HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-10-25 - Orange Coast Pilot'
-•,
Women can sway
vote NOW chief
By LISA MAHONEY
Of .. ...,,.. .....
Women can determine the ou1-
comc of the prts1dcn1i1l race. EJlje
S.meal, former ptttident of the NI·
uonal Orpni2.11ion of Women, 1ay1.
Speaking before I aroup or •bout
17S tludent1 and NOW supponcrs at
UC Irvine Wednesday night, Smeal
said the much-discus~ Gellder Gap
-d1ffertnm in the way women and
men vote on issues -could upset
President ~ei&an's re-election bid. S~~I. 1n ~er talk and durina an
ear her 1nterv1ew, SA.id 1he believes the
race between Reagan and Democ;:ratie
challenger Walter Mondale will be a
close one. And she credits Mondale's
Forecaata on A2
runn1n1 mate. Gcr1.ld1ne terraro.
With thlkl na I\ SQ,
"Femro is crca1in1 a d1fli rent
lntcrtst level from womeo in this
cl~lion. It wouldn't be a blllpme
wnhout her 1n it, .. he aid.
Smeal, 4S, drew on raearch she
collected for her book .. Why and How
Women Will .Elect the Next Presi-
dent." for her lecture. Women, who
make ul? Sl perctnt of the American
population, are voting in areatcr numbe~ than men: Smeal &aid. And
12 percent fewer women than men
s1.1pPol1 President Reapn's pohcin,
she aaid.
That gender gap in political at-
(Pl--WOION/A21
,
ltiURSOAV OCTOBER 25, 1984
NOW'altllle8m•I
Searchers zero in on kidnapper
Detectives received more than 1.000
phone calls about abducted HB $Ir! -----
8y ITEVE MARBU: o. .. ..., ........
For tht first umc llntt li11Je Laura
Bradbury vani hed ftom her f'amily"t
deRt't campsite 1 week 110.
au1.horit1es cxpreaed Opllmiun tl\lt
~ arep1n1nssround on a man they
bc:hevc abducted the Huntus1i.on
Beach11rl.
four w11neilt$ lold authoritJt'5
they art convinced they ..-w the
blond·ha1ml 11rt with a bald.to,. &raY·
haired man in his SO.. acconhn' to
San Bernardino County Shmf'rs
spokesm1n Jim Bry11n1.
"Tllcy'no all sood .......... by
ClllT lllTIDll
(),lANr,f ( ()LJNTY , Ai lf()t1NtA "' r f•~··
Frien·ds continue hunt for boaters
for Newport men missing off Catalina
By ROBERT HYNDMAN ,, while others collect donations t.o pay
a.t1111...,,...1t.11t fortheeffon. .
Friends and co-workers of the two Nearly $5,000 has already been
Ncwpon Beach men lost at sea have raised to help pay for the fuel that the.
picked uf, the search where the Coast aircraft are using each day in their
Guard efl off, with volunteers a:earch rrom Santa Rosa Island so1:1th
searchina in planes and helicopters to the Mexican border.
CoasttrlowlnsU.S. Yacht
Racing Union national
team tltle./C1
Coast
Irvine establishes animal
euthanasia policy, re-
instates $25 animal
shelter fee.I A3
California
What's normal sex? No-
body seems to know./CS
~-=~:;:;.,.;.:;:;~s::sm.o;s:;:
Nation
Elated Elvira
Steven Bai~. 2S, and Norm
Sagon•, 22. hive been1missing since
Saturday afternoon when they left
Catalina Island in a 12.foot mo1or
skiff bound for Newport.
The pair, both experienced sailon,
ran into rough 5eaS about 12 miles
east or Avalon liarbor. Tbe Coast
Guard searched ror the two men
through Tuesday cvcninJ without
success.
''Everyone has a positive attitude
Huntington's Ky accused
of being a top crime
gangs boss.I Al
:;~;:;:>:;:;:;r-:;s:;:;:;s:;:;:;:~:=§::S:;:;:;:;::~
World
Sharon Sorkin, center, ellpRHea deU,ht on hearl.Df ahe'a
the winner of the ltlYlra look allll:e conteet Wedn-.7
nJaht at the Cl'UJ'hone reataarant ID Banta Ana. Sharon
The top Grenada general
says the Invasion a year
ago turned out better
than he expected.IC&
Sportll
Golden west water polo
coach Tom Hermstad has
built a powerhouse team
that Is undefeated.181
Buslneu
Little relief In slghtfor _
those who suffer from
rising doctor bllls./C3
~~~"$!&:%::::x~
INDEX
Leap onto
freeway .~
kills man
A man apparently Jumped to his
death rrom a frttwa.y overpass in
Westminster carty today and was
struck by several passi111 an travel·
ing the busy San Oieao F~way,
police reponcd.
The man. identificd<>nly asa while
man in his late 60s. was pulled rrom
traffic by scvtral motonsts who
Stopocd at the IC(RC or the incident II
the Westminster Avenue ovCJ'p&».
The man was pronounttd dead at
the scene. (P1-Meieelll.A1'/A2} 1.,at:lwr8aa1111•3eo ..
that they'll be fouod," said Linda
Brannon of Balboa's Catalina Pl$5Clt· aer Service, the island ferry service
that employs Bailey and Safona.
Bailey serves as a captain on the
Catalina Holiday ferry while Sagona
is ems;>loycd as a deck hand.
"R11ht now, ··we're ask:ina
beachgoen·to keep an eye out for any
signs or debris that may have come
rrom the boat, .. Brannon said. ••The
fact 'that they've found nothin& is a
posii.ivesi&n."
Brannon said lhe 12·foot motor
skiff the two lei\ eataJina in has a red
bot10m, while sides and a arecn
topdcck. The fibcrsLass bol.l con-
tained blue scat cushions with white
sides, two orange life jackets, a duJI
yellow ammo boa containina flares.
and two dear, watertJaht uash COO·
tainers with tbe men's backpacks
inside,
Nine planes and three hclicopcers
plcltecl ap $260 ~ and dlDDer for two for looll:tn1 the
m-like the hoeom7 ·-of the Dark.' S-nd place
winner wu -da Caponen, Hantlncton-1"
took to the sky Wcdnesdly u the
voluntcereffort&Ot underway, Bran.
non said. Today, five pbnce resumed
the -which has bmt belpcd by Navy hclicojMers ~ I.lie area
around the Channel 1slands.
An 0ttan map is ~ u9ed 10
coordinate die ICarch Wltb pik>ts
roUowinc ·a lrid pettero that takes
them 60 miles out to xa, Brannon
said. In lddition. the fury ICt'Vice:'s
~ -P1USllDll/A2)
Model
tells of
·ki11 plot
Was offercil money
to aid 'snuff film.'
woman testifies ., __ .............
A woman who posed nude for a 5>
year-old .... cbarp1 Mth the 1912
sJ1yiqs of two Anaheim 1ce...,..ers
1e1tilied Wednesday that Fred Bemo Dou&W: One¢ ditck>sod bis pbins for
lwina hitchhikers into lhe dclc:r1 and killllt& the~ durina the _@wiaa of a -snuff moVJC. ..
!Uthy Pltillips, a 2S-year-old fur.
mer Huntington Beach rcsKlent. on--
clime heroin addict and ex.-<lOnvict,
10ld an Oranae County Superior
Court jury that Dou&lu outlined his plans for the .. snutT flick" lcillinp
durina • ion& car ride in October 1979:
Deputy DistriCI Attorney Tony
Ractauctw a11ep 0ouaw fina11y
followed through on bis puesome
murder plan in Auaust of 1982 -on
Friday the I 31h -when be lum:I L9-
year-old Beth Jones and 16-year-old
Marpm Kniegor to their deaths in
the desert undef the prete-that they
too would be l>OOiOJ foe nude photo-
pa~ a former Costa Mcsan
who ran a Qm:dco 0ro¥t fumiturt
refinisbina business, is cbar'Fd with
two counb of tirst-dqru: murder in
the airl>' deaths. If coovicled. the
prosecution wilt ask the j ury 10
(Pl--llOOEL/A2)
Nestande seeks dismissal
of ex-supervisor's libel suit
Supervisor claims his campaign statements
were 'protected pollth::al expression· _
By JEFF ADI.Ell °' ..............
Orange Coun1y Supervisor Brott
Ncstlnde has riJed a petition wilh the
sllte Supreme Coun utin& thlt it
throw out the libel suit lod&ed apinst
him by former Vietl\lm prisoner of
war and ca..Suprrvisor Edison Miller.
The appeal, filed Monday in San
FranciK'O, 15lr.s the hi&b ~n to
di1miss the libel action because the
ConleSted su.tcmcnts are ""protected
political expression .. under the First
Amendment to the U.S. Constitu·
UOD,
An earlier State Apptals Coun
n.ali~ htkS that the sCiteittenu in
qucsbon were factual and. lberefote. were issues tha1 could be tried in
court.
"'If thi1 cue between well·known
palilicaf ldYcnarica tt permitted to
10 to protracted tnal it will inhibit
election campaign.ins to an extent not
heretofore permitted or -COO·
tc:mplaled in om free society," 1,he
petition fikcl byNestande"sanomcy.
Paul Selvin, states.
The libel triaj is 1ebcduled 10 bcain
t0mctime next year u.nleu the Su.
~me Court erect 10 heat the case.
Milkr sued Ne>tande charsin& 11111
he was defamed i.D a 1980 Ncstandc
campoian llier t aotUSed Milkr of
coopcratiq with his North Vid-
namae cap1on whi\c1 pnsoner. Tbe
(Phue-lmllt'-/A2)
Booting---~
Bndgo
C1·2 _.._ ............................... ._._._ ........ ._ .......... -• ._._._._._ .... ._._ .. ._ ...... ._._._._al!
Btlllotln Board ---COl"orni.-
Clualtled
Cornlea
CrOll-d
DoalhNOl-
Hor-
Ann Land«•
Mutu11Fund1
Natlonol-
nlOll
PollOOloO
Publlo NOl-
8Port• Stodt Marlcoto T-n-1-.. , ....
World-
A10
A3
C3
AA
C7·1
A10
01
G5 cs C2
~ ··--Al
A3 cs-a
814
C4
C2
114
A2
A4
'New water' tastier
but not for fish
II may taste: bc:lter Ind be C~1'n".
but tht tap wsitcr that 'ftlll toon be
now1~to tome 13 milhon .peopk
throu out Southern C.ahfom11
CO\!ld <Ja.nttrout to kidney cha.l)'Toit
J)lt1cnt1 ind pct fish.
Bc11nn1n1 Nov. 1, 1he Me•ro--
polit.ln Water Ot1trkt Wiii dittnfttt
11s water with chloram1ne -a
mil1ure orchlonnc and ammonia -
instead of just chlorine.
The Metropolitan Diilrict 111pptin
much of the ............ by on ...
C'oa1t cit1t'\., a' "Nell as commun1ucs
from Vrn1ur• 10 th.c Mr•i n border.
lroaocolly, the ,_ IOr puUJng
Utt chloram.ine iAto lbe water suppty
it llto the ttMOe thlt cutorr1m are
bClllll edvmd IO &her It from Wiier
oled in dial)'lio macht-and filh
tanh.
Ttm Skova. a ~n h
MWO ... plmnedtho1-.mtno .. a
stable com~nd that "°"~ blak down 11 qu1tkly u chtonno.
To ftdt1111t environmenW Qfficials.,
that means the compound 11 teu
likely to mix Wlt.h the. IN tom
dtromp0$lna veteUUOR IR lhc Wllet,
cru1ina 1 chemical believed to be
I I
TONY
Sum>RA
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.. . .. . . -··--..... .. .. ...,... ... _ ..
Al1r*O.W. Cout DAILY PILOT IThurodoy, ~ 20, 1984
Widow held in husband's slaying
8y ll0BEAT BAl\llER
Of ...........
The Wife Of \he n\&D found in an
1nduitrial $tttion of Hunlinaton
Btech dyina ofa aunsbot wound tw
been Am'StcO on suspicion of murder·
1na her husband.
A .patrollina Police officer found·
Blny Alan Ford lyin& in a pool of
blood beside bis 1981 white Ford
Escort tha.t SliUhad iu cngin.e running
al'ld lights on. Ford, a JJ.ycar.-old
resi<knt of Lakewood who was an au10 parts sal~n in Huntington
Beach, wu shot once in the bead. He
died later that evenina of Sept. 3 -
Labor Day -in W«tminstcr Com-
munity Hospital.
Anita Ford was arrested Wccincs.-
day momina by Huntington Beach
Dttectives Ed McErlain and Richard
Hooper •s she canle to the Police
st.auon to ta.lie to omotn about lhe case.
Ford, 25, who was 1ehcdultd to be
arra.iancd today at West Oranae
Coun1y MuniCJpal Court in West•
minsttr. is bc.•na held in Hun1u,11on
Beach city jail without bail.
De1ee11vc bad uid etrlin they
could not e5t.ablisb 1 motive for the
Ullin&. They said they were told that
Ford m1y hive rectived a telephone
call and was set up to be murdered by
someone feianina car trouble. No
other rcasoos could be found for bis
1qtoto be parked on thewron1sidea'f
connector Lane ntar the industrial
buildinp.
Ford and bis will: A.nit& and 1wo
small children reportedly had aone on
a trip toaether earlier oo 1he LabQr
Dav holiday.
Police are tAtremety li&hl·hppcd
about the c ,
··1rs rully touchy/• said L1. Jamet
Walker. "We don't want to release
anythina that will blow if."
Walker uid officcn: had searcMd
lhe Fords' home but wo11ldn•t 10-
knowltdte if the murder 1un was
found. Jfe alSQ declined to say if Mn.
Ford i.s acc:u$Cd of pullinJ the triuer
in the fatal shOOtina otifothen may
·be involved.
"The il'lvtstigation is continuina.
We ate looking for other people to
interview."
Walker said Mn;. Ford was arrested
for all~IX beina "implicated and
responsible • for her husband's death.
Mrs. Ford reportedly is a transpor-
tation broker. The couple had two
small children.
CSUF proffacesip.urder charges-
A university r~iloo;ophy professor
must stand tna on a murder charge
with special allegations that could
bri111 the death penalty if he is
conviC1ed, a judge ruled'Wednesday.
Richard Lee Smith, 42, who teac:b~
es at Cal State Fullerton, is to be
recommend Douglu receive a death
penalty sentence for the multiple
urders;
Phillips, the first witness called
during what is expected to be a two-,
week trial, told juron she tint met'
Douglas in October I 979 after~
ing to pose nude in return for $40 or
SSO. She said she needed the money to
pay for her heroin habit.
''He wanted me to take some nude
pho~oaraphs in b,ondage-type
fashion," the stocky Phillips testified.
.. He directed me bow to pose, how to
look scared and how to come across
looking frightened."
She said Do~as pbotoaraphed
her, using a Polaroid camera. with her
hands tied, her mouth gagged and her
·ank.Jcs bound on a bislch in his
workshop. Douglas did not touch her
or auault her durin& the one-hour
photo session, she said.
Several weeks later, durinJ a car
ride aJong the Dnega H1&hway,
Douglas confided his plans for killing
two hitchhikers. Phillips said. She
said Doug.las told her he wouJd pay
her if she would be bls driver and help
subdue his intended victims.
. "He Said he wanted to take pictures
of other women, take them out in the
MAN •••
Jl'romAl
Westminster police spokesman
Roy Freeman said officers have
classified the incident an apparent
suicide, He said the man's identifi-
cation has not been confirmed.
The California Hishway Patrol
said the 6 a.m. incident snarled
already congested ·morning traffic .
One northbound lane of the freeway
was closed for.a brief period, the CHP
said.
arrai.ined on the murder charge Nov.
l in Superior Court. He is chl.1 in
the fatal shooting of Don Lee
Matters, 38, the ex-husband one of
his former students.
Orange County Municipal Court
desert to make a snuff flick. He
.wanted to get bonda~ shots,
homosexual scenes and stUff ITke
that," she told the court.
Phillips. who said she twice has
been convicted on bvrglary charges
and acknowledged she had tumcd to
_prostitution to obtain money for
heroin, said she made it clear to
Doudas that she didn't want to be
involved.
··1 couldn't believe what I was
hearinJ." she said.
Dunng his opening statement to
the seven-man, five-woman jury,
Rackauckas characterized the two
teen-age vi~ms. Krueger and JonC$,
as "living on the wild side." He said
the pair made the "mortal mistake"
of being enticed by the quick money
Do~as offered them to pose nude
for him in the desert.
The two girls' bodies were dis-'
covered in a remote desert grave in
Anz.a Borrqo State Park: by a man
taking phol.OIJ"&phs of wild.flowers in
April 1983.
Much of the prosecution's case·
rests on the testimony of 38-ycar-old
Richard Hernandez, a companion of
Douglas who alle-gcdly was present
when the two girls were killed. He has
been granted Imm.unity from pros-
ecution in e:ii;change for his testimony.
But defense attorney Geo~
Peters, during his opening statement
to the jury, called Hernandez an
unreliable witness.
"The defense will show Hernandez
is a heroin addjct, alcoholic and
brutalizer df women. There arc
doubts about his testimony," PetCrs
said.
He told the jury that before
Hernandez. was extradited to the·
United STates from Mexico he had
been in Canada where authorities had
used alcohol to get him to change his
story.
Judge Manuel Ramirez ruled after a
len$thy preliminary hearing that
Smith flso coUld ~haraed with allcgations9fl~ingin · nd usi.nga
handgun dunng the Saying -
charges that carry a potential death
sentence if found true.
"Then. the Mexican police got a
~ion....beaten...ou
fiim under the threat of death," the
defense attorney said.
Peters also said he intended to
present witnesses who would testify
they saw one or both of the girls after
the day they are alleged to have
disappeared. ·
The trial is not the first for Douglas,
who gained notoriety in 1977 when be
was charged wjth attempting to lure
two undercover policewomen to their
deaths in the desert under similar
circumstances. It was alleted Douglas
had hired a former Santa Ana
prostitute to torture and kill the
women for a .. snuff movie."
An Orange County Superior Court
jury <lonsidering a solicitation of
m~rder cha~ deadlocked followioa
a highly publicized trial and a mistrial
was declared. Before a second trial
oouldget underway, Douglas pleaded
guilty to the lesser charge of con-
spiracy to commit assault with a
deadly weapon and was placed on
three year's probation.
•
NESTANDE
Jl'romAl
flier was signed by 200 former POWs.
Ncstande ultimately defF'-ted Mill»
er in a bitter race forlhe Third District
Supervisoria1 scat, which takes in
much of eutern Orange County and
pans of li;vine.
Nestande, attending a California
Transportation Commi5sion meeting
in Sacramento this morning, said the
appeal was a procedural move aimed
at having the case dismissed before it
reaches triaL
"We're prepared to go to trial if our
procedural moves fail," Nestande
.aaid. "We're not going to settle. I
consider it sheer extortion."
WOMEN 'CAN SWAY ELECTION' •••
From Al
titudes can make the difference in a
close race, Smeal said.
Televised debates between Preti»
dent Reagan and Mondale raised the
Democratic contender a few notches
in popularity polls. But not all
pollsten agrcc with Smeal's conten·
1ion that the election will be a tossup
between the two. Most national poUs
put Reagan's lead at between nine
and 25 points.
S~eal, in the closing weeks before
Election Day, has been crisscrossing
the country rallying support for the
Democratic cause.
Smeal worked hard to get Ferraro
on the ballot when Washington
decision makers worried that ~he
country wasn't ready for a woman
vice president.
"I told them to get ready because
we were com in& anyway," she s&id.
Women have a different per»
spcctive than men do on issues close
to them like abortion, rape and wife
bcatin~ Smeal said. They also view
economic matters like unemploy·
ment and military spending from a .
different vantage point. she said.
Far from past thinking that women
"will vote like their husbands,"
'women todiy know their welfare
depends on candidates who have
their interests in mind, Smeal said.
Reagan's policies have hurt
women. according to Smeal. "We are
going: backwards,. There's no question
about it."
Smeal says it's long past time for
women to have more represtntation
and putting the Mondale-Ferraro
ticket in office would be a great step
forward.
"I've been picketing in the streets,
you name it, I've done it for women's
rights} but I like something to work
once 1n awhile," she said.
FRIENDS CONTINUE SEA SEARCH •••
Fro.!" Al
-boat, the Catalina Holiday, is search·
ingaround Catalina Island during the
five houn its passengers are on the
island each day.
Membcn of both ramilies have
been helping with the search.
Branncuuaid she and others con-
ducting the search have no theories
on what may have happened to the
pair.
"The boat was in top condition,"
she said. ··and both of them are very
seasoned ocean people."
"We 're aoing to continue the search
as lon_g as we can, or until we find
some sign of them or the boat."
Brannon said.
Catalina Passenger Service em»
ployees Pam Hesketh and Peay
Sand5 .have coordinated the Air
Search Fund and can be contacted at
673-5245. The offices arc in the
Balboa Pavilion, 400 Main St.
Brannon said collection envelopes
have· been left. with the Newport
Beach Police and Firt departments
While donations have been left by
others coming by the office.
LAURA SOUGHT.BY THOUSANDS •••
Jl'romAl
The man, travelin& in a dark blue
.. van. was reportedly seen watchina
children. at Joshua Tree National
Monument Oct. 18, the day Laura
di1appcared. ~
The· gjrt, campioa wil.b bet partnts
and older brother. was last teen
outside a mt room only SO yards from
( the farniJy campsite. Tht van was
parked ntarby, Bryant said w;tnestn
reponecl.
Four wltnestes:. including the girl's
.. fathetrhave been.bypnotiud.. Bryant
said thtouah hypnosis. witnesses
Just Call
642-6086
•
were, able to l?ro.vide lawmen with a have seen the child or her appartnt
deta1lcddescnpt1on oft)le van. None. kidnapper.
however, rec.ailed a license plate ''There are a 101 of eyes out lbett:
number. ~oo~c: I've never seen anythina "W~l-.puuina out an---the--u1 I i_hlsbefore.~ney.ooc..KCRlL
intormation on the vebicle because to '!?w 1bou,t ~he girl and wanl to
some arc thin'9 that the auy could help, bry11.ot $81d.
euily alter .. 111d Bl')'ant A reward fund of mort; than . ' · $l.O,OOO h1sbecnraisedbymcmbcrof
B~n•saidtbeaitl:~dit:appe:arance N11t1onal Kid Pr,in.t 'n Oranae Coun-
has struck a cord WJth people. ty, The orpn1ut1on. which ad-
lnvestlgaton have received more vacates finlerPrintin,, children said
than 11000 phone calls 1bou1 the the laraest contribution has Come
abduction and at least 200 reports •from Mercury Savings and Loan of
from oeopfe who think they might Hunungcon Beach.
Wlla1 4o yea llke 1be11t 1lle Dally Pilot? Wlaat 401'1 y"o• like! Call tile
••miter 1t ltfl and your me11qe will he recor•ed, 1ra1tcrlbe4 ud delivered
lo ta.e 41proprlate ff I tor.
TM Nmt t4·1MMtt aa1werta11e"~ ma1 be nffl to recenl tet&t-r1 .. tlle
e4ilor .. uy tople. Com1rtb1cor1 ••..,. t.ellfft ffl•~• m111 latliHe Utt.Ir
oame 1ad lelepffne ••mbtr for •erlflHtloa. Nt elrc•l1tlo• alls, ,1e1M..
T.-U at wNr"• H J'OOr mlM.
(
•
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Fog, low clouds creep onto Coast
Coastal
Tides
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j ';Of"""· -.. t:ll•.m, !0:37 t..#1.
l c42P-ll'I.
Temperaturea
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-.. ... " ,. .... .... "n " .. .... Eztended • •• ,.,
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---1 .. " .... .. " • •• SWiii dlitc:11on: 90lttl!wwC
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~~~~~~~~~~-·~~~~~~~~~
WATER CHANGE PO~ES PROBLEMS •••
Jl'romAl
in dialysis machines and aquari~ms.
If left in the water, the compound
could pass into the bloodstreams of
kidnty patients and fish, causing red
blood cells to rupture. ·
Dr. Cyril Barton, a kidney special-
ist at tJCJ Medical Center, said
chloramine cannot be removed by the
standard filters on dialysis machines.
Barton e:ii;plaintd the compound
would in5tead pass through the
membrane separati1:1g the dialysis
fluid from a patient's blood.
. He said a charcoal purifying system
or ascorbic acid, better known as
vitamin C, must be added to the
regularfiltcrto tak:echloramine out of
the water. The charcoal filters can be
attached to the dialysis machine and
are available for about $5,000, said
Barton.
Charcoal bits and other items arc
also being sold at pet stores for
purifying the water in fish tanks.
Dan DiGiacomo, owner ofa Costa Mesa pct store, said chlorine was
re la ti vely easy to rtmO\"e. Fish own~
en could let the water sit for awhile,
allowing the chemical to dissipate. Or
they could use a chlorine remover,
wait for roughly 10 minutes. and put
the fish in. _
However, it will now take about
one or two days to take the
chloramine out, by using a charcoal
filter along with conventional
chlorine removers.
"We're ~mmending that people
get a five-pllon pail ora trash can and
prepare their water ahead of time,"
DiGiacomo said. He added that there
Delly Pllol
O.llfffY t1 Quer1ntMd
is no single product tha1 will clear lhe
water or both the chlorine and the
ammonia.
The MWD has spent roughly two
years preparing for the upcomina
change, and is nearing the end of an
ex1ensive campai$JI to educate hospi-
tals, pct suppliers and local water
districts on methods for removing
chloramine.
fliers announcing the change and
outlining the ha.zarc.ts have been sent
by local agencies in the waler bills of
residents and businesses.
Additionally, Skoves said the
Metropolitan District has received
hundreds of calls a week on its free
hotline. The number, 1»800-
CALLMWD, was established an.er
the company's public information
office was flooded with questions by
worried ~onsumer:s.
He mid the change from chlorine to
chloramine was prompted by federal
concerns over a suapcctcd carcinogen
found in drinking water around 1he
country.
Skove explained that chlorine eas-
ily combines with the methane gas
from decomposing leaves, branches
and other organic matter in the water
supply, forming trihalometbanes.
Studies by the federal Environmental
Protection Agency have found that
one type of trihalomethane causes
cancer in laboratory animals. Thus
researchers suspect it could also be
carcinogenic for humans.
The EPA has set a limit of JOO pans
per billion for the aniount ofTRMs in
municipal water supplies. However,
fC(}~ral law states that a violation 1~
made only if the standard is exceeded
throughout a water district for four
consecutive quarters.
Skove said that tap water on the
Palos Verdes PeniOsula and the city
of Long Beach contained chemical
levels that surpassed health stan·
dards, but the MWD has never had a
di5trict·wide problem. He added thali
Long Beach switched to chloramine
last spring, /. oining the city of San
Diego as we I as another local water
district serving a suburb of San Dieao
County.
The MetropGlitan District is a
wholesaler that supplies imponed
water to 27 local districts and cities,
some of which use the water to
supplement their local wells.
The decision to use chloramine in
all the MWD water comes at a time
when the faucet from lhe Colondo
River is being tumed off on the
wholesaler. · ·
In a little more than a year, the
MWD's supply of Colorado River
water is expected to be cut by 60
percent. Consequently, more water
will be channeled to Southem Cali-
fornia from tltC state water project in
Northern California.
''We'll have more orpnics in that
water suppl)', and by continuing to
just use chlorine, we would just be
(_aggravating) the TRMs problem thlt
we have now," Skove said.
He added that the cit)' of Denver as
well as other cities outside the s\ate
have been purifying their water with
chloramine for decades.
ORANGE COAST Clrculatlon 714/"2-4333
Daily Pilat Clne1fled edvertlelnt 714/&q-Sf11
All other department• 142-4321
MAIN OFFICE
)30 VIies! S.y SI , COs1• "'-'· CA , ,,. .. *"--Bo• lf>SO. Coll•...._, CA 112629 MOnOly·F•'V " )'Gel 00
nol iw.. "°"" pel)el by 5XlpmG81 ~7pm
9fid 't'(ltS ~ Will be _ ..
S.l,..<:llly -Sunday II
tOll di> "°' ·-'/fNI C0/1'i by 1 • m UM '*<>i•
H. L. Schwortz Ill
Publisher
10 • 111 .->II yg.a COPY will ,.__,
Clrculatlon
Telephonea
•
•
,
Roeemary Churchm•n
Controller
Stephen F. C•razo
Productlon
Manager
Donold ~-Wllllom1
Circulation
Manager
-
VOL n, HO. 211
THE POSH
TUXEDO
Classic styling at its finest.
Appropriate anytime of
the year, yet perfect for
all of the occasions that
makeour holiday season
so spedal.
•
•
•
.... • .\
Bta lf TIN BoM~o
Library friends Su~pect posts ball In cocalae
t • •t d Lo b y1 rlNB ta t Lovera reponedl) was in the process of pwchMiQI ··Heqnledco-..m.-unacbutnlW'I lie 0 VI SI gar ens vera was u n6 res uran Anthony's Pitt Two rt:l-UJUt IQ NrwJ)Oft Bcldl 11 lbc tver will. .. AivtrZZO ......
b l': t ·'"' d g h t1meofb samstTuaday ADEA..,...,••emidl.owlacame......,• .i~• . e11orc anes 10r ru s pure ase 0ru1 attDts seiJ.ed su7 ooo cub fi'om 1.ovm anc1 ~..., ...... .., ..... 11e.._, ... ,.. •
•• friends of lhe Newpan Beach Library will vis t 8 two can foUowi~ the arrnt ua Sama ,\Al ~II. ~cocm•
Sherman Gardens. on Tuesday •. Oct. 30. The public is 09~!'!,V!.MAl\BLE Jote Luis Vactor, 19. Who wu anaW widl Lo¥en. -,,....,.,...._. "';:.~.1Me1d11 t •birdie
lnVJtcd and a conuncntal breakfast will be served In lite Atr-.... d 1 M b . • ... ,..,. alJ-.-AI sfreed Wednetda.JaftcrfedenlaeeaudrOODld-.. DEA,. FBI._. Nelltlfpon PaHce. 1"M 1pallrT'M prden. ....orona e ar USlnc sman ams~ 1vr .. ~ y qa1nst hJm. A prg ~l Adlii&i"'P•H!O wouW .act ~ .tie:dau Sbe uw.....,"°9 JIM a.. D~. ,William Hendricks, hbrarian and director will buy n4t la~amountofeoca1nefroman undcrcoverdt\11 •Pokmnan uid a leCOnd penon is still~~ CODduded 'ta~e VlSllOrs on a tour of the librarr. 2641 'E. coast ~.' an a ltmg ope~uon was re lea~ W~netday :after Lovera mit11Jly 'WU idtnta&d by J>Olice .. .-OWMI' T~l.oyaa Im beiea ordered IO • ....., ........
Hia}twal" Corona del Mar. Donation '' $3.25 and posung J200,000 bail, federal autho.nttes wd today. of AnthonYs Pier Two, a ~led Ntwpott Bach .. food coun aa ~ 11e:1t monda for a pnli•i•ry
reservations arc required by Thuriday Oct 25 b,r callina Ale1andro Lovera, 2S, was arra1antd 1n federal coun restaurant. But Chfrla IUveu.o, tbe actbal raeauqat bdri~ lbe lli4 11 11 IDOft likdy Ille ... wll be
Anita Ferauson ai 673-1633. For more inf~nmuon. call Wodnesdayonachar:aeofattempdf1410 purctwecoca.ne owner, said Lovttawa1purcbali111tbetaiaurantbuttba1 ~ bya federa'lirUdJ..,, ..
Claudia Baltzer at 67l-S646. • with the intent to <h1tnbute mt. A cmun of Venezuela, escrow had not ~losed. • 1JWaa co.Id DOC tie ..med (or comman.
Coaatllhe workahopt elated
CoaSlline Community Colleae will prc,ent two
wor:kshops. for those inte~ted in starting a busin?I or 1eruna pnces for professional services. 0 Staruna a
Business: Financial Nuts and Bolts,•• a three-part lecture
teries, will be offered from 7 to JO p.m. on Tuesdays, Oct.
lO throup Nov. 13, at Edison Hiah School, 21400
Maanolia, Huntinaton Beach. Fee for ibe series is $40 .
.. How to Price for Professional Services" will meet
from 1 to 10 p.rn. today at Peterson Leamina Center,
20661 Farnsworth Lane, Huntington Beach. Rqi1tration
fee is St~. For more information, call 241'"6186.
Newcomen to receive welcome
The Huntington Beach Newcomen Club is iovitin,g
all newcomers in the area to a coffee on Tuesday, Oct. 30, at 9:30 a.m. ~ll 960-3656 for location and information.
Women set Fall Fe.tlv~.
California Federation of Womeo•s Clubs Oranae
District will bold its 1984 Fall Festival on Tuctday, Oct.
30, at I J:30a.m.,atCostaMesa Women'10ubhouse,6tb
W. 18th Street.
A salad luncheon, cards and pmcs will be featured
With table:: J')ritel; 4oor pi'i.m and opportunitj pnzes.
Tickets are SJ.SO each and reservations can be made by callina Shirlee Earley, chairman, at 962-8929.
Free aemblar on learn~ due
The Center for Education, a atate.certified school for r-·-~-~~children with learning problems, is offerit)& a free seminar
on early recognition . and intervention of learning
disabiliues on Tuesday Oct. 30, at 7 p.m. at Hoaa
Memorial HosRitaJ Ca~eteria Meetina Room, 301 N.
Newport Blvd.. Newport Beach.
Sen. Wilson
to attend
Ferguson f ete
\15. Senator Pae Wilson, R.catif.-= appear at a
St 2w-pcnon fundrai1Ct T\iesday for blican ltlte
Aucmbly bo.peful Gil fcrpson.
Wilson, 9l0tat, with lS other kPlators. will be
FtrJU19D•1 &uau at the S;30 p.m. codmil ~ at
The Newponer, 1107 Jamboree ROid, ID Newport Beach.
tt:rlutOn }s NnlliQa for 1he C?Pf!}Odl Diltrict ICSL His oppooent as Democrat Stne &lclrnaa
Marian Berttso~ wbo vacated lbc seat w make a bid for the state Smase, Will ataend the fundraitef u Will U.S.
eoftljttemeft_.. ·Bedlmn, WiBiam Oehl+ "K)a and
Ron Padwd; Nte ICQ&tOl'I W,illiam Campibdl, Ed Royce
and John ~our and state wmlbly repietcntatlvet
Doris ~ Oiarlcs Bader, Dennis ~ RObert
Frazee. NOian Frizzelle, Bill Leonard, John Lewis and Pat Nolan.
• • •• · Election n:sulu will ]be reported live Nov. 6 on
KOCE-TV (Channel SO). In addition m murm on 1he
presidential race, covent,1e will :focus on five count)·
coo,rcssional races. tour aatc aenate bat~ 16 natc
prositiom and city coUDC1l races in Costa Mesa, Fountain
Valley, Huntinaton Beach. N~ Beacb and Mission
Viejo. Coverqe IW'tlat 9 p.m. • • • Peter Wilhovslcy, special educator; Dr. Barbara
Jessen, neuroloa;ist; and Dr. Kenneth Fineman, clinicaJ
psycholoaist, will make up the panel of specialisu.
Charlene Wilhovs.ky, proaram director at the Center, will
serve as moderator. Refreshmenu will be served. For
more information and reacrvations call 971-5071.
