HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-10-09 - Orange Coast PilotForee•••• on A2 ClllT 1111111 NB
-TUE S DA V OC.. r OflE: H 9. 14fq
Bo.spital drug suspect rear.rest
Newport woman may also be quizzed ·
in attempted Hoag Hospital break-In
alleaedly stcahna vials containmg lbe
two ;powerful painkillei's from a locked :medacme tray at Costa Mesa
Medical Center Hospital. -Fa.u~in Val!ey Detective Dennis
Minna saaa toaiy that Tracy will be characd with the burglaries on Sept.
28 alMS Oct. I and ror an .attempted
b\lrJ).ary at Fountain Valley COm·
munity •in on Satufday, prior to
her arrest an COSta Meta.
By ROBERT BARKER
Of .. 0.-.........
A 31-}car-old Newport Beach
nune-aneathetist was arrcsttd by
fountain Yalley police today on
IUS.Picion of stcahna 121 v:ials of
.. r
McNamara
to leave
Angels
John
McNama
r:a has
elected
not to "'" turn as
manager
of the
California
... Anicls far:_._~..::::m
the . 198S
season , the club '--_.~..._,.
a n MCNAMARA
nounced today.
Followina several convena·
tions with General Manqer
Mike Port, McNamara an-
formed Pon of his decison.
,,:.·~itc In> pleased~ ~ls . •
wanted me back. I feel it's tJme for a change," McNamara said.•
"Buzzie Bavasi ~ me in
1983 and now that he has retired
I think. it is in the best interest of
the club if I leave at this time,''
said McNamara.
During his two yean u
skipper. of the Anaels,
McNamara's teams compiled a
IS 1-1 73 record.
Cout
The cartoon character
Ziggy Is tn the oenter of a
paternity suit./ Al ,
C&llfomla
Gay hotelier opening re-
sort In Palms Spr.lngs for
Alita patients./ Al
Natl on
Barbara Bush apologizes
to GetaldlneFerraro for
calling her a 'name that
rhymes with rich.'/ A4
Man sets wife on fire after
viewing TV program
'Burning Bed'./ Al
Mlnd&Body
Clues In your mouth can
tell a dentist about dis-
eases elsewhere In your
body./B1
Sporta
They' re Calling this year's
World Serles the fast ·
food Fall Classic, and
both the Padres and
Tigers are hungry for a
champlonahlp./C1
Entertainment
Underachievers have
their day In "For the Use
of the Hall" atthe lrvlne
Community Theater./83 ·
INDEX
Erma Bombeck
Srldge
Buflttln Board
Bullnta
CaJlfomla Nfta
Clalalfled
Otoeeword
0..thNotlea
HorOKOPe
Ann lander•
Mind and Body
National Newt
Opinion
P8P&rml
PubllC Not
8Poft• 8t0Ck Marketa l~on
Theatltl .
WMther
War1dNeWI
82
8-4
A3
8&.8 ,
A4
c~
C8
88
C5
82
81-2
A4
A10
81
88
C1-3 87
82
83
A2
A4
m°".\)hine and Demerol from mobde
medicine cans at Fountain Valley Community Hospital.
The woman,1. Identified as Bric:lic1
Lynn Tracy 01 Newpon Beach, wu
_prcviouily arrested .Saturday after
Road•how
Tb.la 1 ~12 Qldamoblle Aatocrat Roadster owned bf Newton
Wlthen wu one of more ttia:D 100 ola.Mlc can oa Ylew at
tile woad unaal Jlf•-=::-cll eoaeoan D'ltlefance. Abo:n. JoJua llarplaJ' 'of llllla a4.ID.lJ'e9 the car while
boJcUq ctaaalater Uanm, 2, and 4-,_r-old eon John
llarpbJ' JV. AlMMat 2,000 people atteaded tile 811Dd&7 eYeDt
BJ ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of .. Dlilp ........
The owner of the Millard Sheets
sculpftlie .. Birds in FJi&ht" -dis-
covered rnissin& Sept. .l 0 from the
Ahmanson estate on Newport
Beach's Harbor Island -hu in-
creased his r~rd offer in the hope of
lurina it home.
A.ir crash
reignites
debate
ondWPt
Richard Hausman, 'who now owns
half the Ahmanson property. is
ofTerin1 SS,000 for information leid-
ina to the safe return of the sculpture,
accord.in& to Jill Lindsa~ Hausman's secretary. He initially offered $1,0QO.
While Hau man hu worked wath
·the Newport Beach Police 0epart.
(Pleue Me UW~/A2)
Minna also TrtCY is bcinaUnkcd to
a bu~ aucmP' et HOI& Memonal
HOSPJtal in N~ Beach on un-
day Jnd • bDfPar>' of Dnnero.I and mon>J!meat Un11ed WC11tm MechcaJ
CCntcr an Slota A.na the ame daj.
Manna laid the woman was re.;
leased on bet own ~nee after
her atTCSl Saturday.
Minna said the woman bad been
identified from a photoaraphk lineup
by tnesses al the F-0unta1n Valley
h pital. Watne.uenlso Sot a detcrip.
Uon of her and her car - a nail·
COIOred 1979 Honda P:relUdcthal
-impoueded fOlloWina 1be oman'
arrest an Cotta Mesa.
Muma. Wbd planned to QlieSlaon
TIX)' today at Fountain V.:llcy PQlice
beadq~ :said e bdaeved
aUeaiedly look the narcotics for per~
sonal use and Ml for
........... ., .............
I' .
at UC Jntne, wblcb i'al9ecl almo.t $30,000 for the s.Ata
Ana Betabta-beMd A8ee11ment &llll Treatment Serrtcee
Center.· 'file center DroYldee """"""Di to jaftDlle law-
braken Uad tlaelr lamllleie. a.t of Sliow . Prt.:e went to
Sten !tubal of ~ for la.ls 1830 ~dlllac V-18
Road.atU.
Vandals
damage
·Newport
·School
CloSed EaStbluff
Elementary subject
of destructive spree
BJ STEVE llAllBLE .............
Vandals w1'0 broke into a dOlc:d
• C'WpQrt Beach clemenwy ICllool
this Yieek went on a destiuctiOG IPftlC.
smashina windows and minors. rip-
pina apart sofas and rcducina a piano
lo so·mucb kindling.
School officials said they have not
added up damaaes at EaStblu.ft'
Elctnentary Scboo1 and do not yet
known whether tbe vandals stole any
supplies from the camirus.
The arade 5Chool was ctoscd doWD in June because of dcdiniaa enrc>l-
lmeot but is bci:.\:=.~or saorqe. acxord.ina to Rar. · • bnsir>C'S'
.manager of tbe .ewport·Mesa Um-
fsed Sc.bool District.
Accordina to police repons. t.bc
vandlh C'Dtemi the $Cbool buildin&
by puJlina off Jou~crc:d Windows a.oCI
then went on a rarnpqie. Windows
and mirrors were broken and sOfU
wcrt slaSbcd nc1 me stD11i~ mcwn aJoa& hallways., pgbce said.
The anda1s alsQ de5tn;n ed docks
mounted in classrooms. rippled up
cots ia a nunc·s office and Pried the
keys off a piano and poured an
unknown substaDce inside ~ musi-
cal instnJ.mcnt. said police.
Schniercr said the ~ was
noticed by 11ehool district employee
who was makinJ a routine 1ospect.Jon
of the dosed school, near Corona del
Mar Higb School in Eastbluft
.. lt V.'U probably tecn·aacn." said
(Pleue .ee V ANDAL8/A2)
Voter reglsttatlo1J
deadlbJe tolJlgJJt
~ Coest residents have until m1dntaht today to rqister to
vote in tbe November eral
election, ~ to
Bal rapist faces ·
trial onjailbreak
County RC'llsttar of Voters Al
Olson. l Olson said the reaist.rar of
voters' office will remain open
until midniaht to accommodate
residents who still want to register
the Nov. 6 election. The office
(Pleue ... VOT&R/A2)
87 JEFF ADLER
Of .. Dlllf .......
Convicted Balboa Island rapist
Mich.ad Eric Gonzales was bound
over to Orange County Superior
Court Monday for tnal on four felony
c~ stemming from his aboncd
Auaust escape an.empt from the
County Courtho~.
Following a tbree-bour
prchmuwy heanna in Central Mu·
oicipal Court in Santa Ana. Gonzales
was bound over on cl\ar&eS of cteape,
assault on a pea~-ofticer with a
deadl y weapon. battery on a peace
(Pleue Me JAILBllltAlt/ A2)
Village Refugees prosper
Inn d in Orange County's da~age 'Little Sailfon ' area by fire, 0 ·
a hv
T9/ )
Of""9' COMt DAILY PH.•OTffUlldey. Octobw 9, 1984 ..
,Amtrak l~ury Metroliner
ails to meet transit needs
ti'ransporta't1on Commission advises rail line . •m~1?' ~~~"°!\!'0'b~:r.i~;.:::.:
to schedul more regular service along ~oute . :!:~~7rtq~cn.i~rid~~~~a~t1~ }~~
busmess purposes.
By JEFF ADLER
PftMOellrNtC ....
• An Oranse County Tran pon.ation
Commission study of Arn LIU puien-
gcr train service l;ctwcen Los Angeles
end San Dieso ~mmends ad·
dtti9ual trains be scheduled to recap.
ture Jost riden;hip and att~t new
passengers.
The study, presented to transpor·
tation commissioners Monday.
found that Amlnlk's new, limited·
1top luxury Metroliner serves only a
small number of high-income users
who might otherwise ride one of the
$ix other regularly scheduled trains to
San Dieao.
Metrohner service, inaugurated in
February, shaves lS minutes off the
normal 2·hour-and-4S..minutc train
ride for passen n; who pay a SS
surcharse. The train, running once a
day in each directiOJ\ makes onl)' two
intermediate sto~ at Del Mar anil
Anaheim.
Reaular service' in the corridor.
aboard one .of sill daily trains,
includes siops at Fullenon. Anaheim,
Santa Ana, san Juan Capistrano and
San Clemente in Orange County.
OCTC transponation analysts COD•
ducted the survey. along with the
state Transportation Department.
after several citits alona the route
expressed conocm that Metroliner
service would not meet travel needs
in the corridor nor increase ndersbip
or Amtrak revenues.
The 'survey found: .
•That ridtnhip on the lower·
priced san Di n i comprised of
more f~ucnt nClcrs, usually women
who ride the train three or more umes
caCb week to 'Ind ft'om work.
•That riddlhip on tl)c Mctrotiner
averqcf less th~n SO penons per
train; lhe San Dicaan train avcraacs
200 penons per train.
•That ride~hip patterns point up
the imponanoe of intcrme.diate stops
aJona ~e rou!c .. Ro~ly 80 percent
of all tn_ps be&in 10 eitfler Los Ariacles
or San Di~o and tenninate at one of
the intermediate stop stations.
•That the p~ 1ervice im-
provements San Diepn passenacra
desire as mo~ frcauent servioe and a
smoother ride followed by creature
comfons, such H guaranteed seating
and complimentary snack service.
Fog expected as cold front ~oves south
By tbe A.lsoclated Preas
Cool air and night and morning low
clouds will hit Southern California on
Wednesday as a low-pressure system
dominates the Gulf of Alaska and a
cold front moves down the coast, the
National Weather Servioe says.
marine air, and then we get low clouds
from the moist air as well.'' Shaw
said.
the low-70s.
Fair weather will frame Southern..
California mountains and deserts
Patchy latc-niaht and early-morn-Wednesday. The mountains, swcP.t
ing low clouds Will punctuate a by 1Sto25 mph northwest winds, will
mostly fair day. Hiah in the mid-70s have sunny but sliahtly cooler days.
are forecast with ovemiaht lows from Hl&hsfrom68 to 75 lndlows from the
58 to 62. 40S to mid·SOs are forecast.
Foggy mornings and coc;>ler air
Tldea
Temps -,
ti L• ... u
74 •7 80 65
42 co 70 16 ... u
16 es ... &I
71 $$ 70 •• ., !50
... $5
Extended
.ra r. 12 ..
Ot 74 u :, 01 13 .,.
~ H ~ IA .. ..
MM .. .. Q
t4 10 tt .. •• u T2 6' N M 7t ... ., .,
11 H
11 u .. .. 7t ..
H 83 7t •• .. .. ,. to
77 61 t2 ,. a ao .. 6S ... u 'tH M
~ t: 41 •2 .. 81 .. .. : r,
.. 611
et M
Even though it is weak, the cold
front is strong enough to deepen the
, marine ~er, weather service special-
; lst-FA~ Shaw--&aid.
"The marine layer causes the moist
Fog will creep into the coastal areas The days will be cooler in the
Wednesday on the back of cool desertJLwbere hiahs.in the 80s to f}·~ Afj ; ,.;, .J ;.J ·~ d g •_J:J: :J:. b •b morning au. SunShmeTs ex~-tOOnreex~~LOW~sfTo:.;;...t;mm.;..._e ~~C~:1:.0~i ...... J._,.C..,..,.,,..,a~11'~1e~a~~s'f.-# ..... u .... 1-1....-F-(V~·..._,.1..0~""""r,...,_1""'1e~rv~-
dUring the day, when highs will reach 40s \0 the low-60s are _forecast J ... J
thin,p aren't riabt but the (county) .. We have ways.of measurin& noise
supervisors wit& their tunnel vision and what that does \0 our lives but the
aren't going 10 pay attention," WiJ-question of safety is riabt there too.
Iiams said. _ It's always present••
Orange County supervisors today Newport Mayor Evelr.n Han said asked county airport experts to in-
she will ask her council colleagues vestigate the plinc crash and return
today to support an examination Qf with an explanation by Oct. 23. l~t-plane traffic out of John Wayne ••1t is important the board aa~
Airport. gressively eursue an explanation, ..
"We've always tallced about com-said SupervuorTbomas Riley, whose
mercial airlines and that problem but district includes the airport and
we've never taken a stand on feneral Newport Beach. Other superviaon
aviation," said the mayor. .. think did not comment on the fatal mishap.
it's necessary that we react. Supervisors had been set to con-
VOTER •.•
From Al
is at 13()()...C Grand A venunc, Santa
Ana.
Additionally, deputy registrars will
be on-duty from 6 p.m. to midnaght at
four other county locations for last-
minute registrants. Eli4ible citizens
can register at the Huntington Beach
Poli~ Department, 2000 Main St.,
Huntington Beach; Orange County
Fire Station
22, 2400 I Pasco de Valen'cia,
J..aauna Hills; the Buena Park Police
Department, 6650 Beach Blvd.,
Buena Park; and the Placentia Police
Department, 401 E. Chapman in
Placentia.
Persons with questions about rcgJS-
tration procedures should call the
registrar's office at 834-2244.
sider selling .. aviation easement0 for
the construction of multi~story build-
ings in the shadow of the airport. The
sale, however, was delayed for 30
days on the recommendation of the
county's airport commission, which
met Monday evcnina.
The single-story office building
where the plane crashed is across the
street from the end of .the airport
runway.
According to eye witnesses,
K.Jingensmith's Beechcraft Baron
lifted off from the runway and
immediately developed problems.
Several bystanders said smoke
poured from one engine as the craft
banked sharply, spun in midair and
then slammed into the Jocado Agri-
culture Corp. offioe building,
Several witnesses agreed that the
airplane never got more than 300 feet
off the grourRl. .
The 6 p.m. crash triggered an
explosion that witnesses said
engulfed a p0rtion of the structure in
tl.ames. A certified public accountant,
!James Crowley, was in a rear offioe at
th~ time of th"C crash and was not
injured.
iiTom Smith, president of Jocado,
sald du.ring normal buStDess hours
there would have been nine em-
ployees working in the area or the
building where the plane crashed.
The fire from the crash cauted a
minimum of $300,000 damaa,e and
Smith said be anticipates the 6sure
will soar once the losses ~ added. Desks, office furniture and company
files were charred by the flames.
Telephones were reduced to puddles
of plastic from the heat. ·
Smith said the company will be
relocated nearby until the buildina is
reconstructed.
The mishap is being investigated
by th~ National Transponation Safe-
ty Board but investiptors today said
it is still too early to pinpoint the
cause of the aocident. The aircraft's
wreckage was lifted by crane frotn the
building Monday morning and taken
by truck to Long Beach for examin-
ation.
Newport Beach firefighters noted
tn a report that one or the plane's
propeller's spun free of the craft's
engme while the plane was still over
the runway. A single blade was found
on the runway and a second in a
clump of grass, the report noted.
Klingensmith, a Santa Ana busi-
nessman and former Air Ferce pilot
in Vietnam1 is survived by his wife
and three cnildrcn. Funeral services
are pending.
VIETS PROSPERING IN COUNTY ••.
From Al
for the propnetors of the boutiques.
Vietnamese grocery stores and Chi-
nese herbal medicine shops, the
Vietnamese influx has brought a new
culture to Orange County, a tra-
ditionally white, upper-middle-dass
stronghold... "
An estimated 60.000 Vietnamese
and other lndochmese refugees live 1n
Orange County, maml) 1n Garden
Grove, Santa Ana and Westminster.
at cording to the county chapter of the
Vietnamese ChaJRber of Commerce.
About 20 percent of the students in
Westmmster schools are V 1etnamese,
but community leaders say the~ have
been assimilated well. That 1s. the
Vietnamese have not clustered in a
large Vietnamese neighborhood but
have blended in with their neighbors.
While the Vietnamese have gener-
ally prospered since amving largely
penniless and finding homes through
churches and relocation services,
Just Call
642-6086
there have been a few obstacles in
their path to assimilation.
Many long-standing merchants m
Bolsa have moved out, citing the loss
of Anglo patrons, and other Orange
County residents remain embittered
about the war and the influx of
foreigners into the blue-collar job
market.
Westminster Mayor Kathy Buchoz
recalls that residents held meetings to
talk about ways to deal with the
burgeoning Vietnamese stores, which
they mistakenly believed were capi-
talizing on government subsidies.
.. It was very emotional and ugly,"
Buchoz recalls ... They said they were
worried about propeny values. (but)
property values have gone up since
the Vietnamese arrived."
"I believe they are a benefit ro the
city, an attraction for the city," the
mayor said.
At th"eir jobs. a lot of Vietnamese
men have had problems talc.ing orden
from women, who we~ more subser-
vient in the homeland, and takina
orders from supervisors who may
have had less power in their home-
land.
Before the Vietnamese arrived, a
lot of the plentiful jobs in the local
assembly plants went to Hispanics,
sparking tense confrontations be-
tween the two groups in the work-
place.
California's estimated Vietnamese
population 1s 179,000, with the next
largest number, 36,000, living in
Texas.
Tran IGem Luu, .who founded the
Delta Savings&. Loan Association in
Bolsa and now drives a Mercedes,
said the Vietnamese community
hopes one day to gain some political
clout.
"We're not ready yet to be a
political force, but we will be soon."
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Delly Piiot
Dellw•ry
ORANGE COAST Clrcutetlon 714/IQ..Q33
c1 ... H1M lldw.,..1.ino 1141142.5111
AH other department• M2-4321 It OuerentMd
.... ".J•.-, S.y rf 'f'"
"GI ...... P'lu' !Ml* l ,
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S..•J1'1•· •11<1 ,.._., "
•Oii Cl-> i10I •K-f(JIJt CCf'"f .,., 1 • m Ce• 0<'1,-. ..
tO a " Ancl f<Jo/I COO"r •111 ""-""'
Circulation.
T.tephonea
Daily Pilat
H. L. Schwertz Ill
Puohsher ,,. .,
Rosemary Churchman
Controller
Stephen F. Carazo
..,..... Produclion
Donald l . WUUama
. C1rcula1 on
Mona _.. Manager
MAIN OFFICE
!130 W_. &ar $4 Cotl1 ....,. C4 Mal~-&• 1seo CCltll !HY CA t262tl
~ lr.IJOilftO'IC...~~ Ho-...... tlOl'ft llllM••t-.0.lor ... m.tlt.I OI acl-«llM "*'' '*'"' l'll<lr ri. •tP~ ·~'*" tP«-* ,_
m.uiOt1 OI COOrf9'1 -
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-By-pffll;-SNEIDEJ\MAN --
Of.,_~,...._,,
A UC Irvine maintenance super-
intendent accused of soliciting e
S 100,000 bribe from a roofing com-
pany has pleaded guilty in exchange
for a recommendation that he serve
no prison rime for the offense.
The l.JCI -empto~!W tee
Grooms Jr., 59, of Garden Grove,
entered the guilty plea Monday
during a preliminary hearing at
Harbor Municipal Court.
In an interview today, Grooms'
attorney. N. David Gady of
Anaheim. said his client contends he
is not RUihy of the bribery charge but
accepted tht"a-uilty plea aareement to
avoid the eitpense and emotional
trauma of a trial
Deputy District Attorney Susanne
·Shaw said ihe will recommend to
Superior Court-Judge David Carter at
an OcL 22 hearing that Grooms be
sentenced to five years probation and
bejCQu.ired to pay a $5,000 fine.
~ ............... ._u,M
Newport-llesa 1ehoolemployeeJob.n Pyne euneya d•m•ae at EutbluffElesneotuy.
VANDALS HIT NB SCHOOL •••
From Al
Schnierer. "From the size footprinu
the police found, that's the con-
flusion."
Schniercr said the school district,
like most, has an on1oing -vandalism
problem.
"But we've really been rather
fortunate,·· he added. It's not been a$
bad as 1t could be."
REWARD INCREASED FOR SCULPTURE •••
Prom Al
ment in an effort to recover the
artwork, he's now willing to offer the
reward independently.
"We got to thinking about 1t and we
decided we'd like to deal directly with
anyone who bas information about it
(the missina sculpture),.. Undsay
said. Hausrrtan's offi~ Wlll ne.JOliate
for its return, she aaid, with no
questions asked.
The office phone number is
476-8804.
The S l 5,000 sculpture, com·
missioned by the billionaire banker
. .
Howard Ahmanson in 1956, has
stood as a landmark for nearly 30
years at the edge of Harbor bland.
The bronze sculpture -weathered
to a sea-green hue-stands seven feet
tall and depicts three seaauJls.
Newpon Beach police said the
artwork may have been sawed off its
base or a pin holding it down may.
have rusted away.
Immediately following the ap-
parent theft. police scuba divers
~hed the depths of Newport
Hatbor in case vandals bad dumped
it there. But no sculpture was found
and no leads have smcc developed.
Detective Tom Tolman said.
Despite the Hausman reward offer.
Tolman said the police department
intends to continue its search and
apprehend.t.he culprits.
The 77-ycar-old Sheets is a well-
known C'.alifomia anist whose paint-
inp were djsplaycd recently at the
Laguna Beach Museum of Art.
Two other bronze sculptures by
Sheets - a sun~iat and a sea lion -
have been boxed ana removed from
the Ahmanson property.
DRUG THEFT SUSPECT SEIZED AGAIN •••
From Al
connection with the theft of S 1 vials .. Costa Mesa police reparted a
of morobine and Demerol. woman wheeled a locked cart into the
But ft wasn't until ioday that Tracy nunes• lo~nac and pried it open with
was positively identified as the a screwdryver. She ~p~rently cul her
suspect who was wearint tight blue ha11d w~llc breaking tnlo the tray,
jeans and a red blouse while a1l~cdly ·pohoe said.
steali~ the powtrful painkiJHng Tw0 nul'SC$ bcQame uspicious
drugs an Fountain Valley. when they saw-t""uspect's bloodied
Tracy was apprehended later: Sltur·. tiand. They also round bloody towels
day at the Costa Me&& hospital by near t)le ~rglarized tray, aocordina
nunet and staff members to pobce.
JAILBREAK TRIAL •••
ftomaAl
officer and ul 1mpnsonment. Ar·
raianmeot was schcdulejj for OC1. 18 .
Addnionally, he wdl bC tried on a
ssn&Jecountofpo UlJ• weapon an
jail. a ch.a.tat lodtied tpi,nsl him •ftcr
a crudel~ &~ioncd knife or .. hank .. was confillCltcd in March.
Tiie 23-ycar-old GOnulcs 11 ac-
cuted of _pull1q a fake aun and
ove~wenn1twodenutymarahals n ~ h dma t<tll on'-thC counhouse'
scoond noor on Aua. I . Gon1.at
was tackled and arte ted is he ran for
a first·floor exit by a California
Hi&hway patrolman who happened
to 6e in the Santa Ana coun bualding
on an unrelated matter.
Had the escape been au ul, it WOldd have been the S«Ond for
Gonul from Onnae County authonties and hr third escape
overall. He escaped from the county
JA•I in a darina dayli&J)t t>reak pt. 12,
1983 b lowmn"' him 1r fmm the
The vials contained 100 miliarams
of morphine and Demerol.
Fountain Valley detectives said
Tracy, who was jailtd in Oranac
County.Jail on suspicion ofburalary,
posscu1on of a controlled substance and~ session of paraphernalia from
the Costa Mesa rncident. had been
released on hc;r own recosn1zance
deipi!e t~eir ~ucsu to bold btr for
<tuc uoruna m the Fountain Valley
C8$CI.
Jail's rooftop usin a rope made out of bed hcct~.
In June 1.983, tac w lked away from
tlic Peter P1tchcs.s Honor Ranch near
Saugu where h had been sentenced
by Los An c_lca County aulhonu .
Gonutc as 1..-.1tina senttncinJ on multiple rape, bur&Jary and usault
char.JC followin hia Febtu ry con·
vicuon for ~ht rape and beat&n,g of 1
Balboa I land wait He ra s 1 maximum 16 to 1 a. r pnwon term.
'
Buu r TIN BoMni
YMeA ;;lates
fitness ·classes
Admlulon procedura told
RepresentatlVcS frtim 2 four· year COIJC&CS' "'and
universuies will be at Golden West Coll~ in Huntingioo
Beach Wedneiday to provide stlidcnU with information
on !d"!i ion procedures and tudent housina at other
anstttuuons.
Visitina admissiotts personnel and counselors from
th perticipatina institution w~bc an the Coll Cent.er from 10 a.m:to 1 p.m.
, .
. Fund-raising breakfut set
The public is 1nvitc<s to attend a fund-raisin&
breakfast provided by The Arches Restaurant of Newport
Beach followinf the Oranae Tide Run-Roll-Wallcathon
'S8turday, Oct. 3. at Main Street and Sky Parle South in
: Irvine. .
:• Sponsored by the local rqion of the Building Industry
, Assoc1~tion of Southern California, the race will begin at9
: Lm. with breakfast served at IO a.m. Pancakes will be
• served for$2 and a seafood omelette will sell for$2.9S with
''proceeds &iven to charity.
For more infonnatiOI\ on the even~ call 540-6921.
t ~.P._ageant.prellmlna":.,Simtr.a..W--
Preliminary ju<faina in the Miss Huntington Beach
SCbolarship Pageant will be held Saturday, Oct. 13 at·3
p.m. at Murdy Park.
The even~ sponsored by the Huntington Beach
Otl!Dt?er of Commei:ce Wo.men's Division .. is an official
prchnunary of the Miss California paaeant.
Applicants must be a hi ah school graduate by June t .S.
I 98S and !Dust be betv.e-en 17 an~ 26 yean of age.
Official entry blanks are available at the Huntinaton
Beach Chamber of Commerce. Sea OiJf Village, .2213
Mailn St. .,
Health care Hmlnar elated
AJzheimtt's disease -the fourth leading causina of
Disney strikers jailed
for defying court order
death in this country-will be discussed Saturday, Oct. 13 By tile Alaodaced Preas
·-in a health-are seminar at Goldenwest College in Huntington Beach. It's ••a sad day" when trikers apinst the
: The on~y seminar will be held in Forum I from 9 Mqic Kinadom Jet arrested and marched
: .. a.m. to 4 p.m. An $18 fee is payable at registration at the off to jail, tiut six union officials wbo were • dOor. taken into custody had been disroptin1 the
•• Statisrics indicate tbtt Alzheimer's is killing about amwement park's atmosphere, a Dis-
• 120 ()()() pcopl h rd' 11 neyland spoke.sman said. .. • e eac year, acco ang to a co ege · The uruon officials were arrested Mon-f spokewoman. . day after lhcy and other pickets in the two-.... •u , . week walkout apinst lhe amusement patk
:· DWed Parents eemhlar topic defi~ a COUrt Order~ !I!<i marched tO a
A four-hour seitunar that examine.s the social and forbidden ar~ near the ttck~t booths. .. 1-·' co fh · h"Jd fwcdl ·u The offici&ls arrested ancluded Bob • .,._.. nsequcnces o avang c t rcn out o ock wt Gable SO the head of the strikers'
bcpreacntedatOransc.CoastColleaeonSaturday.OCt. 13, o~t.Atma' team polioc sa·d -fro!" 9 a.m. lo I p.m. an Room 106 of the ¥-l Science ])isney_fand 'apoke ~man cine .ldi.... ead· d ........... ffi ..... , . y ledbf.Andy ouch,Nt;WPOrtattomeyaridanunMiel .uwai tsai .,...o C•tPlwtce Cdthe
t:.father .. hif1?self. the seminar t!ltitled .. Unwed ~!'ts en eal~~ ~ uoe t': ~~·0 Today will cover the unmamed couple that 11• liv1na leaders d" ned · h P -1 n • t~tber, the sin&le·woman or man who wanlf to have 1 tspe ~ en.police amved and
: child, and the .. accidental pregnancy." Admission is SS werc~ted for V10latm1 the coun order.
: and reservations can be obtained by calling 432-5880. ..
: OCCC·to meet Saturday
-
l ~A~~A!_~N '·8~ __
"It's a sad day for Disneyland,'' park
spokeman Bob Roth said as the picketen
were led away.
4'be intensity of the strike is srowing. ..
said union spokesman Bob Bleiweiss. "We
have a number of thinp we intend to do.
They (Disneyland offteials) are not the on I y
ones with alternatives." Bleiweiss did not
elaborate .
.. -All six of the union officials were
released on persooal l"CCOJ!ltzance.
The arrests came at midday after about
120 striken and union leaders moved their
pick.et line from the park's perimeter to
near ilS main ticket booths, about a
quancr-m1'c inside. Disneyland property
beyond 1ts~rawlin1 parkina lots.
OOt :wetk. a · Superior Court com-
missioner lfantCd a temporary restrainina
orderbarrina pickets from the ticket-booth
area.
<..
! The Oranp: Coast California Council will meet
• Saturdaj',OCt. 13, at the home of Candy Preheim, 24081
Roma Drive, Mission Viejo. .... .
Sbirlg-. Gill of El Toro will be co-bostesJ for the
meetina. Coffee will be served at 9:30 a.m .. with the board
meeting to commence at l 0 Lm. Charlene Campbell,
' president, urges all memberS to be ~nt
Knapp committee plans auction
Tuesday, Oct. 9
• 9:30 a.m., Ora.Dee Couty Board of SQervben.
Hall of Administration, I 0 Civic c.enter Plaza. Santa Ana.
• 1:30 p.m., Oruae CouCJ P1H•ta1 Commlslloa,
• Hall of Admmistration, I 0 Civic Center~ Santa Ana.
• 6:30..p.m., lrvlae City CoacU, Caty Council
Chambers. 17200 Jamboree Blvd.
PoucE Loe
The Committee to Elect Jim Knapp to
the Fountain Valley school board is
sponsoring a white elephant auction at 8
p.m. Frida>-. Oct. 12. at the HuntinJton
Pacific Clubhouse at 711 Pacific Coast
HiJhway in Hunt1ngfon Beach. Tickets arc
SS. For details. call Marcia Wilson at
962-7943. • • • • Otrol Ann Bradford, candidate for
Congess in the 40lh district, will address
the Kiwarus Club of Fountain Valley at a
noon luncheon Tue$day. Oct. 16. The
meetina will be at tht Claim Jumper
Restaurant, I SOSO Brookhurst St., in
Fountain Valley. • • • Dr. Helen Caldicott, founder of
Women's Action For Nuclear Disarma-
ment, will attend a Fnday, Oct. 19 fuod-
raising dinner for Carol Ann Bradford,
candidate for Congress 10 the 40th district.
The 6: 1 S p.m. dinner will be field at the
Hacienda House at 172S ColJeae Ave. in
Santa Ana. A S p.m. cocktail reception will
precede dinner.
Tickets to the dinner include admission
to Caldicott's address at 8:30 p.m. in Santa
Ana Collqe's Johnson Center.
Reservations are requested by Wednes-
da~, Oct. I 0.
Caldicott is past pl'C'Sident of Physicians
for Social Responsibility and author of the
book. "Missile Envy."
for more information, call 64S-O 178.
.
Cartoon character -. in c enter Of lawsuit
OC woman say~ she _ _.__
helped create Ziggy,
had cartoonist's child
By tile Associated Presa .
Zipy. the big-nosed blundncr of
comae-strip fame. is at the center of a
coun battle between cartoonist Tom
Wilson and an ex-lover who claim• She
co-created Ziggy and that Wal n
fathered her child.
Marv Alice Barnes. 4S. of Mt ion
VieJO. is suin& Wilson for halfh1 profi
from Ziggy. contcndi~ she dc'doJ)Cd
Zigy's pet'SO t bsle Uson d
the cartoon and that n o_
an oral contract. to plit the profits with
her
Z1gy has earned Wilson miJlions of
dollars, accordina to UniversaJ Press
Syndicate. which distributes the comic
strip.
Barnes. a former creative director and
editor for the American Grectinas ca.rd
company in ·Cleveland, where Wilson
still works, claims in a separate Oranac
County Superior Court paternity suit
that Wilson fathered her daughter Julie.
now 13, and should proyjde $8.6'44 tn
interim monthly child uppon.
In court documents. Wilion sa}
Barnes is trying to exploit their former
relationship, and Wilson's Los A"\&C~
la'wycr. Irat.wvey, said the two la~sw"'
are "totally without merit" and that
Wilson is "an absolute victim of an
improper action ... He declined to discu
details of either lawsuit..
In one court document. Wilson said be
supported the airl previously because he
felt sorry for her, adding: "It is impo 1ble
for me to tell <be coun that 1 am or am not
Julie's biol<>11c fither..u..
A Superior Court sjudge who ruled
California has Junsdiction in tbe case
ZfW
wrote an priJ that because Wilson had
written Ba.mes and Julie thankina them
for a Father's Day catd .... some expla-
nation olbtt than tcrnity is difficult to
come by."
Lurve)' contends California lacb
JUrsidict1on bec:aUJC W~ variOIU
Zigy enterprises and the relevant wit-
nesses all are in Ohia. But the Superior
Court jud&c rejec:t.ed that argument The
rulint was upheld this summer by the 4th
Distnct Court of Aj>pcal in Santa Ana.
Wilson's appeal ii now before the
California Su Coun.
A Nov. S Coe Court bcarina ts
scheduled on Wilson's bid to dimiSs the
contract case onjunidictional ~ ZiaY products sucb as lf'CC'llDI cuds.
dolls, mup. calenda.r5 and notebooks
racked up$ I SO million in retail sales last
year. The comic strip itself, syndicated in,,
more than 440 M'Vt'S~~ .,.odd~
earned royalties of Deai!y Sl.38 million
in 1982. aC'COrdiisa to a summary of an
audit by Peat. M....-ick. Mitchell &. Co.
'.B&ndit gets $120 cold cash
:from JIB ice cream parlor
cal, llOOQu.aalStrctt.· M h t d ··· an un un er .... ay 'A boat buralar pried epen the hatch ,,.. '
.
