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1984-09-16 - Orange Coast Pilot
... .. ,-,. , 811111 ·ClllT i . 8UNDAY,aSPT .. am11•,t914 . . ~ G°c//llL~ . Mi SS - - - - - -.: _ - - -- --- - - .. r · Hl, B t ONDIE ! HI, R EI;:>! DC:NNIS THE MENACE AOOMIC STRIPl JUDGE PARKER I LOVE T O NICKNAME KIDS AFTER THE COLOR OF ifHEIR HAIR ! -... .,) WHEN CRAIG RETURNS TO HIS SISTER WHO EVER HEARD OFA 12-YEAR-OLD 60Y BEING DEPRESSED, SIS? HE'S JUST A LITTLE MOODY,.,AND THAT'LL DISAPPEAR WHEN I SPEND A ,------,~---- . BETH'S HOME, .. SHE EXPRESSES COUPLE OF DAYS YOU MEAN YOU'LL HERE! ONLY BE AROUND CONCERN ABOUT DAVEY'S 6EHAVIOR ~~l.P l/l p_ouK'~ p 0-16\ YOU LIED TO ME, CRAIG ~ YOU ~VEN'T 6EEN LOOK- ING FOR A Joe! YOU 'VE BEEN GAMBLING ! TWO DAYS? . .,.And we' 11 puf it in the. newspaper! by Hank Ketcham OUTTAMY · WAV,YOU TURktYS! bv Harold Ledoux • UX>K, I KNOW ~E J'ACK56NE> MADE A L.OT OF Mlf>TAKE5 5E.T11N6 UP 1fil6 10UR ... AND I ~W WE ENDED UP GE.111~& 11CJ<ET'E> roR 11-IE WROO& QJQ ( • . . 801 ~1'5 ALL. IN 1HE PAG1 !iJIBJ'UE FINAU!,> GOT "IWEIR ~ 106€TME.R AND OJE'RE. HERE A11J.IE Sf()U) I so L..Ef~ JUsr~ rr ! MOON MULLIN.S ~._~ BUT WE-<5fJ. RUSTY .. OUT OF CLASS WE'RE ONLY ~UM,AN . DOCTOR SMOCK @ 1-r's eeeN A LONG PAY.' :t CAN use A S-Y-IPF ~ec,1"" ! 1-Y-S At,..t, FOR A-r'MOSPHl!!"I!!' PAI,,/ SO WHA1"" AAS YOO ~INKING, POC ?- . . .bY-Ferd clnd Tom JQt'rison ANY'-rHING . W1'1'"H A L,..IGH-r IN . 1-r! by George Lemont ____...,._ ----- 9-'6 c~ ttt•n .. 1....., .•.• n~ot• 1nc ·_J .. . ~ 11M>P11' PIMIN.l•V, P'ORWMP t40! WI •tVOUAC HllRll! ,.=,, , ... . I . • - - ; CAN YOU TRUST YOUR EYES? There are at least six differ· tMff In drawlne details between top and bottom panels. How quickly can you find tt.em? Check answ.n wlttt tttose below. 6u1n1w "' MJllP•d • tWAft•P ,, .. ~,,,, s ,w .... 1111 II lt H r lk.t1t11w II 0oJ;i C IUf .. ll'P I! dof Jltlj) l 6111111111 It ll"°"""Jtot 'I M~f>fll!Q ,-------by Hal Kaufman------- • I y M·POS y ·UMI Names Of 1hr-. flowers •rt ,,_.nted In rtbus form at right. You •r• aslctd te As a "mind reader" - note quotes -you can predict a number that a frieod will suggest. Here's how: Jot down 109890 on a sheet of paper and lay it aside. Now, ask a frterid to think of ·~~r con· sls!.i"f-'19' f{ve) con· seflltlw;{ .di ltl 1'9. Hfv• hlfy, or ~r rfiverst number's ' dl9U1 and Mlbtra~t srnalt.r mount from larger a~.mt. To this result tt,v• person add result digits reversed. 'tudy the ll lustra· . tions f« clues. How quickly can you name the tlwft 1towen shown? lj\11.>qjUtlCI u•tllUI :.Addod ••• /\ llG, llGQUESTIONS l. W~t get; bigger the more you take away? •• "' · . -.. .., ... 2. What gets bigger the more you contract It?' 10# • ' eioo. w • 7 -~·6 (~11 ·3 i 19 • "f' -• • 21 20 0 i 1 Answer should be the 109890 amount noted on paper. • FLAME-OUTI Wtlit can you draw to complete the curious flre-tlgttti,. scene above? Add mtsslng lines to find out. For Better or For Wo"se M lCH A a! f'lCK YOJR UNDERWEAR . Of> DFF.JHE Slf\\RWElL f t~ 'li"rsil ~rtdu® I I : I ........... ~--..,...------~--~~-- ... HEADLINER! Use crayons or colertd pencils lo calor Ae cirWI sc.ne at.owe as tol'-s: t-Rtd. 2-u. W.. 1-Y ...... 4-l.t. brown. S-Flesh tonn. 6-1:* • .....-. 7-Dk. browll. a..,-:111 • ...._ SPELLBINDER SCOllR 11 points tor using .ti tM ~'" the word tae1ow to fOrM .._ __ ..._. __ ....-.i -... ·-.. -- THEN Kort i points Mdt 9lr all '-"• of '°"" lettefs Off ...., ----+------'IDUM ~ h letters Try .. ICllft _, ..... • ~ 1•~-._.~ .. by Lynn Johnston WHOu:FrA WeTlOWE.L ON THE. I COOCH?!. ' R£MEM6€.R -ro ~E.T · Bu1\E.R ON \\.\E. roPCO{(N, MoR~~N \ l1'!> NOW OR Nf..\Jf,R l. \\JE. b01 10 6E-COMf.. MOr<f. A?5f.R1'\\J~ ~ C 1'184 United F•tur• Syndleate,lnc 5l6l-L. ~E.~ 1 AM ON AMO\HER. f"RIU...lN'7 0~1£ WlTH ~ND'l. SNACK SAR -~ wMt,N 1.-6rr 6~CK. ()OwN ~f.~1 . \o Wt.NQ'l , l'M GONNA {\)f. M'( ~R~ ~ROUNO \1E.'2, A~O G,\~E. \.\ER ~ 6\& ~\~6 \ (:,01 Nb 10 1"E MOVlE.'l 1~\? l~ GOMf't,f.1"£L.'/ 6"00L.0 6f. RDMA~r1c,eur R\DlOUL.OU!'.1 ~ WE. ~l.lJ~'i!> Ju~T 511' 1~£1(f, L..l K~ . 61'RAN&~ · GORDO ® · by G~s Arriola·- SHOE NO ... I ~·r WANT ro SPEND ~TM~ . MONE;'<' . .,- I 1ll1NK I'VE. . GOT~jf 1UE. 1"~· • by Jeff MacNelly ::; ,,,,,,,....------~·=. • I , .. . \ --- · l 1 Nl' ·'' '.t 1'111\•llt I: It. '"I -- --- Ex-cop says ·cities slandered him· . . Claims CM police passed on admission he smoked pot to I:i~s Laguna employers But Lux says someone in the Costa Mesa Deparunent pve Laguna Beach police officials "privileged" information about his history of dru& use, wlitch Lux· had willinsJy provided ~uring a poly11'1ph examan· ation. Lux then became the taract of an internal police department in- vestigation in Laguna Beach, arid before it was over he resi~. A fonner Laauna Beach cop who rcsi&i!ed in May afterbein1accused of drua abuse bas filed a $3 million · claim against the city of Laguna Beach, and a 1imifar c1aam apinst the city of Costa Mesa.. charging them both witlr libel and slander in the use Teammates help out a friend whose belongings were destroyed In a fire at her home.I A2 Bids wlll be opened Oct. 17 for 657 offshore oll tracts, Including several off Orange County.I A7 Callfomla A Century City shopping plaza sustains an esti- mated $4 million In dam- age from fire./ A3 Nation· A heart expect says pacem(lkers are often im- planted In patients who don1tneed them./HA"lp._:_.:.........--~ World In Madagascar, natives · maintain such close ttes to their ancestors, they often take bodies out of their tombs and throw a party./AS Singles dances catch on Jn China-to the delight of the ruling elite./ M of infonnation about his past. William D. Lux, 23, a former Costa Mesa High School quarterback, had been a cop in Lquna Beach for three years when he applied for an opening oo the police department in CoSta Mesa last April. • CUtlee hl sand "Not because of guilt, .. Lux said iQ. a telephone interview Friday ... Every-. . Brneet POilt doee eoaae lntrica-"te work OD ~J&iad Hotel'• entry lD eandcutle contest (left) wll.Ue Bob Weible of co.ta lleM pata the ftnl•htn1 toadl• on hl8 cutle. Amen Wardy Collectibles are popular choices to wear to the opening of the Anaheim Hllton./81' Help your makeup keep s COOtdurtngSeptem- ber heat waves./82 · ·Catamaran owner '1Uek~t0 be _alive' Sports Reggie Jackson hits his 499th career homer as Angela ~rulse past Chi- cago, 11-2./C1 Golden West took advan- tage of numerous mis- takes to score a 21-3 victory over arch-rival Or- ange Coast./C1 . . Entertatnment Two musicals In San Clemente and a comedy In Costa Mesa arrive on the theater scene this week./88 Double Bullees skipper recalls harrowtn hours c ngtng to the hull waiting for rescue By ALMON LOCKABEY o.llJ .......... --. Bob Hane~ owner-skipper of the ill-fated 6S-foot catamaran Double Bullet. is back at his desk at bis Custom Lithograph firm in Los Angeles, .. lucky and thankful to be alive." · Double Bullet, the record-shatter- ing -catamaran into which Hanel poured nearly a half-million dol~ and almost a decade of his life, lies al the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean about 700 milts off the coast of Newfoundland. That's where Hanel and his fiv~ man crew abandoned it as it lay awash and mortally wovhded after bittiDJ a partially submerged tree trunk d\.\M& the Transat TAG race from Quebec to France. possible watery death ' less than a month before. · · But in a luncheon interview in a crowded. noisy restaurant a few minutes later. Hanel descnl>ed in detail the barrowini 19 hours he and his crew spent clinging to the un- damaged port bull of Double Bullet before they were rescued by the 813- foot freighter American Pioqeer, one ·of a number of vessels that had picked .up Double Bullet's "mayday'' signal. Amona those who gathered to hear the tale was Mike Kane of Newport Beach. who lost his own SS-foot trimaran, Crusader, last year in a race apinst the clock from New York around Cape Hom to San Francisco. Crusader was lost in heavy weather off the coast of Oille after rounding the Horn. _'fraveJ.._ As visitors walked into his Los Angeles industrial area office on -----Friday, howeverTfland Wtt on the phone conducting business as though he bad not been plucked from a A& for the Double Bullet, "reports that we bit a log and pitchpoled (end ov.cr .end)_ were noLcorrect," Hand said. "We actually bit what appeared Jaded travelers can get far from the madding crowd aboard the luxury cruise ship Explorer.JBS -:-:.:.:.x-:·:·~:·:·:·:-!!:·>:-.-<-:·:·:~:-::=~~>~·X!!!!·: Baalneu Treating employees positively to Improve pro- ductivity Is nonsense, says one expert.JCS INDEX ·Erma Bomb.ck Bridge Bullneu CaJlfornl• NeWa CtaMtffed Croaword Featuree Horoscope AnnLanderw Natlonal Newt Opinion PUblle Notloel SeMoemen SpOrts Stoett Martcett Style Te1evlalon Theltert TraYll Weather WortdNewa B4 EM C5 A3 01-6 88 84 05 84 A3 A8 ca A7 C1·4 • C8-7 81~ TVe's.°X EM A2 A3 (Pleue Me SIUPP&R/ A2) , ..................... ...... "1m0rtcomb1D• fact. futuy on ffewportbatbortoua. . - ..... • I thing just came on all at once ... Lux said he was in the middle of a divorce and his I-year-old &On re. quired costlf ear surgery w~ the department mvestigation bcpn last AJ>ri1. Lux said bis problems made ham a "Walkina basket cue ... 1 didn't want to put up with that .... .. Lux said the dnia incident hap- pened "almost two years ago, .. durin1 a period of separation from .his wife. .. It was a one-time thing. a little . . . .. Beat victim pot," he said. .. tr I wanted the job in Costa Mesa I thought at least rd be honest. ·10en they accused me of drua abuse, .. Lux said. Uguna Beach Chief of Polioc Neil Purcell was unavailable at his officc Friday aftcrllOOn, but Citf M~ Ken Frank laughed at Lux • rcpoi'led admission. •'Tfilt doesn't corres~ to what'~ on the lie detectoc test i.nd what he told the chief. .. Prank said. But be rt.fused lO claborale, obilet'V· ing. uwe·dJustendupinanothenwt lite this one ... However"' F.rank di.day. "Gentr· ally the nature of vJbat he _,, happened 1S accurate ... Eleanor Weaver, Costa Melaasa• tant city attorney, denies that ill)'Oee in Costa Mesa provided any infor~ mation to .u.guna BeaCh officials. She (ne&M ~ Ell:.coP/A2) Suspect tries to hang himself ....,...,.-_.........._== Believed to be first suicide attempt at Irvine Police Station An Irvine man was in stablt condition at UO Medical Cana- Saturday n'i.&ht .after attempting ,1.0 bani himself with his belt OU the door uo& of a boldµig room at the Irvine Policc.Station, acooiding to officlCti. Daniel Driscon. .36. was found unconscious by an 10ffioer makii!f a c:hect of lhC boldiilg room.~ to Lt. GiDe Norden. . Officers and paramedics admiais-- tered cardi()1)Ulomonary ftlUICi. tat.ion U'Catmeot and rushed Drilcoll to Tustin Community HOJpi'tal. He ' was-tramfcrrcd to UOMC. ~!be ·is on life support ·~ ll<>Pt111 officials said his conditiOll is improv- in~~ sa.td the near-bangina curred shortly . aft.er Driscoll was broQ&bt to ·the station at l 17200 Jamboree Blvd. He was amsteid about 2: 10 un. Sa~ on suspl+ cion of assault with a ocawY weapoA. DrisCOll aDC'll'dJy dllaxd two men wi1h a knife iu a pmtins 161 behind• (Pleue ... SUSP9CT/.u) Sallj Au_~omore CbrUtle P'lore8~Satarda '• crou coa.n meet at lntne'• one of enera1 performers reportedly felled Wood ~e lllC1a School. P'lm. wu by temperataree tbat eoared lnto tile 90e at treated for beat ezhautlou. See Pace C2. Capt. Sandbar~ harbor lore to be taken with grai~ ofsaJt Jim Orr's the first · to admit his cruise blurs fact. fantasy KAREN KLEI PEOPLE IN THE NEWS malarky about the Newport he are Orang Coatt DAILY PJLOT/ Teammates come through for victim of Costa Mesa 'fire ·' Y OBERT AR Cit .. a.ii, .... ltd mbcr K1 1Td didn't have a • bing of her own Jcf\ to \\Car at Newport H rbOrHigh School Thurs- )', the day f\tf n me &utted her • amil)"s two-story home on t 6th .~Rt ce in Co ta M . All her new chool clothes were destroytd by the fire. So was the torch ----her: broth r n carried when tfte. Olympic Relay went throu h Irvine earlier this ummer. ~ A few items left in the dryer made it through unscathed, but they were onlytowcls -no clothes. So 14-year· old Amber had to borrow a drns from an aunt to wear to class. • But when school resumes on Mon- day, she's g~i"I ·to have a ncv. wardrobe, 1th lham to canna t m1natc on Amber' SO«Cr team and to their fim1lies. The SJrls dropped in on Amber Satun:by where's he stayana wuh her grandparent~'\nd p~nted her with five $100 bills. :•1t took me by total urpri ;• !h said. "They were 'o thouahtt\il, 1l'1 like a miracle. I didn't cry when they were here, but I did a lot after they left." Amber already has aone hoppina and has pu'rcha~d a jacke~ belt, horts, skin and hat. She said her brother, Sean. also has reason to be thankful for the kindneis of others because American Tele- phone & Telegraph officials have sent him a new Olympic torch and runnina unifonn,_ rcplacina the ones destroyed in the nrc. Amber " s an ouutandina goali on the ewpon Harbor A YSO soccer team for 1.3· and 14-year..ald airls. a friend said. She was selected to compete in a tournament in Calpry1 Canada, and helped spark the Joc11 team to a ~nd plaoe finish. She said she'll be try1n1 out for the varsity team next 1pri~ Carole Steele, a friend said Amber's soccer teammates ''felt ter- rible" about the fire and wanted to do somethina. so they decided to con- tribute the money for school clothe1. Amber said her family believca the fire, which caused an ntimated $160,000 in damqcs, was caused by an electrical shon. She said the family plans to reconstruct and remodel the house. No one was at home when the fire hit. .: Amber Klneaant. fourth from left. with frlenda (from left) Julie J~bn.on. llellua · Deir Net,._ llf Tenf K- llelcblor, Jenni Beach, Janet Sama, Ellen Bunter. Alea Steele, Oen-he Slater. .~ CONTINUED STORIES ··EX-COP CHARGES SLANDER ••• From Al a. , also disputes Lux's claim that the • Information obtain,ed from a poly- &raP.h test is ''\Jrivilcged." • I think he's mistaken," WeavcT said. She will recommend dcrual of the claim to tho Costa Mesa City Council this week. Frank will also recommend denial of the claim against the city ofl..a&una Beach. Lux is currently employed in a paintina business and as an assistant football coach at Santa Ana Valley Hi&h School Ris Laguna Beach claim cites at least Sl million in damages caused him by lost wages, medical expenses for his son that his work-related insurance didn't cover, attorney's fees, and mental and emotional pain and sutrerina. Lux also claims he'.s entitled to at least $1 million in punitiye dam.a.Jes. The cost of damaa- es occUJTina 1n the future are un· determined, accordina to the claim. "I'm trying to get my head above water now," Lux said. althouah he is still trying to raise the money be needs now for attorneys to pursue the claim in court. "It's not the monel, it's just to get my name cleared ... it s humiliatina to my family and friends. "What hurts is that I really liked working down there ... 1 have a lot of friends still there;• said Lux. He said he sought the job in Costa Mesa for a hi&her salary, as a "career move.'' lie accused the J..aauna ~ch depanment of not standina by iU officers. "What I-did was wronai it really bun my career, but I'm still a aood coR. •· Lux said. 'Maybe they thought my mental state wasn't Jood ... I bcc:amc a liability. But instead of helpina me out they investigated me.'' Lux said be was more impressed by the Newpon Beach police depart- ment's recent handlina of an officer in trouble. "They didn't suspend him, they let him work. Everybody's human ... I was iO~J throUfh a di~ey had no r:iaht to do il "What happened was in the put, on personal time-it didn't affect my work -and they accused me of sornethin' outrageous. They went after me.' , ftePa.Ulon Queen ...Ua the Newport barborchaDnelaae•eral dmee each day. . . . . . ~ CAPT. SANDBAR PLIES HARBOR ••• :!.From Al •• ~~ot reporter on board that day. ~~_.. .. The journalist is just back from •!i.>lew York. where she's n wnunA •; er well-known Broadway column, • • e announced coolly, much to the , <uporter•s shock. •.~ The sray-hair'ed ladies down on the • ssenaer deck smiled and nodded ' ioward the vacant lot while C.apt. · ndbar chuckled. * '~YotJ've aot to take all this with a ~ 'ttlc arain of ... " he says. " lndeed;the captain of the c.atalina, • tfoliday (a ship owned by the same tompany as the Pavilion Queen) is entified as ownina one of the more pulent homes on the tour. as is the . ormer captain of the Pavilion Queen -''a billionaire yacht man JU t in Ct.om. •• doing. they don't mind," be added. Pelicans, scqulla, seals and even JflY whalca 'urface occasionally dur· ma Orr's tour. On the recent tour, scor of tiiaky mullet fi'b jumped up out of the warm harbor watm, attemptina to shake parasites from their bodies. · Orr JfCW1 up on Balboa Island and much oflhe information ht aives on bis tour is Newport lore and lcaend he picked up in his youth. As for the mt: e comfonable blur of fact ana fiction arc pan of what makes bi, job fun, be sats. "Who's to know, riahtr' he asked, as he ·awuna the Pavilion Queen around in the Lido Channel and headed back toward the Balboa tour, which runs 45 minutes and costs $4 for adults. "The area appeal• to them -this is an area they read about all over the world in books and see in the movi.ca," be said. For many he added, the Pavilion Queen is their only chance to ride on a larse bo&L "SO me of them think thi• is their yacht." he said. But the Pavilion Queen isn't exact· ly a yacht. The boat was built in l 94-1 and chriatened tht Del Mar. . Duri_nJ World Wat ll, 1he carried up to 500civi.lians between San Dicao and a military air station on COr· onado bland, Orr said. When the Coronado brid&t wu built. the Del Mat wu refitted and moved to Newport Harbor. Pavilion.. And, da in and ~~~~~~~~re~n~a~mc t More hot and humid weather Coa1tal """~ .. MonGe' l'IOI MCI =-' bMCf*~O II tnd INMt ti IO 10I nlgllt lowt .. i. 1• ,_ "°*'' ~ .. tM a.tu• !OM bOtdlt. UQflt verielt wino. ~~~ ... lo ICMtlMel 1t 10 11 k lund..: •ftenloOll, tcKl\ftweet .... , te t Hloll lllouCllrlMI II 1llnet INougll ~ nlGflt ltt'Cftr tow --~" ............. owty~ l'l!Otnlllt CMor •*• 8ma11 cirlft Id~ ,,,.,,, OonooptlOn to ''"" 111ooa 11111\d • kw~ "'1rldo20to10kno1tw!11t OOl!lblnod -Of I to 10 fMI htct•, '°"11\ ot • .,, .. 11000 lillend .... ~ Wlll4IO 10 to ~ knOlt. Oomblnod .... t lO I IMI~ doudllltlt ti llMOO , ..... OW1Y IWIO•t ll'ICWflfnt Eztended ., 71 I ft ... , ..... 17 '7 80 ., ti M = ft 71 • " n ., .... .. 31 IS IO ·51 13 tf If u '11 62 11 47 71 SI 1: 71 al 17 1 .. . 11 u ... 71> ., .,, =~ -'"" .,., !1t =~ ........ ===~ If-~ f'h~ Miss Utah wins title By Tbe AllOciated Preu A Tl.ANTIC CITY, NJ. -Miss Utah, Sharlene Wells. a Mormon who says she has "absolutely no skeletons in the closet." was crowned Miss -America 1985 on Saturday ajaht, end.in& the most scandalous of the l>&§eant's 63 years. I'm a Monnon from Utah and that ahould say it all," Miss Wells said. · Miss Ohio, Melissa Bradley, 23, of Mansfield. who was once accused of shopliftina. was cho~n as the first runner-up. The second runner-up was Miss Mississippi, Kathy Manning. 22, of Drew. Miss Minnesota, Lauren Susan Green, 26. of Minneapolis, was third runner-up, and Miss Texas, Tamara Hext, 21, of Fort Worth, was the fourth runner-up. CoNTINU lU S10R1Es Miss Wells, a 20-year-old resident of Salt Lake City,s_.bcr arms around Miss New t Mary-ADn FatTCU. and then bug Miss Ten- nessee, Shelley Marwrum as she was pronounced tbc Winrilt in a natiOIW· ly televised s)\ow and "'''* a capacity crowd o(ll,000 ~!'It at Convention Hill. Her crownina ends a yearjbat saw Vanessa Williams. '21, of"MllMdtid, N.Y., become tho ftrSt black't6 win the contest and the first woman to relinquish the crown after Penthouse magazine published nude photo- papbs of her -taken before last year's contest, in its September~· ue. Miss Wells WIS crown(a b her predecessor, Suzette ('Jaii l, of Mays Landin.a. Win> lieDllted Miu Williams in July. "Miss Chaifcs also Is black. 71 ,,, t1 74 .. ... .. ... 7a u 17 ., 17 u .. .. .. 11 71 eo · .. 11 .. II .. • .. M n .. 17 .., H 12 .. .. 106 17 u 54 ,, .. ,. ti . ., 11 f7 .. .. , "9nO •1 ~ ..,,. .. M*Jto u IO •• LOUii .. eo It ...... ,..,.. 11 n .... ~.Cfty • .. llllAntonlO n f1 • .,, OltOo .. H .... ,,.....,. ,, r 8911.MM.'. Ill .. u ., ..... .,,. M ...... 71 ft == 7f .. ..... ., .. IO 1y1-.-. ... 41 T .. "' r-.. 71 TlllM 71 .. WMl!lnOton ~ .. Wlerllt• 11 Wiili.....,,. .. ... ~.Do 7' • Tides TOOAY u ""' hlgfl 1t2•m. l'lrtt IOW •:t: .. "' .. It :=::r 12: , "' ... '"'"' " . MC*DAY 1.ltp.111 41 .. ~ 10.4\,"" , .. .... ~.,?p111~riool....._ otl:Jt1.111.. ..,T:••Mpm t.Aoonrtooetodly•l 40jttn ....... U7 p.111 and tWoe 191111 et t UO P "'· llZI t4 w w .... DNcnoet , ew IW M IW Sharlene Wella SUSPECT ATTEMPTS BANGING ••• From Al bar and restaurant 10 the .J.icinity of Main Street and MacArthur Boulevard, accord.inf to Norden. The two men repor'tedly had kicked Driscoll'• car and exchanaed words with Driscoll, who alleaedly aot a knife and turned on the two men. Norden said. DtllCOU bad been drinkin&, aOcofdilii to N ori:ltn. Norden slid the incident is be· lieved to be the tifsl adtclde attempt to take place in the Irvine Police Station. Irvine doesn't have its own jail facility but k~l>t inmates in the boldina room unUI they're released or transferred. to other jails. Police officers had intended to transfer Driscoll to Ora.nae County Jail, according to Norden. Driscoll was alone in the boldina room at the time oftbe incident. . . l SKIPPER HAPPY TO BB~IVE .•• From Al z. to be a partially submer&ed tree trunk but we were sure ihey Mel ttea ua . 1t on Saturday, six days der the start of beaded back towtrd NeWfounai&M" the race .... It wu just a glancina blow :ttanel said when ·aae and hit crew and, after a quick inspection, it saw the li&hts of thl ffeipter early lbe a~ there wu no damaae. next mornina. ~ 'SOdlht it miJbt 'But the blow apparently weak.· be one of the ~iii" coed the bull, and the next day .. We started the at.robe (Sunday), when the wind and seas had liahts we bad stra on our survival increased -we were login.a 2S knots pr. Before loM ftiC: c thiP was in 8-1 O foot seas -we were aware atonaside. It Wit a"*elQme J6on up that we were takina on water. A quick at that bia ~Las it 'bed and look below showed nearly a foot of rolled in the h~ Ids. t timca, au water over the starboard bunk," we could see was itJ oottom.