HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-09-27 - Orange Coast Pilot..
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Foreca1t1 on Al .. COAST IBDlDI
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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27 1984 ORANGE: COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
-~-·---,
_Heights annexation pushed
The Orange County Per-
forming Arts Center has
received a $100,00 Ocon-
tribution./ Al
California
Actor says he won't ap-
pear In the nude In new
movle./A5
Nation
Twenty-ttvee people
were to88ed off a
schoonerthatfllpped In a
heavywlnd./A7
World
Shultz, Gromyko end---
talks that are termed 'a
good start.' I A5
Is yachting a sport, rec-
reational activity, soctal
event or none of the
above?/81
Sporta
The Angels barely stay
alive In the American
League West pennant
race with a 2-0 win In
Kansas City ./C1
Entertainment.
Despite five shows In the
top six, NBC loses the
week's Nielsen ratings to
ABC./84
Baehleu
A federal Judge has or-
dered the seizure of a
Mesa diamond Invest-
ment flrm. /87
INDEX
Boating
Erma Bombeck
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Bullneea
California NeWI
CiUllfled
Coma
Croaword
Death Notlcee
Help Yourtelf
Hotoeoope
In the Setvlce
Mnl.andenl
Mutual Fund1
National Newa
~ml
P=log
P"'* Notk*
SpOtt•
Stock Market•
TellVlllon
Thtltltl
WMttw
WorldNfta
I
81
82
A11
A3
88-7
A4
C8-8
A11
C7
C4 ea ce
A9
82
87
A4
A10
81
• A3
C4·5
C1-3 ee Q§
84-6
A2
A4
Some believe bringing area Into NB fold
would help battle JWA expansion
B11tAREN E. ~
Of .. DllllJ,.. ...
A petition drive aimed at annexing
the rural, unincorporated Santa Ana
HeiJbts to the city of Newport Beach
begins today with proponents hoping
to pthet 6,000 signatures io the next
few months.
Jean H. Watt •. presidertt of a
homcowncr's aroup called Stop Pol-
luting Our Newport, is ~eadina the
latest effort to annex the area au way
to. help Newpon &aqi in •its frattle directly under the fliaht path of the
with the county over expanS1on of airpon.
Jobn Wayne Airport. Ne~rt has repeatedly rcsistcd Satita Ana Hei,lbts, an unia-initiating ten1tby annexataon
corporated'arn of the couoty directly ~proceedings for th area, despite
above . Upper Newpon Bay, is previous petition drives and several
hemmed an by Newport Beach on annexation attempts by residents on
three sides. Much Qf the area is ioned both sides ohbc Newp~:>r1 border.
for ruraJ use. Many residents keep • Watt sa.id the city must act quickly
hones and chickens and operate dog if it is to annex the area before the
kennels in the Hci&hts. which lies . county Board of Supervisors votes in
; ~
January on a plan to c.x~ John Wayne Airport. The au:pon ex-
pansion plan mcludtl pou1ble
changCi in land use and zonin&
desilftations for the nta AM
Heights. • But city officials have not been
wholeheartedly sn favor of the an·
ncxation;and Watt~ they have
drqgtd out the fssuc in the l>Ul.
(Pleue 11ee DIOBT8/A2) ........
Jarvis avoids
Huntington
Prop. 36 debate
Tax reform crusader says Judge Sumner ·ued' aoout him at televised confrontation
BJROBERTBARUR
Of .. DllllJ ........
HowanJ Jarvis backed out of a debate in Huntington Beach Wednesday,
prompting speculation that the 82-ycar~ld political warrior and tax reform
crusader has met his'matcb in the person of former 0rtnge County Superior
Court Judge Bruce Sumner.
Jarvis said today that it•s not so.
He claimed that Sumner "is such
a liar .. that Sumner insulted him in a
previously televised debate earlier
this month on KOC£ Channel ·SO in
Huntington Beach over the merits of
Proposition 36.
Jarvis claimed that Sumner, a
Newport Beach resident who is now
the chairman of the Orange County
Democratic Party, accused Jarvis of
promoting the admendment ••to line
bis own pockets." Sumner, who attended Wednes-
day's debate sponsored by the Hunt-
ington-Beach Chamber of Commerce,
called Rropasition 13 a scam. He also
claimed that his insistence on stick.ins
to the issues stirred Jarvis' wrath.
There are two reasons for Proposition
36, Sumner said, Jarvis' ego and the
money '!' be made by political
organ i.zauons.
!Jut Sumner's comments at the
Cartier television ckbatc, aroordina ao
Jarvis. ••were the lowcsJ,. most ma-
1licious lies rve ever beard ...
The loCal chambct promoted the
(Pleue eee 3ARVIS/ A2)
Prop.36tab
for county
-$160M
By JEFF ADLER
Of .. DllllJ ......
Orange County government -
most notably county sChool d.istricu
-would be forced to refund an
estimated $160 million to psope:rty
owneBuProposition36.thela.rvil
IV .initiative. Pllsse5 in November. according .. to county Audito.r..(Jon..
troller Steve Lewis. . · ·
lo a revised forecast assessing what
fi.DaDCW affect the lax-slashing
measure woiild have on county 1.aXiq
agencies, Lewis has inaeucd his
previous $ 120 million cstimat. by
$40 million; •
Statewide. government woutd be
forocd to Jive up $1. 7 billion, about
$400 million more than the previo1U
(Pleue Me PJlOP./U)
OC's Jews mark
start of new year
Jews in Orange County and around
the world are celebrating Rosb
Hashana today, marking the begin-
ning of a new Jewish year and the
opening of a I 0-<iay period of soul-
scarching. The county has an esti-
mated 100,000 Jewish residents.
Celebration of the new Jewish
calendar year 5745 bepn at sundown
Wednesday.
ram's born. The soundmg of the
Shof ar is said to represent a call for
~iritual reawakening, inspired by a
btblical reference to the revelation at
ML Sinai
Rosh HI.Shana is also known as the
DayofRemcmbfaru:CinwbkbJews
mark the traditional anniversary of
creation of &he world.
One Rosh Hashana tradition is the
eating of bread and apples dipped in
honey to m.arlt one's hope for a
"sweet" year.
Bablee make etahv
Cellna Lqya. an employee at llaa Verde .
Conftle.cent Bo.pltal. proadlJ. c!Uplap her new trlpleta, bOm earlier tbla month.
The trio jolna Cellna, her haaband llJCael
-and the couple'• three other yoancnen.
See •tol"J ...,e A2.
Although the secular New Y ca.r's
Eve holiday is celebrated. with parties,
Rosh Hashana is observed with
rcli&-i.ous services. Rosh Hashana
services were conducted Wednesday
night and today at vanous Jewish
temples and other gathcrinJ p.laces in
Orange Coast communities. Some
Jewish consrcgations celebrate Rosh
Hashana for two days, and these
groups will hold additional services
tonight and Friday.
For Jews. Rosh H.ashana also
ushers in the Ten Days of Pcnitcuoe,
which conclude with Yom Kippur,
the holiest day of the JcwiSh Year.
This is a period of self ~xamination
and repentanQe in which Jews resolve
to improve themselves..
Durina the period of rcpentanoc. it
ts traditional for Jews to recite prayers
near a body of water, symbolically
casting their sins into a river. Mystery driver in NB crash
destined for pauper's grave
By STEVE MARBLE
Of ... .,.., ..........
A mystery driver, killed almost two
months ago in a violent bcad-00 car
cruh in Newport Bc8ch, apparently is
to be buried nameless in a pauper's
grav~
"We'll keep his fingerprints and
'dental prints on file, of course, but so
far we've come up empty. Nothina,"
said Bernie Mazuca, a senior deputy
coroner.
The unidentified driver, at first
believed to be in his mid-20s but now-
tbouaht to be as youna as 16, died A~ when the stolen car he :was
drivina slammed into two other
vdiicles on MacArthur BoWevlid.
Six other people were injured in the
mid-day acadent, four of them
children ridina in a car bound for the beach. .
Newport police have theorized that
the driver antcntionally crashed the
1Ford Pinto station waaon after lead-
ing police on a 27-mile chase up_ the
coast from San Oementc. An officer
whO was tailina the driver said it
appeared he intentionally veered into
the oppasi te lanes in an effort to slrikC
the oncomina can.
The car he was drivina was regis· te~ to a woman in San Diego and
rewrtedly WU stokn while parked
outside an Encinitas liquor store the
rPleue eee CllA8B/A2)
Little ho.r's 8 rea1 big Wheel
among handicapped racers
He'd much rather talk abOut lizards
than the ~on of trophies, loving
cups and PIAqucs he's acQuircd over
the ,.~year.
··~at that one," the 8-)ur-old
blond·hliRd younastcr ahoun,
pointina to • nine .. inch, blue.belly
lizard sunnina nselfon thcstuoco wall
outside hil hilltop Upna Ni&ucl
home.
'"Will you help me catch him?"
In (act, tt'1 p~tt~ hard to act Jade Calct~O' to say a whole lot about has
trophies.
Mom helps.
..
...
SmE
llTCIEll
Pr oPlf 1~ lHf Nu-,s
.. unda) wa thc1nnhcrsaryofh1
fiBl ratt," sa )adc's m lhcr
Kathryn. ••we panmpatcd 1n the
"
A highlight of the services ts the
traditionatblowina of the "Miofar.·• a
--,,. --..., .....................
e hlr aa~11a· Alot .........
el Jiu, blowe ram Ilona
an&. •tol'J A2.
. .
Clouds gtve way
to warm
alleFnoon a
Clear skies after morning clouds
\ JARVIS A NO-SHOW AT DEBATE •••
l'romAl ' .
Jarvi .Sumner shov.Jown but last
week the anti·tax cru dt'r litnt wor{J
10 chamber officials he \\Ouldn•t
participate if Sumner appeattd.
Pincb·bittina for the anti·tax cru dcr was Gil Feriuson, the Re·
publican nominee in the 10th As·
~mbly District.
Ferguson also claimed that
Sumner ••impugned" Jarvis· charac·
ter and engaged in a "cowardl>
attack .. because Jarvis wasn't there to
defend himself." ·
"To call it a scam and to say that
he (Jams) is .doing this to line his
pooket. Thi )s an 82·ycar-old man
'.who's ~\'Cd the hom~s of older
people." •
$pt'(tators at the most recent
debate, ho~ever. didn't hear com·
ments from Sumner tb-the effect that
Jarvis was linini bis own pockets
What Sumner did contend in
Wednesday's debate at the Hunt·
ington Beach Inn, was .·that the
amendment would cost taxpapers
abOut S l. 7 billion to pay refunds to
property owners and would.strangle
local government because of the
req~irement of two.thirds voter re.
qu1rcmcnt on tax and tC.C mcttase .
.. lt's a California St" m. Each side
is spending about $4 million each.
Can you behcve it?" •
Ft'riuson said, howe\·cr, voter5
hould approve the measure "t>c.
~use government inexorably moves
to crush the people it governs and that
taxes will con1inue to rise unless
something 1s done.
•The Rose Bird liberals have
punched holes through Proposition
13 (a Proposition 36 predeccs or.)'
Wc'vegot to close 1t so they can't do it
again."
PROP. 36 TAB FOR OC $160M ••• L
From Al
estimate made in Apnl by a state
legislative analyst. The county esti.,.
mate is based on the state computa·
tions, Lewis explained.
The lion's share of the refunds
would come from county schools,
which would be required to return an
estimated $80 million to taxpayers.
Lewis said. That is an mcrcasc of$20
million over the April estimates.
Similarly, special districts in Or·
ange County, wruch arc responsible
for a host of services from street
lighting to sanitation, would be
required to refund $29 mtllion while
city and community development
agencies would be forced to return
about $27 million.
The Orange County Board of
Supervisors would have to return $21
million to taxpa)ers' pockets from its
general fund, a SS million increase
over the previous estimate, the
auditor~ontroUer ~id.
Also, both the county fire depart·
ment and library d1stnct would be
required to refund a poruon of the
property taxes they receive. The fire
department would have to give back
about $2 million. double the previous
estimate, while libraries would have
to surrender $1 miU1on, representing
no change from previous estimates.
Proposition 36 is intended by its
author, Howard Jarvis, to close
loopholes he claims government has
used to.avoid the provisions of its
more famous relauve -the 1978
Proposition 13 intiative.
One of the major provisions of the
initiative would be to roll back
assessed valuations on property to the
1915·16 baseJcar by returning prop.
erty taxes pai on the 2 percent value
increase allowed by Proposition l 3.
State regulations. as determined by
coun cballcnaes. allowed the 2 pcr-
oen\ to be applied retroactive to
197S-76. Proposition 36 would re·
verse that method for valuing prOJ>-erty.
To be eligible fora refund under the
measure, a taxpayer must have
owned taxable property sometime
during the 197S·76 tax period
through 1977·78 and paid 1978·79
taxes on the propcrt)', Lewis said.
WHEEL RACER A CHAMP AT AGE 8 •••
From Al
got to the finish line, everybody was
clapping. I went faster and faster
when I saw the people."
Kathryn Category remembers that
first race.
"At the four.mile mark, Jade was
screaming in pain. The runners had
finished long before and were waiting
for the awards to be presented when
the announcer S8ld we were coming
in.
"Everyone cheered and cheered
and cheered, and I cncd," she sau:i.
Jade's effect on the crowd didn't
•. end at the finish hoc. Kids gathered
around him, asking him to autograph
their racing visors. And. rather than
having his tbird·place award brought
to him, Jade slowly climbed out ofhis
wheelchair and made his way to the
announcer on legs supported by
alummum braces.
That was seven races and seven
trophies ago.
Td.dea
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... 3S
Supervisors name
·wieder aide to
hea-th care post
By JEFF ADLER
C)f ... Deilr ..... ..,.
A top aide to Orange County Board
of Supervisors Chairman Harriett
Wieder was named by supcrvi,sors
Wednesday to serve as mtcnm filrec..
tor of the county's Health Care
Agency until a new director is
appointed. probably sometime next
year.
Robert Love, 36, will assume his
post as agency director Monday,
replacing Dr. Charles Kerns, who
submitted bis resignation, effective
Dec. 3 l, last month.
A Huntington Beach resident,
Love has been Wieder's chief ex·
ccuti ve assistant for the past six years.
Previously, he was cmplo~ as an
analyst in the County Administrative
Office. "Dr. Kerns bas expressed his
willingness to work with the interim
director, in a consultant capacity, to
assure continuity of programs and
accountability during this tran·
sitionaJ phase," said Wieder in an~
nouncini the appointment. ·
Supervisors met in a closed-<ioor,
two--hour executive session to con·
sider the appointment. During the
session, Love and two 0th.er can·
djdatcs for the position ~ inter·
viewed, • ao-;rdini to supervisors'
aides.· · ~
When the board reconvened its
public meeting. supervisors voted 3-0
to confirm Love's appointment.
Supervisor Roger Stanton, who at·
· tended the closed-<ioor meeting. did
not return to the public session
because of other commitments while Su~sor Ralph Oark is traveling in
another country. .
Wieder said "it is contemplated
that the new iJ'.lterim director will not
8IZll 14
1./l ,..,
1 , ..
1·2
1-2
..... dlNctlon. eouthwelt
RobertLo.e
7' .. 41 ., ..
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11 73
11 13 10 71 41 21 16 ..
71 •N
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61 34
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63 45
74 a
17 IO 14 51
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12 43 73 ,.
be a candidate for the permanent
HCA director position."
In making the announcement, the
chairman emphasized the import·
ancc of maintaining stable funding
for mental health programs, develop-
ing new strategics for indigent medi·
cal sei;viccs and Medi-<!:a1 funding as
key issues the interim director must
monitor. • The ensuing 12 months found Jade
the proud owner of a new, hghtwc1ght
sports chair and he and has mom
bepn tackling the S·kilometer JOg·
ging trail that borders Crown Valley
Community Park Just below their
home.
Kathyrn, who runs alongside her
f rcc·whccling son in races, says the
pair has 'participated m a Salt lake
City race, the Olympic Torch race m
Newport Beach, the Corona dcl Mar
'And babies mcike eight'
for Orange County family
Spmt Run and others.
And, last Sunday. on the an·
niversary of his first race. Jade scored
a personalbest, completing the S...
kilometer South Coast classic m 34
minutes and 48 seconds.
··1 had to stay home today because I
was so sore," the SS.pound Jade says.
smilin$ and rubbing his arms.
Staymg borne from school 1s
nothing new for Jade.
Despite the green.eyed boy's con·
tagious J.ood humor, he's led a pretty
tough life. A life that has included
many trips to the hospital. Jade has
undergone 15 operations 1n his e1Jht
years, the result of afflictions ranging
from scoliosis to myelo mcningocele,
a malady that affects the spinal cord.
But he always bounces back. his
mother says.
Kathryn says her son was msp1red
to race after her boyfnend, Anaheim
pathologist George Awad, showed
Jade a magazine article about veteran
wheelchair compeutor J 1m Knaub.
"George told me Jade should get
involved in something like racing to
avoid a sickbed mentality," Kathryn
said. "We went out and ordered him a
sports chair."
Jade was hooked.
He finally met his wheelchair·
bound hero -in the flesh -
followina that first race a year ago.
Knaub rolled across the asohalt to
Just Call
642-6086
Deilr ......... ., ...........
Yoa.ni JadeCalegory and mother Kathryn find reuon to
.unlle.
shake hands wtth the bOy and
congratulate him on finishing the
grueling race.
"I hope to race with you again," the
muscled athlete wrote in a short note
to the youngster.
Since then the S-foot·3 inch thml·
grader has been attractm& trophies
like polyester attracts lint
He's not about to stop at just SK
and IOK races, either. Jade wants to
participate in a marathon. That's 26
miles of propelling himself along with
a pair of fairly small biceps.
shrugs after a momcnt'3 hesitation.
And. he admits, it wouldn't be too
shabby10 beat old Jim Knaub across
the finish line.
Someday.
For now, he's practmng for next
month's Hoag Memonal Hospital
costume race. He will be the honorary
staner and a judge for that compet1·
ti on.
But his immediate goal is grab hold
of a ltzard just out of arm's reach
The fat reptile moves quickly up
the wall .
By KAREN E. It.LEIN
OfllileO.-, ........
Any mother -from the novice to
the most seasoned -would admit a
new baby can be a handful at times.
But consider the case C'" Celina
Leyva's armful -the latest addition
to her young family earlier ~s month
was not one baby, but three.
And her l2-<1ay--0ld' trio of boys
aren't the only children she must care
for -the 24-ycar.old Garden Grove
woman and her husband, 2S...ycar.old
Miguel, already~ have three other
children -all under S years old.
The statistics were enough to make
a few of Leyva·s friends and cow·
orkcrs shake their heads in disbelief
Thursday at a baby shower for her at
the Mesa Verde Convalescent Hospi·
tal in Cost.a Mesa.
But the triplets were clearly the
stars of the show at the party, where
nurses and patients gathered to bold
and admire them as well as shower
Leyva with baby presents ..•
The cake they cut was emblazoned
with a new twist on a familiar
inscription:" And baby makes eight"
Leyva said she has been getting a lot
of help a.t home from her sister and
her husband, who works as a er·
dener. But sho still sighs and smiles
weakly when people ask her how she
copes with six preschooJ~age children.
.. Pretty &ood. .. she says shyly.
Tbe ttfrce boys, William and Erick,
who arc identical, and David, who isa
fraternal triplet, were born about a
month prematurely at Humana Hos.
pital of Westminster on Sept. l 5.
Both William and Erick weighed
5.2 pounds at birth and David
wei&hed 4.2 pounds.
Leyva worked as a nurse's aide at
the Costa Mesa convalescent hospital
until about her sixth month of
pregnancy. She found out w191 she
was about five months alona that she
would have three babies.
Triplets occur naturally about once
in 8,000 births. statistics show. and
... My goal is to do a marathon by the
time I'm 9," he says. "Mavbe 10," he
.. That kind doesn't bite," he saxs.
"At least I don't think he does.· HEIGHTS ANNEX PUSHED •••
From Al
aUowina dcadltnes for q:rcements to
pass without tak1na any action.
The basic point of contention
Wtaat do you like about tbe Daily Pilot1 Wbat don't you like! Call tbe appears to be a difference of opinion
aamber 1t left and your message will be recorded, transcribed and cleUvered over whether the Hei4bts anneution
to tbe appropriate editor. would help Newpon 10 its fight over
The same tf..bour uswering service may be Hed to record letters to the the continued expansion of the air·
editor on any topic. Coa&ributors to our Lettere col•mu mast Include their port.
name and telepbone number for verification. No clrcul1tion c1ll1, please. "There arc many reasons, from the
Tell us what's oo your f!11Dd . airport's standpoint. why (Newport)
Clrculetlon 714/M2-U33
should (annex the Heiahts area). The
(city's) position on the airport would ,
be very much tronger with (the
Heights) and very much weaker
without it," Watt said.
But Newport Mayor Evelyn Hart
has said. in the past that the city's
attorneys are not convinced the
annexation would help the city fiaht
theairpon.
the news was a shock to Leyva, who
did not plan on having any other
children.
Leyva said she and her husband
share the responsibilities of 2 a.m.
feedinas, multiple diaper changinas
and keeping their other three children
fed.. cleaned and happy.
But as can be imagined, the six
children present a fmancial challenge
that has proved difficult for the
couple. for one thina. they still live in
a two.bedroom apartment. They are
looking for an apartment or house biJ
enough to accommodate their family.
Some of the staff members at the
convalescent hospital arc organizing
a fund to help the Leyvas and said
the¥ hope to work out a hclpina hands
project where staffers can take turns
goina to the Leyva home to help out
Celina.
Another Garden Grove oouple,
Pamela and Denrus Curus, bad
triplets Sept. 17 at Fountam Valley
Community Hospital.
...
Wan also said themajority of Hc.~ts residents wa_nt to be annex_~1 poanlln& to pet1ttons she helpco
cin:ulate in early 1983 that pmcred
&ijnaturcs from 70 percent of the
residents.
Petitions will be circulated amona
the homes in the Heights and at
shopping centers around the area,
Wan said. ,
Delly Piiot
Detlvery
ORANGE COAST
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Production
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Clrcutat1on
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r~ $10t lllu\lflllQOI, .0-IOI_. !Noll .. OI ~1ilfl rt..,,. I, Midi mly IM ll!fl'Odllet!CI •1th0lll IPtdai !*
'""'°'di CCl!Ty!Jgt\I --
VOL. n, NO. 211
From Al .
day of the accident.
But so far the invc tigation has
raiS<'d more q_ucstion1 than answers.
Ma7uca said she find it hard to
believe that someone would not mi
tl1c youth. who stood 6-6 and wtiahcd
only I SO p0und He poned closcl)
• cropriod hair and had no atoos,
moles Of deformlti ·
At the time of the cxident the
driver was wanna cut-off' jeans.. a
plaid hirt and carritd no wall t or ~pcrs that offered a clue a to ht
1Jcnt1ty.
San Diego Sherift"i deputies con·
tactCd the coroner's office just day1
after the accident 'bccau$C they
uspccted the driver milht be a
known car thief: But it wasn't their
man.
I nvc tiJaton id the youth could
be a runaway, an escapee from a
juvenile detention center or a patient
from • mental in titution. But all i
JUSt Ju worlC; investiptofj all·
mitt •
Th d puty coroner said bccau of
her belief th t the unknown dnver
was a Juvenile, she has apin 1ent
fingerprints to agencies tbro14hout
Southern California.
The FBI was unable to match th
finf,crprint in an earlier effort.
•We've received a lot offlicn about
mi n-i kids. From <An bad, n
Dicao and other pla . But none of
them arc tbe rijht on •• Ma1uca ... We'll keep cbcttiq."
ng a brt.ak in the •
youth's body will be buried tn •
unmattccd P."VC t county ~pen 1 Mnuca said. A bunal dAte has not
been t.
.
Selllinar on stress
set at GWC tonight
Three big spenders in Mesa campat
A seminar toni&ht t Go1dcn West Collete wtU focu1
on com ttirtJ stress that could be the caute of na,.;q bcadach or ;~ ~
• • ucoessful Stress · Stratcai~ : Fcchna at Ease -
Easily:• will be held from 7:30 io 10:30 p.m. in the
Community Center at the Hunti~on BeaCb campus. The
brolram fee is SS and further information can be obtained by eallina 891-3991. .
.
Ilea chamber pl1UJ• aactlo.a
A vvcckcnd for two in San Francisco and ~oq ~to the movies are amona soroe 300 henu up for bid
Friday durina the second Action Auction aponsoted by the C9sta Mesa OiamberofCommcrce. The auction be&ins with a cocktail party at 6 p.m. at
the NciJ)tbOmood Community Center, 184S Park Ave.
Dinner 1s included in the $2S ticket price and retetvation1
can be made by callina 979-0Sl6.
Semla.,. oa 1UJ6er at OCC
A· -hour seminar, entitled "Anger. A Learned
Response," will be presented Friday from 7 to 10 p.m. in
Room 113 of Orange Coast Collqc'1 Ooun~ and
Admissions Office, 2701 Fairview Road, COila Mesa.
Lecturer Alyn Bartick, therapist. spcciali:ies in adult
dcvetoyment and ~iding J>COP.le throu&b ttansi.tions. Cost o the seminar is $10 and ttckets are on 1aJc in the
OCC Ticket Office located in the coll~' I Studt'ot Center
Building. For more information, call ~32-5880.
BealtlunobUe to n.lt Jleu
The Great Earth Vitamin Store, 370£. 17th SL, Cos1a
Mesa. will host the Hcalthmobile, a non·profit, communi-
ty service center providina free blood J>RSS~ tats;
Friday from noon to 6 p.m. and Saturday from 10 Lm. to
4p.m.
Free fitness testing. weight consultations and~
sttess consultations and packcU., ud free nutrition
information will be provided. Also available for SS ii an
individual computerized nutrient -evaluation. Saturday.
there will be a tree, body fat/lean muscle mass tcstina.
Jl9n .. ement .emJnar •lated
Tbe IntematioD.al Database M.a.oiacJ:neDt Auocia-
,. tion, 22982 La Cadena, LaaUna Hills, announces a ~
.. day man.qement seminar, fcaturiDJ the PICK Operatins
: System for computer business applications. to be held at
• the Airponer Inn, Irvine, Fri\lay C~m 9 Lm. \o •:30 p.m.
• The program Will off~ . sessions directed to
management level or applicatton dcveTopment-oriented ~ns and will include a luncheon. R*stration fee is ·r
.. SlSO. Call SSs-4442 for further infomiation and rqis-
• tration.
Plant dlapJay .et at UCl
Plants used for foods, cosmetics_ tnCtl)' and medicine
will be on di$1>lay·from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Fri~!:,room1 808 and 8Sl of the UC lmne En . . B . .
The event is sponsored ~CI School of
Bioloaical Sciences to enable the pu~lic to view teachina
methods as well as have an opporturuty to sec an unusual
botanical collection. Staff members will be on hand to
explain the exhibits. For more information, call Carole
Brown ar 856-6927.
~
CUdlaC work•IJop at OCC
Incumbents, golf course operator
raise most money In council race
IJ fONY lil\'EDllA
OfMDlllrNll ....
Incumbents Donn Hall and F..nc Jobnson u well as
city aolf coune operator Harry Green are the b11 speoden
IO far amona the I I-candidates runnina for three seats on
the Costa Meta City Council, accoroinc to fin.anaal
d0cument1 filed Monday at the city dert"s office.
~ state-required campaip financial statements,
coverina the fll'l1 filina period from Jan. 1 to Scot .. 17.
ahowed candidate and plannin; commissioner Charles
Markel dose behind the pedc.
;The disdOtUrCS lhowed a wide 1ulf between I.he war
che:sU amaucd by IOl1't candid& weU-«nowu 1a the
,political arena and I.he lhree leaer-uowa canclidases
blcked by a lai'IC Coalition of homeowners usociauons.
Mayor Hall reported S7 •37 in campaian fundl for
the first period, incluelin& a Sl,063 loan from bis Newpon
Beach electronics company. His :~rted expemea MR
SS,000. most of which went to a political conlllltinc ftnn
owned by two administrative assistants for state Sen. Ollie
Speraw, whose district coven Newport Beach.
Hall said The Eaatbluft' Group consuJtint fimi in
Newport Beach wu comP4tina liictature aftd produana
hando'uts for his campajp. He aid the company would
not be work:ina on any P011lkal lttllq,it5 for btm However,~ lfowcll, Co-putntr an the fum, d
Eastblufr~ indeed map out wa~ aJ\d advate Hall
"bow bat be should nan tbe caml)ll&n" lhrouah oiet
ana!Ysi• and other methods.
llowdl and O.ve 1EUiJ, both aRtS&an\J lO w.
IWtcd me company a year •· Hall said later lhe
di"7tPID.CY wu caused by u ppat'Cnt mUun4em.aod·
ina. -Amona w contnbuuons to Hall's re-elecu n on were SSOO donataons from a Donald Butts. lt'1ed a
rel.ind pnnter/developu, and rom Zubi Inc., listed as
11 btr/1upper club.
lncumbe:nt Johnson ttoorted S7.834 tn funds. IWbilc li1una expenses ofS4,438. Amo~ the coninbulions were SSOO from Don Buw, and S1'0 from Da'id Ball. 'lCC ~dau of Amel Dcvel()pmeftt Co. 1be development
firm recently received aty app-oval for a controvenial
hilh-rise proje(:I that wu lo~ proteSted bY no..-ihsidc
residents.
The lion's &twt of Johnton•1 ex~ iwere for
$4,080 in payment1 lO his ~itical stralqist, Ndsoo-
Padbeq Consultin&o Inc.,. of eolta Mm..
Gften had the llJJeSt ~pai&R fund at S 12,38 l, but SI0,000 was in loans &om .. Rariy S. Green, Inc. .. Hrs
expenses were listed at SS 371. ' Markel listed $41132 in ~nds. with e1_pc~ .of
S3,191. Documents anowed Mattel peid SSOO to The.
EutblufrGroup for consultinaeervices.
vY Hornbuckle ttDOIUd recavuw S
he M Acuon poluic81 committee lbe am...,• ..
ann oflbe Corti Me1 Qitu.na Coali
D a ltJJM'lle tcmClfll\o I.he COldi .a .m>Oned makint douuou of SI 00 ..
ombuddc. pou,Jas Vasa and Dlvid Wbcda:
ever, ilOl1'IC of the money diltnbu1ed on the elldilllll
date for dut filina~ md may aot bavc btcn recrivecl
by candidaltS aa tame fol !be fini Aa&emcnl
Hornbuckle~ ~xpeuea of:S497
Va1e1 lilted S1.630Jti lu'*1 Ududias S700 from Mesa Aclion and S4SO from hlmSdt. Hu cxpcmcs were
recorded at S 199.
Wheeler lbled $2., I SO 10 funds. in lht Conn of a S4SO loan and aSl,700donauoa frpm~Me.aa Action
Candidaie nd pl.annana COG1Jllllll08er rence
Oatke reported MSO lD ooatnbUUOM. all "'Which was
l duti~ the fi11._ ocriod.SMS Soffa. Cbrisiopbcr
and Domuuc Radta au siped dcdarauons that they did
no1 $OCOd or receive more than SSOO financial diSdooltts wcre also filed by Mesa ~n
and the c.osta Mesa Ownbet of Commmx: pol tical
action comnut~
The homeowners JfOUp, whicb was foi'lned IO oust
tncumbcnts, reported funds ofS 10,430.But expen1CS and '
outstand.ina debts towered ill boldinas 10 SS2 I at the end
of lhc fihna ~od. aocordina to lhe lllwicW aawneni
)be dWrlbc:r poup rcponed SSOO in contnbuuon ' au from CJ. ~m & :Sons.
Ali eiah,t-hour ba!kl:atdiac life support work.shop is
• ICbcduled for Friday from 6 to 10 p.m. and Saturday from
9 Lm. \o 1 p.m. in Of'anlC Coast Collcae'1 Faculty Hou.le,
2701 Faimew Road. C.O.ta Mesa.
Lecturer Joan Bougbey is a~· stered nuneemplo)'ed
in the emeraency room of an County trauma
center. The cost of the workshop is S l and tickets are on
sale in the OCC Ticket Office in the colletc'• Student
Center Buildina. For more information, call 432-S880.
·Tennis laiJ beach Laguna pool proposal
. Semlnar11etoa eatbJld&onlen
Golden West College in Huntinaton Beach. will
conduct a seminar Saturday on the eatina disorden of
bulimia. anorexia nervosa and bUlimarexia.
Open to the public, the prosram will be bdd in FONJD
t, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. A rqistration fee of$18 is payable
at the door. For more information, Call 89S-87SO
Th1inday, Sept. :17
• 6:30 p.m., Laina Beacb Board of MjaSmeat.
Council Chambers, SOS Forest Ave.
Poucl LoL
By DAVID BISHOP
........ c. ••• *' :rennis players. objecting to the possible
lou of two tennis ~ have penuaded
the Lqu.na Beach school board to post·
pone city..approvcd plans for a new
IWimmina pool on the i..aauoa Beach Hilb
School campus.
The school board tabled the plan the City
Council endorsed lut week.
0 The board hasn't rejected the plan,"
said Superintendent Billy J. Barnes after
last week's meetina. .. The members just felt
they needed more time to address the
concerns of the tennis players and the
athletic dcoattnient"
School board members want another meet.in& with the City Council to discuu
the prooosal.
Bob Walton, president of the Laauna
Beach Tennis Association and bi&h scbool
tennis coaches Ron Ross and Art Wahl
were upset that the pool plan included no
mcnuon of replacina the two higb .cbool of the pool's deteriorated filtration system,
tennis cou.rts that now OCCUJ?.Y the site and the high school'• water polo team is
where the pool would be built Several unable to practice in the pool.
tennis ptayen joined in their appeal. One reason the city eagerlJ endorsed the
Scbool board President Harry Bithell recent proposal is that final approval
said .. not very much true thouaht" bad wouldcleartbewayfor$7S,000reoovatioo
sone into any t>f the Sugested pool sites of the high school baseball field. which bas
over the ~t two years. bce\l .. on bold pendi~ a decision on the
BithcU said the couocil·s endonement c:i( (poal's} location." City Manager Keo
an L-shaped pool at St Ann•s Drive and F'rank said. The baseball field bas bcell one
Park Avenue .. was a total surprise ... witb of several sites beina considered for the
no advance notice." pool.
Board member Carl Schwarz cast the The city appropriated the money for the
only vote to move ahead with the proposed . work becaUJe it uses the school's facilities
plan. • \o operate an extensive recreation ~
The board'• approval mi&ht have en~ gram, includin& swimmina in the hiab
a lona search for an adequate site io build a school pool, sollt.n on the bueball field
replacement for the. School's dilapidated and tennis on the bi&b ICbooJ cowu.
29-year-old pool on the hiah school Inapprovinalhe pool site, the city said it
campus -tht only public swiJnmina pool would take $3,000 previously planned for
in Laauna Beach. improvina the lights on the two tennis
City classes were canceled for hundreds courts and apPlY it to the cost of an
of swunmers earlier this summer because architect to d~ a new pool on the site.
'
In a related · ue.. the school board
unanimously approved a $S6,61S plan to
l'C$10re the old pool for use until a new one
is constructcd. but the 1V0rk won't proceed
until the cit)' ticts in an additional $8,000.
Bids for t.l:lt renovation project came in
higher than expected and the board wants
to maintain an even split oftbc oosu with
theci~. Earlier this month the City Counal
igrced to pay half the repair costs and
appropriated $20,000 to keep the pool in
operation three morc)ears. ·
The board's appropriation for ~irs is . now contingent upon the city's willingnc:ss
to come up with the rest of the money,
Bithell Said: .. We are hopi.na they can
respond iD a rather quick. manner, possibly
bef'0tt tl>Cir next wuncil meetina. .. Bithell
said.
Barnes said frank will recommend the
additional appropriation to the Cit) Coun-
cil when it meets Oct. 8.
Mesa restaurant robbed Accord in the 18000 block of Gum
Tree.
Frank Vincent Strout, 63, was lntne
A man with a revolver tucked into
the waistband of his pants robbed a
Costa Mesa restuarant of S..00
Wednesday around 11:30 p.m. .
Police u.id therobber delcribcd as.
a Hispanic in his late 20S: walked up
to a ca.shier at the Coco'• restaurant,
&oath Coanty
An armed robber reportedly made
off with S900in cash, check.sand bank
deposits Wednesday evening from
the Famous Brand Shoes store on
A venida de la Carlota in l.qun.a
Hills. The knife-wicldina robber con·
fronted a store employee minutes
after 6 p.m. after eoterina throuah the
store's rear door. • • • A 23·ycar--0ld San Juan Capistrano
woman wu &rre1tcd on suspicion of
dtivina undet the ,influence of alcohol
early Wednesday. A~ne tee Hill was
anested by a Shcrifrs officer on
Marauerite Parkway, near Via
EtcQJat. • • • A I ?·year-old Mi sion VieJO airl
rcponcdly was raped Mon&iy eve·
nina by an assailant who forced her
into hi• car at aunpoint and drove her
io a hotel in the Santa Ana area. The air1 wu waiuna for a ride home in
front of Mission Vitjo Hiah School
when the ilan -detCribed as 1 23-~r..old .S.3 mak Mexician -confronted her at about 9;30 p m. • • • The Univcna l\1li1Ctl Ptoctu
tore on f<>tbcS ROid in Luuna ~was robbed of1b6ut $100 in
late Monda)' or early Tuetday by
a bufl}ar who appartntly used Pl'.Y
'--
1507 South Coast Drive, and asked
for c:haQle to use the telephone.