·• A rnan weann1 a white T-5hin and
• red truw and c.arryina a brown
paper b1J escaped with S 120 Crom the
cash f'Cl!Sten at the Bask.in-Robbins
31 Ice eRa.rri Store in Huntinaton
Beach.
The ruspcct. who said he was carryina a aun but didn't show it.
ordered the waitress to put the money in the bi&. He wd he didn't want any
~ The SUS~ was ckscribcd IS bein1
in his mid to late 20s, aoout S-10 and
havina dark hair. •
Witnesses &150 noted that the
bandit had several days of arowth in
his mustache but that it wa n't fully arown m.
17000 block of Que-ena. • • • Thie'cs t.Olc a Browning mm
.ema .. utomatic sun valued at $400.
Ima
Ca h, a televi 100 and a idco
record~ rcponcd tolcn from an
apanmcnt on Etst horc 1onda)
C\Cn1n
ofavcsscldockedat210l WestCoast
Hiahwaf and took $3,779 worth of ~or sniper 1· n COtJ n~ electronic equipment 1ncludina sev-J. l _ ~ •
eral marine radio and a television
set. • •• n unknown u peel took about
$700 in C8!h from an outdoor cash
dra~er at H rbor \!'cw hell, 2500
San Joaquin Hill Roa<l. Tht crook
abo took the Sh drawtr itself: ••• thief entered an unlocked prasc
on the 1100 block of E. Balboa
Boulevard and took two bicycl -a
Newpon Crua r and a Baa Foot
Cruiser -worth S l • .SOO.
.
Gun-wielding bandit
holds up super111arket
.M Ortnge Cout ~IL.Y J1tLOTITU1114ay, OctObet 9. 1914
Polls: Mo'ndale support firming Operation Greylord nets
~!:ubhca ted~= ~~:.i tha~~~~. rona w )' to I() bribe convi~tion for judge
WA HI OTON (AP)-Tbc int
4c bet ' F. Mon Jc
and Ronald R laid the
groundwo with na votcn that
oould allow ondalc to pick up
suenath ln the days &ocome, polls say,
even though the 100.mmute conf'ron·
talion did not produ bia, m tant
chances in the national numben.
"It can act as a catalyst for voters
with reservation about Mondakl,"
said Andrew Kohut. president of the
Oallup Orphoiution, of the unday
ni&ht debete between the two pn:ai·
dentaal cand date • ..Tbts per-
formance finned up bi1 IUPPQl'l.
pan.icularty the very IOI\, WIVMPC
on ."
"I don't know if n Chanaes votes
ovemi&ht. •t added William Hamil-
ton. pollster who worb for Demo-
cratic candidate . But if the v1ce
presidential debate JOCS 'well on
Thursday ••• and if Mondale does well
in the nd debate. we can have a close race .... It's called momentum ... '
.. He bad to hore up hi Demo.
cratic btse." said V. Lance Tarrance.
Mil c t. lhe WillllOp1itdlJll fttt btforc'lhe flm tseblt Just'l>vet •
tb11 debate •• month before ihc cl«Uon on No • 6. By dMe AlftdaW P
il'bua, -impeci of the ram 19M Before the debate, RtaW' held I _ . ..-....-1 00-Thccruciale dtn n taforpicr
debaie bu me p()lential lO <Clio Shat bia lead '(>ya Mondale ift ~udle conviclcd of extoru money for favorabl ruh~
f the mO&t rectnt seberal decuon nauOIW iSQUs. The latest C ew m t&e nalion'i1 la1JC1t court 1y tern s the lCStlmo.ny of confrontations, where then· York Tames poll, for cu ~ put an undercover FBJ qcnt who saad he bnbcd the Ju~
cb&llenet,nJimmyCarterin 1976and Reqan'a lead ,at ~4 rtt to 31 with cuh1 a juror wd. former Cook County Circuthll
-Reqan in 1980 used the debate pmient for Mondale. J~ Jonn J. Dev1nc, who prOJCC1JlOtl labeled e
fotmat lO calm doubtt abOut their And the in11ant Poll• taken a t "captain of the ahip of corrupuon,'' was convicted ~itaes and thdr.oolicies. Sun<S.y niaht's debate did not tbow Monday in U.S. Di1tnct C:Ourt. A jury deliberated about
''ThOee Who bad doubtt about ~orahiffs. • 20bounoverfoUrdayebeforefiod1naDcv1rieau11tyof25 'Moidale1iad illemiasau.-.c;a,•• Ham· -For e.umple, an A'BC News poU counts of c.uortion, 21 counts of mail fraud and onef
ilton said. ..And pow the other said the "'wen favored Re~n count ofraetcteerina. He wasaciquittcd of two counts o
alternative doeln•t look as aood." 61·36 before the de bite and 59-39 extortion. Devine, 54, wast he third ju~c prosecuted arid
-• • •
~\
.. The&baaesbavetowork toaethcr after lhe confrontation. Given the the teeond convicted in trials atemmiftl from a 3VJ..ycar
&o ai_ve the Democrats the pus6 tbc:r 11mplin1 error mar_ains, those federal invesuaation dcked IOuth-centr&I Los Anaclcs dup~u home. The case
need," Tanance said ... {Ms. Ferraro) chanaes arc not 1tatisucalty 1ipifl· was the 1eCOncf .11ne~P1ained aouth<entral LosARJCICS family massactt in five
hu '°do very well OD Tbunday for cant Weeki. OnAua. 31, the mother, sisterandtwonephewlof~onn~frofootbl,11
sw ~It Alexander were lain when two 1unmen Devine ""!', appeal h1
conviction. AJudee set ntencina for:Nov. 20.
I I I '
· Jlattfott liotel m~ate aUlng
SALT ~KE CITY-Hotel mqnatc J. Willa~d Marriott's cond1~on ~
Ul>lfaded from critical to serious &!\Cr he was adnuttcd _to LOS Hosp1!&1 with 1
. 1ymptom1 of a heart attack. a hospital SP.Okeswoman saad ~y. Mamou; S.. was undcraoina evaluation to determine the ca~ of hiJ c~cst peans. the
1pokeswoman said. The founder of the S 1.3 b1lho".1 Mamot~ Corp. and
worldwide Marriott hotel chain was in Utali to receive ~ special ~ward .at
Bri&ham Youna University today •. BYU •P,Okesman Paul IUChardua1d detail
of the awird would be made pubhc whe~ at was presented ...
TV reporter, cameraman robbed
BOSTON -A television broadcaster and a cameraman workina on an
upbeat Pf'Oll'lm about improvements at a housina develop~ent were attacked
and robbed as they filmed outside, police ui~ .. Neither R~btn Youn1i 3~, nor
cameraman John Baynard. 30, reported any aRJury to Police after tJ;te tnetd~nt
Monday momina, Police said. Liter, reajdcr:ns of the Bunker Hill houstna
devclooment in Boston's Charlestown oeiJhborhood searched for Ma. Younar• ~which had been taken in the attack. They returned the baa and ber
pusport and credit cards. ... .
·IV•tmoreJaJJd cue~·
NEW YORK -Testimony from 10mc of the hiahest-ranki~ U.S. . .
War Will be amona the evidence jurors will consider~ the)' ~de whether
CBS libeled Gen. William C. Westmoreland. Sel~n of a Jury to bt.a.r
Westmoreland'• $120 million libel suit begins today 10 U.S. J?istnct Gourt.
where J\l(t&e Pierre N. Leval and ~awytn were e~pected to QUC$U09 more than
100 people. Twelve jurors-arid six alternates will-be uked to decide wh~CI'
CBS libeled the retued seneral in the ~~n. 23, 1982, ~meotary, The
Uncounted Enemy: A Vietnam Deception and tn promotlOnal adven.w.aa for .
it
Delma BalJb geta pd.an term
CUSTER, S.D. -American Indian Movement
leader Dennis Bank.a will be required to 1pcnd l~'h
month1 in prison on his three-year sentence for ta.kin'
part in a courthouse riot. but milbt be: allowed. to 1erye
the time outside of South Dakota. state offic11ls wd.
After the 1entencc was announced Monday, Banks'
Broob, &uicrolt •ae IRS
WASHINGTON -A Hollywood couple whose two.yC!-f ~come exceeded S7 million is attackiq u discriminatory and unconslltuuonal a
campaip by the Internal Revenue Scryicc,to ahutdown .. abusive" tu aheltCf!.
Oireictor.()()mediail Mel Brooki i.od has wife, actteu Anne Bencro~ filed IWt
in Tu Gourt contestina the IRS' find.ins that they oWtd an lddition&J S 163,000 in taxes for 1977 and 1978. Tbe IRS cliaUowed their deductions for aevetal
ivestmenll, includina the purchite of two movies. "Bia Guns" and "Mark the
Cop," and a minina 'Venture.
CALIFORNIA
SAN DIEGO-The condition ofbatWup1 ftnaocicr J. DavidDominelli,
wbo suffered a mild stroke last week while in prison, bu been uP&tlded to stab~e1 a hospital spokeswoman says. DomanelH, founder of the bankrupt J.
Davia&. C-0. moneytradina finn, had been listed in serious condition until -Monday, when doctors noted an improvement l!ld uppa~ed his con~tfoo,
said Ann Verhoye, a spokeswoman at Sharp CabnUo Hospital. ,...
YI Ell Dalal Lama at VC Sa.ata Barbara
SANT A BARBARA -The Dalai Lama of Tibet will speak about world
peace and Buddhism later this month at the Univenity of California's Santa
Barbata" campus, officialJ said. The Dalli Lama, the spiritual and temporal
leader of the Tibetan people, will visit the eampus Oct 24-26 durina his 44-day
tour of the United States. He wanted to visit the campus, one of three West
~ stops, t>ec:tuse ~Pf.its p~s jn international affairs and studies of
reliaion, uruvers1ty offlClali aaid.
Ri.Rhc now, American Savin~ Invest; The more you deposit, and the longer for you to ~with one of our prof4 ional
mcnt Officens are callinsl all CD investors your term, the more you cam. Investment OffietrS. _
to tell them about our Money Matrix CD And it's all backed by the ize and eir. 91 Ell m
Account. The C D that's so flexible it letS stren8!h of the nation's ~ savi~ and 1-m-:ZZJ-.. , .. •
you determine the ~z.e. term and rate of loan. But why walt for your phone to ring?
your in m nt. Simply call u toll~ and w '11 arrangie ~ AMERICAN SAVI NOS
Applies to tc:rrru from 12 to JS monctu Suh$m lllal penalty for nrly wuhJmval Annual yield bawd on • nd· . ANO LOAN A880CIATION inc _,ht'n nter t lt kft a n J!opos 1 '°' rhl' murc tt'rm ~t r te, Yttld 1nJ I tr mt b ct to <ha w11h0ut nor kc. •
GARDEN GROVE
12 I 41 Oar Jc n GrO\ C' Bh. d
i;34: 90
HUNTINGTO BEACH
7 EJ1nger Ave
il_l21
EAL BEACH
I r c1fir Cu t Hj h
594 SS
LAGUNA HILLS
2'4085 El Toro Rd
770·~81~
CJaa .IJatlJt Jn triple murder
LOS ANGELES -A retired American Telephone &. Telesraph Co.
executive found murdem:l alooa with bis wife and her mother had been a
prominent black community leader, and Police were a ta loss fora motive in the
lcillinp. Ramon Scnags, 75, hi• wife,-Dori.s Jones Scruaas, ~.and her mother, Hazef.Hotmes, 86 were "upriaht and upstandina .. peop1e1 police Detective
John Bunche said Monday at\csi" the family wu found stain m their ranJ&Cked
10uth-<:entral Los AngeJej duplex home. The case wu the second unexplained
10uth-central Los Angeles family massacre in five weeks. On Aug. JI, the
mother, sister and two oepbewa of former pro football star Kermit Alexander
were slain when two aunmen walked into the family bunplow and opened ftre.
Iraq mU.Ue kID• 2 Brim
Two British officers and four Asian crewmen were kilted and nine men
were injurtd in Iraq's latest attack on an oil tanker in the Persian Oulf1 and the
ditabled veucl was towed today to the Iranian port of Bushehr. In ttnns of
casualties, Monday'• attack on the Libcrian·rcai•temt, 254.~ton World
Kniabt was O[le of the most costly 1inoe the escalation or attac:kl on sulf
lhippina last February. An Iraqi militiary communique had ~por1ed two
naval wacia hit in the at tac~ but 1hippina &outta confirmed only one attac
.AuttalJan clbnben klllell
KATMANDU " ~pal_ -Two Australian mombei.~f •"Mt: Everest
expedition were kllled today while tryiq to cljmb the world'• .hiah t
mountain via the·~ west ridae. Ncp&1'1 Tourism Ministry Wd, n.
miniauy Mid Craia lottJe, a 2J.year-old medical 1tudent, fell to his death while dimbina up &om a bivouac at 26,000 feet towards the 29,028-foot aummit.
Anotheichmber, pbya1cist Frtd From, went to look for NottJe but also (eJJ and was killed, the ministry 11id.
Clililw 1F.0.11Jan defect.
TAlnl, Taiwan -Ma Tai·lian1, daupttr of Chinese opera star Hun•
Sin·liu, unounCcd today she had defected to Taiwan because Communist· ruled mainland China .. ianores human daanity." Herddection &-om ma nland
OUna to the island nation of Taiwan was the second Within a week. Miu Ma.
40, wu an open 11qer hkt her mother. be was teen in Hon.a K.ona in March
wbtn she went to the Bntllb colony from lhe southern Chinae city of c.ariton withaeour~p. After that. newtPtpcn in Taipei and Hona Kona peculated
that IM hid~ to 1npporc or the United tatet.
Tluee U.S. Namea honored ..
GENEVA. witltrlahd -The United Nations his honored rec
AinerieaD aeamtn for hero Im in the Olmw rescue of IS Victnamne .. bolt
people" in turbulent Wilen in &he South Chiu Sea. Caot. LeWis M. Kaller,~ ,
of l.Uehunt. NJ •• anchhipmat Of'll Turay, 27. and Jeffrey Ka , I. both Of'SeauJe.~tbeNaruenmcdllat1oeremonyMondty1ttheU.N.oft'ace
in Geneva. The award certificate citecl the enllre crew of the 94,000.ton oil
tanker «oee City for the "humanitarian concern and outstandana ~·
formance•• in mcu na dJe rd'ueea drift1na in a tiny boat pt. 21, t 98J. lfaUcr was honored for oraanwna the racue operauon •hd Ka and T:uray for mmmlna throup turbulent ICU to uve the ·liv of two re . ,,.,
t DAJLY PILOTIT~ October8, Nt
THE BROADWA Y'S
ONE DAY SAtE TOMORRO
SA.M.-10 P.M. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 10. STOREWIDE SAVINGS .
. • ELECTRONICS SAVINGS FOR YOUR HOME
NOW 99.99
RECORO.A-CALL ANSWERING
MACHINE
Will be 129.00. Voice activated system with
bee~rless message retrieval and a toll saver
system. Announce only, pla~ck only modes,
too. Telecommunlcationa, •26 .
•
•
'
-
8 A. M. TO· ·:10 p IM. WEDNESDAY,·(
(
SAVE AN EXTRA 26% OFF THE TICKETED PRICE OF
ALREADY REDUCED ITEMS IN MISSES. WOMEN'S, PETITES'
AND JUNIOR SPORTSWEAR•, DRESSES, AND COATS.
•Except Levi'• Bendover.
WOMEN'S
SAVE 25%
All holrday p.m. separates. rncludrng
beads, silks, tissue faille, reg 38 00 to
256.00, 28.&0 '° 192.00 •
S.ve 25%: Regular prrce and already
reduced all weather coats, short and full·
length wool and wool blend coats.
reg. 68.00 to 165.00 51.00 to 123.75
Save 25%: All sweaters in career sport
swear, Including furblends, cottons,
novelties, handknits, vest, cardigans. and
more by many famous makers and The
Broadway's own,
reg. 9.99 to 140.00 7.49 to 105.00
Save 25%: All regular price and already
reduced misses casual separates from
Gloria Vanderbilt, Jordache, Sasson, John
Henry, and Sync. Reg 9 99 to 48.00
. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 .49 to 31.00
Save 26%: Pant-Her regular price fall flan-
nels, reg . 38.00 to 92 00 .... 28..50 to 19.00
Save 25%: Our own Italian import
furblend cowl and v-neck sweaters~eg.
38.00 . . . . . . . . . . 21.&0
Save 26%: All regular price Lady Manhat-
tan blouses for large sizes 38 to 44, reg
24 00 to 42 00 18.00 to 32.50
Save an extra 25%: All ;egular price and
already reduced Chaus Woman separares
for large sizes 38 to 44 , reg 12 ~ to
72.00 . 9.99 to 50.40
Save 26%: Petites boucle cardigan from
LeRoy knitwear. reg 32 00 24.00
Save 131.00: Brrghtener added Norwegian
blue fox 1acket, reg 2095.00 . . . 1257.00.
All furs labeled as to country of origin of
imported fur.
All junior aw ater1. Choose from Sweater
Tea , Pronto, Kellwood and more (C'est ....J
JoU not included.) Assorted styles and
color•. Orig. 19.99 to 70.00, 11.00 to
62.50.
25% Off: Sweater jackets from Outer
bound. M nv styles and colors.
Reg. 39.99 10 60.00 . . . . . 21.n to 45.00
~ off: Ticketed price on all 1unior
_,,uu1111.,. from Gen8Slt, Ch1baro, Wnt
Cea t Conn tions nd mer .
Orig. 9. to 44.00.... p7.• to 33.00
21"-Off: Our ntrr coll ction of Cati
J
Town separates. Srzes 3 to 11
Orig. 32.00 to 74.00 23.91 to 54.11
25% off: All junior corduroy Jordache,
Sasson, Made In the Shade and Union
Bay. Many styles and colors. Reg. 19.99
to 32.00 . 14.99 to 24.00
25% off: Ticketed price on all sale
dresses Srzes 3 to 11 Orig 9.99 to 49.99
. . . . . . . . . . . . . 7.50 to 37.fiO
LINGERIE
2C)OA, OFF
All Olga bras. control briefs and body
briefers Reg . 13.00 to 31 .00,
10.40 to 24.80
, 20% off: Ticketed prrce of already reduced
sleepwear from Barb1zon, Lily of France,
Vanity Farr, Miss Elarne, Olga, Gilligan
O'Malley, Flair and more. Reg . 1 l .99 to
29 .99 . . . . . . . . . 9.69 to 23.99
25% off: T 1cketed price of already reduced
loungewear from Bill Blass, Crowntuft,
Gilligan & O'Malley, and The Broadway's
own Orrg. 6.99 to 29.99 ... 5.24 to 22.41
20% off: Ticketed price of cotton knit tank
tops and pants from Alexander Julian
Ong. 6.50 to 14.50 ......... 4.00 to 1.00
ACCESSORIES
200A> OFF
All regular and sale price handbags from
B.H. Smith and Leather Express. Reg.
14 99 to 60.00, 12.00 to 48.00
20% off: All our necklaces and earring by
Pierre Cardin, Givenchy, Christian Dior.
Reg. 15 00 to 45.00 . 12..00 to 38.00
20% off: All our T rif ari jewelry. Necklaces,
bracelets, pierced and clip earrings. Reg.
8.00 to 35.00 ....••.•...•... 1.40 to 21.00
20% off: All Evan Pi one ho i ry. Tex·
tures, sheers, control tops and knee highs.
Reg. 1.76 to 9.00 ............ 1AO to 7.211
SHOES
20% off: All Esprit de Corp regular price
hoes for women. Flatt, moccasins, boota
and kimmer1. Reg. 41.00 to 59.00
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . ...... '2..IO to 41.20
20'4. off: All Mra r ul r for women.
Fl t , pump and moc ns. Reg. 32.00
to 46 00 ................ 21.IO to 31.10
20CM. off: Nina h for women. Pump ,
slings and flats in II color•.
• R . 53.00 to 79.00 . . • . • . . 42.40 to U .20
20CMa off: 8 _ ndol no Ml f Of WOfl)tn,
Pump • ings nd fl . R • 60.00 to
62.00 . • . • . • ... • .41.00 to .IO
\--=
20% off: Calico shoes for women. Many
styles and colors: •
Reg. 28.00 to 36.00 ....•... 22.40 to 28.80
20% off: lifestride shoes for women.
Assorted styles and colors.
Reg. 32.00 to 38.00 ••..••.. 21.IO to J0.40
I WEST COAST KIDS
SAVE 30%
All fun fleece separates and jog sets for
kids. In sizes for infants, toddlers, girls 4
to 6X ang 7 to 14. R~. 7.QQ_to 40.00,
&.IO to"'l8.00
S.V. 30%: All outerwear for kids, both
jackets and coats. For newborns, infants,
toddlers, girls 4 to 6X and 7 to 14. Reg.
19.99 ta 75.00 . . . . . ....... 13.19 to 62.&0
S.ve 30%: All girls 4 to 14 sleepwear.
Dreamy gowns, pajamas and robes. Reg.
6.00 to 42.00 . . . . . . . . . . . 4.20 to 29.40
Seve 30%: Every plush girls accessory.
Bears, monkeys, raccoons and many
more. Reg. 6.99 to 50.00 . , .. 4.ft to 35.00
Seve 30%: Our entire stock of regular
priced terry stretch coveralls for Inf ants.
From Trimfit, Schwab, Carters, Le Roi and
more. Reg. 11.00 to 15.00 ... 7.70-to 10.&0
MEN'S SPORTSWEAR
SAVE 30%
Our entire stock of Haggar slacks and
blazers for men. Includes belt loop and
expandom' ~-waist pants for sizes 32 to
42; sportcoats sized 38 to 44. Reg. 21 .99
to 100.00, 16.39 td 70.00
Save 30%: All men's updated wool blend
flannel slacks in pleated styles. In
wool/polyester. Orig. 28.00 to 42.00
, .. . . . . .. 11.80 to 21.40
Save 30%: A huge selection of men's fall
outerwear in today's exciting styles. (Ex·
cept (jesigner, Catalina Varsity, Members
Only by Europecraft suedes and our own
three-In-one zip-off sleeve chintz jacket).
Reg. 60.00 to 185.00 ...... 39.00 to 121.&0
Save 30%: Every colorful fall sweater, vest
and cardigan for men. Wools, wool/acrylic
and acrylic. (Designer collections not in-
cluded.) Reg . 19.00 to 68.00
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 13.30 to 47.IO
&eve 30%: Designer woven sportshirts
and slac~a in our fall collection for men.
Both r~IJlarly priced and already. reduced
atyles. Reg. 19.99 to 80.00 • 13.11 to 11.00
Save 30%: All our spectacular Sasson
•
woven portshirts for men in deep fall pat· ..,
tems. •Reg. 20.00 .•..•.•.•.•..•. : .. 14.00
&eve~ Every heavyweight men's sport·
shirt from European designers end f amou •
Am rfcan makers. Reg . 15.00 to 60.00
• • ..... I •••••• I • • T"i-1" • • • 10.IO to aoo
S.ve ~ Our entire stock of Joet woven
and knit.sportlhirts for men. In v1br1nt
~~&, ~~~ ... a.~~ .~:~~.'. ~·.". ~.~'~~:. ~N:.
a.we al%: Every pair of men's Jeana In
cl k: to trend ttJng tytea. Ong. 16.99
to 62.00 .•..•...•••.•...•. 11a to •.40
a.ve 11%: All men'• wool and wool bl nd se.oncoats In tanor('d and updated
1lhou tt • A g. 7 .00 to 120.00
• • • • • • • • • • it •••• Ii • i •• i i l2.IO to 14.tliO'
/
Save 30%: All men's activewear including
work·out separates, warm-up auits, terry
tops and walk shorts. Reg. 10.00 to 98.00
...•...•......•.•.....•... 7.00 tO ••
MEN 'S FURNISHINGS
All full-cut and fitted patterned dress
shirts. Sensational stripes and checks.
Reg_JQ.99 to 40.00, 8.26. to 30.00
And men's better neckwear in deoartment
225. Solids, stripes and prints In fall tones.
Reg. 11 .00 to 16.50, 1.25 to 12.37
Save 25%: Our entire stock of men's
sleepwear: robes, pajamas, nightshirts and
slippers. Reg 14.00.60.00 .. 10.IO to 41.00
Save 25%: Our entire stock of men'•
hosiery incuding designer arid f amoua
maker dress, casual and athletic styles.
Reg. 3.~ to 7.00 .......•.•.• 2.25 to 1.25
S.ve 25%: Men's eccessories: umbr llas,
hats and small leather goods. Reg. 15 00
to 25.00 ..... . .......... 11.26 to 11.7&
Save 30%: Our entire stock of men's
designer suits .. (except Pierre Balmaih>.
S.ve 30%: Louis Raphael men'• dress
slacks•• in wool gabardine or tropical-
weight wool. Foyr classic colors. Reg.
65.00 to 67.50 ............. 45.&0 to 47.21
Save 30%: Our entire stock of men's
designer patterned sport coats.•• Herring·
bones, stri~, plaids and tweeds in grey~
blue or brown. Reg. 145.00 to 190.00
. . . . . . . . . 101.60 to 133.00
30% off: Our own raincoat& with zip-out
pile lining. Two styles. Orig. 79.99 to
125.00 . . . .. .. . ........... 66.n to 17.IO
••only in: Anaheim, Beverly Center, .Brea,
Carlsbad, Century City, Cerritos, Del Amo,
Downtown Plaza, Fashion Valley, Fox
Hills, Glendale, Huntington Beach,
Laguna, la Jolla, Newport, Northridge,
Orange, Pasa·dena, Panorama, Santa
Anita, Santa Monica, Sherman Oaks,
Thousand Oaks, T opanga, West Covina.
YOUNG MEN'S
Save 25%: Our entire collection of
sweaters and vests (except the BOP neon
sweater). From the classics to the latest
tradition·breaking styles. Orig. 18.00 to
30.00 ................... 13.&0 to 21.IO
Save 26%: All young men's dress slack•
and blazers. From Ritchies, J .J. McWay ,
Angel's Flight, Zeppelin and 4/40 Jaguarf
Orig. 16.99 to 90.00 ..•.... 12.74 to 17.IO
Save 21%: All young men's fall outerw ar
jackets and vests. Orig. 30.00 to 76.00 ....
22.&0 to 18.2&
S.ve 26%: All young men's woven topa,
updated and traditional (0. 183/188/411.)
Reg. 9.99 to 28 00 .......•.. 7.IO to 11.IO
, BOYS
S.ve IO%: Alt casual pants for boys 8 to
20. Corduroy, twill end nylon parachute
ttylet in fall col~Aeg. 14.00 'to 24.00
• ' ....... •JO • -............ to 1l.IO
Save 30%: All drns shirts for boys 8 to
20. Many colors and styles. Reg. 7.00 to
16.00, .. "'T°'' .............. 4.IO to 11.20
• a.Ye 30%: Every boy1 8 to 20 aw ater
and sweater vest. Orig. 7.99 to 20.00
· · · · · · • · · • · · · · · ...... " .... I.II to 14.00 &1tve 30%: Our entire ta<:k of updated
knit tops for boya 8 to 20. Cham1, N.R.G.
nd Tomato atyl 1. Orig. 10.99 to 15.99 •
.......................... 1Mto 1i.11 .
lave 11%: All boys 8 to 20 aolid and
1trlped knit tops from lzod J .G. • Orig. "'
13.60 to 19.00 .•...•..••.... 1.41 to 1UD
•v• 30%: All boys 4 to 7 sweat rt. Orig •.
15.00 to 16.00 ............. 10.IO to nio
Seve 11%: Ev ry Jonath n Strong 1u1t
and aportcoat for boVt 4 to 7. Orig . 29.
to 60.00 ...•.•.•...•.••.•. 20• to •oo
Irie ao%: 0 hkostt B'Golh plavweer for
bOVt 4 to 7. Orig 9 00 to 18.00
• • • • • • • " •••• I ••••••••• '1..30 '°' 12.IO
S.Ve : Billy Th Kid plavw r for bovs 4 to 7. Orig. 6.99 to 115 00 _
••••••••••••••••••••• "''I .4.D ,, ..
~AY,
'
I ,
r
)€TOBER ·:10. STOREWl·DE SAVINGS.
f INE JEWELRY
.... 30%: All 14K gold plain or engraved
wedoing bands
LUGGAGE
AVE 30.00 TO 88.00.
Our exclusive Madison Leisur~ soft-sided
luggage collection, orig. 40.00 to 100.00,
... to 32.•
lave •.oo. Expandable Lark garment bag,
orig. 185.00 . .. . . .. . .. . ..111.99
S.ve 76.00. Unique lark expandable carry-
on bag, orig. 226 00 .............. 149.19
CRYSTAL AND CHINA
Mikasa 20-pc. Gabriele set,
orig. 166.00, 49.•
S.ve 4.01. Gala goblet, wine, flute cham-
pagne, cordial, hiball or old fashioned by
Royal Crystal Rock, orig. '6.00 each •.• 1.89
Save ~. Our entire line of Mikasa
crystal stemware, barware and tableware,
reg. 7.95 to 75.00 .•.....• :·.3.97 to 37.&0
S.v• 215.00. Sango "Antibea" 91 ·pc. set,
orig. 376.00 . . . • . . . . . . . • • • • .•.••• •·•
HOUSEWARES
SAVE 60%
Our exclusive Farb6rware 10 pc. cook t.
O n stock value 195.00, 71.•
lave 20% to 50%. J.A. Henck I 4·Star
ected cutl ry, orlg. 28 .00 to 64 .00
••••• , ••• " •••• ill , ••••• ,. ••• 1100 to 4111.IO
ve ~ to ~ J .A. Henck 11 gourmet
cutlert lecttd 1tyl • orig. 23.00 to
92.00 I : I I t I .. I It i 1 I • • I I I I 't • I 11.00 to 11.40
leve Cook'• Tools g dg tt, r •• 59
to 22.99 •.•..•..... , ..•.••••. 41 to 17.:24
.. ,,. Our nt1rt I ct1on of G.E.
rona, reg, 20.00 to 37.00 ••• 11.00 to 27.?I
RADIOS
Save 10.00. Sanyo AM/ FM stereo radio
cassette recorder, orig. 79.99 ....••. 89.98
Save 10.00. Sanyo Cl A M/ FM stereo
radio cassette recorder with detachable ,spea~, or)g.'99.99 . .. ..... ,....,,.,. ... :a.98 1-.;;;
Save 10.00. Sony MOR R9 AM/FM •
headset,
orig. 59.99 .........•.....•.•..•.. 48.91
Save 5.00. witli Lloyds' rebate. Lloyds 375
AM/FM dual alarm clock radio with bat-
tery backup system, orig. 24.99, sale
21 •. 99, less 2.00 rebate .•.•• 19.•
COMPUTERS
SAVE 340.00.
Jano Dragon 64 computer with 8 pc9-. of
software, orig. 399.00, 59.00
Save 30.00. Panasonic serial impact dot
matrix printer, orig. 329.00 . . . 299.00
,.---,-ve 120.00. Alphacom 81 am matrix
printer. orig. 199.00, was 129.00 .... 79.00
STEREOS
SAVE 70.00
Emerson AM/FM compact stereo, orig.
229.00, 169.00
Save 131.00. Sansui 70 watt audio
system. if purchased parately gJ(),00
•••••••••••••••••••• " ........... ill '111.00
&eve 300.00. Pioneer 100 watt audio
sys m, if purchased separately 1699.00
•••••••••••• lj •••• "· ........ ,. • ,. •• 1 •• CllO
TELEVISIONS
Sive 70.00 Sharp 19" diagonal remote
color portable, limited quantities, orig.
399. 00 . . . . . . . • . . • • • . • • . . . . ••....• 321.00
S.ve I0.00. Sharp 19" diagonal color por·
table, limited quantities, orig. 329.002.41.00
GIFTS
S.Ve 60%. AU barware, orig 10.00 to ...
SILVERWARE
S.ve 50.00. Floral Tapestry goldplated 65
pc. service for 12, no special orders, reg.
199,00.,,,,, I , , o,, • o • • •, • • •, • .149.00
Save 50.00 91 pc. stainless service for 12,
2 patterns, bonus flatware caddy, no
special orders, n(ig. 199.00 ........ 141.ot "' !"'r, •
STATIONERY
Save an additional SQ% off the saJe pOc.
on Burnes of Boston picture frames, in-
cluding collages.
DOMESTICS
SAVE 50%
Our entire collectiop of solid and print
bedspreads and comforters, from Croscill,
Max Ravvicz, etc., reg . 85.00 to 360.00,
twin to king, 42.50 to 180.00
S.ve 50%. Vera. Cannon and Fieldcrest
solid color sheets and cases, reg. 11.00 to
27 .00 . .. . .. .. 3.91-to 1UO
S.ve 50%. Avanti emt>ellished towels,
r~.7 .00 to 16.00 .•.•.....•.. 2.• to 5.11
Save 60%. Jazzy jacquards by J .R.
United reg 6.00 to 13.00 .... 2.• to&.•
Save 17" to 33%. Cannon Royal Classic
terry or velour all cotton towels, reg. 3.75
to 27.50 ............ .. .. 2.• to 19M
Save 12% to 25% 'f>rint towels designed •
by Laura Ashley, reg. 4 00 to 16 00 2.• to
13M
Save 50%. Town house bath carpet, s,,.s·
orig. 29.99, now 19.99 . . . . I
Save 50%. All bath scales. orig. 32.00 to
195.00, now 16.99 to 195.00 1.49 to 17.49
Save 60%. All regulaf price bed pillows,
down feather synth tics, reg. 15.00 to ' , 58• 140.00 .............•....... 7.49 to •
Save ~ All mattress pads, reg. 7.00 to
115.00 .•••••••••.•• i ••.•••. 3.49 to 17.41•
FURNITURE
ao RY, nl.!PHON OR MAIL ORD R • WHILE QUANTin LA T. I LEC110W WILL VARY I STOA
lave 112.00 l"raditiona1 crescent shaped
sofa in 1ne dot velvet, orfg. 950.00 • .._.
S.ve 321.00 Matching k>veseat, orig.
900.00.: ••••••.•.••.••••.•••• -••• 511 ..
S.ve 212.00 Tradition I large scale wing
chair with reversib T·cushion, orig.
,4(X),()() •••••••••••••••• • ..........• 111--
S.Ve 302.00 3-way velvet recliner in
· HercUkin oleftn velvet. orig. 560.00241.11
...
SAVE 25.00
Solid brass pharmacy lamps of
·every type and Style. wall mps. 100.
orig. 69.99, 39.91 saw. 60%. 1464" oval doOr mirror with
brass frame, reg. 19.99 .......•..•... •• ..
SLEEP SHOP
SPECIAL PURCHASE
Seafy and Simmons sleep sets, including
Posturepedic and Beautyrest, with special
purchase on covets.
Twins and fulls .... 51.00 to 1a.01-. pc.
Queens and kings .•.. 211.00 to -.oo Mt
CARPETS
A7
Novice rancher 'fleeced; '
he bids $24,295 for lamb
J,.O ANOEL:ES (AP} -Harold
WayneRam yandru&norecowboy
who wmt lO his fi11t aucuon at the
Ventura County Fair and bou&ht a 1Lm~for1 rttOrd-sh&ncrinJ 24,29S
BymasUkC.
