HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-10-04 - Orange Coast PilotChristine
files go
to Danes
•
.Carter releas'ed
to sell park7plans . .
87 ITEVE MAllBLE .............
Irv me oaJouto rt\4$
D. Caner, released on blltl from QriDft County Jail laic Wednes-
day antencb IO bftttbt ~ hfe iMCk nto b11 roUapted financaal
emp1re by ICIUna off plans for a
Las Vqas 1mu "!~l :~rk. Caner ..32; Mtjailtd Monday
by Shdilli~ues on 22 coun11 or ,lflndtleiflnd 44 counts of
felony ICCUnty v10Jauon The
~ 11tm from an alksed
·COIT 1111111
THURSDA 't' OCT OBf R 4, 1984 OHAN< a (.()lJN Iv I Al If OHNIA .... l t r~ 1.'
~ --
--Bean tries·j~il ce I suictae
..
I Sam Wiiiett will celebrate
his victory over Immigra-
tion officials with a
potluck parfy./ M · '
California
FBI agent suspected of
spying for Russians was
flnanclally-strapped and
sought cash and gold for
Information./ Al
Nation
Congress sends federal
employees home as tlll
remains bate./ Al -
.PresJdent Reagan's
crime package paS88S
.cruclal Senate vote./ Al
Car bomb at Israeli Em-
:-tfllSS1~~~uamage~. -
but no Injuries./ Al
Libya susPeoted of pl ant-
ing mines In Red Sea./ Al
From tops'I to bottom,
big boats are spoofed In
·~vaahtlng," a parody
magazine./81
ts the Orange Coast Col-
lege football team losing
the recruiting war.to
Golden West? /C(
Sea View League powers
Corona del Mar and New-
port Harbor top water
polo opponents./C2
Entertainment
.
The Victorian comedy
"Charley's Aunt" Is en-
joying a brisk revival at
Saddleback COHege./83
McDonnell Douglas VP
John Sigrist will r tire In ...
November.JU
•
81
e•
A3
85
A8
C5·7 a.
C7
A10
C&
82
85
A8 At
81
A3.
A10,C4
C1""4
88
~ 82
83
A2
A4
Educator held in murder of ex-wife
By STEVE MAftBLE
Of .. Deilr ........
A collqe administrator charged
with his ex-wife's murder was rushed
to the hospital early this morning
following a suicide attempt at Orange Coun'l11ai1; authoriti~tt'f)onid. ...
Donald Emil DawSO"d, 4S, a former
policeman and an assistant dean at
Saddlcback College at the time of bis
arrest., slashed his.wrist and bis throat
with a safety razor he bad been
provided. a Sheriffs spokesman LL Bob-.. ,rn .... ...,· said tQday_,. • ,.
emergency medical treatment,
Dawson wu returned to thC count
Jatl where bi v.'U an t JI• s
medical isolation ward.
An livine resident. Dawson was
au esm:t Sept. l S on su picion of
murdering his former wt . Dona
May Dawson, 46.
~. DaW$0n a resident of El Toro,
was a nursins msuuctor at Saddlc-
back Colfc9t~ She was &bot as rmay as
six times.
"
. Coast's fed era
employe~s get
·afternoon off
CU filpe In Newport
Surprise 'holiday'
comes as Congress
wrestles With bill
atiom fo~ the lntcn0r Drpartm~t·
aeoloeical survey department. said
&is emplO}us WttC to stay unul l
p.~
-~word lhrouahout Ute rest Of
tbdmildig1sthat on-ia,y_..._""'4
status it.tJCf iliit timeAOda) ... Lema--field Wd. ..All 'oon<S:S1Cntial' cm-
plo~ were aSkcd to leave and
no11fied that they ouJd ••ate tbC
media for word on when they shOulid-
rctum."
Federal emplo)'CCS involved in •
security, health and cmCflCDC)' ser-
vices, however, wdl renwn on the
~ accordi~ to the Associated
Earlier, the White House Office of Ma~mcot and Budget told federal
departments and aaeocics that em-
plO)'CCS sbou.ld report for ,.ork as
usual today.
At the Office of Personnel M~
(Pleue .ee OOAST~/A2) •
Cops; cat·
mourned
i Mesa·
B1 VEDRA.· .
Of .. Delr .........
The wrecu,e of a car tbat Olp~ O'ftl' du.
mi:mlJnl on Newport Center Drl•e. near ~t ~wa1. remel• after pan.Jlledlce
aMcl the 'Jawa of Life' to pl'J' tile .eblcle .
open and racae Jamee Ponyth. 56. of~ Corona del Mar. l'oraytb wu treated by ·
puaaaedlca at tile ecene and tnnBpOrted to
B~ Memorial Bo.pttal in Newport Beacll. ·
where he wu belna· enmlnecl. Police eald
the car drtft!i bJ~onytb wu traftllni
north on Newport Center Drtn and jumped
the curb and turned oYer. -The Costa Mesa Pohcc Depart-
ment 1s in mourning today for the pct
cat who loved to tinker with the offi~
typewritCT'S and slttp on the couch m
ChicfRoecr Nclh's office.
.
Newportathlete'sja11 death ·~atural'
By PffJL SNEJDERMAN
OfhO.., .......
The Orange Count~ coroner's of-
fice has ruled that Grant Richard
Cooling,' 22-ycar-old coll* athlete
-from Newpon Beach, died ofna:ural
cauxs related to an inflamed heart
muscle after he collapsed in Oranse
County Jail on Aug. 1•. • . -
An initial autopsy conducted aficr
Coolin ' death could not detcnnine
why Cooling died shortly afier being
am:. tcd for failing to appear in court
on two traffic charscs. "
. Coolin1bad been a swimmiria and
crew athlete at Corona del Mar High
School and Orange Coa5t College
before transforrin1 to USC la$t )car to
Dwayne, if yoll'Fe
·ot(t there, your
mother wants you·
n h m . .
seen In 3 years
-,
study business.
Accordina to his mother, Mallorie
Coolina. the 6-5 student had been
fiahti1l4 a case of strep throat but was
· otlrcnvise in fine ph)sical condition.
She said he s .. -.m about'•.000 metcn
a day. -:
Oran County Sheriff's tt. R_Kb,.
(Pleue eee ATBLBTS"S/ A2)
-
KAREN
KLEIN
NEWSMAKERS
The short-hatred feline lnown P.C.. 5hon for Police Cat. was .. put to .
~ccp" at 'CYo'POCI Harbor Animal
H pital this momina after ~ttcrin-
ana: d1agnokd that she • ter-
minally ill. . ' ·
Michelle Jackson, secretary lo the
chief. said '\etcrinarians said the cat
had a 1· percent chance-of urviv1
the feline forms of leukemia. per-
itonitis and li'cr di that bad ·
contracted.
(Pl--... POLIC&/A2>
Flashet suspect·
: tries to sock his
way out of jail
\c>a~ccu. li d ·the na
th er
'W>O$C~ ~~ ~t .a
...
•
'FEDERAL
rnt, \hf: i tant dir«tor d tb
White House would decide t;y mid-
day whether il was likely Conarcss
would ~ss a spending b1U eptable
to ~1dent Ronald Reagan.
While the ~nate has approved
much of the budget. its taroiness in
passing the overall measure left the
bull of go\ cnimcnt ttchmc:ally
broke.
' The goven1ment v.as also iithout
cash on Monday's start of the new
fiscal year whale the House worked tq
oomplete passage. of the temporary
spending measure t~ tide aiencies
He wa t tcd by jail medi 1
personnel nd nta An paramedics.
then was iak.cn to <WeitcrD Medical
Center in Santa An • where he died .
over until toda~.
Shutdowns of the government are
threatened every year because of
lapses in funding. but they rarely
occur. There was a partial shutdown
in November 198 l when workers
were scot home after a balf-<fay on the
job.
Tl es
TOOAY 109p!I\. 160pm ,. ... ,., .... 0 I • 7 2 1 Cha"*ton.S C
5 3 ChaflMton,W V
• t:h"' 147pM
T;Up m,. Chltlollt.N.C.
9"11 ...,. loO•Y 1111 I 33 pm • ri-~ ,!Idly all 50. m 11\0!MU~1(J 32 ChQoo p I'll ClndnntU
n M 70 •• 12 .,
12 48
76 38 • •74 4t
.. 31
• 64
54 " 17 " n 38 ., 49• .,. 31 ti ' ,, Mood ,... lodey at • 20 p I'll. M ll • ~ P:t*t \1 1 41 I m 1110 ,,... ~ 11 Colul'llCMl.S C • A pm boll.Oii ConcotONH
" 43 73 .,
• ,. 61 .
POLICE CAT MOURNED IN MESA •••
From Al
"So. l had to gtve the order to put wbowere really attached to her. Some
her to sleep." Thckson said. are really upset." Jackson saad.
P C. was taken to the animal The feisty cat had purred her way
hospital around 11.30 p.m. Tuesday into police offices after being picked
after policerecord clerks found her up at the Newport Harbor Animal
writhing in tboparklllg lot outside tbe Shelter as a mascot for Costa Mesa's
station. Animalcontrorworkers be-animal control division. P.C. was
heved the pet bad been hit by a car or obtained to replace .. Mama Cat," the
kicked. said Jackson. division's mascot that had d1sap-
Jackson said the morale of the peared after four y9'(rs.
~fficers and other police employees "This cat Just kind of took over and
"She would sit on the front de Jc:
and &}are at (desk. officer) Sam Arnold
because he wouldn't let her sit in his
chair," remembered Jack.son.
A collection within the department
for P.C. 's $290 medical bill turned up
roughly S 100, with more donataoAs
coming in, said Jackson. The cat was
cremated this morning.
Jackson said she was unsure
whether the department would get
another pet cat.
OW.Fl Worth
Temperatures E'=.._ ·
te Le OeclOIC Oulut!I S3 41 EIP-
54 41 f llrb...-1 71 5e
54 32
71 $3 ~: Eztended
e1 47 .,. 44
73 42
11 48 ., 50
S3 41
71 Sii
u '3 ., 16
7' 40 It SI 11 47
12-.,. ., 45 n ,.
44 S5
• 71 411 ., 47
17 62 IO 41
IO It
1' lit
s horrible today because of the loss nobody ever minded," Jackson said.
the I I-month-old cat. P.C.. played on the desks and roamed
__ -,;;1...._·T.;:..::;b~ere~·s:...;so=m:.:;.e~=o::.:l.;;.e.;:;a.;..;ro::;.;u::.:n::.:d'-h~.""e_::.:.frce=l..,y-=th::;r:.;:o""u""gh""""'out the deNrtmcnt:
"It's so hard to lost them. They'll _ncyCLbc_ ,,
ORGENSEN FILES GOING TO DENMARK •••
. mAl '
dy has been selected for a public interdted U.S. resean:hcentcrsas the Danish doctors turned George W.
IGnscy Institute for Sex Research m Jorgensen Jr., a former U.S: Army
Bloomington, Ind., because she felt soldier from New York City into a
Lagu~a'sJackSmith ies;
known as _'Mr: Republican'
ibition planned in 1986.
Z1"'He'r files are like a mirror of our
Jne," he sa1d. ~e said Jorgensen, 58. chose the ~penbagen library over such •
the docua:nentataon of her li.(e . WQO'\IJ\ known as .Christine Jor-\'Long-time· civic activist was city's ..
"belonged in-Denmark." gensen . She later pursued a career as ----------
Hormone treatment and surgery by anentertatner. Citizen of the Year. Chamber president
I CARTER TO SELL PARK PLANS ••• By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of1MDl9J ...... ..,,
ot's Day Parade and was president
emeritus of the Laguna Beach Ex-
thanae Oub. •l'romAl
investigators.
Before his.company was closed by
the Securities and Exchange Com-
m1ss1on last year. Carter had arranged
to purchase 80 acres next to the
Hacienda Casmo. The owner;sh1p of
that property now is in dispute.
Despite the cnmmal charges and
'That's what.nhe's going to . be
concentrating ocl?He needs to arrange
for that to come to f ruit1on because he
wants to pay off his credtors, .. said
attorney Ted Langer.
The amusement park, styled after
Disneyland. is to be called Huck's
Landing. the attorney said. He said
necessary permits alread) are being
processed.
repaid, sa1d Fred Basom, a busi-
nessman representing a oonsortium
of investors.
Carter and rus wtfe filed for
bankruptcy this year but now have
filed a lawsuit to dismiss portions of
the bankruptcy.
John E. "Jack" Smith o f Laguna
Beach, long active in community and
Republican organizations, died
Wcdn.esday moJnang in a Laguna
Beach convalescent hospital follow-
ing a long illness. He was 78.
Pnvate memorial services wlll be
held Friday with bunal at sea.
Smatb, a 42-year resident of Laguna
Beach, was the city's Ciuzen of the
Year in 1982. He was a three-tame
president of the Laguna Beach Patri-
Smith also was ac:tivc with the
Chamber of Commerce arid once
served as itspresadent.
Popularly known as "Mr. Re-
publican," Smath was a member of
the Republican CalifQmia Central
Committee and was re-elected last
June to the Orange County Re-
publican Central Committee. He was
the founder and only president of the .
California Republican Assembly and
wa.s a_ lgoa,w.ne mcm»er of the
Lmcoln Club of Of'an'ge County.
Two weeks aio. state As-
semblywoman Manan Bergeson, R-
Newport Beach, visited Smith at
South Coast Med1cat Center to com-
mend him on bis mvolvement with
the community and the Republican
party. .
"He was more active than anybody
J knew," said Harry J. Lawrence, a
lon&tJme friend and member of the
same RepftblJCan organizations as
Smith.,
"Everyone enjoyed Jack He de-
voted himself wholeheartedly. He
was rehable and consistent and stayed
w11h whatever' he was working on
until at was a success,·· Lawrence said.
"Smee he retired, his whole life. was
devoted to his community and,
through the Republican groups, to his
• the other complications clouding his
future. Caner has every intention of
going forward with the Las Vegas
plan, his attorney explained Wednes-
day.
Most of the creditors. however, are
anxious for Caner lo complete his
amusement 'park so that they can be
The businessman's arrest followed
an 18-month investigation by the
Orange County Sheriff's Department.
Carter's bail, originally set at
$500 000, was lowered to $100,000
on Tuesday by a municipal court
jud&c. -------------country." "He was a whole lot of gJving and "
MOTHER SEEKING SON ON COAST ••. SUSPECT'S JAILBREAK •••
FromAl ..
the last to kno~ . ..:· DeHan says
quietly ,
"We had a happ) marriage for 1711,
years I remember when '>'e go t
mamed he had Just gotten out of the
Manne Corps and I was a legal
secretary We lived in Pompano
Beach (Flonda) at the time and we
used to go sit out on the beach and
dnnk Cokes and talk We couldn't
affo rd anything else so we'd JUSt dnnk
our Cokes and talk and talk ..
They had fourchaldren. mcludmga
set of tw10s, in 40ur years "They were
just quadru'plets. really." she says.
But after her husband worked his
way up to be a manager m the drug
store chain he worked for. he left and
she didn't hear from ham again until
she tracked him down 16 months
later. li ving with the former clerk. and
her son in another state.
After the) established contact
. again. he demanded vts1tat1on nghts
and eventuallv Dwayne and his l 9-
year-old sister. Dawn. went to hvc
with their fat~r.
··1 went through a homble penod at
the umc John (her husband) left."
lk Hart said "In our whole ne1~h
borhood that summer 11 seemed hke
an ep1dem 1t E.,.e~one was gdting a
drvorce .\II the kids were told not to
t.alk about 1t Then one da.,. at lu nch,
one l id adm11ted his father had left
The next thing the) kne"". all the kids
fo und out they were in the same
situation ··
DeHan says her husband did not
pay child support or alimony and she
S1rugled to keeP. her family tOJether
When her children, all teen-agers.
were denied designer Jeans and cars.
she says. they began to resent her
··M~ fnends told me later that the
Just Call
642-6086
D•llJ Piiot
o.tlvery
I• Gu•r•ntffd
Dlllr,...,....., ...... ~
Audrey DeHart hold.9 picture
of her 90D, Dwayne.
children tend to blame the parent
that's left behind for what's hap-
pened ... she satd.
The bitter divorce and abandon-
ment hurt all of the children, De Hart
says, but it may have been Dwayne
that was affected the most:'"'~
Once he went to li~ wt th has father
in South Carolina. he was forbidden
to call or wntc his mother DeHarfs
FromAl ~
daughter told her. In 1982. DeHart's the sock appeared to be stuffed with
husband moved to California, takmg "something solid."
Dwayne and Dawn but leaving no According to reports, Hunt backed
forwarding address. away and allowed the pnsoner to run
Last year some time, DeHart saad, out of the jail, thinking the charn link
her husband asked Dwayne to leave gate to the carport was closed. H unl
atld he compJied. No one knows also activated the jail alarm.
where he went. Sgt. Holbrook explained the motor-
DeHart followed a trail of phone tZed gate usually closes a&r a patrol
bills, old addresses and finally a unit 1s driven into the carport.
psychic's hunch to NeWport Beach, However, police department pho-
where she believes Dwayne is living.. tograpbcr Jason Knox. who was near
Some of her information comes the carport, said the gate was left open
from a "psychometrist" Peter roughly three feet.
Hurkos, whom she consulted at his The sock-wielding suspect was
Studio City home in August. chased and collared by at least three
She puts complete faith in him and omcers, who handcuffed the suspect
in another psychic she consulted in in front of City Hall and marched him
Baltimore. She also thinb she has ----
some psychic ability. "Some (psy-
chics) arc wrong and some tell you
what you want to hear," DeHart
ad mats.
"But this guy really knpws what at's
all about," she said.
Hurkos claims to be able to touch
an article or photograph of a miss1n1
person and then know somethin&
about the person.
"I showed him a family portrait of
us, taken at a wedding. But before I
even turned the photo over he knew
what tt was all about. He told me all
about my hfe and my children and at
was all true," she said.
She contacted the Dady Pilot in the
hope that Dwayne will get hold ofber.
"I sort of figured maybe the landlady
would read the paper and telf
Dwayne," she said.
In the meantime. DeHart bas her
picture 'nd her ho_pes. "My psychic in
Baltimore told me I would get my
children back, one by one. And he's
been nght so far. I'm goini to find
him."'
Wbat ct.o you like about tbe Daily PUot? What don't yoa like? Call tbe
number at left and your messagt will bt recorded, tr~1crlbed and delivered
to the appropr1ate editor. ·
Tbe samt U ·bour answering service may be ••ed to record letters to the"
editor on any topic. Coolrlbutor1 to our Lettera colamn mast laclude their
name and telephone number for verification. No clrcolatlon caU1,please.
Tell us what's on your mind ·
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
Clrcul•tlon 714/142..Q.33
Cl•Nlfled 8Clvettlalng 714/M2~
All othitr ~rtment1 842-4321
MAIN OfFICE
330 .,.,ft4 .. v $1 C',oru CA I.Ii~ a~nt Doc 1$00 CO&ta ~ CA ~7
H. L. Schw•rtz Ill
Publtsher
CM•r'u'll IW (hllQCJ c:oa;. ~ ~'t' No
~ ilot>n llli.DltllllOt• 91)10<111 l'M<W 0 a~I
........... "" -y Cit •IP!OOl.i! f!O .. "'°"' ~;Ill! """
Aoaem•ry Churthman
Controller
Steph.an F. C.,HO
Product on
Mann
~-(~ CWJ .. 1 OM1"' •
back to the JS.JI
The weapon was discovered to be
merely a sock. stuffed with another
wck that had been sol\Jced in water to
give 1t a heavy appearance, said
police.
Originally c}UU"Sed with misde-
meanor, indecent exposure, Sawyer
now faces additional felony charges
for assault with a deadly weapon and
escaping fromjail. He was trans-
ported Wednesday to Oran1e County
Jail "as he could be a further problem
at Costa Mesa City JaiJ,' police
reported.
Holbrook estimated there ·have
been three or four jailbreaks at the
city facility durin& the last 16 years.
very little take, whether thlt was
monetanly. ume-wise or with ideas.··
saad Ball Hoff, a fellow member of the
Laguna Beach Chamber of Com·
merce and the Exchange Club.
"I think he was probably respon·
sible for bringing in 50 percent of the
Exchange Club members and turrung
it mto the most acti ve orga01zation in
town," Hoff said.
"All these groups he was involved
with only made him stronger. If he
was gJven I 0 more years, he would
have been involved with 12 more
organizations." he satd. "He was that
type of person:·
Smith as survived by bis wtfe Marlu
of Laguna; a daughter, Marlu
Abusaid Oliphant of Lagu1t.a; and
three grandsons. Tyrone Abusaid of
Laguna, John Carlos Abusaid of
Bogota, Colombia and Juan Oliphant
of ffawaii.
•
l
·~
Owner sadly
March Fong Eq. watches sale 1:~~0~!~~~~F=~t11.bc of menagerie
1ue1t of honor at ~occlal Charter Day reception at Hilt0n • •
Inn at the Par~ IOSS Harbor Blvd., Anaheim. Friday.
Democratic Women of Orange County will host &he Proceeds from auction will go
· ~vent, open to the _public:, from 6:30 lo 8:30 p.m. ''Tht CO$t to pay the animals' boarding bill 1s S2S l>Ct ~rton. For n)Or6 information and reservation' call .Sl ... 1080.
BJ STEVE MARBLE . ~ .
CWlllehlflNethi# Nancy Ellis, the Indiana woman ~ho lost c of
-""'="'=o=T:"'."'h--... d------------~mOJCthan t Oean, dop net tebbit't in A~. t
••cut-a-Thon• benefit •lated
e secon annuar·•cut·a-tnon," presented by Mitch tearfully Wednesday as l...,ine ciLy officials "-•h tling and Company Haircuttert, 4 718 Barranca, Irvine. will be her.-. . 'y ~~ held Sunday, Oct. 7, from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. .,.. .. The "Cut-a·thon," oriajnatcd by Calvin .. Mitch" She wu ot pemutted to bid on ny of her anima •
·Mitchell, ~nefits tlie Richard Henry Dana School for which WCR taken from her When the city•s animal se~
multi·hand1cappedchildrcn. All haircutsareS12, with all dep&rtment concluded she had mi5treated the ~~~ p~ to be used to purchase equipment for the ~hoot's jammina them into a small motorhome she drove acr°' ·
therapy, speech and adapted physical education depan-the country. • ment The auction, which continues today, I is being
Also participating in the event will be Chuck E. conducted to help pay a $23,000 boardina bill for the
Cheese, the University High School Band, a guitar and animals. ' • " flute duo, and a host of clowns. '.There will be balloons, City officials said nine of the 16 do&s taken &om Ellis
door prizes and refreshments. Special 1ucsts will be Ginny were sold during a silent bid Wednesday at the Irvine
O&D-ey, the United Way Poster Child1 and Christopher animal shelter. The dop. all pure bred, brousbt $43S.
Man.in, the Marth of Dimes Poster Child. AU I 06 of Elli•' cats are to be put on the auction block
For more information, call SS2-2023. today. The remainina stven d~ also will be put up for
Free a dmlulon to muaeam
adoption as will the seven rabbttti found in the Indiana
woman's motor home. · . .
. Carl .Papno,. t}\.e ciW's .an.imal services supervisor,
A once-a-week ftce admission to ~wpon Harbor said ~c city 1s ta.ki~ DO.JOY in 1ts ~sk. .•
Art Museum is beina offered on Tuesdays ~nnina Oct. . . ,But .our band 1s be1n1 forced, b_e added; not.1.ng that
9. The museum is1ocatedat 8SOSan~mente-Drive, near 1t 11n t fair to ask. taxpayen-&e continue 1upJ)ort1n1 the
Fashion bland in NewPort Beach. The free admission on wQman.1 meoaicne. . • . · . . · Tuesdays is made possible by a arant from Butterfield Ellis apparently .considered, scekini. a _fCStra1!11Dg
Savinas and Loan of Santa Ana. For more information, or~er to block the acuon but dectdcd apmst 1t, a friend
caU 759.1122 said todar. · "She s just at a breaking point. .. said Susan Hpw~ an
Blind chll~en benefit "set ~~o~::iod':~r~r ~ supportina Ellis in her enort
tor 91Je and dessett-.desisned to benetit the Blind Jllis1 wb~ sgcD1 n~rly • monuton tbe road with )fer Childre~ s Centef of Los Anaclcs is scheduled to be held aoun&t-.11 faana cnm1nal ~of mistreatina animals.
Oct. 9 from 7-1 O?J.m· a.t \be Irvine Coast Country a .ub, A jury trial ii set for nex\.)Veek m Newpon Beach. J 600 E c H ,... Be Tb fun The woman's home 10 Indiana was declared a health · oast way; tn , .... ewport ach. e draiser eme...,.nrv late lut month. Health officials there claimed is SPonsored by the Newport Harbor-Santa Ana Delta .... •J Gamma Alumnae Chaptq. All alumnae and their auests tlie seven-room, ranch-style house was filled "floor to
are invited to set a head start on their Christmas shoppina. ccilina .. with aninial droppings, lit tu and prbage.
Admission is free. For reservations, call 997-769S or
730-0S83.
C~d ldentlflcadon offered
• A free child identification/photojrapby servace ·is
bcina offered by Tony Roma's-A Place for Ribs at 2530 w.
Coast Hwy., in Newport Beach throuahout the month of
October. The restaurant offers the opportunity to have
children photoJJ:.t!phed between S and 7 p.rri. every
Monday through ~ednesday. ~he photos will be attached
-to identification forms for use if a child is missina. The
restaurant plans to circulate 34,000 identification fo'tms
throu&hout Southern California.
Coune for JMP"enta announced
• Irvine's Family Service Proaram is offering a four-
part course on "Parentina the Elementary School Child"
on Tuesdays from 1 to 9:30 p.m., bqionioa Oct. 9, at
Deerfield Community Parle, SS Deerwood West, Irvine.
Parents will learn skills and practice techniques
desi"1ed to improve children's behavior in the classroom
and m the home. Cost of the class is $30 per per100. For
more information and reaistration, call 660-3814.
A class on stress maoaaement will be offered-by St.
Joseph Hospital of Oranae begionin& Tum, Oct. 9, from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Fee for tbe clasS, wbic meefTor
three Tuesdays, is SIS. ·
Participants will be tau&ht the causes of stress and its
effects on the mind and on the body, how to rccO&nize the
physical symptoms of stress, relaxation and stress
reduction techniques, and the adaptation of stress
management to personal lifestyle. For more information
and rqistratioo. call 771-8040.
Retired teache,. set meed~
Ex-school teacher
Sue Jacksori dies
Mrs. R. Sue Jaekson, a publisher and high school
teacher, died Tuesday at her home on Lido Isle in Newport
Beach after a year-Iona illness. She WIS 74 . . _>.frs. Jackson is the mother of Judith A Franco,
president of .lhe Board of Education of the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District.
She was born in Mt Ayr, Iowa. on June 7, 1913, and
graduated from Drake University where she was a
classmate of President Ronald Reagan and a member of
the Kappa Kappa Kappa sorority. ·
When she moved to California, she founded the
Franklin Publisbina Co., a book publishing house in
Pasadena, and tau&ht at Temple City Hiah School.
Io Newport, Mn. Jackson was active in the Lido Isle
Yacht Ctuband wasa member of the Balboa Bay Club. Sbe
and her husband maintained a home in Palm Springs as
well as their home on Lido.
Mrs~ Jackson is survived by her husband, T. Eldon
Jackson, of Newpon Beach; her dau&hter, Mrs. Franco.
and S01'-in-law John Franco, of Lido Isle; and her
a.randsoris, Jack, David and Mark Franco.
FtineraJ services for Mrs. Jack.son will be private. The
family asks that contributions be made to the Sue!acksOn
Memorial Scholarship Fund for the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District.
Contributions can be sent to the fund in caro bf Dr.
Norman R. Loats. 1601 16th St., Newpon Beach, 92663.
Ski ploader-.'resc,,9e' fore es
evacuation of~three hoines · .
By DAVID BISHOP wett rcportca. °""',... c.11 , 1 ~-.. Luckily it didn't hit anythina, ..
The residents of three homes were said Craia McKibbtn, assistant mu-
evacuatcd alooa Hidden Valley Dnve oicipaJ services dfrector. "Its cbaiils.
this momina and Temple Hills Dnve or .wbltc"'cr b014i ,it oo \be
was closed as" t:aauna Beach fest'Ue trailer, and n J pped ova
crews removed a piece of heavy 't ~e cdae·.. . ..
con9ff\lct1on equipment that fell off a I . Terry:B!l-11dt. aty muruC!pal ser-
tra1ler and rolled down a steep cltff vices diret"tor. said the skipl~~ Wednesday dropped about 200 feet to a pos1uon
'-lbout b.alfVO'ay between Temple
A 3,000-pound sk:1pl~~er rot~ Hills Drive and Hidden Valley." '
off a tra~ler on Temple Hills Dri~e Citycrewsattcmptedtoremovethe
wh1_le being taken to a street repair skiploader Wednesday oJaht but were
prOJCCt on San Remo Drive. hampered by difficu.Jt terrain. Lona
i:. No one was m the loader when it cabtes..-ere1ttachedt0thcloaderthis
went over the cliff and no injuries · morning. and fearina that tension
rililbt <:aux them to map. pO\icc ordtted tbe evacuation of thtee homes OQ Hidden Valky Drive near
t.bc diabled loader dw\1)& the ~
moval efl'on:
T "'-Hills Drive :was doeed '° traffic ~both directions for nearly
two hours this mornina wtille tbc
crews worked. The roed is one of~
two scrvicina . the hilltop com:
mul,tities of Temple Hills and Top of
the World. ~ skiploader was leased by
Richardson and LeBouef of Santa
Ana. I company tlie city bas COD·
tracted with for the road project. a
company spokesman wd. The South Coast Division of the California Retired
Teachen Association will bold its first fall aencral mcetina
at J 1 a.m. Oct 8, to be followed by a luncheon at noon in ---------------------------------------------------------
Cllibbouse 5, Mon~ Hennosa and Punta Alta, Leisun: oc , M '•11 1~ R Fi · =~~-:~~li1:~ia °ii .. 1! ~~: s . 1 er to per .... or_m at . eggae e~t
Association. Cost of the luncheon is $6.SO. For more
'
irifonnation, c::a1t SS 1-0259 or SSS-2093.
Tliu.nctay, Oct. 4
• 6:30 p.m., LIPD• Board of Adjutmnt, City Hall
Council Chambers, SOS Forest A venue.
• 6:30 p.m. Lapu B'eacll Euer11 ~d Env1roament Committee, Comm\lnity Center, 376 Legion Street
By DAVID BISHOP
DellJ Net C.r1 II n dHt
"This is Rcgae music ... ," the audience shouts alona
with the infectious rhythm. The words are ts>-: the. song
written by late black Jamaican musiCal legend Bob
Marley. But the band this time is that of Jack Miller's. an
Oraoae County resident who's-become an Wtlikely
ambassador for Rqpe's &rowina popularity in the U.S.
and throu&hout the world.