Windy clay on the water
A wind nrfer at l'fewwrt BaJ ~,a the
bea'!J'wincla tla1I week u wellu the 'riew of
A debate between incumbent ~ Jerry
Patterson, o.Gardtn GTOve,, ReoubliC:u Cbtll.cbr" J'ublon laland in the ~d. Tbe RObert Dornan and Peace and rttedoai candidlu:
wlDcla are a:pected to die dowD todaJ. Michael Schuylcs Bri&bt will be aired on K.QCE.;TV
(Channel SO) Nov. 2 ~l 8:30 p.m. andapin Nov. 3 at 6
-----------------------------... -----.... p.m.ThesccoDdbalfofOle~mwill:featureadd:late Ezecutlve briefing• achedUled J . h ' NB' ·1 · b · 1 · t ~:pe~=-tiod 41. an miuative lO limit weJ&R l:JSC'~CoUe~ofC<fntinui.n&Edµcationwillpment, ury we1g s s la 1 1 y .. A.post-clectionpaneld.i~bypoliti~1t}xxten
the run th 1n a senes of Executive Bnefinp on Tuesday, Jeff Adler of the OaifyPilot. Lany Pctenon oftbe 'Rqister ~~l from 7:1S to 9:1S a.m. at the N~rt Beach fi • t 1 • andJeffieyPmmanOftbCLos~JesTimesWillbeaircd
FeaturedwillbeDr.RobertP.Biller,execu1ivevice or swimmer s para ys1s onKOCE-TV(CbanoelSO)on ov.9at8:30p.m.,Nov. provost and former dean of the School of Public I 0 at l 0 a.m. and Nov. 12 11 J 0:30 p.:m.
administration at USC; Judy L. Kelsey. city manager of
Fountain Valley; Ron Bat~ city manaae~ of Buena Park; By JEFF ADLER of the ciVJl trial. Taylor•s attorney,
and ~Obert Sbelto~. senior consultant m Government ot11110.,,......,, Wayne Austero, argued his client is
Relations of the Irvine Co. A 0ra--r: S . C ~nulled to between S6 million add Cosr orthe-p~m. inc!uding breakfau;::is 130 per . n "&'-.... ounty upcnor ourt S lo million to cover past and future
person For more information and reservations call 1ury was scheduled to resume de--· medical expenses and lost wage . He
ElizabCth Crane at 752-SSOS. ' -liberations tOday to determine bow also asked jurors to award an un·
much the city of Newport Beach specified additional amount for Tay-
should Pl.Y a 22·ycar-old Claremont lor•s .. loss of enjoyment oflife." Candidates Forum announced man paralyzed following a swimming Attorney Patrick Quinlivan, rep-
Newport Center Association and Newport Harbor accident near the Balboa Pier in 1980. resenting the city of Ncwl>ort Beach,
Area Ctiamber of Commera:. will present .. 19.84 Can· The eight-woman. four-man jury ~ jurors to award Taylor $2.2
didatesForum"forNcwport8eachCityCouncilind40tb retirea to the jury room in the Santa million to cover bis pest and future
Cooaressional District elections on Tuesday1 Oct. 30, Ana courthouse late Wednesday, expenses and an unsOecified amount
from 7:30 to 9 a.m., at Newport Beach Marrio~ Hotel, more than 10 days after dctcrminina for his ''pain and sufterins."
Pacific Grand Ballroom, 900 Newport Center prive. the city was responsibile for the back After delibciratina for about eight Brea1cfastreservationsat$10eacharereq~red. Make injury that left John Taylor a quad-hours, the jury returned a verdict
chaecks payable to Ne:*J>Ort Center Association, 180 ripleaicconfined to a wheelchair. favorin&TaylorOct. 12. Jurors found
Newport Center Drive, Suite 180, Newport Beach, 92660, Durina the 5CCOnd and final phase the cit knowingly and n~gently bY Monday, Oct. 29.
.,I
maintained the popular stretch of
beach near tbe pier in an unsafe
condition and made no effort to warn
swimmers of the~.
Taylor's attorneys contended the
city ought to have posted sians
wamins swimmers of the danaen of
divina at the beach, where unprtdic~
table and shi~ bottom conditions
create offshore trou&)is, sandban and
holes.
Taylor shattered a vertebra on
April 18, 1980 when he dived into an
on.:,comina swell. Somewhere under-
water, he crashed bead-on into an
unseen ridge oftand and suffered tho
mid-cervical filcturc that left him
~lyzcd from the neck down.
0 Parenta Night.". aerlea .et
Alan S. Mishne, director of financial aid for Chapman
College, will bold a serie. of ''Parents' Ni,abts" to explain
the mysteries of the 16-pqe Application for Federal
Student Aid and the 18-~ Student Aid Application for
Another neck injury suit looms
California.
The first session will be on Tuesdal, Oct. 30, from
7:30 to 9 p.m. at Villa Park Hi&h Schoo . Other se•sions
will be held durina November, December and Jan~ at
high schools in Huntinaton Beach, Capistrano, Anaheim,
Garden Grove, Fullerton and Irvine. For more infor-
mation on dates and locations, c:all Mishne at 997"6741.
Thunclay. Oct. 26
• 6 p.m. Irvine Ranch Water Distrjct, l 8802
Bardeen Ave., Ir;ine.
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
OflleW, .........
The Newport Beach City Council
denied a claim this week scekina $1 O
million in damages for a 16-year-old
aarcmont boy paralyzed in a divioa
accident at a Balboa beach Aua. l S.
The claim, filed by the boy's
mother, Catherine Tessier, reponcd-
ly asks for SS0,000 in past medical
expenses, $3 million for future hospi-
tal costs. S2 million for .. pain and
suffering'' and SS million in Jost
future earnings.'
Edward Tessier is hospitalized at
UCI Medical Center after Ile dived
into the ocean at B Street beach,
struck his head and was rendered a
quadriplegic, his mother says.
The City Council's denial of the
claim is needed before a lawsuit can
be filed. The $10 million claim was filed
Oct. 11, the day before a jury held the
city liable for injuries to another
Claremont man. John Taylor. who
was paralyzed following a similar
divina acc1dent.
The jury is currently considering
the amount of money the city will
have to pay in that case.
Taylor•s attorneys argued that the
city lhouJd have posted signs to warn
beach&oers that diVing into the ocean
could be dangerous. · -
Newport Beach city officials, how·
ever. maintain that the city should
not be liable for injuries suffered in
the ocean and are currently seekina
leaislation that would shift liability
for divina iqjuriel occu.rina in the
ocean to the state, says Newport
Beach Mayor Evelyn Hart. •
The city ma)' also appeal the Ta) lor
decision, Hart said. .. We'll post siansifit will help;' she
said ... but I don •t think the city should
be liable for injuries like these where
we have no control."'
Hazardous waste
agency created
QeaUQn of a new office to bmdle Ora.n8i: County's
hazardous 'WaStc problems was approved by the Boant of
Supervison.
The board placed the new aaency under the cont!Ol of
County Administrative Officer Robert lbomu on
Tuesday. It authorized no~ fortbc office~ a ~cw bY staff. r
The qency is expected to be pressed into service after
the BKK landfill in WeSI Covina is dosed to toxic~ m~ ~of such materials more dift"t(1l)J.
Meanwhile, an Anaheim company will bCiin a
supefvised deaup today of Jiu.ardous materials it Utqally
stored.. a company officer said. ·
Dixco-Diversi6ed Omnical Sale$~ was shut down
last Thursday by local officials because of the hazardous
materials.
Cixco-Diversified hired a Rancho Cordova..itmcd
contractor to remove the waste from its property, said
Elan ~. secreury of tbe corporation..
Sunflower closed Saturday
A portion Sunflower Avenue in COsta Mesa Mil be
clo.ed for construction Saturday and Sunday.
A 8~foot of the IU'CCt •ill be closed to eastbound
uaftic on the ·C:Ut side of the Harbor BoUlevard
i11tenecti01L The road will remain ~pen to Wes1bouDd
traffic, said Michael Stevens. street maintenance super-visor .
Motorists attemptina to turn east on Sunflower will
be detoured onto side streets around the construction area. he said.
Ex-deputy given probation
on illegal entry conviction
University Drive. John Jeffrey Kun· A22-year-oldm.tnwasbookcdinto was'S2S.
drat, 28. was arrested at 2: 10 a.m. on Crance County Jail Wednesday for Rantlncton Bee.Ch
A former Oranae County Sheritra
deputy was found _auilty Wednesday
of illeplly entenna a nciahbor"a
Lquna Niauel home ana WU
sentenced to six months' informal
probation, aocordina to a Su~rior
Coun clerk. ~
Steven M. Kent, 33, fi~ by the
Sheriffs De~ment in late February
for violatina department rules and
rcaulations, was arrested and tried for bu~ io the Jan. 28 incident
However, he wu found JU.illy on the
lCNCr clwJe of illcpl entry.
Kent ~rtcdly wu acenina run· nina ftom a house after the home's
owner PQtted an intruder inside the
resadence. Nothma was reported
taken. If Kent completes his probation
period suocasfully, he can have the
conviction dismissed and erased
from his record. a coun clerk ex-
plained
Cowan. Hany Jay Harkins.. 41, was allegcdJy poucssiq marijuana and AspeakervatucdatSJ.SO~'lutolen
arrested at l:•s a.m, oo MacArthur sivin& falJc information to a pOlice from the drivc·up window at Carl's
Boulevard. Frank Lembo, 41, was officer. Police say James Bytd of Jr. restaurant at Hamilton Avcnut
arrested at l l :30 p.m. Wednesday on 8oprt Court. pve a false name wbert and Bannina Street
1 MacArthur. And Lany Stephen Ki~ an officer 9ucstioned him as to wby • • • tler, 41. was arrested at 3 p.m. on he •'lls hiding in a parked vehicle in Thieves stoic an IBM computer,
Jordan Avenue at Michelson Orivt. the J JOOO bloc of Edi•r Avenut three boxes of tools viluCd at SS50
• • • about 9:20 p:m. Upon scarchina andajldcet~breakinaintoa 1972 An undetemuned amount or casb B)'rd. the officer discovered a plistic Pinto in the 17000 block of Berlin.
was reported stolen Wednesday cV\> bl& with less than an ounce of somco~ usina a pry !OOl, rotted
nina from a home on RObmwood marijuana, police said. open a Volts-A-aaen Rabb1t,~t Golden Circle. The burglar apparentl) • • • West COUcat and ~a $ISO entc~ the home through a bedroom Birtha ~an Lao.inaham of Santa AM/FM cassc:nc rldio. ,
wandow. Mon ca Cu~lc was robbed of a park • • •
• • • bench TUesaa) ~t. POiice say ,, home ui me l 7000 bk>Ck of A rtd cruiser bLke was stolen from a thk' es took a wro t iron and Wood , ZcidCr wu ransaclccd and SI :5f9SO n
park on Walnut whik a ilvcr MurTay bench valued at $ 5 (rom the front jewelry was stolen.
. Coetalil-Baker St. Entry apparently was made stolen ftom a imldilf, lot at the Balboa
by removina some touven from a Bay Oub tenftis facility at 1602 Eut
biC)'Cle WI$ reponed stolen from, an porch ohhe women's home whilnhe Tools wonh s•100 ~ere taken from
•P9rtment on Woodwind Wednes-slept. 1 1983 tan Ford '-an tn ftont of a
J
A 31-ycar"'()ld Costa Mesa woman
was assaulted by a tioodcd man
1'uesdl)' mornina w hilc she walked in
the parkinJ lot of an ap&11ment
complex at 2386 Harb<>r Blvd. Police
sa.id the ~oman was arabbed around 7:•~ 1.m. by a man wcarina • ttd
sweatshin with the hood pulled
around bis face. He reponedly
lflbbed her, pushed her apinst 1 Will
and fondled her. The assailant fled
ieftcr the woman acttamed. ••• Jewelry" coins and a television set,
all worth ~905. were l"Ported stolen-Tues<Say from an apanmtnt at ~e
,omplu.at 555 PlulannoAve. Police
laid entry apparentll:' was made by Dl'Yina 'the tetten trom an open
btdroom window. • • • A mcn't jtwelry boi1,, with me
90ld chains, and cttdu card were
reponed stolen Tucsda 10mcume
between 2 p.m. and :S p,m. from an
1panmen1 11 th complex at 63S
kitchen window. Coast H;ahwa). • • • • • • :n unc.teterm1nea amount -A b~arbrotctnunwo a Island
elry and a coin collection wu re-[)five raidenct, Winf. an expensive
paned stolen Wedaetda)' from a '.Rolex watchaftdmnesalverblnfrom
home in the 2100 block or Pacific one residence and U,300 wonb of
A venue. Entry was •pPtrently made jeftlry from another. 1n both cues
by cunina a 11hall hole an a 1Ctttn and the 1ntruder pried open a door to pin
opcnina a alidina llat6 door. entry. • • • Newport Beau Someone slashed three urn to a
Vandals caused S 12,000 wotth of Ford LTD waaon PIJ'bd on the 400
damqe to 12 expens ft by blodc.ofVilJJ4oSou4 •. Damqe
to sina paint remover on the 1utOJ, put at SlSO. • • •
The cars -11 Mttocdcs Bent and • • 2 cahber hlndaun and tevcral BMW-M1'C Plf\:ed at Pan Amen· l)iccaofJeWlay'wetestolm tom an
can Imports, Inc., 600 Wcsi Coast uni~ midencc on the 400 block
Hiahway. of Y11 Udo ord Tbe hem wac
A S..O telc~si~; t was stolen toleft from an uptWn bedroom
from a raidcnoe on Hatbor Island 1rftDe
Drive. ~ohoe 111d the house as for ulC Pol et &tTCStcd five motons on
and has • Realtors lock box pn lhc U$PICIOn or dNnlcen dn ,.,.. n
front door. • Lynne Pope. 29, was armted at 2:4S
A $20.000 Cadill l Dorado w I ~ toda} on Haf\'ITd '"CDUC It
da~.b<>ut S2.200•in.C:Sh 'U ~po~rted~ .......... Lap .... ~..,""aa:=-Beada raidcnoc.1othc~.blockofRoaen.
stolen m an an urance office on sear n?i U,'600 ra Radio cqUipme.-n at 6JJO
Jeffrey Road. reponcd S10len from a loctcd vdude W1J tolcn 'from a vclncle in the
ed in the 800 block of Canyon bl of boll. •
AoO.'I'-.o.11 w A.o:-~ e e • • Poan'8UI V .... ey ltYt' Drive ~~)~ '"":n-.,n. 'Ille\. key and personal •denttfi·
Someone broke into the MD Ur-Numerous items ~ ~cd cation papen fttt tolen from l
sent Care C.enter Tuetday ni&ht and stOkn ftom a tocked"°'* facilit) in tnlnk of:a car 1>&rkcd at Pacific Coast
took an opht.ha1moscopc kit doctors lhe 2200 block of ... na C&nyon Hi&hway and Golden Wen ueet.
use in cyt eum1n1uon Pohce •Y R09(1 Wednctday mom1na. o value A v.'Om&n ~ ~en into tod> =~~~~rw=~ w Placed on tt:e !o:'· and doUuna valued at Sl04 60 was
ninsad:cd a desk and m1de off wilh A S7•ycar-old man wa~rudl) rerovcttd at PcnllC)· ~t
the kit vaJ\ltd ll $ 15(). lDunllf lO &be attacked by a stiftl'a) 1 n if ~ndow was asttSICd at 250. at Main Belch ednada)'aftcmoon.
• • • · Wilbur of Wuhinatoe Plum Strttl man •)'S treated at dle ~for a lattration oa as out S3,9201n cloth111&.jewdl')' ad h faot and trantpOntd lo South
bou1thold akin and l*med her Medical Qn1er for ftnther
:former roommate. Jlfttt OW.bauon matmtnt Ht wu la1er releued
tOkS police her roommaie •ook 3 200 • • • 1n clothana, SSOO n jewelry and S 120 man amount of cash
an c& and :other houte.hold 1ems ~ 1to1en fi-om • lodctd busi·
•1u1e mo' ina out onda or~ nm n 1'M 1900 block of Lquna
di . <An n Road \\ Cdnesda • The lo ,
j
I
I I
I l
I I r I
~--.
I
J
f
t
BI .bas crime family 'on the ma'
•To eche on Co omoo indictments seen
aa mortal woun to crllnlnal o anlzatlon
Tfic "51-oount reacral riic:kclt.Ctioa funds. \raffick.in& in heroin and other
md1ttmcnt returned Wednesday druas. mull1m111ion-dollar thefts, 11-
namcd 11 men. includiog Carmine leel pmblina. lo nsh rkioa ·and
Per1100, Gennaro Lan ella and bnbcry."' NEW YORK CAP) -FBI -.ea11 Fmacb Smitb. Who aokl the oom· Thomas DiBclta. FcdcraJ authonucs Meanwhile, an the second daf or
poeed _as m>oked bulincamen ud million Tuaday that law enfo~ deKribed Persico u the Columbo testimony before the comm1sSJon1 ~ • P*lla 1mp0r1cr'1 officel &o man dl'onl hid trad1tionaJ U.S. family_ boas, Lanaclta as underbo wnncsses dcscnbcd the Yakuza as a tet lindictments apanst lbe .. entire crimioal orpruzations on the run, and DiBella 11 adviser and 1 former network of ,&rou~ whose membcn
'°P ecklon" of one of the city's fin said Wedntldaythat orpni2cd crime family Mid. cover their bodies with tattoos u a ~t . orpnized cnme families. had been ••monaJly wounckd" by the The Colombo family ••controls no atan of dllclpline and chop off fingers
au1horities •id. indictments qain1t 1he Colombo fewer than seven key union orpniza· to atone for ml11akcs.
Mcanwtule, hooded witncaes let-aime f'amlty. tions" in New 'York and ''stroogly The 100,()()().member network is
tif'yina anonymously told the Preli· It was one of the few times in law influences both the construction and movina into Hawaii, C.llfornla. Ne-
dcnt's Commi11aon on Orpnized cnfottiement hi1torx .. that the entire restaurant industries in this city,0 vada, Colorado and New York. said
Cnme on Wedneliday that a new top echelon of a ~or orpnizcd Smith said. James Harmon, the commission's
crime society. the Japanese Yakuza, cnme family has been cha~ in a The indictment allcacs .. e.\tonion dirutor. Yakuza crimes include pm-
is movina into the Unned States. linale fedeiaJ indictment, mnh and PIYOffs, mob control of llbOr blina, murder,cxtonionandaun·and
U.S. .Attorney General William said :in a news conference. unions. cmbenlemcnr of union drua-runnini, he Aid. ------~-----------,__.;,....;.;.. ____ ...;;..;.;.;.;;.;~_,:.;;.;.:.:...;.;,;,;;.;..;,;...~.;......;.;......;;..;.;...;..;--· The Colombo family indictments
resulted from a thrccoycar investiaa·
don called Qpcration Star Quest that
was conducted by a Joint city-federal
Orpni.U:d Crime task Force and
involved two undercover operations,
authorities said.
, A ROBINSON'S EXCLUSIVE: THE
AMAZING HELIA-DlM MOISTURIZING
CREAM, DERIVED FROM
~NATtJRE~TSEtR~~~-~~~=--
11m famous Hunpri4n ~auiy crtAm is · ·
' Jn one operation~ an FBI agt_nt
Poling a a buyer of stolen aoods and
anQtiw' a.acnt posing as his girlfncnd
cnienaincd suspects a~rd a yaOht
docked at Staten Island.
• In the second operation, "the FBI
bua&cd the offices and warehouse of DliM Enterprises in New York's
Little Italy, where "COiombo faroily
people would come in, hang around
and just talk/' said U.S. Attorney
Rudolph Giuliani.
The Colombo orpnization is not
the bluest of New York's crime
familicSbut "it might be the one most
similar to a corporatc_conaJomeratc ...
N ~I 11\l HI IV f'
Braniff eelle off 2/s of fleet.
cuts service to en4 l08•e•
By IM..u.da._. Prat
DALLAS-Huse loun are foraq ~i~ Branitrl~ •• born of'~ 1982 bankru~ of hs prcde<.a10r. to eliminate serv1c:ie to I 0 dll"t eell 20 if au
30 airplanes and lay off employce1, airline officials •Y· In add1uon. Braniff'
president William D. Slattery has resaaned, and Branif,f will 9"11 nine or hi
twelve ptes at its home base, Dalta1-Fon Worth lnternauonal.AifPC?n. to nval
American Airtincs. ··we :reallr have no a}temauve ~t th11 .point bu~ implement these changes," Chauman )ay Pritzker and vtce cha1nnan Pa .
Foley told Braniff employees Wednelday$i t. The executives f&id Brandl'
has loll more than S80 million aincc tttumi 1ervice in March. The said the
1u1teri ty measures arc de1ianed to head off' ditional losses ofS4 milfion to S7
million a month. • ,
David Kennedy wu toJd to Jean
KEY WEST, Aa. -Pav1d Kennedy caused .. an
incredible .uproar .. in his family by tryina &o visit his
ailina lflndmother while under the 1nfluentt of druas or
alcohol, according 10 documents detailina the ,aays
before his death. Ktnnedy, found dead in a hotel room
April 25\ told a drug counselor that security &uards bad
asked ham to leave the Palm Beach estate of bis
pandmother on April 23 because of hi; rondition, the
counselor said in the document. Aooordina to~
Schcidqaer, who treated the IOJl..Ofthe late Stn. Ro
F. Kenncdr 11 the St. Mary's Rehabilitation Center in
Minneapolis the young Kennedy told him in an A.pril ~4 ......... .__ ....
telephone call that he had had .. up to nine or lOdnnb in KENNEDr
combination with extensive cocaine U!IC." However, the document did not
make clear what day Kennedy supposedly inc~sted the alcohol ~r cOcaln.e.
Scheidqacfs rccollc-ction of has oonver1111on with Kennedy was included 1n
an 18·Ne report rclcaled by authorities WedneSday.
RM1an malntalnbJ6 lead JiJ poll•
WASHINGTON -'Two new public opinion polls sugest President
Reagan is maintainina or even expandina an ~!ready big lead oyer challeqer
Walter Mondale with Jess than two weeks left m tho 1984 campa1an. Mondale,
dcclinln.i comment, says ideas. not polls, are the issue, w.~* his own poll~ter says the challenge is to convert "weak Reagan voters 1n the short lime
1entaining. ~
Jlammffied tot fouad In Bron%
phannattutic•lly U$ud •nd compo~ of 11
combin.tion oj 'fliumins, proteins, 11mino 11eids And
O~ e/emmts dmwd from tM jUnf/own: LJ~ it
t'WT)' morning under m•fup. twry evening .s a
night cream. Notice how soon it bqins to 10/tm 1md
sm_o~t~ •way 'Ulrinltles •nd mtort tk firmnas •nd
e/111tmty of -your skin. It 4/so ~lps maintain the
critical moisture balance, to promote a frnh.
. NEW YORK -The mummified bOdy of a J..ycar-old c~ild was. found H=====:iiiiiii':i~==~ lymg face-up on a bed in a Bronx apanrnent a week after h1s .emot101Wly disturbed mother was hospitalized, police said today. Thedeadch1ld's l l·year-WINDMILLS old brother, who had been alone with his 13-ycar-old deaf-mute sister and the
youthful glow. ~ltct from thret s~/ized formulas,
for dry, norm.ii of oily skin types. 1.4 oz. S36.
>Ou'// find Helz.i.o·~ only in Robtnson's Cosmetics,
JH. To order, call tollfae 1-800-341·8101.
Robinsons
Charles H. ~Jewelers
Specialwng in fine jeoNelry.
ClJnlity diamonds and exciting·
gemstoncs end custom designs
Appraisals available. Jewelry ·
and watch repair. 642·3310
0 • 0
0 0
Ct 0
:'\ 0 0
0 0
" 0 0
0 II U
0 0 0
UNIQUE GIFTS
RIGHT AROUND
THE CORNER ...
Where these fine merchants ~ waiting to assist you.
Hickory Fanns
Special foods for special occasions.
Out.standing selection of cheeses. jams, t.em,
gift packs, trays for catering and, ol COU1'5e,
our fl.lmOU$ Beefstkk ... for holidays
or~· 642-0972
Crown Hardwn
-Sav-On Drug Store
A geat place to shop. Pharmacy, photo processing,
liquor dq:>Ortment featurtng premium wines, coSmeticis and
ell )OUr everyday household shopping needs. 642·2211
Mot just en ordjnary hardware store. Extensive bath
depenment, copper-dad bOttoni c:Ookware, kitchen supPUes
and gourmet gftwlte. Free g1ftwrei;> on most Items. L6ok for
monthly~ specials! 642·1133
NON·RECOURSE FINANCING body since Oct. 18, called neiahbors around 8: 15 p.m. Wednesday, said pplice
LOWEST PRICE DANISH t 6/65 Sj)Okesman Sat. Tony Valklong. Ncishbors noti~ ID odor in the apartment,.
SOCMt T.C., 30 YR. EDISON found lbe bodyand summoned police. The child's mother was hospnalized as
INCOME GUARANTEE an .. emotionally disturbed person'' in New k~ on Oct. 18, and the children
(714) 6 73-6824 had been alone in theapartmcntsince then, said Vallelong.
~~~~~~~~ Capote manucrlpt revealed
· COLUMBIA, S.C. -Truman Capote either never finished or destro)'cd
his long-awaited book .. Answered Prayers," but the flamboyant author left
behind a .. beautiful. beautiful story .. that rivals his most-acclaimed work, his
aunt says. The 38-ycar-old unpublished manuscript is about Bud. a bachelor
cousin who lived with his three spinster 5istcn in Monroeville, Ala., where
Capote spent much of his youth, said Marie Rudisin:·1 think it•a more
beautiful than •A Christmas Memory;" one of the late author's most-prai~ ·
stories, she said. CaS?Ote, .wh9 died last month at qe 59 of liver disease
comphcaJed by dru&mto.ucatton. probably never wrote more than the four
chapters of .. Answcrcd Pnye~ .. that appeared in Esquire map.zinc in 197~.
Mn. Rudisill,'72, said Wednesday. She said he abandoned the expose ofhisjet·
set friends because he didn't want to lose theircompanionshiP..
KNIFE
SHARPENING
$1.00
~!ssors & Shears $2.00
SATURDAY 10-27 7 am • 5 pm
or 648-4716 FOR APPT.
170 -23rd Street, Costa Mesa
Modern, Professional Equipment
Nancy Dunn Antiques
~ned setting ror consigned
furniture, china, silver, dolls.
collecUlbles. SpeciallzJng in
cntJque jewe~ everything
from vint.Dge costume to
precious stones. 631·3332
The Minuteman Way
American counby style decorating
for the hOmc or gift giving needs.
Great laection to 6U a c:hlkfs room.
ncluding quilts (, teddy bears.
Glftwnlp, dllna. accessories
m\d so much morel
650.8388
(Open Sundayl
thru Chnstmas)
CALIFORNIA
L
GJrJ :aldmapped, barned
SAN BERNAROINO-.A 15-year.-old Jirl was listed in critical condition
today after she was kidnapped, assaulted and badly b\irned with a caustic
liquid, a_utho~ties sai~. A man drivina a van that matched the description ~f
the one an which the JJrl was abducted was arrested Wednesday evening. said
sheriffs dispatcher Bonnie Owen. He was identified as Jack King. 57, of San
Bernardino. The kidnapper took her to a remote area ofbi&h desert at Summit
Road and Interstate 5, about 12 miles south of Vjctorville, Ms. Owen said. The
man poured a tarie amount of an acid-like liquid on her upper body after tryina
.unsuccessfully to rape her, then threw her out of the van, Owen said.
Delinquent •ap~rter ll•t reJea.ed
LOS ANGELES -Jn attempt to track down parents who owe child
support payments, District Attorney Rouert Philibosian released the nam~ea
2SO fathers who he uid were delinguent in theit court-ordered payments.
••They will be proSteuted ju1t as a thJcf. whicti is what they are," Philibolian
said WedneSday. He asked local newspapers to print the 250 names. The
Angeles Herald Examiner ajrced. The Los Angeles Times declined, its editor
William Thomas saying the lists .. in themselves have no intrinsic newt
values. .. "Each pen.on on the list has been charpd with the crime of willful
failure to pay child support," Philibosian aaid in a statement. ''Our office bu
been unable to locate them."
{Ju.de mde. trine •IJate.
SOLVANG - A mo<tcnte canhquake rumbled across Santa Barbera
County earl)' thi• morning. movina furniture, knocking a woman out of bed and bursting casks at a winery, authorities said ... They think that it happened
ri&ht at thc winery, the way it fell," Santa Barbera County fire dispatcher Usa
Mathieson said of the 3:36 a.m. temblor. She said she hid spoken to the ownen
of the Firestone Winery in Loa Olivu, ahortly after the quake hit. :fbc quake
registered 4.7 on the open-ended Richter sCale. which measures pound
motion, said spokeswoman Phyllis Brewster at the California Insiutute of
Technology Sc:ismol<>I)' lab in Pasadena.
Sprbig•teen a elloat In LA
LOS ANGELES -TickCl demand for rock star
Bruce Sprinasteen's seven-nlsht stand at the SP.9rts
Arena is unprccrocntcd. a ticket broker says. "We wdl do
double the volume with Spri1111teen tt\at we did for the
Olympics .... I could easily have sold another thousand
scats," Fred ROii, operator of Front Row Center Ticket
Service, aid Wednadafk!.he nearly l 10,000 .ats that were available for "'The .. in Los .An,eleS IO&d out in
less than nine houn. alld Ross said he had few $400
tickets because the people who &tood on line to buy them
acne.rally kept them. Roa said one reason demand for
Sprinasaccn tickets is so sreat is the unusual number of
fans who want to sec him more than onoe. Spnnpteen
opens tonlaht and has other shows Oct. 26, 2~29. 31, Nov. 2, 4 at prices raftlina
from S4010 S400 for a few choice seats.
Teea JJeJd fa AJeaader miuden
LOS ANOEW -A teen.qc 111'1 mtmber who appirently picked the
wrol'\I retidtnce was charted witfi mutderina four relatives of former UCLA
football star Kermit A'Jeunder, ~lice 11id. Tieguan Co1, 11, of Lot AJi1e1ea
was bcin1 held on (our counts of murder plus an alleptioll of multiple murder
that, if1uDbekt. would make Cox eliaible for the death penalty. police Of6cer
Willie Wi110n wd Wednetday. Cox was booked for invettJlation or the
quadruple slayfna ~~=-/' However, he tw been jailed since $epl. 6, wW be . was arrased ror an parole viOlation. police Cmdr. WillWn Booth said. '
l'lalJlw'ne Jlotel t&e _,,,. 24
MANILA, Phihl)Piina -Two Americans m confirmed dead end 10
o&hen are •illicw and feaied dead 1n a ftre that t'lll!d lh~ a mon bOtel in
Blp10 cartier this wtek. lnUi .. at leall 24 l'eOOle. oflfcWs laid today. f1remen
e0ttt1nutd to •ftb tllroulll IM cbarred Frame of lbt tour~ Pina Hotel.
where about 200Americ:an World Warf I veteramnd thdrwf va wm •rill
after panitja-li .. sn lut wee1c·140th annivmary commemcndon of lbt US.
ESTCLIFF . PLAZA Anny tanctina at U)1e. •
Prfe.t tlclnq .a~ect lleJd
WA RSA w. Poland -Poland's Communm auibotitia have U1'llled an
employee of the Interior Minlsuy, whicb controls lht nation'• ~ •
lntemaltcaanly, in connection wlJh the abduction ola pro.Solidlriiyor6111U&x
days qo. The otftdal PAP news~ llid Wed•elday audt<iridlt 11111
deialntd nve peoDle Who were &bouahl '° br drivinacan mmilar to tbeom Ulld
by •bducton of the Rev. 'etzy POIMlutzlo. II 11id four oftbem were rthnnd
after a hey opla1ned whete they :hid ben. It identified the•• audlorhiea..,.
hokhnaonly 11 .. On.ielon P. 6om Wanaw, ~ lnteriot MinltUy ~." • .. I 'I ' I
\1.
...
FOR WOMEN
.U% off: Soucie knit cardigan sweaters for mrsses. Orig
38.00....... ..•.•• . . •• • • • .24.#
oU9' oH: Hollday blouses by Josephine, in polyesrfH
georgette. Several styles, orig. 30.00 to 32.00.. . 11.•
30% oft: Catalina fall coordinates including pants, skirts
and sweaters. Oog. 38.00 to 42.00 , •• : ... 26.H ro 28.H
·26% oft: Novelty sweatet1 m 1Sveral b6autiful styles and
c<Jfors. Orig. 40. 00 • • • . • . • . • •..• , ••.• , • ; , • . • • ZIM
Sp.cllll put'f:/uue: Oversized, dramatic coats in electrtc .
colors. Singf1 or double·breasted stvles In ultra soft
Kashmiracle' fabric. Sizes 4 to 12 ... , • , '. . . • n.n
30% oH: Soft angora·blend SWHttJfl with V·front and
V·back. Orig. 42.00 •.... ·,,. . .• , • . •.•• , .••... 21.n
25% oH: Counterparts pplyesterl orlon trousers with snake
print belts .. Orig. 40.00... .•••. .. ... • •••••...... 21.lfl
33% oH: Evan Picone career separates for fall. Soft
sweaters, skirts and blazers.
Reg. 57.00 to 131,00 .................... 11.n to #.H
33% oH: Flannel trousers and ~uble·brc8sted .&Jlfcligons b~
. a famous American woman designer. Orig. 70.00 and
12.00 .....•••. ~· •.•.•.......•..•.•.• 45.n and o.n
33% off: Soft, fur-blend sweaters with boatnecks and easy
dolman sleeves. Orig. 45.00 ......•..•••.••• \ •••• 2'.#
33% off: Double-plearep flannel trousers, Oflg. 54.00 36.61
~oft: Joyce stacked-heel career f)ump·in .aft leather_
"Prelude", orig. 44.99 ..................•. , ....... 34.#
30% oH: Nina's sleek, low sided leather pump on a career· •
~rfect htte/, "Esty", orig . 62,00. • . • , .••.• 11.n
$p«lll/ purchltH: Bandohno open·toe leather pump With
woven and cut·ouc detail. "Cresta" ••••••••.••.•. 41.•
26% oft: Mia te"tured leather flat with Jute stitching.
''Picket", orig. 39.00 ••.... ~ .........•.•••••• , ••... 2'.#
26% oH: Gloria Vanderbilt opan·toe leather wedge with
strippy lattice work at the toe; "Coqui", orig . 45.00 • ,34.lfl
Speclal pul'Ch&A: L.J. Simone drop·sided, basket·wea11e
leather flat ..........•..•.. _ .....•••.•..•••..••••. 34.111
Sp«;llll purchau: Naturalizer• leather dmss boot with
sids·zippers and a medium stacked heel. ''Lady" •• , •. l!l.119
Si»cJal purchae: Elegant high·heel leather pumps with .
snakeskin accents. Two styles, both by Bel Air ..•••. 31.n
40% off: Colorful stone jewelry.· Rhinestone, jeweltone or
pastel earrings. necklaces and bracelets. Reg. 6.00 to
38,00 • • • • •, • o i o; • • • • • • • • • '.' •,,, •••°;I,, ,3,41 f!O 22,41
30% oH: Marvella faux·pearl earrings and necklaces.
Reg. 6.00 to 21.50 ....................... J.H ro 14.H
Sp.dill purch••: Cubic zirconia tlnj;. pandants and
eamngs. 112 to 4 ct ....................... I.# to 11.#
30% off: Mikimi 7 mm faux pearls in black or whfte. Rttg.
'32.00 to 55.00 .•...•........•.••.•.••.•.• 22.40 to 11.60 "'I' off: Selected handbags, belts and jewelry from junior
accessories. Ortg. 3 .00 to 31.00 .•.••.••.•• :z.oo to 20.M
33% oH: Westport Mundi leather to/dover clutch in six col·
ors. Orig. 27.00 .••. , .•..•.• , . . • . • • . • • • ••....... 11.H
20% off: All Dim Hosiery. Reg. 3.00 to 5.00 ... 2.tfO to 4.00
26% off: Berkshire queen·size hosiery.
Reg. 3.50 to 4.00 . .. . , .... ., . .. .. .. . • . ....• 2.'2 to 3.00
3f% off: 2 .... leather fashion belt with gold·tone buckle.
Choose from 8 colors. Orig. 25.00 .......... , ••••.•. 16.19
33% to 3'% ofl: FasmJJn JeathiH: belts. Textured sswn·
metric belt, orig. 30.00 ..•••• , •..••.............•• 11.llJ
Straight cowhide. classic. orig. 25.00 ••.•.........••• 16.n
20% off: All calcuJator-dvtches by Baronet, Rolfs, Princess
Gardner and Buxton. Orig. 20.00 to 35.00 ... 11.00 to 28.IXJ
209' to 50% off: Leather clutch purses by Rolfs, Buxton, .
Prince~ Gardner and B11ronet. Many sizes and styles. Reg.
14.00 to 30.00 ••.....••••.........•.•...•. I.# to 16.•
S,,.c:llll pwchae: Travel accessories by Trina. Satchels,
jewel rolls, organizers and more ..•....••••.. 4.41 to 11.61
2f% off: Scented satin hangers in sets of 6 Five colors to
choose. Reg, 12.00 ................................ I .Ill
60% off: Two·way vaflity mirrors in four handy sizes. Reg.