Ramsey says he liked Nam Nam -a black-booted Suffolk with a swett
fac.c and an 1mma:tulately white coat
-but he thou&ht he WU blddin&
$2.15 a pqund for the lAmb. in1tead of
215. So when he teamed his bid for the
I IJ..pound Nam Nam wasn't $242,
Ramsey was .. sick ...
Ramsey donn't claim ho was
flttccd. He acknowltdact \bat, ex-
cited by his f ant auction. he went into
tt like a lion and came out of 1t. well,
hkea lamb.
But Ramsey isn't heePisb abOut
tryins to recoup his loss. He hopes to
break even by break.ins Nam Nam
1nto etlevision.
Pnd Hardt elta la coqitJartf of hotel he'll con.-ert to ome forlUDS JMktlenta. That'• why Nam Nam arrived
Monday in a stretch limousine at the
Theatre of Arts on Wilshire
Boulevard, bopina to become HolJy.
wood's newest embraceable ewe. Palm Springs resort caters
to homeless :AIDS vletims
AbOut a year NO Ramsey, a nurse,
inherited a 480.am ranch in Ventura
County from an elderly woman for
whom he had betn carina.
Hardly a rancher, Ranuey hired a
man•r to run the 10tead1 boua)it a
PALM SPRINGS (AP) -A man
who ii convertlna hll IJ!Wl motel
into a raort residence for homeless
AIDS victims sa~ he has the blesslJll
6fhealtb autbonties as well u the py
c:ommuoity. ---But fted Hardt sa)ll he's kttpina
lbe Jocadon and current name of bis
Wined Hardtline Reiidence R.aon. ~ject a aecret in cue other residents
of this detert community AR less
teCel>tive to the id.ea.
! .. r don't want a backlash," Hardt iaid. .. I don't llUnd pttina crank calls
but I don't want Molotov coclctails
toned wot.lib ml window."
Word of Hardt s planned ret0n for
AIDS victims came as a surpnsc
Monday to Palm Spnnas Ch.amber of
Commerce executive director Don
Brown and City Planruoa Com·
mission dJ•irman Ric Service. but
neither expressed any alarm.
"Palnl Sprinp bas always been a
mecca for people tryina to rcpin their
health, ... Service wd. "1 don't have a
hystencal reaction abf>ut tome.one
cboosin1 to do this with bis proC.:f,· If we were talkina about a · y
infectious disease, that .,..ould be a
different problem.... cowbOy hat and a JOld belt buckle and
AIDS. acquired immune deficien· went abOut miitna with hit rural
cy ayndrome, is a fatal ditorder nci&hbors. !Jl&rked by the inability of the body's Last wee~ the_prize-winnina Nam immune system to resm dllease. Nam, raised b)'. Jeannette Brisacber,
Tb · kn 16 a 4-H Oub member from • ere 11 no own cure. Fillmore, was offered at the Ventun
Hardt aid the reson will open for Counly Fat .
bus1neu after $11,000 wonh of Ramsey. mistakenly thou&bt the
improvements 'AR completed in openin1 bid wu 64 cents a pound.
January. It wilJ offer fod&in&s to J 7 instead of$64, and thinp developed
residents and a full-time fivi-in staff from there.
ofthree. . "I .was •!ck.'' Ramt:er ~d after
The rat.es -ancludin& three meals learruna hi\ actual bid. I was
a day and motelooSponsorcd .. educ.a· nauseated." tional and therapeutic" activities but . A fneod sugest.ed he talk with ' ~ ........
!JO medical«rvices -will.be S97S 1 · Valmar Olesb; who run1 the Theater Jeuaette Brlaacher and ~tore cowbo1 Harold Wa111e
"month rof'ai>n ate toom atl!'-StSO' .,4f'N .ArU.N. OleW;.reco~cnded.:~ """'RarDKJwitJl$24.29&.l am1uaemed.Nam.llfuaa. _ ~ ~~ .. ·--~
for a semi-pnvate room. A brochure am . am 10 ~nto act1na. pombly . says there will be a heated swimmina endors1n1 Wooht.e or Joy. rack of lamb, also swears she really Will it play jn Holl)'WOOd? .
.. pool and a .. therapy pool'' Jeannette, ~o said sh~'s alad her used~oolitetokeepthelamb'sfleece Well, one of O~sk.a's most f.&mous
"These rat« reflect close to an 89 former pet wont becomeJusunotber as white aunow. paduates is Morris the Cat.
-
percent savine over hospital stays,"
Hardt said. 'They would also be
cheaper than most convalescent hos.-
pitals and far more pleasant.".
The major chance is the uparadina
of the motel's kitchen to meet county
food service standards, be said.
Hardt said the idea came to him
this put summer after be learned
about the mapitude of the AIDS •
problem in the community. Deser1
AIDS Project Director Trace Percy
says 20 AIDS cases have been
reponed in the area.
"Peopl't who ~ve been rejected by
lovers, friends d family should
have a place •here they are ac·
cep1.0d," said Hardt, who is a
bomotexual. "We have to look out
for our own."
COME AND MJEt A "SMURF"
SUN. OCT. t4 t:OO-IPM
AT MESA VERDE CENTER
TllEll On TOTAllY .. ED AT THE
ICE CAPADIS SHOW -Tiii FORM
. Wit. OCT. n TIRO IUI. NT. ti
lllOlL llOW fOl IUTI• llllOlll NIUO llATI• IYllYtAY
Learjet explodes on takeoff;
nUmber of victims unknown
·1 didn't see any
part bigger than •
two feet square.·
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
Authorities invefliptina the crash of
a private je.t said the plaile's tail
apparently hit the runway on takeoff,
spark.ins an explosion that killed at
least two and possibly u many 11 five
peootc and hurled blazina debris for a
hal(-m1le.
Several hours after the accident
Monday niaht, authorities were not
sure bow many people were aboard
the Oates Learjet that was en route to
Van Nuys when it crubed on..runway 2~ef\ at San Francisco International
A.irpon.
Prelim~ repons indicated the with the Federal Aviation Adm1nis-
planc had a two-man crew and picked tration. "We have material thrown
up at leait three passenaen at Butler over a large area of the runway and yet
Aviation, which handles private there's a crater in the .,ound. It's
planes, said Ron Wilson, community sain-to take a lo?l tJme to in·
aft'ain director {or the airport. vest1pte the accident.
Ho~ever, a spokesman for ~be There wu ''v~ little debris of eny plaoe s owner, Oay Lacy Aviation · .. Ai cit' Lo · T Inc. of Van Nuys. said the plane • si.u. •• rport rec~or uas . urpen carried only the pilot, co-pilot and said. The explosion ... ht.erally, possibly one pauenier. completely destroyed the craft.
There were no survivors, and none "Apparently the tail end hit the
of the victims was immediately runway, causma the explosion and
identified. Wilson said. the dispersal of the aircraft over a
..The only thina we have found so half-mile radius," said Turpen after
far arc body parts and a wallet ... I visiting the runway.
didn't sec any part of the plane that The cnuh closed the airport south
wu bi&&er than two feet square," of San Francisco for an hour, and
Wilton said. althou&b one runway remained openil -w?laf's outt.bere ineryvnusual;" there was no word on how soon fu
said Roben Palmer. au.fety inspector operations wouldhcreswmd.
MILWAUKEE (AP) -A man
doused his wife with psolinc and set
her afire1 critically bumin,a her, just
half an nour after watchana a tele-
vision movie about an abused wife
who burned her husband to death,
authorities said today.
"He told us he watched the show
and decided to scare his wife with
fire, .. an arresti na officer reported in a
pohce complaint
The 37-year-.old victim, whose
name was not released, was in critical
condition today with third-dep"t
bums over 9S perc.cnt of her body,
police said.
The man, 39, who was also not
identified. wa arrested shorty after
spla tiina P.S01ine on the woman • ~==~==~====================~=:i=::=~;;;..J..J Monday maht and usina a cfPrette liahter to iplite it, police Ca~\. Dan
wet '"' In Our 1884 Catalog
AS LOW AS Q
'3SPER
MONTH
• UMlm to Wrtte Your Own
COmputer Progr1ma In BASIC
(11mner•1 menu•I Included)
• C1•1rtte Software Av•llabl• tot lduc8tlon, a.me., Otaph c., · ~= Procwlng
• leff-cont81ned =nit Fe.tu,.. Monttor, ,
NufMl'lc ~J 11 Memory
etiCS Prlritii mt«raee
Easy to Expand s Your
Skllla and Need Growl
-..
If you hove on interest in
mOdellng, the Doily Pilot con
help you get o tort. We ore
looking for mOd Is for o
brond new up and coming
South Orange County ..
publication. Send us
information about yourself'
along with o photo to:
930 WEST /JAY • COSTA MESA 92626
Ko·prowtki said. No ctiaraa 'Nerc
f11ed apinst him immediatelY.
The woman's sons, a~ l l and 13.
told a~ today that their father
had watched the NBC mad~for· TV
movie "The Burning Bed. ' The
movie depicted the true 110ry of ' battered wife in Michipn who killed
1\cr fiusDind by scttina his bed on fire.
The boys said they did not sec the
fire set. but heard SCTcamina;u t after
aoina to bed and looked ouu1dt to see
•blue in the back )ard.
'
Orange Coatl DAIL V Yi Ootoblr 9, 1
THE BROADWAY'S
ONE DAY ·SALE '·toMORROW 0 LY
.. J.A. HENCKELS 4-ST AR AND
GOURMET CUTLERY.
4·Star Cutlery is J A Henckels' supreme
cutlery. 6" utility knife, orig. 39.00, now 31.20;
10" cf1ef's knife, orig 64.00, now 44.80; 4"
paring knife, orig. 26.00, now 13.00. Profes-
sional quality Gourmet Cultery is triplepriveted
..... 4-f<>t~ng!h: &-...., ·ng ~nife; ortg:' 23.00, now-
11.'40; 8" carving knife, orig. 24.00, 17.20; 8"
chef's knife, orig. 32.00, now 11.00. Save 20%
on all other 4-Star and Gourmet Cutlery not
shown. Quantities limited to stock on hand.
Selection may vary store to store. Cutlery, 194 ...
'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---'
25% OFF
OUR ENTIRE SELECTION OF IRONS
FROM G.E., NOW 15.00 TO 27.75.
Regularly 20.00 to :p.00. G.E. designs irons to
smooth the wrinkles out of everyday living. Shown
is our full-feature iron with Spray, Steam and Ory
and a SilverStone surface regularly 28.00, now
21.00. Quantities limited to stock on hand. Small
Electrics, 95/ Personal Care, 207.
. SA.M.-10 P~M. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 10. STOREWIOESAVINGS.
25% OFE
OUR ENTIRE SELECTION OF
KITCHEN GADGETS FROM H & P
MA YEA, NOW .46 ro 17.24.
Regularly .59 to 22.99. Ingenious cooks tools •
from can openers to kitchen shears; ~ rests
to egg timers. Selection may vary store to store.
Limited quantities. Sorry, no mail or phone
orders. Gadgeteria, 254 .
,
. 79.99
OUR EXCLUSIVE FARBERWAAE 10..PC. COOKSEY.
Open stock vatue 195.00. Stainfess steel with aluminum clad bottoms
set includes: 1·2-3 Qt. covered saucepans, steam insert (fits 3 qt.
taucepan) 8 qt. covered saucepot, 10 ~" open fry pan. Quantities
limited to stock on hand. Basic Cookware, 143.
. 50% OFF
149.00
"FLORAL TAPESTRY" GOLD-
PLATED FLATWARE 6PIECE
SET.
Regularly 199.00. Save 50.00 on our own
goldplated service for 12 featuring 12 five·
piece place settings, a butter knife, sugar
spoon, tablespoon, gravy ladle and cold
meat fork. Immediate ava1labihty. Sorry,
no special orders Quantities limited to
stock on hand. Silver, 59.
OUR ENTIRE SELECTION OF MIKASA
CRYSTAL STEMWARE, BARWARE
AND TABLEWARE, NOW 3.97 TO 37.50.
Regularty 7.95 to 75.00. Fresh in design, filled
with appeal. Mikasa crystal stemware, reg. 13.95
to 24.95, now 1.17 to 12.47; Barware, reg . 16.95
to 17.95 now 1.47 to 1.17; Tableware, reg. 7.95
to 75.<Xi, now 3.ll to 37.&0: 'Selection may vary
store to store. lifnfted quantities.
Mikasa Glassware, 412.
•
..
-,..
Oran e Coast's
peop e make it
grea~ place to be
What male the Oran Co a areat pl ce 10 live nd
rt? Yes, we have a beautiful coast. magnificent home ,
wwcrin& office buildings and are fa t becoming the cultural
ter of Orange County.
Yet it i the people who make the Oratigc Coast a ~t pl . cc
live and work.
It's Meli Haynes, who is celebrating her 10th birthday;
er brother Dennis, who is our Daily Pilot canier, and their
iJy, who have been special friends to our two daughters.
It's Marlene Belloni, wife of Laguna Beach artist Tom
Belloni, who offered the suagestion to Monday's editor to
publish one of Tom's great works on the front page of the 'Pilot.
I
,
WALT&RBUUOOO•
r oola••li*
'
Plan would impose
martial law tn U.
in case of dtsaste
WASHINGTON .:.... The nation't
civil defense chief, Louis Giuft'ri
, seems determined to carve out a
:;.:...;.-;.;.;..;i.i:ii.i•;.;.;;;;;;.;._~~-~~~ wetfuJ empire for bu Fedcii.I Asency, ---
even if he has to in the Anny.
He's been a geneTou donor of art to local chantable auctions in
the pa.st It'• the six people who were inducted into the Service
~ub Hall of Fame Monday who demonstrated altrui m -the ·~ntelfi h concern for the welfare of others: James Ballinger of
,COsta Mesa.Orange Coast Lions Oub; Nonnan Von Hen.en,
,DDS of the Newport Harbor Exchange C1ub; Geo Hammond M" e COita Mesa Nortll Xlwams Oub; RaJ Ma oney o e
~ unrisc ExchanJC Club of Irvine; Oaire Nelson of the Costa
MesaKiwanrsaubaridLouDingeroftheCostaMcsaRotary. PUC dec1·s1·on's g·oad new· s These men give time, talent and treasur~ to theu
:eommunity. One is &ivina l~dership to a new YMCA for Irvine. AnotherhclpedfoundthecityofC.osta~esaandse~edontbe "or ca11·""orn1·a cons· umers
The scary thin& it that there are
like-minded elements in the Pen-
tagon wilting to terap the Conltitu~
tion and 1um tJic Uni&td Stattt intOa
military dicutorsbip.
, Orange County Board ofSu_pervtSOn. Std I another delivers food 1 l l l
.and tol• to neieOy Orange Coast families at Christmas time. i It 1 the thgµsapd Qf donors to the.United Way Caawaiio .. ~~ ..... ---r-=:--:--:-:;-:::;
•It'• Uncle Pau1, die man who brought more than 700mcbes of · ixes 1 billion :pa~ to this fall's Kaiser School paper drive, even though his
t•ve already rePOrted bow Ouif:.
frida ran afoul o( Aitomcy General
William French Smith Wlth a dtaft
vcstors in proJt!ctt with un«nain executive order that would insert
faie.. FEMA between the Whito House and
A few paid off in new enef'IY the Cabinet in the event of a natioruil 'I children are grown. It's one of the ways he supports cducauon project to increase
because education needs support of all of the people. It's the t-1 l ·
!volunteers who serve on they board, the teachers who provide na ura gas supp y T suppltes1 m05t didn't. But explo-cmeriency. HOIAS ration cnarges were passed along to I also reported that Giuffrida had
con5umcn as pan of the fuel-coat prepared swecpina Je,jslatioo to be
E portion of their monthly bills. presented to Congress when disam:r
: role models for our children to emulate; it's ~pie who do things ~st California consumers don't ! because they need to be done and it's the nght thing to do. know n. but ihey'vc got good reason
It's the hundreds of volunteers who help the Girls Club, for cheerfulness u they head toward
Youth Employment Service, Boys Oub, S.O.S., FISH, the the fall and its hi&her utility bills.
, Schools Foundation and moTC. That•s because two hare.brained
: It's people who make the difference aJong the Coast. no1ion1 wi1h which big ps and
Altrui.s1rn la alive! We need a few thousand more like you electric companies hoped to mine •folks! · their customers' wallcu have been scotched . JIM DE BOOM The best-known of these plans was
LE TTE RS
The !Sets support Berger
LNG • .or liquefied natural ps. Back m
the m1d-1970s, a partntrship of
Cahfom1a'1 two baaaest ps com-
panin -Pacific Gas cl Elec\ric Co.
and the Southern Cthfomia Gu Co.
-trumpetid the prediction lhat a
musivc natural ga, shortaat was an
the works. Unless they were aJJowed
to build a SI b1lhon proJect. they said,
the sky would fall (translate that 11 a
forecast of musivc unemployment,
unheated home~ and usorted other
To the Editor.
If, indeed, the end of Or Paul Betser's career in 'he Hunt1n1ton
Beach Union H1&h School Dl1tnct wu precipitated by h11 atlcgcd failure
to control a rccalcnrant English
department at Marina High School,
then a bit of what make• Amcnca
IJ"Cll dted with his career .
h it espectalty Amcncan for the
man in the middle heroically to
oppose h111u~non, to refute to .. ,o
by the book.. ' when he 1tCS that to
obey defeau a worthy aoal his
1upenon cannot sec. In the Iona line
detcendinJ from Prometheus to
modem heroes such as Serieant•
Warden in From Herc to E~m1ty.
and down to many telev111on her~
1ucb u the Emmy-wmnana < apt.am
Furillo of Hill Street Station Dr Berstr supported his people . Setser upl)Orted his EnaJ1sh
testina?). near-sighted (how can they
speak of excellence when they can't
provide workable clau 11zes or
cler ical au1stan cc?), and
ph1losoph1caJly unsound (numerous
hi&hly-reprdcd atudies prove the
1nefTcctuality of"trackmg," the clotc
kin of the HBUHSD's newly-im-
plemented "strandina").
The ideal but impossible ending lO
the heroic talc would have b«n that
Dr. Abbott s.aw the liaht. He would
have used the expert advice of a team
of ~ned professionals, many of
whom possess master's dqrecs in
Englith and education, and all of
whom know' from practical daily
contact with the students what was &ood for Manna Hiah School's
clicntclc.
d11Uters).
The companies, of coune, were 11
m11taken u Chicken Little. But they
did &et a special law paued durinJ the
fint few months of the panic they
•purred, allowina them to proceed without many of the usually.required
permits. They planned to build the
terminal at Pt. Co~tion on the
Santa Barbera County COISt and bring
in LNG from Alaska and Indonesia.
After Indian sroups and private
parties fouabt the plan in the cowu
for a couple of yean, it bepn to lose
Sr ARCHLICH t
UAS No more. says the PUC. From now strikes that would sive the president ••••••••l!ll!ll••L-on, anyone who wants to invest in (and FEMA) authority to aboUsb
steam becaustct~regulationofnaruraJ
gu prices suddenly created a Jarac
new supply.
Bui the au companies nevtr drop-
ped their: i~ kecpina open all
options on the would·be ps 1mporu.
Meanwbi&e, they had spent about
SIOO million on the project, which at
onetime figured to provide a vut new
sou.rte of profits for both p1 com·
panics.
lt is now aJI bUt dead. put to mt
gu.ietly lut month by the state Public
UtililJes Commission.
Consumers will have to refund the
com via a 0.33 percent rate increase
that will cost the averase customer a
few pennies monthly. If the com-
panies want to· keep LNG alive,
they'll have to foot future bills
· themselves.
Had the plan gone forward, the
added COil could have tacked SI 0 to
the avci:gc monthly bill by now.
·The PUC alto pve consumers a
second caute for rejoicina. issuinj
another quiet order the same day It
put LNG to rest.
This one ends the practice of us.ioa
money from consumers '\o help pay
the bills for enerp exploration and
development 1covitiet by electric
and compani • For yeara, utility
customers have been unwittina i!>·
risly explorau:~~ojcets can do so private>propmy ri&bta and civij
bypurchalmg n companies Hice liberties without the 1'indraoce of the
ARCO or Union' Oil, not via elee1ric courU or lqislatures.
and pl bil~ that made spcculatol!.Qf.... Now my a . sociates Donald Gold·
all Cahfomaa consumen. --1>era and Indy Badhwar have ot;.
The PUC objected not only to the ta.ined a Pentagon document that
old practice of forcins con umen to Cliscloses how the military would
provide risk capita.I; .but also to the -erk in cooperation with FEMA
notion that today°• con5umet1 were civilians dutina a national emeri-
payina for enCTJY to be used by ency. Its proposed asaault on the
tomorrow•s customers. courts, the necutive branch and the
.. ft mismatchCI the risks and bcn· ConstJtution is truly breathtakint
efiu between one scneration of cu.. The internal document a.hows ow
tomcn a_nd another," ~ PUC 11id. the Pentqon, in leque with ~
.. one acnet1tion <&>ax•>. while another plans 10 drape a cloak of questionable
enioys the bcneftu. Jephty over their actjvities whenever
From now on, tf utilities want to they decide the country ii in the
branch out and become eneray supply throes of a national emeraencr. The firms. too, they'll have to put their repon, issued by the Joint Chiefs of
own money on the line, not their Staff last December, is titled, "Miti,.
customers'. tary Support of' Civil Defense: System
It's buically the same prinetple ~ption."
PUC is now applying to LNG, whicV The Poue Comitatus Act prohibits
the 141 companies contend will still the armed forces from enpajna in
be needed sometime. domestfo law enforcement except
Jf either LNO or exploration 1 a undei strictly delineated i'estrictiona ~ investment for utilities, the deti&ned to aafetuarcl-eonstitution.al
commission now says, let the uuHties riabta. TheJointChiefs'&Uidelinesett
take the risk and reap either profils or fonh its own exemptjon1 to ~ law
losses - a principle that allows both ••based upon the inherent lepl riaht
the compenies and their customers to Of the United Slalel tovemment to
know just where their money ii ioins. ensure the prcservat1on of publjc
Older ... by force if necasary."
ftomu EUH 11 • Sou. Moille.·. Jf 1 wise to be 1u1piciou1 when bud col1tUln a,,.,. Ju1n. someone starU talki~ about the
government's .. inherent• riabt to do
thi1 or that. It's a aipJ-that the
Constitution is about to be
blindtided. Jn fact, when President
Truman ordered the Korean-wanime
• teachen -over 20 informed, pro-
fessional, concerned 1nd1 v1dual• -in
their strona advocacy of a ba11c: -
rather than elective -rcadina pro-
1 pam for run.th and tenth $fide
students who had read1na defic1cn-i ciet. Tbe parents and the tcachcn
• wanted the pros.ram, and a larac
I lfOUP of student• benefited from the
: ~m. bul Abbott opposed 1t
Many of the innovations and
methods in Abbott's brave new world
aencrated anaer and frustration
amon1 district teachers, but it was
Manna that had the suppon of a
principal who would fiahl for what
teachers and parents knew to be riaht.
In your cditonal of Sept. 24, you
allege that the committee formed to
recall three HBUHSD trustees lacked
the "facts." We, the Engl1•h teacher•
of Manna. •ubmll that not only docs
The Daily Pilot lack all the facts, but
"°did Dr. Abbott.
Passing of Clete Roberts
leaveseznptlnessbehind
seirure of tho steel mills in 19,2, the
Supreme Court ruled that he had no
1ucb inherent right, even for "na-
tional defense."
Here are tome of the ways the Joint
Chief• plan to bring in the troops-in
close coordination with FEMA:
• .. Normally I atato of martial law
will be proclaimed by the preaident ••
the document states. But It adds, ••ln
the absence of such action by the
Pretident, a eenior military com·
mandcr may impoee martial law in an •
area of his command where there bis
been a complete breakdown in the
exercise of aovernment functions by
local civilian authorities.''
; BaJtr also lijpportcd his EniJ1sh
• teaeben 1n the1f"bppot1twn to many
1 aspectlo(the new EnJ111h cu rriculum
that they saw 11 ultJmately 1mfrac-
tical(howwiU they implement al that
L.M. Bovo
MARY S< OTI for the En&Ji1h
Faculty of Manna H1&h Scnool
Hunt1n1ton Beach
I
j White House garden
I created by Congress
• : Two areas of the Whnc House.only
: twoL~ve been de1tin.atcd what they : are uy Acts of Cona:rcu· Prc11dcnt'1
• Lincoln•• bedroom and Jacqueline l Kenncdf 1 prden. •
I Eakimo huntcn carry 1l~cpin1 baga
mi(k of caribou hide. If trapped 1n a I blizzard, they can stave off 1tarvaC1on I by eati111 th 1r tleepina .
An 1thltte'1 view of history: "Mod· em reran carriers are lonaer th n
three Cootball fidd 1ncludan1 the end
net. The PiJ111m1' Ma~nowcr
wouldn't have m four first
doWn•.
ORA CO
llllJ
.
It wa~ an 169S that Captain Kidd
•,Jfeed topeyWorkman'a( ompenu· tton.
The count of attorneys has nearly
doubled in the United Stales in the
last I S ycar1.
Says here the ntCTIY of one 1111blt
humcue in one day could pov.er the
United States for three years
If you have JO b1lhoif fat ccl11 an
your body, )'ou·rc ju t aver • An)'.
mo~c than that 11 too many. 11 on
some
L.M. Borl /1 • 1,.'1<-•IH
t'Ol•tno/11.
H, L. khw..-11 Ill
WALTER
Bu11ouc111
10 talk too fast and you are droppina
your voice at the end of eilCh pbra1e.
Let'• tryitqain:'
Roy accepted the su,gestlon and
thereafter became• telJ1 y aood speaker.
Alway1af\erthat I wuproud of
Clcto'• pf'Oll'Cll. One fi tu~ panicu·
larly wufnosta~lina.
Therewualwayaalotof4rama
about Gle1e'1 brOAdcast.
Before he,dcttrmlned on a news
brbldca1tin1~recr-b0th radio and
TV -he had atudied to be an
operatic betitoneandector and it
1howed in his btoadcasta.
Whtri I fl rat met Clete Robena he
qs altady,27 yeara old or there ...
about11nd had definitely decided on br0adcallu1a u a career-not th stoc:k mlrktt and not drama as such.
Althouah he had appeared n many
howt.. flc had Callen In love wath the nCM. 0 deliahtfut thin1about etc
th1tfory1 nl ouldruninto
him and, allhoujh I only 1m1ll
potatoes Whtie he bad aonc on to pal
bti&hU qourt0mmonprofi 'on,he
ukl ltwa)'l leaVC whate~ COO vtruuon In Yt'hach he wa1 enaued
and come o~ er to arcct the ola man
No ondcrl'mtoproudofourone-
dme t onandlm hlmt0
much,
•"Military auumption of judicial,
law enforcement and adminasttative
functions oflocal government wtll be
baled on necct11ty thlt it actual arid
preaent" -presumably u decided by
the r,neral on the scene.
• Jn lbe ablenaa of mlftlil la.,,
the pttf ormanee of law enforcement
functions by the military '"" be limited to thOIC actions that a.re
ncccaary to prevent loa of lifl anld
wanton deitruction or propeny:•
Jut who will define ~ liml·
miona it not predlelr spelled out. The Joint Chiefs intend to aive
OuU1'rida and hit •tra~ the military
mutele they need. All military
fon:a. Activo and Rael"Vc, and the
National Ouifd, wtlcn fcdCraliiea,
are conaidtted ,POtentiatty 1v&11atile
to provide t•upport) to ciVll
authoritiea dunna ·a civil defen1e
emer,cncyt the d«ument 1111a.
STRJC'tLY PERSONAL: WW ... a.Mt U.. ,.ntdllaM .. CM &Ml
OIJm~T The SOVICtt'don•t ~1zc South
Kora what the 1981Ciam wdl paa);l. But lntcU~ IO\lrcet t.tll
mo leaden ralize they milMd
I s:Jras:.;:5 ~~n~,:.
~ The Ire "'*""--'° pert'idpete In die l 911 O&mel, "'' ~II probfably demand • con·
on. "My. twl'Cllll upea &he Sov·
m lO Ina 1t ahlt South Korea allow tome or the Games to be pJa)'fd In
NonbKora.
Jd M#rMI 11 • 1rNJaW .... ,,,,
•snaky Lady'
Arbona nate capitol employee loou at 'Snake Lady'
ecalptare ID capitol after it WU dram-a.se becaue of --coneau abOtit-iti ~ a pa l&'i.. A caDitol
director Mid Matt Smith • ecu.lpture u •wetr , • but 'il lt'• art. 80beit.'
..
0 W {AP) -Almost daily,
youna &irts duster around the en-
trance of an apartment block on
Gorky Street. hopi~ to catch a alimPte of us illustnous rciicknt,
SOv1ct .POP mu ic queen Alla
Pupchova.
Th Jar-struck youth_appa.rcntly
..-orry authotitics becau.e they de.;
vote their liveno rock 1tar1, actors or
composers and not to the patriotic
deeds held up a examples b~ the COmmunist Pany.
In the put week, two Soviet ~pen have criticized youth orpnizations for faiUna 10 take
decisive action apinst the fans
outside Pupchova•a apertmcnL
Oil unday, the widely distributed
Ru ian republ&c daily Sovictskaya
Roi 1_iya took up the i~. urgin1 that
o"°'ruzed C.n clubs be founded
quickly lO get youth off the street and
prevent them from idolizina the st.an.
·••Theref!!V!been JO many reports
about us_~qw. we've only aot (Com-
munist Piifydaily) Pravda Jeft to eo:·
joked one of about 10 youns fans
outside the Gorky Street apartment
block Sunday.
The fans said they bad become so
used to ICCioa Soviet reporters reant-
ly that they filllcd loudly when told
by an Aasoc1ated Press reporter that
she had come to talk with them.
"We don't need such correspoo-
denU1" said one airl, apparently
aJludios to the foreisn identity of the
newt aaency. None of the fans was
willioa to be idc~tificd or answer
questions, but they JOked freely in the
rePorter's presence ..
.. Stat heae with us, then they can
take you to the militia too," quipped
one teen-age airl whose red, sboulder-
length hair was a tousled imitation of
PUiadtova'1. . Both Sovaetlbya ya and the
Mo&cow r.outh ncw1papcr
Moskovlky KomJOmolets quoted
locaJ Komsomol (Commun1 t 'Youth
teaaue) Offida conc:edma that they could do nothina bout thC fans.
.. A hundred, 200 peop_le, thar1 n01
many," Komsomol ofTA:iaJ ~
Pavlov told Mo1kov1ky Komsomolets. <4£spcclaJly if they're
just standina there. not intttferina
with anybOdy. You can't detaln them
j un for that. What do you want to do
with them?
.. J thank here we .have the whOlc
problem of unorpnized leisure lime,
about which we discuu so often.
There arc no free premises ••. not
enouah tcaehera and cntbutiasu (to
wort with youth)."
Another offiaal quoted by Sov-
iet k.aya Rosaiya suageatcd premisea
·be rnade available for fan clubs at
which the youna Sovieu could pther
"without the11 bottles of port wine"
and perhaps ev~n meet their idols. .
It was not clear, however, how this
would lessen the reported oblnlion
of some of the fans. One 19-yea.r-old
identified only as Tanya told
Moskovsky Komaomolcts she bad seen a film starring Pupcbova S6
times. Her friend had seen it IS..
times, she added.
Both newspepen sugestcd that
teen-agers turned to pop idolt be-
cause they led empty lives influenced
by what Sovieukaya Roaiya de-
scribed as ••so-caJled unfavorable
families" and what the fans see u
.. borina, unintercstina" jobs. Tanya; fOr tnst1nce, ll1d
came a fan five )'Cati qo ... I bad no
undentandina with my parents, just
like now. J had no close Jirlfriends. I
' A. R0b1ns6ns Sare ... r
FALL SALE AND CLEARANCE
\
Iii Q I Kl " I \\
II II
........... DNESDAY -ONLY!
$19.99 .
FAMOUS NAME COTTON KNIT SHIRTS
Rt'g. SJ/. Yuu know tlx look. You Im"' the Ji t.
\f't h.1t~ .m .mortment of H/C$ .md colors, ""purr
wtton-all pt41T £ \c 1tm11mt! find thtw1 111
Robimon '.s Men's A mts, 21.
-
----- ----
...
,,
•
"
YI .
•
NI \ )f t >LR
..
4
..
·:
-----
--------
•
BONUS PLAN TABLETOP SALE
SAVE 20·0/o
ON DANSK ;DINNERWARE, DRINKWARE AND FLATWARE
. AND CDLLECT BONUS '.CERTIFICATES .-· .
. GOOD TOWARD AN ADDITIONAL TABLETOP PURC·HASE.
1
SAVE ON l DINNERWARE COLLECTIONS
For the first tlmt roer, Danslt Two/1 and Concerto collect1ons .ire on salt. And along with
t~. the three p.:lttmu m t~ Flora collttt1on, mcluding the popular ntw indigo de>tgn. As a
rptnal bonus you 'II rrmve a fttt sugar and O"tamtr from D.inslt whtn 'JOU p14rch~ eight
4·pitte p!Act ~ttings of the Flora colltction. Use your new casual contnnpor11ry dinnt!'TWart
on mon formal occasions as ~II; it's all in how you rmx and march-the very emnct of
Danslt d(Jign. You'll save 20% on accessory pttcn, too, a further opportunity
to custofnrze yo
SAVE ON LEAD CRYSTAL BARWARE, WITH A GIFf OFFER FROM DANSK
Another Danslt first, a set of four all·purpo~ bar 'gL.sses are /rtt from Danslt with your
purcha~ of any 11 bar gl11s~s m any of the 4 patterns available. ~ wtll g1w 'JOU a gift
fonn with 'JOUr pure/Jase; send u, along with your sales receipt, to Danslt at the address
chown on the fonn. They will smd you your gift d1rrctly.
SAV E ON STAINLES-5 FLATWARE, AND RECElVE A GIFf WITH A
40-PIECE SET.
•
---
SAVE ON COORDINATING STEMWARE
Our two nt1,1, pattems, TiwTlaiiil "Frtmi, wUI complement the ainnerw.zrt ~tterm in the
Danslt colltctrons of tht s.imt name. Creau a toe..! loolt umh all four sues.
£111oy the 1818 stamlus steel m any of nx contemporary fkJtterns. You'll saw 10% orrboth
_ OJ't!! >toclt p_urchaseJ a!ul p_/.ace setll~. ~nd With~ seltttwn of.. tight Jp~ct plac!_ sttting~--
D::mslt u11// send you the matching serving spoon 11nd sninng lorlt fret Salt mds Octobn JI,
1984. Robinson's Chma, 67/GIAssware, 86/Silwr FL.t'Wart, 181, all stores except Palm
Sprmgs. Remember to .zslt about our Chma Club Plan.
HERE'S HOW OUR BONUS PLAN WORKS: .. FOR EVERY $250-YOU .SPEND, RECEIVE A S25 CERTJFlCATE ...
FOR EVERY $500 YOU SPEND, RECEIVE A $50 CERTIFICATE ..
FOR EVERY $750 YOU SPEND, RECEIVE A $75 CERTIFICATE
FOR EVERY $1,000 YOU SPEND, RECEIVE A $100 CERTIFICATE
( 1.imqu<' 5 pc pl.ice ~lltnR Rtg. S40.
Sale SJ2 Wr){)d Accent 5 pc pl.ue >eltWJ!.
