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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-09-20 - Orange Coast PilotPmty ralden not entirely off the hook Felony bur:Jbiry charges won't be filed 1p1nst three •tudent1 acculCd of takint pan in 1 panty raid •l Cal State Fullerton, police taid. ' But police Capt. Don Bank.head said WedneSday 1h11it the depanment was still pursuing 1lleption1 that two of the ~ut.hs resisted anest, and I.My till face disciplinary action at tchool. Panty raids were condlicted Friday ni&ht on the Delta Zeta and Alpha Della Pi aorority houses. Tl)e students were ar- rested after the women called Police. Coast Dally Piiot photographers win honors at the Forest Lawn Press Photogra- phers Competition.I A3 Supervl~!S give final OK to Increase In hotel bed tax.I~ .. m:'-::::0:~:;:::;:-;?.=:~:~:=:;:::::::::;::z.:-.:::;::~ Callfomia . San Dl~o Mayor Roger Hedgecock says Indict- ment won't hurt his re- election chances.IM Nation Economic growth slows to3.6percent.IM Special prosecutor sees · no violations In Edwin Meese Investigation.I Al LI ring What IS In the sealed tube that the artist Christo has donated to the "Tubular Art" auction In Laguna Beach?/11 Divorcees discover de- lusions when they re- enter theslngle's scene and work force.111 S1>9rta Kansas City Royals pitch- er Dan Quisenberry, for- merly of Costa Masa High and Orange Coast Col- lege, ls a leading can- didate for the Cy Young Award./C1 Former boxing champ Muhammad All has symptoms of Parkinson's dfsease, but experts say It can be controlled./C1 Coronadel Mar High opens defense of Its Sea View League water polo tltlewtth a wtn over Laguna Beach./C2 Entertainment Does CBS have another "MASH" In "E.R?" It's the top-rated TV show of the week.113 Buslnese Marie Gray has received Dawn magazine's 'Or- ange County Woman of Achievement' award.115 INDEX ErmttBombtclc Bridge lkllletln Boord _,_ C.llfomla N9wt Clualfted Ccmlca CIOMWOrd DMthNot- H41pYouraelt ~oroocope Ann Landers ::l°~Fundo Natlot)ol- Oplnlon :"13 ""* Not-8po<t• Stock Mnttt T....itlon ll>Mtaro Waa1'* WOrtd- 82 84 A3 85 .... C5-7 84 C7 C4 82 C6 82 81-2 85 .... A9 81 A3 C4-& C1-3 IM 82 83 A2 .... • • ' • CUil EllTIDI ()~<f.'4',f (,0LJ,.~''1 A, 'f~Jf•NIA iS CfNTS . Death driver held as drunk By STEVE MARBLE ot ................ A 2S·year-old woman who wat previously convicted of drunken driving has been cha.raed with man- Arrests made in receipt fraud Forgery ring hit department stores for thousands a week By TONY SAAVEDRA Of .. ~,... .... Four suspected memben of a forgery rina that has hit depaf91ent stores throughout South'em Cali· fort1ia for "mavbe-SS,000 a week" were anested VI ed RCSday after one of them marched into a <;osta· Mesa J.C. Penney ttore and demanded a refund for two stolen dresses. Pol tee recovered the dresses. worth $182.72, plus price tap and receipts that were apparently altered before the incident around 6 p.m. at the J.C. Penney at 2300 Harbor Blvd. Police reported the four suspecu arc part of a gang that has developed a complex scam for m::eivina cash refunds on stolen property by altering computer-coded price taas and re- ceipts. fµllcr-ton Detective Jack Petrunclli, who is 1pearhcadioa the investiption in OranlC County, said the eight to IO-member rioa bas hit major department stores in . Hunt- i~n Beach, Costa Mesa, Fullen.on, Garden Grove and Oranat durina tht pu1 few months. The fol'JCI')' in Costa Mesa involved items stolen from a J.C. Penneyl10rein ~na Hills. Pctru.W:IJi said limilar e1ses in- volvina lhc same suipects wen: reported in Whittier and Yomncc in IPI-tee POaGERT/A2J llaufh&er, felony drunken drivirlJ•nd driy1n1 with a suspended dnver's license in a head-on traffic collision that killed three Mission Ytejo women. • Kym Lamcll Murphy of Oxnard wu the.only person to survive the eartr.-momina wreck Sept. JO on Pacific Cout Hi&,hway north of Hun1inJton Beach. Police uid the woman was dnvin& on the wrona side of ihe road· at the time of the accident. Murphy hu been at Founll1n Valley Community Hospital since Fatal Beirut embeesy blast llarlDe ........ motlw &wq tC-4~•• at olte of U.S. 1tm-rUUlaaploakmlD C ----J', wlaere 23-le were bellned ta be dead. lncl..U.C two Am~. SeeatorJ'onPqeA4. ,Ferraro'$ v.-tsit to county will be met by picket-ng Anti-abortion groups plan to protest $SQ.per-person fundl'lliscr sponsored by the Democratic Victory Fund of Orange County at UC Irvine's Uni· venity Cub al S p.m. before movina on to a private SI 1()00..aplate fu.n-draisina dinner at Democratic 8'> tivist Howard Siqcl's Newport Beach home. Democratic vice presidential candidate By JEFF AIILE!l Ol .. Dllf ........ Democratic vice presidential can- didate Geraldine Ferraro will be areetcd by a now-familiar sight when she arrives in C>Bnae County for a two-day campaign stopover today - an1i-abortion.pickeu.. But the New York conarcsswoman, the first woman ever to be named by a m-.jor party to the national ticket. also will be able to spot some fticndJy faces in ihc cro'Nd of protcsten. Both the local chapten of the Alliance for Survival and the National Organiza- tion of Women are as.kin& mcmben to tum ow in support of Ferraro. Ferraro's vilit will be hiJ)diabtcd by campaign appearancn 1n lrvlnc and Ncwpon Beach tonight and Santa Ana Friday momina. Ferraro is schedulo:i to speak at a . Molesters µse guile instead of violence 'I wouldn't hurt these children ... I love them' ' By RICHARDT. PIENCLU .......... --The chikl molester rarely uses vio~nce. The last thin& he or she wants is an unwillina victim. What the molester does want is 1 chikl who can be seduced, uicked. and if need be, blackmailed into a sexual relationship. EDITOR'S NOTE -Child sexual abuse remains 1 mprery to many people, in pen beause they are unfamili1r with how molesters oper- 11e. ThisS«OndinsWl~ntof1five-.. Plrt series detcribts how molesters sed'uce their vic1ims. .. The sun rises and sets with lbc child," said poli~ Sat.IJoscph Polisar of Albuquerque, N'ld ... These auys spend ho\ll1 winnina the love and affcctiQO of a child. Some ocdoohiles will Lake a year to swoon I c:hikl.'" The ICXual mo&esLltion O( Ameri- lPI--llOLllllTllRS/A8J After stayioa ovemi&ht at Costa Mcu's Westin South Coast Plaza HotC:~ Ferraro is scbeduScd to address community ~ups at 9 a.m. Fridaf in the Laborers lntemationa1 ·Union Hall in Santa Ana. (Pl--J'EIUlAll0/A2J ' Coast's cities may discover they can live with 'seers' Oranae c101st cities don'1 have a crystal ball to fOl'tte'e die outcome of a statt Su(>f'Cmc Court cate ch11ltl\lln& the abibty of local aovcmments lo ben to-ealled fonunt\Cllina bus1~ ntst<S. Consequently, tome local cltieta~ recon idtr1n1 their prohlb1t1ons gainst bus1nCS1CS tbattblrlt fttt 1br fOnunetclhna. (>6lm1ttr')', uuolop, ind other psyc.b1c ICf"V-ces. This-k. Cosia Mesa be<ame the la1cs1 Onnat: Coast citv to announce f TONY SAAVEDRA Focus o~ rHt N tv.~ that 11 m11y n:peal its protnbltion on fonuneidhRA bus1nc KS. Hunl• lnpon ~ withdrew 1lS 11-year- old bu 1n June and Newvon 89ch 1s allO reconttdalna >U orchn1n«. aa> proved in t 969. Meanwhile. the cit~ ha~Mtopted Uf"ltl\CY meuum immtd.,,trly ... 1na montorium.t Oft fonu~lhna bu1t~ untl1 offtaal1 can fiautt out where to allow the ttrVicu and hoW to tt&vlatt them The frtat woukl act like 1 sakt,y nci 11v1q the cu~ tome ttmc to (Pleut-CITIA/A2l • the colht.ion but wu to "be moved today to a JI.ii ward at UO Medical Cencer in Orange where the will be hdd on S U0,000 ball 1 Th< womao bas be<a cfwiid wn.b lhrtt counts of velUculai ma.o- 1laufht.er, felony drunken drivioa. driv1na on a suspcDdcd driver"t licrnte and an lddi1ionaJ coun1 of opcrat1na a car with a. blood-ekobol con1m11.n C'lc:eD of0.10. An atrlljllmt:nt date bu oot beea .... Afoeldtobn<1yt<St--the accident ID Seal a.di ,......... that Murphy had a __._.. content or 0.11. acc:ord1na '° ...... investip.ton. State law pftlU.J'DCI a driver to be 1ntcWcaled ~ 10. !"--CB• U/-*21 Spinal injuries claim 30 victims in Newport surf But lU uards say media's attention has cut statistics By ROBERT BARU:ll °' .. __.~ .... About JO swimmers have suffered spinal injuries in Newport Beach this ear, mostly while runnin& and divin& into shal.Jow water but also while body surf\na, Marine Safety Chief Ken Jacobsen said today. Of the injurici, six or KVtn are believed to be vic::tims who have suffmd broken occks and v~ deorces of paralysis, J-said. The il\iury count -mostly affect- 1naathlctic males 1n their late tcms- is up from . last year, Jacotwu sunrutcS., mainly bccawr ITllf'iM safety npcns who have been JO conoerncd about neck inJw'ict are bcina more viailant in reportto& the c:aes. The number of 1ocidenu. • believed about the mnc as . the proceedi'!fi year. Jacobsen asd. .. We on't take the tlichlCSl cbanoc, .. Jacoblcn said. "'If MNDCODe comes to the ~ 10WCf com- plain1na about tbeu fmeen '•:!= we put them 1n an c:Drldor ( and neck Ina:) and call tllo -_.,_. m~. Iii HunUl\llC>ft 8eKb.. bowitver-. Mariae Safety °""" Doua lY Amall ~--/A2J Pilc;ir Wayne to wed Harbor Court judge By ltAREN E. ltLEIN U<IVIDADEAN Of .. o.llf ........ I Pilar Wayne, Jonatimc Ncwpon Beach rnident.and the widow of .ctc>r John Wayne, will wed Harbor Mu-- rucipal Court Ju<IF Stephen C. Stewart tn a privatt ceremony at bcr home in Dover Shores Oc1. 6. .. He's 1 handtomc, charmina and • dclifhlfW man who shares many of my interests.. 1nclud.ina a paqion for tennis. .. Mrs. Wayne said. Mrs. Way_nc,_ wtio wntcs I weekly "Penonal •1y10" colomn Mir the Doily Pilot, said a lalwc r«>qllion is Planned immediately aftct tloe small ommon.y. Two loc:ation11n N~ .,..,.,., d1.am<d for the _Oft. fPl--PILAlt/AllJ LB council buys5,000 wrenches IJ Do\ YID BISHOP __ , ... ""!~- The city ot'Laauna 8cecb 1s attt•ftl ••to \he -and ilanlWarc --Th< cuy will -.,..,,. S.000 wn:n<hts oS<d ror 1111"\" off Mtunll Pl v1lvcs 1n ratdcatial homcil: and 10.000 bootleu on what to do ta an ......... Icy. C'ounat mt:m• a•lhonud 1'11-o( the ll<m T-, ....,, (Pleut-LAOVllA/.U) • .. . t ) ' I SURF HAZARDS POINTED OUT ••• Prom Al said spinal in.Junes ha,·c dropped dramatically this )car on the city • beach. ·•We've had stven spinal injuric this year. Last year we had-3~ pinal injUries and seven in Auaust alone. "I don't know if it's a coincidence 11:>r atthc beach is now gettin back to a!My normal." •. D'Amall said many of tut year's : f\iuries arc blamed on the severe winier ltorms of 1983 ttia& formed for 27 ye rs, 1d a factor leading lO sand bars wMrc the)' had never been the Injuries 11 the constant 1h1ftina or and changed trou&h and water con-the ocean floor . ditions. ''l went surfins at S o'clock last D'AtnaU id he believes .. 1hat lots niaht and l couldn't tell you wt\at the of media 5tuft;' probabl)' has made conditions arc today," he declared .. beach&oeruware of the pi<falls of the Jacobsen 11id the if\iuries usually Pacific and has helped to hold down occur when the victim's hrid hits tbe if\iur· ocean bottom and stops but the body Jacobsen. who's bctn watchina continues movanJahcad. ovtr marine lty in Newpon Beach "It (neck injunes) is auch a dcvat- . tati~ accident, .. Jacobsen said. . "We have the best Hfcauards, best ERRARO IN COUNTY paramedics and best hospital. But if • • • you have as broken neck, you're still • From Santa Ana, Ferraro is sched- ed to fiyto New York, accordina to paiJn aides responsible for her '"'fCbeduhna. • ' UCI sccuri~ officials arc expectina no trouble from the anti..abortion protesten or the pro-Ferraro an>ue. Both. JtOUP' have betn told thclt pickeuna must be limited to at\ area about 120 feet north and south of the Univmity Club, UCI police Chief Mike Michell said. The two aroups will be kept separated but both will "be highly visible to those attend.in1 and the media,•• Michell explained. "We want to let people ma~ their state- ment." • Michell said rcpreeeotatives ·of the anti..at>ortion aroup informed pim they arc expcctina between ~00 and SOO people, while Mondale-fefl'll'O forces predicted about 25 people wilt demonstrate. lo addition. the pro-Ii~ lfOUP hat been aiven a permit to }\old a ra.llY on Gateway Plaza. on the other side of the campus from where Ferraro will be appearinJ-''We've discussed with both aroups the para_tl;leters of good behavior," the police chief added. ~lyzed. We've 1ot to stop it before tt happens.'' Towards that end. Jacobsen said he's been showina "Wipe Out." a docu-drama movie made this year by Hoaa Memorial Hospital in Ne~rt Beach that spells out the arave ·consequences of water iajurles. 0 It shocks them with facts and the onl>t way to shock them is to scare them," he declared. He said he's shown the film to thousands of younasters and is now plannina film forays into Ontario, Pomona and Claremont because many youna residents of those com- mumt1es have been injurcchceently. PILAR WAYNE TO MARRY JUDGE ••• I J'romAl aocording to Link Mathewson, a friend ofthe bride's who will address the invitations for the wcddinJ. Newport Beach florist Xavier vis- tted Mrs. Wayne's home Wednesday niabt to discuss the floral arra~­~ent1 he will provide for the wedding ltld the reception. , He said prdenias, stephanotis and t4illies will be used in the arrange- .ments, in red and white. "Those are :tolors that are very becoming to the • ~dy that's getting married," he said. Mrs. Wayne bas not yet selected a dress to wear for the ceremony, Xavier said, but plans to shop at Amen Wardy's exclusive Fashion Island dress shop-for an outfit. Xavier said Mrs. Wayne bas been flooded with calls from well wishers and curious friends and acquaint· anccs since Monday, when Stewart proposed. Stewart, who lost a recent bid for re- election to the judge's bench to Deputy District Attorney Suzanne Shaw, is SO. Mrs. Wayne, who recently celebrated a birthday. is rt(>C>rted to be about 48. The couple beaan courting about six months II<>· They share a love for tennis and both are described as "family-oriented people." Mrs. Wayne said Stewart presented her with a dozen red roses tCS' 10 &Iona with his proposal. She visited his family in Oarcmont Tuesday. "Then we celebrated Wednesday with an elepnt luncheon at the Newporter's La Palme Restaurant," she said. I Mrs. Wayne a former actress who bas been California ambassador for UNICEF, was born in Peru and met John Warne in the Amazon River iungle in 9S2 where she was filming t•Green Hell:' She was bis third wife. They separated in 1973, six years before Wayne's 1979 death from cancer. LAGUNA>TOSSES IN WRENCH ••• . PromAl ~as ~ of an effort to prepare every ! res1dcnt in the city for a natural ~·disaster. •• The materials cost $14,675 and . Wett purchased despite City Manaicr ~ l<en Frank's wamu1& that sales of ·mo~ than a· thousand of the SI . SO books would be "incredible." The wrenches, which will sell for $3, are used to tum off· the flow of • natural gas in a home. Council members, however, said making money on the program is not their goal. Getting the materials distributed throughout the communi- ty is, Councilman · Robert Gentry said. Frank su8'CStcd that costs mi&ht be cut by reducing the order of booklets. But Councilwoman Bobbie Minkin accused him of "starting to interfere with the intent of the proiram with squirrelly marketing ideas. I wapt to see this go ahead," she said. The city's committee on Emerg- ency Preparedness recommended the program and chairman Harry Hus- gins claimed $17,SOO can be made through sale of the booklets and wrcncnes to the public. "It will be extremely difficult;•· Frank said ... If you took all the service clubs and organizations in the city and they each bought one ... more than 1,000 would be incredible." Council members.rejected Frank's recommendation to defer the project to next year's budget althoush the city had to dip into its reserves to purchase the wrenches and books. four of fiv~ memben' votes we~ necessary to ipend money from the 1eneral fund because it is below the required 10 percent reserve. The vote was unanimous. . The proaram will use the existina Neighborhood Watch organization to contact other croups in tJie communi- ty through which the "educational" materials can be distributed. The booklets and a slide show will be introdu~ to nei&hborbood or· pniza.tions tor a 6Ck1ay period this fall. Trainina of volunteen in emerg- ency procedures will beain io 198S leadi~ to a community disaster drill involvina city public safety agencies and community aroups. According to the recommen- dations of Emer&ency Preparedness Committee Chairman, Sieglinde Johnson, "Laauna Beach will be one of the most prepared cities for any major incident on the West Coast. The plan covers only "disasters such as floods, fires, chemical spills, transporation accidents and earth· quakes. Althouah Hugins said the committee had discussed the pros- pects of prcparina for nuclear war, they chose not to address it. "We didn't feel we could do that adequately," Huggins said. Gentry praised that decision and said, .. in no way do I want to be a part of dupina citizens into thinking we can do something about nuclear war." c ·ITIES PONDER LAWS ON 'SEERS' ••. From Al prepare zoning ordinances and regu- lations in case the state court drops the hatchet on local bans. ''We're just not taking any chances of being caught without a code," said Huntington Beach City Clerk Alicia Wentworth. The flurry of action by local cities was caused by a le~l battle between the Spiritual Psychic Science Church of Truth, lnc. and the city of Azusa. Tbe state Supreme Court has agreed to bear the case, however, a court date for oral arguments has not been set, according to -spokeswoman for Azusa City Attorney Peter Thorson. Newport Beach, Costa Mesa, Fountain Valley, Laguna Beach and Irvine all have prohibitions against businesses that offer so-called psychic services for sale. Huntington Beach lifted its ban in June but imposed the moratorium, in the wake of a lawsuit against the city filed by a Gypsy mother and her daughter. Fountain Valley and Irvine ,re continuing to impose their anli· fortunetelling ordinances. And the Laguna Beach CitY. .Council voted in July to file a court brief in support of Azusa's prohibition. The ban was declared unconstitu· t1onal b_y the Second District Ap- pellate Court in Los An&elet, forcina Just Call 642-6086 • Dally Piiot Dellvel'J 11 Guarantffd 1.1ona.v , 110. y 11 you oo l'IOt ,,..... "°"' ~ lly ~JOo m ca ~t 7om ~ "°"'' tc»Y .. 111 " o-·414 ~'"'°"i ,,., &.INJ•r " fOli «I ftOI It(..... ,0W0 Azusa to tile an appeal with tr! Fortunetelling for pay is also illef!l highest court in the state. in San Juan Capistrano. But.the city "If it wasn't for that (appellate) amended its o~inancc ,to allow· court ruling, we wouldn .. t be con-horosc~pe-cbart~ng, said local ccmed with any. moratorium," said astrologJSt Judy Zant!. Costa Mesa City Attorney Tom '"It's all labeled 'fortunetelling.• I Wood, adding that without local don't even know what fortunetelling control, self-proclaimed for-means. Most ethical practioners tunetellers could set up a Crystal ball don't tell the future as an inevitable and start doing business in their fact," said Zin ti. "The best way to homes. control these thin_gs is to lioense them Most of the local bans against so they can come "'out in the open." fortunetelling were established amid That's what the city of La Habra concern that many of these services did. F61---a rearly municipal fee of could be frauds. S 1,000, loca seers can peer into the In fact, the prohibition was among future unhampered by prohibition the first laws passed by the city of laws. Irvine after it incorporated in 1971. "Local police have not reported But practitioners of the ancient art one (complaint} to me in 14 the years of astrology believe they are beina that I've been here," said La Habra penalized for the misdeeds of a few. City Mana1er Lee Risner. .. There's fraud in any business," For I 7 years, Barney and !,lose said Faye Daniels, a SO.year-old Todorovich have operated Barney's astrologist in Anaheim. ••1 think you Card and Palm Readina in La Habra. ought to ¥et rid of the law and let us Their two sons also operate similar practice.' businesses in town. Althoulb Anaheim also prohibits "I think people have the riabt to · fortunetelling-type businesses, freedomQfs~h. We're law..a6idin1 1 Daniels is allowed to practice people," said Todorovich. "There's astrology under th~ auise of entertain-no witches or bats flyina around ment, she said. here." "If you say you're an astrologist, He quipped, "It's not as if my wife you're banned. But if you say "it's for can tell you to 10 to Las V eaas and bet entertainment purposes.: it's all on number seven -if she could, right," said Daniels. who'd work for a living?" Wbat do you Uke about tbe DaJly Pilot? What don't you like? Call tbt number at left and your me11a1e will be recorded, tranacrlbed and delivered tot.be appropriate editor. ne same U·boar an1wertn1 service may be used to record letters to Uae editor on ••J topic. Conti'iboton &o oar Letlett col1ma must lnc:lude tbetr name and telepbone number for veriflcadon. No drculatlon calls, pltaae. Tell ua what•• on )'oar m~ .. ~ · ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. L. Schwartz Ill Pubhsl"ler Clrculatlon 7141642'""333 Cla11lfled advertt1lng 7141142-5871 All othet department• M2..U21 MAJN OFFICE .. 330 WtU 8ay St Colt• MHt CA Iola• toeltU. l<IJ !HO <:cttt M Copyr.gtlt •Ill C>a~ Coau 1'11~ ComPtllr 1'4; ,.. .... &tot• l•l!!Olll edltOtilf '"'" °' ~· "'flltt "-'e<tl ,,,., N ltOI~ .., ll'IOtJI I Pt< lfllttiOt\ tt cooy1 iO!I' o .... t.Oflr oy 7 • 111 c .. oet01t Hf. m. •'IG '°"' COCIY ... ~ Df 0 Clrcu&atlon TeltphonN AOMmary Churchm•n Con troffer Stephen F. C•r,zo • P-roduct1on Man gcr Oon•ld L. Wllll•m• Clrculat on Manager --~------~'··-----.-..---··--.. VOL 7'1 NO. 294· --~- Coastal fog to make a come~ack · Coaatal Tide• TOO~Y 8-ldlOW , ,, p.m. JO Stcolld lllOll O:Olpm. .. ""' IOw "'10AY Ula.m. oa =raow e,10 ,m. .u 1:0lp.m I.I leoond lllOll 7:04•.m 10 11111 et11 today at ui p.m .• l1Mt ~II 1:401 m. w •tt-01111 tt U1 fl.Ill. Moon •I• to01y 11 4:11 pm,, ,,_ 'tldty ti 2-2• a m. t/14 Mii eo-lll II e 04 p.m. lllfftlo &ut11ngton,vt. CHS* °'*191\0f'l,8 o. Cll.,_ton,w.v . Cllanoue.N.C. ~ Clnolnnall ~ · Colllmbla,l.O Co!Uml'lu!1 Oii. Conootd,,..H, o.ii.t-l't WO«ll Dayton T-emperaturea ~ .. '-• ~':' H 4t lll'UO IT 67 ., 52 62 10 H N 11 12 .. ft .,. " 11 A .. .., ., ., ,. .. Extended tO .. " 11 IO U u .. u 71 =~ = ltO •• .. " 11 11 tO 7t .Q ... .. 11 ., IO M IOI t2 ·71 '1 IOI n :re ... " ... .. to fl ... , .... • 47 D 41 1t ... ti IO u. 71 70 tO • :: r. ... '° ... ft 7t II .. Q .. 11 " ., IO 11 ~ .ra ~ I: " ., n ::· 71 .. Tallmantz Aviation chief Frank Pirte, 65, succumbs By KAREN E. KLEIN . J aocordina to a family spokesman. Pine. of Alta Loma; Donald R. Pine, otthlo.llr,......,, He is survived by his wife, Martha, of Hacienda Heiabts; and Edwara frank Pine the president of of Newport Beach, ~d three chit· Pi.ne,_of Chino; and t.wo sistersL~ Tallmanu l\~tion of Newport dre.n. poug!as, ~f ~n9; Shelley, of Diet~ch, of 9ntano; and Bea b dth b d.d th • 1 Chlno; and Dixie Villasenor, of Munset, ofCbmo. c an e man~ o i ,e aena Mountain View, Calif. He is also phot~phy for D.isner,ttnd s, Iona-~timvM! by three brothen Walter Funeral arrangements arc pendina. ruon1nafi.lmattracuon, 'Amenca the ' Beautiful,'' died Wednesday at H<>ag -----------------------Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach. He was 66. Mr. Pine flew camera planes both for films and for airplane manufac- turers durina his 2S-year career with Paul Mantz, one of the co-founders of Tallmantz, based at John Wayne Airport. · -He beaan workina for Manu as an actor ana stunt pilot. in 19S9 after be bad worked for the forestry d~part­ ment as a fire-fiahtma pilot. He worked his war, up at Tallmar;iu from pilot to chief pdot and then to general manager. When Frank Tallman died seven years aao, Mr. Pine was elected president of the company. He was born Nov. S, 1917J on bis family's ranch and truck tarm in Chino, Calif. His natural love of flyina led him into the aviation industry ata.n early ap. ·.-- His in-flight photography, panicu- larly some darin& runs be flew through nam>w canyons, can still be seen at Walt Disney World and EPCOT Center in Florida He flew across the U.S. for Walt Disney Productions to film "America the Beautiful," a Circle Vision 360-degree film that closed last year.after decades of showinas at Disneyland. He also did extensive pbotoaraphy for calendar art and brochures for airplane companies. Mr. Pine was stricken ill unex- pectedly Tuesday evenin,s as he played aolf and died of circulatory system failure ~veral hours later. CoNHNUEo S10R1Es --- MacDonald seeks new trial in slaying of wife, daughters Prom ataff and wtre·report1 Lawyers for Dr. Jeffrey Mac- Donald. a former Huntington Har- bour physician convicted ofmurder- ina his wife and daughters, soUJ}tt a new trial Wednesday, claiming new evidence sul>poru his claim that a band of hippies killed his family. The new evidence indicates that Helena Stoeckley Davis and Grea Mitchell -both now dead -participated in the killinas, and backs up MacDonald's story, the lawyen said in Raleigh, N.C.. The former Green Beret was con· victcd in 1979 of the slayinas of his wife Colette and daushters Kristen and Kimberly. The victims of the Feb. 17, 1970 murders were found in their blood· smeared Fort Braa home, and Mac- Donald himself sustained knife wounds. Former Fayetteville Times re- porter Fred Bost and private ·de~ec­ tive Ted Gunderson of Santa Monica, both testified that Davis admitted to them her~ in the slayinp. Bost said that he taped six hours of interviews with Davis, who died of pneumonia in January I 983 in Sen· cca, S.C. Mac.Donald's attorneys promised to prepare copies of the tapes and to make transcripts avW,ble for U.S. District Judse Franklin Dupree. Gunderson said he talked to Davis between Oct. 24, 1980, and May 27, 1982. In a letter to the detective, the woman said she had been ••usec:t u a pawn for your convenience,•• that she was pushed into making the con- ·fession, and would not cooperate with him anymore. · Davis' testimony that she did not participate in the stayinas was dis-- missed durin1 MacDonaJd's trial as being "clearly untrustworthy.'' Fayetteville newsj)&per . carrier- Oorothy Averitt testified Wednesday that she saw a woman aft.er the slayina who rcsembeld the blond woman with a floppy hat that MacDonald said was amona the killers. The woman had a "rcpuanant odor .. .lik:e she mipt have been in a boa kiJlina," A ventt said. add.ins she wore an outfit similar to that de· scribed by MacDonald. MacDonald was first chafaed with the murders after an Army investip- tion, but the charaes were dropped in late 1970. The case was reopened at the request of the Justice Depart· · ment. CHARGES FILED IN THREE DEATHS ••• From Al Murphy's driver's lioense was suspended in July when she was convicted of drunken drivina in Ventura County. Accordina to re- cords, she was stopped aft.er a patrol- man observed her car wcavinsalonaa rural road. In that incident, Murphy's blood- alcohol reading w11 0.20 or double the tep.l limit. accordina to court records. A Ventura County judae suspended Murphy•s license with the provision that she could operate a car only when driving to and from work. The judge also ordered the woman to enroll in an alcohol abuse proaram. It is not clear why Murphy Wls in Orange County the morning of the accident. The head-on crash took the lives of Deborah Lee Slemmons. 20; Diane Mae Druckrey, 21; and Dawn Joy Utterbac~ 18. All were Capistrano Valley HW1 School araduates and lonstime friends who rePortedly were rcturnina from a nijbt of dancina when the accident occurred. All three of the women were pronounced dead at the accident scene, leas than a mile west of Se&! Beach Boulevard on a stretch of the coastal biahway where eight people have died in auto accidents 10 lcu than three years. The two miles of hi&hway it unli&hted and without a center divider. The state plans to improve the roadway in early 1986. FORGERY SUSPECTS ARRESTED ••• From Al Los A!lceles County, as well as in Montclair in San Bernardino County. Various Incidents were also reported in San D1eao County. He auesscd the f orien-aana has collected .. maybe $5,000 a week" from various stores. "We've 101 cases aoina back to May;• he said. Arrested at the J.C. Penney store in Costa Mesa was Vicki Diane Selby, 32, of Garden Grove. Thrct otheT5 wert picked up a few blocks from the Clarification A story in Monday's Oaaly Pdot indic-atcd a lawsuit filed by f nends of the Irvine Coast aa.ainit the Irvine Co. over a plAnned dcvclo_pm nt bctw~n l.quna Beach and Corona dcl Mar hacf beeo abtndone.d. While legal proceedanis h&\'C been su\pcnded, the 11oup may a the coun 10 1rcsume the cue. site after they tried to drive away in their yellow Pinto. Their car was spotted by a Costa Mesa p01ice helicopter and detained by a patrol unit The other sus~ts were idcntiftCd as John Edward Van Leuvan, 37Vhis brother Ronald Frederick an Leuvan, 361 and Sueann Marie Adamson, 29. all of Torrance. CO'sta Mesa Omc.er John Pherrin said the 1uspecU were atlqeldy tryiQI to obiain a cash refund on the dreue by usina a complex scam indtntificd in recent fo~rics. Pherrin saad a hiah·priced item is nolen from the store and the ti& i.s chanaed to show a tower pnee. 'That tq is then pla~ on an ancxpensivo item. such as a pair of sock& or underwear. He ~Apliined the attm is then purchased and the computtr1X>ded caa is scanned by the mah R11tttr. The receipt ror the merctwwlite Will be i ucd. bowin the once Pl d but also listi.na the code number" and the name of tho oriainal item. "The airl (checker) doesn't catch that because she doesn't read the receipt," said Pherrin. Tbc receipt is then altered baCk to the price of the orilinal item and taken, alona with the ~-priced merchandise, for a ca•h rcf\ind. Clerks at the Costa Meu •tore had ai ven Selby a $330. 72 refund Monday for items that were later discovered to be stolen. Consequently, they were suspiciou1 when Selby arrived Wednesday demandina a caiJi refund on other items. police said. The sus~a were in custody thas monunaatOranaoCownyJaUin heu • ofS 10,000 bail apiece. Petruuelli aaid this momma other members of the Pn& hive betn identified, but have not been loca10d. He added that many or them art out Of! blil, 1,,..1itinJ tnals for limilar en mes. •• OAILY PILOMtMlday, Septmmber 20 .. * Aa Lightfoot due at Irvine Bowl Pilot photographers earn ho 0 Gordon Lightfoot. sonawritcr nd performer, will appcan~gunaBeach Irvine Bowl on undaylt7:30 p.m. to conclude the Laauna Beach Pop Fcs11val, with Ltptn•s mud shot amon top four; Koehler. Payn also win prizes Daily Pdot l!