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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-10-15 - Orange Coast Pilot1:111111m an.k bandit sentencing today By ROBERT HYNDMAN u4 STEVE MARBLE °' .. .,..,,... .... David Dean Dahlen, the 24-year- old La Habra man who allegedly kidnapped a bank mana&cr and held ( Unlonleaderam Anahel are urging Disneyland strikers to accept a new contract offer./ A3 Coast children tell read- ers what they think of school so far .I A3 California There's a baby boomlet In Callfornla, and the mom's are older .I AS Starting today with Traf- fic Safety Week. the Dally Pilot will publish a traffic safety quiz each ~onday to test drivers' knowl- edge of the road.182 Nation Mondale vows tougher questions; Reagan will use less statistics In next debate./M Auto workers reach ac- cord over contracts at Ford, GMC./ AS World U.S. stops short of Issu- ing travelers' warning of Mexican highway ban- dlts. / A4 I A 'black alert' has been Issued In Britain following bombing./ A5 Sports Edison Hlgh's Chargers have taken over the No. 1' spot In the Daily Pilot's Orange County prep foot- ball ranklngs./C1 The Detroit Tigers are baseball's kingpins fol- lowing their home sweep to take the Serles In five games./C1 Eric Dickerson and Jeff Kemp led the way as the Rams captured a 28-1 O NF.L decision at New Or- lean$./C1 Entertainment Those "words from our sponsor'' area sore spot In televised sports./83 / Bueinesa Americans' rate of Install- ment debt slowed to $6 bllllon In August./85 INDEX Brk:lge Bulletin BOard 8uSlneta Caltfornle News ClaNifled COmlcl CroSIWord Death Not Features HorOICOpe Ann L ndeta Mutual Funds Natlonel News Opnlon Publlc Notl Sport ·T eltvta!On . Tntat .. WMther world Newa 84 A3 85 A4 CS·7 84 C7 C4 81-2 ce 82 85 A4 A6 C4 01.(4 82 83 A2 A-4 four people hostage Fnday in a unsuccessful bank robbery attempt in Irvine. was to be sentendcd today on four prior bank robbery 1:onvictions. Assistant U.S. Attorney Jim Ber- liner said this momina that Dahlen faQCS a maximum of 100 years in pf'i'son for the earlier robbcncs, all tajed lau year. Dahlen. free on S.S0,000 bail at the time of the kidnapping and robbery attempt Friday, was to be sentenced by federal Judge James ldeman at 2 p.m. an Los Angeles on the prior bank robbery convictions. one a $40,000 heist from a bank in Corona dcl Mar. The La Habra man may al50 be al'Taigncd today on charges stemming from Friday·J·drama t the Bank of America m Jrvme, Berliner satd. Dahlen I dly kidnappCd the bank manager at her Tuslili-·bome before holding up an ide the bank with the ho~tages. Dahlen has been held "ithout batl at Orange Count)' ~ail incc his arrest in Irvine. U.S. Marshal'' deputies were to take Dahlen to to the fcdcra'l Coolmg her ,.1eele A cool moantal.n ••tream la jut the place to apend a bot day. and Arlene Kozimbo, 19, of.Newport Beach :.roilnd one cloee to home. It'• In ea.ta lleu '• TeWlnkle Park, where you can ~J the raatic acenery without aalDC up a lot of gu. oorreaionHcntcrat TcnnanaU nd followm1 has scheduled ppcaranc:e rn federal court today. Meanwtule, the FBI saad lbdiy at has no new leads concermqa ~ that Dahlen may have been a 1sted by two mysterious female ac- compliet"S an the kidnapping of Marge Steinborn. S2, m~ of the lr\'tne branch of the Bank C>f Amenca. No other suspccu 1tre arrested at the lmncbank Walharn &mlbom me buk .... aaer"s bulband had ~y IGM ~usun polict' that lluee people -a male and two females -._. 1n ol ed with the~~ and ued him up 1n lhrirTulbO bcfott &ak.iqc bts wife at su•poanl • er car to the bank. Dahlen IS pecaed lO bt ~ (PleUe -BAllDIT ,.., Victim of ousted .... esa cop 1 es $81 million suit Woman claims city negligent in molest case By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of .. &Wlr ....... A 23-ycar-Otd Orange County woman is seeking Sil million in lcpJ damages from the city of Costa Mesa and (onner pohcc offica William lauchlan. who was convicted in July of sexually molcstinaherwbile he was in uniform and on duty. The woman, Tammy F. Ferguson. filed suit in U.S. District Court an Los A1l4elcs and in OTange County Su- penor Court. The suits seek financial compensation for ChalJCS of assault and battery. false impnsonment and Raciti pulls out of.Mesa council race EX-mayor DorihnK' Rac111 w dropped out of the Costa Mesa Ca ty Council race, improving the odds for the rcmainfog 10 candidates vying for three open seats. Raciti. 66, announced his withdrawel last week in a note sent to the media. • .. Unfortunately. I don't feel l will be able to devote the time necessary to represent the people of Costa Mesa should I y..in a council scat, .. he said. Raciti;' an eight-year council vet· (Pleue eee RACITI/ A2) violation of civil Jiabts. T.be .suits abo claim the city i~ pillty of neatisnt supervision of its employee. Laochlan was fired from the Costa Mesa ~ice forc::c about two weeks after h1s &tTCSt in Ja.ouar)'. William Sarrus. onr of the at- torneys representina Ferpnlon. iaid the su.itS were filed in botb federal and state court in case a federal jucfile chooses not to bear certain chartes ID the civil suiL fci:JUIOD then bu 1.be option of punwnc tbe remainiJll counts in state court. Samas said. In tbc.criminal enc. Laudllan wn tried 01) alleotions that on Jan. 10, 1984, tnc officer stopped fcrpnon in C05ta Mesa foT a dekctive tail liabt. then ordered her to dnvc to an isolated industrial area. She testified . that Lauchllli se ually molested her (Pleue 11eef»r8/A2) Crowd was there., __ but not performer 8 7 TONY SAAVEDRA OflMIWIJ ........ Roscmlll"} Churchman was con- fused. Some others v.erc anll)'. Churchman went to the Pacific Ampb1tbeatrc m Costa Mesa tuT- da> night for a Hank Wilh~~s J_r. concert and found herself wamna 1n line with people holding tickets to see Wayne Newton and l..atO)'a Jack.son -an unlikely billina to be sure. The estimated 200 fans showina up at the amphithcatCT Saturday ended up not scc1n1 anyone at all, not Hank, not·Wayne not even Lato)-a. They (Pleue eee ARBKA/ A2) SlaiJJL CSQF~prof h'ad received death threats Vietnamese hnmigrant arrested In slaying·,--husba~d's 11re about two months a o because of has ooopcrati'e studies widow says ABI told victim to 'buy a un. with Vietnam scientists on the effect of the chemical defoliant .\&Cnt By Tbe Associated Preu s Cooperman. 48. wno had taught Orange. A professor slain in his office at Cat nuclear phy ks at the Fullerton FBI aaen ts had ad vi cd State Fu11crton had nnived death campus for 16 years. Cooperman to .. bu) a aun and learn threats due to his wo rte with Viet-Lam remained at the Fullerton jail how to u~ it." said Mrs. Cooperman. namese scientists, and the FBI ad-toda) in connection with the shootina 43. viscit him to "buy a a un and learn d athSaturda), potitt Lt. Ca.rl Hum-Howe\ er. FBI pol man Fred how to use it." his wife said. mitsch said. adding that no bail had Reapn oft~ Lo An& lcs office said Vietnamese immtpnt Minh Van been 'ICt. Sunda)" that he kacw n~thina a~ut Lam. 20. of Westrnin stcr has been Kia ske Cooperman.· the slain anl threats or an) tn\C': u~uon booked for mvcstiSRttion of the professor's wife, told p<?hcc Sunday tnvoh1ngCooperm1n. murder of Dr. E'dward Lee that a student had threatened her Cooperman was active in the NEWSM~tH RS .. Vietnamese-American Sc1entatic Fnendship Association. \\h1ch coor- dinates scienufk teaching a 1stancc to the &ovemmcnt of Vietnam. On the Fullerton campus. he was 'ittn b) some Vietnamese rcfuaecs as a supporier of the Communist aov- cmmeot in Ha not, some studenb and oommunat) m1dents said Sunda). In 1977, Cooptrman helped promote a mo' ic on campus fa"orablc to the Hanoa go'emment, an action which pu&Ted anger amona anti..Communa t Vietnamese imnh- IJ"&Pts ~>n campu .. · Jerrv Keating. Cal State FuUenon•s dutttor of public affairs, said Sunday that Cooperman had bttn amona the first merican VlSitors to Hanoi in the mid-1970s after the fall ofSoudl Vietnam. Cooperman's body To"U foundjust after 3 p.m. Saturday in his si't.b floor office. and um. w o reponcd the s.bootJ -.-as &l'TC$icd later that m&ht. campus police Set. Bruce E'an said. "He (lam) was \Cry calm.'' Eva added. declinina to peculate on the (Pleueeee SLA.Df/A2) Coast weather recoicler J. Sherman Den!JY a~ o ERT B R coin nd tamp roll tot. ol'-.. ,_ o Jbc lus ild u lm1 · l) of mm fi rm n) ~ fl-. the fi~I J ~n Denn). Bunta ton prestJent of the Hunun ton &a~h lka h• belo'td ~ thcrman died Garden Club tn t930 and \\"I' a Sunda) nisht at the: 01 87. member of th en'·~ hamber or apparcntlr when h rt problem de--( ommet\'t anet 1917. "eloped after o n:-ccnt u . He al ~a 1n1cre tc:d an conct'rt~ Mr. Denn). who kept the cny• .and opct-annd wa a mcmberofa Los '-'eAther a I bor of love for more \ngeles orch('Str f9r S<:\Cl'al )cars than half a ttntury but who Pt"fhaps 1lnd ptayed a frrnC'h horn. ~as m~t pleaJIC'd wnh hi\ ang a He attended dull cducauon pcrtect attendance record of attend-classc!I for about 20 )c:trs m Long 1ng Ro~ry Club mttt1n for S4 Beach schools and at Orange Coa t )C'ar • enten:d Hoag Memonol Uosp1-College and became an c;1.pen of the tal an cw port Beach late in ptcm-antiquities of Eg)pt, Grtt\:\: and bcr after canctr ot the lung "'""'~ Rome, accord1n 10 looacime friend. detected dunng a regular llh)stcal Don hipley. ~ Cllammauon, "\\hen ( "'as elected ma)Or 1n He wa rcponed rally1na last wttk 1964 Sherman camt' up and ron·· and has wafe was making plan\ for has gr.ttulated me and ~1d 'Dr Shipley. I return home. when heart problems undersLand you are from near developed Frida) fl'lend\ \4) He (a) ugas Water'I · Vcl) few knew thal du:d at about 11 p. m ~unday at Hoag song \\as from Cornell U nl\ crsh) Hospital. and that was "'here I got m) '1r Denn" is suf"' l\.ed b\ his wall! doctorate:· hi pie) said toda}. of S2 \ea~. Thelma. and a daughter. "I've known him for 25 )ears He C onnte Steinberger and tY.o grand-rates as 'one of the tint gentlemen of daughters "'ho h"e 1n 'orba Linda Huntington &ach. He was vef) Funeral arrangements are ptnding concerned aboul traends \\ henc"er Mr. Denn), who sen:ed as manager the) were sick. he "'ould 1a~.e 1hem of the HuntinJtOn ~alh ( ompan) ne~~ and mae;wnc\.. -~ I Q48 wnul 1962 '•a> kuown for-Vt. Denn) \\as born an Lead Caty diverse and wide:.ranging interests. an South Dakota an 1897. The fam1 I) He was a member of the American moved to Idaho and e"entualh to Meterological Soc1et). \\SS an avid (ahfom1a to escape lOld winters~ The Ocnnu 11 ed to \'&rtOUS aucs an • u1hcm C lifi m and J. berm n duaccd from Lu oma mmar 54.:hool 1n Rcdland1 and entered Rcdland H h hoot in SCptembcr ol 1912. \ere f n:cze in 19 30 dealt 1 blo\\ to the C'llNS indu tr);. nd !Rnn}"s father, John Shtnnan l)(nny. who "'as an clcC'lrical engtnet'r. was tran,. fcrrt(f to l:ona Bc-ach. J. Stlcrman as scheduled to enlist' an ltre Anny an c .. closana month of Worfd War II ~ut became the \icttm of the Ou and wa rcclas 1fkd. He attended the Bable Institute of LQ~ Angeles for a ~ear. He began emplo}ment wnh tht' Hununiton Beach Com~n)' on Sept. 2g, t 923. where he kept rttards of the company·s oil wells. He married hi~ \\-ift. the former Thelma Robtnson, June20. 1932. Mr. Denny begun has uno0ic1al and unpaid weather-keeping act1v1t1cs an 1930 and meatured more than 6SO inch<'\ of ram. most of at from the \\-C:.tther gauge on the roof of has Ptne Street residence. Jn an mten;1ew !>hortl) before he was hospitalized. he '81d he planned to continue to keep "-Cather records for two or thrtt more )'C8n and then tuTITttll' n-sponmntny- over to some one else "ho will "sta> \\ llh it. .. "Then:·s no use doan~ it unless you do 11 ccuratel) :· he s~ud. 3 in cotirt today on drug charges By DA VE BISHOP D..,. Not Con11p 1Rdalll Three people were to be :ma1gned tuday in South Orange Count) Mu- nicipal Coun on charges of con- \p1racy to sell dangerous drugs. Laguna Beach police arrested the \uspects Wednesda) after fhe ounces of a po""erful stimulant and equip- eran, was seen b> some as a !>trong contender m the No" 6 mun1c1pal electu:>n In fact one candidate con- ceded 1n .i\ugust that he ma~ not ha'e entered the race had he knov.n that Rac111 would be one ofh1s opponents. .. He·s the man to beat."' \aid candidate Christopher Steel. .. He's the frontrunner (aside from the ment 10 manutarture th1: drug "'ere found an a \\e~tm1mtcr apanmtnt Sgt. .\lex J 1mane1 -.atd The woman II\ ang in the apartml·nt and t\\.O Gorden (,fo,c men \\.ere released on I 5 000 hail pending their arraignment .\rrc~tcd v.cn· frannc L' nn Kitchens. l I, ol \\ l"'>tminster and Benjamin (1 ) barra '\5 of Garden incum~ntsJ. I might not ha\e run 1fl knev. Dom "'as going to run ... Rac1t1 sened on the council from 1117::! to 1980 before stepping down and mo' mg to the Lake Elsinore area He mo,ed back to Costa Mesa 1n earl) .\ugust to lool>.. after his do"n- to""'n JC\\elry store He adm1ttedh also mo"ed back Gro,c. both charged \\.Ith ron~piracy to sell amphetamines, and George Edward Segrest. 35. of Garden Grove, \\ho wu charged Wlth PoSSCssion of danJerou d~JS for sale and pos- session of manJuana. Police said they were led to West- mm ter by information obtained dunng an\estigations of drug acth it) an Laguna Beach. wath 'he intention or po sibly an· nounting his aandJdac) for a four- >ear term on the council. In earlier interviews. Raciti uad he supponed height and density restm·· uons on hiati.rise bualdmg.s that he said generated traffic. ;oise and caused a lack of pnvac)'. BANDIT TO BE SENTENCED TODAY •.. From Al with the k1dnapptng of Mr' ')1<.·m- born. The bank manager and threl· other bank emplo' ees "'ere held ho-.tagl' for about three hour\ in the Hank ol .\menca at Inane Boull'\;mJ .ind Yale Avenue as ofliu:rs negotiated tor their relca!>C .\ n1 '-hour !ltandoll bl'l"'Cl'n Dahlrn and pollle ended I rida'> afternoon when an FBI S\\ .\ T team stormed the bank and arre<;ted the man The hostages \\.ere not harmed Dahlen "as free un bad at the time of Fnda) ·., kidnapping and robber) anempt. Cou'n records 'ho"ed Dahlen used fam1l}·O"ned propen~ to post 1he S 50 ()(JO bond .\<:cording to a lc'dcral t0un clerk 1n Loo; .\ngl'le'>, Dahlen -waH·onv1cted an .\ugust un tour lUunt~ of bank robben and U'>1ng a dt•ad h weapon I le faces a ma111mum sentence of 100 'cars in federal prison Berliner '>31d Dahlen ongrnall} wa!I charged 1n nine d1fTerent bank rob- berie\. He \aid Dahlen agreed to plead guilt} to four counts of bank robbt.-1"\ and that the other fi, e coun1s "ere dropped an nchange fo_r th e guilt) plea. ·One of the bank robbenes Dahlen was convicted of took place in Jul) ol 1983. Newport Beach police said the bandit held up the First Interstate Bank at Ne\\.pon Center and escaped with $40,000 1n cash. Dahlen also was convicted of holding up a First Interstate Bank an Brea a month earlier. Berliner said Dahlen dad not ta~e hostages an any of the other robbenes. He noted that Dahlen. in most instances. would enter a bank, ap- proach a teller and hft up has shirt to reveal a gun. COP'S VICTIM SUES FOR $81 MILLION ••• From Al and refused to allo" hl'I to lc.1 , l' Im t~(I to thre1: hour'> Lauchlan "'a" arrest1:d alter the incident In Juh l aulhlan "a'> con"1cted of sel:ual batten 1n the incident l a'>I month 'iupenor < oun Judge Jamee; Judge ~ntcmcd the former ollicenu 60 da~ '> 1n wunt' J:11I and thrl'l' \cars formal prohatmn. lk wa' al\o ordered to pa~ h" '1lt1m' e\JX'nc.,l''> llir th(·rap~ m11l111n 1n gcm·ral damages and S20 m1ll1nn tn pun1t1"c damages on each of the firc,t t"o counh (U\ 11 nghts '1olat1of} and a<;\auh and batten J. and SI m1ll1on an general damages and SIO m1lhon in punlll\e damages on the false imprisonment count. ha~'d on Lauchlan·., refusal to allow the "oman to leave 1ng women while on duty. Costa Mesa City Attorney Tom \\ood said the caty is seeking a coun ruling that would separate it from Lauchlan in this case. assenang that the Uiuchlan's acuons were not part of has official pol ace duties. Last month. ano ther woman who alleged!> was attacked by Lauchhn filed a SI 00,000 claim against the cit) for damages A claim must be made lx•forc a lav.su1t can be filed aga1mt a Itaii: skies after m orning haz~ , Coutal Alt&MI 114 u °"""" Tides AllanllC Ott 64 M £llluo Austill •• 62 FwNN!• a.ii-· 73 0 Fll(IO TOOAY Biuningnem 19 et r11Qtt•lf ._, ... !.a u G•lnO~ S-.OllOQI\ 12 01 pm ~I aolM ., 2!> OtMIF .. 1 a.conoiow 8 2111 m Ot 8ot1on -..3 41 HllllOtd eune1o ~ ~ HMl\e TUlllOAY c~ .,. "~ Second "'9" I 03pm • • CllarlfttOtl s c 11 u Hellltton Second IOw t64pm 0 • ChettftlOtl "' v 11 S1~ o..-...Hc 111 '6 JK).IO" .... ~ •16 2 I J,8Ck eorMle M Mlt IOCS.r .. I If P"' I CllagO •O •2~ TUMClll, et 6 SI 1 m Mid -.. ~. r"7 SI i<-0•~ I 1apm a........ l , st v ""°°" 11-IOCl;f •I 10 OI p m MU al coi..mcit c li4 S2 coi..m~Oft 70 SI 1220pm --IQ lll«IO&) M Concord H H 1g 30 1104pm :fl .,. = ••• SI M 27 O.M-.,. 12 0.IOll H4 ., \.OCATION Temps ~'""'°" 8Mcll Extended RWer Jttty, Newpo11 40ln81Teet Htwporl .. "' .nnd au.. Nft1)0f1 AlbMr fl H == ~q.111 ... 43 "'"11>' ~ <limy "1Cb •• '"'* MwtlO 1t .-0 w=:I end t1111t.o.y • 11 io Sari °*'*1tt ""°'°'fOil .., n 'P4~ ION Wai. ltftllO IS-6t CoNTINUEO STORIES .. 65 12 IO 31 :17 6t •I 56 27 p H 0 ,. Ill 0 44 :n .. 73 71 .. ,. ~ , .... ., 13 " 43 72 61 76 •• N .. Ot Hof,. TO,. NOrt Va o;.~Otr Omallt ~ Phil~ Ptioenl• P'lll'::lll P .. t -..e • l"Ofllel!O.Or ~ =City ~ a.a- L-s1,. .. 1amp1 8all Lei>• City ~ San 01eOO SMf'I~ 8 111Mr1P .. SI Ste Mer .. 8"111e 8tlftvei>Ofl 8lou•, . SIM*-SY'-'~· TUCHll Tulle WaltlingtO'I WlcMa w .... a.. •• ~Ot llD M 3-4 ,-4 , 4 , 1·1 ,.... S .... d ... CllOn - 12 16 12 17 76 ' 66 17 .. IO OJ Ill •• u °' .. .. '° .. 17 r, 4t '41 62 31 -17 IO IO ., 02 .. 16 11 41 1& IS ,, ~ ., ... ,, M IO to n 10 71 IS 11 71 12 4e •• 31 11 16 ... •• •• 25 .. •• 70 61 ... ... 74 II 74 12 .. .. 12 4) n •• WELSH LAWMAKEJR AIRS VIEWS AT UCI ••• From Al lave in 11. not die an u ." A~ also said he wa~ amused b) the contro"ers~ over hecklers who ha'e disrupted Mondale's speeches. He said heckhng politicians ts a British tradjtion. "But "e're not as afraid as )OU are of verbal agrcssaon," he observed. Ab~ said has non<onform1st style as part~y the result of ci:ow1ng up "an a mmonty group w1t.hin 1 mmont} group ·· \fore specafically. he was bom and raised W3lcs. a coal- producmg region on the v.e t coast of Britain. But his fam1I)' background 1tlso made him part of the tin} Je\\.ish communit) in Wales. (One of his Lithuanian foictx-ars. Abse quips was the first man to speak \\.chh w 1th a Yiddish ac~nl.) The lawmaker said 1hat rep- resenting Wales. wnh its radical tradauon, means not being afraid to take controversial stands. ··11 also means that coming from such a communi ty. where there 1s great emphasis on the importance of family. that pred1ctabl } my interests ha"e been largely in the field of human relat1onsh1ps;· AbS<' said He said hissociaJConcems ha'e led ham to introduce more "private member acts" than any man in this eentW) 1n the British Parliament. A pnvate member act as legislation introduced by an individual member. not by the govemmenL Among those acts ha' e been measures modemmng di\ orce laws. ending the 1llcpht> of homosexual acts between con ulttn~ adults and establishing c1ubhc funding of family planning centers. 4-bse said he's also spearheaded reforms io adopuon laws to assure better match 1 ng of children and new parents and he has sup~rted ad- d1t1onal finan c1al benefits for WJdow ~·hose husbands died m accidents. The lawm<tkersa1d he's involved in lcg1slauon th at -would set new rules on 'test-tube" baby e\periments and surrogate m ithcrs or "womb leas· 1ng." E~penmen ts v.11h human embl)oc, ha\'C drawn cnticism from some ~uaners, but .\bse doesn't believe this work should be halted if 11 is aimed at pre,·cnt1ng b1nh defects and allowing an1;:n1lc couples to ha\C .h1ldren He: doc., not l'Quate the pracucc "1th abon1on .. ~bonton must be used as a last resort. not a first resort," Abse says "Since an u1 tbom child as mvolved: I've ne\'er taken the vie\\. that abortion as a •.tmpl) a nght which can be exercised "1thout reference to some gu1dan g principles from the Slate. "But thoSt· \\-hO take an attitude "hich insists ihat not e"en for a.short period c;houlcl an) \.\.Ork be done on an embn:o -th l'} arc failing 10 under- stand this w<.1 uld be work to C'nlarge life. to allow •>eople to have children who arc not hand,cappep. w g1\e children to the infertile w1io de~per­ ately want ch 1 ldren I'm an shon. an fa"or of children.' Abse as al'I auome) by profe!ts1oa. and he has also studied psycholog\ e'tens1vely Has outlipoken ·views ha\'C not prevented him from being re.elected by Welsh voters. .. .\t the begJnning of my hfe 10 Parhament, there were the inevitable tension~ .. he said. "But as ahe )'eus went on and they knew that lhese issues never took me away from caring about consutuency issues, I think they took pn de an havma an unusual representative who's not a lOnform1st." He added. "Our elections have to be fought not only on the telev1S1on and in parades. but door-to-door. No one as really exempt from the need to meet the electorate at the doorstep. That's \\.here )OU get the recd back • Abse 1sn'1 shy about confronting his fellow lawmakers either. What would Pnme Minister Thatcher thank about his plan to psycholanalyz.e her 1n a lecture at UCJ? "She would bcexcccdangly vexed at me .. Abse said. "But that wouldn't be a novel situation." Canyon crash vlctlm dles .\ ~anta .\na man has died from m1unes suffered when has car went out of <.0n trol on Laguna Canyon Road. flapped over. crashed and hurncd last week. Michael Eugene Brewtr. 34. was pronounced dead at Mission Com- munat) Hospital an Mm1on V1c10 at I :30 pm Fnda}. .--------------------------------------··----------------------------------------------.. o.ny Piiot o.ttvery 11 QuarantMd Monday froele~ II you 00 "°' ..... your Poll* ll't !> 30 1> m ca~ ortoo1 7 p m end ,.,.,. copy ... be ..,, .... d Sa•OJ'<:ley lllld 5"'IGly II '°" 00 •IC! ·~-'r°'-" copy by 1 • '" coJ Deto-1 1 O • m ano your COJrv w• Clrcul•tlon TelephonH ORANGE COAS 1 DailyPtilat H. L. Schwart x m Publisher Roaemary Chur<: hman Controller Stephen F. Carezo Production Manager Don aid l. Wllllama C1rculat1on Manager Clrcul•tlon 714/8'2-4333 Cl•Hlfled edvertl8lng 714/M2·5e71 All other dep•rtment1 142-4321 MAIN OFFICE l M w .. In., ... CO<ll""' CA M.,~ '' 1'r Ro• ~ '°''• i.wta C/1o. fnf,ilfi • fiy 'II''' t083 ()o1~ Coe~ Publl611"'Q '°"'Pliny N'l ,..,., tta. .. llllil••••.,,,. edllonal me11., °' ~, ... """'" .,.,..., _, De Jwproeb:ad ... ,tlOul -I»' ,,,_, OI COPyrog'll - VOL. 77, NO. 289 I .iulhl,in\ <,l'Otl'ntl' ha' hn·n 'taH·d v.h1k he arrx·:il' h" l flfl \H- tion The <;u1t also r,eek'> SI 0 mil hon from th e n t\ of ( o!tt.a Mesa on the t harge of neghgcntl\ c,u~n 1s1ng m l'mplo~ec: .\ttornn \arru' ~1d thl· ell~ did not proper!\ rec,pond to 1hrec earlier mm plaint\ that Llurhlan "a" harass- (II\ ·~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I R<>lh "'omen'\ legal da1ms ha"e f l'rgu,on·, lJ\ll \Ull ~'l'~' 'Ill ~~·~lsroutinel)' rejected b) Cit) of: SHUTIERS CUSTOfVI QUAUn SHUTIERS ARENA MIXUP IN MESA ... From Al d1dn t sc.·c. anyone but thl· v.orkn in thr lllkct hooth J\ 'pok~swoman for the amphitheater office said th\' lfank Wilham'> Jr '>hO\\ had been \\\II\ hcd Imm Saturda' to Frida \ The ~cv. ton-Jackson rnntl·n "'a" sub\CQuently scheduled for SJturda~ But tha1 v.as later canceled ~h( \J1d tht" chanae.., had hn·n ad,crt1'\ed 1n advam·e of ~aturda\ 's m1·wp Churchman. v.ho hought hC'r Hank \\al ham' Jr ticket<; tn April. was una""are of the change as were some other fan\ who· 1ra\elcd to the amph11hea1er -a da) late -to see Wilham!>. _ Other~ ~ere.• una'-"are that the \;('\\.ton-JaC'k.,nn c.·uncert "a\ canceled "I won't sa> the peopk were at a riotous state. but the) ""ere angry," said the 49-)ear-old Garden Gro\.C resident. Refunds for both concem were g1' en at the box office. but some faM apparentl) lo'>t the handling fee charged b) tt cket agencies. ~1d Churchman SLAIN PROF HAD BEEN THREATENED .•. From Al mot1"c for the sla)'1ng Hummn"'h rcfu\td 10 \.'l\ \\hcthcr the murdc.·r ""capon had been found Mr\ Cooperman -.u1d Lam. a former <,tudent of < OOJlC'rman's, Jled her a month ago to a k for bit I money a Iler hisarrc\t on theft charge~ in Fullerton She "31d \he refu~d. [am·., \l!ttcr. .\nh. desert bed thr prolc<isor and her hrothrr a~ rln c friend~ Just Call 642-6086 ' Dr "te'l.C Murra) 'hairman of Cal ';tJte Fulknun'\ h1oloa,) dcp:irtment. '>.lid Cooperman .. had a real mte~st an the V1ctnamr~ \tudentc, v.ho ""ere J1tcnd1ng tht' un1vcr\1ty H(' "'""'out of ht\ "'" 10 heir tht>m muke tht' 1d1u\lment to tht• uni"l'r"''·" Evan .. ~1d C oopcrman "mort or le!>\ hcfnrnd1•d" V1ctn<imes(' 1mm1- f~rant~ lx'l\IU\(' .. hr "'a" h1m\Cll :I\ f1'l\ IOI Vef) clO)(' tlC!I With thO~ people· C'oopcrman, v. ho \en ed an 1964 a r~rch ph) idst at the U .. labonuoncs tn Lo Ala.mos. N.M .. aJ o w active 1n the ant1·nudcar moHmcnt. Funeral arraftcmcnl$ '4-Crt' rtnd· mg ·unda)' ni l for Cooperman. who 1s \Urv1vc b\ his wife and two t~n: gc d:iuahtcrS Wllat do )Oa llh •bo•l tilt! DaU)· PUo17 Wbll don'I )'OD Uh ! C.11 tM aam~r at ltfl a d yoor m s age wlJJ be rt<'ONIH, traal('ftbed ID4 d Li red lo tJit approprlaCtt d i tor. . n u ameU·ltoUr u w ri111tr'\lce ma)'IM H dlot contt 1uruott1 tdltor o H topt (.'oatri s.rt 10 01r Ltu rs coJama m11t ladud t•ttlr namt 1nd ltlt pbone 111mb r Jor vt rtll I N . • rlrcul•tlon r11l1, pl 11e. Tt ll u w At'• n Olr m111d, ,. · Designed, Finished Installed 31 Years Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters FINEST QUALITY Sl!IUTTERS AVAILABLE ON THE MARKET TODAY ••• AT FACTORY DIRECT PRICES! Call (714) 548~1 or 54&-1717 HEllWOOI MAIUFACTOIY 19n Placentia Avenue • Costa Mesa. CA 'li.621 "' . OAILV PILOTIMC>ndaY. OctObw 15 lllf**M Toastmistress Club sets meet Disney.strikers urged to OK new co Irvine T stmimcss lub will meet on Tutsda frotn 7 .to 9 p.rn. at a wine and chcnc pany at the home ~r one of 1t~ members. for mfonn1uion, call Carol Home at 8S J-38 l 6 in the ~vc!'?"I. or Nancy Spit~cr at $48-3710 anytime. Those C5inna more mformahon about the club arc urecd to attend. ·• Better Breathen to meet The Better Breathers' Club will mttt on 1 uesday from .12: JS to .1: 1 S p. m., on the .5eeond floor of the Lo· Alam!tO Bu inns Center, 3822 Katella Ave Los Alamuos. l •• d. Ron .. Wallen., rqiste':'fd respiratory therapist, will IS<;US~ Health . and Lifestyle" with emphasis on achievina the optimum level of health by avoidioa habits that can be dcstructave . . The. m~tings ~re free, but lunch will be served so pre-tqJstrat1on 1s required by calling 835-LUNG. ~ Free seminar aerlea off erect A series of free seminars will be presented by Fullerton Mortft8&C _ nd £scrow Co , on. iucccssi :TS. Eu~~ ~nn1na0Ct. J 7,at 7 p.m, in their offices at Su_bJcct of the scmina~ 1$ FHA/VA, conventional and adjustable loans and their place in today's real estate market. Space is ltm1ted so call Jennifer at reservations. Membereblp meetlrig set The Saddleback Arca Coordinating Council will bold a &eneral membership meet ins on Wednesday af 7:30 p.m. at_ the Ruz-Carlton Hotel Promenade Room in Laguna N1auet. Special guest speaker will be William Hall general manager of the hotel. Followina his speech, m~bers can vote on the newly·p~poscd chan&es in the by-laws. A COP> ofthesemaybeobtamed from Joe Barney. board member, We asked .students: school s o far?' 'What do you think of Bolsa Chica' s fate t o b e aired i n B odega Bay by calhnJ 837-6937 evenings. · Rcs1dents of the Saddleback Valley area are invited to attend. For more information, call 83()..8316. "' Holiday Gift Boutique set The South Coast Chapter of Women's American Oru~ization for Rehabilitation Through Training will hofd its annllal Holiday Gift Boutique on Wednesday from 7 to 10 p.m. at Columbia Savinas and Loan, Lakt Forest. More than 1 S booths will feature handcrafted items toys,. jewelry, 11ft ~ppina paper. stationery, calliJ18PhY: Chnstmas decorations. stock.ins stuffers and more. For more information, call L1nda Adler. chairman. at 831-5705 or 768-3676. Library elate. open house An open house is slated Oct. 19 at the Huntington Beach Public Library in celebration of the new On Linc Public Access Ca~ With itsuistallauon, patrons will be abluo determine 1f a boOk bas been orderc<I, whether it is circulation, when it is Clue and if it is on the shelf. The library provides touch terminals which allows individuals to track down the information by touchina the screen. The open house 1s scheduled from 3-5 p.m. at the library at 711 I Talben Ave. Career aemln•r off erect A three-hour seminar for people unemployed or unhappy with their jobs will be presented Oct. 18 at Ofange Coast College. The seminar. entitled -changing Careers: Conflict or Challenge?," bqins at 7 p.m. in room 108 of the school's music buildma. / 1 The $2S fee includes a syllabus and special materials. Lola Coxford. a veteran career counselor and instructor at Fullerton College. has liven numerous workshops and has wnttcn a book on resume writing. Monday, Oct. 16 • 9a.m., Oruse Couty tfu11t District Board of Dtreeton, Board Hearina Room, OCTD Administration Buildins. 11222 Acacia Parkway, Garden Grove. • I :30p.m .. Oran1• Couty PlaulD1 Comm111loa. Hall of Administration. JO Civic Center Plua, Santa Ana. Po ucr Loe . Dao Npyea, Utb rrade Costa Mesa "I don't know. ti's 0 K -not a lot of tests. but. yeah, a lot of homework. h's better than staying home." • Proposed occupation: "I haven't thought about it yet." Miclaele Stoll, 7tla 1r1de Cotta Mesa "I think it's fun . h's easier than elementary school. It's fun. The best part of the day 1s -lunch. Debbie Morrison, I~ lrade Cotta Mesa "I think it's going real good. Cause of the auys." Proposed occupation: Psychologist Sllerree AaclenH, 7tla sracle Costa Mesa .. h's a lot 'funner" than elementary school. The best part of tht day is my last penod -home econ- omics, cause we fool around all the time ... Proposed occupation: Vetcnnanan Woman withdraws $20, then rpbbed at.knifepoint A 0 scruffy-lookin1" bandit held a large knife to the throat of a woman Sunday afternoon and stole a $20 bill that she had just received' from an automatic teller window at the Wells Fargo bank 1n Huntinaton Beach. The armed man. described by his CmtaMeea A 22-yeat-old Santa Ana man wa~ arrested unday on suspicion of assault af\er he alleacdly ar.bbed 1 Oishli&)it from a South Coast. Pl~u teeunty auard and lned to hit him with ii. The allegtd a ult 0«urrcd after , bufl)ary su peel Robert Pmton Gonules was chatcd by the uniform· ed auard, Charle Coburn, 2S. Coburn finall) subdutd Oonz.alcs &1\U·.J>U hinj him 1nto .a planter oul$ide the ~f s depanment stott 1 on Bnstol Strtet. said poh report Coburn was thtn 11dtd by •nolhtr aecurity auatd and a pa scrb) ~ The acdon tarted 1fttr Coburn obK~ed Gontalc and another un· identified Hi panic "cH1na.. the b1C)'Clc racu around the perimeter of the hoppina center. The unidcntfie'\1 man fled on foot when um approached &he duo. Oonzal 1t1a ran after throw1na hi blckpa~ at the auant. P hcc rcponcd a pair of boll victim as a slender ~)'tar-old man with dark brown hair and mustach~ and "scruff) lookina... apparcntl) was waitina for someone to obtain money from the bank in the Scaclifl' Villaie Shopp1n1 Center on Main Street. police said. cutters. lht type uScd to cut bicycle chain locks, were found inside the backpack. Gonzale was being held this momi~ at Costa Mesa Ctt) Jail in lieu on 1.000 bail. • • • • • A S2S pune v.ith SS in a h was rcponclt stolen Saturday from a house in the 600 block of 1 th trttt. Poll~ said entry was throuah an unlocked door while the resident slept in another room bet n I a.m. and2 a.m. • • • Jewelry wonh S .125 wu n-poned stOlen sometime be\v.'CCn 10:30 am. and 3:30 p.m. Saturda) from a home 1n the 3000 block of Croydc"h Bi). There "'Crt no tw of forttd cntn. J'h~jcwclrywa taltniroma uuca 1n 1dc the home. • • • • A Bank of Newpon ro1n purk, tontaining SlO ln change. nd aSI 0 CB ~d10 were rcpanC'd :e tol n me· time betwttn 2 p.m and 11: 0 p.m. &urda~ from a cu par\;cd Al 660 He approachc:-d the \ 1ctim from behind nd a~kcd for the S:?O ball. She l't'f u d and then he threatened her with the knife. took the mone) and Oetl. The woman wu not inJurcd Town Center Drive. Entry was ·~ parently pined by smashina a pa - enaer w1na window on the truck and un1ockina the door. ... • • • Mlcbela Mor&H, Ida grade Cotta Mesa .. It's pretty good. because of Jaime. a guy at school." Proposed occupation: Fashion d~er Kimberly La1ll , klDder11rten lrvlDe "It's good. l hke 1t a lot. I like my teacher. Mrs. Ed- wards. The best pan of the day is doing the work. because it's not hard." Proposed occupation· Pan-time pilot/ pan-time veterinarian Travis Lacertot. pradleel Costa Mesa "I don't know h's fun. I'm glad to be there. My favorite pan. of the day 1s playina in the tunnel. .. Ptopoxd occupat1on: Kindergarten student ~ristoplaer Rud, 3rcl (l"lcle Irv la~ "I thank. ifs rather nice. Mrs. Malits is nice. too. The best part of the da) is when we go to recess. snad. and lunch time. l\nd ~hen we have an·· Proposed occupation· Vetennarian Harbour residents dismayed that heartng slated so far away By ROBERT BAUER .... o.mr ........ Huntington HarbOur residcou and &<>cal ot6cials are upset that one of the m05t important heariQCS in the '°"' controveny over devdOpment of the Bola Chica marshlands is scheduled Thursday in Bodcp Bay nOTlh of San Francisco -about 10 houn away iD uavd time by Local rcsidcnu and officials are all but cu1 off from testif}in& at iM auc:iaJ hcarina and cxpec1ed action by 1hc State CO&SW Conservancy. Hart>Our resident Jobn TillotSon. it\ed because tbe present plan doesn't 1ndude a nayjpblc an betwun Hununcton Harbour and t~ BOlsa C1iica waterWays called the sclCction of the Qcodcga Bay site fonbic ~ -a htlle booodoaJe .. perpetrated b) ofl'JCiab > optina for the pleasant altnospb.ere of BodeP Bay f s s1tuated OD a beautiful s~tch of the nortbau coast. about t"-'O hours by car from San Francisco. "You can•t trt there from here," be said. "'Somcthq this imponant should be held in the southern pan oftbc state." he SA.id. Aorence Webb. a senior planner for the city of Huntlniton Beach, also said ·she was St.lQ)rised by the decision to schedule the meeting in the north based on the sipificancc oflhe issue. And John Zmtner. a consultant for the conservancy on the Bolsa Chica development., sn:i he too was \UrpriJed. He said he queried Conservancy President Joe Petrillo about the location but Petrillo set the northern mceUnJ place "because there were lots of northern issues to be discussed.·· ~trillo voas out of state, but Ziotner said the agenda included a loan to state commercial fishermen 9-'ho suffered an "economic disaster" last year. Huntin&ton Harbour resident Tillotson sa'id be fean that harbor boat ownen ml)' become -landlocked" if there is no ocean aettSS bet~n the harbor and Bolsa Chica. • Harbor sailors now have to sail to the ocean throu&h the entrance at Anaheim Bay which th~ Share with the tJ S ~avy which uses the area to load ships of the Pacific Acct with weapons. Tillotson said one aec1dent and the entry way could be shut off. But Zintner. the Coastal Comervancy consultant.. said he is now recommcndina such a cut between the two areas. The problem. he said. 1s that no one wants to finance the project. ~· resident of the 18800 bloc~ of Teton Cirde rcponed 'iaturdal that someone stole his b1c)cle. parked in a lot on the 17000 block of Brookhurst Strttt, "'hile he ~u ~•tch1ni a mo,.ie. The black Sch~inn Cru1~r was \alued a1 SI OO Mc8nde R1\er A"'cnue rt'ponoo Fn- da\: that someone entered his open gaiage and stole aolf clubs in a golf bag. The l ~-asestamatedatS l .. :!00. Bmattntton Beach Two male diner\ ran out on a S64.39 b1ll at <\am's Seafood Res- taurant on Pacific (\list H1ahv.a) and almost ran down t~o wan~ 1o1.ho chastd them to their c.ar. 1n their Wendt Terrace residence for posse 100 of four ouDttS of cocaane. Richartl Laurence Flaoapn, 64-year· o1d Catherine Ann Flanqan and Tamara Lynn Melanson. 39, all of 60 Wendt Terract, were ~ in ide the home Friday morDina and later relnscd on S 15.()00 batl Each is chaf'ICd with PoSSC'SSion of narcoti<:i for sale. Arraignment is scheduled for this momina. • • • An emplo~tt of Fountain Valle) Community Ho pnal. 17100 Eochd St . reponed that someone broke into his tocked gold 1981 Voltta-agcn Rabbit on Saturtlay while 1t ~"as parked in the h01p1tal lot. The loss included a Blaupunkt car tcreo worth S300. ••• Thie'~ tole SI 0.000 Jewelr'\ from a locked "·chicle 1n the 19000 b[ocl.: of Coral~ood • • • Burala~ ~tole personal bank check~ and Other Items from a ""iden~ in the 18000 block of 'cwland trttt. ••• Burglars stoic a S llS watch and a purse contain1n1 $5 while tile victim wa taking a ho'Wl:r 1n her home 1n the 21000 block of Brookhur\t trttt. una •oman Newport Beach ~ European purse wonh $36 wa reponed stolen af\er a woman said iht set the purse down in the m~ of the sidewa on Coroaado Sutet. The woman said she put the punc down so that me could·climb o~ a v.all to K'C if a friend -at bome. • •• 1'.bout S 70 was oJcn from a wallet left in ide aj ck.ct in a Volvo parted on the 100 block of Oraaae ~ The car ..,.-left unlocUd. · • • • A \ andal did about UOO wonh of dam to a car cd on the 2 b&oc' of t 6th lR'C\. ~ vandal rcponcdly {'Unttured l! four t1ru nd s ppCd off an clccmc a cnna. ••• 4 ' A4 Orange Obut DAILV PILOT/Monday. October 15, 1984 Salvador .. rebels arrive for talks Lack of security worries leftists at mountain camp LA PALMA, El \'8dor (AP) -Le~t rebel I den ma~e fmaJ ptt_p-arauon at a mouni.ain camp for 1oda)"1 peaQC talks v.ith President Jose Napoleon Duarte -the firat such meetina since El Salvador"s civil r bepn five ye.an aao. Hospital 'mercy killing' ter1ned a pretty c old one By Ille A11odalt'd Pren . WASHJNµTO N-Police SI}' the ti tal Sl8bbinaofa ~tically 111 S+tcar· old woman in her hospital btd may have been a mercy lulhn,g. the Washinaton Post reponcd today. Ontd als at Washanaton Ho pual Center found Selena To>e a C'OmatOIC stroke patumt. ~1th a knife in her chest Sunfndiy soon a.f\cr shde was ~i att'd by a "!an identifying h!m5Clf as. a famrl) n:ie btr, Pohce an ,. ..... hospital offic1als.sa1d. The wo. man ched 90 minutes later an surgery. A p01l~! spokeswoman said the paticnt'.J anndson, Cardell Shelton 29. was arrest~ and charged wath murder after h~ turned hi.~self an to ~fficers e~rly tOdiy. The Post quoted an unidenuflcd hom1c1de dctcc11ve as saying the death ·•is a p0s ible mercy killins, but a preuy cold one." MJdwaFt Eqre•• take• to alr MIAMI-Air fi'lorida. which shut down ur:icter a heavy burden of debt in July will have three of its Bocina 737s fl>ana this week under the name of the new 'tow-fare a(rhne Mt~way E>.p~ The iMUJUraljourney ~Y wu to take 200 ~'senaers from M1am1 to Chic &~':That OaiJ.lt, hke ~a~> others. W8:J sold out 5Cveral days aao. accordin1 to ofl1c1als at Midway Airhnes, the Chteaio- ba5Cd parent com pan ) of the new ca!Jier. Midway Airlines pJans to spend $S3 mjllion to acqui re most of Air Flonda's as5ets throuth a deal approved last month by a fede ral bankruptcy JUdae. Klng Sr. oat ol IJo•pltaJ Two leaden of the auerri.llas' politic.al movement arrived from Panama and traveled without inci- dent tbrouah aovernment-controlled temtory Sunday to reach the camp and link up with a pair of rebel military commanders. Duane was to leave the capital, San ' a caravan ATLANTA -The Rev. Manin Luther Kin& Sr. will continue to take med ication and be monitored by a cardiologist a~cr bems ~ischaried from.the hospital where he was treated for a chronic hcan a1lment1 htsdoctor ~ys. Kin& ---.....,....;..--~......-~.;_,__.;._.,.....:_...,...._..,.__~~--r-~'-rbc fiubcr ofslain c1vilJ:i&htsJcadcr.Maojn L\lther Kinftt·· was d1sch!Jl.ed Saturday from Crawford Lona Memorial Hosp1taT. wluc e enteficf OCt. 7, nursin' supery1sor Juanita Linkous sai~ Sunday .. ~na as "doina very weU at this point,'' sa1dDr. Bernard Bndaes, Kina's phys1c1an. expected to contain at least 300 vehicles jammed with suppqners he invited to join him. Tbou11nds of people already had ptbettd in La Palma, a nonhern mountain town of about 2,000 resi- . \ A woman atan4a ID doorway of La Palma home hold.lJlf a white nag. Behlnd her are u .......... remnaota of hoetllldea between rebel• an.4 Bl 8alndor &o•enunent troope. Heart, Jang pattent at wor.t THE DALLES, Ore. -Jeny W. Austen, whose diseased hean and tunas were replaced with those of a brain-dead, 18-rcar-old mcnorcyclist, is back on the job after becomina the first Orqoman to undergo such surpry. "Everybody takes aood health for aranted," said Austen, a heavy con1uuCtion equipment mechanic who had the transplant Dec. 2, 1983. Four )'W'I AfO. Austen, 38, an 1J111teur body builder weiahina 20S pounds. was atncken with pulmonary hypenension, a condition of unknown ori&in that suddenly strikes youna people in their 20s and JOs. The disease IJ'Jdualf y damaaed hit bean and tunas and became life-thrcateninJ. dents, to observe the talks. • Ruben Zamora and Guillermo unao. the rebels' political leaders. said they expected no breakthrou&h today but hoped the talks would lead to coatinuina nClOtiations. ''MoJtly, we 1ust want to keep talk.int" said • Zamora. "It as an important step, but onl y a first step." Zamora and Unao arrived in San Salvador from Panama aboard a Colombian plane, their first pubhc appearance 1n their homeland 1n fou r years. The)' were dnven north about SO miles to La Palma b> a French diplomat, and spent the n1Jht at a oonovan, a San frlftOltco Bay .,.. ,....oent WhO hed pUIMKt oH the roed to lfeep. Oavlrt threetened to Uk the U.8 . Stet• Oep'aft,,,.,,t to laeue a warning to trawt ~ 91\d auto lneuranoe ~-dll-oouragfng trawt, but lelt week Mdlcan T ourtem Mlnllter Enrl· q~ Savlonec promlMd to In- er... J>Qfloe petrot• on the highway. • After Oavtn and 81¥tgnac met, embuly tpOkeem.n Nld no adYllOry would be requMWd. Police and tourtem offlclala admit rObberi .. have lncfMMd throughout Mexico u the econ- omy ~. but t~ eay moat IUch lnokNinta occur When our• ftta fall to uM common MnM, auerrilia camp. A handful of diplomats based in San Salvador Steeted them It the a1rpon. No· gowds met them and there was no"sian of armed sccunty forces at the airport. Both tides aareed to keep armed forces at least six miles away from La Maybe Its time to relight your furnace pUot. If you had your furnace pilot turned off for the sum mer. it was· a smart move. You saved ma ne}. But now. cold weather is just arou nd the corn er. So make sure you can safely relight your furnace pilot before you need your furnace . It's easy. Just open the access panel to the main gas control and look for the instructions. If you can't find the instructions. or yoo 're unsure how to relight yo ur furnace pilot. give the Gas Company a call. We11 come out and show you how. But remember: many people ca l1 during the first cold pell . So call today while our service people aren't o busy. That way )'Ou won't be left out in th cold. ~ SOUTH RN CAUl'OANIA ~ COMMNV Palma, and to leave security to the Roman Catholic Church, the Red Cross and Salvadoran Boy Scouts. Unao. recaJlina thousands of politi· cal murders durina the civil war, criticized the lack of 1eCUrity .. "De· spite all of that, we are here," be told reporten. Mondale vows ·IJard quest1ons ln debate Meanwhile, Reagan's camp promises less statistics on Sunday WASHINGTON (AP) -Leaders of the President R~n·s campaian say things will be d1fTerent Sunday when he faces Walter Mondale in their next debate: Reapn will have fewer statistics and more respect for his opponenL For tpe1r pan. the top officials for the Democratic campa11n say Mon- date will come out swinaing for the second tele vised encounter and ask "hard questions" of the Republican president. The pre-debate pred1cuons were made Sunday as Mondale campaian chairman. James Johnson, and his Reaaan counterpart, Sen. Paul Lax· ah. R·Nev .. apf>?red on ABC-TV's "This Week WJth David Brinkley." D1scuss1na the debates on CBS. TV's ·•face the Nation" were the resp«· uve campa1an manaaers. Roben Beckel for Mondale and Ed Rollans for Reapn. Air plJoaa ottered lajet. WASHINGTON -Passcnaers in properly equipped airlinen are belna offend the chance to make lona-distancc air·to-sround telephone calls beainnina today. After 10 years of work and IMumerable cxperimenu. a company called Airfone Inc. w11 inau1uratin1_the new service In cooperation with nine airlines: Air One, American, Delta, &stem, Northwctt Orient, Pan American, Republic, United and TWA. Initially, onJr a few wide-body jeu and planes that fly Iona routes are belnJ equipped With Atrfone's radio equipment, but that could chan1e rapidly If the service proves popular. The credit caret.- activated service, &Ood in the continental United States Aluka and Hawaii cons a flat rate ofS7 ,,0 for the fint three minutes and S 1.2s for each additional minute. CA I If ORNIA - - - -- Actor McDOwall IJVured la clUJJ _ LOS ANGELES -Actor Roddy McDowall, who ,--~ endurtd ha1r-raisina adventures 1n such movies u the "The Poseidon Adventure'' and "The Planet of the Apes." has been 1hlhtly hurt in a real-life car acxadent. McDowall, 56, was \ept at Cedars-Sinai Medical C.entcr for about two hpurs after the accident Saturday for observation, said hospital SPQ\esman Ron Wisc."Hc was knocked around a bitl but all tetta were OK." The Califorrua Hi&hway Patro said it had no details of the iu,-cident. McOowall, who bepn his career in the 1938 Enalish film , "Scruffy," has appeared in more than 80 feature films. includ1n1 "My Friend Aiclca," "Lassie Come Home" and "How Oreen Was My Valley." In MCDOWALL 1960, he won an Emmy for his work in NBC s "Niaht Without Honor" and a Tony for his work m the Broadway production of Jean Anouilh's "The Fi&htina Cock." . , . . ./ LA 1ug vJoleace continua LOS ANGELES -A shotaun a.nd pistol were fired, a car screeched off into the n1pn and five youths were dead outside a weekend pany on West S-ith Street as six who were wounded screamed on the bloody lawn. Little more was known Sunday than when the _pna-rtlated Shootinas occurred late Friday, said Sat. Ed Wilson oftbe (>Ohce department's South Bureau CRASH wtlt, which specializes in combatun1 street pnp. Meanwhile the wave of post.Olympic violence continued Sunday in south<entral Los Anaetes. as a 14-ycar-old Los Anieles bOy who refused to JOin street pnas and a 44-year-old woman who stepped into her front yard to investipte a 11"1 111ument were both shot to death. "h seems we get lullin~ every day an which ganp just start tbootina indiscriminately," said CRASH Detective Michael Anderson. "It's so common it's unbelievable." Hlll•lde reaort gets approval RANCHO MIRAGE - Celebrities accustomed to takina bows arc now bowina to a controversial S90 million hillside rcson backed by former president Gerald Ford. sayinJ they've fou&ht the &ood fight but have lost. Susan Marx, widow of comedian Harpo Marx , says the Mountain Protective Leapie. which includes Frank and Barbara Sinatra. it pulling out of the beanie all inst the Mirada Project in the wake of an unfavorable appellate coun rulina. The protective leaauc claims the project -includina a 2SO-room hotel, 160 hotel villas, 80 townhouses and '5 sanJle-famlly dwellinp -would damace the descn environment. threaten rare native bi&Jlom sheep and endancer their lambina area. 'Cover-Up' actor •tt11 uacoa8Clou• LOS ANGELES -Fans flooded a hospital switchboard wtth calls and sent flowers to actor Jon-Erik Heitum, the CBS. TV "Cover-Up" star who remained unconscious three days after accidentally shootina himself 'fritb a blank. officials sa1Ci. "People want to know how he'sdo1na. The calls have been in the hundreds He must be very ~pular," nursin& supervisor Rita Gainey at Beverly Hills Medical Center said Sunday naJht. Hexum, 26, remained in critical condition, she u1d unday. He undcf'11fent a five-hour operation Saturday and remained in an tensive care, she said. He was to be kept sedated until swellina subsaded around his riaht temple, said Vince Pancttiere, a publicist for 20th Century-Fox Studios. WoR 10 ---~--- - ---- "We're .JOin4 to so into the debate next Sundt)' n1aht and ha\e 1t out." Johnson said. addina that the Demo- crat would ··confront" President Rc- apn over Lebanon durina the 90- minutc ~ssion on forcian policv. Bomb bl••t liJ Brauel• As for Reapn. Laxalt repeated his contention that Mgndalc bested the Republican president in the first debate Oct. 7 because Reapn's prcparen had saddlcd him with statistics. BRUSSELS. Bclaiu m -A bomb exploded in downtown Brunets today seriously damaainl a four-story build1n1 housina the offices of severai conservative organ1lltions but causina no injuries. police said. A police ,pokesman said there were no immediate indications the bOmbina was the work of a left·wina &roup which claimed re p0n1ibility for three bomb attackJ aaainst Western defense contractora in Brussels durina the last two weeks. Tbe bomb exploded ah only after m1dni&ht on the around floor ofihe Paul Hyman Stu<iy Center. a con$Crvauvc research aroup, the spokesman said. "h wu much too intense, much too ltlUttical. ana t think posed tOO much ofa burden on the presuient.. so that when he went into that debate in Louisville, hi• circuits literally .. ere l•nel cablaet mUll• wltlJdrawal overloaded," Luah said. TELA VIV, Israel-Pnmc Minister h1mon Peresconvt'ntda mtttinaof ··1 think the V.C-tttt th1n1 we ctn hisc:oahtion Cabincnoday to dascu hiseaaht-day.tripto the Unittd Statt'Und do. and v.e v.ill do this week -plans for w1thdrawin1 brach soldiers from southern Lebanon. brad Radio, believe me -is let Ronald Re aan be quoliQI unnamed sourtts. said rcrc intended to ptts the Cabioet for a qukk Ronald Rcapn," Liuh said. " ... He dcc111on on end1n1 luacl's occupauon of sou\htm Lebanon, which bepa with should deal a he always has on a a June J 982 1nva1ion. Other media reporu indittted Cabinet members were conceptual v1s1onao· .basis. Thit, hkcly 10 question Peres closely. on h11 promise to make a decision on tht ..-hctt Ronald Reqan 11.best. T~at .s occupation fortes 1n thrtt to four weeks. cht [('Hon he 11 v.hett he is. Hcd1dn t become president b«iusc he h d Statistical know!~~." I More pol90a caad7 tl.lre11tened Johnson said Mondale would uk TOKYO-Eltonion1st dtm1ndina more than $400.000 fr ma m or RcqJn aboul Vice Prts1dent Georae Japanese cand)' maker nt a letlcr 10 a 1elevl on network t.hraten "I to Bush's a nion d nn1 the vice poison more boxes of candy. the nctwor said tOday. A spokesman for &h pre 1denual debate last Thursday that Japan Broadcastina Co0>. said an en" clopt delivcrtd today 10 its Osaka office the Democrats have 1d U .. troop eont11ned 1lcucr11unun1 Pbhce and a '30-aram c.blet of Yt-hat appeared t.o bt died in •• hamc" in Lebanon. sodt\lm C'}'IR1dc. The kttcr, 1ddtcsscd \() N1tional Police Aatncy Ch er .. J think we'll ha t to 10 into thu datoshiSuzuki.p\•ea ttsretumaddrcs .. The Mystery Man ~dtllFace .:· dcblJC tnd di U It," Johnson id, ICCOrdtnttOthccompan} Offi Ill, whO Po~COntandttion henotbfidcntifiN • , ' - . . Sea of faces Roy Harmon of Claremont, I• Ju•t another face In the crowd u he Jee0 1 af•lut.a wall-tnmal recently. ---~ ' ... Aut<i accords reached With FordandGMC DETROIT (AP) -United Auto Wol'k.ers will get novel aid programs for employees who lose their jobs to robots, more efficient operauons or subcontracting in both a tentative co ntract with Ford Motor Co. and the pact they ratified with General Motors Corp. The Ford pact was reached Sunday morning, and Sunday night the UAW announc,cd its 350,000 GM members in this country had ratified their new three-year contract with the nation's oppos1t1on, but passed 5 7 .4 percent to 42.6 percent, the union said. The count from 149 locals was put at 138,410 votes to I 02,528 votes on a turnout of 62.2 percent. Ford workers get their turn to vote after Wednesday, when UAW leaders representing 115,000 workers meet in Detroit to review their tentative contract. Trio pick up Nobel fo r medicine Pion eer research in immunology. -k~~ natural defenses cited 1n award STOCKHOLM. wedcn C P> _:,: The 1984 No'bel Pme in medicine wa awarded today to three re· ;.carche~ for p1onecnn ~ork m 1mmunolot>'. mduding prom1S1ng rt5earch into W11) tQ manipulate the bod~., natural dcfe(l5C~ to tmn cancer. • tondon-born Niels K. Jeme. ~ho works in SwilLcrland. was cited along with WC$t German George J,f . Kochler and Argentine' Cesar Mtlr tcin for thear theories on the devclop.-1 mcnt and control of the 1mmune- systcm. and the discovery of the principle for producina monoclonal antibodies. Monoclonal anti60dies. in ad· diuon to showing promise in halting .jome forms Gt cancer, have been used to treat severe combined immune deficiency syndrome. a rare con- dition in which a child cannot fight off. Auto Upholstery by Stanley 645-9841 RUFFELL'S . UPHOLSTE~Y, UIC. for TM Rnl Of Yu Uf rillikM BlVO .• COSTUUA-SCl-11~ The Pros' Since 195 7 ~ UllITT llSUUICE ~ Non-smoker .~~ Rates l ~ . 831-7740 441 Oki Newport Bh'd. ,.._port llNch, Ca. ALTERNATIVE TO MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBAU PRIME RIB DINNER ~ SPECIAL '6 •95 Complete dinner including soup or salad, and choice of potato TV viewing for //J,{4~rl7,J,~1'1jr-~~~--!!t-'a~e1 80J-£. Balboa lfheres no ""'-like home ... At hOme 1nsttuct1on for a I ac,ies ~ ciuallfltd lnstruetors Math. reading, Enohsn. foreign fanguaQeS. all musta1 1nstrumentsandvoiee.P1~art.h0mecomouttrpt0g1am · mtno and oourmet cookin9! tow rates with no ot>llOattons rurortno scneautea at vour· convenience. 47e .-"'ft2g OFFICE ..OUltS 9am·6om Mon ·Frl u-v:i- sooo Birch Strfft. Sutte 3000. w.st rower, Newoort INC'ft. CA tJMO You and Your Friends are Invited . to attend a free lecture entitled "The Purity of God's Man .. by Timothy A. MacDonald, C.S.B. Member of The Christian Science Board of Lectureship Tuesday Evening-OCtober 16, 1984-8 :00 p .m . · Second Church of Chri1t~ Scientist 3100 Pacific View Drive . Corona del ar No. I automaker. . The Ford contract includes the added protection of a four-year ban on the closmg of any of Ford's 17 assembly plants or 48 parts fac1littes. Everyone i welcome Neither company was forced to give up its freedom to farm out work to save money and keep car prices competitive with the Japanese. "We feel that this agreement will Otild care pro•ided enable us to remain competitive in L _ _;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~=~;;;~~~~===================~ the market," Stan Surma. Ford's 11 673-7726 T~ GM pact faced heav y 1mt1aJ national negotiating committee chairman, told a news conference. Baby 'boomlet' ·sweeping state SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -An ures snow• small dip tn the boom epidemic of pregnancies has In 1983. San Fr~ilco ~ ate$ swept Caflfornla tn tile past five hospital atatlstJcs •uggest years, bringing two mltllon In-another riH this year. fants In a baby t>oomlet that The fertility rat6 nattonwtde for fotlowed a "baby bust° of the late ·women glvfng birth to t™Mr first 1960s and 1970s. Chltd rose by 10 percent for The Increase In births nas been women aged 30 to ~ and by 18 patt.Jcutarly evident among work· percent for women aged 35 to 39 Ing women who delayed child fn 1982. · rearf09 until their 308, prod"c::lng Atta Bat" Hospital In Berkeley greater demands now for day-and Children's Ho.apltal in San care centers and services for Francisco had record nurnbefa of children. births In SePtemt>er and ptedfQt A story on the baby boomlet -a record fOt'. 19S.-. was published ln the San Fran-Ihe Bay Area Business 'cl8Co Chronlcie. which reported Leaders Task Force made up of that Calif ornla had more than 17 executive officers from major live births per 1,000 population In corporatJons Identified child care 1983 -up from slightly more as a mejO( problem this year. It than 14 live births per 1.000 convened a conference latt papulatlon 10 yea,.. earlier. month for employers to ex- ch~e mformatk>n on pror grams. ... Paula Quinn. the head ma- ternity nur• at Children's H~i­ taf, counted 25 btrths In a recent weektrid. "Theee new mothers are women who have had careers, women whO were architects, doctors. lawyers. computer op. erators. you name It," sald Dr. \John Bolton. a pediatrician The average age of new whose San Francisco offices are mothers at the hoapltal la 31, packed wltttteddlers. -nearly deC•d~ otder-tnan "Now they're 1ay1ng, . 'Walt a mothers of prevtous generations. 'mfnut•;-:--we•nt approaohlng our :The baby bOOmlet fOtk>w• a mld-30s. thlatsthetlmetodoft."' "baby bust" of the fate '608 and The resutt ts th• b!Qgett baby '709, when th0u11nd1 of young boom alnce the 1940i In Call-women chote Jobe and birth 1fornla. Although statewide fig-control over marrl• and family. 11 British government on 'tilack alert' after hotel bombing J LONDON (AP) -Police cor- 'doncd off. Downin& Street today, the official home of Prime Minister Maraam Thatcher. a~ ert ofsteppcd up security for Britain s lllvcmmcnt leader\ and buildin1s because of the IRA bombin• thll killed fourpcople Officials said the House of Parlia· mcnt and all aovemment and mtli· tary establishments were put on ''black alert," a hiah alert tatus. Police aid Friday's bornl:i1n1 an a hotel in Bnghton hou\1ng lhatchcr and other top m~mbcrs of the Con~rvativc &ovcmmtnt may ha'-c been the tart of a new lr1 h Re· publn:an Army otlcn51\·e. Officio! dcel1ni:J to givc'dcta1ls of the cunty operallon. But ont of· ticial ource. who \Poke on t'onJ1tton of anon)lmity, s~ud Thatcher'\ per- sonal \C<'Ur&t) fortt, u uall) made up of two pohcc ·ncc1al Branch agent • has hten .. c,p.anded.'' Police today manned barriers clos-ina off Downin& Street, where Thatcher rctumed to her official ~idencc ac No. I 0 from her country retrttt at Ehequer west of London Sunday niaht. Everyone cntcrin, the narrow street was t'hcckcd. Extra p0licc were on dut) outside aovemmcnt buildings. and everyone cnterin, Parliament -where the I louse of l.ords reconvened today ancr the summer rtte -had to undcrao identity checks. The Houst ofCommoo reconvenes f ucwa)'. tore owner\ 1n . central London \\'trc'lbo reported 1ncrca5td sccunt). n lRAC'arbombla t 0«·.17out iJc HarrOds. London'\ most famous 'tore, killed live people and ~oundcd 9l. 1 h3tchcr. ~ho turned 59 on~ tur- d y. wcl\t to Chequers ancr narro~I) e~aping death in the prcdlwn bomb· ina of the Grand Hotel 1n the coaM re ort of Bn hton. "here the CM· scr"athc Pany wai holJina it an· • The '?"IY.way to tax.defer high income from · securities aranteed by the U.S. overnment No other investment offers you all these advantages. Total tax deferral, high yield and payments of principal and interest guaranteed against default by the U.S. Government make the Compass-II Government Guaranteed Variable Account• (GGVA) an attractive new opportunity: principal reinvested automatically • withdrawals can be made at any time••• • free, non-taxable transfers with the four other Compass-II investment options • guaranteed death benefit payment • monthly income guaranteed payable for life • pro1essionally-managed portfolio of 100% U.S. Government-guaranteed securities, including up to 90% invested in mortgage-backed (Ginnie Mae) certificates Stop by your nearest Great American office and ask a PAMCO Representative about this new investment opportunity! • portfolio rated MA by Standard & Poor's • fh,, ••• • •lf'rrf'<l •nnu•t\ '' ~nd"'"' ''"" ~ ~n l•ll' "i">'•O'l<.I' Com~n~ ol C•n•d• .. •U ).I •nd 1< .