He returned after a few minutes.
lifted bis T-shirt to reveal the sun. and
demanded money.
Accordina to repons, the robber
told the cashier to tum around and
Walk toward the back of the store.
When she turned, he Oed from the
restaurant
No more information was avail·
able tliis momina.
toolsandwirecutterstoentcrthrouah • Buratars pried open a window
the front door. • screen in the 200 block of 20th Street • • • d I $700 . . try A car stereo valued at $400 and a an sto e 1: J:W: ·
car stereo equalizer valued at about A resident in the SOO block of 19th
S 1,000 were reported stolen &om Street came downatain to discover
tcpanle can oatked alona Malap his house wu ransacked and a gold
Drive in Dua 'Point catty Tue.day. ri.na and d.iainonds Mrc stolen. • • • • • • A 23-year-old Mission Viejo IDI!' Intruders entered a home in the ~ &JTCS~ earty Mon~y on ~usrn-20000 block ofHatbor tale and stole a
CtOD. of beig drunk lO public. A coin set and a s~ bottle filled
Sheriffs offiCer anatcd Richard with coins.
Owics HQU in the part.ins Jot of a • • • LlaUna Hilla aWlt dub. a·rs stoic IWO .38 cahbtr ... ,_,_ T • • ti .. ...._.. S · at a home in the 60JO block A v.u.-r apparen Y 1~ a o Shitlds. croWbat Wty Tuaday to bttak tnto • • • an El Toro warehoute on Lambert Thieves ransacked a home in the
Drive. About StlS was reportedly :200 block of 19th Stttet and stole
taken. sm cash.
B_..,.._811cll
A resident returned borne in the 800 bloCk of Doremore to find a
tcreeD ~a~ from a window, h wu i tipoff' of thanp to come as
be was ao·1earn that a color TV ind
aiereo compncnts valued at Sl,250
~taken. • • • Someone pried open a front door an
the 5000 bloCk of 80111 A. ~nuc and
stole a S4,300 erox Mcmorywriter
word proceuor.
• • •• Someone stOle $400 inj~lr) after
cntcrina a home in the JOO bloet of
19th Strtttthro\llh a llidi~ aJa rear
windoW. • • • Bufll.m tole a $450 camera. a Sl50 nna and ilver dOllan in lhe
16000 ofUmdiatit. •••
,.
• • • Thieves stole $120 in cash from a
house in the SOO block of J Ith SL • • • A male adult was taken into
custody and $68 in liquor was
recovered at Alpha Be~ 19640 Beach
Boulevard. • •• A male adult was taken info
custody at the Target store. 9882
Adams Ave., for aUC&Cdly stealina
two cameras valued at) 117. • • • • A cleanina ~~ the owner said,
alJcecdly stole $3,SOO in y •ta;: raideDoe in the 600 (ff .f'rant:.
fort while the owner wu ...,..Y ·OD
vacation .. ~Someone eti~ ~n u~loc\~ cai
id' tbc l60C)(U~tock of Nichots'and
stoic a SheU aedit card ~ driver's
license. • • • A $40 jacket and keys ~ stolen
from a visitor to Mooe e• Pina at
BtoOkbu.rst trcct &Dd dams Av-enue. . • • • Someone stOk tires nd
nJued at $2500 from a ttd 1974 red
Potlche an·tbe 19000 block cffOcan
Bluff. • • • 'Thievu remov'4 the rear windo
at a hOme in the 00 bl k of U\
trttt and stoic a moot baa conta1n-
ina S2S7.5S.
arrested for drivina under the in-
fluence of alcohol early Tuesday
mornina at South Coast Hiabway and
Oco Strttt. Bail was set at l t .500.
Newport Beach
A sttn:o unit orth about S..00 ..
stolen from a locked car paikcd on
auto center drive. • • • Juvtoile5 were &rTCStcd on Yale
Loop on suspicion of po • na narcotics. • • • A microwavt ov~ wonh more
than $200 was stolen from an office
complex on Sky Pattc Circle. • • • A mt Schwimn biC)clc stolen
from Woodbrid&c Hig\I School The
bi.kt was valued at about $400.
·,
SOMETHING SPECIAL .•...•.•.•...••• Feminine Fashions .•...................... 645-5711
ETC BOOKS .•..•.••........••.•...•........ New & Vsed Books....................... 646-7502 .
TREDS & THREADS ...•................ Sporting Goods............................. 548-3435 -2ND SEASON .•.............••..•........... Family Re-sale Shop ..•.••...•.••........ 548-4132
I I I
-
N~flON
Bla•t amage9 raearc.b lab
TARRYTOWN. N'.Y. -An cxplo ion that ~hattercd .JOO windows It a
mearch laboratory has bctn claimed by an anu-a~d terrorut lfOUP
linked to l 2 other bombings in the past 22 months, includina a blas1:at a So~th
African consulate just 21 houn earlier. The 2S . to SO ~D~ Of' C1y~1mte
detonated outside Union Carbide's four-sto_ry Stlicon~ Hutld1na ~lab Wednesday~ ni&ht punched a 20-by-20 foot tn an extef"!or wall, tiut ~~~ no
injuries, officials said. The United Freedom Front ~1a1med responsib1~1ty for
the blast in calls to police and two newspapers. said Greenburah P.QliCC $st.
Ro~Rohs.
Cigarette 'INZD11J6 label• OK'd
WASHINGTON -Congress approved stronaer warnings on ciaare!te
labels and sent the measure to President Reapn~s desk. The House pasied
Wednesday and sent to the Senate a $297 billion defense spendina ptail for
fiical 198S heavily reduced from Rcapn•s orijinal ~uest Both chambers
approved the cipreite bill on voice votes with little discussion after
announcement Tuesday of a compromise that satisfied both h~th aroups a~d the tobaoCo industry. Under the measure, every pacbge of ~t~s sol~ tn
the United States '¥Ould have to contain one of four ..-arrunas: Smo~na
cauteS lunF cancer, heart disease, emphysema and . may . comphcate
preananc:( "Quittin& smokina now .,.eatly reduces senou.s nsb to your
health .. ' ' Smokins by p~ant women may result in fetal ll\jury, p~mture
bith and low birth weiaht;' "Ciprette smoke contains carbon monoXJde."
Imdore ta.te. a1m o.a Florida cout
MIAMI -Tropical storm Isidore headed toward the sou~e1.;1t A<?rid;a
coast early today with heavy rains and winds of near SO mph, briPJ.1.DI ~it
a threat of flooding and a warning for residents to be ready for qwck action.
(3ale wa.minp were in effect from Cape Canaveral on tb,e ~tate's ccotral.eas!
coast to Key,West in \he south. The storm was about 6S 'miles cast of Miami
and movin& toward the west-northwest at about 10 mph at 3 Lm. today,
ae:cordina 10 a National Weather Service bulletin.
CALIFOR NIA
4.8 qaa.te rattle. Nortllem CaUfomJa
SAN JOSE -The earthquake that shook a tarae section of Northern
California Wedne9d.ay was the stron&est to bit since the damqina temblot that
struck Morpn Hill last April, officials said: The quake, ~hicb.bit at l :~ J>.~ ..
measured 4.6 on the Richter scale, according to the Uruv~ty of Califomta
Seismographic Station in Berkeley. It wu felt alona pie coast m Monterey and
u far inland as Modesto and Stockton, about SO miles from San Jose.
V.S.·Merlco trade tJe. puhed
TEMECULA-The economic and political stability of Mexico binges on
stronser tia.de tics to the United States and increased support for Mexico's
economic growth, U. Go~. ~ McCarthy said. ¥c:Ca.rthy spoke ~o 1~
Mexican government officials and developers tounna Southern Califoi:rua
industrial and office parks Wednesday. Increased Mexican manufactunna.
jobi and United States--Mex.ico trade are critical not only to Mexico's cubility ------------------------,----------------"---------..;..._----'-.,;--.;~ but a.ho to the economies of other Latin American countries, said McCarthy,
chairman of the state Ecomomic Development Commission.
Co . ~ ... mmgto
WESfCUFF PLAZA
~ 0 0
0 0
0 0
... C:Oming to
WESI'CUFF PLAZA
Diane. (Amllrnpnr:~ t,L.,h1on'
In 1111 hl":td<<tl \,!0\\11., I'/\ 1.ld1sh1 co
l~Nl.tl 'J'll 111'\\ l".tr l"l\0 \lalthtt."'P< >n
.ind :\.1h1.1 I \l lllll~ :ind umi-.t~tl
,(( l l''" II ll °'hi >Ill ll'\\l"~ ~UlO hl·lt'
I<, h.111dl>.1~'-h;tt' and 11<.Nl'I\
HAVE YOU HEARD
ABOUT
~· f'l'",UunnJ.(tht: Eum
tX'4U1 -.()linJ.( nl Ul"iW"ll'f"'t\l"
Danit-I. l.ltl1l" Sf'lc>rt.'"\w in .1 'Jri
l't\" ol n:uur.11 t.d1nt-:-.. :l\ .11~d1lt:
In '111." I to 1-t. QiX'11in)l in Oll<~X'l".
Veca's Intimate
Apparel < ~l\·11111~ 111 Liw Cx1dx-r
_,.-,._ ..
THE NEW STORES: tx-:..ij..'fll"ll 10 ml'l1 a
\\\lllll'11 \ mmpk.1t:
hn~·nt· lll'lU" 'thu
t"Jn .1L-.o duN.·
tompk.'tl' .a honw
Clt.ltlit' U.' wdl ~
tx·.1ut1tul l(f. 1'"1l.' .nt
c:uuul\ R Jtx..,
Thev will be joining these
fine apparel merchants:
"ilorekeeper for Her
lh. pllll' to 'hop 101 l.N1.J .Ul<.I
Jn.,..,, ~lnn.'"l~tr \\he. I\'• >ltr 1r.1111l't.I.
l"tl\lrtl'OH' •'I.tit \\ llJ ll!Ol"dlll,lll'
l LL"ll I.JI l;l'\1111 n' le N \llU bt! ,JC'.11
The Storekl."eper
LL,11.ll .rnd 1r.1d111on.1l ..;port'"'~u tor
nllil .md hc11.., < llCK)'.l' Imm :1
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cr..Umon.J nwns .md \\\)l'lWns
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mt" 111 m:lk.t.· t'Xh outfit
mmt k. '\\.'. 650 2105
WESTCLIFF PLAZA
And'"-: I~ • ·
.
RTD clteit Olymplc loaes
LOS ANGELES -The Soviet pullout from the Summer Olympics
contributed to a SS.1 million deficit suffered by the Southern California Rapid
Transit District during the Games, a spokesman for the bui system said. .. The
late decision that the Soviet Union was not coming seemed to dissuade visitorl
from European countries," RTD spokesman Rick Jager said Wednesday. ·•we
went-ob the assumption that peo]>lc from abroad would be comina over who
would be transit-dependent, but that wun't the cue," he said.
Jla.a80.a .now bJ .erlou coadltlo.a
VACA VILLE -Charles Manson's bums are not life-tbreatcnin& but a
prison spokesman says he doesn't know when he will get out of the prison
hospital. Another prisoner doused Manson with paint thinner Tuesday and IC1
him afire, officials wd. Prison Lt. William Hartwell said Wednesday that
Manson was in serious but stable condition, and may suffer some IC&trina. The
48-year-old fonner cult leader suffered second-and third-degree bUms over 18
percent of his body, mostly on his fact, scalp and bands. in an attack by Jan
Holmstrom in the hobby shop of the California Medical Facility.
--J I
Govemor •l6n• crime bU& ·
SACRAMENTO -Crime tiillS signed by Gov. George Deuk:mejian
include one tQ help victims of0 py buhina" and another to touaben penalties
1
apimt child pornographers. Another of the 29 crime--related bills siancd
Wednesday would revoke a person's drivers liceose for up to seven years when
he or she bas three or more drunken drivinL convictions, and then refuses 10
submit to a blood-alcohol test That bill, AB 1431 by Assemblywoman Jean
Moorhead, D-Sacramento, is the latest in a series of measures she has carried
apinst drunken drivina.
Beach Boy widow ms •alt.
LOS ANGELES-The cancer-stricken widow and son of the late Beach
Boys drummer Dennis Wilson have filed lawsuits seek:ina $20.4 million from
an msurancecomeany and askina to share in the rock star's estate. Shawn Love
Wilso·n, 19, and Oqe Dennis Wilson, 2, who were excluded from Wilson"•
1977 will, want a court order namin1 them as Wilson's hein. In another suit,
apinst Transamerica Oocidental Ufe Insurance Co.\ they seek $200,000each
they claim is due them under Wilson's SJ million life LDSurancc policy plus $20
million in punitive damages, attorney James H. Davis said WcdneMlty,
1 WoRto
Nobel WUJ.iJer aadergoe. •fU6ery 'I
. STOCK.HOLM, Sweden-Alva Myrdal, a Nobel Peace Pri.l.e winner and
former disarmament n~otiator, was recoverina today after a brain tumor
operation, docton said. 'Her condition is quite satisfactory," said profe110r
Lan Granholm of the neuros~cal clinic at Karol.inJka Hospital north of
Stockholm, where Mrs. Myrdal 1 brain tumor was removed. M~l WU
awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1982 for her lifelona work in tho field of
international disarmament.
A~toUab SIJUuJ dead at 95
NICOSIA, Cyprus-One oflran'a top reliaious leaden, Ayatollah H~
Seyycd Abdollah Shirazi, died today at the aae of .9S, the official Iranian newt
qency reported. Tehran Radio, monitored 1n London, said he died of a heart
ittack. Iranian patriarch Ayilollah Ruholtah Khomeini deteritied Shirui"t
demise as ••a arcat loss to Iran," said the Islamic Republic News Aacncy report.
monitored in Nicosia. ,
RaNlan boat NUed by Ja,,.n
TOK YO -A SOviet fi&hina bt>et 'MS captured by a Japanese Mariti.m
Safety AaencyPtll:OJ vessel in the.Paeif1C0oean oft'Hokb.ido today1 1n11tncy
official said. Tflc offidal of the lltbCY"1 beadquarten at Kushiro in
sou.theastcm Hok.Uido told The Auoclaicd Prat by telephone that the s-trol
vessel T upru captured the 606-ton Polevoi. He aakt t be capture took place
after on-board inspcc.tions stiowtd that Capt. YUri A. Yatusbenko hid faired to make proper cntnet in the thip't lop on the ute of filb nets.
Soriem battle UNBSCO cll•'W•
PARIS -The Soviet Union hU dcd.nid i11gppotitlontO1 U.S.·lid
campaian for 'Cbanaes 1n UNESCO, indudina tft'Or1t to~ the U.N.
orpnization to abandon i volvement in peece Ud disarmament iAuea. TM
Soviet views wert outhne<I n 1 DOtidon ·~mat wu adckd 10 the Mmda of
the St -nation executive boerd of the U .N. CducaUooal, Scientific abcl Cultvral
<)tainauuon at the opcnana 1n11on ofl three-~ 1MC"41na Wednaday.
~----------~--------------------·--··~~--.-.!'-"'"------------
( OAILV PILOT/Thut'sday,
.~ykGtalk
1ter me<l 'ag9od start'
UNITfESD NATIONS (AP)-Seo-u I and even an ulllng, us1na lso C.·uuon &atnst c~pecung ny
rcta!'.)' o tat~ Gco_rg~ P. Shultz nd Re n of u 1n hi pccch s Slgllificant brcakthroU&hs tn U •
G vaet k Forch ·~ Mmistcr Andrei •• mouflage" , to hide his real -SOvact relauon to cmcrac from the ro.my o, . av1ng cxch~n d vie grt s1ve intcnuons. mccungs h re and an Wuh1naton.
for unprovma U.S.-So\1ct.rclauon , But U.S .. oflkials said lbeSovacts Gromyko's m una With-Mondale
b'.f}pecparatewaystoday.,-Shultzto ~re privately ignahf\I they may be was beina held at the Soviet U.N.
c re 1dtn1 R~pn an~ Gromyko interested. . . Mi ion. Gromyko apparently a.ireed
to addre s the United Nations. Reagan will find out for ure or\ to the meet.in& to show he wasn't
Shuhltz and Gromyko met for three · Fri~)i officiat_s believe. But t~ese taking ides in the U.S. pyesidential
· ho~rsd. ere ~edncsday. and bt?th said officws, who insist on anonymny, race. ·
t cir 1scuss1ons on U.S,-Sov1ct rcla·
tions would continue when Gromyko
meets R n at the White House Friday,
Gromyko was in a good mood ftcr
the meehna, and a senior U.S. official
II.id the "discussion were a good
stan" toward improving relations
between the superpowers after a Iona
period of deep chill.
. "We hope the Soviet Union is
prepared to move the relationship fo~ard," said the official, who
bnefed reponers on the condition he
not be identified. "We bo'pe they are
as prepared i.s we are," he added. .
Shultz, who also seemed satisfied a~er the meetina. gave Reagan a 1 S-
minuJe telephone repon on his talks
with Gromyko. He planned to 10 to Washin~on today to provide Reapn
with an tn-<lepth briefing.
Gromyko also was busy today. He
was del~vering an address to the
United Nations General Assembly
here and then meeting with Walter F.
~ondale,. the Democratic presiden-
tial boperul. . · u.~ ... analysts were closely
scrut1nwng Gromyko's speech for
clues on Moscow's response to Re-
apn'1 proposals, unveiled in a U.N.
· speech Monday, for "a better work.in&
, relationship" between the super-
' 1 powcn. Publicly, Moscow has been sleep-
~ctor sues, he won't
·appear in the nude
LOS ~NOELE8 (AP) -A ':Mid 1M tOOk StMlilclon't c...
young actor whO refuMd to • bec•UM the~ could.,_.
~pear nude In a movie h• tned a eflt bOth "*' and wom. In tM
$1 m1111on lawlUlt...,.. .the ent~~.
prodUCer Of the tlrft. ~ McAl~I 1lawyer H c.y
Buch a ~ vtolet• hie r.· Stew.rt, laid McAIMy wM .... aonal vatuee and moral ~ng-Ing ••10 allow the ftlmlng to go
Ing. forward wtthout dOlng the nude
J"he eult, announced Wednes-scene and U8'nG a atancMn or
ciay by the attorney for 24-year-doubti. But the actor ,.... to
old Neel Sheldon, wu •counter-go on on that b8111 and tt Aa our
claim .o•nat Pf'oducer Phtnp dafm that the contract wt1t1 ttte McAJney. McAlney Mrller named actor alloWa the pr<>*acer Jo
hetdon fn a 12 mtlllon breach of make the fJ1m with a at~ or a
contract tult for refuilng to double In that 1eene "
continue acting In the $7 mlltton ... 1,.-.. conflr"""---' : ...... --. of movie "Hardrock .. ru .u """' u .. VI,_ •
"I feel from my Upbringing and stand-In for the nude b9cklldi
per90nal values morally, thll It shot.
not something I want to get
Involved In,·: 'Sheldon uld of the
nudeecene.
Femlnlst attorney Gloria Allred
Rob1risorrs
ErING Q-AND-A
f ._
J
DISCOVERED DOWN UNDER, THE . LUXURY
BREMWORTH WOOLS OF NEW ZEALAND
.·DEFERRE D PAYMENT PLAN. NO PAYMENT UNTIL FEBRUARY, .1985*
Q: W1zy wool/
A: Its TU1t1m1/ q"4llit1tJ rmJAm '"""~
Of pnm•ry 1mp()rt11nct is its millfflct'-its
.bihty to sprmg ~k to m ongitWI hNO)Unry
twn ./tn-M1tJ CTNJhtd "1 • S()().pouru/ JlrtnOlrt
or tTUJ Npon /Ty an mt1rr lutU uagut', 71Jt'
rt>1limry u 1nhertnt an tht fibn-(h,iw you rwr
s«n •flat shttpf_}. .u u tht softness, dun1bil1t)I.
firr reunls11ry 1md ~· dean·11p. .
Q: W1ry 't"W 'l.GH11nd woo/I
A: All I is bt tbt ume. Mlf.n;y sh«p
ptodM~ 11 I ro fine you .-rr proud to r it,
brtt tt •, 'JUSI not rou h mou h /qr 11 ~Dry
airptt. Shttp t!Mt ~ct thu longn( nron r
'.J;ool u.itable for c11rptts f101mm m
ZN/Jlnd tiihtrc pwr cond1t1ons """ rdot/ the
yur roMmi. Gtnem·uu hdw rmpmwd on•
good 1nmg. tm tbt symor Drysd41e b1'l'!td
th.it gmws •n tr.lt'r1 Ion :r. un; mom rm/ 1
wool. 7b11 Or),JA, ~ ts found rn ~ . •
Bmnworth w·~t, (Art/Nlly blnu:kd •"'1
Oidanctti with OlMr <ross lmnl> for pufi t
ttttum •nJ quality.
Q: Is Drysd.tlt' wool m:ily U1pe1'ioH
A: Come stt for you~/f. }011'/J find th.it tht
wool fibn is hollow. Ii • tmy Sl«i s;wm
malting It fla1blt •nd •bk to bot.net b.At
And, b«".ut tht wool rs f»'rt >hiu. 11 prod•~J
bri btn-, molt' ""'""'' colon Ulbt-n dytd Wool
n.itun:illy 11bsorbs dyes morr rMil1/y than
mAninl:l:k fibm. •nd llJ 1r 11 rM colors •
~ •nd """~ • mum ul 'paJlllJZ. Juu
t11S1Utl1tt 11 ""~'f"e ar~ 11nd upam
u haw S«n. (Thu 1S o loz for trool~
duram1'1)\ too.) .,
lM u taeh room Pft'tft~ 1bns cbttlt i/N btuk
of tbe carpft to 1tt if 1t mtth -your ~
Brrmtl.'Orth 01rpttm u I.id on tbe 1jloors of
nuny 'i•:cury hotrls .ind on ~MTS 111W4nil rht
~rid, ro JO" (Jlfl .usMm:J I~ IS II oJibc-r
t'b.t lnJO "P to wur uons. A nil
mncmbri, t=b.lt the G'RMii I.Aft doan~ rd/
~ u. OUT a~ nirptt lupmo11;s 11.
.
TURIC£St-'.N. A loop 1roOI rk lkrbrr,
11wrla 111 'l colors. SJ9.9S fl/U'" 13rd W:.cl/M
PETrl PO/WT. .it //,.t /oo;J t&OOl lkTber '"
S tbn-tonn. l49.9S '9"41t' -y;snJ mulktl.
8£RBE.R 2. A high loop wool '" 7 solid rolon.
SS9.9S squ.,, ~tfl ,,,suJ}ftl
HIRVAN. A /rial eff«t tnth 1DOOI hc4thcr
i an j colon. S6S.91 IT ,_rd rnsW/td
-CA.STILLJA '. A ""' "100/ pih
uJ rn 6 co/ors. m .'1
insufkd.
ARKAND.A pn
an j col S1'. 5
Tln:A ~ A-rlMJJJ T fi u pasrtl colon.. m . s
R.obin5l n ~ Bm.ulloom. 6.'
TH· QUI 'EST
Or ... Coat 'DAILY PILOTfTttursday, ...
•
:F·ALL FOCUS SALE
STARTS TOMORROW!
THE · FOCUS IS ON
FASHION · ... THE. CURRENT
;.
FALL COLLE .CTIONS FOR
MEN, WOMEN AND
CHI.LDREN.
SELECTION MAY.VARY BY STORE. LIMITED QUANTITIES. IN SOME CASE. NO MAIL OR PHONE ORDERS.
• ' • • • • • .,. • I • • • •
}: : :-. :-;~ . ~ ; ... --• ' :. !"\ ;-
SpecW pwc:hM•: Angora blend sweater in
11 colors ............................ 34.99
Save 1/3: The Villager classic corduroys,
orig. 36.00 to 111 .00 . . . . . . . . 23.99 to 73.99
Save 113: Anne French silky polyester two-
piece dressing, orig. 50.00 ea ch .. 32.99 each
Save 113: Stephanie Queller wool blend
jersey separates,
orig. 32:00'"to 68.00 . . . . . . . 20.99 to 44.99
S.ve 30%: Career knit dressing,
orig. 30.00 to 42.00 ........ 20.99 to 28.99
• • • • • • • • "'T •' • '
~ -. . . -.. ·~ . • .. • ~ • • • • • ' t .. .. ••
Save 1/3: Gloria Vanderbilt's casualwear,
denim jean and jacket,
orig. 46.00 to 60.00 .......... 21.99 to 39.11
S.ve 113: Gloria Vanderbilt plaid shirt and
twill pant, orig. 46.00 to 48.00 .... 21.81 MCh
SpecW pwchaM: John Henry over-sized
shirts ..................•.......... 11.99
"SpecW value: Sportsphere faU fleece
separateS' .................. ~0.00 llnd 11.00
SpecW pwc:hMe: Knit jersey warm-ups with
multi-color striped top ................ 21.81
SpecW ~: Fall fleece Separates, long-
sleeve crew and pant .•.......... 10.00_ MCh
• , , , ' • ·r ••I'• • 1" . .. ... .... "-~ .. •· . . . . . .. . , , .... .;. ......
Save 11%: Pant-Her fall corduroy looks in
tan, navy blue,
orig. 34.00 to 50.00 .......... 22.19 to 34.81
S.ve 25%:. Cropped corduroy pant,
orig. 26.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....... 11.99
Save 113: Bamboo cable crew-neck vest,
orig. 30.00 . . . . . . . . .. 19.99
Speclel pwchase: Big shirts with menswear
ties ................................. 11.99
S.ve 30%: Koret Nob Hill knits in fall colors,
orig. 38.00 to 62.00 . . . ...... 26.99 to 42.99
'" : :. ... . . . ... . . .. .. . .
Save 33%: Famous maker fall coordinates for
women's sizes 38 to 44,
orig. 30.00 to ~.00 ..•....... 11.99 to 38.99
Sped.I pwcheee: Lady Manhattan crepe de
chine blouses for women's
sizes 38 to 44 ....................... 19.•
. . .. . . . .. . . . .. . . . . . . . .
aev. 11% to 44%: Jayre man-tailored jac-
quard sleepshirts, orig. 30.00 to 36.00 .. 11'.99
Sn• 20% to ~ Vanity Fair Lace Piquant
half ·8'ip, camisole, full-sJip,
orig. 14.00 to Z7.00 .....•.... 10.M to 11.M
S.ve 31%: Crowntuft chenille robes,
orig. 40.00 •.•.....•.••.••...••.•..•. 24.•
Sne 21%: Lanz cotton flannel nightgown,
orig. 26.00 ••.....•.••..•..........•• 11.•
Seve 21%: Vanity fair lace-trim nylon travel
pajamas, will be 21.00 10/10/84 .•..•.• 14.•
lev• ~: Ban cJa ·c long·line bra"' will be
20.00 on 10/9/84 .................... 11M f
,
. . . .. . . .. ,
:_; .., ., ... l_J :---1..~
113 off: Lambswool/nylon sweater dresses.
Three styles. Four colors. S·M-L.
Reg. 45.00 ............ : . . . . . . . . . . . 29.99
1,U off: Esprit separates in neutrals and
brights. S-M-l and 3 to 11 .
Reg. 25.00 to 60.00 . . . . . . 15.99 to 39.99
1/3 off: Our exclusive cowl neck pullovers in
nine colors. Acrylic/wool. Orig. 18.00 11.99
30% off: Outerbound sweater 1ackets by
H.M .S. Stripes, prints or solids. S-M-L. Five
days only. Reg . 39.99 to 60.00 27.99 to 42.00
r : .. !,.' ~.._:~C.:
A-.t. • ~ ~ I_. .t.. ~
Save 113: Georgette dresses from a famous
New York maker, orig. 60.00 .......... 39.99
Sped.a pwchMe: Crepe de chine print
dresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . • 29.99
Spedal pwchase: Career dresses from New
York designer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . 79.99
S.ve 30%: Fur-blend sweater dresses from
Italy, orig. 88.00 ................. 69.99
30% off: Katie and Secrets print or solid
crepe de chine hip-wrap dresses,
orig. 80.00 to 86.00 ......... 49.99 to 69.99
SpecW purd'8M: Two-piece striped knit
skirt sets • . . . . . . . . . . . . ..........•... 29.99
. '.' • ~ :.: . ...:. ...:. :J( :: c.; . . -...... ... . . ·-..._ ... .. ...._ ._,
36"-'1ff: Our own snakeskin sling made in
l!41y. Black or brown. Orig. 63.00 ...... 39.99
Sped.a purcheee: lmpo desert boot in olive,
nutmeg, natural or plum suede . . . . . . 32.99
Speclel pwchase: Candie's "Status" pump
in winter white or black leather ........ 21.99
20% off: Mia "Slouch" boot in blue, vanilla
or steel grey suede. Reg. 50.00 . . . . . .. 39.99
Spedel purchue: Red Cross• "Flash"' mid
heel tone on tone sling. Black/black,
cashew I sand or grey I grey . . .. 31.99
*No connection whatsoever with the
American Red Cross.
SpKW pwch8M: Our own fashion sling by
Axiom. Mid heel with combination upper.
Black, navy, camel or dark grey ....... 2-4.91
. . . . . .. .. ' . . ..... . . . .... -... . . '"' ~ '.. . '. .. . ' .. . ' ..
In• 21%: Rich leather handbags from B.H.
Smith. The latest shapes and colors for fall.
Selection will vary by stores.
Orig 18.99 to 24.00 ...... 13.• to 17•
8peclel pwch.-e: Marvella faux pearl
stationed ropes glowing in 36" to 54"
lengths ..•...•........•...... I.II to 14.99 s.ive 21%: Vinyl handbags and clutches
designed by Valerie Barad. Shoulder bags,
totes, hobot, clutches, more.
Orig. 15.00 to 38.00 .......... 10• to 21•
S.ve 21%: On our coll ction of semi·
p\-ecious atone earrings in pierced styles. Find
onyx, sodalite, rose quartz and more.
Orig. 12.00 to 32.00 .•......... 1.00 to 24.00.
S.ve 20%: On an imJ)f etaive collection of
fine leather clutches. From famous names
like Anda, Sereta, Etra, Genson, Anton,
morel Orig. 1'4.99 to 75.00 •••• 11• to I0.00
Irie 31%: D nskin bodyWear nd tlgh •
Reg. 6.95 to a5.00 • • .••••.• 4.41 to 21.-
30% off: French designer sportShirts in
irridescent solid colors. Cotton/potyester.
·Reg. 30.00 ......................... 19.91
33% off: Arrow's wholesome striped and
plaid winter sportshirts. In cotton flannel and
acrylic.
Reg. 15.00 to 21 .00 .......... 11.91to13.91
33% off: Turtleneck knit tops: pure cotton
from Munsingwear in twelve solid hues and
our own acrylic solid-toned pullovers.
Reg . 15.00 ........................... 1.99
25% off: Selected designer sportshirts and
slacks for fall.
Reg . 30.00 to 80.00 .......... 22.50 to 80.00
Spedal p&.wchaH: Levi'~• Tailored Classics
wool herringbone sportcoat . . . . . . . . . 79.99
25% off: Levi's· Action Wool' slacks in four
basic shades. Potyester/wool.'I
Reg . 36.00 .......................... 21.99
38% off: Pierre Cardin's logo jacket in six
fashion colors. ~non/polyester._
Reg . 65.00 ......................... 39.99
25% off: Sensational cabled v-neck sweater
vest in acrylic. Reg . 20.00 . . . . . . . . . . .16.00
25% off: English and Italian wool Shetland
argyle sweaters. Reg. 40.00 ... ~,· . , .... 21.99
28% off: Shetland wool cabled crewneck
sweaters in five colors. Reg. 30.00 . . . . 21.99
23% off: French designer short sleeve cotton
lisle or jersey striped knit shirts.
Reg. 26.00 to 29.00 .................. 11.19
40% off: Oleg Cassini patterned short sleeve
sportshirts. Polyester I cotton.
Reg. 25.00 .......................... 14.99
33% off: Updated Paul D' Avril long-sleeve
knit tops in four solid colors.
Reg. 25.00 .......................... 11.11 _
•":.·· ...;:···:.'·i~~:····.
... f ,j, • • • f I ~ ' • t .f. • • o ' • ' ' I
Spedlll vlllue: Van Heusen's Corum""' fitted
oxford dress shirt for full-cut broadcloth
dress shirt. Polyester/cotton. Reg. 17.00 and
19.00 . . .. . .. . . .. 12.99 uch or 2 for 24.00
20% off: All Christian Dior socks. Casual and
dress anklets. Reg. 3.50 to 4.25 .2.71 to 3.31
21% to 38% off: Wool neckwear from
famous French designers, American makers
and our own Neil Martin collection.
Reg . 11 .00 to 15.50 ..•......... 7.91to1.99
30% off: Famous French designer leather
and fabric belts. ·
Reg. 9.00 to 22.50 ........... l.30 to 16.71
30% off: Famous maker cotton corduroy
blazer. Tan or grey. Reg. 95.00 ........ AIO
215% off: Famous American designer velour
robe. Reg. 40.00 .••.......•.......... 21•
2&% off: Famous French desi9ner long·
sleeve, long·leg broadcloth pajamas. Four
cotora. Reg. 20.00 ................... 14.99
Spec:W purct.ee: Famous French designer
wallets: hipfolds, passcases, duofolds and
more in fine leather ..••••••••••.•.•.• 12.M
33% to 37% off: Fr"nch designer full·cut
dre11 shirts. Reg. 22.fJO to 24.00 ....•.. 14.•
~ Off: Neil Martin striped and plaid dre11
shirts. Reg. 22.00 . . . . .. . . . . • .. . ..... 14.•
32% off: Arrow short-sleeve Dover oxford
dreu shirt. Reg. 19.00. • .............. 12.•
32% off: Famous Amotican designer chemise
champagne tone-on-tone fitted dreu hlrt.
Reg . :25.00 .......... ' I ••••• I •••••• I •• 11.11
~ to 40% off: De igner f 1tted dre11 shirts.
Orig. 24.00 to 28.50 .••..•.•.•.••... , .11.11
lpeClllil punaha11: Don Loper wallet end key
C8 .. I .............. • I • J6 • I e I I I I f I I A • It I I il L.M f ,-.
•
. . . .. . . . . . . . . . . ,. . ' . -. . . . --. .... . . . . . . ....
&0% oft. London Fog folding umbrellas.
Orig. 20.00 ........................ 1.99
25% off: Nike jogger nylon-and-suede shoe
in grey .with·white swoosh.
Orig. 26.00 . . . . . . . . . ..........•.... 11.99
• I ' ' ~. • "' • .,.. . .. ..... . ........ ''. . .............. ..
30% oft. Toddler boys' basics: Solid
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Varsity style cardigan sweater.
Reg. 10.00 ........................... 7.00
Corduroy belt loop slacks.
Reg. 12.00 and 13.00 ......... l.40 end 1.10
30% oft. Toddler girls' separates: Round-
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Acrylic cardigan ~ter. Reg. 10.00 .... 1.00
Crystal pleat plaid skirt. Reg. 12.00 ...... l.40
30% off: Infant and toddler blanket sleepers
and pram suits. / .
Reg. 10.00 to 12.00 ....... , .... 7.00 to 1.40
25% off: Girls' basic and fashion panties.
(E)(cept Her Majesty and St. Eve tanks and
panty sets). Reg. 1.49 to 5.75 ... 1.11to4.31.
30% off: AO girls' fashion knee-hi socks,.
sport socks and anklets. .
Reg. 2.00 to 3.00 .............. 1.&0 to 1.46
30% off: Classic sweaters, oxford shirts and
plaid skirts for girls 4 to 14.
Reg . 10.00 to 20.00 ........... 7.00 to 14.00
30% off: Fleece jog sets for girls 4 to 14.
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21% to 30% oft. Girls ·4 to 14 fall dresses.
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4 to 6X. Reg. 15.00 .................. 10.99
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~ off: Young Men's polar fleece
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dated fteece tops ..••............ , .••. 1.•
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Polyester/cotton. Orig. 22.00 .......... 11.•
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jeans in eeven solid colors.
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pants for boys 8 to 20. Reg. 23.00 ••... 11.•
8" off: Young men'a Brittanie cotton aaym·
metric bk>UIOn top. Reg. 20.00 ..•••.•. 14.11
~ off: Generra cotton twill beach panta
for young men's aiz• 28 to 38. =~~~~g·~~·~·v1.:.ge ·.,;,Pf.d·fli.c~
top with mesh 'inset. Pofyetter/cotton.
Reg. :22.00 . • • ........... " . , •....•..• 11.11 ~ off: Bugle Boy ..,yton parachute pants
for young men. Orig. 28.oo ........... 11.11
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The Kid 11l1cted ~.
Orig. 7.99 to 16.00 •.•..•.•.••. l.W to, ...
..
J
Schoonerovertur-~
~
Body of John Torrington presened In froet for ISO yea.re.
