HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-09-24 - Orange Coast Pilot'
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MONDA V SEPT EMBER 24, 1984 0 n ANG f C 0 UN T Y (_ A l IF OR NI A :> c) C F N T S
Seven nearby residents
are suing Pacific
Amphitheatre owners
over noise fr.om rock con-
certa./ A3
The Dally Piiot asked
residents how they are
enjoying the end of their
children's summer va-
cation./ AS
California
West Hollywood gays and
renters want their own
clty./A4
Nation
President Reagan says
he's read)' for arms talks
· with Soviets./ A4
People say the strangest
things on their vanity
plates, If they can get
away with it./ AS
Soviet leader Chernenko
turns ?3 today./ A4
Thousands of residents
flee volcano eruption In
Phlllpplnes./ A4
Feature
Objetsd'art and prices
were eye-popping at the
Newport Harbor Art Mu-
seum's Antique Show
and Sale./81
Sa-n JoaqtJin route under fire . .
Newport. Irvine homeowners to protest
development fee plan, noise and smog
Freeway · just norlh of n Juan
Capistrano. ·
Homeowner groups from both
cities arc expected 10 protest the fee
plan and the noise and smqa prob-lems they say the freeway would
generate an residential areas alona the
proposed route.
By KAREN E. KLEIN
ud PlllL SNEIDERMAN
Ofltle0.-,'9ot ....
City council members in Irvine a[\d
Newport Beach th.js week will cdh-
sider a plan that would make de-
velopers help pay for construction of
the controversial San Jo!lQ_ujn Hills
Transportatiol\-C()mdor, a proposed
freeway that would connect the
Corona del Mar Freeway near John
Wayne Airport with the San Oiqo .
Advocates of the freeway say the
corridor is needed 10 relieve traffic
which would be atnerated in south
Driver aerloa8ly Injured
pltal where hU condldon wu deeciibed u
eertoaa. Police Mid tbe accldent occa.n'ed
around 8:20 a.m. &loac_ K~pm Boalerird
near11eaa Dri'~e. City ~tera bad to to
Orange County bY .cxtcnlive new The plan, develope3 ~()ranee
residential and comm~rdal develop-• CountyTranSponauon llUMIOft.
ment planned lhere. scheduled for ·cons.iderauon by the
The developer fee program is 10 be county Board of upemson Oct. 3.
considem:l t>Y the Newpon Beach The program,. called the Major
City O>uncif toniaht at 7:30··p.m. t Thoroughfare and Bri* Fee Pro-
City Hall, 3300 NC'WJ)On Blvd. gram, would require deve~ IO
lrviM City Count".il members will PlY for some of the cost of the
conSidcr the ~posccl freeway 11 a freeway. The amount they would,pay
mect.ina be&inni~!!;30 p.m. Tues-is determined ey how mucb traffiC
dayat 17200Jam Blvd. (PleueMCNB.IRVIN&/A2)
. . .
Crashes claim
6 over weekend
on county roads
Toll for the month
reaches 28 -and
there's a week to go
The September death toll on. Or-
ange County highways continued to
climb this.weekend as &ix people were
killed in traffic mishaps. Three of the
fatal crashes were blamed on wrong-
way drivers.
Two Marines stationed at El Toro
were killed Saturday wben their car.
traveling the wroug way on Pacific
Coast Hiahway outside Newport
Beach; slammed be.ad.on into a auto
driven by Vicki Sweet of Capistrano
Beach.
The woman. drhing in me COITCCl
lane, sustained serious internal JD·
j uries and reqWred emergency sur-
sery following tbe 6:30 p.m. accident
near Crystal C.Ove.
One of the Marines killed in the
crash was identified as Anthon)'
Walker. 27. The second man was not
named because relatives bad still n01 e
been notified of bis death. Officen
did not say which of the men was "
driving. ·
Donald Dean Lake. 29. of Tustin
was killed early Sundav on the San Di~ Freeway when tbCtruck he was
driV1Df spun out of control and
1li~~ on its top, according to the
CaMomia Highway Patrol.
(Pl-..eMerATAL8/A2)
Police probin
death of yout
at Irvine party
BiMVE MAllBL'E
.,. .. a..t' .....
The death of a teai-. boy found
unconJcious this weekend at a house
in lrvin.e wbeie a party was being hdd
is beina investigated by police and
coronor's deputies tOday.
The you~1dentifiedas Richard P.
DiSalvo, 11, of Irvine. was dis-
covered by friends Friday shortly
before midni&ht in the rear patio of a
rcsjdenceon.West Yale Loop. He was
pronoUnccd dead about an hour later
at Tustin Community Hospital.
policC said.
A coronor's deputy said it could be
a month before the laboratory tests to
establish the cause of Cleath are
completed.
The teen was in full cardiac and
rcspirato arrest wbeil be am\tcd
tbebospi&al~room. accord-
inJ to emerg.cncy room physician Dr. Michael Young. No further details of
the death were provided
Irvine police bad responded to the
address on noise complaints at least
once before an anonymous c.aller
telephoned police at 11 : 14 p.m. and
alerted them to the unconscious 17-
year-old. ,
The teen.ager was found on the
ground in a backyard patio. Police did
not say whether the~outh lived at the
address or whether there were any
adults present at the party.
Records indicate that two noise
complaints were filed with police
before the anonymous call was made.
No one was 1.JTCSteci
Jelfrer Friedman, 32. of C.ta 11 .. la
treated by racae workera who palle4 blm
from a tnlck that had Yeered olf Re1'JM>rt
B01ilnar4 th1a mornma and barreled bi to a
tree. P'rledman wu In •araery at 9:30 A.m.
today at Fountain ValleY Community Boa-pry Prteclman from tlle ~·· wrecJtaCe. .Udpolice. Sports
-~amsfoundaway~to---J-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
win In the National Foot-
ball League without Vince
. Ferragamo./C1
Look who's about to win
the National League East
flag. It's the Chicago
Cubs./C3
Entertainment
For the fourth straight
year, the bottom network
Is on top at the Emmy
Awards./83
Bualneu
Women In Sales helps
members develop their
careers./85
INDEX
Bridge
Bulletln Board
8u•l""8
California News
Ctualfled
Comtcs
Croaeword
Death Nottcea
F .. tur91
HorOICop4t
Ann L.andef'I
Mutual Fund•
N1tlonal NeWI
OpinlOn
Paparmt
Potlce Log
PubHc Notleel
Sportt
Stoett Market•
Tetevtllon
Theater•
WMtMr
Weddings
WorldNeWI
84
A3
85
A4
C5-7
~
C7
C4
81-2 ce
82 B5
A4
AS
81
A3
..C4-5
C1--4
88
B2
83
A2
82 ·A4
UCI students find
a new chancellor
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN ,
Of Vie DlllJ .... •td
Students are converging on UC
Irvine in record numbers this week
for the start of the fall quarter, finding
a new chancellor at the helm and
numerous construction projects
underway.
Today marked the begining of the
annual Academic Advising and
Orientation Week, better known on
campus as .. 0 Week." Students will
spend the week buying books, payina
.. late fees,'' consulting with advisers
and meeting representatives of
fraternities, sororities and other UCl
orpnizations.. Fall classes begin a
week from today.
The expected fall enrollment is
(Pleue Me STUDEKTS/ A2)
UCI psychiatrists
now will have maps
for mental journeys
A million-dollar device just ac-
quired by UC Irvine promises to
provide campus psychiatrists with a
newroadmapforthclivinghuman
brain. It will even tell campus
reseatthetsabOuta person's mental
· trafficpattcms.
This unit i! called the PET Scanner.
shon for Positron Em1ss1on Tomo-
a,rapby. It produces a color-keyed,
computer-enhanced video picture of
a pcl"10n'sbr.ainacfr\'it)'. Using the
famili&rrainb'ow pectn.im, the
bu iestarcasofbrain activity tum up
red and thcleastacaivcarc v1 1bJe an
violet .
Ofwhatu is color-coded
portra1tofone'sgrar matter?
"' Rcscarchcrut UCI bcheve the rET&anncr wall help them under·
tand v.1\i~h pans of th b n ore
rdated1opart1cularbchav10 • It
could hclpcampu PSY.Chtatri makemorcaccunuedlA no of
mental illn s uch
• . \
Focus ON TH£ N£~s
$1M fire
injures-
Shores
resident
• Three-year-old'sjoy ride.
not a joy for his parents
By V MARBL
OfDWOl8f .... ltt9ff
A ).year-old Irvine bo) wa ••tuck)
to ~ ali e•· toda} after he hopptd
into his parents' runnin_g car, put the
vthicle in gear and then barreltd
through a neighborhood greenbelt,
across a busy stttet and finally came
to a halt in a park more than two
blocks awa~" Poli~ u1rl rhr hnv whn "'" not
1denttfied,
knee. utTcrcd onl) kanncd
••tte wa upset, or cour$t'. and his
partDb were C\Cn more upset," ~td
oot P9h~ officer afier the early·
morning ride in the Cll)'s 'rurtlerock
commun1ty.
Officers ~id the family sedan was
parL:td at the curb in front of the
house on Southern Wood with the
enJine running. With the rest ,ol the
family st ndan ncarb), the loddler
ppartntly opened the car door and
got in, police id.
The father told pohcc he sa" his
youna n p yms with the electric
window control but did not become
concerned unttl he saw the ear star'l 10 move, officers reported.
Disney workers
vote today
The Monte Carlo. parked near the
top of a hill with wh•t was ~timated
to be a 6 percent grade. took off,
Police said the runaway car zipped
across a community greenbelt, ripped
out an above-gound water main,
veered up an embankment and then
began rolling down the street takin&
out trees as at went.
With the father chasing after it, the
car traveled two blocks before cross·
10$ busy Turtle Rock Onve, police
wd.
The vehicle slammed throu&)l a
wood fence and came to a stop in By tbe A.1ocJated Preas
The management of Disneyland
says it is "'delighted" tllat u01oni2ed
workers at the Anahe1m amusement
park decided to vote on a proposed
contract after turnioa down a pay
offer last week.
Disneyland spokesman Bob Roth
said management offered workers a
"substantially modified" proposal
from the three-year pay freeze
proposal rejected ScpL 17.
The park was operating normaJly
Sunday with a full work force .
The vote on the proposed contract
covering 1,844 employees was to be
conducted today at the Retail Clerks
Union Hall in Buena Park.
Union spokesman Michael
O'Rourke has said a two-thirds "no"
vote would constitute stnlce
authonzation.
Park officials have prepared for a
strike by trainioi non·union workers.
The unions we~ seeking a two-year
pact with annual pay raises of
between 3 and 8 perccmt.
The unions represent janitor~. riPe
operators, bakery and llotel workers.
among otllers.
Turtle Rock Community Park.· ··
The car was deemed a total lo s by
pohce.
Funeral services set ·r or crash victim, 13
V 1siting hours and a funeral sen ice
are scheduled thtS week for 13-)ear-
old Alisa 0 . Jones oflrvine, who died
Friday after being inJured in a traffic
accident.
Calling hours will be from 11 a.m.
to 8 p.m. Tuesday at MacOougal
Family Mortuary. 1610 E. lst Street.
Santa Ana.
A funeral service. open to the
public, will be held at 11 a.m.
Wednesday at Greater Zion Apos-
totic Church, S 12 E. Santa Ana Blvd.,
Santa Ana, with Elder Morris
Dulaney presiding.
Alisa is survived by her parents.
Carl Patrick Jones and Nettie Jones.
Her eight sisters and brothers are
Carol Anne Jones, Carl Gordon
Jones, Steven Cra11 Jones, Cynthia
Claudette Jones, Anthony Michael
Jones, Patrick Wayne Jones, Angela
Rene Jones and Christopher Noel
Jones.
Alisa was an ei&hth grade student at
Venado Middle School in Irvine. She
attended the Greater Zion Church in
Santa Ana and the Irvine Woods
<11lurch.
FATALS TOTAL 6 FOR WEEKEND ...
From Al
Patrolmen satd Lake's wife, wllo
survived the accident. said she had
warned her husband that the truck
was drifting off the roadway just
before the accident. She said he
straightened out the truck but that 1t
swerved into the center divider
minutes later, according to a CHP
spokeswoman.
Rebecca Lake. 31, was treated for
minor injuries at Fountain Valley
Community Hospital foJlowing the
12:30a.m. accident near the freeway's
junction with the Costa Mesa Free·
way.
A San Diego man was killed early
Sunday while driving the wrong way
on the Garden Grove Frccwa). the
CHP reported. Raul Villegas was
pronounced dead at UCJ Medical
Center in Orange.
ViUegas was was dnving west in the
eastbound fast lane when his vehicle
collided wt th 'a vehicle driven by Rex
R. Roberts of Orange. Roberts, 34,
was driving 1n the correct direction.
Robens was treated for minor tn·
JUrlCS.
Anthony David Molhca. 30. of
Buena Park died Sunday after his
motorcycle crashed into a pickup in a
shopping center parking lot, and
Russell Martin, 30, pf San Juan
Capistrano died when his vehicle
smashed into a disabled truck parked
on the southbound shoulder of the
Santa Ana Freeway south of 17tll
Street.
The weekend death toll brought to
28 the number of people killed an
highway smashes this month. Of·
ficcrs said the number of fataht1es
compares wtth 20 during the entire
month of September last year.
NB, IRVINE MULL FREEWAY PLAN •••
From Al
their developments would generate.
Benjamin Nolan, Newport's public
works director, S3Jd the OCfC CSU·
mates about SO percent of the traffic
on the new freeway would be gener·
ated by new development. In New·
port Beach, the majority of un·
developed land belongs to the Irvine
Co.
The proposed developer fee, based
on estimated traffic generated by the
new development. would range from
$650 per umt for multiple-dwelling
residential developments to SI , 120
for single.family homes.
For commercial property, the fees
would range from 371/J cents per
square foot for low traffic generators.
hke warellouses, to $3. 75 per square
foot for high traffic generators, like
l'Ctail centers.
Nolan said the cost of the proaram
would likely be passed on in the price
of a new homes lR the developments
that are assessed.
Nolan said he has recommended
that the Newport Beach City Council,
which has previously stated its sup-
port for the transportation comdor.
vote tonight to concur w1th the
county tllat the program is necessary.
He also recommends that the council
authonze the city staff to work wath
the county and other cities involved
in the program to resolve questions
regarding the implementation of the
program.
On Feb. 28. 1978. the Irvine
council voted unanimously to sup-
port the early construction of the San
Joaquin Hills Transportation Cor-
ridor. But only one member of that
council. Mayor David Sills, con-
tinues to serve on the city is governing
panel.
Another vote in favor of the
proposed freeway was approved by a
3-2 vote on Sept. 11, 1979. Sills again
voted in favor, but Larry Agran, who
continues to serve on the council.
voted against the motion.
Irvine's city staff has recommend·
ed the council take the follow101
actions Tuesday night:
•Express support for the San
Joaquin Hills, Eastern and Foothill
transportation corridors;
•Recognize that developer fees arc
needed to help pay for these high -
ways;
•Assert that the city will take an
active part in planning the new
highways:
• Authonze the mayor to rec·
ommeod to county supervison that
an intergovernmental agreement be
developed for sharing responsibility
for planning the proposed higbways.
STUDENTS FINDING CHANGES AT UCI •.•
From Al
12,SOO students, exceeding last year's
record by 600. The total includes
about 10,000 underaraduates and
2,SOO graduate and medical students.
UCI spokeswoman S~n Church
said because ofl~ited classroom and
lab space, UCI frethman enrollment
will be permitted to grow just 2.S to 3
percent annually through 1990. She
said the campus retention rate also 1s
increasing. with 71 percent of UCl's
freshmen returning after their fir11t
year. For the first tame in the school's
history. some fre hman history and
calculus classes will meet off<ampus
because of the lack oflarge lecture llall
space, Church said. UCI is renung
Jut;t Cilll
642-6086
Oaltr PUot
Dellvety
la Guarant..ct
daytime auditorium space for these
classes at the new Edwards Cinema
four.screen theater complex just
across Campus Drive.
The space problems and grow1 ng
research projects at UCI are respon-
sible for much of the campus con·
struction. Ei&)lt proJccts are under
way or scheduled to break ground this
school year.
These include a connected alumm
center and Umverstt-y-Exten &on
Building. the Nelson Research Fa-
cility. Beckman Laser Institute. a
facult y housina complex, research
centers for computer science and
engineering, the Donald Bren Eve nts
Center and a bndge connecting the
campus with the Town Center shop-
ping and dining area.
Taking office at UCT this fall is a
new chief administrator, Chancellor
Jack W. Peltason. He assumed has
Est following the retirement of
unding Chancellor Daniel G.
drich Jr:
This fall's UCI students will be
paying lower _fees than_thosc wlto
enrolled last fall. The new student fees a~ S44S • .SO per quai:ier for u.nderz
graduates. $461.SO per quarter for
graduate students. The current quar·
terly fees are $70 lower tllan the
charges last fall. Most students enroll
for tllrce quarters each year.
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Tell us •bat's on your mind.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
Circulation 714/M2-u33
Clnalfled advertlaJng 714/M2·5e71
AJI other department• 142-4321
; MAIN OFFICE '
H. L. Schwartz HI
Pubhshcr
Aoaemery Churchmen
Controll r
Stephen F. Carezo
Productton
Mana r
Donald L. Wllllame
C1rcu1at1on
Mang '
•
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CONTINUED STORIES
°"" ................... ......
Plre'1Jttedthlehomeat4601 Brighton RoadlDCameoShora,injuriqaresldent.
CDM BLAZE INJURES WOMAN .••
From Al I
winch witnesses said spread quickly
through the house.
Check estimated the fire caused
$500,000 damage to the structure of
, the house and $500,000 to tts con·
tents.
About 30 boats at sea spotted the
fire nd watched its progress as It
swept through the house, C~eek said.
One boater told fi.rcfigh~ he could
see the piano burning.
West, whose husband James was
hospitaliied Friday with a serious
illness, as napping when a loud
noise awoke her. She saw the fire and
had to t>urst through the flames to
escape the inferno. Neighbors treated
her bums until paramedics amved,
Cheek said. l
Sparks from the fire ignited several
spot fires on shingle roofs throu.lhout
the Cameo Shores neighborhood,
Cheek said, but all the fires were
extinguished before they did any
serious damage,
' 1--
BRAIN SCANNER AIDS PSYCHIATRISTS •••
From Al
electrical probe to stimulate specific
areas of the brain. The still-consc1ous
patient would tell doctors which part
ofhis body-a leg or finger, for
ex.ample-responded to this sumu-
lation. W1th such a probe, researchers
also found they could interefere with
certain thoughtprocesses~such as
those involved in speech.
This technique helped scientasts
determine which parts of the brain
govern specific body actions, butit
was less successful U\ illuminating
how the br:un guides a person's
emotions.
Other strides have been made
through the use of the more famiLiar
CAT Scanners. These are SO(>histi·
cated X·ray machines that d1fferen·
tiate between bone and brain matter.
But they can't tell the difference,
however. between vanous types of
soft tissue and can't detect brain
activity.
Brain act1v1tycan. however, be
monttoredby thcne.w..P.E.T Scanner.
and that will be tile focus of research
-etOCI. Nooth runivemiy'.r.l)epa
ment of Psychiatry has one oft he
innovative butc,pensivedeviccs.
UCI 1s not yet equipped to manu-
faC::ture the radioactive su13r that
must be i nJected to trigger the PET
Scanner images. That short-lived
isotope must be produced at U
Davis near Sacramento and flown
promf.tly to Oranae CQunty.
Sttl • PET Scanner advocates say ats
potential benefits justify the ex pen~
and the lo&istical problems.
"I think it'1oneofthemost
important new directions in psy·
ch1atry," say Dr. Monte
BuchSbaum, a UCI profe sor of
psychiatry who indministerins the
campus's fil'5t PET Scanner te t .
Buchs ump1nedextcns1 ... eex-
pcrienccwith a P6T Scannent the
National Institute of Mental Health
in &th sda, Md., where he worked
for 16yearsbcforccomin1to UClin
1982.
Or. William Bunncy Jr., i.:hair-
man ofU l'ulc rtmcnt of psy-
chiatry. wa once Buch um· bo
at the National Institute. Bunnc)
shared Ru h baum'scnthu in,m,
and the two pre d for c:~u1 111on of
a scanner at UCI. The m1lhon·dollar
dcvke"vasdelivcttd I tmonth. purchased~ ith a combination of
univcrsll~ and federal fund , plu
contnbuuon fr mthcpharm ·
c:cutt hndu U)', which nd to
bcncfil from PET nnerrcsc tch .
In recent tnten 1cw. RuC'h blum
described how a PET Scanner experi·
mentworks.
The tests required a special glucose
(sugar) solution that is .. taaged" with
a short·hved radioactive isotope. A
S 1.3 milhon device called a cyclotron
is needed to produce this substance,
fluorine· 18, but UC Irvine ha no
cyclotron. UC Davis's Crocker Nu:
clear Lab does have one and has
agreed to produce the isotope for
UC l's PET Scanner.
The middle person in this long·
distance relationship is Lynn New·
ton, an aar racer with 18 years offlying
experience. Newton, a Newport
Beach resident, has agreed to fly the
radioactive substance, packed 1n a
heavy lead case, from UC Davis to
John Wayne Airport. It will then be
dnven quickly to UCJ, where PET
Scanner subjects will be waitina.
Dr. Monte Buchebaum
Tile rush 1s necessary because the
rad1oactavc isotope has a llalf·life of
approximately I IO minutes, meaning
half ofit is aone in that period. A test
fliahl took twol>oursand lS mmutcs~----,..,._ ..... ~---~~--__,...___--the drive to UCILookanottier 12 radiooctivity. Thus. areas with the
minutes. But the time was viewed as greatest conccntrattons of the taaacd
acceptable for the PET Scanner tests. ugar reajster most stron&Jy."The
Anadvantagetousangasub tancc computcr--cnhancedpictureranges
that deteriorates quickly is that it will from red to violet accord in& to the
pose no long-term radiation ha1tud to level ofbrnin activity.
the subject. accordin.s to Buchsbaum. Followana the example cited
The subJect of a PET Scanner earlier, the researcher will produce a
_experiment rCC'(avesan injection, and pictureshowin& which ~rt.softhe
the radioactive sugartravclstbrou&h brafo arc active and which re
the blood trcam, reach an& the brain • "rt1tint" while a reporter conducts
within 30 seconds. The brain is a his interview.
leading customer for supt, absorbing UCI rC!i,Ca re hers.. of course, have
it frotn the blood. However, the lofikrexperiments in mind.
special sugar used in this proc~dure i forunmple, an early campu
not broken down in the procc s. C'.ltpcriment will focus on people who
.. It Just sitsthcrcin the brain Jikea arebeina t~atcd for severe anxiety.
label, • Buchsl>aum sa) . With the PE'r Sc.anner, rtscarch rs
Af\erthc injection, theaubJCCt may will trytodctcnninewhm:an'.lttcty1s
pend 0 minutes cnpJC<S in some cente~d in the brain and how anti•
behavior the J)5ychiatnst ~ i1hcs to an'.ltiety dru.pafTcct thi area.
study. The part of the brain that The PCT Scanner has already
aovem this behaviorwoutd make the 'hown that schizophrenia victims hca~iest demand forthe taaged sugar. have pattern ofbrain activity that
Foreumple, ifthc,ul>jrct were differ from those of a "normal"
conductin a news mterv1cw, the peS'$0n. Schi.1ophn:nia is some tames a
• mo!t ac11vea~a ofh1s brain "ould d1flkult ailmentto dilJIU>sc-not
be tho tllatdirtct hand mo~cmcnt e~cl)oncwhocompla1nsofh1lluci·
(takin note ), theplannanaofque • nation h the disorder. With the
tionund memory. PET Scanner, psychiatri ts have 1
After lOminutcs. the ubJC\:t 1 tool tohclpd1a noscschi7ophrcnia
llraJ?pcd onto the PET Scanner table. and to tudy dru u~ an it
pl c1!"&h1 he d within circulir treatment.
opcn1na. Over a 4S·manute pcnod, Lons· nm plans call for use of
picture ofh1 brain-lice l1nch U r P.. nncranthe tudyof
tll1ck-areta en via th nncr· memory. The lr\'lnccampushasonc
eight hank of'.dcttttors. of'.thc n t on' lcadmaccntcrs for
The d lcctornn: n11u ... c10 mem ry reh.
-• 'I
]
...
Parents group
slates meeting
Parents hann-1 Custody, Inc., will conduct ill
monthly meelinJ on Tuesday, Sept. 25, from 7 10 8:4S
p.m.&..al the Tusun Pubhc Library, 3'4S E. Main St. ~obcn Woo, director of th ment and
P1yCbotherapy Center of Tustin will be ilhe featured
speaker:
.Reservations are required t)y lling the Orange County Chapter office at 493-4988. . . .. .
Pree aemlnar OD back pain set
DR. C.ary Rothenbera and Marcy McDowell \vill
Conduct a free seminar and workshop for those persons
sufferina beck J>4in, on Wcdnesaday, SCpt. 26, from 1 to
· 8:30 p.m., at Huntinaton &ach City Hall.
Exercise instruction will be presented and questions
answered. for reservations, call 536-2541.
Can.ervatlon brochures
.
UC decla.res
alien pupils
'out of state'
-AN FRANO 0 (AP)-Whale ~OW1n,g 10 change
the une'& pohcy, the University of C hfornla Board of
Regents declared undocumented lien tudcnts muSt pay
nearly $3,600 in out-of. talc tuition fees .
The board, an unanimous but reluctant move, vot
Friday to back the state attorney gcnctal's ruhng dcll..)iang
resident status to 111~1 itlicn Sludents.
Under the states policy. illegal hens who cannot
prove they are state residents must pay out-of-state tu1uon
fees. ncarlyS3,600ayearin addition to thc$1,300chatged
to California residents.
Both UCLA Chancellor Charle E. Young and
Berkeley Chancellor Michael A. Heyman told the board
that until the courts settle the mQtter, their campuses
would search for id for the handful of students affected by
the decision. ·
Five Latino students sued last wttk m Alameda
County Supenor'Court, claiming the pohcy violates their Brochures on savi~ water and a limited number of right to equal protection under the state cqnstituuon.
conservation.kits arc available from the Mesa Cosolidated Ttte tudents alleged that they have been residents of
Water District, which also provide water-use audits to its California for several ~cars, that their parents have paid •
customers. . • taxei. and that they hould be alldwcd to claim residency.
lhe brochures outline wa)" to ~n5erve ~ater as Los Angeles regent Sheldon w. Andelson said be
temperatures -an~ wa~ rates:-con~nue to nsc. upported the policy excluding 1lle8'll aliens f'or resident
Tbe conservation kits con tam dcVJces to reduce the , status to "focus" the is~ue '° that the court would ha,. e to
amount of water used in showers and toilets. settle the matter for all ~ment of h11hcr education in
.•
241 .......
Personal~c~ water audits are also offered free of California. ..
charae. The dastnct office can be reached at 63 l-1205. The university's legal counsel, Donald L Reidhaar,
FUilerton reunion scheduled
FuJJerton Union Hiah School Class of 1944 will bold
iu 40th reunion in the plaza of Vitia Del Sol (formerly the
old California Hotel) on Saturday, Oct. 13.
There will be a steak dinner and dancing under the
stars. To make reservations and to help the committee
locate missina classmates, ~11 Joyce MacCJocldin
Sullivan at S23-SSS1, Keith Earll at 777-3061, or Bob
Blurton at 536-3439. Memben of other Fullerton Union
cl.aua arc welcome.
said he disagrcei. with the attorney general's decision and
would argue against the policy when the case reaches trial.
The regents and California State University's board of
trustees were named as defendants.
"I'm very uncomfortable with this.•• said ~tudent
regent Fred Neil Gaines. "It's a rascist p0licy." .
J
Oul8 f ountaln decllcatlon
Newport Mayor E-.elyn Bart. left; lDea
Rowald, center, of the Oula 8enlor CeDtm;
and Ron Whitley, rtcht, Newport'• dlreetor
of parka and recreation, were on b&Dd
Satui"day for the dedication of a memorial
fountaba at the a.di llaltlJt1UP098 ....... Cltlsem Center ID COroDa . del :11ar. TM
foa.ntaba wu dedicated la ~·•
Wltb a birthday celelmatloll I• ~ ceater.
wblcb bu been operatlaf for •na ,.an.
' WE ASKED :
11.
Life-change claaeea slated
Laauna Beach Free Oin1c, 364 Ocean Ave., an-
nounces a class intended for those presently goina tbroutb
ianificant' life chanaei. The class will meet on six
contCCUtive Tuesday cvcninp beginning Sept 25. Pre-
rqistration is n::quimi.
'Now that school is back in session, what are
you doing with your fr_ee time?'
Seven suing
amphitheater
over racket
Women•s Support Group, an oqoing weekly group
for women copana with transitions and change in
relationships, family, career, life style, and personal
ar0Wth1 will meet every Thursday, from 7 Lo 9 p.m.
For information on the aforementioned programs,
·call 49~9429.
Blooclm.oblle ln Huntington
Faced with low supplies of blood, Pacifica Communi-
ty Hospital and the American Red Cross arc co-
aponsonna a bloodmobile on Wednesday, Sept 26.
The ~chicle will be at the hospital' a conference center
at 18819 ~laware St, Hu~tington Beach. Hours arc from
12:45 to ';30 p.m.
To make an appointment, caU M2-06J 1, extension
271.
Lakewood Blgh elates reunion
LakewOod Hi&h School Oass of 1959 will hold its
25th reunion on Saturday, Oct. 13, in the restaurant
aboard.the Princess Luiose at Berth 94 in the Port of 1..0s
Angele S&n Pedro. Social hour will begip at 6 p.m.
followed by dinner at 8. For more information, Chll (213)
425-1281. .
FllgJit a~enduiu to meet
TWA ClipPcd Winp extends an invitation to former
fliaht attendants to join the Oranse Coast Chapter.
The social. as well u philanthropic, organization
meets monthly for either a meetinf or social endeavor
supporting the club's intemationa charity. For tnore
iriformation, caU 786-3180 or S4S·l279. •
Monday, Sept. 24
• 9 a.m .. Oru&• Couty Tnuportation Commi11fon
, H&ll of Administration,· 10 CiV1c Center Plaza. Santa ADL . .
• 1 :30 p.m., Oraa1e Coaty P1a•tn1 C.mm.i11loa,
Hall of Administration, l 0 Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana.
• 6 p.m., lnble Rud Water District Board of
-l>k«ton, Disuict01!ice.J8802 Bardeen Ave., Irvine.
• 7:30 p.m., LQaa Beac~ Arla C.mmlsalo
Council Cbamben, SOS~oreat Ave.
• 7:30 p.m., lrvlH Tru1por1adoa CommJuloa. City
Council Cb.amben, 17200 Jamboree Road.
PoucE Loe
t
Cyatlalat>aley
1rvbae
RouewUe ..
"Well m) daughter (now
in school) . tiatcs to ao
shoppini, Now I'm getting
out and catching all the
sales and looking for thi~
for my~lf. You don t
know, it'u lot beuer for me
I'm getnng some time to
myself now."
Rivka Sbelcovll
Irvbte
Part-time Hebrew teacber
"I'm clcanina the house.
tiCang with my little one
(younger child), shopping
and stud)ing. And ... I'm
enjoying 1t very much."
Janet AM.ttws CtDJ Tanllf
lrvl.H Irvbae ·
Homemaker Bouewlfe-b11lae11-··wen, actuall) rm en-womu
jo)ing having lunch with-"Bclie,·e it or not. I'm
m~ daughter (younger helping out at hool. I
child). I've just been in the have my own busine5S, so
fabric store~ picking out I'm v.orking with that
something new for her." . more." .........,,._....~-~-r---e--
GbmyR.ud
lnrine
Homemuer-"tenols b11.D1"
••t play tennis. And rm
getting a chance to tram our
new puppy."
Sbron DoUtl
ButJ:qt Beacb
Shldeot .
··1 go to school.. I'm a
liberal arts major at Long
Be:ich State.·· • -
Mesa police capture three Co.talleu
Santa Ana holdup suspects
A trio of alleged robben escapco
with $269 from • Santa An.a fC$,
· t.aunant Sunday only to be cau$flt
rouahly 90 minutes later by a Coita
Mesa police officer who had heard a
deScription of the act.away car on a
police radio broadCast.
