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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-09-10 - Orange Coast PilotI ~ .. .. Forecaata on A2 Ex-Cuban diplomat urges revolution against Castro y TONY SAAV DRA lllllOlitJ""euff An tJt.Cuoon d1plom t am- ;pnsoncd in that 1 land country 'for ·more th n 20 )ears for oppo ina dictator F1dt I Castro urged political exiles m the Unit- ed Stale$ on Sunday to ri fanning the flames ofa rcvolutton that arc brewing in Cuba. .. People are at the Point of ~Jb'ation;-Evcrybody (there) ir aaamst the system. We hould bC prepared to back that upri ing." said Dr. Andre VarP,S Gomez, .~ . on of 26 Cuban ~heal _J!rts- oners rougJit to lhcu;s. iliis year by the Rev JcsscJ~son. Varga Gomez was applauded nd hailed as a hero unday at A }>re conference hosted by the Junta Patriotic:a Cubana (the Cuban Patriot Council) at the Newport.er Hotel in Ncwp<)n Bctlch. While b01llcd as a pres e<>n· ferenoc,jt was more of a rally.The estimated SO 1udience members were mostly Cuben·Americans who enthu iastically embraced Varaas Gomez-. cry for unn1. MOP{Cu1iin rtceaom fijli ' QJ>tt'lt.1111 out of lhll country Varps Gomez also called on the Uml.cd tatcs to pro~ade , miliwy and financial aia to antJ- Castro aucmllas ()nee the prcd1c .. tcd revolution bes.ins. . That aid would violate a so. calJcd •JtCCmcnt between fonner Pre idcnt John F. Kennedy a Soviet leadtr Nikill Kbrvshdiev made durina the mimic crisis of 1962. Varps Gomez clp&ained (P,Jeue eee DIPLOMAT/ A2) COAST 101.1101 MONDA Y 5 EPTEMBER 10 1984 ORANGE COUNTY CALIFORNIA -is CENTS Cout Senior citizens partici- pate In their own Olym- plcsat Orange Coast College./ A3 A 17-year-old girl from Fountain Valley was raped In a bank parking lot./A3 California An earthquake measured at 6.4 on the Richter Scale rattles San Fran- cisco./ AS Police are trying to find out why two tots were left In a car to die./ AS A convicted murderer goes to the electric chair still proclaiming his Inno- cence./ AS President Reagan and Walter Mondale clash on taxes and the federal _ deflclt./M World Two men have been killed by octopuses off New Zealand./ A4 Biiiy Graham begins a tour of Russia./ A4 ., ;:~:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:::;:;:;:.:;:~::::::::::::::::: .. Featurea Famlly seeks to restore the respectablllty of Its name -Hookers./82 Sporta The Rama got tired of the boos Sunday, and did something about It. /C1 Fountain Valley Hlgh's Barons remain as the Dally Piiot's No. 1 prep football team In Orange County./C1 John McEnroe Is still the king of tennis foltowlng Sunday's victory at the U.S. Open./C1 Entertainment Tom Jones gave his female tans a thrill at Costa Mesa's Pacific Amphltheatre./83 --- INDEX Bridge • Bulletin Board auaineu Callfornla Newa EM A3 B5 A4 Classified C5-7 Com lea . EM Crossword C7 Death Notlc8s 04 Features 81·2 Help Yourself 82 Hor~ cs Ann~• .92 MutuaJ Fund• B5 NatlonaJ Newa A4 Opinion AO ~=· 81 A3 PubUc Not ~ Sportt C1-4 StOCk Marketa B TeleVt on 83 ThMtera 83 w .. th« A2 World News A4 .. . • Business,:civic. leader J. Robert Fluor dead Newport industrialist was leading . ··u·s such a deep loss lo the community," Irvine Ma~or David Sills said toda)' ... It's I.bat an industrialist of his' stature is so active in so man)' communi~ afWrs for sucll a IOrlj tune. He :was a 31cry important part. not just oflr:vinc. bul of the entire county. in politiC5 and as a philanthropist." county philanthropist, humanitarian Deir .... ,......, ....... ~ Flai• at Fluor Corp. beadqu.arten ln Intne. were at tiilf mut today-in memory of the company'• cbairm.an, John Robert Fluor, lDMt. wbo died Sunday. BJ PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of .. Dlllr,....... • Orange County business and com- munity leaders are mourning the loss ofJ. Robert Auor, who died Sunday in his Corona del Mar home after a yearlong battle wtth cancer. Fluor, chairman and chief executive officer of the Irvine-based Auor Corp., was 62. Anno.ancement of his death was made by David S. TapP&D Jr., president and chief opcrauna officer of the worldwide' en&ineerina, con- struction and natural resources com- pany. .. Althouah not totally uncxpcct~, •since his condition was first diqnosed last year, the 1<>'5 of Bob Auor is a tragic one for all of ui -bis family, friends, fellow directors, and the 32,000 Auor emplo)ccs throU&fl- Sehool -bells ringing again· Ftr8t day starts off smoothly for students, teachers By KAREN E. u.E1N Of .. Dlilr ........ Orange Coast children packed their books, boarded buses and fought uomachs full ofbutterllics this rnom- ingas the first day of the public sCbool year dawned in mbst local districts. Cloudy skies prevailed over this · morning's franuc preparations, mercifully coohog classrooms that are not air-conditioned. and early- momina rePorts from school officials indicated that the first day went smoothly in most places. .. It's been wonderful, it's so quiet, .. said Chery! Norton, public infor- mation officer for the Fountain Valley School District, whi<:h oper- ates elementary schools in Fountain On. e ·aead, 9 hurt---,~~~.andasmallpartofHuntil'\llOn Norton said 6.300 Fountain Valley e b h e e d youths were stancd up to start school In . · eac IQ.Cl ents today. The clistnc•·s nev.cst addition. Fulton Middle School, opened without incident., Norton said. By ROBERT BARUR Of .. Dllr ........ One man dro~ned. another was knifed whale playing touch footbaJI, a snorkeler accidentally stiot himself with a pearaunandafourth man was seriously burned when he fell into a fire rina in a series of incidences at Oranae Coast beaches over the week- end. · Frank Silva. SO. of Garden Grove apparently dived under a wave south of!M Hunt1naton Beach pier shonJy after l p.m. Sunday and became diroriented. Authorities said Silva (Pl•ee .ee UACIDtS/ A2) Enrollment fisures were not im- mediately available this morning for the Huntington Beach Union Hi&h School District. But Lyn Henderson. district administrative assistant. said everything was J.Oina well. "Kids arc smtlina. things arc quiet (Pleue eee 8CBOOL/A2) Skin color becomes.issue in Dlack inan 's muider t-ti~·-a-·1 .. out th~ wortd -. ho will mouro him as an outstandins l~der and frien~" Tappan sa.ad. The corporation•s board wilJ mtt1 Tuesday .. to activate the company"s management succession plan," a ooms;:r spokesman said. Auor, who been undcraoing treatment for a malipian t chest tumor for the pa.st year, bad a major role in scttina up the succession plan. the spokes- man said. Flags flew at half-mast today in front on tbc company's headquartcn just off the San Diego Freeway. Auor cmplo)ccs were told thi momina that the funeral woUJd be a private service for family mcmbcfs. A tor· poate spokesman said the death "cast a pall over the orpnization bcausc be was very well-liked and respected." Auor, once a hcaV¥ smo~. was toldoftbcchesttwnormAugust 19 3 while be1ng ttcatCOfor a persistent case of broachitis. company spokes.- man James Rollans said last year. .. Nobody knows at this time what will happen." Fluor said in a state- ment is.sued at this time a y~ aao ... I wasn't plannina to retire before, and rm Dot planning to retire DOW. I coWd be here three years from now and I could be bcrc I 0 years from oow," be said. But tie' aaniiricd that be did cut back on his extensive charity ort bcciusc of his illness. Auor, whose lradenw'k wu a 00.. (Pleue ._ FUJOR/ A2) .............................. Barbara Ne.t.on comforta Iler ala-year-old eon, O.Yicl. u be ~to •tart ecbool tllla morntnc at K••eersl ..... taq _,scllool ln eo.ta lleu.. . STM lhllll - NEWS BACKGROUND 3 killed in ctasll on PCB ' Part Y cloudy, continued warm - CoNr1NuEu S roR1Es THREE· KILI;ED IN C~~H.· .. . . - From Al The -tnen were pronoUDCICd dead at the of the :15 Un. dan Jun qsi of tbc Anaheim Bridle near the bordeT bet~ Huotinatoo and Seal Beecb . The accic:knt oc:curttd an front of the U.S. Naval Wnpons Station just •-nt of Seal Beach Boulevard. . The~ ~-ere identified u Deborah Slemmons. 20: Diane Druck.rn', 2 Jj, and Dianne Sm a ts 20. · ~ Onh&i U>uncy Cororior\ office wd Slemmons •as hstcCS as the drim. Seal Beach Pohce wd Murph~ has been annted on thn=c counts of vehicular m nslau bter. In-noa re se any dtuuls loda) on ~pron the hl\'tdc1tnnincd • fo.rph>" conditton u .. her that the OMuud woman. had c.on-famil> '!t been-told about aa • sumed alcohol just pnor to the thing yet:• collision but u '& not clear hcther The sttttcb of tµgb~a) here lhe she was into1icattd codmt ocai?Tfd 1s not lishltd and I k 0 C t fi fjgh'e... oo center d1\ider, saaJ Stach 1 to0 ~fl&C oun > ire t '"' polaoc id. ab0utfheminuiestocu1Mu11>byfree ''There.hue been man) nccidcnts • from thetW'lst.cd wrec~ofher 1971 there,. c:'Ounty fire spokesman Dcn- Rambler which v1nually wrapped .. -pis hell us. addina; ''rrberc'• been nself aroun~ the smalfer car, a_fCOrd..: • deei> concern from the Jtn~ publk · ma. to police. he .. -as flown b) there about afuu stretch of h1shw >·" bclicop~ lO lhe Founta.10 Vi.11~ Police in Seal Beach did -1 Communn\ H~pital trauma center. immediately have information on: A bospn.al ' pokes.,,oman 11touJd number of aCCldcnu in the are.a. DIPLOMAT URGES REVOLT .•. Prom Al ~ q:rced lO m110\'C thC" missile bases and rou&Jtl) l 7 ,000 Soviel UOC>pl from Cub&, but warned api.nst &n) U S.-becked io\"UlOn of that C'OWl tr). • . is that v.c aJwa)'• 5pcn in Spanish - -.e arc speakins to ourselves;· said Vargas Gomez. "We must speak to t.bcm io En&lish about the dtfficulues an Cuba.. the suffennp of our pe<>plc. ·• V~ Gomez. a soft-spoken, un- assumuia man of 60 years, ma) be best able to carry that message of suffering. of despa.lt for the countr) known as motherland to an estimated 80.000 Cuban exiles in Los Angeles. given the death sentence, wbicb was later commuted to 30 )can in pn$011. He was freed in 1982. but v.asn't aUo"'cd to leave the country and JOin bis wife Mana T~ a professor of hurnan1uesat St. Thomas liru,enU) in Miami. \ Temperatures .. Le ,, .. tl .. •2 eo 12 '1 '2 '4 1' 70 17 T• 71 '° a 10 au '2 " IO f1 ,, i .. Extended CoNTINUEO S10R1Es l=-- -------- 11 11 ra ,. 11 n .. IO '°' n n·• .. •ft IO IO .. 1f .. 71 .... • 71 n ... 11 ., t7 ,. 11 '° 71 4' 1•, •• .... .. ,. 17 1' IO f? ,. n 71 .. ft • Ho ~er. lbe ex.prisoner said ~ belie\ ed the R~n Adaria.istrabon ruopuzcs the C.asuo ttSJme as t.M • doortra)' to communwn lD Central America and as cons:equentJ) more f.a\orable to9o'll'd hclpana to o'-er- throw Cube·s commUll.lSt IO''ttn- mcnL Diplomatic relations bef1tt"ttn the Urtittd Stal.CS and Cuba -.'CR SC\ered in 1961. 1'0 )Ul'S afttt the nse of Casuo. Rdations were partially re- slOred in 197'. For 20 )earl and seven months he was impnsoned in Cuba. after being annted in 1962 u an eocm) "of the government. His ~numon v.ith his v.1fe 1roni- call) came later throuib "what man~ Cuban-Amcncans \,Cw as a pohucal ploy by Rev. Jackson and Castro. Varps Gomez said that he also "1ewed with distaste the mecuna of the t\l.O polmcal leaders. FLUOR.DIES, COUNTY MOURNS ••• Va.rps Gomez said ht is hoptful the t:.S will support Cuban freedom fl,lbtttS as much as 1t has supported anb-<X>mmurust forces in N1carasua and El Salvador. But first, Cuban ciules in the United States must unite and form a strona poliocal pressutt JfOup to lobby Conpns for that military aid. he said. .. We arc only little groups, each one of them with our own truth. We must unify the commun1t) to bu1l<1 a peat IJ"OUP of pttSSUre,• said Va.tJll Gomez. who bas tra~cled the countt)' sa.nce bis return to the United States. spea.kina to Cuban-American voups. He blamed the groups for the lack of suppon shown by an American public that is unaware, unfamiliar and thus uncaring about Cuba's . t. h~o~rfawt_ ThcmainProb1cm Born in Havana, the natioo·s capital, Va.rps Gomez was Cuba·s diplomat to the L natcd Nations v.hcn Castro rose to po"er m 1959. Nouc- ing a ~communist undercurrent" in the revolution-tom counlr) he ~­ nounced his pollt1on and moved to Miami. Aa. in 1960. Then he founded an anu-Castro radio propam and JOtned the Revol- uuonary Democrauc Front. the avil arm of the .. Bay of P115 .. ptOJect. a CIA-backed uivasion of Cuba in 1961 usma exiles. Va.rps Gomez said he wanted t0 "Join the fig.hons .. to be ~uncbed try tht April 17 invasion. so he "cnt to Cuba via -underground.. corutec- llons.. When the attack failed miserabl)". V &')35 fled for sanctuary in the E.cuadonan Embassy. He soon grew restless and left the safety of the embassy in an attempt to esc.apt to the United States. "That was a mi we," he said.: Varps·Gomez C!lUlb~ 1.ned and .. We cannot understand how he (Jackson) can 10 to Cuba, sec a t)raot like Fadel C..stro and embrace him.·· wd Varps Gomez, 1ament1na that 1 000 of the estimated I 0.000 polill· cal pnsontrs still jailed 10· Castro·s pnsons arc lonitime inmates Vargas Gomez knows their ph&ht. No visitors. No lettcn. Little. if an), medical catt. Prisonus att confined to their cells all day. wearina ooh their underwear. He said outside the pnson. the conditions arc not much better ill a counl.J) where the $0\cmment has turned the popuW:e into liars. "You can imagine what is Ilic suuatton of human life m the countl') b~ this picture of life for po11t1c:al pnsoncrs," he said. ··Cuba 1s a country harrasscd. Terrorism is im- posed on them (Cubans) psychologi- cally that the) have to appcarpubhcl~ as baclOna the communist re11me ... to be prctendina to be what one 1s not." SKIN COLOR BECOMES TRIAL ISSUE •.. Prom Al white junes while blacks stand less than a I percent chance of being jud&ed by a jUt) that includes even onr black. Deputy D1stnct Attorney Pat Geary wd be did not obJ«t to Gnmes' mot.Joa ,to inlcn'1e'lli ad- dmon.al jurors but did not consider the matter to be of gteat s1gn1ficance. As it now stands. the tria.l likcl) .,,,u not start unul November -more than a )Car after Hazboun was stabbed and a purse. a ca;h box and a handful of Jewelry were ta.ken from her shop Gnmes said he has ne,·cr had a client who 1s so .. out of character~ with the cnme he is accused of commjuns,. He described Pt'ttus as a ''cburcb-sorng man" who twice was voted most popular student at his hi&h scbool m Cmetnnati. l>auJ Bcrat'r. the former pnnc1pal of Marina High School in Huntinaton Beach where Pettus was bricfl) erirol- led last year, was tlatterin& in bis descriptJoo of the tecn-aier He rtcalled Pettus as a bri&ht, hard- workina student who never missed class. Berger said Pettus came to talk wt th him when the teen-ager decided to dtopoutofhi&h school to return to his hometown. ihat was JUSt three da>' before the murder. Grimes said be has OC\et b«n clear whether Pettus really intended to return to Otuo or whether he JUSt wanted to be free and clear of school in order to find a JOb. He said Pettus told him he had stopped by Somewhere 1n Tune the day before Huboun was killed and talked to the shopkceptr about work. He said Pettus may have left his name Just Call 642-($.086 Dall~ Piiot Oettvery It ouarantwd and phone number ~1th ha. ttsembled Pettus. hanging around lhe But then: 1s the another view. . small complex. One high s.cbool ~ua.inW>oc 8 G lai h" "laun" -" Pettus asked her 1 she would ut nmes c ms is dimt ma) ~ ~ ha"c been snared in the murder ca~' ~willing lo join him iQ pullina $0mc because of mistaken identity Other robberies. She reported!)' called blacks had been at the sboppina p0licc when she beard the )Oun& shop center dunn\, the davs before the o•ocr had been killed. ;; 'A police dettctt\e stated be found murder and cttus ma) ha\·e been SC'oeral items of jev.clry believed to confused for one of them. Grimes have belonged to Hazboun in Pettus' nwnwns. bedroom. v.hich apparently was Jn an unusual mo\·e Gnmes re- searched tbrtt times before the ~ ce1ved permission to hide his chent covcry was made. while the star witness tesufied dunng The evidence apinst Pettus was the prehmana.ry hcarina. When n was dccm~wei&hty cnouah durina a his tum to question the wttneu. preli ry examination last Fcbru-Gnmes peppered her with questions 31) t a municipal court judJC about the ex.act skln color. hair ordered the teen-ager to stand tnaJ for te:tture and faet.al features of the man murder. The JUdar also kept bail at she had seen in the shop. $250.000 - a figure neither Pettus Then. before Pettus was revealed to nor bis famil y could meet. the court, Grimes asked the woman 1f Pettus bas been put at the scene of there was anyone in'the audience v.ho the crime by a customer of the looked like the man she had seen. clothina shop who said she saw him TbouJh Pettus actuall) was out of inside the M:COnd-Ooor boutique the view lD the prisoner docket. sc'·cral of same day Hazboun died. • · Pettus' relatives were sutcd in the The woman said she qamc face-to-. audience. face WJth the man and hid no doubts Gearv protested the tactic and the that it was Pettus. witnesses at fint SC'Cmed confused. The customer. who took the stand After a lcn~) pause. the judge said durin&a prelimi~ hearina.. said she he was sausfied the v.oman did not beard muffied whamptrs mside the sec the man in the audience. shop but was humed out by the man Gnmes later said he believed the before she could 1nvcst1plC. w1tne1s was about to sin&)c someone ··~ -d~ ... she quoted iht outoftheaudieneebcf<>1t hewas~t man u tellina her. off. Geary, though, said the laW}er She testified that the man smiled was takina advantaie of the court and .sently pushed her from the store. which had J!ven the attorney per- clos1na the door after her. latt'T' in the mission to hide his client while askina day when the woman returned to the the witness to descnbe the man she shop, he Slid she found a "closed" had seen in the shop. .- sign hanama on the door. Cheap tnck or not, the courtroom Others at the hoppma center also maneuver may ~nend thinas to said they saw a black man. who come in Pcnu~ tnal. ORANGE COASl Daily Pilat H. L. Schwartz Ill Publisher C lrcula1ku\ 714/M2'""333 craealfled advertlalno 71•1"42-5'11 All 01~ departmenl• M2-4321 MAIN OFFICE ,,,,,. w aa,s r' •• Roaemary Churchman Con roller lltphen F. C1razo Produc:t1on • M n ger Donald l. Wllllama C11cu aflon Manng r l ,_ VO n,HO.t.54 ' l'r.omAl •tie. wa.s known tor his sof\ but direct spealOnf manner. He had an inter- nauona ~utation as a businessman but he often told emplo)cet .. j~t call me Bob:' socieay. as ellcmplified by has active involvement in so many orpniza· tions such as the Boy Scouts, the United Way and other bUDt&nitarian endcavon ..• Both personally and profC'Slionally. I v.i.U miss him very much, IS will ail who knew hlin." Outside the business. bis· charity work was also'widcly rccosn1zed. Auor is survived b> his wife, the ln 1976, be helped the Los AnJCles former Lillian i . Breaux; two sons, chapter of the United Way_ r-aise a ho '--JI d p J record $32 million, and his com-Jo Ro~rt an 'etcr ames • hil thro · th A Auor; his molber, Mrs. Peler E. pany s P. an PJC arm, e 1:1or Auor:. awo sisters. Margaret Ann foundauon, contnbuted S2 million Reed of Nev•port Beach and Eliza- to the drive for the Oranae County beth Louue Ta~·lor of Seattle; and Performing Ans Center dch 1 In· 1983. Fluor was fund drive SC\·en &ran 1 n. chairman for \Jle United Wa) of Fluor Corp . v.bicb -as founded by Orange Count). Fluor"s pod father John Simon ··Far mort than the monC) he's Auor, IS California's mlb WJc$1 siven toa vanetyof charitablcc,auses, publid) beld company and 1M DI· 1t was in his leadership that be reall) tion's second-Laraestenaineennaand made bis mark," ~cmtt John~n. construction company, behind lbe. president of the United Way of San Francisco-based Beeb tel Group. Oranae Count). saJd toda)'. "He was Fluor earned $1S9 million in willinJ \O (support) new and in-profits on revenues ofS7.34 bllhon in n.ovauve ideas such as tbe Jmmivant the fisc:al year that ended October and Refugee PlannlQS Center." 1982. But Johnson added, l<ffe reall> Rober\AuorwasthesonofPetctE. shied away from tak.in& crediL He Auor. the company, president didn't need the credit. He didn't want before his deatb; and the pa.nd$0n of it. He didn't lend hi1 name j ust to get the COltl_paDYS founder, John Simon .av.wds or to be honored That~s the-1-Auor. AuQr suoceedcd bis uncle, J.S. s1an of a true leader." Auor Jr., as JmSident and chief Oranet County Supervisor RaJpb exeauhe officer in March 1962 and Clarlc said toda) ... Bob Auor will be sen-ed in those positions unul Jan. 1, sadly missed in this cou1H)'. Not only 1968, when he was elected chairman ....~tteagreatindustrialist,buthehad of the board 'and chief ellecutive a biJ. heart for helpina the under· officer pri vtlqed. He was one of our area test Born Dec. 18, 1921, lD Santa Ana. citizens... be graduated from Anaheun Uruon Irvine Co. Chairman Donald L Hiab School an 1939 and attended the Bren. a tong-time f~end and busir,i~s Uruvenity of Sout!iern Califom!-a associate who 10v1ted Fluor to Join before entmna m1htar)' $ttVIOC tn the Irvine Co. board in 1982, o~ 1942. served. .. Bob Auor was a com· An Army At.r Force pilot for 3'h passionate, carin& human beina. He ) can durina World War 11. be 5:Cf¥ed was vety concerned about the beuer-two )'cars as a fint ticuten.aot 10 the ment of his community and of central Pacific tbelter. He was decor- ated with the Dminauished A yu11 Cross and Air Medal • Auor was honorary ,;ce presidenl and former chairman of the Natioo.aJ Association of Manufacturers; a board mcmbcr of the California' Canadi.an Bank: and a director of the Irvine Co., Texas Commerce Bancshares ln£.1 Pacific Mutual In- surance Co., nu,ahcs ~ft C.o .• Santa Anita ()ocrabnJ Co. and Santa Anita Realty ~nterpnsn. He served u a member and fonner · chairman of the board of trwtcn of USC, and was a member of the Business Council, the Conference Board. and 1he Bunness Round table. lo l ~ Auor was named Man of th~ Year by En&ineerina Newt--Re- cord and Most Oul1tandi~1 Chief Execuuve Officer by Financial World map.zinc. He was a member of the executive board. Boy Scouts of America, Or- i.DIC County Council. io 1981,.and received the Good Scout award from the Orange County Council in 1984. Auor v.as accepted inlO the Mili- W'Y and HospiWler Order o( Saint Lazarus of Jerusalem and was in- vested as a K.niaht of Malta by the Sovereign Military H°'pia.aller Order of St. John of Jerusalem or Rhodes and of Malta, Wcstem Asionatton. Fluor was a membcr of the Ameri- can Institute of Cbcnucal Eoaincera. American Petroleum l.nstitule. and American manaatmcnt Association. He received an honorary doctorate of laws dccree1iom the UruvetSlty of Southern c.aliforrua as well u the Asa V. c.an Achaevement Award. =79 be received the C..pL Robert liar memorial award from the Natio ForeiP.1 Trade Council for dis- tanguubed contnbutton to the ad· • vancement of Amencan trade and invcstmcoL BEACHES CROWDED OVER WEEK·END ••• From Al was unable to take care nf bimscU in the urf and had to be rescued. His friends assisted him to shore from waist-hiah water but lifeauards and paramedics were unable to restore his brcathu11 or pulst. He was P.ro- nounced dead o n arrival at Pacifica Commuruty Hospital in Huntington Beach. Silva's death is beHeved due to drowning althouiti coroner tests are ptnding, lifeguard John B rth wd today. In waters off South Laauna. mean- while:~ J.2:-.1..e&r~ld norkeler urt Lohme)'er shot himself in tbe thigh with a spear aun when stru~k by a wave Saturda)1, accordina t0 a Sheriffs Department spokesman. The viCtJm was taken by Harbor Patrol boat to Dana Point and then taken to n Clemente Hospital where he was treated and releascd,,.A pokesman said the barb from the spear did not lodac in the man's lea. In an incident at Bolsa Chica Staie Beach. a 33-)'ear-<>ld Pico Rivera man was stabbed an the thiah Saturday I menaary hoth from durin1._a football pme on the beach, a Shenff s spokesman a.a.id. The kn1fina reportedJ)· stemmed from a quarrel over the rules with a pla)er on the oppos~n1: team. aocord- UlJ to reports. The v1ctun stepped out of bounds while aoina 'after the football and felt a buminJ sensation ID his thigh. He apparently ws stabbed with a kitchen-type knife wilh a six-inch blade that hasn't been found by in vestiaa tors. Also in Huntinaton Beach. a 39-}tar~ld Hun1mg100 8cach. man suf. fered bums over a third of his body late Sunday when he apparently stumbled into a beach fire rin& filled with hot, aJowina coals, authorities reported.· Jim Monroe was rushed to the UC Irvine Bum Ward in Oranse for treatment of th1rd-dcaree bums,10 his arms, legs and stomach. said Bi~t Davis. a Huntinaton Beach Fm: ~ment spokeswoman. Monroe res><>rttdly had gone to the Huntin ton city strand earlier in the the I day Wlth a group of about a dozen frientls. DaVlS said flf'Cfi&))ters were told the man bad drunk as many u l 8 been and an unknown quantity of vodka during the day. "He'd passed out for about four houn and when he •ot up be fell onto the coals," Davis wd. Lifcauards reported larae, but not huae crowds. at local beaches where the bigh temperatUJ'C$ hit 88 dqrees at Newpon Beach and U deartts at Huntington. With Tropical Storm Marie kickina up lurf a>nditions, ""'l"e~ up tC> 10 feet were reponed in Newport Beach Sunday afternoon. But the weather for the most pan was "real bot and muaay and there were miserable conditions, accordfoa to tifeauard Crail Fanner. Altogether, more than a million· people flocked to Soulhcm California • beaches Sunday, hfmwds wd, with 900.000 11 l..o$ Anatli County beaches, l 50,000 at Ofa'nae County beaches and tbousanda more iD San Diego C9unty. : BU LLETI N BOARD -----=----~----=--=----- Norwegian: Key to peace? A syndicated noon ys there will be peace in the world when evef)onc peaks Norweg.an. Io do your p:m, or learn this language for travel or busmc:.s purpose . enroll in Norwegian rlasscsotTercd by Coaathn\' Cornl}lunity C'olle e and taught by V1vum Curus, a nat?Ve of Norway. ~he fee as S 10 for the I &.~eek beginner's clau at 6:20 p.m. Wednc~ys at E&t.anc1a High School, room 228, 2323 Placentia Ave., Costa Mesa, or tht' intermediate class, at 6:20 p.m. Mondays at Fountam Valley High Sch90t. room 12~. 178 I 6 Bu hard. Cl~ nan this week. R~ster by ptionang 54~ 7600 or s1aning tip at the first two ICSStOn . • ~ 'Domestic Violence• discussed '1The I sue of Domestic Violence·• will be discussed by Vjvan Clccak and Jan Tyler, rcpl'eicntativcs oft~ Laguna Beach Battered Woman's Shelter. on Tuesday Sep1. 11. at 8 a.m. et the breakfast mcjting oftht' Lagun& Beach ChambCr of Commerce. Tickets ~re SS. For reservations call 494-1018. Speech practice offered The Western Medical Center of Santa Ana and the Amcncan Cancer Society are ofTenng a speech practice aroup every Monday. from 11 :30 a.m. to 12:30 pm. to assist patients who have had their larynx (vocal cords) removed because of cancer. The group, which meets at Orange County Amencan Cancer Soc1etuy offices. 4030 Birch St .. Newport Beach. is open to all Laryngectomized patients and their famihes. For further anfonnaiton. call Dorothy Liff at 752-8600. Candidate forums scheduled The next two regular meetings of the Costa Mesa Civic Association will be hel<t solely for the purpose of providing City Council candidate forums. They will be held in the Columbia Room of Columbia Savings Bank. Harbor and Wilson. on Tuesday. Sept. J I and Tuesda). Oct. 9 at 7 a.m. Each candidate will be introduced and will identify and address the key issues of the race. A questton and answer period will follow. Meetings are -open to all residents of Costa Mesa. Help for singles at workshop _ "People Skills for Singles" will be presented at Santa Ana Collcie, Bristol and 17th Streets, Santa Ana, on Wednesday, Sept. 12, from 7 to IO'p.m. Phil Miller. public relations specialist, will lead the three-hour workshop which will include new skills for meeting p'eOple; body lanauage, eye contact and non· verbal communication, how to break the ice with a new acquaintance, the ri,J}ll things to say. the right way to act, and a helpful overview of single life m Orange County. Add1ttonal information and registratton details ma) be obtamed by calhna 667·3097. · · Beauty program for. &eniora Irvine Senior Center. Northwood Community. Park. 4S31 Bryan Ave .. will present "A Beautiful Mc," a proaram designed for -persons age SS and older which features free health and beauty demonstrations each month. A special demonstration b) "The Hair Depot" of Cost.a Mesa will be presented on Wednesday. Sept. 12. from 11 a.m. to noon. For more 1nformauon. call Michele Bats. 6~3889. OCC to present workshop A five-hour workshop that offers tips on how to succeed in collego will be presented at Orange Coast Collcie on Saturday. Sept. 22, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in Science Lecture Hall 2. Admission i~ $22 and tickets for the workshop arc on -sale in the 0CC ticket office in the Student Center Buildrng. Monday through Fnday. from <1'a.m. to 7 p m. For more information. call 432-5880. Free aemlnar in Fullerton Fullenon Mortgage and Escrow Co .. 905 S. Euclid St .. Fullerton, will conduct a free scmmar on Thursday. Sept. 20, at 7 p.m. The topic, 11m~ at those who arc thmkini of buying a house or rcfinancrng their present home. wtll be "The Many Ways to Finance Property." Space is limited, so call 870-4411 early for rcscrvauons Harry Yo, at left, of Taiwan competed in the 66·69 .aae bracket in the lo~ 1rl;l,· Bob Wtnao of Sauau. lea4ln& tn t They're Dot too old to go for the gold ,. --Age no barrier at senior olympic events at Orange Coast College From the Associated Press David Marcus ran cross-country for UCLA. but now that he's 15 he also runs the hurdles and won a medal m the shot put during the weekend semor olymp1cs at Oranae Coast College. "Age 1s no bamer to abihty," said Ward Blaney. , onJtnator of the games held SatU<day. Blaoey, who refuses to give his age. says: "I could not accept people saying that once you're over 50, you're onJy fit for the rocking chatT." C.H. Yang, 7l panicipated m the 5,000-mcter waJk in I 00-<icgrce heat. Chia Pao. 69, who won the 1 l~meter hurdles. pracuces m the lobb) of a Hollywood condominium complex. "If I fall down, there's no danger:· Pao said. "The whole place is carpeted .. I might get a little rug bum .... " Marcus, a retired dentist now living in Laguna Hills, ran hurdles for the first ume in two years Saturday. He fell and cut his knee in the process. But he did win the shot put medal on hts first attempt. although fle observed: "Well. there were only two guys in 11. so it would have been hard not to get a medal." · ~-----The basic age categories; broken down mto five-year increments, start at 40. but Blaney says there arc events for people as young as 20. Monday, Sept. 10 • 7:30 p.m .