HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-10-12 - Orange Coast PilotI I
Forecaat1 on A2 ClllT IDITIDI
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r1UOAY OCTOBER 12 1984 --
0 H AN (1 f_ C 0 UN T Y C A l I f.. C H NI A '2 '1 C E ~~ T '-,
Hostages escape from bandit
Irvine teachers carried
picket signs around their
schoof district head-
quarters Thursday after-
noon, concluding a week
of smaller demon-
strations signifying their
frustration over stalled
contract talks./ A2
Some Disney strikers re-
turned to work and 100
new workers were hired
at the Magic Kingdom
Thursday./ A3
Callfomla
Fire at South Pasadena
hardware store claimed
four lives./ Al .
Nation
Congress turns down
debt celllng hike; legis-
lators returned to Wash-
lngton. / M
Challenger crew packing
up for return to Earth./ A4
World
Bomb blast In Brighton,
England leaves Margaret
Thatcher untouched, but
4dle./AI
Miiitary blamed in Aquino
murder at airport./ A4
People
TV's Charlotte Rae leads
celebrities who support
Interval House.1 A7
Sports
What does the San Diego
Chicken do now that the
World Serles has
switched to Detroit? /81.
Edison High, the No. 1-
ranked football team In
Orange County, survived
asluggtsh first half to wtn-
lts Sunset League open-
er ./82
Huntington Beach Hlgh's
boys cross country team
-with sweep of the first
six places -breezed to
victory and remained un-
beaten./83
Ba~k of America manager abducteq
from her home, taken to Irvine bank
By ROBERT HYNDMAN, STEVE MITCHELL ud PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Ol tN °"" ..... llllfl
. a blue stttl automatic handgun and
had a knife in his back wckct. He was
wearing one black glove. pohcc" Jaid.
Four hostages held at gunpoint in At I J:3.S a.m.. one of th~e
an I'rvine bank escaped unharmed at s~spected robbers was reportedly 11 :0~ a.m. today, b1;1t a stando.fl talkingtopolice~yphone(rom inside
contanued between pol!C'e ~d ~t least _ the ban~ acco~dang to police repons.
one gunman who remamed inside the At vanous umcs during the stand-
bank, ofT, the male suspect was seen at the
The escape ended a six-hour ordeal southeast comer of the bank. talking
for bank manager Marge Steinbo!"'. on the telephone, holdina a aun in his 52, who was ~bducted at &unpomt left hand. At another point, he was
from her Tustin home and taken to seen crouched behind a teller window
the Bank of America branch at Irvine at the northwest comer of the build-
Boulevard and Yale Avenue where ing. .
she works. accordina to police. Polioc said the man was armed with
Intended murder
·victim tells court
of marital turmoil
--·-Ex-husban c ar e
with hiring 'hit man•
to arrange 'accident•
By JEFF ADLER
Of the°"" ..... Staff
A woman who agreed to pose for
photographs on a slab at the Orange
County Coroner's Office so an under-
cover investigators could convince
her former husband she'd been killed
by a hit man he allegedly hired
teSlified Thursday about her de-
teriorating marriage to defendant
Frederick Penney.
Penney, a 57-year-old Laguna
'
1gue contractor and former New
York City fireman, is charged with a
single felony count of solicitation of
murder. If convicted of the charge. he
faces a maximum six-year prison
term.
Red-haired Susan Penney. 34, told
an Orange County Supcnor Court
jury in Santa Ana that following their
breakup in August 1983 she had been
repeatedly harassed and followed by
her husband, whowasJailedtwioeasa
result.
Speaking confidently, but avoiding
het former husband's stare, Mrs.
Penney described how arauments
leading up to their divorce became
more heated near the end of their
Irvine pohcc Lt. Al Muir uid FBI
agents and lrvane·s city police SWAT
\C'am had amved at ahe Nonhwood
Town Center. where the bank is
• located at about 9 a.m. Pohce helicop-
ters from Costa Mesa and Newpon
Bnch hovered overhead.
Officers csconed civilian from
back doors to those businesses as · police closed off the shopping center
and began evacu~ting emplo>"ccs and
patrons at an adjacent Vons su~r
markeund a gymnas~um. .
Tustin police Lt. H. D. Williams
said bank manager's abduction oc-
curred at about 5:20 a.m. today when
Susan Penney
nine-)car relationship.
"The topic was either the children
or my time away from home. Any-
thing that took my time away from
three peopl n armed m n and two
women. btokc 1mo the Tusun home
ot M rgc and William teinborn
lhrough a rcarwrndo-w.
Wilham wd;Marge tcanbom
in the hower and her husband was
prepanng for a handball game when
the brcak-sn occurred.
He td Mrs Steinborn came out
nd s.aw t~e mate muuder holdm& an
automatic handgun on her husband.
Wi11iarm idthe1unman made Mrs.
Steinborn tum away and face a corner
while he ucd up her husband. He wd
the husband was initially left in a
downstairs bedroom. but w~n the
gunman noticed he was tl)ing to free
himself from the ropes, he moved
Steinbom.upstain where hcrettcd the
the house or away from him, .. she told
thcJUf}'.
On one occasion. their arguments
(Pl~ eee EX·WD'E/A21
bonds and also handcutlta the man.
t bout 1 a.m. the 11truderi left
'Mth Mrs. tctnbom rn hcrlatt model
brown allac, W1lhams Aid IHtt
humand freed hams.elf 11 7:4S a.m
and ailed Tustin Police, who notified
lmnc poli~ that robbery mitJtt be
under way 11 MB. tcinbom·1 bank.
Tustin palace called officers an In inc-.
who phoned the bank. aCJCOrduic 10 police reporu. A female cmplOytt
in 1de the bank ~portedly told Polttt~ ... We're beang robbed ...
Police responding 10 the ICleftC
spotted her car about SO feet from thC
bank and ~n surround1na the
office and cvacldtin& nearby bu1mns
employees nd customers.
(Pleueeee B08TAOlta/A2)
BJDAVIDB ................. ~~~~----=-"-----~
An ex-major league bateball pi\Ch-
ertb.rcw)I :aguaa Beach police a l:lID'C
this week v. ben be rcnqed on an
qiumcnt tocoopente in a druacasc.
AccoTding to LagUna Beach police.
Byron Scon Mclau&hlio. 30,. 'WIS
arTeSted on Sept. l 7 af\er makina a
ckal m an lrvsnc Hotel -lo tell 1 l
ounces of cocaine for S2•.000 10-
undn'co"cr officcn: He had tun
(Pleueeee,PITCllEll/A2)
Stewlirt
• resigns
from bench
Harbor Municipal Court JudJI:
Sttphen Stewart. v.ho lost 1 June bid
for ~~lcction. has resigned from bis
post three months before the end of
his tcnn.
OffiC'lals at lhc Newport Beach
Courthouse confirmed today that
Stewart resigned. effectJve Oct. .S. His
term was to conclude in Januvy. The
fonner judge has saad he plans to open
a private law practitt
S\ewart was an the news last ~cckend when he married Pilar
Wayne ofNewpon Beach. the widow
of actor John Wavne. In list June's primary election,
Stewart was defeated by Deputy
District Attome} Susanne Shaw.
Shaw will a ume the Harbor Court
judgeship in Jan&W). Until the~. the
post will remaan canL
Entertainment
Hank Wiiiiams Jr follows
Leon Russell on the Pa-
cific Amphitheatre stage
tonlght./Wffkender
Hungry for German food
during Oktoberfest? Dine
at the Bavarian Chalet.
IWMkender
Most view
VP Bush ..
as winner
Newport drug theft suspect
bails out after entering plea
Bualneu
Financial Corp. of Amerl·
can has laid off 20•1. of Its
works and cut ex-
ecutlv.es' salartes./84
of debate
By DONALD M. ROTHBERG ,., ............
PHILADELPHIA -Georae Bush •
contended he'd "turned it around"
;.;:.:.:-:-x~'·'s·X-!·:.:.»»'.(•:-»~·:~:-:•:«-for the Republican ticket, whale
Geraldine f erraro claimed .. Two out
of two ain't bad" after tile vice
presidential candidates engaaed in a
A~rnt-------C1-:10 sharp duel for campaign momentum
Bridge 86 --t at drew a Mlbte-roiews ft-om the
Bulletln Board A3 (Pleue Me VJ.CE/ A3)
Bullnesa B-4
You'll find the
bMt •uto bur• •long
the 0'8~ Cot1at In
tod•J'• Auto Piiot
-P~eC1
Nurse faces triil in seven burglartes
~f painkillers from county hospitals
By ROBERT BARltER °' ... ..., ........ :
Newport Beach nurse-
ancsthcti t apparently has been
bailed out of Orange \ounty Jail after
cnterin& a not auilty plea Thursda} in
Oraoac Count) tunictpal \ourt to
sc"cn counts of bur&lary in connec-
tion "l\h the thef\ o1 po\\erful pain-
kiltmftll\lgs f'mm fhc"lrca l'lo p1tals
Ja1f official satd that Bridget Lynn
Trac was no longer in Jiil today but
d~lined to provide add1uooil infor-
mation.
But Fountain Valk)' Dctecu"e
Denni Minna. 'Q.hO 1 coordinating
the assorted drug case ap1n t the 31 -
}car-old TDcy. said her auomc) and
family members had disclosed they
were try1na to v.ork out amangemcn\s
for herto get out of 1a1I and undergo 1
<lrua rctiablfiilion pro ram tn I.Ona. ~It. M ~ "' Ja•I tn heu of
SI0.000 hail.
Traq 1s accused of stealing
mo1J>htnc aod Demerol from locked
mcd1c10e cans m ho p1tals m Foun-
tain Valley. Costa Mesa. Orance a~ ~nta .\na and from a doctor's office
1n ewport Beach. . . . .
he confessed to the 'burglanes
whtk being qut'totioned Wednclda)'
b) Minna in the presence of her
attome}. the dctect1\:e satd.
Meanwhile, 1t also was learned that
Tracy as ~in in\:est&pted for aJ.
IClt(lly mjccung beN:lf with a
su1"tance la t May while ~he wa
pcrforman an~ffietk dblio for
~ h plast uracon H
(Pleue aeo 1"UllSlt/ A.2)
California Newa Ae
. Claulfled 06-9
Comics 86
Crouword Cll
Outh Notices C5
Political water's trariquil fn Newport this year
Gardening Al>
Horoscope C1
Ann Landert A8
Mutual Funds 84
National NftS A8
Opinion A 10
P9')araul A7
People A7.-t P~lcelOQ A3
Pubtlc Noll C-4-6
Reetaurants Weetcender
Spor\a 81·3
Stook M•kelt 85
T •levlslon At
ThNt«t Weekendlt
weather A2
World News A•
Ho-hum city council campaign surprising
after furious mudslln Ing of two years ~o
.. I •
pcnl more than SS0.000 nd th
others pent ell over$30,000. Mu"h
of the monc) was ptnt on Itek.
STEVE
luau
CAMPAIGN '84
"\•
-,.
'
Picketing Irvi ne teachers ·
take · heir.Case to district
By PHU.. NEID R AN
... Oltll!iCW,IWotlwt
In· c teachers med pi kct s1sos
round their chool district h\."llJ·
quartcn. Thu y afternoon. con·
eluding ~etk of m lier Jemon-
tra1ions ·ari f>an their fNmuion
over tailed contrac& c.nl .. s.
1 m pt n to nsare school
board members and di)1rtbutc
leaflets ne~t week, pnor to an Oct. 29
strike authoroat1on vote. •
l hursday morning. .some Irvine
Unified School Distnct teachen. pick·
ctcd t their home campuse!lt before
tht'y \\C~ required to be in cla~ In
the afternoon, the lrvine T<'achcrs
Association. representing local m-
siructon. uracd its mcmbe~ to dem-
onstrate outside the d1stnct'.s ne'A'
administrat1onbuilding at 5050 Bar·
ran ca Park wa).
Ken Hurni:r. pres1dent of the
association.' estimated that 400
t innic1p:ued in the afternoon
pi Kc1in . The union represents
about 7 0 di trirt fntuh\ member\
Fran Morton, a distru.·t
pokr woman, u1d the dl"mon-
1ration did not d1srup1 opcrat1on'> at
the district headQuanm.
\lthough rq.ular cla~room In·
tructlon l'iu continued, some
tc chcr) have stop~ pan1ciparin1
1n eittrucurricular activiues. at the
Uf'IJOI of rhc unaon. Superintendent
A. Stanlc)' Core) has cha~d that
these teacbe~ nrc \ iolarina their
contract: the union di~grtts.
The picketing wa~ tr1ggef'(d b)' an
, 1mpas.c in contracts taJks. prunanl)
concerning teacher alaries.
The union has requested 11 7.S
percent ~l:u; rai~e for the I 984-85
school )'tar D1unct officials have
s~ud they can afford no additional pay
r.u$C beyond the automatic increa\es
provided for lenath of \trv1ce and
.
colic trcd1l'>. 1 he d1"nct has also
olTerc<l to pa) tt chc~ onNlmc
bonu\ 1f funds ~;un at tile cnu ol
the schoot Y'-'llr. but that offer wa
tCJ«ted b)' the union. ,
Ne otat1on'i \\Crt hailed last "'ed.
v.h1.:n an 1mpa~ "as dcd red, od
both jtdcs are nQw 1u_ng the
amvnl ofa ~Ultc mediator who will try
to bu;ak the deadlock.
Assoc1auon pre 1dent Homer said
he plans to addn.· the d1~trict board
of education v.hen the cl~tcd bod)
mCt'ts nc11:1 Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in
the new di!\trict headquancrs.
He s:iid teache~ will distnbutc
leaflets Oct. 20 to convey their
position to l<>C:ll rt 1dents.
On Oct. 29. the teache~ are
sc:hcduled to take a strikr
aulhon1a1ion vote. If lhe measure 1s
appro'>ed. faculty negouators would
have the power 10 call a work
~toppal'e
Crippled swimmer's injury
"claim goes to countyjury
By JEFF ADLER
Of IN o.lly ,._. It.ft
be awarded. The 1rial began Sept 26. claim the c11y was ner.ligent for not
posting signs alonJ the beach warning
of the danger of d1' ing in lo the water
near the pier. where shifting sands
create offshore hoks. sandbars and
troughs.
,
•
Warmer weather for weekend
Coastal
Tldea
TOOA\' 0 270 m
II 39pm
I A T\MDA Y
<137•m
1100.,.
e toe.."'
Temps
HI Lo
73 50 70 114
77 5e
42 M 7t IO
• 55
Eztended
F• w lliQltlly ...,_ HlglW 11
..,_ 7210 71Md~v...,.71
.... \.OWi 66 10 83
~" M1stnt ........
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New¥Otk Nortolk V•
Ok'""'8 OfJ OcnMt Ot1lJ'1dll P.allll~
~ . ~·
. ...,. ... , .
42 29
70 12 4M 47
10 45 77 46
73 40 T1 H 89 ,.
80 70
71 H
.. 9'1
13 II
$0 35 70 II eo 11 78 15
SUR F REPO RT
"'"f.:!1'" Porl hi•
P41<tland0r
Pro....,_
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St St•M.,,. Sitll ..
Slw~I
6f0Uaflfl•v
SP911•,,. Syr.c.,..
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f-TIAN
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er
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.0 ~~ u •· 64 61 •• ••
.\n eight-woman. four-man Orange
( ount) Superior Coun JUr) began
dchberauom toda) 10 dei.ermine
whether a paral)'lcd 22-year-old man
should be compensated for a cnp-
phng ned m.i~~ ~ m 4980
when he dived into a ~ndbar near Lhe
Balboa Pier at Newpon Beach.
The athletic 6-1 Taylor, now a
quadriplcgic who has only ltm11cd use:
of his arms. testified that he decided
to go into the Chilly water that April
afternoon lo wash off suntan oil
before returning home to Claremont
~his j.l.tlfrieAd..
Because of lhe cold 1A.aler
temperature, he decided 10 run into
the gently rolling surf. When he was
about wa1s1-deep in lhe water. he
dived into an incoming wave.
The two auorney~ claim the city
'Ntls awarc of the-unecrtattrboltcm ~
conditions along that popular stretch u r
of beach. but have done nothing to
- -' er suspee nervous
John Taylor 1s seeking an un-
specified amount of damages from
the city of Newpon Beach claiming
thec1t} neghgentl) failed to post signs
warning of um:ertain and dangerous
underwater conditions in the area.
warn beach goers of the danger despite
the numbers of nee!.. injuries that
have occurred there. buying gun, dealer claims
If the Jury returns a "erd1c1 in his
favor. a second phase of the civil tnal
in Judge Lloyd Blanpted·s Santa Ana
counroom will get under way to
determine how much Ta)lor should
Somewhere underwater he ap-
parently crashed head-on into an
uSttn ndgc of ~nd. fthanering one of
his ven.ebra. He urfaced 1n a dead-
man's float. his bod) paralyzed from
The city of Newpon Beach.
through rrvine auorncy Patnck Quin-
livan. has contended waming signs
along the beach wouldn't prevent By STEV E MARBLE
spinal injuries because no one sign 0tat1eo1111yP1ot lhlllt
stepson disappeared on Aug. I .
Thouah Kaye's body was not found
for five days. several witnesses re-
ported seeing a man resembling
Ralph standtn& near a body prawled
on a roadside m Irvine. The wunesses
said that a car, la1er '1dent1fied as
Kaye's. was parked nearby.
the weapon scvl:ral umes after ask.mg
1f the gun v.as "loud··
the neck down. L
Taylor's Newport Beech attorneys.
Herben H:ifif and Wayne Austero.
can warn against the many pos!lible
ways swimmers can 1nJUI'( the~
sehcs
EX-WIFE TELLS OF MURDER PLOT •.•
From Al
became so heated that he struck her
wuh his hand and she struck him
bad •. Mrs Penne) recalled
.\fler 1he1r dnorce. M~. Pcnnc\
..aid her relat1onsh1p with the ruddy-
wmplcx1oned defendant con11nued
to. go downhill. She said the two
NURSE •..
From Al
< 1corge Brennan
Margaret Saito d1\t.1phnt.• rnord1-
nalor for 1he \talc Board of Rcg1Mcrc:d
Nur~s. confirmed thal an 1nH·c.t1g.a-
tton bcg;rn in \fa~ after thl· hoard
recc1 .. cd u1mplatnt'> that r rac' al-
leged I~ ga\(.' her-.clf an tnJt'Ct1<1n· of a
sub~tancc wh1k ac.\1)t1ng in a \urger:.
Trac) \till hollh her nursing license
and a permit to perform ane-;1hcs1a.
':>3110 ~Id
argued over v1siuuon nghts with
their children, 1he sale of their home
and other propeny.
Bui Penney conllnued to talk of
r~onciliat1on "Hr would bring the
subJtel up. I told him I loved him and
I did care IA. hat happened to him. but
we couldn't get back together." Mrs.
Penne) said
~he also acknowledged the two had
SC\UJI relations after thelt d1,or~
had become final.
Ont.• naght .. Mrs Penney ..aid '>he
m :c1.,ed a telephone call from her
former husband telling her he had
been in the houSt' "'hill' c,he and lhl'
children were a\lccp .. Ht· '><ud lhl'
onl} rt'a..on I wa'> ah\l' "'as becaU'>(.'
our son was '>keping with mc:· .,he
testified M~. Penne\ told the c:oun she first
learned that her husband "'as con-
'i1denng lc111tng hcr when one of his
fnends. John Burton. called to warn
her -He felt I reaJly w~ 1n danger. He
was scein~ Frrd prett) regularly and
he was still \'Cl") insistent on ha\ing
me out of the way to have the house
and children." she said
At that point. M"' Penney con-
tacted Orange County henfl's dcpu-
ues who ~t 1n motion the underce>\·cr
opern11on that resulted in Pennc) 's
arrest
Giles agreed to arrange a .. per-
manent accident" tor Mrs. Pennc\ for
$3.000, anordtng to 1ape record.1ng.,
of mccltng' bt:twccn Penne) and
C11ks plJ,cd for 1uror.,
Pennl·~ "'as arrested shonly after
he was shown faked photographs of
his former "'1fc hing .. dead" on a
coroner-., slab. acrnrdtng to the
C'>ldenlC.
NEWPORT COUNCIL CAMPAIGN QUIET ...
From A l
can do on that ·
( uunctlman John ( Ol!. also '>pent
about $30.000 1n his w1nn10g dfon
four years ago .<\n outspoken man
v.ho 1s support1 .,c. of dcH·lopn;icnt
and often cn11cat of those ,.,ho oppoSt'
1t. Co' also I\ unopposed 1n the race.
fh~ onl) conle.,t at all,.. on the west
'>1dc of the lll\ when· 1ncumhent < ounc1lv.oman Ruthchn Plummer is
hcing ,·hallenged h~ [)a, e ( 1off. a ut~
plc1nn1ngcomm1\sioner and pohltcal
no\lcc V" 1an Roum.
For the fir,t t11m• in "' \C'.lr\ the
,1<l'>o(3C\ group "\top Polluting < >ur
Nl'\\POrt 1\PO'J ha .. not put ur a
l and1dak I "lH H'Jr' ag11 l111ir of tlw
\l•\ l'n \llllOUI llll•ntbcl\ \l.Cll' .1lignnJ
\\Ith thl" group and '"' ori:J ''' \IU\lo· grow1h philo'>oph '
"Pcopk °"ho kno"' ''hat the '><Ore ,., in 1h1'i IO\lon woul<ln'1 want to pay a
lot of monl'\ JU\! to ha'lle their
charader delamcd and thC'n lose. · ..a~\ Jean Watt. president of the
ad\o(·aq group
II " 1mpo<o<,1hlc to win when other
cJnd1date<o arc backed -directly or
.... indirectly -hy large de vclopment
interests l1k( tht' Irvine< u and the
i...oll Co. Wall ~>S.
It'\ become appart'nt that one wa)
Just Call
f
642-6086
OaUy Piiot
O.llwery
la Ouarant.-d
... .,,.,... f•.CS.1 " , • 1
nor "-"• "°"" '.., .. , , fl)Oom AOMOl•11>
.,.., '""' ''f'Y .,. °"" ~·"""'
or another. the) 'II spend whate"er 1\
necessar: to win:· says Watt
Past elccuon!> have been fitted with
insulting ne"spaper ads and charac-
ter assassination'> that make the
dt'l toral process "'hull) unpkasant.
~he <.aH SPO"' <:annot find an .. onc
intcrt:.;tcd in running ·
"~c·.,1..· made mu,·h morc progre\c,
taklnKun ISSUC\ .. \.\all notl''> "h\UC\
can be under<,111od bctll:r than
peopk ··
C ounul"oman Jal kic Heather
''ho "'on rl'-l'kl t 11111 t '' o 'car\ ago
nl·n though hl'I d1.ilkngl·r \pent
ahout \ '10.000 rl:11 m' \.\ :itt"<, group
(,IU .. ld thl' lllfllfll\~I \ Ill pa\t l'ln-
llllll\
•· T hl") JU\t \..1•pt tx·.1ting the ~me
old dead horSt.' and I think people
finally said ·w what's new'!'"
Heather said.
"I th int.. we ha.,e a pr1..·tty good team
nght now and people st'e that We talk
to each other and that'~ something we
nc .. cr did when SPON was in con-
trol ·
Rohen ~hclton, a former Newpe>rt
Beach mayor and lrvtne Co senior
'>ICC president ~Y'> the apparent lack
of interest in the election might M the
absence of <:nntrcwcl"\1al develop-
ment projects
Pa-.1 cttv clectJons have co10c1ded
with muli1-m1llion dollar develop-
ment plans.
An Irvine Co. project was aban-
dbned 1n the face of a referendum four
~ears ago and another was unsuc-
cessfull-, challenged 1n a referendum
votc that coincided with the city
election two years ago
.. Bui I am !lurpnsed" Shelton
admits .. E .. cn 1n tranquil limes
there·., al"a~s been a hankenng b)
an) numher of people to become a
wunul member. evt."n 1f they didn't
nccc!lsanl~ disagree w11h 1hc incum-
bent··
")hcllun doubt' 1ha1 the lack of
1..and1date'> 1n the clcl·t1on means that
one faction or another has tnumphed.
··eut I don't think the lack of
interest 1n the ctcc11on should be
wntten un a., apathy." suggests
Shelton. ..We shouldn't under-
e<1timatc the degree ofsat1~facuon the
community feel~ with this c:ounc1I. ··
Wan d1sagrce!I
"It JUSt l'>n't worth 11 (to run):· she
say'> "In fac:t I'm .,orry I wasted three
month\ working on a rnmpa1gn last
time. I could have bttn doing
~mething far more produt."t1vc:·
What do JOU like about tbe Dally Pilot? What don't you like? Call tlle
aumber at left aad )Our meuaae will be recorded.. transcribed ao4 delivered
to the appropriate editor.
The same 24-bour answtrlnJ 1ervlce may be used to record lelten to tile
editor on any topic. Contrlbu&ora lo oar Letters column mutt lDcludt their
namt' and tl'ltphone numbtr for verlflcallon. No rlrC'ul all® cal11,pluse.
Ttll uoe .,.tlat'1 on your mind .•
CJRANGr COAST
Daily Pilat
H. L. Schwartz Ill
Puhllsher
ClrculeUon 71416'2""333
Cla111fted tdYertlalng 714/842·5171
All other department• '42-4321
MAIN OFFtCE
C«i,•IQ'lt 1m Ot•noe u ""~ C<wnr>o"Y ,. -''°'~ _,,,,.,...,,,. 9diftwtlll mllll.,. OI 110...,IMI
-ft --,,.,., ,,. '"""~"° ""''lOUI ~ '*
-QI C""'19'1 --•
Clrculatlon
TetephonH
Aoeem1ry Churchman
Controller
'·
Stepheh F. CarHO
Production
MR nag.er
Donald L. WllU1m1
Clrculat1on
Mano
l
VOL. n .No.m
...
A young Huntington Beach man
testified Thursday that he sold a
pistol to a "nervous" Bruoe Bradley
Ralph JUSt two days before 1he 57-
ycar-old man was arrested on suspi-
cion of murdennit his stepson.
Daniel Diehl said Ralph &ave hjm
four SI 00 bills for the 38-caJaber
revolver afttt -he 10spected the
weapon and fired It numerous times
at.a Huntmgton Beach finns range.
.. He seemed kind of nervous but I
thought maybe he was JUSt gun-shy,"
said D1ehlduringtheopeningdayofa
preliminary hearing at Harbor Mu-
nicipal Coun in Newpon Beach.
"I gol strange v1be!i from him,"
Diehl added.
Ralph. a Bnush-bom free lance
photographer from Newport Beach.
1s charged with fatall shootina
Bradle) Kaye. his 18-year-old step.
~n Ralph was arre ted after his
Sunny skies
to brighten
weekend
Kaye, who would have been a
senior th1<J year at Newpon Harbor
High School. was shot onct 1n the
chest. HlS body was found a
construcuon site an Irvine where n
had been buned under a layer ofloosc
sand. according to police .
Kaye's orange Mercury Capri was
foun"d more than a week later parkod
at John Wayne A1rpon.
Du~hl testified that Ralph tele-
phoned him July 30 about the gun
after seeing a notice that Diehl had
posted at the city firing range Diehl
said he met Ralph about 20 mtnutcs
rater at the rang.e.
0 He said the gun was for his wife:·
Diehl explained. He said Ralph fired
By tbe A11ociated Press
Southern C alitorn1a·s bnef 01rta·
t1on ""llh rain appears o'>cr Skies will
be mostly sunn) with high'> 1n the 80'>
this weekend. the Natwnal Weather
Service say,.
According to pohce and anomeys.
Ralph and Ka~e·s mo1her had a
1umultuou!I rclat1qnsh1p lhat ended
tn divorce tv.o ~ear\ ago. Fnends Slld
they reconciled at one point. but
broke up again
L1..a Jone!>. who said she was
Ka\c·s g1rlfncnd. testified that she
tasi ~IA. Kaye on the morning of the
da\ he 'anl.,hcd She s:ud he called
home at about noon and left a
me~..agc that "he loved me "
Jone:<> also te!>llfied that she had met
Ralph ~e.,eral limes and descnbed'
him as see mm& .. confused and de-
prcs.,1..•d" dunng the meetings.
The day before the muscular.
blond-haired youth disappeared.
Ralph was dnnk1ng vodlc.a and or-
aneeJuice at the house in Cost.a Mesa
where Ka)e and his mother lived.
Jones tesufied.
Highs \\ill h11 the m1d-80s 1n Los
.\ngeles and 78 10 85 in the \alle)S Saturda~ O\ern1ght low<. will be 58
to 63 1n Los Angeles and tht: low 50s
1n the .,allc)'>
The beachc!> will have high'> of 74 to
80 after tonight'\ lo" of 58 to 63
DellY .... ,......., .... ..,. ....
Irvine Police Officer Bdan Clifton ln·
etructa ~trona at a ·~ near the Bank of
America on how to eYacuate the balldllli 1&fely.
HGSTAGE&ESGAPE FROM-BANK •••
From Al
Bank of America oJTicialt in w
n,cle confirmed ·Marge tcinbom
1s the manager of the br nch. ~
Contacted by. telephone al &heir
hon'le. William Steinborn confirmed
that hi wife had been abducted. by a
mnn and two women. He declined to
p~o,1dc funher detail of the kidnap.
Pin&-
PITCHER WON'T AID DRUG CASE •..
Prom Al ·
named u the upplicr of cocaine to a
pair of \ri1ona rtlidcnt who were
prcv1ousty arrt~lcd 1n Laauna Beach.
Mclauihlin'~ bail Wat \Cl 1
S2S.OOO, but he was rdea~d on his (')~n rccogni1ancc after agttcinJ to
met& ~1th police a1 has Chula ~ 1 11
homC' the nc~t da) nd name hi•
supp[icr. pohcc said.
.But Mclaughlin wa aone ~hen
polu:c arri~cd auhc hou on Sept. Ill
and hHn't ho\\n up inrr, PQh~
id He r:ulcd to appear an ooun
onday for h 1 scheduled 1rra11n·
mcnt
An a1Tc'1 warrant was i ucd and
Mclau&}thn's bail was ra1~d to
US0.000. '
"He's prob bly in McAi'-·o:· Sgt.
lex Jimine1 of the LBPO said. "He!
has a lot of connection down there.''
Md..aughlin pla)w in the winter
bucball le-a u 1n .M · i . ~h
Spanish and formerly li'led 1n
Sonora, Mc~ko ... Hc·1 intclltJent and
knows his ) around." J1m1ncz said
MclaUJhltn' ellrgcd acromphC't,
RObCn Ro Hu,rnsldc. 23 of Chula
Vista. fa a prtlaminn heari na on
kt. 23 Bum idc and 1clouahhn
•
Octow 12. 914 * Al
1 Bu un1 N BoARo
Bowling benefit
slated Sunday
Replacements hired at Disneyland .
We tern D y rv1ec1 y T tment Proamm di
host a fund-ra1lina bowling tourn meni on Sunday it I
p.m. a~ M cy Lanes 1n Anaheim. The public i1 invited
T1ckct1 for the event are SI O and all proceeds will be
contnbutcd to the non.profit organi11tion's Day Tttat· men.1 Prosram which provide• daily psycholoaical KtvJc:es for adolcscenu
Bowlers will be eli1ible for a first place prize of S tOO
ar1d many other prizes donated by local merchants. For
informauon or reservations, call 871·1770 or 871-5646.
Fan Fair Saturday in lrvh:le
:rhe public is invited to panicipatc an the annual
!.'Platn and Fancy Fun fair" at the Meadows Mobilchome
Par 14SS1 Jcffrc· Ra .• Irvine, Slturmy, from-ioa.m. to )p.m. • "I I
"Tr_tasurcs ot the Past" is the theme of this year·,
eve!lt wtth park residents offerina books, jewelry, lamps,
radios, cameras. hou~hold items •nd more for sale at
"baruin pricca" in a bauar·1ike settina.
. 1'h~rc will also be baked aC?Qds, candy. sandwiches, fru1~. pie and coffee, aloni with hot doas and beans
available throu&}\out the day. •
There wdl also be a drawina for prizes which include
a handmade mantle clock, oil paintings, a money wreath,
lhd a ceramic pie-cake container. For more information,
call Joe Brown, chairman, at 5'9·8320.
'UCI Day• actlvidea aet
Collcac-bound high school ~niors are invited to
attend "UCJ OR.~n Sunday. Participants are cn-
couraacd to arri •C!linpus by 9: 15 a.m. as the pr~m
bc&ins at 9:30 ~ .j,i!'Sd nee Lecture Hall.
Tours will~~ ed br, current UCJ students and
Al t d P11 i1
ome 01 nc)I nd stnkcB!h \C rttumed 10 ork and
othcn rebe1 pl cedbyncwemployecs1na21/J·wcck·
old lkout over wages, muscment park offic1 ls y.
At>Out I, 00 mcm~noffh'c uruons. or nearty,a third
of Disneyl1 nd's workers. Yi lked off the job Scpl. 2~. but
about :200 r1kers rrtumed 10 woli: \Veoneiday and
Thur'®>, said park Pokcswoman ~)dnc Huwa1da.
Also Thursday, about 700 people apphed for Job , but
fewer than I 00 of the stnkers: po it ions were filled, id
p rk ~spokesman Bob Roth, •
Meanwhile, the unions filed an SI m1lhon I "' un
over the arre ts Monda) ot si~ un on leaden.
The suit, filed in Onngc Count) Supenor Coun.
conttnds lhc cituen:S arrests h) DJ.Sneytand off&aal~
.. caused hum1h tion, emotional d1strcs and damage to
the reputations" ot the»e taken into custody, id union
spokesman Bob Ble1weis .
He said awards from.the lawsuit would ao to help
needy stnkcrs. ·
The union leaderi "ert arrtsttd when they and about
150 stnkel'1 defied a temporary restraining order barrina
them from pickcun near the perk'' main ticket booths.
The unions claim the order was improperly isstied
and is void. and the state Supreme Coun has blocked
fur:thcr enforcement of the 9rder pending an appeal by the
un1on1.
The amusement park hitd set a deadline of
Wedneiday for the stnkers. who include tick~t sellers. ndc opcrato~ janitors and restaurants workers. 10 tither -.... .-~ .. iilli return to work or have their jobs filled by permanent • ....,....,._.:;.1 -
replacements. t!!!l!i•lllll••l!llllilllliiiii Strikers whose jobs have not been filled can get them
0"4t ........ ..,..._.u. academic advi1ors.-M available to answer questions.
Activitteswillc:o11cl J J:30p.m. For more information
on UC( Day and"ca pUI tours, call 8S6-S832-.
back as Iona as they agree to work under the park's latest
wa1c-frce1e contract offer, which was rejected by the
strikina unions, Roth said.
Those whose jobs have been filled must reapply and
await a position for which they are qualified, Disneyland
Strlkera plcket at Dlaneylan4 employee iate a.nder watchful .,.e of park lecartty ~·
officials have said. are scckin1 annual pay raises ofbctwecn 4 per~t and
Al l l l h dul d The park:, which has about S,000 emplo)ec , wants a percent. amn CD c 9C e ~--..&-a.i-yeat-wqic. freeze and euia in--fring:e bentfm;.---ut~Hheirokleonlt'IC't;theltrilcets~nedtxr"CC1i
There will be a ~tluck picnic for Whtttier Collcac panicularly for pan· time and new employees. The unions $7 and SI O an hour.
alumni and their famllica on Sunday, Oct. 14, from noon
to 4 p.m. at William R. Mason Park in Irvine.
,Volleyball; baseball and children's aamcs are
planned. The formation of an Oranic County Alumni
Oub will be discussed. For more information. call 693-0771. Ext. 364.
: CoNTINUEO S10R1Es
--
Hoepltal volunteera to meet
Volunteeri from Fountain Valley Community Hos-
pital will host a mectina of the Oran,e County Council of
·Hospital Volunteers on Monday, Oct. lS, in Huntinston
Beach.
Ex-school custodian
Fred Andresen dies
The program s~ker will be. Lee Ann Donaldson,
coordinator of Hospice Volunt~fl.at St. Joscpth Hospital
in Orange.
The pr0j1'8m is slated at 9 a.m. at the rant Unucd
Methodist Church 2721 17th St., Huntington Beach.
Luncheon-will be served 11 t 2!14 p;m. at -a cost-ot$6.-
Free Ou ahota offered
Pacifica Community Hospital in Huntington BCacb
is providina f rec flu shots to senior citizens.
The special immunization clinic is part of the
hospital's Focus on Community Health prasram which
presents health forums. seminars and clinics free to the
public throuaJtout the year.
Ucker funeral -today
The flu shots will be 11vcn on Monday, Oct. 1 S, at
Wycliffe Gardens. adjacent t~ the'hosptal at 18765 Forida
St. Hours are 1.-~ p,m. Appointments are not necessary.
Women aet luncheon program
Irvine Business and Professional Women will present
Karen Peters. manaacr. County ofOranae Environmental
Manaaement Aaency. at a luncheon program on Tuesday,
Oct. 16, at the County Linc Restaurant. 461 S Barranca
Parkway. Irvine.
Networking and si&n-m 1s at 11 :30 a.m.. with
luncheon aiui proanm to follow at noon. Cost is $9 for
members and S 12 for non-members with reservations
~uired by Friday, Oct. 12. For information and
relservauons, call Veriee Christie at 752-8438.
l
Vice PrealdentGeorieBuab
• .. .-.. .... Ill
Coqre.womaa Geraldine Ferraro .
VICE PRESIDENTIAL DEBATE •.•
From Al
tops of their tickets.
Toaatmuter• meet weekly
The vice presidential debate cov-
ered both domestic and foreijn
policy, and the two candidates
sparred over iss~ ra.nain& from
taxes and abortion to terronsm and
the depth of their eitperience. It was
their only debate of the campaian.
who died for our country and "e delpbia Civic Center came from an
grieve as much for their families as ' ABC News poll that said Bush wa.s
y_ou do. Apol~tc, and do it today," named the wmner bY 42 percent and
Mondale said 1n a direct challcnac to Ferraro b) 33 percent, while 25
Bush. Spcaluna at a rally in Miami, percenJ called it a tie. A total of 681 -------------------Mondale said that if no apolo&Y were people were contacted tn the hour S t A ~ R fJ od Toastmasters Club 179 Westminster Spokesmen
meets every Wednesday, from 6:30 to 7:45 a.m .. at
Rosalyn's Restaurant, Gothard and Edinger. Hununaton
Beach.
Today, a cheerful President R~n
said Bush was a clear winner. adding.
"I don't think there wasan~ question.
I thou&ht he was just srcat."
fonhcom1oc he-\\'ould put the matter after the debate, and the poll bad a an a r1J Ja i ver 0
10 Rcapn himself when the two men margin of error of plus or minus 4 S
meet in their second debate Oct. 21. points. t J • ( k ·11 d
AnAuociatedPrtsspanelofsevcn Another poll. comm1SSJoned b) con ro pro1ec J e For mformation. call 842·8S8 I or Toastmasters
International, S42..6793. debate judaes scored Bush the win-USA Today. also showed a pluralit)
ner. Four or the debete cxpens called of those surve)ed thought Bush had
him the winner oulri&ht. one called it bested Ferraro -By ~e Associated PrHS
•
But l>cmocrat1c challenaer Walter
Mondale had a far different reaction.
------pramna Ferraro's performance and a close viC}ory for F"ertaro. and two scored it a tic. The same panel called Bush and Ferraro each stepped on
Mondale a clear winner over Reagan the stage ~1th a clear m1™on as the)
h v.111 be at lea. la >tar before a flood control plan for
the Sa.nta Ana R1\'ff rccxhn federal approval. · 1
Friday, O<!t. 12
accusin1 Bush of makin& an ·•un-
pardonable" slur when he said the
Democrats had su~csted Americans
killed in Lebanon 'died in shame."
· h · d ba la s d debated four da)s after Mondale's 1n t cir e te st un ay. strona showing apinst Reapn in the
The first hint of pubhc reaction to fint of two debates. Rca.pn and
ConartSS adjoumcJ Thursda) in Wasb1nat0b aficr
k1lhn1 a SIOO m1lhon ~cU.ac of -atcr proJ«tS which·
included authoriza11on offinal desian work for the project.
Such appro .. al is needed beforT construction funds arc
gran1N. No meettnas 1cbedaled ··we honor the men and women their 90-minute debate at the Phila-Mondale will debate again Oct. 21 .
PoucE Lo e
Thug's haul disappoi~ting
-so he slugs store owner
A younf bandit, unhappy with the
amount o money he raked in from a ca h rtaister ull at a Fountain Vl.llcy
matket. lulled the owner 1n the head
with his aun after srabbin money
rt.om the victim's wallet and .shin
~ket.
The aunman, a black juvenile.
escaped with about S 170 from
~-r~a11ey, /
Someone kicked optn the front
door to. hou in the 10000 block or
La Hacienda and stoic stereo equip-
ment, a hand&un. coins and tools
valued at S 1.460. •
• • •• Thieve used a wire clothes hanaer
to pry open a 1981 Oat un 280Z in the
partuna lot at the Family Four
Cinema and stoic casscttt ta , a
ck pack and tool kid and broke an
iaruuon switch. .. . .
Intruders br kc into a 1972
P he 1n the 9000 block of El
Pueblo and tole a Yt'lllct cont 1n1na
S40 from a v1c11m' oursc • • • lit
SQmeone climbed (>\Cf fcnC't to
hou ln the I SOOO block of H)ldc and
tole I color TV. terco and c cir')
after pryinJ open a kitchen ndo • • • • ASS.OOOwom n' oldnf\IWllh 13
di mond w stolen f-rom re i·
d nrt tn the I pooo bl k of ho
l er.
Danny's Villa Market, 16040 Harbor
Blvd .. Police said.
The aunman, wcanna a towel over
bis nose and mquth. waved a ch:-ome
handaun with a two-tnch btml as he
entered the store at abOut 9:30 p.m.
Thursday and demanded that the
owner hand over all the money.
"I'll kill you if push the 1lartn." he
car at Fountain Valley Haah School
and stoic a stereo valued at SSOO.
LapnaBeacb
·camera equipment wonh $800
was rcPorted toJen from a ~ iden~
in the 2600 block of Qucda Way
Thursday night. • • • Eli sa Pai&e Stein. 25 . was arrcated
and characd wilh buraJary Thu,.y
afternoon at a bu incs 1n the ~2oo
block of Forest Avenue. &ti w 1 t
at $10.000.
told the owner. Quan G. Chuc. The
youna aunman became . unhaPP.>
because he aot only s 135 from the till.
Police •id, and then slilged Chuc.
It was unknown if Chuc rcqu.ittd
ho pltilitation wu.h 1njunc rtttave<!
from the blow from the aun. paltce
said. The aunman wa$ still at larac
today.
boat docktd at the uth Short Y cht
Club at 2S27 W. Coast Hiahway. • • • A woman who left her purse
unattended at the Red Onion R~5-
taurant bar while she ,j iN the
restroom returned 10 minutes later to
find her wallet mi sina The wallet,
h and cred11 cards \\'ttt to ether
wonh abOut S2 tS.she told poll~.
1"1.De
San Dieao freeways.
B1llltinaton Beach
,.
A resident of the 600 block of
Walnut A venue rtponed early today
thatsomcone broke mto his blue 1968
Volks .. 'laen Bua. "h1ch wu parked
1n an alley. The lo incluJcd stereo
equipment wonh $300. ••• Entenna throuah an unlocked fron1
grabbed t\\O bottleswol cha mpagnt• 1n
the store and fled in 1 -.-. h 1 tC' 'an
Thursday. The loss v.a S6 Jli • • • " man reponed th.at hu ~3-toot
boat was stripped ·"·hen he left 11
o"erni&ht at a ps-muon on the
romerofMaanoha treet and\\ amer
A ,·enue for tire repairs The los\.
estimattd at SS.000. mcludC'd ti h1n
tackle. a radio and boat equipment
South County
.\ M1ss1on VieJO home was bur-
glanzt'd v.h1le 1he residents were
av.a) at v.ork Shenffs deputies
reponed the culprits probably
enterC'd throuah the rear "doS&Y
door" to get into the home. Reponcd-
1~ stolen v.ere S90 in cash. a 11rr~
'"nter. a dental retainer and nine
can of hghl be-er.
door. someone buJ'l)arized an apan-
ment Thursda)I on tne 16800 block of ~~~~-J~~~~~~ludedcamera "'Ju( dge w1··11· ... hear mot1• on
Entcrina thrC:uiJi ·a rear windo\\,
someone buralari1ed a home Thurs-t • } -' D 1
da) on the 5600 block of Mossvalc on re r1a 1 or e uca Circle. TM to ncluded ~~-ell") •
•onh SSOO arid camera equipment
wonhS4SO. • • • A male juvenile was arrc$led
Thut1d yon u pic1on of shophf\ina
at the MaBhall' tore. 16672 Beach
81\d, Recovered ~ hoe wonh
S3S. • • •
h had not bctn provided a cop} of a Jiill\ou~. bookina shp. The boolmia
;,hp rt dl) oontaans ~ observa·
taon from a Hunt1~ton Beach t er
tllm 10 Deluca s mental QOn·
d1llon . '
In tht meanume, Deluca rtmam
•n pro1cct.1\C tu tody· in the
Count) Jail •here he •~ beina d
Jthout ii. .
BULLETI
-
' J
..
• I ,. .
A4 Or.nge Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday, OCtober 12. 1 4
-.
U.S. records sharp drop in prices WoRlD
""'------
Ar~ed forces catch blame
for Aquino assa~sination wer food, gasoline costs get
most oft e credit for good news
WA HIN TON ( P)·-Whok-
pn • down two months run· ha.n,a, fell 0 2 pertenl an ptt>mbcr.
1he90vemment said tod ~·The drop
wu the Sharpest llncc January 19 3
and marked the first time in eight
cars that pf ct.s fell forJwo st.raiaht
mOnth
Today'' food news meant that. for
lhe first nine month~ of th )ear.
nm at the wholesale Jc•1cl rose a
minuscule 1.9 per~nt, urpming
~nomists who had forecast an
lf\flalton rate approa hina 5 percent or all ofl 9 4.
1-i Much ofthenedit for last month•
Pdrformance went to lower food and psohnc pnoes.
Food prices fell 0.4 percent, the
fih'h ume tn the la t six months that
those pncc h 'e dropped. Pnces for
pork and 1 continued their hllrp dcclmes w ale the costs of fresh
vegetables ond fish we~ also off.
Gasoline J)f'ices declined for the
fourth month.runmna. lthou,gh the
O.S ~rcent dC'C'lme was off .,harply frQm ttic prev1ou montti'~ 4.2 pcr·
cent drop.
White Hou~ spokesman l.art)
Spcakts noted a ~parate ttport today
that said retail sales rose in SCptcmber
after t~o monthly dcdines and called the two report "a winning team."
The good new on inflation, he
added. "provides a new foundation
for consumers to bC confiacnt ttiat
their salaries won't be eaten up b~
inflation."
TOday's intla~n took many
anal ts b su rise. While most art'
BALTZ-BERGERON
SMITH & TUTHILL
WESTCLIFF MORTUARY
"AFFORDABLE FUNERALS"
CATHOLIC SSRVICES AVAILABLE
427 E. 17TB ST., COSTA MESA
, PHONE: 646-9371
• ...
•
~ 0" 4''..,_ l 0 ~ \\10-«?<"l '{ct->~~ do~~~~ ~ ._,,p_'~ ~6 ~~e ~~e~ ~~.,'\ti>-~ ~e~.'Y~~ ~~ ~~ ~,~~<P 60'-~~· ~~~do ~ ~ ,,1 .,p.>'~
~· '\ ,~-,~-
•
Congress turns doWn
debt celling hike bill
•
By &ke A led Pr
MAN ILA. Phllippines-A memorandum from staffl WY ruo lh td mvcstigauna lhc Benigno Aqumo u1nouon acruscs the anncd forces chief
of staff. 17 oth rmthtary men and ociv1lian ofconsp1rat)' in the .mootan~death
14 months ago. The document. a 479.,pagc memorandum b) the board lepl
panel &.a)S the: opp()iit1on leader was !hot by one of his five m1htary cscoru a
he m~med from three year$ of If-imposed exile in the United Statei on A~&·
21 1983. The laW11yers re not membtf1 -of the ftv~mcmbcr ~net .• which
continued its deliberations today, but they con.ducted the snvestipt1on and
interrogated wiln~scs.
