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
6-'2 9150
BALTZ IERGEAON
SMITH I TUTHll..L
WIITCltFF CHAPIL
4'?' ( 17l" SI
cost• Meaa
646·93i 1
PACIFIC YI W
M MOAIAL PARK
Cem ttry • Mortuary
Ch p I • Cfem1tory
3500 Pacific Vl&W Om
N wport 9 c:h
~~·2700
...
Labor and M1terlal1 Bond Code, \tie genaral prevaHlng Senta Ana . C•llfornla eti Thia atetement wu nttd lhlp
attaJI be not ._ than one rat• of per diem wagee llld rlgtlt tltle &n<J lntareet con-with the Count)' Clerk of Or-Mich ... Karr, Vlc:e Prtel·
hundred percent ( 100%) of holiday and overtime work In veyed to and now llt4d by It lngt County on August 8, dent
tilt total amount of the bid tlle locality In wt'llCh lht work under Mid Deed of Truat In 198' Thia 1tllernent wu · flled
P<lce named In the comrac:t. II to bt perlormtd haa ~ tilt property 111u,1tc1 In tald '2112214 wltll tht Col.Inly Clerk of Or·
PRE;VAILING RA TES OF obtained trom the Director County end Stitt deacrlbtd Publllhed Orange Cout ange County on AugU9t 22. WAGES· In accordance with of Iha Department of lfl4u ... u Dally Piiot August 21. 28 1984
,,_ provtllonl ol Section trttl Rtlatlont.; • copy of Lot 55 01 Trtct No. 17 t 3, September 4, 11. t984 F2Al11
1n3 of Ille Cellfomle l.abor wf'llc:tl II on me In Iha omc. .. par m8') recordacl In T-1117 VON a ~ AHomtyt It
Code, tht general PfeYalllng of the Cit)' Clerk of the City Booll 51 Pao-18 and 17 of Law, MO Ntwpof1 Cenl9f
• of pet diem wagee and of lrvlna and wfll be made Mltotllaneou1 Mep1 In the PlELJC NOTICE Dtfwt, l ull• 700, Newpcwt
l'lollday end overtime wort! In ev.uet>lt to any lnter•ttd of1lc* of tilt Cou~ty ~ a..c:ti, CA 12111 -
the loc:allty ID wf'llch the work petty upon request The corder of tald County EX-FICTIT10UI 8 UllNlll Publllhacl Orange COMI
la to be pwfOl"mtd llu t>ttn contrec:tor and lllY tubc:On-CEPT all otl, gu and other NAME STAT'lmNT Dally Piiot AUQUtt 28, SIP-
oblalned from tl'le Dlrec10t trcior under lllm lhell pay hydrocarbon 111o111nc:e1 In Thi folloW!ng pereona are ttmbtr -'· 11, 18, 19&4
o1 the Otpar1men1 of lndua-not .... than Ille epectfltd °' under aal<I land but doing bu9lneAI Al T .179
trt:al Relatlona. • copy of PftlYelllng rM• of wagee to without Iha right of sc'..rtlOI AVACOM end AVACOM 1111.,.1C MOTii'[
wlllc:fl II oo flit In the Of11ca all wor•man employacl In !tit entry abo¥t a deplll of 500 COMPUTER SERVICES ,-ugu '"
ot the City Cltr1! of the City ·~~W' ~1E':U~~~~NS I• l;om tlle tur11ee fOf any 1731 S. Claudlna W1y:
of Irvine and wlll bt made L lftell """""""' d1;;1opm1n1 of uld Anahtlm. CA 12805 ••1111~ _......,. tu anc:ea u r--...d In Strwtl-
party upon requeet The with all the requirement• of dttdt rte:Ofd Hoaelnl, 3700 ptaza Ortvt.
c:ontr-.ctOf and eny aubcon-Sec:tlOn l 777 5 together With The a1ret1 addl'8SI of tilt Senti Ana, CA 9270-'
trc:tor under him tllall pay ell other •1PPllcableC rleql ulr•1 real property ducrlbad M Ae:z.a Sl'lafl.H~nl,
not teal than lht tpec::tntd = c!J. the • 1 orn 1 above 11 purpor1tcl to be: 3700 Pica OflVe, S1.nt1
pr9Ylil•ng ralM of wagt1 to DRAWINGS AND SPECIF!-8e1 Vk:to. rl• StrMI Coeta ~.CA 927CM .i1 worllmen emptoytd In the C •TIONS • tull of d Meaa, Calllornl1 Thi• buelneu II con-e>CAQ.ltlon of the contrec:t. " "' Mt r--ducted by 1 general part-
LABO R REGULATIONS. lngi and apec:lllcetlonl It Tht undtrelgned d lt· narahlp .
Tiie contractor lhall comply ivallablt for lnapectlon c:talm1 1ny U1blllty tor any M B. Shah--HOIMlnl
with aJI tilt requlrtment• of wfttiout charge 11 the olflct lnc:ofrectnen of tlle abo\11 Thlt statement wa1 ftltd Section 11n.S 1ogethtr With Of Ille Dlr1Ctor of Publlc atr•t iddr... wtttl tilt County Clarie of Or·
all othtf apphcabta raqulr• Workt 01 the City 01 lrvlne Said Nit wlll be made, but anoe County on July 23,
mtntt of the Callfornla d. C:rpltte ':;~ :::n_ = without covenant or war-1118.4 Lebof Code ra no•. apec 1 ranty tltPf ... or lmplltd r• F'2111• DRAWINGS ANO SPECIF!-bid documtnl,I may be gard~ tltlt. poaMM'on°, or Publlltlad Orange Cout
CATIONS A tutl NI of dr--pure~~ l~omlle ~~ ~ encumbfanoee, lo P•Y Ille Dally Piiot Auguat 2 t. 2.8
Inga 1nd ap«lflcatlona la man ° u 1• "' ram11n1ng prlnclpaJ aum of September'· 1 t, 1984
1v1llabl1 for ln1p~C11lon of Irvine. 172oo Jambor• the note MCurtd by Mid T • 171 without charge 11 the offlot Road trvlna , Calllornla Deed of Tru1t with Inter_,
ol tllt Olract« of Pubic: 92713-957~ A nonl't'n· thereon 11 provided tn Mid ---------
WorU ol lbt City ol ltvlAa. dablt 1" 01 150 00 bf noie(t) aovenc. 11 any l'\llUC NOTICE
flCTTTIOUI .UatNIH JUME UAJl!MFMJ
Tiie lollowf~ perton1 lrt
doing buatn ... u.
MINING BY DESIGN. MBD
MINING BY DESIGN, MBD
MINING, MBO DESIGN,
20871 Qlancelrn, Hunt·
lng!MI Blach, CA 928'9
Harry J Whitmore, 2087 t
Glancalrn, Huntington
Beach, CA 928'8
Thia butlntH 11 con·
ducted by. an lndlvldual
Herry J Whitmore
Thia llllamtr'll wu llltd
wltll the County Clerk of Or-ange County on Augu11 24,
198-'
F2Q7ll
Publlll'tacl Orange Coul
Deity Piiot September-' 11, ta, 2s 19a4
T-19-' Complete Mtl ol tald ctlafgacl IOf NCh Mt 0' under the terma of Mid o.d ..-......;•:..;..;:=;,-.,;..._......,;;..__
drtwfng1 ap«lllc:atlonl and documenta Dr1wlng1 01 Tr st 1111 ell gee and ACTlTIOUI IU9*1N ---------
bid document• may be apeclf1Cet1ont arid bid Oocu 111.~M~ ol tha T!1111 and MAIM ITAT'llmNT PUBLIC NOTICE porclluad trom Ille Depart-menl• wlll bt malled. upor. of the 1ru111 cr11ttd by aa1<1 The loltowlng peteon8 tra _____ .....-;;..;;... __
merit of Public WOf1ca, City rtcetPI of requeat1 no tater Deed of Trvat doing tM.llineM •· "CTrnOUI aut II
ol lrvtne. 17200 Jambortt thin tO calendar deyt prlO< Thi btntflClary under uld 0 OIFAH ENTERPRISES. NAME ITAT'lfftNT
Road, Irvine. Callfornla. 10 the date Mt IOf optnJng Deed of Tru11 ~11of0<t Ill· 200 E. Sandpoint•. Sult• The loOowfng per-1ona are
92713-9575 A non-refun.-::,d• ~r$5 1~ addition i i ecuttd end dellvertd to Iha 700, Santa Ana, CA 92707 dOlnQ butlntN 11·
dtblt ftt of 120 00 wtll be SE~RITY FOR COMDLE Undtrtlgnacl • written DIC-Dennlt Giffin, 3102 Don-MC MULLEN EOUIP-chargacl lor ttc:ll Ml of . \, tar1t1on of default and De-nybfoolc, eo.ta Mele CA MENT CO, 7" PromanaOa,
documtnta Drtwlngt, TION OF WORK Tiit con· mandforSelt,andawntt.,, 112927 lrvlne.CA92715
epec;jflcatlona and bid dOCu· tract doc:vmanll can lor No11c:1 of Dtleutt and e.o. Th.. bu.In... 11 con· Mich ... C McM\,llltn 74
ment1 wtU bt melltd upon monthly PfoO,.... Ptyrntn!• tlon to Sell The uodtr'llgntd ducted by• en lndMdual Promenade, Irvine , 'CA
rtctlpt °' request• no tater bued upon ltl• engineer 1 cauMCI Mid Nollet of o. Dannis Giffin 92715
then 10 caltnclar da19 prior •llm•tt of 1111 petcentage 1111.111 100 Ettc:tlon to Salt to Thll atatement wu tiled Thi• bu1lnff1 11 con·
to tilt date Ml I« opening of work compleltd Thi Clfy be rte:Ofdacl In the county with Illa County Cl«k OI Or-ducted by an Individual bldt, for 1n addlllonef wfll retain lton petctnl I IO"te) Wf'ltr• lht ,.,.1 property le 1r'tQ9 County on JUiy 20, Mlchetl C McMullen
charge of 15 00 °1 Mell Pf'oOr"' plymenl u located 1914 Thlt 1tatarnent wa1 flied'
SECURITY FOR COMPLE-Metlrlty for eompietloo of Datt Augu11 2-' 198-4 ,_ 11tlth the County Clerk of Or·
TION OF WOAK Th• COil· 1111 bllanc41 of lht WOf~ Al Peclllc Raconv• enc• Publlthtd Or9ngt Cou1 MOt County on Auguet 14,
tract docvmen11 call tor tilt reqUMt and e•penM of Corpmatlon u Mid l~tttt Dally Piiot Augull 21, 28 ite•
monthfy progr .. l*Yl'*'lll the aucoautul bidder. the 2700 North Mlln Str .. t' September 4, 1 t, 1984 f'2GM4
butd upon the enginMr't City wlll PIY the imount '° 12th Flo<X. Senta Ana, caa.'. T-182 Publllhtd Orange COMt
•tlmale of the P«C*'llAQI rtt~~-upon 1 oompllancef fOfnla 112701 DtJty Piiot Auguat 2,, 21 of WO(!( completed Thi City wn., t... requ rementt 0 71-'1550-81-43 hptemb« 4, 1 t, 11114 w1n '-'''"ten per-cen1 (1~) Govttnment Code Section By: P A Tom Pr" PUBUC NOTICE T-tll of MCfl Pf'oOttea payment• t4"02 and the prOY191oni of Publllhed Or' Coat ...___,..._...._ __ _._ __ ~rlty fcw comptellon of tllt contr1ct docume nt• Ody Piiot ~t.:C, 4 t 1 l'ICTTT10Ua 8Ul*lll _________ 1
tne balance of 1111 wOttc At ptrtf .,.~n1no1,.._:o ~1>et11u1ton ti 11184 • , KAMI ITATDmtr "8JC NOTICE -
tllt r~t and a.pen11 ct 0 .._..ur ....., T·1IO The lollowlng ptrll>N art ------.;...;..;,;;.;,,;,;,;;;..__,
the IUCOlllll.ll blddet t"A PR 0 J EC T A D Mt N t I· doing ~ aa. frlCTITIOUI MllMU
City Wiii pay the lfl'IOVnt '° TRATION Anque.uonartlt-PUIUC f«JTlCE SHAAEO !OUITIU. MAm STATUmNT
rt1tlntd upon compllanot t~ to 11111 prOjilCt P'iOf to 1MO 1 Burttt LAM. Hunt· The f~ ""'°"' ti
with IM requtrement1 of opening bldl •l'llll bt ACllUOUI .,._.. ington a.th. CA 12147 dOlnQ tM111NA1
()owrnmenl Code S.Otton d lrtctad 10 AlllTHUA MAll9 ITAn mMT "1'*' J , Qlbaon, 1ftlJ PENNY ARCADE. QOO H
14"02 and IM prO\llMOns of SANTEUCE.S M():.JtM Thi~ pertON •• Toma, Hun ton 9Mctl, Knott A\lt • .,.,. Pet • CA
tht contract docu~ntt av O"DER of Illa City~ 001nO ~ M CA 11.?MI eota 1
pertaining to ' Sub1tttution cil of the City of IMN EUAO IM,.O"T, 1•100 0 In QI b t On. 1 t 1 Jefft91 Ouy Patt Of', eon
of s.curtt• • DATED Augutt 23, ttl4' G<*IM W• Wett •. ltfttop. Pla.cenll•, CA Tynd tt Of., Huntington
PA OJ EC T ADM IN r S . CiYV OF IRVIHE CA 12ta '2870 a.di ¢A 92147
TRAT!OH 1Uqvettiontl'U• av NANCYC LACEY a.nerd H~. 170l1 Jeft0t0aon,"91C. Q '1wen Pmtton, 9072.
UV. to thl.t P'ot«=1 PflOf to P .......... Or Otv ~ Sim• ttt .. 1, Hvnllngton Pl..IC!intla. CA 1?170 Tyndtlt Or.. HunUngton ope ning bid• thall bt ubll .. -.. 11\91 ..,._. 8ncft CA 126'1 L1rry C, Olaon, HI 8tedl. CA 126'7
dlrtctaO to ARTHUR 0.lly Piiot Augua1 2t hp. Tnl .. l»UelnMI It ~on: laurlfwOOd ....... u. CA Tl'lie al(ltl " ootl•
SAHTELICU U0 ..30M !ember -' tH• Wt ,.31 OuC1ed by; en~ 92'70 ~by; anct and wthl
av ORDER Of,.. City~ ... Gtttwd HOllC:t>« A. J Qlblbn Gell • Plt\On •
C(I ~ the 0 r ol U'wtM Tl'li1 '1*lllMl'll fli9CI 'TNI ltlrlafMnl .,. flltld Thia et '"*'t •• fll9d
DATED A~ 23 ltlA f!Of Ct liM Ad wttll IM County Clef ot Or· with the County CltR Of Of· trf1fl tM County Qarll of Or·
Cf'rY OF IAVIN AC'TION • ange Coutity on AUOUll 1•. tnot County on Augutt )0, tr10A County on Jvty 80,
IY NANCY C LA,CfY Cal a 1184 198A 1914'
City a.rt! Da•ly Pilot naMI '21f7U
PvDll•11ecs Ofer1ge CoMt A0.\/190" Publlthed ar.,. eo.1 Publ/911ed Onang• Coat Pu~ Orange eo-1
Dally PllOt Auguet 29, a.p. M'· 71 Oa PUot Augt.111 21, 21 0.ily Pllol nbef -', 11, 0eJtr ,1101 ~II.
tM'lber • 1ta4 SeotembW 4, 1 t, 111~ ti. ~5 1934 tembtr •. 11; ll, 1904
W1·230 T•1IO r.tn l ·1
'
I#..,.. ..
Lottery winner Michael WlttkowaJd (rfeht}, with &lrlfrteod Fr&n Pappa• and llltnola Go•. J ames Thompac:in, beam• a $40 million 1mlle.
$40 liiillion winner
will go back to work
By LINDSEY TANNER
A-i.ted "-Writ«
CHICAGO --A $40 m1llton lottery
windfall might leave some people singing.
"Take ThisJoband Shove It," but Michael
Wtttkowski says he'll sta) on as a printer
because "if I just sat around counting m y
mone) I'd be bored."
The 28-year-old who became the biggest
lottery winner 10 history 1s heading back to
his S20.l)()()..a-)ear JOb at a check-pnnttng
compan) Wednesday, he said. The fact
that he'll get $2 m1llton a year for 20 yea~
"hasn't bcgun1trsmbn yet~
Wittkowski was the only person to pick
the numbers 2. 3. 10. 26. 30 and 4 l -the
combination drawn Saturday night in the
state's cash-swollen weekly Lotto game,
Illinois Lottery officials announced Mon-
day.
-'\t a news conference, Wittkowski said
thalr'he'll share the pnze wtth h1~ father.
brother and sister.
"A.II we want to do 1s pay off our bills.' he
said .. After that we'll stt down and decide
what to do wtth it."