• Laguna Beacb Arts Comml11lon, Council Chambers, SOS Forest Ave. "You become a senior in htgh school at 18. right? .. he said. "A senior's a senior. and we decided a few years ago ifthe younger people want to take part. we'd include them, too." PoucE Loe Fountain Valley girl, 17, raped in bank parking lot A 17-ycar-old Fountain Valley Hiah School student was raped in a dC$Crtcd bank parkin& lot over the weekend. police inve tigators said todaThy. . . ..11 •• c victim reporteoiy was s1tt1ng on a block fence at the bank at 17010 Maanolia t .. crying after he had a fight with her bo}fricnd. Fountain Valley invcstiptors said. A blatk·ha1rcd man of about 19 and belie..,td to l)( of Oriental heritage approached the ~rl osten· ibly·to comfort ht'r and a kt'd if he I ency flashers were left on and no one was standing near the \Ch1~1t' when the collision occurred. No citation~ 'Were 1 ucd. 21 . 'A was ·OK.· Then he forcibly raped her. The assault took place at.>out 2 4S a.m. Saturday. . Police qid the ''ctim was taken to . fountain Valley Communit} Hospi- tal for examination. arttstcd for dnving under the U\· Oucncc ofakohol and posse ion of a conccalro deadly weapo,n in the 1600 block<>f uth Coast Mi&hv."ay Friday night and rclea'lt'd on $1.SOO bail. P'oontaln V&lley · • ' • photo, edCed oat Don Lotner of San Jaan Caplatrano in the 60-74 cateeory of the 1,600-meter ran darlnC the .entor olJlll- ...., .... ,.._.'rT ... ._ plce competition 8atarday at araa,e Cout eouece. . Corona del Mar realdenta Eleanor Lumadon and her father, Ward P'. Price, watch from the aldellnea u their frlendit co for the gold. white 1979 Camaro. Twenty cassette • • • h s 1..10 ~ fi window sm hcd Saturda) -tapes wort "" ~ to rom-&-at...._a ...... homeon the IOOOblock ofGro'e blue 19 2 Buick. ~>!ark. Lane and thie"cs reached in ick tht' ;A Fullcnon woman reported Satur-home and stoic a' ideo ttrordcr. Loss da} that someone broke into her was placed at $600. bl k 1977 Camaro Z2S. parked at • • • ZOJ!y's, 16111 Harbor Bhd. The toss A home on the 6200 block of West included terro equipment worth Oceanfront was broken into unda> S S I and $1.200 "''Orth of jc""Cln wa • P us a sea~ c~':r. stolen. Thie' cs pri~ open a door to P ibh u ina a \ledge hammer. pin entf). ~cone smashed the pol"C'Clain int.:. unnal and toilet late Saturda' in a pubhc mt room at Tomm) 's ~a t food ~t.aurant. 9124 Recreation Ctrck'. 1 he lo s was csumatcd et $1 600. a woman to the around and tole her w.hHMlutcb put$C coznainin S6.cuh--... and $6S 10 miscellaneous propen . • • • Th1c,es tole a purse from a car parled in the 6000 bloc of Elli A.' enue and tool $400 in cttdit • • • Someone stole a wall t. tt card tv.o I) m bags. shoes .and ca ~tte ta~ plus money from a 1982 Olds Cutlass parked at Brookhurst trcct and Bannin& Av· enue. • • • meone tole a cement m11cr belonaina to the ..Mola Development Company at a construction 1te at ·eo1 Chica Street and· 'amer v- t'nue. C•taMea • 10, 11984 Reagan·declares ncreasing t~ax~----e---s 'wrong answer'··- DOYLESTOWN, P. <AP) - President Rcaaan. p0und1na at Walter F •. Mondale's new plan for cunana the deficit even before its release, says raising ta~es is "an old ns>A.er ... the wrona answer" for thr :nation's economy. ·•we won't overcomr our challenges by coins bad: to tho days when the federal aovcmment kept takina more and more. knockina the I economr, riiJlt oft' its . feet in the process,. Rcapn declared Sunday in a campa1an appearance outside Phi la· delphia. . · • 1 ''Raisina taxes isan old answer." he added. "Some say it's t,bc onlv answer. I say it's the wrona answer.·' Reapn rctumtd 10 Wa hinaton folfowina his speech to the larsel> Pohsh Catholic audience attending an annual festival at Our Lad> of Czestochowa Shrine. He was rcma1n- in1 in the White House toda~ and scheduled a meetina with officuals of . the National Baptl$t Convcn11on, a • · group Mondale addrc std durina its convention Ja t week. The pre dent's speech did no\ mention the record federal deficits that have occurtC'd dunna his own term and that.Democratic chall~tr Mondale's :\ increa plan. be1na un"'eiled t-Oda)''. i de tined to redu~. Mondale contend a tax incltl~ 1s essential to reduce the deficits no matter who is elected president ne~t November. Reagan said his aoal 1 a ''h1stonc s1mplificat1on" of the tax code and moving tax rates "funher down, not up." He did not · say whether that would mun an actual reduc11on in t.u.~s. A.S' 1s his cu tom . Reagan never mentioned Mondale by name. The president new from has retreat at Camp David to the shnne an his Manne helicopter. landina onl) a few llundred yards from where he spoke. Mondale revealing budget deficit plan ., .... , .... WASHING TON (AP)-Walter F. Mondale 1s unveihng his plan 10 reduce federal budaet deficits by two- thirds through spendmJ cuts and a tax increase, and demanding that Presi- dent Reapn tell voters how he would deal with the record red ink. He was known to be co11s1denna a plan to earmark all revenue from a tax increase toward reducing the deficit. Making a aplaah · Mondale, wbo planned to disclose his deficit rcducuon plan today at a news conference m Philadelphia. repeated Sunday his charic that despite claims to the contrary. Re- apn would recommend a tax tn· crease after the 1984 presidential election. The president has denied any such plan and said he would increase taxes only as ··a last•reson... · "It's always a last resort an October and a first rtson in December.'' said Mondale. While Mondale refused to preview the details of his plan, he made it clear a Wt increase would be one element Since he began campaigning for president in Feburary 1983, Mondale has ,talked about major budaet sav- ings by cappi na the cost of health care. achieving more efficient adrnini~ tration of farm programs and holdina increases in def cose spending to between 4 and S percent. lf Mondale "'ere to achieve his aoal of e\Jtt1n1defic1ts b)' two-thirds by the end or 1988. the red ink total that year would be about $57 brlhorr. or.an the same ranae as the final year of the Carter admm1strat1on. But estimates of future deficits vary dependma on pred1ct1ons of econ- omic growth and the level of inter~t rates. The federal budget deficit reached a record S 194.S billion m the fiscal year that ended last Sept. 30. Miu K•nAa, Nancy Cobb, jumpe into tlle pool darlna a photo HMlon at the Miu Amerlca Paceant ln Atlantic Cfty, N .J., aa other atate queen• watch. .. Congress ·may boost cigarette warnings WASHINGTON (AP) -After new, rotatina waminas months of delay. legislauon to It was the first item on the agenda strengthen health warnings on as the House and Senate prepared for ciprette packs is heading for final a busy week as rcmainina days an the House action, althou&h its fate an the 1984 session were dwandhng. with Senate remains uncertain. adjournment set for Oct S The House was scheduled today to Onl)' four of the 13 appropnauons consider a bill that calls for replace-bills needed to fund the federal ment of the current warn1n1 with four government for the fiscal }Car begin· iiJlliiiiii-T 0101 Oct I have been ~1gned into law. • Conaress must take care olthcsc items. or lump the mone) into a catchall cmcrgenq spend ma ball. af It R E! 1s to avoid ~s1-elcct1on lame-duck session. · C'omphcating the chore are ma.ior deadlocks over defense spending levels and a budget blueprint. Hou~ Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr . D- Mass... and Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker. R-Tenn., planned to meet early this w~k -their second get-together on the subJCCt -to try to seek a com prom ise that would break 1hc lo&Jam . The Scnaic wu votan@ toda> on a mouon by Senate leaders 10 cut off debate on a bank deregulauon bill The legislauon would Jrant new powers to banks, including undcr- wnting municipal bonds and dealing 1n secunues. Opponenu have been fihbustcnng against 1t Great loans. Great rates. And a great $100 cash rebate if you act now! Senators arc then expected to tum 1hc1r attention to appropriations measures. First up 1s an $8.S billion military construction bill on which Senate Democrats arc expected to wage a battle over U.S funds for Ce ntral America. GREAT LOANS. It's summertime. And the livin' is ea~1er than ever with a loan from Great American. Loan~ tor can, boats, RV's, mobile homes, even airplanes. Loans tor installing pools, spas, or patios. Home improvement loans, equity loans ... most any loan you need for Great American summertime living. :········ • •••••• GREAT RATES. Phone todaya This Coupon . ••••• to discover our low rates and 8 Entitles Bearer toa affordable terms. Choose a 8 competitive, fixed-rate loan. 8 Or our new Controlled 8 ·· Variable Rate, which 8 combines the best of 8 both fixed and variable : rate plans. 8 • • • • a Phone tod , 8 Cet detail and ay. 8 fodcly~~ r df es: • • • • -· • • • • • • Cut out thi valuable I Orange Count coupon for your $100 8 (Call Coh 644-1634 cash rebate! II I 8 8 _ ect) • • • • •••••••••••• ~. .Great American First Savings Bank ,,, Die u ~"'nR' • la ~n.a Savin ' • •n Jo.aqu1n fir 1 5,..,,~vlnjl\ n i ank nt South P.uaektn• • RNru dt "''n \ • !1:1~ah Savin J • Sonnn'l.I Coon1y 110-c>ffic~ throughout C11ir0tn~ • •• : ---lUIDEA , Storms lash both coasts; Marie fades By Tbe A11oclated Prest Tropical storm Diana trudged north in the Atlanuc off Flonda's coast today, carry1na 70 mph winds, towenng waves and heavy rain. while tropical stonn Mane brouiJlt moist. cooler air to heat-stncken Southem Cahforn1a. Diana was cast of Jacksonville. Fl~ 1 early today and movana ~lo~y north parallel to the coa , · 1ne Nauonal Weather Servi~ said. Coastal residents of northeast Florida, Georgia and South .Carolina were advised to be ready to evacuate on short notice. Winds were au tina up to 30 mph alona the coast 11 JackJQnville. and and the storm also brouaht heavy rain -more than three inches in 24 hours at Jacksonville and more than four inches at Charleston. S.C. Meanwhile, tropical storm Mane remained well off the West Coast and was weakenin~ early today. althou h the moist air It ushered mland was e"pected to carry ~bowers to 'Southcm Cahfom1a later today. , The cool 1ur was welcome rchef from tr1ple-d111t temperatures that baked Southtm Califom1a an rec:ord heat over the weekend. But much of the East Coast continued 10 shiver under unnasonably chill)' 1emperaturc , with record lows set unday with 46 dca.rcc at Knoitv1lle, Tenn., and 47 at Washinaton. D.C. Heavy thunderstorms developed today over soulh<entral Iowa, with wind• of ~S mph reported near Pella. the wcath r rvke said howcr and thunderstorms were scattered over the io Valley. the real Lakes, the Mi s1s11pri Valley a~d the northern and ccntra Pl an • Fair kie prevailed over the North· ca t and Padfic orthwcst. . Today'a foream called for widely tterrd thunderstorms from the M1 " tpp1 V Ue~ to the llanuc C t, ¥t11h h ''> n1n upcc1td o~cr the uthcm 11 nuc C st tate A kw thunder1tormt. " ~ c • pcctcd to mo e thmu h. SOut~m hfom1a into lb uthcm Ptntc u l ----~-----"" -. -- NATION ""'------- --------=--~ .J I Shultz declare · Mondale's arms halt plan dangerous WA HI GTON (AP.)-S«m ry of uste George P. Shulll 61)'1 Walter F. Mondllle's propo I tor a temporary halt 1n nuclear w pons te tin&. to stt the for a ummit mectin w9uld n k a.iv1na the Soviets a mi!1tat)' ~vant • ··ro stop our own cap b11J1) to be prepared and det.cr aures ion 1.~ J.USt as reprchrn able as not be1n1 prepared to cnaaae m nqouauon .for" peace, Shullz said on Na -TV's "Meet the Press'' program Sunday. ''l don't think it isa aoOd idea to iuddcnlytum b!lck our cap b1lity to be prepared and to deter," hulti sand. Mondale, the Democratic pr~sidential hopeful, has u1d that if elccttd in November. he will favor a temporary moratorium on tcstina. while stek1na a summit mcc1ina with the ovict leadership dunng the fin{ six months of his pn"sadcncy. Auto talk• near1ng deadline DETROIT -Leu than five days \Cp3rates General Motors Corp. and the United uto Workers from their contract expiration deatiline, and both sides $8)' progre s has been 'llower than hope4 for. The union has not et a formal strik~ dudline against the giant au1om:ikcr. But cbie~UA W batJ?in~r Donald Efhlan said Sunday 1hat. ·•as far as l"m concerned. midntJht Fnday as the end o the aarecment." That's when the labor contract signed in 1982 expires. . . . ' . . Sfof:JD. 'delay• return of shuttle ~ · . · ALTUS. Okla. -The space shuttle Discovery, dela)Cd ovem1iht by Humcane Diana, continued today on its piaaybaclc crosl><ountry trip to the Kennedy Space Center an Florida. The shutife, ridina atop a Boc1n1 747, lcf\ Altus Air Poree Base at 8: IS 6DT and was scheduled to arrive at Cape Cllnaveral at 11 :4S a.m. EDT. What was supposed to be a tncf rcfuelina stop at this southwest Olclahoma air base Sunday turned into an ovcrniaht stay when Diana., 70" mph wands lashed the Florida coast with hi ah udes and wall· like waves. Discovery landed at the air base here Sunday as some 40,000 spcctatoM watched. . Feuaro denle. abortion •tatement NEW YORK -Rep Geraldine Ferraro. who takes her vice presidential campaign today on a three-day swina seeking blue<ollar and ethnic votes, says that de pite renewed cnucism from a Catholic leader she has "never made a statement relative 10 the church's tcachma on abonion." Ferraro said she 'YOuld uy to talk with New York Archbishop John J. O'Connor forclanficat1on oT his comments Sund•>· when he said the Democratic vice pres1dcn11al candidate had created an incorrect "impression" that Roman Catholic J_t~ch1ngs on abortion arc fleic.iblc. Navy planning new nuclear •ub NEW LONDON, Conn: -The Navy 1a studyina prop<>sals for a radically rcdes1ancd nuclear-powered attack submanne that will run faster, deeper and q\lieter than any ever built by a Western power. accordina 10 o published report. The SSN-21 would carry twice as many weapons as today's attack submanncs With an unspecified arsenal of torpedoes, mines and nuclear missile~. scni~r Navy officials fold The Day newspaper of New London. Navy sketches depict the SSN-21 wi.th a wide bow to accommodate increased numbers oftorpcdos and with divina planes amidships instead ofin the classic pos1t1on on the sail, the newspaper reponed Sunday. CALIFORNIA War game. In bll•terlng heat end '.fWENTYNINE PALMS Mftf'lflff-pr~ -to-ba . Southern Cahfom1a and Anzona after endina tfmr Opcra11on Gallant EaaJe '84 maneuvers with a one-hour, live.ammunition bhu·on a bhstenna hot desert bat~!efield: "We wall ~ave 90 percent of the people baclc by late tomorrow. Manne information spokesman Cat>t. Steve Little said Sunday night . For some S,000 Mannes. the five-day military exercise culminated in Sunday's ear-splitting live-fire assault on dummy ta~cts, vie"".ed from a hilltop by about 80 reponeM, government officials and m1htary officials from Jordan Egypt. Pakistan. Oman and Great Britain ' Officers return 266 Illegal alien• SANGER -A iroup of 2SS illegal aliens. seized dunng a nighttime raid of 16 bars and two homes Saturday, were expected to be back in Mexico by today as 40 bar owners and employees remain in Fresno County to face charaes stemming from lh~ r.atd. Officers .condu.ctma the raid obtained.4.S..JUTcst warrants after they said they had observed allepl acl1v1t1es in the bars. Officers also obtained search warrants for two residences -one an Fresno County and one an Dinuba -an·conncction with alle&ed bookmakana a-ctivities 1n Sanaer Four busloads of illegal aliens left Fresno County early Sunday mornina for th~ roughly seven hour tnp to the Mexican border LAX cop faked other !Jerolc•? LOS ANGELES -Police officials sa)' an officer accused of faluna discovery of a homemade bomb he planted on an Olympic bus also faked most of the com~.cndations he received dunna his police car:ccr. Officer Jimmy Pearson has a long ... h1story of s1m1lar acts to draw attention to himself,'' one detective said. Pohcc arc now even skeptical of has claim that he was shot an the hne of duty m 1978. Kn1f e wlelder gunned down ltJ Torrance TORRANCE -A bizarre dispute over finaemail clippers and car keys ended Sunday in the fatal shootana of a 32-ycar-old man who pohce say "lunged" at them with a knife an the parkana lot ofa shoppina mall. Bryant John Leadbeater of Redondo Beach was pronounced dead Sunday at Little Company of Mary Hospital at 6 p.m. af\er several pohcc opened fire m the parking lot of the Del Amo Fashion Square. "He tumed on the officers and lunged toward them," Sgt. Wally Murker s~ud "All three officers fired, and the suspect went down." WORLD ~---~ ~--- Five Iranian• granted a•ylam In Iraq BAGHDAD -Iraq has aranted ~sylum to f'ive opponenu of Jran's Islamic rca.ime -a policeman and a fam1l) of four-who hii,:cked an Iran A.ir jctlimnnd latcrrelea1Cd its l l8 passenacrs and crew mem rs unhanned. lt was\he third ume m twowcckl that Iraq, at warwath Iran for almost fouryeari has aranted asylum to Iranians who defected by airplane. Iraq &ranted asylum to a .man and woman who sei1cd an Iran Air Aubus on Aug. 28., and to two Iranian air force pilots who new their f.4 fighter 10 Jraq Au1-30. l•rael bomb• target. In Lebanon BEIRUT -Israeli Jets bombed suspected Palestinian auemlla tarscts m central Lebanon today, hours after~ .Moslem leader anno1,1nccd ~O youna Lebanese have been prepared for su1c1de attacks against fsracl's occupation force . T.he.lsr~eh c.ommand said its pilots rcponed ''accurate hits" on a three· story bu1ldin11l saud was u~ as a command post by a auerrilla aroup in the mountain town ofBhamdoun, cast of Beirut on the Beirut-Damascus h1ahway. BUly Graham open• tour ofRaNla MOS~OW (AP) -Amencan evanaeliat BillY, Graham, beginn1na a t 2- day speak1ni tour or th.e SoVle-t Union, told • Soviet official th t "pc cc will only come wncn we l(nowGod." "lam an atheist," replied Vladimir V F1t$ev d~p~ty ch11~an of the Soviet council on rcliaious affairs. But he also told the v1 1Unf Bapta t preacher that the ~orld's problems could be solved with mutua efforts toward peaceful coexistence. Graham, who arrived in Mo ·ow Sunday. wa travelina to Leninarad today, and was scheduled to lay a wreath in a cemetery there where \'icllm5 of the World War tl siege of Uninarad arc buned. .. ,,. • Gaetrtlla• clalm Salvador ma ... cre 'AN • ALV DOR -Gucmlla ympathi1cr claim they aurv1vcd an army attack on $0n'lc JOO cmlians in which children and elderly people were killed. A m1lit~ry official denied the 1ccu111ion. About tO pcoptcr·who said they were urv1vof\ rounded up by the army, d nbcd a m k I ina in I te August at the villa of El Tamanndo, 50 miles north of n lvador in nonhem Chalatcnanao province. a lonaume aocmlla u ghold near 'the Honduran border. .. .. .. '· • L.OT Monday ~ 10 _. Killer executed, denying his guilt ~ Waltl8' for rescue FlOod Ylcdma atraoded on a tiny patch of ~ land wa•e to attract attention of a p&••W. relief unit near the rillage of Ban Maen S'rtnol, Thailand. Quake rattles Sall Francisco • • • • • .. , • • • c SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A west of Eureka. stron_1 earthquake rumbled under the Two quick Jolts from the quake Pacific Ocean, 1endin1 two quick jolts were felt in San Francisco, Oakland, throu&h \he San Francisco area but Berkeley and Inverness. and the apparently not triueringa tidal wave. quake also was felt in Fon Brau. authorities said. · Reddin&, Santa Rosa and San Jose. The National Earthquake lnfor-• The earthquake did not aencrate a mation Service in Golden, Colo., said tsunami, or tidal wavc,.accord1na to the quake that struck at.about 8: 15 the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center reaistercd 6.4 on the Richter scale. No in Honolulu. damage or injuries were rcponed. The Richter scale is a measure of heavy damage; 8 1s a "great" qWlke. ca~ble of tremendous damage. The San Francisco earthquake of 1906, which occurred. before the Richter scale was devised. has been. estimated at 8.3 on the Richter scale. " Earfy Bird Dinner Specials 16.95 ,,rime Rib or Fresh Fish ''Going Bald·?'' · · ·Try This At No Risk H't>USTON . Tcus-lf tOU \C Bul. ho\\ CH }OU be SU~ What 15 symptoms of"Sebum" luur loss· 011) or actual!) callSln& I) Our hair I ., Even af vcas} forehead; dandruff'. dr) or Oily: baldness ma) '"m to .. run in the lfam- ttch} snip, and 1f )Otsr hair pulls out ily," n i• ctrtaml~ not proofohhe cause easily on top of )our head. chances art of YOUR hair lou... Man) conditions c~ccllcnt lhat you can now stop your can cautt hair loss. hair loss ..• and &fO\\ mOf'c hair .•• sn Haw loss cau~ by scbum can aho the pmaC') of )our own home. . The earthquake was centered about around motion as recorded on seis- 100 miles west of Cape Mendocino, moaraphs. 1hvery increase of one accordina to Tom McEvilly, assistant number means a tenfold increase in director of the seismoarapbic statjon magnitude. Thus a reading of 7.5 at the University of California at reflects an eanhquake 10 times Berkeley. Estimates on location of the stronger than one of 6.5. epicenter could vary up to SO miles, An earthquake of3.5 on the Richter A finn of laboratof) con5u1tants has run in )our family. and. if you wan ...._,,eloped atrcatment for "Sebum" hair until your are slid bald and loss. that has bcto so successful. thC) your hair roots are dead you arc c omrplete Dlnn~r with choice of • don t even a~ )OU to like lhetr. \\Ord for be~ood help ' n. The) mvne )OU to U) the treatment 'f 1·1 "'· L.:. f SOUP Of Sa/ad and deSSeft for 32 da)S., at their risk, and $tt for •I )'OU Sll ,_vc any tLAD Oft top O he said. scale can cause slight damaae in the The National Earthquake lnfor-local area, 4 moderate damaae. 5 mauon Service, which ts part of the considerable damage. 6 severe dam- U.S. Gcotoaical Survey, said . the-age. A 7 reading is a "major" quake was centered 160 miles south· eanhquake, capable of widespread I ~ ' ON THE PEHl"'SCJLA BALBOA )Ours.cir • )Our head, and would likt ~o stop our .. to 6 PM !'aturall). the) v.ould not offer tbrs hair lou and JtOW m<?re ban··•· now u opponunit) unless the treatment d?C ume lO do somethm& about n before l _Dip A Wiik! v.orltcd. Ho~e'-er, n 1s 1mpouibk to . ll s too late. help e\ef)one. Loctcb Laboratory ConsultantS. Inc . Police probe deaths of cllildren--i·n -·auto· .. -· ... 801 E. BALBOA 673-7726 The great majority of cases of wiU upply )Ou •1th tn:;atmcnt Cor 32 i.a---lillll-========:::::::===========::::!....1 exc~sive hair fall and baldness days ••• at tbear nsk .•• 1fyou have me · · fu stbum symptOms and are not already are e t>egmnm& and more Hy bald Just scad them the infonnauon Dear World , MY YOUNG SON starts to school this week ... It's all going to be sort of strange and new to him for awhile, and I wish you would sort of treat him gently. You see, up to now he's been king of the roost ... He'a been boss of the backyard ... His mother has always been near to soothe his wounds and repair his feelings. ·" But now things are going to he different. He's going to walk down the front steps, wave his hand, and start out on the great adventure . .. It is an adventure that might take him across continenta, acroas oceans ... It's an adventure that will probably include wars and tragedy and sorrow ... To live his life in the world he will have to live in will require faith and love and coumge. So, World, I wiah you would sort of look after him ... Take him by the hand and teach him thing• he will have to know. But do it gently, if you can. He will have to learn, I know, that all men are not juat, that all men are not true. But teach him also that for every scoundrel there ia a hero . . . that for every crooked ·J)olitican there ia a great and dedicated leader . . . Teach him that for every enemy, there is a ftiend_..;..'«==-===---------"==----= Steer him away from envy, if you can ... and teach him the cret of quiet laughter. have faith in his own ideas, even if everyone says they·are wrong ... Teach him to be gentle with gentle people and tough with tough people. Try to give my son the strength not to follow the crowd when everyone is getting on the bandwagon . . . Teach him to listen to all men-but teach him also to filter all he hears on a screen of truth and take just the good that aiphons through. Teach him, if you"CM, howtolaugh-when-he' sad ... Teach him there is no shame in tears .. . Teach him there can be glory in failure and despair in succe s. Treat him gently, World, if you can. But don't coddle him ... Be<'ause only the test of fire make fine ~teel . . . Let him have the courqe to be patient ... Let him have the patience to be brave. Let him ~be no man 'a man . . . Teach him always to have aublime faith in him~elf . . . Becalli;e then he will always have sublime faith in mankind. Thia ia quite an order, World. but ee what you can do ... He's auch a nice little fellow, my on! In chool, World, teach him it ia far more honorable to fail than to cheat ... Teach him to By DA VALENTINE HARBOR LAWN -MOUNT OLIVE rno,./ua,., and 11/,moriaf p ;/, < • CEMETERY -MAUSOLEUM -CREMATORY 1625 GISLER A VENUE COSTA ME"A 540-5554 • ,. • devloped stages of male pattern listed below. All inqwnes an answered baldness and cannot be helped. confidcnti&Hy by mail · ADV. NO OIUGATION COUPON To: Loesch Laboratory Consultants. Inc. P.O. Box 66001 3311 West Main Street Houston. Texas 77266 I am submittinJ the followma information with the undcrstandina that it wiU be kept stnctl) confident~! and that I am under no obligation whatsoc\er. · battle against high energy costs on two fronts: cash rebates and annual energy savings. (Fbr . example, a ·· hotwater-. -savmg showerh d j -- ! REAGAN & Co. ,_ ~------------ Reagan· opens . campaig~. with ·-classic themes W~SHINGTON -Everything you always loved and feared about Ronald.Recigan was on d1Splay in The. Gld\ Performer's OP.Cning foray on ·the fan campaian trail . ·Lou "' CANNON. . Taken together, his si'< SJ>C\.'Ch~ last week might be called "The Collected Works of Ronald Reagan." He talked about high technology in California and family values in Utah. turning presidential J\JSt m time to campaign staff, man}' of whose mem- pacify the busmcss community m hers, while not error-proof. arc very Chicago. Then he appeared m Wash-good at what they do. They under- ington 10 an old rolt as defender of stand the importance of tu ming out a Israel, to which Reagan pledied bl& crowd foe telcviston cameras. undyinJ support in a campaign They lnow about prov1dtn.a balloons speech as subtle as a used-car com-and backdrops and tinlc lightin~ mercial. It may be that there really is only touches that show off a 73-year-ol one Reagan speech, with infirute President to best advantage. vanations. Reagan has been deliver-Another strength 1s Reagan's vet- mg it since he sold "progress ... our eran pohucal speech wnt~r. Ken!l~th most important product" for General K.hacbigian. For all of their hom1hes, Electric in the mid-19SOs. Then, as speeches he wrote for Reagan in now, Reagan praised the country and California qualify as minor master- kn ked Th pieces of their genre. They \\ere oc government. en. as now, stuffi:.....i with histoncal nuooets and he looked ahead to a boundless future c:u oo in which ..\mencans could do any-patnot1c references that Reagan thing. loves, and they used a stiletto on Last week. at two sun-drenched Monday instead of the broadax rallies in California, Reagan rcsurrec-favored by spcake~ at the Re- ted many of his oldest Imes. He talked .publican National Convcnuon. about "the puule palaces on the "Arnenca isn't about promises," Re- Potomac," as he did when he cam-agan said in a memorable hne that ed r. f r 1 fi · made his case and the one agamst pa1gn ior governor o " a I om 1a m Mondale. "It never has been. Ameri-1966. He preached the virtues of 'f1 il k tobo h06d fi ca ts about promise." · am "/• wor • net r · ree-Later in the day. Reagan said: "We dom and faith m od," a litany he used in 1976 and agam when he won want to talk about the present and the the presidency in t 980. future, about what Americans are The speeches bad some dubious doinJ together and what we must passages. In one, Reagan offered conunue to do to make Arncna great "four great goals'' that included one again and let the eagle soar." goaJ. one challenge and two assertions The other strengths of the Reagan that were not goals at all. One of the campaian are Reagan•s. He has been ..,_......,.. __ +.t-t-t.-r~"C"'1't'"" statemcn 1: ··we Will put -d_.,el~i v~e...,r i.;.ll'"'g41 i"'n,.csr"Tsmac..th..,,..,asrnth'IJle""':sc"-41......-'~-f· forward a philosophy that proudly ~cars and believing them. He also l . :i ht d 't ' 1 J saiorepcateatylastweelflhatstrenii}l= -1)/;je proc aims enc ra t iona va ues is necessary to deal wi·th the Sov1'et !J. ~~ ll'ki~. AsrtW that fill ou ves and have permitted /\~ ~-) · J~P<'ifC-our nation to endure."' Union and that Americans want and When Reagan did get specific. he ~rve less government. He believes turned to such second-line priorities these advocacies, too. as the line-item veto and entcrpnsc Reagan's speech~ work on two 2oncs. There are those who love these levels. They work substantively be- proposals, but Reagan did no.t get cause people know what he c;tands for arounc:f. Co treating them senou ly on he lftat issues of' the time. until the third year ofhts term. whether or not they agree with him. The only time he deigned to answer He is a constant m a world where a few carefully screened queslions, politicians shift wtth the winds. before the Chicago Economic Oub. The speeches work even better be demonstrated that he dJdn'tknow symbolically. ··w e will continue to his administration's estimates of tM insist that there is no such thin.a as a budget deficit or rccogruzc that there life without._.unchaned fronllen and have been eidit budget surpluses that it is our mission to seek them, not since World War 11. cringe from them," may not be "a Small wonder that Reagan has not great goal," but it is a resonant held a news conference since July 24. expression of Arnenca.n optimism. that he is kept away from .the.press . Reap.n's secret is that he under-linin~ the ropeS: under the rubric of stands this optimism, intuitively and secunty, and sequestered at other deeply: He does indeed "make the times with no excuse at all. Reagan's eagle soar." He makes people feel handlers understand far better than good, not by providmg a blucpnnt of his cntics how uninformed he 1s on the future but by touchmg the hopes many of th,e day's major issues. It is 111d aspirations that Americans hold not accidental that they have made for themselves and their country. him the most isolated President of That is Reagan's greatest pohtjcal modem times. strcn,th and is why he commands the But none of that seemed to matter crnottonal high ground 10 this cam- as Reagan widened his lead in the paign. Despite his vulnerabilities, it polls last week. His strengths over-will not be easily wrested from him. rode his weaknesses. as they have in past campaigns. The first strength is Reagan's • LOu CoDoa ~l•mai1t. Is a • .. -· ' .. P EBmENT O:N4LD REAGAN . Jac1 · · -AIDEISON .,. Space ·.teacher . . begins an era Young Astronauts program grepares youfhf or future WASHINGTON -Today's youth face the most awesome challenge of the ages. They stand on the threshold of space. Their front1er is the universe itself. his a vast frontier, yet to.be explored, and they are the Col- umbuscs and the Magcllans of tomor- row. They have whole new worlds to discover. The way into space is through hi.ah technology. Thosewbowouldex- plore new worlds must begin with the world of electronics. They must master the.computer, the extension of the human brain. The nation with the best computer tecbnoloaywillgainancnormous head start 1n the exploration of space. As surely as there arc planets and stars as f aras the eye can see, there are also riches beyond imagination and discoveries beyond comprehension waitina for future astronauts to find. The prospectS are breathtaking. This 1sthe lhinkinabebind th~ . Prcsi ent Rcqan bas orde~ his suD<>rdmat6lOd.evelop:-tte kno bow fasc1nated youna people are with space. They swarm to movie theaters to watch interplanetary adventure; they play space games on video sets. The president hopes to lift their gaze from video games and movie screens to the heavens themselves. He wants to stir their irnagjnations, stimulate their spirit of adv~nturc and prepare them for the area test of all adventures-the conquest of space. This is also the reason why Reagan decided to choose a teacher as the public's first representative to nde the space shuttle. The president re- cognized that teachers must potnt the way into space iftoday'schildren are to master the necessary technol<>I)' and become tomorrow's space ex- plorers. How do I know the president had such loftymotivcs?Whoam I to say he didn't select a teacher as the fint ~naer just to get the teachers' vote in November, as some have cbara,ed. I proposed the YounaAstronauts -~ · .