Korean eco·uclJaage propoMMI
SEOUL. South Ko -South Korea propo$ed today that South and
North Korean officiah and bu incssmen get together to explore _means .or
economic exchana" and other cooperation, The move waunother m A scnes
of proposals made b South Korea In its pr~ta1mC<J efforts to ampr~ve
relations with the Communi t-ruled North . South Kortan Deputy Pnme
Minister and Economic Planninf Minister Shi!l. Byung·h)on mad~ the
proposal in a letter to North Korea s cconom1cs mm1~ter. Choe Vona Rim.
Ina p~anes blt tanJrer tujet
MANAMA. Bahrain-Iranian warplane attacked and li&htb' damaged
an Indian 011 tankt>r in neutral waters of the Persian Gulf south of the Iraq· Iran
war zone. shippin& official in Bahrain and Lon~on sa!d. today. The offic1~I
said one crewman aboard the 20,911-ton Jag Pan was anJurcd_by hrapnel in the bombma attack Thursday afternoon. The damaged ship steamed to
Bahrain and anchored offshore early today. Roger Lowes. spokesman for
Lloyd's Shipping Intelligence in London. said the ship was owned by Great
Eastern Shippina Co. Ltd. of Bombay, India.
Challe_nger crew
packs up for home
•
--•
3women
arrested
in scheme
BARSTOW (AP) -Three women
are accused ofposinaas rapccounstl-
ors to pcts'1ade a rape victim not to te~tif> against her alle&ed assailant.
the brother of two o( the women, officials said.
Detective Lio Griqo said the
victim of the Aua. 25 rape, a 25-ytar·
old Bar tow woman, told him Sept •
that three women who called them·
selves "rape crisis worken" had come
to her home Sept. 1.
•
he told him they tried to persuade
her not to pursue the case apinat lhc
man accused of assauhina her -
Jimmie Lee Baker -by sayina that
they had been rape victims and they
"had been humiliated by the coun
process." Griego said. ' e • • • • • • e e
+
•:.. . .,.
• '
e •
t .
A reprc~ntativc of lhc Rape Crisis
Center who had contacted the woman
during the rape invc tiption did not
know the three women. Grieao said .
The victim n:coan1zed the three
when he ·went to the SCpt. 20
preliminary ht>anng for Baker befbre
Municipal Coun Judac Ru fus Vent and saw them in 1dic couruoom,
Gn osaid.
tro three h race a m15dcm nor
Ch&llC of d1ssuadina a witn , uid
upcrvi 1111 DJStr:ict Attorney Dtnni1
nst)'.
Bak}!J. who is beina held 1n lieu of
SIOO,uuu bond, was ord f'fd 11 the
dose of the preliminary hcanna to
tand ltial on xven felony charlet
ncludina forcible rape, a sault with 1
deadly weapon, robbery, buraltr)
rape with a forci1n object and oral copulation •
It
Nrws NorEs
COlllt DAILY PILOT f"'-Ocaobet 12
~ --.& ....
•
-
A p3St pre 1dent of the ddlc k Regional Olamber of Commerce nd
a utmaster w11h 'he Boy Scouts of
America, EUswonh, lives 1n Laauna
Hills with his Wife ind (our chil3ttn.
He is a panncr in the law firm of
Ellswonh & Tibbitti
....
rnCIUdc all tu1hon. reaistrauon and
apphcat on fees in the adtoors non·
m1dent Juris Docloratc Propam.
Apphcants must have at least 60 ~nits of undel'lfldua&e co"* atdits4
and be actfvc 1n lhc real estate prof e5sion. For details. call 964. l U I .
Pines n Wriltnwood
The $31 cost andudes iwo n{abts l~n x meal recnauon, cnttt·
wnmcJU and rou~&np uanspor.
latlOn from San1a Ana.
Senion. ws :5S and oldtr. may
rtlll&ct by calliq JGc.nc Jv.obs al
8.J4.397 I or Ra) ,Oarkc at 547"'4 l ?l.
Panel •pJH)fatmeat
Mary Ann WellsofCorona&I Mar
was rcccntJy appointed by -Oraft.F
County uperyason to 1 '.ihn:ic:-year
term on Jhe Comm1as1on on the Status of Woman.
Fifth District County Supervisor Thomas F. RHey recommended
Wdls' appointment. She 1ill1 the seat
~led rec.en tty by Geraldine Cahall· Piekett.
.-:!'!!!~~
Child care for ~dS fort and after
their elementary school dules as
be!nJ planntd fort;quna &adi.
TM l.4una Btach Untf.ed SchoOf
Distn<:1 and lhc Ora• COual)'.
DePi,i'.(ment ofEduc:auon are ~pcrauna on a proCflJll to provide a
quafifaed statr to serve 2f ctuldren at
the El Morro School. PropQled hours
an 6-8 a.m. and I I a.m. to 6 p m •• with a nominal fees for rt11nrataon.
Questions concemina tlle JJl'Olflm
should be addreued to the county's
FALL -SALE AND -CLEARANCE
LATE 7 P.M. SATURDAY CIDSING
'
FOR THE FIRST TIME THIS SEASON!
$56.99
DANDO UNO
SNAKESKIN SHOES
&g.176. For 2 "4ys onl'y, 'JO"
can find fabulous savin1s on ont
of our grut new looks for f a/L·
Bandolino's "Fant/a.• Choose
b/.acle, gra~ or winter white.
Robinson's Shots, 6.
$92.99-$95.99
OUR ENTIRE
SHOE COLLECTION
BY DAVID EVINS
Reg. l114-S128. Sophimc11ttd.
A:>lish«J. Eltg4nt. Choose •Bravo:'
open t~ sling with button lxJv,.
-zo1a,•opm toeP"'71pwithgathemJ
front. -emu,• /ow htt1 opm t~
withgathert.dfronr. Ormanyolhtr
dramatic styks. {Stltttion m4Y
• vary by storr.) Robinson's~
158, all stores t:xeept A ~m,
Mission VU'JOi PanoramA City.
and Wemmnsur.
$21.99-$48.99
PANT .. HER•
-WAllDROBER'"
FALL COll.EC110N
~ c11rdig11n jaclt.n. Reg. $64. 99.
S.k S48.99. Pkated JMnt._
kg. 139.99. Sak $29.99.
PlbiuJ skin kg, $39.99.
Sak $19.99. 2-button skirt.
kg. S39.99. S.le S29.99.AI~
uiool/po/~kr, in 11TMthysJ, gr•~
sandstone, and upphire. 8-18.
And to coordiMte, the striped
blouse, in pol~ 8-18.
Robi1111irt Sportsvur, 160. "'1
stores ~t P11/m Springs. s.,,,.
Monie.a, 11nd Shn-m6n ads.
$41.99-$47.99
UZ CUJBORNE'S
FLATS FOR FALL
This /.JI. try Ming 11TOund
in INr MUI "Chips• bov s/Ummer
(I« bow is~ Reg. $$6.
Sale $41.99. Or -Pan«he:
Mr lat1'mi Jo.for. kg. 164.
Sale 147.99. Find them both
for f.Jl in Robinsons Shoe
Col1«tWns, 103.
JYll MEN'S LF.AlHD \
YAU.q'S AND
Oioiw{rom our mtirr #kciWn
of~ bJn-/"""4 too!
32-40. kg. SIJ-IJ2JQ·
. s.ie 110.99-12.J.'9. Au S11W i1% on O#r colkmon of~
~ inbl«lt,hruais.~
or grai kg. SJJ-JJI..
Sale S10.99-S42.'J9.
Robinson's Mm 's Accasoria, 93.
ADDITIONALLY, ON OUR ALREADY
SALE-PRICFD COLLECTIONS!
---------------------
• $8.99~$16.99
WOMEN'S LEATHER AND FABRIC BELTS
Ong. S18·S26. After Fall Salt S11.99-S22.99. S.vt•n
additio114125% on our stkction of buutiful btlts-each '-
c•n add th.t /inAl touch of drama to ygur /.JI outfits. S·M·L
Robmson's &Its, 134. '
$2250~ $32.25
WEEKEND WEAR FOR H~~
Orig. S4l·S98. 'After Fall S41t. 129.99-:142.99. Saw .in
11dditional 2H(, on pants. Sho11s, swe.tns. shirth 11ruJ Jmsa
in all t~ ~t new fall J~shion colo~ 4-14 l~tm ·M·L).
Robinsoo s Wttktnd \r~•r. 130
. .
$18.74-$33.74
JWll MERINO WOOL KNIT D~ING
Oni. S42·S75. After F~I S.lt, $24.99--1#.99. S.w an
additional 25~ and mix md m4tch from 011r group of
c111tligans, t.ieSts, P"lkNm. IUJti skirts. Al~ of the finest purr
Merino u:ool ftom Jc.i., S·M·L Robinson's Swt11cm, J.
$22.49-$3Z49
SILKY BLOUSES IN PASTELS A.ND BRIGHJS
~ ullt ch.rmnut b/QMw '" 11ssorud.JMle'"rolors. Ori . SJS.
54/t IJ1.49. Aft" /VII Salt, $49.99. 1MJ<Mbk-"""5tcd s1llt
rrtpc de chint blouw 111 aswrttcl bright <Olors. Ori . S6S.
s.lt 119.99. 'Aft,., Fall S.Ut, IJ9.99. 7"t "°"1 b/OfM. m
dSSOrttd lnigSt 11nd noftml po/ymtr. Orig. S4J. S.Ji 121."9.
Afttr &11 k, S19.'9. All, 4·14. Robinson) ltiOM 2J.
. .
$21.99-$44.99
FAMOUS MAKER l.EA1llE.R HANDBAGS
Ong. S45-S86. Afan F.Jl s./e, $19.99-$19.99. S.Wm
adt/Jtion.12 5% on IM I#.~ biiratlhugs )ON 'w ber. promismg
'JOll'mlf! Choo~ from grNl ~ /Jtt StoM M<>1mlllin,
~. C.nson, Pion«r. •nd Mr. u.ihu.
Robinsqn 's HliniJbiigs. 149/186.
$16.50-$39.74
GLOBlA::.VANDERBILT FALL SEPARATES _
AND \VEEXEND YEAR
Orig. S#-S82. Afan F-11 S.lt, Sll.99-S12.'9. 11n
..
-"'itionAI 25" on tt slli~ corrJi, .nJ hn n~
tlmuns. 6-16. ~·NI · nwy ry o~JRohitutin~
fan Di~ llS.
RMATI
•
'\
Al °'8ftOll OOMt OAJLY PllOT 1Ft1d1y, OCtober 12.
Thatcher escapes
Brighton blast; .
IRA takes credit .
BRIOHTON ~njland"{AFJ -
bomb claimed by the IRA exploded
earl)' today at a hotel where Prime
Minister Ma.rpret Thatcher was stay· iDI! k.illi~ four people and iajurina 30, includin11 Cabinet ministerand a
member of Parliament. Thatcher was
not hurt.
The Irish Republican Army as ued
a statement in Dublin sayina the
bombina. which tore a ppina hole in
. the seafront Grand Hotel, was an
attempt "aaiinst the British Cabinet
and the Tory wannonaers."
IRA auerrillas art fiahtina to force
Britith fldiers out of Northern
Ireland. The statement s11d>
··Thatcher will now realize that
Britain cannoJ occupy our country,
torture our prisoners and shoot our
people in their own streets and act
away with iL"
"Today we were unlucky, but
remember. we have only to be lucky
once: You will have to be lucky
always. Give Ireland peace and there
will be no war," the statement said.
The statement was sianed by P.
O'Neill, a pseudonym offen used by
Sinn Fein, the pobtlcal wina of the
IRA. It was distributed throuah Press
Association, the British domestic
news service.
m t e ouse o Commons, John
Wakeham.
Thatcher id he was sttll awake
when the bta t ocxumd at 3: lO a.m.,
workina on a speech she planned to
deliver to the conference today. Her
husband Denis was in bed ... All the
windows went.and the bathroom was
extremely badly damaaed. We were
ve!)' lucky ... Thatcher said.
S11 hours after the blast. Thatcher
kept her eyes firmly closed as the
conference convened on schedule
wtth a pra)er forthedead and it\iured.
"We intend to continue with our
conference ... because those who wish
to intimidate democraC)' must be
shown that whatever means they use,
those means will in fact fail, .. party
chairman Joh·n Selwyn Gummer
said, hts voice breaking wath emotion.
The deleptes then went on to the
scheduled debate on stnfe-torn
Northern Ireland.
Home Secretary Leon Bnttan told
a news conference that police officials
determined the explosion was caused
by a bomb containina I S-20 pounds of explosives. "It is clear that the
incident was caused by an explosive
device from mside the hotel," he said.
.,..,,,, .... Thatcher, at the Grand Hotel alona
with most of her 22·member Cabinet
for Con~ Pany"J annual colr-ference, said the explosion blew out
the windows of her second-floor
room. She was taken to a police
station in this Enalish Channel resort
and told reporters: "I'm very welJ.
thank you."
The explosion blew out a huae
section of the eiaht-story hotel's front
W&llJ. with the hole risina upward from
the nfth floor.
~ma Nf clfotson a vice eliairman
of the Conservative Party who fled
from the hotel tn her dressing aown,
said: "There was an enormous ex-
plosion, then the smell of acrid
smoke. It was horrid."
Bomb •battered front~ Grand Batel ID Bifititon,
En&land Friday momln •• Jdllhl& f01IJ' people.
The injured included Thatcher's
trade minister, Norman Tebb1t: the
Australian ambassador to Britain, Alf
Parsons: and the Conservatives' whip
Wakeham. 52. was dua out of the
debris in poor cond1t1on, said David
Tnppter, a JUntor minister in the
Trade Department. ·•1 understand his
condttion ts very bad. but he is talkina
I
so that's OK," Tripp1er said.
Australian officials said Parsons,
S9, also was hospitalized He was
sufferina from shock. but was ex.-DCC'ted to be released from the
hospital today, said a spokesman for
the Australian Hi&h Commission, or
embassy.
RUFFELL'S
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192? ~ aw .. COSTA MESA -541·1151
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')
Almost four hours after the blast,
Tebbit, 53, was dug out of the rubble
and was admitted to Royal Sumx
County Hospital. Deputy Di,trict Administrator
Simon Strachan said Tebbit had a
broken lea and other lea u\furies but
was able to move· all his limbs.
Welfare
to spy
susj>ect
probed
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
count) ·s welfare agency has been
ordered to mvestilc'te how a Soviet
immigrant who claimed to be a spy
was able to collect welfare payments
totaling $9,000 in the past two years .
By unanimous vote. the Board of
Supervisors ordered a probe into the
Department of Social Service's
method of payina welfare benefits to
le.ial 1mm1Rrants.
In addition, Supervisor Kenneth
Hahn asked the district attorney's
office to investapte whether Svetlana
Ogorodnikova, 34. committed wel-
fare fraud. She was arrested Oct. 4
along with her husband, Ntckolay, SI.
and FBI agent Richard W. Miller.41.
"If she was a major in the KGB. as
she claims, she would have had to
report income from that JOb (on her
welfare appltcat1on). But she didn't."
Dan Wolfe. a Hahn aide saad Thurs-
day.
In another development Thursday.
defense attorney Howard Weiuman saad he would not represent Miller.
althou&h he had said previously that
he wanted to
Miller is charaed with conspiring to
sell information to the Soviets for
S6S.OOO an calh and aold. He's the
first FBI aaent ever charaed with
esp1onaae and this is the first known
anttance of foreian infiltration of the
agency.
,
'
Fires on NY'a subway forct
13,000 commuters to Dee
lb As oclac.ed Pnu
NEW YORK -A half-dozen fires mtcd 1n the c1ty'1 subwa)' sys~em t
i 11nalcday, li'htly1nJUrina 10 p senaen1and nine firtftlbt~al nd(~tcmt~ evacuation of 3 000 commuter& from amoky tunnels Offic1a s 111 servac
disrupted b~ the hres Thursday in Manhattan and 8f09klyn, had retu~c~ I
nonnal thro~out the 230-mile system by 1:30 p.m. F:tre and transl\ o 1. •
blamed a witchboK undemeath a 22-ycar-old sub~y car for.the ~ost nol (~ :which i bout,S p.,m. as a train pulled 11110 I StlllOn 1n 8rookly1
About 120 flrefiahters were sent into th~ smok~·filled $ubway st~p. and ~·n~ <
them later were treated for · moke 1nhalauon and exhau uon, id u
department pokcsman John Mullipn.
Weatmoreland trial UtJder ••Y
NEW YORK -A risina youna producer and a top networl
comsJ)Ondtnl for CBS News had no incentive to dist~rt tho truth ~hen the
accused Amenca's commander in Vietnam of misleadinJ h11 supenors a~u
the pro~s of the war. an attomey for the network saya. But a lawyer forrett~
Gen. William-C. Westmoreland said the CBS broa<tcast of"Tbc Un~ounta
Enemy: A Vietnam Deception" distorted facts ~use the producer need~
a story a bi& story:• The clash came in openana 111_uments Thursday 11 •
Westmoreland's S 120 million libel suit apinst CBS. "60 Minutes' ~orrespondent Mike Wallace, producer Georac Crile and Sam Ad.amt. ant;\
CIA analy t who was a ·css consultant for the proaram. . .
Suicide pill vote counted
PROVIDENCE. R.l. -A referendum on whether Brown Univers1t!
should stockpile suicide pills for use. durina a nuclear war dr;ew about th~
times as many voters as student electtons normally do. An esum~ted 1.900 o
Brown's S 400 undergraduates voted over two days, compared wtth a norma
turnout of 600 students, student election officials said as votina conclu~ec
Thursday. Univer5ity officials have said that rqardless of the results, wh~ct
were to be released this afternoon, they would not stock tl\e proposed cyanide
tablets. Under the referendum proposal, the tablets would be dispensed by trhc
'health department to students who choose suicide over the aftermath o f
nuclear war.
'Badman' aatilor dead at 78
PORTLAND Ore. -Writer and ps~choloaist Thomas Euiene GaddtSi
whose 19SS book • .. Birdman or Alcatraz' became one of the nation's best·
known prison biographies. 41.Cd Wednesciay in a.P.ort1an.d..nursin• home. He
was 76. Gaddis had suffered for 18 month~ from cancer that bepn ma tea and
spread to his abdomen. The Denver native had careers as an educat~r and
psychofogist in addition to his writina. He was co-author oft he book "Killer: A
Journal of Murder," chroniclina the life of Oregon serial klller Carl Panzram,
and he was published in a variety or mapzines.
. CALIFORNIA
------
Hardware •tore blue kill• 4
SOUTH PASADENA -The charred bodtes of three adults and a child
were pulled from the smolderina rums of a hardware store as arson
investaptors determined the blaze had started accidentally. Two of the bodies,
that of a man and a woman were found Thursday about ei&ht feet from a door,
said Los Anaeles County Shenfl's Sgt. Stephen Finley. The pair apparently
came close to escapmJ as flames roared throuab the cavernous bu1ldtna
Wednesda) ... All they had to do was reach that door and push," Finley said.
The large one-floor Ole's Home Center store was packed with many
.. ex.plosive" materials. includma paint and paint thmner. said Deputy Dave
Tellez.
Cooklea'J>olson blind man
LAWNDALE - A bhnd man who was hospllllhzed after buying drug-
laced cookies from two youngsters who idenufied themselves as Camp Fire
girls said he doesn't know whom to trust anymore. Robert L. Sirmons, 36. said
Thursday that he bought a box of chocolate mint cookies from two airls who
came to bis door the previous day. A Los AnJCICS County Sheriff's Oepanment
spoke man said the cookies sold to Sirmons and found to have been laced with
Vahum were not official Camp Fire cookies and were probably tampered with
after someone bought them m a st.or.c.
Restauranteur 'Trader Vic' dead
SAN FRANCISCO -Victor J. Beraeron, the restaurateur known as
"Trader Vic" "'ho began with a hole-in-the-wall food JOlnt and ended with a
muh~m1lhon dollar restaurant empire, has died at age 81 . &rgeron, who died
Thursday at his home in H1llsborou&h. about 25 miles so~th of San Francisco,
borrowed $500 an I 934 to OJ!Cn his first restaurant, Hinley Dink's in Oakland.
It was there that he began a hfe-lona habit ofinventing his version of South Seas
food and drinks, including such exotic and now-famous rum concoctions as
"Missionary's Revenae" and "Mai Tai."
Expert hired In patJent death
LOS ANGELES -The attome.Y for a respiratory therapist accused of the
near-fatal dru111na of an infant said he has hired an independent medical
expert to examine the bodies of three elderly women who died while the
therapist's care. Sammy Weiss, attorney for therapist Randy Powen, said
Thursday he hired the ex pen because "J do not have confidence nor do f trust
the county coroner. "My (ex.pen) told me the bodies are so decomposed it's
difficult to tell anything," he added. Tbe third body was exhumed by county
authorities Thursday. · ·
Groomer held Jn ~ •l•;ylng•
LOS ANGELES - A Los Anaeles dog aroomer arrested for anvestiptaon
of two rape-murders is also being investipted in connection with at least seven
other rapes. I 00 buraJaries and at least one murder. police said. Kevin Bernard
Haley, 20, was arrested Wednesday at his home and was booked for
anvcstiption of murder in the Sept. 27 death of Dolores Clement, SS, and the
June 26 slayinJ of Laverne Stolzy, 56. "He (Haley) has aiven us mformauon
leadina us to seven or ei&ht ra~s we dido 't ha..ve any reports on and we suspect probably a lot more than that. 'Lt. Bob Martin said Thursday. "We are hopina
thet victims. seeina his picture. mi&ht come forward."
•
...
Danica
Open Daily 10~6 Sunaav 12-5
THREE
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•
t
Orange C0MC DAJLV PILOT IF~. Octoblr 12 1114 A.7
COAST
People
PAPARAZZI
--
Inte~val reStores good life
Star-studded a u ction raises
funds fo r shelter for abused
By BARBARA METZLER
0.., ...... Cen JI ... I
Sa)ing .. Everyone deserves the good life;• Ctaarlot·
te Rae oCTV's "Facts oflife .. opened the fifth annual
hvc auction to benefit Orange County's Interval House
at the Irvine Marriott.
Interval House, founded in 1979 b) former
~-.......;;_..;,_;; __ :;;::m_w-..._..J.;.J Huntington Beach and Seal Beach mayor Norma Gibbs, .. ...--~ .......... ---:-'!!-actus a sncltcr for women and children who arc victims
of domestic \'iolence, •
This was Rae's third )Car asjlonorary chairperson
for the benefit. DoubJ.ma her duties that evening, the
petite redhead, al0Jitw1th son. writer Larry Straa11,
introduced several of the exciting item for bid and even
purchased one -a health vacauon for two at "The
Palms" in Palm Springs. .
Joinina Rae as celebrity auctioneers were actress
Sasan Struberg, also author of .. Bittersweet;" Dick
WU1oa,aka "Mr. Whipplc:"Wllliam KlrbyC.Uea of
.. How the West Was Won:" John Mlllord from
.,..r--,..111..UCorpitol'' and .. Mikei-tamm!r, ... songwntcfCaroT
CO.Dllors,and football playerCbri1 Foote of the USFL's
Tampa Bay Bandits. ·
Prior to the auction. the 700gucstsdinedon
Chicken Beauregard. fresh snow peas. glazed carrots,
topped off with Baked Alaska, paraded into the Grand
Ballroom with fanfare provided by the Home Savings
Band of America conducted by Dick Emmoadl that also
provided the musical entcnainment for the event. The
;~~• invocationwasgi~n-bythc Rn.PeaaBanet~ -
The celebrities then auctioned a variety of"&etaway
o..,,...~_,..._,. • ...., vacationsfortwo"to Washington, O.C..San Francisco
Tenni• everyone? orVattel,Francc.ADallasCow.boy'sf~tballwcckcnd •crocker' •oanlel recet':. .... a';'d::"&om _ than'soo ta ed 8 da for two brought $720, and a skiing week m Aspen, Sa.aan Struber. and Charlotte Rae. -ore •pee ton tum out an y SI ,080. • ·•
at John Wayne Tennis Club for the final• of Also auctioned was a luncheon date with California donated by Crocker Bank. brought $400 for Interval
the 10th annual Wimbledon West tour-Secretary ofStatc Marcb Fons Ea, which went for$250. House, and, as promised in the auction catalog, a .. new
nament aponsored by the Dolpblna, women •a Auctioneers promised that the SCCTCtary would pick up best friend" for the bidder, MartAldveti. . •
dl'rialon of the Me~rt Barbor Area the luncheon tab. A silent auction featured items that lacked some of
Chamber of Commerce. •rm happy with the Jack and Nancy McNaa&btoa outbid all fort he New · the bizarre touches and Hollywood flair from last year
attendance and the enthutum. We had &ood York all-frills spectacular-Regent Air trip and a stay at when several pounds ofbananas were offered as well as
tennla and contrtbutlone for the prlzea were the Ritz-Carlton. Tom Scllcck•ss\\eatcr. but bidders enjoyed the array of
ezcellent,' aald Chal.rman Wendy Parker. top A .. Crocker" spaniel puppy. a big hit last year, fine services. from haircuts to dinners for two. the photo, with Lind& Tucker. Dolphlna• preal·
dent. The $20.000 proceeda will benefit New
Dlrectlomand the chamber. Mary llcCaffrey
11fith eon Bob, abo•e, wu on hand to watch
and celebrate her 80th birthday. Two other
tennla fan• there were Dolpbln Saaan
Fernandes md Richard La.ehn,· ezecutl•e
cUrectm of the chamber.
exqu1 1tcwi andsmaucnnaofanandotbcr
novclttt'S.
A warded durina the nigh1wn a ttom.c acatuc ~•lucd1tS6.000.cntnled""I;alueai~"1ihe~wu
crafted by ~cxican anut Vldw'Sa•mxer, ho will alto
host Ba•raand ~U.,• ofLona &e.cbata
cocktail pany in Acapulco.upao of a vacauoa pack•
they on at the live auction.
The total moniCS'ralsed from the benefit are stdl
pcnding•lthouahGibbs h~ totoplU&yar'sS40,000
because "every year as the best one yet."
Gibbs was awarded a surprise d unna the fcsuviuea.
when Rae ~ntcd her with the lntttVaJ Houte Humanitarian.Awa.id. ,,-
Also recognized Vt'IS J nttrvaJ House pr:opam
dircctorCarel Wllllam1, whowas~vm lhelnten:al
House Womanofthc YcarAward forber .. ~.
enthusiasm and vision.:·
Ata pre s reception before dinner, the celebrities
talked about howthcybCcamc involved with the
Interval Ho\.9C benefit.
··The more I found out about thcabUse, tbemorcl
became intcttstcd" said Rae, wbo said she conlCftlCd lO
become honorary chairperson attbe requat ofllary
Waltaa.cxecutivedirectoroflH .
.. Most.o.nsonc11~ab · •
becomes a pattern,'' she continued. Rae. bo saichbc
v.-asconcemcdaboutinterruptin&herJcWishbolidays
with the benefit, added, ··Goo is where. th.is is.·· ForS~ prCscnt with daughter Jaaifer, it
was her second )CIT ofio\'olvement ... There arc people
who have leuofa voice of their own." shesajd. .. and
they need something like thii to sia.n up the chorus."
Struberaalsoadmitted that ihc was a ~m of
domestic violence nearly20 ~qo. but was fonunatc
to have a network <>ffamil) aod friends to hdpher
tbioUJb the experience. For otben. she said, the
isotauon caused by kecpiq the secret of domestic abmc
causes more pain than the actual abuse.
Wilson, present with his wife of2S years, dancer
Mea Browa, was touched by the horror of domestic
violence asachild when a nci.&bborwasa victim ... Every
unday momina she used to ao to chW"Cb with a btack
eye or a tooth knockod. out," be remembered.
.. l can't understand howanyooecan stay "";th
anyone who hits \hem ... It's miod.bog)ing to think of
bittinaa ,,..oman."
Pa~ruzi is«l1tcd by Daily Pilor Style Editor Vida"·
Dean.
Inteml Boue P'OUDder Norma Glbbe ,reeta Dr. Karol Balley• left. coacratmata Carol
Charlotte Rae and lu S•••bey Roten. WllH•ma who wu named wom.a.n of the~·
Dick Wlleon, aka Mr. Whipple, eqaeeza lD
between Kathy Bachas, mayor of West-
mlnater, and eoniwrtt~ Carol ~on.
Hope's a winner,
prince is thinner
By Tbe A11oclated Pre11
(.omedian Bob Hoee. 81 , opened a
week-long tour of Bntain with jokes
about crcakingjoinl• and old age that
convinced the critics he still belongs
in the limelight.
The Britt h-bom Ho~ was warmly
rcocived by a sell-out crow<! at
London•s Dominion Theater for his
fir t nationwide tour of his homt1an<J
in 30 years. Reviewer Eric honer 1n the Daily
Telcaraph admitted he had wondered
whether Ho~·s heyday v.ac; the
1940s, and whether he would till bC
"the -tun:-firt. standup comic who
used to have us rollin1 in the BJS~ ••
.. Well, rumor,· as ui,ual. was
wront'' honer wrote. In he :rimes of London. Anthony
Masters praised Hope as "a lcsend
who com~ls 1ta1'dina ovations on
his first entrance, and disarmingly
claim to watch h1m~lf on old
movies like a ~n he ha never met." • • • Also in London, friend of Prlnce
Qarles an: ronremed bout hi
health. aao pcolumnist 5aid'Thurs-
daxin the la t month or 50 he h s
"1 1 1y lo t wt1JfU, at a time when he
a not taking any trcnuou cxem
such a playina polo or hunt•!\4:"
wrote N1acl Dcmp acr in the D 1ly
Matl. The coJumni t id the Prin of
Wates, Who celebrates h1 6th b1nh·
da) No"" I~ ha a kcd his staff to cut
dOwn ht omc1al cnaaacmcn11.
Dempster 9uotcd ''char1tablc
11a .. attnbuuna the 11unt1on 10
Entertainer tours Africa
to boost self-help projects
--.. ....
Jobn Den•er. co-f011Dder of tile Ranier ProJect. lllDC• lllld d•neea for cla.lldren at a naral ecbOOl ID Zlllliabwe.
arle want1n1 to pend much .,.;f..-~...>d'm''c as p0 ~1hle v.11h ht fir t·bbm
son. rnncc \\ 1lhnm. nnd h s infant
. "
otherhoad can ,t be
put off mUch long
ANN
LANDERS
/
La<>t nighl '' • hau • tcrnhlc 01 u
mcnt -me old thins In a lit of r. l
he)ellro, '"Wh~ don'1youd1\0l'\.'trm
and mar~ somconc:.v.ho w1llg1H• 1tuu
a familt?'" I was o;o hocked nd hurt (
coukin t bcl1c'c m) ca~
Dn. Jordan and v:f .. -::t Paul will be keynote epeake family-oriented ae a t Orange Coast College.
1
.:Learn to nurture
r ,,your family 's ties
61!1
Relatives may attend
sessions together
or by t h emselves
"'family Making." a da) of fam1l)-
orrented workshops led bv 27 Oran~e
County professional therapists. will
be staged Saturda). Oct. 20 at Orange
,, Coast College.
Twenty workshops. des1_gned for
sin&)es. couples. parents and children
will be conducted from 9 a.m. to 2:30
p.m. in the Science Hall. ~dmm1on i
SJO for adults and SS for children for
whom special .. funshops"' arc sched-
uled. Child.,care ic; u·a1lable for $3 for
the day.
Featured 1;pcakcrs v.111 be Ors.
Jordan and Margaret Paul. therapists
and authors of the books. ··Free to
Love"' and "Do I Ha\c to Give Up
Me to Be LO\ed b) You';" The Pauls
have been mamed for :!O year~ and
have a mamage a.nd family therap:'.t
practice in Los Angeles
They will discuss why and hov.
con01ct issues. such a~ sex. hou<>e-
••
keeping. monl'\ .111d r l' 111 ng I IJrl 1
lead to pmH·r \l1uulr' '>t'' 1.il p •h
fems. lac:k of tun ,111d l ' 111d
emotional d1\turhantt'
Workshop topll '> 1m lwk Br1l:
Training of Olth-1 \dok,,, 111' I•
lndqx:ndl'nn· ... "I 111" '\ >u1 I JI
.\fTcct!I 'r our I 1k c ho1,t s • • ( >I 1
\\.1th DI\ Offl' ••• I l \l' \d lit II I
""Fam1I~ .\¥.,1n·n~.,, I hruugl \
..Couple< "ommun1ca11on ··p, r
1ng Your PJrl·111,· .m,J J lil I . ,
\lllOnal [\JX'fll'lllt" ••
Therap"'' "111 Ix· on hand to hl'lp
auendet.'s in \oh 1 ng problem~ in
under..tanding thcmS{"h cs anJ in
enrichmg their ll\CS together f .1m1h
membef'!j ma> 1.111end rii: hofK
together or scpa1atd> Reg1~r~11on for •he t"H'lll 1s bt-1ng
conducted 1n the c ommunll\ \\: n 1c
Officr in lhr Student < enk r un th
campus al 270 I I atr' it•"' f< 1,1d.
Co<ota Mt·~ r he I 1tlill' "op1. 11 from 4
am to 7 p.m "'"t0kd,"'a111.t S,1 m r 1
noon ~aturt1a\'
( h1l<la·n mu"t Ix JH,·-rcg1 .. 1t•1 ·•I
dur to '>Pall". 1111111.1111111\ I or rnu1
details phon, 4 '2-588U
I• I ,
t I
,,
l •
Harriso.n-DuVall
A PLACL fOR NAILS
l mplctL· ~Jh l .. ir
I <
Stewart honored by USO
Actor J mes Stewart ctiata with com-
edienne Carol Burnett and Mn. Douglu
MacArthur. widow of the general, during a
r~ceptlon prior to the USO'• 23rd annual
Gold Medal Award dinner. Stewart wu
presented wt th the aerrice organtsadon '•
gold medal durln& the e~ent at New York'•
Waldorf·A•torla Botel. ~~~~~~~~~
~REVIEW
rama about nuclear war
a eal bomb on cable TV
lh FREI> ROTllENttERG
AP h .. t.ion W•llet
'\I\\ 'Ol<K -Kight Jjtt•r llw
111 h11rm.111h,1,1t•por1cJ till' \\Orlll 1r,
1 111t lm11k of nucli:ar \\:tr. thl'
I l 1111\ ( \ n\'\\SC:t<;t tllUI n\'\\
I 11 lll 1 I\ fur \Ullll' ll)llHlll"nlan
I '\.lfl:ld It look\ lih· hl"··.,
" •kt•n up
' "I)\ ll I\ .111.1 k I Ulllj>C' I
I l ll l\\\'I" hl 'kl\\
• J.1 \' I.Ill"! ~\; '.m:1J ... hc,h
11 I 1 on thl' v.or .. cning ~llu·
dlll>ll ·11·., "l!nou<o. 'en '>C110u'>."0 ht•
\:I''-hctorc 1mpanmg .,onH." more
~1hhcmh
II this .,,,·re a l":lro<h. 1l \\oOuld oc
prett.) mp\ stufl. Hut 11·!1 "uppo~d
to Ix· s nou., and that'., ''II\ HBO\
1mnt('tmm prt"trntr~ and ar-
n 'ttlnn .. 1hk · ( o untdo\\o n tu l.oolo.ing
1 1p Hd tor thr last l\\CI \i.':lr<.\".Z
ti .i'""t,1111 to t ongrc'>,man Rob-
r 1 B 1dha11111I "lt•v. port &al h \he"
ti l dau ·'11 ·r <•I Robert I larn,on ol
"-;('v.l')ort lk.1th .ind !\.frs Rohen
l lugl1c" of 1 ustin. r ht lw1deg1<>0m-cklt l'i a graduate
ol I pl.inti I hgh School and C"larc-
muni l\kn's College "ith an MB~
lrom thr l n1\Cn1ty ,;, Wac.hmgton.
He 1s rontrollt:r tor lmpcnal Aul~
ma11on in ( osta Mc~.
n \pril \\Cdding 1~ planned.
Vittrup-Callahan
l he cnllJfCnwnt of F'.rances Mund
'.'11trupof:"llc"ptm Bcalh and Daniel
f ugtnc t .1llnha11 o• St. Louts V.'3S
announced rcrcnth at a pan} at the
t111111e oflhc bride's mothe1.
1 lw brtUl: dl:t t ,., the daughtl·r of
Mrs l h..rlcs l.in\\ood J·olk and the
late Dr John I rcdcncl.. Vmrup. She
u.agrnc1uateofNev.pon Harhor High
'IC'hool and I C Sanw Rarbara.
111~ f Uturr h11dt•g1 oom .., the .. on of
l>r .ind \1r., llon.1ld I . < 'ullahan ol
\t I oul\ I k rcH I\ uf Im hltl'hdor·,
1kg1ct• JI l f\l\ll\11\ 111 :-.11\..nun .11
< olumh1.1 arul htJld'> .1111.l'ill:r\ dcgrt•t•
in c-hertll!>ll"') lrnm I c Santa Barbara
\\here he is lin1~h1ng v.ork on a
chcm1st1; Ph.l> ~June 22 \H'ddmg
in St fames Ep1~opal Chu"h 1n
"'lcY.port Bcach 1s planned.
C 1lav .. " 1s a monumental disservice to
riifil broadcast JOumahsm and an
l."'1 barrassmcnt to everyone con-
nected with the project.
The 90-minute drama. labeled
.. pcculat1ve ficllon by HBO. will bcon
"iunda" night and then mercilessly
n·pcatcd three times this month .
The program tries to depict a
Jnclnping dir;aster in the Middle
I a<il and ll'i consequent superpower
l1uclcar ram1ficat1ons through the
pt'r'>pccll\e of nine days 1n the hfe of
the ~orit,und ( Vt'-; nct\\Ork news
organizat1on.
( \'N's anchor. Don Tobin (Can-
adian n~v.sman Patnck Watson).
read-; the nev.s with the urgency of
Mr. Rogers To inject some humanity
-UUO .lb4t drama. Lhc ;inchorman 1s
seen in a quiet moment chatting on
the phone. Bad'nev.s, he tells his wife.
their romantic v.eekcnd in the coun-
tn l\OUI ( vv., Wh1tr House reporter
Dnnan \\.oaldorf(Hclen Shaver. who
once pla)cd a 1 V JOumahst in the
qu1ckl~ canceled "Jessica Novak"")
tll'IS hrr inside 1nformat1on by sleep-
ing "1th a pres1dent1al functionary.
pla>cd b) Michael Murphy.
CVN's intrepid Middle East cor-
re\pondcnt Michael Boyle (Scott
Glenn of ""The Right Stuff'), repart-
ing h\.c from the deck of a U.S.
ain.:raft carrier. says the flash of hght
in the background may have been a
low-} 1eld nuclear explosion. Duck-
ing. he 'ia)S. ""I'm going to see what
that was "
CVN'<; nc"'s-gathcnng st>le 1s to
gather talking heads. There are on-.a1r
o;ess1ons with former presidential
candidate Eugene McCarthy and
Lincoln Bloomfield. the MIT
11rofcssor and one-time National
\cl'unty Council analyst whose
\{Cnario 1\ the bam for "Looking
Glass."
In one newscast. Tobin. inter-
viewing Bloomfield 1n the style of a
Merv Griffin coffee-table cha\. calls
him "Linc." Can you imaa.rne Ted
Koppel addressing Henry Kissinger
as "Hank"?
In a transparent move to inject
"reality."' the program includes
cameo appearances from Sevarcid.
the former CBS commentator. and
Nancy Dickerson. formerly of NBC
Ne.,,.,.
Producer David Loxton and direc-
tor Fred Barryk have no expenencc in
TV news or hve TV, and 1t 5ho.,,.,. In
contrast, the Emmy-award winning
"Special Bulletin,"' which focused on
another fictiuous network lD a nu-
clear blackmail s1tuauon, was
produced by Don -Oblmeyer. who9e
live TV background brought authen-
uc1 t't and drama to the project.
""Looking Glass," the name of the
president's a1rbom command center.
1s also too unreal and wooden to elicit
any crechble tension. If HBO 1s going
\to alarm us by ending the world, it at
least should do 11 well.
HERE'S A LESSON. You can't
always judge a TV movie by its sleaze
potential. It turns out that ABC's
"Single Bars. Single Women .. is not
tawdry, but a fairly enticma Look at
the different personalities who seek
comfon. compamonsh1p and kicks
from singles bars.
The Sunday night movie was
inspired by the Dolly Parton song.
which was composed by former
"Saturday Night Live" writer
Michael O'Donoghue.
More a senes of character sketches
than strai&ht drama. "'Sm&)e Bars.
Single Women" is a study of the
sometimes anonymous. always
superficial connections in the dn nk-
and-dancc scene.
Hayes, Davis to team on TV
IO~ .\NC1ELE\ (AP> -Helen
lla'c' and Bette DaHs, who each
ha,·c t'-'o <hear\, will star together in
a llt'"' \gatha Chnt1e m)\tery movie
tor CBS .
Ha~es v.111 repm e her role as Miss
Jane Marple. the amateur sleuth for
""Murder With Mirrors." Davis plays
a dear old friend. Carrie Louise
Scrrocold, who is surrounded by
people wuh motives for murder.
The movie will be filmed on
location m England.
Beauti_fu
Handlcnit,
Fall arid
Winter Fashions
nf ormal Fashion Show
OPEN DAILY
..
3420 VIA OPORTO
LIDO MARINA VILLAGE
• ..
NEWPORT
(714) 8
I GARDENIN G I~-~------------~ -
Welcome adclltlon
8 pnaclnJ( up the Indoor carden la easy u
bUnn.r ibe .planta anCI an a ttractive eon-
ta!Derln wblch to put them. The piaYback·
plant above wowd be deU,htfir u a
centerpiece OD & table, OD top Of the
tele'ri•lon, or anywhere you like. Planu
have a way of adding ttielr own spedaJ
touch to the lnctoon.
By LOUIS HERNANDEZ
=:::::1;:~ ....
Enough cannot be said about
Southern California's climate for
srowina beautff ul prdens. And 11
would be JUSt about perfect 1f it were
not for the Santa Ana winds. The dry
desert winds that blow out of the
north reap havoc in the garden,
bonging scnous damage to tender
annuals and blowing down trees.
Homeowners have an mnate fear of
falling trees and rightful!> so. But let
us not get carried away. If a shade tree
is what you really want. then a shade
tree is what you should get. That is the
Amcncan way.
If you do decide to take advantage
of your inalienable rights and plant a
shade tree there arc a few things you
should know.
Remember, a regular maintenance
schedule for your tree is just as
important as that for a healthy lawn.
A healthy tree 1s better suited to
Emphasis shifted
to saving forests
By &be Associated Prus
The long-running acid rain debate.
which once focused solely on protect·
ing lalces, streams and fish. now
mcludcs protection of the nation's
forests from what one ~icntast cans
the "ecological catastrophe of lhe
century."
Environmentalists believe this new
focus eventually wilt win them one of
their long-sought goals. rcducuon of
sulfur d1ox1de emissions by indus-
tries that use fossil fuels such as coal.
Meanwhile. both sides mvolved in
the acid rain debate have increased
pressure on the nation's· wood and
paper companies to join them.
ing measure designed to reduce
emissions of sulfur dioxide by ut1I·
ities in the East
That measure was drafted and
pushed becaust of repons that 216
lalccs in the Adirondack Mountains of
New-York state had become~ ac1d1c
that fish could no longer lave in them.
Scientists believe that acad r.un
forms when sulfur d1ox1dc and natro
gen oxides are emmed anto the
atmosphere dunng the burning of
fossi l fuels. The fumes mn with water
vapor in the aar and return to eanh a~
acid rain, dew. snow. sleet or even dry
particles.
Env1ronmentahsts now say the fear
of forest destruction eventually will
give them the ammunition to win
Rep. Henry Waxman. [)...C'ahf a
pnnc1pal sponsor of the defeated bill.
led a delegation to Germany. the
latest in an increasing stream from
the United States, over the Labor Da~
brealc to inspect forest damage
I
withstand the physical and/or
baol()&Jcal forces that may attack it.
Annual thinning of the tree's
canopy (the branches and leaves
make up the canopy) may be the most
1mportant factor in preventing wind
damage. By thinning out the canopy
you reduce the total weight the major
branches and root system must
support. Thtnrung-out also reduces
the "sail effect." The sail effect occurs
when trees become densely over·
grown. Rather than allowing the wind
to pass freely, an overgrown tree will
catch the wind. much in the same way
a sail on a sailboat does. This creates
tre~ndo~ force. on Jhe_s_uppo~
branches and the anchonng roots. If
the branches do not break the tree
may be uprooted, or vice-versa. On
soft wooded trees thas as extremel)
dangerous.
To prevent uproottng. you
absolutely must deep water .. If your
tree is irrigated only b> the lav.
sprinklers. chances arc, the ma)orit>
of the tree's roots arc growini an the
first SIX inches Qf SOIL This IS what
causes surface roots. Surface roots
walJ not adequately support a full>-
e•n tree. Deep watenn& can be
easily accomplished b} placma the
end of )Our garden hose Wlthm the
dripline area of )Our tree and turning
the hoseb1b on at a slow tncklc. Let
tha~ run overnight. On ver, large trees
1t ma) be m."Cessar) to do this .} or 4
11mcs to CO\ er the entire dnphne area
Dt..>ep watenng should be earned out
at least once a month.
Regular fert1lmng Wllh a well
balanced fert1hzer. every three
months. is also recommended. For
further information plea~ contact
your local full service nursery.
1
1 GARDEN CHECKLIST
CHANNEL USTINGS
8 ICNXT CCBSI
8 ICN8C (NBCI
• KTLA (lrlO l
• KABC tABCI
D KFMB <CBS>
0 KHJ·TV (Ind I
e KC.ST (ABC>
• KTTV llnd )
0 OnTV
l l TV
M HBO
C CCtMnWlll
T IWORI NY .NY
11 IWTBS>
t . <ESPN>
S IShowttme)
• SpotttOttt
Since visible tree damage is con-
fined to a few species at high altitudes.
and there is so far no evidence that
acid rain is the cause, the industry is
resisting the blandishments of both
sides. But evidence of slower tree
Jf<>Wlh, as shown by tree nng studies.
is w1dcspresd
In Congress. this year's skmnash
over acid ram 1s over A 10-9 vote ma
House subcommittee killed the lead·
Professor 4-rthur Johnson. a soil
sc1ent1st at the Un1vers1t} of Penn-
sylvania. lasted five current thcone'>
in a speech to the June con\cn11on of
Sorrell Booke u Bou Bog replacee ROKOe
• KCOP TV (Ind I
e KCET IPBSI
e KOCE CP8SI
• le.bl• News l'fft-k)
• Hol1da) plants to look for include with a robot on .. The Dakes of Baszwrd ..
( hristmas cactus. Chnstmas cherry. to-••h t at 8 on CBS, Channel 2.
pomsctJaa and ornamental pepper. r.::...._:;~~~~~~~~~~~~================;;.:=:;;;:;:;:;:;::~::!
Ferns topic
-'of Dleeting
the Amencan Paper Institute-Na-
tional Forest Products o\ssoc1at1on
convention 1n Washmgton
Johnson noted that some theonc'i
contradicted other theones.
"It's possible that these hypotheses
may be the correct ones for these
These will d«orate the home with rn~or;hnedf~nc:e~PP~ bnngs the ,{,.C LLD"D I!i magic o f its colorful blooms to the '
winter garden and also makes a good
cut flower Plant this fall.
•Don't let dahha bulbs overv.inter
an the soil Lift them as soon as the
tops have dned.
,-.
locations."
Tom Poncr. of Porter's Tropicals. Onl theory blames 01one and other
Orange. will discuss the many var· photochemical oxadant'l an the at-
ieties of fems and their culture at the mosphere. another blames acid r.11n.
Tuesday 7:30 p.m meeting of the a third blames sulfur d1oit1de before 1t
Horticultural Society of Orange gets transformed to and rain. \till
County. another blames general !.trl·~s trom all
V1s1tors arc welcome at the meeting pollutants and the fif\h -hnrdl) a
at the Cahfomaa CoopcratJve Ex-theory at all -say!I the kc~ pollutant
• Feed camellias and azaleas hghtl )
during the winter months. The) nt'ed
this to develop their blooms.