-V••••blco •I LrHt ""'f'"C.tn f•~I ,...,."!!\ 8o1nk throu11h ~oh( "nnu1f) "••k~·~ Comp.in" lnw••n..' '-t-<vKn 1""-....,COi. o1n •odl'~"'' lt,t"fl>\!'d '"" 1nw1'nce •!lf'"f"\o •nd • •f'l!t\lf>f'...-1 brol.O"r d<'.tle• """~co""" <.un l1IP ., .. not .11hh.11t"d compo1n~ ot Gri'o11 o\rYW'•K ~ •nd ••P viiPI• '~"'"hit' tor thf' .w: < u•"' ' ot •11 hro. hur"" •d•l'•h•e~nt• do< umf'nt• •r\d ot,.,... m•tl'<oolf\ •nd r>1"1rnt'nl oi<lu• t' ,....., m.a" r..c:.,,... • total tax deferral of dividends, interest and capital gains • no sales charge deduded from investments '" "'"°"~..,..~-....~~ ... -~ (-4-... -~"<>l·•~ t>rt~-df-.~lf'' 4nt1 riv.-... 'l()' 5'U11••ntfl't• tl'lr '"''~"t~r"ll \-OU m•'•• .. • lrn.~•mf'f\I' f"!'\U,1 tot•I '' ~~,t ~ tli• •n '""' {Ontr.Kt ~·' • $25 m inimum investment .. • dividends, capital gains and distributions of "'"1thdr.t,..•lot ~,.hoch "'' O.-.-n 1n ttw<onl•«t ~'th•"',,. .. ",..., be·~ 10 .a 5'\. ctw•gl' "P">'>IM'C'u', ont.t"''"lt cnmpito•P 1nlormo1toon on,,.,.. l OMAAC.C..lf "nnuit~. 1ndud1ng .all ch••1t~ •nd l"P""'~ •hcit.tld bf' •Plld ur•tuli• tM>.1..,.. '"'"'''nll GREATER LOS ANGELES AREA UNIVERSAL CITY 80 U\Jwrul Oty Plu.a . .c:l~ent 10 lklfWf'UI StudlOI. . . . 181111 ~it.20 • INQEWOOOl~rl.ec & M.lnc~tl"f 150 South Marke\ Sttttt 12 HI b .. 1. 7:'94 RANCHO PN.OS Vf.ltO(S:'SAN l'ft)1tO lllSO South Wtilem Mfl~. 121JI1131.0.11 BllMONT SHOR£ 4601 East S...:ond Sctftt .. • 12 rn 416-'JIQ 1 SOUTH ""5AO£NA ltXX> fl,.r O.l. ~ Mflu.p 11'181 7'9'414 l ~'llMAltlN() 2lSS Huntontcton Oriw 18181 ~ l~i RfVfRSIDf COUNTY • ltlVlRSIOli'Adin&k.lllA Mid~ '50JOM1 ton IM'rlue • ltlvtlhlDt "'"' • MS LWYmil't ~~.- Che.stMrt • ....... '"~ 416441(,f, Q(NA.()N ~ Miulrin b"-"'".vd • • • . . .• r,>141601~1 ll ~lll INOltt tOl \\ftl Q .ith.vT\/MlnUf MIJRJU(l~ 2•7• \~ ~ l7"4 ._..,, ~ll RA"-<..HOC .. llF~l'.ilo\ 2"bJO \ nf'I Ro.tcJ !;141 b7f> "101 DtSERT UOT ~INC'> ll~~mDnw•t~'°"Bl\d <bl'I ~ f>itJ.M "PRl~.S 2fi01 l °Wlqu1U·""-Clllum \\.J\ •I F.rr.tl Dr•llt' 111"11 lH l&lh l'i'l.M Of~Eltl Hg~ 111 11 ~f'I ~' ~"'° tbl'll ~ 18811 ~M ()(SUlT TO.\''( ct"-TER HlgtM~ 11l <it~""""""" tl>tQ\ \41-lll 1 1-.0t""" "'Rl~ HlgtMl'y 111.J!OubOr"~ (fllCI \4<;.lt>H l\ORltfCO -ntNC\ • 'lO Ch1"1m.n Ci-< I\' "1 ..,., • ; llM ORANCE COUNTY • ,\NAHUM H ll '- 5'>'IO .... ~ .. An.a ('~'(WI R(>.ld t .. 14-'l'lk.l'i I ()IA"'IG(11u\t1n "'He-Im ZSt\~""11Mtlf\~ •14 ~l ... , OOt 45108.lrrlne'.a P.Jrl.. .. ~ at l•U. l'"l-41 \9'-M>l (l l 2.lNI& (Ibo t'rU &~ •lJ(I l~N"Hll\\ l411t fllKm \ i-14 5111> ';Ill) \I \ION \'IQ() 2.\1,?C.:ahol nrMl.aP.u tn4 ~Wt l o\Cl'o\"lf' .• lll lll112 <.:'°'"'' V.1~ P•'"""' •uuth {11 NogU<"I Rl»d f<Jl ... 1 .. 1 ... \o\llll 019'-;t•~ ~~ •L"l'l~8(A,(,t1 .. 1 l. ~.,.,, .. 'f'OUP Ml.BO.\ Pf ....... "lit ... t.tXl (.r.t ~ Bou"". '<l 8"l80.\ N "'0 lOl \\if' .. 1'11lf' -.E\o\PORT BEICH On l>Kit1<. C<W.'t HI t>w~. ~ '\I< "rthudll~ and ~llO'IC~~ 1 N <l °""Bf .\CH Ml0.Hn~ ''°"'°'II( Hg~\ l MaN«l'I ~ P.lua • .s,.o\'J'-""' CAPl~TRr\"IO WU l arnooo Clpt\tr;ano CAA\ TitA "I() ll "'l H Oot1"!Yt ,...,!.. ltd 11 \ iC'l\.l!OI •.-cs <!pP(Mllf' C:lpt\lr.W.:1 fko.actl Pbz• ~ l ..ntf'f V."' (II \~I "'ill WI ~fl Cmuno ltr.il ...... ( '~''" ,_,_,~"'" .Q) "-" id.t l'w 0 • Offtee "'~turd"' Great American ir t vings Bank AC ifornla fin . ll~.d . . . 'net' 188S. 14H41-I vlCI~ ''. ~unt~ harnc,crbcenuughu tt is toda\. • i.nul one aide, ~ho al o "ould \otak onl)' 1f notidcnt1flrc1 nu lronfcttac~. ~ ............. __ ~~ ....... ----:------------------------------------------------_.;.---------------_._--__. ________________________________ __. __ ;._,_._, • -·- I I lj Foul boaters foul wate:r'.s of Newport Bay Most animals know better than to foul their own nests. Man. we find, ts not among them. · Ac~ording to a report released Friday by the California ~egional Water Quality Control Board, the increase of bacteria m Newport Bay on weekends -when boating and other recreational uses are heavy -.. strongly suggest(s) that di sch es from boats_ace a source of this contamination .. " isc arges'' 1s the polite term the Water Quality Board has chosen to communicate the idea that yachters are flushing their toilets into the same water they satl in. The bacteria these people are dumpin$. into the water can sic1cen·swimmers, causing gastrointestinal illnesses in as many as seven of every 1,000 people to come in contact with .it. Although the Water Quahty Board has concluded there is no public health hazard, regional chairman Philip Mauter, a Newport Beach councilman, is concerned. And well he should be. Recreation is to Newport Beach what steel is to Pittsburgh. Anything that threatens it should be treated as if it were the plague. In his formal statement, Maurer said the board and Newport Beach will begin an educational program to correct improper vessel wastes practices. We hope that will suffice, but we're not optimistic. Newport has addressed Bay pollution problems in the past. The city has toyed with the ideas of tou&,h waste disposal ordinances, building more pump-out facilities for boaters and limiting the number of people who are allowed to live aboard their yachts. It is clear that the city will be forced to police boaters if they refuse to act responsibly. Bay pollution is a threat not just to the seven swimmers per 1,000 it may sicken, but the the image of Newport Beach. If the city becomes known as the Tidy Bowl of Southern California, the economy is sure to suffer. Proposition 36 needed to put brakes on Laguna To the Editor: Proposruon 36 (Save I J) on the ballot is an ab~lute must 1f we as citizens are to e.,.en beg.m to slo"' down the rate of growth of govern· ment spending As a La~una councilman al the time the ongmal Propos111on I J was passed, I maneled at the ~ase wtth which the c11~ of Laguna accommo· dated to the supposed· revenue loss.·· Not one city employee was laid off - everyone got their yearly merit ra1~ and cost of living raise -and have gotten them cvcf! year si nee 1978. How do they do 1t? Simple Double and tnplc a fc~ fees and business hcen~s and let inflauon do the rest. Taxable sales in Laguna are up over IOOperccnt since 1978-Laguna gets I cent of eve'! dollar. Property assessments in Orange County are up from $41 bi I hon in I 978 to S85 b1lhon toda) -up over 110 percent -and Laguna's high turno.,.cr has gotten more than 11s share Laguna continues to be the most expcns1vel) governed Cit) 1n Orange Count) (O\.er $600 per person per year for local government). City salary increases conunue to oucpace inflation -thev never heard of a depression. recession or hard times. Cenain sacrifices have had to be made. however -street sweeping, road maintenance and repamng. !>torm drains and capital 1rnprove- meR1S have gone b) the board while the Cit) stfaf poormouths their sad finances and issues a .. g1f1 catalog"' soliciting donations. And now our Cit) (ouncil presumes to tell us how to vote by passing a unanimous resolution op- posmg Proposition 36. Howls of disaster from the city staff are to be expected -no one can cry better or louder than a ··civil" servant -but the City Council? They of all people should know that the only way to stop the growth of government red tape is to take the money awa) before a new way 1s found to spend it wastefully M} vote is Yes on Propos1t1on 36. HOWARD DAWSON Laguna Beach FV election 's worth the price To the Editor I am writing in repl) 10 a letter to the editor that appeared in several area newspapers concernmg the up- commg Fountain Valle\ School Board cktuon. Like the writer of the pre" 1ous let1er. I too am outraged. Howc' er. I am outraged that certain board mem- ben -who asked staff to 1nvest1gate the law in terms of increasing their own salaries. who allowed certain areas of the budget to remain un- challenged but voted to decrease classroom 1nstruct1onal suppl) mone)' b) 25 percent. \NhO voted to increase class size -seem to resent th e fact that I.and man-. like me. wish to elect the fifth member of the board who will represent me. Given what I've observed of the current board. SS .000 (the cost of the election -which 1s less than the proposed salary increase for board members). 1s a small pnce to pay to allow the taxpayers to elect the person they feel is the mo.st qualified to sit on this school board. . I am also outraged that these same board members and a di~tnct man· agement employtt would send out an inaccurate and misleading letter to a certain segment of the communlly urging the "retention" ofa candidate who has never been a member of the ..chool board. It is my hope that people will vote lor a candidate for the Founuun Valle)' !lrhool board basedtlupon the candidates' qualifications and their stand on the 1<;sues. JO .\NNE ORZO Fountain Valle} Ha wk ' s k ing of h u n t ers The-fish hawk 1c, ll far hl>tter hunter than the lion That bird come<o up wath a fish 1n nan<' out of 10 ,tnkcc. The hon fails to get 1tc. pre> in ntnl" out of I 0 attackc.. In Snud1 .\rabta. a gallon ol &aSOhnc C'~'i('i l 1 C'COt'i A wah.'rmclun ro uSl6 ORANGE COAST • Daily Pilat Will bet )OU a small un'IJ)C'<:1fied c.um wu·ve nc"er heard of the world'c, largcSt pnvatc un1vcf\1ty. Waat. first disqualify m.,. reader 1n Massachu· \Cit\. Oka) 1t''i Nonhcastcrn Un1ver- 'ill\ of &\ton with 34.<X.Xl 'itudent'i. L.M. Boyd 11 • 1yadlc•t~d eolamo/11. ' H. L. 8chwart1 an Plltlltlhir Franll linl ~-""40i"O Eo11or Tom Tait C ir £0i!01" Cratg lhd Se>Ottt Eo110t ··rh qu tJon n~w 1 whether R agan. at 73, retains his P rformer' _ { capacltytoasse what1JBP.~nedandbouncebackagatn t Walt r · J Mondali Jn round two of the 1984 presidential debates." REAGAN & Co. L_ ---·----~ Can Reagan pick himself off the floor in 2nd debate? WASHINGTON -In 1967. a new Iv elected Republican governor of California named Ronald Reagan addressed the Gndiron Club an Washington. The Democratic speaker that night was Sen. Robert Kennedy . Kennedy was a big hit. Reagan an uncharactenst1c flop. When a guest encountered him afterward and praised his speech, Reagan waved the compliment aside and said. "I blew ..... Two months later. when they appeared together on a satellite television show to answer questions from European stud~nts. Reagan had done his homework ~ well that he outshone the redoubtable Kennedy. The question now is whether Reagan. at 73. retains his performer's-capacity to assess what happened and bounce back against Walter Mondale 1n round two of the 1984 presidential debates. To hear the president's advisers talk. the problem is one of ReaB<ln's preparation rather than the president himself. These advisers have more theories about what went wrong lban the pre~1dent doe~ positions on Social Security. Here arc the favorites: •Reagan was overprepared. Re- a~n. who never met a statistic he didn't hke. behaved as if he had been briefed by an accountant. UsuaUy. he talks values better than numbers. This time he supposedly was so overstuffed with statistics that he forgot to be himself. Sen. Paul Laxalt (R-Nev .) calls this .. being brutalized by a bnefing pro- cess that doesn't make an) sense," a cn11c1sm aimed at the White House inner circle. especially Chief of Staff James A Baker Jll and pres1dent1al assistant Richard Darman. •Mondale was undervalued. Re- agan had prepared for a "mean" . . Lou CANNON Mondale. who would repeat the mistake of past opponents and attack him personally. He wasn't ready for a respectful opponent. who zeroed in on the issues. This is directed at Reagan political advisers Stuart Spencer and Edward Rollins. who anticipated that Mondale would at- tack. •Reagan was overprotected. The "debates" arc really glorified news conferences. and Reagan. a performer who benefits from rehearsals. was out of practice. His last news conference was July 24. Deputy Chief of Staff Michael Deaver. the one staff mem- ber who has openly accepted re- ~pons1bllit)' for Reapn·s prep- arauon. is also architect of ,tfte overprotection. • R'.eagan was underprotectcd. Last week. ·a government ex~rt on aging said, "'Reagan was stupid to accept a 90-minute format." The man who accepted the format was debate neeot1ator Baker, a favorite target of nght-wmgers who blame him because Reagan tired at the end of the debate. Reagan even lacked a chair to sit on. which President Ford's negotJators insisted on in 1976 when Ford was 64 yeanoJd. · · •Reagan was mistrained. His prin- cipal preparation was five grueling. 90-minute debates with budget direc- tor David Stockman impersonating Mondale. Stockman won. Reagan resl)Onds best to positive reinforcc- me'¥. He was, an adviser says. "psycholoakally cond111oned to lose.·• · •Reagan was misdirected. "Re· agan plays temble defense but very good pffense." one adviser says. Following the front-walker strategy that has been his campaign trademark, he said little about what he would do in a second tenn and avoided attacking Mondale. Some of these conflicting alibis may have mcriL But the central problem was Reagan. not the process. He was not elected just because he is The Great Communicator bu t also . because he had something to com· municate. In 1980. Reagan stood clearly for tax reductions, defense-spending in- creases and a balanced budget. Some of this was real and some wasn't, but Reagan was a focused candidate with a clear agenda. Despite his huge lead or perhaps because of it. he has been unfocused and drifting in 1984. The key.s to Reagan's character have always been competitiveness and optimism. two qualities only occasionally evidenced in the Louisville debate. Cao he get off the noor as he did the second time against Kennedy'? Can he deliver a coherent closing statement'? My guess is that he can. but it is up to him rather than bis staff. Although Reagan is 17 years older now, he still hates to lose. REAGANISM OF THE WEEK! Answering a debate question about an increase in Poverty during his presidency. Reagan said ... Yes, there has been an increase in Poverty, but it is a lower rate of increase than it was in the preceding years before we got here. It has ~un to decline. but it is still going up' Lou Caluloa /$ • 1yndJc•t~ colwnaJ11. Land of Milk and Honey not all it's supposed to be When you've got a four-year contract~ though, you go where the boss says Wander off into the land of im- agination with me for a little while. This 1s not necessarily going to be a pleasant trip. because I'm going to ask you to imagine a place where con- d111ons arc a littk less than optimum. First. we·ve got to give you a fam1l) and a JOll. Abracad~bra. yo u've got a wife and two children. both under age 10. (Ladies. imagine that you're a man.) You have 3JOb that pay\ about S2.000 per month. There's not much recoan1t1on. but it's a JOb you're proud of. You"ve ju~t <o1gncd an iron-clad. four-year contract wtth )Our em- ployer A contract that guarantees you nothing. but that auarant~ )'OW" cmplo)"er your services for the next four ~e,1rs You will not. neccs arlly. get a raise in pay. You will~ ot the beck and call of )Our employer. subject toao "'here he tclh )Ou lo and to do what he tell~ you to for the nc-.t 4£. month . You have no recourse. If )"OU do not do what )Our cmplo)er tells )OU to do. )OU are suhJCCt to tnal and 1mpmonmcnt at hard labor, no1 to mention man) lcs\ severe but more readily a\'a1labtc pun1shmtnts. I id thi m1ah1 not be "Cr) pfc:a!.lnt. didn't I? One da). your employer tl.)'1 to ~ou. "Pack up all of ~our ~orldl> gooch. Wr'r~· ~ndin -\OU to lhC lancJ or Milk and Honc)I:· Tlm 11 fir t. wund prttl) good to )Ou. lt'sonly:aOer)ou t to the Land of M1llr.;and Honey that )"OU lcam th t c~ cheapest house \iOU can find 1s S 1.600 per month. You learn that bread costs $3 a loaf. Hot dogs are $4.50 per package. To take your kids to an amusement park is almost out of the Que tion: SSO per aduh and S40 per kid. Your employer is stJll paying you the s:imc $2.000 per momh. True. the Land of Milk and Honey has free beaches. but you and your wife are both working extra jobs in order to pay the S 1.600 rent and sull be able to eat. There seems to be very httle time left over when you aren't working. slc(ptna or JUSt too tired 10 ao anywhere. Your children don't understand too well. but they bounce back with the acceptance and rcsilien· cy that 11 youth. :rhe faC1 that they accept the ''tuation doc5n't make it an) the easier for )·ou. Shall we add a little insult to injury? Your job has become nuher un· Popular with the people whO already live an thl" Land of Milk and Honey. They tend to look down on you. not because of)our personal convictions and habits. but because of the fac1 that )OU hold the job you do. \nd. t.hc worst pan '' that they'll probabl) continue to look down upon \"OU, n ht up to the ttmc that )Oli'tt nttdt'd.nndthen thC" lh:~pcct )OU to o out and fa)' )Our life on the line to protect lhcm. Wh)~ ~use )Ollrcnlplo)'er 1 thl" lJnilcd talcs government. and )OU happen 10 be a Un1 trd Slates r· \Iceman. It n1oi~,cs 110 d1ITi.-~nre to 1hc Hta&e rn1Jcru of the l nd or ftU• .. - BtLL HARVEY and Hone~ which branch of the ~rv1cc you re employed by-Army, Navy, Air Force or Marines. They 111 know that you make considerably le money than they do and have a far rouahertime making ends mecL That alone makes you inferior. doesn't it'? You can barely afford the food necessary to feed your family. let alone the dcstancr jeans that seem to be a nccc ity of life in t.he-land of Mtlk 11nd Honey. So why do you put up with 1hisjob? irst of.alJ, the only way out lS to complete your contract and not sign another one. T.hert arc other ways of bcina released, true, but any ()thcr than "honontble disch:uie" bears a stigma that will follow you all of your hfc. • Second. ma)'be you hnve enouah faith in wh:u >·ou'rc do1na to put up with th' re 1dc01~ orthe Land of Milk and Hone • urt. thinprnngcta lntJc rough from time to 1imc. ~v. rage c1v1hans. e\c:n the>st in the lowli t of JO , con id r vou lo be ~ond-clas ClllLen. but wh t the hct'k. Hang 1n there. May omoonc w1ll 1nad1 u Ma)bc thcrc'll be 11 r. Then. b) God. thcrt•ll be nothing th 1· too goo(! for a United Stat rv1ccman. C41/llmal I Bill H1n,.Y. llVH la llu 1i.11011 81•tt•. LOU CANNON colo.mnlat JACK AIDEISOI Gritz fOr~y backed by CI~ Letter shedding • ---light on mission found in fraud case WASHINGTON-Evidence hid· den under coun seal in Hawan indicates that Col James "Bo" Oriti went on his unsuccessful mission to find American war prisoners in Laos hm year with at least initial supp()rt from both the CIA and the Pentagon. Gritz hinted at government sup- port when he was freed from jail in Thailand last year, but it was never confirmed. Hitherto undisclosed background on the Gritz foray into Laos is contained in an affidavit and accom- panying exhibits in a federal fraud case against Ronald Ray Rewald in Honolulu. Rewald claims the investment firm he headed was a CIA front. The documents have been scaled by order of the court, but my associates Dale Van Atta and Indy Badhwar have seen copies. Rewald stated that. as pan of his job. he passed along "classified an- telligence data" to the CIA's H.onolulu station chief~ and that, panly as a result. "the agency orig- inally committed its supPort" to the secret Gritz mission. Rewald said that while his invest- ment firm "did supply a few thousand doJlars to support the mi.ssion .. at the CJA's behest. the agency was con- cerned that a military officer w15 drinking too much and "word was leakilli out" about the hush-hush operation. But Rewald says the CIA chief asked him to bnef the FBl's Honolulu agent·in-<:harge about the Gritz mission. Th<' bombshell of Rewald's exh1b1ts is a confidential letter to Gritz on official DIA stationery from the late Lt. Gen. Harold Aaron, when he was deputy director of the Defense fntelhgencc Agencl. What the letter will do for Rewald s case is not cleat, but it establishes a clear Pent;aJOn link to the ill-fated Gritz expedition into Laos. Gntz has stated that it was Aaron who convinced him he shouJd retire from the Army in 1979 and put together rescue missions in Laos under cover of a civilian job with Hughes Aircraft. But an the letter. Aaron wrote that be had "mixed emotions about your hang.mg it up to pursue this PW-MIA matter but, frankly. I don't kno(I( any other way of gettina to the bottom of it all." The general's letter continued; ''Bo, you have the experience and back.ground to confirm this thin,a one way or another. Don't do anything to endanger your life or the liv~s of those we left behind. I am confident once you prove beyond a ·doubt that our men are still captive, the system will do the rest. Your task 1s not to be a one-man show, but to pu.ll together °tvidence (to) convince p<)lllical skep- tics of PW existence." While "it is too bad we h.ave to procctd this way," Aaron wrote. he went on to a~sure Grill: "Gen. (Eugene) Tighe (DIA chief) it well aware oft.he situation but his hands arc tied. He as a true soldier in a blue suit.'' Aaron repeatedly uraed Oritz to be di ttel. "Keep your government contacts limited to th°" with an absolute need to know," he wrote ... The word spreads fast here in Washin.aton .... ··Uecausc of the politics involved. ~ntact me onl~ if ~ou set in a SPot with no way out. Thia t.hina is so sensitive it could result in a ~al inquisition •f word leaked out t.hat we were procccdina unofficially. ' "Th as 15 a real hot Potato. so watch your back trail C4rcfully. We will arranae. to m«t u ume and circum· ~tancc allow. Of course, 1f you uncover .something critical. contact me immcdiateJy. Kttp the pres and aovcmmcnt offices out of it." The acnerul concluded his letter: "Bo. dc~troy thtsand all other~nltcn eommunic t1on between u " briu confinned the ~x1~tencc or such a letter from Aaron. ftc said.he h d never hown the confidential lrtter to an)onc outside .. channels." and has no idea how at v.11s obtamcd b)' Rew Id. whom he Yid he h:as nc:~r met. FQOtnotc : Pen112 on pokc~man d the DI.A oonductcd an invcsttKD· t1on of tht ~ uer· uthent iay. The results wcrt ancondu i · c. Jad Ami 011 ii • yalllcat«I t'Ol1m11I 1. ~~--~~~----~--...... ----..-1,-.~----------.-1,..------~---..... ----_.. ..... ..,._; .. ..._ ________ ..... ______ .._ ___ --~ ....... '- ' ... ~ ·---· - ANN LANDIRl 111 N'JIRTAI NT 81 BUllNE88BI eeing is disbelieving By SUSAN MONAHAN ~ ~ Clmll ....... Trompe l'oc I 1s a no~·you-see-11, now·)Ou're-not-so-sure switch that the anist pulls on the vie\\er."Trans· lated from the French, rrompt l'oe:1I (pronounced "toy'') means ••tnck the e)e'' and even when you arc prepared for 1t, what )Ou see often contradicts what you know. cros ·lcged on a Pmlan ru_a. Get close enough and you'll be lttcrally disillusioned. Move back. thouaJ:l, and the sculptures become hnle 11rts apin. ''Please Don't Touch the rt" tans abound, and with aood reason. lt'1d1fficult torcsist the ttmptatton to t'!I on the .. pcehnJ" PJ«t5 of "tape strewn acrou Keul'\& Szeto's "The IV Movement of S)mphon) to dtec:k the texture But trompe roc1l n be rnore than ..a cle\cr optical .illusion. lt" oflC.Jl numacry m bolh · nses of the word. Like the pop an1sts of 1he '60s, man) of these artist focu e~· gcrated anenuon on commonp ce obJec:ts. Wathout the 'mg e of background. the ban ht~ nd the values assoaated "ith u re thro\\ n into harp rehef. Otlr,...,........,'--,.,,. At the Laguna Beach Museum of An, ~here ··contemporary Trompe l'Ocil Painting and Sculpture" is on · ·displa) throu&h Nov. 9. the double- . takes tart in the lobby. where Duane Hanson's "Children at Pla>" sit o. 9" c\ en thoufh the dcscnption indicates that this 15 really ~lie on canvas: .. Quaker f:tin:· b) tephen Posen 1salsoa painunt but 1t looks so much hkc rumpled sil that )OU ~'ant .. A PowCrful Paou Pump"' 1 the psoline pump as aeon Richard Haden's sculpture 1 Honduras mahopn). but ·1t ppcars lo be battered ~ellow pump ~h1ch 1s con-sidcrabl) ~orse for the wear. A fj ant penciling of graffiti bra\el}I a sens that this pump ts indeed powerful and pious. But. as 1f m nsv.er. another line of gra,ffill JCCni. ..This 1m e Bold &eometric abetract by Paul 8arklalan becomea almMt OYenrhehDllll became of tho trompe roell treatment. - Dan••~•..,..,, I HrHnHLLI It's beginning to look like Christmas for Junior League, LidO Committ~e ... but first all eyes are on Gary Spencer in style show By BE'M'Y PORTER o.11,... C.. r111, ,...,, • W ·a-a-a it a minute! Giant, all-male "Gary V. Spencer is wearin1 Irvine Councllwoman Barbara Wleaer'1 underwear" down a runway in front of 300 people? That's what the fashion show commentator said and it was a·a·S·P time until guests saw that he was fully clothed in mink coatand leather pants (from I. Maanin). Off-stage, Spencer shyly admitted that the Chris· tian Dior men's undershorts he wore.were a 40th birthday ~ft from Councilwoman Wiener. (Wh-c-e-c, what a relief!) It was all part of the fun-fashions-drinks, food· food·and·more·food at Newport Harbor Junior Leque's invitation-only patron panyatSouth Co11t Plaza'sJewel Court. Leaaue President Nancy Binet said the well-run pany.~baired bySa1leC11eahlser hosted by South Coast Plaza. "honored patrons who have plcdJed a total ofS9S,OOO to underwrite production costs fonhe Leaaue's major fund·raisina eve·nt-Christmas Company" (a three-da)' shoppini spree, at Orange County Fairarounds, Nov. 6.8). LeaJue members and their mates served as models for cloth ma provided by South Coast Plaza stores: Alex Sebastian, Beajoun of Paris, Bullocks, and Charles Jourdan/Xavier Danuad, Fila, I. Maanin, The Lavery and Ri&ht Bank Shoe Co. "Those are just our old ordinary husbands up there on the ramp,"Sbaron Jur1ensea said, "but have you ever seen cuter auys?" Her "cute auy" Ron Jar1enaea, real estate developer, was not a model. puttina Christmas Company tocethcr is .. mostly a breeze," but .. details.such as providinsseparate • dressina rooms for Min me and Mickey Mouse and insuring that they attn't near alcohol, pose a challensc ... Flower amnaements with silver ribbons and sequined masks were donated by Great llqinninp; Photo and Sound flashed individual names of patrons on a larae screen all eveninJ; Good Times Music did liahtina and music; and Mime Marlaue McDouJd said 001 a word; -- Food was provided by Alfredo's. Back Bay Rowing and RunninJ CJub, Cafe Casino, Forty Carrots, Ghandi Indian Cuisine, H. T. 's, l..a Basuette, Pirct's &. Perfect Pan, Pronto Ristorante &c. Trattoria. Salmagundi and Upstart Crow &c. Co. Others attend in& included Dianne Joaea, Jalle Bowt1D1, Jue Martla, Andrea Pfister, Elalae Barrt1, Maey Earl Soncer, Dtue Lawson, Hallie Strock, Buk and Marcia Adler, Jeff and K.aren Armoar, Roaer and .Pat Daraell. Plallllp and SopMa Drulunu, Andrew Blae1,ltenand Dtue ltD.lpt,Bnc:e Lawrace, Riclaanl Martia, Elletl S.mbrw and Al1u Soap&ad, Jr. Further information on Christmas Com pan) may be obtained by callin1720. 7477. • • • Adelaide bp)ey and Glort.a Lau were busy checkina people iri'and aivina them ~oppin& bqs: Pat h BealJ and Ge~• Saoke were t.akina m money; Nancy Roane and Kerry HodleJ watc u AintllaLocaeywusellinapriccditems;Grace Le:-P• memben and hubancla model. Meuier and Claarlotte PatterlOll ett scllina~ur:met fOOds ... the LidoCJubhoasc was a bccb1veofactJviJy: · · · The Lido WorkinaCommitteeofthe Orange 1n bc~uufully at the last mmu.te. . County Philharmonicwassta&ins iu Gtamou.r Auction . Barbll'.'a Meserve (Chn.st~~s Company chlu:man (after a year's hiatus). . !~ lavenders.1lk_)cando~nyth?~a. MartbaFlaorsa1d, MarJ ElmqaJit,chairmanoftheevent,and S~e run.s this h~e a business. Auor(an Dana HoP,n Barbara J>oddi, committee chairman, were in the white knit) had little t~ sa)' about her own contn?uuons dinina room chcckins out last-minute details for the live as star patron. and ch.a1rm•n of computer~omm~ttee, auction and luncheo, while Pa al El~aJ1t was but she had h1&h Prl!Se for everyone else. tnclu~ma Jaet in1pectina all of the plantf on the table (in the pou be Son11tad (art and pnnuna) and Peter Rabblt who made.) donate~ ~sttrs. Paul made 43 pots and before the afternoon was En.Joy ma the food, fOQd·and-more food (do.nated over they had all been snapped up. ··They are hiah·fired by eleven South Coast Plaza restaurants) and dnnk porcelain that I made this summer at the Laauna Beach (from bars. hosted by SCP) ~e~ Dr. Cllarles Be":'ttt School of Art. In the winter J work 11 our place in Palm uaran\e«1 not io dehver .. Allen Brandenbu:,s;s cnuct1m t er. ••SiJhoucue• dcpacu..a WJE'l m •he hape of a human faau~. a trompe roell price w ln~1cates that n IS onh 30 «nt ... Kard ~·: II a portra11ofan1m blrto cop.A c&prttteuplanted ftrmry1n is lOWtt 11p, his C) rt narroWed tither an mcna or aptnst the smo aod • thrtt-<11men 1onal butterll) bo,en dangerous!) near the cmben But someumes the uttre a leu like a hit on the head and more hke a nud an the nbs, Jud ctson• "Toilet Piper V" and "'toilet Paper VIII" (rendered an C1TT1ra marble) re proudly mounted on ~Is ndhouscd underplexiglass~'Cn. It "ould be reach1na to label this liOcia1 (Pl~ Me TllOllPS/112) Model Bob Fluor ~Fluor Corp.) won app.lause for his mink aviator-style Jacket and a sweater wuh ducks across the front. Cbrl1 Vaccaro (a dresser from Fashion Institute ofOcsian) said Fluor•s pants were "too Iona•• so "we cuffed them." He "worried" that the business men-turned models were slow dressers and that "some of them flopped down the runwa)' with shoe laces untied." ( ort~oped1c suracon) a~d his wtfe, Paul (who said they Springs. I built on a room for my kilns and wheels and I had Just r.~tumed from eauna~~way t~rou&h Enstand call it "Potted Paul's Perfect Pottery Parlour." and l!!llY ). At their tabl.e w~re I m·afra1~-of:the· . In the meanume in another room of the clubhouse. Gloria Bradeaon, n.lit, with atater llaJjorte Rector, enjoyed cla6'houae cam•raderle. Other Junior League m9<1els included Sally Lawreace(cbairman, ways and means); Rlcbardand Jue Marttn (aministrative vice president): Mlclaael Sltate(wife Cri• is chairman, exhibitors); RobertTrlnea (wife Pam is busine1schairman) and JuetHarrir filled pres~ TomClar~and hisw1feCaro~yn(wt!~ Ph.Din l40women with shoppinahAaconann, weresippin& Enahsh, t~ree children lnd two businesses ). cbamPllJle donated by Paui'C'it•s the sood stuff, too". Movmaamona the tables were Bob and Patsy said Adelaide) and buying thcaJ,amourittms .. A11baler, Al and Linda Vost, Bob ~nd .Dottie Mes~rve What stamorous items they were-made by the and attorney Beyerly Bla~1 (who enJoy~d~mmma up talented memben. The group is filled witbartisu- Leaaue s~pport in tbe b~smesscommunity ). . Gloria Bradeson, Fran Wannlqtoll and Lome Ueber Special Events Chairman Kimberly Rotlawell 5atd -to name a few. NorreTippenboughtFran'spamnn&ofachild: FrancesMesse111er(committeefounderMllclred Mead'• dau&btcr) boufht Gloria's painting and "Ea•t· en Sprtn1''by Louise as now Eulce MuclliD'1. Shoppers wett lookma forward to Christmas with F10t1 Sebamaclleraeuinaa nativity scene made by Jean DID1le and Joyce Halpt purchasirra the tall ccranuc Santa (also by Jean). The accountina 1s not over. but the comm1ttec should make a good amount for the OCPS' youth programs ... they sold 9 3 of their I 00 cookbooks that were up for sale. • Others there 1 ncludcd Tr au ta Buycte who arrived wtth Rose Smedeaaarct(the} are Upper Bay members and Trauta 's husband. Lorne was pres1dem of OCPS). Martita Green, Pea Reay, Hester Hardace. Alice Collla1, Mary Crary, Barbara Ea1tmu, Dorotlay Meserve and her sister-in-law Kadaarine Meserve, AUJeL1Ddaay,JeuTudow1ky,Sa1J es, taraoYale and Nora Jorcmsen. • P.paruzi is edited by Daily Pi/or St) le Editor \.'ida Dtan. · Holiday ltem1 deliCbted Marj Etm.ca11lat. tla auction chalnnan, and Barbara Dodds. • l "Leonie and Keith .LumplrJD, left, chat with Knill Kearn• and Cathi Tacker. 0-. .... ~.,.,.,,, ..... ne, center, Cbrlatmaa Comp&nf _ cbalrman. and Jail Bowtlftl diK ... ebopp~ ~pne. llaarOn aa4 Roa J1U'.lewD wen eatbulaatla about Sia• •,.clallJ I•" mOdeli' • ..,..,.. . a top ratiq. •• ----------------------------~--------------....... ......., ______ ..__....~-----........ --.---------~-------'~·----~~__,..-------- CJ Caldwell •• ~ I . T . In defense of fidelity ••• and mil~tary budget Wife incapacitated, but husband should remember his vows ~e\'oted to t piedlal st w ve put lato motl a d the po lthe .. Dear Ann Landen;: I m in m) middle 50s. actiH', health). have a ood JOb and l'nJO life. M) onl) problrm is that my "''fi (of 30 )e&rs) 1 in a nurstn home. the result of a head inJury in a r ccident. The doctors do not belie"e he will ever recover, nor. do they have any idea how long she will hve. I have become quite close to a friend of ours whose husband died 15 }cars aio. We have dinner tosether ,every night and I take her to Cl\. IC and social funcuons You might sa> she fills in for my wife an every way. The woman 1s active in church affairs and 1s well thought of an the community. She says sht loves me and will marry me when my wife dies. We l\avediscusscd our relat1onsh1p ~ith our pastor. He did not dis- -courage it smcc Ile as familiar with my • ition an<H<.n&Ws-1~~~-t-"l"l"I...,. of a healthy male. Do you KC anything wrong in what we are doing? We expect a sensible Ann Landers answer. -C. W. In Evansville, Ind. Dear Evauvllle: Do tbese words soancl famlllar'! " ... ill sickDess aacl iJl bealtll, fol' ricber or poorer, forsatiJlg all otllen, till deatb do u part." Read tbem carefally and you will find a "sensible Au Landers answer." • • • Dear Readers: Several months ago I priDted a letter kj&bJY critical of the Defeue Departmeat for spendiDg so macll muey oa items tbat coald be parcbaled at a hardware store for a fracdoa of tile cost. Tbat letter prodaced a response from Caspar Weinberger, die secretary of defense. As secretary of defense, Weinberger • Is very &ood at defeadlilc bimself, aad be did ao la bis well-docamented It f t fforts. reply. A.ad DOW I llave yet uotber letter . from~ Here is an edited version, Mir --~ Jim Loney fuhJoned a llfe-alze, but Immobile forklift. complete with dirt, out of plywood and plutic pipe • ' \ YOU HAVE MODELING POTENTIAL? In honor of our ju~t compktt.·d remodelling ·nu: Fullerton Vcl\'et Turtk cordial I\. im.it<.'~ \ou tojoin u., for champagne .md hor~ d'ot·u,n:.., 111 the loungt' on \\(:dnc'(IJ~. < >ctoher I""' from ') to 9 p m ~~ Plea~ come join u~ at tht' un\eiling of our new look, and help us cekhrate our ne'v. fre~h approach to fine dining. A fresh approach to fine dining. l·t'>O :\orth lfarhor Boukvard Fullerton. <.A 926'\2 (""' l·t) W" 1 9:\ tO ... . I ' TROMPE ••• From Bl rommentary -comedy of. mann r ma) be more accurate. Stnce trompe l'oeil is visual pun. it's not surpn$ina that many of these artists also hke to play w1th words. Dana Loomis' painting of •~sorted visi<>n-enhanctng objects is called "Optaca\1 Allusion." Robert Bourdon's mixed media sculpture. which consists of a crate and two dollies. is probably fair game for any number ofintcrpretauons. The title. however. indicates that "Hello Dolly" 1s all he wants to say. Trompe l'oeal can be ·the ideal vehicle for the realistic artist. Certain- ty Marilyn Levine's ceramic rendi· t1ons of a suitcase and a handbag ("Spot's Suitcase" and "Tribune Bag") arc vens1m1litude at 1ts most convincing. And you can count the goosebumps on John De Andrea's stanning nude': ~ted Blm Woman;" the artist has captured not only the subject. but also the moment. On the other hand. the form gives a new dimension to nonrepresenta- tional expression. as well. The bold, geometric abstracts of Paul Sarkisian's "Untttled No. I" and "Untitled No. S" for example, be- come almost overwhelming because of the trompe l'oeal treatment. But all the variattons within this form have one common theme: Nothing is what It seems to be. Jim Loney's "No. 6" appears to be a for~tiA truck, but no one wall ever dnve it: Dana Loomis' "Dichotomy" isn't a shelf full of books. but paint and canvas. Robert Bourdon's .. Dollar Door" looks like a car door papered with single dollar bills, but when you get closer, you sec that the dollar balls arc actually-dollar bills. Fooled again. lneerely, Caspar WelDMr1er Dear Mr. ecretary: Yeur nlckaame maoy yean 110 was ·~p dae Knife." It l110CMI io now &Ut fOll ate ow u lq llaat kaJft ln yoar war on waste • 'ltttp ebopplna away, Cap! A 1troag deftase ts one tllla1. bat 1ettln1 ripped off t1 anotber matter. " .. Do >'ou ftel aMi:waro. lf<on- sciou -loncl}' "clcomc 10 Ilic dub. There• hclpfor you in Ann Linder$' boolkt. "The 'Kt)' ro Ropulanty." nd.JO ~nr's with) ourrequt-stand • Ions. Hampel/, sclf.)ffJiJrc1 cd cnvt:lopc to-Ann I.anders. P.O. Boi I 199S. Ch1ct1go, Ill 6061 I. Rlcbard Baden••maho&any Kalptureappean to bea battered Cu pump whlcll la conalderably won4tforwear. IS DRIVER !S VIEW DIM? Startana with this California Traffic a (ct ,~;;;;;;;;iij Weck. the Dail~ Pilot ~ill publish 111111111 ...... ,.~~ ~ a quiz for dn,crs about 'chicle regulation. road cond1t1ons and ac- c 1 d c n t • scenes. Chcd )our knowledge of the law c\ery Monda). • • • Under what circumstances may a person install a "blackout" ma ten al to the window of his/her vehicle? ..\) On side windows whacil arc to the rt"ar of the drl\Cr BJ On the rear"1ndo"(s) onl\ when the \Chicle has outside mirrors on both the left-and right-hand sades of the •ch1C'le. C) On an) "andow with no restnctioo. 0) Both ..\and B arc correct. E) Nc,cr. -('lU;>WUcdJ(J JJl!Od 4JV;)Q . uod~JN J4l <q PJltddns J;>"'sue pue UO!lS;>nO) lU;>WJJetd~ lU;>l8 \tnbJ J41 JO sse1S ~1u11PJ1lrtsu1-<Jo1JeJ01 \tdde 1ou s~p-80L n UOl\.J;>S ;>po.) 3tJ14JA t!IUJOJlll.)-Mt!f ;>-.oqt J4.i 'slU!M MOPU!M JO SMOpUtM .,P!S PJUM.IOJ J4l uo PJll81SO! ;>q l0UU8J tVUJJBW lU~edSUIUJ. 'U!X S.JJAIJP pxs;udJpun Jljl JA<>ql 5J4.lUI 6Z l$t!JI ll S! lt!IJJ18W J41 JO ~~ wonoq J4lJI p1:>14spu1M J4lJO uo1uod 1soUJdo1 J4l 01 PJl1e1su1 ;>q ~ew 1uu:>1ew 1u.>JedsueJ1 ·uo111pp1 u1 .. . lJJJJOJ JJ8 9 pue" 4109 -0 :JJMSUV -1;10- MOVIE • i+ "Siii Of The Night" ( tM2) Ray ~. Mlfy!Stft9P. -1:1f- (J) lAHE GMY THIATa _,.,_ .. • r . I 'New' Faulkner book on DeGaulle Pf<IMf f1r.1r s,,;.r' ~~ ---- Blake finds himself to be publisheCI in hock to Alexlsf may lo~e 'Dynasty' • JACKSON, Miu. -L.ouas Daniel Brodaky opened a hidden de k com· panment in a Cahfornia hou e last year and atumblcd on 400 pages of ori&inal movie manuscripts by Wil· liam Faulkner. "I recoani1ed in 1antly Faulkner' own mfnutc iafosyncratic pnnuna 1n the inclusions and delc11ons, itrrows and mikcovcrs and shif\11115 and PAae numberings;• said Brodsky. a pOet, Faulkner scholar and owner of a private collection of the famed author's works. "I pulled back the wad of loo~ shcets. leuin• air and light fall around a script entitled, 'The De Gaulle Story' by William Faulkner. Below this JCrirt was a second one with the identica title, and below it. a third in brown wrappe~ entitled 'Battle Cry' by William Faulknu." he recently told Faulkner scholars mtttina at the University of Mississippi. This December, the University Press of Mississippi, in cooperation with the Center for the Study of Southern Culture. will release "The De Gaulle Story." The publication , comes 40 years af\cr Gen. Charles De -~QauUu~tum~d to fldp liberate his country from Vichy French and Nazi occupying troops. The scripts, written 1n J 942 while Faulkner was under contract to Warner Bros. Pictures, will be pub- lished as Volume Ill of a seven-pan series, "Faulkner: A Comprehensive Guide to the Brodsky Collection ... Though "The DC Ga.ulle Story" never was fiJmed. the early drafts and accompanying documents reveal where Oxford's Nobel laureate directed his energies from 1942-45. Though best known for such no,·els as "Absalom. Ab atom," "The Sound and the Fury" and "As I Lay Oyms," the l 9SO Nobel Prbe winner also was a screenwntcr. faulkntr wrote uch "ar movies of the '30s as .. Tod:.~· We Uve" and "The Road to Olory.4 During Wosld War II. the writer expressec,f his patriotillm b)' joining the batttcy_o.C liollywood war epic writers. At Warner: Bros .. Paulkncr shared credit for "The Life and Death of a Bomber." •'Battle Cry" and "To Have and Have Not." According to Robert Bu<'.'kner, the prO<tucer of the De Gaulle proJect. President Franklin D. Roosevelt .sug- . gested the movie idea to studio head Jack Warner as a wa)' to enhance the public image of De Gaulle. a prospec- tive ally aaainst Adolf Hitler. On July 27. 1942. Warner Bros. hired Faulkner to wnte a "Sereenplay based on De Gaulle's life. Jn man} ways. jt \\ate labor oflove for the Southerner. Faulkner adored France. He read French poetry and visited the country in 1925. Jn his own abstract of the script. Faulkner wrote:"This is the story of Free France. told in the simple terms of a Breton village: the colla~ of France and the hopes andu~htf:le for rejuvenation as seen thro c~cs of villagers. told by means of village characters who arc themselves the common denominator of France. "It isa thesis that lust and greed and force can never conquer the human spirit." Roben W. Hamblin, a professor at Southwest Missouri St.ate University and co-editor of the Brodsky series, said Faulkner's admiration of the courageous Free French fight against the Nazis ··contributed Slf~Uficantly to Faulkner's faith in man s capacity I Y LYNDA HIRSCH William Faulkner ID Wanaen omce d~ the 19'0.. DAU.A& Pa nnaa v 11 tu Bobb) an the hospital, J.R. tdl' hun ChfT ha. been ~led for tbe •hool1n&-J.ft upl1in1 Chtl'tall~an ~ s:ty1nJChffw111~11T that J.ft:,fild tr~ to \'\!Ill bim. YI It na Chn: Pam is lold by him 1hat 'he C'\t'nll!J of the moot1r11 wu a blank btcau1e be wu dnntln1 bta,11). Sue Ell~ and Jenna dilC'u s &he fact lhll Bobby'1 bhndnn• mate him fct'I that he'1 le11 than a man Manha Randolph storms 1ntoJ.R." office and ~uses h•m of bt1na rnpo-nJ1b\e for her hust.nd bt1na 1n a mental 1iMtnuuon. Mand) "lppean, at t~ p0hcc Ntion and pKk.s Otff out of a hncup. telUna pohct they wm t~hcr the nisht of Bobbf 1 P ALCON CllEIT: At lavlill P1111)' th~-.. '° promot.c a .ntY! hnt 'of ch&m· pqnt for the G1obnti fanu)) • .Aqtll ""'ub tha1 Mqpt 11 adopted Wilm Md1111 comes on to Cole and he "'~ her. •ht '1lps him 1CTOJ1 &ht Cacc .-rth • rid "' crop. An~ic pa)'t off a JC'l lnK'hlll and 1e1s him 'o N) thaa Owe wat r'nP.QMlble ror plane Crtth Gutuv Rieb-: m&nl'I mov~ to the vall" and eta ms 10 bt a land de,rloper named Del\') Aftlda narnn Lance publisher oftM °""'pel"f to endure and prevail." Hamblin said the manuscript ''provides an important, previously missing link between the work of Faulkner's middle and later years." Brodsky contends that Faulkner1s scripts will "dispel the myth he was a crappy screenwriter.'' and was creatively fallow while living in California. "The De Gaulle Story is very special becaust it appears to be the onh oriainal full-leneth script which FauJk.Qcr wrote-without :comPO· sitional collaboration:" Hamblin said. In their book. Hamblin and Brodsky tried to detcm'line why the film ·was never produced. They said the disenchantment of Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill with De Oaulle was one hindrance. aJong with the difficulty of finding an actor to poruay the French leader. The studio turned its back on Faulkner's scnpt, which resurfaced lhootins. CMf ts rckased and J.R. 11 lNOTS LA?li'DING: ~mpJed ror more than.35 )Cits later in the rare fearful lhal v.hot\cnnC'd io shoo\ huu 11 vacc-s;nnidtl'lttll ddletc book market. sun on the •trttt. Mandy tomes to Cliffs Brodsky fil'it acquired more than •P111men1 and he is conf'ult'd by her and 2.500 paacs of Faulkner materials unable to btbcve that Jhc's tbm betausc BILL STREET BLUES: ~p1cd for thll escaped a 1977 pufle of Warner she t.ltcs him. not bttause of his n1cceu 'Vftt·prHidential debate. Bros. archives. The Missouri collcc-BObb) 1s rold that• danacrou1 opd'auon tor raid 1 Catifornia' dealer about could ""'Ort' h1• 1fht.•A woman ncau PAPER DOLLS: Blair 1nfonns Grant into Bobb) ·s ~p1tal room while he's and w~ that w is ~an~ Gram "12 ,()()() in 1983 for the lot, which slecpinc al'ld pttparn to tnJttt him whh a learns from Blair's il)nttOIO&Jil tha1 the included a full-length typed filmscnpt falal poison. presnancy 11 'Cf) darlJCrous and orden of"The De Gaulle Story." Blair 10 termini~. Blair rcfutu. uyin& tf Soon after his purchase, Brodsky DYNASTY: Alexis upset when Stt\'cn be must choose between htt father •nd ttceived a telephone tall from a plans to lcilve Colb)co. Ste\en blames her husband and this baby. IM11 c~hOC>flt~~;.;·-~r,.., Hollywood scnptwriter, Albert -1. Adam· for the d1sai>~ oUlaMY-htrhtttbe:od and ti.by. bunobl)) Benertde , who a ·provtd(d e toucheowhen K')'.5111 ralSC"s $4.2 Steve upset when sh_e missa 1 date due to Faulkner WI.th a place to I've in million by ~llin1ofTber Je'4cls. Unaware modchna an1Jnmtnt, Oinab u~ by ' that Alexis holds the monpat, Blalr.e uses exotic layout ,Laurie does for We~:. 1944-45 when bOth were under con-the mansion as collateral to tirc'lu~-· S 12 cOimetie campa1an. WMn Davtd aafon111 tract to Warner Bros. million loan. Blake uses the loan to bu> Blair that Nick borrowed bis from loan During a visit tc Beuerides• home bade oil leases Alexis infomu Blake she abarks io suppon ~wear company. in Woodland Hills, Calif.. Brodsky owns thenotund that in lhrtt months the Blair ofren Mf' trust fund. but be refw;es.. found the hand-corrected manu-mansion he built for htrwtll be hers ap.in. loan &hart" 11)' in wan '°" David and scripts, as well as background ma-Jeff and Kt)stal 10 to motJue to 1dtntif> Blair. T&r) n. bottd at home. wanu to body thought te ~Fallon's but lrirn at tS appeann JObn Waite roct \idrO. but tier terials that had spent years in wmeonc cht. A truck dmer informs MT mother Juha 1• aotall) qainst it. mildewed boxes "stacked from floor that he drove Fallon to Ortson. Domi- to CCtling." · niquc turns down w Vep• i'liahtclub ST. ELSEWBEAE: ~-cm~ for "All at once. Brodsky rccal1cd. "I enpgcmcnt Kl up b} Br.td) and offers hfr World Scnes. realized the monumentality of what I -------------....:........:....-~:.-....:......;....:.--_;:.;..-..:... _____ -:- was holding." Comniercial tail wagging ~ports dogs? "'GARBO TALKS' lSTHEHEART S'f.EALER . Bi'FllED ROTHENBERG commercials left over -when both to timeouts and when the teams is two teams that pass a lot. and a a!T....,,.,.wr1t« • staning pitchers hurl complete change Possession. This create, a 45-4'4 game." ~mes. for example -would be made problem in some games. Lewin sa1d he generally caught up NEW YORK -Philadelphia up in the p<>st-gamc wrapup. "There's a bi$ difference between a in the second and founh quaners pitcher Steve Carlton is a tele vision "Baseball and tennis are two of the two-minute dnve and a 10-minute when teams used their thrco time- producer's nightmare. He runs to the easier sports for getting in a specific drive," said Lewin. who produced outs. mound, fires his warm up pitches and number of commercials," said LewJn, ••Monday Night Football" for many , Boxing. with its 6()..second scpar- glowers at the umpire to play ball - who produced ABC's National yea rs. "lfthc teams are eating up the ation between rounds. is one sport , before the commercial is over. League playoffs two weeks ago. ''You clock with long drives, you can get in that too-perfectly fits television's Sometimes, the intimidation knowyourworstscenarioinbascball: desperate shape with your CO!ft· standard one-minute commercial works. "You just have to pray he >Ou don't know your worst scenario merciajs. format. Both Lewin and Weisman say docsn'tgjve upa h~e run on the first m football." -"We used to get. in trouble with that's too snug. and the bell and some £f;utc•h1.v:~_psar~~ucMerikeof WNeBiCs~sa~0~-The National Football bee·•cu"'e-re.__...,gn.....,·n""d'"'-·~em""-out--teams. like -the-otd;-actiorr.n the bcgi'nnina·onn<t<> a ~-' "' vu rid stricts commercials. for the most part, Miami Dot hins. The ideal situation round can t lost. - OF THE YEAR." -Jud1lh Cri•. WOR·TV Series coverage. rjlllllllllllilllllillllllll!lllit.~::~::~~~::;~~~::~~~j;;;;;;;;;;;;;m;lji;;11;;.-ii1J ThejobofasPortsproducer 1sto I r--~-----~....;..-_.;...~~__;-~~~ ....... --~~--:---~~-~~~ intearate into the aame action such things as story lines. replays and interviews. Another responsibility is to set in the allotted commercials - without interfenna with the flow of the pme and without minina any of the action. • For the viewers. not showina a home run or a touchdown as it happens may be most noticeable this month with the baseball playoffs. Worta Series and "Monday Niaht Football" in prime time. ''Com· merciala from a creative standpoint arc fru1tratina," said Weisman. "But they do pay for my selary." ... They also help pay the players. teams and leaaues. That's why the players -Carlton's resistance aside -are becomina more savvy about TV, and why the spona themselves try to cooperate on commercial placements. , Weisman said he usually reminds p1tchina coaches beforehand that the pme is cmmttonaJ TV and suuests that their pitchers could rest a little lonaer in the duaout between inn mas. Weisman recalled how one hitter. formerly with the New York Yan- kees, did a taped interview that was too Iona to air between batten. "He said not to worry, to cue it up before hls second .time at bat. So we dtd. and he called time out and went back to the duaout for the pine tar raa.'' Weisman said. In football. someone in the broad· cast booth sianals to the referce when the beer or spark ptua ad hal finished pluuina. In baseball, the umpires now keep a two-minute clock on the bet.wecn.-inninas pr~eedi,nu. "The fact ia without commerdiFi. the events wouldn't be on the air." said Denni• Lewin, the veteran ABC Sf>!!rts producer. "We ha.veto balance different needs. The client as import- ant, but the last thina I want to do is be obtrusive to the sportina cvcnv The booth-to-field communication system is not foolproof. At the Ora nae Bowl pme last New Year•.s niaht. NBC missed a kc~ play when the offic11I. apparently cauaht up i~ the excitement of the pme. permitted play to resume prematurely. "All we could do was break into a cold sweat." said Wtisman. Baseball, with its • half·1nnin1 chanaeovers, setms to have been invented by Madison l\vcnue. These natural breaks, alona with an ·on-the· mound pitchina chanae or two, make it relatively easy to fill 'a baseball brOldcast's commercial load. Any Robbins Inks pact with Fox .. LOS ANGELES (AP> -Best· sellina auttlor Harold Robbins i aolna to develop TV and movie p~ects for T~enticth Centul')·FO\. F1nt up will bC "Empire." a stnc for ABC. and a m1n1 crie· bated on his boOk "Dtsccnt from Xanadu.'' In the past mint ric ha"e been made from such Robbins books as "The Drum Merchants." "79 Park Avenut'' and 0 Thc Pirate.'' Amona his boOks made into mo~ ic ~ere "The Bets ," .. The Carpet 11cr1,•• ana "The dventurtn."' • • •NEWPORT BfACH • llCl.UM l~GOllln I*' I laAU OCUY • MMDlll" (Pt) UJO UO 100 1000 • 11~ oom StllllO "COUl!Ta'f'. (N) 1 1~ 100 61~ 13~ iho • SO COAST PLAZA • tlClw.t (lli;ACfll!CT caM0 TlllS" (Pt Ill , .... , 7 JO n~ ........ ll\ (N.U) tft t!IAT 111.11 IO" (al • 1000 ALL SEATS $2.00 AT EDWAIDS MESA, EDWMDS WDMOOK .... .... • lilolllllloo 700 t oo UClUSM UIGAQ(ll(Nl "C'.llOOS ... (11 521.I10 10 IO I t,AC~ OOUY STtlllO . .,. u,.. ere> I I\ 1 lO 10 H •·..-coaa.w omllllCI$' CNl 1AoA IY, 110 t lO s n '1 w.alfl 'IU Clf ... (Pl} IOl.ICIO tOQQ • wtSUIHSTER • c•••m ...... , .... .......... ni>m • COS TA t.1 SA • £0WAltOS -· ...... ~6,)101 AlJaOA TWIN """' ..... ~\1Ai~ fwlN ----... .. Ul 3~1 MESA . -..L •·-· & SlAIS ... $100 "' ~1~ CIOA CTll ...... 4 ,_ ,,, 0•1 CMMA CTll ...... , . .... ,,, •t•I Sll~MWll •IU GFr CNl ...,n..., 11i 110 .... '*' .. DO" (I) 900 •TJMION'' 111 '-Tll111t '4$ IOU • El TORO ,. s l.~. 11 ••• ,. ''•""' mmo SADOUBACK ... ,. ••• ~II ~HO ''D'ltoCI' (111.U) ••r~vn•oo 1~ ffi UDOU8ACIC n1'*'10 ecr 111 ' •., • 6IO IOU I •• l19ITlllft'° ~) m mo aJO SADOHIACK ...... u,. ll'tl ' ... ,, ••••• -. niw1 II\ tL\ mmo SAOOHIACK 'O~n. t •• ,. . '• .. r 111 """'1'5 uo ... • ~I~ • MISSION Vl 10 • H•W•N &. ,_,1it1u Jr, =-1 A•'fl.tc:t.U 41 0 7100. ,,,, ... IJJ J'ltff ••nm (NJ "'" l tH 4t4 t '111·0 a t •H lt;;J~'"" 1.4tt. AT u 1t:'l100 4 100 t 100 1100 10t00 • 1111 Mu"Va i=~'H'lt ... Cl 1100 71H t 1I0/ 70MM CITY CEOTER f'~ (.£tYitlf.~ A ICUU1 STOl'f (PC) IZJ: lH u a ll\ ''" 10» tll&l .. ,...." ....... !.-Mir .. Al -.Mrt"' PIM.., (N) '"I llO SIO tllO IClO CIDl.M(N) .11 ~ IUO IO DA• (M.IJ) JI\'" ruaos <ll .. ....,smro 100 Jl't 1 &• IOlt STRDIUm a I ' • • • • • I .. "~ DI r • ..,..~ .. %( ·• , --<N) •DUf~ 100 4Dl. IH lO~ PACIFIC DRIVE·IN THEATRES* • .. Jr'UNXY WINKERBEAN by Tom Batluk THE p AMIL y BIG GEORGE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP) CIRCUS 0 t>y Bii Keane "I hate Monda ya." "It has turtle wrists, too." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE I f I I J .. . by Hank Ketcham ''He's daring you to sell me something." '~ ONLY YELLS AT 'IQJ AFTER \\OAK I GET rr AU. ~y LONG ~ • GORDO GARFIELD GOOP M~ING, F'OLK6! MY OM MY, IT'S A 8EAU1'1flJL MONDAY M OANING-001 THERE: MOON MULLINS SPl& .. LIN 'THE BEANS .. WHAT1S HAPPENING INT~E !'ITCHE H~H ·M Y TeMPERMENT.AL COOK" ?? JUDGE PARKER AneR&EING 5EAT£0 ~T'THe REST.A.URANT. CRAIG TAKES OFFeN9E TO AN lNNOCeNT N!MARK MAoe BV TM! HOSTESS' OOR WEATHER RAP.AR 6MOW5 CL.fAR 6Kt(c;, WITM NO RAIN IN SIGMT by Gus Arriola by Jim Davis by Ferd & Tom Johnson W£1R~ ,ALL PE~FECTIONISTS WHSRE:'S -w HERc .. EVERYTHING MUST TH' ~Ne ...., Be JUST Sb--FlttSJ' CAN OPENER? INGRfDIENTS Pf.tlME P~DLJC~ by Harold Le Doux ' - .., BURY r by Garr)' Trudeau ~ .. SOH(X)/() OP 6«1. )WMS if "fl6i'.-mAOXl. I LIX5A~ Ill~ ACCtJlM'~ GERMAN 1(KflJ/£0· 11'60. WO/JJI )'QI 1 l<N&I fl/ 50 I ~'11M6. HMPS<»f57 ACC£PTEI) llm)A \ PEANUTS THE MEETING OF ™E CACTUS CLUB WILL COME' TO ORDER ~ DRABBLE OFC<1R$6. I OUR PROPOSED EXCURSION TO l!SULLMEAD Cl1V AND NEEOl.ES BV STEAMBOAT AAS SEEN CANCaED ..• HCIV fJO >QI ff£Lf SIKXJl/)fRf \ I NORM, '100R PRO&£M I~ 'fAAr ~·Rf. AfRAtD ro MAKE. ~\IE6 t !>OME.1'tME.5 '40U J06T i.t~v~ iO !>!JIM ~~N!>T ,.____, 1"E-CORRE.Ni t B~11E.ti ~N 1"£.. "4A'f C.~!> ANO R\OE- OOT '1'~£ bioRM l FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE . ~.I <001" wwe. ALL ~OP~ HF\1.1.CWEEN. AN• '/OU ~~~ St'\E IS! BR IDGE ANSWERS TO WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ Q.1-Both vulnerable, u South you other than two clubs ahouJd even bold: come into consideration. A rebid by •QJ83 <:>95 OAJ6S +KQG opener in a lower-ranking suit does The bidding has proceeded: not promise extra values. Soatll Wett Nortla Eut 1 0 P... 1 <:> Patt ? What do you bid now ? A. -Obviously, it's a matter of ·whether you should rebid one no lrump or one spade. One no trump is unwile for two reuooa. You have no tenaces. so there is no reason why you should want declarer at no lrump. Secondly, if you rebid one no trump you run the riak of mining a 4-4 apade fit. The merit.I of a one apade bid are hard to refute. Q.Z-Both vulnerable. as South you hold: • AIU52 <:> A95 0-U + 1012 The biddlnr bu proceeded: S..U. W..t No~ F..ut l • Put 1 NT Pa ? What action do you take? A.-You have a minimum, balanced opening bid and the fact. that you have a five-card major as of litt.le cons qu nee. Therefore, you thouJd put. To bid two 1pade1 vJrtuaUy ruarante t a aix-card auit In thlt tequence. Bear in ml9d tbat partn t might have been forted to retpond one no ttump with • tin ton 1pade. Q.3-Aa outh, vulnerable. you hold: •U <:?A10982 oat •AQJI Tb blddlnf hu proc ~: U1 WMt ~ East I o P.. 1 • Pue 7 What do you bid now? A.-I JOU hav a lwwult~ hl wh7 not go ah d and d cr1be your holdin Nothinr Q.4-As South, vulnerable, you hold: •93 <:7 A10982 0 K6 +AQJS The bidding has proceeded: Seulli WHt Nort!I Eut 1 <:> Pu1 2 0 Put ? What do you bid now? OMAR SHARIFF A.-Even thouab you have a two- 1uited band, you cannot rebid tbre clubt. That. would be a "high reveree" and abow a band about a kinf atronger than the one 1ou have. for the moment., be content with a rebid of two hearu. Q.1 -Neither vulnerable, u South you hold: +ACM54 052 OKQI •&U The b ddrnr hu pr()(eedtdi N'"' East ~ Wut 1 <:> p.., I+ r ... 4 o Pa11 ? What action do you take? A.-Partner hu 1bown a very , strong hand with 1 nfar-eoUd heart ault and you have the equivalent or a tound openin1 bid. Ir 1ou ti ted to paae. th ,. lt a 1eriou1 rap lo your blddln knowl d • We would check for ac and ttl in 1&ln If h howa two. But U sboW1 eutt· 11 two. u. r t)' factor w would choot ·x no tnimp. to prevtnt a lbt I of l o fut club tJ'I Q.S-Neither vulnerable. u South you hold: +W <:>AKI OJ9t +toe53 The bidding bu proceeded: NorQ Eut So.tit W .,t l • Pue 1 NT Pua Z <:? PaN 1 What action do you take? - A.-As responder, it is your duty wfthm in1muin handi-to '" tnat your aide plays in it.I belt strain. Were you to choose between the major suits on tbe basis of your • CHARLES GOREii high-card holdtn1. obvioual1 you' would bavt a strong preference for heart.. However, opener bid apadu firtt, and bla fi• t·bid suit 1t aJm0tt ahvay1 longer than bia aecond. Cor· r.ct to two spades. -·------ • Profitable •hark Sunny lleq of San Ila*» doean't let tb.la ireat white ah&rk intimidate her. Tbe 1hark at Half Moon Bay Fl.ah Mark et wu caacbt locally and put to &ood use: FWeted. August ma:f ked third month ofU.S. slowingdebtgrowth . WASHINGTON (A P) -Ameri- cans took on $6 balhon more in installment debt than they paid off in August, the third month of slowing debt growth. the government re- ported late last week. Much of the slowdown cam~ 1n auto loans, which increased at only about half the pace of the July gain This was in line with the drop tn auto sales registered in August. However, a se~rate report Friday on retail sales said that auto sales as well as other consumer spending reboundtd in September. Analysts said they expect the debt pin w1I also go up when the September figures arc released next month. James Chnst1an. chief economist for the United States League of Savings Institutions. said the ~lowdown in consumer debt had been anticipated given slower increases in employment and personal income which have occurred in recent months. .. , don't thank the pany is over. We believe the autumn numbers will show a consumer sector that 1s still pretty strong.