·· program to the White House and 1 ·~ have been in on the plannina from the beginning. AfuJl year ago, the National Aeronautics and Space Adminis-*MI tration formed a task force to con- sider ways to stimulate youna Ameri- cans to prepare for the space challenae. lls first meet1n.a was held The lark gets the owl dressed on time ~:E~t~~:::::~~~ 1 here arecompcnsauons, thouah. meetina with NASA offici.ts, includ· .. l You remembcrthedays of the hawks and the doves? Th~ hawks were out to bomb everybody. and the doves were for letting everybody bomb us. Bomb is bomb. and duck ts duck.-and-ne'erthetwain .. We have a somewhat similar situation at our t\ouse. We have a lark and an owl. The lark. as every bod) knows, 1s up with the sun. bus1lyworkingaway. going about the bus mess of the day at full speed, evidently capable of going from deep sleep to full alertness 1n three nanoseconds. You know the early bird that gets the worm?That'sa lark. The owl. on the other hand, is a nocturnal creature. Wakes up with the sctttngsun. carouses all niahtand ioes to sleep. tu=ed but happy, wtth the nsing sun. The owl 1s not concerned wnh the earl)' worm. He has biger samem intnd. The owl is known. universally. a a wise bird. That's because he has sense enough to be up and about dunn& the night. when it's cool. I'm an owl. I fief\ to my own devices, I'd goto bed atab4>ut S a.m nd ri!!tatabout I p.m. J would never asunn . Unfortunately. I'm OT left tom) own devices. 1 he \\Orld nscs with the sun. I'm ~n.of forced togoalona. Not happily. f m1 htadd. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat For a more graphic 11lustration. you might try the following. Takea rather large cage. and go outand find an owl -the feathered kind. Make sure that )oudoth1sdunn1theday. The owl wtllbeaslecp Get in the cage. Poke him with a stick. He'll probably open one eye, look at you, and go back to sleep. Poke ·him again. He'll open both eyes. glare at you and ruffle his fcathps. He'll 10 backtosl~p. Poke him again. Now. you've upset him. His P."!tiencc evaporates. If you don t have the common decenC} to sleep dunng the day. when you'resupposed to, he'll try to put you to sleep -per- manently. .Bill HARVEY starts to whistle "The Entertainer" I bcgm to realize that I'm fi1ht10ga losing battle. I crcakoutofbed. Ann isa lark. At S:30a.m .. her eyes snap open '1ke wmdow 5hades cone bescrk. Hrt motor is evidently fully warmed up, because 1hc leaps out of bed. Since we have a water bed, this. action is usually accompanied by a small tidal wave. ~-~-==• • Into the hower. Threcchorusc of "Sweet Surrender•·. (l'm usually m there for I 0 minute before J realize that I've nealcctcd to tum on any cold water and am beini boiled like a loh<iter.) Out of the \hower, humming "Oh. what a beautiful morning." By now, I have eme~d victoriously from thcblttlewtth ~asickncs­ brol.Jght on by the tidal wave. The humm1nasound iOOd. Then be H. L. lchwart.a ttt PUblilher Franlc lint Ma ~fd;Ct Tom Tait er., tt10t He~·s how honey ant stash grub: Each n1&bt several worli:ers aorge their abdomens to the size of cranberries. then attach thcmselve\ to the roof or t~eir burrow, where th~y han ~10- llonless for the rtst ofthe1r live$. Tht) arc the colon>'\ emcricn{)' ratto11 • Robert "8chc-.e It or Not" Ripley was a collcrtor with intcrc t po s1bly unhke your or J11mc. One ofh1s most pnLed coll<X'tiblc wa the ~keleton of a t\\O-hcaded h.1hy. Holl)wood r~cord~ 1ndil·a1c mov· 1e rtlca~d in Dttcmhcr Ind Ma arc more filel) to Ile hits than mo~• rtlc din other month 8ut nobod) lno wh). Another day has begun. Conversely, Ann has the ability to drop into a state of near catatonia at 9 p.m Havingjust reached my stride. I'll have come up wt th a sure cure for 1nflatton and other probTemsoftfie world. I'll Jump up and start to expound. filled with a feeling of elation and excitement! I'll be answered wtth a small. feminine snore. I'll take her by the hand and lead her to the bed, where she'll collapse like a dynamited bridge. Tomorrow morning. she'll lead me to mg Administrator James Begs, the table, and probably stuffthe first about the Youna Astronauts idea. I· few forksful offood tnto my mouth. presented it to Rcqan on Oct 14, She'll also make sure that I tum on. __ 1_9_8_3_. -- wmecOTd waterwlien I ta1'e m y shower. And. when I manage to shuffic ofl' for work, I know that I'll have at lea!tt two shoes on. Ool11ma11t Biii Harvey /Ives la Hutlagtoa Beacb. Meanwhile, an executive oommal· • tee was assigned to reeommend who should ~resent the public on future space fl' ts. Its final report. dated April 4, 984, listed.a teacher first. Asa founder of the fortbcom1ni Young Astronaut movement, I was 1nvtted to the 1aunchina of the Discovery space huttle. 1 can tell ---------------------------young space fans that no movie, no videotape can match the real ex- Q .. Js there an) pl ~eon earth where men and women dl'CSh cuetly alike? A. l.ndakh. That'\ India's moun- tain provinC"C. They W('lr Ion heavy sa · hcd robes and embroidered tovep1pc hat . Q. Docs a pctM>n inh rit the tcndcncv to sneeze a lot? . Could be. Or picks tt up 1 a habit ma)bc. Re rchers in v.eden f med that 64 percent of the people who neczc overmuch an" the on: ,pnn of parents llkcv. sc kno"n for their ncczing. 1 use the elephant'~ hnun we1ahs five times mort than yours or mine. doe n't mean ~id elephant is fi,e umcs as 1man. In the 'livery year~. t ou1 iana. the only 4itatc with ! law on the UbJCCt. upul tcd th t a la\le O\\ ner rould work a slllve 21 houru day every day. Half ofwha& )OU lcan•ed in collc c 11 no Ion r valtd ix ydar\ after you graduate. Or say the p ~ Tollowcn.. 1 Q. What' the fanhc t the human eye con sec? . Two millions time 1x tnllion mil . Th tis how far 11 11 to th Andr\lmeda laxy, the mo t dist nt 1ght. perience. The staht of the spaccship,"Clinaina hke a huse papoose to ttic monstrous rocket, wasinspirinam themotning li&ht. In the fultftn, thenrys 1cftecu:ct- oftDiscovcry's Jr&Y tiles, projectinaa lookofpurewh1tene . Then the monster came to life wnh a $Udden huddcr, blew a volcanic cloud out of its tail and.asifina temble ra e, rose qonizin&ly offthc yound . ForscveralsecondS, thet.a1I looked hkean inverted volcano blowmaout flame. Then it lun&cd 1ntothe kyaftddisae>pcarcd hkea retrcatina blowtorch into the trato pher • ~ For the: teacher who n6 this mon tcr, 1t hould Ilea tnp to remember. · Footnote: I hope 10 be re dy in October to tell you ho to form VoungAmonaut!('rtW1in your hoof. •·. J -- PAPARAZZI i GalaCbalrmanBarbaraand Alez Bowle Two Dianes -Doyle and Walker -in two bou. Anp.ivel-s8.ry-gci1a -will. be hot act to follow-at .SCR Heat and humidttY wilt guests but not support for thea!er By VIDA DEAN DaJly Pilot Style ~tor "This is going to be SC R's hottest season,•• said Barbara Bowle to the area were released and the musically accompanied fireworks began. Towering high above the pyrotechnic display as a finale was a · giant"SCR,20thAnniversa.ry" display. · more than 600 assembled Saturday evening under a 15,~square-foot tent on the Westin South Coast Plaza Hotel parking lot to celebrate _ _.., __ the theater's 20th anniversa . Dmner was prepared in the hotel kitchens and trucked to temporary kitchens at the party area (adjacent to the theater). "Good timing and two-way radios helped us work it out," said Bob Jordan, director of catering. .. We can get one truck through the parking lot and then we're_platin tbefoodoverhere." e plates coola'lneasarm-onc--'--- \ Roarso teran app ause camefroouhcgucstsswelle ..... ·~~~· ..__ almost unbearable heat. The white- tie-preferred group had turned "California casual" with most of the men now coatless, the women fanning with the blue and silver Starlight Celebration programs and everybody vyingfor the use oflarge fans placed around the big white tent that had taken three days to erect Earlier. Bowie wearing a.black Mary McFadden design with one shoulder strap, said she had search- ed for months for-the perfect drcs for her big night as chairman of South Coast Repertory's sixth an- nual gala. . "It is beautiful, all beaded, but there was no way J could wear il m this heat," she added. ''I'll save it for next year." The other five galas were inside the hotel, but the tent had been chosen to allow more room for the supporters at this very special extravaganza which bad been a sellout for almost a year. "We could have air<onditioned the tent," said Richard Odle. who orchestrated the party, 0 but the cost would have been enormous." (The expected break in the weather hadn't materialized.) Together in discomfort, the crowd also was together m Its support ofSouth Coast Repertory and cheered comments on the progress the theater has made in two decades. Jean Moriarty, Tim Patten • J Clndy Armatrona During the cocktail hour in the pavilion "garden'', Davtd Emmes recalled early days of struggle - first travelmgabout with the troupe working from a station wagon, then at tbe Ebell Clubhouse and on Newport Boulevard. "We didn't have big parties then. It was drink- ing beer and dreaming about this day after a production," added Em mes, SCR's art1suc director along with Martin Benson. Six others there could remember those early days-founding mem- bers who v.ere introduced and applauded were Ron Boassom, Richard Doyle, Ar• ltoastlk, Ha) Landon Jr .• Martlla McFarland and Dou Took. · In 1971 Toni T'ennllle had ap- peared in several SCR productions Terri Gundlach includmg "Mother Earth" which she co-wrote withRAP Tllroasoa. She was back as the star of the gala entertainment belting out tunes from the '30sand '40s with accom- paniment by the BUI Tole Or- cbestra. With her were her mother Catbryn Tennille (who resides on Lido Isle), husband Daryl Dragon ~nd sister Melissa Boettner. On arrival guests were greeted b> Barbara and Alex Bowie and Gall and Peter Ocb1, (he is president of the SCR trustees and Fieldstone Co. which donated S 10.000 for the . entertamment) before stepping into the garden forcooldrinksand the lavish hors d'oeuvrcs buffet To signal the end of cocktails at dusk, theclusterofroyal blue, black and white balloons floatmgoverthe Chrlltlne an4Jlm No"ell quenclles withmoussehnc sauce. sierra salad. veal steak SL Martin and for dessert white chocolate in a dark chocolate mold. Business. social and community leaders (described by SCR's Barbara Grady as the "Orange Couoty~oplcwith vis1on")werc invited, including Ruee and Reary Segerstrom and Ratla Secentrom SCR Traatees President Peter aad Gall Oells (C J.ScgerstromandSonsgave • $20.000 for theJJ'&ll<l.Da'Yilion)~ __ Donald Bren, chairman of the board, Irvine Co.; Marllya Nielsen and son Jolm, Trish and Jolm O'Donnell and Nora and CbarUe Hester. Other undcrwnters there in- cluded Kat.Uyn '.lbompsoa (JOTJCOUS in green), Cyat1t.la and Eric Wittenberg, RJcbar4 and Arden Flamsoa (she's next year's gala chairman). OU via and Andy Jowoa and Carolyn and Maary De Wald. Special introductions were made to welcome SaUDDe and Jack Peltason (he's the new UC Irvine chancellor), who arc "get u ng settled in between parties.." she says. Other party-goers were JadJe and George Argyro1, Doua and David Kelly. ~t and Stepben To~ (red is her color), Jactleand James Rodgen, Keneth and Lydia Himes, Emma Jue and Tom Riley, · Pat and Ricbard Allen, Barbara Aane, Pam and Sam GoldstelD. (Pleue.ee SCR/Pa&• 82) Donna Kelly. Darlene Covtnlton share photos. Pat and Jim LaGraff aymond .cart Willa.rd .. • r 10.'1984 ' WEDDINGS . ~ ---=--------=------=--~ -= -~ ~ Cindy McDermott BEECH£R·KELLER .knnift.'1· 1.vnn Keller aand JudJe MIChad Beecher we~ wed Aug 2S 1n th<' home of the bride's parent • Dr. nd Mr,. Fo)tcr C . Keller of Full-. tnon Otlic1at1ng ~t the &ardcn ctr· c:mom "a'Ju,ucc 1 homa .. cro b} of thl· f-<;unh l>l'>tract Court of AppcaJs. JudgC' Bcrcht'r 1s the son of Joseph Bce'"hcr of H'anni~. ,'..1a,.,. and the late ~1" lkl:chc:r. He rcc1t\ed hi) bal hclor 'of art\ dcgrl"t cum laude trom Har,;ud < ollege \hercomplet· ing .i tour ol '>er"1cc as a lieutenant an the l \ \mh. h~ graduated from < olumb1a l n1\l·rsm Law School. He· "a" appointl·d to tile bt·nch an 1982. H 1., hndc 1' a graduate of Sunn> Karen Cope tl11ls High ~hool in. Fullerton. and UC Bcrkelc)'. She rccie"ed her legal ' "education at UCLA Law School and.. Hu11nas College of the. Law in Sln Francisco A panncr in the Irvine law firm Earley. Epr and Keller. she sits on the boards of dirtttor:s of the Ncwport-;Harbor Law Association in oron D m) pcl cho her p;irtnt • w d· HatbQr Chn t1 n Church an ew· din ~tc.. pt , for her mnm '~ • ponlk chwasthcs.tttan forthc u John Burru of o tn Me m the 18 rnam of • rcn l:hsc Bedford ewport Ba~ Wedding Cb ptl 1n nd C hri\tophtr Ian Cope. Lado Vtllagc Th hriJ 1 the J ughtcr ot Mr. The bride 1~ the d ughtcr of Mr. nd Mrs Eue,cnl' u hu}lcr &"dford of nd Mrs. Kurt pc! Jr. ofS mu An C~ta Mesa. She wore a I cvele J Height he worl· her mothe1'"1 hory organza sown with deep rume . wedding gown,· made at home 28 round the low n('ddme and aroond years ago, ofChant1ll} lace over tin, the cothedml train tier I ~O.yc:ar-old with a fi&sed bo\!Kl' and Queen nnc Belgium hm· veil, a family hcirlo~rn. neck.hoe Md lace sleeves flute tier ' wa held an plan: b} an ivory ilk of hand as>t>hqued lace over tulle flower headpiece. • made a bouffant skirt sweeping into a Christm3 &dford wall her &1\tCr's ~thcdfal train of lace. She wore-a hlll maid of honor, and TradY Barr was trimmed with Chantilly lace tudded bridec;ma1d. Theresa Gonu;} was in v. ilh seed ~rls and quiM. She also char&c of the auest book. · wore a diamond and pearl pendant The bridegroom 1s the .. on of Mr. hclonging to t,reat-aunt and U'>t'd the and Mrs. Fred l cpo"ac of ttunt· s.nmegoodluckptnn} andnngp1llow ington Be~ch. ()a, 1d Delude "as bcsl her mother used in her wedding. man and Phtlhp Brigg'> wa Mr'>. Candy Lnndruth wu~ matrvn . groom.,mun: Ushers \\ere-John of honor. and Dunna 01c-kman and Bnags, Joseph Cole Jr. and Rob C~nthla Burrus \I.ere br1desma1d!!.. Henretta. • · K1mbcrle) Landruth was tlo'ol.cr .girl, A rc,cp11on folio" 1ng the cer-and Kris.ten Landruth \va..r1n1bearer. cmony "'a' flcld ,at 1he Warehouse •. · fhe bndc~oom 11. the-}On ol Mr. restaurant in Nev.: port Beach and \I.IS and frs. Mitchell Burru~ ol Co ta attended by 125 guests. The couple Mesa. He chose Dave' Schott as has then IC'ft on a wedding trip to best man and Michael fddeandJcrry Vancou,tr. B.C. Landruth as ushe~. AmyBUl'f'Q .. A hone} moon 10 Hawan followed a rec-tpuon in the Irvi ne Coac;t Country Club. attended 6y 200 guests .• T~ couple wall make1helr home in Costa Mesa. She ·is eft'lpld>cd by Calico· • Cutting for Kids 1n Newpon Beach artd-he is associated with his father at Harbor Plumbing. · ENGAGEMENTS HUGHES-McGWIRE \1 .\ndrC\\\ Prc!>b\'tcnan < huah. Jr ofMcmphl'>. Tenn .. announce the l'ngagcment of their daughter( c, nth1a Ruth Mooch. to Bmin Carlton C h1ld!1 ofNcwi)on Beach. Her aim: Restoring honor to name Newpo"n Bcach. 1<, to bt· thc Sl't11n~ Im the Dec 29 "l·dd1ng cer~mon> link- ing Kathlene Rene Hughes ol C o<,ta Me\a and MarK Da\ld MlC,"trl' ot Claremont "c:"' of thl'lr l'ngagl·mc:nl and forthcoming nupt1JI\ wa\ announlcd b} her parents. ~ir and Mr\ Ru.hard Alan Hughes of C u\la \k'>J ~hl· I\ a graduate offatanc1a High ~hool .rnd graduated magna <:um laudc trom LSC Her fianll' 1!> thl' \on ul Dr and Mrs John Thoma'> \.1lC1w1rl· ol Claremont A graduall' ol Damien High 5chool 1n I a\ crnc:. 1hc lm_dl·· groom-le> bl: wa'> .\II-\mC'rn:an llr'>t baseman at l ~( ;ind a mc:mber ol thl 1984 l l ~ Ol~mp1l' Ha'>l·hall Team MOODY-CHILDS Dr. and Mrs ( hc~tcr Dale Mood) Thl' union A\enuc Church of < hns1 in Memphis will be the setting lor their Oct. 6 wedding. The bnde-elect is a graduate of Wh11c \talion High School and Memph1!> State Univers1t)' where she "as a member of Alpha Gamma Delta Soront} he has a bachelor of \C1cnce degree 1n architecture and construction and 1s a project eOJJneer wuh Hugh Brooks .4.ssociafes an :--.:ewport Beach. Her fiancc . \on of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Blair C h1ld!> of Balboa Island. 1~ a graduate of -\r(ad1a Hi&b School and USC where he 'ol.3S a member of Sigma Nu Fratern1 t)' HQi. holds a bachelor of sciemc degree an pubhc administration and 1s an account representati ve with Xerox Corp. in "lewport Beach ' DEAR READERS: A few weelu ago, I printed a letter from a Mn. Kooker wbo enlisted my ltelp to restore respectability to the family name. (Sbe wa11lekand tired of seeing "booker'! asecl la newspaper stories as a sabstft•te for "prosti- tute. "I I was inundated wi t• letters from otber Hookers applaadlDg laer efforts and urging me to andertake tlae crusade. I also beard from a prostl- tate who did not like l>riD& caJJecl a booker because It sauested that 1be used a book to getcutomen. "Not necessary," tbe respondent wrote, "I'm well·known here ud II.ave not solicited lo years." My mall tbls week bas been fascloatlog. Here's a sampllDg: • • • FROM EL PASO: SCR ANNIVERSARY ••• DEA R ANN LANDERS: While I \}'mpathizc with all the decent people named Hooker. I wonder if they realize they have plenty of company. What about folks named Pratt. Fann\ Bulls. Duff. Flake. Crumm. JC'rkc: hnk.Sapp. Nutt. I could goon forcH~r. Scheve me. the best defense 1<tascnscofhumor.-TEXASFAN From Bl Marilyn and Richard Hausman, Lynn and Clement Hirsch, Annette ---"".MA.l<U.A.,.J Q)'.tt and J lm J us lice, Don and Lou Smallwood, Boonie and Bruce Lambert, Carol and John Miltner, Hedda and Steve Maros1. Janet and Taylor mitb, "uix·n 1')or Bruce and Pam Ncstaodtand Man Ana and Leo Miiier. ..\ lso. there ~a~ lormcr gala chair- man Valley Reilly and husband PbiL.Ca&bedne and Delaneih)'tt Y.1th another gala chairman Dot ClochmUlaJpb, who met "''th c.:ool rc.,pon\C when he a-.ked .. Are ~c fca, mg'! I waSJU')tgetting warmed up tu the part~ • It v.a\86dcgrcesat 11:30 p.m. DEAR 'J'EXA&-hgree. And DOW please read the following letter from 1UJ01berrndcr: • • • DEAR .\"IN LA"IDERS:lamsure ~ou "111 rece1' c man)' rcpt 1es to that lei ter from re'lpcCtable people named "'IONIGID' WE'I I, GO WI I DAND'IUHN' CW , -, - • ~SHF.11!' Than.JU for p-.ifta JOIU' appliance. the afternoon off. I 1\111 >" "h.11 ,., >u rt 1h1nk111~ \\ I ll'll d11 I j.(l"I Ill\ ('11l'fj.(\ I nw .... llllt' pl.ll l' \ ()ll d11 '°it>llllwm <'.1111011\la I lf1.,. 111 I 111'1 li'l' II \\ 1-.t'I\ Ir ., hot,.,., I 111 )(I\ Ill~ Ill\ .1ppltJll<.C\ till' .llll'rlloon olt I ll"l' thl:lll h<:lorl' l\oon .1ml .1ltl'r hp Ill lkt .Hl"l.' 11 I don 1. fah.,.lll h.t .. 111htttld1..•.-.ll\ Ill'\\ po\\C"f' f'l<tttb I don I \\.ml 1hu11 111 do 1h.11 I'd ralhc:r hdp llll'lll '" (' 111• llll'\ .,. I I II hJ\ l." lllOfl' It I "Ill. IKI 1111 ""'di\ lllJ.( ~ 1" h~ don 1 '1 •ll 111111 ll'k' ( '" l' \our . 1pph.111ll'' 1114. .1t1l 111111.n1111 l11n1s;fu ""'II Jo!• 1"1ld .111d 111m • •ll tlw 1h..tl\\:t,hH ' sC.~· Southern California Edison A11 U1DERS . . Hookercomplainiogabout the abuse of the fa mil) name. Having been a newspaper cop) editor for many ~cars. I pride m)'!>elfon accumulating information of quc\t1onablc value. J rememberhcanng that the term Hooker came from a C1\1I War general.Joseph Hooker. so I h11 a coupleofsourcc books~Thc Morm D1ct1onary of Word and Phrase Origins refutes this claim. Here 1s the explanation: · "Our research indteatcd that the word appeared in print at least once in YouR SELF ,.. 1859. the year be tore the outbreak of the Civil War. But 11 seemed wise to get a really authontall ve answer so we wrote to Bruce Catton. the nation's foremost authority on the (I I War. "It was pointed out that Gen. Hooker's reputation was not the best. In fact. he was called ... man of blemished character to whose head· quarters no self-respecting man cared to go-and no decent woman could go-a combination ofbarroom and brothel."' Here 1s BruceCatton'scommcnt: ''That business about Joe Hooker and the soiled doves of the Civil War pops upeverysooften. I agree with you · that the term hooker did not onginate dunng the Civil War. but It certainly became popular then. During those war years Washington. 0 .C.. de- veloped a district somewheretsouth of Constitution A venue. This became "' . known as Hooker's Division, as a tnbute to the prochvaties of Gen. Joseph Hooker. The name has stuck ever since." Sincerely, Allan L. Gaul. Executive EditorofThe Telcgraph- Herald. Dubuque. Iowa. DEAR BOSS IN DUBUQUE: Thanks for tbe classy researcll. Another eradlte reader, Jobn R. Merrl~lr. u attorDey bl lteDDett Sqaare., Pa., polDtecl oat that Funk and Wapalls was la error wlteD It blamed Gen. Josepll Hooker for maddyin1 tbe Hooker famJJy name. Merrick also eoosalted WJlllam and Mary Morris' Dictionary of Word and Phrase Ort1ln1 and sent docamentallon Identical to yours. So thanks to you both, along wltb all others who wrote. I baven't bad so mucb fu with tile maJJ since I received that letter from tbe woman who did bcr housework lo the nude. ••• Methotl of toilet training can cause prOblem later on Mother!> v.ho .to1lc1 tnun 1h«r--+inenff:.-fk ~rJ '8)' that children b> turning on a v.atcr faucet involuntal) leakage 1!1 a · common ma> be doing them a dmc" ice. says problem among adult women The Donald R Ostergard. M D director problem. in fact. may be aggravated ir'. of the g}nccolog.ic urolog) d1\.1S10n at a woman learned at a }Oung age to UC' Irvine College ot Mcd1C1ne. respond to outside !ltimuli. c,uch as As a specialist in unnar) incon-running water. RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY, llC. fflf Tiit lltsl Of Yu Lift 1922 HMIQ BUD . COST~ MlU -SU-115' Although the problem 1s quite common. 1t often goes untreated. according to Ostergard. In his ex- penence. he's fou nd that many people ~imply assume the cond1t1 on 1s in- curable. "We esumate that 10 to 20 percent of all nursing home admissions are due to urinary incontinence," says Ostergard. "Rather than seek cures for the problem. many.adult children simply place their mothers an a home " ---------------Ostergard has learned however. The Pros ' Since 1951 R_ !? UlllTT llSUUICE C't>. 1~ Non smoker ,,'a'~ Rates 1~b 831-n40 .. 1 Old Hewpot1 atvd. Newpott !leech, Ce. A superb paint job ... only $320! 'rri't" is btlur•inq •.• romr in tt'111 su t/Jt rnrs j 1ut pRilllfll V, l~lt .. qn11r,. Compm·( our 'Jlllflity lflit/J ot/m., tl1nt tOJt '~"''~ "'""'· l;/$flttns n•m ""/min n tltt"' top to111 /1lt.t t/Jr r.\:pt11m•t '"'f'J»11. 'Jnr f.lr11nm:. pain/jab is"" a1111Ui»R 11•/.w tit SJ80-llut if'l9u b1·i1~q ;,, t/Jr ""'P"n brlmr .YOll ._qtt "" ndditi4t1n/ SMJ off1 that the cond1t1on is indeed curable. In nearly all cases. treatments such as medication. exercises. or as a last reson. surgery, can correct the con- dition. "Urinary incontinence" is defined as a loss of bladder control. Because it has social as well as hygenic conse- quences. at 1s one of the least discussed of th e so-called "female problems." As a result. no one knows exactly how many women suffer from the problem._ Or. Ostergard beheves that about half of all women expenence some kind of involuntary leakage at some time or another. The problem is more f rcquent and pronounced for women who have given birth via normal vn1.mal delivery. Because the suppons of the bladder arc weakened dur1ng vag.mal de· livery, he explains. The organ may slip down from its natural position. Then, any stress placed oq the bladder can cause leakage. Jn some cases. a c.SimpJe $nCCle may ~au cnouah stre s for lcaka&e to occur. Physical.activity can also cause the bladder to drop and incontinence to re ult. Female marathon runners and gymnasts, for example. commonly suffer from urinary incontinence . Other causes of the problem m· cl udc stroke. estrogen loss durina mt'no~use, urethral infection and P')'Chological problems. No matter what the cause. Dr. Osteriard says an cfTect1vc tf(~atment exist . Before treatment can be prescribed, a profcs,ional detailed evaluation is n«t sary.to determine the cau.c of the condition. UCl's Chn1c at Lona Beach McnTbrial Ho pita! i one ol the fc.w pl.acu ia.South.ern C..lifornta equipped to make such f diaano ii1. ' Submlt your news To help )OU ubmit th rrqu1rC'd mformatton. fonns arc 1va1lablt t the Daily 1'1/01 ol1iC"e •• UO w. 8.ay t • Co ta Mesa for "t'ddm on/) a bl ck and "hire photo ol the bndc 1 a«eprablc. The phoro mu t be ubmmcd no 1 ''' rhan tlirtt "'~ds after the "T'd 1 01hcN 1 u will not bt publr hcd. H cmcnr mfom11111on r ro be submmcdit lea t 'en "'lYl: bcfo~ the a'Cdilm Form and J'h to nin be dropped off at the offle"e or mallro to rh Wtdd11~ l ~p.'lnmcnr, l 11 RiliJI, P. 0 8ru 1560, Cru11 k , C l1f. 9162 ... . ' .. = NF\. FOOT&W. IJ/LOIO GMATUT AWNCAH HERO ( 19821 THMn r:alllNtt gtrl MTIU!ITAft CWACTJCA -uo-•lllNEll REPORT TIC TAC OOUOK • lfTfQJUCINO llOlOOY =AllMHT TONIGHT == )WA'l'LONatMS DDCVANDYkE -HO- )YOVIE . ~KATE UUJE u~ "1941 119821 JOhn Bttuttd, MMCOllOt.0-TOINto M1IUnt A IARIAAA WALTER8 MOVIE CE1.EIAATIOH '* "Alrptane II Thi stq 11es21 I NlW8 A0cert Haye, J\lljf Hlgefty MERY 0NmN ' (OllitOW OAEAT~ ~ t t 'Yot'' ( 1983) Reb 8r0¥r11, Cor· ~POPI • lone~ AJllPlQ AL1AE.O tlTOttOOCI< . PfUEHTI MOVE •~I LEHflEll * * * * ~GandN" I 1982J Ben Klngs.-NaftHOUA 'Clncb Bergen • =OOAAPHIC Y$OH t ~~ Ana " (1972)' li Wt&l OF FORTUNE y Montano. Romy Scl\neider DDC VAN CM(! • -l'jO:... , l MOVIE : IJ NEWHART u~' Stil Of Thi Hlgtll~ (19821 Roy ~l.-r--... ~.M!t')1Slttee> -..,.,..,,,...._,., _, -1:00-.-tO:GO-,_ --CNMllE'f l LACEY -~"v 8 m ti> HEWS I~ "::r .. AETllAN OF THE wrr 110NC WOMAN U!I THE AllfWeOER 8USIOHS NEWS wrTHll.LYTAYLOA H~d'b ate pe ntf&'ICOMPANY AIAABARA w~~ ... p rs . WHEB.OFFOATUNE 8P£CW.ca.EBM11u"' New York City Ballet dancers Peter Martine V<:lfAJJJ!. OF THE MIMI '1> CAWNG AU. 8PORT8 and Merrill Aebley perform tonii(ht u part of ~~ ~~~My Fivorltt Yt11" 11~21 the Great Performance. eertee, alrtna at 8 on -...... T Ii-Peter O'Too4t. Jeaicl Hatp« • KOCE, Channel 50, and at 9 on KCET. -'"" -:.1:ao-<OJMCME • ·Channel 28. 820NMTOWN **~ "Hammet!" (19821 Frld1oc QI FAIAY FE\JO F«rMt, P111r Boyi.. -l1:35- • _,., .. CINCINNATI -f0:15-(HI H80 OOMtNO ATTMcTIOHI I P£Ofll.E'8 COURT 0 THATS HOU.YWOOO _ 12:00- WIL.D, WlO WOAl.O OF -»JO-0 1WlJQffT ZONE ANIW.I CD INDEPBCJENT NEWS D THREE.....,_.,, 0 •NM PMVl£Wt • ITfADY ASHOOE.S ~hftl (l)TICTN;DOUQH -10:~•-..... __. l)THATGR. DNEWS -WI~ ~~ROCK .-11:iJO.:-U h IWly Two Hats" (19731 Gr• t t "Thi Finll 0p110n • (1982) Judy fJ 0 '1> NEWS ~~Desi Atnaz Jr n-.... ,_.._,._,,._. 8TAXI · ""' ..., .. ,.. ....... ......... .......... G ROWAN & MARTlfl LAIJGH..fN •• ~HalloWeen Ill Seaorl Of Tiit z.l~ Ktntl!Qy Fried Movie" • THEJEFF£RSONS Wi~n 119821 Tom Atk I'll. Stac.y ( 19n) Evan Km, MMllr Bong Soo m> TO• ANNOUal> HM • THE 0000 NBOHIOA8 -12:05- -UO-( MOVIE HI llt£ EVEll.Y 8AOTHf1'S 1J Cl) ICAAECAOW AHO MRS. tt .. Delth W1tcti" 119821 Romy REUNION CONCERT KING Schntider, H~ K"lel -12:15- Q -'TV'l Bl~--11:30-(C MOVIE _. ..._......,AHO 1J 1NON & 81itON t Honey" 119821 Clio Gold1m1th. ="JOKES 0 TONIGHT Ftnwldo Rey tH ''Thi Lut Sun11t" (19811 D ODOCOUU -12:30- Aoclt Hudton. KIB n... ... iu 0 9 A8CNEWSNIGHTUN£ 0 lATEHIOHTWfTHOAVIO """"" 0 MOYIE LETTERMAN -=~ U 'il"RoldTo-SalN"(1971)MllTI· 8AllAB>HfTCHCOCK ~ flTUALS • a:=. Robert Walker PAE8ENTI • MOYIE -I ""111! .. .._ .... _, "' 0 BEST OF LA. TODAY ttt~ ''Thi Nun'• Story" (1959) :LA~u; ..,.~&MAAT1N'8LAUOH-4N ~ Htpbwn, Pettr Flf'!Ch uir -..., .. ,.; •IAAIARAWOOOHOUSEGOO '1>7000UJ8 *** ~ei11on Oollr Brlin" 119871 TO 1EVEJ1. y *11 ( & I MOVE Md\111 Cline, FrlricOIM OOtlllc • MEAT P£AFOAMANCU t t .. Confeuions Of A Wind<M ti> LCM. AMERICAN STYLE ~ _ _w_.11..."_(11174) Robtn Aahotb f;SGAOWINGYEAM-- (C) 8CTV: THE SlCOHD COMlNG Anthony Booth -12:40- lUXU.Y T .. ATHS DRIVE-INS m::; STADIUm 0 Ut 1171 ltf!tPt ~ ... S!if•IOI NOU.VWOOD NOTTU•flt> ltlu1 Surf II Rl s fJ MCMIUAH l WIFE -1:00- 0GDEAUTRY G HOUYWOOOCLOSEUP ) THE PROTECTORS eMOYE **'" "Tiit Castwan 119631 C... Aomtro Fr1nlue Avllolt MOVIE * t t South PiQfl(" ( 19581 MJt2l Gaynor. Rossano Btmi (S)UOVIE -1-.-· t * •Curse Of The Pina Pwitller" 11913) Ted WISS.~ Niven. -1:10- ")MOVIE • t * * .. Ftlncil Postcards · 119791 Mllet Chapin, Blanche Bllt1r . -1:30- 0 FAMILY FEUD DNEWS MOYIE * t "Wood« Womin" 11974) Cithy l• Cfosby RICatdo Mantll* AOWAN l MARTIN'S LAOO~ -1:.46- (C MOVIE • * "' 19'41 . 11982) John Belushi, T ostwo M1lunl -t:00-- 1) C8S NEWS ltGtfTWATCH NEWS . 0 MOVE * t !+""Oed 8oyfl•ldl" 11919J Tiii StWt. Ric:t\ltd Jordln . -2:30-mNEWS -2:45- H MOVIE t t t 'The VerdtC1" (19821 PIUI Newman. Chatlone Rampling - ,ii.REVIEW __ --"-"---------=-~-- 'Ladies' man' Tom Jone better with old material Tina, Prince rule.the roost By Tht AHoclattd Press The loll•t •naarc 811100.rd's hot m :ord h1tc. for the wi:ck cndinJ Sept. IS u lhC) appear in nt'\l week'\ 1uue of 811lboard map11nc. ( op)nJht 1984. Billboard Pub- hcauon~. Inc Rcpnntcd v.1th pcmumon HOT ll'tiiCLES I"\\ hat\ l O\t' Got to Do \\ 11h It" r 10a 1 urncr (( apuol) 2."M1~\10g You-John W ne CE 11- mcncat ' 3."Shc Bop-C')nd1 l.aupcr <Ponra11) · 4 "ut'\ Go Cru).. Prince & The Rt'volutton (Warner Bros I S •• 1uck on You" Lionel R1('h1r I Motown) 6"1f lhl\ le. It" HuC) ~1s &.. The New~ (( h')sah\J 7 "L>mc· I he Ca~ <Elektra) 8 .. The Wurior-Scandal fca1urin1 Pan~ m)th tColumb1a) Q."Gho tbus1c:n" Ra) Parker Jr (Am~J I 0 .. The Glamoruus Life"" hcila (Warner Br~.I 11 '"Sunglaucs at 1EMl-A.mcnca) I:! .. lsghu Ou1" .