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1984-10-08 - Orange Coast Pilot
,_ Foreca1t• 1:•1111111 - ~~ONDA ( <,<; T<;B I R H 1984 --0 R AN G E c 0 u NT y c A L 1 F 0 R NI A ) . ' ~ .... Spill closes area freeway 1·ane crash ki ls pi flight pla~ nd that h1 (l unauon s the twuwngmc 0 planc n td o lO cwPon Beach ooh~ Mid Cher A portion of the Garden Grove Freewaywaaclosed for more than two hours this morning when a truck drop. ped 30 pounds of a powdery .. texture coating that re- duced vlslblllty on the high- way to less than five feet, the Callfornla Highway P.atrol reported. Officers closed off the freeway between Golden West and Valley View streets at 4:53 a.m. because of the cloud of white pow- der. The powder was Ident- ified as Pure-Tex, a celling texture coating material that la non-toxic. A CHP. apokesman said the freeway was closed until 7 a.m. while CalTrans workers swept the powder off the freeway. T raffle was rerouted through Stanton closure. The truck that dropped the pa~I containing the powde Id not stop, of- ficers ted .• Coast ·. · Fountatn-valteyts explor- ing the posslblllty of bulld- lng a new library./ A3 Coast residents give • mixed reviews to Monday night football without Howard Cosell./ A3 ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·!·!·!·!·!·!,,!·!•:-< . Callfornia ·Marines and sailors are Ignoring Tijuana 'off !Units' order .I A5 Madon F · Challenger c mer a takes aim on Earth s subsurface./ AS World Witness say~ atrcratt spun in atr . then pancaked into office near JW A By STEVE MARBLE Of ............. A Santa Ana man " s killed Sunday evenina shortly after Ulkmg off from fohn Wa~ Airport when his twin-cnajne plane crashcd-Jnto a suit~ of offices in Newport Beach and ianited a roarina blaze that caused a mm1mum of Sl00.000 in dam uthorilies reJ>()f'ted today. The pilot. the only s>n10n flying in the Bcechcrafl Bar9n. was identified as'Cloyd Houston KJingrnsmith, ~. A deputy coroner $Aid the pilot was killed on impal1. A spokesman .at ·John Wayne Airport said Khngen m1th d1<t not file was unknown. one de. eun several hm an mitlatr \\'Cfe lOld that the kft propeller of me Witn to 1he 6 p.m. p ane era h and lhcn pancaked" into an office ircraft nued from rbe eaca• ad n ppeared one of the engan on budding at 4200 Campu on~-e. ftcr u"kcotr. ()ranee Oowny fire. lhe mall airpla blew apan_JUSl 1uoh is occupied by Jacado Agricul· fi'1!tcrs id lhe runwa} -as liuered minutes a er the craft hfied off the ture. with cnsane plttS dlat ,apperendy ninway at John Wa)·ne A1tp0n. About half of the office ulld1ng. broke loose from lbe disabled craft. - "He aot up bout 300 feet and I directly across the. street from a The crash 1s bcina 1nvt'ltipted by could see the 9ne engine w mok-county fire union. was demob Md. the auonal TramponatJOn fety ang." id Peter F:an~i, 26, a ... heard at hia and w moke." Board and me Federal AVJabOll pnvate pilot rho'd landed his own exptaiMd Finocch1. "'8) the ttmc I dmmlSlration. Both aamc!CI. bow- planc ju t minutes before w11ncsstn1 ran over. there re tblmt$ coma e~'tr. ettdosed today farCohunbU& the era h. out of ahc "indow • i1 s pr~tty Oa . Finocdli id he tchcd in horror hot.'' .Coast mayors cite oil ' By DAVID BISHOP Dlllf""C.-t a The en"';ronmcnt.al ri of d.rillina · foroilaodpsoffthciOUtbem~ County roastline .. dearly out · s the m1n1scule nauonal benefi190 t would mull. says a Jetter sent bY three Oranac Coast may.on ioday to lhe'hcadsofsix major oil compan' The mayors of Nev.1>0f1 Beach.. Laguna Beach and San Clemente ur:sat the oil ooml)9nics to refrain from biddina on .. en~·ironmcnWJy smsithre .. tnets ~ccn the ooaSl nd n Oemcnk ISiand, 26 miles offsho~. • 011 company bids ror 1he rilht to C1ploic !or od arid natural gas tn eKh - ofttie tracts Will beopcricd-Oa::l1in the Los Angdes Con,-cntion Center as part of :the Interior Ocpa{\ment's proposed Lease le 0. 80.1', ~~ '"* .. ... ~ Cft1a ... -·· • Cr} tal Co tiie Park: on fog)' coastal bluffs between I..;aguu BCacb nd Corona deJ Mar, to dra.mauz.e the let~-igniog $e$$ioo. Forty more East German soldiers hide out In Em- bassy./ A4 -....................... ...... l'laillea leap from roof u flrefllbten battle blue aparked by cl'Uh of aticraft near Jobn Wayne Airport 8aDday. ••Jt'• the first time it's e\iet' been dooe," said l..q\1Da ~h Coua- olman Robert Gentry. oae of the pnmary ot11nizen of the ombore oil opposition movement ''"We have nevermadedirectcoow:t~'itb theoi1 companies about our coDCems (PJ.eue 9ee llA TORS/ A2) An American U-2 spy jet crashes In South Korea, Injuring the pllot./ A4 Feature Support from Orange County for the Weizmann Institute of Science In Israel Is about to be recognlzed./81 Peter Max -~poster king of the '60s -was In Newport Beach showing how he's Involved with video art of the '80s./81 Sporta San Diego pulled It out to become the Nation al League's representative In the World Sertes./C1 The Rams got caught at the last second by Atlanta field goal kicker Mick LUCkhurst and, lost, 30-28./C1 County leaders praise Mondale By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of .. ...., ........ om-. County's Democratic nd Rcpubhcan pany chiefs ~ tc~y that fonncr Vice President W1l.lter Mondale performed wtll in Sunday's debate with PrnideatRonald Rct pn but disqrecd on whether it w1ll help the Democratic chalJcngc(s u hall campaign. U>is lundbc!J. who chairs the county .. s Repubhcan Party, said She does not believe Reapn pol'UTI Will change their minds because of Mon<taJe's warnings Sunda)' a\)out the huac federal defic1t. Brace 811JDDer Wahington watcher an9'yzel the debate on A4. But formC'f Supenor Court Judac Bruce umner. chairman of the e>ranse County Dcmocratrt' Part>. said the debate P'c voters an utended forum to cornpatt the candidates and lhaM.he event .-ve a Walter Payton of the Chi- cago Bears became the NFL •a all-time leading rusher, breaking Jim Brown's record./C3 ·Mesa '·Superblock' -=---::_,tenants say plan's c!: not all that 'super' C1 , . - C4 81·2 Cl 82 A4 A8 81 c. C1'"'4 86 83 A2 82 A.a 'Displacement is a fact of ltf e ... Bu boo t to Mondale's campaiin. Pre-cltttion polls have shown Mondale to be runnina ignificantl) behind Re n in the presidential race. • ··1 pmonall~ felt Ronald Reapn was \iCr) good.' Lundbcra saad. • But bradded thattbc dt le "p~e Mondalt 1 potli&ht he's ne\C'f had befo~. I thin~ (debatan&) the PttS•· (Pleue ... cotm:t:! I A.2) TONY SAAVEDRA - ----- Focus ON THE Nnv s . --~---=--=-=~ .-r=-c•~- 200 airport foes raise $9,000 · · ·at Newport r&lly - Santa J).na Heights annex signatures ___ ___.._....__ -~t_by Oct_. 3_1 __ By ROBERT HYNDMAN Of .. ....,,... .... A Newpon Beach group oppo~n expansion of John Wa)ne A1rpon ratStd $9,000 al a Sunda) rail) to h Ip suppOrt 1lS fight. Jean Watt. president of top l>Ollut- in& Our Newport. 1d ahout 200 supporters attended the• p.m . fund- raaser at Mariner·s Park in '"-:port Beach. • With tickets ~lhQ& for StO each. tho attending Y.ett treated to food.entertainment and pettbcs b) state R~=n rntil)~-oman MaruiD n. 'ewpon h Ctry Councilwomen Jadae He.athcr. Ruthcl\ n Plummer and Ma or Evelyn Hart and lonattme airport foe Vin Jorsenscn. bout$8.000oftbetotal rai colltttcd bcfe>tt the event wilb man of the upporten not in attendance, accordtna to WatL A fund.raising drawing was also held with the prizes donated, Watt said. In add1uon to the funds ra19Cd, Watt said lhe rally provided an opportunity to collect 5ipaturcs on 1 pett\Jon askina that 'ev.-1>0n a.cb annex the unincorporated communa· t\ of nta na H~ts. • PO, • h pponed unc ti tbc communH) that hes \IDdCT J Wa)nc rport's fli&ht path othtts have been undecided in t tbc idea. Watt said. ... n l. WC pla~ I softball JA!!te with the ·~'POn ~ C>C'Ol)lc. apin t ta Ana Heights and •after • 1"< ionmi it .. tae<l .. Watt said. (Pleue 1ee AlllPOJlT / A2) Woinan arrested ·n drug burglary at Mesa hospital • , - T o p opl kill d In outh County highway accl(t nt COUNTY:LEADERS LAUD MONDALE ••• Al dent ve him a lot ot 'onfidc:nce and 'C'Cm 1s the: deficit. l don't think the dcbale will have much impact on the enthusiasm. Hc:couldn'tiodo~nany Amcncan people arc oing to make clecuon bccau5e it focused on com· fun~r-he could O!'l) 10 up.1 think their (voling) decision on th deficit.•• plex as u that the averqe voter has Mond le did "CTY v.cll, be1ter th.Jn 1 Of Rt~n·s pcrformanC"C. umncr d111iculty understandin&. thought he v.ould ... said." He a marvelous ct or .... (But) .. lfthe el«t1on is s<>ina to be won or But Lundberg nolt'd that "R,.onald hewasn'tabletomakelh tusualslick lost with minorities women and R n bas tb re1pon 1b1hty of presentation becau~ he didn't ha"e blue-collar workers. tht'y didn't talk running thi: country. Mondale ju t sen pt 1n front of him."' to these people at all," she said. ha1 to be ~n on TV (to help his Lundbera saKi h r Jonptanding Regarding advice .for t~ can- mpa1gn}... admiration for Re gan wasn't altered di<hte before the next oebatc: Sumnc1 agreC'<l that the exposure by Sunday's debate, Padbera said she would Ul'Je Mondale during the deb te wa'> ~mething .. 1 was proud of him," she ~id. to be "more auressive and M~~da~t need~. .. • .. The dch.itc was atso watched ~~e1lca~la8te11_'t'talen~ would tell Reagan to I m JU l thnllcd. Sumner said I closd> by Orange. Count) politic•l thank we'vt finallv eot th~ 1 ue~ an • consultants . Another Orange County political fOC'us. I lhlnk Vice !>resident Mondale Eilttn Padbera. • a partner in comultan1. Fred Droz. Utd he believe did a tremendous JOb. I think hr was Nelson· Padberg ConsultinJ. said Mondale v.-as the ckar winner in reasonable and ~ind (to Reaaan> -bosh candidatts had problems in unday'sdebate,gi,insh1scampa1gn lmost too ktnd. . Sunday's debate. "a ltulc spark. so that 1t puts us back The Dcmocra11c. pany chief ~1d "Reagan looked \lery ill·at..ease," in the race." the extended ~uonal forum .. for said Padberg. who~ firm has worked Oroz. who is working for the Monda~e was important becau~ the extensively for Republican can-Mondale-Ferraro campaign, said Re-~epu~hcans have don~. a &ood JOb of d1date$. "f thank it was because he wa~ apn came across as "stumblma and 11nonn~ the c.l_u?Jlenge. concentrating very hard on not doina hcsistant," adding.. "I don't ahmk he He ~ ded.. ! II a.ive Reagan credu any ad-fibs or 101ng on too long about had a pasp of the issue " for be1~, walling to come (to the a particular i ue. l don't think d(bate). . . (Mondale) looked Jf'Cat. but he look· Wh1Je the deb3te may not change . Sumner said he w1s~~ Mondale ed and sounded bell« than Reagan." the minds of those whostronJ!y favor had pursued the deficit issue even • Mondale or Reagan, Droz wd it may more aarcssively. But she said Mondale missed many ' affect undecided voters and contibute Lundberg. however. said Mondale opponunities ti:Upccify the issues on to a "snowballing" &rowth in suppon spent too much time hammering which he differs with the president. for Mondale. - Hazy sunshine ahead for Coast Temps .. Le II SI 72 so 11 Q 45 40 72 ... .. ~ 71 ., .. 75 .. 17 53 7t 57 .. ... .. so 10 31 74 94 72 IO 71 " M M ts ., TOOA\' 3 17 P"' I 11 pm 1VHDAY 32'1m t34•"' !i 41pm 949pm 10 5 1 SID 2-4 1·3 1·3 1·3 1-3 1.2 14" .... dlrectoon _,!!Wiit .,.._CTIOM '"' ,.,, ,.., lllr , .. ,., away on the deficit. which she said 1s She said Mondale went overboard in Althou the1>0Us show Mondale i»oc on which even -rt:onomists being nlfr'=:;;tO~R&c~a~ga.;..,..n:.:, ...:;pen;r:t.:filr.ps~-.,be~:::::, :.:r..=.::..J~o=z=-::!o:O::o~r.::;;....,;..:-::::1s~1;;::s~a__._~ cannot agree. because he believed a personal attack presidential campaign. You have to C oNT!NU~D SroR1Es ------ She added, .. I don't thank the could backfire. !;mn.~!1'ber that anything can hap.. -COSTA MESA. 'SUPERBLOCK' • • • Amencan public's number one con-Padberg said she doubted the _ - MAYORS OPPOSE DRILLING ••• Prom Al before.·· ...The lcner~ by Ma>~n Kenne> of Laguna Beach Kenneth Carr of Sao Oementc and Evelyn Han of Newpon Beach. said the 011 companies are bean& asked not to bid on the tracts for "protection of the pristine sand~bc&ChC$ ... prescrvauon of the natural scemc vistas which arc enjo)ed by millions of visitors each )eat ... (and) safeguardina the marine nabitat which deperids on tl\c rocky Jntcrcoas~e1 &he south Orange County coastline. "The nsk.s of oil exploration near our shores clearly outweighs the minisculc national benefit that might result from successful oil develop. ment in this limited regi.on," the leuu said. The letter also says the economy of La&una Beach 1s ''totally dependent" on tounsm and that the other two cities ~c "invested beavi ly" in SCf'\ting visitors to the coast. When the Lease Sale 80 bids are o~ed Oct. 17, Gentry will join a coalition of offshore opponents in· cludinc Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley an a final, face-to-face appeal to the oil companies for cooperation. "I think we're g0111J to get some action," Gentry predicted, "the oil comparuC$ will take noucc:: AIRPORT F OES RALLY ... Newpon Beach's Han was Jess opt1m1stic, but said, "you never know unttl you try ... the otl companies have a stake an this too. they want to bC good neighbor\." Flom Al -we decided 11 was typical that the two of us would still be tied with all the talk that has gone on about the anneution ... The group ho that by the end of the month, the necessar) 4.300 \1gna· tu~ wtll be collected to require the N~pon Beach C11~ Council 10 ask the county Local Agency Formation Commt5s1on to consider the annexa- tion proposal. SPON members believe that an- nexing tht' noise-sen itive Santa Ana Heaahts wiU help Newpon fight airpon expansion. H OSPITAL DRUG~RREST •.• From Al burglary. possession of a controlled substance and possession of para- phernalia from the Costa Mesa 1nc1- dent. In both burglaries at the Fo~nta1n Vallt'y hospital, the mobile trays. which are wheeled from room to room. were apparently left an the hallwa) wh1k nu~ tended to pa- tients The trays were apparently wheeled by the 1h1efto a ~eluded area and then pned open On Saturda~ police were called around 4.30 p. m. to Costa Mesa Medteal Center Hosp1tal 1A.here nurs- es and staff had subdued Tracy, v.:ho rcponedl) became ' 1oknt after being caught with S385 wonh ol hospital narcotics Police reponed the woman wheel- ed a locked can into the nurses' lounge and pned it open by using a screwdriver She apparentJy cut her hand while breakina uno the tray. Two nurse!> became ~usp1Clous when tht'y ~w Tracy's bloodied hand. They also found bloody towels near the burglanzed tray. police said. The vials from ( osta Mesa Medical Center contained up to I 00 m1hgrams of morphine and Demerol. the strongest dose of the drugs given only to patients who are in extreme pain: said a hospital spokeswoman. F IER Y CRASH NEAR J W A .•. From Al Jamc'> ( rowlc). u ll'nilit·d puhhc atcountant \aid hl "'•l' ~ori..ing 1n his otlicc IA. hen the pl;.inl' l r.1'>ht·d 1 nto the building. The In ant· rC''>1dcnt \aid his office 1s at the rear o l thC' Ja<:ado build mg. .. , wa., talking hn tht' tl'kphonc and working on my rnmputcr whl"n I felt tht' building shake:· ~1d < rowk). 41. "I remember thinking. ·1wooder1f a plane crashed ''' But I didn't hear an> sarcm so I figured 1t rnuldn't he too bad · ( rowle\ \31d he worked at h1" desk for another 15 m1nult"'i l'>clort· hcanng tht' 4i0und of brtak1ng gla,., "'I thought 11 IA.a'i a burglar.~ one ll)ing lo hrcak an." the accol(fl- tant ..aid. "I walked out there and It ~as a fireman I'm sure he was as surpn\ed to \CC: me and I wu to see him "I wa~a hltlcconcemed when I saw what had happened," wd Crowley. who feared hundreds of tax files would go up an flames . He said his office wa~ left intact. Orange County and Newpon Beach fircfi&)lters \pent nearly 30 m1nu1c:i bca11na back t~ flam.es. Dama.JC to the building was initially ' pu(ai S300.000 but county fire Capt, The companies betng add res~ arc Atlantic Richfield, Standard Oil of California, Gulf. Shell, Union and Euon. All have expressed interest an several tracu that are just outside an area currently being protCcted by a federally-imposed moratorium on . eners> exploration, approximately 16 miles off the coast. Tht' woman also allegedly took four synnges from the can. Costa Mesa police wd Tracy appeared to be sufferina withdrawal symptoms from drug addiction and became violent and uncooperative when approached by the hospital staff. She was subdued, however, by the workers. said nursing supervtsor Manlyn Treece. Minna said he sus{>Ccted !hat much of the stolen narcotics was intended for street sale to heroin users. "Even 1f 1t was for personal use, (the bur&lar) would more than likely sell a substantial amount. Morphine 1s what heroin brcaJc.s down to in the bloodstream." he said. Mark Reinhold said the figure does nol include the contents of the offices. The building contains offices for the avicultural finn. Crowley's IC· counung offices and an investment firm , Crowley ~id an officer of the investment firm had· planned on working Sunday evening but dad not \how up. "Yeah. he's lucky," the accountant \aid. "1 lookect in his office and the onl¥ thing stand1na were some file cabinet!. Everr.'hina elst was leveled to lhe around .• Just Call 642-6086 What do you like aboul lDt Oaily Pilot? Wbat don't you Ukt? Call &bt number a& Ith and your mtHllt will bt record~. transcribed and dtUvered to tbt appropriate editor. Tbt 11mt U 0bour aD1wtrlna lfl"'let may be t.t d to rtcord lttl•rt to Utt editor oo 111y top c. Contrlbotore to ou utwra column mas& ID htdt t Ir umt ud t 11 b 1t 11mbtr for veriflcallH. ·• elrculatJ call , pl au. D•l_ly Piiot Delivery 11 Ouarentffd r Te II u .wbaC. OD 4-ut m..ln.d. ORAf4G COAST Daily Pilat H. L. SchwartJ Ill Pubh h r Ro.emary Churchman Conrrof r St ph n F. Carazo Proauc11on Manag r Donald L. Wllll1m1 Circulatron Mon g r Circulation 714/142...caiJ Clettlfled aclv•rtftlng 1141M2·5f11 Alt othef depllttm•t• M2-4J21 MAIN OFFICE 330 ·~~ ft From A l elploring the economics of re-large. landscaped parking lot on the developing the remaining property. other side at tM comer of Harbor "We have to see what pencils out at Boulevard. . . the bottom line .. said Pat David, Maxson and other tenants bcheve • comm unit>· dC~elopment coordi-the parking area should tfC plJ:cc<S nator. The repon is due Nav. 7. -between their-1tores and the new Whatever happens, tenants. land· owners, redevelopment officials, real estate executives and the ma>101'aaree that someone i.s going to be unhappy. "'No matter what we do on this on~. we're gonna' be wrong;" said Mayor Donn Hall. "Everyone has selfish motive.s. Nobody's a bad guy. It's just a matter of who 1s going to win ... said Mu son. owner of Omar's custom framing. Maxson 1s philosophical about possibly movina. TRe cny would pay the relocation cost and he could end up renttnl a· nicer. though mo~ expensive. suite in the new Counyards. "'Displacement is a fact of hfe." he reasoned. "We could all cry tears about it. but that's ju~t what ha~ pen5... "" - Maxson. however. 1s not so sure about stayina. He explained tl\at the developer. Pacific Savmis Bank, is hoP.mg to build a two-story retail building right next -J..O the remaining businesses on the' partially-vacated block.. While the older stores were built back from the street. developers have submitted desi&ns showma the new buildana JUtl1n1 out toward the boulevard. Tenants believe the structure will hide their stores, eventually chokina off their business. "You put a two-story building on Newpon Boulevard and people (dn v- ina toward the beach) aren't aoinJ to sec us until we're an aftenhou&Jlt." said Maxson. Conceptual de ians of the building also show it beina constructed adja- cent to the rem•anina tores, with a · buildin.. Otherwise. they contend, shoppers parkina in the Courtyards won't take the ti me to walk over to the older. stores. The remaining businesses on that stretch of Newport Boulevard wdl be sbut-0ut from the stylish shopping center. said Maxson. "We're goma to become a back allc~ to the Counyards. Wt:'re jUJt a king the city not to leave us hkc aum~ pigs to die," he said. Mark Letter. senior vice president of development for Pacific SavilliS. said the c.erner parking tot was needed to create a "window•• that would allow passers-by on Newport Boulevard to see into the hoppma cenr.er aJona Harbor. Letter added that nearly all of the e1cnt buildin15 in the center would be placed close to the respective streets, creatina an urban look that would rcplncc the 4ima11-town effect of having the stores built back from the street. Pacific Savings. fonnerly Pacific Federal Savings and Loan Associa- tion. attempted to get city approval this week on the conceptual desasn for the controversial bualdina. However, the redevelopment aacncy postponed the matter until the November meet- 1na after developers locked horns with tenants last week at City Hall. The di~ecments could become moot if the city decides to t.ake the property and have a motel, office building or another shopping center built there. The site could aliO become pan of the Counyards - whi·ch leads to the people who don't war1t to move and don t want to sell thejr land RESUL TS!T""-THAT' S WHAT TllE DAILY PILOT OIVES ME HERE AT AL'S OARAOE ~uA~()/d. ~!u.:_ RICHARD BYBEE MAllAIER, AL'S IARAOE FAmON ISLAND Finkel, co-owner of Harbor Lites lamp store. has been at his 180S Newpon Blvd. address for the past three )ears. He hopes to be th~ when the dust clars from the much· touted redevelopment project, sched- uled for completion in Feb/'1ary 1986. • ' While his tenure ts shon al the. present address. Finkel's store has been tn the immediate area for the last 12 years. .. I don't want to move: I've worked too damn hard at this location," he complained. "h's going to be hard to let customers know where I went. For all they'll know. Harbor Lites just went." Hts landlord. Vera Hughes. 1s also adamant about not sclhna her share of the rcmauUng three parcels. Hughes and her late husband, Dr. A.G. Hughes. bought the pwpeny about 42 yeats ago One of their son1 was born at the mcdieal center established by Doctor Hughe at the site. where the couple also lived. 'T\ e hved on the prope{ty, I've rebuilt 11 , u's where my husband's office was. It's more than buildings ll's sentimental. that's all," said thC' clderl> woman The prospect oflosang her land 1sn 't new to Hu&hes. Community De- velopment Coordinator David said the ctty has expressed interest over the past few years of acqwnna the en tare nonhwest stretch between 18th Street and Harbor Boulevard. But the cost was "astronomically higher," said David, 50 the agency only took a pon1on of the block. I David explained the aaency 1s considcnng a plan by which, the developer would share tn the initial cost of acquiring the land afld raz1n1 the buildings.Under the current de- velopment agreement for the Courtyards. Pac1f1c Savina• purchased the proper1y afier the City had demolished the buildinp. &~~~£~~ 56 FASHION ISl:AND • NEWPORT BEACH • (714) 644-5'170 • • Chamber sets ; , breakfast meet Jack Hermes Wiii diKus entf1)' rost rcduetion at the ~una Btach Chamber of Commerce brQkfast mec1an1 :Tuclda)'. at 8 a m. in the Ho&cl Laguna. Breakfast is SS. For nscrvatsons call 494-1018. _ , ____ The Cham6tr;.& monthly soc1a m xer will be held on Wednetday at ':lO p.m. at Las Bnsas Re taurant. Admission is $4. Free seminar .cheda.led b A fru. Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) seminar wdl ~ Hitld at the PMS Center of Oranae County located at MacAnhur Medical Center, Irvine. on Tµesday at 7 p.m. The1eminari1 being conducted by Barbera:Jem1pn, a medical doctor from the center lro will be present durina the que'1ion and 11nswer J)eri"64;;~Thc seminar is open to husband and boy f riendS u well FQr more • information and ~rvations, call 261-7372. I" .. Women t o meet Wednellday The California Commi~ ion on the Status of Women wlll elect a new slate of offic.ers and choose 1ts program priorities for 198~85 af its next meeting on Wednesday and Thurlday at 1he Hilton at the Park, 1855 S. Harbor Blvd., Anahe1m.Hi&hlilhtioa the two-day meeting will be a prescntauon on ''The Woman's Vote 1984" by SCcretary of State March Fons Eu, a discuuion of the 1984 child care bills by Senator Diane Watson. and a review of the 1984 lqiJJative session. • · Wednesday's session is from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Thursday's meeting from 9:30 a.m. to S-p.m. A public rec.cption is scheduled for Wednesday evening from 5:30 10 7. A workshop on parliamentary procedure and the Open Meeting Act is planned for iTuC$day at 7 p.m. For more information, call 44S-3 l 73. . T-"' Orange Coast CoUcse's Children's Center WiU conduct its third annual benefit auction on Friday, Oct. 12. at the Airporter Inn Hotel in Irvine. · F08ter 1rand~enta honored Tamera Jame.on·BeJ'I, director of tl'.te ·.:__ foeter frandpuent pr~m a t P'al.rYlew s-.te Boepttal tn eoeta lleea, wu tile center of attention recently when the foeter - I WE ASKED : ,.-.ndparenta were honored for their work With cllenta. Here Auil Green an4 BlanCbe ConleZi.!:!1e program alnce tbe lnCqnton, plant on the dlreetOT. - .... Valle y mo t o wa r dne city librar,f Needed project may be lncladed Jn civic center redevelopment By ROBERT HYNDMAN Clf .. 0-. ....... Another chapter as bdDf. .added M> the SlOfl of founta1 \'alley's dTons lO buakl a ltCYli library. While hb111ry PS>QrtCrS ha~e pJ,olied M)'l lO build. new faah1y forsevcnl )U 1hey are ft()'(t' ~a~ cndana is near. Cuy Counctlman James cal won the oouncd's backing last Weck lo Qplore 1hc fea11bill1}p of me cny buildmg a new hbrary throUgh its efforu at redcvdopi• the ent1rt ci~1c center area . And Ci1y Man dudy Kelsey will meet ~-.th county upcrvisof :Roget tanton this week. to dttc.ms * po 1bilit) of 1hec1t.> working with the oounty on fund1ns nd con truc'lion ofa hbtary. "We'Ve fell the need :for a new hbral') for lhe PIM · ~\·en or eight years at least." cal Aad. The CUrTcnt site of the police ~nmens . head- quarter'$ wasinttially an&cnd~ fora library.Ne-alt.aid.but the city decided the library had to wait ,'" .. The needs of the PQlict came up :a.ad 1'ccded 10 be addressed. but that doesn'1 lcs-sen ihc need for a bbnuy ... Neal"said. The councilman said the current hbnry ts under· sized. overused and jtructurally da~. "l Jhink the libr.h') is simply in<'IYicient. We need a n"°" ,apc, .. he said. . Jim Dick. pmit:knt of Friends of&he Foun1ajn Valley Library. alf'ttd. . In a IC'tter ~ pring to lbc City Cou.Dcil. Pict said • expansion of.the prncnt facility would "not .addret& the a m. The aucuoo bcains at 7:30 p.m. in the Skyliner Ballroom and tickets, available at 1he door, are SS each, which includes hot and cold hors d'ocuvres. Proceeds will ao toward building a permanent child care facility on 'Do y ou. m iss H owarq Cosell on Monday night football?' .. Any expcansion of the current library •'OUld otl.ly compound the problems and &ii lO do the Very lhina the money would be spent for," Did said ... Do noc expeo(I any more money or d'fon in lJ)ina t~ redesian. a facili1>; which is basicall)· 20 years old and rapld.ly deterioratlna. Dick uid the li?nry bu.ildinc has structtiral problems includin& a leaky root that requirn librarians w cover book Jbcl,ves in plastic 10 ptn'cnt dama,e from ra.in~ campus. For. further information, call 432-5569. P~bOne -.guaclron to meet The GrunpaW?ettibonc Squadron of the.Aisocia· tion of Naval A viatfon will hold its monthly meetina on Thunday, Oct. 11 , in the Officers C1ub of the Marine COrpa Atr Station (Helicopter) in Tustin. Hanger doors will open at 11:30 a.m., followed by lunch at noon. Cot. Stand Lewis, USMC (Rct). project director in the SliutUe Orbiter Division of Rockwell International, will tell what it's like to be aboard the space shuttle in orbit. Reservations are a must and may be made by calling- SS 1-11 SS. Deadline for reservations is noon Tuesday, Oct. 9. Heart dleeue lecture set Lawrence Santora. M.D .. will speak on .. Exercise and Hean Disease" on Thursday. Oct. I I. from 7:30 to 9 p.m. in the CHOCAuditorium in Oranse. Sponsored by St. Joseph Hospital. the free lecture will cover the risk factors versus benefits of exercise. Dr. Santora will also discuss the benefits and limitations of cardiac testina and in what situations it is and is not a~priate. For l"C$eTVation5. call 771-8041. Family violence lectu.