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1984-10-18 - Orange Coast Pilot
. "' ClllT 1111111 Trial ordered in st~pson murd .... NB man accused of shooting athlete, then burying body in Irvine ~ewer ditch w11ness stand m a preliminary h r- ing at Harbor M unicapal Coun m Newpon Beach that ended Tuesday. Judae Calvin Schmidt ordered Ralph to appear 1n Superior Coun Oct 29 for nmugnment. Ralph 1s being held ot Orange County Jail on SS00.000 bntl. wiapped m a plastic bag on the shoulder of Bonna Cnnyon Road neartheentrancc101hecountydump police said Juhe Chester of Irvine 1dent1ficd Ralph as the man she saw trtma to cover the bod) wnh aJI)lastic garba bag. according to attorney mon) Ka~ body found fi cb~ lattt c.on tru t1on w~ He d been 01 once rn ttic chest pohcc said. A Newpon Beach tree·lance pho· tographer hu been ordered to stand· trial for the murder of his 18-ycar--0ld stepson, a popular student and athlete at Newport Harbor High School. Bruce Bradley Ralph, S7, isa~used Coast Supervisors go ahead with new parking lot at • Jotin Wayne Airport, but clamp down on fllght limits for now./ A3 A panel has been named with the unsavory task of recommending which schoots should be closed In Hunt~ngton Beach./ A3 California Fannie Mae sees home foreclosures next year If deficit Isn't tut./ AS Nation NASA rocket man leaves U.S. after being accused of working prisoners to death In Nazi Germany during WWII./ Al B-52 bomber crash shrouded In mystery./ AS World Cambridge professor wins Nobel Prize In econ- omics./ Al Iran claims offensive kllled h~dreds of Iraq ,troops./ A4 . Boating Four of the world's fastest and most glam- orous maxi yachts are vying off Marina del Rey for the Cat Cup./81 Hobie Alter and Hoyle Schweitzer are the first to enter the Boating Hall of Fame./81 S~rta Chicago Cubs' Manager Jim Frey Is named Man- ager of the Year by the Baseball Writers' As- sociation of Amerlca./C1 UC Irvine basketball coach Biii Mulligan says he plans to start two freshmen In the starting lineup this year./C1 Marina High takes over Sunsetleagueleadln water polo. white Univer- sity clinches a Sea View playoff berthJC3 Entertainment Richard Pryor Is clean Ing up his act these days as he hosts.a new children's TVshow./83 INDEX Boating 81·2 Erma Bombeck 82 Bridge A9 Bulletin Bo rd A3 Bualnesa BS Callfoml• New A4 C1assmed cs.1 Comics A9 Crossword C7 Death Nolle 87 Horoscope C6 Ann Landers F:l2 Mutual Funds 85 National New A4 Opinion A8 Police Log "3 Public Notl 87 Sports 01-.. Stock Mark t 86 Televt1lon 84 Theat•rl 83-4 Weathtr A2 World N A4 . . oftheAug. I fatnlshootingofBradley Kaye, whose body was found buried in a sewer ditch at a construction site in lninc. Ralph, v. ho pleaded innocent to the murder charge, did not take the • Aliens' corner quiet ·in Mesa Raid netting 46 Hispanic workers keeps others away By TONY SAAVEDRA Of &be ~Not Stailf It may be too early to tell whether Wednesday's roundup of 46 illegal aliens in Costa Mesa wilJ lower heroin 5ales and prostitution m the largely Hispanic neighborhoods of the city. But doughnut sales have definitely dropped as a result of the morning raid by federal immjgra1ion a~nts and Costa Mesa police in front of a hamburger stand at l875 Placentia Ave. Ralph v.11s arTC led after several motorists told pohc in lrvif'le that lhC} saw a man leaning O\er a body When she asked about the body, Ralph rephed. -it's my fnend M.)' friend's SJ ck,.. accord111g to t ti· Daniel Diehl of Hunungton Be ch testified that he sold lundgun 10 Ralph two day5 before the murder. Diehl s11d Ralph seemed nm ous when he boudtt the gun nd td the ·weapon s for his \\ 1fc • guard· struck by car Newport victim. 71 , listed In serious condition An elderly crossing guard prq>anl\& JO walk tudcnts acrotl a "9)' evq>on Beach stnlet suffered scnous - head mJuncs when be was suudc by a motorist who apparcnti} did not 'SClC him. police ~ported today. Herman Plant. 79. of Ne"".PQn Bea.ch is listed m senous but stable condition today at Founwn Valley Commumt) Hospital trauma cenltt where he was ruShed after lM Wednesday morning acadent. For the past couple months. John Yackey sold coffee. doughnuts and other items from his catenng truck to the large group of Hispanics waiting in front of the eatery to be pic~d up by employers needing day laborers. (Pleaee eee ALIENS/ A2) Dlill .... ,....., ....... "- Costa Me.a •tr~t comer. where all en• once conar:eaated, now qialet after roandap. Platte s tandinJ in the middle of EastblufT Drive th his crossing guard sign raised When he 'Wa$ knocked to the ground by a car drfr~ (Jl'Jeue eee CROSSING/ A2} Retrial hearing delayed for Alcala Former San Quentin death·row inmate Rodney James Alcala is back in Orange County awaiting a ne"' trial on charses he killed a 12-year-old Huntington Beach girl in 1979. Alcala appeared briefly in Orange County Superior Court Wednesday, but arraianment on the murder charge was postponed until Oct. 25 at the request of Alcala~s Santa Ana attorney, Keith C. Monroe. The 39-year-old Alcala is being held without bail in the Orange County Jail. Alcala was brought to the county from San Quentin on Monday by Huntington Beach detectives. liis conviction in the 1979 slaying of Robin Christine Samsoc w;is Rodney Alcala overturned by the state Supreme Coun in uguSt. The high court ruled that the JUI) durin&Alcala's fi~t trial in 1980 improperly was informed of hi$ prior arrest and conviction on child molestation charges. Economic· growth urider Reagan seen Continuing By ROBERT HYNDMAN Oft " .......... II t c cconom1c policies mhiated und ·r the Rcagnn dministrataon are allowed to continue. Orange County and ~he rest of the t:ountl) can expect continued economic growth O\Cr the next four }Car • according to the chairman of the United State Chamber ot'Commcrcc. Addressing an economic con· ferencc ponsoted b) the Orang County Chamber of Commerce toda) in AnahcJm, Van Smith said the economic f'CCO\Ct') purtcd b the I 981 tax. cut and 1hc subscqucn1,ump m inv iment c:an continue 1f the president and Congress allow it. "I don't want to pinpoint credit on one man," Smith said in a later intervie"· "but we need a Congrc s that refuses to rui\C taxes a the answer to r'ery t'COnomic probkm," Smith. chairman of the board of the lndiana·bascd Onuirio Corp .. said Orange County i~ in an enviable position to capi1ali1e on the econ· omic rcco' cry.· .. You ha'llC to take a great deal of pnde in "ha' Orange County bu i· nesscs have done rn recent) cars. The growth has been tremendous," m11h said "And )OU h:ivc to give me credtt &15.0 to the c,;posure th1) rea Fate of murder-for-hire d f:endaat rest~-"-"'- Defense claim's Shertfrs Cleputies Joltn BUnon~· a fnc.nd "110 became .a · police nfori:nzm~ and ~ :s · trapped Penney into plot against wife deputies. "This crime was manufactured by police. encouraged by police and completed by police on a person uodci: a tremendous emotional ;train," Dillon told the six-:man. 5ix- By JEFF ADLER °' ... .,..,........ . An Orange Cooney Superior Court jury resumed deliberations toda) to determine whether S7-YeaJ'.-old Fred- erick Pennc)' ,solicited the killing of his 34-year-old ex::-wifc or ~as en- trapped in the murder-for-hire scheme by a do)C friend and under- cover Sherill's depulies. Penney, a Laguna Niguel contrac· tor until his arrc~a July 2. is cha~ with a single felony count of sohci- tation of murder for allegcdl) hinng an"undercover investigator. posin& as a hit man. to kill his former wife and make it appear like an accident. As the final act in the unusual Van Smith gets from Disneyland and the rttcnt Olymp1~ ... (Pleaee Me ECONOllJC/A2) undercover operation. Sherill's De- partment inve.£tiptors-pc-r'suaded Susan Penney to he on a slab in the COLlnt) co("Oner's offJCC and pose for photographs making hn-appear as if she v.~ dead. The photographs then were shown to Penney to convince him the slaying had been l.'.arried out. If convicted. the ruddy-faced Pen- ney.~ormer NcwYorkOt) fireman. r.ould be sentenced to a maximum si~-)ear prison term. ln his closing argument Wednes- da). Penney's dcfrnse attorney. Christian Dillon. dcscnbcd bis client as an "emotional!) diswrbed. deepl y depressed man" who was ~s1l)' entrapped or oushed into the plot by womanjury. He said Burton and investigator Robert Giles who ~ as the supposed hit man "Bobby;· cajoled. bildaercd. advocated and induced Penney toe~ in the murder plot. an act he otherwise would have been incapable of carrying out .. Thi5 is a man 50 emotion811¥ off ccnttt. he'd pab at an)'thin& given him.-DitJon id ... John Biirton cajoled and urged the death of Susan Penney lo an emotionally oi trauahl man on the ed&e -perhaps or a (Pleue eee JURY I A2) Irvine firm wins I $17 .5 million patent lawsuit Jury says second company lnf rtnged on Shiley patents Irvine makes the top 10 in U.S. high-techcit"es . . .. 18, 1984 JURY WEIGHS MURDER PLOT CASE •.• From Al m n eng:wfUl m a breakup of has mamagc that left ham susccmablc 10 1he'lntcnsc suucsuon of others He 1d Pcnnc> s btaanwuhed" b Burton and the ndCf'CO\'Cr anvtsuptor. • Jurors were instructed by Ju~e Jean Rheinhcimer that they could acquit Penney on the cha~ if they determined he was mlf'aJ>pcd in the urder plot by l)Ollcc or someone ing 1$ a police nt. The qu uon of Ptnnefs sanity was notan i sue in he trial. Deput) Distnct Attorney Wallace Wade painted a different picture of :Penney in his summation, callina the defendant a man who wanted to have hi:. wife murdered. ''Mr. Penney wanted to do it. he (fidn't need to be induced," Wade 1d. From Al Since the hamburger stand doesn't open until later in the morning. Yackcy figured he could make a few extra dollars by bringing hjs truck to the site. This momjng. he was virtually .alone. ··They grabbed a lot of-them, and the ones that got away didn't come back." said Yackey, who estimated that SO to 60 workers gathered at the mburger stand around 7:30 every morning to vie for day jobs. .. They ru.sh up (to the employers) saying. take me, take me;• Yackcy said. "These guys want work, just like all of us. Thev gotta have that daily . 'dough-re-mi.'" He also urged Jurors to rc'll &t'W the tape-retorded c,onvcnauons to de- temune whether Giles had used the anflection of hlS VOICC tO ensnare Pe~ney in the plot.. Wade called Pcnnef cl im that he tned to call ofl the kalhng ••a tory that could have bctn wrinen by Wah Disney. lt'u fantasy he's trying to lay off on you, the ladies and senllcmen ofthiSJUry." Penney ttstified. during his day- long stay on the witne~ stand Tuesday. that he had second.thoughts about killing his former wife and tned to call ofTthc plot the .,.,~ekend before Costa Mesa police officials said they eonliCrCd the Immigration and Naturalization Service several weeks ago during the cit)"s campaign to wipe out drug traffic and prostitution in the neighborhood around the 800 block of Center Street and Shalimar Drive.· Mostly Hispanics live in the apart- ments in the area. Police said 38 of the 42 suspected small-time drug dealers they arrested from Jan. I to Sept. 30 were illepl aliens. Capt. Robert Moody said Wednes- day it was diffiC(ult to assess how the raid would afTeet drug sales, which he said have already dropped consider- ably becauseof police pressure. ha rrc:st H ad he rcpcaUXil> 1clephonod ''Bobb~" bul wa unable to reach him "What t h1 defense~ · \\ nde ked Jurors. "It's that Mr. Bunon nd 1r. Gites made: me do n. Wade contended that bcginmng on June 14, when Penn~)' first tclt>- phoned "8obhy.'' he bad ensa~cd in one conrim.ious act of oliciuu1on of murder, culminaung in his Jul)' 2 arrest. According to tc:stimon)' presented duting the trial, PennC}' aarttd to pay $3,000 for his wife' murder and gave the underco"er investiaator a S 1.500 cash downpa)'ment for the job. Shcritr.s deputies first learned that Penney was considering killing his former wife from Mrs. Penney. who contacted authorities-after Burton conf esscd to her he had been offered $5.000 to ~1ther kill her or find ome~!le who wouJd. Moody said he ~idn't know how many of the 11lcga~ aliens picked up Wednesday were living in Costa Mesa. He said at least two \\ere believed to be local dealers. Hamburger stand owner Seun Ho Kim . 49, said he didn't know any- thinJ about drugs. Kim said he was just tared of picking up the trash, apparently left by the job seekers. before he could open his business ever} day. "They're dirty, very dirty. Every morning there's a lot of them here. They sit on my benches," said Kim. adding that he didn't complain be- cause he can't speak Spanish. CONOMIC GROWTH SEEN CONTINUING ••• Smith needled the economists who , predicted tax cuts would lead to .•skyrock~ting inflation and interest rates along with rising unemploy- ment. "We are experiencing an . un- precedented boom," he 5aid. ·'Those , who have long been prcdkting a coming collapse are beg.inning to look like the prophets of doom who walk . the sidewaUcs with signs announcing the impending end of the world wnh old dates scratched out and fulurt dates penctled in." The economic news is excellent. Inflation and interest rates are down. Productivity is up. Employment is up to record levels. The growth of the U.S. real GNP is the envy of the world, he said. That recovery. Smith said, is due to the jump in investment, currently growing three times faster than in previous recoveries. As to the rttent attention focused on the federal deficit following the Reagan-Mondale debate, Smith said the recovery has reduced the amount from $ J 95 billion in 1983 to about $1 70 billion. Raising taxes, he said. would only worsen the deficit. Tax cuts creatt economic growth. economic growth mcreases the tax base with more people at work and more companies making a profir. he &aid. This increases tax revenues and decreases the deficit. Also addressing the 1,000 business leaders attending the chamber's Economic Outlook conference were Lorraine Mecca, founder of a micro- computer firm: Sam Ginn, vice chairman-of the Pacific Telesis Group: Robert Fitzpatrick of the California Institute of Arts; county Supervisor Harriett Wieder; Sanford McOonnel, chairman of the McDon· ncll Douglas Corp.: Robert Parry. chief economist for Sccunty Pacific. and accountant Harvey Goldstein. The event was the 22nd annual conference for the Orange-County Chamber. IRVINE AMONG TOP HIGH-TECH CITIES •.• · From Al m reducing res1dcnt1aJ development and increasing open space, the ass1s· tant city manager said. Brady said both the city and the Irvine Co. have tried to attract hiVi- tech businesses. the so-called smoke- less industnes. In addition to their environmental advantages, Brady said high-tech .,. businesses "also bring lhe type of person to the area who has expen- dable income, which helps the overall tax base. These people are also better educated and more sophisticated." But Brad y insisted that Irvine doesn't want to limit local housing to expensive new sing)e-family homes that only well-paid high-tech man- agers can afford. Local industries also require plenty of employees at Jower salary levels. Brady said Irvine has become the leading Southern Cah- fornia city in apartment construction so that Jess-.affiuent workers can also afford to live in the city. Although it already ranks h1gh among high-tech centers and attract- ive living cnrvironments, Irvine still has plentyofroom to gr:ow. City plans call for a population of~ I 0.()00 by the year 2010. And even more high-tech development as on thedraw10g board. Nearing completion is the Irvine Co.'s 4,000-acrc Irvine Industrial Complex, surrounding John Wayne Airport in Costa Mesa, Irvine, New- port 'Beach and Tustin. The Irvine Co. has also created a new firm called the Irvine Industrial. ' Research and Development Co .. which will oversee Irvine Spectrum. •. The 2.200-acre four-part commercial development tn east Irvine near the junction of the San Diego and Santa Just Call 642.-6086 0•111 Pltot Oelfyery la Guaranteed Ana freeways will include a 457-acre high-tech center and a 340.acre biological science center. In a statement released after the new company was formed, Irvine Industrial Research President Rich- ard G. Sim said, .. Our marketing studies indicate that Orange County's industrial base will expand by eight million square feet annually over the next five years. "High-technology and bio-scicnce research and development are ex- pected to be at the forefront of this dramatic growth. I see that as our principal challenge -to respond to this market demand by developing Irvine Spectrum as a high quality, world class cel)ter for busines~ and research.'' The rosy high-tech future isn't confined to Irvine. according to Tim Elliott, Orange and San Diego coun- ties' staff representative for the American Electronics Association Califomta as whole is healthy tn the· high-tech arena. Its cities occupr the top five spots in the AEA's nattonal list ofhi&h-tech centers. Of the top 25 hi&h-tedi cities. 13 are in Californ ia. Within California. Orange County ranks third in high-tech businesses. Elliott said. n~ht behind Northern California's .. S1hcon Valley" and Los Angeles. Jf high-tech businesses in Orange and San Dieao counties arc counted together, they surpass the number in Los Angeles. the ass<*:ia- uon official said. Elliott said about 95,000 people arc now workina in hiiJ'!-tech jobs an Orange County. He said one of 1he attractive features of these businesses is that each high-tech job i~ said to generate work for eight other em· ployees in related service and supply areas. The four Orange County ~it1cs that made'the AEA's top 25 list -Irvine, Santa Ana, Anaheim and Costa Mesa -arc home to about 72 percent of the county's high-tech businesses. Elliott said. A key drawing card for the area 1s UC Irvine, which produces a steady stream of trained engineers. But Elliott wame<ljhat the Orange County cannot become complacent because other areas are trytng to lure away the lucrative high-tech com- parues. He said cheap fabor and less expensive land arc prompting some firms to relocate in Asia and Mexico. But not all the competition comes from outside the United States. "Not a month aoes by," Elliott said, "that some bigger (high-tech) com- pany in Orange County is not con- tacted by a group in Sacramento, Texas or the Carolina TrianaJe, asking them to relocate. They'd love to have our companies move there." To remain an attractive hi&h-tech center. Elliott said Orange County must continue to ha ve a ready pool of reliable laborers He said local col- l~es must help people acquire the Job skills needed an a time when tech- nology is ,changing rapidly. In ad- dition. he said, the county must make the best possible use of its land. producing a harmonious balance of housing and t>usiness-sites. "J don't think we can sit bark and look at our climate and our way oftife and say they will continue to attract compame ." Elhott said. "J think we've got to go out and be com- petitive." Wbat do yoa like about the Daily Pilot? Wltat don't yoa like? Call tlte number at left and yoar mnsa1e wUI be reeordecl, truscrlbed and dellvtred to the appropriate editor. Tbe same U-bour antwerlng service may be used to record letters to the edltot on any toplc. Contributors to our Letters column mnt l1clude their name and telephone namber for verlflcatlon. No clrculatlon calls, please. Tell Ill what's o.a your mind. . ORANGE COAST ClrculaUon 714/M2"'4m Daily Pilat ClaHHIH edv•rtl1tno 714/M2·5e78 All other department• 142""321 MAIN OFFICE L•i>nc!.ty fr y II yilU 00 NII 1111>9 'ff» ~ Oy 5 'JO p ;n ca• tielort 7 o m Ind yOUf COQ\I d tie (lltheted H. L. Schwartz Ill Publishes Ctrculetton TMphonM Ronmary Churchman Controller t•Ph•n F. C•razo ~rOductlon M nogcr Donald L. Wiiiiam• Ctrcul tion M na I VOL. 17, NO. 212 Clear skies with gusty winds Coaetal Tides TOOAY 4 30plft """"' 12JMLlll 709em 120lpm ,50p.tn 8ooM ao.ton • • llultalo Cur>« CNMston.SC o 1 Ohert9tfon. w v 4 .3 Ct\ar'foll• H C. 21 c~ Sun Ml• todey 11 e· 15 p.m., ,,... 5 1 Qllcavo Ctne1nn1U c~ C01um1>11.S C • CclumbUt,Oll CoMofd)ll1. Oeltu-F1 Worth Frkl•v•H OU tn 1ne1 .. t•11G••n11t·1' pm --OOOMIUI 2.5'p lft.,,_ Tl!Ut9dey 11 t tt• m .,q Mlll9QUl 113 31 pm 4 7 22 FMblnlll 63 •2 F•go 74 153 1'18gtt1lt 41 2& Grind ~ tt II GtMtfD IO 11 Hartford 71 13 ......... • s 2t 11onolulli 69 •4 11-lon 71 49 lnd•-Po'lt 70 40 Jeckeon,Mt H ~ JacklOl'IYll!e ,0 ·~ JuNilU 13 ,. Ken ... Qt~ 7S 16 LU VtQM ro ., 70 H 73 63 10 H 12 .,. <M .... ., ~ 69 ,. 17 12 IO 11 to .. h e3 ... .. 116 12 Gt .. 6t ., 67 Tt 62 6e 32 62 41 t2 .... ,,, .. 60 " 41 24 ,. 51 a o 12' 60 .... to 34 .,. 73 70 &t 12 11 .. ,, 11 31 112 41 ., 10 151 •• 6t ,. 0 so " $2 11 64 .. 69 10 11 11 63 16 61 .. 68 Temps 3t at 51 411 • St ... 43 11 IO SuRr R[PORT HI ... 1111 S3 le 38 17 60 S1 2t 80 116 t7 " '° 72 -'° 71 83 51 31 Dick Dale hotne after . burn injury By Tbe Associated Prus Guitarist Dick Dale, badly burned last Friday when a PAA of hot oil burst into Oames and sptUed over his body, bas returned to his BalbOa Peninsula home. "What more can happen to me?" asked the 46-year-otd Dale. wtio was released Tuesday from Hoag Mem- .... orial Hospital. Dale recently was acquitted on child molesting charges. Doctor5 have said they don't know --- if the left-handed guitarist wiU ever be able to play qain. In the 1960s, Dale was the self. styled "Kina of the Surf Guitar." Dale was heating oil in a pan to make popcorn when the accident occurred. When the oil burst into flame, he grabbed the pan off the stove but dropped it beCausc it was so hot The burning oil.spilled onto his body and clothes, scttina him afire. Dale rolled on the Ooor to snuff out the flame-s. Salciry contract suit looins ln city By ROBERT BARKER Of .. 0..,"" at.llt Members of Huntington &ach's largest Jabof union voted unani- mously Wednesday night to take Jepl action against city leaders who they charge have rejected their salary demands unfairly. Attorney James Harker said today he plans to file the suit in Orange County Superior Court Fri~y. He accu!ia City Administrator Oiarks Thomps<>n of enpaing •n "bid fiith bargaining." · Harker said he also will ask the court to order the city to give 10 percent of the employtti. in the association a vacation so they can picket. Spokesmen for the SOO-member Municipal Employees Association, which comprises non-managment and non-emergency workers, 51y they plan to put up an employee picket line around City Hall Friday momina to publicize their demands.. "We'll be trying to get the City Council's attention,•• unu p~ident Judy Johns said. ~ The employee group is seeking a S percent pay inc~sc plus a Vi percent contribution by the city to a medical insurance fund for retired employ~s. City negotiators have agreed to a 4'h pay increase and the 1h percent contribution to the retirement fund. The total amount of money se1>3r- atin1 the two sides comes to about $65.000 a year. -Youth committed after rape try A 17-year-old student has been admitted to a psychiatric hospital after allegedly attempting to rape a female student at Laguna Beach High School Tuesday morning. acoording to Laguna Beach police: The rape attempt reportedly oc- curred on the hiah school baseball field before classes at 6:45 a.m. The suspect, the 16-ycar-old. viCl:im and witnesses were questioned about the incident, said Sgt. Linda Parker, but the youth was not arrested. Rather than ftle criminal charges, the suspect was admitted for' psy- chiatric treatment at Santa Ana Psychiatric Hospital, Sgt. Alex Jimenez said, and the lenatb of his treatment will be at the discretion of doctors. ''The kid's got mental problems," Jimenez said, •• ... this is better than a cpminal charge. He really doesn't understand what's right and wrona." A source at the high school, who did not want to be identified, said the Jirl's screams alened a passing motor- ist and a iogger. Both stopped to asuist her. The victim was "rou&hC<i up .. but she returned to school Tater that day, the source said. The suspect, who police did not identify, fled but was later ap- prehended by police in one·of his hi.&h school classes, J><?lice said. School officials declined to com- ment. --O·lili''IRI~---~-... -.... -._.-. ---------- cRoss1NaauAanH1Tsv cAR ... homAl ~, , by Barbara Ross, 39, of Mission Viejo. said traffic investigator Rick Bradley. Bradley said the crossingJuard was attempting to halt traffic before walking lo the curb to escort students across the street. The crosswalk is adjacent to Corona del Mar Hiah School and a nearby elementary school. Ross, driving_ a 1979 Ford Thun- derbird. told officers she did not see the guard. She has not been ci ed in the 7:'40 a.m. incident. Platte. em~loyed by the city, suf- fered head inJunes, a fractured J>Clvis and a broken leg. hospital officials said. • ~___.;_·<e~..:. ~ CONCORD CENTURION -------- 32 FASHION ISLAND 644-2040 am·ly party slated Friday Tldepool trip announced Tbe a trnH ge Udubon Society wfU-eonduct a tide pools fi,cld trip on Sunday, Oct. 21 J.. beginnin& at 12:30 p.m. at Lanie C'orona, corner of ucean and Poppy A venues. Corona del Mar. • · Families would especially el\joy the trip, accordi~ to leader Margarei Arnold oflrvine, For more infomuiUOllt Call 634-2246. Dlvorcelssuealecturetoplc Divorce mediation. a new method for ending marriages in a non-threatening, cooperative manner. will be discussed in .. Contemporary Divorce Issues,'' a lecture at Golden West College on Sunday, Oct. 21. Attorney Lawrence Treglia -and £.conan~TCJ1 ;"t licensed marrfage, family and ~hild counselor. wiU conduct the lecture from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. A Ptoiralh fee of $7 and odvance r~stration is requested. 'Fof more information, call 891-3991. •Knowledge' breakfut •lated By JEPF ADLER OflMDlllr .... •'-" The Orange County Board of Supcrv1son moved ahead Wcdnes· day on its plans for building a new parking lot at John Wayne Airpon, ..b.Ul agreed to continue the currenL41- tlight damp on airline operations until Feb. I. plaD that includes new access gu1de- ilines and a rcquin;d mvtt0nmcntal impact repan on incttUing flight levels. ., Supervison had lo PQStpone their certification -0f tbe llUICCr plan and environmental 1niJ1Kt ttpon earlier this fall to allow U..documcnts to be rewritten. The board 15 scheduled to consider ccnificauon of the dotu· men ts in Januaor~ •·Bccausethe'EIR., not~uate to go. we had lo wait on the a plan;• uplamcd Ken Hall. an aide to 1111111111iiliiiillllilliiliilllllilllll!!!••••llii!il-Supcnisor Thomas lliley on air:pon upemsors. as exJlC;Ctcd, extended e life ,,o( the current auline actess plan until a dcxuion 1s reached on a comprehcnsr11e expansion plan. a matt~ TbeaccC$S plari govern! ho\\ many commercial iet tlipts .pre allowed at UC lrvme Business and lndustnal Associ I will present a ''Frontiers ofKnpwledgc" breakfas& on onday, OCL 22. at 7:15 m the Un1vemt) Oub. Chns1t.M mp~,Y.darecioroflheCahfomiaOtlicc aFEfonom1c lind Bu$ine Development, wtll ~k on "Challenges and Opportunities an Rccruiung High- techno1ogy lndustne~ to OrangcCounty."The t>reald'ast is open to the public at a cost of S 12 per" person:, For more information, call 8S6-624S. ,.,. · Cost cllinbs for copies ~f marriage certificates NB traller dweller.s .saved by thenicke! \ B~ to present seminar If ')OU consider ~our marriage an cxpcDSl\e burden, expc~~t it to get Just a little bit heavier.' By ROBERT HYNDMAN Oftllelbltrf'lol~ Who says a niCkeJ can't buy anything these days? Hoag Memorial Hospital Presb) terian, 301 Newpon Blvd., Newport Beach, will Jlrcscnt a free seminar on .. Getting a Grip on Arthritis," on Monday. Oct 22. from 7 to 9 p.m., in the Hoag Conference Center. Orange County OerJC-Recoroer · Lee Branch has announced tliat the cos& of obtaining certified col>ics of rnamage cenificates will be goin up from $4 to $7 bcg'inning Nov. I. For Mary and ~ms ~ole ofNewpon Beach, five cents was.au it took to keep their home out of lhe hands of the count) x collector. • For registration ond funher information. call The increase will be used to fund programs deal in$ with family taw. the training of addillonal personnel in family taw matters and the evaluatin of related progrtlms, accord1ng to Branch. The I S:year residents of the De Anza mobilebome park received a notice in the mail recently that said they were delinquent on their iax payments. And if they didn't pay up by Oct. 12, a lien 76()..5923. • could'1avc been~ against their home. , He su estutiat couples consider-ing tm vc abroad or anythin,g else that requires proof of marriage obtain copies of ·•heir marriage certificate now, before-the fee increase beeomcs effective. The COJeS' un"id taxe rotaJcd lhe rents. The lO perq:n\ penalty on the laie tax. however. was mercifully waived .. Of course. the first thing laid was write a check for five cents and mail ifoff immcdia\CJy." MaryCol~ says ... But ..-.-c thought the whole thi~ was 'fireny funny. J didn•t mink they'd bother with Thursday, Oct. 18 $Uch a small amount."' · • 6 p.m,, Laguna Beacb 5enior Cltlteu Committee, Communit)' Center. 376 Legion St. • 6:30 p.m .. Lagana Beadl Board of djutmeat, CityJiall Council C.hambers, ®S ForestAy~ • 7 p.m., Foun&ala Valley Scltoofbl1h'lct B~ .t Tn1tee1, Education Center, 17210 Oak St. l>ersons who order mahiagc cendi"tc copi in, ~rson at 'lhe Clerk-Recorder's office, 630 N. Broadway, Santa Ana, can pick them up the following day or have the document mnilcd, Brnnt"h-said. As it turns ow. the tax collector usually won't bother with notices for less than a dollar, say William Keys. the Delinquent Collectlont su~.,.. The caJpnt, he ays, was the computer that issues the notices. ••1t ri-4." he said, ·-when it should have µgged. ·• • ·7:30 p.m .. Lapaa Beacll Oable TV Commlliet; Community Center. 376 Legion St. Poucf Lo e MCs~~ facing child abuse charges over spanking A Costa Me man who confessed to ·spanki111 his 2-ycar-old step- dau&htcr with tbe wire handle of a fly swan er is now facing charges of misd~canor Child abuse. Deputy Di trict Attorney Kathi Kendle said James Edward Hill • ..34, could face a m ximum pcnalt).' of $500 and ix months m Jltl 1f convicted ofswatting the child aero the back of her a highs. HUI turned himself over to police Monday on a warrant i ued b)' th • ('Ounty District AnomC)'·s office. Kendle id she filed for the oom· pJ int on Aue. 9. Hill was being held at the county; ii med1ca1w raat UCI Tuesday in heu ofSS.000 ball. ' Costa Mesa detective Paul Cappuc- cilU said Hill conftsstid to ukin,g a coui,>1e ofswi~ al the toddler. who rccttved onl~ minor bn.11 1na from the "Pinkins 1n July AltbouP 1lhe •njuncs were not serious, Kendle said 1he eo1npia1nt was filed to stem any fUturc thr9t of abuse to lhe child. .. A fot of our easel are ma111nal. Pco~ be-come cond1tJOned to 1he idea 'lliat onlv horttnde>us cases arc chil,d :abuse/7 said ~ndle. .. But we tty to nip things in the bud before they tum to sen~ aMcs." Cappuocilli •id the child was brought 'o tM po!KlC llallon an July by an auntwho was blby 11tttna her. gnl was subsequently plaa:d under protecti-..c custody It iht countr.-openned Alben Sitton tm_mc for duldrcn. Police ad Htll ldmitted to swat· ungthcch1ld after She knocked over a plant an the home.;J'k suspect aid he waurrinatohn thc1Jrlbn the4iAPet, but m15'Cd and c.ualn her Jep. "The bruises weren't all U.1 severe,~ said Ca~W. "'h k>Oks as thoufh. he probably JUSl ~ tired of the ktd touching the plants." He ad a new twtst was rucntly added 10 the cue when tbe ~ s mother confesled IO htlt.iq the tot. aayina that her hu.t'blod was lt)'ina to c:ovcr up for ihcr mddeed. • .I Not ddentis Daniel Gordon -of B dies Nin~ people have been appointed ioacom,nntteethat soon will embark on the lengttiv and histoncally unpopular taSk of rec:Ommending ihc closure of one elCmentary school and one ouddle school m me shrink1 Huntington Beach Cit)' (elementaty) School Distnot. School enrollment has been dro/;in,gsteadlly for the past decade. largd} because of lhe ti COSl..ofhonstna m Huntmgton Beach. The district. \\1ncb bad nearl} 1.6'00pupils1n J976. now has less than .S,300 pupil~ The district operated ~en sdtools in I 976;thrtt less than t present. / · SChool officials y ilhat the distict can save bbut $300;0Q0 ann U~ try the dosurc of the two ool The committee that ill hold bimonthlJ. public meetm,gs and 1 expected to make a rccommcnwsuon b) January C~mm \\Cit mcmbcn Ctp(C1Cn "'& \M ppom Borns. I.he 'ntendcnt recreation nd human services for the city of ,Hunti~n Beach: Rich rd Boucher, Fatl)• Bu fnn CicC:aldli .and tidlael Kaster. Ed Zschoehc, an unussdTul canclidatc U1 last ~r'l ool fa clCCtions. w n med as an nltem te. Four persons associated with the sdloob aJso lert' appointed to lhc panel. They includeRebbic Bates. a ma~ teacher at So\\'CTS Middle School; John 1etzgcr, Who :is with the d1 trict' maintenance l:D.d operations depan- ment: Oydc GlasScr. principal at Ketller School: and Dr. _ Gat)' burgner. istant superintendent of ool for busmess. The district has an annual operatina budaCt of ncarl) $16 million, officials id. ' Judge Des hono~ed uth Oran Coooty Municipal CourtJudge Pamela l..tt Iles has received the Out5W>ding ~udge Award from Orange County Women UW)'CT$.. lies. nOran Countydeput)'dtStrtCtattomeyforsill ~~\\as appointed to the SOulh C-0unt) bench m Jan. 1983. ~ he was honored at a banquet earlier this month by the \\omen'slnW) rsgroup\\hich boasts a membcrShipof roQ and a the larg.cst affihate Bar in Orange Coun!Y· _...,. day that someone stole a blue 18- peed Raleigh bicycle from off ett SChool. Tbc loss "as estim tcd at $230. ... M ~ eo.t DAil y PILOT IThutlday October 18 1984 Hotel blaze kills 13, injures 6~ Personal income takes a Angry repairman arraigned on charges of arson, mu~der m ph re and 'C d1dn'1 wan& to take n) chances on a~ rel tivcs nd f nends. • d M 1stant ~ssak there" the JUI) Or d Mo t of lh 0 tr g rl in September dead were elderly. and t\ least SS 8 OD se 1pe_ople were taktn to hospitals. he PATERSON, NJ. (AP) -A fire that aulhonties uad was staned by a ---~awuntkO employee wept ihrour.h an eiabt-story residence hotel early murder. £.ounty ~utor Marun Kayne. Fire Capt. Domenick Cotroneo id l S prople had died in the blaze, but the-mayor · n<Hhe :pros.. ccutor·s office saia they could only confirm 13 deaths. Aid. HO$("tal offinah aatd 60 people By Ute ASMda&4MI PrtH had been u'\jurcd o 9f':t t Russell Wilham Conklin', 44, was ocma eld Wiffiout tl he Pauaac County Jail foUowrna hl am1an· ment <m. Ql)_c ch ~ m ranted arson and one of murder, the onl) charges initially filed Some midenu t:mped from Win· WASH lNGTON -Amcncans• personal ancome rose a st1'0n8 • rcen d .. .