\mencal 1 t'" Corr) Han PC1c:r Wolf IEMI· 13."Cruc:ISummd"' Ban narama{l..on· don1 • 14."Co' c:r \11: .. Bruce pn tttn (( ol- umb1a) 15 .. D)namnc" Jermaine Jachon f -'nsia) 16."Rcx:k ~c Tonttc:" 8111) Squier (Capttoll 17,"\\hen OoH·sCry"' Printt (~arDCf Brm.> I .. I Ju 1 Called To Say I l..o\-e You .. ltVIC Wonder (Motown) 19 .. When You CloK Y c>Qr E>'tl .. Ran (Carntl-MCAl 2 -HardHabi110Brea .. Ch (full Moon-Vt amcr 8~.I TOPI.PS I." Purple Rain~ Prince aDd 1bt ~ol­uuon <Warner Bros;) 2 .. Dom sn the tJ. A ... Bruce st«n (Columbia) 3 -spans-H~ Lnru £'. Tbr cY.'I ryulu.) 4 "Private Dancer.. Tana Turner (C.apnoJ) .S "Heanbrat City .. The Can (Eitttral 6 ... Can't low no.rn.. Lioc>cl ~ (Motown I Bob Hope to receive special Emmy award 7.''0ul of lhc Cellar .. Ran (Atlantic) 8 .. , J 00 ~I Air Platt.. l ulio laJesias (Columbia) 9 -Gb~tbultcrs• Soundtraek .. ( ,..nsta) -. 10 -vlClory"' Jackaons (Epic) 11 . ignsofl.ifc .. 8 11lySqu1cr(Qi'*°') 12 ... B~k Out .. The Pointer uttn (PlaMt) 13 .. he' So Unusual"' Cyndi Laupcr LOS ANGELES (AP) -Bob Hope, who Is kick ng off hla 35th year on tetevialonjaa been voted the pr .. Uglous Governors Award of the Academy of vision Arts & Sciences. Hope, 81, wtll receive the award during rhe 36th annual Emmy Awards telecast on CDS Sept. 23. "This s one ot the highd\ 1Poruau1 honors in the world of entettatn-1• ··so Brakt'S-John W11te CEMf· ment," Hope said. "We 811 loolc Ammo., de!ighted f Of ~-rJ..ecog-;-..a_m~----la~'J.'.l.:.::iS&M~adoo~l.u.oaJ:ll' .. ~M~ad:i::oa*.as:naLctll.Si«.!W.s)~f4i--U . The Governors Award. the highest bestowed by the academy,11 presented for outstanding achievement tn the arts, ecleoce or man-oement of televtslon. 11.-1954-Van Halen (Wamcr Bros.I 18" •idn1pit M~ .. 'ilJlt (Camel-MCA) 1q ... ·Edd1e and the Cruisers· undtrad.'0 Joha C~ IL TM Bca\tt Brov.-n Band (Scom 81'0$ • 20 -Ehmnuitor.. U. TOP \~ amrr l "oi. Lowe oxro•o-.... CM-•• At 1110 3 111 I 1 :1171H t. l 1H as.o DAWN 0'8-tJ) Shows at 12130 3100 5130 1:00 •• 10 :30 Cll nt &a1twood TIOHTIU)"E (RI Showa at 12:35 21)1 l i20 7·10. 10:15 e111 Murrav Dan Aykrovd QHOIJT9USTS"5 (N) Sl'low1 at I 2:2.5 2:40 4111 7 t21 t :S0/70 MM THI! WOii.AM I .. Ra> (f'G-ta ltlUI GrandYI-CJ.S.A . '"' RllVDllOK Of' T .. GH's Shriner stars in new soap NR.._. RA.IN (IQ INDIAllA JOllD 6 Tiiie AT 12141 S10I TShowa:: 1~ .. ~J 1121 7 :41 • • ,0,01 1100 1:so • 10100 IN 70 MM MSJlD9(R) ltlUI Po..-v'1 (A) GRDIU .. (N) ftlua The f'OnrlEndlnt Storv (PO) IKARATK KID (N) ltlaa Co-Hit Cloak &. Datter (l"O) llACHa.l.OR PARTY (R) f"IUI Co-Hit l'lubpotnt I") By LYNDA HIRSC,H l\.m Shriner. the former Scott) Jn .. ucncral Hospital." 1s often called sh> and sclf~fTacing. ··f"ln not much for sclf.promottng." he sa>s. ··1 reall) don·1 do much 1ntenic"ing unles I've got something to promote." Well. hnner has something no"'. "an "'ill be ~n an ··Rituals." "'h1ch ~gm\ :ming in nearl) e'er) major market m the countn beginning toda). The S)'nd1cated serial is slated to run in mo t areas between 7 and 8 :::::~;::~~~~~~~~::;:~~~:;;;~~~~::;~~=-~ p.m.. although ~ome ~tations "ill .. .,.IW'I• *PACIFIC WALK-IN THEATRES* ........ wr.:~ cam 1t at 4, alter the) end their * BARGAIN MATINEES I FIRST 2 Ptrform1nc• Mondly * no.~~e~fre~~:n~~j Hospitar last Thru S.tur•y (Except Holidays & Spec. Ent'ttmtntl) •fW~i•l3J ~U'l~o'i'r' o':K .. s. •• ~ 1 f+1;Mi•I•J•l4) .p .. ~ooMI> "MM*A.M 1m>111-tM01rec.11,Att.•,,,.,,._..p TIE TOftE ~ OOOM" (PG) .. RED" (PC-13) "BOUIO" 1 00 US HS llS JOJO 11 U HS 4 0 6 4U 4; 104S llO <I'll R 11 M l R AOl!llllD , .. OOllY Sll~ 0 "CiiRDl.INS" (I'S) 11.lO 3 00 s JO I tUO II OCUT ~ltl!lO UlUO s H zo . ..,u_ .. ______ ~ LoMIRAOA ~ """1( llAlr' (II) 100 uo ~40 100 101' 11141ttil 2409 lt 1111~·· •• lf Mott• At ~1Hr1141 "DUAMSCAI£'' (PCMl) 11.3\ u~ u~ ·~ 1 -o 10- "N11'U llAlf"• (It) fi OC:. tr Sit MO 1.00 ~ uo uo toe; ··m DAMr <~ :,, 12 30. 300, ~ u soo. 1030 "M WT STAllflliHTUI" (I'S) 11 cc; e • •·STU 00 •TIE SOACH ri:. SPOCJ(" (K) ·~ It• *PACIFIC ORIVE·IN THEATRES• * CINE·FI SOUND! At tJltM symbols p•t sounlll lllirtct to your AM car * r1d10. If ao redio witfl ecc•ory po11t1on. llf1'! y0ttr own AM ,..~1111. ALL OPEN 6:45 Stert Dust< Chlldu1n~ 12 ALWAYS FREE : ' ··QtOSf1U$fOS" (Pli) PW5 "CHllSTll" Cll lo HABRA .. ~""A UIO ...•. '1l.D DAMI" (K lJ) Pl Mr\( Ulf' I') MISSION . ·· WARNER ill '1:11: H. ~ 1". I . . . I ----- -' year. it wasn·l bCcause 1 d1dn'1 like the soap opera format: I really do. I left bcc'.iu!IC after five -rears I rcalited that it rcall} "'asn't getting m) carter an)'place. People an the· industl) really don't recognize vou from working in daytime 'Rituals· has several advantages One, it's a soap, and I real)) like a medium "'here you get to "'ork da> after day. Also it's pnmc time. so that dirccto~ and producers ..,111 pt a chance to~ m) work .\nd It s guaranteed for 52 week(,. which 1s something most actor\ don't get:· Kin' character. an teacher Mtke Gallagher. ts going to be a good guy. but not M.e hnncr's earlier G H good gu} Scott). "'Scott)' '."'"IS naive. He wo uld do ao~ing to protect Laura. the lo"'e of has life. and whale Mike is ' very much in lo"'c on the show - ...,jth a fdlo"" teacher (pla)ed b) Philece Sampler, ex-Renee on .. Day of Our Lne!I .. ) -he kno"' ""hat he wants and kno"'s how to go about getting 11. He's a nice gu), but he' cena1nl) not na1 \ e. Philece and I play the mo t popular professors on cam· pus. v.h1ch means ...,c·u act m\ohcd wnh a lot of ~oung J>"Ople on the shov.. ··People forget that "hen Scott~ started on 'General Ho pit.al he ~as a )Oung character. Mtke Gallagher isn't that )Oung; he·s been around and • COSTA WSA • COWARDS ..... , THE FAMILY CIRCUS by Bil Keane "I'm sorry, but you're not using my leg-warmers os shinguords." by Gus Arriola BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) "I hate Mondays." MARMADUKE •by Brad Anderson DE~NIS THE .ME~ACE "The dogcatcher is on his way and wants a guarantee of safe passage for his truck · .BOO~ 111.JLLl~S HE.AVEN HELP US' ... C,AN ')bu T,AKr: OV~R,EMMA? 1 S'Pf?AIN E:D A PINKY, AGAIN 9 /0 PEA~UTS TU'1BLEWEEDS PVT DOWN ''TRUE,'' EUDORA Hank Ketcham ~You &mR ~or fJJ rN 1HE &IW;E OuR CAR NEWS A 0010 NOO REST AFTER ~T HAPPENED 10 IT~'(." by Ferd & Tom Johnson k,AYo r TH.AT'S NOT P. BIT FUNNY .. I REMEMBElt FROM LAST YEAR WMEN I PUT DOWN 11 ~ALSE " AND I ~AS WRONG ... • '\ by Charles M. Schulz I CAN'T REMEMBER NAMES, BUT I NEVER FORGET A FALSE ! . . by Tom K. Ryan .. 4 BRIDGE A SWl:Rs I U "E£Kl.r BRIDGE Q IZ CHARLES GOREN Q.1-1-:a t Wt t \ ulnt:ruhle, a Suulh you hold: •Q6 ~Q92 OAI0762 +QJJO Tht• lmfd i Ill{ hit pro<>c•t•dl•d: f:a ' South , Wl'it North 1 ~ P.a1t ·Pa i. I NT fou r <'Ard upport and u dul id ·alues. H111 e to t,. o ht•arL6. 'I' hut not onl~ make it h:&rdt!r for th op ponent to g t hal'k Ullo th1• auc• tion, lHit e•onfirmatlOll of U fit c•ould ht t ht• kt·y to unlo1·k <1 g:snie for your Wh31 art1on do you lak •'! .-Sine \'OU hAtt.~ a balAnccd minunum. the onl) ound al·tion iit to pas~. llon't worry about t ht• fal't that you url' ~omt•wh1t hort of Pa1111 ?,, , . 'ide. toppt>rs in l hl' rt•d \uit . A rl'lml or l v. o ~Jmdes in t hil> St;~ut•nct• yirt ual· ly tcuar~nlt'e"I a .. ix hrd suit. Whal do you bid now'/ A ..... Ut• cart•ful. In the balatw1ng Q.•-Hoth "VUlneruhlt'. as South yc;u "t'<ll, 1mr\nl•r rould bid one no hold: trump on us le''='" 1112 HCP +A6542 i;?JJ03 0 7 +~876 (l.6-A-. South, vulnt·rablc. you with 16. ht> would fir.,t cfouhlE' Mill, The bidding has pr~eeded: ';~;6 . <:'K 0 AK~76l •Q85 .Your hand mer1h a ·mov~ toward __ w t North •·:ut South game" and l\\o nu trump ii:. thl' oh 1 • l 0 Pa11 '· The h1dding ha.c; proceeded~ • orth Eut South W eat vwus bid . What do you hid nov. '! ' l + ... , I o 1 i;:? A,i.l-H yOu hid one spade or rni .. l'd 2 o 2 ~ ? Q.2-As South. 'ulnt•rahle, you ' hold: •7 J103 . O.QJ9 3 +KlOSZ Part nt•r opt•n\ the bidding "'ith Qnc no trump. What a,·tlon do JOU fake'! A. -It might o;t·t•m that." ith only 7 llCP. you should he t·onlt•nt lo leave \\di t:nough alonl'. Ho\\evt•r, you haH t•xn•llt•nt rilh•r-. and a fair five· rard suit, .,o Wt' h•t•I that the• hand nwrlls 11h 1nvt1ational ral'-t' lo two no trump. Q.3-Both vuln1•rahk. a-; :-;outh you hold· • 85.a Q853 ' AJ95 +62 Tht• huidinK ha., prn<.'t•t•ded: West '\orth Eai;t South 1 • 1 · Pus ? \\ h.1t .1rt1on do vou tak1·'.' A. -It 1., unli"~ly that )OU havt.> Kamt•. but you .,hould r.1n•I) pass . partn~r·-. O\ l'rcall v. hl•n you haH• SHOE .. DRABBLE to.tl....o hearls, you m•t•d to brush UIJ What do }OU bid now'> on your ba!lic b1ddin1t. A hid of ont• ' • padt" wmrld not ht• forcing-. and ' A._ P:tr~ner ~url'ly .ha:. nine or ll'n could e~d tht! auction when four cards.in .tht· minor. uit , and ht! heart 1s a spre;id .. In .suppo~t Qf mu'il have' at lt>a t a <'f?Uplt.' Of hea~L<i, your hand 1.s ulmo l .th.~ hNrts. Tht>refort>. he j short in equivalent of ~n opt>ning bid, so 1l 1-; spades and. a-; 3 result, your hands only a <~uest1on of whl'Lhcr yuu should fit Vt.'ry well. Wt: ~uggt•st hould bid fou r he11rl or thrt>l'. you w.t"ilt• no timl' and leap straight Lac~ of n fourt)l hea~t is lh com .lo five di<tmonct... • pelltng argument against a Jump lo game, Be content to invilt• purtm·r to gnme "'ith a ra1st~ to thrct.> hearts. Q.5-Neither vuln1•rablt'. as South you hold: •AJ954 ~763 0 94 •AK9 The bidding has proeeedl'd: South West North East 1 + Pau 1 "IJT Pas ? ,, ......... ~,,. .. , .. ·-flt·'·~ ...... For info.rmatioo about Charles Goren's new newsletter for bridge players, write Goren Bridge Letter, 1909 Cinnaminson Ave., Cin- namini on, N.J. 08077 . by Jeff MacNelly FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston 1 181NK1filSON~S I DUNNO.ITS SORfA HARO 10 IE.LL 1Re. FIRST . DAY FUNK\' WINKERBEAN SQ-1E!'TIMeS THEY STAR! OOf REAL MEAN, 61.JT' lORN OJTlnBE NICE ~ SOMEli'MES THEY STPRT: OOTNICE-' 0UITORN Olrfll> BEMEAN • . OF lHE. FtRSI . Vffi\ET)" by Tom Batiuk DR. SMOCK by George Lemont WHY PO Wf;. KE::t::P Mt::S:-rlNG &,I KG ,-H IS, c:>R. e>oe>~ AFreA H.A"1NG eEEN WIPED OUT AT THE GAM&JING TAeu!S. CRAIG SELlS HIS CAfl' ANO RETURNS TO THE CASINO WHERE HIS l.:lX'K Cl-'ANGES FOR TME een A' I • CO P,LETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, 88. t ~ o f~nfare f o~ productivity's ~etur~ A'rter et ht quarters It's time ·someone noticed that U.S. workers are working ' . in t.abor was reedy and laL), "'hec:r the)' used 10 be kcpu were Man ment wa n kl and un· many. h~ gains "'ett C')'C'lkal and iin an 11\"'C' Pollution cuntrol de-"'ould fade. the lcepli ad. c mands fo~ed money into non-pro-111n~ cid tcd. they explained. stmpl) By JOHN CUNNIFF u.-.-.-. .. NEW YORK (AP) -ConsidennJ the notoriety, even scandal, attending ats departure and prolonged a\>sence it is urprisina how httle attention has been paid to its return -but · productivity is ba le an town. . It ~lipped an quietly perhaps, but ll ·presence has been observed now for' ei,hl straight quarters and it is bC11nnarlJ lo look as af at will be. around for many more quarters and maybe: for years. Producttvaty, in case you forgot, is production efficiency. It used to &fO't\ at about 3 percent a year-you could rely on ll -but then in the 1970s 11 became less noticeable and finally it ductive areas. Hi&h energy cosb bc:causethecc.:onomywaui~covcnn seemed to h~ve left town altogether. off et attempts to be efficient And In the pa'>t couple or "eeks. Between t 977 and c:irl) 1982 it man¥ more -p<_>ssible but not however. a1li1udcs chang&'l Among showed almost no growth, cau,ing certain cau5e1. other things, the sccond.qu rter pro- politicians and economists and bust· A ca~can be: madethauomcoftltt' duct a\ it) pin ~red to 4,7 pn-ccnl. nes people and labor to scratcb their factors that destroyed productivity, Reading the figure$, Memll hea<ls and blame each othe_r. whatever the~· were, led to the bag L)nch's chief economar.t. Jack rccc~slon of 1981 and 1982. You JUSt Lavery, declared that "developments What a shame, they all ~id. that eannot c~nti~ue to. live a bener beyond the normal cyclical force~ are the United States of meiica, which maten~l hfe Wlthout produ~ana 11. · . at work." Edward Yardeni of Pruden- showed the world how to produce, S1gn1fi~!lt!Y· produchvny bcpn tial-Bache. said that "there 1s a g6od had forgotten its own lesson. It was" . nsang tgam m the third quarter of chance that. productivit) as in the embara~ing lo lhe point df making t 982. just bcfort the end of the process of a major ~"Cular rebound." Uncle Stm look soft and pudgy. rcccs\ion. generally considered the Rohen Barbera of' E.F. Hutton, Scores ot reasons -some would worst in the post-World War ll era. It remarked that "the revised figu~ ... c.Clll them ahbis -were offered. Just has been rising ever since. were uniform!} posithe:· lbok at a few and you'll g.et the idea; In I 984's first quarter -January Just as surcl) as the reasons for Amencans put too much empha is February, March -the 3.3 percent · producta\ it'fs disappearancc were oo consuming. too little on ptoduc-rise put productivity gams right back vague and probably incomplete, so are the explanations for it return to Hey superwoman, career and per~onal life can be balanced the economic scene. Among the more hkely explanitaons arc these: Labor has lowered 1ts demands and is workmg fiarder. Manaa,crnent has been improved and kno that it must innovate. Large amounts of capital have been invested into automation and bc:tter factories. Regulation as diminished, and ta.xes arc lower The dollar is strong. makmg am pons less costl)'. Many women who are direciing all their energies toward building a ~ career suddenly discover a lack in their personal hves. How does "superwoman" balance the various fragrn'ents of her hfe'? Bobbe Sommer. PhD, of San Clemente, a leading mouvauonal speaker and psychotherapist, will speak on the issues of balancing personal and professional success at the Women In Management dmner meeung. 6 p.m., Sept. 27. at the Regi stry Hotel in Irvine. Sommer as well known in Southem California and around the U.S. as an expen on women's issues. business management, and health t9p1cs. A consultant to maJor corporations and a membc:r of Women In Manage- ment. she has appeared many times on radio and telev1s1on and is the author of two books."Never ask a Cact._us for a Helping Hand" 1s a popular seller, and her new book on us1~ your right bnun for your ri&ht we1 t as currently being prepared 1or pub 1cat1on. Women fn Management is a non· profit educational program helping women enhance and strtngthen their management skills. The organization provides an opportunity for network- mg with other professional women in Orange County. Airfaresgoingup, down NEW. YORK (AP) -Aar tares are going up -aQd down ....-as the airhncs encoun~er renewed turbu- lence at the ticket counter. lnduruygiant United Airlines has announced fare increases on i1s spriwling system. catching ats com- petitors by surpnse after struggling Braniff announced it was cutting ns prices: American A1rhnes and Delta Air Lmes~ec1ded to match the cuts by Branm, which said its success de- pends on 1t slash mg fares and becom- ing a cut-rate airline. r Then, United opted to r.use many of its fares. "We'll match them." responded. Amencan spokesman A1 Becker. This time, Delta was less aniuous to up the ante. "Good luck to them," said spokesman Jim Ewing, express-IDJ puzzlement at the wisdom of raising fares as the industry heads anto its lean fall and winter season. Ewing said the United plan, alTect· mg hundreds of cities 10 all 48 I M UTUAL F UNOS contiguous states, was far too an-pioneer Pcoele Express have touched volved for Delta to respond to off a fare war on Flonda routes. without considerable analysis. offering new lhghts and low fares to As competition widens, the con-the Northeast and Chicago to drum cept of a single .. fare"' l>etwecn any up business in the historically lean two points has all but disappeared. late fall ~nd Wlnter months. Some airline computer systems track United said thateffect1veScpt. 22 at hundreds of carriers worldw1de and Wlll ra1se its fares S 1 O each way on now foll.ow as many as 820.000 standard unrestricted coach fares and schedules in 115.000 travel markets. $20 on round trip discount excursion United'sannounccmentcameafier fares. The increase wall not affect Brana ff. which collapsed pnce and has discount fares on Tucsda)S .and had a fitfuJ nse from the asbes. Wcdncsdays-United'ssJov.estda}S ditched its s~-month drive for busa-of the wed. .. ness as a h1gh-quahty, full-servace airhne and went discounL In Fort Laudetdale. Fla .. Nonh· Braniff said Wednesday that its • eastern president Stephen Quinto survival "depends on this basic said . has aarhne wall _n> daily from change m ~ur philosoph>." and Flonda to Pfiiradelph1a and Chicago announced deep fare cut.sand layoffs for $99 one-way, starting 10 Novem- for 2~ percent of its employees. It said bc:r. it was scrambling to find 1\s niche an Northeastcm's e'\panded service the crowded skies over Dallas-Fort will beg.an Nov. 1 S and the fares wall Won h. be subject to hohda> surcharges. Elsewhere. av1at1on veteran Pan Tickets to Chicago mus~ be bought American 2-year-old upstart North· bc:forc Nov. 15 and will be good eastern l~temat1onal and daScoum through Jan. 31 . AlthouJh there are many mort poss1b1li11es for the hst, an especially mtriqumg one demands further at· tenllon. Several economists ha .. e pointed out that the ba~ boom generation has been absorbed into the labor force. 1hat its members have teamed how to handle their JObs and thus are producing more than before. Whatever the reasons for pro- ductivit\ 's return. its consequences ha"e never been in doubt. 0VCT· samphlfied. productivity gains means a bagger pie for everyone, so that nobody needs to sneak a slice at their neighbor's expense. It means more profits for business, more disposable income for em· plo)ces. both of which arc confirmed fil____!ccent government fi.&ures. It means Jess mt at1on. to which the official stat1st1cs also attest. And it suggests if 001 assures that the econOm)· of the 1980s ma)' grow faster and wtth more stability tban the late and unlamented economy of the 1970s. Welcome home. productivity. I UPS ANO DOW NS ~ - • UPS AND DOWNS NEW YORK (AP) -The fonow1ng u,1 show' the Over·lh1·Count1r stock' and warrants 11111 have gone UP Ille moil and down the most based on percent of chang41 fOf' Frldav No MCurllles trading below s2 Of' 1000 wrfl are Included Net and" pe<c;entaoe ch1119es are tr. differerice between lhe oreviou~ closing bid orice and FridaJp\ las• b•d once Name Last Chf. Pct l ~~1~r~. ~)= I I ~ 8: n·1 S Wilton 4~4 ., Uo . Wafer coater A technician load.aceramlc walen into a machlae deel&ned to coat eacb wafer with t.nnlatln& al om Ina cmld.e al Stmaae TechnolOQ Corporation. One wafer prodacee 380 read/write head.a on tiny elements that read and wrtte computer data on a ma,petlcally-coated dJak, mach like the needle on a record player. Thln ft1m bcada make It pouible for oue StorageTek 8S80 Dltk Drtn to store u much lnformadon u 40.000 home compaten. · Coi;ist(llctio!J begins on Bell Corporate Center Ground has ~n broken and accommodate two tenants. according construction is Wldtt. wa.~ on. Bell to Grubb & Elli' CommcA:iaJ Bro-- Corporate Center. a 6-acre. S 12 kera Group. the exclusi"c lta)mg million research and de .. elopment agent · · · corporate headquarters in the lrYine G1lbc:rt Aja& Assoc1atesoflaguna Business Complex Halls is the project designer and A project of<;anta l\.mta De'elop-·· Douglas Newcomb Inc. of Tustin ts ment Corp. (SOC) ofNewpon Beach. the landscape architect. Construction the building "''II contain 110.300 1s ~hcduled for completion ·in De- square fttt. and is divisible to cember. 1984 • New Condo Fourplex • Exclusive Anaheim Community • Fully Leased, Premium Ra~s • Secure, Gated Community • Hardty Believable Financing DIRECT PURCHASE FROM PRINCIPAL (714) 957-0931 (9-5 Weekdays) ..,__ ~t,co ~ 1 U9 Q 6 Dewev s 7 + 1 • uo 1 ' ~}[: vn ~. t 1 J 8~ 1 i r-----------------~----------, SoecM•c J~ + .., uP 'la · I 10 Flitwl un 7 1 + 1 Uo 1 4 I I Ii ~&~ un n .t ~ 8~ ii · • GENTLEMEN'S GLASS MAlllCURE 11· ·14 FidMd un Jlt f _. UP 1 I lS Fin.A un 4 , ~ UP 1 I 19 W~OI 7 • '4 Up I . I l ~~P ~... i;t + 1 ~ 8~ H-1 1. Nails impeccably cleansed. I Esr~ s : +l ; 8: l!' I ' 2. Shaped to your requ~st. I ScotCb 51• ' Up 1 I I ~~3w9 1f • +J~16 8: l :11 3. Powder buffed to a high gloss. I • "'~'·~~" h. t ~ 8: l I 4. Calluses and hangnails removed. I l IOf s + uo 1 I I ., n111ct1 00~ .. s + · • up 1 1 5. SPe:clal blend of liquid or paste polish. 1 N\me .. L•Jh _c'j?. rcni I 6. All in approximately 112 hour. I . j 1£-#. 1 1" ''• H I 7. Regular 110 , with this coupon '5. I · t~ ~:,..~~ H· : 8. Greatest manicure you ever had or I ·~ tlt I I l~ lf~ _, 1l• ~ , 111 It's FREEi : tl!J 1:· • f 1 If you can't use this coupon. please I x -l I I , t:: 1 :8 1 pass It to a fr end. • 1 .9 They will thank you and so will I. I Al1tM ., 1 I ~". ':' " 1-l! ? I I war i ~ : SPECIAL I m :t 1 ALL LADIES SERVICES 1/2 OFF l I I I '111 ~-·~ '"--I 1 -,,,,~ -,## CO TA SA 141 I , I I I I I ----------------·------------ ' I # On the'' ~i~\(Hft, '1 ~ ~IW,K I S 1 F~J~ Pf6 rl ~·~Fc 2 11 F~'P~ HO 7 ,.P. F"F ~HSit 2fi FintEn 36 7 OS \ , • • MONDAY'S CLOSING PRICES Dow J:oNE s AvERAGES ---- - - WHA T NYSE DID ------ NEW YORK (AP) Seo. 10 WHA T AMEX DID NEW YORK (AP) Sep. 10 AM[X LEADERS GoLo QuoTE S Mrr nts Qu ons ------- , That· s an a pt desert ptlon of both business and business people along the Orange Goast. To keep track of wnere compani s aregol gand which people are helping them g t there ~just watch ·er dlt Line· -ver · day In the Bu ine s ction of,yournew Biiiy Plllf ' S•nFrMCIKo f9Cea Redaklna In Monct.y night football. C2. Rams. get m"-d, .answer boos Ith 20-17 win By CURT EEDE ' °' .. ..., ......... . Enc DicketliOo is a member of 1he • Rams )OU just cao't itop some11mes. The sanw goes for vc:,ternn offensivr auard Dtrtn1s Harrah . • In 01Ckeron'6 j'OU c-an't top • him on pttchouts ~"'ecps to the right In Harrah's case, )'OU can•t alwa)S top ham from saymg what' on has mind. Such wa the case Sunday fter· noon after the Rams had e.utcd the field at Anaheim St.ad1um to take refuge in the privacy of their own · locker room at halftime of their same with the Cleveland Browns. A crowd of 43,0.3 put up with the 95 degree temperatures but wa not putting up with the Rams after the score was knotted at 1°"10 at mttr· mission. Quarterback Vince Fcrr.asamo was being booed each time he went on to the field, mainly because he had managed to comple1e ju.st 6 of 9 ~ses for 64 yards while bein& uncrccpted on~. lt was at halftime that Harrah cot ~ to Coa~ John Robinson with a suaestton and the Rams coach obliged -in the form of a fiery spcccb. The end result was a 2°" 17 Rams victory thanks to Dickerson's running on the winnJD& drive and .. Mike Laosford's 27-yard field aoaJ with 1 :25 remaining in the pme . .. I just had the feeling that wt were hesitant in everythana we were doing. .. Harrah said after the game . . "We were second-guessing oursches. We weren't coming off the ball and just letting things happen . ··1 wanted to tell him (Robinson) that I was·ashamed. I just wanted to tell him that I had that fcelina. .. ...., ,... ....... .,, ...__ .._ Harr.th added. Sunday's . s cor es . •••• 20. Bi'o..wU l?t . Raiden 28, Packen 7 Card1nala 37. IBll1a 7 Glanta 28, CowboJ• 7 Bean 27, BJ'ODCOe 0 Llona 27, Falcon• 24 Clllef• 27, ~ 22 ~ee19. V al7 DoJpbln1 28, Pata 7 Salnta 17. Baca 13 Colta 35, OUen 21 SeabawJW31, SD 17 tum, pvc the .Rams a message an the forgi of "ithe most flt'CCHlp spceCh r~e beard," in.Harrah's V.'Ords. The Ram players, IDm11'1iile, rallied around their quaric:rbaek, refusin• :to allow the fans• boos to (Pleuc Me RAMS/C2) Orange County ToplO ~----J.-Ml•e-Gvman-powen bU way for·yardAae u three Browna l)Qll-at-blm In-the R•me' 20 17 -ftetorr 8elldaf". AngelS find out Seaver can still be tough CHICAGO. (AP) -Chicago White SOx pitcher Tom Sea,er not only believes he'll win 300games. but thinks he'll surpass that fiaure next season. The three-time Cy Youna Award wmner collected victory No. 287 on Sunday, throttling the Anfels 8-2 b> aJlowins only four hits while striking out two and walkin& three. Seaver said he is in a position "to shape my own destiny, because if I can stay healthy, there is no reason to believe I won't reach that select 300 group next season." Marc Hill's two-run double and a two-run sinale by Vance Law sup- ported Scaver's pitching as Chicago Raiders keep lid OD, 28--7 snapped the Aniels' four-game win- nina streak. The Angels slipped l 'h games back of West 01vision-leadina Kansas City. Seaver added that "losina my shutout in the seventh inning was not too important, but because I walked Bobby Grich with two out on a terrible ~2 pitch, I only have myself to bla~e. even though an error was made that permitted two unearned runs ... Seaver's performance, according to the Angels' RegJe Jac~son, was "JOOd but not yeat. sance Seaver has pitched much better in two other games against us this season." Jackson added that the Anaels has BILLBOARD TONIGHT seven games ~maining against Kan- sas City and "we have to be con- sidered to have somewhat of an advantage. Perhaps it will boil down to who has the best clutch hitting and pitching; .. Chicago Manager Tony LaRussa, whose club is seven games back in fourth place, said that "realistically, in order for us to have any chance, we have to win l S of our last 20 games." The White Sox, ending their home- stand with a dismal 4-7 mark, scored two runs ui the third iniung off loser Mike Witt, 12-1 I. Daryl Boston led off with a double and was sacrificed t() third by Hill. Julio Cruz singled throu&h a drawn-in infield for one run and Cruz scored when Scott Fletcher doubled to sht>n ri&ht-ccnter field. The White Sox added another run in the founh when Greg Walker hit his 23nd homer of the season. Gnch iot the Angels' first hit with a leadoff san.ie to center in the fifth. Daryl Sconiers hit into a double.play but Bob Boone got the Angels' sceond hit with a sinale to nght. Chicaio added four runs in the sixth, with Vance Law dnvma tn a · pair with a bases-loaded sioaJe. Tommy Johnrel'~ved Witt and save up a twcrron double to Hill. Seaver lost his shutout bid in the seventh. The Wild. Wild Weat ALWest S-... W L ll'ct. Ga ltMIMI C1tv 73 " S 14 ~· ,, 10 S01 1 n 10 .5IM i~ T•Y"•..._ ...... lcll k-CilY (Gublae, 10-lll 11 Mlnnetote (SmllhMlll, u-m. " .R..._.O... ANGEU <2H -Home (13): SIOf II, 12. ll Clrflland; 14, 15, 16 ChlQoo, 17, ll, 1', 10 IC-. CJIY; 21, 22, 23 TtllM, Awey (I)· Sept 24 Cl), 25, 2' IC.anM1 CllY; 11, 21, 2'. 30 Tt•• KANSAS CITY (20) -Home (7): s.t. 21, 22, 23 0.kllnd; 14 ti>, 25, 2' Anotll, AWIY (13)· Seo!. 10. ll, 12 MinNsot1, 14, IS, l6 Seelllt, 17, 11, lf. JO AMels, 21, "· jO OekiMcl MINNESOTA (10) -HofTlt 0 0) S.1 10 II, l2 KINaS City; 17. ti, If, 21 oic..o: 21, 12, D Otwland, Away (10): s.t. 14, IS, "Tun. 24 , H. 2' Chlcl9o, 11, 21, 2', 30 Ot¥tlMd Rookie overpowers Dodgers L'OS ANGELES (AP) -Cincmnati rook:te pitcher Tom Browning came within two outs ofbccoming the first Nattonal League pitcher in a decade to hurl a hutout in his first major tuauestart. "You can't have everythsnJ. but the Wln was important," said the 24-ycar-old left-hander afterp1n1na a . S-1 victory over the Dodgers in his dobut Sunday Ted Power relieved Browning with one out in the ninth and aot the final two outs after Grq Brock's run- sooring sinale had foiled Browning's shutout bid. "Any butterflies I had were gone after the first inning," said Browning, who oitched in Wichita of the American . . Association as recently as last Sunday. ''I bad a good screwball today; he said. "I pvc up three bits in the second innina. but they were all hit on the ground, and after thatlseulcd down. &Ol ID) rh) thm and felt relaxed." . "He looked very relaxed out there," said Reds pla)CT· manager Pete Rose. "He doesn't act like he's 24. But that's typical of so many gu)s comina into the l~uc now. · "He was about o.ut of gas. I wanted him to get that shutout, and fOf!Mtnately. we bad a 'Cushion." Browning pve up I 0 bits. struck out four and wan.Cll two as a Jast-mmute replacement for Mario Soto. · ........... ..... ........ ............... *llrY -Mllllr Doi. .... 7 D T .. ............ ....... llf .... ..... ,.......-c::.6-_J2 ... ---aedll ... ,....... l•i•rlu. W11t- C'llllllllr"1 u.. .... '#"" . , ' v-----., ......... ....... .. .,-... , ... . aMlllM L--. 21·7.' SlllllM ........ ...... .., ..... ~. ...... .,...an ................ •-14 ...,., ... ........ ~ .. ............ T ... C•'• wv ......... .... ·-· · ,,..,. . ... *" 9flor ...... et'IU•llwll ..,_ ..... AM V....,, 41 ·6. T...._. ~ HMCIM .. ............. ,,..,.. . 1 \ . • t • ' 0 Bruised bodie bruised psyches at·stake tonight, QUote of the clay ~ ENNN'g, NBC sportscaster. prafttng Howard Coeeft after hie retirement from Monday N~ Football: "'I'm not a cntlcal br'oafdcater. I'm probtbfy the captain of the vanlllae. But t'm gra1eful that I can MY CfftJcal thinga, and au of ..-should be U\lnkfUI to !Howard tor tnat." Archer, Alcott, Sikes triumph Lank} C ge Arcber celebrated his 451h b1rthda~ thrtt "~~ls ear.ly Sunda), pullmga"'a) from the pack. to win the Bank of Boston Golf Classic by six strokes. n Archer. helped b> an eaglc-2 o n the 394-)ard 13th hole, fired a 6-under par 65 for a 72-hole score of 270. 14- under at Pleasan1 Valle} Countf} Club. The margin of victory ""as the biggest on the PGA tour this >ear. The victc)ry was Archer·, 13th since he joined the tour in 196'4. However it was the 6-5 veteran's first since 1976 -after hand surgery but before a bad; operation. Healthy and stron~ again. thanks to a daily exemse program supervised by his "•fe. Archer put together his founh consccuu'e subpar round in earning $63.000 and pushing his career earnings over S 1.5 million .•. Meanwhile on the LPGA tour. Amy Alcott, pla) mga near error-frtt round while her main chalkngc1~ sli uggled. shot a :!·under-par 70 to win the Ponland PING Cbamp1onsh1p b) three strokes The 28->ear-old Alcott. who began the da~ m ;1 four·\\a) lie for first, won for the'third time this )Car and the 20th time in her nine )Car~ on the Ladies Professional Golf AsSOCtation tQur., he finished the )4..hole e"ent at 4- under-par 21 Z. one ot'just t~o golte~ who managt'd 10 bruk par· thr'ough three rounds on the difficult R1vers1de Golf and Countn Oub course. Katlay Baker of C'lo\,ef. S.C .. was second at I ·under-par 215. her ~t finish in her)earon the LPGA tour Baker won SI 3.500 by finishing second ... In senfors ct>mpetat1on Du Sikes, after fnnenng a"'a)' a three-stroke lead. broke out of a t1e when Lee EJdu three-pulled the L 7ah hole Sund.a) and won the Unjted V1rgm1a Bank Senior PG.