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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-09-18 - Orange Coast PilotDeLo~ean separates from Wife WSAN· GEL ES (AP)-Just a month after auto- maker John Z . De Lorean was acquitted on drua traffickina charles. he anc:f .. his wife, tele- vision show host Cristina Fcnve, have split up, De LOrcan's at· tomey said toda)'. "If the question is, •Arc they living separately,' the answer is yes " Howard Weitzman said, addina that the couple separated three days ago. FERRARE' "It was a . little too much pressure for anybody to handle," he said. "They decided to take a little bit of a break." Weitz.man, who said he would not be the attorney for either one in any divorce proccedina, emphasized that "no eroceedinas are started. NobOdy s seeina a la " Wiorcan, S9, and Fel'Tal"C, 34, stayed I\ the home of her parents throuahout his five-month feder· al triaf on~ of conspirinJ to distribute s2• million in cocame. De Lorean remains at that home with his in-la.~ Weitzman said. A Laguna Beach cop quit the force Instead of ap- pealing a decision to fire him for misconduct./ A3 California Ave hostages held Inside a Bell home by gunmen are freed./ A4 Nation A radio listener pays 999 bananas-llteralty-for acar./M Mind a: Body Everyone over 50 shOuld have a .. stroke prof lie" made to prevent such attacka.181 September Is caHed the perfect month for procrastinators to renew year resolutlons./81 Sports Marina Hlgh's Shawn Massey Is the Dally Piiot's, Player of the Week after the Vikings' 10-7 victory over Servlte./C1 Enterialnment South Coast Repertory has launched Its 20th season with a stunning production of Shaw' a "Saint Joan." /BS Two more police shows Join ttie fall TV llneup./83 :·>:~~:.:•:•!•!•!•!•!·~<·;·:·:·:-<·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: .. \li' ~ Baameu Americans are not wflllng to accept the aofutlon to the country's economic woes.185 INDEX Bridge Bulletin Board ButMneU Cat"omla Newt Clllllfled Comlea Cf oatWOf'd ONthNotlCM HelpYourMlf Horoec<>pe Ann Land«a Mfnd end IJoC'Y Mutuel Fund• Netlonal NeWt Opinion Paparmt PoleeloOQ Publle Notlcel fportt St Mart<ett T~ ThMtwt Weather WondNewt 84 A3 85 .A4 C5·7 84 C7 C5 82 ce 82 81·2 85 A4 A8 81 A3 C5,8 C1-4 86 2 83 A2 A4 JWA expansion hits sna l~crease~ pub~ic concern may·del~y decision on $191 million project A decision on the proposed S 191 million expansion of John Wayne Airpon -and an acoompanyina increase in the number of jet flights~ may have to be dclaYcd until January Be'adonelt • • 1" so county airport planners will have ume to respond to a lar&e number Qf public conocms about 'the project. In a confidential memorandum circulated amona supervisors .Mon- day, County Coun t Adn n Kuy~ recommended uch a delay to ensUtt legal adcquaty ana complete· ness0 of the Pr.c>JCC1's environmental impact rcpon. 'fhe Board of upcrv1sors probably will con idcr delayin its con uSer· auon of the :dant ~ect durin3 1 dosed 1onWcdn y,accord!DI to Kuyper. The board had been scheduled to OOQ idcr certifying~ Regle Jacbon wa.ee to Illa fana after hlttlna Ida 500tll blf l..pe home nm In Monday DICbt'• pmeatAnahelm. Stadium. It waa a bittersweet moment. though. u the Anael• loet 10-1 to the K.anu• City Royala. See~.PageCl. , project following a pubhc heanna Oct. 11. "We Wln1 to g1ve adequate COn· sideration and f'CSJ)OftlC 10 the ~m­ mcnts received." K.uypet' aid of the recommended delay. The prOblem is mat the county has been swamped with public reacnon to the pro~ reccivina more lhaD 400 pqes Of Mitten comments on lhe ex~nsion plan. tate law reQutres the . Donald L. Bren rates· 'No. 60' On richest list Irvine Co. chairman among top 400 · wealthy. says Forbes chain owner Ricbatd Jerome o~ 61. of San Juan Capian.no. Bren.~ lives OD Unda Ille.. wu catapulled into &be nnklofthe ~­ rich last yar. wbeD be~ coauol of the lrvifte eo.,. lbe ~y daat owm OOHixth 01 tbe Land m <>ranee BJ UREN E. UZIN OI .. ~ ....... • C.oUaty. Ako vaJUcd al SSOO million, but ranked one place lower lban Brm. ii Alfred A. Taubman, a Detroit Donald Leroy Bren, chairman of the board and majority stockholder of the Irvine Co., is the 60lh ricbcst person in the natioo.. aecontint to a list of the .00 wealthiest people in the U.S. reJeued Mooday by Forbes mC~s2. of Newpon Beach. is estimated u havioa a minimum Worth of $500 million. accordina to the financial tniprine's tJllrd annual compilation of nation's wealthy. Other Oraqe Cout residenu that made the list: Pie •n Save aore founder William Zimmerman. 64, of Huntington Beach; Huab Bancroft Ill. 3S, of Newport Beach; and ~ COUBty developer,· political KtiV'l.St and Tmy Naylor rataurant . fiMncier and former c:bainlwl of tbe boerd of lbe Irvine Co. Taubma·1 lhue in tbe company wu bouibt out bY Bml in last year,s takeover. Jou Irvine smith, an Irvine family heir and aootber Nctrport !Beach resident. does DOI appear OD the Fornes list but WU ·ranked OG • similar list published by ~orume mapzine this pr. . Gordon P. Getty, SI, an heir of oil baron J. Paul Getty. is No. I on the Fotbcs '400. 1be San Frmcisco resi· dent's worth ii estimated at $4.1 billion. The top dozen wedhiest people OD (PleMe-.DlVDIS/AS) Dean may: face death in ez-wife's killing BJ STEVE MABBLB °' .. ...., ....... An asislant dean at Saddleblck CoUege who apPeared bridJy in coun today, could f&c:e the diith penalty for alle&cdlY killinJ his former wife, a rcspec:1td nUtsina itlStrUCtOr at the community colJqie. Donald Emil Dawson, 4S, of Irvine, lill~ armed himself 'With two guns. several boXes of ammuni- tion; a set ofhandcu.f& and a lenJlb of rope and waited in his-ex-wife's El Toro n:Sidence Last Saturday for bcr ~ accordi.na to Olief Assistant District Attorney James Eru:i.JbL .. The evidence seems to indicate that Dawson bad made peat ~ arations," said Enri&hL Because of the special circum- stance of lyina in watt a1JeFd in tbe case, Dawson, a former policeman., :rJ. face the death penalty, &riaht The arraipment was .~ned until Oct. 9at tberequestofO.wlon's atto~. The assisiabt c.ollqe dean is · beini held withoUt bail -· Dona May Dawson, 46, Wa.s found face-down on a nci&hbor's lawn when sheriff's deputies arrived at about 9:30 a.m Saturday. She died a short time later at Mmion comm ty Hospital in Mission Viqo. AccordiDa to ID &Ul0p5)', the woman bad been shot six times. Enri&bt said the evidence indicates that l>aMOD fired both lllM be WU canyina. . Dawson reportedly was staildina near his former wife's fallen body when officers sat to1hc sccne1111d wu taken into custody 'filtbout incidcnL Aocordin& to Eiirigb~ DaWIOD appuen~ himself into hiS former wife's T Way residence witb a key the ~ kept bidden in a planter in tbc bllckya.rd. Dswson was still c:arryiaa the key when be was arrested. Enri&bt said . He said evidence indicates DaWIOo carried the auns and ammunition into the residence in a paper baa and theD spread the weapons and otbe:r items out on the Ooor of the.house. A memOrial service for Mrs. O.wson will be held Friday at I 0 Lm. at the Doyle McKinney Theater at Saddleback Collqe. Tbe 'collete tw established a scbolarsbip fuod for Mrs. Dawson's 17-ycar-old dauptcr. Rochelle Oawson. accordina to cam· pus spokesman Btll Schrieber. Kindergarten classrooms are bOOmijig ·Costa Mesa takes new steps to liusli live entertainment •;r By PHIL SNEIDERMAN oe .. o.-.,... .... A new blby boOm has resulted in larstr kindei'Prten cw.ts in some parts of Oranae County, but the overall J>Ublic school enrollment is continuma a decaclcalona decline. Thou&h Santa Ana and some still· arowinc South County communities like Irvine reooncd increased enrol· lments this fall~ administrators m the coastal achool distncts say only that (fteue ... 9CBOOL/ A2) Council approves new city ordinance tl htentn loopholes on noise issues BJ l'ONY SAA VEDR.A °' .. ..., ......... Past problem with a ro\\d) punk nipit dub and a CU-""nt noise blttlc Wlth the Pacific Amphitheatre $pumd the Costa Mesa City Councd to bttf up the city's entertainment regulations Monday. Council members unanimously·~ proved the first rcadipg of a m urc intended to tiahten loopboles and remove questions of constitution.i.lit)' from _ the city's entertainment onh· nance. , The new law would require all busi~ featuri.'04 live C?r recorded mu ><: to meet stnct Do1se. ttaflk, buildina, zoni parking and sccur- Judge: Newport-airpOrt flap carries no sjmple solutiori I l ity lqUlauon.s. LoCa1 motorcycle races. tbe PacifJC Amph1tbeatre. South Coast Reper· 10ry theater and otber &cilities where people arc .. invited to watch. listen cw put>dpete ··also Wo\lld be required to . t aty standards. Reli11ous activiucs arc cxea\pt from tbc ocw ordinance, w ·c:b must be •PP.JOvcd a second time by lbc counal. ··we're actu 50 many more "°' (complaints) and so may (Pl---MSSA/A2) -It was the highest low ever - l LB expected *> G.Kpoo1 , CoNTINUlO SroRIES ---- IRVINE CO. 'S BREN 60 ••• From Al the hst ire b1ltiona1res: 10 men nd tw women, including Oa\ 1d Pack- ard, who founded the Hcwlett·P • ard computer oompany along with millionaire wmiam R. Hewlett ln l 939; and An Wang; a Chin c imm1arant whose Wana Laboratories is amona the top word-processina finns. Four members of the Hunt oil family, of Dalla , •tt listed u b1lhona1re . Nel on Bunker Hunt, 58, who was accu~ or li;'ina to corner the sil er market in J 979, is wonh S 1.4 billion, accordina to Forbcl. Hi sisters, M~rct Hunt Hill and Caroline Hunt Sc.hoellkopf, and brother, WiJJiam Herben Hunt1. are tolethcr wonh a total ofSJ. 7 billion. Other names that appear on the f.'orbei list~ •Ernest and Julio Gallo, wonh $300 million each •Sydney Mark Taper, $300 million •William R.nndolph Hearst Jr .• $250 million •William Baron Hilton. $260 million " •Armand Hammer $200 million •Roben C.J.E.S. Guccione, $200 million ._ ~ • Yol>o Ono, $1 SO million •Orvon Gene Autry, S l SO million MESA TIGHTENS NOISE ORDINANCE ••• From Al more interruptJons to people's h\c~ that (entertainment facilities) have to clean up 'their act or shut down, .. Mayor Donn Hall said this momma. Accordina to the meuurc, au new businesses offerina entertainment .. must apply for a one-)'e&r permit ..from Development Services Director Dou'1as Oark. Existina businesses m)ilSt apply for the new permit within 60 days from the second readina of the new ordinance. The citfs old reaulat1ons were aimed at night clubs and were unclear about such facilities as the Pacific Amphitheatre and such activitiC$ as circuses, said City Attorney Tom Wood. Costa Mesa's entertainment ordi- nance came under fire in t 9S 1 during a yearlona lepl dispute that reached the state Supreme Court. The ruckus starttd when the ctty revoked an entertainment permll from the Cuckoo's Nest, a punk-onented night club, after numerous police reports of vandalism, loud noise and other complaints stemmi'll from the bar's clientelc. , _ While the club has since closed, the city has not forgotten the arguments of co-owner Jerry Roach, who ac- cused the ordinance of violating First Amendment rights. · In the lepl war, Roach also found a loophole in Costa Mesa's ordinance, sayuia the city could not reaulate live music, but only the dancing that accompanied it. ··ne old ordinance really didn't have any specific standards. The proviStons were just general to make {entertainment activities) compatible with surroundina areas,' said Wood. Wood said theoretically the Pacific Amphitheatre shoWd have applied for a permit under the city's eltistina entertainment ordinance. But it never did. And the city did not press the issue. Wood. however, said the council expect.S the amphitheater to comply with the new ordinance. "If the) don't we'll take whatever steps are ncce sary," he wd. Owners of the amphitheater already have refused to comply with another city ordinance intended to regulate the amount of noise emitted durina concens at the open arena. The ac;tion bas led to three criminal complaihts flied by the ~ty apinst amphitbcater-owner Ned-West Inc. for three summer concerts. One of the misdemeanor cases was rejected by a municipal courtjudae while the other two are pending. "' Ned-West has araued the city has no jurisdiction over the 18,000-seat facility because it is on the state· owned ~e County Fairarounds. Tbe company also cla.tms the noise ordinance is aimed solely at the amphithea~er ~nd thus, yioliates the U.S. Consutuuon. • . ~ SCHOOL ENROLLMENT DIPS ••• ·FromAl thetr enrollment drop th ts fall was not quite as severe as expected These are some of the early con- clusions as area schools bqin to count students retutrun& to classes this fall . School administrators cau· tioned that some students, because of extended vacations, family relocation or other reasons, do not report until well after the school year has begun. prices have placed Oranae County homes beyond the reach of many younger parents with school-age chil- dren. The extended enrollment decline has led to closure of numerou~ elementary schools and some middle schools and is affecting enrollment at community colleaes. · School officials keep a close eye on klnderprten totals because they arc a guide 10 estimating classes over the next 12 years. Following is a rundown on early enrollment fiaurcs at local school districts: Newport-Mesa Ulllfled School Di•· trlct -Supenntendent John Nicoll S31d the districtwide enrollment at the end of last week was I S,743, down was 16,427, up from 16, l 3S last year. The kinderprten enrollment was 1,237, up from l, 1 S9 last year. David King. director of facilities plannina for the school district, said future enrollment depends~-on the number of new homes the Irvine Co. can sell locally. ~tu View Scllool District -This district, which operates elementary schools mainly in the nonhem and central sections of Huntington Beach, reported S,89 t students at -the end of the first week, down from 9,S26 last year. The kindergarten enrollment also dropped from 921 to S7S this fall. The district will close four schools at the end of the current school year. Foutain Valley Scbool Dlltrlct: Tldea TODAY ~ 0 ? PJll. 47 ~leW 11:67' I'll. OI WIONttoAY ,-"' 7;Shm •• ""11ow 10~1 Ill\ ... ~ .. •Mpm. 10 Temperature• Just .Call 642-6086 Delly Piiot Delivery_ 11 Ou1r1ntffd MOllCley-f'odty 11 you oo not "9Ve yOut PIPI' by 5 30 p m Clti ~fo<I 1 p II'\ eno Y°"' copy ..-oe a.u • .,td ' tlll 14 24 24 0 14 14 , .. ..... Cllt90CICW\i IOUlll " ,. ,. .. .. u .. .. '" If = u .. 11 to ., H nH 11' IO .. "' 1t :: r: r, .. u :s n ... t1 7' = :: a7 .. :: H N ti .. ,. t1 '1 7t ,, r. :: .... .. 40 .. "' . .. ,. 71 la 1J I ll IO .. 41 . ~ What do yoa llke abOut tbe Dall)' Pilot! What don't yoa llkt? Call tlae number ac left and )'Ollr me11a1e will be recorded, traucribed and delivered to dae appropriate editor. Tbe 1ame U·boar answerlaa service may be a1ed to record letters to dae editor on any topic. Coatrlbatora to our Letters colaDUt ma1t IDcl .. e daflr name and telephone aamber for vertflcatlon. No clrcalatlon calll. l!leaae . Tell u1 what'• on your mlad. ORANGE COAST , Dally Pilat · H. L. Schwartz Ill Publisher Clrcu11tton 7141842"'333 Cl111tfled 1dvertf1lng 71.t/142·587'1 All other depa1tment1 142-4321 MAIN OFFICE 330 W111 Bey St eo.11 ...... CA M•~ •Od•• Boa 1660 ~ ........ CA 112~6 C09r•¢t 11183 Oltngt C-Pu~ ~ No ,,..,, .iorlft, 111ut1111iont eotor-111 matt1< or ICNttlott-"*''' "l<totl l\'lay be ttl)IOduc:ed W•thOl/1 IP«lll pet INUiOn ot copynglll -Stt..o!Oly tr>d Sllndl~ II you dO not rec..... YOl.ol Q09y by 7 a "' ca1 oetor1 10 I m 1"1:1 yOllf OOPy be~tO Clrcul1tlon Telephone1 Roaemary Churchmen Controller Secono Cletl POlltgt ptoO II Colle ..._ CellomAa 'UPS 1U..eoc>) 64.lblc;rtplAOn by Cit'* '4 75 monlllly Dy !I'll S6 60 l'llOtllhfr Stephen F. C1razo Production Manager Donald L. Wllllama C1rculat on • Manager VOL. T1, NO. 282 According to first-day numbers compiled by the Orange County Department of Education, 31 S,274 students reported to public schools this fall, 2,920 fewer than the first da) last year. Countywide, however, 22,402 lcinderprten students enrol- led, an increase of 409 over last year's total. It is the third consecutive year that kinderprten enrollment has increased countywide, and it bas been attributed to mcreasmg numbers of post-World War II baby boomers having children of their own -from 16,077 at the same point last year. However, this year's kindergarten enrollment was l, l 06 students. equal or sb&htly above the figure for September l9S3, he said. This district has had 12 yean of declininaenrollment since J)eakin11t -----------:---:-::.;..;;.--:~~-----..,:.._---.:...;;:;.:_;.....;.;.. _________ ~--~ I J ,806 students in l 97l. 'l"bird--Oay .- Although Oran'e County's 1eneral populauon has Jumped from l.5 million to 2 million over the past I 0 years, its public school enrollment has dropped by almost 190,000 over the same period. School officials have attnbuted this drop in pan to the changing character of the county's population. In the late '60s and early '70s, Orange County homes were affordable to young parents, whose children soon filled nei&hborhood schools. Today, many of those parents. with children grown, remain 1n these houses. At the same ttme, rising Nicoll say the key surprise this year was that his district's high schools seem 10 be holding more students than expected. The Newport-Mesa district, ser- ving Newport Beach and Costa Mesa, bas lost about 10,000 students over the past 10 years and has closed 16 schools as a result. But Nicoll said this fall's early enrollment fiaures indicate the decline may at last be slowina. lrvtne UnHled Scbool Dlltrlct - Because development is still under way in Irvine, it remains one of the few areas with a growina student populatJon. As of the third day of classes, the d1stnctwide enrollment HIGHEST LOW ••• From Al continued hot, humid and unstable weather forecast through the end of the week, the weather service ~id. The temperature hit a high of96 m downtown Los Angeles Monday afternoon, far from the the record I OS for the date. Meanwhile, the weather service forecast mostly hot and sunny weather for the Civic Center Wednes- day. There will be a few clouds with highs in the upper 90s and overnight lows 10 the mid· 70s. CoaSlal areas will be partly cloudy Wednesday. Highs at the beaches will hit the low 80s, with lows from 6S to 78, the weather service said. Afternoon and evening thunder- storms are forecast for Southern California mountains and deserts with some heavy thundershowers and gustr winds. Highs in the moun- tains wil reach SS, with desert highs ran am& from 1 OS to J 12. enrollment this fall was 6,386, about 500 below last's year's f1JUre. Kinderaarten enrollment, however, was S75_~ a 79-student increase over last year's fll\lre. Still, the district has closed six schools in recent years because of the decline. Buntillatoa Beacla City Sclaool Dl1· trlct -This elementary district, scrvina southern an~ coastal nei&h- borhoods in Huntington Beach, has a pattern like that of Fountain Valley. Accordina to fiaures from the end of the first week, overall enrollment thi1 fall was S139S, down from S,639 lut fall. But lrinderprten enrollment was up sli&htly -SOS this fall compared to 494last year. In 1.981, this district closed three schools because of declinina enrol- lment. Lapu Bea~ Uaillecl Sclaool Dl1· trtct -After yean of decline, enrollment may be st.abilizina in Laauna Beach. Overall enrollment at the end of the fint week was 2,344, com~ to 2,398 last year. The distnct bad l OS lrinderp.rten stu- dents last week;-C'Ompared to t24 last year. Althouah he could not explain it, Clyde Lovelady, the district's busi- ness manqer, said enrollment at Laauna Beach Hiah School was up this year to 1,062 students, compared to 1,024 last year. The district has closed one elementary school because of declinina enroJlment. JUDGE WEIGHS AIRPORT EXPANSION~ •• From Al Supervisors for years. Suptr:visors have struJ&led to up- grade the airport and increase the number of commerc1aJ airlines and flights availabre to county travelers while noise-consc1ous residents of the bcachfront community tiave battled to contain the airport's size while urging a newer, biger airport be built elsewhere in the county. "It's impass~ ible not to be aware of the interest andr the controversy over the airport," Schwab explained. "It's somethina one has heard about over the years. Everyone 1s affected by the airport in the county, it is such a sian1ficant entity m the county beina the m&Jor trans{>Ortation facilit~ here. The quesuon as how to clevelop 1t an response to the arowth," Schwab also said he understand the issue 1s a pohtically scns1tjve one and one that presents complex lepl issues for someone in his posatioo to decide. "But if you can't make 1 deci~1on, ~ou can't be a jud e," he noted with emphasis. "Everybody has a feehng rcprciina the 1rport, but 1t'1 no problem dcalina with the cue from a pro- fe iona1 pcnpecttvc. My JUn~1ct1on is limited to whether the emronmcn- tal impact ~~n meet tatutor)' ~uircmcnts,' he id. .. My perception 1s I am protectina the people of the tatc of Cahfomia, which includes all the people in Newpon Beach' an<t &he people rep.- .• resented b~ upcrvtSor . The f n- vironmcnaal Qualtty Act 1 the poh~) . - that aovems m> determination," he said ofh1s approach to the job. Schwab added that even after yean ofbeingaJudge, the importanceofhis position is never far from has mind. "I have very serious responsibhties that require me to keep my personal prejudices out of the courtoom. You ..determine a case based on facts and how the) apply to the law, that sounds pretty trite, but I believe it.'' In the first airpon case he has presided over, Schwab found the county had prepared adequate documentation on a l ,SOO-space air- port parklna lot project and refused to impose an order block.Jn& construc- tion as the city of Newport Beach had ·~ked. But Schwab is not new to hiah· profile cases. He presided over the 1980 murder trial of ROdney AlCala, accu~ of mole1tin1 and killina a young Huntinaton Beach prl. · Alcala's conviction on the murder charsc recently was ovenwned by the California SuJ'mnc Court, markina the founb or fifth in tancc in 18 ycan that one of Schwab' ca have bctn overturned. A lf&duate.. of the Univcnity of Minnesota and ns law hoot in 1953 Schwab and his wife, Joanne, movtd we t ~ bceau lh~y wanted to be near the mountains. Schwab till conft a sr_eat lov of mountains. Mount.a1neerins. 1kJ· ina and Jitldna arc h11 tteteauonaf p!l5 ions, he 1d. Hts courtroom ntliccs a~ deattated v.ith oU paint· inas and photographs of his favorite western peaks. After practJcina law in Santa Ana followin1 a short cattcr as an in- surance adjuster, Schwab was ap.- pomtcd to Oranae County's Central Municipal Court bench in 1966 by Gov. Edmund Brown. Ten years later, Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. elevated him to the Superior Court bench. A Democrat1 Schwab said be quit "partisan pahtical activities the mmute l went on the bench." Besides hi1 love of mountain a and mountaineerint Scbwab'1 love of the law apparently as rubbed off on two of his three children. Both 26-year· old son Eric and dAU&hter Sara,_ ~4, are law student• at McOcorac uw School inSacramento. A third dAUih· tcr, 14-'year--old Anne ii !jniQI 6er first year at Santa Ana H' School. Sinoe he's been usian to handle the airport litiption, the judao uid tie's been approached tevCraf times by people who have raised the object. Howrver. he la.id no political pre urc has been broujbt to bclr by any of the panics involved, and "l have no rrchna there' any animosuy· toward me." He u d he as only passinaJy cquainted ,,.ith the five mcmbtn of the Board ofSu~son and remains .. vcr1 iJnorant of Newport Beach poliucs or cumnt event .. I take lf"&t Sill factmn Ollt of do1n1thi wor'lc;' he1lt01&1d. "I fetla sen of rv1ce. •• . ' Seven the~ OS WhY. this colild be loan.you ll ever need. Commercial Credit's Home F.Quity Management Account proves that all lines of credit arc not the same. Ours is bencr. Why? You can aet up to $100,000. The Home F.quity Management Account is based on the equity in your home. So it can make a substan- tial amount of cash avail-able to you any time you need it. --" Affordable Interest. Our interest rate is just 2% over the prime rate for lines of $20,000 or more.* On July 1, 1984 the prime rate was 13.00%, making an annual percentage rate of 15.00%. No Application Fees. Compared to other inStitutions, our Home F.quity Management Account could save you hundreds of dollan. That's because there arc no points, oo application fees, and no annual fees. Plyment Protection. Interest rate increases will not clwigc the Ul)Ount of your monthl~ ~yment. It 1 Easy. Once your accoUht is open, getting a loan is as easy as writing a check. 10 Minute Application. Take ten minutes to apply for your Home F.quity Management ..... -~...,...., ..... ccount. Call us. We'll take your application over the phone or we can send you an applica- tion. Or stop by Commercial Credit today. One Day Cftdit Approval. In most cases, we ' off ct approvals in 2-i hours, ubject to verification and apprai 1. The Home F.quity Manaac· mcnt Account ... it could 6c the last loan you•n ever need . Commercial Credit. From first and second mortgages to pcraoh-1 loans and more1 we've got as many fi.nl.nCia1 solutions as there arc financial needs. Col111nerclal Credit •for luw Of ~0.000-S 19, 999, the rcN p Mt plw 2 ~~for on onnuot ~· oOt rm, of .;)U% on Jiiiy 1, All roMI vary With lt\e prime rat -In Callbnll Cc!nlmtrdal Cndll ta , B u l l f l I ~ B (J .1 p u ! schedules forum Hi,ah school tudentsand 1bcar parenture snvited to attend I Pomona COU* admiuions forum Wednesday, from 7:30ao9.30a m.,1uhcSouthCoast PlauHotel.666 nton Blvd., ta Mesa. The forum is ~eel to answer questions on vanous specu of ootlcac life mcludin& admissions, cumculum. Student life. financial aid and athlettcs. For more information, con\ICt Sarah Crowley or Donald Pattison al 62t.8146. Lelil aecntarla to meet OranJt County Harbor Lqal Secretaries Association II hold iu monthly educational mectina Wednaday at 6:30 p.m. at the Valla Sweden Restaurant rn Huntinaton Beach, to discuss the topic: "'Tbe Deputment of Motor :Vehicles and the C.alifornia Vehicle Code." The cost of S l 0 jncludes dinner and door prizes. For rnervations. call Susan Gonzales at S28-6083 or Robin fiddler at 842-SIOO. •American• Abroad' offered The Newport Beach Chapter of the American Field rvice will host an information meeting for high' school studcnta interested in spcndirti a summer or a year, " abroad, on Wednesday al 6 p.m. in Sims Hall of Newport Harbor Hiah SChool. Applications for 198S '"Americans Abroad" will be ava1lable only at this mcctin1-Parenu and younacr students interatcd in future applications are also invited to attend. For more information, call 67S-2078. SCaba dlvln& coane offered An eight-week course in scuba diving is being effcrtd twice a week at the CoM.a Mesa Downtown Community Qnter Pool, 1860 Anaheim Blvd. . . The class will be held Thursday and fnday n1ght1 tlqinnin& Oct: 19, from 6:30 p.m. to 9::JO p.m. The $100 class is o~n to studenu from 16 to 60 ycan ofaae. Child abuae prevention topic The Oranae County Child Abuse Council will present ' "Ongoina Information and Plannin& to Aid in tbc Prevention of Child Abust" at its monthly mcttina abursday, from 9 to 10:30 a.m., at the Orange County Department of Education, Buildina"C", Room 1022, 200 Kalmus. Costa Mesa; The meeting is free and open to the public. For more iiiforrnauon, call Jca!lne O'Bryan at 97M97S. . GOiden Wat alata worbhop Golden West College will present a workshop on "Creative Time M~cment" on Thursday, from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m .. m HumanJlles Hall. Betty Kurkjian will lecture on schedulin&. dealina with interruptions, effective de1Cf1tin&. · organizina. eliminating· visual clutter, choice management, procrastination and identifyina priorities. Propam fee is $26 and advance registration is requested. For more information, call 891-3991. Blood preuure teeta 11eheduled Costa Mesa Medical C.cnter Hospital. 301 Victoria St. will host free blood pressure screcninp and provide in?onnatioo on a variety of health-related topics on Thursday between l an 4 p.m. The fr; public event is in observance of .. Emergency Medicine Weck" in hopspitals throughout the country. The emergency facility as Costa Mesa is open 24 hours a day, 36S days a year. It is a Paramedic Receiving Center in addition to ICrving as a first Hour Heart Station. For more infonnation, call Ml 2734 or 964-S918. Self-defentte worbho~ ttet Tht' Laauna Bcacb Free Clinic. 