HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-10-22 - Orange Coast PilotI
' I t , ........ A2
' M o ND A Y o 1 r ( 1 u L A ; .' : 1 rn 1
Two Newport boaters I
Strong winds, heavy surf force duo to Newport Beach, ac:cordina to Coast Weather and Ude reports indicate
Guard apokaman Rack Woods. that1fthclklfr1 motor had failed. tbe
But roup seu forcia them to tum two men would have drifted so IM
north into the •trona winds and 4-to southwest, he said. to head north in small, 12-foot skiff
By aoaERT HYNDMAN °' ....... ,... .....
The search continued today for two
Ncwpon Beach men lost in roUgh
'ilCal Saturday afternoon while head-
111 home from C!atalina Island in a
We asked folks what
preulng queatlon they'd
llke to put to P18Sldent
Reagan./ AS
University of California
regents approve $3.9
blllion budget for next
year./A3
~.v~~~~~:-;,hS1fiS.:·
C.Hfomla
The last and final Olympic
auction pulls In more than
$100,000 for museum.
IM
Ka don
T exas-slZe hailstones,
tornadoes rock Houston
area.JM
French Fiim
•auteur'
Francois
Trutfaut suc-
cumbS to
cancer at the
mof52.·
Moreeyanld .. laoed
candy Is dlecovered In
Japan.I AS
Jl'eaturee
Fewofthe 100masks
artists donated for auc-
tion by the~.
Harbor Art Museum work
as dlsgulses./81
The dimming history of
lighthouses wtll brighten
thanks to a restoration
campaign./81
Sportil
Boomerang was the big
winner In weekend ocean
racing, capturing the
prestigious Cal Cup In the
.. battle of the maxla." /C1
Corona del Mar High'a
standout crosacountry
team le priming for the sea view Le~ue and CIF
flnala./C1
The Ram• are• Atlanta
tonight In a natlonalty
te&evleed game./C1
Entertainment
South Coast Repertory's
prOductlon ofb'Top GJrla" wnr move to Loe Angelee
nextweek.183
Phyllll George lan't ex-
pect9d to be the next
a...s~.bUtlhe'•
got the Job./111
~~ooco~~ec~
INDIX
84
A3
85
A4
Cl-7 ..
C1
C4
81-2 ce
12
81
M Al
Aa
C4
014 ..
82 • A2
A4
12-foot motor skiff.
Steven Bailey, 2S, and Norm
Sea<>na, 22, both experienced sailors, were wt seen at 12:30 p.m. Saturday
when they left Avalon Harbor to
follow a fishina ~t the 29 mi~ back
.... of the bill
6-foot waves about 12 miles cut of Both men were described u e.a-
Calalina. pcrienoed sailon. Coast Guard helicopters from San Bailey works as a captain and
Dieao and Loi Aftldes were joined SqOna u a deck haoo on a ferry
today by a sea Plane in lllle search that . operated b~talina ~ Scr-
has moved to the southwest, covenn,s vice of Bal
5,600 squate miJn, WOods said. Bob Black, the company's man-·
Missingg
feared vie
of kidnap
I,
Detectives search
·ror Hun!ll!@on tot
lost in desert
KANSAS OTY, Mo. (AP) -
Praidena a.,... and Democntic cha~Wallerf. Mondale an.ck· int Oci.er's;.,..._.~ com.
peteact iD a showdown ~
beaded into t.be campaip's cloSina
two weeks with Mondale still playina
catch-up and Reapn's supponers
confident bis victory was lelC\lte. A.Steaina bis opponent's per-
formance, Mondalc aid today ... In
ODC~ be.ctida't dO• ~ Mbe did last time. But, on &hi centtal
question of command, knowledle. of
t.akina responsibility, I think be did
worse." ·
At a brief news eonference, Mon-
dale taia Reap.a declined to take ~nSibility for tbc deaths of
Americans in Lebanan and, instead,
blamed them on .. some IOcal com-
mander even thou&h be is the COlD·
mander in chief ...
ed
a.. YD ft he 0••• ... wJ:l I -r.WU"1:•u:a: up ~,...,"be .....
die ..... Howewr. Wlnte ~ d!ifl f6
staff' James Bater said todily 1lllil 'Ille
Rapa campeip dam DOI 'lll'Pll'
the dectioa is over yea. ~ • • free now to run our own c ., 'l · lad So oat theft IDcldO ... _..
bedoae ...
Biter laid tje bC:lina
notbi ill tbe de1lale ..
bim cT:.e ~_pp in the pall. •
.. Tbc president did wbat -....
do -be WU OD &he o&Dliwt T 1•'!
the eveaioa. ..
ftle Walalaud L~ femlH• from Bl Toro ... ~ mu. ...... , tlaelr .,,...,...
eteJr-Wbaw la tJae Urd UDaal 8Ul4
cutle balld.lq coatMt at Corona 4el llar
State lleacb landay. Additional pboto OD
JlaCeA2.
Mondale also said that. to Reqa.n. .. If t.bc iltepl war in Nic:a.raaua
becomes cmbarraisins. at is tome
minor cmi>k>yee (who as ~blc)
even thoup it is the pn:sidcftt Who ordered that Hlepl war ...
A pend of eeven .chol••k m
oollepate debate judp C:ded ....
d&Jc the winner by an C¥ea widJr
!IWJin than in the first delme ill
Lowsvilk, Ky. Tbty pve me 0.-..
crat 187 points to 168 lar *
prcsideDt. The same pud m I ••
Mondale the winner "¥ a a ' fll 17• to IS7 after the Lou~ 1
An ABC News pOll ol 695 ~
who watched the dcilalt llid (Pl••-W
.Mesa's
freeway:
Switch
in time?
State
..
TONY
SAAVEDRA
Focus u~ ; Hl Nu\s
Capo Beach, Santa Ana
accidents claim two lives
A T cus man walking across a Beach R~. aicrordinc ito Califomia
darkened roadway in Opistrano Hie•Y Patrol spokesman Kea
Beach was killed Sunday cveaina Daily.
when he wu struck by a motorist who · The driverof'the Fonl Pinto statioa a~rently faded to tee the Ptd· w.-d.a Ilia lhe tto.llOll 111idlat H._.'• car ftlPOl1lilJ • 1111 csuun, autboriucs saad. was idlfttiW • Ridmd C. Yara, ..-ae .... ...S Mt two ...
Wilham Adami Woecnita, 40.; WU 16.on..uaaN~. YlftlWU'ldal naova. cm9. 1"' H ........ -pronounced <It.ad at the scene of lbc fault 1in ·me ~l. Daily llicl. died .. ua ••• ~kal ~ .....
8:05 p.m. ICCident ocar: the "iftter-I• aw._ MCbad • ci ll1aa. ~ -.. ..... tllle S: 15 ~ s..;
sectKm of Plcific Codi Hjpway and Huntinltoe ._. ..we.t Oenwlo dlly •i* P
Lost blter, tltree cltUdnm lo ....... •1 TONY SAA V&DllA
·-~ ....... A Million VIQO man and Uvee
duktrea who apparently became
dilorieDted Whale lukiRI after..._,_
fall Sueda 1n Calpet'I Waklernal
Park ~ found by eeatcben ~ this momna. about a 100 yards from
lhe main trail.
~ said ROben Michltl
BoCUean. 44 his rwo dnkftn.
Midrid David. 9. and EricBria 6. as
wdl • Aleundtt abrid Qsillir, 9, all of Mamon V ac,o, wcrc a ht\le told
from thter rtiaht out. but ~ othetwitc unhar1Md
.. h kiftda' h an advcnturt or
I
A2**0ranoe COiet DAILY PtLOT/Monday, Octobef'l2. 1N4
Flery crasfl kills
6 on toll road
toEnsenada
~U4'NA, "Mex100 (AP) SU
people were tined an a wecienct MM-
ori colhsion abOut a mde aonb of
Rosanto Beach on the toll r'09d to
Ensen da, the Me.ucan ffWbway
Patrol said today.
Leslie Buplski, 25 her 11Aer Mary
BuPJlkl" 23, Grca W~ • un-known, and 1\\Oman,1denufied only
as Anita, all of n D1qo, bumed to
death Frlday n~t after the van tbey
were driving skidded out of control.
bi& lhe rold'a mediaa and ~
into anoaber van ffilbway F;trol ·~.<i:lf" M11U11 Coterotaid The D asten and Wtods were 1tudent1 at San Dieao Staie
University.
Tht dnver of the van in whQ the
four San Diqans were ktlled. Wall
Oukter, 24, also of San D1ceo, was
rtponed 1n serious oondition with
th1rd-dcgrec bums at T:ijuana Gen-
eral Hospital, Cotcro said.
Kerin Fujiwara. 8Ua Whitaker and Brad-
ley Wamon. all 8 (from left). wish for
cluamate Lama Bradbury'• me retam at
.,.., .... ,.....~Lee,.,..
olln tree planted In her naaae at ec.ta
lleea'• BWtoP K~ School where mlMln& child & a madent.
GIRL, 3, FEARED KIDNAPPED •••
From Al
"Maybe someone will know some-
thing that will lead us in the right
direction." Stodelle said.
off late Sunday afteml>on.
Stodelle said sheriff's investigators
a~ the search should be called off
so that they could concentrate re-
sources on the possibility of kidnap ..
~rtable restroom where she ~an-1shed was only SO yards from the
family campsite, it was hidden from
view by a clump of brush and some
large rocks, jnvestigators said.
Family friends offered Jtclp in a
different way Sunday.
--
Warmer days but cooler nights
Tl dee ~ ~ ~Cl TODAY 801M SeoanCI 1ow 2:32 p m. o 3 ao.lon s.oooo high ue P rn u lluffl!O
TUQOAY Capw ..._low ~.SC. r••• l:3t a.m 0 1 CllerM«ln.W V. =.::t'ir-I 53 • m t'.1 Qlarlotte,N.C. .... a11pm o.s ~ 8-wS high t 2S p m II 4 Ct1icaOO
Clnc:1nne11 Sun Mlt 1od1y •t 111 p.m, n.. c~
T'*Clay II 7~ e.m MCI ..., 1ge111 • CGlvmble 9 C e· 10 p II\ Columbva.Oh Moon lllta al !i 24 p 111.., ...... TllMNy C-0.N H
II 1:01 1.m llllCI Nb llgeln 11 Ii 57 P·"'· oeae.f't Worth
Da.ylon -----........,._.,..-..,...,..., o.n-Du Moltlet
DetrOlt Temps °'*'"'
SURF REPORT
90 T4 II 70 N .. " :! r, oM ., :: !:
70 ~ t6 .. t 21 .. ..
ff 1! ~~ ~ 66 .. • , 02 ., ..
42 'If
63 2t .. .. 14 47 62 .. ., ..
47 10 7t 117 ,, .,
61 62 17 711
A4 15 u" ti IO ... " ... " .. 61 ,. 33 .. .. 53 ... ., 70
67 i• 10 ea 14 15
A.tebltectm at work
Tlala waa die eeene at tile Corona del llu
State Beach 8anday u beachfrontballden
labored to conatnact their elaborate e!l".
trlee In the isnt annual und cutle
ba.llen, CODteet f'POUOred ~ tbe Com·
modons Clab of the !lewpor~: BarbOr
Chamber of Commerce. The~ entry
la dtaplaJed OD Pate Al.
Just Call
642-6086
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LIQUnl Nigull .....
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat ·
H. L. Schwartz Ill
Publisher·
RoHmery Churchman
Controller
Stepl\en F. Carazo
Production
Manager
Donald L. Wllllem1
Circulation
Manager
Clrculatlon 714/842-4333
CIHllflN advertl1lng 714/142-5871
All other department• 842-4321
MAIN OFFICE
330 w.., ear St Coll• t.t..-: CA
MU •ddtte Boll 1$e0 Colt1 Mt91 CA 92629
VOL 77.NO.-
More than 270 people 1COurcd the
desert near Twentynine Palms over
the weekend, covering more than I 0
square miles of the rocky terrain.
Members of the search-and-rescue
party . came from as far as San
Franc1sco.
Deputies said they are now looking
for a stocky white man in his early 50s
with gray hair, glasses and a pot belly.
The man was seen driving a dark blue
van in the area of the restrooms when
the girl was last seen. About SO parents whose children II!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ attend the same nursery school as
The manhunt was officially called
LOST •••
From Al
enced person," BJaclt admitted, but
said Bailey had made the trip at least
three times before.
.. There was nothina about that boat
they would consider unsafe," Black
said. "He (Bailey) knows what he's
doing out there. "We're just prayina that they find
them soon."
"We think it may be a Ford
Econoline (van) with bay windows in
the back and beiae curtat.ns. We don't
have a license plate number,"
Stodelle said.
He said the man was wearing a
yellow baseball cap when he was
spotted.
Anyone with any infonnauoo or
anyone campina in the area on Oct. ·1s is asked to contact the Sao
Bernardino County Sheriff at (619)
367-9544. .
Laura was camping with her
parents, Mike and Pat Bradbury, and
her brother Travis. 8. AJthou&}\ the
Laura planted an olive tree at Hilltop
Nursery School in Costa Mesa for the
little girJ. They said the saplinf. was a
"wishing tree" for the &irl s safe
return. "All the parents at the school also
help teach so we all feel like family,"
explained Ruth Robinson, a parent
and administrator at the school. "We
feel especially upset.
"We just wanted to offer a prayers
and plant the wish.ins tree.'' ahe said
of the tearful yjajl. "We feel very close
to thjs situatuion."
Laura started nursery school last
month.
FREEWAY ROUTE CHANGE.SOUGHT •••
J'romAl
whether (the route) is aood or bad for While the adopted path was thown to that any route througb downtown
them." have the most ift!pact of all the Costa Mesa will l'A«8te opposition,
He said the commission probably ,p~posed routes, displacing l ,l 18 there is not much doubt that the
won't make a decision on the re51denu. . freeway to the beach area must be
proposed cha nae for another three to !"f.oreovcr, it. would cost S 161 finished. fou h million to acquire the property and Miller said ttaffic on K<:tions of our mont 1· • build the freeway llol)I the old route Newport BouleVatd wu ranked 1 Sth
At least two candidates for City compared co total expcnacs of S9J and .20th hiahelt in the ttate.
Cooocil have arsued against routes mil hon for the ~fc.rred route. And the cnVJronmentll stUdy listed
east or west of tht bouJevant_They Rock Milld, Cosia Meu traffic annual dam.,es from uafftc lklti•
say the ftceway sboilld run stra.ialtt eqgineer, said those fi,pua art bUtd dents on the boulevard at $299,500
down the street, an option that has on 1980 valuations and would prob-f'rom Bristol Street to Bay Street, and
been discarded because the lengthy ably incrcue br the time the four-$295,000 south to the cit)'. limit. Both
construction period would dis-mile extension ftom Mesa Drive to fiaures were amona the top I 0 percent
courage cu tomers from opping at ,ndustrial Way i completed, pro~ an CAiifornia.
sJowntown bu inc s on Ne~n ablX ut 1994 MiUer ~plained that uamc meant
Boulevard. ·I don't thi!1k back an qte 1960s -for a freeway was instead crowcbna
fhe preferred route was ~hoscn money was as important 1111 ls now. onto Newport Boulevard, attracted
from the eight altemauve f!thS HWlwayclOllail ue reallytilhi," •id Jaf)dy by 1he baeh 10 the IOUtb.
reviewed in cht four-year. S2 malhon Miller. He 9ddtd that he didn'c drink '-The absolute wont tame, in my
environmental impact statement therewouldbe1nynewrevetauonuo jU(lalnat is on a wann Saturday
com pteted by tate and fedetal trans. ~uadc the comm11110n to abandOn 1ftefnoon, when the belth trafftC
portation dtpartmencs lut YfM· both che adopted and recommalded meeu can enroutc to the 1wap meet
The review hows that the new plans in favor of another route. attbe (Oranae County)laaqrouDdl."
route would dasplace :219 raidenti, Whale cuy a d state offidll• -.ree he ••d. t .
..
Designed,
Finished
Installed
31 Years Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters
FINE T QUALITY SHU I t EAS AVAILABLE
ON TME MARKET TODAY ••• AT FACTORY
DIR CTP IC Call(714)14M141or54B-1717
1977 Placentia Avenue • Costa Mesa. CA 92827
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
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Watson library
dedication set
A.uthorand LosAngclcsT1mcscolumni tJack mith
Wlll thefeatyred speaker at theded1cat1on ofOtangcOoast
College•a Norman E. Watson hbrao on ThU_rsdaf, 0cL25
at :S p.m. on the lawn in front of the library. A dinner will
follow at 6 p.m. in the Student Center.
Smith will speak at both events which arc Open to the public.
While the outdoor CCPCmony ls free, tickets for the
dinner are $20 apiece and can be purchased by callina
432-5885. Also attendipg the ceremony wall be Watson,
who retired last June from his post as chancellor of the
• COast Community College Distnct.
Crlttenton meetlnl Weclneeday
The annual meeting of Aorence Crittenton Services
of Orange County will be on Wednesday, Oct. :24, at l 1 :30 ,
a.m., at the Newport Beach Maniott Hotel.
Con~ssman William E. Dannemeyer and Dr. John
0. Milner, Professor Emeritus, USC SChool of Social
Work will be guest speakers.
·Both pcakcrs will addrc$s the 1mponant trend and
1asuesaffectingchildren's services al the nationatand local
levels. Fore more information, call Jim Kaspar at
810-5522.
Retired thief to •peak
Huntington Beach City Council bas proclaimed the
month of October as .. Cnme Prevention Month." ------~-------.....;
ln keeping wilh this, Huntington Beach Neif!!-
borhood Watch will '.sponsor a s~ial event entitled ·u
Takes a Thief' on Wednesday, Oct. 2-4, at 7:30 p.m. in the
Huntington Beach Ci vice Center Council Chambers, 2000
Main St.
Keeping bla serving band buay
Tennla pro Bjorn Dort aatoo"aeha a ptctme
for La111'1l Turner of tmne aurtJli. 'rialt to
-~--~~ -; ---~ -..__
$3.9Bbu
approved
UC camp ......
.,. die Ai-81 ... .,.. .
Unav~&~ol alifornia,...1bave1W1V•d1.9
'billion bu416t forJ 98S tlW indlidel •ti«• 2 I .. FIJI
an P"tvate. and lederal supptWt • well 11 SJ
addilional l&alC fund.in,.
The budict itjJi etentJ a 6 6 pmlCDI UICI 2
.apcndina, bu1 UC admantstralorl Mid dley ..
sutrm111 from k:aner tunes .
• •·11canaot repasrtbedamMCb)'SW:r.:"'~ cuts. .. Aid Vaoe Prtsadenl fot llfua.t W ......
UC PJaidenl David P. Gatcfcner md a o:wn .. IP
(fitcal) l'CSUQUOO wtll We kmier dma 1luee ~ ID cawn JCVcre problem areas IUdl as buddi• .., • ..,
aaicc inJtiuction ~uipmcnt ud faciliuea. .. The b!J(lget mcludes a~ for mMe tbaD SI .5
billion an siaic aid, indUd1n1 Sl48 m1Uioe for Clllltal
impro\rements
Lt. Gov. Leo McCarthy said kgislauve approval ol
the rtqucst woulcth1ngeon the economy
Educatson has received !"lai&h pnonty tn s.aar.en-
to.'' MCCarthy said. .. However, for man) lcgislaion, tbe
hi&hcst pnority now is reduaid speodma I tbtnk: 1t will
tum on whether or not the recovery stays strona."
Faculty sa!ariti·are not in uded m the tJudlet. The
univcrsstywill ask for&cultynarics tater. Bakersaid.
The reaicnts also rt'.CCtvod a report from uruvcrsity
ofTJCial1 who said the numbC't Of tUdents'Uanlferina to the
--.........:m n1ne-ampus UC ~lml &oat commumty c:oase.es bat
the Fila tennl• abop la 8outb Oout Piasa.
Bofl'• Tlatt drew hundred. of aclmlrera.
dropped by 40 percent in lhe lut l 0 )'C:U'I.. ' -tbc otliciah said they have eamwted SI million
toW2rd e.ncoura1m1 transferl.
Special guest speaker Mike McCaffrcy, a retired •
professional thief will speak about past criminal
experiences as a ihief and will asdvlse what to do to
prevent becoming a victim. Mc<?affrcy spent nine years
behind bars in various jails and prisons for the crimes of
The regents voted to estabhsb ... ttanster centers'" to
aid community coUeae studentS an making the transat10n,;
and to provide more .cackmic support fOf' ttanstCt
students on the UC campuses. ~---'-""--"....;.....-~-----------------The 106-c:ampus comm='• SY*Jn will ask
for another $3 mtllion lll its to ICt up 30 ua.adCr
centers, which would pro~i.de ~ a.•n• b:
students who want to a>nt1nue lheir educauoa. state
community collqe Chancell9rGcrald Hayward aid.
shoplifting and burglary.
For more information, call Suzie Wajda, coordinator.
at S3~S933.
'If you could ask President
question, what wquld it be?'
Reagan one
Lion• alate coatame ball
1"he Huntington Beach Host Lions Oub will present
its annual Lions Halloween Costume &l1 on Friday, Oct.
26, at the Huntington Harbour Bay and Rac9uet Club.
All proceeds will JO to Lions charities. Tickets at $35
per couple or $20 for smgles, can be purchaSed at the door
or in advance by calling 960-3114. Las Vegas performer
Fats Johnson will entertain.
Halloween carnival due
Villaac View School in·Huntingtop0 Bcach will bold a
Halloween camvial on Friday, Oct. 26, at 8 p.m. at the
school at 5361-Sisson Drive.
Activities start at 3:30 p.m. and will continue until 8
p.m. There will be costumes, bin&o, cake walb, games, prices and treats.
Fall Five Miler scheduled
The third annual Corona del Mar Fall Five Miler is
· scheduled to be held Saturday, Oct. 27. through the streets
of old Corona. The race begins at 8 a. m. at Corona deJ Mar
State Beach.
Registration, which • s limited, is SI l. For infor-
mation, call 64().:.2271 .
Creative workshop offered
The Center for Creative Alternatives. 132 E. 18th St.,
Costa Mesa. will present Dr. Ulrike Kranz of Austria in a
work.Shop on Saturday, ()c( 27, from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Entitled .. Magical Families: A Drawing Funshop for
Pmnta and Kids," the workshop will teach you to use
creative drawing to help your family understand each
others penonalitics and relationships with one another:
bow to alter negative behavior and communication
patterns; how to cope with family conflicts; and ways to
enjoy each other more fully.
Enrollment for both parents and children (7-10 years)
is limited to allow individualized attention. To reserve a
space, call 642-0377.
Monday, OCt. 22
• 7:30 r.m., Lapu Beacla A.111 Commt11lon, City 'kall Counci Chambers, SOS Forest A venue.
• 7:30 p.m., lrville Tru1portatloa Comml11loa, City
Council Chambers, 17200 Jamboree Blvd.
• 9 a.m., Oruse Couty Traaaportadoa Comm.lntoa
, Hill of Administration, 10 Civic Center Plaza, Santa
Ana.
• 1:30 p.m., Oraage County PJamLllls Comml11lon,
Hall of Administration, 10 Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana.
Pou cE Lo G
Darrel Coi.oon Hutbagton Beaclt
Ftunclal couiltut
"I would as.k him how
he"s going to balance the
budget."
Gene DeVlto
Villa Part
~~s alwa~ said on
television he will not cut
Social Security benefits,
but he didn't say anything
about state med1caJ aid."
Jerry HepflD1er
Gardea Grove
Credit ualyai
.. Why docs (Vice-Presi-
dent) Bush pay lcs taxes
than has janitor. rve heard
Iha\ ill.lld i1 kind of ~n ••
~goay
Benefits clerk
"Will he increase our
taxes?"
Lawmen capture Suspect
in Elsinore robbery, rape
A man auspcc:ted of robbina and
sexually attackina Oranae County
visitors to a camppound above Lake
Elsinore was arrested Sunday after
takina cover in a brushy canYon area,
Riverside County Sheriff's deputies
re~today. n Joseph Swan., 2S, is bei
Itel on suspicion of kidnap, arm~
robb'cry and _sexual assault, officials
1"tne
Polioc arrested five motonsts on
1uspicion of dNnken drivana. OJcar Sanchez. 22, was amsted at 11 p.m.
Sanudayon AltoaAvcnuc:and West
Yale Loop. Mark Anthony Hripu, :20. was arrested at 2 Lm Sluuroay on
Chesapeake ancs Savannah. Lawrence
Buckley Wll arraied at 12:4S a.m.
Saturday on Business Center Drive
and MacAnhur Boulevard. teven
Ray People, 2S, was arrested at 11:15
P. m. Friday at Campu and Un1vcr-
$ity dnvcs. Orea<>t')' Soon Klement,
2S. was arrested at 7:2S p.m. Fnday
on Chaparnl Avenue. • • • A 1)'PCVt'!ltcr WU reported stolen
unday aftcmoon rrom • con-
domanlum on lver Drh • • • Tires -were lltahcd on two a :J:rked on Aberdeen Sunda)' mom·
"" ll
said. Ba:il was 1et iooay at 200,000.
Shcritrs deputies had spent about
two wccb 1nvcstiaatina a stnna of
robberies and ICJ. attatks at the UpF.
San Juan Campground just outside
Oranae County.
iibc latest attack was reported
Saturday by an OntWC 1County cou-
ple and their two children 'Who said
the muked man robbed lhem and
• • • A Karrn Ann bne rcsJdcnt told
police a stereo and speakers were
stolen tolMtimc Fnday nip1 ••• .A oome_uter was ROien from a
home on l{Ulh1na Wand Entry was
throuJh lhe front door whale ~he
resu:ltnts were away, Police saad. • • • A condomanium on ~neview was
broken mto wnh the burjlar takinu
TV 1Ct and cash.
COllta ......
A Slnta Ana man s lrrtSted
early unday by p0hce [nvest.una a
Co ta Mesa bur&lary n whteh •he
cu1pnt ranlllCicd a home and un-
nattd on a laundry basket of womea·s
WMkrprmcnt Mart lien Mc:Gtn·
'"m" 2lr. ns taken Into c1,1stody
around .t 30 a m offi~no conduct·
inautaktoutofa moto le kCd
rn the nn of the zed
sexually assaulted lhe mother.
\ Offi~rs said Swan was potted
later Saturday but evadtd arrest ~
taking refuge an a remote area. He
allcacdly returned to the area Sund'y
and again was chased by-deputies~
state rangers. He was apprehend~
followioa a foot chase mto a canyon.
dcpuues said.
J8ClyRose
Totin
Sales representative
Doll Bradley
CostaMeu
Doorm&D
.. How can you stand 1M
insults and half truths of
Foxhoven chosen
top FV firefighter
Capt. 8111 Foxhoven. a 14-year ~ of the
F<>untam Valley F'U'C Department. bas been honored u
lhc city's Firefl&hterofthe Yearby the City Council
The awarcf s recipient is selectiid annually by fdlow
fircfilhten. ~
Foxhoven is thi year's president of the Fireman's
Association and orpniz.cd 1hc F°U'C IDc;partment•s 20th
anniversary cclcbtation hc1d Saturday cvcmQa.
He also hdped OJPDizc Fire Safety Day lut 'MCkcnd
in Fountain Valley,whiCbfeaturcdftlms,exhibiuandlive
demonstrations for the public.
Foxhovenjoined the Eounuun Valley fire Depart-
ment in 1970, wu promoted lo an cnginc:a. and this year
WU named a fire captain.
"I 111css. what his reac-
tion or feeling if Mondale
took die prcSMScncy .... Moodalc.,... ~-~Al hes
at sea for Cba&t
1achtsman Macdonnell
Stanley MacdonnelJ Corona deI Mar. Who :wOrked
with New.J>O!! Harbor )-.:btsmen for mOf'C tbaD three ~died Wedncsdayofcanccr fOJJOWingan CxlCDdCd
illness. He was S7.
The fonncr skipper of the Balboa Bay Oub·s yaciht
Sa~iw was wcll<n~ iti lhc cwpon Harbor area for
his sailing and boat maitlleaanoc skills.. •
No funeral scrviocs-..ill be held though his ashes will be scattered 1t sea Tuesday.
Mr. Macdonnell is SWVJvcd by his \\ife P~. son
Dan of Marina dd Rey. daualu.cr Ouistina Jensen· of
V alcncia and two pnddtildrm.
Debbie Wellare
Hatlqtoll Bea~
Seerecary .. One thing I'm wonder-
ina is if he's going to raise
taxes for the billions of
dolla~ in dcfic1encics he's
creating on all the defense
spendmg."
QlffordS.Browa
Cerritos Aulltut~..,.r .. Whal iSC goiDf to do
for the minorites wstb un-
employment (for that
group) at 14 to 18 percent..
or pn)bably higher. As a
result of that thctC is a lot of
crime. His trickJe down
theory is pretty good, but it
basn 't trickled down."
H. Darwodd Young dies
H. Durwood \' ow:i&, no was the plant super-
intendent of lbe ewpon Fish Cannery for many years.
died Oct. t 0 in hi Desert Crest home where be had lived
for the past 20 years. He was 73.
Officers checking vehicles in the
oeighbomood became suspicious of
the motor'C)clC and waited for the
driver to return. McGinnis ias
booked into City 3ai~ \\'here 'he
remains in lieu of $25.000 bail on
suspicion of residential bUJ'l)ary. • • • A l 9-ycar-<>ld Costa MCA man -.-as
arrested Sunda)" on suspicion of
growing manjuana after police found
four potted marijuana plants an his
bedroom. Michael Patnck Fant was
booked into city jail, \\here he
remains in lieu of $1 ,000 bail. The
arrest came after police were called to
a family disturblncc a& the house on
Anaheim Avenue were Fant lhed
with hi mother. he told police that
~he wanted him to leave. Offiocri
found the plants when they tscOtted
the teen-ager into his room to pa ·his
bclongtnp.
H11nu.n,ton 8eacll
Tools \•alucd at $4,000 w re iaken
from an opcp 111 in me ~ sooo
block of Willet lane between 4 p.m.
turda~ and 9Lm. unda~. • • • Poh~ an"CStcd an Edgcvicw R d
min f'or battery :and mahnous nu
chicfaftcrheall~ly liahtl) iniurcd
on m nanddam acardun an
altcrea{fon. Divid rrtll en
into cu tody abo t : IS p m. unday
af\crhcatlc#dtymu on man 11th
1 crowbar and th~ a hammer
at nothcr.
Mr. Young was a charter member of lhc Newport
Harbor Elks Lodge and among the foundcn of the
Police Reserve Association of Newpon Beach.
He is survived by his v.uc Jean, sons H.D. Y:oune, Jr.
of Virginia and Richard of Mission Viejo, grandaughtcr
KellyJean and a si ter, Yvonne Johns ofAorida.
'Private fuoena.l services were held.
·dam to a car parked on the 2SOO
block of 16th Street. ~ vandal
reponedl>' jpundW'Cd all four tires
and napped off an Clcctric antenna. • • • An outbOard motor Orth $750
was tolen from a bolt docked on the
2400 block of West Coast High.way. • •• A tckvbion set and a radio were
stolen from a rcsidenOf' oo the 2400
block of 16th Sttcct. Police said the
'Crook entered the residence throuah
an U:nlockcd window. T:be lots
put at s1so . • • • Clothing onh bout $2,SOO rqs
tOlen from 1M Flamango Boutique.
2721 East Coast Highway. • • • B~ took about $2.120 worth
of fishi e frOm a boat docked
OD the l 00 b1od: Of W Coas1
Hijbwa).
Slain p~<;>f' s briother
refuses to blame Viets
M Ora~· Cout DAil. PILOT/Monday. October 22. 19(1.4
Film genius Truffaat dead at 52
P RIS (AP) -Fran Ols 1 ruff ut,
the eminent Frenth ttij'ettor who
revolt inst "fi c ~ry films"
produced m ny of I mo l c.
clnamed na popular w rb of cw
W ve cinema, died of amcer. He:
52.
Trutfaut. who I med last yearthnt
he had a brain iumor, dit_d Sund.ta)' t
the American Hospatal in the Paris
uburb of NeuiUy.t whcrq hC had been
admitted about luday1 o. Ho pita\
'°urtts said he spent his 1nal da) -s an
a coma.
The short, dark-haired Parh native
wrote as well as darect most of his
25 major films and sho works, and
acted in some of them.
He had been a major orce in the
film world since the rclea$C of his first
major picture. "The 40Q •Blows," in
1959, and was a leader of'the group of
French directors who re'1olutionizCd
modern cinema with their more
spontaneous and personalized New
, Wave styJe.
Truffaut' 1973 film "Day for
Night•' e.nm d ham n Academy
. Award for be t foreign Olm.
Amon hi other II-known
'-"Orb are .. The t 1etro" atamn•
tberine Deneu\C and Gerard [)c..
pardieu, which won a record IOCcsar
awards, Franoe·s equivalent of the
Oscar; " hoot the !Piano Player:• 1
tragicomic story of gangsters and star·
crossed !oven; .. Jules and Jim," :a
lyncal tale of best friends 1 n lo~e with
the same oma pla)ed by bnne
Moreaui and •·The Stof) of Adele H;
about VictorHugo'sinsahc. lo't'"s ck da~hter, played b) Isabelle AdJam.
His last film,••confident1ally
Yours, .. starring Fann) rdant and
Jean-Louis 'frintignant, wiu com·
pletcd in t 983 and released m •he
United States early :Uus year.
Truffaut was born in Pans on Feb.