\ tournament by a single 5troke. Sikes, posting a final· round 71. took t~ sop pnzc of SJ0.000 wuh a 54-hole total of207 -9-under-par. It was the second' 1ctory of the year for the 54-)"ear-old law school graduate and boosted his 1984 winnings to $144.990 -third best among the tounng seniors. Flag De Lune wins at Del Mar DEL MAR -Flag De Lune onl) a ~ 12-1 bem ng choice of the crowd of 20.000. led from the start unda\ to upset 3-5 fa,orite Ro)al Heroine 10 the S t64.950 Ramona Handicap. the first Grade I e'ent ever at Del Mar. ,. Flag De Lune, !>Cratched from last week's Junl' Darhng Stakes to run an the Ramona. earned a first· place pme ofS97,200 m "'inning O\er a field of eight other fillies and mares . A Washington-bred fill} trained b~ Laune ~ Anderwn, Aag De Lune camed I 15 pounds and vi.as ridden b} Frank Oh\.ares over the I 1 a-m1le turf course In 1:48 2-5 . Mets move to within 6 of Cuba Ron Darling and Jesse Orosco com-£i1 bincd on a six-hitter and Hable Brooks launched a three-run homer to lead the "1cw York. Mets to a 5· I ,·1ctory over the ( ~;.(,fr!e"ubs fhe Mets moved within six games of Ii ce Chicago 1n National League a~tion Sunday. The Mets ~ored all their runs. in the sixth inning after staner Scott Saaderson was forced to leave the game txcau~ ofback spasms . Elsewhere in the NL Sunday, Mark TllarmoJJd and Rieb Gossage held the Astros to .a: c1gh1 htts and Steve Garvey and Carmelo MartlDH each drove 1n two runs as the Padres reduced 1he1r maf.l~ number to 11 with an 8-4 blasting of Houston ... Pinch- hiucr Jou R11ssell's 11 th-innmg s.acnfice fly helped Ptuladelphta to a 6-5 v1ctorv over Mo ntreal as the Ph1lhes snapped a six-game losing ~Meal. Phl)adelph1a scored two rom-wnh cuo outs tn the · ninth to tic the -score. ti.kt Sutter 1 Sclamidt htt his 30th homer of the season for the Ph1lhes . 01.DDyCo'x and Bruce Sutter comf)lncd on a se'rn-h1tter to lead the Cardinals to a :!-I 'erd1ct o'er Pittsburgh. Aady Van Slyke, who hit his SI\ th home run of the !>Cason. scored both runs for t Louis . . Manny Trillo and Bob Breoly each dro' e m a run in the SC' cnth innmg a~ ~n Francisco S\\ept a thrce-gaml' wnes from Atlanta "1th a 6-4 dec1s1on. Lauda wins Italian Grand Prix MONZA Ital\ -Vl·tcran N1k1 Lauda ot Auf>tna dro'e his Mclaren· Tag-Porsche to' ICtOI) Sunda} in the Italian Grand Rnx and strengthened his lead m the World Champ1onsh1p Formula One d m.ers' standings. The 35-)car-old Lauda. m monng closer to his third world tlllc. edged Michele Alboreto of Ital>, in a Ferran. in a thnlhng finish at the Monza Autodrome. Lauda and .\lboreto were the onl) dnvrrs to cover the full distance of 51 laps in the gruelling race. thr I.4th of the 16 world cham p1onstu p cvrnts for 1984 .\nother Italian. RKcardo Patrese finished third. in an Alfa Romeo. one lap behind the wanner. The \ ICtOI) -Lauda '!> fifth of the seaM>n -ga' e him 6J points m the world standmits. Television, radio TELEVISION 8p.m. -PRO FOOTBALL. Washington at San Francisco. Channel 7. RADIO 6 p.m. -PRO FOOTBAU: Washington at San Francisco, KNX (1070). UCI ties, 1-1 • r • ·~igh turnovers· . sink San Diego Seattle (and ranco Harris) takeadvantagefor31-l 7\vin . S • \I I LE -l>aH· Kncg sco~ on a pair of runs an the ocond half, inl'ludm a 37-) rder in the thtrd QUJU1 r. and p.1 sed for nothcr score a the ~ttle Seahawb forted San 1>1 o to commtt eight turnovers in a comc- frum-6eh1nd 1-17 '•ctor) o~er the Charge~ Franco I lam , 34 the NfV') No. 2 all·timc ru her wbo 101neJ Seattle s a frcc nt WcdnCS(Ja), m de bis Seah \\ • dt.-but and ptnC'd 4 yard on ,. cam • ~i\11ng him 11.996 in h1 13·)earcareer. He moved to wi1Jun 317 )arJsofbri-:ilungJ1m Bro\\n's 'FLru hin1rttord. 1 be Scahawks' ondaey picked efffour Dan f ouu' pa ~ a~ Seattll• improved itsN11ional Footb311 League • record to 2-0. San Diego dropped to 1-1 Seattle's-defense had Sill of the San Di~o turnovers -. fo¥r pass 1ntcrlcpt1on :ind t\\O fumble's -and its special trams m:o' crcd awo C hargtrs' tumble~. · Elsewhere in the NFL unda} Giants !8, Cot¥t>oys 7: Phil Simms fired 1hrcc touchdown pas,cs and Lawrence Ta)lor and T etT) Kinard · led an opportunistic defcn~ that forced four Dalla tumo,ers as the surprising New York Giants breezed pa t the 0311as Cowboys. 28· 7 at East Rutherford, ~.J. Simms. who threw for four touchdowns in a victory over Ph1ladclph1a la\t Sunday, fired a 62-yard scoring pa$.S t<> B)ron Wilham\ late in the firil period t9 gtve the Glants a 7.0 lead. Then. onl} a minute and ffve seconds.later. he hit rookie Lionel Manuel with a 16-yard sconng strike on the first play after Kmard intercepted a Gar} Hogeboom pass and returned it 39 yard~. Then Taylor, who finished 'witb three sacks despite leaving the ~me bnefl} 1n the third quaner with a shoulder bruise, put on his sho~ for the Giants Stadium crowd of75,931. Dolp Jos H, Patriots 7: Dan Marino tossed a pair of touchdown passes to Mark Cla}10n within a I :36 span of the third quarter as ahe Miami Dolphins broke awa) from a halftime tic and "'cnt on to beat the New England Patriots. 28-7 at Miami . The victor} was the Dolphins' 17th straight over their American Conference East ovals in the Orange Bowl. ""'here Ne"' England hasn't won since Nov. 27. 1966 Marino. ~ho thre~ five touchdowns passes in f\11ami's season-opening 35-17 victory over Washington. teamed with Clayton on a 38-yard pass play wuh 12.38 remaining 1n the third quaner and capitahzed on Charles Bowser' fumble recover) 1·36 later. this time connecting with Clayton on a 15-}ard scoring stnke. Bears %7, Broncos 0: ·Walter Payton npped off a 72- yard touchdown runand rushed for I 79yardsan 20cames. brealung Jim Brown's NFL combined }ardage record and leading the Chicago Bears to a 27-0 victory over the Denver Broncos at C h1cago. Pa\lon also caught two passt's for se' en }ards for a combined total of 186 )ards. 1"ing him a career total of i 5--.·> 11 to-Brown·~ ffttlrk ef. I . . . It was the eighth-best rushing game for the 30.) ear-old Payton. who hords the single game NFL rushing record of 275 'ards set against Minnesota in 1977 He now has 11.865 rushing yards. 447 shon of Brown's co' eted record of 12.31.:!. Pa' ton. "ho did not pla\ m the fourth quarter. broke loose tor 72 }ard~ and the longest touc~do"n run of his I 0. 'ear care"er 1n the second penod to stake the Bears to a I 7.0 iead. Cardinal 37, Bills 7: Neil Lomax passed for 276 }ards and t~o tou1.·hdowns and Stump Muchell set up a touchdown and a field goal "'ith length~ returns. helping the St Louis Cardinals roll to a 17. 7 tnumph o\Cr the '1s1t1ng Buffalo Bills. Neil O'Donoghue kicked field goals of 23. 21 and 52 )ards for St Louis St Louis raced to a 24.Q halftime lead, as Mncbell reaurncd the opening kickoff 39 )'lrds nnd run the me Jisunce with a Bilh' punt. IDt1 l't, B cueert 13: QuanC"rback R1ctiard Todd hit awo long pa sC• in the.final 2:3S o(pla), scuin1 up H~1e GaJan s winning toucf\down run, as the Ne . OrleanJ S in ts rallied for a 17-1 J victory over the Tampa Ba)' Bucl"'.incers at New Orleans. Todd'~ fint late completton was a 24-yard hot to Tyrone Young. The S«Ond was a .SIJyard pas~ play to Gajan that put the ball at Tampa Bay's 13-yard line. Chiefs %7, Bengali !%:.Todd Blacidedge tossed a pair of toucbdown passes, including a J-9-yarder to Carlos Carson that subdued a Cincinnati Bengals' comeback and p ve the undefeated Kansas City Chiefs to a come-from- behand 27-22 victory at Cincinnati. Blackledgt. making his second regular-season s~n. linked up with wade ttecaver Anthony Hancock o.n a paarof long. acrobatic pa~smg plays that helped ahe Chiefs take a 14.Q lead in the second quarter. But Bengals comerback Ray Horton rcaumed a pa interccpaion 48 yards to spark a rally that eventually P.Ut Cincinnati ahead 17-14 early in the second half on Jim Breech's 48·yard field goal. LlollS l7, Falcons U : Ed Murray kicked a 48-yard field goal S:06 into ovenimc. giving the Detroit Lions a 27-24 victory over the Atlanta Falcons at Atlanta. The Lions drove SI yards with the ovenime kickoff. with Gary 03nici,.::n contributing the key play. a 30-yard pass to David LcwlSdown the middle fora first down at the Atlanta 34. Danicl~n. who completed 22 of 31 passes for 250 yards. earlier had a I ~yard pass to Lewis during the drive. EacJes 11, VI.kings 17: Quan crback Ron Jaworski threw a 1-}ard touchdown ~ass to tight .e.nd Joh.n Spagnola with two seconds left to gave the l>h1tadelph1a Eagle' a 19· I 7 victory over the vmtmg Minnesota Vikings. Phaladelphia drove 59 yards on 11 plays for the winning touchdown. The Vik.Jogs appeared 10 have stopped the Eagles when W1lben Montgomery was tackled short of the end zone on a founh-down run. But Mmnesota was assessed a face-mask penalty. giving Phtladelpb1a another chance. ...Ibi.s..J.imtook~stood in the ~ket and found Spagnola in the comer. f the end zoncortfie winning score Minnesota took lhe lead earl) ao the founh penod w1tb thr help of a pla) on which quanerbaclc Tommy Kramer turned receiver. Colts 35, Oilers U : lndtanapohs quanerback Mike Pagel threw three touchdown passes, including one durinf a 21-point second quane~ to rall) the Colts to a 35·2 '1ctory o'er the Ho uston u1lers aa Houston. The tnumph was the first regular-season victory for t.hcC"ohs since they moved from BaJtimore to Indianapolis this }car Pagel. who riddled Houston by compleung 15 of 20 passes for 215 yards. completed a 14-yard touchdown pass to Butler m the third quarter that extended the Colts' lead to 28-14 RAMS ANSWER BACK WITH 20:-17 WIN • • • From Cl affect their play. In the process. the> right s1delme with 5:31 remaining in field goal m the closing I 'h mmutes ralhed from a 17-10 deficit to earn the quaner The Rams only moved effccuvely their first victon of the N Fl season. That meant the Rams had to kick on the final game-wtnning dnve. "I ha'e to thlnt.; this 1s one of the off to the Bro"ns who took pos-Dickerson,whowasheldtoonly 12 best wins r .. e had 1n m) career," said session for the third time in the yards 1n the first half, brok.e free on a beaming Robinson ,afteN-ard not quaner. h meant for a long first runs of 13. 18 and 9 yards to keep the becauSt' we might ha\C been 0.2. but quaner for the Ram defense. which final dnve alive. because of the wa) the 1cam hung in finall) gave in as Mike Pruitt scored After Lansford's go-ahead kick. the there when the going was tough. from six yard~ o ut at 2:53 of the Browns got the ball on their o....,n 17- "Vince Ferragamo has been tn· quaner. . yard hne. consistent and 11 \t'emcd hkr he JUSt Lansford's field goal of 37 yards McDonald. who completed 18 of couldn't do anything right. But to see with 11 :29 remaining m the second 35 passes for 263 yards. quickly him hang in there and his teammates quaner gave the Rams a 10-7 lead. completed two passes to move the hang togeaher. well I ~ouldn't trade but Cleveland tied 11 on Man Bahr's Browns to the Rams' 49-yard line this expenence and this team for 25-yard field goal with 28 seconds left wuh 37 5CCOnds left. anything.." Robinson added. m the half. · . McDonald's next.pass found wide The Ram farts d~dn't exactl) gJ\e Things started to get interesting receiver Duriel Hams at the Ram 2().. Ferragamo a fighting chance. Fer-after that as Robinson said what he yard hne, but Harris was ruled out of ragamo had only one opportunat} to had to say to has team dunng bounds. move his team through the first 12 1nterm1ss1on. and the Rams managed Harris. angered by the call. was hit mmutes of the first quarter and that to overcome a four-yard TD pa s with a 15-yard unsportsmanhke con- dnve ended after four plays when he from McDonald to 01.Lit Newsome duct penalty, which took the ball back was sacked on a fourth-and-three with I :06 remain mg 1n the third to ttte Browns' 36-yard line and ended gamble on the second senes of the quarter their chances to pull out the game. Harold &\erman scored UC game. They d id it on Fcrrag.amo' five-"The players stuck With our quar· lnine\ lone goal ma l·I tie against The Rams scored fir"t when LeRoy )ard touchdown ~s to Olympic terback today and our quanertxlck Menlo( oUege ·unda). the Anteaters' lrvm picked off :j Paul McDonald sprinter Ron Brown -his first in a responded," Robnuon said. "fer- first intercollegiate soccer game ever. pass and raced 81 )'ards down the Ram uniform -and on Lansford's r&SllmO did some outstandt'!& thtn s ~ ........................... ~~ ...... --;;;;;;;;;;~;;;... ......... ___ ~~==::::::::::=::=:::::::==:::=:::~~~~~:=::=:::::~::::::::::::::=~~~~::!':=:""":"'.:'.'.•11:tomanagelltiSteam. / "If John Robinson hadn't made that tand and the team hadn't stayed wtth me this aame would have been down the tube." added Ferrapmo. who fini bed the day with 12 of 20 completions for 101 yaiVs. "lt wa right here in this room where it took place. ••• WE'L GIVE YOU A ~DEAL! Our special price on Kodak's Developing and Printing of KOQACOLOR Films. ... "The fans ha\ie the riaJu 10 do wh l they do, but 1 love pfayina in Lo An le and I till love the fan " Fem mo continued. "We'll m Ice it more exciting for the fans as 'WC 10 along.' . \ "Today. I JUSt had to put them (lhc boos) out of my mind. The entire team wa willing-lo stay w 11.- Fcmgamo said. • + '300.00 $1.00 off any 12 exposure develop & print order $2.00 off any 24 exposure develop & print order $3.00 off any 3~posure develop & print order Noted Harrah: "If a q_uartcrback 1s not doing the bC t job. in the world. he's the one that gets boOcd. But we lo'e that man (Ferra.aamo). hc'11 one of the be t compet110 in the world. Hcsaad in thc:huddle,-!Don's you111y1 • worry bout a thing. EverylhtfW 1s .. cash or accessories baclc Bronc/ new 1984 Nissan Pick"iJp. 5 sp~c/. N I • B A N '" 0ow ,.,.., N4l'lllPOft a.ch · n•·•33·1300 . ~ Ht!rryl Offer Aune: Thru September 17 CAL'S CAMERAS 1770 NEWPORT IL • COITI MW (7H)Ml-lla oina to be OK.' "He:' our atncrai and when you're losing the: •ar. )OU don't shoot the general. He came through for u •• Hamh addN. * .. l't\AJOfl L A GU a IT ANDINGS Amencan LMtvt WHT DIVWOtt . K1n••Cllv MintltlOll All9lla (nlcaoo Oali.llnd w L P'ct. oa n '9 Sit '""" T11t11 . n 10 '°7 71 70 .904 ·" 76 MS .. " 4tt rlt/ ,. • 63 IO A.ti 0 7t .... IAlf DIVISION ., n M> I IV) 1 I o ... ·~·. Oltlo11 " forOfltO l1111mor•· New York a.ion CltvllaNI Mll"111YMt IO 6J .S43 11 \'J 77 '4 .~ 14 7' tS .Yt IS 75 67 .m "" '4 IO 444 2t~ .... -Ja~ ""'-r• ktttt Chiu I. Mella 2 Cltv ... nd 7, 0.llland S DtlfOll 7, Toronto 2 .. lt""°'9 4 Mllwtul<M 0 loston 10, New YCIB 1 Tou t, Mlnotaota 3 KtnM• Cltv 6, Seet111 S • TMIY't Glmlt NI• YO<k (Sl\ft1ty 1-31 11 Torf)nlo (Stieb 14•SI, 11 Otlroi( llertneUlf' l ·tl at 1111111'\0(t 1F1•n1Hn 1\·12>. " Mlh ... ulr... 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L.oula 2, Plltlbuf8'1 1 N-VMll S, Clllceoo 1 Sen DleOO I, Houalon • Sen Frenclaco '· Atlante • TMIY'a G41""" Pllllecle!Phla (Koosman 14· 111 al Clll· te90 CTroul 12·6) • St. Loul• (LaPolnl ... 10) ., Ntw Vork (Fernendez •·4), n MonlrMI (Palmer 6·31 at Plllaburgll IC1ndtlarl1 12· 101, n Atlanta (M.tlller t·tl al Houlton ($coll ~111, n Onlv eamn achtduled ~Y'• G41mn .. NfrL • MATIONAL CON,•RINC• Sin Francltco Allenl1 Rama NewOr ... ns Clllce9o Ott roll Gr..n8n MlnntsOll TamHhY Wttt W LT 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 ~· 2 0 0 1.000 " 110500S. I 1 0 500 31 0 2 0 ,000 30 02000027 .... ,.;.- 21 SS 37 4t 1• S4 Sl " SI NY Glanl s 2 0 O 1.000 S6 Dllln 1 1 0 500 27 PhlledelPllll 1 1 0 JOO 46 St, Louis I 1 0 000 60 W1tlll119ton 0 1 0 .000 17 AMEllJCAH CON,.lltlNCI Piii.WOii Cincinnati Cltvt4and Houston Witt , 0 0 1.000 , 0 0 1000 2 0 0 1000 1 I 0 SOO 1 1 0 500 Central . ' 1 0 • 0 2 0 0 2 0 0 , 0 .... 500 .000 000 000 .. ., 52 21 .. 17 20 " s•.;" so S4 lt ., 17 Sl JS 5' Miami lndl1ne001l1 NtwEnollnd NY.II~ 2 0 0 1 000 6l, 2• 1105004'4' 1 I 0 SOO 2t .S luff alo 1 1 0 ,500 .a l7 O 2 0 000 2• SI SU!ldl't"• k«ft brM 20, Cltvlland 17 Ill•*" 21. GrM!I Bev 1 SI Louis n. Buff•IO 7 NY Gllnll n. 01K•• 7 Chlc:aooJ7• 0tn11er o OtlrOll , Atlanl1 2• (or) llanwas Cltv 11, Cincinnati 22 PllU.dllotllt lt. MlnMIOla 17 Miami 2t, N-Enellnd 7 New Orlffn• 11. Tam.,. l1v 13 lndlanePOllt U, Houaton 21 S..1111 31, Sen Oleeo 17 Tenltbt'a Game Wtlhlnoron 11 Sen FrtnclK'O 1c111nnt1 1 Dedflrt 11 Sen DleeO, n SUMIY'a G41rnea Pl'llledtlol'lla II Clllceoo Rema 11 Plllaburell ,, 6) St. L.oula al Nl'W York, n Ill.._,. 11 Kanaea Cltv MontrHI 11 Pltlaburgll, n Atlanta 11 Minnesota Sen F,anclaco 11 Clnclnnall, n ClllQ9o al Gr1111 aav ~ • Houstom--n--------ltn11:fril1trrnn--mr---- AM•RICAN LEAGUE w..... S.x 1, Anelts 2 CAUl'OtlNtA CHIC~ .. , .. _. url\111 • 0 1 1 ' 1 1 9 l 1 0 0 Tllmurf W1lfoftl 2b LYM cf Oownlnttf lt1Jllan dtl Grldl3D ~· lb Boonec NtnOllC ~" C1t1WDll PlcclolO st , ..... •OOO • 0 0 0 3000 4000 4000 2 1 1 0 4 1 2 0 , 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 F111cnr n HtlratOll If a11nes rt GWatltr lb SOulrtt Ill SmlDydfl \IL.aw~ '°"°"cf MHllC JCru12b S2 2 4 O T...., ~-'tlMINI 3 2 2 1 0000 2 1 0 1 • 0 1 2 .• 71.0 . 3 0 1 , 2 1 1 1 2' I I I C1llfornl1 000 000 200-2 Cl\ICIOO 002 ICM 10x-I GtMt Wlnnlnt IHI -JCru1 (6) E-JCru1, GW1llltr. OP-<llkffo 1 LO&-<allforn11 •, c111c:aoo 4 2e-eoa1on. Flttclllr, MHltl, Sconl«a. H1lralon HR- GW11Mr 12ll St-JCrur (11). s-MHlll. SF-Smenev. "' " Ill •11t •• so ~ Will L, 12· 11 S M 6 1 7 3 2 Jofln 1-310010 Cort>tll 2 M 1 1 1 1 0 CNuee S..v«W,l•·t t 4 2 0 3 2 WP-JoM T-2:27 A-13,6M NATIONAL LIAOUI Redt S, Dodeln I CINCINNATI LOS ANO•LIS Miiner cf O..ler2b ED1vl1 rt Ctcteno If KncllY 111 Krdldl JI> Culdlftc Foleovu arownneP .. , .. _. ., .. _. JlOO AllCIMllJD 3010 • 1 2 1 a1tuue1 u • 0 0 0 3111 arewerlf •OOO 4001 ZedlrYP 0000 J o o 1 G1Mrer cf • o 2 o 4000 Mldrldort n20 t 1 1 0 YHOtr c 4 0 1 0 4 1 1 o arou ie 3 o 2 1 3 0 1 0 LlllOtlY 211 3 0 2 0 Mer~Dll 1 0 0 0 Htrthlv p 2 0 0 0 ltltenkSa If 2 O O o J2 S 6 4 T..... M 1 lt 1 Scwt•ttlMINI ClnclMlll 000 200 O»-s l.Ot Allfffet 000 000 001-1 C•me w1n111no 1t11 , -c.-no <21. E-HenlllWr ( Krencllldll, Ltndellov 2 OP-<lnclnnell 2, 1,.oa AnoN• 1 LOl- Clnclnntll 3, L°' Anoetta I 2a---EDevla, Foiev. sa.-t.1n<1ntov m SF-t(nic.lv. EOavla. ~ H lltllltHSO lro....nlne w.1-0 11-1 10 1 "°"' \;7 2·3 0 0 L ....... HINNMrL.t·I I ~"'" 1 T-n6 A-2U26 • 0 ~ 0 1 0 2 • 0 . 0 J 1. 3 t 0. 0 St Louis I I lndl1nePOI•• Saallla 11 N-Entland Ottroll II T1mH h v HcknlOll If Sen DleOO New Or1HM II Sen FranclKO NY Cl1n11 II WHhlneton ~ •• ,De. DlnYlf 11 Clavllend, n MeNay, '-"· 17 Miami al luff•IO ICl'llnnel 7 11 •1 Rama 20, arewns 17 ken IW OU.l'tln Clt¥114nd Items 1 l 1 0-11 ltamt-lr'vln 11 7 l 0 10-20 lnt.,ceptlon rt lurn ( Lanaford lllctr.1. t:29 Cit-Pruitt ' run lh llr kkkl, 12:07 R11'1'1V"'FG l..1naford 37. UI Cll-FG 81llr 25. 102 Ci.-Ntwaomt • PllH from McDonald (8tllr kick), 13.S. Rams-Brown S PIH from F1<rae1mo (Lansford kldll. 4.14 1t1ms•FG Lanlford 27, 1l:S5 ~.OQ GAMI STATISTICS a. First oowns 16 lltulhll-·verd• lo-12 Pining Vll'ds 251 Rtlurn 'tlfCll 2S PHMS 11-lS• 1 Sackl Bv 2-11 Punts 6·'3 FumOlti·tost H P9nallles·vard• I· 55 Time Of PoueaalOll JUO lNDtVIOUAL STATISTICS llama u 33·13' to 1.0 12·20-2 2·U 4·~ 1-1 6· .. 21:l0 RUSHING-<ltvelend, Pruttl 27·71, Gr1111 2·2. McOoneld 1·2 Rama. Dlcktnon 27·102. Crutchfleld S-JO. H ard H PASSING-Cl1V1l1 nd, McDon1ld 11·35·1; Items. Ferr1 .. mo 12·20-2·101 ltECEIVING-CllVtlend, Ntwatme 1-65, 8rlnnln S-7S, Harri• 2·50, Pr\1111 2·t , FMCNt 1""4 ltama. DI HID 2·23, l!ltrd 2·21, Brown 2· 11. Olckeraon 2·t , Dr.Hll 1·11, Gvmt11 1-n. MCDoanlld 1-1,.Ferrnef 1-7. MISSED FIEl..D GOALt-<llvtlellCI hllt .. .. STATISTI« Ott ,.,..1 ... n, n Wl!ft"Vl~CM ' U· 1· PMW.YWdl 206 ltllum VU di 5' PM... 21-43·1 larulv s-36 Puntt .. ,. ' • Fumbln-iOll S-J Penalllft• <fl 7·'1 TN Of Pol"'1IOI\ 171l6 INDtVlDUAL STATISllCS , • ltUSHING-01 1, OotMll ls-fl, Ntwtomt 4·2', Sofll!M S.•H New YOfk Gllnta. CttC*lttr 22·11, Mom' 10-lS, Meriuel HI, Gllllr .. 111 1•1, Slmmi 1·0, WOOlfolll 2 ·I mlnul 11. PA$)1NG-'01~1. HOetCloofn 21 •..,·I 242. NW YorlC G•enll. Simms 1'>-20·0 llS ltECEIVING-Oelle1, Sprlnft 7·5', lttn• tro •·71. N-some 3·SO, Oonllv l·JO, Cotbll 2·13, Oorwll 2·12 Ntw York Glanta. Mowllt 3·47. o .w ullam• 2-n, Grev 2•20, JoMM>n M7, Manuel 1-16, Wootfo H MISS!!D FIELD GOAl..s--None · C.rdlnalt 37, 1•1 7 ktr• bv G111n.n Butt110 O O 1 0-1 $1 Louis 17 7 1 t-37 StL-FG O'Donoollue ~ HO StL-GrM!I 4 PUS from l..omu (O'Oonoollue Kick). 7-37. SIL-Anderton • PIH frOtn l..Otnft ( O'Oonoollut lllckl. 13:26 SIL-Andenon 2 ti.WI tO'Oonoollue 'lldll. 1• IS SIL-Mllcllttl 1 run (O'OOlloOl'lue k lcl>.), 7'04 luf-Otnllerct 22 PllU lrom FW9UIO'I (Dl'*O k!CJI). 12:01 StL~C O'Oonoo/IYI 21, Ul SIL .-f' G O' Oonool'IUe 52. 10-.53 A-lS,715 GAM• STATISTICS ~ Flnldowl't t 1tus1111·v11ds 1·54 PH..nt Ylfdl 117 1t11urn varda O ...... 13-32·3 s.cuav o-o Pulita 6-3' Fumo..1·losl 0-0 Ptntllift·verd1 7·42 Time of ~-lion 1M7 INDtvlDUAL STATISTICS s~ 21 .-.-n1 265 11 21-33·0 4-ll 1·3' 0-0 7·SS 42.~ ltUSHING-8uff1lo, Koffler 2·30, FtrllUSO"I HS, Wi.11mt 1·6, lelllltt&•3. St. Louis, Anotrton 20-a. MllcMll 11·'2. Lov1 6·3'. Ferrll s-:n. 1..omu 1·6, Mcivor l·S PASSING-Bufltto. FtrllUlOn 12·21·2·1... Kotfter 1-11-1·4. St.Louil, Lomax 21·2t-0-26S, Mcivor o-.. o-o. ftECEIVING-8uH1IO, Hunler 4· so, 01wkln• 2·41, Frenklln 2·f, BrOOlllns 2·1, Dennard 1·22, Wllllern1 1·6, Mo«t 1·6 Sl.Loula, Tllllv 5·7t, Andenon S·15, Menll >-n. Gr1tn J.-S1. Meck 2·31, Fetrlil 2·1, H1rr.a 1·t •• MISSED FIELD GOALS--Buff1lo, Dantlo 52 Sl'LOU11, 'C'OonoollUe •7 47. Sl II .. ' Howle LoDC of the Raiden. pu.lla Packen quar- tefback Randy Wrlabt to the iround da.rin.I Sun- ..,,.....,..... daJ'• NFL game at the Coll8eW11. The Raiden rolled to a 28-7 'Ylctory .. RAIDERS... d -I': . .r.,y ~~~~i .. ~E~E~{w.~/Recori . not 1ar 01j cient tjme to throw. -----because he was a running back without a team "Their offense was better than our Harris' Payton are then. He signed a one-year contract with the offense," Gregg said. "I c~uld, make , Scahawks Wednesday. one day after the club an el(CUSCandsay that wedidn t have closing in on Brown s learned that star running back Curt Warner was L)'nn Dickey. And I could say that we lost for theenttre season because of a knee injury didn't have (tipt end) Paul Coffman career rushing mark Warner was injured in the Seabawks' (who was s1delincd with an injury). opening victory over Cleveland. ScattJe head "But the guy who played for Coach Chuck Knox d1dn't start Harris Sunday Coffman (Henry Childs) played From AP diapatche1 But Hams received a sumng ovauon from the pretty well, and the gu) who played For the record. Franco Hams is keeping his Kingdome crowd of 61.314 when he came into for Lyon Dickey could have pla)ed mind off Jimmy Brown's record the game in the OJ?Cnmg quarter. He didn't have preny well if he had some protec-So is Walter Payton. his fit'$t carry unul after Seattle trailed 10-0. tion." • 'Tm ·not really thinking about it," Harris "We needed something to pack us up," said Wright completed 10 of his 24 insisted Sunday. "first. I want to savor this win. Scahawks' quarterback Dave K.neg, their of- passcs for on~y 67 yards. He was Playing and wanning again feels good." fens1ve hero of the game with two touchdown · an~pted tW1cc. Campbell was four Harris rushed for 46 yards on 14 attempts an runs and a scoring pass. "and Franco's presence of eiaht for 37 ¥ards. his Seattle Scahawks' debut against the San Diego obviously did that." .. The defensive front seven did a Chargers. . • Reggie McKenzie. a 13-year veteran and a stupendous job," Hayes said. "They "Going into the game, I really d1dn 1 thin~ member of the Scahawks' offensive line. was were allowina 2.5 seconds for the about the record." said Payton. whose I 79 yards asked if perhaps Hams had lost a step in his pro passer. Lofton and Jefferson have to on 20 cames paced the Chicago Bears against the football career. be amona the very best receivers in Denver Broncos. "f don't know if he's lost a step or not," the NFC. But we had confidence. I Both the Scahawks and the Bears won and McKenzie replied. "Maybe he's enutJed to. --mink wc;m~-tough ~n·&O-are now-Z..0: though. Even 1f he's lost a Mep. he's got other man cove"'JCS on ~hose guys. Recltnang in his d resstng cubicle 10 the attributes He's sull em quick feef and he has an Satd Jefferson: .. It's unfonunate Seahawks' dressing room. the bearded Hams uncanny way offinding the hole " thefansdtdn'tscetheshowdown. I'm emphasized he had only two days' practice with not going to say they (Haynes and Seattle tfiis week. The Scahawks came from Hayes) shut us off. The game was behind and beat the Chargers 31-1 7. decide<!__UJ) front. The Raiders dad a He pointed out that he had not played -m g000-}06 of pressuring us. The pads _ since last Jan. I, when the Prtts'burgh comerbacks didn't take it away::. Steelers lost to the eventual Super Bowl The R.aideTS took a 7-0 le.ad on a 3-champion Los Angeles Raiders 38-10 in last yard pass from quarterback Jam season's National Football League playoffs. Plunkett to tight end Todd Harris. 34, missed the Steelers· tratntng Christensen with 3: 13 remaining in campa,nd was placed on waivers by Pittsburgh on the first quarter. Aug. 20. The Packers tied it 7. 7 on a 7-yard "1 even had trouble-"'membenng which way pass from Wnght to tight end Ed West my thigh ~ds went on today," he JOlced. with 57 seconds left before llalftime. Hams' performanet Sunday gave him That turned out to be the only time 11 ,996 NFL career rushing yards, just 317 shy of Green Bay threatened in the aame. Brown's all-time record of 12.312 yards. Payton. The Raiders went ahead to·stay by who had a 72-yard touchdown burst in the Bears· drivtrtf 60 yards on eight J1,a~s 27..P victory over Denver Sunday, improved his Wfol111°11~amnsg 0af3t5h·!ardscco~~~1~Ykack!ff. .No. 3 rushing total to 11 .865 yards -448 away .. from bettenng the fabled Brown's mark. Frank Hawkrnsgotthetouchdown on In his 10th NFL season, Payton says he 1s a I-yard plunge. shoot mg for I S.000 career rushing yards. A 7-yard scoring dash by Marcus ··My overall goal 1s 15.000 yards rushtng ... 1f Allen with 13:22 left in the fourth JimBrown'srccordfallsintheprocess,thal°sJUSt quarter made tt 2 1-7, and a I-yard one oftl'\<>se things," ia1d Payton. d1ve by reserve running back Demck Payton also became the NFL's career total Jensen with 41 seconds to go com-yardage leader with 15,517 yards. eclipsing pletcd the scoring. Brown's 15,459 total. "We were able to put a few thin~ "He continues 10 amaze me out there:· said together, but our offense is not what at Chicago Coach Mike Ditka. should be," Flores said. "We're f01ng Hams m1-;sed the regular-season opener to get better in that department. • Mears may get sur.gery Tuesday INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -Race dnver Rick Mears 1s scheduled for surge!) on his frac1ured feet late Tuesday if swelling in his legs subsides sufficiently. a hospital spokeswoman said Sun- day. Mears suffered the multiple foot inJunes and a head bruise during a crnsh Frida> in Canada, and was fl own by private airplane Sunday from Montreal to Indianapolis. H e was taken to Methodist Hospital, where casts were pla'ted on both of the broken htnbs Mears' cond1t1on ~as listed as good this morning and a hospital spokeswoman said he had no other apparent mJunes. Doctors said the severe i.welhng m the feet would require extensive treatment. The feet have been placed in i.oft compressant dressin~ and Mears has been confi~d to bed to keep his fee t elevated, the hosp1ial said. Mears. a three-time na11onal racing cham- pion and twice winner of the lnd1anapohs _500. was onginally hospttahzed 1n scnous cond1t1on m Montreal. -U.S. tries to avoid playing Russia By tbt Anodaied Pre11 Canada. Sweden and the United States. their Canada Cup playoff benhs secured, concentrate tonight on trying to avoid meeting the Soviet Union m the semifinals Sweden and the U.S play wmless Cuchoslovak1a and West Germany. re- spectively. and have the inside track. If they both win. then Canada, wmner of the ', 1976 toumamenL and .8-1 losers to the Soviets in the 1981 final, must beat the 'Soviet Union to avoid mcetina them 1n the semifinal. ca,,ad1an coach Glen Sather says he's not concerned with the poss1b11ity of plax1n' the Soviets twice in a row. ·This 11 Western Canada and the way 1t 1s here 1s we fi$ht first and ask questions later. To win tbJS thina we have to beat the best so I'm not concerned when we do tt." .. \ Besides, added Sather: "Tearn Canada 1sn 't mt1m1dated by lbe unbeaten Soviet!.." Perh aps not intimidated, but to many of lhe players there is a m)'stique about the Soviets. much of 1t arising from that 8-l whipping IO 1981. "Our confidence had butlt to the point where we thought we could beat them," Mike Bossy recalJed oftllat final. .. To have lost that way ~·as probabJt-tile mo-;t d1sappornt1na 1ntemat1onal loss. , "When you lose. you're second best. That's how I've felt since then We're second best now." John Tonelh, Canada's player-of-the- game in a 7-2 win over Czechoslovak111 on Saturday. also has mcmones oft he Soviets "I've played aptnst them a couple of times We got slau&htered." To rl'i<Un their No. I ranking. Canada must beat the Soviets and one of the keys. says defenseman Larry Robinson. is simp- ly being yourself. "You have to be yo urself. go oul there and let your natural talent take over There·s enough pressure alread) without thm~ing'I havetodoth1sanddothat.' Just go out and play your own game.·· Robinson' regular partner through the .. fint four-gam~1>f-the tournament. Doog- Wilson. may not play tonight. Wilson. perhaps Canada's teadiest de- fenseman, bruised both knees when he was run heavil y into the boards by Frantisek Musil on Saturday. He m1'>i.cd Sunday's practice but may skate today. As usual. Sather wasn't rc·v~hng who would start m goal -Reje.an Lemelin, who was in for the 7-2 win. or Pete Pc:eters. who wa$ shaky m the 4-2 loss to 'weden. '· 9U11N(aa NO'fJCI Of' CANCWA• ACtmOUIMllMl8 ~~A~ll NAM1 aTATlmNT noN OI' .K>INT ~ MAMI ITA'RMltfl • -"J'1t tQlloWlno PtftOn9 .. M1A11HQ 9Y nt1 crrt Tilt toaowtng ptrtOn TM fOIOWlna f*90f1I ... C10lno butlneM N : COUNC&. AHO THI M· d<*IO lNlln.a u dOIOll ~ TA T . DANA POINT LEN~ DIVll.ONSMT AQIMCY ._.ICROMAGTER 8YI• ~CALIFORNIA llro' DANA P<XNT FINANCIAL °' ,.. cm °' coau TEMS, 221 Momtno CltlVOO ~...:;; c.llf oiNO °'"' . DAHA POINT MllA. ~ ON Rd I Cotoo• del ""· f ~-· DI Mat MOAlOAQ DANA POINT THI l'AOPOllD PIRIT ne2S 2 M ,,~~ Aw Cot~ dtl PRO TY DANA POINT • .....,...,,. !JO THI.... Loni COiby, 2 1 omtl'IG _.,~._. • INVE TM NT8, 249'2 Dnl&.Oftmn'llUNPCMt Canyon Rd.,:. ~on· d4i ~·.