·· he said. The August JfOwth an outstanding consumer credit was at an annual rate of 16.5 per(fnt. compared with an average rate of 24 percent from April throuih June. For all of last year. consumer debt rose by 11.S percent. In August. the report Q1d. -Outstanding auto loans rose SJ 78 billion after incrcasrng $3.4 billion in July. -Revolving credit including credit cards sho~ed an increase of SI. 31 billion. up from the $640 malhon gain in July. -Other oumanding short· and mec.hum-term debt. mostl> cash loans from banks. credit unions and savings and loans. rose $2.33 billion in August. down from the $2.58 balhon increase of July At 1he end of August, outstanding installment debt totaled $443 2 b1llton. up 19. S percent from one year earlier Orange CoMt DAILY PtlOT/Mond.-y, OclObtr 15 COMPLETE NYSE COMPOllliE 1iRAN8ACTIONS, a Professor says chronological, inental age not the same hi.Qg Good cxecuftve habits can work as a ~ 1hc ubJect an dCK'rib1na ~ proceM b)·whu~h he asscucs lhe ability of a corporate t'hid' eACCUU\'e ~ 10 handle h1r. JOb. counterb ance to mental agtn process By JOHN CUNNIFF ., ....... AUIJ9' NEW YORK -Good cXC('UtlVC' habits can offset a leadcr·s · ng mind, U)• a professor who has advi J corporate boards on that subjC'Ct dunng :\0 years of confiden· taal counsthna, And what applin at the top lc~el in a corporation. he sa)s. might a1so appl)· an "the White House. "The questron 1_ not whether President R~pn has a slowrng of mental faculties. as I thank he has, but to what utent 1s the slowin& depnv. in& him of his managerial ca~cny;· ~ys Professor Eu,cne Jennings. studied leadership as an academic discipline and also applies his knowl- edge as an adviser to chief executives and boards of di recto~. uries pcop!c not to confuse chronoloe1cal and mental age. "I have seen 50.-year-olds with 8().. )car-old minds. and vice versa:· S8)'S the professor. who teaches at Mich- igan State University's pduate school of business adm1mstrat1on and is author of a dozen books, includina "An Anatomy of lca<ier- ship." which examines the traits of leaders back to ancient times. Not to be O\erlooked, he says. is that chief executives often arc called upon to use much less than the total of their mental abilit}. To illustrate. Jennings cites the observation of AlfTcd Sloan, former chairman of General Motors Corp .. that the wa} the GM was staffed and organized a 12-ycar-old boy could run 1t -and outa.row the Job by age 16. In his three decades of dealing with chief executive officers -and some- times state and nauonal political fiaures -Jennings. 58. has seen chiefs who suffered SC\ ere strokes but who rc~umed to work and did as well or better than before When this happens. he explains. 1t 1s because the CEO has four factors workmg for ham I Good managcnal habits. includ- ing the ab1lit} to delegate and to rcsohe conflicts. 2. A strong team of cxecuh' e subordinates. • 3. A rclat1,el} tranquil or predict- able environment. 4. Good hfe habits. Jennings maintaim. "When men- tal aging begins to severe!) crimp managerial competence. all four fac- tors have to bc prt'SC'nt to offset the loss" Right no\.\. he continued. Reagan has ··some decent but not el(celltnt" managenal habits. and "he has one of the finest staffs a president has formed in a long u me ·· In Jennings· view. the world 1s at least relauvel) tranquil. or free from major wars. and there sttms to be a concerted search tor a contanuatton of peace. Reagan. he says. also has good ltfe habits: "He knows how to pace himself and to exemst. sleep and diet to optimiu his managenal com- UP s AND DowNs NEW YORK (AP6 -The f0112w1nv·11s1 shows ll'lt ver ·11'1•· ounler stocks •nd w•rr•nts 1"-1 l'l•vt l>OM UP the most and down t~ most bued on oercenl of ch•'.1• 'Im ridav. No securil'-s r•d no below ,, Of' 1000 shares are Included. ft.•' and oef'Centa~ changes •rt, the di erence t>elw~n he r;eviou~ c slno bid price •nd Fr dtl~\ IH bid Pl'IC• Name Lui c"l Pel. 1 LfeScl s r I uo n1 1 B~fuet ~ Up A I wt96 , .. ,., Up ~11 • M nlscr ), ~ Up o~ 5 §edec un 1 • UP 6 uar~x t J, UP l' ~ 7 wA s 2 t ~:~ UP 11· 1! PrudFn 1 • UP Ancmpvt 9t"J t I~ VP l ~ Biotcn• 6' • 1• UP OvER THE CouNTER I pcttncy." An excellent ex.ample of his 1 ,i • he says. as t~ sttuation m .. 1ucb President Ov.i g}n D. Eisenhower was involved dunng the 1950s especially following hi heart anack. "What brousht Ike lhrou&h v.'Ctt these four factors:· sald Jennings.. .. He had &OOd managcnal habit . He had aoocf staff and :abinet hCads. He had a tranquil world after tenn1n· at1n1 the dilemma of Korea. and M had aood hfe habits. amona them the 1b1h1y to pace himself.- But. he points out, 1f elements ~!uft. the chief executive might not hl\e w~at is necessary to off)Ct the me:ntal danger. Jennings shed additional U&ht on "When a board •t doubd'ul about the bibtyofachid'toAIJ on his~ -when. t>ftaU$C of thrir love and res~ for him~ are noi sure of 1bcirobjcC'Uvity-I am called 1n ··1 ~111. on a sca1c of 0 to 10, dcttrminc me: ei;tent lo :whim me inch~•dual h.a inlCHcaual facu!ttn available rompared to What lbc job reqwrcsand hat the board 15wilfina 10 tolerate. .. U l ICC' I m id' v.'ho. on I 0 10 I 0. . lll .ha an IJUCll«tuaJ fM.1lh)'Of3 for an I job. and the board j5 ,atisfied wttb nothin,a less thaD a S. he' Stri.kes out both wars. ~aut if the Home buyers can qualify for loan during bank open house ··How much home can you afford?"• will be tbc topic co" ttcd at the H~ Buyer"s Qualifying Open House hosltd by Cold"'Cll Banktt's In-foe offatt; Jane Mitchler. branch sales manaaer. said. The open house will be held CkL 20 from I -4 p.m. at Coldwell BankCT's Irvine office located at 35 Creek Road, Irvine. Lee Mortgage Corp. ofHuntfo1ton Beach will be qualifyinJbayerswitb a -... " high-speed computer 5)'5tcm, which quickly matches clients With homes they ~ can afford. With 100 different loan combinations available, Lee Mof'talle0s • FAST (Financing Analysis System Technology)computtreaables prospective ": buyers to find a loan program to suit their individual needs. ': For further information, call the Irvine office at 552-2000. Gr oup exchanges tips on business I Anthony Christensen. president of the Le Tip Oub of ewport &a(.b , announced the aroup will hold a mcctin.& with no-host bar. open to the pUblic on Oct. 17 at 6 p.m. This social~ ~ held in the Library Louose of the Newportcr Inn. located at 1107 Jamboree Rd. 1n Newport Beach. Le Tip is an orpnization formed to develop business and professional leads among its members. Each business catqory is reprctCntcd by one member. and conflicts ofinterest are not all~. Once a week. mcmben meet to pass along .. tips .. (business leads) which may be hdpful to one anotbef'. The =zalion _provides an establi. bed_ network of.bUsincss contacts in various Le T ip was founded in 1978 in San DU::ao. hs dubs are loc:a1Cd tbrougbou\ Southern California. For more inf onn.ation, contact Anthony Ouiw:ntm. 773-0660. Internat ional business seminar set , • A three-hour seminar, designed specifu:all~ for individuals •'ho arc looking to expand their businesses on a &)Oba.I scak. will be offered at~ Coast College Oct. 20. Titled ··tntcmauonal Bu)insand Sellin,." the semon rum from 9 a.m.. to noon in OCCs Fine Arts Hall 116. Admission id20. Tbe fee indudcsbandout matcnals . Wor kshop to f ocus on winni ng sales A three-hour saJes and marketana work.shop. utlcd "Winning: How to Expand Your Market Share and Defeat Your Competttors, •• will be offered at Orange Coast College th11 fall . The session is slated for Oct. 20, from I to 4 p.m. 1n OCCs Fine Arts Hall I 16. AdmiSSton is S20. The fee includes handout matcnais. Semin ar's foc u s on sales, marketing "Sales and Mark.cuna Methods and Techniques That Reali~ Work .. is tbe title of a one-day seminar bean& offered this fall by Orantc Coast Colleac's Small Business Man~ment Program. · The session. slated" for Oct. 20. from 9 am. to '4 p.m. in OCCs Fine Aru Hall 119. 1s co-sponsored by the Small Business Admm1strat1on Admission t$ S25. u AmEcol CllHll wt Jonel un '' oi.olnc 1s lmtrn un UnFSBk ll ~ shlnd ~ ~~nun Ha nO VanSl'lk Sovron V Bend rllnd nzon un tlecl'I I Nre Lent 1 1 Nordics Tf'ren l'I ~ ... ~t'll J~ Jiffy l~ •h 6'J,,i r· ~. ., •3-i~ -~ 1f: DOWNS LHI 2 ' • ~ UP I 0 -UP I -UP l ,., UP 1 . ~ UP l. 3-Up • Up 1 . -UP 1 ~ UP 1. ') UP 1 • Up 1 t· 1 UP 1 . ~ UP lU I UP ~H +s-16 UP ,., UP +S-16 UP c~ Pct -3. ~ U8 -"· -1 , • 5 ' it ii I IP~~ l lf7 1 In • ,v, lo. Cri.iOnt ~~ lo. I -1 9\i'J - 1 ... 0 i'h -s-u wt ll s I~ -t v ' iC1 •i ~VJ •in \<) 1~ -.... --ell -'" M OP -,, r•nl'R I ' -1 m1>L 6 , "" tastl'l • ~ Ill VS • ~ ~nA~ 61.o ~ mn •O Sl'l atkev SVJ 'ti ~--­.. ,...,~MIN 16 ,, 12 11. n 11. i 1 1 . n.1~ •fU..OtMOfW . ...,.,.,,.,.,....,.. ~ • ,,,...... ,.... --,,...,, I.In. o.w,. '*"=' Coet "',...... .... -... c-. ,~ .. .,...,"""·a.it ~ 11.-.. W>O ~ IOC;Mftl9 _.._. LOJtQMACM (213)~138 1bll Ff'M: (IOO) 331""611 ~ ...., .. . • .. On the , • -- 1 OoVY JoNt \ Av1 HAr;1 s ••• '•' .~ j ,ir. N!W VORK (AP) 'oct as : NYSE Lf~[HR S I NEW VORK (AP) C>ci. '5 ':i '1 ~ AM rx LrnuLR S ' '' .. . . Goto Quo ns M rT~l~ Quolf \ .~ . . . That• s an apt desert ption of both business and business people along the Orange Coast. To keep track of where companies are gotn~ and which people are helping them get there.just watch Credit Line• -ever:¥ day. in the---- Bustness section of your new llllJ Plat Tigert win, Pedrn IOM, but Sid Monge -double winner. C2. MONDAY. OOTOBER 15, 1984 BllKer.,., ............ wHhblgwln Tbe Padres' ste>ey: It :was lights qut When Gwynn lost the ball Int e lights, It told the story of Sa~ Oleg "s futility DETROIT (AP) -Tony Gwynn ball," Wm ns 1d ·He 71Chi I CiD lost the ball an the li&hts. The San for n. I lc.M'o\• he didft'11ee 11. .. D1q.o Padres went on lO lose pmc The soft ny. and tM.pnae, hUlll aa five. 8-4. and the World Series. the balance. "When t hadn't heard anything. I "I had to make the catch." Wa .. as knew he had lost it;' second ba!tman said. ••1t•s tou.gh for me 10 make lbt Alan Wiggins 'd. "There's nothina throw on that play." we could do." Wjagjns caur.ht the bill wsth bas That play. and tha\ 1SSt$sment. baclk to the infield. and had &O llMD summed UJ> how the entire 1984 around to make his t.htow to lhc plJt.e Series went for lhe Padres as they fell GibSon scoredpsily. inthescri~ ..... l,tothcDetroitT1gers. Thr sacnfict fly went anto the The scenario was all-tOO.fam1tiar scorebooks as ··Sac Ay·four." for San Olego. The Padres would fall ibsc>o and 1b.Wi.Da.1oc..c:oac:ll:..4usi...-.-...-;,.+-f-1! -behin<t.-try o c up. ana ttien Grammas had just been talking about watch the pme slip through their that kind of play. fingers. ..If I'm in a position to USt' m,Y fl happened apm Sunday apmst speed, I'm aoing to do it," Gibsota the backdrop of a gray sky at dusk in said. ··1 was &lad to sec Mr. W111m1 Tiger Stadium. catch the bal[ A ftcr-Bctroit took a J..-0 lead in the ~ ou have to make the throw rifht firstinnina.thcPadrcsscratchedback there. That's called agress1ve to tic it entering the bottom of the baseball... .. fif\h. Gwynn had watched Wigins .. at'4 Kirk Gibson. one of the fastest thrown out at the plate in the first playen in the major leagues, sin&led inning; tryina 10 sc~ from 1h1rd base and a pair of one-out walks loaded the on a one-Out grounder to second. bases for the Tigers. Gwynn would later sec Wigins San oteao•a ~ Wlgln• alldea by home plate and Lance Parriab, bat be wu oat. Rusty ·Kuntz. pinch hitting for make an error ,on a routine John Grubb. stepped in to face Craig groul\dbaJI. and watch as pinch.. LcfTerts.. the third San Di90 pitcher. runner Luis Salazar got picked off Kunu lofted an opposite-field fly first base b) Willie Hemandti to end Orange County ToplO Teti Mull•1t'I ~CS·l>-llett Wtllefllewerwtlll 21•6tlechlelt-•l MMeM,lrlt9dr"'9 .. llftllrhmlll• Tus-Ill> ltHt. \ ,..,.;..: o ~ I I . ~ . ~ ....... , ........ ...... ,...,.. Ill ... ""-••••111. aair a c11 .............. '*"cwt ................. ........ Ullll ..... _ .......... World crown haS Tiger fans roaring, wild DETROIT (AP)-Rowdy baseball fans burned a police car. set off smoke bombs and ripped up ~ from the playin& field Sunday at Tiger Stadium, where the Detroit Tigers woo the World Series against the San Dicao Padres. Thousands of spectators poured from the stadium stands after the final out in the 8-4 victory, as Tans ripped up thelutff'or souvenirs and danced with police. who quickly pve up their positions in the outfield. ball to short right. It did not look deep the ei&hth with the Padres trailina S_., enough to score the run. And in the bottom of the 1ci&hth. But there was a problem~ Gwynn. Gwynn would sec teamma~- in right field. didn .. t sec it. · stop Garry Templeton nqlcc1 to "I lost it as soon as lt 1ot over the •. touch second ~~ o~ -an apparent stands, .. he said. . . . forccout. helping open the ptcs to G~nn wuwav1n1 hisannst tryin& three-run homer by Gib¥>n lbal to indicate he djdn't know where the mack it M. • ball was. Yet, as he sat on his !Ocker stool Wiggins was running back and after the fin.al pmc of the season didn't sec Gwynn. Wiggins was Gwynn reflected on what be had sec~ waiting to bear from his t~mmate. -and hadn't xcn. ... That call never came. "That was the key play an the .. I was running back and I saw the game," sajd Gwynn. Police in riot gear kept people outside from charging into the stadium while car horns blared tbrou&)lout the city's downtown area. Fans climbed atop almost everything. from street lights to buses and police cars. Bottles were thrown at pohce near some ban. and several arrests were witnessed, but police were unable to &iv~ early reports. A police car was set ablaze. witnesses said. DEtAdlT (AP) -&.:Mt ....,_ a. r...... won In ._ _..... owt In suburban Livonfa, people rushed from their houses at ~.AIM1r8'ftmllw.,....... ._..,....., ..... game's end bangina pots and pans. But pandemonium reigned Fr......, Md 9IY8 Che 'o.iroli T',.,....... bad nine ""8 M 20 • downstown. d R S . h I h. t1Qer9agoodlt8re. .....~lnllxwMd8COf9d trcet ven or on m1t c ung to 1s pennants. "I'm 'the. ~. i•actm Moet tow. Fout or the Ml C8n'W In praying just to survive." he said. "You have to dod&e a-few beer _ Valueble ~Of tfle 1114 World o.troft'• ptvot111 &...._.._._wk> cans, but what the hell,'' said Mike Lahey of Taylor. . "-'-~._.. .... ......_ .._,---a. ,_,..~·- •·This is unbelievable." said Tigers owntr Tom Monaghan. ~-. tumUNU -""'"' '••..---8 '1oty when~ IOf .. ,.,,. "This is fun. There isn't anything In my life that would be greater year: ago, dam~ carUl9ge In hte Tlgei' runs wfth • ipeilr of two-run than this," he said. addi og to companion Gov. James Blanchard. left knee. ltiomerl. "even being 2ovemor... """'9Y took eutures in h bUt tt•s "I thought yest•day wu "( ....._...hurt"-=··· ~Tr--~.·· ..._ .. aiA, ........ ...:&.ii. -.. ... aarce .. said Blanchard. "It's a very deservina team. and ,.,,_, """ _, -·.-..,,_ ... _, UUI al-.. the fans were very loyal. It's real uplifting for the state." melt·~ hed I It was tom but betl!lf. H0 • Ill over.~ <*1't tMe For seven months. Tiger fans wailed the rallytng cry of I didn't wtht to heat It... It away. W.w got that rtno li1d "Bless You Boys" as Detroit headed toward their first World· l&tt Friday night. wtMln the tMt'• what we wanted. Thia• a Series since 1968. So devoted were fans that Detroit scalpers Worid Series returned to Oetrott, a hlghlght." made money on regular season games while other teams doctor tooked at Trammell'• knee lremmell Mid that e ~psi strualed to sell tickets. and gave him the dreaded of his joy was the f8Ct ttwt 1M -AoldiAg a ~uarc foot of sod from the field, Fred Amen. 17, dleOno.18. Tlgllra had wrapped up the ..,.. of Dearborn, Mach., said, "Some fan came up to me and said "I foUnd out then that It's atat a at home. . 'Herc. have a part of the World Series.' I couldn't resisL" tw," Jrammelt Mid ... It's tt;. 'We WMtecl lo win It here, tn ''I think they've been real good fans in Detroit. They are real same ttMg· ~ tast ye8I' enct t haY9 tront of tt... '*"" hit Mid. ·~ sports fans, and when they win, they're happy," said Jim to go to COiumbus, Ga.. to get tt de11rw It. 'They'w bMrl wtlHtrig a Campbell, prffident of the Tiaers. Looking at bis mutilated took.CS ft '°1!tlme. Now ..._, •• Playing field. he said, "Well, we don't have to play tomorrow." 8 •· '""""7 cel't 00 a:ezy. "I'm d~ wtth that. t Tigert gaw their,.. plent)I For Bob Willcoxson. 33. and Tommy Casias. both of San hadbeenlooldngfoiwtirdtoank:a to d'9lr. about •MGIOi'i.J.Mn Diego, it was a rainy, gloomy ni&ht. Unf I'll ell Mid "rm a little di'iJtpointed, 6ut the Padres did have a 2ood Winter. ortunately, haw to they~ the dlvtlion tllle 9t • · c · h' · • ti Pad "'· ¥ehab1Htate!' • home, won tne ftnal game d ._ year.• said as1as. •• 1s 1sn t rea y the res we've seen. White he's~"""" th.t, Trammell ..... _.......athOintend~ltwllb For Rodney Smith of Detroit. no piece of earth was more · .... .,... .-JV"• ._ .. L!;!;..;=----~...;.:..~------~ ... 1.&.11~-' hallowed that the section of right field he held in his hands as he canenjoythememorleeofNaMVP thededlNeWoHdSerieeW:.CWrat Kirk Glbaon celebrata aecond homer. strutted down Michiaan Avenue. performance in the s.n.. ~ hOme. Only ope football, and Rams owned it Dickerson, Kemp pave way to 28-10 victory over Saints ---·--. \ NEWORLEANS(AP)-Youcan have more than one good running back on a team. but there's still only one football in the aamc, said Rams running back Eric Dickerson. who acted as if he owned the one in the game a~i~st the New Orleans Saints on Sunaly. Dickerson rushed for 164 yards against the Saints as the Rams hammen;d out a 28-10 NationaJ Football League victory keyed b)'. three touchdown pa~s by quar- tcrt>ack Jeff Kemp. Dickerson's comment was aimed at the fact that New Orleans picked up Earl Campbell on a trade with Hou ton and alternated him with Georac Roaers. the incumbent ru hina star. "You can't plit thr ball in half," Dickerson said after the pme. Some other winncn act call from the pre 1dent afler their pmes. Kemp aot a hand hike from his favotllc conarnsman U.S. Rep Jack Kemp. on a c:ampa1a:n swina for the Re- publican pan)·. "Dad thouaht thu roll-oul to(Ron) Brown WI areat." \he )OUtll Qaar· tcrback id aflcr the aame. The elder Kemp wa a pretty fair' quattcrback in his own riaf\t , pll}lnl from 1960to 1969w1th the San Ditto Char&er5 and Buffalo Bills in the old mcr1C'ln football leatuc before -·- NFL scores Rame 28, s.iDta 10 RUlen 23, vw.,. 20 Clalefe 31, C~en 13 8teelen 20, 4&en 17 Red81rlm M, CowboJ9 14 "Seaba•b 31. Blll• 28 Jeta 24, Bl'owJl• 20 s.ai-1•. Colta 7 Pafe20,~· Olaata lf, 7 Ltoee 13, .._ 7 (ot) CardlaaJa aa, a.u. 21 Dolplaiu 28, Olien M> runnina for the U.S. "Hou$C of Rcp~ntativcs from Buffalo. N. Y. The younger Kemp said his dad sn't the only one who thou&ht the K'rlmblina compleuon was a good ol')C. "l can't wait to see n on film m)stlf.'' the youna quancrback s~ud. Siint CoJch Bum Phillips alter· natcd quanerbecks Richard Todd and Ken Stabler u well as runnina backs F.arl Campbell and G~orac R<>al'n. ncs by series throuah t"e first halt and th mt t"ould mu ttr nooflCn ivc parkatall thr h th tint 30 minutes. ln the ond half. Phillips ttle\t on tab1cr. and the ints bqan 10 hov. more ("On$1 tency. Neither &abler nor T d too (PIMM ... aAMS/C2) HO-HUM, RAIDERS EKE OUT ANOTHER AS TIME RUNS OUT LOS ANGELES (AP) -With their game against the Minnesota Vikings on the line. the Los Angel~ Raiders went to Frank Ha\\kans, not Marcus Allen. and the result was another hard·fought victor) for the defendma Super Bowl champions The Raiders and Vikings W(~ deadlocked .20.20 Sund•> when Los Angeles got the football after a Minnesota punt at the Vikings' 36-yard hne. With 3: IS ~mainina. the strattg} was simple -run the ball. set 1nto field aoal range. and eat up the clock. With Hawkins doina most of the work, that's exactly "A hat the Raiders did. and 1l wo~cd to perfection. C'hns Bahr booted a 20.)trd field aoal. his third of the pmc. as time expired to gi"e the Raidc~ a 23-20 tnumP.h· Allen. the Most V~luablc Pla)cr in upcr Bowl X\ Ill last Jan. 22 with 19 t yards rushina. carried Just once oath final dn~ for four) ards. Hawkin earned foe t1m01 for 29 yards. o\Jlcn entered the National Football Le -u c ntc t "Aith 384 )ards on I 09 carries. Hawkins had picked up 61 )'lnis on l7 aucmpts in the fin.t six pmc-. of the ~son. "The full ck doc"n't.ict to run the ball too oftcn..ti0 v.-hen )'OU do. it" u ually pretty important, os:Jou'"c got to make somethina happen," HavA1n said. ··That• .,hat I tncd to do. make somcthina happen. . "We had to ct some poin~ If we couldn't act lhc touchdo~n . .,c had to k1c" the field I. So I ju t wanted to rrotttt the II and get u a ct~-1bk."' Ha~ ins. a tod.y 5-9. 2 lO-poundcr. fin1 hcd the da more than doubhna ht n ru h1n1 to I .. Ith 6S )&rd on 11 canic . lltn ru hcd fo,. '4 yard on 17 tne-.... The .,in WI\ the third for the Ratdc" lh1 on 1n -.hich thcf"-c. oe«Scd I field I by hrin th I te toint to p1" up a v1ct ry. LOI n v.h1 h PfC' ilC'd c.1 pitc t~ fa tit"' pen hr.td t 6 tnn~ tor 140 yard no bl a C... I rt(()ro . "h "'' n't vet) prctt~:· td Raid n h om ..1or . wh t m ... fav mi b IO point . "(Bu\) C\. n w.n·~ a"'"· nd n> a ~ou loo t n, 11' • '1ct ry . By poubdmgonthcm.v. mt thl\C th mdo rnal1ulc 1n th f4 unh quaner." Th Raid ltd\ th<' ti (Pl .. ... Orange COHf OAJL Y ~LOT -----= 15, 1984 ~SPORTS BR EAK ---= "' ---= _-----=-- - ------- Mon,ge • situation one Cor the books, and it's not all bad Mlnn eaotaposta3·1NHLwin Kenney nails Chargers SCQ~r:h~ro•~~~ i°~obf ka~~: ~I w1•th shar·-p 1984 debut andgnc t1nnesotaaJ·I N t1on I Hocicc Cillllll - le g_ue v1clOt)'O\Crthe Nt'w Vork Rangers -- From AP di patrh Ot ROIT -\1d \1on~ may ~t pan ot thr L>ctrou T1 I'\ champion hip ~h re from 1h1 )tar" ·orld Sen~ HC' also ma\ gel pan of the Padres" share as lhe finalii.t P:m of both team·\ la~<''? No mane~ who v. ins? Trut, Nol bad fo1 \OOleoru~ not on the 10'>lcrofenhe1 the Ottro11 T1gcN\ or the Nin Die u Pauu~., for the World Sen es. "It I\ kind of unu)ual." Monge t:Om'cJed. rhc left-hundc:d rt'l1cfp1t<."hcr tx'2an the season wnh \he Padre~. He wus ~-1 before being sold to thC' T1iers in June. Monge was 1-0 for Ottroit in I' games. but when ii <.'ame 11mc IO trim the pla,off roster to the linal ~S. he lost: Sundax •.• Else" here in thc.-NHl ButTDlo denh Detroit 1 6"..4 s right ins Mllllto l"ollpo sror~d t\\1~ and defen5eman Ranno Vlrta a med on three olher goat . • • Veteran Ttrry O'R illy ored On<' y,oAJ und set up anottrcr an It din& ·&~ton to a 4·2 \actor) o\er Hanford. lttl~ Crowder, To Ftr1us nd LystdOD Byen 1,0 scol't'd for the Bruin~ ••. Rook1 Gor41 ~llervtn \Cort'd two io.ab l3 ecoolh ap.an.J.:u first period a(ld then added-another hue 1n the pqie Jo \parK Edmonton to a 9-2 victory O\ er Quebec Sh~r\IFn, "ho pla)'ed JU!'lt two game) last stason for the 01k1> broke 1 I· I ti~ at 15:08 of the fif"$t period when h~ snapped a wri:-1 hot pa t Quebec soahcnder Rld1aNI ~vip)' ... Goaltender Brlu Ha)'w1rd•1 late heroics and Dale Hawercbuk' spirited pla> as ne\\h· appointed team c;iptain ltd Winnipeg to a S-.2 $Ca~n· opening win O\Cr Toronto ..• Washington veteran Mill e Gartner ')Cored his I 99th NHL goal as the Cap1 tals skated to a 5.3 Hctory over Chicago . . Roolue center Carey WU oa scon:d two goals and ~t up another bv Richard Kromm as Calgary outscored V .:incou\er 7-5 Blues deal Kings 5-2 defeat Prom AP di palt KANS SCl'l \' -U1ll Kenney. smkinsquicldy after ont of has p:Mcs was intercepted and returned 99 yards. tos~ a .:?4-yard scorin11. \trike fo1 lhe go-ahtad touchdown in 11..an..as City's wild 31· 13 \'ictory Sunday O\'er the San D1qo Chargers. Kenney, a product of an Clemente High School and \addkback College who threw for more than 4,000 )arch last ~a,on but ~tout tht fif)t st' game'lt this )tar with an mJurcd thumb. passed for 2 )8 )ards in his 1984 debut, including a 5-yard touchdown to\s to F.d Beckman in the founh period. · He entered the iilme early an the second half, and moment'. later. corncrback Gill Byrd intetttptcd one ofh1s passes at the I·> ard line. broke a tackle and burst 99 )'ards up the middle for a touchdo1An. · IUcardo 11.a.rtno • R~d1klns 3', Cowboys H : Joe Thc1 munn thrc)\ ch rec touchdown pa~scs and John Riagins rumbled for a per onal regular eason high of 165 yards an<l bceame only the fiOh 01an 1n NFL hi\tory 10 rush over 10.000 yards os the Rcd\kins crushed the -. i iting Cowboy~. Washinglon's delcn~ totally shut down the Dalla., runninggam~ aftcri on) Dorsen. who was held under 100 ~ards for the I 0th ~tra1"1t game, gained 4 I yardc; on the first 'encs. The T 1get!I. rnncernc:d abou1 \ho11stop ~Ian Trammell's arm Monce inJur. decided 10 keep reserve infielder Doug 83ker and. made Monge 1tte1r last cul, a mo' e announced JUSt belore the> met the Kamas C 11\ Ro~als in the .\_menca_n League ( hamp1onsh1p Series· ll was just one) ard shon of the ( harge"'· record for an interception return. t:>ut San Diego's 13-lO kad lasfed le!>s I N(1LE\\OOD -Brum Suuer had a ~ than 90 ~conds. Kenney whipped the Chiefs 71 vards 1n • Seabawk1 31, Billi %8: l'ave Kncg and old pro Ste\t goal and three assists Sunda) night to pace , only four plays. capping the march with a 24-yard toss to Largent learned on a 51 ·)ard touchdown pass with 8.:9? ~en the St Louis Blues to a 5-2 National Stephonc Paige for a 17-13 advantage. -to Sl\C the ';cahowk\ the do!>t: dec1!>1on over the v1s1tmg Hoc ke) League "•clot) O\er the Los W11h 4:37 left. rookie Herman Heard broke frre over Bills. tn:h . a 1w1st of tat~ would +eave many t<J..;ear H'tt·ram tru'>trated and angr) Monge presents a much d10erent ap~arance Angele!> Kings • the middle an'd raced 69 }ztrds for Kansas Cil>'s final Seattle 5-2 hadtogo88yardsins1\pla)slor1tsgame· Slrtt?T"s-1crat at t6.3tT of1ht--~ond f)Cnod+wou:Q"-l touchdown winning tou1.hdo"' non a Ja) \\hen the Scahawkscouldn't to be the d 1 Oerence. as he Ii r~d in a rebound after 3 shot ~:--BBee-1"~"~~~R~1Q~pj~o....3..l ~pu:rotvld1w1cc.t1...11l.f1f:J([aa:su1a.a JMW!;t·i-a~~HliJi&i.Jhuanndd_JJb~oJ.c!di.JJ:lc:!e.ddi.s .£.Jo(f ll 27 .JOLail.lliiic:i:· r.J•hh.c.1• .fliU:rssi1..-4q:p1.&.:1121.1:nuc~r.-ia~A~Q~.1~,l~I 4-4 ~i r1PH1tt1"11t"~ b) llnt'mjlte &nue Fcderko. Orange Coast Collrge who \\~ signed as a free agent third ptnod. He maintains a con)tant '>mile. and doc\ not sh\ awa> from d1~ussmg has situation. The Blurs padded their lead in the third penod, Friday kicked two field goal\ for the Chargers. Jets !4, Browaa zo: _ Freeman Ml'Netl playing whl.'n David Barr slipped a shot between the legs of Los Elsewhere in NFL Sunday: despite bruised ribs, ran for a pair offirst-halftouchdowns "Being a season·ed ballplayer. l understand wh) certain mo\e!> are made," he said This club sensed a champ1onsh1p. It wanted to stock up 1n the areas 1t thought tt needed. .\nscles goalie Bob Janecyk at 7:07, and Pat Hackey Steelers zo, Oera 17: Linebacker Bryan Hinkle"s one-and rookie Tony Paige rammed into the end wne from the talhed into an empty net with 44 seconds rcmammg. handed interception and return of 43 yards set upa 21-yard I-yard hne for the game-w1nnmg score in the founh St Louas fell behind 2..0 in the first penod, as Los field goal by Pittsburgh's Gary Anderson with I 42 quarter as the '1s1tang Jets won their fourth straight road ADongcle5s scohred on goals b} Andres Ha~ansson and remaining. and the Steelers scored the victory over game. • ·Who knows'> lfl had been on the roster. I ma\ not ha'e pitched at all .. · ug mil pre\louslv unbeaten San Francisco. Paige. a s1\th-round dratl choice from Virginia Tech. G d 3 d h San ~rancasco's Ray Wersching missed a 37-yard field scored hts fourth 1ouchdo"'n of the )Car to cap an 80-yard Two of the nine pitchers on the Tigers rosier. Juan Berenguer and Dave Rozema did not get into the World Series Neither did Baker reen en 8 -year roug t goaJ attempt Wllh seven SCCOndS left, after the 49er) drOYe Jeh• Jme With 5.39 tO gO an the game. S4 yards on a series of passes by Joe Montana. S I' ., Rather than slap awa). Monge has pan1c1pated in as mut:h ol the Senes experience as he can. He has pitched batting practice for the Tigers. and has shagged lly balls wtth the other Detron pitchers before the AAmes. Veteran Hubert Green ended a three- ~ear drought Sunday by shooting a steady. error-free 3-under-par 6 7 Sunday 10 cap- ture the Southern Open Golf Tournament ~ote of the day Hugh MIH.n, Unlverafty of WashJngton quar~ etbaci<: .. We teef we have fut receivers and that If we caught Stanford In a man-to-man cf$fenae, we· could makeJhe big ptayt. That's not a knock on tM Stwtford ~. We could do tt1at aga nst •!1Yt>OdY .. Mesan scores In Frontier 500 DA\' 1 ON. Nev. -Dn' intt a 4-wheel dnve Dodge truck through the rugged Nevada terrain. Rod Hall won his third straight Class 4 t11lc at the third annual Frontter 500 off-road race ~turda' II Hall of Reno. and rider Jim FrlckerofHemet. tool.. I~ hours ~8 minutes. ~9 .,econds to complete the .i92. m1le course from Las Vega"> to Dayton. Ne\: an Columbus. Ga. b~ six !l.trokes The 37-)ear-old Green .... ho had not \\On on the tour since taking the Greater Hartford Open in 1981. led from the second round He took charge 1mmed1atel> Sunda) with a b1rd1e on the opening hole and never was 1n danger an winning the first pnze ofSS4.000 Green wound up w1th a 26S. 15-under-par over the hill). narrow par 70, 6. 791 · yard Green Island Count!'\ Club course . Kathy Wlt.Uworda, wanner of more tournaments than an) woman an professional golf h1stor). captured her first event outside the Un1t~d States with a two-stroke tnumph in the lnsh Open Champ1onsh1p at Bangor Nonhem Ireland. The 45-year-old golfing !.tar capi- talized when her maJor m al . Pat Bradley of the U.S.. fallered over the closing hole'> . Bernhard Lanier of West -German} shot a course record-breaking final- round I ()..under-par 63 and won the Spanish Open Golf Tournament in Valencia Langer finished with a 13· under-par 275 and was two stroJ..es ahead of Howard Oark of England. "ho had a 277 In other competition. motorcvcllst Larrv Rocscler. fresh off a win in a prestlglOU\ race In EuroPt:. 'll'Ored a narrow I 3-second '1cton O\ er Lam Ragland of Phoen" to capture the O\erall title Sportswriters load up on pizza Roe~ler of El Cajon. shared the nde w11h l\.un Pfe1tler of< osta Mc:sa. in a time of 10 hours SI\ minute\ 50 seconds. DETROIT -.\bout 45 minutes after Detroit won the \\s orld Series. a helicopter landed JUSl behind ~cond hase an Tiger Stadium. ··Gentlemen:· a \01cc on the pressbo'< loudspeaker said ... dinner 1s served·· Highpockets Kelly dead at 89 BL Rl l~G ·Vv1E -(1eorge ··High· pocket.,· fl..cll\ tht' lurmer Ne.... York Giants" hatting star .... ho "'t' 1:ktted to ba<,eball, Hall uf Famt• 1n I ~~\ died Saturda\ at agl' 1\4 Employees of Domino's pizza chain. owned by T1gersowncrTom Monaghan. proceeded to unloa<l 200 p1zl.8s. which were dell\_rred 10 the press bo>. to feed an arm) of850 writer~ and broadcasters In keeping "•th the franchise chain., ""ldl'h· ad,en1.,ed pohc~. the p111a!> wen· free. '>IOCl tht.'' took more than 30 minute<. to dell' rr lk had tx•t•n ho'>p11al11cd hl'rt· s1n1..l' Ott.), \I.hen he <;ufferl'd a -.trol.e at hi\ hom<.' 1n the ">an I ranri~cu suburb of Millbrae !\.ell\ had a career batting a' erage of 297 for 16 ma1or league \Casons He broke into the maJO~ "•th the G1antc; 1n 1915 and .... a., the firc,t baseman on teams which won lour straight "'a11onal League pennant~ under Manager John ~1cC1ra .... from 19'.! I to I 9:!4 He wac; one of the top power hitters of his da~. In 19'.! I he led the National L eagul in home runs w11h 23. and dro' c in 12:? runs Cow boy w ins Pac ific Cup Impact takes crown M\Rl\.\[)~LRf) -Cow~J\.J Selson-\1Jrl J.. l!J CO·'>k1ppered · h' Lam Hane' and Stan G1hh\ <;I c abrillo Beach ) acht Cluh postl·d thret• hulll•ts 111 ''In the Pac1fir <up. '~ mholi{ 111 thl· \ f 1dgc1 Ocean KJu OF < la'" '\I< >IH l \outhern ( alllorn1,1 Rt•g1nnal C harnp111nsh1p in J fnur rau: r1.:g:t11a 'a1kd 11u1 lll ( •tlll11rn1a \ rttht< luh 1 hl· lt'~Hlt::t """' ~:ll1C· t111ned b' \H >HI \1,111on .. , \nond 11\('l,lll \\a\( 11\\ardh l 1un .1 111-I• 101 ,(1111p '~ 1pp('rt"d b\ 'ill'' t' \lbl'rt. '-111u1h Ba\ \ ach1 ·Kann~ < luh .ind third ''ii'> l)ca Drt•am a ~ern -~'i UJ '~1ppcre<l h) Bill Petcf\lrn and Pm1I \ate' ( ahlorn1:i \ alht C luh (la.,., '"inner' ""l'n: c o"h°' (la.,, \ anJ Sl'J Drl·am. ( la-.s 8 \1C)I{( " ,umpo!>c<l of ~il1ng ~acht~ JO tt.•ct and undl'f .tnd 1\ o ne of the mo\! popular c1nd la\tC\I growing groups in \outhcrn < alltorn1a UCI gets split in water polo LONt, fH \( JI -r 11lh rankl·d llC tnrn" u~d four soal" from J R. Sal\ atort• to knock oil second rankC'd Stantord. 7-ti in the first of 1wogJmc\ at th<' Pl A .\/Pa~atk· 1 O WatC'r Polo I ournament Sunda\, bu1 thl' \nt· eatt'n. ldl to tourna"ment lhamp1on < ahtorn1a I lkrkcle\ l h\ th<' c,anw "<'ore 1n the \t'rnnJ gamt: U< ln1nc, "h1ch fin1~hcd I·\ tn the eight-team round-robin tour· namcnt at Lung lka(h' SUttl' q'l\h:d fnr a tilth-pince t1<' '<'tlh 4'h r' l ( ln1n('. IU·ll·I m('rall 1h1., \.C'a,on anJ 3-1 in fl< \ \ pla> hdd on tnr 1t~ "'" agaan\t Stanlord. 1ak1ni a 7-4 lead m1dw1n throu h the tinul period lx'forC' ttnlC' ran out Make Doting added t\A.I) goal-; tor ln1nc 1n thr contc'\t .inl.I Stttann Ro"' uilhed the other. Onh· Ton" Bell m n cd more that one goal ro·r If'\ inc in th<' sttond game. :H the \ n1e:t1l'r pttpirc tor ('ahforn1a pin t m.l:n in a non-contrrrn~ mi.uh LO~ .\N(1ELES -Impact. an .\ndrews-39 co-skippered b) Earl Dexter and Ron Melville. Balboa Yacht Club. was the O\erall Inter· national Offshore Rule division \\In· ner Saturda> in the first race of Los \ngele!> Yacht Club's Harbor c;;cne' ~cond overall was another local q1cht Peter Ton,g·s Momentum out ot ~outh 4'hore) acht Club. l h1rd was Trt\. entered b~ the D.amp.S}nd11.atl nf ( ahrillo Beach \ acht Cluh The Harhor '>cries 1s a popular fall e\Cnt 1hat has been ha' 1ng m d1fficult1t''> th1!> \car l \uall) sailed on Sunda\ the lir<.t race schedukd two week\ aJl,o "a" po<,lponed tx·- Catherman top winner in doubles I-o u n t .1 1 n V a 11 n · ' () e d c < athl·rman 2~. captured the h1ghe 1 \tak~., Sunda\ at Golden Wc!>t Col- kgl' when \he took two first-plaC"C: trophic., homr 1n the 10th r\nnual California State Double~ Rarquetball < hamp1onsh1ps C'ntht·rman teammcd with Hunt· mgton Beach's Sb~m ~nccht in lbe .... omen\ open double'\ round when \he nahbed her tir-.t champ1on)h1p in the thrte-da\ tournament, then later doubkd w1ih Huntington 8c.1ch's Dan Southern. 30. in the mixed open double\ round to pin her sttond. outht'm. the IQ80 National Out· door <ian1tci Champion, ha'I been the runner up in th:u department tht LI l 1hrcl' H"ari.. Knecht, ~I. ha~ brcn a douhlc., partner >Alth Catherman for '('\icral H'arc, Other area product~ capturing ch:\mp1onsh1p\ included Marie t larding and r.:aul Olson. both of We tmin 1er, in the men's orcn doubles. as tht' Juo tooli: 1hru set m four matt"hc:c, Olson could h1H cqualell Catherman·~ mark had he "'on his 'harr in th<' mt\N open double cause of the Big Boal Seru:s in San Francisco Class winner!> an Saturday's race were Flambuo)ant. Barney and S1c"e Flam. Long Beacil Yacht Club in Class '\. Impact. Class B. and Hot Rum. C-ast11lon and Johnson. King Harhor Harbor Yacht ( lub Class ( n\l:rall \\inner IO the Performance Hand1lap Racing Flel'I (PHRFl d1'-...,10n wa., BOO 'lou.ng·., Restless.. L.\' { ....-rnnd was Cha .. ah. Oscar Km!..' \<.'al Beach \'achi Club. and third wa., ~lid.er sk1pperC'd h) (hue!.. \ook. LA\ ( PHRr cla">'> "inners wcrt Slicker. Class •\. Restless. (las\ B. and Cha)'ah Class C .. Clippers nip Lakers, 112-106 ANCHORAGE. A&Uka (AP) Juntor . Bddgeman acored 18 points, lndudtng a key, ttv .. pofnt play lete In the oontMt. to leed the Los AngelM atppera to a 112· t06 Nltton.I &elketbelf AeeoclatJon exhfbftlcM I *1ory OW9I' tM l.:OI ~!"=-:.~ .O:.~'thino room"''*'· With two mlnUt• to ptmy. he .,,k • 20- footlf, wu fouled e.y h Liker•' M~tc Johneon, end 1Mk the free throw to put his team up i04-99. The. cpppera, now a.2 ,Jn the Pf• eeaon. led 51~5 at tlilftlme, men were 8hMd by u m9")' u eiQht pOfnte MrfY In Ute third perfod befcn the Laere c.. beck to~ up by one point. The~. however, tOOk ''"teed ror goOd !It 8745 wtth 8'~ mfnut• rtrnMil"Q n the third quarter. TM l.Uera' Bob McAdOO Ml ,,,. gan;t'• IMdinQl.cor.t Mth 19 pOentt. 8'ld -. McGee .o69d 1e lbolnta '"'.a .. IOll, Hanl..Je's mterceptaon, on a pass Montana intended for Giants 19, Falcons 7: Phil 1mm!I passed or .46 yards b k a 11 R I f and one touchdown and New York's maligned defense running ac ' mg, was on Y the second o the season staged one goal-line stand and set up a touchdown with a ofT the 49er~· quarterback Hinkle ran down the n'ht pass interception as the Giants downed the host falcons-. ~~~~\~~~ to the San Francisco 3-}ard line before being Rob Carpenter 'iCored both New Yori. touchdowns. the fil"\t on a 1->ard plunge in the opening period and the other on a 9-yard pass from Simms in the sci.:ond quaner Dotpbins 28, Oilers 10; Dan Manno. the NFL"s top- rated passer. explotted Houston's porous secondary for 321 )ards and three touchdowns, leading the unbeaten Dolph ms to their seventh victory over the winless Oilers. Manno. boosung has season totals to 2,074 yards and 20 TDs. completed 25 of 32 passes. mcludmg scoring strikes of 27 yards to Mark Clayton. 17 yards to Mark Duper and 32 yards to Nat Moore, ~ho tied a club record for career touchdowns. Cardinals 38, Bean %1: Neal ·µ,max. plagued by a v1c1ou!I Chicago pass rush. responded by hooking up with Roy Green for long gains and also scored a touchdown an the closing minutes while guiding the Cardinals to the triumph over the v1s1tang Bears. Lions 13, Buccaneers 7: ~troit quamrback Gar) Danielson fired a 37~ard sconng stnke to wide rece1,er Leonard Thompson 4. J4 mto overtime. givins the L1om the '1clof) an Pontiac. Patriots %0, Bengals 14: Quarterback Ton} Eason scrambled for touchdo"'n runs of 25 and 13 yards as New England edged the lknuls. The Bengals dominated early when rookie Boomer Esiason·s two touchdown passes boostl'd Cincinnati to a 14·3 halftime lead. but the Patnob su~ ahead with 3:S2 gone in th~ fourth quancr on Eason s 25-yard run. his founh rushing touchdown of the season. Colts 16, Eagles 7: Quarterback Ron Jaworski played uni} the first half but directed a touchdown and two field goal dmes that enabled the Eagles 10 beat Indianapolis Jaworski, who pla}ed wnh a pad protecting a cracked nb. c;uffered back \pas ms as the result of a hit by hnebacl.cr Vernon Maxwell on which the Colts ~ere asstsscd a roughing the passer penalt}. Padres:. it's better than last S a n Diego's finish doesn T put a damper on title season - For me. it's eas) 10 cheer against the Padres. They're J 100 one-sided here \\<hen the Yankees get beat. ttf~ i newspapers say the) got beat. Here. the> sa) the Padm beat themselves," \.\"'I DlEGO(AP)-In the finaJ analym. the baseball '>Cason lasted 1wo weeks longer than usual in San Du~go .\nd 1n the fans' est1ma11on. that w:asn"t bad "<earl} 15.000 Padres fans showed up 1n a spon· taneou'I rail) late Sunda} night at Jack Murph} Stadium to welcome the Padres home from Detrol\. Many came to the stadium ..ome three hours prior to the team's scheduled am' al. accord1.!'g to stadium security officials .\II over San Diego ··Padremonium" was pre!.ent It earned over from the Padres· come-from-behind "'auonal l.eat,tue pennant victor) O\ er the ( h1cago Cubs. Banners on onice buildings. ek"t:tnc signs on businesses and a multitude of pro-Padres T-shirts \\ere pn:<.em Baseball was the talk of the town The pany wsas restncted to1he parking lot as security officials declined to open the ~ting area. where a major rail) honoring the team 1s '(heduled tonight [\sen south of the border. In r IJUana. Mexico, merchants along Revolution A venue and the smaller cross street!> listened to the game an English and Spanish on radios and tele" 1S1ons. '\II \aid the) were rooung for the Pad rt) Hawkers of World Sene~ T-sh1ns. pennants and hats RAIDERS WJN got a last crack at local revelers at the stadium. T-shirt • • • merchant Tim McConnell said a bnsk market awa1ls his From Cl leftover goods in Yuma. Anz .. the Padres· spnng trainang excellent field position after Minnesota's C1re~Coleman home ·we will take them over there Tu~)'." he said. punted 44 )ard1o from deep an has ~nd LOne and reg Pruitt "'The} haven't ~n much ofth1s stuff )et." returned it 11 yards. Earlier Sunday. as the game ended. Padres fans were On the pla} before the punt. rookie Los Angeles disappointed but still proud of the teafll'S fit!lt World defensive end Sean Jone\ sacked Minnesota quanerback Scncs appearance. Tommy Kramer for an R-vard los\ at the V1k1ngs· 3-yard lane "Hey. they made the World Series, didn't they?" The Vikings took a .::?0.11 lead into the final penod but asked Dave De1ranich. watching telcv1S1on in Foggy's Notion as Detroit Tigers· fans stormed the field after the the Raiders earned a ueon a I-yard run by Alle~with 1'2 S2 . Tigers won the senes Sunda~ over the San Diego Padres rcma1mn$. Los Angeles got the scoring opportunity when 1 "This as bad ne\\S. but I'm really glad they made it this Jack Squirek ret.:o\ered a fumble b> Minnewta's Alfrt'd d k f d fi ,\nderson at the Vikings' 20. far." he '>at "It"s ind o united the town an uph tcd ··wc···e oot a ,, ng team a d · l k too spmts •· y o fOU n we re JUS ma 1ng ~iranieh wore 3 muscle T -Shin beannga picture of a man} mistakes.'' sa1~ Minnesota Coach Les Steck.el. r1ger with the words "Endangered Species" across the whose team fell ~o -S .• Penalt1e\ a.~d turnovers arc animal lt carntdthcsamcmcssageasabarmaid'sT-Sh1n huning us. We ~cep playtn~ ha.~d . we re nght in every hearing a Tiger and 1he words "Mow Down Motown.. ballpme bu.l we re not winning. But it wa'> the T ager., who did I~ mo\l mg. beating lhl. z.. Tht: Raider~ to<~~ .a ?·O lead b~ ':"o\ mg 72 )ard~ ·~ Padre'> .i.1 in the best-of-se-,,en senes San Diego won ·,'"('t&ht pla)~ aftn m:cl\lng the '!pcning k1~~fT The µme two at home but losi three straight in Ottroit touchdown came on a J4-yard pass from quancrbac~ Marc including Sunda} ·s finale. g_4 Wilson to tight end Todd C hnstenscn on a third-and-2 1 ··He~. I'm keeping th1~ h1rt." De1rameh said "San pin} v . Diego ha's nc,er been a baseball town but now I hope 1l The ikangs bounce<! back wath louchdowns on their will be·· · fir~t two possessions -a 70..yard pa.,~ from Kramer to f-or the crowd ol about 35 peo le at Fouo ·~ the wide rece1vcr,M1ke Jones and a 3-yard run by Alkn Rice. P d • d 1 f 1 · P -Y · Jan tenerud s conversion attempt after J hc. ~ond TO a rci pr~v1 cd fa enty o t~n I'll 1n the post-season. And wac; blocked by Ho~ ie Long, makang.Jt I :f.7. .the~ .°:"eren l b~ o~ bar business either. A 22-yard field goal by Bahr 1n th~ second pcnod and If there .~sn t a pme today. there m~ght .. bc fhc a 24-~arder in the third quancr midc 1l 13-13. The Vik in prople in here. manager i\ndy Jans~~ ~td • If the)' too~ their 2()..13 lcad on a 2·yard K"onng pass from Kramer ~~"u~~'::'nv~g~t~~.thc~nc backtoSanDiego.the}would to tight end Make Mularkey with 1·46 lcll in the third . It was thal kind of talk ~hat m!> t upl>Ct Nav) wcldl'r pen~Ve took the fi&}ll to them and JUSt came up a li ttle C1lenn [dmonds. who d~noed . hi mself as 0 Ne~ York \hort:· 41a1d Kramer, who completed 11 ofhl\ 19 passes for Yankee fanforcedtosw1tch1llca1ancetothcT 1ief"$fonhe 168 yard, ''I'm di\Coura ed with the 2-5 record bccau World Scnc th1 1s a better footb311 team than that'' RAMS WIN, 28-10 ••• From Cl Philhps' per'ltonncl 3 3 ~Jrds tor ;i sci;ond ~u.u t..:1 1uul..l1· down. I ht Rams ot thirJ-quarter touchdown on a 21-yard p;a's from l\.('mi:tto Brown. f ht Saints' sconns came on a 47- yard field ao I b> Morten Ander!len in the fint q uarter and a I ·vnrd plunge b) Hok1c Gaj<ln earl~ 1n the founh quancr. • Crom II nd 01d:crson com- J:>antd 10 run a sttond-quartcr Saint · dn'c into a Ram\ touchdown. Cromwell picked off a tablet pass at the 2·)ard linC" nJ rcaurncd 1t to the 13. From ther~. Dickerson wh1 pJ'Cd otTa 66-)ard •pnn1. rullninJ throu h the rm of 'aints' d fen 1-.r bole ~ Frank WattelCt. D e Wa mer nd J te Poe bHore bet light from behind at she 11. Three pl ) l tcr. Kemp hit Ellard for the touchdol.lin. 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MIU!eft C.111f91191a SOu111W111arn Rl•lflk» s.ooi.o.ca. Sal! Dfl90 Ml6e Cttrut P1lonw S.n 0 Of11101 Coe1I a.tua Ana c ......... W LT 2 I 0 2 ' 0 2 , 11 2 t 0 2 I 0 1 t 0 l , 0 • 2 0 0 , 0 CWffll W &. T 4 ' 0 • ' 0 l 2 I()' t J 0 1 2 ' 3 ' ,Cl , • 0 0 • 0 o· • JO GCW.MUNITY COLL•G• LOO Gelden W"' U·I) (i-ld9c-t c.ntlf .... ) ti Or1net Cotti I 17 Sa11t1 Alll 14 21 Teti 17 16 P•ltdlnl 4l s11 .• Oct 2t -Ml Sen Antonio• s.1., Oct 21 -'' Lone lattidl cc· Sat., No'f. l -Cerrfla.• S.I., New 10 -II Fulltfton• S.t. Nov 17 -Et C1M1no• Sat~ Ho• 24 -1t l1kar1f\eld• GOltaff I 2·3 3 4 4 I 2 Miainl o.trelt New E n;lanel .... 7 0 • s 2 0 s 2 0 2 s 0 ,-, 0 Pttrv 32·l 4 3 > 2 2 NY Jtts Sdlerrar 1 1 D O O 0 llldl•llJOOlb lootl w l·t 2 1-3 0 0 ~--911ffl nandi1 2 2 3 1 o o HIP-OrubO Dv H1wkln1 WP-H1wklns T-2 SS. A-Sl.901 l•Mbal IAVoffs LaAOUI CH~NSHI,. SHIU Tilttdly, OctMr 2 ClllCUO 13. Sin Dle9o 0 O.trolt I. KansH Cllv 1 w.-....,,0c-.r> ClllU90 '· San OleeO 2 Oetroll S. K•nM• City 3 (II lnnino1I 'nwtMlly, oc.. 4 Sen 0119o 7, Chieffo I ,,,,..,, OdtMr s Da1ro11 1. K1nae1 Cllv o <OttrOll w1n1 ..,, .. 3•0) llNNIY, OdtMr 4 Sin Oleeo 7, ChlQto S SUlllllY, OdtMr 7 San OleeO 6, Chlcl90 3 <San Ditto wln1 .. ,, .. ,.2) WO.LO IHIU T'*49y,~f D1troll I, San 01-.o 2 w.-....,,oc-.r 10 San OlffO S. O.tro4t J ,,,..,,~ 12 Detroit S, Sitt 01-.o 2 ...,,..,, Oc-. IJ O.trotl 4, S.11 O•ltO 2 ..... ~,. Dtlrou I, San OlltO .4 (Ottrolt Serln , M l WMd ler1et CNlmPltftt '~"on (ALI '· Plll•buroh (NLI , l~OMl'ltt lfOt-NI# YOtll (l\IL) 4, Pflll. CAL) 1 ltot-ChlutO (ALI 4, ClllC,.O (NL) 2 lt01-(111Clt0 <NL) 4, Ott. (Al) 0 (I 111) 1.-ClllCIOO (NL) 4, 0.lrolt (AL) l l__,.1!11burtll (NI,.) •· Ottrolt (AL) J ltl~ (Al.) 4, Chle:NO (NI.) l "1 ~. (Al.) 4, NIW Yorll (NLI t -ttl~tAL) •.NY (NI,;) J (1 tit) ltl>-Jlrlll, (AL), New Yon (NI..) 1 "1.-.0•llft INLl 4, "'ldtl9tll1 CAI,.) 0 1tlt-ht19n CAL) 4, "'lldtlllflll CAL) 1 ltlt-lo•IOll (AL) '· lrooatyn (NL) 1 lfl7-ClllCtfO (AL) •· New YoB (NL) 2 m ........ ,on (AL) •• ClllCllO (NL) t lt1J--Clnclnnttl (NL) I, Cllleato (Al.) ) lf20-Cltvll1nd CAL) S lrOOklyn (NL) 2 1'21-NIW Yorti , .. L) $, Ntw Yorll (AL) , 1'11-Ntw York (NI.) •. NY IAL) 0 Cl tit) 1'2>'-:Ntw Yorll CAL.) •• New Yoo. INL) 2 ~""' (AL> •• New Yorll (NL) I lfH-~lltM91\ (NLI 4, Weal\. (ALI I 1'2t-$1, Louis (NL) •• NtW Yori! (Al.I , l~ Yorll CAL) 4, ~lttMtfl CNL) 0 l~IW York IAL) •, It. '"°"'• (NL) 0 tm-"'4. (AL) 4, Cflleato (NL) I l~ (AL) 4, SI. Louis INL) t 1n1-st Lou1• CNL> '· Ptill. CAL> , • 19f1-NI# Yorll (AL) 4, ClllcffO (NL) D ln>-Hew YOt'k INLl 4, Weal\. (AL) 1 lfU-SI LOIJIS (NLI '· Oelroll CALI J 1t3S-0.troo 41'Ll 4, Cllbto INL) 2 1'3t-N1w Yorll CALI '· New York (NL) 2 1'37--Nlw Y01'11 (AL) 4, New York (NLI I lnt-ffew York (AL) 4, Chlcl90 (NL) 0 ltlJ-NIW York (AL) •• Ctnclnn.11 (NL) 0 1'40-Clnclnnatl (NLI 4, Dttrolt CALI I ltO-NIW Yorll (AL) 4, Brooklyn (NL) 1 19'2-SI Loult (NL) 4, NIW Yorlt (ALI I lto-HIW YCH'k CALI 4,-11. Loul• CNLI 1 lt4t--$1 \.oul• (NL) 4, SI LOYll (AL) 2 ltu-Dltrolt (AL) '· Clll<:HO (NL) J lt4'-SI. LouJ1 INL) 4, loslOll (ALI 3 lt'7-Hew York (ALI 4, lrooklvn (NL) 3 1..-.<llVallnd (ALI 4, lotlon (NL) 2 INf-New York IAL) '· lrCIMtvn (NL) I It~ YOf'k (AL) 4, Ptlh (NLI 0 ltSl-H-York (AL) 4, New York (NL) 2 1'St-Nlw YOl'k (AL) 4, ~OOklvn (NL) 3 ltS-rNtW York (AL) 4, lrooktyn (NL) 2 lts.t-Ntw YCH'll (NL) 4, Cllval1nd (AL) 0 lt5s-lrQOkl't'fl (NL) 4, NIW York (ALI , lts.t-N-Yori! (AL I '· lroolltyn (NL) 3 ltS7-Mllw1uk .. (NL) '· New Yortt (ALi 3 ltst-HIW YOl'k (AL) 4, Mltw1uk .. (NL) ) ltS~os Aneelts INL) 4, ClllcHO (ALI 2 lHO-PllllbUretl (NL) 4, N-York (AL) ) 1'61-New Yotk (AL) '· ClnclMltl (NLI 1 19'2-New Yortl (AL) 4, sen Ffln. (NL) 3 19'>-L.ol AAtelet (NL) 4, NY (ALI 0 ,,.._..SI Louis OIL) 4, New York (AL) 3 1M5-Los Af1911ft (NL) 4, /Ntlll (AL) J l,.._.111 (AL) 4, Los ~ (NL) 0 19'7-SI. Louis (NL) 4, lo11on (AL) 3 lMt--Ollrolt (AL) 4, SI. LOUIS (NL) ) lH~-YOtk (NL) 4, eatllmor• (AL) I lt7o-tl1Jtlmon (AL) '· ClnclnMll (NL) I 1t71-Plll•bur"'1 (NL) '· 1111 (AL) 3 lt72-0akllnd (AL) '· ClnclnMll (NLI ) lf»-Oekllnd (AL.) 4, N-York (NL) l lt7i-<>11111nd (ALI 4, Los Aneales (NL) 1 lt?~lnclnnell (NLI '· loston CAL) 3 lt7......Clnclnn1ll (NL) '· N-York (ALI 0 1'77-HY (AL) 4, Los Anellls (NL) 2 Tf7l-NY TALl ... -Co• An9Ms CNll 2 ,,,,_..llt•bur911 (NL) '· 11nlmort (AL) J IM-ll'tllt. CNL) 4, 1<11111• City CALI 2 ltll-\.os Af!Miff (NL) 4. NY (AL) 2 1"2-SI Loul• (NL) 4, Mhtleua.t (AL) J 1"3-ellllmort (ALI 4, Ptlll (NL) l 1"4-0ttroll (AL) '· Sin 0 1990 (NL) I Wencl ltf1tt MV .. 1 ltS5-Jollnnv Podres, lrOOlllvn INL> 1'56-0on Ler .. n, NIW YOl'll (AL) lts1-uw luratte, Mltw1ukH (NL.I ltM-loD Turllv, New Yoo. CA&;.) 1'5'-1.Arrv Slltrrv. LOI A""'" INL) l~lobOY IUctlll'CllOll, New Yotll'(AL) lNl-WMIY ,ord, New Y0tk CAL) lH2-lt1 Ptl Tttrv, NI# York (AL) 1'6)-Sanclv l(oulu, LOt A"91lt• (NL) I~ Olblotl, St. LG.11' CNLl , ..... Slnov KOWfllt, LOI A"'9'-' (NLI ,,..._.,,.na ltootnaon, 11111mort CALI lM7-lo4> Olblon, St. Lewis (NL) 1"9--MICktv L.ofl(fl, O.trelt (AL) 1Mf-OOM C~. New Yorll (NL) lf7o-tr00kt ltOCllnson, laUtmort IAl..l 1t71-4tobtr10 Cllnltntt, Pttt•!Nrtll NL) ltn-Glllt Ttntet, 0.kl•nd CALI 1t71-4ttttJt J1c11aon, 0.llland CALI 1t1.-1ton11 '1nttn, ~""' <AL) ... 't.. lt7.,_,..t1 Ito ... Clnclnnetl CNl..l • 1'76-JohnnY ltncll, Cil'Clnnetl NLl lt77-4t ... Lt J1c.ll•Oi'I, NIW Yorll (AL) lt7t-luckY DMlt N-YOf'll CAI.I 1=11 Ster , ~ll~etl (NL) 1 _ t ScfvnJcl1, Phllleltlllflil (NL) lfl,_ ~ CIY. ""'' Olltrrl"O, Sttvl veew. Lot A""* (NL) 1tn-0err ...,, .... $1 Leull (NL.I ltU-ltto. OtrNIMY, l11llmorl (AL.) l,.._At111 Tremmtll, Dttrolt IA'-) SUMIY"s~ 9bmt 21, New Ortoen• 10 ltti.n 23, MIMISOtl 20 Mlltnl 21, HOUllOll 10 NY Glanls "· Atllnt1 1 NY Jets 24, Cle'ftllnd 20 Detroit 13, Tltnfll lay 7 (Oil Plll1-dt!Ptll• 16, rndteneoo•ll 7 St Louis 31, Cl\lcl90 21 New Entiltld 20, C!nclMlll 14 Kl/IMS City 31, Sin Dllto U W•ltllnoton u, DIUu " Pl11Sbur91\ 20. sen ''MICIKO 17 Sltlh• )l. luff110 2t Tlflltllt'• OWM GrM!I llY 1t Dtnver (Ctllnnel 7 el 61 IUMIY't •emn ltalclln 1t San OllOO Clllcuo al TemN lev Cllvtllnd 11 ClllClnttetl O.nvw 11 luff1lo Datrolt •t MIMllOll Mllrnl •I Naw lnt11ltd NV Glant111 ~II ~llsbuttf'I II lnd~Nllt s.tttll vi. Oreen lav II Mllw•ullM Wtllllntton 11 St. Lout1 Kill ... Cltv at NV Jtta IP 'r.nctaco at HOVtlOft ,,....., Or1tlM ,, 4>ellt ,.....v,oet. n •em1 11 At11nt1 CCIII~ 1 II 6 fJ'I\.) se...._cti <J·2> (Mluilft~) 13 It CamlllO 22 10 Mt. Sa11 An~ 3 21 °"'"' Colit 7 23 lll.,.,aldl CC II 1 Sin Di.t& Mete If Sat., Oc1. 20 -So\lttlwtstern• Sat., Oc1. 27 -11 k n 01419a• set .. NoY. I -P11otn1r• Sil., NOY 10 -11 Cltrut• &411., Noy 17 -Santi A111• • Dtnol1t conferlf!U """· Community c ..... tCMcMt · IA T\MDA Y '" ., '"""""" ,.,..,ton 11 llller•fltld CtrrllOI ,, Tift Ml. San AMonlO VI OOlden Witt (II OCC) L~ IMcft CC 11 11'1'"'"9 MllUln C""'"'9ce S.1' Oieto MeM 11 Oranet Coest, l:JO •.m. SaulhWftltf'll ,, SadcleMdl San 01-.o 1t Santi A1't P1tomar II Cltr111 • ••m• a, S.lntt to w.....,. , .. ,. ,....,.._. """' lat9 IW ~ 7 o-11 ::::,ri~~on, 1:30 '·"'· New°'*"' > • o 1-10 vantur• ,, """ .. ,...,. ec ~~Q"'T.'" ~.. from Kemo ltlo HDMI 11 """ Mofllc• (l.1111foro lll<'ll 1eUt11t1n1 C.. ca r W9C11 Item..... rf 1) "" from Ktmtt LOI MftlA cc " WMI LM ...,.,.... CL~~~ » lnttrc•tiOll tt!um ~·~~ ~~ ~ V•llW ~--------~--~--~~~~~----llatnt-lfOWll 21 .... trom I('"" , .... C IS 1111C.t (Lllltfttd kkll) AllltloN VI 11 Dftert HO-O~ 1 ,,,,., IAMwMft llldll Mt, San J1c1nt0 11 OroHmont ~.1'l San hmerdlno 'i1111V 11 ~ V111eV •AMI ITATIITtCI All"'"" 11 ?:JO fJI'\, ""'°" not41d "1n* ~ 1.AJT WllK'I IC0.11 )4 24 ao.;ts fl'AC•t Co1 .. ,.,_. IM 204 ,.1Mdtn41 CC 42, Ml. $111 Antonio J7 106 O Clrrli.• 24. la•trtflt4d 0 • l•-o t"-•7 J ,unerton &>, 1 1 Cltl'llnO 22 • 2~t r• ,:, Tall J7, LOlll llldl CC 1 ,.,, , . ., -..... co• .. ice 1~ri 1o!.1 ltlvtrtlfl CC It, OraOH COlll 17 25...... .,. •. 26 Cllr111 U, Sin D'ltO l4 --,.,, o .... MeM "· Sedd'M•dli 1 IMOfVIOUAL ITATllTKS ltUSHING-ft1m1, Ofcklt'Ml'I 21-164. Cruldlfleld 7•27, ltlddln 4·7, K""9 2·6 NIW °'""'' G•l•n IJ•W, 0 ltoeer• S-11, c1~ s-1t. w.WlllOll s-10, Todd 1- 1m1nus 2). Anthon¥ 1-J, .. W ING-ftems, K"'11> I• lt·0· 142. New Orlesnt, Todd 1·13'"2·7S, Sllbler 17·34·1·141. •ECEIVING-lt•m•. Ellerd 2·42, Brown 2·41, Gutn111 2·21, OrlW Hilt 1·25, lltMr 1·6. N.-Orlelnt, WWllton 3·37, Groth J.-27, Tic• 3·24, Galin 3· 15, Miiier l· IS, Yount 2·24, O. It°"'" 2· 13, Oudlett 2· It, Scqtl 2·30.L lrtNW 1· 13, Antl\onv M . MISSED Flt:LD GOAL.S-i'fonl R.aden U, VlklftlS 2D Seen IW OU.,_. MIMHOll 13 0 7 ~ b ldlf• • 7 ) 3 10-23 LA-C11tt1tansen 34 NU from Wliton "'"' kldt) Min-Jones 70 NII trorn KfllTllf' (St1ntrud lllckl Mllt-4itkl41 3 run (kick l>lockldl LA-FG S.llr 22 LA-FG lal\r 24 Mln-Mulwtlev 2 NU trorn Kre!Mf (Stlll«Vd kldl) LA-Allen 1 run ( .. IV kldl) LA-FG llllf 20 A-d,2n OAMI STATISTICS MM First clOWlll 14 ltutlllt·verds 3l·llM Puslh9 yard• 122 ltlturn yardS '6 Pa111s ll·lt·O S.Ckl IY 2·17 Punta 7·43 ,utnblel•IOtt •·2 Panellifl''t'lrdl 10-9' Time of Pos .. 11lon 2HS IMOfVIOUA'-ITATISTIC1 LA 24 322 142 251 63 21-37·1 , ... 5·'7 1-1 162 140 :M·lS ltUSHINO-MlnnttOll, AllderMlft 1S-S3, Brown 12·31, Netto11 HO, •Jee M , Kremtr 2•0. L" A,,....., H1Wklnl 11•'5, Allin 17•54, W1laon 2·16, K~ 1•7, lflASSING-Mlnuuta, Krll"lllt ll·lMHH. Lot AllHIH, Wiison 2MM•UI. lllCEIVING-MlnnetOll, '"Jil'lft s-1n. lrown 2· 1), Jorclln HJ, W11111 1·1, Mullfll•v 1·2, Andtrton 1•0. LOI AnM!H, tarnwllt , .... Ali.ti •·•2, CllrlsttnMft 4·n , Orent 2·)1. KIM 2·10, ~hllema l-26, MISSED ,I.LO OOALJ-Lot Anttftt. '''" " Santi AN 14, Sautllwe•i.nt 10 w"""' ... ,. co ... oiu •10 Hondo 22. Comp ... 21 Santa Mofttca 22, Gllndalt 17 Slnll llrMfl 20. Hlnc:oc:ll 6 van1ur1 20. Moo<11ark ''r s.utrwn Cll Co ... a W11t Los An"'91 4 , EHi LOI Anollel 21 LA Harbor It, LA SOUtttwftl t LA ..,_,Ce 75, LOI A/191111 CC 0 ...... ce. ... lftee Wiii H 1 JO, Cll Polv JV 23 Klntt •tvtr 14, Mt. Sin Jad nto 1 S.11 knlrdlno v.an 5', Potterv1t11 l• LA V•lle't' 7. AntllOH Veley, Arltone Wntarn 50. Grosamont 31 Cll \.Ulll«ltl JV 21. o.tar1 lt HIGH SCHOOL STANDINGS, SCH•DULES SUftWt Lee ... L'"" WLT Eelltofl I 0 0 Fount1ln V1t11v 1 O O Marl111 I 0 0 HunlfnelOll a .. cll 0 I 0 OcelnVlr# 0 1 0 Wastmlnstw O l O C>wrll WLT s 1 0 4 2 0 4 , 0 I 4 1 1 s 0 , 3 0 llwi'MIY'• Game (7:JI Fountain V•lllY "' Mlttfll (I I DCCI ''*"' ~ (7:JI) HUlllintlOtl leKtl 11 W•tminsler Edison VI Oceln view (II HunlintllOll tlldl) SM View L .. tue L-.ue WLT Corona d4ll Mir 3 O o Newriort Harbo#' 2 o 1 SlddlttHICk 2 0 I Est111ela I 1 n LHVM .. Ktl 1 2 0 Unt .. artl'IY T 2 O ~!d941 1 2 0 0--11 WLT S I 0 4 0 , s 0 1 : ' 0 2 ' \) 2 ~ 0 2 ' 0 0 s 1 C111t1 Mell 0 3 0 TI!WMIY"a 0... (7:JI) ~ 'fl l!•l1ncfl (II N""'"'I HafllOr) ,,..,.. °""" (JIJI) NIWWI Hlrtlor vs COlll Meil (I I OCCI Unf•lf•ltv v• Corone ci.t Mir 111 HftWI Htrbo#') LleuN .. ICll V\, WoodbrldM Cit lr'flMI S.Utl'I CtHt LN_.. LM_,. WLT Et Toro J 0 O MIUIOI\ VitlO 2 0 0 1rvlN 2 1 0 C:1flstflnt Ve 2 I 0 LIOU!lt H • 0 t t Sln~t• O 2 O CW.H 110 "*MIY"t ... (Nit OV.11 WLT ' t 0 4 I 1 J , 0 ) J 0 1 s 0 1 • 1 0 ' • Warren "' l!t T«o cat Mlsa.on Vll Jol. non•1t19\lt lllfW'I'• 9""" (JIM) lr'llftt 11 DIN Hlllt Minion VIM ,, CH 1trt'IO VllltV L1ei.111t H 11 San Cttm111t1 NHL C~lll.L COH,.HNC• SirnVllle OMalefl W L Tfttt G' ldmonton Cll .. fY V1ncouvtr Wlnl'llHe K"'9t 2 0 I S 1' 2 I 0 4 16 I 2 O 2 l> l 0 0 2 ' 0 2 I 1 t "'"" DM.-M!Mholl 2 l 0 ' Twonto 2 l o 4 Clllc... 1 2 D 2 OelrOlt 1 2 t 2 SI. L.oVit I I 0 2 WAUI ~"•INCi ~-· W11f!lllllOll NHJll'MV NV 1111'\Cltf • NV ll11191rt ,.llll1Nr111 lot ton IUff1to HlttfofO MOntr .. I ~ '•trtcll CIMalln • l 0 I l 1 l I 1 0 l 1 0 0 2 1 • 2 0 Aama~ 2 1 0 2 1 0 1 1 l 1 1 • 1 2 0 .....,.. lcW9' St.~· S, Olea 2 lft'O'I 4. Ha'1fw.-2 J > 2 2 1 0 • 4 , t 2 • 7 ,, 11 s ' ' • ' ' ' 10 u ' 7 ' lidf•lO ' Drtrpll ~· J, NY lt~I ,_- 1*'*19!' '· °'** 2 Wlllll ... s. Toronto t Wt netOll I, Cl'llCHO J CllNrv 1. V•~..,., s T ........ a9eme ttfl ldet.illa " ~Ir••• SI Loul• .... .,,.. ... llun s, Ktnea 2 k1rtlW""*' ,.,... ,..,... GA s 11 17 2 13 , • IS 14 7 • • ' lJ . 10 • • 11 10 7 II I L .. A,_.., Hlilll'Ston 1, UJ, 2 LOI At1tMt Smilfl 2 (Svttnl. 4;l"l, J St. L.ov •· '"nno 1 Clennln9. Sillllf) 102 CHI. l'eNl!....,_.llMlOW11, LA (119ttt1n9), :14, Sult.r, SIL (fletlllnt). 14. "'"""· SIL ltrlPOlnt), 145. JOllNOn, SIL (llelid1!'fl. t JI. LHOlntt, LA (llO•Chnt), 12 U. Fu, LA (lrlOOlf'9), 15-~. Herdv. LA (llOOkll'O). 1120 SectM ....... ' St. L.oul1, Mullen I !Sutter> '41 S St Loult , Sutter 3 (Flf<M!'llO, lotllw1MJ, 1'36 Penallllt-86111...,.,., SIL lllOtdlMJ, 2 n. , Sutter, SIL "l(11eo111m1J. l'°7. Dliorrnt SIL ' <crou·C111Ckl11e l, tJt ~ .. enM • St. Louis, terr 1 (lt1me1141, Hlcfltv), 7~7; 7. St. Louis, HlcU v 2 IS..tter, FarclerxoJ. It 14 P'lnaJIV-Al'OenOll, SIL (tl00.ln9) 7~7 Sllots Oii eoe-St. Loull •·1·7-24 LOI A~ 10-S-11-2' Goellft-St. Louis, Wamwv 12' stl011·24 M••). LOI ~. J4ifllC't'k (23 11\ols· It ...,..,, A-7, llOi '"™ •ACL 7 ~ llCCIU "'lflt <°"'°"'svl UO UO 141 FOt'tunt'I K"*IOrn IMcClfflll'J UO Ut Mlftl. 111 Tiie say <Men> uo Alto rK*S Tr~ Mlur. °"9 IVW •OtNO' , '°"'°"' ,,,.,_.... It di w ••tOft. L.otNr. Oudl Time. UJ •IS. IS IXACTA tt-•I Hid w.eo SIXTH a.ca. 1 111' mllft. ltODtr'lkv (LIO'llm) 40IO IU O HO Cllud Slrtcler (111ckl 4 IO l 00 Wettmount SouaA IS>o le) 280 Also rec.o Flt11 le'I, Tr1Mc 1.iariG. J 0 01111:-. •lclffllllt • Tlme· us 11s SIVINTH ltACI. Ol't ml11 Meftlweer (Toro) 4 40 l.00 2 40 ~oof <DM~~I 380 2M Val DI ltol (Lo1oy1I UO AllO rec:ed Lo.ll•vllll SUIM'lll. our .... , ~ Tlrnl: u s ,,, IS IXACTA 13-1) Nd MUO EGHTH •AC:•. 