36-i Ocean Ave., will be ofTcrin& free self-<lcfense work.shops for women of all aaa on the fint Siturday of every month, ft-om 9 a.m. to noon. To rqjster for the workshops, call 49~94·28 and for further information, caU 494'<9429. Free lmmunlaatlon for children Free Immunization shots will be given t&pre-school and scbool.oaaed children Friday frOm 10 a.m to l p.m. at the Huntintton Beach Community Oinic, 322 Fifth SL For further information. call S36-8894. Bradfotd 'tea By AAREN £. kLEIN °' ................. Dca11na her oppon nt's. ··1nat1on WJthout rcprescntauon," 40tb Distnct conams1onal candidate rc>I Ann Brad- ford pitched bales of ··Badham tea" into NcwPQn Harbor 4unng _ 1 fundra1 r undaftn.IJltlbohcalJy dunkina Rcpubl n Robert piidham wilh every t s. radford, Jhe Democrauccandadate, s concent.rltcd on Badham•s travel and expense l"C(X)rds during her campa &n m a d11trict tflat is ovcrwhelm1n&Jy JlC,. publican. Democratic co1lCfeMlonal canclldate Carol An.A Bradford toe•a boze9 of 0 Badb•m tea" -repreeentlne what •he called Rep. Ferraro at reception -in Irvine Thursday New York Rep. Geraldine Ferraro, the Democratic candidate for vice pre &dent. will visjt UC Irvine on Thursday to s~ at a ~pt1on scheduled at the campu'S' University Club. The JSO-pcr-pcrson fund-raiser for the congresswoman is beins or- ganized by the Dcmocraiic Victory Fund of Orange ~ounty. The event is not betn& sponsored by the univer- sity, a UCI spokeswoman said. -Audry Redfearn one of the or- ganizers of the event, said Ferraro is scheduled to give a Spetth. Redfearn said the reception "ill run from S to 7 p.m. and will accommodate SOO guests. She said ticket informauon can be obtained by calling 83S-039 or 83S-8 l 10. LB cop resigns· instead of appealing dismissal truthfulness, discretion and depart- ment policies." Disney woi-kers reject coiltract, vote to strike Frem die .laectated Prell Disooland and fi,-e union. ,,ill resume neaotiat.1ons m the wake of an o~ hclmm ~j«uon by wotken of a prop<>std thiec-)car -• frttn. a company ~n Id. The vote Monda> also au Drized unions rcp- rcscntina 1,soo-·ortcrstocalla trik.cat the world-famous amusement park sbowd ta1k:"s fail. Of tbc J.429 union woi'ken who cast votes, l.388 rejected the prop<>sal and 41 accepted it, said Mic~l 0 Rourke a spokesman for the United FoOd and Commercsal Worken union. • Uss than one hour after the vote. federal mediators asked ttprcseotativcs of the uruOo..s and DisneylaAd to appear at a I 0 a.m. Thursday ncpjbatina session. .. The strike bas been authorized.. but •~cried until that mccun&. .. O'Rourke said. All lhc paniC$ in\·olved aarccd to appear, said Disn~yland spokesman Bob Roth. A four-year veteran of, the Lquna Beach police department chose to rcsian rather than appeal a decision to fire him for misconduct on the jot7, Laguna Beach palice chief Neil Purcell said. Purcell said Coleman was in- subordinate to Lt. Janies Spreine, but declined to elaborate on any of the incidents that have occurred during the last 27 months. CdM man honored The unions. which are batpininajoiotJy, have sousbt • two-year contract with rajscs "bt'tween 3 percent and a percent a )car," said O'Rourke. • 9:30 a.m., ~· Couty Boaril Of s.JCJ'\'llOn, Hall of Administration. J 0 Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana. • 1:30 p.m., OrUp Coaty Plan•ta1 CommluJoa, Hall of Admmistration, 10 Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana. • 6 p.m., LqUa Beacla City COUCU. Council O.ambCn, SOS Fo~Ave. . Purcell said Officer Donald Col- eman, 33. was about to be terminated after a ~rsonnel hcarin& Friday for misconduct "strictly related to job performance." Purcell said a "stries of invcstip- tions" found Coleman guilty of"poor judgement and insubordination ... and sustained findings related to Coleman said Friday that his attorney, Cecil Ricks of Anaheim, advised him not to comment on his resignation since lcpJ action against the city may be filed. C'ple.lllan is married, has a child and said be is startina a pmate limousine 5Cr\'ice in Laguna Hills Corona del Mar resident Norman M. Mamcy·was honored rcccnlly by the Lcbanon-Synan-Amcric.an So- ciety of Greater Los AngdC$ as Man of the Year 1094. A college ~holal"5hip fund was established in Marney's honor at. Sunday's banquet held at the Sports- meo 's lodge m Studio City. Disneyland. faced with a drop in attendance from an all-time hiah of 11.S million VlSJtors in 1980 to 9.9 million last )car, orilin.ally proposed that workers accept a t 7 pcrccnt pay cut over three years. That propo$1l been droppt'(t. but the park is irwsting that which range from about $7 to SlOan bour, be frozen through 1987. The compan) also ts seeking some coocessions in benefits. but Disnc)lland said tbOIC reductions affected part-ttme and seasonal workers ~ that benefits to full. timers could be maintained near their current Jc~el. • 7:30 p.m., lrvtae Ualfled Scllool Dt1trici BMrd of Edacati•, Lakeside Middle SChool, 3 Lemoncrass. Pol ICE Loe ·~ ~BuEglars -cleaned .hous , then. cleaned the.mselves· Fresh-scrubbed thieves who bur- alarizcd a house in Newport's Bia Can)lon area over the weekend ap- parently made a clean )Ctaway from the sceneofthecrimeafttrtbcytoolta bath in the victims' tub. • The 5udsy bW)lars stole $1 ,420 worth of valuables from the home, on the 1800 block of Port Tauert. sometime Fnday or early Saturdly mornina. ac:Ciordina to a Newpon Pomatabl van., ' Someone pqtd out the windo ofa 1983 automobile while iu owner was eatin& at McDonald's and stoic a stereo and amplifier and d1scon· netted wires. • • Bufllan 1tole $600 in cash from a willet an~ d~ ~nwer in the 9000 ock of Niehtji\alle. Thieves stole a coin collect on vllued at $300 from a din1na room 1n the 9000 bloct ofThvm .. ~ Someone broke a window ofa aty vehicle With a hard object While It was fliu'ked an the ctt)' cmplOyca' pafkina lot, I 0200 Slater Ave. • • • Thieves out throuah a fence at the NtVt'.PC)n Q>fl). 11045 ndor. and Ole an 1ndmtn1I aif comprc3'Qr valutd at U.000. • • • Burllan ranMcted a holM in the 9000 I>loct of tarhna and tole 1 Beaeh police report. . In addition to simply buraJarizina and ranuckina the home, howtver, the thieves ~tly drew a bath and loak~ up. some lu:iury durina the coune of the burglary. A friend who was check1na on the houte and waienna the planu while the residenu arc on vacation dis-- covered the bu~-and a bathtub rina -Saturday, the J>Qlict report televt11on set, a vtdco cassette re-. corder, a typcwntet and SSSO an ca~. said. Some of'the mirrors in the home bad lipstick smeared on t~m and other minor acts of vandalism were also found in the house. The 1uspcct apparently uScd a Ice) 1n the burglary. Ca h &nd se~cral Pieces of fine jewelry were reported missing. An invcstipuon into the un ullied 'ncident is continuing. ~ stote employee at South Odut P'lua was ~rtcdly :stolen Sunday from a baOk room oftht st Ott. The wallet discovered mJIJlftl aroun4 p.m. from a punc atop a file ca ntt at the Fulnon Consperacy t 1nhle ••• A 10-peed Schv.inn Vamt) biC}clc wonh less than $400 was stolen froro the"'7 I 00 block of Apncot Ori"e. • • • A wallet containing about $SO m cash was stolen from a car parked on the 3700 block of Sur Avenue. • • • A yellow Schwinn b1c)ck worth about $200 was stolen from the 4300 block of Walnut A\enue. · · • • • A re ident of an apartment on Momina Dove told pohcc that he m1 in about S400 worth of JeWlcry after mo,er.. unloaded her pos ion at her new 1dencc. ~a Beach Ca h and ltTCO speake~ worth a total of $36 7 we~ reported stolen from a vehicle parked in the'400block of North Coast Hi&hway Mondi . night: of Via Nice O\crtheWttkend. An 18- karat aotd chain and five 1S:OUold c:arriftlS ~re ttporttd tolen. The (o\S was placed at S l. I 00. Huntl.DCton Beach Someone broke a p . J>adlock to burv.lanze a home on the 5700 block of 1roph) Dri~e. a resident tt{><>hed Monda) The lo~ included kitchen appliance~ and home entertainment equipment valued at $8 000. . .. • ... mcone ma~cd the fl in a door to burglarize a h me onda) on th( 6100 block of G hpcan Ori\-C. The los included a dco rtrordcr ~orth SSOO. Je~elT) orth $0\0 and SSO tn ca h. ...._ . . . ~ Whtie a re 1dent of lhc 5500 bloc of. Mtddlecoff Dri'c wa ~way o,n vacation. somronc broke into his home b} PO ing orcn a rnr door The I • esumatcd at S2.000, included stcrc0 cqu.ipmcn.L a camea... an4 ,a gu1W'. • • • m1cknt of the 4900 block of Heil venue reported Monday that some- one stole hi ~hite 1973 BMW. The lo s w:u csumatcd at $10.000. • • • mconecut a toe~ to break 1ntoan• oran c mo' ana \i&n on the t 5600 bloc.. of Product Lane. The\ _lo mcfodcd a c~tomcr's .. .as. t o 'riO and a ho un ••• mC'One used a device to ~tract m C\ from two Chan macb1n~ t the ulundcrland coin laund.l'). 165 8 8ol5a Chica trC'C\.. The I $72. • •• Over the wee end. a vandal ran a waJcr h through the mail lot Qf a bu incu on the 300 block of "Pn>- duction Drive, cau ma bout ss.ooo dam gc lo the bu1ld1ng and fumi hi Screams bring help, foil attack in Mesa • ' Orange Cout DAILY -~ev-to -€~~~:~-11-===~-==;:~~ 5 u.s~ sailors D tat d k The ~kipper of the c:rcw 1d by e Il men as telephone from S1~ria earlier today Am ricans to pray for their relea th t their hip had been boarded by armed So\ tel old1cn off the c 51 of ibcria and to\\ed mto a Sibcnan pon. He urged people back t\Ome "to MOSOOW (AP) -A u .. Em· contifluc to pray' for their release. bassy pok.csm n id toda) that the In another con,·cmt1on, the lup- So U • n ·11 lease ti oer 1d the cre\\mcn had explained VJet nion soo -wt re ive r.inan}, mtm), mnny tames" thatthcy American sailors who were ized at did not dchbcrately violate Soviet sea la t week and detained in eastern territory, but Soviet au1horities were Siberia. ··not satisfied." He said an embassy official met Capt Tnbb Thoms. 45, told The Soviet officials and were told "that Associated. Pre~s in a telephone call thuailon and thcirship were ao1ni to placed from Moscow to the crew's be released and that the details wtte place of detenuon in Urclik that he beina worked ouL We were not aiven and four crewmembtrs detained a specific time, but we were told that incc Wcdnesday \\ere well but have they would be released... been told nothing about when lhey The spokesman, who 5poke-on • might get home. condition he nol bt identified, added. · "We were on our way to an island," "My understandi.na was that it would Thoms said when asked to describe be sooner rather th n later:· how his vessel, the 120.foot supply Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Ali ka, sa1i:i in ship Frieda K, was seized. ~ WashinJtOn in a telephone interview, "We neared a gray ship to obtain "We believe they'll be rcleucd within local knowledge of any danger. We the next 2• hours." wefe boarded' by many-soldiers ~ T n : ~ ® Fashion Fa 0 brics . ~ UV:flL and other thints FACTORY SURPLUS OUTLET Open To The Public STORE HOURS: Monday through Friday, 10:30 am • 8:00 pm Saturday, 10:00 am.· 4:00 pm COSTA MESA 743 BAKER STREET • One SJot:lt W•t of BNtol (714) 857·121• carry in.a suns and were later towed by another battleship. Hours liter they came and towcQ ua &o where we are.•• "They say we violated a Soviet boundary," the skipper said. Thoms said Monday Y.hen con· tacted by Stevens that the Soviets want the crew to s~ papers acknowl· ~aina t~ey intentionally ventured into Soviet watert. The U.S. Embassy in Moscow 11id Monday the five uiloB, all from Homer, Alaska, were at a hotel in the town of Urelilc. .. r TRIPOLI. Llbp (f.P) -Libyan· backed rebels in Chad have cxpreslt'd upport for.the mutual withdrawal of French and Ubyan fortlel from th central Afncan counuy, Ubya'1 f. fkia1 news qtncy JANA said today. JANA said the withdrawal accord, announQed by France and Lib)'I on Monday, "o~ns new doors for the final M>lution of t~e Chadian problem and aives it its internal c:haractcr ... The Chadian aovemment opPQs-ina the rebels.has yet to make official comment on the aareement. neao- tiated directly-by France and Lib~. However~ Chad's fore\an minister complained that hit aovemment was not consulted by France, iually, pnor to the announcement. By CM Asaoclated Pre11 JACKSONVILLE Aa. -A federal iudsc tOda)'. refused lO block Wednesday's scheduled execution of am n convicted ofkillint an 84ycar-old child. The 1tate•s hiahcst coun also refused to say t.hc execuuon of another murderer scheduled to die the me day. U.S. D1stnc1 Jud John H. Moore U denied a motion to 111y &he exccuuon of f\ubrey .Adama ~ndi91. apDeal before the 11th U.S. C1m11t Coun in Atlanta. Adams was 1en1cnccd.to die for the Jan. :u. I 978, stran&Una of 8-year-old Trisa Gail Thomley, who dtsaJ>pe.ared on her way home from school. On Monday. the Flonda Supreme Cou,rtt)}' a C>.1 vote. dissol Cd a pncv~ .N!nted James Henry by Circuit .1ud&t Michael ~ manic:k fh c days earlier. Henry, wtio black. was convicted ·Of the March ::u 197~1 m urdcr ofblack cl vii ri&hts leader ~lhc Riley, of Orland~. Hc!'ry and murcboth heduJe'd10die"Wedncsdayat 7 a.m. in tncelcctnccha1rat the Florida talc Pri on near Starke Aato talt• re'IUlivea today · DETROIT -General Moton Corp. laid off ,1 1~ more workers to<Uy because of walkout at 12 ofit1 most profitable fac1ht1es, as the company and the Unued Auto Wo(Jcers aot ready to try again to smooth out their touChy difference$ over job aecunty. Talks between representatives of GM and he UAW on a nahonal contract co,·erina 3S0.000workcn were to tesume t~yat GM hcadquaners in Detroit af\er a onc.:.ctay breather. One analyst·sa1d th~ wal~out was co tina GM $27 million a day, and \he UAW said us members were lo inancarlyS6 million adaf in wag~. A tentative settlement 1t the Van Nuy1 plant Sunda) put some o its 4,000 UAW wor:k~ blck on the job Monday. But efforts to mume production were short·liv~. AtK>ut SS perc,nt of the 2 I OOday-shifl workers showed up. bat .. several hundred" went to lunch and didn't return, 'd local union president Pete Beltran. Union leaders then said the strike would continue pcndina e ratification vote today. JANA, In its dispatch today, said the rebel faction Jed by Goukouni Oueddei "has exprq1ectsuppon for the decis~on to withdraw F:~nch troops and the Libyan 1upponjn1 f!ech:J~.of the nati~nal aovemment Troplcill deprealoa• baJldmf France and Libya announced their MIAMI _ A tropical depression off the African coast drifted '1o1(1y troopswillbcainamutualwithdrawal northwest and could strenathen today, ~id hurricane fottcasten who were mfro0mnth0lmad1.1i.~on Ses•~'n·d2osiren1_0dCbinaada. 13-also watcbinJ a l~ vi&Oro!JS depression near Bermuda. _At 6 a.m., oncf .. depreasion with maximum winds of35 mph was about 350 miles northwcst-0 Fra,nce lel).t ,000 t.roops to sup~n westernmost Cape Verde Islands in the far eastern Atlantic, mo vii\& nonh~t C_had 1 pres1~ent, H1ssene Habre, in at nearly 15 mph, the National Hurricane Center said. The other deprcurpn, his battle. with ftbel forces led by with winds estimated at 35 mph, was "near" Bmnuda 1t 6 a.m. and was Goukoun1, ~ho is backed by sevCral · expected to move toward the nonheast at S mph for tht next 12 to 24 hours. the thousand Libyan troops. center said. Chad's foreian minister, Gouara Lassou, said wliile in Paris Monday that bis aovcmment learned of the ~ment in~ re1>9ru. Hostages released iil Bell De Lorean baah"Dptcy tr1a1 ~· DETROIT -La~ers fo'r John Z. De Lorean teJOig beck into coun in a St 7 million fedei"al b&nkr\iptcy case diat was sus~ndCCS for six moo du wtiilc the former automaker was on trial on cocaine trafficlci~cb~s. De Lorean, wbo was acquitted in Los An&eles last month on all ei t drug counts, ~ claims by crediton of his defunct De Lorean Motor o. and a ~ JurY invC1tigation intQ his bandlina of the company's finances . At stake 1n the Cl9e is the more· than $17 million creditors alleie was divened from De Lol'eln Motor Co. through benlcs in Europe and New York. . . Gltl recall• Camaros, Flreblrd•, van• DETROIT -General Motors Corp. has announced that it is i'tulliill 31,000 1984-model Chevrolet Camaros and Pontiac Fircbiriis and 2,900 1984: model GMC vans and Chevrolet vans to correct two separate ,safety probtcitil: BELL (AP)-Five people believed to have been held hostage for six -----------------------------'-----------! hours were released from a house Brake hoses on the Camaros and Firebirds co\lld separate from an end fitiliil. causina brake fluid to leak and 1)9SSibly lead to a loss of brake power, GM .sira in a statement Monday. The vans affected being recalled are equipped with both front and rear air conditioning systems, GM said. • The Great American · Great loans. Great rates. And a great $100 cash reb~te if you act now! GREAT LOANS. It's summertime. And the livin' is easier than e'ver with a loan from Great American. loans for cars, boats, RV's, mobile homes, even airplanes. Loans for installing pools, spas, or patios. Home improvement loans, equity loans ... most any loan you need for Great American summertime living. fir t Savings Bank unharmed early today as one alle&ed intruder surrendered., a Los Angeles County Sheriffs Dcpanment spokes- man said. Another person was believed to be still inside the home after the others. including an infant, came out at 5:35 a.m .• Deputy Adam Khan said. Details of the incident were sketchy early today. and an hour after the release there were no identities avail· able. There was also no funber word on what may have transpired at the home, btyond an initial robbery report, Khan said. Four armed men reportedly broko into -the house on Weik Avenue, handcuffed the owner and took his wife, two children and two teen-age relatives hostafe, Khan said. The unidentified 32-r,ear-old man manaacd to escape while still hand· cuffed and call police from a neiah· bot'• house honly before midniaht Monday, he said. When Bell police arrived, 'tWO men were climbina oul the window of the house, Khan said. An officer fired one shot, missin& the men, and those two were arrested without funher inci- dent at 12:SO a.m. today, Khan said. CALI FORNI~ - - - - Burt tn.JJ•plant padent gives b1rt1J SAN DIEGO -Her mother wn "terrified" and doctors advised a 23-ycar-<>ld woman with a tran ... planted bean to abort her p~ancy, but she persevered and gave birth to a bealtby girl/apparently the first child born of a heart recip1enL Docto~ said Monday that Betsy Sneath. who four_years aao received the )lean of a man who died in a traffic accident, had given blrth to 7-pound, t-ounce Sierra Jamieson Sneith after a prqnancy and delivCJ')' witli "no complications." .. :r~ere 1s no indtcauon in medical literature that this bas ever happened before," said Dr. Thomas Key, of the University of California at San Diego Medical Center, where the birth occurred Sunday. "There have been SNEITH . piepancies. but they have never gone full term, usually ~u~ the cardiac patient did not want to." Doctors were concerned. that Sneith s male ~ would not function the same as a female bean dunna pregnancy, when it is expected to work about SO percent harder than normal and uoderaoes cbanaC$ to pump blood to the' fetus. "We found her tral!,splant~ male bean experienced the same changes as a fem ale bean would, Key satd. Loadoa mayor vl•lts LA LOS ANGELES -the first woman mayor of London, here to promote a line of British goods, was presented the key to the city br Mayor Tom Bradley. Lord Mayor of London, Dame Mary Donaldson, received the key in a brief ceremony Monday at City Hall. Earlier in the day Donaldson spoke about t.he histoncal preservation of London duri~a luncheon at the Ambassador Hotel. At City HaU, Donaldson said she knew little about the preservation of this city. .. How couldlT' asked Donaldson. "I just got here." State voten prefer Ba•JJ SAN FRANCISCO -Althou&h California voters like them both, V ce President Georse Bush helps the ~epublican ticket more than Gcrald111e Ferraro docs the Democrats, a survey released today says. The California Poll, conducted by the inde~dent Field Institute, shows Bush wou.ld beat Femro 1?)' S3 perecnt to 38 perocnt if voten could pick the vice president sep&nl~ly from the president. Overall, men would choose Bush over Ferraro by a 24- point marain; the margin drops to seven points amona women. , ft•IJ ra1.e •t1a~ fJJ Saata Bar bara SANT A BARBARA -County S)Jpervisors are raisina a sunk about commercial fishermen wbo have left th60Slnds of rotting dead fish oo county beaches. "Whoever is rcspon11ble for this insult should help pa)' fortbe cleanup and F.!>bably should have more done to cm.than that,• Board Chairman Dev1d Yacer said Monday. The supervisors voted S-0 Monday to direct cou.aty attomey Km Nelson to try to prosecute the .. offendina fisherman" to recover th~ costs of removina the dead fish from county beaches. s. Africa.a ml.IJe .ettJemeat JOHANNESBURG, SOuth Africa -Black aotd minen accepted a eompromisc offer tbdly and dro~ ~n1 to stqe tbeit first 91 strike. but mo~ tban 2'° minen were repo~ iruuttd io cluhet with police before th tettlement. ~bOut ~.QOO minen returned t~ work after a one-<IAY. bo~tt. the National Union of Maneworken aaid. Cyril Ramaphosa, the union a &enei'al aecmary, 11id "a tarae majonty" of memben 1cttpted an offer from An;lo Amencan Corp. to boost holiday benefits for black workers at seven Anato mines. llrJda d ad -..e called oil LONDON -TraMport '1n1on leaders today called off Bnwn•1 :2 old dock a&nkc, wb ch bis idled nearly half the natton•a scabOme ttliCle. ta morDlftl·kNaa mettins, the docb commlltce of the aiant Tran pon nd OeMral Worken' Una<>n \'Ottd 7S.S, with th~ 1bstent1on 1u Md .the ltGPNt bnmedaa&ely, officiils 1d The deciuon followtd qrmQcnt bttwttn unlonund state-owned Bntuh l Of'P to allo 00&1 hipm n to rue1 ta cd Ravel\ rala tccl plant m tland - • .. ... alloonlst makes it . ut ~ket~~·~ with 1 0-story tall balloon in wees f ~OME (AP) -American looniat Joe W. Kltllnaer, endina Ute fint solo balloon crouina of the ~tlantic, crash landed today near v6na in nonbcm Italy and •P. ~ntly suffered a broken foot, tneucs reparted. Aft NBC News tclcvUian crew, 1~001 the fint people to :reach Kittiqer after be landed an trees on a mounwnaide, ~Nd the it\Jur:y to The Aasoclated Presa in Pari1. . The televiJ.lon crew said Kittinaer was bcina taken by helicopter to a hosj)1~l m Nice, France. Earher repons 11ld Khtinaer bad landed..ulcly. An Itahan aviation official reached ----------------•Jt!>!> ,J>J~S2!!;r ! Celebration. Bring ttil• Id end I receive 1100 off any of our prog· ram1. Call today. Thll offer won't· I tut long. , · I M?..U. I ~..-couwn . •• TOW9fa ~. ~ I ,,, ___ ._ .. _,.,. COMPANION WANTED ~nadlan bom consultlnc en&tneer. 6', 180 lbs, 40's, recently divorced and without custody of children, fluent In French, about half way throuct\ a law decree. member 9f Mensa. private pUot. exceptlOnaJ tennis player. en)oys skllnc fi'om mountain cabin explortnc In motor home, camplnc In hleh Sierras, travels frequentlr In Europe, loves music and concerts and plays several muslca Instruments. needs lo"I walk& on the ~ at IUl\Set. would like to meet trtm ind athfetlc lady with merry personality. eood educ.lion and successfUJ career. look.Inc for Iona term relationship and poalble rnurlqe and flmlly, nonsmo\er, who Ilk.es to sld, to hike and especially to trnel P.O. BOX 18888 IBVINE, CA 92714 THE RELAXING SOUNDS OF ·THE HARBOR KDCM 1D!l.1 FM STER ED • I • • A 11 · Ill DM ....... NtWJM ...... • .,..._.1IOO ' .. by te&eohone at Genoa's Crittoforo COiombo Airpon id the balloonht bro~t hit 10-story, hehum-fllled craft, the ROile O'Grady, down Mfely in an open field abOut five milts northwest or Savona on the Gulf of Oenoa at 2:0I p.m. {5:08 a.m. PDTI. ••He had some difficulty because of cont~ winds., but be landed without any complication," 1a1d lbc official who asked not to be ident· ifled. He said Kittil!Fr, S61 was in load physical condition aft.Cr the flian1, which beaan Friday in Maine. Four helicopters-two French ind two Wut German -were quickly ~•Pllebed to the landina site to help KittirtfCr, the official said. K.itttnaet, S6, of Orlando Fla., fl reoord-boldina balloonist and para- chutist who was a decorated military ... jet pilot in the Viet91m war. · Six other men had tried and failed to crou the Atlantic alone 'in balloOns, and two of them died in their attempts. • Kitti~r's neartr 84-hour lliaht bepn Fnday in C'.anbou, Maine, and was the lonaest ever by ono person an a balloon, according to the blcku~ team. Jim Serna of tht learn s beadquanen at Weather Services Corp. in Bedford. Man., said the JoelUttqer fli&ht ~v~r~ more than 3.SOO miles. 1AccorClin& 10 Guinness Bo(>k of Records, the 10~1 balloon flight of any kind was S,208.68 miles by the Double Eaale V helium balloon 1n the 1981 during the first balloon cro · ng of the Pacific Ocean from Nqashima, Japan, to Covello, Cahf. A heavy cloud ~•lin& at around 6,000 f cet covered most of the western Mediterranean near the French coast with occasional rain shawm but as Kittinger moved east be found clearing skies. SOUTH COAST FITNESS & P.HYSICAL THERAPY Immediate Rnults EXIAClll THI IAIYWAY v 111 abs .... ,..., 8dmulatlen ti' UVA luftt9" ... Tan to• Golden Btown .................. 8ulld mUada WlthoUt pUmj)ll'lg Iron ..... NutrttlaNI .......... Ceunt ... LAaa, ... Coftttol PHYllCAL THERAPY • ~ Adjuetmentt • ,,_IC*ltle Exerdlel • M--oe • Spinal Trec:t,IOli • Ultruound, t"'9 , • Hydrothlir~ ·~In Sport• lnjur• Mbsr INSURANCES ACCEPTED • -·- • HOO I . llfUIT~ 8Tf 100 l'l • 110.loun.COAIT~ Coast Bank 8ulldlnt 545-3478 I Sov·et defecto 'flees' to Russia He c aims Bntl h captured, drugged and tortured nlm ··························********** • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ~ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • BEAS ICE SKATING AT ICECAPADES Leam to Ice Skate Ice Skating LcSsons at an Ice Capades Chalet arc a ·self improvement program that combines fun, fitness and the . thrill of performing f~r family and friends . ENROLL NOW Quarterly ltates For Los Angel .. And Orange Count!" -SuOCaS.Dd&r .U ~w:tibte ----~e Male ~mal " 2 Party 3 Party Under ll 14850 17220 28755 394 20 30 44 21300 24375 40200 54135 45·~ 32190 ~-;ry 00690 . :2960 55·64 43260 50265 82215 ~.35 ssoo CalencW-.U Dedlledble Age Male r Female ' 2 Party 3 Party Undel 30 111 75 12960 21600 296.40 30 « 16005 183.15 -31485 407JO I 45-54 242 10 280~ 456 JS 548.70 SS 64 32520 378 lS 618 00' 716.10 I I II lin .. TwoHBwomen lead battle for individual r,ights · A pair of elderly HuntinJton Beach women arc the unlikely heroines in a battle that pits individual freedoms against a community that has mistaken majority ruJe for democracy. The war zone is the Cabrillo Mobile Home Park at the edge of the Pacific Coast Highway. The issue: Can the parlc•s homeowners as ociation force Betty 'fecters, 55. and Sarah Leavitt, 66, to pay $10 a month for cable television hookups they don't want? We don't watch it, we don't like it and.we won't pay for it. Teeters and Leavitt say. . . The homeowners association signed a contract with a cable firm and assessed each of the 45 homes in Cabrillo $10 for the service. People in 43 of those homes apparently thought it was a pretty good deal. Only Teeters and Leavitt balked. The park -on state-owned land and managed by an elected &f9UP ofvideophilic residents -threatened to evict the ladies, reconsidered an ct ordered their rents raised $1 0 a · month. Management claims the rent increase is not a disguised cable TV fee. Just a coincidence? Perhav.s. but it is a suspicious one. Only Teeters and Leavitt got rent-hike notices. In the meantime, the TV lines have been laid, the signals have been translated and in 43 mobile homes, fathers are cursing MTV, wives are cursing the Atlanta Braves and children are cursing Cable News Network. The good life has arrived. They're as happy as they can be, and they can't wait to inflict their happiness on Betty Teeters and Sarah Leavitt. A little power can go a long way -as far as a homeowners association president's head, in this case. If Teeters and Leavitt don't want to buy cable TV service, they shouJdn•t have to buy it. It's not like garbage colJection service; there is no danger to their neighbors from their non- participation. But there is a very real danger in a self-important gang of Gilligan•s Island rerun junkies imposing its will on two women who chose simply to stand apart from the crowd. Betty Teeters and Sarah Leavitt are reminders to the homeowners association that ~ovemment, at any level, exists to protect the rights of the individual, not to suppress them. • Khomeini's ailing, successor a riddle Speech stopped rumor ayatollah suffered a stroke WASHING TON -The aging Ayatollah Khomeini has been re- JACK AIDERSON ported to be on his deathbed at least a Khomeini .. could handle another dozen times since he took power '"• wife," which suggests the problem Iran more than five years ago. isn't as senous as reported. Now be has emerged once again One thing mtelhgence sources do looking bale and hearty after a flu rry kno~ . is that K.homcuti's heart of reports that he is ailing. spec1ahst. bas made ~ve~I house Intense speculation continues in call s to his famous paue!lt in recent Western intelli~ence circles OD the weeks, The VISltS arc relatively easr to state ofKhomem1's health -and on log, because thedoctormustcancc all which of several potential successors his regular appointments when he is appears to be in the best position to summoned to Khomem1's side. seize power when the ayatollah finally But for all the SUS&estions of his dies. d1vm1ty, Khom.ein1 1s under no Since Iran 1s a closed society. the 11lus1ons that he 1s 1mmonal. Several experts' assessments remain only months ago. he wrote a secret will, to speculat1on But this much J can tell be opened only after hi s death. It was you: widely bebcved that the will named Dunng the summer. reports flo~ed Khomeini's choice of a successor. regularly into the State Dcpanment But my sources repon that as- suggcstmg that Khomeini was at the scmbly speaker Hojatohslam Rafsan- pomt of death There were even Jani sneaked a look at the document reports that he bad died but that the and was dismayed when he found no fact was being kept ~cret while ~es!pate~ s1;1ccessor m it. Rafsan- succcss1on was being decided. Jani s choice 1s Ayatollah Montazen. Khomeini spiked these rumors bv but he has so far been unable to malong a few pubhc appearances 10 persuade Khomeini to give Mon- the lllst couple of weeks. Indeed. tazcn his offietal blessmg .. Foggy Bottom sources told my as-The State Departm~nt s morning soc1ate Lucettc Lagnado that Kho-line ~akes Montazcn the favonte. me1ni's televised appearances were Cons1dere_d a dark h<?rsc 1s President deliberately designed ··to dispel Khamene1. who has httlc but hJS own rumors that he 1s dead .. ambition going for him. Hts appearance a few weeks ago Another candidate 1.s Khomeini> rewarded the pre>fess1onal Khomeini-son. Ahmad. who 1s believed to be his watchers with one. nugget of specu-father•s favonte It 1s.?I~ considered lative gold: Although Khomeini posSJble that Khor_nem1 will be suc- stood on his balcony and sm iled as ceeded. at least 1n1t!ally. by a commll- usuaJ, his speech was read for him. tee of nvals JOCkeymg for position. The ayatollah. who has nover shirked ~hatever the outcome, m- h1s oratorical respons1b1ht1es. spoke telhgcncc. cxpens foresee u_nrest and not a word to the faithful disorder m post-Khomeini Iran. This anomaJy lent some we1ght_t~ WATCH ON WASTE: Pentagon reports m mid-July that. Khome.in1 poohbahs msist they're not squander- had suffered a mild stroke Lack.mg ma the bilJions of dollars the Rea~n hard evidence. though, 1ntelhg~~ce administration has been throwina experts lean t?ward the poss1b1hty their way -but ~metimcs you have ~hat Khomem1 s summer ailment -to wonder. Consider the doorbells at 1f indeed there was one -more likely Bolhna Air Force Ba~: was a heart attack for decades. Air Force families Then. only la t week. Khomeini housed at the ·little airfield near add~ professional Iran-watchers by Washington. DC . have man~ed to ~1kin1 ~me ~nonal appearance get alona without doorbell\. Visitors and meeting with a aroup of Western imply knocked. But now. With reporters. . money to bum. the Air Force ha Secret 1nt~l!1gencc reparts assen dctidcdtogiveeachofthel.340units that ~~omcin1 suffer) from another tts own doorbell. Winna and in~t.alla­ condltlon not uncommon for an 84· uon arc expcct<'°d to <'0~$200.000, year-old man: severe prostate prob- lem . But the ayatollah"s person I Jict Aadtnoa Ir • 1)'11dic1ted phy~1dan has rcponedl> Joked that Cftl• 1 L · ORANGE COAST ~ailJPilat H. l . Schwartz tu - Pvob11l , Frank Zlnl M l\IQ!flO c l 01 Tom T I cu, Ea; QI • ··.oocon uinersreallycaremorea'bout tl1eauth nUcJtyofaMlcha 1 Jackson tape than thequall(yof atrcrafttnstrom nt on which they take both their live nd th def en oftlJelrcountry?" -~ ~S&'S l'M NOT ~ITINO ... j> Costa: Mesa owes prosperity ~~~~~!