•A\ tht' da}~ get shorter and darker
in winter let \our houseplants rest
Cul bad. or eliminate fenil111ng those
plants 1n lov. light situations. 4-~
active grov.th slows down. tale care
tension. 1000 S Harbor Blvd.. has yet to be discovered
Anaheim. There will be a plant sale r:;;;;;;========================;;-1 and rcf reshments.
not to o' erv.atcr.
Those attending are asked to bnng
plants to be identified for the plant
forum.
Newport Hills
club to meet
The Newport Halls Garden Club
will meet Th~ay at 9:30 a.m ..
Clubhouse 11 on Pon Carlow Place.
Newport Beach.
Followina ref reshmenu and a bnef
bu iness mcetioa. members will go to
Roacr's Gardens for• demonstration
of spnna bulb planting.
Membt'nhip in the garden club ., ope• For mort information. C'all
., Mrs. ClarcnC'c Pearson, ~·2S06
I
Tustana group
meeting slated
-
,..
FALL IS FOR PLAN TIN G
LA WNS..I BULBS • TREES • VEGETABLES
Plant TULIP BULBS Now Plant a WINTER LAWN
How to turn 1000 Sq feet
of TIRED BROWN LAWN
,
s~ Ve up to JO~
• .27
ea.
-into-
A BRIGHT GREEN CARPET
WINTER
YE
GRASS
SEED
It~ Ftny MorH
lOlb Bat
.
Covers 1,000 sq. ft.
SI CE
Ha1lis}aY$
Nursery -Florist
2840 Harbor l lvd., Costa Mesa
a .
' ,.
garden shop ~
r••••••••••••200/e OFF COUPON•••••••••••t111•, r· : ·I PUMPKINS FOR HALLOWEEN 1 -.·
t 18 Ton• to Choo" from I
Fruh from the farm ~ FREE CANDY FOR EACH CHILD
Accompanied By An Adutt I
I EXTENDED HOURS I
I Oct. 26, 27, 28, 29, 30 -Open tll I p.m. J ·----.. ----'!'·-----10--31-84 ---------------
PANSIES a VIOLAS CYCLAMEN
Beautiful ... Shade
color
'
Plant now for
Winter & Spring
Color
white pony pak
REG.SM
NOW79C
C.AMELIAS
New sh pment nl!
20%. OFF I . . .. .. .
\ . . ·,
4" pot
reg. $150
now. S2.$0
BANDINI
Bandinl Supergreen
for grass lawns 40 Iba.
reg. $17.95
now $14.98'
Bandanl 3..:way
WMdlmw
2<I Reg. 127:15
Mowtn.•
All ltEMS SUBJECT TO STOCK ON HA D
,
HOURS: MON-FRI 1·8 •SAT 8·30-e •SUN 8:30-5
S le Good 10-12-84 to 10-18-84
LLOYD'S NURSERY AND lANDSCAP
20?8 • cost" MESAS" ·92617
'
j
••\Vhydo slttakethepharmacl t ll lfl1ourtoput 121ttUeplll tnon
little vial?'' ~ ..
..
Jac1
AIDEISOI
or asiced,
your best bet's
the IJ;ewspaper -Rew.ald·
This is National Newspaper Week, the time each year the
c paper industry pays panicular attention to the role afafree
P.TCSS in preserving democracy.
But there are other roles, just as important if less exalted,
!that a community newspaper like the Daily Pilot fulfills for its ·
aders. Theeditorofthe The Eastern Herald in Portland, Maine
made the point eloquently on June 8, I 795: A
.. Much has been said and written on the utility of
newspapers; but one principal advantage whach might be
derived from the~ publications has been ne~ected ; we mean
that of reading them m schools; and by the children m families.
Try it for one season -Do you wish your child to improve in
t;eading solely, give him a newspaper -it furnishes a variety.
,some parts of which must infallibly touch his fancy. Do you wish
to instruct him m geol[_aphy. nothing will so indelibly fix the
relative situation of dtfTerent places, as the stories and events
published in the papers ... do you wish to have him acquainted
with the manners of the country or the city, the mode of doing
business. public or pnvate; or do you wish him to have a
-.--.~manering of every k1 nd oiscience use uTand amusing, give him
·a newspaper -newspapers are plentiful and cheap -the
eheapest book that can be bought. and the more you buy the
better for your children, because every pan furnishes some new
and valuable information. Instead ofbeinga luxury, it 1sa matter
iof economy, and the poorest family. may & ought to be furnished
begaeyaf-E>ly-mpic Gam es
f cit from politics to profits
with at least one paper per week. Encourage newspapers and you
"'encourage learning and you secure the liberties of posterity.
· Leaming in the hands of a few, effects a nobility, but generally
iffused, is an effectual barrier against every invasion of the
·1ghts of man. Newspapers supply the want of schools, the want of company and want of J>reaching. They have the power to
• ;.mitigate the pa ans of the afflicted, alleviate the distresses of the
orrowful, check the wild extravagance of the licentious, bring
home the prodlgal, and ... to do good to all ranks.
denominations, characters anf situations in life."
Reader fed up to the Dines
by lDerchants' price trlck
To the Editor:
This 1s a comment but firc;t 11 1c; a
question.
The question 1\ about the word. or
perhaps the magic won! Nine Or
• Ninet} Nine
.• .\s I µ1c through the ad\ in \Our
1nteresung publlcat1on I d1Moh·r
that most pnce<. quoted for ~s~nual.,
end with 99 Lake SI 99 So 94 artd I
hke in particular $4.99 Thr' 1u'>t
can't stand to~ .. \ 10. ..... And at the ga'> pumps. It goes like ..
1h1s REGULAR -serrservicl;" 11.9.
full service. 16 9 High test. low test.
'!.9.
.\re ..-.e all lulled into a fine state of
econom} because we are sa' ing one
ccnt'l But then when the sales tax as
added the $41\ angs is modest
My com ment l'i I fear the
adveniscf"i fear the hone'it word
Dollar •
It is so ca\} to sell a house for
S2.299.199
R ELLIOTT DA VIS
Laguna Niguel
CM par k 's a disappointment
To the Editor:
I too am d1..appointl'd "-Ith Costa
Mesa ·s manageml'nt of tht Do"' n-
town Commun1t\ Center ~hat used
to be a pleasant park for rh1ldren and
their famil1ec; ha\ bcrnmc a hangout
would like to pla> ,.
Bradley's star
s h ining a long with
that of state -
Exactly two months after the
closing ceremony, the books can
almost be closed on the first profit-
mak.ing Olympics in the history of the
human race.
But not quite.
For the legacy of the Los Angeles
Olympics 1s more than Just the S 161
m1lhon 1t produced for amateur
athletics across the nallon ($I SO
million m direct profits, another S 11
million from the innovative cros~
country torch relay).
The results of these Olympics will
be felt 1n politics, tounsm, business
irowtb and hfestylc foe decades to
come.
Perhaps the political effects wall be
felt firlt. No one -not even chief
organ12.Cr Peter Ueberroth -had as
much to lose 1fthe Games had turned
out badly as Los Angeles Mayor Tom
Bradley.
Bradley was wide!) thought to be m
some political trouble before the
Olympics as potential rivals includ-
ing his city's police chief and several
city councilmen gathered war chests
and circled rum like wolves moving m
for a kill.
But the Olympics make a Bradley
rc-c:lcct1on next spnng almost as sure
a thing as has two previous re-election
dnves, neither of which even reached
THOUS
ELIAS
the runoff stage. Bradley was the
pnme mover in ~cuing the Olympics
forhasoty, prommng they would bea
no-cost affair.
He delivered. demonstrating that
he can pla} in a le~gue none of his
potential nvals evenapproaches.
And has Olympic performance
beggars anything George Deu-
kmeJ1an has done as governor. Deu-
kmejian narrowly beat Bradley last
time the two faced off. wmnang by a
margin of barely 50.000 absentee
votes. Will the memory and aura of
the Olympics-sure to be featured in
any future Bradley campaign
advenisang -be enough to reverse
that result if and when he squares off
against DcukmeJian two years from
now'>
In tourism, state officials already
repon benefits from the Games.
Thin~ weren't as busy as hoped for
dunng July and August. but they
picked up 1mmed1atel y after the
closing and have been going strong
ever since.
Ueberroth, a former top travel
executive. was n'ht about JUSt about
everything else linked to the Olym-
pic so maybe rus Auaust statement
on tourism bears remembering. too:
"You don't do an Olympics for
immediate profit," he said "You do
it for the future. California wlll
benefit from. these Olympics for at
least IO years, as people around the
world add 11 to their travel aaenda
because of what they've seen during
the Games."
As forbusinessgrowth. California's
image -once believed tarnished by
high housing prices and other draw-
backs to corporate development -
got a thorough polishing. Said one
bu!in~s analyst: "If the R~ Bowl
telecast every New Year's Day is a
real positive influence on Eastern
businesses thankJng of relocating.
thank what 186 hours of live TV can
do."
It's in the lifestyle arena. however.
that most Californians wtll see the
most Olympic results. Already a
sports-mad, fitness-conscious so-
ciety, this state will see its sponana
opponunaues multiplied by the
Olympie proceeds.
The torch relay alone pve more
than $5 mrnion to California
YMCAs, Boys and Girls clubs and
Special Olympics chapters. In many
cases. the Olympic money exceeds
the groups' annual budgets. All that
money means many more programs
with lower fees than they've carried m
the past.
And that translates to thousands of
new participants.
Which means that while the Olym-
pic organizers will close their shop
completely by the middJe of next
year. the results of the Games wtll be
around for many years to come.
TbomH Elh1 11 • Sota Moalc•-
ba1e-d col•mal1t oa 1i.u l11on.
•for city worker<; who parl their trucks
three and four together on "'hat's left
·of the lawn I come to the park for a
little escape from Cit~ llfl· and am
annoyed to find thC\l' "workers"
~parkmp on th<' ttra.,., '-"hl·rc m~ k1d'i
I used to wonder why at took almost
two years to complete the new kitchen
and wh~ n takes two people per truck
to change trash can hners1 Answer'c,
prelt}' ob" 1ous Lack of proper \uper-
' 1s1on and management
Check 1t oul Costa Mesa. there's
more than just "agrants hanging out
al the park~
Roulette's the odds-on fa v orite
D. MEYERS
Co ta Mesa
Sports writer Ca rlson praised
'fl
• I ro the Fdllor
fh1c, letter" \Hllll'n 10 nprt"'" ·long overdue· wmpl1mt·nt to Mr
Hoger ( arlson HI\ CO\l"r.1~w 111 prl'p
'lpons reflects not onl~ .1 l11mm11·
ment to accurac) and a com mrndahlc
hreadth of focus but al\n -and
,•pcrhap$ more 1mportantl~ -a rl·rog-
rution of the 'alue of 1ntcro,ch11la'>llt
athletics 1n the high school program.
I do not always agree with Roger's
o;ent1mcnts and conclusions, but I am
rnns1stentl} 1mpre<1sed b}' his depth
of lnowlcdgc and awareness, and I
alwa} s respect his smcenty and
commitment to our student-athletes
DENNIS L EVANS
Pnnupal. Corona del Mar High
School
Q I know the odds are wtth the
house orl all casino gamblina games.
but which game gives the best odds to
the player? ·
A. Roulette, according to the math
maJors.
The .. lamp fall'' was a fad in
Australia dunng the late 1960s and
early 1970s. To ~execute same, the
JOkestcr fetJ!!ed sudden unconscious-
ness m mid-sentence. The fainting
game ts ancient child's play, and
cen.amly took the female fancy of a
century ago. But I don't beheve-dus
recent "limp fall" fad made 11 out of
Australia, did at ?
Turns out the windshield wiper on
the passenaer's side of the car docs
indeed last longer. usually. Because.
reports a mechanic of considerably
expcnence, the wiper on the dnver:,S
side gets more debris from oncoming
traffic. so gets more wear.
First pilot's license issued m the
Umted States went to Glenn H.
Curtt!t!>, the fellow who desipled the first airplane to land on a ship.
.. ~
was built on the site of an old brothel?
The cockroach has never been
linked wuh any ep1dem1c of human
disease
Claim I!> >Our bram has more than
I 00.000 miles of nerve fibers, called
dendntcs. to connect your brain's
billions of cells.
L.M. Boyd I• • 1yadl~•te4 Did I tell you Buckingham Palace colamalit.
rHow does an aspirin know where you hurt? ,
• 1Lif e is full of little mysteries
·hat defy sensible explanations -
ORA COM1T
l1ilJPilat
and that. goes plop, plop. plop and
presto -an ice cream soda. But if you
go to a drugstore and ask for p1U • the
phramac1st pretends he has to mash it
all wath mortar and pc tic -eye of
,nake-end spleen of andmgynous
goat. and then take it all oul by the
light of the full moon Why?
My 'ccond my'ltery concerns
qua'lim. fhe nc~~pcrs aaid the new
theory 1<1 that qua,.n arc "on theed
of the uni"erse:· Wh t arc thest
people talkma about? Ho could
there tlc: an cd to the una\enr?
What's over the cd c? II hH to be
141y61
l!IOI>
H. L Schw•rt1 Ill
PvOhlhet
Frank Zlnl
Manag;ng Of
TomTatt
011 Cc!lior
Craig Sheff
PQfl• COi!Cf
RICHAID
CoHEI
more univc~ and if, as the an1clc
Yid, Che univcrK keep cxp:indmg 11
has to be expandina into omett)1ng.
If that's not the universe. then what 1n
Che world (a quaint exprt ion in this
conttltl) is it? ·
M> life i hard enough without
~torics hkc this. For some wee no •
I ha\le been con idcring Che matter of
a t ter with directions sayina
ingle slice hert" -with a little
arrow. How docs the toastet II.now It's
only aot a inglc slice? All the
electrical elements 10 on no matter
what. I lllkc no chances. thouJI'. l do
not want a repairman to peer into the
t SH'!r, loo up and me nd ) ... You
toa tcd 1 'linaJe slice tn 1hc wrona
tion."
01hcrm)' tcri confound my life. I
nnot fi ure out ho an a pU'ln
• ._nows wt ere )OU hurt. If your toe •••••ii•••• iiliilililli•••••••••r..J h\&rt . n 0C1 there and 1f )our c:tbo • hum it go" there, too. E\·cn 1footh
read ncws~pcr weather charts.
Washingtorflans do 1h1s for the same
reason poor people hke to read about
the rich -to ~ how the more
fortunate live. But no matter what my
reason, J have noticed that on a Jivcn
day there will be a little symbol next
to some city. say D1llas, aayina NA.
This means Not Answering, or som..e·
thina like that, to which I Jay, "Well,
why not?" Is cvcrythina all right in
Dallas? Has someone checked to 6tt
if maybe the poor weatherman is
slumoed at his de k. a knife in his backf Ha anyone called his home?
My la t mystery concerns t0ek1.
·vet') one kno they mo"c about on
their own, t lo l. take walkl, move
from draYf'tr to drawer: end embrace
soc of a d10ercnt color -m1s-
od cnauon. A fncnd thou&ht he h d a y tcm to top all that. He threw
out all ha socks ind rcplaetd them
~ith Qn( that re Cather bla k or
brown-:-thlt' at. tatcly;thouah.t he
hu been optnina h1 drawn to und
ls that art of different colors -
sock ch not biJU&)1t. With has. afc
nodding, he li'I tticre 1 no c pl •
nauon for this. ) thcrt i
Tht~ 1 ho the u111 enc ~a»nd . • Rlcbrd <Wat I • 1yrilll atH
t"Ol•mlli I.
Student
spyior
the CIA
Youthful spies
in business on
college campuses
WASHINGTON -The CIA
apparently back in business .on
American college campuses. less thaa
a decade af\er It was slapped down b)~
Congress for covertly financina tu.
dent crouos and oayina_y
undercover agents to spy on campus
"radicals"
Tb.ts tame the ClA ·s infiltration of
academia may actually be legal. under
a t 981 execuuve order sianed bl
President Reagan. It aJlows the sp
agency to collect ''significant .. tn•
telltgencc secretly within the United
States as long as the espion&fe isn't
aimed at the domestic activtties of
Amencan citizens or corporations.
An investigation by my associat
Dale Van Atta and Indy Badh~
indicates that from September I 98Z
to May 1983, the CIA paid •
Hawaiian student to spy on foreigne11
at two colleges and a Mormon touri
attraction on Oahu.
If the student spy's informatioD wu indeed-"si,gnifa.can~" the.CIA got
a bargain: He was paid SI 00 a monlfl
for his eight-month undercover
m1ss1on. he said.
The young spook is Jim Rewald.
who was 19 when the CIA recruited
him for campus cloak·and-<tauCJ'
work m JuJy 1982. He had just been
accepted for the fall term at Brigham
Young University (Hawaii) an l.ajc,
Oahu.
Young Rewald also had 1mpressi vc
family credentials: His father. Rontld
Ray Rewald, had .earned $6,000. b
spying on students for the CIA at the
Umvenity of Wisconsin in the early
1960s. (It was this son of domestic
espionage activity on college ca •
puses that led to the congression
crackdown on the CIA a decade or
later.)
The elder Rewald is,,now faci
multiple counts of fraud for h
involvement in an investment ope
ation he claims was a CIA front.
In an exclusive interview, J1
Rewald said he set out to follow b
father's footsteps one night at dinn
in the Rewald home. A guest, a
agent known as Richard Cav
naugh, asked him, "Would you
interested in collecting 1nformati
on students?"
Young RewaJd accepted on
spot "It was my chance to stan wi
the CIA before I lef\ college, ..
explained. "They had known l wan
ed to Join the agency for a couple
years."
Y ouog Rewald signed a con
Hts "control" was a Chinese-Am
can agent For some CIA reuon.
case officer was posin.t as a Japan
named Tadao Suzuki -in the o
state where such an ethnic ma
querade would likely be spotted
the large Japanese-American pop
lat ion.
For his SI 00 a month, Rewald w
assigned to keep close watch on s
visiting students from the People
Republic of China. The CIA want
infonnatton and current phot
graphs.
Rewald diligently clipped anicl
on the Chinese students from'
colleac newspaper, surrcptiuous
snapped their pictures, and w
them to the Polynesian CuJtu
Center. a tourist anracuon next
BNham YounJ University-Hawai
He also ob\,81ncd collqc com~u
lisu wnb details Oil' the Chin
1tudcnts' activities by teUi~
.rqistration office he wu work.1na
an English paptr. Once. he 111d,
riOed the office for funher infi •
mation.
After one semester at BYU. Rcwa
transferred to Ch.aminade a C..thot
university m Honolulu. Suzuki w s
dcH&hted by his recruit's ecumeni I entbu~iasm. The CIA bed about all t
needed on the Chinese studcnu t
BYU-Hawaii, and the 1 ency b
never had a man in place at t
Catholic school.
The pickin&S prov.cd to be Ii
thouah. · ind Rewald's inter Oaaaed. '"I thouaht it was impona
wo-r:l." he said. "But af\cr a while
med 50r1 of ridiC'Uloll':'
till. when he decided lo punue
studi at a uni\'-en1ty in Lon En~and, in tht fall of 19 J
dutifully notified Su1uki. Th
don hool h d an 1ntemlhip p
&n1m in Parliament. and Rewat s
handtersevtdcnO) foresaw a bonan
1n House of Common r fro
their youna py.
las! It wa not to be, Hi fathe 1
CIA-conncctt'd in" tmcnt bu n
collapstd at that 1no nune u ,
nd 19un1 RC't\11f:J'1 IA anttr
hina down 1th 1t. JA~ AIHltrlOll /1 • 'al.UC.I
c.l•m•l•t
'
Kntn Ballatrom (67), Pbll Nabal (SS) applJ preua.re to
Weetmin•ter BICh quarterback Ted llclllllen In EdUon'•
~lrlted GIRLS VOLLEYBALL
OlllJ,... ,....._, ..............
17-7 Ylctory Thunday nJaht In the Samet Leaaue opener at
<>ranee Cout Collete.
Nob(lock)
forEdiso
• 'th one of 12"-M (= I'm not proud of," admitted Wort-poten • ...,.. man ... I'm alad it wasn't taped... 94yards),butJusticetumcdn
Workman had watched his team wilh 6:S<t sull left in the third quaner.
stumble badly for two quarters as the .. They had come out ot their -4.'.3
running game was limited 10 4S yards and were ovcnhiftcd tn our ~
net. quarterback Ktitb Jarmt had ~de." ·d Wortman, .. so we bad QUr
completed just 4of14 for a oct of 14 fuHback nin co their weak sick and
yards, there ..,ere 39 yards in penalties even with four wideout we ran our
and Ted McMillen's 33-yarct SCOMg backs to the Mak side:" ,
pass to Danny Saldana-ball West-The result wasafUD.llinapme t.Ut
minster in the dnver's scaL prodUa:d a 6.2 av~ in tbc ICCOnd
"Theypveusadcf'ensetheyhadn't half (CU1T1n. Gf'ly and Bcnnt>tt
shown:· said Workman and our (PleUe ... Ul80N/112)
~•tie .Est-aneia knocks Sai-Jors out uffirst ers Newpon Harbor Hlgh volleyball
coach Mike Neece is probably count-
ing the days waiting for the return of
his top player, Lara Asper.
Ncccc's Sailors, minus Asper and
staner Sara AIJison. both out with
ligament damage to their ankles, were
stunned by vis1lin1 Estancia in four
games Thursday to highlight area Jirts volleyball action.
In other ma1cbn; Edison and
Marina won in Sunset League play,
Corona del Mar was a winner in Sea
View League action. Irvine breezed to
a South Coast League win and
Newport Christian dropped its
Academy League match.
Herc's what happened:
Estucl.a S, Newport Harbor 1 -
The Sailors fell out the three-way tie
for fint place w1th Laguna Beach and
Corona dcl Mar is the upstart Eagles
ofEstanciascorcda IS-7, 7-IS, IS-11. I S-J 2 vtct.ory.
Julie Simpson's dtfcnst and lhe
hitting of Ann Larimtr and Ann
Javage led to Newport Harbor's
downfall.
"Javage 1s the best athlete ~e·ve
Showdown: Tars
face S8.ddleback
Baron s m eet ov.-
HB tests Vikes
iilSunset openers
By ROGER CARLSON
Of ... OlllJ Nl4 .....
Newport Harbor Ht&h's Sailors
take thC1t Se.a View League cham-
pionship hopes to the Santa Ana Bowl
tonight with the long-awaited duel
with league favorite Saddleback.
Saddleback's speedy Roadrunners
awaj1 with a 5-0 record and a No. 1
ranking ID Orange County, but the
game is amSldcrcd a tossup.
Here) a look at tonight's area
schedule, with all game starting at
7:30: ..)...
Newport Harbor (4·0·1, %-1) vs.
Saddleback (5..0, %-t) -h 's Harbor's
sue and strength against Saddle-
back's speed. The Sailors a rc led by
quarterback Shane Foley and fullback
Fritz Howser while Saddlcback is
sparked by Earl Jones and Tedd):
Baker, backed by 190-pound fullback
Glenn Campbell). Newport's guns in
the line 1nclud~ 6-7, 268-pound Mike
Beech and 6-6. 237-pound Tom
Kitchen . Sate: Santa Ana Bowl.
Marilla S·l, 0-0) v1. tlutin~ Beac~ (14-l, M> -The Sun ·t
League opener pits two of the three
dcfcndin tri-<:hampions. Marina'
Vikings arc blessed with the peed of
receiver Chip Rish, but get most of
their-work done on the ground behind
the sf)ttd of Shawn iassey and
power of Adam An toy an out of a vttr.
The Oilers' Delawarc-T 1 built
around f u1lback Scott ElhotL itc:
Huntington Beat~ High.
faced," admitted Ncwpon's Ncccc
afterward. "She just killed us."
The IOS& dropped Newpon Harbor
to 5-2 in Sn View league play.
Neece said a triptotbeCIFplayoffs
1s still within reach. cspcoally 1f he
can get the injured AsJ>Cf' back on the
court.
··we hope to ha' t her for nut
Thutsday"s pme With ta_.una
Beach;" N~ said. "It's touah now
because t H~d-four pla)ers pla)ina
positions· they're not used to. We can gt our offense running again wuh her
k •• c .
C.rou del MU I, Ullhenl&y t -
The Sea Kinp bad DO uoubk w1tb the
host Trojans.. sc:onna a 15-4, tS-3,
l S-8 v .ctory.
Cammie Lou Dodcr. a senior
middle blocker. and Stephanie
Noonan, an outside hitter. rtcd
lhe Sea Kings. .
Coron.a dd r takts..,on W
bnd&e Tual:ia). UmvcrsityfdJ.&o0.1_
In the Sunset Le uc:
E4Jsoe J. Pe &ala VaJJey J -The
Chargers. ranked third in CIF ~A.
topped the Barons. the No. ! ~cam an
~A, 6-l 5. I S-10, l S-•• l ~l ma match
at FoU.Dtain Vall .
Edison, 4-0 in ~ and · l
onrall. rccaved fine ~y rrom
outside bitter Kathy _Stewart (10
kills); middle blod.tt Dionne Pa-'ers
Cei&bt kills); and outside hmcr La1tra
Enadall ( dalit acc: serves). -~the C a i 0.0 WJJf1
ID &be finaJ ~pmetbefott Ii~ up Foun ta1n V&Ue) ·s lone pouat:
Mariaa S, Watmlattcr I -l1he
Vi.kin im~-edto3-l andba~an
(Pleue ... GDU.8/112)
Game No. 3: It's
Wilcox vs. Lollar
Tigers figure
to haVe t-=-h-e-e---=d,.--g_e_
with home crowd
Wednesday ni&ht. a three-run bod"ler
m the fifth inning that cra.scd a 3-2
Dctrott lead.
~we jumped out to an early lead.
but they showed a lot of dw'artor ...
said Kirt Gibson, MVP of Detroit's
three-game sweep of Kansas City~n
the American Lea&uc playau: .
"lhey'vc come back throuahoul
post-season play. and they just did it
again. But we've cot a f>Od feeling
about CQP'ling home l-1.
Evans said he was not satisfied wtlh
the split in San Diego. "but we've
pla)ed \\di m Detroit all season
long." -
"lfU be good to go ho~ and get
bade m front of 1)Ur fans. but this fs a
World Scncs. and rqardlcss of what
citv vou arc in. ifs a ;peaal feeling
evm11me )OU take the field You can
bet the homecro~d will pump us up,·•
he 'ia1d .
But knov.:mg how to rome bact i
nothing new for the Padres.
They trailed Cbicaao 0..2 m the
best--0f-fht ational Leaauc playoff:
befort nlly1ni With thrce traight
'ictonn 10 an unprcttdcntcd comt-
back to wm their first pcnnanL
The} trailed ineachpmcoftho>NL
playoffi . and they lo l the first pme
of the World Scrin ~o hi&}\ly favo~
Dctro11 before romina 6ctdc to 1n
game twu Wednes&) ~tJ:'l. S·l,
thanls larscJr 10 then middle rc-
hevm. San Diego had to rally from a
3-0 d1sadvan befon-winnina that
game.
U.S. outlasts
Colombia, 1-0
The Ch~cken: San Diego has put a leash on.him
had bro en t11 ronttntrat1 n," G11n-
n ula 1d. ~lf~lt tcmblc. Ml h
to tn\ttU1n without 1mpcd1 the
m~ ...
.. l tcr, he told me 11 n't
bothered ham:• But the .,.,..,.,_
..
J
.. . • '
I
I
,
•
Olympic marathon
celebrity learned .
her lesson in LA
Fnal AP ~bpo1<• ..
NEW YORK -Gabnele Andersen-m
Scbicu. whose rouraaeous finish in 1hc
women·s Olympic marathon became an
_jntPtf1 liorlfo.r many runners. s.aid Tbul'Sda y that one of
the: bigest thi~ she teamed from that harrowing
experience was ••10 bec&reful in a marathon whCn 11 acts
hot and humid."
The 39-ycar-old native of Switzerland who now
lives in Sun Valley, Idaho. was at her fint major press
oonftrence since the Los Angt'I~ Summer Games.
announcina her entry into the Oct. 28 New York C ity
Martithon.
The nationally televised. 26-mi~. 385-ytrd race
will be her first 1est at that distance since her &nlty
performance at lhe Games, whcrt' she lurch_cd a.cross
tht finish after nearly collapsing several times during
the final 400 meters in the Los Angeles Memorial
Coliseum.
-d7o-sta_.::inccwwrucnn"n"erusaclL•d,"'a~=1 ~ ~le~~1cd'Ei~k:.~
effon that cap11vattd millions of people around the
world. "I ~h.the whole World was watching when I was
fig.h11ng and having a hard ume.
··No one likes to be-so public wht'n )OU have a
moment of,,.,·eak.ness. But. I fet'I that 1t 1s an honor that
people now use me as an 1nsp1rat1on. I ho~ I can li ve up
to it.
··1 e:itpect pc-opl.:wilt be watching me mart'. becauSl"
I am more than a runnin~ figure." she added.
Andersen-Schiess said she has received "'hundreds
of letters" since her controvcrs1al and heroic etTon;. in
which she staggered around the final lap tn nearly nve
minutes. The outpouring has bttn mostly positive. she
said. "and has helped me get over thal. It turned a
negative experience around."
She admitted 1ha1 she has been .. overwhelmed" by
the response from .. people who don't know me."
•
Bruins rally in NHL opener Bii comeback for Boo La Boo Kin &• •lin pair of free .,ents
Ray 80""1 .. npp<d I <().foot slap ~ ARCAOIA-8ool.a8oo,com1naoff ~ INGLEWOOD -The Los Anl(lcs ~
shot past 1oalle Ottb Ht.rroa at 14:28 o( , arthroscopic' surarrr for I fhlcturcd kntt, lUnas Thursday signed frtt qtnts Bob '
the 1hird period 1o cap Boston's ~mcback ltd all the way and held off Don't Stop The' Miller and Rick Upo1nte to COtltrtCt.I. the
from a J~I dc(ictt and &ive the Bruins a 4.3 Muslc by a nose to win the $40.000 Na11onal Hockey Ltaaue club announced. .
victory over the Pittsbuflh Ptnauins in Thursdar's allowance feature Thunday at the Olk Trte mtttinaat Both Miller and LaPointc have been playini with
]'lau«;1nal Hockty Lta&uc opener ... Elsewbttt 00 the Santa Anita. Los Anaeln durin' the just-completed cxhi iuon
first nlJhtofthe NHLK:ason, TomasSaodtlrGm scored MakinJ her fint Starlin seven months. 8oo LI Boo season. The terms o the cont~ wca-not rtlcaKd.
his fint NHLaoal with 1:09 rcmainina 10 f,ive the-New wa~ timed 10 I. 17 in the 6'h·furlona raC't ma1ch1n& six Miller. 28.a 5-111 187-poundccnter/;has played the
York Ran.scrs a 4-4 uc 'With the Hanford Whalen . . . filhn 1nd marn ttu-.:e ~n a!'d olde_r. last two seasons in Finlandafterpl1ytn1 ave years in the
Tim Kerr'• goal from 10 feet In the slot at 18:21 of the Boo Li Boo. the lh!rd bttt.1nacho1ceofthecrowdof NHL with lhe Bos1on Brufnt and the Colorado
1hiRI period enabltd Philadelphia to pin a 2-2 uc with 16,562, left fro~ the ra1~carry1na Laff11 ~ncay and J 17 Rockies. In siJt ptt5tason pmcs \lrith the Kinas. M11Je-r
the Wntn.ngton. With t~me nannina out in the third pounds. The w1nntt paid $9.20, S~.60 ~nd $2.80. had one goal and one assist
j)<riod, La Hac>boni broke do"'n the rl&ht Side and red The VIC10ry pvc Pmcay a nd•llJ tnpl~an~ was tit< A9e...,' c-•• facind l• -suit
a pass to .K,.on 1n the-tloL Kerr ..wrtsttd-a .shoJ pail _fifi.h.m.lO.st.arufoc ~I.a Boo..whichra11Cd !tscarect-• •• •--. •-
Capiu:ils goalie Pat Rlgla to tic the scort. The Ayers earninas lo $181 ,410 with the $22.000 first pnte. REDWOOD CITY -San FnncitcO [!]
missed an opponunity 10 win on I 2·\>n· I br<ak II I :_39 John Henry favored • "•in 49en 1u•rd Randy Cross hu been llapp<d ' •• ofthcovcrt1mc ... Mal Davia poked. in a rebound with -e withalawsuitbyawomanwhot.ayshistwo
&Olhcndcr Steve Peuey down on the kt 10 aive EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. -John E dots attacked her.
Buffalo a 4-3 victory over Montreal, It marked the 12th Henry. a winner of 38 of &2 lifetimc Startt, The la~ui1, filed Wednesday in San Ma!eO
strajght victory ror the Sabres ovrr Monuul, oountin& will be going ror his founh straight vi<.19n' Superior Court by LuciUc Winso. 67,ofRedwood Cny,
,nine regular season games plus three playoff matchups this year Saturday n.ight ·in the $400.()(X) said 1hc was "bitten. acra.tched. knocked to the around
last season ... Dcfcnsem1n Cral1 Le.vie snapped a 1-1 Ballantinc's Scotch Cla.ssie 11 lhc Meadowlands. (and) mauled" by the Jl'ish Se1ten on Oct. 31 , f98J as
. 110 1n the fin-1 period, to help St. Louis Blues lO a 4-2 · The 11ft.milc grass race attracitd 12 rivals 10 -she walked near her home~ '
victory over Calpry. Brian Sutter scored the game oppose the 9-year-old geldina. Sam Rubin. a New York Thee suit, which al.ltges negligence by Cross and.his
winner on a deflection to put the Blues into a l-1 lead bicycle importer. purchased John Henry "si&ht un· wife, Patricia. who was wUh the dop 1tt thc time, a5k.s
with the only goal or the se<:ond period ... Quebec seen•· for $25,000 as a 3-ycar-old and watched him general damaacs. hospital cosu and lost wages.
scored on its first two power play attempts of the NHL beco. me t_he lead.in• mot'lc -wi.nn, er in thoroughbrcd-~ason flt-of · ver Venoouver, ... ...
ru1n1n$ the coaching debut of BlU La orge-•.. n a •• hy ~e was given to us. we'll never know." said. ' ,.,
defensive struggle, Toronto defeated Minnesota 1-0 in Rubin: · ~
ovcnm1<. 5 p.m. -•ilmAL.L: WOtld -_..,,.
Wood, Calfee top tourney field """'l~~~:" ~-•AID~• L, WOtld 8erln _San Quote of the day
•. ~
Jolln Elwor, Oen\'9f quarterback. alter lhe
Broncot forced 10 tumOY9t'1 In tut Sunday's 2~7
win: "We didn't,,_ to lhOw up and the-..
would have beaten thtm 14-7.'"
Roach stops Foster in 8th
LAS VEGAS -Junior lightwei&ht m
Freddie Roach of Las Vegas bloodied and
finally stopped Richie Fosler of Glendale 1 at 2:50 of the eighth round in a scheduled
lt>.round bout Thursday.
COLU MBUS. Ga. -Diminu1ivc n Diego •t Oetrott, Channel•.
rookie Willie Wood and obscure veteran g p.m. _ PftlP 'OOtuLL:. t.lrMport Harbor
Bill Calfee each went on birdie-binges va. Saddlebeck at sant1 Ana 8owt (del~). Thursday to post 6-under~par 64s and pin -
a share of the lead, after 1he opening round of the Ch•nne& 58· RADIO
Southern Open Golf Tournament.
One shot back at 65 were veterans Hubert Green. 5:35 p.m. -8AllllAI L· World Seriel. KN~
Gary Hallbc:r& and Larry z;catcr. · (1070). ·
Wood,oneofthesmallcstplaycrsonthetoura15·7 1 p.m. -MO UIKITWALL: Laker• VS.
and 135 pounds, began his birdie berraac on the 1hird CHppeta from Anchorage. Miika, Kl.AC (570)
hole and wound up with five on the front side. He added K1EV (870).
two more on the back and had the lead alone until he 7:30 p.m. -NO IOCCalll: u.zetl va. LU
thrce-puncd thepar-5, 585-y~rd 18th forh;sonlyboaey. Vogae(-Hlon~ KWVE (104 FM).
~~~===========~ ~!!!!!!!!!~
TUT-A .....--..,.A-
~llOOTUUJ a... _____ ,__
Mater Dei falls
in polo, 17-12 Sports on TV for weekend
_ Mater Dei H1gh senior Zoh Beny
scored eight goals but 1t wasn·1
enough as lhe host Monarchs drop.
ped a 17·12 Angelus League water
polo match 10 Loyola Thursday:
Beny, wh.l has now scored 46 goals
1n 11 ~mes 1h1s season. tallied fi"·e
11mes in Maier Dei's eigh1-goal sec·
ond quaner. But the Monarchs still
found lhemsc\ves down 11 -10 at
intermission.
Saturday
TELEVISION
I 0: 30 a.m. -BASEBALL: World Sen cs-San Diego
at Detroit. Channel 4.
, 12:30 p.m . -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Washington at
S1anford. Channel 2.
12:30 p.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Oklahoma vs.
Texas. Channel 7. ·
1 p.m. -SPORTSWORLD: Boxing -Barry
McGu1ga n vs. Angel Mayor (live). Cornelius Boza·
Edwards vs. Charltc Brown (delayed). Channel 4.
2 p.m. -SOCCER: Belgium vs. Argentina (tape).
Loyola iced the ~me by ou1sconng Channel 34.
1he Monarchs 4--0 1n the final penod. 3 p.m. -SPORTSCOPE : Auto racing-Miller High
The loss dropped Maier De1 to 0..2 1n Life 500 at C'har\011e. N.C. (tapci: Golf -One Club
Angelus League play, 6--5 overall. Challenge (lape), Channel 4.
t------------"-o 3:50 p.m -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: USC at Oregon.
Channel 5.
Blazers blitz Lakers
in exhibition, 139-97
PORTLAND -The Lakers are happy I\ wasju5t an
exh1bit1o~me. Thu ·-ay night 1hey comm111ed 37 turnovers as the
Portland rail Blvers rolled to a I 39.97 win as three
Portland s1aners sat oul the acuon.
7 p.m. -CO LLEGE FOOTBALL: Washington State
vs. UCLA at Rose Bowl (delaytd), Channel S.
10 p.m. -BOXING: From Mexico City, Channel 34.
RADIO
9 a.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Air Force vs. Notre
Dame. KFOX-FM (93.5).
9:30 a.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: M1ssoun vs.
Nebraska. KIEV (879),
I 0: JO a.m. -BASE BALL: World Series-San Diego
at Detroit, KNX (1070).
Noon -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Long Beach St. at
Utah St.. KEZY ( 1190).
12: 30 p. m . .:.... COLl$GE FOOTBALL: OkJahOma vs.
Te:itas. KLAC (570).
I p.m . -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: San Jose State at
Cal State Fullcnon. KWVE (108 FM).
1:30 p.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Wash1ng1on
State at UCLA. KMPC {7 10).
3:50p.m.-COLLEGE FOOTBALL: USC at Oregon.
KNX (1070).
4p.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Wyoming vs. BYU
{delaved). KFOX-FM (93.5).
1:30 p.m. -HOCKEY. Vancouver at Kings. KWVE
I 108 FM).
Sunday
TELEVISION
10 a.m . -PRO FOOTBALL: Rams at New Orleans.
Channel 2.
10 a.m. -PRO FOOTBALL: San Diego at Kansas
C1 1). Channel -1 .
l :45 p.m. -BASEBALL: World Senes: San Diego at
Detroit. Channel 4
Buss• son
sued for
$722,000 -
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Jotnn
Buu. aon ot aportt magnate J«ry Buu, wn aued lo< more 111an
$7221000 "by a IOYingt lnatllutlon
which olllms the youngw -cuhed bed c;heci<t, then lllled to
pay o11 a p<Oft1ial0ly not• .. n11ng
the debt, att~ eald Thurwday.
In I cMI 8'111 flied Wednesday,
c.ntury Federol Savlftil• and Loon
Anc>c:tatton contendt that during
April and Moy tt gave the 24--·
old BUSI $219,520 In cuh and
cuhler'a check• alter he de-
potlted 10 checks drawn from two
-blnk acx:ourrts'111at did not h•V9 1Uffldent fUnda to cover the -·· In July, 8-llgned a prom•
SiiiUi&&
MOTORS.LTD.
OUR LONG TERM
LEASE OR PURCHASE;
A LARGE INVENTORY
ASSURES CHOICE
Jim Pa:itson (unsigned free agent). K1ki Vandewe~he
(back inJu ry)and No. I draft pick Sam 8ow1c(cracked nb),
missed by action. Pontand was led by Clyde Drexler and
Bernard Thompson, each with 21 points. ·
Magic Johnson led the Lake rs wnh 18 points. LA 's
Bob McAdoo missed the game with a pulled groin muscle.
Portland's Darnell Valentine had 13 points in the first
quancr and the Trail Blazers ltd, 71>.59 at halftime.
Portland extended its lead to 103-80 at the end of three
periods.
-I p.m . -TENNIS: Dav1s (up -BraJ"il vs. Chile
(tape), C hannel 34.
RADIO
10 a.m. -PRO FOOTBALL: Rams at New Orleans.
KMPC (7 10J.
I p.m. -PRO FOOTBALL: Minnesota at Raiders.
~ note pledglng to PIY oll the
$219.520. plla 1nlMMI and ar-
torney•s -· by Oct. 4, the Superior Court lawsuit claims.
Bu.. llto signed on agr-t
putting' up aa coltaterat 11
thOrOughbrecl llorff9 and their
sublequent winnings or any in-
come from their ute, the ault Jays.
However, oner the p<oml11881Y
note come due, c.ntury Federal
attomay Terry Kelly lald Buaa"
lawyer told him -"'would not pay the note, at, least not on ttte
data It was due.··
QUALIFIED LESSEES LEASE YOl'R
:\EV• LINCOLN or IVtERCl1RY TIIROl'GH
JOHNSON & SON & FORD '.\tOTOR
CREDIT COIVtPANY'S RED CARPET LEASE
1984 TOPAZ • ONLY '162*
41 -clawd •..d i.o.. • 10 6"'671~ • _.,. l-poy.-Sl61 00
ti~ -~•"'I' ckpov> Sl73 fo~ loc,.-1-$166 Toto! -due"'-~ ol ~
sm oo. Total-oi Po)'......, sn76 Toiol M•loooe ollo.....t bCl ooo p.....,11y 6• pe• ,, .. i. .,,.., 60 000 .....
4 "'° dowd .,.ci ...... • IO 6'331' ,. ~ l-,..,,._.,. 1197 79
lf.t ........ s-... .,. 0.0 ... S.00. E~ i.r-1-M IO Tol<ll -due at ...... -.-
Sl107 7_. TotGI-.,1,...,._. 119 tO.. ~ ol........, bCl,000 ,........,. 6< peo...; .,...,.. 60,000 .....
FORD
MERCURY
LINCOLN
t-_.,. ...._ opf>oft ... P""..._ .... --....... .nd ... p<tC• .. .--• .i ................ .._ """"""""·...__...._ .... ...,~ .. ~"'4-• ........... l .. -i.1+•01 .... +.r~ _ .......... l_..,_., .................... _al>tMy ~~"""""' ............ , ..........
IMM Per--lk-IM clw at'-""'~ .....
OllllY'S
ILIUT
IJllGIUI
mlfll IUUI
•
JOit ION
AllD ION
UMCOUI • MERCURY
"Hom. of flt. GoJdftn roudt"
IUlllE
ClllTY'S
11 1 YILlll
UINlll.1-
lllOllY
IUUI 1na
2121 IWIUl ILYI -COST~ IES& M0-11130
.... '·
The Lakcrs. 2-1 in exhibition play. fact' the LA
Oippers toni~t (7 o'clock) in Anchorage, Alaska. The
La~ers and Clippers also play Sunday night in Anchorage.
KRLA 11110).
I :45 p.m. -BASEBALL: World Series: San Diego at
Detroit, KNX (1070).
5:30 p.m. -P RO BASKETBALL: LA Lakcn vs. LA
Oippers at Anchorage. Alaska, KLAC (570), KIEV (870).
7:JO p.m . -HOCKEY: 51. Louis at Kings, KWVE
(108FM).
The lawault -· to recover t~ money, lnter .. t, attorney feta and
$500,000 punitive damages.
EDISON RALLIES ...
OPEN HOUSE
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13
9AM-2PM
EmetlOrl E~lrlc Co., lnduttriel Controls Oh11sion, a world
leader In !he developmenl and manufacture of soUd state 3·
phase un1nterrupl1bl« power systemt. is hok:llng an Open
House on S.turday. Oclober 13 lrom 9AM to 2PM for the
lolLow1ng challenging oppor1un111es Our Managers will be on
hana to aiscuss the role you can play on the Emerson team. so
plan lo stop by thts SaturOa'f
MANUFACTURING
TEST ENGINEER
,,w. seek en 1nd1vldual lo Develop aulomatic and manual lest
equ1pmen1 You 5hould possess lwo ye1t1 experlance in
analog and d1gi1a1 circuitry. have BSEE or BSEET and pro-
gramming e.11.peneflce in BASIC Microprocessor e.11.perlence
11 prelerred
DRAFTERS
l/tlorking under theOlrection ol our Deeign Supervitor. Project
E1\91neer Of" Sertk>r Designer. yau wlll au111 on new proeluct
design arnj mainlenance of a.11.tSt1ng product lines
You will prepare perte lists. 1Chema1ics and cMtaU 01 a1 .. mbly
drawings 1ncorpora11ng engineering changes and dOlng delait
work You will •ISO be rnponsibte !or layout 8nd design ol
lheetmeta• aod/CH' eleclronlc drtW•f\91 E.lcel+ent oral aod
writlen Engll1h COl'l'VliunK:11hons sk1U1 requited
E.M. ASSEMBLERS
SJ 88 to SS 00 per hour to s11rt. depending on ahift and
experie<lce. Automatic incr .. se aflei" ~ da~.
Requiret a m1n1mum ol 6 months recenl IK!Ofy e11perlence,
ti.ady work bllet..grouna and abiti1y 10 UJ1 OVet" .tO Iba. YOU""
ahould 1ead, write. and 1pe1k English Procrl of legal right 10
work In theU S w1llt)erequiredanc1verttledalteremp+oyment.
ln addtll()n 10 a ger'lef"OUI benehll package il'ICludtnQ a peld
Chr111maa weell ettu1ctown. _.. PfOV1de an Ideal MHtt: envi·
ronment to put voor career Wt motlOtl
If you are unab .. to attend our Open HouM, plffM apply in
l)eftOn Monday thf~ WlldNtday t-t IAM, 1-3PM
EMERSON ELECTRIC CO.
lndutlrW Controll OWWon
UDO a. lt.-ndltcl It.
a.nta Ana, CA 82702
(T•k• MltCArthul ••11 oft 55 fwy., .betWHn 5' 405 lwy.)
EQUllt ~un"y Elftptoyer
. '
J
From Bl
carried 22 times 1n that span for 137
yards).
Still. however, the Chargers (now
5-1 overall, 1-0 in league) were in a
hole -as Westminster's Bobby
Ro1e. who turned in a spectacular
defensive effort throughout re·
covered a fumble at the Edison 27
with 4:40 left in the period -but
potential disaster was quickly
averted.
On 1he ne.11.t pla) a heav) rush
turned a Westminster aenal thrust
into an 1ntcrcept1on as lineman
Kevin Hallstrom picked off the
offering at the Edison JO.
The Ch1raers immediately wen1 10
work. reeling off chunks of 15 and 3 I
yards on bursts throu&h 1hc middle by
Curran and Gray, and Jam:tt finished
otTthe 11>.play, 71>.yard march with a
l~yard strike 10 J\lsticc on the first
CHICKEN. • • From Bl
conserv11ivc-approach."
This is all new 10 !he Padres, and 10
the Chicken.
He was hired by a local radio
station 1n March 1974 to dress up 1n a
papcr-mache chicken for a one-week
promotion in March 10 get people 10
ao to the'ZOO. He was paid $2 an hour.
About a week later, the ba5Cball
tcason t?qan. and Oiannoulas, a
baKbell fan. "was look.in& for a wa~ 10
set into the Padres games for free .•
So. he called the team, which had
never been out of last place in the
N1111ional Lequc Wcsl and was doing
just as poorly at the pte.
''They said sure come on over,"
Giannoula.s said. 00They wcrt willlna
to try anythina.