·• Hanel recalled. Hanel said tbe ntost hlrrowina "The increased prcs1ure of the seas experince was \ttfina atx>atd the and hi&h speed apparently had rup-freiabter, whtch ~ tliOpPed a tured the bull. We knew we were in Jacob's ladder ovq_ the side and deep trouble.'' . started throwina li~ to tbO crew of Hanel said he JOl off a "mayday" Double Bullet. on the ARGOS (a satellite 1ignalin1 .. The lines did not have loops and it aystem required to be carried on all was nearly imposstble for us to tic tJ'te Bob ll&Del the racina~yachts). loops because we were so weakened of the crew had bruises and were "I aot otrthe sianal at 9:40 a.m. and by the wei&ht of our slltVivll gear and suffcrina from hypothermia. "We all I understand it was monitored in water in the boota. came out of it unscathed." Paris within 10 minutes. We alrea(ly "Yes; it wu cold. T~ey told us The last Hanel and bis crew saw of had donned survival suits and were aboard the ~-tlitt tJie water Double Bvllet;-it wu lti1J bcina attemptina to launc'h the life raft temperature was 61 s, Wt,it buffetcdbybeavyseas.Itisprcsumcd when a Larae wave turned Double seemed colder.•• · ft Bullet over. The life raft was carried Eric Witte ofCapt,trano &.ch. the to bave sunk. An l11'Cf& search away when the 3/ 16-incb line parted. younaest and str<>@kt of \he crew: several days later failed to tum up any It was probably fortunate, bccauac the was the fitit to aet abOaro die s!ip. sians of debris. six of us probably could never wve "He told the ~ '° tie 1-0oPI in U>e Will he build another catamaran? survived in the life rat\ in those btl\'y line so we could set thtft! \Jver our .. No way," said Hanel "I've re- seu." beads. Then ~ ~~~chore of tired. Double B~t pve me &ix years Late that afternoon. i plane flew, clinibinl that Jlilolr'i ~ in our of fun and adventure, a couple of over atabout 500 feet. "lt didn't even heavy aear," Hanel slid. coveted records and a num~r of waule its winp., like in the movies. Hanel_ denied ref)irts that 1tvcral trophica. Now its back to buaineu ... . \ Just Call . . Wbat do y11 llke abOut tbe Dally Piiot? WUt don't yoa llke1 Call die nmber at left lllW yoer mo111e will 1M recorded, truterlbecl ud dellvfred to.Jilt apprOfrlilt editor. 842-8086 Tbe 11me t4·1loar u1werta1 Mrvlce may be u1ed to record lettert to tit• editor 01 •Y to,lc. Coalfttuaorw to ou.r Lenera colama maat 1.Dcl1de tltelr name and cetepaiou •••hr for verlfJcatJon. No clrcalation calla. plea1e. Tell et wnt1 M YHr cul1d. I • OR,t,NGE COAST DlilyPllll H. L. Schw•rtz UI P.ubu.her;=~=---~-----1~ AoHm•ry Churchm•n Conlraller • -NATION Reputed crime ngure found e~ecuted :liJ N.J. 87 ft A ted ~'"' OLOUCESTER TOWNSHI~. NJ. -The body of reputed orpn ed crime fiaure lvato~ Testa was disco~ertd here. &he v1c:um 1nother.1pparcn1 xccul!on in a conun¥na u~dcrworld power ttrugle mvolv1111 cutno-ricb ~~nt1c City, auth~nhes u1d ~turday: An autopsy showed that Testa, 27, wuosc body was discovered Fnday ni&ht alonpide a road in this town JOuth~t of PhiladelphiC,Had been 1b~t twice in the beck of the head'' close ~aed~th • amall-ciliber wctpon, said Gcof'&C Items. a 5J)Olcesmao for the \,Am en County prosecutor's oiJice. lllne accident probe could tate montlJ• S~IE.LDS, Ky. -Federal mine fcty officials plan an .. extensive" lnvcauaauon to.find the cause ofa coal nu,ne rock fall that killed four mincn and detcnnlnc af there were any safety vtolations. Officials from the Mine Safety and Health Ad mini tradon could meet as early as Monday with ()()Unty state and local officials to make assianments and plan the examination of Wcdncsda)"s fatal iccidcnt at Bon Truckina Co. 's Burger No.2 mine in Harlan County, said Jofin McGrath, an MSHA spokesman. The investiption could take frO~ • co~ple of days to a few wee~s. and 1 few months could pus before M~HA USU? •!I final report on the ICCldent, McGrath said Saturday. But be wd afety atations could be made within a month to six wccb if violations are found. R-.an •Y• America doan•t want war •• WASHING TON -.~es1den.t Rcapn declared Saturday that America ca~ be entrusted with mahtary m1aht" because .. we don"t like war we never hav~." In a. speech '?'fore the National Italian American FoundAtion. the ~tdent said peace 11 the first and tut key to ensure that the United States 'wall always be a haven to the immigrants who've enriched it. And to ensure tl!e peace we must re~ain mili~ly strong." Reagan said. "Down throuah our history_ m~t Amencan p~s1den.ts . have undentood this. We're not an expans1on11t _country or an 1mpenalist country," be said. "We seek only to protect, neverto act u the aagressor." Anned man nabbed at candidate r eception . SYRA<;USE, N. Y. -Police briefly detained a man with a hatchet and lenath of pipe concealed under his coat Saturday outside a hotel where Democratic Yioe presidential candidate Gerildine Ferraro was ancndi~ a fund-raiser, a spokesman said. Police SPokesmao Rod Can said oCil authorities and the Secret Service decided there was no reason to bold the man who told police be lives in Illinois. The man was standin& outside a hotel wbaC Femro attended 1 fu_nd-~sina ~ion aft.er delivcrin& a foreian·policy speech at Syracuse Un1ven1ty, Can wd. . Yaaer IJu 'rJ61Jt •tafr u IJrmter LANDER, Wyo. -Air Force Gen. Chuck Yeqcr, known for bavina the ••riabt 1tutr' as a test pilot, displayed bis skilla u a bunter Saturday u be brou&ht down his buck antelope Just 13 ~utes into the 41 st annual One-Shot Antelo~ Hunt at Lander. Tb,e event draw~ celebrities from a v~ety of fields. CALIFORNI A Fl.re damage. Century Clty •IJoppbJ6 plUll LOS ANGELES-A fire that ptted one atorc in the fashionable C.COtury Sq~ 1hoppin1 plaza and sent smoke pourina through seven others Saturday mo~1n1 caused an estimated $4 million damage, authorities said. The fire was fCP.Orted at 9 Lm., an hour before most abo~ open in the outdoor plaza. 10 miles west of downtown Los Anscles and on the edge of Beverly Hills. It is part of the Century City office, hotel and theater complex. There ~ere no employees· or shoppers in the stores when the fire broke out and no injuries were reported. Olllcer alam, poUce mywtllled SAN DIEGO -Two men were anested Saturday for lnvestiption of mwder, bot iavestipton said they bad not lcamed a motive ia a bootina that left on~ ~ty Police o~ocr dead and two wo~nde4 one of them critfoal~y. i:'olicc were ciuna two men 10 1 perked car late Fnday m Balboa Parle for dnnkin& in publi~ and providina alcohol to minors -two teen-age &iris in the auto - when one of the men opened fire with a semi..automatic bandsun, homkide Lt. Paul Ybarrondo said. Rookie police officer Kimberly Tooabill, 24, shot four times, died at UCSD Medical Center about 10 minutes after bcina airlifted there. Patrolman Timothri Ru()pp, 31 was in critical condition and on life support systems Saturday at UCSDMC while Gary Mitrovicb, 26, shot in the left shoulder, was in fair condition at Mercy Hospital .. The arrested men were identified as Victor Casillas, 23, and Joselito Cinco, 2S. ~ntemlty prank leat& to arre11t11 FULLERTON -To the men of Delta Chi the panty raid was just a harmless prank -but to the patice it was butalarY: The incident took place Friday ni&ht at the Alpha Delta Pi sorority house at Cal State Fullerton ... These Jirls were 1qjtimately terrified over this, said Sit. Glenn Deveney, bead of the bUJ'l).ary detail. But Delta Chi chapter president flich Prior sai~ .. It was a panty raid. It's a routine thin.a that happens several times a year. The problem was they didn't know who we were. One. they found out who we were, they didn•t want to press cbaraes." · WU.an, Dealrmejlan tau Mondale barbs OAKLAND -Gov. George Deukmejian and U.S. Sen. Pete Wilson thJni a variety of barbs at Walter Mondale-includini an exhortation .. to do a little FritzbustinJ .. -at the state's Republican convention Saturday. Wilson delivered a stmama and wide-~ denunciation of Mondale and the Democrats as a prelude to Deukmejaan s remarks at the Hyan Regency. "You remember fritz, .. Wilson told an estimated crowd of SOO, "He•s the one who keeps &howina up at the end of all those stories about Geraldine Ferraro.•• The governor made the Fritzbustina remark in response to two members of the College Republican Committee who saqa a venion the bit movie theme sona ''Gboatbusten," with Mondale as the taract. Abalone dlver ~ed by afJar.k SAN GREGORIO -A diver was killed Saturday by 1 great white shar.k that arabbcd him as he was fisbina for abalone. Sat. Dennis Bentley of the san Mateo County Sheriffs Department said the man, who be did not identify. was divina about 8:30 a.m. PDT oft'Piaeon Point, which is about 40 miles south of San Francisco, when he was suddenly pulled under by the shark aoout I SO __ yards offshore in about l S feet of water. A partner put the injured man on an air mattrcu as soon as his fnena emeraeo on tbe sunace, out the officer said he was apparently dead as he got to the beach. WoR to • I I .. Rlot victim• burled Jn SoatlJ Africa SHARPEVJLLE, South Africa -Carryina ~ coffins shoulder hl&h, several thousand chanting blacks Saturday marched from two mass funerals to cemeteries whc;re the~uried victims of fieau riotina two weeks aao. In Cape Town on Saturday, ident Pieter W. Botha bristle<l at criticism of South Africa's racial policies by U.S. Democratic presidential nominee Walter Mondale. and in Durblni sill nonwhite opposition leaders remained holed up in a British consulate. Pohc:e sajd black townsfiips around the nation were q\liet after more than two weeks ofalmost daily riouna. Debtor couatrla want dJalaflle MAR DEL PLATA, Arsentina -Mioistcn of badly indebted Utin American ,countncs say their call for a direct diaJoauc with indu trialized countries 11 an attempt to add political pcnp«tive to the rqjoo's ~nomic dilemma. In a dc.daration i ued Friday ni~t, the 11 Cartqena Group oountncs invited 'ftllthy countrie1 to j)erucipate in a "'dirttt political dialoauc" which the aroup said it hoped ()()uld be arr&nlCd by 198S. •·in this communique of Mar del Plata, we have again ecknoWlcdaed that the dtbt cannot conunuc to be consadered as a simply economic or financial problem, but that it has deep pohuc'al connations. .. Colombian foreJlll Minister Auausto Ramirez. Ocampo said. . * . eXo.rean - Sov ets seize American. vessel Ship seized near Russian territory as ~vlets hold five Americans in crew ANCHORAGE, AWb (AP) -· Five Amcncans ~ bei~ beld ln the' Soviet Union aftenheu 120.foot supply vessel was seized near Soviet tcmtory, the Cout Ouard l&id Satur- day. "We don'& know why they're in custody or where they were taken an to custody or an)'thi04 else," said Petty Office Mike Hilley an Juneau. The last ref>M.cd location of the Freida K was in the Chukchi Sea just south of Point Hope on Tuesday. . It's.another b oy for Princess ·ni . ·we have nearly got a full polo team.,· says father Charles LONDON (AP)-Princess Diana pve birth Saturday to a 6-~und, 14- ounce .boy, her teeond cb1ld and tbt newest heir to the l.&000.year-old British crown aft.er bu rather, Prince Cbattes. and broth.er, 2-year-old Prince William. .. We have nearly aot a full Polo team now," Cbarles. ID avid palo' player, e1.ultcd to crowds of well· .wis.bc:n before be.adina off for~ "ff drink... Polo is played with four playcn on honebaok on eaCb team. Buckin&ham Palace announced that the child was born at 4:20 p.m. (11 :20 a.m. EDT) at St. Mary"t Hospital, 81/i hours after Diana was admitb:d in the early staacs of la\lor. Charles. who two )UTS a&0 became the first royal father ever to attend the · birth of an heir, was again present in ~ ... -----::----;.,.;.,..;::j,1;;;:,';!1 the delivery room. , Smelly Santa 'D-•bara --, Outside the 132-year-Old red bnck ua& hospital on a west London back That'• tile opbllcm of eome beaeJaaoen after tllouanda of street. cbccn. applause and poppma dead mack.era! waabed ap o.sato IMMacla• to rot. Karen and champqne corks arceted the an- Dea Plaelan of W• Lake V~tr' to walk ·&roaDd tile nowicement..~ of well-wi&bcn flab. apparentlJ damped from naeela. · had pth~ behind police ber· ricades \luouabout the day. Bnush press rcporu had said boft ChatJo. JS, .and :Diana. 23, Jho~fora&irl. lflhct.bybad belEl a gtrt, lhe could hav.c been super ledod in the royal line b) subsequent sons M> Chartcs and Diana. .. Her Royal Highness and ihe chqd are both weU." tfiC palace ~cmcnt sau'.l. • palacC spok.csinan. wtio·1po1ce on condition ·ofnot bein,g identified. ·said as soon u lbc child was born. OwtCs rushed to 1he tel9honc to WI bis mother .. Queen Elu:abetb U, who vacationing with other members f the royat 'family at their Balmodl. Scotland cswe. "7.bc queen and all 1hc royl1 famil) arc ~ .. the spokesman saiCI 1llc baby joins bis father brother as a princc of Wales. U.ke his brother, the baby was aot expeCted to be mmed fOr SCV11!ftJ m-. The London boolana.kina :fi William Hill sajd the odds favored Georae over a vancty of othh common kiq)y Eqlisb names ch as Edward and Henry. Elvis was ihc Ion& ~otat S00-1. Harold Broo~Baker, director of Burke's Pc:e:ragc, the bible of British nobility, said n is ••known royal circles Chutes plans t0 name one child George.'' GM talks keep on as pickets march No national strike deadline set: more talks slated today DETROIT (AP)-Neaotiaton for General Moton Corp. and the United Auto Workers union ba.rpined on a national contract all daY:Satu:rday, as pickets marched outside 13 planu struck over locaJ issues. There was no indication if p~ had been made in natiorial beraainina on the critical job-security iuue. Talks were to resume this morning. Picket lines were set up just after midniaht Fri~ at 13 plants in IOCal protests involving 62.000 employees of the pant carmUer. · • Leaden of the striking locals said the walkouts were desianed to keep pressure on GM while UAW Prcsi· dent Owen Bieber and his barpiners try to reach I new contract. GM and the union barp.ined for most of the day, and at 7:2S p.m. EDT, called off talks for the niaht. A union statement said prosreu bad becu made .. in some areas. Mal'ly difJ'erenecs remain, however:• ~P,mpany officials said oothi offici.all Y. The union bas demanded the fim raise in three years on its S9.6J..an- bour baiic Cost-of-tivina p&)· • men ts total $3.04 for ID average,,... ofS 12.61. The union pve up millions "Of doUan i.n contract CODCaSlOltS ~ Yan wbco the industr)' loSioa moDC'), but this )-ear GM is tn.llklna record profits. Unlon head calls strike by mistake Carolin.ans begin to add up hurr~cane toll BOLIVIA, N.C. (AP) -Three days after Hurricane Diana blasted onto land alona the North Carolina coast, ~ assessment crews scoured the hardes.t-hit areas Satur· day addin& UP. the toll, abudy more than S6S.S rrullion. "The damaae 10 the tornadoes (last March) was obvious," said Russ Edmonston, Sl!C>kesman for the North CarOlina Department of Crime Control and Publ.ic Safety. "But with Uus storm, the real damaae is not easily visible .... We etroom'~- plane loses heart on way to wedding MANDEVILLE. La. (AP) -A putterit\I motor fon:ed a pilot en route to his 'Weddina in New Orleans to precariously crasb·land his inale- c nai ne plane on the Lake PontChartrain Causeway -but his mamaae plans ~re still flyina hiab. No one wu ;injured when Joseph Oarlcs Milano lll, 27, of the New Orleans subud» of Kenner made the forced landina on the southbound lane of the 26-'mtle cauteway into New Orleans on Frida)'. afternoon. Milano, WbOIC wcddina WU schcd· ulcd for Saturday afternoon, said he was en route to New Orleans Inter· national Airpon when bis e.naine bqanq>ullmnJaround4:50a.m. He notified the a.upon tower lhat he wo~d have to make an cmersenq ~- have to go into homes and check for sta~ wasabout4SOmilessouthwest structural damage ." of Newfoundland at 6 p.m. EDT Meanwhile, tropical storm Saturday. and tr'll expected to ooa· EdoUl.Jd died otf the Mexican coast. tinue its nort.beasterl) co~ for bccomina a tropical depression. Fore-. another six to 24 hours. forecasters casten pmiicted little movement out -said. of the system overn~t. · ."It's over water now and poses no No deaths or iajunes were blamed major· threat." Sue Yea.man of the directly on the storm. National Weather ~1<:e at Ralci&h Damaae has been estimated at said earlier. more than S6S.S million. and the total In Coral Gables. Fla.. forcc:astcr continued to mount S&turday as Bob Case of the National Hurricane people who left the sheltcn Friday sot Center -said the chances that Diana a chance to examine their t>roperty. could pick up strcnath arc "probably Diana, reduced to. tropical stonn pretty &ood. • ~0occ the eye itself ICU back over the water, it gets back over its iowte of enerm ... Cax :Said Ffi4a"; "H - ever. we're not looking ror explosive type of intensification.", The main threat likely would be lO maritime intcr'Csts.. not coastal rcsi· dents, he said. Deputy White House press rewy I.any S~akcs said be did no know v.hcn President Reapn woUld declare North Caroli\11 a disaster to enable the coastal region to qualify for (edcral relief assistance. OlangeCou1 OAIL.Y PU.,OllSunday, Sept m Export of 'kiddie porn' sparks N. Europe debate Danes. Swedish. Netherlanders say demand by·U .S. part of problem OPENHAGEN. Denm<irk (AP) llc-iations that child porno· grapt\y i5 flowing into the U'nucd States from Scandinavia and the Netherlands h ve rekindled debate here on how to ronttol pomograph}. ....._--Officials in Denm1lrk, Sweden and the Netherlands acknowledged that charges made by the U.S. Senate and the media on tmported child porno- graphy contain a grain of truth. But ·some authorities questioned the orig- inal source oftbe material and argued that the U.S. market for child porn is a big pan of the problem. Rippi.,_g up cars • serious business ORLANDO, Aa. (AP) -Orange Cou nty Fire Chief James Cragan is so sure his men can rip the roof off a car faster than anyone else that 'he's be,t his shirt -and his badge and helmet -on it. This brutal-sounding compctition- 1s all in fun. but with the serious intention of demonstrating ways to save people trapped in ~rs by auto accidents. It all takes place at the Inter- national Auto Extncatton Competi- tion 1n Toronto on Sept. 21-23, in which teams from l 5 fire depart- ments will strut their stuff. Several fire departments ; have already taken up Cragan's challenge. From Mississauga. Ontario, Fire Chief Gordon Bentley wrote to say, "I ave-ebeeked ~ttMeam!s eredcntials and have already designated a spot to place your helmet in my office." · Fire Chief Walt Chapman in De- troit bets his shirt against Cragan's helmet. .. My men will prevail.'' Chapman said bluntly. ..With names like McGowan.· ·Winchester and Gozzarado, how can they fail?" · · From Tampa came word from Fire Chief Anthony Coniglio Jr. that he not only wagers his chiefs helmet ··but also my badge." And. he told Cra~n. 'Tm looking forward to rece1vmg yours." The Orlando team's six membei:s have nicknamed themslves "Carbusters: We ain't afraid of no wreck." They are. however, somewhat con- cerned about the challenges. "Detroit's where they build them. They probably eat cars for lunch," said firefighter Jay Hoskins. One park to th1: northern Euru. pean debate on child pornogra.ph> was the NBC program .. Silent Shame," shown on Dani&h tel~\ ision in August. · fhe broadCnst said Denmark 1s the center for com.m.crcial production and wholesale distribution o( the material, while the Netherlands is the center for mail order and retail sales, aimed at a billion-dollar market 1n the United States. Danish newscasts showed pans of the program, and the resulting uproar prompted Danish officials including Prime Minister Poul Schleuter to make pronouncement!> that these charges must be investigated and laws tightened. One Danish exJ)Crt di-;puted the broadcast. .. J won't say (the broadcast) was all a pack ofltes. but when tt is said that huge amounts of child pornograph) are pouring into the United States, the first question is: Who is buying 1t'> Child porn has largely disappeared from Oen mark," said Berl Kutchinsky, a University of Copen- hagen criminologist who helped write Denmark's f980 ban on child porn. ··p~lice have not come across it.. and there have been no reports here of its production or sale," Kutchinsky said Police subsequently searched two premises apd charged four Danes with violating the 1980 ban. But officers insist they always have en- forced that Jaw which provides Jail terms for producing it and fines for di~tributing. Scandinavi~n officials also reacted to a series of hearings on child porn in the U.S. ~nate's juvenile _justice subcommittee. (n testimony Wednesday. two experts stated that Scandinavia and Southeast Asia were the heart of a world-wide distribution system of child pornography. For Danish Justice Minister Erik Ninn-Hansen, the ~istribution of C'fiilCr'porn 1s a separate matter rom the production of it. "There isn't a shred of proof that the pornography American customs agents intercepted from Denmark was producod here," he said. However, he said he plans to discuss the Danish parliament's jus- tice committee the possjbility of raising fines and mak ing distribution of child pornography punishable by jail sentences. Currently, only producers or those who cause child porn to be produced go to jail. "The lure of sex from Scandinavia" 1s pan of the appeal of the 1mpon- ex port scheme. said Sigvard Falkenland. who heads the criminal division of Sweden's customs agency. But he added that other benefits oft he system are the reduced chance ~f getting caught and the low penaltfes in some European countries. He alleged that the photographs are made tn the United States. and then Dear World MY YOUNG SON starts to school this week . . . It's all going to be sort of strange and new to him for awhile, and I wish you would sort of treat him gently. published in fore1gn magnm1e wh1th are shipped bad to Nonh \rncrioo. n added problem for IX>h~e i the d1tTering legal t1g(' ohc.Kual con,ent in different countri('s, I he IC311I l'On~nt age 1s t:S in Ocnnuu k and Sweden' and 18 in the Nether!. nus, ahhoUgh pending IC'.'g.l,.4'lat1on there would lower It tQ 16, , In th~ Netherlands. pornograph) has tx-cn illegal since the turn of the centul'), although the ·_ba!\ is -rarely enforced.A draft bill~ parliament wl)uld decriminalize trade in all kinds of pornography. Toos Faber. spokeswoman for the Netherlands' Justice Min istry; said otlicials khow <.