-e topic Fourteen separate workshops, open to the public. will ruJf'liaht the Founh Annual Orange County Conference on Family Violence Issues. The day-Jong conference will be held on Friday. Oct. 12, from noon to g p.m. at Saddleback.Co.mmunity College in Mission· Viejo, as part of Domestic Violence Awareness Week, Oct. 6-14. The schCdulc also mcludes a choice of three evenina workshops, from 7 to 9. for th(>se unable to attend during workina hours. The workshops are free, but a SS tax- deCSuctible donation would be appreciated. Prc-regiv tration U. encourqed but not mandatory. Call 830-2376 for information and reservations. CA LlNO~R Monday, Oct. 8 • 9 a.m .• Oru1e Couty Trauportattoa CommJHloa • Hall of Administration, JO Civic C.enter Plaza. Santa Ana. • I :30 p.m .. Oru1e CMaty P1Ua1n1 Commlssloa, Hall of Admani trat.loo, 10 Civic C.enter Plaza, Santa Ana. • 7:30 f.m .. La;ua Beacll Ar11 Commtssloa, City ·Hill Counci Chamben, SOS Forest Avenue. • 7:30 p.m., l"lH Tru1por&ad• CommlHloa, City Council Chambers, 17200 Jamboree Blvd. Poucf Loe Pe&u Salr011off · :u-ana1. Te111 laves tor . ..Yeah. I JUSl enjoy his comments. You love him and you hate him." He~rtPuler BotiDston Beach . Retired aerotpace eacf- aeer "No, I reall) don't. I can't stand the man. When- ever he's on TV he domi- nates the show and it's kind of sickening. I want to watch the performance not Howard Coscll." • C"urles WU.. LagaaBUcll- At&oruey ... .. Yeah. he's alJ right. Well evt!)'body hates him so l hkc htm. I usually am opf)Os1tc of the trends." Vlace ReeiDe DenveT, Colo. SaJesmu "He provided the enter- tainment on Monday night footbaJI. The others arc stra1cht jocks -just reg- ular football commentary. He (Cosell) adds that tangible difference. He made it enjoyable." O..Ded.mu ~ Capl1truo Beacli flaucer for Xenx "Sure: )CS I miss him. He's a good man. I never a~ with him. but I like to listen to tum:· u 0 Loa ADaetes Accountln1 clerk "Yeah. cause the way he talks and refers to the players. We m1SS him ... I miss him. He's straight to the point -direct, he tells at like It as ·· Cback AlllJoD Costa Mesa Grocery cleft . .. Oh. no. He was just an unnecessary part of it. His comment were \0\1.\1) out of line and ran"\) made sense:· Maret lomoe FoataiD Valley Rqtaurut assis1Ut m&D· a&eT "No wa\. oh. Wh\ IS he off. I didn·t even nouce He·s an mtelhgent gu). He knows tns spons. but. he's too cnt 1caJ. ·• The loss was estimated at S375 • • • Using a coathangcr. someone broke into a white 1984 Volkswagen RJbbit parked Fnda)' on the 16500 blbck of Mt. Michealis Circle. The loss. estunatcd at SSSO. included a radio and a camera. • • • Someone tore a hole m the con- weather. Accordina 10 Neal, a former fountain Valley CJty 7 man•r· t.ht citis origina.t S.200-:iquarc ... foot library WJ.Y ex113ilded .to its~! siin>f9.ZO iqiiii'nCa ui 1969 .. A library tWicc that size as needed, he said, a.ad be has a Sttc in mind. · Ne.at and Dick sajd pece isavailable directly 10utb of the present library on land owt:led by the city. The p!IJ"Cel is oD t.h~ eastern end of the fonncr Mills Horse R&Dch property borderioa Los A.Lamos StRiel · Neal sugmcd offeri q the pad.age to the county for construc:tion of the library while worting OD a. Psit· funding agreement wiili the help o(Supcrvisor Stanton. -But City MaDaF.f Kelsey said any plans for 1 aew li t>rary must be co0S1dcrcd along with ch erall plans for use of the civicoeDler area. The city stafl'. sbc says. is studyina ways to make the m06t efficient use of city facilities_ she said. . . Those studies could be com~lc\cd b)'. the end of the year an<i off'Crcd to the 6ty C'oW:la:I far comldiraifon. KelSC) said tha1 with limi\cd fuads from the oty. county librar) Sui>J>On would be required as well . -we have to find out iflhctta.rc ~ fuodin&IOU.l'CCS from the COUIU). There ~aid. ':Tbe libnary System is COUll\)'-1\lll and, ly • ._, JffCMlld .. for new libraries ... . Police seize six men in athlete's ·abduction By the Associated Press A fonneT professional soccer player from ArJcn.tina was freed by poli~ who booked six men for invesUP.tion of kidnapping. beat1n1 and torturina I.ht man With an clcctncal shock device. authorities said. Enrique C.assa.rctto, 49. had been held at gunpoint, badl> beaten and tonured before he was med by poli.ce at 8 p.m. Saturday, La Habra police Slt: Tom Machado said Sunda). C.assareuo had been abducted from his home in Los Anaeles' Encino distnct Saturda)' morning. The motave for the allClled Wnappina v.-a.s not confirmed, but Machado said C.assareno·s wife called police when she received ramom demands. The six men arrested at the La Habra home on El Pona.I Dnve •ere held without bail 11 lbc West V~ Dnu1on 1a1l in Los Angeles. where they were booked for 1n,csttgation ofk.idnap for ransom and assault with intent to commit great bodily injury, Machado said. • .. He identified those arrested as Aurelio Lopa. 35, Whntier, Lupe Fernandez. 29. Downey: Juan Lotorto, '42, Los Angeles. and three La Habra men -Juan Callirsos. 34. Mano Rosales. 31 . and Eduardo Rc>U, 54. • •• 5omC'One stole an air compressor and sk.11l sav. valued at $800 from a home m the I 7000 block of Baron. ••• llueves stole $300 1n ca.sh and S700 m JCWclr) after cntenna a • ~iden~ 1n the 8000 block of Pa.lcrmo. ••• p.m. Saturday and a kcd the clerk about ~~ular rtOOtd atoum. One of the 1hcn vullcd uuta mall. two-ineh blue steel revolver and demanded money. police said. vertible top of 1 I %9 Oldsmobde into lh(lr pocket~. ~fo~ running to Cutlass parked O\er &he ~eckend on lhc parking lot and fitting in an older the-tOOOO bloc~ of n Juan Court. Bnden. 43. was arrested at 10:50p.m. Frida\ on-Sk\ Park Boulevard. David Dean: JQ. ~as arrested at 11 p.m. Fnda' on McGav. "' enue and Red H1U. Gran1 .\rthur Helwom, 39. •-as amstcd at I:?: 15 a.m Saturda~ on MacArthur Boulevard Walter Victor Ha\~. 30. "as an-cstcd at 1:40 a.m. on Mac:\rtbur and Red Hill . C1cmcnt Joseph DcRosa.. 74 "as a~ted at 10:40 p.m Saturda) on Mac .. rthur .andJru.e.ph Ed\\ard Cap~ 21 . 'A'2S arrested at 11 ::?O p.m Saturda~ on MacArthur. Bufl,la~ took SSOO in tools out ofa Mazda truck 1n the I 6000 bloc of Tiber • He pulled out the cash dra"er and the two rtmoved the cash. stuffing it "'- A burjlar made o with stereo ... ~ ~uJ..P,mentf a video CP. uc .ttcorder and a microwave. 011en from a resiacn~ on the 400 block of Pro • p«t tree&. The, lo~\ w put II S2,Sl9. model Volkswagen Bug. Th d cd t S4SO Both .suspects ~crt described as e .amaae wa~ ~t'."'at a · male Mexicans. 18 to 20)carsold. S-7 A white 1979 Ford truck owned b) .and about 145 pounds. with blad. Mico LandSC1lping was rcponed hair worn ircascd bacl. police said ~tolcn 0' er the weekend from in front bu iness 1n 1he 300 bloc~ of South Coast Hiahwa) Saturday mornina.. Bail was~t atSI0.000. Foanta.tn Valley Tv.o bu inc$5CS ~'UC b.ui'J)anttd o'er the weekend b somco~ who pnro open a dOor at 10061 albnt A vc. Computer equipment wonh SS. I 2S wu stolen at Viii Real futate. Video equipment wonh Sl.<XXl liken rom scncc Enter- ~ oft he bu~ine , l 15 77 Slater A vc. The los wa estimated at$ I 0,000. • • • Brcakina a damna room window. someone buJ11ari1ed and ran eked a home aturda) on the 11700 block of Quartz A venue. 1 he los tll(}udc::d ~Weir\ worth S4.250. • • • \omeonc brolr.:e into a blue 19 7 C hcHolct Impala parked turd.a) on t 17900 block of Magnoha Uttt. The I 1imatC'd at S70. ancluaro c1prtttes. bOO nd co ltlCti Co.taM~ ' A tool bo~ and tools. valued at S6.SO. ~c~ rcponcd stolen bctWt"Cn :? p.m. and 4 p.m. ftida> from an open g.a~c in the 500 blocl ·of Tra,ene Dn,e. • • • T"o mall stereo \pcA~cn v.-crc Rport<'d ~olcn t.-tv.un 11 pm, Thu~a 1nd~·50a.m . Frida)'froma tru<''-parked in front of re idcncc in tin'~ block of &no~ Lane. Entry " through the rtar ~idina ov. of the trucl.. Th"c tv.o pea crs art valued 11 $ 0 • • • Someone entered a house in ttfc 4000 block of Arena throuah a down tairs kitchen window and took a punc. • • • Thieves stole $2.,000 in tools from 1 1974 blue and blad; Toyota pickup in the 16000 bloc.k oflfowland. Woman arrested. · accused of firing shot at husband t · ,..a. ·n :r~o is••i~''le-lologists se king clues ----.;;.;.;_--------..~------------p_u_D ii £1' U Y' • ;i: In b~aching of 94 whales 1nCrcn s by h8t:?1t; the Otmocrauc \\1lh R n m Kan 5 Ci&)' on OCt.. By tlie A•soclatet Prell nominee ld the pttSldentlhtnkl ht 21. EASTHAM, Mass. _ ""'hal• nH"·taliits rched for clues to 10lve ~he can curb federal dcfic:us )>)• m c. The bcst·remembered line of Re-" .. ,~~ b lid ed cs bctunJ Each said he wants to tcep rcli11on apn' debate 1p1nst Caner in 1980 mystery ofWb whales beach themselves, as workers u oz r.rav k d out of'polt&ics; uchaccuscd the other had nothing to ao with issues. It wo.s Cape COd U ncs to bury 94 ptlol whalet that came ashore over the wee en d as lhe} preferred. she id.·· nd wall side of trying to put u there. the R~pn refrain 10 what he id WhalcspttiaJi1tsonSundayexam1ncJ.t)carcaues,somcaslC?n1as2lf~u51 therefore be calkd Mr. Pre tdtnt nd But th.e gJonfied panel proarams were carter mis l&tementi· .. There wci&}\ina a ton, in an cnon to lt'.arn what causes such groun<linp, Anot 1 fl Mr. Mondale," l. ,,., "d · · "'"". .. ctral$StS trc lO be examined toda), said Liz Kay, • spoies~oma~ or u 'A H'NG~o ( p Th h .Four )'"'I-o. wMn he \\8" &he that pan ior pm• ential campaljn • ~ou JO .._in. Bo•ton·s New E .... tand Aau"rium. lfh whales beached them5tlves an an ut~ •Y -. 1 ' I'}-ere e " •• • debate never have been foruma for Re•n knoW5 ~ line when • ..,.. :. .. · · t Tho/ ent in, The Orcat Com· challenger, Reagan pOke~ or the a,roundbrcakins on the issues. They he·s said one. S&turoay in wh1tauthont1cs said wa~ the Jargcststrandang 10 ~ years. muniauor at h1 er ft . But this time. difficulty implicat in rawng with are, an stead, oocasiona for um ma· So after Mondale talked about his deed mammals wtre ~und for graves that bulldozers carved bt~1nd the dune· · President R n was matched "Mr. Pre ident." Reagan man~ in tion and npetition otwell·rehcai'scd tax incruse-ddlcit reduction plan, R1t•d• .. , ~oad'-'e a..0 , .. 0 ,.,. Co·'amba• in ta touah and polished rival. hi~ debate ~in t President' Jimmy campaiJn themes. That's valuable. u the president looked over at his --e.-.i ,..1 -.. .. .. • :I For Walter F. Mondale, never Carter. Mon Ille manaaect. 100. is the opponuntty to Ste rivaJ can-challenger. Pmident 'lteapn and .Deri1ocratic presidential candidate . Walter ~ am lcronuor, di played ,..1E1~Jn '°R!:,.onf~~eRcdpeu~~!:an.s ... whctoor dtdatts handle themsclvenway from "You Know I WI n•t Soin& to sax Mondale arc join1na thousands of other Americans to honor Chn_atopbtr h1s own kill u •communicator, in -~ ~...... u• v.11... ... thc1rscripts. . this at all," Rcapn said, "but J cant Columbus with parades and cercmon1cs on the darfor ltalian·Amcnca · !O campajin debate that ran O\'ertime. acknowl~d that n wa n't h1s best On both counu. while there ~as no help it. There you 10 again:• hinc. Rcapn wa to help de.dicate a mtuc or Christopher CoJUmbUs U> :~~~Pa':i~ht~~~.nf:!:ited ~~ ~~;.'~~~~~rj Mr~rc:,~da~an iJ bruk1hrouah for Mondale, at least Mondale was wattin& fo that ooe. Baltimore's Little Italy section today. Mondale was to march up Fif\b Avet!~ offer a umm~; denunciation of Sen. Paul wait of Nevada. Prcdic· there wu a bcg"1nnma. His campaiin He id the la t time Rcapn mack lhe in New York"s 40\h annual COiumbus Day parade, a sW"ltudded event h1ch R n's debate performance, adroit· t.ably, he aaid Reaaan did best. Just as has faltered aD season long, and he comment was in rcsponae to CalW'. also was to 1nclUde Vice President GCOflC Bush, ICVeU Sophia Loren and ly prabina the pre dent for raisma predict.ably. Ocmocnts said Mon-tais a larid tide behind in the public charae that he wanted to cut Medicare Geraldine fenaro, the Democratic vice presidential candidate. Ferraro f~l a national morale. • dale had won ... We've aot a new IJUl opinion polls. But the Democrats funds. "What did you do right after jump on the other national candidates Sunday, reveling in ~r It.a itn· For all lhat, in poliucs as in sports. communicator, .. said Rep. Michael now have a candidate wbo bas proven lhe election? You went out and tried American hcritaac as she Joined about I, SOO marchers at a Columbus Day favoredcbampionsarc not dethroned he can stand up apinst one of to cut Medicare," Mondale said. parade in Newark, N.J. • on points. It takes a knockout punch. B~~·dC:-~~· fare was 1enerall) as Reagan's arcat strengths. -u-L •L Kl S rl~~ and there were none, from either predictable as a Mondale or-a Reagan Monfiale cnttcs-and some of his M•.1 MU auaerD.6 r. c comer, in the Lou1sv1llc debate. campaian speech Mondale said Re· fnends~ lonaago marked him down EDITORS NOTE -W•lllr It. ATLANTA -The-Rev. M1nin Luther Km wa tCPQncd in critical Mondale's problem was summed aganwantsto cutSoetalSecurityand asadullandlistlcssorator.Heprovcd Me•n 11 Utt8tlve tdltor ol Tbe cond1tion today at a hospital where he 1s un ina treatment for in the instructions from moderator like programs; Reapn called that otherwise Sunday night in Louisville. A11ocl•ted Pn11 ud u1 wo.a tlle complications of heart wscasc, his physician said. The ~yea~..old father of Barb&raWaltersasthedebatebcgan. outraieous and said it isn't so. He will get a ·second, and final Pul/t1er Prl1e for ti• COt'u•1e of slainciv1triahtsleaderManinLuthcrKJnaJr.chccked.him~lf1ntoCrawford The candidates would be addressed Reagan said Mondale'" seeks tax opportunitY in a fore~gn policy debate pre1ldeat1.i c•mp•lp,. · W. LO~ Memorial Hospital on Sunday. "At present he 11qu1te stable and alert ;:::================================================.:::;=~~~ and cheerful and in .Jood 'Pirit1," said Dr. Btmard BridJcs, Kina'• ~~nal physician. "Yes. he 1s In intensive care, so he is in a auardcd status,' Bnd&et said." His condition would be considercdascntical, at least in tcnnsofwhat he has been throua11:· gueen to ln•pect •talllon• LEXINGTON, Ky. -The queen ofEnaland. look:in& foe the little eltra somethinJ that makes a winner, is visitina the blueanss ki~dom of three aristocratic stallions who wear the Triple Crown. Queen Eliubetb 11, who ,___.J----i-f-,a;:'::;m=v-=--1:.on"1i""J~umrt·:y on Sunday aftenJoon and a:hedWcd pri-ate CfPICIMBU today is likely to inspect Triple Cf"9WD winners Seattle Slew, Affirmed and Sccrctanat as she searches for fiuin& mates for her broodmares. ~"The queen will be matching conformation as well u pedipee," said her racina manqcr, Lord Henry Porcester. "She'll be lookin& for thinis you can't set from I photoaraph, tryina to ira p the make and shake of the stallion.'' \ Now you can earn 17%t interest, defer the taxes on earnings, and withdraw any-or all -of your funds whenever you need ... with a new program• at Great American. · Just make one si ngle deposit of at least $4,000. Then sit back and watch it grow. Your interest will compound daily at a fixed 12%, guaranteed for four years (as tong as you maintain the minimu·m deposit). There's no charge to open the account. No fees for withdrawals either. However, if you withdraw before age 59%, tax law requires a penalty. You can wait until yot.1're in a lower tax bracket to pa)( the taxes on interest earned. A death benefit ' payment is guaranteed to the beneficiary you name. 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JllAMCO •nd bl'<ul~ Lift'" not •lf1hatid tomp1n1ts Of Grt11 Anwlfican and ,,.. t0lely rnpon1•bl. for 1tw acctir K y or '11 bro< hur••· •dv«11~nrs. docum.n11 ind otfMr m•t~mt' •nd .dvt<t you may recelvt All fundJ ''" dtpc»11.cf dirtetly 10 hteutl\'f lift CrHt "ll'lt'rocan 11 not • 'fl""'~ brolr#-dt•l•r 1nd ~' tio1 suv1nltt IN d4rpc>$41S Y°" m1Juo ·'Thi\ r111ns 1nd1< •tf'> 1 tomp1ny·~ '""''"~t'_'fr"ngth 1n th .. 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'>A"" ._~IU-..0 2355 Hunt1nRtO,, ()r"" RIVERSIDE COU""TY JU\ ERSIOf Arl1nl(l!ln & l;U<io"l'I ~)() Arl1n1tf<>n ~ 1'01)(' RIVER'llDf ._,,.r J98S l."•~1·"'" .a., .. nUf' •' ChMtnu1 (,I(' .t,\'{ )". ~ J 1,1\ lJ 11 l'DI"'' \'\1ll '> HIRhWI\ 111 '1 Club 0r1Vf' 80f(REGO Sl'Mll\OCS ~10 ChrrJtnµ C11c 1<> ORANGE COUl\JTY • ""AHEI~ Hill~ >S~ S.anu ""' C•n~on bd ORA"-Glflu•lln II ~·IT'I .z;35 '1,Qrth Tv\lin -'*'"IW • ..-.oooe1110GE ~sio B•rrant • P•rlrv..•\ •• l•"•' fl !ORO ~ Wiii f I lol!J Rt>.1d L...CU'" Hill'> .l'4 I01 p,_, ~ \i•ltn, •• '-1IS~~ \ IEIO ZS 1 ll C•bol Rd N'.11 l• Pu 71.tl 559-8803 r•141 Sllf>SlOO 11.EWP()«T BEACH On PK1hc COISI Htghwi\'. bt1Y>ft'fi MxAtthvr ~ .and NewpOft untcr Orrvtt • (714 fiM. 1885 l.AO.JNA BEACH 2600c~anMnue . 17141 ~7S41 MO"WtCH BAV l Mc>Nrch ~ Pl&.u f..... • • 17141496-1201 • SAN ILIA~ CAPISTRANO l2222 C.mlno C•ptW.ano 17141661-0897 CAPISTRANO BEACH 34206 ~ny Parlt Rd .11 V1Ctor11 Blvd,, opposllt C•ptW•no BtKh Plw sn<wtng Ctnl~"'lt 17141496-0201 SAN CLEME"T£ 601 "-orth El Camino Rr•I . 171.tl '92· 119S SA"ll CUME"TEl.AwncMa ft!co 400 Mnd•d• Pico . 1714186310 • Ottt<n ~ Satvrd"' ' CALIFORNIA SmokbJI pro~• ltk ~ubJeumea LOS ANGELES-Some businessmen are smoldcrina over three plant to rcgqlate smokina in public places, proposals that come up for City Council consideration Tuesday. The tou&hcst -which is aiven little chance of passage -would ban f.UfTers from city libraries, museums, restrooms, pharmacies and auditoriums. 'lt'a just another burden on business and industry ... it's un- Amctican," said Les Benson.. president of the Southern CAiifornia Businessman's Association and a non-smoker. "h's absolutely inCredible that these 1uy1 will uy to pass somethina that nobody wants." · .... Bla•t bJ}are. SF worken SAN FRANCISCO -Two workers remained in serious condition today after an electrical explosion started a fire at a Financial District h1&h-ri1e, authonttcs said . The basement blast at One Market Plata happened at 1:)7 P..m. PDT Sunday, and the small fire was brousht undcrcontrobbout a half an hour later, Fire Department Lt. Georse Crowder said. Worker John Bohbot, 35. suffered sccon<f· Ind third-de&rceburns over about 90 percent oflii1 body and was in cnt1cal condition at San Francisco General Hospital, a nursina supervisor 11id. · Gu prlc~ climb bJ autumn LOS ANGELES-U.S. psoline pnccs have continued an uMC&JOnable autumn climb, largely due to reduced production by OPEC nations, oil industry anal¥st Dan Lundbcra says. The avcrasc pnce of psoline for all grades, mcludma taxes, was S 1.192 per pllon last week, up nearly a third of a cent from the Sept. 28 avcraie. Lundbcrs said in an interview S~nday. The analyst. who publishes the weekly Lundbcra uner, checks prices at about 18.000 gasoline stations across the country every two weeks, then averascs the results. Tlc.tet •applier lottery winner LOS ANGE)tES-Chicaao-bascd Bally Corp.1 whicb owns the nation·• leading lottery ticket supplier, could be the bia winner if California voters approve a st.ate lottery initiative, a newspaper reported today. Baily's Atlanta subsidiary, Scientific Games Inc., is invcstina heavily in the mulli·million do1lar campaisn for Propositip« 36, which mandates a state-run lotter)'. Observers said the California '6\easure appell'.'S made to ordCl' for Scientific Games because it says a lottey must be instituted within 135 da)'1 of the election, should the measure be approved. 24 •tufted Into phoae booth MORAGA -At St Mary's Collqe, it's thumbs down for 1oldfi1b swallowina, lhumbs up for stuffin1 people anto phone bootht. On Saturday, 24 students It the tiny school across the Bly from San Francisco crammed themaelvcs into a Pacific Bell phone booth, breakina the 1959 national record by one small body. That body belonaed to S·foot-2, 120..pound lrwan Kamdani, a senior who moved here from Indonesia four years aao. Smith denle• kllllnt Belanl LOS ANGELES-"I didn't kill John Belushi," murderdefe,ndant Calhy Evelyn Smith declarca in a new book, "Chasina the ~ontr" in which she 11)'1 • she told Belushi to have a &ood sleep and "come down o the deadly drup. Belushi died March s. 1982, of a cocaine and heroin overdose in his bunaalow at Hollywood's Chateau Marmont Hotelt according to lhe coroner's autopsy. Smith faces extradition from Toronto on sccond-dcpee muroer cbaracs filed apinst her in March 1983 l?1. the Lot Anaele1 County ~ndjury. In exccrpU from "Chuina the Oraaon,' Smith wrote that Belushi 'asked for more cok.e0 that last niaht but th.It she told him: "Tbe cocaine wu finished, be was aoina to have to come down from all the dn.111 he was ta kin& and have a aood steep ... --~--WoHlD Great Ameriaiil . . ,..,, More B. Derma.a• Mek uyJam First Savings Bank A California Financial Leader •.. Since 1885. PRAGU~. Czccho Jovakia -About .0 more East Omn&n1 reportedly have slapped into the closed West German Embassy. avoid~ 1 round·the· dock cordon of plainclothes and uniformed P.91i~men to j01n at lwt 100 other refusccs seek.in& poliucal asylum. sources who apok.e on condiuon they not be identified rcponed the latest foflux into the embassy Sunday but Mid they could aot tell how the lfOUP Sot past police to enter the comp0und Security had been tiabtened after about 1 O Eut Oermen1 acaled the em= sb-foot wrouaht·lron back fence Saturday. The fence it adiacent to a w ---------------.------'"-----....--------:-.......------:-----------1 hill. ~ • .. U-2 recon}e,t crulJ• m Kanta SEOUL, outh Korea -An American U-2 rcconnaisuncie jet crashed todar three miles south of Oaan Air Bate. ltJ pilot ejected and wu Iden to a hos~1tal. U.S. mmt.ary officlaltCSKt not identify the.pilot of the U.S. Alt Fon:e plin~ .. They wd he was tabn to the '?a• hospnalJ. ~t did not liven hi1 cond1t1on. The U·2, besed.at Olin 30 malca south of~ul, craahed at 7 a.m., • the U.S. Forocs Korea omc1alt reported. The cause of tbc crash wu not known. Uaq claim• Gall attad 8 GHOAD, traq-IMM1.tai4toda_y that itJ warplaneunacked two ah ps southwelt of Jran'a maan Persian Gulf oil tumiUJ. Uoyd'e Sbippina lnttll~cc Unit in London reponed that a Uberiaft.yqi11ered l\lpenubf was on fire and that six aew membm were killed aDcl m: wae bldly bUmec[. An Jraq military pokesman laJd in BUhdad that lraQl Jeu raided t o lbi but Lloyd's ind 1h1pp1111 aourca in Bahrain conflrmea only an atlld OD the l l4,S7.S.ton tanker World Knilbt. The IOW'Cet 11id &be. at\kk occutted ., miles southwat oflran'1 Khar& llland. An lnQi mUnary IDOkaman. radina a communique over state television, uld J~i ~1ai ~umed iafi ly to base after succaafully ra1di!'f, Ind ICOri ... d1ft!Ct htU 00 the lWo bia naval LlrJCU so ho( Khara Island,' which i 131 m Its IOutbtut of Iraq. T•• term• RfM6UJ 'defea.Jn' MOSCOW -v1et mtdt.t ics today lhat Piuidcnt R~n uted Jhc lint dtbatc of the 1984 pteS denual cam1>1iln to lfY to .. ju1t1fy" military aptl\cUna at the upentt Of Anaetica's :poor, ilad10 MOteo'ttt and tbt offi t1J news aaeney Tata both.ctu01td U media rtP'XU on the dtbltt unday n , fn Loul1viUe1 Ky , whictl chaflde~ Re,pn u bcfna .. on-mt dcfcnslvr" durina I 1ppcara Ith Dem~ c malleqer WtltN tM ndal • ---~~ - 0 OT/Monday Challenger crew focuses camera on Earth's surface . t tbiltty f Uli"'"lttei11t· .. ..,01racl~~la&<Cl u:~,rciUC,~IHl~Ht The huttl control center in Hous· ton ad 1hat af Jo phme moved toward Aonda at "'present peed, at ould htt the state 10meume Wcdn sday, well before allenger's planned Jand1 t Cape Canaveral on turday. But officials note<l Oiat tropical torm1 arc unpted1ctabfc and id they were ready to h1ft the touchdown to Cali(omt or New Mexico 1f nee ry. Mis ion controllers de ided Sun· day to postpone the first p ce walk by an American woman for two day , until ThursdaY., bccau they did not w nt a pos 1blc repeat of carhcr antenna problems to interfere with the radar phote>graphy. The delay also p_rcscrvc an option for ~~walkers ,Kathy Sullivan and David Lttt~ma to Jash down the 'aotennas, if necessary, for the return to Earth on Satyrday. It al~ avoids hat VY an unstowcd ntenna whale outside. The dar camera antenn filled to completely rcuact on lllida)' and d to be nudged into pl oe "nh th robot arm. Another antenna, which relays th radar data tO Eanb "1 n orbit na llllite, I t tu babty to lock onto the tclhte..and us motor was djsconncctcd to stop m tnatic Winp. Po anting 1hat second ntenna at the &atclhte is now done by maneuvcnng the huttle. wtlh commander Roben Crippen ind pilot Jon McBride t the control . That isaslowerproce and tc:ientist ~d they now exl)«t to ~· only about SO ~rccnt of the daLI thC)' had sought from the radar expcn· menj. Had the antennas worked as planned, both would hi.Ye beto retracted for the space walk, then extended agtltn afterward. But now. to be on the safe side. tht radar ·ork wit\ be completed before Sullivan and Leist ma go into the open C8f'IO bay tO Two Soviet spying suspects ' had many court ~ates i~ LA LOSANGELES(AP)-A Russian MikhailZlob1n ky, wbocmi&rated in couple accused of being Sovtet spies t 976 and now runs a hamburger were 1n and out of coun at least four restaurant in the Faiifax Avenue area. timesduringthe 1970s, and were once sue(! for fraud by a fellow emigre, a Zlobinsky. wbo spoke in a com· oewspaper said today. banauon of Russian and Yiddish. claim to 1FBI aieots that she was a KGBmaJor. .. She made hcrselflook like a ~osse mensch (Yiddish for "bigshot ') by telling everyone that ihe 'ft'IS in the KGB, but she's too stupidt'' he told dreHerald. -~N11.1iKJkncula.a.:1~~..Jau:nLC1dL....;JS~>t:eietu.ilauiaLaa--'o.QslllOlorodroo.--~•~g;Q~aiJGtd&';'."laut....,-Si>'¥H1t~~eY'1 nikov were sued in 1977 by a .-------------------------------'----i Ukranian immigrant who claimed they bilked him out of SS,000 in a black-matket money deal, ac:cordina to Superior Coun records cited by the Los Angeles Herald Eumaner The West Hollywood couple, meanwhile tuad filed four sutt1. In 1977, they sued the Uktaman 1mmi· arant, in 1975 and 1977 they sued over two minor traffic accident and in 1978 over a dentists• work, the paper said. · f.fbeir most recent coun appear· ance came last week, when lhe West · Hollywood couple wai arrested with Los Anatles FBI aatnt Richard W. Miller. Coun documents filed by the FBI accused Nikola) O&orodntkov, Sl, and b\sestranged w1fCSvetlana, 34, of workin1 for the Sov..,.et KGB. Miller is accused of offenng to sell the Soviets · information for $6S.OOO in sold and cash. All three remained m special protective custody through the week- end at Terminal Island federal prison. A Russian immigrant who claims to have known the O&orodnikovs in f.Jcv told the Herald that Oaorod- mkov was just a taxi driver there . .. They're the same as they were in KJev. simple workers. that's all." said ·-----~-714/972-1270 SALES & tEASING ALL MAKES Maybe Its time to rellght your furnace pilot~ •• MARINESf SAILORS SCOF. TIJUANA 'OFF LIMITS' CU ~RE RETIRING, All ,,,.,,,\ ,._.b 1 .. ct lo proor \OIOc' All \OI .. \ ••no! (a\h ,h .. :• \f •\o arid M o,l•·r(,l'd O•*'' S' 5 .., .. lco,,,.. flo ol1 .. ro1,on' No moot or t f'lf'phonf' ordf'r\ CltlDIT CARDS: Hours 9:30-6:00 Closed Sunday Where Hatbor. VISA 1 MASTllt CARO AMERICAN IXPHSI CARTI aLANCMI DINlltl CLU8 1116 NEWPORT avo .. COSTA MESA Meets N • w P.. o r t Blvd. Genesis. The chemical deQetldency program ----that g~ts you through the haidest part ' Th~ beginning . • trcalf1'(nl pro~ram at South < oa...,t \kd1<.