Miller will lead bis band, the International R~e All~Un, tooiJht at Regae Fest '84 in the Hol~ood
Palladium, aJona with several other headline Pt'rfonnen
includina the first West Coast appearance of Reggae star
Auaustu1 Pablo.
Miller. 36. is immediately recoptlzed u an anomaly
10 Regpc music becal1Se he is a white Southern
Californian who moved here in the late •6()s from
Missoun. But in 1949 a trip to Jamaica opened bis C)CS to
Re&gae and he soon switched from the conventional rock
music scene.
q_ He bcpn pcrformina, started the b&Dd and then his
own recordi~ company called Hll.ku Records. Miller's third album of Regpe, .. Keeper of the Gate," is now out
and a fourth is in the works.
Miller is acclaimed as the finest white musician
playing Rcgae music. There aren't many, after all, Regpe
has its roots in the Rastafarian movement in Jamaica.
Reggae-music relies on heavily syncopated pulsatillJ
rhythms. repeated to a hypnotic turn. ~ beat is
infectious, and thouab much of the Jamaican-based
Reape music is political. reli&Jous and dnaa~riented.
Miller iones down tbe mcssaac and concentrates more on
the music:
Miller has been busy also piooeerina the spread of
Rqpe rbytlmis in comers of the .,.ortd hitherto unaware
of the music. H( and the band, mamly an Oranae County
tion, recently returned from Alaska Where they
t the Carribbean rhythms hve to the cold north for
th t time. He also cla.ims to be the first to bnng Recpc to PCna
and to the outer islands of Hawaii. ,,
Tickets are S 15. available at the door.
PoucE Loe ~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~----------~----------------------------------------------------------~~-o
·Suspected true~ thief seized
in cras_h-punctuated .ch:ase,
r. .
The then of a pickup truck in Kemmis said patrol cars lost ~ght .Alabama A venue.
Sunset Beach late Wednesday of the pickup ~t one pc>int, but the Minutes later, at Warner and
•parked a hi&h·speed police pursuit Huntinaton Beach Poliee helicopter Spn~dalc, the pickup driver ran a
throuah Huntin~oo Beach that WIS able to k~ the vehicle in s1&hl red lilbtand firsthita l984Chevrolet • ended" wh~ the pickup crashed into • The chase endCd in a four.ve6icie driven by Lawrence G. Russell, 37, of
threecanaun intencction. · crasbatSptinjdaleStree1and Wamer l:fUntinaton Beach. The pickup then
The suspected car thief was at· Avenue at about 10 f).m. Kemmis hit a 1981 Volvo sedan driven by
rc1ttd at the scene. No serious said officers ai'rested the driver, Sein Gregory L Strayer, 3S, ofHuntinaton
injuries wett reported in the incident. Lee Hayes, 21, whose' addn:.U was not BCac.h. · ·
Po1iCC aid. immediately available. Kemmis said "Finally. the pickup colhdcd with a
herift'1 Lt. BOb Kemmis said the Hayes was arrested on· suspicion of l 968 Ford station wagon driven by
c:h4se.be&anaubout 9:30p.m. when a auto theft and placed in ihejaiJ ward • <;lark A. St.anley, 26. of Huntinaton
• t 976 Chevrolet pickup was repoJ1ed .i UC Irvine Medical C.enter for &a h.
at ?th ueet and North ~fie ,observation. . Cope said Russell's ~~ear~ld son
Avenue in Sunset Bcaett. .,, Huntinaton Beach police Sat JefT Matthew, a paucnacr. received a
Sheriff's deputies. ftbO patrol Copo wa the fleeig ~ckup aQ-bump on the head. Otorae Fowles.
Sunset •cbt pursued the pickup out parently hit a total of'.: four vehtclea 28, of Huntinaton lkac.h. a pa naer
of that mtmunity into Huntinaton durina the chase th~ the city. Ht ln the Stanley vehicle, reported mi~or &ach, Kefnmi1 said; He said the id a plrted, unocma~ 1976 back iqjuri in the incident. 1 ope pickupftedlt~upproecbina IOO . M~ry wa 1tnd 11 1tiou1 9:~ 1d. Neither required imm iate
mph at somt pointa. p.m. on Hartford cut of bospuahzat1on be id..
.. roaa Colorado.
home on the 1800 block of Seadrift
Drive Once tnside, they stole Si,800
worth of Jewelry and fine sih·cr, ate a
half dozen donuts and cookies and
left their sandals behind. Two ·watch-
es, a lantp. two ~ts of sterlins silver
• and cuh ~ere amona the items
stolen.
• "II
da) at a room at the HuntlJl&UID
Beach Inn on Pacific Coast Hi&hway.
Entry was appamitly m~ throush
an unlocked door. The loss iricluded
jewelry worth S 130. • • • • A man was' ~ Wednetd&y
afternoon oh suspicion of opti.ftiJtl
at \M Sponmart store. 7433 'f.diti#r
. .\'\e. C1othing worth $48 was ~
covertd • • A pragc bursiUY was rq,o110d Wcdnnda~ by a resident oftbe 8100
block of Holland. Entry was made
thro a cl<Sted but not locUd
aaniee door·. The lo included too
wonl\$4.000. . • • • A man was arrested WedActday on
susp1cion of shoplift.in& at tbe Thrifty
Drop store. 986 Adams A "-c. Re--
covered were ciuttttcs worth $16. "J ••
Entcnna t.brou&h a slidi t>dt
windo • someone bur&larizcd a
home Wednesday Otl the 3SOO bl
of Roacn. A radio taken in buraJar> wu recov~tcd in the
:
..
,,
•
,
Potluqkpartyplanped for.,Sam Willett
m Wd tt nd his opted n counuy bf th Will US vo ft l m ~' fi ion Oct. 19, whm the Tickets are SIS nach and include a
Juan ptstrano partnU rt plann1na "ere P ~'CO~ \Oluntttrt, s t60 Founuun Valley Educational foun-bufft't dinner. heck houtd be sent
n open hou • potlu It ny on Oct. old for entry an10 the U h Uat1on prcscnb its first Qlebrit)' by Oct. S to. fountain Valle> Educa·
14,at I :30 p,m. to celebrate tht' end of adoptea child. ~ h1on how and Aucth>n. t1onal P'oundation.
t.hc youna Libenan' JO.year banle to Sam aftd his rent-. Ruth and The fund·raisinaevtnt -..ill ~n at l L11hthou4ie Lane. Fountain Val·
remain with his family in the United David Willett, ha~ invlled nyonc 7 p.m ... nd run to midn1 t at Icy, CA 92708. •
tatet. • who participetcd an m'a 10.year lignthou~ Lane. Hall on albcrt All proceeds w.ill upport the
Willett recently all but .,..on final f~t toauend the celebration, which A'enueat Newland trtet. • -Educational Foundation's efforts to
victory over immigration official~ will be held in the Rancho Del A vior1 Othc,.. to m~cl fa h~s include provide financial support to the
·Jut week when the U.S." Senate Clubhou • 32742 AJi Paz. jn San Judy Kcl y •. Fountain· V~te.y. city Fountain Valley School District
'adopted an immiaruion bill, Juan Capistrano. • manager; Dav1d H_aeen, pn~~~I of· through the award of arants.
pteviou Jy approved in lhe House of Fountain Valle ~.SChool£...oiddy · ·----_ Rep1"Rltutives for Wtttett, an(f nt._;M'--a-....-.l.oln--f-a:_a_hl ___ h ___ Cimmcrs, president of the Fncnds of Ill'.. D -6d b 1
it to the president's desk for a yor OD • ow ' the Libral); Linda Faulk. manatcr of run ay .u • llC OOi•
sipaturc. Fountain Valley Mayor Marvin Fullerton Savings and Loari, and The Ncwport·Mcsa Schools Foun·
U.S. Immigration officials h d said Adler and county Supervisor Roger Sandy Morton, owner of 1cwcts by elation ·w~ll kick. off its fund·rai ing
that Sam, adopted in his nathe Stanton· ..,ill be among thoJC Mortoii. season this year by hosting a ·'Fun
..
J
Day .. on Oct. IS t the Reuben Lee
rmaurantJ IS l · Coa 1 HiRhway. Th U\it1 in t 11:30 am.
with a fl sh1on show.
AAd the da)·.cnda with vicwina of
Monda) Ni~t Football on a lar&e
screen tclcy1s1on1 and a hght dinner
and fa hion ·show red toward
k1nderprtcn-through·hiah school
tudents.
Magician Ros Rice will be on hand
for ublc~dc cnte~inmcnt, and
door prizes will be awarded. ~ Proceeds will be .uscd for rcadin,g
and musit: programs at elementary
schools in the Ne~n-Mesa Unified
Scnool 'Distnct. •
For reservations, call 6 7S-S8 I I.
Panel appllcaii. ND6bt
The city of Irvine is ~king
.-
apph nu tor member t-1a l
an the Jrvinf'Ctuld re Commm •
-~ comm1uce i an advisory
td th t foc:ustr. on child care i uc
in lrvtne nd t.be city's tn\olvem nt
in them. The commtttec.,mak
m;ommcndAtioM to the Irvine Cit)'
Co~cil. . T~c committ~ now consists f rcprcscntati~c' f~ the cit_y's Com·
munity Scrv1ecs ~nd Plannma Com·
missions, the lf".inc Unifi~ .School
District the Jrvme Assoc11uon for Coordi~atcd Child Care, the military communi~, UC Irvine, Saddleback
ColleJe1 ommunity. Provider, the
Jndustnal a,uc'bf'Oral\ge C
and members·a\-large. ·
Four members-at-Jarse are being
souaht to serve terms of one or two
(Pleue eeelf&WS/Aa)
•
ARob1~
FALL SALE AND CLEAR.
$199.99
$58.99-$102.99
EVAN·PICONE
COLLECTION,
25% OFF
Ong. Sl9·S138. Clune
UJOOI, designed m soft gray.
frue-button ;aclttt and dirndl
skirt, 4·16. Just two from our
collection. Robinson's
EJzn·Picont, 14 7.
100% CASHMERE WRAP
COAT, 30% OFF
Reg. $285. An
unbelievable prlCe for a
luxury no wom.zn
should be wuhout.
L1ghtwetght and warm, m
palomino, black and peanut,
"44. 5.zk ends October 14 m
Robinson's Co.Jts, 73. To
orrkr, c.J/I tollfree
1·800·345-8501.
$8. 99-$219. 99
AFRICAN IVORY JEWELRY, 40% OFF
Ong. S 16-SJ68. From the MortA So collection,
choose from necltLu~ bangks, eamngs and mort.
'1 II ivory obt111rml kgai/y from culled hmis only.
Robinson's Fa~ion Fmt }~fry, 141.
'•
$36.99
FAMO.US MAKER
PLEATED LINEN-LOOK
SHIRT, 33% OFF
Ong. 156. Completely elegant, a
cool blMJ of cottonlramtf wuh
the sophisticated addwon of French
cuffs, m white, 4-14. Stzts vary by
store. Robinson's VIP Sportswear,
J. To order, call tollfrtt
1-800-345-8501.
$24.99
JWR SILK/ ANGORA
SWEATER, 34% OFF
Ong. $38. Delightfully detailed,
wuh cap sleeves and button
shoulder, soft stilt/angora m «ru,
silver gray, fuchsia, red, black and
turquoise, S·M-l. Robinson's
Sweaters, I 16. To order, call toll
free 1·800·345-8501. Please
add S2 for delwery
on purchases
under sis.
$18.99
LANZ FLANNEL NIGHTGOWNS, l2% OFF
Ong. S28. From Lanz of ~lzburg, the
trad111onal open ntclt granny guum in
1009& cotton flannel
Choose from assorted stgn.zture prints, .
P.S-1'1-l. Also awilable: J?g"lar round ~:'II~~~
yoke gram'J) gown. Ong. SJO.
Salt S19.99. Robinson's f1m1or ·
Intimate .App~rtl, 83.
$29.99
V-BACK WOOLBLEND
DRESS
.. Great buy. >Ou low these
~thes from San Francisco,
atsigntd WJlh spmt and fun.
Softest lambswool and nylon
v-baclt dress m black, purple,
azure or magenta. S·M·L
lnsuh Robinson's kd &g,
1l7. To order, call toll·
free 1-800·345-8501.
$54.99-
$126.99
YOUNG DESIGNER
DRESSES, •0% OFF
lJng. S96·S212. Bichon, Maggy
London, Eltleltttc, Ntcole Miller,
Ctt Get, Chma 8 .• md more.
4-14 Stl,.ctton wt/I WT) by
store Robinson's l'01mg
Designer ~s~ •• 17
,.
'
NEWSNOTES ••• · FromA4
n. The mcmbcn will be 1p-
p0inted by the Child C Comnut·
ltt.
Appl1~t1on . may be obtained from
the Communuy Scrvtcts Depart·
ment at the Irvine Civic Center
17200 Ja~borcc Blvd. The deadhn~ for retuman~ ~n application is Oct.
JS. For more information, call Ken
l.Uette, 660-3879. •
1th wclcomin and d1rect1ng v1
ttors.. worldna with th in labor od
dcli\ery, hclpin& moth rs on the post
partum unit and their' Inti nt ln the
nuf'ltl"), according to Susan Davis,
director of the h06pitar volunteer
program,
Volunteers will also t>e a ked to run
e~nds, take. bat>y Ptiotos and help
discharge pattcnts. •
telephones nd
&CS
\
Y.oluntecrs mu t be 1 o •
For more mformation, l lhe hospt·
tar volunteer office at 66-8133.
FJre Sernce Day
The Fount m Valley ~trc Dcp 11·
ment will m rk Ftre Service Da¥ on
Oct. J 3 with special demonstratton
for the public at the fountain Valley
Recn:at1on Cente-r. •
-
..
Volunteen needed In theemcracncy room •. '!oluntccri
The department will demonstrate
use of the Jaws of Lif~. ao hydraulic crevice used to remove crash victims
from IJ'ieir: v hie arid wltl..41'.i-"'
Flie bullet Oct. ao _ are needed to p-ect famahca to the
. o~nta1n Y,alrey Community Hos-llospatil; assist with 1dmiss1ohs an
p1tal 11 !'Ccru1t1~1 voluntccra to help in . escort patients from the waitina room
obstetnc se~1ca, . the emetJency to treatment areas, Davis says. ,
fire safety films. he Fountain VefleY'Fiire n-~~KHI
ment will ctlcbrate it 20th an·
nivcrsary with buffet dinner nd
danct Oct. 20, at the Founwn Valley
Demonstration will be presented
~twee!' 10 a.m. and 3•30 p.m. at the
recreation center, Brook.hurst Strtet !°°m a~d the intensive ca~ unit... Volunteers in tnten ive care ..-ill
Kelp ts ncedcdin obltctnc services work wit1l staff and families, answer and Heil A venue. Community Center. The event ·ir be held Crom 7;30
..
I • ,
•
t\NCE STARTS TOMORROW!
,
• $21.99
MEN'S FRENCH
DESIGNER KIMONOS,
SO% OFF
Ong. S45. Clamc lines of
comfort from Utt Frmeh
dmgner -jOu fllt!ar
Utt most/
, Polymer /cotton,
asserted colors.
Robinson's Mm 's
Robes, 157.
$98
6S-PC. DINNERWARE SERVICE FOR 12, 72% OFF
Open stock wlue SJ55. Select from three lowly patterns of
china from Lilinf...: jade Tree, Chippendale or Brocade.
..---~ Each service for 12 includes 12 each: dmner plate,
salad plate, soup bow~ cup and sauar; plus
14" platter, round veget.alie bowl, -covertd
sug4r and creamer. Robinson's China, 67,
all stores except Palm Springs.
2/$12 BATH
ALL-COTI'ON TERRY LOOP
TOWELS FROM CANNON;
SO% OFF
WhAt a ~al way to dry off! In
Cannon's Rqyal Classic of pi ma
• cotcon for softnen und extnntmigth.
Bl~ w/w4 dusty ro~. gray mi1t,
uhite, ~r../ pinlt, forest grmi,
part:hmmt "nd borrkaux. Bath,
If crf«t. SJJ nach.
Now 2/SJl.
Hand. If P"f«t. S9 taeh.
N<YU1.2/S9.
Wash. If P"f tct. S4. XJ tach.
N°"" 2/$4.
Robmsoti '$ T<1't«ls, Jl,
all stores txttpt
Palm Spnn~ To orrhr,
call tollfm
1·800·J4S-8501.
. •
$11.99.-
$26.99
ESPRIT FOR
GIRl-$ 7-14,
33%-35% OFF
Ong. S1B·S42. ~
show JUSt one outfit · ·
from our Espnt
Dust~s collect1on, a
soft mucure of
.textum and styles
that ewry~ rl wants for all and
winter. A l cotton
or acrylic, m blum,
ivory, cinnamon
and 1'114UW.
Robinson's Kuis, 45, -
all stores ex.ctpt
Palm Springs.
. $144. 99 ANY SIZE
EUROPEAN GOOSE DOWN COMFORTER,
28%-58% OFF
Wuh baffle wall construct101J to prewnt cold spots
and doom shifting. 1009ro cotton downproof cwtr m
clMmfldgtJe or light bl~. From Northern Ft.Jther.
with 5-~ar manufactum-'s ~TTanty. 'Fwm. Ong.
1200. Sollt Sl#.99. Ful/lquerm
Ong. SJOO. Salt S144. 99
King. Ong. SJ50. Salt Sl#.99
Robinson\ Comfort"~
·17, All stora txeqJt P.ilm
Springs. For frtt copin of
m4mlf.iauJTT's wammt).
urnt~ to: Cont10/lv, Dept.
21 Jj Robinson's. 600 W.
. lth Strttt, Los Angtle,.,
°T." .... CA 9001 7.
$19.99
FAMOUS MAKER MEN'S KNIT
SHIRTS. 33% OFF·
Ong. SJO. }Ou want ~fed of
ail-cotton and that famous .
loolt. that 14Sts.. In .
assorted stripes.
S·M-L·XL Robinson's
Men's Kmu, 21.
$9.99
S-PC. 18/8 STAINLESS FLATWARE PLACE
SETIING, 66% OFF
Reg. SJO. From Su~e, each 5piect smmg incl~:
dmntr forlt, salad jor/t. soup spoon, lnufe and tuspoon.
Choo~ from sµ 'patterns (we sh<1w Reeds fJnt). S.k
ends Octobtr 14 in Robamon 's Gift Hoi«Wam, 28, 111/
stom txetpt P4'm Springs.
$699
COITON VELVl:T ROLL ARM SOFA, 41'° OFF
Reg. S 1.199. EnJ<l) rht eleganct of thu INx1mou
eggp/.,inc·coloml w/.1 .'1 /\o .iviu~: /~"'· ~· SJ,149. 5.lle S649 Quttn nu sl«p 10f ..
Reg. S 1,..399 s.h SB99. \'om1n.sl chargt for tklit.~.
5.tlt tnds CXtobtr 14 m Robm5< n \ FumlUIJT, 122 111/
sto~ txapt Mimon l 'iero. P.zlm Sprtrigs ,.nJ ~l#n , M.s. No pa'Y"'tnt un11J0,\t.zrch, 19 5, on fimutuJT
purchdm of 1200 or mort on yo"r Robinson's ch.itge
(~t to cmiu .1pjnot.v.I)
~----:--K:'~
· SHOP THURSDAY 10:.9 ..
1 . \ .. c J
..
•
-...
•
No b~il for ~uspected· FBI spy .
K n 11 sd 11 uld _'!Qt±he
II wed bcca u the orOdii'ikOVi
re shll Rus ian dttzcn, and could be
snatched from the country by other
LOS ANGELE (AP)-A 2Q.)e r FBI still i$ conduCllJ\3 a "darn c Soviet u nts. FBI veteran offered the Soviet Union a sment" in the and "a are t "There i a troniKGB motiv1tiort"
.. very detailed" picture of U.S. doal more work i tiJI to be done. .. he to aetttiem out of the Uni~ States,"
lntclh,aencc activities for $50,QPO in said. Kendall id. • '.
Id and 115,000 ca h, authorities AccordinJ io an I affidavit, A preliminary hearing wa set for
sd after th.t first~ver SP> charae Miller admitted he was in financial Oct. 15. A srand jury is expected to
inst an FBI agent. trouble and demanded tbe gold and btain hearing the case hext week.
Special Aaent Richard W. Miller cash for supplyina Svetlana Oaorod· : 'the F81 a0idavit uidJhat around"=
wa held without betl after his atrest nikov, 34, an allcacd KGB major, and Aua. 12, Qsorodnikov identified
_. .......... _,Wednesa&y, ~use "flitJit is a real lier est.tin& hu$binCf;-N 1 oliY hcrsclfforthc first time as a m_,br in
1trona risk: said Assistant U.S. Oaorodhikov.' l, with classified FBl the Soviet intclliaencc aaency ·and
Attorney Ray Edwards. documents. asked Mlller if he would bC willing to
Authorities also arrested and 'de--Government ourttS in Washina-work for the KGB. ~ tained without bail two Soviet 'ton, speakina only on the condition Miller allc edly turned over a 26--
emigres accused of conspiring with thl'l they not be identified. said that page report titled "R.J>9rtina Guid-
Miller. Miller and Oaorodnikov may also noc: Foreian lntclhaence l nfor-
Miller, 47: was a counter-have been havina a sexual rcla· mation," which FBI officials said
intelliacnce qeot in the FBI's Los tionship. wouJd J 've the Soviet Unioo a
AnJelcs Offke and "'as supposed to The affidavit saia Miller detailed "detail picture" ofU.S. intelliaence
prevent foreian infiltrauon of Ameri-"personal, professional and financial activjtics, said the affidavit by FBI
can mtclliience acuvit1es. He was problems" and "she seemed ym-• agent Bryce Christensen.
charged wtth conspmng to gather pathetic." The Ogorodnikovs, arrested at FBI officials said.the data outlined
defense information to aid a foreign Miller, arrested at his home in the their Fairfax aparunent, were ar-information U.S. agents seek when
aovemment, which cames a maxi-rural San Diego County community raiined in a packed Los Angeles they question communist bloc
mum penalty of hfe 1n pnson. and of Bonsall, was to return to federal courtroom. Soviet natives who emi-em1ves and what the)' listen for on
fired on Tuesda\. court m San Diego today for •r:rai&n-arated here in 1973, the Ogorod-fore1~ surveillance wiretaps.
FBI Director \\'1lham H. Webster. ment. At his appearance before a nikovs claimed to be destitute. The MJIJer insisted on meeting the
appeanng glum at a Washmaton majlstrate Wednesday, he and his FBJ said they were rcce1 vins welfare · person who would receive the docu-
press conference. said the" damaae to wife Paula conversed in sian benefits. ments, according .to the Jlffidavit.
U.S. security is not irreparable. The language. Assistant U.S. Attorney Richard Qsorodnikov then introduced her p;;;;;;;;;;~===~iiiiiiii!im~li:!~iiiiiiiiiiii~ii;;;~iii!iiii;~~i;ii!i~iii~i.iiii¥.il husband, identifying him as Nikolay Wolfson and saying he had .. 30 years ,.,,,,..,,_...,., experience in handrin' financial m at·
ten for the network, '. the affidavit
said.
30% Off Cordless Phone
ET-320 by Radio Shack
All controls are in handset.
Up to 100-foot range.
Touch-redial of last number
entered. Pulse dialing.
#43-268 FCC regtstMed.
Noe fof coin Of ~~ UM
Reg.
149.95 . ..
Autcrsearch finds selections quickly. Soft-touch
controls, met&UCrOJ normal bias and EQ se-
lectors, switchable MPX filter. 11~27
·rM Dolby L.abor9torlM Lk»nelng Corp
Mini AM/FM Stereo Music
Save7995
•40 Reg. 119.95
Only '26/e,. hlghl Loud-
ness button for deep
bass. Aute>Magic4 FM
fin&-tuning. #31-1965
System. Cut 40% -WU!
By Realistic
~v• 11911
7980 Reg. S.C-•• tt9m81M.l5
• STA-12 AM/FM
Aecefvw
• Walnut Veneer
• 81/a" Woofer
• 2'/a" lWMter
Buy two for the regular
price of one! 131/:z" high.
#40-1979 .
Deluxe AM/FM Pocket Radio
By Realistic
Cut
41°/o
H1gMow tone switch, AFC
tor drift-tree FM, slfde.rule
tuning, 21/:z" speaker. With
earphone.112-714
a.ttery • .,,..
Budget Tone-Dlallng Telephone
Special Cut ~27°/o Purchase
101!~ 1995
Reg.14.95
ldeelfoi'U•
With Low-te
Long-otstance
Bervlcn
Comfortable new "K" styte handaet. With
modular plug. White, #43-900. Brown,
#<43-801 ~lone..... -!ICC~
Hot '°' COii\ °' P9"Yw· .e
..
..
I NATION
... "'--~ ~ ---=--- -'
Reagan crime package
survlves vote i n Sen ate
By Anocllttd Pre I
WASHINGTON -. President ea n's proposals to rqakc the ttrec
saf(r urv1vcd a crucial test todl).' when the Senate voted unanimously ~o k_cc
the crimc-fightina pac;~e in a ball n~cd to keep tbe,ovemment f unct1on1
Led by Sen. Strom 'Jlurmond. R-S.C .. supporters o the package mustered
97.() vote to defeat a move that would have stripped lhe measure from the
appropriations l~i,lation. The leaislation, which would apply only to federal
crimes, would eliminate parole and all<l'Y the unprisonment of da!lJCt:<>UI
defendants awaitina trial. A hew comaussio!1 wou!d .estab!ish au1dch~e
ensurin1 sinuJar prison terms for pcoP,le co.mm1tl1!'& stm1lar cnme~. Reacting
to the ruccessful 1nsanny plea of prt"Srdentta~ dant J~n W. H1n<:klcy J!
the bill would shin the burden of proof from the pro ecutton to the defense an
insanity cases. ·
Bodi• found ln nver sarclJ
NEW YORK-A ttarch for a mining state trooper has Jed to six sunken
cars, two bodies, a human bone and a arowin& suspicion that the river bottom
in a section of swirlins currents known as Hell Gate is a burial ground for tho
underworld. Police divers who found the bodies of the trooper and a ~puted
m6bster on the sludge<overed bottom of the Ea~ River planned to searcij
again today, Harbor Unit officer John Holihan said Wednesday. "The scuba
team is goina back to that location because when they pulled up the cat
yesterday with the trooptr, they found about four or five more cars down
there," Holihan said.
Marilyn'• Jetter nets $2 , 600
BOSTON -''The body is meant to be seen, not all covered up," says a
note under the signature of movie star Marilyn Monroe, written in resp<>nse to
a query about posing m the nude. That sentiment was wo.rth $2,600 \<> an
unidentified bidder in BostoD Wednesday night as autographs and letters from
the late ~x symbol were put on the auction block alona with the
correspondenoe of former presidents and noblemen. A letter b)' President
Zachary Taylor dated May 11, HSO. discussing U.S. hostages in Cuba, drew
the heftiest bid at $9,SOO.
CALIFORNIA
DomlnelU •alien •tro~e
SAN DIEGO -Bankrupt financier J. David l!>ominelh remained in
."serious but si.ble" condition today at Sharp Cabrilto Hospital, where be was
taken after sufferina a mild stroke in prison. Dominelli, awaitina trial on
eharges related to the multimillion-dollar coUapse on his moneytrading farm. is
bein& ~for in the hospital's inte111ive care unit, said a nursinJ sueervisor
who de<:l10ed to give her name. A former stockbroker, Dominelli is bein.& held
in lieu of SS million bail on chargesarisin& from the bankruptcy earlier this year
of his La Jolla-based J. David &c. Co.
Libya •a•pected of pJantJ.ng mlaes
WASHINGTON -The 17-day cruise of a Libyan cargo ship through the
Red Sea last July suppons U.S. suspicions that Libya mined the entrances to
the international waterway, U.S. offietals say. A1an Romberg. the State
Department's deputy spokesman, said Wednesday that while there is "still no
conclusive proor• of Libyan complictty 10 the Red Sea minina. "there is
persuastve circum,tamial evldencc indicating t.ha1 Libya wu .mvolved lD
min in' the entrances to the Rc'd Sea." At least 19 ships have been damaged by
explosions to the Red Sea since mid-July and a mme hauled out of the water by
a British mmcswcepcr has proved to have been manufactured by the Soviet
Union, which has supplied large stores of mihtary supplies to Libya.
La•t radioactive barrel removed
OSTEND, Belgium -Divers today retrieved the last container of
radioca~ti ve material trapped in a French freighter that sank 12 miles off shore
nearly six weeks ag~. a spokesman for the salvage company said. Henk Drenth,
spokesmarrfor Smit Tak, a Netherlands-based company, said tht 15-ton barrel
was found at 3 a.m. today and removed two hours later. It was the last of 30
·containers of uranium hexafluoride to be recovered from the Mont Louis a
4,210-ton French ship that sank Aug. 25 after colliding with a Nonh ~
passenger ferry.
'Ein>t clJlel reject. Ituael •ammlt
~~o. EaYD.t -:-Pres!dcnt Ho~ru Mubarak has rcJectcd a call for a
summll with lsrieli Prime Mnustcr Shimon Peres because be doubts a meeting
held now would produce concrete rcsuJts, a leading Cairo newspar,:r said
today. Mubarak believes a summit mcetin& with Israel's new leader 'should
lead to important m ults th9t can be announced afterward. Such J. D\.CCU~
sbouJd produce prtctical steps to pusb forward the Middle East peace prooe '
the semi-official newspaper Al-Ahram said.
I don't use a k>t of dUJerent
ftnahdal instJwtJons. AU I need
is one-Atneikah:Shing.s.Tliey'\
""'c .. ~.....-IQl ffi)' CD in\restments, :check· J
tng and •ings accounts and
even the trust fund for my son.
Af!lcrican Saving alway~ co~
through for me. with a personal,
fri lndly touch that you ju t dOn'(
much an '1110~
~~
lltliW
i
,
--r
' : I
. _..
I
WOOL CARPETING Q~ANJ)~A
.$33 .. 95 s •
YOUR CHOICE OF . OUR BEST FROM DESSO,
INSTALLATION' INCLUDED: . .
DEFERRED PAYMENT PLAN. NO PAYMENT UNTJL MARC H , 1985*
..
SKARA, bo11dt ltnodoolt pile m S colon. AjO&;-&:rbn-loop m -I colon.
MA NORA, ribbed &-r/}('T pile m 4 colon. HER .\fA.\DA. rlt1ck Berber loop m 5 ;,,for,
Q: Wh.it IS the most important q11ality to look
for m carpttmg!
A: R~zlimc~! ~ability to bounct or spnng b..zck, to
rtsumt ongmal form after s~tchmg. btndmg. treading (Uy
Lmlt Leagut ~ball ttamsj. crushing (h 500-pound
armom1}.
Q: What is the most m1/ient carpet fiber!
A: Wool. ~nd zt is naturally so (have you ever setm a
flat shttpf). With wool, nature once again displays her
supmonty by mating a fiber of incredible complexity
(man has, m fact, not yet been able to duplzcate 1t}. A
fiber that is, at once, '°ft, warm, durable, easy-to·mamtam
and fire·retardant as well as buuyant.