·hild porn ·is made there but fed lhey can do little 10 stop it. . . . "It is \'.Cl") harC1 to discover.'' Ms. Faber s~ud. "Jt is mostly a family business ... done in private and therefore v~ry, uifficult for lice 10 detect.'' · She said that when cases are disco\ered, official prosecute on charges of child abuse. That only happens abciut three or four times a year, she said. Klaas Wilting, an Amsterdam police spokesman, said a recent raid revealed child porn in 20 of the city's approximately 120 sex shops. He said an unspecifiod amount of the ma- terial appeared 10 have come from Denmark. Officials in Sweden, which crimi· nalized child porh in 1980. said they were unaware of any production or export of pedophilia material. But Falkenland said U.S. officials had requested.aninvestigation of two Swedish companies as part of an alleged tntemational child porn ring. The two companies are suspected of exporting m~terial that had been photographed in the United States. print~d in Denmark and ferried to Sweden to be returned to the United ·States. 60% increase in measles no a <:irming ATLANTA (AP) -Federal health officials say they are not alarmed by a 61 percent jump in measles cases tn the first haff of this year, because the disease is still far below levels in the. pre-vaccination ~ears. The-national Centers for Disease Control said that 1,759 measles cases were reported in the first 26 weeks of 1984. up 61 percent from the 1.095 cases reported in the first half of 1983. Although the measles case numbers are up this year. they are "still far below the number in the prevaccine era ( 1950-62), when an average of ovCT 525.000 cases was reported annually." the CDC·said. "This 1s not a threat to the measles ehmmat1on eflbn." said Sandy Bail. a measles researcher with the Atlanta- baSC'd health agency. You see, ~P to 'now he's been king of the roost .. He's been boss of the backyard ... His mother has always been near to soothe his wounds and repair bis feelings. But now things are going to be different. have faith in his own ideas, even if everyone aays they are wrong ... Teach him to be gentle with gentle people and touga with tough people. He's going to walk down the front steps, wave his hand, and start out on the great adventure . .. It is an adventure that might take him across continents, across oceans ... It's an adventure that will probably include wars and tragedy and sorrow ... To live his life in the world he will have to live in will require faith and love and courage. So, World, I wish you would sort of look after him ... Take him by the hand and teach him things he will have to know. , But do it gently, if you can. He will have to learn, I khow, that alJ men are not just, that all men are not true. But teach him also that for every scoundrel there is a hero . . . that for every crooked politican there is a great and dedicated leader . .. Teach him that for every enemy, there is a friend. St~r him away from envy, if you can ... and ~ach him the secret of quiei laughter. . In achoo), World, teach him it is far more honorable to fail than to cheat .. ,·Teach him to HARBOR LA \VN T ry to give my son the strength no~ to follow the crowd wheneveryone is getting on the bandwagon . . . Teach him to li.sten to all men-but teach him also to filter all he hears on a screen of truth and take just the good that siphons through. Teach him. if you can, how to laugh when he's sad ... Teach him there rs-nu-shame i11 tears .. . Teach him there can be glory in failure and despair in success. Treat him gently, World, if you can. But don't coddle him ... Because only the. test of fire makes fine steel . . . Let him have the courage to be patient ... Let him have the patience to be brave. Let him be no man'!\ man ..• reach him alwavs to have sublime faith in himself. . . Because then he will alwayR hav.e sublime faith in mankind. This is quite an order, World, but see what you can do .. He's such a nice little fellow, my son! .. ' By DAN VA ENTINE- M 0UNT0 IVE -. CEMETERY-MAUSOLEUM-CREMATORY 1625 G.ISLER A VENUE COSTA MESA 540-5554. mtable for. framin: availaLle a; our .office • Checklng him out A Philadelphia pede.trian tall.ea a wary look at· newapaper-readlng~ acalpture called 'Catching Up,• which wu lnatalled at the Four Season• Hotel Jut week. Nine of the lifelike bronze acaltarea of artl.at J : Seward Johnaon, all deplcdng people doina day-to. -day thing• In life; are acat- . ter~ throtJilioat ~he hotel. · China's singles~ow Qg.nce 'The ·collective' at Pal.ace ----=----=-----.....:....----=;-'--:--:----:------'Stie sai<l. "We both enjoy music · The singles dances are an effort to save and singing and. of course. dancing. them from a bleak and lonely old age ~:n~a~~d ~~e~~e J(L\~':~~'\~1~~ it discourages early marriages and a theater together, to the workers c~ub, HARBIN.China (AP)-With the music pouring from saxophones and trombones. factory workers in their 30s whirled around the dance floor of the Youth Palace on singles night, the answer to many a Chinese lonely hean. The heat was oppressive but the ~ung men and women went on ncmg the foxtrot -once con- sidered vaguely naughty in China's communist society -and did .. The Collectjve" gravely and with de- termination. Singles dances. begun early in June, are yet another of the many "firsts" in the new era of Deng Xiaoping. the Chinese leader. Endorsed by no less august a body than the Chinese Communist Central Committee. the dances have been received with enthusiasm all over the country . Their aim is to relieve a serious social problem: the plight of hundreds of thousands -possibly millions - of men and women in their 30s still unmarried. They are the unintended victims of an even bigger dilemma, that of providing food for more than a bilHon-Chinese. mouths. To, keep the birth rate down, and make it easier to feed these vast. numbers. the Comm~r,tist Party has undertaken a scnous' program of family planning. Among other things, great many Chinese remain single· or· just stroll alo~g ~~ Sung)1 River embankment. It 1sn t easy, but once well after the age of30 because of this. in a while we are able to be completely The singles dances arc an effon to alone." save them from a bleak and lonely old She will bring to the marriage-the age. To encourage singles, the Central date is yet to be set -a considerable Committee-created .. The Collective," dowry, comparatively speaking. She a dance that resembles the American lives with her parents and has a tape square dance, recorder. a miniorgan, a radio, a . On one recent Saturday night. JOO bicycle and a black and white TV set. young women and 70 young men ''l have nothing" said Huang. "A from schools, factories and camera .... " enterprises in the Harbin area con-· She earns 43 yuan ($18) basic salary verged on two big dance halls, each and 10 yuan ~$4.20} in allowances with live bands. Ther.e was no jazz or each month. His salary is 45.20 yuan disco. The dancers ate ice cream and ($18.40) with 20 yuan in allowances. drank soft drinks-no alcohol. It was ,Sacb has saved 700 yuan (about a sedate evening with the smallest $316). undercurrent of excitement. Factory. They ditTer on one thing. He wants school and other dances are not her to live with his parents. She, uncommon in China, but singles though food of them, wants-to have dances arc. an apartment of their own. "We put ads in the newspapers and Through his company, he can get a distribute invitations to various one-bedroom . apartment wi.th u"nits," said Li Ganshan, the dance kitchen. shower and small" sitting director. a bespectacled woman of 39. room for two yuan 10 fen a month, "five couples have become engaged less than $1 . · so far. That isn't much, but they are A 28-year-old. railway worker and terribly shy. They will change." his wife served as their chaperones. Mai Hua, 30, is one. who became "I wish we had l!ad singles dances enga~d. She is a kindergarten teacher before," the husband said. "It makes and 1t was at one of the singles nights things so much easier. We dated while thai she met Huane. Ti~nhua, also 30, working in the same· railway repair a cooking gas distnbutor. shop. But we had to put up with jokes "It was love at first sight," he said. and gossip." · Abused 'Chang Cheng' aia. an _object of p_ride bankment." Repairs under way on the Great Wall The wall's last caretaker was the -Ming dynasty, which fell in 1644 after an invasion by the Manchus who af. ter three centuries established the Oing (Ching) realm that lasted until I~ 11 . . . BADALING, Chma (AP) -The Great Wall, neglected and desecrated for more than three centuries, is benefitting from major repairs and a crackdown to stop tourists from spoiling China's bigest cultural relic. Among the -thousands of tourists who vmt the stone bamcr that traverses the mountains northwest of Peking are people who etch their names on the ancient facade. said Wei Fuju. a-maintenance supcrvi$0r. "For every ..character (letter) they wntc on the wall, they arc fined one yua n (42 cent ),"he said. Blue-unifonncd police hunt for ofTcnden, pan of a vigorous new campaign personally endor\Cd by ~nior communist leader Dena Xiaoping and dubbed "L-0vt> our China. Save our Great Wall." As with other popular tounst sites, state· ancuoncd hawkers have t up tails olTerina everythinJ trom Great Wall r-shirts to camel ndc\. But astde from a ~lion at B dal· in Pa ~. rcitortd in the early I ~60s. much of the I .S()()..m1le rampan built more than 2.000 ynrs "fl to repel nol1hcm hnrbllnan 1 falhn apan, The r ·kin fivcnin-New , a tlte- run ftcmoon tablouJ that helped organt1c a Great Wall rcp:11r tund in Jul.... 1d Ponions of the \\Ill ha\c become a 'wccd·mfcMcd d1tt ~m· Neglect, civil war, Japanese in- vasion and violent political cam· paigns by China's post· 1949 com- munist government devastated pans of the wall. known in Chinese as the "ChanJ Cheng." · Dunna the 1966-76 Cultural Rev- olution, many peasants stole the wall's stones and slal>s to build houses and pig pens, in accordance with the official slogan "Use the past ta serve . the present.'' ln 1980. a local Commum~t Pany secretary wa jailed for one year after his commune looted 700 bncks from the wan and uprooted 3.000 youna trte nearby. Wei, a maintcnanc-c upcrvisor since · 1978, said the aovernmcnt rcctntly has hown increasins con· ccrn for the wall and many peasant have return ·d the lab and stones. "Now evet}thina i.s buicalh fine;" he id "h is jusi_a qucsiton of- maintcnancc. •• Sil·hundrcd worker&, luging 'tones up the mountains. have been toiling 'ln<.'e last ):tar lo restore an 800.yard 'trclch of the wall adJactnt • 10 the BadalinJ tounst sile~ e rcnovalcd )>Onaon opens Oct. I. h1na' nattonal day. Wei ,. d th~ rcstorauon o t 00.000 yuan (S2l ().000}. wh tth aimc from the tate and the G t Wall repair fund. The official press agency Xmhua reported $cpt. 2 that dona- tions had readied m'Qre than 1.5 million yuan ($630.000). · The rest Of the money will ~ used' to maintain the wall and repair additional port1ons next year, Wei said. Historical references say it took 300,000 workers 10 years to build the waU, which avemJes 26 feet in height and 23 feet in th1cknes at the base. .. Orange~ DAILY Pl OTISunda)' ~ 11 tlM Madaga~car .~ s dead are popular.as party guests um ah fl nuly taYJ for :months 1f they are althy • ··1n ahe 1'Ct0umemou. you must In 1nv:1te everyone in the vil and kill EDITOR'S NOTE -On rhc ·their ancestors.••. one or two zebu (local ttle) and exotic 1 land ,of M daga r off rhc Th "rctoumement .. aurely i P and )OU mu t have enough nee roa~r of Afoc.a, the ct d re oc-mcmpublicizcda pcctofthe n tor for II these J>COP.lc. You also.need 1onally treated to a mght on the cult. Guided by a trologcrs ond mu 1cums nd new 1 k 1hrouds .. town, exumed from the 811JVC to set a "ombiasi" (fonune tellers) many Fam1hc often pend three or four ne": shroud and go to a parry But the Malagasy remove their a~ce tors months' income on a new lk shroud 1nc1tmt !=UStom of dccoroung. the from their tombs every few years for the corp . Family tombs often paves with X-rated UJtucs has fallen sotnetimes moving them to new and cost more than the family bouse.; on hard times. fancier quarters -Rc.to~r11cment talcs ~bound. One Bv ROBERT WELLER .. . • 1 h sa m1 1onary gemngmto the bad ••~•otllNl'reMWrtW The general thmgi totakcout the of a uiio nd noticing the driver m MANG I LY ORA VE, M .da r (AP)-Amona the Malagas)' people, a funeral was the occasion for an1>rgy, and members of the Sakalava clan left nothing to the irn ti nation when they carved statues of their departed ancestors m the ct of making love. That, how ver, was the undoing of the strange custom. The erotically explicit carvings were impervious to beetles and other insq:ts. because they were crafted from noxious camphor wood, but they fl!ll ·prey to pillaging tourists. By the time the government took steps to protect the carvings in the ·mid-l 97'0s, there were fewer than 1,000 left in the 30 or. o seaside graveyards around Morondava on the Mozambique channel. which scparateli this Indian· Ocean island from mainland Africa. Now the an of death is a dying art. Only a few, small models arc carved fortourim. "lt is taboo now t<> carve these statues for the graves." !iays Moron- dava's district officer, Philistine Haje. "That penod of pillaging created the taboo. Our people arc very spiritual. They did not like the desecration of the tombs. They also were a bit ashamed of all the atten6on." · There arc few visitors now. Per- m1ss1on to sec the grave sites is from the village council, and arc difficult to find. ch the site from Morondava, it 45-minute drive in a four- whcel-drive truck, followed by a mile- long trudge throu&h sand and a thigh- dcep creek. body fr<?m the tomb and take it to the nimated conversation With an men home villa~ for two or three night /' panner. He was showing his de d Rakotoansoa says. "It depcn<ls on brother around town and telling him boy, much money you have. Some-all the latest Jokes. • Protocol calls for providing the village cider, who serves as guide, · ~rum:-. i-™~~1:-. wne-t-t----------; goes only by the name Tsiafindra, sprinlclcd a few drops of rum on the graves and asked for "the protection of the people Ii vin& here and for those of you who are coming to visit" "It is very dangerous to come here," the elder says, rcferrin& to hosule spirits. "We are very sad that these places should have been harm- ed." . Catholic missionary priests who hve here say the elder probabl)' cited · the spirit menace to dissuade visitors. But the priests, anthropologi ts and other scholars say there is no way to overestimate Jhe close ttes between .the living and dea<i on th11 Texas-tze island, often called ·•a world apart." The origin of the Sakalava statues remains a mystery. Some scholar:. ascribe the statues -which some westerners would find grote~uc and obscene-to an obscure fertihty cult. The Rev. Jack Ncullc a Roman Catholic priest from St. LOuis, Mo .• who has Jived 20 years in western Madapscar. says the statues .. are simply a celebration of life. People · here used to live only to their early 30a." Disease and cyclones claimed many. , He added that funerals often were accompanied by all-night or&ies, a practice he says his church has difficulty acccptlnf. But then this area is probably only caght percent Chri~ tian, ~eulle adds. Most of the natives arc animists who believe spirits dwell in rocks, trec5 and animals. The Sakalava grave statues arc less astonishing than many other ·Malagasy practices regarding the dead. Jean Aime Rakotoarisoa, director of the National Museum of Art and Archaeology, heads a IS-scientist team •studyina the islind's unique cultural mix of people from Malaysia, Polynesia, France, Arabia and the Afncan mainland. 0 The Malagasy during their lives liv~ ev~ day with their ancestors," he says. 'Ancestors intervene in our daily hves. Jfl want to build a house, I hav«! to ask my ancc tors if they agree -even if I am a Christian. Many 1>t9ple go to.chureh o~ Sund.ay and then go to discuss things with I A kcd 1has a le. Rakotoan )'I, "Y n· pos tblc me have e n putthetr ancestors tn pl ne nd flown them round the 1 land .. It I WldCI) belle ed that hard hap Y.111 befall famlltcs ho neglect their ancestors-qu1c:kcrthanyou n y the generally Polysyllab1c Mataps) n mes. The coonomac hard ume here have hun the ~remome , 1houp. 'Now some P;COP1e come for ,ust one d y,.-wrap ttic body q~1cld_y in a new $hroud and put it back an the iomb, .. Rakotoansoa ) s · Tiie rctoumement 1s anly one clement of acomphcated set of taboos that circumscnbe a land hfe. Some A 88\' .·200 • _ _2i299.95 a ~p_ak_· Httr~~'------:tr~~~~~~1-t1 • A. Thi-. pair of chain-j.., t"O\t'n"tl in a }()()<?"., \n~ Ii · wht•t fabric warmnt~ for two full ~eat"' normal \War. ,n·pair or n~pla<'t'nwnt b~ Monsmto. B. Choo~ Ult..,.. -.mart 'tond1 lamp~ in hra ... or cer.imic v. ith soft pleated shadt'. C Thi .. hancl~mw c1nccn 'lZ ~fa -.lrept•r j.., tailo['('(I .in a long ''carin:r t•arthtom• Ilt•n·ulon hl.-nd. D ..... \ on Simmon::-Beautym-t Fa:-hion ~upn•mt• lw)(Minµ. 1\,in. t•' h pie< He.µ. :t!9.9.) It• 169.88. Full. t•a ·h pit'(:-t' Ht'"· 3Q9.<() !Salt• ~29.8R <)uct•rt ~·t Rtf!. 1019.9.) Salt• ;)~ l.88 Kin~ ~·1 Ht '· l399.Q5 ~a),-. : l9.88. l n~'\f>ft'le.I tl'aalil~ :mcl pric-.~ µ11am11lt~"<I to he · tlw lo\\t't lo\\ n ... . ., ___ ,._... __ _,_,._~-----~------- •aoaer and out• · Booker T •. Bone, a 185·po1Ulcl mUtltf, ftlee blah• o•er S.Hnaa wlth owner Lan!! LoWl'ef. a cropcluter. JJooker'a been w~ ,iauee for a year, after lt wu found they etoppecl ble eyee from watertnc while ftJlna. Michael Jackson bas traveling chef· LOS ANGELES (AP) -Sinaer Michael Jackson may have beefed up his Victory Tour with the latest in special effects, but when it comes to catina. hischef knows Jackson's diet must be strictly vqetarian. On the road, Mani Khalsa cooks every meal the supersw cats. He is an employee of The Golden Temple Consctous Cookery and Caterina , Company in Hollywood, which sup- plies all of Jackaon"s food -on tour and at home. Khalsa, bead chef at The Golden Temele, wfllcb follows the dietary practlces of the Sikh reli&ion. The two chefs a.re not related. "We sent Mani with the exact recipes for Michael's favorite foods -enchiladas, whole wheat pizza and orient.al salad," said Ms. Khalsa. KhAlsa finds the in&redients for bis secret recipes at health food stores owned and operated by members of the Sikh reliaion. Jackson, a Jehovah's Witness, is not recfuired by his faith to restrict his dieL tlut he follows the Sikh's vC!etanan ~men. Khalsa's meals, but have not rcstri~ 'Michael ts a very spiritual per-tcd their diets like Jackson, who bas son," said Ranbir Sin&h Bhai, owner food catered to his home in Encino. ofTbe Golden Temple. "This plays• "Mani and J have cooked for &ood part in his eatina habits." The Michael on many occasions," said siqer bas known the owner for more Ms. Khalsa. "We have aone out and than seven yean and their rela-cooked with him at the studio when tionsbip "just naturally evolved into he and and J;uJ McCartney were a catcnn& contract for the Victory rccordins." Tour." "Michael will call up an order every Pacemakefs gooQ but overused? ~~~------~~~----~-A~~.-:"'.~"Ji"::::;::-:~----Doctor says 30 percent of cardiac devtces f nstalled In patients In 1981 'unneces I CHICAGO (AP) -Pennaneot pteemakm -Medtronic Inc. of cardiac pacemaken arc a .. aodlend" Minneapolis· Paccscller Systems Inc. to patients who need them. but aU11 of Sylmar. Calif.j and Jnterm~~ aro beina implanted ~letlly in Inc. of Frcepon. Tuas -dech!l~ · .people whose hcart·rh~m problems immediate comment on ~e JW.:fd could be corTCCtcd .in other ways, a lines, company representatives heart ex~n 11ya. late t.st week. . 0 Theie has been a ~t dta1 of But an editorial a~mpany10a,t~e abute Of pacemaker tcchoolOI)' by auidelines said they may be too fll'd physicians, which means implantina and that indications for pa~er peQCn\lken in ~le wbojust don't implaDtaiion arc sometimes uncl~r. need them," aa1d Dr. Brendan P:hibbt Many facton-some non-medical of the University of Arizona at -can be involved, such as hautd Tucson. involved in a ~tient'• job or tl\e He and colleques at five other remotcneu of his location. •i4 the medical centen have developed new editorial by Dr. Anil K. Bhandan and guidelines to help physicians avoid Shahbudin H. Rahimtool_a o( the overuseofthtdcvicea. Tbe1u1dclincs University of Southern Cabfo~·~· appear in the latest Journal of the Phibbs was amon& four physsc11ns Amtrican Medical Association. who tcitificd two . years l&O '¥' A .. combination o( ianorance, overuse of pacemakers in ·hearinp • overenthusiasm and very hi&h before the U.S. Senate Special financial reward" fuels overuse of Commmittec on ~na. . pacemakers, Phibbs 11id. Committee Cbauman John Heinz, He added that any patient who R·Pa .. estimated then that the cost to doubts a doctor's advice about the Medicare of pacemaker overuse was need for one shouldn't hesitate to seek up to S 1 billion annually. a second opinion. Heinz last year introduced I~ ... .. There hasn't been enouah rccoa· lation to limit Medicare paymenu for nition that this is a very m~or pacemakers. The leaislation i1 now in intervention that chan,es the Pl· committee, bis office said Thursday. dent's whole life,'' Phibbs said in a "Properly used, this tecbnolOI)' iu telephone interview'Wednesday. aodsend" Phibbs said. "lt'a aavin& lmplantinaa pacemaker costs up to lives and makina it possible for $12,0QO, includin& bospitali.zatton, people to function." Phibbs said. M~or complication•-Even without symptom•. blood clots br infection that can lead pacemaker implantation may be to death -occur in 1 peroenno 2 necessary for some conditions affeet- percenrof all cases he said. ina transmission of electrical sipals Yet at least 36 percent of the in the h~ the team said. 118,000 cardiac pacemaken im· The auidelines do not apply to planted in U.S. patients in I 981 were temporary pacing, in which a unneeded, said Phibbs. pacemaker is placed outside the body Prescription druas, temporary only until the patien1'1 hcan rhythm bean conditions and other medical stabilizes or until a permanent problems can cause bean ir-· peccmaker is implanted. reaularities that can be corrected with A pennanent pacemaker. is a bet- less extreme and expensive measurcs, tery-powered pulse aenerator he and bis colJca&ues wrote. suflically placed under the skin with Once the Jackson pany arrives at day," said Bhai. "We ~ck.lie the the hotel in the tour city, Khalsa is food for him and either be picks it up aiven a special cookina area set up by or we deliver it to his home. We have Jackson's manaaement team. His been sendina food for him for ycan. family and ci:ew memben also enjoy The plan was when Michael aoes to ------------------......... --...-----------......,..