·at Ccntcr O r. '-'C offu a <.Om· .,, .. What sort of game are trial l a wye rs playing in co~rt,? Law and justice appeared to take opposinJ ides Friday when Judge Leonard McBride ordered a new tnal for Gabriel DeLuca, wiping out the. l S·year-old Huntington Beach man's conviction for the murd r of mail carrier lda Jean Haxton. The 1C$'11 correctness of Judge McBride's difficult decision i unquestionable. During the trial, prosecution attorneys ucccssfully kept what might have been a critical bit of evidence - a booking slip-from the defense. The booking slip is a form filled out by police officers when an arrested person is charged with a crime. ln this case. the booking slip reportedly bore notation to ~he effect that Deluca was acting in a pretty unusual manner. _ Since the whole basis for the defense was that Deluca was so ddJed by booze, drugs and mental illness that he didn't know he had atUcked Haxson. i police observation of bizarre conduct might have affected th~j ury's verdict. Case dismissed. Try aga,in. That's the law. · · · · ? McBride issuedJ.he mtldly...i.u~o..u~-.1• tatement that Deluca is .. clearly guilty" of the crime. And defense attorney John Dolan admitted he was surprised the. judge granted his request for a new trial. One irksome aspect of the Deluca reversal is that whatever OOOPS ... M\SS£t:> AGA,N . BILL HARVEY columnlat 81LL Haavn ... Back an thedaysofKinaArthurand the Knightsofthc.Jlound Table, some men were engaged an the busin~s of ndmg their steeds about the kina· dom. challenging the wrath of draaons, ~ and giants. Usually. there was a princess to be rescued or, at least, a maiden in distress. Some- cimes there were whole villages to be rescued from the evil claws of the local dragon. These men wore suits of "-..... ___ _.._._,,_-arm0t and rode on horses Ibey..-.. ......._ __ widely rcprded as men of bravc_ry and courage Jnd were welt-respected. Today, tocrc are men wllo ride about our kingdom, but they're not enpged in a business, or even looking justice will be done has been sidetracked by legal gamesmanship . ~y pc9Pl~ upon w~om WC depend fo~ the administration of c ~£'\·n-n ~ term £or R&1Aagan JUSt1cc. Simply-if the prosecutors~ who sliouJd l'raVe4'eelr~\.J-U-.l.-.1:l:l ~ :I:'-~ aware thaU.he defense is entitled to see the evidence against the accu~ had made tlie booking slip available, this case would be · • 11 d h t ~ • t for anyone to rescue. They are (I suppose) cngaaed in pleasure. I say "I suppose" because the aciivity that they engage in appcars-t~be. to.me.ia- no way pleasurable. finished now. Ida lean Haxton·s family and Gabriel DeLuca:·s WI a ere 0 same scrip family could get on with the process o( rebuilding their hves. · · .l.~· And the taxpayers wouldn't be picking up the tab for what They don't wev suits of armor. They usually wear shorts and T- shirts. and sometimes, a rather flimsy-lookina helmet . should have been an unnecessary trial. ~When the prosecutors were making the key decision - should we give up the booKing slip or should we try to protect our case? -were they interested in justice for lda Jean J1axton? Were they interested in retribution for her family? Were they interested in protecting soetety from a dangerous person? Were they interested in the truth about Deluca's mental capacity? Or, were they interested only in winning? Too often, lawyers are hke pitchers in the renewal year of their contracts; their primary concern is-ereating a $ood record. They -rationalize their basic disregard for legal pnnciple with broad statements about the system and how well it works. T 09 many defense lawyers will claim their only responsibility is to $el their clients off. They'll do anything and say anything to wm. Too many prosecutors thin their only responsibility is to get a conviction -as if the state had imposed a quota on them. The result is a legal system in turmoil, a system that produces decisions like the Deluca reversal. decisions everyone can explain, but no one can understand. Truth, justice and the American way will have to be defended by Superman. The lawyers are too busy playing some other game. Let's 1Dalce the roads safe wlth Drunk Drlvlng Day To the Editor· Tho~ two drunks who rammed each other head-on in Hu ntington Beach ma) have hit upon something more important than cac:h other Maybe they'"e mad"enentl} come up with a \Olut1on to the drunk- driving problem that seems to be Jjlaguing the Orange Coast Let's declare a Drunk Dnving Da) Ever)· one who isn't drun~tourcf sta) off the road and all the drunks can get in their cars and have at each other After a few }Cars of Drunk Onving Days. the~·11 all ha"e killed each other ofT and our roads ~111 once again be c,afe. Ml< llELE Bl1RGESS Huntington Beach WASH I NG TON -In the days when Ronald Reagan was typecast as a 8-mov a.e actor. t{ollvwood followed a simplcc<nting fonnuJa that Reapn never forgot. The formula. which saved ume and creauve thought. was to make a sequel of an~ commerc1all} success- ful mov 1c. preferably using the same cast Reapn and many others wound up in some real clunkers that wa>. including four films m which he played an am probable Se.cret~rv1cc agent named Brass Bancroft. In real life. Reagan has stuck to the same basic sen pl since he first ran for JOVernor of California in 1966. Asp1r- 1n1 to be a two-term president, he 1 m running against government and its suppo~ waste, fraud and abuse. Over the ycarr •• his supponing cast has changed from tame to time but has always included a trusted and 1dcnt· 1fiablecadre from Reagan's forma- l! ve yea rs as governor. In the absence of specifics from the White House. Reagan ·s habits of \llcktng to old scnpts and the same team provide the most useful clues about what as likely to happen an a second tenn. In the fi111t tenn. wnh no one making a point of it. some of I he new crowd became part of the old. Within 1he White House, OucfofStafT James A. Baker Ill and Reagan'sclosest aide. DcputyCh1efofStaffM1chael K. Deaver. formed a firm alliance lha't ultimately disposed ofall nvals. By all accounts, Reagan as now com fonable with Baker, who once managed the pres1dent1al campaigns .. of Gerald Ford and George Bush, and ~uh most of the people Baker has brought on board. There are nght-wingers orpnazing against Baker, a chiefof stafTthcy r~rd with about as much affection as they do Soviet ForeiJn M mister Andrei Gromyko Thc1ropposi11on isn't hkcly to sway Reagan. who understandably rco,ents the sugges- tion that hl' 1s capll vc of a kbcral l'ahal The stru8$1e within the Reagan adm1nistrat1on has been between conservatives who differ on processes rather than an goals. Reagan rc- cogmzed as much two years ago. dunnga pcnodofWhite House feuding. when he cracked that his administration was one whcrc .. the right hand doesn't know what the far- riaht hand 1s domg ·• Ideology aside, the convenudnal w1-.dom in Washmaton 1s that Re- agan. afre-elected.. wouldhavea short "w1 ndow of opportunity" to ac- com plash someth mg an the honey- moon phase of a second term and a large "wmdowof vulnerability" thereafter. Hewouldbea lameduck at the moment of re-election H1~ Lou CANNON chances for political success would d1m1nish as m1d-tcnn clcctionsap- proached and could vanish 1f ccon- om1c recession replaced economic recovery Th as argument thac Reagan must stnke quickly 1salso an argument a'3mst a new cast. Keepmg Baker and his team. with thcircxpcricnccand political skills, would enable Reagan to a void on-the-job training in the honeymoon phase and be quack ofT the mark dealing with Con;:rcss. This argument 1s likely to be even more appealing if Deaver, chairman of the shadow inauaural committee, de- cides that 1t as finally time for him to take a more lucrative job outside the White House. Norarelargcchangesforcsecn io a Cabinet that, with fewcorupacuous cxccpuons, has earned a reputation for mediocnty. Reapn 11 not one to emulate Richard N axon and ask for everyone's rcsignauon so he can They also don't challcnic drasons shuffic the political deck. or ogres. They challenge somcthma a In la!Je measure. 1t is~ crastthat . U10usand times more danaerous. detenmnes the performance. Kee~ They challenge automobiles. inaBakcrwouldbeanauguryof They also don't ride horses. They budget compromise. Keeping De-ride bicycles. fenseSccrcaryCasparWeinbergcr, And, in my opinion, they're not whocanprobablystayaslongashc brave and courageous mr,g, (and wants. is a sign that anns-control women). They're foolish. agreements with the Soviet Union I ean almost hear the furor and the will not come easily 1n a second term. yelling starting ;ii ready. Words like Keeping William Cascyasdircctor of "cardiovascular exercise.. and Central lntelhgcnce. as Reagan has "physical conditioning" and statc- promiscd to do, an<t U .N. Am-. • men ts like "We nave as much rij)it to bassador Jeane Kirkpatrick ma hijh-the streets as anybody else." level post. as Reagan desires.arc signs These thin.ss arc all true. lfl were in thathcwillnotabandonhlsgoaJsin the hean of Yellowstone Park. I'd CentralAmenca. have as much riaht to be there as NoneofthisiseastinconCTttc, anyone el~. but if a grizzly bear partly becaus.e Reagan is too super-decided that he wanted to be where I stitiousand prudentto focu on a was. I wauldn 't stop co debate the second tenn he has yet to win. In finer pomts of first CQme. fint served deference. White House and cam-with ham. Yet. lots of times I've seen a pa1gn aides ntually warn each Other man on a 40-pOdnd bicycle challenge not to be overconfident. Aficra rare a man an a 3,000.pound car. prcd1ct1on of victory ata Gulf~rt. I( the man in the car is sane and Miss .. rall y last week, the ~resident sober, he'll make every auempt to returned the next day to hss bromide avoid k1llinJ the man on the bicycle. that "President Dewey warned me The operative words here arc sane not to 'ct overconfident." and sober Remember the man 1n Los Behind the scene • however, the Angeles who drove his car down the starund bat players of the first term sidewalk, scattcrina people like ten- arecasting fort he sequel atthe Whatc pins becaUK he wanted to "gct even House. lfReapn wins., it's likely that with the police?" How about the 21- you'll recognize both the plot and the year-old ~rl who was recently killed players. . m Huntmgton Beach? She was REAGANISM OFTHE WEEK: pushing her motorcycle to a ps Spcakina at Texas South most College station. She was in the bike lane. She in Brownsville last week, Reagan was was struck from behind by an aUC&Cd givenapairofcowboybootsbyRep. drunk, and knocked over 100 feet! Phil Gramm (R-Tex.), Republican For those of you who have troubl~ nominee for the U.S. Senate. relatina to distan~ that's one third AftcTthankmgham. ~~aan said. of the length of a football field, or "Some recently have tned to suagcst about the heiaht of an eight-story that I have a ranch where l JUSl walk building. around and look atthe scenery or till , nearly every time I'm out somcthin&, and they've made the dnvin& my car. I'll sec someone on a mistakcofsay1n1that1n front of bicycle on PCH, riding in a 2,..1ncb Nancy one day .... She challenicd wide ct5rridor between parked cars on them to come out and follow me one side and cars goina SS miles per momina to dusk any afternoon and hour on the other. A man has to be a see what I do." damn foo l to do that I'll sec a man on Lou C.aaoo l• • 1y11dlcated a bicycle who peddles up on my righc colamaJ1t. at a traffic li&ht. He takes a quick look "" at cro traffic, and, bare~ slowm1. Lo~~~c ~~-D-id_I_r_a_n_e_n_c_o_u_r_a_g_e_a_t_t_a.-c-k--~--d ttprd1ntopero1ing1 vehicle on lhOt< can eter attack in Beirut ortrytohalt it? ::flii~~Jj~~;;;;;:~:1;~~ <an 'vUU talk \-our..clt out of a heart < h1nc) Hull. Adams. Nichols. Ed-even own one. Whml was a kid I bad attack" One l)r Me) er r ncdman mund'I and Yamold. To identify the "' a 1>3per route. and ml bike saved me thrnks ~ He~ 1hc fcllo~ ~ho lir\t place. the~ U\Cd the in1t1al of each. Intelligence analysts suspicious from walking lots 0 miles. 1 loved 1dent1ficd compuh1"c aattrl'\~l\l' and called 11 Chaney. that bike. doers as ''Type A" pc:opk Fur about Khamenet visit to Lebanon JACK But J was never, absolutely not stancrs. he sa)s. "Walk morl'. talk ~ome11mcs. when rm not thinking ever, tupid enough to challenge 1 full more. and cat more <1lowl\. .. Then he ahout rt."dheads. swordfi hand small uown car with it. h gh · 1 f · h Th the attacks were approved at the .. gets to t e tou pan " n ~amc!. urry animals. I thmk about t rs: e hi•he'lt level of the Irani n govern-A .. DEISOI C•l••al•t Bill H•tvey U~a I• practice losing graccful h ." ~k ., gone United States ·· with 5 percent of the .,. f11 Hutt.11o11 Bud. too far world'c. population and 6.3 percent of mcnt. Do )OU refrigerate tomatoc.•s'' L1kc- w1<,( Thought everybody did. But the f omato (;rowers Associ:uwn says don 't. Tomatoes taste be" when kept on the kitchen counter between 65 and 7S delftt, F. 1x 1tttle~ started a town in O lahoma. fheir ,urname were ORANGE CO.AST Daily Pilat the world'~ land •. accepts 70 percent Some of Ptcs1d~nt Reagan's polill- of 1he legal immigrants from the cal advisers '8w the latest embassy world's other nations bombinaasanopponuniiy forhim to demonstrate his "macho' le denhip o·n the eve· of the election. They wanted h•m to retaliate. Other ad- vi rs urged R~n to f; rict th macho i uc and focus on the peace 1 uc. They aecm to have the pn: •· dent's ear. Some Albanians ha"e pct doas or cats. but those who do are acnerally r'C'glrded there as quaantl> old· fashioned and 1 hit ,illy. L.M. B•yd 11 • 1yodlc•ted C'O/Otnltlll. H. l. khwatt& t1t Ha-e ITC the dcuult. meanwhilt,~f Kh1mene1's sudden 1urpn vi51t to Lebanon. He howed up in Syna on Sept.· 6, a Moslem holi&y. For a rehgiou fundamentalist to travel on 1 holydayastoni hcd hi Syrian ho ts nd andtcatcd that the trip was ura.cnt. Khamcn.ci wu aC'C'Ompanicd by the Cabinet mini ter in charcc of-the rc~oluf nary auard . Aflcr m ung Wllh yrlan r~ i<k'nt Hafez d. the Iranian dignitArics humcd to Rulbck 1n nonhc ;tern l..c non, whtrc the Irani n 'olunt rs arc scd. B lbck IS I lhc h dqoartcri ror th h dowy I I m1 Jihad ftOUp, whac-h has efatmtd n 1b1ht for th aua hon U S tn t ti taon r>1d Kh m n r bnn the toll.ah' bt ., ing for the embassy bombinf. Or did he try to dissuade the tcrronst aroup from us intended attack? Our in- tclliaencc aicncic1 don't know. Btfo the bomb1na, intelliitnC'C anal)'lt ugcstcd an cnttrely dif- ferent reason for Khamene1·s surprise ide trap to Baalbek. They were told th t Aisad had complained to Khamcnet about the unruly behavior of the Iran tin troop in ubanon and that the v1 1ting pre 1dent went tu Baalbck to remon trite with the revoluuonary auards. But now intelligence sources be· licvc at 1s unlikely that Khamcnca could have va ntd Butbc:k without I mana that mBJOr anti•Amerie1n stnkc w in th "ork This would mean that Khamenci either oK·d th bomb Ill or 111 ovcmJled b) the terron t after he lefl. • ~1> urttS lean 10 the \'icw that rad1fal clement in the Iranian gov· .... -~--'i~; crnmcnt C:rtJ.ln red the rmba 1• bamhm from tan to hnaih. •1111• J•ct AIHlt,.,.,, II • l)'HblH C'ttl•mal I I Scientific breakthroughs funded ·fst!ael's Weizmann Institute atns support In county Fruithandler, the rqioriaJ director, &a)I of the lfOUP'• reccptlbn in O.ranae County. . Fuelt.d by news .of continual bleaklhrou&hi in the fieldi of biotoay, chemistry, physi , mathematics, ~culture and computer science, the local Weizmann division pursues ill o main functions -fund-raisina "profesM>rial chain" at the: iramute. hen a ma.JOr breakthrou&h or award 11 earned b) the Weizmann saenttst orkina in lhlt area. the name of tbe csoaor 11 actnow5ed1ed u well. Three auc:hchauJ.. idJ a~ntabli$bedlJI oeroewby, have been :fundda lhrouah the local d1V1sion, Fiuithandki I)' ROBERT HYNDMAN and pubhc rela ons. Of ... Dllf,... •a.« , While about S20 million in support have been raised · .. Jewsarc uests in every pl cc, hosts notvhere. To be by the 15 Weizmann divisions in the United Stateull'past wanted gu ts, they must also be coniemal hosu:· Dr. years, this year's lofty aoat is $'0 million, with SI million Chaim Weizmann oblcrved in 1934.. to be collected by the local division, Fndthandlcr say1. Bul With that thought in mind, Weizmann -the first those two aoalsare already bein& ~etahcad of schedUlc. • president of the state of ls"4el -helped tum an "Tbe mtasure ot ueicess is really the amount offunds unremarkable, arid suburb of Tel Aviv, Israel into the that can be raised in an endeavor like this," be aays. "In hom1de of one of the fore mo t Jcience research centers in the fields like these, you constantly need funds to arow. and wor . )OU constantly nerd srowth." ·. Today, as the Weizmann Institute of Science prepares . ita SOth anniversary celebration, supp0rt sroups based in T~e Welztnann Jnstt!u~e of Science !las. an an!'ual cities all over the world pread word of\ he b~akth 0 • .,5 opcratana budget of $70 m1lhon, half of wb1cb is prov1ded . . . . r u.,, by the aovemment of Israel. The rest comes from pnts bc1n1 made an Rchovot ,and raise mtlhons of dollars to . and contribution from 1u CH visions \P the United States. ensurethat the wor~ continues. Great Britain. Canida. France, Me1-ico and l 7 other . Those voups include the. ~e~rt Beach:based San countries. . Dieao and Orange County Divmon, formed JUst a ytar qo, which is planninJ a jubilee dinner Oct. io at the "We have su~rt from both the Jewish and non· Anaheim Hilton and Towen Hotel. . Jewish communitJet. It'a a non-<lenominational organiza- Eltpccted to attend are the mayors of seven Oranse tion and I think people recoanize the pins being made by County cities, two Conaressmeo, two county supervisors it," Fruithandlcr says. - and leaders ~f county businesses and industry. But that tUnd-raisina isn't necessarily punued The ~ eiunann Jnsutute also prcsenu world-Wide symp0s1ums c~ two yean that attract tbe odd•1 leadu11 ICltntists. Suth unn.-enal J>l)eal, Frutthandler uys, (ollowl lhe ideal m \\'ewnann sou&bt lben be established lbt · mtute In 1934. .. He wanted to set up a resean:h insutute lbat WOUid help not on1y Israel, but all the orld ... Fnuthindler •)'I. .. ~be im1ohement 1n 'c saenee research bas amce attracted some of lhe best IC'lenUsts 1n the world. Thete pet?Ple could make ina'cdil>Jy more money 1n pnva&e mdu try, but they pmer lo work al the Wewna.nn Institute." 'The cahber of research done at the inst11ute i>Ull n on par with such olher intemat1onaJ &ieience cmten u me Max Planclc Institute in Gmnany,the Louis PuleUr lnshtute in France and (he National Institute of Health HI Wash1n,1on D.C., FnuthandlC'f says. Weizmann scienusu invented one Of &he ear! e• compu~ hare credit forundenundina the c:omJKMtCllll of tht DNA molecule and !bavt made Jar1C 1trides m feedin, the "''Q1'1d'1 hunary by develo~ DeW strains Of wbnt. ~ J , Today, nearty 700 rcarch proJCCB are ~pursued an 2 l m n • .JGtm..:.-·LD&.::.Ud.Jmoleellllaic.:!..-~J.m -..M"--'.:-:=---'~'ddilion.._on Thund.ay, County Supcrvisoa thron&h layjsb dinners or even ti Mucb of it i1 do RC Harriett Wieder and Tom Riley will present a resolution . personal, one-to-one basis in which the directon of the 35- commendina the local chapter's work in support of member board discuss the Weizmann Institute and it.s • theWeizmann lntt1tute. · • needs. • ''We've been well-received with open arms:~ Evan Some contnbutors have Jiven SS00,000 to establidl . ..... ...~"' Enn f'naltlaa.Ddler. ~oaal director for Welaa•nn. •18· .. ID ~ fields like tbeee, yoa con8taDUy need new fanda." &CnetlCS lO Wen and theotttiCaJ ph . CS. .r All of hic.b allow the W cimwm Institute lO be die co~ial host 10 the world's _scientisu 111 foundef CDVISlOncd. • By SU AN MONAllAN currently reachina 'l wide audience Ollr,...c.., • .,....... via a three·minute music vidCO Peter Max created images in the promotil)J "Su~nder Your Hean" 1960s that so entranced the youth by the roclc.aroup Miuina Persons. (It can be seen on MTV and other culture they sold everythina from stations ftaturina music video.h posten to coffee cups. Almost two H d d late M · ·di hi .. "' e says that he was attracted v the eca ct :.rJ ax is n na ... on idea of a new creative outlet. '·rm the creat of New Wave. able as an artist to expresa m}'1Clf The Lawrence Ross Gallery in electronically ... in the '80s, electronic Fashion llland drew a crowd last eq~i ment is comina into ill own." Thursday that seemed u interested u ever in the anist's latest creations, ax doesn't expect this new me- which include a venture into elec:.-dium to replace .his painti!lJ. t\ow· . ""'--ever, because "this is somelh1na I do troruc an. ,a ~ 1pect.aton also wanted playfully ... Ma) be I'll do one or two a to meet the arust, who has been in year." temi-seclusion until fairly..rcccntlyJ Ma~'s En .. 'ilh i1 nwent, but b 11'1 not that Max'• work makes a .. statement about the times IS much IS soeaks with a definite, if difficult to h · ood identify. accent. Which is hardly ! a! It captures~ m and translates surprisina. con iderina his back· It t?tO a dn1p th~t thf pubhc ~und. Born in Berlin. he an obvaoully finds flattenna. infant When hit ~" moved to But Max in1ist1 that he doesn't ~lan· Chana. The family lived an Tabet and it t~at way. "Even in the .late 60s hraelandfinaUyscttJed1nSewYork. when my 1tuff became so com· wbe~ Max lives now, when he was mercial, l was a painter. I just 16. happened to pain i111ponant thinp." It was in New York that Max ho aaid in an anterview. learned h11 craft, 1tudyin1 at the An Still, Max does seem to have a Student Leque, Pratt lnstitute and finaer on the popular pulse. He is t~e School of V11ual Arts. And his TV stars brighten gala saluting Olive C.e~ter Sports celebrities also back help for abused children 81 EVE C. LASS ...., .... 0.111111•11• ' Oose to 400 people includina noted television celebrities, politicians, apons fiaures and volunteers attcndedcthe third annual Olive Crest dinner and awards benefit entitled "Californians Who Combat Child Abuse" at the Anaheim Hilton and Tower Hotel. Olive Creit Treatment Centen provide therapeutic treatment for bane red and abused children in 17 facilities in Oral)le, Riverside, and San Bernardino counties. As hors d'oeuvrei-smoked salmon. freib fruit, · _pate; salami and cbccse-were served with cocktails in the hotel's Green Room -mistress of ceremonies Stepllule Edward• was seen practicina her script. Sbe's the TV apokes~non for Luck)' food stores and al~ bas • ..... ~· J•dC• ,... .. D• outa WldaJlanlett Wiider I ODI or ti• laoaon. •. ' been on "the 1 oniaht Show;• ··The Merv Griffin Show" and" AM America.•• ·•Hee Haw0 SW' Mitty Rowe esconcd by ''0)1laJ. ty" actor Jeff Weatoa were also len4ina suppon for the centers. Doa V erleur, Oh ve Crest executive director and founder, took time out from bis areetina duties to pose with several Rams cheerlcaden. He said, "We .. re excited about the turnout. We think it:s aoinJ to be our best ever.•• He was accompanied by his wife, former Miss Anaheim Phoebe Lambetll. tiuests entered the ve~ posh Pacific Ballroom for "The Presentation Dinner' ofsteakandchlcken with bemaneaauce. Aftlr listenina to "General Happcninas," employee "'Volunteers of the General Telephone Company; sina oldies and new tunes, Jada• Pamela Det of South OranJe County Municipal Counjoked, "It's the first ttme 1n m)· life, I've ever liked the phone company." She also quipped that she achieved a personal 'first.' -scatingbetwccnaDod&erpitcherandaRams quanerbeek. On a more sober side as the evening's keynoter, s~ revealed the pliaht of the abused child in the coun system and added she was honored to suppon Olive Crest. _ · State SCn. Joa Seymoar and Orange County Supervisor Harriett Wieder were pven awards by William Ba Hr, president of the board, for their outstandina contributions in initiatina lcaislation and civic involvement to help battered, abused and neatectcd children. · 11 Bread• and Rlclaarl Walh, who were teen chauina with Roberfa IU..Urt,auxiliary president. disp~yed their custom stock race car at tho hotel entrance. The Waltzes will Nn the car at the Corona Racieway dona ti na half the~· from the race to Olive Crest . .. Dukes ofHau.ard .. celeb S...1~r1ppemd in hisoffiaat •duka' J>91lce pit>. · R1b1 Mc'KM, auxillfy Vice pteildcnt.commeotcd. "Thllillll very intaatina. when you aeeauch a com"binauon 0T1tan. edgcaton, bumanl'Wians and attorneys (rtfl rrinJ t.o her hulblnd) ~to bonor OU ve Ornri n the ,ftlht 1Pin1t Child 1bu1e." SO me of the other honored aucsu Yt'tR GMttt AMnw1,ftu 1 aantel,PrMl1ndlW ....... 'ldl en.M&llmO...W lttalilH.lla'1Dwr,O.... o.rtea,On1 1nd~8.-..1w,Jelf~ftll OIMa, SUpcrv110rhm IWt1.Anahtim •Yor Dia "-"· •nd Dell... . Allo an attendance MY and Rel llwdll .. , K•1ndlaalet&an,P .. hmt,Ttil~IMS V1UMa.tlmerteftem111nd lli IPlwrRl9th, aad\hedlnntrwa ' cryel nt. ndararora aood caute.'' East Side apartment an U\at city became a hmnitaae of sorts when be decided to retRat from his O'fo'D commercial success. "I wanted to 10 on a hiatus and just paint," he said. He pluaned to take a si1'·month break, but •"the six months just ~on and one day t realized that 12 years bad aone by-12 of the most creative years of my bfe." He added that be went thrl>usb 10 or 12 1tyles "just playina." Anayet some o me aaijns ne created durina thi1 decade 'fo"'1'e IS ubiquitous u bis earlier commerti&l work. Hit handiwork showed up on "'WClcome" billboards at border crossinas and commemorative awn for World Fain iri SPokane and osvillt. Hh mot\ ambiuous tesWbc dates back to July 4, 1976, hen bt completed the fint of 1 series of s-intinp of the Statue of Libmy. Proceeds from aaJ have been · d011a1ed toward tho restoration of the monatnenL ••1t was a totally patriotic ~ture." he explained. ~ So far, Max bas tu med out about 30 ln.tcq>reWiom of the SWue ofUba-- ty. Several of them~ painied on 'tbeWbiteHOUJClawnocJwy4, l t and ~tcd IO ~t ~ But thiS is not a clue ao Mu01 political affiliatiOll; Jimmy Caner wn aJ1o Ji~ a paint.ins when he was ~ denL . · In any event, hit public bun•t foraotten the artist. who ii now m bis mld-40L People ho were probably bUyi~ bis posun l S years llO were at the pllcry· ~ pain • IJ3 lith()sraptis at pnca !tom S6 7S to $27.<XX>. Son of bis recent cre&Uons bavo "' bemco~ toMitlue01~ Al a youna Painter. , ~er. be mndtkd his wort after that of reali ts. .. Realism WU J::'. &lot of """"'......... , ... VCfY a()9d at 1t , .. lt IJ r&)"l lacbd \hC cltjoYmtnt of crealivtty. Bu.t l leamCd mydtawiq." It temis uzilik.dy thit IDY one • lclaool will be able to claim Mu u a own ... By the time the •609 atyle became popular, I was already into my next atyle." Square off with puzzle Crosswords m oved down and across ' • Donnelly-Plorlmonte Anne Florimonte of Newpon BQ b and To Donnelly of Corona dd Mar wne united in maniaae in a SeP a ccmnony at the Old World pd in Hunt1naton Beach. They u"OUDCICld their C"fl&ement on the lSth · aiuuvenary of the bride•s ~~ Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Florimonte of Huiitinaton Beach, and c:bolt the bride's pandmothcr's bjrthday oT their wcddins day. Tbe bride .wot"e an old-fashioned with a~ neck and~ 'c"""-aa:catcd with lace and • Ibo wott a full length lacc- vaJ. Aorimonte v.'llS her sister's · , olbooor and thn:e listers of the ~ -Denise Steckler. Col-, Hodles and Cheryl Donnelly ~ briclnmaads The junior bridclmaid and flower Jirl. Losa and Sara Maizie, arc cousins of the bride from Pitubursh. Pa. The bride&room is the son of Mrs ElolSC Donnelly of Huntington Beach. Has brother-in-law, Rick Steckler. was best man and a~other brother·LD·law, Jerry Hodges and tw0 brothers of the bride. Joe Flonmonte Jr. and Jeff Aonmonte were ushers. The couple srccted I SO auC1ts at a reception at the Huntinaton Bcac:h Inn and left on a honeymoon tnp to Carmel and San Francisco. They are now residents of Corona del Mar. She 1s a 91 I emCflCncy dispatcher for Newport Beach police and he is a Huntington Beach pohcc officer. Mr. and Mn. Ruuell Parker graduate of UC R1'1crs1de where she was affiliated wnh Kappa Alpha Theta, is a claims supervisor at State Farm in Costa Mesa and her husband is markeung-eoordanato( for 6quidon in Los Angeles. ., Mr. and Mn. Tom Donnelly ~ Tawfeeq-Julieii Susan U\.) Julien of Nc\\pon Beach became the bride of Ahmed Tawfecq of Saudi Arabta an a Sept. 22 CCTcmony at the Eutbluff Oubhouse in Newport Beach .