BROOKSVIL:J..E, Ma ne (AP)-A pluck the 5tupaoers from the waltnof plea~ ure cnusc off lhe Maine c t -~m<!UJn Rrach.
bCcame a Journey mto the ~J'"ifidn I m ,;u11 al*l 10 be bctt aid Zone" when aust of wind f11ppcit .a BCCky Burkey of J'. ~ a PMKB~
schooner a mile from shore, scnd1n,g on the commerc1at cruse "Olad that
2.3 people $Cr'llmbUng 11 nythin,g everybody 1ot back."
that ould float 1n chm)'. s. Burk.ey 11ud 'that ahe was on deck
Helicopters and a flotilla of govern~ hen lhe 64.foot Isaac H. Evans, a 98-
ment nd pnvate boats. alerted by ~ear..old schooner, turned over at
wnnesscs on shore, ru bed to lhe boul U:~a m
rescue Wednesday, and 1119 pa sen-.. It accmcd lllcc. the Wind and lhc
gen and lhe four crew members were water had died down,•· she u1d.
saved. · .. They (1bc crew) were chanaina the Fi~~ peopl were ho patalized for canvas The schooner bepn ·tiltanc
exposure and two were held over-and lbcn,~a.11 of a sudden e wcrc an nt~t authorities said. the water. •
'They're lucky. lucky people," Aid COast Guara Ll. Joseph S.boe said
one of tbc rescue workers who helped ··anythina that would float. l~ were
~gypti_an
to meet
.R:eagan
CAIRO, ~)'pt (AP) -Egypt is
consulting w1th the United States at
the highest level about the possible
renewal ofa U.S. peacemaking role in
the Arab-Israeli conflict, the state· run
Middle East News Agency said today.
The state-run agency said Foreign Fiioi '7en sai•1o1.,.. 's body Minist~r Esma~ Abdel-Mq~d would L.I ..I. meet WJth President ~eagan in Wash-
. . . • ington t~ay to del!ver a mhsage
1 ld t from President Hosm Mubarak. may so TTe Q my,s ery ltsaidthemessaie .. dcalswiththe V 1 latest developments in the Middle
East. particularly a reactivation of the
EDMONTON, Alberta (AP) -
The body ofa sailor, almost perf'cctly
preserved in the permanently frozen
soil of the Arctic for more than 130
ycan, might help solve. the mystery of-
how an 1845 British expedition
perished to the last man.
OWen Beattie, an anthropologist at
the University of Alberta hopes tissue
samples taken from the bodl of Pett>
Officer John Torrington wil indicate
if the more than I 00 men in the cx~ition died of sickness, food
po1son1na or scurvy.
"We know.~ fair amount'of the
peripheral information about the
Franklin expedition ... but what we
wanted to do was to ... look at the
remains of the sailors, .. Beattie said.
"What we're looking for ... is to find
out what were the stresses, dietary,
environmental or whatever stresses
on the individual."
Beattie spent three weeks last
summer on Becchey Island, a rocky craa linked to Kina William Island in
the central ArclJc
peace proocss and active partici-and, Beattie said. at least one ot them pation of the United States."
is equally well preserved, The Cairo newspaper Al Ahram
Beattie said tissue tests and infor-said Mubarak telep1honed Abdel-mation from skeletal remains found elsewhere will offer clues to explain Meguid on Wednesday to give him
the cause of death of the seamen and "directives .. regardin• the meeting · · h d h · with Reagan. Abdel-Mquid lw been sc1ent1sts on t e ata-gat enna ex-in New York since last week for the
J>cdition led by Sir John Franklin. current session of the U.N. General J>o~siblecauscs include scurvy, which Assemb~I
is cau~ by a lack ofVitam1n C, other The tian-U.S. consultations
dietary deficiencit$ or food poison-come two "S after Jordan decided ing. J The Franklin expedition left to resume diplomatic relations with
Britain in 1845 to sail the Northwest Eaypt foUowini a 51/i-yea.r break that
Passage and collect scientific data. stemmed from Egypt's 1979 peace
That winter their ships became lock-treaty with Israel.
ed in ice near Beechey. The ice cleared Mubarak was dispatchin~s chief
in the late summer of 1846 and they political adviser, Osama el-to the
continued south of Kina William Jordanian capital of Amman today
Island. There they became trapped by for hi&h-level talks, Foreign Ministry
ice again that winter. • sourocs said. The sources, who spoke Franklin died in June 184 7. In on condition that they not be ident-
April 1848, the I OS survivors of the 1fied, said el·Baz would carry a ori~ 129-man crew abandoned messaJe from Mubarak to~Kin&
their ships and began walking south. Hussem. ·
They left behind a note that said Top Egyptian officials -including
they had taken the ships' life boats Abdel-Meguid, Prime Minister
with them and were makina for the Kamal Hassan Aly and State Minister
mouth of the ~k River on the for Foreign Affairs Butros Ghali -
mainland. ~ said Wednesday that Jordan·s move
.. They left the sh1p ... e1ther to await would boost chances of renewed
..
hoklina onto Somt had llle,Jaekets
0Jl.~.didn·1 ..
It was 1 .. TWl.liabt Zone tu· a&K>n~1~id Ms Butkey, rcfemQJ to
die I~ klev1r.aon show that pul
ord.inary people in e.xttaorcbury
tuauom -O~bbini on to tloetma ~ arid uyana to follow the
sktppert' ordcrl to set away from the boon« ..
She said lbal the waves were hiah.
but the lcrrified ~naen could sec peoole on their pomicS on ahorc went over. •
.. We knew tba& Ibey could see us .. l'htte wu 1 htllc water comnw
and lbat'M would'be OK. if we.could over the 11de," abe said, PQmlJl'll out
hana 'OD, .. Ille ui4. that &Ilea WU fairly normal .. But tbc
The vetfel WltOD iu JaA tehedulcd · wind laat bl Md d of a s.adden lhere
CN&IC of--wbee a powerlUJ wauoo mucb wales' .. ,
He exhumed the body of Tor-
rington, 20, who died m the spnng of
1846. The body was almost perfectly
preserved in the pennafrost, and the
scientists took small ti$SUe samples
· from it last summer.
rescue, perhap_s at the mouth of the Arab-Israeli peace talks. Bae~ River, or perhaps even to row ......:...:=-==:...:.:=-==.:..__::.__;;....__.l.!:!==::::=~==-~~~~~~::==:::;:;;;======:.:=::..=.:.;..,...;;;._:=::=====;:=~~.,...;..-;~..:;,_......,.,~..,......
Two other men who died at aoout
the same time lie in nearby graves
upriver into mainland Canada to a
Hudson's Bay post," said Beattie.
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•
. -
:Naturalist ·:parks bar ~,
issue averhis wildflowers
Beauty, as they
say, is tn eyes
t zaow 1, filed an ppcal of the . ...:t fine rom a;cauln .:11v1~ the ~ ~onv1ct1on and fine imposed by rdeftndants ... free ndc dunna tic
Ju ttcc H. Walker Hawthorne in ap~ proces . Kenmore Viti Court. If the appeal coua...rules apm1t
of the beholder
BUFFALO. N.Y. (AP)-Ajudgc
.,.anted 1,stay Wedne$day ofa SSO.a·
day fine pending an appeal by a
naturalist convicted of breaking local
laws by refusing to cut his lawn of
wildflowers.
The ruling means that durina the
appeals process Stephen Kenney and
1 co-defendant will not have to cut the
overgrown yard or pay the fine.
"Many issues have betn raised by this apl)C31. It is not a fn vilous appe81
by any means," Erie County Judge
Penny Wolfaang. She ordcrcd,Ken-
ney to po t a SSOO bond and 5ald the
appeal hou)d bt heard "as e~
pcditiously as pos iblc."
Kenney and the owner oft\is rented
home, Davied Tritcbl~r. were con-
victed last weelt of violating the
villaae code in suburban Kenmore by
Kenney's refusal to mow his front
yard. which he seeded with wild-
The appeal challcnacs Kenney, he should have to paJa the
Hawthorne's verdict on the basis of fines art the way back to today, aklJdO
proctdure and the constitutional aaid. 1 he judge said he woul
t sues of freedom of cxpre sion and consider that motion.
elective enforcement of the law, Village officials char&~ Ke~y
Galeziowski id. wath ¥ioladnJ a buildana "vuc Kenney, 30, a doctoral candidate at provision requ1nna that )'.lrdS bt kept
the state Univel'1it)' at Buffalo, is a in the desirable rtsidenual character
scholar of naturah t Henry David of the neighborhood. Thoreau.
He told rcporten before his two--
day trial I st week that his yard wu
more environmentally sound than a
conventional lawn in that it doesn't
require mowing and water and at-
tracts wildlife. .. When· one approaches my yard,
they'll often .see butterflies and birds
hovcrin1 about it, somethina you
won•t 5CC on other lawns on the
street," he said. 0 Beauty is in the eye
of the beholder, and I happen to
prefer wildflowers to aras ... .
He also questioned the right of the
village to make him cut the yard.
.. Where does a community's power
endr' he asked.
Bay Area
Hard Rock
Cafe opens
· SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -It was
6 a.m. in London, but the liard Rock
Cafe was aoing strong, crowded as
ever and twistina to the beat of rock The Kenmore prosecutor, Thomas
Viksjo, said a stay should not prevent 'n' roll. . Natmal.18t Stephen Kenney aclmlr'a b1a 'nata.ral lawn' lA Kenmore. After six months of im.paratton ,,:_ ____ __: ____ __.:: ______________ --:-_..;.._ _____ -=--·--------------------....:----~ and $1 .S million in remodelinacosts,
flowers an<S other plants.
Kenncy's lawyer, John A. Gal-
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Betwe n Edin~ and Warner n Marwlls ShoPP!PI Ctr, 842 4112 In O bfook Viii • South of Leauna Htfls Man, 855 9995
MONDAY-FRIDAY 10·9
SATURDAY 10·6
SUNDAY 10·6
Downey• Huntinaton leach • llauna Hills• LI Jolla· l:ahwood • las V11as • M nlo Park • Montcla r • Northndae • Pasadena· Plactntta
Pleaunt Hill• Puente Hills• R1v1rs1de ·Santa Monica •Studio Cftr ·Sunnyvale• Torrance· W. los Anaelts . .
the restaurant opened its doors this
week to the first San Francisco crowd -nearly 1,200 people who shelled
out $75 each for a peek at the newest
member of the Hard Rock chain.
There was the familiar Iona queue
at the door, the collcie football
pennants and electric amtan !tanaina from the wallSi ~ um(orined waitresses scurrying about to take
orders.
Neon Hard Rock Cafe clocks adorn
the wall above the kitchen, monitor-
in& the hour at the other restaurants in
Los Angeles, New Yorlc and London.
But this Hard Rock Cafe,
brainchild of oWller Peter Morton,
had a Califor1iill flavor that dis-
tinauished it frorp its London cous~
the popul4r rcsuaurant that opened m
1971.
Maybe it wa.s the red Cadillac
convertible sticking out of the wall to
the riaht of the kitchen. Or ~rhaps
the motorcycle chopper wnb red,
white and blue-striped ps tank. It
could have been the Indiana Jones
jacket hanging in a showcase.
The Hard Rock Cafe aims for a SOs
feel serving good hambuJ'ICfS, milk-
shakes and other .. American" fare in
a busy atmosphere dominated by
ultra-loud rock •n• roll
"This is sort of going back to the SOI
thinp," said acneral manqer Gary
Anderson, who . was busy directina
waitresses and other employees be-
hind ·the scene at the restaurant's
benefit for the San Francisco Art
Institute.
"Good music is very important to
our format," he said, as singer Cyndi
Lauper's group boomed onstase in
the background. "We try to be as
upbeat as possible. We pve a aood
value for the money. Good times and
value."
The restaurant was overflowing
with gucstt Monday ni~t, the crowd
of 1,200 crammed mto a space
intended for only 250 diners.
"It's very noisy" aaid Denise
Cammell, arguest ~ho left an hour
before the event ,as scheduled to
end. "I wasn't crazy about Cyndi
Lauper."
And the restaurant?
..It's a gQOd time,.. she said. "I
think San Francisco could use some-
thing like this."
eejust
dropped
by fora
pizza pie
....
Two candidatet were nomlnated
this week io fill a vacancy on the: eeven-member Newport Beach Plan· lliDa Commiuioa and a doud ~were a~lnted to an Id hoc
commmee deabna with a dovelo~
ment plan for ilbe Cannery V d·
lqe/f.fCFldden ~uare area. ~ Mctrill and Rena Kos>: peJman, both -.Newpon .residenta
were nominated at Monday's 9ity
Cowlcil meetina to fill the un6pued olannina commission term of Jerry • kiga. which ends June 30, 198~.
One of the two candidates will bi
appointed at the next C'Ouncil meet· ina. on Oct. 9.
,, 'MerrillL~~k ii an emi>Jo>u. of lbe John D. cl Son land dcv~
meot firm . Koppelman, •.~t is a
monpae t;.nktt with the Wcttem
Bank&. Mortaaae Co. Both nominees live in Corona del Mar.
Also at this week·s mcetina, a 12·
member com mince of merchants and
iesidents was established to work
with the city on a specific area plari
beina prepared for the area around
the Cannery Villa&e and McFadden
SQuare.
Former Baltimore Orlolea pitcher Jlm
Palmer aatotJapba hU p>eter mode~
Jockey anderwear for a fan in a Coata Meu
department •tore th.le week.
Jones takes
command
· .l'be members will work with The
Arroyo Group, a consultina service
the city baS hired to assist in the
J>m)l.J'.atioo of the specific plan.
'. 1Tbe committee members are: Scott
Sboet, Bob Rubin, Russ fluter, Tim
Tendell, Sterlina Wolfe, John Shea, J.
Michael Sinser Betsy Douatieny, Richard Conneita, Rick Lawrence,
Hank Swenenoo and Lee Mallory.
Blood donors needed Pvt: Clt.rb'4lplaer P. Pica, son of
Frank aDd Patrisha Pica of San acmente, bas compleled one station
unit training at tbc Army lDWitr)
School in Fon Benning. GL
Lt. Col. David Jones of Santa :Ana
assumed command of the Heavy
Hebcopter Squadron 361 at Uie
Marine Corps Air Station in Tustin
durin& a recent cba.-Of<lOmmand ceremony.
Mesa. 9:4S a.m. to 2:30 p.m. For
appts. 835-5381, ext 291.
rolet. 2828 Harbor, Costa Me
12:45 p.m. to 5::30 p,m. For appts.
546-1200.
Jone$ sUctieeds Lt. Col. James
Shaefer, who had commanded the squadron since Januar) 1983.
Prospective blood donors, between
the ages of 17 and 65. in &OOd health,
and weighing at least 11 er pounds are
needed. Donor1 are ul)Cd to call the
American Red Cross to make an
appointment to donate either at a
Monday,· Oct. 15: Community
Bible Church, 17 575 Euclid, Foun· liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliijiiiiiiililiiiliiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiltiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii tain Valley. 2:4S p,m. to 7:30p.m. For
blood doifdr center or at one of the
appts. 83S-5381, ext. 291.
Taking Care bloodmobile sit~ this October.
On~ center 1s Seaport Square,
-18822 Beach Blvd., Huntington Of elderly Beach, Suite 101 -102. It is open
"Mbnday through Thursday I 2;30
Thursday, OCt. 18: McGaw Lab--
oratories, 2525 McGaw Ave., Irvine.
8:45 a.m. to l :30 p.m. For appt
660-2261, Jean Cox.
talk_ Oct. 3 -r~~;~ ~.~.p.m. and Friday 8:30a m.
The bloodmobile schedule for ()c.,;
Tuesday, Oct. 23: Comm'r, United
Methodist Church, 6612 Hed., Hunt-
ington Beach. 2:45 p.m, to 7;30 p.m.
Fot appts. 842-4461 . ·
Thursday, Oct 25: Huntington
Beach City Employees,. 2000 Main
St, Huntincton Beach.. 9:45 a.m. to
2:30 p.m. For appts. 536-5917. Fatriily members wantini to team
more about caring for an elderly
relative can attend a seminar on the
subject Oct. 3 sponsored by the Oranae County Health Plannina
Council.
Titled 0 K.incare: Providina Care
fortheFrail Elderly." the free seminar will be conducted 6.to 8:30 p.m. at the
Huntinaton Terrace Retirement
Residence. 18800 Aorida Ave.;
Huntington Belch.
Seminar topics will include servina
the baSic needs of the elderly, home
health and levels of care besides provi~ infonnation oo suppon
orpnizanons available in the com·
munity.
Tbe sponsor. Orange County
Health Plannina Council, is a non-
profit corporation founded in l 971
that collects and disseminates infor-
mation on health care facilities and
services and recommends china.es
aimed at improvinJ the overall
quality of health care 10 the county.
Coast •tuden~
la .cholarsb.lp
competition •
tober is as follows: .
Thui'Sday, Oct. 4:'"Newport Harbor
Lutheran Church, 798 Dover Dr .•
Newport Beach. 2:45 p.m. to 7:30
p.m. For appts: 835-5381, eXL 29 I, or
546-5976.
Monday, Oct 8: Vikiop of Orange
County, Le Premier Restaurant, 695
Town Center Dr., Costa Mesa. 9:4S
a.m. to 2:30 p.m For appts. 833-8283
or497-1738.
Tuesday, Oct 9: S8ddJebeck: Col-
leae-Nonh Campu~. 5500 Irvine
Center Dr., Irvine. 8: IS a.m. to I :00
p.m. for Appts. 835-5381, ext. 291.
Friday, Oct. 12: Southern C.alt-
fomia College, SS Fair Dr .• Costa
Friday, Oct. 26'. Newport Beach
City Employees, 3300 Newpon
Blvd., Newport Beach. 10:45 a.m. to
3:30 p.m. Por appts. 640-2 I S3, Marie
McNiff.
Saturday, Oct. 27: Grace Lutheran
Church, 6931 Edinger, Huntington
Beach. 8:45 a.m. to 1~30 p.m. For
appts. 897-0361.
Sunday, Oct. 28: St. Mark's Presby-
tenan Church, 2100 Mar Vista,
Newport Beach, 11:15 a.m. to 4:00
p.m. Forappts. 644-1341.
Tuesday, Oct. 30: Connell Chev-
Performing arts center
given $100, 000 gift
A $100,000 contribution to the-C. Butcher. bankw1nnan and chief
Orange County Performing Arts executive officer.' .. This contribution
Center in Costa Me.a has been made to the center is based upon our
by The Chase Manhattan Bank, the interest and confidence in the
nation's third laraest bank. Southern CaUfomia area."
The donation is the largest cultural The gift bfin~ the ccnte.r'~ CO!'· ans grant made by the bank outside struction funds to $40.4 m1lhon m
its New York-based operating region. private donations, wh1~ another $13
"Chase•s philosophy reflects that a million has been raised for the
corporation has a responsibility to the maintenance and operation of the
Some 1,500 semifinalists, includ-.... co~m_m_um~· ti_· es_it_se_rv~es.~·-· sai_· d_W--:illar----:d----:=facil::::. i::ty::. ::::::::::::::::=::::::=====-t
ins two locat students, are tieina named this week in the 2 lst annual
National Achievement Scholanbip Prosram for Outstanding Nesro Stu· dents;
The semifinalists were among \be
73,000 black studeilts who took the
Preliminary Scholastic Aptitude Test
and requested consideration in the
scbola'rsbip prop:am.
The aroup includes Anthony
Gatlin of Marina Hiih School io
Huntinaton Beach andl>aul Watford
of Lacuna Beach H;ah Scliool.
From the semifinalists. a aroup of
650 finalisu will be considered for
1ebolarsb.ips valued at more than $2
million to be offered next sprina.
Ml FEEL LIU YOU
IOl1 FIT II?
It you'" lo$l weilht.
Rthttinc is our Spec11lty
OPEil TAK.OlllC I
11.nuno1s FOi
IDllOIEI
-ALL ..oRK GUARANTffO -
.~f.7~9
LARGE SELECTION OF
• Shower Curtains
• Bedspreads
• Bath$hop
• Vanity Stools
• Draperies
• Giftwear
546-6812
SOUTti EOAST
PL~ZA
rs Wlf11
..
CHA.RI.ES H. BARR'S • •
25 th ANNIVERSARY. SA.LE
25%
ON ANYTHING AND EVERYTHING
NOW IN STOCK
L~ST THREE 'DAYS
10 o'clock a.m. to 6 o'clock p.m.
Thursday evenings until 8 o'clock p.m.
CHARLEs·u. BARR.
Mo,terchorge
ond Visa
17th StrMt at l..W. Aw.
Westicliff PkUo
Newport 8eodt
th sides profit
hen· bualness,
education . merge
:a-.:1 In lohis years as president of The Irvine Co., Tom Neilsen has ~~• • t ofhouses • .apaaitments, factories and offices. Now he
wants IO build bridjes -bridles of cooperation and mutual
SllCCell between industry and education.
. It may~ his mos~ 1mix>rtant project.
Addressing a meetmg oft he World Trade Council of Orange · ~~nty Monday, Nielsen UflOO his audience to join the UCI
uua~. and Industrial Associates, a group devoted to
tstablishi.nJ strong tles between the education and business
commun1t1es.
1:hcre are plenty of reasons for a pC,.son with a social
DSCJ~ce to be ~ncemed .af?out education. Neilsen pointed
ut ~·the '!amung rate of illiteracy amonj young Americans
kill
nd 1ndust1)' s growtng need for people with communication
s s.
"The generation graduating from biah school today is the
. irst aeneration in American history to graduate less skilled than
its pai:cnts,0 Nielsen said. "Are we witnessing the passing of the
Amencan dream?°
Not ~f the U.CI ~up .has anythina to say about it. The
laboratones at uruvers1t1es like UCI are the breeding ground for
the scientists, engineers and business leaders of tomorrow. They
arc havens for people who place their creativity and academic
&eedom abov~ whatever it is that the corporate world may have
to offer.
But ou~ universities are in a bind: Research is expensive and
funds. arc tight. They have tum~ to Private industry for help
and, in the process, forged relationships that are benefitting
both. ucrs.medical.school is an example.
~ccordmg to Dean Stanley Van den Noort the university
wouldn't ha.ve had its new home for the Psychiatry and
. p~cology departments if it hadn't been for its agreement
\VI.th Nelson. ~esearch & Development Co. Nelson is building
the new facility on the UCI campus. Nelson will occupy the
·:office and laboratory space on the top floor, and UCJ students
and faC1:1ltY. will use the labs on the ground floor.
A SllJl.:1lar town-gown arrangement will create the Beckman fLaser lnsUtute on the UCI campus, to be staffed by university
· 'Students and ~acuity: Donors for the project include Dr. Arnold
, ,,Beckman, Smith Iqine Beckman and The Irvine Co.
Such cooperative ventures are not new. The Irvine Co.
after. all, donated the land upon which)the university now sits:
But ~ the past, the symbiosis bas been missing; and recently,
relations between UCI and The Irvine Co. have been downright
tense. The company is tryin$ to change that. Its primary owner Do~d Bren, donated a milbon of his personal dollars and mo~
of bis company's money to the new university events center
which will bear his name. Nielsen's active role in the Business
and Industrial Associates is further evidence of a combined
·effort.
. C.ertainly, The Irvine Co. will profit from the affiliation. I tis
: m ~ process of developing a biomedical research complex at
the _site '?f the soon:to-be-b~ilt Irvine Community Hospital. A
designation as UCI s teachinJ hospital will add prestige to the
complex and attract top-flight research companies. That the
medical school was adamantly opposed to the site has been a
source of great te~sion bc;tween th~ company andthe university.
But The lrvi_ne Co. s comnutment to education seems at
least ~ deep as 1ts pocket. Nielsen said it is considering the
formation of a foundation to fund basic biomedical research.
Who would benefit from such a foundation? The Irvine Co ~rtainly. And the university, probably, as well as all the peopl~
1t helps support as the county'~ fourth largest C'.'flployer.
: And all of us who believe that a society thrives on
knowledge.
]~Tb.at noisy pol1ce copter
·JJJakes Costa Mesa safer
•
: To the Editor:
Let's not overdo the slaps at the
police department. The noise C.
Ricc iaretli complained about
prevented a robbery of Stater Bros.
market. according to your Police logs.
.. That chap 1s on SI 0,000 bail. It also
p.-evcnted a rape. Both of these events
can disturb our tranquility if allowed
to 10 on. Give the chaps a thank you
at least for makina Colla Mesa safer
than it was a few years ago.
R. W. POLLAK
Costa Mesa
:Angry about lobbyist cartoon
' • To the Editor:
. I'm. really u.pset with the paper
1nsenm1 a bigoted, anti.Catholic canoon in the newspaper: Yo u
hould have better sense than to allow
this type of prejudice to be pubhshed.
If you are aoina to publish this type of
stuff. then would you publish also one
that indicated a black rcprcseotauve
• as a lobbyist, a black industry that we
should know and would you alJo put
in there a cartoon representinf the
Jewi b industry that we Amencans
should know? If you were to do that
then I would say fine go ahead and
take a swipe at the Catholic church
but I know damn well you arc not
aoma to and 1 f you• re not goi 1_\l to do it
to any other type of group that has
prejudice and 1s demonstrated
aprnst, then I just don't think it is
right for your paper to go ahead and
publish this type of canoon.
~
JIMORR
Fountain Valley
1,400 guests area 't •a many
To the Editor:
Ms. Dean's column about the
Irvine Ranch Round-Up wath 1,400 aucsts sounded like a great panr.. but lhc asb the question, .. Wouldn t this
rank as the la~ t sit-down dinner in c:ounty bisto 'and the answer is no!
We at the i neyland Hotel 11ervc
teVetal dinners a year with I ,500,
2.000 or more u ts. our la t 1it0
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat .
~~ dinner havina been for 3,'400
cnucal care nurses. These meals
ranse from three to sill courses.
Enjoy your paper and Paparau.1:·
• JAMES W. COBLE
Costa Mesa
Editor· note: Mr. Co c is the
cx«Utivc banquet chd at the Di
nc_.,und Jlo~J. n1ht.im
H. L. khw-11 HI
~
I
f ..
· '\Vhen th United States aln e ta bl I he It If a nation not to b
trifled with. nation It I someUm fatal to mo1 st, then will we c se
br:lngtnghomeourdlplomatslnplece , Jn body bag. . ''PATRICK
0
U.S. mustshowterrorists
they cannottrifle with us
Attacks on our personnel won't stop-
unttl America goes on the off enstve
WASHINGTON -It was tn·
evitable that the truck-bombing of the
Beirut embassy annex would become
a subject of partisan· squabbling.
Following Tip O'Neill's lead, Walter
Mondale bas charged the Reagan
administration with a .. serious failure
of security."
Investigation will follow, as it
should. Heads may roll; and -&iven
that this is the third such security
lapse in Beirut in 17 months -
perhaps they should. Yet, ap.in,
however, we arc missina the point.
Even thouah PrcSident Reapn bean
ultimate responsibility foT the ex-
ecutive branch, he is no more per-
~~r culpa~le for diplomatic secur-
ity in East Beirut than would O'Neill
be culpable if "lslamic Jihad" man-
aged to plant a bomb in the Capitol.
Others ate-opportunistically cx-
ploitina the 'latest anti-American at-
tack to pind their old policy axes. We
must expect such assaults, we are
told, unless and until we alter our
blind. pro-Israeli 11aoce. Islamic
Jihad warned that it would make the
latest strike in retaliation for a United
States veto of a UN resolution
condemnmg Israeli occupation of
Southern Lebanon.
But, this, too, misses the {><>int.
Whether American policy is wtse or
foolish, whether it is altered or
maintained, it will always be un-
satisfactory to some murderous cle-
ment in that cauldron of bat.red the
Middle East. Neither the French' nor
Saudis can be branded excessively
pro-Israeli; yet the offices of bOth
have suffered similar attack.
To understand the source of
America's difficulty. consider the
situation of the Soviet Union. Today
Moscow is massacring Moslems by
the thousands in Afghanistan. Yet
soviet embassies are neither bombed
nor sacked; and Soviet d1plomats
operate securely in the capitals of the
Moslem world.
L.M. Bovo
The reason for this is not simply
superior Soviet security precautions.
The Soviet Union has established
, itself in the alobal jungle as a beast
you do not trifle with. KAL 007
reinforced the lesson. If you seize
Soviet diplomats1 or assault a Soviet
enabassy, th~ is common under-
standin& you are less likely to be
rewarded with a shift in Soviet Policy
than to suffer some horrible fate.
The more imPortant reason that
American diplomats are murdered
and Russians arc not is that the rcaimes which provide indispensable
sanctuary and sustenance for free.
laQoe terrorists arc, almost all of
them, Soviet client states.
The suicide bombers who hit the
Marine comPound were not pven a
free hand to plot and organize in the
zones of Lebanon occupied by the
Israelis, the Christians or the
Lebanese aovernment.~Taktng their
inspiration and cue from Tehcran, if
not their direct orders, they operated
out of that 5eetor of Lebanon con-
trolled blthe Syrians.
Syria, ibya, Iran, Iraq, and South
Yemen have all supported or co-
supponed acts of terror ap.inst West-
ern governments, or looked the other
way while terrorists cells plotted
under their control. They {>&Y no pnce
for the acts of terror camed out, yet
reap ucmendous dividends when
they succud. Wben U.S. resolve was
broken by the massacre of the
Marines. and Reagan pulled out of
Lebanon, Syrian prcsta&e soared in
the Arab world, and Haflez al-Assad
beeame the decisive factor in Lcba-
oon 's future.
So it has gone for almost two
decades.
Last year. the North Korean rca,ime
attempted the decapitation of the
South 1Korcan government and half·
succeeded in Rangoon. That atrocity
went unpunished. as dad onh Korea·~ ax-murder of two U.S. of-
Pat
Buca.ttU
ficers in the DMZ several years
before. Kim lkung ktlew be nsked
little through such terror; the capture
of the Pueblo and the downina of the
American reconnaissance plane with
31 aboard in international waters in
1969 likewtse went unpunished.
The M-19 terrorists who killed
security guards in Bogota four years
ago and held hostage 60 diplomats,
including the U.S. ambassador, flew
to Cuba with a small fortune in
ransom. Fidel Castro provided sanc-
tuary, then sent them back, armed, to
the guerrilla struggle. Castro, too,
remains unpunished.
Libyan h1t teams have operated for
years an Western Eu~; last summer
a Libyan "diplomat machine.gun-
ned a British Policewoman from a
window in the Libyan "embassy." No
retailiation ensued. Both the Ruma-
nian and Bulgarian regimes have run
assassins into Western Europe; yet.
their .diplomat.Jc relations with Lon-
don, Paris and Bona arc ucellent.
State-supPorted terror continues
because it works, because it rallies the
faithful and often produces a 'hift in
Western Policy. The states that sup-
Pon it have come to realize they have
notbina to fear from the West.
Wben the United States again
establishes itself as a nation not to be
trifled with, a nation it is sometimes
fatal to molest. then will we cease
brinsinJ home our di~lomats in
piece • an body bags. Unul that time,
we can convert our Middle East
embassies into medieval fonresses -
~ut Americans will continue to perish
an tcrronst attacks.
Patrlct f•duaa u • 1.fDdlcated
c.l•mol1t.
Japan thrives on sweet potatoes
Do you thank of sweet Potatoes
when you think of Japanese food?
Neither do I. The Ja~esc must not
care what we think. They devote 10
percent of Japan' fann plots to the'
arowina of sweet potatoes.
Q. Why lS a baseball pitcher and
catcher together called a "~ttery .. ?
A. Comes from \he militar:y. Before
the tum of the cent~·. .soldiers
rtfcrrcd to 11 as a battc~ when they
wo~ two an1llcr)• paccn totcthcr
as a unit.
onsader the lack th nooeroi.
mother 11vcs b1nh to only one calf
evtty four years. That'• not enouah.
we·rc rapidly runnina ouf of black
rhinos.
pannen. reminded them of. My
husbind and 1 tried it, but it did
nothina for u . All he wanted to talk
about was football -the Wa hinJton
Red kins ofTen i\ic line. the Un1\ier-
sity of Arkan team." •
Tho who claim to know y a
,qUArc mile of water thick with kelp 1s
wonh more than a square male of bia
timber. That much kelp reportedly scneratcs about SI Malhon I year in scafOOd and andu tnal J)f'Oducu.
h wa ristophcr Columbu,, 100.
who brOulf\t in pickles.
The United tat the ool
country 1n th rid that manufi
ture5 its paper currency wllh an anti-
bacterial qent. So could be the do11ar
bill in my pocket is gcrm-frcc. Maybe
both arc.
Those who conf4 to kfiow claim
donkey flesh as far tastier than
horsenc h. •
If you put your bram, pjoal cord
and all ncnc cells into one pile, at
would only wtilb about 3'h pounds.
In that matter of breakfast ccrals.
C\<en after all these yr.an. nothaq 11
better than com flak •
In Norway's nonhcrmost 1own,
Hammerfe t, the kids kept break n.a
$Chool windows th their year·
round 1nowblll flJht . The Janitor
stopped fl He painted three bull
on tflc IYfTI·
L.M. B• d
col•iUI I.
BUCHANAN
"CO'umnlst
J1c1
AllEISll
·-
Fear
stalks
Paris
embassy
WASHINGTON -Terrorist at·
tacks have left a miasma of fear
hanging over our Paris emba sy,
which used to be American
diplomats' favorite ~st.
The danger for U.S. personnel in
Paris is much hi&hcr than the public
has n told. r sent my associate .
Lu e Lqnado to check out rcPort.s
that had filtered back to Washinaton.
Here's what she found:
After a three-year pattern of ran-
dom attacks, embassy personnel are
edgy. The elepnt embassy buildina
on tbe Place de la Concprdc has
become a fortress reminiscent of U.S.
embassies in Saigon or Beirut. Con-
crete barriers are strat~Oy · ~s-
itioned around the buildmg; parking
is strictly forbidden near the embtisy
and passina vehicles are closely
scrutinized.
A heavy presence of French gen-
dannes and unifonned guards is in
ev1dence around the embassy build-
mg. in addition to the Marines
stationed at the entrances. Visitors
arc carefully screened and their
belongings ex.amined. .
What bas turned this f orcign
Service plum sour1 A mysterious ~oup that styles it.self as the
Lebanese Armed Revolutionary
F.actton.'' ,
Since 1981, its members have
struck repeatedly at U.S. diplomats in
Paris. Then, an a cha• of pace and
place, they began gµnnan1 for Ameri-
cans an nei&hboring couatries.
Other incidents that have cast a
chill over the Paris embassy include:
•November 1981: Chris Chap-;
man, the embassy charge d'affaires.;
was shot at and missed by an
unknown assailant as be left his home
on the way to work. The gunman was
never caught.
•Jan. 18, I 982: Lt. Col. Charles
Ray. the military attache, was shot
and killed as he left his house to 10 tO
the embassy. The Lebanese faction
claimed credit; French investiaators ·
turned ur no suspect. •Apri 3, 1982: Yacov Barsamon-
tov, an Israeli diplomat, was killed by
what Police balhstics tests proved to
be the same aun that killed Ray.
•August 1982: A bomb placed
under commercial attache Roderick
Grant's car fell off as he drove toward
the embassy. A Frcqch Policeman
was killed and another badly
wounded as they tried to defuse the
bomb, which evidently wu meant to
go off within the embassy arounds.
•March 1983: The same terrorists
tried to aswsinatc Robert Onan
Homme, the American consul-aen-
eral in Strasbourg. He survived and
remains at his PoSt.
•February 1984: Leamon Hunt, a
retired Foreign Service officer u-
sianed to bead the Sinai Peace
Kecpina Forces, was sunned down in
Rome. ~. the 1..Cbanese Armed
Revolutionary Faction claimed re-
SPonsibilitY' for his brutal murder,
and authorities esta1>lished a link
with the incidents in France.·
As for the Lc~nese Armed Revol-
utionary Faction, U.S. intclliaence ~urcet are pretty well convinced that
1t 11 no rqtaa group offanatica. but an
orgamzat1on orchestrated and con-
trolled by a national aovernment:
Syna.
Their reasoning is that only a
government would have the re-
source• for the plannina and man·
power that clearly went into the
attacks on American persopnel. ln
each case, it was obvious that the
taraeted diplomat had been under
surveillance for an extended period
-Iona enough to know the maJlest deta~ls of his working and commutina
routine .
Diplomats interviewed confessed
~at a feclina of anlliety bas seriously
diluted the heady plcasure they once
felt ove~ thdr assianment 10 the
French capital.
l•d ANe,.... I.I a •~t./
c.ltm•l•t.
-
GORDO
·GARFIELD
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
by Bil Keane
"P J littered! He threw his shoe out
the window!"
BIG GEORGE
by Jim Davls
by Virgil Partch (VIP)
I
I u 11 d
"What kind of mileage do you get?"
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson OEN IS THE MENACE
sea
"Let's go ovei It again stowty ... where do
you think you burled your bone?"
MOON MULLINS
PEA UTS
Dear Sweetheart,
What happened
to the low we shared?
..
Those hours we
spent together.
. ' ' . ~ ..
Hank Ketcham
• !7
~ t )
l
I
"! GUESS mm WHY I LIKE GINA ~E NE~R SAYS
NN'THING WHEN A SMIL.f WILL 00."
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
WE'l> ~e peopL$
FIRED WITH
~NiHUS!,ASM !
Suddenly you said
you were bored.
by Charles M. Schutz
I thought you Jiked
playing Trivia .
by Tom K. Ryan
£ T
+ K 108
ti QJ985
0 J8T4
•2
Eut
Pan
What sets the ex~rt apart from
the av.erage player ia his ability to
comb ore than one J ae of pla1
to ach v t e optimum ruvlt. ow
many Im .. can ou pot on Ulla
·d at?