"I remember !here wai one auy
with a tuba and h11 band and they
walktd around playing, There wen:
lot5 of characters then. It was tikc a
rrce-for..all."'
Ovtr the ycan. he uid, ht lf'W into
tht that1C1er and "'fft:W out of my
shell ... Hitastronom1cal suctc:u took
him.all over lhe country -and later
to fo1ti&n countries-for all d1ffertnt
tinds of C\·cn's.
And lo his home1own. "they uM:d
to Jay it wa n'l .an e\'ent unles~ the
Ch1ct'en wa that-." •
play of the final quarter.
'"The biggest thing was JU51 10 go
ou1 there and block somebody, even if
it was the wrong guy," said Work.man
about his team's second-hi.If come·
back ... What we had was afl attitude
adjustment."
Once-the running' pmc began
clicking, the Jarrctt·Just1ce combina-
tion responded (four receptions for 69
yards in the second halt), and the
defensive pla y of Phil Nabal. Greg
Kopcrek (hC' deftnuel) made 1hc
highlighl film wnh a stunning hit).
Bennett. Gray, Brent Rc1derich,
Grant Ice and others. came closcrinto
focus.
Edison's only first-hair scoring
came afler Westminster gave 1he ball
away on the game's first play from
scrimmage with Kopcrtk recovering
at th~ Lions· 23.
Rose & Co. forced the Chargen 10
se1tle for a 23-yard Tim Bontrager
field goal, and 11 wasn·1 Iona bcfort:
Edison had the ba+l deep in West·
minsler territory with another fumble
rccovery(Graycovercd the ball at the
Lions' 12).
Edison couldn·1 capi1aliu, how-
ever, and the L1on5 eventually were
one-up after MtMillen first went to
Tom lewis for 19 yard5, followed by
his 3J-yard hoo~up with Saldana.
Jon Thomas. Joe Shurley, Mark
Kolinchak. Randy Goens. Ken Reid .
Ken Oriag.1 and Mark Penso, how·
cvcr1 went tO work in the offcnlivc
line 1n the second half, to the dcliaht
of urran, Gray, Bennett and the rest
of the Characrs. ·
adlMn 17, W"'"*"tw 7 ..... .. -.....
0 07 0 l 0 I
.... , ,.....,
. ... _ ... _____ _
-
f(JR rHf RrcuHu
---
, TH llACa. °"9 mile Nte
Tims S..t Evtr (Mi•trl 00 3 00 UO
Sl<JM ICil'O 18-r>oultll • •CO UO Cemwtl llalloultll 2 10
Al$0 read Sk11>1>tO Pr0ttel, Pel-Flet.h, Tloge, Peltr• Duchn1, S.bl'lne lttwerd, Ctl Anott. Time lM 21 S
f'll'TH llAC&. Ont mlll oece.
Howclv Coo (Atldtnon> UO SOO UO
Mofoan Hilt IO!Mnl 1120 360 Fly FIV $1\idow IPitrCtl UO
Also reced: Sclulre Lent Gusto, Emeteld
Culllno, S.llOrl Sier, Frosiv Gin, Celh Plu• nme: 2-01 '15
U &XACTA (S-3) Nid SC1.:JO_
SIXTH 1'ACI. One mot PKe.
WinnlllO Gamt (Parklf'l IUO UO 5AO
Scotch Oou~ lPltrct) UO SM
Sloktt (Sor1001r l0.20
Allo raced: Scot11sn Loeh, Game R~.
Hn.rlous lrew. Meck Dou9al, RIOl.ls "tel· ldtlll 8-De. Time: 2'00 21S.
S3 IXACT A 19·61 oaiC1 s ICO.CO
savaN.,... uc11. One mill ~-
Rttf•t ~ Not (Whitt) UO UO
~ )t, NtwMrl ff•,_, II ~16,c.&a.M9M46
........ ~l•,CWS.M9Nt7
I WhllttY (UI, IS 5$, ! l1n ~UI,
U:5S a lrown (NtlJ, 16 II, A 11.llW INHJ
l6:;JO <S Curt'~ (UI, 16;33, 6 Hn~v CUI,
6 Ml 7 Kil»~ INHI, t6 *· I Muntlmlt1u CNH), H... 9 ~ fCMI, 16:SO, 10
Hel\On CNHI, 16:56 1u-u • .,,,_.,.
I Mofeno ~ETI, 16 C), 2 Serr.o (ETJ,
16 '6, J McFeoo.n I Tl, 16:S2, 4 Clarwnu •u1, u.os s. 1t1c1 m. n 11. 6 B 111
17:7J, 7 Wnto11 CET). 11~1. I lfooetts !"· 17~71 t Polalld Ill, 17~. 10. McM1t1en 11, 1141.
Mlltw °" , .... .,,.. ~" u I a1111ta CMO), 15·1• 7 McNe!Me
!MDI, \521 • .3 ~le t&MI, l5::U, ...
"l'ounl!ln IMO). '537, 5.WYM (MO), 1412. 6 Llddl tMOI, 16;24, 7 Crur (MOI, 16:Cl, t
F111ut CMD), l1;0I, 9 McNemar1 (8Ml,
l1flt. 10 y1e .. la tit-\), '7:33
51r1s 141-J7,W .. .........,U
I lticllOt 11!1, 'f.5'; 2 Neelon IEI, lt5'. > Me Mlllkt CEl 19 11. c JotlMon CW>,
1911, S Few IEi, 19-lO" 6. ~ ~Ilk•
IE>, 19.Ui 7. Plmm !El, lt,S>, I /MCk CWJ,
10 12. t AmS«.on ce1. 20:1'. 10 F1m1m IWI. 11 A6
• , .... lri v...., •. °' ... v..-J6 I Gl141in (FV), 1933. 2 Truo.n (FVI,
20-;Q, "Wtllstllr (0Vl, 10.49, c Citbtrn CFV), 1056. s Will IFVl, 2051, 6. ltovtf
(OV), lO:SI. 1. K , ICtrNI COVI, 2CU9, I
lucMnoll (FVJ, 11,0,, t . S Kerpel {OV),
0 ktMll !f -
"""*" H.,_. IS, UNwn1tv • Newf*f HllW IS, c .. ta Mew SO
UntvwlltY IS, ~-Mew 41 1 HtMOn (NH), 1'.13; 2. T. Alldenoll
(NHJ, lt-.29, l lt•bO•ll (NH>. 19:37, 4 M,
•Anderson CNH), 19'2, S L.110 (NH), lt:SO,
6. lltultll\I (NH), 1'.SS! 7, Ar!Mlttrout IU),
».22, I Fau•ll IU), 10'.23; '· Oudltv INH), ».31; 10 Armtnlroul IUl, 20'.40.
lnltnt U, EJ T.,. n
l. Wrttllt OI, lt-~; 2. 0'8rien 1eT),
20:CO; 3. ~Sltr (I). 21:G3; A. Holst (I),
11:01, s N**"IMlus cen. 21:1S; 6. conw1v
CETl, 11:1t, 7, Ntuloke~ (I), ,11:19; I Pelrct
(I), 21:S3; 9, Altxarto.r <ET>. '1 OI; 10, 8. Movnll'lan (ET), 11:37.
Mater Del It, ~ Mtnttetnerv M
I. Mtls (MD), ll:SS, 2:' Burl\$ (MO),
11-51; 3, Vosl (MD), 19~. c Hoffman
(IM), lt 11, S 0. HUOlllS IMOl, 19:3', 6
l•wlol:i (BM), 19:.U, '· Wllkln'on (BM), 1007, T. HUOhes (MD), 20.11, ' Perez IBM), 20-U; 10. Sale' (BM), 20:19
I
.-.-+---il----S·--t-~~Sk~l~D09Cl..-::~•~nv~ac1w.-~(~•wu~l)lo1111l~--.----...... ~~~~~
Ktnea 2. Olen 2
re..-..~
K*"'-"-' I 0 1 0-2 "-Allllllt l l 0 ... , ,,.,...,....
1. !dmonlon, Coffev I (HuOcM, 2.0.3. 2. l.o' AnoeiH, Tavtor 1 IHer<ly, G1lltv), 9:01
(PO) Ptlfell,__ Edm, Grt00 (hooklnol,
t;5t. LA, LAP·olnlt (hOldlno), 13.0S. Edm,
Kru""lnv$1U Clnttrltrenc.l, 13.27.
S.CINI~
3 Los AllOtlel, sv"" I IT•YIOr), • 19
(pp), Ptnatflll-Edm, Ma'ltr (MHl'llnol.
00:12 LA, Teo;lof (&18'111119), 00.12. Edm,
LY11411'r9m (hookl(IGJ 2~ E<lm, FogOlln
(Ir IOl>ln9), 2:56
'TlllN ..........
4 Edmonton, Hud<lv 1 (ICurrl, Gretzky),
13.15 f'ienllll11t-Edm. Greoo (lrl~l'll)
Ut. Edin, JeckMin (rouol'llno~ 149 l.A,
Seluln <rOUONJIOI, 14' •. hi• on ~s •-n-t-~v. L.o' """'" t-9--11+-n CVoeJin Eomol'ltOll, Funr 129 M'!Ot1·P sevnl. LOI ~-Janecvk 117·2Sl.
A-11.261 ,
NFL
NATIONAL CONf'RllRNCli
Sell Frenclteo
Allanla ltltN
NewOrlunt
Clllcaoo Ta,,,_ BllY
Mlnntt0t1
o.troil
Gr1«1 BIY
Wnt
W l. T 6 0 0 3 3 0 3 3 0
3 3 0
GeMrlll
• 2 0
3 3 0
2 c 0
I S 0
I s 0 .. ,,
Pct. ,F f'A
1.900 163 102 .SbO 157 13A
500 132 117
.500 133 Ill
667 113 " .500 113 I~
.333 119 164
167 130 159
167 " 144
DaAM c 2 0 647 113 109
Wt stilnolon c 2 0 667 IS9 103
NV GCenl• 3 3 0 .SOO 109 1C1
$1. Leuis 3 3 0 500 177 ISi
Ptllledelpllta , 4 0 ,lXJ " 126
AMalllCAN CONf'ERENCE
Plllsl>Urtlfl
ClndMatl
Cltwland
Houston
w ..
S I 0 s I 0
• 2 0
" , 0 l l 0
C4Mrlt 3 3 0 1 s 0
l s 0 0 6 0 ....
Ill 106 71
Ill 141 IOI
667 1•1 IC!
667 15' 104 ..soo 110 115
500 12' 13'
167 106 !SS
167 73 11• ooo n m
Ml.ml 6 0 0 1000 19S p
Ntw Entland
NV Jtls
tndlen•POtla
luffelo
C 2 0 667 12 I 131
• 2 0 ·'" 1•9 130 2 c 0 .333 127 174
0 6 0 .000 101 16'
SUndev'• Guna .
aamt al Nt'flt OrlHns (Channel 1 11 10
t.m.I MlnnttOlt 11 lleldtn
Chlceoo ., SI LOUii
Clnclnnell 11 N1w Enotancf
lndlllleoolls 11 Ptllladlll>l'!l1
Holnton er Mleml ~ Vork Glanll at Atlenlt
New York Jlh II Clevetend
Sen DltoO at Kan.a' City IOlennat • at
10 tm.)
TllTIH lay at Detr04t
ll.lff•lo .. , S.allle o. .. , 11 Wer.l'l1no1on
Plllibutetl al S.n Frenc;lsco ,....,..Geml
Grnn Bay al Dtnvtf <Channel 7 at 6
pm.) •
LA We Fiia (Ander.on) C.00
A"4 raced Six Ac;ro.s, Timelns Se>lrll,
Flying Tralntf. Monltfff Aoe, Bun'IPW
Ctr.
Time· 1.59
U £XACTA IS-•I peld M7.10
EIGHTH llACa. One milt Na.
Amvs Pelt (Pelen.t) 6.IO 340 2.40
JirM Peooel' CTremblavl UO UO T~JlmmvlGNndvl coo
Also racect Meltew Hunter, Bllv ltC, Ac~ice. Cr.eked let, Rlnei Boy rimr. HD 3/S. -.. p EXACTA (7-1) pe1<1 MJ IO
, NtNTH aACI. Ont mllt pee. ~lurtm!tfl Henovtr (Parktl") S.00 210 UO An~ Rohde (e.11.tl") 2.CO UO OMr Sir (Perlllns) . 3IO
Also rectd: Sito Bowl, Tryst, P1y Casn. t<etk F.
Time; 2:d3 3/ s.
Sl &XACTA (6·1) i>eld '14.10.
U f'tCK SIX (2·S·9·S-7-6) pelel '3,20S 20
wllh sevtn wlnnlnO tlckels bht hor-). l1
Pick Six C'OMOltllon petd SIC CO with 16S
wlnnlno tlcklts (five hones)
TllNTH llACI. Ont mile pec.e.
Country Con\fort (PerkW) 11 IO S.00 2 60
Dlemoncl Skloolr llCueOler) UO 210
Mn"R~n ... CMcCertvl l.00 A"° rKed. Juenellt, Tio« Cree«, S.twlna ltOKY, Done lad'Y
Time: 2;05.
13 IXACTA cs-n Nld "°''° Atttndance 3,S7S
O.lr T,...
(at SMta Miia)
THl.la.SDAY"S 1'HULTS (1111 .. 27 ... ~ ,,__, nur ••ca. Ont milt Cll!Vay CMcGUNi) 4.10 l.20 2 60 .w... ~(~) 1.• uo
8uMell CLotoval 160
Also racld· C/\lrolM Star, Sendhurst,
Young Admlrel, Kev To TN Arc. llck'S A
Kldl, Hert>te Ouavle. Classy Monie.
TirM: U6 2/S.
SICOND RACE. 6 furlonos.
Julv a .. u <Plncavl 1.60 UO 3.10
PtrdomOIOrt"a) UO S.40
Asctn'lon (H ..... 1 COO
A"9 rlC9d: Brk:ln, Eerlv Trusl, MelH· lie Tobin, Sharp Conlrol, Seroeanl Wadi.
Time: 1:11 115. 11 DAILY DOUBL• (S•3) Nici 131.CO
THtltD 1'ACL 6Yl fvf'Jonn
The a.1111 Kid IDmnoz) 11..20 'co 1 co
Er\H>llVt (Pedroia> 11.60 7 '°
Exctuslvt Kid IGucit) 11 IO
Also rl<ed: World Ruler, PeN Too,
S.lllno WHI, RtckllU PINWA, Cold,
Wicked Hitter, Oalsky, Shlr1ev'' Steve R ..
Blue Ten.
Time. 1.l6 2/S. •
f'OURTH llACE. 6 lurl0n9s
• D1i11elno Staclt IH•wllt'} 14.60 'co c 40
AllO!tler Tootsie (Blecltl soo "°
Flonwn Ltdy <Meial 7 60
Also rKtd: Half Anoet. Rtllsbone,
Proud n' PauloNtt. House Of Joy, COPI
Gin
Time: 1: 11 21 s.
,.FTH RACE. 6 lurtoneJ
Mudl FIM Gold (Meza) UO 3 60 l 00
Hottllern Olscoverv (LIPneml 3 40 uo
Molt Deltrmlnecl IPlncav) 3 00
Also racect Luch John D., Woods LAkt,
Et BrlO'° Olamonlt, Fore!On Leolon, Purtoln, Artlflcllr, Setty Prince, Hackney.
Time: MO.
S$ EXACTA C3·7l Plld "3 SO
SIXTH llACll. 6 furlone1
Ml Oidle (Plncavl 3 IO 3.40 1.IO
Two HHl'I• (Dllahouu•v•I 6 co c 00
Bronzlno (Sl'loemektr> S 00
Also raced: Ludlv Room. Proltcl Your·
sell, Rtformulelt, Oouer Time: 1:10 4/S.
SEVaNTH RAClf. 1 II 16. mites.
w11cl'I Word IDlllsvl 9 IO s 60 '00
Best LHder (Mcearron> c 60 3 CO
I< RIOlll ldff <Pierce) S.00
Also feced: GrMll Ciders. Aol>llllt,
Mangione, Nordic Son9
Time. 1:4" 215.
U EXACTA (6·3) Nld 1 121.SO
EIGHTH llAC•. 6 -, turtonos
8oo L.e 8oo IPineevl t.20 4 60 UO
Donl\IOP Thtmustc IDINYI S to 3 CO
Bera LIU (MCCtrr«t) UO
Also reao Aunt Iva. Mitra WhiSMr, HI
Yu Wu.
Tlme: 1:17.
55 IXACTA (1-4) oald SIOUO
U ...CIC SIX !3·1·3·)-6-1) oaid
J 16, 1)6.JI wllll 10 w1fwlll!o tick tis 11111
hOrtlil $2 Pick Six consolation e>eld "°6.JO
wlltl 100 wlflnlftt tl'Qtts (tfve llOl'Wal.
MIHTH tlACI. l ll 16 mlit&
Ml AMitd (lladl) • 6 IO '20 l 60
M1rlko'1 An,111 Sen (Plftetv> 710 420
Veclelie (Mt11l 6 40
AllO rleed. Tootle Willers, JollV Shen--"°"' Siient Cat, Eltrt1al Rhton, Mounl1t11
Miid, ~int. 11\dien Ari.
Time: h46 3/S.
If IXA(TA Cl-ti paid S2070Q
Alttt\dtnct 16.5'2
Hklft 5dMMll tlfh
Marine IS, We$trnlns1w 3
Slnllts
Crlsell CM) dtf. Belkin, 6-f. Clef. lswl,
6·0, def F•ndo, 6-0, E . .RobertJOll (Ml '°''· 1·6, -· ...0, 6-0, l.la"V IM) lost, 1 ... , 6-7, won, 6-0 .
~
Fenton-Cllurdl (Ml def. MMtine1-A•is, 6~0. def. ~tws·Lltlle, 6-0, def.
Mou\moules·Malsuurt, 6·0, Harris-Po (Ml
won, 6--0, 6·1, H ; Slenflel<l·K. RobtrllOll IMl won, 6·0. 6· 1, 6-0.
Wtedtw1dee 16, C.... Mesa 1
Slnlles
Tuoktr (CM) '°11 lo Sie9mund. 2•6, lost
ro Wlllellt, 2-6, Iott to Ivey, 2·6, a.rmor1
(CMI losl, 0-6, 0-6, 0·6; Van Scovoc fCMl
icw. 0-6, 0-6, 1·6
Deueles
Wulf·Ctwtno (CM) »at to Ven Hee·
Quarleraro, 1-6. losl to Sc>!Vev·Brown, S-7,
def k lrven·OvtGUe, 6·3; Koge·Sollrt ICM>
lo'l. l -6, 2·6, won, 6-'C, Garvln·Forrnter ICM) lost, 1·6, .. ,, 6-1.
c... .. Mar 15, Ullfvet'slty 3
Slnlles scon (CdMI del. Corfman, 6-1 def.
Wrlgl\1, 6·3, def. LAPOin, 6• I; Sn\lth lCdMI
won. 6· I. 6-t. 6-t; ICtuCMr !COM> '°''· 1·6, won, 6·3, 6·3
~.
Rown·Mailos (C4Ml def. BrancA·MllW.
6·2, clef. How·Robirt1ofl, 6-1, dtf. AIQ-
Meddo, 6-0.. ROWbolhem·Cecireli (CdMI won. 6-C, 6·l , 6""2, D111on-Wooct fCdM),
lost bV dtfaull, losl, 2·6 -•. _7 __ ·6.-~-~-· .......... ...._. .............
~ ftt--off. Croailr,;-t;-oet
Molllttv, 6·2, dtf. Nt11>combl, 6·0. Rk:tt-
ardson CE> lost, 1·6, won, 7-6, ._.O, Str•w
!El lost, 1-6, 1-6, 1-6 \
Deutas
Ht!ldrlcks-He•llnvs IE) m1 to Ryen· Bunne•, 2·6, def. HO#a,..EveM, 6·0, Clef
McCletllnd·Woodf'uf(. 6-9, Fllf<la·Brown
(E l tosl, •·•· won, 6·3, 6·2, kozma-Poe>4ck
IEI lhl, 1·.6, 2·6, won, 6·1
SoutMm ()pen
(tt C"'"*"-G&.)
Witn.Wood BlllCalfM
Gerv Hallbtl'll
Ltrrv Zleoltr
Hubtl'I Gretn
Mik• Sulliven
T1m Sk'nl>tOft
Jtl'ftl<ent
Pet« Oostlrtlul'
F ranll Conner
Mer'll McNullv
G1rvP1nns
Ru C1ldwtl
John Mehattev
Ltrrv Rinker
vance Heafner
Scoll Hoell Oavelerr
LarTYMlte
Glbbv Giibert
MacO'Grectv
Griff Moo<lv
MlktBrlglll
Jodie Model
G-Seuer.
8111 Glauon
CortvPavln
Kiii Mallla<e
8ob8oyd
Lance Ttn8roec1t
Grier .Jonff
Mar" Haves
J.ck ~ldtlaU1
liti<lletd Z~ol
Jlm&ooros
Mllltlteld
'Lennie Cltme<'lll
Tl'lorMI G,..Y
JOflCtian.e
Hel~llOll
Joe\'S~r
Cnarlll 8oC11ne
kenlro-n
We11Y Arm,trone
• GVY ICNIOtr
-' lrell Ul>Ptf
Peul Azinoet
INtt Fltlsllw
8obtlY Wedt<ll'S
GeVln L.ev"'"11
Mitt~
Jim GtlltONf
Rod Curl
MIM$mittl
Dan F~vnell .. ,.,..., .......
Tommv lrannon
Art4'; ... n
lftavne $._,...,.,
MIU NtcOltlle
ClertM'I ROM L.OUO~
HOwtt<I T•lllY •"'""'n ~.,.,OUM!\
Llrioy Mllttr
Jlm NlllOl'd T onwnv Veflntlnl
JeO. S«acllfl Jt. ...-v 11 a Hen •• ""°" ~K!IOl!
Getv Kid! ~c ... ..... 9*.l
JlrnC.-.rl O.weUct11111 w
""' Heftc:ock ..,,,.,,...,
C"'99'0 .,.....9hof! ..., .......
MIW1l Lye ....... Lltllllf DilN'tllt H.,,..,...
Jfm ltu!IMll ~w.... Mllil~ ~~·
Je~ CUCIO
80DVrMl Orto Powers ,. Pell y
... vt!'Ha llt~vW1»i.1M
MJ\tMcC
Mark C.IC.t..Cdl1-
JOfln flOUON
OtlntF.tlW Russ Cocnre11
BUCktY OatdMr
Tommy A.tron '"°" .. int.It DOUllT~
JlmSlmom
WOOdY BlaD.burn
lonv.11* Jltn~I Lttltll'IUi
Mlle.• Doneld 9rldFuon
Doti HalldoflOll 8otl~1*rv
GlorWAI<:'* llJIRoetr•
AelafTI ACS.ma
• Ktfl Gften Slmmv Rachela
Lonn ltOblrl• ~""° Rk11etd CrorlOfd
All9" Miiier
JoMHMll! ltOON~ Manr. Wletle
Oev1d Peooles
lltlck Delrio$
Curt l"llln
JeYH .. S DeWlllWMver
M.ietla• Cunnlno
Garv Mel1owe Jaca Fere111
Date Douoleu
J•m TtlorPt
8o«iClvCllmoe11 Robe<! Donald
lradlrY1nl DavtdO'KtWY
M.Ur.ePutnem llllS.ndlf
Mark Br00k1 Tim Norri' Frank Fullftr
Frid WadJWOrth Tomlemore
Leonard T11omp$0ft
LArrvNflwn
Huot! ltovtr ,
Lvn Loll
8obOY SlrOOtt
Jlldt Archer
Cller"ltl Cooctv
Pll ll"edlf'( '9
K11t1y Whl!WOlll\ 10 ledlv Parson 10
Donne C.oonl 71
Ao;lllo Olr.wnoto, JaNn 11
lkv•IYIOau 71
Dia!IM hllev 71 o.oo .. Ma,...,, n
Ra ComslOck n
Jan St._, AU\tr• n •<II.re Heurltlane, Ir• n
Ab R1ltf'lla'I 73 JK!Ve hilWI n
ROillln Wa lOl'I ..ll. ~ 00Wlin9, B<t11ln 13 hllY !(Ing 73
Jwll lnllllll' 13 Da• Rtld, lr1t1111 73
Sfleron IMrtll 73 Joen Joyce n
1-• •r• A"'9r1Cen1, unlKi noted
Gll1s Vlilrlblll
COLL.EGE
N,.IA~ltl
I loia def Soutl\irn C.. '«ni• Coleve, 1~3, lS·S 15·2
H~ SCHOOL.
s.nwt LAMM EOllCMI def Fount1ln v-..., 6-lS, 1~·10",
IH. IS-1 Martne de! We$tn'llAll•, lS-lJ
-15.11
IS..f.
S.Ulll CNs1 l...-lrvlne del Et Toro, IS·•, 15·4. 1S·9
AcHlmY a.....u.
C.I lutl\er1n dtf N-l)Of'I Christian
lS-7. IHl, IS-S
DNP SM fls.hlne
NEW.-OllT LANDING IN•wPWI
lkiadl) -70 lftllltrl 12' bont!O, 32 beU. 2
Shffl>Shffd, 3 rock nui, 100 m.te~trll
Bexlftt •
(at Lt• v ... sl
Junior fi9htwtlghts Frtd<llt Roech (I.as
Veoes> KO'd Richie Fosltf (Gllfldalt). ..
(Roedl ts 36·6, Fost« 1, 1'+ 11
141GH SCHOOL
l.Otte&li 17, Mater Del ll
L.ovota s 6 1 -11
Met« Del , • , ~u
Marer Del KOf'lftO Bertv I Assieet I.
B••nc I, MullO 1, Br.en I
..
- -
1 CR O''l C • r· , .Ji J!1r11t'T
'
·oiler ru .-
stay un bea
Fountain Valley,
_Edison .also easy
·Sunset winners
Costa Mesa. . .
On the girl idc. higll))-rcgarded
Nev. pon Harbor and Edison con·
tinucd their winnm-wa)s. ·
Here arc the dtta1b of Thu™1ay'
meets: o.
H U.qtoo 8eact. 1 $ M1r1Da 4t -
The-Oilers tuned up for Saturday's
Central Parle ln\·tta11onal b)' routing
Marina.
John Soto led the Huntin$ton
Beach sweep of the top six po it1ons
with a winning tame of 16: 18.
Steve Waythomas, Randy Work.
Ken Vcndlc} and Eric Anderson w~
the next four Oiler finishers.
Edisea it, Westmla1&tr 4t -With
top runner Gene Patino sidelined
with a sore ankle. the-hot Cha~~
minsters Danny Acosta, but n mat-
tered Little in the final outcome.
Edison swept the No. 2 through 7
places, !cd ~)'runner-up Mark Kisner
1n posung its S«ond Sunset 1*tgue
victo11 q.ain~t one IOS$. ~~r ~'a'!. clocked m 16:24, fol·
lo\\td by teammates Dennis Arnds (16~26). Isaac Taylor (16:27). Ralph
JacoMU6:28). SconGarland (16:28)
-and-Ch:ris Thomas-( t 6:40}
Wcstminsttt's next-highest fin-
isher behind first-place Acosta
(16:19) was Dan Kash. who was
eighth tn 16:41.
Foutata Valley to;Ocu:a View 40
-Octan View 50phomorc Haissam
Sadra easily won the ra~ in 16~04. but Fountain Valle~ eased to the victory
with superior depth by taking the ncA t
five spots at Central Park.
Junior Oa~ Bond was cl~ in-a
personal ~t 16:29 to d.llm the
runner-up ~sition w11hjunior Stc"¥e
LaMon third in 16:32. Tim Gould.
normally the Barons' top runner and
with a ~rencss in rus calf. settled for
fifth placdn 16:42. Gould ran a 16:09
on the same course last wee
UaiursJty U , Newport &artier it
llal\'-.k,r ... C..U:MeM ..
• HartMr 11, c..ta-Mesatt
-The Trojan -haodcd cwpon us
first Sea Vie"' ~tback •~ each team
mo'cd to S-1 in Su View competi-
tion while Mesa dropped to 3-J in a
tri-mcet at Ba} Vic~ School in
NeowP<>n Beach.
Chargim, •'hO continutd their dillii·
ruttion of Sunset~ eompetiuon.
Only Westminster's Teri JObuon
Prevented Edi50n from~· :tbr
. tOp $C'\iCn plaa:s.
N1kk1 Ricbot and Miu:b adoa
crossed the finim line ~in
18:58. While Melanie M.anke(19:11). Wcstmi~s Johnson wu fciunh in
19:"21. foflowed ~the fAli9oil lrio or
DCinna Faef R:-30)-:Miooy M.anli:c
t l 9:42) and Ti oy Pimm ( l 9:S3).
Mater Od lt, ~Ma• .. • •err SI -Senior Chmtmc Meis out·
finished frnbman ttammatc ·
Bums to pace the Mon.l:rdu to lbc ~.niclus league triumph. ..
' ii ~ .
Marina gets ready
for Edison with rout
Woodbridge, CdM,
Estancia register--
Sea View-victories
Ma nna High's girls tennis team set
the stage for its showdown with
Edison next Tuesda) by moving to
4-01n Sun~ Leasue pla} with an easy
tnumph over v1s1tmg Westminster
Thursday.
In the Sea View League. Wood-
bridge cased past Costa Meos.a. while
Estancia. Corona del Mar and 1'1C'w-
pon H·arbor arc tied at + l folio" mg
the Eagles· narrow win o"er Ne"pon
and CdM's Vll'to~ against L nl\ C'r-
stt).
He-re's what happened·
Mariu 15, WHtmias&u 3 -The
Vikings thoroughl) dominated in
doubles. dropping onl) f\\o games m
thewm.
T1fTan' Fenton and HC"athcr
Church ~on caC'h set at lovt', v.;h11C'
partners Came Hams and Janet Po
and Kclh tanficUI and ~1m Rob-
enson each lo 1 onl~ ont: pmt' m
thrtt seu.
Marinfs No. I smgl~ pla)tr.
Carrie Criscll. s~cpt by ~res of 6-2.
6-0 and 6-0. "'hjJc Wt:stminster's
tacy fklkin claimed two of 1ht:
Lions" points 1n siraks .
The \'iking.s. ranked ninth m the
latest CIF 4-A poll, improved to 11-0
O\crall and 4-01n le urpl&\' heading
· to-Tu"'sda)'s ron rontttion with
ltaa~ fa,oritt Edi n.
~
Woedbrict&e 1', Coi&a M I -
The Warriors. ranted fifth in:...'\.
cruised 10 the win sparked by as p
io s1f\iles. '"
The Warriors ~~re led by . I
singles pla)cr Kristin Sieamao. ho
v.;on all of her matches.. and the
tandem of Tonva Van Hee and Jill
Quaneraro which also swept tbe
Mustangs..
Eanung the pom1s for the ~us
tangs v.;crc the doubles teams of Juhe
Wulf and G1 Otang and Denise Kop
and Carrie Sohrt.
The Wamors rebounded frotn lap
Thursday's 10-8 setback to Ugur¥l
Beach
Corona del l\tar I~. UD.fversJty 3 -
Theo Sea Kin~· two freshman stars.
Danielle Scott and Toi') math.
brttzcd through all of their s1fliles
match and the doubtes team of
RachCI Rosen and Denise Mallo lost
JUSt thrtt pmcs m three se~
The victory impro,·cd CdM's re--
cord 10 4-3 an Sea View Lcaauc pla}
6-;\ overall. The host Trojan fell to
~-5.
Escaacl• lt. 'ewpo11 ft.,...,' -
The E.a&t~ mo'cd into a thrtt-"--aytie
with Newport and Corona del Mar at
•·3 with the tiJht victory a~ Estancia.
Gta Barbanno. tbe ~cs· No. I
pla\er rtCOTded the deetdina 'I 0th
potnt b\ completing a weep or her
singles opponents.. . In doubt~. Enn Hendncu and
Natalie Hasti0g$ and Joe} Fctda and
Ml\ Bro~ n eaC"h won two ofthn:t.
For Ncwpon. panncrs ~lie Ryan
and Van Bunnell-n all three of
their matdiup$.
GIRLS' VOLLEYBALL. • • Jf'romBl
1 Oran.gt Coatt DAILY PILOT/Friday, October ,2, '19M ..
COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, BS.
•conomics ~ politJcs confusion
The myth that government can produce
econ~mlc wonde.rs just will not go away
81 JOHN CUNNIFF
,,..,.....~
NEW YORK -When economics
meets pohtks m a presidential elec-
tion 1t is like the dark clouds of
confus1on mecuna the wild pies of
r etonc an oma no ma to clear
the air.
After each confrontation. little of
value seems to survive, especially the
truth. Very little economic knowl·
edge has been tmparted. Maybe the
only thina that emeries with added
dimension is bewilderment.
Economists and politicians alike<
might asrce that 'the biggest myth
created is that government somehow
has the ability to produce whatever
economic wonders it wishes. if only 1t
would think "riaht" and aet on with
the job.
Very few· economists and poli-
ttcians believe in this m)'th, but it
persists, 1n spite of widespread recog-
nuion that government has no money
of its own to use in accomplishing an)
task -only the money of the people
themselves. -
Government can. 1t is true.
t>roducc an economic climate that
stimulates the growth of the nauon's
assests. especially b) us attitudes
toward taxes and regulation. but 1t has
no maaical sour~ offinancing for us
projects.
What 1t has been doing a good deal
of dunng the past five decades or so 1s
redistributing those assets -taking
from some and jiving to others b)
means of its taiung pohcies. But by
itself it didn't generate the wealth
in volved.
Around the clock com
When economics and pohttc~ are in
the same room you can be fairl)
ccnain that Social Sccurit} wtll be
tossed around like a bean~a. while
the troublesome economic i'sues of
Social Sccunty will be if nortd. 0J)e of the ~ubstantia issues is that
somebody has to pay for whatever is
received b" others. Social Sect.1rity is a
transfer ot wtahh. and the ttansfer
can only be from relativel~ younger
workers to relanvcly older retirees.
No politician lllces to deal with that
issue. It ·~ more poltucally com-
fonable to tell potential voters that
paymenh wall never be curuuled than
at as to remind them that the sources
of the funds may be themselyes.
For a poht1c1an to say he will tax the
rich and corporations in order to
provide money for the "ordinary"
people. with whom almost everyone
1dent1fies. 1s certain to win the votes
of many people.
What the politician never dares
remind his listeners, however. is that
Terri Ria•· an ln•pector at the Seneca
Pooda plaDt ln Janenille. Wl8 .• watches a b.IO-•l>Md can line ued to 011 can• at the
raie of 27,000 can•per-hour. Dartnc the
fall harveet, the plant operata around the
clock proces.lng the equ1Yilant of 200
acre. of com per clay. The plant will fill 40
million can• of com thh year.
I
.•. . 1( 1s very hard to tu. lhe co1 ponnion
wnhout those ta~C1 filtering down as pri~ increa e to the very people who
are supposed lo benefit from the
taxes.
ihere 1s oothmgclus1veorslippery
abouuhc proc~s. lus metel) the wa)· docs so~ . .
corpOration are set up. They arc set It can make job" directly by eddm&
up to ma,,_c money. and a he.way they to the go"ernmcnt payroll and to
make mone} is to mak( sure they taxes ot defims. It c:in do so
don't sell their products for less than indirectly by producing an economic
1heir cost . Tues are a cost, and so climate in which companies hire
most corporations add the cost to more people. in which c se taxes or
their prices. deficits aren't involved. ·
F''nancial Corp-The i sue of jobs always get s a Unfortunately. \\hen political or·
J • workout. or more accurately. a work· a tors promise JObs they frequently fa al h l fes fj-. e hu JJe:a,tr:---_iOoLJV~C,&..C·~lt~iS2-..J.l.uCULliC........iGu.u.ovi.iCum.u.um.u;;eiJJn~t ...1C..A1awn_t~OW1S~DCC:ll:J<fi:.J.fy-;h...,o..,.w._.l..,b..,.ey~jn..._lt'..,n~. d~t~Q.,...&-::07:8""'bo7.U~t:---r;n c: en Cl i-make Jobs: that much has been it. and the promise 1s given the
to ~edUCe COStS demonstrote<i over the years But appearance of an outnght gift from ·" ' ther\! is a vast difrcrcn~t an how it the ialmighty and beneficent ""''nr
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Troubled
Financial Corp. of America. the
nation's largest S&L hotdint com-
pany, said Thursday_ it will lay off
one-fifth of its 7,500 workers. cut
executive salaries by up to 20 percent
and take a variety of other cost·
cutting steps.
CaIDeron Meraj attends
the Century 21 Congress "By taking these essential but
painful steps now, we arc reshaping
the company to functio{l leaner, strongennd more responsively to the C.meroo MeraJ. bro~r..awner .of Ceotury %1 Walk·ID Realty of
financial markets m which we opcr-HunUJ?gton Beacb and lrv1ne, met. with thr:et membe,r:s of Congress while
ate," said chairman and chjef ex-att~nd1ni a. Century 21 c-0ngress an Wastunaton, D.C., last m~nth. The
ecutive WilliamJ. Popejoy. · ICJ1Slators included Senators Alan. Cranston an~ Pete Wilson and
FCA is the parent of Amcncan Congressman Robert Badham. MentJ used the meeting to urge that new
-Saving•& Loan A~~all~sed in _jmputcd interest mies enacted as panQ(tbe.l2&4J:n.8eform Act -scheduled
Stockton~ Calif. to take effect Jan. I, I 98S -be repe:l~•
The ,w1de-rangmg ~uts we~e Pope-Noemu Wilkes-, a sales associate with Coldwell Banker Residential Real
Joy's boldest move since taking over Enate'1 l.aguna Beach office has been elected president of the Lafana Board
rems of the COr1Pa~y 6111 weeks ago of Realtors. He has been it rc'al estate agent for nine years and served as vice
after the resignation of ~harles president of the board for the past two years. Wilkes is a director of the
Knapp, who over I 0 _years built FC A C.UforoJa AslQClatJon of Realtors and a member ofits Professional Standards fro~ an obscure savings and loan to Committee.
an industry pant. • • • Knapp's rapid-growth policies and A.J. Plt.cber has been appointed manager of personnel for Ples1ey Solld
other practices at f'CA had made him State of lrvme, a supplier and developer of semicustom, integrated and hybrid
the target of intense pressure from circuits. She will be responsible for managing the company's employee
federal regulators. wbo in August relations, benefits and recruitment programs. Pitcher comes to Plessey from
forced FCA to restate its first-half Lamlnation Tecbnoloa he., where she was manager of human resources.
earnings to show a $79.9 milion loss • • •
instead of a $75.3 million profit. ' Robert Dailey hasjomcd the Newport Beach off1<:e ofToucbe Ro11 & Co.,
The company said the cost-cutting an accounting firm. The Huntinpon Beach resident. a recent graduate: of
measures "were formulated and de-Ha1ttn11 College of Law, will aSSJSt in preparing tax returns. in business tax
cidcd upon solely by top management planning and with real estate taxes.
of FCA and American Savings and • • • FCA's board of directors.~· Al Cosentino of Laugna Hills has been appointed president and chief
Asked if company officials had executive officer of Med.ta Systems Technolol)', lac. oflrvine. a manufacturer
held any talks with the Federal Home of duplicatio.n systems for"OOmputer software. Before joining MST, Co~ntin'o
Loan Bank Board about the cutbacks. was president and executive officer of EECO Computer, Inc. Cosentino is
spokeswoman Carol Schatz said, considered a pioneer in the co mputer industry, with more than 30 years of
··None... operating experience.
The cutbacks will be made to the Edward L. Conrad has been cho~~ senior vice president and general
company's huge loan-production manager of Barclays Mortgage Corp.'1 mortgage banking/brokerage depan· · staff, as well as in management, staff. ments. Barclay's is based in Irvine.
administrators and technical • • • workers. About 350 of the layoffs will Jeff Sianser has been appinted director of human resources for Alplaa
be in Stockton. where American Microsystems, manufacturer of multi-user business microcomputer systems.
Savinas is headquartered. Stanger wilJ be responsible for aJI personnel-related matters. including
Jn addition. FCA said it will sell employment, compensation. benefits. training and employee relations. He
ii\Te corporate -aircraft. 41 con-eomes to-A-Jph:a-M1cr() from the Santa Mon-ica·based Papermate d1vmoft of
domininium apartments that had the GUJene Co. ·
been used by executives and other
employees and 475 cars it has made
available for company use.
FCA also said it has canceled plans
to build new corporate offices in
suburban Van Nuys at an estimated
cost of S4 million
HBwoman
wins passes
to NFL game
Wendy Braun of Huntington Beach
scored the game-winning play when
her name was drawn as the
;"Mervyn's/NFL mascot of the week.
Braun's name was chosen from a
random drawing at the Mervyn's
Huntington Beach department store.
As the official mascot. Braun
received four free tickets to the Oct. 7
game when the Los Angeles Rams
played the Atlanta Fakons. Braun
also was to attend a Saturday practice
session and be outfitted in an official
Rams jacket, jersey. and cap.
As a mascot winner. Braun becom-
es eligible to win an all-cxpense·paid
trip to the Pro Bowl in a nationwide
drawing 10 be held later this year.
NEW VO~ (AP6 -T~t fol~wlno llsl $hows I t v~r · •· ounltr stoclu tnd wtrrents I et htve oone uo Ille M9SI tnd dOwrc tn., mo1t beHd on
percent of ch•nr, ~ h~d•r No secvr\tlta re no be ow 2 or 1000 •hut$ art nctuded. el •nd r~nl• t change$ er lht di erenct ~r.een ~he creviaus ~To,1no b d price en hur~w·· ·~' b d Pf' ce
~m• Les I Cho Pel v Un oil 2~ UP .7 I '11.r 'JU !"' i .• o. ·1 C~t> l/o 1.-'l UP • 4 M nrEn n 1~ Up . I ~-,,. 7·~ UP . lee un 1 UP omcw:o • 1 Ho . YI n P · ~p"o ~ h UP , 1 un •.4) 11• uo
• • • Hao-Chee Cbun1 has JOined Kln1 Advertt1lJlg & Public Relations as an art
director with the finn's creative services department. Chung comes to th~
Newp0n Beach firm after more than five years in New York. most recenth a\
a designer for Ba11 & Ya1er. ·
••• Davtd P. Prizio has assumed the post of chief execuuve officer for PriJlo
& PrWo General Contncton of Irvine. Prizio joined his father'~ company
while still a teen-ager, then earned a degree in construction technology from Cal
Poly Pomona before rejoining the firm in 1975. He aJso serves as a general
partner for Munson Prlllo Developu1, a recently estabhshed fnm that will
develop and syndicate research and development, commercial and 1ndustnal
buildings and business parks. Prizio has also announced several appointme·nts.
including: Irvine resident Paal Boardman~ director of marketrng, Randy
Andrus of Huntington Beach, senior project manager: and Daniel Freeman of
Corona del Mat. assigned to the research and development depanment
Boardman brings I 2 years of experience to his new post. Andrus comes to
Prizio from J.A. Stewart Coo1tructloo, where he was proJeC't estimator.
Freeman is a recent araduate of 1&D Dteco State Unlverslty. • • •
George J. P11ano ot Laguna Beach has been named marketing
representative for newly formed Monarclt Beacb Realty, Inc., a d1V1s1on of the
Stein-Brief Group, which is developing the reson community of Monarch
Beach. In his new post, Pagano -who has I 0 years of expenence in real estate
brokerage -is responsible for sales of the nearly 3.400 homes and custom
estate--sized lots in the community. Pagano is a member of the South Laguna
Niguel Rotary Club and the Laguna Niguel Cbamb« of Commerce and serves
on the board of directors of the Soat .. Coast YMCA. •••
The Sales It Markettn1 CouneU of the Bulldlo1 Industry A11oc.latJon of
SootbernCallfornla has reached a membcrsh1pofS45 m the first three quarters
of the year -the highest total since May of 1982. Nick Lehnert, who
spearheaded this year's membership drive. said the origi nal goal was 500 for
the entire year, "but with that ~oal met. we're targeting 600 members before thr
year's end .. The organizations record 1s 70 1 members.
II AOI wlU 21 :: Uo r .... o~ 21~ '·l crirdiec 1.,., H: '.7 J ~ms • ~ V ctraS ~ r· 'h r•rS~s :iii f 'A ~~ ·j ·~ s h ~ r:'. '• ~ l .. ...,
irar~ 1(1 1~ ~ ~ Up
1 mp~~ .,~ ~I · II "'° 1 eca ~ ~~~ ~. .,. 1,,
: 1 ~68 ~ . .... 1/4
Mi:9iv' 1~ Pl• ~ •1.
i .. Up . t ~~u\ :\{,
ti Jr, .,,. 8: 1/4 'I• 1,, . i "~ ''• 14 n r v ,,., ,,..,
DOWNS "'ff ~::'c!o.fw'1 l(o t: Ne mt LIJl -'~9_. 1,.
j ~WLoo §ff l munu
,,,
nrc ~ i"' -loll • uro ''• Va tlsn 1,, -1\ilt . n•c'o ''• 'r'l ...
r On
the.
"'
. .
, •
0 Orange Coat DAIL\' PILOT/Friday OctOO. 11 1114 N8 ..
NYSE CoMPos1a T RAJtsAcT10Ns
,
JllllY'S Clime IPlal
: UP s ~~o Dov.w_~
-- -
WHAT AM£X Orn
-----
NEW YOAK (APJ Oct. ~2 ~~.
rocs.m dlR f-~ ~ ~ N°i:~ 7> 't8 NrMlowS
AMEX LEADERS
I NASDAQ SUMMARY
I ---
NEW YORK CAPl -Most active OV'1'· ·l~·counrer stoci..s su~ieG bv NASO
Name Volume 81 ASkeG C~ •DOIOC s l 77" 200 :l ., n + • MCI 1 371 400 , 7:0. + _. FEM< s 1 ?'8,100 11~ 11:\.o +I' ..
In tee 1 '127 .100 a • ff .,
Mone• "'·I ) AOOieC l lS. ~ 2 l,. -"'
PnilGt S93. 1~ ' I , t '"· ~~·Q YJf.:: • ·~ ~ ffl:IOO ~. ~ • + ~
Goto QuoTES
------
' METALS QuoT£ s
---_F,;,.-~--
That'sanaptdescripttonofboth bu in s and
business people along the Or;ing Coa t. To keep track of
wherecompaniesar gotngandwhichpeoplear~h lping
them get there,just \Vat h ·er dit Lin · v r da)'r in th
Bustn ss s ctton of your Daily Pilllt
~
• , 'f
,.
by Tom Batluk D00
AAAAAAG6.H/
THE
PAlllLY
CIRCUS
by Bil Keane
"First the good news: I scored a touchdown."
by Brad Anderson
"Next time we fly by. toss me a
slow waltz tape "
BIG GEORGE
I
~
.......... ~\ .... ·· ....
·~ ... 14 .. •
by Vlrgll Partch (VIP)
"George. how can you be so sure It's
Friday?"
DENNIS THE MENACE
r r
'YQJLOO<W~
'THAN 1 00, HEN ...
by Hank Ketcham
"'"'-
'RUff' GET A.WAY F~M ™1 TA8L.E 1'
BURY
SHOE
p ~ NUl<OF1UE.!.U'.l?O.S ~~ii ~ """£ 1V(};EA ~AL. '™E.~t.S~T el~ CA~... ~,.....,,,.,__..,.,, AAf, IN~
ro~~PART5.
PEANUTS
DRABBLE
I ' I LL TAKE nlEM OFF
AND PtJT TMEM R16MT
MERE .•. MOW'S TMAT ?
·rnAi ·~ ~ SieR &All( 1~'-i
"k)U'QE. ~ ~~. OAO'
"fO -.Jlf,W 11 H~oM
~ Ot~i~Nl.E.. i • -------·
OKAY, MERE I COME
A6AIN ... SEE IF YOU
CAN TACKLE ME ...
,___, ,,..._ C;;:;
by Garry Trudeau
by Kevin Fagan
'by Lynn Johnston
\OUST \HOUGH! CF
f\ Ref\SON .
GORDO by Gus Arriola TUMBLEWEEDS . ~R by Tom K. yan
GARFlELD
TMAi PE.~Y WIND WON'T SPOIL
OUR PICNIC NOW, GARflE.LD
llOON MULLINS
TRIPPED UP ...