-m Septt"mber -wht~ cOl\fUMer~At. after '6howinf--AO-pu1$ or YI ows; 10me "'""m to-uua) on mooths, shot up by 1.4 pcn-cnt, the aovemment repor1ed today. The ~...traPJ>lDi..SOmc rcstdcnts and fbrcinaothcn to jump from windows. At least 13 PCQple were killed and 60 injured. . Conk"hn entered no picas dunna the arralanmcnt wtuch was held before MunicipalJudgc Ronald Fava hours before oourts would normally he blate broke out abou l~lj a m. in the I SO.room downtown hotel a«upicd by ebout JOO permanent rcstdcnu and mmsients, many of them cbcnts of "vinou1 &JCncie.s of aovemmeni.0 Graves said. The fire was under control at 3:40 a.m. firefighters· ltddcn and others were Comme~ Qqtanmclft $lid the rise an consumer spendi0:3 was the strongest rescued from lhc roo~ authQr:il.l,eJ since a l.i percent pin in .Apnl. Since: thll ttme, spend1n1·hu ~ on .,a sa1a. The inJuricr' included smoke down~ .Ude • .postina no pins at Jll an July and Auaust. Economists ha':C inhalation, broken bones'lnd bums cned lhe drop in consumer buy•n& a1 one of the key reaiOOS for the dramatic '"People were aanmina. uytnJ to slowdown1novcrallcconom1cgrowthsinceJunc:. Totaleconom1cou1put,after tic sheetsand blank~tUPjcther to &et SUJ'lllll ihead ar rates of 10.1 percent and 7. l percent in the first.and scoond A part-time employee who Mayor Frank X. Gra vd Jr.i uid had argued with lhe niaht manaaerofthe 60·ycar .. old Hotel Alexander Hamilton was arrnted and charatd W1th anon and bcoqen. "iherc arc deaths and there are il\furies and there arc still ~pie in ~i~e~.e 3;''~~flcd :~i h~~s~;;: qua~ lhi1 ~. ~lo~cd to a .B.6 percent J>i'CC from July through September, children from a first· floor room. eccordana to a prehnunary e ttmate last month. ··Vti•e didn't "The ones who were more scared Just went ahead and Jumped." • F-J l IJ61J'ter dotrlJ, 2 die . , CARRlZOZ.0 • .N.M. -An Atr Force F-l l I 0 fighter-bomber on a IOW· levcl training mission slammed mto the side Qf a rocky hill and exploded, killina its two crewmen, authonties said ... The bil&C$t piece (of the craft) we could find was maybe a 3-foot-~uarc piece." Lincoln County Chief Deputy ShcrUTCharlie Cox saiCS after the crash Wednesday nil.ht about I.Smiles nonh of lhis south-central New Mexico town. "We didn't find any survivors:~ The names of the dead crewmen were being withheld until.relatives could be notified. .. 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With test INds. 122:212 lettltY _,. ' . AM/FM Stereo Cassette By Realistic Power1ul 30-watt player fits in dash of most cars. Auto-reverse and auto-eject. Five station presets. #12·1902 3-Way Car Speakers _ By ReaJ1$tic Reg. 79.95 Partible entertainer reoor<JS "live .. or off the air With auto4evel. \lariabkt monitor lete you Siaten aa ~record. Sleep switch. #14-1012 Ben.lie .. me .. Phono Styli Cut 50% ~ Hi.ff-11i Price &ch ...... 3.llEach Shldawgraphed tor &MHOrm quality-compare With othlt's It =~In ~old Md w1ftnd ~ ~ • Mondale .aarrou tJJe poll l•P NEW YORK -bem~ic challenger Walter Mondale has narrowed President RcaJ.8n'~ lead since their first debate but still trails by 12 pe'rccntage points, accord ma to a new ABC News-Washin_gton Post poll. The poll, released Wcdlltiday. gives Reagan a S4 percent to 42 percent lead with 4 percent · · · h Oct. 7 residential debate, Reagan was shown leading Mondale S) percent to pe_rcent, wtt percen undecided. War.ten ~to HCret ,•abatance OAK RIDGE, Tenn. -Workers at three plants where uranium processing equipment was manufactured or used have been exposed to a classified substance that causes skin cancer, a aovcmment spakeswoman says. Preliminary tests show the subStance, which officials refused to name for national security reasons. also has caused genetic mutations and sterility in rats, Department of Energy s~keswoman Carol Knapp-Ayers. said WCcinriday. There was no immediate indication the health of 'workcn at the plants here, in~orrance, Calif. and in Ohio has been epetangercd, she said. TIJey have vl•ltlltlon right. CROFTON, Md. -Damon and Sally Tarquinio have worked out a rather thorny visitation matter. They'll be able to drop in on their rose bushes and the other greenery in their aarden as a result of an agrctment reached by lawyers . The deal permits the iarquinios to visit their....bcgonias. rose bushes and evergreens for two hours on Sunday mornings and puts on the back burner a dispute with ncigllbors over where their property line runs. La~ers representing the Tarquinios and their neigboors. Mark and IGmbcTf y Lamb, reached the temp_ora!Y a~ement which stands until the couples or a jury resolve the thorny <f ispute. . ) CALIFORNIA El Capitan clbnben dle YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK -Two mountain climbers died after they were stranded within J 00 feet of the top of El Capitan by lbe worst aututnn snowstorm 10 hit Yosemite National Park in 19 years, spokesmen said. Park crews found the bodies around ni&htfall Wednesday while rescuing three other stranded climbers usina a helicopter hovcrin.a beside the 3,600-foot atanitc monolith. said Chief Ranger Bill Wendt. The victims' names were not released. Tbey apparently died of exposure because witnesses reported their hands and feet were covered with ice. Replacement llOIJ6llt for Berum LOS ANGELES -The accidental shooting of actor Jon-Erik Hexum while tapina the "Cover Up" television series -a shootina that kept him in critical condition today -has forced the .search for a reolacement, the producer said. ..We arc lookina at new ~hanK:1ers... Hllhr Wade uid Wedn~y. "Don't know what types .... That ham 't '*n finaliied one way or the other.' Hcxum remained in critical condition today al Beverly Hills Medical Center, said a hospital employee who declined to give her name. The 26-year-old actor was hospitalized Oct. 12 after he shot himself in the.head with a .44-caliber Magnum pistol loaded with three empty canridges and two blanks, police said. · . ~lsencl:aanted dumped by guru lollowen PORTLAND, Ore. -Hundreds of homeless people bused into central Oregon by followers of an Indian guru arc leaving the commune with DO money to get home and are relying oD social service agencies of communities in the state for food and shelter, officials say. The Salvation Army has fed and housed about 400 of the street people in the past week.. and another 1 SO were "dumped" from buses downtown Wednesday. Since early September thousands of homeless from cities around the nation have been bused to Rajneeshpuram. the central Oregon city founckd by followers of Bhaawan Sbrcc Rajnccs~. FBI proba LA of8cet1 LOS ANGELES -A specially assembled team of FBI invcstiptors is scrutinizins the agenC)'.'s Los Angeles office followinJ the arrest of a former agent on Charles of scllina SCCTtts to the Soviet Union. Tbc team .. will be conducting a total evaluation of cve~~that went on in the case;• Assistant FBI DiteciorWilliam Baker said Wed yin Washinaton. The probe begins amid re~ted published allegations that top Los AllJClCS FBI officials, among them special agent an charae Ricliant W. Bmztng. showed preferential treatment lo fellow Mormons, including former agent Richard W. Miller, the first FBI agent to be aocuscd of espionage: Habetty YVldow retam• to SUI DJego CHULA VISTA -The widow of a JUnman who slau&htered 21 people says she has decided to settle in this S.n Diego County city, four miles north of the...border town where her husband committed the worst one-day murder spree in the nation's history. "I've never taken the easy way out," said Etna Huberty, who is living in an apartment with her two daughters. The girls-one 12, the other 10-arc attending school under assumed names. Mrs. Hubeny, 41, says she tries not to dwell on the events of July 18, the day her husband, James Oliver Huberty, armed himself with three weapons and opened fire in a crowded San Ysidro McDonald's restaurant. Iran ollenmn ""6fa• Iran .said today i& was s&aainJ a major offen~vc along Iraq' bordtr and claimed it killed hundreds oflraq1 troops while capturina two heights. a border post and a pess in the mountamous central frontier area. But Iraq said it • repulsed a series of assaula, captured many Iranians and inflicted heavr, casualties. Tehran radio said Iranian fore.ea, moving toward ''pr c•set goals • retook "dozens·· of miles of Iranian tenitory from Iraqi forcei. lran•s nc~ gency said more than 100 Iraqi troops were captured. The attack marked the first major Iranian offensive qainst lraq since last February, when Iraq Mid the Iranians lo&t S0.000 1<>ld1ers in an abortive attempt to occupy southern Iraq's Huwaiuh marsh.and isolate the port city of Basra . GUJ6 m7'1W claim• ef61Jt PALERMO. Sicaly -The bullet.riddled bodies of e~t men, apperently the ViCtlmt of a 1.1n&1and execution. were found today an a stable after an anonymous telephone call to police. Police A1d the vktims were not •mmedia1dy identified. hahan MWI llh'Cia speculttcd the victims may have been holdina• mttt1n1 in the stable, located nearPiaua Sclffa on theoutskin1 of Palermo. but the pOlitt oft"teer uid. there wa1 not enoup informadon to venfy lhll. He spoke on condition his name not be u!Cd. Thi AGI news llfney uid eeverat horses wett alto kdled by the aunfire. Sp;WI Ylmt 'caoJ' MOSCOW -ynan ~•dent Hafez Assad left Mote0w t~y after a thrtt-diy visit that promPted apeculatJofi about pOhe)' darl'erenm between Soviet leadm 1ftd their main Middle East aJlr,. The omaal Sotict news~ T111 reponed the dfopanurr bUt pve few details about ahe YJth, which 1ntlud wk1 ~nh Soviet Prtsiden1 Kon111nun U. Chtr'Mnko and other Ktttnhn leaden Sovaa med11 reponed Tuesday &hat Allld and Chemenko stretled lhe 1mp()rtlnce of un be1Wttn the Soviet Un10n a"4 Syria, but IUllM'Un iwws~ and ware 1erv1m did not ft>l&o. the triditional pi'act~ or pubhduna lhe texts Of ltJeltS b)' the IWO teadtrs durina lhetr Kremlin lunch Tuesday. P'(>mplulJ peculation that difTercntts al'CMlf dunn-1 the 11lks.. • -I • .. • • • ~ Fannie Mae: Foreclosures loom LOS ANGELES (AP)-Unless the $80 billion. Jt rep<>rted a loss ofS43. l federal budget deficit is cut, high million in tlie thfrd quaner. in pan mortgage rates and home foreclosures oecause foreclosures force<f the -agen-wil1 plague homeowners and would-cy to add $35 million to loan-loss .. be homeownen throuah nc:xt year, reserves. • the Federal National Monpge As. The agency will continue to lose Although those foreclosures appear to have peaked, Maxwell said he expccu the problem to continue through 1985 ~use foreclosures can take up to three )cars. 1-...,.---~---.....----....._---------------------'--- sociation•schiefpredicted. • money through next year unless Those problems will mean con-interest rates drop and that is not · · 1 fi h · · expected to happen, said Maxwell, unuma osses or 1 e-assoclallon Fannie Mae's chief eyecutive. known as Fannie Mae, David Max· " . well said Wednesday at a meeting of The current streak of housmg Los An&cles securities analysts. . foreclosures are mostly oo long-term. fixed-rate mortaaics made at high Fannie Mae is the nation's laricst interest rates dunng the 1981 and monpse lender with assets of almost 1 QR' rN"~sion years, Maxwell said. Fannie Mae often loses from fure- closures because of a drop in the propcny values. Maxwell said. .. tn addition, high interest rates make the agency's $47 billion in fixed-rate, Iona-term loans un- profitable, Maxwell said. The loans are assumable and have an average yiel~ of only I 0 percent, he explained. SAVE 20o/o on Easy Wash s2. 79 -s15.99 · Safe stain remo\ lni concentrate removes stains without acrubbulg · even on the touihest r.tams. sare for all wash~ fabncs. Re1. SALE Pint ....••..• , •.•..•....• •3_50 •2. 79 Quart ......... : •••... L ~-00 94. 79 Gallon .................. '20.00 9 15.99 STORE HOURS: Monday through Friday 10:30 am· 8:00 pm • 81tturd1y 10:00 am-4:00 pm I've been dma1g \alnelS db American sm,. b elJlat years. I Fl COSTA MESA 743 BAKER STREET One Block West ol 8flstol (714) 157-1214 my = trom theai, and they mo bm my Ul,Vtmnea. I~ mo.n Ill Popejoy, their new chmnan, for a numbei ol years. I belleVe in him and his people. They al\Vays give me the :ttght ~, and the tight ratts. ~I they ~my music. DIRECTORY OF MERCHANTS Trek Auto ...••...•.•...••••••••....•.•....• 241-0811 JoUy Roger •..••....••..••.•..•.......•..... ~ Winter Beauty Supply ................ s.45-5180 Stereo House ............................. 546-3544 The Queen's CUlslne ................... S49--0904 Harbor Stylist............................. s.45-8500 Harbor Cleaners ......................... 751-4357 The Register ............................... 754-6272 Thrifty Drug ................................ ·540--4870 Can'da Fashions ......................... ~2:9158 The Shoe Hut ............................. 546-6775 Souvenir 1-Hr-Photo .................. ~2-1757 Large Size Mart .......................... 662-7493 Crown Books .............................. 979-0123 KC's 'HaJlmark ............................ 979-1882 Talbert Jewelers. ........................ 241-020.. Kirk Jewelers.............................. 545-9485 Winston Shops, Inc ........•........... 54&-2622 B. H. Kleine, Optometrist .......... s.45-9162 The New Male Man .................... 540-8818 Wallpapers To Go ....................... 64&-5058 Columbia Savings ...................... 64&-7141 tt•a A E>lly ••••••••••••••• -••••••••• ·····-131411 Dimensions In Fashton ............... 646-8853 J.C. Penny .......................... _ ...... 646-5021 Holiday Spa; ............................... 549-3368 Richard's Beauty College .....•..... 641--0350 . BTE Sandwich Oetf ..................... 850-14404 Chuck & Cheese .... ~········ ............ 966-0813 Vinci Vito Tailoring ..................... 545-4~ Harbor Ctr~ Office. •.... 540-7921 Merchants A9IOC •••••..••.••••••••..•••• 540-7921 Mon Ami Brldala & Formals ...•... 546--1821 Nicks Pizza ................................. 549-1511 Cobbler's Bench ......................... 549-0414 Enterprl• Rent-A-Car ............. ,. s.40-0096- Edward's Hrt>r Twtn Ctnemu .... 63~-9499 fhe Hot Dog Place ..................... &48-4855 H•bor Cent• Lock & Key ••.•..•. 549-3601 Glendale Federal S&L ............... 642-4711 Security Bank ............................. 75M 146 MarShalls ..•..•...•....................•..... 540-0823 25th ~nniversary Sell-A-Bration Oct. 19 Oct. 20 Oct. 20 Oct. 21 Oct. 21 Oct. 26 Oct. 27 Oct. 27 Oct. 27 Oct. 27 SCHED LE OF EVE iTS OCT. 18-21 Ghost-Goblin Contest Ctogger Dance Oemo Super Leg Contest Baby Contest Karate Kids -Bob White OCT. 2~27 .. MagiClan-Adrlan Sundeen Used Book Sale Puttln' On The Dog Show Ptckln Over Afty Grand Prtze Drawing 4:30 P.M. 2-5 P.M. 3P.M. 2 P.M. 3-5 P.M. 3-5 P.M. NP.M. 2 & 4 P.M. 3-5 P.M. 5 P.M. SIDEWALK SALE OCT. 25, 26, 27 ,---------·----PR~ REQl81'RATION -------------, I MANY ATTENDANCE PRIZ~-DRAWINGS AT 2 HR IN~VALS EA~H WEEKEND.I I WINNERS NAMES TO BE POSTED ON 21 STORE WINDOW I I (Across Mall from Theat ) I I I 1 NAME I I STAE'ET ~IP I I .... COit$ ..... '°"" "' ~ 'D£POSIT BOX" ISTMNT"""' bll :ti Of Oldlt' I L-~~--~~-~----~-~-~~~---~----~----~~~~~~J • d storm enve.lops ockies snow.Hiahwayt in caskm Colorado were st1TI icy under a sunny sky Wednesday while the neY. storm spread mto the opposite side of the State. Olddmer "It looks like the heaviest snow will be ronfined to western Colotado and the mountains and not too much will fall in the cast," said weather service forecaster Steve Markkanen. .. The wor t ~ thi thing will be left in the mountains." Thia •kull of a 1ouq male Homo erectu W&I fotiad on weatem ehorea of Ken1a'• Lake Tarkana Ud 4au.4 u being about 1.8 m'Wlon yean old. It la r-11 of· • .. ta. thoqht to be the moet completttaetetoa .,,.-ilD early lnuiMm ance.tor ner found. Cambridge .prof winner . . Of Nobel in economics STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) -ing a government's accounts for Sir Richard Stone of Cambridge different economic sectors into a University today was named winner model for applying its resources, the of the 1984 Nobel pnze tn economics Swedish Academy of Sciences said in for his development of accounting a statement. The academy awarded systems that help governments al· the prize. 10cak their financial resources. The academy said it honored Stone Stone, 71, became the fourth Briton . for .. fundamental contributions to to win the Alfred Nobel Memorial the development of systems of na- . Prize in Economics, which is sponsor-tional accounts. and hence greatly ed by the Riksbank, Sweden's central impro.ved the basis for empirical bank. economic analysis." ttis pioneering research, unln .. Systems for national a~unts the 1940s, concentrated on intcgrat-have sin6e the 1950s had a uni<1,ue international impact and are m--RUf FELl'S dispensable for the analym of econ· lished in 1969. Stone's award marked ~only the fourth time that economic theorists from the United States did not win or share the prize. The academy statement said Stone "showed his mastery in finding routtS for systematic statistical searches . based on the r:c:'luirements of the national accounts. ' He caused improvements in ~tatistics '"'ttrroup ttie checks ~rovided by the bookkeepina. in findina methc:idi for approximations and ~· 'ia&uon' of'avallablc sampliqftpre1," thic statanent &aid. omic levels and structures," the ~ .. AMERICAN SAVl'N09"' UPHOLITUJ' llC. a~i;tli'e ~e time, (they proVJde) a iiii • ---F• Tiii lest Of Y• Lie systematic backina for forecasts in the Born on Aua. 30, 1913, Stone served in Briwn,s War Cabinet during World War u and ID 194.S became head of Cambridlc•• ~ ment of~ E.conomQ. He was ~ Pr of Finance and ACcoullUQI a& Cambridle from 19,S until he relit*S m 1980 -:=::::::::=::::=::=:::~=====:::~:::=~=:t::===::i~-~--... -~--~mllliilill•tz2•._.ll!ll_ll••• .. •cos•TA•MESA-•--•-1.ii1~11i1 form of :national bud&et.s.~· it said. • Britain's prcviousfaureatcs shared the economics pn%es •with olher economists in 1972, J 974 and 1917. ~,,. ·aasning bootways ~ Try cuffing up or down. These tall-heel beauties lead double lives. 36.99 to 42.99 .. MastttClrd • Visa • 60UTti COAST PLAZA m Plau • .. Bu na ~ C ntllf • Hunt ngton C nr r • ftt C 1y "I've never seen any- thing like it." "It's the best thing I've ever done to myself." The economics prize was estab-The ~mlCI 1'fb,e WU the lut Nobel p(i.ze to be aYt'Uded this y~r. lJ. S. racket man leaves~u.s. over Nazl slave charge WASHING TON (AP) -Arthur L.H. Rudolph, dtsianer of the rocket that put American astronauts on the moon. has left the Unittd States forever and renounced U.S. citizenship rather than faoe Justice Department charges he .. worked thousands ofslave laborcri to death" building Nazi V-2 mi11ilcs durina World War JI. A close friend and OO•Wotker or German rocket chief Wernher von Braun since 1934, Rudolph ultimate- ly became chief coordinator for the ~=======================~ Saturn V rocket in this country, and supervised iu planning. design, pro- DO YOU HAVE WHA? IT TAKES TO BE IN SHOW BUSINESS BUT CAN'T GET STARTED?cTHEN-YOU NEED ••• The BuSJness of Show BuSJnea Seminar, developed by worklng professJcnals, la dtl/IJQl'>ild to give the l'Ot11t1tl•I actor a serious look at the lnntJt workings of the Entettaf nment Industry. LEARN • How to develop & cultivate the fight mental attitude • How to select the photoa that II you • How to join the Unlona • How Casting Directors work • HOW TO JUAN YOUR ACTING INTO A PROFIT ABLE CAREER SPEAKERllNCLUDE • BOBBY HOFFMAN-Ceatlng Olrec:tor for .. Gener .. Hoeptt1I''. •"All My Children," "One Ufa To Uve," l*'4 °''*" • Celebrtty Laura "m Miiler trom 'Olrnrne A._ .. •Top Thutr •and Commttc II Agenta • l'\d a hoat or other celebrtUel. eating dlreetcn "1d oth.- • ilhOw bullnen pr~ O•te -Octol»f 2 t, t984 PIM» • AJ/potfflr 1M lt\lfM TllM • a 00 • m. to 3:00 p m t 5 J duction and testing for the National Aeronautic~ and Space Adminis- tration. As part of ''Operation Papcrclip," the U.S. Army secretly had broupt Rudolph and 118 other German rocket experts on Von Braun's team to the Untted States after World War II -at a time when they also were being ~u&ht by the Soviet Union. Near M. Sher. head of the depart- ment's Office of Special lnvestaaa· uons, which is assiantd to trade down Nazi war rnminals in this country, said Rudolph, now 78, qtCed in November 1983 lo leave this country an<' to renounce hls U.S. citizeMliip when he was 'hown the cvi<Jcnce the Justice Dcparunent had pthercd a~inst him over the put several years. Sher said that while Rudolph served from September 19<43 to April 1945 as chier operations director for V-2 missile ptoducuon 11 the Mit· telwcrk (Central Works) under- ground rocket factory in central Germany, he participated in the persecution of forced labor.era. in· eluding inmate from the Dora- Nordhauscn conccntrauon camp. Sher 111d that ifter Alhcd bombers had datroyed the Nazis' V-2 factory at Peenemucnde in 1943, AdolfHitlcr ordered pf'o(luctaon resumed at the undcrsround factoncs an the Harz Mounuuns .. anceHnlcrsawtheV-2 as his salvauon1 they lricd to butld :as many u po ib e," Sher •1d. Rudolpb, who had d t1ned 1he ~ttnemucnde fac1lny was put m Charae of the new m producuon effon and was respon 1 ble for 1he worki~ conduions for th laborers, Shtr said. .. He kept rcQue5tUll more and mort slave laborers,·· 'he Justice 1~•••••••••••••••••••!!!1••••11111 OeOU1ment official said Sha 111d the sqvemmcnt's allCP. ,. t1on1 ~ baled on talks with wune 1 ond thew r1d m11en1l from U S , Ocnnan and other Artlaar Radolpb archives and books about DOra· Nordhausen. He declined to say how the aovcrnment fim learned of the aUqations. "The conditions wcrc uuc:rly outraae<>USj :aruesomc, lrOtesque. Even (NUJ official) Alben peer in his memoirs called them •barbarous'." Sher said.,"He literally worked thousands ofslave labott11 to death." Sher said that polidcal and rt- ligaous prisonm and pn1<>nm of war were forced · to dia lhe tunnels in "hich the rocketS were built without adequate iiaht. air, food or medical attention. "'They were forttd to work 12 and 13 hours; they· slept In the tunnela. 'There were bruwttles by guarda: thousands dtcd of rnalnujn- tion," Sher said. -·Peo~le died of cxhausuon. of dysenter,y. • Sher said he had documented an sni1aftCe 1n which 1<>me laboren sufl'«ted of tabo\llC ~re huna .. in a 1*1Jaalarly slow faahson,• from the raftns of the tunntls "and •he en tare 1nmate population was required 10- watch" "Some oflhe workers we talked to, arown men. broke down and wept rccalhna~ the condmons 1n that fac- tory •• Sher saad 0'T1hole who obo j«ied over the ~n 10 the U.S 1<>vernmcnt s dccas1on 10 Ute the Omnan rocket scsenu1t1 focuted almoet eaurel~ o" the ua·Of 1ht v 2 •• lht c:1v1ban population of LOndon but no one con11dcrcd how 1hc V 2 was butlt " Coast ·stud en ts interning forSen. Wilson Four tudents f rorn \he Orange Coa t arc interning for Sen. Pete Walson thi fall an Washington D.C. Bryan Donlan Buck of Corona del Mar •senior at Cal Poly n Luis Obispo maJonng 1n poht1cal science, as wor,luna as a legislative assistant for -en~y and na,ural resource issues. KJrslen Ahsa Ss>eers ol Newpon Bach, a graduate of UCLA where she majored m history,· assrm Wilson with health and human services. Darrell Kevin Droke of Ne'\Vpofl Beach, a senior at .:5an Diego State UniV<nit)' majoring in pohtical sci- ence, ·works with the day~·to:-day operations of t}lc senator's office. And Stephen Chase Kimball of Laauna. Beach, a junior at Brigham Young Univen1ty studying pre-law, assists Wilson's director of inter- governmental affairs. ~ 1( ..... Homecoming queen Tonya Antonacci wu re· cently crowned home· com~ queen at Edlaon HJ.cb SChool. Medical lab evacuated About 75 people ere c te<I from liunttngton Be ch medical lab Tucsd y ficmoon \\bile fircfi&Jltcrs removed a "h1a,hly expl01nc'' ru t) container of ethyl ether. Fire Department mformauon of- ficer Bil'Jlt D vis $aid the d1 posal effort took place at about 2 p m at :;,pecialt) Medical Laboratory, 18800 Main St. • Davis sad the &enetal manager of the lab discovered·a rusw one.gallon container of the volaulc sutmanec while tak'ing,im:entory. She said the fire department's hazardous ma· tcrials team was called because the container was rusty and because the expiration date on the container was past. Ethyl ether can be highl)' e.xp_los1ve, according to Davis. The employees were evacuated as a precautionary measure. NB woman honored NB couple get college degree~ Goldie Joseph of Newpon Beach will receive the American Technion M>ciety's E~clyn de Rothschild Award at a dinner to be held in her. honor Nov. 18. Karry and Elizabeth Martindale' of Ne\llo port Beach became only the third hu~band and wife to receive honorary d ee~ from hi.&h oiversity at recent ceremonies. Joseph has lobbied for Israel's concerns with constant cor- , · Martindale, a 1927 graC:luatc of Lehigh, and his wife received honor· ary degrees of Doctor ot: Humane Letters during the program. 1 ·recently acquired the means to .,start investing seriOUily. And that's important, because I want to buy a home. So I researched until !found American Savin~. Theyre the nation's largest savin~ and loan. And a smart Investment Officer there helped me put together an investment plan to help me meet all my financial d.>je;;;"t)~ ~ h Di1A1h~ ~ . , ZJ ~rli!W.~ ,.!,~"l._:' -. """'""«JUI hllllicbl PRE-HOLIDAY UPHOLSTERY SALE REDUCTIONS 20 to 40°/o LAQUNA BE~CH 345 North Coast Hwy. (714) 4G4-85&1 COSTA MESA 1595 Newport Blvd. (714) M2·2050 All of our fine tin.es are now available at substantial savings during this promo- tion (including special orders). Select from Drexel, Heritage, Marge Carson, Woodmark, Stanton Cooper & more. Don't wait-now Is the time. .. • starts Friday at 1:30 a.m. • many limited qu•ntities ~ • not all sizes m•r be avail•ble in ••ch grouping • colors and styles limited to stock on "-~ so shop early for be•t ••l•t;tlon! . -' L • w' in our Huntington Beach store women'• sportewea~ buya for glrla . NOW M tftJNIOR TOP'S ••••••••••• : ••• ~ ••••• 1..11. 153 JtlNIOll PANTS •••••••••••••• , •••• ii.II 1111181EI' TC>ltl •••••••••••••••••••• I.II .. 133 LARGE SIZE JOP8 •••••••••••••••• ii.II 137 oilUNIOR 8WEAT811MT8 ••••••••••• I.II 1• LARGE SIZE PANTS ••• , ........... ... 10 JUNIOR COTTON SWEATER8 •• , .... ... ii •HES' SKIRTS •. : ............... ... 151 M18SE8' CO·ORDINATE8 ......... ... 111 •BIES' PE I I IE llLOUSES •••••••• I.II 15 .SIEI' TOPS .................... ... 11:1JlHOR PANT' ................... ... n """"°" .IE.A.NI •••••••••••••••••••• l..lli ::=·~l::iwu;:ua·:: buys for men 71 •HEI' COTTON IWE.ATERI ...... ... ~ m .SIEr aMS ••......•..•••••. 11.11 women's dresses . NOW 35 MATERNITY PANTS ................ ..... 50 MATERNITY TOPS ••••••••••••••••• .&.II 34 JUNIOR DRE88E8 ••••••••••••••••• I.II 23 JUNIOR JUMPSUITS •••••••••••••• 13.11 llrigerle, loungewear NOW 41 BIKINll ••••••••.•••••••••••••••••• lie 112 CAMISOLES ••••••••••••••••••••• 1• 41 llR.AS • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .. 2.11 21 SCUFFS •••••••••••••••••••••••••• .2.11 171 CAllllOl.£8 ••••••••••••••••••••• 2.11 40 FULL LE.NOTH 8U'PS ••••••••••••••• 2.11 31 LONG GOWNS ••••••••••••••••••••• I.II 11 SCUFFS •••••••••••••••••••••••••• .1.9 21 8tJNDRE81E8 ••••••••••••••••••••• I.II 11 LONG GOWNS ••••••••••••••••••••• Lii S11 TEDDIES ••••••• ~ ................... ... shoes for the Jamlty 42 SHORT LOUNGERS •••••• -•••• -• • • • ... f 0 r home 20 HOSTESS WRAPS • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .... or y u women's accessories NOW t• FASHION PANT80CK8 •••••••••••• 2lc 55 SUNQLAS818 ••••••••••••••••••••• 4lc U IOCl<S ••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••• e: IS IHOE..:~ACCUS. DEPT.) •••••••••• lie 17 SAC HANGeRI •••••••••••••••• 1.11 11 ~Tl ....•...•.••••..•..•.•.•••.• 1.11 21 WORS • • • • • •....••••••..•••.•. 2.11 41 LIOTARD9 •••••••••••••••••••••••• I.II 41 ""'811 .•.••••........•••...••... I.II %1 CLUTCltlS .......................... I.II Infants end toddlers ·• NOW 1•11NFANT8' PANTS .................. tic 21 lftf A~I' ftlS ...•......•..••.•... lie • TODDLERS' DM8811 .•••••••••••• I.II D TODDLDI' aAN8 •••••••••••••••• I.II 11 CMBAGI PATCH-ZIP CM& Tt •.••• UI buys tor boy1 NOW a UTTLI 90Y8' DMl8 aoclC&. •••••• lie SIM90Yl'•-m.a ............. .. sr MmA' • CAP1 ................... • 11M80YI' a.a.v.••TL •••.••.•• 1 .. a 1.11TLa 90YI' a. av.1'Glt8 ......... 1.m 11 M 90YI' llOVIL TY TOP9 ••••••••• I.II .... fti •• , ................... .... 17 M ~YI' CAllOUPLA• PANn •.. UI ~ . NOW 'ta WASH CLOTHS ••••••••••••••••••• -.:. -ffAlrrll) TOWEi.i ••••••••••••••••••• * 71 U TH TOWELi •••••••••••••••••••• 1 .. • llATH ACCE880RIEI .............. 1• ••ACMT~ ................... "9 •ca..-1w .................... ... houMw•res J•w•llJ buys NOW 111 IA'!!lllU ........................ -.a -~ ...................... ... -~·····················'· •ce11•n,..,.. .................. .... • DY Cllllll llJ ............. • ••••• • • • • .a. . top, lop. top Huntington Beach • 9811 Adams Ave. at Brookhurst St. I •·Had (Gen. Willi m Westmoreland 's) trial been Jn a court ofla w rather than aoourt ofpubllcopJ11ton. tliejourna/Jsts today rallyJngto ?135 'vould b d nounctng both proceedings and verdlctas ajutflcla lynching.·· lection l>allots :·should be printed in English only ff you want to help a drowning man, don't throw him an anchor. And if want to help underprivileged people crack the mainstream of Ameiican society. don't support stereotypes that reinforce di crimination against them. · Vote for Proposition 38, the intitiative that would instruct the governor to ask the federal ~ovemment to eliminate the requirement that voting matenals be printed in multiple . ... . ' · Foreign language baJloting leans on the same kind of separate-but-equal rationale that allowed white America to erect barriers to employment and h_ousing OJ)R9rtunity while pretending that minorities were getting a fair sffhke. Foreign language ballots, like bilingual edueation, remove from non-English-speaking people an incentive to learn the language in which this society conducts ousiness. It contributes to the deprivation of conversational skills that are essential to · attaining the promise of equal opportunity, especially in the areas of higher education and employment, both of which impact directly on the ability to afford quality housing and to provide quality education to another generation. It is a fact of life here: If you don't speak English, you are eliminated from the American Dream. mlYVIOKKY.. Hf 'n'ON'f '. ~UOOf! (APJ1'AL. P.UNl~UME Nf \?BACK! 1HA1~A 8/f DE1E~~Nf! '~.~" ,. Well-intentioned though they may be, measures like multilingual balloting tum down the heat under the melting pot. changing the essential character of America. They replace the strength of a nation that draws many cultures together with the weakness of a country that discourages ethnic groups from becdming a part of the national fabric: They reinforce the idea of ._ ______________ _.. _ _... .... __ _..._..._...., _ _.. ..... _______ _ difference, rather than unity. Yes, multilingual balloting makes it easier for non-English- speaking citizens to vote; but in the long run, it does not enhance their participation in the political process. It assures those groups that have attained power that they will not be threatened by the success of newer Americans. There are other reasons to vote for Prop. 38: It will eliminate a costly and ineffective procedure; it recogntzes the fact that English is the (un·official) national language; it will ease tensions created by foreign-language balloting. But the most important reason is that foreign language balloting promotes racial and ethnic discrimination. It is not a practice our governments Gen. W estinoreland denied fair trial by CBS journalists should underwrite. Justice demanded equal air time for the general to presenThis defense -r-- ln the li~I suit bro~ght by Gen. William Westmoreland against CBS News. most journalists -have in- stinctively sided with their network co\\cagucs. The rcawns are sev(ra1. To the 'Beatind' the· vellow J1dht. joumahsticfratemity.thegeneralisa a .T ' ~· pubhc figure. therefore. fair game. d gi d j i g g. The CBS documentai;. so long as an erou~ r. v. n aJDe therewasnodehberatcfalsificat1onof tbe record. represented fair comment and cnt1c1sm on a controversial issue. The Fu'St Amendment must protect such enterprising jqurnalism. Besides. the proliferation oflibel suits and size of the awards sought -Gen. Westmoreland is asking $120 million -arc certain to have a .. chilling effect" upon a robust and free press. To the Editor sorely lackmg. I don't know about car owners in The yellow hght means "slowdown other areas of Orange County, but an and prepare to stop." When I do that. the Newport Beach area. drivers are I literally get scowls and worse from apparently color blind or, better yet. other drivers and/or nearly rear- blind ·to the dangerous threat they ended. create when .. beating" the )'ellow These drivers should be heavily light. fined and take a mandatorv course m It infunates me when I think of common decency. If the; can't be these people gettmg away with 1t responsible. aware adults. maybe Ther. are a menace and obviously theyoughttoberemindedofthatfact, don t give a damn! I am sure th ese are by~ being p~lled over by a police the same people wbo block inter-officer. secuons at traffic lights. Can you From what I have observed. the beHeve we actually have to put up---dnvers who are guilty of irresponsible signs that say "Do Not Block Inter-dnving are for the most pan adults- section"? both men and women. Evidently. We are supposedly an intellectual teenagers haven't forgotten dnvers society. bu1.. if people have to be told education or their manners. not to block intersections. I'd say our ELIZABETH LYON mentality and common courtesy 1s Corona del Mar Two parties keep us balanced ( To the Ednor ' We Democrats aiid Republican!> are havin~ such strong feeling!» right now that 1t appear!> we would like to be rid of each other. Thi~ 1s onl)' pre- election fever It won't last . we need each other. But, perhaps. if my joumahsuc brethren will review what was done to the general, and hold it up to their customary standards of justice, they may see glaring contradictions. Let us assume, tor argument's sake, that. rather than CBS. the Joint Chiefs "discovered" Gen. Wcstmoreland's "conspiracy" to deceive his com- mander in chief as to enemy troop strength in South Vietnam. That, as a consequence of aross deception by a cabal of American office~ the Unit- ed States government was left mili- tarily and psycholog1cally un· prepared for the shock of the Tet Offensive. Further, thal U.S. will to resist was. therefore. broken. America forced to withdraw. and a strategic debacle ensued. Had the 1oint Chiefs unearthed such a conspiracy, the general would have been court-manialed. brought to trial and. if found guilty. stripped of his rank and dismissed from the service. as a disgrace to the uniform. in a category a few notches above Gen. Benedict Arnold. At that Westmoreland court· martial. however, the general would have been represented by rounsel. He would have been permitted to cross- examane his accusers: he would have been perm11ted to present the best evidence in has defense. Under the code of military justice. 