1 1" mf111 on run sn.....,. (McCarron> 70l' u o 300 GorOilft (TOt"O) U O 3 40 Gato Oel Sol <Devi l.20 Abo r IC41d. T OllllfUO F OSCI ntll, Pa r Of Otuc:el, G11a11t Ven Tll'nl U t 3 S U flltCK SIX 13-6-t-3-3-7) Nici s11,>n .20 wltll fiVI wlnn.1'9 llCktll <•i• llot'WS) S2 P1dl Shi COMO!allon N ici S1'S.20 w1tll five wlMint llCklls IS>• l'lelnesl NtNTH •ACL 1 I 16 mn.. ZI< I( (McC1rr011J 24 00 10 40 s.20 ~ F'ocQI ( 0omi"9U11 I 11.20 ' 40 Hltemont (l~I uo Also r•CM Vor11u•1f, ,..Of'Del. Gfouewstll, loo,,. Timl 1 44 IJS U IXACTA (7·SI N d 1426.00 Al1"'6ancl 37,711 ) c.....~ UC WIM 1, Lllllt IMO ,... I uc lr•llll IClClttnis v~ 1, ..... UC .,._... '• C:.. 111119 Dou, a ... ' UC Ir• tcOtW: ~ I UC ·~ UC •• 1. ....... eo&.u•• UC '"'91 7, ......,. t 211,.., l ' I ..... ,.,.. .. Dour. 2. UC UC...,....., o... ...... NIWPOllT . LAMDl118 (..._.-rt a.di) -"·~ 20t tionne. 12 .... l .......,., . > vuri....,. 4M 1Md!wll DAY11Y"S L.OCKI• (....._, ..._, -11• '""""" Gl W\llo, 2 V9loWtall .... '"'°--s cab ..... ,, Mf\11 ..... s .,_,,..d, ZJ K utlMn, JS rodl YadltlRI DANA flOCHT SltuSI ,..., 1'9Ct) CLASS A - 1 &Int a.,. ~awel. t JI-, ~1-.•se. 1v, OPVC; 3 .._, S!elre Fre1111 DPVC CLASS I -I C,_. T~ l't'N'I Wattot1, C11>o1t~ &Iv YC: J, GJllO llu&!\. Don •~ A""' l~lf C1it0 l>VC1 l ""ij"'· Freo ~. ,..,. ave CL.ASS c - ' Vw191r IOltme11 0 Am!OW, O~'l'C. 2 Ecstecv, Al """'""" D"YC, > C11ll"I fl L~ P•l.ll Fr tltf, DlflYC CATALINA•27 -l Dev ... GI •• Caao IYC. 2 Tl'ldl .,. o.. UOWCI ~Of'IYl1'1, C-I VC ) ,.,,...t, fllettl MKI OPVC I.AMA CO. lAfll YACHT (\.Ula (Ocf*1tllld• ...... fi'Hll .. ·A -I lft411'M ~ ( KV~ 1 ._,.... Mn•, ~ M VO\'._,. Yldtl ~ aftl , OICA ~II, KVC - l.100•14 -1 llowlal!O LOllmlft, ..... YCt t Marty LKk"IV, LIOI VC LA$£ft -\ I ttv ltlMMI\ "ll!lflnetofl H4~YC SAIOT A • I - 1 C.ftl'Yn U lldW,' I YC, u.aor c-~ -~· ~. ICYC \ World Series records •eccr w ot l'-0 In Ult •ht world Serln CltlWMfl "" Oelrolt llu«• •tld IN Sell Ol Padre\ O.vM lt«CCMtDI ...... Lllfl9ftl 1119111 temt l»V lllN, llille lnlllhot -l llO\in,.\t mlnut ... Ocl f, ltlf, UIH retOfd lltld bV Pllt6tluf91\ et hlllmot•, Oct .0, 19791 Pltdllnt MoM wa!ll.•, -duCJ, ..,.,.. -.11, $a1\ Oieoo, Oct, It. 19'4 uin recwcl ~eel bit Ntw Yn (ALI, n 8nioktvn, Oct, ~. "56; Mlh11•11li. .. (HLI .... New York (AL), Oct s. lfS11. ..... NllllM9 • Moll left on lier.a, both clubs, .. ~ -?•. Oct ti, 191' <Old tecotd tl. ~red bv Ch1C190 (HLl•PtlllectttP'lla (AL), Oct. 11. 1'10. Pl!• hbureh·e.ttimol'•, Oc1 11. 1'111. Moil left efl Mte. one cbJb -1•. 0.lfO•I, OC1 12. ,,.. (Old rtcwel I), V..•ef bv 0.trod ¥l Cincinnati. Ocl. 6, 1..0 SI Loutt va.. MllweukM, Oct. 20, 1"2) ~1 a11ot11 tt•llllo. Mii IMIMI ~ -J, * Oleoo. OC1 10. 1"4 llies recOfcl i.et Dv menv Ctubt' lest by Ollcego While Sox ~ LOI A"Min, Oct 4, 1'59). ~ .. fllne e.tt1"9 in .. runt club, ffm. -4, Alan Trammell, o.troot <ties rKO<d Ml bv 3 ol*•· le•t bV lton C.-,, L°' A""'91. Oct 11, "711 S·GAMI SIRIU ••coaos .....,.. aattine Mo" nit• -9, Aletl Tremmel, O.tro11 lllh record set ov I otlltn, ltit l>v 8r00111 ROOin\Of'I encl Peut 8te1r, 8alt1more. 197') Mo" run• -6, LO;.i Wllilek•r. Ottrotl (1,., record lleld by 6 O'"-''· le" ov 8000 Powe•, 8etllmore, 1'701 Mo•I strikeout• -t Carmelo Men11ler, S.n Dlei>o (olcl rtocord, I, tn.red 9v R~ Ho'"•bv. '• Clllce90 (JllL), Int; Edwin "Ouke" Snlker, -----&ooa!Y.Q..-1.tA"-.--• Hllllno wtety In eH MIY* -urt 8evecaue, I S.n Dlei>o (tiff record held bv menv> aw.....,.. Fewe•I lrl'*'· bettl clubl -0, Detroit end San D'-00 Illes record h4lld bv 6 clubt. teal bv LOI Anoelet end New Yori!, 1m1 IMl'MINll f"ftdlllrle ,., ........ . Gibson turns .boos to cheers Spar y a s o eels vindica ted wf th with Series win D~IROll (Al')-Oc1roie ~luger Kirk Gibson and T iger Manaacr Sparky And l'$Otl both fc I vindi· cated. • 1t wa only a year 110 that Tiger Stadium fans were booina Gib on '\ beC'ause he wautrua&Jina both on and off the field. For Andenon. it swttt proof that his championship ason' m Cincin- nati were no fluke. Gibson, a swift right fielder wo plays with as mµch emot1on as talent. belted two homers and drove in fhe runs Sunday to help the T1iers win the World Scnes with an 8-4 victory over the San Diego Padres m the fifth game. • Gib!liOn silenced most of his cnttcs by hitting .282 with 27 homers and stcalina 20 bases as the Tigers won 104 games this season. He won over the rest of his critics with his World Series performance. ~t~sccondnomer. I crossed the plate and pushed my hands m the air," G ibson said. "When I went back out to nght field. peorle were stand- ing and chccnng. J fee very fortunate now. I'm JUSt lucky to have come so far'' "I nc\er felt the coaches IOI w crtdit they de ened for bu1ldin1 those teams. But, cvcrybod) knows that thi team was put together p cct by piece with a grnt deal or care. "Th~ players arc some of the rticest; people rvc ever been &'9 5-0eiat~-w1th. Tbe)"vc done every- thing we've ever asked and for that reason. they'IJ always be special to me" • The Ti~~ clawed their way throuah the World Scncs the same way they roared through the Ka n -with defense, power and pitchina. especially from the bullJ)cn. Lance Parrish atteted star reliever Rich Gossage with a homer on an ~l pitch in the seventh innina. "It gave us an extra run." Parrish said. "But everybody did something. We all deserve a lot of credit." Gibson also showed a flatt for the dramatic when he bet the manqcr that he would hita homer off Go gc an the ~1ghth innin"g. Anderson thought lhc Padres would aivc the slup.ger an intentional walk. "I put pressure on mysclflike that, then r say. 'Dammit Kirk, you'd beucr d'1.1t.:.....:· ~ "Wben the game's on the lane, I wa~t lo be at 1he plate. My concentration 1s at its peak when the game 1s out there to be won. ··1 don't care about hitting .350. I gave away so many at-bats this year when It d1dn•t mean anything:: Mo•I """ -2, WlllO. Hernenoer. OetrOlt (tin record Ml l>v ltoui. F~,, 0.klencl 1'72) a--w Moil thltd MMmell, one Club -3, Detroit, Tom 8roolltm, Mertv Culllo encl Oarre4 Eveni (lift r_.d bY 1M9 8rooktvn Ood9er1 end "42 Ntw Von. Vriees) TiCera Alan Trammell (left) and Aurelio Lopes leave the field with rictory cham- paane after Detroit won World Serlee with an 8 -' Yictory over San I>Jeao Sunday. While the celebration continued m the Detroit drcssin& room, Anderson sat 1n the quiet of his office and explained why this World Series victory was so s~1al. Darrell Evans. the free agent who gave Detroit stab1hty both in the clubhouse and on the field. caJled winning the championship a dream come true. Padre slugger Rahal continues turnaround Anderson said he never $Ol the credit he deserved for building the great Cincinnati teams he managed in the National Lcaaue during the 1970s. .. I'm so haP.PY -I wanted to know what 1t was hle," Evans said. "J was always asking players who won it how they felt and now J know. You can't descnbe 1t -you have to feel It. vents anger DETROIT (AP) -San Diego slugger Champ Summers. who en- !· -JOYcd his most productive years an a Detroit uniform, 1s angry with Padres' Manager Dick Wilhams for not playing him in Tiger Stadium during the World Sclies. T he Padres trailed the Tigers three games toonegoinamto Sunday's fifth game of the World Senes. and Summers. who hit 20 home runs an 1979 and 17 an 1980. had batted on!\ once -as a nmth-tnnmg p1nch-hitte'r against Jack Moms in Garm Four Pnor to the fifth game. Summers blasted W1lhams and vowing not to return to the Padres next season unless he had assurances he would play more "Ifs nd1culous:· lhe 36-)ear-old Summers said. "It JUSt doesn't make any sense to stick with those young luds -who arc not hitting -when you've got a proven h111er on the bench "lt·s espec1all} hard for me to Sil here 1n Tiger Stadium. This 1s m) park'" San Diego center fielder Bobb\ Brown was hitless 1n 13 at-bats dunng the first four iµtmes and left.fielder Carmelo Martinez was hitting onl) 077. While everyon e is wVta tching Andretti. Jl. -Sneva, h e capt ures fi rs t win of season PHOENIX (AP) -Bobb) Rahal's first victory of the season was almost lost an the ~rowmgdrama of the series point battle between Mano Andrett1 and Tom Sneva. But that's no surpnsc to Rahal, whose victory Sunday m the Stroh's 150 at Phoenix International Raceway as 1ust the latest step m a late-season turnaround that has been v1rtuall)'obscured b) the CART-PPG point chase. "Those guys are going for the big money and it's pretty easy to under- stand why everybody's watching them," said Rahal. who moved into third an the series standings and retains a mathematical shot at the Lendl beaten by Jarry_d SY ONEY. .\ustralta (AP) .\nders Jamd of Sweden gamed his first maJorsingles v1ctof} ofh1scareer. b} defeating Ivan Lendl ofCzechoslo- \ak1a. the world's No 2 pla)er. 6-3. 6-2. 6-4 an the final of the the Australian Indoor Tennis Cham- p1onsh1ps Sunda) The 23-year-old S"ede needed two hours and two minutes to dispose of Lend I Jan')d completely outplayed the C zcch. who seemed bewildered The power pla't Lendl had used so efTect1veh to blast his wav into the final with the loss of JUSI I l.i games dissolved as Jarryd moved him around the coun at will. "It 1s the best match l ha"e ever pla)ed," a Jubilant Jarryd said. JarT)d cQDU2)eted his biggest da) an v.orld tennis when he and coun· 111man Hans S1mmonson won the doubles title with a 6-4. 6-4 \. ICtory over dcfendin& champions Marie Edmondson of Australia and-Ameri- can Sherwood Stewart. .. It 1s the best match I have e\er played," said Jarryd. who earlier this )Car captured a $75.000 tournament at H1l versum. the Netherlands Jarryd. a member of Sweden's Davis (up squad completel) outplayed Lendl in the two-hour. two-minute match. Denver welcomes Packers tonight Ml.IC NOTICE PtB.IC NOTICE PtB.IC MOTtCE FtCTITIOUI 9U8'Nlll K·14202 K-141'0 NAME I TATIMENT NOTICE TO NOTICE OF The following per10n1 ere CREDtTO..I OF DEATH Of domo bullnest u Sandi• auL.K TRANIFIER .IOSEP!UtOWA.lU> Designs. 9 Monaco, N-· (S.C.. t101-t107 AND OF Nhh ON DENVER(APl-Coach Dan Reevesofthe Denver Broncos doesn't believe that his 5-1 team will be facing a l ·5 club tonight when the Green Bay Packers invade Mile H 1gh Stadium for a nat1onally-telcv1scd (Channel 7 at 6) National Football League game. .\nd he doesn't want his players behev1ng tt. either "When you ao up against a team ""1th a l ·5 record. there's alwa>s a tendenc} for a letdown." Reeves said 'I don·1 want our players to think this ts going to be an easy game. It won·t be Frankl), I'd much rather face a 5-1 team at this stage of the season "Green Bay 1s much better than Its rKord. They've got an explosive offense. and they're starting to play good football The> played tough against San Diego last week and had a chance to win. (Quanerback Dan) Fouts had a great game "1 think our "am knowc; we have to play hard to win. We're capable of being beaten C\.CI) week if we don't. We didn't pla} hard or 1ough agam!il < h1cago. and "e got blo""n out C27-0). I've remandC!d our pla)ers of that." The Broncos ""111 put a four-game winning 'ltreak and club-record nine-game home w1Mmg streak on the I~ inst the Packers. BALTZ ... QE .. ON IWT'H a TUTHIU WllTCUFF CHAPIL 427 E 17th SI Costa Mesa &.46-9371 'ACIAC YJEW •llORIAL 'AM c.m.tary •Mortuary Chapel • Crematory 3500 Peclflc View Oriv. Nftpor1 Bnch 54•·2700 McCOMlllCK MOWTUARY 1705 ug:: Canyon Laguna e. ch, Ca 92851 '494·9415 HA~LAWN• MT.OUVI Mortu.-y • c.m.tary C'rematory 1825 Giller Ave Cos1• MeM Mo.-5554 I Ill •• ... port Beacll. CA 92660 U.C.C.) TO AO•UTD Sandra M Schwartz, 9 Notic. 11 hereby given lo EITATE NO. A·121137 Mon.co. Newpor1 Beach, c:redllon of th• wlltlfn To • ,_., ~. CA 92660 named tran1lerOI'(•) that a c:reditora and contingent This bu1ine11 11 con· bulk trentfer II about to be credllort. Ind pel'lonl who ducted by an Individual m•de on penonal pr099f1Y may be othetWtN lnterMt.0 Sandra M Scttwartz her•nalt• delcrlbed In the 'Wiii or •tat• of Thia statement WU llled The name(•) and buliMM JOSEPH HOWARD with the County Clerk ol Or· eddr_. of the Intended A petlUon hU been filed ange County on Septembef tran1lerOl'(1) are GEORGE by PHYLLIS NELCH In the 18 1984 J CAMARA$ 0 v M 1~2 Supe. .... ';our1 of Orange ~ Newport BIVd Cotta Mesa. County requHllng lhll Published Orange Collt Callfom11 92826 PHYLLIS NELCH be IP· °''ly Pilot Seplemblt 2•. Thi loc.tlon In Caltfornla pc>lf'lled u pet'IOnal rep. October t, e, t5 1984 of 1111 c:hlef exea.iti.... olfloe rnentatlve to ldmln•afer the M· t•e or pr1nctpaJ buliMM office ntate ot the decedent ol lhe Intended tran1teror II The """'utlon requeell ..,.,. 11 above -,... All o\l\ef l>uslneaa namr,e authority to ldmlnlater the ---------and eddr .... uMd by the Miiia und« the lndepan-P\B.IC NOTICE Intended tranifaror within dent Administration of E1· thrM y41•re lut put IO far 1at81 Act. FICTfTlOUI lllll ... 11 81 known 10 the lntend«l A hearing on the palltlon NAME I TATE•NT tranifer" are oone wlH be held on NOVEMBER The loUowlng parlOl'll era The name(•) and bullnes.t 7, 1118-4, at 9.30 A.M In Dept doing bull""9 u addrni of the intended No 3 at 700 CIVIC Center M 0 Ill T E R E Y A S · translerM(a) are THOMAS Drive W811. Santa Ana CA SOCIATES 17•52 Irvine J SHOLSETH DI/ M. t542 92702 Boulevard Tustin C.lllornta N-p°'1 Blvd Colla Mesa IF YOU OBJECT to the 92680 CA 92628 granting of the 1>90llon. you w Rtehard Mtlll 17•52 That the property Plf11· should either appNf II the Irvine Boulevard Tuitln, nent hereto 11 deecrtbed In hearing and state you Obf1C· Calilornla 92680 general u all 1toc:t11n trede. tiOM 0t ftle written objle· Ron•ld P Elltoll. 17•52 flxtur.. equipment, and tiona With the court before ln11ne Boulevard Tu111n, good will of a certain the heerlng Your appear. C.lilorn•a 92880 vetinar11n pr1C11ca known u ance may bl 1n par10tt or by Tl\11 bu11nee1 '' c:on· BAL MESA VETERINARY your allomey :::~-::, by a geoeral part· ~2.~p~ :.:at~~~ IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR w Roctlard Miiis Meaa CA 9241241 • Of • oonllnQll'lt c:red•tor of Thia 1tatement wu hlttd rtte buaiMU Mme uMd the d«1111cs. you mull me wrtn 1111 County Clerk of Or· by the eaid traneflrcw(a) 11 your olalm with the c:OUl1 or anoe County on September Nld locatton la BAL MESA pr_,t It to the perlONI ti, 1984 VETERINARY HOSPITAL. r.-Ota!M ~tad by F21m1 Tnat Mk' bulk trenafer II the ~within four montN Published Ora{IOI Ooaat Intended 10 be coneum-from the date of first • Deily P11<>1 Septlmbaf 24 m.ied at the otfa ot BUA· tuance of letwrl u provtded Oc1obet 1. e. 15, 1934 ROW ESCROW COMPANY, In Section 100 Of the M· t•t 2070 H Tu111n Ave , Stinta Prot>et• Coda of California Ana. California on or ldt• Thi tirM for filing claaMa W1I Novembet 1 1914 nol expire ptlor 10 four 1---------Thia bull< ireniler la IUb-months frotn the dat~ of Iha P\B.IC NOTICE jlet to Celllornla Uniform hearing noticed •~ _ __:..=.;:;;.,;...;.,;,;;;..;.;.~--Comn'llrelal Coda Section YOU MAY EXA-..INE Iha '1C1TTIOUI ......... 8108. Ille kepi by the 00Ut1. II you N.-ITATEMINT The name and edd,_. of are 1 per10n ltt1.,..led In Thi following penon1 are the P•rton with whom the estate, you nwy ......,. doing bu11neu u · 8aqU011 clalma m9Y be fried la BUR· upon the ell«IUtor °' IMSmln· Sc:alt Modela, 1710 AOW ESCAOW COMPANY, lalrator, or ""°'1 the at• Monrovia. A-15, Co111 2070 N Tutttn A ... 8ente tOfney for Iha -..cutor or Mffl, CA 92127 Ana. CA ••tM1 Fencl the edmin*rltOf, Ind Ille with Charlel M. Munti.v. 2503 lat day for flinq daima by the c:oun w\111 prOOf of ..,. Tutttn, Newport a..et\, CA 1ny creditor lhall be Oc:t~ ~.a """an,..._ ltll• 92MO ber 31, 1914, wttiCtt it the lnO 11111 you dtelfl IC*=iM .Jeanett• M t'tul't~. 2503 bu9!nel1 «Sey lbefora ttll notleie Of tf1e ~Of an Jn. Tuattn, Newport IMi::n, CA 1tion c:tata llPld-~•orv n IPP!'llwnant ot t2180 fled aboft •a ...... Ot of the patl· Tn11 bullnHt It con-Otted. Ilona 0t ~ ft*'tioned dueled by huloand Ind IOlffe Qclotler •• , ... In hctlon ~ and ~ • - Cl'lanet M Hunt'-Y n.,_.. J, lft•l11t9' fheCeldornla Prob*Cooe T!lit 11atament tiled D.Y.M., Mt"4M TreH• W•th tl'le County Clift! Of Or· ,_.. K...,.... D. '*· A,_,.., ~ County on Sep1ambar 8nmw laat.. c ...... ._ .....,...._, m N. Twallft 11. 198• '8ftJ, 1171 N. T Aw· AW9 ...... -., Or .... CA ~ ............ M,C.... . ..., Publ!IMd °'11191 Coeat tn11, ,..,.., 4*1, Publittttd OrtnQa eo.tt Da tr P 101 Sept~bar 24, Pubfi9hed OrMg1 Oout 0.U, PUot Octoti« IS. II, October 1 I . I~. 191' Deity Piiot OCIOber 19 ttlA 22, 1 .... t,M47 M 117 MT-170 Keep an eye on local llilJ-811_, t in the F .. I title wuh two races remaining. The 31-year-<>ld dnver from Dub- lin, Ohio. inherited the lead from Andrett1 JUSt 16 laps from the end of the 150-lap event when Andretll and former teammate Gordon Johncock banged t<>ielher coming out of •ht fourth tum. "They called that a 'push button' team." Anderson said. "They said I inherited a team full of stars. I don't know how they could say that. but they did. "I knew when I signed with the Tigers we had a chance to win 1t-but lo do i1 the first year is a dream come true." Andretll had been running about eight seconds ahead of Rahal wben he slammed into Johncock while trymg to move past him on the outside as the two exited the comer. "He (Johncock) didn't know J was there:· said Andrett1, whose l 5-point Sllveyvllle talres Oak Tree feature lead over Sneva coming into the race ARCADIA (AP) -SftveWllle bas now been cut to four (143-139). toOk the IMd Immediately and ··1 eoufdn 't ~tt. A-guy'Ntlh-l'tts-c:adltcUO ~YletorY expenence cenamly should have &a~tcartMon iF.lkarkeHandJ. known that l was beside him through CllP on the turf at the Oak Tree the whole comer I was outs1de of him meetir'\Q et Santa Anita . and he shut the door on me. I had the ~ bY Chi1a McCarron llnd race won" carrying 117poundllnthe'1%-mrte Johncock. who suffered a small grlU teat, ~ mowd fn contusion on his right ankle when the front toOn ldter t:t'9 start Md held car slammed into the insjde concrete off wtydlll-.ger Pair of D-.oOel wall. said. "I had been runnina tbe The pec1 Mtter then ltM>Ok -Qff a same line around the entire racetrack ~ by Foecer'n at the mite all race long ... I didn't sec him and I pomt and had 1eno\1Qh l9ft 10 ftnfeh wouldn't normally look in my rear-comfortabty aheecf. ot the late- v1ew mirror in the middle of the t um ~ GOrdlan. to see if someone was following me." ., Gatol>el Sot, the 1982 Kentuct<y Andrellt's Lola was an the pits for Derby. fmilhed thk'<f, 3~ le~t five laps -all under the cautton flag baCk Of Gordian. . -as crewmen replaced the nose SJ~te. Clockec:t In 1:59 3/5, section and a steering mechanism. WM eent off as tM ~2 weger~ Pl8JC NOTICE I Nil.JC NOTIC[ I NI.IC fl>TJC( I NI.IC NOTICE I Ml.IC NOJIC( THE COUNTY OF ORANGE ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT AGENCY ANNOUNCES A PUBLIC HEARING South taguna Specific Plan/LCP PllOPOSAL Date: Tuesday October 30, 1984 Time: 1 :30 or soon thereafter Location: Planning Commaaion Hearing Room 1 O Civic Center Plaza. Santa Ana Allend .. nt No. l to the South Laaune Si>«ciflc Plan/Local Coe•t•l Pro1r•• (LCP) (Zone Chen&• 84·29P) to incorporate textual •nd .. P ch•n1•• to the Spaciflc Plen/LCP . The South Leauna Specific Plea/LCP l• • COtlpreheneive developmant plan adopted by th• Board of Supervl•ors Cor the unincorpor•ted co191unity of South Laauna. The Specific Plan/LCP v•• orl1ln•lly adopted by the Bo•rd of Supervl•or• on April 6, lt8). Thi• ... nd .. nt vill .. -. textual chena•• io the SpeclflG Plen/LCP baaed upon the conditional certification of the LCP by the C•lifornl• Coe•tal C01111i••lon end will aid in th• certification of the pl•o. Th••• chena•• con•l•t of policy lanau•a• che111e1 vtthln the Acaourcc, Trenaport•tlon, Ace••• end New Developt141nt COllponenta of the LCP/Land U•e Plen end reauletory ch•nae• to the LCP/l•pla ... ntl~JIAction• Proar••· Amend,..nt No. 3 el10 lnclud•• • Co1111Unlty Oe1t1n eub·co.po~ent end t..ndacape/Screet•c•pe Master Plan vhich ••t• autd•lln•• end criteria for develoi-ent which ••ph~l•• th• quelltl•• unique to South Laaun•. Other it••• Included in thl• a .. nd .. nt tnvotve1 revlaion co tht eKllttna beech eroeion policy toaether vtth the tddltlol' of pertlntnt r•auletory l•n1u•1•; rnhton of perahted uns vtthin the "PQP" Pui.Hc/Quui·Publlc • Dletrlct1 updete of houe1n& policy end 1•neral provl11on to reflect current County policy end other technlcel refl11 ... nt•. COttPLlANC! WlTit 111! CALlFOIUtlA tNVlaONM!lfTAL QUALITY ~CT Local Coastal Pro1r••• ere •t•tutorlly ox~pt frClfl C!QA r•qulrt .. nt• pur•utnt to Section 21080.9, Dlvteton ll of tht Pui.llc •••ourct• Code. tlfVITATtON All 1>«reon1 elth~r fevorln1 or oppo1in1 thi• propoeel •r• invtted to pr•••nt their vleva i.erore the Pl•nn1n1 C01111l1elon. lt 11 r•qu••t•d that eny Vfltt•n r••pon•• be •ubaltt•d LO th• Plann1111 Ca..leeton at leaat 14 hour• _..prior tn th~ hterln1 date. · ... ~-----, FOil 1URTH!l IMFORMATlON contact tt.llnd~ Scewaft In the Project Plennlna ~---~~South Lagune &peoHlo Plln/l.OCal Coa1t11 Program • , T lephone Service: fond y-f'.rid · 8:00 A.M .• 5:30 P.M. Bu 'ne Counter: Mond y·f rid )' s:oo ~· t..s ~oo P .• t. ERRORS: .. $2.17 per day thal'a AUL )OU pay for 311nn,.30~ In ihO DAILY Pl OT SERVICE DIRECT(ltY pq the IAVINE MIRROR and the HUNTING TON BEACHCOM EA fNWY WedMld yat no eiura ctiargel CAl.L TODAVfl lllfllLllS Your Dally Piiot Servtce Directory Aep,....,,tatlve U J·Ull ed. JOI ... ler I•• llre•l•r ..._ VatualaW lprtatata, Vaf. Aprtaat1, Apatanta, Val Aprtant1, Vaf. ltat1l1 tt Aa1tnttaeat1 3002 Btlt Wu!M SI BtJp Wut.. lllO ltlp Wu ... l!!J!I! ... ll •• lalJtu hlu• flOI C..tl .... 1714 Cotti .... 2714 .,.,.,. ltac• l71t lwt 2IOI SPIRITUAL READINGS &00011'111 OUll UIO llORnllY l /F 2 br Ht bl townehOUM air Eut•ld• 2BR 1 ba. Fem rmmt• for 38r fum Agvtc. I~ All r:r Ii 011ITIRT11111.J OOOll Min e yr• exp. F••t IC· OCEANFRONT: 48R 2b• Bachelor no kitchen MMI conditioning gar patio no s5sotmo 1atlltt + MC. llWNIT ORllT apt on bch nr Balboa oun•et ng 1 1 o. 10 Key by toueh. Call ChHr1 Rutaurant, curate typing, word pro• ~ w/nlct bcttyard. gd tum refrlg prlv entr bl peta 5850 545_.837 Upnar 4.plex 545•4280 Large 3 Bd 2'Aba, 2 car Pier. Prof or 1tudent prat. Camino, Real, San ci.m. Sandi, cat 842·7702 for H .p/hr Full/part time. otttlno. memorlte 11 or Ill pfl(~S2000/mo wtnter or part<lng 1385 876-0349 ,..¥ · encl o-r. pool, tenn11. S345 Incl utll• 873-5882 Lie d. 492· 7298 Interview ll)pt. Apply It 7191 Wimer Ablllty to write gram· 12 I •1"' .. 1.... -~---'-· ---"" •Id• 28 1 chlld ok e cloM to beach I 1200 Ave. (at Buch Blvd) H.B. m•tlctlly w/ 1Clnt apelllno. mo yr. v _.. """ Bi lka ... r · SC Pl11 .,... Lg 1 r · Fem wanted to •hr 3Br CM Lo1t I fo114 300f t•11l1, A11l1t, or call 752""8966 8"'orthand or • ....-wrll· 2683 Eldtn. apt E $575 Condo. pool, apa, MC TIL l 1IUllllT • Cl • ... .... 12'"" • ·---===== n ......... laatl la.a 2210 Ptala1al1 1707 21t+ 1400 dep 875-9291 S525/mo. 540-8759 " ap.. oee •0 """' vv Car.., opfortunlty In In· Co•motologlat A1111tant Ing req'd. Non~er. 18r w/nw carpet Yriy B 141· 1IOI ·~ ut111. ~&-0404 v111men advl1ory A 107 Mein It Balboe Penn Start lmmed. 11400+ to Beat yet family epot 2bt nr 60 A w/gar, car~a. wat« Sharp and cleln newer NEWPORT PENINSULA Fml n/amkr ahr new apt flnanclal planning field. 875•8412 atttt, review In 90 daYt plan w/gar 1400'1 SU5/mo 11t, l11t+ 11 pd. 138·4120, 1·5PM 1Br. d/w, gar. No pett. 2 & 38r. yrly or winter CdM prl br bl HOO mo FOUND ADS Ouallflcatlona: word pro-J<lnt bentfltl. klda/pet fin• 53M190 depo•lt. 873-9198 aftr 228 ·c· Ptaoentla 1640 1485, 831-55~ GaragH H60·UOO Suzann• ue-eeu ce11lng, numerical IP· COUNTER l'\elp, pert/tun l!XECUTIVI ROW fNC. Beet ~tty fM 5pm •3Br 28a. Nr SC PIG• STUNNING 2ar 28• Gar· Avall Now 87&-4912 Bkr 875-5148 ARE FREE ptltude, Interfacing time, day/night, ntxlbi. G901 MIO MN.Ir #211, ~VER RENTED BEFOREI C.rn a ••I K11 HD s A. Pool, apa, c.rport s w/cllenta. Salary+ lnc.n. ached. Apply In l*'Oft. N • w p o r t e •a c h $800 752 5822 den Apt w/PQOI · 595 •SPACIOUS APH• lrvlne btaut 2 tt~ 3Br tlve coml)tnHtlon. Stnd Ofangt Jullu1, 7'11 E. 752·7'491 for tmlMew 4 br fam rm 1 entry Yt bl 18M fi... trPlc. d1hwr. No Ptt• • 110 W. 11th 1 mtle from ocean w/J10. S350+ 'A utile. Al/I CaO: re.um• to. Th• Vieth Balboa BIVd, Balboa ~.!.9. ~"'. •c1~~!.'!!1 north of hwy. No dog•. 3 BED OOM 2 Bd w/gar. new cpt•. 942•23&1 now. Aft 8pm 731·8830 cK.,ort1mpaann. ~'t• ~1J.O Von DATAl..,.Y/O•T Finl ULllllPI. -... _ ,_ ' ... ..._... $100 780-9157 ••t•lcte CM 3 Id 1 ~ ba bl I ' d d H I 1111 a ..... "'" " D8 FUA 8 !D 179"2395 2 ad tp1ce arMt location da~/Wth, bft·lna, patlot. :i:.r:1u~. "!at~~ i:rd. YIHAILLll DllDOI L~,:~lu, 1 ;~0,~dr,,;1 :;: • N•wi>ort BMch, ca 12eeo 1rv1nt CPA 11rm hu QI*\· \~~n. cw 0:. :a2-~ l ,.rtant1 fual1,.. nr beach' 1HO/mo avall kid• olt, no Ptt• te95 838-4120 (;Ill 1·5PM M·F 1780-11200 1300 • utl 873•6228 or call 478-282~ Ing for data entry ct.k. --------. 10115 851.a7a7 850·7275 H7 Vlctor11·0· Agent 831-4980 Bookk .. plng knowttdge, PLMI NlllllU. --------rand new 21R 2ba, 1595/mo Waite to belehl 38,. 2b• Male prof 29.39 non·amkr Advertlalng 0.lfgn Com-10 key I typing eftlolen· ta. p/hr: Cheen AH· 2 Bdrm, 2 b1, beech. new, downtown t7th St ar... 2819 Sant• An1•1· new c:rpt• drpa paint' lhr lge Npt Hgt• hOme. Found 1m fe Pomeranlen, ~any, working out of cy. Salary range from teurent. etudtntt OK. la1MI pvt gateS1100. mo. 1700/mo Call 10 ... teo5/mo Yrl 1 .. : UT&/mo: Avanow842·3442011n1 very old, red brn. w .. 1. oma, near Newport 11250./rno. oom-full/part time. 7801 Wa.. HOI lnclda utll <213>82'* 18:44 979.9395 or 945.9417 WI IFfll I OllllOI 9&1o.5411 or 5'43·8155 Mature M/F wanted to lhr •rn & Ball. Ana. 527·3714 Center, N.B. nefd• ptl1· menaurate w/uper · War,,.,, H.I . ( It BMch _.._.,...__"""""""~ time H1l1tant. Ant. 833-0951 Blvd)°' call 782·8995 t;; etU<llO p;:tlll1y furn, *2Br 1'-"Ba Corolldo ut•ld• 2 Bd 1ba. frplc. Want a ltleetlon of gftat Waterfront/River Ave 3lir N.8 Ver11111.. condo Loet Blk ladle• wellet vie phon11. errand•. 1111 --·------ c:IOM to bch & bay.~. twnh ... 2 CllPOrtl. frplo pat 1 o , gar 17 O o Ill/Ing? We oan offer any· 2a. duplex w/patlo. Avall wlfem. Lori, 933-2000 Savon Brkhur1t/Ad1m1 typing. etc. f'leic. ached· lllTIL HOIT OPPIDI eatuatant mo Jrly 942·1334 or 1775 no~· 7'82·5822 759.1319 thing fr a emall 1Pt to a lrnmed, no pett. Year IM M/F 25•. n/1kr. Naat HB. REWARD 982·5780 u1e. ~-8 Hrt p/day. 2·4 Dtnlll lnturtnoe Martc.i· PIOllUYlll lllDI 87M1M MoNaah AMlty MARGUERITE NA OCEAN 4 Bd hae. If IOOklng In CM. required. 11400/mo+ r•pon 10 lhr hit In nlee LOST Gldn Retriever D•i• p/wk. Call Sttve Ing Seoretary lor New• Catering tralneee, 10-1:30 Ctrtal •11 i 11 DH BL. Mini View, 28r 1Ba for e.:.:~~ ~~~A :a7o6 No NB, 0( HB think of UI llrtt $1700 del)O 885-9053 area of C.M. 542-1110 AnawtLta..l•l. Sore on ~895 port halch Ont d<fOf M·Tl\._or f.12:30 on ,,.. ... -.111 .... ..-............ 1 qu1e1: oontldefete ... ten· petL..lSel Mm or; Call •or that chOI~ Ideal ltvlng >HQ 280 30. 10 And MIF ..mature. PCDf to Jhr back aide 950.7719 AllWUlll llAYIGI ~ttoa~ ve praot ce. day. Lori'• t<Jtchen,f.77 -·-F:'4=~· ~ em. t7oo mo. Mt-'15S btwn 9.4 541-9880 ~'LR~~~ g;~~=~ wll/few a gar. HOO/mo, 2Br 2be Prom. Pt. apt. Loet gray)blk mile Tebb;: nffd1 telephone oper· 1-4 f1°e.01~f'~~~iy ~t:; trance. 173.3474 *PATil &m* e-Stt5E 2aA i AA Large. r•arlylea11.H1·2000/ asoo-.dep Aef1. For UnlvPkerta.Wl'llteool· ator1varloutlhlf11,ae2 lllTAL 1o-12 or 2,..) C stalitll llH W/lnwalklngofthebch clean. quiet faun. Fae Daa1 Ptlat 2121 ev5,.9·3821Corln app1873·8988/852·8088 lar.A!WAA0.789·0318 3rdSt.Llg Bch DENTAL Aul1tant ~~~=-~~~"."." I U2BrSHO&Up carport from '475. hr26acondo,frJ>ic,gar. YEARLY 28r. Blook to Newport Cr"1 31r 2ba LOST SchOOI ring Sien• OLlll nHded. EICper nto. PlllTIJFIOINR• NEWPOAT VICLXdi •Immediate Occupancy 848-4649 vaulWd oell, I~ yard. cpl ocean 6 ~· te75/mo. townhouN. apa, ttnnt•. Coll•,• Vcty Doheny e11per. eutomotlve tltla Laguna Hiii• 770-4278 'ull Ohe\r~. ~It typing JG:r ~5~ 1~ ~-•Month1-~ .. on111~ E·tlde lu11 In 1 pine fore•t on~ non •mkr. no pett Call 8 ,9019 n·•mkr.1385, 542·3150 Bch 0/8. Gold w/blue clerk. Apply In person at DENTAL AECPTli!C =~ ,,~Jg ~: leybd eourt.t.' tenn, rec a lg 2br S835 1br1&30 Nu S7 · H1·2288 •too Prof .. ilonal female to ttone. Call Randy It CO.ti Meal Mlttubllhl. W/lnwrance =°'· baPpetrt.noe mutt~ room. Nr SC P\U. SOfry. WALi< TO BEACH. 1Br orpta fridge dlw gu/wtr llt. ltH ltt•• A lhart turnllhed hme nr 48t·1914 or H5·5748 2133 Harbor Blvd, C.M. 4 d,fyl 548-CM well organized.' General no pell. 557-0075 1BI. laundry fac ' encl pd enc pat1o crrrt no 26 16. d61 g• PoOI * * * Fathlon llltncl. 720-&733 LOST tiny wfllte F/POO<lle Atk ror Mr. Nelton. WI 1100-100 8ulldlng Contractor gar .. IVlll 11/1. 1785 mo. pe11 pref adult• 8 1·8741 cro.. 'to •ho:a/bch. Want to rent hOUN-<lOndo Prof'I rup N/tmkr M/F 1hr vlo Harbor View Home•, !XP'O TRANSMISSION •/WI 111 IT THI located In lrvlne. Contact ·~rt lfac• ZHt 198-4005 WMkend• 4 GOLF COURSE VIEW Nr lit/llt ... S300 eec dep. Cm/NB arH. 1700·1100. Lg NB hme pool/ten wlk N.B. REWARD 720..0512 MECHANICS NE!D!O. 't Lita (714) 133·1512 fS mFroni.aBr Eventno-.Me-1303 HerbOr Sho~. 28r 1Ba $850mo.498·1078aft8 ~~~· r:f:.~~p~.r~r. tobchl450•839·1722 P111011la 3011 :~~ 9~~:9~1~·~;,::ng IUOHIYIOOI FIT Stat• llcenMO Ind ltor'::!1~~'.;J~~~5· Cnt1 Mn1 2724 ~°Se~u/:~·=~3~1/:"0n' Very.nice 3 br 2 b• frplc: w t poflte stood l e . Share NP Shrt home w/ EIOORTl/IODELI · Set1C091erwppll ... eAM· CertP.Awantedlorbu•Y p1tto gar 1750 2 br frpl 751-2378 aft 8pm quiet m1ture M. 1300/mo BABYSITTER dll)ef'ldable Noon. Training program. family practice. 8 hrt Oay •VERSAILLES CONDO• 2Br 18• Older duplex l•ITHT II patio gar aeoo 980-3521 -113 utll 831-3388 Outc•ll ONLV 835-9199 for age 3 girl. 1 day/wk HlghHt commlulon1, M·F PINN Clll tor appt. 1Br w/lll amenlt,_ 11t 2238 Pactnc Ave. S550 57501,.,,, 2 Bd 1 '"'b• Bedroom w/klt prlvllgea. -for 4·8 hrs. Medlcal exper and bOnuNI. Call Mr 887'-2533 ..... clau decor & furniture Sle1n Mgmt 838-0772 Townho\.-e W•t ber, Bait. Harlttar 2742 Nr bu1llne & •hopping Shr 2 br 1•1e b1 dpl11 CdM l .. llfflll l ret• pref NB 7804351 Jam•• *213•87<>-5723* 2BA Wib• 810 Jotnn St frplc, w/d tikkp, yar11 2 Large atudio fuU kitc:h frpl centtr 982•5760 :~~c\~~d5~·~1;~.~~~~ -lor ltle 4012 lllYlmH 01111 -. il1·010I FILL/Tiii PH OCEANFRONT DELUX Adlte pref, tml pet ok car gar murphy bed POOi Jacuzzi Fum room nr SC Plz.a. Jae, 773·52~ Tr1ey Smell eat•bakery-d:ll. for for " yr old, Part/time. EARN to seoo weekly u a Oppp~~~!I ~!~~bl• Winter. Qule1. Call 845-8453 1780'8anta An• $550 714""875-8938 ~001 s275tmo Incl utll•. Info 131·3158 2:30-4pm tome Lit• h10leanlng, my Commercial ·Credit Ac· 675-4811 2BA 1'M>a. D/W, frplc, TSL ~~~~fENT lmat 2744 emale only. 558·1737 l1ata11 W11tH Ztot only NO brl<r• plHMI Wettcllffhom•. 8•8-8044 count Executive. No col· T:~e~,,. Ji?~1~~~E~ YEARL y Furnished blCh gar. no pet• S585/mo. dOli c cona 26 Prlv entr furnllhed, kit prlv Daughter 1 ;;n nd to rent ........ o,, 4014 1•1t1m1• leotlon• required. No partment In our dOOf to Blk to ocean 6 bay 634Hamllton543"-5478 Lltebrtte&alry1brcondo ourM o, r + n-•mkr/n-dnkr S300 + tmhMlnCdM,wlllcleln, __ • • n prevtou1 e>tpe<. ~.In. door newipa~r Ml" S350/mo. 650-9089 on stream & w1terfd. frpl den. lrpl, ~ar .. Kint view, utll 556..0637 paint • .ic:. Wiil P•Y up to PWT llOf PIT Nanny wanted to cert tern1tlonal oompany program. auarentHd 2 br 1·~ b• patio gar 125 micro. wlkln cloNt, gar· avl 1211. 950. 960-3521 Mater br/pvt ba. down· $600. mthly. 759-8133 I IRUl 110111 tor 2 children In lovely provtdea complete ••· hourly wage plut com· AJalla n t1, Oaf. Melody In No ptttl se<>o age S875mo 545-311S Twnh• Trtlrci< AVI 10-27 2 ltlirt. Utll/llnen• furn Fem 23 w/wn quJet dog Hot Cotta Meta locallon. Laguna 9ch home. Mutt tl11ance. Call ACC. (317) ml1llon. Houri: Dam to 2 1-•L.--I I • 21-846•2280 SHADY LUSH LNDSCPE br 2Yt bl, D-R, L·A w-fpl, Laguna. S325. 499.5550 wantt to •hr aptlhM. Exe.I traffic: l eyealght ~=~r •. r,.hr~ .::a.:::r· 839· 1712, ••t. 814 pm 0( 4pm to 9pm. Train· .._. I u uv 2br 1 'llbe townhae, trplc:. Bright. Top ar .... 1 Br w-w crpt, dbl gar. rec lacl Pref 1 peraon HB NB loc. Soon to be v1e1nt. DIOmYE IEGlllTlllY Ing It prol/lded. Potenll•I 1!75 Annual, charming petlo, gar. no pett 1625 ... $550 & ue. Pool, spa, bt>q Lsiooo molt831).0753 2 · 7 m 4 aci 1 Hotels llotela zw 811.CdM $350 S40-f 138 For ln!rernal FtUClonHcaS II •••ltll Aaalitant to pretldent. ~C:....~~ ... '300an 1~1t~~~. atudlo-wood paneling On depotlt, see at 278 Ouiet. No pets. ,..a •'" C m _.. S 11 1 t t fl .._.. "' -·•·-Corll (213) 277-2120 Avocado St 548-7510 MESA PINES 5,.9·2«7 tfUI IC BRANO NEW MOTEL 111111 ft r PAVILION REALTOR ma , .. "a e rm, can· -========:.:.::.==:.=====~~------==--1 29r 288. Walk to beh, ocn Room rate on ule. + ss Int Z9lZ ell-1120 s:.,:,:~ ·~n~er tog~f~ =~~~:n'J°no~:n~i!~ 957·2381ext.1204 vu. srky1l~hte. frplc, "!'d & off w/ad. 'h day rate a\11. Ga~ 1Ml x 30. 115. RETAAY tlonal lklll1.' word pro-HllllAL IFFIDE ~a 4~.::gg·:!' 3909 2544 Newport Blvd. C.M. Larger $110. Storage. lavtlt•,.t • ceulng & exoellent •klll• Experienced In Acct• Rec. s. 9-650-2988 Htb Bch 848-9501 O~rtullltl 4011 llPlllAL UYllll required. Newport Beach Payeb .. & Payroll, type 'HOROSCOPE SYDNEY 0MARR very sml studio. crOH SI lo ulf!u•• 11racH Olli I t l 2914 o#fcE CLEANING llSIOllTIDI office. Pie ... Wtd ,.. 45.50 wpm. Non·tmoker. bch. $300 Inc utl yrly 9 IU 15" Cl ID I I Earn SSOO to 15 000/mo tume & .. lary hlllOfY to: Cotti M... 845-4489 ,_ - .. 94-6087 avail 11/1 IDTOR Ill 12a1 .. d 16e2 si.Ft. In Detail• • 9&3--7428 OHILIOAll WHllll Turner Development •nrcrt ltac~ 2761 Wkly rental• S135 & up. f;~o:-·~~ ~k~ 85~~9~~ Helt w..... 51 ForChrlatlarl IChool 18835 =~~~~1a:t:2~ H&:ai8r?:!~~,ot: :=: 18, 1!2g dlt!Wahr, frlg Color TV, frM coffee, · _ Brookhurat FV 982·3312 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Incl. No pet• Call btwn heated pool. a at•~· 10, 1738 Anaheim, C.M. 600 lOOOllTlll Chrhbeas ••• , ...... 9am .. pm dally 545·48S5 ocean. Kltcoctt • evHalf. aq ft grd fir ofc/ahop/Mh GUiii FIT PfT. ..ult ha--·•n· 985 N, Ill wy. rm pkg S295. 673·2854 "" •• .. Laguna Beath, 494.5294 · -1 cert lnterut In cooking. -----:-::::-:-:=~-2 room office aulte 450 sq The Dally ~lot I• ... k ng 1 Kitchen Thing• 813-3444 IUWI llTIL ft Newly decorated, air bright, 9deptndable. 976..0297 or 831·8778 Taesday,October Ii Wkly rentelt now avall. conditioned, parking, motlvated lndl\lldualtoflll,_-,... _____ _ AR1ES (March 21-April 19) Transaction 1scompleJed.secunty1s 51281Wk&up.2274 New-garden. PCH locatton In a full time c:terlcal po1-OOOUllLllJlYHI PARK NEWPORT AP&RTMUTS enhanced and you'll be commended for :,.our "research ,. Focus on IN NEWPORT BEACH port Blvd.C.M 84e·7445 Corona del Mar Call lllon In • tx.11y offl~. Full/part time. We train. details. intricacies. ab1ltt~ to perceive potential. You'll learn more A great plaoe 10 uve on the 873-4120 or 873·,.128 Muet be accurate w th Student• ok. ChM<• A ... about propeny value. safety and necessity for basic _re_ visions. _ Upper Bey Private SU I SUI LODIE 1'•NNERY VILLAGE• flguru. EKperlence taurant. apply al 7891 2 I club110\JAT & nntt.. .,...,..~,.. __ ....., ,.. ~referred but wlll t~aln. Wal~,8-.... ~--BttaC'l'H TAURUS (April 20-Ma" 0); Accent on versat1 1t". communica-" ....... .,.,. ........... -~· ·~ re 1fi1-na1nn oull•"'i 1•--t .... ,, "'•c ; ; 1paa, 8 tennt1 court1, 1 $120 Wk agl no depoalt • um itc:e ""'' ,,.. " • Blvd.) btwn 3-6pm M·F or tion. possible short trip. Scenano highlights ad~ed popularll). social pools, c:loM to t>ullneH. 3028 W•t'coast Hwy 1250 •q It l 750 sq It 1 age. Saltry open. Apply ca11752•8955 activities and contacts with ltvely. alert 1nd1v1duals. Member of oc Airport FHhlon per aq ft. 875"'4808 In person to the Dally -------- opposite sex sing.s your pra1scs and proves to be loyal ally. Island. convenient ahOPI V1e1tloa Piiot, Monday thru Frida~ 0001 GEMINJ (May 21-June 2q): Accent on pers~nal pos~ss1ons. on eight. IHtlll 2907 AIRPORT AIU 8·11AM or 2·4PM, 33 Saucier In private club In MOTOR ROUT ES Motor routes available in Newport Beach & Corona ~el Mar. Must be 18 yeart old and hP~pendable car. Earn 8600-700 per month. Call 10 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. 642-4333 C-"t1ve hobbies. special collecuons and chance _to increase income.. ---""'!!'"!'!"!~~--150 l<l f1 prof ore w. Bey St., Cotti M•~· Corona dtl Mar. Rick ,.... ** l .Y PUI ** /wndw view. 2ae1 C•m· Ca Lamb 873-3515 Roman~isalw~atu~dandthe~~llbean1mponantdome~1c S~o~1&2BdmA~~-~q ~al~ble a~oe• put~•2111~n~Cor-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ adjust.ment You'll receive 11n which represents genuine token of ment• & Townhou111 from ocean. 538-83 18 ntr campu• & Von Kl'lar· affection. from 1720 (Aak abot.lt man, lnCI Aecept, An• CANCER (June 21-July 22): You arc now able to d1tTer~nt1atc turnlttled apta. pomplete 1t1la tt 1vc, Cont Am A CoffM. between fact and illluf1on. You pin arcater und~tand1_na of ~!~~v.r1~r;:'~~~-:~i l~art 2tot ,_s.oo __ . P_h_:_7_52_·_24M __ _ individual who had been sn "hsdina." Focus on conscience. um1ng. term or 1onger1. on Jam. 16r In §8( unturn h .. w/ UIOITIVI .. ml individuality and bu1c insuncts. Pisces plays s11nifican1 role. borM A.d •t San Joaquin lld• C.M. frpl, bit-Ina, 1 MO ,REE F!ENT LEO (July 23-Au,. 22): What had been nebu10U$ becomes viable Hiii• Ad. gar 1250•'..t '45-0809 Lux ofo nr OC Airport All Fmanctal picture is brt&ht. romance ss "senous." Past investment pays 144· 1100 N.B roommate needed amanltlu, 11.3!/aq ft. d1v1dends and you'll be happier. more secure as result. Cancer. lmmed tor epaclou• hN 933-t17o Jody Capricorn natives play oumandin& roles. . . on water 1525 ad·1807 UIOITIYI lllTll VIRGO (Aua. 23-SepL 22): Reach for the bran nna! Potenual _1s 28r 1Ba. Stapa to bch. Beaut 2 11ory a or Condo Newport Ctnter f\Jll ..,. tremendous and you cmerac a "bta winner •• Advance 111nd1ca1cd sn 17~o~EA~ J6i1:50 ~1~ J30·77~~4:;au vice 544.eeoote7~ business or career -wish also come~ true 1n romance depanmcnt. m Airport area. From eso to Aries. Libra natives fi!ure m cxc1una scenano. 2 BA BY BEACH redeo BkBayhm,matrbdr&bth, 3300 er. New omce bldg, I• h",.hJ ah pltlO g~t all ufl pd NP lvng rm, pool, Jao. ready for lmmed OC• UBRA (Sept. 3--0cl 22): Stress snd1v1dua aty. 1.,. 1.,.t HOO 873.6429 UOOmo Shell• "2·l&A2 CtJpeney. 11.25 /af grou. independence and display pioneerina spint Focu1 on produc~1on, 2ar. refrlg. dl.nw .. her, CdM 38d 2ba houH Broker coop creatJviry and ability to ao to hean of matters. What seemed lost wtlt be atove Incl te25/rno No =ocean view, frplo. 791·59et A & H lnYat ~ ~ovcrcd. Leo native could open door to sttmutaun1 relatio~shiP,. pe11. C111 &•5-4855 /mo 75g..oaoe Shat• detu11 NB 84.llte. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov 21 ): You'll rcp1n sense of d1rcct1on, l300/mo bacnelor unit CdM HouM M/F ttlr with Large office, non-amolcer . communication w•ll ~ received from one who has embarked upoa a ICroN from be ch CJood Prof'I lml• Prlv rm gar S3211mo 945-3700 Iona journey. Trust intu1t1on. make amends to family mcm~r for 1r,:~t>oe perk. 873·«04 ~660 ;caM e11uu1t .. AC, ampl recent djsputc. You could be mv•tcd to aounnet dinner. • CdM atewarct.N 111, bch prkg, lrom 1225. 2855 E AOl'M' AR.lU (Nov. 22-0cc. 11 ): What tqins as • frivolous TIL lllUUlm ,, .. lum 2br 1ba 1rp1 gw Coaat Hwy.17f-e800 R entttprise will become serious, producuvc Check source mattria.I, ~ii Ut· 1101 nttmk Pro't Quiet rm1 • 11, ••I• 1 deep for inform1t1on, team mort about ~sources of others. Gem1n1 Acrou from 8elch New-S350 1111 Pat ~~157 and another Sa&iuarius play paramount roles. i>ort ShOt" Bach unit. Eafty 80., mare to il'lr aaR * l.Y Hiii * CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan 19): learn rules before brtaktn& them. pool. end gar, ltundry. fU1n hme 1n HI wtprlv scacea avallable acr0te Restrictions will bt rcmo"ed, but some limitations wtll remain. Know S478 mo yrty 640·5'01 btth, kitch prlv, pool, rom °"1n ~ 18 at. prcparo 1ccord10&1y and deal ~i1h Scorpio 1nd1v1dual who .. knows IUOll U Y 'Mlt11a 1225 84&-3770 A11ewaetanl1 the ropes:· Pannerslup proposal is part of !t<'cnano. · 28" 2ba. upeta1r1 apt ot F/Prof over 25 n·tmk 2br L£TS AQlJARJlJS(Jan. 20.Ftb. 18):; Favorable ncwJ rccc1v~d from one b1yfront hOm4I All ut111 2Da. ND apt '350•ul.ll SCRAM· who ibares rour lxisic conc:trns. tnttrc u Focus on ChlnJC. travtl, Incl. Ttnnl• avail. e31·8'418/!t3M77l/D vanety. ab1hty to 1et JOb done sn efficient manner. Individual who USO/mo, yrly 8764889 ''"' lhr 4 br EMtbluN ANSWERS rtlies upOn )our judimcnt will .. ttll the world" about your pec11l 8lQ Hr 1 o Ou ir w1g1r. Condo w/3 f1ma1... Phytlc·'lhr" abil11its. &lOe ti«e SIOOlmo '7~·9212 Of 720·1321 Balllt· Dupi• ( vou'l~lbc rth!~::· o1r9:~;c~cci~~ PJ~~r: r,:~~~~!t·~~~~~J l~~t:rl -:-(~Yr_tv-..'.,.."'-t!':':lll:--I HW3~~7:-7~ F;:', ~ lhPr~~ 2~~ W0tcS~~o\1J:" ~II~ It 0 VOU ftcm1.. 11r. music. cntenainmcnl and romance. Keep rcsotulaon 14 5+ l/2 utll ~ 111 .tlat YG'I thlM. don't Con-m1 .. 1 "~wcet tooth:' (213)5•0·0143, wkdy• eaptca to f!Hr only "'" '' '" (7,,4>7 &18 WHAT)'OuUKfJ - • District Mana9er1 If y~ ~joy work1n9 ·with ,;;;·.;;. & glrlt and dttk lobt o,. not for >'°"• conalder o corMr In the MWtpaper clrtulo- tlon Held. 1111• fl o unique potltion with dolly chollengea & rwworda. Our opetllnet ore lmmtdiott. Apptlconts mud ho..,. o YOl'I, ltotlon"!f090" or ftu(k. We offer an •11c•lltnt MllOry with a bonvt pion ond gcu ollowonce. We ho.... on e11cel'-'t benefit pion ttiot ndudft hoJPI· tolla.atlon lnwronce, liberal vocotion ond ho lid~. CondldGtfl m11st hove o dell,. to be IUC<:eHful oftd be wlllin9 to WO~ hord. tr you +hlmc you hove "'-qualltlCCl'llont, pleote opply In J*ton to1 Mofldoy 1hrv kldoy 9· 11 om or 2-4 pm .. 330 W. Bay Costa Mesa, CA 92626 l We are a 39 year old firm wholly owned and personally dperated by it's founder serving the Commercial Industrial, Apartment and Land Market. We are not a franchise branch or division controlled by others. On the spot management decisions. Open door management. No waiting for an appointment. Opening for 2 Commercial-Indus- trial people with ability who want the freedom to work any territory or type of property. No farm system. Please call for an interview appoint- ment. AGES 11-14 EARN lJt TO $75.00 PER WEIK Wt now "'" IS ~ lot ~ "Ctr buMrS to scvrt ''*' for The Or-.e ColSt Olllr Pilot ()I( crews sUft at 3 JO p 111 Pd ,wor• 11111' I JO p 111 ... w.ys. On Sat11tdly. we iwon • ftw lllOfe llollrs Yoo Ml"'" •ant~ • and P'llll. Mone witll elf 111 .. JOllf own lllOIWJ , theft 11 no clttl~ or colecboll 111wolftd H you are 111tttnted, pit~ un Mt hrt MO COO£ (714) 548-7058 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE AClllOll I Enormous 5 Stigma 8 Enthusiasm 14 Skllllul 15 EnJOy 16 Dismay var 11 Dovtno bird 18 .Athena 11 Pottery chip 20 Roman dlte 21 0pen1no1 23 Smelter lo0d5 24 Want.O 26Gem 28 Posse111\1e 29 enveloped 33 UlyssesS 36 . .Payoot 37 Chemleal sullh1 311 Yule fuel 39 Is Mnltenl 55 Dye 57 Seed coat 58 Coated can- vases colloq 60 Allan country var 111 ¢razy 11ano 82 ei.vate 83 H1deou1 one 64 Lyon ... sons 85 Fi.el' -Post 88Won by I - 117NeplleM ..,..ghll var DOWN I Co041nl 2 Home 3 Blackthorns •sir-• 5 Razor 6 a.came ashen 1 S.king unit PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED 45 Synagogue •O Pampas weapon 4 1 Lincoln I Otsh d rien 9 Neon. IOf one 10 Suppot1 11 Shldowt>01t 12 Conll•M< 30 Benoldl 31 She Fr 32 Expens1..,. 33 Ple&Md 3• Garment 35 Lite11m. H Ch0tee 46 Canuck's any 48 Truth dlllorten 49 WrathlUI 42 Mosa•e units •3 Eel11r maker 4 .. F1ted •60.We 47 "ll~".eg •8 T ouchdo.wn 5.2 Hold back 2 .. ¥WOtght 13 Auto ptonMr 22 Aeachel 011w 25 OuU routine 2 7 Say tuntier 29 ~ove rapidly • 7 39 Tfl8end 40 Wound CO\'efS 42 Tours v.Ofd 438ig - • 50 A lrican land 51 Tumbler 52 Be Y9•ed 53Con~·~ S4 Of 1n epoch 5e JUOfl'.S ship 59 Ere ptOblem 10 1 t 12 13 SlUS IO< Tu•eclO shop 6-48-8891 SCTIY /IECEPT. Good comm. skllla. sharp office 89pearanee, lite phOne & type, WOl'd pro- ee ss Ing nee (7 UI 250-324 1 for Andrew WlllJ USED CARS & TRUCKS COME IN OR CAlL FOR FIEE UPUfSll Cormlef-OeL1llo • OHYtoln 182l1 BEACH BLVD HUNTINGTON BEACH IAl-IOll; .. 1·1331 WIW&ITYllR CLWISOCU! See Ronald Dae. THEODORE ROBINS FORD lOt'>O HAllOI llVO COSTA Ml SA 642 0010 • WEC&IE ...... Bill YATES C7 I VW-PORSCHE 8lJ.48QQ4~J ·~·I ( \1)11 .1 \( ·u Supra tOK ml lOA0£0! snrt ac tJtac:ik. ~twm 1s1.oua '11 11111 1111.11" a.w-:o2a2 eYes lt!v. *' ..... Full Powe«' Vtlbwa1ta 91'13 b amp; V&O m m&ny xtru nds ~ MW 1 $800 ObO 754-1497 '70 VW BUG Xlnt cones recem eng, good! '2200 obo St&-1~S7 'IO 2IOZX 2 ~ 2' ~ 1 =7.,...1 '""W/,.,.,..,Sqi,,,__w_re_becfl ___ IO_mi dean. loeoed, 'lolw ml. I o.n s 10.500 673-3&00 very good cones s 1600 751·'617 • I • • "' ·1• • 12.runs ••II. 1.000 mo on new eng S 1690 Ct!ll be1 9·• 675-374&, msg IH ~ l.._,I ... 9".., _,. •ACJll 714-833-1300 tl23 '78 RABBIT 4 spMCI Runs great• amlfm ca91 $2200 6-40-7118 '78 Fial X 1§, Si.000 mi. ':....;:========:: silver. e•c.I cond Cell 6'5-5349 .,, s 30pm 79 Fiitt 12• Spyder eon" at. pwr v.1ndows ac, amlfrn eas stereo ,.., m. 651-1370 851-1 <00 Ht tU6 Ult tor Jona ....... 9125 'llllllAlCClll $139/mo • 1x $486CSOWn C E Commeretal teue ALL-SAVERS LEASING (7141 432-1977 • IYIWIH. 'II lit• SPIC Hmn 11,000 mo 1111.-new, lealh uphot cruise cont, moon· root m~ v.flls Pwf win· dows Honda s No 1 radio cass w/4 spt.rs & blhn bOosfttr etc' etc• S 11 700 To 'flt' call 673·5099 HERi FRIEDUIDER *HONDA* HAS HONDA CARS W•tm<nste• Between 22 .\ 405 F'W) Japar 9129 ·54 XJ6 v.Me * mu•t>«ry !eatn.r 1n1 3.800 m1 S29 500 6'0-5363 NtrtHH ltaa 1145 '72 z;QC a CtlSSIC Low mo totally o~f\11111ed ""' MW '760·1S87 80 2400 ark bfoWfl/t'n int. I O'lll'!lf Ir.lot CQnO $15,500 pp ~10., .. ,, t# 500 Sl SIOMI R4ld w creme tttv Ah options 34'K mlles S34 000 645-31011 "45 4 1$9 OVER 160 Pr 0wnecs M~es To CllOOSf! ff om Jll Sllll•S I NITS 1001 Oua t Su t Nevll>Of1 Beech IU·HOO TOP ns PllD F'<w~ M: Ben? l l&&TlClSI 100 Pr1C Pa~ ro1 R y 111Ulfll ... t1 •ial . EICEIES MIKE lcll£0A'S SOUTH cou1n MOTORS ® lllt UlllT COIVEITIILE Wolfsburg Ed1tton •lrno t,;[l S2:>6 7• • ta• P4l' mo ·op' tl !>;;>O &t Ct.PS 1!1 ''Xi l7$00 C AJ' ~.JC'l'Ttl" Auldv• S!»eOO n ® 1 llt SCllOCCI 11• CUI l&Cll 411 "'°CE l • S? ••• p.-"'° TOP S •2 019 :-0 CAP St?OOO ~S~T Oti ® lllt VllllOI IL tomoCCl • Uf'tll • 1a• pew 11'0 T09 I1• 6.2tl CAP &1' 1195 ';>QQQ~· IOI'! ~SSl.IUIC m 11141 nLSl "'° CE'l • l: ,, • t .. per "'° OP.,,, 040 CAP 111 MlO S)!Xl CAP ·~ion a U iii" (10Gf893J $1111 *** '11 llYILU 10lrner .,.., (tT3MPGl Sltft ...... '11 Cllfl hYIW •'lLEI'• lbw· ma. (t99WZW) ... *** .. 2D.llCl•E F\1111 Powel' (1EWF713) 111,111 .... tUSOIUI lo M FUii PoweJ l71SZS 112• ••• '11Smw Ltht. Seel A,..170727 'lJ!!' - '11 Elll c•IPE Sleteo C... Wire Whl Co~eta( IOFH733) 11a.111 ....... '13 SElll l1YILU nnltt 9313 '67 El Camino Aestor•6' Gd tnl $900obo 675-5855 70 CA.MARO 350 HP B1ackf"'M• gd eond $1IOO/obo ~198 '70 Camero 6 ~. runs atnt rebUllt motOf $ 1200 650-•364 Of $•6-7869 1 71 IMPALA VI good tlr• runs good tows 5000 lb tr a tier $925...641-1982 Manog Tt>I f6 Chr $200 9 drw dreSSf $76 9'2-7517 _j_ i ~ 1Je9a wa¢n S700obo 67J-.3'162 "82 S1Ct1>1C11up new~ spd .. Imm.cl $ol950 ~1-5067 COtolMEll CHEVROLET X.....'-r 1 , • • • ''"''''f '' S40-I 200 tlll ;a c.p.-1 ; 1 K ONO ml I S 7 50 Call I.. •u,. 650-7670 Of 850·5&55 78 Fairmont •uto w . I pwr l s, P•rib , amltm S1&50 ob<> 5S9-I•~ '81 E.c0f1 Wegn • epd e new M\111 Miel S2t00 ~1-50678~-- Lillftla .. BUENA PARK 'ANAHEIM GARDEN GROVE 22 FRWV ...J e ~ er CD SANTA ANA HUNTINGTON BEACH EDINGER 0 · CHICK IVERSON Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi "' E. hast aw,., • .,.,. ltaoll 11...- Hlghest Quality Sales & Service -0 NABERS CADILLAC ~ 210011111111 ILYI., COSTA IEU (114) 140-1100 (213) lll-1211 • Best Prices • Convenient Location • Great Location • Super Service • Courteous & Knowledgeable Sales People __ EQUNIAlN VALLEY WARNER 8 THEODORE ROBINS FORD U.S.A. 's # 1 Thunderbird RetaJI Dealer Modern Sates, Service, Parts, Body, Pamt & Tire Oepts. Compebbve Rates On Lease & Daily Rentals '20IO ...... , .,, ............ 142-0010 "M0-1211 0 SOUTH COUNTY VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU 18711 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach (714) 842-2000 SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE Ofqe Countys Larpst Yolkswactn/lsllzu De* We Wll Not 1141 Undersold PARlS DEPARTMENT OP£N SATURDAY m 0 RAY FLADEBOE HONDA G RAY FLADEBOE # 1 I 11t1 C.1ter Ir., lnl11 In The Irvine Auto Center 830-7800 Complete Sales, Service & Leasing G ORANGE COAST JEEP /RENAULT # 1 11 TH Wnt For l1w lHP Salli For I Y1ars ~ OD1n2e• sALEs . coa""St. sERv1cE ;;;. """-•lvo • LEASING ' CotlA MHA • ACCESSORIES DEPT 549-8023 • HOUSE OF IMPORTS INC. * LONG TUM LliSES * COMmlTIVI PURCHASE PllCES , • HUGI INVENTORY IT\ dial MERCEDES IJ:_\ \Cl 213n14 837-2333 'Cl Next to Santa Ana Fwy (5) on Manchester /Beach Blvd. ' - . VOLKSWAGEN #20 a.te O..ter Ir., lnl11 In The Irvine Auto Center 830-7300 Orantt Countys ~wtst Volkswagen Ota/er Comp/f te Salts, Strvtee & LeaSJnt :~ 0 STERLING R W SAL.ES -SUYIC£ -tl'.ASllC -PAITS Overseas Delivery Specialists PARTS DEPAJltTMENT OPEN IATURDAY MORNINGS BMW -ROLLS ROYCE 1540 Jamboree Rd. Newport Beach 640-8444 . , ' 91 FWY. 22 FRWY • LAGUNA HILLS MISSION ~IEJOj W<Efl """'°"' ~ SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO 8 CONNELL CHEVROLET 0 BAUER MOTORS 1111 ...... , .,, • ., ......... Over 23 Years Serving Orange County Sales • Service • leastng 541-12H $,.ml P.U lilt 541-MM MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM -9:00 PM SATURDAY 8:30 AM -S:OO PM SUNDAY 10:00 AM -5:00 PM 8 STADIUM PONTIAC Y. We're New -We're ON/Ing ' Acroaa from the Bia A on K•teta. Ju•t WHt of the (57) Orenge FrMwer Sales • Service • Parts • Body Shop on Premises 1111111• 2221 E. latella 311-1111 BILL YATES YILllWllEI • NllOIE • PIREIT SALES• LEASING• PARTS• SERVICE 11111Yallele14,IM"'-laflstr•• aa-a 11 111-4111 BUICK -JAGUAR -ISUZU ~· AutomotM Needa SALE$ • SERVICE • LEAStNG Fine Selection of Quellty U..S Vehk:lee # 1 BUICK DEALER IN O~NGE COUNTY 2125 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 171-2500 0 RAY FLADEBOE • UlllLI ••Y ~&1111 IUD #11 ......... , ....... •• I kl :n" Irvine Auto Center "1l 830-7000 8 CREVJER--BMW SALES • SERVICE • I.EASING ''Where Professional Attitude Prevails'' lpeclelb.lng In Europeen D....,. lu1l1nt l1l1atloft of New end~ pnpared u..i IMW'a alWayt In atock. · 835-3171 20I W. 1•t St., S.nte Ana Comer of Broadway & 1at St. CIOMd SUndaya e UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE OJIM SLEMONS IMPORTS 1J01 OfMll •t. -"'"1 CM LOClltJon 1001 QWJll •t. -,. ... OhWon HONDA ; 2880 Harbor Blvd. Coat• Meu 540-0713 3 Blocks So. of 405 Fwy. © World'• Largeat Selection of 0 M•Cfk1• 8iriZ ~ 133-9300 ........ , •. s... . ..., .. . .. Class1f1ed advertising is your best choice for help in selling the items you no longer need. It's quick and inexpensive. and the Pilot reaches Potential bu~rs who live in this area. Call today. I r D1ilyPHat classified ads phone 642·5678 - .. ... • ~ ...... ... ... ...... .. ' c11m 1111111 - - MONl)AY (I( T«HiiH 1'> 1118-1 ORANG E.COUNTY L A llfOt-<NIA 2'1 Ct:NT'. Bois~ hearing ·Site it.ks reSidents Huntington Harbour residents dismayed that marsh decision to be heard north of SF · crucial hearina and expected action by the state Coa tal Conservancy. Harbour re idcnt John Tillotson, irked becau~1he present plan doesn't include a navigable cut between Huntington Harbour and the Bolsa Chica waterways, called the selection of the Bodega Ba> ite for the hearings "a little boondoule .. perpetrated b) officials allegedly opting for the pleasant atmosphere of Bodega Ba) that's situated on a beautiful trctch o( the nonhern coast. about two hours bv car from San Francisco, .. You't·an't get there from here ... he uid. "Something this important \hould be held in the southern pan of based on the 51,&Dtfi ntt of the assue. And John Z1n1ner. a con ult.ant for the conser~ancy on the Bol OtiC'I development, $aid he too was ur- P"tnUo out of state, but Zintncr ad the agenda 1nduded a loan lo state com mercial fis:hamal who uffered an ··economic dalUlet" )ast )ear. By ROBERT BARKER Of the D.-Y ..... Ila# Hunt1Q.JtOn Harbour residents and local QffiCJals are upset that one of the most important hearings in the Iona controversy over development of the Union leaders In Anaheim are urging Disneyland strikers to accept a new contract offer./ A3 Coast children tettread- ers what they think of school so far./ A3 California There's a baby boomlet In California, and the mom's are older .I AS Starting today with T raf- fle Safety Week, the Dally Pilot will publish a traffic safety quiz each Monday to test drivers' knowl- edge of the road./82 Nation Mondale vows tougher questions; Reagan will use less statistics in next debate-./ A4 Auto workers reach ac- cord over contracts at Ford, GMC./AS World U.S. stops short of issu- ing travelers' warning of Mexican highway ban- dlts. / A4 A 'black alert' has been Issued in Britain following bombing./ AS Sports Edison High'sChargers have taken over the No. 1 spot In the Daily Piiot's Orange County prep foot- ball ranklngs./C1 The Detroit Tigers are baseball's kingpins fol- lowing their home sweep to take the Serles in five games./C1 EdcDlckerson and Jeff Kemp led the way as the· Rams captured a 28-10 NFL decision at New Or- leans./C1 ,. Entertainment Those "words from our sponsor" are a sore spot In televised sports./83 Business Americans' rate of Install- ment debt slowed to $6 bllllon In August./85 INDEX Bridge Bulletln Boarts Business California News Cfaulfled Comics Crouword Death Notlc FNturM Horoscope Ann Lander• Mutual Funds Naclonal News Opinion Pubhc Notlcea Sports Tele-Mlon Theat«a w .. ther World N.ws • 84 A3 B5 A4 C5-7 B4 C7 C4 61-2 06 92 8 5 A4 AS C• C1~ 92 B3 A2 A4 Bolsa Chica marshlands is scheduled Thursda)' in Bode-ga Bay nonh of San Francisco; about 10 hours away in travel time by car. • Local residents and officials are all but cut off from testifying at the Cooling her heels A cool mountain atream la just the place to apend a hot day, and Arlene Kozimbo, 19, of Newport Beach found one cloae to home. the state,·· he said. • Florence Webb. a senior planner for the city of Huntington Beach. also said she was surprised by the dec1 ion to schedule the meeting in the n~h It'• in Coeta Mesa'• TeWln.kle Park, where you can enjoy the ruatic ecenery without ualng up a lot of gu. pnscd. . He said he queried Conservancy President Joe Petrillo about the location but Petrillo set the nonhefn mectina place ···~use there were lots of nonhern i sues to be d1r cussed." Huntington Harbour resident Tillotson ad he fears that ~ boat o"'ners may bcciosnc .. land. locked" if lhCre as no ocean aocas be~"ttn the harbor and Bolsa Chk:a.. (PJe.ie eee JJOLSA/ A2) suspectfaCes sentence today Was free on bail after coviction for other holdups By ROBERT HYNDMAN ud STEVE MARBLE OflMDlllr,......., David lkan Dahlen. the 24-)car- old La Habra man who allcac<tly held four bank employees h0Stage1 Friday tn a unsu~CCssful bank robbery at- tempt in Irvine. was to be sentenced today on four prior bani robbery convictions. Assistant U.S. Attorney Jim Ber- liner said this morning that Dahlen would be sentenced by federal Judge James ldeman at 2 p.m. in Los Angeles on the bank robbery coovic- BB weather recorder .J. Sherman Denny dies By ROBERT BARKER Ol .. Dlllr .......... J Shennan Denn~. Hununs1on &ach's belo'ed v.eatherman. died Sunda) n1gh1 al the aae of 87. appa~nll) when hean problems de; veloped after a recent surgel). Mr. Denn). who kept the city's weather as a labor of love for more than half a ccotuT) but who ptthaps was most pleased v.,th having a tions, one a S40,000 heist from a bank in Corona dcl Mar. The La Habra man may also be a.rnigncd today in CODnec'tiOD with Frida)·'s incideot at the Bank of Amenca. Bminer said. Dahlen may be mo, .. ed to the federal corrcctiom center at Terminal Island and hdd there for a court apt;Carance later this week, Meanwhile, the FBI said todily it has no new leads concemma reports that Dahlen may have been assisted by two female accomplices. in the allqed kidnapping of Marp Stein- born. 52. manqier of the JrviM branch of the Bank of America. No other suspects were arrested at the Irvine bank.. William Steinborn, the bank ma n- ager's husband.· had reportedly told (Pleue-BANK/ A2) (Pleue eee J . SllERMAl'f / A2) J . Sherman Demay Crowd was there, but not performer By TON Y SAAVEDRA Of .... Dlllr "91 ltaft Roseman Churchman v.as con- fused. Some others v.erc angr) Churchman v.cnt to the Pacific .\mph1theatre in Costa Mesa Satur- da\ night for a Hanl Williams Jr. concert and found herself waiting in line with ~pk holdinstickets to11CC \.\ayne Nev.ton and Latoya Jack~n -an unlilcel) billing to be u~ The estimated 200 fans shov.i.na up at the ampbitheater Saturda) ended up not 'ittlO& an)One at all, not Hank. not Wayne not C\Cn Latoya. They (Pleue eee ARENA/ A2) S~ain CSUF prof~ad ,received deat,h threats ---Vietnamese immigrant arrested in slaying; widow says FBI told victim To 'buy a gun· ~ ... - By Tbe Assoc:lat~ Press Coopennan. 48. "ho had taught ._professor slain 1n his office at Cal nuclear ph) ics at the Fullenon State Fullerton had received death campus for 16 )ears. threats due to his "ork v.ith Viet-Lam remained at the Fullerton ~ail namcse scientist , and the FBI ad-today an connection with the shooting vised him to .. buy a gun and learn death Saturday. police Lt. Carl Hum- how t9'1J$e it," his wife said. m1tsch said. adding that no bail had V~tnamesc 1mmi'1"3nt Minh Van been set. Lam. 20. of Westminster has bttn Klasske Cooperman. the slain bQdked for in\e ti~tion of the professor's wife. told pohce Sunday murder of Dr. Edward Lee that a tudent had threatened her I husband's hfe about t"'o months ago because of h15 cooperative studies with Vietnam sc1ent1sts on the effect of the chemical defoliant .\gent Orange FBJ agent\ had ad' 1sed Cooperman to '"bu) a gun and learn hov. to use it." said Mrs. Cooperman. 43. Hov.c,cr. FBI spo~csman Fred Reagan of the Lo Angeles office ~1d unda) that he ~ne" nothina about an) threats or an) in,est1gat1on '"' ol\'ln& Cooperman. Cooperman -.ll acti\C 1n the V1ctname5e-Amencan c1en11tic Fnendsh1p As~1ation. which coor- dinates sc1ent1fic teaching ass15tance to the go,ernment of Vietnam. On the Fullenon campus. he "as seen b\ some Vietnam~ refusccs as a supPe>ncr of the Communist go'· ernment 1n Hanoi. some 5tudent5 and communil\ residents s~ud unda). In 197"7. Cooperman helped promote a mo' 1e on campus fa\orable to the Hanoi go,crnmcnt. an action v.hich purred anger amona anti-C"ommun1st \ 1etnam~ 1mm1- crants on campu Jen) Keating. Cal State Fullerton's director of public affairs. said Sunday that Cooperman had bttn amona the first .