\ reception 1m· medaatcl) after the ceremony al.,. was at the clubhouse. The bndc 1s the daughter of (arol Julien and Raymond 1 c1.) <ihc ~ore: a gown of white.· antique \Ilk with patterns of heath and ~quins. Ann Al TERNATIV! TO MONDAY NIGHf FOOTBAtl PRIME RIB DINNER SPECIAL '6.95 Complete dinner lncludln& soup or salad, and cholce of potato TV viewln1 for football 1ame1 80 I E. Balboa 673-7726 ·-- Moine Lobs1er 1n anisette sauce. salmon pooched with caviar and vodka. thtn shces of bOne ss bfeost of duck. cho1eoubt1ond. toumodo of l H E 1 nombed wi1h wh skev ood El"10nt1v new oeoor and m nu bu1 st1H o1 the som ploo 9 nooo 000... the apqr1dlng of the Pool, c Ooeon .. lOWERS -· N l - orrow-cGaup I tc ummer w ddin united J ruce CaroJ McGau of ewpon h nd tlh m Dean Morrow f una i ucl who e&chnn ~ vows 10 the United Methodist hurch tn Corona del Mar. 'l'hcbnd asthedaughterofDr. nd Mrs. James L Mc:Gaugh nd the granddaughter of Daphne WriJht, 84, of Nonhern hforma. who wai an honored Juaf t the rite The bnde fa hioned her own gowo of h1te cc and tin and also de11ancd the flower arran men ts for the church , reception and bridcma ds. Landa McOaugh was m id of honor and Dayna Kimbell, Katie Mt'Connitk, Robin Babbc, Mimi Casey Oame.s. Sharon H~ nd Ruth Kokka were bridcilnatd . The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mn. Dean Mom>W of Fullerton. Patrick Duffy ' t his best .man and ushm.we~ David Kent. Kent Sand· en, Doua McOiuih. Ed Mesa. Brad Walktr and Gres PhillipS. Thecouplcarttted 3S0gucst at the University Oub at UC Irv me. AOcr a honeymoon in· Acapulco, they arc residing in La1una Niauel. She owns "Fowl Play & Co.·· and he is an attorney for Fiore and Nordbcra. Clark-Munson n evening ceremony on Sept. '' in St. James Episcopal Church in Newpon Beach united Michelle Loua~ Munj()n and David Hutchins Clartin marriaie. Newpon Beach residents Mr. and Mr.1. Murton Lo~is Munson are the. enJth white gown with a bOdice of white beaded Alencon lace and an Enahsb tulle skin with Alcncon lace appljques sweeping Crom a dropped waist into a chapel length train. Donna Palmquist was the maid of honor and the six bridesmaids were Ganna Beck, Sally Oark, Ann Ramser. Cath)' Boscmer, Gail Ben- jamin and Kathy Brosslcr. The bridcaroom. son of Mr. and Mn. Wllliam Clark of Newport Beach, was attended by Paul Mar1hall, best man, and Make Meehan. Steven Mun5on, Scott Ramser Jr .. Brooks Ben,aman. Scott Bush and Jeffery Scott as ushers. Tina Newman was m charie of the guest book at a L1do Isle Yacht Oub reception for the 32S sucsu. The couple arc at home in Irvine after a wedding trip to Maui. He is employed by the brokcralC firm of Grubb Elhs an Santa Ana. ~ngcr was maid of honor and bridesmaids were Heather Julien, Laura Ste1ler and Dana Julien. The bndciroom's best man was Donald Julien and Ron Le"v served as the usher. · The couple arc now residents of Ncwpon Beach She ts cmplo)ed b~ an 1nsuran<:e company and he 1!> with a commercial airline. " RUFFELL'S UPllLSTEIY, llC. F• Tiii a.st Of Yu LMt 1 t22 IWllOI a WO., COSTA ll:SA -SU.115' fl.~ !Ji UUITT llSllUICI ('t> ~ Non·sm'Oker ·-~~ Rates 1f b 131-7740 441 Old Newport ... d. Newpot1 ...... Ca. DO YOU HAVE MODELING· POTENTIAL '? • FIND OUTI Enter John Robert Powers ••Modef Of the Month'' COHTEIT Wllltll A FREE Soholarahlp To JBP (TM 8oh0of FOf Winnera) PLUS ....... poun In our • next monthl TO ENTEA. MAIL TH'9 OOUl'ON Wmt VOUA HEAD SHOT ,... ______________ ....._ =------~--., ______________ __ Ht ..... ----------~---- ---~------ohn Ftobltt PowlfS .,,,.. ... .c..r .... 4 Janice Morrow . M.lebelle Clark • Will new laws ' offer another goat to drunks? •• I.Mias M in ct hOw t0 cuttbl!dnnbotfbcfore thedu1nt trashes the place or kills the waitress or barkeep. Now, the state of New Jersey is tryina to lay the blame on the host in 1 private home. This maneuver aives the drunk yet another goat, another opportunity to place the reiponsibilitict elsewhere. . Please tell lawmaken everywhere to think ICriously before supportiq such l~lation. We have learned from experience that Prohibition is not the answer. Individual responsibility is. -The Alcoholic•s Wife Dear Wife: v .. •ve &fvea H I lot to tlltak &Nat. 11waU for a 1ttm1lat1D1 po.IDt of view. hy dJ11e11t.en .. , tMre! Dear Ann Landen: It's a little early to be worryjna about this, but I believe in ptannina aheaCi. My huSband oou~t a snowmobile two ycan aio and loves n. He wants me to 10 along with him next January when he plans to drive the snowmobile from Anchorqe to Iron Mounttin. Mich. Our friend$ think he is out of his mind. ts 1uch a trip fca1ible? -IaJoo Jda Dear Is: My travel e:spe111 tell me tUt Rinard Ud Raymoad Moore ud Lorn Ma*'ew• drove tllelr aaowmoblle from Palrbult1, Alaab, to FeJJt., Mk~., la IHO. It took at day1. lt'1 a roelJI trip, DO 41eesUoa &boat It, b8t tt't do-able. . How you111 is too youn1 for• child to learn about seJC? Tbat'1ju1t one tbilJlyou'/J 6nd in Ann Landers' new bookle~ "How, Wh•t • .,,d When to Tell YourChildAbo&Jt Sex." For your copy send 50centulo111with•lon" sumped, self..addressed envelope to Ann Landers, P.O. Box J 1995, --Chic.1110., JJJ. 60611. _________ _,._ _____ _:__ :' TO NIGHT'S TV ---- ''Thi 8un*la Bed" (Prtmiert) F•· It~=· PN LtM1t. MERV°""'" 10 HENT~CMJZATION Nl/lJMJlWS DONCOflYEU ALFflED tlTOtCOa( PfBENT8 ~MOW * * * "With A Song In My HM't" ( 1952) Sutan Hayward. David Wayne Comedy growing upon he tube By BED ROTHENBERG ~,. ........... NEW YORK -The Kate half.of. .:.:..~te A A1he" wanu tO have 1 bl~. !',I ne fact that she 11n '1 married dotsn c faze her, and. 11 a caument tO 1h11 •pedal lhow, it didn't bother CBS' ~nsonor Its advert1Kn. ln~on t'1 new,.._son return of Jbi1 1 ana Knea. an unmarried frie of Kate's has a baby. K.ate'.s involvement with lhe neWbOm ch1la unleashes her own rnattmal 1m· pulsn, even thouah Katt, played ~)' Su11n Saint James, is divorced and, for the moment. 1nttnd to slay that Q_y, rn funny and m ture w ys. thi episode raises the pr°' and cons or 11n&le·parent motherhood. It doesn't - detail how Kate would act pre&nant, but the mere suuesuon of • 1s1Mlit-e.;.Jo> Sain frl .. •• woman contemplatina havini 1 bib)' -1:1aaan t Jamee and end on Kate• Allie. is li&)lt >::ears away from TV's dizzy • · housewife bumina the roast on "l -Love Lucy." woman and her widening choices. ln fatherlen household," 111d Gorlin. "There was a scene in an earli~r comparison, Jae~ Tnpper living with .. The portrayal allows all sons of version of the script that mentioned his girlfriend on "Three's a Cro~d" iuucs Wlthout beina euperated. :perm bank an~ hirin, a stud. but this season -billed by ABC as a Similar subject mat.ter on another then we took u out,' said Sherry . breakthrough -comes off as sheer show could be ofTcns1ve." Coben. the senes creator who wrote silliness. · Gorhn satd the characters' de· this _episode. "Jt wasn't ncccuary to To . som~ u~ent, "Cheers" and velopment beyond traditional TV · say n. or JO that far. We wanted to "Family Ties" 'also can tread adult rotes "lessens outm9'1ecl stereotypes arue the issue with a wistful sort or territory. but no show docs it as ~eH and allows the sli w tQ discuss . .. .. .. .. .. . 'Rea~istic co dY' Janis back to Broad---ay "-!~•.nd om1n ~ucbencesl&Ulhedal Paiae ys YORK -~'/ve nut.Cd mttunn~ lau.&hcd bard you lhtcclCns nov.~n nd:• ~ B 1 jusibadtow tt nc1~plesreeu fore the couple can n douta lhe ha after what she can ... , comedy an 1 lhinas tht)'ve ~tPoned or an ttabsuc vttn •• oftt'n 1old her iMy flutttnna•in loncl on around she WCtt,IOlna'throuah the same th10&H tmPl>' nc t. tbt sons tum into homma her cha~r. their own srown ~hi&. lftO dren bad mo ed hick home P Jari ns Pai,e haS contlnuecho rtachcnpu ams Paiae. absent from BrOld•'I)' BUt tht death in 1976 of L-•L•"d 11nce She replacc(J Anada Lanibury ~ "' •' m "'Mame .. •n 196 , s lhc wife and husband, sonpnier Ray Ollbm. mothtr n .. Alone Totethtf, .. a com-prompied htf IO tum IO lhe bUsanaa tdy 11th lhe .. Plot line dtteribtd oriel. Tbq bad bem manied 12 above . .Kevan McCanhy, M0tpn yean. hilt IOOk o~rr 11 m-.c Fauchdd'1 fither on TV's ''Flamsnao pubhtll11:11 compan)'. lpaMtl'.\& COfP. Road." is 1he husband ind father. ln Lot An1des, wberf lbc mll hvn. The pliy. by Liiwren« Roman, atarts ··1 1m1t -over-:papen ull 2 and 3 m"1ews today and opens Oct: 21 at a m7•• She )'J. "".He w. snot a man theMus1c801 Theater. 1loeverdisamedbu • .,nhrnc. "I read i and hked ii. .. J>a.iae sa)'I. "Ray 111 ~cry deeply anvohed .. It's a dean script, a rattier un· with Bruihan mu it and al\Ao"I~ corriphcatt.d stot). h 1s bard to find lo"ed it. He wrote lyncs for most of properucs that aren't uJl of four-ntonio ClilotJob1m'1;10l\P: llhat'.s letter ords. depression, mtrospec-how the com.-nl' s formed . He don and nudn)'. I thouaJu it was a wrote CVCl')'th1,_ :in Carmen Miran· lqvcl) scnpt and very "'ell wntten. da'1 nrlht club a.ct for mne )em. He ·•of couf1t there's introspection in was under contract lO Disney and 1l but not thatheavyintros-tion. so won tbe Oscar for ·z;p-a.Dec-Doo- much of what e see .odi)' is so Dab.' " analytic and sodttp; Ithink the world For Paiae. a novice busl· is a complicated place. It would be ncss-oman. takina on that rt1P9nsi- nice to act away from ii for awh le." bility was .. prOblbl) the ~Jy thi'?I ln Au1ust, Paist had her first ~hat ever 5'?1red me 1n .my hfe. Muuc experience playina summer stock tS ~ JJ:0!1n& -.nd vastl> cb.anaina when "Alone To1ether" used Eastern bus11~e11.: . .. .summer theaters as its ti') out path 10 W1th most of It 1n my head. and Broadway. The how played a Wttk with the help of a aood ~tary and each in Westport.. C:OM.; ~Cod.· lawyer, Paiat will run the compan) , • Ion& distance while w·s on Broad· Coben says she has sin&Je fnends Allie." , ., , 19 Os issue, she added. .. because of Alona With pCrformina, Pai also \\<ho've c-0ns1dcred havina children, The amazing thina aoout "Kate &. the need for women to be m~ S k t hopes to tttum tO horseb&clc ndins, and toniJ)lt's i ue touches the broad· Allie" breaking down barriers is'that aocomplisbed IS career people while ; na Ce Se •hich ihe &oves. ••J had five hones er subject of the mc>dttn workina at'sdoncwith such perceptivewitand tbc~yearuJip away." " l:" wbea Ray died, bunters and Jumpers 'T.J-. ' scene too realistic wanntb, -an(J"with '°much fidelity 10 CBS not only d1dn'l rnistthe story fco,r 'Marie , both." she says.. ... jumped and the characien, that hardl) anybody idea, Micha.cl Qaiens, head of C?BS' ~ showed them. I mi.ss it every c:b)." notices it's bappenins. prcsrammin& in New l'ork, actually On TV, She was a ni&ht club sin,er .. I don't worry about alienatm& upated it. .. ASHVILLE. Tenn. (AP)-Siss)· 10 "It's Always Jan," io 19.S.S and '56. any bod)'.." said Coben. "My problem · ·~1t was never a c~ntrove~y here. Spacek will ponray Mane Rauhianti • a series written by btt tccood bm- is to make Kate and Allie true to said Josh . K.a!1e, vice president of -the Tennessee official ..,holiclpcd band. Anhur Stander. Ori .. All in the themsclv~. ~ long as )ou're true to pravam!fla.n_a1n New York.. .. Oearly, to topple the administration of for-.family" she had a sucst shot u ~ the characters, you can ara.ze by any the amphcauon was that Kite would mer Gov. Ray Blanton -in a new other woman" m the life of Archie reaJ·life issue. What I want people 10 find '°mebo4y to.Wber the chikl---moY~.-Bu~. feel after the baby show is real maybe ol' Max (her ex-husband). But Based on the Peter Maas book. She made her inovie debut in warmth." 11'1 really more a bioloaical-<lock ··Mane: A True Story ... production of "Hollyv.-ood C.anteen" in 1944. he Even so. Coben was surprised that story than a how-to story. the Dino De Lauren11is film begins in says she is be$t remembered for ber LOS ANGELES (AP) -Actor James Darren was doina a scene for ABCs "T.J. Hooker" on a downtown strut that called for him to lie in the iutter and be robbed. And robbed he was. for real In tbe acnpt. Darren, who plays an undercover pohcemanf was to act as bait for a man who rol s drunks. The camera was across the street. CBS' censon never raised an eyebrow "We're not sittina on a sequel," November. role io --Silk Stock.inp/' to which rJle abouttbcshow. WinifrcdGorlin, vice a~ded Kane~ "We ha~~ no plans to It is the stor) about TenneS'SeC's ~pla~yed~~a~radian~·~t~ly~~flam~boy~a~n~t~and~~============~ pre ident for program practices, said raise the ~UbJ«t again. . clemency-for-cash scandal which sent fi only one change V<aS requested by her A.dvcrhsers, who have been cntt· three former Blanton aides and a one:. department-:--atel~honenumberin " cized by the networks for being time Chattanooga J;>cmocratic the script was thou t to be too real, cauuou around touchy subjects, precinct \\Orker to pruon. Blanton raising the possi 'lity of vlewer were enthusiastic about this episode. himself was not charaed in the phone calls. There were no ~ponsor defections. scandal but is scrvina a fc.deral pnson "Darren had a dollar bill st1ckin1 out of his pocket," said Debbie Darr, ~u ticist for Colum1b1a Pictures Telcvls1on. "ftils man "Came a ong and crabbed the money." Darren had aha.lover hisey~and it took him a few moments to see that it wasn't the actor who was supposed to roll him . He yelled at the man and chased him about 20 feet. Darren sot his 'money bide. btit the man got a~ay. .. Kate and Allie are two divorced accordina to the CBS sales depart· term for a sc~~te liquor license women suivwg to eree~J m~ '~N AMERICAN MASTERPIECE, THE MOVIE TO BEAT FORTHE ACADEMY AWARD:' ••ALL OF MF IS A SLAPSTICK. HIPSTER HVBRID OF •HEAVEN CAN WAIT AND TOOTSIE. ... _,_. H.._, ~ MMIAZDfl STEVE LILY MARTIN · TOMLIN AUOFME l'UCIUS (I) fl DCll IUTlMO It H~ Ul ro 1010 lo HABRA , .•• ,,/ii : ,,__,., HOWl•CI I[, .-01lln1 Jr IOUNEa 'S STOAY (PGl AT U 1JO 2 1•0 4 1 0 7 00 .. t :1S -ll'r1nc1 1n fU•fl'LR RAHi C•J SHOWS AT U r41 J 100 1120 7 .. ,0101 Stoe Marun A U..Ofl llll (NJ SHOWS AT.12100 1100 4 00 f !OO 1,00 tO·OO 9111 Murray 8HOSTllUSTa•s CNl SHOWS AT U 1fl t i• t100 7:U l :IO/ 70MM Sll.,1 Martllt .. LOJ' T Olf\lln AU.. OP .. "'8, ""' c ........ ,. Sh•t"n Candlu Cll'O) HOU•aYTHC c .. .nav fll) ""• C.H.U.O. '"l' and Mortua•)' ,_, 1;;mt1tO;l 2J r:.v:: 1 :::.~ IUUlAft IUD .,.., ~lit Co•Hlt O"mlln1 {11'0) COUWTaY .... CMP.,1UHPIC&S .,._, T tttl WOlllMI ... a&D JIJllCI 1..1n"'"•-I taRaCOllCIUUIL& SHOWS AT IJt)O 2:10 AT U :ll J 1U f t U ..... , "'" l •'o 7 JO .. t 110 7141 6 t011S 81efl1lor art)' c.-1 DRIVE 1,.10"91 I U tftO;tll l1Wk1111hlCl1it1lr11t U .. 11HREE u .. Net~ -NOW PlAYINO- au1iirait UA Mov'lll 052·4083 •IRD UA~ 911().4022 AM £awanll Ctneml C.nt• 971 414 I t&ilMlll towtnll llr1slll M0-7'" ..... IUQI lDWMDS SO CXlAST lACUlll • ' 1711 ..... • Pf WPOfH BUCH • . ""' __ SALLY FIELD __ PLACES IN THE HEART ALL SEATS $2.00 AT EDWMOS IESA, EDWARDS WESTmOOK P!!! .._ \UI llWel!tl lltonwtUC • ;U1['4 't .~, \I~ • . ' • COSTA W SA • lDWUOS mw kl •• \ .. .. UDY INKERBEAN ' THE FAMILY CIRCUS "Mommy, did you know that Christopher Columbus invented America?" MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson ''He's hard to keep hold of when they're barbecuing next door'" by Tom Batluk 000 BIG GEORGE ... , 0 1 hate Mondaya." DENNIS THE MENACE 1 I I ~ by Hank Ketcham -- BU Y DRABBLE ... ™E LAST OWCOl.AT'E Q{lP . COOtCIE IS 60NE 'IOU' Qf. 5l.1"'4 A "·N~OMf. ~.~NI, FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE G~IRS A l.iJON[)l:R- FUI.. GiRl.. THEY'VE BEEN Gc>lNG 15Gd"°Ht:R ~QoOE. R LU11LE. TUMBLEWEEDS ~ OO"b.l KUP M.I. f"~ bl~~~~~'? I CP.N T FIGURE II 001,oOHN ... ..r----11 IO·t .. . by G rry Trud u by Kevin Fagan t l<~ 1. ~ \'O !>tof 00\~ \tl by Lynn Johnston WHY DOESN'r PHIL WANT lb GET~ED? -~ ;> GORDO ~ tft:GOES: SlJPEft ~ LD15A ~t( ANP by Gus Arriola CIJNl'1W'("0 VIS'f'A Pl!At(1'0 PACI! SfPAll\t ••• GARFIELD MOON MULLINS 'THREE PHoNE C,ALLS, FOUR AUTO ~ORNSJ A>JD SIX W'HISTl..SS . ~I • by Jim Davis BRID GE Q.l -A1 South. vu lnerable. you hold: •9S.. <:;)KIOCS3 OQJ8 •752 The bidding has proceeded: North Eaat Soatla West I• PH• l -, Pue I• Pua ? What action do you lake'/ A.-You have a minimum re1ponse and you have reached a playable spot. Opener's rebid In a new suit at the one·level i1 not forcing. to there is no ne d for you to hep the bid· ding open. Don't take a preference to two clubt -you are rai1ing the level for no good rtason. Partner might have a lhree·c:ard auit and even if be bat five club , el1ht trick mi1Jht bo beyond your combined auets. uLh, vulner:abl , you ANSWERS TO WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ reason'? You have not yet establi1h ed a trump fit. Therefore, we 1ur ge1t cauUon. Inatead or jump shif ting.~e would make a almple one apade response and 1bow our strength in the 1ubsequent bidding. Q.4-Both, vulnerable, H South -you hold: •J76'2 <:>AQe 05 •K7U Partner open• the blddln1 with one spade. What do you reapond? OMAR . SHARIFF "A. -Because of your five caNi sup· port and •Ingleton, you might be tempted to jump t.o four 1pade1. However, you have far too much atr ngth for that action. ln 1upport for ap.td., your hand r valu to J4 pololl, o the l A•book re pon i1 a Jump ral to thr 1pad . oulh you Q.8-At oulh. vul n rabl • 7ou • •KQJ53 <:>K82 OH •Al05 The bidding hat proceeded: N ortll Eaat South W eet l <:> Pue 1 • Pa11 2 0 Pue ? What do you bid now? A.-You want to be at least In 1ame, perhaps slam, but you are not yet sure whether It iJ beat to play In CHARLES Go1£1 hearu, spades or no trump. You need moro Information from part· n r, and the obvfoua wa1 to set that i• to bid three clubl. A now ult b1 / you I forcins, and partn r'1 n •l bid 1hould clarify hl1 hand. N6turaJ• 11. If he ra u clubs, you will t.llt him back lo he•f'U. ( COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRAN8ACTION8, .. ~apan ste~lmake~~ope ·with changes CRE DIT L1Nf ------ Schutz promoted at Calif. Fed. S&L State-of ·tile-art roductton e ulpment 81 JOA.N MOWER '" fl 9 ,,,_...., YOKOHAMA, Ja~ -Wath its J*tel bwldinp, sophisticated com· putcr sr.sttm and aourmet restaurant, \he Ke1bin Works seems more like a Silicon Yalley rC¥arth park than competition for America's agini st~I mills. Steelworkel'I at the NippOn Kokan mill are surrounded by trtts and shrubs. and they can spend their lunch hour in a ctfetcria with a pit'lure window ovcrlookina a Pond. There are no smoke stacks so the air is clear. Built by J a~n 's secoqd taracst steel ·company on a marimade island about 20 mile• south of Tokyo, the SS billion Keihin Works has been in full operation since 1979 with state-of· ~ CZ, the-art production equipment. ~ . But Nippon Kokan and two other I lapanese stcelmakcrs lost m~ney in Mu1 u~l FuNos I l 983, demon1trating that even c4m· panics with tbe mo t modem mills cannot always count on makma money -a ~ ibly daunti"8 tboUaht for Amerielut steel concern that are being urae<t to modcrni1c to compete with impon . Steelmakcn in Japan, the .,.orld'~ No. 2 tetl producer af\cr the SOviet Union, 11y that they. like the U.S. steel industry, fac.e nuctuatina dt· mand as well as preS&ure from c9untries with cheaper labor costs ahd equally 'modem plants. such as Korea, Taiwan and Brazil. "The steel industry in feneral in the woi'td is not expand1ns.' ,_id Michio Mizo1uchi, an ambassador at tarie in Japan's Foreign Ministry. He said 1983 was a particulatl)'. bad year because of e aJobal 'teel iJut. Japan's steel industry operated at 62 percent capacity last year. Tile American industry worked at S6 p"crccnt of capacity. DOWNS UIJl. _c'lf'- a~ :; :t i~ -1 • Teuuo Yam uch1. a general man· r t the Keihin Works, said that de pate its 1983 loss. his company takCS I long•rnngc VICW Of 'ats profitability. for one thing. NiP.pon Kokan, "'hich a1rcad11s Ji pans sixth largest stupbuUder, is d1vcrsify1n • Yam uchi id. ··until five years aio. NKK was 90 percent involved in steel pro-_ duction," he id. Steel's hare .is down to i70 percent, an~ the com· pany's goal is .SO percent. I) Charles Butler. a 'pokes man for the Japan Steel Information Center in New York.. said the Ja~ncse also arc movinf to ensurt compeutJvcness by speciahLing in hiah..grade steel and made-to.order products for con· sumers like the autooiobile industry. Unlike American 'tecl .factories, there arc n0t too many ways to imP.rove efficiency or cut costs at the Keihin Works. 1 With a production capacity of 6 million tons, the mill boast-I· blast furnaces th.at are amona the world's , , ,. largcsl,.autom tion that nllow' some areas to operate unmanned. cncrsy conservauon th t cut down e~· pcnscs, and a tmn pQnat1on 1ystcm that is arran so produt'li now •n a traiibt Une. . • The Keihin Works is such a model 'ewpon Beach 1dmt EU.-e" c. •U s bttn 1promoltd M> ViClt plant that n Amcncan st l ripen. president at OOlfeall FMu81 via,. ... Leu AMadaca.~1 commcrdal wlio as ·Cd to remain nooymous. banki dt" · ion in Oranar Count}'. wath rcspouablit)' for buaDeM said U.S. teelmakeis probably would dc\'e)opment. credit anal and Portfolio nuanantement of the dh1MOta'I find it probibhivcl).' expensive io ~al loans. heh been With lbc nk for two>~ Also jouuiw w constrUCt 'mila rm1llsinAmeri . OrangcQ)lint)OPCr&llona ~1CCPft$1dcnt1s!1Mman.c.or.Btta.WIM>comet The difficulties fl ccd by Japan' 10 Cllifom1a ttdcral from hteantH ~etne91 :8er\1ces, a rfinaoc»& steelmakm in t~e 19 Os arc panty •Qsutut1onuoftwarc company. their own doin ·d heldon • • •' Wesson, a spokesm1m for the Amen· J .C. acRae ha Joined CDB lac., a ewpon Bcach.tmed 1nva&meat can tron and Steel In t1tute in ban.kins 11d venlUrc capital flrm, vaccprcsldcnt and chid'finaodal oflkilr. ..yashinston. In h.i ncW post. Mac Rae will dirttta!l mtcmal financial acuntift and play an ' .. The Japanese bu ah a arcai steel active role tn fund man~cnt. with cmphUtJ on health can: aod the bio-*91 industry from thciround up, but in 50 industry. He •>&s formerly vice prn1dent and dllcf financial oft'ar for VU doin• they became over~nthu 1astic Corp., developer of the contraceptive •oonge. .. ~ . '. .. -. they buil1 bc)'ond their own needs StevH l . Zeller has been promoted to cxccutavc: v.ice president of&NG orthe needs of the export market," he Mott,afe Service, witt. dlrKtor r~ I• 1% .,rwlla _. _. said. 1a,enlaory rnpoa1lb1Uty for RNG ......._...dve ., vice, ~ .. Even o. the Japanese. ~ho ex· b•lkler and brokered loaa dlvlllou. 11'e •ewpen 8eedl rw1•.a 1• i.e. poncd nearly i third of their pro· wltll RNG for two )'ea". duction in 1983, includina about S • • • percent of U.S. con umptaon. are in SkUey, lac. oflrvinc has selected Vk&er c.-mlad1a1, a.e. o(Colca much better shape than the American Mesa to prepare an educational provam -in CODJUnctioM with cudiolalistl industry. and cardiovascular surseons -for paticnu v.bo bare had prosthetic~ Over 1982 and 1983, American im lanted. stee n0$tmorct an~cn~,o~n~.----......... ====-'--~~--~~--~~.~.:-:"'.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..._.- with employment down to about Jack Carder and Dould· M. B•l'M m ha\'C been appointed plroje)CI 213,000. compared to the mad· I 970s manager for Br.-c.Dttnctioe. lite. of Irvine. ~· wtll be: 'r:aponAOlc fot 1u hi&h of 4S3,000. proj~ scheduling. budgcnnd contract ad.min1strat10D. • tu ~pite Japan~ claims about the ~ • • IJ:~ pressures poSC'd by other steel· Robert Dall~ has joined the Newpon 8Cadl office ofT..eM a-a C.,_ ~ producinf countries, the Reagan ad-an a<:C10unting firm . The Huotin~o Beach icsident. a recent ~uaae OI 1 minisuallon intends to open nego-lluliql Collete ef Law, Will assist in prepl'nna w mums. in lMISinew tu )· tiations with the Japanese to curb plannina and wltb, real estate. wes. f An official at the U.S. Trade AJ CosnU.O of uuan Hilb bas been ppointcd~l aad cbid': i:l impons into the United States. · • • • '. Representative'' office. who spoke executiveofficerofMedlaSy1iem1TedlMli90.lme.oflrvine.a nwua&cwrU · only on e<!ndition ofa.nonym1~y. said of duplication S}'stems forcomputeuoftware. BeforeJO&ning MST. c.o.eatioo- : the Amencans are suU workin1 out was president and executive officer of EEOO Coafater. lie. Cotentino is .s their stratCI)' for . talks with the consid~ a pi~ncer in the computer indusuy, wi~ more than 30 ycan of i Japanese. operauna expenence. .,, Although the official said Japanese . • • • s~eelmakers are _not tbe ~nes res~n· , Edward ~d has been chOKn Knior vice ~dent arid.~ sable for.surges U\ steel imports mto -maniao ... r ofiarda-11 Mort••ce ~J?.'• mort&aie be.nkan"'~ocpan. the Umted States last year. the --Barela • · based i' · .......... · Americans think Japan does not have mcnts. Y s ts 10 rvane. · a completely open market for im· • • • ports. H.aa-Oaee Oaa1 has Joined Ilq Adwcrttsiq 6 hblk Rela"-s as a.a art The di\'crsion ~reaicd as.a result director with the firm's creative serv1cn ckpartmeat. Chun& COlnC$ to the leads to greater impons into the Newport Beach firm after more lhan fi\'.C yea.a in N~ York. most recalll) as · United Sllte . the official uid. a designer for Bau Ir Y.aier. _ • Highest Bank CD Rate Term Yield Rate 2 Years 12.llo/o 11 .. 43o/o ---·-- 1 Year 12.05% 11.38% 6 Months · 11.80% 11.16% . Bonus Money Market* 11.25% 10.66o/o -~ ' \ IEI D A.,.,,..1,...1 , IJ t-..wJ '" r•;... ,...1 .1....t "''r""1 '""" "'"'1 on • ourt1 •• t"1 rat• t .. 1 ,.,,. ~r•t RA 1 E R.11n •h '"" "" t.......l on • 1 l'l<lO ~n' ~"""""' al '"'"'""' r<'n.t I\ l•tt • • \ ,. rhd KW• R•tn ... t.oni It < • 11~1 n.>1~• Central Bank \vould like ~ou to earn the high t bank-safe ~interest on $10,000 depo its.You are insured by the FDIC up to $100,000 .. W?'re big enough to off r you a very health}; return on your m n y ndsm 11 en ughtomak it y for you. Ju t for our Custom Investment Account and check these additional benefits: tt· her rates available on other maturities. 'tour interest is c mpounded daily. Your in ttnent is ba ked bY. our $1.2 billi n in n1 re than 92 v ~ars ., Central Bank I JUST lllGttT FOil lOU • • • 1 ' J - ------ On ~ the ,, • J I I Gi l!f rJ!JiMhl id.1Jfi3fo]J1 . MONDArS CLOSHIC PllCES WHAT NY SE DI[) AM F x LlADLRS ' -. . . . ' . , . Got u Quo i: ·,I --- -. I - That•s an apt description of both li>ustness and . business people along the Orange Coast. -To ·keep tra~k of where compant s are gotn~and which people are helping them get there, ju t watch Credit Line' -every day in tile Businesss cttonofyournew 'IHJ Plllt · . .... • f I orange Padres carYe Co Dty--AndCubsmanagetoupholdtra itton: .~~t~,!:~,~~ to~· d 39. ~ Theybreakheartsofthetrloyalfans i~r~g; ~:'·~~:~ T I 0 fl ns. They ere dentrd ba1 m n)' Op umcd to lhcir ptedcSti SAN DIEGO(AP)-Jt wasapme 16-year hi,tory of the Padres, who pennant, which would have ended a · full of history -record·makina never before had finished higher than droudtt in i>'act since World W r II. history for the National league. the fourth in the NL West, mueh le .. l'his is the sweet t. Thi as the extension of history for the Chicago ·m de the Series. which begins here best," said • n Dieao' Dick Wil· Cubs and. perhaps, the beginnina of Tuesday again t American 1%8 uc r ms, Who manJFCI the Boston Red history for the n Diceo Padres. champion Dctron. x to n Amcnan League cham· On a Sunday when presidential The victory, J>lA>cd before ~8.3S9 p1onship in I 67 and took the candidates agreed to debate. major fan~ in San Diego Jack Murphy Oakland A'sto Work! Series victonct leaaue umpires •arced to arbitration Stadium,alwm rked the first'time in in 1972 and 1973 .. Nobody pve uu and San Dicgans •arced to play the NL history a team has captured a chance. but we believed in role of the .. I 0th man," the Padres pennant after losing the first two ourselves." hook their season·lona ineptitude pnies of the bell-of-five playoff. ~ Williams. whose Padres wen 81-81 apin t Rid Sutcliffe. scored six • The Padres erased a hum1h1tm1 and in fourth place in each of his first tames i9 two inninp and defeated the 13..