6, 1932, the son ofan architect. At 14,
enchanted by the cinema and 1n
conflict with his family,· he aban-
doned. his studies and did odd jobs
such as stock boy. office boy and
welder. Hi rics of false staru
rncludtd a stint an the arm). fro
which he deserted
Thufllut was often his o~'n lead1n&
mari - a movie maker 1n .. Da) for
Ni.ftht .. a benevolent doctor tryins to ~ahze a mute Child found tn the
Jungle in the 1970 work "The Wild
Child ...
Jn 1977, he dtd his first acting job .
for another director -Steven
Spielberg -~playing a French UFO ~pen tn "Oose Encounters of tht
Third Kind."
Film critics rtprdtd Trutraut
the unoontested master of the "film
d'1uteurn -the highly personal film
written and directed by the same
individual.
Truffaut and his contemporaries
like Claude Chabrol. Jeat1-Luc God·•
ard and Eric Robmcr believed in
authenticity and spontaneity, Sttkina
to make their movies reflect real life.
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P riest's
abduction
'political'
WARSAW. Poland (AP) -Per
land's Roman Catholic Church said
today that the kidnapping of the Rev.
Jerzy Popieluszko, an outspoken prcr
Solidarity priest, was politically
motivated and that bis life may be in
danger.
"The information we have about
the circumstances of the kidnapping
indicate that the cul~rits acted for
political motives," sa1d a statement
mued by the Roman Catholic
episcopate in WarSaw.
"The act of kidnapping ... brings
deep concern. On the one hand there
is fear about his life and on the other
there is fear that kidnapping ma)'
become a method of political strife in
our country." Popieluszko, 37. of Warsaw, has
been missing since Friday evening.
Police searched roads and coun·
tryside near where Popieluzko was
abducted around t' city of !f orun,
about 125 miles northwest of War-
saw, said a Torun priest, the Rev.
Jozef Nowakowski.
Nowakowski. in a telephone
ntcrview Suncay, said police are
"using every means-possible" to solve
the case. Polish television broadcast
police telephone numbers for people
to calJ with informatton about
Popicluszko.
Church officials said they were in
touch with authorities investigating
the kidnapping~ However, they did
pot say what information led them to
believe the priest's life was in danger, or that the kidnapping was politicaU~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ motivated. ~ No one claimed responsibility for
PEACE ON EARTH SEEMS SO SIMPLE '
FROM 251,000 MILES AWAY. · .
But the closer you get, th'
f more elusive it becomes.
Nobody knows this better l than the United Nations,
r whicll has persevered in the
} pursuit of peace for the past
~ 39 years. I Patiently, persistently, tile
U.N. has kept up the quest1 ~ often in the-face of great dis· i · couragement, ever buoye~
' · by the certainty that it is in
' the right.
When U.N. efforts fail,
read all about th m on the
front pages. But, its succes
often go unsung:-confron·
c
tations avoided, accords
achieved, tensions eased.
Quiet diplomacy seldom
makes headlines.
Those who expected the
U.N. to perform miracles
are no doubt disappointed.
In the words of former Secre·
taiy·Genera.l Kurt Waldheim,
the U .N. could have~ .. a
vitality, a variety and a poten·
rial unmatched by any human
institution that has existed
before7
It is that thought which
moves us to salute the U.N.
as we have for 26 years. Em·
pJoyees at McDonnell Douglas
plants and offices in the
United States and Canada
obSenie the founding of the
U.N. as a paid holiday.
The U.N. deserves our
support. Rather than dwell
on its shortcommgs. Jet us
reflect on its aspirations and •
accomplishments.
The world is worth it.
I
the kidnapping.
Solidanty supporters throughout
Poland gathered at churches Sunday
to pray for the release of Popieluszko,
who has been the target of frequent
attacks by the. Communist JOvem-
9'1ent for sermons advocating the
ideals of the now:<>utlawed Solidanty
movement.
~
JOlymp ics
.aucti on
in LA nets
$100,000
Tornadoes, hailstones rip
buildings in Houston area
By lite A1Hdattd Prell
~om docs and b11il the ize of golf balls truck Houston suburb toda •
dam&g10J store in three-block i;tretch and sh ttering window in an
11panmcnt cometcx; 8 public safety official sa1d, Ute thunderstorms that
prOduced the tWlsters were nding the crest of a slow moving .cold .front that
battered the lower Mississippi Valley and c045tal Texas wath capt other
tornadoc nd up to 8 inches of rain and forci:d hundreds to flee the~r ~ome~ .•
Flash flood warnings were In effect t<><Say (rom eastern Texas to Mis lSSiPPl·
Forcoasucalied for up to 3 more inches of rain toda).
PAC contrlbutfoas ldgber
WASHINGTON -The 65 candidates for U.S. Senate 5eats this year re
running far ahead of their 1982 counterparts in contnbutions received from
poli11cal action committees, Common Cause re~rted Sund!'Y: The sclf-$tylcd
citizens' lobby said reports to the Federal Elecuon Comm1ss1on showed tile
candidates reClCived nearly as much PAC money through Sepl 30 as their
counterp:irts accumulated lhrouJh the November elcctiops two years ago The
Common Cause study found that total receipts for the Senate hopefuls were up
3S percent over the amount raiSed at the same point of the 1982 ~nate races
and that three Senate candidates alttady have uceeded the hiahest amount
spent by a candidate in 1982. .
Man held la drownlng•
GRANTS PASS. Ore. -A 29-year-old California man was arrested for
investigation of murder in the allegedly deliberate drownings of his 4-year-old
daughter and a niece in. a backyard w~dina poQI, police said .. Michael 0.
Fritchey of San Bemardmo, was taken into custody Saturday n1ght after.he
went to Josephine Memorial Hospital's emergency room and bepn talkma
about the Sept. 24 drownings. said Oregon State Police Detective R~n Reea.
Victims Tiffany Fritchey, 4, and Paula Forbes, 2, had been plax1na w1* other
children in the t><_>ol at Fritchey's home Sept. 24, San Bernardino Pohce Sat.
Ros~ Dvorak said at tbe time.
Mlsslle moratorium aot appeallng
WASHINGTON -Secretary of State George P. Shultz says a
moratorium on missiles in Europe wouldn•t appeal to the Rea.gal\
administration, even though Moscow might be leaning toward such a proposal
to get arms talks started again. ··ro think in terms of a moratorium of some sort
at the present very unequal level would not be to our advantage." Shultz said
on NBC-TV's "Meet the Press" Sunday. "To sugest it would be to their
advantage; but to accept it would no~ be to oun." Shultz ~d statemen~ fro.m
the Kremlin last week "perhaps" indicate Moscow might be droepmg its
earlier demand that all of the new American cruise and Pershing II missiles be
dismantled in Europe as a condition for resuming negotiations on ·
in.termediate-range nuclear weapons.
Campbell clJaages soap ads
NEW YORK -The Campbell Soup Co. has agreed to change an
advertising campaign suue!itina that eating its soup promotes good health,
when in fact it has too much salt. the stale" attorney general's office said Sunday.
A sirigle serving of Campbell's soup contains more salt than recommended for
one day, according to.Attorney General Robert Abrams, who said Campbelrs
also agreed to pay his=1office S25,000 in expenses. Abrams said the Campbell
ads, which use the sl s "Health Insurance" and "Soup i.s Good F~,"
make misleading com ·sons between the product and other foods and fad to
mention the soup's sodium content. , •
Dead m1aer dldn 't wear belt
ACTON -Gold miner Roy Madsen died in a mineshaft 34 houn after he
~ncountered poison air in an accident the mine's owner said could have been
averted had the veteran prospector worn a safety line. Allen Herron said
Sunday that Madsen, 42. who apparently passed out and fell down a 40-foot
shaft 175 feet underground. was not wearing proper safety equipment. •'. .. the
proper belt and the safety lines were there, but for some reason he didn't attach
them to himself;" said Herron, whose Pac West Development Co owns the
Governor Mine.
• Gasollne prices Increase
LOS ANGELES-As cold weather sets in and people prefer staying home
to drivina, ~troleum prices have dropped for beating fuel while increasing for
gasoline, 011 industry analyst Dan Lundberg says. In a reversal of the seasonal
pattern, average domestic gasoline prices have risen 2 cents a gallon since
Labor cay while heating oil costs declined about the same amount. Lundberg
said.Sunday. Despite recent oil price cuts of 40 cents to $2 a barrel by Norway,
Britain, the United Arab Emirates and Nigeria, gasoline prices kept rising
unseasonably because of continuing strong demand by U.S. motonats plus
.. disappointing .. third-quarter refinery profits, Lundbe11 said.
$ J million blaze la Echo Park
LOS ANGELES -Three firefiahters were injured today in a suspicious
blaze that caused SI million damage to a partially built apartment buildina in
Echo Park. a fire official said. One was treated at a local hospital for sccond-
degree bums to his neck and ears, fire spokesman Larry Ford said. The pre-
dawn blaze seriously damaged a nearby house, forcing nine residents to flee;
Ford said. The Red Cross was helping them find tempo~ lodgings, he said.
Medlc'• kln In accldent
LOS ANGELES - A paramedic who rushed to a fatal traffic accident in
San Pedro found the victims were his daughter and her fiancee, a Fire
Department spokesman said today. ''Everybod).' lives with the possibility of
having that, of course, but it's a little more possible when you·rc in the rescue
business," spokesman Larry Ford said. Four fl.re companies and four
ambulances responded to a rcPort of a iwo-car collision at 9:49 p.m. Sunday at
19th Street and Western A venue, Ford said.
The woman, 2 Ii died at Harbor General Hospital Sunday night, not long after
the two-car col ision at 19th Street and Western Avenue, spokesman Larry
Ford said. Her fiance, also 21 , was pinned in the wreck and died at the scene.
Doonesbury moved In ,,,.per
DARMST AOT, West Germany -J'he U.S. armed forces newspaper
Stars and ~tripes announced today it was ntoving the comic strip
0 Doonesbury" to the its commentary page because it has a "blatant" political
messaae. A boxed message in the comics section said, .. Many comicstnps ca~
political mesaaaes. but none is as blatant as Doonesbury.'~:Stars and Stripes
will carry Doonesbury on the Columns and Comment page at least until after
election day," the statement said. The comic strip, created by Gary Trudeau,
recently has taken swipes at Ptttident Reagan's policy on minorities.
WORLD
OPBC memben meet In Geneva r
GENEVA, Sw1tzcrltnd -011 ministers from five of OPEC's 13 members
arrived in Geneva today to discus ways of avcn.ina a price war and to pre~re
for a full emergency mcetina nut week. The meetinJ follows unCApected price
cuttin& last week t>y Nigeria, which belon1s to the Orp.nization of Petroleum
Exportina Countries, and by Britain and Norway, which arc not mcmbcn of
the cartel. SoutttS said the meeting is pan of continuing consultations limed at
maintamina OPECs price. The outcome of the meeting could be crucial for
Western Europe. since lower oil pnc:es oould transform a meager economic
recovery mto a Jasti~ boom. accordiQi 10 .some Wen.European analytt ----'"'-
Bmbau7 •mff lartlJer reduced
BEIRUT. Lebanon-The U.S. Embassy, faclnanewkidnapand btimb1na
threats, has reduced its tafT to about 27 by cvacuatlnJ a dozen more
employee$, reliable sources said. In Israel, meanwhile, the Cabine1 ~ed a
Lebanese plan for tartins n~otiations on an Israeli troop withdrawal from
south Lebanon, and officials announoo:t the 600th &tality amona lneli
soldiers in Lebanon since the June 1982 invasion. U •• EmbaSSf official
refused to comment on the rc~rt that more employees had left Btmn. One.
who spoke Sunda1 on condlllon he not be identtficd, $lid, 0 Movcmcnt of
people in and out (of Lebanon) 1s cla sificd for sccunt rtasons."
Leyte fnv••lon re-enacted ""
RED e ACH, Philippine -Hundreds of U. . and Fihpmo marin
On1nge Co
No 'coattail ide' expected
for Republicans this year
WASHINGTON (AP) -Demo-
crauc campaip anal)'IU are claiming
that President RQ1U•s 1ost momen-
tum between the twO .PfC$ldentia1
debates has all but dashed Re-
pubhcin hopea ofswtcptng scores of
OOP candidates mto House seats on
the prcsident•s coattails.
And, while Republican wategists
dispute an)' lesseriing of Reagan·s
popularit)', they,1en&ally~. that a
GOP lai\dslide 01 the Democrai.run
House now seems unlikely.
Even if R~n SUJ8CS ahead in the
polls, it is P!'Obably too I.ate in the
campai111 to be translal'Cd into a tide
• of extra volCS for Republican con-
gressional candidates, Democratic
campaign officials contend.
Democrats had feared that Reagan
Pr td t R would be so far ahead of Democratic ell en ea&•n aad Walter Mondale •how ~008 ezpreeelona dlll"lq debate. . nominee Walter F. Mondale in the
-
' polls by ~rly October that he would I I , _____ ,....... ________ ...;... ___ ....... _____ tum hts attention to help~ GOP r congressional candidates.
But the first telev:iscd eresidcntial
DEBATE SEEN As A DRAW... debate on Oct. 1. in which R~n
was widely reprd as ,giving a halting
From Al performance, changed the dynamics
narrow margin th"ought Reagan was
the winner. The network reported
that 39 percent called Reaaan · the
winner, 36 percent said it was
Mondale and 25 percent wd there
was no clear victor. The margin of
error was 4.5 percent, which meant
that sustistically it was a virtual tic.
In a poll taken for Newsweek.
magazine by the Gallup Organiza·
tion, Reagan was judged to have done
abcnerjobbya barcplurality-43to
40 percent. But the poll of 446
rqistercd voters had an error margin
of plus or m inus six percentaJ,e
points, meaning that agam the dif·
ference was too small to be statistical·
Jy meaningful.
not only of the preside~al contest
and the farmbelt."' Reagan was flying to the West butoftbecongressionaldisnpaiansas
Baker responded that Bctkel was Coast today for campaign appear-sell
"whistling past the graveyard" and ances in California and Oreaon. "We thought by this time they
that Mondale led only in the District Mondale was heading in the opposite (Reqan and Vice &esident Gcor&e
of Columbia and Minnesota. direction for appearances in Philadcl-Bush) would be out campaignina lor
Mondale. who got a boost in the phia. northern New Jersey, New York their House candidates. Obviously.
polls from his strong showing in the and Ohio. they are not," said Martin Franks.
domestic policy debate two weeks The openini question of their executive director of the Democratic
ago. was hoping for a similar result debate dealt wath Central America, Con~ssional Campaign Commit·
from their second and..final debate to and Mondale moved quickly to put tee.
help tiim close that gap. • the pre$idenl on the defensive. ··1 am Skeptical that even if Ronald
Sen. Paul Laxalt, R-Nev., the He..sai4 administration p<?licy in Regan hits a home run Sunday pi,ght
Reagan campaign chairman who was the region "brings up the whole (in the second debate), that they
clearly upset two weeks ago after question of what presidential leader-would be able to capitalize on it'• to
Reagan's subpar performance in the ship is all about." help GOP House candidates. Franks
first debate in Louisville, Ky., was Mondale referred to the CIA man-said last week.
obviously relieved after this one. ual revealed last week that advocated Republicans say they still hope to
"Jn the worst case scenario, I think terrorist actions apinst the Sand· win enough scats io the election to
it was a draw and in that case ... it was mista government tn Nicaragua and repin effective, if not actual, control
a Ronald Reagan victory," said called covert-action against that of the House. Democrats now domi·
Laxalt .. Mondale needed a knockout country "a classic example of a nate the chamber, 266-167, with two
tonight and it was far from that." strategy that's embarrassed us, vacancies.
Even some Mondale supporters strengthened our o~tion and "Our candidates are running
Con~1onal Commntee.
He d the ct that almost
many voicrs now idcnuf y thcmsctves
as Repubhcan a Democrats IPCUs
well for the hkelihood of ll&"ificant
OOP pjns in the House.
However, he l4ded ••1t•s difficult
to_ put a number qn how big our .pins
willbe. It as more difficult 10 ptedict an 1984 1lhan ever bef orc. ..
Vand~ Jqi and othct GOP
. trateglsts are playn1g down prospeas
of a GOP landslide, although he
noied •·aga1oof2Sseauwouldgaveus
etTecuve control ..
However, Vandcr Jagt added, "I
;oon•t rule out the poss1bility that 9.'C
cOuld slide back some:·,
Democrats have been the maJOrity
party rn the Houae-for ffie past 30
~ However, large pins made by
RCll\lblican in the 1980 election that
brought ~~ to power SCl UJ> a
coalition in· the House between Re-
publicans and about SO conservative
Dcmocn who mlJed 1Nm rh• .,.BOU W "
That ptQll ~ ...... ~C:::3it.::
lcadttlb1p
Buttbc~ ...... ..:s 1eau mn tbC l 912 midllail
givm4 Spaker TbamM P
dfccuvc control ofbb •-=-qatn
Dc:m~ IO one dillric:t thaube ha~ been tlYUll
their haftlal 10 "tlpbllC., die Colt-~CU1 atKldby.tialumlll>mM>-cnn BIUCC A. Mormon. Aftertb.,rP
appeared an the staie with Momt0n•1
GOP ~oent. Latty DeNardil,
Morrison• popWarity aP U.e palll
mcrmed sliabtly, they Mid
At the ame iline. Rcpublicam
concede that the president'• pteOd' eupauon with bas own nee will Iced
ham from~ al* to ~ mutt.
ume hclpina out GOP candida1a aa
states that arc alread~ beavil> ~ Reagan.
CYAN/DEC
FOUND INTO
TOKYO (AP) -Two men
bow of~ qlndy -the Int 10 be found In 11 days -
dllccMM"ed todely In the
1ma1HXJX of 8 ~ offtol
Tokyo. a pOllce ~
Another poll taken for USA Today
bad a larger percentage calling Re.
agan the winner. The newspaper's
poll of 850 registered voters had 44
percent 5aying Reagan won, 27 per-
cent saying Mondale won and 21
percent saying they tied The poll by
Gordon S. Black Corp. had a margin
of error of plus or minus 3.5 percent.
gave the pccsident credit for a far undermined the moral authority of strong. We sec a tulign.ing proQCS ••
stronger performance than two weeks our people and our eounuy in the said Rep. Guy Vander Jagt,.R~Micb... _.n"1.
ago. r;~re~~~·o~n~."~~==============~~c~h~ai~rm~an~of~th~e~N~au~·o~n~al~R~ep~u~b~lica~n~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==::;;~ .. It was less one·s.ided than the last
With 14 days left before Election
Day, national polls are saying Re-
apn's lead is anywhere from 9 to 25
points or more.
Robert G . Beckel, Mondale's cam·
~ip manager, disputed the polls,
saymg, .. ln the major industrial areas
· of the Northeast. I believe we're now
ahcadofRcagan. I think we're closing
the pp to a very small maflin in the
big industrial states {of the Midwest)
time, and the president was good on
themes:'' said Democratic Gov.
Charles Robb of Vi!Jinia. "I'm not
sure it will move public opinion very
much." ·
Former Democratic Pa!1}' chair-
man Robert Strauss said Mondale
"eliminated the question of is he
tough enough.·· But Strauss ack.nowl-e4&ed .. the PfC$iden\ was bcner
tonight than he was two weeks a19."
The Qnlyway tO tax defer
_U.S. de&din.Grenada
disputed by 2 authors
high income fMm
secu(1ties aranteed by -
... .
WASHINGTON (AP)-Secretary
of State George P. Shultz and a
Pentagon official have denied a
published report that more American
troops died in the invasion of
Grenada last October than the 19
officially listed by the Pentagon.
l'he Philadelphia lnquirerreponed
in Sunday editions that a forthcoming
boolc by Richard Gabriel and Paul
Savage, former Army .intelligence
officers. will charge that the PentagOn
never rtPortcd the deaths of six
members ofa commando unit sent in
to seize control of an airport runway
in Grenada.
Gabriel and Savage, writini in
Sundav·sedition of the Boston Globe,
did not specifically contradict the
Pentagon casualty totals but said
there were "siSJ)ificant discrepan·
cies·' in the casualty reporting data.
--
The Pros' Since 195 7
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J/\;: ~"\. Non·smoker
• ~~ Rates
b 131-7740
441 Otd Newpon 8twd. Newpon ..... Ca.
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soup or salad, and choice
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ELIMINATE NAGGING
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the l.J.S. overnment
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Stop by your nearest Great American office and
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•flit~ t.u~~ annuity It und-nll<PI' by ~n l11f' Aswnnre Comp.ny OI C..n.da
1US.l •I'd b ~~at 0.11 AINf"ICln f1~t ~utgs hnl< throvgh Pier IC Nlnurty
'IA•"-t~C~p1n~lrtM1r-•5en-ic~1M'IAC01.11n 1ndtptnc!e!Ulk-MwdliteinW1"1nctt ~yand a~ 1tM btokl!r«~ f'!V.\CO•nd S-.11 Ufea~ not affiUltt'dcOmpl.rtliftof
°'81 ii\menc., and-MJlrly '~ear tti. ~of~ broc:hUrti. ~~ ~\~other CNtrrJa and ln\titmtn MMce~ m.iy ~
Al fund ln¥eled ·~ ~11rd dircictty to 5'11'1 lilt' Greit o\!Mfielft ft noc a regtht\id
bfokrr•alff 1nd ~ no4 lu•••nlM' t~ inw~lrnenl )'OU make.
• 'lnlffttmrnu ~• IOl•l 11 I ••' ')00 111 fi"t contract ye11
...", hdr .... ~101 ~·flich M bfffl In lhe<OmrllCI ie>'lthan'S lfUN):be~
to• 5" Chifge. A ptO.Spt<fll\ UJnt.tlnt"I in IOl\.On !hr OOMPA5S-U
Mnutty lnctvd cN'gt'S and c.~K".t. .tloutd be fl'MI c&rcluJ) bt!fore WMm ng
~ 'fnez Ao.id • ·~ .................. (71416"f>.560l
• 1-..QIWOOO/~ttie1 & Manchester
150 SOuth Mmet St1"t • • • • •.••• '21 ~
RA."-«:HO ~OS V£R0£S&.N PEDRO
J&35() South \\btem MnUC .. • ,. , .. at)l 811-0t.Jl
BUMONT SHC>ftf
<!601£au Second Stn!ft. • • • .. .. Qt la 4-'"421
SOOTH~
100> f11r 0.b Mn\le •
SAN MARINO
"2355 ...,ntfr111on OtM! •••
OOlRT HOT SPRI .
11999 Plkn OrM! It ~ Btlld •••• Iii ~
'5"INCS
L~~-· Farid Oriw . •• .. • ..... • • • • • 'f'Jl!J2l.;1M
IW.MOOCRT
tighwly 111 11 San Pab6o ~..... • 191 M-l•
"'1.M ()(SERT lOWNt ClNltR ,
• 11 h l Mc:Jntorq• ~. .. (619) 141-421 l
WULS
111 » Glb OrM.o • • • • • • • • • • )6.26ll
IOU£CO SPIUNC! ..
Chrlsrmi Clfc:le • • • • • • • • • •
C>aANCE COUNn' RMISIOf.COUNn-~ ...... ----~~-.--.~
ttMRSrDU~ 6 MICflton SOJOMi!'«IOft~ •
tt!Vl~Sf[)(JMA!n
JIM5 U\lwn(ty MnUP It
Chettnut
Q(
'°"5 ~ loulMtCI
lN(( ll INO!ft
600WIM Cteham Mn\a
MU•IETA
~MfUo
Great American
first ·ngs
Ul! ••••••
WBOt. Pt:.,,lN'!l.llA
6CIO Wt l.\lboa loule'w.rd •••••• 014161)311)
• • • • • • .. O':M fi.1S.32U
'
Proposition 40:
The cure is worse
than illness itself
I • ,
•
'Thoeenearthepresldentnnilnos.tgn thathehaatheoldflretn the
1'elly that for the paat two decades made him the mostformtdableflgure
ln nattonal polltlca. · •
------
JACK
Alt1mo1
No man is an island. Except maybe .Assemblyman Ross
Johnson. ~=============~~===;::======::::; JOhnson, of La Habra, is the author of the campaign
contribution, reform initiative that a~ on the November 6
bellot as Proposition 40. The initiative'has drawn perhaps the
broadest base of opposition since Prohibition.
It' not the idea of reforming the way our politicians finance
their campaiam that has left Johnson with so little o~
support. It is the way he has gone about it. Johmon~a irutiative
baa earned the enmity of such far-flung philosophical camps as
ihe California Chamber of Commcree and Common Cause.
They aaree that Johnson'11ood intentions, iflaw.t would be
woqe than doing nothing -hardly the essence of rc1orm.
CIA's director
Ignored reports of
dubious dealings Proposition 40 was supposed to ensure that special interest
P'OUPI with a fot of money to spend would not be able to exert
undo inftuence over the elected officials they suppottctt with Lmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ w ASHINGTON -aA DUmor campaip contributions. Instead, according to several analyses, ' William Cuey bas bcel1 ca•t in the
JJOb.nson's initiative does more than asbestos to insulate b t k uncomfonablc embrlte of Buil
incumbents -virtually assuring that challenaen will be Today's umper s 1· c ers !::.eos.in~°tio~~i=~ underfinanocd. It proposes a cap of $1,000 per year on a .. __ __. Aa . f .... 11:-
contributions to a candidate _by individuals, political action ;;;'.t:nd=o~~~ .. ce
committees and even political parties. It bans transfer of merely s1•gns of the t1•mes l've1Ce11athidcreportonTAkot .contributed money from a well-heeled campaign to a poor one from the files of °":mt!:Piaenoe
and it suacsts a fund of S l million in an inadequate attempt to allelina that be bad a · record
mUe up-for other provisions that clearly would give an edge to I don't know about you. but I which meaot a competitor. They !!ubi=.::1tio'= .:: of
wealthy office seekers. thoroughly Cltjoy bumper ltiCka's. don'tbandCadillacaoutatrandomto Sourcea say Greek inldliaenoe It also limits the amount of money people arc allowed to There'• alm011 nothina elJe that can just anybody. cooperates cloeely with 1he CIA. and live to political action committees, reducing slightly the add a lift to my day like teeioa 1 ·9 Maybe she would shoot back. atleut1<>meofthcinfonnationi1in · potential influence of PACs and reducing pcatly the individ-particularly , clever bumper .sticker. · Ill Maybe 1<>meooe bad committed a CIA fib ua1•1 .;.,;~ttoexpresshissupportforthepomtofviewthePAC Scratch that I also dearly love crimeqainatberintheput.andbcen ,\Ubeanapofafinaer,Cucycould •-.u '4vanity" liceme plates. I even made H allowed to ao free bec:aute the police have obtained a report on t ,lakos. reprc1ents. up one of my own. thouah I haven't llVEY ofticeuccidently bumped the crook's Eitbef be Wied to check bis own files In application, Proposition 40 wowd force incumbents and aonc down to the DMV and plllnked head •bile puttma him in the police or ipored what they contained. dWl~ alike to spend more time and effort to raise the same down my cash yet. Ready? .car. t> Cue)' alto ifnored ~ about
amount of money and less time addressing the concerns of ... ly committina • aune. How about Can'tyouj&&1ueeit? .. YourHooor, TakOI' criminal record. Thia uyi a
COnstituents. ...SBWJFU that? my clialt admits to the crime, but lot about the com~ and
Can you ~ne the frustration of asks to be rdeued t?ccaute be .bu • ooberence of the nations epy ~· WeagrcewithMr.Johnson-andbiso~nenta-thatthe rm oot soina to tell you what it beiDa a poliCie officer aild catcb.ina a already suffered a JTICV~ ~-T.atos came to C.axy duri.q the
often confusing arena of cam~ fundanuaing is in need of says, thouab thoee of you who a.re man in the commis&ion of a crime, menL You tee, be bumped his head early da)'I of the· Reapn. ldminiJ.
some reform. But Proposition 40 1s not the way. The Daily Pilot "Star Wan" fans ahouldn 't have and then havinl the courts free him while beina placed in the police car." uauon with a multi-billion~Uar
opposes Proposition 40. much trouble. because you neat~ perhaps while I don't mow. Maybe that bumper ~e to build a ~s-Africa .oil
Anyway, I saw a bumper sticker the beina"' ... .,shot at, to tell_ the man of bis sticker is a aisn of a C roots pa~. c.atey baa denied eodonina
Knowanycowboypoets?
Fete's planned tor them
To the Editor. .
other day that ian't eapecialll' clever, .. , "-A'-t lf "'.;. 1 the!::·:.:.-tho·• .. a.. a CIA m:nnkaman but that does rdlect the UDlet in m a&:.nu"d •""at if I were a cop, the movement~ Ole ~ eDIC. IOrt · ~.. ...-a · ._. ~ ui w. ~it is. I don't advocate the 1&.1 the ~ wu ~teratcd ·~ the which we live. lbee:r lack of accomplishment would ... llleddiJla_....,. of blood unneoeuarily, but idea beic:auee of 1t1 potentially
It said .. FJ&ht Crime. Shoot Back." force me 10 eitbc:r a11oot the crook or ~ I u.o don'.t .ctvocatc comm.it· auatesic·~p;on.ance. .
Mott proliuad. beoamc a clot c:mdaer. Bat 1beD. Uaiajmelbecaute>1C*'iereuonably ~ piP,lliae ·~ carry ~ rm not reany that old, but I can Kicordinl t:O 1e>me of our lea com. sure of sttina away with them. Arabian oil ICrOll Africa, tw.s-•• remembetthetunewhenamuintbe ~fed blecdiD& beartl. even d°" the unatablc Persian OUtf and uu.
prooeu of oommittina a crime bad have ri&hts today. That, of~ 11 rm ablolutely sure that there a.re aitina three central Aftican states _ 1
For over 1 hundred yean cowbo)'I
• and other Westerners have written • aono and poems about upectl of
c:cnvooy and ranch life. Some of t.bCIC
are now part of our natioDal heritaat. u .. When the Work's AD Done Thi.a
Fall." and are known and loved all
over the country. Tbe PfOCCll is l1iJJ aoina on. Cowboy poets and coWboy
PodtY a.re alive and well all over the
Wea( The Institute oft.he American
West in Sun Valley, Idaho, is plan·
~ a bis. project to celebrate this
liYlftl tradition.
inp, and I book publiabed, all OD
cowboy poetry and poets, are
planned.
· But first we must locate u many
poets u we can. Perhaps your relden
could help us out by lettina me know of any cowboys. rodeo bands,
ranchen, or other cow people who
write or recite cowboy poetry. Ma~ some of this poetry bat been publish-
ed in your paper. We need all the
names and addraaea ~ can tct -
ICild any information to me at the
Institute of the American West, P.O.
B<>x 6S6, Sun Valley, Idaho, 833$3, or
call me collect at (208) 622--9373.
abtolutcly no riahts. If the police one ol tbc lilliest thino that rve th~readenout~whobavebeen route of questionable stability.
Rol'med mto tbc 1-nk IDd you were ttceD~ become aware of. Jliabts a.re ~~ ~ that most clever WbethCr the plan was endoned or standina there with a ski mask over DOt &Warded 10 you, you must work piece .. of ~ ~P!'Pnda that not, the mcetinp with Casey pvc
your head. a sun in your riaht band for them. · Dop (with a very few ~ ~n t res11t a crim.ip.aL They're Tllkot and hi• American pmmer _
and a hold-up note in your left, you exceptions) do not work. professu~~ Let the police take care an old Casey sidekick named Joo
were a bank robber, pureandlimple. Anyway, beCk to the bumper o11hem. . Roeenbewn-animportantnameto
There will be a Cowboy Poetry
Gathc:rina from Jan. 31 to Feb. 2,
198.S in Elko, Nev., with trains rwinig to the DtberiDa from Salt
Lake City and Riito. Exhibits. reconi·
HAL CANNON
Director of Reaional Folklife
Institute of the American West
Sun Valley, ID
If you baopened 10mumble10mc--sticker. Bu~th.en. The only ta10n. that ,,._ u th,,,, IO\llbtt _....,_.,, ... ~or .... _ thins like 14Aarrahhh. • IQl me, Tho more in~ aspect of this many cnm•Mh became profe1S10Dal "!""tine v"th Jfen ·-.. _.~, S u;
Copper, .. IO muai· the &:fr:. That liabtina was not MceUarily the crim1nat1 is beca\&le nobody ever ~~! e taaon ta
was the equivalent of a con..fellion. bumper sticker itae~ but the location ~ theni. lt'1 easy to lead a life of -ca.ey!~ put Roeenbaum ill
thouab.no confeaion wu Dt()Clllty. of the aiabtina. It wu on the rear cnme when you know that when you touch with 10me former intelli&ence Aftetall.youwere1taJ:w'iqtbcRwith bumFOf&latemodelCadillac. The robtheba.nk,they1Jputtbemooeyin Wh ·p ha been
apnino.Debaadandabold·upnote Cadillacwubeinadrivenbyarather ~for you, 'Cd even supply the ~inoilie~~ ve 11
inTt.beodaother. ld .. __ clderty~wdktreated uid we~-coif· .. ,m ~ ~':_~OIJOto .t yoW'l.to _;.... a Here.. meanwtlile, is what my y, the bo -up man .... more ftlnlcl· . SC>u}ebow even m my ' iu vi;''" ·~· r,,...,,.., J-""-·-fl d riabts than tho victim. I recently read mOlt vivi im111narytiiib11offancy, '"profeuional" · · than to run UIOClate _,..T um&.uD. OU~ out
an article in our Pilot about a man ljustcouldn'tteethitperticularlady t6c risk of beoOmina a profdsionaJ aboutT.U01&omOreekmtelliaencc
who is •uini the Fountain V~ pul.liqa.•Sandblazinaaway. victim. ~~:i'tf.1~flakot fCJ>'
Police Depeitment bccaute be ~ On the other band. lhe wu drivina c.1....,.1 BJJI Bun~ Uve. reeented the Brit.iib aovemment in its
injwed by a policeman whileall.S· a Cadillac, wb.idl meant money, la B•,,,,.,.. S.d.. effort to tell nucleaq~ower plants to
Flag doesn't get .no respect . °'::-tt.."'::.r=':i.ii~m Kennedyfamilykin toMona Lisa
Greccie. SOun:adetcribed T.UOI u. .. lJla man" who WU peid thouwndr
of dollan to influence Greek oftici&ls
to buy the British retlCton. ThoUlb
TaakOI WU apparently i1111~
the riabt peopae, the deal reu UU'oUlb
abruPtly When a alilitary junta leblecl
power in Athena in 1967. To the Editor. • I fed lilly waitina IO many~ to
pipe. It may 1<>und like nothina. but
to me it amounts to alot rm apeakina
oft.be disrepect our athletes pay to our
Ou and the Star Spenaled Banner.