Reg $55. Cialt S44. Variat1011 V 5·p<. pl.ic't•
1eumg. Reg 140 Sale SJ2
''' 'k'''
Indigo, from flora mllcuron 4 />< pl.ue selttnJl,.
Rey, H2 50. \.,ft SJ4
Adall,lfl, {mm ( mffcrtn collcwrm Solid b,md in 1<ra y, h/111•
fJr taupe· 4 f)( place 11·tfmJl. R<'R S41. 50. ~ale SJ4
Allt'Jl.Yll, /111111 ( 11111 ('r/11 1l)ll<:ct11m !1m1 b.md m 11.r.i\, /i/111
or l.JUf'' 4 f< pl.itt• \t'ttlnf<. R<g S42 50 5.lle SJ4
f /or.i 11.oblt'l A /co wine or f/11tt
chiJmp.111.ne l<t-11.. SI] SO each
'>.ilt $9. 99 flora «mit.il Reg SR.
Salt $6 )9
T1w/1 goblet. Abo u·mc nr flute
champagne. Reg. SI]. 50 each
5alt $9. 99 Tnm'1 cnrrli.JI. Reg. SH.
S.1/1 S6.J9.
. .
florv
&mus Plan certific.ztes are available on combmed q11alrfied purchases you
make per day. You may redeem them any wne btforr October J I, 1984 on another
tabletop purchase from Robinson's China, 67/Glasswarr, 86/frne Crystal,
Jl9/Chrn" Gifts, 183/Srlver Hollowa'ff, lSISi/7,,>er Flatwart, 181 Your certificates
-....·11/ bt issued upon deltt>ery of your order, .md a'ff not avatlahle on m.irl or phr:11e
order purchases. These gift wuh purch.ise cert1ficatn art avarl.ible
e-cclunwly at Rolnnwn's. we hope 'JOU etl)Dy using yours.
'TA9 ETOf BOtH'S l'l A'4Cl.RT Fl A
s25 ~ ·~s .
.......... _..,.... ___ ··---·-· ----· --··
Ht 111 I IC'm
&:lie fleur, /mm T1volJ. colltctron. Gray, blut or taupe.
;pc place settrn11. Reg.1'$50. 5ale $40. r ..
Two/I
Cordon. S pc. place setting. Reg. SJJ.50.
Sale SJO. Nile. S·pc. place setttng.
Reg. SJl.50. Salt SJO. Pyramul. S·pc. place
semng. Reg. SJJ.SO. Sale SJO.
la Tulipe, from Tiwlr colltction. Gray, blue or taupe.
4·pc. plact setting. Reg. $48. SO. Salt SJB.80.
juniper, from Flora collect1on. 4·pc. place selling.
Reg. S41. SO. Salt SJ4.
Bayberry, from Flora collect1on. 4·pc. plact settrng.
Reg. S42. 50. 5.lle SJ4.
v~ ""'~ ,
~
Gustav, •ll·purpose or highbtlll.
Reg. S1'. ~It Sil.
fu cette, 11ll-purpo1t or highb.11.
• Reg. SH S.lt S/2.
Or>i1/ Factttt, llll·purpo~ or
hi hb.11. Rtg. S/6. S.lt 112.80.
J
ROBINSON'S C~PH:fiERlZzD~D~g. w.fO~GISTfii MAKE AN APPOINTM NT WI ~Oil ON ~ A ~REAR T ROBINSON' .
W 'LL RECORD YOUR GIFT PRE RENCES IN EVERY TORE VIA TH ONLY COMPUTERIZ D ERVICE
IN OUTl-1 RN CALIFORNIA. .
,
~ .
-
lllESDAY. OCTOBER 9 1984
Mouth can tell about· hidden ailments
Often Provide habit=ush thett tongu forward. The result u often
• misar teeth and a bi,th, painted palate. lo some ----=-----....:.,__,__---__ ..._ _____ th.is condition may Indicate that the chtld u having the first medical screening difficulty breat!iina throuah the nose. .
-rhe palate is also the floor of the nose," he e1plained.
.. If one is miaa~. the other ii as wclt.1• By SUSAN MONAHAN
Dally Pilot C.rrespoD4nt
Your mouth can tell your dentist more than how
efficiently you brush your teeth or whtther you've •n
eatina too much candy
lately. It can also alert him
or her to the po s1ti1lity o
disease in another pan of
your body.
"The eyes, mouth and skin are often the orpns
where you can first see someth1na wrong," said
Scott ford, DDS., who
shares a Huntiniton Beach
practice with bis wife, Julie.
Ford said that becaux the
mouth is composed of mus-cle and bone as weJl IS soft
tiaaue, H often holds more
clues than the eye.
.. It's imPortant that a
dentist just not say,
'There's a cavity on this
tooth, let'a r.x· it,' .. said
Ford. . SCO'IT FORD, DDS.
Asthma, sinus trouble or adenoid problems may force
the child tO ttSOtt to mouth bteathins. nd often tOngue ~s an attempt 11 creatina more SJ>!lOC (or air
Pl"roid is =Mpicio~ wben a patient mows signs of
perjodontal (&um) diseue at an earl~ ~ .. Diabeucs are
especially prone to bealioa problems, •he explained. Fiery
red pms1 loose teeth and multiple a~ can all be'
sips of dilbetes. •
But Ford emphasized that dentuts should be aware of
a patient'• circumstances when interprctina symptoms. A
fu~ infection can mean diibetet in one ~rson. while
another may have the same .reaction to a high dosage of antibiotics. And those red. bleed.in& sums could be due to
hormonal chanaes associated with puberty or~·
A Vitamin C deficiency can also retard healina. wb1le
someone Jacki=vitarnins may have chronic chapped
lipt and crusty its in the comer of the mouth. Oecreued iva secretion can not only make a pc: non
more susceptible to oral diseaie (saliva is h1&h in
~
I HELP YouRSELF L~-·--------~~---·-~-
While the acid that causes tooth decay can sometimes be attributed-toil~ it ~10 iasbointestiual._. ____ ~--
problems such as ulccn. "The tqioniq of the diptive system is the mouth," noted Ford. "If there is no bacteria
and hi&h decay, then the acid is comina from somewhere
else." · Did you notice
The self-starvation of the anorectic and the self-around Southern
BRENNAN
induced vomitina ~cticcd by the buJemic can create an California during the
acid environment in the mouth, for exampl.e. l"he location Olympics that there
of the problem can also have significance for a dentist; the seemed to be a lot of insi~ and blCb of the lower tee~ are often decayed in a peopl~t jogina b~tem1cbecause.tbeseareasaresubjecttorepea1edcontact . and ndin1b~l~ ,. C:"SIDY· with..stOmach aad. ------·· · ·• lt'a almost-u1f ~ · ft.J
Ford said that the aae of a patienuhould also be ta.ken the spirit of the•••••••••••• into account dmna a dental examination ... With youna Olympics stirred that
children, we pay special attention to the roof of the part of our coUective consciousness which recosnized that
mouth." . •• _ · -• " . . physical conditioning is a necessary pert of our health. Many children are tonaue thrusters, mearuna they How many times have you satd to yourself that you
PAPAR AZZI
--~---=-~-~-
Tom Klel•naoeao•erdetalb oflntDeCo. beadqurtenreceptlon
on Ko•. 1 wltlillartba Green andllarrletCoauSoun Bal~
OCPS to see Bren exhibit.
museum's f!"ee on Tuesdays
BJ VIDA DEAN ..., .... ..,......,
"I hope you like abstract and impressionistic art, ..
said Tom Nlelta. discussing the upcoming Nov. I
patrons' party the Irvine Co. will host for the Oranae
County Philharmonic Society. Guests will have the
opportunity to view Dould Brea'• collection in the
corporate offices at the affair which will be a prelude to
the 2S\h OCPS fashion show at the Irvine Marriott on
Nov.14. ' Nielsen wasaddressinaauestsaboard the B.P.Jobn
II as they cru11ed aoout the harbor. "The Irvine
Company welcomes the opportunity to assist the
Phi~onic. My motherwasa music teacher and
. pta~in a U'io, IO I have an important intcreat in
mus1~·'(Tbccruilewuaprcludetothe&mhlde).
AbOltd were.hyH lleaame, EtleM and,,...
ArtakeYld, Marllla Q,....111an1ett C.1, fashion Show
chairman ElaJH Delmu, Au and Ru• Paa,., MIHJ
Prowell, ..... 811dlaer, DluUTally,PatandAlu
~ykand Lei &111••1t president ofOCPS.
"We reac iiiore Cbildren-27S,000-throu&b
\ our musical propamuhan anyothcraroupin the
country. At Jeut no one bu ever challeqed our record.
And another thins people don't rulize is the number of muslcian1Vthohaveem~oymcntoppottunitiesdueto
the oonc:eru we spont0r, said Knobbe.
(Tbirtywomen'scommitteetthrouahoutthe
oounty pendtimconbenefitatobrinainfurids. They.
are so busy that we may have to cbaqe the name of th11
column to Phm'lha onicruzi.) o.&Ue B•twtltp MieaJIOaboard for the
cnaite ... the 8. • JOhn II bClonp to them. It'• a I 02·foot Feadship~tbe Rollt-Royceofthewater, said Dottie). "'Wc&ake1~~tthreeorroordme11week ."aid!8enof
B.P.JohnFWniturc. "Wcet\iOt.hbet.ausowcworked •• hatd toearnit. Dotueand I ~tlnalotofl().hourdays.
hortly after that, pestt had theoppOrtunlty to ICC
B p John l 11theycrultedatonanibblina hoi'ld'ocuvrcs .ftd· aalldna ~ilbarmOfl "There it is"', said Dottie.
"lt'sonly62~." • • • lntcresunaisOUTandlntri&ulnalalN. • ' "Ir you don't undentand • con~rnP9~1~ of
J .. )'."That intrlaua me., '' 11lcl &"'7..,. 111
mttv 11 Newpott Harbor Art Muteum to announce
r<fimTuetdays."
(Th11 new prqaram ofTenna ftce adm i ion to the .
.............. ..., .....
BarrJBabbdl8CuM9 •rree'he9da,.' at •••port Bart.Or' Art lla.MGID Wltb Don Sactieeea. wbolaandenmtlq tbep,-ro.a..!lec .... t.
muteum on TuCldays, bcairinina today for one full year made possible by aarant t'iom Butterfield Slvmpand
Loan ofSanta Ana).
Rea1>9nsiblc for the arant was DOii Eadraea; presiden(andCEOofButtcrfield, wbowas inon the
patio an &alk. (Boyd is curator for Butterfield's own
collection Vthicb features 60to10 pieoca ofSouth·
westemart.) . • •• .. You have to feel JOmeth1na when you View an.
said Endresen, comparina it to music.
Ttie fint exhibata to be viewed t>y the Free Tuesday
IJ"OUPI will be ''First N~n Bicnnial 1984: LA •
Today .. and ''Steel WitnadorthcTime Deina:
Sculptures by William Wiley.'' •
le.t.C.U.y,NHAMdirector,approacbedour
sroup and was asked how he would dclcribe the Waley
piece nearby. which ap~ t~ be about·~ 8·~00! tcel
cancmbClltlhN bya vanetyof1ttms(vcry1ntnau1na)
.. Heevy," be answered. "It wunoteasytoact u
moved in here. It's very heavy." .
hrt)"'IOm toured the ohibits with Pau.
mel,curator~livinahi1interprctat onofthtpa
beard britfwo by HarrJ a.a..M~ ~elJi U1
and WherealCI prod_almed bY T• IWl1. ~so.
Endreltn spoke notina that 8uuttfield thanked l
mu1Nm forlbeoppc>nun1ty1opaniapmte n the Free
Tue.day prosram to pro¥Jde the public aiu~ a to themuteUm.(Hounare IOa m.1ojp.m.dallye oept
Mon~ys).
<>then that(what 1 varlet~!!'~ocuvrcs t
hld!)indudedE.O.andWm eut
N~1!9"and h9ll Mel. r .. BaJ,OarelSM" .Niii ...-,Metlt VI~ 0.t~•P.IMUll
K..U.FnadeandJtM LllMeand Jule Ai'Mlt. ~ . .
antibodies). It also can indicate an existing problem. -1 bad one pat&Cnt ~ a C:haflle m the
.. AnYthlnathat~therestofthesystemcan~ condiuon of b1s teeth. .. he ........... --... 1 aold hc.110 ~
the saliva Qow," id Ford. addina that the adpnts can chc:cked out by ad be had tJerecl •
include diet, dn.ap. iU or suess. wan ean attaek:."
Although Ford often recommend a medical follow· Other paticn who apparently 111 better ..._
up When be notices an abnonna!ity, be aays thit dentists avcrqe ·condition and bad ll cams tor keda "'"
cannot be classified IS .. tooth ~W1" nolictbd oom~nq of lOOth Kha. A dllCUW .cl .. Most people only IO to see a doctor when l.hey'rc leisure time activmcs unco'-ered &be fact I.bat they worbd
feelin& 'ck ••• but JJ':C>PIC will come in far a routine ~tal out:f.:ldeal-cspec:iaUvwilb wcilbts. Eyeryume~ checkup, M> Often re provide the fint medical screeni.N." ,._ th · ...... 1-•'-"' .ho clenched tbd lee1h he said, mentioning in particular lhe white or rild patebcs ·~ cir m~ un.z r
on the tOllJUC, cheeks or lipt that can mean mouth cancer · · ''When sorru:one comes into &he oftioe. l let ahem
and are oftenfirsi noticed durin,a a dental examination know that rather tbanjUll treat Ole 'pb~ problem, we
F rd bet. · · · '---·· bo tii can alSo ~t the diet and maybe the fifMyk ... Sorneumea o ievcs it as unPortant 10 IUJUW more a ut s my treatment indudes a on that Chc•nauent "* pauenCSthantheir$Ymptoms,althouabbeahicsawayfrom _ ..... =ta•:.--... ___ " -
the •holistic' label -1bat'1 beclOme a buzz rd. Wt ~ UU'U ~
prefer to be called 'health centered' dentisu... Ford is scheduled 10 appear on .. Hour Mapzine'" on
He said that they are more interested in preventina Channel 5 next month to lhart :his phllsopby that bdpin& illness than in repainna dam_aae. and will tb~fore tty to a pataent to set aoa1s and take respo bility often pan of
help their patienu identify Potentially bannfuJ behavior the dental prosram.
patterns. . ~is is not normad1!k:,ba1 you expect to karn ao a
Referring10TypeAbehavior,Fordpoiotedouttbata dentist's cbalr, .. be ... penon•s ,attitude can
hip-stress lifestyle has been linked to be.art disc:asc and influeoce~cooditionofhisorbermoutbaadvx:eva..
cancer. He said that stress can also manifest itself in• "Often When a person FU contrOI of bas 4enbll
nocturnal bnixism (tooth pindina). cold sores and other condition. he realizes that be~ .control over Olbcf ~
dental abnonnalities. of bl life as wcU ...
Tl
don't have the time? The truth is you may not have the people especiilly the elderly. But caution: Watki111 l11 day
ti.me not to exercise! • at work does not count in your acn:ise need. t mua be a specific_ period set Uide durina caCb day or every odler. Yow: bea!th }S your p-eatesta~ It only~ a bout This ,..ru allow your meow procm lO focus OD dial or two Wlth sianificant ~or inJury to n:U>force that activity.
v.alue for most of":'· If you re DO! bealthx. 11 iD.O~ Appropriate me~ attitude will reap poM:ifW ..er~ facet of.your hfe. Som~ ongoLJ!&phys1caJ condj~ ~-.Ito. . ....... • ~• ma ~~ is essenfw to your~etlfli and t&eiifdrt-10 ·s incrcdi tcientific evidaace ftidl domoN ·
your liftstyle. , __ strates the positive dfccts of good pb)'lical coadinoeina:
Whether you swim or run or ride, pump iron, stretch They raJ'F &om ltrcnC'bcnin,a lheapeaty or Y'JIO' heart
or do aerobic dance, the type of exercise is.o't importanL and luna fuDctioa to reta.n:lina the ckwlopneaa of
You must do somethins on an ongoing be.sis. · dqeoerative diJCates that occur with ~ •·.Or
Even simply walking is appropriate exercise for some frOm controllina the deleterious effects obesity and hiah
blood~ to the P.Ofitive cfrects auoc:iau=d wnb llf'CSI
reducuon.
Conditionina exercise is so pfuJ to ~'OW' beahh ill
pcnJ and aids so much iD protcaiou from J.Dj":')', that we
probably have much more time for at then we dUnk.. ----...,,--------__.._r----, Which takes more time, the 20 min.Ula a day Of
Blleen AltUo'ricJl aboard B.P. JOlua 'IL
cxercile or the month recoverina from &hat little pulled
muscle in your back that .oWd. not have ooamed if you
were jn good shape?
Think aboul it. Is it more ume consuming 10 baTe a
heart attack or to delay. po1S1bly pn:ven.t it :wtth aoOd
conditioning? If you wait until after ;your ftrSt heart~
you ·n know for sure!
And the deleterious dJects ofsednnary life dOa ·1 just
occur with .. old ~" Why do you think a professional
football yer is over me b.i1r at 30 -nas ~ i.c·a
coedmoaotrrl' die peak~ atfoctcd
first. AJ>d. he'd be .. ova the hill'' at 20witbout exercitie &Dd
sophisticated conditioniaa prosrams. ·
So next ti.me you bear yoWself sayina you don't have
the time ·-you'd bietter think apin. . _
J. BrelJll&O Q#idlo::.D., . pncuca 6m1Jy and
emef'Jtl1cy m«J.id~ ia Mesa.
Today's man of
passion lives ljfe
lustily.
Aod while
passionate livina cer-
tainly includes sex.
it's oh ... so mucb
more.
. LI DI
Ai.Cm
•
T o d a y ' s ·----------passionate man takes
his pleasure from his physical and mental cncray. He takes
pndc in bunsclf and 10 his bomc.
-He is curious about ideas and involved 10 causes.
He seeks out new experieoccs and new relationships.
He's the best kind of playmate for a woman who pouesaes
·her own personal secunty system, because he ~ecu the
notion of havin& to prov1de external sccu.rit)' for another
person. . .
Today's pau.ionatc man knows bow to nprcu his
needs and cxpccu the othen in bis life to do lbe same .
~vid is a P.'LS"Onatc.m~. ~e lo\ es !O quote AibC:n
£in5te1n, who said, "lmlJlnatlon is more important than
knowlcc:tic." His is a v..-orld of comfortable Self-expression.
He baa the ability to communicate.bis fccliap. as Well as
his ideas. In fact. if anYlhin&. David is aa:uJCd by his friendS ofbeiQa too frank. -
Women respond to DaVld. and he. in turn t,ovcs ~m not just se'tually. but for their softness and their ability to
add a new dinicnsion to his life. H" prlfncnd. Beth. both
lo\'cs and questions hi passiona a\ality.
he RttDUY sent b1m a rhyme bicb read:
"From where 1 it Womantttr, doesn't fit
Yet. I can't iwt
Wonddin&.'' O.vid ciilcd v.i)Cn be rcceh'Cd it. He 1 the man of
toda • He lauahs easil)' and treats th as an ua1 ••• and
1t•1 J_ust for efTca.
In fatt.. it's Beth •ilo 11 more '10COmfonable with tbe mlity of her .. man" •'bo c pecU a ouldef·\~
5hoUlder operation
0. vid ~em lhe iidca of labclia& him \f wnhin tbe
limited identity ofY.h.at ~ dbcs cam a livi
more an tcnns of hat he for 1 fa d
he 0
...
If you don't want to be a loser, don't try to win
*"
E111
Bo11Ec1
1uidelin br OfTCt$ any rut . You're
out thetton your own. Here'1utabat
it.
Winnina is not the team sport that
lo 1na a It's po ibly the most
e du ·vc club an cxistcnoc an the
nited Stat tOOa)'. dm1t noc is
med b) domg something first, the
tc t or the best No one hkcs
wanner ho cts hkc bed rv or i
cxpeclC'd to wan. You always think
)ou"re oi"g to feel better when you
win than )OU tuaUy do. Winnerure1twa~squo1in thcJatc
Vince Lombardi of the Green Bay r kcr who said, 0 Winnin1 i n't
cverythil)g Ifs the ONLY thinJ. ••
and formei .pl'C$idcnt Ric.hard M.
Herpes victim. UJ?.deserving .
DEAR NN LANDERS: I am so &llfl'Y I am puttina a ide evcrythina to
wnte to you It's the letter from
Greenville. S.C., that sot to me. In a
letter si&ncd .. No Sympath>." the
writer said, "People who ,et herpes
deserve tt ."
Four years ago my hu band bad an~
affair w1th a tramp. I learned of tt
when I discovered I had herpes. Did I
deserve it?
I am onl) 30, ha\ e four children to
nuse and am now divorced. I am
reluctant to become romantic.ii)'
interested m another man because I
have this disease. I am trying to
overcome my rettccnce, and with the
backup of my suppon group. called
HELP, I'm making fantastic progress.
...
l.uDEIS
from people hke me who were
lltlJCrcd by that cruel letter. Please
pnnt mine. -One Who Didn't
Deserve It.
DEAR DIDNT: I d1d ntttlve a ton
of ma11, bat a 1arprlda1 namber wbo
wrote daewe4 me oat for be1D1
1ympatlaed c to Uae berpes victim .
Here'• a aample. I bope It doesn't ralD
you day.
was temblc.
What bothen me about most sex
counsclor:s. like you, is the manner in
which you accept promiscuity as
normal behavior. Your advice u
ocntcred around methods to dis-
rcprd the Lord's rules, avoid the
restraints and skin around the conse-
quence~.
We don't need anr. more alibis to
absolve sinners of gwlt. What we DO
need 1s more attent1on paJd to the
.. Thou shall nots." The net res uh
would be increased joy 'in livmg and
loving. far beyond the shabb10css that
is so often reflected in the letters I read
in yourcolurnn-and unfortunately,
in some of your answers. -Playing
by the Rules in Fairplay;Md.
DEAR PLAYING -or perhaps I
bad better addren yoa u Dear Rales:
ToNIGHT'S TV
-------
As ch one Po c, they kept
reiumi not to th ir but
to theu allures. It seemed Ult)' had
I med from them .. soncn 1trongcr
from them ... overcame them ... and
iook enonnous pride in them. Lo ing
-not winnina -had made ell or
them whatever they had beComc.
As someone wiser than most
people once .said, "The only people
who never fail. .. arc those who never
try." •
I am a mce person. If you met me
vou would lake me. I look like all the
other women who stand an the
checkout hne at your local super-
market.
You arc sure to receive a ton of mail
DEAR ANN LANDERS· Your
response to the person in GrcenvilJe,
S.C.. who expressed .. No Sympathy"
for the woman -~icked up herpes,
Your aelf-ripteouae11 11 eiceedect
oaty by yoa.r lack of compau 1oa. How·
.4oH It feel ap dtere -abon tH mere
monalJ wh make mlltUet.
Keith C&rradlne and Tueaday Weld •tar ln
.. Scorned and Swindled," the atory of a mao
wbo llYed by 0 matl'J'laa.. and· inrtn~
, ouCBS,C
'
1 recently acquired the means to
~1art investj ng seriously. And thats
important, beause I want to buy a
home. So I researched until I found
American Savin~. They're the
nation's largest savings and toari .
And a smart Investment Officer
there helped me put together an
investment plan to help me meet
aJJ my financial obj~ves~~
2 ."'
Meryl Sv..p, Kl'lln l(h
~~AOOUONlY •
* "Frtghtmn" (1911) F«d'lnlnd
~Luca 8erccMc:l FAERIE TALE TMfATAE
FNltf l ALEXANDEA
-8:30-
(J) E/R
9 THAEF8 A CROWD
fiCTAC DOUGH
CUBS FtfAl tlOHUGHT8
I EHTERTANEIT TOtlBHT
Wl.O NllEICA
-8:45-
(J) L0Ve BOAT
' -b»-8 Cl) MOYIE
"Scorned And S'#indled" (Prtmln)
Tu.dly Weld, Kmh C*1ldine 8 ltl PAPER DOU.8 • NEWS
MERY GAfflN
NATURE MOYE **** "Flddlet On Thi Roof'' (P#t 1of2)(1971) Topol, Nonna ()ant.
C) ALFRED tlTCHCOCK
PRE8BfTS
(l)MOVE *** ULM'• Spend Thi Nigh1 T ogllhl(' (1982) The Rollng Ston..
-t.IO-CID AND F l'M asmD-PART I cm 8'TYlE • .,.
-t.46-
(f)MOVE *** "HouleOn ~Rold"
(1970) awtstoplw Georgl. Jtnlt
leigtl. -~
D THE BAm:RED WOMAN
Two directors joining Disney 1-1~kffe . ~ !Tu.abt'lh '61ll~nn
bhrwl Vul/J<lll"
, • .. " RfJXirW'r a1HI PHblimt
LOS ANGELES {AP) -The new
management of Walt Disney Pro-
ductions moving to become a com-
petitor f'or Hollywood's top talent,
has hired directors John Mazursky
and John Avtldsen to make movies
for the studio.
The commitments to Mazursky
-("Moscow on the Hudson") and
A vild.scn ("The Kaiite Kid") were
confirmed by outa<>ina production
president Richard Berger and rep-
resentatives of the directors.
It marks the first ume Disney bas
actively souaht directors who leave
their own creative and personal
imprint on their films. In the past, the
studio always wanted iu films to be
unmistakably "Disney."
Mazursky's film WJll be "Jerry
Saved From Drowning," a oomed}'.
loosely 1nsp1red by the 1932 French
film by din:ctor Jean Renoir, .. Boudu
Saved From Drowning." The oripnal
film waubouta boobcller whosavea r:================================================:;-i a tramp from drownina, only to see
INTRODUCTORY PRE-CHRISTMAS OFFER
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tlons at regular retail.
Offer Valid Through Oct. 9th & 10th
Times: 10:00-1:00, 2:00-5:00
MOTHER/CHILD PORTRAIT
AVAILABLE
AT NO EXTRA CHARGE
THE PORTRAIT STUDIO
J~Penney _
..
2300 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA, CA 92626 .
FAMILY PORTRAll8 AVAILABLE
Call for d .. t II tod y
848-5021
PreMnt t la lld for •pedal ott.r
. r
•
the bum invade tus house and disrupt
his life.
The A vildsen film is "The Navi-
ptor, .. which will start production in
January for a Christmas 198S release.
The long production time is required
because of numerous special effects.
The movie, written by Michael
Burton, tells of a I S-ycar-<>ld boy who fallS 1nt0 a raVine and wnes up fi ve
years later and bas oot aged. Tho film
follows his attempt to recapture those
missin,gycanand cu.l..minates with his flying a spaceship back in time.
..
'Use of the Hall'
·splendid comedy
at Irvine theater
Mr. T embroiled
in family lawsuit
.
I)' CHRIS CRAWFORD Oran9e Cc?unty community theater • ...,,...c.-, ,,,,...,., odivenna a very pcnuasive per·
Qfferina a splendid finish for the formance as the matriarch Bess is Irvine Commumtr, Theater·• 1984 Nathalie Michaud. who has enjoyed
ICUOI\ is Oliver Ha1lcy'1 .. For the Use lengthy carttt in loall theater. As
of the Hall " which opened last Bcsl, Michaud serves u the namtor -weekend and will continue tbrouah and the intimate link between au· Oct. 27. dience and action. In her rote as the
In a funny off-the·wall tribute to motherwhowantstooutlivealloOicr
life•s ~nderachieven, Hailey pments children. . Michaud's performance
us with a look at some tra&icomic spa.rkles with subtle observations and ~~Rt :themselvea up for ddi&lltful dry humor.
lives of fallurc by creating un-Marcia Bertholf (Charlotte} and
reachable ..aoats for the!"~} vet. 1ohn Greenslade (Allen) are a fine ~n .an all or noth1n1 mode of comedy team a a once-rich coup&e ~:tedkintha. ~ex cha~ctcrs .have de· Wbo have swiftly 1one throup their a . at1fthey~n thave1tall, they mon~ and are now reduced to
will settle for nothms. . . . , shoplifting at lf0(%ty stores and On~econtrary,adVJ~Haileytna stea.lina canned ~ from their
, .~ea~cal metaphor which serves as elderly oeigb.bors in order to cat bis Utle, we can be sJad ... for the use of ·
• ' LES (AP}-t
an .. A-Tam•• ICJIDCDI from bchi
an~ bunker, r. T in a le Jo Wk about the • wtcd.alhim. ry wants lo. ue Mt. T,,"
he • 06Whan they don•1 ttalitC lS
that after be na sued by~our broO>tr evtr)'\hiDI CbC is~·• '
He peusedt then added. .. I can't tCU
}!>~ !"hY ~y family u IUIDI me.
Tbey re IUln& me &ccause I've sot money. They didn't sue me when 1
didn't have any money."
Mr. '[~wasshootin&a ~for the hit NJM,,; advcnt~medy .. The
A-Team" on a cliffin San Pedro is bein&iuatfors10.ooo~F-QusTero of°*8&6 for of an
cmpkmneut c;outract.
OusandanotherbrOther, ate, had
worked for Mr. T as bod)'IU&ids until
last ~ Nale quit a6d Gus was
fired, which is the basis of his suit.
the hall" -a life span to use whatever An equally ef_fective pairina are
C1qree of talents and skills we do Mary Benton (Abee) and Ron Duvall possess. (Martin). Duvall is comically zany
In the end, some of the playwright's and neurotic as the pla~ght whose
characters are able to accept their plays rarely survive ~njna ni&ht. By
smaller talents, whereas othen are way of contrast, Abee is calm and
'Ron Dan.11 (left) and Job.Ji Greenalade are rtftla wbo
tolerate one another 1n "Por the Uee of the Ball" at the ,~e Community Theater. '
Mr~ T bas just published hii autobiography. ..Mr. T; the Man
With the Cold.. .. but Nate and Gus
and three of his siuen told Peop&e
magazine the lecend of Mr. T is
hokum.
terminally destmed for wasted lives. a~t1n'-of her life u a writer of lat 8 p.m. t~rough Oct. 27 with a
"For the Use of the Hall" is the child~n s bool? and caretaker of Sunday.ma.tmee Oct. 21 at 2 p.rn. in .
fourth Hailey play to be prOduccd bY Mafl!n .. And m the same calm;' the ~ud1tonum of Turtle Rock Com-
lbe lrvineCommunityTheaterand is tlr~mmnersbegivesber· mwuty PMk,.~o Swulybill..R.oad..oft' ~~ly well served b)' strona uns~'"ble ~usband a aun (a gjft for Turtle Rock· Dnve in Irvine. Call
.direction from ICT man&flDI direc-opcrungrughts)andma~cstofinish 8S7-:S496 for reservations and infor-
tOr Tom Titus, who also directed the. off'. her mates in a senes of car mauon. Oranlc County premieres of Hailey's aCCJdents. ~=~--------...:;_.....J
.. Father·s Day/ .. First One Aslcep1 Lenorc..Stj~..ai~ LY~ • -willsUe ano ,_id -'Rover, --ileo tainina poruaYii·as Teny, Martin•s t9"--~--~..-.;.....,..-.11s:.-;;-.---.iu-~-
Rovcr .. on the ICT siaae. · b r. ls 'il ed .In castina this latest Hailey play suter, a nun w o rce J t by Jesus
Titus bas chosen six uperienced and is in the throes of a career crisis.
performers with a'lroven abi11·li,; ... m· "For the Use of the Hall .. per-,. ""''" formances are Fridays and Saturdays
Tony Bill ~pens restaurant
· LOSANOELES(AP)-Tbe latest
Hollywood celebrity to 10 into the
restaurant business is producer and so1n;e~e actor Tony Bill Ball, in pannersb1p with Dudley
Moore and Liza Minnelli.: has opened
the !"Sta~nt in V eniee, 1.0s Anaetes•
radical chic area. Its informal at-
mosp~~ 11 •ttractina a number of
celebnltcs.,
Carroll O'Connor, Sonny Bono,
Patrick O'Neal and Jerry lewis have
all opened restaurants at one time or
apotber, and a number of stars have
~n silent partneQ in some of the
fanciest celebrity banaouts.
Cha.sen'&, still a favorite with the Ho~ywood establishment, was open-
ed 10 193S by former vaudeville •tooae Dave Chasen. It was originally
called the Southern Pit Barbecue and
it•s still famous for its chili.
-~--==-~--
iiiiiiii WOi)
~V..,Mlt ~
CiWiiZ
P-*s
Onngr DrM-tn
134.alll
CiWii
Clnedome
134-ZSSJ
wtSTMINST'D'
Edwlrds
Cll'lllTll West
11191 ~
wtST'Mnc5TtA
haftcs
Hl·Wty 38 DrM· In etl-3683
lmCOI i+wm'I' ..,._....._Ra
EVERY TUESDAY 2 AOUL TS EOR THE PRICE OF 1 AT THE ITADI
... .....
STAOOIOR ...
-m.1770
ml
MANN BREA 523.5339 ... ,.
BUENA PARK DR ff
821-4070 ... , ...
UA MOYl:S 8
952-4393
COSTA llSA
EDWAllOS CIUA COOllt 979'141
COSTA llSA
EDWAAOS SO COAST
PUZA S-4~2711
..
lOWARDS lN'ttllSITY
IS4 All
UHMRA
r~SQUARE
(213) 691-0633
UlmDA
SRO GATEWAY
523161 1
l.MiUMIOCH
EDWAROO SO COAST LAC~ 497 1711
--WIJO EDWARDS Y(JO
TWft 830-6991
OUlll SY\JfY CITY
C£NJ[lt 634 2553
WDlWGTO • EDWARDS CH.MA WEST
n 1·3935
'"AU. OF ME' IS A
Sl.APSTICK. HIPSTER
llYBIUD OF 'HEAVEN CAN
WAIT AND ~IE.-
_..,_ ...... PIOPLI llAoGAZIN!
STEVE LILY
MARTIN TOMLIN
AUOFME
NOWPIAYING
llllA UA.._.
9G'l .... ,.,.
'W.llcl ........ °""'. Ill-GO .... ,.,. UA--tu~
C'OITA~ t--.C-..
S.Jlat
WALK-INS* ~~v'U.:t:.-=:r *
~:t'~:. ~,~l[)[)~()I GAMt: muaous ~ rw r1 rw ROOM
II 3GU •r•n 1116) uc m>.!-~!, )
I How1rd IE Aoll1n1 Jr. SOLOte•-s STO•Y tpG) AT U ·JO 2:40
4 ~o 1 oo ~ t 1 s
Salty l"letd
PLACUINTHE tttlUUtT .. , U 111 2 :30 4 ,45 7 :f0 10:30
Noell N otte 1n TEACHERS (It)
I :00 3:10 S 20
7:30 ~ t 40
Steve Merlin
ALLOI' ... IN)
SHOWS AT 12:60 1 00 4 :00 1 :00. 00 10 00
""nee 1n , 8111 Murray f'U•fllt.& ltAIN CR) OMOSTSUSTEU CNI SHOWS AT 1Z 4S SHOWS AT U ·JS 2 :40
l :OO S:JO 7 :•S 10 OS S:OO 1 JS t ·50/ 70MM
13 itme\ '3 J 21 ~v~: ~ =:."-1!!!!)
ST ADIUm a
I j 1 , •· . .,.