Jnmcs Cunnin&ham. 32, and bis
wife Jana, 29, bolh transients, were
bo6ked into Oranae CountJ Jail on
suspicion ofanned robbery. ana also
• was ctwaed with a narcotics -viol-
ation, 1.a.id Santa Ana Lt. Jack Nelson.
Also arrested on charp of armed
robbery was the man's sister, 26-year·
old Laurie Cunninah&m of Irvine.
The money wu not recovered.
Nelson said that the suspecu told
police they bad alrady spent it. ·~ey must have tiVed it up,"
Nelson said.
Police believe James Ounnin&ham
walked into the Skinny Haven res-
taurant at 3114 Bristol 1. around
1:30 p.m. and told \he CUhier that he
had a aun an his pocket. Nelson said the lutQeC\ wa1 actually prctendiq lO
bavea~pon.
Olftruqnam iook: the money and
to a waitina car, rcponedly
driven by Jana. She and laune were belJeved to be tctina u lookouts
dUrina the robbtry. •
· " Me.nwhile, people 11 a nearby tee
cream atore bad noticed lbe tno
"actina 1uap1e1ously" and wrote 4own the detcrip11on ofOtc car a well
u the lictntc plate number, aid
elton. The mformauon was broad ast
bound Corona I M r rtt\\ at
.l:S pm.
Utt n Uo pulled th
uth· nd m de th rrcst,
By TONY SAAVEDRA
CM .. 0.-, .......
Another suit bas been filed against the embattled
Pacific Amphitheatre in Costa Mesa. this time~ seven
neigbborin1 residents wbo are suin& theater owners over
the noise from rock concerts.
In the lawsuit. filed in Oranae County Superior Court.
residents arc askina for an unspecifled a.mount of general
damages and SI million in punitive darnq,es from Ned~
West Inc.
The action ths taken by Karen Millar, Jeanne M.
Brown. Frederick Bruno, Paul Field. Laurie Lusk, James
icho1' and Dennis Va.nSa.ndt.
Jacqoe'fl'Tuitev
lrvme , -
The bomeowocn contend they arc suflCring from
irritability, depression and streu because of the -cx-
ocuive .. noise from the outdoor arena.
It as the second lawsuit tiled bY homeowners over the
amplified music that they say s:pills into their ~
borhood every time a rock band ~Pat the 13.000-teat
amphitheater. Tbe city also has filed three separate
criminal complaints apinst eel-West for '-iolatioa aty
and county noise limits du.rioa t.brec summer cona:ns.
Btt•tJ COllS1llcu~mua
.,er
"We just added on to our·
house. so rm taking this
extra time to ..,orlc on the
redecorating. And I'm
"orking mOt"C." . Tht residents• initial lawsuit. filed b)• the Conccmcd
Citizens of Costa ~:,a~aou.ary. was aimed at'the ~ COunty Fai Which blCS part of iu ~to tbe amphilht'a&cr. r ·
That cue was rejected by a Superior Court judae.
Lik.ewiJe, a misdemeanor cbarse ~ by Costa -Wea
aplnst ampiaitbeatcr owntrS for violaq lhe oounty
noise ordioanoc was abo thrown out of court. Since t.bca.
the city bas revamped its own DOile ontinanoe -at least
twice in the put couple of months-and bas utcd it to file
two other complaints apia.st Ned-West
Both case5 have been postpOocd by Rarl>or Munici-
pal Court.Jlld&e Sellin Franklin, wbo asked the parties to
coriduci a Joint sound study. But that plan bit the roCkS
when the city and Ned-West couldn't 8ll'CC on when to ~n monitorina noise from the concerts.
The residents' latest lawsuit adds another strand to a
web oflit.iption th.at at least one municipial judge said will
take months to untana).c.
600 poana of pot Rl..ed J.a Ilea _
JouP~rict
Irvine
Motlter-llouewUe
Polioc actin& on a tip arrested a Costa Mesa man wbo
allcaedJy unloaded 500 pounds of nwiJu.aoa from a trUck
and carried the 6-foot tall bales anto bis apartment,
aut.boritics said.
Ten ~pound bales of marijuana tliat bad not )"Ct
been cleaDed of branches and 5tems were confiscated by
officers, who arrested Richard Brian LwJ:Wi, 25, Friday ni&ht at the apartment complex at 2300 Fairview Road.
"I'm catching ur on all
the good books, l'I neglect
my kids for a good book.
So. now it's a little easier." Luman, 111ho was f~ on bail ~~y. faces ctwce:s qf
transportinJ and possession of manJuana for sale, said Lt.
Leslie Hamson.
Her attack.er was dcscnbcd as
Caucasian, 5-10, with a medium
build. darlc hair and a full beard. He
reportedly ran up to her. t.a(ltlcd her
and tried to pull off her shirt. The two
struglcd until he ran on: she told
police. • • • :fh.ieYCS..uscd.a ~ttndl t fnr<:e the
front door\: nob of a home on the '400
block of Vista Suerte last . They
sto~ $5,000 worth of je'lo'dl') and
ransacked the home uten h~ly. ••• bout $1,700 worth of sihcrwart.
,JCWClry and cash was stolen o'er the
weekend from a home on the 200
block of Via Palermo. Th1c'o
twisted the front door lock 10 p in
cntl'). • • • .Bur&lai's smashed a al• ·door Sltunfay at Soulhmad Financial
Service, 3723 Birch St., and tole t•o
IBM !electric t)'peYITitcrs. The lo
was placed at 12.000. ••• door was forciCd open on the l 000
block of Ea t Balboa BoUlc,'l.rd over
the end and an apartment was
ran ed. o l :a ~ in
I.be btta-in.
fluencc of alcohol Sunday ni&ht and
released on S 1,500 bail. • • • James Wade Crocker. 20. was
arTtStcd for driving under the an-
fluenoe of alcohol Saturday in the
2100 block of Catalina Street and relea~ on S 1,500 bail. • • • Midwcl Andre Uspatd., 2S..
arrHted for driving under tho in-
fluence of alcoliol Ciffy tiffiliy
rooming on South Coast Highv.-a)· at
liso Beach He was rdcascd on
S t.SOO bail. ••• 49·)e&r-<>1d woman was robbed
an<S suuall) assaulted late Friday
ni&ht b.Y a naked man in a ockioa mas~ who confronted bercominae>ut
of the shower in bcr bom~ "Tbe
assailant apparently cut a~ wilh
a hand tool to &et into the ~ Sat. Grq Bartz of the Laiuna &aeh
pohcc department said. He ~ed·
ly forced the woman onto a bed Where
he forced the woman to et1~ :in oral
copulation. The man was dcscribc6
only as being in hi 20s with a
medium build. Tbe victim •u taken
to ulh C edi<:l1 G ter where
be was lr't'ated and released, Butt
id.
.. Orange Cout DAIL:Y PILOT/Monday, Sept.mber 24. 1884
Reagan
eady
for talks
on arms
Urges •roa map'
for better relations
over two decades
UNITED NATIONS (AP) -
~dent Reagan, dcclarinJ he is
ready for•'constructive ncaot1ations ..
with the Soviet Union, today
proJ)Osed rciular. meetinp between
SCNor upens from the two sides to
~uce tensions and the threat of war.
.. We recognize that there i$ no san~
alternative to negotiations on arms
control and other issues between our
two nations," Rcapn said in a
prepared speech to the U.N. General
Assembly.
He said these experts and other,
senior U.S. and Soviet officials could
set as their goal a "road map" to auide
relauons between the two super-
powers over the next 20 years.
"We need to eJttend the arms
control process, to build a biaaer
umbrella under which it can oper-
ate," R~n said.
Ugliest of the ugly
NATION
U.S. students score below
norm in mathematics tests
By Uie AHOdat re1
CHICAGO -acar national aoals for mathematics education miet
improve U.S. high sehool students' math abilny, says an author of a study ht
found U.S. &tudents scoring below the intemauonal av~ra~ m math tests. e
Second International Mathernatacs tUd)' of2l COUO!nes fou.nd test ~res rr
Amencan ci&hth· and 12th.graders "fell below. th~ mtematu~nal ~ed!~n n every area," said John Dossey, a professor at Ilhnolt Slate University. If wt
hlld the luxury of more time for mathemat1~1 and. had .icleady estab1~f14'
national aoal1 for secondllt)' math courses, I thank r.~tuuc•is1,r(.~~ e o
t>euer penorinances," Dossey ~1d Snnda)'. P.Pe ary resu ta rt •
May showed U.S. lltti·gradc stod~n\S receive~ 0 hours.a Y~ in
&nstruction le s than the average 1n other countnes at the senior b1ah 6Chool
level. The findings of the tests conducted durina the 1981-82 school year were
to bo offic1ally presented to-inath educators ioda)' tprouJh Wed~1 at. a
mathematics instruction conference at the Umvenaty of llhno11 an
Champaign.
BfJlrut Victim•' service today
DOVER AIR FORCE BASE, Del. - A .service ~s scheduled today fot
two American servicemen killed in the terronst bombma of the U.S. Embas~
· • · annex in Lebanon. The bodies of Army Chief Warrant Officer Kenn~th .
Welch 33 of Grand Rapids. Mich., and Navy Petty Officer ht Oass Michael
' Ray Waii\er 30 of Zebulon N.C.. arrived at Uus Air Forte base aboard a
C-141 transP<>n~plane at 6:S3 p.m. SaturdayJ said Airman ht Class Scott
Elliott Welch and Wagner both embassy staff members, were amona at least
nine People killed ThursdAy when an explosives-packed van blew up 20 feet
from the emba sy annex in a Beirut suburb.
Tazpayen pick up cral•e tab
The president, who once con-
demned the Soviets as an "evil
empire," today said that; "while there
will still be clear differences, there is
every reason why we should do all
that is possible to shorten that
distance."
Brace lloqan. a .enlor at Ind••n• Unl•er·
alty of Pen.nayl•anla. la crowned 'Uf!!.eet Collefe 11aD In the United Statea• at a m
IDdl•n•, P&. Shown po.J.nc beatde the
eml11nJ. winner are Robin Gaylord, left and
Suaan ueante.
W ASHlNGTON -The State Department paid more than $400,000 in
two years for voyaaes, mostly aboard ocean liners in first-class ac~~mmo
dations for embassy employees who could have cut th~ pnce tag dra~ucally by
flying. Sen. William Proxmire, O.Wi1.1 uys. "When 1t comes to using ~ean
liner travel when air travel would be cheaper, the State Department reaulaUo~s
have about as much backbone as a jellyfish," Proxmire ~d Sunday in
presenting bis Golden Reece Award to the department. Proxmire bestows the
award once a month for what be considers a alarina example of wutina the
taxpayers' money.
Four tilled In Vegas shooting •pree
A senior U.S. official who de-
manded anonymity said one measure
Reagan had m mind is .to use the
recently improved .. hotline" between
Washiniton and Moscow to prevent
war by miscalculation;
.. America has repaired its
strenath:' Reagan said. "We have
invigorated our alliances and friend-
ships. We arc ready for constructive
negotiations with the Soviet Union."
U.S. ready to pai::ticipate -
in Lebanon ~egotiations
LAS VEGAS, Nev. -Four people, ipcluding a ~ominent ~alite an~ a
jeweler, were shot to death early Sunday man exclusive area of this pmbhna
capitil in what police termed a 0 murder-suicide;" Metropolitan Police U .
John Conner said the bodies of Alex Egyed, 49; his wife, Vif1ioia El)'~. ~5;
Betty Difiore. S2, and Jack Levy, 66, were found ~t. the. home m the e_xclusave Rancho Circle area where many Us V cgas celebnties hve. Conner wd Egyed
apparently shot the' two women inside the house, then shot Levy in a car in.the
dnveway. EJYed apparently ret~ed to the hou~ and turned the wea~n on
himself, pohce said. AJJ of the vtctlms were shot m the bead, Conner wd.
In a major step in that direction, UNITED NATIONS (AP) -
Reapn will meet at the White House President Reagan, denouncing the
for three or four h(>urs Friday with "despicable act of barbarism" in the
Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. attack..lasLweek on the U.S. embassy
Gromyko. in Beirut, hinted today that the
As for further meetinp between United States was ready to begin a
officials of the two sides. Reagan said ne~ ~ound of diplomacy aimed at
such regular sessions could be con-b~ging peace to ~ban~n.
ducted between Cabinet-level officers All of Lebanon s friends should
and other top officials .. on the whole w_ork to&e.~er to bt:lP . end this
a,genda of issues before us including rughtmarc, Reagan said m remarks
tlie problem of needless obstacles to . pre1?3red for deli.very to . the 39th understanding... · session of the United Nations Gen-
He said such talks could consider eral Assembly.
exchanges of weapons-development ~eaga.n, ~owever, stop~d short of
and arms-purchase plans. saymg ~1rectly that the Um~e~ States
Reagan also said ways should be was going to respond po.s1t1vely to
found by next spftng to have Soviet pleas by Israel for assistance m
and U.S. observers at each other•s pulling Israeli troops out of Lebanon.
nuclear test sites. ~tary of State George P. Shultz
The president called for ncgo-had .~1d S1;1nday that although the
tiations to begin m Vienna by early adn11ru~trat1on had left Lebanon
J98S on ways to prevent the mih-alone since the collapse of the U.S.-
tarization of space. brokered 1983 troop withdrawal
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entlon Thia Ad And Receive 1~.4 Discount
~ment, the ti me might be right for another round.
Assistant Secretary of State Rich-
ard Murphy rePortedlf met today in
Damascus with Synan President
Hafez Assad after meeting with
Lebanon's prime minister, Rashid Karam~ over the weekend. Sy_ria
torpedoed a 1983 accord for pulling
all foreign troops out of Lebanon.
Reagan said today that the u.s.-·
brolceied 1983 aareernent. .. if im-
plemented, could have led to the full
withdrawal of Israeli forces in the
cont.ext of the withdrawal of all
foreign forces."
.. The tragedy of Lebanon has not
ended," he said. "Only last week. a
despicable act of barbarism by some
who arc unfit to associate with
humankind reminded us once again
that Lebanon continues to suffer.
W. H<ill-yw.ood gays,
renters .pushing
for their own city
CALIFORNIA
Tozlc acid leak at Hughes Airport
LOS ANGELES -At least 3,000 &allons of a toxic acid mixture leaked
from a tank at Hughes Airport early today, but there were no injuries and no
need for ev cuation, authorities said. The mixture of sulfuric and chromic
acids and am sum bisulfide was reported spilling from the tank about 2:S8
a.m .. said a coun ftrefiahter who identified himself as H. Carranza. "There's
a hole in the botto of the tank and it•s Jeakina two to three gallons a minute,"
be said. "It's unde ootrol, no vapor spillina anyplace.•• The county'• · I
hazardous matenals uad set up temporary dikes to prevent the acids from
running off into sewers n the airfield at Centinela A venue and Teal Street in
•West Los Anaeles, he said.
Van Nuyt1 p_lckets to remaln
LOS ANGELES -Pickets will remain at least through Saturday outside
the General Motors assembly plant in Van Nuys, de$pite a back-to-work
request from the United Auto Workers national union. The 4,200.member
UAW Local 645 was scheduled to resume talks today after breaking off
Saturday, spokcsmanLuisF.i:cgoso said Sunday. Local645 is the only unitin
the nation still picketing since Friday's tentative aarecmeot between the UAW
and GM on a national contract. Even iflocal issues were decided today, Local ·
WEST HOLL YWOOO -Thia residents are children, the 645 was not planning to return to work until after its leaden travel to St. Louis
colorful two..equere-mtte dlltrlot Census ShoW$d. on Wednesday to get details of the national pact and then return to brief Local
eandwlched t>etwieen Beverly Ttie cityhoOd oppotltlon -645 members Saturday.
Hiiia and Los .a.~ ta rtllaina principally landowners Who fear
hopes for a~-Cametotr. the posSiblllty of new, her~ rent · Fasblon pbotog Randall dead
steeped ln rent• Proteetloril as control -haa kept a tow, ff not LA JOLLA -Fashion photographer Roben Randall. whose work was
ft contemplatea beeomlng a city lnvtalble, proflte foUowlng Initial published in Seventeen, Good Housekeepiq and Cosmopolitan mapzines,
In November balloting. complaJnts that the Idea needed. died at University Hospital, bjs family said. Randall, who tauaht fashion
The 3&,000 residents of the more study. photoaraphy at the University of CaJifomia-Irvine and Orange Coast CoUeae,
area -home of the Sunaet Strip West HollywOOd Is a pOtyglot was 6S when he died Wednesday. At the beg.inning of his career, Randall spent
and a Warner Broe. movie lot. as mix of commercial buHdlnga seven years in Paris working for the French edition of Voaue. He bad done
weft ae numerous gay dube, smaU t>Ungalow-style homes and freelan~e wor~ in recent years and wrote "Fashion Photography, a Guide for
record companies, entertainers new condomlnlume. btendlng the Begmner.
and agents -Wiii vote on chfo and traditional etyJee.
whether to Incorporate their Cltyhood ad'/ocates aay they Chevy Sprint charts mlleage win .
community at a city. · · want a local government clOser
Pulhlng for cttyhoOd la a to home, one that It more
dlverM amance"'of Weat Holly-reaponalve than the downtown
wood'• largest lnt•est groups: county BOard of SupeMIOrl to
gay ~pkt, 'Who by most estt-critical tSIU99 euch as traffic, land
mates comprise aomewhere UM and parking problema.
=====:::c:::::S.;;;:i:1c:::::::::;;;:::zz;:=:::s:::ic======::::;:=:~=:::::;1 around one third of the popu-TtteY want to enaure that the latton, tenantt. who comprised county'• rent controt law, tcMd-
88 pel'.cent of the reikfente In the uled to begin a year-tong phue-
1980 Census; arid seniors, 22.S out In January, fa replaced by
SAN FRANCISCO -The 198S Chevrolet Sprint topped the list for best
mileage among new cars sold in California, aocording to the Environmental
Protection Agency. The mini-subcompact. with the only three-cylinder engine
offered in the Uruted States, recorded 47 miles per gallon in EPA tests, making
it the best-mileage 1985 car sold under an American nameplate. The car, also
sold as the Pontiac Firefly, is a Japanese made Suzuki SA310. Nissan's Sentra
Diesel ranked second among cars sold in Califomi~ also estimated at 46 mpa
in EPA tests, according to ftaurcs released Sunday. In compact can, the four-
cylinder Toyota CorolJa Diesel ranked the hi&hest with 38 mP& in the
California list1 and the lsll!u small pickup truck, at 31 mP& received top ratings for small truckl.
A superb paint job ... only $320!
Sttin9 it btlkvino ... come in anil 1tt thuart just p4intt1I by
Blegtinz. Compa•·t ou,. IJunlity with othn7 th11t colt mulh more.
EllAtO•ts even sml'Nlk111 dt11r top co11t liltt tlJt expensive imf!rtl.
Tlit Ekg•nts fHlint job is'"' '""4Cin.tl val1H at S3RO-but ifyt1u bringjn.,.t~t t1111pon btlow J0"8'' an 111"'itw1111/ $60 ojf1
lf/20.'Vf.WPORT BOUU :VARJ>, COSTA MliSA (~/4) .'>48-'7710
percent. Only 8 percent of the new tenant protections. tr-=:.;;;;;;~==-=~---=--==-==....-i Aging bridge brought dolVD la SF
DON'T IUST GO THROUGH IT -MENLO PARK -Witb a crash into the San Francisco Bay, tbe center GR 011' TUR 0 UGH IT! span of the Dumbarton Bridge ended $7 years of service as the tint structure to
,
reach aero s the shallow waters; While tourists lined the shores and helicopters Divooce SEMINAR circled overhead, the 22S-foot dtawbridae section of the st.eel bridge on Sunday
was blasted with dynamite planted by state Depanment of Transponation FOR DIVORCED engineers. Tht explo~ion had been set for TburSday, but was rescheduled AND SEPARATED ...s.cvcraltimes by demolitionn.pcas. ____ ---~-,--.~ Reco"9Y·--=---~-PERSO:JE~F All,
Workshop
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Sept. 27 -Nov. I
7:30 -9:30 p.m.
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Across from Newport Hubor Hlth. $20 Rec&stratlon
WoRLo
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'New' Red Sea mme ezamJned
CAIRO. E&Ypt -British minc-hunten have confirmed beyond doubt
that the object tliey found submerged in the Gulf of Suu two weeks aao was a
mine and have lifted its instrumentation section from ~ water for
eumination, a British Embassy source said today. "I am sure this will help us
a great deal with our invC1dption," the source told The Astociat.ed ~s.
suggesting that the exan1ination miaht provide clues about the make and On&ln
of the explosive. A French Embassy official, mtanwhilel 11jd French mine-l~====mlll!!;SE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!;!!!!!!!!;!=;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;H hunter opera tin& where the Gu1f of Suez meets the main oooy of lhc Red Sea
tiave detonated l O mines da~ to the l 97 J Anb-lsraeli war and not linked to
For more Information. call 631-2885 9-S Mon·Frl.
Get thin • •
And atay that way,
tor each other.
•
Together we can make it happen.
CALL DIET CENTER ~FOR A FREE OONBULTATION
241-1570
Under New 0111rshlp
recent expl05ions that dam at least 19 ahipa since July 9. ·
Soviet'• CJaemeal'o tarn• 73 .f0da7
MOSOOW -Konstantin U. ChtrMnko, the oldest man ever to become
leader of the Soviet Umoa, turned 73 10day ,after bema awaroed anoth~r
prcst.i&ious medal for.lft'VICIC to :the Communist Party. An Order 'Of Lenin
mc&l was bestowed ~poa Cbernenko tbroup a dee~ from the presidium of
the Supreme Sov:1et, the sta~ntrolled media ttponcd. Ocspue the front·
pqe and top-of-broadcast tttetment afTordtd the mtdal announoements. the
media repons did not mention that today was Chernenko's binhdly. ..
TlloaNnb fJee PlillJppl.ne YOJcaao
· MANlt.A, Pbihppinea -Crowdina int_o_·privat.e cars, duml>1tuet1 and·
cans pulled by water butralo, an additional 5,000 evKUttt pouted &DIO the aty
ofl.4i1Pi fOtlowi na 1 newmaption ofMayon Volcano. R6d Qouolfttiab and
wtlntsSCS Uld today. Officials Uld the total 11UIJlbtr Oeriftl from &be aM
clouds, nowint lava and neatly ron1unt rumbhna or the ltlOC).fooMllah
mountain thlt ibCjan p ~ 9 had exceedtd "30,000. SOJne hid bePft ao ntum
when the tron t c1'p1o ion 11ncc Mayon taned eruptU'I blMaed unolll ud
a h mne mllc 1nto the air unday. The blowup came afttr a wen of'decfini111
ac11~1ly.
,.
.
u~
California DllV chief cen.ar Ja1 M.artln wtth penonallzed
llcen.e plates that recel•ecl her nod.
DMV' s chief censor
deletes dirty plates
Inspector turns down
250 questionable -
plates per month
LOS ANGELES (AP) -In a state
where one in 10 drivers has a
personalized license plate, Jay Martin
is a big wheel.
Martin, 53, is chief censor of vanity
• license plates for the Department of
Motor Vehicles. Armed with Yiddish
and Spanish dictionaries and the
California Penal Code he rejects l
percent of the 150,000 applications
submitted each year as beina of·
fensive, mislcadiria.ot in pt,or wte.
foreign language dictionaries. One
plate that got throuah bare a Spanish
word that meant "wind from the
bowels," Martin saicl
A public complaint led the OMV to
send the car owner a letter of recall,
rcquiri11g him to five up the plate or
request an administrative bearing.
About 30 other plates have been
revoked because of public complaint
in the five years Martin has managed
the unit. she said.
She said onJy two drivers appealed,
both unsuccessfully. One had a plate
with a Yiddish obscenity and the
other's plate read 288A, which is the
state Penal Code number for a sexual
offense .
Soldier s Of F ortune:
They're idealistic ·-
but ce~t!linly not ,;·ch
'I had one uy .. .looklngJor bl bucks.
I .told hi~ to sit home an~ drink his eer' ...
·LAS VEGAS, 'Nev. (AP) -For "That would put u oh haky ground
those sclf-stfled mercenaries who with the neutrality t."' dream of hithna it rich while fi&hting About 1,000 of the magazme·s
communists in Central and "South devotees-m ny c:on pmous on the
America, Dale Dre hau few words of casmo floor in thesr camouflage
advice -forset 1t. • uniforms -are ttendina the fifth .. I had one auy who called the other annual Soldiers of Fonune convcir
day lookina to fight for big bucks," tion.
!lid O)·e, executive editor of Soldier
of fortune map.zinc .... told him to
it home and dnnk his beer instead."
Dye said Central America govern-
ments and guerilla forces -panicu·
larly the S<><allcd contras in
Nicarqua -don't ba'<c.. enough
·money to ouifit their own forces.
much less pay American mercenaries
to fi&ht on their side. ·
"In Nicaragua theydon'teven have
enouah to pay for boots to carry on
their own missions," he said.
"There's just no . money in being a
mercenary these days."
Still, Dye and others behind the
Sohders of Fonune magazine say
they have no problems backing any
would-be soldiers or guerillas who
want to go to Nicaragua or El
Salvador orany other country to fight
against communism.
Earlier this month, two of those
soldiers who belonged to an Alabama
para-military group, were killed when
the helicopter they were using to
attack a military training school
crashed in north~nt:ral Nicaragua.
, .. You set a lot orguys who believe
so stron&ly in an ideal that they would
offer their services to fiaht for it.'' he
said. "An enormous amount of those
. guys who just believe the liberal wina
of Congress is not allowina the
president to accomplish liis goals in
Central America."
The effort to help the contras in
Nicaragua and the El Salvador gov-
ernment was clearly visible at the
annual Soldiers ofFortune meeting at
the Sahara Hotel, where booths and
displays promotini the various ·
causes were in prominent display.
Dye said his magazine sponsors an
El Salvador-Nicaragua "relief fund"
that ships supphes such as boots and
unfonns to the El Salvador govern·
ment and also to the COl)tras through
the government of Honduras.
"We don't send any ~s because
that is illegal," he quickly added.
ad many of the (Onvcn·
t1on arc Vietnam \letcran ho
simply liked mear combat ex·
penenot$ and want 10 rcli 11 1hcm
while otbctl are roc01bers of P.Qhcc or
para•m1litaty organmuons in Olc1r
hometowns. •.
' ··we ilso have guys Who are JU t
Walter Mitty1ng a bttlc bit," ·he .
addtd,. ••They"rc )USt fans and they
Just like to be around lb11 kind of
thing."
_. .. Pd r-'-o
Let there be lllht' -
A atlllty worker ••kes hla
wa1 wp a u,lat pole at
Camarillo•• lt1o Meea ~
Scllool toadjat die HO• fCtr
the latp .ebool football
lleaeoDt DOW e:DterillC ID tlllrd week.
.. It still amazes me how tricky some
people can be," said Martin, a areat--------------------------1
aunt whose own personal license
The Great American
plate reads AUNTY J.
••Sometimes. you have to pro-
nounce the confiauration (of the
request) out loud, forwards and
ttackwatds, and then you say. 'Uh, ob;
that's what it means.' Somebody
walking by our office might be a little
shocked by the tanauage he beard."
She supervises a staff of 30 license
plate inspectors.
Once she accepted a urologist's
request for the plate CME2P, saying,
"I thou&ht it was kind of cute."
But sne turned down 4NIC8. The
applicant told her it was for a brother
named Nick who owned' an eight~
cylinder car.
"We told him that maybe Nick
should act a six-cylindet car," Martin
said.
••1 was shocked at first by some of
• the requests," said the parochial high
school graduate. "I'd say, 'Ob, wow!'
and I'd feel my face gettinJ a little red.
The sisters never taught me any
words like this. But after you've seen
so many, you 1et used to them."
The state's Environmental License
• Plate Proaram bcpn 14 years ago.
There are now l.3 million of the
f olsom Prison-made plates on the
road -more than in any other state.
In 1970, the most souaht-after plate
was PEACE. This year the most
.common requests include GO FOR
IT, IM A 10 and PORSCHE.
The less~mundane requests catch
Martin's eye, but some non-En&lisb
words can slip by, despite the help of
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--f
District voters
.need all the fact I . . on recall issue·
1 As Paul Harvey mil.ht say: Now, here's the rest of the story.
Three Huntington Beach school district trustees are facing
the threat of a recall because they have taken an unpo~ular
position in the case of former Marina High School Principal Paul
Berger. 1
· The trustees voted to accept Berger"s resignation knowing
'\hat the principal had been given an ultimatum by outgoing
Superintendent ofSchools Jake Abbott: Retire or be demoted to
classroom teacher. After 19 years with the district, the 61-year-
old Bergqr chose an early retirement.
Not all the parents, teachers and students who know ana
like Berger took it calmly. They pressured the five trustees, three
of whom ultimately voted to accept Berger's resignation. (All
five trustees concurred with Abbott's recommendation at firs(,
but two changed their positions.)
Berger supporters, outraged that their idea of the perfect
principal had .been treated so roughly, vowed to ~ust th~
majonty -Bnan Lake, Ron Marcus and Stephen Smith. The
recall is part disbelief and part vengeance upon those who would
dare to disregard their vocal protestations.
But why did Abbott force the principal out?
It's a sticky question. To ignore it, to allow the story to stand
as told so far, is to perpetuate the misconception that Abbott -
a highly respected professional educator -ground his personal
axe on Berger in a vindictive parting gesture, then took off for a
new job in northern California. ·
The1 details of the Abbott-Berger confrontation, however,
will tarnish Paul Berger's professional record -something he
and Abbott were probably trying to avoid.
Abbott found Berger to be an ineffective administrator,
despite his long record of service. It was Abbott's assessment that
Berger tended to shy away from confrontations, delayed in
implementing a new English curriculum that allegedly met
resistance from Marina teachers, was lax on the severe
absenteeism of a top school official and dragged h.is feet .in
working toward the improvement ·of a teacher with easily
identifiable performance problems.
It is, of course, the right of any dis~tled citizen to seek the
recall of an elected official. But, if the voters of the school district
are to make a serious decision about their trustees, they should
make it based on all the facts.
•
WeJJ, g entle1Deil, are y o u
'Willing to be gulnea plg s?
To the Editor:
My uncle once-told me that the real
news doesn't begin in a paper tiU
around {>8ge 14 or so. Sure enough, in
a recent issue, there was a small article
which provided marvelous insight~
into how this country works. Some-
times.
Seems that a couple of scientists are
questioning the safety of a new,
widely used artificial sweetener -
aspartame. They claim that certain
basic tests haven't been done on the
product. On the other band, both the
manufacturer and the FDA claim that
the testing was both rigorous and
exhaustive, and that the product is
safe. Oddly enough, they don't state
why the specific tests that the scien-
tists referred to were not performed.
Stories of this nature are becoming
increasingly frequent. Coincidentally
saccharin, another art1ficial sweet-
ener, recently ran into similar prob-
lems. In this case, however, the
scientists have proposed a solution,
which is, basicalJy, ..... a series of
animal studies ... testing for possible
toxic effects ... " of aspartame. I be-
lieve I have a better idea.
Since both the FDA and the
manufacturer have assured the public
that aspartame is safe, let's test it on
them. Shoot up the head of the FDA
with the stuff and stick him on a
treadmill. Malec the chairman of the
board dump a few drops into every
one of his martinis and then study bis
reactions. Why make innocent rats
and monkeys suffer? un?tese people
put their money where their mouths
arc.
PETER B. MARCUS
Newport Beach
1
Balanced liew wbat-'s needed
I To the Editor:
In Monday's Daily Pilot. Evelyn
Weinberg said she was cancelling her
subscription because of wnat
columrust Patrick Buchanan had
written from the right. A week or two
ago someone was very upset by what
Richard Cohe11 had written from the
left.
We can all begin to worry if you are
somehow coeroed into dropping
either of these columnists. As long as
you use both of them, you are doing
your job.
Evelyn, I hope you will reconsider.
JOHN KERR
Costa Mesa
Per-80-nal calls as perks
I •
How many personal phone calls do
you make on the job every day, if any?
Between three and four is typical,
according to the researchers. They say
each lasts an averqe of more than
four minutes. That adds up to a week
and a half of phone talk. On company
ti~e. It's a phantom fringe benefit.