Q: HCIW d~s wool do all these things!
..
..
A: Without getting t('O technical, t.1th
0
wool fibtr i>
composed of tiny molttul11r chains, coilttl wuhm tough,
scaly slims. 71'is ilesign pr<1t1taes a natural cnmp or
lprzngin~ss that can u·uhst11nd stretching and tumtmg
without lm•king, !Mn ~an relax bttwetn "t:rises" to
pmnw strmgth 1md moltcular contin"ity~or" lo(ig,
l<mg timt. A durability you 'II ap, rteiate RlOrt a1ul mort
through t>ii )('""·
... .
....
,
•
A: Unlikt synthetic fibers, u:htch mher 1upport or melt
. under a Jlamt, ":_WI ls..se/f-extmguishmg uhen the firt b
rtmcn:ed. Bums, such as tho~ from czgarettq, do not
permantntl) mar wool carpet trtht-r. &cau~ the bumtd
fibers char rutlier t"b.in melt,-tne brolten tnds CJ11 be
brushed a'4'..t)' -:.;1th a blunt-edged tool and the spot
es~ntl411)' dZS..tpptars.
Q : ltrh.ir mc1kes wool easy to ma1~wn!
A : n,e .'C.l') surfaus of ics fibers tend
to hold dirt high in the pzlt so th.tr tt c.m l1t' 1.ml)
v.irnumcd .i~'J)'. Furthermore, neir/,er d1 rt, ml\ i:rir 11m
w.1trr .idhcr~ "14'ell co this outer skm, so thr'< .1~· 111or(
easil) remcr.:ed. Finally, because u.·ool fiben .m 11p.1qm.
thn tend tn hide dirt belier th.in smooth, o.m•lu1mt
fJ";thet1c fibers. ~
..
Q : Hm.•• d!' wool's ro~orJ. ho/J up!
A: &autifi1/Jy. Becau~ of-:.roo/$ compkx dvmic.J
structure, ll absorbs dye> re.ulil) i;zthout ./ixAtiw agmts.
And tk sc.Jy surfaces of m fibers ~ 11J1 the light,
i'mtltmg m colors tlut S«m mote lusrro"-S than tM, do in
synthetic ft~-.'1 bonus: as chi c.irpet •gn, I« fi1:iii rc4fiS
also c•u~ the color to dttpm .ind .usMmt the Jary;J of
p.zmu so .iPf'e..tlm'l, tc coll«ton of ant~ wool urpets
and tApest~
Q: W'hat m.ilw Dnso dijf~mf
A: Dt'"(l Mt•i.J, fin! d1J!emit .f.oools to nwltt one uieal
\.lm, ( rt•.1:1'J1; 1 , .1rpct of l.Hting lu'Cun.inct.
f •
A: U"l•cn •.z .z11ud .11:o1mst tht 1upenor perfornunce,
eas.\ m;1mte>1.mc t, u1zp.trallelttl bu.t) 11nd th.nibility_
den-..wl, :J">t przu ul -...ool '' an_.outsr.mdmg wl#e i~ .
Q : Do you pm:dt w~tJl/at1onf
._, .
. ..
'
t ..
1 DAILY PILOT /Thu
) . Empty till sends fed workers home
the federal orkforec at th Whu
House dtt rm1ncd th t the rme 1ng
,pcodin com romi bet"'ecn the
House and the n le" s unhkcl) to
meet with Pl ident Re n's ap.
prO\aJ, .
Not affect('(! by the shutdown order
are federal wor\.:crs de lu with air
traffic control, border uDrd • med•·
cal in5titution personnel, and pn on
and. other law enforccrient per on·
net.
The Postal , 1vke, which has ia
own budget, was. not affected. Gov· .
rnn ent proc:n~n ofSoc1at unt)
and other O\cmm.ent che k would
Io proceed.
lso un fTcct~ were the dev:ln·
ments of J\lltkc. Commct(C, Suite
and Hou · ng nd U n Develop-
ment. plu the Veteran' Admmas·
t tion, &h Natiorull Aeronautic~ and
cc dministration and the En·
varonmcn I ProtC'Ction e-nc)t.~Ap..
propnations bills for tho agene:ie
had bttn.p:mcd earlier. .
Nonetheless, the admini. tration e~timat~ that about two-third oflhc
non-dctcn workforce woukl be
aff~tcd b) a temporary, furlough, the
fint tn four ~car .
On Capilol Hill, meanwhile,
peakcr Thom r. O'Neill told
reponcn t t the House was J>rtpa~d to pa s al'l<>thcr shorl·term
exten ion to keep :federal workers
from bem sent home. ·~ •
7 "If it' absolutely noct, ry, we'll
· get it out of here a quickly u pQ~ibte•· and send it to the House.·
O'Neill said. .
NICOSIA, Cyprus CAP} -A
bomb-laden car exPloded today
In the parking lot ot a building
housing the 11,...I Emba-.y,
damaging nearby bulldlngs and
~clea 'but reportedly causing U Wlr ..... no serious Injuries.
An lsraetl Foreign Ml11lstry
~esman. Dan Alhbel, said In
~erusaaem that no ·one In the
embassy was wounded. Ht• re-
port was confirmed by an ltraeff
employee at ttle embueay. ~o
Surfer Bob Rice d.laplaya bU ahark~lmprlnted •urfboard.
laowt'mhaldto~.
Personal $e1Vlce is in~t tO
,me. I've had it with places that
took down their nose at me. ·
I picked Ameiic-m Saving.s for asked Jn01 to be Identified.
Giaht jaws, lunches
ori man's surfboard
&-~~~+--'"'---!!~--..their~ • ~ .
also for their ser\'ite and con-
venience. There's a woman at
the branch I go to who always
has coffee and cookies for me.
~
It\ 1~ Fb.thbnn
»k, Jlllllflf/t".
• 0•1U10llt'r IJtrfffllllN
t ttl«_e~~~~~~~~~~~~~ PO&red to be no damage to ltie
em~ ltMH. whleh occupiel
t~ two top ft6ora of the iix·st~
bufldlng on the maJn commercial
thor®Qhfare ln the 9:8Pltal.
CORV Al.tLIS, Ore. (AP) -Surfer
Bob Rice says he felt "terror, sheer
terror" when a l 2·foot pnt white
shark sank its teeth into his surfboard
in the ocean off Pacific City.
"You could feel the bite," Rice said
RUFFELL'$ in an interview here Tuesday. "1
couJdn't believe it was happening to
c:~ . UPIOLSTHY, llC. ~R4ce-;-2s. said he was c1osc to ending
f• Tiit tat Of Yu LWt "a pcifect day" of urfioa with two
ltn ~ avo., COSTA IEA -54&-1151 .friends south of Cape K.iwanda when
--------------the attack occurred at 3:30 Sunday ******************• afternoon. The Pacific had been • How to get • glass? smooth with evenly breaking • 30% tO 50% • five.foot swells.
• it-The Aloha native~tendingOrcgon : DISCOUNT ~ State University here said he could * ~ see the ocean bottom IS feet below
• • Y• L8IC * and had spotted many sea lions. ... DllJ•...-c "'•11• ~ R' d h . h ~ """" llffli&,9 ~ ace w e was sattmi on 1s
• • • board. waiHng for a good wave, when
• f.AU MGIEY • • the shark suddenly appeared on the • me PfMf!I it-ocean side and lunged .it his board.
• ~ .aTUCf Cll1I • The shark's jaws bit once, then apin
: • with "a bii chomp" before 1uming
.. For Details 645-4697 it away and diving towards deeper
.. CALl MIKE 642-1237 .. water. . ' *****************..,.. The 10-)ear veteran surfer said he _______ __...__ ___________ _._ __ ..;._ _____ _.;;.. __________ 1...-___________ --; was tossed off the s1x-foot·lon1 board
but quickly climbed back on and
paddled toward the beach as fast as he
could.
"To be here and talkin'g about it
and not in a hospital huning is truly
amazing," said Rice, a junior major-
ing in busine . Has only tOJUry was A
small scrape on his nght foot and
there was a SID;lll tear in his wetsutt.
··It had to be a great white shark. no
question about it," said Dale Snow. a
biologic;t with the Oregon Fish &
W1ldhfc Department. .
Snow analyzed the tooth marks on
Rice's surfboard and said the fish was
12 to IS feet long and weighed about
1,200 pounds. The shark attack was
the sixth reported in Oregon waters
since 1951
"Sid Cook. a scientist wbo studies
sharks, interviewed Rice about the
attack.· He said he will share the ''." ,• •
anformation wit,b marine scientists in
ollifomia to l~ more about the
behavior of great whites and their ,
attacks on humans. •
The shape of a man sitti.n& on a
surfboard is much like the shape of a
harbor seal when viewed from under·
water. Cook· said. He added that less
than l O shark attacks occur on the
West Coast each year. mostJy in
California..,
Snow said he suspects a shark, not
drowning. may be responsible for the
disappearance of Robert Heisler of
Lebanon who was last seen Aug. 27
off Lincoln City.
"He was sw1mmi11J in the surf,
dose to the shore, and you would
expect the body to be on the beach by
now.·• Snow said.
Rice said the idea ofa shark attack
"always 1s in the back of your mind.
but you treat it as a risk, any risk."
He added that he reels lucky and
something.else.
"I am not a religious person, but I
think someone was watching me out
there Sunday," he said.
Rice added that he'll continue to
surf but he probably won't be the
farth~st one from the shore again.
FRESH LOCAL LOBSTER
7 111,'u eA ?Ped
.Coming to
\X-'E~'TCl.I FF PI.A/ A
I
Coming ro
~'E~T< LIFF PlAZA
Cru.unpagnt'. I l-.nunn~ tlw I un ·,
1x.1n "'"ll~ 111 ,,l ... 1,1!.IWI \\t ...
,I Diant.· (. •111t·11111e •1.1" 1.''' "'" ,
II• •111 l'lt 1dnl g• •\\11' I\ I 1111,111 •
1 l" l,ll 'f 'Otl,\\ • II '" \ f 1111 I';• 11
111.I x.1111.1 1.,ut111;..: 11 1 11 ,.,
.kU""''"l"'lru1111<'\\t I" 11dl'1-h'
1t • h.111dh.1~' h.th 111d I • """
HAVE YOU HEARD
Al30UT
I >.1111d. l.1d1l"' ··f'• 1n,,H-.11 111 .1 '.111
vt\ 111 11.11111;11 I.II 111l '. ·'' .11l.1hlt
Ill 'Ill ... I le I I t c )pt·11111g 111 ! ~I<~)\ I
\eta\ lntim.ilt'
Appall.'l ! >pt·11111g 111 l.nc < )..1• 'l• r THE NEW STORE£. 1 k.~11.(lll'\l 1• I lll\.1 I ·'
'" )l\lC.·n·,l, 1111pk'lt'
hn"'l·m· lll'l'h '\11u fht°\ "111 Ix· i<>min~ tht·~·
fine..· app.1rd men.:hanb
...,, •rc..·kqx:r for I lt·r·
I to 1' 1111 l Nt.11 ui.I
1 "' 'I" l'\\t'.lf \\ ht'll Ill I II 1111 'I
, ••I' ...i.11l ".n l'. 1(\1111.•h
,I • 11 1 1,h11Ml,loN\1ll1 (01~"1~11
llw ~<>n.·k·c.1)l'r
• i-1 11 n I 11 ., huun:tl ~ iort.'\H .u I 1
1'•11 llhlf'lll\' (r,,.~ ln111l I
1111 ..,.1, ,,,on 11! qu.1lrh 11m.., prL
.,, 1Ht'\I '"'h Int 11dh 1111'< •11.1t.11,I
"'-'1'11 I' h t .!.,Jhj
I f:dlida,·'s 1lw 11114.~ "'
11.1<..lr111111.
0
1I mt•n-. .ul«.I \\tllll\'ll' •
\\t.tr h 1111n11s.: < 1nll .11id. _
< • "1ltll lld 'llll'. IMonl
''\I~"' -r. .ul\.I ~ '\ n ~ .. )j 11ll,.
11 n' .111111 'i'l(:tl~ \\: If h4~frtl.!
r-q~,\l t,Nl .II"'' d'H ic .-.c•'
Humpl) Dumpcy
tnmpk ll' .u hotlh.'
11uthl" ,L" \\l'll ,I'
~x·.11111tul ~ "' "' .md
l'l1tkll\ n ~"''
h t.! pt.;
lnl.1111' to 'Ill I 1 101 s.:irl-.. 111l.111t-.
It 1 ''/' >(le'' ht"' -...·k'-t In "ll < .. 111< r.-;,
( l-.hl-o "'" B ~ ,,1i .Ulu l\Ull\ llhl r
11.1111 >11,11" l.11111111 .. ""'·"
••t.! "-2<1.! •
• I ,, to l'11ft T11rno1 .lf~l l't\•
,, ,,, tl'111ol!\' tn>m f..l;Jnlo( l'-11.
I 'flOI (~ITTll.I"' ( '" 1\\11
n"I < r,11\ I 11 """ \\tlh .11.·n.., "'If'(.' k 1 m.tM' \':k h nutlir
l~lfllpk1 ·(AA !Jin
ESTCLIFF : PbA·ZA
-
EDITORIA L
-------. .
Fr~eway signs
not an answer
to iliri;>Ort.mess
Tl\e county supervisors took a bold. decisive step Monday
toward an ultimate decision in the John Wayne Airport mess.
They voted ~o ~elp ~ople find their way to another airport.
The supervisors will ask CalTrans to erect freeway signs
directing ~ravelers to Ontario International Airport, which, they
argue, is JUSt as convenient as JW A for people who live in the
northern part of the county.
The action is harmless -unless it Ls successful and
CalTrans spends money on signs that are intended to influence
thought rather than ease travel. , ·
And if it's supposed to divert commuters•from their
destination al John Wayne, it's jµst plain foolish.
But by addressing this issue in public, the supervisors are
sendins a message to their constituents: They•rc stumped. They
recognize that John Wayne is overcrowded and underdeveloped
for the current demand. They know that air access to the county
as essential to serve the needs of the commercial and residential
..
I
•
L.M . Bo·to
------
what ··
population and critical to sustain economic gro~wt~h~. t_A~n~d!,.JtUJh~ey_~"--~!::-:~--::.::--::~ .. =-::::'l.:--:=--::::;;;::--::=-::!:"::::;~~::;=:::::::--::=--:=::---::::~~=-=:--=-=:-:--:::-:!;:::t---l.llC..llunc:~4-~-------lt--;---nl
are aware e p1ans or mcreasmg the number 0 at y 1 ts, r1ca oesn nee our· a1 expanding the terminal buiTding and providing more parking . ·
$paces won't satisfy projected demand.
A regular u~ of roca1ne docsn" •.i
build an immunity1 evadenll1. Ta -
They are also aware that a full-service, commercial airport what 1• t needs ,1· s· 11• bera·t1• on . 1s considered by many to be inconsistent with JWA's
surroundin$S and offensive -even now -to those who live
less or ad • not more. to be Ii the:
medicos y.
Q. What other son of anunal as
under the airport's flight paths.
Meanwhile, the supervisors' inaction is causing tUf,IIloil in
the lives o(~ople who must make decisions about where and
how they will live based on the future of the airport. And it is
affecting property values in the neighborhood. The strain is
beginnin$ to show. -
It's time for our leaders to face the facts. They must decide
if they will make a commitment to encourage economic growth.
History would suggest that our supervisors are pro-growth and
development. If they commit ·themselves to the concept of air
access, they must do more than just 'study the available
alternatives -or post signs along the freeway. They must select
the most workable, least harmful of all thf!controversial options
and pursue-it. ·
Expansion, joint use pf the El Toro Naval Air Station,
cooperative use of Ontario, creation of an entirely new airport.
All have drawbacks, but the option is the one the supervisors
have adhered to for too long -doing nothing.
Belng drunk poor excuse
I to get away wlth murder
To the Editor: . cha!JeS -that in my opmion·is not
lt seems to me that all a person need serving t}\e public as their oath of
to do to safely "~ct away with office states they swear to do.
murder," is to dnnk enough to Wall the fellow apparently drunk.
"become under the influence·· get who killed his wife m Mission V1eJO
behind the wheel of an automobile with a gun, get reduced charges too?
aod "randoml> .. lull. How about the fam1hes of the three
Stron• ~ords, yes and oh how true! young women recently IC11lcd on
Why is at so easy to get away with Coast Highway? What are their
murder'? Ask any attorney, he and his "reduced charges?"
"buddies" can literally "beat any OK. it's fine to crit1c1zc but how
cnarge," and get the accused ofr. Ask aboutasolutJon-1f1t'sOK todnnk. Jud~ David 0 . Carter! Wh> 1s then it's OK not to dnnk -but i'fyou
"Miller Time," This Bud's for you" do and are found behind the wheel
and "free Beer&. Wine" so popular? there should bea minimum of 30days
Simply because 1t'~ the "in" than~ to in Jail for the driver and all the
drink! The law describes 1ntox1cat1on passengers -no ifs ands, or buts -
so well. M.V.C. 231Sa-0.I percent Amen. Now!St<>pdnnking!
alcohol and vou're "DRUNK." JOSEPH R. GROTHUS
Jud&es have the power to reduce · Balboa
Rally reveals real Mondale
To the Editor:
The true Walter Mondalct showed•
himself at the USC Rally tlte other
day Not only dtd he lose h1~ cool
under some heckling pre~sure. but he
suddenty ch splayed a very bad tem~r
and insulted th~ student bod} he was
addressing. .Is this the son of man ~"
To the Editor: RtcbardCohen·~na1-.ea umptio.n
(Daily Pilot Sept. 23) that faith IS
beyond analysis, and not to be
mtellcctually questioned, shows ig-
norance on the subject. Every time
you step on a jet plane you exercise
faith that this machine will. ge~ .xou
safely to your destination: faith tn the
pilot, faith in the plane's enai~ee.rs.
Faith based on what? Cohen s tn-
tellcctual analysis of facts concernina
the tatisnc and the odds of a tTash.
And because of your "faith" in the~
people, you place your .life in their
hands wtten rou Ry. It t1 much the
same with rehgion. -..
We are all aware of the atroc1ttc
done in the name of rch11on. i.o. the
lnquisillon. Let us not forsct the
atrocit1c of s«Ular humanism, one
fruit ofwhicb was the holocau t.
Apin Cohen'• umption that all
crtationilt · vc m sul da)'l of
creation hows b ignorance. I will
not punuc thi i u • any fanhcr th.an
to say when Cohen or th C\ oluuon-
ists can come up v.11h one of the
want as commander-in-chief of our
armed forces dunna times of 1.nter-
nat1onal stress? Such an unstable
character might. in anger. push the
button and release death and destruc-
tton on t~~.
FRED PFEIFFER
Newport Beach
"missing links" in the fossil record, of
which there should be billions. please
let me know.
Lastly. in the si.tement thnt
IK»mo5exuals arc what they arc be·
1.1lusc they had no c:hoice in the
matter. why do transexuals have a
choice? Cohen's tryin to be a
colum01st: did you have a choice or
were you born one? Ma) I sugcst that
if your insane theory is true, then ~ophil~. macroph~Ji • end c~ild
abuse!") and murderers arc also JU t
born that way. That's real intellectual.
Richard. That's hkc the murder
defendant that claimed the killina h
commiued was due to the HO$tcsl
Twinkles he ate whtch upset hi
mctabOli m, which I sum he had
no choice in ~ting an y.
I think it's tame for nc papen,
ala . to carefully con 1der so wckom·
ina. such lackluster and bankrupt
apostles of ~me im ncd intcll
tual elite.; as Cohen.
•
JAME P. GOLDI G
Hun11n11on
·Salad days of tfie ct ol ·cany. to the dq> ant?
extracted from fRC Ameru:an~ and furry bttJe beast abounhe ·
scntto 59m~ of the m9s1 d~l«: ~od of a rabbit led i .. ,... .
torrupt re&liHn arr la:tili,-~!rtnlt:trina · , na s JI• ~~.,,~~~, .. .,r,. single worlders ·
are about over'
WASHINGTON -The President
of the United States had just con-
cluded his address to the 39th
conclave of the Wbrld Bank and the
International Monetary Fund. offer-
mg yet another-half billion dollars to
the bank., for su~Sahara Africa. ·The
new money would be added to the
bilhon-per-ycar already pledged.
As Reagan stepped down, a re-
porter turned for comment to the
Finance Minister of thetThird World
nation that has been bencficaa.ry of the
greatest measure of Amcncan gen-
erosity. the Honorable Pranab
Kumar Mukhel')tt oflnd1a. .
"The president .has put forward his
view in an eloquent and forthright
mant1er,'' The Honorable Mr
Mukherjee cooed smoothly. and then
stuck the needle all the way in, "but
what we required was not words but
money,,." ~eanwh1le, U 5 Treasury Sec·
retary Donald Regan was moviJ)g
about the hall attempting to soothe
other exasperated Third Worfdcrs
"We arc ahead of the World Bank on
this." he insisted, "We're going to get
those funtls out of Congress ID the
next two weeks, and I can•t imagine
why there would be any problem."
Ttic snoot} hauteur of the Indian
finance m1b1ster 1s very much the
style at these assemblages this year,
some 12,(X)O Journalists, inter·
national burcaucra\s. finance minis-
terJ. retainers and camp followen arc
wmmg and dining for a week on
e"pense account -the uJt1mate bill for
which w1ll be footed an large pan by
the U.S. '"{>Gyer. The impatience of
the mtemauonahst set with Amen-
c~n stinginess was perhaps best
captured by one of ·their American ~roes, David · RockefcUer, retired
board chainnan of the Chase Man-
hattan Bank. "We've been too reluc-
tant in supportini increases" for the
World Bank and IMF. "Rockefeller
told a handful of joumahsts Sunday
Pat
BucllAUI
ruling c1.i9ues directly,respons16lc for' Q. \\'hicb (he first 'twirm~
the sllffcnnf of Af nC!! s peopl s. . team to p1nstriJ)CS'?
. What Afnca needs lS ~t ~cncan The Yankees. By 1925, be Rut •
aid but a theology of liberation. J'o ballooned to 260 pouod.l.. .• borro~ from Che Guevara.. AfnC! Jacob Ruppert. disgusted, ': n~s tw~. three. many UN IT As, new uniforms for the acam -pinstri
the hberat1on movement led !>Y Jonas 10 make tb look thinner Tum
night, .. my .sut feeling is that bot!? • Savimbi in Angola> to mtorc to into a tradition. •
those agencies need more money. Afnca' oppre1.Sed peoples human
(Only last year. Reapn extracted $8.4 rights. pohttcal riahts and property
billion from a reluctant Congress for rights. .
the IMF, and pledged the U:S. to 25 Between 1945 and l 960, Africa -a
percent of the $9 bilhon .. replace-con ti pent of few pcopk ll.d bound-
mcnt" for that agency of the World less rcso~ -6howed enonnous •
Bank which makes loans at zero growth and promise. Since .. indepcn-•
percent interest for 40 and 50 years.) dence," almo t every African state On a wall of hi one-m hoot•
The Peoples Republic of China. · has receded into the darkness. house in Concord, Vt.. I.be cv;: R~kefeller said ..... clearly need~ as--' Ethiopia is now beaded by a Samuel Read Hall in I 23 put up
s1stance. •• 'fhc wt I fate window of the brutalitarian Marxist regime wb~ .,00d·s first blad;board and Wrote on
World Bank should ect s l 2 billion. . bureaucrats are toda) mterfcri'na with It with chalk. He ought to t
not the measly $9 bilhon committed. food shipments .,.e are sending the monument. We 'lt'C'Ot from qutl
Deriding our forc11n aid effort as a starving Ethiopian people. Ugandata pencils, fountain pens d n
"shabby performance:~ Rockefeller garden pot of tbc earth, was ~ lhrouih a uat t~tt:rs. ~
manifesled spcctal distrcn at. t~e ll-~· . from lhe cannibal ldi Amm only to and kt)boardi ,_,.,th video screens.
government's penchant forgJvin1a1d fall into I.he hands of the equally The blackboard ttmai~ Tbe.black-
to fnends. "To give aid on the basis of oppressive Milton Obote. Angola and boatd is to comcnuD1cation what the
whethcrthey meet our test or whether Mozambique threw off the Portu-horse is to transportation. After Gene
they're good gu)S or bad guys is nota gucse colonial rule:-only to in\:1k ·\P .\utry in\entcd the bone. they named
good basis." Cubans and Russians. Zimbabwe 1 a to-wn after him Why don't they JU t
.\t least the srcat man 1s consistent. bcmg run into the ground by .. Com-build a small monument to Rev.
When di!ipcns1ng loan$ for Cha~ radc Bob" Mupbc. Tanunia's onoe Hal.I?
Manhattan, Rockefeller summarized prosperous economy has been vir· .
bis pbtlosoeby thus; "Just because a tually ruined by the nco-Mao1st -· A surH) of secretaries indjcate S3
t:ountry is ·technically called Co~-experiments of Jubus Nyerere. A'nd" percent of them thmk they're s.ma~
munist doesn't mean that a capitalist so on. . than their The bosses •-cren't
institution, such as The Chase b:ink, American aid to Marxist regJmes 1n ~.arveyed.
cannot deal with them on a mutually Mrica perpetuates tyranny: Amen-
beneficial basis, and. indeed. WC do caD aid 10 socialist rqpmcs per-
deal with most of these SO<&llcd petuates misery.
Commumst countries of the world on Though tl1t attendees at these IMF-
a basis that has worked vef) well for World Bank jamborees are. af &n)'·
both of us.·· thmg, more smua and arropnt than
In one of those .. mutually ever. the) arc hving on time. The
beneficial" deals, Chase made a$ l SO salad days of the single worlders are
milhon construction loan to Moscow about over. One strona populist wind
to build the giant Kama River truck from the Amcncan heartland. and
factor) which turned out the vehicles both mstlluttons would be swept into
that earned the Red Army with such the dustbin of history. Oddly. at 1s
blitzkrcig speed into Afahanistan. onl> Ronald Reagan. Mr. Con-
Whilc the president'$ motivation servative, who has ~ucb a rcscn·ou of
m pihng another half billion on the suppon among Altieri~ con-
va\l aid commitments to su~Sahara ~afrvcs.. who can persuade the
Africa is the highest, the pohcy he as Congress and country to cootin~
pursuiina is bankrupt. Worse t~n a even the currtnt levels of support.
blunder, it has bee-Orne a virtual Pal.rid B.wbu.a ls a sy.tlJakid
crime. For that monc) will be col11mal11.
r--
The Mediterranean Sea near
Messina. SmJy, i.s the only placr m •
the "orld whett sword.fish breed
Q. Jdcnt1f) the athlete who was
named I Most Valuable Pla)or one
season •nd then Rooku~ of the Y car
the next season.
A. Sounds 1mpouablc. d0C$0 't n1
Hockey's Ken Dryden. goah.coder of
the Montreal Can.adicns years .
was called up lo play aoalie late 10 the
season His team "·on the Stante)
Cup. So&ood was he in the playoff he
~as named MVP. Next~ n be aot
R-00k.ie of ~ Year. With this small
atem baTTOOm betton can make a
bundle, I'm 10ld.
CIA outsmarted self. over
In Himalayan -.al.le~ nonh of
I nd1a. l)('Opk pa) special rcve~noe to
dog<. on one da-. a 'tear. 0oss· da). It's
real
m told the calculations of I~
Emstem md1catc )Ou'd never sro~
old. if~ou truclcd l&6.Q09 miles pa
ste0nd. Clock~ stand suJI at that
speed ofri1ht.l1rnc Sto~. defectiv:e chem-gas cu.re
laca
Al EISOI
Evt~ prof~1onal baseball t m
would have a nickname end1na 1n ··'¥-
1f tho~ namers in Ch and
Boston hadn't ttcn cute v.iili the
spelhn of .. $0Ck.s ...
In hart ndc~ hnio. a .. Jack
Dcmpsc>·" i fqWll pan~ gin d
apple brandy with dashes of PC'Tnod
nd Grenacimc. A "Gent Tunnc}" 1
gm and dry 'crmouth with dash of
oran c and lemon juices. I there no -M ntmud h .. dria ., lfnot. Whv
not7
8) ne\t )'t'ar, 1f the pqn tu.: to~
ha~e 1t n t, n will own 10
percent ofall tM farm nation 1ck.
t.
AlO
, 0 £~TH Noncls ----
Pl£ftCI POTHERS
al.LL lft0ADWAY
llllORT\IAAY
110 Broadway ea.ta M91a-
642·9150
IAL T2 KROERON IMITH TunftLL •
naTCLR?' CHAPEL
427 E. 17lh Sl
eo.taM ... 646-9371
D
...
. .
.. -(
)
.'lime and again, I 1
1
you've heard it said,
"To make,money, you have :-
to have money.'
The truth is, you have to
know how to save money
before you can think about
m~more.
Thats why more and
more people are joining the
Pa~U S~vings· Plan to buy
.S. ~ aVJngs· Bond . That -
way, a little i taken out of
each paycheck automati ally.
In no time, you'll have
enough Bonds for a new car;
:your child' education, e en a
dream vacation. ·
Whatever you
Bond are the af4 t,
to gain ca ital.
--=-*·-----------...;.._~...-~:......----
l
·~
..
'
.. .
~argent tO direct Eagle
I .
==MllilCllt·, h ·~ x uuv hir MOOG. hi f Pet~ . Uebcrroth, w s vice president o operations from
1979 until the dosin ceremonies.· Hi mponsib titles
included overseeing more th n :a do1en departments,
By ALM~N LOCK,ABEY
....., .... ~ Wrtlw
The 198-4 Olympics has provide<! Newport Harbor
Yacht Oub's Eagle Syndicate with still another personality
to help brina the AA"teric•' Cup to Newport Beach in ) 987.
The syndicate announced that Dick Sargent, a top
executive for the Los Angeles Olympic Organizina
-~-omm1tt". has mn named as president of the Eagle
Syndicate. Formerly named as ~ipper of th'" ~JOposcd
~new 12-meter EaeJe, which will compete for the Cup at
Perth, Australia in 1987, was Rod Davis, a gold medalist
from Robbie Haines' Solina Class winner.
• ranging fsom 11tc fectton to tran portat1on planning.
Sargent descnm his current rcsponsib1hties with the
Eagle Syndicate as .. looking after the day·tb-day oper·
ations to make SUI" we have a boat in the wattt in AuSlnalia
an 1987 -a boat that will return the America's Cup to thJS
country and brina n to 'Newpon Beach."
As an· avid recreational sailor for 25 years, Sirgent
notes clear parallels between his new leaderstup and the
succe ful Olympic stewardship. '
:· "'The Eagle Syndiatte and the LAOOC both center on
the idea that there's 1"1t>t of cxatinJ opponunitics and challen~ that come when you ~t out t°'dole>metb.inlin
a new"way and make it wort;• said Sarscnt.
''In Los Angele , we did things in a different way, with
a new kind 9f otganiu.tion .. Now with a country other than
•
ANN LANDERS 82
ENTERTAINllENJ II · ..,... ....