~::-.ti l~.AV~ L. BROCHUJ?ES !
1 JUST LOV£ TO
PL,AN A TRIP'
·JUDGE PARKER
PA~IS ! THE: L~i: !
IHE LEFT BANK ! /Ht:
Rl<5HT B,ANK ! W,ADIN<J !
~
UNc>f.R TME
"fMIRP ROCK ~ROM Tl-4E
LE FT
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
TNIS PART IS .
..
IT1S ACTUALLY
TAKING A IRIP
r H,AT WoUL.D
COST
by Harold Le Doux
W•Vest~"f\M)MINE
WA60NS CAR~V'll\IG N~O.
HA\lt: 1WEV RPAC .. ~t7
~A.A$ '(rai?
BRIOG£
Neither vulnerable. South deals .
. NORTH
+k981
C\7 Q4!
OKQ93 .,,
WEST
•QS
1\7 AJ1065
0 884
•t78
EAST + 1078
1\7 98 7
0 1075 •
•&Q105
SOUTH •
+AJ54
~Ka o AJI
•A842
Tb• bJddior:
S..~ WMt N...0 Eu&
INT Pue INT p..,
p.,. P ...
O~nto1 lead: Jack of <:::'.
Obviously. you eland a beUer
chance or belof rlfht II you play I
d fend r tor on ollwo card rath r
-oiao one pecitk card. That wu &h
d n South .l rn d on th'
deal.
Nortb'• blddlng r•t.t no plaudtt.t
from lhil departm nt. With a ruff·
Inf valu In clubt, h ahould hav
ch ck d oo the pou1bllit7 of a M
apadt nt. T h 1p1d ram• would
hav p oted I w probl1m1.
by Pat Brady
WW., tT ~T MEC~ILY fttM YOO'Vf. WOH ml ...
LOmRV.~ ... m?
DOUBLY SAFE
A1ainat three no trump West led
the jack or heart.a. Declarer won ln
band. croued Lo the king or apadta
and finessed the jack. West won the
queen and made a fine defensive
pta1 -a low heart.
OMA~
SHARIFF
heart.I or w th r hi.a auit wu heacf.
d b1 tht jack, After much 11onlz·
In , h choae to play Eatt for the
ac and ducked in dummy ln an ef·
fort to blMk Lhe ault -down ont.
We can't tault d l4rer for pinr
ID b art.I -wt, toO, b.lv
1001 ronr on oec11ion. Hla
mi.take wu 1n th ay he mana eel
Ul apadt ault..
Had declarer needH lour t.rlcka
from th uil. h Jlne of play would
ti:ave been ebove trill m: but
t • re aurfi I nt for tb con·
tract. Declarer could artord to I ta
1p1d trjck to Ea t, in th n th
Declarer bad to decide whether
West wu leading from the A·J -10 of
queen or hearts would have be.n .
aaf e Crom attack. Aa long u Ea1t
held one of tlfe mtuina bonora, that
could be accompU.hed .•
CHARLES
GOREN
At trick two dtclanr ahould cub
t a of paGea. tti.n lead toward
th king and •imply cov r any c:Ud
W 1t playa. Unleu W eat bu bOth
miulng apad hOnon, th coatract
ll a certainty.
Indd tally, ao that d Ltrer
baa a probletn i.o t beart au.it oal7
blca1.1ae the opponent.a w re n
1tandard leiada. Had tb dtfeadera
been playin1 thal th I d of I
jack denl a higher honor and that •
lht 10 proml ea none or two hl1her.
th position' would bnt, been
cryatal d ar. , ..
'
•
AMC gives it~ engines .. a ... boost on 1985 line~p
Jeeps get turbo-diesel sedan and Encore GS hatchback,
E-nc-ore, Alliance aln and optlonal·on other Alliance and Encore models. The 1.4 liter, 4-
stronger power plants cylln~er engine that enabled the Alliance and Ehcore to achieve
A new Renault Alliance con-outstanding fuel economy continues
vertlble, a turbo diesel engine for the as standard on most models.
Jeep Cherokee and Wagoneer, and Encore's sporty GS model has
a more powerful 1.7 llter engine for been upgraded for 1985 and will
Alliance and Renault Encore are key Include such standard features as 5-
-....arr1d1rtd..,tt1""o'""'na-tont~h-e""1-n•R--........,._.,..-..-...c:r--__ s_peed_ manual transmission, 14-lnch
age offered by American Motors. performance tires with aluminum
The sporty 2-door Alllance con-wheels, sport-tuned exhaust system
vertlble marks American Motors' with dual outlets, a front air dam, fog
first ragtop offering In 17 years, the lamps and a special handling
last being the 1968 ·AMC Rebel 5uspenslon with gas filled struts and
convertible. shocks.
Unlike the majority of convertibles Alliance and Encore again will
now sold by U.S. manufacturers, the f ·t ftaA 1 Alliance convertible will be built ea ure ~esta -type blo-formed . front eeats that move fore and aft on entirety at AMC's Kenosha, Wis. center tracks. plant.
The Alliance convertible has a The heating system for Alliance
power-operated vinyl top; color-and Encore was designed with both
keyed boOt with hidden fasteners; front and rear seat ducts for heat,
movable rear quarter window which Is forced between the front
(power optional); dual remote mlr-seats from the center console.
rors; front air dam; zip-out rear Another convenience feature Is
wfndow;1tnted gtass and extra~ -'.!.Syate~ Sentry,'' a seTVtce
body sound Insulation. monitor that electronically monitors
The new 1. 7 llter, 4-cyllnder, fuel-every vital fluid level In the vehicle -
Injected OHC engine, designed by from coolant to battery fluid. trans-
Renault to deliver added per-axle fluid to washer bottle fluid,
formance, will be standard on the engine oll to power steering fluid.
Alliance convertible, as well as the "Systems Sentry" Is an option on all
toP-Of-the-llne Alliance Limited but base models.
1985 Chevrolet
Cor.vette
New Tuned.Port Fu.I Injection, New
Suspension Rmn.m.nt.. R.m.d In-
strument Panel Grophka.
.'11 llfllMI
'"a;;~ ........ _. ... ,_, \ .............. ., .... kl_ l
111cn .-a.ooe .... 1sa m11
llill •1,111 'l,111
-ntr
T
1985 Chevrolet -10 Blazer
New Color COIW'lboshons, N.w Equ!pfMl't l...-.
A More COf!llfonoLle Ride
'Mlftl11i
~ ..... -----( 11Mil •11,100
EASING SPl;CIALIS TS FOR O VER 24 Y .
f . 0 •
CH
..
I
I
I
I
•
.
02 Oran:ge Cout OAfl V P LDT IF y, October 1
Regulations give automakers an out on air.
at belt law would r It v
for air bag bags by 1 ~87
WASHINGTON (AP) -'Th
go mment has ordered Ir bag
or utomatlc eeat belts ln new
cart beginning with som"& 1987
models, but said it would let
The regulation • which cover u
more than 100 p g , call tor;
•Either air b g or a f ty
h rn that automatically wrap
Ive
h v1ng to eQulp c rs w th the
pa slve restraint• If the cars c n
be shown to protect pa ngers
In a 30 mph crash without
r tralnts.
General Motors Corp., for ex·
mple. has been developing In-
t rlor designs -a<rcalled
"friendly Interiors" -on som
model cars th company cl Im
could m t gov rnment era h
prot cuon requirements without
either air baga or seat belts.
Announcing the new rul s,
Dole sat d the new ruin will hetp
to reduce the more than 43,000
traftic deaths a ye r. which he
called ••a national tragedy/'
Consumer and auto uf t
advocate Ralph Nader criticiz
the decision a "e snare end 1
d luslon."
"It postpon for severaJ mon
years need d safetyprotectlon '' cars and earrt with It e hlg1
vulnerablllty to uto lndu1t,,
lobbying later this decade.'
. automakers off the hook ·If
enough states pass mandatory
seat belt laws.
around a car occupant s stan-
dard equlrment In at least 10
percent o alt 198l model-year
cacs. The percentage would In-
er to 25 percent th folt9w-
lng year. 40 ~rcent the year after
and 100 percent for 1990
models.
Mercedes-Benz now offers optional air b,.,
Trapsportation Secretary
Elizabeth Dole announced the
order at a news conf r nee In
July, saying she hoped It would
end a 1~~ar controveray over
mandatory restraints designed
to better protect occupants In
crashes.
•Continued endorsement of
efforts to pass mandatory state
•seat belt laws •with a provision
that If two-thirds of the popu-
omen rawn
to 4-wheel drive
Percentage buytng 4-wheel drive vehicles
has risen from 7 to 16 percent in I 0 years
The number of women driving
four-wheel drive vehicles has
more than doubled In the past
decade.
Joseph E. Cappy, group vice
p'°'esldent-sales and marketing
toi AmerlcaR Motors, said only 7
percent of the nation's 4WD
vehicles were dr iv en
predominately by women In
1974.
utlllty vehicles such as the Jeep
Cherokee and Jeep Wagoneer
grows."
For example, Cappy said, a
company study conducted SJ'V-
eral months after the Cherokee
and Wagoneer were ..mtroduGeG
showed that 21 percent of
Cherokee buyers and 32 percent
of Wagoneer buyers were
women. "
Buyera of Mercedes-Benz
passenger cars can now
purchase an optional safety sys--
tern, including an IJr bag for the
driver, that provldea additional
protection in frontal COlllsfons.
8tralnt System (SAS), It is being
offertMj In North America for tt\t
fltat time and la avallable on alx of
the 10 1984 Mercectes modets.
Including 1he new 190 sertet
C81'9. ...
• system Mercedes off•• \ In •
Europe, the SRS optJon It Ot-
eigneet toeupplement the proWc-
tlon afforded by standard ._t
belts. It consists of'81l .er beg and
knee bolster on the drtvet'a tide
and an emergency t~
Called the Supptemental Ae-• A further develoQment ~• the seat belt retractor for;;b from
"That figure has climbed to
more than 16 percent for the
Industry as a whole, but Is much
higher for Jeep vehicles, " Cappy
said. "We expect It wtll continue
to rise as the popularity of sports
Largely because of the success
of the Cherokee and Wagoneer,
which were Introduced at the
start of the 1984 model year,
Jeep posted a sales gain of more
than 100 percent for the year. Jeep Cherokee and waconeer SportWqona are popular women'• cbolcea. Women bay ~ne of every flye aold.
Motorists and mechanics can bridge language barrier
If y8u sometimes wonder
-wMther youilfldyourauto mectt-
anlc are speaking the same
language, you're not alone.
"Poor communication be-
tween car owners and mechanics
is not uncommon." says Dave
Bowman, technical communica-
tions manager for the Fram
Division of Allied Automottve, an
automotive parts manufacturer.
"And very often poor com-barrier· examplLtbat your car Is sJuggish
munteatlon leads to knproper •Do not-diagnose a car prob-and your gas mileage has drop-
repair and complaints about the fem yuorself. If you notice a ped. Be aware of the "sights,
mechanic." problem, do not simply say to yur sounds, smell and feel of
Motorists need to learn how to mechanic, "It needs a tune·up." trouble"· and relay these to your
talk to their mechanic, Bowman If you do, that Is exactly what the mechanic. For Instance:
says. mechanic will do, and a tune-up Look on the ground for fluid
"There 1s a technique to use may not solve the problem. stains. These Indicate leaks.
that can avoid a lot of problems •Give "symptoms" or details -Listen to your car. Turn off
later on," he notes, offering some to your mechanic and let him your car radio for a few minutes
tips to help break the language diagnose the trouble Tell him, for and pinpoint any unusual sounds
------------------------------------. (rattles, squeals, ets.).
-Smell. Be aware of peculiar
odors, such as burning rubber or
gasoline fumes that could In-
dicate trouble.
-Feel the car's ride Is the car
pulling? ls the ride unusually
bumpy or hard? A change in the
way a car handles can dften be a
sign something may be wrong.
•Do not be vague when ex-
plaining symptoms to your mech·
anlc. Do not simply say, "There's
a strange sound under the
hood." Instead, be specific. ls the
sound a ping or a clink? A
rumble, a rattle or a grind? Does
It occur only In the morning or on
rainy days? Or when driving
uphill? If you find fluid leaks In the
driveway, what color are they?
The more information you
provide, the easier It will be for
the mechanic to pinpoint anc
repair the problem.
•Don't be discouraged If ycx.
cannot expain the car's problem
Instead, take your mechanic for a
test drive. Perhaps the problerT
is better explained If your mech·
anlc experiences It first hand.
•Ask for a written estimate
before work begins tb avol~
confusion later on. And ask to b4
called If there are any changes I~
the original work order.
•When you pick up the car, ask
to see the old parts that were
replaced and ask for an expla·
nation.
NEW
1985's
• ALLIANCE CONVERTIBLE • CHEROKEE
•GRAND WAGONEER •ENCORE
•EAGLE
• CJ7
Don't let your car break down;
take care of maintenance early
ARE HERE! • J-10 PICKUP • ALLIANCE • FUEGO
Introducing The All New 85 RENAULT
$277 57 ~g
-~--._., ............ -....-c-..-... .. -·1-•cy1 ................... ---.-.---. ---·----.-................... ....--.-, --·-·1•.-..--1 tsu. •>n1 ,.., 1ttr111 ·~ .. pto<• 11 9" UH -la• -· -,...,, e< -0111 ,....,,. •• ._ .. UMJ M .. -II'°' A , II
as ,., JeeP. CHEROKEE
O...N ..... ._ltlftt-~-111.11,.fCyl , ___ ,,_It_...
-,_ -a._ o..nir... T-Al -~ ....,,.._
ITK •12M Kii fOMl7f)
·~tndL•-48--li'nt• tG '7~ M40o-lc..h °' Tr-"'t
THIS WEEKS USED CAR SPECIALS
'83 JEEP J10 P.U. '83 RANGER XLT P .U. '82 EL DORADO '83 ECONOUNE E200
TOURING CPE. VAN CONVERSION '·-..... -i(,•"""" Y-4 lo• llllCNM ~ ............ 1111111 V-4 Al • Uflllfl t IMrt T Y iCIOllt7, •!OMtSl1 1117>'11 I l2oYMll
s9990 s7990 s1 s.990 $14.990
'84 UOU WAGON 4x4 '71 CHEV SUIUUAN 4 x 4 'M NISSAN KING CAI 4x4 '82 VW WESTPAUA~·
kl4 .. lft<to 0..:. • V t AT ' ""° -l•rH S• ,_, .... 9.AMPER
"""' -lllT'lfl'IOI f21JMT1 1*1111 jl(Cf'Olll
$10,490 s9990 59490 $8890
~-BODY-SHOP _I_ -SERVICE--; -PARTS-DEPT-1
I OUR BODY SHOP IS I LUBRICATION, I NEW TAKE OFF CJ7 HARO TOPS I
GROWJNG. COME BY I OIL CHANGE, · I
I AND SEE STEVE LEAN I OIL FIL TEA, I • ...... oooo I
OUR NEW MANAGER I CHECK ALL FLUID I WHILE THEY l.'.AST. I
FOR A FREE I LEVELS BELTS I· MQTEI (cat.ORS ON HAHD ONLY) I
COURTESY ESTIMATE. I HOSES I I STOP IN ANO SEE OUR
we WORK ON ALL 1 SPECIAL 1 ACCESSORIES DISPLAY 1
MAKES ANO ALL IN· I I JEEP AND RENAULT I
I SURANCE ESTIMATES I $12.8 • I PERFORMANCE PARTS I
ARE WELCOME. GOOO THAU OCT 31ST I 1 8:00 • 5;00 MON -FRI 1 COUPON I SPECIAL ~---~------L--------~-------~-J
,
•
"It all started when my owner
began neglecting me, Doctor. My
hoses were rotting, my sir filter
was filthy. and It had been over
two years since he'd bought me a
new set of spark plugs. Then
came that terrible night. We were
driving through the rain. I began
coughing and sputtering and
finally could carry on no further. I
broke down right there.
"My owner didn't know what to
do; there was no one In sight.
Finally, he abandoned me to go
for help.
"He wasn't gone long before
two men, who seemed to come
out ~owhere, made their
assault upon me They knocked
m my windows. stripped me of my
wheels, and tires, my stereo, and
robbed me of my owner's valu·
ables. By thd(Jlme my owner
returned I was but s fragment of
my former self. He was shocked
at what he saw.
-
"In spite of all my problems,
though, I'm going to try to look on
the bright side. He's sorry now
and wants me back In good
working condition. It's really
going to be expensive to repair
the damage that's already been
done. I only hope that he's
learned his lesson and w/11 be
more aware of my needs In the
future. A little preventive main-
tenance ls all I ask for. "
When your car breaks down on
a lonely road, there may be little
you can do but raise the hood, tie
a handkerchief to the antenna
and walk -or, better yet, wait
for help.
You can help prevent future car
trouble with regular checkups
and maintenance. Don't wait for
symptoms to worsen before look-
ing Into the problem.
How do you know when your
car needs attention? You don't
have to be a mechanic t.QJsnow
I
when it's time to see a meehanlc.
Be aware of the following:
•Engine: Hard to start, uses
gas excessively, sluggish,
smokes or noisy.
•Tranaml11lon: Slips on shlf·
tlg, noisy, shifts erratically.
•Battery: Won't hold a charge.
•Exhaust: Hisses, rumbles,
roars.
• Stfft'lng and auapenalon:
Wanders, pulls, shimmies,
shakes or bounces.
•Brakes: Noisy, stop uneven-
ly, brake pedal mushy or fading.
•Lights: Out of focus, burned
out, turn signals inoperative.
•Wlnd1hl•ld wipers: Smear.
streak, clatter.
•Body: Rusted, paint de-
teriorated.
If any of the above apply to
your trusted car (or If It has been a
while sfnce you've had your car In.
for service), get It checiced today.
TUNE·UP
I
00 q
I\
•
•
I
1985 CHERO.KEE . . .
This Triple Award-winning 4x4 of the Year Is ready for
ever}1hlng from Mexico to Colorado. It can be yours
today. (Ser. 5194). (Stk. CH573). '$10,890
The legend of the CJ-7 ts allve and well
all over Southern California. This
4x4' s priced low and "ready to seli at
·orange Coast. Order yours today,
please allow 2-4 week delivery for
special orders.
$1111
llEW 98& GRiii WllOIEER
••@•~~~:::;===~ This Is Jeeps true luxury vehicle. 4-
wheel. drive dependability and . --Jeep comfort combine to make it
one of todays most outstanding ·
values. Lots In stock and ready for
Immediate qellvery.
< I
Renault 10.9%
ANNOUNCES RBlllll ~~
RATE
~ou can receive this low financing rate
on all new Renault Encores and Al-
liances ln-sk>c:tt--.:--ftl::lfl--F!JUl-f-¥:-~~~---
1 frri ited offer! '·
1984 FUE&O ·TURBO
Comes loaded with 5 speed
p/steerlng, aJr cond., AM/FM stereo,
custom wheels and morel (Ser. 0681).
(Stk._F..V68n.
8989
llEW 1985 lLLllllCE · .
• • -Thls·brand new 1985 Alliance is In
stock and ready for Immediate de-
livery. Come in for a test
drive today. (Ser.
1633). (Stk, At.567).
$638 .. 9 .
IEW 191& EllCORE
rhts hatchback puts fun back Into.
afford ab 111 ty. (.Ser .~----.......
9725). {Stk. EN614). ~
You can put one Into
YQUr drlVeWay today
tor only ...
$149!" $149.99 a month for~ mQllths C.E.L.
0 .A.C. $2«9 residua!. $487 total to
start. $7200 total of payments.
1980 IMC USLE 414 WGll 1982 SUBARU SL 1181 JEEP CJ-& 414 1982 JEEP CJ7 LIMITED
6 eyl., auto trans., air cond., AM/FM stereo, AM/FM casa. stereo, 5 ap., tllt wheel and In High back seats, AM/FM stereo and ready for Luxury 4'x4, hard top, leather high back seats,
tllt wheel and more. (Ser. 9036), -great condition. (Lie. 1EHE875). fun. (Lie. 18LK413). This weekend we will let AM/FM cas.s., tllt. wranglers, showroom
go for ... fresh! (Uc. 10ZW481). $4989 . $4989 ~5989 $1889
1982 TOYOTA 414 PICKUP 1980 MERCEDES 3000 1982 DTSll 11111 CAB 414 1982 ISUZU I llRI CPE
Uft kit, custom paint, roll bar, AM/FM casa, Auto, air, p/steerlng, c/c, p/wlndows, Lift kit, roll bar, p/steerlng,.-lr, AM/FM cass.,
28,000 mllea. Must see to appreciate! (Lie. p/locks, p/roof, alloy wheel&. Showroom custom paint. Only 28,000 mlles. Must see to
2E33775). freahl (Lie. 681ZEM). -r bellevel (Lie. 3A 19795).
5 speed, air cond., AM/FM cass., custom
wheels. Runs & looks like newl (Uc.
1EYC.53).
$1889 .
EREE 5 MIN. CREDII CHECK
CALL OUR PRIVATE CREDIT LINE
(714) 549-3103 .
$15,189 . $8589
1D0°/o EINANCING l·ON . ANY NEW JEEP. OR
RENAULT O.A.C.
$5589
LEASING
NO MONEY DOWN ANY MAKE OR MODEL . O.A.O.
I ._,
All cars subject to prior ~le plus tax, lie. and doc. ,;;)offer good thru 10-14'-M. c
------~1:illllll . Orange
Coast
nAMC
4 HAR•DA LVD. COllTA M••A· 4a-aaas e P14JB415-777a
t • • " . t .
•
'
I
-
. . --·-
0..,. C:O.t DAILY PILOT/F<lcloy, Oct-12. 1ta4
5 1peed. Air, c .... Custom Whla,
Runs &. looks like new!
(1EYB453) . $111189
ORANGE COAST
AMC/JEEP/RENAULT
24 Harbor Blvd Coota Meaa
1149-8023/645-7770
(Rl848) un
IMTll OMm YW/ISIZI
18711 Beach Blvd Huntington Beac ••2-raoo
6 eyl, Auto, Air, Tilt Whael.
i.reo, Beautiful one owner car
(Su 9036)
••1189
ORANGE COAST
AMC/JEEP/RENAULT
21124 Harbor Blvd e..tta M-
11-.t-808/8411· 7770
•
•
1.S-llter engine w/electronlc fuel
feedback system, 4 apd, Radials,
Carpeting.
ClllTI IW lllTllllSll · ua.....,..., _ ....
140-4411
ONLY
-5 25~~
day
If you furnish the picture of
your car. $5,. additional If
Dally Pilot tak" the picture.
2 days for $45,.
•
AMtFM c... 5 1peed,
Wheel (1EHES75)
$4989
ORANGE COAST
AMC/JEEP/RENAULT
2024 Harbor Blvd Coota Meaa
1149-8028/6411-7770
2.4 llter engine, electronTc fuel lnj9c. ·
lion, 4 apd auto, Plot-Ing, e
apeaker atereo
MITA 1111 llTSlllSll nu...-'r.r. ......... ~1
llft
••• ''''" nr!lllZI 8711 Beach Blvd Hunbngton Beach ..,., ..
•
•
(8708)
SAYE
lllTll atlmlW/ISIZI
18711 Beach Blvd Huntington Beach
'42·2000
1980 MERCEDES SOOD -.
Auto, Air, P/ teerin11 ru1ae,
Power Wind°"' Loeb, & roof,
Alloy Whla, Showroom Freth
(581ZEM)
$111,789
01\ANGE COAST
AMC/JEEP/RENAULT
2524 Harbor Blvd Coata Mat1
1149·8023/6411·7770
S tpMd, elr, eunroof alloy -·· (Stk # 79M)
111,IOI
OIJU 1¥11111
•LIHol..,, •1111! ., .....
•
•
Rear window -/wiper, halogen
headllghtl, headlamp wuhert and 4-
apeaker AM/FM muttlplex rlldlo
w/-aette, whip-type antenna, auto-
malc 1~1~h ....
HUl""°'lh'. _._
U0-441t
-
r
•
'
LOOKING, J;OR
A~ARTMENT?
•
•
SEE SUNDAYS
REAL ESTATE
SE CTI OW
' • II
-· ,l
a
(7141642-4121
, I
' -
PllllC NOTIC£
" .. '""' '
..
NOTICE
Tbe DallJ Pilot will DO l~e:r be open 01' Satarday mornmca.
Oa.r opera~ boan will bi Mouc1&1 tla.na Jtrlday, 8 :00 a.m. to
S:st> p.m. Deadlln• wUI be u follOwa:
EDITION DEADLIJU
onday ............• ~ •..•••....•...•.•••••.••.•••••••••.•••.• Pi-J4ij, 4:30 p.m.
Ta.ct,aJ ................................................... llODASaJ, 4:SO p.m.
Wcd.DMdaJ ......•...•.....•..••...•.•••.••.•••••.•••••.• Tll.cla,y • 61'0 p.m.
TbarMAJ·························••ti••·············· Wed.a~. 4:30 p.a. PrtdaJ··················································· Tb~J. •:SOP••· .. .rdaJ ••••.•.•••••.•.•••••.••...••••..•••••• n •••••••••••• rrtcta,, a:oo p.m.
U1ldaJ •.•.....••.•..•••.••..••.•.•••••..•••.••.•.•....•..••• PrldaJ, 8z00 p.m.
lailyPilai
642-4321 .
.. •
..
PllllllU llfflllT 1111,GOG
FUN, FUN, FUN ia the only way to
describe this home. Sit in your spa
on the front deck watching the
boat.a or slip upltain to your spare
living room complete with wet-bar
for an overall harbor view.
UHISU
111 Via U•• Seid .,,. ••ur 1-1
Marvelous 6 Br bayfront 78' on bay, pool,
spa. 100' boat apace. Xlnt Fin. $4,850,000.
WTllll UIUll
YHUlllm a..m.. brioM tolld,,.,...
3 Bdrm, 2 bath, 112 bloc*
to beed't In old COM. II It Yar• 1121.llO With help It could haw AoOm to apere. LoCme vi.w. 13511.500
108x107. Quiet cul de IJllill()U( 11()~(1 eac CIMn 3 Btctroom · • AAx.. home. Call Nowl RM!tora,87lHIUW
6-48-2313 Bkr.
THE :REAL
ESTATE RS
UOIWITIWIU Fll&IOHll
Enjoy COOi bf~ )Utt
one blk from oceen. 3
Bdtmt, 40 ft lot. AbUn·
dant ttorege. IQe roornt. 3~ garage tJpper unit
w/m1nl ocean view. Greet
for oue.t• or ln-la'#I. 1$95,000. Call BINNIE
DIXON
GE ;f_-,Q 9100
PUILlllllWI
1111 ... 0 ....
1141,IOO I 1112,IOO
Bright, 1paolou1 and
beaut11'u1. One hU 1ll)rary
ott muter tuft• V1utt~ c.111no1 wtth ctrcul•ttno
flN F1butout kltchenl with hlQ.helt quality bullt·
Int and tile oountertoPS
Oeeutlful tit• bethtoomt.
Th... c::t11rmtno C1pe
Cod d• gn untta .,.
tt-49.500 tnd S15UOO Flexible tinanc:lnQ. Mikki
C00ptt 144-8200"
1'/:Macnab ·Irvine
la!Malalaa• 1111
icOTe CAPE cob•
2 Br HM + unit, Only
1321,500 Bkr. 845·"21
lalMI
Ptaiaaala 1117
2 ,. PIJOl If 1
2 Mpera1e houMt In
Balboa. Find a friend or
rela11"9 & '°"" a 1*'1'*· ih19. Botti .,. 2 ltry, 2
Bdr 1~ba. 2 ear gar. Alt
MC>. utlflU. One of a
kfnCS tor 1WO Pnc:.d right
1310.000 for both. If )'OUf
at• contuMd catt for Info MEL FUCHS
P&YILlll llULn
**SAVE PROP 11 •VOTE YES ON PROP 3t
l11al120
Balbo1 Penln prOj)ef'ty
owner1. I wtlt buy, Mii,
rent or IN your vacant
property. lmmed reaultt.
C1tl Agt, Rey Fautll
6'4&-0301 Of 873-717'
Ttacle/aate B Pen Pt 4bf
2ba IP& 1~ lot• 225K eq
315K vt (714) 875-"50
la& •ti I l
lllYlll·UI
Stll-1 Br +den Of tmall 2ncl Id •
Channing Spanish 3 Br. 2 Ba on 45' lot, PUllLY Ml
deck. courtyard. pier & alip.'$1,l~.000. L~BO~c•.:-=.'.·~
Orlglnally c1ret1ker•
condo WfltNely bey .. trom tide llider. Idell! , ..
tr .. t for llveebo41td °' weekender for city ~· srn.n but tM
lea.at •~w Ma6>Kll
by 1350.000.
144-1111 llYllll llJYI UmlHT OHM r~~ :,tthc= w:i,:
Jetty & Bay view, newly decorated Mai ~•_18_9_·900 ____ _ /Jn Nl(,(l
Kai. 2 Br, 2 Ba, 40' patio. Now $645,000
PllllllU 1111 IOUlnl-1 Traditional
II/Ill I' •
l\'1~C. 11111 '1
Realty !xtcu11v• entertllttment,
Bay lliewr Bdrm 3 be.
E1ccttinf0cean & Jenyvtew..-, 4 Br, 3 Ba. 631:.17810--n .. ~•i>a· v~~2~~0 ,\gt
3700 sq. ft. car parking. 11,285,00 ======~I --------
wm Ill IYI UfflllT
At N.H Y.C Traditional & Br apcctacul "
bay vi w. Owntt fin1tnd~ $L050,000.
UAU IOU llWlll
Panoramic & City vi w, pac10 5
Br, 3 Ba. Xln\;financang, now i799,000 . """Nell mam
' ..
'::~ru~· SCC\\c4}lA-1' £~s· ::: '------l>f C\ltf I ~;....... ___ _ .,_..,.. ....... ti •
1-iCIO~ ~ bo>•llll'"''-~.-c
I
MYDllllEI
Lovely home wlth bay and night
light view. 4 bedrooms, 3 baths,
beamed ceilings, French doors. wood
floors. Pnvate pool in enclOled
courtyard. 3 car garage and much
more. Better take a look'
Call YI Sut11
111-1101 141-1111
WAUD I LU IUL DTlll , ........ ., ...
HOROSCOPE SYDNEY
0MARR
-~~ ..
I f ',
I
.. ~,, I
$2.17 per day
That't AU. you pay for 3 ( ,,.._ 30 days mlhe
DAILY
PILOT
SERVICE
DIEC TORY
plut the IAVINE MIRROR
end tn. HUNTINGTON
BEACHCOMBER 9'1try
Wednetday at
no •xtr• Chargel
CALL TOOA'i'lf
UIFllLl&S
Your o.11)' Pilot
a.Mee Ohc1ory ~tll1rve
M2-4121 eit. IOI
5100 Belt Wut.. 5100 ltlt Waat .. SIOO !Htl1 Waattcl
ACC11m11
CUD
The Dally Pilot II aaektng a
brlCJhl, dependable,
motivated indtvlcluat to fill
a full time cle<lc•I pos-
ClllLIOARE WOl l£1
For Christian school 111835
Br0okhur1t FV 962-3312 DRAFTERS
(;r' ltton in a busy otflee.
Must be acC\lrate with
figure•. Experience
P'lf•ted. bUt Wilt tratn.
&'**'tt benefit pad(-
Cltritf•ts l tl• Waatt4
F fT PIT Mull have Sin-
~• Interest In cookttfg
Kitchen Things 873-3444
975-0297 or 831 -8778
OPEN HOUSE
OCTOBER 13 1
9AM-2PM
r .
•'
•
cs
II.
CLERICAL
CALL TODAY
WORI TOMORROW •· SAiary open, Apply ~~ t~ F~:.; l••t4iatt G,tailll
l-11AM or 2-4PM, 330 W. Bay St., Costa M .... • Secre1ar1 ..
ca. • Typist
• RecepliOntll
IQtla, lsshf, -THOMAS TEMPORARIES
Car.., ·opportunity In in-6-41· 1144
vestment adv11ory &
flnandal planning held
Qoa:llntaUOM. word pro-
cealng, numeric.al ap-
ptltude. Interlacing
w/cilent1. Salary + Incen-
t820 E. Oaefe A11e. $1,111e
Santa~!. ca
ln1erv.ew btwn 9am-2pm
No FM
tive compenaauon. Send COOITltL SHYERS resum. to The Vteth Company. 4350 von Full/part time We train
Karman Ste 490 Studen11 ok Cheers Res-~ B.acti Ce 92660 t1uran1. epply al 7891
or c:a11 •1e-2e2s Warner, H B cat Beach Blvd I btwn 3·6pm M·F Of AISWERIR IEIYICE call 752·6955
needs telephone oper· ---
ators vartou1 1n1rt1. 3s2 C0.,11101/HELPER 3rd St, Lag Bch Wanted-lady, tale 60 to
Come to our Open t1ou60
Saturday, October ,13,
from 9AM to 2PM 11nd
d1acuss with OUf Man
agers the role you can
play on ttte Emerson
learn See ou1 large ea "
tOCfay & SPOrts section
EMERSON
ELECTRIC CO.
lnC1uttr1al Contr ols Div
3300 S S1and11rd St
Santa Ann. CA 92702
DAVCt.EANERS coun•cr
assembly preter ~xoor
6412·5466
EARN 1500-600 I
P/WI & BE AT THE early 70'•. pref Widow to
ASSEMBLERS n.tpcereforandbecom-BEACH IY NOON
panlon to my 88 yr 06d Sell C()f)k!r suopltci. 6AM
mother N·smol<et refs Noon Tra ning program
needed South Hunt BC!1 Htghf"St COIT'n" ~ O lo
OPEN HOUSE
OCTOBER 13
9AM-2PM
are• 3 t>rs daily Mori anCI oooustis Ca I lv'r
thru Fri • occasional James
overn1te Own lransoor· &J l·O 102 tallon nee 964-8120
COOIS
Cheers Restaurant
$5 p1hr Full/part time
Apply at 7891 Warner
Ave (at Beacn BlvCll H B
or call 752·6955
Come 10 our Open Houte. Coamo101og1st Ass1sten1
Saturday, October 13 107 Main 11 Balboa Penn
from 9AM to 2PM, and 675-8412
discuss With our Man-COUNTER help, part/full
ager1 the rol1! you can time, d1,-ln1ght llex1ble
play on the Emerson sched Apply m per5on
team See our large ad In Orange Juhus 7 i 1 E
today"• SPoflS section Balboa Blvd Batboa
EMERSON
ELECTRIC CO.
lndul1rlal Controls D•v
3300 S StanClarCI SI
Santa Ana ----
DATA H TRY /CRT
Irvine CPA ltrm has open-
mg tor data en1ry clerk
Bookkeeping knowledge
10 key & typing etf1cien·
cy Salary range from
S1250 I mo com -
men1urata w /e11per
833·0651 CLEH Exper automo11ve 1111e DELIYHY DIUVH
c'8tk Apply 1n per&on at lor auto parts store Must
Costa Mesa Mllsub1st>1 hevf'I vahd Callf dn11ers
2833 HarbOr Blvd c M lie & good drtvers rf'o.
Alt< for Mr Nf'llM>f' cord Apply at Hub Auto
<;upply ? 120 Harbor EXP'O TRANSMISSION BlvCI C M (;46 ?4641151<
MECHANICS ~~EEDfD ,,.., Cl11uC1e
R&R man·t>u1IC1er "" ng man 960·5464 R t,f>fl 0.,1 ve'y Drn,.r GO()(j re
er 'd Brtng MVA Costa am Pai1t ,,.,,., ~PSll BIUP Print
lt1'1 lht • Mth1tr 1690 n iu:ent•a. C M
=·~~ti VIP TOYS DELIVHY PHSOI. M W F 9 30 to I 30 tiP• l
BABYSITTER dependable pro• Own ca• $25 per
EARN fo $1)00 wt>':)i;ty J t
Com" orc.1a Cred t A.
count E.•ecu1•11" uo ot
lec11ons req1..1• t!d
pre111ous e~pe-n"'
1ern111onat compa y
pfOv1des complett!
s1stance Call ACC
839·1712 c•t 814
Engineering
MANUFACTURI NG
TEST ENGINEER
OPEN HOUSE
OCTOBER 13
9AM-2AM
Come to ov1 O~n ~ov·
Saturday October 1
from 9AM to 2PM and
d1~uss w11t1 our Man •d,,rs ttttt •o!P yo' cnn
plr1y on tnP Er•rnr<;
team SfW" r I
l oda) ~ '>r I
EMERSON
ELECTRIC CO.
ln<1ustr1al Controls Otv
3300 S Standard .,1
SBnt11 Ana CA 92702
tor age 3 g1r1 1 day/wfl da1 17 .. 1"3<'·9681 Debi I Escrow aocy e,.-p ne
• for4-ehr1 Me<Sreale•P"'f salary commcnsuro1c a. refl pref NB 760-8351 Oen111t10rttto Recepl "'e•p 6(;1-1551 ~ B"nel•I& <t \ ~s E•D
UIYSlnH HEDED reQ d NB &4<> 2e2s UEOUTIYE SECRETARY
for 4 yr old Part/time OEltTAl Asstst11nt to prtt..sident aome Lite hlciean1ng. my Small r I •atate l11m w .. tcllff home 646-8044 ° EN 1 A L A. s 5 1' 18 n 1 see~,'"ll person with R fi neflde<1 Fe' p4'r n4'C I< Banki"" Lan1,na Hills 770·4275 t>1G ground. organ•n· . .., " t1ona1 slolls word pro-nPtST /IOOHHPH DENTAL REC PT !SE C cctMlng & xce! nt s~lll
Accurate. 50 wpm wltnsuranc.e ••per.enc'.! required Newport 8 d'I
prepare loan documents.I 4 davt 546-3000 CM ofltOO Please send r
ltt• l>kkJ>G, tiling g.nera~ -r.um<1 a ary tilstory ro
otc dull · llE REPAIR Turn r Development Now pa
Uoust Cleaning
L .AtmJG
nth rougn ~
4{)..()857
ire111ir
STARVING COLLEGE
STUDUTS MOVIH CO.
Or nge CU Ong l\al
Student Mov01s tnsure<S
L c T 124-436 641-8427
NEW Wt1rQt1ousc Storage
Paintin1
RAINBOW PAINTING
Oua11ty 1$ our Policy
650 66'6 JEFF Lie 8688
12 {RS EXP Im small,
My prloes are small!
AON or BOB 650-6-4 77
Holiday Intro oH•. Atlfll• =-""==-'-----,, 8gf , 1t0ty hOUM 126. 2 aforv '3S A.J't 137..ec>3e
-----~-~~~~-,.,
Wd proc: l computtt
gr•phlcl I 15/hr. W•
m#e your nut repott Ot
..-Pf9Mnlatlon a YWot1I
of wt &M·1113 John •
FREE tsf.
15 ytt exp. Cu1tom or
ComrMrcltl 241·7039
''" met -0r-•• -n,-d-..,.-,r-om_s.,....1-=5-• tnm ftte f, .. rm
Repair faua.ts, dlap, etc. Trlm1topplngtremov1I
Pauil, Painting, Palntl An~1me ~&M 642-9033 Cleanup/haulfng 432· 1551
Oulhly, gd prices, ,., •• DRAINS cleared. $15 ... ..::'.;;•-.••.r.i,.•1._ ____ _
Nlillktchon. 631-2686 PLUMBING repalra $20 - -G
-hr. Reis PDQ 631-058& In your home, rad .. OUALITY PAINTING 3-12, all 1ubJect1.
FAIR PRICES. FREE Expert Service & Repair 631-1788 (~VII)
EST JOHN 831-2050 3t yr• ••P· 18 yra In area. • Cl .;;.1 Lie #409035 994.11919 Wla " Hug_
llC'1 P1t .. ti11 t R•••lr PLUMBER SAVES tTiiiii LIS WINDOW clEXR1Nd
Resl4'en1111, Commer. au Wtheatl, dlsposalt, etc. fr .... 1. Comm/Raid.
phases toe 953·4293 PTL Call Peter 472-1780 Larry & Steve 875-0599
••••• • State law ,.qU#• that ali
contractor• who petf orm
WOfk O* S200 Including
labor tod m•t•lal• mutt
be lk:enMd Unlioented
contrlGtore thOUtd IO
1t1te Ill their advtrtialf'CI.
Contr1ctor1 and con·
aumert, contact Mary
Grondif at 551-408e with
eny Quettlon-. Contrao-
tor' 1 Stat• LIClflH
Bovd; 28 Clvlo Center
Plaza. Room 890. Sant•
Ana. CA 92701.
For Ad Action
Cal a
Daiy Pik>t
AD-VIS<I
642-5678
S l 00 Hel Waatd 9100 ti Wut .. SI . .... .... _
MlJDS
Seacl fl Motol 1661 So
Coast Hwl, Laguna
Be th 494· 717
Messencer/MalJ Cttrll PIT •tu<*!t SllllTlll
Group claims ofc of grow· Gen offtce/ei.,.ndt, lite Mutt be able to handle the &Ml &11111 •no Irvine Co. has lmmed typing, comput8' Input publie. Eatlv llra/wkndt. PIT, .. _ ...... • ... ,.......,. .-... f o d (Willlra n) Mu1t have r• , _ _, .... ,,. ............. __ ~~'"f 1e °'pe~son ec:;'gd lta.ble car Miieage reim· NurMry ••P .,. .. , can Major ln1urance Co.
drtvlng rec nee Advanc buraement Flexlble hr1. &45--0210 7•11am only. Good lkllla. Call btwn
Polenttol. Attrac. office, Contact Sendra llllf. ULEI PEISll 9:30-12 noon, 851~3999
good benefits Call Lynn, ThOl'n & Co 955-2600 Ladle'• Sportawear·buy91
b t w" I 0 am -2 pm . -, .. un OOITllL for golf lhop. Private uanUY/mllTIYI
863·0660 Full time, Mon·Frl, 7;30AM club 30-35 Hra wkty, I~ MOUllSSlSTUT -4PM $4 p./hr Apply In eluding eome WMttend1. lmmedlll1e opening for u· pwaon. "'Boolta on l"ape Houf1y wage plut ~ per1enced lndMcbll In MlllHll 729 Fat.O, CM s.e-5525 rms.lon. 49e-5787 for I~ faat pac.d, ~ corpor· ex pe~1ence cou pie __ __ taN!ew. ateoffloa. Must MwPf'O-
preterred, but will con-REAL ESTATE ASST feak>nal 9PPNl'MCI l
sider highly mouvated needed Local top produc· SCJll /IEOm. attitude. Top typing &
hard working couple with Ing agent need1 help Good comm lkllll, lhatp lhorthand lklllt requf;ed. MANUFACTURING general maintenance and Mu11 be llcenled. ••· office appearence, lit• Excellent N ,fary. Send r•
ofltce 11t.111s Apply In per-perlenced, and ag-phone a type, word pro-iaume to P8'aonal,
TEST ENGINEER son to 127 Yorktown. ~ranive to ass!1t In •II cesalng nee. ( 7 14) 1111 Town & Coun1ry Rd.
HOUSEclE•uNERS Huntington Beach acets of rHldenllal 2S0.324'1 forAndrew Suite 18,0range,92tee
"" 536.04 11 Hies. marktttlng and ----------~r OUNJIO.U.sf_ _ CUll..J showing of prop~ SlUIUlllt. ltOUTAIYI
SS HOUSEWIVES SS
... OCTOBER 13 PIT 7·330pm 3-11.30pm ~=~~~:-: top --, ftlmll miiiltimlfAIT 11-7am Near OC F11r-producing ortlee. Salary for major brokerage nrm Bright, lntelffgef1t per.an
9AM 2PM grounds Lite-patient • strong commll8'on1 Seeking mahKe lndlvld· needed for tmall 1 man
LOT
-load Good working con· High Income potential u1I for full time MC· firm In Newport. Mutt
d11tons Call btwn 9-5pm. For appt call Patrick retatlal potltlon In bul)' POIHH good office , " e to our Open House.
, 1 • dlly October 13
,., 9AM lo 2PM and
USS w In our M•n·
gerci •he rOle you can
1a, on the Emerson
learn s~ our large ad 1n
od 1 ' Sports aection
EMERSON
ELECTRIC CO.
i:. d1J1;trlll Controti Div
XiO tandard SI
~I Ill A18
Mon ~ri 549·3061 Tenore 631-121111 or office. Xlnt benefll1. lltlllle. Prkw offlca com-
760-8702 pleasant office. bro-puter expertenee a plu1 NURSES ASSIST. k•• exper. pret. but H~. pertonallty &
Certified Ol e11per. trainee, not requned. 957-0500 bulineu acumen 11 most 3pm·, 1pm, 11pm· 7am. Important. Admlnll·
wen stalled, so beds N. RClnllll tretlon 0<gantzat1on &
F nosp•tal with above av· -----..;...;.;=-~-A ~t 70 WPM ability to w~ w/cllent1
S *•1ro1m111n* ccur•. ng ,, crttlcal. Excellent com-l'rage ulary IC&le ME A nii; Min, apellef, proof.
VERDE CONV. HOSP., Mlle Indoor/outdoor reader. Mlf·sl•rter, call s>enMtlon to rlGht Pl'·
68t Center St, Costa work G11den Center Pola or Shelly at 90n Send reeume a ln-MeH 548-5585 Non-smkr. wlll train. HB 641.011 , elude eatary require·
PAINTER WANTED-5•2•8866 =· s:~ s:~ .. ~ e~Pllr must have own llECEPT /GUiii PfT !~112RnoonUY ,._.., port Buch 92ee0
transp Call Wayne, G 'I I I d t ....... M 1 • ....... · ,,..... ---------751.9103 '"' 11• 0 c u -us ofc dutl•. gd typing 11cm11Y
PARllH LOT
type 50 wpm, telephone lkllls no lhthnd tor 2 PfT perm, type 55 wpm,
e11p pref W1lltralnbrlght perion aal••' o f c. gen'I office exp Nr Alr-1ndiv1dual w/rlght II· 842•1801 ..,.,. ... 2•11.e titude 631· t600 .. v. • ,,., v
~ ,..t•-n• "•tH'ft t'T'~t1nrc
Rooth Attendant Accept·
111g apphcatlOfla
3333 \fl Coast Hwy Nwpt
Bch 9·5 Mon·Frt
Receptionist-tuhlon con· SECRETARY for 1mall
scloua enjoy people est1b R E Con1ultlng SECRETARY
~r1t
4 b
'l"Pd"d Good p&y 1f l&st
•, • p~ r PnC..• O San Ju11n
C"1p Strano ••ea
• 831 7300
MECHAIUCS lean cu1 tore l gn /
oorncstrc "'' smog lie
Mm 10 "':r. flXper Bus-;
OG 4{/9·5302
MEDICAL ASStSTllT ~fT PIT tro111 ~back ofc
7d0 1422 Mein Fri 9.5
R ""·-Sal firm. Xlnt typing & grem· IChard vvvllettl on, mar lkills Accurecy a The Jolly Roger Corporate
200 Newport Center Dr. must Posttlon requw• a 0Mce II Meklng an 8'1·
PART-TIME. Varied hours Newport Beach vanety of office 8'<1111 & perleneed Meretary for
to inch.Ida early A M. R•teurant dutlet & wimngneu to 1t1 Re1taurant Oper·
weekend& Must have d• SIT PEHllllll'I wortc aa a team. Mu&t at1on1 o.partment. Pot-
pendable vehicle (small wortc well una.r preuure itlon raqulr• excellent
truck, van, ttatlon PIWnlllE Send reeume & 1al. his-1horthand end typing
wagon) to ass111 newt-tmmed opening• In lrvlne tory to Warren Kellog, 1klll1 and word pro-
papfK dealer in Irvine & Newport Beach, PfT, 1300 Quall, Ste 102, N. 8, eating experienc.. Prior
area Must be depen• Fleiclbll hours Appty In 92680 833-3352 re1taurant experience
dable Contact Greg peraon eny lime. would be a definite plu1.
Hyde Monday thru Fridty 2300 S.E. BRISTOL SIOIR&lll /LHAL Lovely ofllcee wltll good
t>et""een 9 30 and 10,30 NEWPORT BEACH Legal aecretary for email wortllng c:ond1tlon1 and
am onty. 6-42 .. 321 EOE tun charge office. MUii benefit package. A.ppty In liiliiliiil.liiiiilliil••I Rllt-Sandwlch Shop P/F potMU top lkllll, ex· person 8·30 am to~ pm
PHOllE SAUi ~5'1:i24~~~~~~~11~;rp. ri=r:m~;.dy.f'~:_iu~ QI .llLLY lllU llO.