He may u~ his nches 10 bu) Chicago
Cub baseball uc~eth \.\ 1ttkowsk1 ~1d
"Maybe n(J'\10 I'll ha\e money tor playoff
uckets.··
The Lotto game ""ent three "'eeks
without a winner. and frenzied ticket
bu)1ng b) people from as far awa) as
C'ahfom1a and New JrDe) sv.clled the
Jackpot to the monumental It.'\ els
Lotte!) supenntendent Michael Jone'I
said 2.020 players matched five out of the
s1>t numbers drawn Saturday night, and
each will receive S 1,569.50. He ~aid
103.652 players matched four of th!! '>I~
numbers and will each get $45 50.
Pharmacist Donald Pollak. who O"-nit
the Nonhwei.t Side drug store when~
W1ttkowski bought his winning trcket. will
receive a $400.000 bonus.
W1ttkowsk1. who has a girlfriend and 1s
planning to become engaged. ~•d last week
started out like an> other week -he and
his family bought about S 35 worth of
tickets. and he played the same numbers he
alwa)S does.
The famtl) watched the drawing on
telcvtSton at home. Winkowski said that
just before the drawing. he wrote his
numbers on a piece of paper. along with the
words "'these arc my $40 million
numbers."
When' he found out he'd beaten the 3.5
million-to-I odds. Wtttkowski said, he
"jumped up and screamed."
In the hours that followed, W11tkowsk1
said he was scared-and unable to reach
anyone in the lottery o ffice. In ihe
meantime. Wittkowslo turned the ttcket
over to his brother. Dao who stored 1110 a
"secret" hiding place in his suburban
Rolling Meadows home. "It was scary,"
said Dan Wittkowsk1. ,
Wittkowsk1 finally reached a lottery
official Sunday morning and was promptly
plClced up b} a state limousine.
The winner. whose mother 1s deceased.
appeared at Monday's press conference
\I.1th his father frank. 56. a foundry
foreman. br01her Dan. 30. his sister Eileen,
23. and his girlfnend: 22-year-old Fran
Pappas
"I think she pulled a fe\\ strings,"
\\ lltlo~ ki said of his mother. Edna. who
died about I 0 years ago.
rinding OUl he was the winner ••v.1lS JUSl
a shock." W11tkowski said. A small family
celebration Saturday rughC "ts probably the
only reason I slept; h~ added.
The m~mmoth increase in htl> income •
probably won't change his hfest)leat all, he
said "R1~ht now. all I want to do 1s go back
to "-Ork.' he said.
But he conceded. ·~ne of the fir>t things
I'll do 1s get a good tax lawyer."
A record 31. 7 million llckets were sold
for the drawing and at one point were
sclhngat a rate of348 a second, Jones Mi1d.
Smee six numbers ftom the sequence I
through 44 can be combined in seven
m1 I hon different v.-ay!l, the odds against any
~nglc com~mat1on winning were seven
m1l11on to I Ea S 1 ticket buys two pla)'s.
narrowing the odds to 3.5 million to l.
Tragedy thrusts--ri ewspap~r
into communit y leadership'
SAN 'i SfDRO< -\P)-Twomonffisago-.-
the community weekly newspaper Ahora
Now was languishing 10 relative obscurtt).
The events of Jul) 18 changed all that.
Since that day. when James Oltver
Hubert) killed 21 people and wounded 19
others at a McDonald's restaurant, the
b1hngual Ahora Now has become the voice
of this predominantly Hispanic border
town, according to us founder, Bertha
Ahcia Gonzales.
Gonzale~ said she startl'd tht' paper tour
Camelot lives
againf briefly,
1 on SD sands
year~ ago to lend an eYen hancrtO'rleWS-
coverage m San Ys1dro But .\hora No~'s
ng1d. forceful messages 1n the wake of the
massacre have become news ttems m
themselves •
Chief among those was the paper's
pos1t1on that the restaurant site be turned
into a mcmonal park to the dead and
wounded. McDonald's Corp has yet to
decide what will he done with the former
rec,taurant sttc
"I've learned that the me!>s:igc I give to
'people 1s blunt. · M'>. C1onzalcs 5aid
"People get kind of nervous \I. hen they ste
me around . they call 1t stubbornness I
call It prcse' era nee "
One wtclC at\t'T the shooting. the paper
sent Huberty's widow Etna. a front page
message. declaring ... Mrs Hu~ny, The
Commun1t) wants ~ou out " If the head-
ltne left any doubt. the stor. that followed
began. '"(Etna) Huben~ go homt'.'cnes the
t:ommunity."
Gonzales said sh<.' ran thl' ~tory after
recct\ mg indignant telephone calls and
letters rcact1na to Mrs. Huberty'• an-
nounced plan to ~JI the nght 10 her story
10 the highest bidder. Her husband died
from a bullet fired by a pohcc sharpshooter
after a 77-mmutc ~1e,e .
For a bncf ttme after the McDonald.,
hooung. Ahora No~ and Gonzale be·
came nattonal and rnternauonal ntws
sources. A Bnlish BroadC'astana Corp•
1elevts1on team mtcrviewrd her m Ahora
Now's tiny offices and Ms Gonzales was
quoted 1n nauonal publtcat1ons. leadina to
man)' out·of•statc letten.
One of those letters arrived add~5Cd to
"the largci.t nc\\ paper 1n n Y 1dro."
•. Mo'it of the mail c"prc<1sed sympathy for
IOC'81 familic
Gon11les ~1d she onimall) taned
hora ow to protile prominent members
of n Ysidro because 'he felt 1ocar ·n w •
l'O\T."1 c of thC' communtt) 01 13.000 was · too nc tivc. ·
"h·h the bu m~ of the l"l'lcd1a lO inform
bur II we heard about n Y idro were bDd
th1nas h};c gan . fights and 111 I • he ~id .. Out the people&!'( pas n 1hrough
n 1dro. The) re not &aµn n n
' 1dro l h~ "' not ttt1dcn1 of the communal).
hora oW's etrtUlat1on 1 primanly
lrtt. nJ 1hc pa~r be lhe potent J U> o
count)'\Hdc. scrv1n the: bOroer nd La11no
eommuntt1ci; (hln1.ak~ 1J he el 1ms
c ('h ofthr 10.000 'tt.._I) copies re:rt db n.. '"'fl' dcrshipo 0
.....
· Flaherm•n'1
dellght aet
In lnd•mtndence
hatchery. C2.
.
~
. ........ .
, ... ylclarf
OMrllrowM;
.~~ but II ooet. Cl.
-.:aarnett.new u~s~ polo c~8.ch
. Wetetan Newp.ort Harbor Htgh coach
picked to succeedMonte Nitzkowski
I By ROGER CARLSON
Of .... o.atr ...... ...,
' Bill Barnett, who has coached
Newpon Harbor Hi&tl's Sailors to 10
.5tra1gtn appearances in the CIF 4-A
water P<>lo .finals (winning it all six
times in that pan). has bttn sel~ted.
•s the national. water polo coach,
ucceedina Huntinaton Beach's
Monte Nitzkowski.
"l gue s I'm the head bozo." is how
Barnett .put it followina the official
selection in Colorado· Springs this
past weekend.
Barnett. the most celebrated coach
in Southern California prep history.
was the only candidate and
Nitzkowski's person.al choice. His
assistant will be S1eve Hcuton of"
.Acalanes High an a...ra)ette.
Barnett's lppomtment is re-
newable each year, but it 1s eipccted
he'll be the nationAl coach throuib
the 1988 Olympic Games in Seoul.
The eppointment of Barnett fol-
lows the general philosophy of U.S.
water polo over the past few years,
shyin1 away from a head coach from
. .
Tony Donett of the Dallas Cowboya trlea to elude Rama
linebacker Mike Wilcher darinC Monday nlCbt'• National
.
an NCAA school bttau1e of potcnttaJ a lot ot intemauonal expenencc.•·
conflicts"' ithtn the 51ructurc. Barnett y the U • te m Wlll ::1 can·~ say I've had my hean set on conduet itself in the m pla~ 1~
it. a~m1ts the: 42-year-old Barnett, tyle as put together b) 'itzkowsk1
.. but 1t'1 a 100d challenge... and his assistant. Ken LindF.n,
Barnett a.ntieipates at least four of another Huntington Beach resident
the recent nationaJ team to cohtinuc -combining speed and tren~
-aoihe Craig Wilson,. two-ineter ' offensively, blending With a dcfenstvc
man Terry Schroeder. driver Ke, Jn saggina philosophy.
Roberupn and dcfen$ivc, standout The next CQmpemion for the team.
Peter Campbell. . . wh1chprobablywill beJ>Ut t thtt in Robertson is a product of Barnett's . ~mbcrafier.tht NCAA final~ v.~11 dyna~ty at NewJ)ort Harbor and be a training tournament in Australia
Campbell isa former UnivCTSity High in late February and early March.
and UC Irvine star. . then the FINA Cup at Du1sbcri, West
All four we~ starters for the $liver <krmany, in May of 1985.
medalists at the Los Angeles Garn~. The major toumllinent prior to the
··we have a lot of talent out there." '88 Games js the World Cham-
says Barnett. ··eut we'regoing to nttd pionships i~ Madrid in late August of
.., ... ,......, ..... c...
Football ~ opener at tADAhe:lni Stadium. The Rame
were dealt a 20-13 aetback:
A story of lost opportunities
Angels let one slip away, 6-5.
go at it with Indians tonight
AL West standings
W L Pct. G•
70 67 .511
1986, where the top 1x finishers re
uarantecd seeded pots m the
XlYtb Ol)mpiad.
Bamett. a resident -0f una ~.will continue in his capaat) s
ewport Harbor' head coach. He )shisfim pnontyss m lt}1ng
to 11141nti1n and build on J OJ).
portunity Prov.am • Dow
:taridout water polo pta)ers the
luxury ofa meaningful ~P.b \loith :urit'C
available in order to train.
The' only apparent cha in
-tntining will bdn tmns of sc~ulin
the bulk of the wort dunng mid-
week; with playm in orthcm Cah-
fornia traim~ under Heaston and m
Southern Cahfomia under Barnett at
Bcliriont Ptaz.a in Lona Beach. . .
I
·nallaS lOwers
' (~oge)boom
,on the Rams
Cowboys leave
QB controversy
back in· Texas
.·
•hicb the CO•boY' didn·1 eYCn ~
to compliment the passinc pme.
.. It's frustratins anytime you lose
but more frustrating when you think .
you've played almost well cnou&tlto
win. But 'file didn'~'" said bm
vctenn Jack Youoablood at\erward. BJ CURT SEEDEN .. I didn•t rush the passerfoodenouab
Ot .. Dlllr........ .. and there were otheuluQI-' I didn':t
Gary Hogeboom picked the riibt. do." · ·
nigbt to get hot But then. he didn't Youngblood wasn't alone .
. have much of i choice. Quarterback Vinoc Ferrapmo
The new Dallas quarterback., who turned in a forgettable everlina,
took the job from Danny White, compJeung 11 of33 pwu for just 84
made his coach .. Tom Landry, look yards while being lntcrcq>icd four
Hke a prophet in leadina the Cowbo)S tim~. His longest complctioo ~ l 9 ...
to a 20-l 3 victory over the Rams yards. · • before 65,403 at Anaheim Stadium in· .. They made us throw quiok and
the NFL opener tor both teams. · double covered our rtttivers.·· f'er-
Hogcboom completed 33 of 47 raga.mo ttplained.:·0a11as blitzed us
passes for 3*3 yards and then bad the "Cf}' effectively &Dd they stuck 10
audacity to say afterwards: -1 Dttd a thcar pmc plan."
lot of v.ork." The Ra.ms alsb tuck to their pme
Landry. who had to choose be-plan, hich.unlikcaycara:go.clidnot
tv.'CCD last )car's starter. White, and require runnu~ bad Eric 1Ditkers0n
bis protegie •. HQ&Cboom, chose the on crucial th1rd-OO-ar11 plays.
latter and the. fiffh-)'car quanerbaCk The Rams •wkcd the mc>&a&m
from Central M1Clupn descn:id an formation ~JI duringtbc prc·..ftJlSOlii;;:
Emmy for his Monday Night Foot-but it back(Ii'cd on them oodar
ball performance. • night.~ C:o~boy pass CO''CTIJ' had
Before the night 'A"IS O\ er. the edit 9.1thout Dickerson 1n the
Hogeboom had completed so many backfield 'Ahich ~ one Of thc
passes l)latJle helped receivers Doua reason\ Fcrrapmo was pided off
Dooley a:na Doug Cosbie and run-. _foµr tirn~ and the reason the Ram
ning ba.ck Tony Dorsett set personaJ -bad but l l first downs on the ~t.:
reception records. . ··we just never bad lbe preasion
Dorsett. who caught 10 passes for on the thfrd-down pass offense:·
66 yards. addCd another 81 yards on conocded, ~s Coach John Ro~
25 carries. Still. it was a night on (Pleue Me COW'BOH/C9) , '
~~~--'...U::.~.1.A.Pl.i..>-(A.l~~-Th1.ae.e-ADA-Dgel1 ~l a
opportunities slip by in their 6-5 loss to the Cleveland
Indaans, says Angels Manaaer John McNamara..
··we had a couple chances early and didn't cash m on
them and then we didn't do anythina throuJh the middle
" 69 .-496
67 " .493
~ . ...-
1nn10p," said McNamara df the Angels' perfonnanoc
Monday niaht. Jim Slaton, 6-7, took the loss· for the Anicls. who.
began the night in third place, I 'h games behind the first-
place Minnesota Twins 1n the American Leaaue West.
Minnesota slammed t~ door shut on second place
Kansas City to )Video its W~t lead to 21/J over the Angels
and two pmes over the Royals with a 4-1 decision. -•
Toniabt the Anaels send Mike Witt to the mound 1n
hopes of evenina the series with the Indians at one game . • .
apiece and get the road tnp on the rifht track. ~ • I iced the ball inside the comer. There's not much you can
Indians pitcher Steve Comer, raJSed bis record to 4-8 o about that." . •
with seven strona foninp. He yiCTdCd seven s while . lta~~ve. '!" o fias not seen mu~h playma lime latctr. ·
strikina out three and walkina one. said, "Its JUSt fun to play. Anything on top of that· is
Early in the pme, Comer said, he didn't have his good pavy:•
changcup. Hall lined his ix th homer in the fi~t. but the A~els
"But it came back and that's wha1 kept me going," he scored 1n the second when Bnan Dowmna led off with a
said. · double and scored on Rob Wilfo,!l&'s one-out single.
four of the Indians' runs came on home runs tiy Mel ClCyeland took a 2-1 lead io the second whe .Pat H~I and Joe Caner and Harsrove's two-run double m the TablcrsJllJ!ed, too~ t~~ on a .H~ve stnale and scored
fifth innina on Broomck Perkins pinch htt sacnficc flyy
Slaton 'sa1d there was some thought ~ven to waOOng In the third, Julio Franco singled and scored. from
Hararove in the ftftti innina with two men on base. two second when California first ~man Rod Carew failed to
outs and Chris Dando on deck. come up with a Gcorae Vukovich gro~nder for an error.
"We talked aobut intentionally walk.in& Hargrove The Jndians took a S·I lead 10 the fifth ~hen
wtth the base open but Bando's been swin,jnJ a hot bat .so Vukovich. sing1ed IAd Tabler doubled ~fore Hargrove
} w&-decided to pitch to Hargrove." said Slaton. "He.Just slapped his two-run doulile. , ·
................... c.Mlm
Rama defender Gary Green breab ap a pua intended for· a Dalla• recdftr.
Navratllova 's m~ste17 remalns unchallenged
~
Getting to top
can be pa1nf nl
~EW YORK (AP) -Ever since TOday, John McEnroe. the No. I
she tormcd to the U.S. Open men's seed. was to fKC unheralded
omen's champion hip a year aao. and unseeded Robcn Green in a
tbe qu tion has been not who would fourth-round matc.h.
win thi )Car's tournament but Rain first de'la)'ed and then v.-ashcd
'Vhcther an~onc could even come out Monday nilbfs matches includ·
clo tb beatana Manina Navratilova. ma No. 4 men's seed Mats Wtlander
he may ~ the only one who of Sweden ipinst 'tlm Ma.)'otte and
docsn•t think that way -he sa S)'lvia lfan1ka of Wm Germany ~·ct, throu.gh four round no one Ith qainst Petra Huber of Austria. They
oomeclo to bcati her. were rescheduled for toda.~ th 'he
"I don't thin'-about that." the top-Hanfka-Hubcr winner to ra~ No 2
. .
1d Monday. ••tf seed Chns Even Uoyd an the quar·
~rfinals.
, J1mm)' Connon. No. 3. 1plays o.
16 Joakim Ny trom of wcdcn to-
ni&ht an the founh round .. On . Mondly;:-wilh ·an all·Ume
rcroft1 crowd· of 21.112 at the a·
ttonal Tennis Center. aH1t1lova
mcthoditally defeated o. I Barbara Potter M tn u t b I
-.
. ..
--This stoiy' ~ot
a bit fishy: 10
lnju_st 15 niinutes
Quote of the clay.
8HIJ O.dner, the homeePun humorist who
manages the Minneota Twtna, on Carl Pohlad, new
owner of the club: "f hear he'a ao rfch he bought hla
dog• boy."
Hill wins first LPGA title
Cindy HUI picked up her first LPGA n victory Monday, carding a one-under-par
71 1n the final round to claim the Rail
Chant) Classic by \wo strokes over three
players in Spnngtle d. Jll. Hill, 36. finished with a 54-
hole total of9-under-par 207. She won $26.150. Betsy
KJ.a1, Jue Craf&er and Lon Garbaca tied for second ..