_botographcn Howard Upm, Richard Kochler and Lee Piayne won honors, m lud1na one oflbc 1op four pnzcsJ..!'1 the 27th annual Fore t Lawn P Pbotoiraphcrs \..Om pet! uon. Overall Orante ounty photographers wept the too row pnzcs tn w con&al. Alona with Upan, the Jop wannen weft Don TOf1MY who .. on tht best-of.show swetp5takcs pnze-; Thomas Kt1te')' Who 100 fim pnu 1n the DCVr'I ca~ and Doa Kdteft who won fim v.ue tn tbc apon1 QUIO'Y. TOfl!'!9' ~and Ke1'etl all Wort for the Orantt CounlY cd1uon of&bt Loi~ 18*. proceed lO benefit 1he YMCA. For more informauon, 11 Lame Medina 840-3747. The contest, which attracted more than 300 cntncs at from thro\l&l)out California, was sponsored '2>'· Forest Lawn Memorial Parks, in coopcrauon wtlh the Cehforma Press Pllotoaraphen Associauon and Ote National Preis E a--f Photasraphers A sociation, Region 10. Compet1na were zerc.-c andraleer aet 70 photoaraphen who ubm1tted then· !best phot°""phs San Clemente General Hospual and The n publis~ed during the 12-month pcnod that e~ded July l l . Oemente Workout are co-sponsorin& 1 pecial fundraiser -Ptlot Ph.~tographcr L1pin won first pn?f, tn the feature .. Exercise Experience" 00 Satu~ at 8 and 9 .m. at the cat~oryfot Wat~h out ror the Mud ~ne .. The photo of Workout 102 s Ola v1·5ta Can emente a child covered with mud was hot Ln Irvine at a youth oes;' · • . · . . event called the ··Mud Olympics." . &ned to bcne~t the Cardiac Rehab htatlon Koehler won S«Ond prize an the pot new category ., de~ent at the hospital, the ~vent cor.ts~sts of two with "No room for argument·· which showed 1 Newport aerobics. cla sea. For a S 10 donauon, P8!1•ci.pants. may Bach police officer _,ldina ~gun on two susl'\N'ts exercise in one of both of the classes. Abo mclud~ m the L' · h · -~ · · SI Oare breakfast and a T·shin. For more information, call 1p1n won onorable m~uons forotherphoto51n the Pat Creighton at 496.; 1122 or Dona Coker at 49&.6060 pbns and fea,tu~ categones. Payne also won :an · honorable menuon m the feature category. Movie achedulecl Saturday The Jewish Community Center, 298 Broadway, Laauna Beach, will present the movie "The Ap ren- tice1hip of Duddy Kravitz'• on Saturday. Cost is for members and S3 for non-members. Popcorn is free and sodas are SO cents. The Center presents tnovies on the founh Saturday of every month. Sunday is the C~nter's membenhip meetina. Nor- man 1.apedus will entenain with an evening of sonas, accompanied by audio-visual effects. For more infor- mation, call 497-2070. Classes, workahope off erect The lrvine Fine Arts Center, 4601 Walnut Ave .• Herita&e Park, Irvine, is offerina a variety of classes and worlcshOP$ for all ages and skill levels, bcainninJ Monday. Children can participate in drawina. painuna. mixed media, ceramics and other classes. Pottety, sculpture, drawina. paintina. photoaraphy. silk nowennakina. callipapby, printmakin&. stained &lass and California art are among the classes offered for adults. For more information about the proa,rams and for rqistration, call SS2.0185. Reglatration begins Monday Registration for fall classes at the Lasuna Beach School of Art Will begin Monday, Sept. 24, at 2222 Laguna Canyon Road. Instruction is available in stone carvina. clay sculpture, ceramics, painting, drawing; printmaking, lithoaraphy,jewelry, photography, design, wood sculpture and water color. • . Houn are 9 a.m . to 4:30 p.m.; Monday through Friday. For information call ReaiStrar Sue Darrow. 497-3309. Photo exhibition alated Amateur and professional photographers in Southern California may enter Saddleback Collcae•s third annual juried photOlflpby exhibition. Up to three works may be submitted for a SS fee each and should be band-delivered to the An Gallery on the school's Mission Viejo campus by Tuesday, Sept. 2S. For information and entry forms caJI 831-4747. Toutmaaten launch drive Watch out for the mud zone No room for ar111:1Dent Toastmasters International Irvine-Santa Ana Vicin-~~~~i:~~~l! F,:"ee~~~~~Sa~~vfi:oi;!e ;·l~ls Superv1·sors gi·ve final OK a.m. to 12:30 p.m. tn the training room at Coopervision, 17701 Cowan, Irvine. Niguel wo1nan on drug panel . Tbe. purpo~ of ~e IJ'OUP ~s to provide practical to hotel bed tax· 1• ncrease tratn1n1 m pubho spcakina 10 a fnendly and constructive atmosphere. For: more information, call Unda Hill at -474-S900. The cost of hotel aod motel rooms in unincorporated portions of Orange County will be goina U\) following action by the BOard ofSupcrv1son to increase the county bed tax from 6 to 8 pen:ent. ' return, Tom Eichorn, an aide to Nes~nde, ackowledged. He added Nestande still opposed any increase. In voting ap.inst the measure a week ago, the supervisor said he feared the added tax would discourage tourism. t, :~ . . ·~ ·~· ~nn Botu ofl.quna ,iaucl was recendy named to the lnlCIJovcmme:ntaJ Aa~ Council on Alcobol, Drup and TrUfic Safety. • The fonncr San Bctnadino resident bu long been acti' c in akobol and dru& abuse education and prevention~ Th~y,Sept.20 · • 6 p.m., Lacua Btacll SeDior CltlJeu Committee, Community Center, 3741.e&ion St. • 6:30 p.m., Laaua iucb Board of AclJustment, Council Chambers, SOS Forest Ave. • 7:30 e.m., Lapna Beacb Unlfled School District Boan, Distnct Office, SSO Btumont St. • 7:30 p.m., Lapaa Beacb Cable TV Commtttee, Community Center, 374 legion St. Supervisors voted 4-0 t<> finalize the 2 percent increase after the tax hike was approved last week by a ,.:1 m~n .. Supervisors Bruce Nestande and Roger Stanton who voted apinst the new rate last week, voted with the majority Tuesday as a board courtesy to vactionina Super- visor Ralph Oark.. County Tax Collector-Treasurer Bob Citron, who recommended the increase, told the board the extra 2 percent would generate an additional $900,000 per year. This year, the county e~pccts to collect about $2.4 million in hotel and bed taxes, Citron said. \ .~ ... " . \... ,..,_ "'-\. : \tp ...... - , ~~ If ~4 "We stand to k>* an ennrc peralloG of YOU!lf. people throulb substance abute if \\'C fail 10 rccogitize tfUs problem and beai.D to deal 'With it at home. in sCbool. at our wort and lbrouabout our culture," Bot said. • 7:30 p.m., lrvlne PlUJliaa Commllsfon, City Council Chambers. 17200 Jamboree Road. Nestande and Stanton could have blocked adoption of the tax increase by again voting ~gainst it, creating a 2·2 deadlock with Clark absent. But that would have only delayed approval until Clark's The 6 ~rccnt tax bas been levied in the county since 1971. Currently. l 0 of lhe county's 26 cities, includi!'$ tourist-depen- dent Anaheim, levy the higher 8 percent tal. Sapem.Gr Brace NestaDde She~ formerly an elected memberof che both the City Council and unified scboOl district • n San Bcnwdino. And in the C•piSU"&DO Vallcy sbc is active ·m Parents Who care. 2 cha~ Of the Nation.al Federation of Pare.nu for Drua Free Youth. Pou cE Lo e -· With neighbors like that •.. Valley man in hot water A Fountain Valley man called. Griswold said the incident occurred police Wednesday to repon a bur·!· atabOutlOa.m.onMayflowerCircle. alary in progress at bi1 n~iabbot's He said a man phoned police aftc:r he fiome, but the aood Samantan may saw · someone climbina over his not receive a thank-you note for bis neiahbor's iUr wall. canyina what aesturc. ..._....wt t.:;. .... Invcstiptina offi~ ditCOvered 1.......-:"--lO ui; a .,..nt. the butJlar apparently fled with a Police officen who responded marijuana plant -and left 16 more found no ~ne home at th~ buralary behind. scene, but 1n a fenced portion of the . Fountain Valley Sat. Larry rar yard, they ditCOVtred 16 mari- Jmne A man was arrested on uspicion of assault with a deadly weapon after police were summoned to 9300 Toldco Way. • • • About SSO worth of belongjnp were stolen from a car perked at 370 I Parhicw Lane. • • • A $200 beach ~ruiser bicycle wonh $200 wu tolcn from a residence on MeadoWbrook. • • • A typewntcr wa reponed atoJcn from a 11raae on Echo Run. • • • A table wonh about S200 wa tolen rrom the ck yard of a den« on BroOkiton • • • More than $400 worth or auto pens were 1uS1en from l locked p ckup truck patUd at 1939 Deere A\C, • • • •na valued armorc n $200 wa tolcn from• laundry room n 1hund r Run • • • A car stereo valued at more than $400 wu stolen from a Porsc:he perked at l~ McGaw \e, • • • Paramedics were ummoned to 1911 S iera Majorca when: a person suffered an apparent 1ezurc. juana~each two to five feet tall, Oriswold wd. He said officen ob- tained a search warrant and ~turned to the house Wednesday ni&)\t. Gnswold said the plants and an additional quanuty of marijuana found inside the house were seized by police. He 11id no arre ts were immediately made, but said the case remains undd mvestigauon. tnJ. The tools were valued at $.47.10. • • • A home burJ)at'y was dJsco~ercd Wcdrimay on the 9900 btocil: of Thi tie Avenue. Entry bad apparently been made thiou&}l a closed but unlocked slidinJ aJ&$5 door. The lo was not immediately detennined. Newport Beach A locked iafe in the cwpon Harbor An Museum was forced open Tuesday niaht but the cash and valuables inside it wctt not stolen. police said. There ~ no i&n of forced enU)' into the mu1eum. at 850 San Clemente Dri~e. • • • A gold bracelet was reported stolen this ~k from a home on Lucerne. The braoClet. valued at St. 00. Wti last seen 1n • ceramic JC•chy bo:\ an the borne in Julv. • • • White a resident of the 3000 block of West BalbOa Boule\&td ~l~t. an intruder pried a sattn door off her home. The ~ rctam told police ~ heard not but when she went to 1avesttaate lhC scattd off the v.ould· be ~r. There wa no l re- poncd. • • • The ta )&ate was removed from • tnack parked in a structure on the 00 blockofSca OuU Lane Tuesda> n\P.t. Tbc~lt~ nluedatS•SO. bad been complclel ttmo' ed when the o if\tr came beck to 1JCt ha uu k. • • • hunary lhtef ate lun wtnl h nn eked 'I me on \ht 1200 bl oflrnnc "'cnue Wednesda~ and I Del Taco nppcrs on abc hvtn& room table of the home. There\\"& nothl(\I ncd ~en 'n th bufllary, but \bC mtrud c a latch and cl ph n m recorder. d 1 ut SI CoetaMeaa A $SO car battery was rcponed stolen from a vehicle parked in a carpon at 6S 7 Plummer SL sometime between I 0:30 p.m. Tuesday and 7:30 a.m. W((Sncsda\• momina. ~ . . Hand and power aools worth $870 ~re reported stolen sometime be- t~een 4 .p.m. Monday lJ>d 7 a.m. Tuesday from an unlocked tool bo"< at a con tnaroon site at 3183 Red Hill There ••ere no sian offorccd enU). Bunttniton Beach Someo~ slipped throu&h a slidina &la door .1n the 16000 'block of Sanlett and stole a pu containina S 10 ~h1lc the 'ictt~ was asleep in the couch. ••• ·~~ncsht a SC1ttl\ an lbc 21 000 block: of Brookhurs1 rcct but ran av.'lf when 1 victim screamed when he tapped her on the shoulder to wake h rup. • • • Thrtt male JU''Cn1lc too a uit- cue cont1.1ruaa dottiinJ and qw:>oey from a shopina can at SaybroOt ud Edinacr A venue. ••• Bufllars pried OpeD the front door to a residence m the 6000 bled or Warner \'tDUC and took S2,'°° m Jewelry. • • • Someone entered a house all the 16000 block of Baruna and stoic a briefcuc containina confidential papers.. • •• Thieves stole an electronic praae door opener from a boute utter and stolcS200 in Bea~~ aDCS SSOO in Davie Bowie m.'Otd albums from a ptqe in the 19000 bloCk Of Lex· maton. • •• v.oman"' tatcn ntoCultbd •at lbCIUOn • 710 l amcr Ye .. · allcgedl~ calinaa$4.991cn.sdea I' •• Ttucv stole Stereo components and 1c af\ct kins into a home in the 19000 ook Saclw·· men to. Cliff victim unidentified ,l • • , •• • ' A4 * Orange ao.rt OAJLYPILOT/Tll<lrodoy, Sept-bor 20, 11NM 23 feared de~d in embassy blast ;arney Clark 'delirious' Born -laden van runs hail 0 u lets (U.~~~f~k~:~ .. ~~~"3:e'Ti;;,:: while on heart machine NA TION to reach U. . post In east Beirut ""0!1~"~t·~~~~~ All .. suffered cuts e, ... .usoda,... Pren ind bruises. He uid he had been SALT l.AK.li CITY _ Ramey Clark the fint hum~ "! RCtive .• panially buned in the rubble, but "I permanent artificial heart. spent most of his i l2 eta, ys on the 11r4n~en ~tie 1hink I'm okay." pump in a 1tatc of dtlirium bocaute of priorcanhac problems, Ontve~ty,of BEIRUT. Lebanon {AP) -A van filled with explosives and driven by a suicide commando ran 1 hail of sun fire and blew up I~ I yard ftom the U.S. Embassy ann6 outside east Beirut, severely darnaaina the bWkl~ in& and reportedly k.ilfina 23 peOple. The U.S. State De~rtment said twO Amerians were amona the dead. Lebanese military sources put the total number of casualties at 23 dead and 60 wounded, tnu could not SI)' how many were American and how many were Lebanese. At the blast scene, officials supemsing the rescue n:portcd two Americans were killed and 21 wounded. . Amon& the injured "Wt:te the U.S. and British ambassadors. Neither man was seriously hurt. Richard Murphy, lssis'tant st.e· re tary of state. for Middle East atTair; said 10 Washington that two Amen- ca risand at least four or five Lebanese employees of the embassy were among 1he dead. The names of the dead were not im mediately available. The eAplosion ripped a 6-foot- deep, 16-foot-wide crater in front of the six-story annex and injured people inside and outside the build- ing. The Voice of Lebanon radio estimated tfie van carried 330 pou~ of eAplOSives. Murphy said ihe ve- hicle. which he described as a small pickup truck, bore forged Dutch diplomatic license plates. lslam1c Holy War claimed re· sponsibility for the blast. The same shadowy terrorist group also claimed last year that it blew up the U.S. Embassy in west Beirut, killing 63 people, and the twin bomb attacks on U.S. Marines and Fr::cnch peace- keeping 1roops., in which 299 ser- vicemen died. American and Lebanese guards said they fired at the speeding van uxl.ay as it scraped through concrete anti-vchicie barrien on the road next to the embassy anneA. British body· guards waiting outside tbe..anncA fo.r theirambusadorsaid they fired at the van and hil it sevc(a) times. Despite the aunfi.rt\ tht vehicle rolled to aspotdirec:dy in front oftbe main entrance to t.he annex and exploded. Murphy aid he wu told a Marine 1uard killed the driver of the van ju.at before the eAp10lion . ..t · l..ebaner Red CroU ~fficials at U1e anneA, Which is in the east Beirut suburb of Aukar, said they had taken 15 bodies from the wreck.aae two .b·ours after the blast, and had ucated 18 wounded. Abu Jawdeh hospital officials said they had recti ved two bodies and treated 40 wounded. The blast OC:ClUTed at about 11 :4.S a.m, {1:4l a.m. PDT), and th• U.5- and British ambassadors wcte mect- ina on the top floor of the anoeA at the time. U.S. politicaJ, officer. David Winn said neither U.S. Arpbassador Regiuld Bartholoniew nof British Ambassador David Mien was senousJy bun in the blasL Both ambassadors were taken Jo Ab_y Jawdeh hospital in Christian east Beirut. where tht:y were seen con· scious and talk.ins. President Reapn said the CA· plosion was part of ~the worldwide terrorist movement,., which he said .. threatens our people wbertt:vcr they are in the world bCCause these aroups arc opp()SCd lO '!"~ we stand for." The ~cs1dent. io rommcnts in WasbiQ&lon and later in Iowa. said the UnilCd Statet would not be driven out of the Middle EasL .. We must con1inuc," he said. ••we can't just withdraw in the face or this kind of terrorism."' He said he felt the embassy was adequately proleelcd. ""They have bamers similar to what we have hett at the White House" Jo stop vehicl«, R~nsaid. First rcpons from Let.nese mili· tary sources bad said tbc' 48-year-old Bartholomew sustained head and chcsc injuries and was in intensive The wreckqt~lhe vehi~le used in Utah psythiatrists hive reponed. Durina bl1 most di1trnsina momeni.. Clart1, •• the attack lay a ut .five yards from rc~tedly Mid be wanted to die. and tried to flaure "means to aocomp lan the main en ce to the inner; this. .. the docton .-id. When be returned to conJCiousness &.fttr tome of hit buildint. The Dodac or Chevrolet medlcaJ crises Clark was diUJ>P9inted 11 still btina alive they said. lD an van exploded a yard from the annex artj,cle In the ~ptembcr iuoe of the Archives or Oene;.J P~ychlatry,. Ort. entrtince. Bernard I. Grosser and Claudia K. Berenson If!)' mbre exien.&J.ve ptyc:h111rk: One diplomat on lhe tcene said: lCSIS before surgery mlaht have predicted Clark's postoper9tive men'*1 .. Our au•~ shot a\ tbe car ~nd tncd problems. Clark experienced rare lucid momenta immediately foUowioa t1!e ~m:~nd~n~ue'iq:,'i!xi~'n~~oho~~ historic implant of the Jarvik· 7 hean, and durina a short period before his -p0lntina 10 the SDOl in front of the death, the two psychiatrists said. 1 enuonoe. Thediplomatal1<>spokeon SAT 11eore Jmnrovement. laaded ·condition of anonymity. r· The building did not collapse, but NEW YOR.K i-Leadina politicians and cducaton bailed a suon1 rise in there was severe damage to the the avenqe Scho~stio Aptitude Tett scores u fresh evidence lhat a 20.year around noor, and tons.idcrable dam· slide in public ciducation may be endinJ. The Coll~ lk>J.rd ~nn9o8u~ qe 10 the C)ther five stories. Damage Wednesday that averqe math SAT1 were up three po1n1.110 471 tn I l--. from $hrapnel could be seerf soo while avcrqe scores on the verbaJ section of the eum rote one pcint from ~e yards away. pt'Cvious year to 426. F.docation officials particularly noted the atrona th~ Fuad Saleh Jr., a witness who lives b)' women and future teachers. Seniors expressina an intemt in majorina '"· Reginald Bartholomew , ".about a mile from the embassy, said: education imprQved their math.perforinancc ~Y seven point• to 42S, and by , ""The blast was very powerful. Our four poinu 10 398 in the verbal section. Marty educ:a1ort have voiced ~ocern catt:. Rcapn and 'the State Depan-house shook and smoke white over the lteldily deelinina caliber of new teachen. ment denied the repon. smoke, started billowing. We could Winn said he rushed to see the smoke clouds and hear Bartholomew's. office after the ex-ambulance sirens." plosion.··when I fi!"ltgot to hisotra.ce, Fire enginei and civil defen5e Ambassador Bartholomew was squads rushed to the scene to ext· pinned under the rubble," he A.id. inguish the blaze while rescue "We (Winn and Miers) had to pull workers searched the wreckage. Am· him out." bulanccs were taking the casualties to Winn said that at the time of the east Btirut hospitals. blast, there may have been "30, 40 or About 90 minutes after the ex;. SO people in the building. It depends plosion, a man telephoned the Beirut on how many were in the visa hne." office of the French news agency U.S. Marine Cpl. Larry Gill said he Agence France-Presse to claim re.- was on duty at \be front entrance of sponsibility on behalf of Islamic Holy the anneA when the attack <» War, also known u Islamic Jihad. ' Dying man says -he '11 take a note to yo.ur ancestors Social Secarlty bUl to ReaKan WASHINGTON -The aovemment will find it harder to·Cut off Social Security diubility benefits under legislation which President Reapo ir eApected to sip. The bill, given unanimous final passqe Wednesday by both the House and the Senate, requires case reviewers aeneraJ.Jy to prove that an individual's medical condition has improved before temuna1ina benefits. It also allows recipients threatened with cutoff to keep aettina cbeckt until all appeals are eWustcd. 'Gunman• wu only a cameraman HA~ILTON TOWNSHJP, N.J. -A man attemptina to photoaraph Prcsiden.t ·Reagan's motorcade on the Atlantic City Exprt11way was amst;e<t after polict receivcd·a report of a gunman along the route, the Secret ~IOC said. An officer saw a man along the eApreuway, a state trooper received a mo1oris1's report of a person thought to have a weapcn and police chased a man into a wooded area along the highway before the suspoct was arTCSted Wednesday and detennined to be a photognlpher, said township police Lt. Frank Lentt. Teacher'• a .. Jiiµnent: CbUdblrtb .. THE FORT LAUDERDALE. Fla. (AP) McAvoy, the father of th,...., LEOMINSTER, Mass. (AP) -The dozen students in Diane Avoli's macrobiotics cooking school were stunned and then delighted when their teacher suddenly stopped class to make an announcement even she hadn't anticipated. Mn. Avoh was about to give birth. "Jt was very ltrafl&C. J didn't want to believe it was happening," said Mrs. Avoli, of East' Templeton, who gave binh Monday to her seventh daughter, 7.pound, 4-ounce Kristen Pearl Avoli. One student suggested she sit in a lawn chair, and within minuttl the baby was born, while tHe surprised students either helped or watched, chceri4 CALIFORNIA RELAXING ,-'KanMcAvoy,acancerpatlent With a printed guarantoe, who doctors asy has only month• McAvoy prom-somellow to S to live, It doing a booming locate dead relatives and d8'1-o UN Ds buelM18 with hie offer to del1-the ml-B di call r. AIDS battl -to the deceaeed for Heoffersnoclueonhow. "How ra ey •.or e OF THE $20. CM you be sure I can't?" he said. LOS ANGELES-With 239 people dead ofacquire<l immune deficiency HARB 0 R He placed two advertisements Sun.ney Brenneman, edttor of syndrome in Los Angeles County since late I 981 , Mayor Tom Bradley called 1nareglonalmogaztneofferl~to "South Aortda Single LMng," on a IOC:al lask force 10 figbt..ocial and health problerus caused by AIDS . ........,. he de •• ,, •··•h Bradley addressed the group of two dozen community leaden and health contact.,.....,,,..... on t other • o-.i McAvoy'a iivou waa check~ professionals Wednesday at City Hall, urging them to use existing PfOIJ'IJ'S in and has flekted doz.ens of catla ed before the two $60 ad1 were new ways. Authorities said the county and city have received only about K I CM frompeopk!~nghlsservtces. accepted.. $400,000 in federal money, which has been used for several AIOS..rClated "I have a mlssk>n in this life. I Dr. Thomas Hammond, a FcW1 projects, including a medical clinic and ps)'chialric care for patients. B~ey believe this Is what I was put on LIUderdale neuroourgeon, co/I-called the federal help "peanuu." · this earth to do," declared flrmed that McAvoy lt oufferl(lll _a,_ 103 1 McAvoy'1 ·ad In "South Aorlda from a malignant brain tumor SD mayor denle11 cam_..~ rap . Single Uvlng." and has from several -• to SAN DIEGO -Mayor Roger Hedgecock says • "f wUI acknowledge by a l¥f~t.. three or four months to Nv.. charaes that his 1983 campai&n oommittee laundered ten guarantee a copy of wtfleh I Brenneman uJd she was S35f,OOO a~ .. fictional" and vowed to press ahead with FM wlll taketothegravewtth me, and shocked . by the reactk>n to his November re.election bid despite being named in a I aotemnty promise to put forth McAvoy'a offer after the fort 15-count conspiracy and perjury indictment. "I think d!.y rny best efforts in trying !o . Lauderdale News and Sun-Sen-re-election chanccs art excellent,:• Hedaecock said STEREO contact thoee who you wtsh to be tlnel first printed hfa atory on Wednesday. "Not as eAocllent as yesterday. A lot of -t'"''"'...,. u Su d people are Roing to be impressed by the word .':::=:=:=:=:=:===========""'=="'""'""';;;..~-1 j con_,_,... n ay. i-.. 'indictment."Y The 38·year-0ld mayor was accused of In the first week, he had five "The phbnet were ringl"° off accepting illegal campaisn contributions from jailed SOUTH COAST FITNESS & PHYSICAL THERAPY Immediate RHulte EXERCISE TllE EASY WAY .... llectn ........ lt!Mutattofl .,,. UVAa..tM .... T.n to 1 OotOln Br"""'1 ~--...,.. l9IU9dl llllltttout pumping ... ........ ~_.. ....... C-' ....... L#t, °""' -CMfNil PHYSICAL THERAPY \~~rl'l .... Spinll Ad"'91tnllflta .,,. T~le~dlll ~M-.,,. Splnll TrllCtlon .... UltrllOUl'i4,~-. ... ,.,. ott-IP)' .... ~"'•'" ~~l:::::,,_ -· In~ MOST INSURANCES ACCEPTED • • I • ' 3500 I . HISTOI. ITI 100 I ... -• °' ""'"9 ~ "-'UI. ~ COltt .,ni. 9'.llldlnt 545-3476 , requests. At the beginning of this the hOOk/' she said. "I had no financier J. David Dominelli and others. Hcd&tcoct. week, he had more than two Idea that anyone would care Oominelli, Napcy Hoover, an eAccutive in the collapsed dozen, hesaJd. about this. No idea at all. I J. David&. Co. money tntding firm, and the mayor'' RE '"ThelondonTimeshascaHed. stopped counting at 40. It's former poht1cal consultant, Tom·Shepard, were each named in a l~unt Everybody seems to have a very probably over 60. The rest of the · indictmen.t returned by the county grandJUry late. Wcdn~y. The panel~~ good reaction to It. I'm flab-people In the office can't get any from 82Wltnesseso,vertwomonthsbefore retuminathe 1nd1ctmentcontam1na bergasted," said McAvoy, 41 . work done." one count of conspiracy and 14 c6unuofperjury .. MeAvoy said mes1ages "I've had some wlsecrlacks,'' San '"" ldro fl d pa $260 000 ranged from "I love you and will said McAvoy. "There ar6 some • • an Y• • join you soon," to astmple "Why, who think I'm a kook. One guy SAN DIEGO-The San Ylidro Family Survivors Fund now has paid ou1 Dad?" from a child cut out of a saJd that the doctor didn't go ncarlyS2SO,OCX:)'tosurvivonandfamiliesofvictimsoftheJuly 18massacreat wfll. · deep enough Into my head. But a local restaurant in which 21 people were killed. JamesJ. Lanas, president of "Th ' 1 • hi the board of directon of the fund, said Wcdnesda)I. the total donalCd tbu1 far e responses I m gett no .• : I ve got my own t nga to worry cAcccds Sl.4 million. The payout totals $249,317, he said. The fund was weO, I'm way over my head." said about.'' , created a day after James Oliver Huberty opened fire on an afternoon crowd at tif~T WAl>ED ~OUR BAR· Announdngthelloordwalk's grut new~ bar and menu · J Our new salad bar orfers M!Ylhing liom calamari and bay shrimps to mek>n slkes and home- made bacon ~Its ... over lO fresh lttms every day. And the ff.St of our new 1t1<11u Is equally as lempt· Ing: homemade chill. pasu made dally, Incredible -and mesquite broiled salmon. hallbuL scallops. shrimp, chicilen. dry aged bl>ci< angus New Yol1! ~Australian lobster 1311 and much more. Drop by for dinner "'°" ... and (OmC hungry. THf J)()ARDWALN [714) 497-4477 Al th< Surf It S.nd Holel. On Ille ocean In Laguna ntach • a McDonald's restaurant in nearby San Ysidro, killing 21 and WO\jndina; 19 others before he was felled by a police sharpshooter. Cooper jury pick contlnae11 SAN DIEGO -A prospective juror in the u murder trial of Kev.in Cooper has been dismissed after sayin,a she would vote to sentence Cooper to death if he were found auilty. The aclton came Wednesday as eight potential jurors were interviewed at length by court officials trying to pick a panel for the trial of Cooper, charac<f with the ax slayings of four people in a Chirio H~ls home. Cooper, 26, is charged in the deaths of Doupas and Pea Ryen, both. 41; their dau&hter, Jessica, 10, and a neighbor, Otnstopber Hughes. 