~ ~~~~~~~ungan d shoppina mall. And SCOTH of lesser superior ju ge bwldmgs which all produce sales Wt --~· --of which about a fifth goes to the and good friend city of Costa Mesa. --Sometimes I think. the city is too One of the d1fficulhes of editing a rich and, particularly, I doubt the newspaper 1s that, occasionall y. two wisdom of the way it spends. But local ·leaders will die near the same there's no question· that. Donald date and thus create a competition for Dungan·s contributron to the city of Costa Mesa was great mdced. space and attention '" the news-But that's not all. When he became papers. ,• a judge of the Municipal Court he So far as the editors of Oranae continued to dispense logic. County daily papers or even of One of his arcat achievements was newspapers nationwise, there was no to rc<X>gnizc that the way to make doubt whatever how to display the drivers on the highway do better was stor; about J Robert Fluor. Not so not, necessarily, to punish them but the death of Judge Don Dungan. So to improve their dnving habits. far as the Orange Coast Daily Pilot 1s I remember well an occasion on concerned. 1t never occurred to 111c which a police~n chl!'Jed me with that Judge Dungan's modesty would exceeding the speed hmit. I was ha ve been carried over to the obituary furious, so I hi~ a lawyer. My case that was inserted 1n the Daily Pilot by was set for trial. Before Jud&e the funeral director. And maybe the Dungan. newspaper's "morgue" was not con-Before the tnal date the lawyer said suited. Hence. the story about Judae to me. .. I've told the judJC that it Dungan was not given sufficient ·m1&ht be better to set this case in 1mponance. another court because your lon&llme I blam e myself. Not because I have fnendship may be embarrassm1 to any ed1tmg responsibility anymore in you both. He replied, 'Ask Walt to the Daily Pilot, but It never occurred drop by and sec me in my office.'•• He to me that, asamicus curriac. lshould didn"t use the hiabfalutin Jenn call the new editor and alen him to "chambers," so I did w. When I aot thciull story. there he smiled and said. "Walt, I Fact of the matter is that mo t of don't care whether you e~cceded the the prosperity of the city of Co ta spttd limit or not. I just think yc:>u'll Mesa's government is due to Donald agree there's no sense tn havrna a Dungan. broohaha that will just make copy for WALTEI Bu11oucHs ' Law SChool at the University of California, which is generally re- cognized as being the top law school in the West. I well remember when a JOVcmor offered to make Don a Supenor Court judge. With his usual modesty be declined. I don't know his exact words -but his reason I know. He tbouaht he could .. do food" in the court where he was scrvma. Just recently I was talkins to Selim Franklin obout another matter Selim, as you know, is a ·•1ocat boy .. who is a Judge on the same court as Don Dungan. The matter I wu talkina to him about brouaht forth this comment: "l wish we could talk to Judgt Don Dungan. He has the most brilliant mind ofanyone I have ever met.•• I think so, too. So, vara con Dios, Don. I know you'll for&Jve the Pilot for Nnnina the story of your death on paae two rather than page one. Walin ••t:r'M6k h 1 dte Pll•t'1 '°'"""~· . THOMAS LIAS column lat THOUS ELIAS This sort of fraud can kill Bogus vacuum tubes could a.ff ect aircraft operations Much ado has surrounded efforts to halt video ond movie piraoy, the illegal marketing of illicit copies ot movies, video and audio tape'i Anyone with a video cassette recorder is considered a potential pirate. Yet no one has ever even chaf'&Cd that such piracy hurts anyone any- where except in the pocketbook.. But there's another type of counter- feitina under way today, a busines that could prove much more fatal to ' the public. And no one in California has paid any attention to the quiet efforts to stop it. This counterfeiting operation in- volves spare. parts for airplanes and electronic aear. It apparently centers in California, · but came to liaht in Ohio. where the Air force, tlie Federal Aviation Administration and the National Aeronautics and Space Adminis- tration maintain a stockpile of air- craft components called the Defense Electronics Supply Center. The problem surfaced when dozens of electronic vacuum tube$ with ~ncral Electric, RCA, ITT, Litton, SyJvama, Raytheon and Western Electric trademarks were found to be faulty. The tubes arc used m navi- gation instruments. Officials returned many to the manufacturers, who determined that many defective tubes were 1n fact counterfeit or old, used tubes that had been repainted and pack.aged to look like new. . The trail of those flawed parts led to a Los Angeles parts distributing firm known as Aero 'Electronics. At the same tjme, court documents ahow. tubes .. were not working properly in Delta Airlines equipment." As yet. there is no definite evidence that the flawed parts found their wiy into the aircraft of any other line. But the frequent tales of video piracy make it clear that wben countcrfeitina becomes easy, it also becomes commonplace. And court documents show the Aero Eiectronics operation wasn't terribly difficult to set up. The documents, filed after the distributor was r&Jded by federal marshals and General Electric law- yers, showed that all it took to run the operation was a few mct!I stamps to affix bolus trademarks; files to te· move old trademarks, spray paint to make old tubes look new, imitation manufacturers• boxes printed at a nearby shop and a pile of old or surplus tubes. There is no question that some of the refitted and resold tubes malfunc- tioned in aircraft, althou&h thcrc·s tlo evidence that any. d~ths or damqe resulted. No one knoM how many other, undiscovered t>oaus parts arc in place today, or the potential they bear for damage. But teams of federal investigators arc now at work in both Los An&elcs and the Silicon Valley. Greed obviously motivates such counterfeit pans operations. just as it does v1dco and audio pirates who hope to make bia money quickly. But even before they're caugh(, the makers of bogus vacuum tubes don't a]71>eaT to be getting rich. Coun documents filed by Aero Electromcs indicate the firm's profits JlVeraged less than S•.OOO a month dunng the ~ear before it was raided. . More important is the lack • of publicity' accorded the counterfett pans story. Or do consumers really care more about the autheriticity or Michael Jackson tape than the quality of airtraft instruments on which they stake both their lives and the def en of their country? ftom•• EIJu u • Sui. MoaJc.· ,,.. eolUJllllt .. '"'' ,, . The story published heretofore did your competitors an the news busi· say that Don wat Co ta Mesa's city ne . Whydon•tyou,asafavortome. attorney. He was, but what be did just qree to go to traffic school?° then for tht city almo t passes belief. "How a favor to you, Donr' I As most public relations people will a ed. tell )OU, the Costa Mesa city aovcrn· Don replied : .. Asajudgc I want to ment is ldom hort of money. • do the best I can to <'Ure some of the 8 crocs ln a grave Bob Unacr. the city manager. wasa problems on the highways In ad· very sharp tnd1v1dual who could dition to avoiding a trial, I'd like to envision many ways of bnngana • point out to other pt<>plc who have continuing now of money to ttic new tht option of aoina to traffic sd1ool cit).• At the lune the Sqrmrom that )OU cl ted to do so C\ en though propert). where uth Coa t Plan is you were ure thett was no ca now loc.attd, ' JUS a hu e bean a.-in~t )'OU. When > u set throuaJl field . It wa pan of no c11y.,ust pan of with the hool, do me another favor. • the county. Bob cnVl 1oned what Tell me what }OU thank of the tt'lffi<' could be done Wlth .such v11t acrt'qe. hoot. .. He was also harp enough to know he That wa )CUI IJO. or course, but I n•t the grrate t prcxntcr himiclf, did so and I was to impressed with the \he was 1nclinro to talk 100 much information that was 11\en and how ab6ut himself. he called an Don 1t was 11vtn that I wu more than Oun n nd. with Unacr. Don pleased to recommend 1t. r>u n hu 1n th and, throu&h OOn wa 1 tNl)' rcmarbblt at· h r I · c, " blc to ho the tomey and an vcn more remarbblt Btrom (am1ly the d\an to JUdge. them or lemn much of thctr I nd He a a araduatc of Bo:lh Hall .. Each arave contains ei&ht cm· balmCd crocodile - a lither. 1 mother and i1t young. And there are thousands of those ~ves. This describes what archeoloaists dUft up at Tebtynis 1n Ea\'-pt. Why the anaent f.l~tians w flt~so cctrmoniously to bUry all tho fam1li of croco<li I do not know. Nobody can be urc hOw well • horse Wiil do the fint tame 11•senttted in a Derby. The l"ICt is a mtle and 1 quarter. Tra ners don•1 wsh &heir untned h that hafd befotthand A. Nine out of 10 Mcxi n have some lndtan blood. A th photographer round yo r scatter to like a picture Of I lf'lln f sand a mil away. That' cqu1valel\1 to the problem <'onft'onted by astronomy photographers wh n lh want to phot~ph a star 1uch s. Be~iltUSie which is SOO liaht years d1s_t'ant. • ' . ' .. , • , • D1Uy Plll1 TUESD ... Y ANNLANDEM92 ENTEltT~U BUSINEllBS Know details of Medicare coverage • By SUSAN MONAHAN D911f""CMll$1 JI! I "When 1 talk to ae:nior ci'tizeo aroups. what most people want io hear about is Medicare,•• 11)1 Samuel Nodarse, a Social Security represen- tative in Santa Ana. Usually familiar wlth the proaram in seneral, many people are uncertain about 1pecifica ortbc covcrqe, he added. . cause. "The Medic.are cla.ims process has two ~rts," 11.id Nodarse ... Pan A is hospital insul"lnce and Pah B is medical in1ur1nce. •• Under Pan A, Medicare benefits e~tend to in-patient care in a hospital or skilled nun.in& facility, home healthcare and hospice care. Nodane is most ofteh asked how Medicare determine< the lenatb of a benefit period. Medicatet9ven l00pen:entofthc- fint60 day1 of a hoJpiW stay, ~xetpt for a SJS6 deductible charp which lbc patient ts responsible for ... Aftv 60 days -and only a very_ small percentqeactuall stay the Ml 60day1 -the petlOft starts pe.yina ClO-insurance .. " said Nodar.e. 'bospnal cost>. Should !he poti<nt require funber ~Wi7Jltioo, there ii a once.oin-a-lifcnme reecrvc of 60 days. The pert0n •oukS tbco pay $178perday. Ln1 in lhc bosp1W fot 60 OOOleeQUYC: da)• ~· .. fmb b<ndit pt nod ube or tht tt lat.er re-admttled. .. We're -ttSPODMbM. for 100 perctat qain, except for the S3S6 deductibk." Some confusion i senen.ted be- BACKTALK Weak feet mean you can't win Stress., poorly fitted shoes create structural imbalances Did you know------------ that well over 85 percent ofall athJetes -especially tennis CARY and racquetball play- en -havc structural imbalance directly ROTHENBERG related to "Foot Proration .. ?' iliiiiiiliiliiiillilliiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiii A weak (pronated) foot foundation affects the entire body ... resultina ·in body imbalance which, in turn, affects performance. . Body_lmbalance simply means·that one side of the -bodyisstronaerthan the other. The weak side is usuaJlythe one v.itb the pronated foot. . Just think, walkina can put more than 200 pounds of pressure into the foot with each step, and the pretsure is increased to close to SOO poundsdunna running or jouin&. With foot imbalance, the suns put on the weak side on the body can cause a multitude of problems, includina arch, heel. knee, hip and low back pain. Additionally, shin splints and lea cramps can result Thia means lhit &om the 61 st to the 90th day, Medi<are will cover all bul $89 per day of the 1,pproved Because of this. your body's performance cannot reach maximum potential. Foot pronation is an all too frequently overlooked. problem in the athlete. Of all the Dr• Wllll•m Bracciodleta blomcthanical troubles facing the athlete, pronation is one of the most common. This, however, is only part of the problem. - Inadequate .footwear superimposed on the "biomechanical" problem o/the foot is the source of many ! HELP Yo uRsru While a be:ocfit period can be cxhaumd, the Medicare bcn<liu art .renewable; unlimited benefit periods for hos pi taJ or nunlna f'acility care are allowed. Nodane exi>lained that the patient who is djschafltd after stay- · Oo the other band. u a patient is cludw,..i bcr ... the 60 days have been used up, Ulen re-admitted. "We'll aive 100 pen:eot coverqe qain, and they don't hive to ~y the deductible tbJt time. 8¥1 We start Notice body's si Iials, . you ean preven ·stroke When symptoms go away, people assume problem disappears Bf KAREN E. KLEIN Oii .. °""'" ........ It was a frustratina experience for neurolojist William ·Bracciod.iet.a, M.D., to have to treat 1troke patients after the fact. Of ~ns who have bad strokes, Bracaodieta said, a third die within the fint year after the stroke, another third live but need 24-bour care and assistance with even the timplest tasks, and the final third can live alone but-ncarly-eU--tetain some deficicn~ resu.ltina from the stroke. Bracciodieta., wb·o has offices in HuntinJton Beach, Wcstminsier and Fountain Valley,said it was .. frustrat- ina 10 treat a disease which could have been prevented ... Although most people don't know it, Bracciodieta said, strokes arc .. totally preventable ... So this summer1 Bracciodicta de-- cided to "ao pubhc" with a stroke.- prevention.program be operates out of a Newport Beach office that doubles as a headache prevention clinic. The 39-year-old ·neurologist rec- . ommends everyone over SO have what he calls a "stroke profile" done - a physicaJ examination, neu- rological evaluation and carotid ultrasound test. Abou1 lajf of lbc people who eventually have strokes have had stroke warnina sips, Brxciodieta said, but "like most people they a.re optimistic and they ipore little thi!!fS that come and ao. His aoaI by Pllnin& l ... ther • stroke profile is to screen out patients who have a hiah probability of stroke from the aeneral public Ind then perform funhcr tesll on them. Blockqes of fat, calcium or cholesterol in the carotid arteries (blood vcnels runnina tbroulh the neck that supply blood to the brain) arc the culprits that .cause a bi&b percentage of all strokel. Suraery to remove thete blockaaes. includinJ a technique for brain-wave monitonna during SWJCY that Brac- ciodieta pioneered, 11 easily per- ,.ormed. on the carotid arteries once a patient has hem identified u havirla the problem. Bracciodie\I said • some aroups have been shown to be pre.d..isposed to strokes. They are people who: •Are older than SO yean • Hav~ hi&b blood pressure •Havediabetcs •Arc overweiglu •Smoke Durina a stroke, the brain's critieaJ blood supply level drops danaerously low, Bracciodieta Kid. When that happens K(ore an actual 1trokt &akea place1 it may cau.te some of the warrunc lllN of .irote that he •YI people lbould be made aware of. -The mental warnina siarls include sudden bouta of drowsiness, lola of conlcioumesa,. confusion, memory tou. Jou or aarblina of speech, voice cha.net or ha1lucinatiOOJ. Olhcr warmn.,. sians •tr.ctins Ille head or CXtrcmltJn: Sudden head- ache, d.ittincts. double visio~ num~ DCSS of face. lips or tonpe. ~ty 10 speakins, f'acia1 <lroopina, eye closure. hearina or aiaht loll and weakness or tine~ in the body. Episodes, ;,, w . wamina siana1s appear and disappear, are known u .. tra.n.sient itchcmic altacb.., In the year after a TIA, a penom bu a 3l percent probability or. -· • 33 percent probability or another TIA and 33 percent cbanoe of no further symptomL If symptams ue praent, a peticnl should consult a nev--.;.t. Braccioclicta, who is a former director of the 1trokedin.icat Univer- sity of Southern. Califomia Medical Center, u.id too many of bis patients trunk a .tuokt is strictly .. an act of God. ~ don't llDow ii cu be in:venud. Lifestyle, medical bistofY, blood ""'""" level and ... all play • >ital put in strokes and when they occur, be said . foot INJURIES. Don't stint on shoes! The foot and ankle RENEW complex is extremely susceptible to sprain and poorly made shoes with minimal support will magnify risk of injury. YEAR RESOLUTIONS NOW Most athletes choose their shoes for J) 'protection, 2j 5 e f.! e m b e. r comfort, 3) suppQn, 4) traction, 5) balance and/or 6 1 1 i·k accommodationofinj·unes. But which type ofsboe is best 1 wa~ .s 1 e a Each type of ath etic activity may require a separate new May~~nt.•s be-I 1 pair of shoes. Make certain of the fit, choosina a sli&btJy cause it's the start of LINDA larger, rather than 1JD.lller, pair if you zu.ust choose. the school year or Further, fit the fOOt .l"rom heel to ball, nol from heel to because September A. ,.. • ., 1 lonaest toe. means fall and the ••• .:: .... ::-:~-~:;~=~ A .. Mprton's foot" has a short, hypermobile first r metatarsal which is said to produce a collapsin& of the promise 0 1 change of seasons. medial longitudinal arch and abnormal stress on the For whatever reasons, more people are likely to make second and third metatarsal beads. The leads to pain.and new commitmenu, start new projocu, make minor or occasionally stress fractures of metatarsals. major lifestyle changes and open their lives to new people The heel is a constant source of pain in many athlete5. and ideas this month. Bone bruises or calcancal (heel bone) periost1tis in an Theendofsummersign,a.lstomanythatit'stimetoget inflammation of the periosteum(oneofthe laycrsofbone) serious about this ... or that. on the under side o( tbe-heel bone ~used by re~titive · What are yOu going to do with your life? Even the trau~ to the bone. Treatment co~s1su of prolOCtin& the worst of procrastinators·among us are more likely to take heel 'Mth sponae heel pac;l~ or plas!JC. h~ cu~. . some actlOD now ... if ever. . Retnx:alcaneal bun1lis is ~n 1m~h6n with resulting 1 recently attended a .. relapse prevention" seminar 1nfl~mmat1onof~ebu~(flu1dsac)11tuatedbetwecnthe where invited guests were recovering a1coholics and/or ~chilies tendon. tnsertton and t.he calcaneus. Ti:eatment . drua users. All were graduates ofCareUnit, Inc., an alcohol 1 involves prot~ng the area,apmst preuure:lhi• can be and drug_ rehabilitation hospital. Dr. Joseph Punch, ~one ~Y rcmovu~g or soften1n1 t!'e counter of the ahoe or medical director or the hospital and nationally acclaimed. 1nscrt1na a plasU<: he:iel cup or sponae-prad to elevate the alcohol tt:hab guru, approached his Dock with charac-- affected area so that 1t does not rub on the counter of the teristic hufnor. (PleueMe A'J'.BLBTJt8'/BS} "'Go to A.A. (Alcoholics AJJonymous) whenever you PAPARAZZI ---- Bren_'$ Basjj:· best y_et . .. .......... . After Petar Uebenotla eteod IM cnottd rw a11d applaaded ~ 01,.plc aelllenmeow. ' .By VIDA DEAN °"" ..... ..,...... . It had to be the biggest tent thissidcofRingJing Brothers.. There were nationally famous celebrities. some of California's leading Politica1 fiaurcs and Oranae Cpunty's most prominent government, business and social personalities-about 11400 in all, decked out in western prb. They had come to ueren's bsb". or more officially, The Irvine Ranch 1984 Roundup i.n historic Bommer C...nyon where the company hasentertained1Uests for dCcades. And the 1111est list keci>' IJ'Owina. .. We'll always usk-lentf or this pany, .. said G•ry Hut, executive usisc:lnt to Irvine Co. Chairman 0-.ld Brea, "but, we'll probablyhavetokecptoabout t14001uests. The ncxtsizeupwould be a circus tcn.L" How bia was the ien1? Bia enough for the auesu to enjoy 1 sit-down dinner in oomfon with room for . . dancing. a huac bftndstand and room to spare for m1x.1na and min&lina. Wouldn't this rank as the larsest sit-down dtnncr1n county history? • After lrvine Co . .f>rcsidtnt Tom Nlellm said his .. howdys", chairman BrcQ introduoo! a few of the more ramousfolks. Wbm heannounotdPeler U"°"9~f . Olympicsf'lme.1ucsumpondedwilh1lcnatby .ltifld.inaovilion. With Ucberrolh(hc's now on lrvfne Co. 's board of dinocton)was his wifcGtqy. Olhenat tbeSaturdayniaht roundupwtrc U.S. Sen.PeteWlt"' tateTreuurerJeueUanlt., lite Controller It• Cory, Anomcy 0.oeral J• Vu De it.mpandwift.u4no.Rep.-rtl..,.••and-. R<J>. William o.-,..,countySupem.,nTom 1Ule7,Wllh£mmaJ-,Ranlt11WIMerwitblrvand 1,....Nt1 ..... wtlhPam.NtwUOC11ancellorJod (Pl--mVIRS/1131 know you should. Also, fO ju1t whenever you feel lite it," be said. And then, spea!Qna directly to the procrastinators in his audience (and so very many rccoverinJ alcoholics qualify). he.added, "The very best time to go is when you shouk! So and you DON'T feel like it" There's a message in his statement for the rest of us as well.· Procrastinaton of all types arc lilc.cly 10 assume that before they do somethina. they should have to f«I like doing it. Wait\ng for the perfect feelillf ends up bcin& nothina more than a terrific excUse to avoid taking actiDn. · Do you waste time thinking about thinking about doing something and then never doing it? Why you are stuck may seem academica.Hy intercstina but may really be unimportant 10 the process of Change. But since you're boUJ'ld to ask, I'll tell you the reasons. anyway. . Some people protrastinate because they fear failure and doina something new just sounds too risky. Others avoid chanse of any kind out of ianorance or confusion; they justseen unable to make a plan about bow to get frora here to there. Others are just plain lazy. I cart: much more, and so should you, about how you can chanae than about why you've acalmulaled. your b9d habits. Call your local community colleac or University Extension office for their schedule of classes. Lu and lllarlon a.tfacre liked m le. Oean oUt yourclosctlOdly. SW1 a new diet. Call someone new or an old friend you haven't teen io a while. Renew your health club mcmbcrsbip. Buy new unde~ar. Resolv~to tat hcallh.ily. Stop drinking. Stop smoking. Learn French or fendn.a. Start a walking prosram. Volunteer to help a worthwhile charity. Redecorate your Hvina room. Wallpaper your bathroom. Take your wife aWlly for the weekend. Ast your boss for a raise. Try a new haintyk or a new recipe.. Take a new job or at least send Out your resume. Plan a surprise for someone you love. • • • Resolve to 'tlltritc your own Se_paembcr song. Dr. A..l,p..n" is a m.m.,e and &mily rbtnpist in Coron.l'dc/ Mar. ·SM welcomes your rapon.ses. If you wish a TCply, please cndosea stamped, Jdf~ ftlvelope. Wnae to bcr c/o-9aily Pilot. P.O. Box 1.560, Costa Mea 91616. • -~ eoUt OAIL:.Y PILOTITU49SC1ay. 1 HE LP YouRSHF . _. Get motion .s~~kness? Try a medical patch New ~erslon of oldd~cuts side effects Many people exprriencc ..uncom- fortable symptoms of illness a~ sociatCd with the monotonous mo- tion of traveling in· a boat or an airplane or simply ridina in an automobile or bus. ·Among the symptoms of motion , ~ickness are light-headedness. fatigue and -most disturbing _.. nauSta (with or without vomitin.a). The exact cause is unknown but generaJly The U.S. Navy h s u ed drync.ss of lhc mouth -occurs in aryblunin1ofv1s1onandwjdcnu~of nant. • opolamine foq earno treat motiO!l aoout two-thm1s of the people. 'he pyplls (thedArtc. central part ofahe • ll 5lmuld not Kc used in people who BRENNAN CASSIDY s1cknc and a'>tronouts have used 1t DroWSlnc s occurs less frequently, in ere> This is not senous but it can be haYc Jlaucoma. ob tructaon of the to hdp reduce the act! vuy of n rve about one'51xth of the users Othc:r d1strac11ngand last for up to two days. tomach. intestine or urinary bladder: fibers in the mncr t":llr. Pre.v1ousl), th1 I . frequ~nt ide e.ffccts •nelu<;ic If you wtsh 10 oontrol s)'n'!ptoms for or metabolic, liver or kidney disea , . dru was available only an oral form d1soncntauon, a d1sturban~ m 1 ha .L. d d' wnh iSOmc disadvnncageou~ 1de cf-memory. dizziness or rcstlessncu. If onae.r t n u•tt:c ·~· 1 new •SC can fe-cts. these occur. you oon remove the patch be placed behind ttie other ca,r after Wuh the newer Trans:'.denn SCop an<l conUlct }OUr ph~sic1an. rcmuvmg :the fint pateh h s alw. ~ers1on a medicated patch is placed The patch is a mall adhesive disc c~nvement ~ceuse limited .e<>nt~ct consideredtobcad1sturban~1n the ·behind the ear and the ~me .drua thal)oupla on the hair-free unac~ withwatera5 mbathangorswimm11'.18 part of the inner car that help ~ople seeps through th<.-skin dulinga period of the skin at least four bour5 before will :not aff~t the ~ystert\. It ~111 maintain their balance. of up to three day6. boating, for example. It's important continue to work. There 1 an old drug produced in a Side eff~ts still may occur but Jo clean and dry the kin thoroughly You must be aware of some other new form that wall help all~iatc the since the drug passes through the kin ocfo~ applying the patch because precautions. Transderm Scop should c;ymptom ofniotionsidincssanmost a.taslower.rateoveramore 12rolon~cd some of the drug can get on your not be used by people who have an people. Jt 1s called scopolamine and time. the side effects-are less'lhan with fingers. . allefiy to SCO,P.91amine or by prtgnant the new forn1 is marketed ~s Tran~ 1nc oral form . If your fingers then come m contact women, .nursutf mothers or women deonSeop. The most common side effect -w1thyour.eyes,1tcouldcausetcmpor· wf,o are planning to bc<;ome preg- J t 11 also not safe to uso 1n children. Children and the elderly may be particularly aens1tave to the SJde eff ccts of scoPolamine. for further rnformation about this newly pcrf ectcd skm patclt for ~otion s1c1'ness, ask your pharmacist or physician. Brtnnan uusidy, M.D .• practice~ family and emeriency medicine m Costa Mesa. ~.Me·ssage to fathers: Show yoursonsyoulovethern IRVINE RANCH ROUNDUP ••• From Bl Pelta1ou and Su1aane also were among th~ 3~cial • guests. .. Last year, Glea Campbell was the surprise entertainer and there were unconfirmed rumors that he would be back-he was -and there was a double . · su11>rise. His penormance followed a 30-minute show b.Y·Helen Reddy. ago," saic;l Hunt. ·•Then we staned up again last year. . This one is almost three times the number of~ople here in '83." Others seen were MarloD gaou and Tony Moaiapert, Nora and Ciarlle Hester (he had playedJolfatBigC.anyon · earlier m the day behind Ueberroth's party), Carol)'D andMaary De W- ald (he played with Ueber- roth, he said as they dashed off at 10 p.m. to another party). Belllada and Baney Bane«, Amen Wanly,gaUaryn Tllompau, Marilyn Nielsen (Mrt. Tom), Barbara McQtlea (with .. . . . DEAR ANN LANDERS; I was moved to tears by the letter in your column from the mother who asked at what age a father and bis sons should stop exchang· A11 l.uDERS ingkissesandsaying.I••••••••••• "Ilov~you." Your reply wJS one word: .. Never." How right you were. A few weeks ago I kissed my son for the first time and told bim I loved him. U ofortunately he did 11-ot know i1 because he was dead. He had shot himself. The greatest regret of my life is that I kept my son at arm's length. I believed it was unmanly for males to show affection iorone another. I treated my son the way my father treated me and I realize now what a terrible mistake it was. Please tell your male readers who were raised by 0 macho" dads that it is cruel to withhold affection.from their sons. I will never recover from my ignorance and stupidity. -NO NAME, NO CITY, NO STATE DEARFRIENI): Your letter will make a greater lmpact oa t.bose fathers out t.bere t.bQ anyt.biD& I migbt uy. Life 11 peculiar. It waits until we fillllktbe coune and U.en it teacltes a1 t.be lesson. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS~Tbetetter signed "Just Threw Out a $6Calc:.e" made me so furious I bad to write. l share my recipes gladly and give the correct amoun~ of all ingredients. But rarely do the cakes, cookies, pies, sauces, etc., ofothers tum out as well as mine. Here's the reason: lfa recipe calls for 14 teaspoOn of something. I get out themeasunngspoonandm.akesurc 1 have exactly that amounL Most cooks will use an ordinary spoon and guess. lfthe recipe calls for 1 cup ofliquid. I use a measuring cup and notacoffeecup because it' shandy. (Most coffee cups hold 5 ounces ofliquid instead of 8.) 1 f the recipe calls for Jt 6-by-9-mch dish, I don't use a 7-by-9-inch. lfitcalls for butter, I don't use margarine. In other words. I follow the directions ~own to a gnat's eyebrow and never have had to throw anything out. I'm sure some people alter recipes because they don't want their "specialties" showing up all overtown, but almost always, if a dish fails to tum out right, it's the fault of the cook.-ON THE LEVEL IN RALEIGH DEAR ON: You've dJsbed out a 1enerC)ut dollop of common sense, for wblcb I th.ant you. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: After reading a great many letters in your column about where the nice guys are, I Jmewlhadtownte~ _ I spent four years in bars, looking for handsome, exciting men, fell in lovewith a couple and ended up dumped and ashamed. Finally I figured out that men who were wonhwbile have better things to dQ than sit in bars. Wome{l who want a man o(substance and good character should investigate small towns. Attend small- townmeetings and church affarrs. Do some trail biking. hunting and fishing. Most outdoor types and nature-lovers have better character than the boys in the bars. Don't get the idea t.hat country fellas arc dumb and boring. I met the most wondenul man in the world in a small town and we are having a great life. When I think of all the time I wasted in smoky taverns listening to a lot of boozy nonsense, I wonder where my brains were. Pass the word, Annie. -PORT HURON,MJCH. DEAR P Jr.: I can tell Y.Oa wbere)'ollJ' brains were- you were sitting on them. Thanb for a baring. I bope somebody listens. • • • Don't flunk yourchemislry test. Love is more than one set of glands calling toanother. lfyou have trouble making a distinction you need Ann's booklet, "Love or 5eJC and How to Tell the Difference." Send a long, self- addressed. stamped envelope with your request and 50 cents to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11995, Chicago, Ill. 60611. se.cret.comes out of closet With sexual promiscuity running rampant, I could not believe a letter I received from a woman this week who said she couJd not get t\er'coat hangers to reproduce. "I know how much success you 've had and wondered how you did it," she said. "I've tried everything from banging Burt Reynolds on the waJJ to spflying sexy perfume to hanging a nightie fr9m Frederick's of Holly- wood on a hanger. Nothing. Since you · are obviously a sex therapist for inanimate Objects, maybe you can tell me your secret The future of my closet ban~ on your answer." Good gi:iefl D1dn •t your mother tell you anything? SexualJy active coat han~ers are at their peak when they are 10 a small closet. The smaller the clo~t, the better. We once lived in an apartment with a closet so smalJ it couldn't support· a rod . . . just two nails. Within a week (the shortest gestation in the history of coat bangers) we had 37 of those little suckers. ERMA BOMBECK Don't look for fertility among ~Ci rt-covered hangers or sturdy metal slcirt hangers with the clamps. The rich hangers that can afford to produce never do. It's the lower economic hangers (like the wire ones that bend over double when you put a silk blouse on them) that are bearing. The ones that do best in my closet are the ones with no visible means of support ... the ones with the top made out of piano wir~ and the bottom of rolled-up cardboard. I call them one- night stands. They're to~Uy useless, but who has tqe heart to throw them out? Hangers left in cars do well . Especially the ones that take lodging under the brake pedal or book over the seat bell and flap out the window. You have to know that hangers in captivity never reproduce. You know, the ones that are welded to the rod in posh hotels. I don't know how it works, but 1 think they're neutered when they affix them so you can slide them out of the groove, put your jacket on them and fit them back into the slot. Some people have tried to trick hangers into reproducing by install- ing hooks and putting as many as 26 garments on the doorknob. Most coat hangers are too smart for that lfyou're looking for a hanger orgy, just open your closet and announce, ··rm moving next week." You'll get a population explosion you won't be- lieve. I've told you all I know. The rest you'll have to get from the gutter. ftad1e ' nadae k 'h!9ec. & COMPUTER UI ft I CENTERS .. , . . START-COMPUTING WITH OUR NEW COlOR COMPUTER! Low-Cost 16K Extended BASIC Color Computer 2 '159!~ LeMTV Create Vivid Color Graphics with Exciting Sound Effects and Music • Wrtte Your Own Program• tn the EMy-toalearn BASIC t.:•ngaup • UN OUr Program Pek• Certf1dgn for Education, Entertainment, Personal, • Flnendal •nd HouMhold Te-. • e..y to E;.1rpjnd • Attaches to Any TV • S.v• $80-Multi..Pak Interface Now Only S99.15 (12&:3024, Rij. 1179.9~ r Other celebrities included Eva Gabor f'my mother .. in-law." said Gafy Hunt. Shw was the house guest of Gary and Joanne.) There were Juaet Lelp and husband Bob Brandt, longtime friends of Bren who were celebrating their 22ndweddinaanniversary( .. l'U beat Robinson's · Fashion Island in Octoberto intr6duce my new book about Hollywood," Janet confided) and Beverly SUia in town at the Westin South Coast Plaza for the Orange County PerforrningArts Center's Topping Out Party. Mariachi and eountrywcstem music, oowboys on horseback and enormous amounts of hors d'oeuvrcs (withcooldrinks)wereawaitingguestsaftertheir journey down the ''dusty trail" (off Bonita Canyon). HELEN REDDY Bren), Lacllle gHu with. son David, Renee and Beary Segeratrom, Carl and Pat Nel1aer, Jadae Shella and Y &al SOaeuhlDe, Dick and Marilyn Bausman, Alex and Barbara Bowle (recalling her own tented party at SCR a week before) Vicki and Jim WUm.IDgtoa,DoloresandJobn Vlrtae,Sharonan<t Jlm HenwOod, Vin and Nora Jor1eo1en, Del and Bob Cllfford, Gil and Alli ta Fer1a1oa. After the social hour under the tall tree,s, guests walked down a "western town's main street" th.at took more than a week to create and was lined with store fronts and bales ofhay. 0 There arc 600 bales of bay here tonight," said Cbri1Llnd1ay, who was in charge of exterior decorations and tent interior. Inside tall poles had been eucalyptus-leafed; red, white and blue floral arrangements atop wagon wheel lazy susansccntered the round tables. A barbecue dinner (Pennington catered) was served family style-meat and chicken. beans, tamalepjeand fruit cobbler with ice cream). .. Since the Olrmpics it's easier to arrange a large pany like this, .. said coordinator Carol Campbell (she helped with several of those). 0 Tbe rentals have a taraer supply of everything now." · 0 There used to be an annual party until seven years Next year guests can return with their jeans well hitched-paning mementoes were gold beJt bQcltlcs. -l'OO-tD Wl(Jlp .. CINCINNATI PRESENTS tlh "Call Him Mr. S11attet'' (1975) IJDllONEWS e PeOP\£8 COURT (%)MOVIE Stullt Whl1mln. ,,..., Cult*lg. DCHIPS e WlD, WllD WOll.D OF "The Infernal Trio" (1974) Romy tDVEGAS I BJ/U)B() A*IAlS Setlneider, Mlchel Plccoll. I m&T8 OF SAN FfWQ8CO THf&'S Ct:MPNtf "9 CMLD 8EXUAL ABUSE: WHAT -8:30-LATENIOHT AMEflCA m BATTlESTAA GALACTx:A YOUR<H.DAEN 8HOUl.O KNOW (!)MOVIE 1:l9 fD 8U8INf.SS REPORT Cl> TIC TAC DOUOH * * "All My Oel1lng Dlughtn" G>OCEANUS 9 NEWS100,000NAMETHAT (1972) Robett Young. Rl)TllOtld Ma. ** "Eddie Maoon'I Aunn (1983) (J)C88NEWI TUNE ;·THE CON811MK>tt THAT -John Schnelder, Kit= l*NEWS ITHATGR. . (l)S'TIAMIATH: A At0M DICK VAN OYKE · 8A8f.BAU DEUCAT£ BALANCE YURIQ (A)MOVIE -•:00--10:00--u:ao-** "Y«" (1983) Reb Brown, Col'· IJWE/R emeNEWa (C>MOVIE lnne~ D THEA-TEAM I RETURN OF THE SAINT ***'h "Brian'• 8~1971) (S)PY 8 MOYIE THE OOH8T1MIOtt THAT .i... eun. 8lly o. Wi -uo-**** ''Glint" jPart 1...of 2) (1958) OBJCAT£ BALANCE -1~ mAUCE Elizabeth T lylor, tn111 0.0. !:0 1~ 9 MAQB. / LEHAER D 9 THREE'S COMPNtf NEW8HOUR 8 JOKER'S WILD **** "Jene James" (1939) =~YWOOO CB HUMNmES THAOOOH THE (!) WKAP If CN::INNATI ~Power,~ ART1l tDfmJAL.8 MEYEN.Y ***1A "WI Pnr(' (1988) Otllf1. ())NEWS (l)MOYIE flEUNION CONCERT ton Helton. Join Hadcttt. di THE'S COMPNtf H'A "Too Much, Too Soon" (1959) (A)MOVIE (D)MOYE 8 WHEEL OF FORTUNE Dol'othy Milone, Etrol Flynn. *** "Bid Soya" (1982) 8tMI ***'h "The Mullc M.91" (1982) 69 DICK VAN DYKE INOYA Ptnn, Reni Slntonl. Robert Prtllon, Shlrlly Jalill. CH)UOYIE CtU SEXUALAIUSE: WHAT -10:30-())MOVIE - ** "King Qf n. Mountlin" (1981) YOUR CHLDAEN 8HOUl.O KNOW e INOEPENOSfT NEWS * * "Monelgno(' = avlltOJjtllr Harry Hamlin, Joeepll Bottoms. !~OCKHIGH GMOTORW&K Alew, GenevtM . -8:45--11:00--12:»-(%)CHARLES OHAMPUN ON THE *** "DrlCllla" (1979) Frank Lan-1e.•llll!llBllNEW1 8 al LAT£ NIGHf wmt MVI> fUtSCEHE sr~enceO!Mtr. LETTBIMN -7:00-*** "A Streetcar Named Dlllrt" f/O#AN & MARTIN'8 tAUOtMN • ALfND HfTCHCOa( ecasNEWS ~=-IAlgll, Mll10n Brlndo. * ~~.,.· Anfi. PRE8ENT8 IHBCNEWS ~THAEEM&O LOVE BOAT **** "My Flir lldy'' (1964) Rex ~Young, Aly· taPENDBn' NEWS 8A8C~ Hll'rilon, ADdrey Hepburn. .MOYIE ~= • **1A "Ptptr Lion" (1988) Alen -a:ao-I IOIJO GOU>lll1 Alda, Lllnn Hutton. m THREE'S COMPNtf I()) M'A'S'H THE GOOD NEIGHIORI I lOYE, AMEAICAN l"M.E I WHEaOF FORTUNE TICT~DOUOH f90oor.& ATTMCnONI V<1fNIE. YO"tME. OF lME MIMI (!) LOVE 80AT MOTHEM: CAN'T IUY ME P.M.MABAZIE I EHTSITAINMENT TOHIOHT. ~..&.e -t:OO-. I EHTERTAINMEHT TONIOHT VIETNAM: A TEl.EYl8ION eMOVE JEJJIPA1f1f HISTORY . *** "The Wcw1d :\To ** "Counte111it Klier" (1988) .I-* !=&PLACES -·~ Gatp" (1982) Robin Wllllml. tty Lord, Shlrlty Knight. DQIHUNTER 8etll Hirt ~:le OF L.A. TODAY ···~ "Saini Jtelc" (1979) Ben 1111-11=~ Gmara. Denholm Elliot. NEWS ··~ "Dr~' (1957) Jett Qlln.. -7:30-MERVOAff1N dllr, JOlnne . 9 2 ON THE TOWN KCET .IOUANAl.: OOOCOUPLE eMOYE I a FAMIL v FEUD GENEMTlONI OFVIOlENCE 9 Mt; NEWS NIQHTUNE *** "Ga Of ~ .. (1982) EYE ON L.A. m ALf'RED HrrCHCOCK GMOVIE OMt tMn. lMlll cnn. WH~T'S COVERED BY MEDICARE?~ •• From Bl condition that was treated in the hospital. If someone meets the criteria, Medicare provides I 00 percent cov- erage for the first 2Ckiay stay and covers all but S«.50 per day from the 21st to the JOOth day. But the patient's oond1t1on may change dunng a stay in a nursing facilit , so lb.at he or she requires only lnetJ)tniJvc and Convenient Otanklnc W1ter Systems for Home and Pfoft! slon1I UM CALLNOwt custodial care. Should this occur, "(The claim) could go from beina approved to denied ... Pon 't assume that if you put someone in a nursina home that Medicare Will automata· cally pay for it.'' wams Nodarse. ··somethilil that has expanded 1s the homt he8lth care services for the person who required only pan-time nursing care .. .lt's theoretically poss- ible that Medicare would pay for an unlimited number of home health visits." Once apin, custodial care is not included. but the patient may t>e covered for the tcrviocs of a home health aide. "When I'm spcakina to aroups, I'll 1pcnd most of my ttmc on Pan B.'• said Nodanc. Unlike Part A. tbe medical insurance 11 not financed~ SOCial security taxes. bUt ia .-id for with general revenuesand premiums. It i5 not necessary for a pe:non to have paid into Social. Sec\lrity to Obtain Part B coverase: anyone Who is at lcasi 6S. a c1t11.m or permanent rn1&-nt and ~ $t4.~ per month m P-_rtmiums 11 eli&ible. · (Pan A covcrgc can also be obtained b)' someone who has .not paid 1n10 Social Security. lbt.it the premiumure SI.SS per month.) The medical insurance helps pay for docton' scrvioe5 and a number of other outpatient SCf'V)CCI, 1nclildm1 specth 'and J)hys1cal therapy. ··Pan B dOan't to :by benefit pcriOd • but by calendar ~r," ex- plaintd Nodarx. ..There as a $75 .. ... deducubJe per yur, and after that Medicare pays 80 percent of the approved rates (for approved ser· vices)." Misunderstandings oocur regard- ing how the approved rates are set, he added. "Some people think it means that Medicare pays 80 percent of whatever the doctor chaiJes," The Medicare carrier (in Oranac County this is Transamerica QC. cidental Life) actually ex.amines three ChafJCS before decidin& On an IP. proved ·or "reasonable" rate for medical services. The .. actual cha.rae" is the amount the patient 11 charaed by the phys- ician. Every year, the carrier reviews the actu&l'cha.-.. made by dodon in the area and determina each doctor's "customary charae" for each teperate service. The .. ercvailiq ~ .. ti the amount which is hiah enouah to cover the customary dia'Ja. of 15 percent percent of the phyucians. .. The appro~ rate 11 hued on the lowcat of those three\ Medicare will PIY 80 percent of that, '•id Nodane. He pointed out that locaJ SOcial Sec~'t ntativcsareavaalablc to '° sroups. .. mote people know about Medicare. the better they can ehop ror a :sunnlefuental nnliry if they want one,~--be 11 d. "'ii-;-,-hard 10 hop witely when )OU don't know what Meda re oovcn," Questions about Pan B roverqe alto can be 1nsnred by ran • amcr1c1 Occidcnlal at (800) lSl-9020. If' .. J -- INTERMISSION . - 'Sain Joan' stunning season opener for ·SCR MIJ .... ,_....., ....... " ...... r In .. Saint Joan .. at South Coaat Repertory. Whatever re may be harbortd bout Oeo Bernard haw'& " int Joan·· 1t remains dram ucally ~ul cmouonally mov1n nd intellectually t1mulat1ng exercise m thcalCJ' -and a fitutia choice for the opening producuon of South Coast Rcpcnory's 20th an· mvusary season. Generally acclaimed as the play· wnght'J crcaJcst work, "Saint loan"' lnK:CS the bnefbut tumultuous career of Joan or Arc as he leads the French forces against the oppressive En&h h In the Hundred Years War-only to be vilhfic(i by the Cathohc Church and condemnfd as a heretic. to be burned at the stake. Shaw'H'isionof pea ntgu1filled with di,ine 1u1darwc and sccurc in the knowltdJC that only 5he pan free her country 1s rooted in documented .history, however outlandish 1t may seem to a fint observer. Her nuliu.ry quest is ea ily ccomphSl)ed, but even she is PGJACrless to thwart the pious bureaucracy of her church -wtuch cannot countenance her professed one-on-one relationship with the Almighty. . At South Coast Repertory. director John Allison has fused the military. religious and philosophical poles of Shaw's epic drama into a stunning production which assaults the mind and bean simultaneously. Apinst the backdrop of Michael Oevine's &iaantic utilitarian stonelikc pillars. an exceptionally stro~ SCR cast performs with clarity and convict100. form m the role of the chlldi b milksop whom Joan crowns kjng of France. Tom Rosqu1 as mtoothly villainous as the Ear'l of WarwJo • bent o Joan's dcsuuctaon. Supcib llCfformanc.cs arc deh ercd by Kay e. X.Uter as the French b op cauChon. John.Davad Keller (look:· ing much like Shaw himself) the archbishop of Rei ms, Richard Doyle as the French commander at Orlcan and. ~culatly. Larry Drake s the fanatical En~ihsh chaplain whose uccess as WSNidk's '1ut man"' scars him Corhfe. · Lending solid support arc I. M . Hobson as the inqu 1tor, James E. Broadhead in a dual role as temporal and clerical authorities, Dan Kem u Joan's would-be protector in coun, Hal Landon Jr. as ti\( square who launches Joan's career aod SCR regulars Art Koustik, Don 'Jook (who•s apparently chaneed his name from Tuche after 20 years wttb SOR) and John Ellington all performing dual functions. South Coast Repenory bas enjo)cd tremendous suoocss over tts first two decades, and productions such as "Saint Joan" are hi&h among the reasons. This impressive launching CALLBOARD -The fountain Valley Communtt)' Theater will bold audit1ons for its fall production of "Heidi" Sept. 28 from 6 to 9 p.m. at the Fountain Valley Community Center and ScpL, JO from I to S po.m. at the Fountain Valley Recreation Ccnter .... tbe mUSical contains 20 to 25 pans for younptcrs from 8 to 2 I ~ears of age and all roles arc open_ • .call 847-J 108 for de1ails .... Only two negatives are present. both inherent rather than production difficulties, and both instances of the playwrisht becomina consumed by his own literary fire. Shaw's laborious ATHLETES' SHOES preliminari~ to the inquisition scene • • • burden the play unncccessarily and From Bl Violence fits in 'Hunter,' but not 'Jessie' cop show bis · bedchamber finale as an-shoe or inserting a plaSt1c heel cup or pon&e pad to d~"ltc uic atTectCd mu ticlimactic and superfluous, 5hatter-so that it does not rub on the counter of the shoe. iog the mood he has so laboriously The treatment of biomcchanical foot problems c:omists of the proper created. prescription of aood suwartinifootwear. orthotic supporu that maintain the In the central role of "the maid." foot in the neutral po11tion and corrcnive e,;errues aimed at resolvina the Ruth de Sosa makes her Eauity debut muscle-imbalance of the foot · an affair to remember. lfer Joan is This means stn:oatbenina exercises for the anterior JUbialis. tumbricals illiterate but illustrious, voici na and interossci m usclcs. Also a goc?d stretcbiog prosram for the posterior ttbial scrambled syntax with traces of an muscle group and plantar fascia ts indicated 10 cues of ti&htncss. Irish brogue in normal dialogue, but An alternative to the ri&id onhotic is the prncnpUon of spinal pelvic unbending in her devotion to her stabilizers, or power 50les, by your chiropractor. The nwn diffcttnoe By FRED ROTHE, BERG U hlevlllCMI Writ• . Lmdsay Wagner, v. ho \US go10g· fo onginaJly intended series; is gratu-special duty. De Sosa is a tat her finest between these and the rigid orthotia is in the finina of the support. . explore the mental side ot cnme and 1tous. lt's violence for violence's sake. in the inquisition scene, physically The power soles are fitted with the athlete in a ~t-beari.ng 1>9si~on <nmc-~l"1fl~ •·They bought a l)Olice show with a tnd psycbologically sbrtdded but and tlie mold is cast of the feet. BOth Products have bicen found by athlcles to •• Je s1e." we thought, y,as not going ~ychiatnst, an$! that's the rub; that's with her spirit defiantly intact. have merit and a trial of dtber one is indicated in all athletes suffering from to be anotht•r hour of demolition wh) their requirements were so Ron Boussom. who has cmtted a an undiagJ)oscd and untn:aled biomcdlanical foot problem. derbies and hoohng g.allent~ It also specific," said producer Richard St. repertoire of quirky characters for \\as not srung to be another hour of Johns. "Psychiatrists don't normally 'SCR datina nearly back to the Dr. CMy Rothenbcri. a Huntington lkac:h cbiropractOr, isbosr of"'&ct urb:in \ arfarc. There would be ~ct us get ·involved in a lot of action." theater's inception, ts at the top of his Talk. .. • h~tb talk ~OJV ar 7 p.m; Tuesda}'5 on cabJesysrcm Chan¢1 JO. and a de en-a different loolo.:.· .----------------------.-----...----------------------------.....__ But tonight'~ opening episode be- gins \\1~ four pohce car roanng through the :ur Jessie. the brain" cnn\ebusu:r. gets threatened by a hotgun, oes on a high· pttd car chase and ends UJJbcing attacked b} a kmfc-\\1eldmg slasher. "\fld Jessie doesn't h'l:l' in Tu~on nn) more. She's mo\ed to southern ( ahfornaa. B saad ll wanted an urb:in look 11 ms onl} the inner Clt'li or .Hawaii nre nght fur police shCl\\S nO\\, not :ind nzona. fhc changes all tern from nct"'ork mterfercnce. \B thouiflt the pacing of the onginal ~npt wa .. too slow and 1t feared too intelhgrnt a 'lerics, so the nct"ork ordt>red at lca~t one action equencc C\Cf) l.S minutes. The HOie nee. "hi ch docsn 't fit 100111.ht' :,.too u1 the chara<'ter of the RUFF ELL'S UP OLSTERY, lllC. For The.«esl OI Ycu Wt 1922 HARBOR Bl.VO COSTA MDA -!141·115' lUXlMY THfATHS Frnt Twe Ml1Ja11 ~iftlS * Oltl Y IZ.1S U._ lloiM ltoll Lowe OXIO"D 8LWS (f'la-1• At h10 3:15 1 11$ 7:30 .. t :J5 RED DAWN (PG-la) SllOWllt 12,30 3100 5:30 t :OO .. 10:30 Clll\t hstwood ,. TIGHTIH>N (") Sllows at 12:35 2 :)1 5 :20 7:50. 10111 8111 Murr1y Oan Aykroyd OMOST•USTIUtS (PG) SllOWI ,, 12:25 2:•0 ia:U 7 :25 t :S0/70 MM DRIVE -INS m~ STADIUm a TH•WOMAM 1" ltCD ('1119-1, ....,, •acn_•~ 1rty (It) "IEY'IDl8• o~ ..,. .. HAm (IQ ,.ut "orky't (It) PURPL.a RAJ .. ~-) INDUUIA IOllD a...... • .... U. IN) ~ T ..... "' oee.. (flt8) "".., Co-ftufure AT 12i41 3 i0 Sllows 1t 12100 2::10 Tiii LHt St1rfl11\t1r(..O) 5~2~0~~~· s:oo 7 :30 a. 10,00 lo.JD • IN 70 MM "'HIN tall" (I) IMUtrtlm 1"00 UO 61111. IJO. IO~S "IOUlt" • ....... 11 .... •MUTS111H 11!0.J IUJO. 7&~ rto• la HABRA .. ~~ .. I:lll D .• "· · MISSION WARNER 1il.JI:U .. 1r •. ~ ra -· • NEWPORT BEACH • CllnWTWID !1lll1llft"' Cll TW111S UO ALL SEATS $2.00 AT EDWARDS EA, mwuos WESTIROOK • COS TA MESA • lD"MOS _, ._ w )101 HMIOi T • • £l TORO • SADOlCBACll SD••~ t"!I I, .... !>II ~ " I M OrMgt Cout DAILY P GORDO GARt"IELD THE FAMILY CIRCUS "Hi1 Grandma! Wanna hear my T arzon yell?" MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson 'This Is the master bedroom, Marmaduke. Old you get that? ... the master bedroom." MOO MULLINS ~----AJA NUTS TME'( TMINK THAT SHORIN6 SOUND AB<J.lf '(OUR OLD DESK COMES FROM TME AIR COHDfllONIN6 • • by Gus Arriola by Jim Davis ..... "Now where do you suppose that dog got this dollar bill?'' DE IS THE MENACE Hank Ketcham • by Ferd & Tom Johnson TME KID5 CALL IT TME '' SNORIN6 6MOST '.' ••. NO OHE WANTS TO 60 INTO TME 8UllPIN6 ... by Charles M. Schulz I TMINK rTS ALL~ ~SING, Slit .. .. by Tom K. Ryan ~SfMRYVFPN1S. -~tf\k;MKJ"CH IN YAf'JPCl""fY- UOUOI. ; AFt;1 \ I ON•: l IT lloth vuln r ble oulh dtoal ORltl +Q'U • KQ3 O KQH • A6.f l'H.S1 .. ;As I' +s •K 914 0 19.U 0 IOU 0 97U 0 4 •J093Z • J87 OllH •A J I083 0 A87 0 102 .• KQ5 lht bidding: • 91Juth WHt Serth Eaat I+ Pan 2 0 Paa• 2 NT Pa11 3 + Pan 4 • Pan ·s • PH• 5 "7 Pa11 6 + Pa11 Pa11 Patt Opt'OlnJC lead~ Two or •• SHOE , . . CHARLES GOREN Som ;, ar ago. t'rench triple "orld champion Roger Treiel dettd d that ma 1vc brld e tomes lri btuned away :the IHragti playt!r. So he broke up thr. play of the hand 111to 3ev •ral sedions. and publishnd e11ch 111 a 11epllrate l>Uokll1t. British Gut hor Terence Rtte e collaborated wfth Trezcl in updating and trlln lat.lot th "'orks Jnto Engmh. Tbc fiHt In tlul erles I u or ty PllQ'•" Irr d rick Fell Pubh11her1, paperback, 64 pg. Avallabltt from ~he Bridge World at $4.SO plu 75 renta Pi> tage and hantJlangl. \'(>u wilt btdam1har "'1th many of the 1tuation pre ented, but some w 111 hf. new and urpr1 ang Con 1d r this hand, where amb1t1ou b1dd1ng by North land you an a 81x . pade contract. You are m1 sing the re of diamond.,, and thtre i no way to avoid losing a trirk in that· u1t. So lhl• fate of your rontract hinge on bringing in the trump suit without a lo<es. FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE ~<rusr PUU.S SIDFF OOT" OCESNI Cftro=, ABOOI ~'/THING FUNKY WINKERBEAN DR.SMOCK HOSE IS ROSE I DGEP~RKER i~6. eEST WAV 10 CUAA UP THIS~ ... I -J 01AR SHARIF Obviously, you will need • w n nln1 rlnes e to accomplish that. So you win the opening lead 19 dummy and lca\t . • ~Th fir tear ty play id' c.o lead a low pade and fin se the 10 Don't lead the queen, btouse if East has a 1ngleton king of pade you will have promoted West' nin1• lo a lr1ck. WbJ'ln the 10 ol spade wins and both defender& folloYi IOw, It i1 time ror Q\lt econd nne e in trllmps. Gr 1 back to dummy. but this time you must lead the queen or spade!>. Whc-n East cover• and West shows out, you can get back to the board and ttris time take 1 CineHe for the nine of 1pade1. A1 tho t.ard1 lie, had you led a low trump for Che econd fin~ e. you \\Ould have set up a trump trick for East. A good buy at the price. • For .. fonaatioa abo9t Cbarle• Goren'a new .. wilett.r for brldae player1. write GorH B~o Lotter, J9ot Cluamla.Ma Avo., Clanamla· Mn. N.J. 08077. by Jeff MacNeily • ,j' by Lynn Johnston · WHY DON T'/00 LEAVE THRT FOR HISWIFE.10~ f\6a.J'IJ , by Tom Batluk . by George Lemont by Pat Brady by Harold Le Doux . Ii J• ' \ Orange Coast DA l V ~ OT/Tu.day 5-•--I. ..... .. ..... COMPLETE NYSE COMP081TE 11lANSACTIONI, a Economic woes solution simple But ~ ar Americans have not been ~men a company and leave it prey 10 another seneratton. rather than Western Digital appoints new manager in England subsldlary ' to compe11to"'-often from abroad. paYJnJ 'now. willing to accept economic realities Executavt; bonuse when per· --For m0S1 people. a ~need By JOHN CUNNIFF ,, ........ .....,.. NEW YOKK -Some of the United StatCS' biggest economic problems have been created by the charitable desire to do ''right," by the . wish for ~cction, by the notion that nothmg IS impossible if you ti"). , But from another perspective, you rhWtt say the problems arc caused by selfishly wantmg the cake while eating 1.t too, by ~ndi~g big while producing small, br taking the ben· efits but not the obligations Aod, perhaps, b) refusing to re- cognize the ttality. as in health care, that painful compromises must be made and that .something less than the best is all that can be afforded. even i( patients are permitted to dte. The decisions, and often lt\e ~\Jure . formance u down cheat toctholdets budgeusdcsarable. but ho as waJlang to ., ~--... '' ... _ _.. 'L."'-....._n 1~0._ ... m••u·-5ol'-'" ............... ofthcirdiv1deods. nsk: the da~rs pf balancing 1t -· .... -,~~ ~-----.. ,.__..._,, to face them, pervade SOC1Ct). -Most 'people today want to &ee qu1Ck.l)"!Thcaan_gen? Rcccs.saonand Watcra.DicltaJCW,.'incwUnn.ed uikwsaks• bbiaMW~ -Everyone is for a highcrstandard th l the elderly have financial secur-layoff:, to name Just two. Larsen htads Westen Df&IL&J (UK) C... and *' for Ille& .-d of hvm but recent history ugest ity, but many people want it ac-If we really wanted . to cut the distribuuon of the com_panfuenucondpetorand bomd le¥d ~-*I iD that not 811 arc willing to wor1c fodt. co mph hed by moaic. Magic won•t do deficn, ys one professor, wt can the UK. Israel, South Africa. Ireland and ScandinaVll-HewiD alloesuWa• an Pay mcreases, fo( instance. can onl)'. the JOb mo 2h Bdl · th · do d -L i.... in-house technical center m the Unued Kinedom taneo • beea WOtti.Qab be at the expense of someone else af ; r OC) nu?_t. as ere agree to 11 wn an wnte "''cc-to Western Digital Slntt 1979. _,. ..... : 't "' .1 1 • 1 enough o it around. pay for the scrvioes we demand from prvuu .... vi y 1a1 s o nse 1mu • ·1 "' So h d D--•"" ~._, .. _ • • • • taneousl n ,act. as 1t the role of government ovemment. met ans aroun -.,..._has bcrn ppaantcd UAStant aeoenJ m.,...er o(lbe.., a At th~· risk of oversimplifyini. . 10 J':131'llnt~e people money in t!t~ir 2,000 orS3.000 per famdy would be. SaM Hotel 1n lquna Beach. lake has formerly INOfkcd u ~ of unless 8 bigger pie is b ked nobody rc~arement. Or 1s 11 the r:espons1b1hty fine. · • rcstauntnts at Marlett C.se Ma"8a in Key Wes(. Fla. ud as a1111&M1 ~ C4n take a bagger hare. withou\ ot md1v1duals to provide for th~r If ~~ oom. are.n t aCt'leptcd. lhc. manager for San Franasco·s Ualea s.ure ......_, ..._ MOil reciendy. be cutting into someone else's wed . own rcttrcment. or at least most ofn? remamt!l& opttOP .as to compromise spend a ycarronsullmg. or setttng upoF.una 1ynes for newly opcaed bold& Often thought of as a blue-collar As pensions grow. ttie questions on quahty or ~cc. So far, Amen-Jad: L. Gltekll tias Joined the...lrv1~ offic.ie of Lee a A1tu:1a-. a real phenomenon, it i hardl) so. Witness, become more peninent, but they can~ seem unwilling to aooept that . estate firm that peciahzes in commercial and andmuw ~ The for uample, the executive bonusc~ haven't been answered. According to opuon. companyhasoff'tccsin Jrv,ine,EIToroandOranae.Giu:heU,an lmncresident, banded out even when the company·~ Washington, the' financing problems Commoa •toc.k ottered will speqalizc m real estate mve tmenu. Before JOUUlll Lee It AS$0clates, be fortunes aie down·. Consider the of'Social Secunty have been faced and worked exclu ively wnb ootnmcrcial and mvesunent properties ai Jed lucrative ptnsions executives award conquered, but more dispji¥ionate Western Di~tal Corporation has GltdteU Real Estate tn Oregon. themselves. observers disairec. filed a registration statement with the Blue..collar raises not accompanied What has been done. say the latter, Securities and Exchan~ Com- by higher productivity eventually is to hand off the burden of financing mission covering 2S malhon ~hares of common stod:, plus an option to purchase up to an additional 375,000 shares to cover over-allotments. • • • Paal E. LowtT has joined Pt0ma1 • Aaedatacivil cnaan:'~ finn as a NEW YORK CAP) -The followlng list ll show.s lht Ovtr· lht·Counltr Jloc.ks •nd w•rrants lt\111 t\llvt oone UP the most and down the most ~.ect on percent of chlirtV• for Monday · No securlli.s ·trading below d or 1000 1S shares are lndudtd. '' . Net and siercentage changes art· IM '7 d1fftrtnce between lhe Previous ctoslng 11 blcS S>rlc:t and T~av's last bid .S>rlc:t . i The First Boston Corporation and Montgomery Sccunties will co-man- age an underwnting syndicate which is expected to offer the shares during mid to late September. project managc.J bastd 10 the fir:m•s Cos1a Mesa office. Diet M oflNane has joined the firm u manager of land development. Muasdl is a former director of development for Galstla Familf l'rmt of GlcadUt, :a ~evel~.ent and investment firm. He brinp more lbaa l~~of ex~ 1n legislative advocacy, development. redevelopment, public wodts, boUlina. transportation, architecture and construction project ::=:;:1 ao lbe new JOb. He is also a member of the ........... bJ Ar aoo :the 11e9e Bulden Coacll. Lower, a Costa Mesa resident, bri!WI 21 )af'S of expcnc:ace in civil enginccring and project management 10 bis new post. UPS i ~rtni~, L•i'~ icf~ H{c1H:B 4 3 ~~~ i~ 1u 8~ ii 9 4 M1.1llnB t 'h 11'• Up I Name Enzon .