C1tn1topflw P111111t TMK MLD UN (II) St,..ll Of l'lfO (Ha)
• ttOU•llYTHE CEllETIE•Y ,., plur
C.H.U .D Cllf) <1nd
Mortu1ry I")
KAllATa KIO .. , 91'tin Co·Hlt
Orrmllrtt ~Q)
COUlllTlltY IPG) Dtl"PS•UOCES ... , T .. WOllAN Jtnic. L .. n1c I '". 1'ECO..CILA.e&.a
SHOWS AT 12:30 2.50 AT 12.U J 45 5 tS .... • IUED
s 10 7·30 ~ t so 7·45 & 10 1S 8ac1'e1o!Y.:':;'c11t>
DRIVE INS 0..-1 45 Wklaysll :JI wttMl/Clh"m U.._ 12 FREE u-.. 1-.1
ti)() __., ......... •p m•
• SO COAST PLAZA •
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RUFFELL'S .
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ftrllitWOfY•~
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ORANGE ~ 171t!DtlS1 ....... ... ._ ""' a ""' ca * * SUPEISWM' MEETS• EVOY SAJ & SUN • = WMHQAf Mii~i • L.•I\' :.•.•
ALL SEATS· $2.00 AT
EDWARDStfaos~~
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t DAILY PIL:OT IT y, oetot>er a. 11 84
PUNKY INKERB AN by Tom Batluk DOONESBURY by G rry Trud
,;
.
OtN' M16H IN A L. ... f.lJ JJ SHOT ~ IN ~ ...
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
BIG GEORGE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP) s..,R_O~E~~-~---.,
~~j'M ·~~
by Jeff MacNally
\\This was in the basement with no picture
in it, but don't worry -I'll draw one!"
"A• I alw•y• ••Y· If you c•n't ••Y aomethlng
good ·~ • person, ••Y something."
~ 0
t==~~-:;::;: -
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PEANUTS
0
IT~ A!MZ1tl5 J.fOW SCWEnM~5 'ft>Ut< £~A~ 01Gre' TUAN F===~ ~ST~ ...
by Charles M. Schul.
I /O•f 1"4-f-.oe,.-... VE-A~ WMfHO---t-._ _ _,__,_
RICE TO "fOUR OIET
DRABBLE by Kevin Fagar
J MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE , OO~'T li)ORR'f
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''It wasn't an earthquake ... 1t was JUSt
Marmaduke flopping down."
GORDO
GARFIELD
MOON MULLINS
by Hank Ketcham
~
. ~z Wu.~ cMT REAO 100 GOOD
I~ SHE AAS CA1>tUACS IN HEA E~S.'
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
JM 8E:<qlNNING IM <qfTftNG
10 U~ T~lf SE:COND
i'HOOOHTS ...
by Harold Le Doux
\
BR IDGE
Both vulnerable. North deala.
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O}Mlninr lead: F6ur of •.
ln a rec.nt wue of the "'Goren
Brfd Letter:• we bema.ned lbe
fact that man1 inexperienced
pla1er1 ar ln 1 ru b to adopt 1n7
new biddln1 convention tbal
becom • popular, regardl or (ti
m rlt or' wh th r it Ru In th th
rut of their method•. Unlorlun.al ·
17, all too oft.en thia lt at the c l of
WUl, TIW 0WtVS MVTH~ ...
SHALL W~ llJE:\GH
THEM?!
~
bv Tom K. Ryan
by Pat Brady
....... '
I ~ 'ft)) CAtfT AJJl/NS ·
II Ge.T ~~ fN.W:f, ooe oor ' , i Of A llJet Of 1ll0Tlt~ . 1
j n~
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I
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..
THE SECRETS IN THE CARD
•many bridge fundamentals. two card1 higher than the eight
'For example, the tucces. or Therefore, he muat have 1tartei
fJilure of South'• three no trump with three 1pade1 and declarer wiO
contract hinge1on1 ba.tlc defensive four. .,
play. Yet many playert have mud· If Wut capturea the 10 with the
died throuah a bridr• career jack. dedner wm ret bom•
without ever bothering to undert· r pr esa of whether Wnt con
tand thl1 aimple technique. tinuea apadu or not -cteelarer wll
North-South arrive at a fairly alway1 have a 1t.opper ln ttie 1ult
normal three no trump contract. and WMt hu no tide entry. But lt4
OMAR
SHARIFF
ett mak the atandard openlnr
&.ad of th• fourth·bht or hll lonpat
and alroniut 1ult -tpad . Eut
wln1 th lln1 of 1p1det aod returnt t"-el1ht, wtucb cs.darer covtta
Wit th 10. How hould W t
d fend?
CHARLES
Go1E•
-
•
J
·'
J
..
...
J
DAILY P LOT 1Tueed8)', OctOber I, 1NM •
COMPLETE YSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONI, sr.
S I~ rt -4 . tt 11 Test your consumer credit I e 1.e name con o er . . . ·
N 1 R h · • Su01~ of t~o t that removed quired on your cc:wm•""" dlbl.. •b at ewport Deve opment esearc ers say many consumers aren t ~~:=..on m l types of con· ~20"=:.1=*..!:
well versed on rights, repsonstbflltles lnlllmois.sbe Y.S~lheanttfCSlme ~tnidcOme.
South laluna resident Cya~ fteJ110ldl SeUert has been promoted to
coairoller of nae Ne•JM>rt Dtvelopmeat C.. after workina aa the firm'•
accouotifta manager for four yean. fo her new ~t., Seifert is responsible for
oveneeint the firin's joint venture partners _and financial analyses of ftitU!'C
projects. She recently completed the cemficatc prO&flm for women 1n
manasement at UC Irvine and is finishing a similar program for real estate
investment analysis. • • • f"'
R.M. (Mike) Spencer has been named vioe president of public relations fbr
1'e ED&Juder Groep, a Newport Beacb·based nationat advertisin& and pubhc
relations firm. Spencer, a journalis~ author and filmmaker, comes to The
EnJlander Group after six years as director of corporate communications for
on new utomobilc loans-~ SUllivu--tbelllJemeat isJtnaC. By JORN CUNN1FP Jllep]Jy uted. fi 9 '"'4 9 -1 -That statement also is Calle. The rom percent to "' • percent. U' you'n: beyond 1hal 20 ~ -.,. ...._-.,.. most you can be liable for ii SSO per study showtd that in Arizona the cost lhc national .aventte 11 around 14
NEW YORK -With more th n card,evcnifyoudon'treport the card of similar I ranged bet 12 pcrcent-~ woa\,baveatrac:alila
$437 billion of consumer installment missing. You're liable for nothini if peroentand 19.9 ~nL for cm~ she aays.
cttdit out there for can and furniture you notify tbe card issuer of the lo$$ Says Sullivan: .. Dert&ulation o( Her advice: If you're in finandaJ
and items you may not have bought before the card is illegally used. rates puts more pressure on con· trouble contact crediton imftltdi.·
except for the .. easy" terms, you may A research center study sho.,,'Cd ~ers1.t•• to be smarter shoppers fO! atcly and ast about ~-..
assume borrowers know somethina that most peeple with credilcaros are "'"" paymenu. Most o( them quj4fy 10e
about credit. not aW&re of their lcpJ liability. -Laws that keep interest rates tow the 1osic of ICCCP(ina euitt ltnm in
If no~ they should. which is the --Credit bureaus provide con-on consumer loans benefit low-ender to set paid.
reason ror this true-false test, com-sumer-credit rati~ to businesses. income borrov.crs.
pitedbytbePuniucUniveni"'Credit It · • -... _,.: bu J h d Sulli ,_:...-• · • --ChaP1efSevetsoftbe~ R h Ce . ·~ 1sn t .. _.. 111;UJt reaus are o nson an van C&AUU 1t im t act permits a ddlitor to.,.erai ·II ~ a~. anhad which bcains ~-kcepins agencie1 that provide so. lbey found that low oeilinp often ~'IOUS debits and to mate a frclb with an assertton t t many people information -Socia] Sccurit) caose low-income bonowen to be .-·-·
wouJd consider appropriate, to wit number, financial and employment denied credi~ even when it appears 'lta:rL
-By law, you may file for personal status, credit history, outstandina they couJd satisfactorily repay their ft miabt be nice if it Jm"C ~ tit
bankruptcyonlyonoeevery lOycars. debts -but which leavejudaments debts. isn't. JohmOn says lb.at oWbilo mom
The statement is false. You may file to others. debts lbat are DO\ repeid . wiQi
for bankruptcy every seven years if A study done by Johnson showed, The reuon, they say, ii that in proceeds from ttie Ide of a~
-necessaf)', say Pr6feS90rs Robert lfowcvcr,llia oiiTYJ7pen:entofthose order to cover thett costs; firiiila penon'sUletsatedilc:barFd.ClC:1'111G
Johnson and A. Charlene Sullivan, queried correctly identified a credit institutions in such states pt'Cfer to other deba still must be ~
clim:tor and ~te director, re-bureau as 1 record-keepina ~· make loans only to nearly risk-free indudina federal income 1Uel.. spcctively, of the credit resean:h Peo le 1·n st.a•-... _1 bonowers, who usually are wealthier -P ~ u~ ve re-and probably doa•t even need the -A~ filiDa may be kept
SPENCER center. moved interest-rate ceiliap on con-1~.. 00 "OU.f -.1!.1 ~ r.;:_ 10--You must report to the issuer at sumer loans often have a wide choice --.u. 1 \Oil~ ·~"' -1--onoe a lost c~ card or be liable for of rates. -Y --.Walt DlWJ-Pl:odacdou.-H• ii .ea. t~-the ~ ch11ges rn.al:le after tht\::cant was y--if =the;-~!l!!.;~~LIJ.JL,WUWWAIL.J.U.1U1o1~_.::..u..J1&..JJcuc.-""".'----------'-
Acaclemlc DecatMon and the Center for ImprovemeDt of ttilcl Carba1, a -;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;i;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-=--·-----------;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiii~~iiiiiim;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!i private child abuse prevention agency. 1 .. • • • Wisdom Import Sales Co. Inc. oflrvine, importers and sales and marketing
representatives of malt beveraaes, wines and soft drinks, has promoted Trip
&loser to director of dtain accounts for the company•s northern division.
Kloser was previously area manager for the North Bay se<:tion of San
Francisco. .__ ...
Rt.,.. Hansaker ofBuider 6 Associates, be. in Costa Mesa, bas~
elected to the board of governors of the S..dlen Callfo,rala Anoc:lldon of QYU
-Eapeen a Locl S11neyon and Ttmodly Psomu of Costa Mesa's Piomu A
AllOdatet bas been elected vice president of education for the organization.
The aroup is comprised of Southern California enaineerinf firms that have
banded together to promote effective labor relations and continuing education,
as well as manaic a joint apprenticeship orogram. • • • Foz It Co., a national public accounting firm, bas added five staff members
to its Newport Beach office. All have been assigned to the audit department
under partner Fre4 Motearlto. They include: Sau Sobotlk. senior accountant
and Irvine residentand staff accountants Roberta J . Cramer, LeJptoD Ko, A.
Troy Aberuomble and Tllomu ~r1eu. • • Bolt lac. of Irvine has announced tbe promotion of several ma~ and
chan&es in several departments to complement its planned expanSJon as a
manufacturer of CMOS integrated circuits. Those promoted include: Glea
Belt, former controller and now vioe president, chief financial officer and
treasurer; MJcbael McN•tt, former director of technolO&Y 1 who takes over as
vice president. of the new department of quality and rehability, formed by
merging technology -and quality; and Doa1 DlvlDe, promoted from test
enaineerin1 manager to director of manufacturins operations.
Anlolcl Greg is the new director of finance for the Amerlcu Dlvenifled
Tedi Dtvlllon of Costa Mesa. Gregg brings more than a dozen years of
corporate financial management to his new post. He comes to American
Div.mified from Petrolnm C.rp. in Paramount, where be was treasurer. He
has also operated bis own corp_oratc"financial consultin& firm in the past. • • • GeyM.Slpoa,chiefapPraiserforDowaeySavlapudLeuinCostaMesa.
has received the seruor residential appraiser desipation from the
bterutioaal Society of Real Estate Appralsen. Members mat falfl1l
edacatloul ud perlormance reqalremeatl to aekleve tJae dealpattoa, wbidl
callt for recertiftcattoa every five yean. Sipos w beea u appraller for more
thu 1evea yean ~d ll presently cllrector of tbe Oruae Couty ebpter of die
Society.
There are basic rules that govern the purchase professionals at Imperial have gone to school and
and possible financial rewards of Certificates of intimately know all the possibilities. For the short
Deposit. lhere are also a number of little~known course, call today-you'll definitety learn
opportunities i.n managing th_e account. The somethi11& exciting! Do you know .•.
" 0
(
A. How your CD's can be insured for more than $100,000?
B. How to avoid costly early withdrawal penalties?
C. How to get higher returns when interest rates go down?
Call today for the answers to these three important
questions:. and more. Our Account Executives have
the answers to all your questions
.,
(714)
858-0825 Orange Coun~
·-------------------------------------------t---·
If you would like us to phone you at your convenience.
please fill out this coupon completefy and send it to: Imperial
Savings Association. 3750 Convoy Street. Suite 206. San
Diego, CA 92111 .
Name Bus Phori,.
Company __ Home Ph ne
Address Best 1 met a
City State Zip OCD109
-----------------------------------------------
H 1m~..:n1Sa • ~~-~ Assoc1abon
Where T<Jm?1TOW Begins Today. v
•
Substantial forfeitures required for early withdrawal of term accounts Rates sub,-ect to cha e da1fy and sob)ecl to venficatlOQ_by Imperial Savings
Great American
First vinas Bank
Sa~ since 1885
one
Open your account tOday. Call the toll-free Financial Line now: l-800-272-9000.
90 D~ Y TERM 6 MONTH TERM
Ol\ ............. -t
• AC~ OI Sttvice
• Insured rety
• $6 Billion Strong
OivhM' 11 0if'I':> ; • l
'
J
o~ Cout DAILY PILOT/Tu
. .
I've been quite fortunate over
th years with m}' CD in\ tments.
But it took a lot more tlun lu ·. It
took knowing how to invest, and
where to invest. And when I djdn 't
have th0se answers. the Investment
..:._.f~-Officers at Amencan av~~ did . That•s
• .
'. .
'.
•
•
why I've been with Amerian since 1965.
AMERICAN 8AVIN09 ..... ~ .. ..-.-:.·flDlll
. ' --· ... -a.. -
~~-
At Bank of America you can choo~
from a wide vancty of investments
-all backed by the sc.-curity of
California's leading bank And you
can count on the services of a knowl-
edgeable banker who will help you
choose the one that best suits yo41
individual needs. ---
SAVINGS PLANS WITH EASY ACCES.5.
If you're looking for an investment
that combines instant hqu1dity and
market rates, check out our Cash
Maximizer"' acc.ount"!" Or, 1f you're
interested in building a savings
program and prefer a more traditional
way to save, out Regular Savings*
acc.ount may be just what you're
looking for.
PERSONAL CHOICE TIME DEPOSITS.
If you'd like to Jock l.\P some of our
I Cash Maximiz.er™ acco~t
9.00% 9.18%
' ' Cuncnt Rattf
Minimum Bolan0t $2,500
9.25%
Annual Yicldtt
Muu.mum Bal.nee S2,.-n>
9.65%
Current Rat.et Annual Yitldtt
MorcThan $100,())) Mor Than $1 ,(lX}
Two Year Personal Choice
" Time Deposit
1190%
Cum:nt Ra t
highest interest rates, Personal Choice
Time Deposits** give you just the
choices you need . The rate you earn
depends on the amount you deposit
and the term you select -anythi/lg
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can open an account with as little
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DEPEND ON US.
At Bank of America, you can count
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The choice that reflects your
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"'If >'OU dose your ACCOUnt prior co lhc end of • te·
mcnt pcitdd, in WDcd but not
)'CS cmhted co the .aount wdl
noc be paid,
0 ubStantJal liuefest ptNJty for
rl1 wnhdrawal
Ill -
AMVUCA NTf!ISA • MJMllfll H>I< Bank of America
I , '
Ana &trlbator aamed
Dais)' S)stems Corp. bu named
Wyle Laboratories, ofirvine, to be its
first franchised dis1J'ibutor for Daisy's
Penonal Losician CAE (computer-
aided enaineerin&) workstation.
Aryeh Finqol(i, Da11y's president
and chief executive office~ and
Charles Oouah, president 01 Elec-
tronics Mark.etina Group for Wyle,
jointly announced the a,,eemenL
The Personal Logjcian workstation
is the first Daisy product that Wylc
will distribute from 12 locations in
the western U.S. Wyle currently
distributes semicustom software
products -including LSI Loaic Inc.
and NCR Corp. -that n.an on
Oai1y'1 Personal Locician.
IAMllJ6 dem.nd •tro1J6
Euclid Crescent Square adjacent to
Anaheim PJaza•rqional center i1 60
percent p~leased -nearly three
months before the start of a $6 million renovatJon to the 140,()()()..squ.are-
foot shoppina center, it was an-
nounced by Grubb & Ellis Com-
mcrctal Bi:okeragc Group, leasina represcntatJves.
New aachor for the center at the
comer of Euclid SL and Crescent Ave .
will be Desianer Dei>ot, a leadina
discount/promoJionaf retailer of de-
11aner apparel for men, women and
children which has leased 36,800
square feet.
Renovation of the I ()..acre shop-
ping center, owned by ECCA Inc.,
Newport Beach, is scheduled to start
in December with completion and
first occupancies slated for July I 98S.
UP s AND DowN s
•
' •
.. .on
the , •
I N y s [ L f ~ [J t ~ '·_
I
WHAT AMEX Dio :
NEW YORK CAP>~· f T1
AMEX L E~OERS
------
~ l I 11
NASDAQ SUMMAR~'
GoLo QuoTES ·
METALS QuoH s
~ ~-~,-.. -
~ c..-.--.-........ u .........
• .. • .... "' ..... "' eir:... • Ill .... """ a.....·-·....-................ ,,. ................ .........
• • ........... tlf~ ...
-..--That san .ptdescrtpttonofbotb business and
businesspeoplealon the0ran eOoa t. Tok ptrackof
wh re companies ar otng·and which p ople ar helpin
them get th r .]u t wat h ·er dtt Line' -ev r , d tn th
Bu tne ction of your n w Pi
... --
-
NUC.. .., .. =:nM:1::;:"':=;;:c~~.,;;n;,;u;c; :::r-~=•-.O ~::",,eat~ IOJ•r, =·..,• .. -r,:.: ~.i.l\:L~ -.1.&ss=-C...~.J:oltfv.:9~ .._. ...1111• 1•1 ..... W•, CMHan ...... ::,;--........... TIC '11U1t1• ~ 0... L.--~CA_,,
II\ .... I~---ot. QrOllll, CA..... ...... ... • ... • .. ... ... ..... °"""*' •. 1f. ""~ Ofty ........ LIOTffOMAIOOHWAY THI .............. con-........ g.._.m:............ .. ... i ....... ol~ A,...... ... ..._._, &Ultedbf':~Md .... flW llWI --lie. .... ....... t..-.............. ..,_. l!rMn...._,lo4'M .. lu-CetlV,91¥1' ,__.,._ olMlllt-~ Jltlll .. 1...... llMIN' ._ ................. . =Ceott of °'""' Thia •••1111t1t .. flacl __,Md o1 door ..., _, ... ,... W ""'~ ,... ::,~ •••n1U•w· .... 1l.l'ICMr9.""' ~OlnolOr· .......... ., ........ llltd-'•D.IAOCA ... -~ .... Mtfy .. _.,,.,.._ .. '"'9~onlap--...... _..... ___ ITATI lli=ACH. 0r!!9 ..... .....t11n ....c· 1....-..
f*10r111 ,...._ .... 10 11 tlM lft._W ... W.6ol o..lf,OI-... ...... • 1NV l U"'91 .tlWt ._ ... ,,, ....... o. .. · ,.... .. 01111,..~o.a m•• .-.. ,... w • • .-..,1n1•Ni!lll••1,..
-lllfl t TJla ,.._.,.. fltUbliNd 0r'"'9 Coetl IOOTJL"'" -. W •111tAJ1r1 4 ....... ....... wM ol .......... ~
.,._.,...,... ......... ~NotOoMOlrt t~a, ~ Pe•~•................. ..... told. D•HIUID? d ,,_..
tar --.. ftdtf•ldenl IO, 1M4 ~ ... ~~ • ...... to -....... :=";.."';_ ertri A ....... ,.......... =·-..., d....... T471 ~'::' .. :: 0 ftcroAI' ,. •• ~C:.. ... !.oa1-~·~~~ A._.,. Oft N......, QJlr Not Oololllt' I. I.a t , ~: TM ...._ ..,,.., N ~ .. f:o1~ Pw ......
.. .. ... Oii OCTOlllll PWUC llOTIC[ "'" INI............................. ~ GOfftJtltlflt· •" ,,,,." :t7 1114 • t;ao A.M In -YW.-Illa of 11'9 Wottl. ,M) .. ,._.. .... at1 _. ..._.., .............. s:-... ~ ~::: • ~A'7r'•.r _.,. ~ e:::.:s~~=== ~-.. :-.:Mi.'':-.:==:..=='-= AM. CA trroa. 'Tiit ._..,....,..... -~ nu1-. 4 thll llNJlllillhMd ............ Wflll'6 .., prop-aorhc;idOlnllUtt...., ..
• YOU Ol.llCT '°the .. ...,..,.. •. Arft. ..... ooun llltd•to--arwtoa. ertr ............ .., .... HOftCNPtllMI "'·
............. )IOU....,. ~oduottona. 11t ~:·· ~ ............. wtlldl.,.ln .. CllJelC.... .......... ---. .. .,.,.,,.
...................... ~ Ot., .,..J.1, Ool1a 0::,:,, OCl?iit. ~ _,.....,of ........ CouM1 "' OrMlt. .,,, ""' ... 1Np1111•• •: '-tftt Md ..... ·.YVW ._ ..... CA t2lll In a. ....._ Of .. ~ .._ aftd ...... ,.._ ,..... 1.-Of ~ fttt OU....,.. .. , M N • .......... ....._°'*°" Yin.ne Grlr. 4221 Awe oaUOn of TAMAM KAV..,... to ............ Wld ~-..:•• ~ dr•e••d to Mr. "'' ....._ ""' N oourt ....._ MMrtd, ~CA_. IHfVIM f --Of 0,..,....... a llN tor ... Of Pf°'*'>' -N ....... ..,..,., ,.,,_, 11'9 ....... YWI ...... ...,_ DeRoal, -1 Of ---•or.ll to M i*fonMd ..... II\ 1M llNI• II (7M) 'tMl400, ...
.,..lllllfNll\""°"0tW ceta M.,en. ~tOft .._. Ho A,2""7 •t'"' that he/w 11 tanof: ~ of llde: M 1*9a ,_. ....,_, ....,._,CA nt4I °"°"'TO th«:::....,. tf .. ,._ ....._ J • .MMta •CNW, ,... lie**'..., on l'arm
•YOU AM A CMMOR T1lla -.,,,,_. la oon-1HOW CAUt1 ... of'! ~1 dlll. ttlilt. ........_ t llrt, 1111, ._,_, ltd ftt
OI a CIOI .... ncllOr Of .,.... bJ: a ~ Pitt-~ CMANQI _.,.. aftd •11 • 911 ....... 12 -,,..,, ,..,.._ of ....... ~ ::.-~·:.:;.-:.:,-:-::-.,.,..., Vlnolnt °'~ ~ ..... "°'~bid·:-=.: r';<r:. .. .:-~
MUC llJTU
..,_.I to the,,...,.. C.Gtt¥ T~.::t.IVIM ................... "'"*-.,.,.. M _.. lllland.,.,,, lll#i ..,. ='=~~::.:: .. TNl .. ~c:o.~,. .... pecMor\'" .. ~':o.::::r .. = :" .. -:..,=.: ::-:::·:=:::-=.:: ·'
fr0'9 w. c1111 of.,.. a.. --~onm :::,..': :~~ ...,.. ~to OcMm-N'Gl.adlOCMla.,._,• .._. .. ...,. ...........
.,._of.....,.•Pf'CMdM f'-. MIN fl'°"' T KAY "*" C-.. teoeoft 1-· It. .W Mlli lie NfN'lllld II opened. ,.,,,,.,,. TtnM: ., In lectloft TOO of 1119 ~ 0.,.. C.... IMIYfM to TAMAM ~y ... __.... ...... ,_, .. llM d ~ ....... ""* M 1111 l9flllltd • J ........... COda Of Ce1fom1a. Delly Plot ......... ti, AHOI. _.,,,.,,. Md ..,._ llN ..... to ptor w-. llM W ....... ...,,. olh bid . I "'9 llM '°' --.,. .. ~ 2. •• tt, ,.... v IT • HIMIY ON>fMD torrM. ICI. cn:111 .. .., In ......... ol ......... n to1llla.,., ..... • .. "'
MC .... pttot to four T·ao o.e al pwtOM1ne91 •1ad In :---~~~ ~:.":".: lilatWMn ........ Md ~ toe111 bid la lftOr9 '*' taOO, J ~ ........
WWle rtei.on accept8 the •ocal duo
of tile year award for blmeelt and
one for JV.Uo lt]ealu Monday at tbe
18th &D.Dual Coantry llulc Aa-
90ClaUo Awarda allow at Ruh·
Yille'1 Grand Ole OpJ'e7 Boue.
rnone1 .. '0Mhdee.Ofh Pl8JC --o.maittarlbaUld_.., ,.!!!..":.. of ~ Wld a•~·.~rr:T.;,. 111 arid 1• "*""' 20 ""*" ol the ..._ nottoa ..... l'IUllllK. ..,.. .,. oourt "' ..... -.. _,, amount bid Of taoc> ....... · YOtl MAY 1XMM1 tfla , It_,. ,_,. No I 11 700· CMo "9«Mtlon, Conttruotlon 4MtOfOllDMr~...,,,_.. ..., .. ~· On :r: )J ::~1n~a1U':. =Oii =-c.=..~..o:~~OOf'lllk't ... ~0..:~:::-~.'='-:, a. • 10" ,,_ earw .,..~ reo=n·u• MIU ttl4 tU:tao'doC* untw"la ona .._.. o.ty Plot~~~.!•· ln~.f0nft0f1.,.. • \!POI\ ttle WltOt Ot ..,,._ ' ,_ A.M 'anc1 M ·-.,_. ditd l*I Uftilfted ~ 1tM ,,_..All,.,._ mull lie
I b e d '*It« or upon h at Ml»OPNhliOll ·• the Department flf ,... T·211 bJ 0.... oarlled Cltlec*. '"'" A a . ama WlDS awar ~'!..!'-..aoutot,; ~:..::.'i.:. :::-.:i:.:=:'l-: ::='.::':.~ .. _II'-~ OHlllH'• ollaok or • -··--· Md Na Wiii To 11 hlh; be14lclltnlat Of nerne ~ not ~to....,... ~ ..,,_ ......,..., .... °' .., a h GCMM1 Wiii PtOOI of •· d-MCI ~....., .. .---.. • UnMid ............ baflll, ,. .... 'Mt1tatl ......... ~Md OOfhW~ •rr"i" """™"' or~ .. ""* .. ~ "°"'::=. ..... ......w ....... ...., .... topmusica g -r&o. ~~ daWa.,-:= ....... ..::::: llJ•d that.~ Of ........ :.:: ~= .:: ~~= ............. .,MOMr roup *'90ryand:.=..-11of fa::~ ot; ::-o::c:::;:: from ...-Ctla ••not .,.... .,...._. • WWST· --===-~ .... ...-orofttle..... A~,_.._ fled 1 ,.....~_ uot . ..,_;!lie CiOi 1W1 _, aftd .. lie I,_.,.. COMMOOtTY, I01 n. 1ftM, -Md
tlefl60tWtllMI*'* ~ AHNITT9 ~~,.,......,In ... --tor,....,.. ........ ~CclfwDllMer, ....... ., ......... 11'1
the d :.e=:o,:::>c::.,: lnh~Or· ~~-~·~ !!:::::"'~"'.:: CAHowlrd Otctd ... , I01 ~':a,':..=:::; Record third award tal srou{> of the year for secon ..., ..., _.. ...... ~ o.e .... ----r1lgflltoWIM_,,~ ...,_..,CorooeUllMer. Pftorwld .., morf. consecutive year. ..,.... o.. w. ~ ...,..... • ~to .. "11 of Mid'-'· 'Y 1n •bid or to,-.._,, or CA ftl2I · ,.,.. .::;;:., or
for country' music;
Atkins wins another too
•-(PM) ' .. 1111 ,.....,,...~ ..... 'Ill~ -Oitei•u.M al ·~uc mitneddat • _,_..._.,, c:::!t. :,1 ... •• ,_ fWWW .,...,,
The Judds, ~ motbcr-daupner team, ~~ ,':': ...... ota. f111f11t.n. "'AHKDOMIMCtflHI .. ,....,... to__,..•~ • c:i:--·~ won the Honzon Award for career 1tl4 • • • f:': :r;-: ~ Judoe °' tt1a oomr..... .,,....,. 1n TNt ~ 1a ... of .:: ::::-:.:,: M
development by an individual or act that TW·211 ~:::;..::..,.-:: "1 :i:n.;:-c... .:.:..=i~ "I!*= = bY-• ,._. ~ property 1a ~ ~ .....
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -AJa. basneverprev1ouslywonaCMAaward. •-w-~C:,':-Aot. ~=°*bert.11.a. ~~c~~~ ~o.1 .. '!•• .. • ....... ;:~::..~ bama's bouncy fiddle music and soft love ~ llOTICl '*""' '-...-.i T-·-... ....,,. _ _,_. .. ..... • .. -Unlled ~No --th Jeff Silbar and Larry Henley won the • • tlllfd on OO'roel1' • .,, ~~ .. ._. tllftlltheeouftt,°""otar-..,_ --~ songs won t e group a record third sonawritin1. awarct for "Wmd Beneath 1"'~ ~''::; ~ :.ao100A.M~ __ .,.__ rn ........... """ .. .,..eouneyon••••.., :...S • .-..-::-.:._ entertaJner of the year award, and M Wir ,-: . ..... T• .._.. ........., ,.~ nu1-. ~ .. of lea1lon 1110, 11 1"' ..,.· °' .. .., ~ cuitarist Chet Atkins won top mstrumen-Y ~ mp, ' recorded by Gary Moms. · Cf••• '°' ~CA~ w.c. ..,.,.. 17n end 1m t °' h ' ,_ ...., ....... ...., oi
talist for the seventh time at the J8tb The hvc show on C~S. h~tcd by c:~=:,, "vou 09.llCT to.. !:::' ~=-= ~=..,c=o; 11••anot~ot .. .-.
Country Music Association.eeremonies. Kenny Roge~. also paid tnbutc to u-:;..~ · ~Of._ oeeuon; YoU a.,.,_....,... ... ,.... OoWW a. t . 11, ,... :;;=..-::.:,.a:r.":
The award pushed Alabama past P!oncer entertainer Ernest Tubb, who 0,:.1a of t"9 -:11:: ,.,.,.=:.5;; :.;:,:r;:~":~ T4'1 OON6darM tot...,.. .. .,,
Barbara Mandrell for most awards as top daCd of emph,scma last month. Loretta ,..,.,.. ti••or(I> o.e a uona « ,.. ;:i:; 11e .. lll1ad ~the::=-P\11.JC llJ11CE , • •='= :.= 1
-:
entertamcr. Mandrell, who missed Mon· Lynn, one 0 the many Jingen Tubb bl*~ II llbollt to• ::iai:;-voourt "*".,......., f'iltdona. · Of• property to°" CIOtlfOn'n
bet-,. launch to 5tardomkisana his most made"••· ~-~~ tn0a-..t1n~~ ~~ ... ~-=~~ DUTHIMTMIHTT_"' .. .!!' ,... ~ ...,. .... d °' tm-day night's ceremonies because of in-I""' -· --· ,,_, --·-oq ...... _._ -· ........,.,, Iliad .,...t.lllOfl 11'91:1 juries sustained in a car accident but was ~mo'Y 50,~S. "I'm Wal 'n' the Floor ..::.:'':C~= '°:.:&,°TliACMDn'Oft to~=.~o;,;;= INT~MVINUI of ...;;;;; if::iwwae:
shown at home vta remote camera, won ver ou. tta1iafel0f(., w.: HA~ or• oontlllfMt cndltot of CA&.9'0MIA •.. ...._. 1n.,. MOT'ICIWruM..IC e.o.INl(o).Piolcrl.Mllof
entertainerofthcyear1n 1980and 1981. IHOH,IHC.,.eoo..,.,. tNllM••• ,,,.,_,......... ....... oonSanoawttfle.otlOflt•. AUCTIOleM&.I ~--1111
oa,ftwl!Y, .. 141,INIM. youta.n wtltl a. oourt tt C..•1• • .. aeq., TIUa a. Calfomea Under h ~ lft --orade.d.Orl:i°!!! "We don't take entertainer of tha year c.1rotn1a t271•. pr.-it " to ttie .,.,..,.,.. ...., bide • • ,. MINnllltlllM CON. ~ tMarNt.....,. CoOdt ..-.,..._. .......,...
li&htly," said Alabama lead singer Randy -----of 'J: !::'°" ..:,._ C..: ==:.::=: ~ .. of~ !,': =-=.:r.':'t'-;:9 := ::.=.:.i::.:.=r.:---.:--==.: Owen ... We arc going to make plans or~......_ oflloe from h csaea of lr'8t • "9ctM11on Con11ruot1on ....,_ OMoa, 11n 1• .ct for nonpeyment .t Mlll~hmJ=
tomorrow to make Yo proud You Vo•-"' oftt.lneilndad11••or1a: ...,.Of ..... •prowtdad e.caon, 2A22,.,,.,. WllJ, -..c, iuMllllltO, a.a..,._,....,.'-dUa
r.0 r us.. u IAAI BIBSCAR Marprttte, IOI\ Ted ..,.. --.. 1n tec11oft TOO of ,,.. '4'taA-1 l..:ll••laflto.~ totn1a 11114, not .... '*' ""-OH.Ml u o. M*.I. fll#T ~ .. ""ot • •~ THELMA BLAIR and bJa wife Joline: Alloa.~,__ '"*-COdeofCalfoi1iea. tomla Miii °' ,.o ... IM(f)....,_.ll'lad-2llO V•TA Dlt.. OftO, :::=..-::-..:"" 11::;:
Mandrell, Lee Greenwood, Ronnie BIESCAR, puaed uanmon Bm~ =:::•.,.,= ~ ~==-=--= :::r •• :r.:;r~ :,ot.=,oci:!'~4:: ='=1,~::':i Wlllt0r1tr.' .. Milsap and the Oak Ridge~ were ••ay0ctober3, l984. f>rothera, Larry & ev.~IMlPMt•tar "'°""""°"'the,..of .. m11 nut M malled to,,.... ,,..,.. •• on.,. .... l#ldat....,bld Oilad:.fO.i..N finalists for the top honor. The award Wu preceded in Kenny Wblwneck • know!'I to .. .,.... l'laMrlanoaoed--.. ..,... ..,._,. 111111tto1• pr~. blddir ,,.,.. ..., •PfO'Mad~IMlt'Nll,_,_ ~~-:=-.=-._,,, h G d 01 o h · -.th b her husband M · ... ...., .. Mr: "'°"9. YW MAY D.t.MN • <•1t> tz0.ta1. up to 2:00 tTO. 111 for1' (Imel.., .... COde..aoneaMw • ::.=:a prcsen~ at t e ran e pry oust as .._,. Y emorlal .ervtces The'*"'(•)..,,..~ .. "-~ .. oourt. w !"" PM, Tutlld9Y, ~ 10 ntH ,,.,,,.no• and ,....... ,...,, .. QN U.-.~ CA _.,.
based on excellence in all pha~s of of 38 Y..,.., Jc.eph held Wedneeday Oc· ..,._ ot tt1a ~ .. • paraon ••1111d In 1M4. • .,_ llrM ns Cel1Mc:allb• _..., anc1 0.1Nd1••°""9d: ~--.-com country music. Bleacar. She la t.oba" 10.1084. 2.PMat tt•....,•> lt9: HWAN a. ...... 10" """ ....,. ,_. u.., • be:-::. -*"'" wt1t1 bid. Oo4oberll.1 .... 1'1raallda DiilJNot~-. 1"4 Alabama was bolstered bv the album survtved by dauch1a' Sl Andrews 'Preeby· l.&W AHO AUCI! ~ ~o.....-eudn:"'· opened tncf_,.... S*· Dl'A"TMIMT OP .... ~ 11••tt111 . H?1
.1 Bonni~ -Wrtpt Of tertan Church. New·~.,....__., • "Roll On," which contains the hat smglet Veneta. e>rtaon, 5 port n--h. In"-· of _ _ · ..-.. MUC llOnCE MUC llJT1Cl MUC llJTlC( MUC 1111111 Mle llD1ll "Roll On,•• .. When We Mat.c Love" and • .-: usu ··-.... ptOpetty --.. irandchfldren, 8 flowen, contribudanl nant ••II daac:i1lled In ORDINANCE NO. Mii "If You're Gonna Play in Texas (You ........ , -....i-childnm _ ... __ oai-• 111: ~..,,.. ,. ..