\>'ou can't find one of our ~t
players standina at attention. Tbey
ltl.Dd all riabt, look around to see who
is lookin& at them, aaalclt themlielves
everybody stood l1iJJ at attention-it • A woman named Lisa Oheradini distantly related to the Mona Liu.. Kona baa a better chance to survive
wauo nice 10 tee. We kids were sure was the model for Leooatdo da its fint yeart!tatiltically, than a baby
proud just 10 be an American. Vinci's Mona Lisa. Her relatives in A student of matrimonial matten born in the united States.
Everybody stood at attention for the 12th century emiaratcd to IJdand aayi nine out ofl 0 maniqea in which Softest of the ---'oua stones 11• the the pledat of allqiance; it sure started $;:!1.2 traDJlatcd their name into the women proposed have been emerald. ........... our day riabt Fi The ancestor tracken say auc:cessful.
L FREDRIKSEN ve established without dolubt L.M. S.r' I• • 1yMlcate4 Cotta Mesa that Preai.deut John F. Kauledy was A baby born in SinPpore or Hona ~
•
' · The Gipper seems to have lost fighting spirit
While Mondale
'ls lost In his
own ttmewa
• W ASHJNGTON -Preaident Re.
llUo who loves to invoke \he names aDcl upiratiom of loq-dcad Dcmo-
uata. ,slipped up once this month in -'Taaa iDd quoled Republican ~t, Dwilbt D. EiJenbowcr.
Petbapl tbc mistake can be traced
to the llt&int Rcapn faced this
particular day, when he wu beina
preteed by rcponcn for oommcnts on
tbie indictment of his sccmary of
labor, Raymo d Donovan. and for 10
Qplanation of tu accurity at the
bombed U . Embusy annex in
Beirut
ORANGE COAST
llilJPilat
H.LlohWerta•
~ ,,...zw
~
Tom T.et
Clfy itOI
,
•TMkOI ia IUlpected Ofbeina more
than just a nuclear-plant mi&Slemaa
for London. Greek in1ClliaeDce, the
KVP, •UJPCCU that be was a pert•time British spy ... Taake» is very clolely
UIOdatcd with an llCDt of the British
lntclHFDCC Service." a KVP report ttatel. addi~ .. Om reports indicate
be ii 1 colllbontor ,of the British lttYioet. ..
•Tbe Greek fi1et sboW that Tlakol
repmentcd .evera1 British finna, but
be moved his miliWjwtaletoperatiOCl
to Switzerland tbortly aft.er the Greek
90vernment befu in~tiQI him for pouible national c:rima.
• Tllkoe wu lutpeCted of nanniaa ao antiquwmUllliq operation
bti&t hi ~ranee. 1'c aotiquee 1"l'e
•uelled ft-om border Poltl ad even
from the Athens ai""°" with 1be lid of a Greek Civil AViatioG Service
employee. Tbe netwafil ... mo :-'to:'1:T;~'\.t""i::: United S11ta. •
•The Greek army inveedpted
TllkoiWbea be1ried to 1611 taDk pana
COGfilce hi 1913. MolenciDtly%tbe Greek .... ~ llatded • mtJor Jav 11'iptjne OI. a :r.-...
relat.ed wat dal. Wbidl I wto1e
about.
•Greek IOvenuDat repona coe-
fttm 'J1Mkol' earlier crimlMI record
and delcn'bc him • IOIDeCJM wt.a wwouacs do uythiaa for IDoeey."
Beacon
history
won't
go dim
t\s long as new
Lighthouse ·
Society thrives
By LORETTA NOFFSINGER
Anni la•PrtMwrtMr
SAN fRANCISCO -To fans of
~ .......
...
100 artists face
up topchallenge
No disguises:
Most maslts sn6w
cr.eator's identity
By SUSAN MONAHAN
~"'4C.1i .. IRlllMI
All of the anisu were presented
with the aame request: create a muk.
Their interpretations of this assian·
mcnt, on display at the Newport
Harbor An Museum tbrouab
Wednesday, arc nearly 100 unique
variations on wtiat only seems to be
an obvious theme.
does fulfill lhe museum's criteria s
ell as bis own because it c:an Rn"e 11
a mask. The space aeparau~ tbe two houses alsp leaves room for a note,
while the minute window panes can
accommodate the eyes.
Jn ClOfttrUt to Myers• Sleek deSiJn, Martin Betnstein'1creation is a visual
cacophony of paint. mica, beads and
bis mo\Mr's wg. Uke Myers, thCJU&h,
Bernstein' has brouaht bis custOmaJ)'
style to bear because .. it' made of all
kinds of stuff out of my lift -evcrythina I do is."
topical, ·and .proQf Wt wnten MW
not cornaed tbit )af• °"'1eDia martct. His 1ubjca ts II.molt a dlada mask. its eyes cOveted With a sip lbal
reads: 1984. •
several art.illl have Ul9l94
Mized. almost formalized wnl=· ofthe fuiman face.Michael Tncr_-
re1nierpmtd the Hadequin ia llwr
and Sold; Mim Spenua bu crafted•
•mpou1bly perfect, mauve _.
beiutifuJ androiYnY· 1 There seems IO baw bea Iii*
attempt at "functiODal'" an; .._ -
pieces arc obvio!Hly for dilplaJ ......
lhan wear. Tbi111 even -ar ~ Rfl
especially -true OI tbe Wik Of clothins des'iper Na v..._ maritime .Jore, Wayne Wheeler is
"Mr. LiJhthouse," a man sheddina a IJow on the fadina history of the
nation's scafarina beacons.
There were more than 300 light·
houses in the United State1 at the tum
W•JD• Wheeler atand8 ln POlDt llcmlta UCbtboUe near 8&D Francl.llco, one of the pre1ened marttlaie atnictare8.
The masks will be auctioned d~
'1"he Night of the Masque:" a
Hallowecn·inspircd benefit at Bull·
ocks Wilshire on Oct. 27, C>1ppized
by the museum's Contemporary Oub
and Sales and Rental Council. (See
social preview story, below.~z:aone wishinaJo put in a bid before can
obtain bid cards at the museum.
Some of the an bas been inspired
by the human fate, althouah realistic ~nrayals are noticeably absent -
there'• not a papicr mache Richard
Nixon or an acrylic Farrah Fawcett
amona the 101.
Vauahn desips ..._ l9c c:dl
"unoomfonable dolhel." They loot
awkward, and in Id Vaupn _,. • Jhat .. they are .awkward ao ..,.,"
Why do people wear them, Ihm' of the century, from anchored liaht· coUectina liahthouae lore and lhipatostatelyVictorianmodels.Just memorabilia for a library, which
39 manned lighthouses remain. eventually will be provided to estal>-
. . "Th~y are not g~ina tQ..}uild a~y lished museums around the nation.
more 1iabthou1e1 bke the romantic Reaional societies already take an
and ela6orate edifices we've seen in active interest in savina li&hthouses.
the (San Francisco) Bay and up and The East Brother u&ht Station; built
down the coast," said Wheeler, 46. in the 19th century, was saved rrom • ••After 2;000 years, we are at the end Coast Guard ranna. for exam Pie.
of an era of the manned liahthouse. Now it's operated u a non-profit bed
With electronics, we need oruy place a and breakfast inn on a one-acre isle in
rotating beacon on a monopole." the middle of San Francisco Bay. or the 43 lighthouses along the Membcnhip in the national lfOUp
California coast in the 1940$, only 2S is a minimum $1 S a year, and
remain, and some have been reduced operators are producing the p-oup's
. to liahts on polca. first quarterly historical. pubhcation,
To keep the history of lighthouses "The Keeper's Loa." this fall. from winking out, Wheeler has Llahthouses were placed to mark
founded and is president of the non-the danaer of a reef, show landfall
profit U.S. Liahthouse Society, a mark a harbor entrance or for coastal
national aroup aimed at preseryina naviaation. On days with. poor vis.-
the liahthouse legend. · ibility, the foa sianals served better.
The society plans to establish The first fog ai&nal on the West
rqionil districts to recruit volunteers Coast, for exampfe, Was a cannon
to help preserve lighthouses. And it is installed at P01nt Bonita at the·
northern entrance to San Francisco
Bay in 1857, at the site of the Point
Bonita Liaht Station.
A 2~pound siege aun from nearby
Mayer Island Armory was hauled to
the site and a retired army sergeant
was directed to fire it every half hour, day or niaht, durina periods of fog.
The masb are not intended as
disauise. On the contrary, they often clearly reveal their creators.
Anyone who visited Slater Barron's
lintscape at the LA&una Beach Mu·
Rather, these artists seemed
interested in the DIYCbe that lurks
behind the facade~ Valerie Bechtol
makct this point with suneal im·
aaery. Fa~thrOuih brick Walls
and in tum ~ ~olisbed by o1htr
brick walls in what appears to be an
cndlcu process.
Jay Willis' commentary is more
.. The clothes beoOme a kind of IU'ICI
theater," be explained.
-Hi ~ however, loob • moU&h it could fit comfortably owr I.be face ... I don't think uyoae will
wear it, thouab," be said ... lthaa IOUC-
alue on the irmde ...
Itsoon bcCameclearthat there were
over I ,000 hours offog a year at Point
Bonita.
"I cannot find anyone here to relieve me. Not five minutes," in-
tones Wheeler in a dramatization of
the seraeant's loa notes. "I've been up
three days and niahts and only two
hours rest. I was nearly used up. All
the rest 1 would require in the 24
(houn) was two ... if only I could get
it."
scum of Art a few months aao will be
able to identify her version .. sculpted" from the same medium.
And Gifford Myen. whose trademark
is small ale sculpture ofhouteS, has
used this motifin his contribution for
which he, like all the artisu., donated time, talent and materials.
APE EXPECT
A few years later, the fog aun was
retired because it cost $2,000 a year in
~powder -more than three times
ttie seraeant's salary. (Pleue .ee BEAC01'/B2)
· "I've been makinJ fun of real estate
through art.'' explained Myen at the
preview reception ... It's in~ to
me to see if an artist can do somethina like this and still work on his own
theme."
Mycn pointed out that ~ work~l!lll"ll !!!!"!!'~;!ll!'!!!'~~~·..,J!!"!ll
Museum unmasking
its Halloween soiree
Red Cross starts network
at a champagne reception
By EVE C. LASH
~"'4C•n1 ••n•ant
The preview party for Newport Harbor Art
M uscum 's Night of the Masque was as •arty' as they
come, with some of the 70 aucsts attired in art deco black
and white.
lady Sl•hky, Sales and Rental Council member.
said, "This is a areat opportunity to meet the artists and
see their masques. There's a real excitement because
people arc able to place a bid. It's also nice to meet the
Bullocks Wilshire sp~>nsors ofthe event on OCt. 27."
Qpcnina bids on the masques VU)' from SSO to
SI SO. However, on the ni)ht of the event the sta.kca can
10 as hilh as tevcra.I thousand dollars. Siu~· nolCd.
A hundred artisu from all overd1e country bave
Knowanycowboyf'OeU?
Fete's planned for them
To the E.ditor:
For over a hun.dn:d years, cowboys
• and other Westemen have written
' IODP· and poems about aspects of
cowboy and ruch life. Some of these
are now part of our national heritage,
u .. When the Work'• All Done This
Fall. .. and are known and loved all
over the comtry. The process iJ still
aoina on. Cowboy pc;>eta and cowboy
poetry are alive a.od Well allJ>vcr the
West. The Institute of the American
West in Sua Valley, Idaho, is plan-illna a bis. nmjcct to celebrate this 1i • trJdi: r--; ~ wlU°°be a Cowboy Poetry Gatherina from Jan. 31 to Feb; 2,
198S in Elko, Nev., with traim-n•nniDJ to the ptberi11,1 from S81t
Lake City and Reno. Exhibits, record-
inp, and a book published, all on
cowboy poetry and poets, are
plailned.
But first we must locate u many
poets as we can. Perhaps your readcn
could help us out by 1ettina me know
of any cowboys, rodeo hands,
rancbera, or other cow people who
write or recite cowboy poetry. Ma~
10me of this poetry has been publish·
ed in your paper. We need all the
names and addreuel we can set -
send any information to me at the
Institute of the American West; P.O. Box 656, Sun Valley, Idaho, 833S3, or
call me collect at (208) 622-9373. ·
llALCANNON
Director ofRqional Folklife
Institute oftbe American West
Sun V illey, ID
Flag dOesa 't get .no respect
To the Editor: or blow that stupid bubble awn.
I feel lilly wait.in& 10 many yean to In the old days riabt after WWI
pipe. It may 10und like nothing, but everybodystoochtillatattention-it
to me it amounts to a lot. rm speaking was so nice to tee. We kids were sure
ofthedisrepectourathletapaytoour proud just to be an American.
flai and the Star Spe,ncled Banner. • · E~body stood at attention for
You can't find one of .our ~t thep.l~ofa1Jcsi•ncc;itsurutal1ed
players 11aodi11a at attenuon. Tbey our day riabt.
-.nd an riaht, took around to 1ee who L FREDJUXSEN
it looking at them, scratch themselves Costa Mesa
. \
'ThoseneatUlepresiilentnndnostgn. that he has theoldtJretn the
belly thatfortbepast two decades.made him the most f ormtlfab1e ngure
In national pollUcs. ••
LOU CAJOIOJlf
coJgwnW
JACK
AlllEISOI
CIA's director
ignored reports of
dubious dealings
Kennedyfamilykln toMona Lisa
A woman named Usa Gbetadini was the model for Leonardo da
Vinci's Mona Li.la. Her relatives in
the 12th century em.ip'ated to Ireland
where~ tranllated their IWD.e into Fi~ The ancestor tracken uy
they ve established without dolUbt
that President John F. Kennedy WU
-
distantly related to the Mona Lisa. Ko111 bat a better chance to survive
itl fint year1 ~tistjcally, than a baby
A student of matrimonial matten bom in the united States.
18)'1 nine out of 1 O marriqel in which Softest of the J>rCcious stones ii the ~ proposed have been emerald.
L.M. B•r' 11 • ITNJcalH A baby born in Sinppore or Hona colaJUt
The Gipper seems to have lost fighting spirit
'
While Mondale
ts lost in his
own time warp
WASHING TON -President Re-~ whO loves to invoke the names ud upiratio111 of Iona-dead Deina.
cnta, slipped up once this month in
Tan and quoted a Repabllcth ~t. Dwiabt D. Eixnhowcr.
PerbaPI the mistake can be tJ'aA.'lCd
to the strain• Reagan faced thia
puticular day. when be wu beiq
peested by ttporten for comments on
the indictment of ru1 leCt'ttat)' of
labor, Raymo d Donovan, and for ID
QJ)lanation of lax IC:CUri'f at the
bombed U.S. Embasay annex in
Bein.at
ORANGE COAST
DlilyPillt
But the Eisenhower reference -"to
be 11rona nationally is not a •in. it is a
neceuity" -wu at least appropriate. Throutfl much of hit re-election
c:amn.1.n. Reqan bu behaved u Ike
did rnitiJ' 1956 peaco.and-prosperity
rwlcction campeip. Eisenhower all
but ipored. hiJ o~ncnt and do-
livered a meauec iatirizcd by Demo.
cratl as ~ou never bad it so aOoct ..
Had it Dot bccD for the praidetltial ~it iJ doubttul a,...n would
have raited an itluo or even men·
tioncd Walter Mondale by name.
Mondale seema locked in hit own
time warp. It it ,u 1f be had Id\ tho
coun!"Y. during the Reapn n:ceuioo
and failed to observe on his return
that an economic recovery bid oc-
curred.
Ocipite his perl'onnancc in the
debates. Mondale•• refusal to re-
H.Llchw.tz• ~
l'nM Zlnl
MMll)lng ~or
TomT81t
Clry EdJ1or
r
Beacon . .,.
history
won't
go C!-im
As·long as ne~
Lighthouse
.Society thrives
By LORETTA NOFFSINGER
AeMOlated "9M Wtlttr
SAN FRANCISCO -To fans of
maritime lore, Wayne Wheeler is
"Mr. Liahthouae," a man 1heddina a
ilow on the fadina historY of the
nation's seafarina beacons.
There were more than 800 ligtit-
houscs in tho United States at the turn
of the century, from anchored liaht-
thips to stately Victorian models. Just
39 manned liabthouses remain.
"They are not aoina to build any more li&hthousea like the romantic
and eJa6orate edifices we've seen in
the (San Francisco) Bay and up and
down the coast," said Wheeler, 46.
.. After 2,000 yean, we are at the end
of an era of the manned liahthouse.
With electronics, we need only place a
rotatin& beacon on a monopole." ·
Of the 43 li~thouses along the
California coast 10 the 19405, only 2S
remain, and some have been reduced
to liahts on pcles.
To keep the history of lighthou1e1
from winkina out, Wheeler has
founded and is president of the non-
profit U.S. Liahthouse Society, a
national aroup aimed at preservina
tho liahthouse lq nd.
The society plans to establish
rqional districts to recruit volunteers
to help preserve Jighthouaea. And it ii
..
... Wll"tllllet:
100 artists face
up to challenge ·
No disguises•. does fulfill the mu um'1 criteria s well as bis own becau h can serve u
M k 'k a masX. The apace tir:ia the l ro OSt mas S SuOW houses also leaves room for a nose.
while the minute windo swies can creator's identity aocommodatelhecyes.
. lo conuast to Mym• sleek d
.BY spSAN MONAHAN .. Manin Bctnstein'1 creation iu mual
D.ilf,... e.1 , •:11 cacophony of paint, mica. beads and
. his mothct's wig. Like yen. thou.sh. ,All of the an1sts wett presented Bernstein has brought bis customuy
with ~e _same rcqu~t: creat~ am~ style to bear beeause "it'a made ofall
Their ante~tttattons of this ~'~:1 kinda of stuff out of my Ufe -ment, on d1'1)lay at the NC"ft'PCITT' everythifltJ do i ."
Harbor Art Museum tbro_uah · Some of the an bas been i ired Wednesday, arc nearly 100 uruque b th h r--alth .... IPlP, • variations on what only teems to be Y c uman ~.. ou ... :rcahsuc . ~rtrayals are nouccably absent -
topical, and proof lha1 wnten have not commd tbi y~s OrWdlian
nwtet. HU aubJCCl b .tmOll a death
lU eyes covered With a a· tba1.
rcadl: 19~.
vcral utlsts have cn:a1ed
Mim:l, almost fQmWiud venlonl
of1he human f.ace. ichad Tiac:ylm
rc1ntcr:preted 1he Hatlequin in silver
nd Sold; Mtm Spettus has aded a
ifupos ibly pedect, mauve ad
uufwanclrOIYJl~ ,
• There seems 10 have been liUle uempt at .. functional" an lbele
pieces arc obviousl)' for~ radler
an wcar.1bi111 even -or~ .. · ~Jy -true of lhc Work "of clothlne desianer ~idk VaQllm. •
Wape Wheeler atanda In Point Bonita 1'-bthOue near San rra:ncteco. one of the pr1111ned marttlnie atrac\urea. .
an obvious the!f1e. . . there'• not a papier mache Richard
The m~sks wdl be auetioned dunna Nixon or an Arf"\/lic fanah Fawcett "The N1aht of the Masque" a -·~ Halloween·inspired benefit at Bull-among the lot. ,.
Vaugh~ dciians what he callt
"unoomforuble clothe5." They look ·
awkward, and in fact Va\llbn •YI •
lhnt .. they are awkward '° wear."
Why do peoDle wear them. 1heo?
''The clothes become a kind of l'U'eel
thca~;· be explained.
,
collectin• liahthouse lore and
memorabilia for a library, which
eventually will be provided to estab-
lished museums around the nation.
Rqional aocieties already take an
active interest in savina liahthouses.
The East Brother Llaht Station) built
in the 19th century, was saved rrom a
Coast Guard ruin&. for example.
Now it's_operated as a non-profit bed
and breakfast inn on a one-acre isle in
the middle of San Francisco Bay.
Membenhip in the national aroup
is a miniilhum S 1 S a year, and
operators are producipa the JrOUp's
first quanerly historical publication,
"The Keeper's Loa;' this fall.
Li&hthou1e1 were placed to mark
the danger of a reef, thow landfall
mark a harbor entrance or for coastal
navigation. On days with poor vis-
ibility, the foa sian.als served better.
The fint foa sww on the West
Coast, for exampfe, wu a cannon
inatalled at Point Bonita at m.
northern entrance to San Francisco
Bay in 18S7, at the site of the Point
Bonita Liaht Station.
A 24-pound sieac aun fr<>m nearby
Mayer Island Armory v.-as hauted to
the site and a retired army se!iQDt
was directed to fire it every half hour,
day or ni&ht1.durin1 periods of fog.
It soon beCame clear that there were
over 1,000 houn of foa a year at Point
Bonita. .
ocks Wilshire on Oct. 27, orpnized Ra~er1 th~~ artists seemed
by the muscum'sContemporaryOub in~iec in the psyche .that hub
and Sales and Rental Council~ (See behind ~e f~. Yalcrie Bechtol social preview story. below.) Anyone makes this point with su~ im-
wishing to put in a bid beforehand can age~. Faces break~ brick walls
obUin bid cards at the museum. and m \Um are demolisDed by other
l'he masks are not intended u brick walls in What appears to be an disauise. On the contrary, they oft.en endlesa ~ • clearly reveaJ their creaton. Jay Willis commentary u mo.re
Has mask. however, loob u moudi it could fi1 comfonal;b' over me f8ce. .. I don't think anyone 'Will
ear it,~ .. be said. .. It Jm 10Xic..
aJue on the iilside." ·
APE EXPECT "I cannot find anyone here to
relieve me. Not five minutes," in-
tones Wheeler in a dramatization of
the aeraeant's log notes. "I've been up
three · days and niahts and only two
boun rest. I was nearly used up. All
the rest 1 would require in the 24
(houn) 'was two ... if only I cowd get it. ••
Anyone who visited Slater Barron's
lintscape at the Lquna Beach Mu-
seum of Art a few months aao will be
able to identify her version
"sculpted .. from the same medium.
And Gifford Myers, whose trademark
iasmall ICalellCUlptur< ofhoUICS, bas NEW YOAK(AP)-~,,...._......__
used this motif in his contribution for M 1t 9Ge!I wtth 91l1bfttll9, the .. tM tillt of ... ....._
which he, like all the artists, donated P8lt)clke 11 the tnt .._. bom In New YmtrQlr _.
time, ulent and materials. , pr~ rtnb behind onay King Kong M tta ma91 ......... 1'19
"I've been makinJ fun of real estate :Bronx Zoo hM announced that wand Benclera. 11, .. •• r M IS throuah art." explained Myen at the a ltttle ipe In Jen...-y. A few yean later, the foa &Un was
retired because it cost $2,000 a year in
aunpowdcr-more than three times
the seraeant's salary.
preview reception~"lt'1 intcretti~ to -n""*™'m ........__ ~ 'v'w•n• ~ e-....._ -·1W1• me to see if an artist can do aomelhina '.--.....nN'I 9JlVUN --vo• UW\i .....,. ~_.,.,..
like this and still work on his own mm Cln g/fM to IOO poundt. ·
(Pleue Me B&ACO!l/82)
theme." P8tt)clke, a Lo lllftd.,..... ~ • «•nldlt 1•....._
Myen'lJ(>inled out that hit wort--+tiw... ... ._,... :12,)WI ICIQ Wf ttil C.~=---lti.,..al~Pi~• ..... ll..._ Zoo~~--·.
.................. ..., ....
an 011Df 9*J Cbrla Gapm. Jalle Ftmn•ni and Jv.dy 81a~ of 8ale9 aad Rental
s:aponae of Tiewera at maaeam'• ~. Coancll~mder blddlnf on tJae muqaea doD1tecl bj 100 ~
Museum unmasking
its Halloween soiree
By EVE C. LASH
...., .... CM1 .. 1. I
The preview party for Newpon Harbor Art
Museum'sNi&}ltoftheMasquewasas•arty'asthcy
come. with some of the 70cuestsattircd in an deco black
and white.
Jady Slabky. Sales and Rental Council member,
said, ''This is a gr_cat opportunity to meet the anistsand
sec their masques. The~·s a real excitement because
people arc able to place a bid. It'salso nice to meet the
Bullocks Wilshire sPonsors oft.he event on Oct. 2 7."
Opening bids on the masques vary from S SO to
SI SO. However. on the niJht oflhe event the stakes can
aoas hiah as several thousand dolWs. Slutzky noted.
A hundred anists from all over the country have
...
Ot•'89 CoMt DAILY PILOT /Monday. October 22, 1114 ---------------~-~ -----
. ·Landlordshittheroofoversleazyreference
D£ARANN1.AND£RS: A recent
oolumnin wbicllyoue~ u~edjt)y_at thejiilinaof a Los
Anleleslandlordi~tooneand .Uihatyoubavenevcr 1
landlord. Wb_y don't you take some of your
lwd-earncd money and buy a cou~
ofai.nllo-dweuin&housaandttnt tbem?You will learn before Iona that thaeU'O more blad renten than there _are blad landlords.-ONB SHOE ON
THE OTHER FOOT IN QUEENS
DEilSBOB: Y•eealbenp&. I
Rea4ea: ·'--... 01!.A.K ANN LANDERS: I nevtt '
thouabtl'dlivclonaenoua,btowrite to you but your reference to "alcpy"
landlords did il
Katbleen llcAd.ama
llcADAllS-DeRUFF
K.atblecn·Ann DeRuff became the
bride of Mark Raymond McAdams
in an Oct. 7 ceremony in the Firsf .
United Methodist Church in Costa
Mesa.
Roben and Janet DcRuff of New-
port Beach are the parents of the
•• I.MIDS
to mention dleooct of'havinatbe
ilobt evicted.
When one bunch oflow.lifes moved out I bid to put in at leut
three days tcnl~ acourina_ de-
louaia,. Vamilbinaand ~
knObl iaDd brOken mirrorlbefotil
COUid lbow lbeplace toa ptotpCictive
tenant. Twomontba90,lputmy
• propeny up rorlale. l .~ l will be YliiVehad 3'4mltenin the1ut11x Juciyeno\lab iofind 10me un1u1pect·
y4*1.0nlyonetenutdidnodamqe in&aucker:whowillbuymyheadacbc.
andleftU>:ePlac:ectcan.Altthcotheil • Pleue1topaivinaadvtoeon1ubjecu
putbolesinthewall , torcout youknowa&sOtuiCl_ynothili&about.
scrttns, bufned counter topa. mat· -BUMMED OUT.IN ARlZONA ~andcarpctsand stole draperies, mattrcsacovcnand even DBA.RBUMMBD: ftub fwdte
furniture. lhadtos~alotof ee1Dt1fpw..M1t.e ~...-.
money to rcp1aoe item• that were rMder m ,.....B•~ •mere Of 1M
damlged. destroyed and stolen. not same. • • •
bride. Sbe wore a traditional white
high-necked gown with a bodice of
Aleocon lace accented with seed
pearls and sequins and fitted cap
sleeves. The full skirt of organia over
taffeta was bighligbted with a oorder
of Alencon lace and seed pearls.. The
chapel length train was detailed with
an inset panel of netting and finished
with clusters of pearls.
Honor attendants were matron of
honor Susan Parker and maid of
honor Jennifer DeRutT. Bridesmaid!
were Melany McAdams, Denise
Doering and Marna Hillyard.
The bridegioom is the son of
Robert and Barbara Ferry of Corona
dcl Mar. His best mao was Dane
Hillyard. and David DeRuff, George
Logan. Bob Newton and Bill Mac-
donald were ushers.
The couple left on a wedding trip to
Tahiti after a reception at the Bahia
Corinthian Yacht Club attended by
2SOguests. The new Mrs. McAdams is em-
ployed by Marindan.d amusement
park in Palos Verdes and her husband
u with Cushman &. Wakefield, an
mdustrial real estate company. They
arc residents of Costa Mesa.
BAUGH-WELLS
The Community Church Con-
gregational in Corona del Mar was the
setting for the ScpL 22 wedding of
Patricia Wells and Steven Clark
Baugh ofNewPort Beach.
The bnde 1s the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Howard C. Wells of New-
PorfBeach. She wore a WilJiain Cahill
floor length gown of white dotted
organza trimmed with multiple ruf-
fles. Satin ribbons trimmed the
neck.line arui hem.
Alisa Samuelson was matron of
honor, and bridesmaids were Lisa
Fitte~ andJane PbilPott of Santa
Cruz, the bride's cousin. The bride·
groom's niece, Tracy Jones, was
flower girl. ·
Mr. and Mrs. William E. Bau&h of
Newport Beach and Incline Village
are the ~rents of the bridegroom. His
best man was Peter Laux, and hls
brother William R. Baugh of Denver,
Mark Rizzotto, Bill Lyon, Eric Lipper
and Miko Wells, the bride's brother
from Gunnison, Colo., were ushers.
One hundred and fifty fUests
attended a luncheon rece\)tion m the
garden of the Newporter m Newport
Beach.
The couple plan to Live in Pasadena
after a wedding trip to lxtapa,
Mexico. They arc graduates of Cor-
ona del Mar High School and attend-
ed Orange Coast College. She is a
student at the Art Center School of
Design in Pasadena and her husband
is a founding partner of Industrial
Forest Products in Diamond Bar.
Filing coll~~ion report
While driv-
ing in Newport ~;;;;;;~ Beach, you are •
involved in a iii;"~ rear-end traffic
collision at Pa-
cific Coast
Hi&hway and
Jamboree
Road.
You contact the other dnver and discover the
damage to both vehicles is minor and no one is
injured Neither of you can agree Lfyou must call the
police.
Under what circumstances must you file a
traffic collision rePort with the police?
A) Every accident must be reported.
B) Only accidents resulting in injury or c:l'bth to
any person must be reported to the police.
C) You must rePort an accident when the
damage to your vehicles is more than $500.
0) Never.
·~u~H S,J:>Aµp Jno.< JO UO!SU;dsns 1? U!
11nsa.i .<cw wo1.:1 l ·lfS uv :>t!J 01 :un1rv.:1 :a.LON ·1o:>S1? :>:>Ut.msur JOOA JO lU:>W
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JO qt~p JO iUnfu! U! ju~lfOS:>J 1U-:JP!~1? AltlA-:J UJ
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'OS Su1op J:>lJV ·Al.Jed J:>ttio 0>41 01 JltlS.lno.< AJ!lU~P!
pue do1s 1snw no.< lU<lP!:Y.>8 :>!JJ11Jl AltlAtl u1
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JO .(infu! U! SUfl(n!klJ s1u~pp~e .<1uo ·g :J:lMsuy
Question and answer supplied by tbe Newport
Beacla Police Department.
RED CROSS VOLUNTEERS •••
FnimBl
friendsandotherwomeninthecommunity."
The large fountain added a lovely accent to thcJO
a.m. party, along with beautiful fresh flowers. The buffet
consisted ofbountifuJ 'bubbly,• melon and other fresh
fruits and warm croissants.
Red Cross representatives indicated the council's Joal is to "broaden support of the chapter by networking
mfluential women with major experience in the Orange
County philanthropic arena."
Some of the new mcm bers who attended were
Pegy Dracocles, Pat8attre11, Lacla de Garcia,
BenJce ll1rd, C."y Jobson, Mia ~fel, A1drey
Nenn. Aue Natt, Mary Sllul, MarllDe Trainottl,
Shirley Bracken, Louise Coelbe, Jady Dobbs, Olivia
Jobmon,Sally Knapp, Mary Ann Miller and Anne
Vaaderbarp.
Paisley said, "We arecreatinga group devoted to
fund-raising and reaching individuals who actively
support benefits. While donations received through the
25% OFF
CMt. Sizt poly eotto.i.· ~ bQ Ol slolt, pUti? Ol blue pAik1
... Pen{jec-t (JoJL Rottte,
Rospiia~. Ratel . . .
~kv
LINGERIE
S406 CVUJ. Lido, JJ~t l?wel
(714) 67g-n10
~ Thu Sat. 10·5,g()
Uruted Way provide a majoq>ortion of the operating
expenses, additional funding is necessary to maintain
quality service.
"The Red Cross board includes many well-known
county leaders. One shin in& example is Doll hrcber, -
recipient of our first Orange County Spirit award. The
women'sgroupwill beorganizingmanyothergala
events. We are putting the fun back into fund-raising."
Indeed, th~ reception group had fun being on
camera as Jlm Ryenon filmed a video presentation for
an upcomingevenL
Eve ltasla, newly ap~inted community develop-
ment director of the county chapter, said, "I have met so
many i:r:clved and talented women -many already
among our 4,000 local Red Cwsa \'Oluntecrs-who
need only to be brought toiether. We are extremely
eitcited about the prospects."