Mary Queen of Scots was the first
prominent woman to play golf. She
referred to the lad who carried her
clubs as a "cadet," and inasmuch as
she'd been educated in Francc, she
pve it the French pronunciation. The
name stuck. But others less precise
imply called such a fellow a ••caddy ...
snap, crackle, pop?
A. Each starch.Y puff contains air
bubbles, pressunzed within fragile
shells as the . ..puff shrinks in the
cooling process. When the milk is
absorbed unevenly. the shells fra~
ture. letting the air explode free.
Q . lkst-sclling car: of all time was
the Model T Ford, ri&ht?
A. Until the Volkswagen Beetle
passed 1t in 1972, it was.
The housefly ~l$ its wings 20, 700
times a minute. You don't Jeam this
by just looking and countini. You
need special equipmeAt.
New Zealand's Lake Wakatipu The money authorities say $60
rises and falls three inch~ every five. million worth of pennies aet lost
minutes. Why? ..:-every year.
Q. That breakfast cereal that ,oes L.M. Boyd I• • •Y•lTc•led
oap, crackle. pop -what makes tt go col•mal1t.
ORANGE COAST •
1 Daily P~lat
t
H. L. 8chwart1 ffl
Pu
Frenll Zfnt
J.A1~ Editor
Tom T.at
C!lf' E<1i10t
Crelflhetf
Sportt Editor
··Mondale's real victory Is that t;he Reagan !J.de ~reed to any debate ~
Reagan lsfarahead. andthenormalpracttceofronawaylncumbents,.
____________ 1_to.:..re_li_use_U_1_e_1r_o..:.p.:.ipo_n_e..;.n_ts.-a_n..:y:.,.10..:ip~~~rt-u~n-l..:ty:_to_cl ___ 1m_b_1n~t-(o_co:"""n_te_n_t1_0_n..,.. "':"", . .
LoU CAJlflf OJll
coJallUlllt
Mondale won a long-shot
in agreement fo r de bates
W ASHJNGTON -President Rc--
agan•s strategists won all of the battles
in negotiations with Walter F. Mon-
dale's representatives on presidential
debate5". But.they may have provided
Mondale with a long-shot opportuni-
ty to win the war.
Mondale's real victory is that the
Reqan side agreed to any debates.
Reagan is far ahead, and the normal
practice of runaway incumbents is to
refuse their opponents any op-
portunity .to cHmb into contention.
That's why the first presidential
debates in 1960 between Vice Presi-
dent Richard M. Nixon and John F.
Kennedy almost turned out to be the
last. Four years later, President Lyn-
don B. Johnson gave Barry Gold-
water no chancc to debate. After
tangling with Kennedy, Nixon never
debated anyone again.
When President Ford debated in
1976 and President Carter followed
suit in l 980, they were not displaying
their altruism. Both were locked in
tight races and incorrectly calculated
that debates might help them win.
Reagan strategists also were reluc-
tant warriors four years ago. John
Sean kept Reapn out of the first
round of Republican debates in Iowa,
-and '1)01lster-strategj1t Richard B.
Wirthlin opposed the Carter debate.
Reagan told me in a 1981 interview
that he had learned his lesson from
Iowa, saying the only debate he Jost
was tbe one at which he ·failed to
show.
This time, Reagan agreed from the
outset to debate. Some of his in-
timates think that it was the Iowa
Lou ...,.
CANNON
lesson that did it. Others say Reagan
gained confidence from his confron-
tations With Geor&e Bush, John B.
Anderson and Carter in 1980.
Strategically, Reagan's managers
were concerned that refusal to debate
would reinforce the impression of the
president's isolation and raise ques.
lions more damaging than anytbina
likely to come from the opposition.
Whatever the motivations or re-
sults, this year's debate aareement is a
historic breakthrough. ..That lhc
incumbent president who is riding a
sizable lead agrees to debate is a clear
indication that debates as part of the
presidential campajan have been
institutionalized," said Dorothy S.
Ridings, president of the League of
Women Voters, which will sponsor
the debates for the third consecutive
time. "From now on, public opinion
and public 'pressure will make it
almost impossible for an incumbent
president to refuse to debate."
Three cheers for Ridings and the
league for this view and the insistencc
that it is better to have a public-
servicc organization sponsor the de-
bates than have them put on by
television networks, which
presumably cou1d cut away from the
inevitable boring passages for self-
promotion. In the matter of the debate nego-
tiations themselves; this year's
procecdinp reinforce the view off our
years ago that a candidate Ts fortunate
to have White House Chief of Staff
James A. Balcer 111 on bis side. Baker
is kind to bis fami1y, civil to bis
adversaries and more cautious than a
Russian at a Reagan rally. But m
negotiations, he is the basic riverboat
pmbler with the sixth card bidden in
his hip boot.
Baker now professes to believe that
the l 980 Reagan-Carter debate was
.. distoning" because it took place
only a week before the election and
presumably played a dispropor-
tionate role in the election outcome.
He neglects to mention that bis
opening proposal was for a debate on
the eve of the election. The Carter
folks thought they bad won a victory
of sorts by agrceipg_ to the seven-day
interval.
This time, the Mondale negotiators
came equipped with a calendar. What
they racked was a copy of the National
Football League schedule. This not-
so-secret document would have told
them that the Dallas Cowboys host
the New Orleans Saintt on S~~~-y1 Oct. 21at9 p.m. EDT, the time agn::eu
upon for the second presidential
debate.
Baker, who would rather P.laY
tennis than read a book, is famlliar
with the NFL schedule.
I LOa C&uoa I• • •YJMIJc•ted
collUtUU1t.
Forget the breathalizer:
Use a video game instead
JACK
AIDEISOI
Exiting
official
attacks
the FTC
W ASHINOTON Taking the
poef s advice, departing Federal
Trade Commisstoner Michael
Pertscbuk bas made it clear be won't
.. go 4entlc into that good niibt;• but
will ·~· rage against the dying of
the light ' he has held aloft to protect
consumers for the ~t seven years.
His 300-page cntique of the aaen·
cy's perfonnance has amady been
summarized in The New York
Times, drawiQgan indigruu:~t rebut~l
from the FTC's conservative chair·
man, James Miller Ill.
MiUer derided Pertschuk's blister-
in2 report, writinJ:
-'T'Wbile Commissioner Pertscbuk's
rhetoric displays a certain energy,. his
report breaks no new ground. It is a
rehash of his dissents and a stringing
toaether of his various positions,
bracketed in sarcasm."
What Miller hasn't seen yet is
Pertschuk'' brief appendix to his
report. This rubs salt into what
PcrtschQk feels are the commission's
self-inflicted wounds under Miller's
leadership. My associate Tony
..C.paccio has obtained a copy.
The appendix is titled, .. A Reader's
Guide to Claims About the Wonder
ofReapn's FTC." PertscbukchaJ'Kes
that the FTC's conservative leader·
ship has habitually tried to make "a
sillc purse out of a sow's car" and "has
been having fun with numben and
history." He explains: ••And by fun1 1
mean indecent liberties with me
histoncal record and with facts of the
present."
Pert~uk writes: ••f..very govern-
ment !!Jency puffs up its own record
of achievement. We certainly did
when we were. in charge." But, be
complains, .. there is a point at which
puffery passes beyond the bounds of
fair characterization into cynical
press agentry."
What particularly riles Penschuk is
the way be. says Mil~r·s crew takes
credit for actions they actually de--
layed or opposed.
For instance, last May, Carol
Crawford, director of the com-
mission's Bureau of Consumer
Protection, told the House committee
on agina that the FTC's new rule
designed to give protection from
shady undertakers "has peat impact
on older Americans." She neglected
to mention that Miller had opposed
the rule. calling it "a deceit upon
American consumers."
Crawford also boasted that the
FTC had initiated rules to lower the
pricc of eyeglasses. But Pertschuk
notes in bis appendix:
"Convenient forgettery precluded
her from mentioning that she bad just
recommended that a key provision-
that eye-care providers routinely turn
over a copy of eye prescription& lo
consumers -be eliminated.''
In what Pertschuk cans .. the most
baldfaced denial of responsibility,"
Mmcr told Congress the FTC hadn't
buried a rule to monitor hard-sell
techniques by hearing-aid salesmen.
The other day, while reading ·my where are we goin' to plug it in, .. The commission bas not buried the
newspaper. 1 came across a rather O'Brian?" rule," be testified. "The votes for the intcresu~g concept. Seems that .. That house looks as close as any. rule simply did not exist."
there's a man who feels that the old B Go ask the ladr, if we can use some of Pcrtschuk writes: .. The translation
ways of determining if a man is drunk Ill her electricity. ' of this sophistry is: 'Neither I, Miller
aren't good enough. He says, and with "But ... " McGinty starts to protest, nor my two colleaaues appointed by
good reason, that there are lots of ' HIMY but he's the junior of the two, so he President Reagan would vote for the
ways a man can get zonked today. and rcsi&ns himself to the task and starts rule."'
the old blow-up-the.balloon analyzer to unreel the cord. He crosses the Rcgardlng a commission press
only de~s booze. drainage ditch, scales an 8·foot, release last March claiming that the
Good point. The police can pull a that thing?" ebam-Link fence, clambers over a FTC acted on 98 •·consumer protec-man over because he-nu ~-ymrplease-step 1'\J-t -....of.,__,d"'1c-""'"toclnvall;-tear-gasses a-001>ennan tton manew · t983, J>msc ........ ~-
o~rating hls vetrtcte 1n an erratic car, sirr --and"'knoclCs atThe bac\ aoor. -writes:
manner. He may have ingested, "Cas1 What car? Ob, Ibis car. Sure, The machine blips to hfc. "Wow! It sure sounds like the
illhaled, injected, or rubbed into his man. Be right with you." Driver "Hey, man, this 11 ,,eat!' commission had been suina ·dccep.;
scalp some substance that has him reaches over and aets a divers lead A few more minutes of knob tive miscreants ri&ht and left. Rii,ht?
completely torqued, and as far as the weiabt belt, finnly buckles it on and twisting, still no results. The machine Wroni."
equipment the police have, he's fine. loob out of the window. Twists his chortles happily to itself, but refuses He notes that SI of the actions were
They could have bjm blow up the head and looks skyward. Apparently to play the game. votes "to delay or kill actions or to
Ooodyearblimpand,unlcsshe'sbi&h satisficd,heopcnsdoorandaetsout. "I know what's wrong, man. relax and weaken prior orders re-
on alcohol1 it won't do them a bit of .. Last time, I bumped my head on an Gimme a quarter. That's what's straining manufacturers from unfair
good. · overpass." wrong, man. Ya' got to put a quarter or deceptive practices."
This man has come up with a better .. O'Brian, I think we've got one. in ~~·, Don•t you cops know Jack AM•no• It 1 a)'lldJcated· _,
idea. He has invented a video game Get out the balloons." nothin r colamaltL
that be feels will indicate if a man is "We don't have the balloons any· A quick pocket search fails to reveal •
capable of operatina his car. Sounds more, remembes1 We've aot video a sinaJe quarter. McGinty tlaas down
like •aood idea to me, but I can forsee pmcs now:• a passing ice cream man.
a few comPlications. Please im-aine "You're riaht! Damn! Well, I guess "I'm terribly sorry. it's apinst our
the followina: ..., there'• nothin' else for it. Help me act company policy to make cbanae for
"Look at that. McGinty!" it out of the trunk." · video pmes. They're tho work of the
"What's wrona with that. O'Brian? Ten minutes of cunin&t st.raining. Devil, ya' know."
He'• only doin' SS." bumped heads, mashed finaers and The tee cream man is pcr5uaded, at
!DaJJy ffl:ot
welcom• ••1 know t\lat, but his wheels aren't various bruises result if\ the video JUnPoint, to make an exception tlus
touchina. He's at last 6 inches above pme bcin& finally set nJht. side up one time and strikes a deal. Three comm••••
the freeway!" atona the freeway. The dnvcr ~ quartcn fora dollar.
..Now that you mention it .... " watched the whole prqje<:t with '7ha'1 all right man. Three_ q_uar-
"We bettcrpull him over... considerable interest. ten wall last me atf day. I'M GOOD!''
W H EE EE EE R R R R R R "Would you step over here pleaK, As the sccne fades. several other
WHOOPWHOOPWHOOPWHOO sir? We'd like for you to play thi cars arc P!-Jlled ovcnnd there iu hnc
PWHOOJ>t! pme for u " 1t the video pme. Our driver is still
The offcndina vehicle slows and "Sure, man. What ts it? Pao-man? 1oin1 strona. and you can hear hj
stops and, after aheutcd instNC'llon Kona? Spea: invaders? I lo\·c ·~m votoc over .ahe othen say1na, ·•wow.
from thetWOCOPJ, reatartsand moves all!" man! 480,0001 Lct'a sec you belt
from the middle lane to the shoulder. Several minutes ofbutn>n pushina that!" A man has set up a card table
The cops act out. and JO)'lltck twiddleing producc no and i1 1ak.in1 beta on the ide. And
.. May t 1ee your drivtn ..... re ulu. McGinty and o·snan are 11ttina
. "Hey, m~ wba's bappenin'?'' ''Hey, man! You aot to ptua It m!"• dejtttcdly'On the hoodoftheircnmer
.. M~ I see your...... "Faith, an' he's riJht! Get the wondcnna aloud at the possibtln)• of
"C'mon '"man. Sit down. I gOt lhts extcn ion cord, McGintyt.. joinina the ifncsthood 111hc1r
New Wave 1: pc that'll blow you McOintystruglesbackwithalargc O.l•llW1t BLU H1rnr Uni
away. Lemme now. where'd I pua rtiet of electrical cord. ··sure, and Harl~• Bnd.
•
I
'PAPARnu1
------
. . '
ANNLANDIR892
ENlERTAINllENT 81
BUllNEllBI
Gay Bryant welcomes andqa e exhlbtton Karl Copa.a and Jarmin Roach.
.... ,... ........ ...,_
Maney Zlnameyer lea.ma of enaaiement of Plliar Wayne and Stephen Stewart.
Antique show ge_ts better with age
-'.Plane of future'
makes first flight
CAMARILLO (AP)~ Ancr three
years in development, the tevolution-
ary Avtek 400 business aircraft ha
made iu maiden fli&ht and the test
pilot said the moulded fibcraJass cfaft
handled excellently. ,
Pilot Dick Sliff, a recently retirtd
lClt {>&lot for the ,Federal ,Aviat~on
Admanistratlon, said tbt twin-cname
JurbOprop plane reached a speed of
230 mph durina it1 2S·minutc flight .
T:he A vtek Corp. claims the plane is enc first twin-en&Ine aucr'lft C\ er
oonstNctcd usina IOoCllled ··oom-
posites" that re~cc traditional
aluminum with upcr·strona fibcrJJ111 cloth In the cons\Nction
Jm1CCSI.
tate en. Ed D•~ is, R·
tSWOtth, hailed A \1Ck'I J>IOD•
cenna p1rit Thursdl) Sl)'l"' ··oo •
cmmcnt had noth1na to do with what ~cd here today. h wa all
through the ctr on of free cnterpri ..
The au'Plane ats ix to nine
people nd '85 de 11n ti to cnJI 400
mph at 37.000 fi t.
0 We think that this type of con-
5truction •.. will be what all ai~lancs
of the future will be built of. ' said
Rohen Honeycutt, Avtek's director
of marketing. ~
Honeycutt said that amona the
A vtek 400's unique dcsi1n1 were
stubby winas called canards mounted
in front of the au·craft's main winp
and t\\O Pratt & Whuney PT6A·28
turboprop cnJincs facina backward . The canards and .. pu her''·typc
en&incs improve lift and allow better
futl cfficienC}·and speeds, Honeycutt
said. But the real innovation is the use
of DuPont's Ke,•lar and Nomex
ftbcrJiass doth rn the aircraft's
fusclaae -the wtdcst use )"Ct of
composite materials an uch an air.
craft. ·
"'The) allow us to build a Ver), very
trona tructure at a .,eatly reduced
wciaht. We reduced the the tructul'll wc1aht of the alrcl'lft by about 0 perocnt. .. Hone)C'Utt said.
lhc aircraft will eigh 5.500
pounds at takeoff, compared to a
8.675 pound ~o takcoff '1 ht f1 r
Newport Harbor Art-Museum patrons
see best of the good old centuries
By EVE LASH
DlilJ,... C.1 I $1 ... ,
You would almost think you were ·
Jivingapartoftbepast, viewing
thousands of antiques dating back
hundreds of years. Oosc to 500
people at the Newport Harbor Art
Muscum'sAntiqueSbowGala
Preview took pecks at those yester-
ears. -
More than 40dealers from
around the world took part in the
four-Oay event which clo~d Sun-
day.
For the festive kick-off evening an
international buffet was served in
the outdoor Sculpture Garden Cafe.
Guci;ts dined on Indonesian beef
and rice; lasagna and homemade
pasta; smoked turkey breast slices
and croi5Sants; fruit and cheeses;
and the very pop1.1lilr chocolate
goodies from tnfles to trumes.
In addition. wine, classical music
and unusual fiowersadde4jl:1St the
right touch to an elegant affair.
Advisory Board Member Gay
Bryut predicted 5,000 people
wouldscethe how hicbshe
dcScn'bed as cxoeptic:matl)' •·weu
rounded" displaying Italian. Eoa-
lish,American. French, Russian
and Oriental antiques. Carol Land, Robbi Boyd aad Vicki oam, comp.red note.
abcni.t what 40 lntcmational 4ealen hiul to offa. Anticipaunaa whole new au.
diencc for the m ustum from
throughout the community. Jane hoped were Bryaat, Gertrude Doaovaa,publicitychairpcrson Th N F d adAed, "We have a wide rano... in omu, aacy oenter an ._. ov Nancy ZJmmeyer.
prices. We have many small pieces · Thomas commented the show
and we have some for$75,000. But culminates a six-month project,
that's what makes the Show SO with volunteers work.in& four (O five appealing." • I · Some of those guests and council days around the c ock dunna the
members who attended were T. show. "Two-thirds come back year
PbilUsi-and Sae Morcaa. "I think after )car. E..-er}'bodY. knows every-
tbe displaysare beauuful. There are body, it'ssortoffanuly. Wc'vcsecn
manyuniqueandinterestinaitems. ~~~J..c:_ft.endsandncigb.bOrs
Wearefortunatetohavethe .,,
exhibitors. Also, once you get And Zinsmeyeradded ... Last ca~tupin&Uoftbis-it is ycar'!tumout wasnothinaasspec-
fasc1nating, ••she ~d. tacular as this. The people are
One shopper havinaa wonderful enthusiastic. I've heard nothing but
time was Carol J[otl.D. with four rare positive remarks reprdina the dcal-
0workin&" decoys under her arm. crs and the items they represent.
She purehascd four of these tum-of-Also, the floral arrangements are
the-century ducks, valued at $2,000, pretty wild this year." Allea Beet
from the Snow Goose eihibition to (donor) said he was in his punk
add to her collection ofabout I 00. period. I think they are greaL"
Kokinsaidtheshowwas, "vecy, Othershavinaaa.rcat umeat the
very high class-and vcf) n1~ previewpartywercantiquecollec-
merchandising.." tors Mary Anne-.. 1 always think
Admirina the antiques and sbar-it's a wonderful show." -and Lea
ing news of their betrothal were Miller, who purchased a $12.000
Pilar Wayae and Stephen Stewart. Oriental wedding bed from exhibi-
(The first exclusive photo of the tor Warren Impons.
newly e~ed pairwa taken by Everyone sot a chance to view
Paparazz1's Barry Slobin and pub-25mm pearls circa 1930 for $38,000:
lished in the Daily Pilot the next wicen Anne table and chairs circa
day.) 35 for $85.000; ra~ icon from
The four advisers who made the the 14th-19th centuries; antique Mary ADD lllller'• enaemble ' whole event 10 as smoothly as -scientific instruments and a Ger· waaaneY.e-ca~tc~b~er=-'-.~~~---~~~~~---~~~~~~~~~-
man country arandfathers clock
dated 1820and thousands more
antiqucrollcetibles.
Jolm Gillen, one of the jud$es
wboauthenticatestbecollecllon .
commented. "The show gets better -
every year-like my wife Rea. I've
been with her SO yea.rs."
Others on the invitation-only
guest list were Reser and Susy
Laby,PaalandY• $Himmel.
Tito mas and E1dlerQmCk, Mr. and
Mrs. Jack L. Caldwell, &nla and
CoDsey, Eqeale FIUer,
Marcella Porter, Gluy Valeatlne,
Loa1se and Jon El:Uolia, am
Poole, Allaa Barris, Baniene
ltmer, Bart.ra Aue and Mary-
Jaae bell, to name a few.
The poker pme was going ilong
fine, untilitwasdiscovcredO.Dy .
K.arcber was playing with a
•• tacked deck." All ofbcr cards
offered a free ham burscr and drink
-the kind brother-in-law Cad
passes out to almost everyone he
meets.
But, it was a friendlygameamona
Orange County Master Chorale
membe~pthered at the Orange
Park Acres ranch estate of Ga71e
and Robert A.lldenoa to preVlew
their Oct. 6 western-t} e fund-•
(Pleue ... CBOR.ALB/112)
New therap y h elps
eagl~s to fly again
.,...,......
Tile ANll 400, a am&ll bula-plane made of .ll!A-
etreqtla ,-npoette11, made maiden n.,11t aboft Camarffio.
>
f
·.
EN GAGE MEN TS
ROBINSOM-HERBERT
T1he engagement of Tami Lynn
Robinson to Ga' in Herbert Jr. was
announced b> the bridc-elecfs
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Svendsen, durina family party given
in their Newport ~ach home. ·
A graduate of Newport Harbor
High School. the future bride attend-
ed the University of Colorado at
Boulder and rcccaved a bachelor of
arts degree in speech communication
from Cal State San Diego. She is
affiliated with Alpha Chi Omega and
employed by Jan~n Associates. a
Santa Ana-based advertising and
public relations firm.
Her fiance is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Gavin Shearer Herbert of
Laguna Beach and San Clemente. A
graduate of Corona del Mar High
School. he holds a bachelor of ~ence
dqree in bu iness administration
from USC where he affiliated with
Beta Theta Pi. He is active in the
Young Executives and is employed
by Plant Research Laboratories in
Irvine.
The couple are planning an Apnl
wedding.
Debra Picken
ERSLAND-MEHALICK
Marilyn l:rsland of Laguna Beach
hasannounccd the engagement of her
daughter, Victoria Lynn Er..land, to
James Brian Mehalick, both of San
Diego.
They are planning to marry Nov.
17 in the Fairbanks Raftch
Clubhouse, Rancho Santa Fe.
The bride-to-be is a graduate of
California High School. Whittier. and
Cal State San Diego. Her fiance
graduated from James Monroe High
School, Van Nuys, and UCLA.
CHRISTESON-SIMMONS
A Feb. 2 wedding in Soyth Coast
Commurufy Church, lrvme. 1s being
planned by Corona del Mar residents
KeUy Ann Christeson and David
Ryan Simmons.
The bride-elect, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Donald B. Christeson of
Corona del Mar, is a graduate of
Corona del Mar High School and Cal
Poly, San Luis Obispo.
Her faance is a graduate of Corona
del Mar High School and USC, and
attended UCI. His parents are Mr.
and Mrs. William R. Simmons Sr of
Newport Beach.
Submit your news
The~ Pilot wants yoor wedd ing and q~t news.
To help you submit the required Information, forms are available
at the 0-"Y Pilot offlce, 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa.
For weddings. qualify photoa of the bridal coui>Je or bride onJY
are acceptable. The photo must be submitted no later than three
Week• after the wedding, othetwlse It wttJ not be publllhed.
Eng~t information ls to be submitted at least seven weeks
before the wedding.
Forms and photos can be dropped off at the office or m8lled to
Wedding Department, Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa.
Caltf. 92626. -
Guilt p&manent
for drunken driver
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Recently
a reader WTote of a horrible personal
experience -the accidental killing of
another person with a car. My
husband and I have our own horror
story, only it ts worse, because we
were responsible for the death of a 13-
year-old boy.
Six years ago, on New Year's Eve.
John and I went toa party at the home
of friends. We were in the mood to
celebrate. Afier five years of scrimp-
ing and saving. we hatl bou&ht a
modest house and repaid in fuTI our
coUege loans. John had one more
semester of law school left and t-excelJent JOb prospeets. So we were
really in the mood lO live it up.
John and I arc not drinkers, but
that night there was a lot of cham-
p&llle around and we had several
glasses. Everyone was having a won-
derful time and the party dido 't break
up until dawn. Actually, saymg
goodni~t to the host was the last
thing either of us remembers until
after the accident. God forgive us. we
A11
luDERS
ended the life of a l 3-year-old boy
who was detivenng bakery goods on
bis bicycle.
Witnesses said be was dragged
more than 200 feet The doctors did
everything they could to save him but
rus injuries were too extensive. The
lad nevq regained consciousness and
died after four days.
In those few moments when we &ot
the news, the entire world changed.
Never again will it be the same. That
httle boy who was the light of his
parents' life will never grow up, fall in
love and be a source of pride to his
family and a contributing member of
society. Why? Because he happened
-------------. to be m the wrona place at the wrong
00 YOU HAVE
MODELING
POTENTIAL
(The School For W1nner1)
PL.US
See the Winner's picture
In our ed next month!
TO ENTER, MAIL THIS
COUPON WITH YOUR
HEAD SHOT ..,. ___ ...-...-____ ___,
Phol19_-.------------~.--Sdll __ ............ _____________ ...._ ,. _____________ ...._ ....... _ ._. ______________ _
~----------John Robert Powers
#3 Town Ntd Counwy
0.0.
14 547..a228
time.
We called on the family but they
refused to see us. Who could blame
them? The da~ of the funeral we sent
roses and sat m the back row of the
church. When we came home. we
found rose petals and broken stems
scauered OY«OUUroJl1Sle~ ~ husband 11ever finished law
school. He lost llis jol:i {coul<fn't
concentrate)and wa unemplO)ed for
several months. He was impotent for
almost a year. I ate compulsively and
gaintd 40.pounds. Neither of us slept
much. Thtrc were recurrin& night-
mares. And the tears! God. what tears we cned! But an ocean of tear would
never drown out the memory of that
little boy, lost to the world forever.
Intensive therapy and support
from family and some friends kept us
1oing. People kept saying. "Life goe
on." ll docs if they mean the sun
comes up every day, but the kind of
existence we bad could hardly be
called Jivin&-
1 must keep writina before I lo~ my
courage. Maybe this letter will make
an impression on someone. It only
takes one drink for some dnvers to
become involved in a tra dy like
ours. If you don•t bun, maim or kill
yoursclfor a loved one, you might 111
a tittleboy\\ho is tryin tocan'I ome
extra QOCket money. -FOREVt=R
GUILTY _,,, ' .. DEAR AN I NDERS. Almo t
evcr)one knows 11 tak nine months
or approdmatcly 275 days to make a
human by. Wh t 1nim I htls the
longc t acstat1on period? I y the
hippopotamus. My 1stcr ~ th
elephant. Who win ' -G IN
10 HO
DEARG.:Y r lltuwla .lttala:es
1 Uttle onr !O moalb -abo•t CH
d y1 -C. mike an I pllan&. Tlt1t'1
tti lo I t pr pancy ot ian animal.
I
nd) Ci t s nd 'cott
CARPENTER·STEVE NS
K!mberley All)n ve.ns and Rob-
ert Blake rpcntcr c~changed "' d·.
disw vows rn :the First Baptist Church
of Costa Mesa on Sept. 22. The Rev. Tun 11mmon of South Coast Com-
mun1t)' Church m NeWJ>Ort Beach
offictated at the ceremony.
The bnde is the daughter of
Ne"'port Beach residents Mr. and
Mrs. Ph1lhp J. Stevens. Her sister,
hem Ste' ens, was maid of honor
and the bridegroom's ister, Wendy
Naylor. with Srephanie Arche}, Sue Cr~le and Karen Whitenack were
bridesmaid .
Pat Carpenter of Newport Beach
and G.J. Carpenter of Carlisle,.Ma ,
arc th parents of the bridqroont. His
brother, Kerry <..: l'J)Cnter w be t
m n. nd ushers were Greg evens
broth r bnde. Ed Sixt. Tom
Butzboch nd Tcny lbnuon
More lh n 200cgue t attended a
rcocpuon t the Ne poncr Resort
afier the ceremony and the oouplc
dcpancd on o wedding tnp to Yo-
m1tc ond pl n funhcr travels through the month o(Novembcr.
he coup! arc graduates of U I
with degrees in civil engmccnng.
The) plan to make their home an SM
Ocmcnte.
A LllQUJS T-PFISCHNER
The Anaheim Country Jnn wa the
setuna for 1he Aug. 18 wedding of
Daryl Ann Pfaschncr of Ncwpon
Beach and Gary James Almquist of
Wayzata, Minn.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Stanley Pflschner
of NeWJ><>n Beach arc the parents of
the bride. She wore a tea-length gown
of white chiffon and Alencon lace
with a picture hat of matchanJ lace
with a fingenip veal at the back. She
Cllmcd a bouquet of garden flowers.
1 he bride' si ter, Lcshe Moo~.
was matron of honor and another
sister, Kimberly Vo t, was ·a
o.-r,... ......._ 11J Tent IC-
Pbotograpber Bob Fournier uses old-time
propa to traneform Patricia l"redrlck• into
Barbara Stanwyck at Muter Chorale'• weetM
em_ preview where Gayle Anderson rode
Suede led by Jack and Jo Kelly. Maurice
Allard, Donna Bunce and Robert Andenon,
below, dlacuued co~ funda.
1 he bnd~m a the n of ,f>dr.
and Mrs James Almqu1 t or W > ...
sata. H1 brother, De n Almqu1 t,
wa$ best man nd u hers were .Rick
Kantor, Phil Herbold, l.onme
Holmgren,. Mark Brou rd, John
Lundberg and C..arl Mull ,
A reception also at the Anaheim
Country Inn followed the ceremony
and was attended by 200 guests.
After a wedding trip to Bnush
Columbia and Minnesota, the couple
plan to live in Colorado Sprangs. The)
ore both affiliated with Athletes in
Actions Campu Crusade for Christ.
BUCKLEY·SCHREm E R
Huntingto.n Beach residents
Suzanne Karen Schreiber and
Douglas Alben Buckle> were married
in a Sept: 9 ceremon): at the Aarporter
Inn in Irvine.
The bride is the daughter of Max S .•
and Rheta S. Schreiber oflluntmgton
Bear.h .and her husband is the son of
Suzanne O'Leary of Sun Valley and
f\
SU(lDne Buckley
D vid Buckley of Spain.
. Manny Hannon's Band provided
the entertainment for 180 gueSts at a
reteption immediately folloWina the ~remony at the Airponer Inn. ....
CHORALE ••.
P'romBl
raiser. Th~ group sampled (and ap-.
proved) the food, heard the muS1c,
enjoyed the view and announced
plans are proceeding well for the
benefit which will also take place at
the Anderson •s. (They even fed
carrots to the hosts' horses).
Huntington Beach Mayor Jack
Kelly and wife Je were there ... the
··Maverick" star was right at home
in the western setting and he will be
back as benefit emcee.
Bob Founler of Balboa Island 1 attended to show offhis old-time
photo props. (Benefit guests will
bavecomplimentarY vintage
photos made.) lt took ju.st a minute
to make Patricia Fredericks look ,..
like Barbara Stanwyck.
Honorary dinner committee
members include Irene and Jim
Beatley, Jacq•eand Robert
Heebnu, Nora and VlD Jorgeua,
Dolly and Doa Karcller, Hetma and
Jim Na1amat111, Flo11 and Ed
Scllamacber and Jenette and Hal
· Se1entrom.
Donna Bance is chairman of the
..Festive Western"partywhich will
include valet.parldnJ. smging by
the Californians, casmo games and
a barbecue. (Before dinner, guests
will be treated to delicious south-
westhors d'ocuvres of pctite chilc
rcllenos and chile conqueso served
with margaritas while a player piano
reels off old favorites.)
All proceeds from the evening
will benefit the Orange County
Master Chorale. according to Dr.
MautceAllard,director. who was
also at the sampler decked out in his
western duds. Reservations($ l 00
each) may be made through Friday
by callins Bunce at 979-045 t.
Paparazzi is edited by Daily Pilot
Str.Je Editor Vida Dean with con-
tnbutions by Eve Lash.
Music video
goes erotic
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Herc's a
new wrinkle m the home video
market: an erotic music video
centerfold.