Nor.fb.Sotrth hav reach d an x
eellent con1nct. ,and are atfO~
favorit.es 'even tbough the optnln1
lead has knocked out tb only entry
to dum 'a clubs. l'ou win tbe ace
of heart.a. ca•h the king of clubl and
er0$ to the qu n u W l showa
out. The 4·1 club break has put your
contract in jeopardy.
You cash th ace of clu nd trY
the •pade finesse. West ,.pjns tbe
king of pades and forces out your
remaiD.lng hurt stopper, nd you
end up iLb only eight tricks.
You have had &bominable luck in
the black suit.a. By eomblnin1 the
pos ibUity of runnin the dubs with
the a.p~de finesse, you ban given
yourself an alm L 90 percent
chance to make the contract. But
FOR BETl'ER OR FOR WORSE
···NOW ·\ POT IRE
KN\FE. f\t·.l'Fret<. INNA
GLASS UKE. DIS ···
FUNKY WINKERBEA
DR.SMOCK
HOSE IS HOSE
GOSH, t..OOK! IWO SNAKes HAVtN' A PUSH-
OP CONl~SI!
RKER
1ot1 cotlJd laa" .... evet1 Wt.
HAY• '" •potl.t dte aClditioae.I
dwlce?
At lriCk two you 1bou1d cath t'9
ace-kins of dillDODd8 and lead• 6·
PM>Qd toward tM Dine. JI &Jae ·lltit
brub 8-3. or if Eut ttarted .mt.
two hoDC>n doublitton u ia die cue a..r.. JOU have Mt up tile Dine of
diamond• ia d,mmy. If Oae
diamonds don't behave, you have
given up nothiq. You eara ittlll r.'
after the dubl and lf tlile1 doil't
rwl. try t"-1pade nne.e. But 11
the cards lie, JOU will get home with
one pade triclt. two Marti and
three trickt lo each minor tuft.
You have given 1ourself abou\~'
pereeot additional chance for 7our
contract. T)lat doea not toUDd Ute
much, but bear in mind that cuinos
make millions every year with Ids
of an edge.
.:: by Lynn Johnston
by George Lemont
by Pat Brady
• •
All Ortnge Co t DAILY PILOT/ThurSday, 27, 1984
l' ( ..
• 11· • -
Warning~ The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette. Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
,
)
,~B@ :ating
r~~ , , -. ---~ ~ --'-
lllllJ NII THURSDAY
ANN~
TYUITlllGI ..
BUSINEH• ~. •.r ~-~:~ .. __ !:._ __ ..:. --~~-· = -
Olympic Finn trial ~uling fester$
' l
Dire t f 1 g U. l • t d what he caJled "one of tile most i> cuccs have gone unprotested and ~hlch could 1 kc t 1mon) from all willing io '1JbsUtutc lhtirOWDJudl· c. or 0 ra c n n on se s recor unfortunate and expensive prottsts in unpenalized in club or clau racing is witnessts, provide for cross-cxamin-mcnt for Che JU1)''5, even dtoulb they
Straight, on Silvestri disqualification the h!story of yachting." • no re~son . ror auo~ins them in ui9n bY. the pana • weigh au 1bc adn·1 be.rd and couldn't hw'au t1ae
By ALMON LOCJUBE\'
Dellr ........... WrlW
The controversial disqualification
of Russ Silvestri from the Finn Class
·Olympic trials for a ··aross breach of
good sportsmanship" threatens to go
down in yachtin1 annals ~s a decision
comparable to the long count in the
Demsey. Tunney fight.
Silvestri was thrown out of the
trials for deliberately starting early in
the final race in order to hamper John
Bertrand, the only sailor capable of
beating him for the Olympic berth.
In a re(>'.Ort to the membership of
the United States Yacht Racing
U nioR (USYR U), govemina body for
that sport, Tom Ehman. executive.
director, has come up with some
observations to "set the record
straight on behalf ofUSYRU and our
sport."
Herc arc Ehnian's co.JJM4,ents on
"First and foremost, dehbcratcly Olympic tnals, c •pcctally when we evidence and render a proper de.-evadcn<ie.
infrin&ing a racina rule in order to know they will not be permined in the asion. ··Fourth, tht Jury acted properly
pin an advantaae overanother yacht Olympics. . "iSubseQ.uem review procccdi and responsibly in CJJT}'Ull OUl its
1s, in and of itself, a breach of good •'Third, the right of appeal from the under Anicle 14 of the :USYR .duucs. Thereputation.ofitsmembers
sponsmanshiP.. The jury found that Olympic tnals was properly denied bylaws and lhe U.S. OJr.mpic Com· bas been unfairly ~ bY :faltc
Russ Silvestn deliberately infrinjcd under Rule 1. 7. This had been clcarl) mittcc constitution hould have con· accusations, rumors and m1sinf'orma·
Rule 51. l(b) in the last race of the tated in the notice of' rqatta and sidcred only 1wo thmgs: Whether the lion. The claim that prior lO Race 10
Finn Olympic trials. It properly sailing instructions. and c1;.cryone jucy follo~"Cd procedural rules in the jury pve YRU Case 78 to
applied IYRU (International Yacht knew it aoin& in. The best poss1bJe rcnchin_gitsdccision, nd\\1\ethcr.thc Bertrand {and not to Silvestri) bn
Racing Union) Case 78 and Russ was juries were chosen. Tiie s1x Mio JUI')' a'U art>JtrafY or .capric:1opus. been disproved and :ublequently
disquaUfled from the series. · ~rved on the Finn-470 jury were all .. No review lbbard found that the · recanted. "Sc~ond. USYRU is obliied to run ccnif!ed US~RU JUd&tS, and fo~ Jut)' had failed !<> follow th~ racing .. Fifth, Racing Ruic ~9 is defic1e.n1.
the tnals to the standard . of the were intemat1onal Judges. rules ot that the Jury was atb1trary or 1t bould be made eXDlicitv clear tha1
Olympics themselves. That certain'• "The jury was the only forum capricious:_ Unfortinate.ly. some were (Pleue eee SIL~TIU/82)
:1 O clubs head Stars
vie at
BCYC
for Big Boats
22 entries to fly
southland burgees
off San Francisco
By ALMON LOCJUBEY
.,.., ........... Wrltef
Twenty-two boats from Southern
California -four from Newpon-
Beach -are amona the 71 entries
startina competition Sunday in St.
Francis Yacht Club's Big Boat ScriC$
on breezy San Francisco Bay.
The -Big Boat Series, formally
known as the St. Francis Perpetual
series, is -0ne of the most colorful
yachting events on the West Coast
with contenders battling strong winds
and sometimes even stronger tidal
current! in a five-race series for five
pcrpctUal trophies.
BufJCCS of 10 Southland clubs will
be Oymg from the spreaders of the
22yacbts that have made the Iona
voyaic to the Bay Arca for the series.
Balboa Yacht Oub will field three
boats -John Aren's Tomahawk.,
Lido hosts §f:~\i!'IT'~ }:0.0kay, and Ted
Newport Harbor Yacht Club will
· be tepresented by two yachts -Aleta,
8 debuts skippered by Warren Hancock, and
Free _enterprise~ with J:?ick ~llinger at
the helm; Bahia Connthian Yacht
Flv9 ~and three aallboata
are maldno their West coast
dltiUt m the LldO In-the-Water
Paw« and Wboat lhow at Lido
~through Sunday.
Oub will be represented by Hal Day's a ...... a ..... out to weather on a trapeze to k.....m boat up"""'ht can be ezhaaa..a ...... Wintcrhawk. • ....... ....._ -~r •..-..._
F•tured wtn be the Spaailah-
bultt ketch, the BeltloUl'•50: the
fr••h-out-o f-t he-mo Id
Eraon-32 from lrvtne; a new
Hllt1el'M motor yacht meaaurtng
at43,_: the n9W SHverton-U
frOm F1oridj, and the Wellcraft
EXcallburoo42 Inboard-outboard.
The Show II tepu!ed to be the
latgeat no.ting cotlectlon Of new
tt In the West, 1'rJngtng
~ acme of the country's
mo.t d•tlnctJve big boeta plus
eome unique de.tgna from lnter-
natlOnal bultdet1.
· "The dlVet'81ty thta year wtll
af>pelM to all a~s of the
boatlnO community, rrn:todlng thOM looking for a daysaJler,
tender or Inflatable," uld Don-
o.I\ Mclntoah, producer, Who
alee> II Pft!Hnttng 8 wide aefec;o
tlon of Mrftt..oultOm aportttahera
Md conwrtlblli. .:
Admillk>n tt $5 for adulta, $2
for Chhdten 6-1~. amt children
Under e '*· enloQla avaJtable ~ ln:tftf Newport a.cti cttY lot off
iTulttn Avenu. abOV9 Pacftk:
Colllt HIGhwiY With a tree Shuttle to the allow~ frOm 11 a.m. to
luMet today Md Frtday and 10
m. to euneet thll WMkend.
PAPARA ZZI
California Yacht Club at Marina
del Rey bas five entries, includina two
"maxis" -Jim Kilroy .. s Kialoa and
Jacob Wood's Sorcery. Others arc
Camouflage, Maurice Brctzfield~ In·
satiable, Tom ArmstronJ; Pen-
dragon, John MacLaunn, and
Stalawag. \John Kilroy Jr.
Other Southland contingents will
be from CabriJlo Beach. Del Rey,
Long Beach. LOs Angeles, San Diego
and Santa Barbara yacht clubs.
Who says it's a breeze
to sail aboart{y_acht?
In addition to the St. Francis Crewmen use more stamina
=~:!h~':i~~:f!i(~27~"sr1c!~~ ·than a pro football player
the ot~er trophies are the City of~an Yacht racing.
Francisco Perpetual for yachts rauna · thl · 39 to 53 feet under the International Is at an a cue
Offshore Rule (IOR) measurement spory,anoutdoor~
formula· the Atlantic Trophy for rcauon, a social
yachts ~tins 34 to 38.9; the Keith-event, drunken o~
Kilborn Trophy, 32 to 33.9, and the abo~!? none of e Richa~ Rheem Memorial for 30 to Jn some rcspe:ctS
. ALMON
l.OCKAB£Y 32.5 raungs. it mi&ht be con-
The Big Boat Series is conside~ sidercd 1 little of all •••II•••••••• one of the grut spectator yachuna of the above. Take
events on the West Coast as athletics· ~ousands of landlubbers a~d yacht-DcPending on the type of boat one is sailing, yacht
tng buffs gather ato~a the City Front racina takes as much smngth, stamina and mental
shore to watch the b1a yachts tack and con<ientration as the most rugged sport.
jibe like so many dinghies. The late Don Vaughn, a 6-foot-6, 200-pounder who
This will be the first year that the played professiotial football before be ~e a ~wman
big tnaxis will compete as a class. In on large offshore yachts, often descnbed workin1 the
addition to Kialoa and Sorcery there foredeck of a bi& yacht in heavy weather as more smnu<?us
Will be Sumner A. (Huey) Lona's 81-than pro football. yaugb.n d.J:opped d~d while working
foot Ondine from Larchmont, N .Y.; such ilattdeck dunng a ra<ie m the Caribbean. .
George Coumantaros's 81-foot Born-While Ailinf the Transpac on the 72-f~t Windward
merana. New York; Bob Bell's Con-Passaae in 1969, helped hoist Peter Girbaru to the top of
dor, Bermuda, and Nirvana, skipper the9().footmastandthendownthc~dstayw~ereheheld
unknown, Australia. on by one foot and one hand while cutuna away a
Cabbage roll
stuffed with
peace wish
"We're all Rid mg on the Same Space Ship," Bad•y
Ebtea'1 unique contribution to the Stuffed Cabbaae ApPr:eci~tion Society, wiJI pl~ya part i';l international
politics 1fthe veteran entertainer has his ~ar. .
splnnaker that hid bcOOme hopelessly wrapped durina
heavy wind and~ Then it was back to the mastbCad and
down to the d~hcre we carried him, bruited and
eXhausted to bis bunk. The next day Garbani volunteered
to climb to the outboard end of the SJ>innaktt pole and re-
rcave a auy that was badly chafed.
In covering l 2-meter races during the America's Cup.
I have seen crewmen sprawled exhausted on deck after
workina the bicycle winches during a furious taCkina duel
of more than 30 tacks.
And who hasn't seen the ski~per and crew of a 22'h-
foot Star boat hangina on the rail· with their knees with
their bodies almPst out in the water to windward to keep
the boat on its feet on a beat?
Working the bicycle winches on a bi& maxi bOa.t while
tacking sometimes talc~ the strenitb and endurance of
four strong men-not to mention the tailer-in perpetual
motion before the bif genoa jib is trimmed.
Single-banded Finn S&ilon (a 16-foot boat) have been ~own to retire from the sport with bad knees and backs by
the age of 30 after years of •bi1cina-out" with ~eir ~oes
booked in hilcina straps so they could throw l;ll .lhc:ir ~t
out to windward to keep the boat from cap$1.ZlDI dunng a
breeze. And who hasn't seen the crews of speedy cawnarans
hanging out to weather o.n a trapeze secured to tbe
masthead to keep the boat upriaht1? They don•t ilways
succeed and wind up takina an untimely bath.
(Pleue eee YACBT/112)
...,_
Ebsen 's sona in part says .. the world is like a big
round cabbqe stuffed with aoOdies out of every land, so
let's not destroy it, let'senjoy it, help each other to
undentand."
Hiuona. intioduced at the first Stuffed Cabbage
RollofTlast year in Laguna Beach, has since been
translated into many langua'es includina Russia~
o.lr ............ ...,, ...
Ebsen 1ena the son,a ~ SaturcSay niaht as Vla
Jori• ... was crowned Kina Cole JI before about 300 at
theOranaeCoast YMCA·s benefit for the Family Crisis
Center. Eblen also played a tape rccoroina of his ong
bcina sunain Ruu11n -rock style.
"This tape is beinamailed to the White House;•
Ebsen said "with a requ t to PrcSident Rcqan that he
pla)' it when he meets with the Soviet leaders:• (The idea
behind the OreatStufftd C_.bbqc Roll<'ffis to cncourqepeopleofdiff~tcthnicblclc&ro~ndsand
cultures to learn to apprcctatc and respect their
ditrercncts.) ~
The cabbage roll competition this year was won b}
Ute Italian entry ofll• Dele and his fiancee GretdM!m
lnllnmu (no date tct). Dale owns and opcRtCS th
Vila,.Nova RcstaW'lnt in Newport Beach and as
president of the Ncwpon Harbor Arca Cham rof
Gommercc.
Jlm Dale wu named aaper cabb&Ce-stufferatroll-off•
Sblrley Prankel modeled
fm donated for aactloa.
....................... Second lace went to ltlm C.tum, L:Qguna Halls,
for Irish Cab e1tt>ftsand third plate winncrw s Bad.elf Bbea ~ Ille ''Same Spece 81alp"
~for Kint Cole U Vin Jorteneen. ApetLa11lo, osta Mesa. Hungarian roll .
.,,,
Invttattonal race
will h!ghllght
crews· contests
Hi&hligbt of yachtin& activity in
Ncwpon Beach this wcekcDd Yfill be
out of Bahia Corinthian Yacht Oub
where Star Boat sailon from throU&b·
out the Southland will compete over:
ocean oourses Saturday and Sunday
in the BCYC Star Invitational. The
22'12-f oot Star boat is one of the
lntemation.al Olympic dasset.
Voyqers Y acbt Oub will be host to
Performance Handicap R.aci.na F1ttt
(PHRF) sailors m the Southern
California champ\onShip for the class
Saturday and Sunday.
Udolsk¥acht0u~willconduc:ta
reaaua for sailors over 30 at lbc helm of Sabou and Lasers, Saturday.
PHRF sailors not competiDJ in the
ChampiollShip series are inVJted by
Dua Point Yacht Oub to participate
in the Oceanside Arpy Saturday
and Sunday. The tlcct will sail from
Dana Point to Ooomsidc Saturday,
and after-a ni'&ht ofJcweb y tat: ~r-
to Danaftilnt on Sunday.
L6cal International Offshore Rule
(IOR) skippers and crews will find
plenty 'o{ action off Long Beacb
Saturday and Sunday as Long Beach ~acbt Oub hosts the Southern Cali-
fornia Ocean R.aci.rig Association
(SCORA) chJmpionsbtp.
Yacht.tmen who did not get enouah
of Eiuenada in the Ncwport-to-
Enscnada race last spriog can whoop
it up at the popular Baja reson
fonowmg Souihwcstem Y.acht Oub'1
invitational ·race from San Dieco to
EnSenada staning Friday. The race is
invitatiow.· to PHRF, IOR. South-
western Handicap and San Diego
Handieap rat:inss.
Southern california Yachung ~·
sociation calendar:
IM Aqeles-1.Aq Beada
Cabrillo Beach Yacht Oub -
Ma.ri:ncland race (CabJillo Series No.
5). Saturday; Fall One -desian
Series. Sunday. :Little Ships A.eet -Invitational
Series No. 2. Saturday. Lona Beach Yacht Oub-SCORA.
Championshi~ Saturday, Sunday.
(PleUe eee RACA/82)
Bany A.nae pwe 1IP aowa
after. ytm-loat ~-
ber 27. 1984
Clipper Cup a warded
to U.S. White Team
Come-fl'lon1-behtnd effort in Hawaii and Exador. After ~cu\& the fleet f dt
the first four races, the New Zea·
landcn lost their first place to the U.S.
t m after Eudor was dismastcd in
the final Around the tate of Hawaii
def eats Ne'Y Zealand pace-setters
By ALMON LOCK.ABEY ...................
Another Pan Am Oipper Cup
Series. sailed bienni•tly in Hawaii, is
histOf'}. and hclpins to make that
bi tory 11.S the U.S. White Team
coosisting of John Arens• F~n-s l
Tomahawk. Balboa Yacht Club;
Camoullaac1 ~ Frtr$M owned by Al race.
Schulz.· :ffioacn Hill t and Oleck-C.Ompletina the U.~. fleet. the Red
mate, Monte LlVinanon•s Team of Anhur Emil's Pctenon·SI
Petenon-SS from Del Rey Yacht Anemis; Tom Walinski's Farr-40
Oub. . · General Ho pita!, Honolulu, and
The u.,s. W,lukTcamaCC"Umula~ Sidewinder. a Reicbet-Puah-43,
2,21 l pomts tD a come-from4>eh1nd • owned by Charles Short. San Fnn-
perf'ormance over New 7.ealand's cisco, and Wayne Willenbera's
"A" team of Shoclcwave, Sundance Nelson-M.arek-41 Revenge, from
Rancho Palos Verd~ finished third
overall.
USYRU executive
Ehman to q~it pOst
The Blue Team of Irvina Loube's
Feiit-46 Bravura. Oakland; Monroe
Wi111atc's Peterson-42 Scarlett
O'Hara, Oakland, and Larry
Hlt'\lcy's Nelson-Marclt-49 Brooke
Ann, Palos Verdes. ended up in ninth
pla<ie overall .
. , TOtn Ehman, United States Yacht Aeclna •.JUnlon (U8YRU) The bif news comina out of this
executive director. wilt leave the ~ton he1
..... held llrtCe 1979 In ~~~~ 0~fpeb~,; ~u~~n~~!;
November to become executive c:U...ctor of Amerioa II IYndlcate FtcrS*80 Boomerang in the six-boat
Whlchf8ch81Jengfngtorthe 1987 Amerlca'1CUJ>onbtlhaltoftheNew .. maxi .. fleet (yachu 7S feet and
York Yacht Club. lonaer). Boomerana beat Jim Kilrofs
USVRU is the governing bocty Of the .port and .U locel yaicht Holland-81 Kialoa which, according
clubs are afffllated wfth It. to ~pons, prompted Kilroy to call for
In his new rote Ehman wHJ c:oordnate the llCtMtlea ot lhl some redcsi&ninA of his latest Kialoa.
syndicate from an ofJioe ln NeWpOr:t. R.t.. Amerioa A'a atate9'de • K.tlroy;from £i Segundo ((onnerly
home port. • Newpon Beach) is not accustomed to
· 1n announcing Ehman'a resignation, USYRU Pfllldlut CfMICk beina beakn for line honors in most
ober of Long Beach Mid: "Tom hat~ a Wtlll IOle, ~ races. In this ycar•s Around the State a...... • .... ..-. d -~usvAU race Boomerang broke Kialoa's morethananyotherlndmvuaJ, .. ," .. µnp....w._.. elapsed time record for the 775-mile
enjoys today. We wfll mla him, but the IPOf1 ... contll• to benlllt circuit with a new mark of 3 da)'!. 22
from the momentum lle has bUllt. '' • boun, 34 minutes, 5.S seconds. It was
"This hu been I vert dlfflcult declliot.,'' Ehmltt tokt KOblr. little consolation to Kilroy that 4'The last 5~ years with t.JSYRU haw beet'\~. ctlel1nglng Md K.ialoa as ruDller-up also beat her old rewarding. What haa made It ""8t II the ~ -our dedicated record by Is minutes.
VOlunteera and fine staff." Kilroy, incidentally, is the United
SILVESTRI CASE •••
From Bl
yachts which are materially p~ju
diced by unsponsmanlike conduct of
others arc entitled to redress. An
addition to Rule 69 for the 1985-88
racing rules bas been drafted and is
under considerauon.
"While most agJU that the equities
lay with John Bertrand, some believe
the jury stretched the rules in granting
him redress. It was a tough call and
the jury struggled with It Tor days -
doing m the end what they thought
was proper and JUSt.
/ "Sixth, USYRU Article 14 and the
\ USOC constitution need clari-
RACES ... From Bl ·
Santa MOD.lea Bay
California Yacht Club -5
O'Oock Bell race (Harris Series No.
4), Saturday.
King Harbor Yacht Club -Catch
Mc Who Can Race (inverted start)
Saturday. _
Pacific Manners Yacht Oub -
Man-Woman Scncs, Sunday.
Su Dleao
Southwestern Yacht Oub -In-
vitational Enscnada 'race, starts Fri-
day.
Silver Gate Yacht Oub-Rorison
Scnes, Saturday.
' Oceanside Yacht Oub -Jessup
Series.. Sunday.
San Diego Navy Salling Oub -
Monthly Handicap race, Sunday.
Mission Bay Yacht Club -Fall
Senes. Sunday.
Norda and llalud
fication. This he~tofo~ untested (for
the Olympics) grievan<ie procedure
~uired the Amateur Sports Act of
1978 must be carefully studied and
amended in context of the racing
rules.
"Seventh, Russ Silvestri is an
excellent sailor who bas been unfairly
criticized by some. It seems obvious
that Silvestri believed be was per-
mitted to start early in order to assu~
being able to cover Bertrand. He had
seen other sailors do il He was
assured by others that it was perfectly
alJ ri&bt.
"He even told the newspapers in
advance that be might do it. He
deliberately infringed a racing rule,
but apparently had no idea that a
deliberate infringement is gross un-
sportsmanlike conduct., and thcrefo~
grounds-fOt""disqualificatioo from the
senes. Had he realized that, and at is
easy to understand why be didn't, he
would not have gone ahead with it.
"Jt should also be noted that
Silvestri. when the final decision was
handed down, showed true sports-
manship in offerina to help Bertrand
t.nun during the few days left befo~
the start of the Olympics." Ehman wound up bis. ~port wiltr
the observation that "we must strive
for more unifotm application and
enforcement of the rules at all levels.
"Most sailors don't want referees
on the water, and we arc proud of our
sport's self-policmg tradition. But for
it to work, everyone must be usina
and enforcing the same set of rules.
There canru>t be a 'common law'
differing from the written rules and
appeals."
States Yacht RacinJ Union (USYRU) Team Committee chair-
man. He praised team captain Ben
Mitchell of California Yacht Oub for
putting together Jtlahly qualified and
well-organized teams for this year's
OipperCup.
In its sbon history, the Oipper Cup
bas established itself as one of the
International otrshorc Ruic (IOR)
racing's most prcstisious events. This
' year's series brought 64 boats from
around the world to compete in three
27-mile ocean triangle raocs off
Waikiki. a windward-leeward race of
1 SO miles along the coast of Molokai,
and the 775-mile Around the State
race.
The crew of Bob Bell'• 82-f oot Condor.
com~ba the BICBoatSerlesSanday ln
S8n F: nclseo, will defend thecatlfonlla
CuponOct.18offMarlnadelRey.
SIX 'MAXIS' COMING
F~stest, classiest yachts vie
head-t9-head for Cal Cup
Southern California yachting buffs will have an
opportunity see a half-dozen of the biggest, fastest and
classiest world racing yachts in some head-to-head racing
offMarinadel ReystaningOct. 18 when the .. maxis"
come to California Yacht Oub for four day~ of match
racing on Santa Monica Ba)'.
The "maxis," f~sh fr the Pan Am ClipperSencs
in Hawaii will be racing in St. Francis Yacht Club's Bia
Boat Series on San Francisco Ba) starting Sunday and
will bead south for the Cal Cup immed1atel) following
that classic.
CYCCommodore Millard Rosing said four of the
bag gold-platers are already signed for the C,al Cupnnd
"I
II..
twomorearec pected. .
:rhosenlreadysigned forthescnesa~Jim Kilroy's
Ron Holland-81 !Kialoa,'"\.\hich calls CYC its home port;
Jake Wood' new Gary Mull-~2. Sbrcery, also home
be rt he<\ at CYC; George Coumantaros ·German
Frers-81, Boomerang. out ofNew York Yacht Club, and
Hue> Long's8 l-footer0ridine, Larchmont, N.Y.
Also expected arc Bob Bell's Ron Holland-81,
Condor, Royal Bermuda Yac.ht Club, and the AustralilU'f
81 -footcr 'mana. Condor\\ on the I 982Cal Cup and is
the elapsed llmc record holder in the Sydney. Australia-
to-Hoban, Ta m nia. race
ThcCaJCupformatcall~fora fleet race on the first
day,afte-rwb1ch the ~achb will be paired for match
racing. The top two an the match racing will meet in the
final race for .the Cal Cup. '
Mui yachts arc in the 72-82 foot length overall range
and carry crew ofl S to 25.
Anacapa Yacht Oub -Anacapa
Island Series No. 3, Saturday.
C trnnel Islands Yacht Oub -
Oakley PrcdJctcd Log race, Saturday;
ladies at the Helm Sencs No. 3, Drag boats
go for record
Water skiing behind a sailboat?
like ell.Ung behind a rej(Ular power boat." The completely
trallerable 25 With ·~Cloue &ft cabin accommodates four.
Sunday. ·
Santa Barbara Sailing Oub -
San&le-bandcd race, Sunday.
Westlake Yacht Oub-Fall Regat-
ta, Sunday.
Thrills and spills of drag boat
racina.are scheduled for Irvine Lake
this weekend when the 20th annual
Nationals will brina together boats
from all over the U.S. and Canada to
compete in a six-race competition
created to establish official world
records.
A dozen blown fuel panicipants arc
exJfected, alona with a large fleet of
fuel and alcohol boats. Also featured
will be circle racina in K-Boat.s, Pro
Comps. Crackers and Mod V.Ps.
Gates open at 7 a.m. each day.
Admissions arc SI 0 on Friday, S 12 on
Si1turday and $14 on Sunday. Kids
under 12 years old will be admitted
free with parents.
•
1
FUEL DOCK I NOW OPEN
COMPUTI MAllNI
lllVICI
1, ez-nattonal water akttna champ Joyce Phelpe puts lt,
•-Ung .behind Lancer'• new 25-foot Powenaller la 0 jut
Figueroa 'S 'cat' champ
An ability to read the wind shifts with amazing
consistency paid off for Enrique Figueroa of Puerto Rico
who won bis tint Hobic-16 national championship in
breezy regatta otflslc of Palms, S.C.
The title represented a new level for Fisucroa who is
a two-time national champion and one-time world
champion in Hobic-14s.
The wind played havoc with the racing durina the
wcck-lonaevcntand buried other top skippers deep in the
pack. Jeff Alter of Capistrano Beach, a former world
champion in the class, fared no better than foUrth.
Runner-up was Keith Christensen of Long Beach
who still had a chance to beat Figueroa in the final race if
he could put five boats between himself and the winner.
As a result of this, the stan of the final race was a ten e
affair which saw six gene_ral recall nd two post-
ponements. When the race finally did get oft F.sgueroo
stuck to Christensen and covered him on even t c
Christensen wns unable to put an) boats in front of
Figueroa and they finished fourth and fifth respecu-.cl •
Alter, a pre·race favon1c and threc~time .n tlonal
champion, tq,ok the first race of th~ finals.
Long Beach
sailboating
expo grows
Foreign builders.
--
..
'
~LP_ Y ~u~~~~F -~ _
Certain athletes r-~nning into iron· deficienc
Alberto Salazar's scary story draw
world attention to nutritional disorder
Albcrt.2..S laiar.nev_er meant io bc.:a
auinea pig, a cnfice to medical
advance, But the proud runner has
focused attention on a nutritional
di~order that hits millions of our
healthie t people, plus a lot of poor
kid . His scary tory preed among
world-cla s alhletcs at the Olympics,
and the media passed it along to the
world. So nutntion researchers are
5truggling 10 explain the trange form
ofiron deficiency that hit Salazar, one
that seems to be tngcl'ed by exercise.
On March 3, Salazar expected to
break his own 10,000 meter world
record at the Continental Homes race
in Phoenix. He. generally does what he
SAY' he'll do. The weather was fine,
the course fla~ lhecompct1t1on kceri.
But Salazar finished eighth. The
results were so baffiing to the u ually
stoio runner that he poured out his
frustrations about his physical tatc
on national television.
He hadn't slept well in more than a
year, he said. He was listless, irritable
and, wont of all. he was laboring
under the aerobic demands of just
ordinary running.
••rm at a loss to explain why I'm
not running well," he said.
Watching the broadcast a thousand
milesawayan Vancouverwasthew1fe
of Or. Dou$ Clement, a physician to
the Canadian Olympic team and
somethina of an c:llpert in iron
dcfic1ency . .Li~-c w1lh iron dHk1ency, riskincaspcdat kind ohrondcfiam. btt the blood' htmoetobi
you know iron deficient), and !he cy that afrtc:ts no other •lblew!I h •'here about 70 perccn1 of u 1ut
recognized the 5) mptoms. When may come from the pbuodl~ of lhcir nd the hvrr. 'J>lttn and bone
Ocmcnt came home that afternoon fec1,say1Clemc:nt.A1faras11known, marrow. rondcfi~DC) onlylca<hto
from a road tnp with the Canadian ndonn'lafftcuwimmenandbiurs. anemia-ananuallOMofaronmlbc
-.C)'.clina,1cam. hii.wifc.dcscribed v.bat~...,rQom>..va. it cSoesn•i Show up on lu:mo&lobm -.In.JU 11ic ,,,,,.,, The
she bad seen and hrard on that ordinary blood sesu that dw:ck aron dCticXncy of Salazar and man)
afternoon's telecast ~obin c:ounu beaUle 1t 1s 1ron olben is an an 1d1ous form that "I reacted immediately," said Ole· deficiency wtuch hasn't yet become depletes from the inside out, upping
ment, a reserved, careful man who is anemia. Ahbouah researchers aren't the fcmun, or ltoD stol'OI. Jn the
co-director al the University of sure exactly how this phenomeAOn body•1 orpn1 and '1onc malTQw,
British Columbia's Spciru Medicine oc:cu~ thert 1s mcrea ina evuSence of while leav&nl lhe hemoaJobin 1nw:t
Clinic ... , just had to call his coach one thfna: h 11 present in a very larac The usull ll a bod> that dOC$n'l
and 5C:'e if he had been given a special number o( our fit popolat1on. And ·recover quickly from cxem
blood test. This type of iron dcficicn-althQu&b thi1 type of non problem · So peopk who cxerQSCfrequcntl~.
cy is such a simple tbi~ and it can may aft'ea only runners and walkers. and not Just marathoners, become
cause so many problems. ' iron deficiency 1s lhouaht 10 be more •nd more exhausted •11ilc their
What type of!iron deficiency'! How «pidemic throupout the wotld bodies slip anto an achanocd state of
did salazar the fastest marathoner in Tite whole fitness boom ma):'. have d151'Cpau. What happens? Salazar can
'the world, fall victim to iron deficien-crca\Cd a JPOpulauon ofiron-dc!ficaent tell you: cxba\lstaon, ~ and
cy, a condition generall)' associated JJC9pl~ Cement believes. lt may be eventual IDJUJ'Y, even sf the problem
with women? It turns out, say ~I pins our aerobics, but it has added ~·er becomes ise~:erc enough to
Clement and other rcscarchersr that :to the iron problem. cause dinical anemia. •
millions of runners and walkers are In normal people, iron shuttles Whv docs lhis problem oluue onl)
"
Tot Sltlllr, iron pp 1lllr
atttadrbeen filled the only y at CIA
-\\'ltb imore U'On. tnce b11 snum fcmtan turned out to be l~. he was
given a daily tron u~ment The-•
re,suhs were ammedi&ie: Sat.anr's
depres ion vanHhcd, U'alniqs be..; r--
camc easicr and so did leepsna.Most
amponant, the marathon wodd«-
oord bolder returned to fine form -
although not &ood cno~ 1lO win the
marathon t the. Olympu:s.
If you uspcct mm dcfiocnq,
aoctors reoommcnd that you ha~
ICfUJ11 femtin test. Don'il attempt to
treat suspected iron <ldicienq your-
If.
Amerlcu H"ldl MapdDe Sen1ce
.
Lecture leaves 'Death race' idea a grave.mistake
DEAR ANN LANDERS: For the
last several years. a barbaric practice
has bccngomgonat our local high
school.It is called the death race.
Instead of~dually working
1oward physical fitness, the tnalc
students, on the first day ofbasket-
ball, arc subjected to the death race. A
course is set around lhc gym and
through hallways and the boys run for
mort than an hour without a break.
Pails and wastebaskets are placed at
intervals forthe boys who must
vomit. Many boys run to the point of
exhaustion and sicknes~. Many quit
after that first day, frightened by pain
and failure.
Since the coach is revered by male
school officials who find the race very
macho, there is little we parents can
do. Can yoo help? Please speak on this
issue. We don't know anyone with
Alt11
I.AIDERS
your pawerwhocan bnngan end to
this madness. -A DISTRESSED
MOTHERANOFATHERIN
FARGO,N.D.
DEAR MOTHER AND FATHER
INF ARGO: I called Doa Detuae,
priDclpal of Far10 North Hlda School.
He said, "rve aever beard of t1U1 ao-
called deatb race. Can't imadne what
it's aboaL CertaiDly aothlna like that
goes on here at Fargo Nortll. Sounds
to me a1 lf someone ls tl')'lDI to 1tJr ap
a Uttle ml1cblef."
Next, I called Oak Grove Hip and
spoke wltb tbe Hf.!rlntendeat, Jerry
Gordoa. Be iald, 'Tlll1 l1 a La&Jaeraa
bl1h achool and there 11 very little
l'UJllllDI tltroap t•e balls on uy day.
Tiils story 1oud1 a bit farfetcltff to
me."
Bretber Bet1old, priDclpal of
SbanleJ Wp, was oat of towa, so I
spoke wltll tlm Olsoa, teu11 a.ad
a11l11Ut basketball coacll.
Olsoa aald, "Nothl.Dg like &Jaat w
ever bappaed at Slauley. Tll11 ls a
CatboUc acHC>l, yoa bow. A.Dy coad
wbo wolld 1abJect Ills 1hdeats to
sacb bntallty Uoold be drammed
oat of &tie acbool 1y1tem."
So -a boaqHt of poison lvy to die
darllng person wllo clrumed ap tills
booby trap. Yoaaeedabobby. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: The
medical student who can't handle her speechless .. feminist" nurses needs to shape up
before he faces a malpractice sun for
shoddy patient care. He should be
&ladthatanurse'sfirstobliptionisto Ev.y once In ~ I tNrlk
fookoutforthcpaticnts'welfarc,not mothell llQ.llCI go IW'oUah ttlllr
lhe ph)"ician'sego. ~Of tpMcfm .8ftd toes OUI
Example: A physician nearly sent II thoee dwt 1don"t won~
me home for'~ust a miaraine' Parentm 1ectunJ1 .... 911y-
(actua1Jy a lcak.inf aneurysm) but tbe 111w-. .... n..o.. beconle ot..ollete nurse talked him mtoadmitt1name. I ..... _.., · 1
' 'IW7·
owemylifetothatnurscforhavina Kkll°':~~-~-~,.~:-~·~•~::OO~l~l:ll•••········ the'C<>urage and prof cssionalism to , -1 intervene on my behalf. And thank IWhln the ldde redte It ~ ·wlh
God the physician had lhe in-lO"· K'a llme to phe8e It out.) And f8C8 ttt Some of 9*" don, work.
tclligcnce and humility to li5ten to ~w laet It.
her. -ALIVE ANO WELL BE-TM 1J1 II ctt th8t ,_,.,worked for rMW. ""hil ,.,_ allcad JOU
CAUSEA"FEMINISr'NURSE ~much,butl'm~?now." Acttlllly.lput•lotoflllJI .. .....
WASTHERE lectUre. My I~ llumped, ,.,,, ~ ---... .....
DEARA.ANDW.:Yovletterila ~lcMd.l~~lt.drlGDlna ..... thelOar
trlbetetoaanesenrywMrewllo,.t Md coming to,.. on a kitchen ctm ..... l-lfied'9d ""noee tltepatient'swe~~!lnt.Bleuyoa. tleale. I'd ftrlllh the ptww off with, 0 P.IHll uiu out IM~
DEAR ANN LANDERS: This old before It attacks U9," or 0 819y oft the pf)olle unt1ttaedoctal'mM1M
Post ..:op pain unnecessary_ man of three score and ten read with With my test realts.'' It lhould haW ~ tttem to...., bul n newr
greaMt intethrest tOnhe let~er f!Hom "Soaedp for did.