Paparazzi is edited by Daily Pilot Style Editor Vida
Dean.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: "Sleazy
landlords," Cb? I wonderwbo l&Ql>o
pcd up those toileu, left the tl1lh in
the corridon that attrle1ed rodenta,
codaOIChes and Lord knows what
ebe. Surely the apartment wua' lD that condition when it wu raued.
Since you live on the other lide of
the trackl. IO to SDe&k. )'OU doo 't kll<>"' an)'tbiQa a&out "people wbo li vc
like pip.-wowd you believe 10me
folb ~no IO&P or delerlent ln the hou1e?lbey never clean ANY.
THINO!
Sure, there arc landlordl who take
Advant11t oftenanta. but 20 to I it's
theotherwayaround. Yououabtto
t your words. -BEEN THERE JN v
DBA&VA.:=-lllilli:J._ ----...... , .... ,.. ................... .. ..... .................... .... .........................
) ...................... . ..-.. -• ...-. ...
DEAR ANN LANDERS: OfteA we
heattbe wOl'dlattribu..stoJDlm F. Kennedy: ••ufe it unllir." Too bid th!! tile cn.tQte al!")'l~OUt of
context Tbeentin panpa~ ii
worth bearina~• llMf IPia-1 am enck>U?itand 1yeuWillJWllit. -D.K. INO TFALLS,
MONTANA
D&AllOUAT: ............ 1•«• 11-.Jftacelltat. r ..,,.. .. alwaYt~lallle.
hanie Pleated, the bride's stepsister,
Lynne Bame, sister of the bride-
groom, and Kathleen Baum, the .
bride's cousin. Jaime Baum, the
bride's cousin, and Amy Baum, the
bride's half-.sis~r. were flower girls.
The bricSearoom is the son of Mr.
and Mn. Robert Edward Barrie of
Laguna Niguel. James Carlton was
best man; and ushers were ~
Baum, the bride's brother, Chip
Plested, the bride's stepbrother, Step-
hen Baum, cousin of the bride, and
James Anderson.
The couple greeted 200 guests at a
reception at the Bia Canyon Country
Oub.
After a wedding trip to San Fran-
cisco, the couple are residents of
Santa Ana. She is a teacher at St.
Marpret's School in San Juan
Capistrano and he is art director at
lrvine Photo/Graphics in Irvine.
REARD01'·811JTB
Mark Joseph Reardon of. Mission
Victio claimed Lisa Carol Smith as his
Patricia BaacJi bride in a Sept. 29 ceremony in SL
Mary's Cbureh in J..aauna Beach. BARRIE-BAUM The bride is the daughter of Ruth
Wendy Claire Baum of Newport and Richard Smith of Lquna Beach.
Beach and Mitchell Edward Barrie of She wore a fonnaJ gown of white
Laguna· Niguel exchanged wedding taffeta with a cathedral train. Lace
vows in a morning ceremony in St. and pearls trimmed the bodice an<t
Michaels and An Angels Episcopal matching v~il.
Church. Corona de! Mar, on Sept. 22. The maid <;>f hon~r was Laura The bride is the da¥ghter of Sparks and bndesmaids were Jan~t
Deborah Bates Baum and Mr. and Bartram, Molly Herman and. Julie
Mrs. Michael Gene Baum, all of Reardon. . •
NeWJ)ort Beach. She wore a gown of The bndegroo~ is the son of
ivory Ol'p!lZA over taffeta em-· ~o~as ~n~ R~ta . Reardon of
broidered With Alencon lace on ttie M1ss1on VreJ~. Hrs be!t man was
bodice, hem, court sleeves and chapel Steve Manwanng, and ~aul ~cardon, •
train. A Juliet cap of Alencon lace and Greg Reardon and Erik Smith were
pearls held her waltz length veil which ushers. . . was strewn with pearls and silk A recept100 foll~wmg th<: cer-flowers. · emony was held m the tn-level
Her maid of honor was Helen gardens of the, church. One hundred
Schwabe. and bridesmaids were Step-fifteen guests w~re 10. attendance: After a wedding tnp to San Diego, . S ubmit your the couple are residents of Fullerton
where they are students at Cal State
Fullerton. r-
wedding news
The Daily Pilot wants your wed-
ding and engagement news.
BEACON CAMPAIGN •••
To help you submit the required
informauon, forms are available ar
the Daily Pilot omce, 330 W. Bay St.,
Costa Mesa. ;
For weddings. quality photos of the
bridal couple or bride only are
acceptable. The photo must be sub-
mitted no later than three weelcs after
the wedding. otherwise it will not be
published.
Engagement information is to be
~ubmitted at least seven weeks before
the wedding.
Forms and photos can be dropped
off at the office or mailed to rhe
Wedding Department, Daily Pilot, P.
0. Box I S60. Costa Mesa. Calif.
92626.
From Bl
Wheeler is a branch chief in the
12th · Coast Guard District in
Alameda. lk. gives ljghthouse lec-
tures, which include a dramatiution
of the tired Army veteran. He uses
~uotes and slides to tell the history of
hghthouscs and their keepers, or
"wickics," who sometimes per-
formed courageous deeds.
For eumple, there's ldawalley
Zorada Lewis. Born in 1842 in
Newport, R.l., she used a rowboat to
rescue more than 18 people from the
shores of the Lime Rocks off New .. port.
She was keeper of the lighthouse on
.....
one of the larger islets for 32 yea.rs,
and her last recorded rescue occurred
when she was 63. The Lime Rocks
were renamed the Ida Lewis Rock1 in 192• -13 years after her death.
The Li&hthousc Society, based at
130 St, Elmo Way, San Francisco,
94127. is about a year old. But
Wheeler says 900 people are on a
mailing list, and he's received letter&
from nearly every state. ,
"I found out about the lighthouse
organization while on vacation in
Maine," wrote Paul Bosco of Hart-
ford, Conn. ..I thought I died and
went to heaven."
e MBEDtmH)OCI(
'' ll!llTI I MI( ...
lfAttlM
MOYIE • * * * "The Ctnt.vlllt Oholt" ( 1944) Chatlel t..qhton, Robert
Young.
• GROWING YEAM ~~Amy cans.. 1er
(1971) I.Ma Antonlll, Oiancafto
Gllnnlni
-11:t0-1aw.o a • NlWI
ICTV ., ....
• \
\ i r .
P-h/llis George
a 'brightener'
for CBS News?
-
SCR's 'Top Girls'
will move to LA
By FRED ROTHENBERG
APT•e--: ....
NEW YORK -Phyllis George is
not Dlanc Sawyer, but CBS News i•
not ~Poloalzina for puulna the fonncr Miu America and current sidekick to
Jimmy the Greek on the atrul&lina "CBS Momin& News."
George, who contributes whole·
someneu, ch~rpy
banter with The
Greek and eel·
ebrity Pl'.Ofiles to CBS' ''NFL
Today" football
Sbo..,J. joined the
ucB:i1 Mornin1
News" today as the
probable per-
manent replace-.._~~"-=--'-&J
meni for Siwyer, Geerse
who make1 her debut on "60
Minutes" Sunday night.
"Whelher it's a tryout or per·
manent I don't know," said Jon Katt,
executive roduccr of the "Momin&
News." •• don~l make those de-
cisions."
A sou~e at CBS News, who spoke
on the condition of anon)'.Jllity, said
that Ed Joyce, p~sident of CBS
News1 and Howard Strinfer, vice
presiaent, favored George,• and bar·
riDJ an unforeseeable catastrophe, she 1 the choice." ,
• For hi& part, KatZ docsn 't otijcct.
"I'm not the least bit embarrassed ~ PbyllisGeof$e, whose role will bea
strona one, pnmarily as a feature
person in the area of lifestyles," said
Katz. 0 Sbe brinpinterview skills and
bas TV experience. She's a warm
person with a family, and the 'Mom-.
ma News' desperately needs someone
who relates to families and women."
George as' married to John Y.
Brown, the former aovcmor of Ken-
tucky, and the)' have two children.
The apparent choice of George is a
reflection that the momina news
shows, more than any other network
news broadcasts, arc hybrid programs
that must be all thin~ to all people.
They wake up viewen with hard news
about the world, as well as softer news
. about themselves. They also appeal to
the dawn's different constituencies:
the carly-risin& professional with a
train to catch and the housebound
• viewer with time to kill.
• Katz, a former new paper ex-
ecutive who has been in cbarac of the
··Morning News" since April, secs the
broadcast emersing toward •·an el~
tronic newsmapzine." As such, there
will be contribulin& speciahsts.
Business reporter Robert Krulwich
of National Public Radio made his
debut Tuesday by usin& a mound of
dollar bills and a star-spa.ngJcd
vacuum cleaner to explain the con-
nection between interest rates and the
deficit.
"The mandate here," said Katz. "is
to provide a broadcast that is distinct-
ly different, that applies the samt high
journalisuc standards 10 bu11nm,
1pon1. popular cultqrc, consumer
affairs, health and sc1cncc-1he same
elcmenu that a good newspepet
bnngs. ..
"... The :Washini1on Post runs
horoscopes and comics. It has a lt¥lc
S«tion. Why ts it so conuoven1al
when TV covers the same subjects? "The real sianific.ance of what's
happening is the fact we're breakina
new around, we're 1etti~ away from
the talk·show mentality.'
Steve f:riedman1 execut ve
producer of NBC's nval "Today,"
said CBS does interviews, "more than
'OMA' and 'Today~" "To fill two
hours a day, five days a week, ~2
weeks a ·year, the interview ss the
staple of the morning programs," he
said.
"Contributors are imponant/'
added Friedman, "but they cannot
sustain without someone lo hold
them together. A gaggle of con·
tributors, to me, means one thina: no
confidence in the anchors.'•
TV news often has been criticized
for being mo~ style than substance.
The hiring of George may add more
ammunjtion to that argupient. "l
probabl)' am defensive about that,"
said Katz ..
Sawyer was Kurtis' co-equal, which
is unique among momin1 coed
teams. lJryant Gumbel is more
erominent than Jane Pauley on
•Tooay," while David Hartman
dominates ABCs "GoOd Morning
America,". leavin& C<Hlncbor Joan
Lunden with lifestyle interviews. •
"The anchor choice is a major
decision," said Katz. "That's why it
took so long. I feel I &ot my Pb.D in
television this summer. But all alon&
we never wanted to duplicate Bill
Kurtis. We QJ\ted to complement bim.t•
. Throughout the summer, CBS
News correspondents Jane Wallace
and Meredith Vieira took turns as
Sawyer's substitute.
"I don't consider this a com-
promise " said Katz. ••Jane and
Meredith are both experienced
journalists who could interview; they
did extremely well. But Phyllis
George is an extremely well-known
personality. ed she brings a lot of
viewen with her. ·
''What I understand about her is
that she's bri&ht and hard-working.
It's wrong to say that Phyllis George
will never do serious interviews."
Ratings arc an important consider-
ation in the decision. The .. Morning
ews, .. which increased its audiences
1n 1983 with Kunis and Sawyer, has
slumped this year. Now a distant
third to "Today" and the top-rated
"GMA.'' the .. Morning New " is
going through yea another format-
and-anchor change.
.. It's essential that we get this thing
right this time," said Katz. "I don't
want to do this every year." ·
South Cout Repertory is wona n1 SPberr ··These lectwa; ...........
show oa the road. fteeand open_110tbe DUblit= Tbt Colca Meta compu)'"1 currem available~ will lie lldd Pl'Od~aon of<;w)i OlUrdlill'1 .. Top and~ from 5 IO 7 p.m. om.. :now playina on 1he Second Fine Ans'Studio1'1lc91er; ..
S• ihrou,lh Sundar, will mo,.Ye 10 Valde:t is the bmder ad_., ric
the WestwOod Ptayhou1e hr· Los d.ittcsot of lbe Ja1'lllt ad -*
Anldes Nov. 7 for an 1ndefimte run lnftuenilal bihnsua! Cbicl• di HU
The play -wbidl concerns in the Umled Swa. El r .....
women's advanctmeni, put and Cam~no. h wu ~ ID IMS• ~t. PfQVed '° bt a atllout dunna an actJVJlt emcmble aftUialed "'*
lU SCR nm. Oriaioally .cheduJcd to the United Fann Woftal. 11 ......
clolc 1as1 weekend, the Show wu t~ ~nqy 1a ~~ f967 ~JM
extendtd an am week becau.C or wmmna an Obie (Off~OlliilWift
heavy ticket demands. award lhe latier yar
Westwood·Playtiousc execuuve d1· He is c:unanJy<lirec:UDI E Teauo rector Norman Maibaum uw the Campesano aft b11 lase.a Won, ""Car·
SCR producuon and approecbcd ridol. .. at lbe Old Globe Tbealcr' ba • artistic diteClors {>avid Emmes and San Diqo 'the play uses d1aJet11e,
ManinBtllsonabOutthepowblilyof music and dance IO mcU ~ mov.i~ it lO Los Ang&s. QOfridos, or uadiuon&l Mestea01 ..We re tremcndoull) excittd 10 ballads. •
· move "Top Girls' to Los An,ael • • • •
says Emmes, who also directed the hakespcare's .. A.5 You Like It
A~tepy? .
Jean Staplet~left) pesta on .. SCarecrow and lln. Kina''
wit.la Brace . ettncr and Kate Jacboo ~t at 8 on C88.Cbannel~. _
'Carmen' benefit set
Thursday in Newport
show. "This will make Cburchitrs opens a lh•e-day run Wednaday el
work available to a larger audience ~pman Collete an Oranlc.
and allow more Los ~ngeles The romantic comedy. dclci'ibld
theteraoers to see SCR 's wooc•• by director Henry K.ems>-Btair as oae
The Westwood P.layhouK is of tbt Bard's mOlt lill;ttheaned u4
located au 0886 La Conte St, several esiJ aa:cssibl.e pla will be
streets norih ofWilsbin: BoU1evard in fo~eCI at I p.m. )'l,ruptly in ~
Westwood Vilu. across from the Waltmar l"beater oa tbe campus in:
UCLA campus. Futther information Oranae. Call 997-68S7 for umt
on that production may be obtained irif onnation.
at (213) 208-S4~4 .• • The Ncwpori*~ier Arts c.cn~
Cbicaoo plal'Wri&ht L'llis .YatdC'z.; buobta1neel'ptmb~muwtaidlii
author of "ZOOt S'uit:' wilt be in is .. scllina" forSlOO~
residence at the UC Jr'\ine campus While mc teal will remain in the
through Nov. 2 as a UC Reaents' theater, the buyer will be rccopind Opera fans will have the opponuni-support Opera Pacific at the same Lecturer. by 1 brass plate with bis or her name th to !Ce tenor Placido Domingo in time." Valdez will oOnduct drama wort-inscnbcd. About half lbe seats have
t e new movie version of''Canilen" Rcserntions for lbe special show-shops with studenlS from the School been sold thus far ..
and support Opera Pacific at two mgs may be obtained by Callin& of fine Arts and Jive lcctUf"CS on his Anyone wiihini to contn"bute
benefit showin&s Thursday at the 241-1600. ne-N concept of .. Theater of the showdc8llNTACat631-0288.
Edwards Lido Theater in Ne9iport r-~~-::-::::::=::-::-:-:-~~-=r=--.==============================================;;;;;;r--8i~ra Pacific will receive alJ RUff ELL'S
proceeds from the showings at 4:30 UPllLSTEIY, llC. and 7:30 p.m. AU seats are priced at
SS. F• Tiie lat Of Y• Litt
The movie co-stars soprano Julia 1922 .._. awo .• COSTA IEA-Sd-1154
Migencs-Johnson, who performed riiiiiiwiii~iiijjiiijjjijjiiiii1 earlier this :year at the Pacific
Amphitheatre 1n Costa Mesa. • ·
"'We are espoecially pleased to
secure the exclusive right to present
lhis outstanding film," said · Niles
. Gates, chairman of Opera Pa-
cific. "We encourage aU local SUP.'"
porten of the performing-arts· to
attend this perf onnance rather than
driving to Los Angeles or attending
later showings. In this way, they can
ertjoy an outstanding movie and
Tina in 'Rituals'
MANN NATIONAL
WES1WOOO (21S) 20M)66
l:W.'f•1"&·UD·l•·ND·,;t•~
BNM1DS IOWN CENTER
~ti8A(7~71M•M
FR! 0 "° I SA' • ~ "'~ ~ I "'°"' P1'\I f>UI U O 'ID30 020 Ile. 7JCor.:s030
1uxun,.. ,.., ............ . oav•u1 ...... 1.....-
NO Moore 007 films
ilfter 'View to Kill' COSTA IEA LA ._,.
£DW.\IUlS SWTH COAST ME FASIO SQUAii[
l'lAZA 546 2711 ( 213) "1-WJ ,
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Roaer
Moore says it will be the last time he
will use his 007 license.to kill.
.. A View to a Kill" is the 14th in the
James BOnd series and will be the last
for Moore. who took over from Sean
Connery In 1972.
"They're such hard work. lhcse
films," said Moore on location in 5an
Francisco. "They may look great fun
on the screen, but they're phy~ically
lo MIRADA (.~
.... (PS)
tz.30 U0,150
M WT ST-.ml <") US l4S 1050
A llltm1 STOlf (N) rrt __. t • 1IJQ, & .0. IOto
'" 0.-,: "-lllO 11.30. ns c.o. u~. uo. 101S
11llJ w IOll1 (I)
IUC, t.3S. 1'40, l-.S. 'l10 1"'
-(PS)
111U lQ. llHIO ID DA• (9'1.U)
llS 1~
AMNl1JS (K)
M OIUf Sl11ED
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11tlf W llMTS (l)
lllOUHl'OCO
lUS US US US I tS It 4S
nt: unt1 ..u aca1
It ~ HU IS I0.4S
*PACIFIC DRIVE·IN THEATRES• _
loHAf\RA .
• r· .. 1: 1.-..~
'
• N£ WPORT BC A CH •
4 1~ DOl.IY STt•O
"'COlllm" CfCl
I U 400 &U llC. JUI ........ r~
~Wt Wii ,., ua 1010
• '\() COAST Pt A/A •
ALL SEA.TS $2.00 AT
EDWARDS EA, EDWARDS WEST8ROOK
• COS TA WSA •
rowuos _, .....
Mt llOl
SITT( llWll ·au•r f'&l
....,,._ 1 u t 10
• EL TORO •
UTIUill.._. . ._.
115. tlD (I)
f
J
M 0...,.. Cou4 ~ILY PILOT MOOday, Odob«
PUNKY WINKERBEAN
(I ) HOVERCRAFT
THE
FAMJJ,Y
CIRCUS
"It's just the storm before the lull."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
• I ·j
I I
0
~e~ . -.~k ···"~··
"f worked llke any dog other than
Marmaduke today."
GORDO
GARFIELD
"
by Tom Batluk
BIG GEORGE
0 1 hate Mondaya."
DENNIS THE MENACE
by Hank Ketcham
f SURE I KNIJJJ ~ TO CCXM" ! THERES OOE I A
COOPtE, A FEW .. ANO A WHCtE BUNCH ~ "
by Gus Arriola
by Jim Davis
MERE COME~ ARLENE. MEY. ARLENE, WHAT'S N\Y M05T '710 YOO MEAR THAT? SH£'~ CRAZY A600T ME
MOON MULLINS
C~fttl<iEA8J..E ...
I RE:Al.t. Y NSE:D A .
~NJ'Y[>ol.L,AR 11.L ..
JUDGE PARKER
OUT~iANt71NG f'EATUR(?
-·BUT l'LL
S~Tn~FOR
IWOTENS.
WHEN CAAIGS
SISTER 'TELLS
HIM 'THAT THCV
MUST OtSCUSS
T"'1E PUTURE
Llt<.E t SAID, BETH 1 I
HAVE AN IMPORTANT
""'EETIN6 A80UT A NEW JOB I I WON'T ee HOME
CARe OF HIS SONS.HE ~TME'THEY
F'OU.OWING
NIGHT!
,
FOR DINNER'
SME ADMIRE~ ME F'OF\ MY eoDY
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
EVER SEE ANVONE
CATO~ AN ERASER
IN ~ER TEETM?
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
TUMBLEWEEDS
MlettRS-.. · I ~10
l'D 1RINK peoJI
rr!
. '
-
by Jeff MacNally
~lf.E~'y 'J)K£]
A~I~ exf'r<e~S.
bv Charles M. Schulz
JUST CORRECTING A
FEW MISTAKES ..
·u~e.61il£.? oi: llAE.
]
I
]
]
POOR NlO 511.W\O '
by Lynn Johnston
CRNT voo 1FUNK ~ FA~lt'ffi 1HRrr!l
~
by Tom K. Ryan
BRIDGE ANSWERS TO WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ
----
Q.1-Neither vulnerable, 11 South
you hold:
+7 c;:;i KQ83 OA76'3 •AM
The bidding has proceeded:
EHt Soath w .. t Nortla
1 + Dble Pa11 2 <::'
2 • ?
What action do you take?
A. -In term• of high cards you are
close t.o a mJnimum double, but your
poinll are all prime. To pus and
hope partner can act •rain might
put too much pressure on him.
Raise to three hearts. Partner
will bear in mind that you bid
competitively.
Q.!-Bot.h vulnerable, u South you
hold:
+95 <:'KQJJ062 • 0 9 •A75'
The bidding hat proceeded:
SoatJt Wo1t Nortla Eut
1 <::' 2 0 Obie Put
?
What action do you take?
A.-Low·lev~I penalty doublet are
not Ciatt -they euggeat that,
because of a mialit, it might be
wi I' to play for penaltiia than to
bid on. However. your hand i1 offen·
eively oriented and is bound to be a
aefensive dinppolnt.ment t.o part•
ner. P\111 to two hearts.
Q.J-Both vuln rable. u SouL-b you
hotd:
•9 OAQJJOU OT •AIUts
Tb bidding has proc d d:
.. ~ Wm .U E
I Q l 0 DI* P ...
7
What acUon do you tak ?
A.-Thu Um no o can qutt,bl
about 7our def n1iv alr ngth.
However, lh offensive potential of
7our hand ii almo1t unllm1ted. DO
you want 'o def at &wo diamonds
doubt d two lritu and then find out
that our 1tde n maJce HV n
clubs? Show your powerful dlatribu·
tion by jumping to four clubs.
Q . .C-Both vulnerable, as South you
bold:
+83 c;:;i KQ.193 OJ5 •AK87
The bjdding has proceeded:
Soatla Weit Nordl Eu&
1 c;:;i 2 O Obie P ...
1 -What action do you take?
OMAR
SHARIFF
A.-There ia no que1tion I.hat 7ou
have your abate ol defensive valuea.
Offensively, however, you can't
even t>. 1ure of a part Kort, ltL
alone game, if partner, a1 expected,
la thort in hearts. Pasa. and collect
your ~nalty.
Q.!5-As South, vulnerable. you
bold:
•AQ8$ t>KQt'll +AHi
The bidding haa pl'()Cffdid:
"di W ' N.nla Ean
J o P... IO P ..
2. ~--3 . , ...
' What do you bid now?
A.-You have alrtady 1hown 1 goOd
hand with your renrte bid. Now
you can give partner 1 complete
picture of your holdlnr by 1impl1
raisin,1 lo four clubl. Slaee 7ou
would not ralM partner'• MCODd
ault wit.houC. four-card 1uppon aad
your nvene promllU at t.ut ftve
M&rta ud r.ar ·~ partner
1hould koo• &bat 7out hape 11
•
Q.G-As South, vulnerable, you
hold: + KJ78 <::' 95 O A8782 • 83
The bidding hu proceeded:
We1t Nortla .Eat& Soati.
l <::' Pue P... 1
What action do you take?
A. -If you chose to pass, you make
life too euy for the opponent.I. You
CHARLES
Go1E1
should not allow them to buy hand
at the one level unleu there is
nothing you can do about it. Here,
you ahould certainly offer some
competition, and we recommend
you bid one 1pade. Slntt you are In
the balancing position and did not. •
double, partner will not pla_y.7ou for
I alrong hand and wlll allow for th
poNlbllity that 7ou are eompeting
on a four-card suit.
e .... , ....... u.e-., ... r., ._., Cllarleti a.,.. ._, tlae
unrw. Fer • e.,y el "Wml•
0,n'• IAM1,.. .... llM t.
"Oere•·Loa•1," tart ef Utla
... .,.,...,P.O. In eu, P.-1,..
.I •..... Malle cMcll ,.,nae t.
N .......... I d11 •
..
'
Video tratiler
Tb18 Wutration 1bowa the llK-80 Tank
Gtiilllery Trainer that ta belnf 'Uaed by the
Ariny to tralA recratta at Port Knoz, Ky.
Tbe trataer. •lmalatee the flrinl of am-
munl tadon from an Amertc:an 11-1 Tank.
The coll901e rmembnn. a tun control
panel ii med with a viCeo cllik player to
•lmUlate tbe moving taqet.
Micro D charges against earnings
Micro D. lnc. of Santa Ana an-
nounced Mondar. that it will take a
one-time S2. S million charge against
earnings in the fourth quarter ending
Oct. 3 J representing a write.down of
inventory and accounts receivable.
Walker & Lee Real Estate of&nt.a Ana bas been chosen to market the 342-
unit Crestine townhome project in Laguna Hills. The project is being built by
Moreland Developmeat Co. and the ErUcla Co. • • • doa DeTbom1 has been named sales manager of Geor1e Elklu Co.'1
residential real est.ate office in Newport Beach, where be will manage 27 fuU-
time sales associates. DeThomas was formerl)' co-manager of the office.He
began his real estate career with George Elk.ins Co. in 1981 , and has since been
co-salesperson of the year in 1983 and was the firm's top producer for the first
six months of 1984. A 25-year Newport Beach resident, he specializes in
waterfront properties and estates in Newport Beach.
The write-<iown will result in an
estimated pre-tax loss in the fourth
quarter of approximately $1.6
million. This represents an estimated
after-tax loss of approximately
SSS0.000, or 13 cents per share in the
fourth quarter.
For the year ending OcL 31, there
will be an estimated pre-tax profit of
$1 million on estimated sales ofSl 14
million. This represents an estimated
after-tax profit of $5 70,000, or 8 cents
to 9 cents per share.
Lorraine Mecca. vice chairman of
the board an<l-cti1eftxecutive officer,
commented. .. This action is the result
of a thorough analysis and review of
some recently returned merchandise
and slow-movinJ inventory. De·
• • • mand for intertamment and educa-
!he Newport Beach office ofE~t & WMmaey bas promoted five certified tional software. which constitute public accountants to manager poslUons. The new managers are: Mlclaael J. approximately 5 pcrttnt of our sales.
GWmore. new manager in the audit department and director oftbe recruiting ,has been weak thii, year and prices
program for the office; Joutbn S. Hill, an audit manager specializing in the have fallen.
firm's healthcare industry division; Steve MartiDda.le, audit manager ·a1· · · th h·nh h · d · d fi · 1 · · · G M .. This; has caused a depreciation in speCt tzmg rn e .... tee tn usmes an nanc1a tnstttut1ons; rego'}' . the value of much of our enten.ain-
Moatapa, a tax manager; and wnnam L. West, audit ma~r with a spec1~Jty ment and educational software in-in hi&Jl tech manufacturing. contract accounting. Secunty and Exchange
C · · · · d · ventory. Furthermore, the shaJce-out omm1ss1on registrations, an repo:U."\ in the retail market has impaired the
Destp Basics oflrvine bas been selected to d~velop the interior decor for ability of cert.am of our custmers to
the models, office and clubhouse facilities at Pointe Niguel, ah. apartment pay their bills..,
community under construction by lle&i• Management Co. of Newport Beach. Commenting on the company's
The firm recently completed three other projects for Regis, as well as work on inventory and credjt controls, Mecca
three model home interiors and the sales office at Country Living in continued, "We have tighcened our
Sunnymead. by Dlxco and Knollwood. Design Basics principal Ardyce Larson criteria for taking ol) new vendors and
created a country motif for the Sales office by combiningantiques with built-ins developed new formuJas for purchas-
and theme acx:cssories. The models carry out the community's theme with ing and stocking the different
colors, wall treatments, furniture and accessories. cateiories of product that we carrv.
-~~_..... -··--
Orange Coa t DAILV PILOT/Mond y Octobtlr 22 1984 -
COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, 11.
FV High will roll pres
·thanks to Pacific Mutual
Pacific Mutual Ufe Insurance
Company recently donated a run
system printin1 prts1 to Fountain
v,auey High Sct1001.1'beiJ>fC$s will tiC
used,by 100 students an the Graphic
Arts Depanment this fall:
Barbara Gardner, upervisor of
printing and graphic$ at Paafic
Mutual, identified .Fountain VallC)"s
nttd for this equipment from her
participation in thcu graphics train·
mg proara~~ for the l~st t.wo years.
Chuck JMhngs, G.raph1c Ans De-
partment instructor at the high
school, said, ··since federal grams to
purchase new equipment stopped two
years ago, we are pleased this con·
tnbution makes it possibJe to ofTcr
our students training on curTeot
equipmenL •• Gardner said that Pa-
cific Mutual was Jlad to ftnd an
organization th<u woukl make good
use of the press. She also noted, ··ey
donating state of the art equipment,
v.e also· ensure a better train~
employment pool:·
The five-~ear-old press. originally
valued at $45,000, has automatic
hand feeding. plate making capability
and a two-sided automatic printing
~ystem. Students will use the press to
inake stationery. business cards and
also to help with the printing needs of
the school. · Going to pre I•
Pacific Mutual often makes ··in-Chuck 81111,..., Grapblca Arta Deput:aeat bwbw4uw at
kind" contributions in the communi-Foa.ataln Valley ~ 8daool. Jett. llutaua Gudw',
ty through donations of used equip-auperri.ec)r oc:.r:rba=aad ~ f• ...,.tic...._.... •
ment. The .. in-kind" contributions Foantain V Sc~ •-A:r ..... .,.___ WeilmfleHI ! program provides a resource to ----._.. : deserving organizations that Optrate and Rw Simoneau ao 09el' laiiwta~ •• ,_ ... ~ r
on restricted budgets. · • preee that the flnil bU donated to tlle 19t'MDI. •
----------------------------------------------1 .
Who says productivity can't !
whittle away u~s. deficit? I
By JOHN CUNNIFF
~....,_~,
NEW YORK (AP) -One of the
more enchanting suggestions being
made these days is that budget deficits
can be worked down to zero by h.ard
v.ork. creative work, produetlve wo1k
and lots of work by enterprisina
Americans.
Who•sto~Ju:an't happen?
Befor€' you dccfare the possibility
to be preposterous, consider how
equally absurd it once sounded to
hear promises of a return to price
stability after a a decade in which
annual price increases exceeded I 0
percent four times.
It happened thou~. Last year the
year-to-year change in the consumer
price index was only 3.2 pe:rocot. the
lowest since l 967. This year's in-
crease will be well under 5 percent.
And next year looks only slightly
worse.
Nobod} can prove that relative
pnce stability will remain beyond
that time, but it djd come. for a visit
anyway, and maybe that other
stranger, a balanced budget, might
make an appearance too.
To assess the possibilit), it is
necessary to almo~t strip the issue of
politics, since attached to it are so
many fluttering political bannen.._and
pennants that the eye cannot dN\ln-
quish frill from substance.
The contention that a balanced
budget mtght be reached in this
decade comes mainly from supply-
siders. or people who believe the
private sector can respond with
greater production i ffcd a proper low-
tax, high-incentive diet.
That greater production, 1t is
argued, wouJd mean a bi8'ex: pie for
all to share. It would prov1de Wash-
ington with greater revenues. Con-
ceivably. it mi&)lt even lower federal
I UPS ANO DOWNS . -
costs for such itemi as unemploy-
ment.
The entire notion is lb.at a lar&er
economy means more wealth :for
evet)onc. includillJ go\·emmenL It
means a biSFT pie. thus enabling
everyone to slice up a greater amount
without cutting into their nrigbbor's
hare. .
Why even arauc tbc. JPOiJ,lt; say
some supply siders? Hasn't the point
been demonstrated? Hasn ·1 the
budget deficit already shrunk from
SJ 95 billion in 1983 to about S 174
billion in 1984?
Oppooents in both parties main-
tain. however. that to reduce the
deficic by $20 bdlion still leaves a
whopping S 174 billion to be obtained.
And from where? They contend the
only sou.rec is an increase in taxes.
They don't deny that the 1984
deficit was less than 10 the year before.
but they call attention to the C)clicaJ
nature of economies. Fiscal 1984 was
a boom year. fiscal 1985 isn't likely to
maintain the same r:ate of cxpanstQn.
Perhaps their most pvtent arp-
ment is that if the deficit gap wasn•t
closed in the most productive year in
American history how can it be
reduced in any lesser)~
Moreover, it is unrealistic. they
contend. to expect the economy to
expand year after year. For one thing.
plant capacity cannot be expanded
sufficiently fast; to attempt pushina
beyond _capa~ty would invitably
bnng on mflallon.
Those .v.ho contend a tu-in~ is
needed also point to interest on the
national debt. which sunply cannot
be reduced unless loans are repaid or
refinanced at lower rates.