Gay Brewer shot a final round four-under-par 67 to
.... in a ~nior golf tourney m Lexington. K) It was
Brewers first 1nd1v1dual victory on the semor tour and
Ins first crown since he won the Canadian Open 10 1972.
Miami No. 1 in college poll
fhe defending national champion
M1i1m1 Hurricanes, who defeated two Top
20 opponents in six days last week.
including the prescason No. I team are
back on top of the college football ran km gs. a .. \ 1rtue ofa 20-18 victory over top-rated Auburn
in the Kickoff Clas$tC and Saturday night's 31-:W
tnumph over No. 17 f1onda. the Hurricanes roared
from No' I 0 in the preseason poll all the way back 'to the
top spot they held at the end of the 1983 season. And
JUSt hke last year, Nebra.ska is No.:!. Auburn dropped to
t1ghth place.
Miami received 36 of SS first-place votes.and 1.040
of a pos~1ble l, l 00 points from a nationwide panel of
sports writers and sportscasters. Neoraska. which
opens its season against Wyoming this weekend. was
second with seven first-place vote'l and 949 po10ts. The
Comhuskers also were second m the prescason poll.
Jimmy jotfnJ()Tr. Miami's ne" coach. took the
rankings in stride.
"l really have no reaction to M1am1 bemg ranked
No. I." Johnson said "We arc prepanng for ow: third
game in 13 day~ Oar main concern 1s pla}tng M1ch1gan
at Michigan this weekend."
Pitt. (~nkcd thircj. 10 the preseason poll. was up!.Ct
by Bngha~0-1 4 and skidded all the wa' to
17th pface Clemson. a 4().. 7 winner over Appalachian
State. moved up from founh to third .... uh two first-
place votes and 900 points. ·
UCLA. which opens th1~ week aprnst San Diego
State. chmbed from fifth to fourth with six first-place
ballots and 866 po10ts. while Texas. which doesn't pla)
wnlll Sept. IS. JUmped from m.th to fifth with 783 points
. .., .
M cEnroe fined $2,000
NEW YORK -John McEnroe has
been fined S2Jl00 by the Men'<i Inter-
national Professional Tennts Council for
"conduct detrimental to the game of
.tennis.'' it was learned Monda).
The New York left-hander. however. has filed an
ap~l With Mar hall Happer. admtn1'ltrator or the
MlPTC
McEnroe was fined for uttenng an obsccn1t~ at
Nora Mc:Cab4:. a reporter v.:11h the Toronto Gfobe and
Mail. dunng last month's Pla~ers Challenge tour-
nament in Toronto '
.•
The Chicago Cubs -M<!p getting the Iii breaks -and keep winning. Monday,
Ryne Sandber1 scored from second with _
lwo outs m the 12th inning when Philadel-
pbil) shortstop Kiko Garcia misplaye<j Gary Mattbew1'
grounder to give the Cubs a 4-3 victory. The win, .
coupled with the Mets' loss to St. Louis, increased the
Cubs· lead in the .National League East to six
-'3mes.Ch1caio start mg pitcher Rick SatcUffe, who was
lootana for his 14th victory rn 15 decisions sincejoinang
the Cubs m June, struck out a
career-b1g.b IS and allowed only
one wait. in eight innings. But
each of the three hits he aavc up
, were crucial. The Phillies' first h1t
came in the fifth inning on Mike
&bmldt's 29th home run. George
Frat.Ju got the win while Lee
Smith picked up bis 29tlnave ..
In other National· League action.
Larey Mc Williams Scattered three
8a.a4be singles through eight innings and
'' Jason Thompson helped out with a solo homer as Pittsburah defeated Montreal, 3-0 ...
DHty Baller drew a bases-loaded walk from Cincinnati
reliever Johll Franco with one out 10 the ninth inning to
give San Francisco a 4-3 win. Franco came in to pitch to
Baker after the G1apts had loaded the bases on siogles
by Scot Thompson and Joel Yougblood and an
1ntenttonal walk to Jobn.aJe LeMaster ... Brace Satter
set a Nauonal League record with his 38th save as the
St. Louis Cardinals topped the New York Mets, 7-3.
Sutter snapped the old record of 37 set in 1972 by Clay
CarroU ofCinc1nnat1 and tted by Rollie Flagen of San
Diego 1n 1978 and by Sutter. then with Chicago, in
1979. The ma1or league record 1s 4S, set last season by
Kansas City's Dan QuiseDberry ... Dale Mupby's 29th
home run. a solo shot LO the fifth mmng. broke a 4-4 tie
and gave Allan.ta a 6-4 win over Ho~n.
U.S. ties Canada, 4 -4
MOl\JTREAL -. Dave Chrisuan Iii knocked 10 the rebound of Mike Ramsey's ,
long shot wtth 4: l 7 to go Monday night to
cap a th1rd-penod comeback and give the
United States a 4-4 tte with Canada in the second round·
of the Canada Cup hockey tournament.
The goal by Chnst1an, of the National Hockey
League·s Washmgton Capitals. followed-a scramble 10
front of the Canadian net in wh ich Ed Olczyk fanned on a shot with an open net. ·
The lie gave both teams a 1-0-r record in the six-
nat1on tournament
After surviving a couple ofshonhanded situations
10 the earl) minutes. the Amencans scored first as
defenseman llod Langway skated around Canada's
Cha rite Huddy and poked a wnst shot over goalie Grant Fuhr at 6:44.
But the Canadians struck quickly to grab the lcad:-
M1chel Goulet stole a poor cleanns attempt by U.S.
defenseman Ramsey and fed Rick Middleton in the slot
for a IS-foot wnst shot at 14:46. Doug Wilson
connected 2: 13 later with a 40-foot shot which hit goalie
Tom Barrasso's skate and went into the net.
The Americans tied 1t 83 seconds into the second
penod when Middleton lost the puck along boards to
Aaron Broten. who pasSt.'d across the crease to Bryan
Erickson for a 30-f oot shot.
Goulet put Canada back on top when he tipped
home a SO-foot bla!i.t from the point by Wilson on a
power play at S:47 .
Telemlon, raitlo ,
Padres turn on power
Homers~ McReynolds, Kennedy
too much for Dodge'ts, 4-3
LOS AN<if:LES (AP)-The ~1ght of baseballs thing
o .. er the outfield fonccs warms the bean of San Diego
Padre~ Manager Dick Williams.
!.econd and San Diego added another run in the ~ond on
Garry Templeton·~ single.
After Los Angeles scored in the bottom of the kcond
on PL'<iro Guerrero's sin&le, Carmello Maninez led off the
Padres' fourth with a single and scored when Kennedy hit
his 12th home run. '
The Dodgers ~ored twice m the founh on Steve
Yeager'\ double and 1 ony Brewer's &ioundout. Los
ngcJe5 ma1'a ·d only t~o more hits the rest of the aame. "It means a ifCaL deal to have that power." W1ll1ams ~1d alter tht' Padrc'i u~a home run' b) Kevin McReynold~ an~ Terry Kennedy to dispatch the-Lo --------.------------
Angeles Dodger., ~-.l Monday night. . Brave· st Pe e h I t' . 'e can put fi .. e gun in the hocup capable of hilling r z our a e
11 out," added Wilham~ ... and we h vcn·t had that since the ~v of Nate Colhni and Da"c Winfield'. in the 197~.
lhe two homers pu,hed San Diego' ~a~n total to
IOI , the lint t1me"in'e fQ/7 and only the fifth nme tn the
d~b' 16-~car h1stor) that the Padre have hit that man) in
a ~son.
Th .. 1ctory napped a four· me Padr<'~ lo tfll streak
and 1mrrovcd their lead 10 the Nauonal l.t4t ue We 110 I 0
mes o\Cr HoU'\lOn, 1 f> loser at tlanta.
M rk Thurmond. 12· 7. nm~d his fifth can-en 1ctorv orre 1.h n t l}' when Perc1, \\110 11 -6 rttord is the
o .. er.Lhc Dodgers wnhouJ a lo.s T)le lcft-han~r P"e up ton Bra .. es' UttT, would pitch 1n.
.'ltll hits"' 6 1-3 innin •before turnm matters o .. er to the Perez med notonety in A':'Just 1982 v. hen he
San r>ac o bullpen.-l u1s Ocl~on threw I .2-3 hitl s be melo t Ythtlc dnvins to the tad1um and armed fier
1nh1ng ~nd r.a11 Lt'lli n p1uhed the ninth ror ht I 0th ch tart of me with Montreal. tlanta, -which had to t
sa' e kf!Y Rc11 s. 2·1. took the lo . of J l game 1 thhl f'Otnt, won bclund the p11chm• of td~c\ n<1ld\ sl e\J ht 20th homer kadm off the h1l Ntd:ro iand went un tu win the atronat Len ue wt 1
.. ..
The Ram•' Georae Andrew• hits Dallu
quarterback Gary Bo&eboom, caualn1 a
---°"" ............ ..._ ....._
tumble in the openiD• quarter of Monday
ntcbt'• aame at Anaheim Stadium. •
COWBOYS LOWER (HOGE)BOOM. From Cl • •
inson. "But our performance from a
passini standpoint has to be shared
by all of us."·
Even Dickerson, who rushed for
I 38 yards on 21 carries, had a bad
night passing. His halfback option
pau in the fourth quarter wobbled
mto the hands of DaHas cornerback
Everson Walls to set up what turned
out to be the w1nning touchdown.
Dickerson's two-yard run follow-
inga fumble by Hogeboom in the first
quarter and field goals of 31 and 36
yards by Mike l;ansford ga~e the
Rams a 13-0 lead m what was a near--
perfect IS minutes of football.
boom survived a shaky start
in w 1ch he fumbled when Georz.e
Andrews decked him and had"a pass
intercepted by Gary Green in the fi~t
quarter. ' -
"Hogeboom 1s a good athlete and
he's a fighter and he got the job done."
noted Green. "Offensively, they ex-
ecuted very well with quick outs and
underneath patterns. The momen-
tum changed slowly towards Dallas."
Hogeboom found Cosbie in theend
zone f9r a 19-yard TD pass in the
second quarter. culminating a 70 yard
drive. He then moved the Cowboys
into field goal position in the third
quarter and Rafael ~tien kjcked. a
31-yard field goal to make the scor
13-10.
Septien then hit a 52-yard field goal
at 1: J 6 of the final quaner to tie the
game.
The Cowboys moved 69 yards in
nine plays for their winnin& touch-
down with Dorsett scoring from
seven yards out.
.. "This was a ~me we let act away
from us:• adm1t1ed Robmson. "We
had a lot of opponunuies .10 put
points on the board early and all we
got was a lot of threes.
"I was disappointed in the overall
offensive prQduetion (204 net yards).
When you pla> Dallas, it's often feast
or famine. We were a little hesitant to
execute what we wanted to do."
Robmson added.
"''We fiatc<t to lose but we can't win
them all," adde<t 01c:kerson ... Both
teams made a lot of mistakes but they
(th.e Cowboys) were able to capitalize
more. But you can't rely on one
football game to determine a season."
In the meantime. Hogeboom tem-
porarily put to rest the quarterback
controversy-in Texas.
"It's a week-by-week thtnJ. I must
plar well to stay in the pos1t1on I'm
at.' Hogeboom said.
"We are blessed to have two good
quarterbacks," Dallas Coach Tom
Landry said.
The crowd of 6S,403 was the
-second-larJtCSt crowd to see a Ram
..., .......... ., .... 0........
Dallu quarterbecll: 1C1:f'7 Hopboom Joob for a Heiet••r wblle on th nan.
..
pme at Anaheim Stadium. A turnout
of67,070sawthe Rams and 49ers \ast
season. But even the new spectator
craze -the wave -wasn't enough to
spur the Rams on.
"I thought the fans were great."
Robinson said. "We all wanted a
areat start but it takes 16 games to
decide who gets into the playoffs. The
spirit and excitement was outstan3-
ing." • * •AM'HOTU -UMC>acker MIC ow-wffe " bnilled rlb111'1 lht flral quener but X·ravs were
""8hvt ltunnll'ICI badt aarrv ........ d•51oaltd
ll'lt lall lhrM IOM on his 1ef1 foot lMJI t i lhrM
.. .,," Ptll beck In 111aee:• ac:cofdino 10 a Ra"'
tPOlltun.n ••• Qallat ¥altran wide rec.Ivar Tanv H• wffa!'td a .-.raltd ~ ltt the me\I
Mrloln lniury of,,.. oeme •• , Donall, CotO<e ~
DotlltV a«OVnltd for '11 of HGMboom't J3
racepl-Roo.nsan on DOc.l<efa.on•a -.>tlon
NU "WI lhotJ91'11 ii W~ lllert lhrO<HJ"°'-11 flit
otmt Tlllt't lht wav It Is Wllll • trlek Piav II
WOl'kl IOI" V0U bill tomel1,,,_ aM age NI YOU big IOll'lehl'f*... . .
Seahawks
wih; lose
Warner
#
SEA ITLE (AP) -Seattle won its
first Nattonal Football League rea-
ular-season opener ever. defeauna the
Cle veland Browns. 33..() Monday but
Seahawks All-Pro runnma back Cun
Warner left the game with a knee
injury that will requ1re arthroscopic
SUfll.ery.
Dave Kneg fired three touchdown
passes and Norm Johnson kicked
four field goaJs for the Seahawb,
surpnsina AFC tttle game finalists
last season.
Warner was tnJured wh~le makinaa
cut on a sweep around nght end in the
second quarter. He was helped off the
field and limped lo the dressing room.
Coach Chuck Knox sa1d Warner
wasn't hit on the play but hurt himself
while planting his right foot on the
Kingdome's anifidal turf.
The a.nhroscop1c surgery wlll be ~rfonned today. ...
Warner, who led the American
Footoall Conference as a rookie in
1983, had 10 carries for 40 yards 10
the VIC\Ory. ?
Knea had touchdown passes of 34
yards to roolue Darryl Turner in the
second half, and of five yards to taaht -
end Mike Tice and seven yards to
Paul John in the first half.
Johnson booted field goals of .SO.
41 , 24 and 22 yards to equal Efren·
• Herrera's I 980 Seahawks club recoro
of four field goals in a game.
Krica completed I 4of28 passes for
179 yard and suffered one inter-
ception. • · T~c Scahawks. wintc s io eight
previous rcaular-su on openers,
handtd Cleveland us fint lfotout
since Nov.~7, I 91'.L»'tien the Browns
were blan ed by the Los Anseles
Rams 9-0. Seattle Coach.Chuck Kno~
was the head coach oft~ I 977 Rams.
h was a panicularly Iona nd
frustratina day for lcft·handcd quar·
terback Paul McDonald, maktn$ hi
rqular-sc son debut as Bnan Stpc's ttplaccmcnt.
McDonald complctcdJu t etiht of
27 PA for 114 yar nd" ··
1ntcrccpttd twice. He was eked five
times for I sc of 3S yard nd fumblt'd on •
I he hav. ks dcf1 n also eked
McDonald's fourth-Q.uattcr repla -
mcnt, Tom Flick, twice and wound
up with ven cks for 4 yard .
1pe left the Brown ftrr la t
sea n and Joined ,he Wt Jene)
Gcncrab of the Unttcd tat foot· II le UC.
Th attawk also h d en ther 1
rum_ble frOOVCr)'~ tor four lUTnO\'e l!Y Cleveland-and blocked a punt b \cCo
MAJOA LIAGU& ITANDINOS
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61 )5
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$ttllle 7, THH 3
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(Scnu!H 2•SI, 11
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Hou1ton
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S72 500 .., .....