My i OU In tano. e want Anothet orii that .... toe.I Wop ...... Ne¥s mnt. n do •
youtosuacstsomcsubstitutcsfor ~" w frOm _''Gull s.n..a...·· FdllMll Of ... .., It , the most commonly used cuss words. • •• , .-
You came up witb somcdoozies but for~ 10 It""* have.._.. rrt1 dlllwy. WI ...... ' DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: If I
ever need another operation, I'll ask
my doctor to make a promise not to
let me suffer so much after the
surgery. Last month I had a
cbolccy5tectomy with wme com-
plications. A stone got cauaht in one
of the bile ducts.
But it wasn't the operation that
bothered me as much as the past-
operativc pain. I'd almost have to beg
the nurse to t;d me medicine to rontrol iLShe lhe d0<:tor•s order
to "give me a bot" as often as
necessary. The trouble was she was
allowed to make the decision: as the
suffering patient I had nothina to say
at all. Except ask for the medicine.
I wonder if most surgeons realize
how much unnecc sary pain their
patients undergo after surgery. Don't
you think doctors should be more
specific in their orders? Shouldn't the
nurse be told that the patient's
comfort after operation was Number
One on the treatment agenda? MRS.
N.
DEAR MRS. N.: I'm sure many
readers of lhis column will a~ wilh
you. Because of the laxity m orders
and in judgment, many pastoperative
• patients suffer needlessly. The pain
interferes with sleep, .lessens the
appetite, and lowers the patient's
morale:
Doctors mean well, nurses are
sympathetic, but somewhere along
the hne there's confusion on just how
much medication the patient should
have.
In a review of 526 medical records,
K. Sriwatanakul, M.O.. and as-
sociates at the University of
..
PETER
STElllCIOHI
Rochester Medical Center, showed
that a substantial number of patients
received, on average, only 70 percent
of me maximat-orde1ed anaigc1ic
dose during the first 24 hours after
surgery; and only 43 during the ne:llt
24 hours. Many nurses chose the
lower dose when a range was given by
the doctor. I believe that dosage
should be tailored to each patient.
Postoperative comfort is available
for many patients if doctors and
nurses arc aware how much some
patients suffer.
• • •
FOR MR. 8.: I know ~u've heard
that even in heart attack the diaenosis
isn't cut-and-dry. There's nothing to
it when the attack is typical -severe
chest pain, fall an blood pressure.
excessive perspiration, etc. But sup-
pase the enzyme blood tests and the
ECGs arc negative i.n spite of the
"typical'" attack? The doctor
shouldn't be shunted off the
diagnostic trail.
Often the evidence (Cha!l&es in
ECGs and pasitive enzyme tests) will
not show up until a few days have
passed. This is the reason why your
doctor kept you in the hospital after
the pain disappeared, Mr. G. If he
hadn't, he might have overlooked the
•• N 1 • • _. #
111 DCM ........ N.wpcwt llMdl • 714.133.1300
..
tact that you really bad a heart attack. •••• FOR MR. Z.: The elderly alcoholic
is often overlooked. Diagnosis is
undetected especially in one who
Jives alone. But here arc some clues suggested by PatriciaJ: Bloom, M.O.,
assistant professor of family medi-
cine at Texas Tech University:
bruises, broken bones, and strains
from falls during drinking episodes.
frequent visits to hospital emergency
room~. and prolonged seclusion or
refusal to answer the door.
DOn't t to ma .. ~wdiagrrom.of
your father's condition yourself, Mr.
Z. But alert )Our family doctor and
tell him about your suspicions.
mtssed the best one of all Do you elway9 8nd9d up Witt the ldda ._.,., .. Okllf," 9ftd mlldl• ... ...
recall "Checscandcrackcrsaotall I ~~IO pwentlll..,.... II .. lllddlng .... toald
muddy?" Print my lettcrand make frienda. How I rnl9I .. Do you wt Moi1an7 to orj'I" F9 811 Hatm
myday!-FORTSMITH,ARK. since have made them 1181 eo rotten. '"You·----~
DEARARK.:Yeardayltmadeaad cookie a long• you he," wee a wooderM ~IY _. .. kldi
Ml1mlae.Jaeffe4 71w•NI to flnl'-~ ~ 10Wfd out--.. COUid ..,,._ "'* completeW1cohmmaad1oa1ave'~-'"'7 ~m7 -~ .,.'97 _,
tltem to me. n..a:': •.laeap. . own :.1 was glad to unlold. I teltlke a tool when I W d.._..
Are.f.ourpartntsroostnct?Hardto them. Every time l Gft9 the "One of theee c1ey9 you'I ttw1* me IDr
reach.Ann Landers' book.kt. ~eo str1ct0 ep11ctt I knew I WMn't be1f11 oonvlndng e.,a.,._
"BU88ed.BY Pan;!' ts? Howl~ Ckt they looked at 1M ftke I WM h 11 Cled for~ ..... ~-
M<Jre Frttdom. C'f'Uld help .>ou ~.a permt never wts to._. t. ~run low. You
bndge t~egenerat1ongap. Send 50 have to work all the time to ,.pllece okt m1tchee wMI won.. I'm «ntswtthyourrequest•ndaloa,.~ -stamped. self-addte$SMtnvelo~to geffilg a toroUMlilDll'out of "Wodd tt1dl-you to get merrtecliMC!
Ann Landers, P.O. Box J 1995. Chi-make me a grMdmOttler?" 11119<> Dk• ·:er~ don't~ to Ml me
caso.JJJ. 6061 J. what's bothering~' Mt drop It, and 11 unc:leratand.
RETIREMENT SALE
OlPARTMENT STOii
AFTER 35 YEARS OF SERVICE TO THIS COMMUNITY
GOING O .UT OF BUSINESS
TOTAL
STOREWIDE
SALE
FIRST COME
FIRST SERVE
Meets
Newport
Blvd .
INCREDIBLE
UPTO
Of o
OFF
Hours
9:30-6:00
Closed
Suncloy
l
'
" \
M 0r.nge Cout DAILY PILOTtrhursday, September 27, 1984
• '
-t.00-
-..c>N I IMIN a..
GUrT8' -MBWGNFAH LA.CMMET MA8TWla THEATM
Al.IMD~ .....,,.
ltlOYIE
••• "'Galdi' (1982! Ben Kings-
. c.ndlcit Bergen.
MOYE • • • 'CtOlt Ctllk" (1982) MM)'
S1eentxwgen. Rip Tom
-t:aO-D NGHTOOURT
-t:46-
CJ)MCME • Ut~ "'Diii M For Mutder'' 111541
Ray Mtlland, Gr1ee Ket(. ----.. HUm&TIUJE8
l ee NEWS Ol210120Q llPY .V8QN8
Cl9 JUNIOR HIGH '9IOXING
lC)MCME
tt t!-\ "Under f1"" (1983) Nlek .
Nolte. Oent Homan.
(01 MEI. YOUNG .. CONCERT
)IAOntERSQ
-10:a0-
(I) IND9'ENDENT NEWS
ITEMEATit. THE Ill) IANG Q
-11:CI0--
8DD(l)9Ql tlNIW8
8TAlCI
..
Guess who's coming?
Rhea Perlman· crlncee when Nlcbolu
Coluanto tell• ber wtio la about to Ylalt tbe
bar on the ~n-o~ i,.~e of .. Cheen .. tonight at 9 on NBC. C el 4.
tJIC'TV • THE JEfRR80NI e THE ROCICfON> Fl.El ~mrfU
tt "Eddie Macon'e Run" (1083)
John Schnelder, KIR Oouglll.
(Z}MCME
A ctoable .ktdnappl.JiC cue brlnC• .. Simon
and Simon" (Gerald llcRaney and Jameeon
Ppker) to PuU in tbe two-boar meuon
premtere tonJcht at 9 on CBS, Cbannel 2. REVIEW • • "Night Gamet" (1980) Qndy
Plc*ett, Bltry Pnmua.
-11:30-MOYIE
-12:40--2:15;-
MOYIE 'Heartsounds '.TV movie
chuckles in face of death
l i :f eoooCXULE
19 MC NEWS flOHTUNE IUINNIOALLEN
VECW
• LATBIOHf AMERICA m100cwe
(Q)MCME
•• ~ '"t.dill And Gentleman, The
Fabuloul Stains" (1911) OW. Lant,
Rey Winstone.
-12:45-
(!)IEAHUNT
-12:.50-(C)MOYIE
• "Humotlgous" ( 1982) Janet Julian,
Oa¥ld Wlllace. •
t ''The Stud"' (1978) Join Colint.
Ollvw Tobias
eNEWS
GC)MOYIE
-2:30--
• • "Trlil or The Pink P1nther"
(1982) Peter~ Orm Nlwn.
--S:OO-
D MOYIE
By FRED ROTHENBERG
UT......,_....,
NEW YORK -"Hcartsounds,"
ABCs Sunday night moVJc, is an up
movie about about a down subject:
death.
That's no easy fcaL Special credit
should go to the caring filmmakers,
headed by c.xecutivc (>roducer Nor·
man Lear, whose cousin, Dr. Harold
Lear, is the subject of this movie, and
lames Gamer, previously known for
Ught comic-adventure roles, who is
devastating as Dr. Lear, the heart·
attack ~tient who laughs and loves
while living for months on death's
Hoorstep.
"There's no one as
who's stayed alive
thts long." the
heart surgeon, in
part admiration ..ii4~~
and part cxhaus·
lion, tells Lear's
Wife. The medical
community
µp on Lear ong
flgo, a point of view
the film reflects ~
fNtth frequent CX· ~
JUTlples of callous, arrogant and
insensitive treatment.
Based on the best·selling 1980
k, "Hcartsounds," written by
r's widow, Martha, the 21h·hour
m will never earn the endorsement
the American Medical Assocaa· r·on. Mary Tyler Moore plays
artha.
The Lcars' strong. supportive mar·
nagc sheds light on the movie's
darkness. Even in thetr worst mo.
mcnts. Lear never loses his spirit or
sense of humor. At times, their
loving, adult relationship resembles a
vhery fuony, v~ realistic sitcom that
as someliow turned into
Shakespearean tragedy.
After Lear's fit'St heart attack,
Martha has to learn to be a patient's
wife. She spends one night watchina
him sleep, and be catches her in her
v1gtl. "What arc you worried about?"
he asks. "Crib death?"
The movie depicts Martba's'pain
as wcU. often throu411 close·ups of her
brown eyes. She tnes her utmost to
keep her strength, particularly when
he's losing bis. Along with the two
debihtating hean attacks, Lear also
suffered brain damage.
Martha battles a medical establish·
mcnt short on compassion but Jong
on clinical mediocrity and mech·
anics. Lear, who probably knows too
much medicine for his own good,
learns that on the other side of the
chart the patient is quite powerless.
For eight tortuous hours in tlie
emergency room. as has wife pleads
for help, Lear faces lazy and in·
humane doctors and nurses. "Heart·
sounds" debunks doctors as perfect
"Trapper J.ohn"·type ~ods, seeing
them as flawed professionals whose
assemblv line iust happens to be life.
THE ABILITY TO see· doctors as
practicing members of the human
race is the essence of "St. Elsewhere."
NtM:'s hospital drama that won the
best wntingaward forproducersJOnn
Masius and Tom Fontana at last
Sunday's Emmy awards show.
Their clever and percepttvc scripts
capture doctors as ~pie, making
them good, bad and in between. One
character (Dr. Mark Craig) as cranky,
one (Dr. Wayne Fiscus) is a conuc
and another (Dr. Peter White) is
crazed.
The show manages to avoid stereo.
types. In last week's opener; a nun,
played by Michael Learned, is in·
volved in a car crash m which a fcUow
nun suffers irreversible brain dam·
age. It is Miss Lcarned's character
who demands that the life.support
system be switched off. while Ed
Flanders' Dr. Donald Wcstphall re·
fuses.
This struggling sencs returned for
its third season last Wednesday. a
week ahead of originally scheduled in
order to avoid a bead.on clash with
the return of ABC's high·rated
"Hotel," featuring Elizabeth Taylor
in a rare guest-starring role as a
Hollywood IC!Cnd who comes to the
St. Gregory to prepare for her pro.
fessional comeback.
The irony is that Taylor sued ABC
an 1982 when the network announced
plans to do a TV docu-drama about
her. ABC backed down, and Taylor
joins the list of stars who have
checked m at ABC's "Hotel" or
"Love Boat," or have been subjects of
its "Glitter" magazine. ·
REALITY IS NOT a strong suit in
most ABC programming. One excep.
ti on is ABC News' "20-20."
Tonight "20-20" has afnghtenang
segment on a man accused of re·
peated rapes but who has ~n the
system at nearly every tum for more
than two decades.
The story, reported meticulously
by Geraldo Rivera with interviews
with several victims. will provoke
outrage, demonstrating how rape
cases bear special burdens in Ameri·
ca's criminal justice system.
The cenclus1on, in tbe case of tlus
man, 1s that society is both the victim
and assailant.
-t:00-
1) MA0NUU. P.L
0 THEC088Y SHOW
U MOVIE
• • • Flying Misfits" ( 1976) Rot>ert
Co!Yad, Simon Olklllld 8 0 PEOPLE DO ntE CAAZJE8T
THllGS
U JOKER'S Wl.D
(!) WKAP If CINCINNATI
Q)NTUAl.8
Q)MOVIE
••• "Guns For San S.butlan"
( 1968) Anthony Quinn, Chlrlu Bron-
son.
fDCOSMOS
Cl) lltSTERY1
C) 12 O'a.ocK HIGH
ICHO)MOYIE
••••; "CrouGrllk • (19821 Mary Steriwgen. Rip Tom
I H) INSIDE THE HFt
($)MOVIE
t t * '"The B&IClt Stalhorl Retutns"
( 1982) Keltt Reno. Teri Garr
-8:30-
0 Qt FAMILY TES
D ~WHO'S THE 8088? U TIC TAC DOUGH
Cf) CUBS FINAi. llBHUGHT8 m ll'TEJ\T~ TONOHT
-8:46-
LOYEBOAT
t "Society Alflirl" (1981) HlffY Rteme. Veronica Hart.
-12*>-e TWIJGHT ZONE 8 EYE ON HOLLYWOOO GMOVE U t "A LO""Y Way To Dll"' (1968)
!(rt OouQlae. Sytva KOICina.
• U.lY Of INNOC8fT
THE AOCKFON> FUS
-12:05-
8 ())MOVIE tt~ "The Choice" (1981) Suun
Clark. Mltc:W Ryen.
-12:15-
(!) llJEPENDBfT NEWS
CC) SHEIMA EASTON
-12::20-
(.tt)MOYE ·~--***'h '"My Fevonte Yw" (1982)
Peter o·r-. Jtssicl Harper.
-12:30-
D . LATE NIOHTWITH DAVID
LETTEfl&AN
D ALRED HITCHCOCK
flAE!ENTI D THREE THREE 0
atMCME
···~ "The 8'othtte Rb>" (1957) .Ric:bltd Conte Dilnnt folter e LOVE. AMEllCAN STYLE
•VO'tNJE.
(Q)MOYE
• "Uul'• 0.-" (1980) Silgrun
Thell, Iris Stem.
-toO-
8MOYIE • • • ''Wike lsllnd • ( 19421 8rlln
~· Robert Preston.
• lllOYIE • • ··oay or Tilt Wotves" (19731
Ridllfd Eoefl, Rick Jason. ~=AINMENTTONIOHT
"The Main Thing Is To lovt" (1975)
Romy Sc:hntldlr, Klaus Kinlkl
-1:15-
(1) MCME
t t '"Fort Mmactl" ( 1958) Joel
McCrea; FOR9St Tock•
-1~ DFAl&YFEOO
8 BT Of L.A. TOOl\Y
ROWAN I MAATWS LAUGH-IN
-1:55-
CB)MOVIE
U t "Horth Dallas Forty'" (19791
HlCk Nolte. Mac OM..
-2:0C),,_ 8 i :SNEWS IDfIWAJCH
O)IOXING
t t t "Robbery" (1967) St~ Bak•. James Booth. eMOYE
• tH '"The Hlrot1 Of Tllemltk" &,965= Douglas. Rlch¥d ...,.
tt~lwl Officer Md A Genti.
men" ( 1982) Richerd Gere, Dltwl
~.
C.C)MOYIE ... "Tht Bnnlt'• Job" (1179)
Peter Falk, Warren oatea.
-4:30-
(!) MEOK:Al DOCTOR (tt)MOVJE_
t *'~ '1<.n.11'' (1983) Ken Marthlll,
lyse111 Anthony.
NBC impresses, but ABC wins week
Cosby show, two other premieres place second and NBC was third. The 10. "Jessie," ABC. 17.7 or 15.0 ratings: CBS 10.8, ABC 9.9, NBC 8.2. million.
in top five Nielsens for Peacock network r.~~~~;e;k~~~.~o~C.S:a 14~i~:riio~'.'Y Ties," NBC, 11.5 or
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Bill
Cosby's return to NBC after an eight·
year absence from television was the
htghest·rated show of the week, but
NDC failed to win the Nielsen ratings
last week despite taking five of the
first six spots.
ABC was first for the week ended
Sept. 23, and NBC was second. CBS
sank to third place in the last ratings
week before the official start of tbc
sea50n, although the networks have
been "sneaking" shows on early.
In all, NBC plaoed the premieres of
three new shows in the top five.
"Highwar to Heaven" was third and
"Hunter' was fourth. The season
premiere of"The A· Team" was fifth.
"The Cosby Show" is the com·
edian's first venture into television
since his short..&ived variety series in
1976. He first pined fame m "I Spy"
in the 1960s, then starred in "The Bill
Cosby Show" in 1969· 71. .
In his new show, he plays a doctor
with an attorney wife and four
children.
Two new ABC scncs. "'Paper
Dolls" and "Jessie,'' made their
debuts in the Top 10: "Paper Dolls"
seventh and "Jc sic" I 0th.
ABC was first in the A.C. Nielsen
Co. survey with a network avcra~ of
I 5.3. NBC was second witti 14.8 and
CBS was third with 14.2. The
networks say this means that in an
average prime·time minute 15.3 per-
cent of the TV homes were tuned to ratingof2l.6 or 18.3 million house· 12. "20-20," ABC, 17.3 or 14.6 holds. million. A~rc is the complete Top JO: "The 2. "60 Minutes," CBS, 20.7 or 17.5 13. "The Emmy Awards," CBS,
Cosby Show," NBC. first; "60 million. 17.1or14.5 million.
Minutes," CBS, second; "Highway to 3. "Hi&hwar. to Heaven," NBC, 14. "Hawaiian Heat," ABC, 16.9 or
Heaven," NBC, third· "ftunter," 20.6 or 11.4 mJtlion. 14.3 millJon.
NBC, fourth: "The A·'team," NBC, 4 ... Hunter," NBC, 20.4 or 17.3. 15. "Simon&Simon,''CBS, 16.7or
fifth·, "The Enfio-r," NBC mov1·e, million. 14.2 million. '""' 5. "The A·Team," NBC, 19.0 or 16 "W b "ABC 16 6 14 I sixth; "Paper Dolls," ABC, seventh; · e stcr, , . or .
"AfterMASH,'' CBS, eighth·, "Three's l 6. l million. million.
Company," ninth; ADC; "Jessie," 6. Movie· .. The Enforoer," NBC, 17. Tie·"TV's Bloopers&. Practical
ABC th 18.5 o r 15.7 million. Jokes," NBC, 16.5 or 14.0 mi~·
CaJ.enco ·el"Qo,. of the 36th ann al 7. "Paper Dolls," ABC, 18.4or 15.6 17. Tio-Movie·"Buming " °" v • .._. u million. CBS, 16.5 or 14.0 million. ' Emmy Awards, up against ABCs 8 After AS BS "Paper Dolls," was in 13th place. . .. M H," C • 18.2or 15.4 17. Tie·"NBC All.Star Happy
Other premiering shows did not million. Hour," NBC, 16.5 or 14.0 million. fare as well. 9 ... Three's Company," ABC, 17.9 20. "Cqney &. Lacey,'' CBS, 16.4
The next highesHated new fall .... 0_r_l_5_. l_m_il_li_o_n. _________ o_r_l_3._9_m_1i_llil_io_n_. -------
show was CBS' "Cover Up;' in 33rd
place. NBCs .. Panncrs in Crime"
was 36th, A8Cs "Who's the Boss?"
was 39th, ABCs "Finders Of Lost
Loves" was 40th, NBC's "Hot
Pursuit" was 50th. and ABC's
"People Do the Craziest Thmgs" was
55th.
The lowest·ratcd show of the week
was the NBC movie "The Border."
Here arc the bottom five shows in
descending order. CBS' "London &
Davis in New York." ABC's "People
Do the Craziest ThinJS," NBCs
"Dean Martin Celebnty Roast,"
N BC's "Silver Spoons," and the NBC
movie "The Border."
CBS was again in the lead amona
the evening news shows. ABC wa
BALLY
Diana •
lovely detail. on
this mid-low stack
heel hng pump
an or wine calf.
KAMRON RUG ~:~ ·~di
&
HANDCRAFTED GALLERY
GRAND OPENING SALE
FINEST
PERSIAN
RUGS
sru.s
J
SA VE & BUY AT WHOLESALE PRI CE
DIRECT IMPORTS
WE BUY USED RUGS
tn the
..
.... >
•
•
'
·'Scart?crow' hoofing again at 80
BEVERLY Hlll.S -R y Bot r,
lone survivor of the mefl)' quartet
who fullowcd the yellow brick rood,
has undergone hip surgery at the
of 0 and 1 planning to m um to
work.
Every day Bolger' long-legged gall
takes htm arounii two length¥ blocb
near hi9 home. "I can walk without a
lifJ!P now," he si\id proudly. "And I
swim every day. The doctor says
there's no rca50n I couldn't 'dance
in. But I'm 80, and how much
more dancing do I want to dor•
R y Bolger has danced all his life.
He staned in his . native Boston~
hoofed through rcpenory and
· vaudeville, starTcd 10 Broadway
shows ("On Your Toes," "By
Jupiter," "Where's Charl~'). mov-
ies ("The Great Ziegfeld, "April fn
Pans") and television ("Where's
,, .............
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COSTA ME.SA EOwwdit Town c.ar
751--4UM
HUN11MGTI* 1E.AOt
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f.dMrdl IJOD 67W)"i0
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891·3'05
'"IRRECONCILABLE D IFFE RENCES'
IS A CO MPLET E DELIGHT.
lt rak~ custody ol }Our ~rt Ry.m O'N~\l's !x'St pi :ture 'lnl~
'What\; Up. Ool ~'Thn .. -c 1.h.'\'.rs tor Shdk; Lo~. A ma~nilii.1.:nr
l.'om1..Jicmll·--an Ck1r nomimcion tor su~:·
Ray Botcer bam• lt ap with choreo&rapher Anne White at
BollJWoOd celebration for ASCAP o.cia.r wbmen.
''"'' "11.,.,,\ lh \ ...... ,.'
"R1..\.':tlls l ht y1:.1r's ~-.1r-winrnng Terms ol EnJC41mll.11c!"
STARTS TOMORROW
IREA COSTA MESA IRVINE •lAMIRADA
UAMovtes Edwards Edwards Woodbndge SRO Gateway 5
9!1().,4022 Cmema Center Cinema 523-1611
•auENAPARK 979 .. 141 • S5Hl655 ORANGE
UAMovies EL TORO •lAHAIRA ~Orange Mall 952 .. 991 Edwards AMC Fashion 637-0340
COSTA MESA Saddleback Square ORANGE
Edwards BnstOI 5815880 691-0633 Sta.d1Um Orive·ln
540-744' •l'ltl:SE.vn:D • .., 6J9..8no '"° PMKS ACCll'TID '°" TMl OIGAOOIDITI
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STADIUM ORIN
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MANN BRU PLAZA
STARTS TOMORROW
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COSTA flEA 546-2711 LAGIN BOCH 49J.1711
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MSTllMSTEI • EDWAllOS CWEMA WEST • 891·3935
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MARTIN TOMUN
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/liP£ ~ P1cb.ns Preser1:s IMPULSE
Starmg TIM MATHESON MEG nw HUME a.oNYN
Music t>/ PAUL CHIHARA Wl"lnen t>/ BART °"VIS and DQll CARLOS~
~ t>/ TIM ZINNEMANN ~ t>/ GRAHAM BAKER
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12.30. 3-00, 5:30. UIO. 10.30
*PACIFIC ORIVE·IN THEATRES•
EVE.RY THURSDAY I ADULTS
FOR THI N ICE OF OIUI
(l "'ftl11S,. ............. c..t °"""'•' ..... £
-
WARNER
i.1::1• ·'·~~· -
-
COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, 88.
\
Curtls Olson named president
for California Nexµs dlvisiqn
Cart11 R. Ol1oe ofNewpon Beach has bttn named president o~t~e central
California division of Nesus DeveJopmeat Corp, with resp~ms1b1hty for all
finance and acquisition activities. Newly named vice president of the same
division, in charge of all marketing aruvities, is Scott T. B•l'Pam. OlsonJ a
graduate of Corona del Mar W1ll ScHol, has been with Nexus since ~9al.
Before that, he was a saln consultant with Grabb & Elli• Co. in Newpon Beach.
Burnham -also a ~duate ofCdM High, and a resident of Corona del Mar -
joined Nexus last March after spendina six yea" ti a senior sales con~ultant
with Grubb&. Ellis in NewPort Beach. Nexus has offic;es in Newport Beach and
La Jolla. . . . . ~
Reser G. Galloway has been elected vice president and ,eneral ~ounsel 1or
fte lnlae Co. He will be re51>0nsible to the president and board of directors for
all of the company's lepl affairs, includina direction of the internal lepl staff
and relations with outside law films. Galloway, an Irvine resident, had been
managing partner of the Newport Beach office of Padlt, Ross, Wane,
Bel"llba.rd and Sean, hu~. • • • •
Forty years of service
The manaiement and staff of Robert Bein, William Froet
and Aseoclate. get to1ether for a celebration of the flriD'•
'Otb annl•enary of conthluom aerrice in Oranle C~unty.
llevlD R. Vorwerk of N~rt Beach bas been named manager of
_ CaliforaJa First But'• Harbor View office. An Orange Coast Colle1e student,
The enetnee~ and plannlnl company wu founded tn he is a member of the Newpo~ Harbor Kiwanis Chai> and has been with
CoataMeaatnl944andlanowheadquarteredatl401Quall California first since 1976,•begjnning as a teller in the Huntington Beach
St. In Newport Beach. offic~ra Marvl.D and Judy Robbl.Dt have been named Top Salespeople of the
Computer won't replace an accountant
He can help take most of the conf usfon ----out of selection and pur~hastng process
Computer or accountant? Jf you've accountant. He can take much of the
been told that if you purchase a confusion out of the selection and
computer for your business you will purchasinJ process.
RALPH
Scorr·
vmt other people who are using
computers for the kind of work you
want yours to do.
Your accountant's experience with
computers will also enable him to
momtor your computer installation
and help train your staff.
no longer need your accountant He will begin tiy aslong you what
you've been mismformed. Your ac-you wan ta computer to do. The tasks Once your computer is running
countant knows both your business that the computer will be expected to evaluating their proposals. Since your smoothly in your business, your
and computers. He can prov1dc do will determine in large part the accountant has heard all the sales accountant can function in the ca-
valuable assistance tn putting the two software that you need, and the pitches used, he can help you sort out pac1ty for which he was tramed -not
together sucessfully. software will determine the hardware fact from fiction in what the com-as your bookkeeper, but as your
lf you're thinking of purchasina a that you will require. puter salespeople promise. business consultant, advisor, and
computer, there's no better place to You accountant can get bids from Before you buy, your accountant strategist. Both of you can focus not
start than ,,.,.,;th-a-phone-all to your 5'Vel'lllv endors and assist you I n will probably suggest that ~ou and he on producing .reports for banks and -----------------------...:..... ___ __;::.....::...:..:.;::...:.....:...:!=.:.::.:...:::.=...:..::.=-::.:::.=....:.:.:_, the taxing authorities, but on analyz-
ing your business in order to make it
more profitable
Seven reasons whY. this could be
the last loan you Ilever need.
C.Ommercial Credit's Home Equity
Management AccoUllt proves that all lines of
credit are not the same. Ours is bencr. Why?
You can get up to $100,000. The Home
Equity Management Account is based on the
equity fu your home. So it can make a substan-
tial amount of cash avail-able to
you any time you need it.
Affordable Interest. Our interest rate is
just 2% over the prime rate for lines of $20,000
or more.* On July 1, 1984 the prime rate was
13.00%, making an annual percentage rate of
15.00%.
No Application Fees. C.Ompared to other
institutions, our Home F.quity
Management Account could save
you hundreds of dollars. That's
because there arc no points, no
application f ecs, and no annwil
fees.
Payment Protection. ·
Interest rate increases will not
change the amount of your
monthll payment.
Ralph Scott is a certified pub/Jc
account.ant pracllcing in Newport
Beach.
Month for August for Coldwell Buker ResldeatiaJ Real Estate Services'
Newport Beach office. Marvin has been with Coldwell for the past 11h years,
while Robbins/· oined the staff only a few weeks ago. The award is based on a
combination o top sales and unusually outstanding service to clients. • • • Several Orange Coast dentists have received the Academy of General
Dentiatry'• Fellowship Award after completing more than SOO hours of
continuing education. They include: Newport Beach dentists Artbar J.
Helliwell and Edward A. Wat10.a, Fountain Valley dentist Rlcbard L. Sebers,
and Costa Mesa dentist R. Brace Coye. The Academy is the second-largest
dental organization in Nonh America, comPosed of 25,000 dentists in the
United States and Canada who arc dedicated to continued education. • • • Nedra Bazbaw of Costa Mesa bas been appointed sales director for Mary
Kay Co1metlc1. She atta10ed the title after a three-month qualification period,
during which ttme she developed a personal unit of beauty consultants and
exceeded company sales goals, and following a week-long trainina session in
Dallas. As sates director. Bazbaw will provide leadership, training and
mana ent for her unit. She has been with Mary Kay for two years. • • • Real Estate Services Company latenaallonal of Newport Beach has
expanded its services and moved to larger facilities in Tustin. at 1421 Warner
Ave., Suite F. The firm P,rovides MAI appraisals. business and corporate
appraisal valuations, feasibility studies, market research, architectural and
civil engineering services and graphics and brochures. Among the company's
eurrent projects is a mixed-use-marina in Newport Beach. • • • Harry WWlam1 bas been promoted to vice president of operations for the
StacoswUcb Co. of Costa Mesa. Willia'ms had been director of plant operations
for the firm. He was the 1.984 recipient ofthe "Manager of the Year" award
presented by the Orange chapter of the Society for Advancement of
Management and has aJso~ived the Pkil Carrol Award from the group's
international board of<iirectors for bis contributions in the field of opera lions
management.
THE
RELAXING
SOUNDS
OF THE
HARBOR
KDCM
103.1
FM
STER ED
Newport firm
files shareholder
derivative suit
Smith International lnc. an-
nounced Wednesday it has begun a
shareholder derivative suit agamst
the directors of Gcarban Industries
Inc.
The action alleges, amonJ other
things. that the Gearhart directors
breached their fiduciary duty and
duties of tare and loyalty owed to the
shareholders of Gearhart, by actina
out of self-interest and out of a desire
to entrench incumbent management
in actions taken to oppose Smith's
cash tender offer for 3. 7 million
Gearhan shares. It s Easy. Once your
account is open, getting a loan is
as easy as writing a check.
10 Minute Application.
Take ten minutes to apply for
your Home F.quity Management
Account. Call us. We'll take
your application over the phone
or we can send you an applica-
The suit, filed in U.S. Distnct
r...__miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiil--1 Court in Fon Worth, Texas, by thc.....c" Newport Beach firm, names as defen-
dants directors Marvin Gearhart,
Thomas Law, Peter Flawn, Bob
Mr
tion. Or stop by C.Ommercial
Credit today.
One Day Credit
Approval. In most cases, we
offer approvals in 24 hours,
subject to verification and
appraisal.
The Home Equity Manage-
ment Account .. .it could be
the las< loan you'll ever.need.
O>mmercial Cn:dit. From
• first and second mongages to
personal Joans and more,
we've got a many financial
solution as there are financial
needs.
"'.
\
14
MON,RYE·~~~!§] COMP~
8111kt MMA
Bank of Amenca 1.00
California First Bank 1.00
Crocker 1.00
First lnterltate I 00
Lloyds Bank Caltfomte 1.00
s~unty Bank 1.00
Sumitomo Bank 100
Wells Fargo 1.00 . .....
Beverly H1ll1 Saving• 10 00
Cahforn1a Federal 1.10
Central Savings 1.11
1.00
1.00
100
BTERUNG~ SAVINGS
MMA
~x~· 1.25
Far Weat Sav1ng1 1.05
Fidelity Federal 1.00
1.25
Gibraltar Savin 1 l.01
Glendale Federal 1.00
Great Amencan 1.00
Great Weatern 1.10
Home Federal Savin s 1.00
Home Saving• ol Amer 1.00
Imperial Savlng1 1.10
Mercury Savigg•=--~'·:.=:.:00::..
Sears Sav1n111.:.s .::;Ba::.:.n.:..:;:k_.:::•.:.::·00::...
Valley Federal 1.00
World Sav t 1.11
.,
•
Dorsey and Henry Zenzie and Aetna
Life and yesuaJty Co. .
Smith seeks, among Olher thi~.
an order that Gcarhan's pun:hasc of
Geosource Inc. from Aetna be
voided, or altemati vely, an order that
the transaction be submitted to a vote
of Gearhart shareholders.
Smith's suit is in resp~>nse to a
recent decision by the F1fth Circuit
Court of Appeals. In that decision, the
court observed that "a New York
Sto:ck Exchange rule may work
senous consequence for Gearhart
and its shareholders as a result of the
isauancc of the 10 million new shares
in connection with the Geosource
tran5action."
Gearhan did not seek shareholder
approval for the transaction, which
has led the stock exchange to ~n
dclist1n1 procedures a111nst
Gearhart. The Appeals Court said
"several other oourts ... have viewed
Ne York Stodc Excha!llC delisuna
as a severe 1etback indeca. one
rcsultina in irreparable inJury to
corporate lharcholdcn."'
The Appeals Court also id "ll ma~ be that Smith "n prCaent
sufficient evidence to convince the
coun thit the Gearhart duu:tora who
entered into the Geosource deal were
interested, Jiven circum11ancts •h as the ctlbt-day ume pen 6Gln
contract to Clot1na, the fact &Ut
rha" wa •• the throcs of bettte for control of the compan)' at that time. and the re1enuon in Gear.ban f
manqcment or Ot•n• control of all
the new Miarcs. * provision we think
l pan1cularly SUSptCIOUs."'
AMF sells
oldsi ' 1 relo~ates
A 32.6 ere lte t the nonh st
mtcrsccuon of Harbor Blvd. and
Sunflower Ave .• at the border of
Co ta Mesa and San1a Ana, h s been
sold by AMF Reliremtnt Annuity
Trust with ChDsc Manhattan Bank as
Trustee, to the Lee mm is Company
and Metropolitan Ufe Insurance.
AMF Voi1 and the AMF Tire
Equipment Di vi ion which ;prcviou!-
Jy occupied the 2s.year-Old facility,
has rceently reloaated its operations
to Buena P rk.
The Lee Sammis Company. an
Orange County developer, plans to
demoll'h thee.xi ting 578,330 square
foot plant and con truct approx-
imately S00,0()0 square feet of office,
oon>qrate headquarters and research
and development pace on the prop-
erty. When completed, the proiect
will haV'e an e'1imated value: of SSO
million. Lason Pomeroy Associates
are ttie archittcts on the project.
Snyder Langston will be handlina
construction on the initial phase.
Construction funds have been
provided by Wells Fargo Bank.
Real estate
class using
co111puters
Hands-on computer experience win be stressed in real estate sem·
inars. sponsored by the southern
California CCIM {Cenified Com·
mercial Investment Members)
Chapter 12 and Palmer: Berge Co.
Software, to be held at the Westin
South Coast Plaza Hotel in Costa
Mesa.
A seminar will be held each day,
starting Oct. 2 and concluding Oct. 4.
Local CCIM president, Dan
Starkey explained that seminar regis-
trants will be furnished a computer
and Berge Software to assist in
solving actual investment and
finance case studies.
Call Palmer Berge tor rese rvauons
at 1·800-426.2153.
OVER THE COUNTER
UPs AND DowNs
NEW YORK l AP> -The fotlowlng llst shows the Ovtr-the·Counter stocks end warrants tl'lat l'la11e oone UP the most end down the most · based on percent of C'l'lange for Wednesday.
No secuHIY,'-r• Ing below '2 or 1000 shares ere . t end percen 8949 cl'lanQJS ere the er.nee betw .. n the previous dosing orlce end Wed~ey's last bid price.
Bl~g Les'" cr8. u:c'1s.o 3 A~! IJ.e ... Up il.4
4 i?JMik ~ = 8: d:' I dsnet 'h VJ UP 16.J emMd wt '• Up 4
ll ifi n
3 li: ~~ ~i lt '.