----------. Europe that we would send the food by air, but the schedule was too hectic • "Everythina is fresh, natural and ' strictly veaetarian,.. says Akasha Three m~or manufacturers of electrical leads auided to the heart. HALF PRICE TILE! Italian Floor Ceramic -~:::=-wl .. colorll T'le" • 1'/e" . 1t10. 1.• a 1.n f SALE 84112 ~89 112 ! ·--HALF PRICE·ROLLS! Vinyl Wallcovertng1 • "•1111t1d roll In alhclw pd re QnMm •• .,..... 649 ltlO. 12.• SALE w IHCIAL CUAllANCEi • Al ......,,. .... "'....... ftfte LMfl t0t .... l MG. 1.• IALI ~-Mr HALF PRICE PA' Time Saver Latex • Co"'9 In jUlt OM coett """'°' .... end ...... uo. 11.• a 11.• -,QQ 99 SALE I --• GAL llffa .......... ......,........, • Durable no-wu wtnyl petltmtl SANTA ANA 322 w. 17th Street • '"' molt ftoon wtthout .. ,,. • All peftltN not Loell tor ... ..:. ...... ltlG. 4.»12.• SALE 321 -1m!To. ,ne:t:ft'=-,..._ ......... 15 1. I .... ....,. ......... _•ICJTNl#til .. Dw T ..... T ................. ,_ ............................. ·WESTMINSTER · 15191 leach Boulevard 898-338~1 5 E1uf!..~:°lii~i~:1~~ :i~ ~0~ e. o. ron:art-rn1ft1en·tS ntro4uccd to the Golden Temple ~ J J:' by his ex-manager, Michael Meznick, benefit modestly Jackson enjoyc(i the food and quickly became a friend of the owner. "We liked Michael, not because he was a superstar, but because he was fj i 1 g ,,enuinely nice to us," said .Bbai. ' ·r.om _ e~·-ve~r.c s. n · 'Michael has not changed with .I. 1 4.1 .J. ~ stardom. He is still the same Michael. the same lovina person." c 11'.a.Go ( p ~ ...-. "The owner has always made sure H"""' A )-..-_,,... wwv• that Michael was taken care of," said heart dlMae who exerclle to ~~!'":::rin::~~~~~1 knew be couJd . ~=d':.t~'I:': "He 1s rcall_y picky about his food," from ttMllr effot18, r111SQbera said Bhai .. "qur food bas been ~cry MldlnareportpubllhedlailMt much to bis hkina. What we bebeve Week ourselves, Michael believes. H~ trusu TIWlr condullon lteml from• that the people who cook for him are holistic. He is concerned with the study of 148 mkkll •· "*' spiritual aspect -the clean way of votunt_.. With ~ "-' cll- preparina food the way he likes." -.... -eltbel' a blitory Of tlMrt Started in India over SOO years qo, attack, extrelll nlllld aMlt the Sikh's boast over 100,000 Ameri· pain or~ ~·• ....-y. can members wbo believe that the The tub)tlctl..,. dMiled :lntO stress in the w~tem lifest~le sb.ouJd two groupe~ l~S*'U:als*ed In a tic tempered with av etenan diet. ~-tong. ~· ...,.. ___ SMRs ___ ..... __ .. program, theottlir14-.nll(lldln • ~. at-hOIM wllldng progrwn. CORRECTION NOTICE On pace 28 of the Sears Sep- tember 16th advertlslnc sec- tlolf there Is an advertisement for I 1204 f1oor Jack. The copy Incorrectly describes It as belnc a 2Yl-Ton f1oor Jack. This Jack Is actually a 2 Ton f1oor Jack. We sincerely recret this error. After one )Wlf', the men Who Md exercl11d ehotuld ..... 1mprowmern1 In a.....~ fttnw -low.-ed ,..... rat~~ work and Improved ._ to In and proow oxygen n11dedfot ex.a.. 8Ut ....... ~· ...... dtffWenoll In the -i ..... ~ tt8ltf .ctumly ............ .. ----------Clocton1llld lnO...,. otMMa cfa\otke1t . . . ...... _· J,\o.tu1te s . . FRESH& SILK FLOWER ARRANGEMENT CLASSES LEARN THE ART OF FLOWER ARRANGING BY ATTENDING OUR CLASSES STARTING OCTOBER 15 21562 BROOKHURST HUNTINGTON BEACH 62-6687 .. _, ----.,..----"' ~,,. Or~ COM1 DAI Y PtLOT/auno. Septem._ M 1.. Af 0 . Bman Offshore oil tract icked top ·~~.,,~ bids open Oct. 17 oldier Spec. 4 Oerald F. Hart, son of John nd Marpret Hart of Huntlnaton ch, hA• been namod outs\andin,a ldier of the month for the Medical · ~ompany at Dwi&ht D. Eisenhower Ai'lny MCdicaJ Center in Auausta, Oa. Han i1 a biomedical equipment repairer. • • • Ainnan Bt14ley M. May whOIO wife ia the fonner Debra Rou of Huntinaton Beach, h&I been asa~ed to O\anute Air Force Base, lllclc~ c.cmpletin& basic trainina at La '<Air Force Base. Texas. He will .receive instruction in the fuels 1pcciali1tfield. • • • Teti E. Bron, dauahter of Joseph E. Brown of San Clemen to, has been i moted to aerpnt in the Anny. e is a ?11>Cnter with the 497tb aineer Co. 1n Fort E"'ustis. Va. • • • Capt. MJcbel B. Hill, son of Jeanne Popaduick of El Toro, has completed the Air Force military indoctrinauon for medical service officers at Shep- pard Air Force Bue, Texas. Hill, who received a master'• dearee from UC Irvine in l 981 (will serve with the Air Force Medica center at Keesler Air force Base, Miss. • • • 1 Beary P. Puclet, son of retired Navy Muter Chief Pett}' Oficer and Mrs. Basilio V. Pandes of IrvineJ. and Jo19" A. Flortmoate Jr., son ot Mr. and Mn. Joseph A. Florimonte of Huntinaton Beach, have completed *1l Air Force ROTC field trainina encampment at McChord Air Force' Bue, Wuh. Pandes is a student at UC Irvine, while Florimonte is a student at Golden West Collqe. Both attend ROTC at Cal State Lona Beach. • • • i A.Julrew W. Lucia, son of Wesley A. Landen of San Clemente, was commissioned an Army second lieutenant upon araduatina from the Officer Candidate School in Fon Bennina. Ga. • • • Air National Guard Airman Kim Maril NellOn, dre11ecl u pop •tar lllchael Jackson, t. Mn'ed l>Y kt. Ulyue11 Crowder, a cook at llarloe Corpe Air Station tl ~oro, at a llucular Dyetropby Auoclatlon Telethon camlftl th.la month. Crowder wu amont tbe 32 El Toro Marlnee wbo helped out at tbe camlftl. led bads on 6S7 oft'ahore 01J tracts 'alona the C.li!om1a coast. inctuchn_j several ofT Oranae County, will be opened next month, the U.S Dcparunen1 of In tenor announced. Tire 3. l ·mtlhon-acre offcrina 11 the la!JCSI le of offi hore oil dnllina ri&hts ever undenaken by the De"i>an· mcnt orlhe Interior, Ei&htetn additional tract ,hl\ic been .deleted from the sale slnoe the most recent propasaJ was iuucd by the aovemment a month qo, includ-ina l 3 tracts near nta CataliAa lsland. Reasons for the additional deletions were .. basically en· vironmental," said Warren Sutherland of the U.S. office of Minerals Manqement an Los An· gclcs. The rema1nina 1ve deleted traets arc off the coast of Los Ansctcs and Ventura counties. · The Interior Department id in a One-parent families in job program By tile A11ocl1ted Preti Four hundred sin&Je-parent famil- ies from Los Anaeles and Oranae counties will take part in a new federal job-trainina prOlf&m. The demonstration pro,nm, dubbed Project Self-Sufficiency, was announced Thursday in Los An&eles. It will use S2S million in Housina and Urban Development funds to provide housina assistance, Child and health care, counselina and job train- ina to S,000 families in 78 areas nationwide. Included art 200 families an Los An&eles County, 100 in Oraqe County, 70 in Garden Grove and 30 in Pasadena. ~:r:r-:i~~*1~ ~Cb~\~ T~. l t t B "d"' d f . -. :.u;J:~1;~1;..~~-ue~is a or a ra . ior -und=raiser Hafermaiz will serve with the 105th Sixth distnct U.S. Conaresswoman Althea Scott, 2943 Rounsevel Ter-Gentry Tactical Communications SQuadron Barbara Boxer of Marin County is race, 3.5 p.m. · in Cheney, Wash. expected to attend a campaian fund-A shuttle van will be available to • • • rtJser in Laau~ Beach Saturday for Bradford, runnina apinst incum-transport guests from a parkina area Pvt. David P. Daw10D, ~n of Roy 40th district candidate Carol Ann bent Repubhcan Roben Badham, on Pacific Coast Hiabway near Alpha and June DaW10n o.fFou.n~1n Valley, Bradford. The event Will be a $2S per expects support from local officials, Beta to the reception. For tnfor-~ completed basic trairuna at Fon penon wine and -hors d'oeuvres includina Laau11a Beach City Council mation call Brad.ford for Conaress Dix. NJ. • • _-reception in the home of EIJin and · members Bobbi~ Min.kin and Robert headquarters: 645-0178. · TtmotJay D. WU1oa, stepson of Fred F. Uebicb of Costa Mesa, has com· pleted trainina in fundamental mili- W'Y skills at the Army ROTC basic camp in Fon Knox, Ky. Wilson plans tO enter the ROTC pr~ at New MeXJco Milttary Institute in Roswell, N.M. • RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY, llC. F• The Riil Of Yw lit MAiia kW>,. COSTA EA-541-115' •Good through S.pte~r 30lh • ~i,~ 11 VIJIV"I? ROYAL KHYBER · Cuisine of India 1000 Wal 8bM l"b1h (at ..,,.,.._) rttWport Be.ch, CA (714) 752-5200 JOIN US FOR4----- LAKE ARROWHEAD ·~~~HOME~OUR--~-- At the 10th Annual Home Tour Sponsored by the fwake Anowhead Rnorts Chambtt of Commerce Sat., Sept. 22, 10 AM to 5 PM A self~uided tour of some of tl1e area's most . 011tstn11di~rg liomes. Enjoy a pleasant wine tasting 011 the sl1ores of Lake Arrowhead. TICKETS ONLY Sl0.00 PER PERSON ($1 .00 Ch&J'lf for Wine Tutin1 Cl ) Advolnce Ticket" Av11l.1ble -C1U ,,r Wnte 714/337-3715 LAKE ARROWHEAD RESORT CHAMBER OF COMMERCE aox 155, LAKE ARROWHEAD, CA 92352 PURCHASERS OF IRVINE COMPANY LEASEHOLD LAND All residents and homeowners In Linda · tale, Corona del Mar and Newport Beach who P\lf'oh•MCI their leaeeO land from The lrvlne Com- J)Jny before January 1, 1979 and were not Included In' tht recent cla.. action settlement, please re- apond to P. o. Box 22901 Newport Beach, Call- tornla 82958. Homeowner, Who la In this 1ltuatton, 11 looking tor other• faced with .this probl m. All repllea confidential. COMPANION WANTED C..nadlan born consultJnc encineer. 6', 180 lbs, 4()"s, recently divorced and wllhOut custody of chlldren, nuent In French, abOut half way thrQUCh a µw dqree, tnember of Mense private pUot. exceptional ten.n.ls player, enfoys skunc from mountain cabln .• explorine In motor home. campinc In h &h Sierras, travels frequently in Europe, loves musk and concerts and plays several music.I Instruments. needs lone walks on the beach at sunset, would like to meet trfm and athfetk lady with merry personality. cood educatk>n •net successful career, lookJnc for lone term relatJOnshlp and ~ble marrl• and family, nonsmoker. who likes to ski, to hike and especially to travel. . Weight No Longer to Scale Down to Siz~ Go to the Diet Center Now Tbeir Program Include : . • Private Daily Coumeling •Natural Food • o Shots or Dru~ ~\~ ~'T THE Los,~ ~"0 DlE~ ~~ ~'CENTER~ ~ .- pme rdeue lbal lhe deltUOCU wen rude after di1CUM1on1 WJtb lbe memben of the Ca11fomaa Coutat Commin n and Gov. Georsc Deu· kme)ian City offiaal alona the OraQIC Coast have formally opposed the Ale of tracu off Oranae county, uyina that pc.sential oal •Pill• and ocean VJ~ im~tr{'_C,.t WQuJd 8amqe the tounsm 'ind~Slry. Mayor R.obM Gentry of t.aauna Beach bu called for a b&n on oil exploration bciween the coast and Catalina Island, 26 miles offshore. Pespitc .ihc deletions near Santa Catalina, ICVctal lJ'8(tS aituated bc- tv.ecn the island and lhe OraDIC Coast remain ~ (or sale. • Tht sealed bids will be opened OD Oct. 17, 10 1.m., in the ~ Anacles Cohvention Center. Columbia freM••n KrlatlaD Tll-e•• 9lwrtaD of~ ll•cla emolled u a freU.meaat eoa .. Ma Ual- •enlty la !few Tork tlala RJIUDef after 1M9lDi ....... ated from Deer-rteld Academ:r, Deerfield. ...... lllllaf. CdMinan on health council The vice president of bC:alth man· a~ment operauons at Pacifte Mutual Life Insurance Co. bas been ap- pointed to the Assembly of Dekdtet of the Oranr County Health :Plan· n~Couna. lloben L Broaddus, who rep- resents Newport Beach OD the COUD• cil, iJ a Corona del Mar resident who also serves u cha.innab of the U.S. Academic Decathlon. Los An1C1cs. aod is a director on the boaid ,of F.l.S.H., in ewport Beach. The bcalth oouncil educates con· sumcn arid acts. as a cawyst for community coopention and action in Oranae County. All members of the oounciJ board volunleer lheir sen ices. - ln••!(•pen••IY•• • {in Uc "*'' Ii\/) not tl!igtl • ln price, reasonable. o.aif!ed ........ edlleft194ng r.. Classified Advertla ng 8'2-5&78 •100 DISCOUNT Join Ile for our 20Ut · AnnNec'Mty C.lebfatlon. 8'1ng thla ed Md rec:e1v. 1100 off any of our prog. rame. Cell todey. Thie offer won't l•t IOng. DON'T HJST GO TBBOtJGB IT - . G&OW TBBOtJGB IT! DOOire9 . Reco . FOR DIVORCED AND SEPARATED PERSONS OF ALL AGES Six Thursday Evenlncs Sept. 27 -Nov. I 7:30-9:30p.m: ST. ANDREWS pagli'l'TEBIAN f'.illUBCB Newport Beach -St. Andrews at 15th St. - Ac.nl9 from Newport Ha.rbor Hilf\ S20 Reeistraaon For more lnfonnatlon, call 631·2885 M ·Mon..frl *OODEN HEART Orange County's largest selection of Imported Antique and Reproduction Pine. An ever changing selection of one of a kind antiques plus gorgeous reproduction in Old .PIDc.. Qyer_7u.u.....__. ......... -&-L.__......_ ___ -.....--f . . showroom. ------------------------------~ Courtesy To Th ~ad OPE ' Klnd, caring straneers ca.ri still be lound Jn CM To the Editor: I want to make known an the most pubhc wa)' the C'(tJ'C'me kindnes'i _hown by the family of Debbie Huber of Co ta Mesa. The) took in a d~ unkno\\n to them but so 10 .. ed b us. fed him and kept him overnitht and called up the next morning when they SI" a lost dog sign that we had put up. · An~one who ha a famil) pet can understand the ftelings we had when we lost and then found our dog.. But evel}'Ont' should know thnt the Hu~r famil\' acted with compassion toward people they had never met. l'H lwa)) known there art' truly !.;ind, giving people suit around and the) ~hould bl:. rccogni1cd . 1 hank )'OU to the Hubcrs from the bottom of out hean). ROBIN LA E ' Costa Me\J· Of fleer Pille got oif to0 easy . To the Editor: The five-column banner headline says "Cop plC3dsguilty in court" over the anacle 1n the Sept. 8 Daily Pilot. The following mfonnataon and names eon tamed an the anicle should not be forgotten: I. Newpon Beach pohceman Michael Patnck Pule pleaded guilt> to felony drunken dnving. 2. CaJifom1a Htghway Pattol of- ficers said Pule rammed a f rcewa) median divider. drifted across all four traffic lanes, forcing another car ofT the road mto a nvcr bed senousl> injuring the driver. 3. Tests revealed that at the time omcer Pule's blood contained double the alcohol limit at which one as judged to be mtoxicated. 4. Despite the position of trust .DCCllPled by officer Pule his con- fession of felon) drunken dnvang and the seriousness of the mJuncs. Su· pcnnr Court Judge David Carter reduced the charge to a misdemeanor and put him oh parole. Not one day i1' jail. not even a su~pcns1on of a dnver's license. S. Newpon Beach Poltce Chief Pete Gross reviewed the case and de- tennined that officer Pule will not even be separated from the police department. 6. Under these circumstances. how can the C:ihfomta Highway Patrol and local p<?lice officers continue to hand out llckcts to drivers not nearly as drunk, not in positions of trust and not involving inJuncs or even acci· bents? The pubhc wtll know that when one of"their own" 1s involved, there isn't even a wrist slap. 7. Remember Judge David Caner's name. Eventually he comes up on the ballot and may be voted out of office. 8. Look to city officials for ap- propriate action. Name withheld b> request .... Halt amphltheater's support 1-0-the Editor. Now that the Pacific Amphitheatre · and the Neanderthal group (I r'eally mean Ncandenhal) have decided to sue the city of Costa Mesa over the noise issue ma1be 1t 1s time that the city of Costa Mesa dropped its support of the amphitheater. How about withdrawihg lhe police patrols thal are probably paid for by ·Pacific Amphitheatre from the Pa- cific Amphitheatre grounds. allowing them to be in charge of their own crowd control? J:iow about withdrawing the traffic enforcement and the use of the traffic signals at the end of an evenmg's concert? Maylic the city needs to undo some of the things that they have been doing in order to suppon the amphitheater. Maybe 1t is time that the state of Cahforn1a provided crowd control instead of the cat) of Costa Mesa. Cooperation should~~ auon. Uncooperauon should get un- cooperation. The city's cooperated. Pacific Amphitheatre hasn't. It's time that we uncooperate wnh them until they cooperate with the citizens of Cos1,a Mesa. JIM DE BOOM Newpon Beach Share the park wlUi horses too To the Editor: Horses aren't all oats and ha y ... they have a personal side too. you know. In fact, a horse can be quite an mtercstmg friend to hav~. They don't say a lot but they are great listeners and great for entertammg other friends. For quiet times or busy tames. a horse can be a great friend and you can always JUSt nde away mto the sunset. Please think about this. Tho horses and us need a place too. Why can't we keep the stables and half the trails aod you have the other half? You don't need that big of a park. And 1f you're planning on building houses, we have too many anyway You're leaving no place for an) animals. Pan of 1t is your fault, you don't make enough money because the place looks lake a dump. lf you didn't close down the rent barn and let them take lhc horses to the beach. yo u would be loaded wtlh money. IL 1s some people's dream to ride a horse on the beach. We could probably have the prcrncs1 stables in Cahfomia 1f you would have helped us IS years ago. but it's 100 late now. You have left all the work for us. We can't do ttfat without money and you 're the k1 nd of people who have it all but are unwilling to share some of it with the stables-so 1h.at ll could be so pretty and well taken care of. If you will JUSt give us one more chance and help us a little. it w11l probably work out so you won't have to make a park that wall probably ct all trashed and so you won't have to spend $4,000 trying to fix 1t. Our stable i one big family and )'.OU're breaking us up. Most of us have nowhere to go. Please consider it. Thank you. P.S. Why don't you JUSt make a smaller park so everyone c:~n be happy? · From on~ of the: very deptts5Cd peo}>le of the tabltS. l YCONWAY Corona dcl Mar Ocean trip ended it fur-tfietha-14ioal~oll Mechanical dolls m the I 7th cen- tury greatl > 1ntn~ued the ph ilosopher and mathemauc1an Rene Ocscanes. One exqu1s1tely crafted hfcMze model he callrd Franchina He too~ her on an ocean trip to ~ '! 1f her v.alk1ng mechanisms would compensate for a tight deck roll. They did. She ambled allong just fine. However. the ship's ·captain screamed he was the work of the Devil, and tossed her overboard. Poor Descartes • . Q. Which is higher in wild-card poker, a royal Ou h or five of a kmd'l Five of a kind, unle hou rules \ay otherwise. It that rosc win doe n't 'iparklc, 11 wa made from blue arapeo;. Q. How man) uckcr tape parade have bctn held to New York C1ty"1 A. Only 27. At1h1s ~riting. l.a tone bcfort' the J 984 01 mpic nu:d hsts' wat. for the I g 0 pamde for the ho ta c back from Iran Can underst nd wh~ wand haeld wtpers nncrfall apart unul 1t itarH to ram. But why 1o; It they alwa}s wo rk best on the passenger side? · Q Did you say there's a fish that feeds on land? . • . A. o, but I will . A fish called the mudskippcr does that thing. Its e)es arc on turret~ th.at protrude above the water's surface. When it sees a choice m6rsel on land. it skips ashore on fast fins. takes it bite. then· goes back under. Thow shoppers who don't live tn California may not Ii.now that state be me the first recently to require ~troom in upermarkets. You can blcomc paralyzed in your kep. For a minute or two. A tricky mental mechanism omctime fm:z· cs )our ab1hty t(') mo~e ~our volun- tary mu k • so you won t phys1t•all) c"cutc )our dreams. How 11·~ tng· gcrcd i not et quite cle t How long hne >ou been dnvin your car1 8nuun·, Pnncc Charle dro .. t' hi~ \ ton-Manin c:onvcrt1blc for 14 ~t'an •. ( ''(Tl1 fed ralgovernment}h llowedtheautolndu try, whlChwould klllyou to a~ a buck, todJlly-dallyon thelssu ofprotectlverestralnt olaJJ:ktnd -th so-call dpa Ive belt. wl1lch "'rap roundyou wJien tl1edoorclo esandtl1emo tefnc1 nt traJntofall,theaJrliag." RICHARD .COllBN CO)QJIUllat Rican Co1E1 WlJere~s tb.elaw whenln ' need? G.reen light for --.....-. auto restraints sorely needed · __ ..... Lumber firm reaps harvest ofbigbuckSfrom Uncle Sam WASHINGTON -I spotted Michael A. standing by the $tde of a country road. clutchina the side of his car. He ... as disoriented and scared, his (ace beaded with sweat. When I stopped my car to get a closer look, I saw that Michael A. 