1f the pro~ erution discovered testimony that pointed to the general's innocence. he would have been obliged to produce it for the defense. Compare the military justice the general would have received with the trial CBS gave him, before a jury of I 0 million of his countrymen. The general's principal accuser was Sam Adams. a collaborator of CBS producer George Crile, and a former CIA anal~st. Of the nine other .. witnesses 'who appeared during the program, ~1ght were basically sup- portive of Adams' charges: the mnth was given 21 seconds of airtime in an bour-and·a·half to refute them. Wah Rostow, LBJ's national security ad· viser. interviewed for three hours, basically supponed Gen. West- moreland'tttory; but Rostow never appeared during the documentary. What would journalists say of a courtroom proceeding where ~e judge allowed the prosecuuon \o produce eight times as many wit- nesses as the defense? Make no mistake. Gen. West- moreland was tried by CBS News. convicted and stripped of something PAT BucHAIWI more precious to him than money or even his freedom -his honor as a soldier. But. had the aeneral's trial been in a court of law rather than a court of public opinion. the Journal· ists today rallying to CBS would be denouncmg both proceedings and verdict as a JUd1c1al lynching. If. to establish truth and dispense JUStice in a court of law. a fair and adversary proceeding is required, why do journalists not insist upon similar rules of evidence and procedure before ainng documen- taries that destroy men's reputations? Or docs the First Amendment en1itle powerful cliques of JOumaltsts to impose drumhead justice upon their victims in a fashion we would all renounce were it done to some impoverished petty thief in the inner city? Is this what the Constitution's protections for a free press arc aJI about? Most journalists wall insist that justice requires the right to face one's accuser. to challenge incriminating testimony, to· produce witnesses in one's behalf. to be represented by counsel. How many of those rights were accorded the general -before his reputation was destroyed? You may be certain that in the upcoming trial. CBS will insist upon each and every one of those rights it systematically denied to Gen. West- moreland. P1trJcll Bocbuan J1 • 1yndJcatH co/omaJ1t. tfwc did not ha'e some right-wing balance and Qpcrated only to the let\, • we would have communism. with its attendant ills. Some would hkc that. but most of us would net. Conversely. 1f the left were not there to balance the ngbt. we would have something like the Marcos government in the Phil- lipines, or something from which Argentma 1s just now trying to recover. where a lot of people ''turned up m1ss1ng." Some would hke that. but most of us would not. Let's keep our balo:nce. Believe me. we need each other. JOHN KERR Costa Mesa Slgn vandals must be stopped To the Editor: candidate signs as you are traveling city streets bet\\een now and thc.-Nov 6elccuon lfs1ans that you know have been up on previous days arc being tampered with. please stop to take ~otes. on the descnpuon of the involved party or panics. a vehicle desenption and a liccn'C plate number. Administration zealots fight voter registration Huntington Beach's traditional elecifon eve midnight raiders are onceapin on the prowl. These: arc the low riders who, night after night. are tearing down City Council candidate signs. The signs posted by leading grass roots candidates Ruth Finley and Peter Green have been particularly tarietcd, although other candidate~ are 1lso sufferinJ losses. Finley and Grctll signs are d1~ppcarina from the same intersections where other can- didates' ians remain undisturbed. • The question forthe community is whether these actions arc the non- airected activities of O\.t'rzcalous supporters of other candidate~. or whether it is deliberate sabotage. There 1s only.one way to fiad out and th t'' for all fair-minded re i- dcnts to keep an observant eye on ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat You can call such reports to the Huntinfton Beach police at 960~881 • and/or you can file a citiLens complaint. An alternative attaon would be to call me at 897-3994 (cvenin&.S) u a clcarina house for such information. h's high lime to put a stop to this biannual vanaatism. Election~ ihould not be v.on or lo t by a contc t over "'ho ran keep the most sian up for the Ion -t period of time. l.ORRAINE FABER Humin ton Beach W HlNGTON -Some over· iealous Rca~n administration of· facials are stall trying to ban voter· rtaistration drives from public build· ings. Apparently, they fear that a bia voter turnout will brina too many Democrats to the P'.Qlls. The officials have aont so fat as to countcnnand federal court orders and their own internal rcaulations. The case of Donald Devine, direc- tor of the Office of Personnel Man· agcmcnt. has already b«n rcponed. Using his own unique interpretation of a federal law, Devine warned that rqaslration dn ves conducted in tatc buildings m1gHt result in a cutoff of federal fund 10 the tate. In laCl. the law merely prohibit!> talc employees from tryioa co inter· fore in an elcetion. H. L lchwertz ut P\ibWler .• Prank Zlnf M "lglt'IQ fiClllOf 'ow ifs the tabor Ocp nmcnt's tum. The Employment and Training dm1n i trntion has nt letters lO its rqional offices wumina that federal rqulattons don't allow voter-regis-- -. tration .dmcs in state cmplo)ment om .which get federal rund . Tom Tait City [CktOf Crtlg Sheff • [CSllC. ... The lellen don't mention that job scckcrund thoscdra\\ing unemploy- ment bl'n 1i1 ore I likely to be R pn sup~rte'"'. A1 legal JU tafkation. Den Lewis. the ircg1onal management adm1ni Jac1 · AIDEISOI trator. cited an inoperative section of a federal manual. Herc's how he explained this curious reliance on a defunct rule: "Althou&h Part lV of the Employ- ment SCrviccs Manual has been rescinded." Lewis wrote in a memo outlinin1 the new policy, "the prc<:c· dent established ... rcprdina voter rraistration represents an cxpre:r.sion of(qcncy) policy:· J>C(."lfteally, the une employment offices •·could be used for \ otcr rcg1strauon and-or election only dunna non-v.·orku~ hours,.. Lewis wrott'. Funhcrmorc. all com "had co be paid for b) 1he natc from other than (ftderally) IJ'nlcd funds. and the l'lc1lh1H had 1to be rntortd 10 on11nal rondnion at tbc c~pen of the tttte" The ncy's poutaon 1s 1n dirtc1 connicl with ftdcral coun tnJunct on$ ordering that public places mo t be ----·· - open for votcr-registrataon cffonJ. In Ohio two years ago, fore1.amplc. a fed<'ral court ruled that uch registration drives arc protected by the first Amendment. In Penn- sylvania more recently. a federal judse ruled that rdtricuons on votC'r rC'Jistration were violations of the First and 14th amendments, When ask<'d about this ep~rcnt defiance of the courts, a l:abor Department spoke man told my as- $0C1atc Donald Goldbera that these decisions flad been overruled by a New York uue court-though how a state court could overrule federal judges m other jurisd1ct1ons wa not explained. ln fact,. the New York d~ision merely forbade state employees from takina pat.t 1n votcr-rcfi trauon drh•- es. II made no rc~tnctaons on volun· tee rs. The adm1nmration's attacb on voter rtgistrauon. though lepll)' outnJcous. arc hning the desired prac11cul effect. Votcr-rcgistralion 1r<>upS have-had 10 go to coun rcpcatcdl m fight tatc officials Who have one along ~1th 1hc 1admin1 .. truuon -or ha\C been inumidated b) llM thttll of a C'UlOrrln federal fun<h . J•cll ANUHll II a •yHIClllH ,,., ...... . L.M. Bovo Don't buss· in Turkish taxicab Item No. 92117A in our Love and War man's file labeled 0 Travel" reads: ··when in Turkey's Ankara. don't kissagfrl when inajaxicab. The driver will throw yeu out." · slightly abnormal ear structure that causes ttA.cm to go through their whole lives listening to their own heartbeat. Here's a "Plural Profundily" from none other than Lance Branson, tbe- computcr nerd: "To be is to do." - Socrate!I ... To do is to be." -Sartre. "Do bed~ do." -Sinatra. Q. How long docs marijuanastay in the body after smoking? A About a month, actordingto the medicos who study such. Q. Amona women divorced before they'rt 30. what proportion never marry apin? A. More than one out of four -26. 7 percent, precisely. Q. Who was the first black woman to serve as advisor to a president? A. Publicly? Mary Mcteon Bethune. Curiously she·d be rda· ttvcly unkown today were it not. for the football players who made names for themselves in the pros after coming out of the college she founded -Bethune-Cookman. · That type of baldness most com- mon among American men is "'"the , haircut with the hole in it.'" - Both the students and the teachers perform better when the principal of the ~hool is a woman. When I quoted the Education Testina Services on that. a kindly client wrote, '"'Quality of the principal is the most important factor in lhe quality of the school. Women arc still discriminated against. To become a princi~ a woman has to perform better thaq a man. The female principals, there~ fore. arc superior as a group to the . male princi~s."' You going to stick around until 1985 so you can see Halley•s comet then to be visible for the first time since 1910? Do it If the statistics hold up, at least five women in this country wilrcommit murder today. ·: Since 1846. Crane & Co. has manuf~ctured that special strona paper -tested to fold 4,000 times both ways without tearina -upon which the United •States prints its currency. Some business, what? Its orders keep 1ettin1 bigger and bigger. Coyotes wag their tails, too. That animal ca1led the sponge has no heart, no lungs, no brain. So it never bas a heart allaclc. pneumonia or any mental mixup. ll has neither mobility nor self-defense, so can•t s~nd everythin1 on U.nsportation and armament. Yet, as you ·ve read, if you cut it up, it will reassemble itself. The sponge, truly, gets it all t<>sctber. So much for heart. lunp, brains, transportation and defense. Waste! Ont) .. fire creates enouah heat to explode the cones in the slash pine forests, thus to scatter their lcCds. That•s wliy rangers in the Ev~ National Park set forest nres on purpose. A bearded tourist flymg into Albania has to ao to the airpon betber lo have his whiskers shavedoffbtfore he offi~ially qm enter the country. If the hair on has head is too loq. off that aocs, too. L.M. 811' 11 • •J'Hlc•t-4 c-ol•mol1t. .. THE FAMILY CIRCUS "Wanna hold my caterpinar awhile, Grandma? It's OK -he's dead."· by Brad Anderson "Marmaduke thinks his mouth IS a mitt." by Tom Batluk QO()NltSBURY BIG GEORGE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP) SHOE ...... ~ 0 Ea1y on thoH llttl• grMn men Joie•• George." ' n;AGWAT~ 1' A~ ''lt4J 'TZ'l)'(,_ I MAVE TO WRITE A TWOUSAND WORD ES5AV FOR SCMOOL 'TOMORROW WHY DOM1T YOU WRITE IT FOR ME WMILE I WATCM TV? DE1'108 THE llEl'fACE f I 1 by Hank Ketcham ~ •VJHEN ~WERE YatJG, • WEREYOUA WHI~? by Gus Arriola TUMBLEWEEDS I Sl?E:N sNAKl!·llV'I! Ov\:!R A,."!W~ tJANK1 CHIE:F! by Jim Davis ROSE 18 ROSE w.N PO 'w'O(J EAT ~ MUGM, ---GARFIELP? - Eut-Weat vwDUabl NORTH •&•7•54 WEST ., <:>J•s OI .,., AST . , <:>AK 10'1 O KQJt •KJlO <:>Qtl'U 0 109175 ••t OUTR • AQJIOI c::>V.W OA41 • AQ8$4 h blddinr: Weill .U. Eu& ow. t• p .. ow. ... .. - badly. And tbe preempt could e it 4it6Cult lw tbe op1>91ilion t.o find their beat spot. We admire SoUth'• imaginative 1 p to 11aln. W t lick· ed bis chop• in utidpallon of a resouncliJlr penalt7 • Wut I d the ltiQf of heart.a.. ruff· \ • '----'°'c.;:•nae CoNI DAILY PllOTtThu<Sday, Ocl-18, 111M Sale begins Friday, October 19, 8 AM TO MAKE ROOM FOR NEW FALL INVENTORIES WE HAVE Rl!DUCED ' SELECTED ITEM9' AND PRICED OUR SPECIAL, PURCHASES TO SAVEYO.U 1/2&MORE OFF THE REGULAR PRICES OF OTHER LEADING STORES 12.99 TWIN 3.99 BATH 24.49 TWIN WAMSUTT A SHEET SETS · S4VE 50% to 60%, Comp. al 30.00. We made a special ptJrchase to bring you this oulstanding value I Compare the quality on these 1 BO thread count percales in a cotton/poly blend. All first quality . and matched by size Into sets. Each set includes 1 flat, 1 fitted sheet and 2 pillowcases (except twin , 1 pillowcase). TWIN FULL QUEEN KING Compare at Strouds 30.00 12.99 50.00 19.99 60.00 29.99 70.00 29.99 FIELDCREST 100°/o COTTON TOWELS . This Is a superb opportunity to buy a quality towel at our lowest price ever. An exceptional value on a large 25 x 48 full terry IOQP, 100% cotton, solid color towel. Available In white, champagne , brown, sage green, cerulean blue, navy , pink, peach . HANO WASH and silver. Compare at 7.00 3.50 Stroud• 2.99 . 1.74 200 COUNT SHEET SETS SAVE 50%, Comp. at 49.00. Choose Sophisticated Stripe in navy, as shown-, or many other contemporary & floral designs, all from Wamsutta. All are no-iron 200 thread count cotton polyester Supercale• plus sheets. Each set includes 1 flat, 1 fitted shee1 and 2 pillowcases (except twin, 1 pillowcase). (Limited to stock FULL OUEEl'ol KING on hand, not all patterns in all stores.) Compare at 78.00 98.00 120.00 · Stroud• 38.99 48.99 59.99 BEDDlNG SAVE 1/2 BATH SAVE 1/2 TABLETOP FAMOUS MAKER 3.99 SOFT SAXONY "TRIESTE/MILAN" PRINT COMFORTERS TWIN 14.99 FULUON. 19.99 99.00 KING WHITE DOWN COMFORTERS _POOLSIZETOWELS BAT-HRUGS 7991299 TABLECLOTHS Asst. jacquard styles in bright colors, 10 colors, 3 sizes. • . ~~=858~~ . any stze 3499 30 x 60 size. t-----------+~..,...,..,==-==-=,,.,.,,,,.,..;.,=,;;;...;;.__ QUAKER "BOUQUET" KING 29.99 This Is an exceptional value. Twin -Full -Queen also available. ~F-1-E-LD_C_R_E_S_T ________ ___,~~~!~ers SPECIAL ORDER BEDSPREADS & COMFORTERS "ISLES OF ARAN" by From. 1-----------1 Texlured terry Salh 599 SOFT 5 99 LACETABLECLOTHS . 7stzesinwhlte .-.749_5749 : or natural. ""&. . TOILET SEATS with fringe. "CONTESSA" DAMASK 2.99TWIN SAVE an additional 15% on any order from our Sf)ecial Order assortment. 6 asst. colors. ASSORTED SHEETS CANNON ' 899 TABLECLOTH 30rsgoidizes _lnwhite 1499·2499 FULL 4.99 PIMA COTTON _S_A_T_l_N---------t QUEEN 6.99 ~~~~~':~01 Bath 8 99 LUCITE WOOD LEG TABLES COMF.ORTERS KING 8.99 t----..,.--------------f ACCESSORIES Round. 20" 099 4 colo<s In PILLOWCASES 3.99 pr. CUBELLIC,uED Basket, soapdish, 349 899''-'d:ilai'"mi:'.'-. =-===-=------....:U::;._ 4 sizes 1-------~---1TOWELS Q.[l 999 lumblers. etc. -.. PLACEMAT & -~verters 2999-3999 FLOOR ~9_00_1o_rs_. 8_•_1V_1••_· ____ B•-1h _ _;-W-IC_K_E_R---------1 ~!':.,~!~ ~~;s 200 Co, u·NT CUSHIONS FIELDCREST HAMPERS . 1• SHEEt SETS :~~;;:: 999 COTTON TOWELS Bath 599 ~:•ura1 1299 APRON~ ~":.':~::!~: 2449-5999 100°/o C.OTTON i,.~.:.2 .::::;:.::~~~:::·~.:.•0.:80T::::"H_S __ _:::.:.::._.t-EM_B_R_O_l_D_E.._R_E_D..,.. ---'-ll-i~~"11::1t~::,,~,;.~.:;:si~:::•;..· ___ _:3:...49_·_4.:.,99_' QUEEN & KING ON. KG. THERMAL BLANKETS FINGERTIPS SHOWER CURTAINS 3499 TKOITWCHELESN Asst. colors, 1rreg. · 2299 A 1 · 99 4 slyles. SHEET SETS 2399 2899 Quaans & Kings. sst. 00 ors. ' Asst. fiatweavas. Asst prints, 119 SOL!D COLOR CUSTOM QUALITY SHEET SETS BEDSPREADS lid..-., 1499 3499 4 slytes in Queen & King lrTeg. so ....... or • by Fashk>n Bedspread, percales by 'wamsuna. WATERBED SHEET SETS Asst prints.- Queens & KitlQS. . PILLOW PROTECTORS Quilled with zipper. 14900 FLANNE;L SHEETS TWIN SET "Varsity Plafd.'' 13 99 BED PILLOWS STD. ON . KG. While -down, 2491 29• 3999 feather core . WOVEN HEIRLOOM BEDSPREADS CHINTZ 2499-4999 ~~?RATIVE PILLOWS -=c"'"H"'1N=1 =z-------~ ~::;. 499 4 slytes by Fieldcrest. BEDSPREADS Asst. oolid colori 2999-4099 BED Pll.LOWS STD. ON. KS . :_by_Sa_rc_ia_y.--t------°'~·. Oscron• fill In eott, 5• 799 9• medium & firm REST SMART I MATTRESS PADS . BED PILLOWS STD. ON. KG. · Polyestt<fe\I. 099-1699 QUALLOFIL"' 099 10" 1'HI lt'regs, g --Asst. COV8fl. o--L -- SHOP EARLY, QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED TO STOCK ON HAND. SPECIAL STORE HOURS: SAVI NOS SERVICE FRIDAY, OCT. 19, 8AM·9PM SATURDAY, OCT. 20, 9AM·7PM SUNDAY, OCT. 21, 10AM-8PM " SELECTION SATIS,ACTION • Layaway Monogramming Gift Certificates Bridal Registry • Custom Bedding WHITE SALE SAVINGS AND MORE EVERY DAVI , llltllCIH lflCll 11112 ltld I~. · 24321 A". M 11 Clrletl, llJ I .. Bet-Edtnaer and Warntr 1n MarshaHs Shop~Qf Ctr, 842-4112 In O.lbrook V1ll111. South of LquN ltifts Mitt, g55.9995' ~· . · · DoWMr • Huntlnfton •••ch• Lee11t111 Hiii• •Le Jolle •I.ell••-• Leo v .... • M..io ,,_ • M-olelr • Nortlwldge • I'•-• l'lecefttle • l'le••-1 Hiii i' ..,...,,. Hiiia • Riverside • ...... Monloe • ltvdlo Cltr • lunnrvele •Tott-•• W. Lee A-lea • • .. Rescue I part.of -,race's history stirs memories .,.., ............. When 1he deck ciannon blast sends nearly SO yachts off Nov. 10 on the Uth renewal of Los Anaeles Yacht Cub's biennial 999-milt race to Mazatlan, Sinaloa.Mexico, a lot of memories Will be stirred. "f.he LOs Anaeles-to-Mazatlan race is the oldest ohhe Mexican races - barrina the Ne"'.J)On-to-Enscnada race -and bas arown considerably since nine boats started in the inaugural race 1n April 1961. The race was founded by the late Claik Sweet, a Newpon Beach yacht and insurance broker whose 40-foot Jinker was a familiar sight -and frequent winner -in most ocean races of that era. .. I ·~!I By ALMON LOCL\BEY Diii............ .. Four of the wortd'• futat and most glAmorous "mu.I" ~ts ttarted compeulion~~ ma&cb cacci off Manna def Calib naa Yac:bt Oub's Cal Cup, one of the most co~eled ~btinJ. kudos in the U.S. The senes will continue ~ Sunday, windina up WJth a two-boat match race on Santa MontCa Bly. For its 22nd year, the<al Cup n expected to draw ~ of specutor boats, jammed 10 the aunwaln With pcop1e watching the bi&aoJdplaten in hcad·l~head racina. But that fint race was considerably less than a huge success. Sweet himself became involved in an abort· ive .. sea rescue'' that cost him a spot in the w10ner's circle. Cal Cap mpectaton th.la weeken4 are eve to aee fiercely conteeted matcb racee off The format bas cban&tjj this year in that all four boats were scheduled to race toda)" in a fleet race to set up a round-robin series of races which will eventually dctmnine the iwo faSlCSt Half way across the Gulf of Cali- fornia on the last leg of the race. Sweet and his crew spotted what appeared •o be distress flares, On the chance that it miaht' t>e one of the racen, Sweet ordered a change of course and searched until daylipt for the source of the flares without success. J"he time spent in the fruitless search cost Sweet and Jinker a trophy in the race. The most viv1d memory belongs to Dick Lerner, wherever he is, who was skipper of the 40-foot sloop Gamin out of Balboa Yacht Club. Gamin was wrecked on a remote beach near Cape San Lazaro in the evening of April 13 and Leraer and his CttW spent more than a week on one of the must rugged terrains in Mexico with very little food and water. Jn a first person ankle in the AUIUSl 196J1JllUC of Sea tdqpine, Lerner told liow 11 hl~necl lJ\d the hardships the crew went through before rescue. "Dick Fenton was on the helm, and in the middle ofa casual conver11tion with my5elf and Jan Gardner-Smith, he shouted •My God, we're in the surf.' Before anyone could reply, the bOat struck around, was lifted.by the surf and then struck aaain." • Lerner related how he got life jackets on those on deCk and rousted .. out the watch below before tryina to launch the inflatable dinahy and fire off flares. The flares revealed that (Pl~ eee ll&XICAR/82) PAPARAZZI CreatiVltY Of legends . honored Two legendary figures in the boat- ing world have been named to the newly formed Boatin' Hall of Fame by the Southern California Marine Association, sponsor of mijor boat. shows in Southern California. First nominees are Hobie Alter and Hoyle Schweitzer, according to Spike Harvey, executive director ofSCMA. At periodic intervals, whenever somethina is warranted, others will will be added. Harvey said. Alter Ud Schweitzer Will be tn· aµaurated at the Long Beach Inter· national Boat Show dunng the VIP Day preview on Oct. 26. Th~ show runs Oct. 27-Nov 4 at the Conven· tion Center. Alter is acknowledg¢ as one of the creative 1eniuses of boating with hi~ development of the Hobie Cat line of catamarans, tens of thousands of which ply the world's waterways. He also is credited with introducing the fiberalass surfboard. Schweitzer introduced the Wind- surfer, the original sailboard, at the LOna Beach Sailboat Show l S year• qo. Its PQpularity spread worldwide - Hobie Alter and boardsailin' becaqle an Olympic event in 19&4 mdicating the po.PtJ· Wity ofhis i<:fea. The Windsurfer, essentially a surf- board with a mast stepped on. a universal joint with a wishbone boom, is saJled standing up. To decode yachting lingo remember-your A,B, seas · Nautical language has always been a puzzle to land· ALllOI lubben. but some of the modem-yachtins lingo would confuse Loc•••n even the most astute 11119 scholars. ••••••Ill•••• Aorida1s~Ocm1rbci111 Ciraaiti(SOll(.') ii known imemauonally as .. ,ICKW)'.'? Of counc,potall racn or~y1dniftl"01P1mat1a111ielld themselves to acronyms. but you can be sure JOme one will always be tryins. Some of ,the other modml. nautical land= would make old salts wntbe in 0.vey•s Lodller. T. word "saton .. for the below-decb diniftl erea. llllil DO ' doubt came from the women•s inftucnce in yac:bti• Whal setf-rcspectina yachtsWoman wou\d date say: .. rm .,... . below to the saloon?!' 5*110 •Y cvea WCblW Modem yacht· •• I ' ' c..: .. ! ...... :. . .-·-:· ~oW~ -· - 1ng tan&~ has Iona been known u a po& of~ soup. bu\ some of ,~ ~ or tba\ .,. 1m .. ill • •cronyms hat w~· lntemitionll uldflhH '°'*' time eitplaining. For instance: Tt)e Un~ted States Yacht Racin& Union. 1ovemin1 body of the spon. is alphabetized USYRU, but in yacht clubs from coast to coast USYRU has become 0 yousiroo ... Otle of my pet bee& itdle Ille Of tbl WOrd"°bUmpn'" ID reference 10 those inOatable objects ltuaa over the Sides 1lO protect the vessel comina in contact with aaothercraft on stationary object such as a dock. That dates back to the days when the orpn1zatioo was known as the Nonh!o\merican Yacht Racina Union. which of course, you guessed it, was always .. na)'!'OO." . Of course there can be no auess work in pronouncin1 the acronym for the Newpon Ocean Sailini Association. Say it like it sounds -.. nosa." Some of the othm are a little more far-fetched. The initials for Performance Handicap Racing Aeet (PHRF). become .. perf." The Mid,&et Ocean Racina aass (MORC), one of the fastest JfOWIDI racing aroups in the Southland, is appropnatelv pronounced .. more sea." Any nautical &Jossary will tell you Jhat lbcy arc cOm=ttly known u ·~" Tbey::att plaa:d ~ to fend off. not lo bump. They should never be Jeft ~DI over the side whde under way. V cry unse&manlike. Maybe that's why they arc known in many yachtina circlei u "Marina dcl ~ stripes." The only th1na on a ship that can be HahtfUUy called a bumper is the heavy~ on the bow oh t~ ued IO •·bump" or shove ShitJI While dockinc or11ndoctina. And lastly, there 15 the word "bead" which is aautic:aJ 1ermi11ol<>1Y for toilet facilities. There arc diffcreDc:es of · (l'leue -1.D00/'9) Party--goers at the Ritz Were oii ·the right track ...,....,.,, .. ..., ..... llUUJD Bu0ftlolaaatuellytle•"1'ted tbatll .... adJlm won tlae lf&lldprt..: a trtpfortwoon tbeOrlelat&sp ..... • Pacific Symphony's gala finishes with trip for two on Orient Express By CAROL MOORE Of Ille°"" ...... ""' Knickercd newsbOys, coachette murals and st~mer trunks brim- ming with hats and pearls simulated a bustling station for the Orient Express as 280 Pacific Symphony supponcn pthercd at The Ritz. But only Dr. Jam ea and Maril ya Barofflo will actually board the fabled train. Thcirtnpwas the grand prize of Sunday night's festivities. Just getting to the restaurant was half the fun for the donors and fans of the symphony which has presented 12SSOuthl ndconcertsin five years and produced an ··American Music" series of recordings. As they nibbled at smol(ed stuflCc)o and steak tartare canapeson the terraoc. theguestsdehghted in fricndsamV1nain ··btack·ticor l 920sattirc." JobCOmte!· ly, immediatcpastdircctorofBowcn Museum. was the mostnovclamonathe men, wtanllJ&raccooncoat-.. eom· plctc: \\ith bullet holes" -over hi formal ui t as he mangled between the jazz quartet and strings ensemble that cntcnaancd before dinner. Among those sportillJ bejeweled and feathered hc.adachc bands v.:erc Dtrll Clan (wife of:~ conductor, Keldl Olan), Bette Nuce.. DvnU111 Melillf, .leu ltovacs ~here With husband AaJ, general manqer of the Newport Mar· nott) atr1MG•11•1•abdMal'J LtllOftOfNewport Beldl'Wh6wau11 I sa~ onna the Orient El.PttP 1owshe ud _..._~ tiustMnd Bob took from LOndon 10 DA\'mPICKEN Ven1ce1n 1983-es~aall> .. aconocn by a paanlat 1n a White tuxedo wnh the moonliaht ouUtdc that was lbeoluielyromanuc:· Sbccouklbavcconu>arcdno1uwithMand.,._~ (IManbul 10 ~ans) and a r~ othm tn the crowd who wctt h~.na their name would be announced fora rerun of the lull.unous ra1l 1np throuah am replete w:uh 1mcnat1cs to the nth dcarcc and u11 n nncl 1n pcnoo QOllume Hoa .... ~wash i~• aucsuwoulda~tethe htMorkal 1uthtnt1clt~ of Ori nt &press menu Items uch IUbC mo cd Sllmonandcl\urappetllerandcauliftowcrDuBarry.fi tcreatedb Elc::offitrforMadamcDuBan) ltoonth menu 1ttt tu qua latoi> <:Jry cabbqe followed b~ m t mianon. Linamnaonr1hcoaramch1cdG1tt1u t Honorcandra J)bcff) hqucuredd\ampqnc"' re arre,,..._part chairman fta71ndJu (ft~ ... oaDlfl'/D) I 92 Orange OOut DAIL V Pl~OTfTI'ftjf'lday October 18 19M Answering lonely-hearts ad can be deadl DEAR ANN LANDERS I hd) thought u wa nar· row-muided and Just been convicted ofpo1sonina her fourth husband. he A Oound rt a fish I am tared of read ma about alrcadywasscrv1naa 25-yearterm fprpo1soninahcr third corporauons that arc noundenna., fam.ihn that are "flou41er,'' oc.,t M ~ meP•f a fltb,..HH, I• doemed to fouder, IM& 1uu1 for wr1&1a1. husband-a wcaUhyOk'lahoma rancher he had met floundennaand 1ovcmmcnt that are noundenq. The throU&h another lonely-hearts ad. Atkins 1d th t when he correct word Is FOU NOERINO To founder means to ..... l)EARAN LANDERS Can)Oumndonemore letter on the wirbctwcen nul"Slng mothers and restaurants whosucnslb tideurtso refined ano requ re women to nurse m the lad1c 'room ..,, n of you to take uchastro stand l&Atnst lonc y-hcans advertisement I han,acd m) miod •• LlllEn totdtffm1henewsMr.Jonnon sa1d,''Qh, Lord,'' • givewa), tO fail. tocollapse, to ink beneath thc"atcf I hope you will print thas Jettcr in) our column, Ann, The Enahsh lana~ when wed properly, 11 a a wam1n1 to othen who are lonely. And plca~aocepl beautiful When abuled 1t 1san abomination. You can help mR1y!apoEIQ&JeSformypre~1ou 1mtude.-NASHVILLE bypnnttntth1sle1ttrm')'ourwtdelyrcadcolumn.-It "ould bclovely1fthcywould be con 1deratccnou to provide a place to 111-other than the John. I have been m thaunuauon a few um es and n's enou&h to make ~our milk dry up -BAKERSFIELD MOM todaywhcnlrc dthe1••·········· Na hvillc Banner. .EADJ ~R WELLSPOKEN IN JACKSON It seems a man named Henry JonC$0n oITornahawr. Alberta(Omada)tansWCTt'danadinanagncu1tural pubhcation. TM: ~man who was lookins lbr a companion l>BARRBADER:Ne&Mq 1 IDIOC bve MW C04lld lllave Mii tllie lmpacl of y.... r.,i. f Cllleeked ii Mt Wida NamtDe ._.every delall w11 rtp1 oa.Tlauk1 for Ike baa Ill). Ada Wattenmr.cr. · 37. Henry, the:S().year-uld OW(ler of a 90():.tcrc ranch, was lonesome and thou&ht Ada sounded .. interest mg." He didn't realize his letters and checkswercgoingtoa pnson until DisuictAttotney • • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: Ma)' l use your space 10 ·advise thasgreat nation Qf prcdom1nantlyEnghsh- pcakina people on the use and misuse of two words? I refer to .. flounder· and .. founder." G ncr-:tl Kcnncth Atkinscalledand told him that Ada had Body beautiful a figure of speech If I ever go to work on a doctoral disscrtauon, it will deal with the mystery that surrounds a woman's anatomy. f'. mlbc mome w ll- are out of proportion. ma I ~t. but chubb.y. dimpled thiahs~. ! little shoulders, but no bust; small hips, but no waistline. It's a good thing we're too young to shop for oursclve~ or we'd be de- pTCssed with the limited selection of diapcn with Velcro tabs and one-size- fits-a.11 blankets. By the time we're teen-qers, our bodies have bepn to take form, but arms and legs arc bony and scrawny. We have flat stomachs to show off our jeans, but a lot of leftover denim in the fanny. · carrying U.S. mail pouches. While we're looluni down trying to touch the floor to get our waist back, our chins faH. When we stand up straight and uck in our stomachs, our ankbswcll. During the twili&bt years (whatever that means) the body goes through another metamorphosis. The arms become bone thin, the cheek&ones Y-OU've always wanted surface, the ICJS become sparrowlike, the ankles tnm down and the hips diminish. DEAR WELL: Aecordlu le IM Am~ Hft'tta1e Dlctl.uey,seeMI C6U .. el"A.11Mi,a n•er It a Ila& fl ... To n.iiltr meau ••te meve clamany, dir11 .. alifft" ud IUl9Ce"IO PtOC'tM 19 COiaful•." If Job It FOUNDERING lla$eml1tey u u• belterdrop~e CHne: UM la FLOUNDERING, IN! may yet ,.u tlaro1p. "F~r" m•laally referre41 &o a sklptlaklll1:U It DOW 11edu well 1e meu "le fall IUerly,toeollapae." J believe yoer cnsa4e to abelJA cite •Hof tile word DEA ft BAKE: You've 1ot my vote. TU01 for re1l1terla11be beef. U1111ood one. . " . Whar'sprudi h?Wh1t'sO.K?lfyouaren'tsutt1you 'need some help. Ir' a \•11/11blri11 the booklet: "Nec.Jun1 an Petr11ig-What ArethcLimirs?"M111/yourrr:quc11 to.An Landers, P.O. BoA I 1995, Chi~o.111 60611, cncl0111J1 ctn ts and a Ions. stamped, sclf-addresscdcnvdope ORIENT EXPRESS ••. From Bl lkola, (he's president of the Pacific Symphony board) Carolyn nod Maury De Wald, Elalae Redfield, Tom and Emma Jue Riiey, Nora and Hal Lellmu and Belllada and Barney 8araeu. general manager of the co- sponsoring Neiman-Marcus. • OtheB were Jerry Rlcbard1, KartbSmltll,S&ewart Woodward, Letltf Kenley, Malt and TlDa Scbafultz, MlclUel and Joane Sokolski (wcannga sequined railroad cap and ''Venezia" sweater), Bar!baraVou1 and Kenneth r W !&J.O~n:w,:e""'r.-......._,,_. ____ ...,..._.,...,..,,.....,....,.,.,,.,,..,.,=~ xot1CJ11lypulsanngmu51cs1gnal t esaarto apa o ur1 r<>m Neiman-Marcus. Models slithered catm•• '"'Tlong the tables, allow,in1. guests to occasionally pct th CS 18,000 Norwegian fox, $3,000 Monaohan lamb or the suede poncho with sable tail fringe, and quip that .. I'll take two of those," .. Maybe your next husband can afford that one" and "There•s your '84 coat." The grandest of the luxurious wraps chosen for the show by IUtay Leslie, N·M's fash1on~tor. was a SJ 2.S,000, lhree.quarter coat of rare Russian lynx bellies. Thcncamethecou down to the anxiously awaited finale. P.rclimrnary prizes went to Rick Waper (etched Orient Express glassware), Lola CUDoD ofUguna Beach {his and hers gold Gucci watches) and Naaey Carlson of Laguna Beach (dinner for 20 at The Ritz). Ju Picken, (wife ofDavfd Picken, Venice-Sim pion Orie~t Express vice president who came from New York), made the .. fatal, uh, finaJ" draw that left Baroffio •\dumbfounded -and slightly embarrassed." Throu&h conscientious diet and exercise, by the time we arc married, we hopefully arc getting our.anatomy together. On the very day we proclaim ourselves proportionately perfect (usually a 1 S-minute period between 3:15 and 3;30 a.m.), we djscover we're pregnant! We never see perfect again. But wait! The stomach loses all of its ela ticity and looks like a built-in- snack tray. You could actilally set somethina on it were it not for the fact that your bust is resting on it. We are always talkina about challenges in our lives. Our careers challenae us. Technology cbaJJengc us. Cbansc challenges us. Kennetb and SaDd.ra Wagoner But Jkola reassured Baroffio, who has served two terms as president and two years as chairman of the Pacific SymphOJ?Y board, that n~ one was moredcservingoftbeluckydra.wforthedreamtnp,$1,000travehq money and (Ameriaan Airlines-donated) flight to London. Our upper arms become flabby enough to fan South America. When we pursue exercise to decrease them, our bust takes on unreal proponions. If we sit down and do nothing for our busts, our thighs look like we're Next to savinayourbody from time and Vcl':ity, they're not even worth menttorung. Plen~ of actic>n .south·of Cal cup MEXICAN RACE ••. Prom Bl they were near a beach and not on an offshore reef as they ofiajnaJly be- lieved, but there was still danser from the poundina surf and tlyina cear. On an amusing note, Lerner related how one Qf the crew try,ina to inflate the life raft shouted • How do you inflate this bleeping thina'r' The quick reply was: "Read the bleeping instructions." The crew finally got ashore with as much food. water and gear they could salvage and dua in for what appeared to be a long siege. With the boat being dashed to piece=-. they had no means of communications. Their only shelter was tents made from sails and spinnaker poles and pans of the mast. The rescue came after Gardner- Smitti and Ignacio (Nacho) Lozano hiked several miles to a hghthouse and arransed to have the crew picked up in a dilapidated truck driven by several Mexicans. .NOSA winds up '84 season wt th 14-mile Bank Race Newport Ocean Sailing Associa- tion will wind up its 1984 season on the upcoming-weekend with the l_.. Mile Bank Race on Saturday, fol- lowed by the annual meeting and the CommOdore's Appreciation race on Sunday .