'
Medalists
turnin-
Holy bilge! Yachting
~~~e~~~~~~~~
By ALMON LOCltABEY • .,... ......... .,..,
Randy Smyth of H1.1n1ington Beach and Jay Glascr-Qf
Newport Beach, world class catamaran sailors in the
Tornado and Prindle-18 classes, are JOina big time.
Look alikes
don't always !<>und
alike, or read alike. '
Take Yachtina
Mapzine, for nearly Asif~vetalworldchampionshtpsandanOlympic
silver medal \\CIC not bia timoenou&)l, the pair have
. .annQ!IAced intentions to fo~e.thciramateur standing to ~ .~ ·~ . seelcad\tenturean<lprizcmooey fg trans-oceanicsailin&in
a 60-foot catamaran. · ...
a century the bible of
the yaebtina crowd,
btJth·power and sail. -.llililil•••••••
At a Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club rec:eptioo where
they were honored fortheirsilvermedal performance 1n
the 20-foot Tom ado Oass in the 1984 Olympic Games.
Smyth said he has embarked on a three year program to
des1an and build a 60-foot Dedicated Foilar(hydrofoif) in
which he expects to enter ruch events as the Transatrace
where prize rooncy .11Y!JCS to $160,000. .
(In the recent Trlif~irice, Bob Hanel of Los Angeles
lost bis 6S..f oot catama!:_l'_"i Double Bullet, while he and bis
crew offive barely cscapco with their lives after the boat hit
a partially submersed tree trunk in mid-QCCan.)
o.llr ............ ., ...... L.-..,
Commodore Terrence MulU.an la flanked by
Jay Gluer, left, and Randy S"mfth.
I Prindles tn national and world championship regattas,··
said Smyth, "but we expect to spend a lot of tame
campa1gnina the biit boat for the big prize moneyt''
Oi take Yubt-• .
ing. the newest and most daring publication that spends
160 paaes spoofing Yacbtina. yachtsmen, yacbiina
advertisers or you name it. · ·
At first &Janee, the two magazines look exactly alike.
extept for the spcllina. "YaahtiDJ.," and Jhe small print
under the name w)ich prpclJtms 1t "A Parody:_
---.--~-·_.· ~h. J cucss. we w.illswtdodaina icchrras and such
instead ofotber boats," 1aid Smyth at the rcceptio where
he, his parents Richard and Emily Smyth and Glaser were
introduced by Commodore Terrence Mulligan.
As small.catamaran sailors, Smyth and Glaser have
won three world championsrupsin the Tomad9 Oass and
Smyth bas skippered Prindle-l 6s and I 8s to several ·
Smyth. whowfll leave for France in the near future to
consult dcsip1cr,of some of the b11 cats. expects to build
. sa11s forthe bia bOat at his loft in Hunt111gton Beach.
He hopes to avoid the fate of Mike Kane and Hanel,
who both lost their b11 occan""loina multihulls in races this
year. Hanel said he asgivina U\) biacatamaran raetni. but
Kane vows that he is coosidenngan 80-foot catamaran.
And a"paiOdy tt ii; ff'onftover to cover, with full color
ads and photos, some amusina. a few ribald, some corny,
but all spoofina everything afloat from tile America's Cup
to dinglly rcptw, not to mention such famous names in
yachting such as Muddy Bilacs (Buddy Mclaes).. ·Tom
Blackballer(Tom Blackaller). Slim Kiljoy's Hiva-Oa (Jim
Kilroy's Kialoa), Robbtc .. Dainty" Doily (Robbie Doyle},
Dennis Conya (Dennis Conner), Stuart Talker, M.D. (Dr.
Stuart Walker), and even Cuss Mouseberger (Bus
•
Mosbachcr). •
national championships. · .. Vf e will continue to race Tomados. and perhaps
Incidentally: Smyth mentioned that he ts looking for a
sponsor for such a mega-buck venture as a 60-foot« .
The boOk aeu a little sacrilegious with an article,
"Gahlcc Force 10," by Jesus H. Christ in which Christ
chides "his boys" (disciples) for having so little faith and
barfina before he calmed the .. 1ebtormy seas" and fed the
multit\Mk wi\b \he loaves abd fishes-all dcmeinYiddiih
\ J
Major yachting 1rucrcst in Orange
County this weekend will be focused
in the Sao Francisco Bay Area where
71 yachts, includina 22 from
Southern California. will be complet· ina th~ St Francis Perpetual Senes
. (better known as the Bia Boat Series) Saturday.
But for yachtina buffs who do not
make tbe trip north, there will be
ptcnty of other acuon riaht here on
the Orange Coast.
Balboa Yacht Oub wiU be conduct-
ina the list ofits One-Design Rcpttas
for the year with small classes racing
inside the bay on Saturday and taraer
1 '·PAPA'RAZZI ... -
---
.. .
keel boats compeung over ocean courses on Sunday. _
Lchman-12 dinghy sailors wtll be
competina for the Dotie Beek Gab-
boon at Newpon Harbor Yacht Club
Sunday in the second of the fall L-12
regattas for major trophies. The third
will be Oct. 21 for the Saint Cicero
Trophy.
Down Dana Point way, Capistrano
Bay Yacht Oub will conduct its Fall
Repna for Perfortnanct Handicap
Racing Acct (PHRf) and Mid ct
Ocean Racing OW (MORC) on
Sunday. • '
In the Los An&elcs-J.ona Beach
dialect .
.. What's best for my bottom?" ms the sbapefy blonde
model as he applies "f ntertust" (Intttlux) paint to the
bottom of a yacht. S~ uses Interlust because · .. its
" important tOt_!l1e tO keep my bottom in s.h4~. rm mt~tcd in performance, and I know that nothans will
area, Los Angeles Yacht Club wall slow me down quicker than unsiglltly barnacles and Iona
inaugurate its popular Harbor Series strands of sea ~s." , . ..
for lntematfonal Offshore Rule Or Muddy Bilges adforbisdctkandfarmwear. The
(IOR) and PHRF yachts on Sunday; , only real tclto~f~urwcatb~gcarisho'A'. ~ll it holds up in
Long Beath Yacht Out> wtll sponsor tr;uly fo ul cond1t1ons. Thats why I test 1~ ri&ht he~ on my
the Pt. Fermin race Sunday, and P•I fa.ryn. If 1t ~n stand up. t~.a week of pi.a al.op, a little salt
Shoreline Yacht etub is-conductina water is not •o•na to hurt 1t.:
an invitational reptta Saturday. Sacks f 1f\h ~v~nuc fou~ weather .. keeps weather~
Jn other Southern California and body odor tn, accordina to a cute model who u
Marine Association areas: "always leaving it somewhere and auesu. are always
Suta Moa.tca Bay walkinJ ofT with it."
Kina Harbor Yacht Club -Hur· . Ao article on the "Broaching Worlds" .is complde
ncanc Gulch Rtgatta (liglltning) . with tt;a1 photos of some of the most outlandish broaches
Saturday Sunday· Snipe Masters and spinnaker foul ups from real rcpttas.
Regatta. Saturday ·~ The book is published by• Eliz.a.beth Meyer (real
(PleucrMe SAILING/82) person), listint Nathaniel Philbrick as editor·in-<hicf ~
Peter Gow flJ as executive editor. It is pu.blisbed by
DrtadnaUJbt Co. Inc., of Aubumdile; Mm
The promo docs not say bow often it will be published.
but the S 12. SO pnce \llf or a sin&1e usue dOes not ipdjatc
it will be a moathly sublcription item 'sucbas Yacbtiq
Mapz.ine.
.... .... ,...... .. ...,. .....
Muth& and Bob Fluor D with John-Brown. Erln and TreTor Spnaaton. J~ and SbarOD Ellie With DaTe and Patty Baker tboqlat Rane8t _ oon Ball~ the _ yet.
Jr.vin·e civic Spirit shines u'nd€r:Harvest Moon . .. ' ..
B1EVEU..SH
Deir ..... c. ..... , •• '
rt
,.
' . .. .
•
82 ~. 1984
--
IT ONIGHT'S TV . -------· Kudos fOr sex booklet
t
..
I'm a soci l workrr 1n a sub11rban
A11
l.uDEIS
junior high hool who ntc-ets with booklt't bccaus-e the) were wondrring
gfOUP Of Students WhO Wa~h tO about those iamC question\:
di u personal· problems. These Can a gjrl iet prqnant the tiMt
groups begin in the 5ixth grodc-nd go time'! How to avoid geuing preanant.
through the e~th grade. By the time What to do 1hou m. Js VD ~nous?
the bo)'I and gjrls (each an separate What arc the ymptoms? Where to go
groups) are eighth-graders, their to ~t treatment. Will the doctor tell ~~'p;-=!=-,-o!'scx~1~l~~i".cm.c maturit)'. has <iim1nl hed ·oui.Jolb1 hoiilc()ourat,on 1.hc iU->'.
con 1dcrabl) ana manyoftht&roups orthegirlwhopve~ouVO?Ooesthe
were anxious to talk about sex. · gjrt who uy •'no' it homt'·a lot?
•
i •
. . . .
The tud nb "ere hy and 111 at What is homoselluality? Is it curable?
tasc whrn ·dascu~ina st.luat ,· urs. ·How can you tell if)ou are homoscx··
o onC'· wanted-10 speak. £,el) one ual? What about masturbation? I it
ecmcd uptight. Thr di~ussions wron&~·WiU it hun you? Arc )Our
tloundercd. Thtn one da) I decided to parents too strict? How can )OU set
read to them from ~our booklet. "SeJ them to trust you? How your school
and the Teenager.· In less than 10 life ma} ·be affected by alcohol. pot
minutes, the atmosphere changed and heavier drugs. Can a ,in be made
completely. pregnant by an animal? fa girl has
Students were no longer embar-' expcnmented with her brother when ~ ra d to ask "stupid" 'questions. she was 5 or 6 is she still a virgin? Can
c They were fal><:mated wtth your a girl become pregnant during her
: questions at the beginning of the period? If a bo) has an erection whilC'
. .
GRAND OPENING
FR~DA Y, OCTOBER STH
UP TO 60o/o OFF
-Famoua maker aportawear -rolfwear-warm-
up suits -swimwear· -activewear -dresaea
........
0.11,1 .... ..
~, ..... .. 642-5784
1610 W. Coaat Hwy, Suite A (Next to Chart Houae)
THE
RELAXING
SOUNDS
OF THE
HARBOR
KDCM 1aa.1
FM .
STE RED
\....
l/J23B "2 + 'ftl• ,,., mo.
,,._ .... ~ Loed-1 with T-blr. Air· c:Ondit/oftl!lg,
.a c.auette. power ndows Ind many other fet I/fl
60 mo cloud end teeu, cap cost $15.742. doWn pay-
ment $1312 72 Cash or tr•de (S., 023661}
If cars 1t1b}flet to prior .. ,.
•
..
"
Val (Joan Van Ark) and Mack (Kerin Dol>Mn) wait while •u.rieona
· f'ICht to KYe Karen'• life on the •lzth aeaion ~remtere of ••&aot.
Landing" tonight at 10 on CBS. Channel 2'.
•
6
• "Pleygirr' (1942) v.cnc:a Hitt,
Sllnlntbl Fot.
-11:40-
• LA1'ENOHT AMERICA
"-11:45-
(C.l»OYIE
U'A "All'igator" (1880) Ro'*1 F«-
tter, Aobtn Rik•.
-12:00-
• TWIUGHT ZONE
I EYE ON HOLLYWOOD
MO'JtE ttt "I Wiil The LN" (1970) ar.
~Pee*. Tueedly Weld. m GUM.TY OR fllHOCENT
®THE AOCKi:oAD ALES
-12:06--
SAILING REGAT-TAS LISTED •••
From Bl
~anta Monica-Yacht Club -Gold
(.up Race (Thorpe Sencs No 3 .
PHRF). Saturday
Del Rey Yacht Club -Sidney
Sabot N111onals, Saturday. Sunda).
West Coast Yacht Oub -Single-
handed race, Sunday.
San Diego
( oronado Yacht Club -Perkins
Troph) (1n" 1Lat1onal handicap), Sat·
urda>.
Oceanside Yacht Club-Beer Can
Regatta. Saturday. Sunday.
S1lycr Gate Yacht Club -Man ·o
War Senes. Sunday
· Miss1on-aay Yacht Club -Jr.
Commodores Regatta, Saturday,
Sunday
Coronado Cays Yacht Club -Fall
Classic Senes. attJrday
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE
lfAl31VllC
Nortb and lll1nd
Sant.a Barbara Sailing Oub
Summer Senes No. 4, Sunday,
Santa Barbara Yacht Club -Fall
Handicap Sencs No. 2. Saturda); Fall
One-design Serics No. 2. Sunday.
ChannCJ Islands Yacht Club -Jr.
Sabot Day, Saturday. '
'-\Celltura Yacht Club -Gold Cup
Regatta, Sunday.
IAL
Germon Soft Top
only $999 comp.
Aufo Upholstery
by Stanley
645-9841
¥6 75°/o off EVER FEEL LIKE YOU
DON'T FIT II? r-
ON SELE.CTEO ITEMS
THRU OUT THE STORE
tt you· ve lost wei&fll
Refitt1111 ~·our $9ec1alty
• MEET K.K THE KLOWN
-----ANO RECEIVE A EIPEIT TlllOllllC &
Al TEUTIOIS FOi
MER l.WOM£11
~ALL WORK GUARANTEE0 -
FREE REFRESHMENTS & FREE BALLOON
·.c
SATURDAY,
OCTOBEA i 3
.~,,7~
111!11 m • 4 pm CHCMIST"V OUAO
11'0• , ........ "-' C-• -____ ..._ ~ a< .... LIO
AliM SSION 11000
October 4tll and 5th at Jewels by ~pH
Tiit Lllltil ,,..,. Sllc'll M Ot1'Wf IMitlf
540·'411
South Cout Piila
CAROUSE1. COURT -
Mo&fn 9•!11111. Salt 1e4 ,._Sile IH
HANS-ULRICH PAULY of Germany will demonstrate camoo carv-
ing this week, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., ~ight in our store! JEWJ;LS by
JOSEPH is pleased to offer you the charm of hand carved cameos,
each sculpted by this famou-, artist into one-of.a-kind.pieces to be
treasured for years to<..ome. Hi't father, Erwin Pauly, a third gr.ner·
at ion tone carve:-has pieces in the Smithson~n lnstitution's
world .famous Half of Gems. In pi red by his fat'her' variety of
carving tcchniqu , in his home of ldar·Oberst<1in, Hans-Ulrich
Pauly is also a well known ~cul pt or of life size bronze figur • . Th
old world charm h b~tng to ·h ~nique pi e make th~ value .
of his hand carved cameos much ff1gh r than thos ma~ ·pro-
duc d. Hav Mr. Pauly creat •your own family heirloom with a
cameo tor you nd your lov don ~ ••. p rh ·p as a Chri tmas gift.
• •
P.t cJ e join u nd vi it with Mr: P•uly in person d,uring thi verr
pecial ioo. .
'Charley's
Aunt' a
I(Ollicking
revival
A hilarious blend of lapst1clC with
ultrd upper-eta s Bntish manners .~=~•.:1'!d mpres from the days of Queen
1ctona-m thc-tipener o <JdTe-
., ~ck College South•a 1984.SS season
\,D .. Charley' Aunt," which closes this wecktnd. . ,
f'ir t produced m Ensl nd in 1892
this Bran n Thomas comcd)'. dC-:
scribes the madmap adventuttS of
· two young colttge gentlemen. Jade
Chesney and Charley Wuykeham
who need a last·minut~ chaperone ro;
their lady friend when the impend·
ins visit of Charley's aunt has been postponed. '
In desperation, the two coerce their
college cohon, Lord Fancourt Ba~
bcrley. to disauise himself as Aunt
Lucia, a duenna from Brazil "where
the nuts come from."
The aud'tence soon discovers that
nuts are not found only 1n Brazil'11s
zany happcninas and comic coin·
c1dences aboun(i throuah th~ three
acts of the Pfoductton.
Starring in the comedy •re Jason
Johnson (Chesney) and Mark Ed·
ward Lainbr«ht (Wykeham) as the
coUeacclassmate5, with Michael ()ale
~~~itDD-~Mt .
draa as the aunt.
Under the skillful direction of H .• Michael o,te u .. Charley•• Aant .. at S.ddlebeck COllete.
Wynn Pearce, the three IIW~. leads authentfoally deliver the speech, C~tummg for _the production, riiliiiiii~ ... jijj!iiijijijiij
mannerisms and attitudes of 1890s under the direction of Charles
British college boys. O&le, who has the Castagno, is outstanding, 4 with strik·
task of pliyi114 most o(the production 101 ~nd authentic tum-of-the~ntury
in falsetto voice. consistently carries designs. .
.... ..:-•tba>uah. switchina back and fonh .. , '" ,..,._ -.. . ; : ,;. ..
• from maJc to female Wfffiovtt l''littb-'Charle~ A.unt continues · · through tnis weekend with per. Johnson makes &ood use of t~e formances Friday and Saturday at 8
arched eyebrow and other fl.C\ll m nd s da t 3 · th expressions to helr1 convey the com· P·1
• -~ un Y a p.m. '!1 e
La b h " McK.iiiney Theater .. Tacket anfor· edy. ~ rec . t plays an approp.r1atc-mation is available at 83 T-4656. ly anxaety-ndden, love-stncken
youth.
Rocbdlc Robinson. Gwen For·
nataro and Deena Driskill give con·
vincina performances as the boys•
youna lady friends, while Carrie
Fisher gives a stronJ. ponrayal as the
real aunt from Braz.al.
The older suitors, played by Walter
Daly an~n Formaneck., provice
dcJiahtfuJ comic parallels to the
romantic quests of their younger
counterpans. Hal Forsen is ap-
dropriately Bnhsh as Brassett, the i-;;:,;;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::===:::::=
-.Juodious and put-upon butler. . .
AMIDI
STADllM OHi 6391770 _.._
IUA
MANN Bm
52J.S339 .. , ..
UNA rw OR IN
821~70 .... , ..
~MOYIS8
952-4393
COSTA IEA
EOWMIOS CIDA
ClNTH 97~1411
COSTAIEA
fOWAl!OS SO COAST
PlAZA 5462111
·-E OWAROS IJWERSITY
ISAUll
LllNIA
FASHION SQUARE
(213) 691 0633
u ..
SRO GATEWAY
5231611
WlllA .. CH
EOWAllDS SO COAST LA~ 071711 .... ..,
EDWAllOS VU>
~830-6991
OIANll
SYUFY CITY
COOIR 6J.t 2553
IESTWalO •EDWARDS CMMA WEST
1913935
...... krM r DHf
'21"410
•
lg)•
NOW PLAYING .. -
Ill ll&«m ·---·--°"""" 561 -IM_tu ... '•LA..-.
cmtr--'-' l-•GD ~· ... ., ... ~c-e..
tl'f.a••1 . ..
~ ..... ,.,
• SO COAST PLAZA •
.... ,a ....... .... ..._
O...• ~
lllU Uo'Yoo'ft ., ..,..,,..
llAlllwG 1$1 I
C11T••u f-Cftl ... ~11ar
Cllflllf1A
NOWPLAYDIG
lMllMMIUI OM*
l•~'Slotol c......
l ........... U-2561
11UMt --LAllMRA S--0-... M.tel-~ aa,ane ., GU)
' ....... ---u-.-l'IC!llt•IO>W..• .,... ... ~ .. WUll,1111111
,ICllc .... -.11 °''" ... ., f-..... ~ ~ .....
~ Plm~l711
--UoMb~liS' u.a•-~ I ams
Clint Kutwood
TlOHTllOf'IR (II\ Sllowa It U :31.Z: 5 1 :20 7 :10 .. 10:1$
~rlnea 111
..,.PLS IUUN ~) SHOWS AT U:4f 3 :00 1:20 7:41 1-0:0S
l'lTU CO'IOI( "llMTmMllS. (t)
.... tloon71\ tlS
lUXUIW THIA11HS
lt•vt Martin AL.LO,, .... )
SHOWS AT U :OO f :OO •~oo 1 :00 1 :00 10100 ....
·~~~:ls t~ AT U 12I r:':l
1:00 7131l11 0/70MM
IMOUUllA .IOMa a Tiie T ..... etl0..."'8)
SllOWS at U:OO 1130 5:00 7:10 .. 10100
IN 70 MM
• COST A MESA •
.,. .... Cl) Mon,,,.... • .,
•llMIU("' ti)
..... Thun. 30. 10':!0
CllllMA CT• IOMJ!I(• ..... I.Ir., ..... , -"' 41•1 tllMA cnt • _, -,.,. .,.,
~
U I•• " ac-1'Mn I II. lo.ii ,....... • ...... GI)
UI UIO .._,,._..UD
S 11£1tl CO'/OT( M>OUIACll ---.-. \O••,,. .,....,....ua.,
I •• •• Ul~ ... "-' 111. t it
SACnCBACll 'W ,._Ul St••·~ ~ ~ I'•••• w:a-~f") ~I .._ TMnla IUt •
SAOOl{IACll 1111ra •1 •f' .,.. • ..
I .....
~'
/
IRVI
U1:r.I
..
T •nlea.ek _c ... ..a.,..
P•rk
C..M T .......
,, _____ ___ ..............
ncam ...... ,. •. ~i .; .::.;:r.~>Q4 .. •:.t: • ., ••
'>\N AMERICAN MASTERPft
-:THE MOVIE I O BEAT FOR :"'
ACADEMY AWARD:'
"The movie makes you feel
proud to be an American .
You leave uplifted and
thrilled to be alive.'
__ SALLY FIELD--.
PLACES IN THE HEART·
Tri&f PlCtUle Prtsern ·$'UY fE.D · "PlJ£ES I\ 1liE t£ARr ·~an& ·ED HAR.Rl5 ~~".Di.\ \tA1JG'Df. ~'YCl.CM'.R. ~ Procb:er KliA£1. HAlllMAN
PloO.ad ~ ~'£ IXNMN· v.rr.......s Dirtdd byfl&RT~ •
-----• AllNN~ ·----.... -
STARTS TOMORROW
loMIRAOA ~
WlW l'IJl1,J: 1 Ji -.T llmJS" (I)
l ... '4S IUI
'1Ul19UmS" (I).
IHQ 1~ HS H~ ttl llecJ •.
..,.., 11PT.-ti) tttt .... tft
"Tll -.... "'-•S> HO.'~ lt2t "llDDIW (N.U)
UJl.t.»140 ..... (I)
l ~ l'9 IHS
"'tOlmulEIS"(I)
U•t.a.cal•&• lilt
LaHABRA ........ ,.
im::~ ..
-
WARNER
til .. •l ·'· ~-.... -
'
...
r
l
• . . ..
I .. '\
by Tom 8 tluk u
~,.._...,.... __ ,_.. __ ~--~~~~----.THE
BIGGEORGB
..
... FAMILY
-·CIRCUS
by Bil Keane. ., .,
h ,
f
.
FIRST WE'LL SMOOT
A FEW BASKETS ..
Tl4EN WE'LL PLAV A .
LITTLE ONE·ON·ONE ..
OR MAYBE ONE·
ON-ONE-FOURTM .••
"Will there be less homework if the .
Democrats win the election?"
by Brad Anderson
"I knocked over a lamp ... you never saw the
two of them so happy."
GORDO
GARFIELD
"Befqre I run iway from home, what's for
dinner?"
-----------------------------'
0
DRA8BLE
DENNIS THE MENACE .
• t. • .. by Hank Ketcham
---~~ ~ P·• •
FOR BETTEa OR FOR WORSE
GO WASH VOUP-FPCE.
tJ\ICHAEL.G~A
F\NDPHILRRE ~r?~ CDMING FoR
DINNER.
• by Gus Arriola TUMBLEWEEDS
by Jim Davis ROSE IS ROSE
I .GOT YOO ~-rMtNGo
SPUIAL, GARFIUP
JT'S TOO UGHT' FOR F00'7,
ANP YOO CAN''f WRAP SLEEP ~ 10'I DUCK , ~· ~ WMERt~)
.,
MOON MULLINS.
MAMIE!
REMEMBER
ME?11M
MY TWIN
BRon-IEJ?)
Fl2EDDY!
by Ferd & Tom Johnson.
JIM ,A
GRE°,AT
DETECTIVE.
;
1 BRIDGE
~ --:0.... ----------
WET
• 84
i,,QJ09
0 Q106 5
•9•~2
South decided that Black.woc>d was
lhe be~l way to determine the limit
of the hand -an unu ual choite
with a void. When alt act' were ac
~unlrd for, he ventur d a rrand
slam. Nole, however, that for hi
firsl rebid he sMwc<i the diamond
suit in prderenct to r biddlnl' a
..
A•
by Kevin· Fagan
by Lynn Johnston
yoo CPl'l Ge'T'"R I.Of
"OF Mll.EF\GE.OlJf" OF
f\ O~E.-wc:>RD ~~
by Tom K. Ryan
...
;
hand "ith a diamond ruff. He tried
the club fintt -down one.
Declarer ... bad a belt r tin~
available. He should have taken the
king ol hearts at trick on and
discarded a dub rom liand. Then he .
should ca h tlie ace of club' and ruff
• club high. Next he cros 1 to the
CHARLES
GOREN
. .
..
Or~
•
COMPLE1iE NYSE COMPOSITE
... • I
•
Jt;»h~ Sigri-t announces , ..
~
he'll retirCin November . .
.ohn 1-oSagri t, v· p itkn1 ot
fiscal managemC'nt at McDonnell
• Doug1as A tronautaC'!i Co. iA Hunt-
ington Be ch, and long-time Orange
County community leader, will retire
in November after 45 years wath the
·company.
· When DOygla formed it space
sy tems center 1n 1963, Signst 'fas
named vice president· and deputy
• director. In that position he opened
the Huntington Beach location -
wl\icb was built to provide room for
MDACs growini pace and mis Hes
work -and ran 1t an Jts early years.
.. He was responsible not only for
activatin&.thc new faciljty, but also
for establishing our presence in
Orange Coanty and.contributin& to
the area's arowth," said C. James
Dorrcnbacher, vice president and
general manager of the plant.
-Sigrist took an active part in the
development of the locai community,
servin& on both the Huntington
Beach and the Orange Cou_nty
.
Sigrist be~n hiscareerin 1939wath
Dou.&las ·Aircraft in Santa M0Aic1, • •
and fater moves to Dayton, Ohio, 1s
the· company's lcs represcntativc.
He has been in his present po~ition
since 1966.
In rceognition of hi outstanding
leadership and communi~ service,
he received in 1966 the first Silver ·
Knight Award from the MDAC
Management Association.
Sigrist attended santa,Monica Jun-
ior College and UCLA. He also
served in the U.S. Army Infantry and
is a member of the MOAC Army
Association. He lives with his wife in
Ne~rt Beach.
The 2 I members of the Volvo group. said the $20,000 priced models
· Dealer's Association of Southern have filled a gap in the luxury car
• California report that I 984 will be field. which has preVJously only had
among the best~ver wtth some lowest priced models of BMW and
.l 3,000 cars expected to be sold, an M~rccdcs to tempt buyers and then 1t
increase of 5 percent over 1983. pnccs.above the 760 series. Fifteen-percent~ ttm-yCars-tota,t "t,. The basic DL-.mteit1ine of¥ go,
were lO lw."1)' car ooycr1 ot:Volvo·s.I;! s.edanf''.'and !rcl&Ons JS accounting or
760GLE and Turbo Diesel models. nearly 50 percent of the sales volume
Bill Hirsty, president of the dealer of '84 models at the Volvo dealer
UPS ANO DOWNS
NEW YO~K (APJ -Th~ fol~wlng llsl shows the vtr·t •· ounter slocits •nd war;r:nts that have oone UP lhe most and wn Ille most based on percent of ~anQe for WedneMSa~. No sacur111es trading below s or 1000 shares are nclUded. ·
Net and perc:enla,• cha~ •'Jo the difference be~ftn tie prev s slno bid price and ed~,Ji•v's last bid 'brlce.
Name Las I S!'fl Pct. I OntWld i~ • 6 Up ~i i ~'(ft<' 1 Up ,~ -"a Up 11:K 4 rmMg lit UP s Nodw•v i..-, Up ,r f §i:Hll wt l; ~ Up l .0 alSy ~ UP l4j I l~O un v. uo Inf 5 •• ,,. Up lH ll N; af 0 . 4'-\.'J Up
itOv nt J/4 Up , ,.8
mcoa 1. UP I I 1 I WI t~ ~ Hp 11.1 M e rll .. ~ p ll.
It Kence>p r Y1 Up lg:~ 1 ~vrit . '1• t-e Up
I mto ... 1 .,. 111• UP 1 .4 ff AIPMk ~ Up 1p 1 fambeic 2~,u 3-16 UP . 4 ndL un 2\.'t Up 9.4 1 eraCp 4'h ~ UP 9.1
.-OVER THE COUNTER
• $2,500 MINIMUM
DEPOSIT
-..
H Endo Ls :~ i ~ ~nvTr wt ,.rsr s 181* l'i• t icCotr 1 Ve l,/f
DOWNS TIM~"" ust Cho j 1~ -1 Homac un -1:.
Ololoo -1 4 H~mac 214 -~· 5 AV 2 -'h t · 5H lnl ,i~ -~ riinlz r. -2
' Sc ySv ' -• lio H~n un I~ "'-10 ~ ec ~ 1J rimed -"'-1 Oati>Wr -~ I IPLSv -~
14 ~C>m1>a<I -\') ls i19 un _,
t . HYPOnlt r -3,. t Jur-MM \• -~ ~ ~= ~ -,.
-He Oat Ar' -.,.,
m~t 'h -1 ~ .,., u R~wt "' lit AUndrwl 4 "2
§radtn I ., ..
?:i~s • ..
...
• LIMITED CHECK
WRITING PRIVILEGES
• LIMITED TO PERSONAL • DEPOSITS INSURED BY FDIC "
ACCOUNTS
NIMIUM IATI ,AID ON c.o.·fs100.ooo I OVEI
TURY HINSON
(11•) "'""'°.
CALL NOW ..
PUUBTON HIADQUAITllS
f ~PIONEER ~ ~ . BANK
I 515 SOUfh ttolW IM.
Fullerton, Co11fornlo 92632
~·QC
There are basic rules that govern the purchase professionals at Imperial have gone to school and
and possible financial rewards of Certificates of intimately know all the possibilities. For the short
Deposit. There are also a number of little-known course. all today-you'll definitely learn
· opportunities in managing the account. The something exciting! Do you know ...
...
' '
.
A. How your CD'~ can be insuredJor mare than S 100.000?
B. How to avoid costly early withdrawal penalties?
C. How to get higher returns when interest rates go down?
CalLlO:d~y for the ans~ers to these three important
questions . and more. Our A"ccounl ExetTitr'les have
the answers to all your questiol"ls
'(714]
858-0825 Or~nge County .