() defeat at the han<b of Sutcliffe in two years as manaier, cut and pasted Cubs 8-;3 to advance to the World Game I and a 4.2 loss an Game 2 to together a victory 1n Game S wtth five . ScriCJ. wm tM nexttwocontestsat home. 7-1 pitchers and four pinch·hitters. and It was the first championship m the and 7-S. fortin~ Sunda)"s finale. he did it without his best power hitter, Stne OUTey (left) leape Into pile of happy Padree after apbUl climb to World Seriee. DelrOlt'• Tigert h8v• b11n buar getting rNdy for8erlM.C2. .CUBSFANS DIE HARD WITH LOSS Frem ~ dlspatcks For every .t.;anc on the walls of WnaJcy Field a tear has been shed by oncoftheloyallqjonwbofoUo the Cbicago Cubs -the sroup that must ~one more ):car. The Cubs have not played in t}Je World Series since l94S, the longc5t cumnt OOft-eppeaf'l.DCC streak in major lequcs. A 6-3 loa to the Sall Diep:> Padres in -Sunday's fifth pmc of the National Lacue Cbam· pionship Series kept that streak intact and mitcd the anasbina of teeth. the· outpourinaoftearsand renewed cries of: "Wait until next year." This version of the Chicaao Cubs, the winninccst one<ity frarichise in baseball history wn.h 1.227 victories. was unlike &n) ever scot oa the field before. Ten of the pla>cn bad postseason experience with other franchises and the two men in charce of the operation -General Ma~ Dallas Green and Manaaer Jim Frq -bad managed an World Series Still, ODOC ap.an s0methina bap-peried to keep lhe Cubs from playiui 1n the Fall Classic. Instead. it v.as the classic case of Chi o·s fan . .. 1"htj wou14ft·\'bc me .r didn•t break your ean;:' Je Granger, a 29-)car-old Chicaao resi- dent. said. When they Cubs took a two~ to-none lead over the Padres in the NL.CS, hearts wctt beatingqutekJy on Chicago's North Sade 10 antiopatioo of a World Scncs pme in WnaJey Field. The Commissionel"'s office had decided that because the Cubs' park iJ the only one in the maJon w.berc niabt pmcs cannot be played. the rbyt6m Oftbe World Series -.ould be cbansed to accommodate television. If the Cubs had won the pennant. the Scnes would have bc&un in the Amencan League park. not the National.. and (Pleue eee CUBS P AllS/C4 ........ 114 ------··· Iii~~ Keznp .epitolnizes Ra1Ds: in a daze .......... a.-........ ... .._.., .... .. ._ ........ ........ :EJ._ a:--· --·=· ........ ....,,...,.... b ByCVRT SEEDEN Of ... Dllllp ....... Rams quarterback Jeff Kemp had to feel left out Sunday afternoon. His teammates knew what hit them -three field aoals by Mick Luck· burst, includina the pme-w1nner from 37 yards out as time expired in the Atlanta Falcons• 30-28 victory before ~.318 at Anaheim Stadium. Kemp, on the other hand. looked like an amnesia victim who had just walked out of the Mojave Desert. obviously dazed and uncertain of everythina that went on Sunday. His head bun and bis chm was the embattled owner of five stitches. Kemp was knocked out of the game -temporarily -with 38 seconds remaining in the first half after goina head fint into Atlanta defensive back Kenny Johnson. Ueberroth s~eps in, Ralders' umpires come back Wilson flllis bill He suffered a concussion and did not start the second half Kemp eventually returned and even led the Rams to two second-half touch- downs, includina a 63-yard strike to Drew Hill in the third quarter which at the time gave the Rams a 21-17 lead. But it wasn't enough Touchdown runs of I and 9 yards b) th1rd·stnna ~nnini back L>nn Cam and Luck- hurst's field 1oals pve the Falcons the victory and a ~~'ly tic for second place(with the Ramsaod c" Orleans) in the NFC West.. Luck..hunt's field goal with 0:00 remaining on the clock left the Rams dazed. but nothina like Kemp, ..,ho was just fortunate enough to know which locker room he was in. .. rm going to 10 put some ice on m ~ bra1 n." he said afkrward. "Actualh. I felt pretty good at halftime. I just bad some problems With a few plays~ Kemp can be excused for bcina • httle groay and confused. He strua· &Jed thro~ the first blf. compktina 9 of I 6 pa for 9 yards and was unable to get his team into the end lOne. Then C'lme his scramble -all for a grand total ofthrtt \'lrds as the Rams (Pleue eee RAMS/CS) Luckhurst r&ises Cain Falcons· place-kicker rates Sunday's winner as his best Sunday's scores Fa.lcona SO. R•ma 28 Buce SIS. VUrln&• 31 Redak.lna 35, Colt. 7 Bean 20. Salnta 7 Broncoe 28, Llona 7 ~ee 27, BWa 17 • . . . .. . .. . . . ~ .. ... ~ ... =11e1wala 18, Ollen 3 Jet.17, Chlefa 18 Patrtota 17, Browne 18 , Dolphlm Sl, Steelen 7 Ralcten 28, Selhawb 14 Cbaraen 34, Packen 28 Cardfaala S l, COwbOp 20 • 0 Le1110D hopes to sw:eeten Tigers' hopes Afler 10yearsofwalt1ngforthechanc , Detroit outfi Ider hopes to get hot now · DETROI f ( P) -ht>t Lemon walled 10 'i rs to reach ll's post· son competition. ow, he'll have to wall a little Iona.er to get hh ftm hi. .... l:.ctnon, one of Dt-1ro1f s most conr.i tent pla~ rs all ~a\On, went 0. for·l3 as the Tigeu swept the Kansas City Royals in three a,ame~ in lhc I SPORT S BREAK ---- Amen n Lea uc Champ1on5h1p Series. •'They didn't need mt m the pl11}offi ," he said wtth a taulh a the "Tiiers-wmt through a loose wtirkout in the midsl at Tiger 'tadium Sllndly preparina for San Diego in the tir-1 ~e of the World ~nc • which bqins Tuesday. Lemon htt .~87 dunn the rqular son. ra1 1na hi lifetime a"c 10 282. He al hat 20 home run nd dro\'C in 76 runs. Yet he was hut down by Kansas City pitching in his pll)Off debut, althouah he did score the only run of the ~nnant-clinchang name J afier rc~chint b3SC' on a forceouL ··1 nttd to get three or four hiu in tlie ~ries.-tcmon ~i<f. "l ri'etd to JCt some hits so no one comes up after 1t'~ over and SA)'5. 'Do you know you didn'~ get any hus'r Ye h. l'H know it." The T rs ot D to I of 25 bati 1n 11 the Ro> I , and st\ernl of ttie Dctrou hltlen ~O}cd a ood rie One of them, shortstop Ian Trum· mtll, tnpled his first ume up in the playoff opener, then hit a home run and a angle later 1n the game. Oerward, Trammell s~ud the tnpl 1n hi fil'5t at·lxlt removed JOme of the nxic1yabo1.1t when tho fir t htt ~oula come . "That's the way to do it," Lemon said. ''Get )'OUr first, and then youi second and thtn some more. .. Jjuit want to get my first." said the eteran Detroit center fielder. ••1t would be lo d ol m) mind " Lemon did not hit the ball well · inst the Roy I gomg ().for·.S 1n e ch of the first 1wo mes. "When .)Ou want u rcaJ d, )'Ou can someumes try torn ke it happen nght ·away, rothc1 than lctuna 11 happtn.'' he ad. "You try not be too a !live, and Try not to be too timid. both can happen." "When you're not goina well, you try to look at c.-ch at-bat as an independent event When vou're 01118 ii, II tend to build for you."' Lemon ran u nd-down the isles t tmpty ager daum for awhile Oetrolt phtym milled round dun the rehued practto • A gloom) day nd hghl nun that \hortencd the workout did not dampen the team's pints. =t he p\Ayft • 1dded t>Qut ho would get the .. MVC' pri1c-for the mo t valuable clutch hil -while sound of hard-hit balls ech throu&h the cavernous t.adium. . ~ Padres' l Oth m.an Lyle ekes out Lancome~vtctory 49era rtalt 4-0 record tonight Evert Lloyd'gets put Turnbull Was the nc ST.NOMLABRETECHE.Francc-n EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. -Ci] MANHATIAN BEACH -Chris E3 Prese e Sandy Lyle of Scotland captured the Coach Bill Wal h of tht San Francisco c • t Evert Llo>d used the lob as an effecti~·e f Bi S 140,000 Lancomc Trophy golf tour· 49ers secs the Ne\\ York Giants as a team • weapon against Australian WenreTum· 0 g Mac (Kroc) nament Sunday on the first hole of a ·•in the proccs of getting l<>ðcr." bull on Sonday to capture the sin taile, sudden-death playoff against 1983 champion But. can tht Giants. comingt>ff a deOatini 33-12 6-2. 6-3. in the SI S0.000 Virginia lims of Los Angeles 'From AP d1 pate 1 Severiano BaUesteros of Spain. loss. to the Rams, complete the process ()Cfore their tournament. SAN DIEGO _ Jack McKeon. who a The winner's pu~ was $28,000. Nauonal Football League game tonilht against the Lloyd. playing her usual baseline St)'le against her completed his five-year plan in fiour. 1:.elt Lyle fired a final-rou.od 6 ?sver the St. Nom coµrsc undefeated 49crs an Giants Stadium? · opponent's serve-and-volley tactics. rc:quim! only SS the presence of the man to whom the ~n and finished with a I 0-unger-'31' 278 total for 72 holes. "They arc not predictable yet," Walsh maintained. 1 minutes to down Turnbull, her clOic friend and doubles o.-o Pad,..... dedi·cated the"ar -ason as he watched his Lyle made the tum i par 36. but had a sizzling 31 "Some weeks they are superb and other weeks they arc partner. in 90-degree heat at the Manhattan Country ~. • .. ~ -. on the back side. whert he collected five birdies. A not... Cl b Padres win their first National league C'hamp1onsh1p birdie at 17, where he splashed out of a bunker and It's on telev1s1on at 6 (,..hannel 7). u T. h · b LI d h d _ ... h Series from the Chicago Cubs, 6-3. '-e victory y oy . t e top sec • cam~ er "I turned to Mrs. Kroc and said. 'Joan. 1 have a holed a shon putt, put h1m one shot behind Ballesteros. Last Sunday they_ were not. The Giants, 3-2. o~aned $28.000. while the third-seeded Turnbull won S 14,000. He parred the 18th, then waned .for Ballesteros. onlv eight yards rush o h f1 • ...-LI d h II ta I J b k T b 11' feclino the big ouy is look.in~ down on us.· .. the team'• , m., gave up t ree sa eties in one oy . w o usua y s rts s ow y, ro e um u s ... ..... " w~o was at IS, where he took. a ~-y. penod drori.....A s1·., pas•0 s a d · ted 1 th fi t t th b oke a 2 2 t' b neral man ger said Sun ay after the Padres com-8 11 vv..-• r-"' ... .-n commit at east a serve to open e us se . en r • JC y pletcd a historic comeback with ho a esterods two-putted the par-5 17th, m1ssmg a dozen pena ttes apinst the Rams. winn 1ng'the last four games of the set. h . h'rd gh . s n putt. an parred 18, forcing tht playoff. However, the same Giants ripped the Dallas In the second set. after beina tied al 3-3. Uoyd won t ' ear~~ stnu t victory over C'<?wboys 28-7 in t~e second week of the season. Walsh . three straight games to w1n the match, the last point 1 the ~~':s, "I feel hke he's been said he would wait a few weeks before making any coming when she broke Tumbull's serve at love, with with usa year." evaluation of the Giants. Turnbull endina the match with a double fault. The btg guy was Ra> Kroc. · 8 h h f who bou&bt the Padres in 1974 ' Y l e al way point of the season, they should "J actually thought we were both a little bit tired," ~«s~~wa~~n~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~bba~v~e~it~t~~~th~c~~ff"~sa~•~d~W4a~b~h~·~"Th~e~nkw~e~h-o_u_~_·k_n_o_w_i_f~Ll~d~d."Th~~hu~umb~l~thi~s~&htweek watch them break hts heart for I 0 hla thfr d pi...--a-.. at ....... T--"-in .. i... .w ... to .arc a pla . " OD the tour, but ~ s•ill came up_ vdth. hl&Jourband fi .sh. h gb ,.,. ,_ 111-1 -... -...,,,_, ·-utV Giants' All-Pro linebacker Lawrence Taylor said points. She's still dangerous." more. never DI ang 1 er "''an overtake Tom Watton u golf'• ~ money ~hat pla)'lng the 49ers, S.O, is bound to bring out the best fourth. Their mept play once C\iCn winner thl• year. WaUOn 4Mda with 178.280. m New York. Peete •• ~ Tex•• Open field prompted him to grab a micro-O'Meara la Mcond With ~7.•73. "We were just lackadaisical," Taylor said of the --r- phone and apologue to the fans Rams' 09me. "l;!Qn't think there's any dan•,.r of that S N NTONIO CaJ P Kroc who had come to San Otego Jack Felton crash-at DJ-erslde -.... A A -v1n eete n Murphy Stadium to watch. -.ft.I. Y qaanst a team · Anyone with any pride h.as lO be protected his lead with a solid. o~bogey, 4- K.roc, owner of MacDonald's restaurants. passed epe":.r~~?cd· ~e arc going to &o out there and under-par 66 and coasted to a ·3-stroke away earlier this year, but Mc~n did not forget him RIVERSIDE· Veteran sports car racer II victory Sundiy in the ram-delaytd Texu . when it was ume to reflect on his team's success in the Gene Felton crashed his stock car and was ·"'l.r1b•-_.._ 1 Open Golf Tournament. Padres' champagne-soaked locker room hosp1taHzcd Sunday during a warmup ..;.~-& ..-Wlll9 Vo ante Handle~ .. Peete, the inost successful black player tbepme "Ifs something_ that be always dreamed of.•(.-. session for the Riverside Grand Prix has produced, a]So took a cQmmanding lead in tfie race McKeon said. "Me. mo. You ilways feel you're gdlhg to Festiva.L-l'ransAm ~verside ln•f:1"Pftl.ional J RCADIA ts outdueled odds.-E for ~h"fMCtcd Vaakut Trophy, whictlgocUO the man get shon-changed. Up until the fifth inning, I t'lought) 'Raceway. on Tavonte Tsunami Slew down the stretch w1tll tbe low stroke avcraJt: on the Thur. ~ we were go mg to be short-changed again. But God, these Felton, 48, of Manetta. Ga. was pried from his and pulled away to wm by a length and Peete claimed the eighth title of his PGA Tour auy,scame back." wrecked Pontiac TransAm by a hydraulic Jaws ofufe three..quaners Sunday in the Volante career, and his first of the seasoll, with a 266 total. 14 "Some guys never get the chance to play on a team and taken by ambulance to Riverside Community Handicap 1n the Oak Tree mectin.a at Santa Anita. strokes under par on the Oak Hills Country Club course bkc this, .. said infielder Tim Flannery, the only player Hospital shortly after the ntorning mishap. Tights. the second favorite of the crowd of36,S79, that was soaked by a heavy morning rain. who was a member of the team when McKeon became He was in stable condition and in traction after ca med jockey Chris McCarron and 121 pounds, one GM. ··1 fttl so lucky to have been here... suffering fractures 1n hts spine and clavicle, a hospital less th.an Tsunami Slew, ridden by Eddie Delahoussaye. Fla ·--' · spokesman said. Tramed by Laz Barrera. Tishts won for the sixth nnery, u~ pnmarilr m panch-hitung roles this A n-k collar was l!a__... on Felton aft-r he was tt'm · 13 tan h" · h $65 SOO ti season. slapped a ground bal that went through the legs ~... ~ " e '" s s t is year, WIMtnJ t e • trst-of Chicago's Leon· Durham in the seventh inning. removedfromthewrec ge. placepursctoboosthiscarccreammgsoverS3SO.OOO. k · fi 11 h h H Track officials did not know how fast he was going · T1&}\ts overtook Bhnd Spot at the eighth pole ·spar in~ 1 our-run ra Y t at won 1 e game e ~ept at the time of th" a-1dent, ~ur• the practice laps are turning r.o h a d h ld ffT ·SI ' h II 1 h 1 k .. ...... ~ -. 1~ r ome n c o sunam1 cw sc a enae open t !n t e oc .er room. not clocked. near the wire. The winner covered the mile and one-.. ts sometbm& I'll never forget." he said. "This Witne~ses said Felton lost control of his car coming eighth race on tbc twf coursc in 1.46 3-S in luming back team means so much to me .. we mean so much to each out of the track's tum No. 9. ~other 3-wooar -• .. -. other:· J"'" - Record-breaking pace by Payton p.aces Bears Dolphins keep record perfect, Cardinals put away Cowboys From AP d11pakbe1 C.HICAGO -Walter Payton shattered Jam Brown's National Football League career rushing record by rushing for I S4 yards and ~ored a touchdown Sunday to lead the Chicago Bears to a 20. 7 victory over the New Orleans Saints. Pa)ton went into the game needing 67 )ards to break Brown·srecordof 12,312yards. Hts 154)ardson 32camcs boosted his I O.)eartot.al to 12.400 ) ards. The record-breaker came on the second play of the second half when he took a pitch-&nd went 6 yards around left end. Payton also surpassed another Brown standard by going o"er the I 00-yard mark for the 59th tame in has career. breaking a tac at 58 which he had shared with Brown El~wherc an the NFl Sunday: the visitina San Otego Cha~ to a 34-28 victory over the Packers. Fouts completed 30 of 49 passes, the 38th time in his 12-year career that he has passed for over 300 yards. • San Diego's Earnest Jackson rushed a club-record 31 umes for 94 yards whale Kellen Winslow had a tcam- record 15 catches for I 57 yards. Broncos U, Lloa.17: -A bruising Denver defense led by Steve Wilson and Rulon Jones smothered Detroit's Dolphins 31, Steelers 7: Dan Manno threw a pair of mistake-prone offense and lifted the visiting Broncos to a ~cond-quarter touchdown passes 1n a successful return to · 28· 7 victory over the Lions m Pontiac. has hometown as the •.:as111ng M1am1 Dolphins remained The Broncos recovered three of four Detroit fumbles unbeaten with ;.i 'I· 7 rout uf the punch less P11tsburgh -including one which Jones returned S yards for a Steelers touchdown. Denver also intercepted seven Lions' passes Manno. the former I n1 .. ersll) of P11tsburgh star. -four off Gary Danielson. who hadn't coughed one up all completed 16 of 24 pas~s lor 226 )ards whale M1am1 rolled year -and registered sill sacks to completely outmuscle 10 a 21-0 halfume lead ~llh a pair of second-quaner Detroit touchdowns within a span of JUSt over a minute Cardinals 31, Cowboys tO· -St l..Ouis quarterback Neal Lomu burned a bhtzang Dallas defenst wifl'I three 1ouchdown passc\ and the Cardinals ended SC\Cn years of frustratio n 1n Teita'> Stad1unf w1th a 31 ·!0 dcc1S1on over the Dallas Cowbo)s Whale Loma1t ~as bombing the one-on-one Dallas secondary co" erage for over 300 yards, a crippled Cardinal defense inter~pted ( rary Hogeboom twice and sacked him twice. Eallet t1, BIU1 17: Ron Jaworski threw Nor two touchdowns and ran for another while Paul McFadden hit two field goals to lead the Philadelphta Eaales to a 27-17 ., actor) over the winless Buffalo Bills rn Orchard Park. NY The Eagle dominated the game after Buffalo quarterback Joe Dufek went down wnh a knee inJury late m the second quaner Tel~on, racUo Things aot so bad that Dallas Coach Tom Landry replaced a heavily booed Hogeboom with veteran Danny White in the third period White threw a I 0.yard scoring pass to Fred C omwell Baecueen 35, Vlkla11 11: Steve Dc.8crl. passed for 212 yards and two touchdowns and James Wilder added two TDs on the vound to lead the ho t Timpe Bay Buccaneen tQ a 3S-31 -decision over the Minnesota LUCKHURST CONNECTS WITH WINNER ••• Cbar1ers 34, Packers U : Dan Fouts riddled the Green Bay secondary for 369 yards and three touchdown$ to lead · UC Irvine poloists suffer 6-5 reversal u ortd a pair of last-minute aoals to nip favored UC Irvine 6-' Sunday al in a non-conference water polo match at Newpon Harbor High. Vikings ~ .DcBerg. dirccuna the Bucs' th1td victory in four pmes. completed 16of29 passes and fired sconng 1tnkcs of 7 yards to Kevin Houfle and 6 yards to Gctald caner. Red11lla1 H, Colta 7: Quarterback Joe Theismann nddltd a young lndianapoHs pa defense with 17 compl~tions in 20 attempts for 26 7 yards and four touchdown , carryins the: Washi naton Red kins to an easy 3S· 7 win ovtr the host Colts. • Washanston'sJohn Rigins. mcanwliite, used •parina· ly after the lint half, totaled 94 yard and one touchdown. lc-avma him 24 yard hon ofbttoming tbc fifth player in NFL history to ru b for 10.000 carttr yatd Jm 17, Cla1d• II: -Pat Ryan threw a IS.yard touchdown pat to Mickey huler and Tony Pai red on a t -yard run after a fumble to rally the New or Jet from a 9-0 deficit to 1 17-16 victory at Kan s City, UC Irvine (8-3-1). which has jmt one lo an PCA play, tha1 comina to the hand of top-ranked Pepperdane, held a 5.4 advantaic Yt"ith 111, minutes left in the conte t. But tJ ~ Mike Koch netted a aoal past rr ... 1ne's Mark Maize! with 1:.34 rem1jn1ng lo ue 1t and Charles Hams P1trtot1 1'7, Bro •• H : Ton) Eason firtd a· 42•yard\ ortd the pme-w1nner with 1.09 lcft to IJ\lt t~ TroJan' touchdown lo ~phcn "ta mn& on a pcrf«tly e Kuted the win. USC is lhe liOh·rankcd team in the country. Oea·01dcrplay and then hat tamna with a 24-yard ~ to The Antealers. ran.,cd No. 2 nationally. used two set up fony Collans··aam ·winnina touchdown run in the 10 I~ from Mike Dot ma and one each from John Ohv1er. founh quarter. a the Ne f;naJand Patnots O\tCtame a Gres Wilson and Glen Awerkamp 10 total thccr tconng. 16-J dcfi~1t to beat the ho t Cleveland Brown I 7-16 but the I te f roJan ursc proved to be too much. M 11cl, a sophomore, m.ordcd c1aht SD\'CS. whale S oah • nc O.av1son. w11 crtdatcd with "~· IJ n rookie qu ner ck BOOmcr Esia n mad his U JUn1or Mike Ho"'rll, a former Ncwpon If arbor 1 t \tams uccc '" th a ·)'aid touchdo 11 run th t vc ndout, r d two goals for the v. annc" while the ho t Cant'annati Ben II I J.J \'IC1ot)'ovcr che Wini mmHtA '" has form r homr lOI Hou ton 01 rs , It From Cl Ju t to show that he believes in Cain, Falcons owner Rankin M. mith. who was there to sec tnc Fal oas beat the Rams on the West Coast for the first time in 17 yean, came up to Cain while he was bcina interviewed, shook Cain·s hand and said aim~ly, ''Thank you." Roe dominates field to win at Riverside . , NATIONAL LIAGUI ltUYOfll'S l'•*tt t, CUIDI I COeme SI CHICAGO IAN Dt9GO .. , ... •••o • 0 l 0 t "' 4 1 I 2 U I 0 •• 0 0 4 1 I 1 2000 100 0 1001 2 0 ~ 0 0000 •••• 0000 Wlffn.tit 0•¥Mrf hrwYlb '""*• Kerui.ch•c lrow"cf U.i.trei Mlrtlllalf T!'l'IPl!nas Sflowt HaW\lntt MJlmr111t1 Dr••ckYt .... l(qllfl Left«!•' ,trwyllfl ~· »St J T..W ., .... J2 2 0 U 12 0 1 1 > 0 8 I J 0 I I IOOO 1 0 1 • J I 0 0 I 0 1 0 0 0 00 0000 1 0 0 • ooo• 10 0 0 •••o 1 I 0 0 0 0.0 0 .... Sc-.ltY ....... ~~ 210 ... 000-3 ...n··Dll9e 000 002 40x .... Oeme W1Mlftt Rll -GwyM (I), E-c>umem. DP-Se11 DlleO 1. LO&- Crilcato '· Sall oieoo .s 2~wvnn. ,.._ • u.i.1w. Hllt-Olirtltm m. JD• m. '~""-' (I), SMotlett (J). t--'Ttmeitton. SF-N.ttlft, K__.,. ,....--.. Olkatt _. H a•• H IO ~tdltf91,.,M 6 M 1 6 6 13 2 TrOul 2·i o 0 O O 1 lf\Natar t 1 0 0 0 1 IMD!e99 • StlOw IM 3 3 l 2 0 Hewklna I l·l o O O I 1 Or1Y9CllY 2 0 0 0 0 2 Lefftrt1 W,2·0 2 0 0 O 0 1 Goasaoe S, l 2 2 o o o t HIP-HtbMr (by Goua11t). T-7 lf. A-SUSt ........ " .... L•AGU• CH~SMI, 1 .. IH (Al T1'r* ,OT) ..., .... ,Ive SUMIV's SC... Sen Dle90 6, CNcate 3 w ....... ,..... Detroit tt s.n Ditto w.-...., O.trolt at San DieeO ,,.... ., Sen Di900 at Detroit ~· San DiltlO at Detroit s..a.,, OdlMr' " S.11 DlleO 11 Detroit Clf nKeUM¥1 r..-,, OdlMt " Detroit at San D"90 (tt ,....,.,, ........ ,,Odlellt 17 Detroit 11 Seo 0"90 (tt nec:tswv> "'~· Wttw~ COLLI GI USC 6, UC nm S USC I 2 l 2-6 UC nine 2 0 1 2-S UC Irvine KOl'int• Ooline 2, Ollvl« I, c;, Wiiton 1, AW9rklmll 1. J Nl'L NA~AL CONPlllt•NC& Sen FranclKo Atlanta ..,,. Hew Ortffllt Olk.HO TamN .. Y MlnMtOla Detroit Ortenaay Wftt W LT s 0 • 3 l 0 , 3 0 3 3 0 c.mr• • 2 0 3 3 0 2 • 0 l s 0 1 S 0 •ut M,, PA 1.000 1J2 '2 .500 157 13' .500 132 117 .500 l33 133 M111l n .500 123 10 ..m 12' "' .1'7 tao 1Sf 161 ,. , .. 011181 4 2 0 M1 113 109 Wtllllntton 4 2 0 M1 15' 103 HY Gi.ttts l 2 0 .600 " 111 St L.oull I J 0 .M 1" 15' Pl'lllt6'IPhll 2 • 0 .m " 126 AM&•UCAN CON,••INCS Miami .......... nd NV Jiii lndl.,.DOll• lufftlo w• S I s 1 • 2 • 2 3 . 3 c.itr.i , J I S 1 s 0 • last m '°' 11 m 1• 101 M1111 10 M1 "' 104 .JOO 110 115 .JOO 12' 1)6 .161 106 \SS .167 n m ooonm • 0 1000 '" 13 4 2 .. 7 121 Ill • 2 .. 7 ,., 130 2 • .mm m 0 • 000 101 1'S SUNaV'• tc.. Alllnl• M, blN 2t I llaldln 21, Saallle 1• NY Jtla 17, Ktn .. 1 Cltv 1' • Hew lnoland 17, Cit'Ytllnd 16 C!Mcaoo 20. Naw Or1tan1 7 Wa.itlneton JS, lndltnJllOll• 1 ll. Louis 31, Dtllt• 20 Miami 31. ,.ltlaburfll 7 e>en..,.,-n , DelrOll 7 TamH .. y U, MIM .. Olt )I Ptlllldllol'lll 21, llYfltll 17 ClnclMatl ll, ~IOfl 3 San Dleet u. Gf..i an 21 T""""'t O.mt Itri ,ranc:t~ at NY Oltllla IClllnnel 7 ,, •> lt•ldlrl 21, ....... l4 kert n ONrten 0 ' 0 J<-l• 0 ,, 0 1 kJOI,~ " from CONMUNITY COLLSGE LOG G9'den West (I· 1) (Padlc·f~) 21 or .... Coast 17 Senta Ana 21 Ttft 16 Pa..otna Sat., Oct. 1> -ave Sal .. Oct. 2' -Ml. San AntoniO• s.1 .• Oct 21 -at LOllll e..cn cc· Sal.. Nov. 3 -Cerr1t•• Sal., N0¥ 10 -., f=Yllerton·· Sat , Nov 17 -El C.t"NN• S.I~ tin. %l -IJ ... ldMl:I ~ Cefft (0·1> (MlllleftCrnfl •a> >. Golden W•t 7 F"'*1on 7 • s11Se1t:Fdl Sat , Oct lJ -II ltlvtolcll• Sat., Oct. 20 -s.n o-.o Mesa•. Sal .• Oct. 27 -•• *•llwelter"• Sat., NoY. 3 -SaA OieeO' Sat., "'°"' 10 -at Palomar• Sat., Nov 17 -Citrus• Thurs .• No•. 22 -al Sanlt AM (MMIM CHll W.) 13 El Camino 10 Ml. San AntonlO n Otanae Coast 2l Riverside CC Sal., Oct. 1J -ti Sen DletO Meta• Sat., Oct. 20 -Soutnwesttrn• Sat., Oct. 27 -at Sen OlttO• Sat., No•. 3 -Pttomar• Sal., No~. 10 -11 Cltru,• kl., New. 17 -Santa Ana' • Denotes cOl1fefence ..,,,. C..nmuntt¥ ullet LAST WHK'S ICOll•I hc·•<•llftrtRCll kktnlltld n , Lone e.cri cc u Clrrltos 4'. EJ Cimino 20 Patldena CC t>, GOiOtn Wttt 1l Taft 52, Ml Sen Antonio J MIUilt9 CWtf WWW Std~INO 2:3, ltNenlde 11 Palomar 30, Saft OleeO CC I Sall Dle90 Mell l6, Santi Ana JS Souftl••ltrn "· Cftf'\16 10 W.....,...._c ra wce Mootterk JI, Alan ~ 1) Ventlll'a 17, COf'Nlfon 0 • Saft•• Monica 2:1, Sanft 911Mt• 20 Glettdale lt, lltlo Hot* IA ..... c. ..... Sacrtmtnlo 421 FrftllO O De Ania 12. Modelto 7 Groumont o. LA HAIMf 3S 3 1' 17 0 21 lJ a 2l 3 7 " Wtal l.;OI A~ 32. Ml. Jtlft Jldnto 71 LA Pltrce )I, AnteloM .... ..., 7 LA SoulflYrllt If, San k111trdlno ValMv s 0..-t JI, 1.0t A,.... CC 12 tmoer~ v~ "· Cll &o~tMran JV " HIGH SCHOOL STANDINGS ANO ICH8DULIS ... "'" LeetlUt ~ W LT Coront 4'11 INt :r 0 0 Stddi111oca I t t NewllOt'I ...,..., 2 • • la!ande 1 I 0 YtuN hecfl I I 0 C061t Maa 0 2 t UlllYet tlty r 0 2 0 Woodbrkttt 0 2 0 ,,._.,., 0... OOll Oftral WLT • I 0 ' 0 • • • l 2 2 0 2 ) • 0 4 1 I 4 0 I 4 0 NtwllOM HerMf v~ ~ca l•I Salltl A!ll hwl> • l!lltncla lrt WOOdWfdji (al NewlOl'I HmMW) L1""'41 llMdl vt U!WwtllY (ti nlN> Cotta Maa v• CorOfll dll INt ~•I OCCI l4MI"' Ceett LMtut ........ WLT Cto•tirano Vt v 2 O O ltToro I o t Ml•&IOft VlelO I 0 I !NIM 1 I 0 Utuftt Htll• 0 1 0 S.11 (ltn'llnlt 0 , • DIM HIM 0 2 0 , ............. (7QO) W'vWt ti CIPlatrano Vein .....,_ Hiiie at Ml"loft Vlt Et Toro al Dene !!lt o..tl WLT > I 0 a I 0 ) I l 2 I 0 I 4 0 1 J I • & • 1611 ~ II Mt MlOuM leHUll .. LI~ lc:McMe •XHl9ITIOfC Fri, Oct. 12 -LAIS V ... t , Moft , Oct. IS -11 LH veoas. Fri Oct It -at WicMa. • Set. Oct. 20 -et Wld!ll• lltlGULAA S•ASON Fri., No• 2 -11 K111sat City, Mon., , NOY 12 -DatlH Thu. No• IS -Wldllla, Set., Nov 17 -at San Oleo•. Wed., No• 2' -Chlcaoo, Fri., Now. lO -ti Cllrvell9nd. Sal., O.C. I -al Pllltburol'I; Thu., Dec. 6 -11 Ne¥t Yor111, Sal,. Dec. I -at hlllmOft, Tua .. Dec. II -LU V11111; ,rt.. Dec. 14 -~. Sat., Dec. 15 -., Tacoma, Wed . DK It -St. Loui.a, Sal Dec 22 -New Yen; lull., O.C l'3 -S.11 Oieoo; Sun., Dec. 30 -II Wlchlla. Sat., Jt !I.. s -TacolNI Fr1N Jari. 11 - SI L.OUis; Set , Jal\, 12 -al DI 1: Thu., Jan 17 -Minnetota; Sat .. Jan It -at St Louis; Tua .. Jan 22 -al Mltv'910ta; Thu, Je!I.. 24 -LAia V ... s; M«I,, Jiil 21 -C..,,...,_., Wed., Ja"-JO -II e.arumart. Fri.. F.O. l -al Cie..lltnd, Sat , FIO 2 -al Ollca9o. M#Mw FIO 4 -Mlftnelola, Sat , Fib t -,..,., Yor111. MoA. FIO 11 - Wlc:Ma; Wed , F• 13 -KtMat ColY; Sal .. F• 16 -al Lii V ... a. Thu , FIO 21 -at ClllCIOO Sul! • Marcll l -at lll'lllA1uf9'1, Tua Mwdl S -al Minr>ltOta, Wed , Marc:lt 6 - • , 0•111•. ~ ... ·Mardi 11 -p "~'"· k l., Mardi 16 -al TKOmt ~, Mwell 20 -Clllca9o. FrL. MarClt 22 -Dtlas Tue., Mardi U -a.tllmore, Fri .• Marctl 2' -11 Kat-.sas City, kt . Merell lt -11 Wlcllita • WICI , APl'U > -Tacoma. Sal,. ADrl 6 ·-San Dleto, MOn., Aor• I -Kan .. • Cll •, Thu., APl'I 11 -t i LH v.... Sal , Aorl 1J -t i Sen O!e90 Al home OAl'nff at Ille For-um Women'& t.umament (It MMllettlfl a.di) ............. C!w t lvert LloYf CU Sl Off .,.,lfl4ty T""'llUI l~••re I, ... 