-. UP .1 1 WldWV s Cu~ 21 ·1' + V> Up .9 f ~mullt s I Winn n •,... + 1...., UP o.g once s 9 Chnc: Pl l vw + 1, Up 19. 4. oach Last 3~ 111'2 I/• 4'11 Great American ' . .. first · ngs Bank .. afi ·lQT TAX SHELTER DEADLINE . APPROACHES! EXPERT GUIDANCE A MUST! M ost viable tax shelters for 1984 will be gone by the year's fourth quarter. Therefore. between September 15 and October 1, the experts at Hetshberge~ Financial SelYices are g&mg top priority to clients seeking tax-advantaged investments to offset 1984 income. Call 1·800-821·8104 today to set up your free introductory consultation. Learn how you can minimize taxes now and in the years ahead. For a free brochure on our complete financial plannmg services. wme: Hershberger-Financial Services " AegisJ~~ m~stmetil ~uor ~ Metrobank Building, 5000 Birch Street. Suite 200 Newport Beach. Gahforn a 92660 or telephone Inside Cahforn1a (800) 82l·8104 • Outside Gahforma (71'4) 851·1'415 one Qpen your account today. Call th toll-free ~inancial tine now: il-8~2 7,2·9000. 90 DAY TERM 6 MO TH TERM • • . . ·-On the , • TUESDArs CLOSllC PllCES - Dow Jo~E s Avr RAfiE s WHA T NYSE 0 10 NYSE LlAOlR S 1 WH AT AMEX Orn I -- - NEW YORK (AP) $ep, 11 AM EX LEADERS ... 1 NASDAQ SuMMARv GoLo QuoTL S ------- MET~Ls QuuH\ - - --- T'hat•s an apt de criptlon of both business and business p ople along th brang Coast. To keep track of wherecompantesar gotngandwhlchp opl areheJping them get th er ,ju t watch 'Credit Lin · -very da tn the Busln ss e ti on of your n w lily Pihd .. . . * . . ..., .... _......, ............ The Aoiela' .Reafe Jacbon •• hold ~f a Bud Black· futt.11 and It didn't take loq for him to realise he bad :No. 500 In the bank. Later Ile,... c1e1.,ed by die ....,.. · Home~ No .. 500: It ~as typical Reggie Jacksonjotnselitegroupwtth blast; Royals win~ 10-1, to take AL West leacl . By RICHARD DUNN ...,N..c.1 JI •ut It reall,Y wasn't a bad mistake, althoup tt was a little too much out over the plate. It was a misUlkc you can't throw to Reggje Jack.son, es.- pctjally when he's hot. It was a good percent.ace pitch to throwstartinaoffan inning, but thtsis a pme of inches and the pitch that was supposed to be inside eminently · • became the most heroic pitch Bud Black has ever thrown in his youna career. And, oh, was it ever a momentous evening. Seventeen years to the exact day after he hit his first big league home run -also at Anaheim Stadium - Reggie bit No. SOO. The punue to the mag1cal mark is over, but Rcgie's home run was somewhat tarnished by a 10-1 Kansas City win. It was without quntion, a typical Rcpie homer -a solo shot into the right.field seats that pve the Angels their only run, as the loss set them 1 'h iamcs behind this first place KallW City team. Rcgie tagged it off Black m the seventh inniflf Monday niaht. CTCam· in& the tint patch deep over the wall -it left no question to minds of anyoge it was No. 500. The 28,862 fans screamed and requested the ob,;ously expected encore before time was taken after the inning for a few brief words from the man .himself ID front of the Angel duaout. Rcgie's blast was sunply poetry in motion. The ball had jumped off his bat. then came the customary flicking of the bat behind him as he leaned a f cw s-teps toward the Royal duaout. He then clapped his hands. clinched them into fists. dropped his arms into somewhat of a hammer position synchronizing his gesture of excite- ment and relief-and the trot bepn. .. My first thought was, 'That's it.' My second thoupt was, •J wish we were winnina.' I was so elated J really didn't look at anybody until I round· ed second base and saw my dugout;" explained Reggie. ••Rounding third 1 looked at Bud Black and wd in my rnind.. 'thanks for &ivina me 1 ball to hit.' Because he wasn't givina in, and serviDJ uc:,c home run, but he11 wasn't running away, he bad a pmc probably me more famous than to wip." the ~Y who allowed Regic's first - Moving every inch oftheway as if': Jim Weaver of the Arilels. Rcgie air had finally been releaxd; be joins ao elite club of just 13 playen stutter-stepped over third, wa1.kcd the that bave reilched the milestone. And fin.al 10 feet to home plate (not only Rcgic could make such poetic uncommon for Regie) and was then justice counteract ID the same ball greeted by Bobby Grieb (the next park. hitter). the first to do . so on this "It was supposed to be inside (the eventful ni&bt. pitch). but it was a fastball ri&bt down "I would have liked to have won .. the "ddlct Black said. ~ don't the pme; that somewhat t.arnisbcd think Reaie's borne ran takes IDl'· the home run, .. _ Regje said. ••1t was thing away from our win, because this one of the happ1C5t home run trots I was a very big win for us. I niade haveevermade. Th~only~therhoi:ne <Bret) Saberhagien (the Royals' start· run J can relate to this one as the thud ana patcher toni&bt) t.be happiest IUY home run of the Wortd Series pme in the puk. He doesn't bave to~ ( 1977). In fact, the third home run about Regie." was a greater thrill because we won Indeed be won't. but it's assured the aame and the, series." . he's no! the baPJ!iest IUY in to-wn. For Black. be 11 go down an the Regie's total includes one while a history boob along with Regje for (Pleuee ... mtGGIB/CS) The Wild, Wild Wea K-..Otv Niia 11ata .... Al.---• L n n ,. n n· n ,. •. , SC.. KenMa C1tY 11, --• a.:.o '· Mlnnelo1e , T..-ae- Pd. ... 17 -.HI l 4llll '"" K-CllY (S.. .,,,_, t • '°' e1 --Ci:llltlll 1• l), D • Olc.-e ~~ J•11) C'Sdlrom • .,, • " •a RR ..... .-.u (14) -Horne (6)• 5-C. 11. "· a "-CUY: 21. n. Z3 r.-. A..., m: 5-f. 24 (2), tS. i. kHMI Ofy, U, a , ft, :JtT-. ~ OTY ( U) -Horne OJ. s.t ti, zt, 2:1 o.i.a.nd. 21 OJ, 2S. " A..- A-. (6) '-". II, 1', a Aneltl. •·:It,• a.tlnll. .... IOTA r 13) -Harne 6l s-t. •• If. 11~tl.zt.23 ca.wlMd; ·- (7); s. ,,., n. 36 OllcllOJ 11. •·•·a ~ Flores ·has edge as ex-quarterback Rams look for deal . to fill big problem Raiders f coach knows the feeling of interceptions EL SEGUNDO (AP} 7 Tom Flores, a former quarterback and the current head coach of the Los Angeles Raiders, was talk.ina about pass interceptions. .. No one hates an interception more than the quarterback. or the coach," Flores said, .. because it's such a demoralizing thing, especially when you're down in field aoal ran~." Flores• footOall team saw films Monday of how demoralizina four interceptions could be when the Raiders reviewed their 22·20 victory over the Kansas City Chiefs at Arrowhead Stadium oo Sunday. They also saw bow sticking with . one quarterback -in this cue Jim Plunkett -could pay off in the encl 0 rm not &Qina to act into a wbat·if situation," Flores said. 0 ll'1 to,uah enough playing quarterback." · Despite the four interceptions. 1ncludina one wbicb was returned 71 yards for a touchdown and another which helped the Chiefs take a 20-19 lead with 4:44 left to play, Plunkett was allbwed to battle back. He wound up passing for 313 yard~ his suth 300-yard passing pme for the Raiders. Plunkett also engineered the final drive which rcswtcd in Chris Bahr's l 9·yard pmc-winnina field &oal with one minute lo play. Aorcs said he had not considered , rcmovina Plunkett in favor of backup, and former staner. Marc Wibon. . ''You don't want yourquanerback lookina over his shoulder at a auY warmina up,., Flores said. The Raidc!'I, now 3-0, suffered only one new injury agianst the Chiefs, a knee sprain to backup linebacker Larry McCoy. Los Anaclcs will have an extra day of practice this week in advance of its pme apinst the San Dicio Chargen:. ,,,....,..... R•m• qaarterback Vince F~amo pata an Ice.,., on bJa broken riDI fln.ier d~ Sanday'• tame at Plttabmtb. Ferracamo Wlll 6e mdellned at leut foar weeb. Detroit's Hipple isn't in picture Rams Coach Johii Robjmon ad· mined Monday his team must make a · deal now that quartcrt>eck Vance Fem.pmo is out for at least four weeks with a broken band. ~ Untested Jeff Kemp is the only healthy quar1a'blck on t.be active. roster and second·yc:ar rookie Scott TiiaSlc)· cannot be rccalled from the injured rescnre list unul next , At the same time. Robinson said he would not pay any outrqcous ran· SC?msjust beca,usc the Rams are in a vtnu&I cmcrar~·. • ..W~ ave two option •• be said. .. 0 we can ,ct a auy Who can come niht in and tart. or at least give Jeff a run for b1 · money. "Two. we can p:t 1 veteran who is just pla>ina out the ~tnng and mi&bt be a c to help us if Jeff aru bun. ..The probkm v.ith the first opuon as that when ttams knO\\ you art in trouble. they tend to an exhorbi· tant price for a &UY who i only tbeir tec:ond4>est q uanert>eck. ..The SttOnd option is cbeapcr: for your t m. Tbc aucstion tbeo 1 • Can Massey not concerneO a b out Personal stats -.. By RICHARD DUNN Deir Nit OWN.,., t , Player of the Week Kemp do thejob? We'll have to waii and see." The Ram 1·2. pla) at Cincinnati Sunday. . Femgamo broke the ~ bone leading to the little finaer on his throwing hand in a 24-.1 ~ -loa at PittsburJh Sunday. .. Four MICU is OD the conscrvath c jdc, .. Robinson said. "We may not have him blck for six or seven v.u Which leaves us only the la$t five weets of the season.·· Thus the Rams coUJd be pla.)'1~ their nc~t su pmcs 11.ith a~ 20(); pound quan.crbeck ~hOse fim sia· naficant pla)ina time me Sunday against the Stttlers. KempC'ompklc:d 9 of l 7 passes for 127 )'Uds. a touchdown aod an intcrC'CpUon. ·~cff came · and pla)"Cd~t. well." Robinson said ... He's • most competiti~c )OUlll man. He'll Pia •ith enthu 1asm nd he"ll do a acditable job ... Robin50n ttfuscd to d1scuss any ·names involved in po blc trades. other than to sa) Detroit' IEric Hipple • .:an unhap reserve. w 11.1thdrav.'I\ from con dtrahon b)'lhe Lion "We art talkina. .. he said. "We will hue to decide af we're willina to pey a first·TOllnd or attond-rouod pict for the names ft'~ di!ICU 1 ... Mary Lou's cereal will be Wheaties, after ·s gning pact mAPclJ th MIN EAPOU -Olympic 1>m-li9 n ti champion Mary Lou Rctton signed a deal Monday with Wh tie cereal, a General Mills official announoed. Rctton, 16, won the gold medal in the women's indiVldual all round compctiuon at the 1984 Summer Olympics, makift$ her the first American female l)'O\Dy t evrr to win an individual Olympie medal. Jn lUiiunn ti') her old-medal Otfformancc, Rcnon earned two ilvcrand two bron1e medal~ in team and individual events. C. W. Gaillard, vicefrcsident and general man~r o General Milli. Bia G D1vi ion, said, ••wbeatie is honol'N Man .Lou has ~ome a part of its long-· standina association with spon champions." . She will appear in television commemals, be featured on Wheaties· cereal packaa« and a makc•personal appearances for "Thc.BJt.akfast of Champions." Funher details of the contract were not disclosed. The first nationally televised commercial featurina Rcttoo will ur at.the end ofth1s month. She will also be on tbc cover of m1lhons of Wheaties pack.a&«. Wheati« has a long history of beina ai.sociated with sports and champions. . Over the last 50 years, various athletes have been associated with the cereal, including baseball greats Babe Ruth, Joe DiMaggio and Hank Aaron, and Olympic champions such as swimmer Johnny WeisDlullcr, pole-vaulter Bob Richards and most recently, decathlon champion Bru~ Jenner. QUote of the d&J ltJp c..,, announdng en Atlanta &raw. ganle on WTBS, u the Chicllgo Cube ecoted five rune fn 1M ntnth lMlng to bt'Mk a tte: "If you fOlks promise to return for the movie, and patronize all our m>M*Orl, yoo at• free to waJk the dog right now!·--· More neurological teats for All FRANKFURT, West Germany -ml Fonner world heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali is returning to New York Tuesday for more neurological tests, a television interviewer who talked with Ali said Monday. Birgitt Wolff also quoted a doctor who was interviewed with Ali as saymg that earlier tests showed the retired tifbtcr AH has ''minor symptoms" of Parkinson's Disease. -,..,. Auburn'• Jackson out for year AUBURN, Ala.-Auburn AH-Amen-Ci] can running back Bo Jackson emerged c t from shoulder surgery Monday with bis Cl doctor saying it's doubtful Jackson can play football agam this season. Jackson, ajun1or, injured his shoulder on a 53-yard run dunng the third quarter of Auburn's game against Tellas last Saturday night. - · "Jt was as we thought, a shoulder separation. It was severe," said Dr. Jack Hughston of Columbus, Ga., who handled the operation Monday. T1ien' maatc number at one Detroit rhnchcd at l~ t a de for the Ill American League Ea t title Monday ni~t the Tl&ers beat M•lwaukee, 7-3. Dttr0u • l Nn in the sixth 1nnuig 10 break -- open the Lu~ Pcani1ll 1luued a solo home run and Loo ltutr ddat a arana ifam t\omc run u ilie Ti rs lowered their ma&ic number co on ••• Toronto taved otT elimination for at least one more di)' \\ith a ~-4 ictoQ ovcr Bu too Gar~ lora linJlcd with tv.-o out nd the bases loaded an the ninth inn1na t~JlVC the -Blue ''YI the vic1ory. The Red Sox hid taken a 4·3 lead in the lO]! of the ninth on RI~ GHmu 1 second double of the pme. Doyle Ak:H.Ddtr, JS.S, won hiuevcnlh traiiht pmc ••. El Whett 10 the AL Monday, the New York Yankees beat Baltimore, 12-7 with the help ofDoa Baylor'• two- ,... da1l• ud Ked Grlffey'1 three-run homer .•. the Chicqo White Sox kncicked Minnesota ~ out offirst place with a 7.3 victory as Harold Balan slugged three home run5 . . . Dan Klqmu'1 3Sth homer of the ycar.ia two-run blow, was part of a tie-breakina three-run six'h iMin& that propelled Oakland t>8St Tuas, S-3. BW Kruepr, 9·10, won his first pme since Aua. 17 ... Darnell Cole1 hit a fielder's choice hner to left field m the 11th inning that drove home Jact Pe~ate with the wannina run i. Seattle stopped acveland, 3-2. . . s-· • Gooden whiffs 16, but loaea Dwlgbt Goodeu., the New York Mets' Ill l 9-year-old pitchma sensation. struck out 16, but balked home the winning run in the eighth inning as Philadelphia edged the Mets, 2-1, Monday in National League action. The youna right-bander t~ed a major league record as he struck out 32 batters in two prncs,-matcbinJ the 1968 standard of Cleveland's LaJ1 Tlut . . . San Diego needed 1 l mniogs to stop Cincinnati, 2-1. as Grat1 Nettles broke an ().for-16 slump wath a pinch-bit, run- sconna triple in the 11th to reduce the Padres' magic number for winning the West to five with 13 games remaining. The Reds nearly won the game in the ninth when Pete Rose stroked an apparent sin&le to center with the bases loaded. but Roa Getter hcfd the 1>ag at third antic;ipatmg that the ballmight be caught and San- Diego outfielder Kevin McReynold1 threw him out at the plate on the force play ... Joe Nlekro and Bill Dawley combined on a five·h1tter as Houston defeated San Francisco. 5·3. Fullerton 'a Maybury honored Cal State Fullertoit linebacker Russ lil Maybury, Long Beach State wtdc receiver c II• Charles Lockett and Nevada-Las Vcps quarterback Randall Cunningham have been selected as the Pacific Coast Athletic Assocnation football players of the week. Lockett and Cunningham were named oo-of- fensive players of the week while Maybury was honored as the defensive player of the week. Maybury, a 6-3, 211-pound JUmor from Covina. had seven unassisted tackles mcluding four for losses and recovcrcd two fumbles dunng Fullerton's 28-7 victory over Idaho. Lockett, a 6-0. 168-pound sophomore from Los An•elcs.. caught a career-high 12 passes for 189 yards dunng Lons llcach State's 13:11 loss to eighth-ranked UCLA Saturday. Cunningham, a 6-4. 198-poun<f senior from Santa Barbara, completed 16 of 25 passes for 165 yards and three touchdowns and punted for a 49.2-yard average as Nevada-Las· Vegas topped New Mexico State, 28-21. ontana filea 9 million eult SAN FRANCISCO -n Francisco EiJ 49cr5 qwu1erb.a k Joe Montan filed $9 •II • mtllion law uit Monday 1nS1 di U A, the German-o" ed pqn shoe m kcr, 11~ the oomixany b been lhng "Mon· Ulna Stiocs wnhouf li1s perms s on. The SUit all s that Ad1d I h s m de, d\ Crtl cd and sold .. Montana Shoe " since the 49en won the upcr Bowl an 19~2. Alona with damage , Montana's uu sks that Adidas top m kin the hoc and give him all rem ming pairs for .. immediate and total destruc- tion:· He al o is eking all the money Adidas m de on the shoes and wants 10 • tompany to al)Ologize publiel~ for making shoes allegedly without his en· dorsement. In the suit, Montana id he had a $25,000 contract with Adidas from October 198 l to January 1984. He ea.reed to wear Adidas football shoes and make up to three promo- tional appearances durina each year of the contract. But Montana alleged that nothina in the contract, which was not ttnewed, allowed Adidas to use his name on a prqduct. Montana's suit ~)'S the alle&Cd fraud by Adidas caused him •·irreparable harm." · Pell blasts unlvenltj GAINESVILLE, Fla. -Charley Pell. [iJ fired as Florida football coach in the wake c II• i of developments in a 21-month NCAA investigation, said Monday that he was disappointed that he wasn't allowed to complete the l 984 season and blasted the univcrsuy's treatment of two assistant coaches implicated in the probe. Pell. who guided the Gators to a 33-26-3 record in five-plus years at the Southeastern Conference school, was relieved of duty Sunda} and offered administrative leave that Florida President Marshall Cnser said would not continue beyond Dec. 1. Pell told a news conference, however, that he was declinina the offer because he was unhappy with the handling of two Gators' assistants whose names were mentioned in a number of the 107 alJeptions the NCAA returned against the Flonda program last week. Pla1er of week honora to Grich NEW YORK ~ Bobby Grich of the Ill Angels, who hit .444 and reached base a club-record 11 consecutive Um«, has been named American League Player of the Week for the period ending Sunday, the lcaaue said Monday.· Gncb was 8-for-18 during the week and also tied a club mark with eight straight h1ts. He also walked five times and had two homers. In the National League, Chili Davis of the San Francisco Giants was named Player of the Weck. Davis, who has an 1 g-game hitting streak, hit .526 during the week, with three home runs. seven runs batted in and five runs scored Televt.alon, radio TEL!Vl8ION 10 p.m. -IOXING: From the Olymplc Auditorium, Channel 56. RADIO '4:30 p.m. -IA8EllALL: Dodgers at Atlanta, KA6C (790). ·-----.,.. ... 7:30 p.m. -BAlllAU.: Kansas City at Aiigels. KMPC (710). , .. Lasorda gets one he can get his teeth into ATLANTA . (AP! -Los Angeles Manaaer Tom L:asord insists he dcnves no more piea ure from bcauna the AU nta Bro\ than n)' other team. 'It'• hkc i~ me ifl like one plate of slll&bcttJ more thlln another plate, • be d. •'J likc them au ... -. But Lasorda added that he took pedal delJgbt in the ·~gen' 9.0 victory over the Braves Mondly night and tholJ". animated riaht-hander Pascual Pt.rn. 'I like to beat him (Perez) brcauscohltewayheacu," Lasorda aaid refcrrina to Perez's aots ofclauon when he acts a batter out. "I wouldn't let pitcher of mine act that way." . Pedro Guerrero drove in four runs wtth a homer, double and ain-.ilc, and al o upres ed pleasure over his success with Peret. "If he can lump around on the mound wben he ICU somebody out, I canjumparound on the basepaths when l hit a home run," he said. • . Bob Welch and Pat Zachry com baned on a th~hittcr for the Dodgers: . Paul Runge had all three hits for Atlanta, two off Welch, ll·l2. who went five innings.Zachrywentthc final four for his &econd save as the Dodgen won their ixth 1tra1&ht game. • • Welch who had not pitched in 17 days, strudc out stx and walked three in rccord1na his fourth victory over the Braves this season without a Joss. Guerrero pvc the Dodacrs a 2-0 lead in th~ first inning when he connected against Perez, 12-7. for hts 1 'h homer of the season, scorina Keo Landreaux who had reached base on a fieldin& error. Bang Bang Maxwell captures DPYC race A weather (arc consisting of everythina from austy winds, rain, liahtning and flat calms was served up to the 30 boats competina in the fifth race of the Dana Point Series Sunday. The series is sponsored by Dana Point YachtOub. .. Overall winner in the race was Bana Bana Maxwell, co-skippered by Tom and Kathy Adamson of the host club. Second was Blue Max, sailed by Bruce Andcnon, DPYC, and third was White Winp. with Bill Jones of DPYC at the helm. Oass results: CLASS A -1. Bang Ba~ Maxwell; 2. Crash, Eric Wine, Capistrano Bay YC; 3. Tinder Box, Bob Burkhardt, DPYC. CLASS B -I. Blue Max; 2. Wbite Wins; 3. Ozymandias. Jerry Purcell, DPYC. CLASS C -I . No-Y-No, Charles .Berah. DPYC; 2. Vulgar Boatman, Dick Amtower, DPYC Reinhardt Improves EUGENE, Ore. (AP) -The condition of inJured University of Colorado tilht end Ed Reinhardt improved slightly Monday, accordina to the neuros~n who operated to relieve the football player's head inJury. However, Dr. Arthur Hockey said Reinhardt, 19, of Lttllcton, Colo., remained unconscious in critical con- dition. "Ed Reinhardt's condition bas improved slightly," Hockey said. "Results of additional tests, a CT scan, indicate that there bas been a reduction in the swellina of llllllll .. llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll .. 1111111111 .. jlllilllllllllllllllllllllllllll.---' thebrain. Bruins· aw8.it 'The Thing' UCLA braces itself for ip.vasion ofNebraska's·No.1-ratedHuskers LOS ANGELES {AP) -Jn the pme between the Bruins and Corn- words of UCLA Coach Terry huskers figured as one of the top Donahue, the Bruins will come face-college football contests of the season, to-face with "the thina" at the Rost a possible national championship Bowl thts Saturday. decider. .. rvc nicknamed the Nebraska It still miP.it be, although the offense 'the thing,... Donahue said Bruins haven t played likt a top 20 Monday at his weekly meeting with team, much less a oootcndcr for the reporters. "It's a powerful thing. Ifs .national championship, in their first dynamic. It's exciting." two games of the campaign. Why "the thing?" The game will be lclcvtsed na- "lfs like a hu&c thin& thatjust rolls tiooallybyCBS, startinaat 12:30p.m. at you, bowls you over," Donahue While admtttinJ that his club has said wi'\h a .s~11e: "'The thing' is not been impressive in beating San coming to L.A." Diego State, 18-15 and L<Jng Beach .Only a couple of weeks ago, the State, 23-17, Donahue expressed ----------------------------------------------------optimism. ••The 198'4 UCLA team JUst hasn't found itself yet," Donahue said. "This team hasn't quite gotten there and yet it's 2-0. It's a good news, bad news tyPC ofthmg. ''We JUSt haven't gotten our game in full gear yet, but we will. I JUSt hope it's soon. I've tried to be candid about our team. l think there are a lot of areas where improvement is needed. I feel confident we can improve." The status of starting UCLA quar- terback Steve Bono was uncenain Monday. Bono suffcrcd a sprained ankle during a 17-yard run on the first play of the fourth quarter against Long Beach State. "I really don't have a feeling as to when I'll know whether Steve will be · able to ,Play or not." Dooatiuc said. "It's stnctly a wait-and-sec thing. He was limping ycsterda>:: (Sunday)." Donahue satd that if Bono is unable to play, either David Norrie or Matt Stevens would be the starter. Both played briefly 1n the fourth quarter against Long Beach State. Norrie is a 6-4¥• junior out of Portland. Stevens js a 5-11 'h redshift sophomore out of Fountain Valley "'f.'· • I feel confident that if Steve's ready, he'll do a good Job for us." Donahue said. "If he's not ready, I feel whoever plays will do a aood job." Top-ranked Nebraska bas played like a champion so far tbis season, overwhelming Wyomina 42-7 and Minnesota 38-7. The Comhuskcrs have averaged 563.S yards io total offense wbile allowing 198.S yards. "They have a very1 very aood football team," Donanue said of Nebraska.· Women base ball players? A superb paint job ... only $32{)! Sttin.tf u btlkvir1,.11 ... rtmu ~n '°'·" su the cnnjust p11int11I by Eu9anz. Comp11rt our 1fU11l1ty with othN"I that wst much more. E/tJIRn= tt>m m<l"tks 11 dror top cont li•r tin txpmsiPc impfa-u. Tlit Elt61t"~ pt1int ;ob as'"' 11m11zing va/JU '" f380-but if yo" mnf( ;,, the umpon btlow ·"°" /Jtt •n 111lllit.i.tmAI $60 off! Female players get tryouts with goals set in pro baseball ATLANTA (AP) -FcmaJc athletes from around the country -united by a common dream o( smashin&_pro baseball's sex bamer-tried out Monday for the Sun Sox, a women's team applyina for admission to the Class A Florida State League. Decked in sweats or softball uniforms, the women ran, threw. fielded and hit for Georgia Tcch's baseball coach and for a seasoned baseball observer -home run king Henry Aaron. "This is amazing," Aaron said as the women threw the ball in the outfield. "A few of them can handle themselves They're going to have to aavc them a chanoe to play.'' The 32 women cheered when Aaron walked to the dugout .. I said all along. 10 years ago, that it can be done," the Hall offamer told them. "Good luck to you." The Sun Sox -a team to be composed entirely of Bn.H1 Nc -~ women -arc the brainchJld of public relations man Bob Hope. a former vice president of the Atlanta Braves. His group has applied for admission to the Florida State League and hopes to play 1n Daytona Beach. "Our intent is to make this a mmor lcaaue opportunitr, for women to play professionaJ baseball," Hope said, 'The major problem 1s not whether women can play Class A baseball (three levels below the maJors), but that they've never been given a chance." The Sun Sox. uollke most minor league learns, wouldn't be affiliated with any specific major leaaue organization. The most promisma playc~ probably could go up into AA, AAA or even, someday ... the bia lcaaues. ' Ocarly, some of the women at Monday's tryouts at GcorgJa Tech aren't ready for aass A baseball. But a few showed some talent. Georaia Tech baseball Coach Jim Morris, conductina the tryouts, pointed to one who likely could play Class A- Kim·Hawkins. a 20-year-old truck driver from Kenn· w, (Pleue eee WOMBN/CS) Hydroplane . Winner rips competition · 11110 NJ,Wl'OR1 ROL'l.HARn. COS l A MHA (~141 !t48· ~If> Aussles deal U.S. Amerlca 's Cup snub r---------------.. Special Discount $60 off1 I rr• Cfll lhl\ \OUf)Utl "'h(n \OU orJtr: ~ n\H J f tqi:m7 J1.itnt 10~ -;inJ ftN1, $fiO dt•rnunr I o0 lhr N ~uln lfm ~ () ('" .. ~. Lim1111l t1mr• ff. Our .,,.,,,.,.mt)# ~ THllOl G ::0 M P ------------ PORTO CERVO. Sardi ma (AP)- The Au tralian orpnizcn of the next America'• Cup. y.acbt race dealt tht United tates a glancina blow by naminJ the C ta Smeralda Yacht Club challc r of ~rd" for the 1987 event Monday. The· rdiman club thus becomes the offic.al liason between the Royal Perth Yacht Oub. holder of the cup, an4 all chatlcnacl"S. (or I 2-mcter · ahna"s ~at 1 prite Jnd ~•II overstt the orpn1zauon and running of the challenger' ne.s 10 Austr1li • The move came de p1tc thr domi- Prince Karim Ap Khan. prn1den1 of the La mera&da Yacht Club, ls also honorary prcs1dcnt of the Inter· national l 2·mc1Cr Asaodation Pet.tr R. Dalz.idl Royal Perth commodore. cited the Ap Khan's "on 1nacomm1ttmcn1 to promotina and· staini"' wofld-das.s offibori flma" u an 1mponant factor an the club• dcci ion. Dal ell 'd the dcca on hid bee 'made Jutt pnor 10 Ote saan of the rls! 112~ctu wodd cbaf!\ptondup hocted y the 11 ttaJdl ~Khl Club. • -t O>ILY ,,,LOT Ir~ WOMEN· ••• homC2 . By m~,.._ Hawkins was conducuna nc feren(lff belwcen winctspnnll."' • • Prep football players of the wee .. , knew ne of the TV stattons s co ii\&. bul I n er expected th11," she aa•d. . Weanna ba ball ~nts ·~ carryan• a can i>f chew1pa toblceo in her back ~\cct, HiWktn1 said he has J>layed more than I 0 ycars oflof\ball and a year of Uttlc Leaauc baseball. ·•1 alway1 wanted to playb&scball, and now I'm doina t," &he Aid. •·1 think women can play apinst men. Men don't think so, but I do. I think-tbe)"'rc 1f ra1d we would beat 'em." Victoria O'Oonnell, of Norwich, Conn~ attracted aome attention when it was learned &h~ had been hituna off. ll>hching machine at home. Hawkin& later a truck tier out. Several of the women were conscious of a place in hl1tory, 0 .1 hope nobody makes f'Un," uid Dolores Owen. 1 softball veteran and a biolOI)' teacher from Morrow (Ga ) Hiah School. .. This is so important -just to have a chance to m&ke history. "We (female athletes) tuivc feelings. People foract that. And I say if somebody's sooo enough to play, )'ou ouaht to let 'cm." .. Th11 is all 1 've wanted. all my hf e," said Deb Akers, a 28·ycar-old coal miner from Birminal\aro, Ala. ..I've always nntcd to play baseball." The Aorida State league will vote on the Sun Sox' iPJ>lication next Monday.. . · ."i think the leaaue should sjve it due consideration•• leaaue·President Ocorae McDonald said from his office at Tampa, Aa. "The decision of whether they can compete or • not should be decided on the field, not at a league meeting." .. They're definitely treatina us senousty, ••said Ho~. who feels "90 percent' certain the Sox will win approval next week. -· Twenty five players ftom .Monday's tryouis will return for another round TueSdly, and the best of the croup, if the franchite is approved, would be in\'ited to sprina trainiin to join prospects f'rom other tryouts. Hope was happy that the first day yielded even a couple of potential prospects. "There's a lot of peat players out there who'll come out of the woodwork once we set leque approval." he said. "We're only lookina for 20; there'saot to be 20 in the whole COUO!O'." JON 8CH18LSR Corona deJ Mar The 6-2, 175-pOund or (rte safety antercepted 1wo San Oemente passes and h d ht unassisted tackles ln the Kinas' 6-0 1n o"enhe Tntons *------------~------RICHARD MIANM Cotta .... The S-10, 175-~und senior caul!tt 1hrce passes for 74 y rds, one for 34 )'Atd for the M~stangs' only touchdown, and rushed for 30 )'&rds on onl)' two cani *'~~~~~~~~----- CRAIG CONTE ltatancla The junior rushed for 68 yards on 11 carries. one for a touch- down, and caugl:it two passe for 38 yards. On defense he had two key tackles near the end zone. ·~~----~~~~---- JOO OSWALD Newpoft Harbor · A two.way 5tarter. he had seven ·unassisted tackles, an inter- ~ption and broke up a ~. As a ti&lfbick he ran for"'.20yarda on 3 carries and cauaht a 14-yard pass. *~~~~~--~~---- MARK DRAPER Laiun& Beach The 6-0. -tSO-pound senior runnina back rushed for 90 yards on 11 cames and made several important tackles at his free safety position on defe~. DAVID LOP Edllon The 6-3 210.