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Chieaoo •. Pnllt<ltlPhl• 3 112 Inning•> S.n Francisco 4, Clneln~ll 3
St LNa 7, New Yorti: S
A!Wlntt 4,, HOUSIOl'I 4
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IHtnNter •-n. n • Clnclnntll ($Oto 13·7) 11 San Francisco
(Kruk.OW 10-101, n
Ho~aton lkoll S· 111 11 Atlanta
llrln01ar1 1· IJ, n
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CAU~ORHIA ~•VI LAND
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T-Ht A-USS
HATtONAL LEAGUE
l'adrff 4, Dodeen J
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x·•t Natlonal l!Ht (night) W..,.._y,Qct,I
ti Alfttflcan Wttt (1119111)
ti NtllOnel EHi tdevl T'IMlfMlly, Oct .•
ti N1tionat w .. t (lltvfll) ''*Y· oct. s 11 American EHi <nlllhtl
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at Amtrk:1n £Ht (div>. H ntetaatrv
11 Ntflontt Weal llllGl'lll, If nectt'8fY
5uN11y, Oct. 7
at Amerlean East (nltlflt), H nee ........ ,, Ntllontl WHI toavJ, If ,_,ary
JC-tf Ctilee90 Cu«K r9ortMftl NL EHi,
AL wru dWIOt lo 11191\I oatnt and NL to
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WORLD H•llS
TIMldly, Oct. t
t i N111ontl (fllthl)
w....._v,oet.10
t i NatoOl'ltl (n19t1t) '"*•· Oct"-12 ti American lnlo/ltl
Sttvrav, Oct. u
at Amtrlcan (day) •
~y, Oct.,.
ti Amerlc•n (clay), N MCHUry
T""9v, (Ki, ll
t i Nt~I (nlOhtl, If ~aarv
W ..... y, Oct." et Natlonet (nlOftt). H necease"Y
ltMM w ... Stl1el ktltdutt IH CllM~ ... ._.. LIHUtl ,....y, Oct 9
at A!Mfkan tnltllt) w ...... y,0ct.10
ti Amtflcan (n19ft1) ,,...., , Oct. 1J
ti NatiOntf IOtvl JttuNay, Oct. 1J
at Nallontl (clay)
SuMIY, Oct. 14
11 Nttlontl (Otv), " neceuarv
TVIMay, Oct. IS 11 American (n!Qflt), If neuuarv w...._.,,oct."
at American (nlftlt), H necesMrv _,
LOI Alamltos
MOMDAY'S •HULTS
( l>tll .. 5.t·lltlllt "'"'"' ,,_...,.,
PllUT ltAC•. Ont mlle PllCt
• Levity IMtaklll 34.00 13 00 6 60
l lt Ertle CLAdlrt) 4 IO 3 00 • NoO.y, O lravo (Kueoter) l .O •
Alao r'* Tllot Ca~. IQtarcll Sfir, Wind Driven, Chocoltte Stidl, eran1wooo
JOH, OouOle SAlllHI'
Tlmt; 2:0S Sl IXACTA ta-71 paid MOUO
SllCOND •ACI. Ont milt oau
Kinfl Como lltk«I S 20 3 20 2 40
Ttnlltf Tint (Kue!IWJ 7 20 460
FIY J ondt Ftv I GrllfldY I 3 CIO
AllO rac.d (;yoav Patriarch 1111111
Silted, C.all Piia, OM'• Ou kit,
Starcrou, Stertllior
Tlmt; 2114 2/S
ll IXACTA (2·4) paid sn 40
TH•D aACI, Ont milt'PA«
Gltl'a Otslgn (Pierce> 16 20 10 IO a ao
Rov•I Marv (Rltd\4) 1120 lUO
Ka tit aravo (Kuetllerl 4 60 Alao raced; Jutnellt, F IV F Iv Mlt,
AlldY'I HyteOlrl, Levll11t, S'*v etult ,
Outs Iris Ht
IXACTA It 11 PttCI MttOO
,OURTH aACI. Ont mile trot
CllUC:k El Mar (Matt<I t 40 4 40 2 to
A"'I ltllrMt (Ot10tnerl 4 20 3 00
W . Contt11t lOlaenl l.40 .-,"° rlt*! ShtnnH Ster, Imo tmo Imo.
JIUY Jav. Walf'ua. Ktuff Marktnlay, Aad· rnoncs·a Joy.
Time. 2.'04
PlnH aAC•. Ont m ie Nee HI~ $llOw ISMn'tn) 1M 360 UO
Tate Letona (Andenonl 4 60 210
Multi ltf'rv (Kuetllerl HO
Atao rtetd Paul ltf'rv, MlcllNI Jolln,
04ntrt Card, LovHtllt ROCIYI. Mv Tillnka
Allwood, Mffnlflcaue
Time, l:ff 21S
Sl &XACTA 17·•1 0tlcl MJIO
llXTH ltACll. One mile Nee
Hitched to w in CPltnol S IO 3 20 2 60
IOl•l'IOI (0.some<) l to 360
Ftv Fly Shadow (Slttth) HO
AM rec.ad •ldOutlln LHI, SQulre Ltne
Gusto, Mor9tll Hiii, AndV'' Htrmtn. Levn
to Mt, AndY'a Galt. Timt· ~ 1 S
ll aXACTA 12•91 1>tid 12340
HVUfTlC ltAC•. oM milt trot.
Jey'a M«norlea tOvnrl 9 IO 4 60 l 60
Setty (Maler) 4 00 l 40
Mine 0rt90tl IFIKO) 9 40
Alto rec.d SltlMIOt, luck Stove. AnclV'a
Meteor. looola. Flell'I Storm, Jonclum
Ttmt; H2 3/S
ll IXACTA {l 7l oa>cs $4' 20
•tGHTH ltAC• One ml,. Htt
MIGhtv Mttrhi (Alldtrsonl 12 60 7 60 610 Tric.el Clltfffl' (l(U4tblerl 7 00 ~to
Milter G (Miskell • I 60
AIM r~ Fiii P00.'1, It Jotit.
Horizon Ster, Oftt<t SOI'. Fort1ter
Tlmt I Str
ll IXACTA Ct-71 otid a'7IO I NINTif"lltAC•. Ont mllt trot
Nit•'• Stll' IGtuncM UO S 00 2 to CM1rtu1 Mooa« IDftomer> uo no K~ll Lo&*I (S.rtftJ 2 .. AIM t.c.td COITll Ster, ,._,,,.., C K.'a .._.,
Time 1:t I 1 (5
'2 ""' MX (7·7-2-4 .. •CI H•d
M•.O.UO •1111 OM wlnnlne tlcUt (ahc
houoa) S2 Pldl Shi eonlOllllOfl Mid W IJ IO wlltl • WIMIN llcktta ,,, .... hOfMt).
TINTH ltACI. Ont milt oteo Sl9f'mv Alttdl IH ) t» SIO UO
FIYlne "'"' IMlll«) l7 0I 11.20
Pnotftl11 Jtclr. IVllllndlnetltm> 11a '°' AIM tKM \ltlll Twtot.,$Miiit ~t Sill
Detlllt, ~k Oou9tJ, M<IW'IOl.ia lr•w.
OtrllY Lord ~ Tia. 2~ 3/J ,_
I lflOellCO • ·°' 7 '
•
•
Angel, Dodger schedules
• • *et CllQco •• R at 0Mort I
11
•I All&• .12 OS -o..taen It Reds. II IS
23
AoCel1 OD R&illo
l)odi n OD Radio
KMPC(710J
ABC (790)
Monday Tunday
10
17
.,_., 730
~at Btma. 4 40
a.pt.4
25
ADC t.onTV
Dodlera OD TV •
Channel 6 .1-.
Ch&hnel 1
Frtd 1
. ·7 •
Tuts 11 ~·· 12 OS ~·• •t rits, I ·
2A
.,.. it «ofJI$ (2).. 2 30
Astroa 1t DWcwt 1 30
Alli* et Ro11ts. S 30 Mtros et ONctn 1 30 Aas• at Ro1M\. S 30 A.Jlrout DMpn· JJt.
. -30 .
All&• at Teus II OS
Gr1nb at Dtdttrt I
·TI411lD RACI. 1 1116 mlft.
G ant MlllOed (Catnd1 31.20
Nudur (P111tty)
Cltulc Stcretarv (Larntltrt)
•.20 • 60 uo uo
Atao rae.cl: Lltl'tllleWtVl!Olt'nt,
Larrv, EbOnv aronze, .f)lablo Laddie Time l·O 4/6 •
U •XACTA 17 21 N•O S2lt 00
l'outtTH RACE. 6 fv<1one•
•• Our
Nordic SoflO (&fUwtt) It 40 6M l 60
lftl LMdtr INICCt rrOfl) UO 2 to
SOtrtlut/l1lfc (Valen:lUela) :UO Atao r t(td' t1111neu Scnool, lnltl'IO
Oancor. Ntcnotal. Kingdom K«rv. Ora·
metlc Silted, Slr SColl's Co.Kt
Tll'llt· 111
l'l"H 9t.ACE. 6'1'> lurlelnfl
Mark In the Skv (M.ttl '3 IO 31.40 11 40
Famllv Fo11 (Delgadillo) 660 4 20
L'Ntll'I' (Hawlrfl UO Al60 raced· Otlallv. AtekltU Pltawrt.
Rttltllt, Shantln, GooelbVt J y • Candy In
COYrt Tlmt 1 li .
U IXACTA IS-IOI 0tid al,5"50
51XTH ltACI. • M'lon91
l•g land ITOl'OJ 21 20 '40 4 40
Grab Your Socks (McC¥l'onl 3 '° J to
l lu lng Gtmt (LOlO'ttl 4 20 "°'° rtcte1· Whv Old I, Atvdtr'' Gift,
Pro\ltn Precious, Ftvlnt Ctld'I, Hatt KH
Southern Fire
Time 1:12 21S
HVINTM ltACI. I 1116 ""'" Vigor'• LUY (N\cGurn) ,, 40 13 60 6 60
Poouter Lady (si-ntlltr) S 00 3 IO
Qutdt'• Oartln' (McCtrronl UO
Alto raced: Poltv Hlvh. F'"t Stcrttarlat,
Netlllt t<noW1, Ma1'• Lady, Coa1111
lrMlt, Vlvlca
Time· 144 1/S
IS •XACTA 12·11 Pt O $44100
S2 .. ta< SIX ()·7·4·S-.-21 H •d
11oe.no 40 wun one w1no1ne ticket tflvt
norvs).
•IOHTH •ACll. 1 114 milt\
• Prtcl1lonlst IMcCarronl 4 40 320 l :zo.
Pair of ~ ($111<11t) 10 00 7 40
Suoer O•trnono (Plncavl 4 20
Al$0 rtetd Video Kid, SIVtvv le,
FabUkM.11 Otd, CrMClua, Too ComoetolOI',
Eatuoenelo, G1tan1 Vttt
Tlmt 1 ;St 41 S. u llXACTA (J·l) Hid 1194 00
·NINTH aACE. 1 1116 mllH
FtbuloU& MmrY (HWIVI 27 to lUO 7 00 FOi' HllTIMll 4Mtt1) • I 40 S IO
RUl!WtY A~ (Lloflaml 7 60
ECllVJNG-01 , OorMtf 1~. •
f•1)7, £~ '"'"• T H 2·30, 2-?, Ptll111M H. NewMmt 1·3 I.ft
, Elltrlll 3·22. Gre'll 2·24. Olel<tra0n
2·20, Farmar 2·10, David Hlll l•S, Gum.rt
1-3.
MISSED Fll!LO GOAU,...Nont
. • SMMwlrs ll, Browm o
ft ken llW OYenen ~~ 0 0 0 C>-0 soatne · 1 13 13 e>-n
~.,...,....,..
S.-Tlelf ' _ _.,.,,, K,leo (JollnM>n
kick), 7 12 ~~
s..-FG JoMlon 22, US
S.-Jofwu 7 MU from Kr ... IJOllnlO<I
kid!), 1H7 s.-FG JonfttOll 50. 14.16 ~ ...... Ste-FG JoM\0!1 41, t ~
s.t-FG Johnson 24, 925 Ste-Turntr 34 PtU lrom Krieg Uohn·
aon kk:kl, 1241 ~.w.
GAMa STATl'STIC5
Ot Finl oo.nt 10
Ruahet·Ytrd\ la •S2
Pawne vard1 • · ..
Atlurn vardt t
PuMt 9·21·2 S.0.• l'I' 1-17 '"""'' •·,. Fumblti·IOlt 4·3
Ptna•tltt·varo. 6·3t
Tlmt of PotMUIOll 23 57
INDIVIOUAL ITATIST1C5
SM
20
... ,45
162
97
14·2'· I
7 ...
4·36 3.,
S-.7
1''03
RUSHING-<~. Pru.II lS·CJ,
Green 3·t. Sttlllt. Warner 10·40 Otxon
lS-36, Hutl'ttt 11·31. L-1·15 Krtff 3·9
arvant 2·4 .. lorn •·3.
PASSING-CIOtl1nC1, McOo .. •ICI
a-27·2·114. Flldt 1-1+2 s.t11ie, Krwe 14'11·1•11', Zorn o-+-H
RECEIVING-<le\ltland, FMC.htr 3·3S,
Harris 2·4S, Newsome 2·22, Holt 1· 12.
GrMtl 1·2 Stattle, JoMa J 4f Metnttara J• ... Turner 1·34, L•r9'111 2· 17, Warner
l·lt , l rvent l·t Tiet l ·S, Ol•Oll 1·0
Doorn•'* l·O MtSSEO FIELD GOALS-<lt,,_"41, M.
a.hr ....
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T"9 T 00 Twenty IOtrnt In "'' lir\I rtOUtar· ... j.Ofl Aasoc1tlad .Prts1 coUeve
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bonito, n Mnct baU, t ur.co oeu, t ~ 1 Kl#lll 461 mK~tr • 2
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-1 Tem Wala.on
J Tom 1(119
l Fred COlolfltt
•ANH &ffll
S Gh MorC111
6 een Cramaaw
7 C#arY I( edl
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11 Jact. •
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NA TIOMA\. CONl'IEJUENCE
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MB Zlrnnwmu, '7,-1S
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Vict.l A~aroJ, U.tOt
Pat Bredin, M 15'
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Dickeraon vs. Dickerson
Anthony Dickerson of Dallas cU.-ea ln an attempt to •top the
Ram•' Erle Dicker.on ln Monday•• l'f atlonal Football Leaiue
• opener at Anahetm Stadium. Anthony mlued. but the Cow-
boy• didn't. Dalla• rallled from a 13-0 deficit to win. 20-13.
A day. this Dolphin won't forget
Jim Jensen sars. there arc a lot of
-postttom he can t play on a· footbaH
field. Ask ham which ones and he
thinks for a moment, laughs, and sa}s:.
"Defensive tack.Jc, defensive end .....
Jam Jensen emerged Sunday from
the outer reaches of the M1am1
Dolphins' depth chart b> catching fiH
passes from Dan Manno for two
touchdown in the Dolphins' 35-17
victory over the Washington
Redskins. Those were the first five
catches and the first two touchdowns
of Jensen's four-year Nauonal Foot·
ball League career.
In fact, when Jensen came to the
Dolphins in 1981, he figured he'd be
passing the ball, not catching 1t. .\n
11th-round draft choice from Boston
Un1vers1ty, the 293rd player taken that
year, he beat out fourth-round pick
Brad Wnght for a roster spot But there's not much jOb sccunt} an
being a thtrd-stnng quanerback who
"'a an I I th round dralt cho1Cc . .\s a
rule. too can count on one to s\ai,;
around a )ear or so. until another dra(t
produces a slightly younger 'er~1on of
the species
So Jensen became a wide rccc1,er
And a defensive back. And a .. head-
hunter" on special teams, of "'h1ch he
1s the captain. And even the backup
long snapper. In fact, about all that was
left of Jensen's quarterback career was
his number -11 -unul a presca~n
injury to Marino put him back on the
depth chart as a thtrd-stnna '>1gnal-
caJle.c_
It started an Jensen's second year.
.. He had a strong arm but he wasn·t
picking up the plays as quickly as we
wanted, so he wasn't playang much and
he was jUSt kmd of stand mg around ...
says Coach Don Shula. "I hate to see
anybody not dotnga,Jlything, so I asked
him 1f he wanted to get involved
somewhere else. The next thing I
know. he was the captain of the special
teams."
Last year. with a regular-season
career passing mark of no compleuons
in one attempt, Jensen decided to
make Wlde receiver his permanent
position. He made his first appearance
against the New York Jets on Oct. 16.
but went through the rest of the season
without catchang a pass.
Then came Sunday and there was
Jensen in the starting lineup.as a third
wade receiver, setting up a mismatch
that forced the Redskins to cover him
with strong safety Tony Peters. He
made his first NFL reception on the
Dolphins' first senes, but 11 wa~ good
for,o.nly 3 yards.
He had an 11-}ard reception m the
!.Ceond penod before getttng loose m
the third for two touchdowns, one on a
9-yard toss from Manno on which he
was so open he spent several seconds
waving his arms m the end zone the
-~--
.
Slow motion
takes its toll
on ·sailors
By ALMON LOCKABEY
Delly Piiot ... , .. Writ«
. -. Th1s 1s racing?
W el>ster defines rac1 ng as a con test of speed.
but the 12th annual ~n Clemente Island race
from Dana Point to San D1egotumedout to be
a contest of the slows
The race, co-sponsored by Dana Pomt
Yacht Club and StlHr Gate Yacht Club,
started Saturday at I 0 a.m off Dana Point and
took the 24-boat fleet around the west end of
San Clemente Island before heading for San
Diego.
How slow was the race?
The scratch boat. Burton Benjamin's
Nelsoo-Marelc-55, Lone Star, crossed the
fini sh hne in San Diego Harbor at 4:24 p.m.
Sunday for an elapsed time of 30 hours and 24
minutes over the 134-mile course.
If you think that was slow, consider the
fini sh of Rob Batchcr's CF-41 , Auspicious, at
11 : 14 p.m. Sunday (37 hours and 1.4 minutes)
• or the last boat to finish, AIJohnson's Ecstacy
at 4: 18 a.m. Monday ( 42 hours, 18 minutes.
The race started an a bnsk I 0-12 knot breeze
that took the fleet to the west end of the island
(50 males) in about eight hours. B1,1t the breeze
took a Labor Day holiday on the back side of
the island and left the racers battling for every
breath of air to keep them moving. Seven
boats ,gave up the "ahosting" and motored ·
back to their home pons.
--~n the computer finished belching 9ut
the corccted time re ults. here were the trophy
winners:
IOR -I l one Star. Bunon Benjamin.