2. 6•3 IL.:lo•O wiM UI. 000 T vr!ICIUll """ I 14. 000 I 0.-..,..... UeyO•TurnllUll fOf l•t ~aff "' OetrNtny)• a.n1na •~ (Moftleel, 6·2, •·• . .,.. ......... MIWPOttT lAMDtNO ct•ow"'1 leedt) -JO·~· )JO lileftlto, 4 .... , 4 ,.. t &11. n • lftM:ftlii.t • . "" ....... CblcaCo Bean numer Walter Payton loob for room Oii dlie way to~ Jlm Brown'• all·tim.e ft'P'.L nMlllC recad. PaytQn.relie d ·after milestone Just don't fumble, was his own advice before record run CHICAGO(APt-Walt.er Payton. methodically rollina throuah the cw Orlcaiis dcfCnsc for 1 S• )atds came the ation.ll Foot.ball l.Qauc's and fi\'e·)'ltd pins &nio 8 '~uP all-time 1eadm& ru~er Sund.a). ckfcttse. But be broke a 19--yatdcr m slashing pa5t Jim Brown's 19·)ear· the first half then 1 2S:.)ard burst up old mar1' and finishina the day 88 1M m"ddlc ri\b time nmnin&·,~ )lrih ahead o the m n m&n)I :_'[Qr bclie\c the tund.atd fi runru ~-......... • mt ... becks. ~. Bui "'hen it was over. and Pa)'ton He fints.hcd lbe pmc ••ith an C".t'D had receivtd the obliptory tcJephone 12.400 )-atds for bis ~ of runr call from President Reapn. the )e&n and six pmes. doma much of Chica&<> Bears superback had onl" his hea."1 •ork in a stead)" ram tbal ~ · 1· f J bepn falJJna exactly 10 mlllutes after one ieeling-re ic be broke Brown's record -at S7 -for the past three weeks I've tried !Ceonds into the second half. to conceal it. but there's been a lot of Afterwards. in a jammed news pressu~ ... said Payton. who broke conferen« defa)ed while Pa)10D Brov.'D~S mark of 12,312 on the took a caU from the President - second play -and ffis second taITY "Give my reprds to Na.ncy,"' be -of the second half. takina a quipped. and then Mrs. Rcap.n alJo pitcbout from quarterback Jim came on the line -Pa)'ton stid be McMahon and slashing around left. hoped be oould represent all footblll end for six ~rds. ..What was I pla)en He specifJCa.lly noted ~ thinkina'? Don t fumble."' run01ng backs who died at the bciibts The p.me WU Slopped and Pay-oftheirc:a.rttn-Joe Dela.Dtj orthe ton's teammates rushed on to the Kan Cit) Chiefs.. 'Aho dro rDCd in field and conpatulattd him as the an ac:cldc'Ot tv.o sumnxn llO; David Samts stood by and applauded, too. Ovcntrcct of the Miami DOl.pllisa, Hiah over the stadium 10 a private wbowukilledinanautoacx:Ulentlast box.Payton'smother,wife.soo,aoda sumnier. aod Brian Piocolo, a Bean group that includtd his former full· running back. v.ho died of cancer ia back. Roland Harper and bis high 1966 . RAMS LOSE, 30-28 ••• Prom Cl .. ' Bor.der City fans bask in happiness with title c.nrrH"''" • n D1 victOf}. poll« t non, Hrr l•ll anklo on m kffiult * problems with rowd)"m. hand, he bcmo:ancd a tl"mblc after· nd t:ldium SC<'Urlt~ rtpon ·J fc\\ pl int and a crumpled Cubs rua1 in her Q) ••1t•s bttn unbeliev. bl> beauoful," noon. he pralncd her ankle: comm ~ ... ---~-•ct Al t\-1 rre1, d1rcnor of crowd down~ 111mp-n-thtprm~rrikd.h control for the 1ad1um. I le id a ''My k hurts. but I'm in more: pam The Pudres ttw rdcd lh3t •I· lcgiancc Sunday by becom1as thc fi~l Nation.al L..eaauc team m h15tof)· to en a 2..0 deficit and win thn:-c traaghl pt yofl" pmcs. Each or three mci 1n San Otego dre"' an execs of 8,300 fan to the opcn..a1r stadium in scenic M1 ion Valley. -That pm~ Thursda) night was lhc best pme I've ever been to in m) life. It's finally pulled San Diego toiethcr."' ~id Robin Kelloaa. wear· in& a "Cub Bu ter~" T-Shirt. the up~r body anitt of the maJority of fans. "T:> come home after losing two straiah1 and do something like th1~ ... wow'f· Though "Padremonium" caught on in a bigger way with each secunty learn of 260 u hen and over (the Cubs) lo ii)&." he td. 1uat$, including about 30 ' n 01eao She had Oown with her husband • Police oflkc~. ~cpt order wt'H. J.ohn, from Chi so on Thursday, e f .. , think we've had an occu1onal only to ~atch the team lose th~ ..-. • ttm rkabl> wcll·bch "ed but 1111 nd 6--3. ~ case or drunkenne • If~ J~l been tra1gh1 pmcs by scores of 7.1 7-S rn emotional crowd. l\ppruentl). they "l''e tx--cn a Cubs fan all m) life. • don•t care to m1n1fc t u in tn) and the one th1n1 that teaches :;ou is destructive hion," iauc1 said that hfc aoei on:· John Hamngton A few hundrtd fans ru5hed the field satd. as the game endC'd,· snapptnJ up rhc Th(' Padtngaineda new fl n in U.S. bases and anythina else not nailed to Sen. Alan Cranston. O.C~lif .. who lhe ground. But security qu1cl.:I) attended turd.ay and Sunday's rou<ted troublcmaJ...e~. game . .. It W'a'i prcuy mellow:· police Sgt "I've bctn ~edded to them tht tephcn Margcus ')11d ... , heard of wttkend." Cranston said. cmcrginJ three or four IITC' ts. But I think the> from the Padres' locker room. wcrt lust C:JCCt1ons. One fan lcav1n1 the st.ndtum could "Its unda) and people hi-A"e 10 go not beaccuscdofltvinsin the past. He to work tomorro~. ·r he) aot out of carried a hand-painted "Tigcr-hc~ (the stadium) real quack. lt'r. Busters" sign high above his head. been a ph>,'iic;al and mental drain on "Why change a whole song?" nsked C\leryonc. • he said. "But if\ ' uch a Tim Caton of Chula Vista. refemna positive thing." to the "Cub-Busters" theme 1ung to Unlc you were a Cu~ fan the tune from the movie "Don't make me cry;· ~id JoAnne "Ghostbusters." Hamn~ton. who alrtady had tears The Padres open the World Senc streaming down her face u she rcstc on Tuesday night agamst the Amcn- on a bench by the tadium fir1t aid can League< hamp1on De1rot\ Tigers. • • CUB FA:NSDIEHARD. • • From Cl the Cubs would have hosted onlv thrtt games tnstead or the four lba.t belongtd to the NL team on the rouation basis. By lo mg. the Cubs avoided·-a breach of that roauon "I think everybody 1s a little shocked na.tu now that n's over for us," Cubs' catcher Jody Dcw.s.said . .. We still pve-tht people of Chicago something they hadn't had m 39 years. a championship ·· Before. the closest rhc Cubs. who have been tn 10 World Scncs but won only two ( t 907 -.nd 1908) had managed to cla1mmg a c'hampK>nsh~p since 1945 was 19'9 when they led the NL East by 9112 games on Aug. J 3 When the seas.on ended they ~ere ei&ht games behind the New Yor1' Mets. Ron Santo the captain and third baseman of the 1969 Cubs. still talks .about lhat s...woon and Lhe ttouble -lt has caus.NS him. 'T~e got ever) th mg I want an hfc." Santo. a ~uccessful businessman. said 'Tm a happ) man. But I've got this guilt! I still can) the guilt .... I felt guilty for the fans " New.<. th~ Cu~. \he new playoff. Cllperienced vc"1on of the team that couldn't pla) in Octohcr. played in October -bul with no cham· p1onsh1p nng.'> "I've been a Cubs fan all m} Ille. and 1he one thmf that teathe\ vou 1s that ltfe goes on • John Harrington. a Ch1atgo resident who Ile"' 10 San Diego for the final three games of the playoffs. said. • "Well. l can wall another 39 years." Scott Adams. an J 8.year-old Chicago resident. said. "I'll ha"e my gnmd\Qn dnve me (to the game)" "No city m Amenca lo,es 11s baseball team more than Chicago loves tts Cu~." said Chicago Ma)or Harold Washtngton. who saw his Cit) lose at least $1 S m1ll1on per day tha1 11 was estimated ou1-0f-towne" Y.Ould spend whale attending the World Senes. "No baseball team in .\mcnca has 8J'Cn its home a\ much as the Cubs ha"e gt' en to Chicago this ~car:· "Cubs fans suppon the teCJm wh~ther 1t wins or lo~ ... Limo 811!. lhl' houncer at the Cubby Bear BoQT ING ----- Thompson wins one-design race Three das\C'i 1urncd out Sunda) tor Balboa \ 3lht Club., One-<tes1gn Regana for 'acht\ ).31hn& ocean l our\t'\ - Largc'1 'la\\ "'ii" thC' Thmle v.tth nine entries Tht• "'1nn('r was Mark Thomp.,on of Pymatuning Yacht Cluh Pennsyh an1a. Y.tth a lo"' Kore of 51/: point\. Second with s-v, was Bob Van T'Raet. Balhoa Yacht Club. and third "'a' Bruce< rro\St". M11os1on Bay YC. 7 poant'i. In the the-boat SQhna Class the winner W8$ Steven Reck BYC. and ~cond was C nsJones. \\ 1ndjammcrs YC A11leen. skippered b) Peter Nt'w- brc. Bahia Corinthian Y( was lht' wmner over five rivals an the Shields Clan. Runner·up was Mabrc. \3tled bv Kim Miller. Mirnon Bay YC. Winnen in inside eta 5CS' R -Eric Bonneui. BY OEFENDER-12 -John Daniell. NHYC SENIOR • ABOT -Dalt KaJala BYC Lehman-12 race to Buckingham Jim Oudan&h1m of the hens Ne"· pon H tbor V1 chi Club outscort'd nine M\ I un&y to in chc Dou~ Bcck Gaboon, one of 1hc f: II trophies nffertJ for th l.,rhman· 12 cla " Phil R mm1na and hm1d1, nil from Lounge in Chicago. said. "Cubs~~ will alwa)'S be Cu~ fans." Studs Terkel. the author and dedi- cated Cubs fan, may have summed up the feelings of many who have rooted and died and cried over the baseball team once called the Ch1cago Or- phans. "I think thc(re more endeanng 10 defeat than an Hctory." he said Sunday. -1 hkc their loscr-ltke quali· ty." PADRES IN SERIES-. • • From Cl and Garvey both later satd should win the Cy Young Award. "h'~ a beauuful fccltng.. It's the greatest thJog that can happen to an athlete." 5ald Garvey, who finished the sencs eight for 20 w1lh seven runs batted in and single-handedly forced a fifth game when ne dnlled a two.run homer in the bottom of the ninth inning Saturday. The Padres hadj)ulled to w1l1un 3-2 1n the suth when Wiggins beat out an infield htt. GW)nn singled htm to 'iCcood. Gan.c) walked and Graig Ncules and T CrT) Kennedy htt run- sconng 0) outs Before that. at appeared the ( ubs final\) we"' 1om1 to make their dream season a rcalit\ Durham had blasted a twCK>ut, 1wo-run homer off San Diego starting patcher Enc ~how "'ho ~vc up 1hrcc homers 111 (·hi· cago'-; (;ame I runawa" Jod1, Dav1\ added a -solo \hot 1n the second. making 11 ~-0 \.\hen 4.->utchfTc hit a ~angle one out la1er Walhams made a move to the hullpen. bnngJng m .\nd} Hawkins The Cubs would be allowed only 1wo hth through the final 1 2-3 innings. with Hawkins. Dra"cclcy. Lcfferts and. finally , Rich Gossage talung turns on the mound "It looked ltke we had control of the senc'>. but thmp seemed to stan going their way.' said Sutcliffe. "We both had great )-ear'i and ~e played e\Cn until the last game. And they s1mpl} beat us." Said left fielder Gar) Matthews, a \etcran of pla)off sames while with Ph1ladclph1a "It JUSt wasn't tn the cards for us But nobody got hurt and nobody died. We'll come back." Matthew'> made a bobbling. bare- handed grab of a Kennedy foul in tht' fourth inning. and saved 1t least one run 1n tht• c;1~1h when he ~pcared Kcnned}"s smlung ltne dnve. which plated Gwynn but held Garvey at first. It was for naught. Gossage pitched the final two innings. allowina run· ners but no runs. and when Davis grounded 1ntoa game~nding fielder's choice. dehnous San Diego fans had their first winner. "I'm a finn believer in emotion belng a big facl&r in-thtS game." said . Gan.ey. who coined the .. 10th man .. phrase while play1ne on four NL championship teal)'ls in Los An~les "Believe me. they "'ere wonh three runs today (Sunday.)" "Thal I 0th man means an awf"1 lot." said Williams. noti!tJ. that the < ubs also, were w10ners while playing 1n front of the home crowd "The} slaycd with us: they raised our \plrtlS .. Ther umpire~;:-John Kibler, Paul Runge John McSherry and Doug Har"ey -appeared after baseball C omm1ssioner Peter Uberroth agreed to arbttrate a settlement be- tween the striking umps and the two leagues A decision was eitpected before Tut'sday·s game. San Diego's shining moment was tarnished slightly by the womsomc performance of Show. shellacked for the Sttond straight ume after a I S-9 ~ular season campaign, and by the 1n1ury to McReynoJds. who was tied for the teanf lead in homers with 20 and hit .278. W1lltams said he will stan left- hander Mark Thurmond against the Tiae~ on Tu~y. with Ed Wh1lSOn the hkcl) starter Wednesday. He 1s seeking permission to replace McRcynolds. and satd .200 hmer Kurt Bevacqua and .185 Champ Summers probably will splat lime at designated hmcr. Tomahawk leads Big Bo~t swee~ ang OU1 ot New Yortl:. Runner-up WM Jim K roy• t 81-foot KlllQa, • CaRfornta Veeht Club, and thJrd WU .:Jake Wood'• 82·f00t Sor09tY, ttytng tN CX>lort of the Lehalna Ylldrt Club. Wood'a home port c.Nfornla Yacht Club, Marina del At.I,;. on~ M¥tr• weather ex- ~ lnthte '~·a..-wu 1n Hie nrat r.ce when one boet WM d 1m1111ect Md MY« .. on.. IUf- fered ..-. knookclOwN but no Wtould~ I 1\1 rn '''"' uu 11 111111111111 '•n ni 11 •<'t' ••I h11 .11 .11t· i1111I 11 1t111ra.,1 .m l••n·"1 II\ 1••1111111 1h1• 1tl•111.-htlul d1I 11.nn .. 1n1t 1'tl111111,11 .. 111 lh•• l).11h 1'11 t .. • • ·•-•f •1m 1k ~n· "'vi not high 1n prirt' rN110n· abll' ro,.t. rla ,jjjed •d\lt'rllltnl Daily Pilat \) 'DEATH NOTICES MftCI "'OTH!ft9 llLL IROADWAY MO..TUARY .110 Broedway Co•t•Meu '42·9t50 IAL TZ llftGIROtt IMlnt TUTHU.L WllTCLI,, CHA"L .427 E. 17th 8t. Coat•..,. ... 8'e..t371 1.91111.J _ Qoigeoue 81yff0ftt We. L#91t bOet dodt. Xlnt &etma. *2. 100.000' K~ BRITTINGHAM AEALTOA • &41•3.33 • • IUl11fll. SAVE llO TOOi Totlly THE REAL ESTATERS --1!: Macnab· Irvine GE ''>Q-Q100 Ull llU 111 fl• ..... ~.. .... ..., 1·1 M.Uv lowt 6 Br bayfront 78' on bay. pool, •· 100' boat •SJe.Ce· Xlnt Fin. $4.850.000. Chamung Spo.n.lsh 3 Br, 2 Ba on 4~' lot, k, courtyard. p r & tlip $1,100,000. Ufllll lllVI UJflllT OllM Traditional Realty 631-7370 etty & Bey vtew, newly d-.1C0rated Mai liilill••lllllll•I Kat, 2 Br, 2 Ba, 40• patio. Now $645,000. ....-U IM llUIPltlf dUng & J tty vi 4 Br. 3 Ba. 8700 aq. ft. car parkln . $1,285.00 WUT utan umllT - NOTICE Tbe Dally Pilot wUl DO •OGC•... -tvda' Oa operadA& Men wtll... , ..... rrtday, :00 ...... 5:30 P·•· DeiAll • will M u &DtnON D&ADLIKS MoDdaJ •.•...••.•••••••••••.•••••••••••.•••.•.••.••.••..••••• P'rt._,.. •:ac> p.a. ~1··················································· II~. 4i30 p.-. Wed• •d.ltJ ......••........ .,._ ....•.•••..•••...•......•.•• ~J. •i.IO p.a. n-..ao.d17 ..................................... _.--... •• W'ldn •~..J. •:.acJi aa.a.-~········································ .. ••••·•••· ft-..-.d&J. •:.IC>_... ... . . • . . . . • . • • • . . • . . . • . . • . . . .. • • • • . .. . • . . . . . . . . . . • . . ' . • •• Frt.claJ. s :CM» , ...... . JH!!-•J t • • • • • • • • • • '• • • • • • • • • • • • • •• ' • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • F'f1 y • 3 tC)C) p..• • 642-4321 I J! . .... •• llr OtHn 1nta11 llllt. aata11 nn 1u1a .. On. IMa 126/Ui/W Sq Fl tn *LI Pm* F!'"t~M""'""'Pr0f-..-21+--w.-.N•a•1 C.M., 1537 A.IC 8ek• St as--.....,.. ecroee UL.II&...... Bab~tter. -·~· ...... ~. S110-f489_,~L~1-t928 -trom GGllO."' U11 ... •f.jUM••••••tlllUHJ-+.;k•::'*~IG~-~~~~:!;.t:Q;'_;;~:a;.:~;:J dip rtft 1~2'11 AM'a •CANNERY VIL.LAGE* lunananb Hit High K:: net. deCne. Newly lolf..t rtlf ..... Harbor NdQa. A~ & Fr .... andlng bulldlnga 5'5-2141 hOttH• tor Nnport ~ eon 10 atw 1250 aq ft & 750 aq ft. 11 §piRifuX[ REX61Nd8 r....-8l'IOP &tebllMd Ultlii ID ,._,. Al. &46-0780 f /l Ill lllNI BHch O.veloprnent. lu•ury condo. tHO, peraqft.87Me08 AdVtce In .Al Me.,... & ~lnCM.OWnt,. nHd'd 12·14 deye pu~............_-..._ om.:~---W...,.ernUl(.811f't 712-t442dyfl40.24Mev CdM lfnd Nie s1~ mo. ~. 1816 So. B tinng. AQt tM-1541 plmonth fot AJt UM • ,._ ~ a a a •llBIR'I ':'f'::on !Mind ttON lmmldlettly. QMSS1 2333 e.t CoMt Hwy CM\Jno "-'· Sen Clem. St•wltd... aTllldr•n. Aeq. lklltd 9Cltor toeoot• ..,.... ---·-· • (lefrr:.6pm ltk for '*' hwnOf raqW'.cl Contact M•torald~lnSA l45-6383 · Uc'd. •92·7298 &,..blat Wkdaye only, CdM. dlne19 -w ptM-ilng ML•PllTTml PtrtOn In 8CCM1 ~. d41C>t,) Al.itm-M22 ' ' Hgta. 12SSJmo + Ulll. • .. 4111 144-t025 '40-7080 pub. S + yrt 911P. lttono Mek• lc> to 1100/dey de-payroll, & dbl . entry ...... eVlll now. Lera mllTMmTEJ SCR•U LETS proof~wlnaaklll.nut htMQarNIS**ageeln )OUnwittrwutn.I tMdanct. .. .... , II LIUPDlllfWY •M408/'44-0782 1 MO FAEE RENT M· cLEXNiHd lliiili ... •aa in.face w/f)tW. ,..,... loc•I .,... for m.dle Cell for lnttNleW IC)¢. NMded Ni & 7ume, Eetab. Nnport fOM• .._prof 2i4i non«nkr Lux ofc"' oc Airport. All •~WERS Earn l600to15,000/mo. Dyal~• FIT·PIT. ment Dnctora Sid wort& promotion. No u-ma.. "'* & ~,....,,. broker nd1 btlghl elV 1ge Npt Hgta l'iofM. WMnlttea. 11.~/aq ft. 1\11'1 Detde ~7•2t Chat1ottet am.. AocY w/deadllna p•rl•nc• ntcHHry. M4-I• hOuta. &talt $1/Ht. MUI* .,.g91.lo uper. llMt. Ave,..,., 64~ Olene 133-9870 Jody v ..... Empty 420 82 St HB MW74'-• ............ Women, men, ~. b• bo~• blt. cu Beclc:grounclln low\ P'O- Mlf' Turtltr Condo H«'ICt ·<Rtthtc f ' ..... Aeq.50wpmlyplno ebltlty .. nlore efl .. tcOtM. Ptil'lmPlf -n«:r•·'Y ldtel for ltJ. ~. loen MtVICt, ........, °'* • 2 DIRTIYllllTU OIVETHEM •I ...,.,. Banking to perform vtrloue MUST HAY! 0000 P ,._NI dentt Oei4t4 4322.ny-••crow, rHI Htat•. m... ..nn l&.lftea, 2 C8' gat. H.wport Center full ... "I'm no1 the ~ to gee WIBOW RX8 m for Tb'· derlcel duttea + ..... In RONNING &MAU CAA. Ill I ·-tim. l*kPQ. ""~· eto. "!J.IO. n 1 ion 1 .._.A lkr, 1525. + Ylc9 644 88001873-1700 utcera," b...t<ed the arutr $10,000 up. Eaey que11ty: PUT·Till OAlll mell rOOt'l'I. Mutt ti. flex· FOR IMMEDIATE WORK Opponunltltt ev•llabl• · '*Pful, blltwtl train tlGht .. ut · vell. now· o1J men. "but I aur• GIVE ,..., No pene1ty Call YAILT TIWI 1t>i.. CAU 54CM40e ext 29. wtth the L08 ANGELES ptreon. Non·tmokrno 752-6681 Iv m•tt• Feahlon latend. futly dee-THEM.. ~laon Aetoc.873-7311 AboYa poelttont Wffl pey 1700. E. 0....-y Av. .,. TIMES Qrcutet'°" 0... ....... 11.. ofc. tswt02 orat.cl, 118 aq ft mo/mo. · .., & beMftta Cd 111 Sant• Ana. • pettmtnt w, our dooi' 10 To work for Jenlot't M/flw W/Mtl .,. old9r Cell for cMtella 780-8333 Lat I r.u. DOit I I I ... 1111 NEWPORT BEACH· CUh Jdnt • • door ..... Reogedy Anne T'*""rt LIT ::::'~·~: ~= AJtpott .,.._ F;om e50 to I I ta h1ndllng txp•rl•nc• Mergo, 6"-9380 lrlwtn 111•1• progra~ant .. d 17Wi1• , ...:;;;;;;;:;c;;:;;.-·u;~;;; S300 11. ,-. otftC9 bldg, IUllYllY ~ed but wtll tt.an. OlllffRl/111111 a.. 1 & exp«. r.,.S. hourly W9 pM oom-HOUHKEl!Pl"·AIDE· lmtllllf •l't!Mport Cf..i Ur 2ba ...-cty f0t Imm.ct oc-lltM/.1111• ~~ ~c: L.A. Cotp, r•QulrH FOt local moving co. mltlk>n.H<Mt:tamto2 COMPANION, Uvt•tn. ~~ ... ~ cupency. 1125/11 groea. fnllM\ ADS NetlcMi firm~ tent ..... ..'! end•b.n.ttta. MATURE dttvw for Hew-7ta-0643 ' pmor~totpm. Tr• metur.lldy. 720-0411 open, meny _,... ·-·-· • _,_ Bn>k• coop UUl1ll for fa.t pectd _, port ... _..,.1we; Ir· ORIVEA8 1t1iC1 It Pfovtdtd. Potenu-1 eftta. AW/ In = Nwpf on 8tlthol•. LQ 761-6881 R & H Im.at ·RE FREE poelUOn. 16 WPM, UM ::n=· c:.. w;:: regular ""· Min. 2 yre lllllL In to .,, l300 pM per .....,. .. 1001 OulM 8t., ~ * •11•2 Fl,..., I\ anorthendleptedwrltlng. dtwlnQ • cNuff-.ir 0t ..-. For en In~. 8ewrlll "°'* Mldtd to 8MctlMk for P8ttJ YftYM1-5343,M2-t20e 0~~~or21=.: =m~~ ~5f.1re'7 ~~1~We =:.o:W.·~~~~~~S::~~ ~a1.m1ext.1204 =-~~=-= -'-Pror1 GenUernM would tum. ~ lnstalltd Cal· DI...... • ....... .._._ CA IOOlt dttve van etze achOot 3 mo. F« Int.,...,._ Olll l•en cut for•l .. nl .. to ttw• Prtltlgloue ~~Tim~.=~ I --..... UMU c-:L;;C--AH ...... -.. tu buaH. • Hr p/dey llRlllL ... , Adam. 912~ dOmtetlc .;,, lt"nOO ·1c. homtorCondo.NB.,.._ • ._.."''"' ony 141-Mll IN1111111&YAL ~ ._,_,,._Ofl,,. ~tee wtth P8l1' .i P-.on Eleptrleniotd. Fl.Ill Mtn,.to.~..,_. ~ I'm Out of town 211 Sher• dtlwc NB ault• Fot phone eerwy work. -Xlnt ee.lary. Must drive. homt pt'lvti.dga Oood & per1 time. '50-f73, lnaurtnot toe. ~ n6ghta per ..-. aft• LAlrQtoftk» ~ Wiil traJn No • ..,., Equal~ have IXJ*. & tow cM-drlvln;.-..Hcord with .......... •llML~ i....:..--------- ltm......,.732refa.evell 132!/mo.845-3700 MCWetY.Cella.ttyfot ~M/FIH ~c;'amv:'17~ D.M.V. printout r•· ~ttudlolnNtw-Diii Ill -.LlllllT. '= ..,,._, 3br' 2be IPPt. M2-6M-4 BANKING "1 • Qulr.cl.Bonua paid to ...-............... --.. XJ=t fot qu.Ufl.cS /front• be'* olc _.., 8tr •CdMdbclU!tt9.AC,ampl Found,..,.. Ger~ ..... • ... l/P otrtlfl9d driven. Fr .. ,.......-•. ~.--.... tllM ......... formyHo.8ana.m.nt. type$3.25/-C gr.:1 ~~."~ ':l~ E. V9f cotof V\C a.it a Jf *WJafllt* TELLER FfT:PA;---trelnlng prognim. ~ ~ t:;: ceir) d7:'.: 2 yre ...-. In ofc. M1-4001 ... a:t: W .. _,, Kat•tl•, An1helm. 1 men1 ~. 11n·~ Must .,.OWi\~ In P'rton d8llV ~-work GMd _-:.,.. ,_..__ ltvln•. Celt Lynn, -•n' ·-~ wa UtM Bit 83M4t7 up O engtige ..,..... C eiu. '"'K 0· at 10AM; ··,r1.,_ Tr.. · ,...--,,_.. 1D-oeeo _..... ...... , I 1___ vatHtudy. Unlvttalty c.nfornta i=.derel hu a ALL --1111 .... R Tranaportetlon 2003 '*'' 'lmportent. Hours • --Expenelioa for fr 8lr'Glt EQc. ~ dw aa...... Ptnalb Di2 Anlmal a1Udlee ahoW the fufl-tim. Ttll« poetUon 8htrrl Oti<ethy Lagun1 Cenyon Rd T~:,4eturdey. Aett mlAllll oflloe. '""time fOt Cott• 28A 2ti. t1Pt or Ml. In lntlh Ziii ™lllTl/lll' ELI herb "Yohlmbln" may be svattablt In our Coeta OllllT &llllfll1 Laguna Bwh °' ca11: for or Orea ONLY, Flllno&gMlofO. Mtaa O•rmetologlat. = atCtion of NB/CdM. &Liiii lllllU s.v WWII' to Wfch for true Meta Stanch. lrvtne dlvlelon of a rne)ot 7 f. 14 t 7. 2 1 5 1 0 t 844..et33, Tue.Fri. ft>r NB lnlunnct aoneY In Unda. M6-2311 f__,111 ~818tot .:ch to Cl f Ou1cell ONLY 835-9199 aphrodlrlac, Hxual ..__ .. _·-T....... ... _ •l.ctronlc compon•nt 497-3181 EOE lllllHlllfF• Eicphtfpful MMM>OO ...... -·•.. r .• encl aHroom apace or a11mulator and exc:ttatlon ............... -~ dta rt h Med f -U.W. ' ~-. gar. To 11000/mo Top ltllN. HO aq tt w:l'I In laalatu Ou. 4014 herb "lfli...t.cs In b9o-requtr.cs., °' 8 montha to • ~ !.cstt ~ 111¥11 TUmU Exper1enotd In Accls Reo. Janltotlel· Subcontrec-cttlto Offtol/Coeta refa. avall. 831-1679 FV-HB .,.._ ~mar· -coming a pertldpent 1n one~• cuhi.rtng-ex-'°" Poettonrequtea2Yrl oppor1untty for edVanc»-Peyet>i. & Peytoll .. ,'YP9 tort, mutt ha~ own Meiea. netdselCJ*. tek• 11 k.t. Contact Cetol Jonee PUIT.., thla conftdenttel atudy, ptrtenct. or.dtt exp«. In• ,..._r.: rMnt. Muat b• high 45-60= ~--equlptrnent. ~7~ cher9!1' penon w/llte eo- •..:;.. .,.12 &42~1 ext230 IUW.U melll30f«500)'0hlmbln F0t.,, lntet'Mw tilPOlnt fleld strong eooounttng achOol gred, OWttt 18 gd Coete ~ •-•••••..,.•-oountlftO, bitting I OOI· ... t •• H01 Coate Meta tocat'°" ta~• or '50 for 1000 ment .,._.. C8lt: · Jof'I~ ~tdgthtlpfUI on.. driving '9COl'd, ne1t ep.. llllUL..,. ..-.m ... , tee ttona. T')'pln9 • muat. iiSJmo. " co:t: ™ lttr51 Zill Excel tr.me & ~t tlbltta + rHHtch June or CollMn Meeon xlnt beMftta end Orowth pw, mutt hew CUMnt Plr1um;m;tut. ~ ~ :::..,y-=: ~~ t ptut, 8ilety 2164 I.a Seit e.it after toe Soon to ti. vecent ~ & newa lttt• on (71•) ~2300 S>Ottnttel Contect Mm. DMV Printout. ~It ~ · ... tYPlna'. ... .._....., • · oommttttut.i• Wl9llJ«. • 5:30pm. ~i.,.. "!!...,..,..•on:,-unit for F~ Information cell bin. Mell Cit** °' 8chwea* El9qtronica. Fl'MW9Y St~ 2708-tc:t':"':'.u oHlci. &::• ~ ...... ..,.......:; 142•U03 btwn .. m. : """'"':'' ,.,, ...... MEL Fuc.48 .o to Vohlmbln, 3"1 AAI ••1011 aa.o2M BC Htlb« BNd, Cotti 762..ffU . • noon or 2-tpm . • GARAGE FOR AENT ON 10.15. lftd lodla, 24'tw PAVIUONRE.ALTOA Banyen,lrvtne C.92714 ....... ~Ul-0383 ~with•· .... • NEWPORT PENINSULA. aoow, on Npt Penn, rw c/o ~ Dhctor f11111L lll'rMI mM GENERAL OfflCI! 911* ,,.,.. •. Good Of"9el..., -.LL Lim ~ t7~ Npt Bctl ... s 476-0ISI 11W110 . o.pt. OP.e400-KO 1 cn .. tnglng opportunity DRIVER-Wt wl1I ldlool lndtv n.dtd for 1 ~of· tloM ... & .... of 'f04ll .,. Int.,...... In : &l~lfiM 2100Harbor81Vd ~~,c:t ~~ ~~th.~ ~~~~:t: =:r-=--Contlot· =~o'Oef.or'~C:~ Coate Meta. CA t2e2e wetronlet dlttt1butt>r. end In the -.oom for Fla hn. w.eia 1 ' LIOUOft aJii( Plf m-.iona end .,.. ~ The Delly Plot la Miking a EqU9I Oppty ~ for .,, lndMdult \lllfM> 11 routet n::,~ Good Ntt iey. Exi* to work twd tot It, con- brig hi.~ ~n'dabT•. •I • Mff motlvet.cl, hM aood .,..._ ,.,.. llmAL... pttltrrtd ~ · elder tHI; M9rTtl Lynr:h SYDNEY 0MARR moilvetld Ulllton. lllRT, -••• communlcettv• akllla, fM)ut......, ,_,.., atu.-NewpOt1 °"9' fttrn. Al>-• Aeatty It the rnoet pr-. • NII time Cler1C8I poao-pereon nMd9d fOf' el re» tblltty 10 ~ ptObAtmt. denta. 711·7•11. EOE curei. lyplng & apellng, llTlf/LJlluMM ~°:''· m09t 9rowtt1 ltton tu bu9y offtoe. Mwt tine mechlnloel main-. one who peyutt.mson to DNo ltor• Dellv/dettt PIT H wpm, proftttlonet Medlun1 ,._ IMM-lew t.cl Mme In reel• ti. aecum• wttti fltutea. enoe end g1ner11 rneln-dtta .,..... oontact M-' 2040 hn " 11yr+ ~ menntr, front of· tete. P~ yourMtf ExP9ri.nc. pr•f•rrtd, t9nanct of cotpo,.t• ElM. M3-4200m. seo C0119Qt PhainNlc:y 440 floe~ and_.. 1!'!-...eno::f,:'oc~ now tor the nllCt rMI • but wlll train. E.xc1•rnt power boet. ~ ....... IO DATA AEl!ARCHEAI ,..,OrCM IMt-3288 tttudt. Vetted dutlae In e ,...-;-:::..,. .......... --..~ tate boom. C... op- beMflt pec:bgt. Uety ht per ..-yr. round . .......,,., FIT 1 ,IT .,,.. •• un6qut and P!Mllnt at· r=;.;:"'...:Y;:;: portunltl•• avellebl•. open. SeJaty open. ~ AppflcatloN ecoepttd: votvee · phoM wonc & •· PBI• ~. a.MS NaUfM on ~: Ociod or LJoanlll'lg ~ ~ ,. lnPltotpenon, u-... ~'°t~F~Oelty larn-11em °' 1-3 pm. COft\puttUntryfOtReof· PIT Mon-Ft1. 10-2. Own to Joen Helt. 133 00-0anl11tlonel • tkllla l able. To ll1•Mw ceft T •• .a. Oc•-"'-t ......,,.. ,,.,. CAMISRO MFG. flee NMd cMtell ~ ,,..,_,., C6Ml'I out. Dr., fkatle e, HeWpoft of humot = Walt Maclbor9t 0t Wckl a--.y, wv.:r f.11AM Of .. PM , 7801 ClAY . • Contact ltervtng Actora 9Mdl, ce. t2te3 ..,,.. . •t Metrll Lynoh Nelty .. ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19): Money picture LS bnaht, cycle W.Beylt .. CoataMeae, Wofleech/8of0erfteld' ptrtOn.Lolta3-2900 M~C..~11M Contectfnn~ 64&«Ml0t147"410t1 remains hiah, you succeed by taking initiative. Jud1111ent, tntumon Ca. 909/mflhtndlcap/Wla OEOORATI! 1NtlAIOA8 Ex«ctlit lnttruct«t rina bell of accuracy Fami~ member makes ma•orconcession You'll ·--mvuur llKI..... Color/dtalgn. PIT. to t 12 &o/Hr W"'" --'n. booth,.,,..., l'1m rnontn · la... be. " .., fti . ... .. ..,... • .,... -•--urut lltrt. Wllltretn. nl-M47 · ' "".,. f'tllf frM .... boa Penn. receive acco uc, r~war ed 1or past and present e orts. . Meda telepbon• C>P4tf· full/pert Um•. Rapid Wont own.,.. 121..eooe e1a.;1.a1 / TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20): Define terms, look behind scenes, 11ora vartoue ahlfte, 382 growth, multt-facted llLMlflllftl ...,. • ._. aa •er 8•1 rcahze that what 1s currently hidden will soon be revealed. Someone 1s 3rd 81, LAQ. Bch OOfP. hM nMd fOt elCJ*. for eu10 P8f1t ft°'9. Mutt w-• ..-rj 11 HA Ir YLlatm. ~· trying to l~ll you something Be perceptive enough lO hstcn and to FOREMAN bkkpt. ~&~~~!am=~ tim. m..r.111. J:fO.." learn You II locate article that had been lost. MecOttGOf,Yectlta • U./U. cotd AWt .. -H b Auto SNIY ~ tllM work !Yt-r·~!!!~~ GEMINI (May 21-J 1tne 20): What had been nebulous WJll become 1831 Ptaoenua CM • Plfl&L 8upP,Y; · t 120 Harbor n1ngi1~11.00 ~"' +' Hll l'IUll I real. Flirtation will be tran~formcd into somethina of"lastina value." ATTENTION AOENTll we •Pa L ITAT .. 11 BIVCI, t .M . ...._24'4Mlc com cell Mlk• 711-3008 1111811 Gain indicated through career, business maneuver. You'll take areater ar•looklngtor2a.... .... room fOtgrO*tt\ &promo. for a.ucM Ull 11111_., .. charaeofyourdesttny \apncom nauve fiaures prominently. aodctea wtth ~ t lona. Mr Clrant, o.1v9ry o;;; GOOd,. • .!!U..! .. ~ ••t ero~ (Houee • CANCER (June 21.Jul> 22): Study Gemini message for valuable In rnld.ntt•I Income 7•7002 ooro. 1t1ng MvA. eoete '"''"' poerw ~ )looking hint. It is riaht for you to "let go" of respons1bihty which was not your ~tt!' H:"'.,:' IMllllPll Mw 11ut Print. ~~~ :.~pie wtlh we.~- : • own 1~ lint place. Focus on career. busines!, prest11e. ability to impr~s we have a e-n«out Min 2yra.cp. 8alatY com-1880 f'leotntle. C.M. edvw~~ • supcnors compenutton pten. m•n•uret• wt••P· ~ P.