5.00 to 12.00 •••..•..•••••••• , •••...•.•.•... 2.41 to IM
33% off: Ruana wraps in three dramatic styles. all warm
acrylic. Orig. 30.00 . • • • . • • • • • • • • •••••• , •...••• 11.#
3.1% oft: Cable knit gloves. scarves. and hats in six colors,
by Aris. Reg. 8.00 to 15.00 ., ............... 4.llJ to 1.19
$pecllll pun;h&A: B.H. Smith leather handbags and
clutches Pretty. practical sty/es , 14.n each, or '2 '"' 26.00
26% oH: All Flexatard and Marika bodywt1ar. Reg. 19.00 to
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SpecMI purchase: Ganson leather handbags in your
favof/te classic styles ..•.•. " • • . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . 3'M
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m Jasper colonngs. Reg. 10.00 to 40.00 •.• , 4M to 11.ft
ISO% off: Selected Monet• eamngs. Rea, cobalt blus, or
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60% off: Fashion clutches in vmyt Ong 20.00 .I .ft
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-34 ro 36 B,C. 0,,g, 14.50 ,......... • .. .. • • .. .I.#
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Ortg. 13,50 • . . . . . . . • • • • • ... ' .....•.. , • , , .• IM
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bra. 34 to 38 C.D,DD. Orig. 17 00 and 18.00 ..... 11.ft
21% OH: Olgs lacy V·neck camisoles and half-sltps. Reg
74.00 •ch ................ , .... ,. , ......... I.# ..cit
2tJ'6 to 27" off: Maldenform 'Wtuburi;" streth lace
camisole 1nd doublfl·sllt half slip. Orig 10.00 11.00 .•• ,7.#
42% Off: Enrlr• stock of Pam panrl#. Brl1f1, h 'PSters and
bikinis. Reg. S.60 Heh .... . I fol 1ZM
2f9' tilt: Lace·rrlm ~by Deena, In SJx AnSUoui COi
""· Orig, 16 00 . .. .. .. • . • • • 'UM
~ ,.,,._.: S.rlny s/Hplh,m In }r.vel·tone
pO/yfltef ~CQUl;d • , • • , 'II•
111 oft: V1niry Fair ny#On rilcot rr1Wil -.,,wear. P J . •. oown• and coeri Orl(I. 15.00 ro 21 00 ..., eo fJ.lf
Rf' 1111: Fu#./«Jgth chenille wrap rol»t by·Crowntuft. In
sunny pattll OriQ ..fO.()() • HM
'111 oft: Cotton flanr»I nightgowns In nsorrfKI print from
Accentuatl by Lanz. Ong. 30.00 ,..,.
FOR JUNIORS
209' oft: Angora blend V-neck or double sooopneck
swearers bv Sweater Teas. Ong. 28 00 • . JIM
11.% off: Dolman sleeve sweater-dr es In a soft lamp·
swool/sngora blend. Orig. 158.00 • • 11.#
• 309' oft: Callege Town go-together Jackets, k1rts, pants
end blouses Orig. 28.00 to.58.00 . 17M m 11.11
2596 off: Eber casual, metiswear·locik shirt with tie. Orfg.
18.00. . • • • • . . • . . . . • . • . • . • . . . . . • • . •• 12.11
, 26% oH: Eber plaid suspender pants Orirf 26 00 ••.. 11.111
.JO% to 469' oH: Union Bay casual pan~ m several, pure
cotton styles. Orig. 36:00 to 38.00 • • . 11.11
8pedll/ ~: Pure cotton blouses ln an array of plaid
and solid colors • • • . • • . • . . . . . . . . • • • . • , . , 11.n
33% off: Poplin 1ackets in warm winter srYfes. Ours alone.
by Vail Classics. Reg. 60.00 . . . . • ••••.. n.•
26% oH: Sportsphere JOO suits In warm acrylic fleece.
Royal, navy, grey, burgundy, brown. Reg. 40.00 ••. ZI.•
113 olf: French designer plush jog suits m royal, burgundy,
grey or ivory. Reg, 6().00 • . • • • . •• , . . . . . 11M
279' to 31% off: Arrow, Van Heusen. Sasson and Nesl
Marrin fall stxmsh1rts. Orig . 18.00 to 21.00 .•••.•.•• 12.#
2296 oH: Ital ~wool V·neck swearers m nine fashion
colors. Reg. 32.00 • • • • • • • . • . • • . • • • . . .24.#
32% off: "Cadaz" contemporary Jong sleeve sportsh1rrs and
Striped cotton knit shirrs. Orig . 25.00 .•.•..••••.• 11.•
31% to 31% off: ''Cadaz" pl88ted or plaTn front casual
trousers. Reg. 32.00 to 36.00 • • • • • . • . . ••....... 27.111
25% oH: Arnold Palmer golf cardigans by Ro~rr Bruce. In
Orlon ' acrylic. Reg. 35.00 .. • • • • . . . . • . • • • , •• 25.n
30% off: Fall floral-print sportshirn> from Fra~k.
Polyester/rayon. Reg. 25.00 • • • • • • . . . . • . • • J ••••••• fl.H
30% oH: French designer jersey knits and long lleeve
woven sportshirts. Reg. 25.00 and 30,00 •. 11.11Md11.11
26% off: Italian Shetland-woo/ striped sweaters. Reg.
28.00............ . . . • . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . • • . . ..• 11.•
25% off: Sleek chintz jackets with reversible, zip·off
sleeves. Reg. 60.00 ............••...••.••.•.• , .tf.f..llf
2f% to 30% off: Famous American and European designer
collection of sportsh1rrs. sweaters, pants, and outerwear.
Ortg. 30.00 to 82.50 • . • . . . . . • • • • • . . . • . . • • 11.# ro 61.H
33% ofbDiplomarflllnnel paiarntn in pure cotton, Reg.
~ 18.00........... • .. • • • • • •• • • • • • .. ••• 1f ••
25% off: Munsinewear white briefs and T·ah1rts. Reg. 3 for
.11.00 ani:J 3 for 13;00 ........... J ""a.11 and J '°' '·"
309' off: Our own Cenrura underwear. Bnefs, tapered box
ers, flltl·cut boxers, T-shirts, V·neck 'shirrs and athletic
shfrts. Reg. 3.50 to 11.00 .................• 2.11ro1.• ·
25% oH: All our Gold Toe • dress, casual and sthlette
socks. Reg. 3.00 to 7 00 .................... 2.26 ro 6.25
S(»dal pwchlise:-Distinctive French designer leather belts
for dress-up or casual wear .............•••....•.•• 12.11
Z1% oft: French designer pure cotton terry wrap robes in
five colors. Reg. 55.00 •....••.•••••.....•••.....•• 39.#
Sp«:W ~: Don Loper small leather acce~soritlS,
Trifofd,C!uofofd or passcsse sry/es .•......••.•..•••.• I .Ml
23% oH: Niket casual canvas boat shoes with terry lining.
White or grey. Reg. 26.00 .... .. .............. : .. 11.BS
33% to 31% off: DttSigner and famous maker tie$. Reg,
11.50 to 14,00 ...•.•• , •••..••.•..••••.••• I.# and a.#
Sp«:MI ~r. Men's casual leather tie shoes by Raf·
~lo. Flexible rub~~les~ in blac~ grey or ice . ... 2'.H
FOR YOUNG MEN & BOYS
31% off: Campus Le Tigret knit tops in many solids of
cotton/polyester. Orig . 16.00 .....•••.••.•.••.... 10M
22% oft: Levi's ' 501 shrink-to-fit cotton denim jeans. Ong,
17.99....................... . . . . . . . . . . . . • ..• 1'-•
20% oH: J .J. McWays color·contrast trimmed sweaters
snd vests. Reg. 18.00 to 20.00 . . . . . . • . 13.ft and 14.n
SpecJal pc,ll'C/MH: Zeppalin 5-pocht corduroy 1eans •• 11.11
219' off: Bugle Boy pleated front, belt loop corduroy
slacks. Orig. 22.00 . . . . . . • . • . • • • • . . . • • • • • . . . • ••••. 15.119
22% oH: 4140 Jaguar double-breasted tweed blazers. Ot1g.
90.00 .... '"':. . .............................. l!IM
$pecJlll pcll'ChaH: J.J. McWays pleatfKi or plain front
belted slacks in fall colors . • • . • • • • • • • • .. 11.11and21.11
36'6 off: Patterned oxford shirts. Orig . 20.00 •••...• 11.#
26% off: J.J. McWays striped buttondown coll8r shirts.
0flg. 20.00 . . • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . • • • . • • • • .. 14.•
21" oft: Bugle Boy cotton twill sliJcks, In se11er81 fashion
stylos. Orig. 22.00 • • • • • • • • • • • • . . • . • • • . . . . . • 11.•
20% off: Stemwurtze/ fl6ece activewear tops and pams for
young men. Orig. 10.00 each . . . . • . •....•.••• 1.• NC1t
J3% off: Boys 8 to 20 Farah dress sttparat : slacks and
blazers. Reg. 15.00 to 39.99 .•• , • • • • , • .I.• fO Zf.#
21% olf: Boys 8 to 20 essort d Cempus Le Tigre striped
knit shirts. Orig. ''·00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...,
Sp«:IM pwchae: Boys 4 to 7 lzOd J.G. long 6J ve velour
pullovers • • • . . . . . . • • . • • • . . • • . . • • • 12.#
11" oft: Boys 4 ro 1 0 hkosh 8 'Gosh cotton denim
overall$. Orig. 18 00 . . • . . • • • • • • . • • ••.• r• •• , 11.#
s,,ecw ~ Boys 8 to 20 status label chest stnpod
or u~ logo SW811ters • • • • • • • • •••••••••••.••.•• 11..#
CU to "1 olf; Boys 8 to 2.0 Levi's' cotton cord and '10f
denim jtlans. Reg. 11.99 ro .,6.99 . . . • • ,.., to 11.• ••* putdi••· Boys.fro 7 Hush Pupp!#JS fleece jog •ulrs w.th conrrut stffpes ISM ••Diii JlfllC/....: BOYi 8 tO 20 2 P16Ctt JOQset With
conrrur tMr1NI sleeva . . . . . H.•
~ ID ~ oft: FarMU• Fm.ch cMstgnet tOtHNNt tone
logo d'"' ..,, "'· ng 2B.50 to 30 00 , .....
""' oft: Arrow Dover oxford d,... lhlrts flJ wtme. blue or
.ctU R~ 22 00 ,...,
~ ell: Famou1 A~ ~ f1"tt«J. oxfofd nm /t1 Whir., blue, lf!il>k °' «:ru R~ 24 00 IUf ........ -°" .flll: Atrow M>d V«t H.UMI IOfW aleeve, Pll
rem.cl drtll th/TU OtfQ 23 00 to ~ 00 lfM
Jlf'6 oft: A"ow 8rigllde flit«/ d1"1 .trlrts in wh r. blue
ecru or 11'9Y· R1g 20 00 • ,..,.
-
;N% oll: Arrow Dover o1ffOICJ df9# -"'rr. With ~I
srr1pn. Orig. 23 00 14M
:21% oll: Our •xclu1tve d lJn in dor. •tripa, to11lard1 or
IWO!bar stnpes. Rag. 13 50 IM
3'% oll: French designer sllJt. *' R81J 16 50 IM
.Jf9' olt: F•mous French doigner •~nHl«J str,tM Cies ·n
polyester. Reg. f4 00 IM
30% oft: Neil Martin wool 'lcntt tiff In many $0/id colors
Reg 1000 .· . •M
20% ro 25'6 off: Famous French and Amertcan d~ner 2
or 3 pl6Ce suits In wool or wool bt.nd Reg. 200.00 ro
325.00. In leered stores • J#..llO to DIM
2rJf, to 27% otf: French dd gnM wool Mrfie and fl8nnfll
blat.ers. ~eg; f60 00 ro 765 00 • . . '11.IJO
WEST COAST llDS
25% to ~ oH: Health·t•x • for newborns. mfsnts, tod·
dlers and girls 4 to 6x. Reg 1.!19 to 22..<XJ f.M ro 11.#
S,,.CW putt:h••: Plush animal ~(Pl»rS for girts 4 to 14. In
many coTors and~ . . • • • • • • JM
$f»cilll pUlol-.: Girts' pnnt pantH¥ • • • JM IO f.•
ZtJ9' off: Oshkosh• B'GO&h brtghtly colored overalls for
newborns, mfants, toddlttrS and gtrls $Un 4 ro Bx. R119.
1 1 00 to 24.00. • . . • • • ..., flO 11.a
2#% fO :.% off: Cozy sleepgowns and lobes for grrls 4 to
14. Many pastels. Ong. 15.0<h'o 24.0D • IM eo 11.M
Spedal pure/I••: Huggabfe bears from our collectton .of
plush animals m many sizes . . ..a IO ZIM
J0% oll: Blanket sleepers and,.,.,,, suits for newboml. in·
fants, ~nd tcxfdTilrs Reg. 10 00 to 12 00 • • • • ..-IO 7.#
3096 olf: All girls' tighrs, knee h1's, anklets, af"ld danC8WelH
Reg. 2.00 ro 12 00 .. .. .. • .. • .. .. • 1.# • ._.
25% off: Plush Gizmo 111 pet Gremlms"' tn two cuddly .szes.
By App/ause. Orig. 9.00 and 16,00 ••••.••• ,. -"' '11.#
30% oft: Steinwurtzel fleece activttwear separates for girls •
::;1zes 4 to 14. Orig. 7.00 to 13.00 •••• , ••••• 4.IO IO 1.10
FOR THE HOME
15.00 off: 30 .. diamond and oval cur crystal lamp.
Orig. 125.00 • • • . • . • • • • • • .•.•.•• , , • • • • ....
15.00 oft: 29" diamond cut crystal 18mp.
Ong. 125.00 • .. .. : • .. . • • • ....
'15.00 oH: 28" anr~ued bt'aS$ Jr8d1cional tab1
Orig. 125 00 . • ....
'15.00 olf: 33" cur CtyStal vase shape lamp.
0flg. 125 00 . . . • . . • • • • . . • • • • • • • .. ..
'15.00 off: 28" antiqued brass Classic lamp.
Ong. 125.00 .. . .. . . .. . .. • • • • • • • .tfl.#
15.00 OH: 29 " antiqued brass 18mp
Ortg. 125.00 . • • . . . • • • • •..•••..•.•• ff.#
350.00 off: Trad1t100al c.amel b8ck sofa m wedgWOod blue.
Orig. 850.00 .. .. • . .. .. • • ............. -;. :. : .• .IJO
151.00 oH: Curio cabinet with lighted interior.
Orig. 350.00 . • . • • • • . . . • . • • • . • • • • . • . . . • . . • . ••... 1•.00
121.00 off: Dark rattan swi.ffl roclcttr.
Ortg. 350.00 , 1 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••••••••••••••• 13.JIO .
3111.00 oH: Cont~po~ry IMt,,.r wit with ottoman.
Orig. 600 00 ••••....•••••• -. ...•••••• , •• A • • • • • • 2#.IJO m.oo off: Transitional r.cliner.ln velvet.
Orig. 525.00 ... , ......... , I . .. .. .. . . . , ... Z#.00
211.00 off: Traditional quee(I conv.nilJ/e sofa
Orig. 890.00 . • • • • • • • • . . . • • • • • • • . . • • • ••••• , .-..
28% to 50% off: A van ti embellished towels. 2 styles,
btJth tcttip-. Orig, 7;{)() ro'16.00.. .• . . . . . • . •.•• 4.# eo ••
50% oH: Pavlova towels from Cannon. If perfect
6.00-15.00 ................................ 2.#4 ... .
43% to 50% oH: Shannon duck down pllloM, standaro to
king. Orig. 75.00 95.00. • • . • . • . . . . • • • • •. MM .....
43% off: Pavlo\ta bath rug from Cannon, 22x35" oval. tf
perfect 30.00. . • • • . . . . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ,..,,
20% to 50'6 off: Nostalgia cotton faced martress pad from
Barclay. All sizes. Orig . 34.00·67.00. • • • • ••• , ••• 2'M
30% ro 50% oH: Embroidered Christmas scroll tablecloth. 3
sizes. Orig. 50.00-65.00 .• ·t........... . . . . . .... Z.M
Also available: 48x48". orig. 40,00 . • • • • • • . • • • .Zf•
65" 120", orig. 90.00 .............................. Jtf.#
Napkin, orig. 4,00 • • • . . • .••• , • ,, , .••••.•.•.•••• , • , .2.71
40.00 oH: Zenith 19" diagonal remote color ponable,
Orig. 439.00 •••••.•.•• , ..•..•••••••••••..•.•...•• 00
ID.DO off: Magnavo:x' 19" diagon81 co/Of parra~.
Orig. 349. 00 .................. 19 ••••••••••••••••••• .za..llO
60.00 ott: Zenith VHS Video recorder. Orig. 649.00 •. -.oo
I0.00 OM Sharp VHS video rtlCOfder. Orig . .f49.00 •••• 00
10.00 off: Sanyo stereo·to..go system. Orig. 149.00. 1».•
2«J.OO oft: Pioneer '70 watr audio system. If purchased
separately 899 00 :. • • • • . • , , • • • • • •.. •M
10.JIO off: Casio m11StC8I keyboard. Ofig. 99.99 • . •• ••
25.00 Off: FuN lead handcut crystal from Galway.
0flg 65.00 . • . . . . • • ...
IM oft: Fua lead crystal s~ mware from France ••
•Longchamps" panern. Goblet. wiM. flure champagM.
cordial, lliball or double old f. sht0nf!d.
Reg 6 for '23.94 • . . • • • . . • • • •.•• : • . • • • ••. I "1i r~ m.oo eo 4il.OO olf: Nomali.1 dinnerware rvice for 8.
Reg, 550.CJ0.585.00 • • • • . .•• , • • • • • • . •••••••• r11.•
~ ,..c11 ... : Stainless tee/ service frx 8, available In
2 panerns • • • • • • • • • • •••••..•.•....•. MM
~,..dl••·J'.ssortedbra planters .................. a .ft
•·• olf: Kntps fold up electrtc compact sl,oer,
Orig. 70.00 •• . • •••••.••.. , .......... ... I.• olt: Pr:esto Popcom Now Plus• hot air popcom
malcttr. Orfg. 26 00. ~ . . . . • • • • •••....... ,,..
.,,_.., ,,.. .. 111· Cutler)' set wit '.StOtaf}f. &lock • . . ...
.,_.., ~-· 9 pc, cutlery set wrth stontge 'bloe.k .. • . ~ • •
1•M 0#: 18 pc. Farberware cooA:wate ..,,, Open
value :00 . . .
71.0f olf: ICruPt Saro ~ta• bathroom
Ong 2000 .....
ZIM olf: P.rolnsKmal draf11n.11 uble Ht. Orig 99.98 ,..
3.0I • 11.11 olf: FMtOUS mater hJ1X1.oe dN,.nce Reg
.99914600 • -·--···· ••sit: Frigfda re mlcroMve m.tn Orig. 239 00 .--
r•M olf: Amtna m crowa o~n 0 00 .-a
.,, *If: HOlpO/nt mkrowaw o..en. Otftl. 2f9 00 ,,..
THE BROADWAY
\ ' l , ' 7 1 1 I ,.. N • . ' ' I l ) " ,.,, ,,
• ,
t
.. s
100 GREAT OPPORTUNITIES
I
-FRIDAY, SAT-URDAY, SUNDAY ONLY
$39.99
REVERE' 7-PC. COPPER BOTIOM
STAINLESS COOK.SET, SAVE 72~
FRIDAY ONLY
&g SJ4S. A shinmg wlw for the ttnmtry lmchm
•nd tbe rontnnpor•ry. From R~. our 7-JK. sn
mdudn ~~ •nd 2"11· rowrw1111u~m_ S-qt.
cowrtd storl1 pot, •nd a· opm 1lt1lltt. limittd to
stock on b11nd. Robinson's Hou~res. 62, 1111 storrs
txrtpt Palm Springs.
$ 3 9. 99 STANDARD
EUROPEAN GOOSE DOWN
PILLOWS, 50%·60% OFF
Pl11mped to pn/«non, our 1mporttd Europtan
goost Jqu;n pillows 'Ullth wh1tt •il<otton down ·
proof covm. M11chmt 1"shablt 11nd dryitblt,
mcludn S·)lt•r m11nufactHrtr's uwminty, .. From
Sorthnn Ftathtr.' Aftrr
Ong s.Lt J.JAy 111lt
Sundard .... SJOO SJ9.99 S49.99
Quttn ..•. S/20 S59.99 S79.99
Kmg ........... S/60 S79.99 S89.99
Rob1mon 's Pillows, 87, all srom nctpt Palm
Springs To ordtr, call tollfrtt 1·800-J4S·8SOJ.
2 FOR $9 BATH
100~ COITON TERRY TOWELS, S0%·62% OFF
From F1tldcmt,' m a lowly stl«tton of ttarost, whitt, bottlt
grttn. ch.impagnt, CtTUlt.m blue, ptacbglO'UJ, rwvy or m1mos.,
our all .cotton ttrry t<YWels arr plush •nd 11bsorbmt.
After
Ong. Salt J·day salt
&th, 2S" x 48".................... S12 tach 2/S9 SS:99 tach
Hand, 16" 'C 28" .................. S9 t11ch 21$8 S4.49 tach
Wash, JJ" x 13".. .................. S4 t.uh 21$4 S2.49 tach
R.obmson's ToWJs, JI, Iii/ storn ttctpt Palm Springs.
2 FOR $9 TWIN
200-THREAD SOLID COLOR SHEETS,
50%-11% OFF
lots of luxury from W..msutt• • ' Our no-iron,
cottonl polynttr solid rolor shttts, u1tb 1mptrftctions so
slight, 'Y"" may ntwr nottct tht!m. Colors ~II wry by stort.
After
FIJt or fitttd If ptrfect Sow 3""1.y ult
Tum .......................... S20 tt1ch 2/$9 S6.99 uch
F11/I .......................... S26 tt1ch 21$19 S/2.99 tttch
Quttn......................... SJJ tach 2/S29 S16.99 tach
Kmg .......................... S40 tach 21SJ9 S2J.99 tach
Also at1111lablt:
St•ndard wn, pr..... $22 Sil S/4 99
Kmg cam, pr............ $27 S14 $16.99 -
Robinson's &d lmms, JO, all stom txctpt Palm Springs.
SAVE ~7°/o-62°/o
SIMMONS' PREMIUM
MAXJPEDIC MATIR.ESSES
& •Hurtt/ of the bn1 with •ny of our
thrtt firmnmn of Simroons' prmuum
M•xiptdic mattTtms, ~mning llS /qw
111 $75 nmn, u. pc. kgul.r pncn
weJ? m t/f«t Ortobn J5.2J. ~ is
a nom1T111l chargt for ~ln~ry.
Robinson's Sltep Shop. 75, all stores
txrtpt Mission VitJO. Palm Springs and
Sherman O.h •
•
2 FOR $88
CRYSTAL TABLE LAMPS,
SAVE 75%
JUt. S 180 ttUh, 2 for SJ60. Cherish tht!
shining tltg11nct of Olfr 1mporttd /tad
crysul 111'1/t /Amps from N•tha,, Lagm.
Accmttd u1th poluhtd braJS. uhift
p/tattd sh.~. lndnndJUtl Slllt prict, $49
ta<h. Robinson's lamps, 72, all stom
artpt Mimon Viqo. P11lm Springs
1md $Mrm11n O.Ju.
SAVE 50°/o
ANso· NYLON CARPETING-
$24.95 SQ. YO. INSTALLED
Rtg. SSO sq. yd. "A/f«t1on,"" lowly plush
carptt of Amo' nylon m 18 txotmg
colors, with static control anti sod and
stain resistAnt fi/Nn for tasy care. Includes
manufacturrr's fiw·ytar we.tr w.rr11nty ....
Robinscn 's Broadloom Carpttmg, 63, all
stom txctpt Mission Viqo, Palm Springs
tmd Sht!rm1111 O.ilu.•
SAVE 33°/o-50°/o
ON OUR ENTIRE COLLECTION OF
KARASTAN ORIENTAL DESIGN
AREA RUGS
SAVE 50°/o-65°/o
DELDAN FLOWERS, MIKASA AND
SREDNICK VASES TO BRIGHTEN
YOUR HOME
You'll choost from nmnm and room·SITt rup. m
Kirm11n, Sitroulr, Snt1p1, Bolth.ra, Pant! Kmn.m,
Hunting Scmts, Hmz 11nd moTl', 1111 100% wool.
~·w c.pturtti tht natural Mauty of jl<Xl'tTJ m life-
/,/u f<>lytsttrlsillt from DtltL.n. 011r mt1re Dt/"'1n
jlqu;v assortmmt is on ult. Dtl"4n jlO'Uln'S. Rtg. SJ49·SJ,17'. S.lt SJ69·Sl,879. St-y/ts will i.wry
by stort, 111/ sizts •rt 11pprox1matt. ~~ shO'U11ust ont
from 011r wmnmg colltct1on:
Rtg. Salt
)' x S'. ...................... SJ49 $169
4' J" x 6' ................... $$9S $389
s·9· x 9' .................. s1.22s S79?.
8'8" x 12· ........... " .... SJ,92S SJ,279
Comt m •"" iet our murr llSSOrtmmt m Robinson~ Art111 R11g1. 90, •II scorn netpt /.11mon
VitJO, Palm Springs •Jui Shnnun O.i.b. •
Rtg. Sl.7S·SU. Sltlt S.87·S21. Whitt c.ll•'fil1ts by ·"'"
tht bunch. Rtg. 6/S/9.40. S.lt 6/$9.6~. And from
M1k.Jsa. our glass WSl'S in 11s1orttd colon. r Wst.
Rtg S27.SO. <;./1 $9.99. 6" basJm. R.tg. SJJ.SO.
SAit $14.99. From Srtdmdt, •n 11ssortmtnt of
urimur wits m ltWTlll shtlpts 11nd colon.
7~"·12': R . SJO. $.JI,, $14.99. All 1tnm l1m11eti to
noclt on hand Robinson's Gifts, S9. 111/ .stort1,.
arcpt Alim Spnngs.
••for frtt coptn of mt1m,fm11rtTI wmmtrrJ, 1lt ro.
Control/tr, Dtpt 211. Robinson~. 600 W. 7th Srrttt,
ltu An ft\ CA 900/i.
Ttil Q I :KEST \X'AY. JU 1 Pl R 0 1.1 fO
RMA11 N
' '
• •
-
(
-/Oa
~...--~
Disco\er just how rich a light cigarette can be.
Regular and Menthol.
10 mg· tar:' OJ mg n1co11ne av per cigarette. FTC Report Mar'84
.
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
. __L '
Witness says HB's Ky head of Viet crime gangs
By au A1MdaM4 Preti the P"'1 uid before tbc l7esidcnt'1 Vietnamese air force general was the The whncu identified the four orpnization nationwide, with cells of automatic 1p1stol the ar:oup alleJedlyf
A man U:Stifyiq with • bOod ovtr ComllUlllOn on Orpnized Crime leader ofthe opention. m~or PDP ... the Froamen ID Loa 30 or 40 members Jn any one place. used -and clan arm:cd robbcnes 0
h11 bead told a pmadential panel in lhlt Ky 1*ded an orpnizauon that Ky has derucd prev1ou1 rcpons Aqeles and Oranse County, 1hc The Fl'OIJ1lcn. for example. were a Chinese pm ling houses
New York today that he was told that mcl\lded four ~ 11• and tn-that linked ham with extortion Blaclc EaaJe1 in San FrancilCO, the aroup of former South Vietnamese The pu~ of the o~azatlon ls
Huntinaton Beach res dent NauVPn P&ed in einortion, maOJuana traf-aroups F'l1bermcn in Houston and the Eqlcs soldiers who had ~n u .. lned in • --· i h · 1 Cao Ky, the former prime minister of ficldqand armed robbery. The· whncJ1, a man in his 20s, Seven in Chicqo. junalc warfare, he said, toftahtc:ommunaam,sa 1 e~a !"~· the RepublicofVietnam, is the leeder "the witneu said that altbouah he testified in the third day of the He wd rnany oflhe leaden oflhe 'li!c witricts said he and other wh0te professed reason for Joinmg 9' a network of Victname.se crime hid never met Ky s. he wu told by his commauion '1 hearings into the rise of oraanization were fonner 1enttal1 in recruits Mte taulht how to arranar the network was that idcoloaical f tlht.
.aiw su~or -one or U boaes \hat he Alian-Amcncan orpnizcd crime lht Vietnamese army. He said there murders, clean and handle weapons The wnncu satd he and other
l::The ~itness, a member of one of said repon to Ky -that the fonner aroupa. arc about l,000 members an lhc -the QOmmi111on was shown an members were told that the erofits ;=.~;:::======:;::;:;:;:::.;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;::::====;;:;;:::::::=::c:====:::====================:;::::;;::=;;;:;::::;:::==:;:;===:;:;::===============================;:::;;'l !romtbeutnw-priscwem1QUl&JO finance what he termed "the jun&lc
II
r1
. ,
'J• ,,
HALL·OWEEN
At Southern California Edison, we are
constantly exploring and developing resources
as we seek the most efficient energy for ow:
customers. ·
It take• aiae raoarca •
Edison generates electricity from nine
primary resources= watet; oil, gas, nucl~
coal, geothermal, wind, solar and bio~.
More resources than are used by any other
electric utility in the world.
We a1sq place a high priority on developing
alternative and renewable energy sources.
Conservaton is one such souree: The COl\.5ervation
efforts you make are very helpful. Arid we thank you.
:New ways to conserve and to save energy come
along all the time. UsUally they're simple,
inexpensive, sometimes no-cost
.. "'\.,, • tr!' •
..
-
EVENTS
HALLOWEEN IS
.COMING TO ·
FA·SHION ISLAND!
· FRIDAY, OCT 26, 12-9 &
SATURDAY, OCT. 27, 10-6:
Visit our pumpkin ~tch and
take home a FREE pumpkin.
SUNDAY, OCT 28:
Enter our carved pumpkin
contest.
Zpm-Sing-kl.ong Pumpkin
urolling. .
3pm -Awards Ceremon~ •
Join us in our celebration
saluting The Great Pf.!mpkin! .
_ ......
Neiman-Marcus, Robinson's, The
Broadway, Bullocks Wilshire and
Buffums. Over 70 fine stores in
all.
Just off Pacific Coast Highway
between MacArthur ana
JambOree Blvds. in NewfJ9rt
Beach
·~ ---
ways you can reduce energy_ use. Some
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Call 1·800-9Sl-S062.
If you'd like more information
about some easy nevv vvays to save
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This is American Energy AwatenC$
~k. A tilile for all of us to stop and
remember just w.hat it takes to tum on
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sC-E
Southern California Edison
war in Vietnam," to buy weapons and
to pay forthcaroup'<s legal expenses.
"You don't really know wbat
happens to the moncyT' asked com·
mauion director James Hannon.
''No." the man replied.
Eattier this year, Ky held a news
conference at which he responded to
news anicles that linked him to
groups of Vietnamese extortionists
who prey on Southern California
businesses.
The articles, by columnist Jack
Anderson1 also said Ky had fled
Vietnam in l97S with $8 million in
aold, diamonds and currency.
Ky said he had sent a letter to
Andenon demandina a retraction for the articles, which he characterized as
'hnisleadina and libelous.••
j .. I am not some secret society
chieftain, headin! a collection of tbuas,.. Ky said. 'J am a man who
tried to serve his country as a soldier."
Andcnon cited a confidential re-
port from an Arizona-based or-
pnized crime task force and inter-
views with police officials in 1 S cities
as sources for his aUcptions.
Aquino
charges
mulled
Iraq says
it sunk
3 vessels -~
BAGHDAD, lraq (AP) -The
1.-.qi navy today attacked four un·
identified ships tryina to enter the
Jraniaa port of Bandar Khomeini, an
Iraqi military spokesman an-
nounQCd ..
The 1pok.Csman, readina a '°m-munique over the state radioJ said
thftle of the ve11tls 11nk. The rounh
ltiip, ttie un1deiitiftCd 1po eaman
said. was "on fire." The attack, the spokesman uid,
.. underlines our determination 10 tiahten the blockade impotcd on Iranian pons."
There wu no indcotndent con-
firmation of the Ii:agi claim.
llndar Khomeini lies at the nonh-em atremit~ of the Persian Gulf.
-Dou& 100 naila..nonbw.t of lran't -Kh*ta laland oil terminal.
Iran and Iraq have been 11 war for
four yeen, Iraq announced in Fe...,.
ary thatit was impo,sina.a b&Ocbde on
au lranla1 "pons. chidly to cut iato
lran't oil nvcnua -h• maf n source of fv.ndi• ror lhe war. Fifty-saa lh1ps have been damaacd
by attacks in the Pen1an Gulf this
ydt'. Most of the attacka have bt1n C"1'ied out by Iraqi warplanes ;f ·
··rhe ·oJd c~er· campaign BJlalnat Ronald RauJUJ-
SJlehasreductti hts~'ilntf"duHeilhlalntellcC-:-1•
Ther,e Js nothing laggardly or languid about him. '·
Propo1$1tlozi 41
not just
another bad ldea
If'~ AMA11~ llOW ~1/LL
rww!1fANP FOK 11!
I L.M. H
Geor.
created
Ai1ny'S
It's been a bad year for ideas for Assemblyman· Ross.. Johnson (R-Fullerton). .
Joh~son lent his name to Propositions 40 and 41; the first an
ill-conceived and inadequate attempt to reform political
campaign contribution legislation and the second an equal.Jy
·stripes
1 ~~ ':fdtcr an ldl )'OU ~bat 1>9<>r attempt to reform the state's welfare system.
Proposition 41 would cap expenditures for some California
public assistance programs arbitrarily at J 0 percent above the
national average for such programs. It would establish a
commission to determine what that translated into in dollars
and cents and it would give special treatment to the elderly, the •
haShmartcs are -those '1nl>C$ on the
uniform's sSCcve. But not 1U kno"
Georgt Wastun;aton was 1hc fellow 1" .., \\ho d~mcd them up. His men
blind and the disabled among the indigent population.
hadn~t been pa1d, &hat's Wh). He
wanted to 11 vc tbcm at least some son ~ .... ~ of credit an lieu of aF.. so on Aug. 2. ~f-1782. he in,·en~ the Honorary
Perhaps more damning, however, is that several analyses
have concluded Proposition 41 will not necessarily reduce the
total amount of money spent on public assistance in California.
What it would do is shift the responsibility of providing services
-to the very needy-.. the safety-net~ if you will -o he alreaay
overburdened cities and counties. i:~!IJ:5'
But Proposition 41 is not just another bad idea. This
initiative holds the potential to do real damage.
· This initiative -would cut medical assistance payments to
the elderly by 25 percent, eliminating benefits like eyeglasses,
.dentistry, wheelchair and medicines. Despite the advantage it
give the blind and disabled in the needy community;
Proposition 41 reduces the services available to these people, it
cuts funding for foster care programs in half, it cuts assistance to
an unemployed mother with two children from $550 per month
to $360 per month, it reduces funds for workfare, it slashes
family planning assistance by 80 percent and-worst of all -it
makes no effort to ferret out waste and abuse.
Among the organizations opposing thiS-measure are: the · h h ' ·
Commerce, the Caltforn1a Medical Assoc1at1on, C'ahforn1a CalifomiaLeagueof~om~nVOte!S,thecalifo~iaChan:iber'?f Reagan's not t e one w 0 s
Church Council, California Congress of Seniors, the Easter Seal -
~!et~th~~lifornia,thestateFosterParentsAssociationand t ft h b t Big Media ~eDailyPilotopposesProposition4J. OU 0 OUC ' . U
No question that
the ·president won
-. , · the second debate Let s stop blaznlng ()tbers LOS ANGECP.S:-··1 can't lX1ieve
for our lack ofjuddJJJent ~~~hin':~~~m:'d:ba~;~ l were -eJ.• . My acquaintance at Dulles Airport.
To the Editor:
Re: Editorial Oct. l. "Newport
Beach has moved to reduce spinal
injuries in surf' -There is no need
for an apology to anyone, especially
Mr. Herbert Hafif. Any one who
dives into the surf or chnnnel around
Balboa Island just isn't very "water
wise."
won't happen to me. I will do my the morung after Kansas City,
thing.!" echoed a sentiment expressed more
As I see it the public in the past,. graphically the' night before, when a
and as my father tau.ght me, both near dozen friends -listened, in-
accepted responsib1 lity for our own credulous, to media heavies awarding
actions, but not now. Since the legal Sunday night's debate laurels to Fritz
profession has beco~e 50 large (there Mondale "on points."
"' 19~0 debate with Ronald Reagan on
points.