"Body Music" is already available
on videodisc and will soon be
released in videocassette.
UMOVIE * * "Commandol" (1972) "'" Ven Clttl, JaQtl Kelly
Chevy Chase. Sigourney Weever.
CO)MOYIE
It's magazine stick and features six
segments on Angie, Sall)', Amanda,
Leslie, Jillie and Sberree. Tbe women
are in various siages of undress in
such locations as the desert. on \he
beach, or in wheat fie lds. They
accompanied by the soft rock of Chris Rainbow.
-12:15------------· (!) taPal>ENT NEWS •
8 JOKER'S WILD
CJ) WMP IN CINCINNA T1 =~ • t 'Nero Wolle" (1970) Tllaytt
David, Anne Baxter.
fD HOU YWOOO TELEVl8ION
THEATER
=~d_~T
ClSCTV: TME SE<X>NO COMWO MHOAE -'--~
**~ "Krul" 1983) Kll'I Manhall.
lyttt Anthony
($)MOVIE
• t t * "Al Tilt Pr9'idenl 1 Mti'I ..
(19781 Robert Redtofd, Oultln Hoff·
man
(t 831
t * "Thi Sender" (1982) Kathryn
Harrold, Ztljko tventll.
-t0:t5-D EYEON L.A.
-10:30-
1 == EVBINO AT POPS
tSJMOYIE * * • ·'Knight riders" ( 1981) Ed
Harns. Gary latlt1
-10:45-
e a u11-=-wmt DAW> • Hendren replaced
~HITCHCOCI< as T V show host
PflE8ENTS LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ron I = THAEE O Hendren has been replaced as co-host
tt t "Rancho DIN••" (1875) Jen of the show business newscast "Enter-
Bridgll. Sim watnton tainment Tonight" in a contract
•LOW. AME11CAN mu dispute with Paramount Studios. I •GROWING YEAR8 Robb Weller will be the new co-
-11:i41------host of thedaitv'Show with Maty Han
8 ()) Mela.LAH & WR and co-host of the weekend edition -t:z-.a::: with leaa GibbOlls.
(:!) SEA HUNT_ 1:0l>-
I,;'{ mm™
8 HOU.YWOOOCl~ eMCME * t t "Aellecliont In A GOiden Eye"
(1967) Ellzatlettl Tl)'IOr, M-10n Bttn-do f
al ENTERTANtENT TONIGHT ($)MOYIE
• "Prtvalt School' ( 19831 Phoebe
cat• Betsy Ruitel.
-1:1f-'I' 00 THE PAOltCTOA8
-1:2&-(Cl MCME * • "Mountakl Mtn" (19801 Chari+
ton Htttoo. Btlln Keith
-1:30-
I FNAYFU>
8T OF L.A. TODAY
NMAN& MARTW8 ~
)MOVIE
• • • "Croll Crelk" (11821 Miff ~AlpTom
-1~--MOYIE * U "The Kier LOOll" (18561 '°"""Cot WltlOll Cotey
-1:IO-) Yl>EO.UCUOX
(1983) d v.
Areal pro
CybW 81aeplaerd plan •
proetltate wlao becam• ID·
YOl•ed wltb Wllll••
8hatn.et In tM TV •orie
.. Seoreta of. llanled llan"'
tomot at 8 on JOIC, Claaa-aeJ .{,
NBC r eaps most Emmys
yJEJ\RYBUCK '##,...........,,..
LO ANGELES-A taboQ.bre&k· ans drama of lQCtst, a re<rtated ltcc or Amenca'1 Cold W11 history and
perennial favontc "'Htll t~t Blues••
on ~o~ ~onoB at the Emmy award 1 with NBC takina home the mo t for
1hc founb consecutive year.
Four Em~)' finMimcrs -J ne Fonda and CBS stars Tom Selleck.
Jane Cunin and John Ratter -won -~il)J awlfsts S11nda~ nipt at the 36th annual Tclcvi ion Academy . award ceremonies. "'CtlJney &
Laccy's0 Tyne Daly reccaved her
tee<>nd 1trai&l!t.l.~nd Laurence Olivier. ~Uected his film. · '.'Somethina About Amelia, .. aired
by ABC. was named best drama or
comedf special and took the wrltina
award an a limited series or l)(Ciar. Roxana Zal, 14, who played daughter
victimized by incest, won as best
supporting actress in the category and
aid before she won: ''I hope the
proiram helPcd kid ." . · .. Concealed Enemies," about the
Alier Hiss-Whittaker Chambers con-
troversy over alleged communi ts in
the U.S. State Dcpanment that
propelled Richard Nixon into the
limeli&ht af\er World War 11, was c
named . outstanding hmited scrie$.
with director Jeff Bleckner also
honored.
NBC won the most Emmys by a
narrow maqin over CBS and ABC,
collectins 20 includina· the craft
awards that were aiven Sept. 16. CBS
bad 18, ABC 16, PBS l 0, and five
went to syndicated programs.
NBC's "Hill Street Blues" led all
comers with five Emmys, including
best drama series. NBCs barroom
comedy "Cheers.. was named best
comedy series for the $CCOnd year and
alio won Emmys for best writina and
supportina actress.
In four years thegnttyurban pohce
drama has won 25 Emmys, one shy of
•'The Mary T)ler Moore Show,"
makina it the winningest television
drama ~rics ever:
Fonda, a two-time Oscar wtnner.
won as best lead actress in a limited
series or special for her firu TV
dramatic role in ABC's "The
Doll maker... She spent l 2 years
bringina tht! project about a per-
severing Kentucky woman to the
screen. Selleck. who stepped in as Emmy
host when Carol Burnett took ill, won
his first Emmy as best lead actor in a
drama series for his role as the taid-
back detective in CBS' "Magnum,
PJ."
"I was quite shocked," Selleck said.
Ritter, after three nominations and
eight ~cars on ABCs .. Thrcc'1 Com-
pany. aot his first award as best lead
actor in a comedy series.
.. I'm totally surprised," he said,'
adding he thouaht the academy
members woutd pick a .. more in·
tcllcctual how "
Cunin was ~le.c\Cd as best lead
actttss in a corned~ series for her role
in CBS' .. Kate & (\Ilic." She and
Susan Saint James; who was also
nominated, play divorttd mothers
living together for mutual support.
Daly won for the second year for
her role as Mary Beth Lacey wbo
combines police work and hei iamil)I
in CBS' "Caaney &. Lacey."
Olivier won his fifth Emmy as best
lead actor in a limited series or special
for the syndicated "Kina Lear.•·
Rhea Perlman was selected bcit
supportina actress in a comedy series
for her role as the canhy cocktail
waitress Carla in "Chccn."
An Camey, who won an Oscar for
"Harry and Tonto," was named best
supponina actor in a limited series or
special for James Cagney's first ;rv
movie, CBS' "Terrible Joe Moran."
Carney won five Emmys as Ed
Norton on "The Honeymooners:•
Bob Hope honored for 35 yean in TV by academy pl'eeldellt DtUa llaldaar.
RUFFELL'S
UPllUTEIY, llC.
F• Tiie l est Of Y• lie 19!2 ._. AWD.. COSTA EA-541-1154
,,,~~
~Hlllll .... .i•.
.._, ·---; • !!e: -NO\V PlAVING -
1m UA~
llCMOZ2
••ALL OF ME' 18 A
8LAPSTICK. HIPtlTER ffY8lllD OF •HEAVEN CAN
WA.Ir AND '1001'81!.'•
.......... Pmft.IMA8Allllfl
.. ...:,..11)
P\ll"M-•llD" (Pl.II)
IAS '1\ IOIS
us.am
·~ (PC) 1 • '30. lU "lTM 1111 It nl KMClt F\S IPOCI .. CN> J a 1 45
'"tOlDIO"' (ID CM llUR 11 •t • NlliCl'ltD) 'JS 110 ~n1 M111Ul~ (PS)
-1 00. S45. 10 30
"IOI DAWlf' (PG-13)
12 JO, Joo. s 30. too. io30
. IJUMftlS" (N)
l\a .._ .. _...
WARNER
11. •t .r. ~ t"'.I -
again
Pat HamQ&tonJr \he rTeptCUtb
:5cbMidtt on "One Day et Tune ..
won as bn1 uppbni ctor n a comedy~n as~theCl owclosed
out nine years on the atr ... You"rc
10011:111111 a man who's 'lntcd one of
these llu np for lO ~rs -e" ct moc
I was 1 child actor, ' he id.
Cons ll.caChman named ~1
indavLdual performer an a vanety or
music program for her •P.pearance on
the .. Screen Actors Guild SOth An·
n1vcr11ry Celebr'ation'\ on OBS. The
camera panned to • the audJenoe •
where losing nominee Liiy Tomlin.
attired -as her popular character
Ernestine. made a face.
David Wolpcn who earlier
produced .. Roots." was cited for
productllj the opcnang. nd do ina
ccrcmomcs of the LOs An,geles um·
mer Olympics non levision by 2
billion people worldwide. GoJd
medalist Mary Lou Rctton and
former medaltst R fer Johnson pres.
cntcd the award.
"Hill Street' "Alf re Woodard won
as best upportint ac1rcss in a drama
serie' for pqrtra)1n& the mother of a
youna boy killed by pohcc. Bruce
Weitz won best upportma actor and
the show also won awards for direct-
ina and film sound mi~ing for a scne .
Comedian Bob Hope received the
academy's Governor's Award. pres-
ented for .. outstanding achieve-
ment."
Seven new inductees into the
academy·s Hall of Fame were an-
nounced by lucallc Ball, an original
member last year. They are Carol
Burnett, Sid Caesar, Walter Cronkite,
ROd Scrling, Ed Sullivan, Joyce Hall
of the "Hallmark Hall of Fame,'' and
Sylvester "Pat" Weaver, who
launched the .. Today'" and '"Tonight"
shows as NBC president.
The Pros' Since 195 7
~ uum llSUUICI
J/':
• ~ ..... Non•smokec
• ~~ Rates
' b 831-7740
.,., Old Newport lltwd.
.... port !leech, Ca.
'
EXCLUSIVE EJ"OAO£MENT
I ow PLAYING
EDWAIDS NEWPORT aNEl\1.A UA CORONET
-'£\\Pan IEAUt 1714 ......,... r.sn.ooo ~I
DAA:V 12;15, 3:30. 7.00. 10Gt
'--------.NU&tlftO• JI-
lUJUJln' JHIMRfS
f1r11T_ ..... .._._.
OILY SUI U-.. .._,..
l &.sa>i * Ea(IQ
SHOWS AT 12111 2 :05 J 1IS 1 :41 7 :40. 1:40
Clint KutwCHHI TNHTltOllll (W)
Show11t 12135 2:11 1:10 7 :10 .. 10:1$
Prine• In fVllft.&IUU,.(IQ 1SHOWS AT U tU
2100 1:20 7 :45 10101
UIUMlll TM& ¥0LCANO (IQ
SHOWS AT -
1:41 • t:O•
Stfll M1rtl1t ALL.Of'-.-> SHOWS AT 12:00 1 :00 4 1011100 1 :00 10100
, ... w.--a,,.
T ...... .,._~)
. Srtows •t U:OO '~~o 1 :00 7:JO .. J q,;oo • IM 70 MM .
•a..uM(N) AT 1 :11 AM D1wn (ll0•1 S) It 1 141
......, JS O'TMS ..... "" ..... ~tlfy's (A)
ALL SEATS $2.00 AT
• NEWPORT BEACH •
EDWARDS IEA. EDWARDS WESTBR()OI( · .•
• COSTA MfSA •
COWAM>S -· ...... ~' 1101 HARBOll TWIN
• Cl TORO •
..
GORDO
I;
STOP HIM .,~
~>Ir°"
·~
9'-M
G-'RFIELD
by Gus Arrlola
' BRIDG E
ANSWEl\8 TO WEEKLY IRIDGE QUIZ
Q.1-Nelther vuln rabl . 11 South
CHARLES
Go1£N
!OME AJPE Wt1M A 1RUMPET I~ WAil.iN' e<>ME. 8LUE.!t ON THf. AAC,-10 ANP M\./
8RfAW=AS1' 14!> COLP
you hold:
•AKJU ~AQS O?e •AQJ
What lt your opening bid?
A.-H you op ned two spades, you
could g t into troubl • You have
only 21 HCP and a five lo.er hand,
and that is too weak for a demand
bid. We would not fault you greatly
by Jim Davis If you opened two no trump. but we.
pr r r a bid of on pade. Jr partner _,,_...._ __ ....._ ___ ....,.. __ can't re pond voluntarily, you prob
abty are not mis ing a game.
Q.Z-Neither vulnerable. a South
you hold:
+Q6 <:'Q93 01098! •9765
The bidding has proceeded:
North Eut Soath WHt
2 + .Pa11 2 NT Pa11
3 • Pue ?
What action do you take?
A. -While you can pass this auction
if you have a trickle hand, that
____ _.... ____ _,_ _ __,does not apply here. You must
upgrade the queen of spades to a
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
,.-------------------1ure trick, and the queen of hearta might prove useful, too. Partner has BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) announced at least a slx·cud spade
suit, so you have more than ade·
quate support. Bid four spades. ~@_)~/ (( ---------I Q.3-Both vulnerable, as South you
hold:
•J6 l\ll JlO OAQ876 •A912
j The bidding has proceeded:
If North Eut Sout.li Weit
1 ~ Paa 2 O Put
11 2 + P... S • P ...
3 ~ Pue 1 J! What do you bid now?
SHOE
A.-Partncr surely has six b arts
and four apad • •nd his rever
show1 a g9Qd hand. Therefore, you
are in Lhe lam zone. Partner knows
this from your fir t two bids. so
there is no need for dramatic''ICtlon
from you. Four heArts oow it more
than adequate. The next move must
come from him.
Q.c-Bot.h vulnerable, as South you
hold:
+AKQ8 ~8 OA98 •AK853
The bidding haa proceeded:
Eut SeutJa Wt1t North
1 <:' Dbl• Pua 1 • Pau ? -~
What do you bid now?
A.-There isa possibility that, with
a terrible hand, partner would be
• forced to respond one spade on a
thrc-e card :uit. But don't let that
pos ibility deter you from making
your natural bid. With your hand,
you want to be in game, and the way
to get there i to bid four spades.
Don't make the mistake of raising to
three i;pades -that is only invita·
tional and partner is unlikely to
know what he needs to accept.
Q.5-As South. vulnerable, you
hold:
•AQ <:'K103 OAKJ76 •Q98
• The bidding hu proceeded:
South WHt North Eut
1 0 Pua 1 ~ Pue
Z NT Pue 3 0 Put
1
What do you bid now?
"Fee-fi-fo-fum! I smell the blood of
an English muffin!" .
"I hate Mondays!'
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE
"I think you gave me Marmaduke's
hot cake."
MOON MULLINS
PEANUTS
T MBLEWEED
IT WAS
.JUST A
RE ·RUN
~MMA
Hank Ketcham
• f M ~ STAY IN BED 1HISMORNtNG. I CAN'T 1HINK Of ANYTHING 10 00."
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
A RE-RUN, si
'/f;S ·-Bur If
R,AT~D f (J 't STA~. I
by Charles M. Schulz
!'VE MEARP lHAT PIZZA
ATIRACTS l.16MTHIN6 !
by Tom K. Ryan
BRABBLE
FOR ETJER OR FOR WORSE
f\U. RVdHT, ~ER'f eot1-/. H~mts''IHeRe.
WIU. BE NOSOPPER.
UN1iL iFU.S PLReE. 18
~E.DUP-AND I Mt:f\~tJ'(r.1~ #I·~
S01 INS"f"SAP OF A POIN,-., MR'S. Fe,._N,,
eAcH Nl!!I!! PL.e! IS f E!QUIPPeP Wl"f"H A
5UC,-.ION CUP I
I
11-.. .. r....r,··· 0
I
Q.6-As South, vuln rablc, you
hold:
•A76 · «:'AQJ987 0 6 •. 3
Th bidding has proceeded:
oath Welt North ~•It
l ~ 1 + Z + · Pua s <:;) Pue 4 o P&1a
• 'v> P&11 5 ~ • Pas•
?
What action do you tnk.e'/ •
hA.-From the auction, it would
eem that you have the wrong ace.
Partner ha gone out oC his way to
cue bid the enemy 1uit and then
diamonds before supporting heart
at a level over game. It eems h
lacks club control, and &0 do you .
Pasa.
How do yo11 chooH tJa• beet open· ·
Ing lead?, Charle• Goren hu the
u1wer. For a copy of .. Wlaaina
OpeaJaa Le&d1," send 11.85 to
"Gorea·Lead1," care of tbl1
pewapaper, P.O. Box 6U, Palmyra,
N.J. 08065. Mab check payable to
N ew1paperboo1C1. •
by Jeff MacNelly ..
by Kevin Fagan
by Lynn Johnston
we.~K
SHaROLE.S.
.
by Tom Batluk
ACUPUNC'T"URS
F'OR COWARPS!
by Harold Le Doux
.
••
/
COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRAN8ACTION8, 81 •
.
AirCal-Polaris $~2-milJJon Breakin
leaseback agreement OK'd ·down sales barrlers
AirCa1 Newnnrt• u ... c· h, h . ::::-:W~-----5~·"""'1,...,·-·_,.· _,..,,.......:......_---k--...,~:.----...---~ .,... ~u tort he previous fi lycar. S lcs were omen 10 a es rou p WO~ in a OT,
nouncedthatitht\sc:Oncludcda l S27,97Q.tpoo comp red to
get from hundred of others m the
me boat, Unn c ~ns; )ou'rc
more likely lO suck ritb 1.t. and find
role models to use as you d1mb lhe
l ddcr.
lcastback trnn ction of four '737-200 $20 794.uw for 1984. with tts members to develop careers
aircraft with Polaris Aircrafl Leasing NcwPort Corp. designs. manufac-
Corp. turess and.market& a compreben ivc
The proceeds of this refinancing, line of instruments, compon m and
which total $22 million, wdl be' ccessories (or the 14 r optics mar-
pnmarily applied toward debt rcduc-Im. which includ andustrial. ov-
tion. emmental and laboratory cu fomers.
AirCal i a W tern r~onnl camer
serving 13 major cities m the states of Tender o«u ertended
Catifomia, Nevada. Ore,gon nd Smith International lnc. an-
Washinglon with a tl~t of Bocins nounced 1h1s week that it was extend·
737s and MO Super 80s. ing the expiration dale and proration
period fori ts Sl l cash tender off er for PV lbm .-etll recorc& 3.7 million shares of common stock
NcwPon Corp. a Fountain Valley of Gearhart lndustnes Inc. to 8 p.m ..
manufacturer of laser com~nents Sept. 28.
and vibration isolation equipment, As prev:iously announced, upon
experienced record sales and earnings Texas District Coun approval of
for the fiscal year ended July 31, it was cenain additional disclosure, Smith
reported Monday by Walter J. Ludt. will amend its tender offer to P3)'. S23
vice presidenttrcasurer. in cash for each of the 3. 7 million
Annual sale increased 34.5 per-Gearhart common shares purchased
cent while earnings increased by 42 in the offer. Additionally, Smith's
pereent, Ludt said. offer will be conditioned upon the
Annual net income was rescission ofGearhart's purchase of
$6,814,000, or 73 cents per share, Geo~urce Inc. from Aetna Life &.
compared to $4, 794,000, or 56 cents, Casualty Co.
By JOY DEE ANTHONY
W,NMC..rt .. 11*'•
I hey meet once a month t the
Hungry 1'1gcr rcsuuraot in Anaheim to off er suppon, job new and even
les leads. Headhunters often locate
pro peels at mecti ngs. Others come to
find out what sclli~ as all .abOut
before they even try it. .
Women in Sales. a 2SO:mcmbcr
group an the Orange County Chapter
alone. i for: women in all aspects of
the s1lles world.
Men arc invited too. The chapter
has only four male members so far,
but is open to any othcr5 who wish to
attend, ~ys Susan Linn, president of
the chapter.
There's excitement in the air at all
of the dinner mtetings, Linn adds. so
much so that fellow employees of
members often know the next day t~at the group met the night before.
Linn says the fcclina that lingers iis
described by obsttVers as "electric."
UPs AND DowNs
--
NEW voVl;.s <~~P -~~fo11ow1ng "'' howt the Over-the•Counler tockt end warran1, tti.t h•v• oone up
MONEARYE·~~~JS!] COMP
moat and clOwn t~ moat ~~ on
No ~&~ ~v·n or 1000 ~-
14Zf' ~ oercemaoe che""9 ·ere ttie erence blfw"" the prfv!Ou1 dosing price and Frldev't .. ,, bid price.
UPS Le(:
1Bv.
Pel. Up Up Up Up
UP Up Up UP UP Up
U11 UP 8:
lli'J 8: ~ Uo
'
\\ UP UP ~ UP !lo4 UP
Hi
..
lenu M MA
Bani\ of Amenca t 00
C.hlornia Ftrsi Bani\ ti 00
Croc.~ -, t.00
nte• stato t 00
Bank C.hforma t.00
:.!f Uank t.00
Sil" •omo Bank t 00
Wtira Far 1.00
I a LI
10.00
SrERUNG~ SAtllNGa
MMA
.+
i
too
t.25
t.01
100
too
t .to
She ex peas th1 to be especially lbc
case at the October meetrn where the
topic will be •• lhng to Men:•
Thou&h the Lo Angel chapter
founcfa peat deal to DJJUe with when
they were presented with thi talk,
Unn ho~ that the Oran County
JfOUP Wiii find a lot to h ten to and
think about.
Unn comes from an cademicatly-~
oriented fanuly "hose id a of ucce
required gctt1q a Phd. After obtain·
in& a bachelor's an anthropo1~ from
George Wamm ton University in
Washington, D. .• Linn entered the
sales world with a job for an otlice and
printing equipment company. Now
she sells Orange County Chamber of
Commerce memberships. There are
still unfortunate stercoty~ about
the sellina world, she uys. tha\
prevent many from planning a career
m it. She hopes this i changina as
many observe the dynamism of the
Women in Sales group. It's not
academia, she'll admit. You have to
learn to be street wi~ to be good in sales..
But perhaps the most important
quality is pcrsistance. Linn says
Women in S&les can help beginners a
great <Ital with this. In the early days
of her career, she remembers crying a
lot. But witb the kind of support you
Althoust! onginall) the poup intended for those ecmng direct
commt StODS, mOSt of the members tOday arc in col)>Orate 1 Some
have technical cxpctl lhng
thulgft like b~drauhc vahu.
Attheothcrcndoftbcii>ecuumare
1hosc w:ho give cmlal or tup~rc panacs. aJthough these arc a mmonty.
The U . sale$ force• as ch.angmg,
Linn remarked. Women now make
Cooper ls new corperate vp
~raW M. Coorr has joined Fountain-Valley based FBP. -.. I!
corporate Vice president of finance. FHP i a fe~lly gualified 1-Qhtll
mamtenancc organization with l3 medical centers in Califi>mia. Ulab ,_,
Guam. It is currently building its first hospital in Fountain Valley. Q)opU
brings J 3 years of experience in accounting and finance 10 htS new po91.. ~
recently as corporate director offinance and administration for Kllller' S.-, Corp. t • • • PerteeCompwkrCorp.oflrvineha added fourStaffmembcnroitsNon!I
American System 3200 sales force. Mta•lq 'l11hua. formerly DOftbtas1
regional sales manager, is now eastern rqionif sales manager and T .. ~
has joined the firm as central rqt0nal m nagcr. New district manaacn includt
Warren Barter, cas~ ~istrict maDJl&eT, and JM Wrtpt, uthcm disuid
Tanager. Pertee, a subs1d1lU) of'l'rl8m,.·Adler ordi Am~ manu&ctura
sm&)c and multiuser buiin systems and softv.--arc.
"Mysoles ,,,.ssed
S60,000o year.
:Mr Kk 1-Hour
Photo Processor • • 1srunn1ng
around tlte clocli!'
Smee Apr;/, when T 1m Cullen opened his photo processing store. his K1s system hos been
running around the clock. Because of the Kis systems profitobl/1ty and ease of operation.,
Cullen was able to open o second store just three months later.
"n. quo'ity ol Kis pl;illls Mngs tbem 6odt." Cullen hos cop1tolized on the
tremendous versatility of the Kis system, which processes and prints 110, 126. 135,
and disc film tn just 30 mmutss of machine time. In oddit1pn to his retail business. Cullen
serves profess1onol lobs thdt need quick proof prtnts. os well os city and state ogencfes ona
real es tote brokers and doctors. "'You'd be surprised hoN mony people need prints In o hurry,•
soy:s Cullen.'"/ hove fathers coming rJght in here ofter delivery so they con give pictures Of
the new baby to the grondporOOfs. -...--~-=----
•hop#• talte o lol ol pldu1Ws ol •1dren. . ond they wont them bock in o hurry.
Sixty percent of my customers drive up, drop off their fllm and PICI< rt up en route to their
other errorx:J~ ,,
compciCt :frjes1gfii:Jd to (11 lnf'9 less than 25 sq ft of floor space. the K1s system 1s the
easy way to turn ony retail bustness mto on instant profit centel A Kis system costs onty
$34 490 }b(.J con get a K1s fr:ir less than $2.(XXJ down (the oolonce ws poyot)fe up to ftve ~r.s)
for quollfled buyers
On:
the , •
• •
1:QilH1El41t1111iii!ttt41fti!M t
IOllArl CLISllG PllCES
-
WHAT NYSE Dio
NEW YORK CAP> S.P. 24
Todl~7 ~·
NYSE LEAOlR S
UP S AND DOWN S
WHAT AMEX DID
NEW YORK (AP) SeP. 74
AMfX LEADERS . .
NASDAQ SUMMARY
GoLo Quo JLS
M ll~Ls Quo ris
That'15 an apt description of both business and
business people along the OraAge Coast. To keep track of
where companies are going and which people are helping
them get there, just watch ·credit Line' -every day In tti
Business section of y~ur new llilJ l'lllt .
..
..
SenFrmcleco
roll••n lorem81n
unbeaten .. C2.
~Z~~~ei.s ~an frustrate$ DeCi_A~---~ls__,,,_~---!:--~-1 .
hook up asRangers elped
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Coach
Don· Coryell of the San Diego
0-argers doesn't mince words when
discussing the Raiden. He says they
might be the best team in football
tiistory. . .
"Well, they're the best team l've ~ver played against. if you want to put
tt tbat way1" Co~cll says, ''and
· they·v~ done nothmg to indicate
they're not the best this year."
The pme is blacked out in the Los
AnJCles--Oranae County area. It's on
rad10 (KRLA, 1110) at 6 o'clock.
Coryell, in bis 12th season as a head
coach in the National Football
league. will act an opportunity to
find out first hand just how good the
defending Super Bowl champions ue
toniabt wben the Chargers and
Raidem battle at the Los Angeles
Coliseum.
The Raiders will attempt to win on
a Monday ni&htforthe21st time in 24
tries. Since the prime time series
bepn in 1970, the club has a 2~2-1 . record.
"Monday ni&hts have been very
Sood to the Raiders, the Raiders have
been very good to Monday ni&hts."
said Raiders Coach Tom Flores. "I
have no idea why we play so well on
Monday nights. I'd ptar all season on
Monday nights, if they d let us."
The Raiders arc 3-0 this season,
having beaten Houston (24-14),
Green ~y (28-7) and Kansas City ·
(22-20). TbeCbariersare 2-1, havins
beaten Minnesota ( 42-13) and Hous-
ton (31-14) while losins to Seattle
(31-17), turnina the ball over eisht
times 10 the r.rocess. ,
San Diego s victory over the Oilers
last Sunday enabled CofYcll to be-
come the first coach ever to win I 00
or more games at both the NFL level
and the collegiate level. His college
teams at Whittier and San Diego State
were 127-24.~ over 15 years. . . .
Coryell 111d be. was basmg his ·
opinion of the Raiders on last year,
"and I don't sec any difference so far
this ycu."
"Their defense is just great, I just
don't sec a weakness there," he said.
''Their offense, (running back)
Marcus Allen can do everything. they have~ strong linemen. speed on
the outside, a great ti&ht end and a
quarterback who comes throu&h."
Flores expressed the opinion that
the Cbaracrs are a lot better than the
injury riddled team that went 6-10 in
1983. •
"They totally dominated Hous-
ton," Flores sa.id. "(San Diego quar-
terback Dan) Fouts was at his best, he was as sharp as I've ever seen him.
Their defense seemed to play a lot
better."
0.., .......... ..., lfiRMN u,111
Anfel Juan Benlquea leaps to n., G~ Ward'• Dy ball at Anaheim Stacllam Sanda~'. .
with extra swing
One of the 45,094 fans on Fan
Appreciation Day Sunday wasn':t too
appreciated b>: Doua DcCinces.
And according to the Apgel third
baseman. ••Maybe iftbe Angels would
give ll\Vay a baseball to every fan on
Fan Appreciation Day, he wouldn't
have wanted at."
But bcnuse then" was ilbat mbi-
tion -thinp were turned uound.
1'bc Angers suffered another bitter
loss to the Texas Raogcrs, this time in
10 innings, 2-1, and that fan DcCanccs
was rcfemna to was three rows back
near the Angel dugout when he
aPOCated to aid the Texas cause,
helping the Ranacn score their win-
ning run in lhc decisive 1 Otb frame.
When Larry Parrish led off the
inning with a dOuble. Georae Wriabt
foWcd one off adjacent to the dugout.
and DeCinces. in pursuit of the ball,
reached into the stands to make the arab.
The replay showed that the f&n
knocked the ball loose from DcCi-
nces' glove, &ivin& Wrisht another
opportunity to bil
•·1 would have bad it. .. DeCinces
said. 'Tm not sure wbcre bis bands
were but I know I could have had the
ball"
Wright then flied out to center field,
allowing pinch-runner Billy Sample
to advance to third. Bobby Jones was
walked intentiooally and pinch-bitter
Bill Stein fanned look:ina. but pincb-
hitter Marvis Foley laced a onc-
hopper just past the outstretched
&)ovc of first baseman Darrel Miller
to bring home Sample with the pmc-
winncr.
That's where the k.q_lo _the foul ball
comes into effect. Haq DcCinces
made the play for the second out.. lik.e
he. feels he should bavc, Sample
(Pl--Me A!fGBL8/C2)
The Wild, Wild West .. ........... W l Pd. M
• 1S .S\6 -
• 7S S'6 -
11 76 --l s.illaW°'I SC.. Teu1 2 • .,.... I no lnnln!Nl
0.lllend S, KMMJ City 1 MIMelota s. o.velalld 1 T...,.IG.-.,.... (l.11111 12-f and SIWw H ) al
K..,..1 cnv (SM ut r f· lt ...s o.
JadllOft 1"-' J PJ'I\., K>/.PC radio (7IO),
IWnNiot• (Vloll 17-12) .. CMcaeo
(..,,,.ter ll•lt), II
ll ....... G.-
ANGELS (I) -Awn ti): s.t. 24 (2),
2S, 26 KaMU Cltv, 27, JI, 2', • TeaL
KANSAS CfTY In -Hon-. (-0: s.t. 14
(2), 2S, 2' Anlilft, Away (3): Sept, JI, 2', )0
ou.i.nd.
MNMESOTA (7) -A-V (7) s.t. 14,
25, 26 Ctllcaeo, '11, a . 2', JO~
Rains' turn for the right bounce
Kemp's solid play
big key in 24-14
win over Bengals
Mike Lansford kicked· a 29-yard
field goal for a 17-7 advantage in the
fourth quarter, after missing a pair of
first-half attempts.