·------------------------··---------------------~ 1 • ' : If you would ltke us lo phone you at your conven1enc . :
•. please 1111 out this coupon complctery anc.1 s nd 1t to lmpenal 1
Sayin s Assoc1att0n. 3750 Convoy Stre t. RMO Dept • San : ·
Diego, CA 92111 a ••
N me~~----------------~
Company
• OCOl
'*··-----------------------------------·----~-•p•
H '
T . .
~
•
..
..
,
-
Dow JoNE s AvE RAGE s
UPs AND DowNs
WHAT AMEX Orn
NEW YORK tAP) Oct. 4
T1 '
GoLo Quou s
That· s an a pt desert ptton of both business and
b~stness peopl along the Orange Ceast. To keep track of
where companies are got11g an,d which p ople ar~ helping
them get there, just watch ·credit Ltne· -every day ln the
Business section of your new -p·lld
..
,
Detroit hopes
to wrap it up
Frjday night
. ··~KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -The
1 home team ·stands 1-13 in games
between Detroit and Kansas City tliis
year. which is no .,comfort to the
Royals and seems not to wony the
Tigers one bit
The hard-to-figure home fieJd dis-
advantage between the two American
league division winners could go to
2-1 S and still the American ~ue
pennant would fly from T•r
Stadium. The Tigers have two v1c-
tories in the bank and need to win just
one of lhe three weelCen<f games in
Detroit for their first WorJd Series
apparaooe since 1968.
·"It's a live-game series and that'l
the way we'll have to play -it/' said a
smiling AUR!lio Lopez. who tossed
three inni of four-hit relief to et
ey tame back to ·beafth'e !R6hl&;:' ·
best in a nail-biter of a second-game.
John Grubb, hitting a pitch Dan
Quisenberry said .. might not have
done' what r wanted it to do, •• doubled
home two rims in the 11th.
Detroit catcher Lance Parrlab (rtibt) con-
&ntalatee relief pitcher AardfO Lopes
-
>t ~
,,..,.......
after the Ttcen beat Kanua City, 5 -3,
WedneedaJ. DIC't to ;o two ta.ma ap. ·
JC IMm 8Verege1
42 point• • a•me,
but la giving up
51 •g•me.C2.
Ct.lbs can end
series tonight
in San Diego
Corene_. ...
lopeC.....M11'9
ln ... VIMr
wmterpolo.CZ.
• • I
cood reehn .. d Keith Morelad.
h"o scored all the way &om m. bis
on a double by Ren Ce) U> tel 1!IP a •-<>-run third and a ,.-0 lead Wbicb
left-hander 1eve T:rout never rdin·
quished.
' Dernier, rho -started Tuactay•1
n 13-0 . romp WJlh a leadoft' IJomcr • Cn l~AGO{AP) -The San Diego opened the Olicqo first WedDClday
Padf'C1 arc locked in a precarious with a si~e. "".Jlyne Slndbtr.I
situation and the only way out will be sroun<kd to third· buenian Luis
a possible but improbable threc~me Salazar and Whtie Salazar was throw-
s weep over tl{e venatile Oncago in.g Sandbet:I out at first, Dernier
Cubs. t .. ' racedtothiroaadthenacoredasGar')'
Noted for their powC'r, the OUbs Matthews srounded out.
resorted tq daredevil base runoing With one out in ~ thlnl.
Wednesday for a 4-2 victory over the Moreland sinalcet .. Cey folloWed with
Pad.Mand a 2~ le.ad in their best-of-S a double to leJ\oenter and Mcnla9ld,
Na.tional League Champion,bip not noted for his speed, racetf'UI ibe
sen~. way home to score. The throw borne,.____. ....
· Thui the Series could en-d~to-nigb-. -t -il.SO coa CC:t CiY \0 iliiid liDiii
in San Diqo, where the teams resume where be scored on Jody Dans·
the competition after the flight west. saaifice Oy.
If the Cubs don't get that one victory .. When I was halfway to lhird, Don
they need to get into their first Wertd (Zimmer) waived me. I knew the 1play
Series since t 94S tonight. th9 have woutd be close and when the ball IOt
chances again Saturday and~n<iay by the catcher (Terry Kennedy) I was
10 the Pidrcs• _...,. In. e I P ........ third. .. ••Anything can happen but we're The· Padres never recevered bop~ to close it out Thunaay althou ...... _, finally .--.a a ...... :. night.' said.Bob Dernier Wednesday .,. '"'"' _.Qa ..... ...
after bis whose base-running figured the founh wben Tony ~ lbe
in two of the Cubs' runs. National LeagUe battina c:hainpioa..
No team in the NL bas ever come doubled, went to third on a li'cMlnd backfroma~edcficittowina out and scored ~n kevia
nnant although MilwaUkeedid it in McReynokis' sacrifi~ Oy.
~ dff'eat the Aiigets ·1n Anieman r.ea&uc playoffS.
"We· know their backs arc apinst_
the wall btlt we stiU have to go out
their and play with tbc same intensity
we have had all season," said Derpier.
.. A 2-0 lead in a short series is a
It was the ninth· straight victory
here for the Tigers, the first team to
sweep a season s(ries in Royals ·
Stadium since the facility opened in
1973. And it was a bitter loss for the
Royals, who won the West with ap 84-
victory record which many baseball
purists sneered at
....... --· -• ~ .... .. • .. • .. 4~ ~ ~,,~,.~ • ~ .,. Poor !ecruiting equals nci_Win.s fo:I( OC~
"When you Jose like we did
Tuesday night. you know there wasn't
much yoll could do about it,.. said
Manager Dick Howser, whose post-
season Iccord as a fiCld .boss llas
dropped to an embarrassing 0-8 ... But
tomght, a game like this. this takes
something out of you. It's hard to feel .
confident after a game like this, but
we'll T'CIJ'OUp."
·Pirates, 11-41-1 in the last five years,
losing off-the-field warto Gol n West
•Golden West ~t Coast in the
opener, 21-3 and then shocked Taft,
then"ranked No. 1 in the nation,
21-17. That means0CC'sdefense
held Golden West to the sall\e
amountofpointsasTaf\, and because
of several offensive blunders, the
Coast defense spent much of the game
on the field.
The Royals won five of six games at
Tiger Stadium this year. The only
time the home team prevailed De-
tween the two was in their first game
of the year, April 17 in Uetroft But
Tigercatcber Lance Parrish, who hit a
t (Pleue 1ee ORUBB/C2)
There is no way Orange Coast
ColJege is going to lose afootbaJI
game Saturday night. The Pirates
don't play. .
After opening the season with three
-stnlljlit defeats, Coach Olclc Tuckers
Pirates have a bye this week and
Tucier plans to spend the time
working on his team's offense. In
three gaines, the Pirates nave gained
44 7 yards. The OCC defense has
allowed 1,066 yards.
Veiy little-pr.ogress
in talks with umps ·
Amateur umptres
get good grades
. . . to this point
Padres play host to the Chicago Cubs.
So far, tn the four pmes played,
only two controversies have oc-
curred.
In Kansas City Wednesday night,
Royals outfielder Willie Wilson, who
seemed to question an earlier called
..strike &om plate umpire Bill Dee&an..
Bf die A1aoclatecrPren jumped up and down in anger wberi
Richie Phillips, attorney for tbe Deegan called a third strike on the
strikina major league umpires, will center fielder to end the fifth inning
talk apin with the presidents of the with a,runner at second base.
Amencan and National leaguesin an Deegan, who umpirCd in the major
effort to get his members back on the leagues for JO years. said he didn't
baseball fields. know what Wllson. said after the
"I don't want to say we're clc;>se," called third strike.
Phillips said by telephone from hls "I left him the.-e 'doing his thing," Phila~lphia home late Wednesday Deegan sajd. ··1 walked away from
night.' He met Wednesdar with AL him because if I go back to him, I'm
President Bobby Brown m Kansas going to run him out." ~ity ~nd NL J;>resident Chub Feeney Detroit catcher Lance Parrish said
m Chica.go. he had "no complaints about _the
.. Tho mcc:tings.tast l\igh~y) umpires. I thtnlnlicy did a hne JO .
and today helped give us a elearer think it was WTQng for Willie Wilson,
understanding of each other'$ prob-· m o · · o to act the wa he d · d J
lem$'" Phillips sa•d, "but I wo· uldn't m f. piru n, Y 1 • , .. • dido t stick around to hear what he say we~ close. . · was saying. but I think it was probably
Substitute um1>1~ ha~e wo~ked obvious to everybody. He was jum~
the playoff game$ in Cb1cago and ing up and down makin..-foot o•lt of
Kansas <;ity, ~nd will t?C back on the · himself."
field tomght Ul San Diego when the Both Detroit Manager Sparky
...---~---:-:-------. . Anderson and Kansas City skipper
Dick Howser a~ with P~rrish.
"I don't think ¥OU're aoing to-find
any better ump1rina than they've
done," Anderson said.
HoWser said, "I thought the umpir-: jnt.was'aood."
Dccpn, who was behind the .Plate
for the second trai&bt ni&ht. wd: .. It
was easier for me, but it wq harder for
them (the players) bCCause there wert
a lot more close pitches tonildtt. But
(Pleue ... UllP8/C2)
.
Once again, Coast is strugglmg on
the football field ... but wilfft
continue? Better yet, docs it have to?
Consider:
•OCC"s first three.opponents have
a com bin~ record of8-l. Two"oftbe
teams-Fullerton and Golden West
-arc ranked in Uic Soulblan<ntop •.
10. Fullerton is ranked No. 1, which i.
one of the rea~ps the Hornets beat
the Pirates 33-0 in the second game of
the season.
1
7 Things figutt \0 gcla little easier for
tne bdtagured Tucker. He faces the
J>TOspectJ'Of ano-ibcr toss a week from
Saturday in Riverside. The Tigers are
3:<igoinginto this week's game with
Saddlebaclt.
But after that, there are games
against San Diego Mesa, South-
western, San Diego. Palomar, Citrus
-.................. ir......
Qa.Ute,back Bobby Badlelcl will lead Conna clel Mu .,alut Wooclbrtqe 1D a 8ea Vlew Leaeu• fame tomcht.
. .
Coit
SEEDEI
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
--and Santa Ana.
Given an offense, Tucker can still
finish above .SOOwhich would be big
news around camp~ His teams arc
11-41-1since1978. (Actually, OCC
~ I .:....
...
bad to forfeit an pmes during the
1982 season, but then thc Pirates only
won "''O games that year anyway).
Last year, Tucker thoUght a wish-
bone offen5c might bring his offense
some TUCJC an Ule,Pirales came up
with their best record since 1979-
4-S.. I. He'susinatbewishboneapin
this ycarwi th no soc:oess at-all.
10c~.beft.••~ TuC:k~.:S · ~lcmin~ __._1_
recnutlng wars 1s trysn& to compete -
_with Golden est_ w ..... h~ich.au.;isuin .......... tbe--~--~
same communitycollqie district.
Ofcourse.playenintbecowitycan
attend any school they want provid-
ing they live in the district.
(Pleueeee 1'0 WDf8/C2)
CdM, .Warriprs vie;
Uni has tough task
Ocean View hosts
rugged Western;
Li6ns meet Wilson
Four games dot the Orange Coast
atca prep football schedule tontaht -
including a pair of Sea View League
encounters, all of which begin at 7:30.
Hcre•s a capsule look at each:
~
Corona del Mar (~l. 1-t) vs.
Woodbrld.ge (1-S. 0-U -The Sea
Kings of CdM enter this Sea View
League game with quarterback Bobby
offense together after three straiaht
losses. Ocean View bas aonc '° a platoon system with empbasiS on the
defense. Site; Huntington Beach
High.
IAll&:Beac~ wi1so1a <t~1>-...: wes1-
mbutu (1·1) -The visitors boast
quarterback Bobby San Jose, who
threaded some needles last week in
turning RuntinJton Beach away,
21-16. Westminster has been in-
volved, in four traigbt• nail-biter'S.; ·
The Lions are led by quarterback T cd
Mc Millen-iA-thiS =-Uhal Mn I~ --
contest. Site: Westminster Hi.ah.
Hatfield at the controls. Woodbridge .
counters Corona's solid si~ze with -pl.·-.
speed. led by halfback Mark. . . ans
The Wamors arc going with "' .. -... .. ~-.~-
sophomore quarterback John h • •
Yurkovich. Site: Irvine High. C an~es . ~
Ullivtrsity Cl-S, t-1) n . Saddle-ift of ense back (4-t,l-t)-TbcRoadrunnersof ~
Sa<ldlcback 'boast blazing ~ in
backs Teddy Baker and Earl Jones.
and h1ve a good passer m John Cook.
Ocfdlisively they've allov.cd one TD
and they arc favored to win the Sea
View League crown. University ts big.
cxpcnenccd and yet to put it together.
Site: Santa A.na Bowl.
Westen(._.) n . Ocua View (l..S)
-Western 's Pionttrs entcrtbis non-
Jta&uc pme with. scorinaavttagc of
42.0 points a pme behind quar-
terba.ct Chns Chase. Karl Gaytan as
oil tryina to put lus team's runnina
e for n~tional speedway title
a a ¥44
•
• •
The ne~t cnhc~ altemQl orde~
by l tjcr Manager Sparky Anderson
bacldirtd, with Quisenberry throw·
ing to third to get Parrish, the I d
runner. But Grubb, on a 1·2·pitch, hn
a Quiscnbtrry sinker into t.he pp in
right-«M to h run .. ----
.
1\ &reat ddcns1 .. e pla~ by Leon
f>urham helped ~ -.c· Trout m the
\1:\lh inning Wnh one out .\lan
W1ggm~dre'W a wall. (1w~nn then hit
a smash whKh appeared headed for
the nghtficld <:orner bul Durham
lea~ h1Jh to make thc grab and the
putout on Gw)'nn
.J,.
The Ro)ab duJ not get a serun.
ner off Tiger starter Dan Pett)' unul
Pat ~heridan') one-out walk 1n the
fourth . Georie Bren followed with
ingle. then Sheridan ..cored on Jo
Orta'' infield grounder.
.._ In the seventh the Ro,.ii. got a run
off Ti1er bu)lpen ace Willie
Hernandez on Steve 8albon1's ~mgle,
Frank Whtte'1 fielder's choi~. and
singles by Don Slaughf and Dane
Iorg.
" He started me with 1 fastbaJJ and
then he came at me with a bttakin
ball," said Grubb. The pitch he hit
wu "just up a little too much.~ d
Grubb.
"He hit a sinkerNll. Apparently, at
didn't sink very well," Quisenberry
said .. "The pitch was not down and
away li'ke 1t was supposed to be." .
Howser merely smiled when asked
about--h1s dismal playoff record. He
was the New York Yankee manap
1n 1980 when the Royals swept him
three ~,ira1ght He was 1he Royals'
managet in 1981 when Billy Mani~'s
Oak.land A's swept three m a row m
the mini-playoffs in the stnke-ruJ>:-
turcd season.
"I'm not womed about it.." he said. Steve Garvey then !>mgled to ~ore
---W1gmswtth the fin11I run ofthtgamc-
but rhanccs of a b1'r mnmg for the
~adres were 5nuffed
Kan ... Ctty•., Frank White leape oYer De-
troit ~tel'Wlner Da•e Bergman. wbo etole
~"~ ~ond du.rln& eecond lnDln& of Wedn•-
day'• American Lea&Ue playoff aame.
Jn the eighth, the Royal1 knotted it
at 3-3 aga1nst Hernandez. the cond
half of Detroil'sibullptn duo, L~nn
Jonct 1mgled lcadintt off, then Hal
"One key b.lt torught and the record i
different. It won't stay thas bad. It w1U
Moorpar-k has its
good points and
sonie bad oints
~ .:. . MOORPAR~ -One ot>se~/of [!]• .
Moorpark College football had this • »
intcre\ttqJ observation of the 1984 Raiders II
team: ·•rtthke~ hl·avywcight boxer.wnh !' .
knockout punch in both fists but 1f you breathe on his
chin. he'll fall over:·
If you're not into analog). Moorpark t'I an
explosive football team but the Raiders fiz1le when 11
comes to defe~. • •
In three game\ Moopark has been out'iCorcd
15 7-127. That's in THREE games.
After tra\ehng to LA Harbor and sconng a 33-25
victor). Moorpark returned home to pla} its fir!>t
football game 1n a brand new on<all)pus stadium~
'( oach Jim Bittner's team lost to West LosAogcl~.
73-40and then pla)ed ho!>t to LA Pierce. the "lo 4 team
in the Southland. and drop!>(d a 59-54 dec1s1on
Ont local writer 1scalhng forihe reno\ a lion ot thc
field alrctid)," J<>kcs ~oorpark sports 1nformauon
director Jim Niles
What·., "llh Moorpark ~ell. lor one thing. tt'!o a
• )oun& team. There arc 68 pla}ers on tht'> ~cars tcam. 55
of them frc<thmen .
Oppo'ling quarterbacks are a' erasing 25 comple·
t1om and 337 }arc.ls through the air against the Raiders,
prnmpt1ng 81ttnl"r to note: "'We need a better pa~' ru\h
and better drop balk\ b~ our linebacker!> ~e·re going to
conn~ntrate on thl''>l' arl·a~ m practice this week
I he: Ka1dl0r\ figure 10 do "'di agatn~t Han1:ock
C ollcgc 1 n thc1r \\ e'tcrn '>talc opener Saturda)
afternoon. Hanrn<.k defeated ~C'>t l oi. .\ngck'i. 14-10
Moorpark 'lwn·d 40 po1ntf)aga1n'>t ~e'>t I oc, ·\ngc:ks. If
onl 5 We'it Ii\ hadn"t scored 73
B1ttm·r ha' a hold prc:d1ct1on fur ~a1urda-.·s game
which will tx pla-,.ed in the a~-)'ct unhaml·d Moorpark
~tad1um. ··1 guaran1ec we'll hold them unde'r SO potnl'i ..
Van Pelt end.a long holdout
EDEN PK \IRIF Minn -Minne-Ci]
\ota linebacker Brad Van Pelt ended a 12· c • •
'Week holdout Wcdnesda). still bitter that •
the Nattonal Football League team didn't
1radc: him. but needing the mone> to support his family.
"M) feelings ha..-cn't changed a bit. but s1ttin~ out
12 v.l·cli;c,d1dn 't \CCm to put am dents m the sttua11on."
Van Pelt '>atd after his first practice. "Jf It wu/ust me
and <V1ktng'> Ci!'n!'ral Manager) Mik~ L>nn. would
ha-.c gone on "1th the battle. but I have a family to think
ol "
Van Pelt 'illll hope., the V1k1ng'> will trade him
tx·forc ncitl week's deadline.
. Franco...,,...~ of avokjlng oonttct to
atay healthy u he aipproecnes Jim Brown'• NF\.
career rushing record. on a pro~ •o-yard
match race wtth 13tpwn: "Didn't you hear about It?
we had the race and I ran out of b<X.lndt on the 391''
Kings send fo._r to mlno_rs
INGLEWOOD -'(he Los Angeles lll.1 Kin~ have re-assigned. four playe~. bring· ,
1ng the number of players still with the
MlUad to 26, the National Hockey League
team a·nnounccd Wednesday.
Right wrnger Dean Hopkins and defense men Allan
Tuer and Howard Scruton were sent to the Kings' New
Haven farm clubof1he """"•ricen Hockey League while
18-year-old center Brian Wilks was aen1 back to the
Kitchener Rangers of the Ontano Hockey League.
Kttchener 1s a Junaon team. Wilks. the Kings' ~cond-round selection m last June's NHL entry draft,
was re-assianed dcsP.lle the fact that he ~ored se\cn
goals in 1he five cxh1b1t1on games m which he played.
Clippers' Johnson sidelined
LOS ANGELES-Marques Johnson. m
a<.·qu1rcd b) the Los Angeles Clippers last
~turday, suffered an avuls1on fracture of
the httle finger on his nght hand in practice
Tuesda) night but shouldn't miss more than three pre·
sca~n pmes. It wa announced Wednesday.
<\ ~pokcsman for the Chppet'.'s said that Johnson
almost ccrt.a1n~ won't pla) Fnday·nigh\ when the team
facec, Denver tn ll'> National BasketbaH AsWt.~1at1on prt'-
scason opener or Saturda) night when the ctub battle'>
( 1olden <\talc
II 1!> possible, although unhkcl) Johnson rnuld
pla} against the Los Angeles Lakers neAt Monda) niitht.
the 'ipokcsman added. ~aymg that John~on would
probabl) he on a day-to-day bam next week
Johnson came to the Clippers along with Harvey < atchm~ and Junior Bridgeman in a tradc which sent
Terry ( ummmgs. Craig Hodges and Ricky Pearce to
the Milwaukee Bucks.
Huston freed on sez charge
PAINESVILLE. Ohio -Cleveland m
Ca\alicrs guard Geoff Huston was free on
$700 bond Wednesday following his.arrest
on charges of sexual imposition. disorderly
conduct and resisting arrest, the Lake County sheriffs
depanment reported
Huston was arrested Tuesda) night tor allegedl)'
causing a d1\turbance inside a convenience store. said
Chief ~pUt) Richard A Am1otL
Amiott said Huston and a second man entered the
( on-.cnicnt Food Mart in Pcm Township and asked
for dircct1on!>. Huston. Amiott said. then alleged I>
became loud and began knockmg boxes from dtspla)
shelves. •
Flore$ undaunted ·by loss
Raider coach looking ahead to Sunday;
Muhammad goes to Skins for draft pick
i •
reporter~. "Wc'rc '>till 4-1 . we're ~till
in lir'>t place
Lru. Angele£ faCfi ~ lll the
Coh~um Sunday. The Scahawks
were victonous over the Raiders in
both pf the regular.season .National •
Football t.caguc pmcs played be-
tween the teams la.st season but
dropped a J0.1 4 dccisiort in the AFC
championship game.
• CHARLorre... N.C. -Benny II Pat$0ra took ad·v ntage of a cooling track
Wednesday LO win the rich pole position
for Sunday•s Mtlltr High Life 500 Grand .
Nihonal stock car race Wlth a record-breaking four-lap
average bf l 6S.S79 mph.
Parsons, one of the last dnvers to take 10 the high-
bankcct. I 5-TTritc-ovat at Chartoue-Motor-Speedway,
picked up a cash prize of SJ 7.g()(). He also woo new
vehicles for himself and crew ch1efC'liff Chainp1on. a
tnumph worth about $44.000 overall -the biggest
pole payoff 1R racing history
"l think 11 (the cool track) was a definite
advantage," said Parsons. whose qualifying cffon camt
With late-afternoon Shadows covering ffiOSl of the front
stretch ..
Book.Jes may take big losses
LAS VEGAS ·-Bookmakers in this ii
gambling city stand to lose m1lhons of
dollars 1f the Ct11cago Cubs beat the San
Diego Padres to win the National Ltague
pennant. But things could be worse -tt could have
been the Ne"' York Mets
"ThN"e·s goma to be a lot of people who "'111 make
.a lot of mone~ 1f the Cub!> 1A>in.'" said Jim·m) Vaccaro,
Barnar) ( oast sports book manaser. "But 1herc would
ha'c been a lot of people that would have gotten \Cl)
'Wealth) 1f the Mets would have won."
Vaccaro said his sports book will lo!IC about
S250.000 1f 1hc Cubs prevail against the Padres. He
1ermcd 1t a "'i1zcable loss." loss but nowhere near the
S800.000 the book would lla-..edropped if the Mctr. had
'WOO thc pennant.
The Cubs beat the Padres. ii-2. 1n Chicago
Wedncsda) tu take a commanding 2-0 lead 1n 1hc bc~t·
of-five National League Champ1onsh1p Series "-llh the
third game !>ehcdulcd for San Diego tonight.
Throughout the state. the two dozen legal !>porh
books stand to lose an estimated S6-7 m1lhon on the < ubs, who were as much as 80-l longshots to talce the
pennant before the seaM>n started.
··The comment throughout the industry is the
Cubs will be expensive," said Sonny Reizncr. who runs
the sports book at the Castaways. "There was a sizeable
amount bet on tbe Cubs and 1t will be costly for the
C Mtaways and other books."
Televlalon, radio
TELEVISION
5:35 p.m. -9AIEIALL: Chlcago at San 01ego
In third game of National League playoftt, Chmmef 7.
10 p.m. -80XfNG: From the Olympic
Auditorium, ChanMt 58.
RADIO
5:3S p.m. -IA8E8ALL: Chicago at San
Otegg, KN.X (1070).
Bto1tn
M \'II\ I I\~ HI \f II I \I» -
I hl' 1k1cnlltng \111wr B'J""' I<. h<Jmp1on
I 11\ "':'\nKck' ~iJ1den. "-On 1 go un ·
lw.1trn rh1r, 'IC<1~011 Tlw 1.>cn,er
Bronl U'> m.1dc: \ure ol th.11 la'tl
\unlla\
C u :lt h I ••Ill 11• •ft"' "' 1 hl• HJ llkr'
,1c l>:n11....,lrdged '"' dl'<1pprnntmC'n1
~cdnc'K.la-. "''h ht\ ll".1m' It, I l lo"
111 the Hrc"mu>\, hul al!.o chor.c to
.1pprc' 1atc the po\111\ c a\pc<. h ol
"hal"\ lfan\pircd ~1 lar thl\ )<'jilt.
··~c·re nnl panicking. but 1t~1s
dc,a.stallng to lose when lou're not
u'icd to lo.sing. It happens, it's prett)
tough nowada)'i to go through a
~·aJ\n undcfoatc:d
.. The Dcn\ler &lme was our third
d1v1s1on pine an a row and this will be
ouc. fourth," Flores said. "There'!! no
love lost in pm wiahin our
d1\'1St0n .
.UMPS. • •
And he ,tl\o dlo\c lo look tci 1tw
future ~
"~l· hil'l'n't lalkn .1part •· Flore'>
or,.i1d al ht\ werkh ml'l'ttn~ "Ith
"lt'\O\cr "ou have to,oon."
rhC' lo'i\ left th!' Raiders and
Rronco~ 11cd for fir'1 plact along with
~ttle 1n thC' American Football
< onfcr<.'1lc:t:'!> We.stern D1v1sion. All
1 hrcc team'i hnvt• 4-1 rc<:ord' The
other 1wn team' ln the division.
K..tn'la' < it) antl \an Die o, arc both
'\-2
--------..... "We"rc a third of the war thtoua}I
the \Ca\On," Flore\ ,,_,d "It 11oina to
he much toUj.hu lb.an put yc:m. Just
look at thed1v1Mon. I he wor t team IS
.3-2. There·~ no brcath1n1 room. It i
going to be tha1 way all year."
"The lo s show that we're not
unbeatableand howthowstronaour
d1v1s1on is. We 5<1ucakcd by Kan $
C 'tty and wt tqueakcd .~Y Sin Oiqo
and we lo•t to Denver.
Flore announced that the Raiders
have traded wide receiver ('alvln
Muhammad to the Wa hmaton
Redslun, in exchange for-a \Clet:tlon
in th~ 198S NFL draft.
M'uhammad, who hod been on inc
club's inJurcd nsc~·e lilt. wa ac-
• ttvated and then tndcd.
Okamoto leads British Open
\\ ORIJ RN, I n land' IA Pt -1 he
wcath!'r, not the courM!', wa the talk
of the "'omen'.s Amish Open aolf
toumiamut enteM th .
.. M~ fingrn wttt numb and t t
difficult to &nP the club," fil'lt \11\d
leader Ayako Okamoto of Japan said
Wednesday aftcr tourtn thl cavil
woodrd Wob1.1rn wursc an un • par 71 ,.
From Cl
the way I unde~tan<l 1t. the 1clevl'ilon
rcpla) showed I was right."
The other members of Dcepn's
crew were John Bible, Randy
Chri tal, larry l'trhcl, Harold Jordan
and Mike O'Dell
Workina the NL playoff~ were
steak-nnd-~afood salesman 03vc:
lickcnmcyer behind home plate,
phyta.cat cduc.ation teachers Joe Porn·
Poni'at first basc'and J~ Maht.V at
second, and retired p1lo1 Dick
Cavanaua.h at lhirtf. Thc:y also
worked durinf 1hc ven·w k um·
p1re tnkc 1n 919 and have worked
together in 81 Ten Conference cone: II.
-
change."
•
Se&Ki_ngs p
upstart Mesa
Vikes-;-FOuntain V~y open
Stinse slate with triumphs -
Sea View League heavyweights Corona del Mar and
'Newport Harbor won as expected in high school water
polo Wedne5day, with the Sea Kings turning aside
stubborn Costa Mesa. 8-4. and the Sailors humbhng
Saddleback. 24-6. . ~
Meanwhile, Un1vcrs1ty also stayed unbeaten in Sea
View play by routin& Laguna Beach, 14-5. .
In the opening of Sunset League action, Manna
coasted past E.d1son. 20-6. and Fountain Valley defeated
Huntington Beach, 12-4.
The second quarter was dccm .. e for CdM the CIF's
second-ranked squad, a.s the Sea ·Kings outscored
improved Mesa (rated fourth). 4-0
Costa Mesa actually owned leads of I..() and 2-1 on
goals supplied by Alex Crenshaw ButCdM went on a fivc-
goal spun, tallying the final goal of the first period with IO
seconds remain mg and the only four in the second.
In the second quarter. uar) Tichy had two oflhe &0al~
and Steve Schroeder and Alex Wesner one each.
Al~. the CdM dcfC'nse did an e:\cellent job keeping
the Mus tan~ off the board in the 5etond period. surviving
thrtt' CdM e1ections. Cioahe David V1\taunet htd three of
hi'i 10 "3 .. e., tn the quarter.
Schroeder had three gqals O\ crall. while Jeff Ceding
and Tichy tos~d in two apiece Tim Ph1lhps and Drew
Maness were the other goal-scorers for Costa Mesa, which
aho received five ~ves from goahe Cratg Fa1ard1n
( dM travels to meet Villa Park in a non-league
l'ncounter Saturday at 10 a.m '
I op-ranked and unbeaten Newpon Harbor was able
to clear us bench quickly against Sa.ddleback, notchins
nine goals in the first guarter and seven ui the second.
Newport poured 10 two goals before the game was a minute
old.
l"'clve '-;a1lo~ scored, with Tom Hunter and Peter
Shea ~onng three apiece Ncwpon also used four different
goalies. one in each penod with Ian McKay, Jason
Belanger, Tom Hunter and Scott Maberry shanna the
duties • ·
l n1vers1ty's Kc' tn McCollough scored fourgoalsand
Enc (arl\On and Marty Schlecter had three apiece in the
Tro1ans' ea\} victor) over Laguna Beach David Jordan
and Brian Adams each had two for Un1vers1ty
Manna') Tom Warde scored six goals in Just a halfof
1-'la)'1ng time to lead the Vikings to the easy win over
Fd1son at Golden Wei;t College.
Marina talhed seven goals 1n each of the first two
quarters before the reserves took over
Mike Ruzck helped Fountain V3]1ey &el off to a quick
~tan. ~orm& four of his five goals m the first half.
• •
le~c coaches. f I 1s a\o,1stants have been
wtth him for years and there have
been many\ucces~ful seasons.