11 . Their bodies were found June S, 1983 in the Ryens' home in Chino Hills in San Bernardino County. He also is charaed with attempted murder in the slashing of Joshua Ryen, now 9, who survived. Man near Mondale bad tnlfe SAN FRANCISCO -A man with a knife concealed under his ~I lea was arrested Wednesday as he tried to approach Democratic pres1dc:ntial nominee Walter Mondale at a noon rally, the Secret Service said. Rich Mc.Drew, agent in charge of the San Francisco office of the Secret Service said I.he Ol,111'1 was _spotted at the start of the rally in Justin Herman PlJ.U by aients and police officers who noticed he was "kind of a shouter" and was lr)'ina 10 work his way to the front of the line 10 get close to Mondale. He was ideQtified as Paul Fuentes, 28, of San Francisco. Re was to be arraigned today on cha.ftet of possessina a concealed weapon and rcsis1in1 a~t. WoRLO Toll.yo flamethrowers lamba•ted TOKYO-The leftist group believed responsible for ~ult on the ruling Liberal~Democratic Party headquarters with truck-mounted home- made namethrowers "must not ever be fo~ven," Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone said today. A party spokesman wd the attack. which was aimed at the third·Ooor rear windows and quickly spread to the first 1even floors., caused an estimated S2.4 million in damage. Two delivery trucks ulCd in the attack caught fire and the arsonists escaped in a white w . Ecuador plane ton no• 68 QUITO. Ecuador-Five more bodies were recovered from the wreckge where a DC-8 carao jet cra1hed Into a ne!J,hborhood and burned Just aft.Cr takeoff, raisin& the death coll to at least .S8. F1veof1he victims died in bospita1s L,Wedncsday from J.njuries suffered in the cruh Tucsdar· wben the plane smashed ln10 •church and 1 dozen houses In 1 residcntia district that starts about 200 yards from the ain>0n perime&er. Soviet W'l'lter received adnnce MOSCOW-A Sov1et,JOumalist who defected to the West, then riturned to Moac:ow uyina he had been 1bductcd by British aaent&a teceivcd. an ldvance 10 write a boOlt on the Soviet press before 1oina home, The New York Ti.mes rePof'ltd 1oda.y. Olq_ Bitov 1iantd with New Yorktbucd William MOJTOw A Co. in Mattb to wnt~ a boOk ttntativcly Ii~ "Talea 1 Could Not Tell.., Morrow senior editor Harvq Chnlbc:rl told the Times. Ointbefa -..d lito¥ was paid an advance through hi•U.5-Uieruyaeen1, CleoflC Bon:hardt In< .. fo< a ~k detailina, amona other thlnas, how'Soviet news orpniutions band.le thetrrcponcn. how the news ncylass opcrattt and how ankks a.re.cbolcn. • t t I I fl . a REDISCOVER THE PLEASURE OF FASHION ISLAND Depattment & Specialty Stores The Broadw•y Buffums Bullocks W1lshfre Ne1mi.n ·Marcus Robinson's Women's A(JJUrel Am~n W•rdy Apropos At Ease Brooks Brothers Charlie's La1se Adzer Lanz of Cal1fomia The Limited, Inc The Look, Inc. Matthews Nelly's The Red Balloon, Ud. Jean Ryan Fashions Silverwoods Soignee Women's Specialty Forty Love Great American Shott Story M. Jacques Furner Motherhood Matem1ty Mirna's · Women's Shoes Amen Wardy Apropos Al Ease Cathy Jean Huggm's Lanz of California Matthews Fine Jewelry Donavan & Seamans Raff Jewelry Wfndham Leigh Diamonds Men's Aeparel & Shoes Al's Garage At Ease Brooks Brolhers Carys & Co The Look. Inc. Phelps PO.SH Silverwoods Family & Children's Shoes Hemph11/'s Shoes Hugg1n'' Shoes Ntwpott Children's Bootery Wetherby Kayser Family & Children's Apparel At Ease Bambmo Benetton Brooks Brothers Forty Love The Red Balloon, Ltd. Books B Dalton Booksellers Doubleday Book Shop Restaurants Bog1es Place Bob Bums Coco's El Roberto Franciscan Room (Buffums> Udo Buffet (Robinson's> Newport Stuff'd Roll • Newport Turtle Zodiac Room (Ne1man~Marcus> Food Specialty The Ch1pyard (Robinson's) Epicure (Neiman-Marcus) Hickory Farms Sees Candies The Com Popper The Sweet Uf e Bakery Truly Naturally Health FoOds Gifts, Cards, Candles & Stationety Dan) Un Jardin Lambs 'N Ivy Karls Toys. Stationers &Hobbies ~under's Halfmarlc Home Fum1shings The Linen Store Nettle Creek Shop Video Concepts Alt Galleries uwrence Ross Galleries Spolting Goods, Toys, Hobbies, Luggage & ~ts Benchley Lu88age, Ltd. Karl's Toys, St.u1oners & Hobbes Russo's Wond rlul World of ~IS Ski & Sports. Inc. Setv1ces • Anthony's hoe SeN1ce Clmic: :ra1loring Clown Cloners Ceratd Aust n Colden '8/ade 8a IS Goins Pia e Travel • Opt1c1t hop ol A pen That'> om Body T1ckctt0n mt. Offtee 0198-4, Th Irv n Company . . . REDISCOVERING THE PLJEASURE OF FASHION ISlAND: • ~'r ''I'd forgotten how much fun . shopping . could be. New Stores, sunshine, fresh air. It was an experience!" ! I I REM~MBERED WHY I FELL IN LOVE WITH FASHION ISLAND We got up the other morning and found there was absolutely nothing we had to do that day. I suggested some fresh a1r and sunshine,-but Tom wanted to window shop for a new jacket and some shoes. He always gets his way. I was doomed to spend the entire day in some noisy, congested mall. But as he turned the car towards Newport Beach, I remembered -Fashion Island at Newport Center. Once we arrived, I remembered why I fell in love with Fashion Island in the first place. For once, I was glad that Tom had had his way. IT WAS A NICE WAY TO START THE DAY We parked near Neiman Marcus and followed the aroma of freshly·baked croissants to The Sweet Life. Tom's got the nose of a bfoodhound! We had an early firunch under an umbrella near the fountain and big trees in front of the Broadway. The air was fresh, as only the ocean could make it, and the sun was bright and warm. It was a nice way to start the day. We picked up a brochure that told all about the Fashion Island renaissance and be8an to realize hQw much 1t had grown. New stores everywhere- Benetton, Great American Shott St01y and Mirna's. The new look of the .Looi< bv Allen Haum. Plus established shops like Video Concepts, Russo's Wonderful World of Pets and Lawrence Ross Galleries. Whatever we needed- it was right here. WHO WANTS TO RUSH WHEN THE SUN'S ON YOUR BACK Later, leaving Buffums, we stopP.ed for ~ O another cup of coffee and ended up i spending awhile just talking about nodling in particular-and looking out at that specracular view of Newport and the Pacific Ocean. Then, coffee and conversation over, we took a fling at shopping. What a pleasure! At malls, you feel like part of a stampede. At Fashion Island, there's open space, room to walk at your own pace and time to window shop. Who wants to rush when the sun's on your ba.Ck and you're taking in that cool ocean air? A SPECIAL KIND OF SERVICE With the specialty and department stores at Fash10n Island, we remembered upcoming birthdays and anniversaries- so, stops at Robinson's, P.O.S.H., 8. Dalton Bookse/l~rs and Satinder's Hallmark did the trick. The more stores we visited, the more we rediscovered another fine Fashion Island trait, good service. Many of the sh9ps are merchant·owned and we received a special kind of setvice, something I'd almost forgotten existed. When Tom took off for Silverwoods, I Look a stroll. On my way, ~ • Brooks Brothers and the Optic'al Shop of Aspen, it dawned on me what. Fashion ISiand reminded me of- shoRpmg in the Mediterranean. The architecture, climate and casual atmosphere. It was an emotional comfort as well as physical. SOMETHING EVEN MORE EXCITING During my exp/oral.ion, I discovered something even more excitiqg- construction for a brand new FaShion Island area. lrs called Atrium Coult and I can't wait When completed, there'll be three levels of boutiques, stores and restaurants.. A brand new ltvine Ranch Farmers Market will ~e up the entire lower level floor. Pierre Deux, that fabulous French store, will also be part of Atrium Coult I was impressed all over again. And Tom can tell you- I'm not easily impressed. Before we knew it, we had spe_nd most of our day at Fashion Island, btit jtiSt to delay our depaltLlre, we met at. Bob Bums for a late aftemoon cocktail. It had been a wonderlul day. You know, I'd fo~en how much run~:shopping could be New stores, sunshine, fresh air. It was --~~ an experience! WE'RE GOING BACK ,~~ SATURDAY! E At home that evening I picked ----i up the new _ __, VOGUE magazine and relived the the day's expe_rience. Fashion Island was feab.Jrei:J. I wasn't surprised. Just satisfied. We had done something toaay that was ve~ s~ial, fulfilling. We'd rediscovered the best way to shop and the pleasure of Fashion Island. We're going back Saturday! _.J ~ • • 1 - •• A.8 Orwp COMt DAILY PILOT/ThurldaY, Sei>t CoNJ1~utu S10Rn s -- MOLESTERS SEDUCE THEIR VICTIMS •.• . . From Al ca·s cbiktttn is• h e. undempQrted problem that is omcumes ~octd even by parents and ph actans. A PAr1 of the overall problem is lack of µndcntandina bout how mol ten operate. Molcstcn use selection process wbettby the child least likely to say "No•• is most likely to be chosen. Almost always, the molester will aive up on the child who resist . Unfonuoately, there-are plenty of • dlildren wbo don't, authorities 51)'. .. nex don't do it forcefully. They ICduce, said Lo6 Anaeles police Detective Bill Dworin, a child acxual abuse expcn ... ThC)' say 'I wouldn't tum these children. I love them: " Children who don't act enough attention at home are most vunerable, C$pecially those from &if\llt>parent households or those where both parents work. "If you doa't· Jive ~our kids attention, someone else will. I think there's a lot to that," wd Roben D. Joy, a Postal Service mspector pecializing in child pomoaraphy. .. The seduction • process is no different than the one boyfriends and girlfriends use on each other with dinner and flowers," added Oworin. First, a would-be molester must find a situation where children arc available. The connection is often throufb occupation or volunteer orpru.zations. "That's no ~-ildent. lt'1 by desian." said Dworin. About 80 percent of all molestation · victims know their attackers. The victims may be the pedophile's own children, or those of a relative, or the kids down the block. The molester may be a babysitter, a teacher, a sports coach, a troop leader in a routh or_pnization or head of a boys or Jirls club. He or she may work in a nursery school or church choir or children's theater aroup. 0 lt could be your 'aood nei&hbor' or •Mr. Nice Guy,' .. Joy said. •'lte'll say 'Why don't you let me help you out? -~kids can stay with me for a couple • ofdays."' This year, in a nationwide crackdown on child pomopaphy, which law officers link closely to child xual buse. U .. Cu toms Service rescafeh subJect. The child h no • ents h ve identified 300 10 400 freedom in which to con idcr th i>CQJ?le m 19 state$ who i'ecelvc choice." ma11in1s. includina college As the child bec<>m ore com- professor, an Air Force officer. a fortable, "Mr. 'ice Guy" may try children' 1»ych,iatn t ud a hiah some ucklina. some wrestling, fol· school counselor. lowed perhaps by some "innocent" "One usuilly thinks of' a penon fo11dlinJ. who is obse-d with child porno-V"ccy often the molester next shows graphy as beina some son of'sickie,' his taract some child ~mography, livina in the shado of society," said which serves as "validation material" Allen Wilk, a customs service re-to lower the _}'Ounister• inhib1uons, gional pfficiaJ. "Thi description may accordina to Kenneth V. Llnmna, lhc fit some, but we .. ve found othcn who fBl's e1pcn on child sc~ual abuse • could ~ con idercd pillan of the While not every case of sexual community." abuse of a minor involves chitd Molestmuseassortedrusestopin P.ornoaraphy, Lannin1 said access to children. •pedophiles almost always collect "Aauymiahtaoiotoanarcadeand chitd porn .. to show the child ·•how say to a kid: 'Hey, you want some normal it is," as well as for personal quarters?. Let me see you play that sexual arousal. machine.• It builds up the rapport," The molester most often begins the said Dworin. validation f!.TOc:eSS with photos that In one incident in California, a are called •mere nudes," pictures of teacher allegedly told a woman that smilina. nude children m non-sexual her third-&rade son needed math poses. . tutorina; He would be alad to provide Mere nudes can inclu.de home- it after school, but only at his home, ,made snaj)shots of previous victims, accordina to court testimony. nudist colony maaazjnes, sex educa- The teacher is awaiting trial on sex tioo textbooks and books like "Show abuse charges. The boy who sup-Me!", touted as an educational .sex posedly needed tutorina actually was manull for children. · bright enough to skip apde after the--"That's like their Bible," Daniel L man's arrest. Mihalko, a postal inspector in New "Io a legal sense, a child is under the York, said of ''Show Mc!" He said authority of an adult and has no free copies of the book have been found will. In a more imponant psycbologi-oo each of his last five raids. cal sense, children have a hard time DWorin said such books are typi- sayina 'no' to adults, who control all cally left out in the open. "All kids arc kinds of resources that are essential to cunous," he explained. "They'll 1Sk: them." David Finkelhor, associate 'How come these kids are nakcdr director of the University of .New .. So there's this person, whom the Hampshire's Family Violence Re--child trusts, explainiJla; 'Would I do search J>roaram, wntes in bis forth· somethina wrona? These kids are comina book. "Child Sexual Abuse." havina a good time. You're as Once the child is in the J)edophile's beauuful IS they are. Would you like domain, a task fu~er facilitated by me to take some pictures of you?'" the fact childrol are taught to obey Under nonnal conditions, accord· their elders tlle molester introduce$ in1 to Lanning, "The child miaht say: the tools o~ seduction, lures such as 'Kids don't pose for nude pictures. I candy, toys, trips to parks or movie don't pose for nude pictures..'" theaters -anythina to please the But the pornographic materials child. showina other children smilina and "Food, money, freedom all lie in appcarina to enjoy themselve1 often adult bands," Finkelbor writes. "In enable the adult to persuade the child, this sense, the child is like the be said. prisoner who volunteers to be a Besides, said Detective Al S1mballa Maculnea and fllma1 conftecated by, the Poetal Senice are ftlled with plctaree of 'l . ## ........... nude children. Boob like .. Show lie! .. , upper rtcht are touted u e:dacatlon. of Albuquerque, N.M., .. When you appealina to kids," said Laci R. take a picture of a child and you show Rubin, one of the McMartin case them the picture, they like it." prosecutors. "Kids like to be touched In most cases, if the child has been and like the sensory feedback." "trained" properly, the seducer If all aoes IS planned. the victim eventually gets the child to disrot>e. If will fnext be involved in sexual need be, some molesters use drugs or activity. More times than not. the alcohol to funher the process. sexual acts bqin with oral sex. Once the child relaxes, the seducer The deeper that children act in· may bring out some sexually explicit . volvcd, the more trapped they feel, pictures of younJSters to funher the harder~ find it to break out of erode the vicum's inhibitions. the relationship, experts say. "The children realize that they're Still, some try. That's when black· not unique." said Lanning. for the mail is often used. children in the mapzines "have -If pictures were taken, the smiles on their faces and show no pedophile will threaten to show them fear." to the victim's parents. In the California case of the "The pedophile tells the child to McMartin Pre-School, where keep evcrytbi~ a secret, not because teachers have been accused of molest-you'll aet ME 1n trouble but because ing 42 pupils, the children say they YOU'LL act in trouble,'' Lannina played games titled "Nalced Movie said. Star" and "The Tickle Game .. as the Thi!n if a molester is caught, be or cameras rolled. she often denies the actions, or "Kids play games, and games are "blames it on the kids," said Dworin. • .. They tell us: 'The kids wanted it. Tb~y asked for it." Mary Emmons, executive director of Children's Instituto International in Los Angeles, said parenu of sex abuse victims frequently asked: "How could they not have said ~. ~· . an lJll. . . . e reason, sbe S&Jd, as that 10 many cases the blackmail far exceeds the worry of parental punishment. Researchen say threats to harm a victim's parents are common. Children interropted in the McManin case, for example, "uni- formly exhibit an all-pervasive ter· ror," accordina to documents filed in court by Kee Macfarlane, a Chil· dren's Institute therapist. "The children have uniformly be- lieved that the threaU which were made to them would in fact be carried out. e.a.. that both they and their parents would be killed if the children revealed any of the sexual abuse." The Federal Home Loan Bank Board has expressed its full confic;lenre in, and support for, William Popejoy, the newly appointed Chainnan and CEO of Financial Corporation of America and its sudsidiary, Ameriam Savin~, the nation's largest savin~ and loan. In a statement on behalf of the Baille Board, Chainnan Edwin J. Gray said: "We · believe Mr. Popejoy and the leadership he will bring to FCA and Ameriran Savin~ deserve the confi- denre and support of the financial and . depository communities.'' 1...., • AMERICAN SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION A rvlce of Financial COrporaUon of America 122 convenient locations throughout California. Waltin.a for thelMnd-up · Anenthaalutlocrow of~atOar Lady of AnJele Catholic School ID l'fewport Beacb -cerl1 await a commaad to re1 .. their bellam-ftllecl annlvel'M:l'J balloona 4arinC a celebration bonortnc the 11eboo1'1 20thJear. Babies inake three at FV hospital A Garden Grove couple just one Hospitil spokeswoman Sheila month away from celebra~ their Lotmrob &aid thi1 was oilly the first weddina annivenary received a aecond act of triplets ever born at the triple treat Mon~y at Fountain hospital, and the fint in 1t least 1 O Valley Community Hospital. years. Denoia and Pamela Curtis became The two airls and one boy were theparenuofhealthytriplets, born at na~ed Amanda,, Ashley and 4:38, 4:39 and 4:40 a.m. Chnstopber and wei&hed between S, .. 6 and 6'h pounds, respectively. Lobstroh said the triplets are the couple's first children. She said the mother and children were all healthy Monday. Dennis Cunis 'VOrkJ as a carpet installer and his wife has worked as 1 house cleaner, she said From Donna Karan and Louis ~IJ'Olio, sport.swtar designs fttling • the Nordic injlumct. &mm )llCket. $146. Ski pant. $74. Rikbtd turtknecle. $108. Al~ S-M·L Robinion's V~nt., 114, &wrly Hills, Cerritos, ~I Amo, Newport, S.nu Barbar11, Santa Monica, ShmnAn O.lu and Wood/4nd 'Hills. JOIN US FOR OUR VERY. SPECIAL . . EVENTS CELEBRATING THE WORLD OF ANNE KLEIN. • Mttt TrtW &ird from Anne Khin II at our minifashion show in NEWPOKJ; Saturday, !kpttmm 22. At 1 p.m.., foll~ by mform.l modtling until 4 p.m .. - 'CAMPAIGN '84 P~ir of politicians to be feted The Zonia aub of:itlie nl& Ana area has planned a champqne reeep-uon tuiday or two OranleCounty women in poliuca. Manad :Berac5_on, 10th Di trict assemb1ywi>man, and Carol Ann Bradford. candidate for the 40th Cooarcssion&l Distr)Ct, will addrcu lhe poup The l'CQCpuon, whieh as open to the pubhc, i5 lclieduled for l 0:30 a.m. at the Zonta Clubhouse. l Sth and Irv Blvd., in N_e.wpon Beach. For informauon, cau 650-6473. U Co~mao Barbeta ~1 •if1e11 ne "::Jr" Bour CD-Mann County) plan1 '° m1.ed WUm wida IM i. nor 40tb Distnct ca~te Carol camr be v'*ll UlJ~ ol~ fr.Ila ndford1t1~S.llmlay vokedby'dw~olhl m La&una Btacb.1beS2Si>er•person 72 peroeo.1 of &Ma.. fund-raJICr II to take plaee It the ••• home ofEl&in and Althta Soot'9 2943 D\arina ltie ..,.. of ~ U.10. Rou;111evet~erraee. from 3 to s pm. mtmberi of lbe New~...,.. For 1nfonnauoo, call ~S-0178. Q;>tta Maa BoMI ol -!=• • * "' JOlD a DaUOllwidl ~ ,_ U.S Rep._ Rohen Bldham, R-drive. Real -..... He~ :&each, pvm the takedoor....._••e)••lf11¥ .. <luatdian .or mall Bu incu" award co locate ud -~;yoeen fai tie by tbtNauonat Fede'rJtion'Oflndc-Nov::i6~.•tfaia..alNL&=- fronsons COME MEET DONNA ·KARAN AND LOUIS DELL'OLIO IN BE:VERL Y HILLS, TUESPAY, SEPTEMBER 25, FROM 1:30-2:30 P.M. AND DISCOVER THE COMPELLING NEW FRAGRANCE THE WORLD HAS BEEN WAITING FOR ... ANNE KLEIN B I .--· ... • • • < • All Orqe CoMt DAILY PILOTfThuredll)', lleplembet 20, 1184 r • MERVYN'S • starts F.rid~y at 9:30 a.m. • . many limited quantities • not all sizes may be available in each grouping • colors and styles limited to stock on. hand, · so shop early for best selection! • 1n our Huntington Beach store women's sportswear NOW SI JUNIOR SHIRTS •••••••••••••••••••••• 1.11 144 MISSES' TEE SHIRTS ••••............ 1.11 294 ACTIVE COORDINATES •••.••••...••• S.11 'II JUNIOR TEE SHIRTS ................. .3.11 , 111 LARGE SIZE TOPS .................. 3.11 151 MISSES' SHIRTS ................... .4.11 189 MISSES' TEE SHIRTS ••...••••••••••• UI 171 ACTIVE SEPARATES ................ UI 42 MISSES PANT TOPS ..••.•....•...•••• I.II 112 JUNIOR PANTS ••••.•••••••••••••••• l.M A JUNIOR BLAZERS .................... I.II 247 MISSES COORDINATES ....•••••••••••• 72 MISSES' PANTS •••••••••.••.••....••••• 91 MISSES' SKIRTS ..................... I.II Infants and toddlers NOW 23 TODDLER GIRLS' TIGHTS •••••.......• 1k 21 INFANTS' 8LEEP£RS ••••••••••••••••• 114 31 INFANT BOYS' TOPI ................. 1.11 'Z1 INFANTS' AND TODDLElll' SANDALi 1M 57 INFANTI' PANTS .•••••••••••••.•..•• 1• 21 TODDLER BOYS' TEE SHIRTS •••.•.•.. 1.11 31 TODDLER GIRi.i' ORElllEI ••••••••••• UI 45 NE-N ACRYLIC SWEATERI •••.•• UI 31 NEWBORN GIRLS' PANTIETS •..••••.• UI 21 INFANTS' DRESSES ••.•••••••••..•.•• S.11 buys for glrls NOW 11 JUMPSUITS ......................... 4k 201 LARGE SIZE TOPS ................. ,.1,11 · 10ll MISSES' LEVI'S" SPORT TIMER-PANTS I.II 40 LARGE SIZE PANTS ••.•.•.•.•.••••••• I.II 111 JUNIOR COTTON SWEA TERI ••...... I.II 13 SHORTS , ••.• -••.•• ·-· o ••••••••••••••.• 114: _ . 21 TANK TOPS ••.•••.••.....•••.•.••••• 11¢ 14 JUNIOR VESTS ...................... 1"9 123 JUNIOR CARDIGANS ................ 9.11 1<12 MISSES COORDINATES ............. 1.• 1• MISSES P£111E CO·ORDINATES ••••• I.II 147 MISSES COORDINATES ••..••••.••• 11.11 dresses and suits NOW 20 MATERNITY PANTS .................... . 15 JUNIOR JUMPSIHTS ••..•.........••.• L• 40 MISSES' DRESSES ...•••.••.••.••... 15 .• 20 JUNIOR DRESSES •.•.••.•..•...••.•• 15.11 llngerle, loungewear NOW 7S BRAS, BIKINIS ............•.•..••• , .. 1.11 101 SLIPS, CAMISOLES ......... , ....... z.• 20BRAS ............................... 3.11 30 SLIPS, CAMISOLES ..•. , ..... , ••...•. 3.11 53 SHORT GOWNS ..•........ , • , ........ 3.11 12 LONG GOWNS ... , ..... , ... , , ........ 3.11 51 CAMISOLES .................•••.•••• UI 41 SLIPS ••......•...••••.••••••••••••• A.II 41 SHORT SLEEPWEAR ................. .4.11 4:l BRAS ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 5.11 131 SLIPS, CAMISOLES ................. S.• 51 LONG GOWNS -. ...................... S.11 21SHIFTS .......•. , .................... I.II 32 HOSTESS GOWNS ....• , , .• , , • , ••••• 13 •• women's accessories NOW 117 NYLON PANTSOX ............ , , , , , , , 4k 151 SPORT SOCKS ..................... 4k 33 SLIPPERS (ACCESS. DEPT.) ••.••••••. •c 41 SUNGLASSES ....................... 11¢ 17 SCARVES ........................... lie 73 FASHION BELTS ..................... 11¢ 41 WALLETS ........................... 11¢ 53 PANTYHOSE ••••••••.•••••.•••••••••• 11¢ 115 SHOES (ACCESS. DEPT.) .........•• 1.11 21 FRAMES •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• i.11 33 SACHET HANGERS ......... : ......• , ;3.11 41 LEOTARDS •.•••.....••.....•.•...... I.II buys for men NOW 71 POL VESTER TIES .................... 4k 151 YOUNG MEN'S SKINNY TIES ..••••••• 1 •• S4 TANK tOPS : ........................ 1.11 53 HOODED SLEEVELESS SWEAT TOPI •• 1.11 241 I . BLY. PRINTED TEES ............. .2.11 124 BANDED COLLAR SHIRTS ..•.•••••• .2.11 11S HEAVY METAL TEES ............... .3.11 104 IEL TS •.•.•.•• , •••••.•..••.••.•.••• a.JI 32 TE TACS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 3.11 101 L. SLY. PLAID SHIRTS .............. .3.11 · to5 YOUNG MEN'S LAYERED -Tl •••• .4.11 a CHEET AHi• ACTIVE IHIRTI •••••••••• UI 104 I . ILV. RUGBY SHIRTS ............. .4.11 42 8. ILY. COT/POLY KNITIHIRTS .. : ... I.II 70 LIYrS• SUIT ILACKI ........... , .... 7 M 1211. ILV. COT/POLY KNIT SHIRTS ..... 7.11 "LEVI'S• NUVO" JEANI ............... tM 25 TOPS ••••..•••.•••••••••••••••..•.•• 114: 'Z1 BABY DOLL PAJAMAS .••..•.••.••••• 1.11 21 NIKE• TOPS ••.•.•••••••.•••.•••. , ••• 1• II BLOUSES ••.•••..••.•.•••••....••••• 1• 25 SHORT SLEEVE SWEATERS ••.••••.•• 3.11 13PANT8 ••••••••••...•.•••••......••.• I.II 31 ACTIVEWEAR TOPS .•••••••••.••••••• 5.91 11 JACKETS •.•.••••••••.•••••.••••••.• IM buys for boys NOW 33 BIG BOYS' CAPS .................... lie 21 LITTLE BOYS' SHORTS ............... lie 47 BIG BOYS' SHIRTS ................... 1.41 81 BIG BOYi' SCREEN PRINT T ·BHlllTI •• 1.11 35 LITTLE BOYS' NYLON JACKETS •••••• 1.11 S1 lllG BOYi' SWIMWEAR ............... 1M 21 LITTLE BOYi' PAJAMAS ............. 1.11 'Z1 BIG BOYS' PAJAMAS ................ U1 17 lllG BOYS' P.C.H.• PANTS •••••••••••• UI 31 LITTLE BOYS' S. IL V. PLAID 8HlllTI •• 3.11 43 lllG.BOYI' S. SLY. PLAID 8HlllTI •••.. UI 17 FAMOUS MAKER S. ILV. TIES •••••••• U1 shoes for the famlly NOW 45 WOMEN'S CANVAS CAHDIE'S• ....... lie 107 LEATHER DRESS IANDALI ••••••••• 1.11 21 Cllll.DllEN'S SESAME 8111£ET9 lllOll • 3.11 31 BOYS'-LEATHER CASUAL SHOii ••••• UI 53 WOMEN'S CANV Al CASUALS •..••••• 5.91 77 MEN'S HOlllE• TINlll SHOii •••.••• 5.91 31 WOMEN'S CASUAL HIGH TOP IOOTI 7.11 45 WOMEN'S CANDIE'S• EIPADRILLll •• I.II 13 WOMEN'I DRESS HEELS ••.••••••••• 11.11 37 MEN'S CASUAL SHOES ............. 11M for your home NOW 114 WASH CLOTHS •••••••••• ,, •....t.~ ••••• tie 341 HAND TOWELS ::-.;-; ....... : ........ 1.11 23 KITCHEN CURTAINS •• , .............. 1.11 121 POLY /COTTON P£RCALI lllUTI ••• UI 30 IA TH TOWELS •••••••••••••••••••••• I.II II BODY TOWELi " .................... 7.11 housewares . . . -II FABRIC NAPKINS ••.••• , ••••••••••••• - 11 FAllllC PLACEMATI ................ 1k nllUVETa ...................• , .....•• 1.11 14 ACCENT TABLES •••••••••••• , •• , , , •• la 1•~S ........................... ... 37 FAIRIC TMLECLOTHI ••••••••• 2.11-tM jewelry buys NOW 75 NATURAL NECKLACES .............. 1.11 10 CHILDMN'I DIGITAL WATCHEI •••••• 1.11 •NATURAL NECKLACES .............. a.• 44 1921 NECKLACES AND Pltll •• , ••••••• 3.11 20 1121 NECKLACES •••••• , •••••••• , •• , • SM 10 PEN SETI .•..•••.•••.....•..•.•.••• 11M toys, toys, toys . l!IOW 1S FOOTBALLS ••• , •••••••••••••.••• , ••• - 11 GAAFIEU)e STICKERS ............... 41C 'Z1 ITRAWllEllRY .-rCAKl' IElllY WIMI U1 Huntington Beach• 9811 Adams Ave . at Brookhurst St. • ' . i.. I • SapplJ Qlp Frieda It oalJe for bome. 8oriet l""brealr.er Ai.berl la ID bac"CJ'O•u•d. Freed crew.recalls Soviet , encounter on thehigh·seas GAMBELL, Alaska (AP) -Five ti~ but smiling American sailon said they were glad to be back on American soil today after a week in Siberia, where Ibey were taken by a Soviet warship that seized their ?UPplY ship during a souvenir~hunt- 1ngJaunt. The seamen, released Wednesday in a rendezvous between an armed Soviet icebreaker and a Coast Guard cutter in the Bcrina Sea, were not harmed during their detention said Tabb Thoms, skipper of the; 120..foot Frieda K. With his crew by his side, Thoms SJ?.C?ke to a mob or reporten and vdlqers Wednesday night after the freed vessel beached on Gambell, located on St: Lawrence Island about 50 miles east of the rendezvous site where the vessel and crew were freed earlier in the day. Thoms said he and the acw piloted · their ship to the rendC'lvous, where Coast Guard Capt. Jack Billington met with the commander of the Russian icebreaker Aisbcrx in the wh~lhouse of the Frieda K to sian documents turning over the crew and vessel to the Americans. The transfer took place in Jhc Bering Sea near the intemaUonal date line.,,.at 3:20 p.m. AOT (3:20 p.m. PDT). "There was just a very warm hello. We were very happy to see them," said the Frieda K's cook, 29-year-old Charles Burrall. Coast Guard officers who boarded the Frieda K were met by five armed Soviet crew memben, said Chief Petty Officer Dan Dcwcll. Thoms said the Soviets confiscated ftlm from cameras, the ship's IOI and charts from the Frieda K.. Thoms said the crew was pressured to sip ~pen admitting an inten· tional violation of Soviet territory, but refused to do so. "We collect T-shirts and sweat shins from where we ao. from time lo time, and this was our intention" when the encounter with the Soviet warship occurred Sept. 11 in the Bering Strait, said Thoms. The crew, which deliven supplies to remote villaaes. planned to pick up the souvenirs at a village on Little Diomede, an Alas:kan island only 2'h miles east or Sovie1-owncd Bia Diomede, when the boat was stopped and boarded by "many, many" Soviet soldiers, he said. Thoms, who did most of talking for his crew, said they were approachina the narrow passqc between the two islands when he saw a araY ship approachina. -· He said he 11eered the Frieda K closer and saw an officer on tht bridle. "As we neared tho ship ... one of the officen on the vessel mo- tioned" and Thoms interpreted that to mean they should tie up to the vessel. / .. So we threw our lines on and before the wink of eye, you could say, there were many, many soldjers on board, armed wtth guns,. lcn~ves and pistols. and they seized my crew." Thoms and other crewmembcrs said they were happy to be back on American soil and said they were a,rateful to the Coast Guard crew that came to pick them up. Meese .prosecutor nixes allegations WASH INOTON (AP)-A special prosecutor reported today he fpund no basis ."for the brinaint of a prosecution" against presidential counselor EdWin Meese Ill, nomi- nated by President Reapn to be attorney genetal. Special prosecutor Jacob A. Stein, rePorting to a special coun which lpPOinted him to investigate aliega~ 11ons conccrnin• Meese, said he looked only for vaolations of the law and would "submit no comments on Mr. Mecse's ethics and lhULropricty of his conduct or an eValuat1on ofMr. Meese's fitness for office.'' 'The three-Judge panel accepted Stein's repon Md made it J,>Ublic. Stein has been investigating Meese since April when allegations arose during and after Senate Judiciary Committee hearinp on his fitness tQ serve as attorney ieneral. The most seriousalleption was that he played a role in awardinggovernmentJObs to a friend from California and his wife in exchange for a SIS,000 interest-free loan from the friend. In aJI, Stein investigated 11 allega- tions concerning Meese, a longtime per10nal friend and associate of President Reagan. He rcponed that he questioned 200 witnesses and had 45 of them, including Meese and his wife Unula., testify before a grand jury. ln bis 38S-page report, Stein de~ scribed his long inquiry and said: .. Based upon the investigation ducribed above, we find no basis with respect to any of the t I allegations for the bringing or a 'l prosecution against Mr. Meeie for the violation of a federal criminal statu- te." But he added, "I am compelled 10 ·limit my inquiry to the sole question of whether the evidence warrants prosecution under federal criminal statutes." Thercfore1 he said, he would not offer any Judgments on Mecse's fitness to become the nation's top Jaw-eofon::ement officer. Despite the special prosecutor's report, no immediate ac1ion is ex- pected to be taken on Mccse's nomination 10 succeed Attorney General William French Smith, who said last January that he wanted to step down to tum to private life and to play a role in President Reagan's rt· election campaign. BA\'"SIDE VIDEO B.