"We seemed almost self-destruc-
tive at timest Rams Coach John
Robinson said. "We'd have the
CINCINNA Tl (AP) _ Slotback op~rtunity to do something, and
Mike Gurnan of the Rams wasn't wed make an error."
surprised when 1im Breech's onside Kemp, a fourth-year quarterback
kick tumbled his way. But the clean taking over for the injured Vince
bop it took into his arms -and the Ferragarno, completed 13 of23 passes
clear field in front of him -were far for 205 yards without an interception.
from expected. He found Brown for his second pro
Gu man scooped up the dcsper-TD pass late in the third quarteT, after
ation onside kick with t :52 to play.z the strualin& Benpls had tied the
sidestepped Breech, and sprinted 4j pmc wiffi the help of a fa.kc punt.
yards to the end zone to clinch the Brown beat comcrback Ray
Rams' 24-14 victory Sunday over the Honon, turned the wrona way, spun
winless Cincinnati Bengals. around and pulled the ball in with one
"He turned and looked our way, so hand while fallina backward$ in the
we knew he was aoina to kick it that end zone for a 14-7 lead with 2:0 I left
way," Gu man said. "Fortunately, the in the quarter.
ball just popped rijht up to me. If The Rams bottled up Cincinnati's
-you're able tG1>ick at up and-.ct past---· .... 1.auack, holdina Anderson to
the first line, there's usually nobody 17 completions in 31 attempts for 143
there." yards. Two of his tosses were picked
The stunning return killed a off, &ivina him siJt interceptions in his
t
Denials comeback that put them in last two games.
position tQ_!ic or win the game if The Bengals held the ball for 8:24
th9'd recovered the kick. on a drive to the Rams' 2-yard line
QUarterback Ken Anderson got a midway through the first haJf. but measure of satisfaction in an other-(Pleue eee RAllS/C2) Ron Brown palla In a 62·yard toacbclown pue aaa1nat Clncbmatl ln Ra.mf 24· 14 Win.
w19e frustrating afternoon for Cincin-
nati by hittina wide recei-ver Cris
C-0lhnsworih with a l~yard touch-
down pass in the clo ina minutes.
The Bcnpls then lined up for an
onside kick to their left, but Breech
uw the Rams waiti~ there and chose
to bOunce it Guman sway.
"I thouf!t there was more room on
that side.' Breech said. "I hit the ball
bard and lhouaht it would set by~him .
.. But be came up and cut it off, and
·the bell hopped up to ham. He made a
aood, heady play. What c.an you say?"
The return pvo the Ram • who are
now 2-2, theirfiBt<:J)ancc to rein in a
pmc they dominated for the first
threc~uartcn but nearly let lip av. y
throu mistakes.
Jc Kemp, makma h11 first Na·
uonal FootbaU t.caaue start. teamed · up with wide rcccivcr Ron Brown on
a pectacular Sl·yard touchdown
bomb to put lhc Rim ahead l .. 7 in
the third quancr. nr Rams could have opened a
biger lead, but runn1n Eric
Diclccnon in the nd half.
Dicke n carried 22 t1m for 89
yards before tcavi in lhe fourth
quancr with awn 1 IDIUI").
KANSAS CITY, MINNESOTA LOCKED IN TIE
Codiroli fools the Royals into loss,
despttee tertngwttba6.69ERA
Bush snaps out of 0-for-l 7 slump
to get Twins back.in business
.,
CubeUblwo.
n11dY1ctorr
tonlght ·towln
NL l!8et ..... Cl.
Orange
County
.Top 10
....
J
I
'
Who says a coacb
can't do anything
but sit, watch?
From AP •t tt Ell
STORR Conn. -It apparently wa!> 4 II•
more than Darren Coulter could bear.
After two lop ided lo se in previous
weckund dvwn b.y a JS. 7 ore to host Connc-cticut, the
former star quanerba.ck and now assistant coach tor
Morgan State bolted onto the field Saturday and tacktcd
a Connecticut runner h dcd for a touchdown.
"I 11.&C it "'' jU$t wmethinJ that built up ini.1dc
him:· Morpn Sta~ bead Coach Jam Phillips said after
apf)logizing to Connecticut Coach Tom Jackson in th~
loeker room.
The runner. t ilback G~1 Morrison, was awarded
a 71-yatd touchdown.
"l asked him (Coulter) about it and he had tears in
his eyes." Phillips uid ... It wa something he did
inst1Dcttvcly. If he could nm it back in his mind. he
would traSt" it. ..
Coulter wouldn't commenf after the game.
The incident came late 10 the game, ·the fi t
·meetina between the two schools. UConn held a 3
lead when Morpn State's Alphonso Harris electrifi
the crowd with a 98-yard TD run.
On the very next play, Morrison -a freshman
taklD& his first varsity handoff -broke through the hne
at the 29 and was an the clear in front of the Morgan
State bench when Coulter upended him . Momsen was
awarded a 71-yard TD run and Phdlips sent his
assistant to the lock.er room.
Morrison said he never saw bis tackler. Asked af he
was angry about lhe incident, the Madison, Conn ..
player, said, ·•Naw, rm not mad. We won. That's good
enough for me.·•
'the 41-14 victory was Connecticut's first of the
year after two disapPotnting defeats. Morgan State is
now 0-3. I ts other losses were 44-0 to Boston University
and 31-14 to Texas Southern.
Jackson, who was an ~East guard and tri-captain
at Penn State in 1969, took no chances after the
incident. He gathered his team ju.st before the kickoff
and told them "I didn't want any reciprocation to take
place. I told them it takes a bigger man to walk away."
Quote of the day
San OMlgo Chargers Coach Don CoryeU, about
ChuCk Muncie: "If Chuck can get wen -and he la
atek fight now, u everyone knows-then It.ope we
can use him. But we don't know how long that might
b4t."
Salle bury lost for 4-5 weeks
LOS ANGELES -Southern CaJi-·m
fomia quarterback Sean Salisbury had torn c II •
cartilege removed from his right knee in
arthroscopic surgery Sunday and will be
sidelined from four to five weeks.
Salisbury, a 6-5, 215-pound senior. was injured
when his cleats caught in the grass on a roll out during
the first quarter of Southern Cal's 6-3 Pacific-I 0
Conference football victory at Anzona State Saturday
night.
Sunday's surgery was performed at Huntington
Memorial Hospital an Pasadena.
Sahsbury. third on Southern Cal's all-ume career
passing hst, had completed three of five passes for 41
}:Brds ID the game and had directed the Trojans on their
first field goal dnve.
As a sopmnnore ID 1982. Salisbury tore hgaments
an hJs nghtknecdunngSouthem Cal's game at Anzona
State and missed the final four games of that season
Kevin Mel.can. a redsh1rt freshman. 1s expeeted to
start at quarterback for the I 7th-ranked Trojans. who
are 2-0 on the season. in their game against Lou1Stana
State at the Los AnJeles Coliseum Saturday.
McLean filled m for Saltsbury at Anzona State and
completed 7 of Ii passes for 80 yards. Freshman
Rodney Peete will back up McLean.
Racer in critical condition
BROOKLYN. Mich. -Derek Daly Ill
wascrita.cally injured ina violent crash. and
subsequent ram caused postponement of
tht{ tomd Detroit News Grand Prix Indy-
ca~ race Sunday.
Daly was flown by helicopter to the University of
Michigan Hospital in Ann Arbor, where be was listed in
cnticial condition with fractures of both lower
extrem1t1es -both feet and ankles -a broken left
hand, possible anternaJ injuries and a bruised abdomen.
A hospital spokesman said his vital signs remained
stable and that the 31-year-old native of Ireland was
conscious and alert.
The race, which had started just over two hours late
because of a morning-long ram, was stopped again
dunng the cauuon period following Daly's accident.
The contanuang rain finally forced track officials to
reschedule the remainder of the lndy-<:ar event and the
companion Super Vee and ASA sports car races
Monday.
Another milestone for Sparky
Octroat'' Jack Morrit teamed \\ith •
l"O relieve~ on a two-hitter for his l9th
victory and Sparky Andtnoa bet-amc the
first manager to wih 100 game~ in both
league a the Tigers beat the New York Yankees 4·1
Sunday in American League action. Marty Ca1ttllo
drove 1n two runs with a angk and 11 homer. Kirk
Gibson homered and LUce Parrlsll singled home a run
a~ Detroit -which clinched the AL East title TucSday
-rai~ it r«ord to l00-55. nderson·s Cincinnati
Red teams won more than 100
game in 19.70, 1975. and 1976 in
the Nanonal League. The Tigers
need five more victories in the
final se'en games for their win·
ningest season ever ... ln other
AL games Sunday. Dous Lomu
hit his first two major-league
homers as Milwaukee beat Tor-
onto 8-5 ... Britt Burns and Roa
Reed combined on a three-hitter
Andenon and Vuce Law had three hits and
two RBI in Cbic.ago's 4-0 victory
over Seattle ... Tony Armas and Jim Rlce each cracked
a two-run homer as Boston beat Baltimore 6-2. Ric.e
had a sacnfic.e fly as well. living him the AL RBI lead
wlth 121. Armas tops the majors with 42 homers, and
has 119 RBI
..i.Ttme running out for Mets
DwtglltGoodenscattered fivehttsover •
eight innings and Mookle Wilson scored a
pair of runs to help the NewYortcMetstoa
6-1 victory over Montreal in National
League action, but the Mets' time is running out with
Chicago's magic number now at I. The 19-year-old
riJht-hander. 17-9, won for the eighth time in his past
rune starts. stnlong out nine to run his major lcague-
leading total to 276. It was the first time in four starts he
did not go the distance and the first time in six he failed
to strike out at least I 0 batters in a
game . . . Elsewhere in the
National league Sunday. Kart
Bevacqua'• run-scoring sin$1e in
the l l th inning gave San Diego a
2-1 victory over Atlanta and
reliever Gres Booker his first
major-league win. Craig
McMurtry held San Diego
without a bit until Carmelo
Martinu doubled to right with
Good two outs 10 the seventh inning ...
di Johmly Ray drove in two runs
with a single as Pittsburgh ran its winning streak to six
games with a 4-2 victory over Philadelphia, and in a
mght game, Terry Pubt'and Bill Doran hit solo homers
and Bob Knepper, I 5-10, ·tossed a four-hitter as
Houston beat Cmcinnau 2-1. Nick Esasky homered for
the Reds' only run.
Dodgers lose to Giants. 4-2
SAN FRANCISCO -ft took ham 30
major leagues game to do It. but San
Francisco Giants' left-hander George Riley
final!;, posted has first major league victory
Sunda)'..
Riley, acquired last month from the Philadelphia
Ph1lhes 10 the Al Oltver trade. blanked the Los Angeles
Dodgers fore1ght innangsand was relieved with one out
m the ninth during a 4-2 victory by the Giants.
"It's about time," said Riley. 1-0, who wasQ.-5 with
the Chicago Cubs in 1979-80 and salvaged his career
following shoulder surgery in 1981. "When 1 was with
the Cubs, I didn't have enough experience.
"Sance the surgery, I've become a better pitcher,"
he added. "It's a ~real feeling to get the first one. I just
hope I keep contrabuttng to the Giants."
Riley's stout performance. a pair of run-sconng
singles by Chns Brown and a homer by Rob Deer
helped the Giants sweep the three-game senes.
TeleTI&lon, radio
TELEVISION
No events tcheduled.
RADIO
3 p.m. -BASEBALL: Angels at Kansas City,
doubleheader, KMPC (710).
6 p.m. -PRO FOOTBALL: San Diego at
Raiders. KRLA(1110).
7:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Houston at Dodgers,
KABC(790).
..
s
49erss lllperfect
Cavanaugh s eps in to gut de
San Francisco to fourth wtn
From'"'lP dlspalcbn '
Pijll.A()ELPHIA -ubstitute quarterb4ck tt
Cav n~h threw thrct" touchdown passesand direct t
unbt4ten n Franci~o 49ers 10 a 21-9 victory over th~
host Phil delphia Eagles for their founh National Football
League victory in as mnny tarts.
Cavanaugh, who had.thrown onl)' eight passes in the
fir'lt three games, played in place of the mjurtd Joe
Montana and completed 17 of 34 for 252 yards and no
intcrc~puons.
Jn other NFL play Sunday:
Cowboys ZO, Packers I: -Dallas fcty Michael
Down ~rdcd two sacks and. blocked an extra Point and
corncrb ck Everson Walls intercept~ two pa to help
the Cowboy paralyze Green &y•s struaaling offenlC and
defeat the Packers m Irving. Tcus.
It was not until Tony Dorsett dashed seven yard• for a
touchdown with 46 5C<'Onds remaining that the Co~bo)'S
could put away_thc ~rappy Packers. On the~lay, Dorsett
became the NFL's ixth all-time leading rusllcr. passing
former t'cn Ba) fullback Jim Taylor's 8,597 yards.
tt gained 43 yards on 20 carries and now ha
8.621 yards. ....
Seahawllt 38, Bean t : -Chicago's talented Walter
Payton easily pas ed Franco Harris of Seattle to become
the NFL 's 'No. 2 all-tame career rusher behind Jirnmy
Brown. but the Seahawks used a strong second-half
performance by quarterback Dave Krieg and an outstand-
mg defense to defeat the previously unbeaten Bears.
Payton. who went into the game trailine Harris by 34
yards rushed for I 16 yards on 24 c.arries wltlle Harris was
held to 23 yards on 14 rushes. That gave Payton 12,091
yards in his nme-plus NFL years. Brown's NFL c.areer
rushing record as 12,3 t 2 yards.
DolpblDt U, Coll• 7: -Dari Marino tossed a pajr of
touchdown passes to Mark Duper and Pete Johnson
scored Miami's first TD on the ground to lead the
unbeaten Dolphins to a rout of the Indianapolis Colts.
Marino, the NFL's top-rated quarterback, teamed
with Duper on an 80-yard scoring play that snapped a 7-7
tie with 12: 19 left in the second quarter and a 5-yatder that
made it 23-7 JUSt before halftime.
Red1kiD1 H , Patrlots 10: -John Riggins ran for 140
yards 'and a t 3-yard touchdown -aainst the N FL's second-
ranked rushing defenSt", and Mark Moseley kicked four
field goals as the Washington Redskins downed the New
England Parnots m Foxboro, Mass.
Playing against a team that bad allowed opposing
runners 205 yards and no touchdowns in its first three
games. Riggins broke Larry Brown's club record of 5,875
rushinJ yards and boosted his qreer total with the
Redskans to S.,898.
The bruising fulJback also notched his I OOth c.areer
touchdown, tying him with Franco Harris for fourth place
an NFL history.
Browns 20, Steelers 10: -Paul McDonald, shaking
off Sam Washington's 69-yard interception return, passed
for 222 yards m the second half, including touchdowns to
Boyce Green and DuJiel Harris. to give the Oeveland
Browns their fu'St victory of the season, over the visiting
Pittsbu~Steelers.
McDonald ctime alive in the third quarter. hitting hi~
finit five pas$CS ancludina the touchdown to a wide-open
G~n on a safety blitz and a 31-yard pass to Ou1e
Newsome that t up Matt Bahr's 18-yarcUicld aoal.
Jets zi, Bills U : -Pat Ryan threw three touchdown
pMse to We Icy Walker as the New York Jet Cdaed
win le s Buffalo for the Bills' founh straight loss at Orchard
~ rk, N .Y. . ·
Tony Pai started off the Jets' scorina with a 2-yard
touchdown run m the second period. But from then on it
-was all Ryan and Walker for the Jets. as they teamed Of\
scoring passes of 12, 44 and 35 yards.
VUd.Dp zt, Cardinals Z8: -Mmnesota defenders
recovered three second-half Detroit fumbles. and Jan
Stenerud kicked five field goals as the Vikinas edged the
Lions at Pontiac, Mich.
Stenerud's field goals came from 35, 32, 37, 34 and 19
yards to offset a four-touchdown day by Lions quarterback
Gary Danielson, who had scoring tosses of I, 66, JO and I 5
yards.
Gluts 17, Buccaneers 14: -Phil Simms fired two
touchdown passes and All-Pro linebacker Lawreoc.e
Taylor led a New York sack attack against Tampa Bay
quarterback Steve OeBerg as the Giants outlasted the
Buccaneers.
Simms found rookie free agent Bobby Johnson on a
20-yard touchdown pass in the se"Cond quarter just three
plays after Taylor forced a fumble to give New York, 3-1,a
10-0 lead.
Broncot %1, CbJefs 0: -Sammy Winder rushed for
139 yards and a second-<1uarter touchdown and cor-
nerback Mike Harden highlighted a determined Denver
defensive effort with a 45-yard anterc.eption return for
another score, sparking the host Broncos to a victory over
the Kansas City Chiefs.
Until the closang minutes, the Chiefs mounted only
two serious scoring threats, and both ended on missed field
goals.
Falcons 4%1 ()jJers 10: -Steve Bartkowski hurled
three touchdown passes and Gerald Rig&slCored twice on
short p1unges as the Atlanta Falcons buried winless
Houston in Atlanta.
Bartkowski com(>leted 11 of 13 attempts for l 9S
yards, including sconng stnkes of 23 and 16 yards to
Arthur Cox and 25 yards to Billy "White Shoes" Johnson.
Saints 34, Cardinals U : -Reserve running back
Wayne Wilson caught two touchdown passes. one with
just over six minutes left in the game, to lead the New
Orleans S8inu to a victory over the visiting St. Louis
Cardinals.
ANGELS FRUSTRATED WITH 2-1 LOSS. • •
From Cl
would have still been standing on
second base.
And by the tame Fote) c.ame up,
Miller would've been further away
from the bag, not holding the runner
Jones oo first.
Thus 1t would have been an easier
attempt for Miller on Foley's
grounder.
"I wouldn't say 1t cost us a game,
but it certrunly had an intluenc.e on
the outcome," DeCinces said. "lt was
the turning point for them."
"It changes the complexion of
where we play:· Manager John
McNamara said. "We would've
walked Jones, then Stein strikes out.
And Miller had to play behind the
man (at first), he would've been
plarmg deeper. He just missed that
bat which aot through for the single ...
.. I was screaming to the fans, 'Let it
go. Let 1t go.' A ball that comes in
there, they want to catch for a
souvenir and l understand that."
continued DeCinces. "But if you're
up on the game you have to let that
one go.
"He (the fan ) was a little scared
af\er I talked to him. I kept asking
him, 'What are you thinking about?' I
kind of felt sorry for him afterwards.
but only so much. I can't feel too sorry
because It may have cost us the
game."
Meanwhile, slump-buster J im
Slaton was asked to help soothe the
Angels' September ghost -Kansas
City and Minnesota -and he was
pitching as well as he'd pitched all
season.
But only a few mishaps cost him a
victory during his l Q foning per·
formance.
Texas' first run in the eighth mnina
tied the game at one, though it was
benefitted by a couple of bloopers.
Donnie Scott's two-out dunker drop-·
ped among a trio of Angels in shallow
lefi~nter field, and pinch-hitter
Tommy Dunbar's sof\ single to center
brought pinch-runner Jeff Kunkel
home.
"I was upset when they scored their
f;rst run because they htt a couple of
·flares," Staton said. "h 's a shame. it's
jUSt a funny pme.
"I was also upset because they did it
with two outs. l was just trying to take
some of the sting out of their bats -
and I did. I did my job. hjust didn't
work out nght."
The Angels scored their only run 1n
the second innina when Brian Down-
ing drove one over the left field fence
for his 22nd homer of the year.
They also ran themselves out or
two possible scoring opponunities
when Bobby Grich and DeCinces
were each thrown out at second tryioa
for an extra base. And in the fifth
innang. Bob Boone bunted an at-
tempted squeeze in the air Wlth
runners on second and third and one
out. Downing. the runner on third,
was easily doubled up to end the
inning.
ANG•L NOTES -The Aneel1, In lhlrd ~
llh 11•mn behind the Rovelt end Ille Twin•, !revel 10 Kenies Clly for the moil lmoortant
~ of the '"'°"' • four-v.me Ml betlnnlM loday with • doubleMMMr (3-0Sl. Channel 5 wll
btgln COllWHt of .,. final roed ''"' Tuewi.v
nllltlt end conllnut Ul'llll ltlt dhll$10n !Ille Is Miiled
••• ''The txlr• .. me (lo.ilgttt) '' eolM to bt
1n11rument•I.'' Menaow JtM Mc....,... MkL
"Wt eo lo win, end wt lle11t IO "' hel9 fl-om
tvervwhtrt In l ight. Wt Med hefp from Ille
Whitt SO• •nd Clewt.nd (whldl olen Mlnnnol•
fOIK limes nt•I Wftkend) " On Ille ~lodaY, McNamar• Mid, "Wt knew we've had
lhl' 'Ince June, M> -·ve Pf"tPWed for It for •
IOno llrnt." • • lht Anotll """ Mnd G.-z.M
< i2-f) and llldl Sttlrtr C0-0) to the mound todev laclnO Br« Slll1matM (t ·iO) and DaMY
JKirMll (i·•) ••• "This lhillo litl't 011«" wltf'I, Wt
lull nan lo old! II UP end go alter It (tOdav),''
McNemare continued. "I ,_ -"' some 11111 •nd score M>me runs.. We Pla11 btlllf" on tht roed
anvwa11, no douOI tboul II.'' ......... Jad!Mft , wlltl 111, lour·vHr conlracl canine for so centi
Ptr CUSlomtr eftll' tlltndenca rHCMS 2.4
mllllon, wiU Mrn en ulr• Jl,491.50 11111 '"'°"·
SundaY'l crowd P\1$htd Ille IOl•I ... son •lltnd· enca to 2,'°2,007
BOATING
-----------_ = --------"-RAMs:t?ET A WIN.: •
1/1238 a+ ntx pe;mo.
._,_.,. aooa. Loaded wftll T-Oer. Air·condit10fllt>g.
st~ cauette. power w1naows. •rtd many other INtur
00 mo closed etKJ /Mu. Cll.fJ oo3I $15,742, down pay-
mMt $131212 c.1h or tr•'H ts« 0236~)
All Ufl Wb to prior NhJ. ..
From Cl
came up empty when Ander.;on was
!.acked on founh-and-goal.
Kemp. who dadn 't atterru>t ~ss in
the first quarter. then rallied t e
Rams on an 88-yatd, 14-play dnve.
He connected on 5 of 7 passes for 52
yards. ancluding a pair of third-down
completions: to 5ct up Dickerson's 6-
yard touchdown run.
A fake punt set up the Bengals' first
score in the third quarter. Punter Pat
MclnaU1.iook the s~ap and threw to
runn1ngbic\ Stanford Jenn1ngSfor a
43-yatd pass play to the Rams' l 5,
and Larry Kinnebrew bulled into the
end zone from two yards out four
plays later to tie it 7-7.
-Brun captures cup
SAN DIEGO -The Balboa
eha11C'ni' Olp, forj'Un" OTIC' oft
most coveted saihng trophies on the
West Coast, was reactivated after a
nine-year demi~ Sunday with Vance
Brun of San Diego Yac.ht Club
sailed for for 25 years m Rhodes-33
oops-but e--competrtion was
1------------:...----"--------------surging from behind to edge Newport
discontinued when SDYC won it an
1975. Under a new deed of gift the
trophy was reactiv tated for
Etcbell! -22 sJooqs. :rhree challengers
turned out for Sunday's race. Bever, a
former world Star challlpaon from
Newport Harbor Yacht Oub led the
race 10 a close battle until Brun, also a
world class Star sailor overhauled
him at the finish and surged ahead.
Al TERNA TIVE TO MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBAU
PRIME BIB DI ER
.. P ~ IAL '8.9
Harbor Yacht Oub's Don Bever by
less than flve feet at the end of the 12·
mile sudden d,(.ath race off Point
Loma. /-.
The Balboa Challen Cup was Third place went to Los Anactcs
Yacht Club with Doua Jorscnson at
the helm. and fourth was Balboa
Yacht Club's Gene Williams.
From 1950 until 197S the Cup wa
won by vanually every major yacht
club from San Diego to San Fran-
cisco. Under the new deed of aifl it i
expected that the raoe wiH again
become an annual event.
Van 'T Riet wins
r
lf wo classes turned out undly for ....._,to l.Olle lad'! <Sat1K4tvl Balboa Yacht O ub'. One-de 1gn Re·
CLASS A -w Cerl elld Mar& U•I gat\4 for cl 111hnaooean C0Uf1CS. ecvc: , •to. ,..,, ~ "· ea 1ranci . Re ults of tc inside clUtcs on Satur•
• ... YC, > ncott "·Jot· Hofflfttn, ICYC ,~ .. " ..... -not -i:n...a· CLA.Sa I -I &rrn1 lntktr. Jeck ano aruc. u.. .. ... '" •... QI. ,
!Afton. acvc:., i Jro, 1 IYfnl. acvc.; i. n the SC\' en t Tiustlc the ••lad wou, mn •won.. acvc winner wu Bob Van "T R1ct of the
• II I e • A II
Coinpl le dinner lncludin
soup or I d, ind chok
of potato •
TV viewing for
football 1ame1
80 I £. Balboa
673-7726
CL.A$$ c -• FIYlno CO!On. °'" IOl!lt h I b d M .a. Th NtwPOrt HArl:IQr VC, t Holo K '· lttcll Ruf: 0 t c u ' oon WIS 11• omp-
Ctoo l't"C, 1 Vutoaf b tmen, D"" ""'toww. son, Pymatunana YC, nd th1rcl wa c.~~vc et1 ,0 ...WPOl't <SUndtv>. Jim Drury. ~uth hore Y ,
CLAU •-t "'° 2 Ml ..,, C.rotv11 N W1Mer an the five'"boat Im ... Do.a..,., Newpctt leech • 7'M·133·'300
..., '
OIHH PEHINSUU
BALBOA
Merciv, acvc. > Wltlcl• Cla "''"John Gray. Vo)'llCfS 'r' •
c1.1o.ss 1 -a 11e1 .. wotf,2 s1,.u1r ff', runner-up" n:ro-iski'VdnBarbata J ln,tlntt lnK• C r, C. ave:.
CLAU c -1 IYlno cotor1. 2 VUIOw Healy 11nd Ann Kang. I Sailing eoa1me11, J Dnw .. 11.. oti oar '• C.oo vc aton ..
I,
Orange Coa t DAILY PILOTIM~ Sept~4 1tM
Pro golf Cubs' magic numberisone!
re S Ult S Doubleheader sweep provides Chicago ~~:••Y ::3.,,, ':'1,;; ~0~ ~cu :':':: •::;;.,., ~~1::,::~::
OtNt w.,.}!.~.~=· --::.:.*61-M1 a shot at clinching East crown tonight d;c 'g~~~~~~~u:,:son ptay ror ~· "f ~ riab1 thinp He dad ~~me. :tJ:=:~:~ The CUbs nd their ace, Rick •·~ no"' have 10 wm one, .. r,.•me lttwrt, m.aoo •N> .. N•.:n-cMJ From JlP dl•tcbts me hneup."' utcldTc to the mound tonight 1nst Matthews said "f ve-ryth1na :is down· ~vMlllw~AllO 1Nf-..·•M5-iMS ManaaerJimFrey1tareda1ablank One of lhe best move Frey m de the Pttuburah ~ratcS. A Yt1n would hill for us now. We can play fancy :=~.sW,,,, =~~:I;:tt::: lineup card. lr'Yina to fi&ure out the wa to chat Sunday morning with put me CUbs ln the a11onal Lca&ue free. Even if we do l(>1e three an o.ve ~2'.m •Hl-M•J0-17-346 combination of players who could Gary Matthews and then pencil in the playoffi apanst the San D1~0~ Pittsburab. which I don•t really 1tb1nt
Mike ,.,.,,,7 6Hl·7t-70-~ end a five~me tailspin and put the veteran outfielder's name on the The Mets prevcnte<I Chl~~ :(rom we•lldo,lt' goinatobeto\.llbforNcw
0 _., 0...,1, m,700 71-70•66•7Ht-ic7 1caao u over t e top 1n t e 1neup ~r • a ew1, • n1 .. nam c inc inc c • t e ou n 1 on un y o . R111aCoctlren,l20,700 "•*"""~ Ch' C bs h · h J' d M tth Ci.. cd 1· h ' th •l I t 't1J da Y rk ••
Jack •111111t. m.100 7M1·•N,.,o-3-t7 • National J..eque 'East Diviiion title Sarge. sluqed a three-run doubk m by toppmfi Montreal 1. behind thC The Cobl took contrOl' of the ~J!lnkll,._.:!.."'°!~700 '•27·!!:n .. ·,n1·n-<M71_~.77 chase. an 8· l first.game victory Sunday over pitch in& Q Dwight Gooden. opener with a six·run fourth mn1na ~ O;,sii.tso **11:,0:.,::r.. "I auess I E' 12 houn in the • the St. Lou ls Cardinals, then whacked "Gary Matthews, for the last four keyed by Matthews' ba~earioa
MrkMcCm1w,11uso •1·n·10-n·M-M room latt ni t. I thou&ht about a two-run home run in the 4-2 orfivcwccks,hasgottcnsomebighits double.
Halaut1on,11uso • .,.71-10· .. •7~ ev,_,.hine" NU uid. ••1 put down ni .. "tcapvicion1thatcarnedtheCubs for us." Frey id ... He's a tttrnen-Left-hander Steve Trout, 13-7, GervHelOere,11J.9'0 '6•71 · .. ·72·71-MI .... ,. • ••.1 .,, •1 •• ~Govt, s1uso 6H7 n·"·~ lineu~. I decided that if we won the at leaSl a tie for the dsvmon crown. dous influence on this ballclu~. u-scattered ~vcn hits in aoina the
ScottHOC!l,SlJ,9'0 •s-7D"n·ff 7t-MI '' ~fi~n~t~·~·m~e,~J~wu~~ao~ina~~t~o~k~ec~p~th~e:._~W~i~tb~s~ix~p~m~e~s~re~maa~·~ru~·n~g.~tbe~Cu~bs~-~··~w~c~ta~lk~ed~thi~·s~m~o~m~ina~w~he~n~b~e:_:di~sta~nce~ft~or~lhe~~vm]_~u~·na~Cu~rbs~. --~!!~!!!!!!l!!!!!]!l!l!l!I Tom PVtzer, 110.GIO 71·6'-ft-'Jt-10'-iMt _ ...,...
Tllom111Grev. 110.• '7•U-67·6f·72-M · I• Kreti«t, 110.-0 .... 11·7• .. ~4'-G4f
'
Mike a11c1, au 10 1' • n· 70-69 "'1-'-350
$COtt sin.on. 16.110 '7·n~71·,._UO OV4I Reeo. M.110 n.71 ....... ,.......,,..
Getv Kocl\,16.llt 6t•71·10-6'•7t-.350
Gerv ....... tUIO • •n·ff·10-71-G50 0.... luflla, M.11t 7H5''7°""·72-J90 Freel CCM»ln, 16,110 71·t4·71-70-n-.-J50
l!d Fl,Ot1, tUIO ff-47•.,•71'7.._,50 :rom JtnklM, ... 156 74'61·61·73·..-351
loov Sib, ... w 10-6'•n·7t-•,_,s1
1ree1 FaiconL M.55' n·10-.. ·n·•t-u1
R11t Calctw•, SU5' 70-71-70-6'"71-351
Riv FIOYd, M.W 71-71•6'•6'·7'-351
Jtrrv Pett, M,5.5f 70-.,·ff•n•71..-351
Doml Hmnwl. SU5' 61·"•10-73·72-351
W1vne ~. M.5.5f n·H·ff·tt-76-351 L.arrv Rll'ktr, M,5.Sf 71•71•61•6'•72-351
LNA twnwiment
(ti ""' JMt> Amy Alcott 12',2.50,
Pit M41¥tn Sll,157,
K11t1v Wh1twort11111, 156,
1et1v Kint I 11, 15',
leYll'IY Kl.aU11, 15',
Pit lrldllv IJJH,
V11trlt Sklnlltr ts.JM,
Cllldv Plew IS.Jf5,
K1t11Nn Y~ 13.7'2,
Dttlble Auattn 13,7'2,
Jerit0...12,SM,
Muftlll SMncer·DtWI 2,5".
C1t11V Merino 12.515, Vicki""""" $2,515, Yur9rl ~ U,515,
Pll N1111on u.sas. Vlc:kl Ftr90ft U,515, Jan Sl9PMMon 11 Ml,
Merv Ith Ztnmrmn tlMI,
SllV Ullll 11.MI, Gell Hlr1ta l1M1,
Petty Shteflln """· Jent Crlfttr I l,6fl,
Southern
winsHB
t ourney
Three of the seven championship
rounds in Sunday's 2nd Annual Outdoor Racquetball Tournament were captured by area stan<louts at
Edison Park in Huntinston Beach
Sunday. ·
In the mens' open sin&Jes, Hunt·
in~on Beach'• Dan Southern took
Mike Bohne in four rounds, cal>l>cd
by a 21-'l 7 finale after losina the fi.nt
pme,21·23.
IMWI Of'aN SINOLIS
1. Dan SOuthtrn (Huntlnoton leadl> clef, Mlkt
80fWlt (Hwltlneton leadl), 21-23, 21-5, 21-17.