's car had hit a tree ... Don't leave me," Michael A. pleaded. Of course. I didn't. Instead, 1 reached for him and be crumpled into my arms. With help, he made it to the front fender of his car and leaned • apinst it. Below, water from the ruptured radiator leaked on the ground and a bit of steam hissed from the car. From across the street, a man ran out of his houx, saw what had happened and ran back to call the police. Michael A. was injured aJ'ld in patn . Louisiana Pacific goes for handouts from various levels WASHINGTON -When it comes to milking the federal govern- ment for handouts. the welfare cheats and food-stamp chiselers. who have acoused ,President.Reagan's ind,igna- tion. can't hold a candle to Louisiana Pacific Corp .. the nation's largest bu}er of pubhcly owned timber. The company goes after the big bucks. not penny-ante peculations. r .. e alread) reported how the U.S. Forest Service -headed by Lou1s1- ana Pacific's former general counsel aod \ace president, John Crowell - has obligingly agreed to cul down SO rnilhon board feet of aspens in Colorado m response to the com- pan) 's plan to build a wa(erboard plant there. Earlier. Crowell engineered a $600 milJion bailout that let Louisiana Pacific and other big lumber com- panies ofT the hook on their over- priced bids for government timber. But the Forest Service isn't the only federal agency Louisiana Pacific has its hand out to. The company wants the Department of Housing and Urban Development to help finance construction of its waferboard plants 11'1 MisS1$s1ppi, Michigan and Minne· sota, with "acuon grant/' to com- munities where the pla ts will be located. .. JACK ANDERSON In fact, this profit-making recipient of corporate welfare, which reponeda sales growth of 26 percent last_ ¥~ar, plan~ to put up as little as $400,000 of its own money to build one S 18 m1lhon waferboard plant m Mmne- ~ta. Louisiana Pacific expects to ra1St the rest of the money from publtcly financed sour~s at federal , state and local le~els. The taxpayers will take the risks; Lou1s1ana Pacific will reap the profits. The company laid 11 on the line to the town fathers of communities where 1t plans to build wafcrboard plants: no federal aid, no factory. My associate John Dillon has seen letters sent by Louisiana Pacific intended to· pre sure the local f.Ovemrnents into applying for HUD s urban develop- ment action grants, called UDAGs. "But for the approval of the UDAG, Louisiana Pacific will not undenaJce the project," company vice president John Han warned the mayor of Two Harbors, Mtnn. Han's letter pledged that Louisiana Pacific would commit "a minimum of $400,000" toward the Two Harbors waferboard plant. Where would .the rest of the S l 8 million estimated cost come· from? A $2 million HUD grant, $10 million worth of tax~xempt industrial rev- enue bonds, and the rest from a Small Cities Development Grant and money put up by 1...akc County and a state development fund. Despite the threat clearly expressed m Hart's letter to the mayor of Two Harbors, a Louisiana Pacific spokes.. man insisted that the availability of a HUD jrant is "oot a detemuning factor for ouf consideration to go into a community." More imponant. he said, 1s a good labor pool and proximity. to a "fiber p00l" - meaning trees. He was at least panly correct: Louisiana Pacific docs plan to build plants in some commuruties without H\:fD pnts-to-keep loan 1nterc5t rates low. Apparently the company just uses the grants selectively. Footnote: Lou1s1ana Pacific's cor- porate arr<>P.nce 1s not limited t its dealings wtth governmental bodies. Last year, a few days after it refused to sign a wage-freeze agreement with the carpenters' union. the company board voted to give Chief Executive Officer Harry Merlo a $94,000-a-year raise. · Already one of the nation's h1ghcst- paid e•ccutivC1, Merlo now makes about $2.5 million a year -while his company lines up for taxpayer. supported handouts. Almost immediately, Michael A. mned to apol~zc. Somewhat in.o coherently; he.said be had driven out from the city but had stopped at a nearby stand to buy tomat6cs. He removed bis scat belt and. since he was only going a short distance, he had not put it 6ack on. The tomatoes had caused the accident, he said. One of them rolled·off the seat, and when he reached for it he veered off the road. He could not have been 1oin1 over 30 miles per hour. For the.next half-hour, Michael A. -short, about 3S and with dark, Wlf'CY hair-rq>eatcd the sap of the rolhna tomato. He cursed himself for stupidity, apologizing for aJl the • trouble he bad caused. He had chest pems and a cut lip and he may or may not nave been in shock. He had cracked the windshield with hts head and bent the steering wheel with has chesv I felt sympathy for Michael A - that and anacr. The sympathy .came from the knowledge that I would have done the same thing. I worked on,cc as · an .,..,uranoc investigator and so J know the value of seat belts.: But if I bad stopJ)cd to pick up tomatoes and was only continuing a shon distance, I would not have re-buckled either. Michaef ~. could have been me. He could havCbccn anyone. J•d A.odtnoa II • 1yodlca1etl The anger was directed at a dif- coJumaJst. fercnt source -at a federal 1ovem- ~---!i._ __ IJlll!lllili.._ _______________ ... __ _.__________ ment that has played around with the seat-belt issue for decades. It has F • t f 1 • g • h t • allowed the auto industry, which rl Z re 1 10~. S r e Orie wouldkillyoutosaveabuck,todilly- dally on the issue of protective restraints of all kinds -the so-called · • 1 h • It e t e passive belt, which-wtapuround you ~el S lS .U er1or mo 1ves ~cie~~~rn~1~1.~~~~e.:~~ has done this even ·though it know WASH I NG TON -Follow1 ng bis Christian Right that so terrifies the that we are all, at one time or another~ miraculous victory over the Alaman-Liberal Left'> Michael A. Often we need to be n1 in '496 A.O .. Clov1!, King of the Well. as 1 understand it. they want protected from our own foolishness. Franks. who had invoked the God of p pomOJl'lphy recognized as a filthy, ·At the moment, the administrati011 · the Christians during the battle. AT lucrative business. not a constitu-has compromiatd with:reality. lftwo- converted. accepted the Nicene tional right. They want it reaulattd thirds of the atatca ~ mandatory Creed. and had his army marched to 8 out of tne comer drugstore. They .stat-belt laws, ihe g0vcmment wtll the nver in battalions and baptized by UCHAllAI want le raw sex and violence on the not require automatic crash protcc· platoons. Three thou~nd pagans TV shows piped mto the family livina tton, possi~)" air begs. t'• a rult came acrosC) in on-e afternoon. room. If the local hiah schqol has a wntten by officiall who tare driven by read the semi·hvsterical cstab-Jemison declared him<iClf a "loyal French Club and a History Club, they chauffeurs. ln Washinaton, for in· lishmcnt pres. Rona1dReagan iS"'t>emoerar.--anasmtttrarmost of his fec:;I it shoutd-be-free-te>-have-e .aible ~ -driven ~Y. nan red-- somethi na lil<C' compulsory baptisms congregation was likewise registered. Club and a Lutheran Club. They want li&hts. Since the cops can t stop that, 10 store for a 'l('('Ond term. With An outspoken supponer of Rev. restoration to pubhc education of the how in the wortd arc they aoina to , Chaplain Fal"'cll deputized to con-Jackson. who raised $800.000 for 'lame voluntary pra)'cr they knew as enforce a mandatory seat-belt law? fiscate all the hot tubs on the West Jcsst'Ci campaian. Bishop Jemison ch1ldreh. Many of them suppon the And even if those laws work, what Coast.' bru hed a4iide questions abOut his same tuition tax credtts for parents of good arc theyaoing to do in one-third Goaded b) theseed1torialists. lurcd active involvement in politics. "The rcliaious and synaaogue schools thar of the states where there are none? As b .. the promise of front-page publidty black church has al"''aY been m Geraldine Fcmro did, before ~he for Michael A., it would take a cop at for a failing campaign. Walter Mon· pohucs." he said~ w1th1n the black went nauonal. They want to sec Roe the tomato stand to make him buckle dale has decided to make •·Rchgion community. people "hsten to the vs. Wade, which declared access to an up. and Politics" a centerpiece of his anti-pulpit We mold the pow from the abortion to be a constttutional ri&ht, The fact that we arc responsible for Reagin a sault. • pulpit." overturned. because they believe our own actions is be)'ond dispute Fair enouah. But Mondale's deep-Had that Bishop's name been John unborn children have lhc same God-and.Michael A.'scontrit1on was proof e t concern, one suspects. as not that J. O'Connor. had he declarrd that the given right to live as the desp1~ of that. But tt 11 also true that people Thomas Road U.apt1st is to become "Catholic Church has alway been in Jewi\h minority did in Hitler's Ger-w11l have accidents, that they will do our "Established c hutch," but that politic ... h d Bishop O'Connor an-·· many. And they do not intend to something silly. and that they oujht the millions of conscrvatl\c Prot-nounced htmself as a· "loyal Re-remain 11lent . to be protcettd rrom their weakness. ~tants. traditionalist Catholics and publican" who had nised $800,000at So long as prie u. pastors and 'That. after all is the thinkina behind Orthodox Jews could put Fritz in the St. Piltrick' for Dutch's fall cam· rabbis provided moral sustenance to the move to raise the drinkina aae 10 history books alongside another paign. had he added that Roman theant1-warcautc of George McOov-21: Kids are inex~encC:d at drink· preacher·~ <on from the Upper Mid· auhohcs "Ii ten to the pulptt. We cm. thcc1v1l rights poc;ition of Hubert in& and arc more hkcly to have trafr.c WtSt. Gcorie Stanlc_y McGovern. mold the pow from the pulpit," well. Humphrry, the nuclear freae-views aeddcnu as a result The implelt. Mondale's pcc1fK oal m attack-~rdon the c•prcssion. 11 hell would of Fritz Mondale. their pastoral allhou&h not ttit flaitcst, solution i to ina Reap n's tanks to:ttha1ousgroups have busted loo~. . letters nd pulpit homilies were stop them all from drinkina. -in particular Protc tant Tunda· The rea on Paul l..:3xah' "Dear welcome. It was only when they bton Mtrhael A. was t1krn to the m~niahm -is to fnghlcn back Into Chn nan l::cader"' a~I to Prot-" pcakin out" in a fashion· .that hospital, his head m11ina. chest lhe Democnui camp Yupp1 putofT cstant pa to~ to rcga tcr dlurch soundrd su piciouSJy hlcc uppe>n (or ~undana in pein. 1eartd that his by R1hlc Belt p~ her$, nd the mc01bcrs i condemned, nd 81 hop the socual a cnda of Ronald Reapn, uvunes were serious. maybe fatal. He hundred of thou nds of Jew ash Jemison' pubhr claim to h1nc rCIJS· that they were told to &Ct out of ithe cursed himself for h11 pliaht, cerwn voters de~ Pl)' oOendcd by Mond le's tcrtd 2 million is applauded, ~ public 5(luare. he wa1 the v1ct1m of his own -------------------------' prolo cd 'i1lencc 1n the fatt ot the because l..:axalt \\ants Reagan &o win What Mondale and has cohon of carelessness. tater thlt da)' the ofti)' ranun,gs of Lou1 Farrakhan. and ht th1 clecuon nd 81 hopJcmt n hberaJ 1bes arc uy1n,g 1 that evidence of the ac:ade:nt wu a htde rdu I to fonhn try n mn t would like to~ ham I • h 'ou ronscrvauvcs art' rid: np in the 1rtt'1 bark -Jiiht aboft 11nt1 m1t1c lu of tht Re . Jc .. lntolcrnnt of "'Ii on'' ~ the class American • ccond·cla s the pot w anotliif.car haCI till it Jack~on ptt11denf phra . n)'t>ody out c1uzcn1. who do not hare the aamc tarlier What has the cdaton h t m re 1hrrc hu't better dCSCOP\tOn for nght fcm1m ts, abonion u, PY ..-The. tree alwa) wan . Nature bu u t th n Mond le pretends to 1 &ho town pest who pend QCh -t Moridal upponcn -10 done for u •hat neither the IC>"mt• notth t<..lmsi1 nlc d rurcpmmot· Chn ~mas -c ~use m mtcr o n1r.c.un tc,andpankapa(eequal· mcntnor1he1utoindu l'}'Wllldolor "' 1n c nd1wll u1 Wh1 h ndadate c '" I -roaman ~bh I) in th pohucal 1hednver-makc"lfeit ~ " they seem looe promo-itn hoot mnkc 1'l! 1 pnnctpaJ t Yes. rnt lerant ot reftgton w 1n an IC'<'idtnt.~~=--...._,_-"-----~ Wednesda • lhc Prcttdcnt ot 1he 1· on the lookout for p ht tcd sroup e ell) the right phra . mtlhon member tton I Bapu t an,gu1 of tlcnt 1 • • P•trld BiCUD• 11 • W#C9tff ftlcUIW C.W. II • ..,,...,,..,, c on"cnt1on. the RcH~rtn T J Wh 1 e ~I • t e n o 1h r. ~. OflANOE COAST Daily Pilat H. L. Schwartz Ill Frank Zlnl U A 0<11g [:clir :II Tom Tait ..... DorotlaJ Doua of Newport aeaoll. modela a ~oroaa toWll ftt for any elaborate putJ. 1'be co-clialrm.an of Oraate CoantJ 'PbllbarmODlc SocletJ'• Golden ""Baton aua i I OD PridaJ wean a creation lD •ilk cbarmeue, abo.e. Ropee of ·peari. and matchlna blae cutcr.J8tal be9c1a add a note of fublon u doee ber · Jadltb Leiber .. llttle ·' • '""' lallf Pillt SUNOAV. SEPTEMBER 16 1984 ... ,.ble '•rt' ••• modeled •t Coeta ..... , ... luteto Ha new •login. 83. jewel .... '' At rUlat. DorotbJ la a PictUe of-' eteaance ID anollaer Amen W&nl1 Collec- tlbfe of cut llllk ftlftt accented wltla baCl• be9dlnl. A.Caln. a Leiber~ accompanl•.• \ She . builds ·on her image · Dorothy Doan looks· for top quality in fashion. properties Dorothy Doan of N~ Bea,ch. president of Pelican~ bu rmded in ewpon ee.dt for 20 yQrs. She has made her matt on dcvcJ~na properties •nee 1969 when she entered the real est.ale . industry by purchasing residential income units. As~ of investment houses ~ she bqan buildiq ape.rt· menu and in 1975. lbc built her first condominium project. That led to other development projects of apan. ments, condominiums and o1face buildings. Pelican Properties. fonncd 10 :yean ago, also man.aces all the properties they retain in ownership. ~nolber division of the compuy the purchase and operation of properties which a.re already com· mcrcial businCSSC$ that have a substantial cash flow on land that is zoned for a higher and better use. One of those properties is Jocated on the freeway at the Del Mar R.acctrack where S 7 acres are bcina recycled into a maJor ~room bold and recreation complex due to Ila.rt oat year. In addition lO her divcne bw14ing and development expertise Doan as . also t.bc original cbainnan of the boJrd of ewpon Balboa Saviap and Loan .~alion which she founded ill 1978 ,_,ith c:i&ht partners. It v.-as sold in 1983 at a rccord- brcak.iQ& price for the industr}. ·Hard work 1lnd commitment to quality are a vital part of the ouwanding reputation 5he bas • adlieved durina her can:er, The same drive is appliCd to her volunteer wort with charitable, pol- itical and civic o~tioos. She is ~ce :prcSident aDd t.rasun:r of the Orange C.Ounty ~ulharmonic Society, the oldest musicaJ orpniza. tion in the county. For the upcoming benefit for OCPS the fom:W openina on Friday of the Aoabeim Hiltoll Hotel and Towers, Doan as serving as co- cb.ainna.n with Floss Schumacher. Doan attended Michip.n State University, the University of Wash- inaton and UC Irvine, wbcrc sbe is president of the UO Foti.ndation directors. The wife of Dr. Tbomas Doan is a member of the Orange County Lincoln Oub and serves on the executive committee of the Orange County CoWlcil of Boy Scouts of America. As for fashion shopping.. this busy cxccut.ive naturally bas her own '.__... system, be said. as she took time out from a crowded calendar to po~ for Sty&c at Amen Wanly. ··1 call and make an appointment and they have the clothes ready for me to tr) on when I arrive. For evcnina I usually choose black ana ·white, .. she added as she departed • from her usual color scheme and stepped in front of the camera in a brilhant blue aown and a sparkling cut silk vcJ,'Ct coordinated witla aettssorics by Elame 1.::.aughtoo. LooK1Nc Gooo ·------- Eye coloring easier when pencils keep their coo fey, month o I haaa t1~ bout ki p1nacoo1 •.• 1t und ~ ood but t that time I d1dn 't take 11100 riou I)'. Theadvioe" s tOY.eta towel nd • "'nngitdry.Spra) with f~rancc and • • . place in the frcetcr for an hour. After you shower and dr) off e:<cess water. wrap yourself in this icy cool wrap. During the rt\:ent hot pell-when everyone was complaining about the wealhcr. th problems o(apply!!ll mal.:cup ndthedampne sofcloth -itsounded terrific. omeume ~oucancomeupwithgreat ideas born from necessll). · I disco"ered a hint for "ing lip color and eye color pencils after 1 found them melting with the point breaking e\·er. time l lned to use them in my un -airconditioned home. I took a· cup of ice cubes to the counter and before I starte-d 1" 1 """"" "'""'""'!' ... i ... ,. .. ,. the-llCncils with metal ' . Leisure . togs .are trendy Los Angeles is a mecca for fitness- mmded people -with or without the energ) and excttement of the Olym- pics More and more the concern fo r a healthy body 1s reflected m the fashion industf). and California epitomizes this trend toward ac- tivewear. A major front runner m the casual clothing campaign. LA GEAR, re- cognized early that workout wear is a necessary part of almost everyone's wardrobe. Along with this. a huge market for athletic shoes was born. Robert Greenberg. president of L.A. GEAR, sought to offer a shoe that bridged tho gap between athletic comfort and casual fashion. He created an enurely new look for the fashion athleisure industry. Amid the trendy shops on Melrose A venue 1n Los Angeles.1...A. GEAR 's shop offers an ever growing line of clothing for men. women and chil- dren: Its instantl y recognizable foot- wear and such new accessories as hats. hilts. socks and hosiery to complete the look. topsdOY.'Tltntothc1cc. Th tkeptthepomt firm nd clumptogcthermore.gi'm kmaduller,conr rlook. u hie. 0 cou • you'COuld keep them in the refngcrator. tie Ip forth1-.: fa er)tla) use of lotion made for th i butwhoha iim tomakcthetriptothekitchen. purp0 -1trcmo"eswom-outfl kc ,com~anddTercnt no th r complain\ (be ides the he.it) I heard trengths ror more\ 1gorous cxfOliauon, try a granular recently tromaco--wlir\..t·no. aboul her oily skm. ' scrub. One that' oal·f~ water·nn ble, and ideal for the ,N.Qw, oil) kin~ lh l'>n'tall that b d. lt's~tronger. relincf} ofo1ly km. wathstaffih the element bl·tterand u-;uall)' sta> youn er-3. tcerclear of puttmaiadditional oib on your face lookina longerthnn dn kin. -no heavy, unventilated creams or moisturizers. If you But on the other hand. it is more inclined toward really want a moisturizer for drier areas or tiny dry lines. d i turbanct. de~clops larger pores and otlcn looks pasty u~ a light-weight one that's virtually oil-free. This leaves and shiny-and le sclean. If 1t is handled with care. you skin lookinggood, with a bit of sheen. but no shine. get the po itives rather than the negatives. 4. Take advantage Of oil-f rce makeup base and oil· Here are ome tipsoflered by researchers and free sun products. They spare )OU more oil {and more devclo~f'5 m the linique taborat ri :-------t,ro1.tblcJ In nddition oil-free makeup can al~endOY. )OU I. Wash y6urface with soap1 at least twtce a day. with a smooth' elvety misti that minimizes Pore~. Then. That's the mo t important thing '-Ou can do 10 keep oilv for blu~her, use powder or gel-leave the creamies for ~ J drier tcinsthatcan use theextracmollience. ~kin looking cleaner and fresher. And if you use a facial 5. Watch )our mouth! Lipstick feathers and blurs soap especially made for oily skin, with e~tracleansing more\\ hen skin isoily. lfyou rub loose powder into the po\\er but no uncomfortable harshness. you can get even lip area first, you give the lipstick a drier surface 10 cling to better results. and help it hold its hne. • 2. Ex foliate~ that is, remove the dead skin flakes 6. Oil> ha1rgocs with oily kin. and can be at the root .rha(,urfuC"t~vervdav. When "kin is oily, these flakes of skin breakouts. Dermatologists often see that oily hair ,. . bri neto orche a ,c 1pccinll~ whenha1rfalls forw rd in n . Answer: Frequent or daily h ir-washin With nQ1l-c trolling h mpoo And.if~ouha~ebaqgs con 1dcr un out from under them. A moofhed-back 1l irstyle v your forch tl n1oreair nd chance of trouble. 1. Heard nd mnustache could have the me ill etlects a~ ban -by h1eld1ng oily Skin from air1 The ltin stays wanner, other, more brenk-out prone. Answer is the same: F".rcquenl shnmpooina of facial hair and · thorough rinsing to removceverytr.tce of soap. It also helps to keep your bcatd sh on-then 1 f o; easier to part it right down to flair roots and ex foliate the kin underneath. 8. tlephQne , held tightly against chcd:s, have A way of collcctmgstale 011 and gnme that's been known to imuue skin-espec1allyo1ly kin.So before you .. reach out,•• reach for a clean~r-dampened doth to remove the ·' messy telephone build-up. This ought to be done at least - ~eekl). 9. Cheap help: From time to time. thr?ughout the da), pat a little cool water on your face. As it evaporate , it seems to tighten and freshen skin. It also feels good . There's only 87 days until . •• ·~·Huntington .Harl;>dur will be offering Cruise of Light1~ at Christmastime It's riot too soon to think of Christmas -at least not for the Huntmgton Harbour Philharmonic Committee. It's already opened an office at 16873 Algonquin St~ in Huntington Beach and to sell tickets for the Cruise of Lights set from Dec.12toDec.21 withfourtripsper night. . D. Russell of Newport Beach handsome Glno Gaad!o (son of Jo1epb Gaudio of Costa Mesa) will headline the program. The soloist has appeared on Broadway, m. concen with the Las Vegas Sym- phony and the Orange County Master Chorale. Mrs. Patrick Nolan, 640-4027, is membership chairman of the group . • • • Actor Allan Grueaer will be on hand Friday at the clubhouse (610 W. 18th) to entcnain Costa Mesa Women's Club dunng an 11 a.m. ~- Mesa. ..It was Brooklynites that started the group, but anyone can join," said Selma Margel, activity chairperson who may be reached at 957-0581. The Garden Grove group meets Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at 12860 Euclid. Jerry Schwartz, 761-8670, bas information on this chapter. • • • Wives and widows of retired military officers or retired women · officers are eh~blc to attend ac- tivities of OWLS (Officers Wives League). The next scheduled event is a 1 O a.m. membership coffee on Wednesday in El Toro Officer's Club. Mn. Edwin Long, 548-16~5. of Costa Mesa is the membership chairman. • • • Patrons of the arts wiU be board· .. People can't wait until the evening before and count on uckets," said Salldn Cloue,chair- man of HHPC, recently wh ile lunching at Pave in Corona del Mar. "We don't want to have disap- pointed people at Christmastime, but that sometimes happens if they· don't ~t tickets early." meeting' ... Ebc:ll Club of Newpon Beach will be holding its .. Cotton Party" Thursday at 11 a.m. 'when a "help yourself salad bar" will be set up.Also.tat the clubhouse (515 W. Balboa tslvd., Balboa) affair mem· bers will place coins in a wishirig well and make their own ice cream sundaes. Proceeds will benefit crip- pled children of the "Make a Wish" program in Orange County. Mem- bers will celebrate the organiza- tion's 75th anniversary m October. Diane Nicbolson is the new presi- Hearing Center). • • • mg the .. Tiki" 10 Newport Harbor at 7 p.m. Friday for a tw<rhour cruise and an opportunity to meet mem· bcrs of )Cylinder : Cruisers will travel miles of waterways lined with elaborately . holiday-decorated .homes. Jean Railey is chairman of 1his popular event that raises money for musical youth programs for Orange County Philharmonic Society. dent. • • • Ellen Kaufman, administrator of the Jewish Family Life and Educa· tion Program at Jewish Family Service, will focus on .. Assenive- ness and the Jewish Woman" when shespcaksat 12:30p.m. Wednesday to Newport Beach chapter of Hadassah. Minna Posner, 536-0646 or Lorraine Welngardt, 551-2690, may be called for further infor:: mation. • • • Dance/Poetry(fheatrc Ensemble . PassenJers who pay $35 per couple will enJOY wine, hors d'oeuvres and music. Cylinder, Inc. (Orange County's own·modem dance com· pany) was organized in Laguna Beach in 1981. The company is headed by Cynas Parker, 551-4239, and LIDder O'Roarke, (213) 598-280 I, who may be called for reservations or informat1on. It leaden.hip m th~ contemporary categories has resulted m major 1ntemauonal licensing agreements secured b) LA GEAR with such companies as Docspun/Calabash. ln- deka and Raphael of Southeast Asia . Canal clothln& and foot- wear make L.A. Gear a atyle lnduatry front-runner. Tickets -$5 for adults and $3 for children under 12 -may be obtained by going by the office Monday through Friday from l 0 am. to l p.m. and selecting a time and date or by mailing a check (made out to the committee) and a self addressed stamped envelope to the office. The Junior Woman of the Year will be announced Oct. 5 when the Assistance League of Newport Beach. Junior Aux1hary, sponsors a luncheon and fashion show (Neiman-Marcus presenting) at the Westin South Coast Plaza Hotel. The six finalists up for the gold medallion award (donated by Downey Savings) are LlQcla Yappa (YSP). Lynda Sbea (A TSC), Karin de Rl1yner, (Fullerton Charity League), Sandy Brunick (High Hopes), Mary Ann Jeppe (Newport Harbor Junior I.:eague) and Donna Salyards, (Providence Speech and Laguna Beach branch of Ameri· can Association of University Women will hold a coffee at 9:30 a.m. Saturday in the Neighborhood Congregauonal Church, Laguna Beach. for members and prospec- tive members. Signup sheets wtll be available for a long hst of activities set for this fall. Jane Berry, 499-5151. is membership chairman. • • • And. one further item, on the sweet side is the Chocolate Extrava- gana '84 set Oct. 13 and 14 from 1 t a.m. to 6 p.m. at the Disneyland Hotel Exhibition Hall. Chocolatiers and confectioners from around the world will be there with samples and demonstrations. Tickets arc $7 and • THE RELAXING SOUNDS OF 1THE HARBOR KDCM 103.1 For the best in you··· be casual and carefree with a precisk>n cut 'n style. Now sale priced, '14 ReGIS HAIRSTYLISTS • • • Andy Williams fans will be gather- ing at the Pacific Ballroom. Anaheim Hilton and Towers, on Sept. 29 when he sings at the 12th annual St. Joseph Hospital Foun· dation benefit. T.he black-tie affair is $1 75 per person. • • • Members a11d guests of Harbor View Hills Philharmonic have. a treat in store at the Tuesday morn- ing meeting being hosted by Mn. C. 20% OFF French Bras by 2 week only Style #196 Style #103 Cool and comfortable Water wonderlaJid• eur· roundlba Dlaneyland Hotel are the &ackd.rop for theM fan, fuhionable and func- tional outfit.a from Aclldu' new holiday line that doublea u eporuwear and atreetwear. The man'• oat· ftt, left, bu a 100 percent cotton jeney eblrt ($35) • with contru~ cheet and aleeve atri~ and ehorta of 80 percent cotton ud •O percent polyeeter atretcb twill ($27). Becky, near · iUht, wean matchlDC roee· cOlored muecle ehlri ($11) and polye.ter-cotton aborta {$21 ). Larry'• red, white and blue ATP cotton tennt. eblrt ($35) topa 1.00 percent pol,.