COORDINATORS. FT/PT. --fle>elble attitude. Word· 11• .. 1111•-..u....a, •• w II trttn lmmed open· RUllL UUI Tl.lllH star e11perlence • plus. .,.. lflfW
1ngs 852-9066 Pit. flex llra. Nua«y exp Contact Sue 851-tUOO. lnflt 114/llO 1111
PHONE SURVEY·S6ihr prel. 645-4553 liiiliiliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•ii9
exp req. no selling• llltt/CtHftf PtHtl l.,_OTll 101.111 PfT eves HB Ole 9113-7457 FIT Apply In peraon, 9.5
,OLL T•IERS--wkdeya. Noack Trophy • Engraving 170 e. 17th s tO p/hr Must be Ible 10 SI II• 117 Coate M•N Moo1cn1 tal._ w1lh public. No _._ • ·
RECEPllONIST wanted exper nee ~2·7211 ULEI
Motor routes avaiable in laitN
Beach. Must be 18 years old, have
dependable transportation. Ex-
perience h~ful b~ not necessary .
for bu 'I OB GVN Prac·
I ,. Mu"t hawe rredlcal PRHSROOI HELPER F:! ~r~t:rll~~rc::~;
f• ..... llflr 581 5080 Mon & Tuai 4pm-1am weell. Car nae.' (2l3)
HERRlll lY.,.CH A.ppty Pftnnysav8f. t880 949~500
111 " Ptaoentta. Ave, C M ----1 ~our arc 1ntorested •n ' -----SALES MGMT PROGRAM
arnmr; $3~.000 to tCt1111fled Adi are the AmblllOll, enthusm & d• sso.ooo or more 1n c..om· anawar to • succesalul sire to ~cceed a mull. Cal 10 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
mtsslon& and •1 willing garage Of yard aatet lfl a 12 Mo't tmg prog w/trng
10 work hard tor It., con-better way to tell mote tllow. comm, bonueea-& 142•411S fltd~ 111111 MOfflll lynch people! benelltl 780u--0~80~1 ~E~O~E~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~==~~~=~~~~
Really ts th most pres· =========!..===--:.. 11g1ous tnOfit gr6wth
ort<Jntod nam 1n real es-
tate Pr pare yours II
now tor 111 ne•t re I es·
Ull boom Cftle61 OP•
por tun11le1 nvoll11ble
L1cnns1ng tra111tng avA•I·
oble TO tnlOfVIOW C II w It M11<:lbor ~'or Vtkkl
111 Momll Lynch Aeatty 11
!146·9366 or 847·65061
....................................
District Managers
If you enjoy worlung with young boy• &
girl1 ond desk 1ob• ore not for you,
const~r a coreer in the newspo~r circulo
~:,.. t1on field. This is o uniqv• pc»l1ron with
• doily challenges & r•words
WELLS FARGO BANK E.xtru&1on Pren D·e Repair CCJrp 1200 Ounll, 811"1 100,
Contact Chet Boarum. Person Evpe11itnce 1n Nnwport B6ad\, CA 92060
759-5758 EOE sof1 alloy d•e "'P••r E, KIDS-EARN GREAT TRfi AND PRIZES!
Our opening• or• 1mmecl1ota. Appl1<onts
must how o van, 1totionwogon or tN<lt.
W• offer on excell~t 'olory with o bonvs
plOf\ and go1 ollowonce. We hove on
Hcellent benefit pion tho1 tn<ludn holpi·
tolizotion in1uron<e, l1betol vocohon oncf
holidays.
NITOLUIEll
N.wport ar .. er&-9060 I
-Ullflll
cenent ff11'9tl benefits
Non-conttlbutorJ' Group
1naur1ricit & Dental Plan
Liberal vecat1on berlef•IB
Xlnt llMt ng salary Con fem•/mele for Mini Mrkt toct Paraonnet Manag~
Gu ttat'lon Sharp IP· ~ds Metal Co
lltlle M111 Mulfet ut on •
Tultet, along cam 11
sptd nd r ad 1n th
Dally P1rcn ClaasW•
soctlon abOut M Mut-
tet I luff I &nd bOUOh1 II
pearanoe • rnu11 Fut1 1213)328-7420 32.0·0t02 /~ fil'M ,4'99·5302 23 t5 Oom1ngueJ St
CERAMIC STUDIO-pert Torrence CA 90509
urne help. 2·3 days plwk E.O E F1M
1or S9 s You n
your tufta\ aoct tots of
011 er things througri
D11ly Pllol CtUSlll d
Aos ce11 6•2~~1e
CM.8314570 ----------iiiiiiiiiilillliili••
f (}"f()ff llf UT 4
Motor route· HHtilultl
in Ne~ port Ht'ltc'h l', ( .ornnn fh1l
Mnr. ~tu .. 1 b.-IR )f'lln! ol I nd
hnH· dt•1wndohl · t' r. l:nrn
600-700 rwr montli. c· II
I 0 u.m. lo 4 :00 p.m.
6
(714) 548-7058
...
Candldo1e> must hci.,,.. o dHire to be
•ucceuful and be willing to worlt horil. II
you think you ho._ th• ~ol1ficotlon1,
pleo.-opply in pe"'°n to
the D•ily Pilat
Mondoy thru fttdoy 9 11 om 0t ~ • pm
330 W. Bay
Costa Mesa , CA 92626
on 1101 opportun ty mploY '
J
r
Live 1boerd 1vbl 34 yr lml
w1n11 to ml1ntaln. sail
hostess your bOat In re-
turn for room aboatd
Keeper tor bOat or houM
Robyn 780-e905
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
AC ROH
1 Chem clUMI
5 Linden
9 Oltputt , .... __ ,
man •. "
15 Rom111 god
18 Wretched
17 Oout>i.~t
t t N8Wl4)aptt
INIUfe
20 Elevlled
22 P11d attention
23 UMlnMdle
24 unc or 111
25 East lndl1n
28 Compect mu1
27 Bouie IUI •
· 21 El.c unit
31 Flowet part
34 Contalnef•
35Boot~
~ Authot Leon -
37 footptlda
31Qreeltletter
3t FIOOt coo..
~ ThenMref Of*
•1 Ollld ...
•2 Pr .. unit
43 ll'roPC)r11on
.,. Whale group
45 Guan11eo
2
14
17
IO
•7 Oeeeend1nt
49 e.IGiln town
51 AalY8Q8
53 Pnc:tlty ptanll
55 Billet mov..
57 Cott of y1rn
SS -Bowl
59 Gef'matl rt'* so Noun ending
81 Unique folk1 1n
London
82 EllOnct
63 Old charlOt
route
DOWN
1 Stumblel
2 Love It
3 fUf'thet down
•Pipe part
5 Stood up
8 Mow 11ong
7 "-lndogo"
IOowrong
9 Concurs
10 Tied up
1 t Got I oegr ..
12Prlll
13 Ogled
19 Conllder•
21 Se>aiten
25 Door'*' 28 Eatlled
27 Hetl11110n
• 7
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2 Pilot Weekender/ Friday, October 12, 1984
Hank · illiams Jr. in concert tonight
.. Amazing Grace" or wailing his way .. Your Otcatin& Heart .. -rtmams Jerry Lee Ltwia. Ray O..rlts, Brtnda
through "Kansas City," -extremely popular. Lee and Johnny Caih. New Male Country Sinter to the Top Counlt') supe~tar Hank Williams
Jr will perform at Pac1fi
Amphttheatre m Costa Mes:s tonigh
ma show thal opensat 7:30 with Leon
Russell. the undisputed kina of Okla-
homa-sly~ mu it". - -
Williams' father, one of America's Hank Jr. is accomplished with
osl powerful sonawriters, was rt-either a 1uitar, banjo, fiddle, bass. Atagc l l. HankJr. made his Grand
sible for the national popu-Slttl JUitar or harp in his hand!:._H'.!.'is:-.:O~Ic~Opey debut., ~ "Lovc1'ck
lamatrorr of-coumrylmJSlt' n ltle-ti'alning as a musician bCPri literally Blucs.''He stole the show and got his
I 94~_Decad_es after his untimely as soon as he was old enough to hold a own curtain call, a rarity at the ()pry,
death 1n-Tm:n1s catalog of songs -guitar. He naturally learned his Since l~ his work consistently
including "Hey Good Look.in'," 'Tm father's songs early on and re-has received honors rangj~ng from a
So Lonesome I Could Cry" and members such visitors at home as Grammy nomination in 1964 as Best
U.S. Mtle Country Si~r Award In
1972 from Billboard mapzinc. Hit
latest albUm. "M.Jor Moves," was rtieettd !Ht-Ma¥-..;;... _ _._._...._----;
Reviewers have noted that Russell
~emmgJy thrhes on crowd en-
courasement whether crooning an
iru:redlble Gospel-blues version of
Go oo TASTES
FaFe at l3avaFian Cha1et
worth an 'Oktober' visit
German sausages, noodles
~ppeal in coo~ Jestive mont1!_
By BEVERLY BUSH SMITH
..., .... c:.. ' t .
Someynrsago, I stepped off a train in M~unich
dunna the heightofOktoberfest. Immediately. I was
~wept into a spint of good cheer, rela.xed celebra11on and
JUSt plain fun which was irresistible.
hall came back to me on a recent Friday visit to the
Olalet Bavarian restaurant an Costa Mesa. And while its
atmosphere is fest1 veanyt1meof year, somehow I fell
especially drawn du.ring "Oktober," when the first cooler
weather makes German fare most appealing.
The Chalet 1sa panicularlycffcctivemood-lifteron a
Fnday or Saturday night when that affable accord1001st
W1m Van Delfi fills thea1rw1th such tunes as "Ems, zwei.
dre1.1'soffa "Each tune w(''ve v1s1ted, there's been at
least onctablcof guests of German descent, singing and
toasting one another. The zest and cheerfulness 1s
definitctyconta11ous
To see tbisgemut/tch restaurant today. with its
colorful flower boxes. the tinyhghtson the trees at night,
it's almost impossible to believe it was once the site of an
auto dealership.
Owners EncGundel and Susanne Th1erfeldt have
done a masterful job of crcat ana a cozy chalet, nch with
wood, antiques. cuckoo clocks, country bouquets
The service is good-natured and prompt. Heany
brcadarldcrackers. togctherwith both butter and a
chcddarcheescsprcad, appear even before yo u order The
tables are prct11I) set wnh country pnnt tablecloths and
napkms in carved wooden nngs. House wine amves in
att.tact1vecanhenware pitchers. beer an heavy glass mugs.
But therc'salso a two-sided wane list -German on
oneslde(w1th five Mosclsand three Rhines, pnced from
$8toS13), tv.o French and seven nicely-chosen
Cahfomiawincsontheothcr. Ween1oycdaspecial 1982
Moscloftheevenmg($8.SO). with its sweet begJnnings
and tart after-taste.
Therc'salso Lowenbrau on tap. and such wine drinks
TRIBUTE SET
"'
as the bowie: Rhine wine, champagne and fresh fruits or
orangcjuiccandchampaine(bothS2.50). In winter
months, you can sip the hotsp1ced,Juhwein.
The menu includes most of the German favorites
you might wish for: Baynschcr sauerbraten.1agcr
schnitzel. wiener schnitzel, roulade1 la Strasbourg; bibs.-
bratwurst, plus veal cordon bleu., medallions ofbeef
tenderloin wtth hollandaise and asparagus, Hunprian
goulash and filet of pork with mushroom and wine sauce,.
pineapple slice and homemade croquettes.
You dcfin1telywon'taoaway hungry.and fuJ.
dinnerurc reasonablypncedatjustS7.SOtoS I 1.2S.
With so many thingsaoinaforthisrestaurant, I wish
I could tell you the food is marvelous. Perhaps we hit an
"off' night, but wedefinitelyfcltourdinncrs were notas
goodasthosewecnjoycd here last winter.
With the same staff, I'm not sure why th.ts was. But
lhe veal of the jagcrand wiener schna tzels was not as
tender as before; spatzJe (}lo me made noodles) wh1chwcrc
posit1vc1¥ Jddictive on an earher v1s1t. were not as h&ht.
Perhaps we should have ordered the sauerbratcn
which we found sodehcious in the past-not too sweet
and accompanied by excellent red cabbage and a hearty
poullodumphng. Or perhaps the rouladc, stuffed with
bacon, pickles, onions and mustard, tender<00kcd in a
wine sauce. would have been a better choice.
Explains owner Eric Gundcl, "Wedo 1t the wa)'it's
done at home, and many people tell us. 'It's just like in
Germany.·"
Thus the salad colorful wt th sliced bcctsand green
beans, flavorful with the house oil and v10cgardrcu1na. is
not highly chilled in the American manner. (And no,
there's no afTcctat100 of chilled salfl(I forks!)
Ooethm& which had1mprovcdsinceourlast visitto
the Chalet Bavarian, was the desserts.
I had been d1sappo1ntcd previously in the apple
strudel, which was not the sort made with thinnest leaves
of pastry. But this time we enjoyed a deep, dark chocolitc
tone and a hagh, hght chc~e. zesty with lemon,
studded with aolden raisins.
On fine evcninas. and for lunch, the Chalet's ~tio,
colorful with flowers, protected by awninp, prov1deu
pleasant spot for dinins. The lunch menu varies from
roast beef salad with a dchca te spicy dressing ($4. 9 5) to
Reuben sandwich with German potato salad ($3.9S),
H unaarian aoulash soup ($2. SO).
One noon, l 51vored the kalbs-bratwurst, that
plump, delicately flavored veal sausqe, 11thich was
scryed with a bland potato salad. The tpecial that nooo
was a veal.paprika, pleasantly flavored. and apin, not
fork-tender, but remember, I did not pay the price of
Provimi veal, either~
Tbert'sa lotof carinaand warmth evident in tb1s
restaurant, wilhSuzanncashosteu, Ericovcrxeinawith a fine eye for detail. (The rest rooms, for instance, are
immaculate, and in the put, rvealso found the kitehcn
metlculou.sly kept.)
Why not celebrate the tqinninaorfall here?
CHALET BAVARIAN ltESTAUllANT, t 969 Hai'bOr
Blvd., COSta Mesa .548-1323. Lunch, Monct.-Fri., 11 :J().2
p. m~; dinner, Mon.-Fri. from 6 p.m. RetcrVations forsb
or more.
Goi>d T•1teuppean1wicH month 1a Wed~.
Tickets for WlJliams· appearance at
the amphitheater -SIJ.$0 fot co,
xrved and $9 for lawn -may be ·
purchased at the boJ office.
llOa •-Ir•, O..sct C. llobb and leel•• lltft ue f•tared 1.D .. BOf!l• of tbe BraYe" at Goldea Wellt ColJele.
'Home of Brave' is
still full of impact
Y cars before he used the specter of
prejudice as a prelude to tragedy in
"West Side Story.'' playwriaht Arthur
Laurcnts employed the theme in his
drama of men under fire an World
War ll. "Home of the Brave."
While the play met with moderate
succcss(excecdcd in popularity by the
movie version), it is a grippina work
for its time and one which is rarely
produced today. It is on staae this
weekend. complelin& a brief run, m
the Actor's Ptaybox Theater at Gold·
en West CollCJC.
It is, as mipt be C'Xpcctcd, a dated
piece. partKularly in its period·
conscious dia191ue, bUt theft is no denyina the imPl('t ofit111Dty; a 1tep-l>Y-s1e1> unwrappina of a shclflhockcd
Gl's emotional trauma followina:thc
death of hit buddy on a JAplnetC•btld
11land.
The intorac11on amona the aoldien ~ to a danaerous mi11ion i1
penacularly well delineated b)' direc·
tor Charles MitehiU and his 11•-man
cut. The intimacy of the P\aybo1
demands panicular intcnaity. and the
Golden Wnt pciformen stnvc for it
continually, somt mc>f'e 1uccaafully
than otbfri.
Probably the MOit Jaiiud pet·
f'Onuncecomcs from David C. kobb
II Coney, the mttral fiaute of the
, ..
T1111
drama. a Jewish )'OUth daafanJ uodct
be.th real and 1mqintd prcJUdicial
treatment. Robb locks into Ilia
character early and sustains it beauti-
fully, particularly durin• the IC-
qucnca undeT fire on the asland. Mike Owens tum1 in another
strona ponrayal u the Army doctor
who endeavon to un&ock Cont'y'1
mind and cure hit P.l~•tit oaraJYs11. Aleo impreS11vc it Din
l>anlcratz as the veteran non.com
beulina his own penonal crisis -a
Dear John letter. Saeph~ Silva displlys lhi proper
reserve for hi1 ro&e u 1 youoa 1111Jor
rooeemed abOut eamtna-the respect
of his men. Ron Huauter lends to
veer in al\d out Ofhilchal'llCttr 11 the biaoted IOkliri' and Qftly r.I villain or
the show, while John Parker is initidy uevca but ultimately eotn-
peltina • Robb'• dOll ttiDd. ~ ... _.n,....10>
1
Calendar
LY1fN llAallLL, ··one of the
orld' lead I~ <"tlll a." plays mu IC'.
by Ovoritk, LfgetJ and Ca 11. He la
ccompenlt'd by the Loe Angeles
Phllharmonlc, Frt.·S.t. 8:30 p.m .•
Sun 2:30 p.m. Mu le Ctnll"r Pavilion.
(213)972-7211. o&n lllACll off era easy llstentng
on the plann run •Sat. 8:30 1un;-
mtdnlght. Reubrn'a, 1!51 E. Coaat ltlatrway. Newport Oeach. 675·5790.
'tlls PBILAD&LPlllA 'TalltO QUAAT&T gtvc:s a ~rfonnance which tnclud& Quartet lo Q, Op 18
o 2 by Beethoven: Q!.}artet In C·
minor No. 8 by Shoetakovlch: and
Quartet In O·mtnor I>)' Drbu 'Y· UC frvlne F'lne Arta Con<-ert Hall, 8 p m.
87 gt-neral. 85 UCI tudents.
856-6617
8tJ8AJlf t..ANDALZ. ~nl tat St.
~e's Chur<"h, Parts, and Petr a.ea. compo5l"r and organist from
Chari~ University. P~. art! lea·
tu red In l"tt'lla.I at the Crysta I Ca.
thcdral at 8 p.m. Ptecca by Tour·
nemlrt:. Franck, Vleme, Duru~. and F.~n are reaturcd 86. 971-4-083.
auaN OUll&VICB conduct.a the
University Symphony Orchestra or
Cal State Long Beach •I 8 p.m .
Unlvcrauy Music ~nter Hecltal Hall.
rhe pmg.ram locluctc. the world
pttmlere P"rformance by c:lartnet
concerto "Cok<'clon Noc:turcne."
wrttlcn by CSLB ra,·ulty member
l>avtd f'tlder. $5 ~n~ral : (213)
498·5526.
OSU T BAZE I rcaturtd froftl 8 :30
p.m .· l .30a.m. at Crazy HOl"llCSaloon, • 1580 Brookhollow. Santa Ana.
549·1512. ~ "
• DON WILLJ.Allll8, wUh apcclal
CUC91 tar 87lYia. ~rforms at the
Crttk Theatre at 8 p.m . 813.95,
·912.95 and 88 50. 834-1300. RAn WILUAllS .Jlt,, ak>ng with
pe:ctal guesc 1ar Leoa aMeeU, ~rfonns at 7:30 p m. at the Pactfk
Amphlthratrf'. 100 Fair Drtvc, Costa •
a.1esa. 813.50and 69. 634-1300
CorbiDe C&J•waro. lllkkt lmal ua4 Robin .aiee at tbe ,.oram nae.tre, 860 i..,w
Jaclr.llcll clence ID .. Caralftl hta0 ID tbe Canyon Road.~ Beach at S:30 p.m.
Ont p~ of Be.llet Pacifica'• chlldJ'e•'• 8atarday and l:sef and S:SO p.m. Sa.nday.
Clty.Sl5and813.50,(213)980·942J. ewport 8«'ach.clostngpcrfonnant'CS ner PIAyhou:!lf'. 3503 S Harbor BIYd ..
llOVIOLA ~rforrns Top 40 music tonight and Saturday at 8 p.m.. Santa Ana. n1ghtlyu~ptMonda~at
J at Ba.illcr's through Oct. 20. 14346 631 ·0288. varying curtain Um through °"· au Culver Dr .. lrvlne. Tut"S.-Sat. 9 30 "llLSACDa IWllS" at the ~m 17. 979.551 t.
JQOBT LIGHT ap~ra at care p.m ·1:30 a.m. 857-2103. Theater. 12852 Main St .• Gardrn "llT 918Tlta SILS&Jlf" at the
Laguna 9 p m.-closlng. 858 So. Coa t GOPll&R 8a0D, a l'OC'kln' dance Grove. Wtdnc9days thl"OU$[h Salur· Costa M CIVI<" Playhou . 661
UWJ •• l..a.c[una Bnlch. 497·5.404. band, emph&slz'11 <'Ufftnt dance ma-days at a. Sunday. at 7:30: through Hamilton St .. Cotta Meaa. nnal per·
909 aaawsa, OJ. pcrlorm from ter\al whUc recreating popular aongs, Oct. 2ft. 636·7213, rorman<-H tonight and Saturday at
9·12:30 at the Meadowlark Cnuntry Tues.·Sat .. 9 p.m. at Arthur's. 13444 "BOJTOLA" at the Crand Dinner 8:30. 650-5269.
Club In Huntington Beach. 83 ad• Newport Ave .. Tu tin. Theater. 7 Frttdman Way, Anahrlm. "ft'UD& wtTll VIOLIN" at the
mlsslOn. Also. danC'C lesaons from 7·8 TD 8A1Q[ appttra Wcd.·Sat., 9 ntahlly cx~pt Mondays at varying Cypreu CIVI<' Thnter. 5700 Ora~e p.m 846-3391. p.m.·2 a.m .. at Goodie.. l&U Plac~n · curtain llmca through Oct. 28. Ave .. Cyprn . Fridayaand Saturdays
8T&PllA1fm ATU • rar&JlfDS lla Ave .. Fullerton.'524·7071. 772·7710. & 8 pm thmup;h Nov, 3. 527·1949
and the aada Prtoe T:rto perform TD KITU appear Tuca.-Sat. 9 "8UTTSIU'U&8 AU Plllt" by ••oN 90-0W&D TOR" at the
Thura .. Sun evenings. Ron'• In p.m.-1:30p.m .. lvyllou~.384fo·orest the No Baat-Playen at the Anaheim Laguna Moulton Pl yhouw, 606
laguna, 1464 s eoa t tU,ghway. 1'.vc. • t..e«una Beach. Cultural Arts Ct>ntcl"., 931 N. Harbor Laguna Canyon Road. Laituna &-ar.h, ~ma Ucach. 497-4A71. · llAB8T"O appears from 9 Hlvd., Anaheim. clo. Ing per-Tue.days through Saturdays at 8. llD.LLYllOOlllt•ftJOpcrfonn p.m.-1:30 a.m .. Crown Point. 24399 formanrca tonight and Saturday at Sunday at 2:30 unltl Oct. 21. .-u vocal• Frt.•Sat. 830p.m.·12:30 Dana Dr1vc. Dana Potnt. 7 ·30. 534·769t. 494-0743.
a.m, Noel's Seafood, 16281 Pacific LAJIK:& SAJ.LIJIJG performa easy ••CAUCASIAN CHALK ClllCL&" .. 8Alln .JOAW' t South Cuut
Coast Hlthway. Sunact Ocarh. In· llstenlng mualc tndtOnllcly at Rt· In the Oranj{e Coa t Colleg~ Orama Rcpe'rtO'}'. 655 Town Ccnler Dnw.
drilnltc.j2131592·205t. ubcn'sMoonraker.18542MacArthur Lab, eo.ta t.lesa. tonight and Satur· Coeta Mesa. do~Mng perfonnanC'es
CAI'& LIDO, t.tdo Jan All· tars Blvd .. lrvtne. Tues.·Sat. 9 pm -1:30 daX· Oct. 18·20 at 8 p.m .. 432-5527. tonight and saturday at 8. Sunda\' at
\';;
rform Thurs.·Sun. from 9/..m to a.m 'TD FARTA8TIClla" ~t the 7:30 and wttkend mallnttS at 2:30,
30 "900 rt Bl N llATUIOU BOUY reaturn con· Buena P'ark Civic Theorer. 7631 957.4033, • a.m .. "' cwpo v ·• t":W· t I I h Phll nd J pore Death. emporary mus cw t a ante Mclroee Ave •• Oucna Park. F1'td..) "SUOAlt" at t~ San Clfomcntf' LUCZDd&a ~rfonnsjaUptano Shanefrom9pm.-1;30 .m.andErfc andSaturdayaat8through ov.10. Community Thut~r. :202 Ave.
Tues • t. from 8 ~ m .· l a m Nkport Law~nce from 5: 15·8 :45 P m. 2331 523 0351. Cabrtllo. n Clemente. c~ng prr·
17 1615 .,. 17t cu •-nt A Mulrlandj.EJToro. '"TD PAaMSR'8 DAUGBT&Jl" fo-.. n--~on htandSatu_..-.,..at•
• 1"4• "'" --a na ........ -y • o--ca• ... _ ''"" " .... -"' lnddlnlk. 647·9M t. .,..,. -· --.. nr• at the Huntington Beach Playhouet.. ·pm .. 492 nm ... Cl.SALL QUUfTST POU.A. Tunl"S.h 9 P m.· h30 a .m.. Main at Yorktown, Huntincton Bcac:H. "TOPOQU.8" on the Semnd 5t&g!P
p11 ys rrom 9 pm. lndeflnttcJy :at Crown Houae. 32802 PacU1c OOUt clo61ng perfonnanc-es tonight •nd ol South Oout ReP"rtory, 655 Town ~tinriy'a,. 22....1\0 E. J7Lh St.. nta ·Highway, ~una N~I. Saturdays al 8.30. 832-1405": Center Drtve, Costa M , nlghlly A lt30-6658 / "PmTlllU18SOt'TllSllALl,.'at uc~pUlondapat8 30,SundavsatR, n '.!_..... __ .,._.____ Dance the'l"'lneCommunltyThcat~r. Turtle Wttkmd matlntd at 3 throuAt\ Oct.
Pop TDTALLCLUBofOnin-Coun• Rock OOmmu ntty Park. Sunnyhlll 21.957-4033.
:::-...-.......... .._~ --~-·------·-&~ Road Olf Turtle Rock Drive, Irvine. TU POIJllT&Jt ... naa att fca· ty. • eoclal dub for call men and F"rldaysandS.turdayaat8,0ct 2 1 at
tl•r•d '"t thr. lrvlnt: M•adow• women.haet.eaecmt-forrnal•~•t "1="'-127 • ... '" .... Fountain Vala-. Community Center, "'·.. ~ ·.....;..•••-"In ... _ "';=tre. 740·2000 ... , ...... ·--·-u"" " B prat"n ts Top 40 music 10200SL9ter Ave .. Fountalu Val~y. 9 AC'tora Playbo•. Qoldcn Wctl Col]cgt,
Tues -&t rmm 9 p. m.• l :30 a m. at p m. 542• 12 l l. In Huntlnaton Beach. t'loal"« per·
the Reuhln E. t~e. I :!J l It. Coast tttrY.. Theater form11n~lon111,ht and Saturda1 at 8, NeWport Detich. Through Oct. 20. The Sunday at 3. 895·8378.
Reuben E. l..tt ~lebrate• their 2oth .. AJinlll11'0 GOSa" at the Cur• ··.-T0 at Scbaet .. n'• Wcat
annlvenary with nlllhtly drawlnp for lain (:all Dinner !fheater, 880 El Dinner Playhouse. 140 Ave. Pt~. San
peclal prtzee aruf' a grand pr1~c Camino Real, Tu.tin. nflhttY e.xttpt Clanlftt:. Thunda)'11 lhrouf!,h Satur·
dnwtnlon Halloween. Through Nov. Monda~t varytnt c:urtafn umee dllye M e. Sund&ya al l and 7,
3 87&·5790. th Oct. 28. 83tf:l540. 412·8850 analfA U8TOll performs at the ". " at th• Newport ' ' • 0 VS 0 Ya a , II a 9 • UnJvcraal Amphlthcat~. Untvcraal Theater Am tcr, 2501 CllfT Drive, ll.ADllAll'' at the Harkquln Otn-~~~~;.;.;,;;.;..;.;.;;.;..;...,.:..;.....:.-.....,;.~~------~~c...;..;.;~
''• .. alCAR QVIL1'8, T.a" e\JID WOW" .. thir ltGplc (Jf' a IC'ClUl'T •
11ven by CNttoctc Ru~dn. -11-
lloowa art ba.tor1&A and writer, al the
1..-auna Beach MUMK":m of Art. ~rt
1t "7:30 pm .. kdure at 8 pm &4
mtm~n. 8&.60 non-mmlbn'!I 307
CJlff Or •• (4.tna Otach, 494 ~, 1.
ru..
-..-_ .. -------
examines the c:omlng of •Of a you
Cu'ich ~ durtns Workf War u. u
lrvtne Sodal SdenCe Lectu~ H~U. '1
CAa"'G CORIUCTION•. for
friendships and romantic rcla·
Oonthlpe, hoet• a tet·acqualntcd
party at R pm. 810 fndudet WI~.
rtfrUhmmta and pro(esA>natly led
tf:l-acquatntcd adtvltk& 32 Sand· tone. 1trvtne. Aae525•55. 545-0840
IOUTDU 1rmL or FIUSJllD-
SllJP. for Single$ ewtt 45. mttts for
Happy Hour at the Velvc'1 Tunle tn El
Toro. 5·7 p.m. 768-4130. wa:ea. or nustn>RDP. alao i r ~lnlle over 45, meets at
McCOna.hay',s Okt PIKc 1n Anahetm at
5:30 p.m. 828·5215.
Etc.
"OIETOll&UDT" a. cdcbrattd at
Old World. a llltk town In the I~ of
Bavarta. A b,... band dlrcc:t from
Cttman) pcrfonna Wcd • .SUn. Alao
ft"&turtd arc folk dance l(roUps and
bttr drinking contests 7561 Center
Ave.. Huntlrlglon Beach Thro\Jgh
Nov~ 25. 897·f470.
A lllOl'OltCTCL& 8W AP MSST I
hekt from ~MO p"m., Ora~ County
F'atnvounds. J 00 Fair Orf\'c. Costa
Mct1a. fM adults. undf'r 12 free.
495-2542.
Sat.
~ wmnnsa. nuusc.
performs In a rtttlal W'llh lttll n
tnclud10$( "Sonata In~ minor for Flute
nd Conttnoo" b) G.F. tiandcl. '"In·
troductlOn and Variations. Op 160'"
bv Franz St'.hubrft. and ··0uo Sonata 1n c minor for Flutt~ nd VIOia" b) •
Francot Drrknnc. The prqvam ron·
clucks wtth "'Quartet In D MaJOt. K.
285 .. by Mozart and pcrforlncd b)
Wh1tmyttand UC Irvine music: racull)
m~mbn' Amokl Juda~no. n Ormbow. vlolln. Pde-r rd Viola,
and Stephen EnJody. cello ti p m ~ UCI
Fine Arts Conu·rt HaU M g<"neml
dm on 856-6617.
Tll& ALL·AllBRICA1' 801'8 caoaus perform at 8 p.m. al Oran~ Coest Collqlc' Robt-rt 0
Moo~ Thcalrf'. 2701 f'aJrvlcw R d,
Cost~MC"Sa. $5advance dull . S6 t
the d<lc»'. 432·5880
O&N'S 11.ACL !itt f'riday II Ung
LTIQt BA.mLL, f."rlda .;\ •
Ing
COGDtrJ
• Plot Weekender/ Friday. October 12, 1984
Calendar
&eOL • TD GA1'1G p«:Tfonn~ IDSSJJ'fOPERSONSappean11tvcat atcnr.Tal admt ton. 813 day ol show. tonight at 8 pm. at the Grttk the Cal Slate Fullerton gymna tum 773-3501.
Amphllhc•lll'J'. S16 50. Sl5and S l O. with Ba~~asthc!J:.nlngact. 8 GOPllltll DOD, eee F~y ltst·
6=3=4=·:::1300===========ir=P=·=m=. =$6===a=U=F==' =="=ls=,=8=9::::.:::25===\~,,AYID DWT0111 appea"' ~iUl. "AHtliiiHO ooa•• at the Cur·
EVERY
SUNDAY!I
a a.m.-3p.m.
ORANG!
COAST
COLLEGE
ti:. occ •
'MLLlll S f"f~
SPACES $10 • 432-5880 S.WllUf '~_.II Illa•,, .......
BARGAINS GALORE"
FREE CUITOllEA ADMISSION
I PARKINGll
NONPl.AYNa
~ta~ tar i..T.,.a\J~at tan Oinncr ea c-r. y
t Pa c Amphitheatre. 8 p.m., 100 11~.18°•·._.,11.. at the Newport Fa.tr Or •• Coeta Mesa. $20 and 810. A "" 634· 1300. ThNtcr Art• Ci'nlcr. ~ Frtday 11111·
MAVIOLA. &ee Friday Uattng t~·aiu.cm BVll9" 1 the Q(m SOCIAL DISTORnOll appeara alonJ( w!lh upport artists Ta ud rhealcr. See Friday llaung.
R~rtOT')'. Stt Friday 11.itng.
''SOGA.a" at the 5an Ctcmt'nle
Community Theater. 5t'e F'rtday II t·
IN(.. "'"' • .. TOP OllUAI" on the Sttond St e
o( South Coast R~r1ory. Stt Frtday
II ting. TIMt~llotnt'• .. and fipelo Cllala "BOFPOl.A0 at the Grand Otnner
Sa. 8 pm .. Fender's International Th;:,rr,~ llaUng. LectlU9 • •• na•·· 111 Dallroom. 521 E. First St.. Lon.I( n.-. ., lkach 87.'° advance. 88 day of the Anaht'lm Cultural Art.a ~ntcr. "CJtSAnOlf &CIBftC&, PUBLIC
&how.(213)"'35·2838. -cJ.-~-~-Sc-c ffr1d~llstln&. ICBOOLS and The Ftrat Amt'nd·
8BS&llA ltASTOJf, ett Friday Usl· "CAUCA8IAJll CH.AL& ClaCL&" imnt." Kelly Sqtravc.. aultior and Ing. • al Ora'* Coast Col&qe. Stt Friday director ol the CrnUon·S<.~ Re·
JOI llAJIOllST • GRBQ CAP-llsttn.c. llHreh Center. 18 s~ker on tht
POLLA. ~ P'r1day 11 tin~. "TU F~TICS8" at the toptc. 7:30 p.m .• Vlllagt Bible Chureh.
TBS IUDS.~ Friday listing. Buena Park CMc 1lu~tcr. Stt Fr1day 1267 l Duaro St .. Garden Gl'Oft. Frtt
....... ••-F da 1 listing. admlaalon.. 552·3344 • • ...... ~-. lltt r1 y !sting. "TD FAJlMSa'• DAUOBTSa·· "CD89: 11IS WOllLD CllAlll-
LANClt SALLING, ece frtday ltst· at the Hunlln«ton Balch Playhou . PIOll8 and Thc:lr Gal'M$:· Thi.~-
lnflA Y8Boa& BOOSE, sec Friday See Fridat.!:'fng. . ture analyzes the hlslory of the World
ltstlnl(. "l'Oll U8Of"TD11.&LL" at Chea. Champion.hips. the pcreonal
111.AUTllO.Stt Friday 11 ung. the·Jrvtne eomnaunay "11leater. See Uva of the champton • and an ex.am· s~ Fr1day 11.Stln& Frida llstlng. lnatlonolth~rgames. J 1 a.m.·2 pm .. '01ltl.tt-1" ..... at""ihe~~-&ttlfM99'-Dance C&rdcn Grovf' Community Theater. EducaUon Bkfl[;, Rm. 1010, 2701
Stt Friday llstlft«; FaJrYkW Rd .. Co8ta M • 810 ftt.
TBS BALL.ST PACJnCA ~Its "llOllS OPTD 1111.A VS" at Gold· 432·5880 .
.. Ballet for Chlldrnl" sertes with• cm .. ~=~·,~!:._~.~nl~.un«. W-or-11--fte+e~..,....."--....-.,.---~-..=,......~ ··camtval Tutu." chottqtraphed by ~._... Ill -...
l>l<"k f''OC'd to m\lsfc· by Milhaud. The Olnnu Playh~. 5e'.e Frtday llstlng. ·~T J18llDIQ." Jotn the •tan
pl'OfV*m alao lncludea a new work ' ' II 0 V & 0 V & R, II a S. olt~ Onmgc County Martnt": hUUlute chort"Ofllaph~ by Cor1nne caJamaro llAAIUIAll" at th~ Harlequin Din· for a •·hour flAhlng tnp out or Dana
to music by S.tnt-Saens and ner Playhouse. Stt f'rklay ll&tlfl« Point Harl>Or. 10 a.m.·2 p.m. 817
Mu590rgsky rallcd "Ghosts and "llT 8IST&ll SIL&U" ar the adult. $13 <'hlldl'l't'l 10·12 years.
Gobllns." Sal. 3 :30 p.m .• Sun. l :30 Costa Mesa Civic Ptayhoose. Stt Sponaort.d by Goldrn West Collq(~.
nd 3 .30 p .m. Featlval Forum F'nday llsUnJt. 891·3991. ____________ __....._ ______________ -1 Thf'atrc. 650 Laguna Canyon Rd.. "'"1D& WITH VIOl..11'" at the "CAUSU 11' AaT." Thia paoel
Lafl.unJl Beach. 85 admlsaloo. Cypress Civic Theater. Sec Friday dlacuS&ton will focua on an pro·
loMIRADA (;l
NNUM )
ITJO U :I 17' fl( ...... (PS IJ)
HO H O 10!1'>
....... ,., IJO 4.-i 10
fl(
rMl.MlO.ltM £JPmDf {PG)
74) U \ llt\
A nDO'S SIOIT (l'C)
1110 ',.. •tt &t\ n o 11~
(11Jlll4 t.tal1C.. S..1•
OH MIO AT OU
Ill .... 111111 {l'G-IJ)
Ht'°. 110
fl( •tl.Ul (PS) a
111•11M1•i..• ... • l ........ .__
MtllM (PG)
I HO \ UIO IGJO
-(K) 1• HO IOllCi DM•~IJ)
I~ I t\
ruaos Cl>
•ICUTSUO I I 't H G I IO?t
MllllDOlS "'' .-..aim•
l lXI ·~ II~ If~
1tJQOS {I)
•laJTSTDO 11 t~ ~111 1 t'i IOH
.. _ (f'S.13)
I \40 IUI ..... "'' ''° 100
0~1i.2 (I)
IH\ 74\ U \ 60 14\ llf\
* CIFIC ORIVE·IN THEATRES•
NrUUM (I)
ORANGE ~
fUOOS (I) .... cuss••• (a)
0141 U4 Qel/Oo .... ..... ,.,,. ...... u
• • IWH •At. MEETS btry SAT. I S..-V • •
·.• " 11Y f • • 1,11,..1• q' 1't 6J4 •1~9
~JOl2(1) "• . llfO~(I). .
ti I». (PC) ....
mCOllCUAI DIJHICllC£S "''
MISSION .· ..
"SO YOU'RE SICK OF HOLLYWOOD
MOVIU-. ta0 ru lr1enda. ru kid&.
1r1 ttUll glld. that fumy. that nxy. tha1 ~ lnll
ya, bludllng." Atter 51.0. SAN f'AANCISCO CHAOH1ClC
~· . '**** "GET READY FOR :;~. THE MOST ORHHNAL MOVIE II YEAlll ":-~'fl1r .) Wilham Woll GANNETT NEW$P~
·~-~ ::7-:, ~ '1'HE YEAR'S WACKIEST MOVIE!... :.r/~ Alctlatd F~ NE.WHOt.1$E NEWSPAPC~
A l'W(NflElH CENTlMY f'OX ~l..EASf!
JAMIE UYS ... "THE GOOS MUST BE CAAZY· a CAT FILMS PROOUCTION
-· MARIUS WEYERS SANORA PRINSl.00 .-.dXNJ THE BUSHMAN i.-llJlll :.: .: !30fl TAOSKIE ·-:.JOHNNY OOSHOfF -.:-:'-.. JAMIE UYS
E:m ·-· ... '" .............. ..
AV. UO, IOO. tO 10
SAT.ISUN. t: 15, :uo, 5 45. 1:00, 10:. tO
t''~ft !r rj <, TOWN ' ~NT~ P
' .... -'751 -4184 --
! H~ PORT THf A TRf
• ' I ~·/bl
... ~ ... ' ..... , ••• JI
I .
Calendar
CBOCOLAD UTllAVAGARZA
'84 features chO<'Olatlere and ronftc·
tlonera who offer displays. exhibits
-=-"=~==-=~y.;lj!.D=::,;..,;......;,..;;;,.;..n..,,;;o.,.~;...;...--llL!..'n~d~mples of ucts. 11 a m.-6 a.m.-noon. r eti pm.. 6tineylin x n
Arts Bldg .• Rm. 222. 15744 Iden Hall. 1150 w. Cemto.. Anahetm. 87
West St • Huntlniton Beach. Free admission. 541·9878.
admfsslon. 891·3~1 . A p ABaIC P Ara ·ls fcaturt'd by
"CALLIOllAPHIC TOOLS: Vester· Orange Coast Collc&e today from 8 : 15 day, Today and TomorTOw." Produ~ •a.m.-4 p.m . .SIO admtaslon. Flbt'ra.
new crtallons by expertmenttng with fabrta. fashions and furnishings att
a variety or calllgraphlc tools 9:30 fnturul. Chemt.atry Quad. 2701 fair·
a.m.·4:30 p.m .. COiden W~t College view Road. ca.ta Mesa. •32-5880.
Fine Arts 81da .. Rm. 207. 157« DAVID ran, polltlcal·aoclaJ Im·
Golden Weal sr .. Huntington Beach. presstonllt, performs lmpt!nonallons
828 fee. 891-3991. or such c lectton·year ravor1tea .. "~ Y'Olt J'RB PA.II-Ronald Reagan and Walter Mondale, ILT. 1\n Introduction to the funda· as well u well known entertainers
mental of computing ustng an and actors. 8 p.m .. Wllshlre
"Apple" computer for family use. Auditorium, 330 N ~mon St .. Full·
Saturday through Oct 27. 2·•t m. erton. 88.50. 779·8591. One partnl and one child, ages 13.
only. 8 17 per family member. Golden
Wnt College Humanities Bldg • Rm.
206/208. 15744. Golden West St .
Huntington Beach 891-399.l. Sun ..
P'llma Claulcal
.. llAID&U OP nm tA>8T -....... ~-TlD -All-AM&RICAl'f Y8
sec Friday llstln". CHORUS performs at 7 p.m. at St.
''CONC&IVSD 11' LIB&aT'f." A John's Lutheran Church. 154 S.
definitive mm on the pro-llfc cause. Shaffer. Orange. f'ree admlaslon. Top pro-life and pro-choice leaden teU 997 ·841 1. ... -
rng.
TD PlllLAD&LPBIA 8TIUNO
QUARTST •ppt!an In concert with
setccttona lncludl~ "'Strtng Quartet
~llot WeeM.flnd«/ Fr~. OctOber 12, 196' a
Qraham. Huntington Dca~h.
848·3391. osoaoa 80TT8 appr.&r'\I Sun.•
Mon. from 9 p.m.·1:30a m.at Ci'own
n • . . . •• . •
BTSPllAJllllt ATU • '1ll&llD8
and the Ratla Price Trio. att F'r1day
lfaUng.
Haydn. "Strtng Quartet No ... 701 Falrvtew Road, Co.ta Meaa. 84
Bartok and the "String Quartet In advance. 85 at the door. 432·5527-
Mtnor. Opus 10" by ~bussy. 86 RICB.ilD CROZ'S FulJC"rtownr
cteneral admlsalon. 3 p,m. Sa.ddleback Strutte-ra apix-ar from 2 ·6 p .m.
Colltge Mt'Klnney Thrattt. 28000 Mradowlark Country Club, 16782
llA08 llArf1MOflf AJID nm
IUITTBll MCTIO"· afternoons. Old Marguerite Pkwy.. Ml ton Viejo ______ __...__ ________ _.;.. _________ _
831-4656.
Country
TJm SOUTH COAST TJtJO J>t!r·
Coons folk mu .. tc from 8 p m.-mtd-
n!iht every Sunday. captstrano
Depot. 26701 Verdugo, 5an Juan
capt4'lrano 831-0232 .•
BAJQl WILi.LUiS Ja. appears at
the UnlversaJ Amphlthnter In Uni·
vcraaJ City. $15 and 8 1350. (213)
980-9421.
CRAZYBORS& featurta a Country
Jambortt and BBQ Buffet from 2-5
p m. with 3 country bands. 1580
Brookhollow. Santa Ana. 549-1512.
uz
OllAJllG& COA&T COLLEG£ ho ts
four btg bands with mon: than l 00
muslt'lan total performing. VocalbJt
Annt' You nit Is reaturt'd alonit with slx
0 ../ _J
ut of ~here came This inacdiblc story b.
a scrawny colt no one now bccDrne an inspiring
wanted. Then came the film about which Garv
victories and speed that Franklin of CSS..1V Los
made a nation cheer. Angeles says uE.iccellent.
--When he couldn't kVOf~-1chea«L!.'1~ Maslin-
bccame a champion and of the New York Tunes
when he couldn't be calls Phar lap "a
bought he became a target. four-legged Rodcy." you themselves what they an: dotng. LYJnll RARULL. see frtday llat· 7:30 p.m .. Central Baptl11t Temple._....::....;:....:......; _____ _;_ ___ ~-----------------'
7661 Warner Ave.. Hunttn«iton
Beach. Fn:e admission. 962·426tT.
sm,tea
WBE&L OP P'RIEJlfD8JllP, for
singles ovrr 45 meet• at All Io's "In
Costa Mesa for dinner at 7 p.m.
828-5215.
Etc.
OKTOB.&UUT, sec Yr1day ltst·
In" A VW fPOJl8CD SW APllEET ls
held from 6 · I 0 p m at tht' Orangt
. County Fairgrounds. 100 fair Drive.
Costa Mesa -S4 adult ... undrr 12 free.
495-3672
An Al's Garage favorite from Boston Traders ...
100'9 cotton crewneck sweo~ that ore rugged and functional.
just what VoJ wont to go wtlh vour jeonrond octiYeweot
&~~~
56 FASHION ISLAND · NEVJPORT BEACH· (714) 644-5070
His name means Ligia.Ming.
JOHN SEXTON PR ESF.NTS
111 A1t.: .. 1GM1t Wull Mil HAEL EOOLEY l~RNATION"l
"PHAR LAP"
\wm11i TOM 8URLIN'-ON·MARTIN VAVGHAN·)L'DY MORRIS
l ELIA DE BL RGH .,,.J RON LEIRMAN., OAVE OAVlS
C '""""'"'O('"""' RL <;SELL BOYO A CS \.fou1 BRL'( I: RO\t'LAND
\.Tft'Tll>lo• [)A\ 10 WILLIAMSO~ rwiJi,.:.,. .!PH?>i SEXTl)N
Dnc\roo ..,IMON \t'INC f:R Rt'INW'<I Tll·°"'" TWE!'ITIEni Cf.!'1.'TI RY k )\
PG-•·,~~<> ·--····~ ........ .
IOI
SIOWIK!
llU ~021
UA Mov\M4 ......... ..., .. 0.-,..,
..... 9S2-4993
UA MO..-•
111\N..-..~ ....
£l T• SI 1-5880
EdWWds Saddi.t>eclt
Dta..M .. ._.. ...
'• t llllNIT lllCI 67J..t350
Edwards Lido
~ .... Viii liCJO
.._TM IUCI 848-0388
Edllwards Huntington 8Ndl ..... _...,,Ola
--... 495-6220 Edwards MiaM>n Viejo Mall
8 0 hior ID C.-V...,
llAIC( 637--03.o
Al.IC Orwige Mal
T-Sodl~
-634-3911
UA City C«lt•
lnl!leQtr ....... C-
Ulta•~744'
EctwwO. Bti9tol
•lllOI el MMN""" '
~TO at3--0548
UA Wealminster M .. aan o...,. ~ .. ....,. r ...