~'?fu5au•llf''J o.n. MIP!e. o.na • CA co 1'" 11 ••A 11 • • M•. c.11t '" .. ,. ___ ... _ I09 carnation DlftLOl'llSJfT ~ Thie bu* nett con-,...,., __ , UHn J l.uktno\llch, AMA NO. I. cNoted by:.,.. lndMdutl Ave.. CofOrUI CS.. Mal, 24tt2 Dane ~ NOTIC 18 "ERE Y ,_ M Oofby 12!?5 bu It oon-Polnt, CA t2e2t OIV that the JOlnt Public Tl 1taiemen1 ·'" ~ t>ull la con· HeetfnO of the City Council #I tM Cowty ~ of1 °',.: ~ by:~ c1uCt.o tiy. An MMdual and ~t ~ = County Qt\ .. ugut ... Tflle-ewern.nt Ml lliCI J. ~ Of ft OllY eosta·Mwa; 4 -....... -"--CNrt: of Ot· Thl9 1tattnwtt w filed catllomla,ICtwiauledfOf()o. .,._ ..,,., ,,_..,.,_.,, • 14 th"" County etettt of Or· t~ 3, 1N4, at e ao pm. P1'bllalled~..,.eo;r m: COUf\tY °" AUO\lt• • lnQt COUnty on Augutt 27, l\al llMtl cencelfed Ttl9 Dally Pllo1 ,.,, , • ~ 1914 PaDa J:~ 0~!'-0::, ~ Stpternwa. 1 • 1n:._113 P1'bll~ °'~ Coaet Putlltthed Orange COll9I PfoPORd ~Amendment Ddv PllOt Aug\ltt' 20, 21, DaJW Piiot s.p..,.,..bat a. 10. 10 the ~t ,._, PlllUC NOTICE Seolembtt '· ,o, '":..1., 17, t4, 1N4 for Proftct AIM NO 2end1-......;;.,;,;;;;;;;.;;;..;.;.;-.------ M-121 ttie ptQPOMd Negatf'lt 0.0. f1CTmOUI ~ l--.---11ttWl_'fll"r_..-~ -., _______ 1taratlon P'r1alnlrio tMmo ~ ITATDmMT n.IUU1I ""'""' "8JC rl)TM"r On Septern~ ~J 1064, IN ni. foi1oW1nO petton 11 __ .-.-,. __ , •.......,~_.._ City Councl aiotep to dltoOno dOlna bulNal aa· flC'Tl1'IOUI llUllNlll AC1'l110Ut ...... tinue the plan amendment A 0 T O RA M A D I S • MAim llTATllllNT NAli8 tTATDmlff l)r00Mdlng9 Aa •~of TA I BUT 0 R 8 . 3 6 TM"f'oCIOWtnl penoot lffl d The=~ :::,. ~·r:-Pf~ :,~ttt, '"""'· Calif. do:a.:-.. 1.r=oTHEAI ~PLE 8 ELECTRIC, No. 2 d ermlnai• In Ho-Jeffrey Klrthon, 31 PAOPE:ATIES,2952C4nt~ 18M Tuetln A~. A·235, ~~ 1~8M ..._. 1"... S~ttr. IMnt, C.llt. Plac:•. Coell M.... 0 CO.la M .... GA 92027 .,..,_ em._ • .-02714 t2e28 Robert 8. ,ltlpp, 2CM21 llmtlYft leo· Thi• butlnt" It c:on· Roger 0,.ham. 12781 8ayvlft Avenu. Santa An9, ......,. ... the ~.!!._ MtM UUC1ed by· an lndlvldual Bonita ~· Ol'IYe, lani. • CA 92707 ' fledtnl°'"*'t . ....,.... ... , J. Klrthon it.na, CA 9:t7~5 • • Thlt tlUllMM It GOn• PublltMd Or~ CO..t T~• 1ta1-..nt _ .. m.d· OOl'don 0,.ham, 1914 ducted br, 411 ~ • Daffy 11ilc?t Septatnbtt 10• with the Cciunty CMrtc of Or· Port Carney. Newport AoWt a Tr1pp 191M .,. Countyon Auguet 14, a-en. CA 92"0 Thia ttat*'-1t "' 111ee1 M-134 1"4 Tilll bullnMt It oon· With the County ca.. of Or· . ,_ csueted by, A .,..,.. .. '*1• anoe County on Augutt 21. rtllUC M>TICE Publlthtd Of.-.oe COMt MrihlP 1114 Daly Ptlot Auguti 20, 27, Roger Ofaharn ,_ aTA,......., Of1. September 3, 10, 1N4 Thlt a.tat.nant WM riled Publ~ Or9nQt Cout AllANDOIR•NT Of1. UM M-109 With tr. County Cl«1l of Ot1• Dall)' Piiot Septemlier s. 10. °' ano-County on AUOUlt I • 11, 24, 191M 'ICTITIOUI 8UllMI II , .. "IC 11nTll'f' 1914 _ M-124 ..... J"UUL ""'~ ,,._ The toll= perton1 , f1CTmOUI BU ... H Publlthtd Orange Cout CE hav. abe.nd the ut1t of NAMS aTAllMIMT OlllY Pilot Septembet 3, 10, _....;;.ML.....,.IC....,M>...._n ____ th• Flotlllout Butln•H The lollowlng· pet'IOn It i7. 24, 1914 M. e N•.int: WINDJAMMER dol butlneetU'. 12 Kl~OUNTY VACHS, M7t Molo6cal Dr.. C~PUTER WRITINGS IWPKMt COURT ~;..~noton Beach, CA 21301 PIMttM L..aM, Hunt: M11 Truztuft A"""9 The Actlttout Bualntte lngton BMch, Cllllf 92140 -...:.=:::::...:.:=..:..:.;::;~~ Bak ....... CA tl701 Name m.rtd to •be>W WU Ruth ona.n McOougle. Plalnlltf: KATHYRN vm. tlltd In Oranat County on 2130t PIMtt'M Lane, Hunt- • minor by '* Ouatdlan Ad Aorlt 21. 1fM Fiie No. lnQton &Mdl. Calif. 92648 '"". lolowlng pareont .,. utem. AN'rONIA J, TROYER F~44481 ' ltlll bullMM It COf'I· doing ~ W. AND ANTONIA J, TFIOYEFI; ft9d J. Thompton, 9471 dueted :zc:..o~ Lt'AOS UNLIMITED, t BRENDA BART,. mlnOr by MOIOltal Dr Huntington Ruth Corporate~ ~ her Guardian Ad Utem. e.eti CA t2Me TNt at.atement WU llled BMch. CA -- LINDA BART AND LINDA • Thll t>utlntat ~ c:on-wtttl the County C1tr1c of Or-,,_. L.ma. 32 8elCoui1 BART ducted by a Individual ange County on Augutt t4, Drive, Nortti. Newport Otltndant CHARLEY Thie ttatement WU flied 181M Beach, CA t2te0 ~~~~ ef t'ettt:j~~e ~~o wtth the eouniy Cttrtt of 0r-P1'bltlhtd 0r.,. "': ~ ~..:,..,. -. llled DOES 1 through 30. In-= County on Auguet 29• OaUy Pllo1 AUQU8t 20, 27, with ""County Cl«1l ol Or· dutlw Publl9htd ~C041ft September 3, 10, t984 ange County°" Augutt r7, CUt No. 171111 n..u.. Piiot e-1-3 10 M-112 1984 -....a IU•ONI '""""'' _..... ' ' ,.._ NOTICIJ Yw M'9-.., 17, 24, 1934 M-132 PubOthtd Orange COMt ...., T1-oowt1NJdedde PllUC M)TJC[ Dally Piiot on s.ptetnblt a. ....,_. ,_ wttt.eut '8'lr P1BJC NOTICE ---.... -.. 10. 11. 2A. 1914 "" ,21 Mlftt !Mafd . ..nltae fCMI r. n~ '" ....... --_.. :-....:=:::r:.~ ~"°=~TY Tht"=A='"' ....._ ______ _., II YoU wtllll to Mele theed· AT IWYATI 8AU doing~ 11: "8JC M)TIC( vice of en attomeiy In thlt Ne.,_,., HAWK VEHICL.E8, INC. f1C'n'l'IOU8 ..,_ .. matter, YoU eholJld do IO In IN SUC*1ot Court ol 34091 eo.t HlallWIY, MAim tTATllmNT P<Otnptly to that your writ· the Stat• of calltotnla, kW Potnt, CA t2e2t -The lolowlng P9l'IOM .,. ten ~. II any. may be ttie County of Loe AnQtlM. Trlhawlc, Inc., • W dolna ~ -. flled on tim.. lnttieMatterofthebtate corporetlon, 3700 W. HARVEY AND Al· AY110t ~he tldO ct. of Ronald John lnulacx>, 0.-JuMaU A~.. Mllwauk ... SOCIA TES AOVERTHt• mandade El trlbuma: puecle CMMd Wl8conlln 63209 IHG/MARKETING/PNNTED dtddlr c:ontra Ud. tin au-Notlctlallareb)'alv.ntllat Thia butlneu It con-FORMS 1m2 IMnt lt¥d d~ a manoa que Ud. re-IN undtrW\)ntd -111 Ml •t ~~•a::~ Sutt• 102, TUMln, CA t2tld aponda dentro de 30 dlu. Prllfate Sate. to the higtle9t ...,,."'7 · • o.Md 8. Harwy, 1312 Lee la lnlormaclon que and belt bidder, tubtee' to den~ ..._.. s.-,1 Alta OftY9 Tuetln CA llgut. ~lion of aMd Su-,,_statement wae ·-82'80 • • II )'OU WWI to Mele the ado-perlor Col.wt, on Of' after U. with tr. County C1tr1c of °"" Thl9 t>ualMM la oon- W» of an attorney In tHt 201h day of ~'em'*" tn9t County on AUOUM 27, duc1td ~.,, lndMduet m.ttar.-YoU thould do to t"4 tt ttie omc. of Gill• 1984 ~ s. HltWY pt'Olnptly IO that your ..nt· a.I, JU loutfl GleM Al/'o ~ Thie ..a.m.nt wa9 flltd ten rM9C)nM, If any, may be ..,-, S7ttt '1Mf, Let • Publlttltd Orana9 Coast With the C<Mlnty Clet1c of Or· flied on time ..... to01M• County ol Ody Pllol Septemlier 3, 10, County on Auguat ~ SI Uattd dtMa aolk:ltar ti [oa Angetea, State of Cali.-17, 24, 1984 = ' con•Jo de un abogado en fomla. all tr. right. tltle and M-127 ,_ •t• uunto. debarla haoerlo lnter•t Of Mid dee t Hed at Publl9htd Orange COMt tnrntdlttamente, d• ••ta tN time of death and all tM P\ll.IC M>TICE Dally Pllot Septembet 3, 10, mantra, tu rHpuHta right, title and lntarett thet 17 24 1984 eacrita, ti hay alguna, puecle the •tatt of Mid dee 11ttd NOTICa TO ' ' M-111 ter rtQlltra6a a ttempo. tiu acqulttd by °'*9tJon of CMDCTOM OP 1-TO THE DEFENDANT: A law or othtrWIM, 01har then 11UUC TRANIRJt -------- cMI comptailnt haa betr'l llltd or In eddltlon to tr.t ot Mid (Seca. 9101-PtBJC M)TIC( by1M palnllft ~ YoU· If dee nttd, at the time of 8107 U C.C.) .,.icnn--_.. YoU -*"' to ~ thla ... death, In and to ... ttie Cet· Notice .. hereby gl¥tn 10 r• -tult. YoU must, .+thin • lain,_, property, tltuatad In credltora· of the within MAim 8TA1WNT days after thtt eummone la tM County of Orange, Stitt Mmtd -tranaferOf{•) "* • The lollowlng pet'tOnt .,. Mrwd on YoU. fllis..tttl t1111 ol Cdfoml&. paftlculat1y bYlk trtlWtr It tbou1 to be dolnO ~ • coun a wttttan r9tPQnM to tcrtbad u folowt, tC>--#11· made on pertOnal Pfopert)' nfE FORTRAN OOCTOA, tr. oomplelnt. Un-. YoU A condominium, at IN hereinafter deeettbad 3124 8wmuda OfM. Cotti do. YoUr default Wiii be Mint It defined In s.ction The namee end ~ MtM. CA 82928 entered on applleation of the 713 of tr. CMI Code, In F... add,..... ot the Intended J.,.,_ NoN Ctlureti)Wdi plalnllff, end thl9 COUd may comPOMd ol: • transfer~ are: .SUntMtt Ph.D., 8124 Bermuda DrNe. totw a Judg9ITltf1t agatnat PARCEL 1: Inc.. 11382 Wltlllngwell: ea.ta Mete. CA 82t2t you for IM rellef demendtd An undMdtd 1/72 lncer.t Huntington Bea oh, CA Alberta Jana Pwtcer, 8114 In the eomplaJnt, which In and to Lott 1 through 72 92847 Bermuda Dr'tllt, eo.ta ~ could r_,,t In garnWvnent of TRACT NO. te 10, In the TM 0 loeatJon In CaUforn1a CA 92e2t of W9gta, taking of money or County of Orange, State of of the c:tl6ef uec:utNe offtot Thie bu.in... It ~ ptoperty or other relief ,... Cellfomla. u per Map r• or prlndpel bultMtt o1f1oe dUcted by: Hutbend - quested In tM complaint. COfdtd In Boote 439 Peott of the Intended trantfttor vwtf9 0.ted: FebNaty t , 1M2 34 ttllough 37 lndulM of ume a abe>W Jamet Noni ~ GALES ENST AO Ml8ctlaneoue ~. In tM Al other bu11fw. ,..,_ TIMI tt-.menl WM ._ Cltr'k offtce of tM County ,.._•and addr-UMd by the whtl the Coun1y Cltrtt of Or· P1'bhtled Ofange Coast corder of aald County. Intended t,.,_.or within anoe County on AuQuM 21, Dally Ptlot Augu9t 20. 27, EXCEPTING THERE· lhtM ~ IMt )'Mt'I IMI 1914 September 3, 10, 1"4 FROM an undMded ~'peel to'" .. known to IN ,..., M-108 lntarett In all rnlnerala. Oii, Intended trantltf.. are: P1'bllltled Otange COMt gaa, petroteum and other Tf9Ytl C4nter, 88e1 Atlanta. Dally Piiot Septambef 8, 10, --11-un1-1c_11n_Tll'C ___ hydroca1bon tubetenote In Huntington BHOh, CA '7, 24, 19&4 u .... _ __;,r-..;;.;;.;-.-...-..nu-....1n.1;-..-__ or under or which mey be 9264e .... 1. ACTmOU8 llUllNIM pt'oduotd from aald land The 'name(•) and bullneu NAllm ITAlWMINT which unffrllet • olane per· addrttt of the Intended Th9 folloWlng l*90nl .,.. ,.,.., to end 500 fMt below tr~•).,.. Thomae F. doing butk1atl ee; tr. Pf....,t Mface of aald Lemmon. s 10 v1ro1n1a. PARTS PURSUIT. t25 lancUorlNpurpoee ofpn»-ta An9. CA 92701. 18th St , Huntington a..ctl, peeling tor, ''-exporaUon, That ttie property ~ Calif 92&41 ~t. production. nent '*9to la detetlbed In Monte G...ied. 825 11th .. traction and taking of aald oenertl u · trewl Aptt;y, St HuntJngton BMd'I Ccllf mlnarl61, oM, gM, petroltUm and It localed at IM1 Atlan-tiS..a • · and othtf ""hydrocarbon ta. Huntington ea.d'I, CA. Emat1 DouolU l.onQ, 825 tubetanott from aald land TM 9u11na1a name uatcS tlth St .. Hunflngton ~. by WI of ""!t'!: ~ by aald ttal .... Of'I It aald Callt 82841 dtrrloQ and/or o .. -._,p-location It: Travtl ceni.. Th.It butln... It co.n-ment from tutface loeallont That aald bullc tranlfet It ducted by• a general part. on adjoining or ne1Qhbof1ng Intended to be oontum- land or tying outalde of ttie mated et tr. office ot: HOfrlt ~ Long at>ove dteerlbed l•nd It a AatoclatN, 1no. 4570 Thlt ttatament •• ftled being undarltood that the Camput Drtvt. Suh• 9, New- wltll the County Cltr'k of Or-owner of IUCh mlnetala, ol. port Beach, Calllornla ange County on Auguet 14 gu, petroteum and othet t2MO, on °' after OC1oti. .1914 • hydtocatbon tubetancet .. 1. 1114 ,.... Mt tortll abe>W tNll ~ Tiiie tKllk trantftr It au~ Publllhad . 0r.,. Coett rtgttt to enter upon ttie tut-Jaet to Cellfomta Unltofm DllfY Pilot AuQult. 20 21 lace of the aboY9 dte«lbad ~ Codll a.cuon_ September 3 10 1u4 • ttnO nor to utt any°' me e1oe • ' ' M--110 aMd land Of any Pof11on TM namt and eddrett of ~:::::=====:::::--1thtreof tne Mid land fOI' tnY th• pereon· 1wlth whom I putpote whlttoe\IW, .. ,.. Olelmt may be ftled It Norrie Mrwd by Geofge H. Veth. & Ataoela1•. Inc. 4570 Tnnt .. und« Declaration of C.tmpUt Drtvt 8ult• t New· Truat dated Man:ti 10, 1870 p0r1 8aeCt\ CA e2te0 end end Florene• M VMtl, ttie laat dri f« flllnO ctalma Truet .. under Declatatton of by 9/fl/ Cttdltor lhall'be a.- Truet dated Mey 22. 1870 In ttmbtt 21, 1N4 111 11.00 PM, 6etd r~ded Ototmber wf11c11 11 ttie bUllnetl day 31, 1970 In 8°'* M0t Ptoe bef°'9 ttie c:omummatlon HARBOR LAWN· MT. OLIVE Mortuery • Cemetery Cr•matory HS25 Glsler Av• COataMeu ~0-555" PIERCE BROTHERS dLLaROADWAY . MOllTUARY 1 10 Bfoadway Coate M ... 642.-ll15Q - I IAL TZ BERQl!RON MITH & TUTHIU W ITCLIF, CHAPl!l 427 E. 17th St. COateM ... ~6·9371 PACIFIC VIEW MEMORtAL PARK c.mtt _ry • MortulfY Chec>et • Crtm115>fY 3500 Pa I View Drive Newport e.ach 6'44·2700 641, Offtclal Aeoor• ... ,. ~ abo¥t ALSO EXCIPTINQ -..,_,_ ' in. THEAUAOM the lollow1ng ~~· (•)unit• 1 ttwough 72 -Deted: Auouat 21, 1114 thown upon th• Con· PublllMd <>reno-CoMt domlnlum Plan ~ded in DlllV Piiot ~bet 10 13000 Page 1181, Of.. 18f.4 ... 1H llQal Rtcotd• of Mid Ortnge Coun~ ________ .__~ (b) E.lletutNt MNfntnt rtalC fl)T1C£ andJ:JOM-to .UM.and. OCOLWrJ--.;..;;--;;..;,,;...,.oiioiio--1 all thott .,.... o.ianetad ITATlmNT OI' M I , P, !. 0 and CP • Al~IRlhT thown upon tll• con• Ot'uel Of1. domlnlum plM aboY9 ,..,.,. FlCTmOUa 91'°9dto ...,... .. ,.... Mor-. commonly known T~ folfow1na partonl M 22112 Cemlnno ~. heft abendoMcJ the 1M of Laouna a.ch, Cdtotnla.. the "cllt1ou1 luelri ... Ttn'l\t of ... CMfl In In· Na1M: AAA AUTOMOTIV flil IMf'ter of IM untied 3125 KMY Lane, cma It .... on GOnflnNUon of .,_,CA 9M2t ..... or Pitt OMfl and W-n. F1cWout lutlne9 9l'Ot ~ by not• .. ...,,,. ftf9rTed ....... CIUt'lid b7 Mortoaoe or '""' fUtd 1n Onnoe County on Oiied on Ila property to t-1141 ALI NO. '170027 IOld. 1en per Cl9nt of""'°""' Alfred J OerfMI\ 1121 bid 10 be ~ad wfth bid Kerry 1..tM. Coeta MtM, CA 8IOt Ot Off9rt '° be tn Wrte HNI Ing and wt!I bt ~ M Atldt.. Hartlet, IOI I &hit ator.ald Ofb .. #I'/ F1QUttoa. a.nta Ana. CA um. lfttt .,. mt puJllo 11"f°' c.Uon ....,. end beb9 '""' l.Mlr*I Ml CIOfto ct• of.... ducted bY I geNfW ~· Deted 4 of efllp, ttrnber. ,... "'* ................. ....... CL "''If It; M-\lllfttt "1t COUnty a.rt: of Or• ....................... ._county on Augu9t I , MWD1t1f1 llli 1914 · ~ °'""" OOlll PutllllWCI Onnat CClllllt D flloC ._..,, 0, a.lb' PllOl 8'Ptiembtr I( 10, ''· 7, ,.... 11 •. ,4, , .... t~::::::==:::::::==::::::...L __________ _:MT~·t~l3~~r:_ __ ._. ____ ~M~·~ao~_.,.--.._..-...._ ____ ...J'' • J - lephon Service: , 1on4.ay·friday · 8:00 •. M.-5:30 P.M. Bu ioe ·s Countc•r: 1onday·Friday 8:00 A. 1.·5:30 P .M. DEADLINE ~ l11l 'HUC \TIO~ t>t·:AUU'.'ifo~ ~loml"' , Sut. 11 ::io u.m. T~""rla) \Ion. J::m p.m . . ~ t-dllt·~lttt·~ ru .·s. i.:m .. p.m. I It u r dn.1, \\ .. t>Jt: EiO f >. m. Frida~ · · · Thurs. l::\o p.m. · ~alurda~ Fri(lu, :Mm p.m. !'i unda~ Fri. · :1:00 p.rn . CANCELLATIO & CORRECTION . : • • <.d111•t•llulionb and c·orrt•c·tiou .. "'"' he-nrndt" on ..,c.mw dt·ucllinei. Ub ohc)\ t'. 1•1t·a t• ask for u t·arwc-llalion ruJmber "ht>n c•an•·t•llin~ 'our act . ERRORS: . Cht>rk ~our ad dail~ and rt•porl errors immediatf'I~. Tht• l>All .l PILOT assunw lia hilih for tlw firi.I int·orre('l inst-rtion onh:. CLASSIFIED 642-5678 laily Pilat ··· . · ·· · · · . . Our Display Adverlising de· putment ti loo.king lor an am· bilious person to fill an enlry level position. Candidate should posse s good eommunication skills, llexibHity and an aptitud«-for learning quickly. Submit a pktil't, or ••'I phOtopaph it for JOU at a miinal char11: .. . -: THE REAL ESTATERS THE REAL ESTATE RS GE 1s9-9100 ------~ --- • COLDWeu BANl(eRO THE REAL ESTATERS -··----Daily Pila1 642.4321 Cll ' • - ., latala ti Office lntala ZIH Liit I ,.... JIM 1.m..... ltlt Wu... IHI ltlt !ut.. 11001111 Wut.. 9100 8111 Waat.. 9100 ltlt ...... 1190 !tit Waat.. !100 Out IHI Office epaoe for...... fn lalt 4111 ......... ,.....,... OU YM ITlll DECOAATINO SALES llllUL IPFIOI •DTOl llOml Rl!CEPTION1S r 1Typ11t Shi pvt time, 3BR 2ba. Cennery: foe. INVIAe iiXUW §Qpp(y Md' a-day-PIT PON FIT. Tl Ull nu N.ed flair fOt cotor, ~ Mltelon Viejo ., ... Good Motor Rou1• •vallablt In HMvy phoneNoeur•t• epa. pool, t>dl, tennlt. ~-lq/•~---bulandlfdlrw.ng, . fOlJND ADS Aetall/Whol .. aJe; •Ito Muat know matlnt/frtlh ,1 .. WlllLY 1 .iii. a car Flu hrt, Wiit phone prHenct. •c· N9wport 8Mch. ~ng54:_7:~"· Mlary 135()/rno, yrty. Turnkey -.. .._, ... manleutlng, fectala .to. water Mt~Pt Aellab.. • .. trait\ "3-7395 c.uat• typllt, Hra f.5, M f\im, Incl w/d & ut . lmmectla1eooaupancy W.U.C.andAuocNit• trans.~ wtcdyl bet~?~ .. ~ = · p/hr. Call Kathy, Mutt be 11 yra Old, have HOIPTillllT/IPll. OoealMlkle of Cout Hwy. saoo mo. 876-4118 ARE FREE 831.QU IA~. ~ 17th 8t. CM. mantg.,.,,.,..t' pot.,,0.1: ~ PIUll/P·Tlllt 643·5880 dependable tranapor-FOi Ltguna Hiiia Co. Type Newpott. Female only. •CdM dtuutt-. AC, llfnC)I iUlata ~ ftH U•mTUTIR Call Hank at 7514401 Hre. 10am to 3pm. H~ Gym lnttruct0t-attraettve tatlon. Exptrtenothllpf\JI 50 wpm, tlexlble hourt &46-2963 f>'1Ce. from '225. 2155 E Cal• !!!: wlvee/atuctentt 855-1330 outgoing tern nMded for bl.It not neoeeeary. l!arn C.11 fOf apptm. 951-7070 Would k• tern to ahr 2 Bd CoMt Hwy. 175-tlOO • llLlll PlmllU &llllTlll Carpentera helptJI' fOf cu.. llUYllf lllYU CM Gym •r::: pm'd,but 1450-500 per month. Call 2ba Prom Pt, no amoktl Sub-IN foAOtanrl, arcnta. MZ·llll ... UlllllmT ":!:..~t!M 8': ~hr~ ~OYtr't~ for auto Ptrt• ator .. Mul1 wtll train. 14 110 10am Mf.aaa for :i~~~~ p«t. Cell [)ayt 875-6487 9'0, In N.I . lkia lnta firm High 8:: net. ::f''°· to medium .. bualneae 50 htt pet wtc. t76-t023 have yaiJd Calif. UC & gd haltttyftat Beadl, Ille typing, .., .. Llltala Wut.. BH $350/mo. Jim 152-9100 545-214 ~ ~ drtvfna record Apply at NB hair Mlon ha Ol*llno llYll/lllYEI tant to dub boOkkeeper. Two Oftloll a220 mo PARTNER wanied 10 co-and xfnt Wf'9\arial tkllla, UIPIT lllT&LLll Hub Auto Suppty, 2120 for quallfl•d cutter. Needed for FIT PIT work "-'m.& tat.at)' rtqulr• HELPl81nglepr0f.f9mnot 111/la1 clOM to l>Mdl. F nd Dog mbcbNed wntuN eucoeMful new JCJntMlaryandbentflt•. Expet. ontY. mul1 ha\19 Htrbor llvd, C.M. 846-2719 24 yttOtolder Clffneut' "*''to P.O. Box 5482 1 ~~ °' ,:'d~ avail ~. 831-3020 • :.,.; Vic' aath & S:. peraone1 Gaf9 product tor Send ra.urne to: truck a tool•. Call Mr. ....24t4 Claude ·IW TUOIUI hard worttlng · and DE: Balboa 111and, Ca. t2t82 S MOO . anore: N.B: 17W5CM natlonal dlatrlbutlOn & T"°"'r.6.' ~t~~· Inc.. Hall, 549-8111 ftUYllY PIUll TEACHERS AIDES PENDABLE. 850-1388 UIP'T/llOllTUY ".::'~ =~~ C...ercW FOUND. Male nwtetwtlt 1a1ea.7eo.ai91 Newpo,18.ch,c.92eeo · OIUUll twtJparttlme.lnqulreAllen FIT&PITECEunlta&exp. Hllll'l&llllTllTI AeeJ&tatelnveet"*'tCo studto 1or2 trm NB by latab 2111 Aust Shep rnbt l •ma blk il9ft9ant, tor 2 t>oya, my C.M. Col--Bec:tc Flontt, 298 E. 17th req. 14-8 p/hr t 57·1SOee Certlflcauon tralnlno a P '0 h u Ion a I. at • 10/1eelAdam21~ 1580 sq fl bid9. "'m Tern.. rabtel tao 5473. T.D.'i . 4111 ATTllJ• 1nm1111 lege Pr* hm alt achoot. 3 St .. c. M. 845-3«)4 Help wanted '""'*'lately. part time employment tltucla/appHranc• r•· 2522/21M1e-.30ee Mw. Wiii '9l'nodel or 844 3858 ......... Wllttn dal: J/wk. Reh. •lllTIATll• Home cteentng eervloe. available 11PM·7AM for ~ulred, phone., van.cs Prof ooup1e nMdl qui.t divide to tult. Call Lott blk/wht M•I• 1.1 llTI'Lll wanted patt/tlm. tehr +. 54 5 eYM Frldayt and Saturdays at Own trant. 14~1 hometnakl(I & oollea9 h~~':;~tu~.:r-cn':~: 28R furn hme or condo M1mey~~'~l:h Inv. Slb«lanhulklelmoaold lltNln It. IM Call St.w. 148·5700 lllLllUI MDII Supennarketa. Your.,.. 1111111 etudenta. M ... verae 8-40-35'1 N8 or CM. 64&-7513 ' 2 l/2&-811 Vic 11th-Santa 8~ In 181 & 2~ auto After IChoOI In my home, $5 hr. Cati 213 452-6185 Apply Jolly Roger 400 80. if"c·MH~ms c.tlt• UlllllT lllllll A:: I CM/NB 17th ' ~ Ana CM 841-7'12 TD'• Since 1941 Lit l&I N.B . .,... 5 children M . DRIVER-del!Wry & plu, TV Coti9t Hwy, ~n• Boh • . • Clltdtn Grov• ., ... Small .., ... ti .._.. 1000..2200 eq ft, LOST blue&go6d McCn Robt. S.ttler NH/CM Imm~ openln~, mutt MUlt haYe own ttanap. 1M1.iter FIT. Qd drtvlng LEARN Computer and tu t + utl +? &-lat 2tll atnp1epko,a1c,87~ r.wwd Vic. CM-4A-FV RE Br<*• 9d RMttort hawvallddttvtrtllcenee Pldc up at Catclet\ Halt. reoordlllcenceS4&-7080 llTDlllPUITUll wn Otfloe trainee llOht com~ ~Ired tome CJer.oe for rent, Ir; 1 '* H2·28J5or157-1802 142"2171 641-0et1 & OOOd drWlng record. ~ft!,2~~= calf Driver nHded for En~~g•tl~it r~Pontlble, type So.SA 540-6850 :i:1ntelnance nNded. Cd~. Qreet for tM.tt. or ta•utrlal ,..20 Lott Dog gray white Btl! Wut.. 1100 :::n~ab":d ,,::~ ---=· p kindergarten atudent to ~~;:,~o :v.J~~ PAIT Tiii Prefer couple. pert. atorege 17&-1224 llatala u female e lbe. Fluffy & UllllJI P&YllLI 931~900 ... lfltl and from tcmool. Pick up l r..t<*'ltlal tcC1. for Flex hou,., rapid ldvanc. TIL IUUIDUJ -&Wage..,., 11ng1e, e.20. ~ mr mag: cute. 850-'814 euey dealc In 5 "*"°" needed • to work In Weet Newpor1 for. 8em C09t• MW eo. Rell~ ment available. 895-UeO UJ· 1111 coeta M .... '50/mo 1000 tt omc:.. Fenoad . i-.i .... In letthtr"""" accng deot Must haYe ilTI •W eetab. Cleenlng eervloe. anfv81 at MacArthvr lnd trans req'd. M11ege pd. t'irt-t1rni 11ont book-142~7 wttdyt MPM l6de yard Hr Hatbor Bl¥d loet . ....._._I ..... ,.,, • be wlll to Looking for •xpetlenced Must have ~Eng. un Joaquin Cdm. Rttum &ptf pret 831 .... 915 ete>loG It Ft \leli.y office REST AU RANT: Mature, .. oma lntah HH & ..OS ~,800/rno. =~2c:b~'~t!:W-:.;;' r~1pon11b1Wty. Chevrolet M•chanlca. tpkg. Marie 3pm. $4&.1982 IMY9 meg anytime • llt*af Mlat)' H3-0023 =~c:~i~J::P 288eqk2roomOfG. NNN7i it52Agt R ARD846-2841 ~~l~t:~~w.1= :!.P~Hl~~l~ Or~~~. o~~~nce-.aum11 PllTTill Ulllllf ·new 18th8t,CM. Jlhl.lntah UIS LOST-Rewatd,Cellcoftm. environment Ctll INC. A,_ for KrauM, A/RfortmallpYblllh« 2 t J.A, t b hi h RESIOEHTIALCLEANINO 81UDENT8~EFERRED patttlmtdtyltwteh.lftt $225/mo 861-8928 Manx. declaMd, 1121. 2&cM100 · 873-0800 Yrau-50WPMr9q ~~ •• "..' •,1 ~ WorttlngForeman:Sal+ t7.50toatart.281mmedl· av.~lable In local Pl• ., Piii Vic. Univ. Park, Ir"' ....... . . --or-. 0¥1" • -commtol1500/rno Min. •t• openlngt. Muat be 11 Ul'J 11• IT, I.& 8'** tva11ab1e acroee U&-46431861-1075 deya ACCOUNTS PAYABLE Am •UU. 9-& ... pl hr, CdM. Jim, drMng record. neet *P-expr iyr, ttuen\engliltl ~· CltlZ.en req. ShOp. Only re.p. l*90n 2 pvt oa & Ilg Setty/Rcpt from ocean 538-8318 CWll..Clertcal & bank rec:--Looking for ~ 875-0838 pe.er .. mutt have current reg.~ cu\/bOndat>le. Call M PM need -s>~. Alk for Pat 1700/mo ~r 64M2M . REWARD IOlt am callco onclllaUonl i yr •JCPtr Poradl.-Audl Mechanic. OLDIUL OMV prln1out. Appt'f at: Npt Bch 142-e824 Hunt Bch 984-2890 or John (11-<4) 4&M037 m .. rm. "..... lUH&Mnts 360I :., c:'!9'5~ ~ann nteeWfY. G57..oMe xlnt pay, medical & t>en; Buay Newport 8Mch ~·y~t= ~ Landtcape malnt laborer lln&IUIT Ml 1 ... ,. sPIRifOXL REloiNd8 crippled. 'l7a..8740 &Orr II.Ill efltt. CHICK IVlRSON, lntutanoe Clllmt off1ot Mw. '5se-o383 ' FIT 14.00 hr Dan• Pt PART-TIME. Varied houft Mature ~· pereon, wilt. 1 • Piii um AdVICe In All M•twt & FIT evall to tMt INC. Alk for Mr. Krw. need• • full time Clerk Mttlnt Co 24705 Dana to lnol~ early A.M. Ing to Crain .. wonclng Lwt. View offc, + MC'I eoun.eang. 1115 80. El hl'MUJi 3112 lnd=:-w...o anJoye 873-0800 typltt. Dutlea wlll lnctuda DRY CLEANINQ & LAUN-Df. tuel thtu tit Mekandt. Must heY9 ct. Manager for fU\ growing IPI09. ~. nr oc c.mlno AMI, Sen Clem. llWA/IHlll working with flourff Babytltt• for bOy 1'A yrt computer entry, fight DRY HELP FIT, 40 Houtt pendable whlde (email Pie Shop. Exp In bakery airport. Full .. rvlctt UC'd. 492-7211 ..,. .. ,. Mutt haw 10 key exp. old. a-1:30PM, Mon-. Fri. ~Ing, .to. 5 d&YI. &44-<4421 LIUl.lllllTllY truck van ate ti on or rNteurant h.ipful avail. Recept .. copier, SCMM 1 ".. Outcall OHL! 83&-8198 ..,tty*'-' poaftloft. witi Coata.MMA. 142·2238 preferred. ILllTllllU/lllll Red HIUI~., ... wagon) to aiai.1 ~ 497-1037 uk for Pat or kttc:han,oon1w.rm.From l\ft •'41'1 . PtrNUI trafn. Call Sandy BA8Y81TTERWANTED Cal1Mr.Outt>ln553-1133 F/tl L I w k 7=tc:K./retl•t1te papet clealet, I~ lrvlne Jonn 11"" M50 mo. 11t1 la.t, 1 'f' lenlell JOH 842-7702 for appt Dependable pereon to OUIJUL 5ff~7~S4 ::.• or · 11 • 1 · 281"7228 area. Mutt W ~ __ R.,...E""'a=T-A-URAH,,,..-..,.,T,..,,,8-- tee. Jodi 833-N70 ANSWERS &mlllTUTIYI p6dl up and cet• for 2 Imm~ opening.typing-EXERCISE INS;RUCTOR Mectilni.t ~~·M~~=. Frtd~ TllTIW FUTI NEWPORT BEACH. 1880 Tk*le·OxkM *•m11. "'* &llllTAIT =.=n ~F~~: key punch-Ill• 3r~ S12 5,0 hr wlll train Fiil 1101111 betwMn •.so and 10:30 ,. now i.klno eppllcatlON :;!.=~=-0::. S-=-a.tow ll•W,.•n• .... Nwltoreooordlnltorfor Ute houMWOl'tc. Muat ~~·aW.:!SpfnXJnt UCM>302 IHPTUJllll •.m.3.u2~21 f0t all J>091ttont at':: •· oonferenot roorn,,... S OKED ~ national ~ 11ora love ctilld,_,. 536-2023 a .Recall cloth'-ODO••••• ... ...,.. for Southern Orange Mltllon Viejo loclt ' -ton 2 beth Old timer to my,_,,. Mauao• and Ac-In Newport B•aoh . ".. '" .... , ... ,." Cou teldent N II EllptMnoed appltcant• ...,.. .,.., • eon· "I tamember wt*1 ~re. 0p9ri 7 dtys ch 1 ..-ltJ • Babyamer wtntH, my •tore. Flah. 11. Mr Cotton wm train. Uf.8095 nty ' •· 0 r• Nl/Hll llU Call 494ota&I rooma. 11°'~W:.::' you ·ITlOMld gr ... lnstMd 1oem-12tm. 483 N. Old pur 11 ng, ax..-ng, ~ NB. 7 mo twin•. ~-0070 atrlctlona. Afternoon & Ana. S.V. exp. 1D-8 M·F, ----. ----=t:"'*1c , ,,..; ot SMOKED tt." Ntwpot1 Bl AcoW E word proc.eaing, ou• 7~ M-F tcflool yr PIU IUD evenino c1...... H.B. 780-8305 rettaurent · Hoeg H099ltal."Ll for •S~ual Psychic, Ad-Frontage Rd at 15th et: =or::=·.= 1125/wtt. ·,..,._ 173-7854 ~,,-=~=· F~ tl:: ~nee. 11. IA&Jf, UMllllT Pll IPIUTlll 1'11 llAOl lllU erchlttct, drettaman? vteor & card AMder* SOuth 2 bfodtl. per90n. 11000/1200 mo. •ft• 4pm. p/tlmt ft.Jt hra ex-· at)' Tl&lltll Uml Full & Part nme Ane letfllr.t h Mrlq 11880 mo. 945-4100 Put, pr ...... t & Mur9. (714) 541-7209 Call Cheryl, 142-8470 lllPl/OIUllTillll pef1ela en ...... Wiii FILING CLERK 7572AEYNOL08,H.B. Serve. uper .• pref: WUJllllll dayt, 142·7251 9¥9. 87&-2495 or 831-8M4 Fun cherge bOokk trak'I. C811 betwMn t em Electtonlo dlttrlbutor 847-71n 142•1403 111111111 tor law firm In Huntl= and noon. ff7-1191 nMdt mature pereon fOI' MAKE MONEY • MAKE IU PllUIS SYDIEY 01111 HILT 1m1 ~·=Ion ... COOK Fff over 21, mutt =~.,~epixc~ll:~ .. :r. ~~~~K=r m·~ ~~, Expar. Daya. Apply In I*• ---n. pey-work .-end .. H. SALT portunltlte & company -d t ,..,,., w eon. 811 Sleepy Hollow lllm IYllUILI ~eiv~•°'1·00=r!~ 2750 Hert>or CM b•n•fltt. call e1u Mectlcal front omoe ror tuTtt~or pe11 •tr,: Ln, L.eQun• a.act1 In Laguna BMch. MUlt Input rn1n typtng & 1o Counter help-Oonut thOP 8'3-0200 bu9Y pedlattlden. Exp 1 hourt. Muat be npet. on IOllL ULll OV9r 11 YMt'I otd, haw "~ p,,.,: CaJI Christa. M·F am ahlft lpPly In flll• ILlll mutt. CIJI Mf.0474 ~hOnH. Call Scott. ••Pt' ... pertOn fOf :~ndtbl~rhet W~ 5'7-8041 pertOl'l I015 Adamt HB El•ctronlct dlttrlbutor •1111110 51-3008 bouticiu.e c1othlng ttore In Earn' e:s:soo U ~ BOAT DETAILER PIT Htt llllTD llLI need• mature peraon for ~citing tc)vlronment, fut ~I IPPT. llTTlll Cot1a M•• ~2.7103 month. Cell 142-<4331 fla>CJble ~ Boet Ctn1er no up er. n Hd•d flllna dept. & "*"'Ot Grow In 0 Cott• N . p/hr p1u1 comm. No Jim 1~~· call Randy eao..ot-40 Full/pert time. t73-4&40 ctn£er. Xlnt oPP()rtUnltlea Mttalnterior ~,n firm Mltlng nec:c ... ery. Mutt --1-llTl.Plllll------ lllllll OUIT U•I..... ••nu...... ti..com~~i..ca11 =:: ~~na~: be~.M1ka,t5i-2401 for aon ••••co'" sen Tattclay, September 11 --urur ,........ .. _.... p eechool Id It h J ,.....,._ Truclc ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19~ What beif':ns with delay, a~parent lllLY PILIT Pr~~~oua Newport forequlpmentrentllt1ore. f••wtl.., Mu.t be reepontlble,,... r a • MC.,, uan ..._.. .,_ law nrm Mtkt TYPfng & other ofc .-1111 w Hable l have car. 20-30 Hunt leach. Full & Part driving •JIP'f n.c1111ry, setback, 1s transformed mto de inne bene 1t. Terms will be efined. lnduatrloua full-ch•ro• Sat. req. United "*1t All: Looklngforfrltndlyoutgo-Hra p/Wk, tteltlble. $3.35 time, bene1ltt &47·525' u W9tl .. good dftvlng offer will be validated. Moon in your sign coincides with personal blckprf0tbu9Y4-tttomey 145-4790 Ing mature parton to p/hr plue mllHge. Pllllllll record Pd vac, Int, etc. appearances. successful appeals. receipt of gift which features color red prtcttoe Qualified app11-work full time In flO'#W 141-4UI 413-4&3& TAURUS (Apnl 20-Ma" 20): You'll know exactly what to do at the actvert1a1-cant• wlll hava up TELEPHONE SURVEY thop. Salte •XS*'· Mlp-... • Bindery, muttl 1250·•xpar. 1"s,_a1e11-.,..1n...,Coemti...--.,..1ca--=Fu11-,.,-or- J f -.. w/deltyentryof AIR AIP. M.00/hr. Pff ewe, no fut. 840.78801tk for Gut .,. pref, full time. 142..0144 Part ti Wiii 1 litl Alk ri&ht time. C)cle moves up. you'll have a chance 10 display sense o nNT bllltng atatementa, 'blftk oold celle Hltu-74&7 GARDENER, part time for Lenny'• Hair SalOn wantt PIT dellvet bid PICkttt. for 0.,':; 850.'311· respon5lb1hty Member of the opposite sex has plenty to say, wants ocac1 egencyneect1typ11t reconcttltlOn etc. thnlfln-DATA AH!AACHIA/ apt oomolex Call Huber women1• aoee 17-301 with& Llbet'll.-.,Y/autoallow· -------- commitment. talks also about future security. Capncorn plays a key for fMt-peoed deek. Wm MCl81 1t1tement1. Lew ~lfler. FIT & PIT In· 84s.372a · uper enc• pot no ance. Reply '550 w.,,,_ W.UPDlll role. teach word ~ng. firm and/or C.9!11P.Uter ~&...com-mOdtll!!Q_for PhOto ohl-tve#'2~.Vfi/ ler.-leatntog deccut- GEMJNJ (May 21·Jun"O20). f ocus on popularitv, alITTity to touch e.tt lMIM 8t oo. a.P,-1 pfut. 844-1100 puterentry tor A I office. ~ o · · t. bltlont ancf nalr .nowt. lng,clMnlng tlote, help. I h S I b I " f 1111.. Uaa Need detail Otlented --WIU ltalt\. Appfy In Salary It • 'COMU!tatlon 1111ma11T I"" cuttomert MUlt be on uni versa t eme a cs a 1 Hy 1s stron., romance is pan o scenano IHI~ • eon Lott 13,_2800 ,.... peraon Houra Mon·''' and htJrcut or color ct.. MIMlon V1tjO.,., Oood Xiftt with CQlor and mtth and a lon.-standin& w"h can now be fulfilled. Task will be completed. Mid ege COUPL.! '°' 12 UllllT.. · tlM to 4om Atk fOI' Jay, tlgn W«1h 135455 + an phone preaenoe. 10• Tuee tl\ru Sat startlnO burden wtll be removed Aries plays a s1g.nificant role. unit• In Coat• M .... Prodvctlon pper helpfUI DECORATE INTERIORS Joyce, kethy, O.bble 1•10 at oost of prtnt If <:Yrat• typftt. Hra 8-5 SI. pey 1200 wtc CANCER (June 21-July 22) New approach wans favor of '300/mo'*'W:teductton butnotnec.Callbtwn .. 2 Colorld••!on. PIT. to 2332 w. Coatt Hwy. dHlrad Call Lenny p t hr. Call Kathy, ACCENT INTERIORS supenors, leadani members of the communat)'. Stress on11nahty, on HA. •f• req. wkctyt 850..0:M1 .tart. WIU train 77s-5«7 Newpor18each e7a..oa23 CdM ~5150 1 · 87t-2aeo d d h h k h I 532-15939 em onty •·-·-.. 'I MIAIDI •. lll••w 91 •• accent indepcn ence an s ow t at you are not stuc wit on y one _,__ ..,.__ .... , ... r .... method, onJ track. Leo. Aquarius nau~es fiJ.urc in exciting scenano 1c! M::r'30~ w~--= Ctn aip, a crewa. fop PIT,ITWlltraln.CellJuUe LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)· Yo u'll havtab1hty to perceive potenual den ..,._ In Coata houfttpayp!Uloomm.a uw212 Good lunar aspect h1ahhahts travel pubh.ibmg the obta1n1ng of C 8~ + bOnut + Call Mltl•, ?51-2401 I.all wtlt\ EA!El pertinent. eittra 1nformat1on. Your knowledgt, mcrcasc' and so docs apt. No a. 142-<4914 Clutlfled Adi. your OM-It'• a "'llZE your popularity. Cancer nauve fiaurc\ prominently. wtcclyt • PM 11oP lhopp4ng oentw. Cl...ifted Me M2-H71 VIRGO (Aua. 23-Scpt 22)· Do your own personal detective work' You could make starthna discovery. one relauna to mone). resources of others and pos\lble 1nhentance. Relat1onsh4p 1s strona. ~pons1b1h11e~ mount and it 11 ume to "review )Our'situauon" LIBRA {Sept . 