G H F. di . h Ba r-.. -... • to your favorite 11a1U· lwltJold lmp;O¥Mlentl of ,_ OMIM.UICI OP THI COUNTY OP ORAMQll, CAU-SIGHED AHO CERTIFl!O THAT A COPY Otta ave a 1d e in t c nd)." • ht er Manet u lty. Pacific Vlew o.e ~ ,... '"' ... FCMMA, ADOl'llD PURIUANT TO THI ITATI PUN-Of THIS DOCUMENT HAI IEEH DEUVEREO Alabama guitarist Teddy Gentry was Walker, of Loa An· Mortuary Dlreciorw, and .. loC9ttd ti: .. ,..c .... AND ZOUllll LAW A...,.. THI LAGUNA TO THE CMAIRMAH OF THE BOARD thankful that country music had aelea Resldent of &ff 2700 Puente ... Mtll city Of.,._ NtOUm. "-MlllD COllU'.JMTY ~ PLAN (SEAL) UNOA o. AOBE"1'S Cot M f 35 • duMty, ~ AND T~IT ,. .. ..,._.,., OP THI NIT COM-Clettl of the Boerd of SupeMaora provided him wtth a good job."I don't ta ea or PRITCBARD n.a bullrlW name Uled W MYlalONTOTHIPLUlllD~ CountyofOrange,Calltornta
want to have LO go back lO laying carpet ~·~~~EVAN SEARLE :r.c.IM.=io::·:"~'~ ~t=~~WITHC~ZOMNQ STATE Of CALIFORNIA l.. •
for a living," Gentry said at a news member of St. John PRITCHARD, bom IJilt!Al'TI. • ~ lolrd of •of the County of 0r.,., OOUNTYOFOAAHOE f
conference. the Baptist Catholic Tonapah, Nevada Th•UllldbUlktrlilltfetll cantomla,doet«deln foKowt: • 1.UNOAD.R08£RTS.~ofttM8oardof~.
Monday night ... winners were chosen Ch h l c a.... 18, 1908. P..ect lntondad '° • OClnlUlfto-MCTtON 1. The L.aauna N""' ... PlanMd Community do.._......-. t...... _ .. ., _._ of ...... •~d of " urc n oat• ...... ., .. "--4 1na..a •-al the oMol of: Oe\191opmant Plan and ,.ext la~ ~ In ac· , _ _,, _,.,, ,,., 1 ,.,,..._ .. ._""" .... -by the 8,000 singers, musicians, song· Mela, wu orpnltt away \,A;\ • •vw ui ~ ua.ow. INC.. eotdwioe wtth Zone Otlanae M=UIP, purautnt t.o s.ctlOn 8upeMaora of Orange County, Celfomla. llatd on the 211h wnters and other country music pro-thft"eforawhile wu Newport Beech. ea . .,.c.lfOtnlaon«""-7·f.103oftheCodift9dOrcJ!NwQoftNOountyof0range dayofa.ptembtr,1N4,IM~Ofd1Mnotcont•Jno
fcn1onals who belong to the CMA -the aao a member oi the Survived by beloved ~ei:· ~ .. tub-and .. eddtd to e.otlon 1·MI of IN Codin.d Ordlntnce of ~2' NCtlona ... pMNd ~ bV ow folowlng
industry's trade association Mended Hean. ,..,_ wUe June, and t0n tact '° ~ ~ the~°'~· AYES" 8UPEAVt80A8: THOMAS'· AILEY, HAARIETT r~nwood, a fiormcr cac.ino dealer eoc:lation O C Min· Peter Evan Pritchard. Convnen•ll Oodt ~ ..... M I. Ord~ fhd tak• tff4ICI and M In M. WIEDEfl AOOEA A. ITAHTON, AHO VJ~ "' ra1 & Ll""'.t1.'_, So-Memorial Hrvlce1 ltOI. ""'force 1hlrty (30) deyt from *'•ft• ttt s>-. and. BAUCe HUTAHOE
who scored this rear wtth the htt "God ~. wu-=.Papet dawill bellAMheld 'L~ 1119Tha .=:n-:.~ :=,or~~~~-:0.~n~ ~IP~ NOES: 8UPERVISOR8: NON! Bless the USA,' was voted top male editor for both or· y . '-Ao~ ctaHM IMY. • fled 1a DAILY PILOT. • ~ pubf6thecl 1n ~;oin~ of A88EHT: 8UPEIMSOA8: AAt..PH •·Cl.ARK · vocalist for the second straight year and ......... ""-·.~--.. •• 10, 1984, at St. MARILYN JOHii, .etwtar Orenoa. Stlt• of Cellfomla, t-wfttl the -....... IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I~ t....,to ... ""helld ...,...._....,. .. llOH:munaJ "*71bera ....,-w._ .,,. and aftbced tN offtdll .... of 0W loafd of~ "111ot• of the told the crowd of 4.400 at was the binhday aervx. will be held At ndl ewa NPreaby·t ~ ~ ::, t: :"WM. of the Boerd of 8upjMa«a votJno aoafnlt County of Orange, Stat• of c.tifomla, Ihle 2ttt1 day of
oflus mother Bliss. at St. Johns the Bap-er an, ew~or ~ 12t21. Md the ltlll HAARfETT M. Wl!OIR =bar, 1914• UHOA 0. AOIEMS .. , know the true meaning of bliss, " he u.t Catholic Church, Bach. Pactfk laW *"t lor Mna ClllM'9 ~ #fJ CNllfman of·-•-·d < L) Ctn of ow lotitd of ~iaota
on n.t.-St ,.. __ Mo.-ttt•rv Dlrec1.ort, cr9dltorlflallle0otoe.IO. of A.-==-. of of Or-~, -·-said, adding later that his mother was in _.... '-U9w. -,,, 1 .......................... .......__. ,,,.._....... -...... ,..,_
M-· •-.... ~•-__ 644·2700 =L ~-~ ...... -=.::--= 0r.,. r-..-., Calfornll -Pubtltl'led Ortnge Coatt Otilly Piiot OGtobtt I , .... M--180 California watchin& the show. -IVT-... -·--··.. _, --.. .... --···-.__ .. , _ A tearful Reba McEnurc, who sings handtled by Neptune VON SANDE uon c1t11 apedllact ...,.., ,
hard<-0re country music. received a ~~: ~~ ;:. <;~~:.,; ~ 5S-JW.':a Lr#, ,. ,.7 ,;., .•
atandin& ovation when she was chosen quest donationa be 3l, 1984 ln ChkacO. Intended Tr•,...w ·
top female vocalist. made in to ~ St. m. Palled away Octo-.... ~ ~i~ • '1"hi1 11 for me and mama,'' she said. Jc.epha Hospital, Or· her 7, 1084 ln Santa c ••~ II. ...,
aadina that her career was the dream of ange, Ca Ana, Ca. Swvtved by ~ ar.,.. 0otee
her mother, who was in the audience. WHITENEC& dau1hter Arlene o.tlr PlotOctobtrt, 11M
The only double winner was Anne KAN o ER y E Ebert; brother, T·2TI
Murray, who won \inglc of the year and WHITENECK, rest· Adolph Draeaer (100 P\llJC fl011C(
album of the year for A l 1ttle (JO<>d dent of Newport yeaJ"I old) of Palm PW:nnoueMJ••N
News."Thcy were her first C MA awards Beach Pueed away Sprlna•. arand· umtTA,._,
after 14 years of trying. October 7, t~. Born dauaht.er, Joen Trap, The folowfr'l l*tOM.,.
"rd have been more than happy and Auauat 8, 1913, JNewp~t"_!eacOrh; ~=r~= . fied . h . Tacoma, Waah1n(tao. oyce ou.u-, • 10 ",J" Mtolr1tlur IMS., tis a wit JUM one: th1~ 1s JUSt Survtv~ by wUe, eaon: Mven 11eat a.ntaAna.CAt2704 wonderl'uJ:• she said. 1---------.....i irandchlldren; two AmMo ..,,.,., tATM
lnstrumentalist-,onawntcr Floyd 1rHt·areat·1rand-='9' ......._ VlttO. CA
Tillman. 69, besi known for his 1949 son& chUC:lren.Memorlal Thia bUelneaa " con.-
.. Slippin• Around, .. and the Jate country Pll"CI MOTHlltl Hrvlc11 will be taiy. en Nt\fd11111
music publisher Ralph S. Peer were voted HLL MOAOWAY ~~~1~ =-:..":::: ... tied
into the Country Music Hall of Fame MOfltTUUY cttic va.w Mcnuary wtttO.Cowleya.tlcrlOr·
.. I love you so much at hurt~." ~1d 1~~o=y ~port s.cb Pa: T.1: Col.Inly Ot1OGtoW2.
Tillman. IM2 9150 dfic View Mortuary, .......,... n--"C Peer. who founded the Southern Music 644-2700 ~,.~-.; 11,a .
Publishing Co. and Peer lfl.ternational IALn NRGIROH ao. '"' Corp., died in 1960 at age 67. IMITH rvnuu. MUC MmCE T.Jn
Atkins was voted top instrumentalist WllTCLI,, CHAPIL
for the fourth year in a row and the •21 E 17th 81
IC"Venth time overall ... l've aot to be the Coat• ......
lutkiestauy in the world, I auc ," hcaaid. 8"6•0371
Willie Nelson and Julio Iglesias were
voted vocal duo of the· year.
The Statlen won vocal aroup of the
year for the ninth time. ending Alabama's
three-year hold on the award, and the
Ricky kqp 8 nd wa voled in trumcn·
People
NEED
classified
ttACWIC YtlW
M M°"IAL "AIH( c.m.ttry • MOt1uaty
Cha!* • Crem.tt~.
3500 Pac:ehc Vl#fW 011ve
Newport 8'1tc:tl
6-4• 2700
McCOtll K
MOM'VARY
t 705 '-1;: Canyon
L.;una Be ti Ct 928~1
494 9415
HAltao.. LAWN•
MT.OUYE
Mort"AIY • eem. tr;
Clematory
102 Ave
Cos.
(CO!
I
'
1
.j
I •
...
l
UCLA may h•Y•
•tarting QB
lteft·:Bonobkk
for a.turct.1. C2.
tl1Nwln .. 1ln
10...,1111111 .. 10
811hen;11111
of Gl8nta. C2.
1;b.eyeallitt1Je lastloolf:Fall ClasSlc
SAN DIEOO (AP) -11 is 1
.matchup bot of conuuta -tra·
datiOi\ v&. upansion ~and common
threads bindina the San Di* Padres an4 Detroit Ti&cn.
And it wasn't even aul>J)oled to
111.rt here. Chicqo wu all characd up
for itl first Woi'td Series in 25 years,
perhaps the Cubt' fint world cham·
pionshil> in 76. ·
But an a most improbeble of comebetks, the Padres, only 15 years
old., won the final three pmes in the
National Leaaue'a beat-of-live play-
ofl's an4 now find themselves bOstina
toniabt'a opcn!q pine of their first Woild Series (Oiannel 4 at 5:30).
And in S&n DieJ<>, major~
sebalJ tradition •ti welf. oonexil-tcnL In fact. for a while a decide qo,
~or ·Jcaa bueball bert almost was nonexistent. C. Arnholt Smish,
then the owner of the Pidrel, wa on
the verse of sellina the franchise,
which wu to be moved to WuhinJ·
ton,D.C.
McDonald's. a pioneer in fast-food
franchilina.
Thia, incidentally, is bein& called
the fast-food aeries m1tcbin1
McDonald's apinst Domino'•~
1 nationwide chain owned by Tom
Monaaban, who boua,bt Jhe Tiaua after t&e'.1983 aeuon. Instead. he sold it to the late Ray · Kroc, the bamburatrkina, founder of
JUt kicking around
It'• IOCCer'e be9t wltb AY80 Pee
Weee, eacll u theM Re&lon 57
(Corona del llar) y~ ID re-cent action at LtneOlD School.
ClockwlM, from top, !OOM ball &eta
• crowd; Krlatlne Arnold. a. taiee
• ·re0; Betb Oodber, Matthew
Boyt dael; Cbdetlne Co4orl. 5 la
comforted; bappy m~ cheer; and
JlmmJ Lopes alloft footwork.
Sunset League:
A four-way tie
for.first place?
---...,,----:;-, Edison has edge,
in w at shout be
quite a wtld race
Garv-€y~: -
fie's one
-in
DJ.EGO (AP) -Go &1pt.
put · l of the world on Steve
~a-· lbolllden .him U,P wf~ .two·,~ epd
ruonen 10 ICOttftl poatiOD. Send him
up with ooe out and the~ on the
line.':.Send him lO San Die.a~ ~ tliC ffiaiii b.iven ~, tiACi a winner iD tlie-
1 ~~ biltory Of the bnchite -
witil DOW. , .. , ~ 1·vc been more emotioDa1
this ycar;DCC -I have an more
of a leadenh.ip role, .. says the 3S-yar·
old Garvey, a uaanimo Most V_,uable Player telec:tion after lead-ina the Padn:s to • 3 to 2
vksof'J over Chicaan in ati01W Lca&UC Championship Series. -'"Some of the younacr pys are
sa)'inl. •J..ead US, UI what it'I
about.' My Wka lS., bey, let's have 25
leaden. and let'• enjoy the at-
motpbere, and &et'• enjoy oanclves."
Garvey ba been doiaa his bell to
enjoy. He tiuDed in one of most
dramatic indiVidua1 1PCtfi in memory in Four qainst the
Cutia, bcltina out four bits, kDoc:kin& in ruus with two out t1iree times and
<Saiveri.na UIC falil"blOW-a lMHUD
'-'•ft<nnw,...-. ' OU\ t
of the ninth · • .
That was part of an effort tbat led
the Padres to the World Series for the
firlt time ncr. Tbey meet Detroit
~ T~y m Game Ope.
But bis performance wu oo so
unusual. ~bit at better than a .333 clip in championship
,play, and bis W d Seri.es averqc 11
.344 -32 bits ia 93 at-be He was eiabt for 20 in the auc. terics. wllh
seven RBL
He hit .234 this teUOD, with ei&ht
bomen and 16 RBI. But it was hls
leldcnbip, teammates say, that help-
ed briq the hdra revene their
lolina trlldition.
· ~teve is one of those SUY1 wbo
does it tri.th ICtions and not words."
says Tony Gwynn, San Dieac>'s bot hittina riaht ficlda ... When we'd lole
1 couple of ~es and maybe Ft
down a tittle bit, we'd SW1 look.i.na to
Steve and Goose (Rjcb ~l ud
thole 1UY1 to lead as throuab rt.
Tbat'• prccilcly wbat Garvey was
expected to do when the Padres
&ia:ncd hiru u a free qent befOl'e the
19"83 season. His five-year, multi-
million dollar coatract affirmed lO ~y the Padres' desire to build I
wmner.
"1 knew they were scnoua about
(P1eae ._ OAllVSY /C2)
Irvine's Rabmatulla
packs a solid punch
behiild stout frame
•
Prep football players of the week
MIKE SHUCK
eo.talleaa
The 6-2, I SS-pound senior
qu rtcrback did all ht could in 1 tosioa effort (14-10) to Laauna
&Kb. completina 9 of l 7 passes
for l S7 yards, and a touchdown.
·--~~~~~~~~~-
CRAIG COMTB
Eetancla
The junior nailed down 10
unassisted tackles and deflected
two passes on defense. ru hina for
26 yards (J l camel) and catdung
two passes for 30 yards.
•~~~~~~~~~~-
MIXJt BEECH
l'Cewport Barbor
The 6-6. 268-pound senior
poured on bta plays from both
sides. He deflected three passes
and recorded o ne sack and had six
solo tackles and nine key blocks.
·~~------~~~~~~-
llARK McGRATH
-~ ~~und retunn
all-league tackle 'was a contin
force on both sides of the field. He
was eve~berc," according to
bis coach. Dennis Ha.ryuug.
,-..-GRAY
B4Jao:n
He scored all five of the
Ch rs· 1ou hdown in a 3l-7 .
win . over Notre Dame (22-86
•. , rushina). u&ht 2 pa ror 30
yard , ran a kfcko ffback 42 yards 0 1c~~~~-=......,_----~
JOJl!f AQUIRRlt
Pountaln Valley
The S-9, 190-pound fullback
rushed for 47 yards on IS carric~
(a 3.13 averaae), but "made some
kcr, blocks 1n some crucial driv-
es. 'says Coach ¥ike Milner.
·~---~~~~--~~--
CBJPRJSB
Mart.oa
The 5-l 1, I SS-pound senior
wiae rece1 ver caught· four passes
for 97 yards.. including TD rccep-pi. .. ,,_
lions of 28 and 22 yard). Also
made a key block on 89-yard TD.
·---------------~--
DAR..RJl'C TOMASICK
Huntl.niton Beach
The number47 was mag.1cal for
the semor. rush mg for 8 2 yards on
mnc cames, including a 47-yard
TD run. and k1cking two field
goals. both from 47 yards out. * I"
DA VE SUMMERS
Ocean View __ ~---' t>laytngao hts first football
game ever, the 6-4, 2~pound
linebacker recovered a fumble,.
had two sacks, rqistercd six solo
tackles and four assists.
ALCONT ltRA
UnlYenlty
He returned two lickoffi for a
combined 60 yard$ and mad five
solo tackles and four a ists. "He
playeda~ovcnllgame,.. ad
his coach. Rick Curtis.
·~--~~~~----~-
BOBBY ROWELL
Woodbrtqe '
He scortd the Warriors• only
touchdown in a 9-7 loss to CdM, a
22·yard pass from quarterback
John Yurkovich. He totaled two
catches for 34 yards.
•·~--~~~~~~--~
HERBGARZ~·
Mater Del .
The lincbocker was an unani-
mous choice, fotcina ·a fumble,
knocked down a pass. recovered a .----=~·--=
game-wrnmna fumble, had JO '.iiiiiiiiiiiil_Il~~iiilI'lil'
solo tackles, two game-savers.
•~~~~~~~~~--
STEVE GULLEY
Weatmlnater
The JUntor comerback picked
off one pass, recorded four un-
assmed tackles. deflected three
passes and rushed for SO yards on
nine carries. includmg one TD
··--~~---~~~~~--
GLENN CAMPBELL
Saddleback -
Donahue has·
some hope
for Bruins
He Ukes what he witnessed
in fourth quarter vs. Stanford~ ::::r:..,. •
LOSANGELES{AP)-ThcstruglinaUCLABruioc
may have their st.arttna quarterback available th"
Saturday wben they take on W.,binaton Stllc •:
UCLA Coach Terry Donahue said Monday that be
expected senior 5ignal-caller Steve Bono, who has miueq
the last three aames because of a sprained ankle. to be racfx
to play apinst WSU. :
.. I just can't imagine that he won•t be back this ee~":
Donahue said at h.is weekly meetina whh reporters. "t
don't know exactly what the three-week layoff will have 1
done to ham. •
"Our J?lans arc to get Steve working and sec what
happens. If he's sharp and he's on his aame and he'c
physically able, l plan on having him as the start.Uia
quarterback against Washinaton State. -
"lfhc has a week where he's not 100 j)Crcentand be'i
not on top of his pme because of the layoff, I plan on 1oiq
with Matt Stevens."
Stevens, a sophomore out of Fountam Valley High
School, bas started for the Bnnns the last three weeks. ~
completed 17 of his 32 passes for 271 yards qaiost
Stanford last Saturday, &Jvmg hun season totals of 4J
completions in 83 attempts for S83 yards. ·:
• Donahue expressed the opinion that the Bruins
played their best football of the season in the fourth (\uarter
apmst Stanford and said be hopes that's a SIP of things to
come.
"ThJlt was the best we've looked all year on both sides
of the ball." Donahue said. "We were really wired tO
playing the kind of football l want 10 see us play all yeac
long.
The junior bad eaght solo
tackles at tus linebacker pe>sition
and rushe<t for 87 yards on 15
carries at fullback for one touch-
down, givina him 7 TD's so.far. ..The challenge is to get us to play like that aJI the lime . • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••lli•llil••••••••••••••••••••r---'-l'm jU!t-going ~try to get -us 10 buitd lrlf thl1 performarrce .....
SPORT S BR EAK
Fans' enthusiasni
played large part
in Padres'. victory
From AP dJspatcllles
CHICAGO -Bad breaks and ii
enthusiasm generated by San Diego fans
were cited by the Chica.go Cubs as
contnbuting to the heartbreaking k>ss that cost them
their first r<f ational League championship in 39 years.
"They were flat and de.ad in our ballpark, but were
electrified by their fans in their park." Chicago GeoeTlll
Manager Dallas Green said Monday, a day after the
Cubs bad lojt_the fifth game of the best-of-five NL
playoff senes to the Padres 6-3 at
San Diego.
'Tm a mot1va11onal guy. I
appreciate motivauon when I sec
it, and they had it." -
The Padres swept the Cubs 10
the last three ~. all at San
Diego. to wm the National
League title and the right to face
the Detroit Tigers m the World
Scnes, beginmg Tuesday night.
The Padres knocked out
reea Chicago ace Rick Sutcliffe wtth a
four-run seventh mnmg Sunday and held the usually
potent Cubs to five hlls.
Whale Chicago's Wngley field fans are noted for
their passion and had been praised by the Cubs for their
support dunng the season, more than 58,000 San Diego
fans turned out for each of the three games at Jack
Murphy Stadium, 10cluding S8,359 Sunday, the biggest
crowd m San Diego baseball history.
A major brealc for the Padres Sunday was an error
by Chicago first baseman Leon Durham, only his eighth
error of the season. It opened the way for the four-run
seventh inning that finished Sutchffe and the Cubs.
"It was a routme ground ball and 1t stayed real
low," said Durham. who had hit a two-run homer
cartier in the game "You Just knew it was going to come
up, but 1td1dn'L0
'
There also was Tony Gwynn's hard smash that
took a bad hop over the shoulder of second baseman
Ryne Sandberg. scoRng two run~ in the seventh and
g.1v1og the Padres a 5-3 lead.
"It would bave been a perfect double play ball,"
said Sandberg, a Gold Glove winner last year.
"It looked like the ball to Durham stayed down and
the ball to SandbcrgJ umped up," said Chicago Man.ager
Jim Frey.
The fates finally caught up with Sutchffe, who bad
a 15-pme winning streak and hadn't lost since June 29.
Tlgen ar~ 8-5 Serles favorites
LAS VEGAS-Nevada bookmakers, ii
bavin& escaped a $3 million drubbing wilh
the stunniog~mc.back victory by the San
DiCJO Padres over the Chicago Cubs in the
Nauonal ~e playoffs. have made the Detroit Tigen
8-5 favorites 10 the Wortd Series, which bcains toruabt
The Ti.gen bad opened at 7-5 Suoday night. a1\er
the Padres had beaten the Cubs 10 the fifth game of their
National League Championships Series. But heavy
bettina on the Tigert-pushed the odd~ hlgher Monday.
Some sports book operators predicted SI 0 million
would be bet on the series, which opens at Sao Diego.
.. Everyone Jumped on the Tigen in spite of the
wonderful showrng the Padres made against the Cubs,·•
Sonny Re1zner of the Castaways Sports Book said
Monday
"We've goJ a lot of money comang in on the
Tigers," said \Ca> Salerno of Leroy"s Horse and Sports
Place. "I can't see the Padres bei.Df favored in any game,
even at home. We just feel they re playing a superior
team now: ...
9'?:ote of the diy
••Just becaulle u.e are a lot of rtd'l ldd• going
to Stanford cto.n't mean the football~ grtNt
up running around Jn cestlee. M<* of ut .. out of
pubfichlQh ICbooft lk• ~ ...e. w.·,.. the aame kind of footbelt ~ who go to UCLA,
e.xoept w can read." .:.. 8tanfotd defenetve end .... .,. .....
Raiders call Humm into camp
EL SEGUNOO -With the status of Ci]
quarterback Jim Plunkett uncertain be-II
cause of a tom stomach muscle. the Los 4 •
Angeles Raiders brought former backup
s1gnal-caller Davis Humm into camp Monday.
Plunkett tore the muscle on rus fourth pass of
Sunday's 28-14 win over Seaule at the Coliseum. His
backup, Marc Wilson, completed 12 of 19 passes for
309 yards and two touchdowns
Wilson, who was named the stater at midscason
last year but suffered a broken shoulder, is expected to
start the next two or three weeks. depending on the
severity of Plunlcett's injury.
Humm. a I 0-ycar veteran from Nebraska. was at
home in Las Vegas watching the Scahawks-Raiders
pme when he saw that Plunkett was injured. He
tmmediately packed a bag when a team staffer called
him durin& the founh quarter.
Humm was activated by the Raiders followina
Wilson's injury last year and remamed with the team
throuah the Super Bowl, althouab he did not attempt a
pass. lie was cut on the last roster trim this summer.
This time 49eTs
maintain ·big lead
Remy Rahmatulla
IRVINE •..
From Cl
old," Rahnatulla uplams. "m>
uncle .-it me inU>hft1n1 wcishti . And
he stresW'd leas for footbeU, and I itall
try to set ovet1ll body str~nath. Your
lq.s are preuy 1mporunt. ,
His pcnormanoc Fnaiy niaht wu
undoubtedly h11 fin 1 of the sason.
Last fall again t Estancia he rushed
for l9S yards aL the Homccom1na
me. ·•But ovc II, I bad I betlef pme
(Friday) than la t 1 1 bc:Cau . J
uted m)1Clf1 httle bit bt11er."adm11s
· Rahmuulla nd1 I cnJO)'td th1~
I hUI m re .•
They learned
valuable lesson
in Redskins game
EAST RUTHERFORD N.J. (AP)
-The San Franetsco 49en learned a
1ood lesson about the value of
keeping a big lead earher this season
and they showed the New York
G1an1s they hadn't forgotten 11
QuarteTback Joe Montana threw
two touchdown passes and Dana
McLemore returned a punt 79 yards
for another score as the 49en _nppcd
the Giants 31-10 Monday niaflt to
remain one of two undefeated teams
in the National FootbaJI League this
season.
"Even though we Jumped to a 21..0
lead. the pme wu by no means
over," said safety Dwiabt Hieb. who
bad an interception in the nationally
telt>vised pme. "lf1 a comfortablt>
lead but you still have to play hard.··
Tha1'1 the l~n the 49ers learned
earlier this season aa.am'lt tht Wash-
incton Rtdskin\ San Fr1nc11co
grabbed a 27.{) lead 1n that pme. but
had to swt>at out a 37-31 vtC10t')'.
"h wun·1 thll long ago and it
popped into everybody's mind once
we aot the bai lead ... said linebacker
Kttnt Turner. ..We kntti whit
happened in the W1shi on pme
and we knew it coWd es>Cn in if
we did not krcp playi
The 4Ckn never dad 1 · they rai~
thetr rttord to 6-0, the best tan an the
l
team's history ,
"The 6-0 means consistency
throughout the ballclub," said Mon-
tana, who completed 15 of 24 passes
for 207 yards and three touchdowns.
"We are playing well."
That was cs~iaUy true 10 lhe first
quaner as the 49crs scored on their
fir51 three possessions m a span of
seven minutes, 33 seconds.·
Montana. weanna a flack vest to
protect sore ribs, connected with
speedster Renaldo Nehemiah .on a
S9-yard acorina play just 2:32 into the
pme. Less than four minutes later, he
tossed a I-yard TD pas to ti&ht end
John Frank.
Mclemore' lon.g punt return, th
second apinst New York in as many
weeks. turned the me into a rout.
"I don•t know what•s wrona, .. said
Giant linebacker Hany C&t10n.
"We've been weak the last two wee •
We just have to hana toeetherand ae1
out of the valley."
The Gt.anti' only moments in the
un were a 2().~ tkJd goal by
'1umping Ali·H~l..Shcik.h in the ~
ood quanerhand a 2-yard touchdown
run by Bute Woolfolk with l: 17 •~n
tnt~p~.
The touchdown was the fins
a tn a the Sin FranciKo dcfeo~ in
I quarten.
.. Give n francilCO tlTdit/' .• id
Oi ntJ C h Bill Paf'QCIJ after has
&cam dropped 10 ~3. '"T'bef p&afcd
f'ttlty wclf. Th m a couple or
plays catty. Wt wm dy to p y
emo1ion1JJy, hue they ~ull got
nd ~couldn't lo 1t down." .
No panic button for Robinson
The Rams are 3.-3 and dropping Eil
fanher behind the San Francasco 49ers in 4 • • the d~vision race, but John Robinson 1sn't •
. -pushlna the panic button. •
j "I'm not painting a picture that everythiog's
great," the Rams coach said Monday, "but we just have
to just keep swinging and. in a month, look up and see
what happens.••
The Rams, who bad won two striiahl. lost a 30-28
decision last Sunday when the Atlanta Falcons· Mick
Luckhurst.kicked 1 37-yard field
goal as time expired.
.. The game was close from
every observation, the stats and
everythina else.·· said Robinson.
"It was proper that it came down
to the last play, with somebody
kickin to win. "~nfortunately, it was them
instead of us."
The Rams· defense, comina
off a fine performance against the
Robln8oo New York Giants, was the Rams'
weak spot in the loss to the Falcons.
"Our offense played well enough to wtn, and our
special teams played well," Robinson said. "But we
couldn't hold the Falcons when we bad to.
"Our defense couldo 't control them like we did last
week (a~inst the Giants). The intensity wasn 'I there
!~ke ll was ... We d idn't attack them physicaJly enough.
Robinson agam praised the play of quarterback
Jeff Kemp, who's 2-1 smce taking over for the inJurcd
Vince Ferragamo.
"He's been a real treat 10 watch and he'll continue
to be," Robmson sa1d of Kemp. who completed 11 of 19
throws for 168 yards and a touchdown against the
Falcons, missing part of the game when be suffered a
mild concussion.
Cal, Stanford a tars honored
WALNUT CREEK -Fullback Ed [i]
Barbero of Calffomia and linebacker Dave •II•
Wyman of Stanford have been named
Pacific-IQ football Players of the Week.
Barbeto earned 27 times for 143 yard$ against an
Anzona State defense that was ranked ninth ln the
nation going into the game. The power running of the
fullback from San Francisoo helped the Bears pull off a
19-14 upset of the ASU Sun DcvilJ.
Wyman. a junior from Reno, was a standout on the
Stanford defense which held UCLA to just 66 net yards ~shmg. Wyman was credited with si.x tackles_
interocpt.ed a pass and returned the ball 26 yards, and
broke up two passes in Stanford's 23-21 victory at the
Rose Bowl.
Laken rip Clippers, 123-91.
INGLEWOOD -Reserve auard m · Mike McGee scored 22 points while
·Jamaal Wilkes added 1 S as the Los An~les •
.-Laken defeated their new crosstown nval, -•
'
the Los Angeles Clippers, 123.-91 Monday night in a
National Basketball Association exhibition pme 11 the
Fon.am.
The takers broke the game open in the second
quarter, outscoring the Clippcn 37-19 to take a 63.-40
lead •t the end of the tint half.
Bill Walton scored IS JX>lDts to lead the Oippen,
who played without Marques Johnson and Denk •
Snuth both of whom have,5uffered finaer injuries .
Clioper first-round draft choice Lancaster Gordo,p
a<lfed 13 p0idts. '
In the final minute, Laker free agent Chuck Nevitt
collided with teammate Mitch Kupchak, fomni
Kupchak to leave the game blcedina heavily from the
nose. The extent of Kupcbak's injury~ not known;
Shoemaker boots ID longahot
ARCADIA -Lonashot Wayward E Pirate, ridden by Bill Shoe.maker, closed
furiously throuJh the stretch and DttV&iled
in a three-horse dnv104 farusb Monday to
win the $75,450 Anoakia Stakes at Santa Anita.
Getting up in the final jump, Wayward Pirate
finished a head in front of Pirate's Glow, ridden by
Fernando Toro. who was a nose m front of Lady's :
Secret. ridden by Kenny Black. •
USC atar goart out for aeaaon
LOS ANGELES -Southern Cal
defensive tackle Matt Koart will be Jost for
the season after tcanng ligaments in his left
knee last Saturday ma pme al Washin&ton
State.
The 6-6, 24S-pound junior was scheduled to
undei:ao su/Jcry Monday at Huntinaton Memorial ·
Hospital in nearby Pasadena.
Koart, who has 23 tackles this season was injured.
durina the second half of Southern Cal's 29-27 victory
over Washington State. He will be replaced in the
startina lineup by JU.Dior Brent Moore.
~iliililon, radio
......
GARVEY •••
From Cl
FoR THC R[CORD
~ • •
"
......... Ytfll NPL
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Olbeo I>. Sen ot.oo t W L T Pct. Pf' ~A Detroit I, Ke11N1 C:ltY l Sen fr811Cbco 6 I t ·-16) 101 WI *1 I •v, Oct ;I AllMte J 3 I .S00 151 \)4
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Mrlet J 21 NY~ J l 0 .M '°' 141 WOftLD lllUH t. LNt I J t 177 15'
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20
31
1' ,.