But 11 appears "successful" has a
different meaiunaat OranaeCoast
1han 1~d1d year:s aao when the Pirates
were wmnms things like national
champ1onsh1ps and south Coast
Conforcncc titles.
Thoscdaysarcgont. OCC fini hcd
lhird inJts conference last season with
a 3-2-1 rccord(4-S overall). Tucker
labeled it as an "up year" (or Coast.
1 t was just nme ycan IJO that OCC
went I l--Oandcapped the season with
a 38-14 Avocado Bowl v1ctory over
Rio Hondo. Those were the days.
Ofcounc. it's hard to recruit a
player when the proaram baa been
down u is the case with OCC, and
Qgldcn W csui m ply look1 hke the
better buy because it has enjoyed
more recent success. .
Other considerations
Remember last ye~r·s 1tu;>1d
rumor which floated out of nowhere
-th•tOCCwa1aoinatodrop
(ootball? It may have affected()( Cs
rccruitina but Tuckcrdidn't 11vc at
much credence at the time.
OCCsmovetoth Mi 1onCon·
fcrcnce may 'bave h d an im~ct.
Pcrhap players want to be in what 1s
con idc red the tron tcommun1ty
colic footb II confercnt'e in the
n tion-thePAC9-sOoldcn West it,
On theothcth nd, m1ybc pJa)Cl'I
would rath rha'ea w1nn111f n
ndop1 forthewcakrrM1 ion
onfcrcn e?
fort emomcnt,OC
the bcncli1 of the doubt. 1 c Pirat
hnc )llaytd three cry tron ~ tball
1e msand thcrc'.t1utl 1cn on th hcdulc.
Tu kcr oulJn•t
le 1h1nM . •
-
t
I' ..
....,..,,oa.1>
al ~ICen L.Meue.' to.30 a.m. ._.v,Oct. ,.
•' Amtflcan we.-, us om , u
""' . T ...... v.~'6
11 Ian Dl'90, J:n • mw Ir N«UlrY w.-.. v,oet." at Str1 0 , 6:2S o.m , If ~uarv
" Clllcno reottMlllt IN Ntlional Witer .,... HIGH SCHOOL l'OQT8ALL l.tHUI ,.~........ ,......_.....,. o• ... •t NATIONAL LIAGU• PUYO, .. S I _..., HtOff ICNOOI.. ,. vowwn1 • -Cuba 4; ....... 2 . et Arn«IC.tn l.HVue, &:H fl~ NeWPtr1 Hittle[ J4. ....._ca ' IM Yn W... W ...... Y Ntwoort HarDOI' ,,. ' ., • .....,. Cot-.. ,,., fl. w~
(Game Twe) 11 ~lcell LMIVf, I H II m ~~ • 1 2 2 1-6 llrvllle Hltlfl) • ••N Ol•OO • CHICAGO ,,...., Oct. 12 Newoorl ttarl>or ICOflno Hunlff , Intl UnlvtNllY .. 0: (•I ntl Ma
w lt1t2t1 -=~111'1 DtrJ:lletct.':2~,, I 11Ctllcet0i.~;:"'OCLu J. li'#lt>O 2. Alldr n 1, Met.attn :r. eowll
Gwy1111 rt A 1 1 0 Sl!dtirt,, • 4 • t ' t:••~~ 0 Ml!ldla.J. sr.wtrt 2, ~ • ., '· WOOdTuft 2. ~ "--,._ 1.. • 0 1 1 et ~·-· I JO • m C'cillnl;ltoN 1, Mtbtt~ I Ca!IVOft v1. Oranet 1(11 £t ~ ) .,_ • .., v Mattllw•" J 0 0 1 .... S.Wv. ~. 14 llOC!Nbeek K«IM MU!f ll. Wr 2, &!Mini LMfW
Mdtvnl cf i O O I Cello If o o o t 11 (l'ltc.fO, 12 •t p rn,. H '*"""" PllUlMI t ..-CY.,.. n .. !.ft Alemllos (al vluttrn Mll'fll'lllf • 0 1 0 Morllndrt 4 I 2 O TueMlv,Oct. U ,,._ liloh> .._...._
Kf!lllMvc A... Ldmlltt'lt '. 0. ., Anwlcan l.MfUt S'.U •.m~ If .......... ftMr •• Cet1a MIN.. ntem ..a: Dau VJaw 01 ""l.ll\mlll!O!! 1."hlnrlO-3 t t O Cey-> t 1 , ntClllMrY • ,;;...-I'. COtt9'"MIA t" r.,. ... .. ...... }•-n Tmllltn at 2 o o o JDev .. c 1 1 0 '1 • • • Cotooe o.I Mar • I I~ di ... ., .. ~---.. O •• W...._Y,Od. l7 CIKta ... __ .,_..._ Cr-w ", LOllO ~ W son et Wntmlnsttr '.. ...... • 1 1 0 OWlll'n 11> • 0 0 0 et Arnff'ICan '-"'"'· 11S • m., If ........_ -11"' ... • Vllltncie ., 80IU Grenoe Hewt!lna o o o o o ·-~e •• J 0 1 0 --""'rv I, ~,,.., l. ....~ R-............ .__h M" """~ '" • ....,.... Corona Oii ~ JK.oril)t Sd'lto.cltr a, ..._,....e •t .,_.., -•"'°' o '"""" 1 o o o Trout• 2 0 1 O AMl•ICA" LIAGUI PLAYOftf'S o.d1M 2, Tldly 2, weaMlt' 1 krvlle va ~IMllllY <11u 111 lml Per•> flVCl\YO 0 0 0 I ~rf t O O O ...._ ~, __ .... • PRIOAY't OAM9l llv~ flll I 0 0 0 '._ • • .. .,.,. • UNvtrllt\I 14• LA9Ultl ... OI J .. V. &.....-
1.Aftttta • o o t O (Olmt T'ft) I.I•~ ... ell t 2 o ,_ s eot11 ~ 1 l..tll\l!!J 1'l'J"1 Tttiij 1f"'4c<:•""•::---••o'tllt't"'-OtWrT---"'1f'-.. 4l:_ ...... ~------··lllV«'11V ' ' 2 F ·=---1:•1a11Cr. at 1wtorl'H'1ttio1'"~'".•~·g...----... , Seen i,., .......... .. t I\.. .., It ttt 1."4#11 9"ch KOl'lnr. Fr-2r0ellitlt ..,_ Cent t..-wt ; !t':..~ ooo Ill ooo-2 Wlllle~ra 5 l 1 o Wl!Mncf So I o 1. Shal'p 1 Giibert 1. $Ill a.m.rne at lrvw
-102 100 ... _ 4 Trernmi u S o I o i'*'ldtl rt · 2 1 o •. u"'v" ty KOl'IM .YtcCOlloutll '· loAtuna H. vL Ill Toro w M"t.IOA Ge"" Wlnnlno "91 -Mellllaw1 ( 1). l(OlbtOA r1 • 2 2 2 LJonff rf 3 I I 0 Clflton 3, lcfllK1ar J, JorOl!I 2. Adams 2 VlllO Hl;ll) , E-Trout.-OP-CPllQOO 2. ~S.n LNPersnc 5 0 2 1 lretraD 5 0 2 0 Ml,_., • .._. 6 ' o 1,,. Hiiis et Cuatr-V•iev
DllOO •. Chic.ego 6. 2a-Mortlan4. c..,., D1lvn1 '9 • 1 O O Prvor 30 O Q O O IMf'tna 1. 1 4 ~ Cenlwv ......,.
Gwynn, S.nclbare Sl-Dttnltr m. "Jone. If • t O O Orte dfl ' O o I ldlton ~ o ~ 2 t-• $111t1 ~ "*" 11 Et MocMnt I-Trout. $F-JOavfa, Mc"•Ynoldt Gr~ dtl ' 0 l 2 McRN 111'1 ' 0 I l Marlllt 1corlne Wtrde ,, L.lrMn a. '°"1'1111 VI ""''a AM Ill kl'll• Ane •·-...__ tlll H Ill llt 91 so Ulmoncf SO 0 0 W1tl'lan dll I 0 0 0 Iulo 2, Soancwlcl'I 2. ludman 2, S1p • l, llowll ..., ......_ ltremn 111 1 o 1 o Motlev If • o 2 o lrotMnon 1, Perault 1, SctwllHll 1 VIiie Perk 11 Tu1!1n •
Tllurmoftd 1..0-1' > 2·3 7 4 , 2 I lrOkna ,_ 2 0 0 0 BaJDonl II> S 0 I 0 Edlt011 KOt!no; c,mon 2, ~l!ltll 1, -...,._...._.. ua.e
HeWlllna I 11·3 O o O 1 o Oert>tv pit l 0 0 0 Whlll ft 5 l 0 0 •Miiier I, Abl'ahamson 1, Ctr""11., I Loer'l u 1!1 DorMI Cat Vtlenc:~ Hlthl
Orntclty 2 1 0 0 0 I MC11tij 30 I 0 0 0 Slauol'lt c: 5 0 ' 0 ,..,..,.. ... v...., 1a. .. .,...,......, ~ • £M)lr11Ut n PIClllCA let lo/at Grtndt J.'!,~!-Jo 1 0 0 0 • 0 0 CllCPCll N 2 0 0 0 Fountain Velltv ' • 2 2-12 HIOh) .......... I Dloro pit 1 0 I 1 Muntlne'1HI hectl 2 0 1 ,_ • IC•l•fll VI Klfll'tdV (II Wntern HIOfl)
Trout W, l·O I 1·3 S 2 :r J 2 ~ llandn" 1 O O O Fountefn VetJey Korlnt. "u•• 5, Knoll • ,... • ..,. LISMlll'I S, I 2·3 O O O o I U'l(antn pit 1 O O O 2. Clark 2; Pfamllleno l, ,,.t•r• 1, Marina et Mlmk1n T-2:11. A-34,212 ,...._ 41 S t s· Tetlib 44 J 10 J Oerv1rt1nlan 1. • Edison at Notre Otmt of Sherman 0.-•
...... sAYOffs °"'"" k«• IW :r:o ... in..: s HunllnotOll a.en acorino Er'ltndlOll I. Mlfflon V1tio .. St. JIM 9olco
LIAOUI CHAWte>tUH~ HRIH ec. ... Clty ... lto 110 --J 'Olk•r 1, Mllltr '· l.amoar11 1. Buena ft•rk VI Anahalm (L.I Palma
(Al Ttmn ftOTI Game w1nnlne HI -Grvbtl (1). c:" llaftllNll Partt9
1 --~-.... -... "' ( 1 a.tt.tf.,lve E-conc.octoll, ~an, Brookena, •·A -1. Newport Harbor1 2 Coron• Clef Park'!!.:'::'1'"'"" va. _,,,., ""'1 If utl\I
·W ..... Y'a SC.. · Sla"9ht. 1.09-0ttrolt 7, 1(1111111 Cllv 11. Ma.r; 3. Lone leech WllM>n, 4. c .... _., """" NL-ChlclOo '· Ian Dlt90 2 (Chlc:eeo 29-l<Gfblon, LNPerrlsh. Mc:RN, Grubb $. Vitia Park; '· Footl'll1I, 7 S41nny Hbls; • . Stvtnna VI. Trov (II F~on Hlon) . "'°' *"'· 2·0> 1 HR-KOtl>IOll 01. sa-eereman m Senta Me Vallev; '· ~, 10. Tutttn. H.:ir-''on et i.o. Amteos (i ,., Gro,,.
w ...... Wll9YtNll
GOMMU"'1'Y COLUOI seu.c...c • ...
-i
AL-Otlrolt S, K1naa1CI~ 3 (11 lnnlnoa) $-Grubtl, D1lh1111. J·A -1. El Dof•do; 2. El Toro; 3. tndlo; H.cltNa~• WllMlll at atlhll> Amal
(Ottroll llt<lt wlft, 2·01 • tft H a•• 19 so '· Ml11ton Vi.to; 5. "lvenldt Polv, •· Muir; · Lono a.ch Jorden ,1 •~ Monteom· , T~ Oeme • Ottrwet , 7. Downey, I H•cltndl Htlettt• Wiiton, 9. 9'Y •
Gollttn W•t def. c~ .... 1s-12. 1s.-t. 1 15-f. NL~l!lc"° (l!ClleriltY 11.,1 at Sen ftt!rv 7 4 t 2 1 ' "ovet; 10 Chertar 0.11. N\lvf Ir Pl Dlt90 (Whllton 14·11, S:U 11.rn. Harnandl 1 2 1 I 1 1 2~A -I. ClbrlllO; t Mlr1tnte; 3. $ p~ ... a,t •• ~,L , ..... .,.. oam. LOClll "'' f•O 3 ' • 0 0 l -2 Wnlllltr; •.Los Amloo1; s. So\llh P111dlnt; '· -........ ~.. • •• ..L
AL-t(•nM• City (LllW•ndl 11·7) el IC.IMISCltv '· Jent• Marl•; 1. S.nte Ynu1 •. Sen SATUaDAY'S ·-·
Detroit (WUcox 17.,), ~5 P.m. Stbrtltn 1 ' i 2 s Marlllo; f . Santa Fe; 10. Rlohelll. Ma.Iv o.. !:" ~!:tton leedl tat ...
...,,...,., 0.... QulMbfYL,0-1 J 2 2 1 1 Oranet Coat Colltotl • AL-Kenaaa Cllv ti 0.lroll, 10 •.m., If f-j:)7, A-42,0lt. l...onO 11Mct1 Po1Y VI. Fountelll v.._., (t t ~hlcffo al Sen Oltoo. S:2S p,m,, H Wntrnlntter .. tofl) '*"MfY Sonor• at Garcttn Grove
I Nl.-Chlc:atO et S.n Dl'90, l:OS o.m., If ... ..,. .
AL-.:111111 Cltv el Detroit, 5:25 o.rn .. If
~ ... ,.,.
-WORLD lltllli
If Sen Ditto rt111ratn1' tilt N1tlontt L.119ut'.
Shriver
~--~breezes
past foe
MANHA TT AN .BEACH (AP) -
Second-seeded<Pam Shriver breezed
past Michaela Washington inJust '5 minutes Wednesday night. winnina,
6-1 6-1 , to advance into the quar-
terftnah of a women's tennis tour-
nament here. In the quarterfinals, Sh)iyer will
meet Rosalyn Fairbank ·or South
Africa. who outlasted Betsy NaJelsen,
7-S, S-1, 6-4 earlier Wednesday.
In other second-round action.
Alycia Moulton, who upset fiftb-
seeded Carling Bassett of Canada in a
first-round match. eliminated Kim
Shaefer, 6-7, 6-2, 6-3 and JoAnne
Russell topped Anne White, 7-6, 6-3.
The second round will be com·
pleted today with the quanerfinals
·schedule¢ Friday, the semifinals
slated Saturday and the finals set for
Sunday at the Manhattan Country
Club. The sin&les champion earns
$28,000 while the runner-up collects
$14,000.
e
1scover
e
I
°""91' Conl •. Clr'rWIN1 1s-;t?, 1·15,
17• "· lS.-13.
I•
Shriver was in control of the match
from the outset. In the fint set,
Washinal9n..oould only hold serve in
the founh same.
Vaqueros~
to rebound
Who'd expect such a mild smoke from Camel? Who'd exR ct such great
flavor in a Light cigarette? There's unexpected news for toda s smokers,
and it's called Camel Lights. Discover this different kind of amel,
unexpectedly mild-.enjoy Today's Camel Lig hts.
1 Irvine Hi&h•s Vaqueros are in the
hole before meetina their first new
opponent in the South Coast Lcquc,
followina last week's 39·14 lacina by -tt:ms-time ftval El T-0r-0, which-moved
wit& Irvine from the Sea View League
into the South Coast this year.' So. the Vaqs of Coach Terry
Henipn entertain visitina San
Clemente Friday niJbt (7:30) with
more than Just• new]"acc_to...combal, • .._~---~~
it's more like sorvival if they hope to
contend for a CIF Southern Con-
ference. playoff be!"h•. in addition to
champ1on1hlp asp1r1t1ons.
"On film they throw the ball often
and well," says HenJpn. "We•ve.only
really seen them on the two films. so
we'll just ao wittl our rqular defense.
They seem to be4l little bia&trthan us,
but aoecd·wise it . appears to be equat" --.
San Clemente i1 also ~I. havina
dropped a 21·15 decision to
C.piJtrtno Valley in its opener. The
Tntons are led by quarterback Alu
Baker.
·occ, Rus tlers
win in volleyball
TODAY'S
-cAM EL LIGHTS
It's a whole new world.
I
•
--
Oran~ Coast and Oo1den West
collqes opened S9uth Coast Con·
fcrcnt"e women'• volleyball play on a
winniq note Wednelday. with the
OCG'1 Pirates u~1?4in1 Cetritoa and
the Ru1tJen 1weep1n4 past Cypreu.
• s. mi "11t. 0.8 f119. ~trne 1v. Pit Cigatttt by FTC mertlod.
• 4 OCC downed CemtOI, the defend· inf conference hampion, 1 S-12,
8-S 11· 15, 1 S· I) behind ttlc play of
middle btockct Jamille Mocn1 and
ouuidc hitter Rounne McMillen •.
Moen• had l l ktlls, five 1trv1oe
aces and five stuffed blockl while
McMillcn contnbuted l I kills. thmi
blocks and three ace • uzette
OervalSalso otched 16 klllUnd four
aoe1 fOr tht'P1ratC1. Padna the Ru1tlen' 1SJl2. J~9.
1 Y) win ~ outside h ners Chri1
DOnobue with 12 kll111nd Uy Rt.a
with l l.
I
l
. .
Warning~ Tt1t Surgeon General H~s Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Oange!ous to Your Health.
Cl
' '
Grand Prtt" tl .. al
The Rh Cf' idc Grand Pn'.'I. F«ta\· I a ru1na d~u htadcr katunn1 lbc Budwt~ Ttans-AmandCllCCan-Am~es. il«t for Saturday·
nd unda)"al Rivmidc lntemauonal ~---.y.
Am Ona those comJ')l't1ng m the 'r rans.-Am ra«:
att nirrcnl dtfend1n1 snics champton Oa' id
Hobbs, currt•ll pocnl ladu Tom GIQ) anda&.."'lor
hul Newman.
Tbc("an .\m 11tld andu<lcs such mlt'fnal1onal
dri\'mai Michael Rocoflrefand,J1m Crawford
o( Scotlitnd and Juan Manuel Fansiu II of
A1Etntlna.
The Trans·Am pu~ tt$45,000wh1lc tht <;an-
A m purtit is SU.000
T1d.eits arc priced from $2~ for a &u~r ticket
for p:anthtand ll'at1ng both days. to 5' for-grand~tand adm1uion on Sunday onl). General
admw1on uctru fol'both. daH a~ S 12.
Sunday's Can-Am race is set for I p.m ,:
followed by 11\< Tran,..Am race 11 2·45 pm.
. For mo~ mformat1on. phone 6~3-1161.
'.
. -
La. A.n.6ela Lazen opener
The Los Angeles l..azcrs of the MaJor lndoor
Soccer Lngue will host the newly formed las
Vegas -'mencans on Fm.lay. Oct 12 ID a c>~·
sca!oOnpme beginning at 7·30 pm atthc Forum
an Inglewood.
The Amencan~ an cx.p:in51on team, still
figure to be scnous contenders for the MISL
champ1onsh1p bccawic of the aeqwsmon oftwo •
key playen -goalkeeper Alan Mayer, who w1U
also serve as coach, and Julie V~. who led the
San Diego Sockcrs to the league champ1onslup
IO 1983
rickets. pnced at S3. are available at the
forum bo:i office and all Ticket mast.er locations
...
f-l __ _.;;_F..::;.o;_:r mo~ i'l_format~n. p~nc (213) 48,_0-_3_2_3_2_. --\.--..a.-
..
.... -
Bo~ CJafJ baactbaU ~u~
Rcautrallon for in1namurnJ ba ·ctNIT bC-ain1
S.1urday 11 the Ea t Bluff brandl of tbe S<>)a
Club in Newport &-ach Oo~'I Club ba ct lhtressen non"'" it.c!\11s fDPn~for·man dcfi n .
tht.btanch i$ IOCat t l.SSS V1•ta Del Oro
8o)S in 'tadt l·I -...111 bciin play an Januan-. R1..'11 lntion will ht-i.a en un a fitst<amt', firJt· ac~~ ba is until ) p.m. lurda)·. . .
For mo~ information. phone 640-66SO
0
Dad Sou11 Open go_Jf
Francois' o( HunttJ\gton Beach ~ill hold ns
annual Duck Soup ~n ~If tournament on
Monda). OcL IS at Seac!f!L..Cquntry Club in
Hun1ini.ton Beach. EnuY ftt 1s S75. which indudcs grttn fees,
can, golf shin. pnzcs. troph1e1 and dinne1 at
Francois'.
Two handicaps for men and women are
planned. and trophies '\!;ill be awarded for first:
second and third·pbcc fintshcrs.
TCt"-OITttmcs are 9 a.m -noon.
For mott 1nfonnat1on. phone 842· I 919
g 0
• ..
lie» Al~ Oak Tree re~Ult~
Sl!CONO "AC•. ~ mile rel
1n1rlcul110 Jl•t tc11ttr 11 40 no 2.10
Devld $ulnetland (Htlll 2.10 2.10 Franc:I• CIOu9Mt'IY lV•llandlnehaml 2 10 ..... rte.ct llt<ell1* Siar, titelll•NS Four J. H~ C~. CM Fr0tl. f.mo. Flr'•I TiMr.-ttit;·---
U UlACTA 17•2) Nici 06.10
"4•0 ltAC . Ont mllt'N«.
Reciev Suba«t (AMktll) 2.10 UO 2.10 Keren Eve (l.Kkev> UO 2.10
Cut II OUI Ot-) 2.10
~ reeM· Mv ~I .... 0-.-M. utnt FanJUY~
Time. 1 51 4/~
U •XACTA ll •2) Nld '7 20
FOURTH ••ca. Ont mlle ltOI. ~rk Of Sl>ffd (Pierce) 12.60 f.00 4 00
W•lnA (E"loll) UO U O
Mitford MMrOMY IGrUlldvl , '°
AIM> rll(.ed· Hot Chlo, Jonnnv Tollv.,., $1'1a/'I·
"-' Sl•r. Not>lt ll"an NHlle\ F'tlo«be, Finl ..
Dancer.
Time• 2:(M JI~
f'lf'l'H "-ACE. One mile 116U.
Boost T l (K'*'-l 6.00 360, HO
Ml!in Mlrir Jim <GrundV> n 00 12.00
f:tnerlllcl Outl119 (TondrMU) • 00
Also ~; lltOal MoG1erev. 6olill0l, 5'1«· lecwr Ot nctr. Lew O'Tlle Lend, Howdv ()op,
Chrlt Too Htr.
Time; 2:01 •ts
$) &XACTA (f-7) ~Id 5ttUO PmllC NOTict Pl8JC fl>TICE P\BJC fl)TIC( ••
stXTH "-ACE. One mile Hee. F'ICnnoul IU ... 11 F'ICTITIOU9 IUAmll '1Cnnoul ....... MAim ITATDmff MAim ITA.,..,,., · MAim fl A,.......,. = ~~~) lUO ~ i~ Tiie f~ pet'ION we The fol$0Wlng per90N IA Tiie fOllowtng penol\ II
Toe> Sublect (Mal'Chltnd) 2 60 doing bullMel U: doing~ .. : doing bUelnele a.:
Alto rec.d! GIOll o..lcln. Nancv Ander.on. MEDtCAl ELECTAONtCS O.O.M. 000 OFJO()MING, UHIFOACE OF OAANOE
()cea..a n.bl~ ci... Flv Jindl t=av. Strfk""1 Pra, $yt1Mt 8e9'tl. SYSTEM, 30131 Town ~ E. Ootlt HwY .. Corone OUNTY. '121 W•t-'Y
Veteran ocean fiihing expen Charles Da' 1s Hllelled To Win. <lllnt• Or., 1215, Laguna del M.,, Ctltf. 92e25 Place. Ste. J~1-Newpcwt
will conduct his annual ocean fishing d an Oct. Time: :un 21s Nlgu91; Ctilf. e21n Franlc Abe1e, 28122 Ave. DMch, Cellf. .,..""°
• 12 and 19 at Golden West College. Hours arc u •llACT• ll-4> N ici ""0 IN9tllut• fOf tneCS1C.r Stl.ldo-Cddld, MlllllOn Viejo, c.m. Anne Thomp9on, 2311
7 lop m SevE-" R .. C., ........ _mile A•-.... lnC., Cdfomta. 30131 9291W . Cttff Ofiw, Nwpof1 a.ctl, • · · "' ..... .,... -~-Town Cemer Or .. #215, Cerole Abete 21122 Av.. c.m. t2tl3 Davis will share his knowledge of fishing Monlerev Knl9ht (CroeMn> 7 oo uo 3..0 ~lguel. Calif. 92177 c.~. Mleelon Viejo, Clllf. Tfllt bUtlneet 11 con·
ocean waters off Southern CaJ1fomia through ~:= <~~c.> . 360 t: fhlt bllslf'IMf It con. 8a&t1 dueted by. lll'l ln4Mdual shdcs, VCR and lectures Topics include tackle Also raced: White sme Louie. Boomer Hiil. clue1ed by:• 09tPcfnitton Cerole Abet• Anne lllompeon
and gcarlkn~ lures and bait~ ___ -----t--t~n~n:'Dk.,tc~n..,-.~-~MJ~i .... 1ec.._Q,...,14'.'Ml1a11yo....DMoofil>IWl'-"'ci"--'Q""•W1odw.:11t,+-.m.R4:Y..Ob:;.;*::;.rt;..._:L::::u<IOl;:.:;.;Jlte.:::;;:.:•:....;.Pfl~•::::~.,lhll.... ttatement we1 ftled Thlt \ltement WM filed
Ftt is 12, • ~n. Sk~•rle. tlW • For add1uooal rnfonnat1on, phone 891-3991. Time' 1:9t 41~. Tt\le statemem .... "'9cl enoe County on Se91emb« tngll County on Stptember i U EXACTA (t-71 Daiei $32.70 Witt\ tN County et.tit of Or· 14, 1984 5, 11&4 •--------------~ ..._County on~ ,.._ ,..tt EtGHTH ltACE. Ont mite Nee. 4, t984 Publllhed Orange COIM Publllhed 0rMge Coet1
• .. .,...l • ... ... .,:_ -~
wtmbledo.a iv~t i984
The semifinals and finals of the Wimbledon
West 1984 tennis tournament will be held
Saturday and Sunday at John Wa)'ne Tennis
Club an Newpon Beach.
The tournament.. now an Its I 0th year. 1s
sponsored b) the Dolphins. the "-Omen's
div1s1on of the Newpon Harbor Arca Chamber
of Commerce Proceeds bcMfit New Dt~tom.
a women's alcohol and drug dependcnc)
rcs1dentJa.I rchabthtatton program
Admission 1s S5 for both da)'s. Door pnLes
and food will be available For more 1nfor·
mat1on phone 644-82i I
v,
A Salute to
.. ~.IM &Jtezm 'Clli " ~ .. tldlita"',_ .. , .....
Individual game tic'f!:'f: all Los Angeles
Clippers pre-season and regular-season games
arc om sale al all T1ckctmastcr outlets.
The Dippers, who will play their games at the
Spons Arene.a., open the recular home season
Nov. I apinst Lhc New York Kniclc.s.
At the request of the Clippers, Ticketmaster is
droppmg the normld S 1.50 sef'VlCC cbar1c
applied to tickets at its ~mote outlets. The
reducuon 1n price will be offered during the
month of October and will apply to regular-
scason games only.
For more mformauon. ~c (213) 480-3232'.
. ~
• • • Notable
Businesswomen
Coming
Sunday
·o ct. 21, 1984
in t he
Dail y Pilot
A t ribute to t he
Orange Coast's
SUCCESSFUL
WOMEN
in business.
For more
information
call t he
Daily Pilot
642-5678
l
' •
,J I
PllmM>ll (~ SMrT..,) 26.10 9.40 •.20 ~ Ody Piiot Septamber 20. ~ Piiot Septembet ~
ve W•hd (V.a.ndlnotleml • oo ·uo deft Md l'IMt 27. Octob« 4, 11, 1984 27, OctOber 4. 11, 1964
Sf>ecial P'eltr (J PeBer) UO ... lleoAf'UMlf ... d. TH-314 TH-3f1
Also reced. Bi.ck Martt, aaron Module, WM 110
Wew RllW. FldaiOO. Ooct« • A~I M9trpOrt a..dt. C8'1f.
Br .. ~• 12'11
nine 1,51 31S.. _M~~~~~;2!!!1+--fl'°1FmDUIHUll•M--f;=;2!~~~!!::;.;;;;= 13 •XAC t I& 16·.......,....,,rw'T_.....-.:_,.----i1-. ~':!, ~..r: 20, _,. ITATllPT . AC1fftOU9 ?WllAU8
. -~~.;,.~i.ce. OM Milt pacie. ..... ' • • TH...'°* The ~ .,...on It .W.ITAlWf~-·
Pelft' Ontdln (Sleell'll 1UO &.20 l.00 • dolnQ bullntee #: O The ~ penon le · s.m L•I~ tAndenc>tl) 6.00 •.OO PALM GAlLERY. 81 ~ ~ •
s.1veoor tPlenol S.60 PlB.JC NOTICE ~ c.n\11' Or., '*'-PACIFICA IUILOERS,
Also r&Ctd Jed<uo. ~triking ...ir, Merrv , ACT1TIOUI llUIMll Pof1-...~d • .. ~: mec>H 3111 6eoofld Ave., Cofone
Na rdln. Professor Osbof'M, Wikl ~I. LOOlllnQ ,,_,,_ "''""' wmon, del M., Callf m25
Good MAm ITA.,..,..,. 2.9841 Pelleen, Legune Wlluam i.0utt AbMIOn
Time: l:St The followlng l*90l'lll .,. f:'laUel. Ceftt. 92177 22435 OYetleke. I.Me For:
'3 EXACTA (2·S) N ld 1n 70 ~ ~ u: . Thie bu91neaa ,, con-.. , Cellf 92630
U ,.ICK SIX (8'6-l-1-6-21 N ld 11,031.0 with D NAMIC DEVICE1', duot9d by:.en lndlvldulll Thlt butlneH la con-
nine winning tlcitt1' tnve llOrlftl Cerrvover 1 t8e7 Tutque>M Ct., Fou Rlc:Nrd AttlM.!t Hermon dueted by: .,.. ~
ooo1 19.213.11. teln V11119y, CA 12708 · TNt ltat«nent w .. rated Wlfllem loula AbM1on
TENTH RACE. One milt Pke Orne Cherla (O'Dwyer) 6.60
~$ler Wll IKuelMr)
Bramt>le Scramble (l<Hlonl
400 tAO u o uo 2.20
Rooer, • Also raced. Cei:iteln JemH. Flvlnv
Teli:i.I aov. Rowland Brei, La Norm
Tlcne 2:00.
a
'3 EXACTA (2· 11 oeid ~ 60
Allendenc;a· 3, 151
..
..