The O\'erreaching is under-
standable. when one realizes that
some inside 1he media had something
of a wager on what would happen 1n
Kansas Cit). For t~o weeks following
tbc Louis\11\le debate. liberal DCm<>-
crats and the ant1·R~n press
cattfullyplacedall thc~m the-age
issue .. basket Sunday;-Fritz dropped
the basket: or. more preci~ly, Reapn
cheerfully slapped 11 out of the kid's
hand-while Fritz stood there With a
sheepish gnn on his face.
· As a few skeptics warned. the
Mondale au~iliari~ ~·ere taking a
dangerous and· foolish gamble in
portraying Reagan as an aging, ou.t-
of-touch president, no longer up to
the demands of his office. All the
president had to do to neutralize that
campaign and moot the age issue was
Why and when are people f,Oio~ to
stop blaming "big brother' (city,
county or federal government) for
their own lack of good judgment. or
just lack ·or common sense, after lhe
fact. Diving into the surf, smoking.
drinking. driving too fast (over SS
mph) or not fasteninJ your seat belt
arc all neptive acts of:' free will," lack
of jud&ement or whatever! You -alJ
of you -have been warned,
statisticized to death and educ.ated
about these thinp. but you say, "no it
are more attorneys m the U.S. per Pardon me. but Fritz Mondale got
citizen than any other country in the shellaclCed Sunday night. He knows
world), the barristers say -. "Don't it: his staff kno\Ns it; the country
take any responsibility yourself -knows it. A nationwide USA Today
we'll find someone to blame." How-survey, taken imme<liately following
ever, the city. county and state the final debate, had America giving
government, Mr. Hafif; are me and victor) to President Reagan 44-27.
my neighbors. -. That's ~3 -a landslide. p
We refuse to accept any respons1· The same sampling was asked how AT
bility for your lack of . intestinal it now intended to vote. The
fortitude 10 accept poor Judgment, respon~: Reagan 61 ; Mondale 34. Bucuuu either on your part or that of your Only five percent were still un· """""
clients!. decided. That 27-point margin is •••••••li•••..-JOSEPH R. GROTH US among the largest Reagan has enjoyed .
Balboa in four years of his presidency -with
the l 984 campaian concluding in two
Are solstice banners needed? w~~cther the press bias against
Reagan is ideological, professional -
the media love to see a battle start,
and hate to sec one end -or personal
is no looser of much relevance. The
Big Media -which has repeatedly
told the country Reagan is out of
touch, isolated -is itself out of touch.
to show up and tum in a vintage
Reagan performance. Which he did.
The three best lines of tht night. the
onl)' thrtt that will be remembered by
wttk's end. were all Rc~·s: The
crack about Mondale votina to kiU
the Nimitz carrier and the F-1 •s that
are used as the backdrop on Mon-
dale's TV ads~ the needle that Mon·
dale's connection was the'fist one
Reagan had ever heard drawn be-
tween the federal debt and illegal
immigration: the certain-to-be·
classic jibe that dissolved the age
issue in a matter of seconds. and
laughlcr in 'flihic_h even Mondale join~. For. p:irt1san .rea..ans1 the
president said, "I won t exploit my
opponent's yo'-'fh and inexperience.··
To the Editor.
Do we really want to spend $ l ,SOO
of our city tax money for "solstice"
banners? Our Arts Commission has
offered to pay $SOO a piece for three
new solstice banners to be hung for
the holidays.
I'm not sure 1 know anyone who
celebrates the solstice. About every·
one I know celebrates Christmas.
Whatever happened to the beautiful
stained glass panels hung at Main
Beach during the holidays?
HELEN PINES AcconSina to those immediate
Laguna Beach post-<iebate polls, MondaJe won in
Louisville, narrowly; he lost deci~
S ."-4-1.o,• Jo4-4-•rv mlS!dUJded ~~!& i'!,i~dnsa:P 0t~~ an~~~~ Uppo~ .. .14 I. """•tT 8 Geraldine Ferraro. That is how the
To the Editer:
Your editorial on Proposition 37
(pmblina propqsation) is as n:-is.
guided as the Newport Beach article
defendina the actions of Newport
Stach. I would advise you to ao ou~ m
the world and find out wh1t'1 1oin1
on. .
class suppons th~~ entcrpmcs. country scored it. To the Big Mtdia,
however, the first dcbatt' was a
Mondale triumph: the two following
were, at worst, Democratic draws.
Usina the standard by which 50
many network commentators pve
the victory Sunday• ni,&ht to Walter
Mondale. Jimmy Caner won the
Where in laui ville. Mondale re-
veal((! an unexpe<"ted grace and wit~
and humor, at Kansas Cit) he was all
Nol"\egian Wood. The fonner vie»
p~sident look((! "cary: he -,poke in a
drt".40 monotone without umor or
mttaphor or imagery; he bObblcd
v.ords distracting v:iewen from his
message; he repeated to the point of
boredom his charge Reagan wu not
in command -a charge Y.Wbl)
rd'uted b) the controlled -and occass=.. stellar -performance of .the • t,;
Otbcrssa itdifTerentl)'. H~wan
~ Wall SUttt Journal
report by ~ames Perry and Rohen
Merry: ··Mr. R~. who bad ~n
widely pictured as urcd and uncenam
during the first debate two weeks ago,
stumbled· badly in the bqinnina of
the night's debate while replyina to a
question about Central America. But
he ralliedjn the middle of the debate,
only to stwnble again in his do •r:ia
remarks .... Mr. Mondale once aptn
showing stroncer pup of detail, tried
to picture himself as a &ttona believer
in national defense. He hit hard -·
etc."
Did Merry, Pert:) and Budianan
witqess tht-same debate?
Perhaps it is this writer who i_ out
of step. not lhe rest of the platoon.
But. unless 1 am wide, wide, of the
mart -or something utterh un·
predictable turns up -the election of
l 984 ended Sunday niJht.
Before Kansas City. the co,untcy
generally approved of the ~n
JUOid: and had established a strong
bond of affection for the 73-year-<>ld
gentleman who compiled it. In the pit
of tbe stomach of not a few Reapn
supponen, post-Louisville, however,
was a voll)ball-sized doubt: Is the
Reagan of '84 the Reapn of 1980?
When the president ndiculed that
Mondale commercial and destroyed
the age issue "'itb a single witticism.
you could hear the relic' ed checn in
half the home~ in the country. Two
more v.'eeks of Fritz Mondale male.in&
the same point~ he has been makina
for two )Ul'S ain't aonna turn this one
around.
America is back: and so is Dutch
Reagan -four more )'Can Just one
question. What the dcv:tl did he put 1n
that time capsule?
Pa(rid a.aw... Is • •,.allefrftf
colrnnaltt. •
BadlC of Dist1nct1on. a White strip
at>Ovc ahc left cuff, tbc first hasbnun.
Each~ acncration in the induJ•
tiialiied world durin,a w last 100
.,...,..has-bet:n aboat Wf;an-incbt--.,....~•
taller than ihc previous aellCf'ltiOn. I
:S11d .. the andustnalized world." Were
you aware ihat people m the un-
dc" eloped nations dunna that I 00
yearsbavebcen losing up to an i.ncho
height ~generation?
If that firefly iJ flying. u·s a male.
Q. Who are :those Indians ~ho
don"c "'&Jk but always run~~
theys<>?
A. TheTarahumaras?Tbey lave 1a
the ruged Otihuabua 10( Mexko.
Some medu::al ttscan:hcrs went \fl> a
mountain witb some of lbotc natives
and at the top took the pulses
eycr)1Jod)' in the panf. The f°C!'
iiarchcrs • 170 per minute. Tbe
Tarahumaras, 70.
Oarcnce Saunders opened lhe
---ortd's fim ~If «nice~ llOft
on Sept. 11. 1916. in Me.n\Pbis, T,eon. .
One long aisle StTpCntJncd throijgb
the racks. tak:ing the~ bY
item in the store. to exit throuah a
turnsule at the checkout counter. SO
re"-olutionaf} was this panun that
Saunde~ v.'U ghcn a pat.mt oa iL
lllit one Store multielied 10600111 •
years. Through a train window once,
he'd seen a hog squirm under a~
and that rcmem~. ouriouSJ~.
:a at ilispited hun to name hrs
~l merchandisi~ operation ~Y
WiJgl).
More than JOO prh ate banks issUC'd
ban1cdot~ with little govemt'DC'nt
control before 1862. Many were
v.orth}". But some put their offices out
in lhe remote mountains -in wildcat
country-to avoid redemption of their
notes. Wildcat banks were first. Lona
before wildcat oil wells.
Then:'. no .. goodbye" and no
.. hello .. in the lan~of the Eskimo.
A hght rain speeds up the roller
coasier.,irack by at Jea.st I 0 mph.
Tomato plants contain more ni~
otian~n tobacco plants. rm tnUt
The Myopia Hunt Oub of Hamu;.
ton. Mass. -a group of polo Players wt g~ back to I 882 -admits only
near-sighted mcmben.
Can )Ou ,·enfv the da.im that the bone~ of blads ire heavier than the
bones ofotbcn1 Jl.;citbef c:u I. But am
told this is why few blacks excel in
S"-immi~ competitions e"-cn thou&h
they e'cel an virtually all other sports
Will check further.
The Dutch of New Amsterdam
were the first in this country to cook
"olykoeb." lt translates .. oily cakes."
What we're talking about here. Pll·
ivlm. is dolJl.hnuts.
Schoolroom dial.,ue: Q. "Didn't
)OU ~car a c.\\tater. A. Naw. l onl~
put hon ~hen my mom feels cold."
If t.bc marriqe Lasts ooe full yur,
its next most difficult ycan are the
fifth and ninth. Such is the claim of.
the matrimonial rCsearchers.
L.lf. Boyd 11 '• SJodicattd
t'el8malsr.
First of all, your Jtatermnt that
there is no link between the games
and orgni~ crime is mislcadina.
Bally Manu~turii:aa 11 the ~rpniza·
tion promouna th11 pmbhna oper-
ation. I suppote your naive remarks
repnSina Proposition J7 and or-
pniztd crime would also apply to
Nevada and Atlantic City -that
there is no connection with orpnized
crime. I beheve you should be aware in your own Southern Cal!fomia area
Concemjng the lottery itself, ~ou
should be aware that the plavers only
recei\'e 40 percent payoff. whereas in
"legitimate" pmbhng the players
usually take pan in at least 80 percent
payoff. With Ball) or Scienufic
Gimes and the state o( California
operatina this thing. 1t appears that
they c-an pad this deal with minimal
payoff to the players.
It appears to me that anytime
M>meone wants to promote some-
thina, they use cdu<'ltion as a sclhna
point. A sales tax increa~ for schools
would cenainly be a mo~ honest
approach. Unfonunately, the poli·
ticaans take the ··coP"(>ut" approach
with this lottery SCMme.
What's the full story on Grenada?
-~ ... · y..of'Commcrce. pmbhna pcrmns
weft pan and. pan.iel of orpn1zcd
pmbhna. Check with tbe Los An· aeta Times Ind City of Commerce
officials lo verify 1hese very
t\llj)icioua operauons.
Concemill OM poup lhal loees on touery, Mtional statistiti shOw,
beyond an)' doubt, 1hat the poorer
·'
do n t know who writes llhc
((f itonals. but I believe you woiil<J
serve the paper better by enlistina
writers such is Jldt Anderton or Ann
Wells 10 replatt your absurd editorial
wnter. Your ~.r-na 11m· blina Should be ! RICHARDCANTLAY JR.
t.aauna N11utl
H.LIOhnrt1•
Put>ld!:*
F'8MZlnl
..-nao1'IG Ulttor
T .. T ...
Cly £d!lat
CNll ...... 9P<w1 ro.1ar
Where did Hughes .helicopters filmed
In action during Invasion come from?
•
w SH. INGTON -~ year ago invnion. E)"Cw11ncss accounts -. a. Eall
tooay Amencu l.n>OP' &aAdcd on lhi-QOQfi~Phoiotral)hJ a:or_ 11111 ~·· C.nbbean 1sland of Grenada -yet R~tta1 H SOO.Ml> scout hell·
the public sun dOC$n't know. the full (Optm u c tcnsh'CI)' on Gtt:nada. . ••••••••••••
story of the an\'.Haon. Fa1m fooaqe hows one of tile
Not only were :reponen barred thoppen cnlh1na and c.\plod10J. cludt the OH-6 !l"d newer, amprovtd
from Grenada for three days, but the TM mY*f') n du· The Huabn ""Cf'IM)M as wdl.
Pcittapm has ~ ao release af\er· ~MD hdic»Pttt 1 noc pen ohM T1?m: ~ at least thttt: d1n:crt.nt.
anion repont on lht operation. rmy'lt ••wnt~. In mpontc l a tpeaalty tquippcd modth of the
How did the Marines and Ranecn ~I anquary, Gm. J n t1u&hcs hchcop•er. lotekd wilhdatll· ~rfornun tbf\'1 Wm t~~ V~, chatnnan oftbc Jonu Ohttfs ~ dcctronte IUf\~l~ cqutp-erty led or were they l\imptml 1by of'"8tt did not tm the u..-a. daft 1Mltt.-.s'Wdt-as *ree MH~ •ttliuiri
poor ..a~lhaence and command con· u pan of the Grmada 1nvast011 R,wtt. bellf:Vtd 10 be ft'iod1ftcd fOr • ._.,
fusiOn" Did •hdt ~ wortc lhe despite the cyewttness •nd ~ mi90Q
way thcl Wlft Mlppoeed IO" paphte proof lhat me ~ iftCleed Ml'ont1na 10 IOUf'CU. lhe m,...
Tht mmcan publec ma) ntVtt ....S. ~ llflecopem u1ICd tn Grenida
know All•havetoaooa.eVftlaftcr ~Uy, tht PtGtlfC>ft ..,_-, ftftlMfd~tlFort 8'w. C home a~ 11 ,. PeftUlll)ll's ... ~ boullttHyH--~llKe ofdtf rm)'l·=Ol"Cn. lhlt 1\,; Gttnada Qpenbotl was 11969.anddloetwm~~OH-6 ThtHQlhtt baveraainfd
carritdoft'brilhantlyinnayrnpm. modrl But 1ny nt0e1alft ~ fanherafidd. 'l'llWy vuhownuptn o.e u1u,tr1taon of tht-mah~s Gotdbetl and John Dillol bat# the crtatral maa -m the "81111k of
wcH.11ft•kM rs tht ca• or t\t H..._daoppres1thaedo1nbrAl'M''\ 't1A h:kedt'GllWa..,.._MUM
m aeriov itthcoptcn ultd •n the inlt'mll matWt In ftt 'fbty '{a. the StMlfttlla IOWfftmenl . ol
I
i ,
• I
c.. ........ ............. _
i.-..
. THE
FAJlll,Y
CIRCUS
------by Bii Keane
"What homt!Work is that?"
"Handwriting.''
by Brad Anderson
by t.om Batluk DOOIUSBuaY
BIG GEORGE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP)
-~.\~
. >~?
-~·
DENNIS THE MENACE
by Hank Ketcham
PEANUTS
EVERY DAV 'TMAT BEAUTIFUL,
6lRl. IN TME RED PICKUP
DRIVES 8V MERE. AND
WAVES AT ME ...
DRABBLE
~0'4, 'f"e. !>l"°°L.. ._____, PAf'E:R. MU-0!1
~ R:>l.li\C Al,,
.lAR1'00Nl5T\
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
"It's the flrehouse ... do you want to flll In as
mascot white their Dalmatian Is at the vet?"
l
I J
l
I
• ~ I.ONG AA.S rr BEEN SIOCE I ~ ~ FRO'A lHE Wr~S? HES PAYIN' ME BY1HE HOUR.'
GORDO
GARFIELD
'
PON'T VOO J05T LOVf SONP.15E. TME 500NP OF BACON ~ZtUN~
F\ELP?lHE CHIP.PING OF"'fME IN TMf SKILLET' ••• TM£ SMELL
etRPS ••• THf CRISP MORNINCf AIR OF f'R£SM eREWEP COFFEE
by Gus Arriola TUllBLE~EDS
evlift 'fASfl!P A
~~ UW'Yr
by Jim Davis ROSE IS ROSE
I GET TMf FEELING-WE'RE
WA'fCMING-TWO PIFFE.P.ENT
CMANNEL5
BUT I 1Ht~K yoo'RJ:.
ffi.)S\ FINE:~ AND I
~VOU~D
so~.
by Garry Trudeau
WMAT DO I DO
WITH THE REST
OF MY SMILE?
••
by K~vln Fagan
by Lynn Johnston
1Ft1s//
by Tom K. Ryan
by Pat Brady
Prf~ CHECK. LAN~ TWO .. . ~fCf. CHECK , ~ME TWO .. .
I BRIDGf HOW MANY. PARTNER?
'
Both vulnerable. North deals.
NORTH
• K 1094 ~832 o AQ103
+J6
WEST EAST
• 82 • 53
~AQ9 ~J1076
O 782 0 K9S.C
• K85.C3 + 972
0 TH
•AQJ76
~ K54
0 J8
+A Q 102
'rhe bidding:
Nortla Eatt
~... PHI
3 • Pa11
South
I • ~· PaH PaH ~~=~
Weat
PtH ......
Ir •
O~ninic lead: ~:ight or •.
Mo l player take 1 fin se
bel".au e it' th r • 'outh, dcclar r
8l four pad , realized that, ii the
r1ne11e ~t·re going to urceed, h
d Id nor need it I
• Ince he W4 a puselJ hand,
Nc>rth hAd ju!ll about enough for his
.,ump to t l'ircc pade • However,
'. s are his side would have reach·
ed the same contract no matter
what he responded.
West led a trump and declarer
aw at once that, if the diamond
Cinesse were going to succeed, hi~
contract was impregnable. Htiing a
confirmed pouimist, he dt•r.lded to
c;se what he could do i( tbs diamond
fin se were going lo rail.
lie won the flu ·en or trump and,,
with no pau e tor thought, h1• led
the eight of diamond Crom hand.
West. a play r who.liked to hon t
that he played "by th eat or my
panlJ," rolluwcd with the even, the
cnrd nr.Mt• t hi thumb. Oerlart•r
ro ~ with the ace and returned a
low diamonti from th lt\hle.
1-;n I. waa fn a quandary. Arter
lcwing ·for a few minutes. he
elected <to play a low diamond.
Ocr.lart•r' j11ck won tho Irick and
'
the contract was home. Note that lr'
Wc!lt had the king of diamonds, the
<'Ontract wiSstill safe. West could
not attack hearts without setting up
declarer's king, and iC he didn't lead
a heart declarer would get rid of
two of his heart. on dummy's good
dinmonds.
Good defenders would know what
to do when declart"r ltd a low dia·
CHARLES
GOIEI
mond lrom the table. on tC Fir.,
diamond lud. it was We~t'• duty to
gh c his partner a count or the dia
mood ult. With an odd number or
c~rd , West hould play his lowe t:
with an even number, he hould
tart an ~no by playing Lhc hi;hc t
he can pare. On this hand he ahould
hnv followl!d with the deuce, and
t-:a t would know that dcdarer had
ro have o secon1a diamond. Ther
fore, h coul1f ri e with tht• king and
hirt lo 11 hl'nrt to d eat the wn
tract.
-t .. '.'
,
I
News
is good
for Rams
Injured runner
Dickerson wllrbe
ready for 49ers
From AP cl11pa&Oea
Rams' runnina back Eric
Dickerson,. the National Football ~ue's second-teadma rusher this
season, probably won't practice this
• week because ofa sprained toe, but is
expected to play Sunday against the
San Francisco 49ers. Rams' Coach
John Robinson said'Wednesd~y.
Am.ind of thei
Rustler pololsts
often drive coach
Hermstad 'nuts'
Golden WestColleac.waterpolo
coach =rom Hcnns\ad likes the fact
h1steamisundefeatcd1n 16matchC$
this season.
• He lsflso pleased wath the way bis
team is scoring-the Rustlers are
avcragilig 1-4.S pis pergame.
He's even happlerwnh his team's
ci>nsistency on def en5c.
• Tom Hermstadfagurestowin his
16th consecutive conference cham-
pionship and top that with a Sou them
Califomia title before this season is
OVer.
So why does Hcrmnad often hav~
the kind of expression on his face such
as the one to the left of this column?
.. This team ha11tsownper-
sonality,"saysHennstad, who has
been coaching water polo at Golden
West for 19 yean now. "Sometimes,
they can be very unpredictable.•·
C1n
Smu
I SPORTS COLUMN IST
------
Hcrmstad likens the play ofh1s
team to a halfback an foO\ball Who has
been told 1n the huddle to run oft'the
right tackle, but he decades to 10 oft"
lelt tackle.
.. Normally, that doesn ':t work, but
sometima, be secs the defense is set
in a way where it will work and he
adjUS'ts, .. Hennstadexplasns.
Hiswatcrpoloplaycrsoftendotbe
same thing and the results are the
same. Sometimes it works; som~
times it doesn't. When it docsn '1,
Hermstad looks Ii kc the picture to the
left.
"I want a good, set offense and I
Dickerson, who has gained 911
yards on 180 carries this season and is
the league's No. 2 rusher behind
Walter Payton of Chicago, hun the
biJ toe on his left foot in the first half
of, the Rams' 24,.: I 0 victory over the
Falcons in Atlanta last Monday niaht.
According to Robinson, Dickel'$0n
said the toe bothered him a little in
the second half of the game, then
became quite sore on the plane ride
home. X-rays ·afterward were
negative.
Butdon'tget Hermstad wron&. He
reclsthatthisyear'1 team isoneoftbe
mott ialented teams he's guidC:a
Hermstaddocsn'tliketocall
himselfaconscrvativecoach, but
after 19 years. it's sare to say he bas a
prettyaoodideain hishcadofwhathe
expects from his team.
Rustle~s win 16th straight
"He'U be well-rested and play a
great game on Sunday," Robinson
said of his star runner, who led the
NFL in rushing as a rookie last year.
"He'll be fine. I'd sooner have him
practice than not, but the fact that he's
not goin& to practice is something
we1l have to live with."
When the unexpected happens, he
looks a lot like the picture to the left or
this column.
The Golden West Collqe water polo team received its_.....,.
in quite a while qa.inst the Univemt) of Southcna c.aliforU )Wlior
varsity. but emerged with a 16th straiahl ttium,Pl\. 10-I aves dw
Trojans.
After Golden West assumed the lead in the leCODd quner aad
building it to 7-4 and 8-S in the founh pcr1od.1hc vi•tina Tra;.m ~
the advantaat to 9-8 in the late ~ bcfort Matt Wieb diDChed n
with a pl with I I .seconds ttmairuna. .. TheydrivemenutssometimCs, ..
hesayi. "I don'uayt.tiat inacrit.ical ·
sense, though. I'm Just used to doing
thinp a certain way most of the time.
Geoff Gruber. Mau Murph)' and Eric Dind bad a pair o(tallill
apiece for the RustJen.
The Rams, S-2, face the NFC West-
leadina 49ers, 7-1, in a I p.m. game
Sunday at Anaheim Stadium. The
game is a sellout and will be televi&ed
locally by KCBS, Channel 2.
.. Offensively, the players' per-
sonalities have to m11' better. They
have to know what the other suy is
doing. Sometimes it works, other •
timesitdoesn't. Tbeycanbevcry
unpredictable."
"Murphy and LuQd haven't really been pHcoren b-. ._ii
reaDrhelpcd today because we lost Jason CrowQl'lyin Cbe,11111e(oe•
ejection)," said Golden West Coach Tom He111i111id.
The Rustlers battle arch-rival O~ Coaaai OCCJTidllJ:ia dllir
next match.
~ .... ,...._, ........ u,.
Golden Weet water polo coach Tom Bermatad often wean
this ptalned apreeelon. eYen tlaoqb hla team la unbeaten.
Stats ·don •t tell.
stocy fo~ Denver
Raiders aren't cos· offense, it'sexceuent. Through its eight games, the Denver offense has
t aking e" ronco~ L totaled qnly"2,288 yards'-fCWCf than , _ any of ttie leaguc·s other 27 teams.
1tghtly this Week: .. T cams move the ball apinst them 1 . but have a very tou&h time scoring." .,,...~ _,;M-.AN__,..,..H....;.A,_TT__,A_N--.B.-EA__,C ..... H4 .... (,,_A_P_)___ Aores said. "That's typical of Den-
ver. I think their offense has im-
Statistically speaking. the Denver proved, but I still think their defense
Broncos, have the l~k of also-rans. is their strength, creating turnovers Y~t tbey re 7-1 and ttcd for first place and getting field position for their
wath the Los Angeles Raiders atop the offense
American Football Conference's •• ·. . -Western Division. Their balance as much better (than
Coach Tom Aores of the Raiders,. last year). Good.~ootball .tcams rely
whose club faces the BronCO$ on o_n good field eos1llon, which they g~t
Sunday in one of the most important eith~r by the!~ defense or by their
pmcs of the National Football special teams.
t..eaaue season up to now, believes the Sunday's game at the Coliseum,
roncos• record is no fluke. which stans at 1 p.m., will be the
.. Statistics can be very misleading," second of the season between the
Aores said Wednesday. "You look at teams -the Broncos won at Denver,
their offensive statistics and you'd 16-13, on Sept. 30 to hand the
think they were 1-7. defending Super Bowt champion
... (Bot) they're not doing it with Raiders their only loss of the year so
mirrors; They have &ood playen. I'm far. · ·
not surpristd by their having a good .. There's no need to mention -the
record. I've always respected them. importance of the game," Floreuaid.
They've always bad a good defense." "We're both 7-1 and they beat us last
In terms of yardage allowed, Den-time. If we can win, that will PU\,.US in
ver's defense isn't that cood; it first place and also Jive them a
currently ranks 18th in the NA.. division loss. Those thinp are im-
However, compared to the Bron-portant down the line."
Lynn,Aa-e
are latest
freeag~~t~
From AP cl11paktles
The Anaels apparently wall make a
serious attempt to re-si&n frcc·aacnt
outfielder Fred Lynn, althoulh his
asent says "it'• impossible at this
point to predict where he will play in
198S." Lynn. who hit 23 homers and d1'Q¥C
in 79 runs this year, filed for frec-
asency Wednesday along with Anacls
pncher Don ~ reliCvtr .Tu,
McGraw of Philadelphia and out-
fielder-desianated :hitter Oscar
Gamble of the New York Yankees.
Jerry Kapstein, Lynn's qent, said
he had talked with several clubnbout
Lynn already. He said be also had
talked with the Angels General Man-aeer Mike Port on Wedn&day and
probably would talk him 111in tOday.
Lynn was P.latoonat in the Anaell
outfield untal Auaust. He finished
with a .270 averaae in 518 at·bats.
WAHR Polo
.
Raider C.ch Tom l'lores hopee !WI team
hu plent7 of n,ht ID them for Sanday
-·· ,, .. aftenooD'• cradal confnmtadoa wttll
the Denftf 8roDC09 at the Collaeam.
Trojans getting the job done
USC's football team back · -three ofits five victories were by three points or less.
"We're not a great football team," said Tollner.
on track after losing year
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Although USC's proud
football tradition has tamisbed in recent seasons, the 1984
Trojans may be quietly clawin& their way back to
~minent'c. -
After a 1983 campaign in which they went 4-6-1 for
the school's first losing football season m 22 years. the
Trojans have rebounded under second-year coach Ted
Toil ncr to pos ta S-1 overall record and -4--0 Pacific· I 0 mark
tbis year.
Southern Cal is ranked No. 20 this week after having
dropped out of the poll following a 23-3 loss to Loui iana
Slate in the third pme of the season.
Like the strong Trojan squads of the 1960s and 1970s.
this scuon 's Southern Cal team fcatu~ a fine defense.
spearheaded by linebackers Duane Bickett and Jack Del
Rfo :and n0te auard Tony Colorito) a solid offensive line,
and then.mnmaoftailback Fred Crutcher, the conference's
No. 2 rusher.
But Southern Cal definitely hun 't been overpowcrina
1.4
"We're just trying to win a conference football title. We
keepina telling our players that there's not that much
differeoce between teams ... We don't have the explosive
fu:cpQwcr to liiht up the scoreboard
"We're getting better as a team, t>ut we need to be
ready each week. If we worry abOut ounclves and continue
to improve, thinp like v.innina and getting to• bo-.; l game
will take care of themselves."
The TroJanSlast won a Pac-1 0 title r.~e years qo and
were on NCAA probation and ineli&Jblc for post-season
play in 1982 and 1983. They cumntly hold a half ... mc
edge over top-ranked Washington in the Pac-10 ra«.
.. Bcioa 4-0 in the conference bilfv.'ly thou&h lbc
season isn't that bia a deal." said Tollner," ho eot the ha.d
coachina job when John Robinson left for the Rams.
"More unportant is just the fact that we're in t.be raoe. ••
The Troians' weak spot has been u· ~ attaek,
with a lack of consistenC)' caused by an inJut}"to 1tanina
quanerback Scan SalisbuO' an the second game. Senior
Tim Green. however, bas M>n all three of ht tans at
quartcrbacJcandscemstobeacttinabctterwithe1penence.
• •
•
Trammell1
is MVP
of Series
• f . • • • • • • .
• • .
NEW YORK (AP)-Tbe way 11e:
was limpinc Wed=Alan Trm8-mdt hardly loolaed lbe World 1 Series• Most Valuablc!l'l!Qa.
But he's got lhc mr~ awMded ;
annually bY ~ ~ bueball
and Sport MagazJne, to prove tbat br 1
really was the best player in the Series. '
Trammell picked up lis MVP:
cropby just four days after Dr. James
Andrews performed anhrosCopic sur-;
gery on tht Detroit shortstop•s left l
knee and riabt shoulder. ..;
.. l mel very good." Trammell said.
... had the surgery last Friday and l'llJ.
off the cru1Cbcs alteedy. rrn movina
my shoulder around. .. And then ~
~monstrated, rotating his ann a bit C &in&CrlY. • ~ 1.lt Was a deaning-up job, i'eally. t
NothiDa majQr... \ ·
Tra.mmcll's knee trouble bepn just 1
about a )UJ' llD wbCD he was ;.:J!
a Halloween costume. He was '
up as Frankenstein. c::omplete witJt~
wooden blocks on the bottom ofi
combat-boots1o make him extra tall;•
When one of the blocks broke u.Ddeii~
his weisbt. b~ fell. tearing cartilalt in_,
thcmec.
Surgeons stitc:bcd the c:artilqe anti.\
Tn.mmell spent ~ weeks iD a
brac::c laSt winter ... They wanted me lO
stay off the lea." be said. ··ney didn't
want· me to rupture the stitches. It.
never rcally mended, thou~.'' -:I '. Eventually, thewearand tear of~!
baseball season sent Trammell back!
to the surgeons. This time, tbeY 1
removed the cartila.ge complcttl)'.;
And while they were at it, they did:
some repair work on the shortstop's:
~oulder. as well. -.
A nerve problem in the sbouldq~
had kept him out of the Titer lineup.
for fhe weeks last 'Summer and ~
World Series time, it was &ivfni bim!
more trouble than the knee ... I nctded
some~ bot you can't afford to take
time o ff then.''
"There are piaces Where Fred could
aothat he would beplayina.cvery~y, bated on my conViiilteona with
other chabit" KaP1.teu1 llid.
W-arde bFeaks Vik1ngmar--k with l-08rdgoal~
On the vcflC of clinchina the fourpla Wednesday pve him 103 r .. aa•VaDtJll,Wes'-maeri: pis tn the fin& pcnod o pace the'
Sunset U:Mue tltle. tht Marina Hiah for the KaSOn, toppina the !Pf'C"ious Rick Weiss IClOftd three aoats and eartyuDrisinabefbftthcraervcstoOk
waaer polo u:am took on QOa..leipe IChool ttrord of I 00 by Bob Hume in Mi.kc Ruttk two to ta.d the "Batons to over from ibe leCOftd penod oa.
Wednesday's fllinp brouaht to._.
the number or ptaym •ean•fYina they
intended to ao thf'O'llh the re-entry
draft. • The 32-rear-old Lynn would JO&n
e1tchers Rlck Su&cliffe of the Chi~
Cubund BruceSunerorthcSt. Ldu11
Cardinal&. ~ted hitter ~iidie
1bomton of the Cleveland Indians
and infielder Jim Gantner of the
Milwaukee Brewen :as Type A·rated
free qentl, baaed on tbear ~
formancc over the peat two KUOn
Aato Wiii ,u.Md priman1y u a ~liever by \M Ansell last leUOI\. He 1~rtd in 23 pma f39 inninp), postlnf• '91 record W1{h daht uvea and I ,61 tamcd·Nn,tverqe,
foe Buena Pan Wednaday nilhtand 1977. tbe Sunttt Lacuc win. Stuart Ullu.cldech pair ofpb. •
emcracd with an 11-6 victory. In the Warde. a ICflior. was a third-team Goal~ Tony Dalton was cn:dited Dlv1d Vastawtt wortrtu" one mumoh. Vildna Tom Warde 1et 1 All..Qf P IC.lection last season and as 1 wtth 1 aves u Fountain Valle) qua11cr 1n pl. then pla •n the
tchool ttCOfd by aurpuaana the 100-lh•rd-~r auner for Marina. improved to 2-1 an leque~·· The faeld and ICoftid • . He wu ~ma~. Junaor Scon Larxn chi~ an Baroftscanaewuptee0nd in the reolaced 1a Pl by man Jim lnaSUntetlapematthupla~at wtt)Uhreepl andSWvcSpanovich Sunttt with 1 wan over n nut Wllfttt.
Golden West :C~ fountain Val· added two for Manna, now 19·3 Wednctda)'• S..cla ll. Uipu Bttd 7: till
:ley turned back Wesunansttt. Mean· ovmll Fountain Valley (I 0.9) plays at chnpna_ to a ot at 1 playoffbcnh •n
while, in the Sea View Laaue. . The Vatinis visit Los Alamuos on Laauna Hills F'.ridly. thi'Sca Vlevt Leaaut. tht Ea&l too
Corona dcl Mar rolled ovcr Sldd&e.: Fnday afternoon a• 3 before clQsina .c.n. Ml Mar ll, ~I: control rt). tiuifdi"Ja 1.tbaJfbmc
blck and Eataneia kept its playoff out tbe Suntet Lacue campaip The Sci Kli.ianm took advantqe m&flln over lhe na u an 1 mat h
hopes 1hve with 1 win over l..quna 111intt Westminster "6t Wedna-of hmJted ma umc. nemna il I played at C rona del Mar Ht1h
Beath. di)'. 'A. vktocy Wedndday would aoatsanthc ntpcnodtoo~ctWtitlm ll)'tnfcnlc and lanZackb;P-
The details: uaurc the Vakinp the ttaaue title and the Roadrunners. ed in three 1oaJ apse« for th
...,.... u. a...a Pan I: Warde's an unbeaten lcaaUe acason. Oary Tichy notched alt our ofhu, who improved to I0-8o~cralt .
" ..
I .
Trojans' Del Rio
doesn't quite fit
'Mr. Mom.' i1nage
Fr m AP di pale~
LOS ANGELES -fter \\ tching s
Jock Del Rio cook, cletln and care for hts c II•
younger brothers. one of his pals tqged
him "Mr. Mom."
At 6-4 and 235 paunas;-the Southern Cal
linebaclm~ somehow doesn't fit the image.
Trojans' defensive coordinator Artie Gigantino
once descnbed Del Rio as having ••a real sen5C of
nistiness about him" on the football field.
Gil Brandt, vice president of
the Dallas Cowboys. has said of
Del Rio, ''Look for Jack to be one
of the dominating forces in the
NFL in the mid-1980s.''
A four-year starter at
Solllhem Cal, Del Rio lauahed as
he recalled his "domesticity." He
and two brothen and a ste~
brother were raised by their
divorced father, and Jack, as the
eldest, helped around the house.
.Del Rio "( spent ~me long days."
Del Rio said. "My father used to work long hours, so I'd
get up at 6 in the morning, make breakfast for me and
my brothers and make sure they got to school on time.
"We'd all clean up the dishes and the house and
sometimes, tf my father was working late, we'd cook
dinner. I make good lasaana and meat loaf."
Patriots fire Ron Meyer
FOXBORO. Masi-Ron Meyer was Ell
fired today as coach of the National •II• Football League's New England Patriots
and will be replaced immediately by
former Baltimore Colts receiver Raymond Berry, a
former Pats' assistant coach, team &p0kesman· Tom
Hoff man said.
Berry, a member of the NFL HaJJ of Fame Stncc
1973, was an a.ssi11anrcoach for the Patriots from 1978
to 1981. He earned his place in the Hall of Fame as a
receiver for 13 years with the Baltimore Colts.
Meyer was hired as head coach in 1982, replacing
Ron Erhardt.