\\"SIDE VIDEO (IN THE BAYSIDE PHARMACY) 1018 BAYSIDE DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH, CA 821Ml2 780-0113 * ~ r----COUPON-----, I RENT A VCR I I 2 Movi'Es FOR ·1 I Fri, S.1, & Bun i\dd S3 00 I 1111 11...,. en. "ii!:,. "",,.3.;:,';..:.! I ·-------------J VHS ONLY •VCR RENTAL AVAILABLE NO MEMBERSHIP FEES •ALL RATINGS HOURS: MON thru FRI 8-7:30 SATURDAY Q. 7:00 SUNDAY 10-7:00 t Games are over, but work's just ,~tarting for '88 For most of us, the Los AJlaeles Olympic Gaines ended in the rockets' red alare of a fireworlcs extravapnza. As trumpets blared and a 7-foot alien commended Earth· for a display of .sportsmanship that made humans the envy of"the 11nivene, we were countina oilr aold medals -83 for the United States team -and wondering if the freeway traffic would be its usual, conaested self on Monday morning. · For millio115 of.Americans, the closin11 ceremonies were a sharp exclamation point at the end of a marvelously well-written 23rd chapter in the history of modem Olympic competition. But, for the athletes and the people who work behind the scenes to create an Olympic team, the oerembnies prefaced Chapter 24 -the 1988 Summer Games in Seoul, Korea. For them, the work is just beginnin11- Some athletes, particularly superstars lilce Carl Lewis, Edwin Moses, Evelyn Ashford, Orea Loupnis and Mary Lou Retton will train privately with personal coaches and managers. They will compete in the hiBb-Vllibility, bi& money meets. We'll read about the titles they wm and the world records they set and the multi-million dollar endonement contracts they s~. But, we'll hear little abo11t the rest of our Olympums. As 1984 fades, newspapers and television in the United States will devote little spaoe or time to the p~ our cyclists, fenoen, archers or marksmen are maltln11-We re not likely to lcnow bow our national volleyball team is doin11 in international competition. And we won't be aware of the bard work and fuwicial sacrifice of people lilce Dusty Dvorak of Laguna Beach. Dvorak is on the road with the volleyball squad now, carryina one gold medal and setting bis sights on establishing a national volleyball consciousness that will attract young athletes to supply strong American teams in the future. Dvorak's vision of a tradition of excellence will never be realized without the successful support ofBQb Clifford, Dennis Landesman, Bob McCaffrcy and the rest of the folks at the Orange County Olympic Committee. The committee raised alniost $4<Jq,,OOO for the 1984 Olympic team. It helped find jobs, part-time anain mostly, for athletes who have put their careers on bold ll! p.11rsue amateur, excellenec. (Despite the wealth accumulated by the Carl Lcwises of the world,. most Olym"Piins live like graduate students or starvina artists.) If it were not for the efforts of the committee -and hundreds lilc~ it across the country -it's unlilcely that our Olympic volleyball team could be together now, travelina the &lobe to test itself against the class of the world, preparing for another serious assault on the gold. · It is not enough, however, to pat.Clifford and bis volunteers on their backs and offer a hearty "well done." Their job is not done. Their $oal is to repeat l 984's succe$5. To accomplish that, they must raise money now and in 1985, 1986, 1987 and in 1988. lfthe United States is to be as successful in Seoul as it was in Los Angeles, theOraneeCountrOlympicCommittccmustbave the support -financial, emouonal and physical -of anyone who has a dime or a minute to spare. Oh, by the way: Well done. New nolse problem faces CM plannlng commlsslon To the Editor: Recent letters lO the editor have biP,li.hted the chanae of status for the City of Costa Mesa as it moves from a "Goat Hill" environment to the ''City of the Arts." Most of the art seems to lie north of the 40!5 freeway, while south of the freeway, home- owners are left with cultural centers that are described u beina "exempt from environmental determination." Specifically, most of your readers already know of the noise problems surroundina Pacific Amphitheatre. Now, the Costa Mesa Planninc Com· miSJ1on is about to hear an appli· cation for a ~ne ex.ception pennit next door to the Mardan Center on West 19tbStreetinCostaMe11 where the operaton of outdoor races by radio-controlled model cars seek a conditional use permit to continue with the objectionable noise of loud soeaken and model cars permeatina the atmosphere or a quie1 residential area on Plumer St:reet and other surroundina streets on Sunday after. noons when bbmeownen are at· temp~ toettjoy the peace and quiet of their bock )'aids. If the homeowners in the immedi- ate vicinity of the Mardan Center cannot prevail upon the plaJ'lni~ commiKion to tum down the appli· cation for the exemption permit, men the city fathen will have visited upon themselves another "cultural dius-- tcr" not unlike the amphitheater problem which they now face. DAVIl>A. W. YOUNG NCW1>0rtlleacb Make the Western vote coUJJt To the F.ditor: , Aocordina to the ~e of Women Voten, marly Wttt Cout voters intended t0 vote in the 1980 pm,iden· tial election but didn't. Why? Simply becaute NBC broadcasters projected Reqan'1 win teveral boun·· before western state~ closed. Let'• not let that happen ipln. • Pleue encouraae all western states voten to be sure to ao vo1e, ~c" of the ·WCltber, and ~rdleu of projections and . predictiODt. Wouldn't it be downri&ht delicious if the western votes made lhe sm••-b· t broadcasten wrona?Such. indeed, is needed to help make our democratic system viable. ALFRED 0. WUPPERMAN Austin, Texas Back to ba•lcs for astronauts . . To the Editor: ft'• hard ror the astronauu to get away !tom the (down to earth) mundane problems. They are olan- o.ina to uke one of America's fintat tncl>cn u their fint ordinary ~llizt.. rt they are plannina a Iona tnp and with lhe trouble that they ar< havq OAANOE COAST llllJPllat ~th lhe john, I would 1~t that they take wilh them ooe of America'• finest plumben. No one really ap. preclaia thooe 111)'$, bot oomeUmel they are bard to live without. JIMBOLDINO Co•iaMaa H.L--IN -,,..._ ~ ,........,, ..... ,. ... v... ..... ~ ~--,.,__W•Al •ww .... IMO '°"''"" Clty•- o.. ..... CA. .... J c ..... -...,,. ...... ( • ''Whllegood fortune ls a hallmark ofReagan 's career, hf11tough11nu- Sovtet111ance 111 paylnJldlvtdend . He should pursue, not abaiidon ft .... •• - WHf\T ~ 1100 itttNK. o~. CM'i'Pl\iGt.f m.111c~1~ ~lillilrNCi l'l 110 UJlit\ ~ · 111 r+11i I !miHllt, ITlf\G ? • ,.._. --- Reagan's best bet to kee .. pressure upon the Sovie s History shows USSR's leaders don't modify system until cracking point WASHINGTON -Andrei ielves. More die eac:b year than are Gromyko, Stalin's man in.Washing· born; Russian women are estimated ton durina World War 11, is com.in& to have between five and lOabonions back to town to talk wilh Ronald each. The Soviets' "minorities prob- Reapn. Meanwhile, Soviet state lem" promises to eclipse anything propopnda is reminding the popu· experienced in the United States. Lace of the Hitler·Stalin Pact. (In Meanwhile, the Americans have revised Soviet.-hiltory~-tbe ~ w.as 1jp.i.ned their pre-Vietnam self-eon· not one of mutual advantaae, carviq fidence; and Reg.an appears beaded up Europe, b~t a brilliant iactical for a political lriuinoh. maneuver by Stalin to buy time to With the empire in crisis and ~ Mother Russia for the in-Gromyko· en route, two courses will eviiable war t0 the finish.) be pressed upoo the praidcnL The A clear pouibility is that the Soviet fint will arsue that now is the ideal people are beiq prepared for a timeto "strikeadcal,"thatMoscow's "second detente" -this time with · need for trade, technolOI)', new the detated Ronald Reqan. For the credi,Js, a relaution of tensions, is so Soviet empire, in a dcepeniDJ econ· pat that the "carrots" of co-ex· omic, political and social crisis. is in 1stt:nce can be exchan&cd by the West desperate need of such a respite. for • new anns control aa,reement, Publicly, .in the put two wecb., and a return to the balmier days of Moscow was forced to jerk the chain detente. The other view -more of two previously docile and obedient difficult for the president politically satraps. Honecker of Eut Germany -will be toconunue maint.a!nina the and Zbivkov of Bula.an., who were preuurc upon Moscow. until, u l;be toyinawiththeirowntiestotheWesL cn11~ deepens and u the Soviet The Soviet walkout from the arms emptre approaches the edae of crack· nqotiatlons backfired; the Penbin&s ' ina. lhe ~lina elite i~ forced for iu were deplO.Yed· and the crudity of own SUtvlval to modify the system, Soviet betli&efCnce toward Western out of which its imperialistic policies Europe has only underscored Ronald naturally flow. Reqan's depiction of Moscow as the The second coune is araued by Dr. Hevil em_P.i:re," thereby disannina the. Richard Pi~ in "Forei&n Affairs." ••usefW 1diou" who customarily do As Reagan s former Soviet adviser Moscow's propqanda work in the points ou~ it is only when Moscow West has expenenccd a great crisis and WbHe the West appears headed for national reversal that m-_jor course a boom, led by the trem~ndous U.S. corrections are made by the ~e. recovery, the East Bloc is in an Folio~ the debacle in the Crimea, economic slou&}l. Moscow bu just the aerfs were freed; foUowing the announced that oil supplies to the humiliation by Japan in 1904, Wanaw Pact will be reduced. Nicholas Il libcraliud bis autocratic Western dilettantes may deride Nle. followina the near collapse of "Star Wan" as fantasy, but the his rqime in 1921 , Lenin turned to Soviets appear to ~e in deadly lhe West for economic assistance to earnest U.S . efforts to construct a save his rqime and prevent total missile defense that would cancel out collapse. the blackmail possibilities of Soviet .. Russian history thus stronfly first-strike weapons, in which they suaaiests." Pipes writes, "and in· have invested half a trillion doll.an. formed }tussian opinion cor· ADd Soviet society is sick. Al· roborates.. that such ch&QICS for the cotiolism is rampant; the Great better that one can expect ia r.hc Russians are not reproducina them-n1rure oflbe Soviet government and Pat Bucu .11 in its coaduct of~ reWiom will come •bout only fro tailures, I> stabilities and fears o ~ llJd nor from VowiJ\l c us!. seme ofiecurity. (Emp · bia.) "This uaeumm.t is ti.thetk:aJ to the one that uDderpin detente and that continues 10 do te 1hi= in the foreipl and li citc:les ill Europe the United Staiet-that the more nfidcnt and secure the Soviet elite lit the more ttstraiocd iu condUC1 will be." Tbe Lttrer tbesU c:aanot · supported by any evideDce from put and can only derive from of the Soviet elite and the reobtd ofRuW. '1 ,,.sl(empbuis mine.) . Unfortunately, domestic politics has fonxd Rc:apn to cue Russia•s q;ricultural c:risiJ with 22 million tonsofsrain,and to announce that be, hopes to persuade Gromyko tbit Hwe· mean them no harm ... Wbileaood fortune is a hallmark of Reapn'scareer, bis toqb anti-SOviet stanceispayinadividends. He should punue, 001 abandon it -by closing the door to the IMF-to Jaruulski's Poland, den~ furure cmlitJ tn Warsaw Pact nanoo&, and vetoina all loans from i.niemationaLinstitutions. Most impon.ant i1 the continued weapon• buildue. aod early deploy- ment of a missile defense. But n0 more effective a blow could be dealt Communist morale and the idea of "inevitability,. of Communist tri· umpb than the second·term elimina- tioD of the Soviet beachhead in North America: Nicarqua. The belt way to •ianal Gromyko that Reapn intends to "'Stay tbe Course" is by ~ out, oo schedule, the testing Ori.be U.S. anti- satellite weaPon in 1peoe. ,..,,,,,. -". •yHICflled t!'OlumUt. Incorrect Army diagnosis caused cop's la ter trauma WASHINGTON-Foreiah• Iona yean, t.hanb 10 a still unexplained blllftucrotlc aoof. Robert F. Cooper wu led to believe that tie suffered from a my1teriou1, di11bliaa dilate. And even when he was able to ettablilh the tNth, his tormenton refuted to correct lhe enor that all but ruined his life. Cooper's story is a nJabtmare out of Ka!lca -with a 1oucb of'"Catcb·22'" thrown in ror a09d measure. lt •o in 1971, when Cooper, 23 and fRsh ft'om a two-year stint io tbe Arm_y, joined the Wuhinslon. D.C., Miuo- politan Police Department Durina bis probationary year, Cooper WU sununarily fired. Under the Nies, no_,.n fOr di1111ial had t0 be pvtn. But Cooper'I IUperion volun-jU.. <llOlllb in!Orinadon tOIC&l'e thedaylia)>Uout of'l>im. Tbey IOld him be wu l<l llO beal be boil I disablin& rnedi<aJ condition. c-..... lllldcntandably tcr• rilled 11 the tbo\llllt that bis body-llftder anact by oomc droadfill malody. He alto fOund beooWdn1 Ft otbet wort. boc:au,. of the medical IDY'l<IY· H1 docidod be bW IO know whit was wroaa with him. · ,, JACK AllDEISO I mcdlCal term f'or bed·weltina. C.OOperwasdumbfounded, He had never been a bed-wetter. Where bad the police dcpanm<nt llOllCD 1ucb a "cruyldca1 It turned out that the erroneous diqnotis wu contained in Cooper's Anny medical -wh ich bad been te:nt to 1.be disuia: aovanment. W1tbout ever euminina Cooper, or even inteMewina him, tbt Pol.ice dePtrtment'I 1upcrvisina pbyttcian IOOCplad the Anny"• ~ .. diqllOld and jumped to the CODclutton that Cooll<t wuri1 macbo el!Olllb IO be a ~ a memo reviewtd by my auociaie Indy a.dbwar the doclor wroll: ·--una ,.......nu dttp-,......, p<nOll&lny coonicu and a dqlft ofullUICfllvencu wbidl is a 1e11ousbandicap ln f\Jncuonina in tbt npected role that a male pla)' in our aoacty." nel _depuunent tent him this tn· credible responte: .. There exists oo medical examination which would detennioe in fa<t that the diJquolify- iaa condition (i.e., enuresis) exists, oor is there any eound reason to believe it does noi." 1n other WOfd.t. tbe bureaucrau admitted there WU DO WI.)' to be fUf't CQopef WU I bed-wetltf, but \hey refuted to aive him bis job hick becavae there was noway to be sure he wun'l. Cooper then appealed tO \be Anny. in Novtmbet 1980, Col. 0-.. ll H~ chief of the medi<:al corps• inq uinCI branch, wroae that in his Opinion Cooper bad never been a bed-wener, and that bis medical l<COl'd was simply""°"'" The Anny OOtTeC1ed ibt r<eo!d by c1c1cti111 an reference to.enu.res1 At tbe vial. Police: oflklal1 C:l• pta,ned that they badn1 told Cooper then.act rcuon for his d.ismisal "in crier to protccl Mr. Cooper's feel- ""'-" U.S. Dislri<I Jlfdae William lkY&t>t ordered Cboper m .... t<d Wlrh full -pay. lltal ~'U tcven moaths qo. But Cooptt's buru\lc.n.tic torturers attn\ rhroqli -.rith him. They bave •ppeal<d the ..nla<I. PATIUCS llUCllAILU' ........ L.M. 81Ji1 Ruler's . life a roving affair The builder of llM> Oreal WaU ol Otiaa, Ch'ift Sllib H-T~ -anothcl"o<th0te mocwdls who libd t0 llecp in a dillcmu ~ .-:y n.i.lht. Hiltory attributes 11 to hit tear o(a•11ina11on. Our Love and War manootesthateK:bofdwsreaimaa't 270 i-i-s --wttb -cubineo. You don"t tee ma'!t.~ resta.urants. Rhode I hat one. Tbe Dovecrest lodian Rntawanl at TOm&QUlf Alaldia VilJolc. You cu order Qll&hOt pie, brlited elk, dam cam and '"'"'"•"'· I( you will!. The Emperor Ptn_.;n can"t fly, doesn't~ WOll1 build a nest. Al I bird. all be S IOl a.re featbcl'I. In "Jocksonville, fla., tbt Qroeo. lawn C.. i< ~ wUb Ups tba1 .,:'Jwlidl Out ror the AspcrpnliJ." This d I l<mlrle beast thal 1trika in tbt-. -ma tO the smilina etmaay owner. h diicR such an aaimal? No. But me Dllce huo"l bclCD va""atiiect •to ob it -be{-the .... -poot<d almoottoodc<Mn- Nothina_ inlwwod tbt --• W.C. Fldds IO mueb &I 'beioc up-11-1. When be .... tbt cenur or anentioa.. M: wanted it all So. children bothered him. He eouidn't CO!llnlllbem. Dopbocbetedbitn.Hc couldn1 ooauol them. Arrd &llOtbcr comedian, tbt -t £4 W)'Dll. bothered him. 0-. in a pet· r.,.,,,._ with bim 1'tlereia Wpn. momcnwily •tole tbt .,.._,. But Fadch COllld COCIU'OI Wya. W.C. -bis mend £4 -with a PoOl cue. A warm-blooded lion hat to eat its ._.tit in load every 10 days. A c:old- bkloded ti:z:ard bu to eat iu we:ip.t in food every two months. You can tee, what it takes just to stob: a furnace. Eqland's Royal Fomily in 1983 spent SI 12,000 on ui>k«'o of bones and curiqes. but oDJy $12,000 on upkeep of can. Principol New Yori< Yank<a owner Georsc Midtacl Sreinbrmner wu named after that mutioolocist ol ycstcryc:or Georsc Midtacl Cohao. • For th0tc who care1 ~ note Ronald Reqan is an ""l.uarius and Walter Mondale is a Capncom. One out of 10 Americana ~ some tan&n• other than Enahsb at home, and of these. seven out 10 speak Spanish. MOit aowded city in. Europe: is Naples. " What's done with the last remains: In Japan, t 8 out of every 20 bodies are cremated. ln £nalaftd. aemation aocountsfor l5 ouiofevery 20. lD the Uniied swes. only one out or every 20 goes to the cnmatorium. How can . you caU younelf a baseball buff if you don't know tha& Lyle lcoown u Soarkv i• rally oamed Albert and lhat-Aodenon known u Sparky is rully named 0col'IC! Ten times u m&n.)' people, aboult work on Soviet fi.rms u on Americaa farms. But bear in mind., two--thirds of \he Soviet fanns ~ Wtbt:r north oa that side of the -1d than i< the Caoadirm border on this side. Sbort powina teaSOn over there. In A.D. 82S, a .. of Bqbdad named al-K.bowarimu wrote~ text· bbok called "A\.jabr w'aJ-mu· qabllah. • The • Al~br" part meano .. brinaiaa toselher. And we now call it "aJ&ebrt." if we have to mention h at all. Your bra.in was almost but nOt Q\Ute its full size on )'O\&r KYenth bil'th&y. ltem No. &83C in our Love. ane War Man•s file: Seven out of every d.abt really intimate leuen are writ· 1eft after 10 o'clock at ni&b< Most EaYotians cnve their "Cleot>< ... ltiplar" --the nabonwidc addiction is u deep~ u anywhere in the world-t•n f.lypt pvwl DO tobecoo.. China supPied 90 pm:ent or the ...,.id's tea 100 years ..,, Now It'• ao .... to 10 pcrcn1 and 11ill ~ Cbildren don\ oood IO lcoow th< worch "'Ol1D1 .. and ..... ao lCJIO\hcr". Thal"• all in ""' put. P>y<11ok>1i1u say "'°'' &iftod younptmF\ IO bof<d tbe)l IOllliDCty pct1brm about tbr<e podea below tbCtr powilial. PQslO defined an u "a lie wl11<h '-" see \be tntth." Aftercia)>t yeanof d_.s pctition- ina, Cooper -finally lllowcd IO look al ""' polict -Oft his dumiu&I. Tbe doarmmu idtnufied the m~-aftheuon th11 had collaed Coopor'a l!rilll' •••mis. \be Co0pu-ckmaftded mnttalt1ntftt beal•,. he •rd he had bee ftr<d on fAlte pounds.. The dlstric.t's penon- JM Al••-Ar a ,,..__, ~ LM, .. ¥4 ft • ., .. , ..... ....,....... ,.,._.,, • • A.10 Otano. Cout DAILY PILOT/Thursday, Septem . • . • • • • • .. . . ... • • • . Classic styling. Beautifully loomed fabric. Meticulous tailoring. Together, 1hey make a statement about the man. 645-0792 17th & Irvine Ave., Newport Beach, Calif. .Olga introduces Freedom Front· Runner 71te e19ltt MIPP"et /oe IUlfl dp"et 1n cool cot ton -blend Olga net · • Adjultoble l'IOfrGI 9tdl ltropt Freedom FrOfM@ ptot.dl bud from bovnce. niPf>le _!!ritatloll Veta's , ...... IOU' ...alT l(AOf. CA Jlfll 642-1197 • Strop .ldl Rn with body motion nori~ "Unmistakably Femi.nine" • Teddy Bear Calendars are In!! Come see the 1985 Bialosky Teddy Bear Calendar. Featuring the winners of the 1984 Teddy Bear Calendar contest. Also Berry Bear, Friend Cal and the B~ar County Calendar 1985, by Ginny Fraser. · •09 ,1ntrju,~ 'Jltwporr: '&A.t:lt.. (1H) ~·.,_ ,._ ~ IO • :Jiaus0'9 o(,..oo ''C\JitR Cllaz~ ~ollSe r~. .a~~s dltessed t;on. tRe. . ,, oec..aStO~ ondee's QLQc;~ 650-2105 MOVADO The Museum.Watch. FOR HIM FOR HER 14 Karat gold. Electronic quartz. Swiss crafted. AJso available In 18 Karat gold Micron fl~lsh. CHARLES ff. BARR .......... ~GtiilS.C..., Aca•~.._ L .. ., ... , " 111t& ....... W..tclff .... ... ....... A clothing store for men, ladies, and boys, committed to service, quality, and the simplicity of good taste. The Storekeeper /The Storekeeper For Her Jff!stcllfl Plaia Shopping C~ntu • 17th and lrviM !Wwport Beach, CA • 642-7061 QUALITY IN FASHION AND SERVICES WITH THAT PERSONAL TOUCH. ANoEe's PtACE• ANTHoNY's SHo SeRv1 BANK OF AMERICA• CHARLES H .BARR)EWELERs•CRoWN HAROWARE•DR. Lou ELDER•HAt.LtOAY1s MEN's CL0TH1Nc•H1CKORY FARMS• HuMPTY DuMPTY• Huc HES MARKET•THE M1NUTEMAN WAY •NANCY DuNN AN"TIQUES•NEWPORT BALBOA SAVINGS• SAv·ON DRucs ,. •TH SroREKEEPER •THE: SToaEKEEPER FoR HER• VET>.s INTIMATE APPAREL • WF.STCLIFF CLEANERS• ----· -. Talent•· tubular r - Calif om ta artists help museum roll up funatng What do you do rith a standard mailjng tube bc5ides looking through it and tamping or roniDJ it? About 100 answers -de~scd and donated ti>' outstanding California arusu -are on d{splay at tllc -Laguna Bcactr Museum pf An prior tQ 7 p.m. SundaJ when .they will be auctioned at cocktail reception and dinner. Chnsto, famous for his larSe-scale, ccolO&ical extrava- ganzas, returned his tube .sealed with instructiom not lo open it until purchased, prompting speculation that it might contain a piece of his .. Running Fence" or the pink material he used to skirt islands off Florida. The tubes -one-of-a-kind artvtork.s by Terry Allen, Laddie John Dill, Clair Falkenstein, George Hurrell, Scott M~ .. Oifford Myers, Millard Sheets, Barbara Spring arid CharlesVilliers-makeaoodinvestmentsbecauseoftheir uniqueness. Other contributina artists are Sarah Tamor, Shiela Elias, John Botz. Laurie Brown, Jerry Burchfield, Jorie Dubin, Peter Shire and Janet Mackaig. ANN I.ANDERi 91 ENTEllTM .. NT m BUllNEUBI _... .......................... Paab button to MDd ••Screw· ball" ap Stepben Beck·•on· ~· tabe to aplral down. Robert llcl>on.ald, who curated the tabalar art eahlblt. adm1Ne detall Eric Jobmon put bito .. Fata.re Ball41DC." Last year the museum's Junior Council raised $30,000 through a similar .. BOxed Art" project to benefit youth an education programs and the California Contcmparary Artist Series. All donations '"'are tax deductible. a.ny torch ~ted lier tilbe lam wblte. wblmeJcaJ. mu~ hel•ndn1 .a. Fine and Dandy By Katy Brooks Divorcees discover delusions Re-entry into singles world involves more self-reliance than many realize By COSMOPOLITAN AHMntlll.....,. Women who think divorce is the simple solution to their problems may simply have foraotten what sinale life was like. Breaking up a marriasc may be advisable -even essential -but an article in the September issue of Q>sm,01>91itan warns apinst being seduced into thinking divorce is an easy way out. First amona the common but danaerou.s delusions about divorce involv~fe;entry into the datin1 pmc,, wti1cb can be just as intimidat· mg ror an adult a~ it was for a teenager. "In some ways, people rcarcss," says David Schnarch, director of the Sexual and Marital Health Clinic at Louisiana State University in New Orleans. "A marriage medicates your in- securities, but if xou were worried about your lovabdity or papularity before you got married, the same qualms Will p!9bibly resurface after your divorce." There's a frantic quality to the dating of some divorced women. "Many divorced women I know run around as much as they can ju.st to prove themselves desirable,' says Marcia Kamien. who works with an .· East Coast singles group. ''There's an edge of panic to \heir behavior." ' Another delusion is tl\4t once your mantal problems are ovcr4 you will straighten up and fly riaht -10 on that diet, take that exercise class, orpnize your cl09ets. Scbnarch paints out, .. lt~s easier to say, 'Look at all the thinp I can't accomplish because my spause won't let me' than it is to realize that you are standing in your own way." New York J>SY.Chol~st William Beery says. "Guilt feelings about a separation can lead to such seJf. destructive behavior as sloppy dress- ing or extreme lethargy. People try to punish themselves' for what they see as a failure ... Then there's the megabucks myth. about how you will handle money so much better than your spouse did. "The hardest thing to face;·. says Baltimore divorce lawyer Leon W. Bera. .. is that after a marriaae breaks up. both partners nearly always find there's not as much cash as they expected. Living on one salary just isn't as easy as they imaained." Another delusion is the grass .. i~ always..grcener syndrome, in which everybody else's husband appears perfect. Divorced women also may find that the friends they had as half of a couple gradually fade away, and that careers that appear &Iamorou.s actu- ally ,are tough and demandina. Divorced women also must beware of makina thinp harder on their children by becoming too dependent on theln. ••A bad marri.aae is bard on a child," Schnarcb said, "but divorce can be even harder. Kids become angry and di50riented and perform in whatever way they can to show it." Good studyllabits _urged for children CHICAGO (AP)-AltboUgb some children insist they can study with the TV blahng or while eating a snack, this is rarely true, say a new booklet outlinin& bow parents can bdp their 1cids build better study ha.bits. "Most children need an environ- ment free of disttactions and inter- ruptions in order to conceutrate on an<i fully comprehend thefr rn&aiCs,..,.. advises the Enc)'clopacdia Britannica booklet. .. How To M.aU Your Child a Winnerf" And so Rule No. l is to provide a oomfonablc. quiet plac.c to study, preferably a separate room ~ children can dote the door and be alone, althoU&b any other area in tbc home that otTen '°me privacy With aood twuin1 will also do. The 1caflct offc:n pnctical advit'c on improvina readina skills. takina tests, family pmcs and other at-home activities, sett411 aJona with others. SJ>Qnsmanship and developina self- coiifidcnce and a winnina attitude. It includes these suacstions: •Try to arrange that your cbiJ- dren's study area has a desk, a comfonable chair and the necessary accessories such as pencils. paper and erasers, enabliria them to concentrate on the job at band without bavina to stop to search for supplies. •Provide reference and other source books so that they can quickly and easily find answers to questions without wastina 'Ume and inter- rupting their concentration. •Pa.rents should be sure their children a.re in a healthy, tclaxed state of mind before they sit down to stud). When they are tired, bunarY. anxious or distracted. they -MU accomplish little no matter bow they try. •If your younptcn feel the need to tallt to you abOut a ~. help them resolve the pc:ob1em bcfORlhey get down to sttidyinc; otbcrwile they11 spend their Wne ~ about the problem instead of concen-tratin& on bomewort. •If lbc:R's a need for you to Wk lO your du'ld.ren or to discipline tban 'for some rcaso~ it•s best to delay this un ihefr~is~ •It's imponant for peraall IO help their children budeet their nme; for example, by having tbem divide up an eXlCmive reading n9pment inU> several smalltt, less imJJOlinl umts that can be handled over a period of time. •If your child bu difficulty in fmishinataemt~ Uy to determine exactly bow much ttme is needed for study and wort out a schedule that provides eaouJb time for study and still leaves time for other acthities. •Be sure topcnnit some ttluation time, for children should not feel pressured to tackle studies the mo- ment they arrive~~ ibOuld be an m&erval for rCfi'CShriteots, playina with friend,s, or talkiga with you. •Don't constantly nq about homework.; It's important to be 6nn tnd consistent in settina piddines for study. But it is better to let your children take the comc:quences for not Cl01'Dplcting homework than to Dll thcin day after da). •There Should be a· f'CIUlar Sllldy period every day. du:ri.Da whicb you should be a''a\lablc. if pom"'ble, Ito• a.ns"'u questions or to tielp with probtcms. (For a free booklet. write to the Public Affain . ~ent., En-cyclo~ Briran01ca, 310 South Michipn Ave, Q.ica&o, IL 60604.) ................... 0....... Happy With reaalta of the Adolfo party are Oeort• 0.911Mll, LJ'DD• •11r. &18'ant Aatom •or caner and Artiat Harold Clewortla who anYelle4 tbe connnemoratlft Packud Ooqbler and Catherine Th yen wbo la claalrmaD of tlae Ccmeoan. wife Francie npport A T8C fmld-ralaer. ~ter clultll Wltla LOI.a Lee Moore, left, and Jane Au••· Adolfo admirers complete first lap of Concours Evening of velvet and mink raises 6,000 for ATSC ~~C.~ .. nl "Intensely fcmlnanc" ... i the fashion statement for fall, with the Adolfo collection tatina it all Saturday 11 Ute A mcnt and Treatment mca Center (A TSC) fashion show at ks F:d\h Avenue. The Adotro premier howina and reception day at South Coast Plua wa the kickoffforthearand N'Vt'.POn Bu h Concoun d'Elc n t Ocl. 7 at Aldrich Parle on lbc UC hv1ne campu• · In unvcalina the pa1nt1na of the 1933 Picard - official po ttr car for Co11cours d'Elfll.llcc -ana t BareN aeworda was assisted b> uey Tvutter, "ho with husband Brr-owns the classic. It will be in the hneup ofelepnt cars available for VicwingandjudJing at the concours. Appro imatcly 300 A supponm and aucsts tu~ out lo the blaCk-tie oPUonAI function. The SI()().. 1-a>uple faslnon ow, bcncfilin& the A TSC juvcrulc davenion propam, raised about $6,000, accord1na to a..rp ~ prcsicknt oflhe board or dircctOR. He noted, "'This is cry c Cltl!'I for all of u It' a arand c cnal)I and 1 tcmfic kickoff for the Concours. ).t wiU be an c en biaer cvent\b1s r. • • He prtidicted the tnt re fund-raiser includm& th Concours wall net around $40.000. . Champqne, mu 1c and a deli&htful buffet a the baddrop f'Qr 1what Jae CMrlel, cxccut1vt director of .. j .. I ~ • I - . Babystepspoi:ot togiantdiSappoiatment· ---~!""""'."'----------~ lkcd or talked for the first time wh1lt they not t bomc.1 b baby \\ilJ repe:tat for the parent in a few hour'$ orin few ~ •. lMDEIS I w h I hnd read tb1s dvice somewhere before our child took h1sfim tcp. I wouldhavccutitoutandh4ndcd 1ttothat wretchcdlhtlc rup.