Keolln Lee Connota. 11887 wtttl tN County Clertl of Or-™' it.i.ment .,.. flied
Turquolle Ct, Fountain VW,. engit County on September with the County CWt( of Or·
iey, CA t2708 14, 1984 .. ,..,.. County on Sepittnbet Thia bU.alMM It eon-nMm -..... ~ed by. en lndlvlduel Publlahed Or1119 Coat 14• 1984 PllMZI
KM'l lM Conncf'I Dally Piiot September 20, Publllhed 0ranoe eo.t
Ttils 1ta1emen1 wu Ried 27.-0ctow 4, 11. 1984 Delly Piiot s..>tember 20
wtth the County Clertl of Or· TH-320 27 """"......_ 4 11 1"'•~ ' aoge COqnty on Septemb« • V'.i,....,... · · ...,...
13 , 1984. TH-319
mm1 PlllJC fl>TICE
Pubfllhed Or9n09 Colltt FICTITIOUI -··-II Dally PllOt Septtmbllr 20. --27. Oc10ber 4, 11, 1984 MAMIE ITATDmN'f FICTmOUI .,._..
Th-312 The lolloWtng l*'ton It MAim ITATDmWT ---------rd~1~Eu;STAIR· Tiie~ It
PlBIJC f«)flC[ WORKS, M4 Co~ St.. ~N FOAEST AVlARIES
F'ICTITIOU9 IUIMH ~~=Jr S303 .. .,bof Boutevard:
. NAMllTAT'EmNT 884 Cow St .. Coeta MeM; Sul1•H-3.~MeM.Cellf.
The followtng l*'llOl'I It Calif. 92627 92829 doing bualoeM u ; . Thi• butinea• I• con· Vivian c. Fritze, HMO
CONSTRUCTION COH· dUc1ecf by. en lndMdual Valencie St., lfA, Coete
SUL TING COMPANY t555 Ectwtrd John Topel!MI JHN, Cellf. 9292t
JHN V•de. Coet• 'Meta. Thie 1tatement wu ftled Tt111,..bualneaa 11 con· ' cant t~:ze wfth the County Cler1c of Or· ducted ~ en lndMduel
• Jay A. Ro9det, 1555 Meta enoe County on Se9temw ~stat Frtta
V41f611, Coeta Mella, callf. 14, 1964 With the r ..... ~offlledOr 92126 Fma7 .......... , ._.. •
Thlt bv1IM11 It eon· PubHthecl Orenge COIM Z County on Augutt 23,
ducted by: an lndMdulll o.l.ly Pilot September '20,
Jay A Ro9det · 27. OctOber 4, 11, 1914 ,._,
Thie 1t1tement WU ftted · · TH--3115 Pubflah«f Oranoe eo.t wtth the County Clet1c ot Or-Dally Piiot Stptember 20,
9n09 County on Se9tember 7. Oc1ow.•. 11. 1984
14, 1984 ,.... l'tllJC f«>TICE TH-324
Publllhed Orange CoM1
PaltY Pilot September 20, ~A~ll
21. Oetow •. 11. 1984 Tiie roaowtno
_______ T_H-3_1_81 ~=~coCr,: ~'°#,.~ ..
PlBUC fl>TIC[ ACTUARIES, 1100 Quall AA!~ ... ~ penon It
Street, Suite 211, ~ -"V --la: . l'1C'T1T10U8 ..,._ .. BMc:tt, c.llf. 928e0 D E 8 ENTEAPAISES.
NAiii ITATEMINT Fu1Uf'llCoel Analystt, Inc .. 1031 Roeectane ~ 202.
The ronowino P*°90ft9.,.. A Caltfortila Corporation. Fullerton, Calif. 92t33
doing bul!MM u: 11000ulll1Street.8ulte211, Oonekl Edwwd IS!atlop COASTAL GROUP. 18781 ~Bead\, Cllllf. 021eO Jr., 213 Colton St., Newport
Santa Mana, Fountain v• Thi• bualneat 11 con· Beech, cam. t2tl3 ~. Ctllf, 92708 duct~& cerpot&tlon Thia buefnete la con· Heny E. Ancler9on, 11781 Fi W. KllbourQe dueted by. an lnclMdual
Senta M81111, Fountain Val-Pretldent ' O.E. Blatlop, Jr.
ley, c.llf. 92708 Ttllt ltatement WM flied Thie ~ WM flied ErnHt JohntOA, aa 1 with the County Clertc of Or· wtlh the County an of Or·
Dowr Dr., M9wpor1 BMl:ti, 9n09 County on ~i.mber anoe County on Septembet c.llf. 92863 14, 1984 14, 1984
Thie butlnut It con· ~ PlllMt1 .~ ~ ~ ~-Pu~ Pubhhed Orengit COMt
nerthlp Delly Piiot Sepi.mber 20, DillYPllOt Septnber 20, .
Erneet.lohneon 21. Octot>er .\, 11. 1984 v . Oc1ow 4, 11. '*
Thia ttatemem WU "*' TH-318 T'H-321 wtl1' tN County Clettc of Or·
lllloe County on Septembef ----------------
14, 1984 nsMa --"_..a __ JC_fl> __ TIC_E;;.__ PlBl.IC llJTICE
Publlafled Or9n09 Coeat ~ _.....;..;;.;;,;:;;.;;..;.;;:;.:.:.;:;=--
Oihy Pll()( 8eptem1* • MAim aTATIMINT ACTI110U9 9Ull•H
21, Oetobef 4, 11, 1964 The followlng pereone.,. Tiie ~AftllDIT
TH--313 c:lolnQ buak'IMI u : dolno ~ :::eone 119 --------1 TF{AILS END STABLES, AA.SOR VITAE PRO· m-M' Ml\ftM" 20211 Ac9cla It .. Santa Ane o• ~· ...... 1 e. Or l'UIK.I .. n!UI~ H\I.. Ctlf 12704 VVf"'"9o .._ • •
-P1C--Tl110U8---.uu.---.. -r Kalhy . MCNUity M•t· ~tlorpe. Suite 103. '""" _ ..,.,.71 .. ....,... 8 .,on, Calif. tas1 ~ ITA,....,,., "--·· .. .,.. .......,. t., Edward l. Hsmon 21412 ·~ !*'ion It a.nt•AMHts.,Cellf.92704 CMllno Tretlol a' Toro buelM9a: Andr•w Ma•w•ll Cellf t2e30 • •
CO !NOINUflUNO MelMwton. 20271 Aceclll Mirgle A. Jarmin 1724
CONTRACTORI, HO St.L ~ AM Htt., Ct.tlf. Altuna Lane, Hunfmotqn
Prll'M*on Or .• Colt& Mee&. t2r04 IMctl CeM t*I c.M. t:zt21 Thia buaMeaa la con-fltla' 1>U.tn... 11 oon-
Jamet Edon 1a111noer. duCted by: fluebend 9lld wtte <IUCt*I by: oo-oarcnen 290 Prlneeton ~. co.ta Kathy M. Matthewlon Mwgle jarmln ,
Mee&. C&llf. em• Thie tt.,_.,t wea flied Thie 9l&ternent ... ftled
Thll buttneee It oon-wtU! 1M County Clal'IC of Or· wtth tht County ewtt of Of·
• dUc1ed by: an lndMdual ':'9'1: County on AUCIU9t 2t, wioe Countv on 8eptembet
,,.,,.. E. 8elMngat ' -1 t, 18M Tl* a(ai.ment ... filed .. _,_ ,._.
""" (he Coumy ¢*'t of Or-Publlahed °'MOe Coast Publllhed Orenoe Coelt ~~ty °", Stpt*T\ber ~':!, ~~~~= 20, ~7~~, ... -11,.
' ,__ • TH4 10 ' '......, .. , ~ Otinge eo.t -------_T}l.at
Delly Plot Septembet 20, --------------27. Octow 4. u. 1114 __ .;....._..._ __ ..__
TH421 -~------....... ..-.--............, .:,_...;....:.._--~==:: PICTmOUa ••••11 _ _.....;,;;;.;;;.;;;...-;;,;.;.;;... __
.._ ITAW 'ICTlllOUI IUW•
PICTntoUe.Ull ... ~=:w..,. Tile~A=fT_.
U.ITAT'IWr (t)HATIONAL ctLLUl.AR dolnabutir*9•: .:::=~ant f21t'fATIONAl ClL.LULAR . 90NDED MAID IVI· .~ THM PLANT ttLEPHC*!. Ht FltcMr T(MI, INC. all2 ~
WWICI. 1I07 Pott .... =-· Coet.a ..._, e.111 ~. = ~ ~ ~e2tec> ~ a.adl, -.1or1t1 C.ltulat T.... londld Miiiet ~ aOnla l ..,..1 '1to7 Pon phOM Co~ Inc., t31 Aldw Inc., C&lllorni9, AU ~
.............. .....: ............:----..... co.ta ...... calf. put ~ ...............
-·-~· _., t2IH port cellf. NllO Ctlf. 92tl0 Tiiie llutlMM con. Thia bUtllMIN It oon· 'l'rlla bUtlntU .. con• duded by. a CiOf1K1t tlon dUCted bf. ICCl!pofll!On -' ~~L..· ~ Jaw M. &llorfl•IM, ~ ~ ~ _... ,., .... M ~I
lNa MtWMftt Wll ... TM .... .,.It wu fltd Thlt lt•*'*H W fllllllt With tne County Cllirii oe Or• ...,_ ... Counlf an of Or· -"" 1t1e c.un.y an oe Or· ~~'V on ~ = eoumy on AUpt 21, ;:ir114eountr °" leptaMW ,_,. ..... ,_
~ Ofantt CO.. l'utllWd ~ C01M flubllf*1 Orlfl09 OOllt
I Dtolfr.Pltot OcMbet 41 11, 11, twy ~ ~ 17, q.llr Pll04 6-lllflMr IJ,
· l!i,~'ttM f tf $4 October 4, H. 'I 1~ Oc:tOblr 4. '1, ''· 11M
•
i
WWW
Bu in Counter:
M~ndJy·Friday
·00 A.M.-5:00 P.M.
DEADLINE~
· Pl'Rl.IC TION
Monday
Tue&aay
Wedneiday
Thur~ay
-Friday
Saturday
Sunday
·Fri.
Mon.
Tu ea.
Wed.
Thurs.
Fri.
Fri .
CA1'CELLATION &
CORRECTIO~ : •
<.anc·t·llatio!ls and rnrrt-t'tiom. ma,·
be math• on ..,anw deudlinei, Bl:! abo \~.
Plt>aitt• ask for a t·an,·ellation
number when ('811C'e1Jin~ \OUr ad.
ERRORS:
Check your> ad dail) and report
errors immediate ly. Tht> O.\IL\
PILOT a sume liability for thf' first
TncorrecflilTrfion onlv. -..
CLASS IFIED 642-5678
mlEOUFF"'1m. SUl,llO
Tucked deep into this wonderful
family location. with private
beachee is this 3 BR, 3 BA. Vaulted
ceilings, 2 fireplaces and charm
per!Onified make this a real value.
Ocean view from upper bedroom.
First time on market.
Marvelous 6 Br bayfront 18' on bay, pool
spa. 100' boat space. Xlnt Fin. $4,850,000.
Charming Spanish 3 Br, 2 Ba-on. 45' lot,
deck. courtyard, pier & slip. $1,100,000.
UJSIH lllYI UYHllt CHll
Jetty & Bay view, newly decorated Mai
Kai. 2 Br, 2 -Ba, 40' patio. Now $645,000.
PllllSIU IUl IOUlflHT
E>Zc1tmg Ocean & Jetty Vlews, 4 Br, 3 Ba.
3700 sq . fl. car parking $1.285,000.
WEil UY &ft IHFIMT
bay view Owner financmg. $1 ,050,000.
WIU IUCI llWfll
Panoramic ocean & city Vtew, spacious 5
Br. 3 Ba. Xlnt financmg. now $799.000
.; cenu PltiT mans
BILL GRUNDY . REALTOR '. ' ·. ... , ,
Traditional
llealty
631-7370
• !/!:Macnab -Irvine
THE REAL
ESTATERS
a..IUUl'llllT .. ... ,, .. 1 .
PIUlllllll Coun~b ,_....,,
THtSPRINGS
MONTERREY WOODHAVEN
-MOANING$10E Wkf1., mntNy, .tcndl
MMlllULn ,. ... n.a
(118)340-0000
(114)t 1M173
t
..
, ......
ClllTRY
EST I TE
B•rt»•&pertc-. vPrMate Patk»
•
r ; l
Friday, October S
SYDIEY
0101
ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19): You are capable now of collecting
vital infofl}'lat1on . Focus on home. Sttunty. dealings with public and
success in putting across ideas to women. Accent also on sentiment,
aspiration, romance and wishes that are transformed into realities.
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20) Populanty increases. elements of
..
•
l
1m1111111
Motor routn avabble In laitm
Beach. Must be 11 years old, have
dependable transpoftatton. E1 •
perlence he\)fd but not necessary.
District Managers
0
If }'Oii CTI~ wot tf'9 • With ~ bOyt &
91rl• ond ~ iobt ore ~• for you,
conl•de' o cor .. , 1n the new popet c1tculo·
I.on f1tld Th.. • o unique po"''°" wilt!
doily cholltnges & ,.....,ord•
Our oJ*tlno• or• 1mmtd1ote ,_pplttonls
l'llUU hove o .. oti. stot.onW09on or trucli.
•We oft tr on Hcelltnl .olory with o bonu•
pion and vo. ollowonu. We hove an
• e ctl'-'it benefit plan r+iot includ ' hotp1
1olt101ton 1n•vron<1, liberal vocation ond
ho41doy•.
Ccrnd1dote• mull hovti o del•rt to be
wcctnful o~ b. Wi11tf'9 to work hord If
yov rfl you hove the qi;ol1li<otiOM,
pt.OH opply ,,; peraon to1
the.Daily Piiat .
Mondoy thru M<Ulr 9 1 I 01'11 Of ? • pm
330 W. Bay
Costa Mes a, CA 92~'
at oppo
l ·
' ' 1
t
I • )
r .
MOTOR ROUTES
Motor routes l vailable ~
in Newport Beach & Corona d el
Mar. M u t be 18 years old and
have dependable car. Earn
600-700 per month. Call
..
-.. -~~-<.-i..~-~l ~.m,.)q :.Q!!p.-m-: ---~.--.c:.--=
642-4333
~
KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS ANO f»RIZESI
AGES 11·14
EARN lJ> TO $75.00 P£R WEEX .
t "°" ~" I!> _..., lot ~ _..,
buMrS to setatt rtadlrs lof Tiie Ofl!ICt Coast
Olily Pilot Ow CllWS start at 3 JO p 11 aod , llOf' 11111A a 30 p 111 weftdays Oii Satunlly. wt 't"°" I llw llOf t "°"'1 TOii wll um 11111'1 tnps
, and pnza. alotW "1ttl "'_,. '°" own _, ,
Ultrt ~ no cllil•tt'"I Of tolettion mwohed
If yOu Mt tnlett11ed. pleast cil Mr hrl
:: (714) 548-7058
.TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACAOH
1 Wottl.,
5Confound
10 c.tdoame
14 "tJncMr9toodl"
1tTemptr,_ ,.,..,.
17Chlme
t•lllmdown
20Glut1ed
22 NATO member
23~
24 Runs
2e Houaellt•
27 8uppoee
, ~GreNhopper
~Vlndloate
35 Ci.pecloua
310neor~
37~
SI P1ep8ecl
40Al•t -
.. 41 Unueual
'2 o.Aat•
~ Coll9ge
tr...,,. ..
45 lnV91'1_tory
47 WelP clown
41 Ol*iy yJeld
41-oumltlUN
50 !anti aiupporf•
631oot'•~
•
54Screene
51 HM(f1ng OU1
81 A tlcM
12 Aelatlw
83 MJeh'• mate
... 8plt11 letft9 e.sSoM.tnu
MNlmble
17Higti~
DOWN
1 8octy pw11
2~d
3 Well-kept
4 Taking out
5 Mu1e·1kln
&Water down
7 Clothing
8 RIY9r of Siberia
9Flnale
10 Pledge
11 Weave
12 Ax•'•kln
13()9b
19 Ovwec:t
21 VNtige
25.Exce.
21 Small bMu.
27T~
21 Gel around
2t Impart•
JO leatller type
31 -macabre
32 AilcMI n•U....
,
PREVIOUI
PUZZLE SOLVED
33 E4*rt u-.
"''No-I"
31 Wort! unit
4ll Decreed ..
·~ Bdld ~ Ewera'llln
4f. Mldi .. criap
4i"~t
•llNexttoffew
8Nnawlclc
51> Tiw...banded
7 I J
""*''"° 51 Aqi\Kat•
52 Pr.-Eutw •
pariod
53 Type(aoe abbr.
55 Entlf1
51 Ketl)a r!YW
57 Sklol> pen
59 S-.Eag6 ...
leglllatlon
eo Lay fiend• on
. •
, ·' t .,
SOUTHWEST
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
"'"' ..... 1101 Ill. 0
(0\fA Y I\& b4l (1010
-....... , ""'' -'•~ ........ ,.
714 -833-1300
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
lOt>O "4All~ f>l11D
(0\TA "'HA O .. l :>QIO
mTUllltU
1144'• 1 Tl ClllSE fig
2111'•
TO CHOOSE FROM
1-Guatd Red
1-Slat• Blue
'IO AllllC* 0-.., orig ownr, 57,000 ml. •,
111£ lclEIU'S som ·· coum IOTOIS
®
1114 lllllT
ClllDTmU
Wotbbutg Edition
411110CE..L
12351•.. ...
TC>f'$1l.~M CAl'S~-12SOO~ reGUCIOI
~ n
®
11&4 ICCI ...
41moCEL ,.
~-· tu pet mo TOP $120,. 20
CAP 112000 ""* ss 1 .. oe
®
1114 Ylllll
.,moCEl ii
S22t M • ia. °" "'° ToP S1' 626 IO
CAP $1CM!>
12000 c,t.P reductJOn
~SY4GIO
48moCEL •
S1t7• ta.o per mo
TOP S 11 040 96
CAP SH SOO
SSOO CAP •eduction
flnlOual SS~il 76
16711 Beach Blvd
Hunhngton Beach
(11,) 142-2
I THEODORE
ROBINS
I FORD
;:;,~ • .. Alt!l.Oa f.t • .)
CO'>IA ¥1~~ t••:: -.10
THEODORE
ROBtNS
FORC
]•_6: ... A.1061 Oo.•i...
CO\IA "'f~A i>-IJ ;:,010
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
20< ') HAl&Oil ll•D
COUA "'UA C> .. 2 :>010
'7t CuUua Supreme.
$3900 °" .... c..cs. Musts... ...... GNo
'11&1191\.UI
'
,,
'
...
. .;
~, -.
1 GARDEN GROVE
22 F.RWY •
22 fAWY
•
...J I G e ~ cc SANT Cl)
ANA •
HUNTINGTON
BEACH
EDINGER
..J CD og
. .,/
0 CHICK IVERSON .
Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi
441 E. least hJ., le.,.rt leHll
Ila-.. ·
Highest Quality Sales & Service
I
0 NABERS CADILLAC @
21H Ullll ILYI., CISTI IESI
(114) 140-1100 (211) 117-1211
• Bsst Prices • ConV8n/ent Location
• Great Location • Super Service
• Courteous & Knowledf!_eable Sales People
0 RAY FLADEBOE HOND
# 11 &.ft 0.lfer Ir., lnl11
In The Irvine Auto Center
830-7800
Complete Sales, Service & Lessing
G) ORANGE COAST JEEP /RENAULT ,
# l ,, ,.., '"' ,,, . ,,. 1,,, Slltl F11 I Yun
O~n~e • SALES
. •SERVICE
CD
-oa t. LEASlNG . ~ -· "';.;.~~:,.lve • ACCESSORIES DEPT
549-8023
. ,.. . -
. ---
FOUNTA1N
VALLEY
WARNER
.
0 THEODORE ROBINS
FORD
U.S.A.'s # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer
Modern Sales, Service, Parts, Body, Paint & Tire Depts.
!:ompetitive Rates On Lease & Daily Rentals
20ID laner lh•., 1"tl lesa
142-0010 ., 140-1211
0 SOUTH COUNTY
VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU
18711 Beach Blvd., Huntington S..Ch
(714) 842-2000
SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SE~VICE
Ora• Countys LtrteSt Yo1Uncen/!Sllz11 Oealet
We Wil Not Be Undecsold
PARTS DEPARTMENT OPEN SA~Y
RAY FLADEBOE
VOLKSWAGEN
#21lllteleahilr.,lnlH ,.
In The lrvlne Auto Center . 830-7300
Oraf111 Countys Ntwest Volkswagen Ou/tr
Comp/tit Salts, Strvict & LtaSlnt
m
~ G STERLING R W SAllS -S£IV1CE -"lWllC -PllTS
Overseas Delivery Specialists
'ARTI DEPAR'nENT OPOI ·
IATUROAY MORNING8
BMW ....: ROLLS ROYCE
1540 Jamboree Rd. _
N~wport Be~c~ 840-8444
..
,
. . . ,
..
LAGUNA
HILLS
, ..
. ...
.. .. ,.
·.
en ..
"f.,, -...
SAN
JUAN .
CAPISTRANO
0 CONNELL CHEVROLET 0 BAUER MOTORS
21211arhrlW.,lestaltsa
. Over 23 Years Sefvlng Orange County
Sales• Servlee •Leasing
541-1211 S,.W Plrts U.. 541-1411
MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM ~ 9:00 PM
SATURDAY 8:30 AM -8:00 PM
SUNDAY 10:00 AM -5:00 PM
. 0 STADIUM PONTIAC
we•,. New -we•,. Duling-J
Acrosa from the Bia A on Kat.,.. Just WHt
of the (57) Orange FrM••Y
Salts • Service • Parts • Body Shop on Premises
hallel• 2221 E. latella . Ill· 1111
.
G BILL YATES
YIUIW&lll --NllOll • PEllEIT
SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE
12112 , ...... .., ............ .
411-4111 lll-4IOO
A
BUICK -JAGUAR -ISUZU
Cc>ml*t• Automotive ....,.
SALE$ • SERVICE • LEASING Fine SelectJon of Qualty UMd Vetridee
I 1 BUICK DEALER IN oAANGE COUNTY
2125 HARBOR BLVD.
CO.STA MESA 179-2500
0 _RAY .FLADEBOE
u-.. __ , -'11111 lllD
#11 ......... , Ir., Int•
In The Irvine Auto Center
830-7000. .4.,. -:, .• ~ .,,.,.
G CREVIER BMW
SALES • SERYICE • LEASING
"Whertt--Profnalonal-Attlktthi PreValls"
lpeclebtng In._,,,. D•'""· Exnl••I l1l1c1lon of
.... end C8NMfJ ... , ..... u..d ..... aJwaya In •tock.
135-3171
20I W. 1•t St., Santa Ana
Comer of BroadWey & 1at St. Qoeed Sundayt
G UNIVERSITY 0 .Lr,DSMOBILE GJIM SLEMONS·IMPORTS . ... ...... ..
..
HO DA . 1J01 0111111 St. -New CM Location
1001 Oud•t. ----DMelott 2880 Harbor Blvd.
Coate Meu 540-0713
3 Bloct<a So. of 40S Fwy •
--..:~
'
classified ao .
phone 642·5678
@ World'%,=:''°" 01 l'.J::'
133-9300 \G;I
Wes • lilall& • Plrb • S... ·. Wt Sllef
~-
Forecaata on A2 .
•.
,,
Christin
files go.
to Danes
OOPENHAOEN. Denmark
(AP) -Chn tine Joricn n, of
South Lagun • fonncr U.S.
~rmy soldier who SCA change
operation in t 9S2 paved tile way for others, has donated her per·
sonal files to Denmark's Royal
Library. •
Chief Librarian Michael Cotta·
Schoenberg said Wednesday bis
· staff 1s cataloauina the pnvate
letters, documents, film,
· deo phowaraJ>h And
newspaper clippings. Material
(Pleue Me JORGEN &Pf/ A2)
THURSDA Y. OCTOBER 4. 1984
• Jack Smith, Laau,na•• .. Mr. RepabUcan," dleL 8ee.A2
Garter released
to sell park plans
coum IDITIDN .
ORANGE COUNTY CA~:FQP N I A 2CJ CENTS
.Dean tries jail ·cell sui:cide
arirllCd sept 15 ·on susp1ci0J1 of
murdcrina his former 1o1.1fe, Dona
May Dawson.. 46. ..
Mrs. Dawson.a residcntot El 'Joro.
was a nursing i.nstructar at s.dd.le-
beck College. Sbc was shot as many as
six times
Dawson w-as arrested at tbc sceac of
..
$Jim Willett will celebrate
tlls victory over Immigra-
tion officials with a
potluck party./ A4 the shoot in& by Sheriffs .Vnutil'C..~~--.CJI ·~4 ~t:• ~' . :·;·;~:~·=~:.:.;-:·:·:·~:::·:-:•:·:·:.;:-x-:•x..:-:~..:i·:
Callfomia
FBI agent suspected of
spying for Russians was
flnanclally-strapped and
sought cash and gold for
Information./ Al
Nation .
Congress sends federal
employees home as tlll
remains bare.I AB
President Reagan's
crime package passes
crucial Senate vote./ A8
·world
Car bomb at Israeli Em-
bassy causes damage
but no Injuries./ Al
Libya suspected of plant-
ing mines In Red Sea./ A8
Boating
From tops' I to bqttom,
big boats are sp6ofed In
"Yaahtlng.''.a parody
magazlne./81
Is the Orange Coast Col-
lege football team losing
the recruiting war to
Golden West?/C1
('
Sea View League powers
Corona del Mar and New-
port Harbor top water
polo opponents./C2
Entertainment
The Victorian comedy
"Charley's Aunt" Is en-
joying a brisk revival at
Saddleback College./83
.
McDonnell Douglas VP
John Sigrist will retire In
November./85
Te8.rful
owner
• views
pet sale
. Irvine menagerie ~
auction brings only .
$435 In proceeds -
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. ...., .......
Nancy EU1s, the Indiana woman
who lost custody of more than 130
cats, dogs and rabbits ln Augu~
watched teaf'fully Wednesday as
Irvine city officials began selling her
~ts. ' She was not permitted to bid on any
of her animals, which were taken
from her when the cit¥'s animal
services department concluded she
had mistreated thc'pets by jamming
them into a small motorhome which
she drove across the country.
Tbc auction, wh1ch continues
today, is being conducted to help pay
a $23,000 boarding bill for the
animals.
City offietals said nine of the 16
dogs taken from Ellis were sold
during a silent bid Wednesday at the
Irvine animal .shdlcr. The dogs. all
pure bred. brought $435.
All I 06 ofElbs' cats arc to be put on
the auction block today. The remain-
ing seven does also wiU be put up for
adoption as will the seven rabbits
found in the Indiana woman's motor
home. ,
Carl .Pa_gano1 the city's 1nimal
sef'Vices supervisor, said tbt city is
taking no joy in its task.
"But our hand is bein~ forced," he
added. noting that it isn t fair to ask
taxpayers to continue supporting the
woman's menagerie.
Ellfs apparently considered leekin&
a rcst.-.inihg order to block the action
but decided against it. a friend said
today.
"She's JUSt at a breaking pOint.''
said Susan Howe, a n Irvine woman
who bas been supporting Ellis in her
effort to ~in custody of her pets.
"I'm just mad as hell at what's
happening. It's like. a pqlice statt or
somcthina. They JUSt took Naucy's
anunals, stoic thtm really. and no°"~....,,._~~7 ..,,...__.... ..... ....-
they're sellina them off." Howe said. th (Pleue Me IRvunt/ A2) NancyEW•&IYea oneofberfonner petaan affecdonateecratch bebl!'d eean •
Elderly
units
viewed
for·Fv
Complex woul<:l be
.ta.liar-made for
B y ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of ... o.9r .... Simi
A 189-room bousrng complex for
the elderly will bt bwlt tn Fountain
Valley if the city a~vcs the plans.
Dr. Paul Johnson, a member of the
partnership planning the facility, says
the workina dnwings will be sub-
mitttd for review within the next few
weeks ashe awaits the approval of
financing that will enable construc-
tion to begin.
Construti'ion at thc!.itt -at t.ht
comer of W~ A venue and San
Mateo Street -is expected to be well
under w-ay b) early next )eat with
completJoo antJcipatcd b} August
1985. •
Tbc $7.5 m· on project. caJJed the
Carmel Retirement Village, will fea-rorc ~. three-story ~urn
housing one-bedroom suites, and a
central buiJdins housmg a common
dini_n& room. a kitchen. a library, a .
chapel. mcctiJll rooms. lounges. of-
fices and; possibly, a gift shop to be
operated by residents. Johnson says.
The state will license the board-
and<are home whicb will not Ylouse
l"CS1dents who require medical atten-
tion. •
.. Wt're tr)mg to create the image
that we're not a convalescent hospi-
tal," Johnson said. "It's goma to bt
more of a oountry ~l\lb setting v:i\b
healthy, mvolvcd pcOple.''
The rents will probably be about
Sl.000 a month which wiU inclu<k
three mnls a da) and maid senice.
.. t hkc to think n .. ,_n ht a Cadillac
fac1ht~ provided it Chcvrol~t
prices.. 'JohGson said.
Johnson, a dcnt1~ wbo practices '"
Corona del Mar. has teamed wtth
Santa Ana dt\Clopcrs Ron
tcMabon at1d Don Oliphant to build
the pro}CCt ~hict\ they ho~ ,..,lf be
(P1eUe eee BOUSIJlfG1 A2) .... ..... ____________________________ __
Dwayne, if y-0u'r<::
KAREN
KLEIN = out there, your
...t.~:ai~lllA~~~~Bou• .. rd~ .......... ...-..~~ mot b Li..-,~-CULL~~-'f-J.~L.l~llili~--!IMii~
Flasher suspect
trieS to sock his
.-...--ay ou of jail :-
C5-7
I 84 .... c.,
A10 ce
82
85
A6 • A9
81
A.3
A10,C4 ci ...
86
82
83
A2 • A•
-Woman seeking
son she hasn't
seen tn 3 years •
their father. DcHan ha<1n'1 n him Y AAVEDRA
I
I '
... . . . . . . • .. .
CoN r1N uF (1 S To RIE s
.... ------_J
OUSINGCOMPLEX FOR ELDERLY ••• "
mAl \r
, the tirst of sev('ral m the ~c tern
United States. •
.. E\lci)'thina rve read tell me that
o one is really m tinj the (hpusing)
Ctds of the ddetly," Johnson says.
·we pl n to provide the two things
the elderly need most -compa·
ion hip and &ood nutrition."
<
Don Conlraman.'a f'ouotain Val·
le) c1•y planner, ~id city oflkials are
anxioi.I to sec the proJ~t built ..
"We feel it will be a very nC\."C~sary
part of the dly," Contrnman said.
"Rif)lt now, we have very little of that
type of development."
Contraman said thr city had
previov I) run into obstacle tlndin
someone to develop tht. .. -S· cce site .