~und hne cker d 10 un s1 tcd tac.kl and acvcn 1 play1n key role m lhc Ctwim' 14- n over Collon lHt week *----------------~--- MICKY. NNAFLO Fountain Valley The Baroni• kicker booted a 0:. yard field go&1with2:33 left tn th game to help bca t EJ T oro.z.. 11-14. Only one of hiJ tx kickorn have been returned th s n. ··--------------------. SHA WK FLBllilfO .Ocean View A 6..4, 220.pound Junior, be carped these comments from his . coach, Karl Ga~: ·•one of the finest_pcrfomianccs I've seen b)' our Offensive tackles." .•-------------------- . BRIAN MITCHELL Ha.ntlnaton Beach The 6.(f.' l 8S·pound senior free safety, whose a transfCT' Edison, led the Oilers' 17-0 dcfensnc shov. with three nterccptions, and he returned one 35 yard~. •·----~_..;.~...;...----~~ RON LEE I.nine The senior defensive beck broke up a pass, repstered four lead tackles and bad two assists. • He played an instrumental pan in · containing Newport's run pme. llATT UftlOUa Woodbrt.qe Tbt senior free fel) wade receiver lqd the 'l~m Mth llX tackles. all ln the second half. and returned four punu for a I ~yard a verge, o_nc nearly for a TD. *~----...... ----------- TOI HAIDER llaterl>el • 'fihe junior cometbaclc 1ntcr- CCptcd one ~ • {onied tWQ fumbles and • allowed no pa to be com.J?lcted m his area of the fiel " saiCI Coach Cbuck G&Uo. •·-:-~...,.~-----.."'!---- DAVID mCKS Weetmlnater According to Lion Coach J nn O'Hara, "HiCks may be lbc best player an the (Sunset) leaaue." He cauaht-3 ~ucs for 130 yards .an the Lions loss to Pacifica. *----~----------~- 8 TEVE DELGADO 8addleback The 6-2, 227-pound senior center [keyed several goal line .stands with SoOd blockingqainst 5anta Ana, and also helped out at tackle because of an iqjury. ·A ,/ Crane flyinghigh for Thunderbirds i:iJ '84 Ex-CdM player hopes to. complete 1984 ~ithout going down with another injury Sped.al to die Dally Pilot CEDAR CITY Utah -"Jinxed" isn't quite the correct word io de- scribe Jim Crane's football career to date, but "blessed" is certainly the wrong description. Unless some sort of problem sets in bis way, Crane will try to make it three straight pmcs as Southern Utah State's siartina ooseguard Saturday when the Thunderbirds take on New Mexico Highlands. Even though Crane, a junior at Southern Utah State, bepn his serious football playing way back in the ninth srade at Corona del Mar Hi&?!, he has yet to complete a full season offull service duty. last year was. about as close as he has ever come. His bia chance came after an injury to the regular Thunder- bird nose suard, Ernie Pena, apinst Northern Arizona in the second pme of the )eat. For th~ final eight P,mes. Crane alte~ with two other players playing on the defensive line. But even then, he was hampered by a minor knee problem which .. realty kept me from being 100 percent," he ~td. Can Moon graduate to star? Oiler quarterback ts 0-3 in the NFL, (but stil~ has hope By PAUL BARTELT .,..... .... .,.,,,... SAN DIEGO ·-It appean that Warren Moon bas finally returned to earth. After six record-setting seasons with the Edmonton Eskimos of the Canadian Football League, Moon wears the uniform of the Houston Oilen and is now pla)'ins for a league that ignored him af\er a brilliant tbree-year career at the University of Washmaton. • But after thtce pmes, the Moon- led Oilert have yet to win a pme in l 98-4. The most recent setback was Sunday's 31-14 defeat to San Dieao. Unable to act the offense un- tracked, Moon completed only 11 of 31 passes, including a 75-yard touch- down to Tim Wilson. "I feel l can do a lot better," said Moon. "It's aoinJ to take time for me to adjust to a totally new offense and it's not aoina to happen over niaht." Even thouah Houston is winless, Moon's presence has been an emo- tional lift for the team. .. Warren aives a new dimension to our offense With his ability to avoid a -·---l>IUiuih and lbrow on the.nm." says REGGIE ••• · ~Cl member of the Kansas City A's, 2S3 with the Oak.land A's, 27 with the Baltimore Orioles, 1-44 with the New York Yankees and now 7S with the Anaels. Only '°nc of lhe . previous dozen playtl!lhat hit SOO, Willie'McCovey, is not in the Hall of Fame. And he isn't eUiible for voti~ \lntil 1986. So wtiat does that mean to Regie? .. I doll't think you have to act SOO home runs to 't into the Rall of Fame.•• be said, 'look at Stan Musial with 475. Yoai Berra with 358, Duke Snider with 407, Joe DiMaaio with 361. "I'm 1 statistical nut (obviouSly)- and a blseblll fan, and l think aoout When you put it all In penpecuve, I can't toot my own bom. Because (Hank) Aaron "1t 750. (W1llic) Mays 660. (Bibel Ruth '71-4." A .... t..MOTU-,,,.. ..... ~on I'll• mlleltoM "°"' flCllM l'Ull Mondi~ ,...... .. , llJnd.ol..a.dl:w*:"'''~' °"'"""'°·it' • ......, I.ten '"'9IO-orll•W. IOllWll H we WOUid've won, I .....,... .. '"" ~ ............. secono..__....,.,... ... -'*' if. M1et1Cen LIHUl~f , ,....,., of 1t'1t we.-tw lM Wlod Of MPf It' 1' Orfttl tll'I ,._. MIN 1t1111 '""· wUMM rwo "°"" """ end ftW ltll Al IN Nmt 11mtl hi lllMl!lllld I dlAt ~ .,., '~ ..... 11 ~~ •lmM Ht MCOt1* 1M nlntll .Wf tn CUI Nltory I* ~ 1M "9MI' .W llllrd turt I -... ClifW Ml 0-. o.ai. Mine °''* fWO • '1tcNnl n-ld!UIM fW ... tetNNtr .,. ,.,. ..... Wflfl KMMt tnv INt l .. tr'W1911 (I \Ol YI """' ... (Ml tollietll a...~ ( t-il llMfMI .... Z.-(1t·•I WMIMMIY •nd Mllft ._. f'l-'ttJ"" ,..-.m 111 tltllf1oMY OiJCT' center Bruce Matthews. "Once he gets familiar with oui system he will be unstoppable." Houston All-Pro runnini back Earl Cam~bell adds: "The great thina about Warren is he has the ability to make players around him play bet- ter." First-year head coach H uab C•mpbell, who l\lided Edmonton to five COllsccutivc Grt.Y.Cw>-\1.ictoriell was Moon·s coach in Canada. "War- ren haS__proved to me be can play in the NFL," says CamptJcll. "Tbe bigcst thing he aives us 1s a chance to improve. Warren is our hope for the future." Moon turned in his best season as a professional last year in Canada. He threw for S,648 yards, the most pined in a sin&le season 10 the histOt)" of professional football. It was the second year in a row Moon bettered the S,000-yard mark throuah the air. "All my life 1 have wanted to be a starting NFL quarterback," Moon says. "Financially. I've probably made it. But because of the amount of pride I have. I can't relax. I think one of my stroDJCSt P<>ints is being able to come up :with the big play when the team needs it:• Moon's introduction to the NFL. was a rouah one. The Oilers lost to the world champion Raiders, and Moon was sacked four times, including once by his luah ~boot teammate and Iona-time fnend Rod Martin. In week two apinst the Indianapolis Colts, Moon bad his first 300-yard passing game (36S) in a lo ing effort. Still, Moon has yet to throw an inter- ception and currently ranks siiuh in the AFC in passing. After months of negotiations with several teams, Moon narro~cd his choice to $Cattle and Houston. On Feb. 3. Moon s1sned a five-)·ear, .Sb million contract with Hou ton. . .., .................... ..... R_..dacboa. Wltll fu Guy Betko1rlta, wbo captured th balllalt for Maler Ito. IOO • "I think what experience J &lined last year will really make a difference · this year. That experience should Jive me enough of an ed~ to earn a starting role, .. Crane said prior to the season. Well Crane broke into the startina lineup and has averaacd five tackles a game for the Thunderbirds who won their opener over Western Montan~ 24'-7 but dropped pme No. 2, 30-20 to Adams State. Despite beingajunior, the 6-2. 237- pounder has played relatively little football. . He played a little tight end as a freshman at CdM. But he missed his sophomore and junior years with the Sea Kings because of • srowth abnonnality in his back. On doctors' orders, be sat out those two years to prevent senous in.Jury. Then came Crane's senior teas0n. He eamcd a starting spot BJ a def cns1ve tackle and penor;med wdl until the mid-point of the season. That's when be broke an ankle in practice. So much for that season. On the {C(X>mmendation of a cousin who had attended Southern Utah State, Crane decided to walk on to the Cedar City campus. He pla)'cd some freshman ball but sot his real bi& chance in 1983. .. h was probably tht(tnoat CDftCen- tratcd ~ur of f'oottjlll I've ever pla)cd; he admits. 041 feel I made a lot of improvement. Thls ):e&r, I'm ready to buckle down arid play M>me serious football." "1 feel~ in top shape," be says. "l think l U be able to go a Iona time. I feel lucky and ready for a aoOd season." . Ciane :-antsto~halthywbcn* pro ~uu start .showina up to anch him lD 11JnC actlOD. ••t Jtill ba\ie the desire lO play profcsisorWly."' ~says. ... ~opefully, I can attrlet cnoup anenuon to 11tt the pro scouts to look at me scrioUlly next season." : As a sophomore, Crane bad 'l tackles. 39 of tbOIC unassisted. His speed (4.1tnthe40) may also dra some attention. HU Wcnts don•t ~ there. He alsO docs the snappina '9r punts Ind field pl atiempu.. • "Those arc key assignmcntsandJ~ be strctchina the truth a littJe ifl said that I didn•t fed tome ps:cssurc, ~ l.e adds. Bouton Ollera quarterback Warren llocm (No. 1) la looking for etardom in the NFL Resenre '~ drean;i is ~eality• Patriots' No. 2 quarterback · becomes.Waiter Mitty for day before the half lo cut cv.· England's ddlctt to 23-7. • Then. in the SC('()nd b&lf, he e~ttd a 31-point burst, throwin& two touchdowu pas~ in th~ proccu. He finished the da) with 12 completions in 22 attempt for 126 )ard and left Coach Ron Me)'tr speculauni on whether to tart him ahead of Gropo next week apinst WaShin&ton. · DeBcra., whohasinadcababitofcomi offtheberich succeufwl) in n Francisco and Denvert 'd it thlnimc in Tam and did it so well that Coadl John McKay laid he wllJ st.art nut week ag&1nst the c York Giants.. Laguna ·s Fortune earns all-tournament honors formn .. Orange Coa t OAILY Pit.OT/Tu r 18, 1964 O'Meara turns out to be Milwaukee's finest Did ) u nov. \hat t re form rC lifom1 high boo1 pl ycrs now comJ)Cttn on the PGA tour'! mo pg them i Marie O'Meara who ftnall> \\On hisfim toumnmtnt O\er thewcckcnd, the Great :r 1ilw ukct Open, packitlS up $54,000 and mov- mg mto second place on the money ti 1wnbS370,236. Hcwasfourth befortthcM1lw1ukceaf111ron the pioneylistd piteocvcrhaving\\on 11 tournament. An amumg feat. indeed. O'M raisagradu teofMi ·on Viejo High and l..on,g Beach St te, Ii ed in.Laguna Niguel until rectntl)' and wa the U.S. Nat1onaJ Open • champion four yea? qo. He also won theCostaMcsaO~n that me year. ,. FOR TH£ RE CORD ,1 - MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS A"*'1Qft Lff9U9 WEST DIVWON W L flJct Ge n n s11 1' 73 .SIO 1 7S 73 507 1~ 6' 12 .CS7 9 .. 11 .C5' , 67 14 cu 11 65 14 43' 12 EAST DfVISION a· Detroit H St 640 Toronto 1-4 " ..5'0 12 B•lllmort IO 61 .SO IS New Yortt IO 69 .S37 IS~ eostot1 71 11 .sn 11"" C....._lld ff 12 CS7 271'1 Nllw•uk• '2 ., 416 331'1 a-clltlc::Nd lie to< div it0n !Ille MeNIY"•~ KMMS Cllv 10, Aft9lb I Toronto S, 8os1on • Oelroll 7, Milw•Uk• 3 New York 12, 8allimote 7 CNc.ffo 7. Mionnol• l Oakland s. Texas J S..llle 3, C..,.._lld 2 (11 lming1) TMIY"a~ 1<•MH Cllv !S.t>erhaoen I· 10) •• AMets 1si.1on 7·7), n Chica90 (B~M 3•111 •I MlnMMl18 (Sdlrom C·f ), n • Mlw•uk• (McOurt • • m •• Oetrott (O'NMIH), n Botton (Gale 1·31 •' Tot"onto (U.t 13·7), n 8atllmort (O.Martl1111 6·71 •• N-YOt"k <Font-I 7·11, n Clevt&Md (UldUr 0-0) •I S.llle !Moore s-m. n Teaas !T•n.na IS-13) •I Oek!Ancl (Codlro41 3·CI, n w...-Y"aG-K•nsH City ........ n Chlca9o et MlnMwta, n Texas •• O.klend MllwM• •'Detro.I, n 8olton •• Toronto, 7JS o.m 8•11imore al New York, n Cleve .. nd •I Se.•1111, n N•"9Ml L .. 9" WEST DIVWOH W L ~Cl. GB Sen Ooeoo 13 6' SS7 HOUiton 7S 7S .500 1"'2 Atla11t• 1• 1' .A'3 9\l'a ~ 73 n ,_, 1oi; ClndMall 63 17 420 '°"' ~ Fr•ndlCO 62 17 416 21 EAST DfvtStON '° .59 .6CW 12 " S43 , '° 71 .S>O 11 71 7l .523 12 73 JS 493 1''i't 65 IS 433 ts.., Ch!QOo New Yort< PNladelPhla SI LOUii Montreat Pt!tsbur1ifl MIMIY• Saf'9S .,..._.. 9, Allan!• 0 PllllacleloNI 2, New YOl'k I Sall Oleoo 3, Cincinnati 2 (11 Innings> HolAlon 5, 5an Francis.co 3 Onlv °'"'" adleck"4ld T .... Y'aO- DMIWS (~ 12·61 •I Allanl• (Smllh H)),n San Oleoo IOravedlv 1·11 •• ClrlcinMll (Price 7·11) Pflllburtfl CTIJdor 9-11) •I Ch!Qoo lEdlrUIY 1-7) N-York (Terflill 10• 12> •I Pnl~ltl !Demv 7·61, n MonlrHI (Smith 11·12) ., SI Louis (Andular 1'·12>. n San Francisco IRlleV 0·01 •t Houslon t!Atou 7·4), n W~Y"aGMMS DMlerS •• ttouslon, n P1ttlbur9'I al Chlat90 ~ Yorll •I Pnnaoetof!la, n Clnc:lnntll at Atlanl•. n MonlrHI •• St. LA>uls. n ~ Fr.nc:lsco •I San Di.tlo, n AMERICAN Ll!AGUE Rovlls 10, Mein 1 KANSAS CfTY CAUllOR.NIA .abrhlll Mlrtlbl Wiison cf S 2 3 O lanlclut rl 4 O 0 O Sherldn rl 4 2 l l Sconln lb c 0 O 0 8relllt> 2001 LYMd 4110 Prvor3t> 2 I l I OeCna3b 3 O IO Orf•dh s 2 3 J Downing" c I I 0 White lb S O I~ ... Rt.Jtun dh 3 I 1 1 hlboftl 11> 4 1 l 1 Gf1ctl 2b 2 0 0 0 Olora" 2111 loontc 3100 Uontllt 2 0 0 0 5ehofl1d u 3 0 I 0 Slautlf\I c • I W W•tNllc ood:o Cncpcnu COOO TtlhllS Jt 10 12 9 Tetats lO I J I Scar• l>Y 1"""-i<Nl~ Cllv • 200 301 103-10 C.llfO(nl• • 000 000 010-I .G9me *laalllO Jl8.1 -S!>«idAn ( 1)) LO&-KaMas City 4, C.UfornNI S 28- Wllson, Orta, ~. Slaueht. HR- Sheridal'I (7), Ort• (I), Slaugh! <•>. R•·. Jeckson (22). S&-Wllson !Cl) KIOla•ClfY Ii.ck W, 16· I 1 Hul$mann ~ l(lson L,C·S Kaufman Curt la Cliburn wp....<urtl• 2 I~ H R ER H SO I J I 1 l • I 0 0 0 0 I 32·3 6 S S 0 I 2·3 I 0 0 0 0 2 2·3 2 2 2 1 3 2 3 3 3 1 I T-210 A-21.162. NATIONAL LEAGUE o.dlwl f, Braves o LOS ANGILH ATLANTA .. rllbl •rt1bl Sex 21> C I 2 0 MThmc>s" 4 0 0 0 And9UI lb • I I I Rltmrus 4 O 0 0 Landrll r1 S 2 2 I ZU\'ella u 0 0 0 I Amkln8 cf 0 0 0 0 l(.,..,,,,.k rl • 0 0 0 Guerrtr cf 4 I J c Mur11fw cf 2 o o o Mldndorl o 0 0 O Perry lb 3 0 0 0 Manti# If 7 o I o JOl'll'SOl'I lb 4 o o o WNtflld If I I 0 0 Runee 21> 4 0 J 0 ladlrYO 1010 hMdlclc 2100 • ScloKla c • 1 I 1 PPereu 1 o o o Fim.Mec Io O O Falconett IO O O 9roell lb • I 2 0 WSheln llfl 1 0 0 0 IRuuel u J 1 1 0 9rltro4r 11 0 0 0 0 llllver•A I IO O Otdrnono O O O O Welehlt 2 0 0 0 H..-PtrOll I 0 0 0 RR,,_11 3 o 11 Pavnu 0 O II T..... J9 f 1l I T.eab a I J I ~"---LOS .. ,,.._. 701 113 IOC>-f Allenl• 000 000 000-0 GefT'I Wltlftlng Rll -GutrttrO 111 E~. Weld\. OP-Loe AlllJ*s 1 At I 2 L09-4...oa AllONI f, Alltl'lt 1 ~.,. Ill.GM. IUllYftalCIJ .Hit GlwT-m>, Sctosct. rn se M fflOl'nOM)n Ill, Ill usMll ( 41 • " R•• .. so s tOll6 • 1 0 0 I t .. I ,..,, 1 l ·l O'M ra 1 amo thcpla}'Crs qu hf~1ng for the U S. t m th t plays J1 p ''anatenmmatch.:rhetop 10 money-.inncrs soflwoweeks o q · lifiedforthclcam. he U A vs. Japan form t 11 for two ~ of four ball stroke play compctiuon, followcdbytwoday or individual troke play. 'Each member ofthcwinn1ft!ttam will~1\C us.ooo ith s 1 S,000 soina to 1bc to ina team members. Another S 100,000 will be di v1dcd'amon1 the indiviJual leadinaS:Corcrs. The match will bC played t Sobu CountryClubne.arTplcyothewtckof Nov. 1-4. 'lhe mcmo~oiffill ~hteibaum, NFL HATK>HAL CON,•R•NCI Wtst W LT ~ ~p ,.A Slit! Fral!Cbco 3 O O 1000 t7 71 Aflanl• t 2 0 333 IO 12 • .,.,. 1 2 o m " " New one.ns 1 2 o .m 6S .,, c ....... Chieffo 3 0 0 1000 70 21 Detroit ' 2 0 m 71 75 Green .. , I 2 o .m JI 60 ~· I 2 0 .m S1 11 T81'1\N .. _. I 2 I ;333 .a 61 •m 01Haa 2 I 0 M7 SO 51 NY Glallta 2 I 0 M7 70 64 SI Louis 2 I 0 '67 9c 64 ~ 120.33163 61 W•sl'IMulon I J 0 ..3lJ 71 16 AME"ICAN CONl'E.ltaNC• West ••ldtn 3 0 0 1.000 7C Cl K•naH Cltv 2 I 0 M7 IC 71 S.n Dieoo 2 1 e u1 '° st S..lllt 2 I 0 6'7 17 SS Denver 2 I o M7 44 65 CtMr'll P1llsburgh 2 I 0 M7 7C 61 Cle~ ·O 3 0 ,000 31 n Clnc~ll o 3 0 .000 62 to Houston 0 3 O 000 ff '° .... Ml•ml J 0 0 1.000 1-4 •1 New EnolAnd 2 t o '67 " 61 NY Jets 2 1 a 647 13 60 tlldlanaOOlls 1 2 o .m 12 " 8uff•lo 0 3 0 .000 41 .,, TINIM's Scer'a Ml•ml 21, 8uff•lo 11 SUftMY"s Games ll.ms al Clnelnnall Houston •I AllMll• Mlllt'IOSOI• ., Detroit • NY Jets al lluffolo P1llsbl.rfJh •I Cleveland .SI Louis •• New OrlMns S.n Fr•ncbco ti f>Nladelol'll8 WHhinolon •I New Ellllland Cl'llceoo •• Seallle lndl•neoolls •• Mloml Green e.v •• D•llA1 , K•nsas Cllv •• Denvtt T1~ 8•Y ., NY Giants ,.,.,...y, 5"t. lit Sen Oiege> •I llalden (Cl'laMll 7 •t 61 Oolclhin1 21, 9* 17 Scere l>Y Quutan MOaml 1 1 1 o-?I 8ulf•lo 0 3 7 7-17 Mla-Duoer 11 OHS from Marino ('Ion 5ehamam kick), 12.sl MJ.-Cllvton 12 oass from Marino (von SCl'larnann kl<*), f;5' 81.lf-f=G 0.nelo Sl, 14;SS Mlr-Nt/IO<t I NU from Marino (von Sdlitnann kkttJ, U3 ~ I run (Danelo kldll. 11:03 ~Wklna 37 pau from FtrVU$0n (DaMlo kick), 5:AO ' • -.s.css GAM8 ST A TISTICS M69 ..,. First downs 23 16 Rusr.·vatda 33 • .,, 19-61 PaulnG Yatda 2" 221 Return v•rds m 5' Paua 26·3S-1 23·31·0 Sacks av 3·31 1-7 Pwlls 2·3' C·40 Fumbltl·tost • 4·2 4·2 Ptnalhet·vards S-43 9-70 Time of ~slon J?-.51 27:02 IMDfVH>UAL ST A TISTICS RUSHING-Ml•ml, BeMell 16·5', Nathan 12·27, Marino S-(mlnus 4). luffalo, Neal 12·34, Fwvuson 2·21, V. W iMm ._5, Moort H . PASSIHG-Mlaml, Morino 2 .. JS-1-296. 8uff•to. FtrWIOll 23·31·0-259. RECE1VING-M11ml, Ouoer S•61, c.tato •·52, JohnMMI 3-44, Oevton 2·3', N Moo<e 4·2', Nathan 4·2C, Jenltn 2·11, Rose Ht, Hardv M lutlelo. Franklin 7·'2. D•wtdns 3·51. V Wiiiams 3·3', 8arnell 2·2', Na., 3·21 Moore t ·IO, a... l·I, White '"'· MISSED FIELD GOALs-Ml•ml, von Scllarnann 36 Bvffato, D•neto. c7 Top 20 The Too Twenty IHms In the Asaocial.O Prns contM looRMll Polt. With t1r1t·!Qce ¥Otes In oarenthnea, IJM records, 101.i oo l nts b•sed on 20·19·11·17·16·1S·l•·l3·12·11·10·9·1·7· and ranlOR11$ in the swevlous ool lt--.i ~ ""' 1.NIWHka (311 1-0-0 I, lSI I 2 Clemson (lS) 7•0-0 I.OU 2 3 Tuu <•> HrO I,~ • 4.Ml•ml, Fla (1) 3· t·O 197 S S Ohio Sl11t 2·0-0 NO • 9 6.elitJAatn V4UDQ 3-0-0. .117 I 1 Penn Sl•lt 2-0-0 70 12 I UCLA (2) 2·0-0 726 7 9 WHt!lnoton 2·0-0 111 16 10 Boslon COiiege 2·0-0 6,. 10 11 Ok&.homa 2. C>'O 663 Is 12.0klahome ~··ie 2-0·0 515 13 13 So Methodist l·H m " I• Iowa 1·1·0 3'I IS IS.Flotida Stale 2·0-0 340 11 16.Mlch'il'fl 1 +o 3S2 3 17.SOUlhtrn C•I 1-0-0 173 20 II Wtsl Vlruinl• 3-0-0 100 If Auburn 0· 2-0 94 11 20G-eit l·H S7 COMMUNITY COLLEGE LOG ~ West(l-0) (~adfk·f c:. .... _, 21 Or.,,ge Coast l s.r, s.cit n -., .s.nia Ane Set., Seof 2' -Taft< s.1 .. Oct. 6 -•• Pa..o.n.· S.I .. Oct, 13 -lye Sal., Oct. 19 -Mt. San Antonio• e• . Oct 11 -•• Lone a..ch cc• 1 .. Nov 3 -Cerrtl06• •~ Nov lO -•I F~· Sar.., Nov 17 -l!I Camino• S.I , Nov 2A -•I la. trlf.eld• 0.....-.. c .. ,, (0· 1) cM& ... c ..... ~l 3 GOiden W•I 2\ S.I , 5#1 f2 -Fllllerlon Sal s.. 2'-~dr.' S.I , OCI. 1l -al •lverilde' S.I , Ott 70-S.11 DlltO Mfft• I .. Ott 11 -at SOutllwetlern• S.I,. Nov .I -S.., 01tto• Se NoY ,._ ., ~· lat., ...... 17 -Ct1N&· Tiv1 • fltO'f --n -et Se!!!• All9 , • former thl ucd1rcctor nd bailct· lko ch tCompton Hi,shand ComptonCulleaea wclla afonncr N Fl official. will be honored at the i\d 8111 htelbaum Memonll Oolftoumamentat Lakewood l'>Un· uyClubonFriday.Oct. l9. Schte1baumd1Cd lWO)C ruao during 1he football season, and the toumamcnt was taned byafonncr pl~)erandcurrcntsehooloffici I Lour.eJo ph.Also included amona former players on the high school level under SChleibaum wtrc Dulce Snider and Pete Rozdlc. A donation from each cntl')'. fee will go to the Univers1~y ofRedland5 acholar\hip fund, Schltabaum having &raduatcJ from tha1 institution. A tennis tournament w1llaho be staged for those n!)t whhing to play coif. A large number offormerComp1on athletes were present a year ago for the event. How an H .. , forfunhcrinformatJon, phone Josephat(7 l4)9?4-0l 39orwrite to ham at 6792 LeafwOOd Di'., Anaheim 92807. * * "h One of the more wonhwh1Jc pro- jects of the Sou them California Section ofthc PGA tlu.t includes most club pros in thcarca.1s the Ou~ forKiJs:pr~m. U~cluburc collected by the pros and then cut down to size, f'Co'gripped and made \.,. ~rep-football log SUNSET LEAGUE IDtSON (2·1)' 41 WHli.kt 14 Collon 011-Edlson (•t OCCI 019-HunllnotOfl Buch 6 02tr-FV (al Hin, Behl 3 N2-Marlnt Nf-OcMn VleW SAOOLIUCK (2 .. ) Cl Santa Ana V•lllV 14 Sant• AM 520--al U Hal>r• • OIZ-.1 OaM 6 01t-Warren (II MV) 0 0? ....... t Ml•sloll Vltlo NZ-.! San Cllmente Nf-CattO V•llev (•I MV) llfYIM• <1·1) Sl1-8ellnlllt (at OCCI S2'-StJ loKO (al H8) OS-.1 Notre OelM Oll-'Wtslmlnatw (OCCl 019-0cean View (al 118) 02s-+.111. 9aach (•I OCC) N2-Fln. VafltY (Ilg A) Ht-Marin. (al OCCJ SEA VIEW L•AGUE CO.ONA OllL MAR (l·OI 14 H1111lfnuton 8"ctl S27-Coil• Mew (•I NH) 04--Uni,,.-slly ($A 8ow1) 012-Hot Hart>w (SA eowt) Olt-E,tancla <•t NH> 02f-WOOdbridOI (SA lo#!) fl Ullfversltv 1 New1t9" Harbor 520-el Tustlll S2t-EI Toro (ti MV) 0.--San Clemente 01,._I Cap0 ValleV 1 20 flOUNTAIN VAL.UY (2 .. 1 11 Maler Def 17 El Toro· S21~t Mtulon Vi.lo S~lte (SA 8o11tl) 6 San Clomtnlt S:ZO-C•OO ValloY (al NH) ,Sn-i.H 8tedl (•I NH) CM-WoodtlrldlM (at ~"'-> l3 01?-Coala Mesa l•t OCC) IC 019-llnlVWlltv (al NH) 02t-thl•nc: .. (•t OCCI N2-Saddltback (•t NHI Hf-el Newoort H•rbcw 10 N!-<dM lat Not. Harwl o N9-a1 Laoon. eeacn UNtvaRSITY ( .. I) 7 lrvltlt 21 01 ...... t 0"8 H 21 02~.,.,, . Nt-Mlulon VlttO Nt-t...auna Hm, 06-l.8 Polv (al w"'' OU-OC..n View l•I Wllrl Ol~lna (•t OCC) 02tr-W.tminste:r <at H8) N2-Edlson (81 COSTA MESA (1-21 6 1o1sa Gr•llde 0 Mllslon Vleto S~HUlll Hiiia (•I MV) sn-ea11nc:la <•• OCCl ~($A8owl) 012-L.. lkh. l•I lrvlM) 01~ (II Nol Ha'110r) 026-Goll• Mesa <•t lrvlnt) 1.AOUHA HI.LU ll·1) • Woodbridge .... IC Esta"Cla 1' 17 N,_.1 Hu'iilHltton 8tacti HUNTINGTON elACH (l·IJ 10 Corona del MM IC 7 lanllaee S20-t..Alamllos (Wetllf'n) S27-"SaddlebK.k (•I NH) 05-11 l.a9UN 8Hctl 01~ (•I OCCI 01~. H8ft)or (at OCC) 02'-UnlVerSltv <•t Irvine) 17 Datn*I 0 S21-t ~-Harbor $21-1..8 Wilson 06-Maltr o.I (•I OCCI 012-Maflna 01.-e1 Wettm•nster 02S-Edlson (•I OCC) Nl-OclHll v ... Hf-Fin. Va"rf (et H8) MAIUM 0·1 ) 14 EIOl(•ni• 10 Senll• $21-f'"oolhll (fll TU$t 11) S2t-l..a Quinl• (•I Wtslm&lr) O~t Milli an 011-al HIMlllniJton ~h 0 lt--f'ln. Vatll'V (al OCC) ~ View (•I Wstrl N2-et Westminster. Ht-Edison <•t OCCI OCIAH VIEW (1·1> 21 Est~ 10 La Quint• N2-Woodbrldge !•I OCCI Nl-Esl•nda (•I OCCI ISTANaA (1·1> 3 OcMn View 11 LHUN Hilt$ S21-I San Clemente S21-Unlversltv (•I OCCI 0~1 N-oort H•rbor 26 Olf-WoodbridOI (•I NH) 1 Olt-Saddleb.ck (•t NH) 026-<dM Cot OCCI N1-el Lff~ 8MCll Nt-<osl• M1M 1•1 OCCI L1'GUNA HACH (0.21 0 8UIM Perk 6 Elslnore S21-0•M Hlls Sa-<dM l•I NH) OS-CoScl• Mesa 3 012-0ntwr<itv <•t trvlrw> 21 019-Woodt>rldOe (•I lnllne) 02 ........ 1 NtWOOl'I Harbor N~sl•ncl• ~Sad~ 7 N~t. Harl>or (•I Irvine) 31 Nf-Woodl>rldge (al Irvine) WOOOMIOGI (J.1) 16 Ugun. Hrtls 7 Tustlll S21-t San Marcos sa-.1 Newoort Hatbor Os-cdM l•I lrtlM) 012-Esl•ncla (al NH) 019--l.H. &di. (al lrvll!I) OU-Saddleback (SA lowll .11 N>-Costa MIU <at OCCI f4' Nf-UlllVWlllY (II Irvine) SOUTH COAST LEAGUE CAPtSTilANO YALL•Y ( .. 21 S»-Unl~altv (•I MVJ s--.1 Mlvt.lr Os-El Toro (•I MV) 01,._I MIS&loft Vlelo I Olf-al San Ctemenlt 21 02S-C.OO Valev (•I MV) N2-0lna Hiiis (al MV) Ht-.llrvlM MISSION V1•.IO (2 .. ) 21 San O\toO ltl«M 21 Unlversllv 521-FOUl\ltln V•lov S2t--el D•na Hiiis OS'-11 St. JoM 8otCO Ol~ Hiiia (al MV) I• 'FoothlM 22 Ot...-Caolstr•no Vdtv 026-EI Toro N2-9t lrvl111 72 E~•nz• 44 Ht-San Cternenlt S2~dM (al Nl>f, Harbor) S2t-San Clemenie OS-0•"9 Hiiis OIHrvlne 019-11t MlsMofl VltiO u 02'-UGuna Hiiis (al MV) 7' N2-0vt • Nt-EI Toro <•• MVI DANA HILLS (1-J) 7 Sonoi'• I Torrev P•nt\ s21-1 Laguna ltach S2t-Mlsilon VlelO OS-El Toro 011-et C•OO V•llev Ol._.rvi111 SA.N CUMS.NH 0 ·11 13 Santiago O Corooa dtl Mllr S71-Eatoncla S2t-11 Ceoo Valltv ~I Irvine 01,._1 Mt. Miguel cs~ · 019-UollfM Hiii' • 21 026-0_,.. H 21 N~I Toro Nt-.1 Minion Vi.Jo ANGELUS LEAGUE 6 0 7 6 S22-<voreu <•• Western) S2t-al Gardena 0.-Wntern (•I H8) 011-Ftn V•lleY (•I Wmstrl 01,.....Edlson (•t H8) 026-Ma/IM (•I WHlmttr) N2-et Hunllnoton 8Mch N,...... WeslmlllSltr NIWf'OttT HA•IC>tt (2·11 1.7 S.nta A111 20 lrlll111 I 026-el S.11 Clement• 1 N2-l..HUM Hiiis (•I MV) N,_San Dleoo Hiiia MATU Oil (1"1) 13 Fountain Valev 30 Santi AM Valley S21-S.nll AM ($A lowll 527-Westmltlster (SA towf) <»-Hin 8Mct1 Cat OCC> 11 0 WSSTMINSTER (1·1) ' 3 i.. Quinta 521-Hunllnofon 8H<l'I Stt-Woodbf'ldgt l•I lrvlna) OS-ESl•ncla IL T~O 0·1) 32 CHiie Park 11 Pacifica S2l-s.t'Vll• 527-Maler 0.1 (SA Bowl) ~ono 8each Wiison 0 012-~ (SA 8owt) lC Olt-<oal• ,..,.. (ti OCC) 02'-l..eOUl\9 8tactl • Nl-tJnl~f$11Y (al Irvine) N9-<~MM 1' Fount••n Vllllev 521-1 Valellcla S~rvlne (•I MV) 05-l..aNla HIHs (•I MV) Cemmunhv c.ee.. SATURDAY'S GAM•S (N•·--•ICa) Golden WHI •I Sant• Ana Fulltrton •' Oranee Coal Ml. San Alllonio •I Saddleback LA H•rbcw •I El CAmlflo West Los All9lleS al Moorlllrk lmoerlal Vallev at South-tern San DlellO MIU •1 GrosSITIOlll Riverside cc •• EHi Los Anoeles Palomar al Rio HondO Antelacle Vallrf at Citr\4 T•lt at Weal Valley WtsJ. C1l lnilltuta al L.ono 9a.ch CC Scollldllte, Al. al Cerritos Ventura II 8akeraf!Md U.S. Marine CorPi at t>ewrt GoWldlltl, Al. .•• Sant• earbar• cc Hanc:odt •I San a.narc11~ Valltv LA Soulflwftl 11 Comolon, 1:.30 o.m LA V•ltv at Glendale, 1:30 om. Fre"'° •I San .. Monica CC ~s.adena CC at LA Pierce Al 0amtS ti 7:JO p.m. unleu OltlerwlM no!ff. """ Kheet KhecMe (llOft ....... 7~ o.m. llllle&• fletM) T .. UtlSDAY C•oislr•no V•lltv vs Corono dlt Mar •I Newoort HarbOr COSI• Mela"' Los Alamitos •• WHtern trvlne •I Tustin Unfwnltv vs. ~ Hlllt •I Mhslon \l1ttO I S.ddlabadl at La H•br• Pacfflca •I El Modena Loera •t G•rcltn Grove KtllllldY at Fullerton FRIDAY Fountain V111eY •• Minion_, Vlelo a.nn•nu v,, Edison •I OC\. Hunll119ton 8Hc:h •• Nt•oorl H•rbor s.rvne •I Westminster Eita~ 11 San Cllmelllt D•na Hiiis at LHUtla leech S..I• AM V$ Malll' Del •I S.•11• Al\9 lowt Woodl>rldoe •I San Marcos (7;'*51 Maflna vs FoolhlU al Tustin El Toro al Val9ncla ' Or•noe vs. K•I ... •I u P•lrnt P•rk Canvon al Ct>.tt.v • Loog e..ctl Wilson vs Villa P.nt •I El Modin• Anaheim vs Troy •I Fullerton BtH·Olln<la'-411 Rowtand MHnolla 11 8uene P•rk lolY Gr•nde vs. S.v.nn• •I WtSllf'n WMl«n va lttfldlo Alamlto' •I 9olse Gralldt MKnolla •I luane PHrll El OOradO vs Sonora at L• Hal>r• Cerson al SI, P•ul llsri. Amal el Cotton I I shoo MonlPOmetY " wr. PIUS X •t ~ lmount SATUlltOAY Santa AM v ..... •I Lovota OCUn View vi. Cv11ttt1 ti Wutern Esperenn VI I.A CUI/Ill al 8olH Gt1nclt S.nlY H VI Lot ~ al G•rdM • Gt9M Slroldl (Costa Masai. C·47; S. D•~ Swttarl (Fountain Vdtv), 4·CI; 6 Mark Fnorllt (University), 4·40; 1. (lie) Mark PlllUIPS (Woodbridge), Carl Harrv (Fountain V•l- levl, C·37; f K91111 HodfJe (E,l•ncla), 4·34; 10. Mlk• Mc:GllndleV <C>c .. n View), ... 2'. SC.OW I !tit) S.n Curnn <EcfllOft), IC.tvln McClel•nct (NewPOrt H•rllorl, Garv Coston (Mater Del), 12 Md\; 4. l(ellh HodOe 1Estanc:la>1 9. T~°"9l (at Safi l'r'llflCba) M9n'1 Flrlt aa&INI ,.,..... • Terry Moor {U.S.), clef. Gtenn.Mld'libal• <C•n.ctal, 7·•. 3-6, .. 3; Mall OOVM (US I, def R•ndY Nixon <U S >. 6-3, 6·3, Lawson Oooc.an (U.S.), def Tim Gulllkson !U.S.), 6·2, 6·3, Tom Gulllkson (U.S.), Mi. P•lrldl MCEnrOI (U.S.), 6-C, 7·6; 1111 SC.nlon (US.> def Peter RtnMrl (Us l. r3, .,., HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS Mar-.,, ...... a..dl 9 {Mllftll9 ....... ..,.,.., M·ll> ..... Crlwll (M) clef. l.Heh, 6· l; Mf. WI lit, 6-0; def Conkey, 6•1; Po (M) loll 6·7, won .. C, lost H ; Ulncl (M) loll 3·6, won 7·4, tost 4·6 0-...... H•rrll·Ctluc'ctl (Ml loll to 0 Suel·Taul. S-1, dtf N•vlor·W. Sugl, 7·S, def Gold· sttln·T•rbtll, 6·3; Fenton·E. Row1son (M) loll 6·3, WOii 6•1, .... ; Sl•nflllld•K. Roeertson (Ml lost 0·6, 3·6 alld •·6 C .... -MIM t , Ck.-VleW SNlet Ti.dtr (CM) lost lo Hurdtler. 1·6; def. Durr. 6·2. def. Tr•no, 7·6, eons.covoc !CMI loll 0•6, 0-61 C·6, 8•rmore (CM) lost 4·6, 2•6, won 6·2 OWlllel 19atmer•WU!r (CMI def Dll*•·Rlllev. ~-2. lost lo 0.dlln·~. l ·6. Iott to Ktret·Moot•. 3·~ SoM·UrlOll (CMI won 6·1, 6•3, 6-2; Wulf·Chang (CM) lost S·7, won 6·C, 7·S ....... 11,11 ..... Sllllllta Si9111tY ( E) def OM.Ir, 6•2; def Alrine, 6•1, def Ml.,_,,,uro, 6•0, Goldberger !El won 6·2, 6•1, .. t: JoMIOll IE> won 6·0, 6·2, '°· '*"*' Ktf11•$het (I!) def. V~ Vtll·S.wvtt, 6•1; def Norl~·8'Klvnore. 6 1, def. HlfPW•SdUltr, 6•1, Smml F~ (E) won6 0 6-0 ... 1. Simmom-.ut-(II....,. 1·6, 6·2. 6·2 ........... 14, lrvtn. .. JlniN• S~ (WI def Pllaft (f), 6 O, dtf Ma., 6•2, def. lttvnoldl, 6-0, W I• (W) WOii 6·0, , .... , 6·0, h1.v (W) 1oa1 .... 3·6, WOl\60 • Not• OoUOlta rtw11i nof r~ .. 