In addition. they contmue. the very
existence of the debt means that
government must compete for money
with the private sector. thus denying
the pri vale ltJCIOr the funds with:
wtiiCh io 1expand: :
The supply siders. however~ are not·
without polelll arpmaiu. •
Produc:tivit)" after almost diSip-.
peariac from the man~ tee·
tor, bas returned. Ud ioueaa:d ~k,1~\iC)' is the main i~I in a biaer Pie. Jt · u lbe oee cenaio way 101'..PTQduc;iJI& au winnen •
and no losers. •
Many reasons ~ bqrood the
reoe'4W:d pins in produc:tivJty, but
perhaps none is more imponaot alian
expenence. Today's workforce is vast
but growing more dowty, which
means that fewer inapericnoed
workers must be trained.. •
Enerzy 0CO$t seem to ba\•e
stabiliiecl YesterdaJ;:~ ~ icarch. -.1lkb cost y at the time
but made little contribution to pro.
duct.ivity, is now praying off. And
costly environmental expeaditura
have beien taken c:are of:
ls 1M idea of wortiD,g down the
deficits~? The argument
remains. bu1 the idea may be no more
pttPOStet'OUS than was the DOtiOD that
mflation could be tamed, if ooJy for a
While.
Annual PR
dinner set
•
The~ Count); Chapter of the
Ammcan ·· ~ of Women Ac-
countants will hold their Annual
Public Relations Dinner Oct. 25 t
the Sheraton Newport, 4S4S
MacArthur Blvd., Newport Bcacb.
Hospitality begins at 6:30 p.m . and
dinner will be served at 7 p.m.
The speaker for the C'\lenina is Keo
MaJccn.
NEW YORK (AP) -The following llst ll 1how1 the Over·the·Counter 112 stocks and warnnts ll'Wlt have gone up ) the most end down the most ti.std on 14 percent of ctlange tor Friday. IS No '9Curitln :lr•cMG below $2 or 1000 16
shares are lndud9d 17 Net end Dercentaoe Cflang~ ert !ht ti
¥Vol un hrtc WI FMG HydrOh ~ ~INtLa
.. \;
~ ~ \lo
~ l
Up lij l
Gmwdpf ·~ =~ UP Montn un uo l. 9 ~~B -134 Up 1 . -~ uo ' . I Un ~ -2\li Up :.. 'I ~C.r$L -1 uo -lUi Up .. =: .... -... rl diffwen« between lht prev10U$ dos "91 bid prlQ and Frldtfp} last bid price.
i Oy!!~l'M L ' ere.~ ulc.1.1 0
Ar1EIC un :3 l\ UP 2 P= h ' '2V. \'J UP
I
~ff~, 'wt 1·~ 1
'h tl: Art~t;,XOI "r: l: Up ·~1\ u; e "' M: 1t,. i tntlb • uo 1 1 ~MS un ~ Uo I
O\rR TH[ CouNTlR
-- - - -
1-=· lotcna ,,~ ~lo ~dCP lekev ~lrG
~ame iO wt a::.,..
2~16 ti ...
l>lf
7~ ~ 2~ • -ols lo. ~
2\11
Lel~ _5~ m =i
Up R~'
·1g
-" Up 1 . l c ... s -?Va UP 1:9 1 artoR -Va Up ~twk t -\I') Up rwTom =~ Up . 1 · totlttn uo 1 l i; -1 UP 1 -16 Up 1 . 14 -1~ I p -\"2 Pet. §H ... s tntt -1 IU i a ' ~ -~ r m --
•
On
the , •
MOllDArS CL-OStllC PllC£S
M fT~l\ QuuTI\
~ ...... ,, ..
..
..
That's an apt description of both Business and
business people along the Orange Coast. To keep track of
where companies are gain~ and which people are helping
themge there.Just watch Credit Line· -everydaytn tile
Business section of your new •
-
MIMlra Dolphlnl
remeln unbNten
In NFL 8Ctlon
with _, win. C2.
Sea Kings orange
·run to glory county
~oplO
Corona del Mar JQafh'• Sea IDU•. paced bJ
(from left) Dan Bolland, Sean Com-Dar-
~ .......... '--......
ren Wood and Lance Ortla, ba•e a Cl'Oe9
coan~ reputation for rannlng In a pack ..
-
'I'zn sick abou·t this'
SAN DIEGO (AP) -It was suggested to San Diego
Coach Don Coryell that pethaps the Good Lord did not
intend for the Chargers to beat the Los Angeles Raideis.
. ..Don't blame it on Him," Coryell responded ... Blame
Jt on someone else." •
There certai~ly , was blame enough to go around
Sunday after the Chargen pve up 20 points in a seven·
minute apan of tile third quarter en route to a 44-37 loss,
their. sixth straiaht to the Raiders dating to 1981.
San Diego 61ew a 2()..14 halftime lead, and. in the final
minu~e of the game, squandered an opportunity to force an
overtime.
Los Angeles improved to 7-1 at the midway pc>int of.
the season. while san Diego fell to 4-4 and nearly dropped
out of the race in the AFC West. All four losses have come
within the division.
To add injury to insul~ the ChUJCrs lost their leading
receiver, tight end KeUen Winslow, for the season.
WinsJow tore ligaments in his knee in the foUrtb quarter
and underwent surgery to repair them late Sunday night.
San Diego's woes Sunday'were almost too many to
count:
Sunday's scores
Rill1en 44, C~era 37
Jeta 28, Chlefa 7 1Dl:"9
Bronc• 37, Bll.18 7 ~-.-
49en 34, Olleln 21
~lee 24, Glanta 10
Llon• 18, Vlitngl 14
Bengal• 12, Brown• 9
Colts 17, Steelen 18
Cowboy• SO, S&lntB 27 (ot)
Bean 44, B11ccaneen 9 ·
Seehawb SO, Packen 24
Dolphlm 44, Patriots 24
C&rdlnal• 28, Redskin• 24
•The Chargers• secondary;-operatiog Sunday without
iJtjurCd starting comerback Danny Wafters and safeties.
Andre Young and Bob Gregor, was exploited for 332 yards . . . and five passina touchdowns by Marc Wilson who Marcus Allen o~ a IQ..yard score, Dokie Williams on a 2()..
completed 24 of 37 attempts in his second start of the YIJ'derand.Denick Jensen o~ a J-yani TD that was set up season. by a Me dive over the goal line by Allen.
. •Gill Byrd, a second-year pro from San Jose State, Wilsonbit 17of24tossesfor219yardsinthefirsthalf.
twice wu beaten deep by fleet Malcolm Barnwell, who but the Raiders couldn't capitalizc and trailed 20-14 afttt
caught touchdown passes of 4S and S l yards. • two quart.en. Then in the third period a parade of San
•Dan Fouts completed 24 of 4S passn for 410 yards Diego turnovers_: fumbles by Fouts and Lionel James ~d sj>aJ:ked ~ Diego's }ate co.me~ but 'INU and an in~tion by Brad Van Pelt -allowed Los
1otcroepted ti)~ times the thtrd COmtnJ wtth 44 seconds Angeles its ~Jt°t Ouny.
to pl~y.and.kJlhngthe q;a~rs· final drive. Wilson his touchdown pass to Williams:in the
I'm. ~ck,,about this ... : we pve them too many fourth quarter, and Chris Bahr hit a 32-yard field goal. bis
?.PP<>rlUnit1es, CC?ryelha1d mmutesafterthepmeendcd. third of the game, to help the Raiders build a 44-30 Jead
It ~hould be a tie ball same. We should be out there with 4:S4 to play. But San Diego wasn't finished.
playing no~." . Fouts took-his team 68 yards in four plays-,.hittina
corona ael Mar's
cross country team
going after titles ·
prc:stJpouslC'enn) iaiiblov1iltioDaJ
a few Wttb beck. dominated the
Woodbfid&e lnvuauonaJ (Oil\iaa
sweelJStake5 h01l011 Mitri). and r ... isbed 5CCODd at the 'Sonora lnvna-
tionat. Saturday they rolled to the
Division l ¢roWl1 at me Orange
By RICHARD Dl,Uffl • • Count} ChalriPtOnShips. ~Plotc.11111 •• 1 So 'What more could be asked of
They ha-.u1etly gone about thetr Sumner and bis Pllo,piog ~
business 8" simply captured nearly .. We were thC to~ tt.am at
everything m sight. the belinning of the season, .. Sumner
It still, however. docsn 't seem to be said.'""Jben we dropped down to No.
enouah. .... 4 -now we're like at No. 8.
··we let our lids talk about it with "'I have na idea Why. All we do is
their shoes," ,~s :first-year Corona win." del Mat High Coach Bill Sumner, Corona dc1 Mar doesn't have the
whose bo~' cross country team has ace runner Sumner would like.
yet U> lose a Sea View league meet. although he anticipates someone to
"TheYrc kind of Uh a family," be come out of the woodwork soon.
continued. "And lhey Push each What il does have i~ four capable
other out for the top spot on our runners that, on any 11ven day, ClOuld
squad because we re.atty don ·1 have a pr._ovidewbal Sumner calls the .. aoe. ..
No. 1 runner." And ~ four. DimO Wood.
CdM may not have a No. I runner,. La.nee Ortiz.; ~ Holland . Scan
like it did a year ago when Dave Combs, arc CUT)'IDI the Sea Kings
Anderson 'W8S ca tins trade as if fire 'the top. was chlsiDJ him. What the Sea KiDp One more 1~ meet itands m the
do have is a No. I team -1n way o_f another tJtle (CdM woo ~e
Sumner's book, at least. Sea View~ last year), that being
.. I've been runnina for 28 years,.. N~ H~ Thunday, ana
says Sumner ... and the final pictutt Sum~~~'?& to bet ltie ~ten
always sets drawn. There are people record isn. t sOtDS to change. •
that are still rootins for the Chicago Saturday sdfonssawCombsgomg Cubs... . JS:l9. ~olland IS:22; Wood 15:47
CdM.s6-0leaguerccordismerelya ~Ortiz JS:5J, a J.S..16-2~ fini¥1
glimpse of what it has aooomplUbed am1dstmostC?fthc.topcompctJuontn
this faJI. The Sea Kina runners took Soutbera Califonua. •
home the sweepstakes trophy at· the (Pleue eee SltA lmfGS/CS)
RAMS TRY AGAIN,
ATLANTA A WAITS
IN TV SHOWDPWN
A TlANT A (AP)-Rams Coach John Robinson says
he has put the Ra.ms' ~28 loss to the Atlanta Falcons two
weeks ago out of bis mind as lhe two teams prepare10 race
each other tonight in a National Football league pmc. It's
on Channel 7 at 6 o'clock.
The Falcons arc favored by one point aad a aowd of
50,000 is expected at the 60.763-seat Atlanta-Fulton
U>unty Stadium.
Atlanta. 3-4, will attempt to come back from a 19-7
loss to the ~cw Y ort Giants a week ago While tbt 4-3 Rams
are coming off a 28-10 victory over the New Orleans
Saints.
In addition, Rams ~ck Jeff Kemp bas pided
the Rams to three victones in four games sinoe tak.ina over
for injured starter Vinoe Fenagamo. His oDly loss cf uriQ&
that span was to the f aJQOns.
Eric Dickerson tops the Rams' ~pme with 769
yards and four touchdowns, While Kemp has comple1cd 49 ~f 95 plJ:SCS for 1SS y8rds and seven TDS and only one
1ntcrc:epuon~
Defensively the Rams will be hopina for a repeat
performanoe from defensive bade Nola.D Cromwc~ who
scored a touChdOwn last week with an in~n.
.. It's funny, but I find it bard to even remember that
pme, .. Robinson said of the pme tbc Falcons won Wb.en
Mick Luckhurst kicked a 37.yarc1 field goal as tme ran out
.. Oh. 1 remember the guy kictina the ball 1hroulb the
upriah"i but other t.baD that ... I dOn 't think that~ wa_s
an emobonal pme. It was bard-fouabt, aDd wclJ.-.playcd.. L..111 .. 11111!:..J bUt I ooa•t think it wasemotional,"'6e said.
Robinson also was asked about 1he difference be saw ~-:..-. in films of the Falcons• victory over the RaDls a.Dd
AtJanta•s Toss to the Gianis: ·
.. f\irst of all. the hardest thing to do ill 1his lealue is to
play at top level week in and week out," be said. .. I don't
know that they played against the Giants as well as they
pla~ qainst us. They bad an extra toocl day on offense
aga1nst us. In the Giants' pme, thinp just didn't go as well·•
Atlanta Coach Dan Henning didn•t know the answer
either for his club's poor offensive showiaa against the
Giants.
For Wilson, .a starter wh~e Jim Plunkett recovers Bobby Duckworth with a SQ..yard touchdown pass, to close fro~ torn abdo~mal ~uscles, Jt was a pen:ormance that the cap to 44-37 with 2:36 Jeft, and the Chargers regained • ~OnJured memoncs of~1s ha!cyon. days at Brigham Youna the ball on their 16 after f6rcing a Raider punt with 2:06 -.,..i;;;_.:=-im
in the late 1970s. Besides his lltnkes to Barnwell, be hit remaining. Cromwell
.. Our offense was outplayed last week. When we tned
to make the biaplay. tbeGiantscameupwith thebi&pJay
to stop us. We have to put that one behmd us because the
Rams will Jive us one beck of a test this week. .. be said.
Boomerang rides
the right waves
Ktaloa finishes
third in series
to German craft
By ALMON LOCKABEY .,.. ..... ....._ ....
MARINA DEL REY -The 80.
foot German Frc.rs-<I signed Boom-
erang. owned by Geo~ Counian·
tarOus of New York won'Califomla
Yacht Oub's Cal Cup Sunda:y in 'the
finale of the ••battle of the maxis", best th1"9C-OUt-of.,fivc match race on
nta Monica Ba)'.
Boomerang, ·with Olympic gold
edalist ROd Dav1 a tactjaan, won
the fourth race by one minute and :S7
seconds over an c Jbt·mtle wind·
Ward·lccw rd course an Iii.ht to mod·
crate airi over Jam K.Hroy•s Ron
Holland-dC$11Dtd SO.footer, Kialoa,
out of the host club.
Kialoa on the third race m a tight
duel from tan to finish. but atl u did
was delay Boomcrana' ,,ctory by a
cou(>lc of houn Boomcrana had n
the first two races on Saturday.
Both yacht h d 1>9tentiaJ Amen·
ca•s up contcndeB ln tbctr 2$-man crews Davmsthc nominal kippifrof
Ncwpon Harbor Yacht Ctub·s · le
nCfici te btch IS 1J 'fi
America's Cup in 1987. John Kolius
was helmsman on K.ialoa and he is the
New York Yadtt Oub's choice to
skipper :America 11 in the America's
Cup challenge.
In tM third race K1aloa edged
Boomera~ at the tart and led her
rival by .33 seconds at the weather
mark, 22 seoonds at the leeward
mark, 33 seconds at the second
weather mark and JS seconds at the
finish. On the second weather lea
Boomerang'& initiated a taCkina duel
:which resulted in 13 tacb, but
Kiatoa ·~ aew were up to the
ohllleqc. ·
In the founh race Boomcrana
grabbed an I l scoond lead at the stan
nd led by S4 seconds at th first
weather mark, increased n to :56
seconds at the leeward mar~ and then
·1e4 away from Kialoa on the
second beat d pite a funou 17-tad:
duel mitiatcd by IK.ial 'screw.
1
Hagler'• battl~s
Will turn to court
in fight for crown
Bean '4, BKCUeen t: In Tampa, Jim McMahon
passed for 219 yards and three touchdowns and Wal~r
Payton rushed for a pair of touchdowns to leac:t the Chicqo·
Bears to a rout of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and a two-
ga.me lead in the NFC Central Division.
Sabres work over North Stan
FOXBORO, Mass. -Dan Marino led a 548-yard
offensive explosion with four touchdown passes, setlmJ a
club record of 24 in one season as the Miami Dolphins
remained the National Footblll League's only unbeaten ·
team with a 44-24 victory over the New England Patriots Sunday. , MutAo
Ma.rino, who completed 24 009 passes for 316 yards.
Payton, held to less than l 00 yards rushina for only the
second time this season, finished with 72 yards on 20
carries and failed in his attempt to become the thild runner
in NFL history to top the century mark in a record seven Buffalo forwards GU Perreolt and m
Mal Davit scored two goals each, leading ,
the Sabres to an 8--6 victory over the
Minnesota Nonh Stars Sunday in National
needed JUlt halfa season to break Bob Griese's club record touchdown play v.ith 34 scconds remaining. ca ppm& an
of 22 touchdown passes. The Dolphins' offensive output incredible fourth.quarter rally that boosted the In-
fell 4 yards short of the team mark established earlier this dianapolis Colts to a victory over the Ptttsb~ Steelers.
year. The Colts. starting their last-ditch drive from their
straight pmes. • ·
Eaglet H, Gla.Dll 10: A fourth-period sack led to a
fumble by Phil Simms and set up an 11-~d touchdown
pass from Philadelphia quarterback Ron JaworslU to wide
receiver Mel Hoover, trigering the Eagles to a victory over
the New York Giants at Philadelphia.
Hockey league action . • . Elsewhere in the NHL
Sunday. Don Maloaey and Mike A.lllsoa collected a goal
and two assists apiece as the"New York Rangers rallied
from a 3-0 deficit, then held off the New York Islanders
for a 6-S win ... Mark Mettler and Wayae GreUky
scored short-handed goals in a wide-open second
period and the Edmonton Oilers killed off a major
penalty in the third to take a 6-4 win over Calgary.
Gretzkf, playin.J his 400tb NHL pme, sc.ored twice m
the second penod, his ninth and 10th goals of the
season. to snap a 2--2 Lie .... Tim ~err scored two soals
and added an assist as Philadelphia defeated Pit-
tsbUJsh, 4-2 ... Center La1rte Botclamu scored one
goat and set up two others by def erueman Rudy
CUJ7le and.left wing Roa Wllsoa as Winnipeg topped
Boston, 3-2.
Elsewhere in tbe NFL Sunday: own 20 with 1:35 to ao.
Player slips pa_at Ballestero•
MADRID -Gary Player of South II Africa won the $6l,76S Johnnie Walker
Golf Tournament Sunday after a two--bolc
sudden-death playoff witti Spain's
4ters H, Ollen U: San Francisco quarterback Joe
Montana, taking advantage of Houston's youna and
inexperienced secondary, completed three touchdown
passes and Dana Mcl.Cmorc came up with a key
mterception to lead the 49eri to a triumph at Houston.
Montana bit tight end Russ Francis with an 1 l·yird
touchdown pass on the fim series of the game and went 26
yards to Wendell Tyler late in the second quarter. Ray
Wcrscbi~ kicked a 26-yard field goal as the 49ers took a
17-7 halftime lead.
Jets is. atlef1 7: ln East Rutherford, N.J., Pat Ryan
hurled three touchdown passes and ·a sufTocatin~ New
York defense, led by NFL sack leader Matlc Gasuneau,
carried the Jets to a victory over the Kansas City Chiefs.
The Jets spoiled Bill Kenney's return as~ staner for
the Chiefs. Kenney, a product of San Oementc Hiah and
Saddlcback College who passed fot over 4,000 yards last
season, but sat out the first six games this :.year with a
broken thumb, was sacked four timcs-includina twice by
Gastineau -and had a pass picked off that set up a Jets
touchdown. ·
Cowboys 3t, Saints l7: At Irving, Texas, a 41-yard
field goal by Rafael Septien with 3:42 elapsed in overtime
capped the bigest comeback in Cowboy history and pve
Dallas a victory over the New Orleans Sainu in overtime. The score was tied 10-l 0 when Simms fumbled after a
sack by Eagles defensive end Oreg Brown. Ea&les
linebacker Jerry Robinson recovered the ball at the New
York 8-yard line.
The Cowboys, Who trailed 27-6 after the third quarter,
scored 21 points behind reserve quarterback Danny White
in the fourth quarter -the taraest deficit they tiavc ever
overcome in th'C 24-year history of the club. Sea.bawks 31, Packen H: In Milwaukee, Dave Krieg
CardiaaJ1 H, Recl1kln1 U : Neil O'Donoahue.'makins fired two touchdown passes and comcrback Terry Jackson
up for two earlier misses. booted a 21-yard ffeld•oal with intercepted a Lynn Dickey pass in th~ end zone with 24
three seconds remaining. lifting the host St. Louis scoonds left as the ~ttle Seahawks ~hipped Green Bay to
Cardinals to a triumph over the Washington Redskins. hand the Packers their seventh stnught se~back.
The field goal b_y O'Donoghuc, who missed a 4().;yard The Packers moved the ball fro?l their o'!"n 29 to the
try with 2:S3 remaining, cappeg a 63-yard drive by St. Seattle 10. but sacks by John Hams and Mt~c Fanning Louis pushed Greco Bay back 9 yards. Jackson then mte;:rted
B.:f.al• 1• Bro t· J' 8 h t.! ked 33-~ a _last-ditc.h effort by Dickey in the end zone to the e "'• was • 1m rcec IJJC a yaru victory field J , his fourth of the game, H time ran out to ai ve the ·
Cincmnati Bengals a win over the visiti~ Cleveland Broncos 1'7, BIU1 ?: In Orchard Park, N.Y., an
Browns in a battle of bumbling intrastate rivals. opportunistic Denver defense set up two John Elway
Breech's 4-for-4 kicking overshadowed a ~yard fleld toucbdowry ~ and be_lped the Broncos to a victory /
goal by Cleveland's Steve Coit, the sccond-loo&e1t in NFL over the winless Buffalo Balls. histoq. But Elway, who threw a 52-yard scorina bomb to .· , Steve Watson and a short, roll-out touchdown to Clarence
ColtJ 17, Steelen lf: -Ray Butler grabbed a ,Uou 11, Vtklap U: In Minneapolis, Detroit's E.ddie Kay, suffered a bruised shoulder late in the accond quarter
deflected pas~ on the run and completed a 54-yard MurraylUckcdatrioofsccond-halffieldgoals,.includinaa andmissedthcrestofthegame. ,
Scveriano Ballesteros.
Player and Ballesteros coded the 72.-bole tourney
tied with 16-under-par 272s. ~
In the two-hole playoff: Player took six 'trokes
while Ballesteros bad 1even. 1·------l!l!l ... -------lm!ll-~~~lllJllll---------~!llml-------~~-----------------Player earned SJ 8,235 and bad a final-round 6 7.
Ballesteros shot a 6S Sunday.
Sandy Lyle of Scotland was third in the 12-man
field with a l7S after shooting a 71 on the final round.
American Curtis Strange tied for seventh at 276. Toughest race
won by Lamda He bad a 70 Sunday.
ESTORIL, Ponupl (AP) -Austria's Niki Lauda
won his third World Drivers· Championship Sunday in
"the hardest race of my career." He finished the
Portuguese Grand Prix second to his French Mclaren ~mmate, A~ain Prost, to take the title from Prost by a half
point. -
"My objective now is to win the title again next year " •••••••lllil•••••••••r-' said the 3S·year-old Lauda, once pven the last rites after' a fiery crash. ---lililillllilill--llilillllilillillllllillll_______ ~u~'s "9fe,. Marlene. flew to the race Sunday
~ommg m th~ pnvate plane of former champion Nelson
Piquet ofBrazil. It was the first raoe 1he has attended in five
y~rs, and lauah!n& and crying with joy a er the victory,
said, ··1 can't beheve 11 I can't believe at."
Kings still winless
· CHI<;AGO {AP) -Billy Gardne~ scored two aoals Prost led the race from lap seven of the 70 laps to gain and rookie goalie Warren SkordenslU earned his first his seventh .victory _this season. Laud.a -··2oo~perccnt Natio~aJ Hockey Leaaue triumph S~nday niaht in leading ready and wit!> a I 00 peroent car a aood combination" -
the Chicago Black Hawks to a 5-2 victory over the winless had to fight t.lfrough from 11th place.
Los Angeles Kinas. He was third on lap SJ , with no chance of catchm& up
Daryl Suncr, Troy Murray and Cun Fraser each to the second place he needed for the title, when the Lotus-not!=h~ a goal and an assist to help the Black Hawks cam R~nault of Briton f'iigcl Mansell in second had brake
their third v1cory of the season against three lOSICI. The faJlure, and Lauda wlls champion.
win moved them into a tic with for the lead with St. Louis "It's frustrating to lose by half a point," said Prost in the Norris Division. "~ut it's hono"!ble to lose the c~ampionship in these
For the 24-year-old Skordenski, it marked only his circumstances. I ve proved rm a winner this season."
second NHL appearance and his fint since January 1982, "I'm even convinced I am the beat, and I'm ah~ady when he lost to Hartford 6-5. thinkina of 1985.'' Prost said.
The Hawb JTlhbed a 1--0 lead at the l :02 mark of the They both will continue to drive the cLaren with the
fint P_Criod wh~n Sutter poked in his fourth 1oal of the year i: AG·Ponche e~Jine, financed b)' S.udi Arabiari million-
fr'Om JUSt outside the crease. a are Mansour O»ch. •
Lo1 A!tgcles center ~mi.e Ni~bolls tied tlie score at The McUrens have dominated the season winnina
1-1 fiv~ minutes later with h11 third P.1 of t~e year bt 12 of the 16 raoes. and 1eorina four l-2 weeps. The team
uncorkm.1.a JO.foot slap shot from behuMl the nght faccofT scored a rtQOrd 143111 points fo take he consttUctori'
circle. • , a.hamP!onship.
• · Butthe Hawk nook the lead for IOOd m. id way throuah The two driven both aid they had xcellent relations
the pcriOd when Gardner Ufted a rt~und Shot over ~Ute throuJbout the scason,-aftcr ProstJQined from the Renault
sprawJina Elliol. · • team. __________ .............................. __ _
""" , .... A
Anteaters in 7 :5 polo win
STOCKTON -UC lrvine•s water
polo team tuned up for ita ~
qainst Peppifdane Friday ""1th a com~from·betund ~ owr the Univmhyo(Pldf.c~. 7·5,ina PCAApme. lmnesnappeda~111 ltft!llk '¥fdl tM win. ttl oYerlll recans ao , , .._, Md
record 10 4-1. -Peoond1ne, whk:h haaded lrv.tne us •only confercMe lot1 artltt iJus
9QIOn, will play Jhe Anteaters at 3
o'clock at N rt Harbor Hiah Friday.
Senlor tef'IJ)O Roua's four pts
helped ~fth.:nnleed Ant· eatlll in the rne until ()ten
Awelbmp With 2:24left1n the
COetlil .... Ole~~ P.tiflc
held • 5-3 advmn.ap an &be third
quarur.
ROll1 ICOred tt fourth pl With
l:IO rcmaini~ n the pme.
(
-Brltish runner
.sets world mark
ln wet Chicago
I
CHICAGO (AP) t--Steve Jones, a Royal Air Force
corporal from Great Britain, became the fastest mara·
thoner in history Sunday as he blazed throuah the wet,
windy conditions to capture the America's Marathon·
Chicago in 2 hours, 8 minutes, S seconds.
That broke the previous best time of 2:08. l 3 set by
Alberto Salazar in New York City in 1981. ~osa Mota of PortuaaJ ran away with the women's
race in 2: 26.0 J u she won her secona consecutive Cbicqo
marathon.
Jones. 29, of Barry, Wales. topped favored Olympic
1old medalist Carlos Lopes of Portuaal, who finished in
2:09.06, and Rob de Castell& of Australia, who finished in
2:09.09.
A total ofl 0, l 12 runnerutarted the race in wet windy
weather in downtown Chicqo. '
But Jones said he wasn't bothcn:d by the weather
It was his fint marathon finish and only the ieOOnd
marathon he bad started. Last year, Jones dropPed out
after 17 miles in the Chicago marathon.
"Only the last two miles hurt," said Jones, who~icktd
up S3S,OOO for ttic victory. "My plan wu to stick with the ~
marathon runners."
After the 19-mile mark, Jones 1tarted to pull away ·•and they just didn't come," he said. '
.. I looked around me, and I saw that no one was bein1
very dttis.ive at all," he said. ''I ~elt it was time to ao." ·
Despite the m:ont, Jona; pnmanly a lhona-dlswnce
runner, said he still doesn't consider himself amanthoncr
"I'll continue to do one marathon a year, 1nd this ii
the one I'll do next year," be aid. ,. ..........
8tne JOMe eeta 'World record ID maratboo. . Jones aai<! he rHlit.ed he had a lhot at the top time
with about two ka1omctm left when someone in the crowd shouted it. _
Peters~n paces UCI men
Kevan Peterson ICOrcd ihfft 1oal1 and reterve ao&lie Don Road\
plcktd up h11 flnt Shutout of the 1ea10n Sunday It OC ilrvine's men•1
1<>CCer 1team outla1ted Cll Ultheran, 7-0, in a non-confettncle pme •t
UCI.
The Anteaters. I l·l-2 overall Ind l·l·I in PCAA =· todk an early lad and never looked hick, thank110 two first-half 'by Mark
Suer.
John Orlft and Dean Plculbl both netted one pl to round out
Irvine'• ICIOl"lftl. The Antt.1wn. Who earlier in the teason ban CaJ
Lud'leran 7-l, hOlt ~l Poly Pomona Sunday at 3 o'dock. UCI it ia i•
ar..uonollOCCOI'.
I
...
Nl'L
MAT10HAL eotef'IHNCI
W..t W L 'T !'Ct ,, ,A
' 1 • 175 21' 10 • , 0 ;S71 160 127
, ' 0 At, .. \ta 2 5 0 ;J7S 170 IH Ctillrlt Cl'llcaoo S > o
OtttOif , ' 0 'flmHllV 2 I 0 MlllnHOra 2 6 o GrMtl l1y I . 1 o
f2S 111 IM .m 1$9 1eo • .u~ 143 200
.250 J'-J 20J
.12$ IJ7 1'1 Int
It. loula ~ I 0 A2S 241 1"
Wlllllntton 6 J 0 AU 2l7 l.tl o.ai.1 s , o .us m no
NY Gllnta • • Q .JOO 1• m ~1411 .. • 0 ,.500 1)9 143
AMaR!CAN COMPIRIMCI
Wiit
7 I 0
7 I 0
' 2 0 • • 0 • • 0 c....
4 4 • 0
2 6 •
I 7 0
0 I 0 ·-
..,, 16"> " .17S 215 151 ,750 220 15' JOO 141 15' .500 221 211
.500 165 11'0 ,fle) 132 ,...
.12S 102 150
000 103 2)4
Mlwnl
MY Jet& I 0 0 l.000 2'7 117
Ntw enot.114
llldilnuoll• lufftto
6 2 0 .750. 201 157 5 l • .625 w ,.,
J 5 0 ..315 lSl 206
0 I 0 JJOO 13' J3J
SllnilleV'• &e... billln "4, San Olello 37 ~It 2•, NY Gltlllt 10
0.troll 16. MlttMtOtt U Mltml 4', ...._, Enelll!d 24
SI. Lout& 26. WtPllnlton 2• Ctlk:a9o u, TtmN lay 9 5"1111 JO, GrMn lty 24
Clncl111111t1 12, Cleveltnd ' lndl1mioolla 17, Pllllt>ufth ,. Olnwr 37 luffllO 7 NY Jtll a, Kanaat City 7
San Franclteo 3.t, Houaton 21 01flaa IQ, Ntw Ol1MM 27 (ol)
T""""'a 0-lltint 11 Allenl• (Oltnntl 7 ti ,6) .... .,, . ..,.,.
San Frtnd&eo tt Rama Dtnv.r •• ....,.
Cltlc:lllNtl ti HoutlOll lftdlanaOollt ., 0.U.• Detroit ti GrMn lly
MIMetota ti Clllalto
Ntw 00..na 11 Cltflland
NY oJtfa at Ntw E1191t!td
Atltnll 11 Pllllburell
St. Lout• 11 PMadelllhle
Tatn0e lty et Ktm.• cnv
lufftlo 11 Ml1ml
W1P11ntton ti NY G1t1111 MeNav, oet. 2t
Satlll• ti San Diego
lltalclel"I 44, OMI,..,. 31
ken tw Qulltwl
llt116tta 7 7 20 11>-.t.t
Stn D'-vo 7 13 0 11-37 SO-JICll son 5 run (IUctrdo kick)
LA-Allen 10 NU from Wilson (llthr
kick)
$0-Cl\tndltr 22 PISS from Fout• (kick fllltd)
· SC>-Jaduon 32 run (Rlctf'do kick)
1.A-8ernwtl .t5 "" from Wilton (ltllf' !(IQ)
LA-FG lahr '2 LA-Jenaen 1 PIH from Wiison (llhr !Itek)
LA-FG lahr 33 t
LA-Wlllllms 20 PIU from Wiiton.
ll•hf kick) SQ:-<FG Rlelrdo 2t
LA-81'11Wd 51 OIU from Wiison (lahr kldc)
S<r-Wlnslow 5 PIU from Foul•
(Rlctrdo klc:k)
LA-FG .. hr 32
M>-OUCll worth 50 lle&s from Foul•
(Rlc:ardo kldl>
A-57'"2
GAMll ST A T1ITICS
LA
Flntdownl ll
RIAllM·varcts 3"H70
Pai&lno Yarch 321 Rlturnywcta ISi
PtlMI 24·37·1
Stiekaly .t-31
Punta 2·31
Fumbln·losl • 4·2
Pentltla·yerds 10-113
, Time of Possnalon 29:32
INDIVIDUAL STATISTlC$
50 JO 2>-15
37'
131
2•·•5·l 2·• 3.,5 •·2 M6
30'.2'
RUSHING-l.os Allllltln, Allin 1f·l07,
Kint 6-33, ... wkln• •M4, Wltaon 5·6.San Dleeo. J~aon 20·"· McGee 1-1, Fouts %·
<mrnu1 1-•>. PASSING-Lot AllOtfll, Wiison
24•37+m. San oi.vo. Fouts 24·.tS·J...tlO.