-MRS. 8.INAN F.ASTERN CITY DEAR MRS. B.: Yo are ~bag extremely hrd on tile Th· baby-sitter. lte probaltly tllloagbt 1be wa11tvtaa you some • 1 momin . . wodderfuluw1.Toeallllerawretcbedltttluafpl1 . JU t as I Wl$ about to inform my baby-smer of the 11 tltlerfatnorre.souble.nope by tbe thnt youate tbll ndcffi.al ne\\~ she told me that he had walked for h r letter ID print yoar tempe.ratare ls back to ncwmal. rc;terday whUC I wasat work. I w hcansick! How cruel of • • • er to have robbed m ofoneofhfe'sgttalest pleasures, • o~"'RANN LANDERS Th 1 t ~ : is e ter ism resPQnse to 1 rk ~rt-time becauseofcconom1c ncccssily. trove a lctterin your column signed "Grossed Out in my son and It tears my he rt out to leave him. but there is Minnesota." It concerned the middle--aged woman who noway we can makeit on one paycheck. kept a S-by·7 p1cturcofhe~lfon her office desk. The first I hopccvcrych1ldcarctaker who reads this letter~ill Pftr1 of your response was OK but the last three \\Oi"dsgot bcco~sidcrate.cnau&t! to permit the parents toeaj<?yth to me. oncc-m-a-lifct1me \hrill . lt as cruel to tell them lhcirchlld Maybe the woman is, as you said ... pathetic ... but let Communication lacking · in family coll versa tions With rcgulanty, I get two kinds of leum. One is from young people telling me what rotten kids they are, how they've driven their mothers crazy and how they did things behind their backs that their mothers would disown them for forever. They write they cannot say what they feel and so thetr mothers never know how much they love them. As a parent, I belong to one of the bigest coalitions in the world. Our numbers arc awesome. Our P.R. amona the best in the world. Our bonds so strong that one mother can look at another one across the room and know exactly what she is tbinlc- 1ng. Our methods of maintaining dl!Clpl.ine -guilt and respect -are the best-kept secrets of the Western wort~. ' At the nsk of rcvcalin~ a few confidences and jeopardizing our pos1tton ofauthority, there are some things children should know about us. We came mto this world as you did: naked, toothless, unable to com- municate. with sub-standard plumb- ing. We spilled milk, wet our pants.spit, hurt the dog, sassed, hed, stole, were hostile and made our parents wish they had quit when lhcy got the puppy. HELP YouRSELF E111 BOllECK . During the period our own children were growing up, we made approx- imately a quarter of a million de- cisions on their behalf, most of them based on no experience whatsoever and most of them probably bad ones. We try not to look back. We talk a lot. but we never seem to say what we mean. We say, "Aren't you going to pick up your room?" like you have a choice. When you answer, "No," we get mad. We should say, "Pick up your lousy room before it catches fire," but we don't want to appear human. We feet our kids don't trust us. (l know, that's their·favoritc line.) But it's true. If they did lhey would tell us the truth -especially when they screw up-and know that we won't self-destruct. We don't know everything. We just pretend we do to maintain control and figure if we admit that, our kids will have less respect for us. Ironically, the things our children are ashamed to tell us, we already know. We just don't say anything because we feel it will make you feel better about yourself if you can admit it. You cannot do anything new under the sun. Any tem{>tation, anything you mess up, anything underhanded, any mistake ... we've done 1t ... and survived it. We really don't have to be told we arc loved. We search hungrily for it every day of our hvcs and recognize it in a million fonns. We can live on something like a homemade card or the first bite out of your ice cream cone for years. We're human. We bleed when we're hurt, cry when we're unhappy, are disappointed when we fa11, and wonder why we're here. That's why it takes a lot for le.ids to get us out of their lives. The other kind of letter? They're from women telling_ me what rotten mothers they are and how they've driven their kids away from home and how they can't bring themselves to say to their children they love them. For a society that lalks a lot ... we don't say much, do v.e? Drinks, pregnahcydon 't mix DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I can lately. MRS. P. understand that heavy drinking dur-DEAR MRS. P.: The usual s~s ~pregnancymighthanntheunbom and symptoms of ulcerative colitis baby. But bow about the expectant PETER vary. Some, like you, may have mother who takes no more than a diarrcha, but others may also com- glass of wine at dinner -or perhaps plain of rectal-bleeding. abdominal one highball? Is that amount danger-STEllCROHI pam and loss of weight. About onc-ous for the child? MRS. U. third of. the patients have mild DEAR MRS. U.: Someone has put it symptoms, while others suffer this way: "When you drink during severely. I wish I could say there's a p~ncy, you dnnk for two -simple test that will establish the whJchisn'tgoodfortheinfant." AJl of As I said, the exact safe level of diagnosis, Mrs. P. But it's well us accept the fact that dnvmg and dnnkmg dunng pregnancy is un-accepted that the major diagnostic alcohol don't mix. However, there are known. But tt 's evident there's a risk tests for ulcerative cohtis are ban um still too many who aren't aware that if the woman is a binge drinker or a enema and sigmoidoscopy or co- pregnancy and alcohol are as an steady heavy drinker. In one study, 32 lonscopy. imperfect muturc as oil and water. percent of infants born to heavy FOR MRS. • M.t In managmg (wish I could tell you, Mrs. U.. drinkers had congenital ab-rheumatoid arthrius. the doctor re-- what is the safe level for drin)cjng ?Ormalittes compared to nine percent ah zed that treatment must be tatlored mothers-to-be. But it's the excess use in those who d1d not ~nnk and 14 to each patient's needs. Sometimes that is the most threatening. pe~nt m mod~ratc dn_nkcrs. ls the_ longtnals arc essential to determme For example. here is a warning daily &!,ass of wine all. right for you. the effectiveness of treatment. about the potcnllal dangers of drink-Ms. V:! ~h~ not take tt up ~tb your For example, 10 many pattcnts, mg dunng pregnancy by lhe Depart-obs~et~!=1an ;, He may surpnsc you by larges doses of aspmn are lhe treat- ment of Health, Educaton and Wei-saying yes. • • • mcnt of choice. Other pattents do fare: "Excessive use of alcohol by ,better on indomethacin or women during pr~nancy may DEAR DR. STEINCBOHN: Do 1 phenylbut.azone. lfaUthcsedrupfall, produce what's caJled the fe tal al-have to go through taking a banum thedoctormayprescnl>esteroids. But coho! syndrome. This may consist of enema and all that? My doctor as steroid long-term use may be a variety of malformations in limbs. suspects that 1 may have ulcerative limited, injection of gold compounds heart, face, head and elsewhere. cohtts. He says that's the only way to may help. Recent experiments in- Alcohol also increases the incidence be sure about the diqnosis. I am 66 dicate lhat gold may be taken 10 pill _of_s_ti_ll_b_irt_h_s_a_n_d_a_bo_rt_io_n_s_ ... ____ a_n_d_h_av_e_bee_n_ha_v_i_ng_a_l_o_t o_f_d_iarr_h_e_a.... form. This would be a major advance. It hasn't yet been approved by the Food and r>n..g Admmistration. Chuck Barris set for TV comeback LOS ANGELf.S (AP) -Chuck Barns. father of 0 The Gong Show" and .. The $1.98 Beauty Show," IS back in the television busin~ after an .absence of three years . .. We're in full swing, with two veteran produccn under coo tract and four shows oo the boards.·· said Budd Granoff, president of Chuck Barns Productions. ··we're now back with a very aggressive stance." me tell you tory that may put henna different :tilht For manyye n my husband chC3ted on me and den1ocl h. Oncchca kcdmetopickuparolloffilmforh m, The clerk kcd me io check the pictures to make urc they were OK.I n'td ribclhepain \\hcnseveralpicturestumcd out to bcof a b1k.uu-clad woman PoSina on my hu bana·, boat. I showed them to him and he laughed-id he didn '1 know how those pictufC$ hadcotten on has roll. l h d n that girl at his place ofb\ainess. She worked there. ' Myhu band's office photograph arc all of himself, has boat nnd his cars. I ktep pictures m my office, too. They are of myself, the children, family and friends. My p~otograph reminds me that I am a wonhwhite human ocini no matter what tlsc happens in my life. Perhaps the middle-aged woman in Minnesota is an egomaniac, but pcrbap , like ml', that photograph helps reassure her ofbor own worth. Sign me-ANOTHER ANGLE TO THE PICTURclNSANJOSE DEAR ANGLE: How Id tNl Y"r sell-et teem ii" badly damaaecl tbl yoa aee4 a plctare of yOVNU u a Bill Coeby and hie wife, Phyllcla Ayen- Allen, •bare a night with their re8tleM kld.8 (Keabla Knight Pnlllam and Tenipeatt -U0-8 GD QJ NEWI ea.a G IJ/LOIO m nHDCOMPNIY G> IATT\.ESTAA <W.ACT1CA e•mEdAEPORT GoctANlJS Cl8NEW8 ..CHEWS OICKVMDVKE MOYE ••·~ "Tom a.twe.i Two l.cMrw'' ~= Rlmldc. George Ptpperd . .. ··o.i Of The C«ltwy" (1983) ~~w .... re~r&UtyH area "••~bmu btlq."Bat wtmtever wom ii OK Dillen.et I.ab flee4 tllff I ''"'"· • • • D. R~NNLA OERS·J soman YOW\8 mothers the.st days carrymg gm 11 children m pouCh od their backs, over the1nhouldcrs and slung round m fro Isn't this dangerous? The little on seem strapped m awfully_ tight.1 am-CONCERNED JN SCRANTON DEAR SCRAN: Tiie exptrU itve ha 5-.tar nu.,. TMyapp .. •d U..ffdoee.aett" aod" uy ltstvu U.ecMJtl a tremeadoa1 feeUa1 of emodoul 1enrtty. b my 91JlaloD lt'i 100 dmet ~tter Ua.u leavlas tlle ('kfW at llaome wUlla 1 11tter. 1' • * •• .Are you,"Or is SOtt}Col]C you care about m in1 around withdrugs-orcons/de{fftilt7.Areall~bld'!What af:>Qutpot-inmoderatiop?Ann Landers all·ncw booklet, .. The Lowdown on Do~." ~paratcs the facts from the fiction. For each booklet orderN. nd $2, plus 1 Jona. sclf-addl'C$.w:d, stam.P«!_ envelope (3 7 oenf!postllgo to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 1 IP95. Ch1cago1 lll.606l I. ~ BJedaoe) on tontaht'• premiere of .. T_ Coeby Show•• at II" on Nfle, Channel 4 (..,. rnlew, Paee BS). . · • · ~ 8 8E.8T OF L.A. TOD.\ Y (!)MOYIE •" • • "Klnlas City Confldentlll;' • (1952) John Payne, Prtlton Folt•. J eMOYE .. : • **IA "A FMf In The Blood" (tN1) · Efrtm Zinblllt Jr .. N9t OlctN>n.· (%)MOYIE • ··~ .. ~ .. (1913) ~ o...v*"~· -1:»- Showbiz sendoffs leave 'em laughin • $238"2+1U-,,., mo. ,,.., f9N JOOl'Jt l..o60ed with T·bar. AJr·oondltion/ng, ter.o 01Wet:e, txWflf wind • and many ot teat 60 mo. CIOHd end M . cap cost $15 742, down pa)'• ment $1372.72 c.esh or~ (S« 023G61) All can wb to .. ,. ,JI I e e A II 888OM~~lwtt•1"·833·1300 By BOB THOMAS ._ ................ LOS ANGELES -Last month's memorial ~rvices for Richard Burton and Truman Capote pro\ 1dcd further evidence of a Hollywood trend: the final tribute a how bu in . The practice may have started with tlie ntes for Edgar Bcrscn m 1978. 1t was held in a Beverly Hills churth wtth '°mcwhat tridiuonal culogj by Johnny Carson, Ronald Reagan ando ers. Another tribute Was given by Jim Henson, ettator of the Muppet and a lonatJrM Beracn f1 n. He came to the ¥.uJpil ac\;ompanied by-Kermit t.h ~h1 is the fint lim I ever played a funeral, .. said Kenn it. • The new kind of memorial, often orpnizcd b produ<'Cn or ent1 of I.he dtpaned rs, h turned into me1h1ns alun to ao lri h Wake combined with a Dean Martin ro t. The Burton mcmonnl wu held nn1 in a church but in a theater -the Wilshire, where the Welsh actor made his last stage appearance nine month ago in ".Private Lives." The curuin wa1 up, disclosing the set for "Brighton Beach Memoirs," the thrater's current attraction. Half of the audience consisted of fan and cu.no 1ty 1eekers. allowed in ldeJU tbcforctheproarammned. They he rd a ric of reminiS(lCncc -mo t of them funny -by actors. d1rector1 nd JOumahsts. The only n:ltgious noic was provided by 'I Wtlsh e,hurch choir whith na hymn J n Hu on 0 w in from Puerto "all rta to speak (or less than a minute. Rachard Hams broke dovm nd ncd from the S\qe as he t:qan his ~ch He returned after a few mmut sand read a somewhat inoom· prthen 1b elegy of bis own rompo. ition. . . The rchgiou may bet offended by the Bunon event. thouih he hats 1 more proper funeral at Cehgny, Swiucrland, after his death 1hcrc The audience ch~ film clips Aug. .S. Others may find ll a ftttina Mennan beltina her famous ao farewell for an actor who Jovcd and laughed ''reminiscences by : storyttllinaand goOd times. Hopc,MaryManinandothera.\Ma While not primarily a HollywoOd of the stones reflected Menna fi1ure, Truman Capote, who died r1ucou1 humor. here Aus. 2S. was given a funml last week tha1 reflected the trend an ltwasmorcofapcrfonnanoe tha tributca memorial, but u one "mourn • It was held in the nondcnom1na-remarked: "Wun't Ethel the one tional chapel of thc.W twood Villue saq •There's No Bu inqs Ukc h cemetery with the authofs &vorfte Bu11ness'?"' sonp una on rccord1nas by Ella The funer1l ha long been Fi~Jd, Fr1nk inatra end Andy important fbturc of mo ic J Wilham . A cabaret· tyle n,acr play-datma bade lo the New York m cd piano and sana tunes fram the e for Rudolph Valentino in 19 Capote mu11cal. "House of Flowers ... The tnbutes. bbth tearful and :Amons the most leaen funny. came from actor Robert Blake, !uncrili was lbc one rot Hany author Chnstophcr f hcrwood, tn l 9.S8. The Columbia Pictures bandlcader An1e haw~ Joanne was a much hated man. yea 1 st non (former Wtfc 01 Johnny ~wasftlle6'W1lh~pldorhi1 Cat'90n) and othcrt. ntcs. Moat memorable of th l't'ttnt • ..Give the l'CQplc bat they mcmonals was the one for Ethrl and \hey'U tum out for 1t.11 R Merman llUt March at U1c Hunt· kclton cracked on his l.CleVJsl in ton Hanford Theater. how. .. . . Orange COMt DAILY PILOTITIWrsdly, SePttmber 20, 198-4 'E.R. 'a sMASH for CBS, but ABC wlns top honors Count hbil ln Actor Tbuo P~, who plap CO.U.t Ton1 era on .. Dap of Oar. LlTa, '' will appear at . Banttnaton Center letv.rdaJ. He'll haYe lancb wttb 10 whulen of a drawtnc that daJ. REVIEW - --- LOS ANGELfS (AP) -no doubt a hop1na 11 baunothtr .. M·A- S-H .. on its bands after the fmt•placc ntinp debut or UE.R.,·· its new bospit&J eme~ncy room comedy. The new scncs was No. 1 and in all CBS had six shows in the Top 10. Ncvcnhclcss, CBS fcU to second place in the Nielsen ratinp for the week ended Sei>t 16 as ABC regain~ flntJ>!&oe. NBC was third. CBS would not be remiss in comparing .. E.R.1 ' to .. M·A·S-H." It has somewhat of the flavor of a civilian ~uivalcnt and its sw, Elliott Gould. plays a doctC>r as irreverent 11 his role as Trapper John in the movae •·M·A..S-H." ABC was the top network for the week ~itc having only two shows in the Top 10. Tht> network, however, did place ciaht shows in ~e nextJIO.. NBC also had two shows 1n the 9P 10. .. ABC• hiaheat-rated ahow was the seventh-place movfedebut of the new fall sen .. Hawauan Heat." The network's Monday Nilht NFL Foot· ball was I 0th. The moviefrcmaere ofNBC's new "Miami Vice series was second and the itscoYerqc of the .. Miss America ~e.&llt" tiecHor third with CBS' .. 60 Minute ... NQ otbct new &bows made the J'9J> 10. ABC's .. Glitter" wa112th; NBC'1 "Punky Brewster" was 38th; the new CBS .movie .. Threesome was 46th. The season premiere or CBS' .. 60 Minutes" was fourth. The fall &eaSOn docsri't officiallyf.t under way untd Monday, Sept 2 , but the networks Sot off' to an early start. ABC won the week with a network average qf 14.1 in the A.C. Niclscn Co. survey. CBS was second with 13.7, and NBC was third with IL6. The networks say this means that in an avcraae prime-timeiminute 14.1 percent of\hc TI/ bome1 were tuned to ABC. The Top 10 were: CBS' "E.R .• " ill Cos by' s back inform ·n TV's bestnewcomedy •1 JERRY aucg '#T....._.,.., ' SUCXlCl$ful "Maanum, P.L" LOS ANGELES -After the may-ABC'S MAIN EVENT for toniaht. ban on the networks' new detective which directly follows .. The Cosby Show," is "Who's the &ssr• This ICries here comes 1 niabt to recover comedy series doesn't quite have the your senie of humor and lau&h. Bill Cosby makes his return to same impact, but it's not bed, either. ort television Tony Danza stare as a former .in a new comedy athlete who takes on a job u a live-in ·es for NBC that housekeeper to suppon his young aebuts tonight. dauabter. Judith Light is the buaincsa Piscopo when he was on NBCs "Saturday Night Uvc," don't miss this. PilCOpo is a multitalented com- edian and his impersonations. par- tic:ula.rty Frank Sinatra. are on the money and very funny. He does a nice ear~y .~f Michael Jackson's Thriller . If you mist it this ..-eekend. not to wony. HBO will run it apin ... and apin ... and ap.in. Now that's some-executive who reluctantly hires lhina to rejoice Danza to look after the household ,.:....-------...----------------------1 about. Cosby has and her young son. lost none of his ABC's term for it is that .. she's mqjc and it is far French vintage. He's Milwaukee and away the best suds."·lnanearliertimeitwouldbave new comedy of the been said they tiave a Katharine season. Hcpburn-Spcnoer Tracy relationship. In ''The Cosby· Show" be plays a They spar a little and there is the New York City obstetrician who has a tlectrietty of romantic tension in the wife and four children. That ri&ht air. Danza comes off well u the there .is an interesting development lovable rougbncck and Miu Light .-I real family. manqes to bold her OWt\ and be Bui, of course, everything doesn't irresistable at the same time. · run amoothly at home, and that's Katherine Helmond ( .. Soap") Ibo where Cosby's deft touch lifts it above stars IS Miss Liaht's no-nonsense the ordinary. When he returns home mother, Alyssa Milano IS Danza's one n.iaht be finds his son bas made all daughter Samanatba and Dan~t~n- .. D'•" on his report card. His Wife tauro IS Miss Liaht's son Jona • (Phylicia Ayers.Allen) wants him to ABCs other entry. is .. People Do handle it bccaUIC "he'll just sav 'no the Crazi Tbinjs," which la problem' and then I'll kill him:' opposite !fk CO.by Show" an~~ Cosby says. ''I see, what ).'OU want fint half of .. Mi&num." metodo.isaoupstairsandkillhimfor Beit COnvy it the host. Tbe tint you." Exactly. q>sby handles his son • abow wu not available for pre- 10 a manner that is not only funny but review but a look at an earlier apecia1 inteJ.liaent. He is more than a match indic:a~ this is the kind of abow for bit off'spring's maneuvers. where people are indUoed to do The comedy also stars Malcolm-bizarre things. Son of in the vein of Jamal Warner u !Us son, and "Truth or Comcqucnoes" or .. People Tem~tt ~ledsoeil· Lisa Bonet and Are Funny.' It's not the kind of show Keahia K.niaht P\l wn IS his daugb-that will stimulate your mind, but it ten. th may help you unwtnd after a toUgh That's the sood news about e day Cosby show. The bad news is that its · competition on CBS is the hi&hlY FINALLY, SATURDAY, on HBO; ------STARTS 10MORROVV there's "The Joe Piscopo Spetj.al." If,. iiREi" COSTA MESA IRVINE . ...ALL Of ME' IS A SLAPSTICK. HIPSTER HYBRID OF •HEAVEN CAN WAIT AND 'TOOTSIE.'" _ ........... ~91Wmf1 "Uly Tomlin geta laughs and , polgMncy from her character ... .na Steve Martin \laulta to the · top of the clue with hi• brattn, pr.clM p«rfonoanc.e. Tha. one goee In the time capeule." -...... ~~~ STEVE . ULY MARTIN TOMLIN , AUOFME· • I -A lllWllW l"iW l&1lil ~ ~~~·---.. 1~ ln•ex•pen•alve• "(In • 1P9n I 11\1) flOt high In prlc1; r111011ebl•, :::::=...., .. C1~1*1 Advtnl Ing &42-5178 you have cable and you've never seen UA MoVln • F.dwards Town Center Edwards UMetsity MISSDI VIEJO Edwards Vleto Twin (714) 830.eoso ._,_.71!.,tH • SO COAST Pl AlA • ~ 751-4184 8S4.a&11 HUMT1NGTON 8f.ACH l.\GUHA.BEACH Edwards Huntington Edwards South Coast 848-0388 'ST· 1711 AL( SEATS ·s2.oo AT il>WARDS IESA, EDWARDS WESTmOOK .... ,_ .. DOln sruro ..,._ • .. ,..ll) • COSTA MCSA • _,.,_ ~ u '••.. ..,.n.r.1n ..... ., ~,..,,, »l suo •n.n uo 1tn S~EBACll so r., ,, I I••'• ~·~ ... SADOl(IAtll ,, ... "' I ... .. ~l~ SAOOl.(9Atll , ........ I ft ~I ---· ._..., .. l!W\ ,. ,. ... ilWI 7 ll t 10 UUJOlOls • MISSION Vil 10 • ... ""' rn rn M-1111 uaUSM lCM:oun ·~ ... .., UC 100 10« Nia '1Wl.l ..... ) • Wf ST MINS H R • CIOll M.Sl .... _ "''!l .. _ ... •W I '-11111 "fflll ... 4"l .. til~)) &"-IOJO lifii wm l:llll Wnioot .. _,,, -....-:a> .......... HlJt)) • t1wt1 >n uo c•••m READ THE F• PllllT. YOU MAY HAYE illlT MCllTUIED YOUR UFE. A.N .4IAl\I ACJIJRS_PRESENTATION eri .. ~ .... An1..A'\,M'. ~& ~ ... ~ ..._ STARTS TOMORROW -~ M1•u:c11111 ... C9M056 .... ,.,. Onle-4n l»C770 .... ,.,_ OriwHt IZl.00 "IGl.lll" ..... 11 ...... ..... mlll 100. ii~~» 1ti 10• "B DAWN" (PG.U) i2 ao. 3 oo. s 10. a oo 10:30 lllUA I Ttf ... TIOlf' (~ lH u~ 54~8U lCIS lVUlY TMUUDAY J ADUlTI ' FM Tltl f'9'1Cl DF OHi • 1i..... .. ....-u...~ .,.... .......... ( "CllSTllSTUS" (PC) l\Ul fWIMI". (I) . la HABRA .. ~ .... & - WARNER uU JI~. il..."T1r.£ • - IM Orange GORDO GARFIEl.,D \o'OlJ MAY MAVE. COFFEE ON l.rlOOA C>lf..'f1 GARFIELP ; . THE FAMILY CIRCUS ---~~~..:_bY Bil Keane "I can't crayon when you' re drivin'." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson - "Yoo-hool Come around to the back door. I think It's easier to reroute the traffic." MOON MULLl~S by Gus Arriola by Jim Davis I BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) ··. ·. ·-·······-.. .. • • • ' "Oh, how I wish the world was flat ·· REALLY flat!" DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketcham ~ • YA WN'TA ~~Tl lHINK,JoeY 2 11HINK LIFE &E61NSAT FIVE ... by Ferd & Tom Johnson SIC LEAVE ... . ~'' '/ I IM SORRY I l FOR~OT TO FEED I 0 .. PEA 'UT • • . T MBLEWEED~' IT WAS OOR TEACMER'S IDEA,MAfWE . .SOMETMIN6 MA0e MER DECIDE lO 61VE .~ANOTHER CMAHCE ... by Charles M. Schulz AT LEA5T IT'S NEW SHORIN6, MA'AM, AND NOT RE~NS ... by Tom K. Ryan W:CAU5 1P'RJ?CiOOS1 IFGOVHAV' MEAl\t1" OS 10 tee FUES ~1'~'1- MEA&.. HE: ~PN'T AA\le c~ R.V' SW~ COi G IQ nm HEART OF THE AlTER CHARLES GOREN ~nrlh South \Ul nl•rahl l". outh dial . .SORTH • 97 <::"00 \\ .:s·1 • Q8. t'AKJll O·A K 5H 'EAST +654 +)63 o J:J som·H + J 9 7 3 • AK 10 SZ ~ IOHt 0 Q9 +AK The bidding. • Q-9 ~ JO U 6 + QI082 South WHt :'liorth Eatt I • Pau 1 !\IT Pa 11 2 Pau 2 • Pa11 3 + Pa11 Pa• Pu • Op1•n1ng lo•ad: Three or +. Thi' ri·crnt ·~ummer :-\prt h Amt•ra·11n Champion hip in Wa hington madr front pagr new! . 1n tht• world' pres . though not in a ~.1y to br1nl( JOY to thl' hearts of liridl(f' adm1n1,trator' First, a team SHOE "u euspc ndl•d fron1 tht1 tourna mehl for • impropr1el es.u Then 1-;dith Ho nnkranz. v. 1fo of lh" developl!r ol the Homf'X •yatem, Dr. Gl'otge Rosenkranz, w * kidnapped nd held for rantom. Sterlln1 work b\' I he 1"1ll rt"Jultcd In thl' a(p r;,turn ol Mr , R nkranz. the fl'rOvery orthr• ran Om 1tnd lhe Ip prehen ion o( threP U peels 1n the k 11tn1pping The t'BI lnvest1gat1on wu not all that Dr. Rost'nkranz had to admire in W11h1ngton. On this hand Irom ~an evt>nl prior to th kidnapping. il WU tJ'le dcfpn f' Of hli partner, Edd1t1 Wold of Houston. that urnt'd hi!> plaudit . . 'North South w«-re playing five card major op<.>ning bids with• forr ing no trump r •J)Qntc. South really had no rea on to invite game with h1 hand , since he might hav• found h1 partner with an even weakl'r holding. • FOR BETl'ER OR FOR WORSE FUNKY WINKERBEAN 1: CAA'f BEWBJE. AU.. ~E RJ!>5 EUER40t-1E. )~ MAl<I~ Jlhi Ba:Au&E I KICK A FEW FIE.lD GOALb ! DR.SMOCK HOSE IS ROSE ·1 h n f I IT'S TIM& TO G£T ORGANIZW / Al~ l'U... HAVE 10 AOMrf rMA'f r1 16 PREm EXC.tTlNG ! Wold led a club, and dedar r tu~d East'11 queen with the a Ace, king and anoth r trump I Weal on play, and a club retu looks natural enourh. fiowev drclarcr would win thit and ta thret1 diamond tr1rk for ·contract. . Wold found the klllinr contln tion -a low heart! The defen~ took' their four hurt trkkl down one. Whyia low heart and a high honor? The auction mar East with a doubleton ht'arl. W if that doubleton did not lnclud qut'en'I lfh n Ea t probably held queen of d11mond1. 11nd defender would ret their th hurt trick anyway. · /' f'or lafonaa,tlo~ about Char Goren'• aew new1letter for br playeu, write Goren Br~• Lot 1909 Chu1amlnMD Ave., Claum IOD, N.J. 08077. by Jeff MacNe by Lynn Johnst by Tom Batl by George Lem , - -OvlR THE CouNTER -------- MUTUAL FUNDS --- --.... COM~TE NYSE COMPOSITE 111AN8ACTIONS. 81. Joint veu ture agreement signed Nclsoa R rch Devclopm~t Co of Newpon Beath tiasannounccd a mult1part grecmcnt fr ath Sumitomo Corp. for 1omt venture. hccn •n&and oommon • toCk 1le4uisi· ti on. First. the agreement provides for the tablishment of a JOtnt-vcnturc company in Japan for the com· mercialii.auon of A.zone, Nelson's penetration enhancer. Sumjtomo is to provide financing. - managcn:tcnt services and facilities for the joint-venture oompany, which will be known as NclSQn.Sumilbo Co. • Ltd. elson will oontribute rigbts 10 Azooc in Japan in return for which 1t • wtll rcl'C1ve a controlling interest in the joint-venture company. Second, the agrccment ~ts Sumitomo the exclusive ri t to represent Nelson in Japln for ·ccns.-ina other Nelson products fo r 10 ycar5. Sumitomo is one of the leading mtcaratcd trading companies (Sogo- Shosha) with a staff of 6,000 in more than 400 office$ in Japan. Third, the agreement provides for the issuance of a warrant to Sumitomo to purchase up to 300,000 shares of Nelson common ~tock. Specific financial terms of the multi- pan a0ttmeot were not disclosed. Marie Gray. left. bu been ee1ected a -.. ~ ComatJ Woman of·Achlnemeat.•• 11.aqaret BUI. editor of Dawa Maealne, praented tbe award to Gray for lier accompUU- ment. In fulaton deetan. Gray receives Prange County Woman award • _, __ &--.- 714/972-1270 - SALES & LEASING ALL MAKES MONEAYE·~~~!!] COM PA t.2§ Fer West S. .. ri'IQS tca F ti Fed•tal 100 ••• 12$ ... tot t .00 too t• t 10 t .00 1000 t .10 t 10 • 00 111 too too t .00 ... t 15 • r • l I I '--+ • On the ' ' J;---·---- ~··~--- , • , NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACT IONS TllUISIAfS CLOlllG PllCES Oul'i Ju~'·' A1£HACfS WHAl NYSE 0 1n WH AT AMEX Dio 1 ~ • "'I~ NEWYORKIAP)59P.20 , , T1 ... i,= =~~· G1Ho Qu11rfs -- That's an apt desert ption of both business and business people along the Orange Coast. To keep track of where companies are gain~ and which people are helping 'them get there.just watch Credit Line' -everyday in the ~usiness section of your new ' ' ' • --·..--. --- ' \ ... Klngeop1n ... ¥1ewta11ue polo tltle 1d1len1e with wlotoly. C2. .. 0 rrtURSOAY. SEPTEMBER 20 198' quiz: He has answers Ali said to be out of danger x-Costa Mesa High. OCC standout tsatopcandtdateforCyYoungAward It's Quiz time: Who's the best relief piicber in the American J.aaue and possibly all ofbatebe11. • A; Dan Quisenberry of the Ka nus Ci\y~oyals, ex.Costa Mesa High, cx- Qtlqae Coast College and ex-La C!.Nj standout. " Qu1tenbcrry,commonly referred t~~teammatcsand 41ports writenas ·~uiz .. , is a leadina candidate for the qy YounaAward, as he has b«n for t.tie ~t few ~ns. If the Royals win the American ~ue West. Quiz, who's after his own save record of 4S (set last year) would be the most loaical choice for the Cy Youna honor. And when you'retalk.ingabout the RolaidsFircmanof'tbc Year, you're talking about Quiz-he has won the presiigious award reserved for relief pitcben three ofhis four full major le.agueseasons. This~. witbhis41 savcsaod2.64ERA1n 119'1.sinni~ pitched, he'sa virtual shoo-in for h11 fourth. • HejustmayhclptheRoyat1extC1\d their season into October. To set the record straight, what Quisenberry docs is shut the door, quietly but firmly, on the opposltlon. Unlike that ofothershort reheven, notably Goose Gossace and Bruce Sutter, who slam the door. The result is the same, only the method is different. So who is this super:sw who was never drafted. and practically ~d to beg to get ·5WJc(l to a :pro fl lonal oontract before Ben Hines, his coach t La Verne, talked Roya! scout Roscy Gilhouscnmto 'gninghim. ··11 was through him that I got a nee. It was Ben Hines that got me in, if not for him, I'd be somewhere tn dblivaonngbtnow: .. Oul$Cnbm'y rec.at1 • ••I knew he had" coniacts -1 onJy cntthcrc(La Vemc)toget ed. •• And the road to fame and success n't euctly easy. ··1 felt like I.wasioingtoberelcascd at sevcrill limes{durina°Cnor tequc career)," he said... use of the auys that were there, and since I threw funny, they didn't think I had a major lcaaue arm.•• That's puttinaitmildly. His soft serves, however, and his great eon- trol, have eamed him 177.~vesin the bif. leaaues. 'I've aone beyond what rve ever expected," he said ... I had bif dreams like any hi&h school kid. but never Kanna City'• Onlz Concepcion bolda ball !IP after ta.am. oat Gary Pettie In the. .,..,,... ... .,,....._~ ninth lnn•n1-of 1Vedne8day DllJlt'• aame. The An&ela won, .t-3. tho~ght I'd tVtn there. The odds rcsomuch m tanybodyanmy case." Qu1senbelT)•wa n'tevcnsuOPOMld to make Tnple-A (Omaha) ... i6cy (the organization) sent me to Mexte0 onewmtertogivemcmorcex- perience, to ifl could be a l:riple· A pitcher," Quizcnberrysays ... And that next pnna, I didn'l even make thcTripte.A team." Says longumc friend and former La Verne teammate John Verhoeven, '"I was in T nplc A one year with the Whjte SOx in Iowa, and I aStcd IDY man John Sullivan {now a coach for:Toronto)oneday, •Hey, whydon'I yOUJU)~bringupQuiz: .. He said, 'becaux we don't think Quiz can pitch up here (Triple-A).' 'fhat's reanr. somethina what the auy's done, • V tthoeven, who once pitc~ed for the An4Cls { 1976-77), White Sox and Twins. In Quiz's case, that definitely wasn't the right answer. NEW YORK (AP) -<For1DCr world bcaV)~t bo:u .. daalDpiOa Muhammad Ah was~va &Ctt medi-cations Wednesday dodOfl wM said be was 1 enn1 from "Parkinsoni m."ormmonympeoms of Parkinson's diseuc. And, Ali Mid he wanted to amrre his fans be was n01 dyina. Ali, 42., apparentl)' did not have Parkinson'' diieaSC, a dqaenc:talJve brain disease, "per se," and cxpens believed bis condition. cou1d 'be controlled by ~ one of his An els ba k ~~"'nc=:.tcr, aid in • g C .. He's not in anr dan,cr. lt"5 not a fat&! diseuc;' said f.cker, medical • . director of Ali's bo~ng man• mmt in the iace §t~~~~~l Ali, whose specic:b was slow and .. Grich not surprised at bad-hop single times sl~ said in a tdnisioa inteniew Wcd.oesday :that it waa Tbe Wild, Wild W eat possible that bUxina had caused IX'dblems. bUt said be never recretJ.ed his-rina-caree:r bccau.sc it of the aood h bad allo~ him to tnin& lO other th~t beats Royals By RICHARD DUNN o.1r .... c:.. $ ..... ALW ......... W L f"cl. ... ic-Cltv 71 73 .Sl7 -...... 76 14 .!itl1 ll'l ~· 76 7S .5a 2 w tr -.nsw... .._ '· ~' CllY l m lnnfn91> CNCaeo 1. MiMIMt• l T•Y'•O.... . Bobby Grich had a hunch it wu K-.a1 Oty <Gulllcu 1•m •• .,__ . h CWln ll·ll), " 1omJ to appen. Chlaeo <s..,,. 1e-10> •• ~· His bad-bop sin&)e in the 11th <Vlol9 11-m. o innin1 Wednesday ni&ht at Anaheim ANGns ~~cl: s.. • Stadium beat the Kansas City Royals, K-Cltv; 21. n. a Tun; ,,._., t•>. '4-3 ..• and Grich saw it coming. s.. 2c m. is. 2' It.-cttv. rr. •· at, The win moved the Ancels within 30 ~ cm nu _ HDme m. s.s. 1 'hpmesafthc front-runoini.Royals 11. 22..D Olkland. ,, m. ~ 2' Aft9111, in ltie American Leaaue West; and ,,._v w: s... 20 ~. •· "· • Grich says he wasn't surprised when ~mson ou -Ho!'N w: '-'·a he hit reliever Joe Beclcwitb's oa.o: 21. 22. n Ontllmnd, ,,...., en: cUl"lebtil -past third baseman Orea s.t. u. is. 26 CHmeo. 27, •· "· • Pryor for the pme-winnina RBI. °""9lllld. "I knew when I hit it. rd ro~ ~y ••••••••••.., top band ov~. and ii was a curvcball. -" . so I thou&ht it mi&ht pop up(on Pryor takes a funny bounce. Gt?cb said. fora bad-bop)," lie explained. .. I~ wh~. ball ~bably woukl ve been saying to myself runnioa down the an inning-cndin& d~ble ~~ tbe {base) line, 'pop up, pop up.• bounce stayed true. I wa. 11 all "I thought when J hit the bell it had the way, and wbcn I saw 1t take ~e a chance of takina the biah bounce, bounce I knew the pm~ was ours. because it bad a lot of topspin on iL" So the An&cls sur'Vlvcd the two Doua DeCinccs bad opened the ~neamed ru~s ~cy pvc Kansas City inning with 1 single. and after Rick m the tint. 1nrun'-and. t~ ~s Burleson was inserted as a pinch West~ wlld apm. A win ton1&ht 1n hitter. Brian Downin& put down an ~c 1enes finale wou.ld put the Anacls perfect ~fice bunt. J~ a ~f ~me behl!ld the Ro~s. Reggie Jackson was walked inten~ I thi~k It was an important pme tionally second. and the drama be-for us. Angels Ma~ Joh!> tween Grich and Royals pitcher Joe Mc_N~ undcrst.a~ 1>ut I don t Beckwith bcaan. behevc 1t was a m~st win for us." "I know from my experiences of Al~~ugb theres a d~ san:ies playing on this infield that when a ball remairuna on the schedule. mcfudina with topspin bits the dirt it usually (Pleue eee AROltL8/C2) ~ &tad I've bec1l dwitable all my life. l'm glad I gave away a lot of money. rm &lad I bdpcd alot of poor people, .. Ab said . He said be~ &0 be ~tal­ized for two more days. f.cker, a dia&nostic ndioloCist who WU consulting OD Ah .. , cue, said doctors at Columbia~PrcSb)'lenall . Medical Center were tcstina drup OD the fonntt champion .. to tee af n helps him and bow mudl 'st hdps him." Ali, com~=~f slowed motum and slum:d underwent five days of leS1S at COlwn~Prcsby­ tenan lhil moatb before leavina SeDl. 11 for a brief tnp '° Europe. :He returned Tuesday foe more tms and trcalmetlt. Because his condition apparently was not wonemna aod be Jaeted c:Wsic sympt.Oms, docUn ruled out both Park.imon's ditea1e and ""the JMlDC~ syndrome,•• c:amed by rqx.:ated blows to the bead, Edcer SIJd. Ali. who won S6 ofbis 61 fights. 