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17 0
Or Cout DAILY P l.OTtruelday. October I. 18M
Pr~p football log
~aaACH(M·11
IO c.t'OM 4MI MM 14
17 Demien •
24 """*" Hettlor 24 · It L.11N l'9Cfl Wltoft JS u Meler Del • " 01~
0""11 Wnlmlnltw
025-Edllofl tat OCC)
N>-OclN4 VIM ~hi •• VrMilY (el Hll
MARINA (J.2)
14 EIM!'enit 10 Servltt
1 Foottia
IJ LA Quinta 2t MllilkMI 012-et Huntington IMcll
Olt---f:tn. VelleY Cal OCC) 02P-<>cAn Vltw (el Wair>
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u
7 2'
7
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. HtGH SCHOOL s~ ldl••••• SllA YWW LIAGU•"
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s.ddlebM:tl 2 0 0 NtwPOl'1 Hartlor 2 0 0
Ealenc:le 1 1 0 Letlune 8eedl I I 0 <:oat• ,,_. 0 2 0
UntVen.ltY 0 2 O
Woodbrldee 0 2 0 ,,.,..,., GMMI l7'.JI)
°""" WLT
4 I 0 5 0 0
' 0 1 2 , 0
2 3 0
0 i' 1 1 • 0
l ' 0
Newoort Her1)or YS.. ~1 tt I dl (el
Senf• Ana towf) EttMclt •vs. Woocllrlcl9e (el ~
Hwllor)
~leech '1$. UnMnltv <•• INlne) Co.It ,,_. YS.. Corona ctel MM (el oco
S0'1TH COAST UEAGUE a.... 0...-WLT WLT ~VeltY 2 0 0 J 2 I El Toro 2 0 0 1 2 0
MIUlofl V1eio I I I l I I
"""" 1 1 • 2 > 0 LAeUM Hiii • • • ,. 4 •
Sen °""""" • 2 • I > 1 DeneHlll 020 oso
PnllaY'• ~ (1:JI)
lrvllle ,t CuistrMO VdlY Leturwl H et MIUloll Vleto
El Toro ef Dene Hiit
Sen Olrnenle ti Ml ~ (non· .... )
MISaow YleJO ti-1-1)
)1 s.n 0"90 N«1la tl~y
lf Fountain Velltv 14 0-Hma
14 St. Jofllt ~ 0~ Hiii Cal MV) Ol~etll Valley GU-El Toro ..,...., lrYlne
~Olrnente
-,
111 " " 12
.. u
" •• ,,
• • 2' l
"
1 ' 21
21 ,,
SUNSET •••
boa Cl
Muaey lw •"Cfaled 5.9 ~ OD
81 cama; and Antoyu fialua al a
rate of 4:t per carry -• MalllllC
which denies vr.:ry many thitd4Dd-
IOQI. siiualions. . ~ is ~ hOwew:t, ....
quanert.ck ieveB&Otdyt wadaiD dlle
qptioo terics, aAd altlMqla the Yak-~ have compklcd just lout pe.a
in row of lhdr paa (resUJtia& :iD •
l-1..R'Jobrd), lht lhreat ofR.ilb :aca
ddi to pJay tMrina"s runniiw
pmc onatly. Oddi: 6-1. . .
4; W'ettmlulet (!·J): 1bis IS the
Uons• best loOk since 1976, with
quarldback t:cd McMilleft01 msp
passiq. the runnina of 1 ~ scolo~Dave Hamn and aerial taflttl
such as David Hicks available.
Coach Jim O'Hara9s lions are Ibis
&nd have a reputation '!« lbeer'
hittina in the catqOry of Servite ar Edison, Which puts them in • telt.ct
class.
JnYOh'ed i.n four straipt pmp
decided by duce poinu or ~ Westmislmtlbowed~_.
tics with a 28-14 ~over LOIW
Beach Walson -IOmeilWa& Hun1-. kach did not rnaf'a Weet • b!fc: in a 21-16 k>a to Willoa.
--WllWiMtCr'1-cha"Qlf o£--aR11&11° •---.,..,:.,,~+1 ~mmt11e10p ttuw MJUld be eahilDcecl~->Um-
with a viciory ,.,.msi a;tc:boOI ftidl was once· ·lhcfr sPccW pauy -
Marina.
Westminatcr recorded a ~ 14-0-1 rcoonlap.imt lbc v~ &Om 1 ~11. bu1bas101t the
last five. Odds: 7 -1.
1 .•• ,..... 8.-d ti..a.;u: Tbe
-~ "'-'-""'"•~··, -.... Oilen cr:'fllititGeOsllt.:r.c-are
at ""'1era; Tue.., Mardi 1' -et ~; AllO l"eclld: OMI Ou a.ta. ~ L..-a· ~a period Of'qHWDt Fff .• NiM'dl J2 -et H«atan1 5'A., Merel\ Gwto, Selon Ster. Emerald Outing, ...;...;."---.c-'----M -Detroit; T..._, MMOI 2' -et Sterc:roaa. Chucllllaler. ~ ~~' •WV'"._._ ~
Portlllftd; Wed~ Mardi 27 -et S.ttle; Fr1., Time: UD 2/S. Back o( die Year Dllmty =:: .. 2t ~ Delles; SI.II., MerOt 31 -P UACTA o .. , .... m.oo.. Thompeoa) and it's lbowina wi.lb a
Tua, ""'11 2 -at '*'"*'' Wed.. ""'' ~ ~:;..<>;-m11e NCI. '3.00 to.• lack of comil&eDcy in the nm.n.i.aaand l -et Sen Antonio; FtL, ..._. 5 -Kansai Mk'flMI JoM (Sllen'en> 7 • 4.00 Pl.SSi!ll p.me.
City; Si.I., .... , -Portland; TIM., Mrt ..... , llnt ,,,..,.dlel'ld) a.• "Wlzo D-...... bu shown ~ t -Denver; TIIUn.. ""'1111 -et Goldln ........ ___... l.Of'4 ..... " • ll ~
_ -• •--tt.... Tuetnlll1ne Led, NerdlM Gold, Cl'Ullll!e N. .._ -.. ... -~;Fri., Aort 12-S.ttle; Sun., A111rt 14 ....,,,.. · ·-v ""• Ull "1111 Ull, v\n11u • ~ty to · the oppocitjoa
., ---Timr. 1• us. ~to-noee • 'N• l.&M; A UACfA IM> _.. OU.a knockout bai been WtiQI. iD
SIEVl:NTH UCL One"'* oece. -.1.1: • • ...... 1. BllY ac ~> 12.20 uo s.• _,,._uou to too many m1-aes
Hy Sen WllNr (~I a. ... Scott Elliott ls 8 IC)ljd rwmer.
,..... lnv8der ,,..,,..., a.a quartel't>ildt Joe Nipoli bas lbowll
AIM ,__ ....,., GoUc:M. smau• obvious -tial in efforts apiDSt ~ .... .._ Lmt G, sm Aaw, Damien ~-Newport Harbor. ud '""* 2:tl 115.. --I"-....:.~ • • • .....__U-•XAC1'a t•-ttRSIS~-----~-~¥e-.--
IJGHTM Ha. ON m1e Peet. The defmse is not IO impremvc, votw <llifdlle> ue uo uo however, 10 deal with in-t»bole
Mon OlldY MM 1Sccr1e) 6M .._. situations c:amed by oflmsii¥e emn. Crec:Md a CPlera> ._. """ I
A11o rllCled: OWmlftt C.., Ne!IYI Odds: '""" • Hunter, Sole EJIMCltion, Mint..., k!IW!t, E-= ~.;:rs.: $. ()eeM V\ew (l..f}:~· -a_.,,
P DACTA (S-1) NJd WM. loOkfortbtSeabawtJ11DderG:aywi.;
...ne llAC1 o... rn11e .,.., wbo bas illStallcd a _runni.DJ
a..rM ~ lo.orrier> S.• lA 2• philoeophy bent OD aUackiQS with ~~'~> · 5
.10 t: twotisbtendsandthreeblcbiolbcl,
A.11o tK!ld: ,.....,, Hlfu siv,,...... buttberoad10bei!1J&tilleoon1tndcr ~ 2:01 vs. in these circles is a Iona one.
., UACTA {4-t> H.ld uuo There's no t!.~ strike potential.
S2 "*sax <J-1+ ... +•1 11111d muo but what the wks have taken
wltn nve Wlnnlftll lkMI• <nve '-->. away is the '1>1utber" wee.Idiom the
Cerrvowr POOi SIG,SlUI. --'l of the 1-cn ...... Taieo i;..a.ttv, TEtrTM llACL Ont mll Net •....., ..._-~ I'.
Game R*le CKuetWJ 2200 t.20 7.M Ocean View figures to deal a swift
o.tw wd <AndlnenJ 12..10 11.eo blow 10 others' champion~h•?\ hopes. ·
KUT ~ (,....,.._) U0 eo-"-'-'"• -~ •"'-A.llo r.c:M:-.. Mw'llle, T~. Die· The~w-...are.,..~pvenUK '•'°"*· Ft'061Y ~. Too ,._.,, opportunity to dominate the cloc:t.
Daft ""'*-could spring e upset or two -l ~!'fs-11 ...w W'-50. • because they don't fipre to be
Al1endencr. 4,m. interocpt.cd often,
Mike McGlincbey returns with an-leaiue su.tus at tiabt end a.od ~
Au.stwict Jives Ocean View a solid
kickin& pme. Odds: SO-I.
Kings send
goalle Blake
·to f artn club
INGLEWOOD (AP) -Tbe0 Lot
Aqeles K.ino have ,....,.,.,,, left
winaer Dan Brennan and aoa1lCDdcr Mike Blake to their New Kavcn &rm
club of the American Hockey~
it was announced Monday. Brennan appeared in seven of tbc
Kiili'' n.iAc pr'CICISOD ~~-Up &D assist llld a tcam•I . 2
penalty minutes; Blake poaeda 93
aoa!Hp.inst averqe in three preseaso.n pm.ea. I
Tbe rcassianiaa of B1ate, tbe only
returnee from last sc:uoc.'s Loil AD·
FJet aoattend.in& wlit. mcam lht ~ •ill ao wiih Bob 1a.DKYk iabd Dvrcn Eliot in IQial at tbe bcainnina
of the 19&4-I! 'National Ji
~SC2S0n.
Janecyk WIS ltCQuircd by Lot
lea from Cb.icaao in• deal .&idl in,olvcd a switch. of number ooe
picks between tbe Kinas and Ba.ct
Ha• in last June's entry draft. Eliot
as a former Comdl Univenity IC)alie
-110 v.'&S abO a member of'\be
Canadian Olytripic team.
Tbe moves &eft the Ki wilh 24
players on ·r roster.
Laa810id dedde.
to •tay W'ltlJ A'•
642-4121
'Subnit I pkbrt, ot Wt1 phototfaph It fot
you at 1 mllmal char&•·
C CENEAA TION
HEAL TY NOTICE
Tlle Dally Pilot will no loqer be open OD kta.rdaJ ~·
Om open~ laOGn wW bi Monday thra Prl4ay, 8:00 a.m. to 5t30 p.a. Dei.dl.la• will be u foUcnn: ..
&DITION &A.DURE
llood&J ••...••••...•....•.......••...................•...•••• ~. •sao p..-.
Tt1.cla7 •••.••...•.•.........•..•...••...............••...• llelada7, •iao p.a.
Wed.nt811ida.J •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• h4ieda.1, t.'80 ,.a.
Tbal'9Cl&J ...•.•...•••••..••••.••..••••.••.•..••••.•.• •~..ea,, 4sl0 p.a.
Pr1c1a, ••.••..•...•.•••••••.•...•.....••••.•...•.•.•••...• n....-1• •taO p.a.
8ata.rcla.J.. •• • • •. • • •••• .• •• •• ••• •• •• • • •• •• •• • . . •• •• . • • •• • • • • • Pt1A1a1. ll()O ,. ••
S'a.n.da.y •••••••• •• •• ••••••• •• • • •• •• • •••••• •• •• • • • • •• • •• •• •• •• • rrtda1. S:CJC> p.m •
. Daily Pilll
I ••
$2.17 per day
Tl\at'a AU ~ .,_tor '"""''°c kt the DAlY
PlOT
SERVICE
DIE CT ORY
ptl'9Chi1""1HI MIRAOA end the HUNTIHGTON BEACHCOMIEA~
Wedn.der&1 no extte dWoel
CALL TOOAVn
.... Liii
Yow Oely Plot
a.Wie Dnctcwy AIPI ... ,,~
" -··--·---···--HOROSCOPE SYDNEY
01111
• ,
WedDesclay, Oct 11
ARJES (March 21-Apnl 19): A~nt defeat is transformed into
victory. You'll locate what had been missing or stolen. Emphasis on
initiauve. new starts, pionceri~ spirit. Someone behind scenes is
..
..
,J ~~~NOW HIRllG
\ p' I CISllEll 1 CUlll
' 1lnt9Mew1f Fridays 9-11 A.M.
. {I t 1390 North P~ Coast
<Hwy., Le.guna Beach (on PCH
& Viejo)
caJI (7 14) 494--9233 for more
tnfo.
E TllTU1111
Pl'ttme yo.II .,._ ""* be
a¥ll Fr1 & Sat. eonar.--------
0&.-"°" thN 1"111 ol u. y.-. ElqMlr. noc nee. "'-
tervl••• I training ldledul9d 0 c Oct 100\.
,.,. " "' + bonUa. c.ii (213) 452~
District . Managers
If you .,,.oy wort11nt,1 wrfh ~ boyt &
Q•fh and d.sk jobs Ott not fof you.
comidef a <Of"' "' the neWlf)Oper cifcuto·
hon fie'd This '' o UNqve po\irion with
doil'f chollen9cn & rewatcb
Our ~.ngi or• imtMdiatoe ApPticontl
mu\I hO¥t o ~ ttottonWCl90" or tnKt .
We oft.°" uc.llent ~ wi1t1 o ~
pion and 90' •~• W• ho¥I on
uc.o.nt b4lfll0f '' pa. M «luda hCM.pi
tolitOltiOn ~ • ltberol .ocohofl Oftd
~·
Candldam """' ho.,. o dnire to t..
wee and be to If
yCM1 'I°" hcwe ttt. Cl'l4MlliCOhonl,
p&eose epp+y ... ~~ ..
tl1e
330 W. Bay
Costa Mesa, CA 92 26
'
C 110 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
142-4111
MOTOR ROUTES
Motor ~ates available
OENEAAl OFFICE .cper
lnd!Y needed tor 1 gtf1 of.
ftce. Ver1ed duUee, legel
or ecct bdcGrnd a ...i, Flu In. 845-0351
in Newport Beach C.orona del
Mar. Musa be 18 yean old llnd
have dependable car. Earn
1600-700 per month. Call
HAIRSTYLIST-nlc"• '*"*· od atmolphel •• k.a: Flllh. Ill. 71CMON
Newapeper
I 0 a.m. to 4:00 p.m . \,
642-4333
KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES! •
:: (714) 548-7058
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROaa
, Reeotll
SSwiU~I
9 PIClufe
14 Dairy trNI
15 Remari. •Ole
d.ed
18 -hOIKley
17 Engegemen1
18 Arum planl
19 nnntlh l•k•
~Addlell
22 Sleeveteu
nooMdreuf's
24 Hema in
28 Cut
27 Jtrwell
29 Hof HRH
30 'V oung """'"' 33 Amph1b1an
17 Equlf pref
38 Fire llt<:APfll
39 Alder Sc01
40 Cargo vesMi
4 1 Add11tone1"'
4 2 T elftc:O~I
44 Ran •nlo
45 Gruty erN
46 0'1Kh<>n
4 7 Cowboy g4tM
49 Con0e1eeod"
53 0.mand
2 3 4
17
20
24
57 A.clor -Flynn
51 Cmirch table
59 a.ta around
81 Eanh e><ef
6:L> M1n1mum
83 Ml11ture
84 FlaVOf es wooA •• ,.,,
88 1'1an 1rap1
81 Seth'• M)tl
DOWN
I Runl
:>Balance
3 Several Engll1h
QUeflhl
4 Ptece apart
!i Vecn1 area
6 Bound
7 r rench c11y
8 Orutd
morn.imen1?
~ F AVOf
10 R111pec1
11 -Kheyyem
t? Vetch
13 Doller blll1
'11 legt llAng
23 Deel•••
25 WM Scol
:L>8 Ficw..r
3-0 0<1nk1ng IPOlt
31 P . .,.d
PREVIOUS
PUZZLE SOL YEO
32 DlsaPPN!t
33 Appew
34 Auto part
35 lncftne
J&S.C
3 7 Clefgyman s
Off~
40 S..
42 V11e1 pen
43 C•ty preneme
45 O\lttlel fMh
47 Hide
48 Hackneyed
SO lnttrument
5 I X-raled moV>e
52 Tr~a
53 -Sunday
54 T Oatl eprNO
55 Ending l<>f -o ()( rn.o
58 Proofread
80 Olatr J &ignll
• 7 • 10 11 12 13
t
~--......... ----------------~--~--- -
RVM~
~~----
COMM ELL
CHEVROLET
·." , , •• 1.. '
' I ,.., I \ ,, I . \
5 46-1200
'WIUI
U8EOCAA8 a TRUCKS
COME INOA CALL F<>f'
Fiil llfUIUL
Con'IW-Oll.llo
al...-r . 18211 BEACH BLVD.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
14l .... lJNl-W1
WIWllTYM • IWl ... Ulf
S..AoneldO-
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
20b0 HAllllOll 6l v 0
CO\fA MHA 642 0010
10
UllllEW
&Ill'• 111'1111
l.AAOE IEl.ECTION Of
NEW & USED IMW'll • ........ _
VOlUMI! 8AL!9 8EAVtee I U!ASINQ
3170 N. ~,Avit. LON08fACH (No..Chiwry~
l~~ OPEN 81V!H OAYI
'JIHllL
5eM ml. Otto Calf. '*· ShOwroom QUll. 2 toPI.
elr, -.rto. 2 ownwa. ottet.
7M,0203 or 7ff.O+M
•71 BEL. wht. bll'9 leMher
~.:5&:~~Xlrll
"72 250 4 Door. Auto, P/8,
P/8. A/C, new b.igt
peint. ~ 790-t494
'71 SL¢. Thie gcwoeoue el-vw blue 8LC le . ...stor9d
to lie• new cond. A ttuly =PP~&f53'*'Y
'80 2400 CU9t Pelnt, Bil
leattw Int. 37 gal '** eunroof, bleupunkt. Wei cared for. IOI( ml
11•.000 nrm. 780-9577
·eo 2400, dt'k btownltan
Int, 1 ownr, xlnl cond
115.500 pp 720-9417
·e 1 '80SL w"'<llat lo ml ong owner 8'gnal r.ct/blc
ltht Perlect Coftdltlonl
131.000 '*'2211
.... *>O (non-turbo). lky
or•en/blk '"'· auto, bteut!Nlt VfttY tow "*' ... t.aa,too. ua-aias-.
OVER 110
Pr..own.d Meloedee
To CMoee from
.lllW.S
lllNITI
1001 Ouell keet
Newport 8-:t\ .......
'
. 111£5-::u·s
coum
IOTOIS
~
11UUUl1'
CllYllTIILI
Wotfaburg Edition
. 41inoCU. 12'8 74 + ta.. per mo
TOPltUto ..
c:Mttt5.A" IZ500 CAP tMuctlOO ~l&eoo21
@
, ,,, SOlllOOI
........ UllJ
48 l'llO C E. L '23' + IU per mo
TOP $12,019.20
CAPlt2,000
A.eldu., •7M OI
-@ -
1114 Y&lllRIL
IO mo C E.L
$221.111 + tu per "'° TOP l14,l2t IO
CAPl14,et5
$2000 CAP ...ouctton ~&5140IO •
m
111' llnLIE
41 moCEl.
'21h wpermo.
TOP ltt,040 N
CAP1T1,500
.s500 CAP l9duction.
Allelduel ss21t 1e
Aailt8oC> "' leulng •
1e111 Beach e1vd
Huntington Beach
(11•) 142-2000
NABERS
CADl.LAC
LAAQE8T IEUCT10H
"' .... model, tow mlllge c.dll9CI In 8outherri
C8ilforNal S. UI tOdayt
140-1110
2tOO twbor &Ml.
C08TAMEIA
•
.. • I
•
...
'
Forecaata on A2. Cllm 1111111
---
I I Jf '>[)fl V < ·<. I OHf H 'i "lf~:
HQspital. drug ~Uspect rearrested
.
· Newport woman may also be quizzed
in attempted Hoag Hospital b~eak .. fn
.
allegedly 5teahnJ vials con taming the
two powerful painkillcn from a
locked ·medicine tray at Costa Mesa
Medical Center Hospital.
Fountain Valley Detective Dcnnts
By ROBERT BARKER morJ>hine and Demerol from mobile Minna said today that Tracy will be °' ... °""'""'~ medicine carts at Fountain Valley charged with the burglaries on Stpt.
A 31-year-<>ld Newport Beach Community Hospital. 28 aod Oct. I and for an attcmytcd
nurse-anesthetist was arrested by The woman.l identified as Bridget ' -b!i!rgl.ary at Fountain Valley Com-
Fountain Valley police today on Lyno Tracy 01 Newport Beach, was munity again on Saturday, prior to
suspicion of steahna 121 vials of · previously arrctfed Saturday after her arrc t m.Cosu Mesa.
...
.
McNamara
to leave
-Angels
John McNamara has elected
not to return as manager of the
California Angels for the 1985
season, the club announced
today.
Following several convena-
tions with General Manaeer
Mike Port, McNamara in-
formed Port of his decison.
0 While Im pleased the An ls
"W31lted me back, I fee ·
for a change," McNamara said.
"Buzzie Bavasi hired me in
1983 and now that he has retired
I think at is in the best tnterest of
the club if I leave at this time,"
said McNamara.
In acceptina McNamara's
decison, Port said: .. Speak.ina
on behalf of the organization . l mow .we1l all miss John. We
had hoped he would return · ~Q in 1984 but we do respcci
hlS feelings on the matter."
During his two years as
skipper of the Angels,
McNamara's teams comeilcd a
151-173 record, finishing ma tie
for fifth in.198l arutwiodma up
in a second-plao: tie with
Minnesota.
Coast
The cartoon character
Ziggy Is In the center of a
paternity suit./ A3
Ciillfomla
Gay hotelier opening re-
sort In Palms Springs for
Al~ patients./ Al
Nation
Barbara Bush apologizes
to Geraldine Ferraro for
calling her a 'name that
rhymes with rich.' I A4
Man sets wife on fire after
viewing TV program
'Burning Bed' .I A8
Mlnd&Body
Clues In your mouth can
tell a dentist about dis-
eases elsewhere In your
body./81 •
Sports
They' re calling this year's
World Serles the fast
food Fall Classic, and
both the Padres ants
Tigers are hungry for a
champlonshlp./C1
Enf'ertalnment
Underachievers tiave
their day In "For the Use
of the Hall" at the Irvine
Community Theater ./83
INDEX
Erma Bombeck
Bridge
Bultetln Board
Bull,,..
Callfornla News
ClaNlfi.d
CrOMWOf'd
Death NotioM
Horoecope
Ann Landers
Mina and Body
NJtlOrial New.
Opinion
PIJ>af'aul
Publle Notlcea
=•Martceta
TMVllon
ThHtetl W•UMH:
'WottdNIWI
,.
82
~
A3
85!8
A4
C4·8
C6
B8 cs
82
81·2
A4
A10
81
88
C1-3
87
82
83
A2
A4
Roadahow
Thia 1912 OlcUmoblle Autocrat Roadater owned by l'f ewton
Wlthen was one of more than 100 claMlc can on Ttew at
the MCODd annaal Ke-=~ CoDC01U'8 D'Elq&ance. Aboft, John llarpby of BWa aClmlra the car while
bol~ daaOter Lauren, 2, and 4 -yeu-old 80ll John
llarpby IV .-Al»oat 2,000 people attended the Sanday eYent
UCI .official pleads
guilfy' to bribery
By PHJL SNEIDERMAN
Of ... Olllr ........
A UC ltvine mailrten.ancc super-
intendent accused of solicitina a
$I 00,000 bribe from a roofing com-
pany has pleaded auilty in exchange
for a rccommendallon that be 5Cf"VC
no prison time for the offense.
The UCI employee. Elie Uc
Air ·Gr.ash
lie ignites
de Bate
ea JW~
Newport tumln
lts attention to
small aircraft
\
Grooms Jr~ 59. of1CA.rdeo Grove,
entered the auilty pa Monday
durin.a a preliminary hearina at
Harbor Municipal Court in Newport
Beach. · In an interview today, Grooms'
attorney. N. David Oad)' of
Anaheim. said his client contends he
(Pleue .ee UCI WORDR/A2)
Minna also Tracy &S bemg linkedJto
a bu~ attempt t H a Memorial
Hospital in Newport Beach on un-
day and a bUralary of Otmerol and
morphine at United Western Medical
Center m Santa Ana lhe me day.
Minna said the woman was re-
leased on her own recognizance after
bcr arrest Saturcby.
Minna said the woman hid been
identified from I Photo&raphic li'lCUP
by wiln scs at lhc Fountain Valley
h pital. W11nessaatsogo1adescnp.
tion of her and her car -ru$t•
colored 1979 Honda Prc1Ude that was
impoundta following the man·s
rrest 10 Costa Mesa.
Minna who planned 10 quntioa
li,.cy iOday at Fountain Valley police
headquarters. said be believed
allqcd.Jy took the narcotics for pci:-
sonal use and not for e5.
HOM Ho1pna1 offJCial1 COftfinaed toda~ that a womad had been lioUd
lo recent inadenis an whiCb pof'llbJe
cdacine cam were moved to otber locataons in the hospnal. Bat aa.
werr no theft , lhey said. bccautc die
cans contuncd no contrOUed ublcances.
Tracy was anated dw fint time
Saturday aftctnoon an Colla Mal &D r..-..-DllUG/A.2)
'Sign
wars'
heated
inFV
Candidate blames
mayor for latest
ppllUcal van sm
•1 aoasar llYNDMAN a. .. r.,,.. ...
~ Foupwn Valley Ol)' Council
ca;,:(lidite laid two of bis campmip
'""sia.ns were ripped down over 'the
weekend and -be thinu be lcDoW$
wtio·s.rcsponsiblc..:.. Mayor MarviD
Adler.
James Pctrikin tilea a poltee report
claimini the signs-one mcasurioa 4
b)' I feet. the other 4 by 4 -were torn
down and datroyed. 1'bc CO&t of. I.be siazis.. be said. was $37~,
... have to think it was Adler or bis
supporters. .. Petrikin said. .. bc:cawe
ooc of bis signs ri&ht next to mine
wasn't touched."
Adler, seeking his fourth term.
dismWed the ICCUS&tiCJD and saMI he
was out of toW'n .tbc entire weekend
attending Yom K.ippur tCT"Viccs..
Adler said he suspectS Petrikin
himself may be rcponsibiC Cot 1Carina
down bis own ~ tD 'tiabt of f.be media attention a Huotinctoo Beach
C1t) Council candidate attracted
v.hen his s.,i&ns ~ hnda:liu.d
1·s just another wa-y to Fl bis name in I.be papen, .. Adler sa.ad.
at UC lnine, wblcb rat.eel almost $80,000 for the Santa
Ana Belabts·ba.ed ~eat and Tnatment 8errices
Center. 'fhe center f.r:;:f• coanee•~ to jaYeaj1e law-breaken &!\d their ea. Best of ow prise went to
Ste'Ye Nanlnl of Tac8on for Illa 1930 CadlH•c V-16
Roadster.
The accusations are the latest in an increasi~y heated City Council race. Earlier. Adler and two otber City
Council memben bad been accused ofbreaki~ st.ate law by meeting
privately m Adler's borne to discuss
city business.
Tbc county district anorney's of·
fice. ho~er. determined there was
insufficient evidence to support the
claim.
Voter reglstratlo1J
deaifllD.e to1Jlg1Jt
~ Coast residents have
until midnight today to regjstcT to
vote in the November ~eral
election, accordina to
County R~ uar of Voters
Olson. __.
Olson said the rqJstrar of
voters' office Will remain open
until midriiaht to accommodate
residents who still want to rqister
for the Nov. 6 election. Tbe office
, (Pleue eee ~OTER/A2)
Bal rapist faces
trial onjailbreak
By JEFF ADLER
Of ..............
Convicted Balboa Island rapist
Michael Eric Gonzales was bound
o-.cr to Orange County Superior
Court Monday for trial on four felon)
char&ei tcmming from bis aborted
August escape attempt from the
County Courthouse.
Following a tbrec-bour
prclimin.ar) bearing in c.cntn.t Mu-
nicipal Court in Santa Ana. Gonz.alel
was bound over on cbataes of escape. ~uh on a peace officer with a
dc.adly weapon. battery on a J>CllCe
(Pleue eee JAD.BR&Alt/A2)
Refugees prosper
"ifl: Orange County's
'Little Saigon ' area
l DAILY PllOT/Tu day, Octot>at 9, 1 8•
Amtrak luxury Metroliner
fails to meet tra·nsit needs Foggy mornings and cooler air
t::r 1t
Tran portatton Commission advises rail line
to schedule more reg~lar service along q>ute
8)' J
01\MO.Or~••"
Ao Orange County Transpon•uion > Comm1 ~on stud) of Amtrak'pa~se~
gcr lt:lin ~rvi~ bctwetn Los Al'\&elcs
and San Diego recommends ad· ~ ditional trains be scheduled to recap-
ture lost ridmhip and attract new
p scnac~.
The study. presented to transp0r.
tation commissioners Monday,
found that Amtrak'' new, limited-~top luxury Metrohncr scrvts only a small number of high-moome users
who might otherwise ride one of the
~•A other rqularly scheduled trains to
San01qo.
Mctruliner sefVlce, maugurated in
Fcbru~ry. shave~ 15 minutes off the
norrnal 2-hour..and-45-mmute tram
ride for passeflJtn ~ho pay a $5
surchitrgc. The train, runmns once a
_day in each direction. ~Oftly l WO
intermediate stops, at Del Mar and
AnllhCim.
Regular scrv1ce an the comdor,
aboard one of six daily trains,
mcl udcs stops at Fullerton. Anahe1m,
Santa Ana, San Juan Capistrano and
San Oemente in Oraoge County.
OCTC tran$port.a1ion analysts con·
ducted the survcy1 along with the
state Transportation Department,
af\tr sevcra) cities along the route
expressed conotm that Metrolincr
service would not meet travel needs
in the corridor nor increase ndership
or Amtrak revenues.
The survey found:
•That the Mctroliner appeal\ to a
mall J:~t of hi&h~incomc
1r'l't'etf-rs nam tend to ndc the
train infrequently, predominantly for
business PUrpo'SC5.
• lbat ridcntUp on the lowCT-
priced S:ln 01~n i~ comprised of
more f~uent riders. usuall)' women
who ride the train three or more times
each week to and from woii.
•That ridenJl1p on the Mctrolincr
averages less than SO .penons per
t.ratn; the San Oiegan train aver&ge$ 200 persons per train.
•That ridership patterns pomt up
the importanoe ofintennediate stops
Iona the route. Rou&hly 80 percent
ofall tnps bqin in either Los Ancel~
or San Diego and temunate at one of
the 1ntennediatc stop 'tations. -
•That the primary service im--
provcments San Diegan passcngen
desire 1s more frequent service and a
smoother ride followed by creature
comforts, such as guaranteed seating
and complimentary snack service.
Coastal
Tid es
71
89 ..
80
68 76 ti
9$
70
75 81
51 72
'° IM
12 ~ ., •• MllwM .. ..
M I '"*A u HtlfWl!llr lf7
,,....Oftal\1 a
NftYoo~ 17
Norfoll.. Va 1)
o 1.i-eirr .,
Orn&lle fiO
Otlendo 14
P.&m5PflnQI 1()4
Phi!~ u ~ ... :no:.::r ... n 11
IPof'tllU14. Or 1t ... ~ n =:re.,, u
"""° .,.
AicllMOllO n
9-llNl11o ..
SI Louil 11
s1.-.i•Ttl'h1Ma ..
S.,I Lfll(• Olly 71
SMAntoniO 15 s .. Ot9go 76
52 San F 1 llldtco 77 3"' San J11111,P A t2
61 StSle~ a
48 S..llle • 50411t~ ...
Sii SIOWI Fiiia II
71 Spoll-12 55 lie.,,_ .. 13 54 II Tooeu 11 62
64 lliCIOll .. 11
64 Tulsa . ... 98
'3 WahUlglon .. 12
50 Wlehlt• 74 57 13 W~k-a.r1• • .. le 61 WllmlnglOn,0. ee 56
Fog expected a s cold front 1I1oves sout h Temps
By Use Associated Prest
Cool air and night and morning low
clouds will hit Southern California oo
Wednesday as a low-pressure system
dominates the Gulf of Alaska and a
cold front moves down the coast, the
National Weather Service says.
manne air, and then wt gel low clouds the low-70s.
from the moist air as well," Shaw Fair weather will frame Southern
said. California mountains and de1erts
Patchy lat~night antl carty·morn-Wednesday. The mountains, JWCP.l
iog low clouds ~. punct~te a by IS to 25 mph northwest winds, will
mostly fair day. H\gh in the m1d·70s have sunny but slijhlly cooler days.
arc forecast with overnight lows from Highs from 68 to 75 and lows from the
58 to 62. 40s to mid-SOs are f orccast' Even though 1l is weak, the cold
front is strong enough to deepen the
marin®e!l_weather service spec1al-Fog will creep Ulto the coastal areas The days will be cooler in the ~~-...dcscns. 'b'bercJl.i&h~ 10
morning air. Sunshine is cllpccit(i low-JOOsareexpccted.l.owsfrom the
during the day, when highs will reach 40s to the low-60s arc forecast. Fathers'-grOapto help HB
manpayforgirl's burial
lsfFrarilie ~Jiaw-Saia. -
"The marine layer causes the moist
CRASH IGNITES CONTROVERSY~ ..• Frim 1caft ud wire report. should be buried like one," ACO$~
said. garuzation headquartered in Santa
Ana, had referred Acosta to attorney
Henry James k0ehler JV when the
transfusions became a custody issue.
The group has 4,000 members in
California.
rromAl
things aren't ngl)t but the (county)
supervisors with their tunnel vision
aren't going to pay attention." Wil-
liams said.
Newport Mayor Evelyn Hart said
she will ask her council colleagues
today to support an examination of
light-plane traffic out of John Wayne
Airport.
"We've always talked about com-
mercial airhnes and that problem but
we've never taken a stand on gencraJ
aviation," said the mayor. ''I think
tt's necessary that we react.
VOTER .•.
> .............. ----
"We havo ways of measuring nCLSe
and what that does to our lives but the
question of safety is right there too.
It's always present."
Orange County supervisors today
asked county airp0rt ..experts to in·
vestagate the plane crash and return
with an explanation by OcL 23.
''It is important the board ag-
grcssi vely pursue an explanation:·
said Supervisor Thomas Riley. whose
district includes the airport and
Ncwpon Beach. Other supervisors
did not comment on the fatal mishap.
Supervisors had been set to con-
sider selling "aviation easement" for'
the construction of multi-story build·
an~ in the shadow of the airpori. The
sale, however, was delayed for 30
days on the recommendation· of the
From Al county's airport commission. which
• met Monday evening. is at 1300..C Grand A venune. Santa Tbe single-story office bu1Jdin1
.\ na. . . . where the plane crashed is across the
Additionally. deputy regi~tra:s will street from the end of the airpon
be on-duty from 6 p.m. to midnight at runway. fo~r other county locations for. last-According to eye "'1tnesses,
minute. registrants. Elaeible c1t1zens KJingeosmith's Beechcraft Baron
can register at the Huntington Beach lifted off from the runway and Poli~ Department. 2CX>O Marn St.. immediately developed problems. Hunting~on Beach; Orange County Several bystanders said smoke F1~e Station , . poured from one engine as the craft
-2. 24001 Paseo de Valenc;1a, banked sharply, spun 10 midair and
Laguna Hills; the Buena Park Pohce then slammed into tb'e Jocado Agri·
Department, 6650 Beach. Blv~.. culture Corp. office building.