21-17. MllWI ONN DOWLaS
1. Jamie lollttr•Trev Ttvlof (H\#111"81on Medi> dtf. One Fr.eu-Aaln CulllblrtSOll
<W•lmlna!W), 11-21, 2HS, lf-21, 22·20, 15-12.
MtXaD Of'aN DOUaLIS
1. J1mlt e.rtttr-chanda T1vlof (Hunllno1on IMCll> clef, Merk Chrfstlan IL.one 8eacll)·Sllln'I
Knedlt (Hurillnoton laedl), 21-14, 17•21, 21-12,
2H'-WOM8WS ONN llNOLU
1. o..-Cl"-'men (Fount1ln V111eV> def.
Slltrrl Knecht (Huntll'\tlon hadl>. 21-S, 21-14.
forfeit. MaWS I DOUILaS 1. Ptt KVll (Mahtlm>-Ptul <>rttta tlut111 Park> dtf. Rav Duran (COSll Mua>-ROC>
lalaem (LljMll Nloual), f·21, 21•1', 21-1•,
l1·21 15-1 . • ' MaWS C llNOLU 1. JOhn GulttrTtt . (Slntl Anel def. 111n1do
Or111 (Sl11t1 Ma>, 2H•, 2H7, 22•20
IMWS C DOUIUS
1. AdOIPll 1e1tren·Mlk1 leltran (Slnlt Ana>
def. P1UI Ort ... •Jactllt WMt (autna P1rll>.
forftlt.
High school
football slate
. '
More <orrosion resistance.
New, re-engineered seamless,
smooth-side strongbox
with double-walled
construction.
..
Three-across seating.
Full-bench seat.
STILL ONLi •• $
....
More combined
horsepower and
torque than any other
standard pickup.
Powerful 2.4-liter NAPS-Z
hemi-head engine.
More value with .
standard 5-speed
overdrive transmission.
1rs here. Now. The 1985 Nissan Regular. Bed. It's mor~ truck, but
not more-money. This ·tough, new performer is-.f isted right now at an
'84 sticker. .So get more than you bar:gained for at your Datsun dealer.
· The $5999* Nissan Regular Bed; more true~ not more m0ney. No
other truck works so hara tor so little pay.
• NISSAN,
AT DATSUN DEALERS
•
..
TEXAS
.A8Mlr 21>
Rh1•1dtl
Ward If
&Bell Jb LAPrtfl rf
s.moteH
GWrohlcf
9.lonft lb 5coll c
Kunkel'' Ste111 Pt!
.Alldlflft"
W11kran u Dunbar Ofl
Yostc Folev on T .....
s.ec...
COLL.GI MaN
UC Soam. ._..,.. 2. UCI I
COLUG• WOMIN UC lnN :t. c:.11 ~-. ,...,,_ I
UCI sconne Ktalt 1, Wttch 1
•n11l1 H•rrl1 1, Cu1lmel'IO 1
\
GRROI I I I I' I '
" a ' o w I I] t
\
•
i
642-5878
P&Rl NEW,ORT
&PlATMEhTS
., I•• llr••lar
,,... who need Pec)ple •
That'a What the
DAILY PILOT SERVICE DIRECTOR\' ,
la all abeutl
ilpr!!ab, Val. beat 2"I ta I tt Lttt I ft... HM Wu... llM ltlt Wu... llM !t!JWu... . Sito _l_•l .. e W.......,,u ............ __.1..,.11.,.1 ltlt Wu... 1111
I aua .... mo: tumeanea room nw lbrt IHI ....,. nu COMPUTER t tit iiiMti1 _.__ nprt-. M So. eo..t Ptal. 1*nale Fem,&anic:h::w1poo1, RtlPOMlb'9 to 8&bY91tter 7 mo old. & pit.~~. EAGUUH!AV!A8 management • ......... '
lbt1begerYtty'750rno $275mo.W-17'7 fl1IAO S300 + dePO HB. SB~dpbcw/WM.'350, fNIU\ADS Sharp, caring S*IOn Wlltnlrdl31:0140 . Earn le/hr, PIT, PY** Earn What Yourr•oeneral ottlc. dutlM,
5111 RN.-St 142 7W Atta I. AJ Bal Penlneula, 173-5492 \M1ll w/e'Xf) I refl own tr8na. po1•--.Mu.tbeolean Wonti. PIT Mll\eO!"*'t OOOd ~.phone Otdtr 97 -eaa1 IS~ ROOM In NICE HM + • In my home u needed COUNTER and fklff fold ciut&~aa. LotaOf po91tlon, no upaf•IOI 0.., no ernoit ... full 2 or 1 HOME ~RIVILEDG0ES. Fmlnl.,.,.,tolhrnlet2br Reep, MCUfe pw90n to ARE fRE£ 7eo-1551 laundty work. M-8 Oeyt wtilldi;'i42.n11 neceHary. 511-1211 time. N>ot'/ ..,,, to 12 VEASAILI..£8: 2BR Hr.OCC.caD 762..e731. 2bew/gar,pool,apa.CM elWe E-alde C.M. 3br 14&-7421N8 Mpm.MkforRon noon,S12fAednll,CM.
QOf'IW 3rd "'· AYI sept Room. ptl'lat• ..,trance. *32a 432..u1 du~•· oar. yd. priv. Ref• Cal·. . uaY1111a 111111 eounttt/Kl1chen help. PIT M9'M .,,. .... oa .,,. ...... 15· t 1000/rno ~ Coat a MeO $250 Harb« Ridge. Att & l'9q d '350mo. M&-2520 •nttlliOetlt, mature woman & FIT Tuf'IWnY 8turtet GOOd telephone voice a 1..-a
BAYSIDE Pnthae Vl9w 54Mtt2 hlohtohoor ·eon ~lhr Worldng beoh 20-30 took--141·1111 to *Y w/ohlldrtn Wfl... 751..asee muttt 'IT 8im:n., Ma:'~"r:c. 0,:.,:~A tor lneurtnet Co. Mua1
Sbr pvt bdl pool tpa 2gar luxury condo. 1550. Ing tor eame to ahr 2Br parenta on vacatlont. eonttruotlon 843-0008 pr men /mtnual tlett type. Nr 80. coo .. 1 allp?l1950154-1777 Bo Lao bch home w/klt 152""442d}'/l40-2.434ev -.>t. 213--514-3992 Dyt Aetl. ,-.q. 840-5111 Counterpereon, f/t.$5/Hr. ~train 1.7..eeoo Ptca. COntact St._. :--------• pvt oar no dl'UQ9 an!Qk· Interviewing Mon-Fri ....... Wlllll at 833-0421 BEACH YEARLY Ing 1250 mo 490-4329 Live at bMC1t yrty, 2 glrta ltltila Wut.. ffH LOs.T t/14 honey color SAM BYSITTEAWAHT!Of hm· 10trn. Kuateta flT, non-«noktt, rnttut9, llllUI. UlllT -------
Dek.lx 2BA 2ba. gar. 1 Jll l llli ftd M/rmmt Imm.cf '326 PttbUll Babe, =-"t? at\n womwi to care or CINnlra. , .. E. 18th St aware and energetic • Operator ·~~St~1f:OO/mo. ltttll tt I mo.Monique~ *.,-:'~=.~~= 54M181;82W ~~~,..re~· eo.taMtee: ' 84M32tMktor~. •:~~~~ 'f1LD1me,1ratlfl ' UllU•HA Male~2'"'31non4mkt ~ti of polite LOST Small white Day Portere Newport 111 .. 1&1111 ote.M1-t001 Ful0tPartTll'rie.Eaml4-
LIOOVlEWEl.EGANT . 95Mtl ahr lge Npt Hata home. pampered poodle Matt ... ttlmmedmlllle9 ~2~'!! =t Center FIT blllnguel ~MA ..-..urn. MEDICALRECEPTI~·~ •10lhrlf,0Mtlllfplk2 .. dt/Jt. Specbra 1Bt 2Ba. <Sect 11111111 Ava now 642-3442 Diana 751-2378 an epm, yraold celtd ~.Vert "toddlera, .,,_..... (epanlltl) 2t1-12'4 · -· • VtVQ DA. i1250 yrty. f7&-«W of aoi. & Mcfadcian Hott.,.... Aefa 831 I fwnale. Atxlble ptlmatl~!>etk office No experiellOI nee 1111.,.,. ~====-=---tWkJy IW'ltall. •135 & up. M/F, 1~25, nofHl'nkr ahr Lake Arrowhw:t Bue lady REWARD 191-()455 DECORATE INTERIORS l'IOu1'. IStatt $5/Ht. Muat t40-4eaO .., *' looal .,,
MAGNIFICENT2bt, cow TV, trM con., SBR.rMat•wlblth,CM. 50+ wnta nit» rm Flunf ll Banking Color/d .. lgn. PIT. to be bondtble. Car MINllllLLLYIOI .,: tot.local =~ vtew, ,,.. cSecot $1300. heeled poof & stepe to '225 + w . 545-8006 or lhr l'IM 751-185.5 t......i. H FILL TlllE atart. Wll train. 175-6447 nec:nsl'y. Ideal fot atu-11511 ~ Ctl lmrntdl-~ 831"" OC*tl. Kltefl'• avail. M/F 30+ Prot n/amk w Prot/F, w/~. aka ei.c Wft/IMCI · DELIVERY PERSON FIT & dentt.Cell4'4-4322 ~ aMty. ~S .i. U anc to belch! 38R 2 N5 N. Cout Hwy. 28t 281 Turtle Roctt hm/apt •lrllf call Trlda TILLll PIT tv9nlnaa ... 50/hr time. If your .,. ~eel It 1700 E. Gln'Y A~ ... nu ctp'*1drpalpalnt. Laguna Beliefl. 494-$294 Condo tennla pool vt.w 714/78CM241135-7880 Outcall OHLY 836-t1M c.n 1.1ny 11~7ae0 lnMkHllf/Lht II earning '31,000. t< 111. Senta Ane.
IN 1975/mo. c.tl E tsoo + ~ utll9 $295 <Sep Prot'I man Meka prof'I Outgoing per.on wtth c»-Good ooot<lna and nt '80.000. or moN In com
&43-1155 or t50-Ml7 IUUll mTEL ref ~; 854-2080 1Ua1n ftr WOMM tor weekend an to wen wit.ft the DallWfY/Pldcup '*"°"• houMk no tot , • ml..iont end •e WINlnc Plllm LIT
lu 7 Wk~ IW'ltala now avan. M/F ahr CdM home. 2eR. Ital 2111 la.lllno. •Uno. • 1214451 publo. !: ~t e•: ~1°~~2-~~ha. In ~Laguna~ to work ~ fot It, oon 8t:'h An.ncsant. Acolpt-
1 nw $1 /wk & r,t 2274 New· 1350 +12 vtll. N«netcer sma' cer oar oomp enoi lulat1111 =-'*IUfttel 't:i Aett 1'9q. 173-3025 ~ ~iai:=. Lynct 331 ~tWr Nwp1 Newcarpet.~stove PottBNd.C .. 846-7445 90M2290f'875-1164 wfel.cnrfalrgroundaSl5 ltrlalt 4'11 beebletooommUn~ •HITUTIU HoueekHper, Laguna ttoloua. m••t or= Bc:h.MMon-Fl'f.
utll pllld $445 mo. A f111tlta M/F w ~ apaclOI• mo 751-3531 effectively. Good or· Frideyt & 8eturdeya at ~ 1"9tffemtnt tadllty, «fen1ed nttne In iMI • 1--------
0ct. lttl.18Mt44 ltatab nn Bal. Pen. -.>t. kMutit Otflftlntllt BH Eataln,.~Mf .... ~= flzat!Onel etcme. llte ~MatbtayouratM 3-11PM. El'lalttl IC*k· tat•. Prepere youtMf PUTTml '298 mo Av.II Oct 1at ar ""' °' · and 10-by. Contect -··· Int. a on.a off. 40•••51 now tor the'*',....• fWmanent. 4 d1 wk. M. ta a Nov 1at. r .... 54M880 120/442/582 &I Ft. In ~room,fadal bra Pelz at (21t) MM 8u~rvi.ota lllO tme boOm. c..r op. no Sat~~
apt on •. , * * Lf Piil ** ot 873-9282 C.M., 1537 A/C Baker St. wtJdlfiO room. 540-4887. needed. (213)452-58U HOUSE~KEEPE~u.:: ~=ltl.. avallable wrepplng, llte typlftO, gaa l wtr pd 0y Spacee Avallable aero. l11o.$4al.Bkr851-8928 Serloua.lnterettedperttee lllTIL IPeM • no training tvll phoM &. ~·ti/hf.
144-2181 w. 754-86? from Ooean. 538-8318 M/F to ahr SBr 381 Nwpt 17 ................. _St c•6 Ofc only. c.JI after 7PM. ll Pll lll l&Yllll .,a.,.._ IT M3-1922 able. To Int.WW cal Coeta ~ ~ t~ • twnhMl385/mo.Walkto ....... --.. ' ... 173-3114 ..... RECEPTIDEHTAL ....... -:-'!'iiiiiiiimiil7-' 8.A. Hgta 18t 1525. ltatala tt bcha828-78t1·131-1534 or ltlop eoo eq ft. Gmd llllOllTI• tant ~. Exper nee. 11111m•• Walt Maclbor11cl or Vlkk PAITtm
pet•. '9fl1Q, atow & lwt 2IOI M to lhr 3 br d ' Santa "'· wlNm •21un-2&54 la11Mu OD· 4014 Laguna Hiiie 77G-4275 llPllYllll = ~7~1•1 STUDENTS PREFERRED
dlw Incl 64~5 29; -.>t to ;;; on elUff Ana hatt t23'f:o + utl 250 eq rt 2 room ottic.. llLllA PIWU Equal Opp~ Em.flyr Dental Tech CNB pluter tor hotel In LIQuna 9Md1, t7.50 to ttlr1. 21 lrnmedl-
.. Jae. Evea/Wkndt. caii Oct f ,.,. req. Lara 778 W. 19th St, CM. Olll-IP UllMll&T /F/ pnon, fai-arn quality Engllah/8panllh . aPMtc· • ..._. lelttr/UWt It ate opening&. Mu.t be 1& ~"~'Tl'~~~rl 131-4238 or 548-2033 432-9389 644-0782 S2251mo 851-8928 Hlg.. Mt Banking lab. Non-llTW. 545-6885 Ing • mutt Howt ~11 Ute houellc~ .omt Plue. Cltbilin req. 1 , 1 w •• c· • deprec. --11LL11 PM, Wecf.Mon. Super-cNld c:are •randa. .to C.W M PM Npt facll1tJee. ct.p. Young alngle ~ gllln--M/F to tl'lr lg duplex ...... , IUll.,. 545-2841 ._. .. ._ IUI IUll 'tleotY exp«. nel:Hl&ry. Muat t\M reftt9nCM Hunt 8oh II• .0 ~ 14811182·7420 fully empl guy, tootclna lot CM/NB.,.., 1280/rno. + e..utJful offtoet aVallable. famtaat sa:;:-n:i ~•pen:ent Night Ihm -wtl train. Seal-c.11.t9444e0 Matur• woman pref. "* "* "* rmt9('a) to llhf ~apt. utla, aut & dlP 4MM14e NMf eo..t Hwy °' O.C OfftrtultJ 4tll --.. ~ °"' artt Motet AS>Pt-1 7am-llSIH •aa.. laguna Nlguel area. •••••••
Went to tent rioue.<:ond wt\l'I. 7eo.eat1 Richard M/F E-alde CM twnhM. ~ :~.~r :.~y ~ H ~ = sa18:': noon, Mon thr\il'h. 2274 w• 4f3..2792 PAAT·TIME, Yaa1ed hcM1
Cm/NB •• 17004800. COM S 8d 2ba ~/cc.\ Mttr/pYt bl 1345 1at tut bUnda apacloUa wtn-LEXfllliNd COf'M'leNerate wttti ex-Newpott Bl .... + to lnc:tuct. wty A.M
Haw ,..,., ... '*· 50 yr vtew. 14ee!mo. AM/PM 646-6403 6424751 dows •• Aecaptlonlat and ~ to ··=~21 perlence. Competatlve DISHWASHER 9:30-e:30 ~ 8Mch firm a-... .... tMM c»
old r•ndparentt 759--0IOe/846-2449 day M « F Rmte Wlnted to conletence room In· l'Mf1c9t ra• ..-..nt Friday l Saturday. Eno-pendlf'lgaallUtaft. l!you llTll llml ~ (llMI ~/lt,1~t:n~odl•·cDMremwantedtoahr3 ahare charming COM. duded. iutta•n, beneflta.Cdafter10AM lllhSpMklng.4~ ~t= truck. van, atetlon
• bd w/2 ma1ea. Pttv be home. 1500/mo. Dya UU l ..... lO T.D.'i , 4011 per90Mel 851_:!900. . Drtver CM i.e a 1 f'laut• In-Motor AouWe avallable In WllQOn) to .-.t ,.,.._ Attract~tumroom, W/D,frptc.20-351Hmkr. 758'-1114orev873-9270 llllllllOIUll II.I 11111110'1 come we wOf1c from Newporta.actl. PIP« ::r'1beln !MM "=wTw~F • .:=~ S445tmo 873-1030 Mahr fum NB Dplx on sea ~ ~ ~~~ =~ 1.11&nu11 EOEMFVH ;.u. PAIT,... tarn-1pm or 1pm..8pm In Muat be 18 yra old, haw =·· Cont•ct ~ ~ 979-9851 CdMGREATRM&BA atior.. eoea 21-211350 ated, calf tor detallt. ..,_._........ UllllMll• Makeuptoe1ooio.ya. • plelMnt 1nwonment. dePtndtble tr•nte>ot· HydeMondeYttvu'r1cUrt
' U.ofKfT/UV-AMetc +uU l31·2815avt 10/1 780-8333 Ss*i..-niingln1at&2nd Pll1·TlmtOC*llnQa. '*1ftgam.itpeckageeln No ~ neoeae-tatlon.Expetleooe ... pful .,....,_, t;30 and 10:30
Fum.Pvtroom&Ba.walk·t475+dep.84M255 Fem rmmtWlntedn«nkr TO'aSlnce1SM9 Call8ob-f7M191 local .,.e ro;m;c;11 ary. Call George but not MClllll')'. farn a.m.O!ll¥."'2;2!1
In doeet, lndry fad!., ""Fem 24-30 find rental w ' ttg 2 bt watettront &llPllT AIU Robt.Sattler NH/CM . promotion. No eic-Anderton at 876-CM&O '450-500 per month. Ctlll --·
kit S2tO-CM 131-1198 If ArVM * home IS50 846-2108 Two 150 .ci n prof ofce RE Brok• Bd Aaaltott BEAUTY CONSULTANT perlence neceuary. Janltorlat. SubCOntreo-1o.tn to 4pm.
Furn.room& bethfotprof =..2~ ewe~ rm. . wlwndw vtew. 2311 cam-642-2171 545-0811 to cell on Mione for aek>n Women "*' atuden1I, tore must haw own Ml-tall pg .... •Tiii . Nonlmoker fmlt nnted put Or 1211 IMne. Cot-• direct ...... 1469oC34 I • II • I -··· ·--t ....... 7.a..a ....... metute man. Quite.,... Fem rmmte wanted to lhr ahare tum ltvlne Condo nerCampue& Yon Khat· WIDOW HAS tat tor TDt tt:J:r• HaAVE• &~~~ _...p.,,_, . ._ .... v UTlllll.n&ll•I• Ful I Patt Time. ~
S300 + utll. 54&-a3e8 tum iu.. t#nflee w/UCI $300 mo Inc utl 552-8223 man Incl Aeoept, Arie tlng10,000No ,!!:J!'Y,.~~ llKDP•am RUNNING SMALL CAR. & lllTY /llWT IP ...... ,.. 8ervo. exper. pref. •-·"'"'Bc:hFurn Pvtent .. ...._t w_...t 'eont Rm & CoflM · --·7·.,_ Paclftc View MemorllJ • 642•1403 --· ., a..,._,• -OCllYIS)Ua. N/amkr quiet M/P to ahr 2 ave. · Denn11on Ae10c 173-7311 Pant 144-2700 Mk fot FOA IMMEDIATE WORK Fut Qf'owMQ publlNnQ Loceted In Nwpol't IMch ---------ba. Prof/but. n-amkr. (408).a87·?074 COiiect or br 2 be hM on Penn S4001• 752-2464 Pat · CALL 54C).H45 ext 29. co. nr Alrpot1 Meda Mtf. hu opening tot tull ttm. PlllllllY
'350. Refs 494-0451 854-3878 9/23 $375 873-2912 . NEWPORT BEACH. 1880 ltll ...... llii ' 1700 E. GllT)' Ave, ste ttatttr. TyPe 50 wpm, tee1etary In Mlee depart-sev.t.I p:;tiOft. ava11:
MatterBdrmw/drWlnQI Femtoahr3Brh1e. N/lkr, eq n. Ground noor office *.IAllTll* ULll 111. Santa Ana. >tint phone manner, non-ment. Pay range AX. eoem.uce l Glftt
ba.,MeaaVerdehome.""M-mustllkedoas.$350/mo. Find what you want In apaoeavall.4ofl'l6etolt· Patt-time d9Yf Ef Toro Or>enlnaMWoffloelnNB. R H •Plllll amotcftjV"Y~·~ 11100.1200. p/mo. Ct11 Dtc>tl40-737SNpUctl
amkr/dtcr S400 55e-0837 Mary 432..e1"17;645-8252 Dally Piiot c1ua1r1ec11. ea. conference room. r• Mlallon VlefO Dan. Point for flit gt~ PIT Mon-Ftt 10-2 Own &.ow ~~~ol Harold Lloyd, 642-SM70 =:.t::..!..b::; ., ... "7-0eiet>twnM. ==~toewnln tt1na9., -cut: Con-ea11'?or1aa1..e~eo HlllAllU ~a::!·::!~
bldg., bee41t. Jand9Caped, ANSWERING SERVICE uoeet of •1500 wkly. tactlt&NlngActortMov· KITCHEN HELPER: WW 7-3:30 3-11:30 3:30•7:30 Mlllng MCCllU')F. Mutt
ualgned &>al1dna. ,_, Tetepl\one ()petatot. Training and quallfy Ing Co. ~1318 tr.an, ..,, up, coot<. ~M. G~ WOl'tllng oond. betxpet. Mike, 711-2401
HORO SCOPE SYDNEY
0MARR
Hoag HotPttal. ia.i tor vw1oua INftt FIT. leade pro~ded. Only EXERCISE INSTRUCTOR btk.,Y, dell 1125 Vic> mall • Hoep. ,..., PHONE SURVEY iilH
architect, draf11rnan? 382 Third 8t. LAe· Bc:tl" hungry clotera nffd t12.50 hr wlll train tone, CM. 131-3151 OCC !:!'!r~~ Cell no ....., pit ~ ~
'$1180 mo. 845-4100 IH~ lll1IU •gfi· Call Carl at 850-0302 Pl btwn ~"· 1 req HB ofc llS-7457
d9Yf, 642"7251 eve. 8tudenta/hoUMWIVM · & 7 • 401 berolH lnatructora ''Tl ... ~.... 111111-P/T PLAft1C8
N.wport Blvd, NB. 450 to etc. needed to c.a °" U-. WUTll 112.50/Hr. Wiii train. -... Uve In. Npt 8c:tl.,..., tot
800 a/f, nner bide • 1 9Cl 1eada tor promotlof-. No PIT dy9 only. Pret. colleQe Worll own area 220-2311 Local awetd Winning lend· elderly ledy. 131-7 .. 7 ........... .
ft. Agt. Pat 642·5200 Mlllrlg In~. Anaheim student. Cell Barbera fot ExpttlenOed r.fdentlal ~:.m:::-et~~ nw111 n..-..!f!'Tlll ~ Center 200 Sq Ft office, Hrt. 3 to •• Mon appt. 6404280 plumber wanted Pteoe Ing • per.on whO PNnatal/Poet Pattum ftt. --... .., .,...,.. or
T d Set ... _ er. prtvotclhrreoept10ttety ~=-~·6ft6~;0Call CHILOCARElnmyhorne wottt.Ctll!Mlke5'42-1211 wantttomake$30.000to neaa ln1tructor-P/T. ~~meoNnt(._ aes ay, p emsn:r ",. . . w/archltech. _ 761-021& . • for 2mo beby, Mat, NIP '90,0001 Y'M'· Academic bactCQround & --·· -:o:-""' _. .. · ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19): Aura of confus10~ exists. Orders, dyt/ 840-0321 wknd.. Mwl\bfY PIT fOb op. ttm. NB. AUS. 846-9117 llllJ1ll •IT Call eeo.8732 and exper'9not In related ~~111Pf')7and ).~
instructions subject to su~den cha~~e. Go slow, ix;rec1ve picture in. its oo Airport .,... ore ape. portunltlee ~· How to -•• •IMI ~ lnluranoe ~ Afk fOt Anna flald 1"9qultec1. a1..e140 hrl!;d 0 to":" e. Good
entirety. Specific emphasis on lcgaltttes, travel, SOClal contacts. Mantal 225-830 afi Iota of ptj(no, add extra t1 •to~ In-F Teeahtr llnfln ...ir1 neo.. 64 LIU&. .. DllJ --UlllT fl.ngar/hand o.xtettty irn.
status ts also spotlighted. Janttrl, all utllt Ind, from come. For more cell °' tt w t"' · -1111 ~ w1a ·tr11n Good ~lnci PQtt9nt. Mutt be eblt to
TAURUS (ApnJ 20..M•y 20): C>btam valid hint from Aries t1.10 ut. Mo-to-mo OK. 504-&46.o315 ext A..431 ~ ~i:1~~-P.-.onal UneeUndefwrt c=:c.io:'~ environment. Newport IPeM and undlrltand
messqe. Spar for time, play waitina pme, check details and be aware 557•7010 lfidt• l lWlllTlll ~ ema ciet Mar ' '°' :=· &pet. prflf. CdM 175"0200 conv11eacent Center ~ !:::."00:::::
of subtle nuances. F<?Cus on special services, employment. ~ts. ~oplc OFACE TO SHARE, 19th a.""'-Wtfttn • D lllL 64 1 .... ITlll .. _., .,..n64 ~ bentfltt .,_.
who rely upon your Judgment. Scorpio plays lcey role. l Pl__..U. .... 230 a/f wanted part/time tetlr +. 11D1f &llllTllT ..,.... -.uaa •'*-HOP AM at·
GEMINI(Ma 21-June20)'Youa.re .. teleased"fromcommitment to 400 alt. Avl 1011164• ca.llSte'f't.846-5780 IRVINE lrvt dtvWon of alor Some_,, a plUI. HcMn ()fflCEPERSON -· ·
you s~ou~d. not h~ve made in fi'~t pla~.'YOii'U tccl more free as r~suft, .:::~~A~ llTI .... tl~ronto com~:'rmtt ~~ vf:J. pV/l'f'Jdt_.. .Mii.. -=~
creative Juices will flow, opt1m1sm wdl replace gloom. Emphasis on prl<g fr!n 1225 2i:&r. Smog llolnae Pl'Jlf'd own RANCH dllttlbuttt i:::, nttd .:Sf LAD08 LIQUOR larQe Cadlho ~P '
change travel variety, speculation. eoUt Hwy 17a-etoo · tool• perm. Latj19 'deen •n exper c" 1 31952 Dal Obtapo In Oolt• Meta la Meklng
CANCER' (June 21-July 22): Domestic adjustment is ncctssary. · atiop; tr end alignment. • ~· reqult• 2 8an Juan Capo • matuAI • .-..ponttbte
you'll galin added 1nfoi;tnation concerning safety, basic rules, propcny ~~I .. 11 ~ ~~ ~=: FARMERS ot'edh NP In • .....f.: 2:~ ~~ =.=t p~~ o::!t~
value. Some restnctaons are necessary. actually work to you ... 1e111 •• i..ouna na.,, ~ field. ltrong accounting u potltlon. Office ex•
advantage. Know it. be diplomatic. Prime Cannery Village or 494-MOO knowttdgt MIPfUI. Offeti llgatlon ~lf'J for ~ It Mlptul I
LEO(July2l-Aug.22):Someappointmcntswillbcbroken people commerclal bldg MARKET ~t ~~ ...... and ~":!_-!Mntln -~ NletY le°'*';~ In
d be l ~ fi I p -I'. b ' w/greenhoYN. Perleet automotlYe gr.,....,, POttn-........ tact '""' -~ ••-penon to ar.nda from I lcn to. ate or aorge~ u . cnect your own tee niqucs. stress ~tc for att ga!Jety. •12501mo IUlll/....w • Myra Crowe MS-42M swacuot '*1 to 00 Ai-AM--12 PM. M~ •
setf-rcltance. Look behmd sccnn for answers, rcal12c you ere on brtnk ..__ ITa-3717 · ........... , . ...-.a.. ...... ....._ Pott: health • llfe. dental f ...... _ · r· d ~.. Two cder1C9I ~ In r-1__--7 -·7 ..,,_ near INuranot ~ beMd rov...,.
O unJ)OfU.nt ISCOVef")'. High voNmt muffler It fMt peoed COtpor... 8 C0Mt Pitz& hlMpen-~· ice. Qood \llf!.~ (Aug. 23-Scpt 22): Xou recoup )oss, you'll have added • • tootctng fot expe1_,:: omo. 1n Cotta Mw. 1n'ga ror •XC*'ett«*f, :n=:· tklll• °'a NABERS respo!ls1b1~ty and chances for increasing mcomc may m)Jlt1ply. * l.Y Piii * brake and front end :llllllll PIJllLI enmutllltlO dlntll ....., ..-of humor_..,
Relation h1p grows stronger, cycle moves up and you could strike pay Specea .vall&ble eotoM meotlanlc. Muttt be ..., Enttyi.w.t know 10 keybY tant. P~ to COntac1 ,,.., W4e22 CADlLAC
dirt. Older individual lends ccncfit of experience. from ocaen. 5384318 ttartier. Legunt NIQutl touott. ' JMnnte. 645-04 MAIOi wented IMolln
LIB_J\A (Sept. 2~~· 22): You touch ch~rd ofun1vcrul appeal. ti ~~7~:19=3~ Pl~fDlllllL PKL/TmNJ Mote1-1ee1 90 cout llM....,N
• Cyc)c tugh. p0putanty 1!'ci:ease.s, audience is wider and pc~nal 8PIM'OXCMEXBIA88 rorAalpl\ • • W fllT/TmW ttwY.~ • ._.. ... -
••••llllT •YPUT
l30W.t.y11.,C.M
Ml..Ul1 honzon~ arc br<>Jdcr: Tim1na 11 on ~ct and you ,could win a Advtot In All Mat11rt , tmtrmtdleM-... OPS>Ottunltlea avellable . --=--=s===:':"""'l:=--
populanty contest. Anes and another. Lib~ figure promlncntly" CounaelnG 1111 ao e lOl'l'IOUft , bpettelioenecunr,. Fiie With the LOI ANGELO M~~o ;1 ';:.!"& ~11·1y P1·1a1 · .. • · .. · • ·· · ·· ···~: SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21): L1aht as shed on area prev1ou l CtmlnO ....,, 8tn caarn. ,_..,..... ~CMll'ntomttor TIMU ~ 0.-1 kt• matr.' Incl
1hrouded m mv.tery. S independence inventivcnc cou,. uo·o. 492-7281 xperlencieel tune-up medloll lnMnnol. P•r•rneot In our doo( to e.!-8 .._ io _ ~.oiJI -,. • y 'II • h f ' mteflanlc Med4MI Im· doOf IMWIPIP'f ..... ·--_... w1 ll'IJnCS top1oncer a pro)CCt. ou get to cart o matters, a~n $CRI UL£TS med~ ¬ ._... :YM ., .. M proer•m. Guar•ntMCI Of9C. Own .,.,,.. neo..
w11J feature a .. secret" mceu and romance wtll floun h . ,_.. prlferr9d,' uioune...,., ~ -. plUt ocwn-'" "'°"" ot 9flft. ...,_ •
IAGmARIUS (Nov. l -Dec. 21 ): Wish com true. famil ••wes ...... a dflY WOftt ..... ~. 1Houfe: "'"' '° IO "' '* M ~ Our Di play Ad•ert lq d~
J>11l1me.n1 II lo0kln1 for an am·
bhlou1 petton lo fill an en117
leY~I potllloa.
member proves loyalty and )OU fttl more secure a n: ult. Moon NW bit pey, .,.....,,. """ tpm. Training 11 ~~·~ 4 '·
position hi&hli&hl friend , hope , desire • pow(n of pcrsua ion. OOl®a·Naor r ou '!.~1~~_p_a . c 111 ·-ptO'Mtd. Potentlel to Ji!~!ii<:'7;niiiiiiiit.