\mencan '1si1ors to H1no1 in the mid-19.,0s after the fall of South \'1etnam. Coopcnnan's bod' was foundjust after l p.m Saturda~ m hts si~th floor office, and Lam. "ho reported lht shooting. >Aas arrested later that mght. campus police Sgt. Bruct Evans said. .. He (laml v.:is vCf'\' calm." E'ans added. declinin~ to si>ecutate on the (Pleue eee SLAJllt/ A2) Fiery Welshnian brings views to UCI Radical Labor member of BrtUsh Parliament doesn't duck thorny issues In either country nt dcb.ite bet~ n NEW SMAKERS DAILY PILOT/Monday, Octo .. Victim of ousted Mesa cop , files $81 million lawsuit By PHIL 'NEID R 1AN oe""' llolitr .._ a-.n .B·H~ar·old Ornn,t.' { ount) \\Uman 1\ ~k1ngS8t m1ll1on 1n k I damasc') from the cm ot Co'>la ~ks:i and former pohcc otliccr \\ 1111am Lauchlan. "'ho wa .. con\ u:u:.'1~.1n;Jlf.I~ • ofse11.uall> molesting her while he w~1 Jn uniform and on dul) 1 hl· \\()man famm} F Fergu'>un, tikd \Ull tn l Dt'>trict oun 111 Lm Aneetc .. and 1n Orange Count> u- pcnor Court Thr ~u•h .. eek financial compcn~llon for <:hargc'> of as!.auh and ba\lef') falst" 11npmonmen1 and v1olat1on uf1:1" 11 ri1h1s The \UJls also claim th~ cit) 1'>.gu1lt} of ncit11gent supen 1s1on ol its cmplo)n'. Lauchlan wus fired from the Costa Mesa police force about l\\O \\CCII.'> after his arrcM in Janua"' Wilham 'iarrus. one o l the at- tome) s rep~lmg fergu'ion ... aid .the sum \\ere filed in both federal and ~l<Jtl:' (OUr\ Ill c SC u kdcral JUc.1~ <hOO'>l '>not to hecin:cnam l'ha1"¥es in 1he t.'t\ 11 \Ull, ferauson th<'n has thl· option ot l'Ur .. uing the 1erm11nang count\ 1n ,I.Ill' court, Sarru~ \U1tJ In the l'nnunal Ca\l'. uud1lan WU\ tru:<l on allc."Ballons that on Jan. JO. I ~84. the otflter \\Oppt·d f!'crgu .. on in < O'>ta Mc:'a for :i defl'l'l1" tail light, tlH:n llltkrl'd hl'r lu dnH· h> an t\ola11:d andu\trt.!I area "'itw ll'\ltlkd tha1 L.iuchhn ..c'\ualh mok'>tl'<i her and rc:fu'>CJ to :illo\\ t\er to ka \\'. for l\\oo to thn.·e hour~. Lauchlan was am.·~tcd alter the inudenl. In Jul'<. L aulhlan \.\3S rnn\ 1cted of ·~,ual batll'.'f'\ 10 the: incident. Last month. Superior ( ourt Judge Jame:'> Judge '>l'nlcnt.ed the lorml'r oOkcr tu 60 da} ~ 1n l'ount\ Jail and thrcl' ~ear\ formal prohatton He '-'3~ ahu ordered to pa\ h1' '11.. um\ l'\pensei. for therap~. Lukhlan", \enll'nll' ha\ been .__~-¥-+~robbed in Irvine today A man 1..arryinga robbery note held up Centuf) Sa"in&s and Loan today in Irvine and escaped with an un- calculated amount of cash. police ~Id. The bandit. ~eanng a brO\.\n, }ello\\ and black shirt. entered the sa\JORS and loan on Walnut ;\\enue . shorll) after 10 am. and handed lhe note to a teller. according to In me ollicers. No gun was seen Police said the robber appeared 10 be1nh1slate30s He\.\ashea\\SC:tand about 5 feet 9 inches tall. Tl'liers told police the} la'>t sa\\ thl' man running \\est on Walnut ta\cd \.\hilt' h1..• UJ)JX'Ullt tw~ l'OO\ ll'- tton. l 1..·1gu,on\ u'il i.un \c.•ck!I SIO 1111llwn in g1..•n1..•ral dama l':o. and S.W nulhon an pun1t1,e damage-. on each of thl· fir'>t two ll'Unh (en ti nght!i ' 1ulataon and ~uh and b<tttcf')'). and SJ million an general damagt'1 and SIU million an punatt\.c damage' un tht· lal-.c 1rnpn\onmcn1 l'Ount, h.i,cd on Uiul'hlan's refus.ll to allow th\.' woman to leave I he c;u11 alsu seeks $ IU million I rum lhc rrt\-of Costa Mc'>a un the l'harge of neghgl'ntl} supc:n 1sing its l'OlPIO}ee .\Horne' ~arru'> \3td the Cll't dad 001 propcrl} respond 10 thrl'C earlier 1..omplam1s that l auchlnn was harass- ing \\Omen wh111:' on dut\ ( osta Mesa C. ll\ .\ttorne\ Tom Wood \a1J the cit~ 1s seek1ryg ·a l'uun ruling that would separate 11 from Lauchlan 1n tht~ case. a\sert1ng that the Lauchlan's a('ttons were not pan ul his Qffis~al p01lcc du Lie~. Last mooth. a06t~ ~man ~ alleged!> \\a\ allat.·ked b} Lauchhn tiled a$ I 00,000 claim agam!.t the Cit} for damages. A claim must be made before a lawsuit can be filed against a Cit\ Roth \\Omen's leg.al claims have bc:cn routmel} rejected b\ Cll'\' of- ficials. · • ~151ijMl~NITT~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- ARE NA MIXUP IN MESA ... From Al didn't see anyooe but the "\\Orker in the ucket booth. A spokeswoman tor the amphnheater office said the Hank Williams Jr. show had been switched from Saturday to Fnda> The Newton-Jackson concert was subsequentJy scheduled for 5aturda~ But that was later canceled She said the chan~es had been ad' er11sed 1n ad ... ance ul ')aturda' ·s m1xup . Churchman." ho bought her Hank \\--tlhams Jr. 11d.e1s m .\pnl. wa!. unaware of the change. a' \\ere some other fans "'ho tra \ eled to the amphitheater - a da' lall· ~ to see \\ ilhams · Others \\ere una"arc that the NcwlOn-Jarll.~on \:Onle rt was canceled. ··1 \\On't sa) the people \\ere at a riotous state. but they were angry.· said the 49-year·old Garden Grove resident. Refundi. for both concert!. were given al the box office. but some fans apparentl> lost the handling fee charged b~ ticket agencies. said Churchman J. SHERMAN DENNY DEAD AT 87 ••. From Al · perfCct attendance record of attend- ing Rotaf') C'1ub meetings for 54 years. entered Hoag Memorial Hospi- tal in Newpon Beach late 1n Septem- ber after cancer of the lung was detected during a regular ph)sical examination • He was reported rall)1ng last week and his wife was making plani. for h1i. return home. when heart problems developed Fnda ... fncnd'i sa\ He died at about 11 p~m \unda) al Hoag Hospital Mr. Denn-. 1s sun 1ved b' his wile of 52 ~ears. Thelma. and a daughter Connie Stctnbergl'r and h .. n grand daughterc, v.ho ll\l' in ) nrha Linda Funeral arrangement!> ar1..· pending Mr Denn),\\hO'>t'f\l'Ua,managl·r of the Huntington Rcalh ( nmpan\ from 1948 until I %2. v.a\ kno" n lo·r d1\lerse arrd "-Ide-ranging 1nlcrcs1' He \\as a member ol thl' ~mencan \.1eterologu .. al \oc1ct'. '-'3\ an a' 1d loin and '>tamp collector a mcmher of the Cactus and Succulcn1 Soc1cl\ of .\menc.i tor man) ~<:ar-. "a' the lir-.t pre<itdt·nt ol the Huntington Beach Gardt•n < lub in 1410 and \\a., a member ol lht• c1l\ \ C hamtx-r nf Commcrn ~inle IQ2"' He al\11 \\a., 1nterc!>tcd 111 l·onlcrt' and opcra\anJ wa~a member of al o'> ..\ngeles orchestra for several years and pla}ed a French horn in a local band in the late 1920s He attended adult t"ducat1on dassc!> for about :w \ears rn Long Beach i.cho'ols andf at· Orange Coast C ollege and became an npert of the an11quiues of Eg)pt. Greece and Rome. according to long11mc fnend, Don Sh1ple~ ··\\hen I \ .. a., elected ma\ or in 1964 Sherman came up and con· gratulall·d ml· and said ·Dr \h1pley I understand \.Ou arc from near < a~ugac, \\ater'> ·\en ft·v. kne\\ that 1,ong \\3\ Imm <. urnt'll l n1\l~rs1l\ Jnd that v.a\ v. hc:rt' I got m\ dodoraLc ·· Sh1ple~ said toda\ · ·1 \l' l..110\.\n him lor ~'I \1..•ar~ He r;ile'> d'> ont· of 1hc lir\t gentkmen of llun11ngtnn Bt•a1..h Hl' "'a'> \Cf\ l tlnl't.'mcd about lricnd~ \\he never thl') \\Cre '>Irk he \\Ould takl· thl·mn newspaPl r. and magazines \1 r Denn\ \.\aS OOrn lO l l'ad (II\ 10 \outh l/alol<I in 1897 f he lamtl\ rntned tn Idaho and cH·ntuall~ ti1 < al1forn1a to t'\1..ape told \\mters· The lA:nn'' ll\cd 1n 'anou!> c1t1e\ in ~outhcrn ( alilorn1a and J. \herman graduated from L ugonia grammar \thool in Kcdland'> and l'ntered Redlamh High "<.'hool 1n ~ptemberof 1912 A severe freeze m 1930 dealt a blow to the citrus mdustf). and Denn} 's father. John Sherman Dennv. who \\8S an electncal engineer. was trans· ferred to Long Beach. J. Sherman was scheduled to enlist m the Army 1n the closing months of World War 11 but became the v1c11m of the tlu and \\oilS reclassified He attended the Bible Institute of Los Angeles for a }ear He beg.an employment with the Huntington Beach Com pan) on Sept. 28. 1923. where he 11.ept records of the com pan:. 'soil \\ells He married h1i. \'lfe the former Thelma Robinson. June:!O 1932 lhc.:Denmsha"ebecn longume members oft he First Chrn- 11an Church 1n Hun11ngron Beach Mr. Denny began his unofficial and unpaid weathcr·keepang act1v1t1cs in 1930 and measured more than 650 inch~ of ram. most of 11 from the weather gauge on the roof of his Pine ~trcet residence. In an interv1e"' shortl) before he was hosp1tal11cd. he c,a1d he planned to continue to keep weather records for two or three more ~cars and then tum the respons1b1lit~ O\Cr to ~ome one else who will ··stav "\\Ith II .. . '"There's no U\c doing 11 unle .. s ~ou do 11 accura1el't · he ..aid BANK ROBBER SENTENCING ... From Al Tustin pohll' that thrl'l' people -a male and t\.\n female' -\\Cfl tn\Ohcd \\llh thcallcgt•d kidnapping and tied hint up rn thl'lf T USllO homl' heforl' (;il\1111" hi' \\lfl' ,It !lllOpolnt 1n hl'f l.H Ill !ht• h.1n ~ \mcnl'a at In 1ne Bouk\'an.l and ) ale.\' l'llUl' J' nlliccr\ nl'gotaatcd for I hl' Ir rl'lca '>C la<,t month on lou1 lOunt\ ol hank robbc:I) and u">1ng a deadl\ \.\Capon Ht: lan-d a maximum 'ientenl'c of 20 'ear'> in federal pri\on. One of 1hc bank robocne\ Dahlen ""' lOn' 1rted of took platl" 1n the 'ummcr ol I 9tn l'•kwpon Bt•arh polite \Jtd tht' hank hand11 Ill Id up Fair skies after morning haze Coastal r WOUQll T.wtdlly ••~till patlly douOV l~hle ... d rf\Ofl"'IQI Ill IOUlt! COAAlll at-HQllh #!fide IO 30 "1iift "'°"" -nc>ilt•w•lotft canvcma Wlod1 dlminlelllnG lonlgtil HIGf\I most " 7' 10 80 "°"'' lO '" G2 from l'Ollll cono.p!IOO 10 ,,,. Ill•· -llofde< -Inn« ....... llglll Vlt.atlle Wll'ICll nlgfll &l\CI ~hlng flOUlt .,_,"°II -.111-11111y •to 16 ••><>'• f1-0er""-'nnor,.1 • ..._.1 IOGal •'4>1~"­ .,,,. wltl(lt 1~ ,., 21 •0011 t.el-11141 CMlrOna notlh-lwlld lrQm San11 Monta ~ 10 21001 WVld '"f...:S W"'"'' ~,. 1 ? lo 3 I Paru, OOudy <N•• ....... s ..... °'''' 14 .. Mlf) 'Woth-1 """°' I~ IO 30 •r>(l\t 1n1ough T liilMl•r Ot'Caalu<••• ""'" 10 :\~knot• noa1 POll'lt Cox\OePllM co .... Dined H• Md swell I w 1:1 , .. , Pattry cloudy Snow .. ·c. r. · -----------t,1ien111 Tides TOOA'f 12011> '" •n•'" TU.IDAV 1 Olpm 1154 pm AIW\11CCI• Aulttfl &11U•m0f• 8•,m•nutil'tm El•tmarc.i. !>I BOIH 011 &o.IOf\ 8ullalo ~ 4 11 Cnar1ot1°"'S C o 8 cr..,1e91on w v SWI NII IO<llV 11 & 19 P m "MM T uetda. .i 6 ~ti a m 11na Mii aQaon 11 I 18pm ' ~ 65 °""''" ~ ~6 (IP .. o 19 62 F..,oa.,;.1 7a 47 F•rgo 8~ 89 Fl<IQ•l•ll 58 44 Grend A1p0d1 47 25 ulMI !'1•, 5:S 4~ HllllOtcl 56 50 Hele<>• 44 29 H~ 17 82 li{IUtlOt> 77 !12 lnCllWlll>Ok'l e 1 se JKklOll M• 41 2 I Jacllao<M~I 70 62 ./-u 77 !Ill Kan .... C<ly 117 ~ LUVllOd UIU. AGO ~~ =r~ M """" M~l'°aul NUl\11111t! N.-Orta ... -voo. l'fOflOlk.Ve , Otl&noma Cit• °"'""' Ofl\llldO Palm8'l'~• f'!l la.dt'Q!!ll !'hoenl• p lllbo#Qfl Po< 1latld' Me POll~Or Pto;ldenee R&l9igll IW>ld City "*'° RICllmotld llllCfllNlftlO SI LOU<I ~ • 61 Pett-T11mt1• &•I Le ... Cur 6' 55 SW1 An1-e2 eo San Diego 32 27 San Ft~o ~ 49 8111 Juton P R !>ti 27 SI 61e M11 .. 113 59 s .. n .. 4S 1e S..re..epo.1 es 4J Slou• Falla 44 lJ Spoli- 86 73 S'f'_.. 78 61 TOC*ta H 63 T~ 11 ee rui .. 87 63 W&.,..ioQlon 48 43 WICMI ;2 111 Wllk•·Batre 15 49 wo1mono1on o. .,, 62 ., .. 11 H 13 ., 6J ,. : :: " .. u ., 17 M U IO to 12 M II 16 a 94 ., .. JO .. ., GO 0 ~1 •i 52 » 57 80 IO 41 S2 M se u 77 •• 11 H 71 ti 13 t4 51 H IO IO ,, 70 11 55 ., 75 tl2 •• •• » 77 .., 114 .. •• 25 e• •• 70 57 I• M ,. ,, 7' 52 68 •• 72 ., 73 •• Moon,, .. , 1ooayal I'll ~';i'IMU _, 12 20 p'" ana ,_, eg..,, r....aar •• no'" m Cl\lflolle NC c11 .. ~11 Cll1C"ljo Cmc1nn•I t..i.•111na (•;'•tmb<t s c. umbul Qt\ CO.-O>W0- 0.UH f1 'NOtlll OaytOf'I -==~~~o ~~~~i:iiiiiii-:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Oero••· -----------0.1 MornM Temps 0.lrO•I 74 11 "'14 Sii SI 31 69 H 8' S7 Sil.I 2-3 J-4 3-4 3.4 I 1-2 l·• s-dlrec;llOt'I -II OIMCTIOM la4t Good = OOOt ,., fllf WELSH LAWMAKER AIRS VIEWS AT UCI ••• From Al ll\c 1n 11. not die in 11 · .\bsc also said he \\as amused b} the controHn} O\Cr hecl..lers \\ho have disrupted Mondale's speeches. He said heckling poli11c1ans 1~ a Brill'>h trad111on "But \.\e're not as afraid as \OU are of 'crbal aggression." he obscn cd AbSl' said his non...conform1s1 !>t-.le 1s panfy the result of growing up "1n a minorn) group wuh1n a m1nont} group·· More specificall). he wa!i born and ra1~d Wales. a rnal- producing reg.ion on the west coast of Bntaan But has famal> background also made him part of the tin) Je\\1sh rommun1t't in Wales. <One of his L1thuan1ari forebears. .\bse 4u1ps. "'as the first man to speak Wcl\h '-'•lh a ) 1dd1sh accent ) The la\.\maker ~1d that rcp- rc-.en ung \\!ales v.1th Its rad1lal 1rad111on. means not being alra1cl to take controversial stands. "It also means that coming from such a communt1). where therl' I'> great emphasis on the 1mportan1..e of fam1l} that pred1ctabl) m} mteresl\ ha\(.' been largel) tn the field or human relat1onsh1ps." .\bse said He ~aid his social rnnccrn!. ha' e kd him tu introduce more ··pn\all' member acts·· than an) man in thl\ lentuf) 1n the Bm1sh Parhaml'nl .\ pn,ate mcmhcr act 1s leg1sla11un introduced b\ an 1nd1"1dual mcmt>cr. not b> the go.\ernment • ·\mong tho..c act'> ha\ l' hcc:n measures modern111ng dl\orre la\.\\ ending the 1llcgali1) of homose'\ual acts bet\\een comult1n~ adult<, and D•lly Piiot Dell very la Gu•r•nteed "4C>nll"• f Oder II y • ii estabhsh1ng publ1t funding of family planning centers .\bse said he's also !ipcarheadcd reforms m adoption laws to assure better matching of children and new parents and he has supported ad· d1t1onal financial benefits for widows "hose husbahds died 1n acc..den~ Thela\.\makersa1d he'sinvolved'm leg1sla t 1on that would !.et new rules on 'test-tube" bab> experiments and surrogate mothers or "\\omb leas· 1ng." Experiments \\Ith human embr)OS ha\C dra\\n cnt1c1sm from some .iuancrs. but Abse doesn't belle .. e 1h1s worl. should be halted if 11 1s lamed at preventing birth defects and Jllow1ng infertile couples to ha' e :h1ldren. He does not equate thl' practice: '' 11h abonion .. ..\bonion must be used as a last re'>Ort. not a first resort." .\bsc !lays. 'Sance an unborn child 1s involved r,e nc,er taken the vie\\ that abortion 1s a simply a ngh~ which can be e\er<:1sed without reference to some gu1d1ng principles from the \l31C. "Rut tho)l' \\ho take an attitude '' h1rh ms1'>l' that not c' en for a shon tX'nod <ihould anv \\Ort.. be done on an .·mbf)n -the~ arc la1hng to undl:'r '>land this "\\OUld he , .. ork 10 enlarge Ilk lo .1110\.\ pcopk tu have children who arl· not hand1tapped. to gl\t' children to the infenilc '1>ho dc!>per- a1ch "an1 1:h1ldren I'm. 1n short. 10 fa"or of children.'" .\bst· "' an allorne~ b} profession. and he ha., also studied psycholog) ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat I ' ih• voor O•~*' t y ~ IO 1 rn co~""'"'• I 1 '" j 0 f " CC( y ., .t 00 " ~fllfrod H. L. Schwartz Ill Publisher Clrcul•tlon TelephonH '• I 1-J , , J d• , •M.-MOO Rosemary Churchman Cc ntroller Stephen F. Carazo Prod ict1on M;mager Donald L. Wllllame C1rcuta11on Manager cxtens1wl}. Has outspoken views haw not pre\ented him from being re.elected b> Welsh voter~ "Al the beginning of my life in Parliament, there were the inevitable 1ens1om." he said. "But as the years \'ent on and the) knew that these issues nc,er took me away from canng about constituency issues, I think the) tooll. pnde in having an unusual represemauve who's not a conformist .. He added "Our elections have to be fought not onl> on the tele\ ISIOn and an parades. but dooMo-door. No one 1s reall) exempt from the need to _meet the electorate at the doorstep. That'!> "'here }OU get the feedback.' ..\bse 1sn'1 sh) about confron11na his fcllo\.\ lawmakers either. What '-'Ou Id Prime Minister Thatcher thank about his plan to psycholanalyze her in a lecture at UCI? "She would be exceedingly vexed at me:· Abse said. "But that wouldn't be a no\el !illuauon." Canyon crash victim dies \ "'i.inta \na man hac, died lrom 1nJune' ,uffc:rcd "hen has car \\oent out qi u>n1rol on Laguna Canyon Road. t11pped over crashed and burned last week. \11t.had Eugene Brewer. 34, was pronounced dead at M1ss1on Com· muntl) Hospital IO M1i.s1on V1e10 at 1·30p.m Fnda~ Clrcul•tlon 7141842-4333 CIHalfled ~vertlalng 714/842-5671 •11 other d•p•rtmenta 842-4321 MAIN OFFICE (" '71!?& <. ~, ~· • 1~J 0.~'JQf! Coss• P·,bL"""O Compa"• No '>r .. , ~l()f'('\ -...11.1.ons ec)IOf<IO ,,..lie< or .0-1- ,,_,~ ..... ~. ,,.., II!! lefl'Odiuc«I .. '"°"' K'IClil !)(It ~c;li:U..,.OQl'!C•""' SM:ono CllH6 r-•aoe l>iloO II C-a MeW C&fOIOl'll•• tUPS 144 8001 ':Wll1Croploon by UIH.., S~ 7!> monthly by ma.1 S6 ~ m<lnlllly VOL. 77, NO. 289 D:ihkn hl'ld '-'llho111t h;id at Or- .1ngl' < "111lt\ IJ1(0\tr tlil'''ed,en<l 1, l''l'X'l ll'd t11 Ix• di.11~cd '' 11h 1hl' l.1J ndppm~ c1I ~Ir.,. \ll'lllh•irn \ h 1 hour .,tandoll ht:tv.el·n I >.1hkn .tnd politc t'mkd f nda' Jltnnuon \\hen an FRI \\\ \I 1cam 'lor med 1tw hanl. and .urc\le<l the m.1n T hc ho,l.t!ll'' '-'1'1 ·not lrarmt•d Dahkn rt'f)l>rto.:dh \\.iS lrcl' on bail .1t the 11me ol Fnda'' k1dnappin~ .ind rohhl'n attl·mpl t hl' I 1 r\t In I l' rqa ll' Rank a I N 1..• \'pun If!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!• ( l'nler and c'<.'aJ)l'J \\-Ith $40.000 1n The Ii.in~ m.111a~1·r .111d 1hrce 11tht r bank l'm phi\ l'l'' '"~·re hdd h11\tagl lor about thtl'l hour' in lhl' B<tnll. ol \t·cording to a federal l 11ur1 l krk in l m .\n~cle~ Dahkn "a' l'on' 1ctcd l'a'h Dahlen .tl<,u v.as con' lltcd of holding up a F1m Interstate Bank in Brea at about tht. ..ame time BOLSA HEARING IN BODEGA BAY ... From Al Harhor -.a1lt>r' n111\ h,1,1..• to 'all to lhl ocean through th1..· rntranc<' :n \nahl:'1m Ha\ "'hirh lhl'' \bare \\Ith thl· l \ "·J\\ \.\h1Ch Ill,('\ the Jrl'J Ir> load '>hip' 11f the P.1nht I kt1' '-'llh v.eap11n' T1ll11l \nn ,,11d unl· Jll 1den1.ind1h1• cnll' \1.,n could tx· shut oil Rul /inlnl·r thl' C oa<,tal Con- 'l'nanl \ lUn\ultanl \<11<l hl' 1\ no\\ rl'l om niend mg such a rn 1 hct" ecn lhl•11.,oarcar, fhl:'prohkm.ht•\31d '' th.11 no om· \\ant' to liname the project. .\n' action thl' ( nastal C on\Cnan· l.,. makes Thur'>dh would be in the recommendation · 10 the C 011c;tal Com mission wh1l h ha., f11rnl authont\ on Bol..a Chica deH·lop- ml:'nl. ot'finals said SLAIN PROF HAD BEEN THREATENED ... From Al m11t1\t• lor the ,1<1~1ng tiumm11~h rdU\t'<l to'·'~ v.ltt'llll'r the murder \\ol'apon h.111 ~·1·11 lound Mr<. < oop•.:rman ,,11d t .1111. a forml'I \tudcnl ol 1 u11pcrman·., callrd her u month ago lu a\k lor h.111 monc) alter his arn·st nn 1hl'll l harge' 1n Fullt'nun \he ~ml \he rl"luscd Lam\ w.tcr \nh. dl'\Crtlx-d th< 1~rofev~nr and her hrulht·r ·'" t IO\l fncnd\ l>r \1n1• Murra' lh:mman of Cal \I.Ill' I ullcrtnn·, h1olog' dl."partmcnt. ,,11d C oorx·rman '"had a rl·al 1ntcrc\I 1n lhl' \ 1c1name\t' <,tudcnt'I \\ho "'l'tl' llll'Od1n1t lhl' UOl\C~"I' lie \\t'nt out 111 hi\ \\a) to help thl·m mdt..e the tdlU\lfllCOI Ill lhl' UOl\('r\ll\ .. f 'an' ..aid < oop<:rman "more or k" lx•frit'n<kd" V1ctnaml''l' 1mm1 · U.IOI<, h<'\:.Hl\l' ··h(' ... w. hm1\ctr a\ ha\ln& \Cl) du\\' 111:'\ \\llh 1ho1oe people" < ooix-rman. \\ho wn cd in I IJ6~ a .. a rc~arch ph)'tnst ;tt thl· I \ laboratorie\ an Lo~ \lamo' N M ~l<.o \lias '1C11\(' 1n the .int1·nudt:ar mo"emt'nt Funeral :irrangl'ml:lll\ Wlr<" pend- ing 'iunda~ night fot ( oosx·rman. who"' \llf\1\Cd hy ht\ wife.· and l"\\O 1r..-n·age dau1htrr' Wbat do ) oo likt' aboul the Dall)' Pllo1:' Whlll don't you llb"' Call tbe numbtr ll ldt and )'Hr me11ait wlU ~ recorded, 1raalbt1bf'd Hd d~ll~trtd 10 \ht appropriate editor. SHUTTERS CUSTOM QUALln SHUTIERS Designed, Finished Installed FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE . ON THE MARKET TODAY ..• AT FACTORY DIRECT PRICES! Call (714)548-&841 or.548-1717 Just Call 642-6086 nuamrt4·bo r u1•trl11urvl t maybe a rd to reconl lttttn co tht ~ltor 01> any toplr. Contrlbatol'1 to oar LeUtrt tol1rnn cna t ID<'J f ~elr HEIRWOOD MANUFACTO y 19n Placentia Avenue. Costa Mesa, CA 92627 . name and ttltphont nam~r for "trlfkallon. o clrculat on call , '' . l~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil T"ll u what'• on your mlnd. t ' ---MONOA Y o c r 1>nrH 1 ~> , )ff.l 0 RAN Ci E C 0 UN l V C A l I f 0 H NI A ; '· r f t-4 T ·· -. SUS Coast -- Untonteaders tn Ana are urging Disneyland strikers to accept a new contract offer./ AS Coast children tell read- ers what they think of school so far./ A3 California There's a baby boomlet In California, and the mom's are older./ AS Starting today with Traf- fic Safety Week, the Dally Piiot will publish a traffic safety quiz each Monday • to test drivers' knowl- edge of the road ./82 Natl on Mondale vows tougher questions; Reagan will use less statistics In next debate./A4 Auto workers reach ac- cord over contracts at Ford, GMC./ AS World U.S. stops short of Issu- ing travelers' warnlnQ of Mexican highway ban- dlts. / A4 A 'black alert' has been Issued in Britain following bombingJAS Sports Edison High's Chargers have taken over the No. 1 spot In the Dally Piiot's Orange County prep foot- ball ranklngs./C1 The Detroit Tigers are baseball's kingpins fol- lowing their home sweep to take the Serles In five games./C1 Eric Dickerson and Jeff Kemp led the way as the Rams captured a 28-10 NFL decision at New Or- leans./C1 Entertainment Those "words from our ,sponsor'' are a sore spot In televised sports./83 Bualneu Americans' rate of Install- ment debt slowed to $6 bllllon In August./85 INDEX Bridge BuUetln Board Buslneu California Newa Classlfled Comlcl Crossword Death Notlcel Featur Horoscope Ann Lander• Mutual Fundt Nattonal News Opinion Public Notices Spot ta Ttlevlalon Theater Weather World Newt EM A3 95 A4 C~7 94 C7 C4 91-2 C6 92 85 A4 A6 C4 Cl-4 82 83 A2 A4 e I na· e 1ncour Cooling her heel• A cool mountain atream la jaat the place to •pend a bot day, and Arlene Kodmbo, 19, of Newport Beach foand one cloee to bome. It'• in COllta Meaa '• Te Winkle Park. where you can enjoy the ru.•tlc acenery without ulng up a lot of au. Sentencing set for today for man a rrested in Friday's Irvine kidnap Ot ... O.., .......... David Dean Dahlen. the 24-)ear- old La Habra man who allegedly held four bank cmplo)ecs hostages Friday in a unsuccessful bank robbery at- tempt in Irvine. was to be sentenced today on four prior bank robbery convictions. Assistant U.S. Attorney Jim Ber- liner said this momina that Dahlen would be sentenced by federal Judie James ldeman at 2 p.m. in Los 1on).onc • in Corona del Mar. The La Habra man may al50 be arraigned today in connection with Fndats incident at the Bank of Amcnca. Berliner said. Dahlen may be moved to the fcdctal corrections center at Terminal Island and bcld therefor a court appearance laier this wed. Meanwhile, the FBI .00.y •id it has no new leads co~na reporu .. .(Pleue eee BAD/ A2) Bolsa hearing to be ·heard far, far away Huntington Harbour residents irate that marsh decision to be heard north of SF By.ROBERTB~ OtlllieO.., ....... Huntinston Harbour residents and local officials are upset that one of lhe most important hearings in the Iona controversy over development of~ Bolsa Chica marshlands is scheduled Thursday in Bodep Bay nonh of San Francisco; about I 0 hours awa) in trnel time by car. local residents and officials a~ all but cut ofT from testifyina at the crucial hearing and upccted action by l~ state Coastal Conservancy. Harbour resident John T1llo&son. irked because the present plan doesn ·1 incl\lde a navigable-a&' between Huntington Harbour and tbe Boba Chica waicmys. called the 9dec:tioa of the Bodep Bay site for the bcarinp ··a linlc ~ .. pcTl)etl'atcd by officials y optiaa for \ht pleasant atmospbcrc of Rodep Bay that's situated on a beautifW stmdl of t.be northern coast. about two hours by car from San FruciJco. -v ou can't 1t1 t..berc from berc. .. be saJd --SOmethq; this . imponan1 sbouJd be held in the IOUtbcrD part Of the state ... be said. Aormce Webb. a senior pbonel" (P1eue 8ee BOLSA:/A2) Victim of ousted Mesa cop files $81 million suit" By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Ol .. O., .......... A 23-)ear-old Orange Count) woman 1sSttkmgS8l m1lh on 1n legal damages from the cit) of Costa Mesa and former poh~ officer William L.auchlan. who was convicted in Jul) of scxuall> molesting her wh•le he was in uniform and on dut) The woman. Tammy F Fe,..uson. filed su111n U.S. D1stnct Court in Los A.n$eles and in Orange County Su- penor Coun The suits seek financial compcnsauon for chalJCS of assault and battery. false impnsonmcnt and '1olation of av1l ri&ht.s.. The suits also claim lhe Clt)' is guilty of ncali&cnt supcn1s1on of its employee. Lauchlan was fired from the Costa Mesa pohcc force about two ~'Ceks _ after his arrest in January. William Sarrus.. one of ~ at- torneys rq>rcsenting Fcrsuson. said the suits were filed in both federal and state coun in case a federal jUdge (Pleue eee COP'S/ A2) Slain CSUF prof had received death threats Vietnamese immigrant arrested in slaying: widow says FBI told victim to ·buy a gun· By Tbe A11oclated Pre11 A professor slain in his office at Cal State Fullerton had received death threats due to his work With Viet· namesc scientists. and the FBI ad· vised him to "buy a gun and team how to use it," his wife said. Vietnamese immiarant Minh Van Lam. 20. of Westminster h"as been booked for 1nvcsti~tion of the murder , of Dt. Edward Ltt Cooperman. 48. who had taught nuclear physics at the Fullerton campus for 16 years. Lam remained at the Fullerton Jail today in connection with the shoot mg death Saturday. police Lt. Car1 Hum- m1tsch said. addmg~hat no bail had been set Klasske Cooperman. the slam professor's wife. told poh~ Sunday that a student had threatened her husband's hfe about two months ago bccau~ of his cooperative studies with Vietnam scientist on the effect of the chemical defoliant .\gent Orange FBI agents had a d' 1sed Cooperman to "'bu) a 1un and team how to USt' 1t. ·· s~ud Mrs. Cooperman. 43. Howe\ er. FBI spok~m:in Frrd Reagan of the Los Angele offil-e said Sunda)' that he knew n~thing a~ut an) threats or an) 1nvest1gauon involving Cooperman. Cooperman was ac11ve in the Virtnamesc-Amencan c1e nt1tic Fnendsh1p .\ssoc1at1on. ~ h1ch coor- d1 natcs sc1en11fic tea hm& us1s1.an~ to the go,emment of\! 1ctnam. On the Fullerton campus. he ~as seen b~ some Vietnamese refugees as a supporter of the (ommunist go\- t"mment"'ln Hanoi. some students and communtt) ~s1dent s.a1d unday. In 1977. Cooperman helped promote a mo' 1c on campus fa,orable to ~he Hano i go\Cmment. an action ~ h 1ch spuf'Tt'd anger among ant1..Communist V1ctnamest 1mm1- granrs on campu Jen) Keating. Cal State Fullcnon's director of public affairs. said Suoday that Cooperman bad been amona the first '\mencan visitors to Hanoi m the m1d-l 970s after the fall of South Vietnam Coopennan's bod) was found Jut after 3 p m Saturda) in his sixth floor office. and Lam. who rq>oncd the shooting. v.-as arrested latc-r that ni&ht. campus police 1. Bruce E\ans said. .. Ht (Lam) was VC'I) calm:· Evans added. dcchnintt to speculate on the (Pleue-SLADl/A2) Welshman brings views to UCI Radical La r member of British Parltament doesn •t duck thorny issues In either country - Leo Abst i not our run-of ·the· mill polttiaan. AbsC (~nO\lnttd A ) admns he has a habit ot uk1n trong po 1tion on i ucs hat most law· makcn try to 1vo1d 'Y thousand or mile • He' 1ntrochkcd lea.a lation conccmina t;omo~xuahty. di\iortt, dopuon and birth control He'' out poken on AID . P• and nu· clear arm In 1973, h publi hC'd a book that ul"c)ed tlic uncon iou motivations of polit1c11n , But aon't look for 1n Wash· infton. O.C. for the past 26 yean, he ~ bttn a Labor Pany member of the Hou of Common 1n the Bnh h Paihamcnt. reprnenting an indus- tnal con utuency in Wa He's s~ndina Oct in Oranac County, howt,er, 1-a \'ts1tin1 Re- nts' L«turtr t U l~ine. And he 1s not tonin down h1 \:tc for the rampu vi~t. La t Friday, bsc applied Freudian anal)'SIS technique 1n 1 tcctun: on Bnti h Prime Mini tcr Marprtt That htr. He v.ill ~n dcli\'cr anpthcr lecture-cnt1tlc-d. "Trca n. the Ult1m1tc Cnmc. and the P )ilhO thol ) ofthc 'p)." 1 no m0tt hkcl) to pull hi pun he 10 di u 1n th mtncan politic I nc. He sau:S t~e rttfnt de tc bel"ccn P11 $10 £11111 NEWSMAKERS Prcs1d nt R n and DcmOC'f'lt1c chall r Wah<"r tond le ~t­ li&htcd Rr n'\ d\'ancing )ta~. R n 1 71 .. hem t tnk1n thin to me v. th s)mptom' ot I ncJ in Pre dent Rt n.:· h id. ··1 tind 1t hard to undrrs,tand h .-pcopt (In contemplate h \ 1n a 77 yt-ar ld prn1dcnt fat tht end of h" term) 1 find 1t a surpmc in a count') thars suppoSt'd to ha\e a cult of )OUth . .. II politician art a to,..., ~nd hkc aging opera tars w"' find 1t han1 to lca\c the s~. Pcrhap t~ pubhc should encouraac us to do so •· Abst. ~ho 1 appr h1n h1 7 • !.aid ht won't stt~ rt~l«uon whtn his term up1f'C) in about four ~l"I"' He said. "We ha' e too mu h gcnatnc k d ~hip in tht v.ortd Th1sapphes in Ru\\11 and in Ouna as v.-e11. In a nuclear • I find th1 fnghttn1 ··1 remcmhcr hov. Winsto n hutth1ll ta)ed on too I and ho~ Bntain uncrt'dforit. amanof~7. lean~) thcrt1 aumcv.h nth t rch hou'd b( handed to anoth r all n .... The future ~ uld tcrm1n d b .. 1ll v.ho aft' 01 to (Pl Me WtLSH/ A2l Leo Abee • 1 DAILY PtLOT /Monday. OCto David Kennedy's final days a nightmare of drugs, alcohol Woman companion says RFK's son haunted by aytng of hts father that h1.• h ti w wa., about to \Jd1~c1 coc:unc. 1 hem ord lluw Marchant. 24, ol Warv..1ck. R.I.. told authonuc that Kl'llllt'<l> a .. l..e<l hun to hu> ~·oca1nc at lc.1 .. 1 twll"e When qucsuonc<l lunlw1, he rcquc\h:<l an attorne) be pre,t•nt. \\ t~ 1 I' LM BEA{ It, t-1a tAP) -Le ~ than tv.o day11 before tlru~ k1lleJ him, a lrartul D v1d Kennedy told a woman he had ju't met he could "ne"er find peace inside" and -wa, 'full of p1un" frum the 1268 murder of ht\ father. Sen. Rubert F. Kennedy, documt•nts ~•d. lk1.a1l~ofthc la~l a,oniriniday~of th( 28:~car·old Kennedy's life v..ere t''c;sled Friday after •JUdit rultd the in 1 rial .-ihered Junng an ufficial .tn\cstig.:iuon of Kenned) 'sdeath was C'O' ~red b) the late'~ o~n r«ord ....... -9 l\.enn <l). fo1,1nd dead of a fatal •drug comb1na11on .\pnl 15 a1 a Palm • Beach hotel. spent his final dn}s ,annlong and snon1n~ i:oca1m.-"'h1k complaining about hie, the records shu"' .1, German 1mm1gran1 Manon N1t•mann 41, ..aid she met 1-.enncd\ al a popular Palm lkach night spo.t Apnl 22 and \a\.\ him <1ga1n lht nc\l da\ at his hotel 'iu1te f hf' n~~ ion ~urn1•d to 1 be June 1968 slayin~of~cn. Kcnnc<l} at a Cahforma pol1t1tal rail)'. an 1nc1- dcnt that David. then 13. watched over and over on tele\ 1s1on al the fa mil) 's hotel room '"I can. I can never find peace 1n<.1de. r,e been full of p~un:·· "l1t·mann ~1d Kenned-. told her. And I ..av. ·You need help Da' 1d.' And he say. ·ye,. help."' 0\ H}' tng for \t one poml. he aid, the} 1.:m'd to~<'thcr. . · Olh«. .1.n1.crv11:ws islsu chromch:cJ the agon) Kenned)' suOcred Ix-fore the fatal drug ingestion. Expcm said he died ota combination oh.ocamc. a tranqu1h1n and a pa1nl1llcr. I "-O former bellhop(I at the: hold. Oavid Linwood Dorr and Pc-ter Andrew M. rchant, "ere arre ted 1n mid-Ma> on t"o cocaine count But authom1cs cannot tell 1f the drugs they are accused of supplying 111 Kenned~ contnbuted to his death. "Da' 1d Dorr came up lo me one night and he startl'd bragging and boasting thal he's gomJ 10 o,eU Kc.-nned) drugs." an~ord1ng 10 a statement b) hotel bellman Rotx-n John Lucke 51 Lucke ~1d he tncd 10 dt">Couragc the ~le but Dorr 1ns1sted. l'' en rcadil~ six·nd1ng wha1 Dorr told him "'a5 b!l> latll 50 lor the contraband "H~ said he S{'cn the lioc;Wl1ing. he was sack. and he needed 1l." Lucke \aid.- Dorr. 30. of Wc'>l Yarmouth Masi. .. told poltce he had no knowl- cdge concerning Kenned) 's drug use or ho"' Kenned) obtained drugs dunngthelastda)soflmhfe Heahu \atd he d1dn ·1 recall tclhnJC anrnm· No tnal Jatl has been set 101 the h\0, ,\ ,t.llcml·nt b\' Kc nncd\ 's llrotht·r Douglas. 17 lkta1lcd Dimd i-..t'n- ncd> 0 Hond1tmn lhl' mornmgol Apnl ..!~ "I k "'"<I\ dnnl..ing mo1o1 of till· d.t), but m the morning I susp«led him on cocaim: .... Ht' was son of jump). p rano1d and jump) .. ·· Douglu "aid in a !.tatemcnt tali.en in Washing- ton 'haring a room \.\Ith Dougla .. \\as a '>Choolmatc Demel.. E'nns. \.\ho told 1n'c'11gato~ that Da\ 1d .._l'nned~ talked to him that Easter weeh·nd "about heroin." • .. He asked me. did I want lo ao get \Orne smack. and I said no that I didn't do heroin. and he said to mt• lhal the \tufT in Ronda wouldn't get me add1ctcd." E\ans l>ald The hotel was onll a lcw miles from the oceanfronl compound or R"ose Kenned). The frail cond1uon of David's 94-ycar-old grandmother also affected him. Evans said. David Kenned) was "vef) upset O\Cr hoy, sick his grandmother was. he had never seen her 1n that bad a rnnd1t1on before." E' ans told in- ' csugators. 3 in court today on drug charges By DAVE BISHOP O~ .... , C...,eepondeftl Three pcoplc "'"ere lo bC' arraigned toda~ in South Orange Count> Mu- nicipal Coun on charges of con- sp1raq-to sell dangerous drug~ Laguna Beach polKe arre•Md the '>US~ctc; Wedne"iday after five ounce~ ot a powertul stimulant and l!Qu1p- that Dahlen ma.. ha"e t'x:cn assisted by two female "acwmpltces 1n thl' alleged kidnapping of Margl' Stean- born ~~. manager. ol the In.inc branch ol thl· Bank of .\menl'a N-o other su\pc{I\ \\ere arrested at tht· Jn ine bank \.\ 1ll1am ~le1nhom . the hank-man- ager·s husband had rcponcdl~ told Tusun poltcc that lhrce pcr\<ms - a male and l"'o females -"'Cr( involved "'Ith the alkgcd k1dnapp1ng and 11ed him up in 1hc1r T us11n homl' hclon: taking his ""l' a1 gunprnnl in her lar tn tht• hank Dahkn hl'ld \\1thou1 hJtl JI < >r- menl to manufacture the drug \.\Crc found in a Weslminr,ter apanment. ~gt .\le>. J1mine1 said The "'om an"' ang in thl· apanmt:nl and l\\O Garden Gro"e men were rcle~d on S 15.000 bail pend to& their arraignment. .\rrc!lted "'l'rt' kanm· Lynn K.Hlhens. J 1 ol \\. estmtn\ter and BenJamtn (,. ) harra '5. of Garden ange Count\ Jail Cl\ er lhl' \\Cl'kc:nd. '' e\pected to he chargcd "'tth t hl' kidnapping of \.1 rs ~temhorn The bank manager and lhrl'l' otha bank cmplo\ees "'ere held ho\tage for about three hours 1n 1he Rank of \mcnca at Jn inc Boulnard and Yale.\\ enue a<i officers ncgouated for their releaS(.' A. 61 :-hour standofr hctwe1; n Dahlen and police ended Fnda> afternoon "-hen an FBI <)\.\ .\ T team ~tormcd thl' hank and arrc~tl'U tht• man Tht· hostJgl'\ \.\t'rt' not hJrmcJ Dahlen rqx1rtcdl) "·" lrl'l' on hail al lhc lime ot r nda\ .. l..1dnapr1ng Gro'c both charged with consptral'} 10 sell amphetamines; and ueorge Edward Segrest. 35. of Garden Gro\e. who "'as charged with possession of dan~us drugs for sale and pos- )eSS100 of mariJuana. Pohce said they were led 10 Wes1 - mins1er by information obtained dunng 1nvest1ga1ions of drug acll\ II) in Laguna Beach. and robber)iuempt .\ccording toa federal court clerk in Lo~ Angeles Dahlen "'as con' Kted last month on four counts of bank robbery and using a deadl\ v.eapon He faced .e ma~1mum sentenl'e of 20 >ears in federal pmon One of the bank robberies Dahlen was con\lctcd of took place in chc summer of 1983. Newport Beach police said the bank bandit held up th' first Interstate Bank at Newport Center and escaped with $40.000 in. cash. Dahlen also "'"as con' ll"tcd of holding up a First Interstate Bani; in Brea at about the same 11mc. COP'S VICTIM SUES FOR $81 MILLION ..• From Al choor,cs not 10 hl·ar lcrtain lhargcs in the l:I\ ii SUll. £ l'rguc,on then has the o ptwn ot pur\uing thc remaining count-; 1n <,tale roun \arrus said In the cnminal \.J'>t'. Lauchlan ~as tned on alkpt1<1n~ that on Jan I 0. I 984 the ot11cc:r '>lopped f-erguson 1n Costa Me'>a tor a dcfeCtl\e tail ltght. then ordcrt:d her lo drl\e IO an 1sola1e<l indu<.trtal area \he lC'illfied that Lauchltn ..cxuall~ molested her and rctu.-.ed to allow ht:r lo lea'e for two to thret· hours Lauchlan wa'i arrc<ott:d after the incident In Jul} Lauchlan "'as convicted of <exual battery in tht: incident. La~t month Superior<. oun Judge Jame<o Judge r,cn tcm:cd the former o lfo..cr tu 60 da"s in wunt) 1ail and thrcc )cars lormal proha11on Hl \\.a!. also ordered to pa) h1'> '1ct1m ' expenses for therap~. Laulhlan·, sentence ha., hcen ,,a,l'd "h1k he apf)\.·al<, hi\ wn,1c t1<1n F-crgu\·lO.., ll\ ti \Ult \l'd.o, S 10 m1ll1on 1n gcm:ral damagt:'i and S20 million 1n pun1tl\e damage'> on each of the first t"'u lOUnl'> (Cl\ 11 nghts \ 1ola11on and assault and batter.). and SI m1ll1on in general damage'> and $10 m1ll1on 1n pun1t1ve damage'> on the talsc 1mpn<,onmcnt rnunt haSl"d on Lauchlan ·., refu..al to allow the woman to lea\e The su11 also St:eks SIO million from 1hc Cit\ oft O'ila Mcsa on th e charge ol ne.ghgenth supcn1'>1ng m cmplu)ee. ,\llorney Sarrus said the cit) did not properly respond to three earlier m m plaints that Lauchlan ""as hara~s­ ing "'omen whale on duty C os1a Mesa (It)' Attorne) Tom \\.ood -.aid the city is seeking a court ruling lhat would ~parate 1t from Lauchlan 1n this case asserting that the Lauchlan·s actions were not pan of hac; official police duties. La~t month. another "'oman "'"ho allegcdl) "'as attacked b) Lauchltn hied a SIOOOUOcla1m against thel'1I~ lor damages A claim must he madl hcfore a lawc;u1t can be filed against J Cit\' Roth Y.omen''i legal cla1m<o ha\l' Ocl'n :outinel) rcJellcd h" Cll\ ol lic1ah:. BOLSA HEARING IN BODEGA BAY ... From Al for the lll) ut Huntington Beach. al<oo ~1d she war, ..,urpmed b) the dec1s1on to schedull' 1hr meeting in the nonh based on the <o11~n1fican1.:e ol the l'>'iUe '\nd John /1ntncr. a rnn\uhant l(1r the conc;crvam > on 1he Bol'>a ( h1la de\ elopmcnt \atd he too wa' '>ur- pnst'd He ..aid ht• qucned < ·on'icn ann Prcc;1dent Jot• Petnllo ahou1 the location but Petrillo <oct thl· nnrthl·rn meeting plalr ··0ccau~ 1hc.:r1: "'"Crt· lot\ of northern l'i'iUl'' 111 Ix· di\· I U\..Cd •• Petrillo "'a' out ul \talc. hut /in1ner said the agenda 1ndudcd a loan to state commercial fi">ht'rm en "ho <oulTcred an "econom1l d1Y'ill't .. last \Car Huntington Harbo ur resident r1llotc;on 'Mild he tears that harbor ooat O\.\ners ma\ hclOmC "'land- lodcJ" af there 1!. no ocean acce,c; bct"'een the harbor and Bolr,a < h1c:a. Harbor ..a1lors no"'" have to ~11 to the oct>an through the entrant·e al \nahe1m Ba) which they share w11h 1ht• I ~ 1',ja,.,. which usc'i the area to lciaJ -.hips o( the Padfic Fleet v.ath "'capon~ r 11101\on <;a1d one accident and the l'ntr. wa\ could be \hut olT. But Lintner. the C oa,tal c on- ~n ann umr,uhant ..aad he as no\~ rl·commendmg such a <.:ul bel"-een 1he two area\ The problem. he <;a1d. 1\ thal no one wants to finance the project ·\n) action the Coa~tal ( onscrvan- n makec; Thursda' "'ould be 1n lhe rccommenda11on • to the Coa,tal C omm1<o111on wh1c:h ha!. final authont)_ on Bol a (" h1ca de\.clop- mt:nl. officials )31d SLAIN PROF HAD BEEN THREATENED ••. P'romAl mot1\e Im the sla_>in~ ffumm1t~h rduc,l·d to ~I\ \\hl·thL·r lht· murder weapon had hc~n found Mro; c oopermJn \.'lid lam. .1 former \1uJent of C oopcrmttn'\. r ailed her a month aao to a~k for bail mone) alter his arrc~t on thch charge 1n rullenon She !-aid he rel used l..Am's ,1 tt'r. \nh. dr~rtbcd the prnfe~~r and her hrothct II\ clo fnends Just Call 642-6086 Ur. ~le\l' Murr;,i\, cha1rnun ol ( ul ~tale Fullerton·, biology department. ..aid ( oopcrman "had a real 1ntcrcr,t 1n 1hc V1etnamt·sc c,tudcnh ~ho "l'lt' Jllc.nd1n the un1\Cr'i1l)'. He ~enc out ,,f ha\ "'a' to hdp 11iem makt· the 1d1u,tment to the u01Hr\it\ .. E \tin\ -.a1d Cooperman "more or lc\c, ~fht'ndcd" \'H·tn.iml' 1mm1- i.'r.J nt'I hct ,111,l' "lw ... 1" h 1 m 'l'll a' ha\ln& \Cr) ('lo.-.c: llc'i w11h lho-.c people," Coopcrman. "'"ho -.crH·d 1n 11164 il\ rc~arch ph~s1<.'1\t at lhl· t S laboratone.5 in lo\ Alamo\. N M .. al'-0 was aCll\C 1n the ant1-nudear mo'll~ment. f uncral arrangerncnl\ "ere pend· 1ng Sunda) n11h1 for < ooJ')C'rmnn. who 1> sun 1\ ed b' h1!1 wife and l"O teen· d3ughtcr\ \\bat do )ef' like •bowl lllt' Dally Plloa~ Whal doa'a you llkt? CaJI a t numbu at lf'h alld yo r mtt •It -111 bf! rt ordtd. tran cribf!d aod df11~erta ao &lit approprlalt HI tor. Tht U mf' U ·hoar HIWtrln& SU\llt'f' may ff U fd lO ~t'Ord ltlttr CO tbe tdltor OD any t pie. Coatrtboton to our Lttttr1 colamD mulC include tbtlr oamt a.nd ltlep at aumbu for nrlflt'1tlon No clrnl1tloa call , pitas... 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WELSH LAWMAKER AIRS VIEWS AT UCI ••• From Al llH In ll, 111>1d1~·111 II •• .\b'> · al'o 'klld hl· \\a' <1mu\ed b\ thl· lnntro\t'f'>\ oH·r hnl..kr' "'h;> ha\t: dt'>rupll·J· !\1onllak·, 'iX'l'thn Hc '><lld hn~ltng p11hl1l1.1n' '' .t Rrill';h trnd1tmn "Bui "'c'1t· not a' .1fr;.11d .1., \ou ;ire of' crhal aggre<i"un :· ht· ohwn t•J Absl'.' ..aid h" non-<.onlorm1\I '>l\k I!> panl} thl· rc,ult ofgro~1ng up 1n a mmont} Ll,roup w11hin J nunnnt) group .. More \pcc1ficall~ hl' "'"a' born and rniS(:d Walt:\. a uial- produc111g region on thl· "'t.''>l l'oa\t ol Bntain. But ht'i fam1I~ h;ickground also made him part ofthl' 11n~ fr" 1\h communm 1n Wale~. (C >nl· ol h" L1thuan1an forebear.. .\h<ol' qu1r' wast~ t-"lnt m:tn1o 'PC'"3k ~ mh "W"lth a'\ 1dd1~h arccnt.I The la" mal..er ..aid 1ha1 rcr· n:...cnling \\alt''>. "'"llh '" rad1lt1I 1rad111on , mt:an'i not being alra1ll lo takl· rnntro\Cr'iial ~tand' "It alw mean<i that l'Oming lrom such a <.:0mmu n1t\, v..herc tht:n: " great t:mph3'>lS on ihc 1mponanCl· ol lamil). that prcd1ctabl\ m~ 1n tacsh h:ive been largcl) in the lit"fd ut human relauonsh1ps ·· ·\h\l' "aid Ht: sa1J h1~ ~oc1al conn.·rn'> ha' 1: kt.I him to introduce morl· "'rrl\all' membc:r ill'I, .. than an\ man 111 th" c.entur. 1n lhl' Hntl\h Parl1amrn1 \ pnvatt: mcmbcr art '' kg1<olatwn introduced h> an ind1\ 1du.1I nwmll\.•t nol b~ lht: go' crnment Among thO\l' Jll' hJ\C Ol'l'll mta'iurl'' modern111ng d1 \ orc.·e la"'"" endi ng the allegahl> of homo-.exual ach lx·1wccn conc,ult1n11 adult'> and .::,tabllshing puhl11.: lund1ng nt lam1I) rilanning lCntcrs Ab~· \aid he"r, alw \Pl'arht•aJl•d n:torm .. 1n adoption laws 10 a~surc tx·uer matl·h1n~ of t•h1ldren and new parent\ and he has sup~ncd ad· d1t1l•nal financial bcnefil for widow "hu"ic hu~band<i died in accidt'nts. 1 hc la" maker said he's Involved in lqo'>latmn that would \Cl new rule'I on 'tl''>t-tuhc.. baby e>;pcnments and .. urroga11: mnthcr'> or "womh leas- ing. f.'l.ricnmcnl'> with human embr~o., h,l\ e drawn cnt1c1sm from some 1uancrs. hut .\b'IC docsn 't tx'hc' l' this "ork .. tiould be hailed 11 It 1' urned at pre' enl1ng birth dcfel'I\ and illo~ mtem-lc.· cou~ to tran- • h1ldrcn Ht: doc'> nol equatl· till' f1r3lllCC \.\llh abon10n ".\hon1on mu'lt Ix used ar, a la\I t:\ort. not a first resort." !'\bsc '>3)S. ·\met: an unborn child is in\olvcd. I \ c ne'er tal..cn thl' \ 1ew that 11hort1on 1s a s1mpl) a right wh1<.:h can he c\erc1'>l·d w11hou1 reference to \Ome gu1llang pnnc1plt"S from the \late. "But tho'>C:' "'ho take an att1tudt "'"h1ch 1ns1sl" that not C\en for a shon pcnod should an~ "-Ork be done on an , mh~o -tht·~ arc la1ling to undl'r- 'tand tht' "ould he "-Ork lo enlarge Ilk lo allo" Pl'<>Pk to ha\t d11ldrtn \.\ho i11 e not hand1C'apped to g1\e :hsl<lrl·n tu the 1n1Crt1lc who Je'>JX'r ,11l·h "an1 c.hildrcn I'm in \hon. 1n la\ or of children.'· \h~ 1s an auorne~ O} prolc'ls1on. and ht.' ha'> al..,o studied ps\chology Dally Pilot Delivery -\-ORANGE COM l M I• Guaranteed Clrculatlon TelephonH n,,,...,._, ,, A•P • 1142 U» Daily Pilat H. L. Schwartz Ill Publisher Rosemary Churchman Cortml er Stephen F. Carazo Produc11un M;inaqt'r· Donald L. Wllllam1 Circuta11on M;irmQer ntl'n'>l\l'I). His oubpoken \'tcws ha "e not prt>\ en led him from being rc-ekned b) Welsh voters. ".\t lhl' bcg1"ntng of my life in Parliament. 1here were the inevitable 1ens&.0ns " he said ... But as the years wt™' on and they knew that the'IC l\SUl'S nc\cr took me away from n mng about consutuency issues. I 1h1nk the~ took pride in having an unusual representative who's not a rnnform1s1 ·· He added. "Our elections have to he.· fought not uni}' on the telev1s1on and in parades. but door-to-door. No om·,., reall} ellempl from the need to meet 1hc electorate at the doorstep. l hat'\ whl·rc ~ou gel lhe feedback·· .f\~e t\n·• shy 1!tbout eonfront1na hi\ frllo"' lawmakers either What \H>UIJ Pnml' \.1in1sterThatcherth1nk .1hout his plan to psycholanalyze her 111 a kc1ur1: at LC f'> "\he "'ould be e'ceed1ngly vexed at ml · .\bsc ..aid ··But that wouFdn't be :.1 nm cl slluauon .. Winds knock out power in SF Valley Bv tbt' A!l!IOc."iated Prell ~llllll' 11 <XJO Depart men I of Water and Po"'cr Lustomcrs spent lhe&r l'' cning in darkness a~ 35-mlle-per- huur \\.tnd!> gusted across the San F t'rnJndo Valle) and West Lo~ An- ge le!> damaging power lanes. officials ..aid Clrculatlon 714/142-4333 Cla11lfled edvertlalng 714/142·5171 All other department• 142-4321 MAIN OFFICE • ~l'W CA '• ~ CA c;;q_>{l r ~ I IOI!) 0.•"IJ@ eu.,~J ~ CorrN,,,, No .. !00"'1 !lu\l1•!l0<'" eotor• manet °' _,,... ..,,.,,, • ..,""' milr oo •HI'~ ....,t.ou, "*""' per t ocr1-rY' ... ,..... S..:ond <llU l~taue (lltlCI et Cuala MoM C.11.,.,... UJ>fi 1'4 800 S-•111llOI' b-, CNI• "' re. monO"'r b, mi1 ~ !>O mc .. ·tr 1 VOL. n , NO. 289 SHUTIERS CUSTOM QUAUn SHUTIERS Designed, Finished Installed =:J·-....... 31 Years Experience Manufa~turing Quality Shutters FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAIW\BLE ON THE MARKET TODAY ..• AT FACTORY DIRECT PRICES! Call (714) 548.S841 or 548-1717 HEIRWOOD MANUFACTORY 19n Placentia Avenue• Gosta Mesa, CA 92627 Gunman wanted funds for getaway <:;.... • A man who alleiedl¥ held four employees hostage dunna a failed robbery at an lrvinc Bank of Amen~ la" week wan1cd money to finance a gc11way, accordina to published statements by his at· tomeyr_._ __ ~...- David Dean Dahlen. 24. was already facina a possible I 00.y~r prison sentence for bank robbery (Pleaee Me GUNM.Al'f / A2) - Sex attack suspect killed in pier fall A Temple City mar. M.>Ughl b) police u ,pcct 1n ncsof xu 1 11sault1 was ,lound flo 1ina in the ocean off' Huntington h lat Monday. ; • Alvah F. Bourget, 38, ppercndy jumoed or fell to his death from the HuntinJtOn Beach City Pier, PQhct 5aid. 'The cause of death wiJI not be determined until an autopsy 15 completed. Bourget was named in n arrest wammt 1 sued Mcmday in Los Angeles County charaina him with It count of sexual assault. Lou Rhodes. a Los An clcs County S~frs deputy 5a1d it "'85 hkely Bourget knew of the warrant. · Rhodes said Bouraet was arrested last month on tuspicion of'. xually molesting ~ventl chitdttn but wanefeased pendina funher lnYtSllpt&On1 A police heticoP.ter •PQtted Bo~t's body at about 7 p.m. Monday. floatingone-quaner mile south of the pier, accordLng to Huntington Beach police. He was dead when pulled from the surf, Huntington Stach t. Bert. Chadwick said. Someone take pity onKltty l y llOIDT llAKU2l ............... A whne. nulduevou.. but sweet·naturcd at -lkftOWIS only as Killy -showed u_p • die ewPQn 8cach Golf COUl'S bout1WO~lf0 She appattnlly liked .Ut ibe AW and prom,PUy made betbome at the course that la urider Jhe takeuff pattern at John Wayne Airpon. • But for ISOmeOllC who lived~ the tolf COUJR; sbc devdoped ~· , ........ srrrt/AS) COAST 11111111 Mesa ·loser in arena noise suit Superior Court judge rejects city's preliminary injuction against the company. City Attorney Tom Wood asked the court, as pan of Costa Mesa's counter suit apinst Ned-West, to either shut down the amphitheater or force it to adhere to the city's notse ordinance. bid to control amph itheater sounds By TONY SAAVEDRA Of .. Oeltr No4 lblll The city of Costa Mesa has no leaal jurisdiction over the Pacil'ic Amphitheatre on the state-owned Orange County Fairgrounds and can- not force the outdoor arena to abide Coaat Clove cigarettes are the newest status symbol - despite American Lung Association warning./ A3 Spanking students Is a no-no now In LA school district./ A4 First blizzard of season socks It to Denver, Rock- ies./ AS World Anti-apartheid leader Bishop Tutu awarded Nobel Peace Prize.I AS Mlnd&Body The success rate of cor- neal transplants such as those at South Coast Medical Center Is en- couraglng./81 Let someone else bake cookies. Today's grand- mas are.Into velour jump- suits and archeologlcal expedltlons./81 Sporta After scoring five touch- downs In one game, r by local noise laws, a Superior .Court judge ruled Monday. The latest round in the fight over noi~ controls at the 18,000-seat arena went to amphitheater owner Ned-West Inc. when Judge Judith Ryan rejected Costa Mesa's bid for.a Ryan instead ruled that Costa Mesa could not impose regulations on the state fairarounds or its tenant, the SJ 4-million amphit~eater. Pampkln patch l'oar-k:r-old cart.a Shimon of lnine found jut the rla:bt pump for her Balloween jack-o'-~tem at the Irdne She also denied the preliminary inJUCtion because .. there was no reasonable probability" that the cny would win its civil suit and be Jt8nted a permanent court ordcT apmst the amphitheater. The judge's ruling kills Costa Mesa's suit. but Wood said be would attempt to keep the litigation ahve by filing an appeal with the 4th District Appellate Coun branch in Santa Ana "l think (Ryan) is wrong. I think we'll get a reversal in appellate court," said WOOd. · The city's COUllter suit was filed Sept. 25 in response to an earlier civil suit by Ned-Wtst, which l:laimed Costa Mesa's noise ordinance· was aimed solely at the amphitheater and thus violated the .. equal protection clause" of the U.S. Constitution. Monday's action added another wnnkle to the lcp1 question of whether the amphitheater is exempt . . Randa Farmers )4uket lo lnine. Unfortunate17, abe foand the bit 9q1IUh a t:rttle too large for euy carrytnc. from local rep!ations and P-:O~ bY the shield of "'soveretJD 1msnw1a-. ty:• Attorneys for Ned-West posed that same defense io the sc~tc criminal complaints filed apinst me company for violatioa Costa Mesa's noiK ordinance dunng t•o rock concens this summer. In those cases, Harbor Municipal Coun Selim Franklin ruled on Scl>l (J'.'leue eee JUDG&/A2l Council . kills office project · CM denies waiver of two-story lflmft on helghtofbufldin s By TONY SAAVEDRA Of .. Dellr ....... A muJt1-t1ercd office complex proposed for Costa ·Mesa was quashed Monday when the City Council overturned a PlanniQ& Com- mission decision to waive the t~ st~ry bcl&ht limit on the project The council, actina on an appeal by nciabborina homeowner Patricia Aynes, voted 4-0 apinst the plan to build two-, three-and four-story office buildings at 881 Baker St. Councilman Ed Mcfarland abt- tatned because he was notatthc Oct. t meeuna when the appeal was ~t beard. At the request of developer Ridwd Carstensen, the item was postponed unul Monday. Carstensen had asked for another continuance to Nov. S, but bis rcqµcst was denied. Aynes' banle againsHhc 'Six-build- ina complcit had pthcred steam earlier th1~ month amon1 ~dents in the Mesa "del Mar res1dential tract near the proposed 4.9-acrc construe- tion site She c1reulated flyers and brought residents to the Oct. 1 council (Pleue ~ COIDICIL/A2) oun an Valley Algh's -Dave Swigart was an easy choice as the Dally Pilot's Player of the Week./C1 Newport neck injury awarfl worrfes cities Ocean View Hlgh's foot- ball team Is scheduled for a Flagstaff, Arizona ap- · pearance In 1985./C1 Entertainment Looking tor the ultimate trivia game? Check out PBS' science series • "Nova" tonlght./BS INDEX Bridge EM Bulletin Board A3 8UelMA '--.C:..:~-e5-7 Calltotnla Newa A• CIUltned C5-7 Comlce EM Croeeword C7 Death Notlcee 04 featurH 82 HMOIC9$)9 C6 Ann Landen 82 Mutuit Fund• • 87 National New. A4 OplnlOn Ae Pola Log A3 Publlc Notlcet C 1~&4 Sportt St~ M1tktt1 8388 T.eevttlon E B3 A1 Oild'"Niwa A4 . . . i . . - 'Maybe we should put a st n up at the city entrance tellin people to enter at own risk.' By STEVE MARBLE Oftlle°'9r ........ ' Newport Beach Mayor Evelyn Hin is angry and concerned th•t a "dangerous precedent" has been set byajurythat found the city at fault for. the paralyz1na neck inj ury of a ~ year~ld Claremont man who dove headfirst into the ocean. "It's a black day," said the mayor. ··1 just can't understand why the city should be re~ponsible for something that's underwater." An Orange County Supc:nor Coun jury last Fnday ruled that quad- riplca.ic John Taylor crushed a vcr- tebra because the city was negligent m not waminabathersofthe harzardsof swimmina and divina in the waters near the Balboa Pier. Ta)lor '41S injured four years ago when he dove into the wa~r and struck a hidden ridge of sand He is paralyzed from the neck down and confined to a wheelchair · Similar lawsuits are pcnd1n1 an several Ora nae Coast cities. mcluding t...aauna Beach ROBERT ----HYNDMAN CAMPA IGN '84 . VALLBY/A2} "My personal opm1on 1s that this ruling will have a muc,h more far- rcaching effect than .,Ust alona the coast ... said Bruce Baird. supervisor of Laguna's lifeguard scrv1~. "Eve'): ci\> has some natural hazards. ' said Baird It's a very unfonunatc dectsion because the cod result may be that some recreation will have to be banned. he added. The issue tn Taylor's jury trial was whether the etty was oeaJigent for not postma signs warning bathers of sh1f\ina sands. underwater potholes and sandbars. The jury ruled in Ta)lor's fa, or "M> first reaction is anger because the cit} has done so much to educate people and to teach them to have a healthy respect for the ocean." said Han. herself a weekend boater. "It's almost - 1 don't know. Maybe~ should just puta ign at lht {Pleue ... DfJUllT I A2l ·Dick Dille burned in home-accident Surf utta rtst may be unat>le to play alh as a r s ult of fire • Ootober 16, .. 98'4 • COUNCIL QUASHES COMPLEX ••• Prom Al Chance of ~howers Wednesday meeting to prote$t the intltased traffic and lack of :privacy that she id would be caused by thc:"ll3144~ s.quarc·foot complex. "Tihey were CXJ)(Cting 2,000 cars with that complex a the de$tination. The tf'llffic flow would have been awe ome," said Aynes this momine. She I~ complained about the multi· story buildincs. "We would ha\e been blc to cc them from our )-ards nd th ) Y.ould be able to us." .According to cit)' plannin,g ttpons, the pro#t was 110 fo t from home 1a~ro ~ a flood<ontrel channd and Bear StiTet. fhc site wa also more than 400 feet nwayfrom hon1es to the nonh. I!' other uction Monday, council . JUDGE TURNS UP VOLUME ••• From Al 28 that the city could indeed pros.- ecute amphitheater owners under the noise ordinance. franklin ex~lained Costa Mesa was not trying to rcaulate activity on the fairgrounds, but rather the noise that was leavina the grounds. ·City Attorney Wood interpreted the decision to mean that Franklin .. did not buy the argument'" of sovereign immunity. With conflictina court decisions, it may be up to the appellate coun to --:"'tettle-the issbc of'whccner Costa Mesa can police the amphitheater word implies. This is the hijhest de~ision in this . ca~ on t~e appli- cauon of sovcre1in tmmuruty,"..Pa- piano said. Ned-West has not appealed the Municipal Court deci ion, and Pa-· piano said the Superior Court ruling an the ci vii case would help. his defense against the misdemeanor criminal charges filed by the city. A trial date for those charaes has not been set. Meanwhili;, Woo<isaidCosta Mes-1 wouli:i persevere in its crusade to lower the noise spilbng into the residentiaJ neighborhoods 6urround-'"f. the concert facility. . members voted w1thQUl d1scuss1on to ra se their monthly tipcnd from $382.88 to S42U7. an mcreasc of 10 pt'~\. Th(' change will take effect Dec. I. The council's hm pa) raise wa a S pcrctnt jump in ()eccmber 1982, said cit\ Personnel Scn·ices Di~ctor W1l- tiain l'odd. · stop," said Wood. ··we don't have all our egp in one basket." Woo;d was re~erring t<? the city's nuuance suit a$a1nst 1he amphitheater in Supcnor Court and the criminal charge~ in Municipal Court. . ' Moreover .. on the same .day that Judge Ryan ruled that Costa Me9a had no auttiority to regulate 1he arena. the City Council gave final approval 'on another law intended to force amphjtbeater maDa&C~ .. lO apply for an entertainment permit. That permit would only be iranted if the company agrees to abide by city building. ~raffic, safety -and noise -regulattons. Ti dee TOOAY S.COrKI high I 03 p m 6econd !OW • ~ p m .. ~ .. ., fhthlQn • :U7pm 4 7 flUllow 1112Pm.. 06 6!111 Nh •Odey •& e·11 pm~ 11-w.o....a.si 11 • St • m. llt'll MC• 90a1n ate 17pm Moon11-•\11 04pm ,H11rdf 17 p m ll1d •ts again W.O~ at II 10 p.m • Temperatures ... 43 71 40 40 23 -11 "' l '""' I& .. ... !55 71 12 -~i ~~::a:: c~1 ... St10wer=> ~ F~mttt s"°' .. ()cducleo.,.... ~torwv-. ~· 63 ... F•100 6t •• to 78 ,.lllf .. 27 61 60 CltlNI Rlpkjt " At 15 43 OteMF ... 46 tO .... 2t Or""*'>OrO.H C IO ... rr 82 HWtfOrd n 43 J1 62 "*" "' 33 •1 5t Honotulv .. " 40 21 HOU•ICHI 71 .. 70 02 i"dlatilPOI• 7' p n 58 .i.etltM.llM 18 OI 87 58 JDtonvlllt 17 u 16 52 .hltlMU ... ., 70 51 It-Coy n 81 13 30 l•VeQn 71 .. , 74 11 Uttle Rodi 73 02 74 &e 51 111 118 ,, .. t• u I "4 13 ,, .,.___.,.. IO .. eo N 112 18 llt '41 H 11 ., &4 ?:l «I 67 n :: ~ ee el II IO .. 17 to .. ~ 61 41 u 38 111 60 eo ,., 112 31 M 31 11 48 f6 Ill 77 89 &1 aa eo eo T3 70 71 ~6 ti 75 11 ... ... ,. 77 11:1 .. 49 ... u .. 49 "10 51 ..... ,.. 11 74 1U .. 48 1:1 ~ 13 49 Neil Papiano,. attom~y and chief executive officer for Ned-West, said the.ruling by Judae Ryan upped the scales in his favor. .. This is a supenor coun, as the 'We're not going to let up until they· (Ned-West) comply with the noise ordinance. There's no way we'll Wood said the entertainment ordi· nance becomes effective in 30 days . 73 "' .... 21 Extended DICK DALE HURT IN FIRE ••• From Al I rolled up m the rug. co ncert next month in Manhattan Beach. Ill .. 5t .... 