0 01,.......1 9 1shoo Amal 11 01~ Mont. ($A lowl) 01 ....... t Pius X NI-SI P•ul (SA lowt) N~vlta (SA lowt Let A*""" MONDAY'S AHUL TS (2511 .. S4·ftllM ..,,_. ,,..., NST RACL Ollt mllt Met Fllrllecrell (Vdlntlham) :UO 3 00 2.60 Ml Glddav (R•ldlfordl 12 40 UO F•lr PtltnlOM (Shll'rll'll UO Abo raced: Brentwood JoM, The Cen- dlilalt, Double Sk~. EnouN N Devour, L .... e1cw11. Tlmr. 2.M. U ECACTA (2•9) oalcl Sl7UO saCOHO RAc1: OM ,,,,.. HC9. FIV Jlndt Flt (Grund'Y) 11.IO 6AO «.40 Countrv Comfort (Prier) !Sot 120 Pont"" (PHI) s.20 ' AJao r acieci l'tr F:lv ShMlow. Ac\llf, Stoo The ••In. llHOUlllM U•t G, Starcroas. T""' 2.20 2/ S. U •XACTA (2·11 Hid S116 70. ntaD RACa. One mil• oac:e. Sklppera Vivider (Aubin) 17 40 10.00 • 20 Anctvs ~ (HuriOutl 1600 7.60 111n1 0utus1 cw.ems> 7.4' Allo rKeel li9 Ernlt, AllclVI Herman, lolshol, Wlrwout. L.ev'ltv OG, Flvllle Train• tr. Time: 2 01 >15. sJ IXACTA (rSl oald 12:114 10 . POUltTH RACI. One mite trot. Imp Imo 1mO (Rult) IUO 7.00 Chuck El Mar (Maier) c 00 Mr Content (OIMlll S.00 340 C.60 AIM> raced. •H.t R .. rHI, Jurv Jav. Smoll.v Rt9f. Booolt, Time: 2 GU/S. 'IJITM aACL Ont mlla Nee. Crutt On Iv (V•lludlnollaml uo uo uo Mlcln fJhl Mine (Pttlno) UO UO Minute Man (Short) 1.20 Also l'1lc.d Smooth As Vt1v11, AtllatoH, WclY o.t. Nori Al'lll J~ic; Kint Como Time: UO 41S sJ IXACTA (1·4l paid M0.50 IOCTH RAC •• One mlle NU. Chlcltvl <Mlrclllilldl 51 IO lSJO 7 ot Oullklrt1 (Whffllr) j.60 UO A.ndvl Mav (Grenier> 10,40 AIM raced SOlcv a..111, 0\#lt ~. TrMI YourMlf, GI GI ltoel.tf, Katie aravo. Flora o.nk:a. Time 2tl 215 U •XACTA (,_.4) N141 s.Qs.30, laVSNTH lltAC•. 011t mite trot. ANIY'' IMteor ( • 1tcl'flt) 10 SO • 60 410 J~ (Trtmbl•Yl 6.00 J 40 SAl'tool (L.aOtvl 1.20 AIM raced Mine OrtOOf'I, W., Jrn Memotlft, ICP, FltVI Storm Tltne: t JO 21 S. U IXAC'TA (3• 1) Nici 1'2 60 llGMTH RAC.I, One mlle tkt Sup« Netto (Sfltrr'tftl , 11.60, IOI J.40 Tred Miu IMa ) «AO UO DeMf1 SOii (AndtrlOll) ..... Abo racH Ottft "91111, Fui l'\'lcMI, ffftMIV Fronk, a.tie Jollt, .la1ntt Vlnctnt, Clilc:ktd IC9 Timi u• >11 si UACTA fN) Mid 1111 0 WfTM "ACS. One milt trol Como Ster (Lltftttlfll 1'" uo uo Cl'letrilA Moote IOttot\W) 4 • MO NUM Siar lGrunctvl 4.20 MIO rtctct KllJUO, t..Olltl lftl.ielt, Nollfl Affttt~ • ,I 50p~ to in a tour card Ear Y. cnt onaJguahfyi~ te rnclu eeunc \:COuntor ClubinCh1001wuhothersan Indiana. Ronda cw tl'ICY and Tenn Datcsoflhc earl.> quahfy1na to um arcOct.2-S. A sccond qmcn1 ~ill be pla>cd CXt,30.Nov.lwtthJackNaaJaus'• Bear Creek Golf Club ln Temecula the cl tvcnuc.Olhcs rein Dalli and El Paso, Texas, Flonda and Mt 1pp1. :The fin I qualifyjna tournament willbeheldDcc. l2·17atMi ion Hill1Count!')' lubandLaOu nta Hotel GolfGlub near P Im SJ?riO&J. The ftllOn&I toumomcnts will be over 12 holc1. PGA tour player•s cards will be iuucd tolhetopSOfinishcrsat the final qu lifYittJ toutl'\A~ent and the next 50Wilf pm cx~mptaons for th 1985 Tournament Pia yen SCrics. ,.,.ALOOSAS THiaO RAC.. 4'h furfontl$. TraWllnt SOut?I (Rond) UO llt Tlmt Wond (Smith) Sootltd MMt1V (Ectwatdsl UO I.II uo UI A.ff .._, Atso rtlCtd. 8o Brown. EINal .Anotfllr °'°"'*· Time: .SI 215. S.S IXACTA (HI Nid $50.00 THOROUG .... IDS FOURTH RAC8. 6 ~ l'rouct Yri• (~) fOO 5.20 i .. Slmpllallc'I Date~) 11.20 Mt IHu Jucta (811dl) IM Aho raced: Dallv E1ttnlH, SeconCI IMI, llo lad Wind, SIQJ A a.w. •u• .. " Sem Tlmt· 1:1'. ''~ aACL I 1116 ma.. Cum Oft Ea11 (Ortetal 1.60 2.10 2M Ctlio Saver (DllJdlo) S.40 3 .. ~nt FrMdom (.._nsenl 2 .. Alto ~ Proud R•scal, .._OPV ~· eratlon, Renfro. Time: 1:57 21s. U DAlt..Y DOU8La CH I Nici Slt61 SIXTH RACE. 6 fur!Onts. Zoom AIOnt (Fernandll) UO Tootle Wallen (Or1tH ) Mv Oonna e. (Menal AIM> rac9d· Plc!u.ntrv, MusJcal ..... Time I 11 2/S. S.S •XACTA (3·C) Mid MS.50 SIVKNTif •ACE. 6 furlongs. E>eclllna v. (H•Menl 6.60 3.M '>·'° Dinner Al Maxim's (OllVll'ft) 3.00 ~ atue Evld Ruler !OtltadBlol •.tt A1So raced Ml•ml Kid, Glory AOovt, t..IJCkv Flor, Rldda .. Y. Miu Plwtne T.lmt 1-20 21 S. elGHTH RACe. 6 furtonGI, Mr.._rbofLIOhta (H•nwn> I 40 3 to 260 WlloOon (8r .. well) C.60 JAi DQ-Tr•alC Tov <Estrada) t60 Alic roc9CL Boot Proof, FrMU Fire, E>ectaslvo, E. T. Home, No Acdal'MllOll. Time: 1;1'. S.S IXAC'TA (1-1) peld MIAO. NPfTM RACE. 6 fur'°"9L 81oom1n1 Tyrant (Orf ... ) UO 3.00 UO It.,_. Mlll1Yr <Cnn> s.• nt fMctlo Gal (/Hna) J .. AIM rocecl: Waller Weill!', MalfttlC Mllltlt, Rldlle Mat. Prince Romor • Time: 1:17 2/S. T9NTM lltACE. 1 1116 mites Pr1M1Y•tl~ (Oe1Mdill) 1M UO UO • Bold N' a.tier <Meno) 7.21 3.20 AllllurOuk (Pedroza> J 00 Also rtlCtd: V•nce'a 8•Y. P9rfect t4>•tr1 Mlttltv c .... ,., Privett Room, J•llO« Wackv Time U• 1/S. as IXACTA (5-6) Nici mt.so. n f'tCK sax <1·3·3+1·5> oald s1..a..1 oo wtttt six winning tk:ktls (flw horsat) CarrvOft• ooot: sn,tnJs •L•YINTH .Aca. 6 fUrtonos Eortlllt (Ha"Mn) 10.60 ._. ! Cit •t.m!IUI ANe4 <Ort ... I ISM .. H cm-C8l'NO C91ack> 3.10 Also raced: ~. Secret Rt· venoe, Sllwr Prtnc.ss, Tiny llade. Time: 1:16 J/S. IS IXACTA (3·5) oalcl 5461.00. TWIL'Pnf •ACtL I'• mile Jack•IS Ctll•f (HolllftUWOrlh) 900 4IO UO Tent Tall <Bums) C60 HI ...,_II Sat•n (Dtltacllllo) UO Also roctd· Jerome Pr1<l'lt, Fun For Ma, TOfW'a TrMaure, Ml9r•tt. In~ C«.lllY, 110n Ab, FUI Vlllln Time, ~" l/S. S.S IXAC'TA (S-1) Nici Skot. Alllndlllce: 6MO (tatlmtltcl). .. t - Dcn TH Nor1ccs NRCIMOTMlftt .UllROADWAV MC>ftTUARV I 10 Bt<*Sway CottaM ... '42·9150 •AL T2 UftOl..ate llMTH TUTHLL WllTCLIF' CHA"L 427 e. 17th s1. CO.taMeH 148-1371 PAClflC YllW -~AL PARK Cem tary • MOftuary ChaPel •Crematory 3500 Paclfle View Ortve NewpOf1 BMc:h M41 •2700 MAMC>f'UWft. MT.OUVI Mortuary • ~91Y CrematQrY 1625 019ief "v Co ta M 540· 54 -..i 184 Cl 642-5678 ~ P&Rk IUft'POR T IPIRTME•P s r l•r ' . . Call (714) 494-9233 for more Info. ... .. For Ad ActiOn Cal ·a Daly PIO~ _AD-VISOR 642-5678 Werk 114 DI at .•. , .••.• ,,,.,,, '"••••rt 'A representative wut be In Coate Meta to Interview for winter aeaaonal employment. For further Inf ormatton prior to Sept. 19, call (1) (801) 849-1000, ext. 1819. On Sept. 19, call (714) 540-2500. Atk for Georgia Tay- lor, . District Managers If yo11 enjoy work1n9 with youno bOya & gltla ond CU.k 1ob1 ort not for you. con& cs.t o <OtHr 111 th• Mw paper circulo· tiOll f;eld. Th J 11 o un;qvt po lion w~ doily chOllengtt & r•wcHdt. Our openin:g1 or• lmrntdlOtt. Appl1<onh mu1t hove o 'ltQll, atotionwogon or trvtk W• offer on excelttm 1al0ry th o bon11• plan Ond 9C11 ollowono. W• ~ ~ eiic•llent btntf11 pion thot in<ludt1 holf>l .a1t1~ lnwronce. lilMrol llOCotion an hotidoyt • • Cond1d0tu rn1nt have o dtur• to IM WCCetsful Oftd bf Willing to WOfk hori:I, 0 you tfl nk you hove tM quoliftcotiOns, pltoH clPPf>' person 0 1 the lllllJ Pllld Mon~ thN fr doy 9 1 ' °"' 0t 2 ti 330 W. B1y COsta Mesa, CA 92626 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE AClllOU 1 Dilcol IClrt • OlipOMof 11 Mouttll 14 Medlteneneen country 15PU'l9qUal 11 --NMtlcen • 17Under~ 1 IT llklng Icily 20 Acqulelcel IOI 22 lcofdl • 23 Tfall 25 UI( city 21Pare 2t Hoc:tcey gr•t 30 Aemalned '2 Uncoohned • 14 C8U9inQ uwp peln 3t Confident • 42 PlumP« '38tt•Qde 45 ShOOI from embulll 4t£gg~ 4t Not: ScQt. eow pe1'y 64 Celf C.IC~ U"-'ain«I II OlalrtbUte II DlliOl* to Dental WO. 83 Cllo'1 9111., MYoko - 87 COider ee Poll YllitOf .. f:lber knot 10 Alqulrenw\11 71 lnenlmlt• DOWN 1 c.ncftenut 2 Club 3 Source of ctmreea 4 Secret• 6FOf•Cf~ I Wrongdoer 1 H<*ll • On penllOt'I lbbf. tlnaec:I 10 LAtterl 11 Bel ...... 12 Ex1lf'lt 13Ptay~er 19 -tide 21 0Udo'1no11 23 BMrtype 24 Sj!'ang 21 8ectoUd• 27 Vllve pan ao Cloth type 31 Wll1• mallet 33 PeltliOn PMVIOUI PUZZLE SOLVID 358errll 31 Trell'll on 1 cflcUll 37 Mianland $1 Cupidity 40 Perpttually -"' F"ooct~ "44Cut 47 a.. mamm.i. 4tGr .. 1Wh111- 50-Aollge 51Unp•~ 528ailboll 53~ 56 Plume 90UfCll 57 lc:fawny 5t le~U•' enc.tat 11 Honor c.td t2 Compeny, Fr. .. Ttirloe pm 16 FOOd .ctap 144-4411 ULllPllm For Portche, Ferrari, Mercedee. MUST ~ PROVEH tree* l'900rd and GOOD drtvlna teCOf'd.131-3221 Alkfor~ TYPIST Mtlndl Th«*fltY •tHIWT .,""" P 0 , IOI! 1MO, - COIM ...... C..taa .... , ... •-......,~----~ ~r-~-----_ _,_ ___ ...,..,u 111£ lclEIU'S som co um IOTOIS fP 1114UAIT ..-.UTIILE Wotfaburg Edition 411MCLl 12)174 .. ---TOl'$13 UO ... CAP $16 4tl l2500 CAI' ~iOl'I ~IM0021 .® 11UUlllCCI tt•Ull 4trnoC£l S2al .... per "'° TOP$tl.Ott20 C•P $12000 ~SS'l'MOt ® 1114¥&1&111 I •-CEl '229 ... tu .. "'°' TOI' St• ra• . C..SM I ~CA!t~ Anidull S6..o ID C7 •B, 198C "I NU 11 .. ,.....,, '"" Dill/1 ~"''·,. .. . . 10 steps suCce.ssrur garage scile -· 1 Decide on dates. Look al a calendar and Ml the dllH and time• or your • Nie WHkends era usually good but 1T11ny 1uc:ce11lul •let he\19 been held 111 the evening, 1ust 1lter work eti.ck Ille -•lher lorecat in the peper, ind wetch 101 flfly Oll'9r large ....n1 rnet "9Y ettrect potent11f buyers awey, •uch IS 111" or conwnun•IY .... nts Hive your 11le run 1t leHt two d..,.-aome people m1y not be eble to come on any 11ngle day Z What to sell. Everythln ! Th111s . .-yth1ng you hlven t used 1n the • last y11r ~an item has entlQUI value, or 11 brand-new Of has unusual v1lue be tur• to uk 1 healthy puce 101 t Gtot 1 pad of paper and ..en your wtioll houae Look evlfY*hell, and hat ...,.,..hing 3 Write your ad. · Herl ia I auggetlild Id .Glnigl Sale -4elkl Bentwood 1ock1ng Chl•r, ~ Wanta clothing. 1122 • Victrola on or1g1na1 C4binet, many gldgew. lots. of unusu1t 1tem1. rock collection. plenw. R9frffhmentt. 3 • am to 6 pm S1turd1y and 5'lndey 1234 South Anyttrffl Yourtown Ju9w.t of Main ll'ld 2nd U.. "'11 sample Id u 1 gUidl Be Mitt to loll unusual. Items e. •• 1pec1foc u pottoblt OM d1r.c1ion1 ti ntedtd Don t uee 1~tJOn1 -men)' people won't bother to dlcopMr tl\tm. CAUTION Don t tdve,rttM 1111yth1ng you don t really ht-.. E\lllf'f Item 1n the 1d mutl bl on hand 11 the start ol the Mle 4 Where to advertise. Piece your ad *htr• 11 ""'" be 8"l'I ~~pi. *ho fMt In the 11u -moll people shOP clOM to hOrl'I The • Ditty Pilot ts 1bo by aa 000 edults on Coslll Mell, Newport Beech, L1gU1\l 8elch. Irvine, Huntington Beach and FO\lnll•n Valley -guMtnlMong you wide • aposu11 And w-th ,the Ptloe. ~re nO( pay111g for waste c1rcul111on 1n LOI Mgtlll Of Anaheim Plan to run your 1d 3 t1me1 or mote. and 111n It 1 few ~lyt t>elore the Nit IO blrgaon hllt\llB ean hive plenty of notlCI 5 Make a sign. To help tr11k1 your .. le IUCClel&lul, me~• 1few11gn1 • from cardboard 1nd letllr wlh 1 mlglC marker It\ goOd 11g~Sll'I .. 14 •• ~ 6 Placing your siCJL · The morning of tne ..ce. but not before. pl4ce your 11gn1 81 au re Ind add 'fOUI ~ Ind any • d•teci1on1t arrbw1 This lhould bt done 1bout 1 half hour blfore the uJe Itani Piec. your alOn wMrl It 1:1n be seen from bolh'Sldnof the atrfft b¥ passing Cll'S ~ pedlstnan1 CAUTION Some towns hl\19 11*1 thlt rnmc:t 1,,. placement Ind dur1tion 01 geraoe ule 910n1 Pi.tse check v.4th 'f04Jf town• pt1nn1ng department or clerk 7 .-.aning prices: •• M11k Pf~ wtllta trwy can bl Men cinn, otftet • 1ul)Jly 11orn haw 111r0o1A1 soi. tnd eolO? of 1t1ckert that work well. or you cen UM mullong tape Howt\19r you mark tl\lrn . ..-. ,.._ w . Oat1g1 11le1 111 for ti.1~11n hunters Remernt>tt, wtllttver you can I Mii you II h1111 to d'8g back 1n t,,. hOule Ind 11011 1g11n !Of 1nott.81 ~., 8 ServlncJ refresllments. Thia do.sn t n111110,co« much. 1no C:ffflH 1 friendly • 11mospllere II alto 1noourag11 people to sllly lonoer and perhaps buy more 'fCJY could even charge tor 11pen1w1 111m1 hke <Sonull Of the kt<ll could go 1n bus•ness tor the day With a temonedl 1tanO 9 Display. Make 1yre 1111rytll1ng Cit\ bl...,, Hive c11d tables or 8 bo1101'*<1 aa .ntlltlt ~ two ehllrt Don t c1"99 people 10 btnd a. ume. you can t http ot u .. Of'9 llble as a CS.k Where rQ11 cen Ml •vefYlhing Ind lake money 'Ute only one caen bo• (ton cant Of bO•" work lone) Ind m11t.e IUft IOtNOnt II IP90'ni.ct ushoer 11 all ttrntl Arrange btfe>rehend lor • froend wno can help 1naw1r questiona relief fOf lunch, ete a Check your M~ and friends. . • If 1ny Wlllt 10 IO n 'fOUI .... Tht.a will o•ve you eomeone 10 thlft ••1*1111 ,..,II Ind in<rMM 1n1er111 Ill y04ll .... II oel'lefl ~n ~ «lie aw. to WICludl lhil in yQVf Id ti llt'lptt lhf-4~ Uie,'" ' t\149hb0t!lood ult ) Group tllet are a IOt ~fun. 100 Daily Piii Claulhed Advertising 642.;,5878 De Lorean separates fromwlfe LOS AN· GEL ES • (AP)-Just a month after aut~ maker John Z. O e . Lorean wu acquitted on drug· trafficking charges, he and his FERRA.RE wife. -tele-- vision show host Cristina Ferran:. have split up, De Lorean's at- torney said today. "If the question is, 'Are they living separately,' the answer is yest Howard Weittman said, adaina that the couple separated three days ago. "It was a little too much pressure for anybody to handle," be said. "They decided to take a little bit ofa break." Weitzman, who Said he would not be the attorney for either one in any divorce proceeding, emphasized that "no \'_foceedinlS are started. Nobody s seein& a lawyer." De Lorean, S9, and Femre, 34, stayed at the home ofber parents throu&hout bis five-month feder- al trial on c~ of conspirioJ to distribute $24 million in cocaine. De Lorean remains at that home with bi&.in-laws, Weittman said. A Laguna Beach cop quit the force Instead of ap- pealing a aeclston to fire him for mlscondutt./ Al C&llfornla Five hostages held Inside a Bell home by gunmen aretreed./A4 "Mlnd&Body Everyone over 50 should have a "stroke profile" made to prevent such attacks./81 September ts called the · perfect month for procrastinators to renew year resolutlons./81 Sport& Reggie Jackson slugged his 500th home run to Join a select group of baseball greats Monday nlght./C1 Marina Hlgh's Shawn Massey ls the Dally Pflof-s P.layer of the Week after the Vikings' 10-7 vtcto,.Y over Servlte./C1 Entertalnm~nt South Coast Repertory has launched Its 20th season with a stunning production of Shaw's "Saint Joan." /83 Two more police shows Jotn the fall TV llneup./83 Bualneu Americans are not wllllng to accept the solution to the country's economic woes./BS INDEX Bridge Bulletin Board BualnMS Callfornla New• Classified comics Crossword O..th Notlett Help Y ourMlf HOIOICOpe Ann Lander9 Mind and Body Mutual Funda National New• Opinion Peparutl Potleelog Public NoUces Sports M A3 es A4 CS-7 84 C7 C5 B2 ce 82 81-2 es A4 A8 81 A3 C5,8 c1_. 88 82 83 ~ 1m1111111 Pee· reroute still an issue HB homeowners flock to meeting to push coqipromlse mini-reroute By ROBERT BARKER become pan ot a "walled-in" ghetto Of .. Dllr .... tUllt in western Huntinp>n Beach. Jeanne Collins, who has lived in for Instead of en Joying fresh sea 10.years in her two-story home on the breezes and water-onented vistas. the fringe of the Bolsa Chica wildlife area • 60-year-old Colltlls declares that resi- ncarthe PacificOccan, is worried that dents wiU be ovcrwhl med by noise she and her wel~-to-do neighbors may . and fumes if a State oastal Con- scrvaricy plan to reroute 1x lanes of Pacific COast Highway as approved- .. They say the)" re gou11 to put of an eight-foot wall to buffer the noise. But it's aoing to cut out our breeze and -.:JeWI. And it's going 'to se~rate the rich from the poor. The nch people are going to be able to sad out to :the ocean in their tall-masted boats and we•re I() inf JO rt their garbage (noise and pollution. • The Coastal Conservancy's rerout- ing plan -it's slaied to go to the Coastal Commission for apt,oroval in Novembef -was developed in an auempt to settle issues that have snallCd the development of 1.600- acrc Bolsa Olica area by Signal Landmart. \ Government officials favoring lhc pl3n ~that the rerouting V."Ould do awa.y with the need for an expensive bridle, that it would be more eovironmeoWly acceptabl~ would preserve 900 am:s of wetlands southofWamer;Avtnueand adJaoenl to Pacific Coast Highway u a wetlands wlldlifc habitat free from d'cyclpment. Colhns and aboUt 3SO of her neighbors auendied an ou1doOr meet- ioa near the bulb of the Bolla Chica Monday ni&ht IO bear a co~pron.HIC Plan developed~ Michael~ a resident oflbe .area. (Pleue .ee llEJlOUTE/ A2J Bailey claims ·HB suffering identity crisis Be'adonelt Reale Jacbon wa•ee to bJa fan• after hitting bJa 500th bla ieacue home nm In Monday night'• •ame atA.Dahelm Stadium. It wu a bittersweet moment. thoa&b, u the AJaaeb lost 10-1 to the Kanw City Royals. See .tory, Pae• Cl. Councilwoman sees contest to develop thellleforbeachto\Vll BJ BOB BABKER °' ... °"' ........ If tbeic'1 one thin& the city of Huntington Beach is fac~n1 it's an identity, accotdina to Councilwoman Ruth Bailey. .. We're known for surfing and for oil and for havina wonderful family- oricnted people who are · sports- minded. We have an excellent climate and giQt patts. · "But we don't. have.a self iticntity and we need to develop. one to be .. proudo(" Bailey set out to rectify that problem Monday night by setting up a contest to develop a theme for lbe ~She said she hOPcs lhat ground Mll be set up and a theme selected within three months or so. .. Newport is known for its rich people and for its yachts and Costa Mesa bas become ... the city of the arts." Bailey said the Cbambe:r of~ meroe calls the Huntington Beach ""the pla~und of the Pacific .. - .. bu\ that s the same as Honoltilu. "Ano during the OP surfina cham- pionships, they called it ·sun City, USA• and I thought that was cute and . a nice thing to say.•• • • • • Airport. expansion plan facing ~lay A decision on the propoled S 19 l recommended sncb a delay .. ,o million expansion of John Wa~ .. ~nsurc 1cpl adeq~· ~com~ Airport -and an 'ICX:om_panyiua ncss .. of the pro,JC:Ct s cnVU'OmDCDtal iocrease in the number of jct fliab.ts-impact report.; · may have to be dda~til JanuaJ)' The Bbard of Supc:rvUq:i:s probably so countyi!iirport ,.ill have •ill coDSidet )ins.its c:o~­ time to fespoiac;t to a laJjt number of. attoo of the iti.tiiRt = d~ a public cooc:erus about the project. dosed session -W.ed y, ila:ordiDC In a oonfidcntial memorandum to Kuyper. The bOard bad beeD circulated among supetvison Mon-scheduled to consider~ the <by. County Counsel Adrian Kuyper (Pleue eee AlllPOJl1' I A2) Kindergarten classrooms are booming .. Educator may face death ·in mu:rde:r of his ex-wife By PBJL SNEJDERMAN Of .. .,...,... ... A new baby boom ha~ resulted in lltier ki!'derprten classes in so111e parts or Orange County, but the overall public school enrollment is continuing a decade-Iona decline. Though Santa Ana and some still- growinc South County communities like Irvine reported incrca!ltd enrol- lmenls this fall. administrators in the coastal school districts say only that (Pleue MO SCHOOL/ A2) . Saddleback official cµmed With guns allegedly waited for victim in home - By STEVE MARBLE Of ... Dellr ........ An assi tant dean at Saddleback College who Jp~red briefl y in court today, could face the death penalty for allegedly killinJ his former wife, a respected nursma instructor at the community college. Donald Emil Dawson. 4S. of Irvine. allegedly armed bim!ielf with two auns. several boxes of ammuni- tion, a set of handcuft\ and a length of rope and waited in bis ex-wife's El Toro residence last Satufday for her return, accordina to Chief Assistant District Attorney James Enright Judge: Newport-airport flap JEFF . carries no simple solutio~ Junst 'must represent all the people;' complex legal Issues Involved described appointed to the bench m 966, acknovJk<t&eS he is well awatt of the contrO\'Cn)' and intC'TCSl the airpon ncrat • h ckSCri h1msc1fas an mfrequcnt airpon r who rm· ADLER - NEWSMAK£RS "The evidence seems to indicate that Dawson had made great -prep- arations,'' said Enright. Because of the special circum· stance of l~ing-in-wait allqcd in the case. Dawson. a former policeman, may face the death penalty, Enriabt said. The arraianment was .postp0ncd until Oct. 91t the rcqucstofDawson's attorney. The assistant rolkat de.an beina held without ball. {Pleue eee. OS :..lff A2) It was the· highest ow ever Stock Mar.keta T•vttlon Theater• W•th« WorlONewt A2_...,.,,.__,.,~,.._....,.., patt\1~ v.ith the plight of Ne ipOn RC.att\. res'dent ho live below the noi ~ 11rhnc fl11-ht path. A4 hwab. fi rs1 "I ve h d on:as1on to '1~11 down - -• • • • • • • • ~ • • • . • .. . •. ;. .-•: ;. • :· ., •• •• • !· •• :~ .. ... '* °'-Coaot DAILY PILDT/T-.:lay, Saplwnbjlo' 11, 198' 14-year-old guilty in mom 's murder A tcen·aae 'rl who a P.fOittUtor said was ablo with her bo)friend in Satani m and beavy rnetal music was convicted of murderina her mother, a former chail"Noman of the Oraaie Count) Coahtion 111iiu1 - Oorne1tic Violence Jeo.niftr Newton, 14" ofFullcnon. \\'U found auUty 01 flrat-dqrw m\lrder Monday_ by Juvenile Coun Conun.iuioDer Frank Fuel af\t.r a th~week oon·JW')' trial REROUTE TO CREATE HD GHETTO? ••• Prom Al Knapr·s· plan calls for a "milli- moute' that would keep Pacific Cout·Jiiahway well to the wes1 of their homes. Knapp. a project man· aaer fc>r the Ralph M. Parsons Company of Pasadena, said his plan also would take advaotaae of hi&h ltrr&in oo the Balsa Chica bluf'f\op to build a bridle over a new navipb1e channel for taU-muted boats to pass lhtou&h. The key 10 the plan, accord.in& to Knapp, is 111 takina advuaae of the elevation of the bluff which ht said ranats from l4 to S&. feet hiah ... By movina the proposed channel over cl05Cr to the bluff, it en.ables a brid&e 10 span tbe channel by comina directly off the hiah around, drastical- ly reducio.g the cost of b\lildina a bndae. The proposed "mini-reroute" bends inland to cir<:le behind the proDOled marina. crosses the channel on the octan tide of the proposed new homes and then beads back to its prftent confiauratJon. Spokesmen for the homeowners aroup say their plan is beina ~ived favorably by--ovarious qencies. City official~ however, a.re said to have reservauons about the lack of cross- conncctina roads in the Balsa Chica: AIRPORT PLAN FACING DELAY·•· ll'romAl ~ project following a publib hcarinl' Oct. 17. "We Want to give adequate con- sideration and response to the com- ments received," Kuyper said of the reeommended delay. . The problem is that the county has been swamped with public31&tion t0 the pi'ojcct, reccivina more thaft 400 pqes of written comments on the expansion plan. State law requires the county 10 respond to those comments in the final environmental report. The city of Newport Beach. whic~ hll'ed "private consultants to analyze the comprehensive document, itself submitted I pages ofcommc:nts. Kuyper sa that the volume of Public respon made it "that much more important•• that sufficient time be Jiven to adequately-1os~r the concerns addrtssed by the pubhc. DEAN FACING DEATH IN SLAYING ••• Prom Al Dona May Dawson, 46, was found face-down on a neighbor's lawn when sheriff's deputies arrived at about 9:30 a.m Saturday. She died a short time later at Mission community Hospital in Mission Viejo. Accordin& to an autopsy, the woman bad been shot SJX times. Enriaht said the evidence indicates that l>awson flftd both guns be was carrying. ~-······---···· ...... -.. . Dawton rtport~IY. WIS stltidina near his former wife'1i falleo body when officers got to the scene and was taken into custody without incident. According to Enriaht, Dawson appartntly let himself into his former wife's Toledo Way residence with a key the -woman kept hidden in a planter in the backyard. . He said evidence indicates Dawson carried the guns and ammunition into the residence in a paper baa and then spread the weapont and other items out on the floor of the house. A memorial service for Mn. Dawson will be held Friday at I 0 Lm. at the Doyle McKinney Theater at Sacldleback Collea<. The college has established a scholarship fund for Mrs. Dawson's I 7~year..old dauahter, Rochelle Oawson, accordina to cam- pus spakesman 'Bill Schreiber. A private family 1ervice will be hckt Saturday in U,Una Hills. SCHOOL ENROLLMENT DIPS ••• From Al their enrollment drop this fall was not quite as severe as expected. These arc some of the early con- clusions as area schools bqin to count students returning to classes this fall. School administrators cau- tioned that some students, because of extended vacations, family relocation or otht:r teafoOnS, do not repan until well after the school year bas bqun. prices have placed Oranae County homes beyond the reach of many yo~nger parents wi1h schooJ.::age chil- dren. The exJ.ended enrollment decline has led to closure ·of numerous elementary schools and some middle schools and is affecting enrollment at community colleges. School officials keep a close eye on k.inderpnen totals because they are a guide 1n cstimatiR:g classes over the next 12 yean. Following is a rundown on early enrollment figures at local school districts: · was 16.427, up from 16,135 last year. The ldnderprten enrollment was 1,237, up from l,1S9 last year. David Kina. director of facilities plannina for the school district, said future enrOUment deP.Cnds on the number of new homes the Irvine.CO. can sell locally. Oceu View Sc::llool Dis trict-This district, which operates elementary schools mainly in the non.hem and central scctiont of Huntington Beach, reported 8,891 students at the end of the first week., down from 9,$26 last year. The kinderprten enrollment also dropped from 921 to 878lhis fall. The district will close four schools at the end of the current school year. FontalD Valley Sc::lriool DI.strict This d istrict has had 12 years of • Partly cloudy-but still hot Tides . ........ ..... _ ... WIDtflaDAY • 1;)11,111. 10:111.111 • t .91p"' Just .Call 642-6086 D•llY Piiot Dellvery_ I• Gu•r•ntffCI Monclly·f• .. Y II Y,,_ OD r'(ll ,,.... 'Jq>I paper Dy 53Cl1Jm ~Nbltor17p m -.,_ QClPY De _ .. ' .. " .... e : Tt ,., :: :: ·5 ~ :l .. i: '" .... ,; :: 5 il " .. : :: " .. tT Pt .... .. 11 : ff : i; " " a n .. :: :: .. , i; " a fi .. .. ... --141 -.. ..... ... -'1 = 14 -,., "* 14 .. .... llltecllo!t: "°""" ' Wllat do you llke about tlle Dally Pilot? Wlaat doa't you Uke! Call tbe n11mber at ieh and your me11aae wUI be recorded, transcribed ud delivered 10 &he appropriate editor . Tile 11me l 4·11oar aa1wert.1 Hrvlce may be u.1ed &o record letten to die edllor on any topic. Coatrlbulort to our Letten colama mu1t laclade tbelr a.ame and telephone namber for verification. No clrct.latloa calls, ple•1e. Tell 111 what'• on yoar m.lnd . ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. L. Schw1rtz Ill Publisher Clrcul1tlon 71.t/842-4333 Cl1a1Uled actvertl1lng 7141M2·5t11 All other department• IM2..a21 MAIN OFFICE )J(J-......i lifS! . Colll """9, CA • M..i AdO< ... b 1MO. C0.1 ..._., Qr.. IH2t , Coc>r•.grtl 11113 Oral'IDf C-1 PualllNr19 ~ No ._ "°"" ~11l0r"ll. ldilorlll 1111n.r or ~ -_..., 1111)' Ill llOI~ WilNIUI IOICiel ,,.... _,or ~""1-.... Sa! ..... Clay -Sunoiy II yO\I OD not r.e-rw COP)' Oy 1 I m ~ o.10{1 10 I I!\ .no ,.,.. (:CIP'I' wol M_ .. ClrCul1tlon Tetephone1 Roaem•ry.Churchman Controller -· Ori .... Co..n1, 4,.,., W2•t»S Stephen F. Carazo ProductlOn Manager .. Donald L. Wllllame Circulahon Manager VOL. n, NO. 212 According to first-day numbers compiled by the Orange County Department of Education, 3 t S,274 students rcponcd to public schools this fall, 2,920 fewer than 1he first day last year. Countywide, however. 22,402 kindergarten students enrol- led, an increase of 409 over last year's total. It is the third consecutive year that kindergan.en enrollment has increased countywidt, and it has been attributed to increa,ina numbers of post-World War II baby boomers having children of their own. Newport-Mesa Unifi ed School Dl1- trlct -Superintendent John Nicoll satd the districtwide enrollment at the end of last week was IS,743, down from 16,077 at the same point last year. However, this year's k.inderprten eoroUrnent was I, l 06 students, equal or sli&htly above the figure for September I 983, he said. declininaenrollment since peaking at ----------------,"'C---------------~--------11,866 studeri'ts in 1972. Third-day ,- enrollment this fall wu 61386, about I l Although Oran~ County's aeneraJ :!ft~lation has Jumped from I .S · 'on to 2 million over the past 10 ycan, its public school enrollment has dropped by almost 190,CXX> over the same period. School officials have attributed this drop in pan to the chan,&ing character of the county's populauon. ln the la te '60s and early '70s, Orange County homes were affordable to young parents, whose children soon filled nei&hborhood schools. Today, many of those parc:ni.s. with children grown, rematn in these houses. At the sarile time, rising Nicoll say the key surprise this year was that his distnct's high schools seem to be: holding more students than eJtpected. The Ncwpon-Mcsa district, ser- ving Newport Beach a~sta Mesa, has lost about 10,000 students over the past 10 ycan and has closed 16 schools as a result. But Nicoll said this fall's early enrollment figures indicate the decline may at IUJ be slowina. Irvine Ua.lfled Scllool Dt1trlct - Because development is still under way in Irvine, it remains one of the row areas with a growing student population. As of the third day of classCs, the districtwide enrollment HIGHEST LOW ••• From Al continued hot, humid and unstable weather forecast through the end of the week, the weather service said. The temperature hit a high of96 in downtown Los Angeles Monday Mtemoon, far from the the record I 08 l'or the date. Meanwhile, the weather service forecast mostly hot and sunny weather for the Civic Center Wedncs.- day. There will be a few clouds with highs in the upper 90s .and ovem.ight lows in the mid-70s. Coastal areas will be pa:rtly cloudy Wednesday. Hi&hsat the beaches will hit the low 80s, with lows from 68 to 78, the weather service said. Afternoon and evening 'thunder- storms are forecast for Southern California m1;>untains and deserts with some heavy thundershowers and gustr winds. Highs in the moun- tains wil reach SS, with desert hia,hs ranging from I OS to 112. 