• Jhc annual meetina at Balboa Y'acht Club will feature the election of new officers for 1985, followed by a race by the commodores and otliceB si&hted Lido-14 skippers in Satur- of cooperatina yacht clubs sailina day's regatta. Lido-14s over bay courses. Trophies Lehman-12 sailo!l will see action will aJso be awarded for the winners in Sunday at Newpon Harbor Yachl the 14-mile Bank race. Oub with the Satnt Cicero Trophy at NOSA is the orpnization that stake. sponsors the famed Newpon-to-W~1le all this is going on in Oranae 't11senada yacht race and an Argosy County, four famous "maxi" yachts race to Los Angeles Harbor in the start competition today for the Cal early fall. Cup at California Yacht Club. Jn other Orange County yachting Marina del Rey. The match race activity, Balboa Yacht Club will host series continues t~roug!l Sunday .. theBlindRcpnaannuaJlyconductcd . Southern Cahforn1a Yachting by the Lido-14 Asloeiadon for blind Assn. calendar sailors from the Orange County Lot Aatele.Leal Bea~ Bra.iUe Institute. The blind skippers Seal Beach Yactit~ Club-Ghostly and crewmen arc accompanied by Galleons {Sabot), 5aturday; . Lona Beach Yacht Oub-Catalina Island Series No. 9-IO, S3turday. bcrfest (keel boats>. Saturday, Sun- day. · · Kina Harbor Yacht Clut>--FalJ One Design Regatta. Saturday. Su Dtcao Coronado Cays Yacht Club-Ship Shape Series, Saturday. Mission Bay Yacht Club-Lido-14 Fall lnvita· tional, Saturday, Sunday. Coronado Yacht Club-Fall Regat- ta (all classes), Saturday, Sunday. San Diego Yacht Club-Etchells-22 Rcgat~. Saturday; Dix Brow Series (SDHF), Sunday; Waterman Series (IOR), Saturday, Sunday. Oceanside Yacht Club-Jessup Series (handicap), Sunday. CALCUP ••• Prom Bl a.m. over a windward-leeward course with windward legs of 2 to '4 miles, Jiving the yachts plenty of windward work. Each yacht will carry a crew of about 2S. After consjderably more hardship -helpina to push the truck out of mire and other obstacles -the crew of Gamin finally arrived at the naval base at Magdalena Bay where word went out of their plight. The U.S. Coasr Guard cutter Afert eventuaJly transported them to San Diego. AU of which brought up 1be warning in subsequent Mazatlan races -a warning that Lerner never tbouaht was funny: "Steer clear of Lerner's Beach" -as it has since been known. US.YRU ilational c~amps ch·osen _ · Sunday. , Los Angeles Yacht Club-Harbor Series, Sunday. Santa Monica B.ay ·California Yacht Club-Cal Cup. today throuah Sunday. Santa Monica Yacht Club-Octo- Southwestern Yacht Club-Pavey Overnight race (handicap). Saturday, Sunday. • Nortla and lalaad Channel blands Yacht Clu~Fall Coastal Series. Sunday; Banshee Special, Sunday. Ventura Yacht Club-Lady Ski~ pcrs Series, Sunday. All four yachts are fresh from campaigns in the Clipper Cup Series in Honolulu, followed by the 811 Boat Series in San Francisco. The odds-on favorite appears to be Boomerang which defeated Kialoa in both those series. Boomerang. alona with Sorcery, are the two newest .. maxis." A ••maxi" is a yacht designed to rate a maximum of 70 feet under the International Offshore Rule mcasur- mcnt system. In arrivina at the 70 ratins the-JOR uses numerous buU measurements, displacement, sa.il area and various c.ther dcsi"1 par- ameters that arc figured into a complicated mathematical formula. The result of the measurement is the yacht's in,dividual raung. · LINGO ••• From Bl The United States Yacht Racing Union (USYR U), national govemin& body for the sport, wound up its national cbampionshii> repttas in September with the finals of the Mallory Cup at Baybcad, N.J. and the opinion as to where the term orig-Prinoe of Wales Bowl at Rochester, inated, but most nautical historians N.Y. agree that it derives from the days The Mallory Cup is emblematic of when there were no toilet facilities • the men's championship and the aboard and sailors had to .. go to the Prince of Wales Bowl is a ladder series head of the ship'' to answer nature's to determine the match racina cham- call. pionsbip. In British yachting circtcs the The Mallory Cup ended as a cliff .. head .. is rffcrrtd to by me inifiaJs hanger with the tol) t\\lb contentten WC. which is the polite way of saying "tied with~ 191/z points. The tie was .. water cJQset." broken. according to finishing PoF But please. girls, not th~··powder it ions in favor of Mark Eapn of New room" -or even the bathroom, Orleans, La. with crewmen Corky unless you have a bi& enough yacht to Hadden and Beau Le Blanc. The afford a shower or bathtub. brother team of Jay. Bruce and Mark THE 16TH ANNUAL LONG BEACH INTERNATIONAL SAILBOAT SHOW I * From Sallboelde to Oc~ng Vlchta * 400 88ftboMI * 325 Acceeeory Dllp-C * Win Seven lotrta ato gtwn 8WllY It the lhOw * Weekend Fa1hlon 8howf!Mlt1ne Bamr THE GIANT OF SAILBOAT SHOWS • ' of ........... , .. ea. ..... Long Beach ,~,to launch -24 designs The annual Lona Beach Jnter· nauonal Sailboat how traditionally iu launch1n1pad for brand new craft. The upcomina 16th edition at Lc>na BeaCh Convtn\ion Center, Oct. 27- Nov. 4, will follow that pattern as mort than 2'4 desiana will be In· trOdueed to 1bt sa1hna ~blk. Cha1nnan Dave 1Geofrtey of me 1ponsonna SOuthem Cahfomia Marine Association estimated tbat more than 00 sailboats will be on dipy in what hu become the nauon·s largest indoor all-Mil abi· biuon. More than 360 IOOCMOI')'. displays wall cover nearly C'Vft')1biftl 1hat aocs on a sailboat. Appearin1 11 a 111lin1 1tmin1r Thursday, Nov. l, witl be bndy Smyth and Jay Gia~. the Olympic sdver medal TomeGO a111mmn team, who wall rclaie their Gama expcncnces II wtll b Other rte.eta of their open11e an 111hna caiamaram. Tihc Lona Beach Show now liPlftS an area of more than 250.000 C (ttt, tak1n1 in bath the Lona Arena and the Convention Can.er and cktend1n1 ou1door1 h>ward the lqoon . Pryor, puppets how not to mess ow kids upllves I)' JERRY BUCK 11 dramallud and a soluuon '" ............. .., offered h'1 usuallt based on some LOS ANOELES -Producer inc1ckn1 in which nyor mmed up Many Krofft sold CBS on the td'-1 of and h11 eiperiences are offered u an 1 children·1 lhow 1tamna Richard example. Pryor The only hateh was that Pryor Pryor as lhe host and makt1 knew noth1na about n comments about what'• ~1n1 on, but Kroft\ and b11 brother and panner at'nlso 1 ~play ofh11 childhood wath Sad Krom, were prolific producers of Akih Pnnce playing Little RJchae. Saturday mornana showa for children Pryor also pllfl some or his (1 vontc who moved into producing prime· characters 11111UnJ Uttle Richie an ume vane1y shows and mouon his search for the ri&ht answer. p1cture1. lt'nll told wuh humor, assisted by "The idea of the show ori&inated the Krom .P"!Ppell. The Kroffis arc dunna a lunch t had with Judy Price puppeiCCrswhote family trad1uon of CBS," 111d Many Kroffl .. She said reaches back atnerations 10 Athens she thouaht at was about tame we sot Greece. back into Salurday morn1na. She said Ktom said the wnters, Karl we could do wonhwhile thinp and KJeanachmidt, I.Orne f'.rohman and have 10mtbody wonhwhale. I aaid, Paul Mooney, ,also contribute to tt\e 'You mean, like Richard Pryor'?' success of the show. "h took me nine months to get to Krom was asked if he thou&ht n--· a all In ·we port Pryor, and 10 tell the truth, l pvc up lfTI:or was a pro~r role model for &MU&1Um J., w on it. J was in New York City the children. Four years aao he was Cr&Jll'lem~. wboplafiedP.T.Jtaniumln recant performance. ftereal..,_ coldestdayoftheyear. lcallcduphis ·severely burned in a dru&d'elated the maalcal •Ba"rnam • et dae 1''1'POrt l'fewport a.cb reelcleal\8 -Sllll ti laW)'CJ" and I said, 'OKi, do J set to accident. and he Is also wcll·known beater Arts Center, la flaaked by Karl =rm.cwt aad llal'k attea• C•• I meet thts auy or not?' I aot a mccung for non-stop profanity in has concert B&rnum (left). tile lllaowmaa'• ..-.--t .. ~t ~ 9cboo1. Tbe 91unr cll11I • a week later. I knew u wouldn•t work, BPP.f•ranccs. :a.epbew, and bla fllOD• Mark. wliO .teWed a montb nu:a laat weellm:ML b~~MYW,'lloHk~~J~~ff~ 'lth1nk1~oo~on~h~v~c~~~h~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -do-a kidFJtrow:".. sa1 lGaM. "I believe as the ather o Krom was so cenain Pryor three dauahte.rs that he could be a wouldn't do it he hadn't even created good role model. a format. But he quickly put one ••What's he like? More hlCe these together, , shows than his concerts. I think he The result is "Pryor'• Place,•• which took a bla riak with th ii show. If the is on Saturday mominp on CBS, show hadn•t 1umcd out well he would If you baven't seen Jt yet, sit dowp have looked foolish. He ceruanly and watch. If your youna children didn't do it for the money because he haven't teen it yet, sit them down can make much more doina a ~ide you. Young and old alike arc in mov1e." fora treat, even thouah it's aimed-at -Jn the show Pryor freely admits children 6-8 ycan old. thlt he's made errors, and bC offers Sheena Easton blends .old, · new in Costa Mesa concert In each show a childhood problem insiahts, humor and the benefit o(hts British stage, screen at.tor has many-Irons in, the fi.re By DOLORES BA~Y •11 ti I ,,,_.,._, NEW YORK-He has the lyrical · leanness of a young Henry Fonda or Uslie HoWard and eyes that smile and tease. And wilh his quiet, British voice ,and electric presence. there's no doubt about it -Jeremy Irons is the matinee idol of the '809. After winning a Tony Award for his J>9r1tayat of the loveslcK playwnaht an Tom Stoppard's "The Real Thing." Irons has warmed up movie theaters with ~is smolderina passions in "Swann in tove." Based on Marcel Proust's hauntina novel, "Swann'• Way"-r-the first book of the French autnor's monu- mental "In Search of Time Lost" - "Swann in Love" is the tale of obsessive love and Parisian class Clistinctions. Irons ponray1 Charles Swann, the trqic lover who abandons all for the love of the beautiful courtesan, Odet- te de Crecy. And in the role, he has swapped his very proper British tonaue for the more romantic French -a linguqe he learned for the film. One recenl afternoon before endina hi1 stint in "The Real Thing." Irons · talked in his drcssina room about , Charles Swann, acting and his career. He had read Proust and liked the character. ·~1 choose my characters," "THE MOST RIVETING MOVIE OF THf YLAR1 ' ' eo111ma l.DWMDS IWllOW '1111 4Jl4501 ..,.,I .. a.t• lOWMDS SAllWG .. ,. [ n.• AlllXJJI 0 -•lMMDllMUITY a11 Ill OOll,.., * iiMNE ORAMG1 WESTMINSTER Ect#ards Unlwrslty P1el1'c"s Onlnge Ptclftc. 854-al11 OrM-ln 634-9381 !:fl-Way 39 Dr'M·ln cosrl MESA * LMiUM HIUS OfWKZ 891 ·3693 EdWlrdl 8r1stol Edwards/Sanborn Onedome 934.2553 •. 540-74'4 Laguna Hills Manr768·e611 o · ·.· . '* COSTA MESA • PRESENTED"" ..... ao ... i:.lllO-=sm £.dwwas Cinema c.nter 97M 141 11141"4 HM Le••• Mil u..,••••11-- ....,(PC) 100 Ht Ht IOI IOzt "'. 1tACIOS (I) •ICU'ISTED U.JQ. UU20, rn ltlD llDOA• ~Ul I DO $40 IG 1t .... Ml UO I ~lml) .... .=.(I) lo HARR A ,, .. , ··.d1 ·,~r. • • I 1 . I ••• - MISSION . 'T··r~. . n How1N II. "olllna .:Ir. -....-snMIY "I AT U•H 1140 •• 01100 ..... seave M1rtl11 Al.LfH' .. llW1 ' SHOWS AT U 1IO f rOO 6 100 t 100 lrOO 10100 ..;.i=;;r. :HOWS AT U 1IS r:l 1100 71H l 1H/ HMM Gii'liJUJ4;12JWA\1f a;; ...... J Cflrftt ..... r ~"" TitS WILD UN 1na ..... ., hrt,, ,,.,- co=:. ,.era> ~J-:a• &llft ,,,,.,. I ••KCO~ --------- 1100 6 1111 6 l 1H O"IVE-lld 011t11:'5 WUtyt!I:» W\_.l/C 1"9a U'*' 1Z f"EE .,... The first night he stole her diaries. The second night he .read her fantasies. The third night he started to live them ... I I -.-• \ • • c • ( i "'GARBO TALKS' IS THE HEART STEALER OF THE YEAR!' -Judith CriJt. WOR-TV EXCLUSM ENGAGfMlHT NOW P L AYING * NEWPORT BEACH * CXCUISM tCAClllllllt ,. 6 ™CK DOllY ....... ('$) IHO. 330 100. 10 00 I lllAQI DOllY SfU(O "COUllTIY" (N) l&S HIO 61~ 110 iho [lC111M Oll:AGUDl st........ ____ , t1 ..... IC CIQr. (1'I) 1!>1 .,.. uo 110 1010 TOMI com• oom STU(O ~·.:.:; .-·a ..., near l"Cl 1)1 OM. ' ._ llltt,•11~ 91~ TOMI C(Nl(R .._ • B' U •••""Ill 11~ (fS.lJ) ,, ._ 'M IMT m 00" (I) m 4114 u• in• SOUTH COASI WtHllO ·.ucn•nt ll.9T"ft) 11~ uo ~=-....,,..~-----S-ll-W-*-1111 ...... ,..... .. ~11711 SOUTH COAST .... """-' )4 1711 ·.u fll•" (Pl) '00 • 00. lot• ·•cacuat --·~ n.t6H UO 10 ~-( itfflilCU" (Pl) """ ,. 'JO • ALL SEATS $2.00 AT mWARDS EA, mwARDS WESTBROOK • IRVIHE • ~ ..... ,_ .. e4-llll UClUSN( UICAGUPl "UM s.-• ""U) ..... , .... , 100. 900 UC.l USM: lJIGAGOllM •QIOGI(•• ~) ':ft uo, 10 40 4 WCll IXllT STlllO ...... lW'fCl ,., no 10..n ... COllCUIU •ftlllaS" fC) .._ l!llrS 1 IQ. 9 stn1 IWTll "MJ.Gf •• "1 500 100 109) • Wl S T MINS TE R • CllMA WlSI ._. ... """" ... ' 191·3U!> CllMA WCST .,,,--u .. _ .... .,, ms CllMA wm -..-. C-••tnl 19) 3'J) Cil'MA WEST ...,_ i;-.-.,, ».1$ • tl>NTINGTON Bf ACH • . ' • COSTA Mf SA • EDWARDS """'' ._ ~6·3102 HARBC. TWIN """' -6ll•ltrJ HARB TWIN ""'"' -'31'3~1 STCVl -.W• ".Ur.r <N> Mo~ Tllotn 1 IS, 9 10 ''Ol '*' ... DO" ~) 900 "TDllD(" (l) llool!W16CS.10!) '1UCU• 111 IPIT• (Pl) • .... """,,~,.~ .,..,. O'l(AI'. .. C911Ual •Wiii t• •• tots --·~ "' 10.n (N-IJ) ........ (N.IJ) uo .t TtACI Stlll 0 ""lllmlS (I) l J6 !4C , " • H TORO • SAOOUBACK ·M WATf w <N> so '••.. 115 ........ .._.(I'll) ~I SUO '00 lOJO SAOOUBACK "lllD'f ar <N-U> iio •••,.. _I•••••• Mlftn..tU0,15890 Sii ~UO S~OOHBACK ·D1. r11u 1111 oo· 111 H '••"' 540 IOJS l '•• •• •T181111Jf(• Ill ~II SUO UO SADOU8ACK .... l#"(N) ,,. ...... t t... •• ..,..n.n 1 n 'I~ UI~ SAOOllBACI( -mm. .. \0 l et ;i rll) t•l••h ~I~ SAOOH8ACK ·• aa lft" Ill ·"" t.,., ... 11111, IO~S . '""1'• ~ ..... , ~II UIO uo • MISSION IJIE 10 • /' .Jes e 'communica_ting• on 'Saturday Night Live' 'Teacher~.' stilltop flick; 'Heart, ' 'All of Me' (railing LOS ANGELES (Af>) .. Teachers" maintained its popularity wnh the nation's movi~rs last· weekend. outpacing Sally Field's "Places in the Heart" and the Lily Tomlin-Steve Martin comedy ... 'All of Mc.'' The only new movie released during the Friday through Sunday weekend was "Garbo Talks'' from MGM-UA, while 20th Century Fox kicked off a second effort for the Australian horse-racing entry, "Phar La .. ~·therwise, ' average numbers prevailed during the normally slack fall movie season, with "Teachers" pulling in the largest chunk -:-$4.8 million -in box office dollars. In its first two weeks in release. the movie starring Nick Nolte as a put-upon high school teacher has accumulated $12.7 million on 1,721 U.S. and Canadian screens, the entenainmen1 newspaper Daily Variety said Tues- day. The movie has topped the bo.ll office charts both weeks. .. Places in the Heart," with MiSJ Field portraying a Tnas wido" trying to hang onto the family farm, edged ahead of"AJI of Me" W1th $3.~ million in 688 theaters to take the No. I REVIEW --,------------· · 1 spot. The Tri-Star Pictures release has attracted $9.3 million in fou1 ~"----~~---weeks'Telea . ,._,. 'Rosenkavalier' opera t1ne musical mixture MAJOR HOLLYWOOD SNEAK PR•Vl&W TOMORROW 8:00 Joke didn't lile his mott'ier'I new boVfrtend He WOI the flrit to worn hef. NOw. hei the ontv ooe who can save her. i . ... .. All of Me, .. in wfiicn Tomlin ano Martin share tbe same body, laughe<l up aaotber _'$3.3 million for the weekend to run the movie's total gross to $22. 7 million in four weeks. "Country," the Touchstone Film! farm.mg story starring Jcssjca lansc and Sam Shepard. moved into SS theaters from last weekend's l E screens and harvested $539,895 fo1 bountiful $6,066 per-screen haul. "Garbo Talks" was the only r'IC\\ entry for the weekend, taking in a $127,192 on 16 screens in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago and Toronto for a strong $7,950 per-screen aver- age. Other than those movies. however, it was the faJI doldrums for the rest ot the crop. "Phar Lap," which had been re- leased in a few situations <luring the summer, broke out in 103 theaters over the weekend, but managed only $225,605 for a S 1,821 per-screen average. Among the older releases, the unstop~ble .. Ghostbustm" took in $1. 7 nullion and was the fifth most popular film in the nation. The Dan Aykroyd-BiU Murray comedy has grossed $209 million in 19 weeks. Following is a list of the hiahest- grossing movies in the United States and Canada last weekend, includins their titles, distributors, weekend gross, total gross and number of weeks in release. "Teachers," MGM·UA, _ $4.6 million, $12. 7 million, two weeks. "Places in the Heart" Tri-Star $3.4 million, $9.2 mi'nion, fou~ weeks. "All of Me," Universal, $3.3 million. $22. 7 million. four weeks. "Irreconcilable Differences," Warner Bros., S l.8 miltion, $8.8 million, three weeks. "Ghostbusters," Columbia SI. 7 million, $209 million, 19 week's . "A Soldier's Sto~ ... Colum~ia, S l ;,6 million, SS. I million, five weeks. Purple Rain," Warner Bros., S 1.3 million. $61.8 million, 12 ~ks. "The Karate Kid. .. Columbia. Sl.2 million, S83.3 milhon, 17 weeks ..The Wild Life," Universal, 's1.2 million, SS.6 million, three weeks "Thc~".ilThat Men Do," Tri-Star, S 1.1 m1lhon, $12.6 million, four weeks. "Amadeus," Orion. St million . $3.6 million. four week . Elvis60th birthday lest slated NEW YORK (AP) -RCA Re-cords plans an extensive celebtation to commemorate lhe SOth an· n!versary of the late Elv:ls ~le)') binh. . Thc_ leatndary rock •n• roll &tar, who died Au~ 16, 1977, would have bttn SO on Jan. 8, 191$. !he r.car·lona anniversary cam· pa1an vo 10 mcludc the release, ••EJv1s Praley-A Golden Celebration" - • lll·record stt of many live lX'f" formanccs that have nevtt befort been rcluscd: the oriJ)naJ mono sound of four Nrly Presfcy LPa· and an HBO cable TV IP"Cill of ra~ tn· ptrforrnancc concen f~ Presley's rccordi~ for RCA havt to1d an txccu or I billion cop cs and hit !t9 IQld or plauruam .-wans. •op '"' pumbtr ICt\tCVN :b)' ab) Olbcr rtt0rchrt1 anist. •CCIOl'di"' 10 the / ; Senior ~xecu~ves findj~bs in the W Orange County• s strongest area of recruitment ls still high technology Hiring of senior executives m the The institutions appear to be cx- West accounted for 35 percent of total pencndna slower arowth and thi5. national demand duhng the first nine "COmbined wnh a concern about months of 1984 u manqemcnt interest rates. has reduced cxccuuve recru1una dim bed 29 ~rcent, ac· hiring.·· oordan' to the S 1st Naupnal Index of Orange County companacs in par- Exeaitavc VacancJb released toda) ticular sought top financial otfaccrs by Korn/Ferry International. and marketing executives. Parker "Hiah technology continues to be added. the ~r~a ~f strongest management Major corporations nationally recn.11t1ng in Orange County," said hi~d senior fxecutivcs at a strong Donald Parker, managing partner of pace durillJ the first nine months of Korn/Ferry's NeWJ>Qn Beach Offiet:. 1984, posting a 29 rcent increase "We sec nicular &r~lb.. .. ...i.inn"...&.twhe;__Q;QViicC"'"r.w&h-.•~ • • . areas o computer. high i.cchnology "',Executive hiring whic has been equipment and electronics manufac· at record levels for the past year luring," Parker added. reached a plateau in the third quar- A wave of executive hiring m the ter.'' said Lester B. Korn, chairman of first two quarters began to slow the world's Ja~st executive katch somewhat in the third c:iuaner, Parker firm. 53idL .. The economy appears to have ··Demand for Orange County real stabilized at a h1ah level and com- cstate executives faltered a little but is panics arc waiting until after the still active," he said. ••At the same election this fall to dtcide whether to time, hiring by the financial services opt for more a~ve expansion.~ organizations has been quite Jlow. Korn pred1ctcif that; executive L.M.Boyd. informs in the compensauon would nse onlf ~ to 7 pe~nt this year, "However, c•pect senior manqers will ~ive substan- tial bonuses hued on profit l'Cr· fonnance whkh could 1n fact e.1ceed last year's record peyr:nents," he said Hanna of chief executive officers reached a record hp for the Index at 13 percent of demand and, whem combancd witti recnutina of general manaccrs. accounted for one-half of all executive hiring during the thard quancr. Clearly, jo~ opponunities and vacancies today att Jt the top of the corporate ladder," Korn said. The National Index of Executive Vacancies is based on a quarterly national clients who are amona the nation's largest corporations and non-profit organizations. including govemmem agenci'Cs. universities and cultural institutions. The Index records hiring of executives earning $75,000 or more annually. Demand for chief executive of· fictrs represented l3 percent of lOtal hiring during the third quarter of 1984 compared to 11 ~cent a year ago. Recruiting of gener.il managers ... ... Cf'OC*., tM Fl,.t lntetsUte ... lloXd! 8enk California t.• Security 8anli t.00 Sumitomo Benk ... Wellt Fargo •• La C.llfomle Fedefal • CIUc:O!p S!!inl! rose markedly durina the period. have met eAPlnded martcuna needs "'Financial ....... -..Ml.,._~. QJ r hr - raduna 3.7 pm:cnt of total ckinand and arc concent11una on more effi. oft'enna ~.., CIEi a competed lO 32 pumit a year qo acnt prodllaion arid bottom.Jiqe Jaon for die rilb& IOp ...-1e ... Recrunina of market1na and Ries profits., K~ noted. there 11ddinlldY11elt ••z .. aa executivtsdroPIJC(l from 22 pnttnt a FJnanciaJ scrvaces compblQ, an-lower Jevda," Mid Kora. )Ur ago to . 'f8 percent of total duding banb~ Insurance comptntes demand Hinna of manufactunna and brolccrqe finns, we.re the iarsm and enaineenna executives rose lO '9 r«nntcn or eAec;utJve.ulcnt with 23 pen:ent of total ,demand lhis quancr pcrtenl of total demand. This was comP1red to 7 percent an l 983. Thcte down slightly from lhe 24 percent trends typteally ~gnal that com~mes ~ m the me pcnod wt year A ~ealthy ·first ~O days ch1efcxecuti.ve offu:Cr of ltvine Citl Sa .. ·angs recently announced the S& had reached nearly 7 million in deposits and over $9 million in total assets for its first 90 days of opcr- ataons. ending Sept. 12, .. We're very pleased with our performance thus far and believe that our ~licy of controlled groWth, combined with moderated rate ri.Sk. will tiC the keys to our continued · ··1rv1nc Cit_r Savi~ has..,... Located at 2400 Michelson Drive· 1teachly sinu openmt. .tai4 ~.-.. at the comer of Von Karman in the ••but we will not pow amply fcW Ille lrvi!le B_usiness Center, Irvine City .sake of arowU... We ate a U. Savings opened ns dors for business diuonally managed SAL Whole - on June 12. In its first 90 days, the objective is :to em.nee Md ~ S&L f undcd several types of loans. he investments ud savinp ~ .: including ~adcl\liat. automobile and of our 1todcholdersud cuMOmerS. ha income propcny, as weJI as establish-addition, eveiyone bett lailtes ~ ing personal lines of credit for pride an their prcwisioft of hilblY customm, The instituuon also ex.-penonatized~ u.isooed'M panded its staff and now employs 20 distinguishing faaon." Construction claims seminar set A regional ' conference on .. Con- struction Claim~ Perspectives on A\oidance and Management," is scheduled for Oct. 30 at the Newport Beach Mamou Hotel cl Tennis Club. Sponsored by Hill International, the confe~nce will explore current trends in con!ltructlon claims. avoidance measurcund claims resol- ution, reported Irvin E. Ridner, UPs A~o DowN s NEW YORK (4P) -The following fist sho•u lh• Over-the-Counter stocks 9"d warrants IMI have g()M up founder and chief exccuti \ e officer of Hill. Top lc,el representatives from various construction professions and disciplines will be ~nelists, indud- ing: lrvin E. Richter, president and chief executive offioer, Hill Inter- national, Inc. RT. Allison~ contract supcn'ISor. Arco Oil cl Gas Company Ernest c. Brown, P.E.. &q.F== mcrl} oorp0ra1e ~ RDOr · necn.. Inc. Will.am K. Jakeman. vice prem- dcnt, Roberi iE. McKee. Inc. Gordon Hunt.. &q .. Muna&. JKot ford, Hoffman. Hunt a Throdanonon. Mercury :s&:I, passes t~e $2 billion mark the "'*' end dowl'o 'tl1i most ~ 00 .,.,~~~1~ ~'4·or 1oqo Mercury Savings&: Loen-Asma- sNres ere Included tion. Orange County-based financial d1ft:i.r:.':' ai:r=J•rhe c~~ .. ·~~ institution announced third quarter bid orlce and Wedneldav's lisibrd Pf'ice. unaudited. after-tax, consolidated UPS DOWNS OoWney Samii! t.15 fer W•t Sevi!!i! • •• Fldelitf~I . .. "1"1 NltlonW1dt t.t• GlbfWtar Sevl!!SI! .. Glendale federal .... O...t ~lneflcan ... ... · earnings of$"44,000, and nine month earnings of $2,6 78.000. Start or hnprove YOUR OWN Business A taninar enmininc the uw of concern to new bwinaa owne:n and ia intended to make you~IDOft 1ucca1fuJ in YOUR bu.Anae operations.. The seminar wm be cbnduded OCTOBER 27th & DECEMBER 1st . from 9 flN. to Noon or ?he Offices of SEOTT, BANKHEAD & CO. 11.'300 DOVE STP.EEt SUITE 200. NEWPOf\T OfACH CA 92660 YOU Will. DISCUSS ••• NGISTERNOWI (114) .,...,.. .... r°' odditlonol ~ cot scon. IAM04lAD r. co.<'''> tsw1.u On the , • TIUISDIY'S CLOSING PIJCES WHAf NYSE DID NEW VORK (AP) -Tiit followlno 11,1 lt\OWS lht Ntw York Sl~k E><dl•ng• s.toek.S and werrtnl• thtt "'v• vo~ up the most tnd , dOwn lht most '·bal on perc~f ot chell9t regordltn of vo ume tor Jnurwv. No 'f(urlli~ tradlno betOw s2 .,. Incl-.-:Net '" percentav• d\8f'gH art tht en~ be ween ttie e>revlQ\Js ctc»lno pr and Thurld•{,'1} o.m Pflet, N1rnt Luf Cho Pc;tl J Fn~L :JO i:~ ,~~ 8: ·~ '~ Go~~u~ ~ f Uo 1 • Tonh orP "~ 4 UP . wn.Air .In 4 i UP PS.A Inc dpf 1tV.i l Oup ~er 1n1 .~ 0P ~~~ldt 5~ ~ ~: ~llVtn~ l 26"1 1~ P b$yc: H 4 /a P or~ A rw 114 Up ~l'~ ~14Pf t~VA l¥z 0: ~s~trr· s 1 ~ ·~·" Mo l s t NGa 'h ~P ~ ~ ~I MJ11 ~ l . : •kl~u~' 4S ~"" 8p . ~r l,!Qf' p .• h .33 I> . eoi SC f ~ Ya Up . i;r.t·.& ~ ,~ u: 1 DOWNI Namen Lu}~ _cl~ ct.1_ j !!'~~ J~= : 4 ~~~ CV 2 ~ -I/• 1. GIO r ~ -" . LL.. Qf'P ~ -f,4 Trlron~n of I -l't Mcormlnt wt --34 L!f!!'.\lrl~ t -1'9 Ff&fnooOG \·l -~ r, =XO ~= ~ ~Jrjyc f; = ~ •"9er011 ~ -~ u~f,~3i °' = ~. Am IRH ' li'l't -2V• lelfwt 1~->A sourc• -'11 tll&Plrl t• -l Wtn I• -4 lfrt_dAE n \ I/• -}l s vcoP1trr 1 -~ WH AT AM EX Dio NEW YORK <AP) Ocl.11 ~l -~~ AMEX LEADERS " ' . . . .. . . GoLo Ouou \ ME 1A1s Quon s r 't • • -. . . That's an apt description of both business and business people along the Orange Coast. To keep track of where companies are gotn~ and which people arenelP.lng them get there.just watch Credit Line· -every day in tne Business sect ton of your new ... 'D E~TH NOTICES DIXON YR.ntXON.vit- ltation Thur:aday 4pm·9pm OC't. 18, 1984. hc:ifk V:-aew McCORMICK llOflTUARY 1195 L9t: CMyon :a. • ca I r • ~ C0Mt DAILY PfLOTIThurtd1y Oc1ob41t 11 1984 ~00. DiSCO\er just how rich a light cigarette can be. 10 mg "tar:· 0 7 mg nicotine av per c1gareue , FTC Aepo11 Mar'84 Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigareue Smoking ls Dangerous to Your Health. Regular and Menthol. . ... ... , 10 with White .. Q •• C2. UC.lwill·haveayounjloak Rick Ciaccio •tretcbe8 and llaten• to ln•tructlona. Bosco Tech'' s Englestad, Scott to start along with standout transfer Rogers ByCURTSEEDEN Of .... o.llJ ............ UC Irvine basketball coach Ball· Mulligan mana_ged to survive life without Kevin Magee. 8(ginnina this season, he must figure our how to survive life without Ben McDonald. Bob Thornton and Gl:orge Turner, .. We can replace those three players offensively, but defensively ... well. look at the f res no game last year. Thornton and MGDonald took out their forwards (Ron Anderson and ·ecrnard Thompson) and both of those guys are in the NBA," explains Mulligan. "Thompson scored 21 (for Portland) against the Lakers the other night." With that thought in mind, MuH;gan opc;ned practice Monday to begjr1 his fifth season -a season which will see for the first time since he came to the Anteaters two freshmen in the startmg lineup. Rodney Scott. a 6-2 guard from Bosco Tech, and Wayne Englestad, his much ball) hoocd teammate al Bosco Tech .. will join 6-I 0 transfer Johnny Rogers. and returners Tod Murphy and Jerome Lee in the starting five. · Mulligan has seven freshmen on his 12-man roster and defense and exsxrience.~ lack of. figure to play a part in the eiifly going:But Mulligan also has anotherbjg front line with the likes of the 6-10 Roaers, ~8 EnaJestad and 6-91/i Murphy. "We've never started two freshmen here, but then "'e've always been JC dominated (relying on transfen),'" Mulligan s_ays. ••fortunately, some of our freshmen are further advanOed than the others because of the coaching they received in hiah school." Mulligan says McDonald, Thornton and Turner can be replaced offensively, but the Anteater defense will have its hands full. In addition. UCl hits the road early wi1h games in Colorado, Montana, Oregon and Hawaii dotting the fint three weeks of the season. • "I think we're going to be a good teaml I just don't know when," Mulhgan admits. UCI finished second in the Pacific Coast Athletic Association with a 14-4 record. The Anteaten were 10-0 in CraWfoi'd Hall on the UCJ campus. and among those victories was an upset of nat1onally-rankcd Nevada- Las Vqas. "Las V~s has the players th s year," Mulligan concedes. "'They had five rcdshins last year." The UCI coach uys a second-place finish in tt1e PCAA is within his team's reach, but the Anteaters will have to fight off Fresno State and Cal Siate Fullerton. Mulligan osxncd practice Monday (Pleue eee UCl/C3) ' Coach BUI Mw!Uan muea a point to 8-10 center Johnny Rogen, no WUfbe In the Anteaten' ~ llneup. Raiders are surviving the penalties ... so far I Flores to cut back in that department ,but not cut team· s aggressive nature MANHATiTAN BEACH (AP) - The Los Angeles Raiders have been penalized 72 times in their seven NationafFootball League games thi!5 season for 572 yards. yet only one team. Miami, ha5 a better record than they have. l But that doesn't mean that Coach •Tom Flom i n't concemed. "We need to eliminate ~me of the penalties without turning off the asJre5Sivc nature of the team," Flores said Wcdnesdar,."•Hoi>¢fully, we'll be able to do that. • Last Sunday, Los Angetes raised its record to 6-I with a 23-20 yictory over the Minnesota Vikings. Los Angeles won despite the fact that it was penalized 16 times for 140 yards. Eleven of the penalties for I OS of the yards came in the first half. The Vikmgs were on top 13-10 after 30 minutes of Play. .. There is just no excuse for those th.inas (penalties>:· Flores said. "We're year in and year out penalized more than most teams. Last )'Catt, were were much better, the year before, we wer~ terrible." The Vikings broke a 7-7 tie by driving 47 yards for a touchdown in the lira Quarter. They were aided by personal foul sxnalties against three members of the Los Angeles second~ ary -Vann McElroy. Mike Davis and Lester Hayes. Would Flores fine his players for committing such sxnahics? .. The commissioner will fine play- ers." Aorcs said. "I don't fine playcn for things like that, I haven't in the Pl't. anyway." Another area that continues to be a concern for Flores is his club's running pme, or tack of it. The Raiders arc averaging only 97.1 yard' sxr same on the ground as compared to 242.6 yards in the air. .. We've always liked to throw the ball, this year our passing game is carrymf the offense," he said. "Some- times it s by design. sometimes it's by ncc~sity. We have been worklna hard to set our ground game 'oing." Marcus Allen leads the Raiders in rushing with 438 yards. but hu averaged only 3.S yards per: carry. He has also caught 34 p3 ses for 418 yards. "We want to get the ball in his. hands. it doesn't matter how;• Flores said. "(But) that d<>C$n't excuse our lack of.a ground ,pme. ·• The Raiders face the San Di~o Ctiargm this Sunaay. Los Anaeles won a wild 33-30 decision over the Chargers at 1be Lbs Angele.'i Coliseum on Sept. 24. "last time they ran the ball very well against us." Flores said. "We've 'IOt to do a better job of stopping the run this time. "They're a hiah-potent offen5e. It's unusual they aidn't st<>rc a touch- down against Kansas Caty list Sun- day. 1 can't remember the lasl timt that hapsxncd ... The Cba~rs lost to the Chiefs. 31-13. lta'-ina both teams -.'itb 4-3 records. San Diego scored its only touchdown on a 99-yard interception return by comcrllack Gill Byrd. 7be Raidm activated lmeba er: Brad Van Pelt earlier this week. Van Pelt was atQ\Jircdif rom the Vikings laSt week. Aorcs said he plan~ on givm1 the veteran lincbatkcr some playina time apinst the Cb.arwers. which would be his first action of the sca~n. ''How much {playing time) we're not ure," Flores said. "We"ll have to pla) that b} ear." ............ ...... , .•.. ................. ··-~~ Manager of Year to Frey Mets' Johnson is runner-up in writers· poll NEW YORK (AP} -Jim Frey, who turned the Ch;c:qo Cubs frorp a lower-«helon team to a divaaoe winner 1n hi first )Ur WJth the dub. Wednesday was named the Nauoaat • Baseball Wntcil" Association Of America Frey rccci"ed 16 of the pOlll"bk ~ first-place BBW A 'Votes and xvm for second foraitotal of I 0 I ~la WlD easily over Dave JObuon of the New Yiort Mets. ~ ~ CODteDdecl most of the acuon 1lith lbe Oubl for the NL East cham]Jionllup and finished &eCo¥ iP lhc divaswn . .. rm -honored poUd that people lhoµabt I did a~.~ Frey Did. .. But it was tic orar n1-that wait OU( and .. lM ~ 10 Ill tilt ballplayers. A lot ol DeOok 4aa"Ye crecliL rm 1• die p Who 9'1pptm '°be saand'-here. He added that ""\ildi•1' ·• awatds .. DM%Yf but ... ~ .. • -=F,:=2:~ .... bllot. JohalOD ... -.s -.. 24 With four VOICI i;)r fir9.Dllce,, J6 ilr second and ra.ar·tor-ainl . . • Dick Williams of tbe Sac DifaD Padres. the Na6onal ~ Cbaa-~ finalbed m dtird 1plece m 1k banotina. alto wllh fourvota for fillt place, one for second and l 8 forlbinl. Two writers an each of the NL catia voted and die poinl SJlltlft is bued ' on fi,, c for first~ arec for second and one for lhud. This 1'45 only a.he IC<lond ~r that the BBW A members have voted for the Manqer of the Year aW'&J'd. which they pve last year :an she NL to Tom l.asorda of the Los Antdes Dodger's. The ~ Associated ~ w'hich previously had awarded manaaier of the year tn each leape. this )'Cit wdl make one award -~ legue Manager of lhe Year. Frey. in 1980 u a frttlbman rJl!ior lai&ue maftlltr. led the Kaasu CUy lloPl!i 10 &he: Amencu Lape peanant. Prior to ~'11 in City, Frey ~t I 5 ycan an the Baltimore Orioles' s~tcm, tqinnina in 1964 after rctinna as an active pg)'C'I'. ~~~ he p&aycd professional as an ootfieJdcr for 14 years. the nati vc of Cleveland never made it to the major leagues desj)ite a lifetime bani avcraae of .302. Tom Florea McNa~ra to make it officia'ltoday Vikes, Barons clash ~ Gorman, the club's general mana&er. all but sianed McNamara during talks at the World SCrics m San Diego 10 days ago Sullivan and Gorman admmcd that McNamara was th~ir first choit"C to succeed rcti~d Ralph Houk, 65. as Boston· field bo . McNamara, 52, a major league man r for 10 full seasons and parts of thrc others: cleared 1he ~way to come to Bo ton hy rejecting a con- trat't to continue ns manager of the Angels. "I put lot of pnonty on m~or league experience," Sullivan said on the West Coast. "l "ouldn'tcliminate ~ood peo~lc In our orgaruntaon, but 1n this uuation I think we need omconc with cxpcncncc in handl11\g two different clubs Half our team 15 c~pencnccd, half Is 'cry )OUfll. There' not much an between. "We want to l nd th charnt'tcr of the m n er into the character of the teem." "He' soltd guy... 1d Gorman. 'He's handl d \Ctmn clu~. he's hand!~ kid nd he a und orgnt7.at1onn1 le der an the minor. I UC .. u111'an id he t lkC(J tO •• bout 1 other ndadatc ••• fl r Houk decided to retire on pt. 2S .... ........ .,u. ..... s.taacla •a Adam Wal ...... will be one of quartert.ck lllke Roeelllnl'• ........ ap:lnat 8'4dlebaek toillClat. • .., in key Sunset· I .. ' I ~ e>r.,.coeet DAILY P LOT/Thurta•y Octo&et 18, 1 84 ... m AP dl99&dlt1 m LO NGE -Gacy Hogcboom •II• ha started ,u 1evcn of Dallas· Nauonal Football Leque pm th ts season. At least one obscner, Bud Goode' computer, believes the Cowboys hould go beck to Danny While. Of the four NF'.L quanerback TBting factors. the mo t impanant, ooordan to Goodc's computer..a1ded mustical anal} is, as the touchdown pa 1ng ;per. ecntage. Dall • with a 2.04 percent figure, rank last m the National Football Conference and 27th in the entire NFL. sul'J)a$Stn• pl'\IY Cle\ eland ( l .42 percent). By companson, the Miami Dolphins and quar- terback Dan Marino lead th leaaue wnh a 9.68 percent figure. Compared to White"s 1983 percentage (:S.2S pcrccnt), the Cowbo) s have lost more iround relative to the NFL oo this key statistic th n any other team, Goode said. According to Goode, the touchdown passing percentage correlates S6 percent with points scortd thi season and rorrclatcd S2· percent last year. · Hogcboom was . lectcd by Dallas Coach :Tom Landry to suecttd White as the Cowooys' starting quarterback les 'than a ~eek before the season staned . ote6ftlieda1 RM 1us111111. ~ pied• cMcUMno ,, broeda.• Jolt 9Uttma the OOld ~ duttng the .... llllOft ..... Kanw Qty It'• ty dlftlcUt 0.C.IM W Ye ~ In heat for I month· Peniutna •kate to &nt victory arre1 Yo... ortd t\\O goals and ~ t up ano\hcr to lead the ~m burgh " Penguins to their first victory Wednesda) night, a 4.3 tnUJllPh over the Vancouver Canucb. Rookie Marlt Ltmlfts, pla)'•lll his first home game, t up a power-play soal by °"' SMddtll 18 seconds into the game to 81\'C Pmsburah a 1-0 lud . •. Clark Gillin ored hts third goal of Hie game with 3·14 rcml\tning to le d the New York blandcrs to a oome-from-bchind 6-4 victory over Octrou. Gilhe deflected Pa& LAFoatalu'• lapshot past · Detroit netmindcr Gre1 &efu 10 snap a 4-4 tic nd gi\'e the Islanders their third straight victory ••• Veteran center Tom Lysiak scored with l :02 lo play to lift Chicago to a 4.3 wan over St. Louis. Lysiak, Skating down the ict toward the net, took a pa s from ceve t.rmer and rammed the winning goal 1past Blues goahc Mike lJat . •. Will Palement and Dale Hu&er broke open a 2-1 game with third-period oats to lead Quebec to a 4· I ~1ctorr over Buffalo in the Nordiques' home opener. Pecer Swtay, playing in his first game afier sining out a three.game suspension, and Loal1 Slelpu scortd scoond·pcriOd soals for Quebec .•. MarkFuco,SylvalD Ttargeon, Joel Qaeunllle and Ron Frucl1 scored consecutive goals to rally Hartford to a 5.3 victory over Toronto •.• Ed Been scored three goals. ooc an cmp1y- netter. to lead Calgary over Winnipeg. 7-4 Nb:on .,Jee to end holdout LO ANGE -Vet ran guard m Norm Nixon ha rcaC"hcd an under tand1 na wuh &he Lo Anact 1ppcrs and d lo end h1 ond pre-season holdou& over a contract dispute. the team announced Wednesday. Due to bcC' me a free a nt at the end of this son, Nixon ha repeatedly sked to have his contra~t rcn~taatcd or extended by 1hc National Basketball A soc1ataon dub .. 1imficant proare has bttn made m daJCu 11ons for 1n extension of Norm's present contract which expires at the end of the 1984-85 season," 1d Oappers General Manqer Carl "hccr. "We will conunue discussions with both ides which will hopefully ~It rn a linaliz.ation of a new contract for Nocm:· Financial helpforu.s. playen LOS ANGELES -Eight of the ll m members of the U.S. men's Olympic volleyball team wall be able to stay togcth r throu&h the 1988 Olympic Games a1 a re ult ofa program that wtll assure them from $30.000 to $60,000 each, officials said. The program devised by the U.S. Volleyball Association will enable the players to retain their amateur status and ptt\ ent them from accepti"8, offers to play In Italy, where they could have earned $30.000 to $SO.OOO as professionals. • The payments. which include in some a.scs free rent, are ICfil under International Olympic Committee .rules, officials said. Pena OK after ulcer treatment LO ANGELES -Pitcher AleJandro Ill Pena of the Los nacles Dodaers was 10 be released today irom Glendale Memorial Hospital. where he M5· lrcatcd for rc•t:· uvauon ofa duodenal ulcer, the Nauonal lcquc team nnounccd Wednesday Pena. Who had the best earned run averaae 1n the NL this pall season, was hospitalized Tuesday with acute abdominal pe1n He f!nt suffered the pfocr 1n October of 1981. Ram• activate ufety Johneon Free safety Johnnie -'lohnson, who 0 suffered a broken ankle last July, has been a~uvatcd by the Ram • the National Football League team announced Wcdnts- day. John50n wall take the si><>t on the Ram • 49-p~er roster previously occupied by staruna offensive t .e Jackie Slater. who underwent knee suraery earlier this week and will be s1~etincd for the rest of the • n. .•. FUEL DOCK r NOWOP•N Hiini:ers Welcome duck sea~Son this weekend COMPLnl MARINI IVICI Waterfowl hunters will be heading this year due to low reproduction in in the fall months Jt is followed by a two per day:, except in District 22, out to pands, lakes and rcfuJCS in Canada, but thosewillina to stick it Santa Ana wind condition and these where the limn is sull one. The many partsofSouthem Cahfomia out 'hould enjoy good huntinaall strona wmdsalways help OJJt a duck honker season will extend one week this coming weekend as the 1984-85 year Iona. · or goose hunter. J past the end of duck season and close duck and goose season gets under The baa limit on ducks has been There should be little facto hamper II on Jan. 20. 198'. way • • rcduCcd to five lflis year. down from opening, but those hunting Imperial HonkCTnumben have iocrtased H 0 unters will be equipped with hip seven, and ll'iis reflects the drop in "'! Valley waters should prepare for hot Nl£11£C greatly in many pans of Southern • boots, hotguns, trusty retrievers and population of waterfowl in the Pacific and clear weather as soon as the sun California over the past few years and a sack full of decoys over their Flyway as determined by Fish and rises. a bettenhan a verqe season is shoulder as they brave the early-. Game bioloaists. Sprig and teal The bulk of this year's duck harvest predicted on these majestic birds that morning elements in hopes ofbag&jng counts are way down and these are . will consist of mallards, widaeon, decoy well into fields. • . alimitoffast-flyiniducks. twobirdsthatlocalhunterscounton diversandspoonieswithagood HuntinginNortheastemCali- The outlook for the opener is annuaily to increase their harvest. numberof pdwall as well. Sprig. the It is hoped teal will come through fomia got offto a slow stan a week mixed, but gunning should be good in This week's weather mi&ht trigcr a usual target for many waterfowlers, the Southland early this winter and ago, but there are lots of ducks and bi& traditional hot spots around the little early migration ofbirds out of will be around early in the season, but offer some &uod gunning.. Canadian honkers in the area. With Salton Sea, at Baldwin Lake and on the Ptcific Northwest, but not in time will be hard to find workina decoys Hon km are fa1rpme on the the help of a freeze hunting should the many private clubs in the South-to help the opener. On the brighter during ovembcrand December in opcnina weekend as well for most of improve sreatly in this pan of the ~~~==~~~~~~~!!~l~an;d~.~D~u~ck~n~u~m~be~rs~a~rc~d~o~w;n~a~p~i~niiiii~s~id~e~.~us~ua~lly~a;ft~e;ra~.c;o~ld;fi;ro;n~t;pa;s~ses~_;;m;o;st;area~~s.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiii;t;he;So~u;th~la~n;d;w;i;th;t;h~eba~g~li~miit~se~t~a~t~•sta .. te• ....... -. .......... .. e I • Padres dismiss Sherry SAN DIEGO (AP) -The San Diego Padrn have dismissed Norm Sherry a~ the club's pitching coach in the wake of a disastrous performance by the team's startina rotation during the World Series. •'ifbey told me I won't be: badt; it was a shock to me," Sherry said Wednesday night ... When yo1i1 win, you never ~x~t something like that. I thought I did a good job. Evidently, it wasn't good enough," General Manager Jack McK.Con said team officials "felt like it was in the best interests of the organization to make a chan~ in pitchina coaches, because of conflicts on the pitchina Staff." McKeon said that the Sherry's contract with the club would not be reneWed, althoup he has been of- fered another position within the Padres organization. Sherry1 53. has not yet decided whether he wall accept the new job offer. If you thought Camel would never make a light smoke, here's unexpected news: Camel Lights. It's a lfght, mild smoke, and because it's a Camel, you1mow the flavor is great. see for yourself. Enjoy Today's Camel ~ights. And be ready to have your mind changed. The seneral manager said the Padres have not yet settled on a replacement for Sherry, a fonner catcher with the Dodgers end New York Mets and manaaer of the Ancels. McKcon denied that Sherry's ouster had anythina to do with the collapse of San Dieao's stanina pitchina corps in the World Series, which wuwon by the Detroit Tigm. Durina the senes, the Padres four- man rotation of Mark Thurmond, Ed Whitson, Tim Lollar and Eric Show lasted a combined total of 101/J inninp in five pmci.. They pvc up' 2S hit , includina five homers, and 17 runs (one unearned) for a combancd ERA of t 3.94, an all-time high in World Serie5 play. TODAY'S CAMEL LIGHTS It's a whole new world. . . -· . ' . • 9 mg. v. o a ma. ncome •·per C1Qllt(ll by FTC method ,,.. I Warning The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous tQ Your Health The Padrn won their first Western Division title and National League championship with a staff that fin· ishtd the rqular season ranked fifth in the lcaluc. with an ERA of 3.41. Funny car world title up for gra·bs POMONA (AP) -Mark Oswald. Kenny Btmsteinand Billy Meyer will be blttlina for the National Hot Rod Associauon~a Funn}' Car world championship and S-40,000 b0nu1 dunna the Winston World Finals bc&innina today at Pomona Raceway. Oswald, from Cincinnati, Ohio. 11 the overall leader with 7,912 Potnts IOln& into the KUOn's lut l'ICC. :Bernl\ein, from O.Uu, isseconcl wnh :7,S44 points and M~. from Waco. Texu. 11 thard with /~'JO. OsMkt has run con111~1uly all year. winnin_a the Spr1nanational1 1n ColumbuJ. Ohio, and NorthStar Ni· t1onal11n Brainerd, Minn. Bern1te1n won the 01tomauonal1 m 011navdle, f11., 1n M•rch, becom· •na the fint Funny c;ar driver to exmd 260 mph. Meyerwon tht Southtm Na'iPnal• in Atlanta. 0.. the C~un Nataonal1 1n B110n koutt. La . and Mohon· Grandnauonal In Montreat,~. Meyw"'°""er ha1 bttn pl,.ued by lnrons11ieney tk fatted ao quahty an the I kar (ldd ror tht -.on- oPtnlna W1n1«nat1onal1, a run at Pomona Racewa Bu~etball cJlnlc 1 he third onnun1 Fullcnon oil B •kct~ll Chn cWill be held Tuesday in the Home1 } m on the Fullenon campus The chn1 • fcaturi111 four r coa hC$, will not t>:J S p.m. WJth rqistru.t1onnnd conclude at ~Sp m. Tupa"' for i11KU on wUI Include fast bre k dnlls. matCh•up :ronc, "lllllt' thing~ that le d to 1 succ:enfut .im>&mm" And •·cvaluauna pcrsonn I nd oppont'nts •• The fc1nurcd :u>ca\:crure Kevin W1l n. fir t· ~ear head co ch at Chapman College: George l='1Jhcr, first-year at Cat Pol) Pomona, ROl"r Sec. founh-y r ch nt Fullcnon College, ond Paul Ootuaux, m h1Sscventh year at Sonora Ht,gh. For more inform uon. phone 871· 000, ~tcn51on 344, Bjom Bor-6 ap~co lnterna11onil •~nnis' star BJorn Bora ~111 appear at the tla Jtorc tn Cost. ML"Sa's South Cc st Plan Frida) to autoaraph J)(nten from 1·2p.m. Bors" the only player to Wln the French Open x times. Si~cc rcunng from ac11vc pla), he has spent some ume endonana Fila sponswtar. Rozier admits cheating Hetsman Trophy 'winner claims he received money NEW YORK(AP)-Mike Rozier. the 1983 Hei man Trophy winning runnin• back from Nebraska who . now is 1n the United State$ Footb&ll League, has admitted in a published repon tohavingviolated NCAA rules by a~ptina money in his senior college season. Sports Illustrated, in its Oct 22 issue, says Rozier admitted in a tape· m:ordcd interview that he signed with an aaent and accepted money durina Nebraska's 1983 season and that, before playina in the Orange Bowl, he entered into a contract with the USFL's Pittsburgh Maulers. for whom he pla)ed last ~pring. Under NCAA rule~. Rozier could have come to terms with an agent or a pro team only after the Orange Bowl · pme against Miami, wh ich ended shortly after midnight last Jan. 3. • 't Bk and JOk run• The E1 Toto H11h SChool Booster Group will hold ns annual 51i 'and I Ok runs on turday. Nov.10. 1 he Sl tuet for8 am nnd lhc lOk at 10 am. The nu-n are sanctioned by The Athlctit Congress Proccccb will benefit the El Toro High basketball team Entrants will compete for first.place uophia an 10 age eroup dwl ions for men and women. wheckhair d1v1s1on as also 5Chedulcd. · Pre·rcgimataon will ntmue until Nov • .3 Cost is S9 h1eh includes a T olh1n Late rej•Stnuqn -until the day oft he rate-15 $10 with T-stun. El Toro Hi,;h 1sJooued at 2S2SS Toledo Way. El l oro. For more anformat1on. phone 8111 to~ at 951·3257. World let •ti DIYl• More tfuin 400 compet11ors re espcard ro lht SlO 000 World Jet ki Finali DI Lake t11wasu. Arizona Oct. 26-,28 Jct ski rac1i:i1 IS a comb1111t1on of motocr~ nmvs\:hfll and . ucs. all performed on the water. , Rrg1 tration for the finals is 6Ct for Frtday. Oct. 26 (rom 9·11 a.m at the auuc.al lcn Conference C'eJUCr. Room A. Quahfyml roundi aft' Saturday. Oct. 27 wt th fi iutls on Sunday, Oc:t. 28. . • R ctn bc;ans al 9:30 a m cad\ da). For more 1nformauon, pho~ lS0-4277. IJCI ••• Prom Cl sending his pla)-crs tbroU&h four-hour workouts for three days. tltcn off a day and thrtt back on. While ifs still early. Mulligan has been able to form a few opimons of his team: •On the front line of Rogers (5 .8 percent from floor l~"O years ago at Stanford}. Englestad (S8.2 as a :senior at Bosco Tech) and Mur:phy(S7.S la t year): "It's the best shooting front hne wc·ve e,·cr had as a uniL •On the backcoun: .. We have extreme quick.nC'S$ at the guards (1..ce and Scott baeked up ~ freshmen Bryce W1U1ams from St. Bernard' and Boris King from Palm prinis). •On this year's defense: .. Dc- fcnsavel)'. you ~ one or two ways, either nrictly with your philosophy or with the scoutina repo~ t tend to think WC wiU JO with the JCOUtinc report and be flexible, depending on the opposition. Basically, We will still JO man-~man for purposes ofblock- ma. which you must do:· •On the Anteaters• scllCduJe: .. Whenever you IO on \be road, it's toUgh. We 1°'1 to Colorado here last year and we tiivc to ao to BoUJacr this year. We're aoing to Montana where hardly anyone •ins and we open 3.&1inst Nebraska in the Cable Car Classic (at Santa Oara):• . •On Rogen: ••t hope the )car off doesn't hurt him too much." But. accordina to the magazine. Freshman Wayne En&leatad (left) pants forward Tod Murphy aurtna UCI practice. ...., ......... .., ....... ~ En&te.ta4. at 6-8, flp.ree to be the Aat- eaten• other ~ forward. UCJ open the son •1th an exh1biuon pme qa1nst the Un1,.cr- M\.Y of Toronto fridly Nov. 16 Rozier said he signed with Los Anatlcs-bascd agent Bruce Marks in Auau t 1983, befort' Nebraska's first pme of the season. and that Marks paid btm four monthly installments of$600 durina the season. Marh 1s an associate of Mike Trope, byt Rozier ·said he did not know· that at the tame. Rozier abo told the magazine that. several days before Nebraska's 3 l -30 loss to ·Miami that gave the Hur- ricanes the national championship, he, Marks and Maulers General Manager George Heddleston aareed to terms. Beach l .Ok ru~ tops running activity Academic Boosters hope to raise funds- f or supplemental learning materials uwc just sat down and went over the contract." Rozier was quoted as sar.in&-"It sounded good to me. The million dollars for three years." After the Orange Bowl game. Trope emerg- ed as Rozier's agent. In the days following that pme. Rozier. Trope and the Maulers ~1d they had not made a deal. But on Jan. 9, the USFL club said it had signed Rozier to a contract 16 hours aftcrthe pme. The second Edison High School's Academic Booster Club's !Ok Run is ~t for this Sunday. The event will be run along the beach on asphalt surface, stanang at the Huntin~on Beach Pier, run along thebiketra1landacccs road. tum around and return to the Pier. The race will ~an promptly at 8 a.m: with registration ~tartina at 6:30 at the Pier. The cost is S 12 with T- shirt and S l 0 without. There will be 12 divisions in both the male and femalec.atcsoncs with several awardsciven in each division. edM' Newpo. rt Spccialmerchandiseawardswilloc presented bydrawingaf\erthe race. , win in tennis Parkingisavarlableonthestrcets (parking mete~) and off-street park- • . .:.... by a s---p 1•0 doubles. the ing in state and city lot~ a Iona Pacific ~ ......... Coast Hianwayfora fee. Corona del Mar High airls tennis The purpose of the race is to raisc • team defeated host Foothill. 13-S. in a funds fortutorial services. sup- ' non·leaaue match Wednesday. t 11 · 1 d • • .Jn No. I doubles, senior Rachel P emcnta eam1ngmatena s.an 5Cholarshipsand by sponsonna Rosen, the defending Sea View academic competition teams. League champion in doubl~, teamed For more information, phone Pat wt th junior Denise Maltos to win by McKenzie at 968-9598. scores of 64. 6·1 and 6-1. In another non·lcague match in-* '* '* scenic Ocean Boulevard. runs by the Belmont Plaza Pool to the Belmont Pier. The course heads out and back to the end of the pier before returning to Ba) shore A venue where it finishes · · alongside Alamitos Ba)'. Race registration i5 S8 which includesuouvenirraccT-shirt. The cost to enter the race only (wittiout the T-shirt) is SS. Race-day regis- trants must add $2 to the above costs between 6:30and 7:30a.m. Awards will be presented in 24 categories plus top overall fi nishe~ Mercha-nd1se awards will bC&ive to top and random finishers. Orange County meet set volving a Sta View Ltaauc team, The 1984 Belmont Shore F1vC- Newport Harbor crushed Sunny Milerw1llbcrunthrouahthe~asidc A newcoureeat Irvine Park wilt Hills. 1 S-3. communit> of Belmont Shore in be the alt• of ..._ Orange CoUnty Core> Crook Id t only two pmes UmgBeachSaturdayat8a.m. Cron Country Chlmpk>n9hlpa overall and Donna Newcombe drop-It begins at Bayshorc Avenue on Saturday, t>egtnningat 8 a.m. ped only four fo pace the Sailors m Ocean Boule,ardandrunseasttothe lrvlne Pn w.. the 1"' lit• of singles. ~hile Julie E~ans and am tipofLOn$ Beach Peninsula. There it the meet In 1117 Md IMt hOlted _H_o_w_a,.i-rd_w_o_n ... a_l_l t_h_rec ...... .sc_t ... s_in._d_o_u_b_1e ........ __ rc_,. ... cnc __ s_d1_rcc_ti_o_n_a_nd_he.,..a_d_s_w_c_t_o...,n_, the'Champlol\lhtpe In 1980. A need of motW than 3,000 runnert from Ill ovs the county II ~ed to Compete In lhe event Wh!Ch II one Of the~ of the crou country 11110n .kt 10range CoUntY. CAR ELEPHONES • As low as 83" /Mo. Leasing • Same Day Service • Certified, factory-trained technicians .. ' •SAVES TIME • EARNS EXTRA $ . • IMPROVES EFFICIENCY • Bill ,felc&ano of Oyprw Md the ..... Urne .... ~ln 15:40, ...._ M9Ur8DliYOf 1Mlllkln Viejo hed the top ... *-< 11:33). Amona !the it>oyt .,. .. on ..... .. tnnd... ..... of co.ta M ... (15·16) enct Dew Ar.-..on of COrona .. Mllr (11:41); --Edtton'I Nfkkl ~ W e gltta dMlkM\ Winner In 1t:OI. Con'9fttlon ~rune -.p N yeer. Arnono the ..._...on ttte boyl ...... UrWetlftY"• ~ ~ MCI MaW o.1'1 Merk :'':n::no: c::::.:.: 8Mtri&MMI MCI Ms.ti ••w . Who II '•ding. •••JJPOrt ........ -~that Ma~~ °' tM 1lwKattoNllll ........ ed ....... Di'I The oour• ...,,.. • twc> .................. of400 Pf* on .,...., ... eftd ._.-. ... hlll of boUt 100 ~ r DElillS BIOSTEl•US RUN NING Theraceisbeingorganizcdb) · California Athletic Productions of tongBCicfiincooperaiion wadi A Runnina Experience Club. Formoremformation. phone(2 I 3) 439-6876. * * * The Los An I~ Pro Comfon Run scheduled for atuiday. will offer all participants a detailed anal} sis of thcirperformanccaswcllasa national computer rankina courtesy ofl.~vi's Runncn RankinaSctv:icc. The LosAnaclcs ProComfon Run is one in a series of seven Grand Prh I Ok road races which will take place in seven United States cities this fall , culminatina in the finals competition in Honolulu. Hawaii. Runnen Ranki~Scrvicc rain runners of all abiliuescompetina in road racing ransina from Sk.s to marathons. Rankings arc reported on a pm.:ocntile basis and art bmkcn. down by age and gender. For more information on the service. phone (216) 861-RACE. '* * '* RUNNlNG SCHEOUL& SATURDAY ....,_.. SMr'9 f'IW·Mlr. 9"11\S I• m. et OcM'I 9ou1e.,.n1 •!Id .. ., Shew• ... .,.,_,.. 8elmoftt 511ere F I IOOe c.ourw F• • T· -. an efld u wfllloUt ,. 11 ta i. tee uie 0.1 of rne rece. P« more itdorrnelioft, ot>OM t2U) G-WS. Nl!IM Ullllt -•:30 it.111..t Plummer ~ , Futerton Ftllt, $CS!dc murw.. F• b d WI T 111/rt and M Wlll'IOlll I I .... tee ~ mer. ltlfoi'melioft, ltflOM St.W Pbdlel •• m-1101 ._..Den,_.* 9eG 7: ~Ui.) w I I m C ) et Bon OU.. ol 8'*'9 P.a. Fief, Mnetlo!l9d ceurse.. F• I'• T •lliln end l.J w-in..1 -Uh' 1 i.te fee PnKeecb beMflt IN llOYI CUI ttl lkana ~ F« ,_. lnfomlaliOI\, ~ ~eim·nSJ ~au.mtUQ.SMll•:lw 730 1.ll'I i(Sk) •lid h .rn. C ) 11 UC lrvllw. Sanlc courst lht Fee tlO T· lfllrt For more •Ion. aur1dll et $S>W.e SUltDA Y ......... A ...... nlc ..... 0.-~ anina t 111\. el 1M Hunllft010tl 6ftdl Pier. c-. oe run• n. tleedl Gii sur111Qt. F• tu 12 w T encu It wm.ut Reo sntllXI bePls •• uo av of rec. For mor. ltllorme! PN1M Pel Mecl<..mla el 961·fftl. SPA·TAC•aw ¢' ...... caac-. Mii •• &esiM 61.m. et ROM ~.:F.tva too.~meRosellOwt. FH• stO wllTI :r~Ullrl and S6 ""lttloUI Wlltl '2 tete tff en rac. da v w !ti no 5!llr1 Oliaraft1ftG For mg,. mallort. llllOM c RC atll II •·552t Vikings clinch tie for title University tops Costa Mesa to earn Sea View playoff spot Marina H1ah's v.ater_polo team clinch~ at lea t a_tie for the ·un~t Ltague \l\lc Wednesda) ntght. downana Fountain Valley at Golden Wet.1 Collcse. Elsewhere Wedncsda). Unave~1ty scv.'td upa pla)ofT berth 1n the a Viev. League with a decisi,·e wm o'er Costa M~ \\bile Newport Harbor and Corona del Mar once qa1n brttred to victory. The details: • El Ruatlen •weep "'t OOC .. - . -~ .... Ali.tilt ""°'*"' Chlce90 TMIMllY Delroll MIMeaota Gr9'fthv Finl.._. Var• rUlllille Verdi""'"-Total Yatell Oxa=-a .... ..., llO #S \QS6 '1621 915 2:31' *' Punta ~-· 36·.Cl.1 Ptftettlft 5H1S. .. ,.. Fumblls·io.I 2M1 14•6 ltllSftlnt TO. 1 s Panlne TO. • 10 Return TOI 2 • Tottl TOS b " INDIVIDUAi. llVUllN Tea va a.,. TD Dldltrson lSS 7'' .o 4 Crutthfltld 37 12' u 1 Ridden lt UH 0 KtrN ' 6l '·' 0 E.lard I • .co 0 Gumtn 1 2 10 0 FllTaGtmo • 0 0.0 0 TOlllS 226 1056 4.7 s ()pp 113 "' 3.3 7 .. .. sine ... f'C "' Vdl TO Kemp ts ... 1 755 7 Ferreo.mo " 2' • >17 2 Dllt 4 2 0 22 1 Dl<:Mnon 1 0 1 0 0 Tot111 16' '° IO 10N 10 ON 25' 153 7 1767 ' lleafYN Ne. Y• TO Elafd 1' 226 2 Oevld H.. 1' 137 1 Gumwi ll lOJ 0 01Cktr1on 11 " 0 Drew Hm ' m l ltown 6 13' l Fln'l'W S 4S O ~lfll 4 41 0 CtlMHleld 2 n 1 McOOneicl 1 • 0 F1ulkner 1 6 0 llttddtll 1 6 0 Tot 1is 80 IOP4 10 °" JS,) 1761 6 Of,_ ltad«'~ Puflr.111 -Ml$ko, 3'--14IO, 41.1 IVO Kickoff rtlum1 -Ori# Hill, lM0.7 1¥9., Redden, 7·UJ Punt retunll -Ellerd, 17-136 IVO lnltret911om -Irvin, 3·11.S, Cromwell, 2·54, G,_, 2·2' Odds .. ,L, /' ll•ldlr• 3 over llSan IM"lllO xClnclMlll l over C1tv•nd Denver 3 O\ltr xluffllo Mleml 4 over xNn l!notitlld xT9mH l•v 1 over Chlcloo XM1Mnot1 2 over Detroit W11llln9ton ) ., over xSt. L.oult xNV Glints 1 O'I« Ph~ll S..1111 2 over xGreen S.11 (II Mil· WlutlM) P1lllburtfl 4'h O'ltr 111lllClll111t1011 xNV Jtll 2'h over KlllMI City San Frel!Clteo 10 ovw XHOUllOfl xDI a 6 tNW New Orleena xAti.'111 1 OVlt lltamt (Moncsly lllthll c-.. xWuhinttOll lf OVlt OrlVOll Oklt!IOIM 21 Of/er xlow1 Slllt JrTtl! .. 12 O'fW Arklftlll ac>ifOll CCllllOI .c °"" xW"r Vlrt nl1 NWa.-1 2'Y, ...,_ 11Color1do ltSMU 14 OYer HoustOll IVU 6\"J Ovit xAlr Foret • Ohio State 71'> over xMlchloan St11t ltMlaml, ,.. 14 er.er PllllOurth LIU J~ over xKentucky South Carol!N 2\'J OVlt xNotre Dime JCOt!l•lloma Stet• 22 0\111' KaMas xAuDur11 10~ over Geot11l1 Teen •G90r•I• 6 Offr Vanoerblll "'IOflde State 1' ewer Tulane xFtwlde 31 oYer Cincinnati xlow1 7 over Mldllnn x...,.n St•I• 7 11 .... r Syrecuae. f'...n "•'""'• ... '""' • bee ..... , Smooth Al Velvet. HIOOY Huntin11. IY• Ive Scottv, Mr N M Time: 2:01 1/5 U IXACTA (S•3) H•d M2.30. SIXTH RACI. One mlle Net Mlxl4Y llue !Kuebler) '40 2.10 260 Doctor °°" <Plano> 520 HO Oir«I Kl119 (Andeflon) 400 Also rececl: T011tut1, Doctor l11ltv, Lt Norm, ROUIUIOll. Ro••" Crest. Time• t;St •IS, U IXACTA <7_.) Nici WUO SIVINTH llACL Ol!e mlie i>ece SOecfal Ptr.r (Kuttlltfh lOIO UO '20 LOt'cl AIM CAMenon) lUO HO lttvent ""'-'• (o.-ntr) ).00 Alto raced: Nevtt' The '-""'· K"*'-PrlnCftl, Wive ll1der. Tltnt. l;Jf 2/5 U IXACTA CJ·I) Nici SlSUO llGHTH ttACI. One mile Nc.t SOie EllHd!floc! (Vlldvn) 2'M IUO 7'4 Trlc:UI C11treer (H. Partier) 700 uo Moftttfl\I Knltl!t (Cl"OllNn) JOO Allo rac.d: Fleallv Fr•'*• Dewrl Son, 0..11 Point, E.IOclUtr!t Ray S, Mollltf'l\I ltoc:lttt, Wei SMa.oned Gtri. Tlmr lSt 215 U IXACTA (7 .. l Olld Sl6UO .. "1NTM ttAGL OM mile PKt. Petit Ontiln CO'Dwver) 12.20 uo 2.40 Sam l.elOnl (AtllllrMll) 340 2.40 Jet Futj lra110 (Kuebler) uo AlaO rec.ct: Prot.aor OIOorne, WUtt, Striltlnt Heir. Wlkl Tlf'nt: 1:57 3/ s. U IXACTA (6-2) oeld MUO. 12 P'ICIC SIX (3·5-7-3-7-6) ptld S1,7JUO with rwo winning tickets (five honn). Carryover POOi: 126,,17.4' T•NTH •AC •• One rn.llt PICt. Phoenb1 Jeck (Vlndhml 1.40 400 260 H H Tr-(Plano) 300 2.60 Otrtrf Lord (l(ueO!w) 7.40 AJao nic:.d: llOasom Time, Trolo!t, Scott!Sll LOdl, Mack Douell, Don APOle, Kerr Hlnovtr. . Tll'lle'. 2:00 41 S. U l:XACTa (2-fl Nld Ul.JO Attllldence· J,429. O.k Tree (Its.....,.,.., WaDNISOAY'S llUULTS (lllfl .. 27 • .., .............. me.ftN) 'IUT ua. 6 h.lr1iontK. Gr~ Siem .. by (Hwtv) UO 2 • 260 Aot11ti.I& (MIU) UO 3.IO Crewtw ... llTY <OUwereal 5.IO AIM rec.cl: T-Pad, Flll\IOfl Knowi· ldoe. Unaw"lened, Petitt P1rr1c:t. s.ncir1 z. Time 1:11 1/S. SIECOND ••ca. 6 furlo"ll• Vollmo (~Oii) UO 340 2 IO Mlaler ~ro (Olivares> JIO 300 Cold NOM CH1w1tv) .S40 AISo raced· Emtr11d Cul, Kevin'• Trldla, Overllnd Journ111. P1trlotlc Ptec111t, Troi.n House, 8tn Redeemed. Time. 1:09. J /5 S2 DAILY DOUll.a C2-4) Plld llOIO THIRD llACI. ' furlotlo' Small He61t (LOIOVI) 22.00 7 IO UO Pint For Gold (Garcia) UO 340 Tfle Belle (McCerrOt'I) 2.10 Also rectcl: No F.., Of Flvlne, PrineeN Dvne, Spray COloene, 11wedtr'a DrMm, S.!llON Roxie. Stnoltln' Pellf, G1lener1e. Time: 1:11 2/S. fOUltTH llAGL 6 .... futlonol. Artistic Venture (Loicwa> 2420 10 40 6.00 ltoc:oM Navaaco (OeilllOu ... ye) SAO A 00 Mattie's l\flftv ("9droul ,.oo Also rectcl: o..r Crvs1-., LIYllY WOft• der, Klllme Point, Lovtprttlflder, C.o•aln A It., W•t ~. Eradicate. Vtrona·s Flr•I. """ llACa. 1~ mllltl Oii turf. Decontr04 (Slbllltl S.20 3.20 2.10 F"slbllitv StudV (~rron> • oo UO lounc:lttt l1.1tlon1 (Garde) t oo Also raced Certeift Trttl, ..,. .. Flett, Lt Cid, G111leo, Quot1tloc! Mlrlls, VllMI W•v. Time: UI 115 U IXACTA (6·1) Plld 16200. SOtTH llACI. 1 111' miln lolcler Tllen IOld (McCm) 320 2.20 2.10 Viva Mlxl CPlncay) 2'4 2.10 N1ll11e EXlllorlf" (LOtOVI) 2.20 Alto ractd: Wtttern Sport, N111111 l!x-Olof'ar, Pencil Pulhtr. Time: 1;45 11 S. U IXACTA (4-l> Plld llt.50 SIVINTH llACa. 61,., turtono1. Pertv l.Hder <McCerronl •.co •OO .c.IO Mt. UYtrmort CPlncay) J.60 2.IO Gr1n lert>e CC11t1nede) UO Alto receci Ru Lake, $erl'a Delltflt. Klnoaldtr Tlrnt. 1:1.S 215 u IXACTA (3·4) oe:d 1noo ltGHTH •ACI. 7 fuOOr>os - Mlt!W T. Prkr (Dlh5Yl 1'.60 UO 6AO ~Ivel• JUllO'I (MUI) 11.00 7 00 Den's Dlablo (TOl"O) uo AlSO reced C1rtoed, Lomtx, Fatt Ac- count. Doctor Didi, Or. Ill"'•· IClf'Oet Co., W1ttf Into win.. Gwonlmo J, Time: l'.23 41 S 12 "9CK SIX Cl·t-6+3-2) Mid 11,16100 ""1ltl " Winnint tlcUta Cflve 11or ... 1. Carrvover llOOI 1111M1. NINTH •ACI. I 1116 miles Cl!Ofllla Cluetn 1~011> too uo soo IOft Hult (la~nctl SM .c 20 IC.'""'9 G!ft !S.Dlltt) '"' f Alto rectd. Juatiflcante, Ma Vere .... I c:c:hvtiumo. lull"" cnum, Mehooeny ""' . TllTle lM 1 5 U IXACTA CNI Mid 111400 Allendanee 21,05), Autt r.-. ___ """MOMIY·L.aAOlllJ -,.,.,.,.,... Gd. IS) I 0.fr W11trlo ' 2 lotMw A ton J ~G111t A Dalt Ear"Nrdl 5. • EfUDtt 6 T.,,., l.aOontt ......,.,._... COWWMTY COL.Laoa MllC..WC1 a www GOiden West dtf Or•Nt Cotar, IH. 154, lS•S \.J NHL CN'tW'MLL CCMtn•INCI lnw9li DMllM w L T "" 0, OA Edmonton , 0 I 7 23 7 C11Hrv l I Vancouver 0 • n 15 1 WIM!llee l Of• 2 16 21 1 I 0 2 ' ' I(-0 l I 1 12 " twrtaOM.-Cflleaoo 2 :2 0 • 20 " Mlnnesot• 2 J 0 • ' l SI Louis 2 2 0 • ll ll T0tonlo 2 2 0 • IO lJ Detroit 1 l 0 2 15 20 WALIS COffl'HINCI f'a'1dl ~ l\fVlslendera 3 ~ 0 6 21 21 W111hl'0'011 2 1 1' .s 14 12 ~ ' ' 1 3 • t NtwJeraev I 2 • 2 12 12 PlltUlufptl t 2 0 2 IO 11 NV ltlllltWI 0 2 1 1 6 10 MlfMDM.a. Hartford 2 1 1 s w IJ '°''°" 2 2 0 • 11 15 1Yff110 2 2 0 4 ,. l5 MontrNI 2 1 0 • It ' °'** 2 2 0 4 ll " ........ .,.,sc.,.. ~ •• luffato 1 NV ltllnderl 6, Detroit .C Ptttaburth •. Vancoy~" 3 Harlf«d S, Toronto 3 Chicaoo 4. SI. Louis 3. Caltery 7, WlnnlPeO 4 T ........ aOemes Klllea 11 Mofltrnl Dllrolt 1t Heriford VlllCOUVtr ,, Phltedelphll Edmonton 11 MIMesol• Beldne (It ll-> Ftywe.ghll -AIOnlO GonlMl StrC)!'.19• bow (l1kw1n.ics1 won unanln'IOUI 12-rOUtld Otc:llion ovtt' Merlo S.vl"8 (s.ctemento) ,. rellln Norltl Amwlcen loxltrv Feoer· ttioft !Ute. Strongbow Is 1t·7· 1; S.Ylle II 1t·6 Mldd!twe411t111 -OwiOhl Dnlaon (0.- lroil) outoolnttd Ernest lttbOllt (LOll9 IMCl'I), Women's twnntt TOf' MONIY·WlNfflttS ("""""' Oct IS I I. MlrllNI Navralilovl 2. Chrlt E \l9rt Ltovd l Hana Mllldllkova 4 Pem Sllrlver S. Wtlt4Y T url!Ouil 6 Ml!IUell Mlltell• 7. K1lhv Jord111 I H11t111 SuilO'fl ' C1rllno a .. 1e11 10 Zll\I G1rr1aon S2.0N.25' WC,$27 MlUW Ma1,130 1213,670 11n,1>2 1160,(IO:) 1155.443 11S2,5" 131~ H lttl lcbNf t1tt1 ~ -.i Mer IS, ,..... S ,.,.... SCOll (CdM) '°'' lo Owr. 2·6. lost to Denny, 0·6, Clef. lieclll'n«t, 6-1, Smllh (CCSM) to.I, 0-6, 0-6, won, 6· 1; Kructer ICOMI io.t. 1·6. won, 6-•, 6·4 ~ llosen·MIJIOa (CdM> def. Lambet1·Van Pell, 6·4, def. Al'lrlint·Mlyemura, ~.def. McCaln•Heroer, 6·1: 1towbothet'n-C.pret1 (CdMl won. •·2, 6·•. 6-2; 011ton•WOOd (CdMI WOl\1 6·•· 6·), 7•6. New-9 HlfW IS, SUMv H .. J ~· CrOOk (NH) def. Slenesky, 6•0, def. Abe, 6·2, Clef Perka, 6·0; Neweomt>t (NH) won, 6·0, 6·3, 6·1; Mcl<lbC>on (NH) loJI, 3·6, won, 6·2, 6·1. Oeutlles !vens·Howerd CNH) def Penner·Loo. 6•1, def. Jonnson·MoMe. 6·2. def. 9l1.1nt· Or...,.tr"'· 6-0, McCltllan·S.1>15ti1n (NH) IOI!, 6-7, won, 6·2. 6-0; McGreth·Snvder !NHI lost, 2·6, 6·0, 6-1. • Winner Phil Gu7 .of Lafuna Beach captured tbe recent Preal- dent•• Cup tournament at Imne Coa•t cc. .I USFL NFL is charged witti conspiracy by football league NEW YORK (AP) -The United Stat~ Football League filed a $1.32 billion antitrust suit against the National Football ~ague Wedne,.. day, seeking the voiding of the NFL's television contracts with the three major networks and chariing that "a conspiracy" exists to put it out of bu sines~. The USFL also asked the coun to break up what it calls the NFL's monopoly on' player contracts and stadiums in the nation's maJor cities. · NFL spokesman Joe Browne ~id the league would have no comment until it had seen the coun papers. In the suit filed in Federal court here, the USFL. which has played two spring-summer seasons. said it "seeks redress for past and ongoing viol· ationsofthe federal antitrust laws" by the NFL. It names as defendants all 28 NFL teams as well •~ Com- missioner Pete Rozelle. Filed on behalf of the league by New York attome>' Ro) Cohn. the suit accuses the NFL of "numerous predatory and unla\\ful actions•· by which it "sought to ~~tuate the monopolr of the NFL by mak!na successf u entry bf a competing professional footbal leaaue into the business of major leaguei football impossib1e." Jt claims "there 1s a conspiracy" among NFL clubs "to create a complete barrier to the entry of a competitive league into the business of ma,ior league competitive foot- ball." Since the emergence of the NFL "the efforts of the defendants and their co-conspirators have been specifically directed at the elimina- tion of the plaintiff USFL member clubs as competitors." The USFL, which voted last Auaust to switch to a fall schedule staning in 1986. was formed in 1982 as what its founders said was . an alternative to the NFL to provide sprin•·summer football for the Amcncan public. It came into being with two-year television contracts estimated at from $18 to $22 million. · Last season. the league expanded from 12 to 18 teacnsand several of the franchises were sold leavina only &i>. of the original owners. Muncie allowed . to go home SAN DIEGO (AP) -San Dicao runnina back Chuck Muncie, who entered a drua evaluation and trea·t· mcnt center la~t month. has com- pleted the first phase of his tcbabili- tation and returned 10 his home. team officials ~id Wednesday. Muncie. the Chargers· leadina rusher from 1980· I 98.3. was prevented from being tradC'd to the Miami Dolphms earlier this season when a urinalym 1e1t showed traces ~ of cocaine. A news release prtparcd by the team said Muncie has finished "the initial phase of a chemical dependen· cy procram," which was said to hl\e been conducted at a 1rcatmcn1 center in Ariiona. Muncie ~s returned 10 San Di~o for "afler-care." the release said. National Football Ltaaue Com· missioner Pete Rozelle has 111d he will not make a dec11ion on whether M u.ncie '!'~return to th~ lcque un u I he 1 · satisfied the. runnin& back has put his drua dencndtncy problems behind him. Rozelle's rulina .. w 111 be made afler further medical rccommendat1ons arc rc<ic1vcdt the tatement 1d • .. The afkr-carc proaram tS firmly 1n place and the commm1oncr has had nopponunnyto revtcwall penancn1 e1reum tanets '' ()•Meara has set some lofty goals and has fini hed eighth or better m 11 of his last 13 staf15. That streak has boosted h11 monty winnmas for the season to S4S7,4~l1 more 1han dpub1e 1he amonl he hMJ earned m his thrte previous seasons and second only to Watson•s leadi .. LAKE BUENA VISTA. Fla. (AP) $476,260. Watsonisnotcompctinaln -Mark o·Meara is an intense. this event. the ne~MO-l&Jt official dedicated, aoal-orientcd man who toumamenl onihc schtdul~. has two of pro golrs most coveted O'Mcara needs to place fim awards -P.laycr of the Year and ($72,000) or second {$43,200) lo leadina money winner -within overtake Watson. And a victoo-b)' reach as the IQ.month POA Tour O'Mcara could place him in strona season \\inds down. con~nuon for the Pia) er of the Year "I want to catch Tom (Wat on) on awatd, which is determined from a the moner, hsl. That's my target for complicated point liSl. this year. • the Mi sion Viejo High Watson and South African Denit graduate said before the stan of the Watson, each a three-timewinnenhis Walt Djsney Wo~ld Golf Classic season, are tied for the lead with ~ today. points. Denis Watson is fourth on the And O'Mcara. 