- e.ter doable knit ahorta ($45). Tent choee· a tur- quolee, ecoop-neck tank top with white me.h bOttom ($14)~dmatcblD.g lOOper- cent nJlon trlcot 111Dnin8 ehorta ($16). • • • Transplanted Brooklyn1tes in Seal Beach and Garden Grove have formed their own chapters to suP: port the City of tf ope. The Seal Beach chapter will hold a potluck social meeting Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at 1806 Jamaica Road, Costa FASHION CALENDAR ------- I 5,000 cbocaholics arc expected to show. Childrens Hospital of Orange County will benefit from the eveot. Tickets, obtainable in advance at all . Southern California Ticlcetmaster outlets or by calling S4t46S9, also will be sold at the door. I. MAG NIN: Informal modeling of Perry Ellis, Etten Tracy and Anne Klein dc~illlcr sportswear i set for Thursday, noon fo 3 p.m.' in the South Coast Plaza store, Pronto Ristorante and Fony Carrots restaurant. Prescriptive representative will present clinics on color wheel selection Thursday, Friday and aturday. Appointments available by callina 9S7-l 5 I I, ext. 262. • • • • NORDSTROM: fc:n1laamo representative, Cliff Barrot. will present a trunk show of the Italian shoes from~ to 9 p.m. Thursday in Men'i Shoe on level one. • • • MAY CO.: A ~minar for ~rcer-mindcd women is scheduled at the South eoa Plaza tore from 6 to 8 p.m, Wednesday with Editor-at•larae Kate R.and l.loyd a peakcr. A fashion p~~ntatton and hght supper al are scheduled. Re rvation (SS) may be made by phonma the cJiccutive office, ext. 26« at the tore. A minar b)' Wenda Hams Millard, general manager_ of Worton Worn n Ventures 1s t for l l a.m. to 12:30 p.m. turday at the We tmm ter tore. • • • FA HION HO : Women• Guild nd hool UJ.thary, Our Lady Qu n of n els C tholtc urch, f1 h1on how luncheon t Sept. 28 in the • Pacific B llroom at Newport Bcitch Marriott Hotel. R rvations <US each> may be made with-M nlyn Pell , 6.w...4S03. Fastuons from Nord t m. l . • ... Bft D.tt HO : t>a}'"Ot Your Ltfc their mothers and fi m1lics at ·outh Hours re 10:30 a.m. to 5 pm II 1 ickct ore S per pc on. --~ :!/"o_ • ~~---- - BWar Wallertcb. cater. tella llad Tlll..tu, left. an4 Catherine TbJ9D wlaat oadlta are treadJ for tbla fall. Terry Vella and Gall Paoli were de~ted bf •portawear f&UloD parade that followed their condnental branch. Or nge CODI DAILY PILOTl unctay 8lptemblt 1t 186' City of the Arts has· design$ on mall City of the ArU ... that;• Costa Mesa u proclaimed by Ma7or Dou Ball. Hall, attendina ••An Evenina to Remember .. hosted by the Arts Commission of the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commen:eatSouthCoastPlaza'sJewelCourt,also proclaimed ArU Month. "Everybody traveliDJ on the freeway will mow September ia ArU Month in Costa Mesa," said Barbara OradJ,panycbairman. "Banneninthreecolorswith the Arts Month, Performina ArUCenter and SCR Ioaos · are flyina on Bristol and Anton 1treet1 and all over Town Center. It'• thri1lini to see the enthusiasm that bas been aenerated. Next year we'll have banners down Harbor Boulevard... - The bannen were underwritten by Georse Ar&Yro1, Harry Rinker, the Chamber, c. J. Seaentrom and son, Donald Briaham and Partners, Pacific Federal, Westin South Coast Plaza. South Coast Repertory and Southern California Edison. FW1bcrenthusiasmfortheartswasseneratedwhen O..W Emmet and MarUa Beato• were anpounced as winnenofanawardtobeaivenannuallytoapers(>n(or · penons) who bu made ouutandinacontributions in the art1. The two co-founders and artistic directors ofSCR presented the perpetual trophy plus smaller replicu to keep by Art Ktclmu of Rutan and Tucker. (E.F. Hutton sponsored the award). , .. Baker, an·Arts Commissioner preaented awards to winnen in a m_ter contest sponsored by OrlnaeCoUt Col.lqe (Beb cniteier,-1 idvenisina det.ian clau). Lava PudJ received a SSOO South Coast Plazliift certificate for first place; Carol Lueola, second place, S2SO aift certificate, and Karea Metl, a SI 00 SCP certificate. The winnina posters were ' exhibited alona with work done by the Costa Mesa Art Leque memben (the latter will remain at SCP all month.) South Coast Symphony's strina quartet provided music, the tables were loaded with hors d'oeuvres and theeveninaconcluded with thcdebutofexcitinanew fashions desianed by students at Fashion Institute of Delip and Merchandisina.(Jt was at this point that shOppcra stopped sboppinsand moved to the roped off area fora cloter look). A few of the an enthusiasu there were Paal Breclla (be•aflyiq the banners at theorchidprdens), Betty ........... (co-(oundcroITLK Galleries), Allee Ll&ett; Waller LJld,Jadl Ball (Cott prexy), Norma Deruoa, Bite J1•HD,Ed McFarlud,Arleee Sclaafer and Jim a ...... • • • ...I • Fashions by Ralph Lauren, Anne Klein, Yerry Ellis. R.ebeCCa Moses, Jean Marc and Kaiper were paraded by Sab Fifth Avenue, South Coast Plaza, much to the deliabt ofmemben and auesuofSound ofMusic chapter, Oranae County Performina Arts Center. Tb.ii wu the second year BWu Wallerl~ fashion director, had invited the sroup to view a coUection- thia time it featured desiancr sportswear with a bevy of the 1C110n'1 androsyDous looks. Before the show memben held a business session followinaacontinental bfunch. Prnidcnt Sbrl EsaytU welcomed (amonaothen) Jerri Mtraim,SM Per· ....at. WaM==J,Mdellae Blackwell;Catberille n 1-.aan Wllla'lcMepa.Man.nom,..., LiieJR.Mi,Olelili ,OallPaoll,AmJVle1'and CaniJaDeWaW. .............. .., ........... Wearable •art• er.ted by·Fublon Jutltate of Deetp and llerclaaa- dlalDa •tadell.ts ... modeled to the dellCl't of &oath Cout PlUa puty-&oen and ...... pu1 e.r•by. Some of tbe e7e-catc'her• were, elockwUe from left. a bl11e tl•••e paper bloue, a~ Mt for . the cocktall· hoar, a coat bl the latest 1~ and •afarl-ln•plred clothe. for the oat- dOOIWJ male. .. ............................. .... ,... ..... Pat d Ed McFarland and w. em~.Etlche.r eye new •tJlea bJ etudenta. Arleae 8cbafer and Dan Ball ~ 8;rt wuue an .. / . Balley, Sae Cttsp. Patrick Dton and Lacy RJan, teated~ \ ' Team's from Down Under, but are styles a cut above? Cll lllrc .. [ ...._,,--~-------------..-..-----~--_,_,~----~---~..--..--------T"~-...--"P--~-·--~ - Cruise sails f ar f rom the madding crowd Explorer travels where no other For a ood man) ~asoned travelen. the ideal dventure i one that takes them so far from the bc:sten path that they sec no other tounst for week ·on end -expeditions thai encounter culturts completely un- touched by their own. . lmJ)<>ssiblc m this aae of easy access to everywhere? Not at all. In fact, such an adventure can even be luxurious for those with em>ulh time. to make the journey and the price of admission on an expedition ship sailing under the flag of an organization called Society Ex- peditions Cruises Inc. The luJtury cruise ship 1s the Explorer and the jollmcy is en.dless- the Explorer's continuing mission is t to cireumnav1gntc the world, cason an r son, on 1outes tha1 cro , but seldom follow. the esmblished trade Ian. One uf the most unu ·u11l scgmen14- of th1 )'cat' atinemry bcgans at Punta Arenas Chile. m .February, when &>uth America's ummer sun till ride h1i.b in the sky. The Explore1 arrives there after more than a month of cruising along the nm of Antar~- tka. · . . A smaU ifoup of travelers - perhap' a huhdrcd -will meet the Explorer at Punta Arenas for a two- weck cruise north along Chile's west coast. The ships siz allO\lr\ the expedition to travel through the coast.al archipelago where no other ex'pcdition pro~m ventures. This wildly beautiful region has been described by travel writers as having ..... more mountains than the Alps, more glaciers than Alaska and more fjords than Norway, Sweden aod Deomark combined." The Explorer pulls into Plleno 'Montton the t2~hdayofth~Jeisurely, probina cru1&e nonhward There's another exchanac of passcrlJers here -som heading home, others)oinina \he hip as it continues the Joumey through what SQciety ExJ)Od1tions calls 1he "lost hland oft he Pacific". These arc i lands lost to time. The ship follows in the wakes of Darwm and Heyerdahl, and !he name~ ar~ familiar even to those who s-cldom stray far f10m home: b- inson Crusoe Island, the Selka s, Easter island, Pitcairn, Papttte. Tonga, FiJi and, finally to Pllpua New Guinea. . The Explorer carries a fleet of inflatable Zodiacs, those versatile, stable boats popularized by Jacqu~s Cousteau's television series. With this equipment, passengers \'isit places ordinary tourists never see -beacl)es, villages.. uninhabited ·islands so remote that the only remmder of another world is the occasional contrail streak inscribed across the sky by a Jethner. · Harboring angGr self-destructing In the final analysis, the.silence and dtstance are a major part of the experience·. On the-voyage of the ~xplorer, the traveler can become attuned once again to the sounds of nature and to the voices of culturcs- c.ultures regulated by the ancient rhythtn of the tides rather ·than the metronome of cwilization. I Myaterloua atatuea viewed on Eaater Island, a lost laland of the Paclflc. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I ama man who was married 23 years. Recently 1 . . filed fordivortc. It wasn'teasy, butld1dll because I had to. I am not going to try to make a case for myself. I will simply enclose the . following statement ~e~ I ran across tt, it changed my way of thinking. Forthe first time since I filed, I no longer feel ••••••••••••• anger toward my wife and her family. . •• lDDEIS DEAR READERS: We have had who make it complicated. All these many request• over the yean for weird conven~ions and strange t hose bands we cOlltkler to be our plays. Why, if they'd simply learn to . favorites. That makes quite a list. take their tricks, they would be rar For the time being, therefore, we . better oCf. CHARLES .GOREN OMAR SHARIFF I hope you will print th~.s~tement for all l;he people who find them~lvcs prisoners of anger. Perhaps it will bele them as 1t hel.P¢d me. The author 1s FrederickBuechner.lam-AN.ANONYMOUSREADERINMICHIGAN DEAR READER: Tba.nka for lhariD& a remarkably luipdul eaaay. are d!votlng the Sunday column to "Only the other day I played in a • eeriee of famous hud1. At the end six diamond contract on this hand, of the series we will 10 b~ck to · It was in a rubber bridge game. AU our weekly question and answer my winnings go to a very poor (ami • column. • ly o( which I happen to be the head! religion to go down in makable con· "My denigrators accuse me of Bueclmer 11 a pbllosopber of no 1mall dlmeia.ton. H lait messqe were beeded by one and all, this would be a beaUbier ud happier 1'0rld. Here it la: North·South vulnerable. South "N.Qw you must agree that six tracts. Besides, my Rabbi has a rule: being lucky; some were impertinent deats. diamonds is an excellent contract. If 'When Lhe )ting is singleton, play enough to suggest I must have Of tbe Seven Deadly Sina, anger la poaalbly tbe most fu. NORTH 1 were addicted to finesses, I would the ace!' Ir ever there was a time to peeked, but that's not really fair. If +AK s.-have been defeated. I would have apply the rule, this was it. trumps were 3-2, my line of play To lick your wounds, to smack your Ups over grlevuces long past, To roll over your tongue &he prospect of bitter contronlation to eome- To savor tlae last toodllome monel of botb tbe pal.D you are giving and tbe ___ 'V 4 2 won the opening lead, crossed to "I won _the. opening lead in hand would always. succeed. Because of O Q.j_32 dummy and taken the trump and immediately launched myself the missing "trump spots, if trumps pain you are getting back, . In many ways It ia a feast flt for a king. • AK Q finesse. As the cards lie, that would into the fray. When the king drop· were 4-1, all lines were due to fail EAST .have meant the loss of a second ped. it was a simple matter to draw excep~ in the event that his majesty The cbief drawback la tbat what you are wolllog down la youraeU. Tbe skeleton at tbe feast la oa. ----..--... DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am writing in reference to "Honey," the woman who objected to service people calling her Sweetie, Doll, etc. · wGJk.ata r~rthotclinthe Catskill Mountains. Over the years I have been a waiter, bus driver and luggage handler. I have been called Boy~ Man. Son, Buddy, Pal, Jack, Jake, Boss, Red. Lefty, Hey You and several other ·names not suitable for print. I separate these names into three categories-some I dislike, some don't maner one way orthe other, and others are amusing. But this I know: In a society where people must communicate, and there are very few name tags around, we must get the attention of tho~ we are serving ~or t~ose who are serving us) by calling that person so~et~~g. lf the name as neithe.r crude ~or disrespectful, no one should resent 1t. Life ts too short to get exercised abdut things of such littlec.onsequence. -MY GIRL CALLS ME DREAMBOAT DEAR BOAT: Wish I bad nld tbat. TbaDb for a solid and sensible response. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: The letter from that lowdown skunk who called hts illegitimate grandchild a bastard prompts this letter. Afterseveralyearsofrcbellion. our daughter came ho.me pregnant by a married man. Believe me, I know the heartache and suffenn~a parent can go through when such a thing happens. I have been there and it ts pure hell. We_JQpk our daughter in and she had the baby. Her attitude changed · completel5' when the child was born. Now our relationship is wonderful. We have our daughter back and a beautiful grandchild, also. Maybe~ ebster terms him a "bastard." but to us he is a blessing. He has enhan~ our h ves more than wordsca.n express. -GRANDMA. ANYWHERE, U.S.A. DEAR GRANDMA: Tbukl for an eloq1eot testimony. "Grandpa'' 1ound1 like a world-du• beel. IFYotJCAN WEST 'V 1085 ¢ 10987 . +J732 SOUTH +Q63 'V A K6 0 AJ65 • 986 Tlfo bidding: South West North Eut 1 0 Pass 2 + Pus 3 + Pus 4 + Paa1 4 'V Pau 4 NT Pass 5 'V Pass 5 NT Pa11 6 O Pass PaH Pasa Opening lead: Queen of 'V. He looked like any other Ace o( Diamonds. except for one slight oddity -a small black skuJJcap was pefched atop his head. "f am an Orthodox Jew," he explained. "Bridge is really a simple game," he pontificated. "It.'s the players A BETIER CRUISE 1T A . PRICE, 0 BoNVOYAGE! ' You won· t find anything better than what Sitmar offers. Our new, Liberian· registered fleet, including the btand- new $150.000,000 Fairsky. Wann- Italian ha;pitality. Spacious cabins. Swnptuous dining. And sparkling entertainment. And with our 1985 Super Saver prices, which include free air fare, you won't find a better cruise value either. $lQOOOFF THE PANAMA CANAL On our 12-day cruises January 24 to May 24. Save from $500 to $1000 per couple. That's up to $5600 less than Princess' 14-day cruises. Up to $3500 less than their 11-day cruises. $i00 OFF MEXICO On our 10 & 11-day cruises January 26 to May 22. Save from $400 to $700 ~ .. -... per couple. You end up paying about the same for a Sitmar 10-day cruise (roundtrip from Los Angeles) as you -weuld for 7 day:s-<>n et:her--eruise-lines. $5()()QfF THE CARIBBEAN On our 10 & 11-day...cruises January 26 to June 1. Save from $20~ to $500 per couple. Plus, our new 11-day itinerary includes Cozumel.and a day exploring the Panama Canal. Sold exclusively by travel agents. Book by December 31, 1984. :->-Star r.it tnK: Fiddm*'s \.Vorklwide Guide to Cnust.-s SITMAR SUPER SAVERS • rump rrlf111frdm~-one:-~~-~twitTTI'lOT"e-T10ttrtds-oftt'ttm11)-1t-ftd--thim-~rhe-k<Hijl~r&$--UJ\pi:~~~-'-..VULS-t--t ·•However. it is against nry ruff my heart loser on the board. Getting a grip on l ost luggage When they talk about space travel, the good news is that sometime in this century, people wiJJ be able to travel on a shuttle to the moon. The bad news is their luggage will · end up on Mars. Wherever travelers gather, the sub- ject eventually gets aro~nd to lost , luggage. They arc not preny stories. Like the Olympic cyclist medal winner whose bicycle did not make it home with him ... not to mention his medals. Or the cardinal who flew on a commuter plane ·from Chicago to Dubuque, Iowa, and watched the luggage holding his vestments being unloaded in Galena. And you don't want to know what happened to poor Roselyn Gordon of Ft. Lauderdale.Fla. E111 Bo11EcK Earlier this year, Ro~yn went to Pittsburgh for the weddmg of her grandson. It was a shame the wedding wasn't held in Canada. because that's where her luggage went. The agent told her if she did not receive her luggage in 24 hours, she would receive S35 for .. new under- wear." The lugga§e did not arrive and "new underwear' was the least of her GREATLY REDUCED CLEA.BANCE SA.LE! ART POSTERS, NHAM EXHIBITION CATALOGUES, ASSORTED ART BOOKS. PHOTOGRAPHY BOOKS, GIFT ITEMS, CARDS OPEN TO PUBLIC TUESDAY, SEPT.18TH THROUGH \VEDNESDAY,OCT. 3RD l l :00 AM TO 5 PM NEWPoRT HARBOR Al l MUSEUM 850 SAN CLEMENTE DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH, CA 92660 (714) 759-1122 worries. All she had to wear to the wedding were the slack suit and sneakers she had traveled in. The family tried to come to the rescue. But I the mother of the bride was too sbon and too thio. Finally, they found something to fit ... a blue matemity dress. They washed out the spots and dried them with a hair dryer and Roselyn marched down the aisle I between her two grandsons wearing a maternity dress and a pair of gold bedroom slippers. End of the story? Grow up. As they 1 were eating dinner the waitress spilled salad all over the JOld bedroom ., sliP.pcrs and the next time around she 1 spilled champagne down the ~a temity dress. lt was probably nothmg • personal ... just an opinion. ~Y husband is in the pr~ss .of fillinJ out a two-page questtonnatte on hls lUW,lge that sat io ~la~ for. a month while ~llorung in New Guinea. They want every item in the suitcase listed along with when it was purchased, where purchased and the original cost The clothes could 10 out of style before he gets all the questions answered. There is no place on the form for the clothes be had to buy in Pon Moresby where they stock clothes for men S-4 or under (he's 5-11 ). Or how he had to endure smart remarks like, .. Are you on your way to a Oood?'' I find myself empathWna more and more with the noo-En&ligb;. speakina Yugoslavian woman f saw who boarded an airplane in LOs Angeles wearing two wias and three fur coats. . The woman obviously spoke fluent airlines. .. , • Laurel learns Trent's her brothel! on . . t YLYNDAHI ALL Y ClllLD ': l.eammgJoanna in dam'1 plane before t t(IO off, R. bcliev e may have been respon. sible for h11 crash Adam presumed dead. When Hilary tells Tad they're throu,h he · ~to marry the P.fCIJl•nt Dome. Grq conrronts Tony abOut causioa Jenny's death and the duo liaht on the rooftop Whm rony spots I &1rl he thtnkl 11 Jenny he falls over cdae uf roorand d1es.1'h1nks to Joanna, Palme1 learns Ross has an ex· wtfe Cynthia and a son AndteW. Palmer hires a private detective to find them At Chuck heads ror Ken tu ')',he and Donna have ic&rf'ut &Oodbye. Phoebe admits to Hilafy she sflll lovcs LanaJcy. Lanaley, erroneously thmkina Phoebe 1nu6bed ltlm for Horace, turns his back on Phoebe. Uza dcVJSCS devious plan to Kparttc 01ff and Nina.. Zack becomes clQser to Nana. Followtft& htt brukup wt th "fom, Donna mums to her friendlhip with Zad. ANOTllEI\ WORLD: Sally IJVCn h~ none $Ul&'CStion to shoot Catlin next ttmc they meet. Grant scerninaly acttj?J! Lily"• ~itute past. CA s cerwn Cecile's been 1n his apartment but Fehcia thinks 1t may be Cecilo'i pMt. Blaine ahockrd when she~ finds papen indicatina Sandy pthem! evidence against Cory Corp. Mac heads for London to tr}' to stop his bu5incss woes. Mark and Ahce realize they love one another. Larry and MJ. beainn1n1 to believe Sally not responsible for her strange behavior. M:J. teams hypnotist from univmitv is not man who's been tiypnotlZlOJ Uy. Myl\CnOU ttinact rel Callin from Donna's wine ect!ar. Later Perry olans rendu.vou, for Catlin and Jy. Sponana Ca1hn II~ turns round and fim &un mtte umcs AS THE WOIUJ> TURN · Ldmm& Betsy's true adcnuty\ RIW lytna,l)' tell het 'hc'1 wanted by police so they mus1 halt the rch for her baby. Under bypno ts, tcvc ttealls a man tryina to •ttaQl!c him Ind then Steve reachin& for obJcct and h1ttana him on head Cra11 findi cassette tevc made whtlc under hypnosis and malls cassette to Bnan. Run intercept call ftom Steve to Btts)'. Marcy m1s- tntcrprct.1 Kirk's fncndsb1p for romanltc fccli~ on his pan. Learri1na his $Cntcnce tW titn reinstated, au pulls .aun on Maapc and forcca bcr to So with him to SL Lou11 •'here a man bu altbi for Cat Oun oar talkJ Dustm out of runn1og away. CAPITOL: Myrna biainnin& to behevc Scotty i1 Kelly and Trey's c.bald Brenda plaaued by niabunarcs following attack at Lake Matblebcad. l.ed happy when he sets call from "frogman" who say1 he has tbc diamond and wants to deal. Sloane hun when he learns Thomas ha,) befriended Kelly. l.ed admits to Tyler that tic ~id Kell)'s'ba1l but won't say why. Ricky notice nng on Quinn's finger is the ume ring Brenda's attacker wore. DAYS OF OUR LJVU: Contmu1n1 to be blackmailed by MU. Neil uses Diane's baby to pass off as Bo and Mq.an's child. Madame X orders AJcx to buy atnpjoint called Beefcakes. Madame X then infonns Pete she's bis new bou. Gwen aivcs Larry to open doll house BURBANK(AP)-Jane Withers., around." she said. ''So. my !Dother RWNCHMll ---- THE PORT THEATRE 673-6260 Mo• .. 