1 Onv~ un JI/• 'Ai UP ~ 1 ~cad 1 >.t l'h Up .
14 etrrilst "' Up t · 15 ens k I"" 1 UP
1
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Stairway apruced up
Kewport Beach.Mayor EYelyn Hart (center) cuts the ribbon
to mark the renOY&tlon of a etalnray frOm San Clemente
DriYe to the !fewport Center Library and the Kewport
Barbor Art llueum. With her are Mary Richmond.
chalim.an of the !fewport Center Library Boerd; and Walter
B. Gerken, board chalrm.an of the Paclflc llatual LUe
ID.eurance co., which eponaored the project. ·
Harbor Cbrporate Park leasing begins
Leasing of the new Harbor Corpor ..
ate Park has been initiated with the
recent signing 'of Alpha Micro Sys-
tems, a maker of micro business
computer systents and related SQft-
ware applications. Alpha Micro Sys-
terns-Mn occupy a 10.3 acre site, upon
which wilJ be oonstructcd a two.story
72,000 square foot headquarten
building and a 103,000 square foot
manufacturing facility with
mezzanine space. ·
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'itep p.l\l brinth b.tnk ng Step up to
( orpor ate dl'USIOM At \\ tmarl. 'i;ivtn ~
Bank_ h adquart1 r olhtes and ofltcc~ are
looted m one pl.11 u-u•ad to dt•.il
personally and 1mm dl.ttt•I .., th ~our
ltnanrn1I concern
SAVINGS BANK
wport Cent r
..,
Mesa diamond investment
firm eized byfederal court
na~an lhC tt
jud&e'5 order m51allcd :a re•
ceaver to run the flrm5 and rou lht
compames' a T um also
ued a temporary rcstramm.a order
coppmg ttte.QUC111onablc opc.ra11on5
Crandall Financal Corp. u owned
b} & ~thers, Michael and Ronald
mtth:Tbe Smhhs •'fft narped 1 n the
Ull.
In tbc wun hcann,J. 'al\QtnC)'S for
the two finns dcmcd the SE s
. allegations.
dall Anancial Corp of Co ta Mesa Reach~ by telephone. Ronald UdWorld Wide Coal Reserve ~td of mhh said he and fns brother ould
Las Vegas. defend lhernsdvcs ap,mst the uit. Two other finns hiliated with .. we· c got aothmJ 10 hide.•• he
Crandall Financial and officers con-1d.
nectcd with the companacs ere also The S has accused the Crandall
••• ·tw1lflc ..wlnge . . . ·.
... uclu.he Shoplut'ance•
prtJtectlon •••
Kl UVI O.MOtWIMTION8 DAILY AT: ...........
Fii OUFTSllEI I llllllSTI
mANGE ccum FAIRGl(Ul)S
IU.DllG 10
COSTA EA
FllllY, llPTDlll 11
SI Y~ll~~
FREE GIFTl
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Attend a 5nopcm h MARK V demonstnltion
and recetll't a FREE g t -a Ninety tem tor your
shop voo,.. ffiEE .•• jO&t for stoppmg b
•
Shopsmlth,b:_
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-~--~~----------~---·---
•
1 I
On
the
l -
, •
, -L
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
TllUISDArS CLOSIH PllCES
-
WHAT NYSE Din
--
NYSE Lf~Uf RS
UPs ANO DowN s
W HAT AM£ x Dio
---.
NEW YORK (AP) $ep. 27 '1 ,.
AMEX LEADERS
NEW YORK (AP) -Sale&, ThundeY Pl'ICll •nd net c:hentM Of the 10 MOit acfjv• Amertc~ Stoett tXCM ''"'"' trld no
• nallonJiLl' more tl~ . ~~~tn ; ~~ t ~ ~nli , ,-1r: enntttffeth -1.4 ompe;;on , ~~f~ii K v. i·~
~ecm • nwr lvTul
Colo QuoH s
That's an apt description of both business and
business people along the Orange Coast. To keep track of
where com pant s ar gotng and wnich people are helping
them get ther ,just watch 'Credit Line' -very day ln tHe
Bu in s tton of your n w. · 11nr Pllld
..
Denver'• Etw•J
m•lnconc.m
tor Raldera
8und8y. C2.
~Taft College .st~ikes itrle~ again
Nation'' s No. I -ranked t)C football team
is quite a hit in the middle of nowhere
' By CURT SEEDEN
Of .. Dilllr,... ....
When Golden WCSl College foot-
ball coach Ray Shackleford goes on a
reauitina trip he usually b~ in his
car and heads for Marina Hi&h a few
blocks away, or Huntington Beach or
Oeean View highs.
When TaO Coll~c Coach Al
Baldock goe r:ccruiting, he hops on a
plane and heads for North Carolina,
among other pfaces. ·
Taft, which supplies the opposition
for Golden West Saturday afternoon
Taft:
Nothing
tricky
Unbeaten Cougars
have outscored
foes, 111-13
ByCURTSEEDEN
Of .. Dilllr,... ....
Golden West College football
coach Ray Shackleford and his assis-
tants examined the pme ftlms of Taft
College's 56-0 victory over Ventura,
but they might as well have looked at
a 1980 Taft College contest
The Cougars never seem to change,
which is one of the reasons Coach Al
Baldock has lost just 10 pmes in
eight-plus seasons at Taft.
"They're doing exactly the same
thing they've always done and they'll
never chanie, 1' says Shackleford of
tb"c Cougan who provide the opposi-
tJon saturday afternoon ( 1 :30) at
Orange CoasL
"They beat you with cood execu-
tion. There's nothina tricky about it,"
Shackleford adds.
aft enters the Pacific--9 Con-
ference opener as the No. I-ranked
team in the nation, a 2-0 record and
sound victories over Ventura and
West Hills (55-13).
But Taft's Baldoc)c is the fmt to
admit his team's first two opponen~
were bardJy formidable.
"We'll have a much better idea
about our team after facing Coach
(Pleue eee TRICKY /CS)
( 1:30) in the Pacafic-9 Conference
opener, will bring with il a reputation
for winning, a rather larac thro~ of
supporters and a unique situation
which allows the CotJpn to recruit
.out of ~te unl~e ?ther commumty
colleges tn the d1stnct.
· The city of Taft, population ap-
proximately J0,000, 1s situated 1 lO
miles north of Los. Angeles and 35
miles west of Bakersfield. A sleepy oil
town, Taft awakens each Saturday_ in
the fall . The Cougars sell out 7,000-
seat Martin Memorial Stadium each
homeaame.
That is often the case with a
winning football team. •
The Cougars were 10-1 in 1983.
They won their first two games this
season in convincing style -56-0
over Ventura and SS-13 over West
Hills.
\\".hy do playcn from around the
country dloo$C to attend Taft Col-
lege, enrollment 700? Why can
Baldock recruit anywhere 1n the
c~untry? \YhY do the Cougan con•
s1stcntly win?
"The state, having put us in a larger
conference, recognizes that we can't
compete with just one high school
(from which to recruit} so they allow
us to go out of the state to Jind
athletes," explains Baldock.
"Other people think it's a bowl of
uavy bul I'd much raifier have a farger distnC1 m th1s state than to go ~hro~ all the bother,.. Baldock
continues. ··Fullerton, for example,
has more than enough high schools •
right in its backyara; That's more
preferable. Taft High has 27 kids on
varsity and they haven't won a game.
and they haven't soomt a point. l',n
supposed to play in be PAC9 wnh
thatT'
Baldock ys there arc no ~
$elling points to lure athletes to Ta.ft
College, middle of nowhere. ··we see that they (the athletes) arc.
tducatcd and that they •re placed in
four-year school On scholarships:•
Baldock explain .
'rhere is no such thing as a social
life for a Tat\ Colleie football player.
.. If ,ou're gomg to college for a
50cia1 life, ~ mewbcre else. ..
Baldock says. 'J cjon'll want them here
in the first p~. You go to collqe to "'t?ri' ~n )'Our grades, improve your
mind, improve your body and to on
and finish your dqree. ..
Baldock. a stna clisdphnanan bas
been ooadlina football for nearly 30
years. H t":-·bclan as an Ul&Stant
mshman coac6 at u before aoana
to Tan for three years a$ an assmant.
HlS coaching c:arccc·ba lso taken
him to Ha~ock College, GOllqc of
the SCquoias, San Diego State and .Los
Anaeles CC before retumJllJ to Taft
where be has spent the last ntne rcan.
HisCouprsarcrankedNo. I anthc
country, but he doesn't g1vc the
current poll nor 1the prc-RaSOn poll
Dilllr ......... ., .................
Runnm. back DaYld Apptec!':.g:r> and QB John Bebile
lead Gofden Wellt .,al.mt po Taft Satarday.
Angels .prolongthe agony, head for Texas
Romanick pitches
seven-hit shutout;
John faces Rangers
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)-For a
man whose team just lost a touib
game in the thiclc of a pennant race,
Dick Howser was remarkably
buoyant. .
But despite the 2-0 setback at the
hands of the J\n1els Wednesday
night, Howser knew his Kansas City
Royals had taken three of four from
the Anaels and Minnesota was losing
in Chicaao.
After the Twins did lose to the
White Sox 9-3J. the Royals went to bed
l 11.t aames in 1ront of the Tw10s and
31/J ahead of the bftely-breathina
Anaels in the race to determine who
represents the American League West
against the Detroit Ti.gen in the
American Lcague playoffs.
.. We had a Jood series," said
Howser ... I'm sausfied winning three
out of four. They (the Angels) arc still
hanginf in there, aren't they? You've
101to11ve them credit."
Ron Romanick shut out the Royals
on seven hits and out-dueled Kansas
City ace Bud Black, who aave up onJy
four hits. includina three scratch
sinales in the sixth that produced the
pme's only scorins.
"I'm satisfied with the way I
NFL 'voice'
Facenda dies
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Fu·
neral 1ervices hive been ~t for
Friday for John Faoenda, the
dramatic: vo oc of National Foot·
ball t.eaaue hi;hliaht films and•
pioneer&roedc::astcr who has died
auhe • of72. .. There will never be another
voice like his." said Steve Sabol,
executive vke prc1ident of NFL
Films Inc., which hired Facenda
to namte its weekly hiahl~ts show in 1962. Has last work for
the company involved biahliaht
of tb11 )Uf'."1 upcr Bowt.
Facenda~• nch baritone was
recqaniztd by m Uions and his
mooth, e nly paced tyl
earned prai from broadca ters
throti&hout h1 l0yrar career in
radio and telcva ion.
J.
, A ray of hope?
AIW......._
· W L .-ct. Ga
1)7' .m-il n .SIJ I'll 7' 7' JOO ,.,,. w ...... .,.. SC..
Aaelft 2, Kansu City 0
ChlQoo 9, Mw.sol• 3
T ...... IGefMI ~ (JOM 7· 121 et Texas (MltMlll
t-l3)
Mlnneso•• CSmllmon 1s.-m et Cleveland
(~113-6)
ICensea City Ide
ll ..... o.n..
ANGSLS (4) -Awev 14): SISll. 27, 21, 2', 30 Texea.
KANSAS CITY (3) -Awev (3): Sept, 21,
2'. 30 o.tllend.
MINN.SOTA (4) -Awev (4) Sept. 27,
21, 2', 30 Clevttllnd.
pitched," said Black, 17-12 ... 1 pitch-
ed well but it wasn't &ood enough.
That says it au."
Romanick leveled his record at
12-12.
"We went out to have a good time,"
he said. "It had been frustrating so far •
We came into Kansas City with big
expectations. But we're not out of
yet."
The Angels, Twins and Royals all
firush the regular season on the road.
The Royals took toda}' off before
headina for the West Coast and a
three-game series at Oakland. The
Twins finish with four at Oeveland
while the ¥sets. ~hC? could forae a three-way t.Je by wmnana every pme
and havina the Twins and Royals lose
every pme, finish with four at Texas.
The Angels send Tommy John
(7-12) apinst the Rangen tonight.
"This means we're still alive. We
still have somethina left to play for tomorrow.~ said Angeb Manager
John McNamara.
~el ahorta~ Dlck Schofield can't aeem to ft.Dd a lULDdle on the ti&ll OD .
,,,, .........
pickoff attempt aaahaat Kan ua Clty'e
Onlz CODCepelon ta tb1rcl tnntn1.
Llamas, P arsons capture heats in surfing
OCEANSIDE-Round t~oofthc
tnals in the tubb1C$ Pro Inter.
national Prof cs ional Surfing Tour-
nament at Oceanside Harbor Beach'
Nonh Jetty wa complettd Wedn
day, and a number of arc.a ~urfc
remain in the hunt for the $22,000 1n
pril.e money bcma offered. ·
mona th ready to compete m
today's third round are Hunun on
Belch' Bud Llama and l"ftd Gert h, U,&una ch' Mile
Parsons and Ne pan Bea h's Grq
Munpll.
Othcn advanan in ludcd ht hly· m the m 1n
wham bad Taft ranked fint mudl
credence. .. ~son PiCb? You rnilbt as
well toss ~a bunch a COlftl uCl pick
one as they ,come down. •: ao opinaoa, .. he aya. .. , don't •
raakinp. Y'°"doa'tF.t•fedillt(fara
team's ~) ull1il ,_.¥r --
two or..._ .confeftac:C ~ We1l
have a mil:h better idea of, oar leUll
after .JJl1y1n1 . coach (Ray}
Shacldeford's team."
The Couprs.thas season :are qu11t
big. 'llte. otrtnsive hne •vuaees 2SO
pounds. the defensive line around 220. •
Baldock estimates a half dot.b of
his piayen are from Taft ~ 1'ht
funny Ouna ss oeople lhiM Wt
, ....... 1'An'/C8)
Mater Del renews
rivalry wtth Lions
after 19 years
Sa'.dcneback Higb's R~nen
put tbrir Sea View league cbam·
pionsb.ip aspirations on the line
to~t ~st uptet·minded Q>Sta
Mcsawhile Westminster and Mater
Dei renew a football rivalry after a 19·
year lull.
The Roadrunnen are ~ favored to roll bccaUIC of their
depth and experience. while tbe DOD·
leque pme ~een Westmimler's
Lions and the Monarchs ofMat.er Dei hrin&s. toectber two IChools that d~ football in QranacCowity
in the micMiOs.
The last meetina (1965) rcsulb:d in
a bitttt fmish when Maler Dci KOred
a 17-1 '4 victor), bclpcd when ID
official whistled a play dead became
be thoQ&bt a player had the ball and
was tackkd lD the interior, but in
tt:ality another player wu scam~
around end for an apparent winruna
touchdown.
Mater Dei went on to win the OF
4-A championship, while a dummy
official was hung in ef6ay on the
Westminster campus.
Herc's a look at toni&bt's two
pmes, both starting at 7:.30:
S.411~ (1-1) n. C..ta Mesa
(t-!-1): The Roadnin.Ders boast ex-
~tiooal speed in backs Earl Jones aoCJ Teddy Baker, and have a defense
which bas allowed six poinu in three
pmcs. Costa Mesa is a decided undc:rdo&. but Mµstanp COICh Tom
Baldwin bas promised to throw
everythina but the kitchen sink at the
ROMl.runne:rs. Site: Newport H.arbOr
High.
Westm.laster <i:z> n. Malcl' Del
(Z-1): Westminster's Lions have play-
ed three straiabt close games. toppina
La Quinta (l-0). then losina heart-
break.en to Pacific.a ( 14-11 ) and
Servitc (16-15). Ted McMillcJl is at
the Westminster CODtro whiJe
freshman quarterback Todd
Marinovicb peces the Monarchs. 1bc
pme is rated a tossup. Site: Santa Ana
Bowl.
Twins
can't gain
on Royals
=--...;,..-..---=..-_:.--~--------------------.....:.:.----....... ---------~--------....... .;:._--------------------------.~"'---~...--...--•--------.__........,_ .... ~----------------..--....................... --=~~---...c..;,..
. .....
C2
Television special to focus on 111arathon
Show will feature appeal. history
of man's ultimate en 'urance test .
On Saturda), Oct. 6, Channel 11
w1ll a1ra onc-;hour pee a al cnllcd
.. Marathon," at 9 p m,
The how w111 focus on the ultim te
t t-themarathon. Fot\lrhatever reason~. thousands of people each
year part1c1pate in this trial of
endurance. The marathon was firi.t instituted
asa lonadist.aoce foot race at the
revival of the Olympic Games at
Athens, Greece in 1896, even thou&h
no marathon had e'*er been run in the
on&& nal Game . It commemomt~ the perfonnance
ofaGreek.soldier.Ebidippad who
according..10ttaditiao, cao.1hedis~
tan~ in 490 B.C. from the plains of Marathon to Athens· to announce
\'ictory over the Persians. .
-Marathon runocrs featured in the
special arc Rod Dixon from New
Zealand who placed first in the New
York Marathon, Grete Waitz, who
represented Norway in the 198~
Olympies m Los ~ngeles, and Bob
nd mmyGrccn,acoypl from
En nd\\how ntedtocompctem
the eY. YorkMMBthon merel) for
person I a<:haevcment.
The lihow also feature ••marathon
great<i,'' special moment!. in mara-
thon ht tory, the crowds that come
out to 5upport the runners and the
drama that urroundi. thce\ient
* * * ihe l 98~ 1985 Long Beach M:l18·
DEllllS
llOSTEIHOUS
RUNNING thonclinic w1llbecortductedevery
Thursdayeveningat6:30p.m.at · td1 ussionwillbcfollowedbyashon
RogersJuniorHighSchoolGym--·run.
nas1um, 365 Monrovia. Long Beach. All cliniQ; arc free ofcharge and
The weekly clinics will include should be ofbenefit to both fint-time
many of the most knowledgeable and veteran marathonen,,
peoplein their fields. The lecture-The clinics arc presented asa pub)ic
sen·1cc b) lhc Long Be ch M th on.
Theupcommgchm wlllbC:
•Oct.4-Buddmgan Individual
Training Program, conducted by Joe
Carlson.
•Oct. l I -Equipment, conducted
by Pat Patterson.
•Oct. 18-Nutrilion. conducted
by.Evelyn Ttibo.~----.
•Oct. 25-Running tcchniqu
conducted by Dr. Jim Coots,.
* * * RUNNING SCHEDULI!
SAT\MDAY
1llt l't\AOD Orv Ru.., 1• Md 2·MIH! ... Ina NS e.m. (2 mllft) .ncs I e.m ( 10k) 11 NtwPOrl
Btedl 81Ck Bev. Mosllv flet coune, with Hl'lllt
tredts, on ecoloelQJ rtMNM '" 11 s 10 With T • ihlrt end 55 wllhoul with Sl i.te I• Proc..Os
benefit Mothers ANlntl DrunlL Orlvint For more
l •
Three-across seating.
Full-bench seat More combined
horsepower and More corrosion resistance.
New, re-engineered seamless,
smooth-side strongbox
with double-walled
construction.
to'rque than any other
standard pickup.
Powerful 2.4-liter NAPS-Z
hemi-head engine.
More value with
standard 5-speed
overdrive transmission.
'*Mfr.'s sug. retatl price excluding title, taxes, license and destination charg~.
trs here. Now. The 1985. Nissan Regular Bed. It's more truck, but
not more money. This tough, new performer is listed right now at an
'84 sticker. So get more than you bargaine<{ for at your Datsun dealer.
The $5999* Nissan Regular Bed; more tr"'ck, not more money. No
other truck works so hard for so little pay.
• NISSAN
AT DATSUN DEALERS
ftfO(fNtiOfl~ llhOl!t ~" ~ ., M4·~S. SUNDAY
CellMUITI llkl Molnl••Jn.•l lm AllQlln Atllllllc Club, Seventh •net Ollve Slretli, LOi
CourH GOH lo 11'11 Memorlel Collaeum
wltll tne lnc1lnt Fee 11:1 Wlth T •lblrt wtth U
latt tn Tri. r.c. drew S.400 runnen la'I nar.
For tnOl'• Information,~ Jim Gould no••
12131 '2S• 2211 Wlh ,.,.. O~ S _. lCMu Bevlnlee
C5kl a_fld 1:301 m. (!Oki II Whllllef Nefro.1
P.¥11., South El.Monte. Flat COW'H.FM b M with
T,"111'1 elld M wlll'IOUI wllh '1 late IM. Pro<:Hd•
Mntfll LA County O~rtmet1t of Perkl end
•ecr .. llolltfoottil" Olstrlc;t Youth Proeram1.._ FOf' more lf'lformatlon, pflOne Steve Frtf'lk at 1eltl
ff"6J'3.
, .... AllNMll Lwllemla S.c11tV CW9Nldt
af'ld9t 10lr Md 2-Mllt w•: B"l"' 7:30• m -metl et UO a.m in hlbot Park In s.n OleVO •rid
!Mis to Cor-00 Rot111111 eourM o~er Coronado
Brklllt PrOCMCI• benefit Tiit l.eullernlt Society~ Sen OllOO. For more lftf«mallOI\, PhOfle All!llllN
Ltvvtl (61'12'3-'1:11 •
Edison
jiTlsrace
to viCtozy
The Edison Hieh girls cross coun·
try team, perennially strong in the
Sunset League and rated fourth in tho
latest CIF 4-A rankings, swept the top
three places and took seven oftbe top
eight slots in defeating Fountail'l
Valley, 17-46, Wednesday at Edison.
Nicole Ritchot raced the three-mile
distance m l 9.08 to win, followed by
teammates Mitch Nadon (19.25) and
Melanie Manke (19.29). Valene
Gio\)in was the top Baron finisher,
placing fourth with a time of 19.56.
The Chargers placed fifth throu&h
eighth with Mande Manke (20.11),
Deanna Feser (20.33), Tiffany Pimm
(20.35) and Kathy Garcia (20.38)
scoring for Edison. On the boys side, Fountain Valley's
depth proved crucial as the Barons
notched a 22-35 victory over Edison.
J um or Si Rangel was the winner in
a closely-rontested raoe at the front
end, edging Edison's Gene Patino by
three seconds in a time of 16.05. The
Barons took the fifth through seventh
places to seal the meet. with Tim
Gold, Dave Knos and Cay Bond
placing in those spots for Fountain
Valley.
It was the first competition for
Edison, which will run in the Dana
Hills Invitational Satiirday.
In another Sunset meet. Marina ~stercd a 25-30 victory over West-
minster, despite a wire-to-wire first
place showing by the Lions' Danny
Acosta in 16.16.
Marina's Jim Maynard closed fast
to finish second in 16.51, followed by
teammate Bnan Jewett ( 16.55). It was
Marina's first Sunset victory in over a
year, and fast finishing Sean Mcin-
tire, who passed two Westminster
runners m the late going to place
sixth, proved instrumental.
Huntington Beach senior Lisa Tor-
l'C'l's victory in 20.36 wasn't enough
for the Oilers in a 25-30 loss to Ocean
View an a g.arls meet at Central Park.
Akemi Royer and Erica Whistler
finished second and third, respective-
ly. for Ocean View.
Raiders
focusing
on Elway
MANHA TI AN BEACH (AP) -
The abilit)' of Denver quarterback
John Elway to run with the baJl is one
of the main concerns of the Los
Angeles Raiders, according to Coach
Tom Aores.
"He can take off and run the ball,"
the Raiders coach said Wednesday.
"He's one of their top runners."
Aorcs' concern for Elway's ability
stems no doubt from the second-year
quarterback's scrambling in a victory
over Oeveland two weeks ago. In that
game, Elway ran the ball five times for
45 yards.
A year ago when the Raiders played
the Broncos at Denver, Elway was in
the spotlight because he bad been the
first player drafted and was beina
asked to learn a complex offense in a
hurry. Now, Aores says, he's a
different quarterback.
"He's more poised," said Aorcs.
"One of the things they had to realize
was the tremendous press~. not
only on John, but on (Coach) Dan
Reeves.
"When you sign someone with that
much acdaam and talent, you almost
have to play him immediately,"
Aorcs wd "You don't have the
luxury of bnnaina him alona slowly
because you have to play him im-
mediately."
The Raiders, 4-0, meet the Bron-
cos, 3-l t Sunday at Mile Hi&h
Stadium 1n Denver.
"I don't know if Denver's that
good," said Aores when asked about
the Broncos' record, "but tf Kansas
City is any level of measurement,
they're a good team."
•
daJ Tug-of-war fans
pulling ,fQr sport
to reacD Oly1npics Blyleven '• 18th w1ri a shutout
0 HKO H, Wi .-Afour-Oayworld
From AP di pattltu •
war wm be waged m this small Midwestern
community ~&inning tOday.
Bert Blylevu nuscd hl5 record to IS. 7 •
With hts fourth shutou11 a scven·h ttcr. as
Oeveland edged Seattle, t-0, Wednesday
ni&ht. BlyJeven struck out 111 nd walked Oshkosh will be the fi"t U.S. city ever to ho5t the
International Tua-of-War World Championships,
which, in their 24th year, arc ex~ted to feature more
than 700 "rope-pullers" from 16 nations.
lt'1 the fint1ntemationil tUJ-Of-warin thi~country
aincc the 1904 St. Louis Olympics.
Tua-of-war has not been an Olympic spon 5inoc
tht 1920 Antwerp Gamet. And Roben Pulfer, founder
and t>re ident of the U.S. Amateur Tua-of-War
Assoc11tion, said that this weekend's event may be
crucial for those who hope to sec the sport re tum to the
Olymi>.ics.
0 The interest dropped in the United States but
linJCred in Europe," said Pulfer, a native of &em.
Switzerland, who has lived in Verona, Wis., for ~4
years ... It's only now repining stature. We need to
recreate the kind of enthusiasm shown in the Olympics
in Los Angele . We hope tu~-of-war can be at least a
demonstration sport in 1988. '
When Pulfer formed the U.S. Amateur Tug-of·
War Association in 1978, htS dream was to sec this
country carry the sport back into world prominence.
"I pray we have J$ood weather because it would kill
us financially ifwc dtdn't get plenty of spectators," he
said. .
He said he is hoping that 50,000 pcoplotake in the
weekend's action.
one a he lowered his ERA to 2.81 with his 12th
complete game. The veteran right.,handcr has 46 career
shutout5, and the 18 victories uc Blytevcn's most since
he won 20 games with the Minnesota Twins in 1973 ~ •
. Elsewhere in the American lca&uc, Job MontefuH
held Baltimore hitless until Rieb baau sing1cd leading
off the sixth inruna and puchcd the New York Yankm
to a 3·1 victory over the Orioles. Monttfusco pvc up
only two hits in seven 1nni~. lcaar~•ftC'r imtatina a callous on his pitch in~ hand. Dan etti pitched two
inninp for tiis 30th save ••• D••)'lle Muplly'• lhrce-
run homer in a seven-run second inning lC'd Oakland to
a 7.5 victory over Texas. Dave Leiper, 1-0, a<>t his first
major league \lictory, pitch1n,g one inning of relief for
starter Mike Warrea : •. Enile Whitt capped a four-run
third jnrrina with a two-run homer, and Geor~ Bell
homered in the 'seventh inning as Toronto defeated
Boston, 8-4, behind the seven-hit pitching of Doyle
Aleuader." Alexander, 17-S, gave up four runs on four
hits, includina Mike Eatler'• two-run homer, in the
second innina but only permitted one base-runner the
rest of the way on Rlcla Gedman'• two-out double in the
seventh •.. Pinch-hitttr Ben Otllvle ripped a two-run
double and Robla Yout singlednome the so-ahead run
as Milwaukee rallied with four runs in the eighth inning
to beat Detroit, 7-5. Tiaer reliever AareUo Lope&
suffered his fU'St loss of the season after 10 victories.
Fernando fans 12,
·but loses No. 17
LOS ANGELES (AP) -It is said
that anytime I pitcher loses 20 pmes
he must be a pretty aood one because
be keeps going to the mound stan
aftcrstan.
The Los Angeles Dodacrs' Fernan·
do Valenzuela hasn't lost 20, but
Wednesday night he lost his 17th, 3-1
to the Houston Astros, despite strik·
in, out 12 batter$.
t marked the 13th time in
Valenzuela's last 29 stans that lhe
Dodgen have scored one run or less.
Valenzuela, who was the National
League's Cy Youna Award winner
three years aao, did not appear to be
upset with his 12-17 record.
"Anyone can lose 17 ,aamcs," he
theorized. "The one who 1s not losina
is the one who is not pitchin&."
The Astros won the iame in the
nintll inning when pinch-bitter Mike
Richard lashed a two-out, tw~run
double down the left field line to
break a l·l tie.
.. It was a good screwball. be hit it
very well," said V alcnzucla.
Richard. who was obtained by the
Asttos in August in a trade with the
Texas Rangers, said. "It was my
bigest hit of the year ... He has only
four since coming to the Astros.
.. It was my first ~e-winnina hit
in either league,' Richard said.
.. Since coming here I've been used·
strictly as a pinch-hitter, so rve been
just trying to make contact.
"We needed the win, we're stJll
trying for second place, so it's nice to
bea pan of it"
Pedro Guerrero, who improved his
-avcraae to a season·hi&h .299 by
-------------collecting two of the Dodgers' six hi~s, Newport,
University
win in polo
Newport Harbor High. the ClF 4-
A's top-ranked water polo team,
staned quickly and cruised to a 14-6
victory over Estancia 10 Sea View
Leaauc action in the Sailors' pool
Wednesday.
Newport jumped out to a S-0 lead
after one quarter and built the
advantaac to 10-2-at halftime before
~tng Estancia ev~.n if! the second
Now 7-0, the Sailors were paced by
Jon Elliot's four aoals, while Doug
O'Donnell and Andrew Lawson had
three apiec.c. Goalie Mike Campbell
worked the first three quattcrs before
aiving way to Ian McKay for the final
·stanza.
S'cnior Jeff Jones notched four
goals for the Eagles, while Chris
Lorenze and Peter Howe tallied one
apiece.
Next on tap for the Sailors is 3-A
power Riverside Poly Friday after·
noon at 3 at Newport.
In another Sea View match, Uni·
vcrsity eased past Saddleback, 21-6
behind five goals by Eric Carlson and
four from Marty Schlacter.
The Trojans, 10th-ranked in CIF,
scored six goals in the first quarter
and five in each of the final three
apinst the ovcrmatched Road·
runners. .
In a non-conference t:ommumty
collcac matchup, Orange Coast was
dealt a 12· 7 defeat by visitina Lona
Beach City.
• The Vikinas effectively took con·
• trol of the contest an the second
quarter, outscoring OCC, 6-1, to grab a 7.3 advant.agc at halftime. The
Pirates. 7-4 overall. never seriously
threatened af\cr th.at.
Rob Mirande and Do_ua Plitt had
two aoals apiece for occ. Which
hosts Mt. San Antonio in a South
Coast Conference match Fnday at
I 3:30.
! TAFT •..
' PromCl
because a player is from out of state he
has two heads and stands ci&)\t feet
tall." Baldock says. "That's not
necessarily true. I'd much rather
recrull in this state."
There are several Southern Clli·
f'om1a players on Tan's team th1l
9e00n, but. Baldoc,k ~lDllOUl, ··~~)
(the _players) must m1t11te contact.
"'Tan wouldn•t have a foothill
team afthey weren't allowed 10 ao Jet
athletes out of state," say Golden
West's hackleford. "I'd ure rather
lhey co to Texas to find them than to
Hununaton lkadt."
hlci.leford hu raoed Baldock·
coathtd team for m1ny years, dlung
c.ktotheda)sGoldcn Westand l.Jos
nacles C were ulhcm Cahfom1a
Conference foes.
"I undmtand thal Bakcrdlcld ha
somcthin hkc 20 out-of. tate ath·
tctc . but u' always Tan \\htch acts
Jhc bam,ac." h cklcford conunu
"The ch a v.ho complain hould
tan loolun 1n the mirror.''
singled home Los Angeles' only run m
the third inning.
Valenzuela restricted the Astros to
just three hits in the first five inninas,
but Jose Cruz homered wilh two outs
in the top of the sixlh to tic the score.
It was Cruz' 12th homer, all of which
have come on the road.
Cruz singled to stan the Astros'
rally in the ninth. Glenn Davis
sacrificed. Terry Puhl walked and
after Alan Ashby grounded out,
Richard, the pinch hitter, doubled
down the left-field line.
"That was the old Fernando out
there," said Houston manager Bobby
Lillis. "But Richard came through
like a champi_on. .
"We like hln\,'Or we wouldn't have
traded Alan Bannister for him.'~-.'
The Dodgers arc idle today, then
closes out the sea.son over the week·
end at Dodier Stadium apinst tbe
San Francisco Giants.
TRICKY •••
From Cl
Sbackleford's team. It will &ive us a
much better feeling,•• he says.
The last time Golden West and :raft got together was two y~ ago.
The Cougars came into OCC top.
ranked, unscorcd upon and they had
managed to score at least SO points in
each of their previous pm cs.
Taft still won the pme, but t>y a
surprisingly close score, 38-21. . "
"I thinlc. we surprised them when
they were down here last time," says
Shackleford. "It was the same cir·
cumstancc as th.ts year, with the
exception that this game is a con-
ference game. We played them tou~.
our players were not intimidated then
and l don't feel they arc now.''
After two games, the Rustler de.;
fense has allowed but one touchdown.
Taft has scored 111 points in two
games.
"The defense held a solid offensive
team (Santa Ana) to 14 J><?ints. They
(the Dons) scored 33 -.ainst one of
the top defensive teams m the nation
(Fullerton)," Shackleford poanu out.
"Now I don't know what that pro,·e
but we're a g6od defensive team.
$ttUrda)' wiJI show how aood WC
rt'.llly arc."
Taft's fullhouse offense features
several runnina backs. John tewa.rt
is averaging l.S.4 yard per carry,
Alonzo Clark averages 8.2 yardsrr
carry and James William~ is at 7 ..
The Co~rs arc avcrqjng 390
yards rushing and SSS yards in total
offense. ,
Baldock has taken a look at a trio of
quarterbacks in prc-confcrenoe
pmes. Sophomore Mike Perez has
had the best outinp. completiq l 0 of
1 S· ptucs for 204 yard! and two
touclldowns.
Golden West counters w1th quar·
tcrback John Heinle who has com·
pleted 22 of~ pas for 286 )lrds
and four touchdown . He bas been
intertcpted three times.
The Ru tier rustunaaame is led b
s>homore John Lamberton bo has
I .SS yards ion 40 cemcs fort 4 0
IVC~.
"Taft is tht best team c \\ill ra
thi1 ):Ur,.. adds backlcford.
"They re c plo t~c on oft'cn but
thc)'re not inV1ntlblc on deftn • I
think we can me th of·
fen hcl~ but we have to c «Ute our
offense to petfi . uon "
MAJOR LEAGUE STANDtNGS
A"*1cM L.MM
WIST OMSIOM
W L ~ Ga ., 7' .522
11 n .su 1112
" 1' .500 )'h 7S 14 An I n 15 .A62 '"" 7l '7 .'49 11 ~
67 90 .A'l7 15
U11T OIVISK>N
x·Oelroll 102 56 .6A6
T«onto • 71 .553 t•\l't New Yoft( I.JS 73 .531 17
Boston ... 7• .532 11 e.itrmort 13 75 ..525 ,,
CltYtlaM 71 r7 "9 31 Mllw•ullet 65 t3 .•11 J7 x-won division 11111 w.....-rakw. .,..... 2, KMMI Cllv 0
Chlaleo t, MINleeote J Cllvllend t, SMtllt 0 -•
New Yott l , 8e"lmort 1
T orOl'IO I, Boston • Mllw•UkM 7. Dttrolt s ou1enc1 7, Tues s
T .. Y't o.met
...-(John 7-12) et Tnu CMlson t·m. en> Mlnnnote CSmttllSOn tS-1)) et ~
(Sc:Nlltt 3-tl. (nl
e.l!lmort (Dbton 4>-ll •I Boston (Olede
12-121, Cn> Dt1rolt (Peiry 11-ll et Ntw Yor11
!Cllrlsten&en 2-•>. Cnl Clltcaoo CHoYt 13-17) et Sfftllt (8-roies
H), Cnl
NatloM! LH9Ue
WUT DIVtSIOH W L ~ Ga
a-Sen oi.go 90 6t .56'
Allentt 79 79 .500 10"'1 H~ton 1' IO .'97 11
Oedlelr't 7' 13 .A71 '" Clnctnnetl 67 tl .m 22112
Sen Frenclsco " fl .•IS 2•
IAST DIVWOH a·Chlceoo tc " .59S New Yor~ It 70 .5'0 Sii>
St. Louis 13 7S .52S It
PlllledllPhie 11 71 .509 13 II>
MontrMI 75 12 •71 11112
Plltsbur911 n 17 .CS3 22112
•-on division tlllt w.-...r• Scwts
Houston ), Oedlelr't ' N-. Yott 7, PtllledtloNe 1
Sen Dle9o •· Sen FrtnclK'O 0
St. Louis 5, Montrtel o Cl'llcaoo S, PillUlurth 2 Clnclnnetl 6, Atlente 3
T.-Y'1 G..-
SI. Lou s (Fondl 2·•> al Mcw\tttal
(PP'ner 6-3) Aliellte (Smith 1~) at Conc:fnNll (Toivtr
0-0), !nl
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Antllb 2. Renb 0
CAUflOANIA KANSAS CITY
ebrllllll orlllill
Ptlllscf
Schoflldas
LVMrf
OOwnlnglf
OtCncs3b
R&JltMI dtl
Grich 2t1
DMllltr lb
loontc
T"'8b
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•110 Sherldnrf •Oto
3 t 0 0 lrttt 31:1 • 0 1 O • o l 1 one c11 " o t o . 3021 Mot'-Vlf •OOO
.. 0 0 0 hlbofll lb 3 0 ' 0
3000 Whltt2b •O lO
3000 S&lauohlC 3000
3000 Cncocnn 3020
Jl 2 " 2 Tetals U I 1 0 ~ tw lnnlnea
~ IOOtneot-2
Ktftllt CltY IOO ... 000-t
Geme Winning Rll -Dowlllno ml E-s1euon1. DP-<eotoml• 1.