27. c:losina out his money winnina list at 1$406,976. He1. founh ~ason on 1he Tour, has even like-o·Mcara. flan$ to play both 01 loftier long-ranae ambitions. • the final officia tournaments. · And~ Bean. the No. 3 mont)' "I've had a good season. l'w winner \\ith $418,99S. also is in the 1mprQved. I've moved up on the 132-man field that is scheduled lO ladder. My goal is to conunuc to pla>·one round on each of throe resort improve -and I believe I can do courses before the field is cut to the that. f wantto continue to impro"f, to low 70 scorers for Sunday's final ·go from a lood pla er to possibly a round at the Mynolia course 11 Walt ' " ' --w~hwo.;....;.is.--~o~i~sn~e~y=V/r;;.o~r~ld~~:.::a~::.:::.:::.=.:~.:::.:.,:...;.~,._~ enjoying a hot streak. • Other leading entrants include Jn the past thrit months, he has t 984 two-time winners Bob East· been in the title chase in almost every wood and Gary Koch; Craia Stadlef'i tournament he has played. He scored defendina title-holder Payne Stewan; his finl career \'ictory in Sep1ember1 Hal Sutton; Arnold Palmer, and has a total of five runner-up finishes. Huben Green, winner of last week's has been third in three others events Southern Open at Columbus. Ga. · NCAA postpones eligibility i_ssue KANSAS ClTY (AP) -The performance between minority stu· NCAA Council has agreed to seek dents and whites, but there is postponement of a controversial re-evidence that therc•s a catch-up in quirement that hi$h school students process -that scores arc improvina mast reach minimum scores on each year,"Tonersaidinan interview standardized collqt entnncc tests to at lhe close of the NCAA Council be eligible to participate in college moetina- spons, NCAA officiab said Wednes-"So in this two-year period it gjves day: everyone a chance to test that. And if The effective date of the require-· after two years it appears as if there is ment would be postponed from 1986 parity than I think there is an intent to until 1988 under the NCAA Council maintain (Proposition) 48 as it is proposal, said NCAA President John written. Now, if there isn't parity, Toner. there will be further adjustment." The requirement. part of a pack4ge The NCAA Council proposal, known as Proposition 48 that was re.ached in a threc.-day cl<>Sed mect- passed at the 1983 NCAA convention ing, was sent to the President's m San Di~o. has been criticized by Commission of the NCAA for ap. people who. t>efie~e the sta.ndardized proval. rr the commission approvt1t tests arc rac1~1ly ?1ascd agamst blacks the proposal woul~ be voted on by the and other mmont1cs. full NCAA at its January I 98S Supporters of Proposition 48 said it .._meet in&-· would improve the chances of stu-Proposition 48 requires that hi&h dent athletes receiving their college school student athletes make a ~00 degrees. score on the Scholastic Aptitude Test "It's quite evident from the re-or a IS score on the Amencan Co1le&e search that there is a disparity of Test. It also requires that higbiKhool students maintain a 2.0 pdepoint average on a 4.0 scale in a .. core curriculum" of 11 subjects. Delahoussaye pilots winner ARCADIA (AP) -Matthew T. Parker, a two-year-old colt ridden by Eddie Delahoussaye, rallied along the rail through the stretch Wednesday and won the Sunny Slope Stakes at Santa Ani1.&. Carrying 117 pounds, Matthew T. Parker finished a lenath in front of Private Jun~e. ridden by Rafael Meza. Dan s Diablo, ridden by Fernando Toro, finished third a neck behind Private Junale. The 2-1 favorite Carload, ridden by Bill Shoemaker, finished fourth after racing in traffic d uri na the early Sta&C$ of the race. Coverina the seven furlongs in I :23 4/S, Manhew T. Parker defeated 10 two-)ear-old rivals and earned S4l,3SO. Trained by Roben Frankel, Matthew T. Parker has now won twice in five lifetimestartsand earned $60.1 SO in 1984. In other action. the NCAA Council agreed to several proposals relating to autonomy of the vanous divisions in the NCAA, said John Davis, the NCAA secretary-tr~surer. Open payments for marathoners NEW YORK (AP)-Top runners in the New York City Marathon will receive open payments this year, rather than the secret payments made to some runners during the ~st eiaht years, city and race offiC11Js have announced. The winnina male and female runners. will aet $25,000 apiece out of total payments of$2SO,OOO, said Fred Lebow, president of the New York Road Runners Club, which •taacs Ille 26·mile race. A complete list ofprizea would be released before the race, he said. The Cha~ 111d lhe) do not expect a dttmon from RottUc for tt\Cral \\ftkl "We arc prepartd to do whatc\'tf 1he php•cians and the NFL want us to do.• said team majont) o~M"r leA pano Dlfferencevf oplldon Paal ._tiller ~:'Qae NewYorlE Jalu ...... 1 .. tt., Wltll Detroit'• Lue . bert dutn1 JlfllL .... •-• .. 1 illllat. .. CLASSIFIED INDEX h Pfac1 Ycu Ad. Cll 642-5678 • Orange Cout DA LY Plt.OTIThwldey OeeatJ• ta_ 11M '6Rl NEWPOR T lflUHMElllTS $2.17 per day n.t'• AU. rou ~ '°' 3tin..30~ In the DAlY PlOT SERVICE DIECTmtY ----·- ber 18 19M 1,1rt111at1, lal. ..... not V1cat!ta ltatab t• -• laftltatat lilt Wut.. lllO 111 Wu!H HM •11 Wyl!f llM ltlr Wu... SIOO '•wwt 1w1a nit ; ; * lntala ZH7 but 2tOI *LY PAii * on.tUlti" 4011 Drlt•at ltl Wutetl llllTll llLI Frr Slat• noena.d 1nc1 UmuPI ; llliilii 1Went to Nnt ~ LARGE BIG Bw Ceblf'I Spec. available llOroae mceaLEXJJiNG FfT PfT Mutt 'haw aln-DRY CLEANERS. Mature Cet1 P.A want~ tot bUty l..Mj~ Foreman. e... Udo flle Waterfl'Ont. Pvt Cm/NB .,.._ 170C>-S800 Pool tbl car TV 2 ~ Newpol1 Cte9t aBr 2ba from oceen. 536-3318 &m S500 to $5,000/rno. oere lntweet In cooking Expr so ht wk. ~7691 family praotloe. e hr• day p«lenee, lmmedl.ate em· bwh. t_.,ge custom de-Have refa, IM ok. 50 y; Sipe 14.'Cell; MM918 townhouse. tpa, tennl1, Aaatuctatltl 3061 Detalla 963-7428 Kltchefl Things. 8~ COUPLES EA.RN EXTRA M-F Plea .. can for appt. ploym•nt. T:!z dOflar. ~ 38r :lbl. Yfto/ LM. Ofd grandparent• n-amkr. S395. 842-3850 .... ...... 4021 975--0297 or 831-8n8 MONEY • PART TIME 887-2533 761-3 • 11950/mo,UM&M w /ipollte poodle. ltatal1 ti Newport·Oneto1hr3br2 A:=~A~:~~~=Sa 117m LCuNCi bY fat OllOIUTlll c.tl84M547 . FULL CHARGE BOOK-Lu41tlftllillf,/ ... llTllllt 75 ·2378aft8pm IWt ltOI ba hae on Pen~290 Countellng. 1815 So. Et T.D: of $125K end 2nd •H•Sfut • OllTIMllSDYICll KEEPER P/T 1'·11 Auhf,lllHnhet t -3 9d 2'Abe 2 Ac:tl\le Ben. Cttlzen needs f ir&;g Of rmmt. to avsll Im~ 850-Camino AMI San Clem T D of HOK on 9djolnlng .... l'lra/wtt at NB law office Must haw -mm of 4 Yf9 -.:d pool • ten= room "' wtU keep hot.l8e : new ~Br 28a NB Non smoleer M/F to ll'lar• Uo'd ... 02-7298 . e:.id. C.M Propettlel. Pub. Co ..... full tln'le .,, ............ , .... Ref• req'd call 478-7018 9'11*. matntalOtng lawn, c:1oee='ti.ett.s1200 • foraame548-7oe2Edwln condo. Nr bch '325 lrg2brapt CMS275utl SCRAM·LETS (fl02)29MH9 ::~o!itie!'~!:,': ltfftHfllhritltM GALLERY ATTEND-1hruba, trHa & TamllwWll FumroomnrSCPlza.J.c, S31-&553orl42-4299 lnd&ee-4012Aot>ert leltWut.. 9100 data entry for on-line ,.ntlwltilllitlltlt ENT/INSTALLER PIT 8')tlnklett. 8altty ph.ie Ml-1m ~only75/rno~7~~ NB waterfront hme w/boet Proflretp N/tmkr M/F lhr •NSWERS ~...,·-·-* computw tyttems r-. ••-•HtlN li4I -=tyM~· ~~ :mm:c.u ~'1 · allp. Muat ... 1525 Lg NB hme poolften wlk ft ""' ...._, r:one c:uatomer contact, erlpabefftill dffh. Cliff Of .,.~1 . LLOYDS NUASEAY & •&PACtOU8 APT* 1.Lg;;f;tum:Hft'.-;~:;;;;;:;j~;-;:rm;:;;nlba:;; 5"8-1807 0t 850-9070 to bch $450+ 839-8722 H....ih. Rutty -fllPLI lght acctg, typing & Gert· Int lalft ttlstt•tr · LAN o SC A p E co. 1 "* lrom OCMn.. Priv *"· It cook.H/11'.1\k CdM 3Bd 2b• houae Rmmt• to lhr 28r 1'A8a Clo\le-Refund flll lllftll .,., office. GoOd tet. nl II IDDAL lfP111 148-7441 &42-2367 qulet,mature.m/f.'375+ bay/OCMn vi.w, frpJc. w/pool, hOt tub. 18th & CURRENT lllTI phl~ne & letter ~ting .. N ..,.r. PfT, 8-12 Mon.·Frt. Qood L1f ••• ftlll• I U lllHI o.putll Ind. &45-28e3 1488/rno 79-0808 Orange '315 549-5822 Nothing mak• you tMI F• PllP Ill.I ~ !,:,:U:q ~~nt t>:! aanfMllrllC,... 'Y.l?lno & general omce -lf&o:t 1200 · OCEAN BREEZE tum rm CdM LG RM, Great Hou... Rrnmt• wanted 25-30 to oldet than the d~ needed tor ~ .. nfront eflta. 8•nd ;_,me & OllT • a,,1y 11 ,.,.., ttcllll, pleuant phone 1Tt~~v!t.1"1patt Aoent es 1-ilNIO (llnens lnel) In Twnhm, for u.. of kltch, OR, den MIP find & shr a pf11ee In that your child...,• hi•-hotel. Stop by 1556 So. Nl&fY requlrementa to: 1-111• •rlitlNlt vo4ce. 847-e102 10-3pm DRIVERS . mai:;:re reepbu cleen V«Y $475 +depo 840-.f255 Nwpt Bch. Joni 831-1340 tory '-'r~ are ;s~t Coe.at Hwy LllQ. Bch for Judith Parker. Clrculit-11t,IM ll/f/V/I UIEUL "'111 CARWASHEAS w:::::~".o~A= ~~n ' :::/dr~k~ CM 48r pool hae, apa, 50" Room to shr. 2Bt hM In ~~~T !:nta. 81 -appt, No Phone calla.' tlon ~an:"ft, w: ~ lmll. nllT lfF• Accurate typln,.. filing. DETAILEAS · tmmect, no peta. Y•... kitchen prlv, pooUjac. TV 1375 Incl uttta. Al6! f0t NB. Pteffem, n/lkr, quiet 1 ~ I,.... 3m IEW :=. ~ ~ 92660 Dent 1 1 Matke1· computer de • entry 831-8900 required. 11400/mo+ $350/mo lnct utll Avail-850-9311 Walt type.$325, 1st,lut +de-.... t '"" ' Ing as:'[~ N '*&,"''· Hrs 7am-4Jc:. LYl'I 1 l1100dlpolltM053 abluio.1131..2288 Fem.,,, .. br e.tbluff poaltreq.8"8-1352 LOCATIOI OUUlll•llll port ~~d:;, ~~=·~181r-11~7am. Qlrect pdent ON THE BEACH Condo. w/3 femetes. leatab W1atM HOt OlJND ADS 1* Blllngual dusroom aide rHtoratlve practice. care, well ~ &o ~ Room & bath. privet•..,. 759-8282 or 720-1328 Gent..,, prOf woman na. F "'rtTo:Ye lmtned t• poe-(Spanlth), 3 hra p/day, 831-4231 IUEIW. .... OUll S.N.F. MESA VE'i~~ :=:-~~ 1·~ Fml N/amkr, u\lii~ furn rrn wtkltch prlv. AR£ FREE •Part.Of' Full time phOne fluency In English & Oental/Ortho Recept. -~~~ngci~· !'!!,!: CONV. HOSP.. 81 • • mlnlmel Childcare + $150 Preter Nwpt couta1 area. aaJea (sfternoon & eve-Spantah. Written teet will Benefit•. 4'n {)ys. exp · ~, ...,.,.. · Center St .. Co.ta ~ 842""5373 .mo. ·lrvlne twnhme ,,..,. No cata. Glotls 850-i 17 4 nlno lhltta) be In District Office. req'd. NB 842-2e21 S950. Conatruc:tlon com-548-5585 • I Room for retired proffM uer 5~ aftet 8pm hrqn ft1 can: •D£LIVERY REPRESEN· se.~~ =1't~~t DONVT SHOP part time g:7~ls11C•ll Laure,1--l-ll_M __ R..,....,.Tiillli-,-~~ :~or ::c~~ ~ Fml n/amkr W new apt Ital 2912 lAT~.!_(1~1athawecon-r/l. 864-8888 Deadline Mon-Fri eam-1 lam'. GIRL FRIDAY PfT muat A Man~t poelllon · · · • CdM prl br b• $500 mo Hl·llll omy ..,,....., 10/19/M 988·1051 can be youra aft• 8 cal bef9amatt5pm. Suzanne 848-6888 Garagea 10~ x 30, 175. •oFACEM NAGER -No · hawgeneralofftcelklll1. monthupectallndualn-a.ttb~b B04 875-5148 Larger $110. Stora;e. exper~1 lfyou're Cletlcal DRIVERS-Crou country Someacctbekgnd,be~ lnglndfleld..,_~ Htb 8ch 846-9501 FOW1d· Back Bay ArM. an energetloe, outgoing CA Uc req'd-no ctua 1 llable & aelf rnotlvated. cation Earn from IKXA~ UotEC. FfprOf rHmk st\( 2br 1 flJll ~ fyl>e w/C1'111 Ilk• pereon, we wll train you! IATl 1mt MacGregor Yacht• Houn flex. 852-8111 S20 ooo'to $40,000 . .,.,,_ ~ r8'e on ...... S5 ba tum. apt In C.M . 8300 owee lntab UH ..,. Btack/Ekown Now Call Denni• .. 831-3339 Full 11me geMfal of'tlce 1831 Placentia CM GOURMET ml.tlon m~t HEALTH CLUBS TENNIS SWIMMING plu~ much more' Sorry no pets Models open daily 9 to 6 ~/~ay rateCavlM. .+'Mrtll 850-n'43 tv l1\IO 1201U2/512 Sq Ft. In at oC animal lheltw AERO. BIC INSTRUCTOR ~:"· d ":"11 typet 55 FAIT,... COUNSULTANT We will tend yo(f" to 850-2MI Hr bch. M/F n/lkr Refs 1110-$469. Bkr851-8928 FOUND Min Alrdeale, Mom..w sh • -.. Pt•• helpful. Non-smoker Pizza rettaurant gen«al Wiii train. Sacramento, then , ........ _.' Btvd • · Lg 3Bt 2Ba CdM duplex. C.M .• 1537 A/C Baker St. lft cw~ _. • 1 a en ry eiq1. $10.15 p/hr sc:hool for 3 ••ra:n Lll.u IUOI $500 Cell 720-1888 brwn/blk, M, vcty Warn-but not req. 534-1'72 preferred. Nr O.C. Air· help, 18 & over. 673-1368 Mr Jamea 542-3883 train you wit!\ a an-. •CANNERY VILLAGE* er/Edwrda HB 834-4593 Imperial Spa port Newport Weatem teed tncome to at.art ... 1-llfll Ill Male prof 28-38 non--amkr Freeatandlng bulldlnga FOUND M Kitten wtit & AIDE ll~n For 2 eld«ly corp. • M I c h e 11 e , Fiii iii.PEi •llOLUIEU Ing and MrVldng -*•t>- • lhr lge Npt Hgt• home. 12501<ift&750 aqn.s 1 orngebtwnAtton°&Flwer women Balboa Penn. 851..05t7 Aa.1111ant II FOOd Service Needed. Full & part-time, llahed accounta. You Wkly rentala. 135 & up. Ava now 842-3442 Diana per aq tt. 876-4808 141 1773 962-90&3 875-7062 873-3944 needed by Huntington male & female FleXlbfe muat be 21 or 'f'et ~d ~~TV~, "r •t=~o Male prof only 26-35 non-AllPOIT AIU Foun~ ~ Point loat a ue11tt•111 •r•VJQI OICOllL Wlllllll Beecht ..... S5°!1Y sp~oo1 .. Dlpl-ly houra. Stlr1 S5lHr. Must bondabl•, 1mblU•u•: . · · · , •wsn eut axper. pref. but not men-r...... .30. r . ..,p be bond1bte. Oar agreaalve and •P*>rt• ocean. tch •~II. amkr-atralght-".'uat be 150 aq ft prof ofc hungry·HELPI. Can t need• telephone oper-datory. Apply Wed, Tuea 20451 Cralmer Ln. H.B. neceuary. Ideal for stu-mlnded. MUST HAVE Ap•rtments 985 N. eo.t Hwy. clean-lhr 2br 2~b• twn w/Wnd\N View. 2381 Cam-keep. 835-8441an2pm •tOl'I vwlou. ahltta, 382 °'Thur Mlpm. lchaboda, 984-8888 Deadllne for dent•. Call494-4322 eny-GOOD CHARACTER! Llgt.lna BMch, 41M-S29" ha. CM. '325 83t-"391 =~:.:.1~~':·K<;:,: Found: 811\IW tabby & 3rd St. Lao. 8ct'I 18582 e.ch Blvd, H.B. apply 10119/84. time. Prevlou• .. ,.. ... NNport Buch So. 1700 16th Strttl (at Oovtr) 642-5113 Pll 111 mm. M/F 26+, n/arntcr. 2 bt hte man. Ind Recept, An• white femlle cat. Vic on APT. ~OR. WANTED 0.11 •1111111 •• lllY. lTTlll. INSURANCE co. pertenoe deelred, but not Wkly rentals now avalt. S300 mo. lhr utM. Nr bch, svc, Conf Rm & Coffee. Mag In FV.nS-55441 Ratlr~ male preferred. • ' Mature reap. lndMdual Cu-Prop uper helpful, required. S128/wtc & up. 2274 New-quiet., ... 8'2-8110 $400. Ph: 752-246' 962-2808 No heavy dutlee. 22 unlta. FILL II PAIT TlllE needed for morning type 55 wpm. Vatled & Hospttallzatlon major pott Bl'ld.C.M. &48-7446 MIF. mature. prof to lhr Coata Meu 3"S Sq Ft plu. Lott Cat: 10113 Lag E-Blutt NB. 752·25&4 WlllQ • IEI houra, Mon-Fri. 8:3 lnt9'eetlng dutlea. Wiii mtdlcal, exc.ptlonal N~;-port1Juch No. 880 lrvint Avtnue (ell 16th) 64S-U04 Yacatln 2Br 2ba Prom. P1. apt. bthrm avail lmmed Niguel. Lrg bm/blk tabt>-A.uembleR apply 7 AM MakeuptoS100.p/dayde-am-12:30pm,muttbe18 traln-Xlnt Benefit•. So. profit lhat1ng end NV· Int h ....., $500+dep. Refa, For 1300 • 494.3903 0 ; by. Reward. Wkday1 only MacGregor Yachta llverlng9mallpect<agealn yraorolder,contectMrs Coaat Plaza, Trleh lnotpt0gtam. I ..,.. ap~ 873-88881152·9088 548-334s 731-7110 x 119, fN/W'll.n Corp. 1631 Pl.:.ntla CM local area. Must have HayH, 982-1374 tor 764-7812 **LY Pill** NEWPORT BEACH shr lrg 495-8831 or538-6457 own dependable amalt turtt. Info. .,.Ja-n"""lt-or..,.la...,1--"'"'s,,...u"""b-co_n_t-ra-c-For peraonal tnt~. Spaoea Available actoa BAVFAONT Home '425 Sth noor~!:~l; corner Loat 9rey/blk male Tabby, Wk~~· ~!'N ~it°'=~~.~· F• IYD ftLPll tort, muat have own call: Brlsn Relph from Ocean. 536-8318 plu. utllltlea. MS-2108 office for ..... /eut>-let. Univ Pk area. White col· n :.,on No m • <>-temporary u needed on-equlptment. 983-7428 · (714)$3S.:.3055 ---" FuH aecre1atlal aervtce. lar. REWARD. 788--0378 aW-a1g1 b~xp~~ E:m:=o:~~:• ~11:,:"y callatG.W.C.$5.Mplhr: .ll.llllETUY T'*'"Thurt. So. C.t PW.a area. Gr .. t LOST HalrlH• brown only. couple llte hMkeeplng Cout Community Col for IOrtlng lltrature, filing, lntervlewa Wed. thur Fri. Vlewlll $825. 141-8784 Chihuahua vety of Flower cooking Irv. 832-4723 Segee, 1370 Adams, C.M. typing & ~~•/ol'lone. E al n...u..o. • ..i... momn 11m1 St. CM. H0-8208 aft 8pm AITl lnllUH :1/H5007 IOI' appl. EOE $3.715. p/hr. 22 ~ .:CiF'' 1 MO FREE RENT L09t M/Orana9 cat w/blue ~':':t.~a:t';t:a OllPITllllPEI.!'!'"' Flall9 .,, .. HOROSCOPE SYDNEY 0MARR Luxury office nr OC Air· collar on Bal~ Penn. .,.... .., port. AU amenttlee, .1.35 REWARD S100. 673-7"88 Am TIU ID'90i Exp'd IBM ayt*'1 34, fOr fOt Chlro. Aec;pt & bfNlnQ. per aq n. 833-9870 Jody LOST: Red female mini· & light repair-. Npt Tire lrvlne Furn mfg w/rttr11 Part time to be Ml tlme.J F ..... lon laland tufty -... O a ch ah u n d Cd M oentw 3000 E PCH. COM tyltem :US. Aequlf9 mfg c.tl Brooke, 141-1255 -· • .,..... . ' ap In Nttlng up and oP--......,..,,.--........,.~..,..---. orated, 818 aq ft ~ bch, 10114/84. Reward. UIY111111 eratlng A/P, AIR, (JL ~ nunm "' leaM or mo/mo. Call for 673-7M1 PfT NannywantM to care order entry. Growth poa. PAIT/1WI Wiii . detail•. 780-8333 L09t: REWARD for 3 moa. for 2 children In lovely Call for appt. Karen Opportunltlea avaflabfe Alrpot1 area. From 700 to cream kitten. Sunday l,aguna 8ct'I home. Muat S-'0-1194 P(lnclplel only. with the LOS ANGELES Friday, October 1 t 3300 sf. New office bldg, 10/ 14 4-6pm. Santa Anal have ref' a & be depen-CONSTRUCTION TIMES Clreulatlon Oe-A.RJES (March 2 1 ·April 19): Enthusiastic fnend or associate ready tor lmmed oc-Roch9eter CM. 831·3431 dabl•. 1-4 hr. 494-8741 Reildentlal RemOdetlng. partment In our door to m akes 1eport that is "too early". Means discern trends. be aware o f cupancy. $1.25/af groaa. LOST Sctlool ring, Sien• Babyaltter want~. 2 chit-Must be exper. 831·2345 door newapaper .. ,.. current needs. ~eep guard up. w ait fo~ ad~itional information . Focu s 1:~'::'ai~ H In t College. Vcty Doheny dren rttlme, 1 chlld ptt. ~gr•m. GuarantHd also on clandestine m eeting, a,lamour,intn~ue and rom ance . va Bch 10/8. Gold w/blue lit• hMpng. Reta per91. 1111 rty WQ ~u• com.- TAURUS (April 20..May 20): You succeed b'-workino Within rules. mllL/lfFIAtr stone. Call Randy at C.M home. aft 5:30,. Saucier In Private club In mlaalon. Hours. 9am to 2 J • -581-1514 or 855-574e 148-7898 or &45-1243 Corona del Mar. Rlclt pm Of' 4pm to 9pm. Train· regulations. lndividual who has had cont.act with governmental agency holce Newport a..cti lo-Lamb 873·3515 Ing II provtded. Potentlal could prove of immeasurable aid Focus o n restrictions. red tape, basic :C::" ~o:C~ ~~: L~~}13'(r:.:l M~~w ~~ ~UIDP/T c 0 ouNT£R }._~bty-::~or": 1~~ issues and property values. (714)846-7100 Blvd) r.ward 850-7318 ..... , IMners. ""'-... _ or call: NOW HIRING Call (71'4) 494-9233 for more Info. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Finish rather tha n initiate prOJCCl. 3112 Laredo BBQ, 3901 E. wlll train. 842-5-488 957-2381ext.1204 ~lc~~~~~~lt 1n ~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~~~~~·~ eow~~~~~~=~~==~=~b~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~ Refuse to be limited, realize your potential is tremendous. Touch on prl<g, from '225• 2 5 e. wAITe UXLE SEEKS peraon 3-5 pm. • universal theme. Aries plays key role. · T~:=· 8 ;=mo, ~~TZJ.N:2.t,~END ll .. llS lltltltlll , CANCER (June 2 I-July 22): Stress ind ependence, creativity, M•rlne,.. Cove, Rtveralde now hiring. ev .. & Wknda. willinane·ss to get to heart offina ncial maners. Let go o f past, gc1 ready Or. Suitable tor 2 ,,..on ian...111 . Call Bob, 875-9191 I for fresh stanand rcahzeyou now~n take greatercharie ofy our own offlee. Call Jotin Sulttvan 111 lalt 4012 BEAVTY SALON destiny. Money coup is distinct possibility. 875-4981 8fNli c;: beketY-delf. I& ASSISTANT l;EO (July 23-Aua. 22): Contradictory repons arc issued -your 1111 Info &31-3158 2:30-4pm CdM. T'*'"8at.14o.1900 own instincts, intuition serve as reliable guide. Study AnC1 message for ... ,11, onty NO brkrs pteuet llLL Plllll valuable him. Lunar cycle high. meanina Judgment will be on taract. htlattl A::. 4114 The w--t., Hotel hu C.anccr, C~ricom, ~uanus persons fiturc prom inently. !!! ·--,....E· U'lf•. (A 2 22) D . . fi II . 11 l .. •-.., opening. xper. pref . ..-~ ug. pt. . 1verst • give u play to 1n1e ectua location. 87w 251 ..... , A.ppty In person 1101 curios11~. Doors previously closed will now be opened -$hove aside I Ulll 11111 Jamt>orM Ad, N.B. Mon· trtpi<bt1ons. You could be on bnnk of ma.ior d iscovery. You'll obtain lff•IWUl9al Hot eo.ta Mela location. Tl'lu,. 1:30·12Noon. ••inside information." Sa&ittanan plays key role. 1000ff CM 213-435--8371 Excel traffic & ~t llUllUL LIBRA {Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Rcv151o ns are neccs\lry. but you'll get ..... 1• loc. 8oon to be vacant. ........ •••-•- d ) ·11 bl ._ For lnformat!Ofl ult ........, ..... ,_, our wish an ove w1 ossom . You have rare opportunity to correct ifO GE ceAtEN& 8, Ml!LFUCHS 10 work buty e11n1e ~ past errors, to rebuild on more suitable structure. Surprise dlvidend AMERICA Storage PAVILIONR!ALTOA midnight. F1tat contlder- comei from recent busincs investment. apacee avaitablt. Gree1 111-1111 SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Be ready for chanae. travel, variety Jocatlon. % ml from HOllQ ' and chance to contacta "very unportant" person. Be analytical, di1Ccrn Hollpltal. 1900 ~ SECRETARIAL SEAVICI. moods and rnotives._Member of opposite sex-is iotcrcSlCd aod you'll ~~~· =~~~ Al6! ~B:b :~aon. :='":'ilii'iliimti== know it without playina games. Vireo fi&urcs prominently. ..., •-;;.---~-ts I SAGlnARIVS (Nov. 22-0cc. 21 ): Major do mestic adj tmcnt is .. .....- due. Focus on considcrJtio n of travel, education . en\ironment, Yo u ,.in through d iplomacy. you lose by attcmptin1 to force iuucs. Taurus ~ • llTI • ... native 11 ~lnccre. could help you overcome obstaclC1 Snn--:..........a by Mernbera of Coastline CAPRICORN (Ott. 22-Jan. 19): Define term get rid of ,.~_,.....,. ... "' su~rfluous material. keep resolutions concemina work, rccrcauon . Art.lsta Aaoc. diet and health. Pi~s perM>n has ~rct to share and ~.r listening you LIOATlll• Baker St. & Mesa Verd I benefit. Look behind scenes. perceive pote ntial and rcah:rc 1ha1 41pecial Drive JCNtce is required. AQUARIUS(Jan. 20..Fcb. 18): Lepl agtetment require tlld), can be concluded and solidified. Focus o n added rcspon 1bdity, dtlllcngc. f:t~h1p, marriage. You'll have chance to increase in ome. to climb towards goal. Capricorn pla) key ro t • PJSCES(fcb. 19·March 20). lndi' 1dual who sh:.rcs yourroncuns will help promolc product ideas. Focus on employment. h lth, J>Cl!. prontt who do aarc and lhavc )Our t mterats 1n hcan. You"U be 111 Yll IT• YI U11 11111111A WlllLTt Art you an "ln·home clOMf"? Qtiallty IMlla. intntQetMnt P<>ttntlel 711·1.tot -tor Hin!! dealing With innova1i.,·c person who c.an cJ1pedi1e papc~r'J( • Frc -----~~==~======~~~~~t:.: District Managers ---_,..,._ If you enioy working with YOUft9 boys & girl• ond desk lob• ore not for you, consider a c~r in fhe newspoper drcufo. tion fi.ld. Thl1 11 0 ~ position with doily dlol~ & rewords. Our opening1 ore lmm.diot9. Appllcam must hove o von. lttotionwogon or tnkli. W• offer an u~ walaty with o bonus • plan ond got attowance. W1 hov. °" e)lc1llent benefit pion tfiot lridvdet hotpl• totiIOflon lMYt~, libero!, ¥OCatlon and holldoJ'I. • Coodidcrton must hove o deilN to bt *'KOHtful Oncl be "t"'lfrif to~ hard. If rfOU lhWt you hCl'W9 the quolfficofionl. PleaM opptr In '*'°" lo1 330 W. Bay Costa Me11, CA 92626 r . ( • . TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZL E ACllOll 1 .1v.i •Overdue 10~ EuQene - 14 Root°' Yale 15 Chlneee port 18 o.p,avect 17 Eeho eounct. 1189119fage 19 A11al outcome 2oe11dut• 22 Demoted 24 PINMd ;2ecu1t1ng • lmplement1 ' 27 Atlactled ; 31 Clutmy one • 32 Golf club• :33rute1e11 • 35 Not m111y :,. Exctted :3lct1u11 •4Q Pldlec !41 Gumet 42 &tended 43 Soelal gtoup ,..&Ody., .. 46Ateup '47 ,,,. _ B 1 hied\ JNture 52Garmentl 54 Relatl'48 SI Pot input 59 Petu Indian 11 Habituate: VII'. 82 SllYer: abbr. 83 Bon.-pref. 14P..-monev 65 -d'oeuvr• M V111t1ge can 87 Age group DOWN t Jumble 2 "Tnank• --1" 3-LOUIM 4 MOdifylng 5 Treck event I Ordinance 7 &itroullded by I MUlleal IOUndl 9 Monocle 10 Mat t1 Get out of 12 Angry dog? 13 Snowmobllea 2 t Hq down 23 Repfob1t• 2ssn.p1reee 27 PrejudtCe 21~ 29 flue dirt 30 Uk• prun-. 3" Mountain ranoe .. PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED 35 CoUnty .vent 38GenNnrt~ 37U .. ahol 39 us.can. lake 40 catlf\.tl management 42 lrriitat:ion <QMO&IP* 44 8-• 48 Vthtde 47 Cut 41 EqulM 49 Join 50 fWnl()Ye eo.., ff'Oft\ 53 OuttkM. pr.t 55Pr...w 58 The Old Sod 57 OlcS WOt1d llurd eo Aciman bronze '11 LAAGE SELECTION ~ NEW & USED BMW'S! ......... VOLUME SALES SERVICE& LEASING 3870 N. CMr1y AY9. l.ONGBEACH (No CMrryutt....05) l 11.)11Mlll ~WtiCOmt OPEN SEVEN DAYS -.......... ·4··· . ...,.-~ "" ..... 714-833-1300 ... *IHIA* MS HONDA ·CARS ".:0NNEll 1: ~EVRO LE. . . ' s 4b-I .;_ •:,: THEODORE 1 1 ROBINS : FORD 1 ~·t'>"'HA,Q~~~1-. .... -I I CO~TA Ml~A ~~; -,- THEODORE ROBINS FORD :,· •. 1 ... AR(l()Q "-l•O (<."IA Ml ~A "~ .' Q(~IO THEODORE ROBINS FORD 20t>C° HAR~:';-'"-'~ CO,lA'-Al\A ·~ • BUENA PARK 'ANAHEIM GARDEN GROVE 9 CHICK IVERSON ~ Chevrolet • Porache • Audi W L INst lwJ., • .,,rt 1911• . 171-1111 Highest Quality Sales & Service .. 0 NABERS CADILLAC ~~· UH Ullll ILO., OllTI IEll (11•) M0-1100 (211) H1-12H ' • Best Pr/ca • Convenient Location • Great Location • Super Service • Courteoo• & Knowlfld'l_Nble Sales People 22FRWY WARNER ..J I e U) ~ CD SANTA ANA EDINGER 8 THEODORE ROBINS FORD U.S.A.'s #1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer Modern Sales, Smice, Parts, Body, Paint & Tire Depts. Competitive Rates On Lease & Daily Rentals nll...., aw., ....... 142 .. 1 • ., Mi-1211 0 SOUTH COUNTY VOLKSWAGBN/18UZU 11711 Beach Blvd., Huntington ... ch (714) 142-2000 SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE Or ... ~ lltlld Volbw~lslwl De* Wt Wll Hot 8e lJlldenold PARTS OO'ARTIOT OP9I SATURDAY m 0 RAY FLADEBOE HONDA 8 RAY FLADEBOE #11 lllte IHter Ir., lnl1t In The Irvine Auto Center 830-7800 Complete Sales, Service & Leasing VOLKSWAGEN #21 ......... , Ir., lnl•• In The Irvine Auto Center . 830-7300 Orl"lf Cobntys Nlwtst Volbwapn Dea/el Complete Slits, Sfr~ice & teas1111 91 FWY. 22 FRWY I LAC:iUNA HILLS 8 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2121 .... , ••• , hsta .... Over 23 Years Serving Orange County . Salee • Service • Leasing 541-12H S ..... Pq U.. 541-1411 . MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30AM -9:00 PM SATURDAY 8:30 AM -8:00 PM SUNDAY 10:00 AM -5:00 PM 0 STADIUM PONTIAC ' W•',. #NW -W•',. a..llng y Acroaa from the a1g A on Katella Juat w ... of •he (57) r•"99 Fr•••J ... Sales • SeAtee • Parts • Body Shop on P1tmises llilltl• 2221 E. 1111111 11._ 1111 ·• BILL YATES YILllWUEI • PlllOIE • PIHllT SALES• LEASING• PARTS• SERVICE 12112 , .............. _ ..... .,_ 411·811 UT~ ' I MISSION Vl:°J """""" Vlt.K1 SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO BAUER MOTORS BUICK -JAGUAR -ISUZU c~ Automottvie.....,. SAL.Ea • SERVICE • l.EASINQ Fine S1l1Clkln of Quelty u.d v...-. #1 BUtCK DEALER IN °"-'NOE COUNTY . 2125 HARBOR BL VD. COSTA MESA ~2500 0 RAY FLADEBOE In The Irvine Auto Center ~7000 e . CREVIER BMW . • GRANGE COAST JEEP /RENAULT # 1 11 TH W11t F1r ~ 4D STERLING W WS -sma -lWllC -PUTS OYerMa Oettwry SpeclaHsts R • UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE OJIM SLEMONS IMPORTS /lij M, Siiis F1r I ,,., ,,, ... ,., Omn2e• SALES Loa~t. seRv1ce •• _ m• _,IOll 94~0 • LEASING r •••• COITA •trM • ACCESSORIES DEPT 54l-I023 • HOUSE OF IMPORTS INC • • I.ONO TllM LIASlS • COWIT"M PUIOfASI NICIS • ttUOl INVINTOIY IT\ dial J!tERCEDES ~ 'C:I 213n14137.2333 'CJ "Next to Santa Ana Fwy (5) on Manchester/Beach Btvd. '.MTa Dl'Ml'TlmNT OPEN UTUllDAY MON•tcal BMW -ROLLS ROYCE 1540 JamborH Ad. Newport Bueh 640-8444 .. HONDA 110f OWM •t. -,._CM LOCMflon 1001 Quall .,. -........ Olri8lon 2880 Harbor Blvd. Coata M•H 54CM)713 3 Blocks So. of 405 Fwy. © World'• L~t SfNctlon of IT\ Mf#~ s.nz 'CJ 133-llOO Classified advertising is your best choice for help in selli'lQ the rtems you no longer need. It's Quick and • mexpenswe. and the Pilot reaches potential boyer:s Who hve in this area ' Call today. llilJPilll class.f •eel ads phOne 642·5618 .... Ulllll · ""' ....... "" .. l.. • llDI Murder-for-hire verdict pen • 1 Defense claims Sheriffs eputles trapped Penney Into plot against wlie with a 1nglc felony count of soha- uu1on of murder for allegedly h1nna n undercover anvcstaptor, posing as a hat man, to ~all his former \\1fc and m ke n appear hke an ac:odent she were dead The photographs, then own to Penney to convince him the layt had been ed out Jf convacted the ruddJ·faccd Pen· ney,aformerN YorkCit)i fireman. could be tenced to a maximum 11-ycar pnson ltm1. By JEFF ADLER °' ... ~ ......... An Orange County upcnor Coun jury resumed delibcrauons today to determine whether S7-ycar-otd Fred· crick Penney sohcitcd the k.ilhng of Supervisors go ahead with new parking lot at John Wayne Airport, but clamp down on tllght llmlts for now./ A3 A panel haa been named with the unaavory task of recommendirig which schools should be closed In Huntington Beach./ A3 California Fan le Mae sees home f losures next year If deficit Isn't cut./ A5 Nation NASA rocket man leaves U.S. after being accused of working prisoners to death In Nazi Germany during WWII./ A8 B-52 bomber crash . shrouded In mystery./ AS World Cambridge professor wins Nobel Prize In econ- omics./ Al Iran cl alms offensive killed hundreds of lraef troops./A4 Boating Four of the world's fastest and most glam- orous maxi yachts are vying off Marina del Rey for the Cal Cup./81 Hobie Alter and HoYte Schweitzer are the first to enter the Boating Hall of Fame./81 ··············································'!.·.·················· -.,•-;> • • • • : •.>~,,-A• .. • .. •.l'.I'~ •..'!.•A•~ • •,,.!.._• • • • • -Sports Chicago Cubs' Manager Jim Frey Is named Man- ager of the Year by the Baseball Writers' As- sociation of Amerlca./C1 UC lrvlne basketball coach Biii Mulligan says he plans to start two freshmen In the starting lineup this year ./C1 -Marina High takes over Sunset League lead In water polo, while Univer- sity clinches a Sea View playoff berth./C3 Entertainment Richard Pryor Ill cleaning up his act these days as he hosts a new children's TVshow./83 INDEX Boating 81·2 Erma Bombeck 82 Bridge A9 Bulletln Board A3 Bulineat 85 Caattornla Newa A4 Clualfled C5·7 Coma A9 CrOllWOf'd C7 OMth Not oes 87 Horotcope ce Ann Landera 82 MU1Ual Fund• 85 National New• A4 Opinion Al PoMcelog A3 PubHc Notleet 87 Sparta C1·4 Stook Maft(eta Be TeleYia1on IM T'MeW• 83-4 WNthef A2 Wortd Newt A4 his J4..ycar-<>ld ex-wife or was en· trapped an the murder-for-hire scheme by a close fnend and und r- cover Shenfra depuues. Penney, a Laguna N1gue1 contrac- tor until his arrest July 2, as charged As the final ct an the unusual undercover operation, hcrifi's De- panment anvcstaptors persuaded Susan Pcnne~ to he on a Slab an the count.> coronet's office and pose for photographs mak'mg her appear as af ~~ns-'--t-~----- corner quiet. in Mesa Raid netting 46 Hispanic workers keeps others away By TONY SAAVEDRA °' .. 11.alJ Piiot ... It may be too early to tell whether Wednesday•s roundu{> of 46 illegal aliens in Costa Mesa will lower heroin sales and prostitution in the 1a.Jltly Hispanic neighborhoods of the city. But doughnut sales have definitely dropped as a result of the morning raid by federal immigration agents and Costa Mesa police in front of a hamburger stand at 1875 Placentia Ave. In has clos1 ument Wedncs.- day, Penney' dcfen auomey, nsuan Dillon, described hi client n .. fl\Ollonally d1 turt>ed, d~.li lawsuit looms , inHB City employees· union ch BJ ROBERT B.A:llU3l °' .............. Members of HuntmglOD a..ta•a larsest labor uruon voted unam- mouily Wcdnesday aiabt IOtake lelll actlon ap1nst aty leaden who ~ diargc have rejected their salary demands unfairly. Attorney James Harker satd todly he plans to file the swt in Onnlie County Supcnor Coun Fi~. e accuses aty Admimstrator Thompson of enpging 1n .. t.d &i barpuung." For the past couple mont~ , John Yackey 50Jd coffee, dou~nuts and other items from his catcnng truck to tbe large aroup of Hispanics waiting tn front of the eatery to be picked up. by employers ricedma day laborers. Dlllf,..._...,......,~ (Pleue eee ALIENS/ A2) Coeta Ilea atreet comer. where allena once concretated, now quiet after roandap. Harker said he also will ask tbe coon to ordtt the aty lO 11ve 10 pcrocnt of 1lhc emplO}'tes in I& (Pleue ._ WAGS/UJ Retrial hearing delayed for Alcala· Former .San Quentin dcath·row inmate Rodney Jame:. Alcala is back in Orange County awaiting a new trial on charges he killed a 12-year-old Huntinaton Beach girl in 1979. Alcala appeared briefly in Orange County Superior Coun Wednesday, but amignment on the murder charge was postponed until Oct. 2S at the request of AJcala's Santa Ana attorney, Keith C. Monroe. The 39-ycar-old Alcala is beina held without btij in the Orange County Jail. Alcala was brought to the county from Sin Quentin on Monday by' Huntington Beach detectives. His conviction an the J 979 layina of Robin Chnstine Samsoc was Rodney Alcala overturned by the state Supreme Court in August. The high coun ruled that the jury during Alcala's first trial in 1980 improperly was informed of his pnor arrest and conviction on child molcstation.char&es Economic gro~h under Reagan seen continui~g By ROBERT HYNDMAN OfllleDelfr .......... If the economic polia initiated under the :Reagan Adm1msttlltion arc allowed to continue, Orange County and the rest of the: country can apect continued economic an>wth over the nc:At four years. according to the chairman of the United States Chamber of Commerce. Addrcssang an economic con· ference sponsored by the Oranae County Chamberof Commerce today m Anaheim. Van muh said the economic recovery p~tm! bf the 1981 taxcutand thesubkQucntJump in investments can continue 1f the pre 1dent and Congress allow it. ··1 don't want lo pinpoint credit on one man," Smuh said in a later inter\' 1ew, .. but we need a Con~ that refu~ to raise wes as the answer to every economic problem:· Smuh,chainnan of the bOard of the Indiana-based Oruano Coip.. wd Oran County as an an enviable po iuon to capitalize on the ccon- omac recovery. ''You have tQ 1 ke a·sr-eat deal o~ pride in what Orange Gounty busi· n have done in ~nt yea~. The sro~1h ha been tremendous," Smith ~1d. ••And you ha\ft to aivc ome credit also to the c po ure this rca Veteran HB police canine 'Pase ha' dead.at age of IO German shepherd put the bite on crime -and criminals -during tour of duty By STEVE MARBLE ··1 started working with Pascha in OflleDellr,......,. 1979 and he wa~ quite honestly as Hunungton Beach police officers capable and trustworth).' a another today arc mourning the los. of one of police officer," said Gilligan. ··The their most distinJuished colleagues only thing he couldn't do was shoot a -an ~pound German shepherd gun. who spent 1x years sniffing out 'I coukf trust him WJth m)' v.