500 below last's year's fig ure. Kindcrprten enrollment, however, was S7S-i. 79-student increase over last year's f11ure. Still, the district has closed six schools in recent yean ·because of the decline. BllDtla1&oa Be.ad City Scltool Dt1- trlct -This elementary district, servina southern and coastal neigh- borhoods in Huntington Beach, bu a pattern like that of Fountain Valley. Ac:cordina to fiaurcs from the end of the first week, overall enrollment this fall was S,395, down from S,639 last fall. But kindergarten eDrQllment wu up sliahtly -508 this fall compared to 494 last year. In 1981, this district closed three schools because of deelinina enrol· lment. Lagua Bead Uallled Sdlool Dis- trict -After ycan of decline, enrollment may tic stabilizing in Laguna Beach. OveraJI enrollment at the end of the first week was 2,344, com{>l-red to 2,398 last year. The distnct had I 05 kindergarten stu- dents last w«k, compared to t24 last year. . Althoua,h he could not eJtplain it, Oyde Lovelady, the district's busi- ness manager, said enrollment at Laauna Beach High School was up this year to 1,062 studenu, compared to 1,024 las1 year. The district has closed one elementary school because of declining enrollment. JUDGE WEIGHS AIRPORT EXPANSION •• ~ From Al Supervisors for yea rs. Supervisors have stru_ggled to up- grade the airport ·and 1ncrea~ the number of commercial airlines and fl~ts available 10 county 1ravelers wtiile noise<onscious residents of the beachfront community have battled to contain the airpon's size while urging a oewer, bigger airport be built elscwhert 1n the county. '"Ifs imposs- ible not to be aware of the interest and the controversy .over the airport." Schwab explained. "It's somethina one has heard about over the years. Everyone is affected by the ait'PQn in the county, it is such a significant entiry in the county bc:ina the major ttanS{>Ortation facility here. The QUHtJon is how to develop it in response to the growth." Schwab also said he understands the issue is a Politically sensitive one and one that presents compleJt legal iuues for someone 1n his ~ition to decide. "But if you can 1 make a decision, you can't be a judae," he noted with emphasis. .. Evuybody has'-fceltnc reprd1na I.he a.irport; but ifs no problem dcalina witn the cue from a pro- fi ionalpmpective. Myjurildiction is limited to whether !he enironmen- tal impacl ~rt mceu statutory feC!\.li rtmenu. he add. My perception is I am protect1nc the ptOf>le of the lite of California, Vlbjcll indudet •ll the ile in Newport 8ca<h 1n4 the peo e r<p- ~tcnted by 1uperv1JOR. e En~ vlronmental Qu.ahty Act 11 the Policy tba1 governs my determination," he said of his approach to the job. Schwab added that even after years ofbcingajudgc. theimponancc of his position is ntverfar from his mind ... I t have very serious rcsponsiblities that requir< me to keep my personal prejudices out of the courtoom.J You determine a case based on facts and how they apply to the law. that sounds preuy trite/;but t believe it." In the int airpOrt case he has presided over, Schwab found the county had prepared adequate documentation on a l ,8~space air- port parking lot p~jcct and refused to impose an order blocking construc- tion as th« city of Newport Beach had asked. But Schwab is not new to hiah- profile cases. He presfded over the 1980 murder trlal of Rodl)ey Alcala, acculCd of molctting and k.illina a youna Huntinaton Beach .:irl. Alcala's conviction on tqe murder cbarat recently was overturned by the Cali(omia Su_preme Coun,·lnarkina thefo~r~~h1~n!~ 11yun that o sea have been ov.ertumf:d. ., . A lf'ld\Ulte of ihe University o( Minnctota and its law school in 19,3 .. Schwab and hit wife, Joanne, moved west irl 19.SS because they wanted to be near the mouni.iDL SchWlb still confuses a tttal love of mountains. MoCl.nttJncttina. skl-inl and hWna art bj1 recreational pas11on1. he said. H11 courtroom offices arc deocr1.ted wilh c:>il paint- • ings and photographs of his favorite western peaks. After practicin& law in Santa Ana following a short career as an in- surance adjuster, Schwab was ap- paintcd to Orange County's Central Municipal Court bench 10 I 966 by Gov. Edmund Brown. Ten yean later, Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. elevated him to the Superior Coun bench. A Democrat, Schwab said he quit .. partisan politic:al activities the minute I went on the bench." Besides his love of mountains and mountai ncerina. Sc~b's love of the law apparently ha1 rubbed off on two of his lb.rec children. Both 26-~· old 10n Eric aod dau&hter Sara, 24, are law students at ~cOeorac Law School inSacramento. A third dau&h· ter, 14-ye.ar..-oldAnnei~' nina6er first year at Santa Ana H. School. Since he's bem nai to handle· the airport litiaation, the judle said he's been approached sevmr times by people who have raised the subject. However, he said no politicaJ prnsure hu been brou&}lt to bear by any of the Pf.rties involved. ind "1 have no feel.in& thert"1 tny anlmotS tbwardme."- He said he i1 only passinaty •cquainted w;th the flve membe:rt of the Board o(Su~aon and remains .. v~ \ar1orant of Newport Beach palittet or current events. "I take Jtt:it tatisfaction out of do1n1 this ~rk,'' he also uKI. "I feel a sense of aemcc.,. I -------~----------- Seven reasons whY. this could-be . the last loan you U ever need. Commcrcial Credit's Hoine Equity Management Account proves that all lines of credit arc not the same . Ours is better. Why? You can get up to $100,000. The Home Equity Management Account is ba~on the equity in your home. So it can maldi-?ubstan- tial amount of cash avail-able to . \' you any time you need it. Affordable Interest. Our interest rate is just 2% over the prime ri1te for lines of$20,000 or more.* On July I, 1984 the prime rate was 13.00%, making an annual percentage rate of 15. OOo/o. .__._ No Application fees. Compared to other institutions, our Home EQuity • Management Account coiild save you hundreds of dollan. That's because there arc no points, nO application fees, and no annual fees. Payment Protection. Interest rate increases will not c~ the amount of your mon JtY.~~your account is open, getting a loon is as casr as writing a check. 0 Minute Application. Take ten ptinutes to apply for your Home Equity Management Acwunt. Call us. We'll tike your application over the PliOne can,serulyD~an.appliw'ro~-,---~~~ tion. Or stop by CommcrciiJ Credit today. . On~DarCmlit Approval. In most cases, we offer approvals in 24 houn, subject to vcrificatioo .and appl'lisal. The Home Equity Man.aae-' mcnt Account .•. it could 6e the last loan you'll ever need. Commercial Credit. from tint and a<eolld mottpgeS to perional loans and more1 we've got as many financial tolutions as there uc: financial needs. . Coilllnettlal Credit • ! ' • ForwattonA2 fllll 111111 • • : • ' ' '·' £:! ~ •• • • : (;-.Al'-t .f.l'il't' : ;,~' ..... IA • f••' 1 .---~ DeJ.,oreao separates from wife ace eat LOS ANGELES (AP)-Just a month after automaker John Z. De Lorean wu acquitted on drua traffickin& Ch&J'IM, he· and his wife, television show host Cristina Ferrare, have split up, De Lorean's attortiey said todly . .. If the question is, 'Are they livina separately,' the answer is Yet;•• Howard Weitzman said ad.din& that the couple separated thrtle days qo. "It was a little too much pressure for anybody to handle," he said. ''They decided to take a little bit ora break." · Weitzman, who said he would not be the attorney fo.c either one in any di'vorce •proceeding, emphasized that .. no ~roccedinp an: started. Nobody s seeing a lawyer ... De Lorean, 59, and Ferrare, 34, stayed at the home of her parents throu&bout his fiv&-mootb feder- al lrill" on ctwaes of compirin.J to distribute $24 million in cocat.de. De Lorean remains at that home wilb his in-laws, Weitzman said. Coaet 40th Congressional Dis- trict candidate Carol Ann Bradford held a "tea party" to protest her op- ponent's congressional spending./ A3 A Laguna Beach cop quit the force Instead of ap- pealing a decision to fire him for mlsco·nduct./ A3 ~-.:::::;::;z.~.s:;::~ California Five hostages held Inside a Bell home by gunmen are freed,! M lllndaBody Everyone over 50 should have a "stroke profile" made to prevent such attacks./81 September la called the pertect month for procrastinators lo renew year reaolutlons./81 x;»"m~;:::::~;:;.9.~o!:::~;::::::: Sports -Reggie Jackson slugged his 500th home run to')oln a 881ect group of baseball greats Monday nlght./C1 Marina Hlgh'sShawn Massey ls the Dally Piiot's Player of the Week after theVlkhlgs' 10-7vlctory · over Servlle./C1 Entertainment South Coast Repertory ., 1nmur ero He'adonelt Recite Jacbon _..,. to Illa fam after blttiDC Illa 500tll blC leape home nm qi Mondar DICht'•aame at Anaheim Stacllam. It wu a bittcraweet moment. tboqh, u the Aqelaloat 10-1 totheKanwoClt,.Ro:J&la. See-iy.J>aaeCl. Saddleback official arined with guns alle edly waited for victim In home An assistant dean at SaddJcback Collett wbo worked as a reserve police offtctr until earlier lhis year could face the delth penalty for all~>: killing his former wife, a DUl"Slnl instructor at the community colleae. Donald Emil Dawson. 45, of Irvine alleseclly anned binuelf with at &east two CUDS and waited in his CX·wife's El Toro residence until she returned home early Saturday, accord in& to lhc On.nae County ~net Attorney's office. · Dona May Dawson, 46. -fOllD<I face-down on a netahbor'• law ""* sheriff's depulits arrived at about 9; 30 Lm. She died a abort lime Jaitr at Mission community HQIPi&a.I ia Mission Viejo. DaMOll r<pOrtodly .... standiit& near biJ former wife's &llcn body when ofticers Sot to the ICIC'De and WU . c---/All) PCH rerouting plan to create Bolsa ghetto? Propesed noise wall will cut breezes, view, residents say By ROBERT BAl\llR Of .. ~....... - Jeanne Collins., W'bobaslivcd in for 10 yean in her twe>-story borne on the frin,ce ortbc: Bolsa Chica wikllirearea near the: Pacific Ocean, is worried that she and her wcU·~o nciabbors may becomc_part of a -waJlec:f.m .. abcttO in western HuntillflOn Beach. lnsi.ad of eivo)'i.., fresh ,.. breezes and watcr..onen*td vistas, Lbe 60-year-okt Collins dedlres that resi· dents will be ovcrwhlcmcd by noise and fiimes if a Slate Coastal Con- ~ plan 10 reroute sU. lanes of' Pacilic Coast lfilhway is llJ>IWOVod. "Theyaay they',. png to put of u ei&ht·foot wall to buffer the noile. lklt it's eoina to cut out our breeze and views. And it's aoin& to ~le tbe rich &om the poor. The rich DeOOle are Fin& to be able to sail out-to the ocean in their tan.masted boats aad ....... ~"' r u.e;, san-<noist and polluuon. The Coutal Comervancy's rerou.t- •ina plan -it's slated to IO to 1be c~ Commission bapporoval ia November -was developed in an attmpt 10 1en:lt itsuc:t that ha"Ye M • I the clevdopmem a( I.~ acre Bolla Chica ua by Siana! Undmark. . Government ofticia1s favorin& tbe plan aJ'lllO(I that the -w. would (Pleue-UllOUTl:/A2) has launched Its 20th Ki season with a stunning ndergarten production of Shaw's . f-: .. =""sa""1n,,_,tJ""oa,,,_,nc:.c·"'c::m=-,__-1-,classrooms ---- rwo more police shows jolnthefallTVllneup./13 are booming Costa Mesa takes new steps to hush live entert:aiftfllent--- ~~;:;:;:;:.;~:a:;m::.:«~:;:;:;:®:a~ Baelneu Americans are not willing lo accept the solution to the country's economic woes./85 INDEX • 114 A3 N .... C5-7 114 C7 C5 82 ce 82 81-2 N .... A8 81 "3 C5,8 C1-4 ee 82 83 A2 .... BJ PHIL SNEIDERMAN Ol .. hllf,......., A new baby boom has resulted in Wacr kindergarten classes ip some pans of Oranae County, but the overall public school enrollment is continu1na a decade-Iona decline. Thoua,h Santa Ana and some slill· growi~ South County communities like Irvine reported increased enrol· lmcnts this fall administraton in the coastal school districts say only that (Pl-oee 8CBOOL/A2) By TONY SAAVEDRA Of .. .,.,""' .... Past problems with 1 rowdy punk n~t club aod a.cum:nt noise battle with the Pacific Amphitheatre spurred the Costa Mesa Ci ty Council to bctf up the city's entertainment rcaulations Monday. Council members unanimously ap- proved the fint reading of a measure Judge: New-pprt-airpoit flap carries no simple solution -- ------------Jurist 'must represent all the people;' complex legal Issues Involved described TheOraftlCCounty upcr;.orCoun judac w~o may be asked todttcrm1oe the l<plily of lhc county'l IJfOpooed S191 m1lhon John Wayne Airport cxpan ion plan Candidly ldm11s he has no IOluhon to offer for tht tetmul&)y ?IJ'ldox1(1J 11rpon tm~ brolho. While Jud.Jc Phihp Srh~b. fillt 1pp0tntcd to the btncb 1n 1966. ack.now~ he 11 ft:ll Iwate of the contro"trSY and intcrc:tt the airport Jenml1es.. he delcnbes tumttlf'U an tnfrcquent .-irpon user who· sym· pa1bim with the ohahl of Newport Beach rmdcnts ._,.ho )1\le klow t no11r ai~ ... n.p1 path. "I \IC had occasion to V'61t down there and ._.hen tllt airplann ao o ... ·cr 1l stop$ the con\ttsaUon ... the 5S.. ynr..old JudaC. a Santa na rn1dent Slnct 1955, said, Schwab was mo&n<d by Juc!F Rte:hard Bcacom to prtSldt O'\"tf' a1~ bua,ation a.rhtr this ytar after JUdlf Bruce umlltrtcn 1~ bench to re1um to ptl\'a\e law pradtC't. Bckom sa1d he. scltc\cd Scti-.ab for the Job bcausc hc"s "an excclknt Judie, h•ahll °""nlcd by auomcys and 1 n't t:alT)1n& arouftd 1nyonc clst:"sa&cnda ... • i.ntcndcd to tighten loopboks and remove questions of constitutionali~ from the city's entcnainmcnt ord1· nanoe. The 'new law would require all businesses ftaturi04 live or reoorded mustc to meet stnct noitt, traffK., !>uiklin&. ~onina. partina and sccur• tty rqullttons. Local motorcyctc races.: the Pacific JEFF ADLER N£W SMAKERS Added Beaoorri ... lt1s imponant you have • judee or some taturc haodhng lllcst .,...., When • hot grounder comes alona, you loot tOr the best infielder to put tn the pmc.- Wh1t the aood·naturcd, diminuhvt !udat 1nbcnled was 1 tompk:x 9tfld of Clld thlt hlvt' pined the <•IY of Ncwpon lleadl ap1n I thc Orona< County Board o( (Pl--.IUDOS/A21 Amphitheatre, Sooth Coast Reper. tory theater and other facilities where pcopkart .. invited to watch, U.tcnor. participate .. alto would be required to meet aty standards. Reliaious activities art t:Kempt from the new ordinance, whi<:h m~t be 1perovcd a second time by the councal. .. We'rt ac:ttina so many more noitc1 (complaints) and '° many more intcmiptionS to people's liVcs that (entertainmenrfacilitita) have to . (Pl---~/.UI It was the · highest low ever • • -• • • • • .. .. .. • • • : .. :: :· . • • . . ONng9 CoMt DAILY Pll.OTITuaday, - C1HC lf,U[lJ S 10R lfS DEAN FACING DEATH IN SLAYING ••• homAl taken into cu tody without ncldcot. u of the pecia1 circum· tancc of 1yjna in wait all an the Dawson may face th death penalty, aooordina to Chief A 1st nt District Attorney lames Ennaht. Dawson " s ordcrtd today to appear for artaj£nmC1\t Oct. 9 t South Oran ~ County Municipal Coun in una N ucl. He is bem& tield lithout bat! A rne.ri'OriaJ f\'1Ce for Mrs. Dav.wn "'11 be held Fridayal to a.m. at the OOyle M Kinnty Theater 'at ddleback College. The colt has e tabh hcd a tiolltShip fund for .Mrs. Dawson's l 7·}~r-old dau tcr, Rochelle wson~ ooordin to cam· pu P<* man Bill Schrieber. A rivate family rv1ce will be held tutda in una Halls. MESA TIGHTENS NOISE ORDINANCE ••• Prom Al clean up their act or shut dov.n,'' Mayor Donn Hall said this morning. A~ordina to the measure, all new businesses otrerina entertainment must apply rot • one.o_year ~rmit ffom Dcvd opment Services Di~tQr Do~as Clark. Ex1 ti"C businesses mu t •ppl)' for the new permit withjn 60 days from the second readina of the new ordinance. , The city's old regulations were aimed at n1aht clubs and were unclear about such facilities as the Pacific Amphitheatre and such activities as c1rcuse$, said Cit)' Attorney Tom Wood. Costa Mesa's entertainment ordi· nance came under fire in 1981 dunna a ycarlons lepl dispute that ri hed the state Supreme Coun. The ruckus of co--owner Jerry Roach, who ac- ~u&ed the ordinance of violatina Firt.t Amendment ri&hts. In the legal war, Roach also found a loophole in Costa Mesa's ordinance, sayma the city could not rqulate live mu5ic, but only the dancina that accompanied it. • tarted when the city re"oked a.o entertainment pcrmtt from the Cuckoo's Nest, a punk-oriented oiaht club, after numerous police reports of vandalism, loud nojse and other "The old ordinance really didn't complaints stemming from the bar's have any specific standards. The ctientele. · . • · provtsions were just general to malce While tac club has since closed, the (entertainment activities) compatible city h•s not foraonen the amuments with surroundjna arcas.::.said Wood. REROUTE TO CREATE HB GHETTO? ••• Jl'romAl do away with the need for an expensive bridge, that il would be more environmentally acceptable, would preserve 900 acres of wetlands south ofWamer Avenue and adjacent to Pacific Coast Highway as a wetlands wildlife habitat free from develpment. /I' Collins .and .about )50 of her neiahbors attended an outdoor meet~ in& near the banks of the Bolsa Chica Monday night to hear a compromise plan developed by Michael Knapp, a resident of the area . Knapp's plan calls for a "mini .. reroute" that would keep Pa~ific Coast Highway well to the west of their homes. Knapp, a project man· a_ger for the Ralph M. Parsons Company of Pasadena. said his plan • also would take advantage of high terrain on the Bolsa Chica bluffiop to build a bndge over a new navipble channel for tall-masted boats to pass througb. The key to the plan, according to Knapp, is in ta.Jona advanage of the elevation of the bluff which he said ranges from 24 to 58 feet htgh. "By moving the proposed channel over closer to the bluff, it enables a bridge to span the channel by coming directly offthe hiah around, drast1cal· ly rCducina the cost of building a bridse. The proposed "mini-reroute" bends inland to circle behind the proposed marina, crosses the channel on the ocean side of the proposed new homes and then heads back to its present configuration. Spokesmen for the homeowners aroup say their plan is being received favorably by various agencies: City officials, however, are said to have reservations about the lack of cross· connectina roadS in the Bolsa Chica. SCHOOL ENROLLMENT DIPS ••. Jl'romAl . .:• their enrollment drop tlus fall was not prices have placed Orange County homes beyond lhe reach of many younger parents with school-age chil- dren . was 16.•27, up from 16,135 last year . The kinderprten enrollment was 1,237, up from 1,159 last year. :: quite as severe as expected. • . These are some of the early con· clusions as area schools begin to count students returning to classes this fall. School administrators cau- tioned that some students, because of extended va~tions, family relocation or other reasons, do not repon unttl well aft.er the school year has~n. The extended enrollment decline bas led to closure of numerous elementary schools and S-Ome middle schools and is affecting enrollment at community collqes. School officials keep a close eye on londerprten totals because they are a guide tn esumating classes over lhe next 12 years. Following is a rundown on early enrollment figures at local school districts: · ·David King. director of facilities · planning for the school district, said fut~ enrollment depends on the number of new homes the lrvine Co. can sell locally. Oceu View School Dlstrfct-This district. which operates elementary schools mainly in the northern and central sectiorisofHuntington Beach, reported 8,891 students at the end of the first week, down from 9,526 last year. The kinderga.ncn enrollment also dropped from 921 to 878 this fall. The district will close four schools at the end of the current school year. Foutaha Valley Sclaool Dllartct: Partly cloudy ----b ut still hot Tides TOOAV leeolld :il:t'Tp "' 47 hcOllCI loW 1167pm 01 W«DfG80AV ,., .. """' 7'37a m II '"' IOw IO Slam •• ~lligll 4 58 p:m so 8Ull ..... IOday ., • .st fl Jfl • ,... w.....,., al I 31 a m It'd M11 agMI ...... P.-.----MOCMI _., today II t;ft p.m., ,._ Waclnteder•l 12 15un anctM11 a;n el3'24 P-"' Extended . .. 7t ~8 .. IO t\ .. " .... i: ll IO .. .. . , n :; ,. 6) ., .,. 111 IO .. ., 1°' .. If 4J .. . ... , .. 42 1'0 IO .. .. to 61 12 44 • ., 14 .. ... to .,, r7 .. .. .. .. 71 » .. .. 71 t1 ., 71 81 .. 11 71 H .. 61 .. 40 .. 41 .. 7t 72 II 71 " M IO ..... .. " Just Call 642-6086 What do you llkt about Che Dally Pilot? What Jlon't yoa like? Call tbe number at Ifft and )'Our messa1e wlll be recorded, transcribed ud dellvered to lbe appropriate editor . Tbe same U·bour a.aswem 1 service may be a1td to reeord letters to tltt editor on any topic. Contributors to our Ltttera column must I.Delude dtelr name aod telepllone number for verlficatJon. No clrculatlon ca.Us, please. TtJI us what's on yoar mind. Dally Pilot Delivery· 11 Guar1nte.d uoncs., Froday If ye; oo l>OI ht•e ~°"' pe,per Dr S 30 O m UI btll)fe 7 p m and yaut COil 1 """' t>t O@tiwrea Sa•uroay ano Sunolr 11 you 00 not (fCel•• 1llY1 COOY try 7 a m ca Cle!Ote 10 I m .wlG 104/I c.o;>y ..ti .. ~ Clrculetlon T•lephonff M:it• 0•~"11~ COU<>!y A•fM W-4SU ORANGECOAS Daily Pilat H. L. Schwartz Ill Pubhshe~ Rosem.,y Churchman Controller Stephen F. Carazo Production Manager Donald L. Wllllam• Circulation Manager Circulation 714/142-4333 Clnaltled edvertl1fng 714/M2·5e11 All other department• 142-4321 MAIN OFFICE 330 W•t Bat SI CCIII M.u CA U1 IO<l•ew 8o• 15e0 Cotti MMa CA '2121 Copy1i(l"I 1953 Of&tlQI Coesl P~ Compe")' No "'"" 110< llUWll'°'1S. edllonal INll81 Of _,_,_ (!lent$ ---' Mlf bt •IP<Oduee<I '#lfhoUI .._ ... '*" INUIOn ol ~! - VOL. n ' ~o. 212 According to first-<iay numbers compiled by the Oranee County Department of Education, 31 S,274 students reported to public schools this faJJ, 2,920 fewer than the first day last year. Countywide, however, 22,402 kindef1irten students enrol· led.tan increase of 409 over last year's total. It is the third cohsecutive year that kindergarten enrollment has increased countywide, and tt has been attributed to incrcasina numbers of post-World War II baby boomers having children of their own. Newport-Men Uaif1ed School Dls· trlct -Superintendent John Nicoll said the district wide enrollment at tbe end of last week was I 5,743. down from 16,077 at the same pomt last year. However, this year's lcindergarten enrollment was I. I 06 students, equal or sliahtly above the figure for Sep].ember f 983, be said. This district has had 12 years of declining enrollment since peaking at -------------'-'-_._ __ --:-:__"""".""" ___ .:........-"-------------------, 11,866 students in 1972. Tbird-Oay .-• AJthouJb Oran4e County's eeneral population has Jumped from l.S million to 2 million over the past l 0 years. its public school enrollment bas dropped by almost 190,000 over the same -period. School officials have attributed this drop in part to the chanaina character of the county's population. In the late '60s and early '70s, Orange County homes were affordable to young parents, whose children soon filled nej&hborbood schools. Today, many of those ~ts. with children arown, remain in these houses. At the same time, risina Nicoll say1he key surpnse this year was that his distnct's high schools seem to be holding more students than expected. The Newport-Mesa djstrict, ser- ving Newport'l~each and Costa Mesa. has lost about 10,000 students over the past l 0 years and has closed 16 schools as a resull But Nicoll said this fall's early enroll ment fiaures indicate the decline may at last be slowing. lrvlDe Uaifled Sclaool Dlltrict - Because development is still under way in Irvine, it remains one of the few areas with a growing student ·population. As of the third day of classes, the districtwide enrollment HIGHEST LOW ••• 0 homAl continued bot, humid and unstable weather forecast throush the end of the week, the weather servi<ie said. The temperature hit a high of96 in downtown Los Anaeles Monday afternoon, far from the the record 108 for the date. Meanwhile, the weather service forecast mostly bot and sunny weather for the Civic Center Wednes· day. There will be a few clouds with hi&bs in the upper 90s and ov~miaht lows tn the mid· 70s. Coastal areas will be partly cloudy Wednesday. Highs at the beaches will hit the low 80s, with lows from 68 to 78, the weather servic.e said. Afternoon and evening thunder· storms are forecast for Southern Cabfomia mountains and desens with some heavy thundershowers and gusty winds. Highs in the moun· ta.ins will reach 85, with desert highs rangjng from I 05 to 112. enrollment this fall was 6,386, about 500 below last's year's fiaurc. K.inderpnen enrollment, however, was 575-a 79-studentincreaseover last year's fiaure. Still, the district has closed six schools in recent years beca use of the decline. HantlD1ton Beacb-City.SCbool DI•· trlct -This elementary district. serving southern and coastal neiah· borhoods in Huntington Beach, has a pattern like that of Fountain Valley. Accordjng to fiaures from the end of the first week, overall enrollment this fall was 5,395. down from S,639 last fall. But kindergarten enrollment was up sli&htly -SOS this fall compared to 494last year. In 198 l, this district closed three schools because of declining enrol· lment. Lapna Beacb Uaifled School DI•· trtct -After years of decline, enrollment may be stabilizing in Laauna Beach. Overall enrollnlent at the end of the first week was 2,344, compared to 2,398 last year. The distnct bad 1 OS londergarten stu· dents last week, compared to l 24 last year. Although he could not explain it, Oyde Lovelady, the district's busi· ness manager, wd enrollment at Laauna Beach High School was up this year to 1,062 students, compared to 1,024 last year. The district has closed one elementary school becau~ of declmina enrollment. JUDGE WEIGHS AIRPORT EXPANSION ••• From Al SuperviS-Ors for years. Supervisors have struJlled to up- arade the airport and increase the number of commercial airlines and fli&bts av11lable to county travelers while no1se-conscious residents of the beachfront community have battled to contam the airport's size Vihtle uf&ing a newer, bigcr 11rport be ~uilt elsewhere in the county. "It's impos~ ible not to be aware of the interest and the controversy over the airport," Schwab explained. "It's something one has heard about over the years. Everyone is affected by the airport in the county, it is such a significant entity an the county beini the ma.Jor transeortat1on facility here. The quesuon is how to develop 1t an response to the arowth " Schwab also said· he undentands the i ue is a politically ~nsitivc one and one that presents comple~ legal issue for someone ift his eosit1on to decide. •'But if you cant m.aake a dec1S1on_. you can't be a judge," he noted WJth emphasis. "Everybody has a fcclini reaardJna the ai.rpot11 but it's no problem dealing tn the case from a pro- fe ional perspective. My jurisd1cuon 1~ hmittd to whether the cmronmen· tal 1mpa t re~ meets tutory requ1remenu,' h id. "My pcrcepdon ii I am prottctana the pe.<>ple ofth tate of California, wb h inc udcs all the people m ewport Belch and the people ~~ nted by upcrvrson. 1ltc En· vftonment I Quality t11 •he poh that governs ·my detemunataon," he said of his approach to the Job. Schwab added that even after years of being ajudae. the importance of bis pos1uon is never far from his mind. "I have very serious responsiblitJes that requtre me to keep my personal , preJudtces out of the counoom. You determjne a case bastd on facts and how they apply to the law, that sounds pretty trite, but I believe it." In the first airport case be has presided over, Schwab found the county had prepared adequate documentation on a l,8()()..space air· pon parkina lot project and refused to impose an order bloclona construc- tion as the city of Newpon Beach had asked. But Schwab is not,.new to hiah~ profile cases He pre 1ded over the 1980 murdef-cnal of Rodney Alcala, accused of mole ting and killina a youna Huntinaton. Beal:h airl. Alea.la's conviction on tbe murder charae recently was ovcnumed by the California Supreme Coun, marltina the fourth or fifth in tancc in I$ years that one ofSchwab'.s ca have bttn oven urned. A araduate of the University of Minnesota and tts Jaw school in 19S31 Schwab nd his wife. Joanne, movca t in 1955 beeau lhcr. wanled to be near the mountam1. hwab ill confi a great love of mountatns. Mnuntam crin& i· ina and h1k1na re h1 rcc:rcational passion • be said. JtiJ courtroom offices art deocrated With 011 paint· ' ings and photographs of his favorite western peaks. After practicina law in Santa Ana following a short career as an in- surance ai:tjuster, Schwab was ap- pointed to Orange County's Central Municipal Coun bench in 1966 by Gov. Edmund Brown. Ten years later, Gov Edmund Brown Jr. elevated him to the Superior Court bench. A Democrat, Schwab said he quit .. partisan political activities the minute I went ori the bench." Besides bis love of mountains and mountainecfina, Schwab's love of the law apparently has rubbed off on two of his three children. Both 26-year- old son Eric and dauabttr Sara. 24, arc law stud nu at t.lcGeof'IC La School inSaaamento. A third dau&h- ter, 14-year-old Anne is t?q:inninc fier first year at Santa Ana Hi&h School. Since he's been assianta to handle the airport litipuon, the judge said he's bttn approached several times by people who have raised the subject. HoweYcr, he said no politieal pressure has bttn brouJht to bear by any of the penies it1v0lved, and ''! have no feelan there· any animosit toward me." 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