RECEIVING-l.CK Anotltl, Kine s-•, Allen 5·40, lrt ntl'I ,._.,_, Ctlfl&lenMn 4•42,
l1rnw1U 2·96, Wllll1ma 2·37, Hawklna 1•.t, JtnMn M . San Oleeo, WlnllOW t·107,
Holohtn 6-M, hndro11 2·•7, Sltvll't 2·30.
Joiner 2·2.S, Duckworth 1·50, Jamet 1·31,
Cflandler 1 ·22. Jtckaon 1-12.
MISSf!!O FIELD GOALS-4..ot Aneetts,
lahr31.
C ..... TOP 2D
HOW THl[Y f'Altl[D
How tM AllOCllttd Pr .. TOP 1'wtnlY COl1ett toolbtft IMml fll'ld IMI week:
I. Wllfllnlllon <7+ol 11111 °'"°" 17-10. PMxl: Arf10111, Satwdly.
2. Ollltllomt (5-0-1) tltll IOWI Stalt
12·10. PM111. ti K111111, SalUf'dly. 3. T11111 (4+ ll btet Ark1n111 24· 11.
PMxl: SOVthtrn Methodist, SalurdaY. .t. Botton Colltot (4-1-0) IOll to W11t
Vlnlinl• 21·20. Next: Rulwa, SaturdlY.
S Ntbrnlll 1'"1·0) bNt Colc1r1do 2.t•7.
Next: KtMM Sttte, $tturdtv.
• SOulhtfn Mdlodlll (4·1-0l to11 lo
Houston 79-20 Nt•I: •I T11t11, Sllurdty, 7. lrltlhem YOUllll (7-0-0) 11111 Air Fora 30·U. Ntlll: 11 New MtJCloo, Sllur·
div. . I. OtllO Slllt lM·O) llett MJClll!ltn State 23·20. Next: 11 Wl&COMln, Saturday.
9. Miami, 1"11. (M·O) bltl Plll&tlur9h 21•7 NtJC!: al Loul1v1111, Nov. 3. 10. l.oul1l1n1 State (5•0· 1l bt•t IC.en·
tucttv M·lO. Next: ~Ire Oeme, Stturdtv. 11. South Ctn>llM (6·0-0) bNI ... Olrt
Dime M·32. NIXI: 1!111 C1ro11111. Stturdtv.
12. Oklthom1 St11t (5·1-0l btet Ktnats
'7-10. Next: Coloftdo, Saturd1v.
11. Auburn (5-2-01 bMI Georolt Tedi 41·34, Ntl(I, I I MIMIUIPPI 511!1, Salurdlv.
I._ Geortll (5-1-0) bell Vandertllll u-n. Ntxl; •• Kentucky, Stlurdtv. 1s; Florida Sft le (S-1-1) Mii TIMM
21·6. Pffxl: at Arl1ont Sitt•. Nov. l.
16. KanluctlY IS-1·01 lo&t 10 L.oulll1N1 Slate M·10. Ne111. O.Wola, SllufdtY. 17, Ftorldt 15-1-ll bNI ClnCl11111tl •·17.
PMxt: AUCM.rn. NOii :t 11 1-t (J-2-0l bttl Mldll09n H·O
Nlxl: ti lncllene, S.lurday, 19. Pam Sl•lt (5•2•0) NII SvrKIM
21•J, Nell1. •t Wftl Vlrolflla. SattJrdt,. 20. WtM Vlr.W. (6-1-t) DHI Bot!Oft COlllM 2MO Ntxt. Pann Slate, Saturd..,,
c...,.
SA TUltDAY'S LATI[ ICORH
Wll1
1..11 Verne !11, llt~a 9 .._wan Jt. Utati 11
COMMUNITY COLLIOI LOO 0....... WMt (4•1)
(PHIM·9 C1111fa taetl
11 Ol'tntt Coeat )
11 Santi AM 14
11 .,.,. 17
16 '9110tna .tJ '° Mt. SM AnloniO 14 111., oct. .,, -11 i.;ono IMdl cc•
s.i..,.Now, J -CtrrllOt" .~ .. --Jtl., Nov. 10 -at Fu11trton• lat .• NOV 17 -Ill Camillo" Sit., Nov. 2.t -11 lakeAfltld"
or.. C.1t ( l-4)
C....C.lfMIMI)
2 0oNtn WWI iU
7 flUlllrtM u 1 111" Hell 2t 11 Rlwrl* 1' 17 SM Diieo N1Mt l4
Stl. Oct 11 -•• Soutllwetftrn• Stt., Hew :a -SM Diieo" • t i • Ho¥ 1t -11 f!9iamlr•
1., NoY. 17 -atna•
Tl!Wt., NoY, ft -at Stnll Ana
IUIJlldl (4.J)
C.....C•llSMa) lJ El~ t3 :it Ml, 1911 AllfionfO 3 11 Or-.. c ... 1 1
a """"* cc " 7 a.ti Diieo llMM l " "~ \ I t i., OCI J7 -11 Siii DletO" !.,Nov.I-~ s.1 .. NOv to -•I Citrus~
$et Hoo; 0 -&entt AM" • "'*" coofl! eoce """
HIGH ltttOOL ST AMDIHGS .............. ........ Wt.T •oiton 2 0 0 'oun'-111 V.lltv 2 o O
MMlni I ' 0 Hun111111tclfl lted1 1 I 0
OC..n vi.w 0 ' 0 W111mk»ler 0 2 0
ow.a
W LT
' • 0 15 2 0 .. :a 0
t .. 1 1 • 0 , • 0
1'1wr*Y'1 0...... (10IJ
Edlton n Huntlnoton ln<:h (11 Ofll1llt
C:O.•tC ... l , ... .,.. o.m.. (7:11)
Wettmlntler "' fiMli'll•ln YekY (II Huntlnoton IM<fl)
OcMn View v... M.trtrw (II Wntmlnlter)
SM VltW~tui ....... WLT Ntwoort HarD« I 0 I ~ 3.0 1 . eorone cset MM :a 1 o
~··wi 220 Ui\lvtnltv 2 '1 o
E1l1ncl. 1 J 0
WooclelrlOH l I 0 COilt tMM 0 .t 0
Pt*Y"a OMIM 17:>0)
OWrel WLT
1·0 2
6 t I
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, 5 0
J ' • 0 6 I
Coste Mew n Unlv•,.llv (ti lrvlnt) Eala~ yt, Coron. NI MAr (ti orenoe Coe11Colleoel
L.ffunl 8Hch et Ntwport Hartior
WOOdDttcltM v1 St~d!. r•• Stnte An. 8owl)
Sevth C.st LMeut
Leeeue °""" WLT Wl.T El Toro J 0 r' I t 0
CllOlltrano Vaa.v J I O 4 J O
MIUIOn V~ 2 I 0 4 2 I
lrvlnt l '1 O 3 .t O
l.ltUnl HlllS ,I 2 0 2 5 0 Dtna Hilla I 3 0 1 • 0
San Otmllllt 0 J 0 I S I ,,__Y'• o-(7:JI) Qpj&lrlltO Veney .., •• L.t9\lfta H'lll (I I _ MlsslOn Vi.lo)
0.hr II Irvine (n«i·IMgue) "'*Y'• Oemei ,,.,., D1n1 Hrtt1 ti San CWntntt •
Et Toro 11 Mlt11011 Vltlo
LI Palm• • •mllh Lei ..... Kttll\ICfY n £1Mr1n11 (11 Valanc:la) """"'"' ...... ClnYOfl vs. VIU. P111( (ft El Modine)
PIUDAY ............
l l"'°P Monltomttv 11 $1. P1ut
MllW ~ 11 Pful X c:.twv LAeeue onnee ti El Moc1et11
s.1111 Ar11 Vallrt "'-Fooll\11 (t i Tu1lln> TUstln .... Stlllt Anl (II Santa Al\I
Bowl) ...... u.w.
CYPl'tH vs. Loa,.. (at LA Palma Park)
f>.tclflc.a n . l!I Oorldo ltl Valencfa) ca.r-. Gnve ......,.
loist Gr.,,. VI Satilleeo (al Garden
Grove)
Glrdtn Grove "''· lltancho Allmlloe (t i 9obe Gra!ldtl f'l"M'WIY ....._. euena P1r11 vs. Sonort lat I.I .._lit•) Futllrton .... lunnY Hiila (1t ll.9fll
Pitrk)
LA Hlbl't "" Troy (ti Futltrton)
Orlftet LAetue Anatlelm It Western
SaVlnM ti lr•-otlndt SATUttDAY .,,.,, ......
$erVlll Vt. ll"'°P .Amil (II I.a Ptltnl P.,k) Gardtft Grwt UffUI)
LA OUilltl ¥1. l..el MlleM (It ... Gralldtl lmcilrl!M9Ut
K1tt111 vt. Los AlamttO& <11 Wt111rnl
""" SChod 1i.t111tc1 UST wan'S L•ADDI ~""*" I.Gree ltnllmln (University), 23·170. 2. SNlwn Mn..., (Marini), 1l·15t, J, Fr1t1
HOWMf (NtwlllOff ... rbor), 14·13', • Dave s-iowt tFount1i.n v1 .. v>, 21-122; s. Trt
Anton <N\ltw DtO, 29-121: •· s..n Curnn (Edison), f'"fl, 7. Mtrlt DrlPll' IL..ffune
laec:tl). 1·'2..
~•Mine 1. Keith J1rr1tt (Edison>. 1·11-0, 3.t6
'tlrds, S TOI; 2.. Todd MlrlnovlCll (Miter
Dell, IS-21·0, 205 Ylf'dl, 3 TOs; J Shlftl
Foltv IN-port Htl'W), 10-17-0, 171
yards. 1 TD; .t. Jeff Bietmen (lrvlntl.
'7·36-i. WO Ylfdt, 0 TOI, 5. eo Udvoff
(Hunll!wton lacll), 12-lf-O, 111 y1rdl, t
TOS; "' Eric zeno <Fount11n veaey),
l-IS-0, 105 n rds, 1 TD.
lttc9Mne
I, Mlkt Mllchell (Mlltr Del), 1-12'; 2.
MIU HtnlMn Urvfne), 5·S1; 3. (111) lrltn
Davi.on (Coron• de4 Mir), JOf'dan Fr1nk
(lrvl111), 6·'1; 5. C1rl Harrv (Foun11ln
Velltv). 5-7'; 6. P1ut Garver (Hunllnoton
llaechl, S-52; 7. 1<11tmt Goflart (Unlver·
11ty), 5'-56, I. Sim Slrolc:ft"',¢ott1 N\811.
s-•7; '· l rld Arnold (Unlyeraltvl. 5-19. Nole; Rldr. Justice lEdlsonl, 3·220.
ktflM 1. (llt) Frllt Howaar (Newport Htrbor),
Rick Justice (Edltonl, Shawn Mlutv
(Marlnt), 11 .. c111 4.. (111 ) It.my
RttimatUlla (lrvlne), seen Currtn (EdllOll),
12 tteh; "' Dtrrln TotnaJlc:k <Huntlnoton 8Mch), 10 nch.
NH L
CAMNELL CON,.ltlNC•
Smy1lw DMsltn
EClmonlOf'I
Catearv Winnipeg
Vancouver ~
W L T ~ GI' GA
60 1 13.t220 420 13523
r 2 2 0 4 • 16 le
1 s 0 2 20 37
052 2203'
NtrTtl DMaltft
SI. l.oulJ
ChlctllO
Mln111S9l1 Detroit Toronto
! 2 0 6 21 " 3 3 0 6 29 27
2 .. 0 • " 21 2 4 0 • 2.S 31
2 • 0 4 14 29
WAUIS CONfllReNCI ~ttl1Ctl DM'*'
NY 1"9ndera • 2 O
Pl'll'-delc>llla 3 2 1 NYRa,,_. 2 2 1
W1st1tnelon 2 2 1
Plllst>uf'Oh 2 3 0 New JtrMY 2 J 0 Adami DMaltfl .. 1 1
.. 2 0
3 1 I
' 3 0 2 .. 0
.... V'lkerea CNcfft 5, Ola 2
lufftlo I. Mlnneeot• ' ~It 4, PIHHUrtll 2
Ectrnoclloll .. ~ 4
I 14 lO
1 26 " s 11 20
5 1• 11
4 15 " .. 1f 21
9 24 11
I 27 2S
7 1• "
' 29 t7 .. " 26
NY llttftMfl 6, NV l&landert 5 WIMiMcl J, lotton 2 T__.aeamta
No MIMI lcMduled ~·---Hartford tt C.,..rv Mont, .. , ,, QutMc
V111C0\1Vtf II NY l&llndlri
Ptihadlloftl1 II MliwMol•
O.kTrw
(1tl&MM AMI)
IUNOAY'S ltlSULTS "6•" IT••v llWIUINNtd lfttttN) f'atT tt_Aca 11na m1111: uPU1•lll9 <V.i.rt1ue111 too lAO u~ Golden l•llMI' tMCCtrllCKI) uo 2.20 &In Acllol CCnttftldt) 3.40
AllO ~ flo COl!fral. Mrtallon Mlu7"\'llllfl'orce, &lnee, Manuia Mii T11· !toe, Jin ltllftlna,
Time 1"3 3/S.
SICONO llACll. 6 J'2 fUl'lon9t.
H• FO!b {ValtnJUtla) tlO ... UO
SOolltr .. y (DtilhCMMVt) UO J.20 ltouvh F1111111 cuonarn> .uo
4bo rec.CJ Stint c:.dvan, ll1111tn11 Mar• lvr, llt11H A~. C.Ute Malt, CtndY 'flmt1. •
Time MS 415.
SJ Dltt\. Y DOUa&.i8 (2~1 11110 "6M
n COMSOLATION DOUeLa l2•1) Mid 19IO.
TldlD RACI. 1 1116 fnllti
l..oYMblt Min (llaek) IOJO 6.00 UO Poct•.-_t IShoemlker) IUO I JO
ltamtfttJc llOft'llll (Valenzutlt) UO Abo rt*: M , Nalalll l<l'lowl, $um-
mera Sof'tt, $wttt Jeanne, Plr1lct Jov, Season'• Greetlntt.
Tlrnf. I :.M "5. '°""™ RACI.
0
11. f~ Honto (~U) ~ IUO MO UO
, CllltlonM (841Ql • >.JO UO
Mt. HollY.ooCf ILloNm> S..00
Also rtclld. 0'11!1mo Ooc:, Jim .snot, Exl>loMn Twlil, N-Strtdt!IY.
Time, 1:10 115 """ ltAC•. I 1114 mUts. Amerlctn Sl1ndlrd (Me11) 7.20 "20 UO
AUIO Command« (Stevens) UQ ''° Time l"or 'Slltnct IMIOlt) 4.60
Alto racto· Jutlel'• Pride, Wetell W<Wd,
lvron, GrlmbaN, Gl"ev Mlssll•. MltahlO.
Time: UO 315.
tS l[XACTA (1-1) Ptld 5\73.50
SOrtH RACa. 6 furl0n9\.
Slvenntll Sllw (DlhimYt) 3 IO UO 2.AO
L1vou1 (McC.rool l.60 uo
Nudffr Winter (ShcMlmtktr> uo
Alto rlCllCI · R11M UD "1ld 01nce,
Tantallttd, 1t1lMt11, Sllna, ~-Stam. Time: 1:10 1/5. ·
s•v•NTH RACI. 6 fUr1orlrlt. Jalllc:o (Bliek) 11.10 uo uo
llttilctld Wtor (Vlilntutll) S.00 J . .tO
Mooltu IOomlneunl UO
Alto raced: Trov1t11. S-Nestorr, At
He PINltd. H9nsland, Wt'Mfll. Timi: 1:10.
IS IXACTA 17-3) Pllld •1'1.0ll.
lllOHTM ltACI. 1 11• rnllel on lurl.
Sabin (Mac*) 4..40 4..00 3.20
GrlM Mine (Cullftlda) 7'10 UO
Eslra0141e ll..*IUlu10 ..-
Also reced: FtnnY ltOUOll, 5ell Sorlne,
ParldlM, CorntdY Act, 'llllOt's l..ldY.
TIITll: 2;00
12 '"9CK sue 14·1.,.+M> 0tld~5.52uo wllh 37 w1Mlno tlcklla tahc llorlft). U Pick
5lx COftlOCltlon Hid $209.20 wl"' '75 wln-nl1111 tlclltta tnve ,_,..,,
NINTM RACI[. 1 1/ 1' mAltt.
Tom (CIJlantdl) 12..tO 7.tO UO
Jumbltt CVtltnzutla) t.t.20 100 Golden E. IAWn) .t..60
AM rlCICI! Jett Sett Joe, ToP Poll. l/0(1tuftr, A·Sltlo Oltz. BY Thi River.
• Mtlecwllt , ftlnet. Time. l:.U..
ti IXACTA (7·1l Ptld t.40:),00. 4 lltndllnce: .ti.,,,,._
211
lobGlldtr, 1926 71-71-70-69
Scott Stmpt0n, 1926 12·•1-10-n
Di n Pohl, sm 67-67·n·74
Dinis Welson, S'26 61-70·69·7S .,
lltalPh Lendrum, sao 71·70-71-70
Gtne Slutra, SltO '6·75-71·70
Curt avrum, SllO 6t-6,.74•70
lrell UPOlf'. SllO 71-70· 7o-71
ThOml• Grn, SllO •t-•n·n G Ibby Gllbtn, SllO 1.t-10-•s-n Tonv Siiis, SltO 72•'7·6f-74
JolV1 cool(, 5124 ., M·n -11-11
Maril Haves. Sil• ... 13.70-71
Jim KIM, "24 6'•10-73·71 w Wood, "24 10-n-61-n
Mart. 8 f OOI! •• 1124 10-'1·n-14
Garv McCord, "2• 70-71-61-74 t.oren ltoMrts, ~ 69-71·'7·7' ..
Howard Twlllv. t1'.t ~-'n·n
~tPtck,S71.t ~.,..72-72
J1y Overton, s1'.t IU 6'·n·n-n
TOM Jefllllnl. S7S6 •10-n-11
lt•O lrvtnl. 175' 1M1-10-n
BollbY Nleflols, 175' 73•7Mt·7J Ol<:k Zotlol, 175' '1•7J61•11 -1<11tn.M!lllr, sn• 10-10·12·1•
Peltr Oostwhufl, sn• '5•74·73·7'
Jtv Cu<ld, sn• 10010-71-75
Dave &ICflllDtf'M(, sn• 70-61·73·76 .,
CIVdt ltno. s700 1Ml"6t-75
Totn Ltnmtn, 1700 • .....,.7>n
Mlllto.ff.Mtl ,,...,...,,-1.
o... .......
DAVIY'I LOCICIR {.......,, leedll -
l:al ....... 11' llOflfto, 3 ytllowtll, '°'.
roca ""'· 1t aalld *'· m m.c:ktre&. NIWrQltT LANDING (NtQert
..di) -IS t!lllln 263 llol'IUo, 27 MU, 7 ICUIP!n, 6 rodl fish, 5 ~. 12t
madttrtl.
S.Ccer
COLLIG• MllM UC nm7,c.l.....,_t
UC Irv ne 1Cor1ne Pllllt'Mlll 3, Slitr 2,
Gran 1, P1CUIM I.
CCM..LIGI WOMllN
UC lrWll i, UCSD 1
UC lrv1ne M:Orlnll: su-r-1, Grewar I,
Kell« 1.
Water pelo
COLL•G•
UC 1r'Mt 71 '"•ctflc S UC Irvine 2 I 2 2-7
Plclflc 3 ' 1 0-S UC lntlne scorlno Roul 4, Oolln9 I, Bel
1, AwerU!nP 1.
c ............
SOUTMIUtN CAL CHAMPM*SHtftS
(It UC .,,,_, a. .. 111 .... SIMllt
C.rollftl Kufllmln IUSC) Olf. ~ J\lllO (~dine), 7•S, 6•2. a.nw:1111111t• .,.,....
• Lllldl Ho...a<tndv Metereoor lSan Dieeo S111e) def. L'lftll L"'&•Jaftt 'f11o!Na
(UCLA), 6·.t, 6-l.
• I
Garlits c
worlddr
POMONA (AP) -Don .. Bil
Daddy'" Garhu capcwed bit ICCOM
COJUeCUtlVC a&ioall ffol,Rod ~
SOCl.ltion ~t Suncla.Y, defauac G~ Beck for the Top Fuel d,..
dtlc in the Wamion Wadel Finill at
Pomona Raceway.
Unheralded Sherm Guan of AzUll. 5Urpri~ a~ field Ul MD the
Funny Car chami>ioGlh1p and Bob
Glidden of Whneland., Ind., won the
Pro Stock utle.
Mark OlwaJd of Oincannati,
clinched the FllllDY Cat world dwn· pionthi~M(),000 ICUOD~ bonus Id . &o me .fiJWi
IJliDil ~of.Ar ..
linaton, Texas. Claimed the Pro Stock
world title for the :founh conKCUUve
year When Challenaer Wanen Jdui.
son wu defeated in I.he flfA round of
eliminauon
GarJits. a 52-year-Okl driver from
Ocala. Fla., uJed four cons.isient runs on the way lO tUs 23rd career NHRA
victory. He beat Beck. from Hemet,
with an elapsed &in¥ or S.:SO seconds
at 261.62 mPb to Beck's 6.33 at
I s.4.63 mph. Garlits exceeded 260
mph five times durina the four..(lay
event, includin1 1tbrce during
eliminations. His fastest speed was
263.92 mph. ·
Gunn. 41, a professional ~hassis
builder who moved into nnro-
methane-btirriina Funny Car com·
petition last year, wasappearinsin bis
ftrlt Ude fW8d. HJa 191t Qi-.IMll =~~-~~-11J.1!11111&
OlwUlllelda Jet 1oua;
qver Ke.nay .,. ·= ar '°De eveDI. bul....... ~ endedwida•~-"~ tbe~~M,:l::'C:.:. .. ~o.::s ~ 4: Ci!! i'ouftd over E4 McCuld ol ando:.:~~ ...
Fu~y Car ipeed ia NllllA = 261.062 m~ ~ dae ...
linilbed with Ull PoiD&a to&; 14' lw
MC)W and 7,81l:ti-......._ Glidden establitlMd a new_.,...,
Pro Stoclc clapeed tame RICIOld • 1.11 I
seconds When be llOpped a.la Lml Of Bladlid, Ohio, ia die ..._
Gliddcn's Ford Thuadabird 'Wll
timtd1117.61 ICCOOds M lll.11 ... while Lears Pontilc finilbcd leCOllid
at 7.8J and 162.45 moll.
Shq>bcrd, wbo umaect Joluuoa by
72 poanu prior lO tbe Wotld F'IAlll.
won the world dwnoioalbip ad
$20,000 bonus WtacD 'JObMola WU
Ul)llet by Rickie Smida of~ JtS
in lbc ~ round and 51ie...i-..pm1a-11t1
eliminaled Joe l.c!poDe of Newtown
Square, Pa.
-14 .. mile bank race
to Wind Warrior
By ALMON LOC&ABEY .,.., .............. acar weather and fair winds Satur·
day got the 51 starten in Ncwpon
Ocean Sailing Allocia\ion's 14-mile
Bank race back to port before niaht·
fall, giving skippers, crews and race
committeemen plenty of ti.me ror
dinner and other festivities uhcm.
The race, known for 36 )'e&n u an
"iffy'' aftiJ.r1 went ofhrithout 1 hitch
this year. welt, almost.
Shortly after arriving at the Lausen
. Sea Mount (14-mile Bank) and tet-
tina the weather mart. race commit·
teemen aboard the s1ak.e boat
. Horizon spotted an overturoed boat
about about a mile and a half to the
south with its two occupants waiving
frantically for help. Tbe Horizon left
its post and went to \he rescue and
found two men sitting aboard the hull
of a 19-foot inboard-outboard spon
boaL
First 1boet to flrush the 2g.m11t
round-trip was the catamaran Wind
Warrior skippered by John Wake of
Bayview Yacht OUb. wi1h • § time of 2 boun and ,3 miz•n
mooobWJ IO fiaitb was 1-
dline. a MacGraor--6S skippcnt by
Tom o·~ o1 ·Capislraoo •Y
Yacht Qub. Her clap.rd time wu 3
houn and 30 minu1CS.
Corrected time winnen:
ORCA-1. llclolv~. JOiin Miza1a.
Soulb Shore Yacht Cub; 2. 1mi La&.
Vic Stern, Seal Beach Yacht Oub.
IOR -I. Mimi, Robert KOU. ua ,'1A. -1. Gonaaitoba. ~
Olson-Dou& Campbell. 8aJboa Yacht &~~·~6~.~
Mas1cr. BruCc HmiOn. VoYllfm
Yacht Oub; 4. Millennium Falcon.
Dou.Gfeller, Lido hie Yachtaab. . Pll.RF-8 -Debra, Rauft'.Jam.
Wooden HUD OwnersA-.; 2. Flyiaj
Circus, Nick Tolmall, BYC; 3~
T' Gil Knudson. sn-c. ~...C -l. Avaoll Jl. Red
Masino, VYC; 2 Second Hilf. Pett
Johnstone, BYC.
Slew of Gold wi·ns
NEWYORK(AP)-ltwasasuper.
Sunday for Mickey Taylor, an owner
and guider of Slew o• Gold, a 4-year-
old colt wbo earned $1 ,355.200 for a
fall afternoon jaunt around Bel·
mont's Park Ph-mile oval.
But Taylor knoWi well that oo
matter bow easy a race. a. horse can
come out of it lame.
So when be was asked how Slew o'
Gold was followina his mill1on-dollar
victory in the Jockey Oub Gold Cup.
Taylor, said, .. Suptr. I couldn't take
another surprise at 8 Lm... ·
Tbe moruina after Slew o'Gold"s
victory in lbe Marlboro Handicap
SepL 29, Ta~lor shO'ftd up at the
barn to find out that the son of Seaulc
Slew bad a quarter crack in ~right
front hoof.
Saturday.af\crSJewo•Go1deamed
a $35S,200 purse plus a SI million
bonus for swccpina Belmont's fall
Sabm captures
Yellow Ribbon
ARCADIA -Sabln, ,.,ho had a
scvco-race victor) strina napped
~hen she fini hed out of the money io
the ttccnt Man o• War Stl.kcs at
Belmont. romped to an impressive
victory Sund.a)' in the $400,000
Ydlo"" Ribbon StlicsatSantaAoi~
Flown in from the East for tbc rich
twf. ICSt for fillies and man:s J years
old and up, Sabin Jed from lbc stan
and finiihed l lenatbs in front of
French import Grise Mine.
Another runner from Francr.
Estrap'ede, was third b • another 1 "4
lcngthl.
The winner, ridden by Eddie Maple
and cam.ing 123 PoUnd was clocked
in 2~000\'Crlhc IV• mite 01:1the1f1.SS.
Championsrup Series of the Wood·
Ward, Marlboro and Gold Cup. Taylor and trainer John Hertler Aid
that Slew baa raced with a ~
quarter <nCk on the iiuidc of theTi&ht
front heel and a veiy small aack on
tbe ouuideofthc same heel.
T&)lor said that the cracks ~
filled with two fiber glass pa 1ches. and
that the colt was I 00 pen:ent for the
GoldCUp.
He also said if Slew o"Gold, who
now hu won all five starts this year~
came out of the race all ri&bt. be· ~ould contest the $3 million
Breeders'. Orp Classic Nov. 9 at
Hollywood Park and ~bly tr)'
sra~ acx John Henry in tbe Holl)'·
wood Turf Cup Handicap Dec. 9
before being retired to stud.
So sure was Taylor ofSIC'lt· o 'Gold'1 form, that. .. if we had aotten beat.en
today, I would bavecomeupbcre(tbc
press box) and jumped"
Winslow out
SAN DIEGO (AP) -San Dieto
tight end Kcllen 'WinSJow suffered
tom knee lipments ~Sunday's 44-37 loss to the Los Raiden and Will be lost for the ~ the
team said.
Winslo"', who teadl the team with
SS rcccpuom for 663 yards lhit
tcason. """nt dOwn fOUOwina a 12· yard catch in thC fo~ quaner of'lbt
pmc. He tel\ the field on a sttttcbcr
after bCins bit by Raiden linebecker
J efr Bartle$.
The AU·Pro, "Who~\ out a wed< ~lier this year because of a ront.nct
disput was lO undC:flO SUflCI')'
Sunda> ni&ht at a San Diceo hospital
to :repair tfit Upmcnt da~ to his ri&bt nee.
,,. .
I
,
O.W,.. CGM1 DAILY PILOT/M-. oet-22. 1914
Rahal collects
at Laguna Sec~;
Andretti wins
LAS VEGAS (AP)-Patty Sheehan putted
with extreme accuracy and took advantage of
her opponent's mistakes Sunday to beat Pat
Bradley and collect the $50,000winncr·s purse
in the women's S 100,000' J&B Gold Putter
A ward competition.
Sheehan. 1983 Golfer of the ~r on the
Ladies Professional Golf Association tour,
won 5-up with four holes remaining in the
scheduled 36-holc match.
Sixteen competitors1 started the putting
event Saturday over the Desert Inn Country
Qub coune in the series of matches. Sheehan.
27, was the only one undefeated in the double-
elimination play.
Ornrn No11 cEs
PARKS
CAPTAIN GORDON
B. PARKS, United
States Navy retired.
Resident of Newport
Beach, CA. Passed
October 19. 1984.
Bom May 4, 1898 in
Clinton, Missouri.
Survived by aons,
•
IAL TZ HRGEflllON
llllTHlTUTHIU WllTCUFF CHAPEL
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Colt•"'-' M&-9371
PAClftC VIEW
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I ltJAl 111£ilr~t-.;.