Meyer's firin& came the day after the coach stunned
his team and defensive coordinator, Rod Rust. by firing
the popular assistant in an unex~ move, citing
"unreconcilable differences' in defensive
philosophies.
r
ga.teoftMclaJ
Du IJ1 ... , ....... ...,.,.ca °" 4'**beak Jfllfl<t!MP, ................. toWolol1ellnfow
oftftelhi9 ..... M'-.._...,_.._.... ..
......, Yllill Ferr111mo: ~Jell took owr M
.......... W9 ...... "" he GIM.lld OOUft1 IO tour Now" IOc*a ...... klgcanolMtty ~ •
Olien atay unbeaten with tie .
Washington's Bobby Carputer each , Edmonton rookie Gord Sllenea and · ~
scored two goals Wednesday ni t a the
Oilers and Capitals skated lo a 3-fNational
Hoc.key League tic. The lie kept the Oilers the only
unbeaten team in the NHL this season at 6-0-2
Shen-en, the only rookie to crack Edmonton's Stanley
Cup winning line-up. and Carpenter both received
as51sts on their teams' third aoal ... Beu Wllaoa, the
seldom-scoring defenscman, collected two goals and
center Dtal1 Savard scored once and picked up 1wo
assists to lead Chicago to a 9-3 triumph over Vancouver
a~d .u!ldisputed possession of first place in the Norris
Dms1on ... Bill Derlago, who bad not scored a goo.I in
his first six games this seaSQn, netted three as Toronto
broke a four-game losing streak with a 6-1 victory over
Detroit ... Center TbomH Steen scored two goals and
added four assists as Winnipeg defeateo Hanford, 84 .
.. Don Lever11 goal at 16:53 of the second period
snappe4 a 2-2 and New Jersey went on to its first road
victory of the season, 5-2 over Pittsburgh. Lever's
second goal of the season wa~ a backhander from IO feet
that beat Pen&uin goalie Mlcbel Dion ... Ken Linesman
· scored two goals to help Boston break a lhree-ga.me
losing streak and ~efeat St. Louis, 4-1. Geoff Courtball
and Tom Fer111 each had a goal and an assist for the
Bruins, who shut down the St. Louis attack, limiting the
Blues to 16 shots on goal.
ADgdahlreapalrofecouta
• I
•
UCLA'•SplnnfaceeMU1ery Ki t•11
FonnerCoronadelMarHWiandUC ISi ngs 8 1 lrvlnc basketball player Marie S"pinn who
as a walk-on thi season. will underso made Coach Walt Hauard's UCLA team t h k ~.,i:i~1:,'."'ryooh11left~_!u<tdaJatUCIJ. can s a e
Spinn, who transferred from UCJ 10 UCLA an I i h bit order to pursue a JOUtnalism dqrtc1 Wll .lost for the 08 ng a season last week when he tore cartlla,e &n h11 knee
dunng pracuce. '
Spmn hcl~ Corona del Mar wm the CIF 3-A
championship an 1980-81 but played spannaly 'in
college under UCI Coach 8111 Mulligan. He then beat
out 10 other walk-on playen during a tiyout and made
the Bruin roster this year.
Rea• to anderao foot •ar1my
LOS ANGELES -Veteran left-Ill hander Jerry Reuss of the Los Angeles
Dodgers will undergo minor surgery Fri·
day to remove bone spurs from both heels
the National Lequ~ team announced Wcdnesd&)'..
The surgeiy will be performed by Or. William
Wagner at W:itittier Pres~)~an Hospital. ' Reu~ wdl resume his wrntcr workout program in
approximately four to six weeks, the Dodgers said.
Reuss"" 35, had a~-7 record with a 3.82 earned run •
average th&S pHt season. He was limited to only )0 •
games. IS ofth~m ~tarts, because of vapous injuries. He
hurled only 99 innings.
Equal pay for women runnen
NEW YORK -Women's long· m distance runnen earned another victory
Wednesday, when Fred Lebow. director of
the New York City Marathon, announced
that the top three finishen in Sunday's 26-mile, 385·
yard race would receive the same pnze money as the men. Le: bow said the bigaest supporter for equalizing the
financial rewards was Mayor Edward Koch.
The mayor recently baa tiicOme angry with Lebow
when the race organizer, who had been paying prize
money to athletes under· the-table since 1976. disclosed •
that he would be paying it openly this year.
B)' BAl\RY WILNER
A#~WftW •
The cover of the Los Angeles Kings' media guide •
features Gmeral Manager Rogie Vachon and Coach Pat
Quinn seated outside The Forum. decked oul in tuxedos,
clutchina long, round caprs. Both are smiling ni.:I seem
completely at ease. Obviously, the photo was taken before the Nntional
Hockey teaaue season bcp(I. . The Kinp arc off to a 'hoJTid start. Everyone m the
NHL. 10cludin4 the lowly Penguins and Devils, n :inaged
to escape the wmless ranks while the Kinas still searched
for a victory. · Neither Quinn nor Vachon have had much to smile
about this year. .. Breakdowns," says Quinn. who spent the last two
years pursuing a law degree after being fired as 1coach of the
Phi(adelphia Flrers. "We're a young team and we don't
have the d1scipbne yet'1o avoid those breakdowns. . There"has been little indication thus farthat the Kinp
are getting better in any areas. T)le goaltcnding has been
atrocious and Vachon is on the hot seat because he traded
the No. 3 overall pick in June's draft for goalie Bob
Janecyk1 who had all of eight NHL games under his belt
with Chicago. Jane<:yk looks like he's in over his head.
Then there was the Charlie Simmer controversy ..
. Though Los Angeles received a 1985 first-round draft
choice in return. Simmer's loss is bound to make a bad
situation even worse. ·
h's almost a ccnainty that the Kings -one of the
NH L's bigest losers at &he gate -will be in the bottom
position in the weak Smythe Division for the rest of the
year. They failed to make the_p!a~offs the ~st two seasons
nd1heir owner, crry Buss, mijht ~ getting antsy aoou
poor attendance and poorer on-ice performances.
Marina triumphs Jn tennis
-"" ,.._roeaccoco Riley's
contract
extended
INGLEWOOD (AP) -Pat Riley,
who has guided the Los Angeles
Lakers into the National Basketball
Association'.s Championship Series
in each of bis th~ years as the team's
head coach, has signed a multi-year
contract to continue in that capacity,
it was announced Wednesday.
In addition. owner Jerry Buss of the
Lakers said in a release that Bill
Benka and Dave Wohl have each
signed contracts to continue to serve
as assistant coaches for the team.
No terms of the agreements were
announc-ed.
According to published reports.
Riley and Buss agreed on salary teams
of the multi-year deal about a month
ago, but complications arose over the
wording of incentive clauses.
The announcement of the signinp
of Riley, Bertk.a and Wohl came just
three days before the Lakers open the
1984-85 season at San Antonio.
Riley, 38, is the first coach in NBA
history to take his club into the league
finals m bis first three yean as coach.
His regular-season winning record of
162-73 gives him a winning per-
centage of .689, second-highest in
leaaue history.
Of all the Filter cigarettes you· can choose, one offers you
something special. Camel Filters. You get a smooth smoke, of
course, but you also get the great flavor that's a Camel exclusive.
Enjoy a different kind of Filter and a new kind of smooth-try
Today's Camel Filters.
Riley, an All-American at the
UniversityofKentucky, played in lhe
NBA for nine years, five of them with
the takers. He was a member of Los
Angeles• league championship team
of 1971·72.
The Lalcers lost to the Boston
Celtics in the 1983-84 NBA Cham·
pionship Series. Los Angeles won the
league title in 1981-82, Riley's first
season, and lost to Philadelphia in the
finals the following campaign.
TODAY'S
CAMEL FILTERS
Its a whole new world.
I
16 fll9. "taf.1.2 mg nlCOtlfll IY. Pl' aglll!tl by FTC mttllbd.
Warnmg . The Surgeon Gener'1 Has Determined
That C1garene Smoking Is Oan~erous 10 Your Health
Bertka, 57, beg.ins his fourth year as
an assistant coach while Wohl, £J4 begins his third. '
MIND •••
From Bl
ly, wedon'tgetanyweakerwhen be
comes in."
When will Hermstad stop looki M
like he does in the picture to the left?""
"lfthe1rindivldualityevcrworks
for the betterment of1h1s team we•rc
in &ood shape," answers Hennstaa.
• ln•ex•pen•atn•
•(In lk "*'. MY) "°' """' In prlu, reaaonable, ::,1111111111
Otnalflect Advertlling
142-5878
•
""'" NATIONALCOHPERltK• Wiit
ftct. PF f'A .us 214 \0 Jt5 1M 137
.375 174 177 ~75 170 1t1
W LT
7 I 0 $ ) 1'
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If I.OU I 5 3 O 6U 241 1"
W1&t1tnglon 5 :S 0 All 211 10
01U.1 Ii :I 0 625 157 170
NY Gl1nb 4 • O .500 1.M In Pl!lledtlohla • • 0 .sao 139 , '3
AMllUCAN CO..PIHNCI
Otnvtr ••Iden Se1tt11
Kanr.a•Cllv S.nO/,IOO
,Pll l•llurOh Ondnnell
ci.vt11nd Hou1ton
W.•t 7 1 0
7 I 0 • 2 0 • • 0 • • 0 ""*'· • • 0
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1000 103 234
• 0 0 1000267 117
6 2 o .1so 201 m s J • us \65 18'
3 5 0 .375 ISi 206
o • o '°° 1u m ~~·Gamft Sin Frenchco •I tlltm
Dlnver ., "'*" Cine.Inna II 11 Houaton 1no1anaoor,. 1t DallH Detroit 11 Grten l•v Mlnn.M>ll It ClllCIOO
N1w OfleaM at Cltvtlend
NY·J•IS •• New Enol•lld All&nfa at Pllllbur111!
SI. Louts 11 Pl\llaCletPhll
1'1f"llllol 11'1 al Kanu1 Cltv
euff•IO 11 Miami
Wnl\lnoton et NY Glanh
MMd9Y"a Game -'MTtll er $11fOl.-OOtOii:.;.=Mif~-7-cc,•16~l
Odd$ .. PL
San Frenclsco 3YJ over altema
xR•ldlrS 6YJ over Denver Clnctnnell 4 over aHouaton
110.ks 10 ovtr India~ •New Eno!and 3 over ~Y JI!•
XKll\MS Cltv 6 over TllTIPI .. .,
xOlvlhlNI 1 YJ over N-on.ins XChlcallo 61"1 over MIMHohl
$1. Loi.Ila 3YI Offf J1Phlleelell>llla
icGr1111 81v 2\IJ ovw Detroll
xPltt1burg11 3 over All1nt1 W1aht119to11 6 over xNV Gl•n"
JIMlliml 11 ov11r Buff•l9
mn Ole90 ·~ OVlf S.tttt CMotlday nloht)
COLUOll
xWnhiMlton 7 over Arl?Oftl
Oklll!Oml 2'3 over 11.Kansu xTuu 7 ovw $MU
xNtbraska 31 over Kenus Sllll
8YU vs. XNIW Mtxtco, "° Odds Ohl<> Sl1t1 • OV9' 11Wlsconaln
al.SU 10 ovtr Nol,. Dame •SoYtn CarOUN 1' over E.¥1 CerOllna
x0kl4lhom1 Stet• 30 over COIOrado
11Boslon C0"9e 14 over Ruteera
Auburn l2 over •MllalsMPol s1111
C0-1111 S~') over 11Knuckv lowe 11 O¥er alndlana
xWnt Vlrginlli 2 over Penn 5t111
xUSC 11 over Callfofftll
Jl-«llnolM home tHm. 'Nm H1mm'1 RIM RICll & SM1I Mell
c ..... ...._.sc::McMe
WIEST
Cal Slltt Fullerton ¥S.. LOfl9 8ffctl Sl1 l1
•I VtltrlM Slldlum (1;30 o.m.)
Cal VI use •• LA CollMYm (1:30 1>.m.)
Arlt-11 Welhlnllton
Stan!Ord at Or9tOll SL
W1Ullnt10f! SI. at Oreoon &.n oi.eo St •I twwaH, "
Fresno SI. II s.n JOM SI., n c11 Poly <~LO> at ..St. Mary's
Whllller 11 Rl<lllrids. n
Pomona·PlllW II octldtntal, n
Cal 51111 Norlhrlc:lot et Ce! Lu!Mta11
La Venoe 11 c1aremonl·Mudd
UC Devis 11 cal State HaYWvd
Chieo SI. et Humlloldl St.
San F.ra11Clsco St. 11 s.nta Cllra • Roat I IS
UCLA et ArllON St., rr
8VU et New Mexico, n
Pacific 11 Utan 51.
Wnl TIXH Sf. •t N-Mlick:o $1,
Teicas El Paao at Ulen
Nev1dl·Rtn0 11 ~ St.
8ol11 SI at Mol\t1na SI.
ldlllo 11 Mofllana
E . W1sl'llngton al ldlho SI., n
New Mexico Hlohlands et Nortntrn
ArltOfll, n
SOUTHWEST SMU 11 Texes Arkenses at Hou1ton Rice at TtlCH ALM 81vtor ., TCU
Colorado el Ottl1h0m1 St.
Tulsl 11 THIS Ttch MIOWIST
Notre Dime et LSU
1<11111$ Sf. 11 Ntbrllkl
11r11101s 11 Mldlloan
Mfctllg1n St et Minnelol•, n
Ohio SI. 11 Wisconsin
Purdue 11 Nortllwntem
lowe et tnc:tlen•
lowe St. 11 Mlsaourl
Oklllloml at K1n1H
Otllo U. al Watern Mlcti191n Mlemt, O II Notthtfn llliftols ,....
ToleclO II Klfll St,
Wichita St at Drake 8ow1lnl Gret11 at Ctnlfll Mlchloa" hM St al Eutwn Mldlfgan SOUTH
Tenntu .. 11 GIOfllla Ttdl M1Ul'61POI al Vatldlfbllt G~el• at Kenl\XkY, n
North Carolina at Mlmollls st. n c:r.mson et NOf'll'I Carolina St.
Mlrvland 11 Duke
AIAIUrn 11 M/stln!Ool St.
ClllCIMlll 11 Loultvlllt
William a. Merv •I Will• Forni
VMI at Rldlmond
Southttn MlnlnlHI et SW LOUl"8111, n
EHi C1roim. •• SOI.Ill! Cerollna
•AIT Penn St. 11 W .. t Vll'otnle
11<rmv et Syr1euse
Navv 11 Put
Rut111ra 11 Bolton Collelll
Y1le 11 PllYI
H1rverd 11 "pr1ne11on
Vlr91t1l1 Ttcfl 11 TtmPll
HOlv Crota al •rown
Dlftmou11'1 II Comeil
Cofoalt at ColUtnbla
MIHIClluWlh 11 l01lon U
CAMHILL ~PWRllNCI
ecsmonton
C1to1rv
Wlnnlll4'Q •
V1ncouver
KIQla
lmYIM DMIMll
WI. Tith OP
' 0 2 14 0 5 2 0 10 ..
3 2 0 ' 2• • 1 o 2 n 052 220 '"""'&>Mu.
GA
7:J y
52
~.
CnlcffO • 3 o I 11 30 SI Louis 3 3 0 6 22 20
ToronlO > • 0 6 20 JO
Detroit 2 .S 0 4 26 37
N\llmnol• 2 s 0 4 21 21
WALH CONPllltENCI Patl'k* OMllila
NV ISllndll'I ' 2 0 10 ot0 J~
PttlledlUmll 4 2 I t 33 II N1wJ1nev 3 3 o 6 24 U
Washlnvton .2 2 2 . 6 22 11 NY Rlll'lll'I 2 7 I S II 20
Pitt'°'"" 2 • 0 • 17 21
A4'WM Dl¥IU9ll Montreel 4 l ~ t 22 H
Hartford • J 1 f J2 <35 ,...,.....~~~· ff 2'
8ostOll 3 • 0 6 20 'l1
Quebec 3 • 0 ' 30 30 WtdlneldlY'ISctnl Ntw Jertev s, P1t1sbur11n 2
WIMl11111 I, Heriford 4
8oston '· SI. Louis 1
.• Chieffo t, Vancouver 3
Totonto 6, Dt1roll 1
WashlftutOll 3, Edmonton J
TlllllttM'1 ~ auftelo et MonlrMI
NY RaftNJS at Ne. JerMV
St. Loul• 11 Ptllladt!Pl\ia
WeslllnutOfl 11 C~
,
w ...... tlNrMnMlftt
(1tl,....... ......... ,
fttrat lllUl'MI SINllt • Virginie Wedi C9rlllln) def. AMa Marl•
cec:cninl Ut•tv>, 3·6, 6·2. 6-2, P1aca11
P1r1diS (Frence) def. Jamil Go6dlr (U.S l,
6-1, 6-2
~ ..... ,.....
C.1'*1111 TINWW (Frence) def.
latbat'I Port.,-(U.S.), 6•3, 6-3; Vlf9lnla
Ruiid IRornanlll dlf. Ttrrv ,.,.. (Us 1.
6·3, .. 1.
Wtrtd Mbtecl Otutlltl
(If ..... )
flint .....
Vinet Vin Palltn•K1tl!v Rlnaldl (U.S.l
def. ROICOI Tenner•Rosle C.Mls IU.U,
• 7·6, 6·2, JoM·Lult Clerc·Gabr• Sabetlllf <AreentlNI def. 8• 5anlM-Annl White (U.sJ. 7·5, 7·5; Zina Garrhon·s.tnmv Glammatvl (U.S.) def. Jotln Lloyd
CBrlllln)·Wendy TUNIOcJQ (A1AtraGa1 ......
•~. 7·5; '"-'er FltmJoo·811111 Jeen Kine
IU.S > Otf. Mlrtv RlesMA·Klm ShHf9t' 1u .. s.1. t·3, 6·•
Hlltt lcftMI
Marllw 17, Ill Ten I s-.... Po IM) dlf. wnt. 6•0, def. Spreeue, H,
def. Llnl1, 6· l; E. Roblr1son (NI) won. 6•2,
H, H ; HMN'Nli CM) lost, l-6, -· 6-4, 6-0 ·~ LienQ·Harrlt .(Ml Oef. Ca~·McUn,
6·0, Olf Cass·Schmldt, 6-3, def. McL.aocl· Focht, 6--Q, Sl1nfllld·K. ROl>er1llOl'I (Ml won, 6·41 6·2, 6-0; Ftnlon·Churcn (Ml won,
6· l . 6·2, ,. ,
Mltalestt h, CertNI .. Mar 7 ~
Scoll (CdM) IMI lo lotldOll, l>-6, Iott to
Atnllld, H , def. SlmPllOl'I, 6-2, ""1th
(CdM) tost, H, H , 1·6; Krucker (CdM) '°''· 2-6, l>-6, l~ Dellllllft R~·Mlllos (CdMJ lost to WallChel·
Hoffman, 6·7, dtf. Kreyn1k.·Mlr11oll•. 6·1,
def. Etvln·L.tceze, 6·1; Rowbolhl1'11·
C1J>rtl1 (CdMl '°''· 4·6, won, .,.1, 6-l; Wood·Hovev (CdMl lost. 1·6, won, 6-1, 6·1.
Clft RANKINGS
4•A -1 Pllcl6 Verdel, 2. Mlralfflt; 3.
Dos Putolos, 4. I~ S SOuth Torr1'1at,
6. Rolinll Hilll: 7, L."""9 leadlJ I Santi
.. T!)al'a; •. Wt1lllk• Acedlmy, lt.. ....
~ J·A -1. San Merino; 2. c.ilbffn; a.
Matw DtlJ 4. Wtslllike. S. Claremont; 6.
K1ttfla; 7. Los Altos; I. l.• Calllda; f ,
Gltndort; 10. TllO\IMnd Oek.•. 2•A -1. LI Quinta; 2. Chamlnadl; ,,
KIOOll; 4 tndlo, s; L~; 6. Arroyo
GnlnOe; 7, Monltitltlo; • ~; '· Velenda: 10. VletW Va11ty.
,.,... "" '"""' LAGUNA ••ACH OOLfl. ASSOC.IATIOM ,. ......
~Bruce A1111lr,1ldo: 72-Roberl
RIPloVlt; 7._Vlc: Herbauefl, Al Grena.
·~ 71-Frallk Rout, 7>'-Cllrence Ow1ton
1..-Randy WOOd c l'lllM
73-Carl lhcklul'ld, 14~. Brick, Teel Lthner, 75-Atex lrvino, Ernie Jacobi,
Tl'llOdof"e Demetre
• D .......
61-Robltt CelOll, 7 .... W.C. Wilson, ~ictl .,_,, Eerl Janett. .,.....
72-<ill Ff'W#eld, 7 ..... Mno Orayi
7r-t..ou UflcllrWOOd
..
CIF f Qotball r'atings
Big Five COnr ere.nee
'La IWrMa t Vallncla J SUMY Hlh .. w.wn .. ...... di ......... " .... 7 La Qulflt• (lltl La HMwl
9. Fullerton
10 Trov '
1, LYnWOOd
2. EIPer llftll 3F~
4.EIModlna
S Rowland 6 Padf!Q
IMM lltc:ar11 ""-s-.t 6·1 m Aniltlill ~ I 1111 MlltM +-1 f7
Moore 5 1 10
"""' 8tll ... , 7' S..... S·1 II Del lltev +-1 M ~.... "'' JO 0..tttY ii,.. JO
AnNlul 4-3 12
f.entral Conference
~ •~ n Orentt 7-o n ,,,.,...,.v 7-0 "
OrlllN 7-CI M
SN Yatw 6.of· 1 At SNW.. , ... J U
Getelln Grove •·2 a FrtaWev 5·2 21 FrttW1v 6• 1 ]I
Frtewev S-2 I
Southern COnf erence
Sen GeDrlll ValltY NI 77 Emolrt rl 6t
Ctt1turv 6· 1 '8 Clflfurv 6·1 56
5'1rra 6-1 42
Emolrt S·2 J1 7. El Toro
l OoWMY .., Sou1ft Coest S-2 JO
t. Wtil Covina
lO VIiia Perk
l. P1sa4tfll
2 C1inarlll0
3. Vlnft.rl
Ole) Mih s. Santi Monica
6. ChlMll lalal'ldi J. Hart
I . Palo\ VWda• f. Oxnerd
10. Wa.t Torr•rtta
S." G1brlal V111tv 5-2 21 Siert• $•I 1l
Century !·2 9
Coastal Conference
Pacll'lc 7-t 100 ... , Arcadi., ... Mermonte ~ 6•1 • 8aal Rovat, 47·13 CllallNI 6-0-1 71 Tied OlCnans, 25-25 P11eiflc 6-1 71 leet Hoover, 2'·1• hv S-1 6S 8"1 RldOndo, 33-6 Mlfmont• 5-1-1 S3 a..t WM~I, 2106 FOOll'llU S·H 31 Belt 8urrOU9fll, H• t2 Bay 6·1 2' 8111 South Torre"'•· 34·15 Chen!lll 3-2-2 22 Tied Venture, 25· 25 .. ., .. , 13 8••' twwburv Park. 21-0
Desert-Mountain Conference
l . Claremonl
2. Artl!WOO
3 .... Gerdlm
4. Tert'ICMI City
S. Sa1I Merino
6. Norco
7. Ramone •.Pomone
'· Covlne 10. 81elr
1. Whittier Cllrbllan
2. Velley Cllrlstlatl 3. a .. umont
4. Montdelr Prep
S. Sin Jacinto
6. LA Lutheran
7. 8iatloo
I. OnterlO Cnrlsllln
•. Daerl
10 eoron
Eastern Conference
llsellnt 7-0 ,.
IVY 7-0 73
Wnllmont 6-1 61
Rio Honclo S-1 S3
Rio Hondo "°O Sl IVV .S-2 .,_
1vv 5-2 »
llMllnt 5·2 2'
Villi Viste 5· I 15
Rlo-HondO 4·2·1 '
Inland Conference
Olvmolc 7-t IO .... Caoo Valev Cir. 21·6
Olymplc 7.. n Bait Melodvtand, O•ll DI Anui S-1-1 62 ... I T-tvnlnt Plllmt, 11-0
Alphe 5·2 52 hel WIOC>, 76•0
0t AnUI 6·1 41 Beat Slf'rlllO, 3'-'0
All>lla S-1-1 31 ... I LA hlltlSI, 50-0 o-t-1nvo (Ll .. , 34 Lost'° T~. 20-11
()tympjc 4• 3 f3 8-t Brllnl"ln, 17-14
DfttrMllYO (L) S-2 IS leaf Moieff, 3S-7
Oesert-lnvo (Sl S-2 11 ISQI CSOR, •l-O
. Northwestern COnference ·
l. Clnvon CCCI
2. North Tarrence 3, CabrlllO
4.Sente Merla 5. LomPOC •. ltl9htlll
7. Alatcadel'o
• lneiewood 9. T Ol'T lnct
10. CuNer Cttv
Goldtft ,.. .,,
Oceen 7-0 7l
Loa PtdrM 7·0 '6
Nortntrn 6· l 5'
Northern 6· l 41
Northern 6-l 35
L.os Pedrft •· l JO OCeen S-2 2:3 ec.an .. , 11
Ocean •·2-1 '
e.1 Sa&ious. 35-7
Beel kvartv Hilb, 21·7
Baal Atnaldtro, 2'•22
8"1 S.n l.uls OOIAtO, 37-6
8"1 Arroyo Grandt, 24· U
Bat Morro a.v, 21·•
Lost ill Cakllo, 2•·22 8Ht Hallllftlorne, 13·7
Belt CUiver City, ~O
Lost to Torr.nee, 3-0
Southea tern Conference
7·0 •o ' 7·0 ,.1
S.-1
6•l 5·2
4·2 ,.,
4·2
n
75 ..
S3
45
35
31
lt
11
'
l. Fallh 811>11\t
Eight-Man (Large)
Delphic 6-0 Ifft luekltY, •·tt 2. TtmPleton
3. Rio Hondo Prep
4 Buckltv ll~OPa
Trl'-COt.lntv ,. , BAI El Peso di ROiiin, 60-12
Prep 5·2 8111 Flntndllt Prw, 54-l4
Dtlplllc 4·3 Lost to Fellh laPtlsl, •·29 Trl-Countv S-2 ... , Cont u-.,, 42-24
1. 819 Pine
Eight-Man (Small)
2. HMMrll Christian
3. Cel Lutlllren
.. 81oomlftllf0fl Chr. s. N_!Wl*1 Olmtlaft
HH.o 7-0
Christian 6· l
Ac.adlmY 7-0
Chrlsllen .. 1
Academy •·J
.,.... ... ......
OAVFt'S ~OCkaR (.....,_. la90l
-53 antlln. 235 bonito, 1• rod! fish,. 1 helllKit, 2 c.allco blu, 7 Miid beu, 7 bll'9
Nrch, 1l sculPln, t ~. 117 meoaret
Tiiis Week's treut IUftb
LOS ANG.LIS -Ilg ROCk Cl'ffk,
Cutlk I.Ille, Lll09S latle, Pudc:lln111tone
L•k•. Pvnmld L1k1, San Gabl'lel River <•st, wal fortt1), Santi Fe ~nervolr.
SAN IUNAJtDtMO -Greootv Ulkt, Moialll NatTOWS Pant Lake, Semi Ane Rl"9(.
S.ICOlnllt,64·22
e..r a1oom1ngton cnr .. 77· w
... , Llbtn'v Chrl"1an, •311
Lost lo HftOtria Christian, 27• 14 ... , ........ """· »·13
Fl~tortlUa• . Wal'~ { ,..w Fl)tnG-'!..·-drOp Rustlers end first round perfect
Off tubltentllllV .. Anglll' _.,.
nut~. Plrates-"'ntorem ... "noneback· With lht Sania Barblra Tournament ~tcd ror The AIMlhllm Qly Counc1 Ml wi cu • Saturday, Golden West will meet ~·prci.u toniaht 11 7.
-w-i pN11m1n1rr appr!!1ll to • UCJ.rvJne dealt ato setbaclt anltftld of Friday u ~na1ty achcdub!.!Thc matOh "''u .,., ...... W'---aw-biC on lhe-CU.-.n' noor. tno.1~.,_.a .. orowchport• Coat Confm~ Orllll9 C..• a, .......... a: The Pinta rccavtd 1 ~ring Anoe' V--M PM' women 'I volleyball rK"ecamc to a clqtc Wednesday niaht acare from ecra~ Fullaton before com1na throua.b wnh • *"""-· with Iden West 11tuna atop 1be atudinp a1 7-0 and 13-U. JS-13. l:W.. ll-1.S. JS-3 vtnhct. ~ lr'Ofn IOtM r-. Oranae oa t COl1*Jutta step behind at ~I. s.mtie Olrvais (21 kills~ Rounhc McMtllcn (19 ~ tMfd ~ .,_ by ~ The Rustlen made quick WCMt of~ bu• kilind IOOhocnote outside hnter Bridfitt Bandel (12 lorttlM durlnO ...,_, 99d the Oranae Coast W\ltlled to PG" alt ¥lC.10[y liliMt killl keyed 6e ~--·au.ct. ~ dtr ......_ to..,. mt Fullerton. Pinta wil visit Cerri Friday nicbt bcf0tt
-iiriftllMI..-,,_.... ...... tMI trOM In ~ acuoa. U IM.e IMI • tilJtt aoa-~tntlleSlfttaBatblraTounwneat twdayand
tt'9 Mt, ~ dllol conrcren~ mat& to LQyola·Matymount, 'Suftdly. Ooldee Wal wall mo be an the towne)'
The propo_Md Orillnenee Glf11ll Heres what happened· ~la-~ a. UC lnt.e t: The ntcatcrs
•maxlmumhoft1,000...!'.!<'-.0 GoNftWt1U.~t:1ihcRuatltnclotedou1 '1to.Poed to 9-11 ovenll followina a 15·11. 1).15, I -9.
blM bOUnOlnl tiMett --. ...,. lhc match an under 1n how 10 rema n unbea~ in 8-t5S:,!7·lS 1etblck 10 Loyoaa.Marymount.
WOrttt Mdl litnk bOMIMa • the play wnh a I ~s. "~· I~ 7 VenliC1 over the Oaaclllol • 1 ac lllDlt Aa~1m ra1Md from a 12-5 dtfaat 'n the MldlUm. GOktcnWcstwasled ~-of'Uweet«+re•-decMi .. 111Mreotatea l~14lcacS.buHhcLio
The ordtl..,_ NqUlr9 two middle blockmCece El.uud T~ ~--•oulli* the rat 1llrel nu 10 d0te .out tbt mateb more ~ Md .pproWlll bY h tter Karen Kniaht ~"I I iwcre junlOI' ou idc hatter ndy Rohril
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lft. while F.dwardund Kni&ht bad vcn k1ll1 a~ 14.
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•As low lr./Mo. Leasing
• Certified, factory-trained technicians
•SAVES
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MANN NATIONAL
WESTWOOD (213) 20MM6
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When tt)e music stops,. the mystery begins.
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Jake didn't like
his mothers new boyfriend.
He was1he first to warn ~r.
Now, he's the only one
who can save her.
. PAROOMT lltTllES PIESENTS
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moneymaker
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Movie
patrons 1pent $3 4.Jl!ilhon to ma~e
MGM-UA Entertamment Co. I
.. Teachen" the moll popular movie
1n the nation'5 theaters last weekend.
The hiah 1ehool comedy is an us
I fourth week of release. • "Places in the Heart" by Tn-Star
· ,_ _ ... ~ Productionsand ••ThicfofHcarts" );y ~:r::...~:=.,a;c:.~~ ParaQlount Pictures Corp. tied for --~---------~ .. second place with a weekend take of
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Escort fleet's
well qtialified
By ALMON LOCKABEY
0.-, ............ .,...
It's axiomatic that yacht racers in a
Iona distance off shore race are con-
stant!>: wat~hil'\& each other -or at
least listenmg to the morninJ radio
rollcalls to kctp track of their com-petitors. -
But the real watchers and listeners
are crews'that receive little rcoog-
nition in long distance races -the
escon vessels, u ually power boats.
When Los Angeles · Yacht Club's
Mazatlanraceget1underway Nov.10
the picture will be different. Instead Of
a fleet of.power vessels.. LA YC has
received the volunteer assistance of
several of the West Coast's finest sailing yachts with skippers who have
Mired from racing but love sailing
and know the came intimately.
What better combination to ensure
an understanding of the action and
the need for placement of escort
vessels to be in the right place at the
right times.
"These special volunteers take
their jobs seriously," said A.C. (Al)
Manin, l..o$ Angeles architect and
urban planner who will be heading
this year's escort fleet. -
"We will leave severaJ days before
the Nov. 10 start to station ourselves
farther down the coast," said Manin.
"This should be ofbcnefit to the faster boats. ..
Manin, who has raced his
NOSAelects
Bob Wheeler ,
a~ pr~sident
_ _.__Robert .-Wheeler of-BalbOa
Yacht Club was elected president of
the Newpon Ocean Saihng Associa-
tion (NOSA) at its annual meeting at
Balboa Yacht Oub. He succeeds
Au101
loclllEY
lapwonh-50 Sumatra in many raoes
-including the Transpac -will be
at the helm of a new 5 I-foot fiberglass
sloop also named Sumatra. .
"While I know here have been
injuries, accidents and boats lost in
past Mazatlan races. I don't believe
there has been a major incident
recently," Martin said ... lfit kicks up,
however, everyone is subject to a lot
of exposure out there."
"We will undoubtedly have some
communications tasks and Sumatra
carries singlMideband, VHF and
ham radios for this purpose," Martin
continued.
Duties will be spread among the
five escort vessels and each boat will
be assigned a different pan of the
fleet.
"Our progress., of course, dep_ends
on the weather and we will be
watching developing conditions
closely," Martin said. His crew of
expenenccd ocean racers will include
Dick Chewning.-owner of the famous
Danzanta; Pete Utecht, Ed McNutt,
and Walter Hoffman who will serve
as navigator and ham radio operator.
Other escort vessels will include the
75-foot ketch Kamalii, owned by the
Doheny family; Night Song with vice
commodore Leon Coper aboard; WiJ
Bassett's Chardonay, and Don
Tyler's Delphin.
Although communications among
the racing fleet will be by marine
radio, the advent of ham radio in
yacht racing has provided a day-to-
day report on the progress of the
racing boats and their standings in
fleeL Several of the racing yachts will
also have ham radio aboard to
communicate with their families
during the raoe.
Fourteen New York-36 sloops are
scheduled to start competition Friday
off Newport Stach for the national
champion5hip of the popular class.
Registration in progress at the host
Newport Hatbor Yacht Club in-
dicated there are two enlrics from
New York, two from Chicago, and the
remainder from Southern California
clubs from San Diego to Los Angeles.
Signups continue today from 5 to 7
p.m. and Friday from 7 a.m. to9a.m.
After a skippers' meeting at NHYC
Friday-al 9 a.m .. crews will board
their boats for the first of lwo races
start1ngan1:50a.m. Two more races
will be sailed Saturday and one on
Sunday to determine the title.
The moment of truth
Boomerana, ttiJat;Jfbea oa downwind nm to
o•erhaal Klaloa ID tlaelr ftnt match race in
Callfotnla Yacht Clab'• ·-.tt1e of the
m•wt•" lut weekend for tile cal Cap.
Boom~ cliDclled tJae troplay with a wiD ln the foarih race off llarbaa del Rey.
Robcn Carolan, aJso ofBYC. •
~=~:\=~7.:1~::~ )NHYC hosts tWio . wsr.ee, •~e1 .. d e•rA .. ts yacht race an the world by sheer .,,. I a .&A .... '-'JIA
weight of numbers. It annually draws . . . . .
60():. 700 entries. The fall mv1t~uona1 regatta for Bay Yach.t Club will stage its.ann~I . _Suta Mealea ~1 Silver Gate Yacht Club -Man ·o War NOSA also runs the Argosy race Mothers Sabot sadors out of ~e~n Dana Point· Harbor Cliamp1onsh1p AS90C1at1on ofSa.nta ~on1ca Bay Yacht Series. Stinday.
from Newport Berach to Los Angeles Harbor Yacht Club today wdl point. Saturday and Sunday. ~H'~ "M?mp1onsh1p Regatta (IOR. Oceanside Yacht O ub -Fall DiriP>
Harbor and the 14-Mile Bank race. up a weekend of sailing activity from In other Southern California · RC)~=· Sunday Series. SUnday.