41 n while he was watching the World Series on television with a friend. He said he'd started to heat oil for some popcorn but was sidetracked by the baseball game. "I kneeled there for maybe a minute looking at my bands, and I thought. oh my God, this is pretty bad. It just looked like a dead person's hand." "This has been a rough year for Dick and now he doesn't know if he'll be able to use his left hand well VALLEY OF THE POLS ••• .. I went into the kitchen and ·saw the smoke pouring out, so I took it to the door to the outside. As I Lifted the lid to get the smoke out, the humidity of the air hit the oil and 1t was like a flame thrower. it hit my face -for some reason it didn't bum my face - but I dropped it and it went like a loud boom .... I just threw myself on tht> floor. There was a throw rug there and Dale praised Newpon Beach para- medics for their quick work. "I have to give credit to the 'uys who came down, the paramedics, • he said. 0 Tbey worked on me like you wouldn't believe .... The world is full offrien.ds you ain't met yet." The 4S-year-old musician said he intends to appear at a scheduled INJURY SUIT STUNS CITY ••• From.Al - city entrance tellinJ people to enter at their own risk." said the mayor. "I cen.amly don't mean any di~ respect to this young man but this raises serious concerns about all cases where someone is injured because of an act of G<><L" Hart added. Wayne Austero, one of the at- torneys representing Taylor. said the case -if nothmg else -should be a wamin1 to cities that they )lave a responsiblity to the public. "My partner and I feel that there arc ccrtam cases, regardless of the odds, that ought to be tned m order to focus the attention of the public on a real problem." Austero said. ··we ran up against the attitude that signs are wonhless Nobody wanted to change their opinion. They were stubborn, almost arrogant, .. the at- torney noted. Lifeguard officials m other coastal c1t1es said they have followed the case with rap1 interest. "If the issue is signs, the classic example is the 55 mph signs on the freeway. How many people pay attention to them," sa1d Huntington Beach Lifeguard Lt. Bill Richardson. Huntington Beach, which owns and maintains a one-mite stretch of strand, began placing warning signs at the beach about a year ago. Ten sisns. printed in Enghsb and Sparush, caution swimmers aoout rip currents, sand bars and other obstacles. The siplS were erected following a lawsuit m Los Angeles that found lifeguards were negligent for not warning swimmers of rip tides. "You can put up signs for every- thing but people have a ~ choice whether to believe them or nQt believe them," said David Pryor, a state lifeguard supervisor in Hunt· in&ton Beach ... Peoole have to take a Prom Al enough to play guitar Hain," said In past vears, about t3 percent of Kage. ··sut he's a fighter. ·'r :r Fountain Valley's registered ale spent much of the past year in votersc~ercised their .ri&ht in ,city the courtroom successfully fighting elecuons. she said. in ract, Brown allegations that he molested a young needed fewer than l. 700 votes four girl. Most recently, the Costa Mesa years ago to become the top vote- City Cou·ncil denied Dale's pfan for a getter in the City Council election. nightclub in that city. -But with an expected voter turnout Kaye said Dale now intends to this November of SO to 60 percent. locate the club in Anaheim. Brown says some candidates may certain amount of responsib1hty for their own lives." Richardson said lifeguards in Hunttngton, Newport Beach and other cities have gone lo areat lengths to educate the public · about the hazards of playma in the surf. Recently. the two cities and Hoag Memonal Hospital m Newport Beacf1 filmed .. Wipe Out" a ·short movie dealing with neck injuries. It has been shown in schools and cable television. "That's why tllis cuts so deep," said Mayor Hart. "We've already done so much." Taylor has not yet been awarded a dollar amount in bis damage suit. City officials said they have not decided whether to aj)p_eal the case, attempt to settle out of court and allow the jury to come up with a figure. change their campaign strategies. "They think they should do it like the big boys do it.'.' she say~. "But they don't realize it doesn't work in this community." Those familiar witb the campaij,Jl know Brown is referring to Jam Petrikin, a chiropractor acuve in community organizations who, directly or mdircctly, bas sparked the bulk of the campaign fireworks. The target of Petrikin's volleys bas been Mayor Marvin Adler, a three· term councilman ~king his fourth term. But Petri kin says he ha n 't engaged in Ctirty politics. .. J don't think this race is different from other races in the past," Petrikiri says, ''and I hope it doesn't set any worse thin it has." While his accusations have re- peatedly pot Adler on the defensive, Petrik.in said, "He (Adler) says I'm attacking him personally. I'm not attacking him p,em>nally, rm at'-Ck· ing his record. ' • · Either way, the Fountain Valley City Council race is focusing on the battle between Petrikin and ~dlcr. A weapon in that battle is a proposal, called Measure C, that GUNMAN AIMED FOR GETAWAY ••• -would limit City Council members to two consecutive terms. But even if fountain Valley voters endorse it, the measure would not affect this ~year's election winners. If approved; the measure would become effective in Prom Al at the ume of the hostage drama last Friday. court records m Los Angeles show. Dahlen was scheduled to be sentenced Monday on prior bank robbery co nvictions but a federal judge in Los Angeles delayed passing sentence untJI Oct. 22 The La Habra man was convicted Aug. 28 after plcadinJ guilty to robbing four banks. including a $40.000 robbery m Corona del Mar. Dahlen was arrested in June and originally charged with nine bank robbencs. At the tame of the Irvine incident Friday, Dahlen was free on $50,000 bail. According to published reports a'tnbuted to 11ttorney Rohen launders, Dahlen was afraid of going to prison and wanted money to .. blow town." · Dahlen was arrested Fnday-after- KITTY NEEDS A HOME ••• From Al ptetLy bad-hal»I Kllty became a golf course thief. She stole golf balls -specifically. she stole golf balls that golfers were puttmg out on the 18th green when victory or defeat could often hang in the balance. Her penchant for latching on to golf balls -she buned them m the groundskceper's sand pile for reasons known only to herself-turned out to be a hazard that ocarly cost her her hfe About four weeks ago Kell y P1pano. who works at the ~olf course's pro shop, found Kitty s banered and unconscious body under a car in the golf club's parking lot. "They broke her jaw and nearly destroyed her eye and car. She suffered cnouah trauma to be run over by a car. Aul she never went out "We think that some golfer became mad about lomg_ a aolf ball and struck her in the side of the head with a golf club." With Kitty hovenna between life and death, George Camaras - a golfer and veterinarian -took charge. He took Kitty to his animal hospital in Costa Mesa. reset her jaw and nursed her back to health. She's almost recovered, Camaras said Now, Camaras and Pipino must find a new home for Kitty. They can't take a chance on rctumina her to the golf count and have her return to her dangerous life of larceny on the links. They"rc: looking for a good home, with rc$ponsible 0"1ners. But she can't, close ber jaw completely and isn't able to clean morsels from the comer ofber mouth. noon after a seven-hour siege at the Bank of America in lrvine. The four female hostages, including the bank manager who had been kidnapped from her home in Tustin, managed to escape unharmed after three hours. Dahlen was arrested after a SWAT team stormed the building. which was surrounded by FBI agents and about 30 police officers. He is being held without bail tOday at the federal correctionaJ facility at Terminal Island. This isn't purr-ah, par -for the course. Cam..aras said', because cats. are so fastidious, · That's why a potential owner must be w1lhn1 to help out with her pel'Sonal hygiene. "We want to find a owner willing to do this." Camaras said ... We want her back if someone takes her and doesn't want to keep her. We don't want her to be shunted fro111 home to home." Potential owners who might want to take a chance on adoptin1 the reformed solf baJI stealing cat can drop by to visit her at the Bal-Mesa Hospital, l 542 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. Pipino. the first to befriend Kitty and -who paid for her spayina and shots when she fint amved at the course. 11 ofTerin& to pay for shot,, Pe~ino said she would do anythina possible to prevent another CA Tastrophc. ORANGE COAST Clrculetloft 714/Ma..un Delly Piiot Oeflvery le QuarantHd ~r f rt().fy " you do not M..e YOU! 114''* i,., & 30pm • Df!IOt•., ,, m and rour ccipy w11 "" -.....a Daily Pilat H. L. 8chw1rtz Ill ...... Publish r RoHmary Churchman Controller 8tephM f. Carazo Production Donald L. WHllllma .. Clroulatlon M nag r M nag r +. CtaMffled *•*"Ill 714/MJ-1111 AH otMr ~ M2-4n1 MAIN OFFICI U0 WtSt 81\r Iii Cotta._.... CA M!~ llc:.clftsS Bo• I ~¢Sta Mfta -CA 92628 VOL 'Tl, ~'"- 1987. . Petrikin helped initiate the measure which he says will allow Just .Call .642-6086 Designed, Finished Installed ·•new blood" to revitalize the City Council. Candidate Scott also sup- ports it. But Adler says the measure is specifically intended to embarrass him and call attention to his l 2 ye.art on the council. When the proposal was first dis- cussed in February, Adler said it was intended specifically to prevent him from seeking re-election. •'This leads me to believe that the initiative is politically motivated and that the so- called 'concerned citizens' arc per~ · haps \hose wbo will be working for candidates running for office this November," he said. Adler's view on the matter hasn't changed since then. --- Furthennorc, Pctrikin bas con- tributed money to the group supp<>rt- ing Measure C. Fountain Valley Citizens for Good Government. The chainnan of that group is Oan Hoppy. Hoppy is the same man who went 10 the county Distnct Attorney's office claiming Adler, Brown and Councilman Jim Neal violated state law Sept. 18 by meeting in Adler's home following a City Council meet· ing. State law prohibits a quorum of elected "offiCJals from meeting to discuss city business unleis the meet- ingj~ publicly announced. . Hoppy said the omctlls met to discuss the effects of Measure <?. which was debated at the City Council meet in& earlier that cvcnina. The District Attorney's office de- tcnniped, however, that there was insufficient evidence to .support Hoppy'5 claim. If there arc more itsua to tic found Petrikin i~ lookin& for them in city records. Late last month, he acCused the city manager and her staff of drqiing their heels in providing past records concerning council mef!'bers' travel expenditures. This time. it was City Manager Judy Kelsey who was put on the defensive. Ktlscy said the delays were caused by Pctrildn who was not specific about the ty~ of information he wanted. Pctnkin says he wants to know how much money was spent to send Adler to League of Cities meetings beld at various sites throughout the year. And most recently, Petrikin has accused Adler and his supporters of tearing down his campaign sips l 1h weeks ago. Adler's signs, which Petri kin says were posted ri&ht next to his, were not damaJed. And once again.-Adler -found himself responding to new accusa- tions. "It's just another way to JCl his name in the papers," Adler said. But this time, Adler also responded with nCcidlinaofhisown In sugestina that Pctrikin may have torn hisown signs down in light of the media attention a Huntington Beach City Council candidate attracted when his signs were vandalized. The back-and-forth accusations, while attracting attention, may not attract votes. according to Barbara Brown, ··vou have to understand 1h1s community," she says. 0 The people here don ... t 'like to sec this type of campaign. I'm telling ~ople I meet to look at how the candtdates run their campaigns so they can tell what the candidates arc like. : . - "fountain Valleyhasalwayabeena quiet, bedroom community sur- rounded by walls," Brown said. "The walls seem to keep out the problems from Santa Ana and the troubles Huntington Beach has." • But Fountain Valley's walls ap- parentl¥ aren't hi&h enough to keep out the influence ofbia city politics at its mudslinging best. Wbat do yo.a like aboat tlae DaUy PUot'? What doa't you like? Call tbe 111mber at left and yo•r menace wm be recorded, transcribed ud delivered to die appropriate edlcor. 1'lte Mme U·llffr u1wert.11ervlce may be used to record letters co tbe editor oa ur topic. Coacrtbators lo oar Letters coJamo lllHt lach1de tllelr name aod teleplMae aamber for vertflcaUon. No clrculatioo calla, please. Tell •• wlaat'a on yoar IJllDd, • P 36 , . Firefighters suspect arson Jf1 • rop 1.orum . b ht· t k •t ..a• set Wednesda" 111: . rus ire a par s1 e ... :::-~~,.::& • ~~ TONYSAAVEDR~ hlazcaround l:SOpm 1nafieldatthe 1futty to :top lbe r a1' ~ ........ ~--·--°' ~~,... •te1t 1 e o Die Pf' >~d Ta1brn Reaiona1 areve awa> rn a bTuc Chevrolet A pubhc forum on Prop 36. spon orcd by chcDrangc CountyChaptcrofthcOlhfornm LtagucofC1ties', w1lll be held Wcdnc dny at 7:30 p.m. al the Oarden Grove Communny Center, Sianford Street, east of Euclid. Canine companion• featured The Ota&s MounUun group . for physically handi- capped adults will how a firm abOut canine companions for lhc handicapped at their month1y meeting/social on Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Rehab Institute 01' Southern C&lifomaa, 1800 E. La Veta, Orange. • Refreshments will be served by· the Young Ladies Institute. For details ab6ut volunteer work, membership, donation$ or tran·sportation, 11545·7888 or 535-1970. Ezcbange Club alatea tour Arson is u pcct d an a half-acre Park ntar 19th ~ Uttt and Balboa Camaro. b ~ Boulevard. rush urc that created more smoke 'the fire was in a ICC'Uon about 40 Police ttacttl the car hccnse plate than danger Monda) for con-d f lb number to 1 Cyprm residence Where domanaum """' den•• at the border of yari s west o c boulevard and tht h ,.._A .. _ ~ ... ., ... Newpon TcfTM'lc Condomanaums aut onucs C'Qnt.a"~ ln'!; MJspects Costa Mesa and Nev.-pon Beach on and ea11 of the Sinta Ana River JUSt However, !ftO anat wttt madt West 19th Street. acrossfrOm Huntington Beach ~y. "All natural and accidental means Ric.hey Aid tnves4ptors did not No one was IDJUred an the fire. and hive bctn eliminated."' said Costa find an) incendiary devices at the Jl1chey said a lot of high grass was Mesa Admtnistrauve Fire Chief Jim ile. buuhtblUedidnotprescnla R h However. police rcponed that a t 1 to nearb) l'Clldcnu. He cx- ic ey. gardcnerallhc complcxsaw t~o men Pia cd at took longer than u'uaJ to Thirteen firefighters from Costa run from the brush juH before the con the flame& beause fitt~ Mesa and Ncw1>9n Beach brouJ,ht the flariles rose from the field. The fllb&rrt had trouble setuna lhcir names under control roughly 46 gardtncr noufcd resident Thomas equipment down a gully to reach the mmuces after they wett called to 1hc .Melander fl hot . .:SS. who tried un uc-fire. 'The Exchange Club of the Saddleback Valley will have a noon picnic lunch 18nd tour the historic Heri~ 1----:----........ ----..,..,..,~'lll• ... •!lll!JI Hill In El Toro on Thursday. The tour, which begins promptly at 12:30, will include the Serrano Adobe, F.l Torn Grammar School, St. Geor&e's Episco1>4l Church and the Bennett Ranch House. For more information, caJI 831-3340. Mesa High reunion Saturday c-t6ry-eaneanion oroma Mesa KtgrrN..;,~,.__J_. ______ _.. ________ _.~~~WJ"'"1~~~ be held Oct. 20 at the Irvine Mamou Hotel. Please ton tact the high school at SS(>.:3344 for details. i Upper Bay tour announced The Friends ofNewpon Bay will guide their first tour of the season of the Upper Newport Bay Ecological Reserve on Saturday, Oct. 20. The walkini tours, lasting one to two hours, introduce visitors to the wtldlife in the estuarine marsh. The tours are ~ven in coo~ration with the state Department of Fisli and Game. Tour groups start every 1 S minutes from 9 to 10:30 a.m. at the corner of East Bluff Drive and Back Bay Road. Sorority luncheon scheduled Kappa Delta Alumnae from the Newpon Harbor and Orange County Alumnae Associations will join together to commemorate the founding of the sorority at a luncheon on Saturday, Oct. 20, at 11:30 a.m. at the Copa de Ora Restaurant in Costa Me5a. All area Kappa Deltas arc invited. For more information and reservations, caJI Barbara Johannes of Dana Point at 496-4345 or Shirley de Hera~ of Huntington Beach at 846-4164. Golden West slates seminar Golden West College will conduct a one-<lay seminar on Micro-Computer Trouble Shooting on Saturday, Oct. 20, from 9 a.m. to nooon in Math Sciences 123. Topics to The .... ~·so-er Funeral held for John Deane Funeral scrv1~ were condUC'ICd Monday for John Harold Peter Deane. who died Thursday at Hoag Memorial Hospital 10 e"".l)Ott BeaCh. He was 62. Mr. Deane. who had been self-employed 111 mail sales. was a Canadian Navy veteran of World War II and a member.of St. Joadtim•1 Catholic Church in Costa .Mesa He formerly bcl ~:the CosuL-Maa Kinett Ou. He 1s ·survived by his wife, W1nnfred May Regina Deane, of the family ho111e in Santa Ana, and two dauf)lters. Unda Bentley of Nevq>011 ~ and Gait Omstenscn ofHuntinaton Beach. A'lso sun.·iving arc three sisters, au hvmg in Canada. and four grandchildren. The family has requested memonal contnbutions to the American Heart Association. PlttCC Brothers Bell Broadway Monuary was in cbar&e: of amtngcmcnts. be covered include how to analyze and prevent computer r-•3 • ,, problems; how to repair minor problems; and how to The GoOdyear blimp aalli OTer a nearly know when to take the computer m for repair. . emptt.uandneu the Newport Beacli-pler; Program fee is $15 and advana! regiruau~o-'-n-15~= a ll1ll'e ·~ th•t~ummer Is OTer and fall ls aponaa. Youths' taste for scented cigarettes poses health-hazar-d requested by calling 891-3991 . ___ _._.._ .... ____ --_.._ ______ ._ ________________ _ By dlle AllOCiated Prat • OCC offering workshop A four-hour workshop, designed to help attendees rtalize1heirstrcngths and learn how 10 present themselves with impact.; will be offettd by Orange Coast College on Saturday, Oct. 20. from 9a.m. to I p.m. in Room l IOofthe Counseling and Admissions Building. Bush uses 2 dictionaries to back 'shame' comment Indonesian-made clove cipret\CS have bcoome • (!CVO status S)mbOI among the youns despite unfavorible opinions from the American Lung Association. .. I guess it's the nc-· Whioo -it's the thing to do." said Jeff Bendall. 20. of Costa Mesa. wbo staned smokiDJ . clove ciscrettes a )'ear ago. ··1 thoQlht. •£vcrybodfs smoldng them, why not cry them?" llley wtc bcUcr than Registration fee is $15 for the course, entitled "Promoting Yourself -Making You Your Greatest Asset," conducted by Jean Blankenship and Marge England. For more information. call 432-5880. Pianist to perform at U~I Pianist Julien Musafia will perform at UC Irvine's Fine Arts Concen Hall on SatUtday. Oct. 20, at 8 p.m. Admission is free and no tickets are required. Dr. Musafia is professor of music at CalState Long Beach and founder and director of the university's Consonium Musicum. For more information, call 856-6617. CA LENDAR Tuesday' Oct. 16 • 5:30 p.m., Lapna Beacb City CouncU, City Half Council Chambers, 505 Forest Avenue. • 9:30 a.m., <>ruse Coaa»-Board of Superviion, Hall of Administration. IOCivicCenter Plaza, Santa Ana • I ;30 p.m., Orange Couty PlunlD& CommJ11loo, Hall of Admlnistration, l 0 Civic Center Plau, Sin ta Ana. • 8 p.m.; Foantaln Valley City Coucll, City Council O\ambers, 10200 Slater Ave. PoucE Loe LOS ANGELES (AP)-Citing two dictionaries and numerous news.. paper stories, Vice President George Bush today def ended his accusations that Walter Mondale and Geraldine Ferraro said the Marines killed in Lebanon .. died in shame." · "That was and is an accurate statement of the case,,. Bush -said, although he failed . to produce any statement quoting either Mondale or Ferraro as saying the Marines had died in shame. . Instead .. Bush quoted from news accounts that said the two Democrats were critical of U.S. policy in Leba- non. For example, he quoted Ferraro assaying on Sept. 20 that the Marines "died on a mission without a purpose and for a policy that's never been explained.•· Bush declared, "Mr. Mondale and Mrs. Ferraro can argue all they want. · They can demand apoloaies every day. But the fact of the matter is (that) accusing young men of dying without a purpose an(t for no reason is in the lexicon of the Amencan people a shame.·· Bush quoted Mondale as saying that with the death of the Mannes "once again we're humiliated in this region.'' Strctchin& to make a point. Bush said, .. Abase in Webster's as l uridcrstand it is defined as deep shame, and when you look up humiliation Tt refers you to abase ... He acknowledged that he errCd Monday night m sayini that Webster's International 4efincs hu- miliation as .. d~dation, diS&JKC an'd shame." Instead. BuSh said, the dictionary he Should have cited was American Heritage. In earlier campaign travels. Bush has said that the United States ''suffered a humiliation in Iran" with 52 Americans held hostage for more than a year. Given his comparison of humiliation with shame, Bush was asked if he thought the hoSlagcs had been held in shame. · · • "No." Bush replicCi. "When you're held hostage by a government it's a very different thins than when you tiave wanton tcrronst acts;" SpcaJung to Republicans at a fund~ raismg dinner Monday nipt, Bush concluded. ..So much for all this apology (demanded by Mondale}. 1 .. Our Marines didn't die m humili- ation, or in shame or m disarace or in gcttina pushed around," Bush said. .. They died in service to·their coun- try, to eve peace a chance in J..ebano~ . . Bush triggered the dispute with Mondale when he made this state- ment in last Thursday's debate with Geraldine Fcrano: .. We went to Lebanon to give peace a chance. And for somebody to sugest. as our two opponents have, that these men died in shame, they'd better not tell the parents of those young Marines." The remark drew an immediate protest from Ms. Ferraro, who said. .. no one has ever said that those young men who were killed through the nClligence of this administration and otners ever died in shame.•• Mondale labeled Bush's statement "unpardonable" and said he was -angry as licit" about the rcmarlt. The Democratic challenger said he would confront Reapn on the .sul?ject in their debate Sunday if Bush refused to apologize. C~l~." , The ciprcites arc exoticaJJy packaaed with wdl brand names as Ojarum, Jakarta, Bima. Kuta and Krakatoa. "They are real popular," said Ken Harbauah. manager of Peer Recor& near the Newpon Beach pier. "A lot of people unoke them just because they smell bad. and a lot ot older people don't like them." · Thr ci~rettes. which go for as much as $2.25 per pack of 10, have a aistinct, pungent aroma. They smell like burning clo,·es, the fragrant dried Oowcr bads of tropical evergreen trees. · Despite their billin1 &$ clove cigarettes, the Caddish imports actually have more tobacco than cloves. An iuWysis ot several popw r brands by tbc Oak RidF National Laboratory in 'T enncssce sh~ that the cigarettes contain 60 percent tobacco ana 40 perc.ent cloves. The researchers also found levels of tar, nte0tine, carbon monoxide and carbon dio~ide that were, on the ave~ higher than those found an rcgUlar commercial ciprtltes The American Lung Association of Orange County has issued a warning to the public about the clove . ciprcttes. .. While it is. not known whether clove cigarct?Q are more dangerous to moke than regular cigarettes. we must auume that clove ci,garcttes pose at least the me danacr as r_cJUlar cip.rettes unless proven othcf"sse." said Debbie Mahood in the statement 1Ssucd by the association. Rour suffer slight injuries - in early m~rning NB blaze J.iapoa · · Sbe..sutmiscd~e. ring may Donald Richard Martin. 38. was · have fa len dow~ ~~drain. arrested for driving under the m· · Thie\cs stole two Chevy wire- fluence of alcohol Monday rught ~t . wheel hubcaps v&lued at SJ 50 shonly Ocean Avenue and Beach Street. &ii after a visitor parked her car at Los was setat $1,500. Amigos High School. 16566 New-•. • h s . Telephone compan) workers re-ope t. • • • ported that a customci-·s phone lines Burglars stoJe tools and a lawn under the influence of aJoohol. Darrel Eddie Hillman. 44, 'f'f'llS arrested at 12:25 a.m. on MacAnhur Boule\"ard at the 'cwport Freeway. Monica Su~ Abbott, 25. wu arre ed at 1:45 a.m. at Campus Drive and Manin. De· borah Hadden, 27, was arrtSted at 8 a.m. on Bordeaux. Elwood Adam Boguckt 41, \\'U arrested at noon on Aston Strttt at Barranca Parkway. John Howard Rapp, 41. wasanes~ al 11 :35 p.m. on MacAnhur 11 Four persons received minor in-w1thi~ IO mtnutes. a lire dcpanmcnt juries durina an early momina fire s_pokesman reported. The cause of the that caukd an c timatcd SJ 20,000 • fire Is under 1nvestiption. daml&e to a home in the Bia C-anyon Shack, who was alone in the home, area ofN~ Beach tdday. told ftrc officiah he hcara poppina The home of Dr. Michael Shack at 19 Bum ng Tree Road cauah• fire ~rtly after 4 a.m. Ncwpon Beach fircft&tttcrs controlled the liliZe and cractina noises and smelled smoke. He JOtd the home and neiah· bors Called iftrefiatum. • Stukk suffttec:f·ftotn smoke inhala· tlon -.na wn ai ven ftnt aid at the sc:ene. Also. two fircfi&htcrs suffered minor neck bums and a third strained a knee while fiahtina the blaze. the acpanmlnt fiPOrled. Of the estimated Ion, $80,000 damqe was to 1hc house and $40 000 to the contents of the home. No oeher h<imea wett affected by the blue. were intentionally cut Monday niahl edger valued at $790 from a pragc in m the 900 block of Miramar Strttt. the 16000 block of Mt. Hanna. Police responded and found the • • • occupants safe inside the residence. A hu~ intruder ate a bag of • • • potato chips in the lmna room and Someone rcponcdly took S50S.SS stot~ ch1J>5. beer and ~inc after in cash from a locked vehidcparltcd b~kmgantoa residence in the 10000 an the 1900 block of Lquna Canyon block of Poly Coun. Road Monday '.tt;moon. Someone sh~ through a Sli<iing Freddie Ruiz Gonzalci., 36 w s ~ door ind stok a purse contain- topped in his vehicle Morida) 1n th 1na S7 cash and $42 in misetllaneous 1600 block of South Coast Hi&hwa)' items from a hou~ in the t 0000 Noa and arrest~ for ~ion or man-of Elk River. juana for sale. Ball WU set at SS.000. 1"iD Rewpott81acla Stereo equ•pmt:nt and• televi ion aet we~ toltn ~ a residence on the 2'400 block of 16th treet. The I was estimated at SlSO. • • • A btach IOCf' reported that hts $200 surfboard wu 11olcn from the Ncv.I· port Pier area ' U nr~ el"ilty. .. 0...,.. Coelt DAILY PtlO It's the best way to find out about what's new in phones. Because when you make a decision on business phones, you've got to be right. . We're AT&T Information Systems:J\rul we1fintroduce y(ju to our advanced phones for small businesses, like the MERLIN' .. Communications System. Phones that remember numbers you dial frequently. Phottes that page, redial automatically, and transfer calls. Even set up 3-way conferences-. No other communications company has a service force as large as ours. Nor the experience, expertise··and_te.chnology. Get acquainted with our sfuall business specialists. They 're your Small Business Connection when it comes to phones. 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Jllem.Themoreyoudeposit.nn the long·r .in1ply call us roll·frce and "r'll .lrr:mge (5j AMERICAN SAVINOS Appl1t' to tmru from l.l co lJ montht. Swb•t1111tial pm1dr:-/or tarlv ... ulldrau iU. Anmu:il 1dd b.md 'Ori comptil4ndmf •• '/lnl ANO LOAN A880CIATION inrnr.u u ltf1 °" tkpo111 for cltt tnrtrt tmn. ~bou rall', 'l1dd and rmru 11ihJm co claante u11hn111 nouce. _ COSTA MES~ 3929 S Bristol 979-9800 \ - .. CARDEN GROVE 12141 t1:irden Grov(' Bhd 534. 690 HU, 11NGTO~ BEACH 7g30 Edmgcr.A\c 848·2222 LAGUNA HILLS 14085 F.l :r<u(l Rd 770·2816 . . ~~- OR~NGS 1965 N. Tuatm 974·1620 • S~napshots of young solar syste1n elate asuonom.er By ilM AllOC)!&ta Preti WASHINGTON -The st~onicst evide~cc ~~t. that planets surro~nll a nearby star has renewed speculauon about PQSs1ble ltfc on other worlds, says an astronomer who took the first photoaraph of what may be a youna ~Jar system Scientists prtviously had identified about 40stars that may be orbited b)' dusi ice ~rtides and other solid material. But they .say a p~otograph relcascci Monday is the first direct evidence that some of the material around one of those stars-Beta Pictoris-has coalesced to create planeu. "'Planetary Kienlists believe that (the process leading to) the fonnation of the Earth an~ our solar system ·is a verY common occurrence but we never tiadyroof that 1t h•ppen1 elsewhcrt," .sa1d Jct Propulsion l.iooratory astroncfmer Ricbard.J.-- Tcrrilc. "Now, we're beJinnina to sec that il is a common occum.nce," T.emle said. "!(one extends that e-ven funher, then you get to the quesuon ofhfe on other worlds. That's the next step." Prime rate cat upected NEW YORK -Crtdit analyus say thoy expect m~or banks will follow the lead of Bankers Trust Co. of New York, which reduced its frimc lmdins rate, the interest charged for the best industrial customers, to 2.2S pen:ent "Before long. we're going to see-everybody at 12.2~ percent." Maury N. H!rris, vice president of the investment firm Paine Webber lr,'lc., said af)erthe nation's ninth·laraest bank announced the .SO..perceniaac.point reduct1on. ~l\ another economic rtport, the Commerce Department reponed that inventones held by U.S. businesses edged up 0.8 percent in Auaust while total sales ~~pped f«?rthe second straiaht month. But analysts noted that recent econom1c s11n1 potnted I to a rebound of sales in September. . -1 U.S. "11Jlag to Wk WASHINGTON -The United Slates says it is ready to meet "any time, any place" t.P negotiate with the Soviet Union on @ntrol of space weapons, and a so remainlWilltng~1 strat~nd medium-~----..,.. nuclear forces. The offers came Monday in a statement read by State - Department spokesman John Hughes. It was not clear if the statement • repr-esented a change in the administration'• earlier approach; rejected by the Soviets. Previously, the Rcapn administration had said it was wJlliP4 to open talks with the Soviets on space wea.pons, but reserved the rjght to raise otber arms control issuts, particularly tbt nuclear weapons that were the subject of suspended talks on strategic and medium-ranae anns. .SU c~a agabJ•t 22 dropped HASTINGS. Minn. -Child sex abuse charges apinst 22 people were dropped to prevent further trauma to the victims and to avoid releasing police reports on another investj~tion °of great magnitude," prosecutors sa.ad. The Scott County Attorney's Office on Monday asked a judge to dismiss 26 counts each against Scott County Sheriff Deputy Donald Buchan and his wife, Cindy, just as their trial was about to f>eain, then withdrew more than 300 charges against 20 other people. The Buchans had been c~ with abusing two of their own children as well as other chil~n in Jordan. about 40 miles southwest of Minneapolis, where authorities had claimed the existence of two broad sex rinas. CALIFORN IA Winds fan Flllmore blaze FILLMORE-·A brushfire that blackened 2,000 acres burned within a mile north of the city early today as hundreds offirefighters.fought heavy brush and shifting winds of up to 30 mph. There were. no injuries and no SU'Uctures threatened from the blaze, which started about 7: IS p.m. Monday in Los Padres National Forest, Ventura County Fire Depaarnenl dispatcher Tony Fina said early today. About 350 firefighters and four bulldozers were working along a 10..mtlc stretch of the Goodenough Road to create fl backfire, Fina estimated. • Reagan stlll leads lij poU : LOS ANGELES -Walter Mondale and Geraldine Ferraro's debate perfonnances boosted their imas.e with potential voters, but poJJ results published today show they still trail the GOP ticlcet by a margin similar to that from before the confrontations. lf1he election were held now, S6 percent of the respondents to the Los Angeles Times poll said they would choose the Ronald Reagan-George Bush ticket, and 39 percent opted for Mondale-Ferraro. The response was, ~imila~ to th~t in a poll taken just before the Oct. 7 presidential debate, the Ta mes said, notmg that the survey results have a margin of error of 4 percentage points in either direction. .. Spanting ~d• bJ LA dl•trlct LOS ANGELES -Spank.i!lf in public schools is ineffective, a bad example and a possible goad to chtld abuse, the Los Angeles Ul).ified School Distnct board decided as it slapped down the practice by a 6· ~ vote. The decision Monday rcpealc;d a 1980 board policy allowing pl)ysical punishment of elementary and j1,1Q.i0i...ijigh school students with the parents' writ~ rmimon. Span~ffifenfsTs'"morellian asrmoohc act." ooard'Pfesident -- John Greenwood said. "It is an act that gets copied in thousands of homes (when) the school district gives it an official sanction." WoRlD OJd-•tyle Jiau permitted v A TICAN CITY -Pope John Paul 11. acknowl~na the a tachment of some conservative clcray .to the old-style Mass. is pemuttin& priests ln certain : cases to say the rite irl"l.8tin as it was before the reforms of Viticart II. The po~·s dec1sion. revealed in a circular released a._te Monday by the Vatican, stnctty limits die (lays anCI places in which &he Lltfn Mass can bt conducted. It also warns that the Vatican has the riJht to ban priesu from cclebratina the old· style rite if they overstep limiu on ats use. The wamins btou;ht to mind the rebellion by some conservatiye prints, most notably Swiss-baled Atchbisliop Marcel Lefebvre, over the chanee in the Mass from Latin to lotalla~ two decadesaao. Jloh anad poUce •liltloa LONDON-Masked ~ouths hurled stOnaat a pc:>licc statiQn and beat up a woman :poltee offtccr in a north Fn.,,., coal &own today follo~na a breakdoWft of ulb to end ~tain's teten-month minen' strike. Polee ~enu 'eaViJlald· with riot thiel8 wm--.cbt fO iJie ton of Orimethorpe in Ycirbldre~ -...tbrOWina mobl of'u manr u 70 people rpeatedly atladced tbe ~ •de)ft, '9(ice uid. Police Superintendent Anhur WH1iam1 atd OD11~·Slt. Janct·Smith Md politied)an ltDest Webller Weft forced to nee the &e.1-~ldina. They were~ andlloftect and the woman was beaten 10 die ll'CJUnd and kicUcl Sbe reeeived CW-and brUites. lrol'W to,..., Oii ecoaom7 TOKYO-In itUattat m~•oapendconlltUwnhlrivalSoulh Kortt. NOnh Korea lllud today to the South91 propo_tll for talks on cconod1ic eoope,ation arid § I m-.. Nov. 15 in the tNCt villale OT Panmu.Uom. North '1 lllt.e-'rllft ndio and offtdal ews ..-ey, monitorild hi To~,~ North ltortlft V• Premaer Kim H~n ant a lefter to~b Korean~ Prt• Mtn....,Sbln ~~-h~ propoeina Iha& JM !WO Iida •l'kl five-mntberdil~ionttD Panmul\JOl'T'I fbr the economic talk._ The economic 1alQWQidd MoW Cbe~f.tnn.ferofNorth Korean flood relic! suPOlan to South 'liC.cn'a Ind-.. QP.nina of• direct =Inc bctWttn ·the two Iida llte. IMl..momb. Earliit..,,. *")lelt, ..,on1 font from the two sidct lllil in Pinmunjom bUt tf11Cd tO~ on a unifi spc>ns team for lht Olympics and other intemattbnal events. '\ .. .. • Anti-apartheid leader award d Nobel OSLO, Norway (AP) -Anglican Bishop Desmond Tutu, bla1.·k anti· apartheid leader of the South Alhcan Council of Churches, today was named winner of the 1984 Nobel Peace Prize. Tutu, S3. became the second black l'tlilStance leader to win the erize. Albert John Lutwli.Jormer pre 1den1 of tfiE African National Congress, won the pri1e in 1960. The African ational Congre s has been outlawed by South Africa and is now the chief tho e who OJ?J>OSC apnnhc1d re en m 1hc same l1gtn Wi those!\\hoopposc Commun tm:' Tutu ad. the bloodbath .,..,II be 1neVit1bk~ South AfncanCouncd ofC urch~ Tutu td butalso1oall nd1v1duabandgroup In announcing the .a•anl tl\C m Sou1ti Afnca who with their ,.._.,,.., .. " 'obcl om-n----1•...a eo1-m r. hwnan d1-11 fratcnuty Condemning 1panhe1d s n evil "' "•D"" ... "'" .... KU -... nkm 10 azJSm and CommUmsm, he Tutu 0 a unif) ang leader fisu~ ~o &he and dcntocnc)' u~11e the admua n guemlla group fighting to overthrow .,. h ..;a. h 1 I': campatfn to rnolvc the problem of of the world the wh11e-minonty government. saiu t e 8\\81" ., going to e P iocu~ opanhead an outh Africa"' the ttcntion or the worfd on our· luatd n was dnrwmg aucntaon .. ,o Tlltu. who wn amon~ those con-The commutcc said 1n a prepartd the non-violenutruule for Libmttion sidcrcd a favorite to rece1v.e the""pcace tountry. sunement that, viewed in the con~xt 10 which Desmoruf""Tutu bdongs prize, was at the General 'J:hcol<>gical "II 1 up to the antcmation I of Lutuh's pnz~. the award .. mould and lhat the means .~y "'hach ithat SCminar.y in New York City when the rommunuy to exert pres.sure on the be 5ttn as • ~wed recognatton of campat,gn 11 conducted • 15 of vat.al pnze was announced. He was told of -SQuth African :sovcmmenl ... es--lhe oou.raae and "hcroa m shown bl imponanoc" for Afnca nd peace in the Nobel commmee's dcc1S1on l:ly pcc1all> economic pressure, lD go to black South Afncans in their us.e of the world. • th Norwegian .amt>.issador, Tom the conference table." he sa1a. ·~~nus · pe~eful mC1hods" :in 1he mugte Vrolscn. who came bearing a bouquet is our vet)' last chance for change againstapantieid:' l'utu has liecomc ~uth Afnc:a·s ofnowers. · because if this doesn't happen, we arc The committee $aid lhe awatd chief moral $pokesman agaanst the ··1t is a tremendous political state-for the birds. ''should be regarded :not onl) as a country'& system of stnct race ~par-ment that ha bttn made -that "If that doesn't happen ... it seems g~tureofsuppon1o{Tutu)andtothe auon, called apartheid r~:--~___.;..;,__--..~~~~.-;....~---11;iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;ii;iii~--------;;;;;;m;;;--. Denver pummeled ·by winter blizzard By the A.,oclated Preas snow io New Mexico and Colorado. An early blast of winter covered the said Paul Fike oflhe National Severe Rockies with up to 36 inches.of snow Storms Forecast Center in Kansas today, after stranding motorists for City, Mo. 11tE RELAXING SOUNDS OF J'HE HARBOR 545-1476 "I've never seen any- thing like it." "It's the best thing I've ever done to myself." ' . l • • hours in drifts near Santa Fe. N.M . In In Colorado, 36 inches had fallen at Denver, fender bc:nders were . up _Woodland t>ar byearlyloda) and.24. fivefold and e-nattomsllr tel~vt~ inches ~ere on the ground at Cripple football game was played in bhndmg Creek. An inch of snow an hour was ~KDCM ELIMINATE AGGJNG-1....;~~~--____,~~t-tt-H -snow. . . . falling at Stapleton airport, which was A car cr~&h on an icy highway m already under 8 inches. For only the C:-olorado ~11le~ an 8-year·old boy. A SC(Ond time since 1966, the U.S. Air smgle~~sa.ne J~t crashed near Den· Force Academy outside Colorado ver. ~!llang two people. . but Springs closed today because or the authonties had not detennmed weather and 4 ()()()workers and 4 400 whether the weather was responsible. cadets were toid not to report. . Higb~ay PatroJ _.Tr<><!pcr Gc;ne Travelers' advisories were poste<t 1D!l.t FM STER ED BACK PAIN TONE&FIRM . LOOSE, SAGGY MUSCLES Payne tn Denver .. saa~ this m<?mmg for much of Colorado and parts of that .~ere were basically blru.a~d New Mexico and North Dakota. con.dttions... W~ have about sax some extendin,& through today. major roads throughout the Denver Stockmen·s advisories for rain were mmoa~~d~o~th.e~mran~ 1"~~~Q~~~m~~~h~===~~==~=~===~~~~=~~=~~d~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ closed.... Winter storm watch.es were posted l , .. It started snowing yesterday eve· over the Cascades of Oregon and the ning around six o'clock and it's been Shasta·Sisk1you area of Califor_nia. snowing continually throughout the Three winter storm systems evening. Most -of lhe roads are brought snow and wet rain to the sno~cked, icy, and (there is) poor central Pacific Coast, the northern visibility with blowing snow," he Great Plains and th~ central Rocky said. Mountains and western Oklahoma The wintry weather on Monday ha di -d H G d f h ~·ammed traffic in Denver and Santa pan n e, sai arry or on o t e forecast center. · e, delayed fli&hts up to two hours at Denver'sStapfeton International Air-"Each one ts moving in a different port and left thousanc:h of homes direction, not combining," and posed without power. But the Keystone ski little threat east of the Plains, Gordon resort, 90 miles west of Denver, said early today. planned to open Friday. Its earliest A foµrth system threatened thun· start ever. derstofins from Oklahoma to Louisi- " A big blast of cold air from the ana, Gordon said. A tornado watch • Gulfof Alaska, combining with wann was ~ed early today for parts of moist airnorrrtvl-exitt>:"._ brougfiflhe Mlssoun,-Ancansis andUklanoma:- RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY, IJIC, t. n. lHt Of , .. lift IAL 1922 KWIOR SI.VD., COSTA IEA -541-115' Auto Upholstery by Stanley 645-98 . ~ ~ .. SAL'S SPORT HAUS.' PleaM com• and help ua celebrate our new aecond Ooor npanalon. and to give the '84·'85 Ski &ea.Ga a proper aend off. Food and Drink• will be Hrved by Gold .. Traffl•. The latcat Ski Novi-wlll be ahown throughout the night. Hope to aee you and pleu• bring a friend. PRIZES! t Sl•cn•lv hl'eSportHau • 1779 New0port Boulevard, Coata MHa, CA 92627 (714) 145-411• Plump, juky brotWUm stuffed with snioKed Nm and SWiss cheese OKTOBF.RfEST SPECW. Hickory Farms SOUTH COAST PLAZA • CAROUSEL COURT 6•0·6991 ...... -~--................... • ------___ .....__ .. Itta~·only one yes to approve a loan at Household Batm. The to~hest part about ~ttinq a loan these days is the layer after layer of executive approval ~u have to patiently wade thro~h .. At Household. we're cutti~ throu~h all the nervous·maRinq. time- wastl~ red tape. If -you need a personal loan of up to $10.000. secured or unsecured. it -0nly tabes the approval of one person -the bran~ mana~r. Normall,y' on the same day YQU apply. And ~ht now. Household's rates fire amon~ the lowest. So. whatever your personal loans needs -vacation. home / improvement. whatever-ViSit your nearest HOusehold Banb branch. were paJ1 of 6 family of companies with 8 billion dollars in assets. But ~t only tabes one person to say yes . .. t Open • I I ... .. • ·ea11romta Isa real talJlet for ~mocraf$ th ts fall. Only they know Jf the reason ts because the Mondale-Ferraro Ucket Is doing so poorly elsewhere that California 'a 4 7 electoral votes loom ass list. forlorn hop orlf'.tt 'sbecausetheDemoc.ratssensea upset In thema'lclng. ·• What's the • proper price of suffering? .. First the Costa Mesa cop molested the woman. Now the woman·s tryi~ to rape Costa Mesa. She wants $81 million for the psychological injury she suffered when the polic~man stopped her car, led her to a secluded area and kissed and fondled ·~~ . A jury found the policeman, William Lauchlan, guilty of the offense. Certainly, the woman has suffered, and may continue to suffer. Understandably, she demands revenge. Mesa? •. Is a life on ·easy street the appropriate compensation for her trauma? Does her status as a victim give her license·to Victimize her· neighbors? T1111AS EUAS Demos make push in state rely ave so many count on so little for so much. That bleak paraphrase of Winston Cnurchill may sum up the Dem~ cratic Party's hopes and pl•ns in California better than anythina party leaders will say. •For Democrats tryina desperately to tum back Gov. Deukmcjian's reapportionment plan (on the ballot as Proposition 39}say they're oount-- ing on help from a strong turnout for presidential candidate Walter Mon- dale. Certainly, she deserves some sort of compensation -for her expensive medical care, for example. But, from a public policy standpoint, the frightening aspect of this case is that a jury lS quite likely to be sympathetic to this woman's plight. A jury is quite likely to find that Costa Mesa must bear some responsibility for the actions of one of its police officers. Although a JUJ'Y might not award the plaintiff the entire $81 million, it is conceivable that she could walk away with $10 million or more. Costa Mesa could survive such a financial blow,1Jut a city like Laguna Beach, which has more swts on its bands than Brooks Brothers, might not. It is slowly edging toward bankruptcy. We seem to have conceded that money is the salve that heals our deepest wounds, we have adopted it as the ultimate measure of success and we have created a legal system that defines the seriousness of an offense against law or against man by the amount of money involved. And national Democratic officials in turn say they're counting on the anti-39 campaign mounted by the party's legislators and congressmen to bring out the voters Mondale needs to challenge President Reagan on his home turf. Orange Coast early industry brought tears to many eyes That seems to make it clear that neither Democratic effort can re- alistically ex~ much aid from the armed without causing as much other. -wllat will happen if this woman is awarded the $81 million she -upon the advice of her lawyer, of course -thinks she deserves.? Her psycholopcal pain will not be lessened, but she will suffer in a better neighborhood. We can't sacrifice our access to.the courts, we can't ignore our responsibility to innocent victims, but we must find a way to limit awards to reasonable levels or face the reality that we are destroying our public institutions. eM council candidates need careful evaluation To the Editor: There is af ool m the City of Costa Mesa an obvious ~tempt by a few people, who wish to remain anonymous, lo gain control and power over the citizens and their local government. A "coaliuon" of homeowners, which is actually only a few people playing with names so as to remain anonymous, have coirced some others to act as candidates for City Council. J heard these candidates at a forum at the Board ofRealtors. I am shocked by the utter lack ofknowledge of some of these candidates of even the simplest idea of what government 1s or how it works. The attempt to create issues where none exist to the outriptt recommen- dation of a socialistic government controlh:ig all of the land and doing all of the bualdm$ and controlling our lives is a chalhng thought and a danlerous philosophy to say the least. The ridtculous allegations made by thts so-called "coahtion" arc an obvious attempt to confuse the voters by lies, half-truths, and innuendoes and to create unrest in a proud community. The voters should examine careful- ly the candidates and their philosophies and any so-called issues before choosing a new course for the city for the next four years. RICHARD CARSTENSEN Costa Mesa Reader defends CM council Way back before there was a city of Costa Mesa, some of the obvious problems that needed solving became more and more evident. For example. Costa Mesa had a very good fire department but it was entirely a volunteer fire department. As I recall rt, the chief was Bert Smith who, with his brother, operated Smith Brothers Heating. Or some- thina of the sort. Now Bert is chairman of the board of Citizens Bank. Another ob\ 1o~s deficiency was the lack of a police department. However. as always seems to happen. when there is a need, somebody steps up and solves at-or at least attempts to solve it. That was the way with the police situation. He~ in Costa Mesa was a retired state ·highway patrolman named Frank Vaughn-nicknamed "Tiny." Ht had had an accident while on a chase for a cnmanal (drunk driver, I believe). Anyway, Tiny Vaughn undertook to ~lice a lot of the growing industrial area. To do so. and to get a small payment for 1t, he would sago up with the various companies to act as "watchman." As 1 have told you before, I was a little bit like Bert and Tiny. There was obviously need for a newspaper. So. with my pal and former cxecurive officer an the Anny, Dave Ring. I bought the Globe-Kerald. I thought I saw an opportunity, but a growing newspaper -any vowin& news- paper, weekly or daily -requires constant infusions of capital. The only way I could Jel that capital was to either borrow 1t or to work for it. And that's what I di(i. I've told you before about being able to borrow from Vick Rosetti. the great president of the Farmers & Merchants National Bank of Los Angeles. But borrowed money has to be paid back. So I went to work for a 4 To the Editor: t resent John Gardener making the statement that he is speaking for all Costa Mesa homeowners. He certain- ly does not speak for me and a lot of other homeowners that I know in Costa Mesa. individuals who wish to promote company t~at was own~ by the Max their own narrow interests. ,..,.F~ctor family. At the t,ime I s~ed. Costa Mesa is one of the most ·this was called Plastic & D1ecast desirable cities in which to lave Products Co. It th~n became Eldon because of the tremendous shopping ln~ustnes,. but 1t dt~ mu~h th.~ sam~ facilities such as South Coast Plaza. If thing. It did }1le~ daccastang. pulls John Gardener and his "httle and knobs which were made of thinkers" had their way we would be WALTER Bui1oucHs diecast metal. Beyond that this company engaged in all «.inds of plastic casung. Plastic casttng is of two kinds: thermo-plastic casting and thermo- setting plastic. Among the places I went for business were various branches of the armed services. No need to tell you all the different things we solicited to make. except one. -which is the- sul>ject of this story. The chemical coivs stocked reg- ularly an anti-riot weapon. It was a "baseball grenade." These grenades were exactly the size of a baseball. The theory was that most soldiers as kids knew how to throw a baseball, so 1t was relatively simple to train them to throw this grenade. It was not only the shape of a baseb;ill, but it had about the same wei&hL The way ;1 worked was that half of a shell was molded with thenno-sening plastic. The two halves would then be "glued" together and filled with what was called CN mix. The filling went in through a threaded plastic bole and at the same time the two halves were molded, there would be a threaded closure. When filled with CN mix, the ball would be closed and seJ aside to be "armed." In a riot the armed .,j,nades would be passed out to the poifc:1' or whoever else was endeavorina to stop the rioL There were, of course, problems because if the CN mix started to evaporate it would cause eyes to run and set people to sneezing. Some place along the line our engineer discovered that setting the filled spheres aside for a weekend would cause the noxious fumes to dissipate. Then thegrenadescould be difficulty to workers. One thing. however, is settled: One Fnday evening I got a tele-California is a rcaJ target for Demo- phone call from someone sa~·n th. ft'l o l b k fi SOme hi'gh school kids had c11·m crats is AJ • n yt ey now or sure if the reason is because the MondaJe-the fence and were stealing the Ferraro ticket is doini so poorly unarmed grenades. elsewbert that California's 47 elec- Naturally. I sot in my car and drove toral votes loom as a tut, forlorn hope over to the filhng plant. or if it's because the Democrats sense I got about as far as what was then an upset in the making. called the American Legion building The suspicion in most quarters, when bright lights shone on me and a hwoever. is that the Mondale cam siren went off.-It was T-iny Vaughn paign is following the controversial playing policeman. He started trying A•""' d · f · · to chew me out, but he didn't get far. I ... ust a vice 0 state campaign reve--,. the sionals and started chairman Mickey Kantor. He rec- • :KU ... om mended then that Mondale and chewing him out ... Tiny;• I said, .. I Ferraro virtually concede California pay you, to watch t~l J?lant .. Now I if they were doing OK elsewhere, but find you re not watch mg tt bu~ inst~ campaian hard here if they were I have to be called. by a !l..«:~~bOr. faring poorly in other large uidustriat frank :wu apologettc. We went over . ·states. · · · .. and tned to secure the plant better Whatever the reason, Democratic a!'d ~ went ~ome an~. renewed ml Natjonal Chairman Charles Manatt ~ight ssleep. Oh well, I told mysel , now says Mondale and Ferraro will No haf!11 done. Maybe Fra~k ~l do spend a combined total of"at least 12 a better JOb the rest of the night. days" in California before election No harm done? I.:bat's what I day. thou&ht. · .. California is targeted " said Man- The n~xt day at the Newport au, a Los Angeles lawyer' and banker. Harbor Hi~ School there was proof 0 They'Tl be spending a lot of time and IJ?at boys will be boys. Some ?f the some real money here. That•s a real ~ds threw baseball .,-enades m the joy compared to 1972 and 1980. I hiah s(:hool. As they hit the walls they thmk the effort will bear fruit." , shattered and re!eased the tear gas. Not 100 many othcn share Man- The NewP<?rt pohce we~ call~ and l att's conclusion, since most poµs got a ~he.wing out bY, S1d Davidson, show Mondale trailing Reagan t;tere the pnnc1pal of the high school. . by at least 16 points, about the same _ So my w~ll-meant effort to bnng deficit he faces nationally. manufactu~ng to the. Orange Coast But Manatt sees the $4 million that ended up with my be1!'g esc<!rted to locaJDemocratsplantbspendagainst the ~ewport Beach .Pohce station an~ Proposition 39 as a "virtually un- havrng to appear m Judge Dodges prect'dcnted plus. The effort is here, co~rt. along with the coordinated work . Who ~old you we needed mo~ against 39," he said ... There's a real andu~try in the Orange Coast 11!3·, engagement of legislaton and mem- the .JUd~~ dem~nded s~emly .. tt~s bersofCongmsin the campaign, and o~v1ou~. 1 replied. :1"he JU2Je dadn t that's unusual. We believe that the thank at ~as obvious. .Hundred people who vote apinst Proposition dol!8r fine, ruponded the JUd&e. 39 will vote for Mondale." I ve forgotten whether the Army Butstate party offteials say ttle shoe procureme.nt peoP,le aUowd that as a is on the other foot. They say they cost of doing business or. not. Any· need a strona Mondale effort to have way, w~ now have fine.~hce depart-a.ny chance of turning back the ments ~n ~h of the cllles se~ed by redistricting initiative. the Dally Pilot Any argument. What's more, Manatt bases his W•lter Barroo1b1 II tbe PJlo,,, optimism on a presumption that /01111dbl1pobU1ber. hasn't worked in the past -that voters will link two separate ballot items. I feel that Enc Johnson and Don Hall arc qualified and that they are doing an exceTTent job ofrepresenting the overall best interests of the entire commu'"nity and not for just a few CIA-Pa i d i nvestment firm ~~:~ re~igioJJ :::~M~~~:~~ta: f o r J a panes~ trade s~crets driving all the way to Los Angeles to shup. HAZEL AND TWEED STONE Costa Mesa Back in the 1980, when Reagan easily won his home state, Democrat Alan Cranston easily won ~lection to the U.S. Senate, topping even Reagan's vote total. Cranston spent m~ than the anti·J9 campaian will raise, but his strong petforma!K'C did ex-President Jimmy Caner no 1ood apin•t Re· If the Catholic and fundamental to God every day should get along specifically from the ministries of Chnst1an anti-abortionist candidates fine. There could be a Christian Sought blueprints Finance, lntemallonal Trade and win the election and have the op-Scientist candidate who will promi5e Industry, Foreign AfT11rs, A&ricul· portunity to force -other ciuzens to to pass laws abandoning the AMA of technology for JACK 1ure, ForestrY,. Fisheri~ and Eron· conform to their ideas of morality. and shutting down hospitals. And omic Planning." can you imagine what the election ·how about the Seven Day Adventists monorail system Rewald submitted several CIA will be like in 1988? -they m1&ht get together with the A .. IEISOI .. taskin! requirements," or usian· d b h h r . . Jews to change the day ofthc Sabbath WASHINGTON _ The CIA Ill ments, which I would receive from Eoco~rage Y. t e oht er r~111s•on"'s to conform to their religious beliefs. authorized payment -of SS".OOO in the agencysenina fonh lhe details of success1ul cam~gns. t ere~· prov-.1 hat ht ·-nc:y Wished to know ably be so.inc Hmdu cand1dates for Even the born4pin Chrisli\l.ns bribes to obtain a blueprint of the h -w -. ,...... . · .. iJUtance who will promote a constitu-who believe all non-born-aHin secret technolney used in Japan's agents had invested t ctr own money concerning a ai~n country. apyn. M . . L-1' ' et anan pentsts an ~aevana that the same voters who didn't link a vote for Cranston with a vote apinst R•n will tie a vote apin11 an initiative IO an anti·Retaan voie. With that kind of reasonina11 work • In the h~ echelons Of lbe party. it's no wonder Democ:ralic prospects look so flimsy with lets dlan a monlh to 10 -as 01m1y as the 1eenano the pen~~rs draw. Jact. Allllenoa 11 • lyatllaleltl DD 16 a 1yadb1W · h · --• in the company. Congressional tional amendment banning t e eatm1 people arc going to hell when they die high-speed surface transport -the sources said disciplinary action has of meat. Moslem candidates may wtll certainly be clamoring for anen-HSST -the world's fastest monorail been taken against foOmc of the aicnts. promote the idea of passing laws tion. system. The Japan~ tiave been "We were still payina for \he banning alcoholic beverages and al· . testing it for the past five ears. • antclliaencc when tM com,pany wc_nt lowing men to have as many as four Who will win? If they all do the 1 wu-jutt OM proJect in the out t'tiusincss,'' Rcwald told my ·-wives ~ -t)pical famitx will tiavc four wives. CIA'•cland-t1·ncacqu1sit1onoft--h· · B dh d D l ·. . . dozens of ch1ldr"Cn (the family plan-.. .... .... assoc1ates Indy a war an a c Possibly they would JOtn forces ningclinicsare all closed and there arc nical and trade secrets throuahoutthe Van Atta. with the Mormon churc;h. which alw no doctors) all eating not~ing but Pacific. according to sworn te timony "We paid a Japan~ businessman frowns on hquor and 1s only a few vegetables and attending thetr church now in the FBl's pos5CS ion. The S30.000 (for the HSST bluepnnt) as a ,cncrations frorry po~ypmy. It would on Saturday. Think about it when you affidavit, with substantiating first installment. and then S2S.OOO be an odd combination, but no more vote on Nov. 6. documentary evidence, was sub-more over a period of months. We so than Jerry Falwell and the pope. MARY WAGNER mitted by Ronald Ray Rcwald as pan later Ulflrted France for the same The Ayatollah Khomeini and the B lboa of his defense apinst federal char:JCS projC<':t. because France had been ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat \ H. L 8chwam IH P\itJ~· Fran" ZJnl M4~(CJilOI Tom Tait C'tr £cfll0!' of fniud in the multi-milhc>n-dollar more suctt!sful than Japan in aeuina collapse of an investment comP8ny the kinks out of the propulsion ht headed in Hawaii. )Slem" of the high-spttd monorail Rewald clatms that the in tmcnt &rain. companr. -Bi hop, Baldwin. Re· In addition to the high~pttd train wald. Dillingham & Wona -was information, Rcwald was Ordered to CIA front. 