' HAR~Mfll'~
~ta ~ ltttli,!ettb 2114 lnta11 te Office leatal1 1114 t I Ftu4 3004 ltl1 ...... llM ltlt Wut.. 1100 I J1 Wut.. 1100 Belt Wut" 1111 Ith Waat.. 1100 Bft Ullll IUOI lurt 2tOI 400 to eoo eq n ~ FOUND: bffl tem Stilh Tzu a.ntc1n11 , • G.1.1. •1111111 ....... frtll If• me;~ ;Wt llT• Ill Lo fl.Im rm/ba 1n Npt -.:>t •bl•. All or part; 1793 Or· ;:• t~t~P!!m ~= ftt•• YllLT flU II Pllt Tllll 11:00 to 2:30 + OfT. 111111100 PIT. Int. tcwm exp .. tllllllY eorOM from beectl. Good tna/pool/tPIJgym Nloel ange Ave, CM. Call a.tty ,._ .,.... .... I Newport Harbor Art Mu. want•di exp er. pro-prl011ce. ltv. 9~&.2<122
location Wkly rentaJt. tt35 a up. N/S '3YS mo e31~77 at M&-9181or844-2270 w/1blkHmeehd/~lart ·s~ TELL•IS I ID ..um 759-0391 Margi. ten10.,a1 to car• tor .. EDIC .. I. 1218 Belboa Color TV, ,,._ oon.e. · m x oun ,_a '"""' Iii Malc•uptol100. p/dayd• · large, alngle-rHldent :'.-. .;..,
1IL I II Mated POOi a tt9P1 to Male prOf 2W8 non-tmkr AllfllT AIU brn M«1e pup, fern Pit UVWlng wnall pdaget In home. Mutl haw ~ U .... , I..,'" 1 lllllT OCMn. Kitch'• avau lht 1ge Npt Hgu home 150 eq ft prof ofc Bull " Niko'', ,,,.... red PART·TIME&FULL TIME local 11-. Must hav. flllT IFFIOI auto. for errand• a be N~ a..ch PIMtlc IU· 1111 Ha N, CoMt ..,.Y. Ava rv:tW fM2-3442 DfW wlwndw vi.. 2381 Cam-lrllh Setter "B~"· NEWPORT IEACH Im-own deoendable emall tor Chlro. Aeept & bUUng. able to speak Engllth &Kgeon needl matw•
UdQ Ille WttsfronL Pvt Lllguna 8Mch, 49"4-5294 M/F 25+, nlamkr. 2 br hM put Or .#211 tNtne. Cof-Fem. bUc/gf9Y DSH at mediate s-t·tltM ·and 0«. F0t Immediate wort!, Part time to·&. f\IU time. ttutntly. OUtlee &nGtudt: front office peraon.
beech. Lafoe cuttom ._ UllQI lllft &300 mo. thr utll. Nr bd'I, ner Campus l Von Khat· =.:. t~= ~~ full·tlm• CHh Vault CALI.:: ~--5 ext 11 Call 8t00ke, 841-1255 olMnlna. eicpert Ironing ~t phonemlMtl'e;
tuu 38r fba.~lM. Wldy . ,.... .... now avall. quiet.,.. fM2..S110 ::i·c!:' ~&~ t9n ...d collar, s mix Ter-Teller =Ion• available °'""'" IPIUTH FUl.L CHARGE BOOK· (whit• cf ..... al'lltU), I.,.,.. lnturenc•, typing eo
t1950fmo, I t12t!Wk&up.2274N#-M/F ltlr 2br 2bt nice '4o0 Ph· 752~2'484 tier pupplal avall. fOt at our BMotlOf• llPOYISll KEEPER .PIT 14·11 ~~-tl'IO.:~a::~j :."~.~~==
•• ,111' OI._ P<W1 Blvd c M .,..._7445 condo .._./Jae: nr SC Plz · ' adoption NWJ)Ort a.ch tlce. One YMt eictenetw c ..... d B hre/Wk tt NB law ottloe ., .. ,. 30 .. _ •7 /h M F ~· · · · ~ S300Hoi°r~288 CoetaMeM3458qFtplue Anlmaish.iter,125M ... caahhtndllngtXpetlenOe ~ lt"•'f'~for Retareq'dct1147&-7018 .,;_.-1: .rwt.e: ·Pr. tlttd. Call P~ •• '!:: ~~ :;=.a.t!t,:: Vuadn . Newport ere.t aar 2bA =~~~· :;:~13Jgi,m•g; Dr.ColtaM ... ~ r.-!~~:1~! IYl1":,, ~ ~i::,; 5=e:i1':eg:'!.;:r. 8:301Dto51.IPhUL..,..u
ctOM to beM!h. t1200 latab 1187 townhouM, .,,._ tennis, 548~5 Lott Cat: 10113 Lag our Ml·tl~ p09ftlon. _.,In aettlng \IP tnd oc>-flll/1111! PAY _.. •-n••y ''""!... In YIL IHYllllT n-wnkr, 1385. fM2-3850 Niguel. Lrg bm/blk tabb-CHh handling •ex-ttatlrig AIP. AJA, OL and PllT/lllll Wiil •no e&Vll ""' If your .,. lrrtWt ... ••• 1 LAROE Big llMr C&t;Mn. DESPERATE by Reward Wkdaya pettttlOe f'le:lptUI bl.It*"' order entry. Growth poe. OpportunlU" avallabl• for tortlog lltraturt, flllna, .. rnlng •35,000. to · .... Al Pool tbl, ar TV, 2 frpb. Prime NB exeo-type M/F Ith noor Exec att oomer 73 ;.1110 x 119, wlWt<tl train for our part-time Call for appt. Keren with the LOS ANGELES typing & i:l•fohone. '60,000. or mor. In oom-
•SPACIOUS APT• Sipe 14. c.n: 14~18 to thr IUX apt. You ~ ottloe for leae/tub-let. 4ls.8831 or 538.6457 poaltlon LIAht ..-,., 10-540-t8t4 PrlnclpfM only. TIMES ClrcolatlOn 0.-'3.75. p/hr. 22 mtaa!Ont and .. wtlllng muter Bdrm. Comervu, Full MCNtettll ..w.. .d .. '7l"""'V• to~ hard tor It con-1 mile from ~ pool Jae uuna. tennlt So Cat Plaza area. G...at LOST 8chOOI r1ng. Siena key an good com-CONSTRUCTION p&11mtnt In our door to UlllGAPI tld thlt Merrill ~
142.2357 lutall tt and more. 780-8()45 Vlftlll 1825 541..a7a.t Colltge. Vciy Doheny m u n I c a I t o n Aaldentlal Ren\odtllng. door newa~aper ulu Lend~ Foreman. Ex· ~la itit moe1 ......
llWaUft I a.... IL.: ·-· . 8ch 10/4. Gold w/blue •klllt. excellent .. 1.ry Mull be exper. 931·2345 program. Quarante•d perlenoe, Immediate em--tlgtoua, mo•t growth •im----.. rt ....,. Prime NB exec>type M/F ato•. Call R•ndy at and beMllta. Contact hourly wage plua oom. l)loyment. Top dollar. Ol'lent.ed nttM 1n r•U•
11&o-f1200 2fir W•ba, poot/Jac. to ehr lux apt, muter mOITIYE 111111 511-1514 °' 855-57'48 Debra Paiz at (213) C~~ t,,_ ~bly· mllllon. Houtt: 9am to 2 751-3222 tate. ,,.,,.,. yourMlf
Agent 931-49'0 '312.60+ 112 utll. Avail bdrm youB. Comer vu, 1 MO FREE RENT 640-4887 --·· ~ °" pmor4pmto~.Traln· reel La Cilmiltt ltfi 11/1 c.a 146-9974 pool ~tame. tenn & L&lxury Offto9 "' OC AA· LOST Slamele neutered 1.,....w.••-• 'Will train. fM2·5'88 Ing la provided. Potentlal LOT ~tt• = ~ ... !!: . more 50 mo 7~5 An ._.. •1 •5 male In IMM T-r .... _..Ut _...... -ma llRt. to earn $300 plue per -... • r:;c;my 2£ 1!%L: Q; 8echeklr wta * 2br 2be • port."''~-. -~ REWARD! 173-1921 U.,......... .,.. ....,.. week. For an tntervt.w, ATIEIDAMT portunltlH a.v•llable. end Qlll' We1* to beeCt\ Pattc Newport A.pt w/M Proflf'9ePN/amkrM/Fltlr per eq fL 833-e970 Jody ............ ORY CLEANERS. Mature cell' II Ltoenalng tteln&ng avall-
M25 mO. (211)271-45&4 n-amkr/drvga 840-8297 LO NB hme pool/ten wlk FUhlon laland fully ~ Lost aml r:y, Poodle, Eq\191 Opportunity &pr 30 hr wlc. 49"4-7591 9S7-2381 ex1 1204 abla . .fo lnterM# call
..... Ziii CdM 38d 2ba houee to bch '450+ 839-1722 :::So,~,:,~:;:; ~~ S:.1~~:P, empioye,r M/F/H OllT•IR 1111101 general S:::i. = many ,=-. =~.::f't.= ~=: FUm S Ptii J:C b9Y/otean View, frplc. Prof. M & F, non amkr, no dttallt 780.~ p I 1111 BANKING ltP tel•••., • ., .. ,. HELPI 1001 Quall St., Q $-46-9381or147..Sl50$1 ";" nr C • s.4M/mo 759-0808 pets, Lllg. 8ch hm, OOMn • tnOI I s.. our ad In today'• Md .._.111 ..1 • ...A..a..a Need help In my gourmet BMchuk tOt Patti =-~~7~ CdM N/tmkt Fml to lhr view, 2br 2ba 1e2: ~· Airport., ... From 700 to WHITE QXle SEEKS daultledeundefRECEP· ,..,, ....!'~.. food bu11ne11. Pert TIWI ltTILUlllTllT • very nice 3bf duplex 780-8224/E863-64 1/ 3j()Otf.NewOfTloebtdg, PARTYINO FRIEND TIONIST. ,........_ult Urne/FuUtlme.642·3M3 LI · Ul&ID
r:lM;;;;;ge;:t;;bedl;;t;;ooc;;;:;;m;;a;ln;-;:;eo.te;; S400+ utl 173.4533 Rmmt Bal Penn Bayfront ready for lmrMd oc-18-30 AJ. 842-7158 mPDW. ii,_ ........ ltlet I I OfflOI lmrnfd. openlngi, fUll/patt experience cool• ~~ ~tlf"'· ~133.1ll5311811gltte comp. Fml pr«, no_ JM ~~~.25/tf ~osa. IUiielltl ! ..... I&....-erpllliutleallUlfltr Accura1• typing tlllng .urr.~~~ ptef9fted, but Wiii con-
. Fem lhr NB condo ocean S550 771-3955 875-2828 751..S989 R & M lnveet f Ill 4t12 ...... ',... Int llnt out Mn computer date ent,Y CAR WASHERS alder ~hty mot!Va~
LQerm. bath, loYely homt, w. FUlh .. prtv.$2e7/mo Rn\mte wanted 25-30 toJI 1 aa.....ua t~r 11 •fs ...alt helpful. Hra 7am-4pm. DETAILERS hwd ti :Vt couple and
ml ,, boh. Fem••• 85<MMS24 art epm Don help find l lhr. pl~ In m&R./..... Sm811 caf•bakery-dell, for :::~ ........ PIT 01 re' ... , "' 1150.41000. mo. Non-931-oltOO =,,:; .. 'A:': per-
*250/mo 536-1789 F t te t 111\er cut Nwpt Bch. Joni 831-1340 ChOI~ Newport Beach lo-Into e31«3t58 2:30"'4pm ... "' • PIJ a,.ntl amoker pref. fMC>-1813 ton to 727 VOttltown HloelV tum room wtttl or em o nn o e •· cation on PCH, water-only NO brkr• pfalel Lu.do BBQ, 3901 E. 1111 ilaJ &n, I.I. LYl'I 8 h
w/o kltch pr1v In..._ hmd~~es~~~~ ltatala Waat• ztOt aide. Approx 950 eq ft. halam AO: fOl4 CoutHwy,CdM,app1yln 1·11•PrlfftalJUI IDEULIFFIOI Ull 11pm-7am. Dlreci patient =f1gton tac
Verde ..... 9'7MNl58 yar · · Fem exec to ahr hie. rent (714)645-7100 ~· pettOn 3-6 Pf". wl1h typlog exp«. Hra 6-5 care, Ml staffed 80 bed -------.---BREEZE Femnntedtoahr3BrCM rm or hM alt nHr •CdMdluult• AC ampl UllllPDllllU BMuty l/f/Y/I Mon-Fri. Salary approx. S.N.F. MESA VERDE IEW ~~wnhln. tor ~: :~~~o~ 1290 + ~7~ ':'xi1 to pncg, from sa25. 2855 E. OlfMP UWll&T UIUTYUIT I llUYEIJ POlll :~~y ~t.~'t'a~: ~~~.st.~~-~
quiet, tiuty per90n non • . • Coeat Hwy. 67W900 High C: net, deprec. IUltOlllll PIT, travel llO*'CY· Own 557..5511 54M585 LOCATIOI
lmk/dMk, TV, kltctl pttv, Fml N/lmkr, lw In, PrOf man want. 18r or To leue •4oot mo, 54&;.2147 Exper. Salaty p1ue comm. car, Mon·Frl. 931-9040 we Have lmmedtat• poe-
pool/jlle, 1350/mo Incl minimal ctilldcare + $160 Bach apt on Balboa Martnere Cove, RIY«tlde and benefit•. Richard IDT 1......... IEIEUL IFFIOI 11E110AL U Off10I 1tton1: utll. Avelleble 831·2288 mo. lrvtne twnhme neer Penln. Lv Meg 831--0874 Dr Suitable for 2 per90n PLAIT IBP Ouellete Salon 200 Nw-lL .,.,IUI, ONE FULL & ONE PART for Urologlet. X-ray, *Par1 or FUil time phone
ON THE BEACH UCI 553-0e84 atter6pm CU1tt1 fer offto.. Call John Sulllvan IUED •11 port Center o;, Newport R:f.:'ctahlp = TIME POSITION typing, fna. exper. aalee (afternoon A ._,
Room & bath .-. Fml n/smkr lht MW apt 87M981 Hot Coeta Meaa location. e.ach ~. Newport Beech atock mar-831-$301 nlna shift•) '.,. .. ate eo-CdM pn br bA $500 Int ztlJ Excel traffic & ~ for a progr ........ w.11>-ket adYllory firm. If )'OU • •D£LIVERY REPR~EN-==::J.~./e~ suzenn• 849-8&'8: W•tSlde c.M. Gar.ge. l•1lan1 loc. Soon to bi vacant. BEAUTY SALON =ic:r1;= d•~ can type, handle l)honee. t.1edlcal TAT=uat hawecon-
142-5373 • 87S-5148 ~~,.,,;/~r lntala 2111 FOflnf=~H1' CdM. T=~~~1900 •flt• (RDA pret•rttd) ~l~k=~~ ~~~-.°O'IFICe~AOEA-No ltttll.lltttb HM Fmltolhf3bt2beheeCM · Apprll Ho eq ft on Npt PAVILION REALTOR 540-7922,...,..' Mon-the atoCk market and tonabl•, trim, Span. experntemwy,ltyou're eRXRb4JEw UofeL. 1300/mo avail 11115 Oillet lntal1 ltlf · 8ivd. Utl lnCI, CPA-~ 111-11ZO 111.W. deya 54W264 data entry, can l40-5500 •P••klng ~d•. Med. .,.. energettoe .. outaolna
Room $5 BonnleDennl241·9602 ;cXNNERYVlillGE• altoretcS125553-1115 IEWllllll&n Dant•llOrttlo Recept. IUIUL•-i axper. a: typlna -"Ill• paraon,wewllltraln-yQUT
oft w/,::.r.Yl~a~t•+ llvf. F/prot n-emk ahr 2t>r 1 tun frHttandlng bulldlnl' Stor9ln busy area tor pilot IHt1ta1at to W<lfk ~c:llnlc 4pm-Beneflta, 41~ Oya. Eitp I ~~"' pref'd. S.A. 019-1824 Call Oennl• at 9314339
2544 ~!!.Yd· c • .M. ba !Um. apt In C.M. aaoo 1250 eq rt & 750 eq ft. 1 franchlM, br .. k through Oaertultln 4011 mldfllgh1.ho contlder· req'd. NB 142-2428 • •-•·"'•ht
;=== sso-=21" ...... ===:;l·:;!.::lWt:;::l=I eso-=:;::7J:::43=1v=meg=:::!='*'==lq::l "=·=e='·=5-4eoe==· :::::41 ~= ~ity,b= ULIU llUll :'!.°:'~~:I 9t :':" x~ DENT AL REC PT /SEC .... .....,,:;> " wtth landlord. 870-5170 .H1wfiArJ and gift atore on nec111831-a300 w/lnlUranoe eicper•ioe. • TJJltt ._ ____ ...,._.._ ____ _, _________ , busy Mann.Ave. fleJtlble 4 daya 54e4000 CM No uperleiice '**"'Y·
en ... uial ....,. $20,000. 173-89<>0. 1111 lllYDI lllYD/C.Ulll P19Jy" com• In and
ltatah 2tll Waterfront Homee Inc. Apply:~ -::::Churat Pt-time, egt fem tor/tame, ap · YIOTll
S DUME ••m L-a 8Ch ln'ltltor wanted FV 912-3312 80-70 yra, In gd Ilea~ ,,.,., ...... .._."1 YONEY aaanlT II tor MW prettlge Travel w/xlnt driving recor11. _, n1 -a Agtney-Trawt benefit•. Cafeteria help wanted. Liv• In NB-CM·CdM 4141 llrt• It •••• 10I
, ~7 eq. at. Fr• tt.endlog 144-9971 •ft ~m Mature pettOn. 5 daye a ar• Retp0nd to Box l.L 111·1111 OllARR bldg. 90o ft. N.N~. Week 9:30 am 3pm no 10551, Coet• Meet, ca. --------Bl (714)844-4910. Mtm&WA... ff2i wukel\dl phone 92827-0193 GOURMETCONSULT. ············~ WtsltJ I. Jtfltr 0.. j17~ rm bY 1at IT3-4403 after 4'pm DRIVERS.Croat oountry tl0-1
15 per hr ldutrlal T.D. ot t125K a.rid 2nd UI Yll IT• Tl CA Uc; req'd-no cq:i nee Wll TrWI .. _ . a.a·-•-..... T.D.of$50KonedJolnlng iraa•1Y11Sil._ MllCOregorYecht• • Mr.Reynold• 642-3883 'l'lladaJ, Oc&o.ber U MD ._.. E...ide-C.M Propert1-~sana ...., i831 P1ac.tlfla CM GOORMET
AIUF3 (March 2 1-April 19): Go slow , get second wind, play HOOeqtt.w/ot;;hddoor. (802)299-8988 wunn COUNSULTANT
waiting game. Legal papers may no t yet be in order. Know it, check 2 otflce8' warthoUM. Top BtlJ Wa till 1100 A.re you an "ln·hom• lllYR 110.-15 p/hr
sources, be positive concem inJ rights and permission s. Cancer, ICM;etlon. 875-8251 • ctow''? Ouallty IMd•. email ec:ono. car <>I' truck. Wiii train.
Capricorn natives pJay o uutanding roles. Gourmet dinner on tap for lmal/WllEllllE *~!!'!!:'!* ~1~~~ ,:-=•I. i~S:·bemoab~:'::,; Mr Jamt1 5-4.2-3883
ton.ighi! 1ooo.t CM 213-435-1371 ....... ,.591'"--=• P.U.C. S500.000. Mlto lllSICWIEll TAURU~(April 20-May 20): Stu~y A!i~s message for reliable hint. It a 2, · F ww IUID Uabltlty r.q. Cell t*. Needed. Full & pert-time,
Go slow, finish task at band, make 1nqumes and accept compliment tr~t A .._ *ft FIT Ind Mends C pay. 8:30am or aft. 5pm, mtle l r.mai.. Fltxlble
from Sipttarius admirer. Y ou'll be invtted to dine out, morale Will be afORXdE CENTERS OF F• PUP llll Growth CO· 5 lone 834·1328 houra. Start SS/Hr. Must
boosted and you should leave details for ano ther time. For now, have AMERICA Stor age needed ror oC..nrront M:fS ~:.:wTsH Fin FOOi b• bondabl•. Car
fuo! l:~.·~~1~~ ~~ hotel. Stop by 1555 So. 2960 Harbor llvd CM Pizza reetaurant general ~i ~~~~ ~~:
HOROS COPE
* REIL ESTATE SILES *
COllERCllL-llDlmlAL
we are a 39 year old firm wholly
owQed and personally operated by
It's founder serving the Commercial,
Industrial, Apartment and Land
Market. We are not a franchise,
oranch or division controlled by
others. On the spoL management
decisions. Open door management.
No waiting for un appointment.
Opening for 2 Commerclal~lndus
trlal people with ablllty who want the
freedom to work any territory or
type of property. No farm system.
Pleae call for an Interview appoint-
ment.
WESLD I. TAYLOR 00.
1 CMt Plu• • laltt HO. ltQm leatli (114) 1u;u10 : GEMINl (May 21-June 20): Focus on change, travel, and Hotpltal. 1800 SUl>ttlor coa:tH~~C:,C~· for CHILO CA.AE for t'A twin Mlp, 111&owr.873-1300 time.
: ~~~~~p~unu~~n~en~h~~i• ~~~~~M~· P · ~~~~~~~==~~=~~======~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
highlighted, you'll be able to imprint your own style. Sciorpio native is f<>I' BUI or Betty. IGll81• p!Wk CM/N9142·'7t03
. on your side, Sl:'llCSU rebuilding program and is sincere about lending Aaa...,....b )IOI a.Ill •tstnH ....._Wt••
• benfit of expenencc. sPIRifOXC AtXBIAas The Dalty P11oue.-1na a FIT PIT. M:i"r.M -.
CANCER.(June 21-July 22): Get promises in writin&. work out ~ 1n A.II Mattwt & bright, dependabfe. oere lntaNtt ln·eootdna.
payment plan, study wonh of property. Period of confinement is Counaellng. 1815 So El motlv•ted lnOIYtdU•Uo 1111 Kitchen ThlnQe, ~ temporary you~u soon have greater freedom and you'll bC more secure Clmtno AMI, San c111m. a run Jlmt cwlml ~ 915.:.0207 .. «°'31"871•
as result of checking source material. Virgo plays sipificant role. Llc'd. 492-7291 ltlon In • buey omo.. lllM.ATlll
LEO (July 23-Aug.. 22): You could feel "surrounded .. by relatives. SCRAM LETS Must be .ccurtt• with Focus on domesticity, trips, visiu,caUsand unu.sual requests.Give full • flgur ... bperlence &llelTllT
ptar to i~tcllectuaJ curiosity. Means ask ~nal questions.. c"-Prefei'red, but • tre1n. P\lb. Co. Mekl ""' t!Mt
valid replies. _..... i--• ANSWERS =--~~. = =r.-~..:r=
VIRGO (Aua. 23-Sept. 22): Define terms where fina arc Chalte~Unout In pareon to the .Delly data emry tor on-IN
concerned.. Study Cancer message for valuable hint. Some answers Venom-Elldur• P(lot, Mondey ttw\t ftridW borr\p4,lter .yatema. :r ....
found ~hin.d the scenes. Accent on special collection •. penon~I AN ECHO t-11AM 0t 2-4PM •. S30 !::': outtOf'l'ltt OOftteet,
posses5100J,1osuranceratcs. You'lllcarnasccrctduritlle\leninahours. ~~f'Y1":~o 1~,r.: ~i. Bay st.. eo. .. M.... ~ -=:.~' C:
UBRA ~Sept. 23-0ct. 22) Lunar cycle high. this can be Power-play my otdet brother. My APT MGA WANTED ~ & IM1s ~ day. Numencal cycle points to rcspan ibility. -·re authority and drtndP• tOOI( me uldt a.. • • lkBtll • """' Min a ,,a 1 . 'fi-.& I la h T ' Y~-·.. end -m. Wt llCMoit ..... i;:?",:e! . .'~.~t~Ted. • .... ,.... -1ntettSt ~ ove ,re ttOD.? 1p. 1m1ns,judamentare on t.a:riet -:you'll "~btr. you'll~ ,_,_., ~ -units. ...... Send rtieUfM a
sua:ecd by maktnJ special appearanoct and personal appeals. ;etanvth~Orlglnalfr E~ NB. 752-21M ~ ~ ,0 SCORPIO (OCt. 23-Nov. 21): What ~n IS a bobby could be AN ECHO.' AaMmbtert epptv 7 AM JudtOt Pett<• Olrcula·
transfonned into~fitableenterprisc. lndiv1d11al you tespectWlll k onty. ~ Yidrt• ttonManeoer.4aoOeam-yourcounscl. MaJorcyclcends, you are rid ofburden, you can now take Lt1t COrp 1131 Pfaetn111 OM SM Or • .,.. 20I. New-
areater charge of your own dettiny. UlllT. Ill.. port &Mclh, a..12MO
SAOITTARWS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Wish comes true in unusual Wkndaonty.IWtmld-Noi Cltrtcll
manner. Mdember of the opposite SCll Ii involved, you gel to litatt of FOtll> ADS vembtt. No exp. '*· llTl llTIY
matters an you have chanc.e to erase past ml w Imprint strle. n1:a1tt btwft tam-~2 Ful 11mt .-.rel Office
avoidheavyhftiqandshowyouhaveconfidcnrcinyourown1bilit1 • ARE FREE onty. ~. """' 'YP9 65
CAPRIOORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Collect needed data; realize ·-111.... ~. dtta entey _, pro~ ·oral superior ia obscrvina. 1s interested and does Y.'ant u to Cal: Nd,::=__...,.. c»o ~~~!;, ':;nc,•~o~~
sticCCed. Cheek diet, nutntion, remember rcsoluuons ooootmina Ml-llJI tlllilt*4-tt0twl46-7441 "" ~ w..wn
proper rest and Wholesome lfood. • ....... ,. ~-~ r p 1•7 MI c" •It•. AQUAJUUS (Jan.'20-Fcb. JS); Good lunar a pect eoincidca ith ,..,. ,... -··"°6
hijher eCSucation. plrituaJ val Jong.Oistanoc call, travel ptans. 1•------•I& MQiht ,_..,..~ c°S: cocimiL WAftMiid
PqpWarlty i . dcmanas. arc made upon your lime and you FOUND Whitt echM cat °'"* 80001 ' ~ Htc ~ In· ' beeome more nsiuvc conccmu_tg body1a • ~ PW 'Ont 11111111& **" ~ t-eom (Feb. 19iMatth 20) Plans arc revised oonccnung H• .mile ,,.. ooi11at P/T NMnr .,._,to cw.t 1100 w C>Olllldront 1Me
• 1_ y 1'akentoN9ifllPOt1 HerbOt lot a c:Mllrtn In lip¥ltr 1nvcsunen1s. savt m nu ou may be rrl> i toO hea ily on Anlmll ,.._,.,..; w. bt taiount ldl "°"" ~ TrMt ,_, .., Mutt tor I
1$tlrc:cs of . F-oc on nncr, mate, de · tc and put to MP r not ~ fff'• a 1111 ~ I'•• 1ootlt1 •It" a bu deal hieh had been .. ktpt crtt" 'dalmtld Chll*. t4 rv *' ... ., .. , 0111•11 Id IMt-117•
District Managers
If you •n1oy work1n9 with young boy• &
9lrl• ond de•k jobs or• not for you,
coniider cKOrffr in the MWlpOpet circulo·
"'/· . tion field. This i1 o unlq\I• poiition with
· doily C:holl~' & r.-,.,orch.
Our o~g' ore 1m!Mdi0te. Appll<ont1
mvit ho'<'• o wan, •tationwogon or tNCk.
We offer on excelltnt solory w;tJI o bonu1
pion ond 001 ollOwon<e. We how on
excellent benefit pion tflot indude1 ho1pl·
•oliic.ttlon lmurance. liberal 'IO<otion ond
holld!ly•-
Cond1dot a muat hove o deitre to be
1uccenfuf ol'd be willing to worll hord. ff
you think you hove the quotif1<otlons
pleow opply in person to
th~ la.HJ Pilat
Mcmdoy thrv Friday 9.1 t om or 2 • pm
330 W. Bay '
Costa Mesa, CA 92626
Newapaper
KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES!
IODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACAOH
'Walking~
•Friend Fr.
10 Or1nken
14 FurnlJwe Item
15-BMch.CA
11 lnJUr•
17 ---.,,
ti-ataxia
20 Ridar aound
21 Sma.Uutbll
22 Sphttaol
struggle
230welllng
26 Snate to cateh
people
~1 Poller player
30 School br .. tc
31 Pointer
32 Sandal part•
33 "WHMI" toond
31 Oroopl""
37 Ta1ar1
38 Parant. lnfC>fmal
H Equet. pral
40 flQUf~' •lJflO
: 41 Not dedltfad
• 42Tell
; .... Gem 9Uffacet
• 45 Lament
: 41 LON P9{19r\Q9 . . .. . . . .. • . . .
41 Sock tabnc
40C&IW
50Pro -
S4 Ammunition 57 uBolero" man
SIS~ soo .. pref.
60 Expiate et Greek god
82 MortgllQO'
63 Prooeed•
1 UM a dirk
2 Narrative
3 Oualltlad
4 Acrobatic trlok
SS*amp
8Appof11on
7 Debatable
I Bu• abbr.
flAltar-
10 Undet'*Mr
11 NASA'1 field
12 SodhJm
catbonat•
131.. .. thar bend
1f1Halryma ...
21 COtlteintf
24 Actor Ayree
25 BMnd•
21 T 09 player9
27 Spanltti palflter
28 Ar•' kin
2tHM!t...i
II 7
PREVIOUS
,PUZZLE SOLVED
30 Hlgl'lway
32 Aalh flood
34 Fall to say
35 Sma111umpa
37 Ado
38 Grow tl\in
408-adltem
41 Deckhand
43 Auna llWI'/
A4 PatOll)'am
• •
45 a.lief
48 BIUnder
47 Teacher
49 Centat
St Uk county
52 Wa•too
53 StrO(!Q b<ewl
55-Paulo
5e Ctl09
$7CNM
Ill£ lclEIU'S
SOUTI cou11n
IOTOIS .
®
1914 RA88IT 4 ••
C!.l
sm tH ID lltf mo
tOP~~40
CAP !Cost $.313! 56
Residall SUOO 00
®
1111YAUIUIL
eomoCElo
Snt • ••~ per ,,.o T~Stt 626
CAP S1•et5
'2000 CAP rf!Ouetlott
Residuals
CONNELi..
CHEVROLET
.. _' '' .
I"-,. ~
I '4~1100
bit
·11 Fan1 5q1Mr. aeso.
... 1458
77STATION WAGON
F\111 SU.. Loedlld. Low W.,~(811SWV)
$2$11
**"* 't 1 ESCORT STA TfON
WAGON
I. s.n-. &1111 low ..... sw.o.en.a....
(1CGU257)
'1481 **-* BILL MAXEY TOYOTA
18202 a.ct\ 182.a
'M ~ t CY1 mto. 83,000 ml $1150.
142..0795/ev s.t..a&23
tM~ltMoton
'M MUST4NG fUM .-.
nda pelnt/eofN body wit.
11000 obo 545-1370
~ Coeet DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 22, 1984 ' .
BUENA
PARK ~NAHEIM
GARDEN GROVE
HUNTINGTON
BEACH
CHICK IVERSON
Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi
441 L .._. hJ., ............
111 Mii
Highest Quality Sales & Service .
0 NABERS CADILLAC,, ...
21H.llllM ILYI., C:OSTl IESI
(11•) Ml-1100 (211) 111-1211
• Beat Prices • Convenient Location
• Great Location • Super Service
• Courteous & Knowlede_esble Sales People
22 FRWY
FOUNTAIN
VA~LEY
WARNER
~I
i SANTA
ANA
EDINGER
THEODORE ROBINS.
FORD
U.S.A.'s #1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer
Modern Sales, SerVice, Parts, Body, Paint & Tire Oepts.
Competitive Rates On lease & [)ajly Rentals
2 ................. ...
lt2-0011 tr M0-1211 I
0 SOUTH COUNTY
VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU
18711 BMch Blvd., Huntington Beach
(714) 842-2000
SALES• LEASING• PARTS• SERVICE
ar.,. eo.ntrs LMaest vo1Uwacen/111au Dealer
Wt Wil Not a. Undlrsold
PMTS IUAmlENT OPEN SATURMY m
0 RAY FLADEBOE HONDA G RAY FLADEBOE
#11llfl0.lflr •., lnln
In The Irvine Auto Center
-r 830-7800
Complete Sales, Service & Leasing
G ORANGE COAST JEEP/RENAULT
#111 rte.,,,,,,
.,,, "" Sala '"I run ' O~~e• SALES •SERVICE 0 te LEASING t-..-:.-_.,_ u~~':'U:vo •ACCESSORIES DEPT
549-8023
G HOUSE OF IMPORTS INC.
'* 1..0No-lBM LIASIS
• COMNTITIVI PUICHASI PllCES '* HUOl INVINTOIY IT\ ~ial_MERCEDES. I):\ 0 21an14137.2333 0
iNext to Santa Ana Fwy (5) on
Manchester/Beach Blvd.
VOLKSWAGEN
#na.te11111er•.,1n1111
In The Irvine Auto Center
830-7300
Oranp Countys Ntwest Volb.,.n DU/er
Compltte Slits, ~rrict I Lusi171
0 STERLING
WS -SUta -LUmc -HITS Over .... OeHvery S~l9t1
PMTI D9ARTmlfT ONN
fAWAYM01.W1!9' BMW -ROLLS ROYCE 1540 JamborH Rd.
Newpott&each 840-8444
•
. .
91 FWV.
-
22 FRWY
lAC:iUNA
HILLS
MISSION Vl:°I
lillUK)N
""""
SAN
•
JUAN
CAPISTRANO
...
.0 CONNELL CHEVROLET · 0 BAUER MOTORS
BUICK -JAGUAR -ISUZU
Comp6ete AutornoCt\19 NMd8
2121 ..... ., lh4., ........
<>* 23 Veers Serving Orange County
S81ea • SeMce • leasing
541-1211 s,ec111PWu.541-1411
MONDAY-FRIDAY ..... 8:30 AM -9:00 PM
I
SALE.$ • SERVIC! • LEASING
AM 8electton of OutlltY Ueed Vthldee
#1 BUICK DEALER IN ORANGE COUNTY
212S':HAABOA BL VD.
. COSTA MESA 171-2500 SATURDAY 8:30 AM -8:00 PM
SUNDAY 10:00 AM -5:00 PM
8 STADIUM . PONTIAC
V. · w.•,. New -w.•,. ,,_,,,,, J
Acron from the Big A on K ..... juet WMt
. 0 RAY FLADEBOE
. of the (57) o,_... FreewaJ
Sales • Service • Parts • Body Shop on Premises In The Irvine Auto Center
liillil• 222~ E. l1t1ll1 . Ill· llll 830-7000
·• BILL YATES • I CREVIER BMW
YILllWAllll • Pllllll •...alt
SALES • LEASING • PARTS ~ SERVICE
12112 , .. ...., ............ _
UM111 111-4111
8 UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE eJIM SLEMONS.IMPORJS
HONDA
2880 H•d>or Blvd.
Coata M-540-0713
\
•
3 Block• SO. of 405 Fwy.
Classified advertising is your best
choeoe for help In selling the items you
no longer need. It's Quick and
Inexpensive, and the Pilot reaches
potential bu)lerS who live 1n this area.
0811 todaY ~
.,,.
Cln&ifiedlda
Qhone M2-M78
(
ll d111 ....
1 ...
•
Missing girl ·feared abducted
Detectives unttng possib e suspect -
after tot ~nders away from ~ampslt'e
only SO yards from the fam1ly"1
camp itc in Joshua Tree Natjpnal
Monument, about 130 miles
southeast of Orange County.
.. At this point we're invcstigat1~
the theory that she was abducted,
San Bernardino Sheriff Sgt. Mike
Stodelle said. He said detectives will
fan through nearby desen com-
munities and interview all known sex
offenders and others who might be
able to offer a clue
.. Maybe 10mCOne will know some-
thing that wtll lead US ID the right
d1rcct1on," todelle saad.
More tha~270 people scoured lhe
desert near Twcntynme Palms over
the weekend. covenng more :than I 0
square miles of the rocky temun.
Members of the scaich-and-rcscuc
party came from as far as San Francisco.
The manhunt offiaally lied
off late unday afternoon
Stodelle said sheriffs anvcsuptors
agreed the search should be called off
JO lbat lhCY could concentrate re
;souroes on 1the 1POSSibibty ofkid~p BJ STEVE MARB1'
Oftlleo.lrN.ttulf
A team of detectives was formed
early today 10 take over the search for
_ !--aura Bradbury. the 3-year-old Hunt-
tngton Beach girl who may have been
We asked folks what
pressing question they'd
like to put to President
Reagan./A3
University of Callfornla
regents approve $3.9
bllllon budget for next
year./A3
Callfornla
The last and flnaJ Olympic
auction pulls In more than
$100,000 tor museum.
/A4
Nation
Texas-size hailstones,
tornadoes rock Houston
atea./A4
World
French Fiim
•auteur'
Francois
Truffaut suc-
cumbs to
cancer at the
ageof52.