11., Al' 5•alo 7 00 the child star who became Josephine, and I w_rapped each 0!1e.1ndlVld.ually, u Ta. .... , .... _ If ..... ""11 ,.1.,.,.,, the ladf plumber of television com-but I said to my dolls. k s OK. kids. ... , " ,., ,.,. ..., u1 • "" .. mercia fame, is gcttina ready to One day, we'll take YC?U .~ut for the display her collection of more than whole world t n. 8,000 dolls in a studio where she also WHEN tN SOUTt4ERN CAL1fOAMA VISIT liir-"'~~~ llTUOI09 T°'-"' plans to make family films. With the collaboration of Chuck Rice,,Withers is building the 6tudio next to Rice's ColorHousc film processing finn in Burbank. It will cost nearfY S 1 million, including the land, and will also feature a run for stray dogs and cats she picks up until . she can find them permanent homes. -----:----w.··· t:hh.eP1rs-. ~sx.s,-stanet! ift-dozeM-of- Pteuared Elliott Gould play• an o•er- bmdened doctor lD a h•pl- tal emer&eDC)' room OD the pre'riew epl90de of .. E/R .. tontaht at 8 OD CBS, Cban- Q~l 2. . •• ..... """"'.,_,. ... _. .. ~·=· ~ ... ctSTllUI STADIUM OR It UA SOUTH COAST 639-1170 ~94 ma ElTllt UA MOYIS 4 lDW~ SMaUIACI\ '90-4021 SI I 5l80 ..... .. UA MOYIS I lDWAllOS WOOOUIJCC tsl-4993 551-Gm CISTllUI -f.DWAllDS (;l(MA ,._ ORMCE Ml coou 979-4141 '37-Gl40 IU1WISTO • UA WlSTMllSTO tw.l 193"-0S46 films and radio shows as a child. By 1947, she had collected 3,500 dolls, many of which were displayed during World War II in a two-year travelina show that raised $2.S million in 10- ccnt war stamp admissions. But wherl' she married Texas rancher and oilman Bill Moss, ''He didn't want to see a1J these dolls •WDTMlfU'TU ~ anom.w.t 881·303S WDTMICS'TM l'lclflc .• Hl·'MIY 38 OrM-ln 91·38113 •~rm .. ._ ( NO~ MXIPT1D "°" l'4S OCM:DllJfT J .,. IUCTICTOlt IUCM 843--0388 .-.ell IUCH 644-0760 EDWAltDS llMMlTON EDWARDS 1€WPOO ~ A1Wim a799850 PJUC .uwlJl DI.ft .a SZ!-5339 MAAN 8AEA PlAZA lllM ,. 952-4993 I.IA Wt'IS I n Tmo ~1saao lOWAltDS SAfn.EBACK GENE WIWER'S , VICTOR ORAi -·-VICTOl ORAi W!Ttt\l:. ._ OlllOft ,_;fUfWS IVlll 8S4 Ull mAlll 634-2553 COWARDS IJM:_.RSl..._lr_Y ___ CK_DOME _____ _ LA HM1A (213) 69 l 0633 SMITl Ml 540-7444 NI( fA.SttON SQUARE EDWARDS BRSSTOl LA lllADA 523-1611 mtmS1D 891·3935 SRO GATEWAY 5 EDWARDS CNMA WEST 11SS101t VI.JO &30-6991 ET19111D 191-3693 EDWARDS VUl TWlf PACIF't llWAY 39 OR ft NOW SHOWING llSSQVl.JO lOWAllOS YU> 1Wt4 83().6991 S D fWI TO I.HAI -..caTIOCM EDWARDS NEW9'0R1 644-0760 .. ~coon ''Many layered and funny, Alan Rudolph's 'Choose~· 1s an LA. fl~r. a neon orch1d- h1p, outra~ous, ~aut1tul •· lA __ _ " •ChooSc IM' 1s marwtous ' entertainment Amazing!" llUN.9~-°'""" Qf..o,c4LHt a a serious comedy Ge~ Keith LesJev Ann Bujold Carradine · Warren Sat./Sun. 1:20, 3:00, 5:45, 8:00. 10.00 EXCLUSlVE ENGAGDEfT edwards TOWN CENTER "'I "' '~ •• "751 4184 .. If M ..-·I l ., • COSTA ME SA Mon.·lhurs 6·00. 8:00, 10:00 BO DEREK An Adventure in&stasy · ---couxxr--· · I •11111a11Utm••-PCJW1.) CAllOl IUUlOfS IN _ • • -1111.t • mr& _ . &MIO GIOVE Sl0-4401 Edwwds Westbrook OlAllli( 634 39 ll SMTA MA 540.7444 Edward.$ Brisl'ol f(Qflg YAW1 9631307 •Dolby Stereo MUUlllNlll STADIUM OfM._,. UOAPABl21-4111 Blf.NA PARK Ott.fl C8$Tl as& tTM141 EDWARDS CIDA curu.R SEE 'GREMLINS' AGAIN BEFORE IDU IDT 111E~! ___ ,..... ·-~--""' . ..-...... ----- lWlllS ·--··· cma IUA 151-4114 EDWARDS/~ EJ)WAROS TO\tm C£HTE.R I.A~ HUS IMLl • Hiil• tlll.11t tu-1311 llSml .. 4tS.ait fAMLY fWl . EDWAROS ~ VlJO MAl1 -15"111 oaNtGE 634-2553 EDWARDS \JIVERSITY mn cm C01tl lUXU.V THfAntfS , .. ,_ .......... Oily ll.15 u .. ....,. DRIVE-INS :t:: ,_OD l.OW• OXl'OaD.._.... ,.a.ta At 1!10 3 :U 5: 1S 7:30 A t:3S 11£.D DA-(Nt-12) Sllowsat 12:30 l :OO 5 :30 1:00 .. 10:30 alll Murr11 Oan A1luo1t1 ~"'8J Sltowt at 12121 2 :40 4 :55 7:2S 1:10/70 MM STADIUm a PU•~IUU .. (IQ ·~ .. "::~ -~~CJ ~ AT 12:45 l :OS SMWS at U :OO 2:30 TM l..att Starf1-tlt•r(PQ) 5·2~0~0~5 S :OO 7 rl0 .. 10100 • IN 70 MM Ei tU?aJl3;i 2U\4A~':H =.,... ) ·:.::~!!~·';:, VOLCAllO (IQ At 7:20 Conan 1'11o DIU!AMSC•N pia.1a "'9DUl T.. I . .._.__ CN> 3 , to 12:30 2 :4S S:OO o .. tro1or ("°)at 1'1111 Co-Hit Conan 7 :1S 6 t :lO t 10S 5 :1S I. t t25 Tllo Oot1'01W CPO) ORlvt lld aiWr• UMlt U FllU Ullla .... IQ.-I• *vi 1 • ..... a* . "MMllM M llD" (K. U) u~ 1 u• 'r.. us 1~10 "CIDlllS"' (fC) •• ~ ~ l '"ml TIO a. TIE SUICI ,. SPtCI" '"' l 1.51 "If]) DA_. (PC-U) 12 30, 3 00. 5 30. 8 00 1030 WARNER tiL: :.l.L lJ._..._ .r.I - s • 'Kismet,' 'Sligar,' 'Eileen' open this week Tv.o mus1 I!. in n lemcnte - one postPQned from I t week: -nd a comed) revival in Costa Mesa compose the w«k' newcomel'S on 1he Orange Coast theatrical scene. .. lo• TITUS Bo Derek: 'Bolero' pays b.ills HOLLYWOOD (AP) -John and Bo Derck aay their-new film, "Bolero," ma) be a "sill) bit offlufT ... but it helps pay for their J.2-acre Santa Barbara ranch. . "Oh, if the day ever comes when I can raise money without Bo. then maybe I'll make a different sort of film. But nght now, what we're doing is helpinf pay for the ranch which we love," said Derek. 58, who wrote and ditteted "Bolero" with his wife as star and produocr. The Cannon Pictures film was released without a rating. presumably because extensive nudity and sex scenes wouJd have earned it an X It grossed more than $4 million dollars during its four-day Labor Da) weekend debut. but cnucs scored 1t as ooring and s1Uy. "The critics don't worry us,·· Derck said. "But why do they feel the need to attack us? This film i~n 't meant to be taken seriously ... "The film is meant to be corny," Derck, 27, said. "And, hsten, it's so innocent If Hugh Hefner went to see it he'd be bored to tears." Sharing an opening ntghl a tew m1le:i. apart Thursday will be "Kismet" at Scoostian's Wtst Dinner Pla)housc and "Supr" at the San Clemente Community Theater. The latter show was delayed a week because of illness m the cast. I lso 1oing on the boards Thursday 1s "My Si ter Eileen,'' a reprise of n earlier production m the Costa Mes:i Civic Playhouse. Meanwhile. final performances of· the loni-rvnnina musical "The Best Little Whorehou ~ in Texas" will be given at the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse. Mtlhcent Rene 1s d1rect1ng "Kismet" with Jay Bradle)' as m u'it· cal director and Denise Dales choreo- graphing the show. Peter· Quesada and Celeste Tavera headline the cast. Others in the com pan) are Richard Kleber. Lynn Dove, Dale Tracy, Mark Rydzynski, Lee Waddell, James Randall, Tracey O'Connell. Margaret Swayne. Lorie Hope. Corey Elias. Meta-Kate Hellman. Susan Skadron. Kim Ulrich, Collette W1g- art, Lisa Hellfntsch, Eric Leviton, John Rinaldi, Michael Malone, David Hubbard, 8111 Carteal and Kevin Wiley. "Kismet" runs throu&h Nov. 4 with performances Thursdays through Saturdays at 8 and Sundays at I and 7 at ~bastian's, 140 Ave. Pico. San Clemente. Reservations 492-9950. Opening Thurs.day after a week'~ delay is "Sugar," the musical comedy adapted from the mov1e ''Some Like It Hot." at the San Clemente Com- munity Theater. Omo PaJazzt. Christopher ~apulo and Dino ACAOSS ., 80 Library patron 160 Hall Latin 34 Poon tree 83 Pours down 161 Gloay fabric 36 L16tene<'s "loan' 1 Domesticates 86 Spread f()( drying 163 'Yankees" 37 Ph11tpp1ne native 8 Mine car 87 Aooelerate. 2 wds 166 Jump bunny-style 39 Purposive 10 Drives Into 89 Over there: poet. 167 -Oeum 42 Terminated 14 04ymplc events 90 Chemls1's habitat 168 Suitable 44 Exact likeness 19 Still 92 Embarrassing 169 Lengthy 46 Gloomy 20 Dedalm Wiidiy blunderS 171 Small amount 48 Route 21 School test 94 American general 172 Rocky hill 50 Discourage 22 Fr~tens 96 Wandered ott 174 From· Lat 51 8r8Zllian parrot 24 Ledger entry: abbr 99 Knowledge 175 Take a nap 53 Pronoun 25 Gift for Dad 100 Sifted 1n French lady friend 55 Lease holders 2e Matured 104 U-boat 178 Cuchulain's wife 57 Ear comb. form 27 Bleck: comb. form 105 Storm center 179 Overjoys 58 French cathedral 28 Confused noise 107 Caress 18 1 Unpleasant smle City 29 Neuter pronoun 111 Winghke part 182 Ribbed fabrics 59 Jog 30 Knc:Jd( sharply 112 Musical show 183 Cozy rooms 60 Go by bus 32 Bold outlaw 114 Threw 184 Leases 61 Yes· Sp 35 Care for medically 116 8ectric Ufllt 63 Bushy clump 37 Sudsy brew 117 Performed DOWN 65 Yet 38 Mine entranoe 118 Gulf aoores 1'1. 66 Swinging barrier 40 Scoop out 120 Hindu grant 1 Violent speech 67 Always 41 Playground Item 122 Uncooked 2 Indian mulberry 68 Communists 43 Street surface 123 Hindu mantra 3 Encountered 71 Oelertllke 44 Attlole 125 Ancient string 4 Oklahoma City 73 Scold 45 Allots instrument 5 Spirited horse 75 Seize 47 Church seat 126 Ore refiner 6 Game taker 78 More adOfable 49 Thin 129 Perch 7 Great anger 79 Suppose 51 Accumulate 131 Cheerful 8 Affirms 81 Goddess of dawn 52 Flee: slang 133 Body part 9 Awards fOr valor 82 Beam of light 54 Pied Piper follower 136 Cry of discovery 1 O Reconstructs 84 Lariat loop 58 Senk>r 137 French legislature 11 Chopping tool 85 Cl8SS1fles 57 Anglo-Saxon coin 139 Totem pole 12 Beer ingredient 88 American poet 58 Long steps 141 Bat1< 13 Mote Intelligent 91 Honeycomb 62 N4Mwthetess 142 Push 14 Plane spotter substance 84 Harden 145 Enigmas 15 Dismounted 93 P In MPH 85 Totter 147 Fem1n1ne title. 16 Tlmx>ntalner 95 Cut In two 69 NorM explorer abbr 17 Judah's son 97 Wheel groove 10 CyprlOOld fish 149 Frenchman's cap 18 Pleasing 98 Col0f1ng agent 72 Head: slang 153 Peel expressions 100 Exhausts 7 4 Fender mishap 154 Garment edge 19 Leave In a hurry 101 Chowder base 78 Roof edge 155 Slumber 23 Plant stalks 102 Uncommon n Siient greeting 157 Mimic 31 Fruit Mild 103 Press for payment 78 Cobalt symbol 159 Poetess Teasdale 33 Drink alowfy 106 Taro root 2 3, • ~ .c-;- SIS ANSWERS IN CLASSll'llD . . -· 108 Timber tree 109 Flying toy 110 Par~se 113 Soothed 115 Droop 119 WOfk hard 121 Behaves 124 Anatolian goddess 125 Gallops easily 127 Definite article 128 Digraph 130 King's taxes 132 Sweet potato 134 Close to 135 Bob bait f()( fish 137 Ahke 13&Abound 140 Bul1ets 142 Petty disputes 143 Ports 144 lode load 145 Soak flax 146 Appeared 148 Health resort 150 College cMer 151 WeMS away 152 Records on ribbon 154 Detester 156 FOfemost 158 Go In 161 Dimension 162 Alaska city 164 Bolivian Indian 165 Shoe bottom 168 Enemy 170 Pinch 173 Raced 176 FOfW8rd 180 Teletype: abbr • BARGAIN MATINEES AT MOST THEATRES SEE DIRECTORY BEL: W FOR PRICES • HlWPORT BUCH • • SO. COAST PLAZA • TOMt CCNTCll u1.,.,..,. ....... 7S1·4114 toiiii C[NTCI "ll ••• It ••1 hW ...... •ID" (N.U) t1 -USO.H0.•15 US &10 m 4114 lOIO $1.5011 00 '°"" chttR ....... (PC} U '"' .._ SHO 11.111. UO I~ .. ,,_ ·~ ......, IAlllAI" m 4114 JOI l.'.n US 10 ~ (l'C) TOWN C£NT£R txtlUSllt £~111111 U ••• ..... •a IGl..-s SIOlr (PC} ,._ lllll.1lO US,Cl900 m 4114 II 00 SUO Ill.JOO SOUlH COAST CO.ff snno ......, '1IClmlllltlS" (P(il ....... I )IL JO ue I.I~ 1010 ~6 1111 Sil.IS. SHI fUOO SOUTH COAST ._.. QO_· <NI •• ..,. Sal I JO 400 110 IOlO $111112 4\ J 00 S It 1~ HO Pll(WW~l&O • IRVIN£ • wcxwm "1T• m r "> ........ ...... $1'10 l 4Q. 640 10~ ! " Ct1•., 11 "UST SlWlllnO" SSl·KSS J10 l24S HO.US <NI woooeRl>Gl •• a11S· (N.IJI ....... ...... u !ii 1'2\ 61\ lt10 [ .c.-... " ~· SSI OW> JOO 11JO 4 n 12!1 IP'J W0008Rl>C£ 'tlOll « IK ............. , --·111 I .. c..,., I J ~ I 9 IU\ SSI 06SS WI Sot! SJ SO 10 00 WOOOBRl>G£ ... ,.,,,, ... , I ol '"'" SSI om W0008Rl>CC ..... ~ ...... I ti,..,,. ~SI 06SS REHlllll ' (I) It~ l 1\ ~I\ 11\ 91' •S..0...,1100 US..,,.,. II JOO .. "' CMOSTIUSltlS' !Kl I IS ) H\ tDO 10 IS S.. SHD IA J lllaAlt .. (f'C) HOt~ -·(PC) I ttO 10.JO • WESTMINSTCR • CKMA MST t.."111.STW ...-•1111111Cft'" (I) W..-.. ,. l lO US US 11). IO•S 191 J'3~ SJ W U HO CM:MA wm ....... .,.. lln-1" $150 I 2!l SIO UO ll'G IJ) """' ... , 14 ·1oonomr «NI 19t.J9n Jou Ho 'so 10 ~ Clll'MA W[SJ 1t1111 • 111. ... .,...... -llOll (I) ""'°" •• • po 1 JO. uo, uo too HI 3'J~ U\ $l SO It UO til MA wm ·. ... .. "' .,, .. -S?\q I IS SIO ta!> c-. ""' • 1' RUllGl(T"' •1 1!11,3S JOO 'S I . .I~ • HU NTINGTON BEACH • IQtTIHGTOfl .. lel! .. -.H IO OJU IMtTIMCTOfl """''-"~ &f.. I 1410lU ._. ...... I l\ ~00 84\ (PC IJ) •ILE ~ ,,, 0 (11.U) • GARD£N GROVE • WES TBllOOll ..,...r111 ••UfllNf .. $1 QO I SO HO 14~ ........ I "Sl«IllA ' (N I S30 4401 JOO H 6l\ 10~ WlSlBROOll IOlOO"' ......... s ·~ ~20 tttl ._,. u flf ...... ~J HOUOl J no 11 • COS TA MESA • HARBOR tWIH &ii• -• Q "(tt-IJ) -14~ ))O ~I\ ll0,900 6313501 100 U~HlOO HAiBOii time -....sc.wl" ,..m -U~ 1~ UCI 10'0 -,. "Nftt ..... (I) ill 3501 JOO lflll. 4 JO. 11' Ml SA •11.u1 ~ IJI •·••' & M I SOD 900 1• Sun 'lllCIMIOOIMll.,., 646 501S S100 SOS 110 II GD CINEMA C fR • WAit ••' ll'CI """" & U)O UO 800 '-' U ._ .• !PSI ,,, 4141 JOO tn ~~ 1020 CH.MA CTR -....orna _, "*'Cl) -I l ~ 1 t lte\ 97,4141 ~S.UWIOCI CINCMA CTR Bat llUllAT -· ... l'!llS"'(PC) .._ 11 It ? 10 • 10 us I 7D. ,19 4141 10-:JO SBOUlOO CKMA CTR ....... ' . Lunch & Dinner, Sunday-Thursday , • H TORO • SA.OOUIACl '1Wll _. (ll lD •••" $150 CIO II' 111 ... " ,. MC#(" !ill ~ll ) 00 lJO •I~ 10.n 4" U> SAOlltCBACk Clf._ U l•ttl ... "(I) l 1 .. " I. l ~ I t 10 0 » 1 ~no s.us-u ~ 1., oo SAOOUBACK $.?jO l~C\ 4 ~ ".... ,. ., ~ • I•• •• ~· ~ 300 14~ • ·~ 1• SA00t.£8ACK St t., ,. t• , •• ., m ao SAOOUBACK so'•• .. U 1•1 a. ~lUIO JI ,. a1 IQA.\' "910S1MIUI' (PG) ttt no so. uo. 1010 Sii/Soii l ~ U I 09 0."1 WTllOOD •'*'10(" Cl) I Jl HO •OO. 1r.i 10~ SatJSM U 50 10 00 "IMA!t ... tpS) SlSO l 'O 110 , ........ (l'G) !00 llO 6~ 10~ • SANTA ANA • BRISTOi. ....,.. ....... ~07444 BIUSlOl ...... 111o.-. .... ~0 74U BAIStOl ...... .......... ~o 7«4 ..... iHo 1 ia us.• ,. ·~ca1 Jllll JlO I\\ 10~ ''IMA!t ae• (l'C) USO 10 100 U -USl SlWICIMTD" l~· I~ I~ JO?O I'S) rder·one orthese delicious encrees, and we'll serve it with our famous traditional flavor margarita. So come, treat yourself to a Margarita 9mner and enjoy 12 ounces of Mexico's favorite beverage. A) Chicken Picado $6.75 Breast of chicken sauthd with onions, bell peppers and tomatoes • (well spiced, but not hot). Served with tortillas. rice and beans. B) BeefTostada Compuesta and Beef Burrito $5.95 A crisp corn tortilla l9Jlptd wJth beans. beef. lettuce. tomato and guacamole. served with a beef burrito and rice. • C) Taco and Enehllada Combination $5.25 Our most popular combination, Your choice of. chk'ken or beef taco with a deli iou ch esc rnchdada. Served whh riCe and btan~ . ALAR • , • Off and running RUDDen betln the race to the flDlah Saturday tn the lelllon 2A eTent ~t the Woodbrl~e In'ritational crou '"Bruins-hold-o Long Beach State extends UCLA before ·bowing in fading moments at Rose BoWf BJ ROGER CARLSON Of .. Dlllr ........ PASADENA -UCLA's Bruins have built a reputation over the past two years here in their home at the Rose BOwl as a fourth.quarter team, but it didn't show Saturday a they beldon to~tan unim~ive 2).;l 7 non-coDference footba.U victory over Lona Beach State before 40, 132. Maybe it was supposed to be too easy. Maybe it was because you know who (Nebrask.i) is scheduled to be here in six days. Maybe it's because .. . well, even UCLA Coach Terry Donahue was shak.inJ his head a little in disbelief following bis team's second near-mi5$ ap.tnst competi- tion suppolCdly not up to 11tufT. . "Our team found a way to win lnd that's important;" said Donahue, ..and we're gettina ready to play the No. I team in the country (Nebraska). "Our team hasn't found itself, Titans teach Idaho a few-things in win Fullerton's opener at home a success In 28-7 triumph By CHRIS MONAHAN CMllr .... C." J I ' flt Cal State Fullerton is recognized as one of Oranae County's premier institutions of higher learning, ~ pecially in the area of football. On Saturday, the Titan players spent time teaminaas well as teachina in their 28-7 victory over visiting Universityofldaho before S,650 fans at the Santa Ana Bowl. comer of the end zone. The Titans had a chance to put some points on the scoreboard Just before the end of the first half, takinl possession on their own 15 with 1: l to play. Allen completed fiv~ of eiaht passes to give the Titans first~and goal at the Vandal one. On thiro down from the one, running beck Van Campfield was tackled at the four and the Titans, out oftimcouts, couldn't get the field &oal team on the field before time ran out in the half. . 'Jfitan Coach Gene Murphy said the team's first half performance was a cue oflettina down following the two road victories. •After the two wins, there was some complacency coming home and wearing the orange jerseys," Murphy commented. "We also may hove been a little overconfident." • • I country' meet. lrYlne ~·· Traq W~t {uUtet) waa the winner of the atrta• 2A ft.nlty nezat. tOr detalla, eee C2. we're struglina. But, there's ho~ ... The Bruins cashed in with a touchdown with the help of Craia Rutlcdie's 33-yard ~turn with an interception to the 49ers' 2-yard line in the first quarter, added three John Lee field goals (two were set up by a fumble recovery by Mark Walen and an interception by Herb Welch) and. yes, the Bruins did manage an 80..yard march for a touchdown at the outset of the third period. "We didn't want to JO bick out there i.&t halftime umjd." said Donahue. "You can do that if you play not to Jose and we did not want to tip-toe over ea shells." The Bruins. however. never could really put the 49en away as quar- terback Doug Gaynor, a 6-2. 213- pound junior. drilled the Bruins' secondary for 3 t 2 yards with 28 completions in 44 attempts. Those completions included a 6- yard scoring strike to Glenn Withers- poon, a 160-pound freshman who added a 4-yard TD run in the second half. Coach Mike Sheppard's Long Beach State squad still bad a shot at a ~or uptet in the fading momeDts; but Gaynor's fourth-down pass was intercepted 1>r James Washington to seal the verdict, leaving UCLA 2-0. CdM,Unlver81~ 81110ftl top t•m• •t Woodbridge m•t.C2.. Reggie move ·a Step closer tomagic500 Ange s rip Seaver, White Sox, 11-2, to remain close By BlatAaD DUNN Dlllllr .... C..1 ' .... Always one for the dramatics. Regje JaCbon picUd on an old nemesis to climb one step doserto htS maaical SOO home run milestone. AftergoirigO-for-f l prcvaoustythis apinst Cbicqo hw1er Tom Scava-, he picked quite a spot for bis first hit off the probable future Hall of Farner. Jackson lua.cd a two.run, fourtb- in.oi!'ll bomcr,lhe 4'99th of hU career, to lead the Anscls to an 11-2 victory over Seaver and the White Sox Saturday. Anaheim Stadium rocked for the tee0nd suai&ht pmc when Regje aced off on a Seaver offering. deposit-ina it deep over the ria.bl-«ntcr field wall. A ~ocal aowd of 31,SSS roand its approval as Jackson went deep for the second straiaht game. What the victory did was help the Anaels keep pace with co-,Je.aders Kansas City and Minnesota, who eaCh secured wins OD the road later Saturday. "Now it seems we have five ex $ix guys puttina it all tasether at the same tune. instead of bavi~ just one SUY hot." Bobby Grieb said. "The fact that Reggie's ootjns for SOO. it seems eve~body here is acnina excited for him." Jackson's homer couldn't have come at a more oppanune time !or \be Anaels. lt set the tone for the dub; coming in the fourth innin& widl 06ua DeCincn aboard on first U4 ~ ... AROSL8/C2) ~17triumph the 49en 0-2 against Pac-l 0 compet.i-uon. Gaynor was looking fot bis favoriic receiver-split end Cbarl~ Lockett, who bad already cauabt a dozen of bis offerings for l 89 yards. .. I toed to bold on u long as possible for Charles." said Gal°°r. "because be hits the open .area: But the Bruins' ru h. the only effective defensive tool against Ga•1nor. proved equal to the task. the 49cis pve the BrWos too many easy· ~uu.s. but~ shruged ofl'h1s team's tutoO\'CB and callcdtheturninJpoint .. when we bad fourth and J J and didn't &el it." aluding to the 49cn. last11$1) paa. LA:e K..DO'Wks, a product 1of Marina Hiab in Hunungion Beach and the Bruins' defensive captain at inside linebacker. admitted it 't a textbook eft'on. but tbctt were ex• 1tnuating circumsaoocs. •we've tried to cep thir,p in perspective,.. id KAo"''lcs abOut the Bruins' schedule. which found San Diego State and long Beach Sta~ prccedi,na NCbraskA. .. But Cbrasta I &fwa}S ID )'OU.r mind: ~ -we·re tetti~--nenroii. and having problems wuh Lons (Ple&M eee t7CLAJC4J OCC drops Victory Bell . Bucs drop ball,.too, and Golden West capitalizes, 21-3 ByCURTSEEDEN Of ... °""" ........ Ora.nae ·Coast Collep: has bad a difficult time holdina onto the cov- eted Victory Bell the past few yean. and Saturday ni&ht the Pirates lost it to Golden West qain, bcca~ they couldn't bold onto the football. Golden West. which relinquished the trophy for the first time in five yean last season after a 24-23 loss to the Pirates, is the proud owner aga.in thanks to seven OCC fumbles -siit by running back John Castaneda - in a 21-3 Victory before '4.000 fans at occ. Five of Castaneda's tumbles came on punt and kickoff returns. and the Pirates only turned the ball over three times. But the Bucs' inability to hold onto the football left them in horrible field position for much of the game. "This was probably the worst kiclti.OJ pme I've ever seen in one pn,ie, • conocdcd OCC Coach Dick Tuektr. "We Clroppcd four or five punts and had two bad sna~. You can't do that and bC sucx:essfiit" Tbe real success story. Saturday niabt was the rossii,rf Goldcn West quarterbaCk ohn ciole and the · emersencc of former Edison Hi~ quarterback Ken M-.jor as an sobd Ught end. Heinle completed 13 of 22 passes for J 76 )°Uds. and thtt'W touchdown passes to David Al>Olelate for9yards. Maj~r_for 15 and BiU Drown for 9. • QCC;-iJone score was the first of the pme and came on a 33-yard fieki goal by Bill Lytle with 2:14 rcnwnma l.D the first quarter. Heiille., a sopbomore wbo llfrew b · nearly l, 700 yards last season, over- came a ric~ety start to power Golden West to :victory in the season opener for both teams. "There's still a million lhinp we need to work on, but I thouaht our execution of the footbe.ll went very well," said Golden West Coach Ray Shackkforii. .. Any time you can rw:l the balJ apins.t Oranar Coast you have to be pkacd. .. Act\ially, the Rustlers only picked up 84 yards net ru.shina. '" 1by sophomore John Lambcnon on 22 carries. .. Defensively. ~ didn•t pla) that bed.I ·:· noted OCCs Tuck.er ... They didn~t move the ball on us." The Rustlers really didn't need to move the ball offensively. Tbey (Pleue Me GOLDS1' WUT/C2) .. It was a homecomina of sorts for the Titans, returning after openins with road wins over Boise State and Hawaii. It was the first time the Titans had played a pme in the Bowl since 1975. __ ........... ua.. Titans. spent .LI.he rst f • teaming not to relax apinst visiting Idaho, as the Vandals jumped out to a 7-0 halftime lead on the strona right arm of stanina quancrback Scott Linehan, who entered the pme as the ln the second half, the Titans' c1i· opPQnunistic defense, which had intercepted two passes in the first. forced -oiCtf 11iinl tumovcr-urt..