Other officers seated. were Jerry Newpon Beach to _Dana Point. Yachting Association areas: Coronado Yacht t:lub-Perkins Se Sou~we~(P7.J.~t C1ub -Arden
Brame, secretary; !•m E~m1 , NHYC a1~ will hos~ the . New TroJ>hY (invitational handicap), Sunday. nes o. No,_. &M ~Saturday
treasurer, and Rod Lippold, JUdge York-3~ national cbamp1onsh1p re-Lot Allldet·Lo•1 Bead Cortez Racina Association _ Around Santa Barbara Saili Oub _ Goblin
advocate. . gatta Fnday, Saturday and Sunday. Alamitos Bly-Yacb\Oub-Hallowccn Coronados Islands race (invitational). Regatta, Saturday, Sun'!f.y.
A auest at thcfmeehng was CHarlo1s Lido Isle Yachi Club will conduct R~~!;.~!c~~as~b~}uri!'~ Beach _ Sa.k{~Y· Ba Y h Ct b C 1 . Pierpont Bay Yacht Club -Twice
Avila, owner o the Bahia ote • its FaJI Regatta for small boats racing Navy Day Regatta, Saturday. N ·~on h (~ . ac) k. ':tt. -S aro yn Around An.aca.pa Island rttt, Saturda), Ensenada race headquaners. and his inside the bay on Saturday. Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club _ Fall uSau "°P. Y 01J>C • l\! . ), unday. Sunday. ·r. Doi Do Da p · C -n D1cao Nav) Sad1n1 C1ub -Anac:apa Yacht Oub _ si-t.....bandcd w11e ores. wn na omt way, ap11trano Scriei. Sundav. ' Monthly H.andic:ap race. Sunday. race. Saturday. .._.-
I P APA RA/ II
~ "=c------=---~ --
0
tea•n
nation
A tno of 0raa,e County .UU.
tkippen arc proud leMees of .-
Geeqe R H1nmaa Trooby S}'lllballC
of llhe United Stala Vat Raci.
(.!n1on (USYRU) aeam. rw:1111 ctwn-
paonlhap
Team capwn .Pede Dickey of
Sun1et Beach. plus Kippers Ja:t ~ranco. Lido blc Yldlt Ou~ alid
Oui1 Rub. Hwa._... Ha1boUr
Yadu Oub. repcieamted lbcUSYRU
Ara 0 (Cahron.ia}cmti«this moeda
on Nan"lplllel Bay, ll.l The ....... WU~by~'Y8dn OUb.
The tolSl trio ailed ...... tams
from OSYRU Aia1 C acJ D. sia1
two tad! &om Arem A, B. ad F.
Dickey, • 9IO con. --of' 1lilc year, teamed with iJriDa' Alh* .....
can ~ sailon F.naco ....
Raab IO cdie out die ddi if••
dlampion leallt from AreaA, CONi• ias of lkippen F.d Adams (clP"••)
IDd Stu Johasione, boch of'Nea....._
~and Jact Slaatay, .....
.. All of lhc Arca G tkippen ba9C
cx1elllive tam nc:iaa . expeneme. ..
Mid Blake Middldon, USYRU ..._
IMll oaNesilD direcior. ""1'MJ ...
IO UIC their Kilb IO )IUD ODe o.t' at
one time or another.
The event wu sailed in the new
Holdei'-141 provided by the Hobie aa.. Allociatioa of Qcnntidc. [)e.. liana' Ron Holder is a product of
Balboa Yacht Oub'sjunior JJl"OllUl. ~ OD the jury was Ted ~of~ Beach who was commilaioner o ;ch ting in the 1984
Olvmpics.
be Am G team will re=t USfltU al the prestigious I D
Trophy Team Racing Meet (British
for reptta) next May in West IK:irby, ~ire psyched about sailing for
the Wilson T~)'. .. aid~ ... I
racca~ Cfunng ihC COllCPite tour
in J 980 and can't wait to take another
sh0tat1L"
Long Beach
sai~ing sho~
largest ever
The nation's largest indoor sailboat
exhibition. the J 6th annual Lona
Beach International Sailboat Show,
opens Saturday.
The ;coo.boat-strong event will nm
through ov. 4 at the Long Beach
Convention Center. Hours arc Satur-.,
days.. l I a.m. to 10 p.m.; Sundays.. 11
a.m. to 7 p.m., and weekdays, 3-10 p.m. .
The !MPt ever Southmi C&li-
fornia Marine As.sociation-spomored
show at.ends through tbe Center, the
Sports Arena and oatdoors toward
the .n. In addition to the hUF
boat display, there ~ill be a 360-bootb
ICCeSSOry area. displayina everythina
from engines to electronics, and even
nautical dressware.
SpcciaJ features include a sailina
seminar conducted by America's Cup
skipper Dennis Conner of San Diego
at 8 p.m. Tuesday and a clinic by
Olympic silver medalists Rudy
Smyth and Jay Glaser, Huntington
ee.ch at 8 p.m. Thursday.
There._ will be weekend fashion
shows and the marine biz.au is nearly
twice as W. as 1983.
Pink PanthermySteiy}s gem ofa party theme
·Fund-raiser at Newporter
benefits Planned Parenthood
By EVE C. LASH .,.., ..... c.. ........ , • .. Wherc'smydiamond(a$7S,000-i75-caratrock,
that is)T' shouted one overly dressed frantic women at a
recent fund-raiser at The Ncwportcrrcson in Newport
Beach.
MostofthclOOauestsofthcSouthCoast •
Orpnization of Planned Parcnthood's(SCOOP) "Pink
Panther .. banquet wereatanlcd byhcrinquil').
But, 1ctuaUy the women portrayina Lady Wmdsor
1 of Pink Panther fame was actress Dlue DtJle of the
South Coast Repertory Theatre hired to add mystcr) to
dlcpany.
The little theatrical tint wassomcW:hat real
however. Guests~ a kcd to find the pseudo acm and
tum it1n fora complimentary weekend stay at Tihc
Newponcr, 1ccordina to tbc lJnspecior.' anothcuctor.
The lilclcy. would-be detceti vcs who found thcstonc m 1
potted plant were Ble and Ma11 AM IMllart.
As the S 175-per-couple benefit bepn with an
ouj4oorcockta1I m.'lfPtlOn in the Plaza Coun, ._ ........,MttaGelqan~uH~allofNcwpon
Beach, were found "talk'ittaabout lldies' 1nvcstmcnt
clubs··
.. We ahbuld be talk1q.about Planned ~renthoOd,
J feel vtrystronafyabout uobjectava. .. llidltptoe
uwe'reberewtthlOQd ftiendland .........
pr:_oJ~ and PhllosoPhy ~believe an." added Morpn.
SCOOPPrcsadcnt 11E...-.Bwthr.
Vlland era.ht1••••andDr.a.,......_.of
JNcw:pon ae.cb wert dt9CUSS•"I tht pttSidcntsaJ debate
"Our man (--.elllllft) won of CO\lne, there's no doubt
about,,," llid smallwooct
Bn•IJancl ... aarwof'Newpon Belch were •clhna._anct ,,_a.r,orso.hbguna Baich
iabo\lt their reunt tnpwith Stanfon.1 alumni on the
J
' "
C9 ()qnot Coat DAILY PIL;OT!Thutlday, Oo1ober 25. 1984 ...
umber of women haters
disturbing to homosexual -..
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Reprd-
ioa the kncr from a rapist who saad
his "hobb)'" was the rcJull of the
domincenna women who raised him:
He hates women and rape is the way
bcaetsevtn. Mybecqround was
:Similar. but thu~ turned out dif-
fettntly.
Mother ran our family. Daddy was
a "Aimp. lhnyone isat fauh, it's him.
Almost all my teachers. from nufSCO'
through hiah K'hool, were women.
· The m&Je teachers were all cf-
• fcminatc. ln one school the only male
em&>l<>rec wu the janitor. I was
• discipbncd and rewarded cxclus1 vely
b) women. I learned early where the
• powrr was and I wanted to be on the
winnmgside. I'm a homotexuaJ. . And now will you please answer my
qu6tions? ls11 worse to rape a
woman than to castrate a son? In a
uniscxual society. have parents for-
aouen how to make men and lovers
out of their little bo)'S? ls~uaJityof
scxe-s related to the mcreasma rate of
• rape and homosexuality'?
• You advised the rapist to get
counseling. That ma¥ solve his prob-
• lcm. It hasdonenothlna for me. The
big problem is what ate we goillJ to do
about all the men who arc growmg up
to hate women? And why do so many
men want to be women these days?-
•• I.Mias
1dfere4at die.._.. el males mu
~odlerway ........ FOU.wtqyov
Hae of ru10Dlq dlere U..ldbe
more mem·laa&en lllu .. ma-Mt·
en. •
Yo• Imply IMt MmOHnality
resalts wMa.-waat .. be wemn.
Not tn1e.NeOMU.ws fer nre wut
caase11lemosenallty.Some
HdltridetAY dteeHH~Uc. O&laert dalm It II .. ydol I
ceMJdoa19&. sun e&Mn say It'••
comblutloaof ._...
VoasayceuteUqdl•'tltelp.Too
Md yo11 dla't ltave a eempeteat
dlerapltt. I sauestyM &ry aplll. u
Y" believe Y• daote ltemoeesulily
beea11ewomeenle dtew...Wu4
yoa wuted to beoa tlM wlaDlal alde,
yolU' Oitrapbt did a very poor Job.
• • • DF.ARANN LANDERS: My~hus·
band and I arc senior citizens. We
have many fricndsand arc very easy
to&etalongwtth. The problem inhat our oldeSt and
dearest fricnds(acouplc) had a
financial setback and borrowed a
large sum of money with the under-
standing that they would pay us back
in a month. The month has turned
into a year and they still haven't paid
us. Wcrcmindcdthcmonccafcw
months ago and they became very
ho5t ilc. N' ow they don 1t talk to us.
What would you do in a case like
this? We need the money desperately.
-STUCK IN BOSTON
DEAR STUCK: Dey .. ltave a
slped DOte 1tatlaa Ute term1 ef dae
repaymemt'? U ao&,yH cukl11 Ge
IDOff)' &oodbye.
I•~ f•hlre, lf frlelMl1 alk so
borrow mOHy dley .-W be toW,
.. Wewlllslo••teattWMakfor
yoe. Wbt ie yH ltave ferffl·
lateral?,; If Uley uve .. collaceral,
yoa are takla& a bi& naace ..
lN SEARCH OF ANSWERS IN BAUllE·PltT AK Omaha, Neb.
· COLUMBIA, S.C. Former CON Mcsans Mr. and The bride-elect is a graduate of
DEARS.C.:Yovan•mpdeiltbt Mrs. Thomas Baume, now of Marble Newpon Harbor High School and
more me• bate women am vke-Rock.:, Iowa. have announced the attend& Omaha College of. Business.
versa tu wild pesa. llaappea to e~gement of their daughter, Her future bridegroom is the son of
believe &Ut more females ltave Michelle Rae, to frank Petak of Mr. and Mri. Frank Pctak of Omaha. jjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~p;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;~;iiii~iiiiiiiiiiiliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiEiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;Fiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;,;;;;;;~ He is employed by the City of Omaha. A November wedding at the First
United Methodist Church of Omaha
is planned.
-7:30-e 20N THUOWN
1831 Fullerton Ave; We've
Moved
REDllAllf-BJGBEE
Shau11a Lee Redman of Newport
Beach and Phillip Kevin Higbee of
Fallbrook have revealed their plans
for a May weddin~Jn Newport Beach.
The bride--to-bC is a c,raduate of
Newpon Haroor High School and
UCI. where she was affiliated with
Delta Gamma. and is doin_g graduate
work at the University of San Diego.
She is the daughter of Mrs. Jean
'Dynasty' locks ~p top spot,
but ABC boost not enough
(at Broadway)
Costa Mesa -646-9634
By JERRY BUCK
APT......,..,_
'===;::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~=~ Hernandez and Gordon Redman of
Ncwpon Beach. .
LOS ANGELES -Joan Collins
behind bars is a ratings bonanza for
"Dynasty" and ABC, but the network
suH ran third behind CBS and NBC in
the Niel~n ratings for the weekended
Oct. 21'.
since its season premiere last year as it
placed first with intertwined stories
that found Collins, as Alexis Car-
rington, in jail for murder, and her
former husband, Blake Carrington,
facing financial ruin.
TAILOR-MADE SAVINGS!
If you have lost weight. ..
Why buy a new wardrobe?
REFlnlNG IS OUR SPECIAL TY
Expert tailoring and alterations
for men and women. ro-m•k• old-clothft
look Ilk• new, and
new clothn look
thelrt».t ... 11.,,,....,, All"'" 9,,.,. ••• 1
LARGEST
TAILORING SHOP
IN ORANGE COUNTY
South Coast Plaza
Carousel Court
M-F9AM-9PM
SAT9AM-6PM
SUN 12-5
I ',
Moine Lobster in anisette sauce. salmon pooched
with caviar and vodka. thin slices of boneiess
breast of duck. chateaubriand. toumedos of
beef flambed with Whiskey. and more.
T H E
Elegantly~ decor and menu.
but still at the some place ...
9 floors above the sparkling stretch
of the Pacific Ocean.
At the SUtt & Sahd HOtel
On the ocean ot Laguna Beach
f«bre<JdOst. ~ ond dinner Can (714) 497.4477
The future bridegroom is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Donald W. Higbee of
Fall brook, He is with the lawyer and
Title Co. "Dynasty" got its highest ratings
CBS was the to~ranked network.
with NBC in second place and ABC in
third place io what was yet another
non-normal ratings period for the i----~---------------------, week after lhe World Series.
SI/EC.
4A
JA
7·YV: •
i..-IU
Truly a i.1c,h1un,1ble
dre~s sling open toe
pump for that
~pec1al Fall a(f.lir.
Rlack pat\•nt or
bone calf.
2A . '"-HI ~ aJ'-1
U • -l·IU ~-----ef. ~~~ SHOES -----
99 f ashion Island, Newport Beach 759~9551
Sunday the presidential debate was
not rated and took out a 90-minute
block of one of the highest sets-in-use
periods of the week. The audience
estimate for the debate is not ex-
pected to be available for a week. The
first debate, however, had an au-
dience on the three commercial
networks estimated at 90 million
viewcn, a~rding to ABC.
.. Dynasty" crept ahead of CBS'
.. Dallas" (which was second) as
Collins exchanged her Nolan Miller
frocks for pri90n gray. The audience
also learned that Fallon Carrington,
Blake's daughter, is presumed to be
dead, and that Blake's grandchild tw·
been kidnapped.
Another major contnbutor to the
rise of"Dynastf' in the ratings is the
web of intriauc being SJ>un by
Diahann Carroll, a new addition to
the cast.
C'BS was first with a network
average of 16.4 in the A.C. Nielsen
Co. survey. NBC was second wilh
15.8 and ABC was third with JS.3.
The networks say this means that in
an average prime-time minute 16.4
percent of the nation's TV homes
were tuned to CBS. .
NBC. with a biJ boost from the
movie "The Burning Bed" and the
World series the previous week,
remained in first place for the season-
to-datc. The ratinp: NBC 17.5, CBS
16.9, ABC 15.2.
This is the first week since the
premiere week of the fall season that
every 5how in the Top 10 is a regular
series. CBS had five shows, NBC
three and ABC two.
WE'RE ALL WOUND UP FOR OUR
''CLOCK· TOBER-FEST''
THE BEST SELECTION OF OUAL ITY ANTIQUE & NEW
CLOCKS AT THE LOWEST PRICES
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STATIONJIA8TER
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A CLAS81C llAIUTY
Thi• Collector• Clock Chim•• On Th•
Quarter Hour And St'1kH On Th•
Hour. The Lower Calender F•c• In•
dlutu The Data Of The Noath And
...1'.IM Mottth Of The y_,_ 1'.fM "C.lftl·
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Bonnet PedlnMnt.
Solid Brau
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Submityour
wedding news
The Daily Pilot wanll yow wtd·
di111 and e~~nt news.
To help you 'IUbmit tilt rwulted
informa11on, forms are available at
the Daily Pilo~offh."t. JJO W. •r St ..
C'osr.tMtM.
for wtddi1111. qualitf "'10IVI of•he
bnd•I couple or bride-only Irr:
lttltPlabk. The photo mu•• &e tub-mit1td no later thin lhlft MieO alter
tM v.wldj"" OlhCIWltt 1r Mil 801 I.Ir publisht<d.
Et11•mcnr mformatHJa 11 to be
IUblritrled If /cat le~ Mllf!il bdOrt rite Wedd11t1; Forms •nd f)IJOros can br "'°"*1
-off ~I the otrice 01 fMlllill 90 '* ~'"' DrtMnmnu, Drli'1 l"IJof. 1'. a 8o.t 1$60. Costa Metia, Callf. 91626. .
..
COllPL.EtE NYSE COllPOllTI
The thre~ sure things .in life are
death, taxes·, higher doctors' bills
)>esptte efforts of the AMA, medical. .
fees still climbing faster than inflation
By JOHN CUNNIFF
~ ....... ~.
NEW YORK -There appears to
be little relief in si&ht for those people
who suffer ft-om the pain of riSJna
physician fees.
A widely followed survey shows
that such fees continue to rise faster
than the inflation rate despite 'a
request by the American Medical
Association and state medical so-
cieties that memben postpone in-
creases for Ol\e year. ·
The survey. by the J11&pzine Medi··
cal Economics, showed liule
slowdown in the rate ofincreasc1, and
even sizable increases by some
specialists.
lns11rcrs have attempted to crack
down on needless use of medical
facilities by patients and on the
amount they att willinJ to pay for
specific medical procedures. At the
same time, officials have attempted
to Qiss~dc hospitals in the same
areas from duphcatin~ costly facili·
tics and equipment.
Hospitals themselves have at·
tempted to become more financially
efficient, installina business-like
purchasina and bi11in1 procedures.
and hiring administrators famililr ~th the best buaineH techniques.
It found that neurosurgeons, at S8 l Reflccuna the·arowina concern of
foraninnial vistt. a 1 percentincreuc hemedical profriliomtbat~
over early 1983, hid the hiahest m~tattcmpU.01mpo1e1ometypeof
median for al)J s~iality. ~ccs lim1tat1ons on fees, Arthur OWens.
chargCd by peaiatncians rose 1 S senior cditOr, c:ommcnled:
percent, and internist fees rose 14
percent. • . "The bureaucrats could bc in-
f or office revisits, the survey fluenCed ~any si11Uficant Jtlowu11 of
found , the median ftt ofoi'thopcdists doctOl"I' fCe bikes between now and
jumped 19 pc,rocnt, while office revtst then (next year). but such a slowdown
fees of neuro: uraeons rose 12 ~nt. ~ seems unhkcly ...
Tax indexing squeeze
on income tax inflation
scheduled to. begin Jan~ 1
Fees increaStd at an annualized
rate of 7.6 percent in Jhe firit seven
months of 1984 after rising 7.S
-perc:en.t in _each of the prtcedina two
years, ll Slld.
' In spite ofsuch efforts, doctors' fees
and medical costs in general have
continued to rise, influenced in part
by new .research findings, costly technology~ greater specialization
and an ever-agina population.
Pttlsute for fe<leral intervention
bas risen simultaneously, and Con·
gress recently asked the Department
of Health and Human services to
study the feasibility of controlling
doctors' Medicare charges.
WASHINGTON (AP) -A four· will be made each January, based on
member family with income of the inflation rate in the prccedina
$25,000 Will get a St-a-week tax cut October-through-Scpttmbcrpci~n~'odWbc·)J~~·· next year-occausc Of1 e mi:lexina Witliout in<tciinJ. anyone w o
change desianed to squeeze inflation received a cost-of-hvina raise next
out of the federal tax system. year that just matched the rate of ln each instance, the rate increases
ran substantially higher than the
consumer price index. The index rose
3.2 percent in l 983, the lowest since
1967, and at an annual rate of less
than 4.S percent in the first half of 1984.
The magazine alluded to the poss-
ible implications of the risiDJ charges
by asking the question " A.re increases makina a case for controls?"
Public alann and calls for action of
various sons have risen in recent
years as health care costs have
continued to exceed increases in
other consumer product and service
areas.
MUTUAL FUNDS
Concerned with the threat, the
American Medical Association is-
sued its request for a moratorium on
fee increases, but the Medical Econ-,
omic survey suucsu that if some
doctors heeded the request, otben did
not
.. The survey findings indic.atc little
lessening of the number and size of
doctors' fee increases during the year
ended last spring," the mapzine,
which de.ala mainly with the financial
and tax aspects of medicine, reported.
--1\li
A sinaJe person carnipg '$30,000 mflation would end up with leSI
and claiming avcras;e deductions will disposable income bccaute of the
realize a tax reduction of almost $2 .. progressive" nature of the tax sys-
week. The sinaJe earner with income tcm. As income rises, so does the
of$200,000 is due a tax cut of.about percentage of earnings that is taxed
$8 ·week because of indciting. away. Tax analysts say that unless the
Indexing, which was enacted io system &s adjusted to account for
1981, will So into effect on JIJl. l. inflation, a person who receives a 10
increasing the standard deduction percent pay raise will pay 16 perttnt
and personal exemption and widen-more in taxes.
in1 the tax brackets by 4. l percent to Indexing will mean a tax cut of $47
account for inflation. According to a in l 98S for a typical single taxpayer
Labor Department ~rt released with average deductions and income
today, the Consumer Price Index rose ofS20,000. The $40,000 sinaJc person
4.1 percent durina the 12 months will get a S 1 SO tax cut. .
cndina Sept. 30. The tax acljustments A one-earner couple wnb two child~n and income of $20.000 will
•. see a $38 Wt cul in 198S because of
inde:itina. The family of four with
S2S,000income-about the median,
accordinl lo the aovcmment -will realize a S l tall reduction, almost SI
a week. The same family at $100,000
income would sec a $420 cut.
A two-earner couple with two
children aadS2S,000incomcwill Pl)'.
$52 lcss com·Plttd to their situation if
indexina did not ao into effect. At
SS0.000, this family will pay $227
less; at S 1001000, $420 leu.
Although mdcxina was not a part of
lhe u.x prop-am that Praldcn\ Ro.
agan recommended in 191 I~ be
warmly accepted it after it was
approved by Consress with the 2~
percent across-the-board cut in Wt
rf.lcs that he proposed. Ac bas vowec;t
to oppose any tampcrina with index-
ing.
Walter F. Mondale, the Demo-
cratic nominee for president, bas
proposed that inde:itina be delayed for
families eamina more than $25,000 a
year and that it be fully implemented
after tb.C federal bud&ct deficit has
been brought under control.
Architects
merge two
practices
William John "Bill'. Warkentin,
AlA, and Thomas P. Cox, AJA, have
announced the merger of their two
architectural practices to fonn War-
kentin Cox Architects (WCA), Costa·
Mesa.
THE
RELAXING
SOUNDS
OF THE
HARBOR
KDCM
,~~;~_,;, ..... 1D!l.t
FM
STE RED
r
l!otq! S.nk Cahfoin11 ...
SKUntx Bini! ta
Svmttvm9 S.n\ ! •
Wtlle f!IQO t• ••u
.,.f .
On
the
TllUISIAfS CLOSllC PllCES
Dow JoNl \ Avl RA Cf s
WHAT NYSE D10
... ew YORK tAP) OCt. 2S
NYSE L£A0( RS
' + t• • • . • ~ ,... -.
, WH AT AMEX Orn
NEW YOR~ CAP) OCI. 2S
~dva~ tellned nchanged otal~ues New Ohs
New '
AMEX LEADERS
.,, .. . . . .
GoLo Quons
ME1~1 s Qucu\ ....... ,~ ....
That's an apt aescrlption ofbotliouslness and ·
business people along the Orange Coast. To keep track of
· where companies are going and which people are helping
them get there,just watch 'Credit Line' -every day in ttie
Business section of your new llilJ Pllt
.
f
I
Grenada general recalls inv
·1 asked m self why on Emth the United
States was ettln Involved In G~enada.'
FORT STEWART, Ga. (APl-
;nie biahest-ranldna Arm)' officer In the U.S.-lcd inva11on pf
Grenada says that when he got the
wotd that the operatton was on, he thouaht, .. Grenada? Why Ortnadar' .
"J uked myself why on eanh tbe United States was .aetuna involved
in Grenada," Ma.i. Gen, Nom1an Schwarzko~f recalled in an inter-
view pubhthcd today, tbe an· niv~ of the invasion, in the Attanta Constitution.
"Then I said, 'Schwankopf,just
let it son itself out. You're an
in1tn1mcnt of palicy. You don't
make p<?licy."'
He said his doubts began to case
on the-second day of the operation.
when he flew in a helicopter to the
Grenadian capital of St Gcorse's
and saw m the distance the red
graffiti scrawled on a wall. ..
.. I've seen that sign all over the
'¥Orld, in Bcrltn and Vietnam and
Tokyo and.even on the walls of the
Pen1ag0n;• heaid ... ltalwayuays
something like 'I.Ong live Marx·
ism' or 'Down with the United
States.·
"As the helicopter ~l closer and
I could read it, n said, ·ood blcs
America."'
Schwarzkopf. commanding gen·
eral of the Mechanized 24th In fan·
try Division at Fon Stewan, said
he i~ now·· 100 J>Crccnt sure we did
the right thing.
"First of all, I think it was
healthy for the military to have
been involved in an operation that
the Amcncan public ha resound·
ingty cndoried Also, n wa &OOd to
be 1nvohcd in n opcrauon that
was r«o&iJ1zed by cvttylx>ay a1 a very uccnsful one, given the
rcccl\I h111ory or the armed forcH
in Korea, which some ~ople
con1Jdered a ue, and Vietnam,
which othcn fclJ was a defeat."
Schwarzkopf said the military
l'e(lCived insuffioaent intent~ncc
before the opcrationr ln which
Army Rangers were parachuted
under fire onto an airpon.construc-
lion sne at one end of the island
and Marines were flown by heli-
oopter to an airpon at the oppoJitc
end.
And he dcscnbcd an odd acci·
dent that may have saved thelives
of dozens of U.S. troops.
Sdiwarzkopf said he was ftrst
told of the operation on the Sunday
n~t before the Tu.csday morning
action. He flew to Atlanta for a
briefing &Qd then to Norfolk, Va.,
be ore board1n& the carri r Guam
On Monday afternoon, about
700 pannroopers from the 7.Sth
Army Rafllell at Hunttt Army
Airfield sn vannah and Fon
Lewis, Wash, boarded CUO
tran1Pon plann for Grenada.
Thc111 'WOUid be the fin1 oomtpt
J(MP'aehute o~uon rver launched
from U S so st. , "We wanted to drop lhcm onto
lhe runway(of• new••rportJbeina
built by Oubln conmuctaon
workers) at Point Sahnes on the
$01Jth end of the island,"
Schwarz.kopf &atd. •
.. We had no idea what lbe w1nd1
down there were, so 10 It" the
maximtJm numbetOflJ'ratr.oopen
directly onto the afrstnp and 'to
keep from &elt.in& anybody blown
into the sea, we d«aded 10 drop
thtm from only SOO fec-t."
Later, U.S. officials discovered that anti-aircraft suns had been
dcploved nn hip sround sur-
Milslc brings siblings together after 62 years
.....
'I reco nlzed dreamt ofthi~.''
her by the way
H_Y.dc, who had Jost track of his
family after his parents separated
around l 920, soon found out from, she was playing' her that he ha~ t.hrce other sisters and a brother hvmg.
ROCHESTER,N.Y. (AP) -At Now plans itre. being ma~e for aae 82, Albert Hyde was ac-some of. t~e f~m1ly to reunite at
cuatomed to livina alone in a Jog Than~giVJng in Central Square,
cabin and ridina his bi~lc four 17 miles nprth of ~racuse a~d miles a diy to fetch water from Jim-abourtt> lTtl~ west ~011sta1ma,
Bryant's barber shop. w~c .Hyde hves.
He thought he would Jive his Things are supposed to reach filial yea.rs without a family-until out ~at way.., so~c cause or ot~er, l
one day this month, when he heard don ~ know, said .Hyde, a B1ble-
some piano tunes played in a way re~dmg man ~ho fnends say ~~rs tic lladn't heard them played in 62 a Jacket and uc even when ndmg
.ycan. his bicy~le. . .
There were songs like "Till We Hyde s two daughters died m
Meet Again," "Down By the Old infancyandbis.wifc,Doris.,dicdin
Mill Stream," .. When Irish E)'cs 1977 after~ senes of strokes ..
Are Smilina.. and "The Old Early this summer he said he
Ruaed Cross." made one lasttry .to find his family.
Pfunkina out the old standards He traveled to his boyhood home
in unforacttablc style on a arand in Chateaugay, ~ tiny village half·
piano at a church hall was the way betw~n Adirondack Park and
younaer sister hc.,had not seen since the.Can~an border, but found t~e
1922 when she was 13 and he res1denttal hotel where the fanuly
ca11ed her "Pumpkinseed." once lived had been boarded up for
"Her features changed a little bit, years. .
but otherwise lrecognizcd her riabt On Oct. 9, Mrs. Mc~1i}lt
there by the way she looked and t~e h~ppen!'1 to attend a se';lt~r
way she was playing," Hyde said c1t1zcns luncheon at United
thia week Methodist Church in C.cntraJ
.. I'm Ai.beet. I'm your brother," Sau•re white. visiting their. siSt~r.
Hyde told Mary McKnight, of Mynlc Nesbitt, 73. who hvcs m
Rochester, his voice cracking. Central Square.
Then they embraced in tears as That was when she met Albert.
others at tbcseniorcititens' lunch-"You could have knocked me
eon in the town of Central Square over .with .. a f.eathcr,", Mrs.
looked on in astonishment. Mc.~.ntJht said. 1 had cm all "I think it was a goc:tsend " Hyde crymg in there." After lunch ishe
wd. "I fiaurcd 'They're all gone. took him home to meet their sister.
I'm alone and' that's it.' I never "l didn't know how to feel," Mrs.
Nesbitt said. ··tt felt so funny, not
seein' him for so long. and just
thinkina about him. and wonder-
ing where he was ... He looked a bit
like my father."
Mrs. Nesbitt said she and Hyde
had probably seen each other at
1enior citizens' luncheons several
times before without recognizing
each other. It was their sister's
P!an"O---playing tharmadc the dif-
ference.
Though happy to be in touch
with his family again. Hyde plans
to keep living in his log cabin.
which bas no running water or
telephone but recently was equip~ with electric heal
"I keep fairly good and warm. I
&et aloog pretty good up there. I
can't complain," Hyde said in a
telephone conversation from the
home of .E.dward and Ruth Uy,
who pvc him use of an old loggers'
cabin when his house burned down
in 1969.
Hyde worked in construction in
Syracuse for 22 years, then moved
to Constantia around 1962 and
took up odd jobs laying concrete
floors, digging ditchcs·and dotna
~ntry work. he said.
' He did a lot of what we call bull
work1 and he was an awful hard-
working man. He was so honest
about everything." said. Leonard
Cooper Sr., the Constantia his-
torian. •
"You can always count on
Albert," Cooper said. "He was
liked br everybody. Nothing made
me fee more pleasurable than to
find that he found his long-lost
rclath·es." Myrtle lfabltt embrace. brOther. Albert BJde.
l ~ •
So, ·what's.·normal sex? Nobody knows
D· "· -N -
PIYD
PIVAll. s-5 -------•away Sunday 0.:. ber 14. ·llM. A lm1C -re-,-"-.,.--.-,-.. -,-• c;'1a..=~
1Mm8TA~ ...__~..._......._ ,... ...... ,..... .. ---... ~ dOir'8 ...,._ • t.er Sharon Pivar
ELECT ft 0 NI C ft Fl 0 • S11rro1. Private Jilem. FosaoNAL INYfTATIONAL
CQNFWNCE (EPIC). 111 oiial lefVices were ~W~. SulelC ...... held Friday CktOber' ,..,..
pottCW1--r.-~ 111 19, 1984. Family ...
Am tao• W1y. N .. port test in lieu of Dowen. ...:tt. Cllf. t2llO • contri.bulk:lnt be meae
11* buslneM i. con-to the A.medcan NEW YORK (AP) -There is .. If you 're look.inf for a central Based on their answers to ques-tanked hi&h in hfe satisfaction and agajn that then; is no ·normal" way duceed by;.,..~ Cancer ~.
no such thing as "normal" sex, just normalcy, it doesn l exist," Eirl tionsabout how satisfied they were sensuality but low 1n eroticism; of sex, just differel)t ways." CM 1.. MllcHce -·~
different preferences, according to Ubell, Parade's health editor. said with their lives, what sensual 10.9 perunt. However, Pomeroy, who is now tt111......,..... .... ftlecf MARTINEZ
researchers who conducted a na-·Wednesday. .. Although they arc behavior -"petting" and other •'"The unsatisfied sensualist,•• affiliated with the Institute for -"" u. Courwty a.ti °'Of. M A R Y L 0 U
tional survey showing American often treated as a differen\ species touching -·. aroused them and ranked high in sensuality but low in Advanced Studies of Sexuality in Z Cclune1 °" OdOblW I. MARTINEZ, born
men and women fall into eight sexually, there arc more simi-eroticism, the participants were life satisfaction; 8.S percent. San Francisco, said he could not .._ April 11, 1930. P~
sexual behavior styles. laritics than differences between divided into eight categories: •"The sexually conservative," make specific comments until bC -~ o:::' 1 ~ away October 22.
0 Thc questions that cross every-women and men." •"The pansexual," ranked high high in life satisfaction but low in read the entire study. 25 1 1tM ' • 1984. Resident of
body's minds arc 'Am 1 normal?' The researchers said eroticiim in life sausfaction, sensuality and sensuality and erotici~m. 11.l per-Ms. Flax said therapists will be · ' TH-312 Lacuna Be.::b far 4
and 'How do 1 measure up to -enjoyment of fantasy, porno-eroticism; l 9.8 percent of the cent. • able to use the categories as ··a yeMS. PreYb.-relli·
everybody else? .. ' said Dr. Carol graphy. oral sex, masturbation and papulation. • .. The nonseitual," low in all quick diagnostic tool -· and a dent of Newport
Flax, a sex researcher with Col-certain other sexual practices -•''Ttic satisfied erotic," hi&h in three categories; 13.2 percent. springboard for conversation. It BeKh tor 6 years.
umbia and New York universities was an area where women and men life satisfaction and eroticism but Dr. Wardell Pomeroy, an author (also) will be. gOOd for premarital p:-eviouily of Loa An·
who designed the survey questions. differed most. Sixty-eight percent low in sensuality; 11. 7 percent. of the Kinsey reports, told Parade counseling and child education... * aeJes •f« 40 years.
The study, conducted for Parade of the men were rated hi&h in •"The unsausfied erotic," high the fi.ndinas "give us a new and The data, compijed betMJCD Ma:nber-of Our Lady
mapzinc by Mark aements Re-eroticism, compared with 44 per-in sensuality and eroticism but low intcrestina classification and a way January ~d March, was analncd al. Mt c.arme1 fer 9
search Inc., was based on question· cent of the women. in life satisfaction; l 2. 7 percent. oflooking at human ~xual bchaY-by computer by Or. Philip Mer-yara. Survived by
nairea completed by 1.222 ran-Ei&lity-six percent of the women •"The lonely erotic, .. bi$)1 in ior that we have not really had rificld, professor of education.al Q) Edward; dau1bter
domJyselectedmarried,sin&leand and59percentofthemensaidthey eroticism but low in life sausfac-before. l>SYChology at NYU. The survey Carol Lynn, of
divorced men and women between found it difficult to have sex with a tion and sensualitr. l 2. l perocnL .. And, in essence. the discovery had ·a margin of crrW of plus or Lquna Beech; ....
18 and 60 ycan old. partner they did not love. •"The satisfied sensualist." of such styles ·empha'tizcs once minus 3 percentage Points. ~ Kevin and Stieplwn
i llili._ ....... -. .......... llllllii ........................................................ 11!"._imil~ ...... lll!ll ...... l!lll...................................... Martine~. Lacuna Beedl; mter', Betty
) \
'
NOTHING TO DO?
SEE FRIDAYS .. ~
WEEKENDER!
-
...
• • • •
CONCERTS
DINING
LOCAL EVEN'TS
MOVIES
Dai • I
1(714) 642-4321
-
-
Wood, Arizooa;
• I motber-m-1aw, Helen ' p ' Martinez. RalarY Will
00 be Tbur.tay lOPM,
Oct. 2:>, Our lAdy of
Mt. Carmel, MaD will
• be Friday Oc\. 26.