Southwestern YC, 2. Ausp1c1ous, Rob
Batcher, SWYC'. 3. Red hift, Ann Kahle, Los
Angeles YC
PHRF-A -I . Espresso. Parizcau-Mulve~,
San Ottgo YC: 2. Los Tigrcs, Alec Ob-
erschrpadl, SWYC; 3. Bang Bang Maxwell.
Patty and Tom Adamson, Dana Point YC.
PHRF-8 -=-I. ShaJom, Alan Cohen,
GSL YC; 2. 01ymond1as, Jerry Purcell,
DPYC; 3 Fe tival, Patnck Osborn, South
Shore YC, Trying to •hake loose
Ram Barry Redden· (30) trie. to get away a
;. pack of Cowbo79 Monday nlght,lncludlnt
Victor Scott l22), but he wa•'hauled down
for a •hort gain ln a 20-13 Dallas Ylct~ry.
PHRF-C -I. Comcdianne. Cal Bu~rt,
SWYC; 2. £cstacy, Al Jotinson. DPYC J. sea
Shaft II . Williams.Pane. Oceanside YC .
Life goes on; even without Howard
NEW YORK (AP) -lfo\\ard
Cosell was not an the the booth when
ABC SJl(>ns kicked oil 1t\ Monday
Night Football for 1984.
And, he won't ix' back
Both the network and tht' at1onal
footb II Lcaaue ar confident. thougtr.
that the g.amc·~ the thing that 111 win
. • ,. •the hcans of e publtc.
Co II announced lut month th:u. he
wa rcnrinJ from the Monday N1~ht
t?am, ending a 14-)r~r awx 1.atton
with onr . of \J1orts f\; ·~ · unique
underu~.Monday Night football
e1tpandcd the A from unday
afternoons 1n\o a pnme·t1mc rnt1n
bonanza and m de household name
of Cose II and ht\ br c:kast colic uc~1 frank Gifford and f>lndy Don
Mcrtdtlh. . .
Rut Coscll 1s now 64 and the·
constant tnavcl nd 1ttcn11on have
taken their toll
•'M) father died 1n"<. h lrlottc Mcm·
onaf tJospttal m on h < roltna awa)
from hi~ famtl ). I hat t'i not &<>lnA 10
h ppc to me... o II told Oco~
Vccsc) of fhc New Yor~ l am . "M>·
beloved ".1fc, Emmy. and I h vc
-dec1~cd 1h t h1ch<"~er of us 1ocs firs\,
we arc ban lo bet 1hcr. I want to be
1th my tv.o daughtcr1 anii my
arandchtldren. I am sick of lrl\ieJ. My
wife wa5 not '-"Ith me at the O!>mp1
Enou h,"
There 1Acrc que uon durinJ the
Co II yc-ar whether the hy·pla) in tht>
bpoth was ovcrshadow111g the me
on th e field No\\. w1th Co\ctl .ianc. the
•
'
Cl .. A
Telephone ervice:
Monday· Friday
8:00 A.M.·5:30 P.M.
Au ine s Count~r:
Mondarf'ridny
8:00 .M.-5:30 P.M.
DllTlllUJllll
1111.111 ~tent famJIY-ftOiM I.Moe INlng room, famllY reom,
fonnail dlntng rm. 2000 IQ
ft. Cloee to tchOoll Cd
today to ...i ~2311
DEADLI 'E Bier.
Pl Ill, I CAT 10~ 1n::\ Ul . I~ E .... ,!ill.a~··a·.11111: .. !·:!••11_!1111•!· \ 1 o nda \ ~u t. I I :.iO u.ru. l~~!:;i'.:!-=Ei~-~~~~~!!~='.E!~=~f• Tut· .. da·~ \1011 . i::m 1a.m. ·Ii
· \'\ t>~· ... clu\ Tut· . t;:JV p.rn . •
'J:t1ur ... cta ~ \\ t•d . .,&::m p .m. ... ·
Frida~ Thun.. l::m p.m. • · ·
~aturda~ t :r!do ~ :i:OO p rn .
~U Jlda~ • rt. :i:OO p.rn .
CANCEl.LATIO ' &
nut• 11 Lllll• tor a hOUM lie• thlel In old
COM, MMt 3 Bdrm, 2
CORRECTIC> S: r ~.~· .. ~n~
Cunc·t•llulions und rorrt·c·tion., ma~ I=. t~'
l~t· macft• 011 sa mt~ dt·acllint•.., al!> ahm t•.1 Ree1tor1,e7~
I lt·a ... t• ai,k for u c·unn·llalionl ~ ~~~~~~~
number "h.-r, c·anc·c•llin ~ ~our ad. IPllUllYllW ERROR · Large private lot. Ont • . " .tory Bdrm, famfty Chet·k \Our arl daih and n•port room, dining room, wtap
·. d. I . l 't I>.\ II ' around patto gatcS.nt. errors · tmmt• 1alf' ~. w . New carpet, 3 car
PILOT a umt''t liabilih for tht• firit t ~Barbara ~t.m•
inrorrf't'l in ertion onh·. 200
CLAS IFIED 642-5678 ~ Macnab-Irvine
LIM ISLE
101 Yi1 U• S..4
. nmun
1111,MI
l,1 lallJ 12·1 Gl'Mt buy! Gr•t Po~ for expansion or IUP« u Marvelous 6 Br bayfront 78' on bay, pool, It. 3 BR 11ng1e story ir..
spa. 100' boat space Xlnt Fin $4 850 ooo dltlonal «*lgn. Quality • • ' ' • bullt extremely wert ·ng S~h 3 Br, 2 Ba on 45' lot, maintained. S.ll•r~
g deck, eounyard, pier -& slf p.
Be$ l, l~,fOOOuJ 3. B 2 • on no: ...
auu r . Ba, playroom, fireplace, I==~~~~~~
beam ceilings. Xlnt financing. $420,000. Ll.Ma
IAYllll lllYI IAYFlllT OIDI Ptaluala Hit
Jetty & Bay view, newly deco.11ated Mai
Kai, 2 Br, 2 Ba, 40' patio. Now $64~.000.
PElllllU 1111 OCWFlllT
Exciting Ocean & ~etty views: 4 Br, 3 Ba,
3700 sq. ft. car parking. $1,285,000.
WEIT UY an IAYFlllT
At N.H.Y.C. Traditional 5 Br spectaCular
bay view. Owner lin. $1,050,000.
Wiii IUOI llUllll
Panoramic ocean & c1ty view , 5 Bet, 3 Ba,
spacious for entertammg. Xlnt hnancing,
now $835,000. ·
BILL GRUNDY . REALTOR
• , •i ' I , '° 4 ._. f, ' f
~PEWIU '
Re9dy to mow Into tr•
dltlonal quallty 3 bedroom, 3'Abe home.
Beautifully remodeled
with room for eddltlon.
Pier for 52' bOll + tide
tlet. ~ .. Of
Bay, lkyllne and night
llght1. Private large
courtyard plu1 ••tra ·
parking. Priced to MK et
*975,000 FEE. 831-1400
~ATlKfRO~l
H~t.Y'-·
REAi. ESTATE
131·1400
cmu .. lllu llH
IUYUl-111
Hll,IOCI :=!!!!~!'!!~!!!!!!!!!~!!!!~~!22~~~~1 1 Br +den or tmall 2nd Bd. Orlglnally caretaktrt
Let U1 Hel~ Y ••
\
Sell Your Property!
he Daly Plot off en you Uis 111ct silt ad
on u "Piehl'• Pac•" weekends for )Ult •
125 per day, or 2 days for 145.
·.
Submit a pidtrt, or we'I photoeraph It for
you at .• mi1inal char&•·
CLASSIFIED •••
·RIEAO FOR PROFIT•
condo w/l<Ywtty bey view
from tide Jlldtit. ldMJ ,...
trwf" for llwaboerd or
weekender lor olty
dweller. Small but th41
leut ~Mal-Kai
by $3SO,OOO. ..... ,,11 --......
111,lllY.&
&ll•llUD At l'A% lntweet Try a MW 2nd Trust Deed, tm11
down. Low peymenT1 3 Bedroom. Upgf'.adtd. Ctll
guldcty-thll won't lut .t 110.,050.
THE REAL
ESTATE RS
llU fll IPPT. Tl ..
4BR 2 story widen, Ofo.
library, 3 car gar. • $240,000
-BR llome, lrtthly painted, new carpet, 2
car garage 1125,000.
'::~:::~· S<Cl\4ll.A-/J, e/fS :::: ,.,....,. ur ·~'~CUI' • l'OUAN -----..... nn
..
l&M7. ... ::":"':':yw=ctt-3=-=-'bt~2:""ba::---
2112 Setang 111&.000 119-HIO own( egt
A!POS 2 on IOt 140,000.
Houee 1127,000. LOW
dOwn. -cit 646-7718
.1; ........................................................................................................................................ ~·~'.;...:;~.-.. ...... ..-. ...... _;....-..-:~~....:.:*==:.;;=--..l..~----~ ....... ~.__....,., ... ~-·-..-...--..---...._.._ ____ _ I •
•
-..
•
District Managers -If you 9nfOY WOJk1n9 w. ~ bOyi &
91rfl Ond d• jobl Ofe not fof you,
CONldet 0 C~ee.t 111 ~ citcv\o
tlOft fiekf ~ 0 VNqw po11tion Wtlft
doily cho!l.ng.t & rewordi 0
Ovr opentnG• ore mmedioto Appli<.ms
mvu have o ¥0n,.:1tationwogon Of tfUc\
We ofi• an H<•l1ertt so(cwy wttl o bon\ii
pkii and GO• o!IOwoncc Wt hM °"
e.1C'9l ~fit pion that lft(klcMt
tolirotioft intutON:t, I · ol ¥Oeotton ond ··"
I CA 92626
-~ .· .·
FOlll> ADS
ARE FREE
Cal:
Clerks
CIRCLE K-MARKETS
•.J ~~~NOW HIRINC
~f . CASHIERS t CLERKS
,Interviews Fridays 9-11 A.M.
. -tat 1390 North PacUlc Co~t
~Hwy., Laguna Beach (on PCH
~&Viejo)
AGES 11-14
EARN lW TO $75.00 PER WEEK
Wt now hl•t l ~ C1Pff11111S IOf fOll"I tactf
bu'ftfs to seture ruden IOf lite Ofanct tout
Daily Pilot Our crews stJrt 1t 3 30 p 111 ind
I.on u"bl 8 30 p 111 • .et~lbys On Saturdiy, we
j wort a few more hours You will e11n 111&111 trips :tnd llfllts, atona 1111111 urnrrc JOUr own 1110MJ ,
lhtfe rs no dtllvtt1nc or collection 111~Yed
" ~OU II& 111tmsted, plUse "" Mr [irl
(714) 548-7058
J(i)[)AY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
AC ROH
1 Pwtonnel
6 SIP!Wll onet
11 Vutmenl
14 Greeting
15CleenM
16 Beetle
17 Oitclosur e
19 Through •
20 Sall eupporl
21 Mob act IOn
22 Ship Mellon
24 lmege
28 Set fire to
27 Paying guest
30 Exigency
32 Pointer
33 Burgle
34 RllMI
37 lncumbrance
la Golf game
39 Locallly
40 Wool pref
4 I Lofty Ilk ..
42 Peal
43CMCeOel
45 Ultra fashion·
Ible group
•eGreekc•ty
48 A Doe
•• Rlc;hM
5 ~ Moslem judge
~Yoko -
51 Thon, lherp
CUlhng lece
80 Tchers' org ~ 61 ~ger
62 Roman VIP
Vt!(
EJld -1e
' E 4 Bowling 11'-Y
unill
f5 PIUM
DOWN
t Level up
2 Subjeel music
3 Swiss renge
4 PrN1fng device
5 In llVOI' of '
6 ·The Rein
In
7 Conveyence
II F0r11tude
9 Ktndollnp
•O Worldly
t 1 f.ti>lofts
'2 Fr~h rt\194'
•3 -name
•8 TV lube M111
•3 ThrMfotd pref .•50vef•...,,.
'II Thin n111
17 Sllllll
PREVIOUS
PUZZLE SOL YEO
30 Flabbergasts
31 Lacrosse teams
33 Hurting
35 Socc.t grHt
38 S..son
311 Ship leavers
39 Go before
41 Aroose
46 Together ..
47 Chaoson1
48 Buft and 00.
50 Proh1 s 1 Sioux Indian
53 Mine tunnel
S4 Ice houM var
55 Abylmal sa Fonner Queen
of Spatn'
~ AA Fevorible ,,---.-~, I
•a Dive s numt>e<
~e~bror l.A>IUmbo
42 Percephon
44 Pronoun
45 Gemstone 59 1n-1ew abbr
' .
14
..
tO
.. •
,,, . "' .... , ' .... ,., ..... ~, .....
714 -833-1300
8750 Menc:Mtter &Ml
BuenaP.-iC
11401 ....
®
1114 Y&IAlll IL
eomoCEI. 11
Uztff • 1 .. 1* 11'0
TOP$ 14 6~6 80
CAl» S1U 95
12000 CAP reCluchon
Affldlllt ~WI 80
m .
Bill YATES
YW-PORSCHE
' I• j 1 t ' , • ~ ' ' I'
837-4800493·4S I I
Aattt, Dta11tlt
NO CREDIT/DOWN? Take
on paymt. a get '8 1
Champ for $148/mo. IY9
rneaa&S0""'299
aaic• 13ft 1612 C:SXBRE co0PE
LOADED 111 (315237) 11111
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contrec1..Wb/Pflot ....
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of lat• model, low ml!Mge
c.d1118C9 In SOUthem
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COSTA MESA
bnnltt~ 1313 1A2MA OsEbXR
A/C, PIS. & brak-.
{325001)
17111 24 mo/24,000 ml MN
cntrc1, aub/Ptk>t ute
16401 a..ctl . Hunt eCh
&47-1707
'89 Cotwtte Stingray, T-
tope, good cond In ' out. ·Rune exit. 350 4apd.
$6325 obo, wlll acctPt
aml trade. MW5ee
COMM Ell
CHEVROLET
'\.~ H .11 t••I H' I
I I ,.., I \ \1 t " \
S46-1200
Ult
1,83 ESCORT WAOON Air, Pow. StMrlng end
btak• (33e032) .... 24 mo/24,000 rnlaerv
Contt'9Ct·1Ub/pr1or ....
Elmftfa . UEDCMn
16401 8eiCft HUnt 8ch
147-1707
·ea Muatano MW pe&nt,
tlr•. traM, eng, lmmacl
-i>P(714) sao-011 64CM 197 .,..
•
' ..
•
•
-------
TUI SOAY. SEPTLMBE~R-' 1964 ()RANGE: C 0 UN l Y r A • 1 f ()I H-1 I A .' ' ( f N 1 •,
65 ;000 attend Rea_g·an. kick~f
. ~
President opens re-election·campatgn' an~~·~~~:~edns0~~P.:~1~~rc
ith h lid 11 M I S P k wathm the rall)'s fenced grounds. 'W_ 0 a Y fa Y in i e q Uare. ar W1th another I S.000 unabll'-to get in. ~;..,_-----,:;...,.....--.....:....:....___~--.-..;.. _:.:.__,_-=----. Some of the backup was caused by
. By PIUL SNEID~RMAN · 'Roanna en ~rs of •·four More ¥ Iona lines · at a1rpon-~tyle metal
0t ... o.., ..... ,...., Years!" erected the president a he · det~tors. wl\ich "'"re used to screen
Pr'tsicknt Ronald Reagan. looking .made ta1J1~a1gn prom1~ of ~orld . aJI tho5e who entered the rally a.rca.
to kick off his faJI r~tection cam-peace and cconom1c prosperity ifhc is Ma.RY of those ~ho could no!_ get tntQ
paign before a strona.Jy supportive re~lectcd Nov. 6. Re gan also used thf'' lfally remained m. outside pa_rk
audience. found one Monday at Mile the occasion to ~b·ut an AFL-CJO &r\:a) ~nd \\'Itched tl;tt-prt~idl·n"al
Square Park in fountain Valley. t>ffiCJal's critac?sm of his tax policies •motorcade along Euclid Str,:c ·t"'
A former Irvine employee
faces charges of trying to
rip off his old company.
/A3
C.llfomla
A missing 3-year-old glrl •
has been,roynd un-
harmed. AS •
Nation
Two killers will be ex-
ecuted this week In
Florida and Louisiana un-
less appeals are granted.
/A4
The next s-pace shuttle
will becrowded -wlth a
record seven astronavts.
/AS
A Chicago printer will go
back to work as usual;
even though he's $40
ml Ilion richer after win-·
nlng the state.lottery./88
world
Rioting greets the de-
cision of South Korea's
president to visit Japan.
/A4
Mlnd&:Body
:The prcs1d nt left the count)
Monda) afternoon from the Manne
Corps Air Base in El oro. bound for
a Sttond Labor Da> rally in Non hem Cahfom1a. .
Ben Niel~. a Founuun V lie' di.) councilman · hu is also ctave an
Rcpobhcan PQli11cs, said Monda~s
gatherina at Mik Square wut one f
•tho largest political ralhe~cver held n O_ranac Count) · · -· ··r 1hink 11 wa one~ of the ·mo t
Poor habits during a third
of your llfe-whlleyou're
steeping -could hurt
your health./81
If you have vision prob-
lems, even subtle ones,
you're more than llkely to
have vision-related com-
.