£0Pllnttdonty~ MOTOR ROUTES Motor routes available in Newport Beach & Corona del Mar. Must be 18 yean old and have de~ndable car. Eam 8600-700 per month. Call lOa.m. to4100 p.m. 642-4333 • LEO (July23-Au&-22):You~n1R9terpersonaland"universal" t>eeutlful otn09, tnd d I0-1t22Kethy FfT-llghtpk:ikup&delfvtry *M1-12~* ~·~~.Yoo11~oo~~mR1~iuent~y.Yoo~eim~~nt :t~~~™~unN~~~ =~·~~ ~==~=~-~=~~~~~~~~~m~~~~~~~~-~-• d1scovcry.emphas1soncreat1v1ty, independence and flasbesofaen1us. 13w370 nut eyp., know bOC*· ~54MW ~--, Ye You'll iet to heart of matters. member of opposite sex wtll profess love keeping, non«nkt, run- VIRG<> (Aua. 23·Scpt. 22): lntunion is strona. you 'II sense what is n1ng front office ,., "Y .,..., to occur and you•11 know What to do about it. Emp_hasis on money of Traditional ~M27c;" Jan °' '~ xJ: 1oeet • otb~. 1ntens1ficd rclat1onshi{> and dctjsion affcctina home and Realty . , eotd .dftvlncl ,.. teeunty. Can<:er, Capncom nat1 v" fiaurc tn sccnano. · 63l-7370 P/TPl"'."'T HEW~ATION!AS LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 22): SpotJiaht continues on lcpl affairs, 11111•• ..,._,200 PtttonMI dtC>t special documents, decisions afTectina lona·term relationships Open ATTll'f• ll-llD In ptwent t~ e.ctt ~. . hn~• ~f CO!flmurucat1on, make pla_ns which could J~d to travel. Social 111 ....._ Wwt omoe. 71:-= ..,,,, LA TlMU to hornet 1n act1vtt_1e1 increase. more populanty leads to additional demands on wanted pettltlmt .J:+ 2 Newpot1 ~ S:IO am you.tome. ceitetew 84W7eo · llUUllT_. to lam. llH/mo SCORPIO (Oct 2j·Nov. 21 ). Some of your best qualities auric to · MUIC hew ..,,.. l ~ ,,.._~...__ ...... 1 ___ _ forefront. You•u overcome barriers, obstacles will be transformed into tut°'"°* • fMt. •to 11 am. '1Ml1* &iWiY ""°" MlntM 1tcppina·1tonc~ toward aoal. you'll attract fnends. ellics. supp()rters. ~:!~':'Med fW:1~'r, •:rtw't~~j ~ ':.: floww ~ Another Scorpio filurcs prominently. • _ . ~ v.., Duty, CIMfl 11CMl71.Kd!Y-r.cord. ,T:::. ca IAGITl'A..Rtu (Nov. 22~0c-c. 21 ): r~pnnt style. ma~e chan . I lllMP· oomm•°" wn-CAHAOtAH LOffe.A11i 1..mlff:il'i•iiiiimiii~ open door to roman~. Focus on charisma, pct19nallty, 1pec11 Inge • 111-too1 pey tu .,.. ~ to 1 1•111111191 ·~and unusual wcanna apparel. Adhere to your own style, .. lwC*y UIA ..,_,. ,Ot ,l'lllM .,_, ... .._ ... rcaliu it la lime to lead rather than to follow. ViTJO plays key role. bpw euiomou" tits. ,,.. _.....call tol. tree Miii ,,, a .... ·~ CAPIUOORN (Dec. 22..Jan. 19): Spotliaht on residence. bfcst)'fe, cttrts' "'1f*f 1n ,..on 11 1..00.2tM2t1 oua ..-WV w " .. m~or ~ome.uc adJustmc.nt. Excel.lent for pu~ha.sc of ~n object Cotta M-. ~-CAAHf lHifAilifi J::· ..,., '* neo. • luxury items, prOd~ct~ which bca\,lt1fy ~urroundinp. Family member 2833 HetbOt IMI. c M. ~ °"" trwl••• & tre1n1n1 eectsyourcounsel,1utnureandyoupinbyadbennat0Gol~n Ruk. AttctorMt.NIMon. ....,,,, ='e."':~~ '°"· AQUARJUS <Jin .. 2~Fcb. 11) .. 1.nstructtons, ~irectiont art 1Ubjrc1 c.11C1">4IMMI , to chanae. Know 1t. d_11pl~y versatthty, look behind Kef!eS a"d follow 69ntailoro.o MMtJU. t.b.rouah on your own ansuncts Money comes from surpnse sourct end ...,.., •" }>!!'. Dp you11nave reuoo to smile, to celebrate. · _._....._ req'4111, HI Ml Mlt PISCE8 (Feb. I ~March 20): Study Aquarius mcuqe for valuable Motor routes H...-In Lll\N mm. hia1. You oaa make this a power-play day. Netdcd mattrial ti«Om a .... ..,... u. .. t b 1'1 old """' DINT At. Auleu'n1 available, yo locate an1cJe that hAd been "out of a&al\t." You make up D'HWh..,. • Jllf'S • , .. 1 n .. ftcr, a.,., _ neo for recent rt11tcalculation. You·u be back on ...tnnina trick! cllpendlblt b'IMpOHation [j ~ ... 17M111 · If OCT. 9 11 ypur binhday you havt ability to touch on univtrsa1 -· • blHf AL; Mloiiflllo theme. Yoll pow. senwofdrama. people rely.on you forc:oun I. You ptrltnc1 hilpfd bUt not necnnry. .,.,.,,.,.. II •-. 1&U'IC1 larae aud1encca Jdom.arc uusfi~ wnh st.ttus quo and hAvc • •..,., •• WO OM knick (or knockant dO\\'n barric.n and prcJud1w You arc dnwll to --- liw, thtattr, mcdKfne. Anes. Labta persons play important rotts n Cel 10 IA to 4:00 p.m. HWtilNft·•-.,...., yoyrhCe.Jf 1 :;.i.youcouldm1nyth1s)e&r.ffmarritd,th rccou1dbe' n Motll. ,..,,_ .,..,. an lddipon·Jo sam ty. Dcccmber could be your·mo 1 memornbl Nl..,11 "°°"'Mon ..,,.'Th. lt7• month or 1 .•llwll0'1 • .. .. If you enjoy woA1ng with ~ung boyt & girl• ond ded1 fob. ore "°' for you, coNlder o corMr in the ~wspoper <irc1.1lo 11on f .. td. This ii o unlque po\ltlOn with dolly chatl~s ' tt'#arda. Our Opening• Ott tl'/\rntd~, Appll(Onh muat hovt o "°"' stGtkinwOQOn or truck , We offer on ucellent IOICity with e bonus pJon ond eat ol~~. We ho-.. on aJICifltnt...btnffrt p!ori lt\ot iftckicm Ospl• toli~ itiwronce, ltberOI YO<otion and holidOyt Candidotft !'"'" h~ a dni,. to bt tueC>ndUl ond be wll""t .to wofi! l\Otd If ~ think yw -. the CMIUflcatloM, pleOM apply In ,.non to: the 330 ..... , Costa Mts1, CA. 92626 ~ ~--~-~---~~--~-------...:----~__;, __ _.......__..__ ........ ....::..,.......-.~~~ ...... -----------~--~..;...--.:... _________________ ... I Schools a In traction 642-4321 . Lois ext. 309 regarding advertising placem nt in the S~hoola & Instructions Directory -call N4Mlpaper Pacific l:ravel School 610 I . ., .. Sc ... S.eta AM, Ca. 9J'701 OIANCI COUNTY'S 0 LY ,.W An ACCUDff!D 71AV!L AC!HCY SCHOOL . An.-• Alfllw ....,,. ~ ,,...,,.. UCJNMa, AFTE,_,.., EVENIMO Cl.ASSES ·c.11 (714) 543-9415 .. ........................... __ ........ KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AM> PRIZES! (714) 548-7058 TODA~'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE. J ACROU ( n Wredl 51 Altow in 1 RaiM 54 Coneumed 5 Ointment 51 Pronoun I Wuangty 57 0..l*U 14 y.., "*1 51 r:ww.yclub 15 Concept 5t a.nkn.iptey eo GtowlnQ out 18 Hard wood 11 Surround 11 Alien gulf 12 TNI Sp 11 ~ 13 ~cdellutieat 19 ll"Opucs.n.::e counc11 20 Big -Of Pac 1M Anti YOI .. -Contwenc. 85 TIC!llity 21 C4untyol lrelend 22 Pronounc. 23 Ruf n1ture 26 Ouretlon 27 Gumer 21 Calliope, • g 28 Stlut In 32 BIOmMI 35c.t~t 37 ProrlC*'lt 3'-TV 3t Afr_,.. 4IO Numotmatttt 42 Froren r11n 43SuC*tatM . .uft!X 44 CofT!pleted 458t1Nout .. Ml'"~ DOWN 1 At>rlde 2~ 3 Ainge part• 4Cyat I Cutln two I l°"deepty 7 ''King-" I "Bloody Mery" ISummat• 10 °"'4ndi 11Jolnt~ 12 Noun endinO 13 lndlOO UMr 21 GMti 2 4 0.INlll'I Cit>' 21E.,.!Mder 21 Tracti tlat PREVIOU8 PUZZLE IOLVED 2tjYWgreen 30 !&~"• llln 31 Ttlton 32 -card 33 Hlgwane 34 Lltlded H Auler 31 Pnneie of - 31 Grotto 41 M~tNlcl 42 ~ QUiC:kly 45 Rec:ompeitM 41Feesimde 47 PreYaticetion 480nthe - 4t Join 50 PunitM 51$~ 52 ContteNWt 53Averege 65 Soto piece 59 Grldlton Offldal .,. .... ...... ............ I~; l~I ..6 . • 714 -833-130C ~Mlictlf• To QIOOll tn:wrl ••n•• ••n 1CI01a.19"'lltlt usaoon...,_ m.:t• '® 11MUlllT Ollftllllll Wolfsburg EdftlOn 'lll'OCE L U3' 1• • IU ps mo T~Sll,520 .. CUSt~48t USQOCAP~ ,_....neao,. ' . pnt:.:"2'.:'~j'7 • MCM\17 '*ndl-* HilU8TAHO V_. ~Power ....._,.Cand.., ~CZAOE571) ,,.. 8fU. MAXEY TOYOTA 19202 ~ IG.cll2I • ,...., --=tier'• OM! CS, W9il ~. dMl'I. iota of ..... 1llft Of'I It. 25 mpg 11SO. ~ 1400 aft 5 1'I Fell"rnant Wgn dMl'I ... gd cones. mml1m. _.. ... m50~151 • 714·31S0 1'l9 -.~"wm -~ . .. • .~ l' I : ( ) 1 I i a . BUENA PARK 'ANAHEIM GARDEN GROVE HUNTINGTON BEACH 22 FRWY FOUNTAIN ..J ! ~ er m SANTA · ANA EDINGER a1 VALLEY O n WARNER ~ 0 CHICK IVERSON 'f Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi 441 L ..... hJ., •""'9 leaoll na-11• Highest Quality Sales & Service 0 NABERS CADILLAC 2IOO Ulllll ILYI., CISTI IW (11•) M0-1100 (211) Ul·12U • Best Prices • Convenient Location CD 0 THEODORE ROBINS FORD U.S.A.'s # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer Modern Sales, Service, Parts, Body, Paint & Tire Oepb. Competitive Rates On lease & Daily Rentals 20IO .......... leda .... 142-0010., M0-1211 0 SOUTH COUNTY VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU 18711 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach (714) 142-2000 • Great Location • Super Service • Courteous & Knowledfl.61Jble Sales People SALES• LEASING• PARTS• SERVICE On~ Countys L.attest Volb•11t11/lsuzu De*1 We WI Not Be UnderlOld PARTS ClPARTflOT OPEN SA~Y m 0 RAY FLADEBOE HONDA G RAY FLADEBOE #11 a.te O.mr •.,Im•• In The lrvtne Auto Center 830-7800 Complete Salos, Service & Leasing VOLKSWAGEN #20a.telellttr•.,lnl•• In The lrvtne Auto Center 830-7300 Orante Countys Nlwat Vo/ksw11tn Dtaler Comp/fte Salts, SmfCf & LuS1nt 8. ORAIGE COAST JEEP/RENAULT # 1 /1 Ttl W11t F11 :~ G STERLING R ~ SAW -WVICl -lWI C -PAITS Overseas Delivery Specialists ""'i., Sain F11 I Yem .J OBn~e· sALEs Oa t • ~RVICE •LEASING l'ARTI DUART'mNT OPEN IATUROAY llONINGI BMW -ROLLS ROYCE 1540 Jamboree Rd. ,_.(' :_-._ u't,:,.9::.:,..Lvo • ACCESSORIES DEPT 549-8023 Newport Beech 840-8444 . Class1f1ed advertising is your best choice tor help 1n selling the items you no longer need. It's quick and inexpensive. and the Pilot reaches potential buyers wh o hve 1n this area., Call today. Daily Pilat ctass1f 1ed ads Phone 642·56 78 ~----- . . . I r 22 FRWY LAGUNA HILLS MISSION VIEJO SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO r .. 0 CONNELL CHEVROLET 0 BAUER MQTORS · nn....,..., ..... .._ Over 23 Years Serving Orange County , Salee • Service • Leasfng 541-12H S,.a.l Pw Ult 54J-Mll · MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM -9:00 PM SATURDAY 8:30 AM -8:00 PM SUNDAY 10:00 AM -5:00 PM 0 S-TADIUM PONTIAC We're New -We're 0..111111 l Acrou from the Bia A on KateU. Just Wfft of the (57) Orange Freewa1 Sales • Service • Parts • Body Shop on Premises llalatl• 2221 E. l1t1ll1 111•1111 BILL YATES BUICK -JAGUAR -ISUZU ~AutomotM ..... 8ALE8 • SERVICE • l.EA8lNG Fine 8111 r;tton Of au.llty Ulld Vlhlclea #1 BUICK DEALER IN OAANGE COUNTY 2121 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 171-2IOO 0 RAY FLADEBOE In The Irvine Auto Center 830-7000 G CREVIER BMW IALEI • HRYICE • LEASINQ "W,,..e ProfeNlonaJ Attitude Prevalla" lp1clelitne In 1..,.... D=. l.x~ 1l1RI llllOltoft of ....... canfulJ .. ,.,,,.. ...... always In ltoclc. 835-3171 20I W. 111 St., lent• Ana yorner of Broadway & 11t St. Ck>Md Sundays G UNIVERSITY OLDSMQBILE GJIM $LEMONS IMP.ORIS HONDA 2880 Harbor Blvd. Costa u-540-0713 3 Blocks So. of 405 Fwy. _, • 1I01 QuMI •1. -·Nflw Ctlf Locellon I 1001 QUI/II''· -,,...,. OMM#t © World'• L•rQfMt s.lectlbn of @ Merc«J• 8"nz ~ U.llOO Wes· LtllilC ·PW· lnM ·Wt .. e HOUSE OF IMPORTS INC • • tONG,... t.IAIB • c:owlTfTIW PUICHASI NICIS • HUGI H''9nOIY dial MERCEDES IJ::_\ 211n14117·2133 ~ • ext to Santa Ana Fwy (5) on Manchelter/Beech, Blvd. .. ---~ ---~-----------'---'-'---~----------------- , SpHlcloses area freeway A portion of the Garden Grove Freeway was closed for more than two hours this morning when a truck drop- ped 30 pounds of a powdery texture coating that re- duced vlslblltty on the high- way to less than five feet, the California Highway Patrol • reported. Officers closed off the freeway between Golden West and Valley View streetsat4:53a.m. because of the cloud of white pow- der. Thepowderwasldent- lfled as Pure-Tex, a celling texture coating material that Is non-toxic. A CHP spokesman said the freeway was closed until 7 a.m. while CalTrans .. work era swept the powder off the freeway. T raffle was _u:u..u:Yill!M...lll.l.LoughStanton and Westminster during the closure. The truck that dropped the pallet containing the powder did not stop, of- ficers noted. .. !·~·:·:·:,:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:-:~·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· Ce>ut . Fountain Valley Is explor- ing the possl blllty of build- ing a new library./ A3 Coast residents give mixed reviews to Monday night football without Howard Cosell./ A3 California Marines and sailors are Ignoring Tijuana 'off limits' order./ AS Nation -Challenger camera takes aim on Earth's subsurface./ AS World Forty more East German soldiers hide out In Em- bassy./ A4 An American U-2 spy jet crashes In South Korea, Injuring the pilot./ A4 Feature Support from Orange County for the Weizmann Institute of Science In Israel Is about to be recognlzed./81 Peter Max -poster king of the '60s -was In Newport Beach showing how he's Involved with video art of the '80s./B1 Sporta;- San Diego pulled It out to become the National League's representative In the World Serles./C1 The Rams got caught at the last second by Atlanta field goaJ kicker Mick Luckhurst and lost, 30-28./C1 Walter Payton of the Chi- cago Bears became the NFl:'s all-time leading rusher, breaking Jim Brown's record./C3 INDEX Bridge 84 8u119tln Board A3 BUl!nea as Callfornla Newa A4 CIMllfted C6-7 CrONWOtd C7 DMth Notlcu C4 FMtur• 81·2· Horoecope ce Ann Lander• 82 National Ntwt A4 Opinion AG P~aruzJ 81 Public Not 04t1 C4 8porta C1~ Stock Mark BG Thutera 83 Weather A2 Wtddng1 B2 World N A4 1:a1m 1111111 --- 0H ANCilC0 U N l Y L A LI J OHNI A. /'1 Cf N TS plane crash kills-pilot ,. Witness says aircraft spun in air then pancaked into office near JW A By STEVE MARBLE Of !tie Olltr .... ...., A Santa Ana man was· ldllcd Sunday evening : hortly after takina· off from John Wayne Ai~rt wtien his twin-ename plane crashed into a suite of offices in Newport Beach arid ianitcd a roarina blaze that caused a ·~. mmimum of $300,000 in damage, authorities reportcH today. The pilot, the <>nly axrson flying in the Beechcraft BarQ~ was ident1fie(f as Cloyd Houston K.hnsenmuth, S4 A deputy coroner said the pilot was killed on impact. · A spokesman at John Wayne Airpon $lid Klingensmith did not file a 01ght plan and that his ~unataon was unknown. Witnesses tO Ole 6 p.m. plane crash said il ppcared one of the enganes on the smaJLair:plane blew apart just minutes after the craft lifted off·lhe runway at John Wayne AiWon. ••tte JOI up about 300 .feet and I could see the one cnJ.lne was mok· ins," said Peter Fmocchi. 26. a pnvate pilot who'd landed his own plane just minutes Ix-fore wnn~ ing the crash. Finocchi sa1<i he watc Cd in horrOT as lhc twm-c:n,gme plane banked offlo one de, pun sc-.eral um an idatr nd then "pa ed" into an office buddina at 4200 Campu Ori e, which lS octQpted b) Jacado A&ricul· ture. • AbOut hllf or the office butUltng; direct!)" cro the rce1 from a count) fire station, demob hed. .. I heard n hit and w mo e," explained F'.inocch1. ''By tM ume I ran'over, then• were names com1na out of the windows. It prett) hot ... . ...... ......... _,...._......., Irvine woman . raped Second vi Um dissuades attacker - who flees residence One Irvine "oman l3lS raped while another ;as a to dissuade her assailant 10 separate attadcs. lrvane po,h.cc ~today. -4n Atabout 1:20a.m. tllis mom1nc. an int.ruder broke into a~ an the Cul"erdak ocighbortiood and raped a 48-ycar-<>ld ·oman "ho .sleep on the b ving room sofa. police aid. She a okc and screamed for her husband -..:bo in the uJJStain bedroom. The uspcct fled and seen drivm& awa) 1n a whs~ car of unkno"'fl make. ·' In a ~tc 1ncideni, a woman in ber earl) 30s was attacked twday afternoon when a man cla.Jming to be a xrviceman. came to her door' and asked to usc her phone. Althouit> his request • s df;Clined, the assailant forced his WI.) into the Woodbrid&e ho~ and pulled w mantolhc POiice said the ~'Oman .,. bo had U..n1na in rape ~' cntion. was able to di uade the wouJd-bc rapist v.ho fled the home. The suspect •-as detcribcd a .S. foot-.8. stocky 30.)car-old with rcd-dish~brown lair, shoulder-length hair. He v.as weanna round, tinted wire-nm glasses, a light blue T-shirt and red and •hlte shorts. He abo bad scvtral da)-s· a:rowth ofbea.rd. Plama leap f~m roof u flreflabten battle blue •~ked by cruh of aircraft near JObn Wape Airport Sanday. Irvine police do not bcliC''e the two incidents arc linked. County leaders • pra~s~ Mondale ' But party chiefs disagree on debate'$ effect on election By PHIL SNEIDERMAN OlhCW!r......... • Oranse County's Dcmocntic and Republican pany chiefs qrecd today that former Vice President Walter Mondale performed well in Sunday's debate with President Ronald Reaaan but disaarced on whe1her 1t will help the Democratic challengfr's uphill campaign. Lois Lundlx'!J. who chairs the county's Republican Party, said she docs not behevc Reagan supponers wsll change their ·minds because of Mondate•s warnings Sunday about the huae federal deficit. Brace S1llllller Related story on A4 But former Superior Court Judsc Bruce Sumner. chairman of the Oranac County Democratic Pan). td tht debate ll"e voteri an ~tended forum to compare the candidates and that the event &a'c a st to Mondale's campasan. rc-electioh polls have shown Mesa 'Superblock' tenants say plan's not all that 'super' • • Lola Lundbeq Mondale to Ix' runnin& ignificantly Ix-hind Reagan sn the presidential race. .. I personalll felt Ronald Reapn was very good. · Lundbera said. . But he added that lhedebate"gave Mondale a potli&ht he· ne"er h d before. I think (dcballn&) the prcsi· dent P"e him a lot of confid nee and enthu ia m. Hecouldn·11odownany (Plcue eoe COUNTY I A2) ·TONY SAAVEDRA -- Focus o ~ T H~ NE\\S - ---- . . HB homeowners :win turn pocket in road median Complaints force clty to cut entry f9r condo access Kathy Phillips. a nurse, said at the time. "h shows that cit) ff mem- bers do• hat they want and they don •t bu e consideration for anyone. A difTcren~ m seconds can mean lh(S ... By ROBERT BARKER l it\ offi c1al!,, "ho acknowlcd&ed °' .. .,..,,...... the' made an O\ers1&ht by not noofyina the ro1dents or the work on Huntinaton Buch Cit)' officials. the ,,.lane Bois.a Chica, arc prcpar· ) iclding to protests. have aarced to in& plan for the tcf\ tum that thcy·n cut a left-tum pod.et into a new submit to the Cit) Council ~xt highway median . that will allow Monda) condominium owncndircctaccc to The "ork" 1s e~pected to add about northbound lanes of Bolsa Chica SI 5.000 to the $468.000 hi&hway Street. upgradina project. Residents of the Hunttnaton RI\-But Cit) Enginttr Lo Evans said 1cra condo on tark trttt n~r Bol toda' that e'en with the ncv.: accesi Cb1ca peppered City Hall ~1th com-the median cut w1U provide it i plaintsv.henthc)awokeon~momma 'doubtful that homeov.ncrs can turn last month to see con tructton crews left on Botsa Chica bee& of the J)9unng co~CTCte for t!'c ncv.-n1cd11n. ~ ttca'" traffic volume at peak pcnoc1s The residents claimed the new Other offioa 1d fire and ~r highwa) work would h mpcr accc \ChtclC) could re h the tart A\•· to t/leir home enuc condominiums by ahcmati /This i httr 1d1oc • resident routes Woman arrested in drug burglary at Me~a hospital B TO V AA 'EDllA • I .U * Oronge C-t DAILY PILOT /Monday, October 8 198" -' Witness' dau hterdies; legal dispute continues Girl. 15, succumbs .of complications: ,father petitions for autops , funeral reh11ou1 hchefs ofhtr mother. Susia Pina Acosta. a Jeho\'lh's Witnn$. The Stet believes blood tnns- (u_s1_911s art forbidden by the lhble. lilfune, A"conr.t-ft""'U--~n•'C1 who h\.-es LO Hun11n11on Belch and who had not seen hit d.auah1er an 11 )'Ul'St sued for JOin1 custody to have 11 ta)' in her trea1men1. = -A I S-lt:1r--old sirl who was lhe ob)ttt o 1 custody dispute between her mother, who ol?poscd blood tran fu11on on reha.ious arouods. and her father has died of compljca· lion from her illness, a doctor sayJ.. But Melissa Pina Acosu.·s dea1h will not end the legal d1sputt11 bet•·cen her divorced parents, her father's attorney said Sunday. "We're 101ng into court today at l:JO for two thinp," said attornC) Henry James Koehler IV , who rcp- rntnts Arnold Thomas Acosta, who lives in Hunting!on Beach "Fint. we want an autopsy -tht• &irl's mother doesn ·1. .. Second. the father wants a funC'ral . and tilt mother wan1!J; her cremated, immechately." He s~ud he 1s seeking an au1ops) because the results would be need~ for any possible c1v1I or cnm1nal prostcut1ons i'ieilim1n1 from Meliua·s dta1h Melissa d~ at 1l:l41.i,m. Sunday of ··complications of lupus erythemotosu.s," a brcakdO~n in the immune system cspcctally a.ffccuna 1he kidney, Dr. Jorie Mandelbaum s.rud 1n a sll!ltemen1 read by a Manin LuJl:ler Hosp111il spokeswoman who. declined to 11ve her name. Melissa underwent surgery Scpl. 26 for pstr~1ntest1nal blce<hna cauSC'd by 1he disease. but the bleeding conunued, Mandelbaunf\ statement ~Id . .. She ""'as rcce1v1ng in1ravenous nutrition and oxygen to assist her breathing when her hean stopped 1h1s morning:· the \tal<.'ment conctudCd Mehssa ·s dis.case 15 con\ cn11onall) trea1ed w11h blood transfusions. bu1 un11I June she received none becau~ she was cared for at 1wo d1fl'erent hO$pllal~ 1n accordance with 1he An Orange County Juveoik Court commissioner instead gave custody to tht courny's Department of Public Social Services.. which had the criti· cally 11! girt tnnsferrtd to Man-in L\t_ther for immediate blood trans- fusions. The day of her las1 operation. Sept. 26. KO('hler aga.tn went to court because Acosta had 3llegcdly been denied v1!>1tat1on nghts. Juvenile Court Judae Do,nald .\. Mc('arttn awarded each P.3rent a ··50-50 time share of the th1ld on her deathbed," Kochler said. Howe\ er, nr1ther parent war. in the hospital when shed1ed_ She apparent- !) had bttn unronsc1ous for several days. KDl"hler said. southland skies sunny and super Sunny, warm wca1her -!he kind Crash ends ,pursuit of Ferrari; three held Sou1hcm California is famous for - ponc<ll) a11cmp1cd 10._pyl_! 1he car will continue through Tuesday, the over for spccdul.g in the area or ~nalWCil.tiZ'fStrVtte"Slltd,oci'ay Thrc( tttspee~ 1n ~ silver Ferrari led police on a 100- mile-pcr-hourchase through the west side of Huntington Stach before spinning ou1 and crashing Sunda) night. accorchng to pohce. Arrested on suspicion of stealing the luxury sports car rcponed to h'avr a price tag in the S40,IXX)...SS0.000 r:anat were Dion Hlavnicka, 23. Gary Hlavn1cka. 20, and L11a Rivas. 19. all of Huntington Beach. according 10 ofticen. Officer David Humphreys re- Algonquin Street and Warner Av-Inland highs in Orange County will enuc about 10:30 p.m. approach 88 followingoverrught lows But when he turned on his red hghl. in the mid-to uppcr-60s. the Ferrari rcponedly sped east on The beaches will ha'\>e to,N clouds Wamcr Avenue, tumed north on and locallydentc fog, clearing to hazy Bolsa Chica Strttt and thrn spun out sunshine by m1d-momin&-Highs will after strik.inga curb while auempt1ng be 1n the mid-70s followinaovem1g.ht to makr a sharp tum onto DovewOOd lows in the m id-50s to mid-60s. Drive. Highs will hit the, 90s in the valleys. The car, whicb. still had its Euro.-7~ 1n thcmounta1ns, "".\t,h lows in the pean license plates and was not m1d-40s and .SOS. registered. sustained major damagr Temperatures will reach thr 80t in to its undercarriage. pohce said. Owt:ns Valley HOSPITAL DRUG ARREST ••• From Al burglary. possession of a conttcilled substance and pos5ns1on of para- phernalia from the C'os1a Mesa 1nc1- dcn1. In both bur&lar1es ilt the Fountain Valley hospnal. the mobile tra)'s, which arc wheeled from room· 10 room. were apparent!) lefl 1n the ha\lwa) wh1lr nurKs tended to pa· tients.. The trays we~ apparcntl)' wheeled by the th1ef10 a secluded arca and 1hen pned open On Saturda). police were (a!lcd around 4:30 pm. 111 ( osta Mesa Medical Center Hospital .... here nur~ es and staff had subdued Tracy. u.·ho reponedly became' 1oll"nl after being caugh1 wnh S385 wonh ol hospnal narcot1C!.. Pohce reponcd the woman wheel· ed a locked can into 1hc nurses· loungr and pnNt 11 open by us1ng a screwdnver. She apparently cul her hand while breaking 1n10 the tray. Two nurses became su'sp1c10\Js when the)' sa"'· Tracy's bloodied h&nd. They also found bloody towel• near the burglarized tray. poltce said. The vials from C'os1a Mesa. Medical Centereonta1ned up to 100 m1llgrams of morphine and Demerol. the strongest dose oflhC' drugs given only 10 pa11ents who are 1n extrC"me pain. ~1d a ho~p1tal !>pokeswoman . The .,,..01nan also allegedly took four synng~ from 1he can. Costa Mesa pohce said Tracy appeared to be sufferina withdrawal S) mp1oms from drug addicuon and became violent and uncooperative when approached by the hospital staff. She was subdued, however, by the workers. said nursing supervisor Marilyn Trcca. Minna said he suspected that much , of the stolen narcoucs was intended ror street .salt to heroin users. ··Even 1f 11 was for .personal use. 11he bur&lar) would more 1han liktly sell a substantial amount. Morph1nr 1s what heroin breaks down to 1n the bloodstream,"" he said . ' COUNTY LEADERS LAUD MONDALE ••. From Al funher -he could onl( go up. I think Mondale did vef) wel . bettC"r 1han I thought he would.'' But Lundberg noted that "Ronald Reagan has thC" respons1b1hty of running the countf) Mondale JUSl has to be ..ccn on TV 110 hC"lp his campaign).'" SumnC"r agrerd 1hat the e~posurc during thr debate was something Mondale ilceded. ··rm JUSI thrilled.'" Sumner said ··1 think wr've finally got the IS$Ues 1n focus. I think Vice Prrs1dent Mondale did a tremendous job. I think he v.as reasonable and kind (10 Reagan) - almost 100 kind ·· Thr Democratic pany chief said the extended nalional forum for Mondale was 1mponant bccau1e ··1hc Rcpublu:ans ha,•e done a good JOb of ignonn& thr challen&e .. He added, ··r11 give Reagan credn for bc1n~ willing 10 comr (to the debate).' Sumnl."r §.31d he wished Mondale had pursued the deficit issue even morr agress1vrly Lundberg. howe,·er. said Mondale spC"nt too much time hammering awa) on the deficit. which she said is an L!"lsuc on which even econom1SI!> cannot agree. She added. ··1, don't think the American public's number --One con- cern is the defrcn. I don't think the Amencan people are going to make their (voting) dtc1s1on on the deficit.·· Of Reagan's performance, Sumner said. ··1-1e·s a marvelous actor .... f But) he wasn't able 10 make that usual slick prescnlation because he d1dn•t have a senp1 in front of him." Lundberg said her long.st.anding adm1ra11on for Reagan wasn't ahtrcd by Sunday·s debate. "I was proud ofh1m," she said. FIERY CRASH NEAR JW A •.. From Al James c·ro.,,.lc~. a l'er11ficd pubht accountanl. ~1d he was working 1n his office when thC' plane cta\hed into the budding. The Irvine resident ~1d his officr ts at the rear or the Jacado huildrng. .. , was Lalk1ngon 1he telephone and ...,_ork1ng on my computer when I felt 1he bu1ld1ngshake." said Cro"-'ley, 4 l .. , remember th1nk1ng. ·1wonder1fa plane CTflShed..,. Bui I d1dn·1 hear an) •urens so I figured II couldn't bC' 100 bad.'' t •rowley said he worked at h1o; desk for another 15 m1nu1e' before heann~ the \OUnd of breaking gJass. Just Call 642-6086 Dolly Piiot o.tO.ory It Qu•r•nlHd 1,1,_,,.,.,., 1 • ..,..~ ,, ,, , -.. .. _•"•I ~ t', .. ~ "I 1hough1 11 was a burglar some· one tr)1ng to break 1n."' the accoun· tant ..aid ··1 walked ou\ 1herc and 11 .... a .. a fireman rm o;ure hC' was as surpn~d 10 ~C' me and I wa~ 10 ~ him. "I wa\.J lit11l· concerned when I ..aw ..., hat had happened;· said Crowle). who feared hundred" of tall: files would go up 1n names. lit' \a1d hi s o ffice was lefi intact. Oran&C' Count) an.J Newport Ocacl'I firefighters , spent nearly JO minutes bca1ing back the flame\ l)amagc 10 !ht' budding wa, 1n111a11, out at SJ00.000 hu1 count) lire" ("apt Mark Kc1nhold ~1d the fi111re docs not 1 nclude thC" con ten ts of the offices. The building contain~ offices for the agricultural firm. ('rowlcy·s ac- counung oniers and an 1n\estmrnt firm. lrowle\ c;a1d an officer of 1hc 1nve-s1mcii1 firm had planricd on working Sunda) e"en1ng but did not \how up. · ··Yeah. he's lucky." the accountant sa1d .. , lookC'd tn his office and the o nl) thing s1and1n,g were some filr cab1ncts E''e?.'th1ng C'l!.C' was leveled 10 the ground · \llhal do }OU llkt abo•t lht' Pally Pi101? Wbat doo 't yo• like? Call lbt number at lf'ft and yefur me11agt ~dll lw-rec.rdcd, 1rantcrlkd and dellvered to lht 111pproprlate editor. Thl' 1'tlMC' 2i·hour 11nl•t'rlng lf'r\'IC'f' mayM 1srd lo.record letters to lbe 11ditor on an) lopic C•ntrlbu1or1 lO our W it.era ctil•mn m••t loelude their name and telephone-aumbtr for vrrlflcaUon. No clrc•latloo eall1, plea1e. Tell us wh111f1 on yo ur mind l(~AN< ,J.. (l,iA' I Daily Piloi Clrcul.etlotl 71t./M2"'4333 c11ullled -11.ino 7141 .. 