-ell- crooks and puttina the bite on bad beinsat all times," he oed. gu~ut he never bit anyone who Pascha. though not 1he first police didn't deserve to be bitten," said dog in Huntinston Beach, was one of ffi · · the most popular canines in the cny 0 1cer Tom Gilhpn. the dog's and the county, said~. Bill tamelli . handler. .,.. Pa'>Cha retired from the police "Back before the other ataes an l;he canine corps last ) ear and It ved his countr picked up on the idea of pohce final days with G11lipn. has ...,ife and dogs. probably took Pascha to e~Cf} their t\\O children. The dog died city in the count). He s rcall) Wednesday at the• of I 0. ~ popular and probabl)• helped con- vincc other ciUC$ to get dqgs,"' :SB.Jd Gilli n. The city present!) has ll~ police d and a fourth will be sworn in wathin the month. Gilligan said PaScha was allov."Cd to roam ftte through the police station v. hen not on duty or ridmg 1n the back t of Gilligan's squad car. Although nobody bu.added up the flJUrcs, Mamelli said Pascha took pan in numerous arrests and ap- prehensions and earned trcmcndo respect from lawmen. .. He was unique 1n the respcd that I fOuld i&k.c him to a kinderprten and .,ust let him run round. He :loved IOd . But in a situation "Mth a aiminal, he coWd chew him up if.11 called for that. .. said Pa.scha·s baJMI.. ler. 'Pasch•. a gra<iuate of Uie {Pleueeee ~/A2) Irvine firm··wins $·17.5 million patent 18.wsuit Van8mlth · get from 01 ncy'I nd nd the recent Olymp1 •• . (Pleue.e ECONOMIC/ A2) Jury says second company Inf ringed on Shiley patents Irvine makes the top 10 in U.S. high-tech cities Master-p anned community usually listed amo nation 'a tter place to live, work TeleV1MOn eAecull follow 1hc Naclsea nttnat. lhlMIC' coa hes 1nct tbt m~r k9aue mnd1np and the Top 10 C:OllCIC ran.ki• M0\'11C m()Juls watch the Wcdily bo om Otts. ut P.aul Bfad Jr USHWll at managtr oflrv1nc da1m1 official 1n h11 communal) don\ Pl much aucntion lo h t that com~ atict bf. anou taftdlrd ull It wa difficult to -.nore 1he honon that ll"ahe collectt!d 1n two c11y rank np released 1h1 Wttk ~- • , .·. Orange COMt DAILY PllOTIThuredey Octobet 18. 1114 JURYWEIGRSMURDERPLOTCASE ••• From Al ~oled and Uf'icd the de.ath of Su n his~ fe murdered." ncy to an cm01ionaU) dis.uauiht "Mr. Penney wanted to do n. be man on the tdgc -pcmaps of :a didn't nttd to be taduced " Wade bttakdown -a man cnaa&Jna in a usd. fantasy world.•• 'The prosecutor reminded 3urors A d fense psychiatmt testified that P~nney. an convcnat1on1 with dunng the trial that fcnne)' suflered the hn man that were sectttl)' ta~-f~m a mental illness foUowm1 the :;r~ ~~ .P~~Y~~~':.~~··~ ti{"akup of his maniase that left ~lm permanent thinj done'' an the early scepublc to lhe intense 5U88,C lion minutes of their first meeting 10 a qf others. He said Pcnnoy was restaurant parldn,1 lot. !'brainwa bed" b¥ Bunon and the He also ur&ed Jurors to revacw the ;µndercover invciuptor. tape.recorded conversations to de- ;;:Jurors were instructed by.Judge termine whether Giles had used the n Rheinheimer that they could inflection of hi voacc to ensnare uit ~nney on the cha~ if they Penney in the plot. tttnuned he was entrapped in the Wade called Pcnn~"Hla1m that he urdcr plot ~Y police or somCC?ne tried to ca.II olTthe killing ·•a story that ma as a poh~e agtnt. The q~tt~n C'ould have btcn written by Wah Penney's sanity was not an 1'lsue tn Disney. lt'sa fantasy he's trying to'la) trial. ' off on rou, the ladies and gentlemen Deputy Distnct Attorney Wallace ofthisJury." ade painted a different picture of Penney tc tifietl, during his day. nney in his summation, calling the long stay on the witness stand • fcndant a man who wanted to have ·Tuesday. that he had scrond thoull\tS Since the hamburger stand doesn't open until later in the · morning. 1Yackey fi&ured he could make a few utra dollars by bringing his truck to the site. •. This morning, he was virtually alone. ""They grabbed a lot of them, ana lbe ones that got away didn't come back," said Yackey, who estimated that SO to 60 workers gathered at the mburger stand around 7:30 every morning to Vic for day Jobs. "They rush up (to the employers) sayin!: take me, take µie," Yackey said.· These guys want work, just like all of us. They gotta have that daily !<fough-re-mi. " ::> Costa Mc-sa police officials said they contacted the Immigration and Naturalization service several weeks ago during the city's campaign to wipe out drug traffic and prostitution in the neipborhood around the 800 block of Center Street and Shalimar Drive. Mostly Hispanics Jive in the apart· men ts in the area. Police .said 38 of tbc 42 suspected small-time drug dealers they arrested from Jan. I to Sept. 30 were illegal aliens. Capt. Roben Moody said Wednes. day it was difficult to assess how the raid would affect drug sales, which he said have already dropped consider· ably becauseof palice pressure. •bout k1llmt htt former wife and tned toall offahe p1ot the "'eekend brforc hit anaa. He said he ~tcdl> 1depboned ··Bobb)''' but wn unable 10 reach him . .. W~t 11 h11 defense?" Wade asked jurors. .. 11'1 that Mr. Bunon and Mr. Odes tDade me do 1 t." Wade cotnended that betinnina on June 14, wt\cn Penney tirsl tele- phoned "Bobby.'' he had e~~ in one oonunuous act of solicitauon of murder, culminating in his Jul.) 2 artCSt. According to teSlimony ptt$ented during the trial1 PennC) a~ 10 pay $3,000 for his w1fc•s murder and P'C 1he undcroovct invcstiplor a S l ,SOO cash downpa)menl for the job. Sheriffs deputies first learned that Penney was considering killing his former wife from Mrs. Penney, who contacted authorities after Burton contessed to her he had been offered SS.000 10 either kill her or find someone who would. Moody said he didn't know how many of the illega.J ahens picked up Wednesday were living in Costa Mesa. He said at least two were believed to be local dealers. Hamburger stand owner Seun Ho Kim, 49, said he didn•t know any- thinJ about drug.s. ., K.im said he was just tired of pick.in& up the trash, apparently left by the job seekers. before be could open his business every day. "They're djny, very dirty. Every morning there's a lot of them here. They .sit on my benches," said Kim. add mg that he didn't complam be· cause he can't speak Spanish. ECONOMIC GROWTH SEEN CONTINUING ••• ' From Al Smith needled the economists who predicted tax cuts would lead to skyrocketing. inflation and interest ntes atona with rising unemploy- ment. , .. We arc experiencing an un· precedented boom." he said. ''Those who have lo.ng been predicting a coming collapse are beginning to look hkc the prophets of doom who walk the sidewalks with signs announcing .the impending end of the world wilh old dates scratched out and future dates penciled in." The growth of the U.S. reat GNP is the envy of the world. he said. That r~overy, Smith said, is due to the jump in investment, currently growing three times faster than in previous recoveries. As to the recent attention focused on the federal deficit following the Reagan-Mondale debate, Smith said the recovery has red\lced the amount from S 19.S billion in 1983 to about S 170 billion. · Raisin& taxes, he said, would only worsen the deficit. . This increases tax revenues and decreases the deficit. Also addressing the l,000 business leaders attending the chamber's Economic Outlook conference were Lorraine Mecca, founder of a micro- ·computer firm; Sam Ginn. vice chairman of the Pacific Telesis Group; Roben Fitzpatrick of the California' f nstitute of Ans; county Supervisor Harriett Wieder; Sanford McDonnel, chJirman of the McDon- nell Douitas Corp.; Robert Parry, chief economist for Security Pacific, and accountant Harvey Goldstein. Coaetal ~. ""' ~ (!JlJ;I. FlllON TS "ftf\1):t ""J~ 'i.j~ WIVlrl -C!)!O._- l'•<'<lie•f> f:la11 F'k.lrrou Snow O<:c uCf!O.,... S1at.on111r •., Tides . tll~ We.aN• S.r.•(t •:i)U U~ ~1 IC ~· 'YOOAY 430P.tn llNDAY 12:04am 7.otl!'ll 12otpm !150pm lolte '°''°" • • auttllO c~ Chw•too,S C 0 I 0"91 ... IOl'l,WV • S CNrto1t1,N.C 2.7 ~ •1 c~ . Cincinnati ~ Cotumtii..S C Colu<!lllus.Ot! Conco<d.H H. o.11»-fl Wonll on SuRt REPORT .. Lo H 63 " 39 87 50 151 29 eo u 87 81 IO 72 .. eo 71 13 61 SI Town pays final respects to unofficial weatherman By ROBERT BARKER °' tlle OelJ ~ •tai11 . J. 'Sherman Denny was described as a man "wbo served in the best interests of alJ those around him .. as friends, neighbors and loved ones paid their final respects Wednesday to Huntington Beach's unofficial weatherman for more than SO years. Mr. Denny. who died Sunday at the age of 87. "had absolute honesty and intcgnty," said the Rev. Alben Karges at services at the First Chris- tian Church of Huntington Beach. "And that made him lhe right man to guide the Huntington Bcach Co. in the early years of development in the Ctty. ..He was a man of his word. Whatever he was committed to, he was faithful and loyal. "There is ·no better example than the Rotary Club. where he had a perfect attendance record for 54 years. .. And he was exact and precise. Things were either perfectly right or they were wrong. That made him the perfect man to observe and report the city's weather for·' more than SO years." Mr. Denny. who measured more than 600 inches of rain during a half· century's labor of love. regularly climbed to his rooftop on Pine Street to monitor his sophisticated weather instruments. Just a few days before he was hospitalized when a routine checkup detected lung cancer, he said he had to "whack.. off a tree limb that was encroaching on a rain gauic. Kargas told of an incident that he said Will related him to him by Tom Overton, tbe church's senior minis- ter. . • "One day he was walking down the street and saw a shiny object. He saw that it was a valuable diamond set in a cuff link. "He went to the' door of a nearby house and asked a man if the cuff link WIS his. • "The man said it was and showed him the matchingcufflink. With that, he (Mr. Denny) went along his way happy to be of service. "He was a good man who loved God, his community and family:• The economic news is excellent. inflation and interest rates are down. Productivity is up. Employment is up to record levels. Tax cuts create economic growth, economic growth increases the tax base with more people at work and more companies making a profit: be said. The e"vent was the 22nd annual conference for the Orange County • Chamber. IRVINE AMONG TOP HIGH-TECH CITIES ••• From Al in reducing residential development and increasing open space, the assis- tant city manager said. Brady said both the city and the Irvine Co. have tried to attract high· tech businesses, the so-caJled smoke- less industries. In addition to their envtronmental advantages. Brady said high-tech businesses "also bring the type of person to the area wflo has expen- dable income, which helps the overall Wt base. These people arc also better educated and mor~phisticated." But Brady insisted that lrvane doesn't want to limit local housing to expensive new single-family homes that only well-paid high-tech man- agers ean afford. Local iodustnes also require plenty of employees at lower salary levels. Brady wd Irvine has become the leading Southern Cali- fornia city in apartment construction so that les~affiuent workers can also afford to live in the city. Althoupi it already ranks high among high-tech centers and attract- ive ltving enrvironments. Irvine still has plenty of room to grow. Ctty plans call for a population of2 I 0,000 by the year 2010. And even more high-tech development isonjhedrawma board. Nearing completion tS the Irvine Co.'s 4,()()().acrc Irvine Industrial Complex, surrounding John Wayne Airport in Costa Mesa. Irvine. New- Por1 Beach and Tustm. The Irvine Co. 'has also created a new firm called the Irvine Industrial. Research and Development Co .. which will ovencc Irvine Sp«trum. • The 2,2()()..acre four-part commercial development fo east Irvine near the junction of the San Diego and Santa . . . Just Call 642-6086 !Dally Pltot O.Uvery ti Ouatentffd Ana freeways will include a 4.S7-acre high-tech center and a 340-acre bioloiical science center. In a statement released after the new company was formed, Irvine Industrial Research President Rich- ard G. Sim said, .. Our marketing studies indicate that Orange County's industrial base wtll expand by eight million square feet annually over the next five years. "High-technology and bio-sc1ence research and development arc ex- pected to be at the forefront of this dramatic growth. I sec that as our principal challenge -to respond to this mar:ket demand by developing Lrvine Spectrum as a high quality, world class center for business and research." The rosy b1gh-tech future isn't confined to Irvine, accordin& to Tim Elliott, "Orange and San Die&o coun· ties' staff representative for the American Electronics Association. California as whole is healthy m the high-tech arena. Its cities occupy the top five spots in the AEA's natJonal list of high-tech centers. Of the top 2S high-tech c111es, 13 arc in California. Within Caltfomta, Orange County ranks third m high-tech buStnesses, Elliott said. ri~t behind Northern California's "Silicon Valley•• and tos AngelcS. If htgh-tech businesses in Orange and San Diego counties arc counted together, they surpass t.he number m Los Angeles, the assoc1a· tion official said. Elliott sa.id about ?S.000 pe9ple are now workm& in h1att-tc:ch JObs m Orange County. He said one of the attractive feature~ of these bu5incnes 1s that each higlHcch job is said to generate work for eighl other em- ployees in related service and supply areas. The four Orange County cities that made the AEA's top 2.S list -Irvine. Santa Ana. Anaheim and Costa Mesa -arc home to about 72 percent of the county's high-tech businesses, Elliott said. A key drawing card for the area is UC Irvine, which produces a steady stream of trained engineers. But Elliott warned that the Orange County cannot become complacent because other areas are trying to lure away the lucrative high-tech com- panies. He said cheap labor and less expensive land are prompting some firms to relocate in Asia and Mexico. But not aJI the competition comes from outside 1hc United.States. "Not a month iQCS by.·· Elliott said. "that some bigger (high-tech) com- pany an Orange County is not con· taeted by a group in Sa~mento. Texas or the Carolina Triangle, askin& them to relocate. They'd love to have our companies move there." To remain an attractive high-tech center. Elliott said Orange County must continue to have a ready p<>ol of reliable laborers. He said local col-l~ must help people ac.quire the job skills needed in a time when tech· noloSY is changina rapidly. Jn ad· dition. he ~id, the county must make the best passible use of its land, producing a harmonious balance of housina and business sites. "f don't think we can sit back and look at our climate and our way oflifc and say they will continue to attract companies," Elliott said. "I think we've aot to go out and be com- J'etitive.'' Wbat do yoa llke aboat tlle Dally Pilot? Wbat don't yoa Uke? Call tbe namber at left aid y09r mes .. 1e wUI be recorded, lraascrlbecl and delivered to ibe epproptfa~ editor. · • Tbt same U·•oar 1aswerln1 servJt'e may be Htd to recorit Jettera to tbe tdltor on any topic. CHtrtbeton to oar Leu~rt colanua mast lllclade tlaelr name and telepltoH Hmber for veriftt'atloa. No clrculatloa calls, please. Tell as wlaat'• oa yo1r m1D4. ORANGE COAST 111i1J Pilat c.;cutatton 11•1142..tm Cl•11fted ~ 7141142-1171 A• otMr .,.,.mente 142-4321 MAINOFFICC 330 w,., 8.y I Colt• '""' CA r.u• lddr-ea. 1r.eo c::o.ia Mn.a e... Matldty.f ti(Jaf II ~ 00 nae ha_,, )'W ~ DY ~ 30 p rn ua tirtt.• ' " m llllU ~i)lll ~r>OV .. _. 111 ,,.,,..,tu Satutaa, a...o c.....a., " ~ 00 not ll!Oef!WI yCllf CoPY by f • m oin De!Ot• H. L. Schwml HI Pµbhshor 10 ""' -'°"' ~ ... bl ..... Ctrculatlon TMphonn ' Stephen F. Cerezo Produc1ton M nog r Donakt L. Wltllam1 Oircuta11on Mang r VOL. 77, NO. 2t2 VETERAN P.OLICE DOG DIES •.• From Al Adlerhorst Kennels in Riverside, was sworn in by Huntington police in late 1977. The dog was 22 months old at the time. "He never missed a day of work because of illness and never came up lame,'' said Gilligan~ "He really gave the city his all." ••tte didn't retire because of illness. He retired because it was time to retire. Just like with a person," said Gilligan. "As far as I know be was the first dog in the count¥ to saay with a force unlil retirement age." Mame Iii said the farmer police dog will be cremated and his ash'es buried at Sea Breeze Pct Cemetery in Huntington Beach this Friday at 3:30 p.m. WAGE SUIT LOOMS IN HUNTINGTON ••• From Al association a vacation so they can picket .. Spokesmen for the 500-member Municipal Employees Association, which· comprises non-managment and non-emergency workers, say they plan to put up an employee picket line around City Hall Friday morning to publicize their demands. "We'll be' trying to get the City C'Quncil's attention," unit president fody Johns said. The employee group is seeking a S' percent pay increase plus a 112 percent contribution by the city to a medical insurance fund for retired employees. City negotiators have agreed to a 4'h pay increase and the 112 percent contribution to the retirement fund. The total amount of money separ- ating the two sides comn to about $6.S,000.a year. Employee reprcsentati vcs said an arbitrator and the city's personnel commission have backed thcir de- mands, but at midni&ht Monday the City Council rctumcd a decision that rejected the increase. Attorney Harker said Thompson "bargained in bad faith" because h~ allegedly presented to the City Coun· cit a salary resolution that differed from the one as>provcd by the city's personnel commission. Harker claims that only the person- nel commission has the authoritr to present salary resoluuons to the City Council and that it's up to the seven elected officials to approve or reject the offer. Thompson was attcndina the state · Coastal Conservancy hearings on Bolsa Chica today in Nonhcm Cali· fomia and was unavailable for com- ment. ---<e---.----------.. CON CO RU CENTURION RA FF}eWeJry 32 FASHION ISLAND 644-2040 . . , -, ". ' - ' I I 1 'I. I ;. ' I . . . e urors we1 ver e e 1r 1nmur case with new parking lot at John Wayne Airport, but clamp down on flight llmlta for now .I A3 A panel has been named wltff the unsavory task of recommending which schools should be closed In Huntington Beach./ A3 California Fannie Mae sees home foreclosures next year If deficit Isn't cut./ AS Nation NASA rocket man leaves U.S. after being accused of working prisoners to death In Nazi Germany during WWII./ Al B-52 bomber crash shrouded In mystery./ AS World Cambridge professor wins Nobel Prize In econ- omics./ Al Iran claims offensive kUled hundreds of Iraq troops.fM Boating Four of the world's fastest and most glam- orous maxi yachts are vying off Marina del Rey for the Cal Cup./81 Hobie Alter and Hoyle Schweitzer are the first to enter the Boating Hall of Fame.181 Chicago Cubs' Manager Jim Frey la named Man- ager of the Year by the Baseball Writers' As- sociation of Amerlca./C1 UC Irvine basketball coach Biii Mulllgan says he plans to start two freshmen In the starting lineup this year./C1 Marina High takes over Sunsetleagueleadln water polo, whll&Unlver- slty clinches a Sea View playoff berth./C3 Entertainment Richard Pryor ls cleaning up his act these days as he hosts a new children's TVshow./83 INDEX Boating Erma eomt>eck Bridge Bulletln Soard Buitneu California New• etnstfled Comic• Crossword Death Notices Horoscope Ann Landers Mutual Funtss NatlOnal News Opinion POllCe Log PUbllc Notlc Sport• Stoot< Mark ta 'l' tl*Vtlion 'fheeter• WMther World New• ,. 81-2 82 A9 A3 85 A4 C5•7 A9 C7 87 C6 82 85 A4 A8 A3 87 C1-4 86 84 83-4 A2 A4 Aliens' Raid netting 46 Hispanic workers keeps others away By TONY SAAVEDRA OfllleO.., ........ It may be too early to tell whether ~edn~y·s roundu~ of 46 illcpl ahcns m Costa Mesa will lower heroin sales and prostitution in the largely Hispanic neighborhoods of the city. But doughnut sales have definitely dropped ~a result of the morning raid by federal immigration agents and-Cost.a Mesa police in front of a hamburger stand at' J 875 Placentia Ave. For the past couple months, John Yackey sold coffee, douehnuts and other items from his catcnng truck to the large group of Hispanics waning in front of the cateo· to be picked up by employers needing day laborers. (Pleue aee ALIENS/ A2) Retrial hearin,g delayed for Alcala Former ~n Quentin death-row inmate Rodney James Alcala is oock in Orange County awaiting a new trial on charges he killed a 12-year-old Huntington Beach airl in 1979. Alcala appeared briefly in Orange E'ounty Superior Coun Wednesday, but arrai&nment on the murder charge was postponed until Oct. 25 at the request of Alcala's Santa Ana attorney, Keith C. Monroe. The 39-year-old ~cala is beina held without bail in the Orange County Jail. Alcala was brought to the county from San Quentin on Monday by Huntington Beach detectives. His conviction in the 1979 slaying of Robin,. Chri5tinc Sam!liOC was 0.-,Nec,._....,.....,..Uplll Co•ta Mesa street comer, where alien• once con1tefated, now quiet after roundup. o-tcrturned b) the state Supreme Court in ugu-.t. The high court ruled that the jury during Alcala 's first trial in 1980 improperly "as informed of his prior arrest and con,·iction on child mole4'tation charges. . Irvin~ fiJ"m wins $1~.5 million . . patent"Iawsuit Jury says second company infringed on Shiley patents Shiley Inc. of Irvine has been awarded damage of SI 7.5 million following a four-wC'Ck tnal in which a JlH) <Jccided that another Irvine company. Bcntky Laboratories, infr- inged upon l\\O Shile) patents cover- ing blood ox)gcnators. BloOd ox)genator transfer oxygen to the blood dunng o~n heart surgef). The patent trial Wa'i conducted before U.S. District Court Jud Wallace Tashima in Los Angeles. Tashima could mcrcasc the financial penalty when he rules on punit1\C damages in the coming "eek~. The judge also can alter or rt\ersc the Jury·~ decision. Frank Haskins, a sen o. \ICC pre 1- dent with Sh1le), said the JUrfs decision was one of thc largest a\\ards in the hi~tol') of U.S. patent litigation. Haskins said Bentle) bcg,:ln market- ing the di puted medical device rn I Qr/ and that the federal uit ~ filed in J98t. Sh1lc\ 1s a ~ubs1dian of Pfizer Inc .. and Bentle) 1s a subsidiary of men- can Ho pital uppl) C rp. By JEF.F ADLER Of~DellJPllo48WI An Orange County upcnor Court JUI) n.-sumcd d hbcr.iuons today t dete:rmme :whether 57-ycar-old£rcd· nc':k Penn ) hc1tcd lhc k1lh~ of his 34-)ear-old e1-W1fe or was en- truppcd ' in 1he murder-for-hire scheme b) a close f ncnd and under- co" er Shenffs deputies. J>cnne)I, .a una 1gucl nirac.= tor µntd his DITCSt Jul) 2, tS oha~ "1oth a mgle felon) count of $0het· tauon of murder for alleged!) hinO£ nn undertcncnmc;suptor, posing as a hit m n, to kiff...h~r w1 nd make 11 ap~r hke an acodent. · As the final act in the unusu:U undercover operauon, he:nfrs [)c.. partment '°' estt?lOTS persuaded Su Pennell lO he on a lab n t count) coroner' office and pose for photographs rn:akaAg lher appear a 1f she were dead. The phot~ph then were ho\\n to Penne) to convtnce him the sla)1ng had been earned out. If convaeted. the ruddy-fa~ Pen- ne), a former Nev. Yor'k Cit) fireman, could be sentenced to a maximum Stl·)Car pnson term. ln his closing argument Wedn~ <bl) Penney's iiefense attorney, Chns11an Dillon, described his chent as an ··emotionally disturbed, deeply depressed man.. \\'ho \\'3S eaSll) entrapped or 'pushed into the plot b} John Burton, a fne"nd \\ho beclme a police informant. and b} Shenfr deputies "Thi cnme was rrumufacturtd b) police. encouraged b) pohce and completed b~ police on a person under a tremendous cmouonal strain."' Dillon told the six-man. x- " oman JUI). IHc said Bun n and n' est• r G ;ho·~-PIJ!!5JClD·~n supposed hit man ··eoob)1 .. ClJOlcd, bad red, advocated ano 1qduced Penne) to engage in die muriler ipl~t. an act he otherwise \\OUld have been incapable of can) mg out. "This is a man so emotionall) off center. he'd grab at anytbmg gnen - tum:• Dillon .-said. ··J<>hn-Burton <'3JOled and uried the death of Su n PennC) to an emotionally distra~ht man on the-edge -perhaps of a breakliown -a man engaging ~n a fantas} v.orld." A defense ps)ch1atnst tl"St1fied dunn1; the tri~l that Penne) ufTered from a menial illnes!'i following the breakup of has mamage that left ham ~usccpt1blc to the tntense u t1on of others. He said Penn~ wa ••bfamwa hed.. b} Burton and tht underco'er in~1iga1or. Jurors were insu-ucted b) Judge Jean Rhemheimcr that the) could acquit Penney on the cbarg af lhc) (Please eee JURY/A2) Samaritan saVes surf shop, keeps blaze from spreading ~ I NB crossing gua~d struck by motori$t Quick action by Newport Beach resident ---earns him ob at Carl Hayward Surf Boards By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of .. Dllllr .... 8telf A 2l•)car-old man •as crCducd today with helpma contain a down- town Huntmg1on Beach store fire Wcdnesda) night that could have spread to other Mam Street bu i- ncsscs and apanments. Hunttn&ton Beach Fire Depart· ment spoktswoman Birgit 03, m:ud Michael Kenncncr broke down the door of Carl Hayward urf Board , I09V2 Mam St., and used a fire Cllt1ngu1sher to combat the flames. Davis said Kcnncncr was not able to put out the blaze before his C\tingu1sher \\as c:\tlaustcd. But <ihc said he kept the fire from sprcadmg unul firefighters am, ed. F1rcfightc1> C'\llngutshcd the bla1e, and no 1nJurics were reported. Wuhoul Kenncner·s quick action. \he .said. the fire could e:lSll haH' prcad to other old Main · Street bu1ldin~ that house malt bus1nc scs and apartment . As 11 was, d:imag\.' to the surt r,hop wa estimated at SJS,000. Davi said. TcntatiH• <"3USC of the bla1e wai> an elcctnC'31 equip. rncnt malfunction. h1.: s:ud. Colleen ltnrwnrd., \\ 1fe ot surf shop O\\ner Carl Hny"nrd. today pr:uscd Irvinemakesthetop 10 in U.S. p.igh-techcities Telev1S1on <''-CCUttYet i>llow th Nici~ nunp. Atblttic h tract the m1,10r lcaaue staftdangs and the Top 10 Colleac nnlunp. Mo 1 moauts watch the weekly bo om tcO'M.. • Bui ~ul Brad Jr llmOin CH) managtr oflmnc. cl 1m officaal 1n h11 communaty don•1 Pl) much attention to hsu that corn~re Cata b~ vanous standard ull II wa difficult to 1anore the honoD that lmn~ rolltctCd in two cit) rank1nas relca d 1h1 wrck.. ~ .. PHIL s ...... --- - N f~\ P 1U\Plt 11\I DAILY PILOT/Thwadey Oc10Der ti 1114 rs plan legal action Clear skies with gusty winds From Al ~ Sinl:e the hamburger stand doesn't open until later in the morning. Yackcy fiaurcd be could make a few extra dollars by bringina his truck to the site. This ·morning. he . w~s . virtually alone. . "They grabbed a lot of th~m. and the ones that got'away didn t comC' back,'' said Yackey, who estimated that 50 to 60 workers gathered at the hamburger stand around 7:30 every morning to vie for day jobs. ":tney rush up (to the employers) said. "These guy~ want work.just like all of us. Ther gotta have that daily 'dough-re-mi. " Thompson of CflWil\I in Mbad fauh rp1mng." Ha~ ad be also will ask the court to ~er' the ctt)' to ga\ie lO perrcna of th~ emplo)'Cn in the association 1 -aca11on s<> the)' t"an piclcCL pgkesmen for the SOO.mcmbcf Mumapal Employees Assodauon, wh1c:h compnses non·man-amcnt nd non-cflJCTICnq· workm, Ill) 1a:.ey plan to put up an emPJo)'eC pt ck et hnc around Cuy Hall Fnday mornln,g. .. We'll be-II") na 10 get the Clt) Counal' tttenuon.'' unn prcii<knt J~yJohn1111d The cmplo)tt group Is stiCkina a 5 pen."t:tn Pl>' increase s;>ha a VJ pcrcen1 rontnbuuon b) lhe ~II> to a medical msurt~ fund fhr re1area employtc:s Cit) n~tiators have recd 10 a 4!fz pay 1n«e M: and the pcrrtnt contnbuuon 10 1he rcurcmen1 fund The total •mounl of monq scpar. au~ 't~e t"o ides comes 10 about $6),000 a ) ear • R QUIET AFTER RAID ••.• ,.. CoslA Mesa police officials Aid Mood) snid he didn't know how they cona~tod the Immigration and many of the illegal aliens picked up NaturaJizal\on St-rvice Stveral weeks Wednesday were hvina an Costa a~o durina c city's campaign to Mesa. He said at lca~t t'AO were Wlpe out drug \flffic and prostitution believed to be local dcale~. in the neil.hbOitiood around the 800 Hamburger stand owner Scun Ho block of Center' Str~t and Shalimar K.im, 49, said he didn't know any- Drive. ' thinJnbout dru~. ~ostly Hisp:inic~.live in the apart· Kim said ·he was just· tired of mefttsinthcarea.Policesaid38ofthe ptckmg up the trash, apparently Id\ 42 suspected small-time drug dealers by the job ~ekers, before he could they arrested from Jan. I to St-pt. 30 open his business every day. were illegal aliens. "They·~ diny, very dirty. Every CapvRobert Moody said Wednes-morning there's a lot of them here. 1 1cu assess ow c ey 1t on my nc es, sa1 1m, raid would affect drug sales, which he adding 'that he didn't complain be· said have already dropped consider-cause he can't speak Spanish. ably bccauscof police pressure. Coutal Ti dee Secot>CI lllgh tOOA't 430pm •• ,,., .... Arll IOw l?CM 1 m 0 I =.::t'iow .. 7091m <1.3 120lp m 27 s-tdhigtl 550pm 6 1 . 8l,ir1Mt•1oc:11y ti 81! pm, rw. Frlcllfll7 011 m 111>c1•thg1m1te H pm Moon .. tHt2Mp.m .• 11tMThurlldly 11 1 UI 1 m ll'O "" IO'ln 11 3 3t p m ) ( SAMARITAN SAVES SHOP ••• From Al ;\:-' Im 2-4 4-5 M 24 ... 2-3 &wllldlreal!On:~ "How do you thank someone for something like this?" sbe asked. "I wouldn't have gone in (a burning shop)." Hayward said she asked Kennener how she couid repay him. According to Hayward, he replied, "I could use a job." She said she told hint·with a smite, "You've got it." ' But before any mo~ help can be hired, the business must be reopened, Hayward said. She said her husband 'Carl is a professional surfer who makes boards for sale at his shop and coaches the surf team at Marina Hiib School. She said he opened the Mam Street shop 51/J years ago. She about 100 surfboards in the b~iness were destroyed by the heat of Wednesday's fire. "T,Pey melt~ like marshmallows," she said. ' "Wc'1J reopen a.<1 soon as we can," Haywa'rCLsaid. "Christmas is coming and a young family like us can't afford to have the business stay closed too long." National hotlineprovided for victims of spinal injury JURY WEIGHS MURDER PLOT CASE ••• BALTIMORE (AP) - A national toll-free hotJine that provides referral informadon and crisis intervention for people with spinal cord injuries ral>legjc" 22 ritonths ago when her University of ~aryland Shock spmal cord was damaged in a car T~u!lla Center, J>&rt;tcipaled i.? . a accident, said it took aoout 16 ttaJn1na Prosram thatincluded V1$1l$ months to coordinate the project. to the neurotrauma unit and rcbabili-JPtOmAl determined he was entrapped 10 the murder plot by police or someone acting as a police agent. The question of Penney's sanity was not an issue m the trial. Deputy District Attorney Wallace Wade painted a different picture of Penney in bis summation, caltin& the defendant a man who wanted to have his wife murdered. "Mr. Penney wanted to ao it, he dtdn•t need to be induced," Wade said. The prosecutor reminded jurors that Penney, in conversations with the bit man th.at were secretly tape· recorded and olayed during the I(). day triaJ, told .r&bby" he wanted "a pennanent thing done" in the early minutes of their first meeting in a, restaurant park.an& loL He also urged jurors to review the tape-recorded conversations to de- termine whether Giles had used the inflection of his voice to ensnare Penney in the plot. Wade called Penney's claim that be tned to call off the killillg "a story that could have been written by Wah Disney. h'sa fantasy he's trying to lay off on you. the ladies and gentlemen of this jury." Penney testified. during his day· long stay on the witness stand Tuesda)'.. that he had second thoughts about kdling his former wife and tried to call off the plot the weekend before his arrest. He said he repeatedly telephoned "Bobby" but was unable to reach him. • .. W~t is his defense?" Wade asked JUron. "Ifs that Mr. Burton and Mr. and their families went into action Oiles made me do it... ~ednesday. Wade contended that ~noing on "This year will be a real trial effort June 14, wheo Penney first tcle-because there is nothing like this in phoned .. Bobby," he had eng&fCd in the country to compare it to1" said one continuous act of solicitation of Karen Colvin~ a spmal.cord victim murder. culminating in his July 2 who helped start the proaram. arrest. ··About l 5,000 to 20.000 people Accon:ling to testimony presented will have ~ spinal cord injury this during the trial. Penney agreed to pa)' year," sa1d Kathleen . Deasy. a $3,000 for his wife's murder and gave spokeswoman for the National Study the· undercover investigator a $1 ,500 Cent~r for Trauma a~d EJ!lergency cash downpayment for the job. Med1cal. Systems~ which will house Sheriffs deputies first learned that . the hotline program. . Penney was considering killing his . .M«?st people who suffer spinal cord former wife from Mrs. Penney, who IDJunes arc l 5-to 30-ycars-<>I<!. ~nd contacted authorities after Burton 70 percent to 80 percent of the v1chms confessed to her he had been offered are male,. Ms. Deasy said. SS 000 to either kill her or find Volunteers who staff the hotline someone who would. will answer questions about acute .. When I was injured, my husband talion facilities, Colvin said. Vohm· and parents wanted to find out tecrs also re<:eived instruction on answers to ~uestions like where is the crisis intervention and the problems best rehabilitation hospital. what arc paraplegics and quadraplqi~ en- th.e implications of not walking again, counter while retumina to the main- and what are muscle spasms," Colvin stream of life, she said. said. The hotline staff has access to a CoMn's husband. John, contacted data base computer, Colvin 5aid, Louise McK.new, oncofthcdirutors notin& that personnel at the Shock of the National Spinal Cord Injury Trauma Center "are at our fingenips Assocaat~on, for information about and are available on a rotation basis" spinal inJuries arid found she wanted to provide answers to more specific · to put together a national hotline. questions. Mc Knew had received a small The hotline will be open 24 hours a grant from International Business day, with a medical answering service Machines Corp., but she did not have takin• telephone calls at night. If the v enough funds to set the project under situation 1s urgent, volunt~can be way, Colvin said. reached on a beeper system and will Colvin's husband and her father's return the call. IRVINE AMONG TOP HIGH-TECH CJTIES .