Money comes to you through career or businc . Ca.nc:cr: Aquarius w°":&jCoadle ~~· • '°' ~ o.c • ....,.,.. ;:"!8:° ..... .-.:,-0.:-· "!V:.::•,:
! persons pla key roles. Y DO ftOMl:Y 11 IOOldnl '°'en H?.at1 .,, t204 OC»lltllofi ~am
, CAPR q.>RN(0Cc.22·J n, 19):Goodne~ comcsfrom"thet09/' 1:o~~~One-= ll'llml•vm Ololtllt9lldtl111o·dleill,_. •• 11 •• .,,_ c~ ... & Means upcnor or aovcmmcntal agency hes green tight. You II to the ou.· ''You know & 11tt ,...._ NPi-fn .,,.,__totwdtpro. •••• --ooo-. '*'-'men b
rcoe1vc invitation that could include p u ·ous ~OCi I etTnir, pteial you're~ dd-. c.nt«IOOOE.ll"CHCOM ._.. of 11 ~ oon,, tr.at.~•,.:..~ Ct1r11tm••· ftd o•n · ~ I nd J ..-.... _.. Ol'dltl and ~ mt -·-..,.. .,., .. ..,, ~ ... hr. COM.
IMIVC OfJOUmcy. !lft!UIOP'AYSOUI .. '" roe. • --~-·--.. --~-·-... --!AQUA US (Jan. 20-cb I t. Good lunar pcci co1 1d wnJ thlft YOU DO... _.,., ...,,... NOOtd .-IMUMI. ~
anncl,cd tion1"'tllin to hake tu quounulurattl • Yo t =.=:'wM~IMWM. "'*' ...... 1 IPeed •.ir•atdu. 'f:':G;:=
a no lo r pia.y • nd fiddle, educational opportunm boun Found. I :&lliCIOii:Ci kj! "'*"' ~ (16-70 0.:. ~1 ue-::" ,,...., __,. 141 OllO'
nd man 11 app tc )O\lr work. • -. a -. dd, to IOOd :"' ""*' to CJ · ~= Ml'f*f. di. to, IPP ROi -----~~ p (Feb. 19-Mmh 20): Do me personal ~1\:C ork bOml.142"'°"' _.. '" '°' = 1 ,..,.,. ~ ,.... to oe-·1oe 90 Qo.cW T I _throuah on c:luc , hint hunch You'll m kc d1 very FOUND: M* ~ mo old lnliM lft otnlalfi ~~~ 17t0. ~ Y~raw , .. , .. Z.ou-w;..._ u. f'ed
min resources of others nd po 1bly I m boUI money lhal AA*eMpmlx&amabik ~ ,....., our home. CA.... ll*09.:nao1n n. o.ay Aol'emofftntnwuc
houldbcoomingyour ).Gemini. Va o . g.inanu pc nifi urc :ran1i1, ,..,._ 11i8 6471 St1110ct1Ca164'"'315 ,..W.,..Adl!Oelno. Wllfl•01•11I~
prominently. 644 °' 87&-MIO / Ml"'87t. CM Nowt 642
I
Candidate ahoald ~ ood
c:ommunkadon Miii&, rlu1bilh7
: and an •ptllud for leanal111
: .. quick) ,
1
\
ACROU
t Time ot )'Mr es.-buY9
10 Elated
14 Witch
15 Antler part
18 Latvtan aty
17 Hiding piece
18 Vlgoroua
20 Youngat•
50 Of en epoc:ti
54 FollowW of
Plato
57 Springe
51 Gwden tool
59Mortgage
60 Keen
11 Tlnl •Ki*1
82 lnMnllble
63 S..Ofe Polk
DOWN
~~ ::::;" 1 c)A Of CA t
23 Fence part 2 Implore 3 Stun 25 AdOf'• • lntrlntle 27 untvwslty 5 Protection
officer e Rob
30 Shrub genus 7 Intimation
31 Form ot humot e Pre>noYn
32 ,,_mined 9 Thro..igh
33A1<*1nedY 10 loone' kin
31 SI~ 11 Wnllng1
PREVIOUS
PUZZLE SOLVED
..
S1 M .. t C::UI 12 Spry 30 flalfan City ot
31 Air 13 Carl)t' kin 32 MlnetaJs. IUtf 4e Maren., Maytag Elec. Otyer i100,
39 T•mlnua 19 17th e.ntury 3" Mr. Slaughter 47 Evll aplrlt & other ltema. MS-2451
40 Church.,.. data 35 Tootl't pref •t lnMC'I refrlg 111 wutt/dr'f' tr.ez.
41 Watrbittj~-21 HofMr.•.Q-)7~--~1.A C.V~~---.,.$125-1225 W .. 29t.S.
<t2 Bad temper 24 One, no matt« ~ lncl•nauon 52 Com.c -
.-. Very t>etl Whlctl 40 Warning Jorlneon
•a AnttnOalt• : ~~:-" tool • 1 Hwry · 53 Sly 1oo11
"7 NOUl'lef\ 27 c.r.ftony 43 Duhfr1ter 65 -Hlekory
•• Mi1tak• 21 waland •• Chttge 51 Fasten •t "Shamel" 28 1MI .-...n1 45 a.tame a--.are 57 ~ched -
2
••
' •
WlllT
USED CAAS& TRUCKS COME IN OR CALL FOR
FIB AffUllAL Cormlw-OeUllo
lmlll.IT 11211 &EACHILVD
HUNTINOTON BEACH
.. , ... ,, •• 1111
WIWMTll9 ----,,, ... .. . .... -....
714 -833-1300
8750 MallCil'l llllf 8l¥d a...Pwtc
(114)121-1111
C7
( \IHI I \<
I
Detnllt lllJ .,. a;;;;: J ... ftlM .... ,..... ..... .... BRsroL AT EDmGER ' 11200 080 UMl41,.. IN SANTAANA
Ml-0110
111£ llcl£11A'S
SOUTH co um
IOTOIS
@
\IMUlllT'
Ollftl111ll
Wolfaburg Ec:litlon
48-CEL
1236 74 • i.a '*mo TOP '13 S20 M
CAPS15,41t
'2500 CAP reduC1JOn
S5'00U
®
1114 SClllCCI
11•CU1'*1
41 lftO CE l-
U31 • 1&11 '* mo TOP S12.0t9 20
CAf' 112000
~S57MOI
@
1114 Yllll I IL
eomoCEl
S22t .. • w pw ft'()
TOP S14.&M90
CAP $14 895
12000 CAP reduc1JOn ,_..$5MOIO
111C I P LSI
48moCEL
$217• IP per mo
TOPS11~96
CAPS11,500
~ CAP r.ouction
~elSS269 76
187 11 Beech Blvd
CO...HRL
I CHEVROLET
I ~ ' , • • ' --
:""'-' " .
!»46>-I 200 , .. Bil
'7JMAV£...cte
Automallic, NI Cond. Low
m11a a o.n (211RX0> .,.
*** 71FOADLTD
lMd9u root. 4 door plWd. iow,,.. a...,,
(~
Bill MAXEY TOYOTA
192I02 a.di 1&24129 ......
'71 CAPRI 4 c:yc 4 IPd.
amlfm c-. AUHS OAT.
11100 obo. N74m
OIA..Wlt
166&bSOUEGX
4 DOOR. AJC, PIS19er, &
~Autoinin-. (304848)
Hunungton Beach 24 mo/24,000 m1 ...v
(l 1') 142-2000 cntrc:t, IUb/prior .... _
v:.-=.'i':":.~ -· WE CUE _ •8401 a.ct1 Hunt 8ct\ .... lsM 147-1707
-----------
.... mAm ..
1112REUANT
17,000 AJC. P~&..._,Auto
Cn.M, AMIRI C ne
(311741) ... 14 "'°'24,000 ml~
cntn:;\,~--
-·
, .
'
91 FWY.
. ...
GARDEN GROVE-
22 FRWY ....
22 fA.WV
-> I i cn SANTA
ANA
HUNTINGTON EDINGER
BEACH FOUNTAIN
~ VALLEY
OlS WARNER
~
-
0 ' CHlCK IVERSON
Chevrolet • Porache • Audi
441 L o..t ..,., ...,.rt leao•
171-tlll
Highest Quality Sales & Service
..
0 NABERS CADILLAC 3
2100 Ullll ILD., COSTA IESA
(714) M0-1100 (211) 117-1211
• Best Priess • Convenient Location
• Great Location • Super Service
• Court1JOus & Knowledgeable Sales People
en
0 THEODORE ROBINS
FORD
U.S.A.'s #1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer
Modern Sales, Service. Parts, Body, Paint & Tire Oepts.
Compebbve Rates On lease & Daily Rentals
20IO ..,.., lh~., °"" ....
142-0010 ., M0-1211
0 SOUTH COUNTY
VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU
18711 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach
(714) 842-2000
SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE
Oranse Countys Llf&at Volswapn/\SllZll OaJiel
Wt Wiii Hot Be Undetsold
PARTS DEPARTMENT OPEN SATURDAY m
0 RAY FLADEBOE HONDA G RAY FLADEBOE
#11 l8ft IHter Ir,, lnlH
In The Irvine Auto Center
830-7800
cBmplete SaletJ, Service & Leasing
G ORANGE COAST JEEP/RENAULT
# 1 ,, ,. .,,, ,,,
I• JH, Sills l1t I run ~ Of':~e· sALEs
0 t • SERVICE
•LEASING ··~ ~,,. 111::.'r.9::.::V0
• ACCESSORIES DEPT
548-8023
VOLKSWAGEN
#20 We ltlfer Ir., lnl11
In The lrvlne Auto Center
830-7300
Orlntt CaunfTS Ntwnt Yolhwairn Oalu
Compltte Slits. Sfmce & Lwi111
~ G STERLING R W UW -SOYICt -LWllC -PUTS
Overseas Oellvety Speclallsta
PART8 DIPAft'TMENT OPEN
8ATIMOAY MORNINGI
BMW -ROLl.8 ROYCE
1540 Jamboree Rd.
Newport Beach 840-8444
IRVINE
LAGUNA
HILLS
...
•
\
MISSION
VIEJ°(J.
LAI(~
""'"'°" ~
,
SAN
JUAN
CAPISTRANO
n
~
$_
;-·
0 CONNELL CHEVROLET 0 BAUER MOTORS _
2121 ........ ·~ ...........
OVer 23 Years Serving Orange County
Sales • Service • Leasing
541-12H S(MClll Pllts Lile 541-1411
MOHDA't.-FRIDAY 9:30 AM -t:OO PM
SATURDAY 9:30 AM -e:oo PM
SUNDAY 10:00 AM -6:00 PM
0 ST ADIU8't1 PONTIAC
we•,. N•w -w.•,. 0..11"" '
Acroa1 from the Bia A on Katella Jnt WMt
of the (57) Orange Fr•••Y
Sales • Service • Parts • Body Shop on Premises
1111111• 2221 E.1111111 Ill· 1111
BILL YATES
YILllWllU • Pllllll • PEllllT
SALES• LEASING• PARTS• SERVICE
·12112 , ................... atr ..
81-41.11 -'"~
BUICK -JAGUAR -ISUZU
Complete Automottw *-de
SALES • SERVICE • LEASING AM 8electton of Quellty UMd Vehldea
#1 BUICK DEALER IN OAAHGE COUNTY
2125 HARBOR BLVD.
COS'rA MESA 179-2500
0 RAY FLADEBOE
UlllLI IDOllY .111111 lllD
#11btthlter•.,lnlH
In The Irvine Auto Center
830-7000
G CREVIER BMW
SALES • SERVICE • LEASING
"Where Professional Attitude Prevails"
8peclelf&Jnt In IWlll Hit 01...,,. IXoeleftt ....... of
.... Md c#9fulJ Pf•P•N UMd ...... alweyl In ttook.
835-3171
20I W. 1at St., 8.nt. Au--eon. of Broadway & 1tt St. CloMd 8und1y1
8 UNIVERSIT,Y OLDSMOBILE C>JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS
. .
HONDA
2880 Harbor Blvd.
1J01 Qutlll •t. -INw CM Location
1001 Qull St. -,,_._ OW#elon IT\ World'• Largest Selection of IT\
Coate M•H 540-0713 · 'Cl Merced#M Benz \CJ
3 Block• So. of 405 Fwy. 133-9300
~ ....... ,.... ..... ~
Wu · l.elslll • Pw · Stt1'ct • W, _,
Classified advertising ia your best
choice for help an selling the Items you
no longer need. It's Qutck and
inexpensive. and the Pilot reaches
p0tential buyers who liv 1n this area •
Call today .
• D~iljPilat
t
cla ifaed ad
ph6ne 642·5678 • ·;
'
--'...----------'~----....... ----··'-__ ....._ _____ -...:., ____ ..._._,
m1111111
--------
MfJNIJA 'f •,1 1•11 MUI H /•1 l'HV. ( 1 ' 1 ~ r ~' . ' 1 , ) 1 1 r, 1 ' 1 I\ 11 , , 1 , r J 1 " ,' ·, , 1 r, ·
-----
~ry~, .Irvine teen ~ies after. pa
Coaat
Seven nearby residents
are suing Pacific
Amphitheatre owners
over noise from rock con-
certs./ A3
The Dally Piiot asked
residents how they are
enjoying the end of their
children's summer va-
catlon./ A3
Callfomla .
' West H~llywood gays and
renters want their own
clty./A4
Nation
President Reagan says
he's ready for arms talks.
wlthSov~/M
People say the strangest
things on their vanity
plates, If they can get
away with lt.1 AS
World
Soviet leader Chernenko
turn• 73 today./ A4
Thousand• of residents
flee volcano eruption In
Phlllpplnes./ A4
Feature
ObJ•tsd'art and prices
were ey•popplng at tne
Newport Harbor Art Mu-
seum' a Antique Show
and Sale./81
Sporta
The Rams fQund a way to·
win In the National Foot-
ball League without Vince
Ferragamo./C1
Look who's about to win
the National League East
flag. It's the Chicago
Cubs./C3
Entertainment
For the fourth straight
year. the bottom11etwork
la on top at the Emmy
Awards./83
Baalneu
Women In Sales helps
members develop their
careere.185
INDEX
Brl~ge
Bu11etln Board
Suslnen
Callfornla New•
Claulfled
Com Ice
Cro11w0td
Death Notice•
F .. turea
HorotCOPe
Ann Lander•
Mutual Funds
National News
Opinion
Paparaw -
PoUcelog
Publlc Notices
8portt
8toek Mlrl<et
TtlevWon
1'huters
Weather
Weddings
World News
•
94
A3 BS
A4 ce-7
84
07
C4
81·2
C8
82
95
A4
AS
81
A3
C4·6
C1-4
B
82
83
A2
B2 •A4
Youth. 17, found in cardiac arrest
in patio, succumbs later at hospital
By STEVE MARBLE is being investigated by pohce and
OtdleDlllJll'tee..., coroqor's deputies today.
·The d?th of. a teen.atge boy found The youth, identified as Richard P.
~nco~~1ous this weekend at _a house DiSaJvo, 17, of Irvine, was dis-
tn Irvine where a party was being held · covered by friend5 Friday shortly
Driver senoualy inj1lred
Jeffrey Jl'rledm•n, 32, of Coeta lleu la
treated by reKUe worken wbo pulled blm
ftom a tnick tbat bad .eered olf'l'fewport
Boulnvd thla mornhli and barriled into a
tree. Friedman wu ln •Ulllery at 9 :30 a.m.
toda~ at l!_o~tain Valley Community Hoe-
UCI students· find
a new chancellor
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Orientation Week, better known on Of.,...,._,...,..,. campus as "O Week." Students will
Students are convergjna on UC spend the wec;k buying books, payina
Irvine in record numbers this week "late fees," consulting with advisers
for the start of the fall quarter, findina and meetina representatives of a new chancellor at the helm and frate~itics, sororities and other UCl
numerous cons~ruction projects · organizations. Fall classes begin a
under way~ week from today.
Today marked the beginina of the The expected faU enrollment is
annual ·Academic Advisina and (Pleue Me STUDBNT8/A2)
. .
UCI psychiatrists
now will have maps_
for mental journeys·
A million-dollardevicc~°"tac·
quired by UC Irvine promises 10
provide campus psychiatrists wit ti a new road map for the hvina human
brain. II will even t&ll campus
rcscarchcrsabouta pcoon'1 rncnlal
traffic pattems.
This unit isealled the P IT Sc.anncr.
~hon for Positron Em1s ion Tomo-
araphy. lt produccsacolor·kc)ed,
computcro(nhanocd videb p1ctutc of
a pcn0n•s braan acuvat)'. U 1n1 the
familiar rainbo~1 pcctrum, the
busicst1rrasofbrainact1v11y1um up
red and the least acti\C~arc vmbl m
v-iolet.
Of whafu isa color-coded
Portrait of onc'.1gratmaucr?
Researchers at UGI belic~c the
PET nn rw1ll help th m und r-
tand ~h1ch pan1ofthc brain arc
related to1>11n1rularbcha\1ors. h
Ctluld hclpc mpu~ ps)-ch11tn ts
makcmorc ccurntcd1 n of
mental 1lln ~ u ha
P11L
SIEllUIAI
Fot:11 \ 11~ 1tt1 N1v.\
hizo'4ircn1a It may allO help them
chooscthcdnaanhatarc mQSt likdy
to help victims of mental illnm.
Dcspnegrcat tndcSan recent
)'Cir\, the human brain conunucs to
challcnae rcscan:hcrs try1ni to under·
tand how at d1rectu pcnon's
ph~ ical..nollcmcnt,cmohons. nd.
tholJlht proccs
m earl) brcakthroughsOC'·
tuntddurinabrain :urger) c pcri·
mcnt hen ph) ktans. used n
(PleueMelUlAIN/A 2) . '
before midn1jh1 an the ~r patio ofa
residenoo on West Yale Loop. He was
pronounced dead abou~ an hour later
at Tust&n Community Hospital police 111d. '
· A coronors deputy said it could be
a month before the laboratory tells to establish the cause of dciaah arc completed. .
The teen
respiratory rrcst when he arnvC<S t
!he ~ospital emergency room, accon:l·
ans to em~cy room pb)>s1cianDr.
Michael Young. No (unherdetailsof
the ~th were provided.
Irvine 'police had responded to the
address on noise complaints at least
once before an anonymouJ caller
telephoned police at 11:14 p.m. and
alerted them to the unconsoou~ 17-
year.;o!d.
The teen·~ found on lbe
ground 1 n a c'kyard pauo. Police did
not ~ cthtr the )'OUth lived at the
ddttSS. or whdhcr thcr were any adults present nt the patty.
Record 1nd1cate mat 1WO DOtlC
complaints ere filCd wath police
bef ort the anon~ mous ~11 was made.
No one was arrest~
'Fore ' fusillade
a frustr ation
to irate HB folks
Golf course neighbors
s a y flying balls
a missile menace
"We've asked ithem ~If cows
peop&e) to come down and took at 1he
damaces but they won't come. They
tell us to take it up with the golfets.
Glaw>w said she did buttonhole
one ao11er recently after be hooked bts
drive and smashed a window. BJ1to8EftT BARUR "'He was mannerly, bUt he oi<fn'l °'.,. Dlllr Nie.... I'. • I ncd Errant gnlf balls from Huntington wantto pay ior 1L summo up my
Beach's Mcadow!ark Golf Counc countac and chased him across the
have tutned nearby batk yards into course. l cauibt up with him near the
-:11 .. ...._ • clubhouse and be finally~ to to an .... 'Wery ran&e. ""'utlog can, submit it to his insurance company.
smashing windows and SC'tually hit-Glasgow said tbcgolfer'sinsuranoe
ting .one pe110n, accordina to resi-company bas paid off ... But I was den~-WilUam K.andel,•h09Cyardon embarrassed an~ he was embar-
Grcen View Lane abuts the I Slh hole ras~;. I wouJdo ' want to do :that
on the city-owned course's eastern again. . . . •. border wd misdirectea' balls have · Glas&ow also_sa1d a coustn v1Slt1J11
"' ---""' bo $6SO da • from San F.ranc1sco was struck oo the ca~ a ut . mage to hii foott.UabaJI .. Butwehaven'theard1f Vollcswagen Rabbit alone. h ur , ' L-.. But Kandel claimed today the aolf t ere were an~ bro~n bont1. .
club's insurance company refuses to Max Bc;>wman.~oroftheaty"s
pay damages, sugestina the costs community scrvtccs department,
should be covered by Kandel's home-said . today he plans . to check with
dwnen insurance. officials from Amcncan Golf, the
.. We probably ict more &olf ball' lessee of the 94-acrc coune.
than anybody, a neighbor, Rose · ••l"bq (the lessee) a.re really the"
Glasgow, said. rcsponSlblc party. Bowman added
.. We've had two V.y!ights at $200 that \he roune has been ""very
each broken by coif baffs a5 well ti cooperative" in maki~ about other windoM. (Pleue Me 'l"OU' I A2)
Funeral serviees set
fdr crash victim, 13
AJ1sa ts survived by ber parents,
Carl Patrick :lones and Nettie Jones.
Her e1&ht sislCt'S and brothers ~
Carol Anne Jones, C.a.rl Gordon
Jones. Steven Cralg Jones, Cynthia
Oaudctte Jones, Anthony Michael
Jones. Patria Wa)'ile Jones. Angela
Rene Jones and Christopher Noel
Jones.
Alisa was an eighth gridC student at
Venado Middle School in lriine. She
attended the Greater Zion Cborch in
Santa Ana and the 'Irvine Woods
Church.
NB, Irvine
conslder
freeway .
proposal
By llAREN E. KLEIN
and PRJL SNEIDERMA.N
Dn. lloateBKlaabaam,Joeepb W
le•••er on ,.uea t Erln Hulett. •
...
Howard Hughes' funds tied
to Nixon, Watergate ca·se ..
CHICAGO (AP} -!\ nc\\ book
alf rt'C"lUSI\'C billionaire Ho~ d
Hu. rttly donatrd money to
fonne Ptc!1dent Richard N1xon.
who»e fear th donations would be
disclosed 1'ed to the 1972 Waterpte break-in.
Memo purpottedly handwritten
by the late Huanes show he also m de
secret oontnbutions to former Demo-
c:ntic National Commmee chainnan
Lawrence F. O'Brien, author Michael
Orosnin allqes in the book "Citilen Huahcs:·
Orosnin claims in his book that
Nixon knew of the payments of
S l 5,000 a month to O'Brien, and
feared O'Brien would reveal the
$100,000 in payments Nixon re-
ceived from Hughes while in the White House. . .
Drosnin says that led Nixon to
order aide H.R. Haldeman to obtain pr~r ~f the payments to O'Bri~n.
semna in motion a covert campaian
that led to the 1972 attempted
·n ofDcmocrat1c headqu rten
his' is nothi 'Dt:w and there 1s
no crcd1bihty to 1t,.. O'Bnen id
from his New York home Sunday
niaht. He told theNcwYork.Tim'hhe
terminated a contract with tf uahet'
Enterpriaes two years before the
Waterpte brcak·in.
John Ta~lor, pokesman for
Nixon, declined Sunday niaht to
comment on Drosnin'sclaim , saying
he didn't "know anythina about"
Drosnin's allcaations. ·
Spokesmen for the Hu&hes estate
could not be located for comment by telephone Sunday. But Perry Lieber,
who knew Hushes and who now 1s a consultant with the Summa Corp ..
the Nevada arm of the Jiufhes
orpnization, aid he "can't 1mag.ine"
the recluse tryina to buy influence in
the White House.
Lieber said by telephone Sunday
that Hushes may have made e<>liucal
contributions, but he d1dn t thank
he'd made secret pa}ments to Poli·
tman~.
Excerpt of lhe book l>Y·Drosnin, a
former rePoncr for the Washington
Post nd Wall trcet Journal. appe r
in the No ... ember and December
is uesof Playboy m zinc. Th book
1s to be published &n OCccmber by
Holt,JRh1neh n and Winston.
The lil'$t excerpt carries a note
sayjna the memo 1 have been authen·
ticated as written by Hughes throuJh
researth and test by 1handwntina
experts Ord~'I) Halton and John J.
Hams. Copies of some memos ar
rtprintcd 1n the mapzine.
Drosnin 111d O'Brien a~d to
become Hu&hes' chieflobbyist in July
1968 and beaan collectina SI S,000 a
month frpm liulhes a year later.
Drosn1n gid 1'lixon's motivation
was that O'Brien had knowtcdae of'at
least $100.000 in secret Auahci donations funneled to the_presiaent throu~ Nixon's friend, Charles G.
"Bebe · Rebozo. lie said the money
reached Ni~on sometime after he was
first elected in 1968. Drosnin also
said Nixon artw lncrtasinaJy fearful
O'Bnen would disclose the contribu·
tions durina the 1972 campajan.
weekend crashes claim
six on county highways
The September death toll on Or·
anae County hiahways continued to
climb this weekend as six people were
killed in traffic mishaps. Three of the
fatal craslies were blamed on wrona·
way drivers.
Two Marines stattoned at El Toro
were killed Saturday when their car,
traveling the wronJ way on Pacific
Coast Hiahway outside Newport
Beach, slammed bead-on into a auto
'driven by Vicki Sweet of Capistrano
Beach.
The woman, driving in the corTect
lane, sustained serious LDtemll in·
juries and required emeraency sur·
aery followina the 6:30 p.m. accident near Crystal Cove.
One of the Marines killed in the
crash wu identified as Anthony
Walker, 27. The accond man was not
named because relatives had still not
been notified of his death. Officers
did not say which of the men was
driving. . Donald Dean •LaJce, 29, of Tustin
was killed early Sunday on the San
Di~o Freeway when the truck he was
driVlDf spun out of control and flip~ on its top, accordma to the
califomia Highway Patrol.
Patrolmen said Lake's Wlfe, who
survwed the accident, said she had
warned her husband that the truck
was driftina off the roadwa~ JUSt
before the accident. She said he
straightened out the truck but that 1t
swerved mto the center divider
minutes later, accordina to a CHP
spokeswoman.
Rebecca Lake, 31, was treated for
minor injuries at Fountain Valley
Commuruty Hospital followina the
l 2:30a.m. accident near the freeway's
junction with the Costa Mesa Free-
way.
A San Dieao man was killed early
Sunday while driv1na the wrong way
on the Garden Grove Freeway, the
CHP reported. Raul Villegas was
eronounced dead at UCI Medical
Center in On\nae.
V illcps was was dn vana west m the
eastbound fast Jaite when hls vehicle
collided with a vehlcle dnven by Rex
R. Roberts of Oranae. Roberts, 34,
was drivina in the correct direction.
Roberts was treated for minor tn·
juries.
Anthony David Mollica, 30, of
Buena Park died Sunday after hls
motorcycle crashed into a pickup in a
shoppina center par~ lot, and
Russell Martin, 30, of San Juan
Capistrano died when his vehicle
smashed into a disabled truck parked
on the southbound shoulder of the
Santa Ana Freeway south of 17th Street.
Irvine tot'sjoy ride
no joy for parents
By STEVE MARBLE
Of tM DlllJ ..... •i.n
A 3-y~r..Old Irvine boy was "lucky
to be alive" today after he hopped
mto bis parents' running car, put the
vehicle in gear and then barreled
through a neiahborhood greenbelt,
across a busy street and finally came
to a halt an a park more than two
blocks away.
Police sajd the boy, who was not
identified, suffered only slcmned
knees.
"He was upset, of course, and hts
parents were even more upset," s11d
one {><>lice officer after the early-
mormng nde m the city's Turtlerock
community.
Officers said the family sedan was
parked at the curb in front of the
house on Southern Wood with the
engine running. With the rest of the
family standinJ nearby, the toddler
apparently opened the car door and
got in, Pohce said.
The father told Pohce he p_w his
young son playing with the elcctnc
window control but did not become
concerned until he saw the car start to
move. officers repcrted.
The Monte Carlo, parked near the
top of a hill with what was estimated
to be a 6 percent pde, took off.
Police said the runaway car zipped
across a community areenbelt, rip~
out an above-around water maan,
veered up an embankment and then
bejan rollina down the street tak.ina
out trees as ~ went.
With the father chasina after iL the
car traveled two blocks before cross· mJ busy Turtle Rock Drive, police
said.
The vehicle slammed throuah a
wood fence and came to a stop in
Turtle Rock Community Park.
The car was deemed a total loss by
police.
'FORE' FUSILLADE FRUSTRATING ....
From Al
S 14,000 in adjustments to alleviate a
samilar problem on Graham Street,
west of the course.
Last July, homeowners south of the
course across Warner A venue alw
complained of aolfballs whizzina into homes.
Dr. Kandel, the resident who said
his back Jard 1s like an "artillery
range" sai he believes that golfers ti}'
-
to avoid hitting trees to the nght of the
1 Sth hole and aim left -sometimes
mto his yard. He said he believes the
problem could be minimized by
movina the trees.
STUDE~TS FINDING CHANGES A T UCI ••.
From Al •
12,500 students, exceeding last year's
record by 600. The tot.al includes
about 10,000 undcraraduates and
2,500 sraduate and medical students.
UCl spokeswoman Susan Church
said t>equse oflimited classroom and
lab space, UCI freshman enrollment
will be permitted to grow Just 2.5 to 3
percent annually throuah 1990. She
said the campus retention rate also as
increasin1, with 71 percent of UCJ's
freshmen returning af\er their first year
For the first time in the school's
history. some freshman history and
calculus classes wtll meet off-campus
because of the lack oflarge lecture hall
space. Church said UCl is renting
daytime aud1tonum space for these
classes at the new Edwards Cinema
four-screen theater complex just
across Campus Dnve.
The space problems and growing
research prOJCCts a1 UCI arc resPon·
s1blc for much of the campus con-
struction. Eiaht projects are under
way or scheduled to break ground this
school year.
These include a connected alumni
center and Umvewty ExlCnSlon
Bu1ld1ng. the Nelson Research Fa-
c1hty, Beckman Laser Institute, a
faculty housing complex, research
centers for computer science and
enaineering, the Donald Bren Events
< Center and a bndge conncctma the
campus with the Town Center shop-
pina and dinina area.
Takina office at UCI this fall is a
new chief administrator, Chancellor
Jack W. Peltason. He assumed his
post followina the retirement of
·founding Chancellor Daniel G .
AJdnch Jr.
This fall's UCI students will be
payina lower fees than those who
enrolled last fall. The new student fees
ate-SW.5-0 .per quarter for un.dcr-
&raduates, $461.50 per quarter for
graduate studenu. The current quar-
terly fees art $70 lower than the
charges last fall. Most students enroll
for three quaners each year.
Jus t Call
6 4 2-6086
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Dal'1 Pllol o.llvery
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Ttll us wbat11 oo your mind. •
ORANGE! COAST
, Daily Pilat
H. L. Schwartz Ill
Puoh h r
\
Rosem1ry Churchman
Centro ler
Stephen F. Cerezo
Produc11on
Mara er
•
Clrcul•tlon 7141M2-4133 c1 .. 1lfled edvertltlng 7141M2·M71
All other d•p•r1m•nt1 142-4321
MAIN OFFICI
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!!t!R-VINE MtfLL FREEWAY PLA N ••.
corridor is needed to relieve traffic
whlcb would be aenerated in south Orange County by extensive {\ew
residential and commercial develop-
ment planned there.
The developer fee proaram is to be
considered by the Newpon Beach
City Council toniaht at 7:30 p.m. at
City Hall, 3300 Newport Blvd.
lrvine City Council members will
consider the proposed freeway at a
meetina be&innina at 6:30 p.m. Tues.-day at 17200 Jamboree Blvd.
The plan, developed by the Orange
County Transj)Ort.ation Commission,
1s scheduled for consideration by the
county Board of Supervisors OcL 3.
The program, called the M~or
Thorouahfare and' Bridge Fee Pro-
iflM, would require developers to
pay for some of the cost of the
freeway. The amount they would i>aY
is determined by bow much traffic
their developments would aenerate.
would ranae from 37Yl cents per
sq_uare foot for tow traffic aenerators,
Hie warehouses, to $3. 7S per square
foot for hiab traffic generators, like
retail centers.