Flrat Lady Nancr. Reaian and Praldent Ronald Rea.tan
wave to the crowd at the preeldent'• re-electtoo kickoff
0.-, .......... _, ....... u,e.
rally lo Fountain Vall~J. Monctay. An ·eetimated 65,90()
~pie jammed Mile square Park.
.. plaints about using a vis-
ual display termlnal./81
Sporti
Vince Ferragamo and the
Rams had a day they'd
llke to forget, as Dallas
rallied for a 20-13 victory.
/C1
Bill Barnett, a Laguna
Beach resident and
coach at Newpoc.tl'iarbor
High, ls the new nillonal
water polo coach./C1
The Angels tried to put on
a rally, but fell a game
shortat Clevetand. /C1
Bualneu
Jack Link letter credits
talks with his dad, Art, for
his business succe$s./B5
Entertainment
Bo Derek's sizzling
11Bolero" hltsthe$Cl'eenS
without a ratlng./83 ·
INDEX ·
Brf*-A8 California News A4
Cluslfled C4·8
Comic. A8
Crossword Ce
Death Not 96
Features 82
HOf'0900P9 CS
Ann Land rt B2
Natle>MJ News · A4
OpfnlOn A7
Pubfk: Not ee
Sports C1-3
TMtvlaon 03
ThMtetl ~
Weather •• World N9wt "',.
MOndalC: Reagan 'uncari~g·
~ndidates at Long Beach rally launch
~-------~ampai n. with attack on GOP incumbent ..
LONG BEACH (AP) -Along the
urban canyons of Manhattan, before
small-town Wisconsin. and in
Ronald Reaaan•s hQJnc state of
California. Walter F. Mondale has
opened the Dcmoerat • faU campaign
by attacking the president as a leader
of "uncarin~ icy indifference to
human need.•
From coast to coast on Labor Day.
Mondale and his runnina mate,
Geraldine A. Ferraro. campaigned
together for IS hours, soundin&
themes they hope will reverse the
pubtac opinion polls and prevent a
second Reagan term. ·
On the West Coast. Mondale was
Rrccted by two former rivals for the
Democratic presidenual nomination.
Sens. Gary Han of Colorado and
Alan Cranston ofCahfomia.
Han. who spent five months at·
tacking Mondale a the leader t1f the
old Democratic politics. pra1~ him
generously at an atrpon rall) in Long .
Beach. .
.. Wallet Mondale has courage."
said Han. wh o planned a day of
c.ampa1gnin1 for the ticket in central
Cahfomta Tuesday.
Earlier. before about 5,000 checr-
(Pleue eee llONDALE/A2)
·Drowning mars week~nd_
By TONY SAA V,EDRA
Of.,. o.itr ..........
. major incidents to spoil the laz) ·
mood of the holida).
><n apparent drowning at Crystal
Cove State Park Monday was the only
accidental death rtported in the
Orange Coast during the sunny,
threc,.da> l..abOr Oa' weekend that
attracted more than' a million sun-
bather' to area beaches. • Lif~uard alona the Orange C'oun-
tycoasthne said it was ~mooth sailing
throu&hout the weekend, with few
State and local police reported
there were no fatal traffic accidents on
Orange County frttways or Orange
Coast h1gh\\1~s.
The otherwise pcrfccl \lictkend \lias
ma~d. however b) the apparent
drowning of Corona resident Mark
Cady. 18. Cady wu pronounced dead
at 8:31 p.m. after doctors m the
emergency care unit of Hoa& Mcm-
$upervisor~ ignore -puPlic,
women·voter's' study finds · . .
-.
JEFF
ADLER
Focus ON THl NEws
"I'd love lO sec this become •
trad1tton.... icl n.laid .. You tno.-
thc Democnt can ba'e lbcir cam-
paign k1ckofT in New Yor'k with the.
labor Day Parade, and tbt
pubh n can ha' c lhcir ck.off tall)
1n,founwn Valley.~·
In 19 0, Orange, Count)' oten
P"C the Reagan the larJCSl maJonl)
of n)' county an the nauon ·
No major incident$ m~on· (Pleueeee66, /A2J
6...-y Sunny
woTds,
summer
heat
Heat can't melt
victory spirit
at Reagan rally
By PHll.SNEIDERM.AN .,. .. ,..,·""' ....
The campaign promises comma
from the presidential podium Mon-
da) at Mile Square Palk were sunny,
but the >Acathcr was just plain boL
Man)' of.t.bOIC MibO trekked to lhe
.Founwn Valley park to bear Rona&d
Reagan kick off bis fall rc-dec:lion
campa1Jf1 wisely c:arric:<f portable cook1"$ packed ~1th chilled dnn
and picnic food. Other parched
Rtapn fan:. had to wait in long lines
at the refreshment stand ntsid.c the
rally grounds.
But llC'COfding to o e pubhc safety
employee who otked lhc cvcnt. lbe
wont hncs resulted from under·
estimating the turnout. Apparently.
tbn'c were no\ enough ponab&c toilieU
to accommodate the S0.000 or mpre
J>COP-k at the pan. ·
'ou had to feel .son), too. for lh
S«rct &nice men ho •-ue
s..atang out Labor Day ht-at 10 •
suits and tics with radio plup in their
cars and ·walk1c-ia.lkics and w'b~
knoV.-s-what son of ~pon under
thnrroats.
Fire offici.al5 said they treated oruy
about 17 cases of heat exhaustion. a
modest total, considerin& the turn-
out.
till. 1'Utintain VaUe) Frrr Bat-
talion Chief Bob McVcy obilcn'cd.
.. Had thisgoncon lonaer. hlc:ethc US
(PleUe aee SUJmY I A2)
Slaying
prQtieil.
byHB .
police
ER
-
. .
MONDALE SAYS REAGAN •uNC~RING' ••• homAl
pundit thau > we arc 01ng to lose,
they arc "'rona. The people know
"'hat's JOina on and we arc soina to vin t.•
Mondale and ferraro' camp ian
day was marred by lo1A. turnout for a
Labor Day parade in New York. and
by a late arrival and a faulty micro·
Festival, we would ha\e had to get out e\•eryone atlfndina the rally. A 45·
water cannoQs" to cool J)('Ople off. minute wait to get in· was not
Overall, a pleasant hoh<fay picnic uncommon.
.atmosphere prevailed. Along wuh ice y end ors· hiked up ahd down the
chest , many of those at the rally lines. sclhna Amcncan flags -SI for
bro.u&ht blankets and lawn chairs small ones, $3 for larger ones.
• • P~t!~" ~:8!w~or bou~ 4,ooO
waucd four hours for the two con·
d1dates to 1mvc. As Mondale spo~C:
hts microphone ~ent out inter·
mtttently, and a hsten~r in the
audience fell 111 and ttquirtd emera·
ency medical treatment.
In New York, Mondale an~ Fer•
raro marched at the head of the
parade, but a relatiye handful of-early.
nstrs turned out at 9 a.m. to watch the
Democratic ticket march to ether
down Fifth A venue.
5 a a
Fair skies with patchy clotids
Loulto1Uf • t2 ..
l.Ul>boQ 1t 11
Mlmfll\ I 91 ,.
MJamj IMtiOll . ., 11
MlfNIU N 79 " .... ,,. u ..
~-ville " u
lffwt~ IT 11'
IW#'YOftl to ...
• Hotlotk,Vt ., u
Olda.l\om1 Cny 11 70
Omella n II
~111\do 00 " 1111'1 Sl'.)(lnQI 1111 n
"'1hdelph•• IO tO
~ 11 .. ··~~ If .. ,. ..... '13 61,
P°"6nO.Ot, 12 60
PtO\'ldenOI " 61
Tide•
.. .
:;:rc,ty .. ot ,, ..
~ .. •2 .
~ 11 61
8.clfam.nlO .. " StLoult .. 'l'3 ..... 11 ... ~Tll'l'pe 13 ,.. ~
Seit •Cllv " IO .• ~"' ~. : .. which. proved handy beca"!se the "Got the winnina colors here -
bleachers at the park filled qu1ckly. _,,, h' d blue .. barked one
Cam~ian aides said the {>arade
was left on the schedule despite the
likelihood of a small crowd so that
Mbodalc'score support in the North-
est and amona union mtmbers would
be emphasized on the traditio111l
kickoff day for lb~ fall cam~ian. T004Y 120hm t·l21>m ~ g 811<ll11VtOll. Vt ..... &t o ,.,oo a111MtoNo .. :-ts. . _. . .
" Tberallygatcswerctoopenat8:30 '"'4, w tte .. an · -
a.m .• but Rca~n fans conv~rged on saJPu~!~rs could not have known
the park even ~arti~r· BS' 8.45 a.m. that ~x full offree fla~ was waiting
ton-. slo~·movmg)anes. b.ad ~ohned., JI.the other side of the me&al 'tichmd the ·handful of airport-type •0~ m~tal detectors set up t.o S(reen (~leue~~LY/~S).
It was a different story in Wiscon·
sin, where cheerinJ and clapping
residents of Merrill lined Main Street
five deep as Mondale and Ferraro
rode by in an open l 9S8 Ford Fa1rlane
convertible under sunny skies. -.
•
MURDER INVESTIGATED IN BB ••• From Al ·
Lakewood, works in HuntiQgton
·Beach-. Ford had been shot once in the
head, police said. He died at West·
minster Community· Hospital early
today after failing to respond to life
""suppprt systetns-, Walker Said.
. · The. murder weapon hasn't been
· located and.investigators apparently
have not established a motive. There
were no powder burns on t.he body
and police don't believe the wound
was self-inflicted.
.. This happened in a very unusual
location and we can't irnagine why
anyone would be there," Walker said
today. 1•:rhere was absolutely nothing
there and all the industrial buildi..!!P
(in the area) were closed."
The victim was found by Officer
Bob Clemons who was making a
routine patrol of the industrial area in
the Edinger-Bolsa area in \he western
part of Huntington Beach al>Qut 11
p.m. Monday.
Clemons saw the victim's Ford
Escort car was parked· on the wrong
side of Connector Lane near En&}neer
Drive with it's lights shining and
motor running. .
"There were some siiros 'of life,"
. 65,000ATREAGANRALLY ...
P'r0mAl
Walker said. "He was still bleeding. Jt
was just a matter of minutes mer the
shooting."
The victim was treated by para-
medics and rushed to the hospital
where he was pronounced dead at
l :56 a.m. today.
Walker said police arc planning to
interview the victim's wife; Anita, 25,
and fnends and acquaintances to try
to establish a motive.
Ford has no r~ord of criminal
activity with local police, according
to Walker. Results of an autopsy arc
pending.·
day's rally, accord mg to police and that the stale of the nation h~s 105.4 milHon in July.
fire officials. . improved since the Carter-Mondale Bulan Associated Pressreport said
Orange County and Fountain Val-administration ended. almost four the pfesidenl did not mention thatthe
ley firefighters treated two peo{>le years ago. unemployment rate is 7.5 percent,
wuh angina attacks and another WJth ":foday," the president sa'd. "of all just 0 ~fa point lower than the 7.6
a cut finger. The three victJrns all · · d · 1 · f h percent rate Reagan denounced as .a
required hospital treatment.-Seven-~~rl~aJ%n~n~~~sn~o 0 1 ~ "depression" when he launched his
teen cases of heat exhaustion were economic growth; one of the lowe 1980 campaign.
reported but they required only first inflation rates -only one-third o Donahue and other AFL-CIO of-
aid at the park. what it was four years ago; the fastest ficials argue that, total employment Ora~e County Sheriffs LL Wil-rateofjobcreation-61/imillionjobs numbers notwithstanding, workers
liam Miller said he was not aware of in the last 19 months; and the largest are worse off than they were four
any arrests made in connection with increase in l'eal, after-tax personal years ago because of the loss of well·
the rally. But he said some of his income smee 1973." • paying jobs in beavy manufactunng
-deputies estimated the crowd to be H-accused a hi·gh-ranki·ng AC'T during the long recession of 1981-82. even larger than the president an-... .-~
nounced. CIO leader of"distortmg the facts" in And they note that the roster of
--o-ne or our men in a helicopter charging that Reagan1s tax policies unemployed totaled 8.5 m.ill.ion !n
estimated 80,000 to 100,000 people, arc beneficial to the nch and that July, compared to J.8 rhtll1on 1n
and somebody on the ground said uncmploycment is growing worse. Reagan's first month in office.
50,000 to 60,000 so l guess 1'11 say Although Reagan did not identify In his speech. the 'president also
tfiere were 50,000 to 100,000 people the labor leader by name, depu~y responded to Donohue's criticism by
there ... Miller said. · press secretary Pete Roussel sa1~ asking, .. When he acc~sed me of
Fountain Valley Sgt. Larry Reagan had add~ th"e attack to his . plotting to destroy the unions-does
Griswold said only one mmor traffic s~h aft.er sccmg AFL-CIO SC"C· he know I'm.the only oneevel' to hold
accident occurred on the major ~etary:lreasurerThomas R. Donahue this office who Isa lifetime member of
streets surroundi.pg the rally. mtery1.ewed on the C-Span cable an AfL.CIO Wlion? I W8$ six times
Al thou~ there .,.llS heavy (raffic telev151on network '?vcr the. week~nd. president of my union and led it in the
congestion during th~ morning hours The labor fe~e.raW>n, which chums first strike it ever called." as people arrived for the rally. about 13 m1llton members. has
Griswold said the streets were ba~k to endorsed Mondale. Reagan was referring to his days as
normaltraffic levels just an hour after "lt's hard for me to understand a Hollywood actor, when he headed
the rally concluded. bow someone in his pQSitiQn could be the Screen Actors Guild.· .
"They got out a lot quicker than as unknowin~ as he seemed to be At the · Mile ~uare rally, the
they. got in," Gnswold said ... I don't about the nallonal employment situ-president also outhned "four great
have any explanation for it." ation," the president said. Reagan goats to build our tomorrow." ·
At the ralJy, Reagan offered an added, "He (Donahue) might lixe to These included sustained econ-
upbeat message, pledging continued know that there are more people omic growth without inflation. as-
pcace and prosperity if he is elected to employed today than ever in the surance that the nation will remain
a second term. He did not mention nation's history." ·•forever prepared for peace." and
bis opponent, former Vice President Total employment hit a record commitments to '.'rich traditional
Walter Mondale, by name, but argued 105.7 million in June. but fell off to -varu~nctmchartmgnew frontiers.
"'
c • .,,., .
Wll*HOAY Clllf'lttlon,S C ..... ,low Ut. m 0 1 ~IQll,W v
::o.llJll a 27 1 m • J Cltwtolte.N C io-1 oe p In 2 7 Cheyefln9,
etcond 1110" • T oe 1> "' s 1 cnoceoo a.in ,." tOC11y at 1 11 p.f!I ,,_ Clnclootll
Wt0ntt01y et e,.a 1 m ind .. 11 eg•n =:: 8 e ll~Mpm -· · MOOf'I ru .. tOdly II 4 11 I> m . Nit II Columbul,011 1 02 PJ'n and r!Mt ega111 Weclnetclay ti Concord.NH 5 00 pm • o.fla•fl Worth Dayton QtnY« •
Dee MOl1141f Temperatures o.trCN• OulUlll
HI L • ~I PllO
.. 0 t vanlVflle
15 ~~ ,~.
. 111 .. 31 Fi.g111n .. 7' 0ftnd~• 11 eo O!Mt Ftllt
W .80 HartfOrd 71 41 H...,,_
13 70 .. HOllOl\lto 04 70 Houeton
•• •2 ·lndltM.4)0!1• "• tl eo ~ICll-Mt • 91 ' 112 J&tlllOtlllllle
74 50 Jun.tu ts 7• • IWIMt C11y
82, et Lit V-o•
73 50 Utti. "°'* 11 M l.OtA~
100 H
70 53 71 •• es ea 73 ...
.. &2 73 '41 •2 , ..
71 .. 92 10 t3 ... N , 70 •• •1 71 .,
.. t7 t1 70 II 70
SI 52 .. OT
92 87 -54 30
11 SURF REPORT
awi Diego If 11. San franci.co ... .. Seti Ju111,P.fl .. H
8t8ttMll'lt ~= 5' Sta11te ..
'"''~ ti .,
tloUX llllt n · 11 Spoktnt 11 •T Syr.-• 12 ...
TOl>tk1 7e ..
l11Q911. 92 70 TulM 75 72
Wlllllf\Olon u M
WIOlllll IO 70 Wllk•·••r•. 71 u Wllmlnglon .0. 92
-
75 60 ...... ___ &..;..~----I --------~----
: U Extended 79 13
tO 73 oe eo
92 ea
' 78 39 83 49
71 SI .,. 65
Early morning crash
Paramedic. aid one of the vtctlma of an
early-morntna car accident in Hanttn_atoii
Beach. A pofice apokeaman Baa. 2:1f. of
Ai'cadla, wu drlvtn' weatboand on Warn·
er A venue when he collided at St. Geor1e
Lane with a car clrlven-b.1 Ann Hoffman, 24, of Costa Mesa. The Injured, beelde BU
aaa 1·2 • ,
1
I
1.