1hat he and others in-pthcr intelligence on Japan's pro-. volvcd were CIA ~nt and that the JCClcd trade surplus, ns indus1nal fi~m·$ failure \\'a~ .. caused b)' 1he export rcstnunts and the auidehnes rnQ'." ,demands on its rcsourte5. for auto expons. Also. actardm& ~o ThcCI .1n1«tttaffidav11s.atfirs1 the doai~ts, he wa ordered 10 denied any involvement 1n dc\crm11'1c '"the influence and ncgo- BBRl>&W. then admitted th t some t1atlng 11ytcs of kc) burc;.ucnus - Cel•mm11. eel....,.L H ow was m eter m a de? -Oo you know May a meter 11 that P'lnicular Jenfh? FrnchldcnliSll ip t 79.5 decmd ,, so. one taHDUlioath of the lenath or eanh·s mmdian betwttn the E.quator and •he North Pole. Wilen Vtkinp •11N 10 lcttand, ~ey mas&ook the pthennal Steam there for amokc. so named the capital. .. R~J1vi1t:• mean1na •·Smokina a.y. ' On a train trip over tht breadth ot the 1~1 UnioD, you'll Piii throuah 11 ume lond. BUt you'll onJx need one ,w1•cb. AU the trains sock 10 Moecow time. Tokt you the Eskimo has dozen1of words for varieties of snow. But did I mcnuon there'• only one Elkimo .ord for tree? Otran'esalways 11ve binh standilll up. It's a five.foot drop. Tbud1 Ab, Mom! Artificial ear.device . . advances FDA approves one channel plus test of more electrodes By SUSAN MONAHAN 0.-, ..... c.~1 The state of the art of the "anificial ear" was outlined at the 14th annual mcctin1 of the Society for Neuroscience at Anaheim Convention Center. The Food and Drug Administration rccentl a roved the use of !J.._j\Q_ au t oryprost es1s, a ev1ce at ts SUf&JC y tmp anted m the cochlea. or inner ear. • Alben J. Hudspeth, M.D .• Ph.D., noted that the inner ear "is arguably one of the bOdy's most complex organs. Ifs smaller than a green pea. but it has more than 20.000 moving pans" that challenge researchers. Four plutlc pet• (A) aapport lntraocular Hudspeth, a J>rofessor of physiology at UC San lena (8). Demarcation line (C) run• between Francisco who conducts research on the structure and mode of transduction of the cochlea, indicated that in the last 10 years scientists have come to understand the - workiQ&S of the inner ear. .. I clear doaor cornea and eloady cornea. ZlC-~ line t. the aatare. 111111111111 TU SOAY ANN LANDEll8 92 TVU8T•ca1m .......... Better • •• VJ SJ OD restored JncreasmgJy. Lucille Michel had been ha,_vin& prOb- !lcms wuh her c~: but last Janual'.)' She awoke one mommg to find the vision in her nght eye oomp&eu-l.) obstructed. ••1t was like a white fog. .. she Aid. -1 couldn'1 sec anything at all and the pam was 1tcmblc."· ---0!~ C-OAW110!&: wllD-.ut''.,....t~~lii-..l::ICEl.iM;~.QU....&11~-..iil ophthalmology staff at South Coast Medical Center an South Laauna. who diagnosed douding of !he come-a caused by fluid buildup -ithin this ussuc. Blmers fanned on :the surface of lhe oornca \\htch. when llhey broke. caused seveTC~n. · Dr. Hennck.-explained that clear vision as dependent upon a dear oomea. the th10. uansparent mcmbtant (Pleue eee COll.NEA/lt21 The cochlea is lined br the basilar membrane. which is covered with "hair cells.' Each is topped with 30 to 300 G d ftlaments or "hairs" for sensory reception. When a sound ran ma e mov~s through.the ear, the basilar membrane is stimulated , and, in tum, sumulates the cells. • Bite into life, not cookie The hairs bend back and forth in response to sound, and this produces an electrical response, which essentially Funny. I'd never convens sound into an intelligible pattern. think to describe There are approximately 16,000 hair cells in -me-Alice as an .. older human cochlea, each tuned to a particular frequency that woman." What I in- can range from 20 to 20,000 hertz (cycles per second).·· Just itially perceived was u the strings on a piano go from a low end toa high end ... her air of a c- hair cells along the spiral .of the cochlc;a respond ~o the complishment~ Alice appropr:Utte frequency," said Hudspeth m. an 10.tervtew. knows ,she has!.'· too. Hair cell loss can result from mfecuon, drug "I m 6 1, she •••••••••••• intoxicity, agjn$. loud noises or a number of congenital says. She was defian t syndromes. Hair cells cannot regenerate, and their loss as she referred to hersclfas an "older woman." (Please aee ARTIFICl.AL/82) . "My Nfocntion i'I limitf'd and I started htrt' ac: a ~ock .. clerk." said the current corporate vice president. old mom a new jogging uit for her binhday. Hers wu a She was beautifully dressed. Her nails were mam-matter-of-fact statement that had more•to do with ml cured; her hair soft and fresh. She didn•t !'ecd a s~it and a velqµr tha~ anything ebe. tie to make a presence. Her po~ture, gait and direct eye Ge<?flla wu 73 'When She • was my da?S'ma1e.. contact said it all · attemptJng to earn ihcr; P.b.D. Fasctna1Cd tiy her Dteretl I'm somewhat embarrassed for all '"omen that Alice·s and ~er enC!J)', I qucsuoned her. . story should even be remarkable. Even in 1984, her kind of Georgia. at )"O~S:. age, f 'ft'ould hope to be &ending toa role model Is still too hard to come by. Although rve met !ovely garden or wnu_ng a booL Why ~o ~.ou ~~ quite a few my faith is always renewed when someone like 1ump through acadenuc h<>QPS at this point llD your life?" • • • 'I'. "I've had a lovely prden aDd rve wnuen three Alice walks mto my hie. books.'' she said. ~Now it's time to earn my Ph.D. lt.d>ecn My friend, Ann, told me that she bought her 70-ycar-a lifelong dream." Whatever happened to fat grandmas w:ith thctr bia black shoes and unlimited supplaes of&esh biked CO<Wes? I met a Grandma in the Middle East :laSt summer. Rose had just oome off an an:heOlo&i<:al dig ~ her efforts had been subSidizcd. She bad~ ma th~ shcltet for Rx weeks.. heving left her bu$bi"nd of 42 yean home in Brooklyn. N.Y. Rose was pursuing her dream. ow. she was on her way bome with wonderful gifts She was briacin& her children and her grandchildren stones or aavcnturc •.• and herself as an uciting role model. So much for freSb baked cookies. •'Those they can make by themsc:lvcs, .. she aid. It's not new that women have Choi~ the trailblazina started ~me time qo. What's new as that even some traditional ··olderwomcn .. whohavespent the major~ of their lives attending to the nCC'ds ofottiers aredmiiij to wee a bite out oflife just for thcmseh·ca. Taking a bite out of life instead of cooties ts more consistent 1'-ith red velour. Dr. A/u.ZJ is a m~ and Umily cberapist in Corona deJ Mar. Sbe welcomes >·our responsn If you wish a reply. pie~ enclose• stamped, se/f..;i~ envelope. Wnlt' to Linda Alpzj. Ph.D .. c/o Daily Piloc. P.O. Box I 560. Com M~ 92626. . BACKTALK 0.-,f'llet ........ .,,._,.....,, JoanneBlrtcbercoqratulateePbillpandValleyRelllyonthelr American Jewlah Coinlillttee honor u huaband Ron watchee. autte Edwarda chatted with Victoria and Gret Currena &IDOi:\& the happythron& at crowded cocktail reception tiefore banquet. Positioning of23 discs is slippery Pl)ilip, Valley Reilly share honot . . American Jewish Committee gives humanitarian award By EVE C. LASH OflMDtlJ .... llalf DtlJ"'°'CM1111udt11I ._ The American Jewish Committee honored Mission Viejo Co. President Pblllp and Valley Reilly at a lavish awardsdinnerat the Westin South Coast Plaza Hotel in Costa Mesa. More than 400 community leaders and friends of the couple turned out for the.elegant $2()()...a.plate Hum an Relations A wards banquet. Acrording to Blada Beral.area director, this was the first time the national honor-presented to "leaders in the civic and business communities whose careers , and ideal$ have helped significantly in elevating the quality oflife in our society" -was awarded to a couple. "The California Promise" was the theme for the dinner. hosted by the Orange County chapter's 500 members. General c9-chairmen were Supervisor Har- riett Wieder and RaymODd L. Watson. Even as auestsenjo)cd a cocktail reception in the foyer, Herb Scllwart1, president of the Orange County Cchapter, said, "Wow. This is, as l told Mr. Reill}. an evening to remember. We are very happy he consented 10 be honored. We believe the Reillys epitomize the best in a pluralistic society.·• Reilly would say later, ''What's so much fun fo r me is to see so many people from all over Orange County and to become involved and be here." Lew Janowsky 1 president of the Young Leadership Round Table division. said, "Thjs is very exciting. And we arc very pleased by the large turnout." Jodse Leonard and Renee Goldsteia ofNewport Beach said they were "delighted to have so many people here. It's fun . We were just talking with Rabbi Bernie Kine and his wife Barbara, Dr. Michael Manball and his wife Barbara." • Board Member Bob~le Stearn was chat-chatting with Charlotte Goldstein oflrvine about the pleasures of the East Goast. "We're Eastern girls. And we were just wondering when Bloomingdales will open in Southern California." In the Plaza Ballroom guests dined on Johann Strauss salad. veal medallion forestierc with fettuccine, ao;paragus, stufted tomatoes and ice cream Born be. When Larry Gootkln and his orchestra raised the tempo aficrdinner.jinerbugcrs filled the dance tloor to the sounds of" Bye. Bye Blackbird" and .. Rock round the Clock." Fay Levoy and Paul WelDber1 "ere dancing in the aisles while Donald and Oiue Abrams ofNewpon Beach entered tf\e dance floor tor MichaetJac:k~on favorite~. ... part of the American Jewish Committee. (Reilly revealed jokingly that he lefthistuxedoi.o Denver where the honorees have made their home since June.) Beral remarked about how Philip and Valley Reilly have both made generous contributions of time-and effort to enrich theOranieCount) communtt). He has been a membcrofCalifomia's "Little Hoover Commission" and the Governor's Task f orce on HousingAfTordability. ln 1977 he was named Cit) of Hope"Manofthe Year," and in 1975 he was the Professional Builder of the Year. The Reill)sarc both UniversityofSouthern California alumni. ~e is a trustee and she is active in fund-raisinaand scholarship events. The American Jewish Committee. founded in 1906. 1s the pioneer human relations agency in the United States. Through its 50.000 members, the group protects the civil and religious rights of Jewish people here and abroad and advances the causcofimproved human relations. Others enjoyin& the dinner pany were Jou and Leon Sell warn, vice chancellor UC Irvine, Phyllis and Alan Jaeob1, J us ti cc ShellaSoJiensblDe, Deu l1uc1, Carol and James Gllleraa, Su pen isorTom and Emma Jue Riley, Supervisor Bnce and Pam 'estud~ Bubert and Ada Scllwvn and Martt,. and Tom Nlelsea. . Wat on presented the cn·stal dove aw rd to the Reilly who rcpondcd, sa)rng they were honored to be . P;iparazzi is (dited b. Daily P.ilor Sr.vie Editor Vida Dean. hrnlllCoattobonortbeRelllya:Lew'l1Janowsky,Dlane Abra.mt,PhllandNanceRoft,NoelleTay.katalul1"oab&pp. Are you better off now? Maybe she told·you so Dear Reader.: ~veral weck1 110 l f1 Dted • le&kr from a I rous rtacltr wt.o &old me laow I l&ad cUQed Iler Ille. W.ea I tbnked lier for tie ki9d words I asked readen wbo laad proll&ff from my advl~ lo dJ'op me a Uae ud let me bow lao I had llel~ tMm. l wp 11.Qprep1ted "' ror tM avaluebe Ulal followed. Sia~ to4a)' l• my Htll IUJveraary as tile Htllor of die AM Laod rt cohlmn, I ask yoar badalgence wblle I ng11e la a bit of 1elf-1ervlD1 rbetortc. J print tllese excerpts at tbe risk of belag arrntecl for practicing medicine wltlloa1 a license. From Beaumont, Tex.: You did more than change my .life. You saved it. Eleven years ago you printed lhe warning signals of cancer and pleaded with your readers wbo recognized a symptom lo see their doctor at once. (I hadn't had a physical in four )Cars be-cause l hated them so.) I toek your advice and within 48.hours my breast was removed. ·Today I am well and feel like a million. lfit weren't for you A11 lANDERS l would not be alive. From Seattle: 1 wrote you in 1966 about m> 6-)eat-old son who was driving me crazy. He was incorrigible in school and a hellion at home. Spanking made him WOl'$e. You told · me to take. him to a neurologist and have him tested. Sure enough -· the boy was hypcrkinetic. Medication changed the child's life, and mine, too. Today he is' in Yale law sehool instead of the penitentiary where 1 thought he would surely tand. From Newark, N.J.: Ftve yc-ars ago you told me. "h 's not what you are eating, it's what's eating you." I took your advice and sought c-0unselin.1t. My ulce~ and mignunes arc gone and there re not enough words to thank )'OU. From Omaha: \'our rclentle cam- P8lf,n IJ.Pinst cigarette smoking fi. nal y 'ot me. a three-pack-a-day man, to QUlt smoking -cold turkey. My brother. who smoked as much as l. wouldn't qun.,He died in 1980. I feel cenain your column saved me from lunJ cancer. From Manhattan: Your infonna- tive item& on Alzheimer's l>ise.tse made me·· realize why my mother ~uddenly becomes hostile, angry and impossible to please. I am no longer hurt and defensive and she i~ in a nu~mg home getting the care she needs. From Dallas: A few years )OU printed a column headed ·•The Siknl Killer -Hi&h Blood Pressure" and urged your readers to gel their blood pressure checked. I did -for the first time an I 0 years. The doctor said I was within inches of a stroke and put me in the hospital at once. I sent you a dozen roses. From Ponland, Ore : When I ..+-.-!---:---tll-.i--....~--:-':"""'"="'~~=~~._=-.,._,.~;.mr-.--,.,....~,rrw:----~ h-YseaRd was a treR9'> est ite. I nearly died. You advised me to Most of ua would rather not thlnk about the bacteria and viruses that flourilh on public toilet eee.ts. BUt consider: More than 97 million Amerlcaris UM public restrooms at work each day, And over 20 mllUon have genital herpes, Which can remain viable on tollet seats up to MY9r1 hours. ask myself.if my life would be better with him or without him. I added up the pluses (great husband, terrific father, lovely provider, faithful and. kind) and decided rd be better off WITH him. So now I let him dress up in his wig and heels and chiffon dresses when the kids are asleep and we play .. g1rlfnends.'.' It no longer bothers me -in fact, I enjoy it. Medical •upp0rt group form• l>r. ~old O. Beckman, Oranae County Superri90r Tom Riley. Mabel Bec&man and Joan Dubiell attended a reception at the NeW'p4>rter to celebrate the formation of tile fir•t AlJbebner'• Dtaeue and Related Dia· orden AHoclatlon aa:dHary lD the U.S. - ·A cold is.a ·cold is a cold cold 1s what ntakes It more devastat- ing. During any season bestcures are still lots of-rest and+ifl~o~id~s--..Bft11..,EllMAll Then again. it's no fun to be sick when it's swelterin heat and hu- .. _.lf--;;m~1~ity outs1ae an<rno air conoffion- ing inside! ------.......... --- Oh, the dreaded summer "cold." People always seem to complain that a cold during the warm weather that stretches into September and October is so much worse than the more usual winter cold. I never really understood that. A cold as a cold, no matter tM season. Winter or summer colds seem to me CASSIDY A "cold" is still just an infection of the upper tespiratory tract. The nose, the mouth, the throat and the sinuses may be involved. The infection often to be equally unpleasant prospects. · spreads ~wn the t~~ and may Maybe it has something to do with develop !nto bronctuus or -:&i:tlY our own expectations. we are not P!leu~onia: For the most par:t, at 1s a surprised. mdecd often expect, 10 v1ru~ mfeclln.g the upper ~s~ges of catch a cold in winter. Ma)lbe the !heatrway. Ius ~sually self·lim1ted- unexpected nature of the sumQter it goes away by itself. . . There are a few things which one can do to speed that recovery. The True. you'd have to touch ~itaHa 0r an os>e:n sore to the seat to · be In danger. But for those who"can never be too careful talte note. • The Marlenn Corp. has come out wtth ProTec-2. the first pocicetelZ.ed IUrfac:e dlslnfeciant spray that kills tMtr;pes simplex virus 2 on contact with hard surfaces. ProTec-2. available since August In drugstores, 8lso nukes the bacteria that cause athlete's foot, salmonefla food poisoning, strep throat, staph Infections. bolJs and ab8cessea, as well as the viruses responsible for common colds Paging all shopper:s ••• traditional standards are rest and fluids. Hot fluids (the old standard chicken soup) are helpful because the heat will help rid the upper respir- -atory tract of viruses. Garltli0$ hot salt water will help, especia1ly if the throat is infected and swollen. A sit in the steam bath may help. : and HO!lQ KQng flu. The small can costs about $3. Lennv'S &1s~o123 Consultation. Cutting & Style $25 Foil Highlighting $45 Colour (Products used: $35 Fromesi & GoldweJI) Perming $35-$55 $5 off any service new client 2333 E. Coast Hwy. Suite A (By MattH'•) Corona d.i Mat Open Tu ... thN Sat. 9--6 Like mil hons of other Americans. I have become a toll-free 800 shopper. Catalogs are my life. They are stacked by my bed. stored under m) desk, spilled out all over the coffee table. bundled and stored in the garage and still each day a truck pulls up and deposits more. The reason I took to catalog shopping was to save time. Imagine, no more putting on a dress with a bell, finding my car keys, cruising around ~ing for a parking spot and being boqy-scarched when J emerged from a fitting room. All I had to do was p~k up the phone and place my order What cou.ld bC simpler than that? Who would have guessed that Miss Toll Free would want to know full name. address. phone where I oould be reached during "the day and evening, the 15 digits of my credit card. its date of expiration, the page on which my items appeared and their dig.It code numbers. In honor of our just completed remodelling. The Fullerton Velvet Turtle cordially imite~ you to join u~ for champagne and horsd'oeuvres in the: lounge, on Wednesday, October 17, from 5 to 9 p.m. Plea~ come join u~ at the: unveiling of our new lcx>k. and help u~ celebrate our new. fresh approach to fine dining. A fresh approach to fine dining. 14~0 ''fo rth Harbor BOult.~-ard Fullcnon. CA 92632 (71-f) 8 ... 1·9:\•iO l - ' Eau Bo11Ec1 Also. the description, tirsl and second choice of color. the mono- gram, the quantity and the price on each item. Did I want 1t shipped regular or express mail? Gift. wrapped? Did I know of anyone who was not receiving the catalog and what were the four letters following my name on the address label on the front of the catalog? 1 had conversations with Mass ToU free that lasted longer than most mamaJes. But after that, It was all over. nght? Wrong. . Since no one was home. they delivered the package containing my salt and pepper ceramic pigs to my neighbor whom I hadn't seen in a year and a half. When I went to pick them up. I was there for four hours getting caught up. The Peruvian hat that looked sensational and mysterious on the model (possibly because she was Peruvian. wore a black cape and boots, and was standing next to a llama) made me look like l was hiding from the law under a manhole cover. It had to be returned. Unfortunately, I had discarded the box 1t came in. The only one who bad a box that fit was Mother, who lives 45 minutes away and waflttd me to pnce things for a garage sale while J was there. • The country-Western skirt 1 or- dered in case someone invited me to a square dance had enough material for a coat after I had it shortened by a woman who lived S 12 and 35 minutes away. The underwear I ordered last spring was on back order and by the time I received it this week, l bad outgrown it. I would like to reform ... go back. to shopping the old way ... get off the phone and get on with my life ... but the catalogs keep coming and coming and I don't know whom to tell to make them stop. Rest is important to alloW-your body's defenses to work. Your body will demand more rest when you are sick. If you overexert, your cold symptoms will last longer or worsen. Or they will sometimes return -after receding for a· period -if you're not fully recovered. The role of Vitamin C is still controversiat If you can take large doses without irritating your stomach. it may help. The most difficult question is if and when to see a doctor. Certainl)'. you should seek medical attention tf you develop complications. High fever, chills. cough producing thick sputum and predominant sore throats need evaluation. Symptoms that persist longer than expected or are wol"5C than usual are suspect; It's a decision that you must make based on your previous experience. Common sense will help. If in doubt, check i1 out! J Brennan Cassidy. M.D.. prac- r1ces family and emef8enc:y medicine in Costa Mesa CORNEA TR.t\.NSPLANT CLEA.RS VISION ••• From Bl located an front of the iris, the colored part o(the eye. The cornea, separated from the iris by a fluid-filled chamber. not only protects the inner stnictures of the eye from the outside environment. but also bends and focuses hght rays for vision. Because it has no blood vessels, the cornea is transparent. It gets its nourishment from the fluid within the eye and from the tears which bathe its outer surface. Unfortunately, certain eye diseases and injuries can cause clouding of the cornea and permanent blurring of v1s1on. They include hereditary disorders, infections such as herpes or corneal ulcers. chemical bums and sharp 1nJunes which can leave scars. In addition, if blood vessels grow into the cornea in disea~. it loses its ttansparency. • In Michel's case her cornea became cloudy as a complication of previous cataract su~ery. When permanent decreasc .. in vision results, visual function can only be restored by surgically removing the diseased cornea and replacing at with a clear donor cornea. In recent years. the science of organ transplantation has progressed significantly, and the cornea remains one of the most successfully transplanted organs, having an extremely low rate of rejection. Dr. Henrick suggested to Michel, 85. that she have a corneal transplant as soon as a donor cornea became available. She agreeaand early one Sunday mornin-g she was notified that a cornea had been received. Surgery was scheduled the following day. Ur. Henrick pointed out that selecting a suitable donor 1s very important for transplant success. Usually. very young or very old donors canpot be u~d. Also, if the donor had certain types of infections or cancer, the eyes cannot be used due to the danger of passing the disease on to the recipient. , Corneas must be removed within hours of death and stored in a special, nourishing fluid. They can only be stored for a few days and must be transplanted as soon as possible. Most donor corneas are obtained from a nationwide network of eye banks lhat can ship a cornea anywhere in the country within hours. However. donor corneas are scarce and most patients requiring a transplant are pJacca on a waiting list until a donor is found. Michers transplant operation at South Coast Medical Center u$Cd the most advanced instrumentatio11 and microsurgical techniques. Dr. Henrick used an operating microscope to provide magnification as the central portion of her cornea was removed. A similar!¥ sized "button" was then removed from the central portion of the donor cornea and sewn into place in Michel's eye. She was awake but sedated during the operation, and no pain was felt. Usually patients are required to stay two or three days in the hospital and return home to normal activities. The sutures are left in for several months and then removed. • Vision, usually unclear at first, improves during the following year. Glasses or a contact lens may be required at a later date for better vision. · After the suf&Cry, Michel Jay resting in bed, feeHng opt1m1st1c. "It will take several months to know how much my v1s1on will improve," &he said "but. in the meantime, at least the terrible pain I was suffering before the operation has stopped." ARTIFICIAL EAR PROGRESSING ••• From Bl results in ~ome degree of hearing impairment. This lfas The outer component picks up sound with a been called "nerve dcafnc.ss" -a misnomer, said microphone. breaks it down into the co~t pattern and Hudspeth. because the nerves themselves remain intact. delivt'n ii to the mcchanical (."'O(hlta. The appropriate ··v:ou may have scattered losses, focal loss oc.havc the clearoda are S'limulated, and t~y. in tum, stimulate the whole thing waJ>('d out;• he explained, addina that the proper ponion·of ihe cochlta that hair ctlls formerly elderly frequently suffer a focal. los.s that affects their cxc:attd. hearing in the 4.000 to .S.000 htrtz range. While auditory prostheses containing six to eisht People wath this condition complaill of beina unable pairs of electrodes are currently under invcsta11tion. the to understand much of what others say. A raistd voice, devict approved by the FDA has only one pair of however. is apt to make them complain of noise and does clect~h;· problem. in some ..:,....plc•s opinion•. ;. this nothing w increase thcirromprchcnsion. -~. .... .. .. The loss is onl) '" llhO.K ftt<tu.cnci ihat contain 'sin&Je channel' is alttldy outmoded, .. said Hudspeth ... Jf C"Cnaan sounds. Plltkulartv the i1b1lants," said Hudspeth. J oTrcrtd a profound heanng hm. I would wan a.~r or He e plained that modtrn heanna aid~ can-Mlp &wo and sec hO>A' the other: ckviccs fa~." He also <'ompen~tc for this, hccausc they arc adjusted to the '\pccul~trd that because the prootdurc as new, &he individual's hraring ranac:. opera lion may be ~stly now. Hudipeth po1ntCd .ou1 that the FDA has approved Out omeonc with a _J!rofound hearing lou cannot .studies that will allow multiple-channel dc:YJces to be benefit from this amphfica\ion. The 1rt1rac11I ar. implanted in several hundred voluntecn. ho er. 1s designed 10 1mulatc the funcuon of hair cells. Oft ho IS mtlhon Amcncans who $uffer some~ The prosthesis ha two. pans. A small pla tic <"Urlicuc of hcarin' impaanncnt. so far ihe onl~ ones wtto t.ne-W- containmg electrodes i urg1cally implanted in the lower an art1fic11l cochlea implanted arc thaw wnh the most pomon of th t'OC'hl a. the other half of the apparatus. profound losses. saad Hlid~h. "What reman1 10 be tttn which a' approxinuncly the ire of a cigarette pacl(age. i~ as whether the prosthesi~ wall be a viable altcmauve for worn on the per on. •htHC 01hcTS "'ith a modcnue hcannR lo s ., • ... • J\ t.al~ ................... _______ ........ ~iii.iolii../l..a ........ iilllliiliillllliiii .... -----........ .;;........__......-....... .---.......... ;...... .......... ~------.....:.~ • Ultimate trivia quiz on 'Nova' 81 DANIEL Q. HANEY ,,, ............ BOSTON -It will probably dawn on "Nova'' loyahstJ that somcthing's different when ther tum on the flrsr show of the series 12th season and· hear, "'ht off, applause. "Tonight from the studios of WOBH Boston," begins tt\e an- no~ncer, "Nova presems the first national science test, and here's our master of ceremonies for toniihf s test , the distinJuishcd host o( the intellect~I quiz hows 'Jeopard)'' and 'College Bowl,' Mr. An Aern-i , .. ~en there's An himself, triding out of the 0 of a 11ant Nova logo arinnin~ waving. blowing a kiss and .aying, 'Thank you. Thank )OU very muctt." • For one evening, the na1ion's longest running science show loob like t~c product of some mad genetic~ experiment: What do you get if you CWU.!Qbcr,,.50mcti~ even dour, e<luca~nal TV program with, sa), "Family Feud?" What you get air~ tonight at 7:30 on KOCE. Channel 50. and at 8 on KCET, Channel 28. No grim reviews of animal poaching here. Nothou~t­ ful investigations of the life cycle of bugs or sun spOts. No, this is an honest-to-gosh quiz show. Like somethina plucked from the mists of morning television, this one has a cclct>rity panel. a rarticipating studio audience and, o course. the affable Fleming. The panelists are fonner NBC news anchor Edwin Newman, ABC science correspondent Jules Bergman. actress Jane Alexander and Marva Collins, the founder of the Westside Preparatory SchQOI in Chicago. Flemina asks the panelists IS multiple-choice science questions. And just like on a real quiz show. the contcstanlS hold up cards with the letter of their answer. Before the program started, the audience was asked the same questions. and their answers are compared with those of the panelists. The questions, though, are a bat different from the usual quiz show fare. All have something to do with technology, wddhfe, life sciences, science .history or r.hysical 5c1enccs. They arc, in genera , prett)' tough: How many red blood cells does the human body P.TOduce each day? 200,000. two mtllion, two billion or 200 billion? How much platinum must the United States import for its defense. needs? 2 percent, 22 percent. 69 percent or 99 percent? '"GARBO TALKS' IS THE HEART SIBALER OF THE YEAR." -lwMi CnSt, WOR TV lllU M.11111 h l'lla J2'!1.UL IU£1&ArA111 IJAU0-9524991 COSTA•SA l°""5~T 15313S01 A~~:W ---.. --£ llMllf LA 11MADA llhll'UJ~ SllOGm1!1YS C-IDt611 ~ t ~ lllUIOll Wit.Ill LMlllA l(ACll l°"1!11l ~ '"" lOoNtCa Sou11t mem Calsl OIWll( .,, '711 ~e34 Z5S3 LAIWM Wl~ COSTA~ .WC f SQuare UA lftl Qoemn £-aSauCICG:m 8111~ ez.5lll ~S41711 pi!-ij)- EXCLUSM fNG.tGEMOO NOW PLAYING MANN NATIONAL EO¥NOS TOWN CENTER wmwooo (213) 20M366 c~ MESA (71') 761..&1M 0-..Y•1.~·:UO ·U5·aa>·1Q15 Rll.·620 · I w &SUll.· 1~·•00 I MClN """~ Rll.a.SN\M50¥1215 t~-1030 6Xl ·t~·1030 730ancQlO , *I BUENA PARK * HUNTINGTON BEACH *MISSION VIEJO *WESTMINSTER UA Movies .£.dwards Huntington E.dwards V¥ Mall Edwards Cinema West 952-4993 848-0388 495-6Z20 891·3935 •Im *•RVINE ™ WESTMINSTEA UA MCMeS Edwards Uniwrsrty Pilclftc's Orange Paciftc's 990-"°22 854-8811 Ortve·ln 634 9361 H1·W"Y 39 Dnv.·ln COSTAMESA *WiUNAHIU.S ORANGE 891 -3693 Edwards Br1stOI Edwards/SanbOm Onecl<>llw 634·2.553 540-7~ Laguna Hills Malll768-6611 * COSTA MESA * PAESlNTED IN ._ooiU! ........ Edwards O~ter 979-4 t 41 NO l"AS5CS 1oCXV1tD l'Ofl ms lJUCD40IT Howutl It. Aolhn1 Jr IOU>II ll"S STOttY l"Q) AT t2:l 0 2 :40 4 :$0 7 :00 9 ·1S S•llY f'lelel PLACU IN THI! HEART (N) U :tl 2130 4:49'):10 .. 1 :30 ,,Ince In ""'P\..E RAIM ,., SHOWS AT 12:4$ 3:00 1:20 7 :45 lO:OS NtcJc Nolte 1n nACMl:RS(a) 1 :00 l 1tO 1:20 7:l0 .. 1 :40 Steve Martin ALL Oft lllll (N) SHOWS AT 12:00 i :OO 4 :00 1 :00 l :OO tO:OO 8 111 Murr•Y OMOSTMISTEU (N) SHOWS AT U :U 1:40 S:OO 7 ,35 9 :10/ 70MM 13 i W4•1i3;I2J t3:.v:: ~ :.;;J DRIVE-INS :~~ STADIUm a ' ' •• I. 4 •• • .... STAa Tal:J( Ill (1"'5) Tiie L.ut St1rfl1hter (l'Q) & "•d D•wn (~·1SI Cllrl1tOfllllltr Penn T .. WILDUROO . a ulltfor '··"" ,._, - IRaac:GllCILAM..ll Dlf'l'1t•..CSSIN) Wom•n In Atd('°·U ) couwr•Y CN) Dlf'l'KIUDICSS IN) KAllAft IUD .., S.m Sllep8r'CI I •••ECOtltCILAllUI SHOWS A'"T SHOWS AT 7: t S ._111 Co•Hlt 7:00 .. 9 : 11 .. t :30 Gre"'tlns (N ) DRIVE-INS o,_ 1:45 WW.ysll :ll WUMl/Cllilllne u ... 12 FRH u-. Nftlll • t«WPORT BUCH • lM:lUSM lllCMlilllt 7-6fl0Rll IMlll(lll"(PC) 17 JO. JlO IOI 1000 4 I btJ OOlll '1tt!f & C91111!.Y J.PCl IC\ Clll)US 130 1030 • SO COAST PLAZA • -IUUJD US ·-••"'"1J> 1'0.6t0. IUS lflU( (I} 11~ c.s 10 "' ......,.were> 2~,cs lt-S • SCUll'1 STll'f (N) mo u s u o '~uo. 1~~ -CNl IGI Ull.iHD .... ,...J) t u.us ..,..., ·--1 GI, J 29..1• .. it29 -O'C> . .... ~ i•4A71~ t ?S PACIFIC DRIVE-.. THEATIES* * CllE·FI IOUIDI At*-.,..._._. .. ,._,All• * rMie. ".......... Y~!ll!tJ!!-MpwM1 ...... , ........... l:JIN -.-SHI* O..-'l•12~flEI lij@tjllj!X+31rr:n ~ )•;llJINf41+3) •• s.t1t1B1•m .,.,...,.. ~-,;::" 111ra;·1D::r.-=-=.J l llMf .. Ill llCISlMltlS tpC} t -" • CDl1QY ........ ,...... km 3 M Ell THll IO• (I) -(PC) ORANGE ~ 111'1 .... ,/Or ... ...... ,.., .... c .. * * SUPER •AP •lll 1-. SAT. I ...... * * ruam ti> f\11 cuss Cl ... (I) ~'Rll t(I} IUI ltTO ~ (I) EllAllS •SA. OllllS IHTlllll HWAllS ••llllCl (TIU. Im. •Yl • WO. Diii' STUlO ..,._IJrlNI us llQ 10~ • COSTA MESA• CDW MOS $TMlllM'9I _, "IU•Fftl -~1181 "-11~ tit MARIO TWlt 'tll MlmDO"' (Ill -UC -~~111 rn 1~1 tlw\6~ IU~ HAM''"" ?UCO• -.... ,. tfCI -m no1 hon rC111 u~ •$• Atl ._.."" , .... ,. UIS U\ IC ""' IJOO "l!t&Ma•W"l Mii ~n UC CiiMA C'ia "U nim ttlO ... mm o•-. ......-r .....U"tpl) ~61 lU~ ... ll'( "" ..... (Pl) ~DZCI> IUI 1110-(1} la HABRA '1A~ A MISSION • H TORO • SAOOUBACll ·111 .. lt ... l'C'I \ D ,.,. _. au 11 ...... ._..(PC) '>II~ '°' 111.W ~AOOUS.-Cll ....... ..._U> ..... llw\UO P '~ I -. '>II ~llO SAOOlCBlC~ '\fli ....... ' ,_ .. '>II...., 'II • M?SStOft VIE 1(1 • VI f'!, I f"I~ -....au 111 IUtt tKl 1 " THE PAlllLY CIRCUS by Bii Keane "Go to your room, young lady." by Brad Anderson by Tom Batluk DOONESBURY BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) SHOE &ItfJ {i, 4-s~-..... ~ ~ 0 H1ve you.,,., noticed Oeorge'a fCMWarma? He built them up pitching pennle~" , DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham ~ JtlZ .M~ ~ AQ<EO M~ ~ CAMPAIGij ~NEl)( ~ ~E. ~ET ... l'""~s-'"1' PEANUTS I WAS JUST OVER TO THE Pl.AV6ROUND ... DRABBLE by Gerry Jrudeau lUIGWA~A IT 1c;. l'JU~ ~·t ~Ai, ~TE. ;r,..._,n _ __. .. rN . TMAT Ml6MT BE l<IND OF FUN TO TRY ... WMAT DO YOU TMINK ? JUST ONE MORE TMIN6 TO LOSE AT .. •by Kevin Fagan 1. 1R~D£0 ~ COOft.£ Ot..O 11~ (:'()R tT ~ FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston GORDO GARFIELD OOR 5ATELLt1"E PICfORE ~W5 CJ..OUP5 MR TME NMT'MEA5T, eLJNN'I ~£5 IN THE. 500TMW£5T ••• MOON MULLINS f I 1 •• by Jim Davis 'fRAFFIC MCKE.17 IJP OH 12TW !>TRE£1' ANP NN LlflLE MIEGE. 6AU. V, PLAYING IN ME.R eANP&OX IN 1't>CAS by Ferd & Tom Johnson SHOULDN'T You-rRY IT? L.OOK, ~ DON'T YOU GUYS~ Oft lN T"iE CAR FOR ME ~ IU. FINISH MY COFFEE ANO "-P'O\.;OGIZE TO THE HOSTESS F=0R MY SHORT TEMPER• f -=- ~ AW, COME ot_i Ma'\- St'\e.. Wf\NlS '°Be. R PIJNK~f'oR ~E.N,CX1N'I voo.uz.! ROSE IS ROSE BRIDGE Both vulnerable. North dealt. WEST •111a t;i SI 0 10851 • 941 NORTH •KQt t;iAKJt O AJ83 •Qt EAST • 10• ~Q'7tl () 94 - •ll8751 SOUTH •All! c:> 161.c 0 KQT •AllO The biddiq: N~ Eu& s....ti WHt IO P... INT ~ ... eNT r... P... PUI Opening lead: Six of 0. SOuth, dedlttr at a 1mall 1lam In no lrt1mp, had three JPOHlble IOUfCeJ for hi• 12th trick: I heart finetff: a dub rJneue: or I 8-8 tptde break. In whkh Ol'dt.r 1hould he te1t thote pollibUitlet lo give hlrmetr the but •hot for hl1 1lam? With hit nat hand and weak spad ult. South ftlt that a Jump to two no Lrump wa1 mored tcdptfve lhaa a on 1pa(ie re pon e. North'• THE ORDER OP THINGS leap to alam WH •imply a .utt..r of arithmetic. In the modern Whion, Weit Jed the second-beat of a suit ln which ht held no inter.at. Oetlarer won in hand and roulinel1 tried the heart finease. East won the queen and made the devioua ah1ft to a club. Declarer waa about. to take the o ••• SHutiF finuae when tbe thouiht 1truclt him: ''Whal If the club ffnUH alto were to fall when tht 1padu were 3 S all lht time?" Althouth the finuae w11 th pereen...,_ play, d darer opted t.o forgo it ln fuor of the epade break or a equHH. But tbe oddt htld and no aqueen materlallzed -down one. We don't rault declarer for hit line of play and we COft.IT&tulate Eut on his fine performanu. However, we do 1 .. 1 thaC. South dldn•t riv• himMlf ever1 chine.. Declarer ahouldn't t.-t 1pade1 before tr1ini at ltut one Ila .... &ee.IUM if tpadft AN 4•2 Ind bt lote1 whichever fin .... he triee to the hand with the loDC apecle, he will be defeated. lf dedarer 11 ,plna to lose a trick, be mtpt u well dO I 90 to the hand that eannet harm him. CHARLES 801£1 After winnins the diamond in hand, ditlarer thOuld aota tO dum· my with the kins o11,.-and tr1 the club fineaM. II that IOlet, deelarer can win an1 return from We t, caih two mon rouDCle of 1padet to He If that 1uJt will brMk and, lf It dou io\, he can 1WJ fall baclt Oft the heart n....... That allow• htm to tr7 alt three poealblUUtt and .. ke hia 11&m U any one of them ·~· \ ~~~~,~~.~~~~a:d ~~.~~~ny~~ ?.cr!~~~~p~on~ o.llf,... cerrn,,,..~, offices throughout the U.S. employ· occurred since J 973. For a pcnod of JOb •• M1ch~el M. McCa.nhy1 a fourth ing about 3,300 people. h did Sl.2 threeorfouryears. thechainnan say • Where did McCanhy ~this ideas scncrauon M~CQnhy in the 120 year· bHlion in sales" last year say McCarth) Brothers was the fastest· for the company' char\p? .. J'm a old construction company known as M<:Canhy, the chairman of the firm. growin11>u1ld1ng firm in America. lousy operauons l'I)' but rm pretty McCanhy Brothers, says he kne\\ Four months aao. 'McCanhy To fuel that growth penod go0datdrcam1na. Mc:Olntlyilid .. I even as a small boy. that he would Brothers set up a Ncwpon Beach McCanhy decided to alter the archaic do an awful lot of .radi,... be • someday take the reins of the com-office,. McCanhy sa~ u•5concclvable methodi Which had led the company explains, "and every lime find pany. that m five years time, this office 10 act basically as it had for 1hc past someone who huan 1ntcmtia& idea • • The firm has c~anged a great.deal alone will emplo~ JOO ~ople and 100 years without doing some things ~1cularfy1f1t'saCOmpcUIO!:rl~ since he dad, havm1 been rela~1'.ely another 1,000 out an the field. a well 85 n u$cd to do them At one n."Toalar&eextent.headds.,mcfirril ~mall then (aroundS20orS25 m1lhon Current projecu in thcareuncludc dme lhe firm was slower and only 8 has refinecf!prev1ou1ly exllUna con- m .Yearl)' sale.s) while being ~ond or a S 14 mdhon dollar Holiday lnn at gcnc~I contractor McCarthy made n ccpt . "We didn't really !nvent lhe third largest in the country now. the Von Karmen A venue overpass of po i~le to guara~tce 8 building on· wheel, we JUSt pcased It, oded at, an4 '.fhc ~mpany, an owner-operated. t~ ,San Diego . freeway and a 21 sche<lule or ahcad-of-ehead-of«hcd-~c sure n was ,~ace and round and pnvatcl~·hcld oonstructo~ of hosp1-mdhon renovation and new wma ule something he 53 5 15 alwa)s worked rtal!lllo'Cll. tals, <:>ffice , hotels and Just -;1bo~t project for the Palm Sprin~ Riviera promised but seldom Ztivercd. Ad· ··1 was-damn !ucky an findin& some anything anyone wants to build. 1s Hotel. C!itionally. the finn began offcnng 1 of the people I vc found who really comprehen~ive service to the client. could cany t~c ball, for msta~ce Ov tR TH£ CouN TER ROJCT Burnet m the ivery bcsinmng McCarthy ~rothers kind of ~ stages, who is the president of our -----;-"'"""'!"--~-....... u~~·~n~d~surpnscd the compet1t1on company, and many others." ore lt knew what hll themi-Two ~rt aan be met David iL. M~~rthy says. "Last year we were Malmuth, the companyi'29year..:ofd bu1ldina I 0 per~ent of all the dollars vice-president who was asked to set spent on hospitals. When. you c~n up the Newport' office. Malrnuth, a take I 0 percent of a market hke that an graduate of Stanford U nivcrsity's one company," h.~ ~ys, ")ou've done. MBA proaram and a former double something nght. Vtfe ~ere alrcaily major in philosophy and psychology up to five percent until anybOdy woke at Claremont Men's Collcac. was part up," he added. of ll team of advisors at St. Louis- .. , stall love to go out on a project based MarlcTWin Consuluna Group, site," McCarthy says. It feels aood to who suggested a coordination of me. I like the smell of lumber. and McCanh 's mar'ketin sirat on a nationwHJc basi5. From his youna consuhanu, McCarthy says he discovered he'd been acting like the chief guru who sat around catina lotus blouoms and tn;ng to matt all the~ company dcasaons himself. ''You must be pretty egoltllical and an'OIMt." the group told ham, -,r you think you alona can have aH 'thole areat thouahts." Adminina to himself ahat sbmcone else miaht have a tbc>Ulb• now and then, McCarthy sa~ be brou1tn in some raJ en~ Went and the company really took off. We're your type Open House. ( )c·toht~r 17. 18 ~ lt) U>:OOn1n-l>:OC)p1n \Ve · hm c · IBM h , ,. ·- w 1i 1 n~ that allm\ \o ll to <'oll'c ·c ·t· a ''on I.! .l Ii 11c • ut a pam~ntph t>asil~. \Ve · hmc • l~J>t'\\lilns lhut'll ~Ion· infonnatio11. We· t•\ c ·11 hm t ' ~omc • r. thaf 11 ('Olllllllllli- c·alc • with c·ompal- iblc• I~ f >t'\Hilc•1-s. ('Olllf>lllc'l'S. lc•XI 1u·rn·c·~:-.ol)o; or dulu 11t•h\ml..s. But \dl\ not c·onw in and ~c·c · fCu· ~olll~c ·lf. Slop I>~ \Vc•drn:~da~. Tln11~da~ or Frida~ lo ~c ·c· llw c•xc ·itilll-' lint• of' IBM Sc·lt ·c ·lric·~ Elc·C'lm11i<·. a11d Pc•1:.. ~uml T~ f W\\ rilt'•"· ----- , . /,, / ' .. / . Cc.,..at .\lc>sl :u:zo Rri .. 101 St .' 17L1l ,.,l>'l-1777 ' There are basic rules that govern the purchase professiona sat lmperip1 have gone to school and and possible financial rewards of Certificates of · intimately know all the possibilities. For the short Deposit. There are also a number of little-known course, call today-you'll definitely learn opportunities in managing the account. The ~ething exciting! Do you know •.• A. How your CD's can be insured for more than$100,000? B. How to avoid costly early withdrawal penalties? C. How to get hifher returns when interest rates go down? Call today for the answers to these three important questions ... and more. Our Account Executives have the answers to all your questions. 1~aoo 582-4848 Orange Count y ·-------·-------------~-------------------------If you would like us to phone you at your convenience. please fill out this coupon completely and send It to: Imperial Savings Association, 3750 Convoy Street, Suite 206, San Diego. CA 92 111. ___ Bus. Phone ______ _ Company ___ _ ·----Home Phone _____ _ Address __________ Best lime to call ____ _ C1tylStatelZ1p _______________ _ 1016 ----------------------------------------------- H lmJ>e:~!tion Where Tamotrow Begins Today. Substantial forfeitures r~urrcd for early withdrawal of term accounts Rates sub1ect to cha and subrect ro yenficauon by lmpenal Saviogs one Open your account today. Call the tOI~ Financial Line now: lJloo..:272 .. 9000. 90 DAY TERM 6 MONTH TERM -- '\ . . 12.00" 11.38" 12.40% 11.74" CW"T"entlm- • • 1 day, October 1 Is this the recession hatnobod¥ now -nght now. economy as begmnlng to m II over· You m } wonder why npc. ~ple arc aware of th1 1on. But then, )OU re lize. most people v. h1ch goes on nght under the w tch· can only see what they can sec. 1'h l ful but uncomprehending eye of the 1 , they cannot see "the anvtStble Federal Re ervc Board. the White enemy-out there. the one that Juhan House, and a l}emocruuc cnndfdate nydcr and his staff at then w l ll ~ for P!hadent ~ho would)ove to have International Moneyhnc nrc able to some cconomac ammun1t1(>" to u detect. . •• h SQCS on, in fact, riiht under the "He is there but you can't see him, noses of the ordinary c1uzenry who, they say, And he is stalking you. m spite of its reputauon for not "He lurks in the mountH)I stack of . knowmg what 1 going on, 50mehow unpaid blllS, in the ra'aged checking manage 10 sndfout when a bounuful account, in bankruptcy court _ __. ____ .._ _______________ __._ ____ prooccdinp, in the increased feelings COMPANY INC. ofunocnarnty and anxiety of htemlly millions or Amcricans.0 All this might be true, but it ha n't been packed up b.Y some reasonable people who go tight on giving the opinion that the economy, though badly weakened by budJet deficits, trade deficits and deficits m the bOoks of some of our big and sman banks, can work its way through the next >ear: or so. There is. m fact. no trouble this autumn with establishing a con sen us of forecasts for l 98S: The economy will slow, and the thrut x1sts of a recession late in the year or early in 1986. - Nobody knows whether this will be so, but it is the considered judgment of many people in government, management, labor, politics. econ- omics. banking, academe and fortune telling -and 1t docs secm to make sense. , First, the economy already .seems to be slowing. Secondly, it i~ cyclical, has always expanded, shrunk and expanded again. Next, the longevity tables of previou) expansions sugest this one is gcttina a bit old. Finally, when the rate of econpmic vowth slows the threat of recession is ---..---.--------------------------' inherent. Mounting stack of unpaid bills? Based on the experience with install- ment credit in years past, statistics now show Americans are within the bOundarics. Ravaged checking accounts? Most checking accounts are generally close to beins ravaged by their ownen secmi~y unlimited desires, but few arc actually ravaged. How do you ravage a checking account without pay!ng the penalty? Economy prospect receives favorable short-term :r:epoit HOTSPRINGS, Va.(AP)-Some top executives say they're generally optimistic about economic prospects for 1985, but are reluctant to look bcyoad the next 14 months. Uncertainty about the outcome of the presidential election, and its effect on tax Jaws and an already slowing economy, are two reasons 1986 is difficult to judge, they said. "When you get into searching beyond '8S. you find you're pretty much reduced back to extrapolating history," said Clifton C. Garvin Jr .• chainnan of Exxon Corp. and chair- man of the Business Council, which is comprised of chief ~ecatives of many of America's largest com- panies. The council's mcetina. which ended Saturday, is held twice a year at this mountain resort and allows members to discuss the economy and to bear from members of the Cabinet and Conaress. The council's economists issued a report that said the economy would slow to about half its 1984 pace to a "more sustainable" rate in 1985, and that inflation should remain rela- tively low. But they also warned that the massive federal budget and trade deficits threaten to push the economy into recession in 1986. Several executives said after talk- ing with their colleagues that most of them generally agreed with the re- port's outlook, and endorsed action to narrow the deficit. \bu'll get~ on CUllARD cruises .... ·· · · · ·· ··: · wlienyouopen aMoney Market Certificate~unt. "I'm very bullish about '84, and I think 'SS is a very healthy but very important year," said John R. Opel, chairman of International Business Machines Corp. "The important thing is that it's the first year of a new administration, and J think funda- mental tax changes arc required ana I think fiscal policy needs attention." If you thmk saving won't et you anywhere in this W<.lrld. it's time you opened a Money Market Certificate An .. ount with Pacific Savings Bank. Not only do these accounts pay high money market interest, for a limited time they come with substantial snvm~ •on luxurious Cunard crui TIRM ~HIP DESTINATIOS SA\'l~GS• I monlh Princn1 Mn~~/Ala11'a Sl5l' \ monlht Princ:m Mt't1CO '-USO ti month• Princett Mu1co s '""' 1 ~ar Prinn• Mulco "400 \ mon1h1 S.p(jord Tran.Canal/Ala.U SHO ti mon1lu 'lasa()ord Tran.Canal/Alatka S<kX' -I vur aaa{jord Tra.....Canall!.latka S5\"0 _.i Otht"r cru1ae9, l!XCt'P' "l111a6ord \\nrld Cn1 w, may he a\'lllable ""°n r~1. Ju t depoc;it $5.000 from a ~urce other than an~ i t· mg Pacific Savings Ban~ account. )ou11 save on Cunard Prince s Crui co Mexico or Ala b, or on Cunard/.'.NA Sagafjord Crui to Al ka ond the Tran Canul. EnterthePacificSav1ng Bank/Cun rdVIPSwe pstak • You could wm an II day Sa afJord Cru1 for two to Alaska worth $8000 There's no obligation. Just fill out an entry form at the Pacific Savings Bank nearest you. fur up·to·the·minute money market certificate rates and more information, call 1·800·PACIFIC ( 1·800-722·4342). or mail in the coupon below. Money Market CCrtificate Accounts from Pacific Savings Bank . Isn't it about time you ~t somewhere? r--------, I ' .Im ~ natmo_,)rno...., I tnno_, fyr_ M<lney Mnl:rJ Ccmflace I Accounr. and would Jihi more bi&>rt'lltuloo I N mt·------------- nd r J I I I t I I ComM OA9lt>1 I OP L---~-1-. ..... ::J PACIFIC S'\VINGS BANK ANAHEIM 1696 lbl717lit 611 The outlook for taxes was a prominent topic at the three-day meeting. Executives interviewed made no outnght call for taxes to be raised, but ome asked thal any proposed tu chan~ be forwarded not only v. 1th an eye toward the deficit but also toward ·extending. conomic ex· pansion. • . M1'CdffU.S. companies facing that dilemma could prosper noncthcle • Caterpillar Tractor Co. Ghairman Let L Morgan said, .. Not \lirithout an adequate respanse by the oompanies themselves.' Ad, PR contract apprOved •• •. UP s ANO OowN s NEW YORK (AP) .... The following 11&1 &how& • lh• Over·the·Counter filock& end werrents lhet heve gone up ~~·~·~~.:_wror the M~!v bf$ed on No HCUrltles lredlng below d or 1 shares ereJndUded • ...-.....-......._._ Net end oerc:entage chen~ ere the glfference betw•n the prev s dosing d price end Monta,ls' I.est bl price. l ~~"'j"' Lei'~ Ch~ ulctt~· ! ~~; ~~ -= ~ 16'.9 i slMr 41"2 ~ Up 16.1 YorkRs ,_. 'n Up 't·' Qutrex ~ :J,(o UP 1 . ln~ar s '• 1 Up 1 . I ~ V un i,., • • Up 1 • 9 I 5'l 1 '" H• Up 11.4 'I nv un •n 1,~ UP 11. 1 vber >.:. '• UP 11. 1 elepy .'J Up • 1 •m un ~ Up .4 J4 ttc un '• u0P .1 i~ ns Fd 4'n ~ P ·~ '' v~~ 112~ l"' Hg :j JI rofinvt I/• 'I• Up . ~ ~fri , 1 tt n ~g : ILkFd ~ ~ Up . ~or 1 'h 3.4 UP • lite l&rJ t ~~ ) ~~~ oofNNs ~ tJC St Ncf.m• LT ~ _c~~ l A~~pt II• -$ IPLS~ 'h -I ~: i ='= ~16 ~ ~ I ~ 'h 1~ ~oorP ~ -l: ; ~:r.•n ~ = "• IMOdl 1 ,. -1"• l ~J 1~-- 1 ~~~~ 'te 1s N9{!!.'n ~ -3.4 Ajiil( s 1 ~ -1V• 1 Bosv ~ta ~= = :2 6 vlUnloll 2~ -11• ElTorito's quarterly income up · El Torito Restaurants Inc. oflrvine Monday reported· pro forma net income of$4,045,000 for the quarter cndcd Sept. JO, 1984, a 24 percent increase over 1983 third quarter net income of $3,260,000. On a ~r share basis (including common and common equivalent shares}. caminas rose to 3S cents fot the 1984 third quarter compared with 28 cents in 1983, up 2S pcrccnr. El Tonto's sales in the 1984 third quancr reachcd $65,9321000. or 17 percent over I 983's third quarter sales of$S6, I 74,000. The companf's initial public offer· ina took place 1n January 1984, and all amounts (includina the number of shares outstandina) fbr periods pnor to the ofTenna have been adjusted to reflect the company's operations as if the ofTcrina had been completed on Jan. l, 1913. for the nine months ended .SCpt. 30. 19M. Pf'O forma riet mcome totalcd $8 979.000l an increatc of 45 ~t frQm the 6,191,000 earned 1n ~he 1983 pcnod. Pro fonna camlnas per share for the nine months Increased 44 pen:cnt to 78 cents from S4 cents fn 1983. Sales in the 1984 first nmc mo1Uhs were $189.034.000. up 20 percent from 1983.• Commcntina on these re ult . Larry J. Cano, founder and chief executive officer, stated, ••we arc pleased that the company"' JX"f· rorrnancc'" the 1h1rd quancrof 19 4 continued ~ccotdm& 10 manaae· mcnt' tarjet fQr both sale) and cam1np . . At Bank of America you can choose .from a wide variety of investments -all backed by the security of California's leading bank. 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N1!W YO"K~~> -FIMI Dow•Jonet IVO!l\' '°' 11 y, OCI. 16. llnd ·11tt1 rrr . + ~: •1~1 ' M , r1n • Ulll' ) 'SStk • I . WHAT AMEX Dio HEW YORK (API Oct. 1' 7:-. 16 AMEX LEADERS • t i •• ,. , • Goto Q uon~ M fl4l\ Quort'> ' .. ,, .... - That'san apt description ofboth business and b':lslness people along the Orange Coast. To l«!ep track of where companies are going and which people are helping them get there,.justwatch ·credit Line' -every day in the Business section of you.r new Alan Tr•mmell ••• hi• gift or being MVP, • 'Tr•m•Am'. C2. .. : -_..... _.-.<.I' ~·· --~ Swigart • all h~ ne~ded was a pu By RICHARD DUNN 0...,. ,_ Cene11t3'fM Three )'C30i 0 vc Swtgan hated Foun~an V lie)' High football coach Mike Mainer. "He used to push me around;' waprt says "and get on m lot. I rescn\ed n 'hen!' But oh how things have changed in three years Swagart has become one of the premier tiulbacks in Orang County, and he'U admit now h's largely due to the disCipline Milner forced upon him. • looking at '85 . Anderson says btg challenge DETROIT (AP) -The World Series trophy barely had been passed to the Dctro11 Tiaert when ManaF SPJJio· Anders.on bepn to thank abOut-ncxt season. "The greatest chillenge for this club is to win in 1985," he said. "It must win in 'SS. "It's a must for these players. "It's a must for this team. "It's a must for these fans." "Vince Lombardi ona: said that every squirrel can find one acorn," Anderson said. "Let's sec if we can find 1 bunch of them." The Tigcrs captured their fourth Wort~ Series title, their first since 1968, with an 8..;4 victory Sunday over the San Diego Padres in the Series' fifthpme. It was the end to one of baseball's most cta~~ic frontrunmna season.$. The Tigers not only led the American League East Divi ion from bcainning to end -becommg the Jhird team in . __ ,,,..,_._ (Pleate Me T1Gltll9/C3) M1lner's brand of d1sciphne be· came even heavier handed dunng h1 sopho!llore season, When wigan was a starting runnmgback on the varsuy. But, whatever anim hy w1gart believed was there, has now cc sed and the Fountain Valley star looks to Milner as a father-figure. "He's been a three-year tarter for us and he's improved every year with ex~ence," ys Milner. ackno l· ed$m& the fact that Sw1prt's earlier attitude could've proved detrimental. .. He's finally domg the things that we alwav:s. thought he would do this y ar.1'~ They're No. 1 And Milner couldn't have been more proud ofb1s pnz~ pupal than I t Fnday mght when SWlga"n max1- m1zed I than two quarters wonh of play mg ume 1010 hts best out mg e'er on the football field. :Sw~n· 171 yards rushing on 18 carries (an average of 9.S )1lrds per rry) caused n valanche at West- minster High as the Barpns clobbered Ocean View. 52-0. O>upled wnh his five touchdowns nd lwo reception for 64 y rds, Swigart was an easy choia: for the Daily Piiot's prep Player of the Week. That's right -fh e touchdowns' Player of the Week The first came on 1-) rd run -Fountain 'latlc)"s first po 1on of the II. His second s a 42-) rd scon~ to from quancr'back Eric Zeno, also an the first quaner. The third touchdown. m. l· yard run, th ume 1n the second gu rter. By now. the Baro i:re up 21-0. . Foun1a1n V lie) scored on HS mnial fi e po ion -ithc fifth llqSle BeDllOD .et. pace for IJl'm.IP of Jlfe~rt Barbor fUCb AllUI behind Hemon. Jalle llorrla, ~ Rabbi~ 11#~.J' rmmen. ca.rrently top-ranked ln Cll' croea country. Ran-Aiui enon ,'LauraLUO, llJ.Cbete~.Baitiara dllnl. Whm uktd Wha1 miaht $)'lllbolm h 1mPrO anent over lut lalOft.. wrpn bcamc $OIDC'Wbat pc•zzled. ~ ... 8WIOUT/C3) makes it official No lofty goals for Laker center in final season I Gl.£WOOD (AP) -IKareem Abdw-Jabbar snlends to end bil oulSWl ina basketball career lhil a:ason, and he p.JDC'a alkime lcading ICOl'Cf !Sa}'J that lae11 DWI th mrmones but no sadDeM .. I've bad a great carea Ud rm ha~ I was able to pla) as Iona as I ha~e. said the Los AQldes L8tcn' 37-ycar-otd center, CWTently 1he <>W- est player in the NauonaJ 8asketNIJ Association ... It's not sad. Tbttr"s a lot more left for me in tifc. .. , fed pretty good about every- thing. I have the opponmuty to leave t closc:to the toP-of myarcer ... bdul-Jabbar, \\inner of the NBA'"a ost,,. Valuable Pla)er Award umcs. announced las1 scuon tbal 1 S uld be hts final c:ampmp. Asted whether ClCJ"CD10lllCS bonot- him around the NBA oties dUa n might ~vc distraa.illa. be id. .. o, 11 ctD be ice 10 rdaae IO the fan .. then added wtth • arin. (Pl_..w .JABB&a/C3) Despite losses, OV's Gaytan upgrad_ing ~chedule fiJure as 26-point favorites Friday the ridiculous and absurb. Maybe. for night against winless Costa Mesa . . . a small fee, we can hold a pme up to •I'm not sure if it's happened • sharpen our pencil~ too •.. before -but Irvine schools Wood-ROGEi •There may be a new football Seahawks have a date in Flagstaff · agatnstoneOfAtlzon a's t opteams bridge. University and Irvine were all phenom in the future at Edi'°n _ They may be taking their lumps So, the '85 non-league schedule will · victorious on t~e ~me Friday J?i&l!t CULSOI freshman Kalief Caner (6-l. I 0) bas right now with five straight losses, but be flagStaff (away), Estancia (home),· lut wee~ -hJghhghted. by lrvmc s scored 14 touchdown and ruo for • Ocean View Hi&h's football team Fontana (home). Gardena (home), a 20-18 tnumph over Capistrano Val-over 1, 100 yard in the Qwscn' first : ap~ to have a very bright situ-bye ana Western (away). Icy · · · . five pmes. 1be only I .,. to a ation in the near future. The Seahawks' trip will be by ~The last tame Capo Valley met an sophomore unit. according. to C~h TheScahav.ks.pendinsfinaJboard Amtrak and in addition 10 tanglfoa Ihmc-rc1 school .~s.a ye~ ~o Fred Marquez •.• ~proval are scheduled to meet with Flaplafrs football team, they'll w en 1 e oup.rs pi 1~ on m e •Good coaching wans the close flaiStafr.Hi&h on Sept. 6 in 1985 at ... do some sightscein~ w~o!!jents ~ 34-7 victory ov~r rencwin one of the best prep football pmes. it's said, and )'OU mi&ht check Northern Arizona University's sky· You can only go out of state every " JC. td goes aroun • sencsinOran County. Edison leads out tbc scene at Corona dd Mar d three years -and Ga{18n says they'll usually com~ aroun · · · where the Sea K.i~nder Dave ome. r. • • • 98 •Thetclev1sedpmeoftbewcck.by it. 3-1, but it's the .. , .. that cvef)one fi · . Flagstaff. a three-year ~tate cham-go ior ttapm m 1 · KDOC (Channel 56) will be Foothill remembers -a 28-27 thriller in Holland. are S-I . t\'C win pion, plays before crowds m excess of * . * * . (Ted Mullen) at Tustin (Marijon 1979. Ed150n went on to v.in the ClF comina by 111 •" of 6·4 poin~ a 10,900 on the .Astroturf on a ~~tar •Eves:rone stnv~ for conststency, Ancich). I'd put my money on Big five Conference with a 55-0 ~ -m~ ~~ ~'f::1~ ':5 ::; basis. according to Ocean 1cw but whats been gorna on at Newport Mullen even thouJh it comes one victory over Redland-m the finals .. 1n11me. Holland, ince mumino t lbc Coach Karl Gaytan. . Harbor H!&h borders on unbellevab~e week ifter the Bag One over El • -... The Seahawks have al;so picked up -the Sa1fors, unbeaten throuah sut Modena . . . •I'm not sure which catqory this start of 1983. ts 13-4 • · a non-leaaue ll"'!C wit~ Fon~na games with a 4-0-2 overall record, • AbOut El Modena . . . 1he belongs in ... but toppina a pme for •Fonner Corona del Mar H~ (foJ'!ller St. Paul Hlgl:t assistant Dick have scored in th.e 20S. in ~very, ~me. vanguards will be meeting up Wlth commercials during the KDOC t.ai>-water polo star Dave Pcrelstein Bru1ch & Co.). And, Coach Make G1ddtngs Satlors Edison in 1985 as the two schools arc . in gs has to fall in somewhere bttween scored four Roa ls in a recent . ~ of three mes for BuckJJelL Budaidl 6-1 ••• • oWllaln Va.lley"s Emile flan) nd Mike C\\'tOD and Corona dcl Mar·s Scott C'arpcntc1" arcn ·1 ~ orily Orange G t area products runniQ& round the football fac-ld at tanford. tanford's band -a Satu~y After· . noon venion ofSaturday ilbt Uvc. is ockcd 1ith a:rea Went. Costa esa ruident Btmda Branin, o made the transitlOD from member to c:heCrlcadcr ••• •Ocean Vicv. High·~ uled et l game with lnglcWood at nahcim Con\'Clltion Ccllter as pan of a doublebcadcrwith Mat.er Dci and Vcrbum Dci has been switcbcd -Ocean View will host hwcwood at 1 own campus and Mater bci will meet Vcrbum Dci on an four level at the Con"enllon Gentc1". That's on Dec.