. -
• PUot Weekender/ Friday, October 12, 19tM
Calendar . .
Dana Point Cafe. 24720 Del Prado. perform from 4 to 8 p.m. and 9 to 11 GOOD8111P'FappearsSun.-Mon. 9
Dana Point. 661 ·6003. p.m .. 2900 Newport Blvd .. Nt'Wpor1 p.m.· L 30 a .m at Crown Houx.
STUDIO CAPlt featuru an after-Beach. 32802 Paclflc Coast Highway. Laguna
noon JaU SHSlon. l OO Main St.. NI uel. ..
------BalbM, 670-'1~-------._,==-------------'81HEBl'h\-ltA&'f'GR appcaia at 8
CA.Pit LIDO, Lido Jazz All -stars • p m al the Pactnc Amphithea tre, 100 Fatr Drtve, Costa Mesa. 8 13.50 and
88 50. 634-1300.
THE ;\O. 1 \10\'IE I ~ . .\:\IERICA !
\ \lllllt'lll hllt'\ ,I ll'oK ht•t.
I ht "he .. 1 I"' c hu lugN ){•I(" lll·r-..c:I L..
GOODIBS featu~ Showcase Con-
c:-erts with o:rtglnaJ bands1 6:30-9 p.m.
Abo from 8 p.m.-2 a.m. "Hit Video Countdown"wtth KKHR radtostallon
1641 Placentia Ave.. Fullerton.
524-7071.
DA.llVJ performs Sun.-Mon. 9
p.m • l ·30 a.m. nt Ivy House. 384 Jl'o~t Ave., La£una B(ach _
BATSBOUBOUSE presents First
Class from 9&m.·l :30 a.m .. and for brunch The xlc Land Trto appear
rrom 10:30 a.m -2:30 p.m. 2331
Mulrlands. El Toro
Theater
..
"AlfYIBINO GOU" at the Cur·
taln Call Olnncr Th~ater. See Friday
Hating.
"8UACDa BOll8" at the Gem n1eatet. See ,rtday "BOYTOLA" at the Grand Dinner
Thnter. See Frtday II Uni(. •
"IU811ST'" at Sebasflan'• West Dinner Playhou"Se. 5tt Fr1day llaung. ·•11ovs ovsa . 11as.
1111.ARDAJ111' at the Harlequin Din·
nerPlayhou~. See Friday llstlng.
"0Jlf BO-OW&D 1'11m" at the
Laguna Moulto'n Playhouse. See Fri·
dav llsUng.
"SAIJlfT JOAlf" at South Coast
Repertory. See Frtday llsUng.
''TOP (HllLS" on the SecC>nd Stage
of South Coast Repertory. See Friday
llstlng.
Lecturea
"Blt8T OF EDllIU" Is shown u
part of a David Niven fllm tertes. 3
p.m , Golden West Collegf' Commun!·
ty Theater. 15744 Golden Weat St.,
Huntington Beach 82 cneral d·
mJssk>n . 895-8378.
WDSL OW P'llm!fD9BIP, for
slnltlN over 45. meet• at Casa
Vallarta In Brea at 11 :30 a.m. for
brunch. 828-52 l 5.
TBSTALLCLVBofOranJtcCounty reatures aoclal volleyball at l :30 p.m.
at Shiffer Park In Costa Mcaa. For tall
men a nd women. 542-J 21 J. 1
BIJllGLltT AlllAftS' Dl9COVBRT
GROUP meets for dl9Cu.sslon and ~lal. 7:30 p.m .. Unitarian Chun:h.
1259 Vldorla St .. Costa Mesa. 8 admission. 962·8596
Etc.
OK'IOBltJlFUT. 1ee Friday II t·
lfllt.
"TD WORLD O~ MIKO." A
cla~lcal mime performance by
Brontalaw Machalskl. winner of sev-
eral p~ awards. Is featu~. 3
1):m .. UC lrv1ne-RM-Art--.v~I
Theatre. 87 general admt slon.
856-6617. .
CHOCOLATE UTRAVAOMZA
'M , Stt Saturday llstlng.
Mon.
c1 ... lcal
DAJlfJEL POLLACK. 1ntemat1onal-ly renowned concert pianist who
I ht· '1111\llllllt' lt·.ic hc:1 ".11 t·111li<'fl h111.1l1<.
\11<1 \I lllhllh f.:1 oKlll.11(' \\ h1 I C ,m I lt',1<1111 \\I Ill'
It' \loml,n 1~1111: .11 fl l'I. lf1i.:h '~N AMERICAN MASTERPIECE,
THE MOVIE TO BEAT FOR THE
ACADEMY AWARD:'
.... ,,.. .......
w \\II" II Wt,...._
"-\lltM I HtUU ••
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----------NOWPlA~NG ----------
suENA PARK * HUNTINGTON BEACH *MISSION VIE.JO *WESTMINSTER
UA McNtes Edwlt'ds Huntington Edwards V-,0 ~ E.owardS CtnlfN Wat
952-4993 ~0388 495~ 891 3935
*PD *IRVINE OiWia£ WESfMINS'TO UA Moll* Edwards Unl\lenlty P~dflc"s Orange Pacrftc s
99()..4()22 ~11 DnYe·ln 634 9361 H1·Way 39 DrM In * mstl MESA *LAGUNA HIU.S OMii(ii 891 3693
EdwWds Bnstol Edwwds/Sanborn Onedome 834·2553
540-7444 Laguna Hiiis Miii 768-661 1 * OOSTA MESA • * PRE.SEHTED .. ......, O......,~==-
EdWal'dl ClnefN Center 979 4141 N6 'AS5CS AaVTEO l'Oll n.cs Dl10llGOEfT
•
"A magnificent motion-picture
that achieves true greatness.
The movie makes you feel
P.Q>Ud to be an American. The
actors are all perfect ... but
no praise can be high enough
for Sally field. You leave
uplifted and thrilled to be
aJive." -Rtx Reed
"This movie will find its place
in many a heat\ this season .
Best of all is the climax."
-iidwd Scbdd.
T1M£ MAGA7JN£
"Superb. 'Places In The Heart'
gets a 10 (highest rating)."
-Cary franklin. KCBS·TV
-Pat Collins. CBS TELEVISION
.. A classic. A fi ne, enduring.
deeply American film. It ends
with a startlingly beautiful
scene, a true commu nion of
spirit, with a hint that
reconciliation binds us aJI."
-Sheila Benson. LOS ANG~ TIMtti
"A beautifully controlled
dream that fills reality with
sweetness. The ending of this
full-hearted movie is like
a breath of pure afr."
-Jn Kioll. EWSWEEK
"One of the finest films in
y~ about growing up
American."
-Vll'ICtnt Canby.NY Tl~[S
__ SALIX FIEW--
PLACES IN THE HEART
IM.A
MAM BrN Pl&iJ
529-5339
IUOA'MI UA Movies 952-4981
COSTA MESA E~rds Hllbof TWiii 6.11 3SOI
COITAlllUA
EOw1tOt South Cotsl
Plau 5427n
Calendar
performed as honored t10lotst ~ntly
before the U.S. Concrt-at the Truman Centennial, critiques the
work of four local talented tano
focusing on tee nlque and style. I ci
a.m.-1 p.m., Sherman Clay. South
Coast PTaza. 810 dulls, 84 students.
545-0415.
.~~~~~~~~~
COUDtry
CllAZTBOJlSE fNtures a Monday
Night Football Party with 3 etant
screen TV's, rame prtzee, pop com.
and hot dogl. 5 p m. -1 :30 a .m. 1580
Brookhollow. Santa Ana. 549-1512
Jass ----KUllT VOLOJI&, att Saturday llat-
lng
GEORG& BUTTS. att Sunday It t·
Ing. CAP'& LIDO, Wayne Wayne on eax.
Dave Roblnton on piano and Tr9cy
Longstreth on drums perfonn from 9
p.m. to l:30a.m .. 2900Newport Blvd ..
Newport Bench.
Pop
ooooaron, see Sunday tLaung
00001&8 featutts new music
nights with celebrity OJ'a 1641
Ptacentla Ave .. Fullerton. 524-7071
DilVl. ICC Sunday II tlnf(
BAY8Jl0ll HOOS& featurea Flrst
Class from 9 p.m.·1.30 a.m .. 2331
Mulrtands, El Toro
Dance
for dancing from 8: p.m.-mtdnlght.
Clo9e Encounters. 21022 Brookhun;t.
Hontlngton Beach. Indefinite.
968-9800.
Tues.
Cluelcal
DAVID UUISLD ,and NANCY
8JUCAJU>, a duo-piano team. are
showcaacd In a recital at 8 p.m. The
program Includes Mozart's "Sonata In
D. K. 448," "Saint-Sams· Vartattons
on a Theme" by Bttthovcn. rlus
Rachmaninoff's "Suite No. 2. op. 1:·
Cal Slate FuJ~rton Recital Hall. S4 ~ncral admJsslon. 773-337 l
osn llAC&. see Frtday usun~.
TBS 8&Q1JOIA STan.o pafonns in concert at CaJ
talc Long Beach. The protram In·
eludes Mozart's~· artct fn G. K. 387," Bartok'a " rtct •6." and
Beethoven's "Qu ct 1n e . Op. 59. No.
2.'' 8 p.m., University Music Center
Reena.I Hall. $5 generaJ adml Ion.
(2 I 3) 498·5526. •
Country
TlmGE .. YllA%&BAJllDappean
from 8:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m. during Talent Conteat night. Cash prtzes
awarded. Crat Hor 1580
Jua -LU CZDIBZR, att Friday llsUng.
CMS LAGO'JlfA hosta a Tunday
Nl«ht TaJent Search, 9 p m.·t'lostng.
85& So. Coast ttwy , Laguna Beacfi.
497.5404,
TIU CHIZ llAllRJS TlllO perfonna
from 9 p.m . to 1:30 am . Cafe Lido.
2900 Newport Blvd .. Newport BcAch.
.&D J.ZACB app.cau Crom 8:30-11 :30 p.m. at the Meadowlark
Country Club In Huntington Beac:h
84 adml Ion. 846-339 l .
Pop
JUSTIJ'f TUSK pcrfonns Top 40
mu&lc Tues.-Sal. from 9 p.m.· l :30
a.m. Reuben's, 1513 N. Tustin Ave ..
Santa Ana. Throu&h Ott. 31.
547-6281, LA!fe£ 8ALLIJllO, se-e Friday ll~-
1°b llABOOY a GREG CAP·
POLLA, 9tt Friday II. Ung llAVJOLA. see Friday listing
OOODDt8, att Monday llattng.
GOPD• aaou. 9et' Frtday list·
Ing. ITarTCH, Stt Fl1day listing
1111t IUTES, 1tt F'rlday listing
ALL SEATS $2.00 AT
,,,.
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fft61'.I• IOJCI
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'• ~-· uo "'°
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'
Piiot WMkendef / Friday, October 12. 1984
WALK-INS * ~~J;,::_ ~ *
::1
1
::. ~f flE(Jfl[)( GANE
DRtVE-INS =~~
1 .,
,.,., ... ~ r• ROOM !l!'!!!U n----.,.._-...
HowaN L "•"'"• "· .....,.......,...y .. l AT U t:IO J:40 4 : 0 7100 .. t ill
Sally ......
~ .. TMS NRAaT IN» 1a111 Z1JO 4:41 '71fO & t 1JO
"'"Nolte la TSM:ltSID Ill') '100 J :10 1 •20 ,,,. • t 140
St.,,• Mart111 ALLOF ..... 1
IHOWI AT U:OO .f:OO 4 tff t 1001:00 10:00 . ·::.=~~ . ~ATU•llrn 1 100 71H t 110/ 70MM
e:::ri~V"~. I =:·-==--~ KAaATa ...... SHOWS AT t i.. SHOWS AT 1 :10 -~-Co·HU 7 141 6 t :IO 1;00 6 10:10 Gnfllllu• (N)
OIUYE llS O.-l:U WW..Sll Jl .... f~ U.., 1Z FflU u .. ._.
.. ONE OF THE BESf FILMS OF THE YEAR.
A MUSf .. SEE. Shelley Long is a likely
C>scar conten~ -~~ r--r.....,
·~An important comedy. Recalls last year's·.-
Oscar-winning 'Terms of Endearment~"
~'" ('Ju.-r.~ ...
"A triumph of imagination. One of the
funnier and more intelligent movies of
h " t e autumn season. tt.oa....u"-•r-
"A complete Jdighr .. :' -P .. c
THEIR IOYEAROl.J>
D\UGKTER 1 L-..C
nt EM fOlt Ol\'CW."l:.
nAN<r"oW »ti.UY LCNi Dl1W BAmttOl
:(K'Ullllll'fm.'t.~ A 1.A.\1\.\A PQl.\'1'0 Wt \AM.tj.D
~GAllfE.D Slwo. ST --t.~\I ~ flAWI. "'' --MKlMllm -.ua&~-~t.'NN."I -~M.-t"'t ~--~sm!Jl
-(lWlil~ ---:-0
.,.
'39.UJO COSTA eoA t19~141 LA ttMb (213) Hl-Oill
STO. DlllN COWARDS Cll com• rAS*IM
um1A11. It! at0t1....s QllCl& Mil-
IE ~ltSut LA_.. '23 1611
llMNN WA PWA SIO r.AtlWAY S
''"~ .... SA IWI' •1 ,, ..
.. ISUlll llSSDI.., *»'991
£0WMOS lJIMRSm ( DWAJIDS ,._., twit ,.. ... ,,.,..,., a
11\1¥ PAM 9S2 49tl .. m065~ CUil '34~3
I.IA MOYlS I · llMAIDS woooeulCl SY\JfY tm CCNT£11 · -·· 111111 ....:ACUl•Cd.1111 ...... ,. ...
.SIWGttl • C CM.MA WlSl • 191 lm
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.·
'
a Pilot Weekender/ Friday, October 12, 198~
'''GARBO TALKS' IS THE HEART STEALER OF THE YEAR...
An enchanting and off-beat love story, or more exactly, a story of anempttng the impos.sible
for someone you love ... Anne &ncroft is superb, Ron Silver matches her, and the grand
~~ --finale IS perfucrion. [X)NT-MISS 'GAB.BO I " ·
"('" -:... JuJnh Cmr WOR TV
~1 L v~
;
UNITED ARTISTS Pre\tnh AN ELLIOTT KASTNER PRODUCTION
"*** 1/2 * -A DELIGHTFUL ROMANTIC COMEDY ...
Anyone who has wept over a box of Kleenex at the local bijou will
b? enrapturl,J with this sweeti and goodhearted look at the
human comL<ly."
-R1ch:arJ Frtnlm.1n, NE\X.HOUSE NE\\.~rArER.,_
"A SMASHING PERFORMANCE BY
ANNE BANCROFr! ... ***'/2 *."
Clas.5y, otf-~<lt and sentimental story that's often very. funny.
Lan:y Gn1sin's sc.ript is smart and imnginativ~ ... Charmingly_
and slickly Jirectl'li by Sidney Lun1~t."
W1ll1Jm Woll GANNETT NE\\.':tPArER'-
"A DAZZLING TOUR-DE-FORCE PERFORMANCE
FROM ANNE BANCROFr!"
-l.A-onarJ Malrm. ENTERTAINMENT TONICllT
"ONE OF THE MOST DELIGHTFUL FILMS TO.
COME ALONG IN SOME TIME ...
It will ll'<l\'L' you \Vith a \\.'Ondertul fl'ding al'(Xtt lifl'.11
n,11._. L.slh. K~RC TV
"lJ<.) SEE 'GARB() TALKS: ..
l THC)UUI ~T IT
WAS TERRIFIC!"
l.1: Sn11rh NE\\. H>IU, DAIL) :-.JE\\.' '
c S~rrmic ANNE BANCROff · RON SILVER ·CARRIE FISHER ·CATHERINE HK.KS "GARBO TALKS" also \tarrin)( STEVEN HIU.
.inJ m mJtr of t1pptt1r.in1:r HOWARD DA SILVA DOROTHY LOUDON.· HARVEY FIERSTEIN · HERMIONE GINGOlD
Mu)tc. bv C\' COLEMAN Wrmrn ~ LA RR\ l·RL'SIN PmJuceJ h\i BURTI HARRIS t1nJ EU101T KASTNl:R
DwcttJ by SIDNEY LUM ET
EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT s T A R T s T o . D A y
Calendar
BA Y8801t& BOUR. t!1tt Friday
llslln«,. ,
11.AUTllO. ett fr1day II Ung
... *'A-,_...WIU!Y LA_. --MIMll E-.. C1!11N ~ -$43102
fflQnls ,__ v.,. flllC fdlan m 1500 •1 am
MIMNM CllTA•M
Plcd!c I e,eiia 1>1111 £-.. Soulfl
DIWtlll C:.. l"tl!J
111-4(171 S46 2711
_ ,_ --MoliieS 9l!i2 •1
.... -.... )[--~ c..-.
,j .. ~•11 .....
•a.---.u ~ 'l~UO-H45111111"
• Pilot Weekender/ Friday. October 12, 1984
20/20 ALE VIDEO•VISION s
SET YOUR SIGHTS
ON DUR 20/20 VICED VISION SALE
• SAYE $20.00 ON THE PURCHASE OF GREYSTOKE
• 2fOR1 -RENT GREYSTOKE GET 2nd TAPE FREE
• FREE MOVIE PASS WITH THE PURCHASE OF ANY
VIDEO TITLE WHILE SUPPLY LASTS
QGQQQOOOOOO~GQO~OO~OGQOOOOOOOOOGQQOO
e.J/JlllU
P-OFTN£
OST Aft
28"0FF ON THE PURCHASE OF AllY VIDEO TITLE IN STOCK
DURING 21/21 VIDEO VISION 21 DAY SALE l'HRU OCT. 2
NO ntlA TAE TtCKET R[QUIREO FOR T9'AIE£ TO VIOCO CUITEA
OPEN DAILY 11 A.JI. le UP a
•
I
I
l
-
j
/
11 Piiot Weekender/ Friday. October 12, 1984
Calendar
mission 846-3391. Ing.
TBE cmz llAll.R.IS TRJO, ~ 9TU'TCB. sec Friday listing.
Tuesday listing JOI llABOJf&Y a OREO CAP-
lllAR.K DMOLY appears 9 p.m.· POLLA. att Fnday listing.
Pop
llAVIOLA, see Friday listing,
JUSTIN TUSK. sce Tuesday listing.
LMCB SALLDro, Stt Friday llst-
11.AATR.O, sec Friday listing.
8AT8BOU BOUSE, Stt 'Prtday
listing
Theater
rnJt:
Tlllt BAl'Q(, ~~Friday II. ling.
GOPHER BROD, see Friday list·
WllTTtN IV: •
SOOME CHOOOWV
lYalCS IV:
~0 KUllCl MUSK IV:
WILLIAM H lOCKWOOO
DlllOIDIT1
llNEST SAUACJNO
WO RED
PREMIERE
A lo.ring 1920's musiul comedy ~
Jimmy Our.m~ in his ~· days.
7 FREEDMAN WAY, ANAHEIM (Across from 011n-v1and)
~--------------------------~ 8~C\( . 2FOR i
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
. I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
ei . the $ of : ll -:-~--I
Two Great Dinners for the Price of One!
Choice of ten fabulous entrees including
prime rib and fresh fish . ..
Seating on first come, first served basis
on 2 for 1 nights.
' Offer good on Wed~sdays. Thursdays and Fridays
5-7 P.M. thru 10-3 HJ4
I
I
I
----·· .... --------------------
"BO.FPOLA" at thr Grend Dinner
1·hratcr. Sec Friday llSUng.
"llOV& OVER. llR8 .
llARJDIAll .. at the Harlequin Otn-
.. OM BORROWED T .. at the
Laguna Moulton Playhouse. 5ee FrS-
daX ll$Ung-. ·
'TOP GDtLa" on lhc Second Stage or South Coast Reprrtory. See Frtday
listing.
stratCS!lst and author Or. Adclt'
Scht'ef<' offers SUJUteSUons to lmpro~
your probability Of sue~. UC lrvln"°
Science Lecture Hall. 8 .m. $5
BJLL llcOLMllAl'f. Whitt' Hou~
fellow. disc~ "Beyond War" at
noon. Santa Ana Colle«e. Room
C-W4. f"rt't' admission. 661'-3000.
.JOllJf 1lAJ.'l)Lf .. proprietor of Eng-.
land's Whlltlngtbnf Press. delivers a gu~t lrcture beforeithe Patrons of the
L1bra.cy al Cal State Fullerton. An
exhlbtllon of books produced by the
l)ubllshlng house and featunng th~
Illustrated with wood _engravings.
The Hilarious
Comedy Farce
"BEHIND THE SCENES"-
wtth
lrtHI Capo1er1
Restaurant Account Executive
Mu.ot E. LEa C1l1br .... Their..._~
The Reuben E Lee Aeecaurant end Showboat Wiii be celebrating tt*r 20th
.nnlversary dwJng the whole month of Octot.. 1"*11 wll be nlghtfy drftlnga
tor apeci8' prtzea end e graild prize drewlng on H.-Ow..,. OOn't mlsa the
HdowMn party with ··o.xter'' October 3C).NQwmber 3. The Rtuben E. L ....
located at 151 E.ut Coaat Highway, Newport 8fech. C811 675-5790. Happy
birthday Reuben E. Lee!
CAFE UDO PtHlnb tt.ppr .. Jul .. How
Just about all reat.uranta have a happy hour. true. bUt now you can enjoy e
"Jazz" happy hour at Cafe Udo, tMwpc>rt's Cannery VIiiega local jazz tPOt.
IJnWind your day wlth some downbeat ot upbeat Jazz piano tunes, aa well u
enjoying compllmentery hot and ootd hort d 'oeuvres prepered especlalty by
Chef Francis. On the piano bw ta Wwrtt11 Jaon from 4:30 to 7:30 p.m .. Monday
thru Friday. Cafe Udo 11 located on ~ Blvd. In Newport a..ch. Call
675-2908.
YIU.A NOVA P1w P8et9 C1l1breet1"
During • epec;!al week40ng celebratlOin. the VMla NOva RNtaurant In Newport
Beactl Wiii be ~, IOm8 WllfY ortglNI paeta dllflill to call attention to
National Puta w..-. October 15dl ttwough 19th. We're Just golf'G to let OUt
lm••tlona run a fft1te, ll1d CrMle IOm8 lnterMtlri(j and orlalriel apedata that we think ewt'YOM WIN k>W," Mid VIie Nova OWl'Mll' Jim Defe. Netlonal Puta
Week 11 IPOf'IOled by the Netlonel Peilj Aaeoctatlon and le Intended to mek.e ~mot• aware of "the van.ty the. PMta noodle llddl to the Amertean dining
table." In llddltlOn to the puta ~·the re.taurant le aleo ~Ing the
2nd Annual 8P11Qhetti Open Golf TOOfMment on October ~5th. The Spaghetti
Open Wiii begin et 11 a.m. on Mondaj M the eo.ta M... Golt and Country Club
and will end With a dinner at lhe VIie Nov.a Immediately folowlng the
Tournament. The entlfe Tournament It a beMftt tor the 0r"109 County Crippled
Chfldren'• Society. Al.o ~of thtweek~ MtMtlee, wtll be A Tut• Of ltely.
• t1w courM m.ei and wtne t1111ng ot the reg1e>n9 of Northern naiy. The evient i.
CO-tpOMOred by thil VIiia Nova Md Les Amit du Vin (Friends Of Wine), an
tnternationll toe1ety for Wine appreci9tlon. For further lnformttlon. contact VIia Nova at $42·7880. • • • • •
----~t-••-~
etchings. line block and llthog,aphy accompany thr pre$Cntauon.Unlv<'r
slly Center Thcatre ... 7:30 p.m. Mem
bcrahlps may be purthucd at the doo fo~J for students. $10 for otbf'rs
871-lTI .
Slnglea
8011'11DU Wll&BL OF JPlllEND
SRJP, for slngl~ over 45. meets to
supper at 6 p.m. CoOk Book Res
taurant. 17th and Yorba. Tusun
768-4T30'.
The combat scenes art particutarl)
well staged, wittl the bloody results o
warfare graphically <tcpicted. One
faux pas mars the otherwise effecttvt
costuming -the presence of a Spec. ~
patch (unknown at the time) or
Hunsakcr's unifonn ..
Three more perf ormanccs o· .. Home of the Brave" will be pres-
ented -tonight and Saturdaf at E
p.m. and Sunday at 3 p.m. -in the
Playbox Theater on the Golden W e11
campus. Call 895-8371 for tickc1
info~tion.
· Now Serving
COUNTRY STYLE
SllllY$199 IRUICH
Includes &JWK/Jf16
Well Drink or a.er
9:00 Al to l:H Pl
845-IOl1
1712 Placentla
Coate Mau
IUTIJUL
FOOD ••• NO
WEIGHTING. Sito' flt. hnltlw
the utvol Ul!fll lor
luch ortlJU~rl
OK'IOBltUEST, lee Fr1day llat-
lnll. TllB GBaaY BAZE BAPID, see llsttng. --'-Wednesday listing. BTIPllAl'fm ATZS It FJUlt~.-ilDllA.11 WORLD," Ice Capadea
new revue. opt>ns at the Forum In Jazz Inglewood for 18 ~rformancea · ..__ _________ _.
-and the Ratll Price Trio. see Frtday
-listing.
through Oct. 28. Two houn of llAllK D1'0LY, aee Wednesday
dynamic cho~raphy. dellJthtful llstlnj(.
productlon num~. dartna a£hlettc TOii llcLAIN, see Wednesday llst-
Pop
nm BAJQ[, see Fr1day Usttng. Also today Is "The Poorman's · 1'onlte
Show" with The Poorman from KROQ
F'M radio stallon.
realB and da.z:zllnl( special effects arc Ing. featured. (213) .. '14-6000. LU CZDIBER. see Fr1day listing.
-GltD llACK, sec Friday listing.
Coan by __ ~----
A f.anhful m:reation of the
award-wmmns rauuraru m Hawau
lntemadonaJ aowmet cu.llinc
praented In a unique
dinlna atmoephcre. .
Diruna from 6:30 pm nightly
Ext.-epr SurJay
Jackeu for eendcmcn, pleue
RCICTVauons -7li/999.o990
Located In dv
&Krald ol ANhdm Hocel.
1717 S. We.t Sc., Anahdm
FRIDAY/SATURDAY
SPECIAL
York
Steak
Tender New York Steak,
cooked ~o your taste, and
served with homemade
soup, crisp green· salad,
choice of potato, dinner roll
and dessert! s
• ~
COSTA 1EA 3125 HarbOr Blvd.
•• 1790 l MicArttlur 81vd.
llAR& ISBBLL APID TBB
llBTTIDI SECTIOl'f, e~Jao. ln-dCllriltc. old oana Point Cile~120
Del Prado, Dana Point. 661-6003.
CAR LIDO, see Frtday listing
DAllVEYTRA TLOR, ace Saturday
AftG.§ALLll!G. sec Friday !tst-
ln,i. JOI llABORY a GREG CAP-
POLLA, 8tt Fr1day listing,
nm BOWARD UdOLD8 BIG
Edouard MANET ( 1'832-1883) LA d•Jeuner sur l'herbe (lllllCMort on the
Gr .. ). 18&3
The attire may be different.
the tradition Is the same at
Where love of llfe and foOd become an art and old world
hospltallty abounds ·
Partake In our "SUNDAY BRUNCH IN THE PROVENCE"
Sundays 10-3, 3421 Via Lido, Newport Beach; 675--4904
.
Piiot Weekender/ Friday. October 12, 1984 11 ..
BAJfD appean from 5-8 p.m. In the
Center Court of the W~ml~I
In Westminster. 898·2~58
llAUTaO, 9tt Frtday llstlng.
STUTCB, 11tt F'rklay listing.
llOVJOLA, stt Friday listing.
GOPBEll DOD, sec Friday 11~-
your dancing pleasure. 8:30-11 :30
p.m .. ~ cautomtan. 16431 ~
Chica, Huntm«te>n Beach. 82 ad·
mlMton . 846-1347.
lnl(.
nm SAJtL &JlllG BAJQ) appearw 8
p.m.-mtdni.tht. Meadowlark Country Club. 1678';2Graham Slrttt. Hunt·
lngton Beach. 84~3391 .
BAYSBOU llOUU, see Fr1day
II sung. Tlleater
Tim IUI'D, 11tt Friday ltsttng.
.AJ8TBf TU81l;
---~~~~~-~
De.Dee
TRACY WELLS 810 BAlO>, for
968-5050
WE PROMISE YOU
GOOD CHINESE
FOOD
LUNCHES OiNERS.-'tMPICA...,.,..~L~
COCKTAILS. 8ANOUET FACILITIES,
CATERING. FOOO TO GO
OPEN 7 DAYS
SeECIAI.: DISCOUNT
ON FOOD TOGO
31~ 8-:h Blvd 827· 1210
Nelrl<no«'s
Anllheim 99>9920
Ronr:lie Brown
And His Trio ..
Enjoy the music of
Ronnie Brown and his trio
YJednesdoy through Saturday nights
at Copa de Oro. Relax, sip on a
Copa Margarita, have an appetizer
and enjoyl
8:30PM-12:30AM
located near South Coast Plaza
633 Anton • Costa M~so • 662-COPA
-
-
~
I ,
I
J
4
12 Piiot Weekender/ Friday. October 12, 1984
Calendar
''llOFl'O.LA" at lhl' Grand Dinner
The-ater. See Frtday II Una
ma nrop GIRLS" on South Coast
Repertory's Sttond Stage. Stt Friday
llstlnf. • ,.
youcommunlcatr. 7:30-l0:30a.m.88
ltt .• Golden West College BuslnCM
Bldg .. Rm. 110, 15744-Golden West
St .. -Huntlngton Beach 891-3991.
.. CAOCASIAJlf CBALI CDtCL&"
at Orange Coa t College See Frtday
•t-.--------=l=lstln . .. at
and a Klllrr Whale Show not usua!Jy
avallablr to the genera! public. A lour
of the penguin raclllty b also sched-
uled. For those who purchaae ACS
ticket• the price la 88 adults and 85
establish the QrangP Countl Ofllceof
Protocol and rntt'm ttona Visitor.
Council, Is ht'ld Nov". l& at the newly
opened Hott'I MC"rtdlen Newport
Beach. Cocktatls at 1 pm .. dlnnt-rat 8
-
-
' .
en West Coll~f'. See Friday listing.
"IDSllET' at Sebutlan'!i West
Dinner Playhou~. Sec Friday listing.
LUDY STRAUSS, coUector and
rxhtblUon coordinator, IC'ClUrH about
her contemporary qullt collection and
how she became acllvely Involved In
thdr creation. 8 p m .. Laguna Beach
Museum of Art. South Coast Plaza
"OKTOl!IEantST:• ~c Fr1day list· Ing. A Jl1JlDD ART SBOW and Sale la
held by the Coastline Artists' Associa-
tion Oct 19-20 at the Mesa Verde
Center. Non-members may enter art
works, no cralta, by dellvertng them
Oct. 19 from 8-10:30 a.m . to the
center. Categories lnclu<k watercolor
& Chinese brush. 01111 & acrylics. and
other media. 546-8734.
deadlJne Is ov. . 834-3220.
"l'OOBT OF TBS llAl8UJt" U<'·
lion and ball ts planned by the
Newport Ha:rbor Art Mwaeum on &it ..
Oct. 27. Hosted by Bullocu Wllahlrc
In Fashion Island. It features mort'
than 100 nationally recognlz.cd and
cmcrgJng artists who have created
masks to be auctioned. The masks wtll
be exhibited bef(lnntng Oct. 4 at the
musuem. 862 50 pcT pcreon. Reser-
vattons may be madt' by calling
759· l 122 before Oct. 20.
"llOV& OV&R , MRS .
MAAKBA.111" at the Harlequin Din-
ner Playhouse. Stt Friday listing
"llT SISTER BILEE1"' a{ the
Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse Stt
f"riday llallf!& _
,site. 82.50 members, &3 50 non-
membc1'8. 494-6531.
sm,iea
Adftllce Bl111Df
"ON BOJUU)WSD TIME" at the
Laguna Moulton Playhouse See Fri-da>.'. listing.
'SUOAJl" at the San Clt'mcntc
Community Theater Stt Fr1day list-
. 4-sTTLUr· COMlfU!QCATJOlt IN
A CRAZY WORLD." Get a clHrer
picture of hou you· and those around
8JtA WORLD ts the desUnaUon of a
unique, bchlnd·the-scenes tour of·
fered by Sea World In conjunction
with the American Cetacean Society
on Ocl. 20. Beginning at 2 p.m ..
visitors can see all or the regular
allrat"Uon& plu& stay after-the ~tc.
close for a prtvate, back-stage look.
Planned are a special Sea Lion Show
"A SALUTE TO TD t:MTEa-
NAnORAL CONSOL.All CORPS, •• a
rund-ralser with proceeds going to
American
-TH£1J..ut
Amencan. Lunch MF 11-2 30 Olnnef
M·S from 5 PM Happy Hour M·F
4 30-7 PM Sun Champagne Buffet
8runctl 10-2 30 Entertainmeot &
Dlnc:lllg Banquet Facilities 14962
RedhlD. Tustin 730-0115
THE ORIGINAL BARN
FARMER STEAKHOUSE
The 0t1Qinal Featuring d!Splay bfaolong
Lunch Mon -Frr 11 2 O.nner noghtly
Moo ·Fn lrom S pm Sat & Sun.
tr om 4 p m 200 1 Harbo< Blvd . Costa
Meia 642·9777
HARBOR HOUSE CAFE
EstabllShed since 1939 Omelettes. 25
varieties Served 24 hours Sand·
>NOChes. 30 varieties Heated garden
pa1o0 O.noei served 5· 10 pm 34157
Coast H>Ny Dana Po.nt (714)
496-9270 AISo 16341 Coast Hwy Svn~1 BP.ach (2t3l 592-5404
PARADISE CAFE
San Franc-;can tyle FreY! f!Sl'I and
pasta Patio d•ntng lunch M·F 11-3
Omner MOf\ Sal trom 5 p m Happy
Hr M·F ~7 Wed Ladies ntte 50¢ weil
drinks from 3 p m Banquet lac•1oes
600 NewP<>rt Cen11!f Dr Fashooo
1919nd Newpor1 ~ch ~4· 1237
POOR RICHARDS
KITCHEN
Breakfacil. lunch. donner PallO dinong •
with ocean 111ew Modest prices
Beer /wine Famed IOI' Belgian wattles
Open daily from 8 am 1198 S Coast
Hwy in V1nage Faire Mall. Laguna
Beach 497 1667
Chinese
JADE DRAGON
Szechwan & Mandarin Curs.nes ol
Old Olina Host Wanace Lee Chef Yr
Chen Elegant dontng lunch dinner
Sat & Sun 0.rn Sum (Ch.nese Tea
Cake Brunch) Banquets Beer &
w,~ R"a!IONIOle 1><tees 12100
8eAch Btvd S1an1on 898-8933
Continental
AIRPORTER INN
Mediterranean Room
Continental lunch M F 11 30-2 30
Sun Brunch t().3 O.nrl91 lrom 5 30
Happy Hour M F En1er1a1nmen1 &
Dancing 7 noghts a wee!\ Valet park·
1ng BanQuel tac111t1es 18700
MacArrM. lr-.ine. 833·2770
CAFE LIDO
Newl)on's Cannery Village 111ZZ IPOt
Cozy atrnosphefe Amencan. llallan
& Continental menu Lunch M·F t 1-3
Otnner nightly 6 pm. to lnldnighl
Entenainment nightly g. t 30 Sun. 18.zz
set6IOfl 3-7 Ample pe1klng. 2900
Newport Blvd • Newport Beach
675-2968
MARCEL'S
V°'lal Marcel. OanclOO Wed tlw Sat
mghts to Buuy BoK 9 pm to 1.30
am. Top 40'1 Live Reggae evllfy Frt.
& Sat l1om 9.30 p m Backgammon
Happy Hour 4-7 pm W•tch tor our
gr•nd reopening Oct 31st Serving
aandwiehes, soups, salood end
crOllNnts 130 E 17th St, Cost•
Mesa &46·3866
RIVIERA
Conttnental Chel Richard Befgner
s.nce 1970 lntimaie O.n1ng LIM\Ch
1 1 30·3 Dinner lrom 5 p m Clo$ed
Sun & Hol;cjays Banquet rooms
3333 S Brtstol, Costa Mesa
540-3840
French
BORDEAUX
100 Wll1a Sllvet Food Award Wnnet
Lunches T'* ·Fn Dinner M·S Cloeed
Sundeys & holldaya Ott Bristo! and
RandOlph (bet-Hen Baker and a.er)
then left onto SI. Cla11. 758 SI. Clair,
Cost• MtM 5-40-3641.
Eor R~staurant Directory
Information, ,Call Brenda
Caponera at 642-432 t x262 ·
I
~l>·-.
f • ' • . . .
ORANGE
COAST
RESTAURANT
DIRECTORY
LE MIDI
New in Newport. old In tradition
Ftal!Oflul French Pro11encele dl&hes
Charming dee:or and alrnosphere ol
1he South. the Midi ol France Lunch
and dinner T..-thru Sun ExtensMI
Ca141 and French wine 11$11 3421 Via
Ltdo. Newport Beach, '" plaza near
Hughes Market 675-4904
Irish
llULDOON'S I
Homa of Award wlnniflg lrilh Collee
Best corned beef and cabbage. lrllh
11ew and OUI Old Countiy Pol rout.
Guineu on t•p Open 7 dllys • WMI<.
202 Newport Cent• Dr , F•shion
lsl8nd. Newpor1 Beach 64()..& 110
Italian
DONATELLl'S
The original since 1973 Now open In
our new location Sefvlng ClUf famous
paza and pasta Dine In 0t take out
9430 Warner at Busnerd, Fountain
Valley. Behind the S1aler 963-5~5.
MARCELL OS
Famlly owned Ea1ablished W10e
1973. Pastas. .._I. paz.a SpeciallZing
Ill ~ Beef & Wine Ml"9d
Salad bar. Lunch Mon. tllru Fri .. dimet
7 nigt1ts a WMI< Sunday Brunch 10-3
p.m. 17502 a.en BIYO at Slater,
HuntJngton Beech. 842·5506.
Mexican
Ml CAIA MEXICAN
RESTAURANT
Our fOOd II"• tr_, to MeKICOI Est llflCe
1972 Open datly ffom 11 a.m..lof
IUnch & dinner. Coc:ltta Entertain·
merit Wed lhru Sal night• in the Burro Room. 286 E 17th St, Costa MIU
can 845-7629
TAEI AMIGOS
A ~ fOf people .00 appl'ect411e
good Melllcan food at turl)fislngly IOw
pncee Open daily 1 1 a m for IUnctt &.
dtnnet. Dalfy tunctleon apec1a1a. DaOGi-
lng Ftl. & Sat tO pm. to 1 am Top
40'. fTlU$IC catering 2200 Harbor
BIYd , K·Mart 9laD. Coeta Miu.
8'2-827•18278
Natural/Healthy
FORTY"CARAOT9
()ell()OUS fashion food per H8NY
~rom. A greet p&ace fof dinner 7 1
days from 1 l a.m Sunday Cham-
pagne Bruncn Between Bulloc:Jls and
I. M~. So Coast Plaza, lower leYal..
556-9700
PUFF1N8
"Naturally" cOOked foods. from pen·
cakes to crepes to steak&. An adllen·
ture If:\ natural eating Open Sun thru
Thurs. 8 a.m to 11 p .m Frt & Set 8
am to midnigtlt Vise/MC Casuat
Moderate Prices 3050 E Coast Hwy.,
Corona del Mer 640-t 5 73
Seafood & Steak
BLACK BEARDS
Hearty Beet Enlrees & SeelOOd
Lunch 11·3 30 Dinner from 5 p.m
HapPy Hour M·F. Ex~ Oy$tlf
8af Two blocks south of John Wayne
Airport 833-0080
THE CANNERY
Featur• fresh loi::.al ... food, eutem
bee1 Lunch. dinner, Sooday bNnCl'I
and champagne brunch, harbot
CfUISeS Entertainment nightly and
Sooc»y atteinoon Lounge IOOd 119f.
·1ey. Historte wetemont land~ in
Newport's Canneiy Vbge. 3010
Lafayette 67~57n.
AUSTY PELICAN
Fresh tealood and lots of It Newport
Beach-Lunch, dinner. Sunday
brunch ~sNewport Bay 2735
W Coest Hwy 842·3<431.
IMnl-l.Unct\. CllMtf. happy hour.
1830 MUI 546--<&77•
TALE OF THE WHALE
Open 7 dllys Breaktast 7 a.m M·F.
Lunch 11_. M.f Oinnef 4-1 1 M·S Set
& ~brunch 7-.4 Oyster bef Fri .
Sat .• Sun Banquet lac11tl• up to 500.
Enterteinment Wed ·Sun. Panoramic:
bey V18W 400 Mall'l St . Balboe
673-4633
THE WAREHOUSE
Freth S..tood and lntenletional
• eut11ne Waterlront Clinlng CMI
Chiltlel Kmeglen. Ll(lCh. Dinn«. 8-t
& SUn Award Winnlhg Brunch. Ban-
qOell & Catering, Oystet Ber, Etit••
talnment l.ldO Village. Newpan
Beed\. 673-4700
1
Foreca1t1 on A2 c11m11n111
-
FRIDAY. OCTOBER 12, 1984
[o~tages escape fro;m bank J>audit
k of America manager abducted
l her home, taken to Irvine bank:
for bank rnan8acr Marge Steinborn, S2, who was abductrd at gunpoint
from her Tustin home and taken to
the Bank of AmeriC'll branch at Irvine
Boulevard and Yale Avenue, where ERT HYNDMAN,
MITCHELL aad
llEIDERMAN .........
10 tages held at gunpoint in
ut
,e Disney strikers re-
ed to work and 100
workers were hired
ie Magic Kingdom
rsday./A3
llfomla
at South Pasadena
iware store claimed
lives /Al
ti on
gress turns down
t celling hike; legls-
rs returned to Wash-
on. / A4 ~
llenger crew packing
"return to Earth./ A4
arid
ib blast In Brighton,
land leaves Margaret
tcberamtouched, but
~./A8
.ary blamed in Aquino
~.:.:!.:!.:~:;.~~=·=·:·:·:·:·
;p ie
1 Charlotte Rae leads
brities who support
-val House./ A7
Orts
at does the San Diego
:ken do now that the
Id Series has
ched to Oetrolt?/8 1.
.on High, the No. 1-
;ed football team In
i ge County, survived
1ggish first half to win
unset League open-a2
tlngton Beach Hlgh's
~cross country team
'Ith sweep of the first
•laces -breezed to
>ry and remained un-
:en./83
tertalnment
k Wllllams Jr. follows
, Russell on the Pa-
Amphitheatre stage
~ht.IWHkender
~ry for German food
i g Oktoberfest? Dine
e Bavarian Chalet. ~
ekender
1lness
nclal Corp. of Amerl-
ias lald off 20o/o of Its
:sand cut ex-
Ives' salarles./84
l;X
=>not • In Board ess
rnla Newa
fled
:a
word
Notices
1nlng
cope
ilnders
iJ Funds
'al Newa >n
az:zJ
C1-10
88
A3
84'
~
C8-9
88
C9
C5
A9
C7
A8
84
A8
A10
A7
A7·8 A3
C4·6
en def
81•3
85
A9
WMl<endet
A2
A4'
an Irvine bank escaped unharmed
late this morning. but a standoff
continued between police and a lone
lUnman, who remained inside.
The escape ended a six-hour ordeal
he v.'Orks, according to pohoc.
At 11:35 a.m., one of three robbers
was reportedly talktn to polttt by
phone from in 1dc the bank, accord•
mg to police reports.
Intended muider
v ictim tells court
of marital turmoil
Ex-husband charged
with hitj 'hit man'
to arran -·accident'
By JEFF ADLER
Of .. .,.., .... 8*mlf
A woman who agrted to pose for
photographs on a slab at the Orange
County Coroner's Office so an under-
cover investigators could conv10cc
her former husband she'd been k.11led
by a hit man he allegedly hired
testified Thursday about her de·
teriorating marriage to defendant
Frederick Penney.
Penney. a 57-year-old .Laguna
Most view
VP Bush
as winner
of debate
By DONALD M. ROTHBERG ,
~ .............
PHILADELPHIA -George Bush
contended he·d "turned it around"
for the Republican ticket, while
· Geraldine Ferraro claimed '"Two out
of two ain't ba(J .. af\er the vict-
prcsidential candidates engaged in a
harp duel for campaign momentum
that drew favorable reviews from the
(PleaM eee VICS/ AS)
Niguel contractor and former: New'
York City fireman, is charged with a
single felony count of solicitation of
murder. If convicted of the charge, he
faces a muimum six-)ear prison
term.
Red-haired Susan Penney, 34, told
an Orange County Supenor Court
Jury in Santa Ana that following their
breakup in August 1983 she had been
repcatedJy harassed and followed by
her husband. whowasjailedtwiceasa
result.
Speaking confi<kntJy. but avoiding
her former husband's stare, Mrs.
Penney described how arguments
leadin& up to their divorce became
more heated near the end of their
You'll.find th•
bHt euto bur.a elong
the Or•"9• CCMaat In
toet•r'• Auto Piiot
-PegeC1
Ho-hum city council campaign surpristn
Irvine pohcc Lt. Al Muir ad FBI
agentsand lrvanc· Cit> pohceSWAlt
team had arrived at the orthwood
-iown Center. where the bank 1s
located.
Officers esconed ci\f1han from
back doo~ to those bu m s as
police closed ofT1thc shopping center
Jt 9 a.m. and bcpn evacu1.una
employees and patrons at an adJaccnt
Von"& upennarket and a l)m·
nasium.
Muir ad the incident began at S
am. "ilcn aq armed m n and two
{emales enttrcd the home of the n
manager Marge Steinborn. barui·
cuffed her husband Wdham. then
forced the oman to dnvc ibcm 1n
her autolflobde tQ lhe bank in Irvine.
Bank of America officials an Los
teacllen Jaaye stopPed pUtlclpatlna lD atracarricalar
acttritiea. See •tol'J'.. ~e A2.
Susan Penney
• nine-year relationship.
"The topic was either the children
or my time away from home. Any-
thing that took my time away from
the house or aVI"&)' from him.·· she told
the JUI')
On one occasion. their arguments
(Pleue eee EX·WIPB/ A2)
n&dcs sdenufied tonbom as lhe
manager of the branch
Contacted by tetepbw a1 their
home, Wllham lCinbom confirmed
that his "', e haC:I been abducted 'by a
man and t o men. He decbncd" lO
pr0v1d further details oflhc k.idnap-
JU
Pohce id the nk 1112~'
~Jeue MC B08TAGU/A2)
Council
forum
orderly
inHB
BJ ROBERT BAR&.ER °' ... ..., .......
1be candidates for the HuntiaJ!oo
Beach Cny Council provided
slim~ about themselves and their
uparatlons in a mannerly l.nd wide-
ranai91 noontimt outdoor forum
Thursday at Golden West Colleae-
• Bud Belsito, an attorney and
former Huntington .Beach city lld-
nuni.strator. tressed tba\ ofticials have to addreu flooding prObfeau
that in 19 3 atrected thousands of
rcsi<knts,
lsito also · bbCd at -setr-ser-
vina" 0 , -WbO 0 0 put ... ---
measure on the ovembcr ballot that
ould ~pea) a tv.o-consecutive term ·
limit on council scr'VIClC. Votcn
approved the t o-tcnn limit by a
3'h-1 m.&rg1n in l978
• Elaine Craft. a mother of eight
and at) voluntttr Mio made a pe>utt
of not bcina a .. proftsSioaaJ poli-
. (ri-. eee CARDIDATU/A2)
Harbor Municipal Court J~
Stephen SteWart, who lost a June bid
for re-election. has rcstsned from bis
po t thrtt months before the end of
has term.
Officials at the Newport Beach
Courthouse confinned toda) that
Stcv.'&rt rcsipcd. effecthe Oct.. S. His
term was to conclude 10 January. Tbe
former jud&e has said ~e plans to open
a pnvatc la,., practice
Stewart Y.'&S tn the news last
weclend when he married Pilar
Wayne of Nev.-port Beach. the widow
of actor John Wavne. Jn last June's primary decuon. St~ was defeated by Deputy
District Att('lmey Susanne Shaw.