· 11.AM. Our lAdy bf
Mt CanDel. 5ervice
... concludes at the
Church. Pad.fie View
Mortuary. Directon Q) Mf-~_21_00 ___ _
~ • >< Q)
• = • •11-•t
l
• I
r
a l • • •
•
•
consolidating domestic and fotelgn su~aldlarHtt of tht·Llberty
National Bank of Huntington Beach In the State of Cell1ornla, at
the close of bu11neu on September 28, 19&4 publlthed In
response to call made by ComptrOller of the Currency, under
title 12, United Statea Code, Section 1.&1. Chaner Number
17308, Comptroller of the Currency, Fourt•nth Dl1trlct.
ASSETS Thou-of doll.,.
Cash and balance• due from depository
lnatltutlonl
Nonlnterest·bearlng balancet and
currency and coin ............................... .
lnterest·bearlng balances .................. .
Securttles .................•..............................
F~eral funds sold and securlUes
purchased under agreements to resell In
domestlc offices of the bank and of Its
Edge and Agreement subsidiaries, and
ln IBFs ...........•........................ : .............. ..
Loans and lease financing receivables:
Loans and leases, net of unearned Income ................................................ .
LESS: Allowance for loan and lease
losses .................................................. .
LESS: Allocated transfer risk
reserve ................................................ .
Loans and leases. net of unearned
Income, allowance, and reserve ........ .
Asaeta held In trading accounts .......... ..
PremlMS and fixed ueete (Including
capltallzed Ceases) ................................. .
Other real estate owned ....................... .
Investments ln unconaoHdated
subsidiaries and associated
companies ............................................ ..
Customers' liability to this bank
on acceptances outstanding ................. .
Intangible auets .. r ................. 1 .............. .
Other assets .......................................... .
Total ut1ts .......................................... ..
Deposits: In domestic offices: ............................ .
Nonlnterest-bearlng ........................ .
1nt8t'est-bearlng ............................... .
In foreign offices, Edge and Agree-
ment aubaldlarlea, and IBFa ............... .
Nonlntereet-bearlng ........................ .
lntereat·bearlng ..• : ........................... .
Federal funds purchased and securities
sold under agreements to repurchase In
domeauc offices of tne bank and of ltl
~d~eF~.~ .. ~~~~-~~.~~~~'.~~~'.~.:.~~~ -
Demand notes l11ued to the U.S.
Treasury ................................................ ..
Other borrowed money ........................ ..
Mortgage lndebtedneaa and obllgatlone
under capltallzed .............................. .
eank't nablllty on acceptances ex·
ecuted and out1tanding ........................ .
NotQ and debenturt aubordln1ted to
dopoolto ................................................. .
Otner llebllltlee ............................. _ ....... .
...... total lllbllltles .............................. ..n ..... ..
Limited-lift preferred ilock ................. ..
EQUITY CAPITAL
PerP41tu1t preferred etock ..................... .
Common •tock ...................................... .
~~~~!;d';t:Ofiii''e;.;d:capitli';~;.-
cumu1at1w foreign currency traoatatlon
1dJu1ttntnt1 .......................................... ..
Total equity cap1t11. ....... 1 ....................... .
Total llabllitl .. , llmlted·llf• preten'ec:t
ltocic, and equity cepltal ....................... .
49671
484
15592
48952
-0-
-0-
-
7136
5400
7767
1000
'
"49187 -o-
1530
542
-0-
1004 -o-
1270
74856
2789
-0-
-0-
-o-
1004
-o-
2!508
24119
661
• Wt. the underslgMd director•. attett to the correetnMI of
thi• 1t~tement 01 rMOUr* arrd nabtlltlel. W• declare that It haa
been •xamlned by u1. tnd to the bMt of our knowledge arid
bollol hot .,_ p._rod In contormanco with the lnofrvotlono
ind 11 tru1 and correct.
J. Don Hortloldor
AMnM.C-
Phlllp e. 1nglH
' I, Jemu D. Ott, Chief Ftnancl•I Officer, of the 1bowo-n1med
blnk cso ,,.,.by dtcl1re lh1t tr.le Report 01 Condltton 11 true and
-oct to th• bat of.my knowtodgt and bolllf.
Olttd: Ocrtober 11. 1114
Publlthod Cif ongo C-t Delly Ptlot Ocloj>Of 26, 18M
'
Ml.IC NOTICE
'1CTIT10Ul llU ... U ,.._ITA~NT
Tr.. followlng '*'°"' .,. doing bYslnet9 ..
COSTA MESA FOOT
CUNIC-POOIATfUC MEDI· CINE & SURGERY, 2428 ~ Blvd , Coat1 Mesa. Calif 92827
Allen J Degrtndmont
P.P M • 440 FAlr Dr .. Costa
Meu Cant 92e2G
• J, Gen1 Lef D.P M, 41
Vallly Vlew, ltvlne, Catlf, 82115
Thia bu11n... 1 con·
ducted by: an unln· eorporated u1oelat1on
other than I Plftnenhlp
Gerie L•, DP M
Thia atattmenl waa fli.d
wllh the County Clerk Of ()(. ange Count~ on Septtmber
20, 1984 ,_
Publlanea Orange Coast
Dally Piiot October 4, 11, 18, 211. 1984
Telephon Service;
Monday.Friday
· 8:00 A.M .. 5:30 P.M.
Bu iness Counter:
Monday-Friday
8:00 A,M.-5:00 P.M.
DEADLl~E
PLIU.H' TIO' UEUll.l'.\E
Monda) Fri. 4:30 p.m.
Tuesday Mon. 4:30 p.m.
Wedne day Tues. 4:SO p.m.
thursday Wed. 4:30 p.m.
Friday Thurs. 4:30 p.m.
Saturday Fri. 3:00 p.m. un•IT
Sunday Fri . 3:00 p.m. ,..... ma••
CLASSIFIED 642-5678 Prlde0f~=4 8Clrm Lovely
;;... .... .-..... ... .... =:-P.::.:.,rr..::
1 A..\,;,..-.....:1 .... petlo New kitchen. Im-,
...,...., ... maculate throughout. --PUBl--IC-NO..;;_TIC_E__ Call to ....
UDO llL'E '1CTIT10Ua llUU9A
NA• ITA1-NT dJ::~~--
GAEEN THUMI Pt.ANT 8ERVICI!, 1807 Port S..
boume, Newport Beach,
Cellf. 92e60
Borilta L &Mkl, 1807 Port S..bourN, ~Beech,
Ceilf. 92ee0
Thia t>Ualn••• la con· ducted by. an ~I
Bonita L. 8anld -
Tt\le atatement wu filed
With the COunty Ctertc of Or·
tnge CoUnty on September
21. 19&4 F2llt7'I
Publlahed Orwige Coast
De.Dy Pilot Oc1ober 4, 11, 18,
25, 1984
TH-354
Ml.IC NOTICE
'1CTITIOUl ...... H MAim ITATDllNT
Th9 lollowlng perlOM 11e
doing bullneaa aa:
CHARTER ENOINEERLNG
CO., 1835 SUP«'« Unit #2, ' Cotta M .... Catlf; 92827
An1 Out .. , 519 Amber Dr .. Huntington Belch, Calif,
92e48 •
Merrelle(Mlke)DUt•, 519
Amber Or., Huntington
Beach, Callf. 92848
Tnla t>uttneaa 11 con·
ducted by: I generll pill't •
M(lhlp
Mlk• OorM
Thia atetement WU Ned
With the County Cleftt of Or-
8flge County on September
7. 1"4 ,...,
Put>lllhed Ortinge COlllt
Dally Pilot Oc1ober 4, u , 18,
25,; 1964
TH..:355
Ml.JC NOTICE
flCTITIOV• M.llM81
NAMI ITA.,._NT The following P«IOn la
doing bullneu u :
ORY LUBE. 1307 Hunt·
lngton St. Ste #0, Hunt·
tnoton Beach, Callf. 92MI
, Robert Allen Jaekaon,
1307 Huntington St 819 #0,
HIM!tlngton Be~. C1llf.
92&48
Thia bualn•• I• con-
ducted by: an lndlvtduel
Robert Allen JllCkeon
Thia ltlterl*ll .. filed
with the County Clitk of Or-
ange County on September
12, 1984 ,...,
Pub(litled Orange CoMt
Diiiy Plklt October 4, ~ 1, 18,
25, 18&4
TH..sM
MLIC NOTICE
FJCTITIOUI llU ... A
"-'-ITATIMEfr
The followlng pe!'IOM ate
dolna ~ u "NEW·
PORl PACIFIC LIMOUSINE!
6ERVlCE", 4570 c.mpu.
Dtlve, N~ e.ch, CA
82MO , Morgan Fllftlly Trutt did
4/3/14;, 2011 W1terford
Lane, HuntlnOton Beech, CA
92841
Thia bualn•H 11 con-
ducted by: a farnllV trvat • Barbara P. Morg1n.
Tru•t ..
Thll ltatement WM filed wtth the Coilnty Clerk ol Or·
ange County on OetOber 4,
11, 18, 25, 1"4 ,_
Publllhed Or111ge CoMt
Daly Pilot Oc10ber 4, 11, 11,
25, 11&4 !J?.$$1
Pta.IC NOTIC[
P1CTmOU8MWU
NAmlTATWT
The folloMna penlON .. doltlo bWIMel ...
THE WALDIN GAOUP. 1
Cy~ Point LMe. NeW-
pott BMctl. Calif 12MO Din• A Gribben, 1 cypr.. Point l.8ne, New-pon a.ct!. c.llf t2llO
Welter P. Gribben, 1 ~ Point l.8ne, New-
port1'8Nt11, Clllf t2tl0
Thia bUllMtl I• con·
ducted by: 11utband eno..,.
Dina A Oftbben
Tllll 1tewnent wee tiled
with the County Clerlc of Or· ange County on ..,...,,.,.,
28, ,... 1'1111141
fllitllllMf Oranee CoMt
o.ly Piiot Octobtlr 4, 11, 11,
25, 1114 TH-1&7
I
•LUii ....
Located In the prtme,
~~r\t~
Broadmore home la
ptlced to •· a..utlful condition Wfth • wry
open a woodey WllnQ.
AllO evall9ble tor ..... or
\\/\Tl Kl HONT
llOllU ~ 11ii1c.
REAL ESTATE .,.... .... oPllOf1. Dell Bibb, ______ _
~"I e Gr 0 d Y liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
apl top
1198,500. •..• , ...
BR 2'4' ba condo. 'l/fllY
dean $1M,700. .., ....... . ... ,,It
••
wmiiJn SUl,111
Charm abounds in this wonderful
Cape Cod style family home. Large
1padous rooms throughout, separ·
ate master iUlte, plus children's
rooma. Family room w /ha.ndsome
stone fireplace opens to pool/1pa •
area. New kitchen w/ eating area. A
real value.
NOTICE
TbaDUIJ Piiot ..w-·----.. _.. -....... ,:~. 0u.,_.~....._wlllMllanC rllanhti«Q,Wa.•.lle &1IO p.m. Dei4 %11 wlll .. M ... 1 aa:
EDITION DllADURS
f
people ....
cl•H Htd
/.Jn "''·.tl
I ;1111 t 1 /-,
/\'.,"ifJ[ !l\l l r,
• r
Cll 1
DllJ Plot ...
642-5&71
.......
......... Llfa ,.. ..........
(114)l1Nt11
)
pg lhe UMNEMIMOA
end tile HUNTIHOTON
HACHCOMBER ~ W~at no exua cMraet
CAU. TOOA'i'tt
UIPML.m
Y OUI u.ily Plot 8en1ce onctofy
~
Ul..tl21t11.•
HOROSCOPE
- - --
•
SYDNEY o ••••
I
c ........... ~r·,, A.M.111-....
COiia Mlm .... Ht1J"1 ..,_MDII_,
Oii (1M) ......
"*"WO. IOI
an Ol**'G '°' • P-'· time ••et•rlenoed,
cnetlYeUyOUt Mist IO
produu quallty ed
leyOW, compe & fto;tt9
tor • fMt pececl dally
new1peper. Concept to ftnlaNd wt. Send ,,..,,,,.
Ody l .. ox coplea Of
WOftc to: 81eve Hough,
Art Director, Orana•
Coat De11Y Piiot. M>. aox 1MO, eo.ta Mela. Ce. t292t
District Managen
If you ~1 WOt\ino with 1'0Uft0 boys & olfla and detk ~ Ote not for you,
com&W o c0teer in the newtpaper clfCulo
..on fl9id, Tl\h Is o Vftlque ~ with
• dolty cftoltenves' NWOrck.
C),r openlftgt ore I~. App~
mutt hct¥t 0 YClfl, datloflwogon Of ttvcl.
We oft., on etceefltnt Ml4ory with a bonui
pion and 00' allowance. We h0¥9 ..,
nceleM beMfff p6Clh that ln<ludet hotpl·
,........,.. ~e. &ibtfol ~ation and
Niday•.
339 w. aa,
c.t. Mesa, CA 92126
\
i
* IUL ESTATE SALES *
OOllEIGllL-llllSTllAL
We are a 39 year old firm wholly
owned and personally operated by
It's founder serving the Commercial.
Industrial, Apartment and Land
Market We •• not a fr ncillse,
oranch or division controlled by
others. On the spot management
~'slons. Open door management.
waiting for n appointment.
Open ng for 2 Commerclal-lndus-
trlal people with ablllty who want the
freedom to work any territory or
type of property. No farm system.
Plese call for an Interview appoint-
ment. •
WllLO I. TIYLll 11.
1 ............... HI. ..... rt ......
(114) U4-.. 1D
m 111n m111&1
' NEWPORT BEACH
la looklnQ tor:
SEAMSTRESSES &
TAILORS, PIT, to help
With our grand C>p9ftlng. At>9tY Mon-Thun. 8-5. 04600 MllCAt1hur Blvd,
Newport 8Hth, C•.
02N0£0E
~
lxlDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS. AND PRIZES!
AGES 11-14
·EARN " TO $75.00 19 WEEK .
We now llatt IS~ b ,_. _,
...,.,, to ... ,..,.,, lor The Or-. Coast
PlilY Not. Ow am • 3;3Q, g n Wot\ Ali a 30 "111.....,.. 0n Setwdaf, ..
1 lnr llOrt boltfs YOll will urn _, lf1la
pnZIS. "°fll Uf Jl)Ur OWi! .,., I , •. U.e IS IO ....,.. or collect!Ofl 11YQNed
If JOI •• lllftfestM. plN$t call llt Eart
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROH
1 Weight unit
tFamoua
~ ...
10 Ottoman VIP
14 tron rust
15 Hotmes' qveet
18 Entwine
17 lllamdelly
11 a.comtng r.CS
20 lrltll rtv9f
21Cl'leeMtype
23 Lootia after
24S~
25 Slaveolf
2e0r ... -
30 Gutcet1
34 .. Tenn11. -?"
35 Suf'f •alk
37Wal•t>ody
38 Btftlatl carbine
39 "TM boarda''
41 Swluctty
4t Kltehen Item
'3 Commotion
~ Prl!C*I•
··~ 41Demo111Md
$0 Of H befnla
2 MOOU6e
63 Go """"" 6&~ft•t•
DOWN
1 Mtn11al
2Vehlcle~
3 011turb
4C1ty1n
Oklahoma
5 City of lr11n
I Varnoc>1419
7 Styptic
18cfape
tGameblrdl
100 ..... 0t<
11 Winds
12 lnllnu•t•
t3Slh0ef
19 P•c:.lve
22 DMd at
24 LOWiy worker
H~tQf,e~
21 HMC!tool
271Mer ~t
28 Wotflllie animal
29~n!Unl
I 4 6
•
PREVIOUS
PUZZLE SOLVED
31 Red as --49 SWote
32 M~tal 51 Ord4lr1 to go
33 Ohllreti 63 Sofec:ovcw
aaeetnbty 54 Fllture
31 Spell out 55 TrufY?
40 Sea current SI Celet111uon
41 Impudent unrvly 57 Stuoefy
c: Id SI J\mgfrav etc
43 WOfk ror -A 59 Anocal•
45 L.n out /'t ~ e 1 HQd cover
•TC .cs 13 tndignallon
Tll lll&IWAY
LAGUNA HILLS
11 now lnter.1eWll ig for:
STOCK
SALES
GIFT WRAP
CREDIT ACCOUNT
Alt-SA \'ERS
I I ~ ..
SOUTHWEST
10
llllllEW ...
•ITlll
•
llKE lcKEIU'S souT1 coum
IOTOIS
~@
1914 RA88ll 4 ctr.
GIOC.U
smu• '" TOP s
CAP CIAU
20000
®
1114 ¥Alllll
moC,E-l
SZ19 t.u Pt:1 mo
TOP SU
~P&1-' ~
UOOOCA ' s
18 7 l 1 0 Ch 8 Vd
Hunt ngton Beach
(llt) 142-2000
'13 Ekig, lltv'I, nu pelftt. top, tir.. ,.. tr9M,
-
MIS
CAii.LAC
T.,_.f OOOPf
ROBINS
~ORD
4 ,,. ..... it. Iii~ 1D a. , :,
(r)\'A ... , L .. ' I
1800 '2000 831-4082 .... ~
'13 VW, nwny att-. ex-Auto, llC. pe. pit, '~ good c:ond. Re-..._ e qe. ..,.
bullt •"G 9000 ml (t05Z80) ,.
545-0880 ....
THEODOIH
ROBINS
FORD
• • ·~ .& " '· • •
(' ~.A ... ' . L ..
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD . .. ,..~.,. . " .. ~
C 0~ I• "° l ~ • '' -" 'J
l t I . ,
~
I i
\ I BUENA
PARK
-CHICK IVERSON
Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi
441 E. C.ast lwJ., 11.,.rt ltao•
Ill-OHO
Highest Quality Sales & Service
. .. o· NABERS CADILLAC = ~
2100 HARBOR ILYI., COSTA IEU
(71•) 140-1100 (213) 111-1211
• Best Prices • Convenient Location
• Great Location • Super Service
8 THEODORE ROBINS
FORD
U.S.A.'s #1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer
Modern Sales, Service, Parts, Body, Paint & Tire Oepts.
Competitive Rates On lease & Daily Rentals
20IO ...... r llQ., .........
MJ-0010 " M0-1211
G SOUTH COUNTY
· VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU
18711 Beech Blvd., Huntington Beach
(714) 842-2000
SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE
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81 FWY.
22 FRWY
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Sales • Servtce • Leasing ·
546·1200 S,.clal Parts Ult 546-9400
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•
I
Women can sway
vote NOW chief
By USA MAHONEY
Ot-. D.itr lllo4 llaH
Women can detcrmmc 1he out·
oome of the pre 1dcnttal race. Ellie
Smeal, former president of the Na-
tional Oraamzauon of Women. says
Speaking before a group of abOut
17S students and NOW supponcn at
UC Irvine Wednesday night Smeal
said the much-discussed Gender Oap
-differences in the way women and
men vote on issues -could upset
President ~eagan·s re-election bid. s~~I. m .her ll~k and durinJ an
eather intcrv•ew, said she believes the
race between Reagan and Dcmocrauc
challenger Walter Mondale will be a
close one. And she credits Mondale's
Forecaeta on A2
runnina tnatc, Geraldine t-maro.
with makma n so
.. Ferraro 1s audna a d1fTereAt
interest le"cl from women tn this
clcctton It wbuktn'1 be a bellaame
Without htt1n at • she• d
Smeal, 45 drew on tescarch SM
collected for her book "Why and How
Women Will Elect the Next Presi-
dent," for her lecture. Women who
make up SJ ~nt of.the American
p0pul1tton, arc votana in _&rater
numben than men, Smeal said. And
12 percent fewer women than men
suppon President Reagan's Policies.
she said.
1ihat gender pp an po1111cal at·
(Pleue ... WOllS1'/ A21
J
THURSDAY. OCTOBER :?'1, l'JIM
. Searchers zero in on ki ____ .,.,.~
Detective received more than 1.000
phone calls about abducted HB rl
B11TEVEMARBLE people who .... tbe lllllC ~ ia ... ._........ ...... 1be ... ma. llid .,...
For the first tune mcc lmJe Laura ""Two ol lhetn called • lier ._
Bradbury \'ani,hed from her fanuty's 1be tbf• J*lure • '*'1i1111 ..
desen campsite a "eek aso. A~ wetw told JllVZll.lcn authornics cxprt5$Cd opttmasm that she~ die wulilCI .._ ••
thc:yaregaminggroundonamdlhcy OCallODal CtlllOIDer m die
behcvc abducted the Hunu ... on 110rewllcruheWOfb.1_..:.1~'9
Beach 11r1"" -We)! 4"ef91*1 a ,......
Four w11rie scs told authorni~ ·and we tt moviDJ bwll'd. We"ve
they arc convin«d they •• a.he ..... ..._ ... ~ipalliia-
blond-ha1rcd 11rt With a baJdans. pay. ... Ii••" 11 m ..,..,. die
haired man m his SOs. ccordi"I IO .,.._. .. llid. dedi• ... IO .a& san lemirdano Countv Sherifl'J ................... fllC ~ spokesman Jim Bl'Vtlnt. . --.&..... dleir lmldL
"They"re all iOQd SlPUDp ~ N-'Cl'l•~n-LAmA/AS) ...... a
· ..
mn111
ORANGE C.OUN TY t, • '. • ' ••
Widow-held in husband's slayi
Investigation of HB roadside murder
leads to arrest; others to be quizzed
resident of Lakewood who was an
auto pans salesman in Huntington
Bt.ach, wn lhot .. ia~htad. He
died later that evening of Sept. 3 -
Labor Day -an Westminster Com·
rnunity Hospital. By ROBERT BARK.ER
Of .. .,., ........
The wife of the man found in an
industrial section of Huntington
Beach dying of a gunshot wound has
been arrested on suspicion of murder-
Coasttrlo wins U.S. Yacht
Racing Union national
team tltle./C1
CoUt
Irvine establishes animal
euthanasia pollcy. r~
Instates $25 animal
shelter fee./ A3 .
Callfomla
What's normal sex? No-
body seems to know./CS
Nation
Huntington's Ky accused
of being a top crime
gangs boss./ Al
World
The top Grenada general
says the Invasion a year
ago turned out better
than heexpected./CS
Sports
Golden West water polo
coach Tom Hermstad has
built a powerhouse team
that Is undefeated./81
Baalneu
Little rellef In sight for
those who suffer from
rising doctor bllls./C3
..,:.:::;):::::~~~::::*::::::::::.~::=:::::::=:::::=:.;:~
C1·2
A10
C3
A4
C7-9
A10
C9
05 ca
C2
C3
A4
Al
A3
CM
81-3
04
C2
IM
A2
A4
ing her husband.
A patrolling police officer found
Barry Alan Ford lying in a pool of
blood beside his 1981 white Ford
Escort that still had its engine running
and li~ts on. Ford, a 31-year-old
Elated Elvira
Anita Ford was arrested Wednes-
day momin& by Huntington Beach
Dettctives Ed McEtlain and Richard
Hooper as she came IO the police
Sharon Sorkin. center, upreHea deu,ht on b~ ahe'•
the 1'1.nner of the Sl'rira look alike contest WedlieH&y
aJ&ht at the Cruybone re9taarant ln Santa Ana. Sb.aron
Leap con to
free'Way
·kills man
'New water tastier
but not for n h
It may tute bener Md be-...
bllt the tap waler tMt wtl IDoa be
nowiC10 -I)~-throu out SouU..
could ...... tidnlJ
paticnt1 and pet M. Beainnina Nov I die ,....._ DOlitan Water DWrtft will dilidct
• hs wa1er with dlloramane -a
munure of chlonne and ammonia -
ms.ad Of Just chlonnc.
The MetrOpolhu Dillrict supplies
much or tht water Uled'by Orlnae
CO.St Ctlta. u ~~ 11 communltlCS
rtom Ventura to tne MnlCln bordtr.
station to talk to officers about the
case.
Ford, 25, who was schc:duled to be
anaia,ncd today at West Orange,
COunty Municis-1 Court in West·
minster, is being held in Hu~
Beach cny jail without bail.
Detech ves bad said earlier they
could not establish a motive for the
killing. They said they were told that
Ford may have received a telepbonc
call and was set up IO be murderod by
someone fciping ·car trouble. No
other reasons coulct be found tbr bis
auto to be patbd on cbe wrona side of
Connector Lane near the iaituitrial
bUalda•
Follll and has wifit Ani1a lad two
small children Nf Wfl,dly hell.,. on :,!"~ plier 09>-lk Labor ~ice are extmnely lillat;.aipped
picked up $250 cub and 41aMr for two f• loo••n• tile
ma.t llke the boeomy •111.etrw of tlae Dark.• St NGd ptace
wlimer wu Brenda Ca~ra. a-ttnatoa Beacb.
about the cue.
.. lt's realty toudty, .. mid Lt. JalMll
Walker. "We don't want 10 "*-uYlhisw that will blow aL ..
Walter said of6cen Md _,aea
the fords• !home .. woaldll"I a.
knowleds tf lbc m.-.......
found. fie alto dediMd IO~ if'Mn.
Ford is ICICUed of pulli• dat uwer-
in the fatal sbootiaa or if adla'l -y
(Plrr • -WIDOW/AS)
Model
tells of
kill plot .
Was offered money
toald ·snuff mm:
woman testifies
., lEFF Al)l.Q ..... .._ .......
-4' WD I -.O;pGICd.nude.fau :s5-
)'eel'-old man cbarwed with the 1912
llaydp of two Anaheim )eeD •n
testiW Wednesday that Mec1 Bene Doualu once disdolcd bis plus for
lwinl bi1Chhiken into the dc:serl and
tilliaa tbem durin1 the filmin& of a
.. snuff movie. ..
Katby1'billips. a 2S-ycar-01d for·
mer Huntinaton Beach rcsidmt. on-
etime heroin addict and ex<00vict.
&old an <>ranee COWlty Superior CouJ1 jury that Doualu outlined tm
plans for the .. snuff' flick" killinp
du~ a Iona car ride in OctOber .
1979.
Deputy Distnct Attorney Tony
Racbu&as alleges DouglU finally
follOwcd throuah on bis gnaomc
murder Pl.an in August of 1982 -on
Friday the 13th -when he lured 19-
~-old Beth Jones and 16-year-o&d
Margaret KrueFr to1 their deaths in
the desert under the~ that they
too would be po&ina for nude pbo&o-:
~&las. a former Cosia Mcsan
who ran a Garden Grove furniture
refinishing buliDCS$. is cbaqed with
two counts of first-degree murder in
the girb' deaths. If ~pVic1ed. the
pl'OICCUtiOD will ask UlC jury to
(Pleueeee llODKL/A.2)
Nestil.nde asks state court
dismiss.Miller'slibel suit
SuperVtsor claims his campaign statements -
were 'protected political expression
By JEFF A.DI.ER °' ...............
Orange County Supcn·isor Bruce
Ncstande has filed a petition w1th the
tatc Supreme Coun 1~1ng that 1t
throw out the libel uit lodged 111inst
him by former Vietnam prisontr of
warandex..Supervisor Edison Maller.
The ap~1. filed Monday in San
Francisco, aru the high court to
dismiu the libel action bc'<:ause the
cop&c$&Cd statcma\ts an= .. proiecled
pohtical CJLprcssion •• under lhc Fint
mendment to the U.S. Constitu-
tion.
An earlier tate ApPeals Coun
rulin• held that the statcmftlts in
qUcttaon were factual ind, Lhttefbtt.
were issues that could be tried ill
coun. .
"If lhis catc between well-known
political adversaries is pttm1ttcd to
ao to protracted lriaJ it will inhabit
election campaignina to an extent not
heretofore permitted or con· mplatcd in our free society,.,., llhc
petition fitca by Nestan<k's atto~t
Paul Sclvin, states.
The libel trial is scheduled to beain
sometime next year unless the Su.
pmne Court agrees IO hear the Cuc.
Miller sued Ncstande cha.rains that
he was dcjfamed ill 1 I 980 Nestande
campaip that lcCUICid Millet ol
cooperauq wilb his Nonh V.et-
namesc captors while a pnlOla. The
~ ... w.T.Allm/U)
AS * ~ Coelt OA1LY PILOT /Thursday, Octob« 25, 19
Desert winds may fade by Friday
LOS ANGELf.S (AP)-facept for
continued wind) condiuons in the
dcsen the-du l)' dry Santa Ana
wtnds which fl nnect a flurry of sm U
bru h fil'C$ 10 Southern Cahfomia
mar. like a breather Fnday, the
auonal Weather Service says.
A ''rtd·flaa len" w s called
recommend DouaJas re<:t'ive a death
penalty sentence for the multiple
.. murders.
Phillips, the firsr witn s called
durina what is c peeled to be a two-
wctk lril!l. told jurors she first met·
DouJtu In October 1979 after aarce-
in;a to pose nude in return for $40 or ~---4il5t>:Stte"Satd1h"ElladCdllle money to ~l. for her heroin habit.
'He wanted me to take some nude
photograph$ in bondage-type
fashiont the stocky Phillips testified.
"He directed me how to J>OSC, how to
look scared and how to come across
looking friahtened."
She wa Dou~as photographed
her, usina a Polaroid camera, with her
Wcdnesd y by the Lo An Cit)
flf'C Ocpanmcnt for high fired nser.
The "bru h-bumins 1nde "of 150
" "the hith t l'\e ever n in seven ~ rs on the tob,'' poknm n
Patrick Pauerson td
C.ounty firef!lhters quelled a thrc acre blaze on 11\a tahn Island,
' hands tied, her mouth gagged and her
ankles bound on a bench in his
workshop. Douglas did not touch her
or assault her during the one-hour
photo SC$Sion, she said.
Several weeks later, durinJ a car FredBerreDoacla•
ride aloQg the Ortega Highway,
NESTANDE •••
l l'J'omA1
' flier was signed by 200 former POWs.
Ncstande ultimately defeated Mill-
er in a bitter race for the Third District
Supcrvisorial scat, which takes in
' much of eastern Orange County and
paru of Irvine.
Ncstande, attending a California
• !ransportation Commission meeting
tn Sacramento this morning. said the
' ap~. was a proced.ufa! move aimed
at havina the case dismissed before it
reaches trial.
• "We're prepared to go to trial if our
procedural moves fail," Ncstande
saiQ. 0 We'rc not going to settle. I
. consider it sh~1 extortion."
MAN •.•
Jl'romAl
Doug.las confided his plans for killing
two hitchhikers. Phillips said. She
said Douglas told her he would pay
her if she would be bis driver and help
subdue his intended victims.
.. He said he wanted to take pictures
of other women, take them out in the
desert to make a snuff flick. He
wanted to get ~·Jage shots,
bomosexuaJ scenes and stuff like
that," she told the coun.
Phillips, who said she twice has
been convicted on burglary charges
and acknowledged she had turned to
prostitution to obtain money for
beroin, said she made it clear to
Doug.las that she dtdn't want to be
invofvcd.
.. I coulctn't believe what I was
bearin$." she said.
During his opening statemept to
the seven-man. five-woman jury,
Rackauckas characterized the two teen-a~e victims, Krueger and fones,
&$ "livmg on the wild side." He said
the pair made the "mortal mistake"
of being enticed by the quick money
Westminster Police spokesman DoueJ.as offered them to Pose nude
Roy Freeman said officers have for him in the desert. cl~ified the incident an apparent The ~o girls' bodies were di_s-
su1c1de. He said the man's identifi-· covered in a remote desert gr.tve an
cation bas not been confirmed. Anza Borrego State Park by a man
The California Hiviway Patrol taking photographs of wildflowers in
said the 6 a.m. incident snarled April 1983.
already congested morrung traffic. Much of the prosecution's case
One northbound ~ane of the freeway re~ts on the testimony of 38-ye~r-old
was closed for a bnefperiod, the CHP Richard Hernandez, a companion of
said. Douglas who allegedly was present
tiut that was the largm of fhc blazes
quickl) doused by c;ounty crews
uthon1le5 id.
The W thcr Service A)'t tUab
pre ure inland that produced Utt
hot, dry nonherly wind~ will we ken
b)' Fri41y, Jlowing lower pressure 10
move an .
when the two girls were killed. He has
been granted immunity from pros-
ecution in exC'hange for his testimony.
But ·defense attorney George
Peters, durina his opening statement
to the jury, called Hernandez an
unreliable witness.
"Thodefclna wil~lhow-Wemandc2
is a heroin addict. alcoholic and
brutalizer of women. There are
doubts about his testimony;• Peters
said. • · He • told the jury tha1 before
t{cmandez was ex:tradited to the
tJnitcd STates from Mexico, he had
bttn in Canada where authorities had
used alcohol to get him to change bis
story.
"Then, the-Mexican police got a
Mexican confession beaten out of b.>ttl~ under the threat of death," the
aerense attorney said.
Peters also said he intended to
present witnesses who would testify
they saw one or .both of the girls after
the day they are alleged to have
disappeared.
The trial is not the first for Douglas,
who gained notoriety in 1977 when he
was charged with attempting to hm"
two undercover Policewomen to their
deaths in the desert under similar
circumstances. It was alleged Douglas
had hired a foftner Santa Ana
prostitute to torture and kill the
women for a .. snuff movie."
An.Orange County Superior Court
jury· considering a ..solicitation of
murder cha!Je deadlocked following
a highly pubhcizcd trial and a mistrial
was declared. Before a second trial
could get under way, Douglas pleaded
guilty to the lesser charge of con-
spiracy to commit assault w11.h a
deadly weaJ>On and was placed on
three year's probation.
WIDOW •••
From Al
be involved.
••The investigation is continuing.
We are looking for other people to
interview."
Walker said Mrs. Ford was arrested
for allC$edly being "implicated and
responsible" for her husband's death.
Mn.. Ford reJ)Ortedly is a transpor-
tation broker. The couple had two
small children.
WOMEN 'CAN SWAY ELECTION' ••• Jl'romAl
ritudes can make the difference in a Smeal worked hard to get Ferraro
close race, Smeal said on the ballot when Washington
Televised debates between Presi-decision makers worried that the
detlt Reagan and Mondale raised the country wasn't ready for a woman
Democratic contender a few notches vice president • · I · 11 B .. I told them to get ready, because
in J>OPU anty po 5· ut not all we werecominganyw~," she said. pollsters agree with SmcaJ's conten-tion that the election will be a tossup . . W~en have a itTerent per-
between the two. Most national Polls spectlve tpan men.do on issues cl~sc
put Reagan's lead at between nine to them like abortion, rape and wife
d 25 · beaung, Smeal said. They ilso view an pomts. economic manen like unemploy-S~eal, m the closing weeks before ment and military spending frQm a
Election Day, has been crisscrossing different vantage Point. sHc said.' r
the country rallying support for the Far from past thinking that women
• Democratic cause "will vote like their husbands,"
women today know their welfare
depends on candidates who have
their interests in mind, Smeal said.
Reagan's policies have hurt
women, according to Smeal. ... We are
going backwards. There's no question
about it."
Smeal says it's long past time for
women to have more representation
and putting the Mondale-Ferraro
taclcet in office wouJObe a great step
forward.
·'I've been picketing in the streets,
you name it, I've done it for women's
rights, but I like something to work
once in awhile." she said.
FRIENDS CONTINUE SEA SEARCH ••. 0 From Al ·
The pair, both experienced sailors,
ran mto rough seas about 12 miles
east of Avalon Harbor. The Coast
, Guard searched for the two men
through Tuesday evening without
success.
...
topdeck. The fiberglass boat con-
tained blue seat cushions with white
sides, two orange lafe jackets, a dull
yellow ammo box contaanin,g flares
and two clear, watertight trash con-
tainers with the men's backpacks
inside.
Members of both families have
been helping with the search.
Brannon said she and others con-
ducting the search have no theories
on what may have happened to the
pair.
..The boat was in top condition,"
she said. "and both of them are very
Fog, low clouds creep onto Coast
Coutal
High O .. "TtrN>t<t1t~tl 70 '10
80 •
•
•. ~.~. 'AONTI ~ ~1iT:/ "'tif;t1 W11m -Cold._-
Shower~ Ra;n F...,, .. , ..snow ~clu0e4..,.,... Statooar r ...,,
HI~ WN!llef ~· /llOA4 US o.c1 ol C-OCO
TOOAY 5-1dlow .C:SOp,111. o ..
lecond IWglt 11:09p.m •••
ftf1lNMo
,.....,
.C.11a.m 1.6 =:Tiow 10:37 a.m •• 6"2pm -o•
8un 1911 todlY at f07 p.111, ~
f1iCSl)t ., 7 01 • rn; anc1 .. 1uo111" • e.oe JI.Ill ..-oon Mtt II 7•10p m, rte. FflcMy et
• 40 a.m MCI Mlt lg-at 7,14 pm.