Johnson said he hOJ'C' tht foctlit)
wlllattract botti\hceldcrly now living m the Founulirr Valley area as well H
relative of local f'C)1dent~ who may
want to have' their parent~ livmg
nearby.
JORGENSEN FILES GOING TO DENMARK ••• Prom Al .
already has been selected for a public
exhibition planned in 1986.
. ..Her files are like a mirror of our
time," he said.
He said Jorgensen, 58. chose the
C,openhaRen library over such
interested U.S. research centers as the Danish doctors turned George W.
Kinsey Institute for Sex Research in Jorgensen Jr .. a former U.S. Army
Btoom1n&ton, Ind., because she felt soldier from New York City into a
the documentation of her life woman known as Christine Jor-
"belonged in Denmark." ' gen sen. She \Ater pursued a career as
Hormone treatment and suigCI)' by an entertainer.
:·IRVINE P~T AUCTION NETS $435 •••
Fn»mAl
· "She had more than S 10.000 in-
.ves(ed in these animals:· Howe
claimed. "OneAf her dogs. a chow.
she paid ~.SOO for. The dog went for
$20 yesterday." ·
Elhs. wf!o spent nearly a month on
the road with her animals. 1s facing·
cnminal charges of mistreating
animals. A jury trial 1s set for next
week in Newport Beach.
The woman's home in Indiana was
declared a health ·emergency late IMt
month. Health officials there claimed
the seven-room, ranch-style house
was filled "floor to ceiling" with
animal droppings. lllter and garbage.
CARTER TO SELL PARK PLANS ...
"l'romAl
investigators. "That's what he's going to be
concentrating on. He needs to arrange
for that to come to f ruit1on because he
wants -to pay off his crcdtors." said
attorney Ted Langer.
repaid, sa1d Fred Basom, a busi-
nessman representing a consortium
of investors.
Carter and his wife filed for
ttbankruptcy this year but now have
. .
-Continued fair Witfu clear skies
Coastal
Tides
TODAY
Second low 109p m. :u
s-.Cllllgh 1·50pm u
l'NOAY
FW•l low 143•m 0 1
Firs! high l:t3•m 4 7
Flfwt low l.47pm l'
8-tclhlgll 735 p'" 53
Sun "'9 today at 1:33 p.m, "-
Frtdayat I 50a.m •ndt11tu .. 1n111·32
p.m Moon ,_ loclll'f &I 4.20 p m • Ml• Frlell)' 11 141 a m end ,.... 10M1 11
4S3Slm ·
Tempel'atures·
,.
HI Lo
53 ...
54 "' 11 se 64 32
71 53
66 52
91 59
87 47
71 44
73 42
77 49
81 50
83 41
71 3e
SMwer
cn.wi-ton,S C fa 61 Fergo
Cll•lel1ol\.W V 10 41 Flegelaff
Clnwtotte.N C n 47 Gr11nd~
~ 12 41 OrMtFelll
Ctltce90 76 3t HerHOfd ClndnnaU • 74 41 Heliln•
~ .. 31 Honolulu
Colvmb11.S.C ,.. 43 HOU9ton
Columl>ll&.Oll 18 41 lndl"'8POll•
C-d,NH. 12 43 Jeckton,Mt
o.a.AWortll .., 15 .hlCUOflvtti.
OeytOll 73 40 ""'-Del!wr .. 61 1(-Clly
0. Moll-. 7t 47 L .. veeu·
OetrOll 72 34 OuMh 11 45
f!P-11 54
FeOblnkt .. 3$
Extended
(
Q
Before his compan.y \¥as closed by
the Securities and Exchange Com-
mission last year, Carter had arranged
to purchase 80 acres next to the
'Hacienda Casino. The ownership of
that propeny now is in dispute.
The amusement ~k, s~Jed .after
DISneyland, is to call Ruck's
Landing, the attorney said. He said
necessary permits already are being
orodcssed.
filed a lawsuit to dismiss portions of _-i11111 _________________________________________ 1--_:__· •
the bankruptcy.
Despite the criminal cha~ and
the olher complications cloudmg his
future, Caner has every intention of
going forward with the Las Vegas
plan, his anomey explained \\r;ednes-
day. •
Most of the creditors. however. are
anXJous for Caner to complete his
amusement park so that they cap be
The businessman's arrest followed
an I S~month investiP.tiOn by the
Orange County Sherift's'Dcpartment.
Caner's bail, originally set at
$500,000, was lowered to SI 00,000
on Tuesday by a municipal coun
judge.
MOTHER·SEEK11'G SON ON C9AST •••
From Al
lM last to know:· DeHan says
quietly.
"We had a happy marri<Jge for 171/1
years. I remember when we got
married he had just gotten out of the
'Marine Corps and I was a legal
secretary. We lived in Pompano
Beach (Florida) at the time and we
osed to go sit out on the beach and
drink Cokes and talk. We couldn't
• afford anytbingelse so we'dJustdrink
our Cokes and talk and talk."
· They had four children, including a
~J of twins, in four years. "They were
JUSt quadruplets, really," she says.
But after her husband worked his
-way up to be a manager in the drug
t store cnain h~ortred fur, tre1efnmd
sbc didn't bear from him again until
she tracked him down t 6 months
later. living with the former clerk and
her son in another ~tate.
After they established contact
again, he demanded visitation rights
and eventually Dwayne and his 19-
year-old sister, Dawn. went to hve
with their father.
··1 went through a horrible period at
the time John (her husband) left,"
DeHart said. "In our whole nei$Jl-
borh~that summer, 1t seemed hke
an epidemic. Everyone was get\ing a
divorce. All the kids were told not to
talk about it. Then one day at lunch,
r one kid admitted his father had left.
The next thing they Jcnew. all the kids
found out they w&e in the same
situation."
DcHart says her husband did not
pay child support or alimony and she
struggled to keeP. her family together.
When her children, all teen-agers,
were denied designer jeans and cars,
she says. they began to resent her.
"My friends told me later that the
children tend to blame the parent
that's left behind for what's hap-
pened," she said.
The bitter divorce and abandon-
ment hurt all of the children, DcHan
says, but' it may have been Dwayne
that was affected the most.
Once he went to live with his father
1n South Carolina. he was forbidden
to call or write his mother, DeHart's
daughter told her In 1982. De Hart's
.,.., ......... ., ..... .-u,en
Audrey DeBart holcla picture of her aon, Dwayne, now 20
and mlulng for the put three yeara.
·husband moved to Cahforn1a. taking She puts complete faith in him and
Dwayne and Dawn but leaving no in another psychic she <onsulted 1n
forwarding address. Baltimore. She a1so thinks she has
Last year some time. DeHart said, some psychic ability ... Some tpsy·
her husband asked Dwayqe to leave chics) are wrong and some tell you
and he complied. No one knows what you want to hear." DcHart
where he went. admits.
De Hart followed a trail of phone "But this guy really knows what it's
bills, old addresses and finally a · all about," she said.
psycbic:S hunch to Newport Beach. Hurkos claimno be able to touch
where she believes Dwayne is living. an anicle or photograph of a missing
Some of her information comes person and then know something
from a "psychometrist" Peter about the person.
Hurkos, whom she consulted at his "I showed him-a family portrait of
Studio City home in ..\uRuSt. us. taken at a wedding. But before I
even turned the photo over he knew
what 1t was all about. He told me all
about my life and childr: and it
was.all true," she said
She contacted the D · ·iot in the
hope that Dwayne will 1et bold of her.
"I sort offiiured mayJ>e the landlady
would read the paper and tell
Dwayne," she said.
In the. meantime, DcHarf hils)'ier
p1ct4re and ber hopes. 0 My psychic in
Baltimore told me I would get my
children back. one by one. And he's
been nght so far. I'm going to find
him."
Just Call
642-6086
Wbal do you lib about the Dally Pilot? What don't you like? Call the
number at left and your message will be rtcorded, transcribflt and delivered
Dally Piiot
flellYefY
I• Guaranteed
to tbe appropriate editor. .
The same 24-bour answering strvlce may be used to record letters to the
editor on any topic. ContrlbutCirs to our Lettfn column mast include their
name and telephone number for verification. No circulation calls, please.
Tell us v.hat's on your mind.
ORANGF COAST
Daily Pilai
H. L. Schwartz Ill
Publl5her
Rosemary Churchman
• Controller ·
S\ephen F. Carazo
Produc.t 1..r
ManagP.r
Donald L. William•
C1rculat1on "
Man~ 1er
Clrculatlon 714/642-4333
CIH1lfled ~v•rtl91ng 714/842-5171
All otheT d•p1rtmenh M2"4321
MAIN OFFICE
) "" ' r 1 Co111 1,1iotM C.A
MA 1 '••t ~· lf,fitl Co&•• U0P I A 1.\'62(1 \
""1'<'' ''11l3 °'l"llf' Colt\! ~ ~"' ,..,,
"''"' <I "" Al\1•11(.Wlll f!O.lD'llli -t•IPI QI 11"'9'1rw>
_,,h "'""°" ,,.,., 00 •!'(Jfroclt~~ • 1'10ul JQf!C .. I '
.. ..... ' Ql'V'i(l>ll
VOL 77, NO. 271
Laguna's Jack Sinith dies;
known as '·Mr. Republican' . -
Long-time civic actiVist~as city's
Citizen of the Year, Chamber president
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of .... .,.., Piiot • ..,,
John E ... Jack" SDllth Q.f Laguna
Beach, long active in community and
Republican organizations, died
Wednesday morning in a Laguna
Beach convalescent hospital follow-
ing a long illness. He was 78 .
Private memorial services wi,11 be
held Friday with burial at sea.
Smith, a 42-yearresident of Laguna
Beach, was the city's Citizen of the
Year in 1982. He was a three-time
president of the Laguna Beach Patri-•
ot's Day Parade and was president
emeritus of the Laguna Beach Ex-
change Club>
Smith also was active with the
Chamber of Commerce and once
served as itspresident.
Popularly known as "Mr. Re-
publican," Smith was a member of
the Republican California Central
Committee and was re-elected last
June to the Orange County Re-
publican Central Committee. He was
the founder and only president of the
California Republic:an Assemb_ly and
SUSPECT'S JAILBREAK ...
'From Al
the sock appeared to be stuffed with
·~something solid."
According to reports, Hunt backed
away and allowed the prisoner to run
out of the jail, thinking the chain link
gate to the carP<>i't was closed. Hunt
also activated the jail alarm.
Sgt. Holbrook explained the motor-
ized gate usually closes after a patrol
unit is driven into tho carpon.
However, police department pho-
tographer Jason Knox,. who was n~r
the carport, said the gate was left open
roughly three feet.
The sock-wielding' suspect was
chased and collared by at least three
officers, who handcuffed the sus~t
in front of City Hall and marched him
AMERICAN SAVtNOS A'llCI U>All "9IOGl"'i0f<
. .
back to the Jail.
The weapon was discovered to be
merely a sock stuffed with another
sock that had been soaked in water to
give it a heavy appearance, said
police. ·
Originally charged with misde-
meanor, indecent expolure, Sawyer
now faces additional felony charges
for assault with a deadly. weapon and
escaping fromjail. He was trans-
ported Wednesday to Orange County
Jail "as he coufd be a further froblem
at Costa Mesa City Jail,' police
reported.
Holbrook estimated there have
been' three or four jailbreaks -at" th~
city facility during the last 16 years.
was a lbn&time member of the
Lincoln Club of Orange. County.
Two weeks aJd. state As·
semblywoman Manan Bergeson, R-
Newport Beach, visited Smith at
South Coast Medical Center to com·
mend him on bis involvement with
the community and the Republican
party.
"He was more active than anybody
I knew," said Harry J. Lawrence, a
longtime friend and member of the
same Republican organizations as
Smith.
"Everyone enjoyed Jack. He de-
voted himself wholebeanedly. He
was reliable and consistent and stayed
with wha1ever he was working on
until it was a success," Lawrence said.
.. Since he retired, his whole life was
devoted to his community and,
through the Republican groups, to his
country."
"He was a whole lot of giving and
very little take, whether that was
monetarily, time-wise or with ideas,••
said Bill Hoff, a fellow member of the
Laguna Beach Chamber of Com-
merce and the Exchange Club.
.. I think he was probably respon-
sible for bringing in 50 percent of the
Exchange Club members and turning
it into the mostacth>e organization in
town," Hoff said.
"All these groups lie wis involved
with only made him stronger. If be
was given 10 more years, be would
have been involved with 12 more
organizafiions," he sai<J. "He was that
type of person."
Smith is survived by his wife Marlu
. of Laguna; • a dauJhter, Marlu
Abusaid Oliphant of La&una~ and
three grandsons, Tyrone Abusaid of
Laguna, John Carlos Abusaid of
Boaota,-Colombia and Juan Oliphant
ofRawaii.
.. I • \·
-
For4Ca•t• on A2
' ' (
C ri&tine
files go
to Danes
.COPENHAGEN, D nmark
(AP) -Christine Jorgensen, of
South Laguna, o form r l.1.S.
Army soldier Whose x ch
operation 1n l 952 paved the y
for othen, has donated her per-
sonal files to Denmark's :Roy l
Ubiaty:'
Chief Ubrarian Michael Cotta·
Schocnt>trs id Wednesday his
staff is cataloguina the pnvatc
letters. documents, film, ..,· • .l)h .
newspaper cfippinas. Material
(Pleue ... JORGltNSltPf/A2)
•
Carter released,
to sell park plaris .
(~
' f IRIT 11111111
THURSDAY . OCTOBER 4. 1984 ORANGE COUNTY C ALIFORNIA 7'"> CfNT<.,
Cout·
Proponents of a measure
JQU&:zllt council terms In
Fountain Valley have '
raised $1,500./ M
California .
FBI agent suspected of
spying for Russians was
financially-strapped and
sought cash and gold for
Information./ Al
Natl on
Congress sends federal
employees home as till
remains bare./ Al
President Reagan's
crime package passes
crucial Senatf vote.I Al
World
Car bomb at Israeli Em-
bassy causes damage
but no Injuries./ Al
,>-
Libya suspected of pl ant-
ing mines In Red Sea./ Al
Boating .
From tops'I to bottow.
big boats are spoofed In
"Yaahtlng," a parody
magazlne./81
.
Sports
Is the Orange Coast Col-
~e football team losing
the recru t{jig war 0
Golden y/est? /C1
Sea View League powers
Corona del Mar and New-port Harbor top water .
polo opponenta.IC2 ...
,.
Entertalnt~=t-
The Vlctorlan c y
"Cfiarley'a Aunt" Is en-"-
1oylng a brisk revival at
Saddleback College./83
e . . ·e 1nex: w1 e'S
Tearful
owner
Irvine men erie
auction brings only
$435 in proceeds
By STEVE MARBLE °' ... °"" ......... Nancy Ellis, the Indiana woman
who lost custody of more than l 30
cats, dogs and rabbits in August.
watched tearfully Wednesday as
Irvine city offic11Js began selling her
pets.
She was not permitted to bid on any
of her animals, which were taken /
from her when the city's animal
services department concluded she
had mistreated the pets by jammfoa
them into a small motorbomc which
she drove across the country.
The auction, which .continues
today, is being conducted to help pay
a $23.000 boarding bill for the
animals.
City offictals said nine of the 16
dogs taken from Ellis were sold
during a sllcnt bid Wednesday at the
Irvine animal shelter. The dogs, all
pure bred, brouaht S•US.
AU 106ofEllis'catsar.etobeputon
the auction block'today. The remain-
ina seven dogs also will be put up for
adoption as will the seven rabbits
found in the Indiana woman's motor
home.
Carl Papno, the city's animal
services supervisor, said the city is
takina no joy in ats task .
"But our hand is bei~ forced," he
added, noting that it isn t fair to ask
taxpayers to continue supponing the
woman's mcnagcnc. lill~Rntl)' considered scclUn
a restra.inma order to block the action
but decided against it, a friend said
today.
"She's. JUSt at a breakina point,"
said Susan Howe, an Irvine woman
who bas been v.ipponing Ellis in her
cfl'on to rcpin custody of her pets.
.. I'm just mad as hell at what's
· · -· e ~ e'
SUICI_
' e?
Admints~~atoo:;;.;.; ....
taken to UCI
Medical Center
By STEVE MARBLE
Ot-Dllllf ....... A cOllcge admimstrator chaqil::d •.
' with his n-wife's murder was rusbed
to the hospital early th'i.s morm..
followina what appeared to be a
suicide ancmpl at OranaC Cowiry
Jail, authorities reported •
Donald Emil Dawson, 4S. a former
policeman and an assistant dean at
Saddlcbac College at t.bC time o.fhis
arrest. was listed in stable condition
at UO Medical Caner in 0raaat
where h~ was taken at 6:30 Lm.
Sheriff's deputies did not describe
Dawson's medic:a1 condition and Siid
it would be boun before it is
~unm what ~~. An in-
vcst1ptor said at appeared DaWIOn
tried to Lake his own life but it was too
"early to confinn thnit was a suicide
ancrnpt.
· Dawson is beiO, bcld at 1hc county
jail without bail. It could not be
lcamed whether he was bci°' bcld in
a celJ with other prisoners or 1fhc bad '
been plaocd io pro~ve custody.
Ali Irvine resident. O.wson was
arrested Sept. JS on suspicion of
murdmn& bis former wife, Dona
May DaW10n;46. ' ·
Mrs. DaW$0n, a resident ofEJ Toro,
was a ours.in& instructor at SaddJc;
bade Collcac. She was shot as many as
six times and died at a nearby hospital
a short time after the sbootina.
authorities said.
Dawson was arrested at the IOCDe of
t.bc sbootiaa by Sherifrs deputies. He
reportedly told invcstipton be u.sed
two suns 1n the attack and directed
them to the weapon~ aca>rdint to
court record
oweroutage
hits airport
John Wayne Airpon's crncrscncy
senerators were switched on Wednes-
day night for about an hour durina a
iM> r ~iagc. iii.the airport·~ -
ger 1'munal.
An airport :pokcsman said the
main ettctrical circuit serv'ina tbC
airport blew out at 6:57 p.m .. blackina
. out the terminal but not the runways,
where the li&hts operate dh a separate
cireuit. . Tb~ rmciacncy generator came on
immcdiatdy ud sta)C\1 on until
...,,... ....... .....,..~ -poy,~r was ru~rcd at 8:01 p.m .. tbc
' bappenina. It's like a police state or
somethina. They just took Naucy,'s
animals. stoic them really, and now
they're sellina them off," Howe said.
(Pleue ... IRVDU/A.2)
pok n 1d. Tb were Do
Nancy Ellla •••ee on_e of Iler fonner peta an affectionate ecratch bdllnd the ean.. fl•Jhts delayed ~utc of the outaie.
Dwayne, if you're
Ol;lt there,. your
mothe~ wants you
• I '
KAREi ,,
KLEIN
Nrw sMAKERS
Fla~~er _ suspect
tries to sock his
J
Morning, evenlng
louds foglv
. way to sunshine
, -... CoNT INUEU SroR1 cs
Gray will hrouJ uthcm
C lifomaa late tont&)\t and i ft the c.arl)
momin hours rmJa). h t th~ Ill·
mospherc Ytill lighten an the
ancmoon .
Los A •ties wall h VJ! h h be-
tween 76 and 80, while the atfe> •
warm up to 83. the National Weather
Scf\·ice said.
Lo"'s.toniaht wall be 58 IQ..(,) 1n Lo
r. ------
JORGENSEN FILES •••
PromAl . ""-~----~.,._._.,_.,,,_,,.,._.,....--:,.......,..~-...;..·_,,.,=--••
already has been selected for a pub 1c mtcrcste<f U.S. rcscarch centers a the
exhibition planned in 1986. Kinsey lnstttute for Sex Research in
"Her fil arc likc'a mirror of our Bloomington. Ind .. becau5e he ~ll \l e," be id. · the documentation of her life
He said Jorgensen, 58. chose the "belonged in"Denmark."
Copcnha en library over such 1iormone treatment and suracr) by
IRVINE PET AUCTION ...
homAl
"'\
.. She had more than $I 0.000 in-
. csted tn these animals.'' Howe
claimed. "One of her dogs. a chow,
s'he paid $500 for. The dog went for s10 yesterday." •
Eiits. who spent nearl) a month on
the rood with her animals, 1s facing
cnmmaJ charaes of mistreating
animals. A Jury tnal is set for next
week an Newport Beach.
•
Danish doctors turned Georae • • Jorgen~n Jr., a former U.S. Arm)
oldier from New York Ctty into a
woman known as Chnstine Jor-
gensen. She later pursued a career as
an entertainer.
The ""oman's home in Indiana was
declared a health emergency late last
month. Health officials there claimed
the seven-room, ranch-style house
was filled "floor to ce1hng" with
animal droppings, htter and garbage .
CARTER TO SELL PARK PLANS •••
'PntmAl
in vcstip tors.
n..' Before has company was closed by
me Securities and Exchange Com-
dtission last year, Carter had arranged
to purchase 80 acres next to the
Hacienda Casmo The ownersl!!P_ of ~ ~t property now 1s In dispute. ·
Desp1te the cnmrnaJ characs and
the other complications cloudLOg bis
future, Carter has every intention of
.. goi..ng forward with the Las Yeps
plan, hisattomey explained Wednes-
day.
"That's what he's going. to be
concentrating on. He needs to arrange
for that to come to fruiuon because he
wants to pay off his credtors ... said
attorney Ted Langer
The amusement park. !>l~led after
Disney la no. Is to oe cama ttucn
Landing, the attorne) said He ~·d
necessary permits already are being
processed.
Most of the creditors. ho""e\er. are
anxious for Carter to complete has
amusement park so that they can be
repaid, said Fred Basom, a busJ>.
nessman representing a consortium
of investors.
Carter and his w1fe0 filed for
bankruptcy this year but now have
filed a lawsuit to dismiss portions of m.. .
The businc!ssman's arrest followed
an 18-month investigation by \he
Orange County Shentrs Department.
Carter's bail, originally set at
$500,000, was lowered to SI 00,000
on Tuesday by a municipal court
judge.
MOTHER SEEKING SON ON COAST ••• -
Prom Al
the last to know." DeHart says
quietly
"We had a happy marriage for I 71h,
years. I remember when we got
mamed he had Just gotten out ofihe
'Manne Corps and I wis a lepl
!ecrctary. We laved an Pompano
'Beach (Florida) at the tame and we
used to go sit out on the beach and
drink Cokes and talk.. We couldn't
afford anythmgelsc so we'dJust dnnJc
our Cokes and tal'k"and talk.."
. They had four children, including a
set of twins. an four years "They were
JUSt quadruplets, really.'' she says.
But after her husband worked has
way up to be a manager 1n the drug
store chain he worked for. he left and
sbe didn't hear from him again until
she tracked him down 16 months
later. hvmg w1th the former clerk and
-' her son in another stale
After they established contact
again. he demanded v1s11a11on nghts
and eventual!~ Dwayne and his 19·
year-old sister, Dawn. v.ent to live
with their father
"I went through a horrible period at
the time John (her husband) left."
DeHart said. "In our whole ne1Jh·
borhood that summer, at seemed hke
an epidemic. Everyone was getting a
divorce. All the k.1ds were told not to
tallc about 1t Then one day at lunch,
one kid admitted has father had left.
The next thing they knew. all the kids
found out they were in the same
s11uat1on."
DeHart sa)s her husband dad not
pay child support or alimony and she
struuled to keep her family together.
When her children. all teen-agers,
were denied designer Jeans and cars,
she says, they began to resent her.
"My fnends told me later that the
chaldrcn'\ltend 10 blame the parent
that's left behtnd for whafs hap-
pened." she said
The bitter di vorce and abandon-
ment hurt all of the· children. De Hart
says, but 1t may have been Dwayne
that was affected the most
Once he went to live with his father
in South Carolina. he was forbidden
to call or wnte his mother, DeHart's
daughter told her In l 982. DeHart's
husband moved to C ahforn1a. taking
Dwayne and Dawn bllt leaving no
forwarding address.
Last year some 11me. DeHart said.
her husband asked Dwayne 10 leave
and he complied No one knows
where he went
DeHart followed a trail of phone
balls. old addresses and finally a
.• psychac·s hunch to Newport Beach.
where she believes Dwayne 1s hvmg
• Some of her information comes
. from a .. psychometn st" Peter
Hurkos. whom ~hr consulted at his
Studio C'1ty home in Au~ust
.,.. ..
<
Just Call
642-6086
o.., .... pNIAtbf Mowetd.......,
Audrey DeHart bolda picture of her .on, Dwayne, now 20
and.mlulng for the pa•t three year•.
%e !Wts complete fa1t~ 1n him and
in another psychic she consulted m
8alt1mor' She also thinks she has
some psychi c ability "Some (psy-
chics) are wrong and some tell you
what you want to hear," DeHart
admits.
"But this gu) reall) knows what it's
·au about:· she said
Hurkos claims 10 he able 10 touch
an article or photograph of a ma sang
person and then knov. somethmg
about the person
"J showed him a fam1I) portrait of
u'i. takfn at a weddtntt But before I
even turned the photo o .. er he knew
wha\ at was all aboU.L lie told me all
about my hfe and my children and It
was all true." she said.
She contacted the Datly Pilot 1n the
hope that Dwayne will get hold of her.
"1 sort offigurcd maybe the landlady
Y ould read the paper and tell
Qwaync," she sajd.
In the meantime, DeHart has her
picture and her hopes. .. My psychic in
Baltimore told me I would act my
children back. on y one. And he's
been right so far. ·m going lo find him ..
Wba t do you like about the Dally Piiot? What don't you like? Call the
number at left and your message wUI be recorded, transcribed and dellvued
to the appropriate editor
The same U-hour answering service may be used lo record leuu1 to the
editor on any topic. Contributors to our Letters col1m1 must Include their
name and telt phont numbtr for verlftoatlon. No clrcaJalloo ca Us, please
Tell us what's on your mind.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
Clrcut1tlon 7141'42"'4333
Cl1t11fa.d ldvertltlng 714/M2·5t71
All other ct.p1r:trnent1 142"'321
MAIN OFFICE
H. L. Schwart% Ill
Publ1st er
RoHmary Churchmen
C r 'r • r
Donald L. Wllllem•
< '' 111on MRn
l
.. ,,
" • -
J \ • I .. I.
r-'
Continued fair with elear skies
Co atal
Tides
,.., . .,
IQ am .. ,,.,., 0 I 4 7
t0plft
7.SSPI'!\
2 I Clwlllton.S C
SJ ~.W V
.,,. MU lodlr .S f 33 Pm • ,.._
Fnci.y 11 t 00 I m Md -llOI"' II t 32
p Ill ' MO<WI r-loO•r at 4 20 P m,, ee!t
Friday 111 1 .a • m Md •-<llQWI 11 4'&3pm
ClwtoU9"HC ~ QnQrlNU ~ Columbla.S.C ~-°" ConcQrO,N H
Oallaa-fl Wor1h
Dllylon Temperatures g:--Moinff
HI S3
M 71
s-4
78 ae 81
87
78
73
77 .,
• 63
71
Lo Oel•Olt .. ~:,
;: F lltbllnkl
32
S3
62 59 47
44
42 49
60 41
3t
Extended
73 10 u
II 11 ,. ..
7t
• 7S '2
la.I
1-3
2·3
2-3
f
2-3
1-2
2-3 a.... dlflCtlOft: IOUU!weSI
Laguna's Jack Smith dies;
known as 'Mr_. Republiccin'
~ " . By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of the Delly Nol ti.ti
John E. "Jack" Smith of Laguna ·
Beach, Iona ac11vc m community and
Republican orga01zat1ons. died
Wednesday morning in a Laguna
Beach convalescent ho~p1tal follow-
ing a long illness He was 78.
Pnvate mcmonal sen. ices will be
held Fnday wtth bunal at sea.
Smith. a 42-year resident of Laguna
Beach. was the c11y's Citi1en of the
Year an 1982. He was a three-lime
president of the Laguna Beach Patn-
,'CONTINUED STORIES L~~~~-~-~
--
ot's 'bay Parade and was president
emeritus of the Laguna Beach Ex-
change Club.
Smnh also was active with the
Chamber of Commerce and once
served as itspresident.
Popularly known as "Mr. Re-
publican," Smith was a member of
the Repubhcan California Central
Committee and was re-elected last
June to the Orange County Re-
publican Central Committee. He was
the founder and only president of the
(ahfornia Repubhcan Assembly and
... ( ~lt•.:-
was a lonJtime member 'of the
Lincoln Club of Orange County.
Two weeks 8JO. state As·
semblywoman Manan Bergeson, R-
Newport Beach, visited Smith at
South Coast Medical Center to com-
mend him on his involvement with
the community and the Republican
party. ""\
"He was more active than ao'ybody
I knew," said Harry J. Lawrence, a
longtime friend and member of the
same Republican organizations as
Sm 1th
"Everyone enjoyed Jack. He de-
voted himself wholeheartedly. He
was reliable and consistent and stayed
wtth whatever he was working on
un11l 11 was a success," Lawrence said. ··since he retired, his whole life was
devoted to his community and,
through the Republican groups, to his
country.··
SUSPECT'SJAILBREAK ... "He was a whole lot of giving and
very little take, whether that was
monetanly. time-wise or with ideas,"
said Bill Hoff, a fellow member of the
Laguna Beach Chamber of Com-
merce and the Exchange Club.
From Al
the !tock appeared to be stuffed with
"something sohd ...
According to reports, Hunt backed
away and allowed the pnsoner to run
out of the jatl, thinking the chain hnk
gate to the carport was closed. Hunt
also actJvated the Jail alarm.
Sgt. Holbrook explained the motor-
ized" gate usuall) closes after a patrol
unit 1s dnven 1010 the carport.
However. police dcpanment pho-
tographer Jason Knox. who was near
the carport, said the gate was left open
roughly three feet.
The sock-wielding suspect was
chased and collared by at least three
officers who handcuffed the suspect
in froot.ofCity Hall and marched him
AMERICAN SAVIN
TIO!!!
(
back to the Jail.
The wtapon wa!t discovered to be
merely a sock stuffed with another
sock that had been soaked an water to
give 1t 1 heavy appearance, said
police.
Origmally charged with misde-
meanor. indecent exposure, Sawyer
now faces addtttonal felony charges
for assaultr.wllh a deadly weapon and
escaping fromJail. He was trans-
ported Wednesday to Orange County·
Jail "as he could be a further problem
at Costa Mesa City Jail." pohce
reported.
Holbrook estimated there have
been three or four Jailbreaks at the
city facility during the last 16 yean.
"I think he was probably rcspOn-
s1blc for bringmg in 50 percent of the
Exchange Club members and turning
it into the most active organization in
town," Hoff said.
"All these groups he was involved
with only made him stronger. lf he
was given 10 more years, he woutd
have been involved-with 12 more
organtzations," he said. "He was that
type of person."
Smith issurvived by his wife Marlu
of Laguna; a daughter, Marlu
Abusaad Ohphant of Laguna; and
three grandsons, TyroQe Abusaid of
Laguna, John Carlos Abusaid of
Bo&ota, Colombia and Juan Oliphant
of&waai.
l
...