Shaw will assume the Harbor Court
JUdgesh1p in January. Until then. t~
post wdl remain vacant.
Newport drug theft suspect
bails Out after enteriilg plea
Nursef aces trial in seven burglaries -----of painkillers from county hospitals -------
By ROBERT BARKER declined to bro"idc additional infor-
Ofh!Wlt,....... nation. ,
A l'.e\\-port Beach nurse-But Fountain Valk) Octcct1"e
anesthetist apparentl) has , been Dennis Minna, V1-bo is coonhnating
bailed out of Orange C:ounty Jail after the assoned drug cases again t the 31-
enterinaa not au.Ht) plea Thursday in • ~car-old Tr8<1. said bcr attornc) and
Orange Count) Municipal Coun to tamil) members had disclosed the)
scvrn._ counts of buf&)ary in conntt'· \lt'Cre ti') ma to Vl:Ont out arra~mrnt t1on~th the theft of po"erful pain-for her to ~tout of jail and underao a
k1lhng dru'5 from fhe area ho pit.al . dru& rchab&hallon procram in Long
J11I officials said that Bmtgct l)nn ~acti he had been tn jail in lieu of
Tracy was no longcr in jAil toda) but S 10.000 bail.
r •
-
Srm
lutll
CAMPAIGN • 84
TraC) is accused of stealing
morphine and Demerol from locked
med1c1ne carts in ho puals in Foun-
wn Valle). Costa M~. Oransr and
Santa Ana and from a doctor·s office
1 n rwpon Beach.
he confessed to the burglaries
while beina queslloned Wednesday
b' Minna 1n the presence of her
attorney. the detectt\it said.
Meanwhile. 1t also was learned that
Trac" ts being tn\iestiptcd for aJ-
kttdl) injccttna hcnclf with a
ubstance tut ~a while she was
performing an thetic duties for
N~rt Beach plastic uracon H.
(Pleue ... l'fURSB/ A2)
,.
I
I
AS* Orange Coa,t DAILY PlLOT/F,rielay, October 12, 19 4
Picketing Irvine teachers
take their case to district
By PHIL NEIOERMAN
Of .. O.., .......
Irvine teachers ( med p d:et ~"
around their stl'loo~· d1stm:t he:sd·
quancrt Thursda~ afternoon, con·
dudin& a >Acek of maller dt!mon·
str:nions '>ignif}' ina their frustratton
over stalled C'Ontract talks.
Teachers l)'fan to addrc s ~hoot ,..,.-'£-o-'-rij memoe~ and oastribute
Jeaflets next week. prior to an Oct. 29
strike authoniation vote.
'fhursday morning. some Irvine
Unified School District tcachc~ pick-
eted at their home campu5es before
they were rtqu1red to be in class. In
the afternoon. the lrvine Teachers
• Associatton, representing local in-
ttuctors. urged its members to dem-
onstrate outside the d1stnct's new
admanistrationbualding at 5050 Bar-
ranca Parkway.
Ken Homer. president of the
associatit>n. estimated that 400
le che~ p.J'11c1patcd rn the attcmoon
piclctin The union rcpre ~nt'>
bout 7 0 di trict fncuh) mcml)( r .
Fran Mo1 ton, a distrkt
"pokes"'oman. aid th~ demon·
stration did not <li rupt openmons at
lhe dist1ict hcadqu:irten.
hbough regular cla"i room in-
struction h:. ronttnue<l. ~ome
te.acbers have Mopped participating
in e~tracu1 ricular activities. at the
urgmg of the union. Superintendent
A Stanley Corey has charscd that
these teachers are violating their
contract: the union disagrees.
The pld:etmg was tnggerc..-d by un
impasse in contracts talks. primarily
C'Oncernmg teacher salaries.
The union has requested a 7.5
percent salary raise for the 1984-85
school year. District oflk1als have
said they can afford no add1tiooal pay
r~use beyond the automatic increases
provided for length of service and
colkgc credits. The d"'lrkt ha o.I o
oftcred to mt} 1e. l.'hers a unMinie
bonus 1f fund r<-main nt 1he end of
the ~hool }Car. but that off~r was
r~jl"Cted b} the union.
Nl"gota11ons were hulled last week
when an impa\~ was decl red, and
b<.>th sides arc now awaitin~ tbe
nmval ota ~tale mediator who w11l try
to break the d adlock. ,
o;-;ociation p~ident Homer said
he plans to addre~ the district board
of cdut":nion when the elected body
meets next Tue)da} at 7:30 p.m. in
the new d1$1rtct headquancrs
He o;a1d IC:llhers will d1~tr1bute
leaflet" Oct. 20 to conv(!'y their
posiuon to local residents.
On Oct. 29. 1he teachers are
c;cbedulcd 10 takr a slrike
authorization vote. If the measure 1s
appro,cd. facuh} negotiators would
have the power fo call a work
stoppage.
Crippled swimmer's injury
claim goes to county jury
By JEFF ADLER
OttMO.-, ..........
be awarded. The trial began Sept. 26.
The athletic 6-1 Taylor.. now . a
quadnplegic who has only limited use
of his arms, testified that he deetded
to go into the chilly water that April
afternoon to wash off suntan 011
before returning home to Claremont
claim the city was negligent for not
posting signs alons the beach warning
of the danger of diving into the water
near the pier. where shifting sands
create offshore holes. sandbars and
troughs.
The two attorneys claim the city
was aware of the uncertain bottom
w
Coaatal
-~~~~ ::°::.~k1~
Sl'l0we1:. A in rtutroP:. ~now Octtu<Jt!d -.-51i11o0n;11v a.
Auaron
llalt>mor•
----------811mlng1>41m Tides :=ck
Fl<t1 IO,.
F1t1I hlgll
S.Concl IOw
TOOAY 6 27pm
II 311p 111
IATUN>AY
Boe Ion
O ~ &llalO
31 CUC* Ct>ar ... 1ot1.S C
Ch11t1MI011,W V
2 1 CllaflOll•,N C S•~ oe ChtetlQO Clnclnn1ll
Sun .. ,. lodey •I II 23 p m ,,_ Ci.v.ioncl
S111ur<11y a1 e ~ 1.m encl Nit again ot Columt>ve.Ott
6 22 pm Concord,N H Moon ,,_ today al I O 1 p m • telt Ollfat-FI Worth
• 37am ~IOO•m
8 10pm
Sarut<11y 11 ti 20 a m Ind ,,_ •'" " 01r1on 137e>m °'"...,
-----------0.. MOI,_
111•1 ~I NH""''~~ N{)AA IJ$ °'"'' tt .. ~ ......
42
10 • 84
10 77 • 73 'n et eo 76 llf ~
75
'° 71
I SURF REPORT
Temps 0.lfOll -~~----------
HI Lo
73 50
10 s•
11 511 42 34
19 eo 68 55
Oulut" EJP-LOCATION
Huntington &.ech ----------At_ .,.II)'. Ntwpofl
Extended ~~~9!i.~
Fair aM tllgtllly war""' HIQhl at btttchee 72 10 111 and lni.n(I 111119Vt 71
to M. low• 55 1013
&.lboe W9Clg9 ~Beectl San Clemttnt•
Watw temc> 1$.ea
t&ZI
2·3 1-3 l-3
1·2 1·2
1·2 3-4
$ .... OltCllOft: _,"'-"" An eight-woman, four-man Orange
County Superior Court jury beg.an
deliberations today to determine
whether a paralyzed 22-year-old man
should be compensated for a crip-
pling neck injury, suffered in 1980
wften ne di veo into a sandbar near the
Balboa Pier at Newport Beach.
with his girlfriend.
Because of the eoid--'wtttcf'~-cumtiiti'oms'atcmt!~at1PQ1:7\lf:1tr.stn~r--1~#------... _.,-t~jt-t,_.L.ti;--._...,... ... _..,._,r......,~9-... '11erv()tts-' -
buying gun, dealer claims
John Taylor is seeking an un-
specified amount of damages from
the city of Newport Beach claiming
the city negligently failed to post signs
warning or uncertain and dangerous
underwater conditions in the area.
If the jury returns a verdict 1n his
favor, a second phase of the c1v1l trial
in Judge Lloyd Blanpied's Santa Ana
courtroom will ge~ under way to
determine how much Taylor should
temperature. he decided to run into
the gently rolling surf. When he was
about waist-deep 10 the water. he
dived into an incoming wave.
Somewhe.re underwater he ap-
parently crashed head-on mto an
useen ndge of sand. shanenng one of
his venebra. He surfaced in a dead-
man's float. his body paralyzed from
lhe neck down.
Taylor's Newport Beach attome>s
Herben H::fif and Wayne Austero. ...
of beach. but have done nothing to
warn beachgoersofthe danger despite
the numbers of neck injuries that
have occurred there.
The ci tv of Newport Beach.
through Irvine attorney Patrick Quin-
livan. has contended warning signs
along the beach wouldn't prevent
spi nal injunes becat,tsc no one sign
can warn against thr many possible
ways swimmers can injure them-
selves.
CANDIDATES OFFER VIEWS IN HB .•.
From Al
t1c1an." said she'd .. love to see" the
creation of a performing ans center
where budding artists could d1spla}
their work.
She has the integrity. honesty and
courage to care about people, she said.
• John Erskine. the executive
NURSE ••.
From Al
George Brennan.
Margaret-.Sa1to. d1sc1pline coordi-
nator for the state Board of Registered
"lurses. confirmed that an in .. es11ga-
t1on began in Ma y after the board
received complaints that Trac} al-
legedly gave herself an inJect1on of a
substance while assisting in a surger:.
Tracy still holds her nursing license
and a permit to perform anesthesia.
Saito said.
director of the Building lndustl)
Association. said he'd approach his
duties with a .. business approach:·
He said he "led the charge" to pre .. ent
a IT}assage parlor from being located
1 n a shopping center. said he favors an
"aggress1\e" deanup of the .\scon
Landfill
"I'm a Republican. 1 suppon
President Reagan ... he told the stu-
dents.
• Ruth Finley. an incumbent. said
she is looking for the preservation of
open space. the hbal) and cultural
and spmtal things as well as the cit}·,
economic health
'There 1s more than "-<><>d. cement
and stucco:· she ~1d
•Jack Kell }. the incu mbent ma}or
and television and movie actor. ast...ed
the students "to evaluate my record
up to now. The acid test is ro.ur vote
on Nov 6." he said
• John Horne. a senior systems
consultant. cnt1c1zed what he said
was a $4.500 expenduure by the city
for the Interval House for Battered
Women. "It's not~ven in Huntington
Beach.'' he said "it's in Seal Beach."
Horne said he 1s concerned aboot
the progress of redevelopment in the
city and about the distribution of
taxes.
Candida1e Peter Green. a biology
1no;1ructor at Golden West College.
wa<; teaching a c la<;s during the forum
and fellov. instructor Richard Rowe
pinch-hit for him . Richard Davis also
filled in for candidate Jay Stout ~ho
had a business conflict.
The remainder of the 16 candidates
fo r three openings on the seven-
·member City Council did not make
an appearance.
NEWPORT COUNCIL CAMPAIGN. QUIET .....
From Al
can do on that:·
Councilman John Cox also spent
about $30.000 1n his winning efTon
four years ago. An outspoken man
who is supportive of development
and often criucal of those who oppose
1t, Cox also is un opposed 1n the race
The only contest at all is on the west
side of the city where incumbent
Councilwoman Ruthelyn Plummeris
being challenged by Dave Goff a city
planning commissioner. and political
novice Vivian Roum.
For the first ttme in six \Cars. the
advocacy group Stop Polluting Our
Newpon CSPON) has not put ur a
candidate Four years ago. lour of the
seven council member., were aligned
v.1th the group and fa\ored 11\ slu~
growth philosophy
"People who know what the '>core
1s in this town wouldn't want 10 pa}' a
lot of money JUSt lo have their
character defamed· and then lose,"
says Jean Watt. president of the
advocacy group.
It 1s impossible to win when other
candidates are backed -directly or
indirectly -by large development
interests like thr Irvine Co. and the
Koll Co. Watt says .
"h 's become apparen·11hat one way
Jost Call
642-6086
0•111 PUo1
OefJv9fY
11 Ouar•n,tMd
M '°"' f' oc»~ I• '°" Jtl NJ( ,...... '°" PAPf'! by !>:JOptn CAl~I[>!~ ,•Im
a1'd fQ'• COOi' """ t,<!'
~·"'1
or another. they'll spend whatever 1s
necessal) to ""in.'' says Watt.
Past elections have been filled with
insulung newspaper ads and charac-
ter assassinations that make the
electoral process wholl} unpleasant.
she sa)s. SPON cannot find anyone
interested in running.
"We've made much more progres'i
taking on issues." Watt notes ··issues
can be understood better than
people .. ·
CounC1lwoman Jackie Heather,
who won re-t'lcCtl()n l'-"O }ea rs ago
pen though her (hallenger <,pent
ahout $50,000 claim' Watt ... group
cau .. ed the contrmcr\\ 1n pa\l elec-
tions
··The> JU'>t lo.cpl hca11ns the 'aml'
old dead horse and I think people
finally said. ·so what's new?'"
Heather said
"I think we ha ve a pretty good team
nght now and people see that. We talk
to each other and that's something we
ne ver did when SPON was m con-
trol."
Robert Shelton, a former Newpon
Beach mayor and Irvine Co. senior
vice preo;1dent. says thr apparent lack
of interest in theelet"pon might he 1he
absence of contro1'ers1al develop-
ment projects.
Past city elections have coincided
w11h mult1-million dollar develop-
ment plans.
An Irvine Co. project was aban-
doned 1 n the face of a referendum four
years ago and another was unsuc-
cessful!) challenged in a referendum
vote that coincided with the city"
election two yrars ago.
"But I am surprised.'' Shelton
admits. "Even in tranquil times
there s alwa}'s been a hankering by
any number of people to become a
rnuncil member even 1f they didn't
ne«essanh disagree w11h the incum-
~nt ..
"'ihclton Jouht'> that the lack of
l.rnd1Jatc' 1n the ckcuon means that
one lac11un or anothcr has triumphed.
"But I don't think the lack of
1ntere<;t 1n the election should be
written off as apathy." suggests
Shelton "We shouldn't under-
t•s11ma1e the degree ofsa11sfact1on the
rnmmuntt} fcdo; '-"llh thts council."
Watt d1<,agrees.
··1tJUSI isn't worth 11 (to run).'. she
<,a\<, "In fact I'm 'orrv I wasted three
months workin& on a campaign last
time I could have been doing
-;omething far more productive"
Whal do you like about tbe Dally Pilot? What don't you Uke'! Call tbe
number at left and your f!lHtage wil1 be reeorded. transcribed and delivered
to the appropriate editor. '
The same %4-hour answering servl<'e may be used to record lellera to the
editor on a.ny topic. Contributors to our Letters column mHt Include tbelr
name and telephone number for verification. No circulation calls, pltase.
Tell us what'• on your mind.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
H. L. Schwartz Ill
Pubhshe1
Clrcul•tlon 71'1842-4333 c1 .. 1lfled lldverttatng 714/142·587•
AU other dep•rtmenu 842-4321
MAIN OFFICE
~'Cl'" •98.1 ().,'Of' e<au Pi.r~ r~"" N1'I l>f!,., "°'.... "'1l1•4!~ "''"'°" • ...." .. "' • "'"''" """"' ,,,,....,. ,.,., ..... •ept<IO<.C.0 • !!l(IUI l'l*:Mif)\l;r
'""-"'WI n• cor yrrgtll er .. -6••110.v 4!10 ~. '
yOl.J 00 no! r "C"'"" Y"'" OOPy blr 1 • m ~ 1 .. 1 •• Ml ii m .,,,, yqur <:OJ•7 ,.Jl
i-.~ •
Clrculatton
T .. ephonet
Rosemary Churchman
Cor !roll r
"' ' t~ f!O'l•J"' 1111-0 ftl l~tA l.'MA C.wor ...
IV"S •H &!01 \lb"..GTopl'°" ~ Cll ,..., "1!> ,,_ir;y ,,., INI• '6 611 rnontN"
Stephen F. Cerezo
Production
Mnnayer
Donald L. Wllllam1
C1rculat1on
Manager VOL. n, HO. 218 ..
. ,
By STEVE MARBLE
Of tM O.ity Pilot .....
A young Huntington Beach man
Jestified Thursday that he sold a
pistol tO a "nervous .. Bruce Bradley
Ralph just two days before the 57-
year-old man was arrested on suspi·
c1on of murdering his stepson.
@aniel Diehl said Ralph gave him
four $100 bllls for the .3ka1iber
revolver after he inspected the
weapon and fired it numerous times
at a Huntington Beach firing range.
-.. He itemed kind of nervous but I
thought maybe he was just gun-shy."
said Diehl during the opening day of a
preliminary hearing at Harbor Mu-
nicipal Coun in Newpon Beach.
··1 got strange vibes from him,"
Diehl added.
Ralph. a Bnllsh-bom freelance
photographer from Newport Beach.
1<; charged with fatally shooting
Bradley Kaye. has 18-ycar-old step-
son Ralph was ai:restcd after his
stepson disappeared OQ Aug. I.
Though Kaye's body was not foun(j
for five da15 .. several witnesses re· ·
ported seeang a man resembling
Ralph $Landing near a body S{>rawled
on a roadside in Irvine. The witnesses
said that a car, later identified as
~ye•s. was parked nearby.
Kaye, who would have been a
senior this year at NcW'port Harbor
Hif' School. was shot once m the
chest. His body was found at a
construction she an Irvine where it
had.been buried under a layerofloose
sand, according to police.
Kaye's orange Mercury Capri was
found more than a week later parked
at John Wayne Airport.
D1ehl testified that Ralph tele-
phoned him July 30 about the gun
after seeing a notice that Dlehl had
posted at the city firing range. Diehl
said he met Ralph about 20 minutes
later at the range. •
"He said the gun was for hrs wife."
Diehl CJ(plained. He said Ralph fired
the weapon several times after asking
if the gun was "loud."
According to police and auomeys,
Ralph and Kaye's mother bad a
tumultuous relanooship that ended
in divorce two years ago. Friends said
they reconciled at one point. bul
broke up again.
Lisa Jones. who said she was
Kaye's girlfriend, testified 1that she
last saw Kaye on the morning of the
day he va01shed. She said he called
home at about-noon and left a
message that "he loved me."
Jones also testified that she had met
Ralph several times and described
him as seeming .. confused and de-
pressed" during the meetings.
the day before the muscular,
blond-haired youth disappeared.
Ralph was drinking vodka and or-
ange Juice at the house in Costa Mesa
where Kaye and his mother lived,
Jones testified.
o.111 Net ..... .,,......,.. .......
Irvine Police Officer Brtan Clifton in·
atructa patron• at a apa near tbe Bank of
America on bow to. encuate the bUllcllDC safely. .
HOSTAGES HELD IN BANK •••
From Al
husband freed himself at about 7:45
a.m. and called Tusun pohce, provid·
ing them with a descnpt1on of the
family car and sua.gesting the robber..
might be headed to the Irvine bank
with his wife TuMin police called
officers m Irvine. who phoned the
bank A female emplorec inside the
bank told police ... We re being rob-
.
bed."
Office~ arrived at the shopping
center a short time later 10 discover
the bank manager's car parked out
front. ,
The male i;u~pcct. who police said
W8'i armed when he broke into the
,..,
bank manager·11 home. is dcscnbed
only as a white male. Police sajd the
two females involved may be cm-
plo)ees of the bank.
At pre s time, police were trans..
port1ngautomobiles in the pa~kina lot
fronting the bank to a rear area for
those who were earlier evacuated
from the market and aym.
EX-WIFE TELLS OF· MURDER PLOT •••
From Al
became so heated that he itn.&ck her
with his hand and lhc struck him
'.back. Mr . Penney recalled.
After their dwortC: Mrs. Penney
said her rtlat1onsh1p with the ruddy.
complexioned defendant continued
to go downhill. She said the two
1u1ucd over vis1tat1on ni}lts with
their children, th~ sale of their home
and other propcrt}. ·
But Penney conunucd to talk of rccondhation~ ··trc would bnna the ~uh1nt u . I told him lloH~d him and
ijiCJ care Whal happcnC<J to li1m, fiut
~c oouldn'1 c1 b d: together," Mrs.
Penney p1d. -' •
h lsn cknowlcdgr:d the two had
it \Ul) rtJauons af\cr their divorce
had become fin 1.
•
One n1aht. Mrs Penney said ,he
received a telephone call from her
former' husband tellina her he had
b«n in the hou!IC while he an4 the
cluldrcn were asleep. "He 1d the
only rca~on I was alive was because
our ~n WD.S lecping wath me," she
te t1tkd. .
Mrs. P nney told the cour1 sl'te fir t
learned that her husband wa con·
sidenna kilhna her when one of hi
friends John Button. called to warn
her. "Hcfcl1J rtall~wa indanicr~lk
as sccina J1tc."d pretty regularly nnd ~ was !\llll "¥C'!"'J in i\tcnt oo ha\ ing .m out ofttic way to ha"c th<": hau ..
and rh1klrcn," he .aid.
1 that po n\. Mri. Penney c n·
u1"'rd Onm Count) hen fr~ d pu-
. ·-
.
ucs who set in motion the undercover
operation that rcsullcd in Pcnncy•s
nrres1.
Burton. accordina to teStimo/t>.'ift
the rasc. supplicU Penn~) wtth . a
telephone number of a hit man. sn
ctu.alit)' sheriffs dcpanment under-
CO"¥C:r 1n~estiR1tOr Ro~ Giles.
11lc~ 11grtt"d co amnac a "~r·
manenl accident"' for Mrs. Penney for
3.000. accord1na to tape rccordinas
of tlln&S bclwc:i:p ancy and
Giles pla}cd for juroB.
Penney was arrc tcc9 honly after
he wu 'hown taked photQ&tayht of
his (ormcr wife lyan1 "dead on a
<:oronct'• lab, coord1n1 to the
C\ldCn(t,
FRIDA Y. OCTrJBER 12. 1984 -
an its
e
ID
Cout
Some Disney strikers re-
turned to work and 100
new workers were hired
at the Magic Kingdom
Thursday./ A3
Callfomta
e rv1ne
:-:-:;:::.:::.:::::~~;~:;::~:=!!~:::;:;:::;::~·~:~·:·:·~
Nation ~
Congress turns down
debt celling hike; legis-
lators returned to Wash-
lngton. / M
Challenger crew packing
up for return to Earth./ A4
World
Bomb blast In Brighton,
England leaves Margaret
Thatcher untouched, but
4dle./AI .
Miiitary blam9d In Aquino
murder at Airport./ A4
TV'~ Charlotte Rae leads
celebrities who support
lntervat House./ A7
Sports
What does the San Diego
Chicken do now that the
World Serles has
switched to Detrolt?/81.
Edison High, the No. 1-
ranked football team In
Orange County, survived
a sluggish first half to win
Its Sunset League open-
er ./82
Huntington Beach Hlgh's
boys cross country team
-with sweep of the fl rat
six places -breezed to
victory and remaJned un-
beaten./83
Entertainment
Hank Wiiiiams Jr. follows
Leon Russell on the Pa-
cific Amphitheatre stage
tonlght.IWMkender
Hungry for German food
during Oktoberfest? Dine
at the Bavarian Chalet.
IW•kender
Bualneu
Financial Corp. of Ameri-
can has lald off 20•4 of Its
• works and cut ex-
ecutives' salarles./84
INDEX .
Auto Piiot
Bridge
Bulletin Board
BulklMI
Callfornla New.
Claulfled
Com lea
Ctottword
DMth Notlcft
G.,denlng
Hor~
Ann Lander•
Mutual Fund•
Netk)nal News
Opinion
Pepwazzl
People
PoNceLog
Pubtle Notlcel
Allt ta
8pot'tl
8tOCkMWket1
T~ n.t ..
W•ther
World Newt
C1 -10
86
A3
84
~~-Ae
C6-9 ea
C9
C5
A9
C7
A8
EM Ae
A10 A7
A7·8
A3
C4·8
Well(tndef
81=3
85
A9
WMkender
A2 ......
Intended murder
victim ·tells court .
of matital turmoil
Ex-husband charged
with hiring 'hit man·
to arran e •accident'
By JEFF ADLER °' ... o.lr .... et.If
A woman who agreed to gose for
photographs on a slab at the Orange
County Coroner's Office so an under-
cover investaptors could convince
her fonner husband she'd been killed
by a hit man he allegedly hired
teshfied Thursday about her de-
terioratin'a marriage to defendant
Frederick Penney.
Penney, a S7-year-old Laauna
Most view
VP Bush
as winner
of debate
By DONALD M. ROTHBERG
,,,,.....~ .
PHILADELPHIA -Georae Bush
contended he'd .. turned it arou d"
for the Republican ticket. ~hllc
Geraldine Ferraro claimed "Two out
of two ain't bad" after the \i ice
pre dcntial candidates~ in a
harp duel for campailJ'.lmomcntum
that drew favorable reviews from-:thc
(Pl ....... VICS/A3)
Niguel contractor and fonner New'
Yorlc City fireman, is charged with a
single felony count of solicitation of
murder. If convicted of the charie. he
faces a maximum si,._year prison
teim.
Red-haired Susan Penney, 34, told
an Orance County Supcnor Court
Jury an Santa Ana that following their
breakup in August 1983 she had been
repeatedly harassed and followed by
her husband, who was Jailed twice as a
rnulL
Spcak1n1 confidenttr.ebut avoiding
her fonner husband s stare. Mrs.
Penney described how arguments
leadina up to their divorce became
more heated. near the end of their
nine-year relationship.
··The topic was either the children
or my time away from home, Any-
thina that took my ume away from
BJ ROBERT BARIO
Of .. INIW ........
A NCWP.Ort Beach nunc-
ancsthetist apparently 1*'n
bailed out of Oran&c County Jail al\ r
cnterina a oot auilty ptca Thursday in
Oranee County Municipal Coun to
St\icn counts of buralary ao con nee·
tion with the theft of po~rful pain-
luUing dn&p from fi"e area hospt
Jail offic&als said that Bndaet Lynn
TnlC)• was no lo~r m jaal tod.ily but •
the house or away from him." she told
the jury.
On one QCCaSion, their arsumcnts
(Plea._. U -WU'B/A2l
CAMPAIG N '84
• . .. ~
B of A manager
abducted f~om
her Tustin home
81ROBDT11YNDMAN _.STEVE Mm :an.a . ..............
Three bank robbers 1bduC&ed a
Bank of America manqrr from ber
Tustin home early lbis momina ad
were rcponcdly bOktina hOMlllCf
inside the Irvine bnnch oflioe as
police surrounded tbe b!1iJd.ina and
bqaD evaruatina people from neatt>y
businenes.
Irv· POiice Lt. Al Muir said FBI aeents and I.be city•s SWAT-"caeam~...o-----i•
amved at the Bank of America in the
'orthwood To\im Ccnaer 1t 9 a.m.
and bqan evacuatina emDlo>us and
patrons at an adjacent Von'' super-martct and Nautilus l)'mnasium.
Officers esconed civilians from bldt
doOn to thole busiDrSIC'S IS police
dosed off the sbooPia& center at
Irvine Boulevard a.ncfYale·.
Muir slid the incidea& bepaca& S a.m. when an armCd man and two
females entttcd tbt borne o1 the bank
~. budcuffcd bCT bosband.
then forced the woman~ drive them
in her automobile to tbe bank in
Irvine .•
Bank of American offacials in Loi Miida tenwivdy identified the mamvr u MaflC S&cinbon..
Con\acted by ldephorie at their
home, William Steiabont confirmed
that hts wife bad been abd\M:'la! by a
man and two women.
POllCC said me bank tnaallllei's
buSbin'd fttec1 htmsetf It abaat 'l:4S
a.m. ud called Tustua police, pnwid-
•D& them with a dacriplion of the
family car and suantina the rObbCn
miabt be beaded to the lrviae buak
(P.JeMe eee llOST AG&Sl A.2)
Sus~ct
1aervo11s'
.when he
g~tg11n
81 STEVE MARBLE .............
A )OUDI Huntington Bcacb man
testified Thursday that be sold a
powerful handlun to a .. nervous"
Bruce Bradley blph just two days
before the S7-year-old mao was
~ oa suspicion of murderina
his ~D.
Daniel Diehl said Ralph pvc him
four SIOO bill for the .38 caliber
revolver after be inspected tbc
weapon and fired it numerous times
at a Huntiagton Beach firina range.
.. He seemed kind of nervous but I
thou&ht maybe he was just gunsby."
(Pl--eee SUSPSCTS/ A.2)
J
'
..
Ottngt Co.at DAIL YPILOl' /Fr uay, October 12, 1984
Picketing Irvine teachers
taK€ t1leir case o 1s :rict
•
tc chcn pan1cip tcd in the emoon colic c cl't'Jns The d1~tncl has lso
pidieun1_. The union rtpresrnts ofTcrcil to p&) lcachcl'l a onMime ab0ull'7~d1stnc1 fl cuhy me-mbcr5. bOnu~ 1f tunds ~main at the end of
Fran Monon, a d1~trict the hool )e:ar. but th:n otTrr was
spoke \\Oman. 1d the demon· tCJt:ctcJ b) thC' union.
tntt1on did not diuupt operation\ a1 Ncgotauons "ere halted 1 t "et"k
he d1\tnct h . dyume~----:-~-~ht'n an 1mpa wa~ decl f't'd , tmd
Although regular cla \l'QOm in-both 1de art now . l\\;uttna the
Slruction has continued. some arrhal of'.rt~t:Jtc mediator wh~1 will tr\'
teachers h vc stopped t> nic1patina to break tht deadlock. ·
m cMracurriculur a<:t1\ 1tics, at the ~ OC1 lion prcs1d~m Hom<"r ~id
urging of the union Supcnntendenl he pl:ans to 11Jd~ the d1stricl board
A. Stanley Corey ha\ charged lhat of education when the elected boc.h
the~ l<'liChcl"\ are v1olaung their mcel\ ne\t Tucsda) ·at 7:.30 p.m. 1n
contract: the unaon disagrees. the new di~tnct hcadquurtc~.
The pickctm& wu tnggercd by an He ~id teacher '"" d1'ltlnbu1c
impasse in ,ontmcts talks. primaril) leaflets Oct. 20 10 COO\C) their
concerning teacher salunes. position to local residents.
The un10n ha~ rCQUC$tcd a 7.5 On ()<:t J9, the leachers arc
perC"cnt salary raise for lhc 1984-85 scheduled to takr a strike ~hool )ear 01stnc:t olllhals have authon1a11on \Ole. ff the measure 1c;
said they can aflord no additional pa) approved, facuh) ncgot1a10~ would
r.use beyond the automauc 1ncreaSC'~ have th\: puwer 10 call a work
provided for lehgtll of service and \lOppagc.
Crippled swimmer's injury
F claim goes to county jury
, By JEFF ADLER be awarded.. The tnal btgan Sept 26. claim the c11y was neghgent for ~Ol
ot 111e D8ltJ Net ataff The athletic 6-1 Taylor. now a post mg s1gnsalOnJ the beach wamang
t}.n eight-woman. fo ur-man Orange quadriplea.ac who has only limited use of the danger of diving into the water
C aunty Supcnor Coun JUI"\ began of his arms. tesl1ficd that he dc-cided near the pier, where sh1fhng sands
dc:'l1berat1ons toda) to determine to go into the chilly water that Ap~I create omhore holes. sandbars and
.... helher a paralyzed 22-year-old man afternoon to wash on suntan 011 troughs .
should be compensated for a cnp-before returning h~ to Oarcmont The 1v..o anornm claim the c1ly
pting nccltlruury siifferea in T980 Wilhn1s girlfnend. was aware of lhe uncertam bollom
when he dived rnt~a sandbar near the Because of the cold water conditions along tha\ popular slrc tch
Balboa Pier at Newport Beach. temperature, he decided to run into of beach. but have done nothing to
John Taylor is Sc:"ekmg an un-the gently rolling s~rf. When he was warn beachgoersofthcdan.gerdesplle
specified amount of damages from a~ut . waist-deep 1n the water. he 1he numbers of neck tnJunes that
the city of Newport Be.ich claiming dived into an mcommg wave. ha' e occurred there.
the city neg.ligeotly faaled to post signs Somewhere underwater he , ap-The city ··l of Newport Bea~h.
warning of uncertain and dangerous parent!) crashed head-on tntu an through Irvan<' attorney Palf'!ck Q!l•n·
underwater cond1uons an the area. useen ndge of sand. shatteryog one of II van, has contended waf!'1ng 1gns
If the Jury returns a verdict in his his vertebra. He surfaced an a d_ead-along the t?each wouJdn l prev~nt
favor. a second phase of the civiltnal-man's fl.oal. h.1S body paraly:z.ed 1.rom pmal m1un . be<:ause-no one .1go
an Judge Lloyd Blanpied's Santa Ana the neck down. can warn aeamsl the man)' possible
courtroom wall get under way lo Taylor's Newport Beach anome)s. v.a)s swimm ers can lnJUre them-
determme how much Ta)lor should Hc:"rbert H::fif and Wayne Austero sehes. •
SUSPECT'S GUN PURCHASE TOLD ...
From Al
said Diehl dunng the opcnmgday of a
prehmmai;. heanng at Harbor Mu-
nil:1pal Court in Newport Beach.
"I got strange .. 1bes from him."
Diehl added.
Ralph. a Bnt1sh-bom freelance
photographer from Newport Beach.
1s charged with fatally shooung
Bradlc) Kaye. his 18-year-old step-
son. RaJph was arres~fter his stepson disappeared on I.
Though Ka)e's bod) wa not found
for five da)s several w11ncsses re-
ported seeing a man resembling
Ralph stand mg near a bod) \prctwkd
on a road!t1de 10 Irvine. The w11nes!l.{'~
said that a lar. lilter 1dl'nt1ficc..I a.,
Kaye's, was parl..cd nearb)
Kaye. who would ha'e heen a
senior this year al Newpon Harbor
H igh School. was shot oncl' in the
chest. His bod) was found al a
construcuon site an lr" 1ne where 11
had bttn burfud under a la} er ofloose
sand. according to police.
Ka)e's orange Mercut) Capn was
found more than a "-Cd. latcr parked
at John Wa}nc A1rpon
Diehl 1es111iC'd that Ralph tele-
phoned him July 3U about the gun
after seeing a notice that Diehl had
posted at the cit) finng range. Diehl
id ~ m<'I R.aJph about 20 m1nu1e~
later al the range.
··He said the gun was for his wife,"
Diehl e'plaaned. He s:ud Ralph fired
the weapon St'Veral times after asking
1f the gun was "loud "
According to police and auome)s.
Ralpb and k..a\.-e's mother had a
tumultuous rela11onsh1p that ended
in divorce two years ago. Fnends said
they reconciled at one point. but
broke up again
Lisa Jones who said she was
Kave's 1urlfnenJ tesuficd that she
last uw Ka'te on the morning of the
da\ he rnnlshed She sa1d he called
home at about noon and lefl a
message tha1 "he lo\ied me ..
Jones al\o tes111ied that she had met
Ralph se .. eral 11mes and descnbed
him as seeming "confused and dl·-
pressed" dunng the meetings
Th<' da) before the muscularr
blond-haired youth. disappeared.
Ralph was dnnkinc vodka and or-
anae juice olt the house in Costa Me~i whe~ Ka)t.' and his mother lhcd.
Jon~ lestilit•c..I.
\ccord1ng to de tense allomc:")' Jad
E:.1rlc) Ralph ,., a diagnosed man1l·
dl.'pre\!>1' t' \\ho takes medicauon for
the cond1110n. In court Thursday.
Ralph kl'pl hi'> gaze downcast much
of thl' lime and periodically took on
his glas!tes and "-lped his eyes.
He 1s being held on $500.000 bail al
Orange Count) Jail.
NEWPORTCOUNCILCAMPAIGN QUIET ...
Prom Al
can do on that."
Councilman John Cox also spent
about $30.000 in his winning effort
four year!> ago An outspoken man
who is supportive of development
and ollen cnllcal of those who oppose
11. Co' also 1s unopposed in the race.
The onl) rnntcst at all 1s on the west
<;1de of the cit) where incumbent
C ounc1lwoman Ruthelyn Plummer 1s
being challenged b) Da"c Goff. a lit)
plannmgcomm1ss1oner and polilllal
novice V1v1an Roum
For the first time 1n "" H'arc, lht•
advocacy group Stop Pollu11ng Our
Newport (SPON) ha\ not put up il
candidate Four vearc, ago lour 1)f the
.,c .. en council member' "'l'rl' al 1gnl.'d
1,1,1th the group anc..I fo,orl'd 11\ ,10 .... -
gl'owth ph1losoph)
"People who kno"' "'hat the ~ort•
1\ in this tov..n v.-ouldn·1.,..an110 pa~ a
lot of mane) JUSt tn haq:· their
character defamed ;ind then lo<,e."
S<t\<. Jean Wall. pre-;1c..lcn1 of the
ad .. ocac) group
It 1<. 1mposs1ble to "-10 ""ht•n other
landidatcs are backed -dircctl) or
1n<lirectl) -b> large development
interests lake the In 1m• ( o and the
Koll Co Watt says
"fl'., t>c:come apparent that one "'a>
J~tCall
642-6086
DaUy Piiot I Oetlvery
11 Guaranteed
!i Jll p ,. t•• W"'!Jf P I f
or another they'll spend whatever 1s ,
necessary to win," says Wall.
Past elecuons ha\l'C been filled with
insulting newspaper ads and charac·
ter assassinations that make the
electoral proces!t wholl ) unpleasant
'ihe sa"s SPON cannot find an)one
interested 1n running.
men1 proJects.
Past city elections have cotncided
with mult1-m111ion dollar develop-
ment plans.
"We''e made much more progress
taking on issue!> · "-an notes .. Issues
can be undcrc,tood better than
people ..
Counul.,,.,oman J.1t·k1c Heather.
who "-Oil rc-cklllon two )ears ago
l'"en though ht.·r l hallcnger spent
about $'i<J.000. claim' Vva11 '<; group
cau'>ed the nintrll\ t'f'>) 1n pa'>t l'lel-
11ons
'The) JU!tl kepi ocalinS the saml.'
old dead horse and I think people
fi naJI) said. 'So what's nev.. '>'"
Heather said
"I think we have a preuy good team
nght now and people sec that We talk
to each other and that's something we
never did when SPON was in con-
trol"
Robert Shelton. a former Newport
Beach mayor and Irvine C'o. senior
'ice president, says the apparent lack
of interest in the clecuon might be th1·
absence of controversial develop-
An lrvrne Co. project was aban-
doned in the face of a referendum four
'.t<'ar. ago and another was unsuc-
cec;c;fulh 1:hallenged 1n a referendum
'ole that cotncided v..11h the cit~
elect ton tv..o H'ars ago
"But I am surpnsed." Shelton
admm ·E,en in tranquil times
1here\ alwa\S t>c:en a hankl.'nng b\
an'.t numhcr of people to become a
counnl rrwmhcr L'H'n If thn didn't
ncn•s.,anl) dl'>agn•c "'llh thr. mcum.
bent"
\hchon douhl'> that the l;wk of
tand1dalt.'' 10 the clct:11on mean., that
one fal·t1on or another has triumphed
"Bui I don·1 thin!.. the lack ol
inten·st tn the dcc11on \hQuld bt·
wnm·n olT as apalh) ... suggests
~hclton '\\<l' shouldn't undcr-
C\t1ma1t• the dcgrl'e of!.atl'>facuon the
communal) feels with 1h1!1 rnunc1I ..
\.\'all d1sagrct.•s.
"It Jll!ll 1\n't worth 11 (to run),' .,he
\a\\ "In fat:l I'm sorn I wa'>ted three
month'i working on a campaign la\t
lime I could haw been doing
\omcthmg far mort• produc11' l' ...
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Tell us what's on your mlod.
ORANGE COASl
Daily Pilai
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MAIN OFFICE
M.JtW. .. • 1· ·"' I "°' t1.a-. r°"' llllr.. D
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P· 1blt >her
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~~~ Ro••m•ry Churchman
Control! r
tephen F. Cerezo
Prodoc11on
ManAgP.r
t
Donald L. Wlutama
Crrculntlon
M ag VOL. n , NO. 218
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Ex:..pitcher McLaughlin
throws police a curve
By DXVIDlllSBOP ~-~--h:omc t.hr nt day and name h.i\
.suppher. police said. Dalllr .... _.,. " •• t ~ • U"
n ex-major league baseball pitch-
er threw Laguna Beach police a
curvcball this week: "hen he reneged
on an agreement to cooperate in a
drug cast.
Accordrng to Laguna Beach pohct,
Byron Scott Mclaughlin. 30, was
arrested on Sept. 17 after making a
deal in an Jn. me Hotel to sell 11
ouncc5 or cocaine for $24,000 to
undCTCO\ er offiC'tl"5. He had bttn
named as the supphcr of cocajne to a
pair of AriLona rt's1dent who were
previously arrc-sted 1n Laauna Beach.
Mcl.aughlin·s bail was set at
\15.000. but he was released on his
ov..n recognizance after agreeing 10
meet with police at his Chula Vista
But Mclaughlin was gone when
police amved at the hou~ on Sept. I ti
and ha n•t shown up since. police sai~ I
He fatted to appear in court
Monday !Or his ~hcduled arraign·
menl.
o\n arTC 1 warrant was issued and
Mcln1Jth~in's bail was ra1'>Cd lo
$250.000.
"He's probabl> in Mexico.'' Sgt
Alex Jiminez of the LBPD s1ud ·He
has a lot of connection, down \here.··
Mclau&hlin played tn the winter
baseball feagues in Mu1co. speak!>
Spanish and formerly li'ed in
Sonora, Mex1l:O. "He"s tntelhgent and
knows his way around." J1minel said
Md..aujthhn's alleged a.)complicc,
Roben Roy Burnside, 23. of Chuta
Vista. faces a pttlimmary hearing ~n
Oct. 23. Burnside and Mclaughlin
are both charged with conspiracy to ~II cocaine. Burnside was released on
S 15,000 bail.
Mclaughlin. 30. compiled a 3-5
record for the Cahfom1a. Angels in
1983. His five-year career ended in in
December when he wa~ released from
rhe team.
Mcl.aughhn rem101sccd with die
undercover officer about his baseball
carl"er, a police spollesman said, and
he earned a baseball card of himself.
Accordmg 10 pohcc. McLaua;Hn
bragged that he had been "ulo
dealer," selling cocame 1n large quan-
1111es for the past fi ve years.
Texas suicide pact surf aces
after deaths of 6 teen-agers
L[Aul[ (l"T) Tna\ (.\P) -
Some s1uden1s an a suburban school
d1stnc1 where "" ll-tn-agcr'I have
killed 1hemselvec; an the last 21"
month!> had ont:e entered into a
su1c1de pact. but no such pact l"\lsls
currentl). officials said toda).
Rumors of a pact in which 2010 30
students swear lo take their hve~
w11han St"\ weeks were "generated by a
student who. according lo the stu-
dents and counselmg staff. began the
star} as a lark." utlicials of Clear
Creek Independent $(:hool D1stnct
'>atd in a wnuen statement
However the statement did m-
d1ca1c that a pact "-a\ "at one ume in
place among some student friends" of
the three non-student~ among the SI"\
.. u1c1de '1eums. but ha1i sintc been
abandoned.
The offic1al1i said the~ have a\-
.,cmblcd a plan to 1dcntil\ .,u1c1de-
prone \lu<lcnl!i an the d1stnc1·s two
high !llhool'> and arc traan1ng high
.,chool coun!">Clors in how 10 1dcntil}
'>uch stuc..lcnts
In add111on all high sthool \tu-
c..lcnts an the d1stnct ha' c been
assembled for group meetings with
psychologists "to dispel rumors (to)
reduce the suicidal clu tenng." The
')(hools al.so arc ~heJuling 1nd1vid-
ual scssions and po ~ible referrctl of
students considet<'d high mk.
The oflic1als saad that althou~h
lhcre 1s no 1nd1ca11on of "potential
suicide d ustcn ng." the d1stnct re·
cognatcd lhl'.' poss1b1h ly because of
the non-s1udent su1c1de!t which were
the first thr<'c deaths
Thursday. a 14-)ear-old boy who
crouched b\ the exhaust pipe of his
famll} car rn a closed &arage became
the fourth teen-ager to take has life an
the past v.-eek and the sixth an two
months. officials said.
Darren Thibodeaux stuffed towels
under a garage door and turned on the
car engine. police said.
Jimm) Larrabee. deputy supcr-
antendent of the school district, said
that psychologms met w11h ·students
111 group of 800 to 900 Thursday.
Or. Rion Han told Clear Lake
students 1t was "OK to cry. O K to feel
bad I\.-O K to feel gutll) 1f they knew
the ·person who had comm1lled
su1c1Je and felt they didn't do enough
10 help ..
Tht· late'lt 'iu1c1dc v1c11m was found
"'hen Th1bodcaux's 17-year-old sister
d1sc0Hred the bod) lyang by the rear
of the car. police ..aid. The car had
'>talled. but 1\s IJJUUon was o n. and
..aid officers believe the bo) died of
carbon mono1odc poisoning.
"A~ far as we know at this t1me.111s
a '>U1cide.'' !kltd police Lt. Russell
W1lhams.
HOST AGES HELD IN BANK •.•
From Al
with his wifo. Tu~un polkc called
ofliccrs in Irvine. who phoned the
bank. A fomale emplo~ee inside the
hank told pohce. ··we: re bcmg rob-
hcd." c..
001c:cr!i arnvc:d al the \hoppmg
center a 'hort lime later to d1\Covcr
the bank managc:r's car parJ..cd out
front.
The male ~uspcct. who police said
was armed when he broke into the
ooni.. manaa.cr"\ home. 1s described
only as a white male. Pohce said the
Thibodeaux was a ninth-grader at
Clear Creek High School. in the same
school d1stnct as Ocar Lake High
School. where three other teens have
killed themselves an the last week.
Two other former students have
killed themselves since Auau l
Th1bodcauit's body was found
about an hour before I SO mourners
anended the funeral of 16-year-old
Gary Shivers.. a Ocar Lake High
'>chool student found hanged Tues·
da).
"We gave him a nde home the
naght he did 11," said Richard Baker, a
C lcar Lake sophomore "He said he
didn't know the others but wouldn't
have done what they did."
The other victims were Lisa Schatz.
15. who was found hanged Saturday
in her home: Weslc)' Tiedt, 19, found
hanged at his home Oct. 4: Sean
Woods. 19, found Sept. 17 &hot to
death an his pickup, which was parked
in his neighborhood, and 19-ycar-old
Warren Kuns, found shot to death in
has car parked in a field Aug. 9.
Official~ and relatives srud Kuns
and Woods were fnends. as \ferc
Woods and Tiedt They said Shivers
knew the Sc ha ti~ girl. but was not good
fnends with her.
l.arrabee said he did not know if
Thibodeau\ knew any of the other
victims.
two females involved may ~ em·
plo)'CC\ of lhc bank.
\t pre'\\ tame. pohct .... ere tranJ-
poninaautomobilesin the parkmglot
fronung the bank to a rear area for
those who were earlier evacuated
from the market and aym.
. .,
EX-WIFE TELLS OF MURDER PLOT •••
Prom Al
1hc 1r dl\"Ol'('C
t ic \\ho set 1n motion the undercover
opcr.u1on that resulted 1n Penney's
·'"' t.
Burto n. according to tcsumony in
the l':l\C, \upplicd Penney vmh a
tell'11honc numbC'r of 1 h11 man, in
ctuality hcnff department under·
,.o.,..tr 1D\L-St1ga1or Robert Gile
c ''''"'~ t to rranac a .. Pl'f· manent cc1dcnt" tor Mf"I.. Penney for
3.000. ooording to tape rC'C'Ordtnp
of meetings bctWttn PcnnC)' 1and
111cs pln)ed for JUNrJ.
Pcnnc)' was, am:: led honl) after
he •'ll sho...,n fak«I photasra~ o .
hl5 former wife •> 1na "dead' bn a
coroner"\ lab, 1J('('()fd1n1 10 lhc
\Id nt"t'
' f
/