2·!1871 Alt oth« deparhMntt 142-4321 MAIN OF,ICI! ffntfWJ&T ..-M.ru lo ,, ~ ......... (I ( .... ~ '" .ve.Jfl .~ .,,., -"" ~-.. ,,. •. -' . .,..., ,. ... .. ..... ,,.., H. L. Schwartz Ill F it1i. .t-,., r ·-..:t~ ~,.,......._.. '• ~· '.... .... ~._.....,, __ ·-.. , Ill' •• _..., .. ",.,. ""'" •. ,_... ..,,_.,..,,., .. ,.,.,..,,. "' 10 •"' -· ,, • .,. ,.......,., Clrcu'9ilon TolepltonM Rotemary Churchm•n ( f ,, '" .. . .,. ' • , . ••• ... --Stephen F, Car•.10 Pr'odUC" M,1nn rJ0>• Doneld L. Wllll1m1 r 1rc.u1a1.nn ~A;)Oo:l VOL. n, NO. 212 • l . ' -·-~--===- • -. . . • azy sunshine ahead for Q9ast Coutal Eztended . ~ .... --...-~ -ioe-hc.....i _, ... tntOUfl'I ,,. '*'°" tfiOr>t "" ltw 10. -N -I UlflOl"O •o •• IO •s llllMd ~IAeya l_. .....,., ... M 10 I~ Temps -=:t:ciue ---· Alt#tlltClt'( --·--.. ---._ ~IGfl.SC -w• ~.NC g:::· ~~ .... " " " " " "' " .. " " " .. •1 •• " .. ~·~ .... .... 10 31 " .. " " 71 11 .. " IS II Tides ......... _.,. TOOAY ~ ,,.,.,,., • 11 ,_,,., TWSOAY ....... ;"'\"7" .. _.,. 3 21•.m t.:w ...... l .. p.1t1 t•tp m '·' " .... ,. •4 ,.. ••• ••• ,., 14 --- " .. ., .. .. ,. .. .. ,. .. ~ :: ,, ,, .... .... " .. .. .. .... " .. .... " .. -c-... ... ... ... . .. ... ... COSTA MESA 'SUPERBLOCK' ••. • From Al explonn_g the economics or re-larsc. l~ndscapcd parkina lol on the Finkel. co-owner of Harbor Llies dcvelopteg-thercmaining.propcay__ .. otf!eJ -"l<Jc at .l.llc ~oro.u of_tlJ.r.~r, lamp s1ore, has been at his 1805 "We ha ve 10 sec what pcnc:ilsout at Boulevard, Newport Blvd. address for the put 'the bottom line," said Pat David. Maxson and other tenants believe three ycan. He hopes to be there community development eoordi· 1he parking area should be placed .. whenJhe dust clears from the m.uch- nator. The repon i> due Nov~.7. between their stores and the ntw'-rfb'tlted rCdCve1opmeni project, sch'td- bui1dina-Otherwise, they con1cnd. uled for completion in ~til"tllh!y shoppers parkina in the Courtyards 1986. Whalevcr happens... tenants. land- owners, redevelopment officials. real estate executives and the mayor agree 1hat someone 1s going to be unhal)py. won'ttakc1htt1me1owalkover1othe While his tenure K short at the oLder stores. pruent -.address. Fink.d's store has ··No matter what we do on lh1s one. we're gonna· be wrong." said Mayor Donn Hall. The remaining businesses 9n that been in the immediatcarca,foithe last - stretch of Newpon Boulevard will be 12 years. "Everyone has selfish mauves. Nobod)' s a bad guy. lt's1us1 a matter of who is goin& 10 win.·· said Maxson. owner of Omar's cuslom fram1ns. · Ma:>.son 1s ph1losoph1cal about possibly moving. The city would pay the relocation eos1 and he could end up renung a nicer, though more expcnS1\'e, suite 1n the new Courtyards. .. D1splaecmcnt 1s a fac1 of life:· he reasoned. "'>le could all CT) 1cars abou1 11. but that's JUSI what hap.- pens.'" • Maxson, however. 1s not so sure about staying. He explained that the developer. Pacific Sa\'1ngs Bank, is hoP.1ng to build a two-story re1a1\ building righl next to 1hc rcma1n1na. bus1ne5ses on the pan1ally-vac.ated block. Wh1IC' the older SIOrt'S weft' built back from the strC"et, drvrlopcrs have submillcd designs showing the new building Julllng out toward the boulevard. Tenants behrve the structure will fttde 1hclr stores. eventually choking off their business. .. You put a t"'O-story building on Newpon Boulevard and people (driv- ing toward the beach) arcn'1 going to see us un1il we·re an afienhou&ht:· said Maxwn. Conceptual dc'1gns of the building also show 11 being constructed adja- cent to the remaining stores, with a ' shut-out froni the stylish shopping center. sait;I Max.son. ··we·~ going to become a back alky 10 the Courtyards. We'rr JUSl asking the city not to leave us like susnea pigs 10 die,·· he said. Mark Letter. seniOr v1cc c>res1den1 of development for Pacific Savings. said the comer parking lot was needed to create a .. window" tha1 would allow passers-by on Ncwpon Boulevard to sec in10 the shopping etnter along Harbor. Letter added 1ha1 nearly all of tbe eight buildings in 1hc'Center would be placed close 10 thr respective strttl5, creating an urban look that would replace the small-town effect of having the stores built bark from the st reel. - Pacific Savings. formerly Pac1fie Federal Savings and Loan Associa- uon. attempted to get city approval this week on the conceptual design for 1hc controverliia~building. However. the redevelopment agency postponed the maner until the Novrmbcr meet· 1ng after developers locked horns with tenants last werk al City Hall. The disagreements could become moot if the city decides to take 1he propcny and have a motel. office building or ano1her shopping centCT built there. The site could also become pan of the Courtyards - which leads to the people who don't want lo fnovt and don't want to Kii their land. RESULTS! THAT'S WHAT THE DAILY PILOT GIVES ME HERE AT AL'S GARAGE Tiii PllOT REALLY RIAClllS Tllf AC~IVE.-lllHD PEON fu4~,_()~. G/U<_ RICHARD BYBEE MANAGER. AL'S GARAGE FASHION ISLAND "I don·t want to movt; I've worked too damn hard at this loca1ion.'' he complained. "It's going to be hard to lei eus1omers know where I went. For all they'll know. Harbor Lites jus1 went."0 His landlord .. Vera tfughe"S. 11 also adamant about not selling her share of the remaining three parcc}s. Hughes and her la1c husband, Dr. A.G. Hughes. bought the property about 42 years aAQ. One of their sons was born at the medical center ~ established by 1'oetor Hugh es at the sttc. where the couple also lived. .. r ... c h\'cd on the property. rve rebuilt 11 , ifs where m} husband's office was. Ifs more than buildings. 11·s scnumental, 1hat's all." said the eldtrl)' woman. The prospect oflos1ngher land isn't new lo Hughes. Commun11y De- velopment Coordinator David said the city has expressed interest over the past few years of acquiring the en lire northwest stretch between 18th S1rcct and Harbor Boulevard. But the cost was ··astronomically higher," said O,vid, JO the agency only took a ponion of the block. David explained . the ~ncy is considering a plan by which the devC"lo_pcr would share in the initial cost of acquirio& the land and razina tPe buildinas.Undcr the current dc-- vrlopment agreement for the Courtyards, Pacific Savin.is purchased the propcny af\er the cuy had demolished the buildings. &~~~ 56 FASHION !SIANO· NEWPORT BEACH· (714) 644 -5070 • ' .J . ..,....~~--...\~~1 fM~¥.11WllA>!'ll~ - ' I Forecaeta on A2 M ON!u\ f UL l <i·H H >i l<j>lr1 Powder lplll closes fwy A PQrtlon of the Garden Grove Freeway wu closed for mor~ 1 .. b houra thl• morning n a truck drop. ped 30 ds of a powdery texture coating that r• duced visibility on the high- way to less than five feet, the California Highway Patrol reported. Officer• closed o the freeway between GOiden Weat and Valley vi.-w 1treet1at4:53 a.m. ~ause of the cloud of white pow- der. The powder waa ldent- lfled as.Pure-Tex, a celling texture coating material that Is non-toxic. A CHP apokeaman said the freeway waa cloaed until 7 a.m. Whlle CalTrans workers swept the powder off the freeway. T raffle was Lerouted through Stan~t ~---- and Westmlnater during the closure. The truck that dropped the pallet containing the powder did not atop, of- ficer• noted. Coast ,., -. Fountain Valley Is explor- ing the possl blllty of bull d- ing a new library./ A3 Coast residents give mixed reviews to Monday nrghl football without Howard Cosell./ A3 California Marines and sailors are Ignoring Tijuana 'off llmlts' order./ AS Nation Washl~ton watcher analyzes Sundaf s presl- dentlal debate./ M · Challenger camera takes aim on Earth's subsu~~ce./ A5 :~!:~:!:!;~:::~:::::~:::::::::::!::~::!":~::::::~:::::::~:=~ World Forty more East German soldiers hide out In Em- bassy:! A4 An American U-2 spy jet crashes In South t<orea, Injuring the pllot./M Feature Support from Orange County for the Weizmann Institute of Science In Israel la about to be recognlzed.191 Peter Max -poster king of the '60s -was In Newport Beach showing how he' t Involved with video art of the '80s./11 :-:·~:·:·~:·:-:•:•:.X·:-~:·:·:·~:·:•:?>:·>:·:•!t!•!-:·:· Sporta San Diego pulled It out to become the Natlonal League's representative In the World Seriea./C1 :The Rams got caught at the last eecond by Atlanta fleld goal kicker Mtck Luckhurat and lost, 30-28./C1 Adult comedy takes a at~ forward on "Kate & Allle" tonlght./113 M A3 85 A4 ~7 C7 C4 81·2 ce 82 A4 Al 81 Ct c, ... 88 83 A2 82 A4 e 1e·r ane " e \ I near • ras Witness says craft 'pancaked· into buildi authorities~ today. The pilot. the only pcnon ft)'ia& UI the Beechcraft 8arott. WU idcn&ified as Ooyd Housaoa KJi.......-. Si. A deputy coronor said die pilot wal kil~oa ilnpKt. A spOkesmaJl at John Wayne Ai~ said Klinlcmmi&h did no161e a fliaht plan ind that his datinabOll was unlrnowu. WilnCSICS to lhc..6.p.:m. ~ cmll said it appearid one of die~ oa the malJ a.irplant blew apM _;- minutes after the craft lifted off die runway at JOhn Wayne Airpon. .. 'He Sot up about lOO :f'c:c1 ahd I could 6ee the one enaine wu smOk- iQf. •• id Pct.er Finocdli, 26, .a pn\tate pilot wtto•d landed his own plane just minuies ~ witncssina the crash. Finoc:dli said he watched in horror as the twtn..mcine plane banked off to one sick, spun SC'\'cral times in midiir and then •pancaked" .into an ofr1tt buildm& at 4200 Campus Drive, whtch lS occuJ>ie!j ~ Jacado A&rnul· ture. bout half of the offt« buddini, direct!) ~ the stJU1 from 1 · oount) lire station, -.'U dcmOlishcd. .. . -1 beard it hit and sa111 mokc ... exp&ained Finocdli ... ~ me time I ran over. lbcrt wen &ma conuD& out of tbc wi~ ll pmt ·~~ .. hot."' 'evt'J)Orl ~Cb Politt said they ........... .., ............ told that the Id\ propdJer of the aircraft separated from the engine after takeoff. OraQSr Countr fire- fiJhters .said the runway was littered with en&ine parts that apparently .broke loose from the disabled craft. Plamee leap from roof u flreDpten bettle blue 11PUked by cruh of aircraft n-.r Jo~ Wayne Airport Sanday. The crash is being iavcstipted by the atloiial Transportation Safety (Pleue .. rmaY /A2J eoua.ty leaders praise --JJJdal.e But party ct.ltefs disagree on deb=--a_t_e_' s- eff ect on election By PHIL SNEJDERMAN Of ... DllJ ......... Ora• County's Dcmocra&k and Repubhcan pany chiefs.~ today that former Vice Pttsldenf\.Walter Mondale performtd well in Sunday•s debate with President Ronald Rcapn but disalfCCd on whether it Wlll help the Democratic challcn~'s ~all C8ml)eian. Lois Lundbc~ who chairs the county's Republican Pany. said she does not believe Rcapn supponen wtll chanse their mind because of Mondalc'1 wamin~ Sunday about the huac federal defim. ill ' J But !'!")Cf upcrior Coun Jud&e Bruce U.ncr, chairman of the Orange County Dcm~ratlc Pan). said the debl&c pvc voters an utendN forum to compare the candidatn •nd lbat the event ean a bo61t to ondllej caarsaian. Pre-election polls-bave hown Mondale to be runnina sianificantl> bthind Reaaan in the presidential ract. Mesa 'Superblock' Ie;nants say plan's not all.that 'super' • "I pcoonalll felt Ronald Rcapn WI nry aood .• Lundber& said. But she added that the debate "p~e Mondale a spotli&ht M's ne~tr hid before. I think (debating) the presi- dent pvc barn a lot of confidence and enthu11asm Hccouldn'taodown •ru'. funhtt-hecouldonl) soup. I think Mondale <hd Vcf) well. better tt\ln I thought he ~ould.'' (Pleue eee COUlfTT I A2) fONY SAAVEDRA , - Vin Joracnsea. About $8,000 of the total raised was -rollcctcd before the event with many of the supponm not in attendance, according to WalL ~ fund-raisma drawina was also cld with the pnzes donated. Watt ~Id. 1 In add1t1on to the funds raised. an said the rally pro,·idcd an pponunll) to collect signatures on a uuon ·na that ·c,,."POT1 Beach nne the unmcorporatcd communi- 1, of nta l\na Hci~ts. PON has supported annexation or the comraunity that liC$ under JOhn Wa~nc ,\1rport's J)ight .pa~ •hdc . . • . other5 ha'c been undecided or With tJCkcts it'll ma for SI 0 c . apinst the idea. Watt said. those attCJ\$f1ng were trtatcd to "In fact. we pla\cd a softball pmc food..cntetWnmtnt and S,PCC<:hcs b) ~•th the ""J~ Beach ~!~ ~tt. ~kan sscm man ap1nst · nt.1 Ana Hei&hts and after Manan CIJCSOn, • pon Beach SI\ mmnp. it was tied." Watt said. CU) Councilwomen Jac.kae Heather ... "We dcadcd it .,'as t)pjci.I that the Ruthel)'n Ph.immcr and Ml\or ~ faclyn Han nd lonat1mc a1rpon ·roe \Pleue ... AIRPOaT/ A.2) Wvman arrested 1n drug-burglary at Mesa hospital By TONY SAA •EDRA .............. ' . ' r 8, 1984 Witn_ess' daughter dies; legal dispute continue fa th er petitions for autopsy. funeral I S-~ear-old gu1 who was the "Shr \\3\ re<:e1Hng intra\Cnous object oi a custo<ly d1'ipute between· nutnt1on nd ox) gen to as.,1st her h r mother, ~ho O{lposod blQOd brcathma ~hen hc:r.ll an topped th1~ tron fu ion on n-1 OUi srounds, mom mg," the statement ooncluded. and ht'r father ha died of comphca· Meh.,ota's d1~a~ 1 cor\,cntionall)' lions from her illness, a doctorsa)s. treated with blood tran fusions. bu1 But Mch sa Ptna Acosta's death until June-~c recched none, because will not end the kpl da'lputci she was cared for at two different between her divorced p rents. her hospitals in accordance with the father· anomcy said Sunda). religious beliefs of her mother: Su'l1a "We'fe going into court toda) at Pina Acosta. a Jehovah's Witness. J~j0 fo two things," said attom--. .,..T h t belie vi; btOOd trans. Henr; Jame Koehler JV. who rep-fu~ipns art forbidden by the Bible. rtsents Arnold Thomas Acosta. who In June: Aco ta, an ex<onvict who lives in Huntington Bcac1l. lives in Huntington Beach a11d who "first. we ~ant an au1ops) -the had not seen his daughter in 11 years. gjrl's mother doesn't. s C'dforJointcusao~)> toba\c her 1rca1mcn1. An 0range ·ount)' Ju,enllc oun commissioner instead vc cu tod)' to the countf :, INpartment ot Pubhc tal Service , which had lh~ Crill· c; lly ill girl transferred w Manin Luther for immediate blood;,tran • fusions. 'I he da~ of her I st opetntion, Sept. 26. Kochlrr ag.it1n went to court be"·au Acosta had allegedly been ·denied "'isitatao n nghts. Juvenile Coun Judge Donald A. Mc-Cartin awarded each parem a ··so..so time \hare of the child on her deathbed," k.ochkr said. However. neither parent was in the hosp1Utl when she died. She apparent- ly had been unconscious for vcral da~s. Koehler said. ·• · cond. the fatherwa01sa funeral. and the molher wanh her crt·mated immediately." He said he I\ ~dong an autopi.) bce3u\C the results \\-Ould be needed for any possible c1v1I or cnmmal prosecutions stemming from Melissa's death St&t e employees' union · ~~~ps Disney~and pa.tty · Melissa died at 11 : 34 a.m. Sunda> of "comphcataons of lupus erythcmot~us," a breakdown 1n the immune system especially affecung the kidney, Dr Jorge Mandelbaum said in a statement read by a Martin Luther Hospital spokeswoman who declined to give her name. Bf tbe Anociatd'Preas replacing stnk~rs permanently this Thursda) Jn a gesture of unity with stnking The Cahfomla State Employees Disneyland workers. one of the Association h::sd booked a celebrallon largest unions representing ~tate em-at Disneyland for unday and sold ployees urged members to forego a union members tickets at a discount. party it had booked at the Magic The CSEA could not cancel the Kinidom. party officiaUy. since Disneyland Meanwhile, an estimated 400 honored the tickets if individuals \tnkers were back on \he JOb Sunday used them. a union spokesman at Hazy sunshine ahead for Coast Coastal Extended Temps · HI~ 04I ., n !!iO • 77 63 •S <IO 72 '4 6S 63 7t IG ., ... 75 .. --flT' 13 7t 57 se .ie 16 so 10 31 14 64 _ 12 eo 71 ., 14 3e 85 11 TUlto•V 323•111 t34un. '3 ottp m 114tpm 07 63. 01 LOCAnoM <t t l111n1111g1on e.Kn Ri•WJelly.N ... .oo/I Sun Ml• today al t 21 pm, ,._ 40lh $11•1. N ... POtt t""4ay nt» • m and Nit -o•on II 22nd Slteet Nhl)Ofl I 27 p m -8alb09 Wedga Moon ,,... today al 1· 13 p m , •• Laguna e..ctt TUMCl•Y •I ~ 3t • m and •-~ at Sall C~a I 37 e> m WaW tamp 13-t6 llU: 2-4 14 1·3 1·3 1·3 1·2 1·3 8 .... dHtllOll flOlll"-I 1• .. 12 6t ... ,. u 61 1• st '' a .. 55 r• a1 6& 51 78 14 11 eo 11 $t ~ c 8S SS 82 ... OtMCTIOW f&lr ftlf ,..,. ,.. lalf ,.., tw Mehssa underwent surgery Sept. 26 for gastro-mtestmal bleeding caused by the disease. but the bleedmg continued, Mandelbaum·s statement sa.o.. following D1nscyland's notification stnke headquarters said Sunday after- that the amusement par" would sta...!!__n_oo_n_. ____ ---------- burglary. possession of a controlled substance ~and possession of para- phernalia from the Costa Mesa inci- dent. In both burgJanes at the Fountain Valley hospital. the mobile trays, which are wheeled from room to room. were apparently left in the hallway while" nurses tended to pa- tients. The trays were apparent!) wheeled by the thief to a secluded area and then pried open. On Saturday police were called around 4:30 p.m. to Costa Mesa Medical Center Hospital where nurs- es and staff had subdued Trac). who reportedly became violent after being . ~#'.r- caughl wtth $385 worth of hospital Thewoman.alsoallegedlytookfour narcotics. syringes from tht cart. Pohce re.ported the woman wheel-Costa Mesa police said Tracy ed a locked cart into the nunes· appeared to be suffering withdrawal lounge and pned it open by usina a symptoms from drug addiction and screwdriver. She apparently cut her became violent and uocoopcntive hand while breaking into the tray. when approached by the hospitaJ ,...wo nurses beeame :uspiclous siaft:-She was s.ubdu~ however! by when they saw Tracy's bloOdied the ~orkers, said nursing supervisor hand. They also found bloody towels Ma~lyn Tf«?CCC. . near the burglarized tray pohce said. Minna said he suspected t~at much ' of the stolen narcotics was rntended The vials from Costa Mesa Medical for street sale to heroin users. Centercontainedupto IOOmiligrams .. Even 1f 1t was for pen.onal U$C. of morphine and Demerol, the (the burglar) would more than likely strongest dose of the drugs given only sell a substanual amount. Morphine to patients who are in extreme pain. is what heroin b reaks down to in the said a hospital spokeswoman. bloodstream ... he said. COUNTY LEADERS LAUD MONDALE ••• From Al But Lundberg noted that ··Ronald Reagan hac; the rc<;pons1b1ht) of running the country 'Viondalc Jui.I has to be seen o n TV (lo help has campaign)" Sumner agreed that the ex.posure during the debate wa<; ~omethang Mondale needed . "I'm just thnlled ··Sumner said. "I thank we've finall> got the issues 1n focus. I think Vice President Mondale did a tremendous JOb f think he was reasonable and kind (to Reagan) - almost too kind." The Democrauc party chief said the euended national forum for Mondale was imponant because "the RepubHcans have done a good job of ignoring the challenge.'' He added ... I'll give Reagan credit for being w11hng to come (to the debate).·· Sumner said he washed Mondale had pursued the deficit issue even more agress1vely. Lundberg. howev.er. said Mondale spent too much time hammenng awa) on the deficit. which she said as an issue on which even economists c~nnot ap,rcc. FIERY CRASH NEAR JW A •.. From Al "I remember thanking, · 1 wonder 1f a plane crashed?' But I didn't hear anv She added. "I '16n•t think the Amencan public's number one con- cern 1s the deficit. I don't think the · Amencan people are going to make their(votang) decision on the deficit." · Of Rea~n·s performance. Sumner said, ··He sa marvelous actor .... (But) he wasn't able to make that usual slick presentation because he didn·t have a script in front of him." Lundberg said her long.standing ad11)1rat1on for Reagan wasn't altered by Sunday's debate. "l was proud of him." ~he said. COSTA MESA 'SUPERBLOCK' ••• From Al · exploring the ·economic~ of re- developing the remaining propeny. 0 We haveJo see what pencils.out at ahc bottom hne.''·"tlid Pat David, community devclopmena coordi- nator The report is due Nov. 7. Whatever happens. tenants. land·. owners, redevelopment officials, real estate executives and the mayor agree that someone is going to be unhappy. ''No matter what we do on this one, we're gonna· be wrong." 'Mlid Ma)or Donn Hall. <.-., ··Everyone has selfi!h motives. Nobody s a bad guy. Ifs Just a mauer of who 1s going ~o win.'' 'Mild Maxson. owner of Omar's custom framing. Muson 1s phiJosoph1cal about pos'i1bl)' moving. The city would pay the relocation cost and he could end up renting a nicer. though more eilpens1ve. :,uite in the new Courtyards. ..D1splat:emcnl is n fact oflifc." he reawned. "We could all cry tears about 1t. but that's just what hap- pens." · Mu..son. however. is not so sure about staying. He explained thaJ the developer. Pacific Sa ... inp Bank. is hoP.mg to build a two-story retail building right next to the remaining businesses on ·the pan1ally-vacatcd block. While the older stores were built back from the street. developers have ~ubm1tted designs showing the new building JUlllng out 'toward the boulevard. Tenants-heve the structure will h1 e t cir stores, eventually choking off their business. "You put a two-story building on Newport Boulevard and people (driv- ing toward the beach) aren't going to see us until we're an afterthought." said Maxson. Conceptual designs of the building also show tt bein_. constructed adJa- cent to the remaining stores, with a large:. landscapt<l parking lot on the other side at the comer of Harbor Boulevard. Maxsonian6 othet tenants believe the parlcing-area ~hould be placed between their stores and the new buildin" Otnerwise, ttle)' contend, shoppers parkin& in the Courtyards won '1 take the ti me to wallc over tot he older stores. The remaining businesses on that saretch of Newport Boulevard will be shut-out from the stylish shopping center. said Maxson. .. we·re going to become a back alley to the Courtyards. We're just asking the city not to leave us like guinea pig.s to die ... he s:iid. Mark Leiter. senior vice president of development for Pacific Savmg.s,. said the comer parking lot was needed to ere.ate a "window .. <that would allow passers-by on Newpon Boulevard to see into the shoppina center ~Iona Harbor. Letter added that nearly all of the eight building.~ in the center would be placed close to the rc1ipec1ivc trcets. creating an urban look tbal would repla~e the small·town effect of havapg the storH built back from l~ street. Pacific Savings,, formerly Pacific Federal Savings and Loan Assocta· uon, attempted to get city approval this week on the conceptual design for the coniroversial building. H(),)'o'evcr. the redevelopment aaency postponed the matter until_the November meet- ing after developers locked horns with tenants last week at City Hall. The d isaireements could become moot 1f the city decides to talc.e the pro~ny and have a motel, office building or another shopping center· built. there. The site could also become part of the Courtyards - which leads tolhe peo~le who don't want to move and don t want to sell · their land. Finkel. co-owner of Harbor Lites lamp store, has been at his t80S Newport Blvd. address for the pasa three years..,.ie hopes to be thert- wttcn the du,t-clcars from the much- touted redevelopment project, sched- uled for completion in February 1986. Whale his tenure is short at the present address. Finkel's store has been in the immediate area for the last 12 years. "I don·1 want to move; J've worked 100 damn hard at this location." he complained. "It's going to be hard to let customers know where J went. For all they"ll know, Harbor Liles JIJSt went." , His•Ytndlord. Vera Hughes, is also adamant about not selling her share of the remaining three pa~ls. Hughes and her late husband, Dr. A.G. Hughes. bought the property about 42 ye~o. One of their sons was born at the medical center established by Doctor Hughes at the sate. where the couple also lived. "I've lived on the property, I've rebuilt 11. it's where my husband's office was. It's more than buildinp. It's sentimental. that's all." said the elderl)' woman. The prospect oflosing her land isn't new to Hughes. Communit y De- velopment Coordinator Davi~ said the Clty has expressed interest over the past few years of acquiring the entire nonhweststrctch between 18th Street and Harbor Boulevard. But the cost was "astronomically hiaher,·• said David, so the agency only took a portion of the-block. David ex.plained the agency is considering a plan by which the developer would share m the initial cost of acquirina the land and razing the buildings.Under the current de-- vclopment agreement for the Courtyards, Pacific Savings purchased the property after the city had demolished the buildin1:5. Board and the Federal A v1allon .\dman1'\trat1on. Both agencies. how- ever were du\cd toda} for ( olumbus Da) ,~ Jame'> C ·ro~lc~. a lCrt1fied public accountant '>aid he was working 1n his office ~hen the plane crashed into the bu1ld1n~ Thl· ln1ne resident said his office 1\ at 1hc rear of the Jacado hutld1ng · ">iren<, so I figured 11 couldn't be too bad .. ( ro~le) said he worked at his desk for another 15 ma nute\ before hearing the sound of breaking glas!t. "I was a little concerned when I saw what had happened." said Crowley, who feared hundreds of tax files would go up in flames. He said his f:;,ijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiliiiliiilliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ office was left intact. 'I wa-. tall.1ng 11n the t<.·kphont• and 1o1.ork1ng on m) l<>mputcr "hl•n I fl·lt thl'bu1ld1ng\hakc.' '>aid< ro""ln.~1 "I thoug.ht 11 was a burglar. some- om· ti) 1ng. to break in :· the accoun- 1an1 -.aid ·1 ""alked out there and 11 \\<I'• .a fireman I'm sure he was as \Ur pn'>nl to \Cl' ml' and I was to ~c him AIRPORT F OES RALLY ••• From Al 4 , two of us w11uld ... 1111 Ix-11<.·d with all 1hc Lalk that ha' (.lOnl' on about the annexation " Thr group hope'> that b) the end of the month. the nt-(~<i'>ary 4. 300 signa- tures will be collcncd to require the Ntwport Beach ( 1t} Council to ask the lOunt> l ocal Agency Formation < ·omm1s!>1on 10 consider the anneila- t1on propo~I. \PON member~ behrve that an- nt-1ung th<' no1!K'·-.Cn\1tivc c;anta Ana He1ahts wall help NewPort fight airpon cilpans1on • Orange County and Newport Beach firefighters spent nearly 30 minutes beating back the names. Damage to the building was initially put at $300,000 but county fire Capt. Mark Reinhold said the fiaure de?Cs not include the contents of the offices. The building contains offices for the av1cultural firm. Crowley's ac· counung offices and an investment firm. C"'l'owlcy ~1d an officer of the 1nkstment firm had planned on working Sunday evening but did not 'ihOW up. ··Yeah. he·\ luck) ... the accountant ~id. "I looked in has office and the only thing sundin& were some file cabint'ts. Every,1hing cl~ was leveled to the ground. · Just Call 642-6086 What do }OU like about &be Daily Pilot? What don't you like? Call &be numbtr at ltft Hd y.ur mn•••e will be record~. transcribfd and delivered D•llY Piiot Dell very la Ouat•ntNd . Clrculallon Tel phOnff _____ ... to the appropriate tdltor. · Tht 1amt %4-hour an1wtrtn1 servke may be u td to record letters to the tdltor on uiy toplC'. Contributou to our IAU~r• ('Olumn moat Include their namt and ttl pboae number for verlflcaJ on. No clrcu1ailoacalls, pleaat. Tell u whal'J on your mlnd. u flANuE COAST ·oailyPilQt H. L. Schwartz Ill 1 l>hc;n1 {· RoHmary Churchmen Co•'', Stephen F. Carar.o Pio UCltOn , n lkJ r Donald L. Wllll1m1 C1rcul tton M n r Clrculalfon 7141M2...U33 ClaHlfled edvet111Jng 714/M2·5178 All o11)er deparlmentt M2-4321 MAIN OFFICE ~ W~! 0.~ Cl CM!a L'.OU C.-•u !l!t!'U • 1!>(;0 C..IA M~ " ,t;;1 • RESULTS! THAT'S WHAT THE DAILY PILOT GIVES ME . HERE .AT Al' S OARAOE THI PILOT RIAllY RIAClllS TIIE ACTIVE-MIMOD Plorll • &~§@&~&@~ 56 FASHION ISLAND· NEWPORT BEACH· (714) 644-5070 r ' •