37 by knockout, is the only fiabter to have won the hea~t boxina champiousb.i_p three times.. in a 21- year career from 1960 to bis retitt-: ment in 1981. His title was stripped away in 1967 when be refused to be drafted into the Army: he won it beck from Geotwe Foreman and later IOlt and won it ap.inst I..coo Spinks. CdMhosts dang~rous .Cougars · OCC figures to be on the def~nse this week Powerful Hornets invade; Golden West visits Dons; Gauchos await Mounties ByCURTSEEDEN Ot .. Dellr ......... Orange COast College takes on the Southland's No. 2-ranked team, while Saddleback College's 38-pme home winnina sl{Cak -reportedly the lonacst in_~~. _nation -faces a stiff test to highli&ht this week's community college lootball schedule. OCC pliys oost to powerful Full· erton, SaddJebaCk entertains No. 8- tapkcd Mt. San Antonio and Golden ·West will try to make it 2--0 when the Ru!tlers play Santa Ana in the Santa Ana Bowl. Kickoff is at 7:30 for all pm es. Herc's what to expect: hllerton at Oruae Coast Coach Hal Sherbeck has another bi& and powerful football team, a squad dominated by sophomores including quarterback Rocky Mouw and runnina back Damon Sweazy. The Hornets defeated Santa Ana. Payton has lofty . goals for himself He is hoping to Qecome No. 2 rusher on Sunday 43-33 last week. which means Full- erton's defense is hiaJ11y overrated or Santa Ana's offense is hiJly under- rated. OCC, meaowbtle, 1s coming off a 21-3 defeat to Golden West in its opener last week. The Pirates hurt themselves with seven fumbles and could collect no more than I S2 yards 1n total offense. Only the OCC defense kept t.hinas from gettin1 out of band. ''The Hornets look better to me this year than they did last ~when they won the national title, ' admits OCC Coach Dick Tucker. ''They run the ball well, they throw well and they have one of the best defenses around -particularly against the rush." Fullerton's Sberbeck, meanwhile. isn't so sure about his defense -~cularly bis secondary -foUow-tnt last wee 's p.mc. . We, as it turns out. are a very inexperienced football team and we should just feel lucky to come away with a win." Sberbeck said. Mouw leads the Fullerton attack. He completed I 0 of 23 passes for I 2S yards but was intercepted three times by the Dons. Sweazy picked up 83 yards on 19 carries. ln all, Fullerton pined 313 yards against Santa Ana. OCC's freshman 9_uarterback Ken Laszlo bad very httlc protection &plnst GOiden Wna. He manascd lO complete just 7 of 19 paues for S9 yants.. Tailback Kevin Bradley, still trylD& to return to true form followina an ankle injury last year, picked up .30 yards on l l carries.. Fullerton bas some incentive for this pme. o~ Coast tied the Hornets last season, the only blemish on a perfect fullcnon season. Gol4lea West at Suca Au The RusUcn will have their hai:Jds full with Santa Aria's Zcth Verdon. a ~Y wide receiver out of Gancsba f"cn1on gained an amazin1419 an. purpose yards ap.inst Fullerton last (Pleue ... OCC/CS) Croudip · waived by.Rams The Rams waived rookie cor- netbeck David Crolldip Wcdnada to make room on their roster for n ly acquired q nctbaek te Dils. Be has 1,649 homers CHICAGO (AP)-8 be Ruth and Hank Aaron have over 700 career homers a piece, but Rich Buhrke has 1,649. Actually that'• how many Buhrke bu cauaht durina 26 ycan ofwatch- ina and waitin1 behind the Wngley Field bleachers on North Side street and at ballp rks in other cities. Buhrk~ 3~6.t a supetjnten~en~ of the uburb&n roles Park Oistnct, is armed with a fielder's alove1 a radio and a 2-inch portable television set. He says the TV aives him a small advantage over the rest of the sana that waiu for bleacber-clearina homers 11Y the Cbicqo Cubt and their opponents outside the b&llpark. It aives him a split-second wamina that the baJI may tie corning. • 0 1t's an innovation this year," be said. "It. really kilts the time more • than anythina else. It a.cu a little boring.out here, you know." Buhrke, who also coaches baseball and hockey in Niles1 Jives a lot of his baseballs away to Lmle Leques and Boys Clubs. He has 135 home-nm balJs autographed and displayed in his den. 0 My wife would kill me if I keep them in the iiv1ng room,' be said. ANGELS BACK IN RACE ••• From Cl five with th Royals a lo ould'" put the Angell 3th out. nd tall pursuing two teams. .. nus was really a big win for us because now ':re in «end plaoe and only cb i one t m. I know from my c:bys at anclnnau that it's lououghertochasctwotcamsin t d of one, .. 1d McN•mara. The Anaheim Stadium pthcnn also witnessed twoAnael rtlieven put toaether parkling perfo1mances. Doua Corbett picked up for starter Gcofl'.Zahn with the batet loaded in the sixth, and promptly induced Don .. lauaht to around out endm the OCC 't 1 1•: ionina. The next nine hitter& went Se S memor a :. ~0ti~1!i~=~" i:C~i'~h~~r~:~ scholarship fund OOn Aase, who has two wins and , ! siuavcsalonawithanERAof0.73in Oran c Coast Coll~e women • his last ei&ht appe:irance$, work~ t)'!e • volJeyball coach Jane ~ilgendorf ~ 10th ancf 11th inninil to gain his announced a mcmC?rial ~holanhi~ fourth win against one Joss fund h~ been e tabhshCd in memolY., .. He had a very aood sU\ker of 0Cbb1~ Slemmons, ~ho was k.iU~ tonJaht," McNamara id of the rcctntly in an auto acadtnt. resuraent Corbett. Slemmons, a member of the OC<f .. "It was the la t pitch 1D (Pat) volleyball squad, was killed Ilona: Sheridan (in the ninth inninal." with two other youna women wbeO-Corbett explained of his injury, to their car was hit by an alleged drunt• which the extent is unknown. "l dnver. pulled ~methins..and I ~idn't want Donations can be sent to Otanac• ~~=~.undhurtttbyaoinganother Coast C.Ollcic. 2701 Fairview R~, P.O. Box SOOS, Costa Mesa, CA 92628..0120, in care of Jane Hilgen- dorf :i * ANOai.. ..HOT11S -9'ed CertW, tllll 1111111 frotn • h&lf"1tlson lonO Pinched Ml'VI In "" neck, ci.uvertd '*"'" the blottsl blow kif Ille Anoel• Wtdnt$CllY nlolll otncll·llltllno kif DICk ~ In 11\t 1tv1n111 lnntno. Aftll' K1nM1 City He has caught l ,030 balls outside Wrigley Field Kan•• Ctty•• haD.k Wblte watche. throw while complettni double play on Bobby Oei)"" ...... ., IUelw'll IC...., Grich'• trounder In the fourth lnn.lng. On the around le Aniel Brian Downtnf. ''°""' DMI Qui~ r91Jevff 11ertlf' o.mv JedlMll with no out• Ind DalTtl,,.., ebolrd on frat, e.-...._ M({lflald Miiier to MCOl\d, 1nd Mii ~ struck out. Thlt'• wlltn Clt'ew'a M:rllmlnt llM drlvt tcOl'ed MlllW to tit Hil4cndorf is also encouraai~: donations to Mothers Against ON~ Oriven (M.A.A.D.). Runners are al* encouraged to ~articipatc in · th • M.A.A.D. five-mile run Sept. 29 OD • Newport's Back Bay Road. ' SiniIDons issues warning to NFL about tanipering From AP d1lpatcbe1 [il NEW YORK -Chet Simmons, •II • comm1ss1oner of the United States Foot- ball league, contmucd his campaign Wednesday against "outsjdc interference" )"ith USFL players by agents and the National Football League, ,. citing the Mike Rozier case. · "The potential for tampering in the player contract area is exacerbated by our announced plans to move to the fall in 1986," Simmons said an a statement. "I want to make tt clear that we-will consider attempts with i)(lr play- ers as unfriendly acts that will not be tolerated. "I W8J)t to make it perfectly clear that we will not stand for outside interference by agents or other professional football leagues, such as was so evident m the RoZJer case ... He added. "I was very un- happy with the apparent 'nego- Slm.mou t1atrons' between the Houston Oilers of the NFL and RoZJer's agent that appeared on a daily basis with national media The only thing that both parties seemed to forget is that the player involved was 1-lllJy bound to the Pittsburgh Maulers and the USFL.r. Simmons said he specifically cited the area of players contract in a Sept. 13 letter to NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle "dealing with potential problems of an antitrust nature." Quote of the clay: Former running back Jim Brown. Whoee blFL rushing record figures to be broken toon: "tou don't have to be a great back to break a record like mine. You only have to be g()O(i and lut &White." Hinkle finishes f u t for lead' Christmas present& Sox win Pinch-hitter Steve Cbrl1tma1 hit his ii first ~or league home run, a three-run blast that broke a scventh-mning tic, and gave the Chicago White Sox a 7.3 victory over Mmnesota Wednesday ni&ht. the Twins' third straight loss. Floyd Bannl1ter, 13-10, allowed five hits in seven inninp before yielding to Ro11 Reed. Mike SniUb1on, J 5· 13, was the loser as the Twins fell into third place in the Amcncan League West, a half-game behind the Anacls and two behind Kansas City ... In other Amencan League games Wednesday, Dwight Evans drove in six runs with two homers and Mike Eatler added a two-run shot to power Boston to a I 0-4 victory over Toronto. In the three-game series, in which the Blue Jays sorpassed the 2 million mark in home attendance for the first timeiit'.1 their eight-year history. 'Evans slugged four homers and drove in 10 runs ... Garry Hancock'• two-out, bases-loaded single offTexas reliever Tom Benke capped a ninth-inning rally that gave Oakland an 8-1 victory over the Rangers ... Detroit, playing a predominantly reserve lineup the ntght after clinching the East utle, got an RBI-triple from rookie Scott Earl in a three-run second mnmg to defeat Milwaukee, 4-2 ... Don MattlD&IY drove in three runs with three hits and roolae Mike Pa&llando blasted a two-run homer as the New York Yankees downed Baltimore, 6-5, completing a tllrce-pme sweep of the Orioles ... Alvl.n Davis' two-run, third-mning double led Seattle to a 4-3 victory over Cleveland. Phillies give Chicago a hand Tony Pena h1t a arand slam homer to • highlight Pittsburgh's six-run sixth inning and Job.may Ray knocked m· the winning run for the second day in a row as the last- Muncie checks Into hospital .. SANDIEGO-RunningbackCbuck [!] CdM crushes· Muncie, threatened wtth suspension from •II• • the NatioDal Football League after flunk-: ma a drua test, has checked into a Art• t 12 4 · Scottsdale,~., hospital for evaluation and treatment IS S .. : of drug abuse, tt w reported Wednesday. f • Muncie, apin the property of the San Diego . Chargers after last week's trade to Mianu was nullified by the results of a urinalysis, was ordered to seek treatment by NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle. Rozelle had warned the running back that he would be suspended immediately ifhc failed to comply with the league's order. He will not be allowed to play for any NFL team' until he undergoes the evaluation and 'successfuJly completes any prescribed treatment for the problem. Reportedly, traces ofTHC, the active ingredient in marijuana, showed up m the sample taken while Muncie was in Miami. The deal was immediately voided after the results of the analysis became known to Dolphins officials. McEnroe turns back Wilkison •• SAN FRANCISCO -Top-seeded E3 John McEnroe beat Tim Wilkison, 6-3, 6-4, and second-seeded Gene Mayer was upset by Peter Flemin.a, 4-6, 6-3, 6-0 Wednesday in the first-round of the Transamerica Tennis Open. McEnroe, the world's top-ranked player, ap~ off form in his first tournament match since wtnmng the U.S. Open two weeks ago. But he mana~ one service break in each set and held on to beat Wilkison. who ranks 63rd in the world. Mayer, who was involved in a frightening traffic accident Monday, escaped with only cuts on his back when a truck slammed into his car and flipped it over twice. After Mayer won the first set, the 6-5 Acming took charge1 slamminJ 16 aces in the match and yielding only ntnc points 10 the final set. Earlier, in a second-round match, sixth-seeded Kevin Curren of South Afnca survived a match point on a misplay by Tom Gullikson and struagled to a 3-6, 7-6, 7-6 victory. University stifles ·Eagles in Sea View League opener :· ~·. Laguna Beach Hiah's water polo team got a taste~ what the powerful Sea View ~gue is like Wednesday opening io the new circuit with a 12-4 setback to alwa~. strong Corona del Mar. _ • The Sea Kings, the defending league champions ai¥f CIF 4-A semifinalists last season where they lost to Sunn1. Hills, showed once again they will be a strona contender ia• the league race. • Host Corona del Mar won it with three goals in~ pcrioo ap.inst Laauna, manufa(turing a 9;-2 -advantaac after three quarten. eaguna Beach has moved from tHt South Coast to the Sea View leaJUC this year. • •: All-CJF performer Jeff Ocding matched the Arti ~· total with four goals, and JOl support from seniors Stu.ail' Lillis (three goals), Ty Tnpolli and Steve Schroeder(~' apiece). : In goal, Dave Vistaunet enjoyed a top pme for the Sei · Kings. . • Laguna. 3-2 overall got a pair of gQa).s from Kitcher and one each from Stuart Fraser and Chart' Gilbert. • Both teams will compete in the South Coa11t1 Tournament, due to be.Jin today. :• Another Sea View Leaauc playoff team from last yea( University, opened its loop season with a 7-1 victory ovet Estancia behind the JOaltending of Victor Bak.k.ila. · r Bakkila stopped 13 shots, allowing only a single tallf late in the third quarter. Meanwhile, Univenity was pa~ by Brian Adam( who had three goals and Keyin McCollough, who added two. ln a non-league matcbup at Golden West, Founta.u, Valley fell to Los Amiaos, 12-11 despite a five-goal performance from Ricky Weiss. : .. place Pirates routed the Chicago Cubs, 11-6, Wednes- day. However, the Cubs' magic number was reduced to three later m the evening with New York's loss to Philadelphia. Chicago leads the division by eight Aflles ... Light-bithng Steve Jelti belted a basts-loaded triple to cap a five-run first inning as Philadelphia blasted New York, 13-5. Steve Carlton, 13-7, allowed eight hits in eight mnings to ~ct the victory. He struck out eight to rajsc his career stnkcout total to 3,872, one behind all· time leader Nolan Ryan of Houston ... In the National League West. San Diego chopped its magic number to two, while chm1na1ing the Dodgers .as catcher Bob Raider& e•dn runn•-.-b &CL Brealy dropped a throw from second baseman MIDDY -& ~ & Trillo with the bases loaded, allowing Eddie Miller to • Reuss shar p in win~ . . . score the win"1ina from third base 10 the bottom of the · EL SEGUNDO -The Los Angeles m LAS VEGAS_ Lon Hankie nppcd six l!I I 0th inning in the Padres' 5-4 win over San Francisco Raiders announced Wednesday that they •II~ shots off par over the last five holes, shot a ·"In other '8mes, right-hander Danny Cos fired a three-have signed running back Jimmy Smith, HOUSTON (AP)-Jcrry Reuss made it official. H •• career-best 9-under-par 62 and es ta bit shed hitter for his first maJOr·lcaauc shutout and Onie Smith who returned a kickoff l 01 yards for a healthy and throwing hard after a season marred by am a one-stroke lead Wednesday tn pro golfs tnpled and scored on Terry Pudleton'1 sacnfice fly m touchdown agajnst them dunng the 1984 National problems and stays on the disabled ltst. •: nchest tournament. the Las Vegas lnvttattonal. the sixth inmng. 11vmg St. Louis a 1-0 victory over Football League preseason. "It's a nice feeling to say it and to mean it I'm 100 "That was fun There was a lot of laughing and Montreal ... Daue Walker and Tom Foley homered as Smith accomplished the feat while a member of the percent qain. I'm healthy now and throwi~ well," Rcute giggling out there, .. said Hmklj:, who has been in a deep Cincinati defeated Atlanta, 4-2. Washington Redskins m the second quarter of a game said after pitchinaa four-hitter and leading the Los Anaelet slump since breaking his dnver m the Houston Open won by the Ratdcii, 2J-20. Dod&crs to a). I.win over the Houston Astros Wcdile<ui""'" th AL pair handed Suspension. Smith, a rookie from Elon Colle~c. was released bic. · .... t ~'4 more an a year ago. ned k' ft h fi f ru.,. · But there was no laughter for Fuzzy Zoeller, the the "' s ms a er t c irst game 0 t c regular season. Despite the win, the Dodgen were mathematical current U S. Open title-holder and the 1983 winner of NEW · YORK -Pitcher Dennis • A spot on the roster opened up when the Raiders eliminated from the National league West race when sad th1c; event. Rasmussen of the New York Yankees and placed reserve linebacker I.any McCoy on their injured Diego later beat San Francisco. • Zoeller suffered a recurrance of chrome back outfielder Willie Upshaw of the Toronto reserve list. McCoy was injured dunng Los Angeles' Reuss, 4-7, won for only the second time sin spasms and. despite medical treatment Tuesday, was Blue Jays have been suspended for three 22·20 victory over Kansas City last Sunday: rttum1na from the disabled li5t on July 12. Bob K.nc~ unable to make a defense of his title in the five-day, 90-games for their actfons in a Sept. 11 game between the l'!-1~ was the loser as the Houston had its six·p~ hole tournament that offers $1, I 22,500 in tot.al prizes two clubs, American League President Bobby Brown TeleVlalon , radio wmnma streak stopped. . : with S 162,000 to the winner. announced Wednesday. "I had no pain and I had command oft~c game, that Zoeller was hospitalized for ix days in August when The suspensions began WcdncSday night. TELEVISION the key," Reuss Slld. "What's imponant to me arc; se\.cre back troubles forced him out of the PGA Followina a fifth-inning home run by Toronto's aroundbalb and stnkcouts." • National Championship and the World Series of Golf. Jesse Barfield, Rasmussen fired the next pitch near No evente tcheduJed. Dodger Man-aer Tommy Lasorda was pleased wittl Ht nkle's spectacular fintsb consisted of a string of Upshaw's head. Upshaw charged the mound and RADIO Reuss' performance and predicted the Dodgers will four conc;ecut1ve birdies bc&innang on the l4tb and knocked Rasmussen to the around, emptying both • p.m. -BASIBALL: OOdgera at Houeton, contenders next season. ! capped by a wide-breaking, :JS-foot putt for eagle-3 on benches for a brief pushing match. KABC (790), "He pitched well. Jfwe had bad a healthy Jerry ReUSlt the 18th at the Las Vegas Country Oub, a par·7 l desert Both players were ejected from the game won by 7:30 p.m. -8A8UALl: K8nau City 8f our season would havr a been a lot different." Laso~ resort layout. Toronto, l 0-3. • ~i KMPC (710). said. "Playen are ao1na to have a bad year but next year •••••••••••••••llilil•••••••••••••••••••••ll•••••••••••••••••ir--' will bounce back. Oui motto is 'we shall return, we EVERY SUNDAYll 8 •.m.-3p.m. ORANG! COAIT COLLl!OI! BARGAINS GAl.ORElf REE CUITOI ... ADM ON aPAMONOll 'I ' LINCOLN; Neb. (AP)* -Ne- braska's decision to aartt to a CBS telecast of Saturday's same at UCLA apparently won't be costly when it comes to kecpint the No. I-ranked Comhuskers 1n good standina with officials from the College Football Association and ABC-TV. "We have no animosity at all," Dick Sn1der, the director of prom~ tions for tbcCFA, said Tuctday. Donn Bern tein, ABC's director of media relations, said, "We arc no1 at all diuppointed with Nebtuka's decl ion. Nebta k.a hM to do What's in iu best interest. and v.-c undc~t.and thll." . ebraska' .,air'cemcnt to the 1clc- cas1 technically violated the cros vcr rule which 1s part of A tclc 11on ckagcwuh the CFA. The 63-i'n nbcr Of:A, of which Nebraska is member. bat an· cxclu l"C contrac:t with A The contract's cro sovcr rule tipul tc that Cf A sch<>e>ls cannot have ••croMOv~ 11rn gain t non A members uch 1 UCLA br dam by a nval n twork. return."' JtM NIEMIEC Ou1000Rs ti vc fat already building on their h1nd quarters. Hunters will have to work a httle hard rforthctaraerbuc.k d r numbers art down and the shoncr son will m1 mo t of th annual The Golden Wnt COll soccer m Ytill host tta n oth annual sooccr tournament f'.nday and turdi), lcomina El C.mino, Mt. n nton o•nd lmAnacl Mi on fbr the event. The fint pme wall be F'ridAy at 6, wnh El Camino and Mt. C 1auar· .. rutt1na period. Those who walk off • roads and shady mountain sides hould find gOod sized bucks in heavier cover. All legal bucks will free of velvet cover and their horns will be 'hiny when harvested. There arc still tap available for late·seasondecrhuntinain paruof SouthemCalifomiaasallquow .. established this year by the Depart· l ment ofF"h and Game have not bciit apphed for by huntera. A1 the weat tum cooler. huntinacond1uons should improve overall and the do in&MCksofthclateSQIO.D lhould ~rd huntcn with above ve huntina. MAJOll LSAOUa ITAJHMHGS ~ ........ ....,'IDMMON K911Ma Otv-> • ,. : .l; ~ O• ...... .. 76 14 501 1~ MlnnMOt1I 7• 75 ! o.11*'41C"''---71 11 AM I -70 ,, .... '*"" .. .. 451 10 Te11a1 61 N .GO 13 aAJT DMllOM .. " .... s 14 a .ta M 12 t9 ~ IS~ IO 70 .s:n 11 IO 7l .Al 17~ ff M 4SI tt .... Mllw91Aee u " .411 JS'.'I 111-*0ft dM~ 1111e .......... lclw9I Allillll 4, KenNt Cltv J m lnllinttl 09klllld I. TeAI 7 o.trolt•. ~' ._... IO, TorOlllO 4 N.w VOl'tl 6, lelltnore S CNcNo 1, Mnleeota J leltttl 4, Oewlend J • T•V'• ..... Kenaat Chy (Gutlleh 10-12) 11 ~ (Witt 1)· 11), h\) ~ Chlea90 (S..YW 14· 10) al M!Metot• CVlola 17-121 Mh..._ (~ lJ 12) at Toninto (Ille«> l4·1), (n) • ._Ion (NflltW 10-51 al hlllrn«e (~lMJ),(11) PrteY'IO.... Ttql at~. (n) Mllw~ at Toronto, <nl 8otton al a.ltlmort, (n) Ntw Vont at OetrOlt, (n) S..ttlt al Chlea90, (Ill o.klelW et KaftMI City, Cnl C""'8M at M!Mtlota, (n) ................ W•IT DMSIOW W L ftd. Ga SM Oleeo 15 6' .$63 Howton 76 76 ... 9 ..... A .... ta JJ 11 4') 10 ..... ~ 14 71 •• 7 HI,<) Clndnnlltl .. • .'21 21\.'\ s.n Fr•ncltc0 '2 n •n 2l •AST DMSaON ~ '° 61 .,,. New Yon a 10 .sa 1 Pbl1delt1!N 11 n .m lt · St. Leula • 1' n .m 11 Montrtel 74 16 ,49) IS ..... Pflltbunlfl '7 IS .. 1 23~ w ........ SC... DMelrl J, .._,Oii 1 Plltlllur9t\ 11, Chlcaeo • ~ l), New York 5 Clndnnatl 4, Atlanfa 2 St. Louil 1, MonfrMI 0 SM Oleeo S. Sell Ft'Mdsco 4 ( 10 ~) T•V'•..._ ~ (HlnNMr HI 11 "-IOn (ltYM 12• 10), (lwl} f'lttlbunltl Co.Leon .. 13) al Cftlcaeo (ltuttlven 1-10) Safi ftrancJKo CICrukow IC>-11) at Sen Dle90 ( L.ollr 10-12) andnnall (lttf>IMOll M l •I Atlanta cc.n. 7-6), (twl) MofttrMI CGUllcQon 11-1) al St LcMA11 (L.l~I 11-10), (n) ""*"' ..... DMelrl al Seft FranclaclD, (11) Ptll11S1-.lll9 II Pl"*"", (II) Mlf*MI 11 New York, (nl CMcNe .. St. Uuk,.(11) Clndnnatl et Houston, (II) Atllnta II Sen Dleoo, (II) AMalUCAN L•AOUI ~ 4, lt9¥1111 J (. ICAJtlAJ CITY CAU~ .,,.. ., .... s 1 't l«llieUlrl 5 120 5110 ScNftldaa JOtO 4 0 0 1 c:arew pf\ IO 11 0010 Ptcdolou 0010 1120 '""""" ltOt 2 0 0 0 LYM cf 4 0 I l S t IO O.Cna A S 0 1 I JOIO ~or 0110 3011 Downlnelt 4110 I 0 0 0 le.Jkudl , I 0 0 4tl0 Grlc:fllb 5111 4 0 I I DMlllr It> I 10 I ScDftln -0 I I : ,..tlur o o o Wllont21> 0000 loonec: 2021 Narroft c: I 0 0 0 If s I 2 T..... M 4 9 4 Sar9111i ....... ~atw ... • ••:..,_a C•• 11t• 11...t4 0.. out --WIMlnl "'" ICWed. OWN WIMt'8 HI -Grlcfl (7). •-eoon. O~ Cltv I, eel· • fornle 2. LOll-tC.aNu City S. Calfarni. I. 2...-uon., 9anlcluel, LYM. 5-eoone, Downlne. • H llD N IO KMIMtOIY D~IOll • ' , , ' • Qulsnln 2 I . 0 0 I 2 ledlwllfll,..4 21-J 2 1 1 2 ' c..... ?Mn 52·) I ' 1 1 0 Cartlltt 3 l·J I 0 I 0 4 AaMW,4·1 2 0 0 0 I I D.Jec:Qofl Pltdled lo 1 batt• In 711\. T-2:59. A-29,tN. Mitt •vtntlfl .. ,.,..... ........ nt S1 "' t -.. ,, J 412 ., us 2l ... ftd. 491 60 IU 20 504 74 IU 1' 131 11 " ' nt S1 .. 11 "''°·" t 14' 14 3' ' 1'2 9 JS J tt • 1 0 412 '2 112 t2 37' SI N 2 4193216, 117 17 24 I :170 31 1t 4 23 2 , I • 2 0 I ..,, .., ·-142 ftfTCHtMO • .m • .J02 n.ao ., .m • .261 20 .265 S5 .262 33 .JS1 15 :10 15 .246 I .241 75 .m tt .221 21 .20S 9 .. 11 ·'" 2 .l)O 0 .000 ,,, .JSt • H N IO W·L•llA A... 33 U 11 21 4•1 U6 COt'Mtt 12\\ 14 27 49 5· I 2.• Fond! 1''h 14 3 IO H 2.2t s.nc:Nt ~ 74 33 51 H 2M laflft 114'b 1'5 4' 57 IJ·f U2 Witt m Jll M m 1>-11 u1 1teman1ctt 21''-m S1 a 11o12 ua ~ 172'A M SJ .. M2 4.4' ICaYfmefl ~ 4o) 1' M M ... '"'on" ~ a 10 1s 1-2 4.'7 siatc 14''h In SO U 7.. S.17 ICIM!t '2 61 tJ 4o) 4·5 W UCorte ~ 30 12 13 M 6.75 Swen S I t 2 t-110.• ceurn 2 J 1 I H IUO Smf1t'I 1 • • t ... 11.• ~ n " t s t-1 9IO T.-1-., Ml7 ..... 1.,_14 I.ft SeWi ~ 11, MW I, C«Wl 4, KIMll t , K.,.,.,,.,. I. NATIONAL L•A~• D1J11 I a. A._ 1 LOI .,.._._., HOUITIMt .,... ., ... • 2 2 I Dor•ft • t. t 4 1J1 .... d 4 I It ' I., o.nw:a • t t ' IOtl Crull •ltt 4 I II GDew 1i. 4 I I I Jttt """" •t11 a 111 .....,c ., o t t tttt u .... IOOt I 0 It CMll-" It t I ltll ·~ .. Otll ltJt K11.,.1n 1100 JI I I ,..,..... 1 I I I DewWt• t t I I ~ •111 ,.._ 1114' ............ '--...... . -___ , ...... ----· ............ -~(II 1-GuerrltO. H'*" ~ NI• ,.... '· ---, loe-\AI ~ '· ...... " .......... t, ""'· lie •Ai-. ......... .... ........ '° • LM Allift"9M W.DM810AV.. llUUi.11 (1191 ........................ , P•IT llACS. OM m11t NCJt De"8ldoUI ~I n.2t llAO AO ""° Owttr U"ertlir) , ... uo NICkY D 9'9W (KUlllW) 4.20 AllO raced lrnOkln Who, Anctiar hY, ~.Jet. w.twfl Kine lellrt o.nc:.r, Wind°""" Time. im 211.. U •XACTA Cl 21 paid tu9'7o MCIOND llACL 0.. mlM trot Da\M ~ (HllJ UO UO 2.10 lntritUllll Star (Ollf) 2 «I 2 lO C. Frott (~) 2 IO AIM rec.ct: Hidden Ciiio, Farnn Flrt!, Francts CIOllllNrtY. HlfNand Four J, ·~•tw. nm.· Im 111. U •XACTA (3•t) Nlcl ~ n.D UC•. One mllt ,._., •ac.v IYb6ed (~al) t.AO 2 «I 2 10 Cut tt Out CIOMlll MO 2.10 Mv Aunt RM CM«chatlll> 2 lO AIM r.c.t· Kai'eft Eve K, CfltQulAd, Delofllt Wav Home, flt; Fl\' Mia Tlmr. 1:91 llS. u •XACTA ( ... 1) paid 112.to POUllTM lllAC.. OM mUt trot. Mltrd l'IMrOMV (GtndY) 20.00 UO UO Hol , .. (Mdtrloll) uo uo Dl.mond Huni. (~) 5.AO Alto rK9d: wa .. ua, NoOlt lttNll, Proud Chi•, Neelll& Ptlotllt, Fi.ta D4"IC9r, SMrk Of Stleed. Tlmt: H) ~ lt/ltt:.IL 0.. mlll .-.. ••t SUMY co.om.> ue :t.10 uo Van T UClllr ( l.edtev) 7 M 5.20 IC•r ~ (,.._Mn) 5.AO Also rectd: Game ltoOble, 1-.i labt, TnllN, D V Mell, Oon APOlt, kotCh OOuOte. Time 2:01 ., s. U 8XACTA CM> peld IS2AO SIXTH RAC•. 0.. milt Mee Gieit Ot&len !Pierce) 4.00 J.40 UO lt!rtlhm Ao ($llllttl) ..... uo Lev1tv 1t11yttvn (l.lldtevl 3.00 AIM ractcl: ,,..,,_ FlllOw, L.evlt1tt, DMt Du ..... Sanora S!v, GYW>IY Pltrl· lll'Ch, L.lw Of Thi Land T1me 2:CM. U 8XACTA Cl-61 M id W .90, sav•NTH itAC•. 0ne m11t paQ. J9Y'• Delleht (Parker) uo J.00 uo Warm WI.,_ (Plello) UO U0 MUii ........ IF. Shernln) UO .,Allo. raced: C... OlllMMd, L.O¥Mt* ltoeut, Olntrl Cini, Oti So Fest, lvt Ive lkater. Pau4 ......... Timt: 2:00 J/S. P SXACTA (4·61 Mid 1:11.20 . •IOHTH llACI. 0.. milt pec;e. Isley 8ov IF. Sherren) I0..60 7.00 ).00 F ......... (PltMr) UO 5.20 M&Atl I~ CW.ma) SM MIO r9CM: """*"I 8"'9, Direct Kini, Jam9 Grattan, ll-.n Crest, Dultva Laur1yne, la Hom\. Tlmt: UI J/S. U •XACTA <: .... ) Mid stl.50 ....-rM ltAC .. One mlli "°'· Jual AF ... CH. Plrkar) I0.00 21M 1UO Doctor hlltv CF'tlno> 7.00 4.00 V• Waled CV~) J.00 AM fK*I: Never 1l\t 5amt, 8ledt Mark, Jules eov, Tuemat1na L.ld, Deln· ov•. Time: l:91 U •XACTA (t-3) Mid MOs.71. U l'tetC SOC IM-1-4-H) P9td 51,otOM wtttl 10 W1MIN lldttta (five l'IOrMI). c~ POOt: ''°·'°"" TINTH RAC•. 0.. milt Nee. 1ltt COITIPllnn Gold CKblrl UO 3.00 UO T• lublec:1 CMllrcMnd) 9.00 5.00 lladt c (Mueller) '-00 Alto recld: JeMa't Jfw, ~ Hol· ldav, Chrll Tw Her, Mlater CkAlav, Strlllrw .-ric., ~ lt•!Pf\. Time: 2:00 J/S U 8XACTA (2-1) NW UUO Atl«ldeonct: J"51 Nl'L NATIDMAL C'Oli"•it•lltCI --w IL'!' iJ 0 I t 1 2 1 I Ca9tll Pd; PP PA \.CICIO ,, 71 • 12 47 " .m '5 n Chlca90 Detrott OrMftaav Mh'!Ntot• tan.e .. y iJ 0 I.AGO 10 21 ·t 2 11 H 1 f ... l2 »J5711 t 2 ... .... DfllM ) 1 M7 '° 11 NV G nh J I M7 10 6' I Louil 2 1 M7 94 6' ~ ,, .23)4') .. WHhlnelon I :2 m ?I ~ AMetUCAN CC>Mflla•llKI West l 0 0 2 I I , 1 0 2 1 G ~I , 1 0 • 0 , I I J 0 0 3 I 1100 1' ., "67 .. ,, M1 '° SI "" '1 IS5 "" .. '5 • M1 14 M mo• " u '° .000 _., '° 3··r 0 l.OOI M 41 2106676' .. 210"71360 120.m1211 tJl .. 417' ,.. ....... lbml at C~ll ((Mnnl! 2 el 10 •.m.> . HoUiton et Attama MAMMol9 at Dtlroo NY Jtl1 at luffM Plll•Meh at Citll ... llCI St. l..oult at New ori..ns Sen Fr81'1daco at ~ Washllllton •• H4w E!!lland ChlQeo 11 Sealflt lncleft1lllOllt at MIMnl Green .. .,., Olht 'Kal!lh OIY at Denver r • .,_ Bay •I NV Giants MIMIV'• ..,,_ San Dleeo at ttaww. (Channel 1 at 6 •.m.) NFLIMden NATIONAL CON,lllt•MC• ~· ~I.AIL Sinw'nil, Olanta Monlana,S.F._, O.nlelloll, Dee. L.omax,SU .. ,.A PC Y• TD W 73 S2 .,1 ' J " S5 '41 • , 12!0"7. 1 n S3 m · s o 103 '2 10S 6 4 ltU1Mrl TC Y• AV9 LG TD 71 :16.l 5.1 S7 J 6) 350 5.6 1'2 I 11 -4.1 f1 1 S4WU204 ltloes.All. Pal'lon,Oll. Pie*.--. .... TV!lt,S.F. Andlnoll, StL " tS3 4.1 " J lteciatwwa Ne. v• AW LG TD Mot*, WMll. 21 m Ii.I 32 0 Donll'Y, o.I. 17 ., \7.1 ., I 5"9110ta, Ptlll 17 152 u " I 8.Johnton, All 1' 214 l'-0 U 2 Johnlon, Glilftts 15 lll ll.7 U J J.Jonn, Ott. IS lot 7.3 1' 1 Donel!, Dal. l5 101· 7.l 21 o AIMUAN CON"la•NCS °"*' "'"""*' Mwlno,Mla. Woodtlrt. Pitt. Fouta,$.0 ....... Incl ~,luff. Mc.Hen, Jtta • COlllna, N E. Dldlev,lnd. ............ J---,S.D. PA PC Y• TD 1111 '° ., 141 10 3 nU'5662 105 70 ... • 5 710!97 43 """'42 ltU1Mn PAV• A .. LG TD '7 2'2 4.A I) 2 " m .u 21 1 S7 245 U IS 3 4o) DI JJ M 2 ., 2ll u 11 3 aKatuw& ColllNWW'ttl, On. F,...a1111, Cklff. SldWor1tl, Pitt. Challdltr, $.D. Jotllla,S... OWll ...,_....,. .... YaAwUITD " JM 17..6 .. I " 1'7 lQA 2A 0 17 2f7 17.5 51 1 17 m 111 "° 2 1' 20'1 IU JI l " 17' .... 11 2 c..... ...... ~ W•IT N-.saa al UCLA (Clw!INI 2 at 12:30 •.m.> Lone leedl St. •t Fr.no St., n °"9on II Ca8fomla Sen Joie SI. at Stenford Howton el Wul'llngton h• St. at WasNlleton St. avu at Hawaii, n Wlc:hlte SI. at Nevada·l.llt Veeu. n cai State Nofltwtdle et San Frendaco St. UC Davia et Senta Ciera, n ate Havward at Cal Pot; (SLO), 11 _._..Al-i::ll~""' St., " aoao•• USC at Ara-St. (CMnllel 5 al 7 •.m.) Cel Stele Fullrfoll at CelorMo SI. UtP at Alf Force TH•I Tedi at New Mtlllco, n Nt'lada-~eno at 8olM St. Molllalla St. et ldMo, n Montana 11 Idaho st .. n SOUTH SW ~ at AiabalM Ar1zona at LSU, n Florida St. at Miami, Fi.. ArmvalT..,,_... Southern NUUIH""" al AuDur'n Wake F-1 et Horttl Cerollna SI. CIN:lnnall ., Memofll• $1 .• " Cltadtl al 0eotM Ttch Cltmaoll at Gtortla OW. 11 5outn carolllla, n K1naas at V~ll, n Kentudlv •• TUiane, n L.wi.n. Tedi at MIUlulool ltldlmond at Vlrelllla Tedi Furman at Manhal, n w .. tern CW91na at VMI IOUTMWlllT TulM at Artlan&al .. vtor•t~ Nortll Tex.a.a St. at WU, n Iowa St. at Ttua A&M. n Kans.a St. •I TCU, n Sen Dleoo St. at Oklafloma SI. L.amar at Ilea. n McfilteM St. at W..t Ttllu SI., n MIOW•IT ColorMI at Noire Dame MlcNMn St. at tl!Nb ~'"·'~ • I~ et Nort,,,.,_,_.n OlliO SI. et Iowa Mlnnetota II Plrdue Ml1slulool St. et Mlleowl tllllOllSI atl~SI Kent St. at N. lllnoii, 11 e . ..