23-0ct. 22): Check details. be po\ft1ve concem1n1 spe'Cial naJm and permissions Moon pos1t1on h1ghhg.hu partnership, publicity. encounters with those who~ views may be opposite your own. Unonhodox procedure 1~ apt to succeed. Emphasis alw on mantal statu,. SCO!t'PlO(Oct. 23-Nov. 21 > lndhidual whusharc5 your conccms 1s willina to cooperate 1n connection with unique prOJCCt Get plans o n paper, be analytical, put tOgtther puzzle p1ccn and perceive picture in 1u cnurtty. Membcr of opposite sex "involved. AOITrARltJ (Nov 22-Dcc. 21 ). Good lunar as~ coincides with ch•nJe. travel. vanety and romance Focus also on domestic relationships. basic ehangt"s. purchase 'Nh1ch could mclude an objects, lu\ury items. Taurus, Libra. Scorpio natives fiavrt prominently. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. I 9): Take 1n"cntory. &Ct profc 1on1t smcnt conurn1n1 value of pones ions You m1 y have 10me1hin1 that 1s wonh m ore than onginally ant1C'1J)3tt'd. 011 deep for information. rcf u1e to be discou eel by one who 11 skeptu:aJ, co\'ious, AQUAJUU (Jan. 20.Feb 18). Relauve who previously appc:artd 1nd1fTertnt will now o vital intemt 1n )Ourfrojttt, Focus on tnps visa • fund1n ab1hty tn handle 1ddtt1ona re pon ib1lity. Rela· tto hip mtcn 1fi~ and )Ou m1ah1 be surpriseJ by ••ctcctara1ion of love." • 1 P ·· (Feb. 19·Marth 20) Take 1nu11t1\c, ~;u:h bc}ond~umn1 upcctattons What appeared a 1011 C'IUst' ~11J he · rcv1\led 10 your achan . Cycte h1 • ~ou"ll be at the nght pl ct. populant) will 11l(nn and ypu·n rcl1c,·cJ ot unn~sary e•pcnsc. burden • ~ . KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZESI District ~anagers If you •n1oy worlung with youno boy• & girl• ond d"k 1ob1 ore not for you, con\ldtr o corHr 1n the newspoper c1rculo· t•on field. Thos '' o unoqu. po''"°" with do ly cholleng • & rewords. • Our op•n1ng1 ore 1mld1ote Ap,.,lr<on11 mint ho11e o von, itc;iti nwOQOn or trvck We offer on ••c•llent ' lory with o.~t pion end 001 ollowonce We ho~ on e11cef nt b.nef.t pion that imludet ho1p1 • tohiotion n1uronu, l1berol vocation ond holidays Condldol" mu\t ho"• o dt'ttre to be succ uful ond be w1ll1ng to worh hord, If you thmk t<OU ho11 Hie qvollf1<ottOM, pleoie opp!y .,, pert.On to 1 , the Daily Pilat doy tflru hidey 9 1 I o or 2 ' 330 W. Bay Costa Mesa, CA 92626 --·~~-- . ' Pacific . . Travel School . 610 E. l7ch .. •ti•• An•, c •. 92701 OlANGE COUNTY'l ONLY PIJVATE ACClfEDfTEO nAVEI. ACENCY SCllOOL A"*l<*t Alrllnt Sabre Comput• Tr nlnO MORNING, AFTERNOO~. EVENING ClASStS C•ll (714) 543-9495 PUYllTES PRE-SCHOOL I&•• 2 thru Pre-I 2950 McCllatock Costa ••ii 549--3877 JUllUIY/lllPI Sm.a oomputer com Medi 8 good wor1lw, tu I time to NI\ our omce. llt typing, etc. Cd 811, Spm, 24Mtn 795 Pau rlwo Costa Mesa 540-1919 PARK PRIVATE DAY SCHOOL Now Has Limited Openings For September in Grades K thru 6 Before and after school . Day Care Available · 211 l•it1 Yl1t1 At1. Costa 1111 141-11l1 ·. lDlte Jfatmumt &c~ool ORANGE COIMTY'S OLDEST I FllEST PR/VA TC SCHOOL Grades K-8 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACltOH 1 Whirl 5 Ankle COV9f tDMdeO 14 M.ito part 15 Cer1oonist P9*- 18 Gwmenl CUI 48 Coral ndge '7 Bottle cap 51 Alt•c:allon 54 Expect 541 Pro - 57 8IUe atllde 58Greetong - 59 Small atraw bl.lndte PREVIOUI PUZZLE SOLVED • 17 Holiday time 180MIMll. eo German gun 11 Being• Sft, 82~0ff one - 1t Oet~lve Phllo - 20 Lyne P<*TI 21 Fhted chalfl S3 Splttl 8" Elk'1 kin 85 TumdOwn DOWN 22 L .. f-cutl.,.. 1 Wood fiber 23 Saving• 2 OoH out 25 Very good 3 French glrla 27 Pub offet'1ng ' Protection 21 lttNCt 5 UntatMd 2t Eye part I F'ork pan 32 C.med 7 A of AM __ 3_5_~:..=;..i..:..t=o ___ I Ballet mo~ old '"YI n:iimid ones 37 ice aurtec:e 10 Chine Item 31 Birttwnatkl 11 ........ 1ng1 39 ~ 12 Peru natM 40 New York reeort 13 Letter• ... 42 lnltMMnll 431o11ott 11gn '4 BOundanee 45 Ceptured '· 21 Cornllhman 24 Chof .. 2tTr ... 21 lrrltat .. 2t W1ng,eg. 30 lmPJ-..lon 31 Small rooma 32~hnee 33TalM pet10f'I 34 lnvolltedln 35 lml)UO«lt • 3t Stupid c:t1ac>e 31 Coel IOUfc. ,, • Flndert _, .. 42Spr• 45 Alictatt ,. Bladltnall• 47 Ala - 48 UM1ut 4tAtnber or ITIMllC 50V9CUOUI 51 Pungent Wit 52 Piece°' evidence 53 Ball IC gult ~o.u .... 5t MOM)'rol • \' 4{ ' ' ... ~) SOUTHWEST LEASING, SALES I OAti YAE.NTAL Dof'MStlO-FottlOl'-Exo\lc 111-4411 • NEWPORT BEACH '71Dataun210 GX "Mih Stereo a A1tt tfiS3WZP) ., ... B!Ll MAXEY TOYOTA 11202 ~ M.2..(1821 *** '710.1.un wilt! Automatte end AK Cond ($57UXV) '2111 *** 11 210 u na -un_ 001111011- DAL!B vwa r;.;:,-,C ® 1114 UUIT CHYDTlll.E Wotfsburg Editloo 14 '* TOP l1U20 .. CAP l 1S C99 '2500 CAii ttlCl.ldlOn RMIOwal~ .:a ® 11U SClllCCI s1•US1UC11 Cimo CE Ult .... per "'° TOP $l2.01t 20 C•~ 111.000 -~$571608 1 ® 11U¥WC I L IOmoCEL !! '"9 91 • Wt pet INI TOP $14 &2S 80 CA" tt4 SXIOO CAP ~aon Aesldual sse~ BO m 1114 llPILSE 41 rnoCtL 1! $217 • lb ~ "'° T Of' S 11 040 96 CAP SH -500 $500 CAP r.oucoon ~ .,, Le 1s; 11 B ach Blvd Huntington B ach (114) ••2-2000 .. COMHElL CHEVROLET -~,.~1 , .• ,..._ J •, \4 a 546-1 20C '71 MUSTANG red/WM .uto ¥-4 S3500/obo pp 730-2425 786-GS2 Must .. *"-pelnt. ,..,. enatnew ur.. lmmec 12900 dy . 310·4277 ftlofwtnd '40-4117 U..la 1b a;;CL-i 1i.W A' Blla'edmoft (1JEG411) IUEUIUILll 540-e100 • 'IOMARKV1 ........ l10.116 a.low A_.. Mlle (1SNWM8> llllll UNI Lii 54().1100 .. I 91FWY GARDEN GROVE 22 PAWY • I . / \ 22 fRWV ..J 0 .... ' (/) ir CD SANTA HUNTINGTON BEACH FOUNTAIN VALLEY ANA EDINGER o~ PACIFIC . OCEAN Q CHICK IVERSON Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi 441 E. C.ast IWJ., 11.,.rt le1oll 171-0IOO Highest Quality Sales & Service -o NABERS CADILLAC ~ 2100 URl8R ILYI., COSTA IESI (114) 140-1100 (213) lll-1281 • Best P~ices • Convenle~i Location • Great Location • Super Service • Courteous & Knowledf!..eable Sales People "" CD 0 RAY FLADEBOE HONDA #11 a.ti C.1ter Ir., lnl11 In The Irvine Auto Center --830-1600 Complete Sales, Service & Leasing G ORAN E COAST JEEP /RENAULT r-# 1 /1 Bl W11t For . ,,_ _, Sain Ftr I Ynrs C orcn~e • SALES Oa t • SERVICE •LEASING ·-·. m:;.Af.-:r.:t•0 • ACCESSORIES DEPT I 549-8023 WARNER NEWPORT BEACH Balboa r~ r ---- 0 THEODORE ROBINS FORD U.S.A.'s #1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer Modern Sales. Service, Parts, Body, Paint & Tire Oepts. Competitive Rates On Ltase & Daily Rentals 20IO l1rlter lh•., Cesta •esa 142-0010 ., 140-1211 0 SOUTH COUNTY VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU 18711 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach (714) 842-2000 SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE Ofqe Courrtys lartut Yolbwactn/IMIZI Dealer We W Not Be Undef50ld PARTS IUARTMENT OP£.H SATUR1lAY CD RAY FLADEBOE VOLKSWAGEN # 20 Alt• Ceater Ir., lni11 In The lrvlrutAuto Center 830-7300 Orange Countys Ntwest Volkswa1en i)ea/er Complete Salts, Stmce & LeaS1ng m . ' ~.._. G STERLING . IR W SAUS -SHYICE -WSllG -PUTS Overseas Delivery Specialists PART9 DEPARTMENT OPEN SAT,URDAY MOANINOI BMW -ROLLS ROYCE 1540 Jamboree Rd. . Newport Beach " 640-8444 ., . . . . \ ~ MARINE CORPS AIR STATION ~~ EL TORO IRVINE LAGUNA . BEACH ~ LAGUNA HILLS I MISSION VIEJO fl g '8 0 1.Al(fu M/$$ION VIEJO SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO .... 0 CONNELL CHEVROLET 0 BAUER MOTORS 2121 llarlter II••·• Cetta •111 Over 23 Years Serving Orange County Sates • Service • Leasing 546-1200 Special Parts U1t 54&.9400 MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM -9:00 PM BUICK -JAGUAR -ISUZU Complete Automotive Need• SALES • SERVICE • LEASING Fine s.tecllon of Qu8ltty UMd Vetttct.e # 1 BUICK DEALER IN ORANGE COUNTY 2925 HARBOR BLVD. • COSTA MESA 178-2500 SATURDAY 8:30 AM -8:00 PM SUNDAY 10:00 AM -5:00 PM 0 STADIUM PONTIAC We're New -We're Dealing Aero•• from the Big A on Ketella Ju at Weat of the (57) Orange Fr..way Sales • Service • Parts • Body Shop on Premises l11h1i• 2221 E. latella 381-1111 BILL YATES YOLISWllEI • PlllOHE • PEllEOT SALES• LEASING• PARTS• SERVICE 12112 Valle leatl, laa.l1a1 Ca1tl1tra11 413·4111 117-UOO • 0 RAY FLADEBOE UICOLI •EICllY .111111 11111 #11 bte O•lftr. Ir., lnl•• 'in The Irvine Auto Center 830-7000 G CREVIER BMW SALES • SERVICE • LEASING "Where Professions/ Attitude Prevails'' 8peclatl.1lng In European DellWefJ. Exc.llent lelectlon of .... eftd-eerefvffy ,...,.,_. Ueed ...... tfW8y8 tn-.tock. 835-3171 208 w. 1.fst., s8nte Ana Comer of Broadway & 1at St. CloMd Sundays G) UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE QJIM SLEMONS IMPORTS HOND~A ~~ 2860 Harbor Blvd. 1301 Ou•ll St. -INw C•r LOCllllOn 10t11 Ou•ll SI. -R ... hl Ol~l•lon IT\ World's Largest Select/on of IT\ 'Cl '-Merceda. S.nz \CJ Costa Mesa 540-0713 3 Blocks So. of 405 Fwy,. . 833-9300 . I SMa • lulil& · Parts -Stnlce • W, n., . Class1f1ed advertising 1s your best choice for help in setting the items you no longer need. It's Qutck and inexpensive. and the Pilot reaches potential buyers who hve tn this area Call today. DailyPHat -eta 1f1ed ad phon 642·5678 '•" • .. ' Forece•t• on A2 • .. E~-~uban diplomat urges revolution against ~astro By TO AAVEDRA of 26 Cu n poLit1cal pn,. OflM.,..,.... . ~-~~-----'wc:~brou&ht.101bcll S.~:car An ex.Cuban d1plom t am-by the Rev JJc Jadcson prisoned in that 1 land country ValJIS Gomez .was appl udcd for more th n 20 y rs for and haded as a hero Sunday at a oppo 1ng dictator Fidel Castro press conference hosted by tile urged pohticaJ exiles .in 'he Unit· Junta Patnottca Cub n (the ed Stat on Sunday to bcJin Cuban Patnol Councll} ""'It the fannina the flames of a revolution Ncwporter Hotel in Newport that are brewing in Cuba. Beach; . . "People are at the point of While b1Uc4 as a pro s con· dcsp,eration, Everybody (there) is · feren e, 1t was mbrc o'f a rally. The ap1nst tho sys\em. We should be estimated .SO audience members prepared ,to back that upnsing;" wete mostly Cuban-American& .,said Or. Andres Vargas Gomez.. who enthusiastically embraced v Gomez's Cf') or urutx mo Cu n .. f recd m fi ten .opcratang out o ilits coun ry. Varps Gomez also lied on the United Ultes 10 prondc milnary and financial aid to anti· tro guerrilla once the pr~<hc· ted revolunon begin . Th t aid would violate a so- callcd agreement between former President John F. Kennedy and Soviet le dcr Ntk ta Khrushchev made dunna the sn• Ue cnsis of 196~ Var"Ps Gomez cxpbuncd (Pleue eee DIPLOMAT I A2) "J. ·. COUNTY IDIIIDll ,, MONDAY SE-P TE:MBER 10 1YB·l ORANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA · 25 CENTS Coaet Senior citizens partici- pate In their own Olym- plcs at Orange Coast College./ A3 A 17-year-oldglrlfrom Fountain Valley was · raped In a bank parking lot./A3 California An earthquake measured at 6.4 on the Richter Scale rattles San Fran- cisco./ AS Police are trying to find out why two tots were left In a car to die./ A5 Nation . A convicted murderer goes to the electric chair still proclaiming his Inno- cence./ AS President Reagan and Walter Mondale clash on taxes and the federal deficit./ A4 World Two men have been killed by octopuses off New Zealand./ A4 Biiiy Graham begins a tour of Russia./ A4 Features Famlly seeks to restore the respectabltttyof tt·-- name-Hookers./82 Sports The 'Rams got 11red of the boos Sunday, and did something about It~ /C1 Fountain Valley Hlgh's Barons remain as the Dally Piiot's No. 1 prep football team In Orange County./C1 John McEnroe Is still the king of tennts fottowing Sunday's victory at the U.S. Open_.IC1 Entertainment Tom Jones gave his female fans a thrill at-- Costa Mesa's Pacific Amphlthe~t'ie./83 INDEX .. Bridge Bulletin Board Bualneu Callfornla New• Clastmed Com lea CrONword Death Nottcee Feat urea Help Your f Horoscope Arin Liftdefl Mutual Funds Nation&! N Opinion Paparanl Police Log PublcHot SPort• tock M rket1 Televt on Th t Wuther World Newt M A3 BS A-4 C5-7 M C7 C-4 Blr.2 B2 ca 82 85 A-4 ~----AS B1· A3 C·-4 C1~ B8 83 83 A2 A4 Business, civic leader .J. Robert Fluor dead .,.., .......... .., ........ u,in P'laa• at Fluor Corp. beadq~en in Irrine were at half mut today in memory of the company•• cbalrman. John Robert Fluor, in.et, who died Sunday. Newport industrialist was leading county philanthropist, humanitarian By PHIL SNEIDERMAN out the world who will mourn ham as °' ... °""........ . an outstanding leader and fncnd," Orange County busmcss and com-Tappan said'. niunity leaden arc mourning the loss The corporation's board will meet of J. Robert Fluor, who died Sunday Tuesday .. to activate the compan\ 's in his Corona del Mar home after a • management succession plan.". a yearlong battle with cancer. Fluor, company spokesman said. Auor. chainnan and chief executive officer who bad been undergoing treatment of the Irvine-based Auor Corp., was for a malignant chest tumor for the 62. _ past year, had a major role in setting Announcement of his death was up the succession plan, the ~pokcs­ made by David S. Tappan Jr., man-said. president and chief opcratma officer Flags flew at half-mast today in of the worldwide enginccrina. con-front on the company's headquarters strucuon and natural resources com-just off the San Diego Freeway. Fluor pany. employees were told th1 morning "Although not totally unexpec~ that the funeral v.ould .be a prwatc since his condition was first service for family members A cor· dia&noscd last year, the loss of Bob porate spokesman 5aid the death Fluor is a tra&ic one for all of us -his .. cast a pall over the organization family, fnends •. fellow directors. and bcausc he was very well-laked and the 32.000 Auor employees through-respected." • School.--~ bells ringing ag£in First day starts off smoothly for students, teachers By UREN I!:. ltLElN Of .. 0.., ....... Orange Coast children packed their books, boarded buses and fouaht stomachs full ofbuttcrflies this mom- inaas the first day of the publicscbool year dawned m most local districts. Ooudy skies prevailed over this · mornana's frantic · preparations. mcmfull)' coolina classrooms that · are not air-conditioned; and carly- momin& reports from school officials indicated that the first day went smoothly in most places. .. It's been wonderful. tt's so quiet." said Cheryl Norton, public infor- mation officer for the Fountain Valley School District, ~ich opcr- • ates elementary schools in Fountain an e -dead f a hurt--~!~Jtanda mall part of Huntington Norton said 6.300 Fountain Valley e b h e e d }Ouths wtrc si&ned up to start school In:... eac 1nc1 ents today. The di trict's newcstaddition. Fulton M1ddk School. opened without 1nC1dent. Norton said. By ROBERT BARKER Oran e Coast beaches ov« the week-Enrollment fi14.ttS were not am-°' .. .,..,,......,. end. mediately available this morning for • Mlt's such a deep loss to the community,.. Irvine Ma)·or DaVld Salls said today .... Jt"s rare that an industrialist of bis stature 1s so ac:uve in so many community affairs for such a long time. He .. -as a VC'f) important part, notjU5t oflrv:me. but of the entire couaty. in politics and as a philanthropist. .. Fluor. once a heaVf smoker, was told of the chest tumor1n August 1983 while bcina lrca1cd for a persislellt case of bronchitis, company ~ man James Rollans said last year. ... Nobody knows at this time whit will liippcn," Fluor said in a sta1e- ment issued at this time a year aao .... wasn't planning to retire before. and I'm not planning to rctu'C now. I coUld be bet"c three yea.rs from now and I could be here 10 )utS from now ... he said. . But be admitted tbat he did cut back on bis extensive charity work because of his illness.. . Auor, wbOIC trademark wu a bow (Pleue ... nooa/A2) One man drowned, another was Frank Silva. 50. of Garden Grove the Huntinaton Beach Union Hiah k~~whikplayiqw~h~t~n~.~~.P~~~n~~.\~u~ttaft~~h ~~~~~.&tl~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ snorkeler accidcntall)· hot himself of the Huntington Beach pier hortly -district ad mini trative assistant. said Barbara !Cd.eon comfon. ber •bl-year-old eon. DaYlcl. aa - prepara to·~ achool th.la omlDC at J[ataer 1tlemeatuy Scllool in ea.ta Mesa. with I spearaun and a fourth man was after l p.m. Sund.a} and became evcmhina WI goina well. seriously burned when he fell mto a disoriented. AUlhoritics said Silva ''Kids are sriuling. thif\&1 are qutct fire rina in a scrie of inci~ences at (Pleue eee BltACllES/A2l (Pleue eee SCHOOL/A2) Skin color becomes· issu.e -in black man~ s murder trial ; Pettus· lawyer suggests 19-year-old may be guilty onl of having dark skin to STEVE MARIL£ NEWS BA CKGROUND 3 killed.· in crash on PCB Storlll 's clouds give break from hot sun I IOmc lhunelenbow·crs m the moon· t in ind deserts. the auo CoNTINU£o S10R1Es --------- - -. THREE KILLED IN CRASH.~. The women wen: pronounced dead at the IQCt1e of the 3: IS a.m. accident just U)l of the Anaheim Bndge near the border between Hunt1naton and Seal Beach. The accident occurred in front of the l~. Naval Weapons Station JUSt west of Seal Beach Boulevard. The deceaR>d were 1dent1fied a\ Deborah Slemmons, ·20; Diane · Otuckrey. 21; and Dianne Smm. 20. . The Orange County Coronor's office s&Jd Slemmons wa~ hsted· as the driver. Seal Stach Pohce said Murphy has been arrested on three counts of vch1culnr manslaughter. ln- vestigato~ said they ha~determin~ that the Oxnard woman hac.J con· sumcd alcohol just prior 10 a.he colhsipn ~ut 1t was not clear whether she was 1ntoiucated It took Orange County tirefijhtc~ about five minutes to cut Murph) free from the twisted wreck.age of her 197 l Rambler which vinually wrapped 1tsdf around the smaller car, accord· ang to pohce · She wa~ flown by helicopter to the Fountain 'Valley Community Hospital trauma center. A hospital ~pokeswoman would not relea t any details •today on Murphy's condiuon because "~r family hasn't been told about any- thina yet.'' The stretch of hi.ghway where the a~ident occurred 1s not hghtcd and has no center d1v1der. Seal Beach police Slid, I "There ha\c been many aceide1m there," count~· fire spokc1man Den· nis Shell said, addina •• "Tbere's bttn · deep concerti from the general public thert about that stretch of highway" Police in Sul ~och dad not immediately have 1nformat1on on the number of accidents in the area. DIPLOMA 't URGES REVOLT •.. From Al Khrushchev agreed to remove the missile bases and roughly 17,000 Soviet troops from Cuba, but warned apinst any U.S.-backed 1nvas1on of tliat country. , , However, the ex-prisoner said h~ believed the Rcapn Admm1strat1 on' rtCO&n12es the Castro regime as the doorway to communism in Central America and is con5equently more favorable toward helpmg to over- throw Cuba's communist govern- ment. Diplomatic relat1ons between the United States and Cuba were severed in 1961, two years after the rise of C&stro. Relations were partially re- stored in 1977. Va119s Gomez said he 1s hopeful the U.S. will support Cuban freedom fighters as much as it has supported anti-communist forces in Nicaraglia and El Salvador. But first,. Cuban exiles in the United States must unite and form a strona political pressure voup to lobby Congress for that mihtary atd .. he 5aid. 0 We arc only little groups, each one . of them with our own truth. We must unify the community to build a great &fOUP of pressure." said Vargas Gomez, wbo has traveled the cpuntry si'nce his return to the United States, speak.in& to Cubao-Amcncan groups. He blamed the groups for the lack of support shown by an Amencao public that 1s unaware. unfamiliar and thus uncanng about Cuba's p1iaht. "It is our fault ... The mam problem is that we always speak in Spanish - we arc speaking to ourselves," said Vargas Gomez. "We must speak to them in English about the difficulties 1n Cuba, the suffenngs ofour people." Va111s Gomez. a soft-spoken, un- assuming man of 60 years, may be best able to carry that message of• sufTenng, of despair for the country known as motherland to an estimated 80,000 Cuban ex sics m Los Angeles. For 20 years and seven months he was impnsoncd m Cuba, after being .. arrested In l 962 as an enemy of the government. Born in Havana. the nation's capital, Vargas Gomez was Cuba's diplomat to the United Nations when Castro rose to power m 1959. Notic- ing a "communist undercurrent" in the revolution-tom country. he re- nounced his position and mov~d to Miami. Fla. in 1960. 1 There he founded an ants-Castro radio program and joined the Revol- utionary Democratic front, the civil arm of the "Bay of Pigs" prOJCCt, a CIA-backed invasion of Cuba m 1961 usmg exiles. Vargas Gomez said he wanted to .. join the fighting" to be launched by Jhe Apnl 17 invasion. so he went to Ct.Jba via "underground" connec· uons. .w,hen the , attack failed miserably. Va!Jlls fled for sanctuary 1n the Ecuadonan Embassy. He soon grew restless and left the safety of the embassy m an attempt to escape to 'the United States. "That was a mistake." he said. Varps Gomez was caught. tned and gi ven the death sentence, which wps later commuted to 30 years m pnson. He was freed in 1982, but wasn't allowed to leave the country and join his wife Mana Teresa. a plefessor of humaruties at St. Thomas University r. ,Miami. · His renunion with his wife iron1· ally came later through what many Cuban-Americans view as a pohtical ploy by Rev. Jackson and Castro. Vargas Gomez said that he also viewed with distaste the meeting of the two political leaders. "We cannot understand how he (Jackson) can 80 to Cuba, see a tyrant like Fidel Castro and embrace him ... said Vargas Gomez, lamenting that 1,000 of the estimated I 0.000 polsu- cal pnsoners sull ja.iled in Castro's pnsons arc longtime inmates. Vargas Gomez knows their plight. No visitors. No letters. Little. 1f any. medical care. Pnsoners arc confined to their cells all day, weanng only their underwear. . He said outside the pnson. the . conditions are not much better in a country where the eovernmeot hos turned the populace into hars. "You can imagine what is the suuauon of hµm an life in the coijntry by thu picture of life for poltucal pnsoners," he said. 'Cuba 1s a country harrassed. Terronsm is im· posed on them (Cubans) psychologi- cally that they have to apecar publicly as backing the communist regime ... to be pretending to be what one as not." SKIN COLOR BECOMES TRIAL ISSUE ... homAt · white junes while blacks stand less and phone number with her than a I pcreent chance of bema !·-But there 1s the another view iud&ed by a jury that includes t~eri · One high school. acguaintancc one black. clau)led Pettus asked her sf she would Deputy District Attorney Pat be willing to jom him in pulhng some Geary said he did not object to robberies. She reportedly caJled Grimes' motion to interview ad· police when she heard the younashop ditional jurors but did not consider. owner had been killed. the matter to be of great significance. A police detective stated be found As 1t now st.ands. the tnal likely will several items of Jewelry believed to not start until November -more have belonged to Hazboun 1n Pettus' than a year after Hazboun was bedroom, which apparently was stat>bed and a purse, a cash box and a searched three times before the d1s- handful of jewelry were taken from covery was made. ber sbop. - - -TM evtdenu 'Q:liinstl>ettus was Grimes said he has never had a deemed weighty enough dunng a client who is so "out of character" preliminary examination last Febru· with the crime he 1s accused of ary that a municipal court judge commiting. He described Pettus as a ordered the teen-ager to st.and tnal fOr "church-going man" who twice was murder. l'.he Ju.dgc •lso kept bad~ voted most popular student at his $250,000 -a figure neither Pettus hiah school in Cincinnati. nor his family could meet. l>auJ &~r. the former principal of Pettus has been put at the scene of ··Marina High School. in Huntington the crime by . a customer of the Beach where Pettus was bnefly enrol-clothing shop who said she uw him led last year, was flattenng in his mside the secood-fl.£0r boutique the description of the teen-ager. f:ic same day Hazboun '11ed recalled Pettus as a bright."' hard-The woman ~id Jhe came face-to· working student who never massed face with the man and had no doubts class. that st was Pettus. Btrgcrs.a1d Pettus came to talk vr1th The customer, who took the st.and him when the teen-ager decided to dunnaa prelimanaf) heanng. said she dropoutofhi&h school to return to has heard muffied whimper) inside the hometown. That was JUSl three days shop bul was hurried out by the man before the murder. before she could investigate. Grizmssa1d be has nevcr»etn cJe~r _"We're ~lose~" she _quote4 the whether Pettus really intended to man as telhng her. rttum to Ohio or whether he JU'it She tesufied that the man smiled wanted to be free and clear of school and gen ti )' pushed her from the store. in order to find a JOb. closing the door after her. Later an the He said Pettus told him he ~ad day when the woman returned to the stop~ by Somcwh~e in Time the shop, she said she found a "closed" day before Hazboun was killed and ~1an hana.ang on the door. talked to the shopkeeper about work . Others at the ~hopping center also He said Pettus may have left has name 'ia1d the; .. aw a hlaC'k man. who resembled Pettus, hanging around the small complex. But Grimes claims his chent ma} have been snared an the murder case because of mistaken identity. Other blacks had been at the shopping center during the days before the murder and Pettus may have been confused for one of them. Gnmes maintains. In an unusual move, Grimes re- ceived perm1ss1on to hide his client while the star witness testified d.url.ni, the prcflmTnary hearing. When it wa~ his turn to question the witness , Grimes peppered her with questions about the exact skin color. hair texture and facial features of the man sh~ had seen in the shop. Then, before Pettus was revealed 10 the court, Grimes asked the woman sf there was anyone in the audience who looked like the man she had ~een. ThouJh Pettus actually was out of view in the prisoner docket, !>CV era I of Pettus' relatives were seated in the audience. Geary protested the tacuc and tht• witnesses at first seemed confused. After a lenJthy/ause, the Judge said he was satasfie the woman did not sec the man sn the audience. Gnmes later said he believed the witness was about to single someone out of the audience before ~he wali.Y.t olT. Geary, though, said the lawyer was takina advantage of the court which had Jl ven the attorne> per· m1ss1on to hide hs~client whale asking the witness to describe the man ~he had seen in the shop ·Cheap tnck or nm, the courtroom maneuver ma~ ~rtend thing!> to come 1n Pettus trial. ·Just Call 642-6086 What do you like about &be Dall)' Pilol'' What don't you like? Call the number at left and your me11aae wUl be rtcfordtd, tranccrlbcd 111.d delivered to lhe appropri1te 1dltor. Tbe amt 24·bour 101wuln1 aervlct may bt u1ed to record letters to tbe tdltor an any topic. Contributors to our Lf'tter1 column must Include their name and ttlt pbooe numbt>r for verification. No ctrculatlon c11l1, plcalf'. Dally Piiot Dell very 11 Quarenlffd Circulation Telephon • • Tell 01 what's on your mind. OAANGE COAS'T -~aily Pilot • H. L. Schwut1 Ill Puotrsher AoHmary Churchman Controller "' Slephan F. Cerezo ~·"Of Cc>d« Ml..aaJ Proouc1 ion Donald l. Wlllltmt C1rcula11on M nn er Man Circulation 71'18"2'""33 Claaalfled adnr11-lng 714/'42-5871 All oth•r ct.pertm•nta 8"2·W1 MAIN OFFICE . VOL n, NO. 254 . . l ., Partly cloudy, continued warm· Coa•tal Tldea $.oondlOw TODAY 40,1 p"' I 6 s.cono l\IQll 10 O• pm u ,._, >tit YI' .. ~ ... ~~~ "IOU vj, 0.11 • C:.-r • TUltoAY F11s1low 410•"' 0.4 ~ Y04hl!I •e lo-.o O)pm 13 S«>Otld 11.gl\ 10 )~ PJI\ u . . 8uf\ Mia lode~ II 1 01 p ~. ,_ Tlltlldll' 11 e;» 111\. llWI Mia lgllll II 1·0• p I'll. -• ' Moon ,. ... lode)' al 1 4' I> m , .... TU41d•r 11 t·4e • m alld ti~!\ at tOls>m AIDeny Albllqu.rqu. Amati Mo Anct\of90<t A1i.n11 AlltnhC City Avltln kltll!IOf• 81rminQNm llltmtrc:k 8olM 8ot1on Buttllo \ Extended '~-O~Tl~UEU ST ORIE S _ F LUOR DIES, COUNTY MOURNS .•. ·• From Al · tte, was known tor his soft but direct speaking manner. He had an inter- na11onal reputation as a businessman but he o0en told employees •'JUSt call me Bob." Outside the busine~s. his charity work was also widely recognized. In 1976, he helped the Los AnJeles chapter of the United Way raise a record $32 million, and his com- pany's philanthropic arm, the Fluor Foundation. contributed $2 million to the drive for the Orange County Performing Arts Center. In 1983. Fluor was fund drive chairman for the United Way of Orange Count). "Far more than the money he's Jiven to a variety of charitable causes, 1t was in h15 leadership that he really made his mark:' Memtt Johnson, president of the United Way of Orange County. said today. "He was w1llme to (support} new and in· oovauve ideas such as the 1mmigrant and Refug.ce.Planni'na Center.·· But Johnson added. "He really shied away from taking credit. He d1dn 't need the credit. He dadn 't want it. He didn't lend his name Just to act awards or to be honored. That's the sign of a truo leader." Orange County Supervisor Ralph Clark said today, .. Bob Fluor will be sadly missed in this county. Not only was he a veat industrialist. but he had a biJ. heart for helpsna the under· privileged He was one of our ireatest ci tizens •• lrvine Co. Chairman Donald L. Bren. a long-time friend and business associate who invited Fluor to join the Irvine Co. board in 1982, ob- served, "Bob Fluor was a com: passionate, caring human bcmg. He was-Yef'Y:OO"ecrned about the bette1- ment of his community and of society; as exemplified by his acttve involvement m so many organiza- tions such as &he Boy Scouts, the Uniced Way and other humanitanan endeavors... Both personally and professionally, 1 will miss him very much, as will .all who knew him." Fluor is survived by his wtfe, the former Lillian M. Breaux: two sons, John Robert II and Peter James Fluor; has mother, Mrs. Peter E. Fluor; two sisters, Maraaret Ann Reed of Newport Beach and E!jza. beth Louise Taylor of Seattle; and seven arandchildren. Fluor Corp .