1·2
1•2 8.....it dlf«uon· IOU"'-t
eONOmON ,..,
felt ,..,
fllr ,..,
• lair
flit
and Hoffman In tbe l:l: 11 a.m. accident
were: lllchael BoUmann. a .26·year-otd·
Fountain Valley re.tclent and pueeqer ~
Bu' car; Brtan Bellino, 21, of· l»&lm Sp~a. who wu alA In Baa' car; and ·
Debbie Kello&, of Coeta Mesa. a ·toammate
of Ann Roffman.
Reagan's Mile Squa~e rally
bargain for GOP at $60, 000
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
OI tM OlllJ l'llot It.II
want to have their turnout compared
to that of the Reagan raUy. .
When all the bills are totaled, SUPERVISORS R~PPED IN STUDY Monday's Mile Square Park rally may
• • • • end up costing President Reagan's re-From Al clecti<'n committee $60.000. That's
grounds, and airport-type metal de-
tector had to be set up to screen those
anendine the rally. He said that if the planners bad
known how many people would try to
attend the Labor Day event, they
would have=tnlarged the fenced rally
area and set up more metal detector
'
public hearings arc not open forums,
but rather legal formali.tJes which do
"1\0rinfluence policy."
•Votes arc seldom e}\plained.
"Citizens attending board meet10gs
for the first time are iJ.Stounded at the
speed with which agenda Items are
decided."
tbe report "assumptions" tlfat were not be tarried on .the consent calen-about St a head for everyone who
unsubstantiated by any scientific dar. attended the Labor Day rally in mean~"I sent them a letter asking •That rules regarding public hear-Fountain Valley.
about their methodol~.,but th~ ings should be widely available and But Orange County Supervisor
never r ponded," he said. routinely enforced. Bruce Nestande, who provided the
In addition, Nestande said. Reagan
supporters used telephones, hand-
outs, mailers and advertisements to
alert county resident to the rally. Still:
the campaign planners were \tn·
prepared for the deluge.
"I would say the crowd response
was-beyond anyone's expectations."
he said.
entrances. _
The Reagan-Bush 'S4 committee is •
expected to reimbuse several govern·
mentagencies for expenses associated
with the rally.
•Supervisors react emotionally to
testimony rather than listening and
weighmg 1he ev idence. "Speakers
who express views shared .bY the
supervisors. or those with whom they
can 1dent1fv. are commended and
their statements are accepted without
question Speakers who are con-
sidered opponents are cross-exam-
ined or lectured by supervisors." -
However. supervisors hold quite a
dlfferent view ofbotlt tlle report an
how they are percei ved by the public.
"They made their statement. I
vigorously disagree with 1t." said
Supervisor Bruce Nestande "Slam-
ming it (the public heanng process.)
the way they did was a gross misdeed
to educattng the pubhc "
Superv1~or Roger Stanton labeled
The two board members also · bel' v1 th R indicated they feel they are respon-•That 50 percent of all board c;ost estimate, " es e e-
sive to the public and said their office meetings should ~ held, at night to pu~~~~an~Jeot !:Sar~~i~man of the
doors always are open to consti-allow grcate~ part1c1pat1on by the event. which drew what he called a
tuents. working pubhc. Al~" agend~s should record turnout for an Orange County In recommending that the board be posted for pubhc ins~uon at all 1.t. 1 11 bli l.b . d . h II ~ d po I tea ra y. adopt more than nine major changes pu c t ranes an city a s aroun "No question. ll was a bargain."
in the public heanng process, the county. Nestande said the day after about
Podolak urged .supervisors to give •T.hat the board should es~ab1ish a 65,000 flocked to the county park to
citizens "respect. courtesy and the Jb-~1nute ora'I c_om,municat1ons see Reagan kick off his campaign.
opportunity to make their pitch" pen~ at the beginning of each He pointed out that the president's
without being interrupted. "We can meet.mg to allow any member of the appearance was covered by local and
only s~ggest-{'hange if they want J>Ul:>he to address the-board-en-any-national tele;lt· ion news crews. Buy. effective citizen participation.:' she matter · fo 1· · A• d• u-ld h"" -.in_~t t ose wno wl'Slf tO speilc. at a 1ng tune-r t11CCll a "WO u~C-sa~;,,ong changes suggested in the public .heanng be permitted to phone ~~~n~~~~e ~fJ~ than the ~all} s
league repo.rt 11re: in their names to .the clerk of. the Nestandc said the rolJfs planners
•That cntena should be developed board before a meeting 3:0d tha1 sign-oad to work extremely quickly to tum
for selecting items to be placed on the ~P cards would be. available at the an open, weed-filled park area into
consent calendar. which an tum um~ of the mcc:tina. to prec.lude fenced rally grounds equipped with
should be published to keep the having to stand in line at rryu:ro-bleachers a 'Speakers''platform al'\J:i a
public informed. Certain budget phone.s. Names would be calle~ in the ress platform. Power and phone
·items and· matters of policy shoutd order in which they were received. Rnes also had to be connected on the
The supervisor said a cautious
prediction of30,000 people was made
by the rally planners, who feared 1t
could look like a failure if just 20,000
attended.
As 1t turned out, approximately
50,000 were admitted to the fenced
rally area and perhaps 15.000 were
turned away. at the metaJ detector
entry points.
Nestande said another 10,000
people •~ffl were-turned-away-at
parking lot entrances' because there
was no more room.
The supervisor said one of those
tUTned away was his own son Brian,
who arrived late, hoping Just to hear
the president's speech.
Nestande said the success of Mon-
daf s rally may actually have hurt
Mile Square's chances for hosting
future political events. The super-
visor said other candidates ma} not
Fountain Valley police Capt. Bill
DiNisi said his department would bill
the committee roughly Sl,SOO .for
police costs. Fountain Valley officers ·
handled traffic control around the
park. ,
The city's public works dcpanment
will seek about $1 ,000 for placement
and removal of street bamers and
temporary no-parking signs. accord· i~g to Wayt'e Osborne, public works ducctor.---___ ,......
The re-election committee had
alrudy deposited $2,83'4 with the
county to cover park permits,
POrtablt rest rooms, ranger expenses,
speed bumps and fencing, according
to Bob Burk. the county's manager of
public property permits.
Lt. Richard Olson said the county
Sheriffs Department would not seek
any reimbursement for Jaw enforce·
ment at the park duri~ the rally.
Just ca11 ·
642;_6086
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ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
H. L. Schw•rtz" Ill
Publ c;her
Ro1emary Churchman
Corirrr llN
Stephen F. Carazo
Production
--tAannger
Donald L. WllUam1
Circulation ..
.. Manager•
•
Circulation 714/142-4333
Claultted advertlalng 714/142·5871
All other department• M2-4321
MAIN OFFICE
JJO Wm Blt'.$1 CO&l.t Mftl CA r
MA 100-tM 8o• l!i&Q CCIII !hta CA 9l'tl2
._ VOL. n, NO. 248
From A·--
p.m. that a swimmer had been pulled was otherwise calm, and that tn·
from the water. eluded the one to three-foot waves
Rogaenbuck said Cndy was. ap. • that frustrated holiday surfers .
parcntly swimming with a fncnd. l 9· High tcm~raturcs. ranged irrto the
)'C&t·old Ro> Brown of R1vers1de. 90s Monday nd forcc~sters predict
and was returnina to the sho.rc when the heat wa~e will conflnuc through
he ~_a.an to founder. The hf<JUard Wednosday W\th early mornma low
Slat IOT'IS had closed about 30 m IO uteS. cloud 81 vmg way lO cleat SXICUtarca
carher at:t.hc beach between < orona bcac.:hc where highs will hover
dcl Mar and Laguna ~ach. around the 80s. ·unny slues are
n au top y 1s pending todete1 mine forecast inland. 4Nlth highs an the low
the exact. cause of death. N<? funht<r 10 mid·90 . • anformat1on was a~a1labk this morn-
ing ••
• .Lif.ctu.:mh Along other Orange
Coas1 -b<''1chcs reponrd tlk w1.:cKcnd
Tin)· waves, wuh v.ater
temperature of70 degree \\C:rc al$<>
rc1><>ncd thi~ momUlg. prompt1na
one lifeguard to say, "It hke bath·
water out the~ " •
About 26S.9&l bathr-rs 'i ltCd Or angc Coast beaches on ·Labor Pa)'.
n on1cl an Monda" ·s D~1J~ Pilot The visitor b~akdo n MQnda for m1~1tknt1ficd a tlsta Mesa Ul) area beachc wa ~ Hunlln ton tatc,
Council cnnd1Jatc. 1 he rnrl"l'C t namC' 36.000. Huntington Ctty.; 4S,OOO.
Correction
·I fary I lombucJ.le " · 8olsa Chica. 42,600 Cn tal Co~
12,300; 0 Newpon°Corona 100,000;
-and 40.000 Lquna.
Only • about .00 boats otT Los
An&eles and Orange counties fi~ed
help dunng the three-day holiday. the
Coast Guard said
On th~ roadways, there were nult
traffic death$ for lo\ Ansclcs and
Orange counttes m the fil"5t 60 hours
of the holiday weekend, accord in& to
Assoc1ated Pre~ ttpon . No f'tttWay
deaths wett tet>Qrted in Ora.-
County, how~v-er. ~
Drunken driVln' arrnu for the two
counaics totaled S 9, about J ~f'(Cnl
· ahead of the total for the same ~iOd
la t year, the hiahway patrol t11d.
Locally. police and CHP officials
ttpcncd about I 3S'armts ford1h·1n
under the influence ofltcohol. About
4S amst were made by city pbli1
dcp:u1mcnts around lhc ONn C I
l
----TUI ';()l\Y ~EPTFMOfA l 1'1P..1 OHAN(,f LOlJNIY CALlfOHNIA ;', Lt~~r·,
arts -Sa .. :·es an
Otto -n·. 1 .
I
Coast
A former lrvlne employee
faces charges of trying to
• rip off his old company.
/A3
Caltfomla
A missing 3-year-old glrl
has been found un-
harmedJ A5
Nation
Two killers will be ex-
ecuted this week In
Florida and Louisiana un-
less appeals are granted.
/A4
The next space shuttle·
wlll be crowded -with a
record seven a~tronauts.
/AS
A Chicago printer wlll go
back to work as usual,
even though he's $40
milllon richer after win-
ning the sfate lottery./86
World ·
Rioting greets the de-
t:1$1on of South Korea's
president to visit Japan. •
/A4 •
Minda Body
Poor habits during a third
-of your life -while you're
steeping -could hurt
your health./81
If you have vision prob-
lems. even subtle ones,
you're more than likely to
have vision-related com-
plaints about using a vls-
ual display termlnal./81
Sports
Vince Ferragamo and the
Rams had a day they'd
lll<etoforget, as Dallg.s
rallied for a 20-13 victory.
/C1
Biii Barnett, a Laguna
Beach resident and
coach at Newport Harbor
High, ls the new natlonal
wat.er polo coach./C1 ·
The Angels tried to put on
a rally, but feJI a game
short at Clevelanct. /C1
Baalneu
Jack Link letter credits
talks with his dad, Art, for
his business success./85
:->:~·:·:·:,·:~·:·:·:":·:-:.:.!-:·:-:.:·~x-:-:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:. .
--4-_
Flrat ~dy Nancy Re.can and Praldent Ronald R~ ·
wave to the crowd at the president•• re-election kickoff ·
.. " .
/ o.IJ ........ ..,~u.-
rally ln Fountain Valley llonclay. An eetlmaied 85,000
~ple jammed lllle Square Park. ·
·55, 000. attend Reagan kickoff
"
Years!" JTCCled the president as he
made campaign promi~s of world President opens re-election campaign
with holiday rally inMile Square Park · peace and economic prosperit)' ifhc is
re-elected No". 6. Reagan also used
the occasion to rebut an AFL-CIO
paign before a strongly supponive official's cnuc1sm .of his tax policies
audience. found one Monday at Mile and his record on unemploymcnL
.
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Ol .. 0.-, .... IW
President Ronald Reagan, looking
to kick off his faJJ rc-clccuon cam-
Square Park in Fountain Valley. An estimated 50,000 people were
Roaring cheers of "Four More •within the rally's fenced grounds,
with another 15,000 unable to get in.
Some of the backup ~'l.S caused by
long lines at airport-St}le meta(
detectors, which were used to screen
all those who entered the rally area .
Many of those who could not get into
the rally remained in outside park
areas and watched the presidential
· (Pleue eee 65,000/ A.2)
Ra11y was like a sunily holiday picnic . ~
By pmr; SNEJDEllMAN
Of .. Oelfr ........
c campaign promises coming
from ihe presidential podium Mon·
day at Mile Square Park were sunny.·
but the weather was just plain hot.
Many of those who trekked to the
Fountain Valley park to hear Ronald
Reapn kick off his fall ~-election
campaign wisely carried po114ble
coolers ~eked with chilled drinks
and picni~ food. Other parched
Reagan fans had to wait In Iona lin
at the ref1'C$hment $lands inside the
rally arounds.
But accordina to one pubhc safety
employee who worked the cvcnt.'tbc
worst lines resulted from under·
cst1maung the turnout. Apparently,
there were not enough portable toilets
to accommodate the 50.000 or more
people at the park.
modest total, cons1denn1 the turn-
out ·
Sull. Fountain Valle) Fire Bat·
talion Chief Bob McVey obscl""ed,
"Had this gone on longcr. likc the US
Fcsuval, we would have had to get out
w.atcr cannons" to cool people off.· You had t<? feel sorry. too. for. the , Overall, a pleasant hohday picnic
Secret Scl'Vlcc men who WC,!'C atmosphere prevailed. Alona w1th ice
sw.catang out t~e La~r Day heat t_n chests, many of those at the rally
suits and ues w1~h rad1~ plugs in their brou&ht blankets and~ lawn cbairs
ears and ¥r"allc1c·talktcs and who-. which pro\'cd band)' b«ausc the kn~ws.-what son of weapons under bleachers at the park filled quicldy.
their coats, The rally gates were to open at 8:30
Fire officials said they lrcated. only a.m .• but Rcapn fans converlCd on
about ) 7 cases of heat cx.haustton. a the park even earlier. By 8:4'3 , a.m.
long. sJow-mov1ng lanes had formed
behind the handful of atn>Qn·t) pc
metal detc(tors set up to sc~n
cvel)one attending the rail}. A •>-
minute w11it to , gel in "" not
uncommon. ~
Vendors biked up and down the
lanes. sclhn,g ._mencan flags -SI for
small ones. $3 for IM&er ones
.. Got the "1nmna colors here -
red, 11.hne and blue,·· barlcd one
salcsma.Q. Purch~rs could not ha\e known
that a box full offrcc nap was wa.1una
on the other SJde of the meta)
(Pleue ... RALLY I AS) Entertainment
BQ Derek's sizzling ~?t~~~f~:!!~T~~-ee-ns ....... :Supervisors ignore public,
s:<;:.:v:-:-:-:·:-:·:..:•!•!•:•:•!•!•!·!·:·:·:·:•:.X~:.:;:::•:· JEFF
ADLER
Bridge
C8'1fornla News
c1 ... 1fled
Cornlea
CrOllWOf'd
DMth NotleeS
F.-tur• Horoecope
Ann Landet9
NatlOnal Newt
Opinion •
Publtc Notices
Sports
T.-vtllOn
ThMter1
WMther
Wortd Ntwl
• J
..
A8
~· C•-e
A8 cs
86
82 cs
82
A4
A.7
B6
C1-3
B3
83
A2
A4
women voters' ·study finds
Re~lt is unsubstantiate • a disservice
.to pu lie education, sup rvlsors claim
'\
al
id rd
f ....
Fo cus ON THE Nr~s
-. . ;.· ... !t '· .. '" .
Police discover
bodyjust minutes
after shooting
By ROBERT BAR.UR
OfMl90.-, ........
. . ..
Detccti\CS today arc probina \he
my'1erious )hootina dca\h of a 31-
)ear-old auto parts saJeunan who was
found Jying in the street in a darkened
Jnd loOC1J.1ndlistrial section of Hun1-
incton Beach with liis car's cn&ine
running and head.liahts shinina.
Lt. Jim Wilker-said IM victim,
idcnufied as Bart'} Alan Ford of
Lakrwood. ~orb in HuntiDllOa
Beach. Ford had been 5hot once an the
head. police said. He died at Wcst-
(Pl---llVRD&ll/A2)
Teen:.
... drowns
at Crystal
Cove
One death mars
hOiiday ·weekend ··
in Orange County
By TONY SAAVEDRA
.Of .............