• 19. ~ Detroit Violence< blamed on ~rks' Ex-Anteater Spinn makes ·UCLA roster • 'Maybe th is city Just can't handle being a star' Is Mauch next Angel skipper? . Looklq for day llbt o...-n•al .. bau 8uam7 l du (2 ) ....... lloncla.) aiftt•• blluird ln ftl'. Former CdM star given a tryout, becomes a Bruin percent from the field. He elpcd the Sea Kings '° l ro ~raighl Sea Vic Lca&uC Cham- pionship& •th i~ntica:l '2S.3 n:cQrds. Rams' Slater out for season . Unpredictable Ce:il concerns Bruins coaCh LO ANGEl ES (AP) -UCLA has dominated California in rC('Cnt years and 5till ha . chance to win the Pacdk-10 Conference football championship while the Golden Bears 1u·c out of l·ontcntion. Yet Coach Terry Donahue of the 8ruini. c>.pects a most diflicult time when the team' squart off in a natioMll¥ tele .. ised game at Berkeley.this Saturday. .. We.re going to have to play·our bc$t game o'f the sea on to come home with 1 win, I truly believe that," Donahue said Monday at his weekly mcctina with reporters. "I think "e're ready to play our be:,t same c;>f the year.'' As for as Cal's being out of contention in the Pac-10, . Donahue said he doesn't believe that matters much. • "l don't think athletts need a carrot, .. he qid. "I think we played as hard in 1980 when we were ineligible for the Rosc Bowl a we're playing now: ( don't think whether you're alive or not alive in the conference race has much bearing in a given game." · Most likely, the Bruins will have to play very well should the Bears ~rform the way they did at Anzona State on Oct. 6 when they defeated the Son Devils 19· I 4. However. Cal dropped a 9-6 decision to perennial Pac-10 doormat Oregon State last Saturday. "They really have played impressively at times, ... Donahue said of the Bears. "They ran the ball extrtmely f-i-~----w;,;.;e"-=1.:..:1 aginst Arizona State .l'Vhich is mill)' an accomplish- ment. When they were on defense, they took the fight awa)' from Arizona State. "l see Or'egon State as being a pretty capable football team. 1 think Cal is. loo. You take a look at the leagu.e. that's the way 1t iseach week. so many of them could go either way." Donahue expressed the opinion that the Bruins lire "ahvc by a thread" in the conference race, but won't be should they suffer another loss in league play. "We're a football team that needs to go out and work on fundamentals and just try to keep on getting better," he said. "We have to play every game like there's no tomorrow. Tigers'. hero dubs his MVP reward · as his Trani 's Am From AP dispatches DETROIT -Dctroi1 Tiger shortstop Alan Trammell, who ~as voted most valuable pla)er of the World Senes, picked up the keys to a shiny new Pontiac Trans Am and promptly dubbed it ··Tram's Am" Monday. The car. which is awarded to the MVP by Sport Magazine. was presented to Trammell during a brief ceremony in Ti$cr Stadium -on the grass just behind his infield posinon. Trammell "I hope I don't mtSS 'em." Trammell said when photogra- phers begged him 10 toss the keys in the air. "The season's over now. so we don't want an E6. That's happened before!" Indeed. Trammell made one ha rm less error in the second game of the World Series, but 11 was just about his only mistake as he helped 1he powerful Tigers brush aside the San Diego Padres four gam~ to one. "I know ho\.\ Detroit has waited and this 1sa special thrill." Trammell said. "The th mg is. though. I thmk Jack (Moms) and Kirk (Gibson) were deserving of MVP, too. But, we've had somebody different every night. We weren't a one-man team this year." Nor was TrammeU a one-man gan$ dunng the series. However. he did hit 450. including a pair of homers in the founh game. He drove in six runs and scored five. "There's no question thal game four .was the biggest one I've ever had," Trammell said. 'Tve had some nights during the season. but this was by far the biggest This was the World Scnes. "Saturday night. after hilting those two home runs. I had trouble sleeping. I was so wound up As a result, I was drained Sunday (when he was hitless in four al· bats)." As Trammell chaued and posed with the new car, his 2-year-old son. Lance. raced 'round and 'round the vehicle. opening and closing doors and kicking tires. Trammell's wife. Barbara. watched both the 101 and the MVP with a warm smile from a few paces behind the knot of people. , . "This hasn't all sunk in yet," Mrs. Trammell said. "We're going to leave the car in Dc1ro11 and JUSt dnve it to work next year. I have my little Toyota at home. m San Diego. and I just love 11." Denver gets 17-14 wln in the snow DENVER (AP)-Dcfensi ve backs Steve Foley and Louts WnJht re- turned two fumbles for touchdowns JUSl 37 seconds into the game and the Denver Broncos held on for a 17-14 National Football League victory over the Green Bay Packers Monda)' night in a game played in storm that dropped ankle-deep snow on the field by game's end . -The Broncos. extending their win· ning streak to fi vc games. raised their record to 6-1 and kept pace with the 'Los Angeles Raiden in the AFC West. Green Bay suffered its sixth straight setback after an openina victory. The scores by Foley. a product of ·Tulane 'OnNt"rsity. and Wright marked the \CCond conSttutive game Denver's defense had contributC'd two touchdowns. For the year, tM Broncos defense hu "cored six times. • Despite a me1tly anemic offense. the Broncos made the 14-0 lead Mandup with key dcfcn ivc play • the final one comma when dcfensi"e end Rulon Jones <"ked quartcrhatlc Lynn Dickey and forced a fumble after the Puckers had driven inside the Denver 20.yard line with J:O left in the game. Prep football players of the w~e~ PAT McGRATH Corona del Mar 'fhc senior hncbicker helped keep ( dM atop the Sea View Unguc at 3-0 by gndina out to 98 percent with 6 unanisted tacklts and two rect) ered fumbles. * MIKE SZTPERSKI Coeta lie.. . The sophomore linebacker blocked his third extra point and also had 12 unassisted tackles. "He can play with anybody," said C'oach Tom Baldwin . * MIK.EOUTOT E•tancla 1 he S-11 senior had six un· assisted tackles and an inter- ception with three minutes left in the first half. "Grading out real high," said Coach Ed Blanton. * HO TRUONG Newport Harbor BRENT RIEDERJCH Edl1M>n He pidc-d up two· i1:tcs. indirect!) leadang to two Tl) passc . He also had 7 olo tackles. thrc a sim. onerntet\'eption and 11 cau cd incom.,lctmn. * WAYNE SltANOA Ocean View t\ l60·pound senior. ht 'was' credited with eight unasc;isted anJ ix 1mis1~ tackles against Foun· tain Valle)·. and limited the Aarons' Carl Harry to one catch. * ADAM ANTOY AN Marina the senior running back rushed for 142 )ardson 20carrics, had sc .. eral key block~and helped control the football in the Vik- ings' big 14·9 win over the Oilers. * E D LIDYOFF Hund.naton Beach GREG BENJAMIN Unl•enlty I k helpe<f 1he Trojan5 dispo!ie of Lnguna Bc-ach with 178 yard~ ru hin on 28 carries. He also scored two of the Trojans· three touchdown both from S yards. * MARK PHILLIP& Woodbrlcke The 5-8. T70-pound tailb=ick rushed for l l 2 yards on 20 canies. two for touchdowns, caught two paHC for 29 yard~ and had an antcr<:cption at cornerback. * STEVE MONTANO Mater Del A ~fety. he graded out to 83 percent after his three solo tackles and seven assists against Amat. "He JUSt played a vcat game," ~1d Coach Chuck Gallo. * BOB ROSE Weatmlnater The 5-10, 162-pound senior 1s making his mark as one of the best . recci vers-i"h Ora~~ Count}'.....En,,__ W"'illglil he caught 0 passes for The Oilers' reserve quarterback completed seven-of 12 ~sses'for ~ ... ...,,_-128-yard9. "I le did'Wtr.ml sec-z-on~---£, ~ string quarterback has 10 do." said Coach George Pascoe. The 6--0, 193-pound senior lineb;KktuY.llins~ --riekcd up 10 lead tackles. includ· ing four hits behind the line, 12 assists and two caused fumbles:-l 59 yard!5 and two touchdowns. ·----~------------~ MARK DRAPER LuunaBeach Ifie .senior runni~ back was held to 12 yards rushinJ. but on defense he made a diving inter· ception to stop a TD and was in on half of the tackles. "' Flores irked over 16 ~nalttes LOS ANGELES -Raiders Coach s Tom Aores praised his defense, but he said • II• he might have something to say fo the Raiders this week about their penchant for drawing penalties. ''There's no excuse for that." Aorcs said Monday about the Raiders' 16 penalties for 140 yards in their victory over Minnesota, 23-20, at the Los Angeles Cobseum on Sunday. "We had l l penalties in the first half. and some were on crucial plays," Aores said. "This is a ~me of controlled emotion, a controlled physical game,' he said "You have to control yourself on the field" . In the first half alone, the Raiders were flagged seven times for personal fouls. On one Minneseta scorins drive, the. Vikings gained 27 yards througjl penalties. The Raiders lead the National Football I,.cague in penalties with 77. "Teams approach us differently." Flores said. "They're saying thty arc not going to be intimidated. You can't be retaliating. because when you retaliate. you're the one that gets caught.'' Flores said that aside from the penalties. "we actually played a pretty good game." Quote of the day Chuck Noll, PltttbUrgh Steelers coach, after a 31-7 loss two week• ~o to Mlaml: "You have high poJnta and Jow points ~n a season and this is obvlously the low point, but It's something that can turn around tn bne game." (The Steelers came back from the toss to the unbeaten Dolphins Sunday to knock off the prevtoualy undefeated San Francisco A9ers, 20-17). .. Loyola'• McKenzie ineligible LOS ANGELES -Senior forward m Forrest McKenzie of Loyola Marymount University has been ruled ineligible for the upcoming basketball season by the Na- tional Collegiate Athletic Association because of the grades he earned as a ninth-grader, the school announced Monday. The 6-8 McKenzie tied Gonzaga's Jofm Stockton for the West Coast Athletic Conference scoring championship last season, averaging 20.9 points per game. and led the Lions m rebounding with a 6.4 average. According to a stattment issued by Loyola. McKenzie's grades have been at a satisfactory level for him to remain eligible for competition under both NCAA and university requirements smce his ad- m1$_sion to the school. ·------------~----~. MIKE HENIGAN I nine He kicked the winning field goal with 11 seconds left in the game to beat Capo Valley, l0-18, caught three passes for 38 yards and broke up two passes. Boser Gonzale. not ndfied • j - RIALTO -When boxer Paul ;a Gon1ales performs his art in the ring, they say feathers fly. But eve1}1he Olympic l ()6..pOund gold · medalist was stunned when a pigeon smashed into a helicopter be was ridinginenroutetoa Toys forTotscar show. The pigeon shattered the helicopter's plexiglass .. chin bubble" as the aircraft was flyina about 100 mph Sunday over the Pomona Freeway in eastern Los Angeles. Gonzales "took it like a champion." said Rich Sc3nlon. the organizer of the car .show in Rialto where Gonzales served as the guest of honor. Pilot Jim Singley of the Los Angele$ eminty Sheriffs Department sa1a feathers from the dead bird filled the inside of the chopper, but there was no danger to the aircraft. "We just con tinued," he said. "lt made it a little breezy." · The helicopter. a Bell UH-I B. was fly1ng at about 700 feet and also camed s1x otberpasscngers, including Gonzale1>' manager, Al Staokie, and Olympic commit- tee representative Beverly McClain. Singley said 1t is not uncommon for sheriffs aircraft to hit birds, and the situation is usually not dangerous. He said the "chin bubble" is a small w1fldow below the main windshield which allows pilots to observe the ground dunng take-offs and landings. The car show attracted about i.000 spectators and raised about S 16,000 for needy children for Christmas. Scanlon said. . He said Gonzales d1dn 't appear to be shaken by the incident. "We talked to him right after he got off the helicopter and it dido 't seem to faze him at all," Scanlon said. "It was er shock. the loud noise and all. He took it like a champion." Lee shares Paclflc-1 O honor WALNUT CREEK -UCLA place-[iJ kicker John Lee and Kenn yTaylor,astarin •II• Oregon Sta1e's first conference victory of the season. have been named Pacific-10 football Players of the Weck. Lee's 47-yard field goal on the final play of Saturday's game against Washington State ga ve UCLA a 27-24 victory. He also had a 42-yarder in the game, and he " 16-for-l 6 on field-goal at~l)"lpts this season. Taylor. a cornerback. intercepted a pass. blocked a field goal try, broke up three passes, and made six tackles in the Beavers' 9-6 win over California. The Bears' offense netted only 206 yards. Other defensive players nominated for the weekl y award were linebackers Joe Kelly of Washington, Duane Bickett of Southern Cal, Tommy Taylor of UCLA. and Lee Blakeney of Washington State. •·~;.....--------------~ STEVE DELGADO SadcUeback The 6·2, 227-pound senior intercepted a Newport pass and returned it 43 yards for a touch- down and saved one when he made a tackle on the 3-inch line. Long Beach State QB honored Lona Beach State quanerback Doug [iJ Gaypor and Nevada-Las Vegas safety E.d •II• Saigncs have been selected as the Pacific Coast Athletic Association football players of the ..,eek. Gaynor, a 6-2, 213-pound junior from Fresno, was honored as the top offensive player for his performance in Lo03 Beach State's 24-22 victory over Utah State. Sa1gnes, a 6·1, 173-poundjunior from Sun Valley, was tabbed as the conference's top defensive playerfof ' his effort in UNL V's 33-20 triumph over Idaho State. Gaynor completed l 8 of27 passes for a career-high 333 yards and two touchdowns as the 49ers won their first aame of the season. He also rushed I 5 times for 39 yards and one touchdown in the ~me at Utah State .. Saignes had a single-pme school-record three interceptions as well as four tackles and six assists in ()NL V's fifth victory in six pmes this season. Saignes, a backup free safety. was filling in for inJUred starter Dalton Reed. Canadlene trip Flyers, 5 -2 MONTREAL -Bob Gainey scored ~ twice and Gu Lafleur snapped a 30..game sconna drou~t as the M.ontreaJ Canadiens beat the Philadelphia Ayers 5-2 in a National Hockey League game Monday night. Gainey got bJS first two goals of the season, while Lafleur scored for the first time in either rqular-season or playoff action since March I .After that goal against the Red Wings 10 Detroit. Lafleur didn't score in 15 straight regular-season pmes or 12 playoff encounters last year. He hadn't scored in the Canadiens' first two games this season. Clippers lose to Blazers EUGENE. Ore. -With three of its players not in action, the Los Angeles Clippers fell to the Portland Trail Blazers. IOS-97 Monday night in National Basket- ball Association exhibition play, here. The Clippers were playmg without holdout Norm Nixon and the injured Marques Johnson and Derek Sm 1th. Rory White scored a game-high 20 points for the Clippers, now 3-3 on the exhibition season. ~elemton, raillO talVlllON Noewnt•~ umo 6 p.m. -MO MOCaft: Kln9' 8t WMhlngton (delayed), KWVE (108 FM). 1:30 p.m. -PllO aAMS1'8AU.: Porttend •t Laker•, KLAC (570). U e berroth satisfies baseball's umpires ••4 11111 Pack.age ts worth troat and Kansas City II well IS the first four games of the National 1. 4 million OVer League Championship Series be-tween San Di~o and ChiC"ago. the next 3 Yea rs- -Before the fifth and deciding game , of the NLCS, Richie Phillips, at• torney for the umpires' union and the NE\Y YORK (AP) -Baseball league presidents avttd to accept C.omm1ss1~ner Pc~cr Ucber:roth, i:Cr· Ucbcrroth's arbitration to settle the v1na as a~b1trator 1n the su:ike which matter and the rqular umpires kept . ",'8JOr leaauc umpires from wo~kcdthatgamcaswcllasthcWottd offic1attna thouah most of the League Sen es. Championship Series, has awarded Phillips said tho ·umpires were th~".' a package worth almost i 1.4 "~cliahtcd with the decision of Com- m1llton fo~ the next thrtc years. missioner Ucbcnolh." ln a decision ann_ounccd Monday, "ft reflects an appreciation of the Uebcrrmb ~with the contention contrib\ltion ttie umpires make to of 1he umpires' .union that a "pool" major league blscb111 and a willi•· hou~d be established f~om v.:h1ch all ncss to compensate them com- ump1res will be pe1d wnh the mcnsurate thC'fewith .. he said proceeds o(playoffand.Worla Seri" "~opcofully, the independent posture games, not JU St the ump1rc5 that work d11pJ1)'.Cd by the comminioncr in tbii th~sc aamcs.. • case will help insure labor paa la The umpires arc an 1ntepal part bastbell 1n the ycan ahead" of maJor league ha1eball. They arc Under the tcnns of Ucbcrrot~·1 important to the pla)crs, fans. and all decision. the umpira will receive of orpnilcd ba bill," Uebtrroth $40S;000 for wortin1 apeciaJ evt11t1 said m a tatcm~nt rclrascd by hit Juch as the AIJ.Star Game; Pla)'DA office. and World Series 1n 1984 fT1heY hid "l hcse 60 men ere the be 1 in their asked for $46S 000 · profeu1on, and ha\~ paid their dues In 191S. lht umpires• Pl in- wn,h . mapy years ot hard work and creald to ~~00, and '" 916 u tra1n1n1 •n amateur hateball and the socs io SS2S.uuu. ~ minor ltqucs They •llould be re· The umplrn had uked tor cqsniztd actord1naly.'' SSlS.000 in 198S and SSSS.000 It offset a brilliant pcrfonnan« b)' P ckers "'idc receiver Jam Loft • who defied rhe clements b)' tching a C'arter·ht,gh 11 passc\ for 206 yarl'fs. indudin 1 54·)'ard score m1dwn)· !hrough th~· fourth Quarrcr. Green BaJ'• Gertt EIH• famblet oa tile flnt play from 1e'a1mmage wlaen bit n l>eaftl''• Tom Jacboa dulAll lloadal nw,llt'• DL .... ooqteeted In 11.,,l.IUai'd. The u~p1res truck on the evt of 1986. Ua.1uc Presidents Ch b Che pla)ofTs and amateurs worked all Feeney of the NL and Dr. Bobby thffe pmcs of the American Ltaauc Hrown of the AL. had offtnd Champ1onlh1p • ti between De~ $225.000 ror 19 .. J • H'L NATIONAL COH,.tlllK8 len,ranc KO """' Allanie NtWOrllall• W..t W L T "411. ,, PA • . ' 0 .d1 190 1tt ' 2 0 .111 ''° 127 3 • o A3" 1'4 153 ' • 0 At ,., '" c.tr1ll ' :J 0 .571 IM 117 3 • 0 •29 IJCI ISi ~ ' 0 ;2a6 IQ 166 2 5 0 ,,.. ,., 1'7 I 6 0 l~ Ila 161 ... , ,,....,, WHlllnGlon ,5 2 0 ,11• ltl 117 Dtllla • :a O ,511 m 1'3 NV oi.nta " 3 o .m 121 "' SI. l.IUCt • S 0 .S71 21S 175 Prlllldtlllhll :I 4 0 ~ '15 1:1> AMaalCAN COH,HIHCI Wttt lltldln 6 , 0 ..Dtnm • 1 O S..tut s 2 0 K1nsa1 Clrv • , o .. nDfffo • 3 0 Clllftl 4 , 0 I 6 0 I 6 0 0 7 0 lau .157 171 121 S7 123 n ·"' lfO w .571 1'I lD .571 "' 11• .511 ,., 15.) ,tQ 110 175 .lO ,, 131 000 t2 200 Miami 7 o o 1.000 223 n tWfr E"'11nd S 2 0 .7" 1'1 145 NYJtll S 2 0 71• tn 150 tndl1nnol.l1 2 s o 2N 1~ 190 luffalO o 7 o ooo 129 IH 0......ldtlMM ............. c ...... Moor111rk 11 Com.ton, tJJO Pm Gltlldllt el HtllCOCk Vtnrura er Senta hrwe CC: lltlo Hondo 11 S.n11 Monb OWlrel WLT 4 , 0 4 1 D I f D I J 0 ' t 1 :» 1 0 I • 0 0 .. 0 0 .ii 0 leVtMnl Cll c..-Mee L0t All9tllt CC et Wiii LAii ,l.lllltlM E1$I Lot AllMIH 1111 LA VllleY LA HltOOr 11 l..A Pi.tc. ,, .... c ... rw.e AllltloPI Vellev •l 0.Wt Mt. Sen JKfnlo 11 Grournon1 San llrilarcino V111tv II llTINl'lat V.aty All Hmel 11 7:J0 o.tri.. Ullleu l!OJt4 COMMUNtTY COLL•G• LOO Gtlden Wttt (J· 1) <PlcNk·f c. ...... , ,, °"'* Coa&t t1 Santi ""' 21 Teti 16 Pa~ S.t., Oc1. 2t -Mt. Sin Antonio• s.r. 0c1. 21 -11 LOl'O 1tect1 cc• S.lw No..,. ) -Cerrllot• Sii • Nov lO -•I Fullerton• S.I., Nov. 17 -El Ctrnlno• 3 14 17 .Q Orange Coast DA Y P LOTlT~ Octoblt 11 1... C8 Prep . football log SUNSIT L•AGUI 1 Edlaon '7 UODL:81ACi( {5+1) .. 0-.Hlla llMION ti• I) Olt-Huntilie!On &udl ., kl\ta AN Vallri ' O~tlM <ti Wt1ttekt ~ cnto-Ftn V•lln (al HI) l• le • Anl 0 ""'1t MIHJon Vltll H Cotlofl N~llll '' IA t4*• • H1-91tenC..,.._ ' ''"""" 10 ~an View n Col. Mey 0 tlt-CpO Vllllrl <-' MVJ ,. St ,Jonn Iosco 20 2t uniwr. rv l7 13 Motft Demt ($11efOek1) 7 '' fi!ewJiOrltwtlOr "' MVIMll 04) 17 Wt1tml11tltr 7 SIA YIBW L•AOUI Olt-e1tllldl lal NH) 11 Ul'llWnlly ' Olt-Oceln View 111 "41) COltONA otlL ~ ("1J, OU-Woodtwl ... t5A IOWt> 7 Hew:"' HtrtlcW flt 02~tn IMch (II OCC) 14 Hunllntton ... Ch 10 N2-C6M (11 NDt HartlOfJ 1 Tu• 21 N,_'1n. V.U.y tllo A) ' S.n Clemente o N9-I IAlll.IM ... ell 1• Kl Toro " . Nt-Marlna 111 OCC> 7 C1Dl1lr1no V111tY fJ ;I« Sin~ ,, • I• LI~ ... et! 7 UNNHllTY t.2-4) 10 CaPb rlllO Vlllirt flOUNTAI" VALlJY C4·2) ' WOOdllfldlll 1 7 lr'l1nt 21 01,_.t D.nt Hllll 17 Mtflf" Del 13 ,3 Cotll 1MY 0 0 Minion Vltlo tl ~ 11 er TOf'O I• Olt-Unlversttv (11 NHI ti l.9011111 HlllS 0 Nf-MllMell Vlelo 14 MIHlon Yltlo 1t 026-E111ncll (11 OCC:J ,, E•leitele 22 ~H 11 S«vll1 )6 ~(1INHJ l7~ :II " Lone •••Cf! PolY 20 N~I Ntwoorl Harbor '-Lutuna 1kec!1 1 LAeuliA MiU:t Cl SJ 52 OcNll Vltw 0 Olt-cdM {ti Hot HtrOO!') I Woodllr-) 1' Ol~lnt (II OCCI COSTA NIA CO·M> 026-Co511 Mell Cat ltvlM ,, ~lande 17 02..-Wtatmfnlltr Cal ttl) 6 8o1M Or1nc11 7 Nl-HDf HlrDor (11 IMN> 0 Uftlwnlty " N2-£Cllton Ille "-> ' S.nlfffo ,31 Nf-"INOOdllrfd91 (et lt¥111t} 2• MMllr H ,._.,_.l H_iil!flngton lffcb... 0 Lo' .Al9ml!Ot 0 20 Ill Taro ,., .--0 StddllotQ 21 WOODMIDH U-4J 7 Mlulol! Vlelo II HUNTINGTON HACH C1-4·U 10 Latun. l..cn 14 " LlfUM RIM • Olt-er loin Ollnefttt to CorON del ~ ,. 0 Cototll def Mer lJ 7 Tu111n 2l 025'-<.No V ..... 111 MV) '7 Dtrnltn 0 Olt-ftot. HalDOr (at OCCl 0 San Marcos Jf H2"!-0lnl Hill (11 MVJ 74 Ntwoorl HlrbOr 2• ~h· (11 ltvlnt> r• Nlwoort Hll'DOI' 2' ,....1 lrvlnt " Lone lalCtl WUIOll 21 ~OOdllrlOoe Cal OCC> 7 Cerona CMt Mar . • 1J Met• Del ,. ~$111\de <If OCC> 23 E•tanct• 14 MIMON Y19JO <•·l·I) ' Matllll ,. Olf-Y9 Id!. Cit lrtlnl) 21 .. n Dlt90Nd'M ' 0 ..... t WMtmil'ISI« ISTANCIA (1-J·U ~lSABowt) 21 IJnlver• t\I • 025-Edllon (II OCC) OcAln View 21 Nf-(.os11 Melli <•t OCC:) " ~v lllY 2' N>-Oclen Vltw • Ll!Kllll Hlls 14 "9-Unl'lll'•ltv (1 I lrvtnt) •• o.tll H ' Nt-Ftn. Valin (II H8) ~n °" ·'«111 2t u " Jonn aoK.o ,. nlvlnltv " SOUTH COAST L•AGUI 21 IAO\lnl H 7 MAlllMA (4·1) ~ 10 lenlltt 7 -..Mlndl~l..Jalt&-..._;~--__;~~u=.,A!..llauii~:.----.....,. ---....--.,-11~";.~ Oranet Cottt CO·O New.ore H•rtlOr 26 CAl'lrntAMO VALUIY (J.J) O~lrll)O Valltv never d1 , " Gsbloa uid. .. we 101 lo the Wor'ld ~ and now we•re world cbampicmt." llaWlrt 11 Ian Dfffo IMIUltft ~) Chicago al Timpe ••v J Go!Oen WHt Cltvtltnel II Clnclnntll 7 Fulltrton 21 33 2t 19 Dtn¥tr 11 IUffllo 1 Sldelllblck Detroit II Mlnntt0t1 17 Rlv.nldt Ml1ml II New l!ngl•nd "'·· OCI. 20 -"" DltoO Mtu• NV Gl1n11 II Plllladttllftll Sat., OCt. 'l1 -at StuthWllllrn• P11t,bur911 11 1nc11e,..11011& Sli..-Hov. :1 -san oi.oo· ~1111 va. Gr"n Bay 11 Mtlw1ulltl Sii., Nov. 10 -II P11omtr• Wallllnoton •I SI. LOUii Sat .. Noll. 17 -Citrus• 1<111111 crrv 11 NY Jell Thura .• Nov. 22 -at Sent• Ane S.11 Fr1nc1Ko 11 HOulton ,.,.w Or1t1n1 at D• .. • SllldlMdl (J·2) MIMIY, Oct, n (MUltft CtillfiMwt) it.ma II Alllnl1 13 El Camino Rams (4·J) : ~-= t'O:::" 20 2' RIVll'Mde CC: 23 3 1 ll It 17 7 Sin 01"0 Mell 24 Sat., OC'I. 20 -Soo.itllwestern• 14 Sii .. Oct. 27 -11 San D1teo• 12 Sal.. No..,, 3 -Pefomlr• 30 Set .. Hov. 10 -II Clln,,s• 10 S.t.. Mo~. 17 -Senta ...,,.. • denotn confefenct eame 2• HOU\lon 21 Grftfl l•v 22 K1n1a1 City 33 Sin Dleoo 13 Denver 21 S.11111 2l Mtnnno11 OCI, 21-tl San Dltoo Oc1. ~Dtnver Nov • ...,._, ChieatO Nov. 1r-.1 S..1111 Nov. lt-kanqa City Nov. 2Hndl11111Po4!1 Dec., :h-at Ml.ttN Die. 10-.1 Dtlroll Dec. 16-PlllU>uref:! ~Tep20 lltctr.i "' ~ ,, 7 20 30 . " " 20 1.WUhll!OIOfl (37) 6+o I, 13S 2 2.~ 00~1 •~0-1 1,on 3 3 Texat <•~> 3+ 1 t.OS1 I .t lolton COlllOI <6l 4+0 1.Gn 4 S.Netwa.U S-1-t .. ' •.SO Melflodlal ( 1) •·M "2 1 7.BrlOhem Youne 6·0-0 aq S I or., Slate 5--1-0 74' I t..w.mi, Fla '·2·0 "' 10 10 uu 4·0-1 '52 12 ll.~ Carollna 5-0-0 49• 17 . 12.0llllhomt Stare •·HI ..., • 13 13.AulMll 4•2-0 (StY) " 1'.~11 •-1-t .ta) IS lS.Florldl Sier. •·H 1331/J t 1UtnlUCkv 5-0-0 211 It 17 .Florldl 4-1-1 214 " 1Ltow1 4·2·0 1.57 lf.PeMSt1t1 N-0 • n 11 20.West Vlrelnt• 5+0 67 COLLRGB . PCAA LtltUI OVerd WLT WLT Cal SI. Fulltrfon 3 0 0 7 0 0 UN l.ts Vtots 3 0 0 S 1 0 FrlMIO Sl1t1 2 0 0 S l 0 kn JoM State 2 2 o 3 • O Peclflc 110 330 l..Oflt hKll State I 2 0 l S 0 IJll" State 0 J 0 0 S 0 HN Mexko $1111 o • o 1 6 o SttunllY'• Gil'neJ C•I S11t1 Fullerton ., Nevtde·Reno (non·conftf~•> LOllf ... di sr111 11 N.w Mexico Sr • n SW LOUllilM ., Sin Jote Sl•lt <non· conferenu>, n Utllll Slate 11 FrlMIO Sllll. n Nevld1•LH Vt1ts ti P1ciflc, n #" ~·c.Hk· 10 ~ W LT use > o o Arltone l o o W11hin9lon 2 0 0 UCLA 1 I 0 Stanford I I o OYwlll W L'T 4 I 0 ' 2 0 ' 0 0 4 2 0 3 3 0 HIGH SCHOOL STA'NDINGS, SCHlt:DULH SUftM1 Ltleut &.Mew W LT Edison l 0 O Founltln Valle'( 1 O 0 Mwin. 1 0 0 Hunllneton a..ch O 1 O Oc11n View O 1 0 wes1m11111er o 1 o OWrll W LT S I 0 4 2 0 4 2 0 1 • 1 I 5 0 3 •3 0 TIMltMIV'• ChfM 17:JO Fountain Vllltv vs, Marina Ill OCC) ''*"'' 0..... (700) Huntington Beach et Wttlmlnster Edison "'· OCAn VI-Ill Hunllt111ton ~) Sea View LMeue 'L.._. W LT CorOl'll del Mar 3 O O NewPOft Hlrbor 2 0 I s.ddltbedl 2 0 1 Es11nc11 l 2 O YOU!ll BMCh 1 2 0 UlliVll'titv 1 2 o WoodtlfldOe 1 2 0 Cost1 Mesa 0 J 0 TliM'MllY'• Game (7:31) Slddltblck vs Estancll <•t Hewoort HarbO<) ,,.....,,.Gama (t:JI) N-oort Harbor vs. Coara Mesa Cll OCC) Univanrtv vs cor-del Mar <•t Newoort Hartlor) i..ouna lkadl vs WOOCIDridlle tat trvlnt) Stuth Coel1 LMl&Mt • LMtUe WLT EIToro 3 0 0 Mlulon VleJo 2 O O lrvlnt • 2 l O Cal>lstrano V1li.v 2 1 o t..1111111 Hiiis 0 7 O Sen Cltmtnlt O 2 O Dina Hills O 3 O TlwrMllY'• Game (7:Jt) OVwal WLT ' 2 ,0 • I 1 3 3 0 J , 0 1 5 0 1 • I 0 6 0 WlfT'lfl '115. El TMO 11 Minion Vltlo (non•IMgue) "11111¥'1 Glmll (7:JO) trvlne •I Dane Hills Ml»ion Vlelo at Clpl1tr1no Valley UOUl'I Hiii 11 San CltfMnlt °"""' LlffM v ... n<le vs SIV911111 (II Western) Arllona Stete 1 2 0 0reeon 1 2 o 2 3 0 ntDAY 4 2 0 ....... Lll9UI On19on 11111 I 2 0 C1llfornll • 1 J o ~ ~ ~ ~!shoo Amal 11 Plu' X 2 ~ Strvllt al St. Paul We5hlf1tton 51111 0 2 0 Sltur•Y'• o.Mt Atl1on1 11 USC UCL.A II C1tifornla Oregon 11 w1a11tngton Oreooil $1111 11 ArllOllll 51111. n Wa1hlnoton s1111 at St1nford COMMUNITY COLLBGR f'ac-t Cenftl IOC',f C...-IMI WLT Fu1)ef ton l 0 0 Pa.._. J 0 0 B1k .. 1r11111 2 I 0 Taft 1 I 0 c.ttlloa 2 1 O 'Goldln Wtil l l 0 Lont ltedl 1 2 0 EIC1mlno 0 3 0 Mt. 5111 AntO!llo 0 3 0 ..... v-.o-s Futllflon 11 .. ktnflllO ov.r.I WLT • 0 0 2 , 0 • 1 0 4 1 0 J I 0 3 I 0 3 , 0 2 3 0 I 4 0 Cerritos 11 Tift Ml. Sin NllOftlO n GOldtn Wftt (If OCCI Lont lllCf't CC 11 P1Mdlnl CilltVrt L-.ue VUll Perk It El Modtllll Footl\ln 11 Tu•lln O!'anot 11 Sanla AM .,,,..,. Lll9UI ESHren11 yt. Kattlll 111 Park) • L• Palma Ge,_.GfewLtMM U Qu"'ll II loiM Gtandt LOS AmlOos •• Gltelln GroYI ,,..... u..- SuflnY Hiiia •I luane Part!. l Tnw YS Sonore (I t LI Httbrl) LI Hlbn at Fullerton en... LMtue Mffntll• at Wntwn SAT\MDAY ..... ~ El DotlOO YI. CY1Wftl (II Wftter"I Lot A19rnllOS n . P9c:Klca (II IOIM Grendel CAR TELEPHONES • As low as U-/Mo. Leasing • Same Day Service • Certified, factory-trained technicians •SAVES TIME • EARNS EXTRA $ •IMPROVES EFFICIENCY Ol~tldittl9Cli: (II Nt-11 n E llllrlllll 7 1"0011\111 u 02'-CdM (II OCCI V Coton. 1114 W< 13 La Qulnll 1~ N~I LIOUM ltldl 21 San Cllmintt 11 Mllllktll NI-Costa Mita (tt OCCI It Dene Hllls SAN CLlllMSNTa (1 .. ·1) ~• • Huntlnoton lffdl ' 11 Ir-vine ,, kntll9D 7 01 .... Ftn. Valllf (ar OCC> LAGUN~ HACH (2·41 Olt-11 Mlulon Vltlo 0 C~CllMMAr 6 O~tan VI-(II Wstr) 0 luene IP1rll. ·u 02~ Hlllt (II MV) 21 E111ftC11 n ,.,._., Wntmlnatw ' &lalnon 2t 1S Caolirrano Va ..., N2-+/1 :n N,_,.Edlson (11 OCC) 7 Dine Hlll1 6 Nt-EI Toro (II MV> 22 lrvlnl :M 7 Coron1 dtl Mir 14 6 NJ, Ml9utl CSD> 21 OCUN VllW (M) 14 COlll Mela 10 DAMA HILU (14) Ol~Hllls 21 E1t1ncla 3 7 UnlvtrSllY 21 7 '°"°'• 21 02'"-011111 H 10 La Quinta 21 01..-WoodbrldOe <•I lrvlne> • T Ol't'l'f Pinn 21 N~El Tore 0 Cypress 31 <nFet tffwPOtl Hl!'W 6 LtG\lftt hKn 7 Nl-11 Mlu10I! s G1rc1tna 2' N2-Est1ncl1 ~ Mission Vleio " 13 Wta•trn " Nt-SMdllbtCll • Caoblreno Vetri \t O Foun111r1 Vatle\t 52 o El Toro 14 ANGl~US &.aAGUa Ol~dllon (II HB) Nl~T HAJl80ll <• .. ·1) 01~ MATUO.l(J-1) ou-Mar11111 Cal WHtmstr) 27 SM!a A!ll • OU-.t S.11 Ciememt 13 Fouiu.tn Vl8tY u N,_.t HUITlillttOft BAdl 20 INillt ' N~H lalMVI JO s.nt.Ana ....... 0 ~t WMlmlnSltw 2' Hilfltlnglon IMC!\ 2' H~DllfOHtllx 31 Sent• Ana ,. 26 WoodllrlclM .. H Wntmllllt• ~s WIST'MtNSTlll CS·l> ,, estancia 0 IL TOllO t4·2) M Hullflfl9ton IMctl 1IJ 3 LI Quint1 0 2.6 Sacldll!Kk 26 J2 CUtle Parlt. 0 I ·~ "-""' 21 11 Plclfkl 14 OIJ-<osra Mal (11 OCC) 14 ,ounl t In Vallr( 17 0 ..... lshoo Mont. (SA 9owfJ IS Strvltt 16 026-t;.ffUl'll laldl ' Vallnda 21 Q26.-el PIUS X IS Matar Del 13 Nl-Ynlvtnltv (11 lrvintl Jt """ " Nl-51. Pe\11 ($A 8ow1) 21LOf'O Bftdl W"itoll 14 ~Ol'Olll clel ,.,,., 33 LIOuna HllM 20 Nf-5trvlte CSA 8ow1 ~ I ' • • .... AJilmlt9i MONDAY'S lllSUL TS W"1d Serlet rKW-dl -·- ( .... ef 5"4Y '*'-' !MeflM) ,IRST llACI. Ont milt Met. Double SlliPPI!' !Pierce> 4.60 UO 2.20 S)'fvtlllf' (Cliff) 3 60 UO Gr .. G CMal«l UO Abo rac.td; Andi« &Yr fak Ptllltlom, Tannl• Runner, Leval t>ev•. Western l(lng, El PICO Tlmt 2:05 U IXACTA 16·71 Plld ~UO SICOHD ttACa. Ont f'!lh In>!. lklCk Slow (01 Franco> 'U.00 10.20 3 00 eu1em Paotant CRtldlit) S.90 uo Chuck Et Mir (Miler) 2 60 Also ret*S· tMeOow Vlctorv, 8"0t1, Glmt C1pt1111, Merel IMlucouo, SUPlr MooM, Dlnlt Jlv. · Tlmf: 2:05 4/S U IXACTA (1·31 Plid 1216.60 THtllD ltAC&. Ont mlal PIC9. HY San Stllr>Clel' (Medland) J.20 2AO 2.20 Acuff CSl\ltrto) • 00 2 90 lolallOI (Delomw) 2 . .0 AISO raced GYPIY P1trl1rcn. ltlOll Monterey, Starlllzor. Stll'cross, Mellow Ftl- IOW. Fior. Danica. Timi HS. U UCACTA (1-4) Plld S2UO. ,OUllTH llACI. Ont mire lrol. R E TOdd (OHomlr) 6.00 :uo 2.IO s.tly (Miiar) 3M 2.60 J111s Mtmofln <Parkarl l.00 Als.o raced: Sklloot, r c P, Mino Draoon. Time; 2 02 3/5. "'"™ 9tACI. Ona mlle PKt. Howdv Mon !9llll0) S.00 3.60 UO El Tortnto !Wllllams) S.00 3.60 Minute Man <Aubin) • • t .60 AIJo raced: Fire Anet lllatn, Al\dvs Pepper, AWIY From Homa, Antllooe, C'Mon Hl"bil'I. Time UI I 11.5 U IXACTA Cl-4> Plld 522.IO llXTH llACI. Ona milt !>Ke. e,,,., aid 0u11119 < Tl'Chu > 31.90 11.20 1 .oo Jonnny Gcxidlo (I( utbitr) 3.90 l.60 Smottl11 Who (Marctlancl) . 5.60 Als.o rK4d: First OulClsl, Skk>oerl lnv1del', FIYlne Trainer. AndVS H«r111111, Hello Chlrow. Timi: 2:02 215.. 13 IXACTA (7·6) Plld Sl700. savaNTH llACE. °"' milt PIO Dltt.IQNrlllt fA!ldlrson) ~ '-• 90 Mastar WJD N (l(UlllW) t .00 '-'° FIYilllJ fitoger IMlitt) UO Also raced: Scotch Double, Frostv SltlD-'*'• ROMlancl lrtt, Grlbbl"· Snow ~ A, Too Popular. T lmt: 1:00 11 S. 13 8XACTA (3-61 P91d "3.00. ·~HTH llACI. Ont milt trot. Crul1lno CP1rlltr) 160 2.60 Nardini Gold 3.IO Lord Nul 2..0 3 . .0 2 . .0 Also raced! Tuemarlna Lad, V1ncltr Lome, Mk:llMI Jol'ln N. Time. f;SI 415 SJ IXACTA (4•3) paid s12.30. NINTH ttACE Ont mitt trot. Como Sltr H.lotlthllll 13.20 UO '-90 Pttev 1.00 4.20 Kiii Nor1•fl 4 20 Al&O raced KIUOudt L.ot>etl, Nlt1'1 Sllf" CMertul MOGM, Hobie Arnetta. Time 1,Sf .,~ a.J IXACTA (6·21 Hid mt . .O. TINTM llACI. OM inllt Nee. Mufti lll1ln«Mlw <S11«ren> S.60 l.20 3 00 AIMI Gold (Ctoenanl S.60 4 20 RMI ~y (Detomtr) UO AIM raced: Atwavs Sunny, V1!1 TUOOI', C1Dl1in Jemft, EHV D V • Sfllmul, SO\#· trtlln si.r. . Time '2;02 21 s U aJCACTA <4•5) ,Hod SSUO 1'1tenOllU •.007 Records Ml or tied In the lbt World Slt'lel betwaen lht Dtll'oll TIMT• Ind "" Sin DltOO ~rH· GAMll llllCORDS o.tr1ll Loneesl """'1 """ b'f time, rdN lnnlnll'I -3 l'lour1, 11 minutes, Oct. t, ""4, Illes rKOrd held bY P1llaburlltl at a. Jlmo<t, OCI 10, lf7t) fllttcNftt Moll Wllkl, Oftl dub, 91m1 -11, San Dil90, Oct, 12, ltM Cllel record 11\arad bY N...., Yori! CAW. rt. &rOOk!Vn, Oct. S. lts6, Mllwluk11 !NL) ¥J. PMw York (ALI. Od. s. ltS1). ........... Most left Oft ti.M, Dolf'I dubs HIM - 2,, OC'I. 12, 19'4 lold recoro '23, IMred bY ClllCIOO (NLl•P'llllldelPnil (ALI. Oct. 11, mo; P11tlbUrtt1·1ta111more, oc1 u. 1'71l Mott left on Illa., one ~ -14. DllrOll, OCt 12, 1914 Cold record Jl. lhlred bV Detroit vl CIK-11. Oct. 6, 1'40; St Louis 11~ Milwauk .. , OCf. 10, lift>. M.Mf. ca\ltltlt -'"tint· n nt inlllfl9 game -3, Sin Oit90, OCI 10, ltM 1119' rec»rd Ml DY mlllY ewbt, IHI by Cbialoo White Sox n LOI At!Qtltl. Oc1. 4. lHtl. ~· ..... Battino In Ill runt c!YO, 11me -4, Alan Tr1mmtt1, Dttrolt (!lei record Ml by l othln; 1111 bv Ron c..,, Lot Al\t'lles, OCI. II. 1971). S·OAM8 SllllllS lllC<*DS ................ Motl f'llla -t , Alen Trammal, Detroit (111$ record Ml by I others, last bv BrocMls Roblllson Ind Paul lllir, Bllllmorl. 1910). Molt runs -6, Lou wt1111ktr, DetroH (1111 racord l'llicl b't 6 01t1tr1; 1111 DY Booo Powell, a.lllmOr•, 1'10). Most strltaoutJ -'· c.m.o Martlllh. ~ Oleoo <* rlCOl'd, I. atwN b¥-R°"" Hon.l>Y, Ollcaeo (NL), Int; EdWln ''°'*•" Snlker. ltooklY1t. ,,.,,, Hhtkitl 11ftlv .In II -"" -Kurt levKqua, Sen Dit9o (llill record,,_ bY meny) NHL CAWlllLL. CONPllUNC8 ~DM.- W LT"' 2 0 l 5 2 I 0 .t l-J • t I 0 t 2 0 2 I I Ntn1I oew.... Mimttot• 2 ' 0 ' Toronto 2 I o • Chlc89o 1 J • 2 Detroit 1 2 I 2 St. Lo.ill 1 1 0 J WALES COHl'lltllKE hti10~ Plllledllonia I 1 t Wllh4neton ~ I I 1 ,...,._ ,. l • NY b1a1WW1 1 l 0 NVR~ 0 2 1 Pit!SOUrot\ 0 2 0 MIMll>Mli. G" 5A ' " s " n 13 lT s 2 ' 13 ' 3 1 I l6 15 11 .. s ., ' ' ... 13 0 • 2 I 0 2 l 0 1 I 1 2 1 0 1 2 0 • It • MIMIV'• sar. Moftt19ll s. ~ 2. T ...... sGarnea Kin9I 11 Wuhineton New JlrMY 11 NY latancier. loston 11 Edmol\ton • ll II , ' '° 4 12 • 1 • 1e ........... ~. lll.lffllo " QI**= NY Klll"def'I 11 Detroit V111Couwr 1t Pit!SOuretl Heriford at Toronto SI. LoWI 11 Chieffo WlnnlM9 •• Cllovt' DETROIT BLOWS SELF-RESPECT . • • r...-c1 • to depend on a team to uplift the commu nity is :kind ofmey.' Kaplan said cities should be me11urtd by such tradattonal 'benchmarks as museums, S)'.m· phonies and ~taurants. Detroit has an of thOlt thinp. but they arc laracl) 1snort<I an comparison with its sporti team a. "There is almost a ~ncss of ~ an Detron that distur'bi me:· Kaplan ••d ··n, 11 not the wa) a atyshould rd11e tons team. It Should be a pla )'ful ttu '-"-.. That 1YJ>t of .,a.yfulness demand that you think the·cny n 10methin& mort bHides JUSt a plKt for blllpmes." Even Emily Gaal, who ha earntd a rtputat1on 11 OM of Dttron's ibiaant nonpeid boosttrs. was SlddtM(f by the notous cdebnmon that fQlknvtd the n,m· M tnumptt In Game ~ Sursda~ niaht Geil. who owns an ct ett1m and lift :shoa called Em If tbc ~. · i'"' a pttillcl n the -.-...::..-~· • • The Tiaers did n in a Whaon mat would seem lo quiet even lbe lftOft sevmamcs. ~wona dub-record W4 pmn. bo1d1aa PO lets d*n a seven..,. me lead &Om July I until dae end of the :season and finilhia& · '' pines ahead of le(l()ftd1Ucc Tor-onto. The frontrunnina DIOll pu1 them an the select company of lbe 1927 ew Yprt Yantca ud me 1923 New York Giants. The TJ.F.l'S beat Kamal Ctty in lhtte strai,abt pmcs llD tbe AmcriC:aD Laauc pla~·and needed Giiiy oee p_me ,over 1ht nwwnum '° beat Su ,Diqo an lbc Wortd Saia. In lht rnelry of tn 1 -:::il1;. c:aldaer Lance ParriSb did not an1 IC9lll could have stood ID IM r:~· .. , don't think ~ .. be 111.id. :o.wilUllnJ 3'ot40 Wll falnaltie. Vic jUJt put n all toec:tber. We are world cbampjom." Yet, Anderson was lookin& toward ·the future. probably became lit llad a ~t with which io compare iL UDlilce mc>st of his Dlaycn. Andenon bad been to the World Series before -four times as manqer of the Cinan- nati Reds. He lost the Series twice. in 1970 to Biltimore and in 1972 to ()Ulend, Then, he won In consecutive ICllOG&, 1975 and •76, apimt Boaon and ibe ¥ ankecs. Andcnon bas Qllcd &be '16 Reds. who won 102 ~and lwepl w Yankt.es in the Series. the best team he bas rtwlaied-He bu been asked rcpcaledly M> com~ 1.be greatness of lliat anaa- nati ttam with this yeai"s T:lltfl. ormllly. be wrilllcs Giil of ik question, bllL pemaps b)• imolorilll the Tigers 10 win qat~ in ·ss. 'ht 'WU lookina for a way to answer it With action. And.crSon never JQUy seemed to forgive t.M Reds for fui.D& him -.ftet the 1978 season. If it were possib~ IO travel in time, h-e .said. he would love • -.to take bis 1984 Tiacn bide ci&ht years and play the Reds in a WOrld Series. That mi&ht answer the ques- tion. · SWIGART ••• Prom Cl Milner, sitting in thecoacbes' office at the time, looked at Swipn and barked. ··maturity.·• .. He's definitely a father to me." Swiprt says of his bead coach. .. He's alwap pushed me. It (being pusbtd) didn t focus in until lat.er. thouah. He has hcl~ me in school, and with personal problems. ··He·s different than what people tlunk -I don't thinJC fiC wan~ an) body to know boy.• be "211.) i " fl\'bc Milner is hard to flaure - but there's no q\leslion here Otis tailback is comin& from, "ith • IOC>d ~lid pu h from behind. JABBAR ••• From Cl Fans SAN DIEGO(AP)-TheSanDiegoPadres may have lost the World Series. but they have capluttd the hearts of their fans. who turned out en masst" at San Diego-Jack Murph) Stadium in a public display of affecuon for their heroes. A thunderous cheer rose up from the crowd as the ballplayers.. coaches and management toured the infield in convertible antique cars Monday nigh~ a day after San Diego was defeated by Detroit for the world cham- . pionship. ··1 thank we'JI be beck next year -the Padres and the fans," said Ed Craven of nearby lemon.Grove. one of an estimated 35.000 people who attended the celebration marking the Padres' best season m the 16-year history of the franchise. Fans cheered for nearly five minutes for first baseman Steve Garvey. the hero of the National league playoff victory over the Chicaao Cubs. Garvey. holding a single red ro~. took a bow and blew kisses to the crowd. "I thank God that I live in San Diego with ixopk that truly care about each other and v.ere here to share with me the ircatest year of m' hie." Garvey ~id . "We love vou." Garvey called the Padres' champ1onship o,ea)on "the start ofa tradition" forthe team. v.h1ch won ib first division and league champ1on~h1p this year. Robinson readies for QB controversy \!though Vmce Ferragamo isn't expected to be available for duty for at least a couple of weeks. Rams Coach John Robinson already is bracing for the anticipated Ferragamo-or-JefT KemP. quarterback controversy. "It 11 ~ anterestinJ and I promise not to lose my sense of humor, Robinson said Monda)'. "When the time comes. I'll make the right Ex-Corona Raceway owner Lipari dies CORONA (AP) -Felice Lipan. a former Grand Prix racer who fought for years to hold auto and motorcycle races at his Corona Raceway. died while v1s11ang relauves in Ohio. Lipan. who laved m Corona for more than 30 year... died Saturday an Cleveland. He was 7Q Before World War II Lr pan drove Maserat1 cars on the Formula One circuit In 1971 Corona Raccwa} staged ns first maJOr night e'cnt. a lJ.S. Automobile Club mrdgct race which dre"" more than 5.000 fans. However. ncighbo~ complained about the racewa\ 's noise to the Sheriffs Department and co'rona police. Lipari agreed in 1974 to file regular reports on noise and dust control, but an 1976 he sued 1hed1strict anomcy'soflice in federal court for $1 .1 million. claiming-hie; business was hampered by ~ulations. The suit wac; later d1sm1sscd and Lipan sold the raceway m 1981. LtP3ri is urvtvcd by ht~ wife. Laura; thttt ~onL Tom. ~ohn and Charles Lipari. all of California. and two daughters. Vivian Wriaht ofCmcmnati and Minam Mayshark of New York City. Private '\Crvices wall he Thursday. . KC Kings moving to Sacramento? · dec1s1on." he added, sm1hng. "There's no question in my mind I'll make the nght choice. Of course, I may have to persuade others of my enlightenment." Robinson said he will refuse to be affected by any controversy over the quanerback snuation. The issue. which over the years has become practically a Rams' trad1t1on. had a brief dormant period last ~son, after Pat Haden retired and Ferragamo became the undisputed starter. "I cannot be in a situation where external tilings -the fans. the media. m) wife - dictate my decisions," Robinson said. ''My obligation is to do what's ri&ht for the team. "I remember people telling me (at Southern Cal) that I should take Marcus Allen out of the· tailback job and move him to fullback and put Michael Harper at tailback.'' He added with a laugh. "Besides. if I'm always right and you're always wrong. there's no controversy." Ferrapmo. unimpressive an the Rams· opening two games. suffered a broken bone m his nght hand in the third. Kemp. in his fourth Nataonal Football League scawn out of Dartmouth. came on to guide the Rams to three ''ctoncs rn four starts. the lastcst a 28-10 dec1s1on over New Orleans. Man, 64, sues over denial of boxing license , IAL TZ BERGERON IMITH t. TUTHlll ft8TCUFF CHAPEL 427 £. 17th SI Cotta MeN 846-9371 ,ACtFIC Yti"W llEMORJAL PAM cetnetary • Mortul!Y Chaoel • Ctem1tory 3500 PICUIC vi.w Drive Newport BffCh 6'<4·2700 lltCOMltCk MORTUARY 1795 L9g4.,1n1 Canyon Road t;agun1 Beach ca 92851 494·941$ HAAIOft It.AWN· MT.OUYI Monuary • c.mtt•ry Ctematory 1625 Gls!W Ave Costa M 54~5554 ,.,.CE MOTHOI RLLMOADWAV llOfmJARY 110 Btoedwly COll•fMta &42·9150 ' PlllJC NOTICE MUC NOTICE .. • ---. --- ---- '~HE DAll .. '1 PILOT CLASSIFIED OPFICE HO RS r~tephone Service: Monday-Friday 8:00 A.M.-5:30 P.M. Bu~ine Counter: Monday-Friday 8:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M. DEADl.h 'E - ea6ual 'ltgance g4g ~ 'Ola1e. CdM ~ q.,I~ 1-4 p~ l t'l Hl.U :ATIO' OE \DU~•: Walls tor all your paintings plus a private Ocean View studio for dabbl- ing. Lovely 3 Bdrm, 3 bath home, 64' lot facing quiet artiStic Har.el· Dr. You Will be surprised at the quality! $485.000. Monda y Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday Fri. .Mon. Tue : Wed. Thurs. Fri. Fri. ; 4:30 p.rn. 4:3~ p.m. 4:30 p.m.' 4-:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 3:00 p.m. 3:00 p.m. * -~<>~ma <Id JHM, ~673-849~ 3407 £. Coat Hwy., c.-.. Mlw UDO ISLE ... ·~rvetous 6'Br bjyfront 1Er on cay. pool, s~. 100' boat space. Xlrit Fin. $-f ,850,000. 2-4321_ ' --·-- COLDWC?Ll. BAN~<?R Ll M-11-l&O Traditional Realty 631-7370 f ff!J ~jJoo(piaft_C)Q tan1asilC ul-de-Sac. 3 8Clrm 3 bath cont~ porarv decor and en -WATt:.Rf RON'T rooms offer spac1ou1 HOML' -.. leyout Estate Sile lot AEAL ESTATE with pool and pkmty of a1l1·1m privacy. 751-3191 ,... •/llllil ....... ............ , .... '111 !fa=" ...... ... Y'/A 1 ERFR0NT HOMO 111111·'9 • - October 1e 1984 .... 1 ..... hf 1 ..... Umnt.... Aert111at1, Uat. Apumnh, aat. Offfn liatah 3004 Btlt Wut• 5100 Wat .. 'Ctita iGli UM bYlat 3Zf4ltwprt1tac• UQ lalhl hJid !706 Cftta •111 1724 lftM!! .... IHI 2 roOnf Office suite 450 sq Lott cat: 10113 Lag •lllT&IUIT* P/TIU IFFIOI Ult§X BEL MAR: 38R Woodbridge 2er, den, ....,... II. Newfy decor•ted, air Niguel. L.rg bmtblk tabt>-Ill PEOPLE <Mrtlllng OMIQn Co .• 2ba, Din rm. 1ge family pool, tennlt, & a/c. NEWPORT BAY CONDO 3 br 2 ba lower duplex"' Eutslde 2BR f be. *SPACIOUS APT* condiUoned, parking. by. Reward. Wkdayt FNl IUYIU WOt1tlng out of home, or rm, 2 ftplca, gorgeout SHOO/mo. Agt s.4M161 bOat slip optional $1200 water Ruby Ave Xtraa $550/mo 1st/lt1 + MC. 1 mlle from ocean. garden, PCH l~lon rn 731-7110 x 119. ev/wkn •STI Newpor1 Cent•. ndt pit pool wlhMt• & dllld • • u.nfurn. 3 Bd 2 !4b• 1850 $l200 mo yrly 875-.8877 Uppet 4-pleic. 645-4280 &42-2357 Coron• del Mar. Call 495~931 or 538-6457 ut1tt; AM. phOn8I. •· prool cvr. New cp1a & lil11oa VitJL 2217 aq tt, 2 car ¥ar. tee 2~•· $575 Annual. charmina E-SIDE 28R 18A wge Ynl&ILLEl •HI 873-4120 or 87~128 FHI PUP. 111.P tanda, lite typing, etc. p&ln1s. $1250 mo Incl l/c §br2ba mc;a kltCfi off Ev-9at..a<> 182~ 1 • t1ud~ wood paneling. On clean quiet 1.Un Fae $7~$1200 C\CAlfNERY VILLAGE* F~~~ =k !~wt A;~ needed for oceanfront Flell. echedute. 4~ Hrt gdnr/pool tna111tenance. Loa Allsoa w/garg-S725 days em°' Hamp. Cor., (213) 217-2120 carpor1 from S475. ~gent 831-4960 FrHStandlng bulldlni• ewt. Blactc/Br ...... n, Now hotel. SloP by 1555 So. _p/da)' 2..4 Days plWt<. 751-t821Of642·5200. no fut details 53M190 "''"' .. 549 1250 ft l 750 ft 1 v~ Cout H ...... Lag. Bch. tot call Steve 75~1995' 44'! Seat Alty fee Surrounded by luicuty 2br Bachelot no kitchen semi ~ Waterfront/River Ave 3Br sq sq . at OC animal lhetlw. ~, Dl•a Ptiat z~ home ocean clou fUrn refrlQ prlv entr ba 28a dupleit w/ allo A ail per sq h. 675~608 appt. No phone calla. AEROBIC INSTRUCfOR lmazlng off er 2-3br ll!J!rt leac• 2269 kid/pet $850 don't delay! parking 1!85 875-0.349 Daa1 Ptlat 2721 lmmed. no pef. vU, ~.. LOST: Recs female mlnl· IOOOllTlll Morrwwe shift. Exp pref abodew/frplcdenyard *IADllYllW* 539~190BeatRltyl .. Cfrtaa•tlNu 212128r2baCOndo,frP!C,g11. required $1.tOO/mo+ 150 :~Npr~TJclU • ~~,i:,~~~~·Re~:r~ OUll but~~;:J&i~1472 $475 53t-e190 Best fee 3Br. big bonus rm, 3Ba. DI IUFFI 2 Bd fproe, grMt IOCallon vaulted cell. fed yard. cpl S 1700 depo 985-9053 N/wndw view 2361 cam: 873· 7681 F1ut1bl coonlry kit. torm.t DR. 4 BR 2~b•, 1700 slf nr beach $850/mo avail ;;Zo '::11-~~~· no peta. 'I' EARLY 2Br. Block to put Or •211 Irvine. Cor· LOST School ring. Stena T.he Dally Piiot Is ..-1ng • lllWlllll llllYIOI Jall;z Wf pool. Jee, grdnr & pool tv.-:ihM. Avail, $1275/1... 10/15 851·8767 • ocean 6 bay $475/mo. ner Campus & Von Kher-College. VC1y Doheny bright, dependable, 1 telephone Of>'r· aye. Wat• pd. $1608 mo. Alter 5 64'--0335 2 Br, 1 Ba "-low PCH But. ltac• 2740 Call 650-9089 man, Incl R-"t. .t,ns 8c:tt 10/8. Gold w/btue motivated Individual to till 81°'1 varlout lhlftt. 3t2 VACAN ltlatp 3Br 28• -Call now at 551-9768 ..,.. -........,. a full ti---•-•-at po•· 3td S1, Lag, Sch ='.Cr"f·C:::S~~900 3 8d 2 ~ba C<>ndo. Gas Kld:1~f~ ~;~L: rm ~:'~~.~~!!,~:"~: 2~ios~ba.,0db~h~S:i1~: Rot111 2900 ~ c~! 1~1-2~;..onee. ;~~~~5,;!~ 6:5.~~~e at ltlo~ in"'; bu'.Y office. Aaembl4n apply 7 AM frplc, pa110 w/wetbar, home ocean lronl area $520. 873-5078 1st/lat + $300 tee clep, ; * ; •XEOITIYE: Mutt be aecurate With only. MacGregor YiQhtt IHt. hie• IMO ~ comm ~l/apa. S800'• 2 BR 1 bath Eaay walk 10 $650 mo. 498-1078 att 6 want to rent hooa.-condo r; ~ltnH SCRAM-LETS flguret. Ex:perlence Corp. 1831 Placentia CM U75 2&; off BOiia cfiJCa 96s-i .~~..!._ 58 or •111 .. 110• beaCh S76ci, caJI to .... New studio apt. 1 blk from ~~:.N~er;,~i.S~O~~r Lux~,;-4~,fi~ nrR~T Air· ~~~· ::emu =: EXP'D TRANSMISSLON aulte deal avail 10/27 Of Don't P .. up lovely 3br Agent 548-7729 beh, 2 sty. 1 br, kltch & pOft All amenities $1 35 ANSWERS ....... Sal•..,"""*"'. Apply MECHANICS ' NEED~. home w/ger also 2br3Br2%8a.200ttoffPCH. 2bahomew/ooeanvlew gar.$650 mo.CallKeot. Old grandparent• · ' · in-....,_o;;~t~ ....... ~ Dally R&R man-bullder·••ng kid/pet $530 hurry Huge mat1• suite, 1am ~ 53~8190 8Mt tee •2Br 1~Ba Corolldo 536-0671 w 1P011 t • P 0 0 d I e · per sq ti. 833•9870 Jo4y Neuron -Yearn Plfot~Monday thru Friday man. 96()..5464 Robert 539-8190 ee.t Alty fee rm, frplc. dining, pool & Iota Aai 1wnhte. 2 cerPOrts. frplc 751"2378 aft &pm UECmVI SllTH April· Petrol 9·11AM or 2-4PM. 330 IUYllTTU IEEID Brand-,... ~ hofM:, • spa. $1800/mQ..~lll. eest ... , faml"' """t 2bf nr 8775 no pett 752·5822 l/ery. n:..3 J<5&2 2b~frf,~ Bedroom w/klt prrvtlges. Newport Center tun eet· PLANT W. Bey St, Coa~ or 4--1" old,-Pertl . . Walk to bch. 3Br 2~Ba. 4BR. den. pool Lease pie:; w/g'6.7'-S400't *PATIO &PTI* patio gar S600 980-3521 Nr bu&ilne & iJropping vlce 6«-68007613"=1700 WhlT• at1end1ng our local Ca. .ome Uta htcleanlng my frplc. gar~ $1050/mo $1700/mo. Call Peggy et kida/pet fine 539--8190 ~/In walking of the bch. lni•t . 2744 center. 962-5790 Airport area From 650 to !:~ ~=~~~:: Weatcliffhome. 64M044 Ut1lit1• I . 53M&37 Harbor Alty 67~ Seat Alty 1.. 1 & 2Br'S650 & Up. Furn room nr SC Plu Jae, 3300 al. New office bldg, spectacular. In feet. my U•ll. UlllT&lt Long awal1ed 3br under p i ... •Immediate Occ;uJ>9nCY 3otf Course Condo. 2bf + pool $27.5/mo Incl utils. ready for5 lrrimed OC· professor quipped, "If FILL Tiii UIYllTTll $700 nr thopa/thl• BALBOA ISLAND: • beet Aprtmtatl an I •Monlh·lo-Monlh den, ftpl, g11., Kini view, Female only, 5~ 1737 cupancy. 1.25/lf grou. yoor IQ. were any lower, Thia 181t paced high vOI-IT Nanny wanted to Olire 53M1to Beat Rlty f.. home. one houae to IU.2111 a~ 1211. $950. 960-3521 Lg tum poolaide rm/ba 7~;~~eam H lll\18$l • you'd be a PLANT." umne aalet office .,.., tor 2 cfl~en In ~~ V 3Br ., Bayfront Furn or unfum. • -•--L 27•1 priv ent. It eook.N/1mk 3 waon wtlh follOWlng Laguna home. ~t . c~ 10 -~~!:.,~Id. ~~ 11800/mo yar1y. "--I ... ,2 .. WALK TO BEACH. 1Br .,., .. , ... c. -. quiet.meture.mlf $375-t •cdu dloult•.AC. empt Ptrsoull 012 e'Orfjjarii:atlonal ablUty have rers & be deperi- .................... ........, '-ftll 111 .,..,. 1ea. laUl'WSry tac., encl '9f)'tmlt1Udio.cro1utto depUtlllncl.64S-2663 prkg~rromS225 .. 285SE-WHITE UXle SEEKS •Ute~ deble.$Chr.494•974:t M2-4.t71 °' 968-9853 LINDA ISLE BAYFRONT: NEWPORT VILLAGE gar .• avail 1111. $765 mo. bch. $300 Inc utl yrly c H 67"6900 • •.-.urate lniat 1244 Beaut. 5 bdrm, 5 bath. 2 Jr 1Br $530 & 1Br $800. 898-4005. W•end• & 494--6087 avail 1111 ltt1la)leteb oast wy. "'"' ~f:oT:J.N:2.,/;~~ ENO • Xi;;t teiephonuklllt t10fy, for the executive Gas pd, pool, Jee. vol· Evenings. 648-1303 I •· 1. 27,9 BRXNir-NEW MOTEl To leue $400/mo. • SupetVlsory exper prel. TURTLEROCK Twnhm who enjoys entertaining leyt>all cour1t, tenn, rec C I 27.... ~rt •dC• Room rate on tale + SS Mariner• Cove. Riverside lallaHHI • Able to ace.pt , 3BR 2ba S1200 + dep. In luxury. $6500 per mo. room. Nr SC PIZA. SCHry. tltl tU ,.,. 1Bfi525 dShwthr, ff"" , · Or. Suitable for 2 pereon f •-t .a012 uon and e .. ....iA1te IAlllll our ad In todty't classified under SEC· No P8U 851""87 Agt WE HAVE TWO HOMES no peta. 557-0075 29r 1L older duplex. Incl. No peta. Call blw~ off w/ad. ~day rate avt. offlee. Call John Sullivan or .. I .. ...,.... 4 8d 2 'M>a. 2 ... ty untver-TO CHOOSE FROM. 8 t It L 2e.ao 2238 Peciflc Ave. $550 9am-4pm dally 545-48s5 2544 NT~9~vd. C.M. 675-4981 1•s·m .. a""'11 ea-.1 .. -s'""aJC""'""'wy ..... aei...,.1.""ior• • 'i>°'~8f~C:!.i .. RETARV city Park Condo. 2 ftplc. Wattrfrnt ltMS IH, U • IC• ... Sierra Mgmt 838-0772 Info 831-3156 12:30~pm environment hot tub, new carpet•. 111-1400 113 .. 100 Unique. 18r Iott •Pt. ocn 1Br 1Ba W/pool & patio. UlllA IUCH 1a•••tri1l . only NO brkra pleaaet exper. utr9ng plu• Avail Nov 1 $1200/mo vu. Walk to bch. Ideal for No pe1t $C50/mo. Call IOTOI Ill ltatlll 2920 1 .. han1 Op. , 40i4 If you are the enthUtlastlc, _______ _ 788-681.t or 644-1862.. sgl prof $550 960-4648 after 3:30 646·3618 Wkly rental•. $135 & up. rn><! aq ft. w/overhd door. PUITSllP ::t ~Of' -=·rv~.K: UITllDEll IEIT&U Beach cot~ on wat«, lew~rt lt1c~ 6t 1Br $440 refrlg. pool, IN~EWPOATBEACH Color TV tree coffee 2oflie#&wareti0uae. l'op 640-2950 llSTIUP/T CALL us REGARDING yri~: ~~~r~lC b:o::lcsq. s~~ 18161N ooean Front. lBr tndry. Avl 1111. ~o pets. A great place to llve on the heated pOol & stepa to locallon. 875-6251 I lllHl llOUE PIOO &DISPlll aredo BBQ, 3901 e. IRVINE LEASES 1oootmo 7.,,9685 wk $C95. mo/wntr S 1395 .t23 W Bay 548-9516 Uipper Bay. Private oce•n. Kltch't evall. IFFICE/W&lllll•I! Hot Coate M ... location. Coast Hwy, CdM, appfy In ...... (Fo Famllles) 973-7873 985 N Coaat ..,...... . ~ Excel traffic & ~ht 27.t-4 E. Pacific Cout Hwy person 3.5 pm. r 1BR upatalrt, $380. Pool. clubhouses & hHllh Laguna B.:.--.. , • .:~:-5'.;,.. 1000af CM 213~5·8371 1oc. Sool) to be vecant, Corona del Mar 640.21501--,,--.....,...,-....,.... ___ _ OCEANFRONT: 4BR 2ba •VERSAILLES CONDO* gas pd, no pe1t. reft req. spa, 8 tennis couris. 7 ........ , u... ""'"' For Information call laskiH Ro••ln home w/nlc:e bckyard. gd 1Br w/all amenltln. 11t 1.t7 Flower, 64S...S161 pools, close lo bullness. SUWI IOTEL fliu. leat1l1 2925 MEI. FUCHS hiring. Eves &.Wknds ~~~~'."s°1~~~t clan decor & furniture 2 br 1'/t ba patio gar 125 OC Airport, Fathlon Wkly rental• now avall. *l.YPUI * PAVILIONREALTOR C••,.!4~unlalsltyt.ln In· CallBob,875-9191 *213-670·5723* Melody In No pei. S600 :~a~t,f°"venient thops $126/wk & up: 2274 New· Spacea available acrOM 171-1120 ;;.;t"";,;t"advlsory & 1-------- Nwpl Hgta lmmac 38r .+ OCEANFRONT DELUX 648-2280 port BIVd.C.M. 646-7445 from ooean. 536-8316 financial p!Wtnlng fleld. ·--=====~· 3 c::';~. ~~: ~:P. w6~~~:'t. 2 br 1'/t ba townehouM air Singles 1 a 2 Bdrm Apart· SEA I Sii LOllE AutHctaHlt 3002 =~~ ';'=. Oualiflcationt! wCHd pro-"'1H1'11m new lawn. auto aprnkfr. conditioning gar patio no ments & Townhou1e1 Newport BNeh. color TV SPIRtfOXL READ1Nas Import leather tlraw baG• ~~· numer'1' lap-knoc:lc• often When )OU no gar, no peu. '!'EARLY Furnished bach. peta$65064S-'4837 from $720. (Atk about S120Wk.,.I no~··t "d ....... 1 "II M.. • .,_ .. "--Na.. ,. pt u e. Inter ac ng u.. r-.ult~ttlr\ Dali.. S 600 elk & b f -.. • _..,,..., • ... v.... n " a .. era "' Npl .....,,, ~· ~·-o• L.,.. wtcllentt. Sa.laty + lnceo-•1 1 /mo. w/gdnr Mf'V to ocean ty 2br 1'hba 1ownh ... frplc. urnlShec:I apts. comple1e 3026W .. tCoutji~ CounMltng. 1815 So. El lnformatlonconteet uve compepaatlon. Send Piiot Cla11 l•ed dt to 751-5989 R & H Invest $350/mo 650-9089 patio. gar, no pets $625+ with TV, ltnens & utenaill, V ti Cwnlno Real. San Clem. Monroe Fus Cootultant retYme to: The Vieth reach the Orange Coaat depoalt. see at 276 maybe rented for short ICI •• Llc'd 492-7216 3'715thAvN.YN.Y 10018 Company. 4350 Von mat1(et. HOROSCOPE Avocado SI 548-7510 term or longer). On Jam-....... 2907 I~. Ir • 3AA.a T'el prlv(212)883-'7750 Karmatl. St• 490, Phone 642·5e711 2br 1'nba Twnhse gar~ ~~~ at San Joaqu n * * l.Y POI * * ...,. tH .,.,. Newport 8eech, C& 92680 ~~~~~~~~ patio S650 no pets 2310 F 00 Spacea Available aero19 °' call '76-2821 ;:.. SYDNEY 0MARR Santa Ane .v &46-2 from Oc:ean. 536-6316 ~ Wanted 1~~~-:~~~~==:=:===~=;::1 Retail ehop • lClntmcOnie. 11 E·tlde 2Br 1 child otc. leatall tt Top a.IQlan Chocotaterte 21~ $~~ ... -ap~7 es :::~ 2Br 1Ba. Steps to bch. Skirt 2901 Npt Bch. San o •• L.A. • + """ ......., -$750/mo. Agt 642·3850 .,. _______ ....,...-. Information contact 2BR w/gar. carpe1a, water PROPERTY HOUSE 1 uplrlng prof rmmte to Monroe F ... Consultant pd. 638-4120, 1·5PM 2 BR BY BEACH redec lhr new 3Br 2Ba NB 3475thAvN.VN.V 10018 ••••••••••••• 2228 ·c· Placentia 15'40 patio garage 111 utl pd g~~~~53 ~r ~~~2~25 Tel prlv (212> '83·7760 *3Br 2BIC. Nr SC Plaza 673-5429 540-4917 S.A. Pool, apa, carpart 2Br. refrlg. dishwasher, 8:2' t..:t°:f,,2 !Jd~O:V: layntaHt 40 I S800 No pets 752-5822 stove Incl $625/mo. No lmmed. S400 nfi-6483 --Omrtaaltl11 l Wests1~.8~~R~g~ 1•11 ba pets. Call 54S...4855 CdM 3Bd 2ba bouae L~~!';:t::~~~~J:~~ office cL!XNIAd dsh/wth, bit-Ins. pattoa, IE&COl l&Y bay/ocean view. lrplc. lar. REWARD. 786-0378 Earn $500 to 85,000/mo. 2BR 2b talrt t 1 S46&/mo 759-0aoe Delalla 963-7-426 kids ok650. n~72P87519 S695 baytr~I ~:W.. A~PulH• --. Found Seal Point. lost a I Wa ... 40~• . Incl Tennis avail. Early60tmate1o1t1r 3BR hungry-HELP! Can't "!Jl • '"• DELUXE 2BR EASTSJDE: $950/mo, yrty. 675-8669 tum hme In HB w/prlv keep 835-6449 aft 2pm 1175.~ secured by 111 2446 Elden $725/mo, =-=-...,,...,..__,,.....-----bath, klteh prtv, P<>Ot. :T.D of S12&K and 2nd call 651~8226 Big 2Br 1Ba duplex w/gar. 1.-\ulllt $225 6Mt-~7'70 Loet Blk ladlet Wallet vie T.D. of S50K on adjoining 5308 SeashOfe $800/mo F/Ptof OY8f 25 n·tmk 2br Savon Srkllurst/Adam• E..ide C.M Properttet. Eastslde 2 8d 1ba, ltple. (Yrly rental) 963-8377 2ba. NB .... t ••50+utll HB. REWAAO 9&2·5760 (90212"·8"9 patio, gar S700 ...,. ..., 759--8389 Lido II.le Waterfront. PV1 631-&41&/E 937·1771/0 beach. Large custom ~ luxe 38' 2ba. Yrty Lse. S 1950/mo, 673..a886 E·tlde lwc In a pine foreat lg 2br $635 1br $530 Nu erptt fridge d/w gas/Wtr pd enc PttlO crport no peta pref adult• &3 MJ741 Fem rmm1e tor 3Br furn apt on bch nr Balboa Pter. Prof or a tu dent pref. NEWPORT PENINSULA $3.tS Incl utllt 873--56&2 2 & 3Br. yrty or winter. Fem thr 4 br Eatlbkiff Geragea S650·S900. Condo. w/3 femalet. Avail Now 87s:..4G12 Bkr 759·1282 or 720-1328 . Call (714) 49...,9233 for mo e Info. l)istrict Managers · If you~ working-~ y;;;; b;. & oirh and ._ jobs OJ• not for you consldtt o co'"' in the~ c.'irculo: tion field. Thli It o unique poi.Irion With dolly Chol*'9et &. rewotdl. tfle__.,_ ~AN Mdor 9·1 l.Gllt °' :lw&_,.. 330 w. Bly Costa Mesa, CA 92626 • an..-~.....,., l • ~aper KIDS-EARN GREAT :rRIPS AND PRIZES! . AGES 11-14 : EARN tit TO $75.00 P£R WEB . ·W• now hlwt IS ~ toi ~ actr beMn to seure ,.-, b The Orqe Coat :°"Y Not Ow uews start at 330 p.11 lld 1 "°" Ullbl llO p.111 • ..ways.. On Sltllfday, wt wort a ltw mcwe i.11 Yoo wt urn many ~ Ind pmtS. ... WI~ llllllftl VCMlf OWft lllOfte1 I I· • • theft IS IO dell"'lf1I Of coleetloft lll'fOl¥ed. ;H you are 1nterestld, pleas. call Mr £1rt (714) 541.:.7058 TODAY'S , CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROU 1 Fuel lttm9 • • Bullet IOUlld 11 After ... 14 Roman rooma 15 Alriiift-- 18 Qo wrong 17UMta~ 18 College official 20 Hearth deity 22Bodypet1 23 EgyptlM king, 1822-38 25 P-1\Jme 28 Duke or .. ,, 29 Hottelry 30 Seid "Hello" to 32&.wrlty 34 Control 39 Worrytng '42Leu1~t '4i1•tt• ~ MaketoyOue 48 Guahed fot1tl •t ~Hlgn-" 60~amb,e.g. 64 Hurrlcene MCeNdlan COMeNatlw 51~City -.61 cnlnA Item ~tty oppoMCI 83 Litt ee 0o 10mett11ng 87Go 88Amerlnd 89 -W .. t 10.0Mt..W. 71 Whip marka DOWN 1 Vehicle 2 Sioux Indian 3 Ruulah port 4 EnJO)'ed 5 R41clt .. 8 Pixie t.Fol~ a FaH behind t Cuc:koo 10 Try 11 -Haute 12 Screpe oul 13 BuebeJI boo-boo 10 Acme 21 Pitch 231n1tlal 240ett.ther 28 POii!* IOUfce 270ar;~. 30Hominy - 31 Feeatecl 33 Bitd PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED 35 Nothing 38 Relating to low 37 Instructor 31Abtuiw "° Lay-me..downl 41 Olt9rtuppl)' 44 Weanng away 47 Follows the trail of' • d Ocrwn Under bl;d SO F•mlnine tllle 51 H .. lh QefWI 52 Mar~ 53 Male animal 55 card 1""oa11 57 Ego 59 SO.It 81 Rec.pt1011 82 Rodwil 6'NCO 65 Etec *'Ort • .. SOUTHWEST --~ ~- l0NG8EACH (No C'-'Y dt-405) s~~ OPEN SEVEM DAVS 1IO 280ZX 2+2. ucept cle9rl. loaded. low ml. 1 own S 10.500 67"'3800 ,# I • • ,. . ~. . ' ... . . . . ... 714-833-1300 111£ lclUIA'S SOltl-:CIUI It llTllS -lm 1114 ... ClmoCEL • S:2 n· • tu per mo ;f()P s 11,0tO..M CAPJtt,.600 S500 CAP ,eauc:i.on • fllllicliml SS2fi9 76 @ · 11MYllA•& lliO "10 C E. t a $229 te • 1U per IN) TOP$l4 82680 CAP$t4..195 S2000 CAP r~ ~S5a4GIO 18711 Beach Siva Huntmgton Beacn (71•) M2·2• WE CUE ........ BILL YATES , YW.PORSCHE -' . 8)].~00 0).45: I NABERS CADILLAC LARGEST SELECTION of late model. tow mileage CadillllCS In Southern Cahfomle! See us todavt 540-1180 2600 Harbor Blvd, COSTA MESA . ca OfangeCoaa1 DAlLY PILOT/Tuesday, Octo~ r 16. 1984 • The spirit of Marlboro in a low tar cigarette. Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking'ls Dangerous to Your Health. • Kings g 100'1: 11 mg "tar;· 0 7 mg nicotine-Kings 801· 10 mg "t1r:' 0.7 mg nlcotina av. per cigarette, FTC Report Mar'84- 100's Sor 11 mg ''tar:· 0.7 mg mcotma av par cigarette by FTC method ' -LOW ERED TAR fl NICOTINE • \ .