LOB-'<allfoml• '· ICanws Cltv 7 :rt-<onc.pcJon. 58-lleJedlson (I). .., Han .. so
~ Romtldl W,12·12 t 1 I 0 I 2
ltaftlalCltV
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NATIONAL LEAGU•
A1trM 3, Ded"" 1
HOUSTON LOS ANGILllS .,..... ..., ....
Pnllovta b ... 0 0 Sex a ' l 0 0
h11 d 4 0 0 0 8Rusu4 u " 0 I 0
Garner:hl & 0 2 0 undrxrf "0 0 O
Cruilf 42J1 G'*"'ef •021
GDev•S lb 2 I 0 0 MarsflU • 0 0 0 ~r1 20t0 Sctolelec 4000 ~ c .. 0 0 0 lf"Am lb 2 0 1 0
CRenleft u 3 I 0 0 Lendlty w 0 0 0 0
Rldvdt II>!'! t 0 l 2. StllbO\ lb l 0 0 0
IPtlle u O O o O Riv.re 3b 2 o 1 o
MScOlt o ? 0 0 D RlltnkSUl't t 0 0 0
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t. .. ~ ., ... --• Otme WlM1no ltll -1Uch41rdl (I>
E--'1MIY. lltvtf• Loe-Holllton 6 LOI A._... 1 21-1Uctierel1. Htt-<ru1 (If)
Sa-c:Ni (Ill, BfMm Ill 5'-lti.eta
GO."" • ....... so ......
MScotl • s I ' D I
0.wtnW,)M J ' 0 • 1 • LAii MlliM VI L,lM7 t ' J J 3 12
T A U1.
Padta put on • how
.
Es-Sea Kin& Goebel •ldellaed
I tak Fullerton ns1vt taeldt Ill Han Oocbel. a product of Corona dc1 Mar t 11 J
Hi&h, ill unde110 artht0scop1c:· knee urscey fler bc1 snjurcd pncucc
NEW YORK -Unbeaten Larry m
Holmes, caSting aside Geme Coctzee, will
Tuesday.
Goebel, 6-8 and 260 pounds. was an AD-Sea y,,..
ucchotcca a tilbtend ~th lheSCa:K:inltud wu
so a ~tcr on the CdM balletball team
TbCJUDlO?' lineman 1S peeled itd be sidelined for
3-4 eeks. · fi&ht James ··eonecrusher.. mith for the
f ntenational Boxing Federation heavy-
weight title Nov. 9 when he continues his quest to catch
the ghost of Roe~ Marciano.
Fullenon, 4-0, ,_,,.u open m defense of the Pacific
Coast Athletic Assoaauon championship When u boeu
Utah tatc turd&y, J o'c:loo at the Santa Ana Bow!.
''I'm goin let that fight die," Holmes said at a
news confcren Wednesday, rcfcmng to his pro~
bout apinst Coeuec, the World Boxing Assoaation
champion.
TeleYlal~. ra4lo
Holmes had hoped to make his first fi~ this )car
for promoter Don Kina again5t the WBA title-holder
from South Afnca. But that fight was blocked. at leaftt
tcmporarilY\ when Holmes lost a lawsuit filed ~
Virainia atto'rney Richard Hirschfeld.
Cr.u c.untrv
HIGH SCHOO\. ...,.
MM1M 25, w .........
C tt WettllWlllW)
I ~·· CW) 16 3'. 1 Me~rd (M), 16..51; 3 Jewttt lN.1. 1' 551 " Resrt <W>, 17 00, S. IC....v (MJ, 17 07: 6 Mdnhrt (M),
17.29; 7. Bryan (W), 17.3', I Trlftided (W),
17 .... ; t Welcltoet (Ml, l7 A6; 10 ~ve~bie '""*"' v...., n. ·--is·l-(et lllMfl)
1. Ranetl (FVl, 1' 05, 2 P•llllO (E ),
16. .. , 3. Lemon (FV>, 16 1•; .. Kistner IE), 16. \6, S Gold (FV), 16. 16; 6. kncn (FV),
1U3; 7. 80tlCI (FV). 16.35, I . ArncSH-{-6).
1U2, t . Wtrd !FV), 1U•; 10 Jteobt CE),
1U5
Glm
Oceaft Vla'W 1$, """"""'" ... dt • (et Cmtral f'arti)
l T«rtl (HI ), 20.)6, 2. Rover COV),
10.S., l Wlllallw (OV), 21.IS, 4 80tlCI (HI),
22 Of, S K. CarNI (OV), Z2 17; 6 S Cerllti
(OV), 22.21; 7. Alvaro (HI), 22.lS; ..
Jec:klt (H8), 2J.S2; t. SC"90M (OV), 2S.1•,
10 ~II CH8), 25.50
~ 17, ~---v...., A6 (atl ... )
I. Rltc:flOI (El, 19 OI: 2. N.cioa CE). !US; l. Me Me!lkt (El. lt.29, .._ Gloom !FVl.
lt..5'; S. Me. Menke (E), 20.12, 6 F-IE), 20.33; 7 Pirrm (El, to.3S, I Gafde
(E), 20ll. t . ICeMY lFVl. 20.s:J; )0. Trudll
CFV), 21,16
Hltl\ ld\ool scMdUle
TONIGHT s.. VltW i....,.
Saddltbeck va Co••• Mese <•t N-POrt
H1rbor)
C*"UfV Leatue
Senll Arte "' VIiie Park (al El ~) ltnlllrt LMIUt El Corado vs. ICetelle (•t LI Petme
Perk) on.. LMIUt Trov at Vtltncla ...........
Wtltmlnattr "" Mettr Del (et Senta
AM Bow1l
L°' Am/90$ ti Wftlem
,RIOAY
Set Vla'W LM11Ut
N-llOl"f Harbor "'' Woodllrkl9e (•I lrv1flel La9U'\e leech vs· COf'one dl4 Mar (al
N-oort Herbor)
Eslal'de vs U111YWl11Y (et Ora,..
CoeSI) s.w. C..d L-.ut
1r11tw vs. El Toro <•• MilSlon V"t910l
Miulon VielO et Dene H I
Sen Clel'Nfltt ti Cep11trtno V••• c.,.,,. L...-
C.nvon at El Mocttne
Ora'IDt vs. Fooltlll (et Tustonl Tustin vs S.ntt Arie V1~4!V Cat S.11te
Alie 8owll -
lfn91rt L~ ).
ICIMtCIV vs CYPt'tM (et Wt1tem)
Lo• Alamitos vs Ell>tl'ente (et Velln·
cla)
Ntft•llel!Ue •
L• Quint• "'' Marine (er Westminsltr)
Lone lffctt WllMMI er Hunllnoton Madi
Otten Vltw ti Ger dine ll P m.l
Leeune HiMt at Me'fftlr
Rtnc:ho Alemltos at Fuittrlon
Le H&bre ti Lekewood
Sortor• et 8r .. ·Olinde
Troy et vattnclt
Artttl• a l Boise Gra"dt
Gercitn Grovt vs A"I"' m (at Le
PeltN Perk)
Sent,. .. el Le Mifeot
~ •' 1tow1anc1 11~ Amat at St l'rtndt
Horttl TorraM:t at llaPloo Mon'""'9rV
Alltnenv " SI Paut
Plus X et Comoton
SATUROAY
I,,_. L-.U.
li'e<•llO "' Loera (91 LI Pelme P81"1tl ..........
Serv'1 t 111 F-lelll Vt It" let Srlte
Ane low\I SI John 8oKO "' ECl!sol\ (t i Hunllnttofl
a..tfl) llltt'• Paf1l et S.veMie
p.,,..
WIDNISOAY'S RCSULTS 04'11 .. , .......... ...,....,
~ALOOSAS
l'IRST RACI. 6 ~ Holt Flies IY ('Mine) l.tO ,_ UO
Slf Denolkl4 lOdioel I 00 UO
SteiM ~ lG...V llO Also rectd: Mislliv« CUP. ltodl Y s Fllt1,
I'm A Dutr Too. OOlhe W!MI
Time u• 3 s SS EXACTA C2·7l H d SSt.00
OUAa'TEJtHOaS•s SECOND RACL 3SO ver~
Swtt1ell0 lStVllltl ZUO UO "40 Hennl Pill (Hartl SM ~.20
TOP ltNtnt U~rooj(s) UO
Abo rM*1 lmPWial Son, SoflOfatlleal«,
FIVlno Peuem, Fire Me Fl"'' Debi Turn.
Sheckv Rad.
Tlmt: 17.11 TH•O UCL 3SO veros
Shut Kid (No9uN I I 20 "O UO RiOtll RnPOttM (Cr....,) 3 40 2.20
Two Nolft (lerdl z.• ""° read T19fr T• Miu, Le ROM -More,<_._..C_,....._ ..--M Go
11rrlt 17 .79.
IS E.XACTA t7·•> oeld S6050
T'MOROUGt4••os FC>UaTH RACE. 6 llllllnet PTocier Theme Clleclt> 760 Ut 2.tO SIUMlne Searl C,MMe) UO UO
Soul SMrOllftl IF.,,,.,.tl J20
Aiao racec:I: FantestlC Sota. ..Ve's Ga · ~ Ster. Hlell T•tw, Curioua 8eeu
Timt: 1.l2 11S..
FIFTH llACE. 6 ""'*'"-· llio M:deml I ioll ( F fftCl.I) 1 IO 4 10 3 20
C9CQln Gii CEstreda) 6.40 4 60
Mesttr Con.trot C NocJutl) I 60
Al$O rac9CI YetNlle_.., Y111te UO<n
Inch tn Tlme, C-.ttY It~. Mr l.umlltr·
llld< T1mt 1'12 2J s.
12 DAILY OOU8L& C•·•I NICI 14"00
SIXTH RACE. 1 1116 mllft
Ster Court <HoGlrtolwortlll 2.5.IO I .tO 4 00
Mortlfoft (Whitt) .._60 2 IO
AuSaoltJlm (Munlnv) 2..60
Atso re<:9d•Cellfomle Ill.tit!\, ProPtr
Strtclt, t~, SN'11 Acklct,
Heneie.I Prince
Time. Ht.
SS EXACTA (7·•l ot•d "'6.00.
SSVE.NTM llACa. 6 fur1onea.
5'l«lel Occaaio.t <Crwl 10.tO S.00 lAO
R0$19'1 Tonic (l!Kk) UO l..tO
MlreUte (Hellltfl) 2M
Also recld: Fillt'll!l'f Atnv. Akaroe, u
Eatr .... Genuil't Ulrk, Jennlltr'a Ollck
TliM 1.12 11 s.
EtoHTit RACL £ ~ Ct~ (Cnitl J..60 240 2 60
OouClit JOY (PT"octorl UO· l.20 I Away~(landtrM) )IO
A.l50 n1C1C1. At's WClllOlf, I! ICOr1' a Jtw,
Pal1tf'1 lest On, Air Of GloN, tllTlt. 1:11..
SS.uc:TA (6•lJ Nld $1.UO
M1Nnf ltACa. 6 M'lllNI Thi labt (...,..,.) • 00 uo .... oo
Melie Mentra !9unlll le IO 5.10 Le Quatrlerle (Ootn1""'92) S.60
, Allo rec9CI. secuier 5*, Hollleu R"' s , Seretoee Trenca. s1a11ra Girt, Pod>ola
T1mt 111 I S.
SS l.XACTA 12-6) N td 123600
TENTH RACL 1 1/16 mies
S."ClllUnl (~) 21 ... t..20 • 00
9 ,sJllfo (Fef'"M'*l) 15.00 7 IO
ROOUt Prlna (Ariail UO
AltO rKtd SoMk $1>y, LlslO, Olc.,.'S
Prielt ElcMlllo, Art'S LUCkY $oft
Tlmt "'' 2tS. SS IXACTA (1·11 oeld Sltl.50.
12 f'tCK SIX <•+5·6 2•2-tl oeld StOI 00
•ltll 3' w"1tllno tl0.111 (flvt ttorMI) carrvovw POOt '35.Clt 1s,
ILIVENTH RAC•. 1 111• mllM
Fr•11 a Vtienltne l819a. 6 IO "4t l ..O COUrw lean (Oon'l"'9Uerl I "8 400
""9 Cornea Love !Mtnll l "° AlaO raced Pe MIMI, catuti FallCV,
Suell•, RtntW, U.. S__.,ster.
~ROM
TitM lAS 4 S
SS Ix.ACTA ()·fl NlO SlS.UO
TWILl'TH RACE. I 9116 ft\lies
JtrOl"'lt Pre fie (8'S-1) UO 4 IO 4 00 Tonv·a TrMIUl'e (hunl lUO 520
Poodeh ONtn (Ftr!W'Cltll 400
Atso rectd Ject.et s C , Pfelr\t ~.
Tra'4!"1t, M.~IY F HelO RMtol!\. Time ,., • s.
SS IXACTA 13·11NicillCM50 A~l'>Ce 10.llO (•t!f'Nl.O).
LM AJemitM
#aO .. ESOAY'S RUULTi
(Urd tf 54·"'9flt ... .._. ~· ,llST ltACI. Ollt milt ~
Tim.roes 5lleCIOw (LCb) 160 360 UO
AllCflor le' ( OttOl'ntf) s.... l.. .. Htllo• Criereer CPe!"llttl UO
AIM r~ W•'11 Orlw, Nldlv D lrt"°
W1M Df!vtn TlmmYI 5111-
Tlme ?'CS .. s
13 EXACTA Cl-61 ottd 1'1 IO
SICONO uca. °"' mile e>e<:e SCUUla (F. Shl!Telll 1UO 660 ~10
To11ro Rotd (H l UO 3 IO
$uotr Pride l I 2 AO
A ra.tA<O Gem •Leu. SOmefM"9
Fe!ICV, ()!\ So FHI ~ klld Mu,,._,. HoPt
2 U &.X.CTA () •lei SMto
nmto •Ac .ON Dineta Carel f&a ) 3 .0 w "'" WilMS ( rlO} , 00 Don ( )
• A ~ Armtito Fe , "°' $haf. ColntrY ,
u aXACTA "cl 4)
POUltnt RACE Orie
80Ml ( )
)
(D Fr
sornt RACL One mlie --.
9(tlll ...... U . Pwbr) 12..60 7M UI FU. R (H. ParMI') JM 19
Oodor OOll (Pl9no) la ~ rMM '*-~~,Mee49¥ 9U, Alwin"-"· MtA •~. toiu• TltN Ul llS U Ix.ACTA < .. n Mkl "5.11.
UVSNTM lt.Aa. OM mil -... vec-.. l~> llO MO 2AIO ,,,,_... o.icw Men (H.. ,..,..,, 2 '° 2A
T Nlne fl..ecUV) ZM
Allo reclld-: Stflllllw Prb, ~ ~
Guatev, lzadl C.
1;513/S.
t3 XACTA 1(1-7) Mid SlOA.
llJGMTM ltAal. One mle Na. WlkJ Wllll lH ~erJ UO UD UO s..ctel Pcttr U ,..,_,.., JUI 7.AO
ltKi. Man. ""*"-> uo AIM rece.s. Ya w.-.ci. Plmc:al • ...-..,
Module, Doc:W lallrt, F C...
Tirrw· 1 :51 11 s. u Ix.ACTA CS-7) Nici sn.lO
NIHTH UCL 0.. mlle NCI..
Giii! Midlll¥ (Andenon) $..20 MO 1.AO
M.iOfllt Mltrtx lS.1991> s..20 UO
W.U SeesontCI Git1 co.on.-> UO
A/to r.c.c1 F-ler. Vot9', Ttie Com•
_.,.... Gold. #Qter G, EIOCIUllnt ttO¥ $.
T1rnt; 1 " 2J s.. U IXACT A (2-6) 11ei4 Sll. lG.
S2 Ptat wt lSlt-H-1-S t-2.) Mkl
SS.900.AO w eitl'tt w1Mlftl tlcUts <llX
llONft) U Pldt stll ~!Jon MIO 1129.00
w1 S'f rlc:.UJI (five borMll
TtNTM RAca. Oi'9 mile 11*11.'
Aliillt Gettv (~) SAO JJ0 UD
Emereld OUt CT...-.U) \SM 6AO ~(DelomlrJ ...
AllO rec»ct. a-T Z, #n Roohi .... .....,,.., ~ R ... ,.,..,,,_.,, Stoo The
R MorNll Tll'ne 2:01. •
U axACTA lW) MtO Ml.Oil At ~·lAn
w .......
COMMUM:t'TY cou.aoa
'--a..d\ ti. °"'* c...a 7 Lone le.di 1 ' 1 ..,_ 12 OnftM CO.SI 2 I 2 I-1
Or... Cont ~ Mhnde 2. ~ '· ...... '· h••""' 1, ""z. HtGM SCHOOL
......,....,,_14,Ellllndl6
Eatallde 0 2 I 2'-6
Hettior S S J l-t4
E•i.nd• acorltll Joll8I "· LortMt I, HOwt 1 ~ H.rtior tQlf'fne: Ellol '· StlftleY I, O' DonNI l , Le#fO'I 3, 51*1 Z.
Ewltlll I.
u. ........ 2l. 111 r·. di' uat .... ~ ' s s r21 Sadlf'1l11dl I l t .-: 6
Uftf"ftn ty ICOftmt R.-. 2, CettMll s.
JotQllll J, l't\c.CC11ou91'1 3, Sc*cfW .. Olerll
1, Aa!'l\S' S1d .. Mdl acor• t..ec:orde 1, Wl"Wlt
1, MM8I'"
C-..teear
MEN UC ..,,.._ 2. eel Sta• ~...,.,. 2
UC ltv111t scorlnt G\11111 1, 'Mrlft 1.
WedMSdayitnMadleM
IAUIAU. -.--.. ....... TEXAS RANGEll5-fQmed Jof\n Via
meGla llolli dlr9c:tor. ~i._. OK 1 .... ~~
FSL-A-'Otd Wit fltllllea
• fr•~ 11 CIMn<e!tr elld • ....,. OI
T--bu&~ • hl'CNM Oey"lOM 9MctL
u.sllSTaALL ... ............. ,. • ..ii ...
OEHVEllt NUGG£1'$-Slvt'IM MMf'f '"''*· for'oifal'G KANSAS CITY KING$-$lo11ed Joe C.
~ttw. ctll'W, ,. a _.,...,. ClOft•
trad f'O-TLANO TR•IL
ILAZEltSo-'We!Yet Tom ~ ... c.-•w. UTAH JAll~ .. ~ 1Wmt
wllt\ JolWI SloQfOft, l'Mtnl. en t ~ ...... eentrect ..... .., anc ...,, IMlll•
Cu1Te Ctwtla lt9dle\t, M:irMY Hltft, Wit
Rick•• , "*"*• a. Evlina+ '"'. tl'd Kel!V Knlltlt, .:IOtWI Pllwnt, IN tllll Sterr, a POOTaALL ......................
Cl£V' LAND IROWNS-lte '" IOI\ klek ~ ........ ,...
•
"
1 DAIL "f PILOT y, September 27. 1
DEATH NOTICES
\.
l
'
642-5678
PlRl NEWPORT
aPlRTMENTS
pq &M lfMNI MIA OA
Md ttle HUNTINGTON Bl!ACHCOMBl!A tvttr; W~at noextrl dMlrQel CALL TOOA'Yll
Ulflll.lll
Yout Olly Ptlot a.Wll~ Alpr .... 1ta1M
Ma..a1111t.IOI
HORO SCOPE SYDllEY
01ARR
------------~---
• y
...::..J.
!. •
•
"
MOTOR ROUTES
Motor routes available
in Newport Beach & Corona -del
Mar. Must be 18 years old and
haYe dependable car. Earn
1600-700 per month. Call
10 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
642-4333
Our Oitplay Adnrti ing de-
partment it looking for an am-
bitiou person to rm an ~otry
level position.
Candidate hould ~ff' good
communication skill • fluibility
and an aptitud~ for lurnin~
quickly.
...
end Rt>5um~ to:
Orang~ Coa t O.-ily Pilot
P.O. Box 1560
Costa '\ttta. Ca. 92626
Aun: 1:.1 A \tlTH
ORANGE COAST DAil Y PILOT
I 0 W BAY Sf •COSTA M['iA CA 9,fiJb
• •• I Y t I
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
1M°*'*
ea.ch
10 Stdltful
14 London moMY
15 Fenc:y cue
11Thought
17 o.rman city
18 Ranked box•
20 Klttenlah
21 Per -
23 Tidblta
24 H*'CI n,.
25Streem
28 FOilow after
30 Ember•
M~~
35 Flnal notice
37 tnetlname
pref!•
31 Legal ctwg.t
3t Moa*1\ ''bil>'e"
41 Verdi gilt
42 TIC·-·109
43 Penehllnl
44 Waltzer
48Clip
41Hernee
60AunM.llly
52 lelN•
53 KldMPPW
5e<lrHt -
57 Ho--
to Ane1oha
82&at•
84 Sit...: abbr
15 Helry growth ee Fired ptecee
87 Deride·
II Looked~
• Curtail
DOWN
10~·
abbr.
2 Verne hero
3Handy-
4~tlang
5 Mottgegeee
• Wllhdr-
7 Pertlcle
IConwnt
member
9 Fecatmlle
10 MOMy. 11*'0
1 1 lcelendtc wor1I
12 Length units
13 litumene
ti E)eet
22 Cell forth
24 Lowty WOl'tcer
258ma11Texu
ennadlllo
28~-
27 Bathsheba'•
hut band
...
PREVIOUS
PUZZLE SOLVED
21 Fregment
29 Atctlo reg!On*
31 V•tment
32 Burdened
33 Dlttlgur•
38 Cree or Erle
'°Formerly
41 S.111• up
43 Legume ahrob
45Stat•
4 7 Mensa loeal•
41 Raised
51 -M1n.1ter
53 Legel IM'ld«
54 WIMcity
55 Baked goods
5e Utedup
57 Elhnled~
51 APC>liee 6t lnterlOcl\ e1 Negative
63F~I
F<UIJADS
ME FREE
cat
Ml·llll
·-USED CAM a TMJCKS
COM ,,. Oft CAU. 'Oft ...........
eonw~
lllOllUT
18211 elACH llYD
HUNTINGTON llAai
Ml.-11 I• 1111 __ .. ___ .. ............
THEODORE
ROBiNS
FORD
JOr•c' HAl~OR IHllO
CO~TA MHA O•n 0010
THf OOORE
ROBINS
f OPf'
: '' ..... WI ~ ' • I
\.,,'A ... '' 1 .. I I
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
• -,1:> ><AaM•ll ~ .. o
{0\TA "'l'>A o.&; ru•C
P..own.d Melcedee
To~from
1'•1&.111a .,.,.
1001 Quell S1reet
N9wpoft Beed\ .....
11PIAPlll
For P•1IP9fed
Melcedel Benz
-sm•.TEl&ll
Top Melcedel Prbe P8'd Cll p..., Of Raiy
..... 1111 &amooa 2130(714637~2333 ,_.. tin
·U 111 CW\REAX CR
Blue w/bl\M, loaded,
$38,350. 84M~ 842~7251 ~ndl
anauna ......
1 Tl •1111 ...
2121'•
TO CHOOSE FROM
1.ou.c!Aed
1-slllte-
I
. .
0011110•-
WUL!ll vwa ,_
lllE lcl£1U'S
SIUTI co um
IOTOIS
~
1114 IAlllT
CllYDTIIU
Wolfsburg Ed1tlon
411110CEL
1236 7 • • 11111 per mo
TOf' St352014
CAP$U4tt
S2500 CAP reduction
Aealduel SS800 21
@
11USCll-a1• 1&11 U11J
41moCEl
S23t • , .. "' mo TOP $12.0tt 20
CAP $12 000
~U7M0t
@
11UYUhftlL eomoc UL
'229 ... , .. "' "'° TC>ft $14,&26 IO
CAPS14,IN
$2000 CAP 1'9ductl0n
Aee1c1W11 ISM> IO
t87U Ch BtYd
HurHtngton Beach
(l14) 142-2111
16401 a.ct\ Hunt 8c:f\
147-1707
17,000 ..... .VC,
P/$1eer & twak-. Auto.
CNlee, ~ C1111tta
($11148) ..... 24 mon..ooo IN eerv
~ 9'b/prtot ...
mflflA,NG ;;;g"CM S'' E$
1MO 1 lilectl Hunt lk:tl
'47-1107
91 FWY.
22 FRWY
22 FRWY
..I ' o · .....
fl) cc
CD SANT
ANA .
HUNTINGTON
BEACH
..J CD
0 :J: WARNER • 0 ~
0 CHICK IVERSON
Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi
441 E. ..... ..,,, • ..,.rt ......
171-0IOO
Hlghe_st Quality Sales & Service
en
. ..,
·O NABl;RS CADILLAC 3 j
2100 URIOR ILYI., COSTA IESI
(114) M0-1100 (213) 111-1218 ..
• Best Prices • Convenient Location
• Great Location • Super Service
• Courteous & Knowledfl_eable Sales People
0 THEODORE ROBINS
FORD
U.S.A.'s # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer
Modern Sales, Service, Parts, Body, Paint & Tire Oepts.
Competitive Rates On lease & Daily Rentals
20IO larMr lh•., o.sta Ina
142-0010" M0-1211
0 SOUTH COUNTY
VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU
18711 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach
(714) 842-2000 .
SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE
Orqe Countys lafcest YolbWIPft/lsllzu Dealer
We Wiii Not Be Undersold
PARTS OCPARlMOO OPEN SATURDAY ·m
ORAY FLADEBOE HONDA G RAY FLADEBOE
# 11 lllft C.lftr Ir., lnl11 ca.
In The Irvine Auto Center
830-7800
Complete Sales, Service & Leasing
8 ORANGE COAST JEEP /RENAULT
# 1 /11 Tt1 Wnt For
l1w 1111 Sills For I Yun
O~n~e • SALES
VOLKSWAGEN
#20 lite C.lflr Ir., lnl11
In The Irvine Auto Center
830-7300
Orange Countys Newest Volkswagen Dealer
Complete Sales, Strvice & Leasing
. ~ G STERLING IR ,~ SAUS -SEIYICE -LWllC -PUTS
Overseas Delivery Specialists
PARTI DEPARTMENT OPEN
SATURDAY MORNINGI
BMW -ROLLS ROYCE •SERVICE ~~~ oa t. LEASING . ·:: ::-_·. mc::t,.~:,_Lvo • ACCESSORIES DEPT 1540 Jamboree Rd. .
Newport Beach 840-8444 549-8023
f IAVINE ~ ~ . .. .. ~ ' . ·-~G
•
LAGUNA
HILLS
· .
MISSION
VIEJOj
g
~ 0
l.AKE-MIS$JON VtEJO •
0 CONNELL 1CHEVROLET · 0 BAUER MOTORS
2121 ...... , • ., •• , O.sta ....
Over 23 Years Serving Orange County
Sales • Service • Leasing
546-1200 Special Parts U.. 546-MOI
MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM -9:00 PM
BUICK -JAGUAR -ISUZU
Complete Automotl"9 Needs
SALES • SERV1CE • LEASING Ane Selection of Quaffty U9ed Vlhlclee
# 1 BUICK DEALER IN ORANGE COUNTY
2125 HARBOR BLVD. SATURDAY 8:30 AM -8:00 PM
SUNDAY 10:00 AM -5:00 PM . COSTA MESA 171-2500
. -. .
8 STADIUM PONTIAC f. We 're New -We're O..llng 'ti i
Acroaa from the Big A on Katela. Juat WHt '
of the (57) Orang• FrMW•J
'-Sales • Service • Parts • Body Shop on Premises
fi1h1I• 222& E. l1t1ll1 111-1111
BILL YATES
YILllWllEI • PlllOIE • PEnEIT
SALES • LEASING • PARTS •SERVICE
12112 Y1ll1 lea•, la1 .l1a1 Oa,astra11
411-4111 117-4IOO
0 RAY FLADEBOE
LllOILI IEIOllY .111111 IUD
41 11 Alte ..... , .•• , lnl••
In The lrvtne Auto Center
830-7000
8 CREVIER BMW
SALES • SERVICE • LEASING
"Where Professional Attitude Prevails"
IS*=lell&lng In EutOPNa Delvery. lx«*lent lelectton of
New end c.retu1J ptepered Ueeci IMW'a elwaya In ltock.
. 835-3171
208 W. 1at St., Santa Ana
Corner of Broadway & 1at St. CIOMd Sundays
G UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE OJIM SLEMONS "IMPORTS'
HONDA
2880 Harbor Blvd.
1301 Qu•ll St. -New C•r Location
1001 Qllilll St. -Reule DW#elon IT\ World's Largest Select/on of @ '<::;I Mercet:lea Benz ~
833-9300
Costa Mesa 540·0713
3 Blocks So. of 405 Fwy .
SM · UUilC • Pn · lenlci • Wy llltj
Classified advertising 1s your b est
choice for help in selling the items you
no lo~g e r n eed . It 's Quick and
inexpensive. and the Pilot reac hes
potential buyers who live in this area.
Call today.
Daily Pilat
class1fleo ads
phone 642·56 78
\
'I.
I
•
11m11
----
THURSDAY. SEPTl:.MBEfl 2i 1984
- - ------~ ~
[)QPf!~!!tJ'S
COMING! Myst~ry driver o be buried
The Orange County Per-
forming Arts Center has
-·received a $100,00 Ocon-
tribution./ Al
California
Actor says he won't ap-
pear In the nude In new
movle./A5
~· Nation
Twen~-three people
were tossed off a
schooner that flipped In a
heavywlnd./A7
World
Shultz, Gromyko end
talks that are termed 'a
good start.'/ AS
Is yachting a sport, rec-
reation al activity, social
event or none of the
above?/81 .
*:-;:.:·:·:·:·~·:·:·:-:<·:·:·:-:·:.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·!·:·:.:·
Sports
The Angels barely stay
alive In the American
League West pennant
race with a2-0wln In
KanaasClty./C1
Entertainment
Despite five shows In the
top six, NBC loses the
week's Nielsen ratings to
ABC./84
Buelnea
A federal Judge has or-
dered the seizure of a
Mesa diamond Invest-
ment firm. /87
INDEX
BOatlng
&ma Bombeck
Bridge
Buu.tln Board
Bullneu
C.Uforni. News
Claallfled
Com lea
Crouword
Oeeth Notk*I
HelpYourtelt
Horoecope
lntheaeMce
Ann landtn
Mutual Fund•
National Newt
Opinion
~= Put>Mo NotloN
Sport•
8toc:k Marketl
Ttlevlllon
ll*tn
WMthet
Wortd NIWI
81
82
A11
A3
88-7
A4
CM
A11
C7
C4
92 ce AO
82
87
A4
A10
81
A3
C4-5
C1-3
88
84
~5 A2
A4
Youth who caused NB head-on crash
sttll unknown, due for pauper's grave
By STEVE MARBLE Of .. .._ .... _
A mystery driver, killed almost two
mon~s ago in a violent head-on ~r
crash 10 Newpon Beach, apparently as
to be buncd nameleu in a pauper's
Babies make eight
arave • .. we·u keep his finaerprints and
dental prints on file, of counc, but so
far we've come up empty. Nothina,"
said Bernie Mazuca, a senior deputy
coroner.
1be Unidentified drivu, al first
believed ao be in hia mid·20a but now
thought to be as youna as 16, died
Aug. 3 When the stolen car be was
drivina llammcd into two olbcr
vehicles OD MacArthur Boulcvarct.
Six other people were iajured in the
mid.:ciay accident, four of them ~children ridina in a car bound for the
beadi.
NCTipOn police tiavc tbCori7.ed that
Celina LeJft. an employee at lleu Verde
Conftlacent B01tpltal. proudly •. dlapla19
her new trlpleta, born earlier thla month.
The trio~ Celina, her haaband ~
-and the couple'• three otlaer yoancaten.
See atory P,ace A2.
Alert six-year-old FV girl
spots sparks on build.ilig
BJ ROBERT BARUR
Ota.Deir ........
A 6-year-old airl probably saved a
buildina from bcina consumed by fire
in Fountain Valley durin& the heiaht
of Tuesday iliaht's electrical storm,
her proud mother said.
Karen Martino Hollerman said her
daughter, Sumer Joi, beard an un-
usual buzzina sound when the two of
them went to rent a film at a Vtdco
store at Broolchunt Street and SJatcr
Avenue.
.. She asked what the noise wu
while we were in the building. but I
didn•t pay much attention,"
Hollerman said. "But when we went
ouuide the buzzina arew louder.
"Sumer looked up and saw s~
from some win:s hanaina down frOm
a marquee at an adjacent store that
Smt
llTC1£ll
--
p E 0 p ll I~ l H £ N [ \\ s
•• u da) was th anniversary ofhis
first rtt"e •• ys Jade' mother
Kathryn. l·wc panicipated in the
bid aone out ofbusiness," Hollerman
said.
.. We called the fire department and
they took care of it."
A Fountain Valley Fire ~·
ment spokeswoman said fire ten
arrived at the buildina at 7431
Brook.hunt St and shut off the
electrical circuits and taped the ends
of the wires to prevent them &om
arcina in the rain.
the driver intentionally aashcd the
Ford Pinto station wqon after lead· ina police on a 27-milc dwe up_lhc
c:out from San Clemente. An officer
-.Do· was lailinc,..she driver said it
appeared he in\«ltlonally .~ into t6e opposite laDes in an cff ort to strike the • lbe~becan. • . • car wu drivioa was reps.-
terut to a woman in San Dieao and
reportedly was stolen WhiJe SJatked
oullide an Enciniw liquor store the
day of tbe accident
But to far the inveltiption bu
railed more questipm than answa"L
Muuca said she finds it bl.I'd 19 believe that someone woUld not mm
tbeyouth, #ho stood 6-:6and wciabed
oDJy I SO pounds. He spof'.lei(l dOKly
crolJl)Cd ibair and bad DO latoolJ moles ,or deformities. f Pleue .. CKA811/A2)
Jarvis avoids
Huntington
Prop. 36 debate
Tax reform crusader says Judge Sumner
'lied' about him at televised confrohtatton
BJ ROBERT BARKER
Of .. Dllr .......
Ho~ Jarvis backed out of a debate in Huntington Beach Wednesday,
promptina spccUlation that the 82-year-Old political warrior and tax reform
crusader has met his match in the penoo of former Oraqe Coonty Superior
Court Judie Bruce Sumner.
Jarvis II.id today that it's not so.
He claimed that Sumner .. is suds
a liar" that Sumner insUJt.ed him in a
previously televised debate earlier
this month on KOCE Channel SO iD
Huntinpon Beach over the merits of
Proposation 36.
Jarvis claimed that Sumner, a
Newport Beach resident who is now
the chairman of the Oran&e County
Democratic Party, accuJed Jarvis of
promoting the adJDendment .. to line
his own pock.en."
Sumner, who attended Wednes-
dafs debate spon10red by the Huot-in&ton Be8c:b Chamber of Commc:rce,
caDed-Propositioo 13 a ICIJ'D. lie also
claimed that his inaisteooe OD siiOOna
to the issues stirred Jarvis• wrath.
There are two reasons for Propolition
36, Sumner said, Jarvis' tF and the
money ~ be made by political
orpnizations. •
But Sumncr·s comments at the
WUcr idevisioa debate. accordina to larvi&t ~ lbe lowealT ma ..
f.Jicious lies rvc ever heard."
The local chamber promoted the
(Pi.. .... .JAJtVJa/A2)
Prop.36tab
for county
-$160M
BJ .JEPP' ADLER °' .............
Oran&c County ac;>vernment -
moat notably county school districta
-would be forced to refund au
estimated S 160 million to propcny owners if ~on 36, the flJ'VlS
IV mitiative. paxs in Novemtiei, acx:ordina to county Audiior-Con-
trolkr Steve lewis.
In a revised forecast a5.1C'Ssina .taat
financial atrca the tax-slasbiaa
measure would bave on coonty taxina
· Lewis has iocrcacd his ~ S 120 million estimaic by
:HO million. • Sta.1n1~·~.~mentwouklbc
forced to Jive up $1.1 billion, about S.-00 milhon more than lbe previous
(PleUeeee PltOP./ .&2)
OC's Jews mark
start of new year
Jews in Orange County and around
the world are celebratin& Rosh
Hasbana today. mamna the bcain-niog of a new Jewish year and the
openina of 1 l<Hiay peri¢ of ao"!-searchina. The county bas an cstl-
matcd 100,000 Jewish residents.
Celebration of the new Jewish
calendar year S14S bcpn at sundown
Wednesday.
Although the secular New Year's
Eve holiday is celebrated with parties,
Rosh Hasbana is observed with
relilious services. Rosh ffashana
services were coodUdcd W~
niaht and today at various J ·
temples and other pthcrtnJ places in ' Oran&e Coast communities. Some
Jcwisb conarcptions celebrate Rosh
Hashana for' two days, and these sroups will bold additional services
tonight and Friday.