Buena Park; and the Placentia Poh~ Several witnesses agreed that the
Departryient. 401 E. Chapman in airplane never got more than 300 feet
Placentia. . . off the ground. P~rsons with questions about regis-The 6 p.m. crash triggered an tra~1on procedures should call the explosion that witnesses said
registrars office at 834-2244. engulfed a portion of the structure in
· · -United· Fathers· of America will
fiames.Acertifiedpublicaccountant, help a Huntington Beach man who But thegirl's.motberdisagreed.
James Crowley, was in a rear office at won a court ruling allowing,. him to "The girl wanted to be cremated 50
the ume of the crash and was not bury his I 5·ycar-old daughter, but the mothC1" is merely trying lO carry
· · red who cannot afford the burial. out her dead daughter's wishes," said
lOJTom. Smith, president of Jocado, Melissa Pina Aoosta died Sunday Kennth BarwjcJc. Mrs. Aoosta•s at· ~d during normal business hours of a disease that attacked her i!llmune tomey. He was not present during
there would have. been nine cm-system. She had been the subject of a Monday•s court hearing.
ployees workina in the area of the cu~tody dispute when her Jeh~v~h's Orange County-Juvenile Court
building where the plane crashed. Witness mother refused on rehgaous Judge Donald A. McCartingave both
fi ds t ~ t h · blood parents part of what 'bey wanted by The re from the crash causBl_a_ grou'!: . 0 e er receive denyj"'o requests for the autopsy and minimum of $300,000 dam.age and trans1us1on~. ...
Smith said he anticipates the figurc After Melissa's death of"complJca-the cremation. will soar once the losses arc added. lions of lupus erythemotosus " her However, Acosta is indigent and
Desks, office furniture and company parents contined to argue ov~ what cannot afford to pay for the burial.
files were charred by the flames. to do with her. ..J said Rod Biving!I_. prcsidentofUnited
Telephones were reduoed to puddles Herfather.A:moldThomasAcoS1a;' Fathet?*Af'DC!l<:a Inc. .
of plastic from the heat. wanted a Roman Catholic funeral Therefore, Bivings said Monday,
Smith said the company will be and an autopsy, while her mother, biso~nizatfon will start seeking tu· rdocat~ nearby until the building is Susie Pina A~esta wanted to bar the deducttbledonat1ons today to pay for
reconstructed. autopsy and have the body cremated. her b~rial.
The mishap 'IS being investigated "ShewasbaotucdaCatholic-sbe United Fathers, a non-ptofit or-
by the National Transportation Safe-
ty Board but investigators today said
it is stiH too early to pinpoint the
cause of the accident. The aircraft's
wreckage was Lifted by crane from the
Vandals ransack school
building Monday morning and taken By STEVE MARBLE
by truck to Long Beach for exam in-Ofttiel>ellyl'ltol ... "
ation.
lment but is being used for storage.
according to Ray Schmerer. business
manager of the Newport-Mesa Uni-
fied School District.
. Melissa's discas. lupus
erythcmotosus, is conventionally
treated with blood transfusions.
However, she received no tran~
fusions until June because she had
been cared for at two hospitals that
treat patients 10 accordance with
Jehovah's Witness beliefs that the
Bible forbids transfusions.
In June, Acosta. an ex-<:onvict who
lives in Huntington Beach and who
had not seen his daughter for 11 ycan,
sued for joint custody so he could
arrange for his daughter's treatment.
The Orange County Department of
Public Social Services was awarded
custody and Mehssa was admitted
immediately to Martin Luther Hospi-
tal for blood transfusions.
"I've been praying for her to pass
away:· Acosta said. "After these last
operations, ifs better that she died.
She wouldn't have been a whole
person. She looks peaceful now. She
looks happy, she doesn't hurt any-
more." . Newport Beach firefifhters noted
10 a report that one o the plane's
propeller's spun free of the craft's
engme while the plane was stiU over
the runway. A single blade was found
on the runway and a second in a
clump of grass, the report noted.
Vandals who broke into a closed
Newport Beach elementary school
this week went on a destruction spree,·
smashing windows and mirrors. rip-
ping apart sofas and reducing a piano
to so much kindling. Flood session in Huntington
Klingensmith. a Santa Ana busi-
neSSf!tan and. forme~ Air Force pilot
m Vietnam, 1s survived by his wife
and three children. Funeral services
are pending.
School officials said they have not
added up damages at EastblufT
Elementary School and do not yet
known whether the vandals stole any
supplies from the campus.
The grade school was closed down
in June because of declining enrol-
'
A community meeting is scheduled
Wednesday night concerning flood
control problems in Huntington
Beach.
Experts on redevelopment, flood
prevention as well as candidates for
the Huntington Beach City Council
are expected to be on hand to outline
steps residents can take to safeguard
their homes.
The meeting 1s slated at 8 p.m. at
Peterson School. 20661 Famswc>rth
Lane.
VIETS PROSPERING IN COUNTY ... ommmm111Mll--------------. -. -... -. ----------From Al
for the proprietors of the boutiques.
V1etnarpese grocery stores and Ch1-
n@g(! herbal medicine shops, the
Vietnamese influx has brought a new
culture to Orange County, a tra·
ditionally white, upper-middle-class
c;tronghold.
A.n estimated 60,000 Vietnamese
and other Indochinese refugees live in
Orange County mainly in Garden
Grove. Santa Ana and Westminster.
accord mg to the county chapter of the
Vietnamese Chamber of Commerce.
About 20 percent of the students 1n
Westm 1 nster schools are V 1etnamesc,
but community leaders say they have
be-en assimilated well. That 1s, the
Vietnamese have not clustered in a
large Vietnamese neighborhood but
have blended 1n with their neighbors.
While the Vietnamese have gener-
ally prospered since amving largely
pcnniles:. and finding homes through
churches and relocation services.
there have been a few obstacles in
their path to assimilation.
Many long-standing merchants m
Bolsa have moved out, cittng the loss
of Anglo patrons, and other Orange
C-0unty residents remam embittered
about the war ~d the influx of
foreigners into the blue-collar job
market
Westminster Mayor Kathy Buchoz
recalls that residents held meetings to
talk about ways to deal with the
burgeoning Vietnamese stores. which
they mistakenly believed were capi·
talizing on government subsidies.
"Ir was very emotional and ugly."
Buchoz recalls. "They said they were
worried about property values. (but)
property values have gone up since
the Vietnamese arrived.''
"I believe they are a benefit to the
city, an attraction for the ·ctty." the
mayor said.
A.t their 1obs. a lot of Vietnamese
men ba ve bad problems taking orders
from women. who were more subser-
vient in the homeland, and taking
orders from supervisors who may
have had less power in their home-
land.
Before the Vietnamese arrived, a
lot of the plentiful jobs in the local
assembly plants went to HJspanics.
sparking tense confrontafions be-
tween the two groups 1n the work-
place.
Cahfornia's estimated Vietnamese
p0pulation is 179,000, with the next
largest number. 36,000, living in
Tcus.
Tran K1em Luu. who founded the
Delta Savings & Loan Association in
Bolsa and now drives a Mercedes,
said the Vietnamese community
hopes one day to gain some political
clout.
"We're not ready yet to be a
political force, but we will be soon."
Just Call
What do you llb about the Daily Piiot? Wbat don't you Hite? Call tbe
number at left and your meuage will be recorded, transcrlbed aad dtllvtttd
to the approprtat~ editor. _ .
642-6086
The same 24-bour ans"erU.g service may be uted to rfford le&tert to tbe
tdltor on any topic. Contributors to oar LeUen colamn mast include tbelr
name and telephone number for nrlflcatloa. No drculatlon calls, please.
T~I us what's on your mtnd. \..../~
Dally Piiot
O.llvery
le GuarantMd
u ''",. ,., ff '( .. tu.... .,,..., r ac• t
' W r f'!' "I tJf'• • '
IA •<XI' Op, ~ l• ,... .... ...,
Clrcutatlon
Te phone•
•
~
ORANGE COAST t
Daily Pilai
H. L. Schw•rtz Ill
Pubh<>h~r
Roeem•ry Churchman
Controllr.r
,,
Steph n F. Carazo
Product on
Mnnnger
Oo~ld L. Wllll•m•
C1rculat1on
Manag r VOL. n, NO. 213
..)
UCI WORKER PLEADS GUILTY ...
From A l
is not guilty of the bribery charge but
accepted the guilty plea agreement to
avoid the expense and emotional
trauma ofa trial.
Deputy D1stnc1 Allome)' Susanne
Shaw said she will recommend to
Superior Court Judge David Carter at
an Oct. 22 hearing that Grooms be
sentenced to five y~rs probation and
be required to pay a $5,000 fine. lf the
judJC does not follow the recommcn-
dat1on, Grooms can withdraw his
guilty pica.
Shaw said Grooms could face a
maxjmum of four years in prison for
soliciting a bribe as a state employee.
The prosecutor said she was rec-
ommending the ncrprison ~ntence
in part because it is acceptable to his anticipated termination by UCI.
univenity officials and because The deputy district attorney said
Grooms has no prior criminal record. she had been prepared during Mon·
Grooms was arrested by UCI day's hearing to play a lengthy tape
police Sept. 25 after he alltJcdly recor<hng of conversations between
solicited a bribe from IBK Assoctates. Grooms and an IBK official.
a Yorba Linda firm. in exchange for Defense attorney Gady today de-
promising to award the company a scribed the matter as "a mis-s 150,000 university roofing contract. understandinj." Of the tape record·
Investigators charged that Grooms ings. Gady said, "One sentence out of
demanded $50,000 a year for two four hours could be interpreted as
years. plus a share of the company's • incnminating; the rest was innocent."
gross profit$ and a share of the. Gady also said no contract was
business itself. made and no money changed bands
Shaw said part of the guilty plea in the incident -
arrangement specifies that Grooms Grooms has been employed at UCl
have no future contact with the for four~and·a-balf years. Before his
university or the roofing company arrest. he had notified the univcrslty
that he will not file a grievance over that he planned to rctt~ in May 1985.
DRUG THEFT SUSPECT SEIZED AGAIN •••
From Al
connection with the theft of S 1 vials
of moryhine and Demerol.
But tt wa.sn.'t until today Wl Tracy
was positively identified as the
suspect who was w~ tight blue
jeans llnd a red blouse while alle~dly
stealin , the powerful paank!Uina
druJ,S in Fountain VaUcy.
Tracy was.apprehended later Satur-
day at the Costa Mesa hospital by
o\lnet and staff members.
Costa Mesa police reported a
woman wheeled a locked can into the
nurses· loungeti\d pncd i1-0pen with
a scrcwdnver. She apparently cul her
hand while breaking into the 1ray.
police said.
Two nurse~ became suspicious
when they saw the suspect•s bloochcd
hand. They also fo\lnd bloody towels
near t.hc buralarized tray. accordin1
to police
JAILBREAK TRIAL ...
From Al
offiett and false impnsonmcnt. Ar: was tackled and arrnted as he ran for
raignmcnt was scheduled for Oct. 18. a first·floor exit by a C:.lifornia
Addlllonall)'. he Wiii be tntd on a Hi&hway patrolman who hap{l'.Cnc:d
sii:i&ferountof posscss1nJa weapon in to lit an the 1n\I Ana court bu1ldin1 jail, a chatlC ICM!~ ap1ns1 him after on an unrtlatM matter.
1 crudcl~ .. fashionci! knife Qr•• hank" H d the cSCJaoc been wee: ful. at · wa conflated 1n March ~~·~-~ii>u~d ha .. ·c been the tteond for
Th<. ll·)'car-old Gonzale is ac:.. Gonz.al~ from Onngt Coun•y
cu.std or ullm1 a fake un and autbor11Jes and hts •hird csca~
ovcrpo nglWOc1eiRnynm h I 1 ovtntf. He ped from the.founty
a holdina cell on tht counhousc·s J11lmadlrin1dayllh•b Sept 12.
second floor on Aua. 18. Gon1 le I by lo~-rina liim Jf frorn 'the
,,
The vials contained 100 miligrams
of morphine and Demerol.
Fountain Valley detecdves sat<S
Tracy. who was jailed in Orange
County Jail on su,picion ofbursmry,
possession of a cont rolled substance
and possession of p&rapbe.malit from
the Costa Mesa incident. had been
released on her own recoanizanoe
despite their rcqunu to hold her for
qocstaonina in the Fountain Valley
ca
Jail's rooftopusmsa rope made out or
bedsheets.
1 n June 1983. he walked aw y from
tlic Peter Piteft Honor Rinch near
· ugus where he had been tentcn d
b) J:;l>j"'"AnJcle& County authorities.
Gonzales is awaitinJ senttnc:ina on
multiple rape. bui:l1ary and a uh
cl\arges followina h1a ·February con·
viC'uon for the rape and beating of 1
Balboa Isl nd wallrn • He rues I
rnu:lmum 16 to I • r pnson term.
I
OS
SUS
Disney strikers jailed for
picketing too cf OS§ to
ticket booths./ A3
The cartoon character
Ziggy Is In the center of a
paternity suit./ A3
Callf omta
'-6i!Wl1tetelfHH'~.
sort In Palms Springs for
AIDS patients./ Al
Na don
Barbara Bush apologizes
to Geraldine Ferraro for
calling her a 'name that·
rhymes with rich.' I A4
Polls show Mondale's
taking up the gap after
Sunday debate./ A4
World -,
El Salvador rebels agree
to ~ace talks with
Duarte./ Al
Two Australian climbers
killed on Mt. Everest./ M
Mhid&:Body
Clu-es In your mouth can
tell a dentist about dis-
eases elsewhere In your
body./81
You probablyhave more
time for exercise than you
thlnk./81
Sporta
They' re calling \his year's
World Serles the fast
food Fall Classic, and
both the Padres and
Tigers are hungry for a
champlonshlp./C1
Edison High Is a slight
favorite In the Sunset
League football race, but
four other teams also
have a big shot./C1
Entertainment
Underachievers have
their day In "For the Use
of the Half" at the Irvine
Community Theater ./83
County Music Award win-
ners Include Alabama for
third year In a row as well
as guitarist Chet Atkins,
Willie Nelson and Jullo
lgleslas./M
Baalnea
Find out how much you
khow about consumer
borrowlng./B5
INDEX
Erma Bombeck
Bridge ·-
'Bulletin eoerd
Bualneaa
Callfornle Newa
Claulfted
Crouword
Death Notices
Horoaoope
Ann Landers
Mind and Body
National Newt
Opinion
Paparam
Pubtle Notlcel
Sport•
82
S4
A3
85-8
A4
C4-6 ce
88 cs
82
81-2
A4
A10
8-1
88
Road show · ... ,
Thia 1912 Ol~oblleAatocnt Roadaterowned by 1'ewton
Wlthen wu one of more than 100 cla•lc can on new at
the woad annw K~ ~ell Concoun n•1tteaance.
Abo.e, Jobia ll~lay °'"~ BUJa admlres the carwlalle
laoldlq daanter Lauren, 2, and ~year-old llOD John
llarplay IV. Al>Oat 2,000 people attended the Sanday eYeDt
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of .. IWIJ ........
A Fountain Valley City Council
candidate said two of his campaign
signs were ripped down over the
weekend and· he· thinks he knows
who's responsible -~or Marvin
Adler. ·
James Petrikin filed a pqlice report
Air crash
reignites
debate
on~WA
By STEVE MARBLE
.Of .. Dlllr .......
A fiery plane: crash near JOhn
Wayne: Airport that killed one man
has reignited a debate in Newpon
Beach ~>n whether the airport and
nearby business offices and homes
will ever make aOOd neiahbors.
The twin-cnainc Beechcraft lun~ nose-fil"ll into the corpora&e ffic:ies of a Ne~ &each qncul·
tural finn Sunday evenlna. The pa lot.
poyd Houston K:linaensinith. ~.
Ms killed insWltly.
.. This reinfol"CC$ lO tames o"cr that
ha n "tirport in wrona place," said Tom Walhams. a New-
port Beaeh businessman and board
rftcmber of tht Airport Workina
Group of Ota nae Councy-a dtittn
c:qanmuon oDDosed 10 the c •
claiming the signs-one measuring 4
by 8 feet, the other 4 by 4-were tom
down and destroyed. The cost of the
siiJlS, he said, was $375.
0 1 have to think it was Adler or his
supporters," Petrikin said, "because
one of bis $lgns right next to mine
wasn't toyched."
(Pleue eee VALLEY I A2)
0 R A N GE c 0 lJ N T y c A LI r 0 ~n... A -: ' (_ ~ ~~ • -
r .u
at uc·rm.iio, whleh rai.ied alm:.r for tlle San.la Ana B~ta-baled Aw'imnent aD Treatment Senlcea
Center. 'fbe center r.r:nra to jaTeDUe ..... braken and their ea. Best 8liow prise went to
Steft KaDJ.nl of Tac8on for Illa 1990 CadDlac V·18
Roadster.
Newport woman
also suspected
in Hoag break-in
By ROBERT BARIE&
Of .. O...,........ -
A ll"")'car-old Newport Bcacb
woman, · suspected of stealina
narcotics from a Costa Mela bolpitar. was iaken into custody 'IOday by
Fountain Valley police OG .......-
of attemptina to brat itato FoWtuin
Valley COmmwlity Ho.pilal S.tur·
daI-:-
Tbe woman, identified • = 1
Lynn Tracy, was bein.I questiOned . .
dent and two earlier burglaries at the
Fountain Valley bolpital. OD Sept. 21
and Oct. 1 •• 121 individual doles of
morphine and Demerol -..ett 1aken
from a ·mobile r&dicine cart at
Foantain Valley Commwlit}'.
Police said Tracy also may be
questioned about an anmipted
break-in at Hoag Memorial Hospital
in Newport 8eacb Sunday. •
·&ri'estigators said Tracywas idalt!""
ified in a pbotgpaph lineup by
hospital officials is tbe suspect wbO
attempted to break into tbe hospital
Saturday afternoon.
Tracy was arrested in coDDCCtion
with the drug thefts at the Costa Mesa Medi~I Center H~ Saturday
-when S 1 vials of morphine ·ana
Demerol were taken, accordi1tg to
. detectives.
But Tracy was not positively ident-
ified as the same suspect who was wearina tieit blue jeans and a red
blouse while stealin& the powerful
painkillillJ drugs at Fountain Valley
Commwuty Hospital Oct. 1 and Sept.
21.
Detectives said that fountain Val-
ley hospital officials~ a de-
scription of tbe woman and her auto
after the Saturday incidei>t
Tracy was apprehended laterSat\D'·
day at the <Asta Mesa h9'Pilal by
nurses and sWr member$ after tbe
~break-in incident.
CO$ta Mesa police ~ a •
woman wheeled a locked cart into the
nurses' loun,e and pried it open with
a saewdrivcr. She apparently cut her
hand while,..,,breaking inlO the tray,
lice said. . po ~-.. Two nurses UQ.iiUue susp1aous
when they saw the suspc:ct•s bloodied
band. They also found bloody toweli
(Pleue Me DllUO/ A2)
::.~r:f:,=·: Bal rapist faces .·
~ Coast residents have t e 1 • • 1b k unti•~•dnigbttodaytoregisterto a ODJal rea vote m the No~embcr (CDCral
eteciion, ICOOrdtna to Orange •
County Registrar of Votm Al
Olson.
Olson said the rqistrar of
voters' office will remain open
until midnight to accommodate
residents who still want to rcaiStcr
for the Nov. 6 election. The office
(Pleue eee VOTU/A2)
County Courthouse.
Following a three-hour
preliminary bearina in Centn1 Mu-
nicipal Coun in Santa Ana. Gonzales
was bound over on characs of escape.
assault on a peace officer with a
deadly weapon, battery on a peace
(Pleue eee JAILBll&AI(/ A2)
..
Stock Marketa T*"'8'on
ThMWI
W•ther
WonctNewa
C1-3
87
82
83
A2
A4 ns1on'of John.Wayne Airport.
"Fa&e keeps try111A t0 ten us that · aabble from unaU plit.JM lltten poand after &aada1••
(Pleue ... CRA9H/A2) craall.
,
,
mtraklux ry _ etroline
ails to meet transit needs
By JEFF ADLER
Of .. hllr ......
ton Oranac County Transponatloo
<;omminionatudy of Amtrak pa •
r train scrv1ce between Los Anat ·
and San l>irat> rctommcnda a •
ditional trains be scheduled to reca~
t ~ lost ridership and attract new
n B .
Th study, presented to tt1nspor-
1on commissioners Monday,
t; nd that Amtrak's new, limited·
op luxury Metroliner es only •
1 all number of hip-income users
ho might otherwise ride one of the
six other yqularly scheduled uams to
San Diego.
Mtttoliner se '"· inauaurated in February, shue~ IS minut off the
normal 2·hour-and-4S-minutc train
ride for passen who pay a U
surcbarse. The train, runnina oner a
day in each direction, makes only two
intennediate stops. at Del Mar and
Anaheim.'
Reaular service an the corridor.
abOard one of .~x daily u.ins,
includes stops at FUJI noo. Anaheim,
Santa Ana, San J Capistrano and
San Ocmcntt in nae Cou ty.
OCTC transpo · oo analys con·
ducted the suncy, alo"I with the
te Tran ponation De nm n1.
aner vcraJ atics alo th route
expttued concern that Metroliner
service would oot meet travel needs
in the cotridor nor increa ridership
or Amtta'k revenues.
The rvey found:
•That the Metrohner apDCal to a
small ~ment of hiafi,incomc
travelm •• Paucnacrs tend 10 ride the train infrequently, predominantly for
busines pUrposes.
•Th.at ridership on tbe lower·
priced n DitP.n is comprised of
more frequent ndc:rs, usually women
wbo ride the train thrie or more times
each ..-eek to and from work.
•That ridenhip on the Metroliner
avcraces I than SO penon1 per
train; the San D1epo train averagea
200 persons per ttain.
Fog's in store for the Coast •That ridership patterns Point up
the irnP<>runcc ofintenncdiate stopS .
al na the route. Rou&bly 80 percent
of.aJ ttiJ>S besin in eitlier Loa ~la or San Dicao and terminate at one of
the intermediate Slop stations.
By t e Associated Pre 1
Cool air and niaht and momana low
"°uds wall hit Southern California on
Wednesday as a low-pre ure system
dominates the Gulf of Alaska and a
cold front moves down the coast, the
National Weather Service says.
Even thou&h it is weak, the cold
front as strona enougb to deepen Lhe
ma.riQCJa)'er. weather !CrvJoc spe-cial·
ist Frankie Shaw said.
0 Tbe marine layer causes the moist
marine air, and then we get low clouds
from the moist air as well," Shaw
said.
Patchy late-night aod early-morn-
ing low clouds will pUnctuate a
mostly fair day.
•That the primlt)' service im·
provements San Diepn pessengen
desire is more frequent service and a
smoother ride followed by creature
comforts, such as auarantecd seatina
and complimentary snack service.
CRASH IGNITES CONTROVERSY •••
From Al . .
things aren·l n&ht but the (county)
supervisors witn their tunnel-vision
aren't going to pa~ attention," W1l-
llams said. Newpon Mayor Evelyn Hart said
she will ask her council colleagues
today to support an examination of
hftlt-plane traffic out ofJohn Wayne Atrpon.
"We've always talked about com-
mercial a1rhrres and that problem but
t'-'C'vc never taken a ltand On rneraJ
av1auon," said the mayor. •• think
1\'s necessary that we react.
· "We have ways of mcasunna noise
and what that does to our lives but the
question of safety 11 ri&ht there too.,
Jt's always presenL ••
• County Susxrvisor Thomas Riley,
whose district includes the airport
and Newport Beach, was expected
today lO raise the question of hi&Jl· nsc develo_pment near the airpon.
County officials have supported of-
fice development over rcsidenual
building in the shadow of the arrport.
1 The office building where the plane
c;rashed is across the street from the
VOTER •.•
From Al
1s at 1300-C Grand A venune. Santa
na
Add1taonall>. deputy rcaistrars w111
beon-<iuty from 6 p.m to m1dnaghtat
four othcl" county locations for last-
minute re&i~trants Elt~ble citizens
can register at the Huntington Beach
Police Dcpanment. 2000 Main St.
Huntington Beach , Orange County
Fire Station
22. 24001 Pasco de Valen'c1a,
Laguna Halls: the Buena Park Police
Department, 66SO Beach Blvd ..
Buena Park: and the Placentia Police
Dcpanmcnt. 401 E Chapman in
Placentia.
Persons with questions about regjs.-
tration procedures should call the
regJ~trar·~ office at 834-2244
end--o-fth-e-airport run-way:-----will-. soar once the losses arc added.
Acco.rding to eye witnesses, Desks, office furniture and company
Klils'nsmitb's Beechcnft Baron files were chatTcd by the flames. lifted-·off from the runway and Telephones were reduced to puddles
imin.cdiattly developed problems of plastic from the heat.
Several bystaodcn said smoke Smith said the company will be
poured from one engine as the craft relocated nearby untd the buildina is
banked .lharWY. spun in midat.0nd ~~ tructed.
then slammed into the smgle-story The miship is being invcstil&led
Jocado Agriculture Corp. office by the National Transportatio.n "Safe--
#building.. · ty Board butinvatipton..tOdq.aid ..
Several witnesses &creed that the it is still too early to pinpoint the
airplane never got more than 300 feet cause of the accident. The aircraft••
off the ground. wreck.age was lifted by crane from the
The 6 p.m. crash trigaered an buildina Monday.morning and taken
explosion that witnesses said by truck to Lobg Beach for examin·
enplfed a portion of the structure in ation.
flames. A certified public.accountant, Newport Beach firefighters noted
James Crowley, was in a rur office at in a report that one or the plane•s
the time of the crash aod was not propcllefs spun f~ of the craft'r
injured. enaine while the plane was still over
Tom Smith, pre11dent of Jacado, the runway. A sincJc blade was found
said durina nonnaJ bus1ncss hou11 on the runway and a second in a
there would have been nme em· clump of grass, the report noted.
ployces worlc.ing in the area of the KJm&ensmith, a Saota Ana busi-
buildioa where the plane c;rashed. ncssman and former Vietnam pilot, is
The fire from th~ crash caud a urv1vcd by bis wife and three
minimum of $300,000 damage and children. Funeral services are pend-
Smilh said he anlJcipates the figure ina.
JAILBREAK TRIAL •••
Prom Al
officer and false impmonment. Ar-would have been the second for
raigrunent was scheduled for Oct. 18. Gonzales from Orange County
Additionally, be will be tried on a authorities and his third escape
smglecbunt of pos9C5Sm,aa weapon m • ovc!rall. He escaped from the county
Jal I, a charge lodged ag;nost him after Jail in a daring daylight break Sept. 12,
a crudel}' fashioned knife or "shank" 1983 by lowering Mm self from the
was confiscated uf March. jail's rooftop using a rope made out of
The· 23-ycar-old Gonzales as ac-bedsheets.
cused of pullina a fake sun and la June 1983, be walked away from
overpowenng two deputy marshals in the Peter Pitcbcss Honor Ranch near
a holdina cell on the courthouse's Sauaus where be had been sentenced
second floor on Aug. 18 Gonzales by Los Angeles County authorities.
was tack.led and arrested as he ran for Gonzales is awajtin& ICllttncina on
a first-floor exrt by a California multiple rape, buraJary and assault
Hi&hway patrolman who happened charges followin& bis February con-
to 6e in the Santa Ana coun buildma vactioo for the rape and beating of a
on an unrelated matter. Balboa Island waitress. He faces a
Had the C'5C3PC been successful. it maximum 16to 18-yearprisoo term.
VIETS PROSPERING IN COUNTY •••
From Al
tor the propnetors of the boutiques.
Vietnamese grocery stores and Ch1-
ne~ herbal medicine shops, the
Vietnamese influx ha~ brou&ht a new
culture to Orange County, a tra-
ditionally white, upper-middle·dass
'>tronghold
An e<,t1nMted 60.000 Vietnamese
and other lndochine..c refugees live in
Oran~.l' < nunty mainly in Garden
GrO\r \antt1 Ana and Westminster.
according to the county chapter of the
V1ctnamc~ C ·hamber of Commerce
About 20 percent of the students in
We\tmin'ltcr schools arc Vietnamese.
but communaty leaders say they have
hccn 3'>'>1m1lated well. That 1s. the
V1t·tnamc~ ha ve not clustered in a
largt· Vietnam~ neighborhood but
ha\C hlcndcd 1n with their ne1&hbors.
While the Vietnamese have gener-
al!) pro<,pcrcd since amvma lariely
penmlc'>s and finding homes through
rhurcht, and relocation !'ICf'Viccs.
Just Call
642.-6086
OallJ Pltot
o.llvery
11 Ouarant.ed
there have been a few obstadcs an
their path to ass1m1la&Jon.
Many lona-standina merchants in
Bolsa have moved out. cat.mg the loss
of Anglo patrons, and other Orange
County residents remain embittered
about the war and the influx of
foreigners into the blue-collar JOb
market.
Westminster Mayor Kathy Buchoz
recalls that residents held meetings to
talk about ways to deal With the
burgeonrng Vietnamese stores, which
they mtJWcenly bebcved were capi-
talizing on iovemment subs1d1cs
"It was very emouonal and uaJy,"
Buchoz recalls. "They said the) were
womcd about property value$, (but)
property values have aone up since
the Vietnamese arrived."
··1 behcve they arc a benefit to the
city, an attractton fo.r the city." the
mayor said
At their 1om a lot of Vietnamese
/
men have had problems taking ordcn
from women, who were more subser-
vient in the homeland, and taking
orders from supervison who may
have had less power in their home-
land.
Before the Vietnamese amved, a
lot of the plentiful jobs in the local
a~scmbly plants went to Hispanics,
sparking tense confrontations be·
tween the two groups in the work-
place.
California's estimated Vietnamese
population 11 179.000, with the next
largest number. 36,000, living in
Texas.
Tran Klem Luu, who founded the
Delta Savanp & Loan Association in
Bolsa and now drives a Merccdesl
saJd the Vietnamese community
hopes one day to g&Jn some political
clout.
"We're not ready yet to be a
political force, but we will be soon."
Wbat do you like about tbt Dally Piiot? What doa'I yoa Uke? Call tht
oumber at lefl and your mean1t will be rt'Corded, lraa1crtbed aad dellvtrTd
to &ht appropriate editor.
The ume .U ·bour an1wert11 aervke-may be tased to record lt1ter1 to the
editor on aay topJc. Contrlbat•n to our Letten colamn mast tntlUde their
name and telephone namber fot vtrlfloatlon. No c:lrctlatloo call1, plHH.
Tell H what'• on your mind.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
Clrculatton 714/142..a33
Clfflffled edvertl nt 71-4/142·1171
All other dtlpertment• tu-4321
MAIN OFFICE
3 W SI
I.I
l"fll'a.r II ""'-• !! '°" ' •..:-. ..,..,., ttirlr"' , • -°"" ~
H. L. Schwertr m
Publtsh r
•• ,. .... )(l'r ....
~~
Clrcufatlon
Te .. phon••
ROMm•ry Churchm•n
Controller
MColl ()r !tftO" ( ., '"" ..,
IJOQU•eN~ ....
Stephen F. C1ra10
Produc11on
Manag r
Don•ld L. W m1
C1rculatlon
Manag r VOL 77, NO. 211
• •
•
. ~
Foggy mornings and cooler air
Tides
TOOAY
Temps
a 41pll\,
t4tpl"I\.
toAY
, ••• !Tic
'"''"' 4 ltpm
1024Pfft
°' 41
Who wants to be goalie?
u .,, .,
17 n 11 II . .. .. ..
104 .. .. II .. 70 ft" II Q j:: ::
71 .. u ., , ..
11 " .. .. 11 .. . .,
11 ..
IS N
76 • 11 II
" 11 U IO • N .... .,
11 11
12 .. ., ..
11 H .. 11 .... • t2 71 67 ....
.. 61
A Y90 Coach Jack JeDMD bu plenty of
Tola.nteera for the 1Nlle'• job dartn.& a
recent Pee Wee 1ame at LlDcolD School ID
Corona del llar. More photos, pece Cl.
Fathers' group to help HB
man pay for girl's burial
From staff and wire reports
United Fathers of America will
help a Huntinaton Beach man who
won a court ruhna aJJowmJ ham to
bury his I S·year-old daughter. but
who cannot afford the bunal.
Melissa Pma Acosta died Sunday
of1d1seasethauttacked herJmmune
system. She had been the subject of a
custody di putt when her Jehovah's
Witness mother refused on reli&ious
&rounds to let her receive blood
transfusions.
After Mclissa'•death of .. comP.lica-
tions of lupus crythemotosus, • her
parcnu contined to araue over what
to do with her.
Her father. A mold Thomas Acosta,
wanted a Roman Catholic funeral
and an autopsy, while her mother,
usic Pina Aoostar wanted to bar the
autop: y and have the body cremated.
"She was bapti1ed a Catholic-she
should be buried like one~· Acosta
said.
But the girl's mother disagreed.
"The girl wanted to be cremated so
the mother as merely tryina to carry
out her dead dau&hter's wishes," said
Kennth Baf'Wlck, Mrs. Acosta's at-
tome/. He was not present during
Monday's coun hearina. ~
Orange County Juvenile C-0urt
Judge Donald A. McCartin pve both
parenu part of what they wanted by
denyina requesu for the autopsy and
the cremation.
However. Acosta is indiaeot and
cannot afford to pay for the burial1 sa.ad Rod Bivanp, president ofUrutco
Fathers of America Inc. ·
Therefore, 8Mnp said Monday,
his orpmzation will start seckina tax·
dcducttble donations today to pay for
her burial.
United Fathers, a non-profit or·
\
ganization headquartered in Santa
Ana, had referred Acosta to attorney
Henry James Kochler IV when the
transfusions became a custody issue.
The group has 4,000 members in
Cahfornia.
Melissa's dueas, lupus
erythemotosus. is conventionally
treated with blood cransfusiont.
However, she received no tl'IJ\$-
fusions untd June because she had
been cared for at two tiosp1tall that
treat patJents in ac.cordance with
Jehovah's Witne$S beliefs that the
Bible forbids transfusions.
In June, Acosta, an ex-eonvict who
lives in Huntinaton Beach and who
~ad notkt~ hisdauahtcrfor 11 years,
sued for Joint cu tody '° be could
arranie for his cauptcr'1 treatment.
The Oranae County Oepanment of
Public Social Services was awarded
custody.
DRUG THEFT SUSPECT SEIZED AGAIN •.•
From Al
n r ihc burglanz~ tray, accordina
to potioe.
The vt.ls contained UX> ma ti m
of morphine and Demerol.
F'ountain Va11cy dctcctivcat wd
Tracy, who was taken to Oran
County Jail on u picion of bur&Jary,
pos ion of a con1rollrd 1ubstanoe
and po ion of ppraphcmalia from
.
the Co ta Mesa incident, hia n
n:I~ d on her own recosniz.anoe
de pile their n:qu u to hold her ror
qu tionina in the Fountain Valley
Ql
VALLEY SIGN WAR ESCALATING •••
~rom Al
u
I