-e1T01Mo,11 OtilO U. al E. M1cNeM. n .AtMnMS St. •I SO 1111no11 loWllne Green al MMmt, °"'° W.loanl Mldll98ll at Ceftlrai Midlleetl New M111lco St. -' Dnllt •AST North C~ et ao.toft Collee Mtrvlalld at W.t Vl~nla Vlrillnle at New 1111Mrs at Syr.c:use, 11 ltnt et T8'Nllle Wiiiem &. MMv al P9llll SI IOllOft u at Hew ~ v ... •I lnlWll • l&DNI .. "°""'"""" C:OIMte •I L1it1111'1 HeN9nlat~ Mor91i11 SI et CtnMCllcut Prlftcttoll at Cemal ...... Owlmtulfl ~ .. HolY <:tot.a RhOOt ~ al Malnt "'-~Kiii .... (Al-lfNI..., ...... _.., TOMeffT • ~ V..,.,'"" C... &MINIM at HewPotl Hertlar COiia Mtla W lal Allmltot et wnttrft !Mlle.,., 'tultlll Uft!Wrttty n. latune Hiia It MIU1on Vi.lo •• •••bK11. •• I.II ....,,. ~elEI~ L.oera II Gw9ln 0nr¥t K~ IF'*'* NtDAY ~ v...., ., MkWft ....,.,,. Ila. ~ ., Or91Wt c..... ~ 9tkfl ., ,......,, Hal'W ~ •t Wetlmll9W flMMCla .. $M Otmtllte Dene Hiii I ~ -..ct\ .., n. Miter Dil el a AM Glrtl ........ NIGM ICMOO&. L.aeuna e.ctl dill'. MaMr De1. 1MS, i.1', lH, lS-4. Racing series .., windup Two Ofuee ~ ~ clubl Will wind up dMir-_,, .... -- races lhia •ettmd witb Wia c.arta-Unan Yacht a.a, coe41M1"9 dtc venth and eielada ,... Ol ill A1*1man &rid SINnlly _. .... day and C.pesuuo •=~ wrappi!ll ~ IU 0Qru s.illl ~tb rxamandee.. ..S unday. Both .a.. ~ tar .... fonnance H11ad.ca,p llaciQI Fleet )'Xhts. Balboa Yadn b wil le9d a.e-desi&n yachts into KbOll wida ..... boats l'lcins over iMide cous-. oa turday and keel boats CDalf"Uaa over ooeau coune1 OD Suaday. lduna.it· 12 sailon will IWt ihe fint of a a:ria of troobyir~n. .nit the first for the ScfloCt. roplly OD Sullday. l.ebman-12s are lbe New- port Harbor Yacht Cub's dub dinlby, attractina top :..non. .lfun~ Hatbour Y8dat Oub will be host IO l..uer ldon Oil turda)'. In other Southcta Califonua • y Acbrina Aslocialion areas; IAI hid• L'Cfi .._. West CoeitYacbt ub-~ banded race, Saturday. . Bnccaoeer Yacht GIUb -Annual Patejas race. Suday. Stlldalll'Wlcaaa, Redondo Beach Yacht Oub Girls On the~ raie (P~, Salllrday: Single-banded Race, Sun· day. California Yacht Oub-!lnvcntd Enduro Race (HarriS Series No. 3), SatWday. Wind.JU1mcrs Yacht Oub-loll)' Roecr Rqana. Sunda)'. Corooado~=tOUb-Ship Shape Series. Saturday. Mission Bay Yac:bt Oub-Bowen Memcrial Reaua (I..iahtn.in&). Satur day: Geary..lf IDvitatf~i~): Coronado Yacht Oub -Vanity ~ Race (handicap), S'ai- urday. ilvet' Gatat :Vtcbt QUb -Area Championships (T-Bird, J·24, Catalina-27), Santana »30), Samr- day. · Sall Dict0 Cnaisa' AllOCiatioa -Milliou Bay Blue Waier race (predic- ted lo&). Saturday. Sao Diego Yacht Oub - Catalina-30 Nationals, Saturday. Ne1111 u.t JaliM Ventura Yac!lt Oub-GOld Cup Reatta, Sariuday. Suua Barbare Y ac:bt Club - Wibocl Series No. S, Saturday, Ladies Da}'. Sunday. CJ:ajnoel ls1ands Yi.cbt Oub - Cub Olp Series No. 2. SatUtday, Sunday; l..ad.ics At lite Helin Scriea No. 3, Sunday. ~ occ ... • 1'nllil.C~ week. He caupt D.lDC passes for 196 yards, &lid p .eked up 222 yards OD kickoff returns. He finished the lliabt with four touchdowns. Santa Ana's rusbin1 same stUmbled qainst FuJJetton: Tbe Dons bad 344 yards throa&b tbc air but minus 4 7 on the srouDd. '"We'd like to establish our~ pe," says Santa Ana Coach Dave 0ps. .. But talisticillr. it~s ~i.Da ao be diffiCult because of uYurica 10 our otremivc line and runoioibedts. .. Golden West rode the P'nint of JohD Hcinlc and the nuu:Uaa oflobn Lamberton to a victory over OCC. Heinle completed l3 of22 passes for I 7S yards and three toucb.downS last wee ~betton picked up 1S yards on 22 c:ames. , Rustler Coach Ray Shack.lef'ord loots for a hiah-1COrina .mur. "This is lhc best team Santa Ana bas bad in the three )'CaJ'I that O.VC Ops has been there,.. Sbactleford sa)'1. 4bey have a super quattet'bea (Dave Mooe_y) aild they are aood dcfcn5lvdy. They pv~ a soqd Full- ertoD team all they could baodle ... Money completed 21 of 37 pas.s but •-as interc::q>ted four tima by Fullerton. .. • • . 1 ,. • t 1 .1 " .. , ii fl/ c. c. ,,_ \ 01 A TH NOTICE S IAL TZ llRQIAON IMITH TUTHILL WHTCU,, CHAPIL 427 E 17th St Cott• M .. a 646-9371 PACIFIC VI W MIMOAIAL PAllU< Ctme1ary • Mortuary Chepel • Crematory 3500 Pacific vi.w Drive Newpor1 BMch 644-2700 80ft LAWN• MT. OU MortUVY • Cemttary CrttnatO<Y 1ea5 01.i.r. Ave Co1t1M 540·55,. ' ... PEOPLE TURN TO CLASSIFIED BECAUSE TBEY KNOW OTllU PEOPLE ARE SELLING. ~ll•Nt rvttv1hln• from tnl)IOfCVI lu 10 p!JO'lo& II • tllr 1111u~ of PN\jllr 1n «lttt'llrd old hohblr• and 111kf up nrw ont• f<>r l•rnllW't lo m• ••r •nd •row And lht" ~Ion 1h11 Onrt ~vt'd lhf"l!I -11,,.11llvr1~1r uwful~ Daily Pilat • .. • I • -.. 4 Cl 642-5678 1J: Macnab -Irvine BILL GRUNDY . REALTOR . . G N 0 TS I' I I' I .. ce SZ.17 per dat TlMllra ALL JOU pey ' INl.IOchlyl lntht DAlY Pl.OT IRVICE DIECTmtY f*'9._WMHIMIAROA MCI .. HUNTINGTON l!ACHCOU8EA 9*Y Wadrl11dayat no t1ttta cNirMI CALL TOOAYll ... Lm YOIM Olly Plot ltrw. onoto.y ..,_,tattw Ml-tal1at.• Sri•EY 01111 . . Call (71•) •9'4·9233 for mort Info. l•r .. • Our Display Advertiliog d~ JNi:11ment la looking for an · am- bitiou1 person •o fill an entry level position. Candidate should posseu good communication 1kill1, flexibility anCI an ap•hude for teaming qufokly. ~nd Reaume to: Orange CoHt Daily Pilot P.O. Box 1560 Cotta Meea, Ca. 92626 Anni LI A S!\UTH ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT ttO W AA\'ST ·COSTAMESA CA 916~ ... ' . ... .... , ....... District Mancagers If yov enjoy worlu~ with yovng boy1 & g rll ond dtik jobs ore not for you, coniider o corur 1n the newipoper circulo· I.oft f Id Thi1 ii 0 uni~ poittio1t with doily choll n9ft & r.....ords. Our OfM'\•"9• ore 1mmed1ote. Appl1contl mu'' hO"\'o o von, totionwaoon or truck, Wt offer on uc.llent '°'°'Y with o bon111 pl n ond goa ollowonce, We ho.,. on .. cellent btnt11t plan thot il'<lude' hotp;· tolirotion iniuronce, l1be1ol ~ot1on and holid<>y•· thel•ilJNld Mond9Y thrv Fr dat 9 I 1 om O! 2 pm 330 W. Bay Costa· Mesa, CA 92626 ' Find wt.at &:.::d: In Delly Piiot New9pai>er . KIDS -EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES! I AGES 11·14 ·EARN ... TO $75.00 PER WEB. Wt .,.. !law IS ..,..... IDr ~ .... bll9WS lo *"' r..,.. IDr lllt Or .. Coast Olilw Pilot. Ow Utws stJtt at 3 30 ' •. tlld =•• t11t11 a 30 P • ...ways. °" SablfdaJ, .. t IN aor. Mws. YOll wil tttll llMJ QI prim. .. "'° ...... "*' Oft_, I I ... !Wt • no -~ ., collectiall iffDhld. " JOU .,. illtlfattd, .. call .., ' [#I 'AIU :cm (714) 548-7058 · . TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE AC*)Q 1 Stabbed • Oltflgwe 10Contalnerl 141.Mnbllt.• 15-Telk 'Wiidiy 1l~out 17~• 18 SoYliat city 18 Repetition 20 Treipe 22 Street 24NcMM-um 2t Owtndled 27Named 31 T tnn1t unit 82 Cl'IMMCIOth 83Yeemed - S5Author - Wallece 31 Eilgllltl COf'N)OMf --~ 40 w.-c.()fl, e.g. 41 Tint 42Mpect• 43 M#I• ""' of 44 E1wnl1Y 46F..,._, 47 Nelurllly .,..,.,_ 1T,...,~ 52 M of - 54 Kind of Mtd 58 FNnetl 59~ 11 Mae up (for) 82 Sac. units 13GreetLMe .. ~·· as¥'::0 aMowMCe etl<JndottMe 87 Atllte DOWN t pgyyOt1 2 Mlc:towaw - 3 Battio gulf 4 Acttv•le 5 Leaeenlng of tenllon • 8dwly' tlgn 7 Fllh • Prewnt 8 Uberetor to Undergarment 1 1 L0\'9 tilllit 12Chle~ 13EQUN 2 1 Salt pfltlrm. 23 AllCe4 25 Lukeiwwn'I 27 "Aeellyt" 2t "°' ewrl Of'9 2t Meiocly IOFeuted S4 Snoutl SSMvMce MOther 37Tobecoo: ooloq Hc.n.ctlen~ net member 40 Roet• 42 SencMI Pllt 43--•helf 44 -Hemtngw9y 41Mak•Metnl 41$"'-d 48 Circue WOf1tet 41 Sprtgfltty 60Heeddl ... 53 Authot I(~ 65~ se ·aeon 57 Aota eou....uneae r' • TYPIST " SOUTHWEST ... USED CAM & TAUCK8 COME IN OR CALL FOR ..... llllUL COnnler~ 1mlll.IT 18211 lf.ACH BLVD. HUNTINGTON IEACH .. , .. ,, •• 1111 WIWllTYlm ... --a. Aonlld 0.. THEODORE ROBINS FORD 411r.t_.. ••A&fl<tP 'l•U ( Cl"A Ml \A ~,.) J IJ()l(l ,, .. ". .. ~ ---.... 714-833 -1300 @ 1114 SClllCCI 11•1&11U11l UmoCE L '231 • 1&a per mo TOP $12.01110 CAP S1UOO ~S61MOI @ 11UYllAlll m 1114 lllPILSE CO,..,NHL CHE~RCLET . . )4tr I J.G\., THEODORE ROBINS FORD lOt>~ HAll!l.OCI ti• 0 CU ... TA Ml 'A c..a; •()l() ~ Un -'eye'::@· emlb c:-. RUNS . 11100 obo. 157..ent ~ Mere Zeptler Sdn. Low m1 ...... W11Y ...... whl•. $22'0/obo, IU54150t~ OWmrW' Ull '6 t6f6WSO '™· oft .... end twowft, 115.000. SB-1721 .. ,.... iHi ltfl.MSllPml A1.1tO. AJC. PIS. Ml Aldlo 4JUZVI) .......... Auto. AJC. MUFM ...,_ Pl •t .. r,brak .. , WI,. MM! ..,.,. (I01t47) •••• S 1 A U ,, W • ng Jf4-M5·'91' .-1 rile....-.. .... --.en ......... ) ~ . ' I GARDEN GROVE 22 FRW'f HUNTINGTON BEACH FOUNTAIN ..J ~ ~ SANTA ANA EDINGER ~ VALLEY O x WARNER ' 0 ~ CHICK IVERSON' Chevrolet• Por.che •Audi 441 L least hf., .... rt .... ~ 17MIOI Highest Quality Sales & Service ... m 0 NABERS CADILLAC ,,~ 21001111111 ILYI., COSTA IESI - · (J1C) M0-1111 (211) 111-1211 • Best Prices • Convenient Location • Great Location • Super Service • Courteous & Knowtect11.esble Sales People 0 THEODORE ROBINS FORD U.S.A. 's # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer Modern Sales, Service, Parts, Body, Paint & nre Oepts. Competrtive Rates On Lease & Daily Rentals 20H...., lhL, ......... 142-0010., M0-1211 0 SOUTH COUNTY VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU 18711 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach (714) 842-2000 SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE Orq1 Countys Lartest Vo!Uwa&en/ISlllu Dealer We Will Not Be Undersold PARTS DEPARTMENT OPEN SATURDAY m 0 RAY FLADEBOE HONDA G RAY FLADEBOE # 11 lite Outer Ir., lnla1 In The lrvlne Auto Center 830-7800 Complete Sales, Service & Leasing G) ORANG.E COAST JEEP /IENAULT # 1 II TN Wat Fii' . I• JH, 11111 Fii' I Yun O•Dln2~e. SALES L< rs • seRv1cE . --.. ~. """'11!.wo t • LEASING VOLKSWAGEN #20 btt Otater •·• lnl• In The lrvlne Auto Center 830-7300 Or1rtt1 Couniys NewtSt Volkswaien Dealer Compltt1 Sa~ S~mct & Lwmg $ ~s ~,!!RLi::_ rurs jR Overaea.s Delivery Specialists 'ARTI DEPARTMENT OPEN IATURDAY MORNING9 BMW -ROLLS ROYCE 1540 Jamboree Rd. Sit FWY. 22 FRWY j 1 . . MISSION LAGUNA VIEJ°l HILLS VJ(~ ·~ vrEJO , r .0 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2121 .... , ........... .... Over 23 Years Serving Orange County Sales• Service• l.eaalng 546-1280 $,.a.I Pw U. 541-1411 MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM -9:00 PM SATURDAY 8:30 AM -8:00 PM SUNDAY 10:00 AM -5:00 PM 8 STADIUM PONTIAC W•'re N•w -W•'r• O.allng Acrou from the Bia A on Ketell8 Juat Wfft of the (57) Orenge Fr .. w•r Sales • Service • Parts • Body Shop on Premises l11h1I• 2221 E. l1t1ll1 111-1111 BILL YATES YILllWllEI • PlllOIE • PlllEIT SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE 12112 , ................ 9-l•h'•• UMI 11 117-4IOO SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO BAUER MOTORS BUICK -JAGUAR -ISUZU \ . Complete AutomotMt Needt SALES • SERVICE • LEA81NG Ane S1l1ctlon of au.itty UMd Vllhk:lee # 1 BUICK DEALER IN ORANGE COUNTY 2125 HARBOR BLVO • COSTA MESA 171-2500 0 RAY FLADEBOE UlllLll ... , AHll IUD . #fl ......... , ... lnlae . In The lrvtne Auto Center 830-7000 G CREVIER BMW 8ALE8 • SERVICE • LEASING "Where Profesalonal Attitude Pr11V8/IB". .. lpectee:11 .... Ualftl lft luropNn DI.,,.,. bCllllRI 111111\toft of New end .,.._, pr1pared UMci 8MW'e alwaY9 In stod<. 835-3171 208 W. 1at St., Sant. Ana Comet of BroadWlly & 181 St. ao..d ~ G UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE OJIM ·SLEMONS IMPORTS HONDA 2880 Harbor Blvd. Coate MeA 540-0713 3 Blocks So. of 405 Fwy. , .c-·-'. coeT._,... • AccessoR1Es DEPT 548-8023 Newport Beach 840-8444 • .. I Classified advertising 1s your best choice for help In selling the items ybu no lo'nger ne-ed. It's quick and inexpensive. and the Pilot reaches potential buyers who hv in this area. · Call t<Xiay. " Daily Pilat class1f 1ed ads phon 642·5678 • " PllarWanie trill"ma~ry localjadge By KAREN E. I.LEIN udVIDADEAN QI .... Diillr,.. .... Pilar Wayne, longtime New- port Beach resident and the widow of actor John Wayne, will wed Harbor Municipal Cour.t Judge Stephen C. Stewart in a private ceremony at her home in Dover Shores Oct. 6. ''He"s' a handsome. charming and delightful man who shares many of my interests, in- cluding a passion for ten- nis," Mrs. Wayne said. Wa)'De Mrs. Wayne, who writes a weekly "Personal Style" column (Pleue eee PU.AR/ A2) Coast Dally Pilot photographers win honors at the Forest Lawn Press Photogra- ph~rs Competition./ A3 Two women political can- didates wlll be hosted at a champagne reception Saturday./ A7 California San Diego Mayor Roger Hedgecock says indict- ment won't hurt his re- election chances./ A4 Nation Economic growth slows · to 3.6 percent.I A4 Special prosecutor sees no violations In Edwin Meese Investigation./ A8 Llvtng What is in the sealed tube that the artist Christo has donated to the "Tubular Art" auction In Laguna Beach?/81 Divorcees discover de- lusions when they re- enter the single's scene and work force./81 Sports ., Kansas City Royals pitch- er Dan Quisenberry, for- merly of Costa Mesa High and Orange Coast Col- lege, Is a lead Ing can- didate for the Cy Young Award./C1 Corona del Mar Htgh • opens defense c;>f Its Sea View League water polo title with a win over Laguna Beach./C2 Entertainment Does CBS have another "MASH" In "E.R?" It's the top-rated TV show of the week./83 Business Marie Gray has received Dawn magazine's 'Or- ange County Woman of Achievement' award.JBS l~DEX Erma Bombeck . 82 Bridge 84 Bulletin Board A3 Bualneu 85 Callfornla News A4 CIUSlfied CS-7 Com Ice 94 CrOMword C7 Death Notlcel C4 Help YoureeU 82 Horoteope ce Ann Landers 82 LMng 81·2 Mutual Funds 85 National News A4 Opinion A9 Pap.rant 81 Polle Log A3 Public Not C4-5 Sports C1-3 Stoek Mark t 88 Televt~on · 82 Theaters 83 Weather A2 Wortd Newt A4 • • 1:11m 1111111 De&th driver held as drunk . ) om an charge with three fa alfttes in Coast Highway head-on smashup By STEVE MARBIE Olllteo.llJNM ..... A 25-)'ear-old woman who was previously convicted of drunken driving has been charged with man- ~u$)lter, felonydrunkcndnvinJand dnvmg with a sus~ded dnver·s license in a head-on traffic colhs1on that killed three Mission Viejo women: Kym Lamcll Murph) of Oxnard was the only ~rson 10 urv1vc the earl)'.·mom1ng wreck pt. 10 on Pacific Coast Highway north of Huntin.gton Bach. Police said the woman wa dnv1n on the wroo. side of the road at the time of the accident. Murphy has been at Fountain Valley Community Ho pital smce Fatal Beirut embaaay blut llarlne iaard motions away photot&:f!hen at •ite ol U.S. Eml>Uiy annez ezpL on iD the CllrlatlaD Eut Beirat area today. A ~p called .. Ialamtc Jihad" clalmed reaponilbllity for the blut. See •tmy on J>aeeA4. . Molesters use guile instead of violence ·1 wouldn't hurt these children ... ITove them' By RICHARDT. PIENCIAK ...................... The child molester. rarely uses violence. The last thing he or she wants is an unwilling vrct:m. What the molester does want is a child who can be seduced, tricked, and 1f'need be. blackmailed ·tnto a ~xual relationship. . EDITOR'S NOTE -Ould sexual •bu~ remains a mystery to many people, in pan ~ause they •rr• unfamili•r with how molesters oper- ate. This S«Ond installment of a /iv~ part ~ries dcscnbt·s how molesters Sttlucc their victims. "'The "un nscs and sets with the child," said P.Olicc gt. Joseph Ptilisar of Albuquerque, N.M. "Th~ 1uys spend hours winnina the love and affection ofa child. Some pedophiles will take a y~r to 'woon a child." The sexual moleitation of Amen- (Pleue eee MOLSST&RS/ A6) Coast's cities may discover theycan·livewith 'seers' Orange Coast cities .don't have a cry &al ball to foresee the outcome of a "talc Suercme Court case challengina the ab1hty of local governments to n so-called fonunctelhng bu i· TONY SAAVEDRA Focus ON TH[ Nu"s th tu may fon unctclli rtA the coth 1on but was Jo be mo'll cd today 10 J Jatl ward t U J Medial C.cnter in Orangt where lhe will be held on $150.000 iba1l. The woman has been chafltd With three counts of vChtcular man- laughter, felony drunken dnvtn,g. drivana on a ;1uspcnded dm:cr's license and an additional count of operat1na a car Wllb a blood-alcohol Spirial injuries claim 30 victims in Newport surf But llf e uards say media's attention has cut statistics ByROBERTBARUR Of .... o.llJ ........ About 30 swimmers ha\le sutrered spinal injuries in Newpon Beach this ear, mostly while runnina and divin& into shallow water but also while body surfina. Marine Safety Chief Ken Jacobsen said today. Of the injuncs, six or seven are believed to be victims who have suffered broken necks and varying degrees of paralysi Jacob$cn u1d. The injury count -mostl~ affect- ingathlcttc mat in their late teen - is up from )-eat. JacObscn sumu mainly because manne safety ex~s who have been so conocrned about neck injunes arc bein& more visilant in rcporun1 the case$. Tht number of incidents is believed about the same as t~ proctcdmg year, Jacob5.en Said. · .. We don't ta&r;e the slightest chance." Jacobsen a.id. '"If someone comes to the lifl uard tower com- plain101 about their fingers tingling we put them an an extractor (spinal and neck brace) nd call lbe para- medics." In Hunu on Beach. ho vcr. Manne feh• Capt. Dottg D"AmaU (Pleue 11ee SU1lP I A2J Department store forgery suspects arrested in Mesa By TONY SAA VEDR.A °' .............. FoUr suspected membcn of a fol"JC1Y rial that bas hit department stores ~out SOuthern Cali- fonua for .. maybe S.S,000 a week .. ~ Urcstcd Wednesday after one of them marched into a Costa Mesa J.C. Penney store and demanded a refund for two tolcn dt . Police recovered the dresses. worth $1 l .72, plu pnce 1agS and rccctpt that 'CTC apparentl)' altered before t..be incident round 6 p.m. atthe J.C. Penney at 2300 Harbor Bh'd. POiice reponed lht four suspccu are pan of a eana that has d~doped a (Pleue eee JPOJtG&RT /A2) Canyon brus.h f=ir-e blamed on arsonist A fire lb.at burned 20 acres in brushy Williams Canyon and left four people with minor injuries Wednes- day was set by an arsonist. county firemen reponed today. The fire burned alona steep canyon walls off Williams Canyon Road but never threatened areas homes. There were no evacuations, a fire dispatcher reported Two county firdiptcrs and a U>s Anieles Times reporter suffered heat exhaustion and a third farefi&hter sustained minor neck and head iajunes. All were treated at Chapman Ho pit.al in Oranae. The fire v.-as reported at I: 19 p~. and was cootamed by 3:45 p.m. Students at Silvcrado-··Elementary School, 11/J miles from the fire. WCTC allowed to go home as usual after afternoon c~ aecordina to the school's prin · Sbiron:Ad.cle. She said two tudc-nts 9.'ett kept on campus unttl their parents amved. Pickets to greet Ferraro in county By JEFF ADLER °' .... .., ........ Democratic vice .p~1oentt1l can- didate Geraldine FCTTtro will be greeted by a now-familiar ight when she arrhcs in Orange County for a two-day campaign topover today- anti-abortioo pickets. But the New Yorlc co~woman. the first woman C'licr to be named by a major pany to lbc nallonal ticket. also will be able to spot some fnendly faces in the crowd of pro te Both the local chapten of the Alhancc for urvival and the 'atioDal Qrpnir.a- non of Women arc a king membcn to tum out in upport ofFemro. I '" ' Fcrraro·s '1 it will be bightigbt by campaign appeManccs ln lrvine and • 'ewport Beach tonight nd Santa Ana Friday morning. · Ferraro is heduled to ~ at a .$50-per-person fundra.iser sponM>rcd b> the Democratic Victor')' Fund of Orange County at UC Irvine' Uni- versit) C1ub at S p.m. before movi on to a pri\'ate S l ,()()()..aplate fun· d.rai in dinner at Democratic ac- tw1st Ho ~ l's cwpon 1Bcach bom fter taytn O\ernight t C ta Mcu's Wcsttn uth Coa t Plaza Hotel. Ferraro i scheduled to (Pleue eee ntDARO/ A2) Heist fails as· register stays shut 8) ROB RT BtU\ R °' ................ I ~ * Of.nge CoMt DAILY PILOT /Thut'ld•.Y. SURF HAZARDS POINTED OUT ••• Prom Al 1d ~nat anjun have dropped dramatically 1h year on the cit) br h. "\\c·,c h d ven pinal injuncs lb s ~ • Last r we h d 36 pinal l~uries and "'en in Auau t alone. "I don't lmo" if n' ooinetden or tf the btach i now enina ck to halfway normal." D'Aman said .many of la5t year's JnJurier arc blamed on the severe . ·winter stonns of 1983 that formed and ban where they had never been and cha~ed 1.ro~ and "'-ater con· ;uitions. D'Amall said he believes "that lots pf media stuff' probably lw made bcach«OCn aware of the Datfall oftM Pactfic and hu helped 10 hold down {l\)Un . Jaco n, v.ilo's ratchirul o'"' manne e) an ewpon sdi for 27 v / 1d a factor It dina to the i?\iurics 11 the con tani h1f\ina of the ooean floor. "I wtnt urfina at S o'clock last night and l couldn~t t 11 >Ou What the condition• ~ t ay," bedC'Clatcd. Jacobsen id the injunes usually occur when th victim's bcati hits the ocean bottom and stops but the body continues movi"J ahead. ••1t (neck injun ) i su ha dcvas· tauna accident, .. Jacobsen id. "We have lhe best lifcgUl,tds, best paramedics and best ho pita!. Rut if you have 1 broken neck, )ou·re still ralyied. wc•ve ot to top it before It happen •• To~ rds that end. Jacobsen id he's been howtna "Wipe Out." a docu-drama movie made this )'tar by Hoaa Memorial Ho tal in Ncwpon Beach that pell o"t the &rave conscquen of water iajurin. "It ahocks them with tacts and the only way to shock them is to scare them.•• he declared. He said he's hown 1hc f'ilm to thou nds of younasten and is now planning film forays into Ontario, Pomona and Claremont because m ny youn• res1dent1 of those com- mun1t1c1 have been injured recently. CHARGES FILED IN THREE DEATHS ••• -"\ From Al . . Muri>by's driver's li,cense was suspended in July when be WU convicted of drunken drivini in Ventura County. Ac:Cordin& to re- cords. she was stopped after a patrol-man observed her car weavi~ along a irural road. In that inetden~ Murphy's blo'od- cohol readina was 0.20 or double the legal limit, accordina to coun records. A Ventura County Judae suspended Muri>hv•s license with the provision that she eould operate a car retumina from a niaht of dancina onl~ when drivina to and ftom work. when the accident occurred. The jud&e also ordered the woman to Alt three of the women were enroll in an alcohol abuse proaram. prpnounced <Sead at the accident · scene, less than a mile west of Seal It is not clear why MurJ?bY was m Beach Boulevard on a stretch of the O~ County the momma of the coastal hiah~ where eiabt people accident .hJve died in auto accidents an less The bead-on crash took the lives of than three years. Deborah Lee Slemmons, 20; Diane The two miles of hi&hway is Mae Druckrey, 21; and Dawn Joy unli&bted and without a center Utterback. 18. All were Capistrano ·diviaer. Valley Hi~ School araduatcs and The state ·plans to improve the lonatime friends who rcponedly were roadway in early 1986. FERRARO STUMPS IN COUNTY ••• From Al mmuruty groups at 9 a.m. Frida~ in the Laborer's lntemationaJ Union Hall in Santa Ana. From Santa Ana, Ferraro is sched- uled to fly to New York. accordina to campa~ aides responsible for her scheduling. UCJ security officials arc expcctina • no trouble from the anti-abortion protestcn or the pro-Ferraro aroup. Both groups have been told their pickeUnJ must be limited to an area about 120 feet non.h and south of the University Club, UCI police Chief Mike Michell said. . The two aroups will be kept separated but both will "be hi&hly visible to those attendina and the media," Michell explained. "We want to let people make their state- ment." Michell said representatives of the anti-abon1on &roup informed him they are expecting between 200 and SOO people, while Mondale-Ferraro forces predicted about 25 people will demonstrate. In addition, the pro-life group has been aiven a permit to hold a rally on Gateway Plaza, on the other side of the campus from where Ferraro will be appearinJ. "We've discussed with both aroupa the ~ctcrs of aood behavior, .. the oohce chief added. Pii;AR WAYNE TO MARRY JUDGE ••• Prom Al . for the Daily Pilot, said a large reception is planned immediately after the small ceremony. Two lo- cations 1n Newport are beina-d· cussed for the reception, accordina to Link Mathewson, a friend of Wayne's who will address the invitauons for the weddinJ. Newport Beach florist XaVler vis- ited Mrs. Wayne's home Wednesday ni&ht to discuss the floral arranJe- ments he will provide for the weddan& and the reception. He said prdcllias, stephanotis and lillics will be used in the arranae- ments, in red and white. "Those arc colors that arc very becoming to the lady that's aettina mamed," he saJd. Mn. Wayne has not yet selected a dress to wear for the ceremony, Xavier said, but plans to shop at Amen Wardy's exclusive Fashion Island dress shop for an outfit. Xavier said Mrs. Wayne has been flooded with caJls from well wishers and curious friends and acquaint· ances since Monday, when Stewart proposed. Stewar ... who lost aTCCent17idfone- elcction to the judae's bench to Deputy District Attorney Suzanne Shaw, is SO. Mn. Way.ne, who recently celebrated a birthday, is reponed to be about 48. The couple beaan couning about six months aao. They share a love for tennis and both are described as "family-oriented people." Mrs. Wayne said Stewart presented her wjth a dozen red roses to fO alona with his proposal. She visited his family in Claremont Tuesday. "Th.en we celebrated Wednesday witb an elcpnt luncheon at the Newporttr's La PaJme 1'estaura.nt," sbe said Betty Porter, a friend and neiahbor of Mn. Wayne•s, said datina was a rare oocurenoc for Mrs. Wayne after John Wayne's death. More recently, however, she has appeared publicly with several eliJible bachelors. · "There was a contractor, there was nmntnm>, there was a whole slewor men," Poner was qupted as S(}'lQI. •• ... When Judge Stewart came alona. I said to Pilar, 'What abOut this jud1e? He is really something. You better latch onto him.' " Mn. Wayne,: a former actress who has been Calitomia ambassad~ for UNICEF, was born in Peru and met John Warne in the Amazon River junale in 952 where she was filmina "Green Hell." She was his third wife. They separated in 1973, six years before Warne's 1979 death from cancer. Mrs. Wayne has been married twice and has three children, Marisa, l 8J. Aissa, 26, and Ethan, 22. ;)tewart, married once previously, has two children, Andrea, 12, and Matthew, 10. The judge had been an acquaintance of the actor Wayne. CITIES PONDER LAWS ON 'SEERS' ••• From Al prepare zoning ordanances and rcau- lations in case the state court drops the hatchet on local bans. "We're just not taking any chances ofbcina caught without a code," said Huntington Beach City Clerk Alicia Wentworth. The flurry of action by local cities was caused by a leial battle between the Spintual Psychic Science Church of Truth, Inc. and the city of Azusa. The state Supreme Court has agreed to hear the case, however, a court date for oral arguments has not been set. accordtng to a spokeswoman for Azusa City Attorney Peter Thorson. Newport Beach, Costa Mesa. Fountain Valley, Laguna Beach and Irvine all have prohibitions aaainst businesses that offer so-called psychic services for sale. Huntinaton Beach hfted ats ban m June but imposed the moratonum, in the wake of a lawsuit agamst the etty filed by a Gypsy mother and her dau&}lter Fountain Valley and lrvane arc con11nuin1 to impose their anti- fortunetclhng ordinances. And the Laguna Beach City Council voted an July to file a court bnef in support of Azusa's prohibition. The ban was declared unconst1tu- t1onal by the Second District Ap- pe~te Court in Los An1eles. fotcmg Just Call 642-6086 Azusa lo tile an appeal with the highest coun an the state. "If it wasn't for that (appellate) court rulina, we wouldn't be con- cerned with any moritorium," said Costa Mesa City Attorney Tom Wood, addina that without local control, self-proclaimed for- tunetellers could set up a crystal ball and start doina business in their homes. Most of the local bans against fortunetellina were established amid concern that many of these services could be frauds. In fact, the protubmon was imon& the first laws passed by the city of Irvine afterit incorporated in 197 l. But practitioners of the ancient an of astrology believe they are beina penalized for the misdeeds of a few. "There's fraud in any business," said Faye Daniels. a S~year-old astrologist an Anaheim "I think you ought to 'et nd of the law and let us practJcc.' Althou&h Anaheim aJso {>TObibits fortunetellana-type businesses. Daniels is allowed to practice astroloay under the auise of entenain- ment, she said. "If you say )'ou•re an astroloaist, you're banned. But if you say 'it's for entertainment purposes' it's all nght." said Darucls. Fortunetelling for pay is aJso ille.-1 in San Juan Capistrano. But the caty amended ats ordinance to allow horoscope-charting, said local astrologist Judy Zintl. "It's all labeled 'fonunetellin~· 1 don't even know what fonunetellina means. Most ethical practioners don't tell the future as an inevitable fact," said Zintl. "The best way to control these things is to license them so they can come out in the open." That's what the ci'fy:"of La Habra did. For a rearly municipal fee of S 1,000. loca seers can peer into the future unhampered by prohibition laws. "Local police have not reported one (complaint) to me in 14 the years that I've been here," said La Habra City Manaaer Lee Risner. For 17 years, Barney and Rose Todorovich have operated Barney's Card and Palm Readini in La Habra. Their two sons also operate similar businesses in town. "I think people have the naht to freedom of speech. We're law-abiding people," said Todorovich. "There's no witches or bats flying around here." He quipped, "It's not as if my wife can tell you to ao to Las Veaas and bet on number seven -if she could, who'd work for a hvang?" What do yoa llke about tbe Dally Pilot? Wbat doa't you like? Call tbe number at left and your meau1e wlll be recorded, transcribed and deUvert4 to Uae appropriate edJtor. Tile same U-boar an1werln1 service may be used to record letters to tbe editor oa aay topic. Contributors to our Letters column must taclude tbelr name ud telephone number for verification. No circulation calls, please .. Tell us what'• on your mlnd. · Dally Piiot Dellvery fi ORANGE COAST Clreulatlon 714/142-4333 ClanHled advertltlng 714/M2-A71 All other dep•rtment• 142-4321 It Guaranteed ~J rrl08y I y(!u dO "°' hlY9 y1'11' ~' tr. !130P m be'OI• ~II m ana YolJ< •(!