A hiahli&ht of the services is the
traditi:Onalblowina of the .. shofar, .. a
ram•s born. The souDdiD& of tbc
shofa.r is said to tq)l'CSCllt a call for
~iritual reawakcnins. inspired by a
biblical reference to the revelation at
Mt. Sinai.
Rosh ffasbana is also known as tbe
Day of Remembrance in which JCM
mart the traditional anniversary of
creation of the world.
One Rosh Hashana tradition is the
eatina of bread and apples dipped in
hooey to mark one•s hope for a
.. sweet" year.
For Jews, Rosh Ha.sbana &lro
uibcrs in the Ten DaY$ of Penite:Dcc,
which conclude with Yom Kippw.
the holiest day of the Jewish Year.
This is a period of self-examination
and repentance in which Jews resolve
to improve thcnuelvcs.
Dwina the period of repentance. it
is traditional for Jews to recite prayers
nCar a body of water, symbolically
c:astina their sins into a river.
Clouds give way
to warm
afternoon sun
Clear skies after morning clouds
.
Coastal
••
JARVIS A NO-SHOW AT DEBATE •..
From Al
Jams-Sumner howdown but la t
eek the anti-tax crusader sent word
to chamber officials be wouldn't
pan.icipete if Sumner appeared.
Pinch-hittini for the anti-tax
crusader was Gil Ferguson, the Re-
publican nominee · in the 70th As-
~mbly District.
Ferguson also claimed that Sumner .. impugned" Jarvis' charac-
ter and engaged in a "cowardly
attack" because Jarvis wasn' there to
defend' him~lf. ·•
.. To call it a scam and to lay that
he (Jarvis) ts doing this to line his
pooket. Thii. is ~n 82-ycar-old man
who's saved the homes of older
people."
Spectators at the mo t recent
debate, however, didn't hear com-
ments from Sumner to the effect that
Jarvis was lining his own pockets.
What Sumner did contebd in
Wednesday's debate at the Hunt-
ington Beach Inn, was that the
amendment would cost taxpapers
about S 1.7 billion to pay refunds to
property owners and would stran&le
focal government because of the
requirement of two-thirds voter re-
quirement on tax nnd tee increases.
. "It's a California scam. Each side
is spending about $4 million each.
Can you believe it?"
Ferguson said, however, voters
sbouJd approve the measure "l»
cause government inexorably moves
to crush the people it governs and that wcs will continue to rise unless
something is done.
"The Rose Bird liberals have
punched notes through Prop<;>sition
13 (a Proposiuon 36 predecessor.)
We've got to close it so they can't do it
again."
Tides
TOOAY S.OOO.OIOw 6&4pm 0 1
"'10AY • =~ 1207a.m ... o·:ss .. m 16
a.corid hlQh 11 S<la.m 11 s.condtow e S:Spm 0 1
Sun ll9IS tocter at 6 43 pm. rlMa Fl'ldllyall45a.111end'919~all42
Piii
17 H 71 40
54 • 6t 30 .....
7) 41
to 82 .. ao SI 42 ,, 41
F >Cl
flll. " ar. ....
PROP. 36 TAB FOR OC $160M •••
Moon eeta tOday at I 40 p m • l'IMI Friday et 10·~ a m alld Mlt ...,.. et
t;.20 pm •
114 47
87 85 eo c2
71 st
.. 54 51 41
$5 31
IO ~ 55 40
41 H N 16
.. 341
Ortllll
Hlflford
Hellna
Honolulu Ho&lllon
lndoal'l lllJOft• .JaokaonMe
Jecllton'lllle ..v-.. t<At.-CftY
LeaV90M U111e~ ~ .... From Al ·
estimate made in April by a state
lecislative analyst. The county esti-
mate is based on the state computa-
tions, Lewis explained.
The lion's share of the refunds
would come from county schools,
which would be required to return an
estimated $80 million to taxpayers,
lewis said. That is an increase of $20
million oyer the April estimates.
Similarly, special districts in Or-
ange County, which are responsible
for a host of services from street
lighting to sanitation, would be
required to refund $29 million while
city and community development
aeencics would be forced to return
about $27 million.
The Orange County Board of
Supervisors would have to return $21
million to taxpayers' pockets from its
aeneral fund, a SS milhon increase
over the previous estimate, the
auditor-controUer said.
Also, both the county fire depart-
ment and library distnct would be
required to refund a portion of the
property taxes they receive. The fire
department would have to 11ve back
about $2 million, double the previous
estimate, while libraries would have
to surrender $1 million, representing
no change from previous estimates.
Proposition 36 1s intended by its
author, Howard Jarvis, to close
loopholes be claims_&QYcrnment has
u!Cd to avoid the provisions of its
more famous relative -the 1978
Proposition 13 intiative.
One of the maJor provisions of the
initiauvc would be to roll back
assessed valuations on property to the
1975-76 base year by returning pro~
crty taxes paid on the 2 percent value
Ulcrease allowed by Proposition 13.
State regulations, as determined by
court challenges. allowed the 2 per-
cent to be applied retroactive to
l 97S-76. Proposition 36 would re-
verse that method for valuing pro~ ·
Temperatures
Eztended
e,obeehgiblcforarefundunderthe ·Supervi·sors name measure, a taxpayer must have
owned taxable property sometime
during the 197S-76 tax ,period we d e d t
through 1977-78 and pai~ ·~78-79 1e er 81 e 0 taxes on the property, Lewis said.
:-!-!_f_E_L_~-C~E~-R_A_C_~~M-P-A~T-A_G_E_S_ .• -.~~healthca~epost
got to the finish line, everybody was
clapping. I went faster and faster
when I saw the people."
K.athryn Calegory remembers that
first race.
"At the four-mile mark, Jade was
• screaming in pain. The runners had
finished Jong before and were waiting
for the awards to be presented when
the announcer said we were coming
lD.
• 04Everyonc cheered and cheered
and cheered, and I cried,·· she said.
~.. Jade's effect on lbe crowd didn't
• end at the 'finish line. Kids gathered
: ~round him, ask.in& him to autograph
• }hel.I' racing visors. And , rather than
... having his third-place award brought
to him.Jade slowly climbed out of his
: wheelchair and made his way to the
announcer on legs supported by
aluminum braces. ~
"" That was seven rac.es and seven
trophies ago.
By JEFF ADLER °' ... ~ ........
A top aide to Orange County Board
of Supervisors Chairman Harriett
Wieder was named by SU\)Crvisors
Wednesday to serve as mtenm dtrCC-
• tor of the county's Health Care
Agency until a new director is
appointed. probably sometime next
year. Robert Love, 36, will assume his
post as agency "director Monday,
replacing Dr. Charles Kerns, who
submitted his resignation, effective
Dec. 3 I, last month.
A Huntington Beach resident,
Love bas been Wieder's chief ex-
ecutive assistant for the past six years.
Previously. be was employed as an
analyst in the County Administrative
Office. .. Dr. Kerns has expressed his
willin&ness to work with the interim
director, in a consultant capacity, to
assure continuity of programs and
accountability during this tran-
sitional phase," said Wieder in an-
nouncing the appointment.
" Supervison mel in a closed-door,
two-hour executive session to co~
sider the appointmenL During the
session, Love and two other can·
didatcs for the position were inter-
viewed, acwrding to supervisors'
aides. .
When the board reconvened its
public meeting, supervisors voted l--0
to confirm Love's appointment.
Superiisor Roger Stanton, who at-
tended the closed-door meeting, did
not return to the public session
bec8use of other commitments while
Supervisor Ralph Oark is travelinain
another country.
Wieder said "it is contcmelated
that the new interim director will not
54 41
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T-TWI W~Oll
Wlchit• w1111 .. ..,...
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be a candidate for the permanent
HCA director position."
In ma.Icing the announcement, the
chairman emphasized the import-
ance of maintaining stable fundin&
for mental health programs, devclop-ina new strategics fo r indigent medi-
cal services and Medi~ ·tundina as
key issues the interim director must
monitor. The ensuing 12 months found Jade
the proud owner of a new, lightweight
sports chair and he and nis mom
began tackling the S-lcilometcr jog-
ging trail that borders Crown Valley
Community Parle just below their
home.
K.athyrn, who runs alongside her
free-wheeling son in races, says the
pair has participated in a Salt Lake
' City race, the.Olympic Torch race in
Newport Beach, the Corona del Mar
Spirit Run and others.
'And babies make eight'
fo_rOi:ange County family
And, last Sunday, on the an·
niversary of his first race, Jade scored
a personalbcst, completing the S-
kllometer South Coast classic in 34
minutcS and 48 seconds.
"I had to stay home today because I
was so sore," the SS-pound Jade says,
sm1lin$ and rubbing tus arms.
Staying home from school 1s
nothing new for Jade. Despite the grcen~yee boy's con-
tagious J.ood humor, he's led a pretty
tough hfe. A life that bas included
many trips to the hospital. Jade has
undergone IS operations in his ei$ht
years, the result of affhctions ranging
from scoliosis to myelo mcmngocele,
a malady that affects the spinal cord.
But he always bounces back, his
mother says.
Kathryn says her son was inspired
• to race after her boyfriend, Anaheim
pathologist George Awad, showed
Jade a magazine article about veteran
wheelchair competitor Jim Knavb.
' "Gcorae told me Jade should get
involved in something like racing to
avoid a sickbed mentality," Kathryn
said. "We went out and ordered b1m a
sports chair."
Jade was hooked.
He finally met his whcclchair-
bound hero -tn the flesh -
followioa that first race a year qo.
Knaub rolled across the asohalt to
Just Call
642:6086
Dally Piiot
Dell very
la Guarant..O
I.I friOty II ,OU
Dlllt .......... .., ..... ~
Young Jade category and mother Kathryn find r euon to
•mile.
shake hands with the bOy and shrugs after a moment's hesitation.
congratulate tum on finishing the ... ·And, he adrrnts, it wouldn't be too
grueling race. shabby to beat old Jim Knaub across
"I hope to race with you again," the the finish line.
muscled athlete wrote in a short note Some day.
to the youngster. . For now, he's practicing for next
Sinc.e then the S-foot-3 tncb third-month's Hoag Memonal Hospital
grader has been attracting trophies costume race. He will be the honorary
like polyester attracts lint. starter and a judge for that competJ·
He's not about to stop at just SK tion.
and l OK races. either. Jade wants to But his 1mmed1ate goal 1s grab hold
parucipate in a marathon. That's 26 of a li1.1rd JU St out of arm's reach.
milesofpropellinahimself alona with The fat reptile moves quickly up
a pair of fairly small biceps the wall
''Myaoalis to do a marathon by the .. Thal lund doesn't bite," he sar,s.
time I'm 9," he says. "Mavbe 10," he "At least I don't think he does.'
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Tell us what's on )'Oar mind.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
Clrcu .. tlon 714/142-4333
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All other d•partment1 142-4321
MAIN OFFICE
net "-"" ~"OU' ~ Cy
!i 30prn oe!Ct•7 r '"
nnd '°"' cos: ' "' b'l to H. L. Schwartz ut
Publsh r
RoHmary Churchman
Cootroll r
Stephen F. Cerazo
Produc11on
Manag r
Donald L. Wlllfamt
C1rcuta11on
Manager .. VOL. 77, HO. 271
..
By KA.RENE. KLEIN
Of .. Dlllt .........
Any mother -from the novice to
the most seasoned -would admit a
new baby can be a handful at times.
But consider the case of Cebna
Leyva's armful -the latest addition
to her young family earlier this month
was not one baby, but three.
And her 12-day-old trio of boys
aren't the only children she must care
for -the 24-year-old Garden Grove
woman and her husband, 2S-ycar-old
Miguel, already have three other
children -all under S years old.
The statistics were enough to make
a few of leyva's friends and cow-
orkers shake their beads in disbelief
Thursday at a baby shower for her at
the Mesa Verde Convalescent Hospi-
tal in Costa Mesa.
But the triplets were clearly the
stars of the show at the party, where
nurses and patients gathered to hold
and admire them as we~owcr
Leyva with baby prescndJ"
The cake they cut was emblazoned
with a new twist on a familiar
inscription: 04And baby makcseiaht."
Leyva said she has been iettina a lot
of help at home from her sister and
her husband, who works U a et·
dencr. But she still sighs and siniles
weakly when people ask her bow she
copes with six preschool-age children.
..Pretty good," she says shyly.
The three boys, William and Erick,
who are identical, and David, who is a
fraternal triplet, were born about a
month prematurely at Humana Hos-
pital of Westminster on SepL l S.
Both William and Enck weighed
S.2 pounds at birth and David
weighed 4.2 pounds.
~yva worked as a nurse's aide at
the C.osta Mesa convalescent hospital
until about her sixth month of
prep.ancy. She found out when she
was about five months alona that she
would have three babies.
Tripleu occur naturally about onc.e
in 8,000 births, statistics show, and
the news was a shock to Leyva, who
did not plan on having any other
children.
Leyva said she and her husband
share the responsibilities of 2 a.m.
feedings, multiple diaper cbangings.
and keeping their other three children
fed, cleaned and happy.
But as can be imagined., the six
children present a fina.Dcial challenge
that bas proved difficult for the
couple. For one thing. they still live in
a two-bedroom apartment. They a.re
looking for an apartment or house bi&
enough to accommodate their family.
Some of the staff memben at the
convalescent hospital are orpnizing
a fund to help the Leyvas and said
they hope to work out a helping bands
proJcct where staffen can take turns
going to the Leyva home to help out
CeliQa.
Another Garden Grove couple,
Pamela and Denrus Curtts, had
triplets Sept. 17 at fountain Valley
Community Hospital.
Irvine killer suspect has court date
A former tow truck driver facing
murder charges for the 1979 slaying of
an Irvine woman, 1s scheduled to
appear 1n court Fnday when 1t will be
determined if he also should be tried
on rape and burglary charics.
If Robert Uoyd Sellen is ordered to
stand trial on the additional char&cs it
could mean the death penalty if he 1s
convicted.
Sellers, 26, was arrested March 29
after an Irvine police sergeant made a
routine check of evidence pthercd in
the five-year-old murderofSavannab
lei&h Andenon, a 22-year-old tec-
retary who lived alone.
Deputy District Attorney Rick
K.inf said be originally filed murder
and rape charges again t Sellers and
later added ChafJtS of auempled rape
andbu~ry.
Sellers attorney responded by fil-
ing a demur, asking that all charges
except murder be tossed out for lack
of evidence. A rubna is expected
Friday.
Anderson, a native of Utah who
moved west just months before her
death1 was blud1C9ned to death. Her
nakea bOdy was found in a 1uest room of her apartment.
At the time, police refu$Cd to uy
whether the woman had been sexual-
ly assaulted. •
Sellers was <t_uestioned at the time
of the slayma but was not arrested.
He'd been employed as a security
guard at the apartments where
Anderson lived.
The case remained unsolved until Sat. Scott Cade made a review of the
fingerprints a.nd blood 1mudact
found in the a~mcnt and dis--
covered some that reportedly
matched Sellers' prints. l'he match
apparently was ovedooked in 1979.
At the hme of his arrest, Sellen was
employed a a tow truck operator.
C~SB VICTIM STILL UNKNOWN •.•
P':romAl
At the time of the aoc1dent, the
drher was wranng cut·oO jeans, a
plaid h1n and carried no wallet or
papen that ofTcrtd a clue as 10 his
idcntit •
Investigators said the youth couJd
be a runaway. an pee from a
juvenile dc;tcntion ocntcr or a patient
from a mental 1n rhution. But all is ju~ aucsswor , invc Lipton ad·
m1ttrd.
The FBI was unable to match the •
finacrprints in an earlier cffon.
.. We've rtt.cived a lot of ftttt1 about
mi ina kids, From Carlibid, San
Dieao and other pl1<1CS. But none of
them are the riaht ona," said
Matuca '1We'IJ ktep chtctinc!'
Bamna a bfelk tn the cate. the
youth's body wilt be bUritd In an
unmattced Jl"l"C at 'county ape
WICa 16id. A burial daic Ml not been L
•
The Orange County Per-
forming Arts Center has
received a S 100.00 Ocon-
tribution./ Al_
California
Actor says he won't ap-
pear In the nude in new
movte./A5
Twenty-three people
were tossed off a
schooner that flipped In a
heavywlnd./A7
World
Shultz. Gromyko end
talks that are termed •a
good start.' I A5
I Is yachting a sport, rec-
reational activity, social
event or none of the
above?/81
Sporta
The Angela barely stay
alive In the American
~eagueY/estpennant
race with a2-0wln in
KansasClty./C1
Entertainment
Despite five ahows In the
top six, NBC loses the
week's Nielsen ratings to
ABC./84 .
)!::::8::::!:~<:~:·:~·:::·::»:·:.:·:·:·:·:~:<-:-:·:·:.
' Bulnea
A federal Judge has or-
derecUhe seizure of a
Mesa diamond Invest-
ment firm. /87
INDEX
81
82
A11
A3
86-1
A4
CM
A11
C7
C4
82 ' ce
A9
82
87
A4
A10
81
A3
04-5
C1'3
88
IM
84-5
A2
A4
..
111111111•
<Jl~/'d~r,f (JJtH~ r f • A1 'Ir,, .• ,,/\ . 1 •, •
----.. -
er's
e river orname ess .
Bable. make eight
Celtn• ~. an employee at Ilea Verde
Conftleecent Hospital, proudly cllaplaJll
her new trtpleta, born earlier thla month.
The trio JO:lna CeJln•. Iler haabuld ~
-and ttiecoaple'• three otberJ~eten.
See •tol'J Paae :A2.
Alert six-year-old FV girl
spots sparks on building
BJ ROBERT BARK.ER
Of .............
A 6-year~ld airl probably saved a
buildina from beina consumed by fire
in Fountain Valley dwina the beiabt
of Tuesday ni&bt's electrical 5torm,
her proud mother said.
Karen Manino Hollerman said her
da\llhter, Sumer Joi, beard an un-
usual buzzina sound when the two of
them went to rent a film at a video
store at arookhurst Street and Slater
Avenue.
"'Sbe lsked What the noise was
while we were in the buildin&. but l
didn't pay much attention,"
Hollerman said. "But when we went
outside the buzzing pew louder.
.. Sumer tooke(t up and saw sparks
from some wires hanaina down Crom
a marquee at an adjaceat 5torc abat
had1oncoutofbusiness.," Hollerman
said.
.. We called the fire department and
they took care of it."
A Fountain Valley rm: OcjJart·
ment spokeswoman said fircft,gbten
arrived at the buildioa at l 7431
Brookhurst St. and shut off the
electrical CU'Cuits and taped the ends
of the wires to prevent them fioni
arcina in the rain.
Little boy's a real big wheel
among handicapped racers
He'd much rather talk about li:r.afch
thin the collection of troph · lovina
cups 11\(1 Plaques he's vquirdS o
the past year. •'LoOk at that on •• ttie 8-year-old
blond-haired rounaster shouts,
paintina to a nineainch. blue-belly
li:r.arcbunninailtdfon the tucrowan
out de his hilltop Lq'una Ni.aucl
home.
.. Wall ~ou hCJp me cateb hamT'
In fact, 1t'1 pretty hard to get lad
Caleaor:y to say a whol lot about h
uoph1 •
om helps.
Smt
MITCIEll
- -
P EOPLE IN THl Nu~s
' '
Youth who caused head-on crash
In Newport remains unidentified
By STEVE MARBLE children riding in a car bound for the
CM .. ...,........ beach.
A mystery driver, killed almost two Newport police have theorized mat
months ago in a violent bead-on car the driver &ntcntionally embed die
crasbinNewportBcach,apparcntlyis Ford Pinto 11ition ~n after lcad-
to be buried nameless in a pauper's ina police on 1 27-nille cbate =
aravc. coast from San Clemente. An
"We1l keep his fmp:rprlnts and who was taµina the driver laid it
dental prints on file. of course. but'° aPPtMed be intentionally veered :ildO
far we•ve come up empty. Nothing," '6eoppositelanesinandror1 &oltrike
. said Bernie Mazuca, a senior deputy the oocomina cars.
coroner. The car be wu drivi!W wu ..... The unidentified driver, at fint ta'Cd to a woman in San D;., ud
believed to be in his mid-20s but now reportedly was r&olcn while Parted
thought to be as young as 16, died 'outside an Encinitas liquor._ the
Aui. 3 when the stolen car he was day of lbe accident
drivina slammed into two other But 10 f.ar the inveiti,llion ha
vehicles on MacArthur BoWeva.rd. raiJed more q_uatiom tbatl amwen.
Six other people were iajURd in the Muuca said ibe ~ it bard to
mick!ay accident. four of them (Pleue ... C•AaB/ A2)
Jarvis avoids
Huritingtori ,
Prop. 36debate·
Tax crusader says Judge Bruce Sumner
'lied' about him at televised confrontation
By ROBERT BAUER °' ..............
Howard Jarvis backed out of a debate in Huntington Beach Wcdocsday,
~mpting spcailation that the 82-ycar.,old politic:al warrior and ux crusader
bu met his match io the person offonncrOrangeCounl)'S periorCou.rtJ~
!truce SUmDCt.
Jarvis said today that n's notao.
He claimed that Sumner "is such a liar .. th&t Swnner in.sWltd him in a
~viousJy tdeviled debate earlier this month on KOCE Chan.ncl 50 in
Huntinaton Beach over the merits of
Proposition 36.
Jarvis claimed that Sumner, a
Newport Beach resident who is now
the chainn.an of the <>ranee County
Democratic Party,· accused Jarvis of
promoting the.admendmeot 04to line
his own pockers."
Sumner, who attended Wednes-
day's debate sponsored by tbe Hunt·
ington Beach Chamber ofGommc:rc:e.
called Proposition 13 a scam. He also
claimed that bis insistence on sticking
to the i ucs stirred Jarvis' wrath.
There are two reasons for Proposition
36, Sumner said. Jarvis' cao and the
money t~ be made by political
orpruzations.
But Sumner's comments at the
earlier tclev.ision debatc. acciordina to
Jarvis, .. were the lowest. most ma-
licious lies rve ever hcatc:l.~
Tbe local Chamber promoted the
• Jarvis-Sumner showdown but last
week the anti-tax crusader scot word
to chamber officials he wouldn't
participate if Sumner appeared..
Pincb-bittina for the anti-tax
C1"\1Slder was Gil Ferguson, the Re-
publican• nominee in the 70th As.-
Ptop.36tab
forcoun~
$160M
By JEFF ADLER °' .............
Orange County 90vern.ment -
most notably county school disttiets
-· would be forced to refund an
estimated S 160 million to property owners if Proposition 36. tbe Jarvis
IV initiative. passes in November,
accordin& to counfy Auditor.COD·
troller Steve Lewis.
In a rcviJcd forecast awsina •IW financial affect the tax~lashina
measure would have on county taxina
agencies, Lewis tw incrcUed bis
previous $120 million estimate by
S40 iDillion.
Statcwic!e, &Qvmtmcnt woU1d be
(P1eue eee PROP./A2)
scmbly Oistnel
Ferauson also claimed that
Sumi= .. impuaned .. Jarvis' dw'8C>
ter and enpaed in a .. cowardly
attack" because Jarvis wasn't there to
(Pleue ... .JAllVIS/ A.a)
DAU.:Y PILOT /lihlJr
1st Tom Sawyer back on the ·ob
h' fl rk offi ts 1d there ha~c n
no problems.
nothcr600to700cmployt'CS ere
re dy to fill in 1f needed.
The lkout -rtp~nting le
than half the park's 5,000 workrn -
be n fter union members voted
Mond y for the nd time in e1Jbt
da) to re)CC1 comp ny oncrs rallmg
for a two-year wa~ftte'.te. •
rhc companr, ~ insisted that the proPo I 111~s • lfsl nd final" offer.
J"-RVISANO-SHOWATDEBATE~ ••
From Al · . ·
defend himself.''
"To call it a ~m and to say that
he (Jarvis) is doina this to line his
pc:>0ket. This is an 82-year-old man
who'a saved the homes 1Sf"'blder
people:•
~ Spectators at the• most recent
debate. however, didn't hNr com-
ments from Sumner to the effect that
Jatvi was tinina his own pockets.
· What Sumner did contend in
Wednesday's debate at the Hunt-
ington Beach Inn, was that the
amendment \o\Ould cost taxpapcrs
about $1.7 billion to pay ttfunds to
property owntfs and would st.ran&le
local government becau of tbe
requirement of two-thirds voter re-
quirement on tax and fee ancrcasei.·
"It's a California scam. Each ide
as spending about $4 million each.
Cao you believe itr·
Ferguson ~id, however, voters
hould approve the mca:i.ure "be·
caust government inexorably movei.
to cru 1h the people it aovems and that
tallu will continue to rise unle s
somethina is done.
.. The Rose Bird liberals have
punched hole' through Propo jtion
13 (a Proposition 36 predecessor.)
We've gono cl°" it o they can't do it
aaain."
PROP. 36 TAB FOR OC $160M •••
From Al
forced to live up $1. 7 billion, about
$400 million more than the previous
estimate made in April by a state
legislative analyst. The county esti-
mate is based on the state computa-
tions, Lewis ex plained.
The lion's share of the refunds
would come from county achools,
which would be required to return an
estimated $80 milHon to taxpayers,
Lewis said. That is an increase ofS20
million over the April estimates.
Samdarly, special distncts tn Or-
ange County, which arc responsibl~
for a host of services from street
lighting to unitation, would be
required to refund $29 million while
city and community development
agencies would be forced to return
about $27 m1l1Jon.
The Orange County 8oard of
Supervisors would have to return $21
million to wpayen' pockets from its
general fund, a $5 million increase
over the previous estimate, the
auditor-controller said.
Also, both the county fire depart-
ment and labrary distnct would be
required to refund a portion of the
property taxes they receive. The fire
department would have to live back
about $2 million, double the previous
estimate, while libraries would have
t() surrender S l million, representing
no change from previous estimates.
Proposillon 36 is intended by its
author, Howard Jarvis, to close
loopholes he claims government bas
used to avoid the provisions of its
more famou!I relative -the 1978
Proposition 13 intiahve ..
One of the major provisions of the
initiative would be to roll back
as~sscd valuations on property to the
l 975-76 baseJcar by returning prop.
erty taxes pai on the 2 percent value
increase allowed by Pro~sition 13.
State rqulations, as determined by
court challenges, allowed the 2 per-
cent to be applied retroactive to
l97S-76. Proposition 36 would re-
verse that method for valuing prop.
erty.
To be eligible for a refund under the
measure, a tupayer must have
owned taxable property sometime
durina the 197S-76 tax period
throuah 1977-78 and pa.id 1973-79
taxes on the property, Lewis said.
WHEEL RACER A CHAMP AT AGE 8 •••
From Al
got to the finish line, everybody was
clappina. 1 went faster and faster
when J saw the people."
Kathryn Category remembers that
first race.
"At the four-mile mark, Jade was
scrcamina in pain. The runners had
finished long before and were waiting
for the awards to be presented when
the announcer said we were corning
in.
"Everyone cheered and cheered
and cheered, and 1 cried," she said. .
Jade's effect on the crowd didn't
end at the finish line. K.Jds pthered
around him. askina ham to autograph
their racing visors. And, rather than
having his third-place award brou&ht
to him, Jade slowly climbed out of his
wheelchair and made his way to the
announcer on legs supported by
aluminum braces.
That was seven races and seven
trophies ago.
The ensuing 12 months found Jade
the proud owner of a new, li&htweight
spons chair and he and rus mom
bepn tackling the S-k.ilometer jog-
gina trail that borders Crown Valley
Com munity Park JUSt below their
home.
Kath yrn, who runs along~;de her
free-wheeling son an races, says the
pair has participated an a Salt Lake
City race, the Olympic Torch race in
Newport Beach, the Corona del Mar
Spirit Run and others
And, last Sunday. on the an-
niversary of has first race, Jade scored
a pcrsonalbest, completma the 5-
k1lometer South Coast classic in 34
minutes and 48 seconds.
"I had to stay home today because I
was so sore," the 55-pound Jade says.,
sm1hne and rubbing his arms.
Staying home from school is
nothing new for Jade.
Despite the green-eyed boy's con-
tagious good humor, he's led a pretty
tough life. A hfe that has included
many tnps to the hospital: Jade has
undergone 15 operations an his e1Jht
years. the result of afflictions rangmg
from scoliosis to myelo mcningoocle,
a malady that affecu the spinal cord.
But he always bounces back, his
mother says. Kathryn says her son was inspired
to race after her boyfriend, Anaheim
patholasist Georae Awad, showed
Jade a magazine article about veteran
wheelchair competitor Jim Knaub.
"Georae told me Jade should get
involved in somethana like racina to
avoid a sickbed mentality," Kathryn
wd. "We went out and ordered ham a
sports chair."
Jade was booked.
He finaUy met his w~eclchair
bound hero -in the flesh -
followina that first race a year ago.
Knaub rolled across the asphalt to
Just Call
642-6086
• .. •. Dlllr .... ,......., .............
Yoang Jade Cale&ory and mother Kathryn flnd reuon to
•mile.
shake hands with the boy and
congratulate ham on finishing the
grueling race.
"I hope to race with you again." the
muscled athlete wrote in a shon note
to the youngster.
Since then the 5-foot-3 inch third·
grader has been attracting trophies
like polyester attracts lint.
He's not about to stop at JU t SK
and IOK races, either. Jade wants to
partic1patc in a marathon. That's 26
m1lcsofpropellinghimselfalon1 with
a pair of fairly small biceps.
"My coal is to do a marathon by the
timt rm 9:' he ~y ... Mavbe 10," he
shrugs after a moment's hesitation.
And, he admits, it wouldn't be too
shabby to beat old Jim Knaub across
the finish hne.
Someday.
For now, he's practicing for next
month's Hoag MemoriaJ Ho!lpatal
costume ra~e. Hewtll be the honorary
starter and a judge for that competi-
tion.
But his immedfate goal is grab hold
of a lizard just out of arm's reach.
The fat reptile moves quickly up
the wall.
"That kind doesn't bite.'' he saxs.
"At least I don't think he docs. ·
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Tell us wllat's on your mind. ..
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ClaHlfled adwertltlng 714/142-5171
All other d•P11rtment1 142-t321
Dally Piiot
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Publisher
RoHmery Churchman
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MAIN OFFICE
I . l CO&• ..... CA
• l!ieO Oolta •
Clear skies after morning clouds
Coa•tal
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TOOAT ............. lecOl'CI IOW 6 '4 p m O 1 ;:;"'on
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t 20 p.m OdliH't WOrtfl = Temperatures E,:MoiNI
ti ... EIP-12 40 ,.,..~.
62 ~7 •• 40
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,. 67 , .....
12 67 .. *3
Supervisors name
Wieder aide to
health care post
By JEFF ADLER
Oftllel>eltJ ..........
A top aide to Orange County Board
of Supervisors Chairman Harriett
Wieder was named by supervi.sors
Wednesday to serve as 1ntenm dm»
tor of the county's Health Care
Agency until a new director is
appointed, probably sometime next
year. Rohen Love, 36, will assume his
post as agency director Monday,
replacina Dr. Charles Kerns, who
submitted has resignation. effective
Dec. 31, last month.
A Huntington Beach resident,
Love has been Wieder's chief ex-
ecutive as~stant for the past six years.
Prcviou.sly, be was employ~d as _an
analyst in the County Adnumst.rauve
Office.
"Dr Kerns has expressed has
wtlhngness to work wuh the interim
director, 10 a consultant capacity, to
assure continuity of proarams and
accountability durina this tran-
sitional phase," said Wieder in an·
nouncing the appointment.
Supervisors met in a closed.<foor,
two-hour eJtccutive session to con-
sider the appointment. Durina the
session, Love and two other can-
didates for the position were inter•
viewed, accordmg to supervisors'
aides. •
When the board reconvened its
public meetina. supervisors voted >-0
to confirm Love's appointment.
Supervisor Roger Stantoll, who at-
tended the closcd.<foor meeti111. did
not return to the public sion
because of other commitments while
Supervisor Ralph Clark is travelina in
another country. ·
Wieder said "1t is contemelated
that the new mterim director will not
40 t :: , ...
.. 67 ff ~ ., 44
85 ,. " .. n .. ,. 14
70 q
10 ..
71 " 1t .,
.. 17
.. :11 ,. ..,
" eo tO 11 Ill' ... .. 11 ...
&2 .,
" IO •t D lti ... n e ...
51 Ml
70 M NU ,. 6S
'7 IO 7• 11 t .: u ae
be a candidate for the permanent
HCA director position."
In making the announcement, the
chainnan emphasized the impon-
ance of maintaining stable fundil.l&
for mental health proarams. dcvelQp-
ang new strategies for indigent medi-
cal services an<! Medi-Cal funding as
key i sues the interim director must
monitor.
'And babies make eight'
for Orange County family.
By KAREN E. KLEIN
Ofllleo.llJ ..........
Any mother -from the novice to
the most seasoned -would rnit a
new baby can be a handful times.
But consider the ca of Celina
Lcyva's annful -the latest addition
to her youna family earlier this month
was not one baby, but three
And her 12-day-old trio of boys
aren't the only children she must care
for -the 24-ycar-old Garden Grove
woman and her husband, 25-ycar-otd
Miguel, already have three other
children -all under S years old.
The statistics were enough to make
a few of leyva•s fnends and cow-
orkers shake their heads an disbelief
Thursday at a baby shower for her at
the Mesa Verde Convalescent Hospi-
tal in Costa Mesa.
But the triplets were clearly the
stars of the show at the party, where
nurses and patients gathered to hold
and admire them as well as shower
Leyva with baby presents.
The cake they cut was emblazoned
with a new twi1t on a familiar
inscnption: "And baby makC$ eiaht"
-Leyva said she bas been gcttina a lot
of help at hqme from her 1ist.cr and
her husband\ wbo works as a ~
dener. But she 1till siahJ and smiles
weakly when people ask her bow she co~s withs~ pmchool~ children.
"Pretty aood. .. she aya shyly.
The three boys, William and Erict..
wboarcidentical,an~ David, who isa
fraternal triplet, were born about a
month prematurely at Humana Hos-
pital of Westminster on Sept. tS.
Both William and Erick weiJhcd
5.2 pounds at birth and David
weighed 4.2 pounds.
Leyva worked as a nurse's aide al
the Costa Mesa convalesc~nt hospital
until aboui her sixth month of
prcanancy. She found out when he
was about five months alona that she
would have three babies.
Triplets occur naturally abOut on«
in 8,000 bin.ha. atatistia show, and
the news was a shock to Leyva, who
did not plan on bavina any other
children.
Leyva said she and her husband
share the responsibilities of 2 a.m.
feedinp, multiple diaper cbanainas
and keeping their other three children
fed. cleaned and happy.
But as can be imagined. the six
children present a financial challense
that bas proved difficwt for tile
couple. For one thinJ, they still live in
a two-bedroom apartment. They arc
look.in& for an apartment or house bia enouah to accommodate their family.
Some of the staff memben at the
convalescent hospiial arc orpniz.ing
a fund to help the Leyvas and said
they hope to work out a helping bands
project where staffers can take turns
&oing to the Leyva home to help out
Celina.
Another Garden Grove couptc1 Pamela and Dennis Curtis, haa
triplets Sept. 17 at Fountain Valley
Community Hospital.
County'sJewsmarkanew year
Jews an Oranac County and around
the world arc celebratirra Rosh
Hashana today, marking the bcain-
nu\& of a new Jewish year and the
openina of a l<ktay period of soul-
scarchina. The county has an esd·
mated 100,000 Jewish residents.
Celebration of the new Jewish
calendar year 5745 bepn at sundown
Wednesday.
Although the accular New Year's
Eve holiday is celebrated w1th partie ,
Rosh Hashana is observed with
rctiaaous services. Roati Ha hana
service were conducted WCdnclday
ni•ht and today al variou Jewish
, CoNn Nuro SroR1Es
temples and other ptheri.nJ ptaca in
Oranac Coast communiun. Some
Jewtsh conpqations celebrate Rosh
Hasbana for two days, and these
groups will hold additional scrvi
toniaht and Friday. A biihli&ht of the services is the
traditionalblowina of tile .. shofar," a
ram's horn. The soundina of the
shofar is aaid to represent a call for
1e,iritual rcawakcnina. in1p1rcd by a
biblical rcfercn<X to the revelation at
Mt. Sinai.
Rosh Ha hana is also known as the
Day of Remembrance in which Jews
mark the traditional annivctSary of
creatton of the world.
One Rosh Hashana tradition is the
eat1na of bread and apples dipped in
honey to mark one's hope for a
"sweet" year
For Jews, Ro h Hashana also
ushers in the Ten Days of Penitence,
Which conclude with Yorn J{jppur,
the holiest day of the Jcwiih Year.
This is a period of self-examination
and repentance in which Jews ietolv
to improve themselves.
Durina the period of repentance, it
is traditional for Jews to recite praym
near a body of water. symbolically
casting \heir sins into a river.
CRASH VICTIM STILL UNKNOWN •••
From Al
• uthcm Cahtornia.
The FBI ·as unable lO match the
finacrprinu in an earlier effon.
"We've re«1ved a lot ofnienabout
mt in lud From C•rhbed, n Dicao and other places. But none of
them arc the riJht ones," said
Mnu , .. We'll keep checldna; ..
0.rri "I 11 break i D the Cf,IC. lht
youth' body WJll be bWled n an
unmarked J!IVC at county u~.
Mazuca 111d A bunal date lw not
been