• which was founded by Fluor's grandfather John Simon Fluor. is California's sixth large$t publicly held company and the'na- t1on's second·laraest ensineering and construction company, behind the San Francisc-0-bascd Bechtel Group. Auor earned S l 59 million in profits on revenues of$7 .34 billion ID the fiseal year that ended October 1982. Robert Fluor was the son of PcterE. Fluor. the company's presiden\ before his death; and the grandson of the company's 1ounder John Simon Fluor. Fluor succeeded his uncle. J.S. Auor Jr., as president and chief executive officer 1n March 1962 and served in those positions until Jan. J. 1968, when he was elected chairman of the board and chief executive officer. Born Dec. 18, 1921, 1n Sant• Ana, h~ 1raduated from Anaheim Union Hiah School in 1939 and attended the University of Southern Califom1a before entering military service in 1942. Ao Army Atr Force pilot for 31/2 years during World War JI, he served two yeaJS as a fint tieuccnant in the central Pacific theater. He was decor- ated wtth the Disttogu1shcd F1yina Cross and Air Medal. Fluor was honorary vice president and former chairman of the National Association of Manufacturers; a board member of the Californaa C.anadian Bank: and a director of the Irvine Co.1 Texas Commerce Bancshares foe., Pacific Mutuar In· surance Co., Huaties Aircraft Co .. Santa Anita Operatin,a Co. and Santa Anjta Realty Enterpnses. He served as a member and former chainnan of the board of trustees of use. and was a member of the Business Council, the Conference Board, and the Business Round table. ln 1980 Auor was named Man of the Year by Eniineering News-Re- cord and Most Outstanding Chief Executive Officer by Financial World magnine. He was a member of the executive board, Boy Scouts of America, Or- ange County Council, in 1981, and received the Good Scout award from the Orange County Council tn 1984. Auor was accepted into the Mili- tary and Hospitaller Order of Saint Lazarus of Jerusalem and was in· vested as a Knight of Malta by the SOvereian Military Hospitaller Order of St. Jobn of Jerusalem of Rhodes and of Malta, Western AsSOC13tion. Fluor was a member of the Amen· can Institute of Chemical Engmeers, American Petroleum Institute, and American management Association. He received an honorary docto.rate oflawt degree fromlhe University of Southern Califomia 15 well as the Asa V, Call Achievement Award. In 1979 he received the Capt. Robert Dollar memorial award from the Nauonal Foreign Trade Council for dit- tinauished contribution.. to the ad· vanoemtnt of Amerlcan trade investment. BEACHES CROWDED OVER WEEK·END ••• PromA-1 was unable to take care nfhlmsclf ID during a football game on the beach, a the surf and had tO be rescued. His Sheriffs sp<>kesman said. fnends assisteo . htm to shore from The knifing reportedly stemmed wa1st-h1ah water but lifeguards and from a quarrel over the rules with a paramedics were unable to restore his player on the opposin• team, accord- breathing or pulse. He was P,ro-tnJ to reporu. The vJctlm stepped out nounced dead on arrival at Pacifica of bounds while going after the Community Hospital 1n Huntmgton football and felt a burning sensation Beach. in ru1 thigh. Silva'!> death is believed due to He apparently ws stabbed with a drowning although coroner tests are k1tCheti·type knife With a IX·inch pending, lifeguard John Barth said blade that hasn't been found br today. investigators. < In waters ofTSouth Laauna, mean· AJso an Hununaton Beach, a 39· whale. 19-ycar-old snorkeler Kurt year·olt! Huntington Beach man suf- Loltmeyer shot himself 111 the thish fe1ed bums-over a third of his-body with a spear gun when struck by a late Sunday when he apparently wave Saturday, accordina to a stumbled into a beach fire ring filled Shcnfrs Dcpanment SPokesman. with hot, gJowan& coals. authontaes The v1ct1m was t.aken b) Harbor reponed Patrol boat to Dana Point and then Jim Monroe was rushed to the UC taken to San Clemente Hospital Irvine Burn Waid in Orange for where he was treated and released . A treatment of thsrd.<fegrcc bums to his spoke!>man said the barb from the arms, lcp and stomach, said 81_fllt c;pear did not loda.e an the man-5 lCJ. L>aVis, a ffuntinat0n Beach Fire In an incident at Bolsa Chica State . -Oepanment spokeswoman. Beach, a JJ.ycar-old Pico Ri vera man Monroe reJ)Ortedly had gone to the was stabbed in the thiJh t1.1rday Huntin1ton city strand earlier in the ' day with a group of about a dozen · .fnends. Davis said firefighters were told the man hac:1 drunk as many n 18, beel"5 and an ·unknown quantity of vodka durina the day. "He'd passed out for about four hours and when he •ot up he fell onto the coals," Davis said. Lifeauards reported large, but not huge crowd5, at local beaches where the high temperatures hit 88 dcattes at Newport Beach and 85 dcarees at Huntinaton. With Tropica.J Storm Marie kickina up surf conditions, waves up to 10 feci wen: reported 1 n -Ncwport-Bcadr Sunday afternoon. But the weather for the most part was "real hot and muaay and there were miserable conditions, accordina to Lifeauard Crai& farmer. Altoget her, more than a million people flocked to Southern California beache$ Su n~r.._li(eauards s:ud, with 900,000 at I.:Os-Anaeles County-- beaches, 1 S0,000 at Oranac County beaches and thousands more in San Dieao County. SCHOOL STARTS ALONG COAST~~. From A l and everyone's happy .• ;· she 1d Air· with the c,ampus to their classes this condtt1onma units broke down at morning. Fountain Valley H1&h School, Hen-••t uw a fow tears but all the kids dcrson said, malcina Hi.in~ uncom-were welcomed by their teachers,•.• · fortably warm there but not un-Ray siid. "Overall thett: wu 1 big bearable. turnout and · 1 l'C'll enthwias11c School ~II• al~ rana in 1he aroup." Hununaton Beach 1\y (f.lcmeotary) t Costa Mc~ thah School. the 5c~ool D1!.trict th1 morning. In the 1,414 MudcntJ who showed up Ocean V1e~ hool District. tudent ~crcn'c 1t1eonlyonc who hod to fiaht returned toclas rooms in Hunungton the first-da)' Jtllen. Tc>tlay "as the Beach, Fountain Valley, Wcstmin ter fin.&dayofcla se fottheschool'ane and Midway C1I)'. principal, Frank tnfusmo, a K"hool At Harbor View £!1cmcn1af}" sp0kawoman id. • School, 600 studcntJ b6th from ''He's doing fine," the Harbor· View llnd from the nnw· spokeswoman said rca urinaly. cloM:d :astblufT ·I mental") ·hool "l fe' JU.St upcr throuah ~he pthcrcd und pr pared to t b3t'k •o whole thi.ng.'' their tud1c • aeoordi n to Nc•rpon The lrvtnc Unified hool o; trkt re 1dcnt Janet Ra» opened fo~ busmen la t Thurlda)' Ra). who ha lhrttch1ldrcn aucnd· facin mi r11ble hcst and me 1n llatb<>r Vu:w th1 )c.ar, 1d he power outa1cs accord1n1 to Fran nd other ~rcnl \olunt n helped Mon n, an 1dmin1 tnith'C a 1 cant u1dc \oun u:r who 11re nm fAmah r in the d151~ ct • . . ' . "There wau peaceful bcf!nn1na to the fear," Monon said. 'We had 16,3 8 6tudents ... but we're sure that will be adjusted upward because w know all the kids don't show up for the fit1l d.ay.'' Thrcuchools had hlackoutsdurina the record-brcakina heat last week. he uid and school official1 had to arapple witb whether to-dtami clas!Cs for the day. "luckily all the power and the air condiuonma was hick on within about an hour and 1 ha lt .. Monon llll'1. Tb11 t1 the fintyear lhat lrvane hilh hool 1tUden11 hav tieen required 19 tany photO ·14ebtffi~iion rard$, 1he said. and the proaram h11 wor:ked out well. The requirement Was 4 aCled upOfi afttr vtral Una enity H Sd1oo11tud.cnts" re: injurdj la1t r h1lc Jnving off ctmpus dunn, a I u nch bi'CI \ Dr. Andree Varau Gomez '\ Forecasts on A2 Ex-:Cuba diplOmat urges revolution against Castro . . l • • f IRll I DiTIDN . ..._,, MONDAY SEPTEMBER 10. 1984 ORANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS • Coast Senior citizens partJcl- pate In their own Olym- pics at Orange Coast College./ A3 J. Robert Flu·or, 62, A 17-year-old girl from Founta'n Valley was raped In a bank parking lot./A3 California An earthquake measured at 6.4 on the Richter Scale rattles San FriJn- clsco. /AS · Police are trying to find out why two tots were left In a car to die./ AS Nation A convicted murderer goes to the electric chair stlll proclaiming his Inno- cence./ AS President Reagan and Walter Mondale clash on taxes and the federal deficit./ A4 World Two men have been kllled by octopuses off New Zealand./ A4 Biiiy Graham begins a tour of Aussie./ A4 Features Famlly seeks to restore the respectability of Its name -Hookers./82 Sports The Rams go! tired of the boos Sunday, and did something about It. /C1 Fountain Valley Hlgh's Barons remain as the . Dally Pilot's No. 1 prep football team In Orange County./C1 John McEnroe Is stlll the king of tennis following Sunday'svtctoryetthe U.S. Open./C1 Entertainment, Tom Jones gave his female fanaa.tbrW4l---~~~ Costa Mesa's Pacific First day of school Amphltheatre./83 Barbara Nelaon comforts her alx-yea.r-o1d ::.:::::::::::.:::.:::::: . .:.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:~:-:·:·:·:·:·:·: aon, DaYld, aa be preparee to •tart mcbool ... th.la momtnc at lta.l8er Elementary School lo Coeta lleea. See atory oa A2. . INDEX Bridge Bulletin Board Bu1lneu Callfornla New• Claulfled oomtca C1"911word Death Notleea Featur .. Help Your t HOfoacope Ann Landet• Mutual Funds Nation IN ~~nl~ P ce Log P IC Notl s i Stock Mar1< t Televt on TI\Utert WHthef World N , B4 A3 85 A4 C5-7 84 C7 C4 81·2 B2 C6 82 85 A4 A8 81 A3 C.4 C1~ 86 03 83 A2 A4 # Skin color becomes issue in black man's murder trial Pettus' lawyer uggests 19-year-old may b guilty only of having dark skin Industrialist. ---philanthropist mourned by QC By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of .. DlllJ ......... Oranse County busincu and com- munity leaders today mourned the loss of J. Robert Au or, who died Sunday in his Corona del Mar home after-~. yearlona battle with cancer. Auor. chairman and chief executive officer of the lrvi~bucd Aupr Corp., was 62. Announcement of ht5 death v. s made b)' David . TapPln Jr., president and chief operating omccr of the world~ide cngjnccrina, con· struction and natural resour'ClC$ com- pany: . ••Although not totally unexpected. since hi condition was first dia&nosCd last )Cir, the loss Of Bob Auorisa truicone for all of us-hi (Pleue ... l"LUOR/A2) J. Robert Plaor One dies, three . ·hurt in bizarre · beach incidents Knifing, spearing ,..__ reported as sands full over weekend In waters ofTSouth Laguna. mean- wb1le, 19-ycar-old snorkeler Kun Lohmeyer shot himself lo the thiah ~1th a spear gun when struck by a wave Saturday. accoriiina to a hcrifl's Department pok . By ROBERT BARIER The victim was taken by Harbor °' .. 6.lr,........ . ~trol boat to Qana Point aod ~en · One man drowned, another v.ils · · taken to San Clemente Hospital knifed while pla)ing touch football. a >there he v.'l.s treated and released. A snorkeler accidentally shot himself poltC$man said the barb from the 7 with a spear gun an~ a fourth man v.:as spear di~ not lod&e in the ~,1 lq. seriously burned .when he fell 10to a lo an incident at ~lsa quca late fire rina m a scncs of incidences at Beach. a 33-year-old Pico Ravera man Orange Coast beaches O\'Cr the v.:cck· was tabbed an the thigh Saturday end. dunnga football game on the bcaeh. a frank Silva, SO, of Garden Grove hcriffs spokesman said. • apparently dived under a wa\e ~uth The knifing reportedly stemmed of the Huntinaton Beach pier shortl~ from a quarrel ovc~ the rules with a after .I p.m. unday and became player on the oppos~ng team, aoc:otd- -dl~nc.A A~nhorii ._ lnt.Jl.On:po.cts.....1..bc..lll.ct.u:D..Sl:.cJ>1)Cd,out __ "'-'- was u~e to take care of hamsdf an of bounds 11rhilc going after the the su nd tiad to be ~ued. Hi football and felt a bumina nsation fricn assist~ him to shore 'from in his thigh. · •'a.ist-high water but tifi uard · and He apparent!) v.s s_tabbed v.:itb 1 paramedics v.crc uru1bk to restart hi kitcbcn-t)pc lnifc v.:1th a 1.Anm brnlh1ng or pulse. He v. P.!O" btadc that h'i n't been found by nounccd dead on amval t Pacifica ~-Om~R+W~~~H~ Beach. Siha, ·death i bchc'fcd due to dro--. nina althouift coroner test arc pcndina. liftguard John Barth said todav • StEV.£ Mu1LE -- NEWS BACKGROUND 3 killed .. in crash onPCH torm 's clouds give b~eakfro111 hot sµn lhc auon I -- CoN T INUl O SroR1E s ---~ THREE KILLED IN CRASH .•• l"tomAl · The women \litre pronounced de d at the scene of the 3:1S a.m accident just tast of the Anaheim Bndg near the border betw«J\ Huntin&too and SCIJ BC ch. The accident occurlcd 1n front of the U.S. Naval Weapons Statton JUSt ~t"St of "Seal Beach Boulevard. k The de«ascd ere 1dcnutied as Deborah Slemm ns, 20~ Diane Oruckrcy, 21, and Dianne Smits, 20. The Orange County Coronor.'s offic · w.id ·Slemmons was· listed ·as the driver. · ~ Beach Pohcc said Murphy has been arre ted on three counts of vehicular manshauahttr 1 n-v~tipto~ 1d the h ~edetetmined that tht-0.11nard woman had con· sumcd alcohol just prior to I.he collision but it wu not clear v.ht-ther he was into~icatcd. It took Orange County fircfiahtcrs about five minutes to cut Murphy free from the tv.1sted wreclmge of~er l 971 Rambler which virtually · wr.apped itself around the smaller car .. accord- 1og to police. She wa'I Oown by helicopter to the Fountain Valle) Commun1t) Hospital trauma center. A hospual spolesv.Oman ~ould not rtlease an) detath todil~ on Murphy<s condiuon because "hC'r timily hasn't ~en told about an)· t.hma )et." , The '>lrctch ot h1ghwa) where the accident occurred h not lighted nd has no· center di"'.1dC'r, Seal Beach police 111d • "lhcre have.been man) accic.kn&s there;· county tire spoke5man Den· nis Shell .said, adding. "There's· been deep.concern from the general pubhc. there about lMt siretch'of)1ighway." . Police m Stal Beach did not immediately ha"c 1nformauon on the number of accident~ in the area. DIPLOMAT URGES REVOLT ... From Al Khrushchev agreed to remove the missile bases and roughly 17,000 Soviet troops from Cuba, but warned ap:mst any U.S.-b3cked t0vasion of th.at country. However, the ex-pnsoner said he believed the Reagan Administration recoaruzcs the Castro rt'glme as the doorway to communism m Central America and 1s con~uently more favorable toward helping to over- throw Cuba's commurust govem- · ment. Diplomatic relations between the United States and Cuba were severed in 196 I, two years after the nse of Castro. Relations were partially re- stored in I 977. Vargas Gomez. said he is hopeful the U.S. will support Cuban freedom fiahters as much as it has supported anti-communist forces in Nicaragua and El Salvador. But first, Cuban exiles an the United States must unite and form a strona poHtical pressure voup to lobby Congress for that military aid, be said. "We are only little groups, each one of them ..-ith our own truth. We must urufy the community to bulld a great &roap of pressure," said Varsas Goma. wbo has traveled the country since lus return to the Umted States, spcakma to Cubcin-Amcncan croups. He blamed the groups for thct lack of support shown by an Amencan public that is unaware, unfamiliar and thus uncaring about Cuba's pli~L ' It is our fault .. The mam problem as that we always speak in Spanish - WCHU'e speaking co ourselves." said Vargas Gomez ··we must speak to them in English about the difficulties in Cuba. the suffcnngs of our people." Vargas Gomez, a soft-spoken. un- assuming man of 60 )Cars, may be best able to carry that message of suffenng. of despair for the country known as motherland to an estimated 80,000 Cuban exiles an Los Angeles For 20 years·and seven months he was impnsoned in Cuba, after being arrested in I 962 as an enemy of the1• government. Born in Havana. the nation's capital. Vargas Gomez was Cuba's diplomat to the United NatJons when Castro rose to power in 1959. Notic- ing a ... communist undercurrent" in the revolution-tom country. he re- nounced his position and moved to Miami. Aa. in 1960. There he founded an anti-Castro radio program and J01ned thC' Revol- utionary Democratic Front. the c1v1I arm of the '"Bay of Pigs" proJect, a CIA..backed mvas1on of Cuba in 1961 using exiles. Vargas Gomez said he wanted to ')om the fighung" to be launched b} the April I 7 10\:as1on. so he went to Cuba via "underground" conncc- t10ns. When the a ttack failed miserably, Vargas Oed for sanctual) m I.he Ecuadorian Embassy. He soon grew restless and left the safety of the embassy in an attempt to escape to the United States. "That was a mistake," he said. Vargas Gomez was caught. ltled and given the death sentence, which was later commuted to 30-years in pnson. He was freed in 1982, but wasn't allowed to lea vc the counlt) and jOin his wife Mana Teresa, a professor of humamtie at St Thomas Um"crsll~ in Miami. His rcnunion wuh his wife 1roni- cally came later through what man~ Cuban-Amencans '1ew as a pohtical ploy by Rev Jackson and Castro. Vargas Gomez said that he also viewed with distaste the meeting of the two poht1cal leaders. "We cannot understand how he ' (Jackson) can go to Cuba. see a t)rant like Fidel Castro and embrace him," said Vargas Gomez. lamenting that 1.000 of the esumated 10,000 politi- cal prisoners sull jailed 10 Castro's pnsons are longtime inmates Vargas Gomez knows their phaht. No visitors. No letters. little. 1f an y, medical care. Pnsoncrs arc confined to their cells all day, wcanng only their underwear. He said outside the pnson. the cond1uons arc not much better in a ·country where the eovernment has turned the populace into liars. "You can imagine what is the s1tuat1on of human life in the country b> this picture of life for poht1cal pnsoners," he said. ..Cuba as a country harrasscd Terrorism as im- posed on them (Cubans) psychologi- call y that they have toap{>Car publicly as backin& the communtst regime .. to be pretending to be what one 1s not." SKIN COLOR BECOMES~TRIAL ISSUE ... From Al white Junes while blacks stand· less and phone number with her. than a I percent chance pf bemg But there 1s the another view. jud&ed by a jury that includes even One high school acquamtance one black. claimed Pettus asked her 1f she would Deputy District Attorney Pat be willing tOJOIP him in pulling some Geary said he did not object to robberies. She' reportedly called Gnmcs' motion to interview ad-police whe"n she heard the young shop ditional jurors but did not constd~r owner had been lolled. the matterto be of great' s1imficance A pohcc detective stated be found · As It now stands, the trial hkeh will several items of Jewelry believed to not start until November -more have belonged to Hazboun IO Pettus' than a year after Hazboun was bedroom. wh1ch apparently was stabbed and a purse. a cash box and a searched three times before the d1s- handfuJ of jewelry were taken from covery was made her shop. The evidence against Pettus was Grimes said he has never had a deemed weight)' enough dunng a client who is so .. out of character" prcltm1nary examinauon last Febru- with the crime he 1s accused of ary that a mun1c1pal coun JUdge commiting. He described Pettus as a ordered the teen-ager to stand tnal for "church-going man" w~.o twice was murder. The Judge also kept bail at voted most popular student at his $250.000 -a figure neither Pettus hta.h school m Cincinnati. nor his family could meet. l>aul Berger. the former pnnc1pal of Pettus has been put at the scene of Manna Hiah School 1n Hunungton the cnme b) a customer of the &ach where Pettus was bncfly enrol-clothtng shop who said she saw him led last year, was flattering 1n his inside the sccond-Ooor bouuque the descripttoh of the teen-ager. He same da) Hazboun died. recalled Pettus as a bnght. hard-The woman said she came face-to- workrna student who never missed face w1t.h the man and had no doubts class. • that 1t was Pettus. Beraersa1d Pettus came to talk with The customer who took the stand him when the teen-ager decided to during a preliminary heanng. said she dropoutofhi~ school to return to his heard muffled whimpers 1ns1de thC' hometown ihat was JUSt three da}s shop but was humed out by the man before the murder .before she could '""estipte. Gnmes said he has never been clear "We're closed," she quoted the whetbec Pcuus rcalb 1Jllended to lil3ll-aS t.e1liJli her. return to Ohio or whether he just She testified· that the man smiled wanted to be free and clear of school and gently pushed hC'r from the store. 1n order to find a job. clo'img the door afier her. Later 1n the He said Pettus told him he had day when the woman returned to the stopped by Somewhere 1n Time the shop. she ~1d 'lhe found a "closed" day before Hazboun was killed and sign hangina on the door. talked to the shopkeeper about "'Ork. Others at the shopping center also Hc.JAJ.dPcnuunroavc J~Ohts name _ ~d lhe)-_sav. a blark rrurn, who resembled Pettus. hanging around the small complex. But Gnmes claims his client ma} have been snared in the murder case because of mistaken 1dent1ty. Other blacks had been at the shopping center dunng the days before thC' murder and Pettus may ha ve been confused for one of them. Gnmes maintains In an unusual mo\:e Gnmes re- ceived pcnmssaon to hide his client while the star witness testified during the prelimanal) hcanng. When 1t was his turn to question the witness. Gnmes peppered her with questions about the exact skin color, hair texture and facial features of the man she had ~en an the shop. Then. before Pettus was revealed to the coun. Gnmcsaskcd the woman it there was anyone 1n the audience v.ho loqkcd hke the man she had seen. Though Pettus actual!) was but of view in the pnsoncr docket, SC\eral of Pettus' relatives were seated in the audience Gearr protested the tactic and th<· witnes~s at first seemed confused. After a lenJthy pause. the judge said he was satisfied the woman did not sec the man an the audience Gnmes later said he believed the w1tnesi was about to single someonC' out of the audience before she was cul off. Ccaf). though.. ui4 the law~cr was taking advantage of the coun which had ,1iven the attome)-pcr- m1ss1on to hide h1schcnt while asking the witness to dcscnbe the man she had seen an the f.hop. Cheap tnck or not" the courtroom maneuver mal p<?rtend things to come in Pettu$ tnal._ Just Call 642-6086 What do you like about &be Oail)"Pllot? What don't )ou like? Call cbe number at ltft ud your me11a1e wlll H recorded, 1un1crlbtt4 an cl dtll\'trtd to the appropriate editor .• Tb• same U -bour answering service ma)' bt Ultd to rtC'Ord letttrt to tbt editor oo any topic. Cohtrlbutors to our Letten column mutt Include tbtlr name and telt phont numbt>r for verification. No clrculallon calls, please. Tell lls •bat'• oa your mind. ORANGE: COAST Circulation 714/142-4333 Partly cloudy, continued warm ·eo atal TOOAV Seconcl IOw 4 01 pm , 5 5«oncl higll 10 04 p "' 6 • TUHOAY t::IOal'll • 0 4 10 AS• f'll_ 4 I 4:33pm 11 10 lclm 51 Sun Mlt 100.t al 7 07 p mr ,_ 'l'IMOIV •I 8 33 • m ll1d .. 11 agtwi •t 705Pl!I • "'"oon ,,_ 1o<11y •I' 7 •l p m .. i. T~I)' •I. 48 ~m llnd ,_ ~ It IOI pm • Temperature• ~Ally AlbuQuef Q\19 AmanllO AnchOfaga Alhlnla Allv!Oc:COy Aulllfl latlil!\Ot• 8itrningllatn Btamar"' 8olee 90lll0fl 94.lllllO "' ~ ,. 59 93 59 12 eo &2 47 t2 .. ,. 70 17 74 11 eo 12 70 83 35 12 •• 10 '7 ., " Extended • ,. •o .. .,. t 1 .. IO 71 100 11 rt to .. IJ " tO n 6J n f2 74 " ., .. ,. u .. " '° 11 '°' ~2 11 .. u fl IO IO .. 71 .. ,. N It " .,. 72 41 17 N 17 ,. 7t '° l' •• 74 '* .... " 74• ., 74 IO 11 .. 71 ,. u 7t IO Kids face books, butterflies 1 as Orange Coast schools open B)' KAREN ~1_KLE[N Of IM Delly Nol •'4" ' Orange Coait children packed their books, boarded buses and fought stomachs full ofbuttcrfl1es this morn- ing as the first day of the public school year dawned in local distncts. Cloudy sines prevailed over thls morning's frantic preparauons. mercifully cooling classrooms that arc not air-conditioned, and early- moming reports from school officials indicated that the first day went smoothly in most places. "It's been wonderful, it"s so quiet," said Cheryl NortOf\, public infor- mation officer for the Fountain Valle\ School District, which oper- ates elementary schools in Fountain Valley and a small area an Huntington Beach. Norton said 6,300 Fountain Valley youths were signed up to stan school today. The district's newest add1t1on , Fulton Middle School. opened without incident. Norton said. In the Newport-Mesa Unified School D1stnct. Mound 2.000 stu- dC'nts rode buses to school this morning. said a spokeswoman in the I CONTINUED STORIES - -~ - distnct's transportation office. In all, thfn&S went well, she said. "Everybody's in school, and noth1ng broke down or stalled." she sa1d about 9 a.m. At Harbor View Elementary School, 600 students both from Harbor View and from the now- cloJed EastblutT Elementary School gathered and prepared to get back to their studie , according to Newport resident Janet Ray. Ray, who has three children attend- ina Harbor V1ew this year, said she and other par:cnt volunteers helped guide youngsters who arc not familiar with the campus to their classes this morning. . "I saw a few tears but all the kids. were welcomed by their teachers," Ray said. "Overall there was a big turnout-and a reaJ enthusiisuc group." At Costa Mesa High School, the 1.414 students who showed up ~eren 't the only ones who bad to fight the first-day Jlttc~. Today was the first day of classes for the school's new pnncipal, Frank lnfusino, a school spokeswoman said. "H e's d oing fine," the - spokeswoman said reassuringly. "He's jUSt been super through the whole thin.t." The Irvine Unified School Dmrict opened for· business last Thursday facing miserable beat and some power outaa,es. accordina to Fran Monon, an administrative assis~nl in the district. "There was a peaceful ~nniDJ'tO the year," Morton said. 'We bad 16,318 students on the (Sept.) 7th but we're sure that will be adjusted upward because we know all the kids don't show up for the first day." Three schools had blackoutsdurini th e record-breaking beat last week, she said, and school officials had to grapple with whether or not to • dismiss classes for the day. "Luckily all the Power and the air condi tioniog was back on within about an hour and _a.half," Morton said. This 1s the first year that Irvine high school students have been required to carry photo identificatio n cards, she said. and the program has worked out well. FLUOR DIES, COUNTY MOURNS •.. From Al family, fncnds, fellow directors. and pany's ph1lanthrop1c arm, the Auor board member of the California the 32.000 Auor cmP.loyees throuah-Foundation, contnbuted $2 million Canadian Bank; and a ~or of the out 1he v.orld who will mourn him as to the dnvc for the Orange County Irvine Co., Texas Commerce an outstandmg leader and fnend," Performin,c Arts Ce nter. Bancshares Inc., Pacific Mutual In· Tappan told the Assoctated Press. Fluor 15 survived by his wife, the suraocc Co., Hughes Aircraft C:0.1 The corporation's board wtll meet former Lillian M. Breaux; two sons, Santa Anita Opcrati~ Co. and Santa T "'-· h • J h R be f 1 d p J Anita Realty Enterpnscs. uCSU4)' ··to activate t e company s o n o n an eter ames He served as a member and former management succession plan," a Fluor; his mother, Mrs. Peter E. chairman of the board of trustees of company spokesman said Fluor, Fluor; two sisters, Margaret Ann who had been underaoing treatment Recd of Newpon Beach and Ehz.a-USC, and was a member of tbe for a malignant chest tumor for the beth Louise Taylor of Seattle;· and Business Council, the Conference Past "Car. had a miaior role m setttn& seven &randchaldrcn. Board, and the Business Rouodtable. ' ~ In 1980 Fluor wu named Man of up the succession plan the spoke~ Fluor Corp., wh1cb was founded by the Year by Engmcerina News.-Re- man said Auor's grandfather John Simon cord and Most· Outstaodina Chief Fluor employees were told this Fluor, 1s California's sixth tar&est Exccu~ive0ffiocrby financial 1orld morning that the funeral would be a publicly held company and the na-mapzme. pnvatc service for family members lion's second-largest engineering and His civic duties included: hall'· only. A corporate spokesman said the construction company, behind the man, United Way of Oranae County, death "cast a pall over the organiza-San Francisco-based Bechtel Group. 1983; board of governors, United lion beause he was very welJ -likcd Fluor earned S 159 mllhon in Way of America, 1983-4; chairman, and respected" profits on rcvcnucsofS7.34 bllhon in Uruted Way Campaign, Los Angeles "It's such a deep loss to the the fiscal year that ended October County 1976-7;andthatorpniz.ation community," Irvine Mayor David 1982. m 1977-8. Sills said toda>-"It's rare that an Roben fluorwas the son of Peter E. He was a member of the executive andustnahst ofh1s stawre as.so active Fluor, the company's president board, Boy Scouts of Amenca, Or· ·- an so many ~ommun1ty affairs for before his death; and the grandson of ange County C:Ouncil, m 1981, and such a loni-WllLfu was_ \'U) ~~ foundcr.-JOOA-Sunon-~ved the Good-5cout""1warctfrom-- ·1mponant part, not just of Irvine. but Fluor. f.luor succeeded his uncle, J.S. the Oranie County Council in 198•. oftheenurccounty. in polilicsandas Fluor Jr .• as president and duef Fluor was accepted into the Mih· a ph1lanthrop1st." e:itecuuve officer m March 1962 and tary and Ho pi taller Order of S11nt Fluor. once a heavy i.moker, was· ~rved in tho~ positions until Jan. I. Lazarus of Jerusalem and was in- told of thechcst tumor 10 Augu•l 1983 1968, when he wa elected chairman vested as a Knight of Malta by the while bemg treated for a per~1stcnt of the board and chief executive Sovereign Military HospitallerOrdcr case of bronchi us, company spokes-officer. . of St. John of Jerusalem of Rhodes man James Rollans said last year. Born Dtc. 18, 1921. in Santa Ana. and of Malta, Western Association . -Nobody"kmrwrnl1\trnme .. ,..w""1m:""'t.-bc=pall.atca.Trom\ cim -=--f:loor.wu-e mem F-Of A~me::..:.:..:.--- will happen." Fluor ~id an a state-HiibSchool in 19'\lf and atttnded the can tn titute of Chemical Enaineers ment issued at this tame )Car aao. "I University of Southern California American Pietroleum Institute. and wasn't plannini to retire before, and before cnterina military SC'tvice in American manqemcnt Auociation I'm not plannina to reure now I could 1942. . He received an honorary_doct~ratc be here three >e.ars from now and I n AM)1Y Air Force pilot for 3'h of laws degree from the Unavm1ty of could be here 10 yea M from now," he years dunng World Warll. be served SouthemCaMomiauwcUuthe Asa said. · two yean as a first lieutenant in the V. Call Achievement Award. In 1979 But he adm1t1cd that he did cut central facific theater. He was ~or· he rect1vcd the Capt. Robert Donar back on hiJ extens1vr chanty work ated with the Distinau1shcd flYilli mtmorial award from the National because ofh1s 11lne " Cros~ and Air Medal . ForeiJl:l Trade Council for di,.. In 1976. he helped the Los AnJeles Fluor wa~ honor ry vi~ president tinau1shed contribution to the ad· chapter of the United Way raue a and former chairman of the National vanccment of American trade and record $32 milhon. and hts com· ssociation of Manufactu~n: a in\Utmcnt. Oallr PHot Dellv ry 11 OuarantNd Daily Pilat Ctaulfled edvertlalng 714/M2·587t AU other department• M2~21 BEACHES CROWDED OVER WEEKEND •• • MAIN OFFICE Ctrcutatlon Telepfton•• • H. L. Schwartz Ill Publisher Rcnem•ft Churcttman Contra ler Stephen F. Carazo Produc11on Managor Donald L. Wllllam1 Crrculatrori Manager ' ·From Al VOL. n, NO. 254 .. .. . •: \ ..