Te~peraturee
LOCATION
.. Le
87 3t
42 35
45 <&2 ----------Hlinungton 8MCl1 ,.,_ ,,..,y, N8poft
35 " n "" IO 14 61 21 M 64
71 71
~Str•I.~ 22nd SrrMI, Newpor1
a.llllOaW'°" i..tlunt 8eacfl s.n Citmenre Watar tamp 62·64
WATER CHANGE POSES PROBLEMS •••
From Al ...
in dialysis machines and aquariums.
If left io the water, the comJ)Ound
could pass into the bloodstreams of
kidney patients and fish. causing red
blood cells to rupture.
Dr. Cyril Barton. a kidney special-
ist at lJCI Medical C.cnter, said
chloraminecannot be removed by the
standard filters on dialysis machines.
Barton explained the compound
would instead pass through the
·membrane separating the dialysis
fluid from a patient's btood.
He said a charcoal purifying system
or ascorbic acid, better known as
vitamin C, must be added to the
regular filter to take chloramine out of
the water. The charcoal filters can be
attached to the dialysis machine and
arc available for about $5,000, said
Barton.
Charcoal bits and orher items are
also being sold at pct stores for
purifying the water in fish tanks.
Dan OiGiacomo, owner of a Costa
Mesa pet store, said chlorine was
relatively easy to remove. Fish own-
ers could let the water sit for awhile,
allowing the chemical to dissipate. Or
they could use a chlorine remover,
wait for roughly 10 minutes, and put
the fish in.
However. it will now take about
one or two days to take the
chloramine out, by using 3 charcoal
filter along with conventional
chlorine removers.
"We're recommending that people
aet a five-gallon pail or a trash can and
prepare their water ahead of time,"
OiGiacomo said. He added that there
.
1s no single product that will clear the
water or. both the chlorine and the
ammonia.
The MWO has spent roughly two
years preparing for the upcoming
change. and is nearing the end of an
extensive campaign to educate hospi-
tals, pet suppliers and local water
districts on methods for removing
chloramine.
Fliers announcing the change and
outlining tbe hazards have been sent
by local agencies in the water bills of
residents and businesses.
Additionally. Skoves said the
Metropolitan District has received
hundreds of calls a week on its free
hotline. The number, 1-8'00-
CALLMWO. was established after
the company's public information
office was flooded with questions by
worried consumers.
He said the change from chlorine to
ch.loramine was prompted by federal
concerns over a suspected carci~ogcn
found in drinking water around the
country.
Skove e~plaincd that chlorine eas.-
ily combines with the methane gas
from decomposing leaves, branches ·
and other organic matter in the water
supply, forming trihalomethancs.
Studies by the federal Environmental
Protection Ajency have found that
one type of trihalomethane causes
cancer in laboratory animals. Thus
researchen suspect it could also be
carcinogenic for humans. ·
The EPA has set a limii of I 00 parts
per billion for the amount ofTRMs in
municipal water supplies. However,
federal law states that a violation 11
made only if the standard is exceeded
throughout a water district for four
consecutive quarters.
Skove said that tap water on the
Palos Verdes Peninsula and the city
of Long Beach contained chemical
levels that surpassed health stan-
dards, but the MWD hat never had a
district-wide problem. He added that
Lona Beach switched to chloramine
last sprlng. joining the city of San
Diego as well as another local water
district serving a suburb of San Diego
County. ·
The Metropolitan. District ia a
wholesaler that supplies imported
water to 27 local districts and cities,
some of which use the water to
supplement their local wells.
The decision to use chloramine in
all the MWO water comes at a time
when the faucet from the Colorado
River is being turned off on the
wholesaler.
In a little more than a year, the
MWO's supply of Colorado River
water is expccte<t to be cut by 60
percent. Consequently, more water
will be channeled to Southern Cali·
fomia from the st.ate water project in
Northern California.
..We'll have more orpnics in that
water supply, and by continuing to
just use chlorine, we would just be
(aggravating) the TRMs problem that
we have now," Skove said. -
He added that the city of Denver as
well as other cities outside the state
have been purifying their water with
&hloramine for decades.
oaur Piiot
Del Ivery
ORANGE COASl Circulation 714/'42'""333
CIH•lfled advenlelng 714/142-1171
All other department• M2.at1
11 Guaranteed
MQnder·Ftlelar 11 you do
nol N"9 r<l"' papet br
6 30 p m cal btl0<• 7 p m
8'1Cl)'llllfcopy ... bto
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Slt11<CS11y alld S<niey "
rvt1 oo not rece'lt• 'fOU/ ClOO'f by 1 • m.. cd be!Of•
1 O • m •1>11 your cq>y wlll
be Clelf>oerlO ~
Circulation
Telephone•
Dli_ly Pilat
H. L. Schw•rtz Ill
Publisher
Roaemery Churchman
Controller
Stephen F. Cerezo
Production
Manager
Donald L. Wllltama
Circulation
Manager
MAIN OFFICE
330 W911 &Ir SI Cosi. ~ CA
Mea e00r-Bot 1560 Coll• ....... CA 92629
Cow9'1 1913 Orengt Coest ~ ~ No
"'" llOflC!L llUstrlliOfW edlt0fi81 men. Of _,_,_
~ he<"" ,.,., be ••Odllc:ld WlltlaUI tpeCillll I*.
minion ol COC>Y''V'll OWllll'
Second dMI POl1'08 i-.o ., c-MeM. Clilorlltl
(UPS 1••·8001. SublctlplfOl'I by '*'* $4 7!1 montN)'
by ma• S8 50 ~
VOL. 77, NO. 211 .. Everyone has a pos1t1ve-attitude
that they'll be found." said Linda
Btannon ofBalboa·~ Catalina Passen-
ger Service. the island ferry service
that employs Bailey and Sa$ona.
Nine planes and three helicopters
took to the sky Wednesday as the
volunteer effort got under way. Bran-
non said. Today, five planes resumed
the search which has been helped by
Navy hehco_pters sweeping the area
around the Channel Islands.
seasoned ocean people." .------"-------------------------------..,.-------~
.. We're going tocontinuethe search
I
Bailey serves as a capta10 on the
Catalina Holiday ferry while Sagona
is employed as a deck hand.
, ••Right now, we're asking
'· beachioers to keep an eye out for any
signs or debns that ma} have come
from· the boat, .. Brannon said ... The
{ fact that they've found nothing 1s a
4 positive siin."
• Brannon said the 12-foot motor
1 skiff the two left Cataltna in has a red
, bottom. white sides and a green
An ocean map 1s bein$ use~ to
coordinate the search with pilots
following a grid pattern that takes
them 60 miles out to sea, Brannon
said. In addition, the ferry service's
boat, the Catalina Holiday, is search-
ing around Catalina •~land durina the
five hours ils passcP&Cn arc on &he
island each day.
as long as we can, or until we find so~e sign of them or the boat."
Brannon said.
Catalina Passenger Service em-
ployee Pam Hesketh and Peuy
Sands have coordinated the Air
Search Fund and can be contacted at
673-524'5. The offices ate an the
Balboa Pavilion. 400 Main St.
Brannon said collection envelopes
have been left with the Newport
Beach Police and Fire departments
while donation~ have been left by
others coming by the office.
L .................................................................... .
LAURA SOUGHT BY THOUSANDS ••• 1 Jl'romAl •
The man, travehng in a dark blue
t van. was reportedly seen watchin&
children at Joshua Tsu National
' Monument Oct. 18, the <tay Laura
C1 disappeared. c . l . . ...... ~ :rh 11r ,camp1na w1w Ul,;J pauou
and older brother, was last seen
• outside a restroom only SO yards from
t the family. camJ)5tte. The van was
1 perked nearby, Bryant id witn
1rtported.
'V Four wirne , mcludin1 the gir1's ~ father, have tictn hypnotm~d. Bryant
id 1hrough bypM i . witnesses
Just Call
642-6086
were able to provid~ lawmen with a
detailed description of the van. None,
however, recalled a liccn plate
number.
··we're not putting out nll the
infonnation Ol'\ the vehicle because
some arc thtnis ttiat the guy could
easily alter." said Bryant.
B!)'ant said the&irl"sdisappcarance
has " trudc a cord" with people.
tnvestiptors have received more
th.an 1,000 phone calls aboul tht
abduction and at least 200 reports
from people who think the m~ht
have seen the child or her apparent
kidnapJX"r. ·
"There arc a Joi of ty~ out there
lookins. I've never seen anything
quite like this before. Everyone seems
to know about the &irl and want to
help," Btyaot said.
A ~rd fund of more than
SIO,OOOhasbcen raiScd by member of
National Kid Print in Oranac Coun-
ty. The orpnizatjon, which ad·
\loe&tcs fingerprinting children. said
the ~af1C$t contl'}bUtion has come
frol'T) Mercury Sa'Vings and Loan of
Hun1in on Beach.
Wbat do you llke 1b0al tbe Dafly J>Uo&! "h• doa•t JO• lllle? C.11 die
oambtr at l~ft aad oar m age wlll be reconled. traascrlbed aad fitlvtrf41
to lH appropri1te editor.
• ne Jamf. !4·1tour an1"1rln1 service may be 1Hd ao r~rd letten NIM
tdllor on any tOptc. Coatrlbo&ora to our Letters cel•m• m11t lacl1dt llttlr
!lame 1nd telephone number for VC!rlflc1tlo1. No clrc•latln calls please.
T~lt u1•hat'•011 oar mind,
1
I ,
THE POSH .
TUXEDO ~
Cla~sic styling at it finest.
App;opriate anytime of
the 1car, yet perfect for
all of. the occasions that
make our holiday sea on
o pccial.
Gen.1emen'• Ct6ltq n.pwea t>v 10cllton
J
•
..._.._ ~ . ~· ........ -.... ..-:• {
-····~
Woinen can sway
vote NOW chief
By USA MAHONEY
Ol .. ~ ..... talf runn1n1 mate, ald1nt t-nntru.
Wo"men can determine 1he out·
come of the presidential race, Ellie ~meal, former prcsldeot of the Na-
tional O!'Jani1atlon ofWomcn. uy!I.
Speaking before a &roup of about
17S s1uden1s and NOW suppartcrsat
UCd Irvine Wednesday night, Smeal
sa.1 .the much-d1$Cusscd Gender Gap
-differences in tht way wbmen and
men. vote on, i!lsues -could upset
President Reagan's re~leci.ion bid ..
\\'Uh nlak1ng it ~o.
"Ferraro is C"rcatina a diffctc'nl 1n1crest level from women 1n Ibis
election. It Wouldn't be a ballpmc
withou1her1n 11:· •he said.
Smeal. in her talk. and during an
earlier interview, said she believes the
race between Reagan and Democratic
chalJenger Walter Mondale wiU be a
close one. And she credits Mondale's
Smal. 4S, dtc'w on Meartb ibe
colletted for her book .. Why and How
Women Will Elect the Next Prtti·
dent," for her lecture. Wome9, 'IAi"hO
make up SJ percent of the A'lltJjcan
popu.latiooT are ..-otufa in grHter
numben than men, Smeal said. ·And .
12 percent fewer women than men
supQOn President R~agan'1 policies.
she said.
That aender gap in poliucal at~
(Pl--WOlll&N/A:ll
THURSDAY QC TOOlF< ;', 19tt·l
• l
Coast trio wins U.S. Yacht
Racing Union national
team tltle./C1
C0a1t
Irvine establishes animal
euthanasia policy, re-
instates $25 animal
shelter fee.I A3'
Callfomia
What's normal sex? No-
body seems to know.ICS
Nation
Mondale woos voters
while Reagan takes the·
dayoff.IAB
World
The top Grenada gener.111
says the Invasion a year ,
ago turned out better
than he expected.IC5
Sports
Golden West water polo
coach Tom Hermstad has
built a powerhouset'al"
thatlsundefeated.181 -
Buainellt . I
Little relief In sight for
those who au ff er from
rising doctor bllls./C3
~x-.;.~~:.~~::.~-:;::~::;.-:9.:-:::::::;:;s.'.o;:;
INDEX
Bolting
Bridge
Bulletin Board eustneas
Callfornla Newt
Cl ... lfled
Comlea
Croooword
OeathNot-
H~
Ann Landerl
Mutual Fund•
N1ttono1Newt
Opinion
Pollot Log
PubNCNot-
8pot11 Stock Mllt!ceta .......,,,
Ttteetera
WNther
WottdN-
.. •
C1-2
A10
A3
C3
A•
C7-9
A10
C9 cs ca
C2
C3 A•
A9
A;I.
CS-8
81·3
C• ~ 94
A2
A•
ow ------
Elated Elvira
Sharon Sorkin, center, ezpre11ee dclJiht on hee.rlat 1he'1
the winner of the Elvira loo!< allke contm Wedii-y
night at the Cruybone reataurant in S&nta Ana. Sharon
Mesan
held in
molest
A cily of Costa Mesa maintenance
worker was BrT'C$\ed Wednesday on
susp;cion of molest in. a I ~year..:okl
girl who is related to him.
Charles Richard Moffett, 35, WI
booked into Costa Mrujail. wbcft!fae
remained this morning in lieu or
Sl,000 bail.
Sgt Tim Holbrook said Moflnt.
who lives 1n Co1ta Mesa., allqldly
(P.1--lllOLSllT/.ASI
'New water' tasUer-
but not for fish
It may tall< .,.,.., ..... lie .......
but the tap 'W8tt1' ta.t wll IOOll be
flowong 10 tom< IJ tllillbi DIOllt
throughou1 Soulhera C'abloniia
could b< dlna<rou• to kid1lq' ~
t11tien1s and prt ftsh.
Bqinn1na No" I, dlr Mevo-pott11n Woter o;....., Will dlolnrt<I
its water with chloram1nc -a
mixturt or clllonnc_Ud ammon1a-
1ns1ead of Jult chlonnc.
The Mttropohtan l)i~tnct "upphn:
much or the wakf u!itd by Oranar
Coast c111n, as wtU 1s communities
1tom Vcniura &Olhl Mc-.kan berdtr
·l
••
• Searchers zero in on kidna
Detectives received more than 1,000
phone c~lls about abducted HB girl
By STEVB MARBLE or-.._.,. .... ..,.
For the first u since llttJc l..aura
Bradbury vanjshed from ber fam11y•1
dtttr1 campsne a "-'tC'k aeo.
au1horities c~prcsstd Opl1m1sm that
thcyarcp1ninggroundona man they
believe abducted the Hunun111on
Beach tJrl.
Four v.1tnesSh told authonuct
they arc convinced they 51w tM
blond·bail't'd girl with a balding. gray·
halrtd man 1n his 10l, accord1ns. to
San Bernardino County 5htnff's
spokesman Jim Br) ant.
"They'r< all aood 518)lU01S b)
pfopie-who saw t~ th1na 1n ahou• thtt same -ata. said lk}a.al..
.. Tv.'O of ahem called us after ICClltl
tbr 1u1·1 picturt' <tn M:kvtlion. •
Another'\\ 1tnm told inv~
ihc rtlCoSDilcd ~ wanted man at aa
oc;asion.al customer 1n Lbe ~
llUS'e whcrt lbe W<lrb, llr)anl •id-
""We've d(ovdoprd a pitltem now
and wc"rt moving forward. Wc"ve
1nttnsif1Cd 1be tc"an:h Id cerain ucu
and lessened 11 10 01he:n... the
spok.Hman said. dethn1n& U> ~,ry
where shcntri dcpuun art cooa-1t-
lt'lt1ng their tearrh.
(l'l--LAUllA/A2)
flRST EDITIDI ·
Of<ANGE COUNTY CALIFORNIA 25 CENT'
..
.
picked up $250 caab and dinner for two for 1-'dnl the
moet like the-,. ·111-of the Duk.' Second place
winner wu Brenda Caponera, Huntington Beach.
Police continuing
search for others
to quiz in ki_lling
By ROBERT BARllEB
GI' ............
The wife of the man fouod in an
industrial section of HuntiftllOD
Beach dying of I gunshot wound hu
been arrested 011 suspicion of murder-
ing her busbud.
A patrolling police officer found
Barry Alan Ford lying in a pool of
blood bcs1dt.. his l981 white Ford
cP1--•wow1AS1 -.
Leap to
freeway
kills man
A man apparently jumped to bis
death !Tom a freeway O'fei pal in
Westminster early today and was
struck by several pessina cars tra~l
ing the busy San Oiqo Freeway,
1policc: reported.
The man. identified :!las a white
man in his late 60s. wu icd &om
lraffic by several m torists wbo
stoDPCd at the scene of \he incident at
the-Westminster A venue overpass.
The man was pronounced dead at
th<ocenc.
West.minster potioc spokesman
Roy Freeman said officcn have
classlfted the incident an ~t
suicide. He said the man~s ulentifi·
cal.ion bas not been oonfirmcd...
The California H"1:'way Patrol
said the 6 a.m. incident snarled
already CO"lf!Sted. ' mom.in& uaflic.
Ooe northbound lane of the freeway
wucloted fora brief period, thcCHP
said.
.Model says 'snuff'suspect
told her of his deadly plans
Testlfjes she posed nude for bonda e photos.
was offered money to be murder.a mpllce
followed thro~ on his gruesome
murder plan in August oft 982 -on
Friday the t 31h -when he lured 19--
ycar-old fkoth Jones and 16-year-okl
Marpn::t Krucacr to their deaths in
the dncn under the prc:tcnx that ihC)'
too would be posina for nude pbot~ By JEFF ADLER °' ... °"" ...... A woman who poSed nudeJhr a .S.S..
)'e&r-old man chaflC'd with *1.e l 982
slayings of two Anaheim lttn~
tes1ificd Wednetday that Fred 8errc
J:>oqlas 0nct ditclosed bi plans for
iurinl, h1tdlhi"et1 l.nto the desert and
killin1 them durina the filming of a .. snufT mov\e ...
Kathy Phithps, a l>)'tar~d fOr.
mer Huntinaton Bt.acb n:sident. on-
C!limc heroin addict and ex-convict.
told an °"ngc County Superior
C-0urt jury that Dou&las outlined his
plans for the .. snuff' Okt" killinp
durina a long car Tide in October
1979. )
Ocput)" District Attorney Tony
Rackaudtas oll .... Doua!U finally
pphs. .
. Oougl,as.. a fonner Costa Mcsan
who ran a Garden Grove furnitu.re
refin.ilhina business., is dwJed 'With
two counts of first~ murder in
t.he sirls~ deaths. If t:onvicted. the
PfOIC'CUlion will ask the jury tO (Pl--llODSL/Atll
Friends continue
hunt for boaters
$5,000 collected to continue search
for Newport men mlssln off Catalina
11J llOBERT llYNDlllAN ... ..., .......
Fnen<b and co-worlcn of~ hlwO
Newport lelldt martost at WI! ha c
picltd \IP 1hc art'h ., ~ the Coast
Guafd kR off. Vi>ith \rOhantccn
n:h1n& II\ planes Ind hd~
wtult utbc:n collect donauon to Pl>
for the ft'hrt ~ s ~.000 has olreody bcc!I
•
CSF prof faces murder charges
A uni\'f'Bll)' ollllosopby proftuor Rlchard l..tt Smith. 42, who teach-M11ttn, 38, the ex-husband of one or
m.u.s• ft.Ind tnaf on 1 mwdrr ebarle es al Cal State Fullerton, is to be b.is former students. with ~ alltpuons that could lrQ1aned on the murder c:hatse Nov.
bnna. tbc dath pcaa.Jty if be ts 1 in Superior Coun. He is cbaJ'ICd lo Smith is being held without bail ll
convicted. • iudao rukd Wednttday. th< fall! >hootina of Donald ~ 1he Oranae County Jail.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
WIDOW HELD INHB KILLING ••• From Al .
E9COrt that still had itsenainc running
and li&hts on. Ford, a. 31-ycar-old
l'Clidcnt of Lakewood who was an
auto parts salesman in Huntington
Beach, was shot once in the head. He
died later thllt evcnina of Sept. 3 -
Labor Day -in Westminster Com-
munity Hospital.
• Beacb city Jld without bail. Walker: ''We don't want to r¢lea,e
Deteetaves had said carlitt' they anythina thlt will blow it."
could riot establish a motive for the Walker said officers had tearched
killing. They said they ~re told that the Ford1' home but wouldn't ac·
ford may have reiceived a telephone k.noWtedae if the murder gun. was
call and was Rt up to be murdered by , found. H""e also declined to say if Mrs. so~eonc fc\anin& car trouble. No ·Ford is aocused of pull ins the triaacr
other reuons could be found for his in the tat.al &hooting or if others: may
auto to be parked on the wrona side of be involved. C~nn.cctor Lane near the industrial .. The investiaation is -continuing.
buddings, We arc h>oki for ot er le to
•
Fog, lbw clou ds creep onto Coast
FDfectlt tor 8 .m EDT, Fri., CCI
10 Coastal
Anita Ford was arTCSted Wednes-
day momina by Huntincton Beach
Detectives Ed McErlain and Richard
+---M'QO'PU"I! stte '*mew-the polk:t
station to talk to offlCCfS about the
case.
Ford ind his wife An1li and two 1nterv1ew. -
Ford, 25, who was scheduled to be
arnisned today at West Oranae
County Municipal Court in West-
minster, is bcina held in Huntington
small children reponcdly bad gone on Walker uid Mrs. Ford was arrested
a trip together carher on the Labor for aJl~lX beina .. implicated and
Day holiday. · responsible for her husband's death.
Police arc txtrcmely tiaht·lipped Mrs. f'ord reportedly is a transpor-
about the case. tation broker. The couple had two.
"It's ~Uy touchy," said Lt. James small children.
WOMEN 'CAN SWAY ELECTION' ••• PmmAl
titudes can make the difference in a
cJosc race. Smeal said.
Televised debates between Presi.
dent Reap.n and Mondale raitcd the
Democratic contender a few notches
in popularity polls. But not aU
pollsters agree with Smears conten-
tion that the election will be a tossup
between the two. Most national polls
put Rcap.n'1 lead at between nine
and 25 points.
Smeal, in the closing weeks before
Election Day, has been crisscrossing
the country raUyina suppon for the
Democratic cause. ,
Smeal worked hard to get Ferraro
on the ballot when Washina:ton
decision makers worried that the
country wasn't ready for a woman
vice president.
"I told them to get rcady1 because
we were coming anyway," sne said.
Women have a different per·
s~ive than men do onjssues close
to them like abortion, rape and wife
beating, Smeal said. They also view
economic matters like unemploy-
ment and military spending from a
different vantage point, she said.
Far from past thinking that women
"will vote like their husbands,"
' women today know their welfare
depends on candidates who have
their interests in mind, Smeal said.
Reagan's policies have hurt
women, aceordi.ng to Smeal. "We arc
going backwards. There's no question
about it."
Smeal says it's long past time for
women to have m9re re1t_~ntatllm
and Puttl.ng the MOndale-Fcrraro
ticket in office would be a great step
forward.
"I've been picketing in the streets,
you name it, I've done it for women's
rights, but I like something to work
once in awhile," she said.
...... -.. .. 4;IO p.-i. •• -... 11'.0t D• .. -· ...... 4;21 .._,,.. u =::r ... to::97 ~. •• ....... ~ ..
lkMI _. ~ al t;G7 p.111,, ....
F!'ldmy•1;07a_..,.Ww!,.......,.•l:Ge
·~ MMl'I ••• ,,.,,,,,., ...... ~.-..-
1:40 -..... ano ........ 11 7: ... p.tn.
Temperatures
~ .. ,_
" .. =-.. .. .. ., ........... .. ..
'''"" n ..
AU.nllc Cl!)' .. .. ..... .. .. -· .. .. " "
Eztendecl
.... " .. .. " .. .. .. .. " .. .. " .. " .. ., .. " . .. .... .. " " " .... .. " .... .,.,_ .... ... ..
··:s-... -.. Dlol.IDI Wiii . Cooim" ~ HIQlll II to71.~4 IOto.
SURF REPORT -... . .. ,_, • • ' •4 Swtl~:~
----· ----:::::. -__ ,,
CoNTINUEU STORIES
WATER CHANGE POSES PROBLEMS •••
J'romAl
in dialysis machines and aquariums. is no sin&le product that wiU clear the
If Jef\ in the water, the compound water or both the chlorine and the
couJd pass into the bloodstreams of ammonia. · LAURA SOUGHT BY THOUSANDS .' .•
J'romAl . "· kidney patients and fish. causing red The MWO has spent roughly two
blood cells to rup1ure. years preparing· for the upcoming
federal law states th.It a violation 1s
made only if the standard isclCceeded
throughout a water district for four
consecutive quarters .
Skove said that tap water on the
Palos. Verdes Peninsula and the city
of Lona Beach contained chemical
·levels that surpassed health stan-
dards, but the MWD has never had a
disttict·wide problem. He added that
Long Bea~ swltched to chloraminc
last sprina.1· oinjng: the city of San
Diego as ·we I as another local water
district serving a suburb of San Diqo
County.
• .
'.f .,
'.I
. .
The man, travelina in a dark blue
van, was reportedly seen watching
children at Joshua Tree National
Monument Oct. 18, the day Laura
disappeared.
The girl, camping with her parerlts
and older brother, was last seen ·
outside a restroom only SO yards from
the family cam,PSite. The van was
parked nearby, Bryant said witnesses
reported.
Four witnesses, including the girl's
father, have been hypnotized. Bryant
said through hypnosis. witnesses
were able to provide lawmen with a
detailed de!Cription of the van. NOne,
however, recallc<t a license plate
number.
.. We're not putting out. all the
information on the vchiclc,.bccausC
sdmc arc things that the guy could
easily alter." said Bryant.
Bryant said the girl's disappearance
has .. struck . a cord" with people.
Investigators have received more
than 1,000 phone calls about the
abduction and at least 200 repons
from people who think lhey might
have seen the child or her appa.rent
kidnapper.
"There are a lot of eyes out there
looking. I've ne;.yer seen anything
quite like this befOre1 Everyone seems
to know about the girl and want tQ
help,"' Bryant said.
A reward fund of more than
S 10,000 has been raised by member of
National Kid Print in Orange Coun·
ty. The organization, which ad·
vacates fingerprin1ing children, said
the largest contribution has come
from Mercury Savings and Loan of
Huntington Beach.
FRIENDS CONTINUE SEA SEARCH •••
From Al
The pair, both experienced sailors.
ran into rough seas about 12 miles
cast of Avalon Harbor. The Coast
Guard searched for the two men
through Tuesday evening without
success.
"Everyone has a positive attitude
that they'll be found," said Linda
Brannon of Balboa's Catalina Passen-
ger Scrvic.e, the" island ferry service
MOLEST •••
From Al
fondled the girl while she was alsecp
Sunday night.
''He (was) intoxicated and climbed
into bed with her," said Holbrook,
adding that the teen-ager woke up and
pushed b.im away .
Police said the man also had
allegedly molested tho girl in Septem-
ber. None of the incidents were
related 10 Moffctt's job as a city
worker.
The girl was taken into protective
custody Thursday and placed at the
county s Albert Sitton Home for
Children.
that employs Bailey and SaJ<>na .
Bailey serves as a captain on the
Catalina Holiday ferry while Sagona
is employed as a deck hand. ~
.. Right now, we're asking
beach goers to keep an eye out for any
signs or debris that may have come
from the boat," Brannon .said. "The
fact that they've found nothing is a
positive sign."
Brannon said the J 2.foot motor
sk.itfthc two left Catalina in has a rtd
bottom, white sides and a green
topdcck. The fibcr&(ass boat con-
Lalned blue scat cus6ions with white
sides, two orange life jackets, a dull
yellow ammo box conui.ining flares
and two clear, waterti&ht trash con-
tainen with the men's backpacks
inside.
Nioe planes and three helicopters
took to the sky Wednesday as the
volunteer effort got under way, Bran·
non said. Toda)', five planes rnumed
the search which has been helped by
Navy helicopters sweeping the area
around the Channel Islands.
An ocean map is bcini used 10
coordinate the search with pilots
folloW:ing a grid pattern that takes
them 60 miles out to sea, Brannon
said. In addition, thf; ferry service's
boat, the Catalina H'.oliday, is search·
ing around Catalina Island during the
five hours its passengers are on the
island each day.
Members of both families have
been helping with the search.
Brannon said she and others con-
duc:Jing the search have no theories
on what may have happened lO the
pair.
"The boat was in top condition,"
she said, ''and both of them arc very
seasoned ocean people!"
"We 're going to continue the search
as long as-we can, or until we find
some sign of them or the boat,"
Brannon said. ·
Catalina Passenger Service em-
ployees Pam Hesketh and P~
Sands have coordinated the Air
Search Fund and can be contacted at
673-5245. The offices are in the
Balboa Pavilion. 400 Main St
Brannon said collection envelopes
have been left with the Newport ·
Beach Police and Fire departments
while donations have been left by
others coming by the office.
MODEL TELLS DEATH PLOT OFFER .••
Dr. Cvril Barton1 a kidney special· change, and is nearing the end of an
ist at UCJ Medical Center, said extensive campaign to educate hospi-
chloramine cannot be removed by the ta ls, pct suppliers and local water
standard filters on dialysis mach1nes. dis1ricu on methods for removing
Barton explained the compound chloramine. .
would instead pass through the _ Fliers announcing the changt and
membrane separating the dialysis ~ outlining the haiards have been sent
fluid from a patient's blood. by local agencies in the water bills of
He said a charcoal purifying system residents and businesses.
or ascorbic acid, better known as Additionally, Skoves said the
vitamin C, most be added to the Metropolitan District has received
rcgularfiltcrtotakechloramincoutof hundreds of calls a week on its free
the water. The charcoal filttrs can be hotline. The number, 1-800-
attachcd to the dialysis machine and CALLMWD, was established after
are available for about $5,000, said the company's public infonnation
Barton. office was flooded with questions by
Charcoal bits and other items arc worried consumers.
also being sold at pct stores for Hcsaidthechangc:fromchlorineto
purifying the water in fish tanks. chloramine was prompted by federal
Dan Di Giacomo, owner of a Costa concerns over a suspected carcinogen
Mesa pct store, said chlorine was found in drinking water around the
The Metropolitan District is a
wholesaler that suppUcs imponed
water to 27 local districts and cities,
some of which use the water to
supplement their local wells.
The decision to use chloramine in
aU the MWD water·comcs at a time ·
when the faucet from the Colorado
River is being tumed off on the
wholc$3.ICr.
relatively easy to remove. Fish own· country. ,
ers could let the water sit for awhile, Skove explained that chlorine eas--
allowing the chemical to dissipate. Or ii)' combines with 1hc methane gas
they could use a chlorine remover, from decomposing leaves, branches
watt for roughly 10 minutes, and put a,nd other orpnic mailer in the water
the fish in. supply, fanning tribalomethanes.
In a little mort: than a year, the ·
MWD's supply of Colorado River
water is lxPected to be cut by 60
percent. Consequently, more water
will be channeled to SOuthem Cali·
fomia from the siate water project in
Northern California.
However, it will now take about --studies by the federal Environmental
one or two days to take lhc Protection Agency have found that
chloramine out, by using a charcoal one type of tri.haloplethane causes
filter along with conventional cancer in laborator)' animals. Thus
ohlorine ~movers. . rc~hers suspect it could also be
"We're recommending that people carcinogenic for humans. ·
"We'll have more orpnics in that
water sup't>ly, and by continuing to
just use chlorine, we would jusl be
(aggravating) the TR Ms problem that
we have now," Skove said.
He added that the city of Denver as
well as other cities outside the state
have been purifying their water with
chloracninc for decades.
get a five-gallon pail or a trashcan and The EPA basset a limit of 100 pans pre~ their ~ater ahead of time," pcrb!ll.ionforthcamountofTRM1in
DiGiacomosa1d. He added that there mun1c1pal water supplies. However,
ORANGE COAST Clrcua.11on 714/Ma-4333 Dolly Piiot Daily Pilat Clotalftod odftftltlng 714/M2-M71 Oellw•rr All other department• 142-4321
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L.agur'll N'IJ-'ll -Manager Manager VOL n, NO. 299
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From Al
recommend Dol.1£las receive a death
penalty sentence for the multiple
murders.
Phillips. who said she twice has
been convicted on burglary charges
and acknowledged she had turned 10
prostitution to obtain money for
heroin, said she made 1t clear to
Douglas that she didn't want to be
invofved.
brutalizer of women. There arc 4~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~J doubts about his kstimony," Peters I
Phillips, the firs1 witness called
during what is expected to be a two-
\ week trial, told jurors she first met
Douglas 1n October. 1979 after agree-
._ in_1 to pose nude in return for S40 or
$SO. She said she needed th,e money to
pay for her heroin habit.
••He wanted me to take some nude
pbotoaraphs in bondage-type
fashion," the stocky Phillips tes11fied.
"He directed me how to pose, how to
look scared and how to come across
loo kin& fri&htened." ~
She saia Dou~as photographed
her, using a Polaroid camera. with her
hands tied, her mouth gaged and her
ankles bound on a bench in his
workshof,. Douglas did not touch her
or assau t her during the one-hour
photo psion, she 11id.
Scvml weeks later, durinit a car
f ride alona the c:;>rtesa Hlghway,
Dooglasconfided his plans for killing
" twfh.)litchhikers1 Phillips said. She
t sald Dou&las told her he would pay .,,._~-~herlfshe would be his driver and help
, subdue his intended victims.
"He f.lid he wanted to 1.1ke pictures Or other women, take them out in the
1 desert to make a snuff nick. He
wanted to SC' bondaae shots.
homosei:ual scenes and stuff like
that." she told 1hc court.
• •
~Just Call
642-8086 • I
•'
"I couldn 't believe what I was
hearing." she said.
During his opening statement lo
the seven-man, five-woman jury,
Rackauckas characterized 1he two
teen-• victims, K.rueaer and Jones.
as "living on the wild side." He said
the pair made the "mortal mistake"
of being enticed by the quick money
Dou$1as offered them to pose nude
f0Th1m in the dcsen. -
The two girls' bodies were dis-
covered in a remote desert grave in
Anza llorrego State Park 1!)' a man
takin8Photographs ofwildRowers in
April 1983.
Much of the prosecutibn's case
rests on the1:estimony-of 38-ycar-old
Richard Hemandei, a companion of
Douglas who alleaedly wa1 pretent
when the two girls were killed. He h11
b«n granted immunity (rorn pros-
ecution inellchanae for his testimony.
But defense attorney Ocorae
Peters:, during his openina statement
to the jury, called Hernandez an
unreltablt witness.
"The defense will show Hernandez
is a heroin addict. alcoholic and
said.
He told the jury that before
Hernandez was extradited to the
Un~ STatcs from Mexico, he had
been 1n Canada where authorities had
used alcohol to get him to change his
51ory.
'"Then. the Mexican police got a
Mexican confession beaten out of
him under the threat of death," the
defense a1torncy Wd.
Peters also said he intended to
present witnesses who would ttstify
they saw one or both of the girls after
the day they arc alleged to have
'disappean:d.
The trial is not the !int ror Douglas,
who gained notoriety in I 977when he
was charged with attempting to lure
two undercover Polictwomen to their
deaths in the desen under similar
circumstanCC1. It was alleged Dou&las
had hi~ a former Santa ·Ana
prostitute-to tonure and kill the
women for a "snuff movie."
An Orange County Superior Court
jury considering a soficitation Of
murder cha~ deadlocked followln1
a highly publicized trial and a mistrial
was declared. Before a tCCOnd trial
couJdae1 u.ndcrway, DouaJ:u pleaded
aulhy to the lesser cha.rte of con·
nuracy to commit 1111uh with a
deadly wt:1Pon and wu placed on
three year's probl1ion.
WUt do YOO llll:e 1bo•t tH Dall)' Pilot·? WNI do1't 1w like! CaH &a.e
umber at 1~t 1JMI )'Olr me11a1e •111 M reeerded, tnAfC11Mll ud dtllveffil
i. die appropriale Hiter.
TH Ame 24·1-o•r ••••t-rln1 urvtee mafbf Qff to rt"COrd lett.nl 11 ~.
edl1or .. ••r. loph~. C11rtlb1tort lo Hr Letlen Hl1mi m11i Uicl•e tntr
11me alWI It .,.._. 'Y'"r fer 11erif~t•. No ctrc•ll&lw calls, pltaH.
TtU 11 w•al't ea )'O•r mtnd.
-. . I t t
THE POSH
TUXEDO
Classic styling at its finest.
Appropriate anytime-of
I he year, yet perfect for
all ofthe occasions that
make our .holiday season
so pecial.
( )
~ follNon lllanCl ta ap&rl leoc:f'I
OM)M0.1)10
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