An apparent dtowrun, at Cryml
Co'c State Park on Monday was tbr
only accidental fatahty reported dur-•
1na the sunny. \.bttie-da) Labor Day
•1eekend that attracted more than a
million sunbathers to Oranat Coat
beaches. •
Mark Cad), I I, of Corona JWU
pronounced dead at 8:31 p.m. after
doctors in lhe cmcraency care unit of
Hoag Memorial Hospital worked tD
vain for oearl> 90 minutes to .rcsusoi·
talc him. · ·
Cad) was transported by helicopter
to lhe Newport Beach: bospil&I from
Crystal Cove, where lifeauards, Or-
anae County paramedics and some
beachaocrs had applied
cardiopulmonary resuscitation to the
teen-ager. · ··
Jack Roggcnbuck.. lifeguard supcr-
(Pleue eee TltM/A2)
Reagan
'uncaring,'
Mondale
ch~ges ·
LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP) -
Alona the urban can)ons of Man-
hattan. before small-town Wisconsin,
and in Ronald Reagan's bomestatcof
Califorrua. Waltu F-M-Onda.lc bas
opened the Democrats' fall campaign
b) attacking the "f'Sidcnt as a lcaQa:
of .. uncan'.'f.. icy ·tnd1ffercooe to
human nttd. •
From coa t to coast on Labor Day.
Mondale and his· running mate.
Geraldine A. Ferraro. campaigned
together for l 5 hours, soundin
themes th('} hope .. ,u rc"-crsc the
pubhc opinion polls and prevent a
S«Ond Rc..-pn term.
the We t CoasL Monda.Jc .-
1rccted bv tv.o former rivals for ~
Democraiic prc.s1dcntial nomination,
n . Gary Han of Colorado and
(Pleue eee llOKDALS/A.2)
AFSOB ·
suspec.ted
in NB·
blaze
'
,
... .
VESTIGATED IN BB •••
MONDALE SAYS ~AGAN 'UNCARING' •••
FrOmAl ~
Alan Crnn ton of California.
. .
Hart, who spent five months at-tackina Mondale as the leader of the
old Democratic politics, praised him
generou:.ly at in airport rally in Long
Beach. • • .
"Walter Mo ndale has courage,"
said Hart,· v.ho pi.nnetl a day of ca~pai~ina for the ticket in 'central
Cahfom11 Tuesday. .
Earlier, befori about 5,000 ch~r-
m1 supporters m Merrill, Wis., (pop.
. 9,502) Mondale recalled that the 1,te
radio commentator H.V. Kalten-
bom, a native ofMemll, had reported
Harry S. Truman's defeat premature-
ly in the 1948 presidential clectton.
"l loved H.V. K.altenborn." S&Jd
Mond le. ''but he was wron1-Th~ ·raro marched at the he d of the
pundits that SI) we arc goina to lose, parade. but relativehandfuJ of early
they arc wrong. The people know risers turned out at 9 a.rn. to watch the
whdt's goin• on and we are &oing to Dcmocrauc ticket march t ether
win it." down Fift_h Av~nue.
Mondale and Fcrtlro's campaian Campaign aides said .the parade
day was marred by low tllfl\out for a ~as .lcf\ on the schedule desp1Je the Ltbof Day ~de in New York, and "hkchhood of a ~mall crowd so that
by a late arrhal and a faulty micro-Mondale·s core support m the North-
phone tn Long Beach. est and among union members would
There the crowd of •taut .000 be emphasized on the ttadiuonal
waited four hours for the two can-kickoff day for the faJI ca~pai~.
didates to arrive. Mon poke, . It was a differen.t story an Wiscon-
his mtcrophone went ou\ inter-sin, where checnnJ and clappmg
mittcntly, and a listener 1n the residents of Merrill hned Mam Street
audience fell ilJ and required cmerg-five deep as Mondale and Ferraro
ency medical treatment. rode by in an open 1958 For~ Fairlane
In New York, Mondale 8fld Fer-convertible undcrsuony skies.
65,000 AT REAGAN RALLY •..
Jl'nimAl '
motorcade along Euclid Street.
n ·e president left the county
Monday afternoon from the Manne
Corps Air Base an El Toro, bound for
--al«"OftdLabor 0a)' rally in Northern
California.
Ben Nielsen, a Fountain Valley cit}
councilman who is also active in
Republican pohucs. said Monday's
gathering at Mlle Square was one of
the largest pohucal rallies ever held tn
Ora.n&e County.
"I think it was one of the most
spectaeuJar days in Fountain Valley's
history," Nielsen said. "I think it
went super. It was unfortunate,
though, that there were a few mmor
snap in getting people in.··
He said Monday's crowd exceeded
the 30,000 who pthcrcd to hear
former President GeraJd Ford speak
at Mite Square m 1976. Reagan spoke
at Mile Square to a smaller audience
when he was campaigning for the
presidency m 1980.
"I'd love to sec-um become a
trad1non," J\1elsen said "You kno-w.
the Democrats can have their cam-
. paign kickoff m New York with the
Labor Day Parade. and the Rt-
publicans can have their kickoff rail)
m·Fountain ValJey " '
In 1980. Orange Count) voters
gave the Reagan the la~cst ma.Joht>
of any count} an the nauon.
' No major modents marred Mon-
day's rally according to pohcc and
fire officials •
Orange C'ouflt)' and Fountain Val-
ley firefighters treated two people
with angina attacks and another with
a cut finger. The three victtms all
required hospital treatment. Seven-
teen cases of heat exhaustion were
reported but they required 9nly first
aid at the p3rk.
OranJ.C County Shenfl's Lt. Wil-
liam Miller said he was not aware of
any arrests made an connecllon with
the rally. But he said some of his
deputies c~tunatcd the crowd to be
even larger than tbe president an-
nounced
"One of our men in a helicopter about 13 malhon members. has
estimated 80,000 to 100.000 people. endorsed Mond;!lc.
and somebody on the ground said .. Ifs hard for me to understand
S0,000 to 60,000 so J guess I'll say how.someone 1n his poSition could be
there were 50,000 to J 00.000 people as unknowinJ as be seemed to be
there ... Miller said, . -ebout the nauonaJ employment situ·
Fountain Valley s,t. Larry ation~· the president sat~. Reagan
Gnswotd said only one manor traffic added, "He (Donahue) might hk.c ta
accident occurred on the major know that there are more people
·streets surrounding .the rally · employed today than ever 10 the
AJtho~ there was heavy traffic nation's h1story." .
COn&C'$UOn during the morning hours Total cmplo)ment h1t a record
as people arrived for the rally, 105. 7 million in June, but fell off to
Griswold said the streets were back to I OS.4 million m July.
normal traffic levels just an hour after But an Associated Press report said
the rally concluded. the presidebt dad not mention that the
"They got out a lot quicker than ~nemployment rate is 7.5 percent.
they got in," Griswold said. "I don'i jUSt 0 of a point lower than the 7.6
have any explanatton for it." percent rate Reagan denounced as a
At the rally, Reagan offered an "de8rcssion" when he launched his
upbeat message, pledging continued I 98 campaign.
peace and prosperity ifhe h elected to Donahue and other AFL-ClO of-
a second term. He dtd not rhcotJon ficaals argue that. total employmen1
his opponent, former Vice President numbers notwJtbstanding. workers
Walter Mondale, by name, but argued arc worse off than the) ~ere four
that the state of the nation has years ago because of the loss of well-
improved since lhe CC\,rter-Mondale paying JObs m lleavy mamafaauriPg
administration ended almost four dunng the long recession of 1981-82.
years ago. · . And the)' note t~t the roster of
"Todav." the president said. "of all u mplo)ed l otaled 8:5 million in
the maJor industrial nauons of the July, compared to 7.8 million in
world. Arlienca bas the strongest Reapn's first month Jn office.
economic growth: one of the lowest In his speech. the president also •
mflation rates -only one-third of responded to Oonohue's cnttc1sm by
what tt was four years ago. the fastest ~king, "When be accused me of
rate of JOb creation -61/2 mallton JObs plotting to destroy the unions -does
m the last 19 months: and the largest he know I'm the only one ever to hold
mcrcasc tn real. after-tax personaJ this office who is a lifetime member of
income since I 973 " an AFL-CIO union? l was six times
He accused' a h1gh-rankinJ AFL-pres1dcntofmyunaon and led it in the
CIO leaderof"d1stort1ng the facts .. in fir~t strike it ever called."
chaJiiog that Reagan ·s-tax policies Reagan was referring to has days as
arc' bencficiaJ to· the rich and that a Hollywood actor, when he headed
uncmployement is growing worse. the Screen Actors Guild.
Although Reapn did not identify At the Mile ~uare rally. the
the labor leader .by name, deputy president also outhncd .. four great
press secretary Pete Roussel said g~als to build our tomorrow."
Reagan had added the attack to his These included sustamcd econ-
spcccb after seeing AFL-ClO sec-omic irowth without innation, a~
retary-trcasurer Thomas R. Donahue surancc that the nation will remam
interviewed on the C-Span cable "forever prepared for peace," and
telcvisJOn network over the weekend. commitments to "rich trad1ttonal
The labor federation, which claims values" anOio chart.mg new frontiers
SUPERVISORS RAPPED IN STUDY •••
From Al
pubhc heanngs are not open forums.
but rather legaJ formalities which do
not influence pohc) "
•Votes are seldom cxplamed
"C1t1zcns attending board mecttng.s
for the first time are astounded at the
speed with which agenda items arc
decided"
•Supervisors react emotionally to
testimony rather than listentng and
we1ghmg the evidence. "Speakers
who express views shared by the
supervisors. or those with whom the)'
can 1dcnt1fy, arc commended and
their statements arc accepted without
q_uestton. S2Cakers who arc con-
sidered opponents are cross-exam-
ined or lectured by supervisors."
Ho"'cver. u~n 1&0rs hold quite a
different view of both the report and
how they are percca\ed by the public.
"They made their statement. I
Vigorously disagree •with it." said
Supervisor Bruce Nestande. "Slam-
ming it (the public hcanng process)
the w~y,they did was a gross misdeed
to edu?atin& the public ..
Supcn 1sor Roger 'itanton labeled
' Just Call '
642-6086
the report "assumptions" that were
unsubstantiated b:r any scienufic
means. "l sent them a letter ask.mg
about their methodolOf)'. but they
never responded.'' he said
The two board members also.
indicated the) feel they are respon-
sive to the pubhc and said their office
doors always are open to constl·
tuents.
In recommending that the board
adopt more than nine major changes
1n the pubhc hearin& process.
Podolak urged supervisors to give
Cltn:cns "respect. courtesy and the
opportunit~ to make their _pitch"
without being interrupted. "We can
only suggest change 1f they want
cffccu ve citiz.cn partlClpauon." sbe
said.
Among changec; suggested 1n the
league repon. are:
•That critcna should be developed
for selecttng items to be placed on the
consent calendar. which 10 tum
should be published to keep the
pubhc mformed. Certain budget
~terns and matters of pohcy should
not be carried on the consent calen-
dar.
•That rules regarding public hcar-
inas should be widely available and
routinely enforced.
· •That 50 per.cent of all board
mceungs should be held at night to
allow greater participation by the
working public. Also, agendas should
be posted for public inspection at all
public tibranes and city halls around
the county.
•That the board should establish a
30-minute oral commun1cat1ons
_period at the begmning of each
meeting toaJTOw any member oTilie
public to address the board on any
matter.
•That those who wash to speak 3l a
public hcanna be permitted to phone
an their names to the clerk of the·
board before a meeting and that sagn-
up cards would be available at the
tame of the eeting to preclude
hav stand in line at micro-
p ones Names would be called in the
o e 1 ch they were received
Wbu do you like about tbe Daily PUot? Whal don't yoo Uke? Call tbe
number at left and your mess11e wlll be recorded, transcribed and delivered
to Ute appropriate editor.
Thuame 24-bour answerlng servicem&)lb e UJtdto_record letters 10 tbe
editor on any topic. Contributors to our Letters column mHt lnclude their
name and telephone number for verification. No clrculactoo calls, please.
Tell us what's on your mind.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
H. l . Schwartz Ill
Publisher
ClrculeUon
TelephonH
Rosemary Churchm•n
C ·I r
St hen F. 'Carazo Donald L. Wllllam•
C1rcu1atton ~ Product n
Mnn.!Qer M .. nag r
VOL. T.f, HO. 241
•
. -•
•
a
Fa r skies w·th p8.fchy c
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1' M 14
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a.ct AINl!IO 86 .,
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St ~•flft'INI 13 78
Galll.al<. Cit)' 11 60
SMAntonio .,,
~ 11 "' ... ..
Stn.NanP A II ,.
S1 Mat• M
BeeUlt 73 ..
::,..~ 91 IT
13 67
~-77 47
8"'.-82 ...
T~' • 1' ..
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flllle 71 ·72
W~Oft " ..
WICNU. IO 10
WI -a.re 71 17
WllmlngtOl'l.De 12 .. 74 Ml
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7J 60 71 M
100 61 N 62 M 17
H.17
64 30 :' SURF REPORT ~~-"'_.,._,_~
\
alU t.2
1 ' ' 1 ,
1·2
M ...... dlnlcllOl'I toutl'l-1
CC*DITION I~
lilt
la!• fw fair
lalr ,.,
TEEN DROWNS AT CRYSTAL COVE •••
From Al
visor for the state beaches. said rescue High temperatures ranged into the workc~ were notified around 6:30 90s.
p.m. that a swimmer had been paJJed Early morning low clouds Wednes-
from the water. · day will give way to clear skies at area
Roggenbuck said Cady was ap-beaches. where highs will hover
patently swimmin& with a friend, 19-arounct the 80s. Sunny skies are
year-old Roy Brown of Riverside, forecast inland, with hiahs in the low
and was returning to the shore when to mid-90s. ~~
fie began to founder. The lifeguard Scattered afternoon and evenmg
stauons had closed about 30 minutes thundershowers will hit the moun-
earhcr at the beach between Corona · tains and deserts. Mountam high~
dcl Mar and Laguna Beach. Wednesday will reach 88 after over-
An autopsy 1s pendmg todetermine night tows from 45 to 65. In th~
ah• cu~ 'a1Hit ~f·4N&h.r No-f..ri~e~H ~iftlet-he-~.
!nformat1on was available this mom-Tiny waves, with wa_ter '"t · temperatures of70 degrcss, were ilso
ifegl!ards along other Orange reported this morning, prompting Coa~t beaches reported the wttkcnd one lifeguard to uy. "It's lik'e bath-
wu otherw1~ calm. and that in-water out there." .
eluded the I-to 3-foot waves that About 275,900 bathers visited Or·
frustrated holiday surfer . angc Coast beaches on labor Day.
.
ARSON SUSPECTED IN NB •••
From Al
Stephens. It took 20 firefighters about
I 5 minutes to control the blaze.
Newport Beach Fire Department
Paramedic Paul Schneider strained
his neck wh1le'fightang the blaze and
was 1reated at Hoag Memonal Hospi-
tal, tn Newport Beach. for the 1pjury.
Stephens said. He was later released
an satisfactory cond1tton
A renter, Larry Backus, 43, was
living '1n the home when tbc fire
started. He left the home just mo-
ments before the fire was discovered
by a neighbor. Stephens \aid.
The blaze apparently began at two
or possibly three different points 1n
the home. Stephens said. One fire
broke out 1n a uulity room attached to
the kitchen and a second one started
an the garage. on the other side of the
hoµse . · ·
"Th as as definitely not an accidental
fire. from everything we've seen so
far." Stephens said. "There was
nothing an either area that would have
caused a fire -no clectn~I winni,
no gasoline."
This fire was unrelated to a recent
blaze on Dorothy Lane, a fire depart·
ment spokeswoman said. The earlier
fire may have been caused by de-
tenorating attic tnsulatJon, fire in·
VCSt!&8tOr ·
Stephens said there was no ins~ta
uon in the attic of the Commodore
Road home. The manner by which
the fires were started has not ycJ been
determined.
OBIT UARIES
---~-----------
Clara Spaulding
memorial service
set Wednesday
Memorial services for Clara Annet-
ta paulding, a member of the Zonta
Club of Newport Harbor and former
owner of Spautdina's J~welers on
Balboa hland, are scheduled for
Wednesday at 3:l0 pm. at theZonta ·
Club
Mrs. Spaulding died Sept. I at
Glendale Ho pital. She was 87.
Born in York Center, Ohio, on Oct.
17. 1896, Mrs. 'pauldina wu a
i_e"elcr for ~O years. he sold the.
Balboa (5land tore, l'>till call d
Spallld1n1' , 15 )ears ago. ·-
She issurvivcd by her son, Dr.John
p uld1na, of Glendale: herd ughter. Mary nn Teasdale, of Idaho. nd
two btother . -
The memon I service ""111 be held
at the 7.ont Club, 2101 ISth t., in
cwwrt ch. pm tc 1n1crment
will l kc place at .Fai(hB\'Cn Mcm·
on 1 P rk 1n n1a JU .
The visitor breakdown Monday for
area beaches was: Huntington State,
36,000; Huntington City, 45,000~
Bolsa Chica, 42,600; Crystal Cove,
12.300; Newport-Corona 100.000;
and 40,000 Laiuna.
Only about 400 boats off Los
Angeles and Orange counties needed
help dunng the three-day holiday, the
Coast Guard said. ,
On the roadways, there were nine
traffic deaths in Los Angeles County
in the first 60 hours of the hohday
weekend. according to Assoetatcd
Press reports.
Drunken driving arrests forthe two
counttes totaled 579, about l percent
ahead of the total for the same period
last )Car. the highway patrol said.
Locally, police reP<?11cd about 4S
arrests for drunken driving;
me
...,,_.,......,..._.K..._
FlreQ&laten attack a bl&U from aboYe and below llondaJ
lD lfewportlle&cb •
$(
.