Nolan said the cost of the proaram
would tihly be passed on in the price
of a new:fiomes in the developments
that arc assessed..
Nolan uid he has recommended
that the Newport Beach City Council,
which has previously stated its sup-
port for the transportation corridor,
vote toniaht to concur with the
county that the proaram is n~s'ary.
He also recommends that the council
authorize the city staff to work with
the county and other cities involved
in the proaram to resolve questions
reprdina the implementation of the
program.
On Feb. 28, 1978, the Irvine
council voted unanimously to sup-
port the early construction of the San
Joaquin Hills Transponation Cor·
ridor. But only one member of that
council, Mayor David Sill • con-
tinues to serve on the city's aovernina
panel.
Another vote in favor of the
proposed freeway was approved by a
3·2 vote on Sept. 11, 1979. Sills again
voted in favor, but Larry Aaren. who
continues to serve on the council,
voted apinst the motion.
Irvine's city staff bas recommend·
ed the council take the foltowina actions Tuesday ni,aht:
•Express support for the San
Joaquin Hills, Eastern and Foothill
transPonaUon corridors;
• Recoanize that developer fees are
needed to help pay for these hi&h·
ways;
•Assen that the city will take an
active pan in plannin1 the new
highways;
•Authorize the mayor to rec-
ommend to county supervisors that
an intergovernmental aarcemeot be
developed for sharina responsibility
for plannina the proposed highways.
.Benjamin Nolan, Newport's public
works director, said tbe OCTC esll·
mates about SO percent of the traffic
on the new f rceway would be gener-
ated by new development. In New.
pen Beach, the majority of un·
developed land belongs to the Irvine
Co.
Fall weather to continue
The proposed developer fee, based
on estimated traffic aenerated by the
new development. would rana.e from
$6SO per unit for multiple-dwcllina
residential developments to S l, 120
for single-family homes.
For commercial property, the fees
Autumn's pattern ofovcrniaht low
clouds and mostly sunny days will
continue this week in Southern
California, forcasters say.
Highs will be in the temperate 70s
to tow-80i Tuesday in Orange Coun·
t_y, accordina to the National Weather
Service. LOws toniabt will reach the
m1d-60s.
Beach highs will range from the
upper-60s to low-80s after ovemi&ht
lows m the mid-50s to 60s.
Locally gusty northerly wmds will
blow in the mountains toniaht but
decrease Tuesday, when hi.ah• will climb only to the SOs to mid-60s.
BRAIN SCANNER AIDS PSYCHIATRISTS •••
From Al
electrical probe to stimulate specific
areas of the brain. The still-<:onscious
patient would tell doctors which part
ofhis body-a lea or finger, for
example -responded to this stimu·
lation. With such a probe, researchers
also found they could interefere with
certain thouaht processes, such as
those involved in speech.
described how a PET Scanner experi-
ment works.
The tests required a special aJucose
(suaar) solution that is .. tagged" with
a shon-li ved radioactive isotope. A
S 1.3 million device called a cyclotron
is needed to produce this substance,
fluorine-18, but UC Irvine has no
cyclotron. UCDavis'sCrockerNu·
clear Lab does have one and has
agreed to produce the isotope for
UCI's PET Scanner.
This tcchni9ue helped scientists
determine which parts of the brain
aovem specific body actions, but it
was less successful in illuininatina
how the bnaiAJu.iides a person's The middle person in this Iona· emollons. r . ,.... distance relationship is Lynn New-
Other strides have been made ton, an air racer with 18 yean offlyina
throuah the use of the more familiar experience. Newton, a Newport
CAT Scanners. These are SOt>histi· Beach resident, bas agreed to fly the
cated X-ray machines that differen-radioactive substance, packed tn a
uate between boneand brain matter. heavy lead case, from UC Davis to
But they can't tell the difference, John Wayne Airport. It will then be
however, between various types of driven quickly to UCI, where PET
soft tissue and can't detect brain Scanner subjects will l>e waiting. .
activity. The rush is necessary because the .
Brain activity can, however, be radioactive isotope has a half-life of
1 monitored by the new PET Scanner, approximately' I IO minutes, mcanina Dr . Mon te Bucbabaum
and that will be the focus of research half ofit is aone in that period. A test
at UCI. No other un~ity's Dcpart·-fliaht1ooktwohourund 1 Sminutes;-~ ...... ..-
ment of Psychiatry bas one of the the drive to UCI took another 12 radjoactivity. Thus, areas with tbe
innovative but expensive4evices. minutes. But the timc-wa1 viewed as grcate t concentrations of the tap
UCI 1s not yet equipped to manu· acceptable for the PET Scanner tesu. suaar resister most stronaJy. The
f.acturc the radioactive sugar that An adv1ntqe to usinaa substance computer-enhanced picture ranaes
must be injected to triaaer the PET that deteriorates quickly is that ii will from red to violetaccordina to the
Scanner images. That short-lived pose no lona·term radiation hazard to level ofbrain activity.
isotope must be produced at UC the subJcct, accordin& to Buchsbaum. Following the example cited
Davis near Sacramento and nown _The subJcct of a P£T Scanner earlier, the researcher will produce a
promf.tly to OranJ'.CpQ.llty. experiment receives an µtjcction, and picture howina which ~rts of the Stil , PET Scanrier4ldvocates uy its the radioactive 1upr tnvels throuah brain are active and which arc
potential benefits justify the expenJe the bloodstream1 reachina the braii1 .. rcstina·• while a reporter conducts
and the to1i5tical problems. within 30 aeconas. The brain is a bis interview.
"I think it's one of the mo t lcadinacustomer forsupr, absorbina UCI researchers, of coune. have
important new directions in psy-it from the blood. However, the loftier experiments in mind.
chiauy, ••says Dr. Monte ... special 1upr used in thi1 procedure is for example, an early campus
Buchsbaum, a UCI professor of not broken down in tlie process. experiment will focu on people who
P'YChiatry who is administering the "It Just sits there in the brain lilte a are beina treated for severe anxiety.
campus's fint PET Scanner te ts. label, • Buch1baum II.YI-With tho Pl::."T Scanner rucarchm
Bucl!sblum pined extensive ex-After the injection, ihuubjcq may will tty to determine where anxiet ·is
periencewitha PETScanncrat the spend 30minutesenP,Jed inaafne centered in the brain andhow&nU•
National Instnutt of Mena.al Health behavior the psychlaaut wish to anxiety drup aff'C(t this area.
An Bethesda Md , where he worked study. The parts of tht brain tKat The PET Scanner has already
for 16 yran bCforccomina to UCJin •.·overn this bChaviorTtOuld .. kc the shown that schizophrenia victims
1982. hea v1est demand for the &.aaed aupr. hive pauems ofbrain acti v& ty that
Dr. William E. Bunncy Jr:1cha1r-Foruample. fftheaubject wtre dafferfrom those of a .. normal''
manofUCI'sdcpanmentorpsy· conductinaanewsintervtew,the pttSOn. hi1ophreniaiuomellmcu
chiatry, was once Buchsbaum'• boss most ac;tivcartas of his brain would dafficuh ailment toditJnoae-not
,atthe Nationalln tltute. Bunncy • bC those that direct hand mO\ttmcnt cvet) one whooompla1ns ofhalluci· ·
shared Buchsbaum'• enthus~um. (ta kin& nott1), the plannina ofques. nations tias the disorder. With the andt~twopre ~dforac~umt onof ttonundmemory. . ~ETSQnner,psychia1ristsha\'t1
a scanner at UCI. The mifuon.c!ollar After 30minuttt,1he subject is • tool to hclpd1qnoae ICbizophren a
dc .. ·ice was dell ve~ laatmon th, traPl)ed onao the PET nncr table, and co study druas used in h1
purChisedwnhacomb1nationof plac:inahisheadwithanadrcular treatment. ,.
unlver ll and rcdcraHundt, plu openina. Over a 4~11unu1tperiod. IA~raqc plans call for u of
contributaons from the phann•. pictures on. I mtn-lli6cl Unch uo·. ET Scanner inahe tUd) of ceulical lndu t_l')'_.1 wtuch tands to 1hick-aret1ktn via tbe:anncr'a memory. The Irvine campus hA1 one
benefit from PET nner research. Cilht bAnkl or deleCtOtL oftbe nauon'a lcad1na ccntm for
In rtetnttntcf'\'1CW. Buchsbaum 1th dttectoraa~senifu\eto memory rch.
I
'
Coast
Seven nearby residents
are suing Pacific
Amphitheatre owners
over noise from rock con-
certs./ Al
The Dally Pilot asked
residents how fh~ are
enjoying the end of their
children's summer va-
cation./ Al
C&llfornla --West.Hollywood gays and
renters want their own
clty./A4
Nation
President Reagan says
he's ready for arms talks
with Sovleta./ A4
People say the strangest
things on their vanity
plates, If they can get
away with It./ AS
World
Soviet leader Chernenko
turns 73 today .I A4 .
Thousands of residents
flee volcano eruption In
P.hlllpplnes./ M .. ~~. ········~················ ... ····~· ....................... ., · . .,;.-;:•.•.•.•.•.•. ··-~·.•.•.•.•.•.•.•.·.-..·.·········· .. ··;:-.•.·.·~
Feature
Ob Jets d'art and prices
Were eye-popping at the
Newport Harbor Art Mu-
seum's Antique Show
and Sale.l81 i
Sports
The Rams found a way to
win In the National Foot-
ball League without Vince
Ferragamo./C1
Look who'a about to win
the National League East
flag. It's the Chicago
Cubs./C3
Entertainment
For the fourth straight
year, the bottom network
Is on top at the Emmy
Awards./83 ~-..._.,. ___ _
Baalneu
Women In Sales helps
members develop their
careers./85
INDEX
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Bualness
California Newa
CIUlln.d
Cornlea
Crouword
Death Notleea
Featur ..
Horoscope
Ann Landera \,
Mutual Fund• \ National News
Opinion
Papwazzl
PollCI Log
PUbllo Notleel
Sportt
StOCk Marketa
Tllevllton
nhMt•• w .. ther
Weddings
Wor1d Newt
a.
A3
B5
A4
CS-7
84
C7
Ci
91-2
C6
B2
85
A4
,A6
81
A3 • C.·5
C1·-i
86
82
B3
A2
•. 82
A4
f 1111 111111
-----
(),,fl.N· ,f <•tJNlY \ ,11>1>.~NIA ,') < fNI',
·.
• .1es ee11
er 0 --
U .
Driver Hrlodaly injured
Jeffrey Friedm.u, 32, of Coeta 11.. ta
treated by racue workers who palle4 him
from a track that had ·•eered off lfetrport ·
Boale•ard th1a morntng an4 bartelecl lDto a
tree. Friedman wu in nraery at 9:30 a.m. ·
today at Foantaln Valley Commanlty~Boe-
pltal where hla condlUon wu dacrDed u
iterlou. Police Kld the acct4ent occtured
aroancl 6:20 a.m. aloq lfe.rport BoaleftJ'd
near lleaa DriYe. City D.retJCbten bad to to
·pry Friedman from the tnack'• Wreckafe,
aald police.
Record crop of UCI students
finding changes on campus
By PHtL SNEIDERMAN
OfhDelrNet ....
Students arc converging on UC
Irvtne in record numbers this week
for the start of the fall quarter, finding
a new chancellor at the helm and
numerous construction projects
underway.
Today marked the begining of the
annual Academic Advising and
Oncntation Week. better known on record by 600. The total includes
campus as 0 0 Week." Students will about 10,000 underaraduates and
spend the week buying books. paying , 2~duate and medical students.
"late fees." consulting with ~dv1scrs 't'l)Cr spokeswoman Susan Church
and meeting rtprescntatives of ' said because ofhmited classroom and
fraternities, sororities and other UCI lab space. UCI freshman enrollment
organizations. Fall classes begin a will be permitted to arow just 2.S to 3
week from today. pen:cnt annually throu~ 1990. She
The expected fall enrollment is said the campu~ retention hile also is
12.500 students. e"<ettding last year's (Pleue eee STUDENTS/ A2)
UCI psychiatrists .
now will have maps
for mental journeys
A million-Oollardcv1cc-Just ac-
quired by UC Irvine promises to
provide campus psychiatrists with a
new road map for the living human
brain. It will even tell campus
researchers about a person's mentnl
traffic patterns.
This unit is called the PET Scanner.
hort for Po nron Em is 100 Tomo-
graphy. It p,roduccs a color-ke)'t'd,
eomputer~nhanccd video picture of
aperson'sbratnact1v11y. U 1ngthe
familiarrainl:>Qw spe(trum, the
bu 1tstarcasofbnunact1\•1tytum up
ttd and the lea t activ re \1s1bl m
violet. .-:.
Of wh t use is a "''Olor-codcd
ponraitofone•sgraym tter?
-Research at UCI bchcvc,the
PET nnerwdl help them und f'"
PHIL
SIEllEllAI
Focus ON lHl N l~s
ar
Youth, 17, fou~d. in cardiac arrest
in patio, succumbs later at hospital
IJ STEVE M.ARB~E
Ol .. Dllllf ........
The death of a teen-. boy found
unconscious this 'lllrttkend at a house
in !Nine Where a pany was being held
11 beina investigated by police and
coronor•s deputies today.
The youth. identified as Richard P.
DiSaJvo, 17, of Irvine, was dis.-
covered by friends Friday :shortly
before midnight in the rear patio of a
residence on West Yale Loop. He was
pronounced de1d about an hour later
at Tustin C-0mmunit) Ho pita.I.
police said.
A coronor's deputy said it coUld be
a month before the laboratory tesu to
establish the cause of death are
completed.
The teen was in full cardiac and
respiratory rrest hen he amved at
the hospital emergency room, accord-
ing to emergency room J)hysacian Dr.
Michael Young. No further detai1i al
the death were provided.
Irvine police had responded IO llac
address on noise complainu at :leas&·
onc:e before an anonymous caDet
telephoned police at 11: l 4 p.m. ud
alcn.cd them to the unconscious 17-
ycar-old.
The ken.qer was found oa the
around in a backyard pabo. Police did
not say whether the youth lived at the
address or WbC1hcr there were any
adults present at the pany.
Records indicaie that two DOite
complaints -wue-fi.led wit.b--PIHl·K:C---~ before the an6n ymous call v.-as made.
No one was arrested.
Crashes claim
6 over weekend
on county roads
Toll for the month
reaches 28 -and
there's a week to go
· The September death toll c;u1 Or-~ County h!ghv.'8)"5 continued to
climb this weekend as si'-PC()ple were
killed 1 trafflt mimaps. rte oflhe
fatal crisbes were blamed on wroPi-
way drivers.
did not say hicb of the men -.11.1
driving.
Donald Dean Lake. 29. of TU5tin was killed early Sunday ou the San
Diqo Freeway when the lnltk be was
driving spun out of contrt>I and
fii~ on its top, accordina to the
Cahfomia Hi&bwa)~~ PatrOlmcn said 's •
{Pleuc .e F ATAL8/A2)
Police s-;.ell brawl
at Bun gton bar
Two MariDes stationed at El Toro
were killed Saturday when their car.
travelioa the wrona way on Pacific Coast ·Highway outside Newport
Beach, slammed bead-On into a auto
driven by Vicki Sweet of Capistrano Pool cu wen 1urned into
Beach. weapons and 1~1 balls reportedly
The woman. driving in the correct v.-ere flyina aft& a fJ&ht broke out at
lane, sustained' serious internal in-· WOOdy'' Pat 1"-: _-_ ~ike'' in Hunt.
juries and required C'fDCflCllC)'. sur-ingtOn Beach, acx:oroi~ to polioc.
gcry foUowina the 6:30 p.m. accident The fracas ~ y broke
near C~tal Cove. over a pool pme a.od five men were One of the Marines killed in the involved wheo an employee called
crash was identified as Anthony police a fev.• aunutet after midJU&bt
Walker. 27. The second man Y.'l.S not Sunday mornina,.
named because relatives bad still not There were no major iojuries and
been notified of his death. Officers no arresu. police sa.id.
.............. \M,.,.
$1Mfire
• • 1nJures
Shores
resident
.und h1ch paruoflfle brain are
related to pan.cul r behaviors. It
couldhclpcampu ps chi tn t
m kemorc l o of Dra. ll•te a.c-.libi ... JoHpll Wa"emonatra \JCl'•P T
Scat&ner oa patient SrlD Hulett. .. mental illnes so h
Howard Hu hes funds tied
,
to Nixon, Watergate case
ew book claims ecret contributions
made to both GOP. Democrats by recluse
t1C'atcd wnnen b Hu hes throu h
re :al'C'h nd 1 t b) hand\\TUin
expcns Ord\\ > ltahon and John J.
Har1is. Copies of omc memo-:. are
repnntcd in the magaiine. CHICAGO (AP) - A new book
·all rcclu 'vc billionaire Ho\\ rd
Hugh retl) don t~ mon y to
former Pre ident Richard Nixon,
whose fear the 'donations would bC
disclosed led to the I 972 Watcraat
break-in.
Memos purportedly handwritten
by the.late Hug.bes show he also made
sttret contribution to former Demo.
cratic National Committee chairman
Lawrence F O'Brien, author Michael
Drosnin alleges in the bOok "Citi.ten
Hua.hes."
Orosnin claims in his book that
Nixon knew . of the payments. of
$15,000 a tnonth to O'Brien, and
feared O'Brien would reveal the S l 00,000 in payments Nixon re-
ceived from Hughes while in the
White House.
Drosnin se)'1 that led Nixon to
order aide H.R.. Haldeman to obtain p~f ~f the payments to O'Bri~n.
aettma 10 mohon a covert campaign
that led to the I 972 attempted
buggina of Democrauc headquarters.
"This is nothing new and there 1s
no credibility to it," O'Brien said
from bis New York home Sunday
ni&ht. He told the New York Times be
tenntnated a contract wtth Hugh
Entcqmse two ) rs before 1he
W tCJpte break-in.
John 1lylor, f)Okcsman fo
Nixon, dc<:lmed unday night to
comment on Dr ntn'sclaim$.5a)1
he didn't 0~now ,nyth1n bout"
Orosnin's allegations.
SPokesmen for th~ Hu&hes estate
could not be located for comment !)y
telephone Sunda>. But Perry Lieber.
who lcnew Hughe and who now 1s a
consultant with the Summa Corp.,
the Nevada arm of the HuJtlc
organization, said he "can't imagine"
the recluse tryina to buy influence an
the White House.
Lieber said by telephone Sunday
that Hughts may have made P,Oht1cal
contributions, but he didn 1 think
he'd made sa-ret payments to poli-
ticians.
E>.cerpts of the book by Drosnin, a
former reporter for the Washington
Post and Wall Street Journal, appear
1n the November and Decem~r
issues of Playboy maµz.mc. The boo~
is to be published m December b)
Hoh, Rhinehart and Winston.
The first excerpt carries a note
saying the memos have been authen·
L>ro nin id O'Brien d 10
becom Hughes'ch1cflobbyl51 in July
l96ti 11nd ~an collec:1irig S 15.000 a
month from lf ughes a )CU later. Orosmn 'd Nixon's motivation
was th.Ill O'Bnen had knowledge ofat
least SI 00 000 in sttret Hu&hes
don 'tions funneled to the president
through Nixon·~ friend, Charle G.
··ecbe" Rcboio. He said the money
reached Mixon omeume at'ler he was
first l'lccted in 1968. Drosnin al o
said Nixon gcw rncrcasangly tearful
O'Bncn \\Ould (lisclose the contnbu·
tions dunng the l 972 campaign.
Drosnin's findings we~e based
largely on almost 10,000 memos
handwnttcn by Hu&hes, acrordinJ to a ne\\s rclca~ by Playboy magitzinc.
Drosnin said the memos were stolen
from the rcclose in 1974 and that he
obtained them during his investiga-
uon of the burglary.
In one memo said to have been
wntten in 1968, Drosnin quotes
Hughes, who died in 1976. as saying,
"lam' determined to el~t a president
of our choo ina this year, and one
who will be deeply indebted. and who
will recognize his indcbtedn~s."
C-ounty nurse faces trial
i~ 1979 murder of baby
By tlte A11oclatecl Pl'Cll
A nurse was ordered to stand trial
for the 1979 murder an his home of a
baby, who initially was ruled to have
died from an accidental downstairs
fall.
Fullerton Mun1c1pal Court Judge
Richard Weatherspoon also ordered
tho nurse's wife, who was babysitting
the boy, to be arraigned on a murder
ch~ Oct. I. the same dav tnal 1s to
begin for Michael Dale Gamtson
Weatherspoon ruled after a four·
day preliminary hcanng dunng
which the credibility of a witness who
provided an alibi for Gamtson. 33.
was challenged by prosecutors.
Garritson's wife Linda · was the
babysmcr for Scott Phillip Cleveland
on Feb. 20, I 979, when the boy
sustained fatal head inJun~ at the
Gamtson's former home an Anaheim
Hills. ·
The injuries initially were ruled the
result or an ag:idental fall down four
carpeted stairs, baf'f"Rtmtd autopsy
in 1981 determmed that the injuries
were not accidental.
Gamtson was charged with
murder an August. Police said his wife
admitted she hed during the 1979
mvestipt1on to protect her husband;
she since bas said she will not testify
against him.
Disneyland workers vote
today on new contract bid
By tbe A11oclated Preas
The managemc:nt of Djsneyland
says it ts "delighted" that unionized
workers at the Anaheim amusement
park decided to vote on a proposed
contracl after turning down a pay
otTcr last week..
Disneyland spokesman Bob Roth
sa1d management offered workers a
"substanttaJly modified" proposal
from the three-year pay freeze
proposal rc1ccted Sept. 17.
The park was operating normally
Sunday with a full work force.
The vote on the proposed contract
covcnng 1,844 employees was to be
conducted toda) at the Retail Ocrks
Union Hall an Buena Park.
Union spokesman Michael O'Rourkc has said a two-thirds .. no"
vote would constitute strike
authonzauon.
Park officials have prepared for a
strike by training non-union workers.
The unions were seeking a two-year
pact with annual pay raises of
between 3 and 8 percent.
The unions represent janitors. ride
operators. bakery and hotel workers,
among others. The park has 5,000
workers, 3, 700 of whom arc members
of 26 unions.
Most workers currently earn $7 per
hour to SI 0 per hour, and Disneyland
contends that average wages for
similar work in the industry are about
one-third less.
FATALS TOTAL 6 FOR WEEKEND ..•
From Al
survived the accident, said she had
warned her husband that the truck
was drif\Jng off the roadway just
before the accident. She said he
straightened out the truck but that it
swerved mto the center divider
minutes later, according to a CHP
spokeswoman.
Rebecca Lake, 31, was trca tcd for
minor injuries at Fountain Valley
Community HospataJ following the
I 2:30a.m. accident near the freeway's
Junction with the Costa Mesa Free-
way.
A San Diego man was lulled early
Sunday while driving the wrong way
on the Garden Grave Freeway, the
CHP reported. Raul Villegas was
pronounced dead at UCI Medical
Center in Orange.
Villegas was was driving west in the
eastbound fast lane when his vehicle
collided with a vehicle dnvcn by Rex
R. Robens of Orange. Roberts. 34.
was driving in the correct d1rectton
Roberts was treated for minor in-
JUrics.
Anthony David Mollica, 30, of
Buena Park died Sunday after his
motorcycle crashed into a pickup in a
shopp1n1 center parlung lot, and
Russell Martin, 30, of San Juan
Capistrano died when his vehicle
smashed mto a disabled truck parked
on the southbound shoulder of the
Santa Ana Freeway south of 17th
Street. •
The weekend death toll brought to
28 the number of people killed in
highway smashes this month. Of-
fice~ said the number of fatahucs
compares with 20 during the entire
month of September last year.
STUDENTS FINDING CHANGES AT UCI .••
From Al
1ncreasina. with 71 percent of UCI's
freshmen returning after their first year.
For the first time in the school's
history, some freshman history and
calculus classes will meet off-campus
becauseofthelaclc oflllfit lectur~haU
space, Church said UCI 1s renting
daytime aud1tonum space for these
classes at the new Edwards Cinema
four-screen theater complex JUSt
across Campus Dnve.
The space problems and growing
research projects at UCI arc respan-
Just .Call
642-6086
s1blc for much of the campus con-
struction. Eight projects are under
way or scheduled to break around this
school year.
These include a connected alumni
center and University Extension
Building,-1llc Nelson Rc~arch Fa-
cility. Beckman Laser Institute. a
faculty housing complex, research
centers for computer science and
cnginccnng. the Donald Bren Events
Center and a bndge connecting the
campus with the Town Center shop-
ping and dining area.
Taking office at UCI this fall is a
new chief administrator, Chancellor
Jack W. Peltason. He assumed his ;
post following the retirement of
founding Chancellor Daniel G.
Aldrich.Jr.
This fall's UCI students will be
~ying lower fees than those who
enrolled last fan. The new student recs
arc S44S.50 per quarter for under-
graduates. $461 .50 per quarter for
graduate students. The current quar·
terly fees arc $70 lower than the
charaes last fall . Most students enroll
for three quarters each year.
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Tell as wbal's oa your mlnd. .
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330 w"' a.tr 1 COit• '..I t i20' • I
VOL. 77, NO. 261
•
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P'tre gutted tlila home at '6601 BrtiJlton Road ID Cameo Shoree, tn.Ju.ftni a raldent.
CDM BLAZE INJURES WOMAN •••
From Al
which witnesses said spread qu1ckJy
through the house.
Check estimated the tire caused
$500,000 damage to the structure of
the house and $500,000 to its con-
tents. About 30 boats at sea spotted the
fire and watched its progress as It
swept through the house, Cheek sa1d.
One boater told firefiJ}lters he could
see the piano burning.
"'"West, whose husband James was
H&pitalized Friday with a serious
illness, was nappina when a loud
noise awoke tier. She saw the fire and
had to burst throu-.h the flame5 to
.
escape the inferno. Nei&hbors treated
her bums untiJ paramedics arrived,
Cheek said.
Sparks from the tire ignited several
spot fires on shmgle ro0fs throuahout
the Cameo Shores neighborfiOod,
Cheek said, but all the fires were
extinguished before they did 'llOY
serious damage.
BRAIN SCANNER AIDS PSYCHIATRISTS •.•
From Al
elcctri£.al probe to stimulate ~ific
areas of the brain. The sull~onSCtous
patient would tell doctors which part
of his body-a leg or finger, for
example-responded to this stimu-
lauon. With such a probe, researchers
also found they could 1ntcrefere with
certain thought processes. such as
those involved in speech
This technique helped sc1enusts
determine which pans of the brain
govern specific body actions, but it
was less successful in illuminating
bow the bram guides a person's
emouons.
Othcrstndes have been made
through the use of the more familiar
CAT Scanners. These are so-phisti-
catcd X-ray machines that differcn·
tiate between bone and bra1n matter.
But they can't tell the difference,
however, between vanous types of
soft ussuc and can't detect brain
act1v1ty.
Brain act1v1tycan, however, be
.morut.Ol:C.d by the nc.w PET Scanner.
and that will be the focus of research
at UC'I. No other um vcrs1ty's Depart-
ment of Psychiatry has one of the
innovative but expensive devices.
UCJ 1s not yet equipped to manu-
facture the rad1oact1ve sugar that
must be inJected to trigger thePET
Scanner imaacs That short-lived
iwtope must be produt'ed al UC
Davis near Sacramento and flown
· promP,tly to Orange County.
descnbcd how a PET Scanner experi-
ment works.
The tests required a speaal alucose
{sugar) solution that is "tagged" with
a short-tived radioactive isotope. A S 1.3 million device called a cyclotron
is needed to produce this substance,
fluorine-18, but UC Irvine has no
cyclotron. UCDavis'sCrockerNu-
clear Lab does have one and has
agreed to produce the isotope for
UCl's PET Scanner.
The middle person in this lona-
d1stance relationship is Lynn New-
ton, an air racer with 18 yearsofflying
experience. Newton, a Newpqrt
Beach resident. has agreed tony the
radioactive substance, packed in a
heavy lead case, from UC Davis to
John Wayne Airpon. It will then be
dnvenquicklyto UCJ, where PET
ScannersubJcctS will be waiting.
The rush is necessary because the
radioactive isotope has a half-life of pproximatel~l lOminutes. mea ing
halfof it is gone 1n diat penOd. A I st
flight took two hours and 15 minutes:
the drive to UCI took another 12
minutes. But the time was viewed as
acceptable for the PET Scanner tests.
An advantqe to usina a substance
thatdetenoratesqu1ckly is that it wtll
pose no long-term radiation hazard to
the subject, accordins to Buchsbaurh.
The $ubject of a PET Scanner
expcnment receives an injection.and
the radioactive sugar travels through
tbe blo<>dstream, rcachina the brafo
-thin J<kttonds. :rhe bfaift ;,.. ~
Still, PETScanncradvocatessay its
potential benefits justify thecxpc:n
and the logistical problems,
"l!hinkit'soneofthcmo t
·1(1'lpOrtant new directions in psy-
chia1ry. ·• ~> Dr. Monte
Buchsb um, a UCJ profc 50rof ·
p y hiatry who 1s administcrina the
campus's first PET Scanncnest .
Buch baum gamcJ eucnsive e • pcn~ncc with a PET nner at the
'llii.lt1on I In htuteof Mental H Ith
in Bethesda. Md .. where he worked
for 16 years bcforccomin,g to UCJ in
1982.
Dr. Willinm r:.. BunnC) Jr .. ch If•
mano(UCl'sdepartmcntofp y-
ch1atry1 wuoncc Buchsbaum's bou
at theN tional lnstllute Bunnc)
h red Buch um's nthu 1asm,
and th two pr ~for cqu1 nton of
I 'iCAnner at U I. '.1 he ~llllon-dollar
d ~ice sdelivcrcd la t month.
purch scd th com bin I on of
univ nn~ and federal fund plu
cnntnbuuons from the pharma·
ccuuc I andustl)', \\b1ch tand to
bcncfil from PET nnerrcsc r; h.
In a recent tnterv1e • Buchs um
leadina customer for sugar. absorbina
it from the blood. However, the
pcc1al supr used. in this procedure is
not broken down m the procc s.
.. ltjusts1ts there tn the br3in hkc a
label, 'Buchsbaum Y'· After the injccuon, the subject may
pend 30m1nutesc~ in some
behav1orthc psyeh111n1t wish to
study. The pans of the brain that
aovcm this behavior would make the
hca' iest demand for the taacd supr.
Forcumplc, afthe sultjcct were
conductanaa news interview, the
most active areas ofh1s brain would
be those that d1r«t hind movement
(Ulk1nanotc ),lhcplannmaofquc
t1on andmcmory.
Aflcr Opunutc ,thc1ubjcct1s
strapped onto lhc PET, anncnable.
pla mah1 he d\\1th1nac1rcular
opcnin1. 0\Crl 4?·m1nute pcrlod,
ptcturesofh1s bnun-hces lfnch
1h1ck-arc taken ~ll thcscanner·s
e 1 nk of detectors
l\ det tonarc n 1ttvc10
Dr. Monte Buchabaum
rad1oact1v11y. Thus.areas with the
area test concentrations of the taued
sugar register most mongly. The
computer-enhanCcd picture ran
from red to violet accordin& to the
level oftiram activity.
Following the.example cited
e rlier, the rcscarcherWlll produce a
picture showing which ~ru of the
brain are active and which arc
"rcstina" while a reporter conduct his interview.
UCJ researchers, of course, havt
loftier experiments in mind.
Fore~amplc. an early campu
uperimcnt will focus on people who
arc bcina treated for severe anxiety .
With the PET Scanner researchers
wall try to determine ~ere a ninety s
centered in thebrainandhowanti•
anxietydrup affect th1sarca.
The PETSranncrhasalready
hown that 1eh1zophrenia v1ct1m1
have pattetnsofbrainacuvity that
d1fTerftom ttioseofa "normal''
person. Schizophrcnia 11 sometimes a
difficult ailment todi1Jn01C-not
everyone who complains ofhall uet·
nations ha (he dtsorder. With the
P~":f Sclnner, psyduatnsu havca
toot to help d.a&n01Cach1zophrcoia
nd to stud) drugs used so 111
treatment..
Lona·ranac plan call for u of
UCl'sPETScannerin the 1udyof
memory The Irvine campus ha one
of1fle nat1on·11cad1naccn1cn for
m m arch
l