••• injury care, rehabilitation and re- search. and provide the names of regional contacts (or people with q\lCStions about special services in their state, Deasy said. company. Gorn Management, .. We are encour3'ina daytime use prov1ded more money for the pro-so clinical information and 'the data gram while the study t'Cnter, which is backup is available,"' said Colvin. pan of the Mal)'land Institute for "But if they're in crisis, or just need Emergency Medical Services Sys-someone to talk to, someone will be terns. provided information, advice available.•• and other non-monetary assistance. -The national hotline number is Volunteers, including staffers at the 1-800-526-3456. From Al in reducing rcsidenttal development and increasing open space, the assis- tant city manager said. Brady said both the city and the Irvine Co. have tried to attract high- tech businesses, the so-<:alled smoke· less industries. Jn addition to their environmental advantages, Brady said high-tech businesses .. also bring the type of person to the area who bas expen- dable income, which helps the overall tax base. These people are also better educated and more sophisticated." But Brady ms1sted that Irvine doesn't want to limit local housing to expensive· new sin&le-iamily homes that only well-paid high-tech man· agers can afford Local industries also require plenty of employees at lo~r salary levels. Brady said Irvine has become the leading Southern Cali- fornia city in apartment cons1ruct1on so that less-affluent workers can also afford to hve in the cit). .., AJthough it already ran1cs h1.gh among high-tech centers and attract· ave living cnrvironments, Irvine still has plentyofroom to grow. City plans call for a population of210,000 by the year 2010. And even more high-tech development 1s on the drawmg board. Nearina completion 1s the Irvine Co.'s 4,()()().~cre Irvine lndustnal Complex, surrounding John Wayne Airport in Costa Mesa. Irvine, New- port Beach and Tustin. The lrvifte Co. has also created a new firm called the Irvine lndustnal, Research and Development Co .• which will oversee Irvine Spectrum. The 2,200-acre four-part' commercial development in cast Irvine near the junction of the San Diego and Santa Ana freeways w11l mclude a 457-acre htgh·tech center and a 34().acre biological science center. Jn a statement released after the new company was formed, lrvfoe Industrial Research President Rich- ard G. Sim said, "Our marketing studies indicate that Orange County's industrial base will expand by eight million square feet annually over the next five years. 0 High-technology and bio-science research and development are ex- pected to be at the forefront of this dramatic growth. I sec that as our principal challenic -to respond to this market demand by developing Irvine Spectrum as a high quality, world class center for business and research." The rosy high-tech future isn't cot.fined to Irvine, according to Tim Elhotl. Orange and San Diego coun- ties' staff representative for the American Electronics Association. California as whole is healthy in the htgh-jech arena. Its cities occupy the top ftVe spots in the AEA's national list ofh1gh-tech centers. Of the top 25 high-tech citie~. t 3 are in California Withm California, Orange County ranks third m high-tech businesses. Elliott said, right behind Northern California's "Silicon YaJley" and Los Angeles. If high-tech' businesses in Orange and San Diego counties are counted together, they surpass the number in Los Angeles, the associa- tion official said. Elliott said about 95,000 people are now working in high-tech jobs in Orange County. He said one of the attractive features of these businesses 1s that each high-tech job is said to Colvin, who became a quad- generate work for eieflt other em- ployees in related serv1ce~and supply areas. The four Orange County cities that made the AEA's top 25 list -Irvine, Santa Ana, Anaheim and Costa Mesa Earthquake rattles Wyoming -arehometoabout72percentofthe CASPER, Wyo. (AP) -The routines to speculate about the Hall.Employecswcreevacuateduntil county's high-tech businesses, Elliott strongest earthquake ever recorded in tremors. Montana and southwest the city building inspectors could 53ucid.1A ~eydrah~nhgcaodrd for the area is W)'oming rattled parts of six states South Dakota residents also notified check for damage. rvme, w IC pr uces a steady this mornino damHing buildin°* in law enforcement agencies after the stream of trained engineers. .. _. ... Sandra Booth, a reporter at the But Elliott warned that the Orange at least two cities and forcing some quake struck. Cas~r Star-Tribune, said her mother County cannot become complacent evacuations. There were no immcdi· Waverly Person of the earthquake "thoupt it was 10 explosion. bee h · 1 ate reports of injury. center said the quake was the largest · · · Th h a~ ot 1 er ar~ ar:: .. t~tnghto ure John Minsch, spokesman for the on record to have hit Wyoming and Furniture was Jumping. e w olc away e ucrat1ve ib'r-tcc com· U.S. Geoln.ical Survey's National the binHt quake in the Rocky house trembled ... Things were bounc· panics. He said cheap labor and less -.. ..,.,,,,,-: ing on the table.'' expensive land are prompting some Eanbquake Infonn.ation Center in Mounwn region since one in Idaho Norm French, director of the state fi · Golden, Colo .. said the quake f'Clis-in October 1983 that was 7.3 on the Binns to re:oca1 hte in Asia ~~d Mexico. tered S.S on the Richter scale and Richter scale. Two children were Office of Emeraency Preparedness in ut not a t e competition comes occurred at 9:30 a.m. about 40 miles killed by falling debris in that quake. Cheyenne, said. the quake was felt from outside the United States. southeast of Casper. An aftershock Susan Brooks, deputy city clerk in stronaty in Cheyenne. "Notamonthgoesby,"Elliottsaid. rumbled through the rqion at 9:57 Golden, Colo .• said structural dam-ScottSmith,manaainacditorofthe "'that some bjgger (high-tech) com-a.m., and was measured at an intensi-age caused ~ the quake to Golden Alliance Times Herald in western pany m Orange County is not con-ty of about 4.0. JliAn• C . . lied Nebraska, said, .. There w•-two t.acted by a &TQUP in Sacramento. . "..;: ...-. on omtniums compc ... " Texas or the Carolina Triangle, People in high-rise buildings m -Mil authorities to order evacuation oftbc definite shocks. It didn't rattle JlllY· asking them to relocate. They'd love Lake City felt the quake, there were building. tbina but . you could sure feel the to have ourcompa"ics move there." reports of broken china in western City officials in Douglas. Wyo., around under you moYe. You know To remain an attractive hi&h-tcch Nebraska, and office workers in which is near the epi~nter, said the how it feels when somebody moves center. Elliott said Orange C'ou nty r;:De=n:ve:r::in:l:e:rru:;:::pt:cd=:th:e:ir=m==or:n:1n;;g::::e::art:;;hq;;u=a=k=e=c=ra==ck;:ed;;=a=w;;;al:;I =•;;t;C;;:i t;y:::;Y:O:u:r::c:ha:i:r1:. T::ha:t:'s:h:o:w=it:fd::t.:"=::;. must continue to have a ready pool of 11 reliable laborers. He saist local col-~ le~es must help people acquire the Job slulls needed in a time when tech- nology is changing rapidly. In ad· .--------------------~. _..._ _____ "':'""'"_.......;~----...... dition. he said. the county must make the best possible use of its land, producing a harmonious balance of CONCORU housing and business sites. "I don't think we can sit back and lookatourclimateandourwayoflife r;,ENTURJQN and say thex will continue to attract \..:,, companies. Elliott said. "I think · we've got to go out and be com- petitive." ------ · --- --------- ' Just Call 642-6086 Wll.at do yo. lib •bHt 1'e DaJI)' Pi1ot? Wbat doD'l )'O• like? Call tile cnunber at left •IHI yoar masa1e wlll be rttoriled, transcribed aad dtUvercd to &lie appropriate cdltor. Tbe Hme U·boar u1weriD1 1ervlce may be used to record leUtra to , .. , editor OD any topic. COetrilHttort te ear Let&en colama mast ...,, ... ~Ir name aod telepbone a.mber for vtrlllcatlon. No clrc1latloD cans pleate. oan1 PUot DetlverJ I• GuarentMd M<lodAy Ffodlly II yOu CIO !IOI ~· yOUt PGP« bf &30p111 citO ~loll 7 p m !Ind '°"' COJIY .. bl .,.,.._, &an.oey encl 6uo101? II """ 00 llQI •tot.... JrOll' CCJPr br 7 a "' bP I 10 '"' Incl~ P>P1""" De~.O ClrcuMtton T~ 1:ell 11 wbat'1 oa yo1r mlad. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. L. Schwartz Ill Publisher AoMmMJ Churchman Controller Sttl)hen F. Caruo PrOductton Manag r Donald l. Wllllam• C1rculat1on Manag r ~FFjeWeJry 32 FASHION ISLAND 644-2040 VOL. 77, NO. 212 • .. ) cu1111n111 -- FRIOA'f. 0 1..:T OOlR l ~t 1984 0 HAN ( ~ f C 0 UN T 't' ( A I I F< J H NI A l !J C [ N T ':i :p ·neyguil in"murder plot : a offered $3,000 to deputy Supenor Coun Jury following 1wo days oftielibcrataons. · ge 'accident' for ex-wtre· PcnneJ. convicted of a sinJ)c count of soticnauon of murder. faces a maximum six-year prison term. Judge Jean Rhdnheimcr scheduled sentencing for Nov. 14. By JEFF AD~R Of .. .,.., ........ Frc<terick Penney, a 57-ycar.old Laguna Niguel contractor, was found guilty today of birin~ an .un~over Shcnff'1 Department investigator Candidate accuses coun- . ell of giving city · adlmlnl&trator a secret ralae./A3 Fighting fire lands Good Samaritan a job./ A3 California Organs of actor who ac- cidentally shot himself wlll go to others./ A4 Natl on Nation's GNP grows at a mere 2. 7 percent, but that's not necessarlly bad news./A4 Democrats coming down hard on CJA terrorist manual./ AS World Charred bodies of three Mexican Investigators found In car outside of Ensenada./ AS A professlona1 rl.lnner Is jogging 3,000 mlles of the Great Wall of China./ AS People I.. Celebrities In red shoes are shown In a new book and art exhibit premier- ing In Laguna Beach./85 Barry Reid warns that people aren't protecting their prlvacyenough./81 Spotts Fountain Valley High rallles from e 14-0 def lclt for a 31-21 football win over Marlna./81 Detroit's Sparky Anderson Is selected as the American League Manager of the Year ./82 It's no surprise: Former Angel manager John McNamara takes Boston job./83 . Entertainment Olympic champ Scott Hamilton stars In the Ice capades revue In Los Angeles./WMkerider •Places In the Heart' leaves you cheering for the mlsflta.IWMk•nder INDEX posina as a hit man to murder his 34J. year-old f ormcr wife. The ruddy-faced fonner New York City fireman appeared emotionless as the verdict was delivei'ed by the six- rnan, sii-woman Orange County Mob at J. Magnln'• Defense attorncr, Christian Dillon said Penney was jpreparcd for lhc worst" and took tne guilty verdict "calmly." A steadL.~ia of cuatomen trabbed op Ales Item.a at . J~b '• South Cout Piasa nore Tlaunday, the .. Econ.omist bullish on Orange County econom.ic future By ROBERT HYNDMAN Of ... DllJ ....... The economic recovery OJ:ange County enjoys foUowinfi the re- cession o( the late '70s wi continue into next year, but at a reduced speed, according to the chief economi1t for Security Pacific National Bank. Addressing 1,000 county businCIS Resldents- b.appyWitlJ decision onBdlsa By ROBERT BARKER Of .. o.IW ........ \ A Bolsa Chica development plan that includes minimal rerouting of Pacific Coast Highway and a connec1- 1na waterwa¥ to ncaror Huntington HarbOur while preserving 915 acres of wetlands remains intact as it heads to the state Coastal Commission for approval late ne)tt month. Meetina in Bodega Bay in Northern (Pleue eee llOLSA/ A2l leaders Thursday at the Orange County Chamber of Commerce's Economic Outlook Conference in Anaheim, Robert Parry, a Security Pacific executive vice president, said the rate of economic arowth should slow nationwide as person.at income arowth stabiliz~ (Pleue eee COUl'fTY/ A.2) Have your eye on a new car?· You'll find the bnt 8Uto buYa 8lonQ the Or•nge .Cont In tod•r'• Auto Piiot -P99eC1 ~ I 01110~ added has chent ·~ruly vcst.l'8tor Robe.n Oilcs, ho posed s believes he was manue".'fted uiid6-·the hll man. such intense and contmuing runsurc "It's fa1rto state my dtentadmittcd. that he was robbed of his free will" 10 a cnm1nal act dn the sand crc's The defense cl a med dunng the some quesuon of ha men I tatu , two-week 1naJ that Ptnney was Burton s actions and the propnety of entrapped In the rnurdcr.for·harc Gd acuons," the defense nofllCY scheme by his friend. John Burton, id. who lcnowi(l&Jy supplied Penne)' With He aho id be planned to file a the \Clephone number of the under-motion for a new trial and fathn.g cover Shenft's deput)I and in· that. would seek PrQbation for Pen~ oer an ntcnc1n DepUlf Di net A1totney Wallaa , W 1d he fl t lbc Jury's verdja ~trc t" Juror5 listened to secretly &ape- rcrorded COO\'Cl'UllODS bet\\ttn Pen ney nd lhe undacovcr hn man duri the trial In the convenat 01\J, Penney agreed to pay $3.000 iT a ··pcr:manau accident" forh1s former (P.leue eee nJIJllSY I A2) seeks to buy · park County welghin city's offer for Fairview acreage ByTONV AAVEDRA Ol ... Dl9f ........ Aides to county Supery1sor Thomas Riley are reviewing over- tures made by the cit)' of Costa Mesa to buy 257 era of the Fairview Rcgional Park site, wildtmess that has remained relatively untouched since prehistoric times. The city, in a Sept. 12 letter Ito R1lc)"s office. asked about the J>OSSI· bility of buyi~the nd. It wants to h It county n Wt 'Ould tum the bluffi along t e Santa Ana River bed into a SIO m1Uion regional park comPtete rith an 18-boJc,gotf counc. six lighted softball fields and a campins facility for u_p to 120 rec- reational vehicles. The plans have raised the U'C of Costa Mesa nature lovcr5 d resi- dent5 living near 1he 283-acrc 'tc oftbcC05ta McsaCounuyOUb, near Euan H School. Oty Ma Fred Sonabal said the lctler t al the~ oflbc nine-member citiZcns advtSOf)' com- ~eue .. Jai8A/A2J New hearing set for teen suspect in Mesa murder Robert Parry By JEFF ADLEJ\ °' .............. A 16-)ear-dd.Costa Mesa boy will have to be recertified as an adult before he can be tried on murder cbarp. an OraDF County Superior Courtj~ has ruled. Judie Donald McCartin. sjttina in juvenile court. ordered • ·new certification hearing for Steven Telles. cbal"l,Cd with the May ,19 bcati~ dcatn ·of 60-year-:Old Cios1a Mesa resident Eugenia Baker. The ~na to determine whether Telles will be tried as ID lduh must be rcPCated because of t«hnical errors in the record, explained Deputy (P1eUe eee TU!f/ A2) County child care backe~s assail veto of latchkey bill Urgent need for day care centers stressed before meeting of state advisory co.nmtttee By DAVID BJSBOP ..., .... cw ... t' • Advcxatcs of child care an ~ County criticized the m:cnt veto of ••1atchkey" leiill~n by Oov. George Deukmcjian Thursday. Their comments came at a mcettaa of the statc•s OiUd Development Programs Advisory Comminec. which met in Costa MC$a to hear testimony on child caR in the county. Earlier thi month the ao cmor vetoed a commmee-cndorsed $35 million day<are plan. At the same time he announced the creation of a task force for more study of the issue. The vetoed bill would have prQvidCd S.30 million io provide care before and after schOOI (or Children whoSC parents Work. Tbe bill WC>uld b.lve also provsdcd $5 million f}>r con tructioa of new day-<arc ceotcn. rommiuee member Vivian Weinstein called the temporary Wk force a ''slap in the face" to dlt committee. Weinstein said cn<>U&h information al.read)' was available to document a substahtial aced for affordable child-care programs thrOughOut tbc state. The Orange County Comml!SSIOl1l on t.bc Status of Women. a coun~ fwldcd nC), issued a rcpon 1hls ummcr tha1 WOD praix from com- mmtt members. Janie Arookt1 wbo cbaircd the commission, d .. child care · no longer a social issue. it is a crime prevention i u . . ~wCB'fU>/A2) Auto Piiot Bridge Bullttln Board Bualoea Callfornla News Claaalfled Comfcl CrottWord Death Notlcea G1rd4N\lng Horoecope 01-8 84 A3 87 A4 C5·7 EM C7 c• ee oe ae 87 A4 A.7 85 A3 A Texan takes over the reins of Huntington school system OCjurors debatin~ award in paralysis Ann l..9ndetl Mutual Funds Natlonll News 9Plnl0n P90Pie PobLOg Pubtlc Notloee AMteur11nt ~· Stock Marketa T•'Woh Theet•• Weeth« Wortd NeWI Al C4 Weekender 81-3 88 ae Weektr\dlr A2 A.4 Here's 1 touatue for even the Tm•ial Pursuatcrs: What's a ul-R and c.an you name two people who ha vc ever tii:cn there? The an er IS that ut-Ro 1 a Slate collcac an Alpine. Texa And two or lll lflduatcs ITC Mane Otto, the aalna upenntendent of the HDntl'1Jl9" BcaCti Union Hiah 1 Di trict, and her fonntt aood fncnd. the late a or 0.n Blocker The nam of other ul Ro graduates don·1 comt readily t mmd Otto whoscplactd Jake Abbott 1t the da tnct'1 helm 1n uaust. was I tPecch and drama ~•t theco11q.e and c:O-surttd in •veral coltelc Ro1E1T .. I j DAILY PtLOT/ThuNday OctOHt 11 1914 WorK rs plan legal action llompson o enpam m "Nd ri th rpimna." Huter id he also wJll a k the coun to order lhe cny to ''' c 10 percent of the employ in the associ.at1on a H1cauon so &he)'. can pidc:er. pokesmen for the :SOO.member iunicipal Emplo)~s Association, which compnscs noo-manqment nd non-emergenC) wortcl'rs. say they plan to put up on tmploytc picket line around City Hall ):nday momioa. .. We'll be uyin1 to 1 1he Cit) Counol's aucnuon " um1 prcssdcna l~y Johns said Thl' employ~ group 1 ku\& a S peroent ~Y inl'"re;i~ ptusa Yl peroent contnbuuon by the city ~1l a medical an urancc fund for l'l"llrtd cmplo)ttJi. Cuy neaouatori have greed 10 a 4'h pa) ancrea nd lhc 'h pcroent con&ributaon to the retirement fund. The 1lotal amount of money ~par auog :the t~o ides com to bout $6).000 8.)C:lr J ALIENS' CORNER QUIET AFTER RAID .•• From Al Since tht hamburger ~tand doesn't open until later in the mornin~ Yackey figured he could make a few extra dollars by bringing his truck to the site. This morning. be was vinually alone. .. They grabbed a lot of them. and the ones that got away didn't come back,". said Yack"ey, who estimated that 50 to 60 workers gathered at the hamburger stand around 7:30 every . morning to vie for day jobs. :'They rush up (to the employers) ~--""D..m· 1wg;-r.tal~e·-rrre, Ulee me, Yackc~ said. '1"bese auys wanrwork.JUSt like all of us. Thcv gotta have that daily 'douah-re~mi.(" Costa l'SI pohce otlic1al!\ 5aid they contacted the Immigration and NaturahzatiDn Service several weeks ago dunng ~e city's campaign to wipe out drug traffic and prostitution m the neighborhood around the 800 block of Center Street and Shalimar Dnve. Mostly Hispanks live in the apart- ments in the area. Police said 38 of the 42 suspected small-time drug dealers they arrested from Jan. I to ~pt. 30 were illepJ aliens. Cap~btn ~nod)' sa11l..Wednes- diy it was c:(iflkd t to assess how the raid would atfcct drug sales, which he said have already dropped consider- ably bccauseof ~lioe pressure. SAMARITAN SAVES SJIOP ••• P~mAl . ''How do you thank someone for somethina like this?" she asked. "I wouldn't have gone in (a burning shop)." ~ Hayward said she asked Kenncncr how she couJd rtpay him. According to Hayward, he replied, .. I could use a job." She saict she told hiqa with a smile, .. You've ROl it." But before any mo~ help can be hi.red. the business must be reopened, Hayward sa1d. She said her husband Carl is a professional surfer who makes boards for sale at his shop and coaches the surf team at Marina Hi~ School. She said be opened the Mam Street shop 5Y1 years ago. Sbe about l 00 surfboards in the Mood} said he didn't know how man) of the ilkgat uhtns picked up Wednesday were living in Costa MC5il. Hl' said at least two were believed to be l<X--aJ dealers, · Hamburger stand <wcr $(un Ho Kim. 49, said he didrrt kno~ an)· thinJ about drugs. • Kim said he was just tired of picking up the trash, apparently Jen by the job seekers. befort he could open bis business every day. "T~ey're dirty. very diny. Every mom.mg therc· .. ...a...10""""~~~~;._, They sit on my benches." said Kim, adding that he didn't complain be- cause be can't speak Spanish. b~incss were destroyed by the heat of Wednesday's fire. "'Tl'iey melted like marshmallows," she said. "Wc'U reopen as soon as we can," Haywartl said. "Christmas is coming and a young family like us can't afford to have the business stay closed too long." . JURY WEIGHS MURDER PL0TCASE .•• From Al · . .., determined he was entrapped in the murder plot by police or someone acting as a police agent. The queshon of Penney's sanity was not an issue an • the triaJ. He also urged jurors to review the tape-recorded conversations to de- tennine whether Giles had used· the inflection of his voice to ensnare Penney in the plot. Jurors. "Ifs that Mr. Burton and Mr. Giles made me do it." · 4 i' iii as s Clearskie with gusty winds Coutal Tides TOOAY 5-JdhlQI\ 4:30pm., •• nl!OAY Flrtt IOllW 12.04•.m 0 I ~tow 70l•m 43 . 12;otom 27 SacondNQfl &~om. i I &Jn .. ,. today at 8.15 p.m , ...._ fflde1al7 Qla.m endNtll!Dlllnllll t4 p.m. MoonMtut2.5'p m ,r1-Thund•y •t I 18 am and Nt1 again al 331I)111 Bolee = c...,., Cl\arteslon Sc Ohatlalon.WV ~.NC c~ ChiC.980 Clneinna11 ~ C01urnt11•.S C. COlumbut.Oh. Conc41fd.N.H O.U.-fl Wllf'lll 31 It q .. 93 to 37 ea 71 " ~ ... 6t 72 1) n 29 37 21 6ot tr 71 n •• ... .. 47 ll .. t:.·~ 10 IO t:::-TO oa 13 ll ::=::11ah 'lO..a ,. ~,.._ c .... ., ....,wtle " ...... OrtMna Tl 67 HlwVM n eo Nottolk,V .. '10 '° OkllflOnw Qr,y 64 66 ONM Q .. OrNinllD = .. PllmlP!lnp 56 f'llllUllJhlt • .. ~ ti 17 =:.,u::r .... .,. u .. " lllonllndOt .. "' PrllllkMnm 112 44 ::rCftr n 114 .. 33 Atno 41 ~ .. AidwnonO "' :rt Ill Sact....uo a •Ii llLOIH ta 100 ·~•·l'M!Pa .. .. ~UliaCltv '° :M t:= n n 70 641 ..,, f' lflnCllCO u a1 Ian "'*'•p R .. 73 9181aMarle ·~ 31 .._ .... :i <41 ::.X94: 70 M '4& 8poUne Ill 81 .,,_ 70 &Cl Topela .. 52 'T-11 64 'T ..... ea 6t WMllll\el4111 ' '70 " WIONW $7 » w ........ ,. H ,, W"'*'Olon De. .. 51 ----------Oeylon DenYW O..M-C' ..•. -D .~~ .... ,) U K t I\ t r U M I Natiorial hotlineprovideP. for victims of spin81 injury BALTIMORE (AP) -A national toll-free hotline that provides referral informatjon and cnsis intervention for peopJe. with spiria.J cord injuries and their families went into action Wednesday. raptegic 22 "'onths ago when her Universit~ of M8f¥land Shock spmaJ ·cord was damaged in a car Trauma Center, pai:ttcipated in a accident, said it took about l6 training program that included visits months to coordinate the project. to the neurotrauma unit and rchabili- ••wben I was mjlittd, my husband tation facilities, Colvin said. Votun- and parents wanted to find out tecrs also received instruction on answers to.~uc~tions Jik~ where is the "crisis int~rvention and the problems bes~ reh~bll~tatton hospital,. what arc paraplcgtcs. and quadraplqics en- the imphcations ofnot walking again, counter whale retumina to the main- and what are muscle spasms." Colvin stream oflife, she said. said. The hotline staff hai access to a ., Deputy District Attorney Wallace Wade painted a different picture of Penney in bis sµ.mmation, calling the defendant a man who wanted to have his wife murd~. .. Mr. Penne wanted to do 1t. ·he didn•t need t be induced," Wade said. Wade called Penney's claim that he tried to call offttle killing "a story that could have been written by Wah Disney. It's a fantasy he's trying to lay off on you. the ladies and gentlemen of this jury." Penney testified, durin·g his day- tong stay on the witness stand Tuesdar.. that he had second thoughts about killing his former wife and tried to<:all off the plot the weekend before his arrest. He said he repeatedly telephoned "Bpbby" but was unabll' to reach him. W,ade contended that ~nning on June 14, when. Penney first tele- phoned "Bobby," he had engaJed in one continuous act of solicitation of murder, culminating in his July 2 arrest. According to testimony presented during the trial, Penney agreed to pay $3,000 for has wife's murdl'r and gave the undefC9ver investigator a $1.500 cash down payment for the job. "This year will be a real trial effort · because there is nothing like this in the country to compar:e it to," said Karen Colvin, a spinal cord victim wbo helped start the program. "About 15.000 to 20,000 people will have a spinaJ cord injury this year," said Kathleen Deasy. a spokeswoman for the National Study Center for Trauma and Emergency Medical Systems, which will house the hotline prognsm. Colvin's husband. John. contacted data base computer Colvin said Loui5e Mc~ew, o~e of the direc~o.FS noting that7"personne't at the Shock of the. ~auonal ~p1nal C<?rd lnJury Trauma Center "arc at our finsertips AsS0C1at1on, for mformauon about and are available on a rotation basis" , spinal injuries and found she wanted to provide answers to more specific ' to put together a national hotline. questions. The prosecutor reminded jurors that Penney, in conversations with the hit man that were secretly tapc- recorded and played during the 10- day trial, told "Bobby .. he wanted "a permanent th1n,1 done" in the early minutes of their first meeting an a r'C$\aurant parkins lot. "What is his defense?" Wade asked Sheritrs deputtes first learned that Penney was consideripg killing his former wife from Mrs. Penney. who contacted authorities after Burton confessed to her he had been off ercd $5,000 to either kill her or find someone who would. Most people who suffer spinal cord injuries are JS-to 30-years-old, and 70 percent to 80 percent of the victims are mate. Ms. Dcafy said. McKnew had ~ived · a ~mall The ,hotline Y<'.ill be open .24 hours a grant . from International Bustness day, with a mcd1cal answenngservicc Machines Corp., but she did not have takin• telephone calls at night. lf the enough fui;tds t~ get the project under situation is urgent, volunteers can be way, Colvin said. reached on a beeper system and will Colvin's husband and her father's return the call. IRVINE AMONG TOP HIGH-TECH CITIES •.• Volunteers who staff the hotline will answer questions about acute injury care, rthabilitation arid re- search. and provide the names of regional contacts (or people with questions about special services in their state, Deasy said. company, Gorn Manaal'ment, "We are l'ncou~ng daytime use provided,. more money for the pro-so clinical infonnauon and the data gram while the study center, which is backup is available," said Colvin. part of the Maryland lns~itute for "But jf they're in crisis. or just need Emergency: Me~1cal SCr:viccs Sys-someone to talk to, someone will be terns. provided mformat.Jon, advice available." and other non-monetary assistance. Tht national hotline number is From Al i'h reducing resident1al development and increasing open space. the assis- tant city manager said. Brady said both the city and the Irvine Co. have tried to attract hi&h- tech businesses, the so-called smo~e lcss industries. In addition to their environmental advantages, Brady said high-tech businesses '"also bring the type of persantcf the area who bas expen- dable income, which helps the overall tax base. These people are also better educated and more sophisticated." But Brady insisted that Irvine doesn't want ro limit local housing to expensive new sin&le-farruly homes that only well-paid high-tech man- agers can afford. Local industries also require plenty of employees at lower salary levels. Brady said Irvine has become the leading Southern Cah- fomia city in apartment construction so that less-affluent workers can also afford to live in the etty. 1 AJthough it already ranks htgh among high-tech centers and attract- ive living enrvironments, Irvine still has plenty of room to grow. City plans call fora population of2 IO,OOO by the year 2010. And even more high-tech development 1s on the drawing board Nearing completion is the Irvine Co.'s 4,000-acrc Irvine Industrial CompleJt, surrounding John Wayne Airpon in Costa Mesa, Irvine, New- port Beach and Tustin. The Irvine Co. has also created a new firm called the Irvine lndustnal, Research and Development Co .. which will oversee Irvine Spectrum The 2,200-acre four-part commercial development in east Irvine near the junction of the San Diego and Santa Ana freeways will include a 45 7-acre high-tech center and a 340-acre biological science center. Jn a statement released after the new company was formed, Irvine Industrial Research President Rich- ard G. Sim said, .. Our marketing studies indicate that Orange County's industrial base will expand by eight million square feet annually over the next five years. "High-technology and bio-science research and development arc ex- pected to be at the forefront of this dramatic growth. 1 sec that as our principal challenge -to respond to this market demand by developing lrvine Spectrum as a high quality, world class center for business and research." The rosy high-tech future i~n't confined to Irvine, according to Tim Elliott, Orange and San Diego coun- ties' staff representative for the American Electronics Association. California as whole is healthy in the htgh-tech arena. Its cities occupy the top five spots in the AEA 's national list of high-tech centers. Of the top 25 high-tech cities, 13 are in California. W1tbin California, Orange County ranks third in hiJh-tech businesses. Elliott said, naht behind Northern California's "Silicon Valley" and Los Angeles. If high-tech businesses in Orange and San Diego oounties are counted together, they surpass the number in Los Angeles, the associa- tion official uid. Elliott said about 95.000 people are now workina in hi&h·tcch jobs in Oranae County. He said one of the attractive features of these businesses is that each high-tech job is said to Cot ... ln, who became a quad-Volunteers, including staffers at the 1-800-526-3456. generate work for ei~t other em- ployees in related service and supply areas. Eartl?-quake rattles Wy.eming The four Orange County cities that made the AEA's top 25 list -Irvine, Santa Ana. Anaheim and Costa Mesa -are home to about 72 pereent of the county•s high-tech businesses. EJliou CASPER. Wyo. (AP) -The routines to spccUlate about the HaJI. Employees were evacuated until said,Akeydrawingcardforthearcais strongesteartbquakeeverrccordedin tremors. Montana and southwest the city building inspecton could UC Irvine, which produces a steady Wyoming rattled parts of six states South Dakota residents also notified check for damage. stream of trained e:r:·neers. ttus morning. damaging buildings in law enforcement agencies after the -Sandra Booth, a ttnnrter at the B Ell' h h o at least two cities and forcing some quake struck. --.:..-:-ut 1ott warn t at t c range evacuations. There were no i'mmedJ'· W 1 p f h •A-'-i; CaspcrSw-Tribune, said tier mother County cannot become complacent ate reports ofi.niury. aver Y erson ° t e IC4.luiquaa.e "thouaht it was an elplosion. beca th try. 1 ~ center said the quake was the largest F · · · :r\o.-h I USC 0 er areas arc 1ng to ure John Mi·nsch, srwJ...cs-an· "'ot the d ha h' w . urniture was JUmp1na. 'll'I; w 0 e awa th I crat· high t h ..., m 1• on recor to ve 1t yomang and h bl·..1 Thi bo "I e u 1ve • ec com-U.S. r~otneicat urvey's Nall'onal th b' t ._ . th R k ouse trem ~... ngs were unc-pames. Jie said cheap labor and less ~ -• e 'iftS 9ua ... ~ m e. oc Y ing on the table.•• • expensive land are prompting some Earthquake Information Center in Moun ta an region smce one ID Idaho Norm French, director of the state firms 10 relocate in Asia and Mexico. Golden, Colo., said the quake regis. in October 1983 that was 7.3 on the Office ofEmeifnMI Pre-redness in B II h · · tered 5.5 on the Richter scale and Richter scale. Two children were ·J .,... ut not a t e compet1t1on comes occurred at 9 .. 30 a.m. about 40 mi·les k'll db fl:..•i · d bri . a.~ Cheyenne, sai tlic quake was felt from outside the Uruted States. 1 e Y G.I 1ng e s an hiat quake. .., · Ch "N th b "Ell. ·d southeast of Casper. An aftershock Susan Brooks, deputy city clerk in stron .. y in eyenne. otamon goes "/• iotts;u · rumbled through the region at 9:57 Golden, Colo., said structural dam· ScottSmith.ma=·n editotofthe "that some bigger (high-tech) com-a.m., and was measured at an.intensi-~ caused ~ the quake to Golden Alliance Times in western pany in Orange County is not con-ty ofabout 'A.O. R 14.... C . . 1, ... ...1 Ne'--·ka. sai'd, wrhere we-t°'O tacted by a group in Sacramento, .. 1...,.. on omaruums compe acu "'-'1 .... ... Texas or lhe Carolina Triangle, J>eop!e in high-rise buildings in Salt authorities to order evacuation of the defirute shocks. It didn't rattle any· asking them to relocate. They'd love Lake Caty felt the quake, there were bu1ldina. thing but you could sure feel the to have our companies n)ove there." reports of broken china in western City officials in Douglas. Wyo.. ground under you move. You know To remain an attractive hi&h-tech Nebraska; and office workers in which is near lhe epiccntl'r, said the how it feels when somebody moves center, Elliott said Orange County r';:Dc=n:V't:r=in:te:rru=:pt:e:d=th:e:ir=m:o=m=in;;g;::=ea=n=h=q=u=a=k=e=cra;;:c;:k;:ed:;;a;;;:w~a~l21 ~a;:t ;C;:i;tY;;;;y:o:ur:c:h:a:u:"!. :T:ha::t's=ho;:w~it:;;f4:e:lt:.''==:. must continue to have a ready pool o( 11 reliable laborers. He said local col- leges must help pcopleacqu1retheJob skills needed in a time when tech- nology 1s changing rapidly. In ad- dition, he said, the county must make the best possible use of its tand, producing a harmonious bal~nce of -----------------.,;....<e~~ housing and business sites. "I don't think we can sit back and look at our climate and our way oflifc and say they will continue to attract companies," Elliott said. "I think• we've got to go out and be com- petitive;" CONCORil CENTURION ·Just .Call 642-6086 Wbt do y .. like abo41t die Dally Pilot? Wb1t dol•t yoa llb? Call tbe Dllmber at left asad yoar mena1e wlJI be recorded, truacrlbed and dtUYtted Delly .Pllot . Defl"'J 11 Guar.,..tNd MOll<M, Ftld•r II ,nu dO nOI ...... your pAtW l>r ' 30 o rn c.4 btfQIH µ 11'1 ano 1°"' eopy .,. bo ~ s.¥ and~ • rQu 00 no! 1...:-tOlll COC>Yb!l''7 •1t1 '~ 10 • m eo'Cf yQM copy ..-0. ... .., • Ctrcua.tlon t •••P."*'" ~C<uyY MMDI l~~--- to Ute appropriate ed1Cor. • The tame U·bour aa1wtrio11enlce may be used to record letters to die editor oa any topic. Coatrih&ora &o Mr Letters colama m11t iMltadt Utetr name ud telepbone number tor vertftcatlon. No clrcalatlon callt, please. Tell 01 wbat'1 011 yoor mlDd. ORANGE COAST lailj Pilat H. L. Schw•rtz Ill Pubhsh r Roumary Churchm•n Controller Stephen F. Carazo Pr0duc11on Manag r Oori•ld L. Wllll1m1 Circulation Mana er Clrcu .. tlon 714/'42-4333 • C .. uftled actftt1t•ng-T141142·M11 Alf othef depertrnMl9 '424321 MAIN OFFICE ' '330 ~nl fWt St COft• ~ CA .Md ll&nlS &• I Costa Mesa CA W'4'fl VOL 7l, NO. 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