/AA
More cyanide-laced
candy Is discovered in
Japan./ AS
Features
Few of the 100 masks
artists donated for auc-
tion by the Newport
Harbor Art Museum work
as dlsgulses./81
The dimming hlstorY of
lighthouses will brighten
thanks to a restoration
campalgn./81
Sports
Boomerang was the big
winner In weekend ocean
racing, capturing the
prestigious Cal Cup In the
.. battle of the maxis ... /C1
Corona del Mar Hlgh's
standout cross country
team Is priming for the
Sea View league and CIF
flnals./C1
The Rams are at Atlanta
tonight In a nationally
televised game./C1 .
Entertainment
South Coast Repertory's
production of "Top Girls"
wlll move to L:os Angeles
nextweek./83 •
Phyllis George isn't ex-
pected to be the next ·
Diane Sawyer, but she's
got the Job./83
INDEX
enctge e•
Bulte11n Board A3
Bullness BS
C•'"ornla NeWI A4
Otaalfled C~7
Coma EM
Crouword 07
O.th Notl* C4
fMtur• 81-2
Horoecope C8
Ann Lenders 82
Mutuel Funds BS
Natlonl1 N "" Opinion A8
Police I.Jog A3
Public Not C4
Spotit C1-3
StOCk Merk I a& TMvttlOn 2
ThMtwe B3
Weethtt A2
Worid Nftt A4
kidnapped after wandering from her ~rents' desen campsite late last week.
The blonde-haired gir1 vanu •hed
Thursday afternoon after wal king
with her older brother to a restn:>e>m
King• of the hill
Tbe Walala and LJIUI fam!Wm from El Toro
and ~ SW. dtapl.,ay tlaet.r eweep-
atakee wlDner ID the 2! )rd annual aand
cutle balldlnC conteet at Corona del Mar
State Beach Sanday. Additional photo OD
PqeA2.
Deputies said they are now loOk.ing
forauockywhiteman in h1scarty .SOs •
with ~Y hair, glasses and a pot bcll .
The man was seen dnvmga dart blue
(Pleue Me OJRL/A2) Laara.BradbtlrJ
Lost Newport
boaters squght
near Catcllina
Pair forced north
by ~ough seas;
Coast Guard hunting
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Ol .. Dllllf .........
Thescarcb continued today for twO
Newport Beach men l m rough
seas Saturday afternoon rb.ilc head-
ing home from Catalina ISiand in a
12-foot motor skiff.
Steven Bailey. 25, and Nonn
Segona. 22, both experienced ilors.
were last seen at 12:30 p.m. Saturda~
When they left Avalon Harbor to
follow a fishing boat the 26 miles bade
to Newport Beach, according to Coasi
Guard spokesman Rick Woods.
But rough seas forced them to tum
nonh into the strong winds and four-
to-sf x-foot waves about 12 niilcs east
of Catalina. Coast Guatd bChcopte!S
from San Diego ind Los Arigdes were
joined today by a sea plane an the
search that bas moved to the south-
west, coveri"' s 600 square miles.
Wobdssaid
Weather and tide rcpons 11oda1t
I.hat if the skiff's motor had fililed, die two men woWd have drifted .,...,_
west. ht said
Both men were de$a:IDed :u ex-
perienced ilors.
Bailey worts as a capWD aad
Segona as a deck hand oa a ferry operated t;y· Catalina Pam., Ser-
VIC:C of Balboa
Bob B~ the compuy"s .....
ager, wd Bailey has worbd rcw 111e
fCrry service for the ~ seven ,.rs and bas a captain's license and a ICJO..
ton ocean operator's liceme -
credentials that follow at lmll two
years' sea lime and slJCltalfv.J com-
pletion of tests.
The boat Bailey and Seaona left
Catalina in. Black said. was almolt
ccrtairily cquippe(i with a 'hand-h:Jd
radio, flara. tifejackcu aDd cushions.
-He (Bailey) knows what bc'sdoin&
out there." 8lack said.-"We're .t,ust
praying that the)• find them soon.
Sunday'·s debate
termed a 'dra•'
by many polled
But Walter Mondale·s still playing catch-up
as the campaign enters final two weeks ·
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -
President Reagan and Democratic
challenger Walter F. Mondale, attack-
ing eacb othcr·s judgment and com-
petence in a sbov.'down debate.
headed into the cam~· cJosjQ&
two v.-ecb with Mondale sttll playina
caU:b-up and 1Reapn's upponcrs
confident his victory secure.
Assessing his opponent's per-
formance, Mondale · d tOday, .. In
one sense, be dido•t do as poor} as he
did last time. But. on tbc ceotnlJ
question of command. knowlodgc. of
taking respon ibility, I think he did
worse."'
At a brief news confercnc.c, Mon-
dale said Rc.apn declined to take
responsibility for the deaths of
Americans in Lcbanan and. instead,
blamed them on .. some local com-
mander even thouah be is the com-
mander in chief."
Mondale also said that, 10 Reagan,
.. lf the illegal war in Nicaragua
becomes embarra.SsiOJ. it is some
minor employee (who is responsible)
even though ii is the president who
ordered lbat illcpl war."
But Vioe Prcsiderit ~ IBusb
was jubilant. ··1 think we just wrapped
up fourmote')'C&l"S, .. Mdedared after
the debat.c.
However. Whit.c House Chief of
staff James Baker siid today I.bat the .
R~n campaign docs ot believe ~ election IS over yet. "'bUt we are
free now to run oar own campa1p
and ao out there and do what needs lO
be done.""
Baker • d M believes Mondale did
nothing in the debate that will help
bim close the pp in \Be rpolls.
.. Tbe president did what be had 10
do ... be 1&S on the offensive mOlt ot
the evening."
A panel of seven 'tcbo)HtlC aDd
collqiate debate judges aallcd Mon-
dale the winner by an even wider
marJin than in the first dCbalC in
Lowsville, Ky. They pve the Demo-
crat 187 poinu co 168 for tbe
president Tbe same panel dcdam:l
Mondale the winDCr ~ a ~ Of
17410 157 after the LoWSVillcdeblifc.
An ABC News poll of 695 people
who watched the debate said tbal a
(PleueeeeD&BATS/MI
Mesa's .
freeway: TONY
SAAVEDRA
Capo Beac~ Santa Ana
accidents claim two lives
Switch
in time'i>
For some h could meu a repr,1evc,
for otberi. a co'ndemnauon
The Cahfornaa Transpot'll lliOn Comm1111on is cons1deri111 reNuttna
the long-overdue Costa 'Mm 1
way extenoon llO that 11 Nna c. st of
Ncwpon Boulev*rd
'J'he chanae would •vc 7 3 tmma
and busanmcs taf'IC\Cd alone the prevwus path arana wat ofNe\Jipe>rt
Boulevard. But 1t woUld pull ' the
flttWl_y thf'Oulh IOme 14-t budd1np
st of the downtown area
The commimon will ltftd one ot
its members to Com Maa Oty Hall.
11 F11t Drive. T=a>Ddluct a pubhchtarinaon the n to•bft ndon
the preV1ou1 route. m 1 969
If the numerous Wepbonc calls to
u:Maa' TrafticJ>fvi onas an
Focus ON THE NH-.s
1ndi~tion,a 10odtumout is expected
at the ii p.m .. hearing.
It won't be the first time the public
has aired ats fttlinp about the
:pro~ 10 1end the &ttway down Ne~ Boulevard to Bay Strctt,
whCR It will IWl'W~ftll before
:re.JOin1na iht boulevard at 17tb Street.
The tbOroueb&re would end at
llidustrial :.:J; stC>PP,i" sbon of the N~ atyllimna.
1llieOld rou1e would are wide to the
wesi '' Bly 5eftet and ~vaahlllly link .tdl Newport ~lev.ftl at I Sth
tftld Heinz Heckeroth. dbtnct dn-ector
of the State Dcpanment of TranSl)Of-
latioO, aid a 1er1e1 of meelinp and 'W<>fbhops have been held dunna the
put 111 years on the Polllbk routes ror lM mueh.ftecdcd e ten ton. The
CO. Mesa Oit Counal 1 en·
dotted the easterly route rte-
ommendcd ~C.luans staff. "It's been pven e oeptioMI n
already h' really bcctl aonc o" r,
sakl H th .. 1But t are atwa~
people d1rtetl afftatd •Gd they
u1ualiy have thcar own opinions
~ ... nt&&WAY/A2)
·--A Te man WJlking across a
darkened roadway in Capisirano
BciCh wa killed ' unday cvenini
when hl' wa struck b)' a motorist wbo
apparent!) failed to the pcd-
cstnan, authoriti said.
Wilham dams Woscniu., 40, was
pronounced dead &l the scene or the
B:OS p.m. aoodent near the anter-
iSCCtion ofhcificCoast Hi&hwa> and
Beach Road, accord•~ to lifomaa H~way Patrol spokesman Ken
Da1lv.
Thedriveroftht Ford ~nto tation
wqon that hit tM Houston resident
't\"aS identified as Richard C. Yam..
16, of Laguna Niguel. Yartz. was not at
fault m the accident. Daily id.
In nothcr weekend cc1dcnt.
Hunti~on Beach resident Gerrarilo
Lopez Hinojo. 2l, was kiUea after-he
lost control oflUs car on First SU.ia
Santa Ana. a(X)()rdigg to~
Hinojo' c.ar reportedly *i't I
aero tM street and lhit twO .._
movm.g can. The Hunuoatoa -died at UCI Medical Ceri'1ef .......
two hours after the j: l S p.m. S..-,
da) mishap.
Lostbllrer, th~ee cfJildren fopn
u ar.,. Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 22, 1984
Crash kills 6 n road to Ensenada
Van carrying Baja Triathlon officials
hits road median a mne north of Rosarlto
TIJUANA. Mexico ( P) -Six spoke man Capt. Mtgucl oterosaid. ~Jc were killed an a weekend head· Th 8uga1 kt si ters and Wood
The driver or the other van,
R1cardoSandczAlvarcz andhi1wifci.
Francisca Verduzco de SAndez, 01
Enscnada, died of masswc head injuries. T:hc1r daughter, Maria An-
tonia Sandez, 10, was rqK>ncd in
senous oondation at Rosan10•1 Red
Cross Oin1c, Cotero aid. on oolh1ton about a mile nonh of were tudents '" San Diego State Rosarito Beach on the toll road to Univcrsit)'. -......---Ensenada. Mttiean-Highway--1'he driv'1"-of ti\ van m wlifcli ihc
Patrol said today. four n Diegans ~ere killed. Will
The ix Americans apparently were
traveling to Enscnada, where they
were going •o officiate an the ~a Triathlon that took place over-tnc
weekend in Enscnida.
J . I
'
..
~lie 8ugalsk1. 2S, her sister Mary ildcr~ 24 .. also of San Diego. was
Bugalski, 23, Grq Woads, age un-reported in seripus condition wnh
known, and a woman, identified only th1rd-<le~ bums at l'Uuana Gen-
as Anita, all of San Diego. burned to cral Hospital, Cotcro said.
death Friday ni~t after the van the[ .Another passenger, Trncy Moore,
were driving skidded out of oontro , 25, suffered unspecified injuries and
bit the road's median and crashed was taken to General Hospital,
. into · another van, Highway Patrol C'otero said.
Knln Fujiwara, Sara Whitaker and Brad-
ley Wat.on, all 3 (from left), wlah for
cluam.ate Laura Bradbury'a·aate return at
Mary Sugalski was hi&h school
athlete of the year for l 971 in Santa
Cruz County. Both Sugalski sisters
were well-known athletes from Aptos
Hiah School. /'
GIRL, 3, FEARED KIDNAPPED .•.
l"romAl ·
van m the area of the restrooms when
the gjrl was last seen.
"We think it may be a Ford
Econoline(van) with bay windows m
the back and beige curtains. We don't
have a license plate number."
Stodelle sajd.
~ He said the man was wearing a
yellow baseball cap when he was
SPotted. Anyone with any information or
anyone camping in the area on Oct.
18 is asked to contact the San
Bernardino County Sheriff at (619)
367-9544 •
Laura was cam ping watb her
parents. Mike and Pat Bradbury. and
her brother Travis. 8. Although the
p<?rtable restroom where she van-
ished was only SO yards from the
famil y campsite, 1t was hidden from
view by a clump of brush and some
large rocks. investigators said.
Family friends offered help in a
different way Sunday.
About SO parents whose children
attend the same nursery school as
Laura planted an olive tree at Hilltop
Nursery School in Costa Mesa for the
little 11rl. They said lhe saplinf. was a
"wishing tree•• for the girl s safe
retum.
"All the parents at the school also
help teach so we all feel like family,"
explained Ruth Robinson. a parent
and administrator at the school: "We
feel especially upset. .
"We Just wanted to offer a pra)'ers
and plant the wishing tree," she said
of the tearful vigil ... We feel very close
to this situatuion.'' ·
Laura started nursery school last
month.
FREEWAY ROUTE CHANGE SOUGHT •••
l'romAl
whether (the route) is good or bad for while the adopted path was ahown to
them." have the most Ul'.l~Ct of all the
He said the commission probably • proposcii routes. displacin1 1. J 18
won't make a decision on the residents. ·
h r. ... _ h Moreover, it would cost $16 7 proposed c anie or anotud t rec to million to acquire the pro...-v and four months. _ _. .,, build the freeway along the old route.
At least two candidates for City
Council have argued against routes
tast or west oC.thc boulevard. They
say the freeway hould run straight
down the street, an option that has
been discarded because tht lengthy
construction period would di~
courage custom~rs from Shoppina at
downtown bu 1nesscs on Newport
Boulevard. ·
he preferred route was cboscn
from 1hc ci&tit alternative ~~hs
reviewed in the four.year. S2 m11l1on
environmental ampecl 11atcmcn1
• eompltted b)' 11a1e ind federal tran
ponalton aes.nment1 Im year.
The RVteW shows lh11 the new
route would di1~acc 219 resident ,
compared to total e~pen5es of $93
milhon for the preferred route. ·
Rock Milkr. Co ta Mesa traffic
engjnecr, said those figurca arc baled
on 1980 valuations and would prob-
ably increax by the time the four-
milc utension from Mesa Drive to
lndu trial Way is complcled. prob-
ahly in 1994.
"J don't think back in the 1960$
money was as smPortant as it i now. Hagh~-ay dollan arc really tiaht. '' 111d
Miller. He added that he d1dn'1 think
there :would be any new rcvel1tion1 to
pcmladc the commimon to abandon
ooth 1(hc adopted and reoommended
plans in favor of another route.
While city and talc offic1al1 agree
Warmer days but cooler nights
Coutal
Tldea
TODAY 2:32p.m
1:31p Ill
8el1lniot• lllrml!VWll ...,,..," Bolte 0.3 Boeton u...,,. c;..,.,
TUUOAY ~11111,IC
2 39 Im 0 1 Ctiatte11on.W V,
1:53 a.m. 8.3 Chanotta.H c 3·11Jp.m 0.3 ~
9:25 p 111 5.• Ohlc:agO
~I
Sun ... IOC!ly ai '11 pm. ...... ~
Tlllllllay _, 7 04 1111 lllld Mii 11Q11r1 91 Cok!mbla.8 C.
&: 10 p m Colunlblll. Ott Moon Mtl al 5:2• p.m., ,._ TUMday C:O.-d.H.H
13 .. El~ 72 II F__.e
3t 21 FllOO 41 21 l'\8gelllf
70 80 ()fend Alpiel• 70 $0 QrMtFlll9
36 0 HantotG ., n.....,,.
11 15 Hcxlolulu
12 st Houelon
t7 13 ~· 6$ u JO.IOl\.Me. •12~ er 41 ""'-
• • ~City 70 41 1..MVIQM ee 112 ,, 5,
a ao 74 II
70 u et IO ~ '° 64 31 44 ,, ..,..,. 'fl !ff.,.
70 14
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fl t1
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62 M ee eo ... 21 ... " .. ,.
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63 41
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11 e 01am,andMiiIJOllf\116 57 p.111. o.aae.l't Wortll = _;;...-----~--O.MOINI
.. ...
21 27 51 si-
17 41 SuRf REPORT Tem~
.. Le 87 .,
Oelroll
Duluth
:: ~ Ezten<led .,. 33
42 3t
eo ee I"• .-w1 -~, d• au.ty wtndl ., .. ...,. ~ ~l«lnladrt. HIOfll 72 ee 14 1o12 ~•uo •i:o
Arcbltecta at work ...,
Tll.lit wu t1ae 8Celle at tM Corw1 del llar
State Beacla Bandai: u beacld'tOld iallden
JabOred to comtract tJael.r elaborate ea-
trl• lia tbe 23id. annaal .ancl eutle
balJ418' eonteet epouored by the Com·
modorM Club of tbe Ne:t::f Harbor
Cllalaberof Comm.eroe. The ~ entrJ
la cllapla~ OD Pafe Al.
Just Call
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ORANGE COAST
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H. L. f ;chwartz Ill
P~1blisher
ROHm•rr 'J Churchmen
C1:mtroller
Stephen F. C•razc•
Production
Manager
Don.Id L. .........
Circulation
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330 West Bay SI • COiia 1.1.,.. CA
M•• •Od<ess Bo• V>8" Colla Meu. CA 9~ .. ll
Copytighl 1183 Orange Coesl ~ ~ N!l .-"°""' D.lslleho••;e. adotOl'ill m.11• or ao.ens.: • mc!llll ,,.,.., INY be rep<OdlJc«I 'Wllhout spec,_, per
f'll!lllon ol cepy11gh1 -
'
-
MONDI• -Y 'JC r rHH F1 _.., 1~HM
earc
e con 1nueso
We asked folks what •
pressing question they'd
like to put to Pr&sldent
Reagan./ AS
University of California
regents approve $3.9
bl Ill on budget for 11ext
year./A3
California
The last and final Olympic
auction pulls In more than
$100,000 for museum.
/AA
Nation
Most polls show Sun-·
day's debate between
President Reagan and
Walter Mondale was just
about a draw./ AS
World
French Fiim
'auteur'
Francois
Truffaut suc-
cumbs to
cancer at the
~of52.
More cyanlti•laced
candy la discovered In
Japan./ AS
Features
Few of the 100 masks
artlata donated for auc-
tion by the Newport
Harbor Art Museum work
as dlsgulsea./81
Th dimming history of
Ilg ht houses wlll brighten
thanks to a restoration
campalgn./81
Sporta
Boomerang was the big
winner In weekend ocean
racing, capturing the
prestigious Cal Cup In the ,.
•'battle of the maxis." /C1
Coronadel Mar Hlgh'a
standout cross country
team Is priming for the
Sea View league and CIF
flnats./C1
The Rama are at Atlanta
tonight-· as Monday
Night Football returns to
the screen. /C1
Entertainment
South Coast Repertory's
production of "Top Glr1a" wm move to Loa A~les
nextweek./83
Phyllis George Isn't ex-
pected to be the next
Diane SaW)'er. but she's
got the fob.JBS
INDEX
Brtdge B4 ~lnBoard A3
Butlnelt 85
Celttornla Newt A4
CIUllW CS-7
Comlet 84
CrOUword 07
DNth NotlOel C-4
Feetur• 81·2
Horoeoope ce
Ann L.enderl 82
Mutual Fund1 BS
National Newt A4
Opinion A8
Polloe Log A3
PubHO NotlOle 0.
8PO(tl C1;.;3
Stock Mlrkttt ae
Tllftlllon 82
n.terl B3
WMttler A2
World Newt A4
Mesa·'s
freeway:
Switch
in time?
cutle balldln, contat at Corona clel Illar
State Beach SandaJ. Additional poto o.o
Paa•A2.
Strong windst heavy surf fo~ce duo
to head north in small, 12-foot skiff
By ROBERT HYNDM»l
OflMDlllJ .........
The search continued today fbr
two Newpon Beach men lost in
rough seas Saturday afternoon
while heading home from Catalina
Island in a 12-foot motor tiff.
Steven Bailey, 2S, nd Nonn
-&gona, 22, both experienecd sail-
ors, were last seen at 12:30 p.m.
Saturday when they left Avalon
Harb<Sr to follow a fishing boatw
29 miles back to Newpon Beach,
aocording to Coast Guard pokes-
man Rick Woods.
But rough seas forc.cd them to
tum nonh into die :strong windl
and 4. ito 6-;f oot waves about I
miles east of Catalina.
Coast Guafd heliooptcrS :from.
n Diego and Los ~lcs wae:
joined today by a sea plane m the
search that has moved 10 ~
southwest, coveriq s.600 squate
miles, Woods said.
Weather ind tide repons indicate
that if the mfrs motor bad failed
the two men would have drifted lO
the south~ he said.
Both men were. described u
experienced sailors.
Bailey worked as a Skipper on a
Catalina Island ferry, Woods said.
Missing girl, 3,
feared victim
of kidnapping
Detectives search
for Huntington tot
lost in desert
BJ STEVE MAl\BLE ..... ..., .......
A team Of dctecuvcs was formed
earl)' today to take over the seartb for
Laura Bradb.WY. the ).year-old Hunt-
ington Beaeh prl who may hllve been
kidnapped after wandering from ber
parents' desert. campsite late last
week.
Tbe blonde-haired ·girl vanished
Thursday afternoon after walking
with her older brother to a restroom
only SO yards from the family's
campsite in Joshua :tree National
Monument, about 130 miles
southeast of Orange C.Ounty.
•'At t~ point we~ investiaatiM
the IMory that she was abducted,'
San Bcrnardlno Sheriff Sgl. Mike
Stodctle said. He id detectives will
fan through nearby dcscr1 com-
munities and interview all known sex
offenders and others who might be
able to off er a clue.
•·MaYbc someone will kno some-
thing that will lead us in the right
dim:tion. .. StodcUc 'd.
More than 270 people scoured the
desert near Twcnty_q1ne Palms o\·cr
the weekend. covering more than 10
square miles of the rocky terrain.
Members of the $C&J"Ch.and·rescuc
party . came from as far as San
Franasco.
... The manhunt wu officially called
off late Sunday afternoon. ·
Stodelle said sheriff's investiptors
agreed the search hould be called off
so that they could concentrate re-
SOUl"CC$ on the possibility of kidnap.
Deputies said they arc now lookin1
.. We think iit may be a FOra<
EconoliDC (van) with bay windown
the k and beige curwns. 'e don't
have a lic:a1te plate umber,
Stodcllc said.
He said the man wearing • )'Cllow bascblll cap When he 'WM
spotted.
1'1\yonc with any information oc:
an)onc camping in the area on Oc:f:
18 is asked to contact the SU
Bernardino County Sheriff at (619)
367-9544.
Laura v.-as campina wnh
parents, Mike and Pat Bradbury, and
her brother Travis. 8. AltboUgh t
p<_>nab1c restroom where van·
1shcd was only 50 yards from the
family campgi~ it was hidden
view by a clump of bruSb and SOIQ
(Ple&ee Me GDU./~
·TONY
SAAVEDRA
Capo Beach, 'Santa Ana
accidents claim two ltves
indication. 1 lood turnout is upected
at the 1 p.m. 'larina.
A Texas man walkini across a
darkened roadway in Capistrano
Beach was killed unday cvcnini
when he wa Jtn>clc by a motorist who
apparently failed to see the pcd·
cstnan1 authorities said.
8cacb Road. acconling to California
Hipway Patrol pokcsman Ken
Daily.
Thedriverofthe Ford Pinto tation
' n that bit the Houston resident'
1&1 1denuficd as Richan! C. Y.anz. 16, of Laauna Niguel. Yaru was not at
fault in tlte accident. Daily said.
It won' be the fitit time the public
has aired iu feelift&' about the
proposal to 1end the freeway down
Newport BOulevUd to Bay Street,
where it will ...-ina300 feet east before -~~~-"""""'~-----..,,._~ rejoiniqtheboulevatd at 17tb Street. The thOrouabfare would end It
Wilham Adams Woscnitz. 40, ..-a
pronounced dead at :the scene of the 8:05 p.m. accident Mar lhc inter-
section of Pacific Coast Hilb way and
In another weekend acrid n&,
Hunti~on Beach resident. Gcrratdo
For 10me it could mean 1 reprieve.
for othen. • c:onden\Mtion The California Tranaponation
Commiallon ii con•ideriD& l'U'OUtina the Iona-overdue C0111 Mesa Free· way unaon 10 that n runs east of
Newpott Boulevard
The ~would •ve 763 homes
and buab~ ~ Ilona the previous s-~ ll'tiftl west ofN~ Boulevard. ht n would "ih the freeway th....,_ IOmt 144 bUUdinp
cast of~ ~town alft
The comftlt111on wtll tend one of
111 cnembcn to Col1a Meu t)' Hall,
77 Fair Drive Tuetda=IO conduct 1 pubhcheeriftaonthe to abandon
the _pr'CVlout route. peed tn 1969.
If the numerous ~~one calls to
ta Mcu' Trafftc Dhti on• an
mnctuttrial .:~ ·~Ol>.Pl"I short of the Newpon at)' .lim•"-
Tbe okl route WOUid 1n:wide to the
west at Bay SUeet and eventually hnk
witb Newport Boulevatd at I Sth
Street. Heinz Hccteroth. distnct director
oflhe State ~l ofTl'Ulspor-
llUOft Mid a _._ of meetanp and worbhOPI bave been held dunna the
JpUt 111 yean on the poaablt routes
;f'or 'the much-,ftftded UlttWOft. Tbe OOS&I Mesa Oty ouDdl alto en-
doned the eutaiy route rec-
ommtnckd by Cahrau 1ttft
..... ,been aiven uciqKionll am~
already. 11'1 really been tone Q er. aid Hecttr0th ... But ~arealways
people dutctly antdtd and tbty
u ually hive their own oP.n ons
(Pl ..... PU&WAY/AI)
'
.U Or.,,ge~DAILY PILOT/Monday.OCtoberH.18 ...
Fiery head-on crash kills
6 on toll road to Ensenada
Van carrying Baja Triathlon officials
hits road median a mile north of Rosartto
TUUANA, Mexlco (Al') -Six
J?CQP1e were killed in a weekend head· . on collision about a ·mile north of
Roearito Beach on the toU road to
Enscnada, the Mexican HiJhway
Patrol said today.
Leslie Buaal&ki. 25, 11.cr sister Mary
Buplski, 23, Orea Woods, age un·
known, and a woman, identified only
as .A6i&a. all of San Diego,' burned to
dcat!Pl'Fiday ~t after the van the[.
were driving skidded out of contro,
bit the road's median and crashed
into another van, Highway Patrol
•
spokesman Capt. Miauel Cotcro &a.id.
The Bugalski sisten and Woods
were stu~ents at San Diego State
University. ,
The driver of the van in which the
four San Oicpns were killed, Will
Childer, 24, also of San Dieao, was
reponed in serio_us condition with
tbird-Ocgree bums at Tijuana Gen·
cral Hospital, Cotero said.
· Another passe~. Tracy Moore,
25, suffered unspecified injuries and
was taken 10 Genera] Hospiui.t~
Cotero said.
•
The dnver of tht other Van,
Ricardo Sandez Alvarez, and his wircJ. frJ.ncisca Verduzco de Sandez, or
Ensenada. died of ma1sive head
injuries. Their daughter, Maria An·
tonia Sandez, 10, was reported in
serious condition at Rosarito's Red
Cross Clinic~ Cotero said.
The six Americans apparently were
travel~ to En.senada, where they
were ao1n1 to officiate ln the Baja
Triathlon that lbok place over the
weekend in Enscnada.
Mary Buaalski was hi&h school
athlete of the year for 1978 in Santa
Cruz County. Both Bugalski sisters
were well-known athletes from Aptos
Hiah School.
Kmn 1"11llwara. Sara Whitaker and Brad-
ley Wa-n. all 3 (from left), wlah for
claumateLauraBradbury'•aafereturnat
D..,'*",...._llJJ~P9JM
oll•etreeplantedlnhernameatC:O.ta
Meea'oHllltopNanery8choolwhere
miulnl child la a atudent.
GIRL, 3, FEARED KIDNAPPED •••
Jl'romAl
large rocks, investigators said.
Family friends offered help in a
different way Sunday.
About SO parent,s whose children
attend the same nursery school as
Laura planted an olive tree at Hilltop
Nurscrv School in Costa MeP. for the
little gift. They said the saplin~ was a
"wishing tree·· for the girls safe
return.
"All the parents at the school also
help teach so we all feel like family."
oplained Ruth Robinson a parent
and administrator at the school. "We
f~I especially upset.
"We just wanted to offer a pray~
and plant the wishing tree " she sai
of the tearful vigil. "We fcci very clo
to this situatuion."
Laura started nursery school las
month. ·
FREEWAY ROUTE CHANGE SOUGHT ••.•
From Al
whethcr(the route) is good or bad for
them."
He said the commission probably
WQrft make a decision on the
proPosed chanac for another three to
four months. • At least· two candidates for City
Council have ataued against routes
east or west of the boulevard. They
say the freeway shoWd run strai&ht
down the street, an option that fias been d.iteardcd because the lenathy
constrUCtion period would dit-
couraae cu1tomen from shopping at
downtown busincues on Newport
lloulcvonl. The prcfeTTtd route was chosen
from the eiiht alternative ~ths ~viewed 1n the rour~ycar, $2 m1llion
J' tnvironment.11 imPk" 1t1t.erncnt f· completed b)l ttate and federal trant-
po!Ution departments las& year.
The review shows that the new
route would displace 219 residcntJ,
while the adopted path was shown to
have the most impact of au the
proposed routes, displacing 1,118
residents.
Moreover, it would cost Sl67
million to acquire the propcny and
build the freeway along the old route:,
COQl~ to total expenses of S93
million for the preferred route.
.Rock 'Millcr1 Costa Mesa traffic
en&in«r. said those fiaures arc bucd
on 1980 valuations and would prob-
ably increue by the time the four·
mile extension from Mesa Drive to
Industrial Way 1s com~e&cd. prob-
ably in 1994.
"I don't think back in tht 1960s
money was at important as, it i1 now.
Hi&hway dollal'l are really ti&ht," uid
Miller. He added that be didn't think
thFrc would be any new revelations to
persuade the commission 10 abandon
both the adopted and recommended
plans in favor of another route.
WhiJe city and state offici11ls aarec
• •
that any roule through downtown
Costa Mesa wiU aenerate opposition.
there is not mOch doubt that the
freeway to the beach area must be
finished. :~
Miller said traffic on sections of
Newpart Boulevard wu ranked 15th
and 20th hlahcat in the 111te.
And the environmental study listed
annual damaaes from traffic acci-
dents on the boulevard at S299,SOO
from Bristol Stlftt to Bay Street, and
S295,00010uth to the city limil. Both
fiaures were amona the toP 10 percent
in California.
.Miller explained that traffic meant
for a freeway was instead crowding
onto Newpon Boulevard. attracled
largely by the beach to the south.
•VJ"he ablolutc wont time, In my
Jud&mcnt ls on a wann Saturday
ancmoon. when the beach trJ.ffac
meeu cars cnroute lO the swap meet
111he (Onln .. Cou,nly) fo1(Jr011nds,"
h< .. id. •
'
-
Warmer days but cooler nights
Coa1tal
Tides ........ ._.. ..... TOOAY 2'.32 p.m
l::Mp.m •
TI.ll:*>AY ...... :::,::r .. ..... .,,, 2:38 '·"'· 1;53 Liil.
3;16p.m.
9'26 p.m .
........ --,..,., .. .... .. ..... 11 8ufllllo ·-on.n-ion,8.C o 1 °'*""lon,w.v l .S CMrtont.N.C.
o.s~ 1.4~ .,_,,,.
&w! 1911 ~ II 1.11 p.111., ,.._ ~
TuoNday •t 1:04 ....... Wld .... IOalrl " °'*"1'1blll.S c. 1;10 p.11\. COlumtPlll,Oft.
Moon '911 U 5;14 p.rn.,ri.. T~'Y COnc:onl,H.H. IM 1:01 .. rn.Ind1911~ tt 6 57 p,rn, Dell9t-Ft Wor'lll
.... M ----------=oin.
Temp~ = SuRf REPORT ... •4 ••• 24 ... ... , ..
24 SWiii dlrction• IClllt'-f
....
~ H ... . " .. " "n :: '~ 10 .. .... " .. .. .. ". -ll .....
" " .. " .. ' .... g::
<12 ,, " .. .... .. " .. .. " .. " .. 71 67 71 ,, ....
17 76 .. .. .... .. .. .. " .... .. " .... .. .. .. .. .. "' " " "' .. .. ..
-cnoo ,,.,.,_ ... . .. ,_,. ... --: ~ '* •
. Architects at work
Thia wu tile ecene at tbe Corona del Mar
8tate-chl1uulayubeac-tlndlden
labored to contatruct tbelr elaborate en-
triee In tbe 23rd annaal oand cutle
llstlld•n1 conteet apoll90ted by tbe Com-
-Clab of tbe Newport Harbor
'Chamber of Commerce. Thewtnnlnlentry
la dlaplayed on Pale Al.
Just Call
642-6086
Dollr Piiot
Dell..,,
11 ou•raritMd
~•ICMY II \'DU OD "°' ,_ )'Otll Ill'* Oy •
&.30 p m c .. Ditlol1 7 p m
I 9nd fOYr C<lPY-,flll bl .........
SlllA'OIV ltlCI 8\INlly II
)'Oii dO ncrl ·-)'Otll
.
copy by 7 I .Ill, Cd !*Oii '
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...
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ON THE MARKET TODAY ••• AT FACTORY
DIR•CT PRIC•SI Cell (714) 548-8841 or 154e:,1111
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