(!"y ,.,. ~ 90 Daily Pilat H. L Schwartz Ill Publisher Aoaemary Churchman Control! r Stephen F. Carazo Production Manag r ' Donald L. Wllltam1 C1~cu1a11on Manag r MAIN OFFICE J30 W"1 lay I 00&11 t.ltu CA I.la• aaorns Be• 1660 Colt•.,._ CA 11616 (;Qpyf!gl!I 191l 0rat1QI Coall p~ ~"' n..., "°''" Mlrafo()(ll 94:1~0'\AI ,,,.II,, or Ov..-tllfl 1t>9,,.. ,......, n>ty be r9'JfOCM:t4 * 11\0Ut lt>fCltl .,.i Of toPttiQl't Cl'" .. oO _. CO.ta l.lftl C. l(Jmll iC:IO'I "' " ~ 16 lllOllll'\IV VOL n, HO. 284 • • .. 11 Coastal fog to m~ke a comeback Coutal. Tides TOOA'f 8-ldlOw 12 11 P.t!I u l9"0!ICI 1'11;11 O:otp.11\. .. . "'IDAY ,., llOw 121•"' 02 ~low I 10a In 4.S 1 otom 24 lecondlllQI\ 704om 10 •un "'' today 11 I .A p 111, rlMt l"rlCI•~ 11 t 40 a m 1no "" IGflll 11 I t 1 p.111.. - Moon Ml._IOC11y .i 4 17 O "'•"''-l"flclay1t2 241111 lllCIMllllgAll\11104 p.m. lklll lurilngton, Vt. Cuper Chltleelon.S.C c11.,._1on.wv Cll&rlOU•,N C Clle)oenM Cf'dtaOO ClndMatl ~ Colut!\Oi'S C Colll<llbua °" c-dNH o.a..l't WorOI Temperatmea e=Moinel LA = 41 EPuo 11 62 40 56 ea .. ., 13 .. , 13 " Eztended 90 N .. 16 '° l3 ., .. . ,, 17 .. ll.:: ,, 71 7t to ,, .. .... t1 II IO M lot 12 11 t1 ,100 " ,. " 1• ... • '° H ... 14 •I ., .. , u .. , 71 4 ... to II U ,. 70 IO a .. .. ·tt 11 ... to .. 11 ,. 12 .. u .. 11 .... S1 = :J 17 11 .. . . ... .. n 11 .. 65 n " 11 ... Flreflghten hold blaze to 20 acres Ora~e County\ fireftthter weta down thlclr. anonbt. Four penona, lncla~ a L09 bra•ti in Wllll&m• Canyoo where a blue ~elea Tlinea reporter, •afferid heat apread acrou 20 acrea of uninhabited eshautlon or other minor hdartea. terrain Wedne9day. The fire, which waa were treated at Chapman -lioepltal contained in two boun, la blamed on an oranie. The fire wu never cloee to hom Osnu~RIES Tallmantz Aviation chief Frank Pirie, 65, succumbs By KAREN E. KLEIN Of "" Olly Piiot ttllff Frank · Pinc, the president of Tallmanu Aviation of Newport Beach and the man who dtd the aenal photography for Disneyland's long- running film attraction," America the Beautiful," died Wednesday at Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach. He was 66. Mr. Pine flew camera planes both for films and for airplane manufac- turers durina h.is 25-year career with Paul Manu, one of the co-founders of Tallmanu, based at John Wayne Airport He began working for Manu, as an actor and .stunt pilot, in I 9S9 after he had worked for the forestry depan- ment as a firc-f!Ahting pilot. He CoNTINUEU S10R 1£s worked has way up at Tallmantz from pilot to chief pilot and then to 1eneral manager. When Frank Tallman died seven years ago, Mr. Pine was elected president of the com pan)'. He was born Nov. 5, 1917; on has family's ranch and truck tann in Chino, Calif. His natural love of flying led him into the aviation industry at an early age. His in-flight photography, particu- larly some darina runs he flew through narrow canyons, can still be seen at Walt Disney World and EPCOT Center in Florida. He flew across the U.S. for Walt Disney Productions to film "America the Beautiful," a Circle Vision 360-dearce film that closed last year after decades of showings, at Disneyland. He also did extensive photography for calendar an and brochures for BJri>lane companies. Mr. Pine was stncken ill unex- pectedly Tuesday evenin.a u he played golf and died of circulatory system failure several hours later, accordina to a family spokesman. . He is survived by his wife, Manha, of Newport Beach, and three chil· dren, Douglas, of Chino; Shelley, of Chino; and Dixie Villasenor, of Mountain View, Calif. He is also survived by three brothers, Walter Pinc, of Alta Loma; Donald R. Pine, of Hacienda HeiJbu; and Edward Pinc, of Chino; and two listers, Luan Dietrich, of Ontario; and Lillian Munset, of Chino. Funeral arranaements are pendini. FORGERY SUSPECTS ARRESTED •.• Prom Al complex scam for rcctivina cash refunds on stolen proptrty by altenng computer-coded price ta~ and re- ceipts. Fullerton Detective Jack Petruzzelli, who is spearheading the invcstiption in Otan1e County, said the ei&ht to \~member rina has hit major department stores in Hunt- inaton Besch, Co ta Mesa. Fullerton, Oaiden Grove and Orange durin_1 the pa~t few month The foraery in Costa Mesa anvolved items tolen from a J.C. Pcnne store in J..aauna Hills. Costa Mesa Officer John Phemn id the suspttts were allcgeldy try1n1 Clarification • c. to obtain a cash refund on the dresses by usina a complex scam indentified in recent fo~ne . Pherrin said a h1gh-pnccd item is stolen from the tore and the U.& is chanaed to show a lower price. Tha1 taa is then placed on an inexpen,ive item. such as a pair of sock$ or underwear. He explainC'd lhe item is then purchased and the computer-cOdCd tag is saanned by the cuh rcaistcr. The receipt for the merchandise \\Ill br 1 ut'd. shoW1ng the pnCC paid but also Ii tina the code number and the name of the ona1nal item. "The airl (chcder) doesn't catch 1hat because she doc n't read the receipt," id Phcmn. Th TCCC pt i then altered baC'k to the price Of the on_ginal ltem and taken, along with the h1g.h·pnced mcrchandt ' ror ('a h refund. Oerks at lhe Costa Mesa store had given Selbya$330.'72 rtfund Monday for ucms that ere later disoovcttd to be to1en. Oonsequcnlly, they were s·u1p1c1ous when Selby am~td Wcdnc d mandang a h refund an other ncm J)(lhet said. ii The suspects were to .cu tody this morninJ_-a_t Orange County Jail m lieu of SI 0,000 baa I apiece. HOLDUP ••• From Al Boulevard and Gufteld Avenue. The aunman, dressed in a blue and white Aawaiian $hin and blue jeans. walked mto the tore shonly before 6 p.m. Wcdnesda)', brandi haf\l a five. anch handaun. He demanded the clerk ope.Jl the register. he tried to compl y but couldn't because she ,be<'.ame so O(rvous .she foraot the procedures. accordina to Sav-On'a Assistant ManaRcr Oary Mcilroy. ' The bandit kept his cool and tned has own hand, tumina the key to the rc11 ter. But it didn't open bcCause he didn't lcnow the other p~ures., Mc11ro)' id. After 1he gunman left. Mcllroy - in the company of a cu tomcr who jn hnc behind ttie bandit -went out 1dc the ~rkma lot. lookina for him • . • . . . '• •• . ·: . . • . • . . . • . • .. •: . : ,.. . . . • • • • • • • I • f 1111 flTlll l••~I ,'.\\ ,.'t~,lbt••. ·~. (J t• AN ( ' [ \,_ ''-l L ~ T ) ', A I I :___' '. ,... i A. • -L. l ~~ • Pilar Wayne wlllmarry local judge Pilar Wayne, lonatimc New- port Beach resident and the widow ofattor John w,.rne, will wed Harbor Municipa Court Judge Stephen C. Stewan in a private ceremony at her home in Dover Shores Oct. 6. ··ue•s a bandsome1 charming ano delia,htful man who shares many .of my intcrc1ts, in- cl u din a a passion for ten· nis," Mrs. Wayne said. Mn. Wayne, who writes a weekly ••Petsonal Style" column (Pl-oee Pll.AR/A2) Coast Dally Pilot photographers win honors at the Forest Lawn Presa Photogra· phers Competition./ A3 Two women political can- didates will be hosted at a champag·ne reception Saturday./A7 ::;:::--:;m:=r«::.::>::x-:--:::::::::;:;.,.;:;:=::::.m:;:: California San Diego Mayor Roger Hedgecock says Indict- ment won't hurt his re- election chances./ M Nation Economic growth slows to3.6percent.IM Special prosecutor sees no violations In Edwin Meese Investigation./ AB Ko:::~s::::~;:::~~::;:;,;_..;..;:::.;:,:m~;;; Llvinl Whatlslnthesealedtube that the artist Christo has donated to the "Tubular Art" auction In Laguna Beach?/81 .. Divorcees discover de- lusions when they re- enter the slngle's scene and work force.181 Sports Kansas City Royals pitch- er Dan Quisenberry, for- merly of Costa Mesa High and Orange Coast Col- lege, ls a leading can- didate for the Cy Young Award./C1 Corona del Mar High opens delE1nse of Its Sea View League water polo title with a win over Laguna Beach./C2 Entertainment Does CBS have another "MASH" In ··e.R?" It's the top-rated TV show of the week./113 Baalneaa Marie Gray has received -Dawn magazine's 'Or- ange County Woman or Achievement' award./85 INDEX Erma Boml>eek Bridge Bultetln Board Buolness Collloml•- CIUollled · Comk:o Crouword DMthNoi- H.ipYou,_ Horoocopo Ann Lander• Uvtng Mutual Funds Nallonal Hewe Opinion ~= PubllC Notlcet Spona Stock Marhta T-lolorl ThMtoro WMlher World- • B2 84 A3 85 .... C5-7 JM . C7 C4 82 ce 82 81-2 85 .... A9 81 A3 C4-6 C1-3 ee 82 83 A2 .... • • ' u .1c1 ecomman • 1 s2 . . ass Born -laden van runs hatl ·o u lets to reach U.S. post In east Beirut - BEi.RUT, Lebanon (AP) - A van filled with explosives and driven by a suicide commando ran a bail of sunfireand blew up today. yard from the U.S. Embassy annex outside cast Beirut, severely daRl:IPng the bui1d- ina and rcportodly tilUng 23 people. The U.S. State Department said two Americans were among the dead. . Lebanese" military sourttS pu.t the total number of casualties .tt 23 dmd and 60 wounded, but could DOI •Y bow many wett American and tM>w many were Lcbancte. At tbe blul scene, officials supervising the retCUC rcponed two Amcrians were killed and 21 wounded. (l'laM-l:ZPL011101'/A2) Surf hazards underscored ' in Newport 30 swimmers hit by spinal injuries so far this year Of .. .a..,,... ... _ About 30 swimmers have suffered Spinal injllrics in Newpon Beath th.is year, mostly while runni.Dg and diving into shallow waler but also white body surfing, Marine Safety OllcfKen Jacobsen said today. or the injuries, six or seven ~ believed to be victims who have sulfcn:d broken necks and varyina &:oms of paraJy.is, Jacoboen ta>d. 1bc injury count -mostly affect· ingathlcticmalcs in their late tecns- is up from last year. J.:obsen sunnues, mainly because marine safety. cxpcr1S who ~e. ~ IO beiq more yjplant in reporti.na. the CUCL The number of incidents is believed about the same as the procoodina~. iaoo0sen· said. .. We don't take the sli&b-leSl chance, .. Jacoblcn said ... lf someone comes to tbc lifquard toWer com- plaining •bout their fit!Ft' -we put them in an cxtrw:MW (si)iaal 1"--811JU/A2) Motorist charged in Seal Beach • smashup deaths 87 STEVE MARBLE Murphy bas been at Fountain °' .. .,..,,...... ValJcy Community Hospital siDoe A 25-year-old woman who was the coUision but was to be moved ~v.iou.sly co~victcd of .drunken today to ·5· iJ ward •l ua McdicaJ driving has bc:cD charged With man-<:enter in wbc:re she will bt sla!lfhtcr, felony drunken driviOJand--bcld on SI .SO bail dOV1ng with a suspended driver's The woma~ has ~n cbaracd with license in a head-on traffic collision three counts of vehicular man.. that killed three Mission Viejo slaUfhter, felony drunken drivina. women. driving on a suspended driver's llarlneauantmotlonilawayphotooaphen at lllte ol U.S. Embauy umez upTo.ron In tbe Cbrladan Eut Beirut area today. A Kym Lamcll Murphy of Oxnard JicenliC and an additional count of was the only person to survive the operatiOJ a car with a blood-aJooboi cartr.-momina ~ Sept. 10 on content1ncxccssofO.IO. ~~ ~fi.c Coast -Hi&hway norm An artaignmcnt date has not been poup called •1Ialamtc Jihad'' ctelmed Hunu_ngto~ Beach. _ . stl raponalblllty for tile blut whlcb may Poha: saKI the woman was dnv101 A focld sobriety test condDCt..iafttt ba"e kllled 23ipeople. • on the wrona Side of the road at the the accident in Seal Beach revealed Molesters use guile instead of violence 'I wouldn't hurt these children ... I love them' By RICHARDT. PIENCIAK ,,llTClds•"'-..... The child molester rarely uses violence. The last thin& he or she wants is an unwillina victim . What the molester docs want is a child who can be icduccd, tricked, and if need be, blackmailed into a sexual relationship. · EDITOR'S NOTE-Child sexual abuse remains • mystery to many people, in part because lhey are unfamiliar with bow molesters oper- ate. This second installment of a five- part sen·es describes how molesters seduce their victims. "The sun rises and sets with the child,,. said police.Sgt. Joscp'h Polisar of Albuquerque, N.M. ""These guys spend hours winning the love and affection ofa child. Some pedophiles will take a year to swoon a child ... The sexual molestation of Amcti· , (Pl-• MOLl:STl:RS/A3) Coast's cities may discover theyca~livewith 'seers' Orance Coast c1tte1 don't have a Cl')'lital bell to foresee the outcome of 1 state Su~mc Cour1 case challenaina 1hc 1blllt)' of local &<>\lcmmcnu to bin so-called fon.unctelJina busi· ncsscs. Conacquct\tly, some local cities arc reconsidcrina their prohibitions apinst businesses thatchaf'IC fees for fonunetclhna. ealmistry, • lrolo&Y, ind other 'ps;yc:htt tcrvtCCS. This week, C'otll Mesa became: the l11t:st Onihac Coe t City to announce ToNv SAAVEDRA Fo cus ON THE NEl~s that ii may repeal its proh1b1tion on fonunetclhn1 bu51nc scs. Hunt- ' 11\&ton Beach withdrew tts IS.year· old ban 1n June and Newport Beach 1s also recon 1dcnn111s ordinance. ap.. proved in 1969. Me1nwh1~. thc C10Cs have Mlopced urvncy measures Immediately ptac.. ina moratonums on fonuncklhna bu11nesscs until officials can f11urc out"'''htrt to 1llow the tef'Vtett and how to rtaulatc them The frectt WQukl act hkt a safety net 11\'1na the "('l(tCI tomt time to (Pl--CITIU/Aa) • time of the accident. (Pleue .ee CIL\aGS8/ A2) Pickets to greet Ferraro in county Democratic vice presidential can· by campaica appearances in Irvine didate Ge"ldine Ferraro will be and Newport Beach toniaht and grecl.Cd by a now-familiar siabt when Santa Ana Friday momma, she arrives in Onnec County for a Fcnaro is scheduled to speak at a two-day campaip stopover today-1~-pcnon fundraiser spontond anti-abortion pickets. by the Democratic Vi~ Fund pf But the New York congresswoman, On.nae County at UC lrv1ne's Uni· thcfirs1womanevertobenamedby1 vcrsity Oubat 5 p.m. before movin& m~or pany to the national ticket., on to a private $1,000-.plate fuft.. alsowillbcablctospotsomefriendly draisina dinner at Democratic"°" faces in the cro't\'d of protcSten. Both tivisl Howard sw,d's ~ the local chapters of the Allilnce tor &:.ch borne. Survival and the National Organiz.a. After stayina ovetniaht at Cona tion of Women are ask:ina members Mesa's Westin South Coast Plaza lO tum out in apport of FerTarO. Ho&cl. Ferrato is IChcduled to address Ferraro's visit will be hiahli&hlcd (Pleueeeena&AllO/AS) ,, LB council buys5,000 wrenches By DAVID BISBOP --The d ty oft.acuna lkaclt ..... u .. into the book aoa hardwatt; b\wiaea The aty wtll soon own S.000 wrenches uJCd for tum1na off mtural ps vah·cs ia rcs.dc.ntial homes aod ~ 10.000 bookJcu OD wbat to do tft U cm.,...ttcy. ouncil men'!bcrs autboriud pwdwc of the items Tucoday nW(lt l"--LAOOl'IA/AS) I • .... Coastal f ogto make a comeback "We'"c had ~n pmal in.turic this year. L:ast year we had 6 spjnal il\iurics-and 5even in Auau\t alone. "l don' know if it' a coincidence or 1fthc be ch &snow acttin back to half.way nor~a1.•• . D't\mall said man) of last year's injuries arc blamed on the "Severe wmter storms of 1983 that formed sand bars where they had .never been and chanacd trou.&h and water con- ditions. D'Arrutll 1d he belie,. .. that lot of media tuft'' pro bl)' h m de bea ocnawiuc of the pitfl lb of the Pacific and has hclprji to hold down 111.JunCS Jacobsen. who's been watching over marine safey in Ncwi>ort Beach for 27 yrars, id a fl tor le ding to the injuries is the con tant &hif\ina of the ocean floor. "l went surlin1 at :S o'clock ta 1 ni&ht and J couldn't tell you wbat the conditions arc today,·· he declared Jacobsen said the injuries usuall) oocur when the victim's head hats the ocean bottom and stops but the body continues movinJ ahead. .. lt (neck injuncs) is such a de tating accident.." Jacobsen id. si hfi u rds, be t m and i ho piw. But If you ha'e a broken neck, you're still rulyzed. We've got to top it before n h ppcn •• Toward that end/. Jacobsen said he's been howin Wipe Out,'' a docu-drama movie made this yC'ar by Hoag Memorial Ho9lital in Newport Be ch. lhat pclls out the sravc con~quencl"S of water iajurics. .. It shock' them with facts and the only way to hock thtm i$ to scare· them:• he declared. He said he's shown tht film to thou nds of )Oungstcn and is now planning film forays into Ontario, Pomona and Clarcmeont bC'cau<1e man~ )OUng residents of those com- mun111es have been injured recently. LAGUNA TOSSES IN WRENCH ••. From A l as ~rt of an effort to prepare every resident in the city for a natural disaster. The materials cost $14,675 and were purchased despite City Manaaer Ken Frank's wanuna that sales of more than a thousand of the $1.50 boOks would be "incredible." The wrenches, which will sell for $3, are used to tum off the flow of natural ps in a home. Council members, .however, id making money on the program is not their goal. Getting the materials distributed throughout the communi- ty is, Councilman Robert Gentry said. Franlc suqested that costs mi&ht be cut by reducing the order of booklets. But Councilwoman Bobbie Minkin aocused him of .. starting to interfere with tl\e intent of the program with squirrelly marketing ideas. l want to see this ao ahead," she said. The city's committee on Emerg- ency Preparedness recommended the proiram and chairman Harry Hua- gins claimed $17,SOO can be made throu&h sale of the boolclcts and wrencbes to the oublic. Council members rejected Frank's recommendation to defer the project to next year's budget. PILAR WAYNE TO MARRY JUDGE ... From Al for the Dady Pilot, said a tar&c rcc:cption is planned 1mmed1ately after the small ceremony. Two I~ cations in Newport arc being dis- cussed for the reception, accordma to Linlc Mathewson, a friend of Wayne's who will address the mv1tations for the weddiDJ. Newport Beach florist Xavier vis- tted Mrs. Wayne's home Wednesday night to discuss the floral arr&nJe· men ts he will provide forthe weddmg and the rcc:cplton. He said gardenias, stephanotis and hllics will be used tn the arrange- ments, in red and white. "Those are colors that arc very becomina to the lady that's getting married," he said. Mrs. Wayne has not yet selected a dress to wear for the ceremony, Xavier said, but plans to shop at Amen Wardy's exclusive Fashion Island dress shop for an outfit. Xavier said Mrs. Wayne bas been flooded with calls from well wishers and curious friends and acquaint- ances since Monday, when Stewart proposed. Stewart, who lost a recent bid for re- election to the judge's bench to Deputy District Attorney Suzanne Shaw, is SO. Mrs. Wayne, who recently celebrated a birtbday, is reported to be about 48. The couple beon courtmg about six months ago. They share a love for tennis and bOth are described as ..fami!¥-onented people." Mrs. Wayne said Stewart presented her with a dozen red roses to so along with his proposal. She viSJtcd his family in Oaremont Tuesday. "Then we celebrated Wednesday with an elegant luncheon at the Ncwportcr's La ~e Restaurant," she said. Betty Porter, a friend and neighbor of Mrs. Wayne's. said dating was a rare occurance for Mrs. Wayne after John Wayne's death. More ~ntly, however. she has appeared publicly with several chgible bachelors. "There was a contractor, there was a tennis pro, there was a whole slew of men," Porter was quoted as saying. " . When J udgc Stewart came along. I said to Pilar. 'What about this ju<igc? He is really something. You better latch onto him.' " Mrs. Wayne, a former actress who has been California ambassador for UNICEF. was born m Peru and met John Wayne m the Amazon River ~un&]c m 1952 where she was filming 'Green Hell." She was his third wife. They separated in 1973, six years before Wayne's 1979 death from cancer. Mrs. Wayne b.as been mamed twice and has three children. Marisa, 18 Alssa. 26. and Ethan, 22. Stewart. married once prcviou ly. has two children. Andrea, I 2, and Matthew, 10. The judge had been an acquaintance of the actor Wayne. ' CHARGES FILED IN THREE DEATHS ••• Prom Al that Murphy had a blood-alcohol content of 0. I I , accordma to traffic mve5tigators. State law presumes a dnver to be intoxicated at 0.10. Murphy's dnver's hccnsc was suspended in July when she was convicted of drunken dnving m Ventura County. According to re- cords, she WllS stopped after a patrol- man observed her car weaving aJong a rural road. A Ventura County j udge suspended Murphy's lJcensc with the provision that she could operate a car only when dnving to and from work. The judge also ordered the woman to enroll man alcohol abuse program. It is not clear why Murphy was m Orange County the morning of the accident. returning from a night of dancing when the accident occurred All three of the women were pronounced dead at the accident scene, less than a mile west of ~aJ Beach Boulevard on a stretch of the coastal highway where eight people have died m auto accidents m less than three years. Co tal Tidea TODAY etcOfldlow 1111 PA 30 88COl'd high • 1:09 p.m u l'M)AY Rntio-l:H•na. 02 ~'°"' I IOani 43 I Olpnl 24 ~Ngll 104 pm eo Sun IOlt loClay W'I ~J p m • O.. l'tloey el I 40 a m and MIUgllft 911 61 '"' Moon-· loelay ., 4 17 p"'. rba 'rtcs.111124• m •!111 ... ugainatS 04 pm Temperatures Extended , 70 51 ... 44 IO &Cl 41 48 6l ~ to 42 64 44 ... .65 54 57 81 60 58 17 77 -7t 71 12 •11 12 n 11 71 76 85 n .. -.. 83 to to .. 41 " 43 '° ... to 14 17 •17 77 41 75 66 171 :70 ~ 65 02 ... 61 74 l::r:-~ UIMlllMG'! ~ M'*"81Plllll HulMlle New<>ltMM ""Ven Natf!* v. ~<:111 Ott.Mo Ptllrn 8p<1ngl Phllld.iphla ~ ":::::t " .~ • "°'!land Ot Pra-•109nelt ::t'cirt Mno ~ ~IO l1LOIM It "91 .. Tlf'llP9 1-"LMi•Clty auMtonaO htloteoo Sen l'rl1!CllCO a.n "'*'·"' A. 8tS..Marte s.t1le ~ lpok-~-TOC>tl!• lUCIOft 'TlllU W~on WICN'• Wilk•&eut ~o. ,,. 76 u 17 ., '° •• 11 71 1f to ,, " " H ,, •• l= .. n n 17 106 71 , . ... 16 ... .. '° 711 " 14 41 " 4f a 47 7t ... ... '° a ea 71 70 to 93 .. .. .. 11 .. to 16 71 78 62 . .. ti .. ., .. 11 to ., .. 60 11 12 .. • ... 51 11 51 .. 16 1i 16 75 54 In that incident. Murphy's blood- alcohol reading was 0.20 or double the legal limit, according to court records. The head-on crash took the hves of Deborah Lee Slemmons, 20; Diane Mae Druckrey, 2J; and Dawn Joy Utterback, 18. AJ1 were Capistrano Valley High School graduates and longllme friends who reportedly were The two miles of highway is unlighted and without a center divider Firefighter s hold blaze to 20 acres Orange County firefl&h ter w eta down tblck anonlst. Pour penona, inclu~ a LOii bru•li ln William• Canyon where a blaze Ana el ea Times reporter. •offered heat The state plans to improve the roadway in early 1986. · apread acrou 20 acres of unlnbablted ezbauation or other minor bUurle.. All CITIES PONDER LAWS ON 'SEERS' ••. terrain Wednesday. The fire, which wu · were treated at Chapman Boepltal in contained lo · two hour•. I• blamed on an Ora~e. The fire waa ne•er cloee to homea. Prom Al I OBITUARIES ~r--::_ ------11;-· prepare zonma ordinances and regu- lations m case the state court drops the hatchet on local bans. "We'rCJUSt not taking any chances of being caught without a code," said Huntington Beath Ctt> Clerk Alicia Wentworth The flurry of acuon by local c1ues was caused by a lc$3J battle between the Spintual Psychic Science Church of Truth. Inc and the city of Azusa Azusa to tile an appeal with the highest court in the state. "If 11 wasn't for that (appellattj. court ruling, we wouldn't be con- cerned with any moratorium," said Costa Mesa City Attorney Tom Wood, adding that without local control. self-proclaimed for- tunetellers could set up a crystal baU and start doing busmess in their homes. Fortunetelling for pay is also 1lleea1 m San Juan Capistrano. But the cit) amended its ordinance to allow horoscopc-charhng, said local astrologist Judy Zintl. "It's all labeled 'fortunetelling..' 1 don't even know what fortunctclhng means. Most ethical pract1oners don't tell the future as an inevitable fact," said Zand ... T~e best way to Tallmantz Aviation chief Frank Pine, 65, succumbs The state Supreme Court has agreed to hear the case. ho~cvcr, a court date for oral arguments has not been set, according to a spokeswoman for Azusa Caty Attorney Peter Thorson. New rt Beach. Costa Mesa. Fountain Valley, Laguna Beach and lrvine all have prohibitions against businesses that offer so-called psychic services for sale Huntington Beach lifted its ban 1n June but imposed the moratonum, in the walce of a lawsuit against the city filed by a Gypsy mother and her daughter Fountain Valley and lrv1oc are con11numg to impose their anti- fortunetclhng ordinances. And the Laguna Beach Cny Council voted m July to file a court bnef m support of Azusa's proh1b1t1on Most of the local bans against fortunetelling were established amid concern that many of these services could be frauds. In fact, the prohibition was among the first laws passed by the city of Irvine after it incorporated in 1971 . But practitioners of the ancient art of astrology believe they are being penalized for the misdeeds of a few. "There's fraud in any business," said Faye Daniels. a .SO-year-old astrologist in Anaheim. "I think you ought to Jet rid of the law and let us practice.' Although Anaheim also prohibits fortunctclhna·typc businesses, Damels 1s alJo~ to practice astrology under the su1sc of entertain- ment, she said. • control these things is to license them By KAREN E. KLEIN so they can come out in the open." °' 111e o.., ""'°' .._.. That's what the city of La Habra Frank Pinc. the president of dad. For a yearly municipal fee qf Tallmant1 A viat1on of Newpon S 1,000. local seers can peer into the Beach and the man who did the aerial future unhampered by prohib1t1on photOi(aphy for Disner,land's long- laws. running film attraction. 'America the "Local pohcc have not reported Beautiful," died Wednesday at Hoag one (complaint) to me in 14 the years Mcmonal Hospital 1n Newport that I've been here," said La Habra Beach. He was 66. City Manager Lee Risner. Mr Pme flew camera planes both For 17 years, Barney and Rose for films and for airplane manufac- Todorovich have operated Barney's turcrs dunna his 2S·ycar career with Card and Palm Reading in La Habra. Paul Ma nu. one of the co-founders of Their two soru also operate similar Tallmantz. based at John Wayne businesses in town. Airport. "I think people have the right to He began working for Mantz, as an freedom of speech. We're law-abiding actor and stunt pilot. in 1959 after he people," wd Todorovich. "There's had worked for the forestry depart- no witches or bats flying around ment as a fire·filthtmg pilot. He here.·· He quipped, "h's not as if my wife • can tell you to 10 to las Veg.as and bet ' CONTINUED STORIES worked his way up at Tallmantz from pilot t~ chief pilot and then to general manager ... When Frank Tallman died seven years ago, Mr. Pine was elected president of the company. He was born Nov. S, 1917, on his family's ranch and truck farm m Chino, Calif. His natural love of flying led him into the 1v1at1on mdustry.at an early age. His in-flight photoaraphy, particu- larly some daring runs he flew through narrow canyons. can still be seen at Walt Disney World and EPCOT Center m Aonda. He flew across the U.S. for Walt Disney Productions to film "America the Btautiful," a Circle Vision 360-<lcgree film that closed last year after dcc~des of showings at Di!>neyland . He also dad extensive photography for calendar art and brochures for airplane companies. Mr. Pine was stricken ill unex- pectedly Tuesday evcnina as be played golf and died of circulatory system failure several hours later, according to a family spokesman. He is survived by bis wife, Martha, of Newport Beach, and three chil- dren. Douglas, of Chino; Shelley, of Chino; and Dixie Villasenor, of Mountain View, Calif. He is also survived by three brothcn, Walter Pinc, of Alta I...Om~l. Donald R. Pine: of Hacienda Heignts; and Edwaro Pme. of Chino; and two sistcn. Luan Dietrich. of Ontario; and Lillian Murisct, of Chino. Funeral arrangements arc pendin&- The ban was declared unconstttu- tional by the Second Dlstnct Ap- .pellatc Court m Los Angeles. forcing "If you say you're an astrologist, you're banned. But if you say 'it's for entertainment purposes' it's all nght." said Daniels. on number seven -if she could. who'd work for a living?" -= -= ""---=----= -=-------- Just Call 642-6086 Wbat do yoa llke about tbe Dally Pilot? Wlaat don't )'OU like? Call the number at left and )'our mesuae will be recorded, tran1crlbed and delivered to Ute appropriate editor. Tbe same t4·bdur an1wertn1 service may be uef'd to record letters to tbe editor on any topic Contributors to our Letter• colamn matt l.nelude their name u d telepbon number for verification. No circulation calla, please. Tell us what's oo your mind. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. L. Schwartz Ill Publrsher Ctrculetlon 7141142-4333 CIHtlfled edvertl.Sng 714/M2·5e71 All other dep1rtm nit 842-4321 MAIN OFFICE no wni e., 1 Colla Yna CA U.t •Odin Do• 15e0 Colla !HM CA °"6'f> Rotemary Churchman Controller Steph n F. Cerezo P-ro<:luct1on Mlir, g r Donald f.~ Cir cul Man ... FERRARO STUMPS IN COUNTY ••• Prom Al. communityaroupsat 9a.m. Fnda:yin the Laborer's International Union Hall in Santa Ana. From Santa Ana. Ferraro is ched- ulcd to fly to New York, according to ca.mP. 'J'l aide re pon ible for her scheduling. UC I 'lt'Cunty ofl1cials arc expccuna no trouble from the anti-abortion protestc1" or the pro.Ferraro aroup. Both gro have been told their p1ckct1ni " "mitcd to an area about 120fi·, orthandsouthofthe Univcr It> lub, UCI police Chief Mike Michell id. I he tY.O will be kept Clarification separated but both will "be highly visible to tho5e attending and the media," Michell explained. "We want to let people make their state- ment." Michell ~id rcpn·scntative of the anti-abortion group informed him they arc exprcting bctwttn 200 and SOO people, whil Mondale-Ferraro •V''-".> •"cdicteu ""'"" .. .1 ~v.,11: will demonstrate. In add1Cion. the pro-life Jl"Oup ha been pven a permit to hold a rally on Gateway Plaza, on the other side of the campus from where Ferraro will be appcarinJ. "We've discussed with botharoups the parnmctera of aood behavior," the pohce chief added. EXPLOSION IN BEIRUT ••. Prom Al ttmatcd the \.'In rricd 330 pounds of explos1H~s. American nd l...Cbancsc auard said they fired at the peed1n,a van today as It scraped throu&h concrete n11·vch1clc bamcrs on the roaa nex1 to the cmba sy annex. Bri tish ~)'· guards wauina ouuade the annex for: thtiramba adorsa1d they fired at lhc v•n .and hat H \.Cral tim( _Despite the -11unfire the vthiclt rolled to a spot directly in fron1 of the ma1n entrance to the 1Utn~ and c ..,, td 1