----"' reserve quarterback Darel Tracy was sacked by defensive tackle Ron Mclean and fumbltd. Reserve Jinebacker Russ Maybury fell on ~t ;iving the Titans possession at their own 20. •· pers fear less or stu · • d? Rams hoping _l__.__•------..age assln""'1"'---.t • lead.in& passer in Division I-AA. Jn the second half the Titans. who had obviously learned from their mistakes. taught the pass-oriented Vandalsathinaortwoaboutlheanof passina, scorina four touchdowns, three ofthcrp cominJ on passes. "They beat us up m the first half," said Titan quanerback Damon Allen. "We just didn't concentrate in "the fint half. but the ooacbes had con- fidence and stayed with the pme plan.. We came t<>ðcr in the sccond half." • The Vandal struck early, scorina their only Points of the pmc on lheu second drive of the pme. Linehan led a 1even-play, 47 yard drive. cul· minatingwith his l l·yard touchdown pa to tight enCI Scott Auker, who made a areat diving tch in the bltk 1t took the Titans only seven plays to cover the 80 yards. with the touchdown comm& on runnina back Roy Lewis' one-yard plunge. "l have to aive all he credit to the coaches (for the good defensive playt" Maybury said. "We watched a Jot 01 films and we knew e•acUy what they were aoina to run and when." Maybury 1recovered another fumble at the Vahdal 3' with just over a minute to play in the third quarter. Followin1 a.n Idaho penalty whteh moved tht bltl to the 25,. Den tosSed his first touchdown pa s of the pmc to Allen Pitts, who cauitlt two of the ttirec Allen threw, to put the itans ahead to my. College football scores UCLA 2J, LOllO 8MCh I. U Cet Stilt F on 21, Idaho 1. Stanferd 34, l1IJnOb 1t Or.-21, Colorado IO • Arbone 27, OrtVon St. I Callfom n, PKHk 12 Ntvaoa u• .veoa1 n , Ntw Miu· ICC SI 11 • WalhlnttOn 20. Mklhlten '1 Ntbrtlka •• MIMriot•, Notrt Demi 14, Mlchl9an St. 20 ONo St -., Wattllneton St. 0 Miami, Fla 21, Purdue 17 Wlacion1tn 35, Mllaourl Penn St, IO, Iowa 17 Gtottla '1'tttl '6, Alabama 6 SMU 41, LOilltVflll 1 ' UU 41, Wichita SI 7 Ok•horN a, Pttt$burttl o Jury is still out ---on team's move to Los Angeles The Sports Arena management said they wanted to make the Oippers f ecl at home and that they were remodelinaoffices for the franchise and a 1uy said, "then put the offices in the cellar." • The implication and indication att, ofcoune, that the NBA team doesnotfi&\lretocndweanylcu abuse here than itdid in San Diqo. As callous spans fans, 1n fact the San Dies<? pop~lation iucrvinaan •Po: prcn t1cesh1p. The Jury. therefore, i till out. The decision is pcndin"""'-to whether the moveoftbeOipptrs.ft'Om the n DiqoSponsArcna totbce>nein Lbs •ks reflects courqe or Slupklit • Of course. sometimes the two make ucellent bedfellows. People who Pfddlc ticketnn ll tell you that Sou them 0.Hfomia ism than hard tell. It 1 far mon: frustrat• iqina muc.hasthCbchaviorofthe ticket dientdc has no pattern. uthland ns ht .tor)' bu many oommendab1ecumpl of weird fan reactlon and be.ha v r but the move ofthC RI den ffom lhe Oakland 1 um tothcl.o A lOCol· l u,,Hat thct p 10 I h1 auonal • Buo Tucm • game in gear " . Even for runner running red light can prove costly F AP I pate - , CRoss Cm1N rnv ) her lhe runners. One was nta Ana phomore STAVELINE.Nc,.-Runnm red Iii li&ht can be co tlf, us the winner of the Christie Aorcs. o taken to Tusun Community Hosp tal for heat exhaustion. Others collaJ>sed to WU' B)' JOSEPH DUDEVOl.R umner. knees. followina \heir races.. dclirin& a .,.., ,... °""'''-.11 "We've bttn 'Otklq 011 our be et towel over lheir bead and a drink YI-Omen's compcuhon in the •·wortd'1 To\i&,he: t Triathlon•· k med v.hcn he lost out on the $10,00<> first prize. work up to lh s ooin=I I'm not of water almost more than a trophy. 'the Sea Kinp of Corona del Mar wqmcd about t1ie 1 at WJU The •iris' races were ah~ned r~:t~=~ya:~ th:t°!~i~~;.;~ oomca5 'f't build IO itd the IWO from the uautl thr,ce mitet to two to annual Woodbrldse Invitational meets we tt m,ost Jnj~ in -the preven\ olhert from wiltina in after- cro s country meet Saturday at Mt. ~C lnvu.a\IQ(t# an~ tu CIF • noon 1un. Competitors were ursed to Jacquehnc Shaw ofCalaarY. Albetta, h~d won the race recently at Lake Tahoe,~ui wa ubsequently told he wa disqualified be(ause she had run a ttd liaht on a_ brid c near Marklteville durina the cyclina compcli· uon. Woodbridae Hiah. finals. · he said. water themselves down before and Corona del Mar beat the heat and 1 The only award COtona dtl Mar after races and this seemed to al- ficld of23 other Divi1ion 2-A ldlools didn't win was the Grtnd c;:.)ampion Jeviatc much of the problem. She had ~"'um 2.4 miles1 biked 120 miles and run 26.2 miles m 11 hour • 11 minutes and 32 seconds to beat all other female com~titors. · "l thin~ 1f the officials had been oonsisttnt. 1t wouldn't have lx-cn o bad." M~. Shaw said ... 1 was the onJy one disqualified. Thett y,ere a lot of traffic violation), The oflfo1al~ v.ercn't consistent." in the 5Cnior, junior, and sophomore trophy, which wtn1 lb a sft'Y Itron& Sumner's troo"' manucd tO es. races to win aoina away. Sauaui 1quad. and "' °'nsa.nc1ina cape tbe wom of it, as CdM'• noes Fant-year coach Bill Sumner Competitor awafd. .won ~ Jo were in the moruina ho. un. brouaht his Sea K.i~ out in force (77 Alcaraz of Santa Ana Y•Qer. Alca~z in aO) for their fint outina of tho turned in the best ume ftie ~ a Tracy WriAht of lrvine Hiah won seaaon. Already tabbed the number 1 $:42 cloc.kina •roVnd1be thrtHhlle the airls' 2-A -Varsity race vtith a ume one v&t11ty team in 4-'A cron country, course that fcttu~ 'P ~ dbne of l 9:23 to lead Irvine to the &cam Corona del Mar didn't disappoint of the runners could thake -lan· title. Univcnity checked in with a Race dirtetor Charlie Lincoln said competitors were warned befbr~ the race to obey traffic rcaulations. Ifs. Shaw had a 30-minute lead whon '>he committed the error. anyone as the Sea J(jnas $COred with relentina heat. second-place finish. one or the most imponant assets a With the tem~ture 1n the 9<rs. The Outstandin& Competitor Angela French was declared the v.i nner. team can have -depth. -the competitors found tHtmUlves Award in the airll' divWon went to No one ·from Corona .del Mar just happy to firibh. l~t llone win. Mountain View's Tracy William, placed hiaher than eiabtb in the There were a few int~ when who ran an 18: J 3 to lead her team t0 Cuba' m.,tc number at five senior 2-A race, bufthat didn't bother medical attention ~uired ior tho l·A win. • .. Pittsburgh Steeler$ President Art AooMr, atter piecing running beCk Franco Harril on walvera: "Football ta a tearra garM. Franco haa ~ a greet player and atway9 put the team before hlrnHlf. By not reporting to camp, he placed ut In a potltfon where we had no alternat1Y81 left. It would not t* fair to the team, playere and coedles to let thlt eltuatlon continue.'' 1\on Cey doubled home two run& • dunns a four-run first-innina outburst and Scott Sanderson and Lee SmJdl combined on a six-hitter Saturday as the Chicaao Cubs posted a S-4 decision over the New York Meu and moved toward their first National Lcaaue divi1ioriaJ championship. The victory pvc Chi~o a 9Vt-pme Un6eateli UCI in final Found Chiefs test O'Meara eztenda lead to three , cushion over New York-the tarcest fint-place lead in the East this year. It also reduOed the Cubs' mqic number to.five aamet ... In other National Leque ofown tournam€nt Raiders Maril O'Meara, chasing that elusive, n first erofess1ona1 victory, compi. led a front-runruna. ).under-par 69 and stretched his lead to three strokes Saturday m the tlurd round of the Greater Mi.lwaukcc Open Golf Tour- nament. O'Meara, four times a runner-up tlus season, completed three rounds over the 7,010 yard Tuckaway Country Oub course in 204, 12 strokes under par. But Jhe former nauonal amateur champion., who went to Mission V1eJO Hi&h and bas won $316,236 without ta.kinaa title, bad a five-shot lead at the turn then saw it whittled away over the last nine. Tom Watson and Du Pohl were each three shots back at 207, while Ketti. Ferpa and Jim Nelford were four back entering the final day ... At Kent, Wash., veteran Kati.y Wlt.lnrorti. snared a share of the third-round lead by shootinJ a 7- under-par 6S, and Vicki Alvares tied an LPGA 11naJe- round record with 10 birdies. Whitworth, 43, used only 26 putts in finishina with a ~4-bole total of209, 7 under par. That pve her a tie for first place with halfwal> leader Maffln Spencer-DevllD, who shot a I-under 71 .. . At Charlotte, N.C., MJller Barber and Peter Thomson carded 3-under-par 69s to share the third-round lead of the World Seniors Invitational aolf tournament at Quail Hollow Country Oub. Barber and Thompson were tied for the second-round lead on the par-72, 6,894-yard course at 9-under 207, four strokes ahead of third place! Geor1e LaiuaLD1. Slew o' Gold wins Woodward .NEW YORK-Shift) Shelk, who has !!J run an cheap cla1manJ races for most of his career. threw a scare into Slew o· Gold, but at the .finish la.u year's 3-year-old cham- pion prevailed Saturday to win the Woodward StaJces at Belmont Park. The v1ctonous 4-year-old son of Seattle Slew ' ridden by Angel Cordero, overtook ShiftyShetk with i sixteenth of a.~lllle to ao and Posted a half-length victory over the Oscar {)arrcra owned and trained colt. action Saturday, Houston slowed l San Dieao's cbarae to the West title IS rookie Gleu Davia' two- out double in the eipth in.Dina scored Pllll Ganer &Om first with the winnina run in the Astros' ).2 victory over the Padres. San Dieao s mqic number for win· runa the race thus remained at six · ... Terry PeadletOll belted two doubles and drove in three runs to ·help St. Louis to an 8-3 victory C., over Pitt1burah Pirates . . . Tim Ra.LDea cracked a three-run homer and BW Galllcbon won bis fifth strai&ht decision as Montreal defeated Philadelphia, 4-3, snappina the Phillies' fivc-pme winnina streak ... 1\lck Camp scattered seven hiu and Dale Marpby and GeraJ• Peny each drove in two runs to lead Atlanta to a 4-1 triumph over San francilco. Camp, 7-6. struck out four and walked one in pitchina his first complete aame of the season. · Meara buay at Rlvenlde today RIVERSIDE -Roaer Mears, the II acknowledaed king of off-road racina. will ride in three races today in the 12th annual SCORE OfTRoad World Championship at Rivenide International Raceway. Mears, whose brother Rick Mears is a top lndy- typc dnver, who has won 19 world titles at Riverside, mostly 10 off road events. Mean, of Bakenfield, will dnve a mini-pickup 10 the Nissan Mini Meta.J Cballe~. a s1naJe-seat Chenowth in the SCORE Challenae of Champions, and a Chevrolet pickup 10 a four-wheel-drive event. Anteaters cap day with easy win over UCLA The UC Irvine water Polo team has advanced to the final four of iu own tournament after winruna three of four games Saturday at Newpon Harbor Hiah The biaacst victory was a 10-3 verdict over UCLA, a team which bad beaten hiahly-rcprdcd Stanford earlier in the day. In the win over the Bruins, UCI broke away from a 4-2 halftime lead with four ltraiaht aoals in the third quarter, two comina from Glen Awerkamp. Mike Dotins and Awerkamp shared scorina honors in that aame with threo aoa.11 apiece. Earlier, UCI knocked off UC Davis, 12-i, and Claremont~udd, 12-3, before fallina to the U.S. National Team, 11 ·2. Alona with UCI, the U.S. National team, Cah- fomia and Peppcrdine advanced to today's championship round. UCI opens apinst Cal at 9:20 a.m. at Newpon Harbor ffiab, then meets Pepperdine at 3:4S p.m. today. J.R. Salvatore notched four aoals for UCJ apinst UC Davis and Stefano Rossi keyed the win apinst Claremont-Mudd with three aoals. • In hiah school action, Marina Hilb outscored University 4-1 in the fourth qutncr to capture the semi· .KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -Not finals of the Mooi:e Ligijt Tour· ·since the Super Bowl da>"' of Hanle nament, but the Viklap ltlJ Victim to Stram more than a dC<:ade aao has so a seven-aoaJ outbUrtt Kwneyts · much ex~&emeot swirled around the Donny x~aaa 1D the Kansas City Olicfs. . The V~ be.it Un"~· 11·8, The first Arrowhead Stadium m .the semi1lnalJ bd\lticJ fi•e~ sellout 10 three years was a JK>S:Sibillty • effort.byTom War~1.at thcyfeUto today(Chanoel4at lOa.m.)when the peren~ly t.<>uah ~ lo the unbeaten Chiefs host the unbeaten, champ1onsb_ip same.... l-;;.. l 0, It Je). ~h-rival, Super Bowl champion Los mont :riaza m ~q JleKD, . • An&elesRaidm.Addinatothefestiv- Apinst Uruv~L lhe Vi.kiqs itiet will be a "Silver Anniv~" pulled away &om _a':'°'' ildrd quancr party celebratina the foundinl of the deadlockoaplsbvStev~~~-v ch old American Football Lcque. and. Warde and "'then lleld ·orr the Lamar Hunt, Chiefs owner and a Trojans. . prune mover behind the establith· . Warde, a third-teaiJ)..AJl-CIF selec-ment or lhe AFL I quarter<entury U~>n. a year 81>. h*I" lie~ ~e qo, will preside at halftime cer- Vi_Jcinp aet evert ti '9Veft with his emonict honorina the 11 livin& third aoal o,f the day. ~pano".kh bad members of the ''Chiefs Hall or three goals in the sem1final victory. fame." Forccasu called for a flawleas .Downey bro~e open a s-s .aame autumn day with .sunny met and Wlth three Stra1aht &oalS late ID, the temperatures in the low 70s. second quaJ1er .. Yamada h~d .11ven "We should sell~·• aaid a Chiefs Downey, !"hich d also \be Vtkift&t:._a ticket official. Arrowhead Stadium, 2-0 !ead in the fin! ~-~ seatiDJ 78.~. was last stmched to Manna banled hick. capaaty in 1981 for a pme apinst Sc:ott LaJ:seo addea 0 a s lbr lhe Raiden. . ~ aaamst 06,wtlC'f. ~ In the old days, before the Chiefs Man~aoabeM1ke~on,thad went into a Iona period of decline in 22 saves 1~ the tYIO •mes; . 1972, the Raiders and Chiefs Fountatn Vall~~k:' f\~ place tn swapped AfL and division cbam- the . ~me tournament wt~ a l ~ 13 pionships aod constructed one of the decu1on over Bev~ Hills. Mike ptne's most endwiria rivalriea. Ruzelc scored su to ~ lb The 1984 Chiefs opened their Barons. dL second season under John Mackovic Founwn Valley ~neil a ~·I nnt-by winnin1 at Pittsburah and Cincin-qua.rte!'-a~vantate. . nati, the first time Kansas City bu '_'Was J worried?" asked Cordero afterward. "I was womed at the three~1ghths pole, the three-sixteenths pole and the eighth pole. I wasn 't afraid of fit to Fight but the second horse {Shifty Sheik), if they don't beat him today, they won't beat him any time. He can do better than that." The off-road four-wheel-drive event bas drawn more than 200 of the top competitors in off-road racina, includina factory drivers Ivan Stewan of Lakeside, in a Toyota; Wallcer Evans of Riverside in a Dodae: Rod Hall of Reno, in a Dodge, and eastern champion Cun LcDuc of East Lonameadow, Mass., in a Ford-Powered Jeep. Mannas Warde,linth lr.i3 Bnan o~ned with two road victories Ii.nee B~thert.o~ al~ ~th Ruzck Mid J 979. The Raiden, called by Uruversity s MikeQJthOn earned tu-Mackovic ''the mosttalcnted team in tournament honot'I. the National Football I..eaaue .. are -----------------•llillliliiilililiiililli 2-0 with victories over Houston and OreenBay. ANGELS ROMP ••• Of the pany Raiders Coacli Tom Flores noted, •1for one thint. it will let the e)ltire Ci~ fired up. It will help ' Tele'f"lalon, racllo .. From Cl broke a l·J tie in the fourth in.ninJ. lt H~me punlehea Hutching• Tl&.IVlllON wu his Jackson's 21st homer of the 10Lm.-PROFOOT9ALL:ChlcliOOVl.0..-0 season and itjust seems a mat&er of SAG INAW, Mich. -Thomas m Hearns. demonstraung his awesome punching power from the. opcrung bell. knocked down Fred Hutchings twice and Bay, Channel 2 time before be becomes the 13th 10 Lm. -PRO l'OOTaALL: LA Rafdera VI. member of the SOO circle. KantU City, Channel 4. The celebration hadn't died down .11:15 a.m. -IAmALL: Dod~• at ClnOln· before Grich blasted his 18th homer stopped him 1n the third round Saturday to retain the World Boxing Council super welterWeight cham- pionship. Hearns, who scored both knockdowns in the first round when he nearly ended the fi&ht. bad Hutchin.gs in trouble 1n the second and finished the match in the third when he had the challenger reeling helplessly from a barrage of head punches. natl, ChanMI 11. into the left-field box seau, the Noon -IAlllALL: Mlnneeota ve. Texu, second straiabt Jlnl~ in which the tw~ Channel 7: have home~ back-to-back. 1 p.m. -NO POOTaALL: Ram1 VI Pit· The Anaels continued to terrorize ttburgh, ChanMI 2. Seaver the next innina. knock.in& the 4 p.m. -1WNNll: PaclflO Southw.t ~. problble future Hall of Farner out. Channel 2. After the White Sox scored an • -•oona•L -unearned run in the top oftbe fifth, v p.m. -rnv -: ._nver YI. theAnael1cniptcdforfourrun1inthe Steele, partner stay unbeaten Cleveland, Channel 7 .RADIO bottom of the innina. Fred Lyon 10 a.m. -"'° POOTaALL: LA Reid.,, w . homered with two ouu, his 23rd of REDONDO BEACH -Top-seeded m the ICUOn. Andy Fishburn and Jay Hanseth, both of Kan ... Ctty, KRLA (H ~ DeCinceuinaled and Brian Down· Los Angeles, advanced undefeated Satur-11:l& a.m. -MllALL: Dodgere at Clncln· ina walJc:ed bel'ore Jd.iever Randy day in the second day of co mpetition at the natl, KABC (790). Nieman came on to surrender an RBI ninth annual World Championship or Beach Vol-Noon -IASllALL: Chicago Vt. Angela, 1in&le by Jacklon to center, which leyball. KL.AC (&70). Boston bobbled for an error to allow Also unbeaten was third-seeded Scott Steele of 1 p.m. -PRO POOTaAU.: Rama at Pit· Dowruna to take third and Jacbon to Laguna Beach, and Mike Fitz,erald of Malibu. Steele ttburgh, KMPC (110). ao to second. and Fiuaerald upended second-seeded Orea Porter and · e p.m. "'O 'OOTIALL: Denver YI. Cleveland, Grieb was wallccd intentionally to Gary Hooper, 22-25. 27-25 and 25-21 KNX(1070). load the bases, butBobBoono~ted ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~··••••••••li•r...1---:0eKNelsos:u•citb a l\\lo-nin 1ana1e ta ~ make it S.-2. mn-MOMIS;LTD. GOLDEN WEST WINS VICTORY BELL ••• From Cl simply punted and waited for a fumble. Ironically, OCC's only score of·the pme was set up by a Golden West turnover. Lamberton fumbled on h11 own 17 and OCC's-quarterback-turned· linebacker David Goodine pounced on th~ ball at 3:06 of the first quarter. OCC bad to settle on Lytle's 33-yard field goal, however. Golden West came back with a pair of touchdowns in the second quarter. The first WIS set up when Cutaneda fumbled a punt and the Rustlers recovered at the OCC ~yard line. Heinle tften hit Mike DiBemardo on a 37-yard pa s play and rwo plays ' later found Applcsate 1n the end zone ju't seven seconds into the second pctiod. OCC appeared to forse ahead late in the quarter when quarterback Ken Lau.lo connected with sophomore tt,aht end Bill O'Neil for an 83-yard touchdown pau. The play, however, was called ba.c.k on a hold.int ~natty, followed by an u~1.1>9rumanhk.e con· duct call on the OCC bcnc.b. OCC was forced to punt With 49 seconds remain.Ina in the half, but I.hat was enouah time for Golden West to score apin. th11 time on Heinl '1 l $-Yltd strike to ~or. Oolden West took advanta&d of a six-yard OCC punt midway tllrouab /; . • the third quarter and moved 36 yards in four pla)'t wtth Heinle hlttina Brown frOm 9 yard.a out. The Ruatlen then made tbinp difficult for occ to aet back into the pme by consumina more than seven minute• of the fourth quaner on a Jona drive that stalled on the OCC 12- yard line. "I'm al•d to aet the bell blck on our camput,'' admitted Shackleford. Added Tucker: "We can solve the problems with our kick.in1 (return) pmo. We've just aot to protect our quanerback." . frown, 1 t, . "I think when ~ (RCllJ!O) home run. he Piti tbt t4l.m tiD. .. Grieb said. "l tliink it too'l a litde wind out of Seaver'• - "Rcuie'sjutt IMd a Jood day" sa' I r John McNainara. I ' ~'d it (SOOl so it can'be ~iD1ftrijl" "I've been luetY.~f! t two home rurii I'• lib hn at aood times, •• saidn. ... m not makinJ any pteai on W'bea I'm ao~ to bittiii n-~' 101n1 to take one It• 1 1Kbon a1sO RBI to cen&er in the ti a . e run lwina, just 11 tlllt~ bellil lo ecreamapin:"fw11j~t tryi-lOput the bat on the tiell," explained Jack.son. sell out the stadium. · "The people will aet loud, and act to cheeri.na. and the atrnoq>here they crtttc can help the playen. And so will seeiaa some of the arett players of the championship years co~ beck and takin& pan. I thin.Jc its an advantqe for the Chiefs." 'the Chiefs, who lost in close pmes twice last year to the Raiden, weft in1Wled as 3-point underdop. In their two victories, they have not compiled liahts-out 1t1tistica. CdMsweeps in volleyball But his botner off' Seaver •• c Mar H~' ...:.a 'l enouah uttafaction for one daY. orona de1 • .... s easi Y "The-wau thrill there.1.Ln't think advanced to the fin round of 16 ..... uv Saturday in the Oranae County I've had a bite hit oft" h_hn in 1 Volleyball Tournament,._ sweepina years/' Jack.on '*1. t n f1 b b 2-u •• t "He'•• Hall of P'lf'Vr-iou w pat ve OCI eac Y oowi.. a -~ Fountain Valley Hi&Ji. -even ~ouah he't not wh t fie uied The Sea KiOfS were htrdly tc tcd in t<? be, be 1 not 11 ~6Ultl. Buhven on itoepig& Cap1sua.no Valley (1 s-a. ~sw?,ntdays, h'e st;elil thelettofall 13-0). El Modena (lS-7, tS-0~ ~~ ume. . tnrcon Bueti (1 '· , '·111 AHOIL NOT81 -mwttn tfle CJ 3-2, 1 S-8) and lot Am11ot ( 1 S·2, 11i.n11on tocu..o en hW ""'· l '· l) in wi nnina their pool. 1111 ..375 .... " over "" ~ -The top two teams and toj) two =. :'lr:1i;. "'il m"'= third-place finishers in each of seven .xs fl.lrlne 11111 ""'-.... 11 '""' • eoots were to advance to next week't. ~~ ~~· i: :": · .. i ,..,_ ~,., f9 _m final• at fountain Valley. l*'I" HI "'' rallM Ille ..... ..., ]'9 tr\ Scrilor middle blocker Andrea Re- Jlh 12 to 17• .•• '-w.'.Yf ttt ~tun "°' dick 191tkcd C.dM with btr all-=:.~~ ::'1a~'fr"c&'.:;: around play and hitt!Qa. as did • '""' _..,.. "''"" h ... ..w ~ sophomore back-coun fpeciali1t JW ~ ;::;"'~~~ l~~·i . "::'(=; Har;rinatC?n with her servina and 1a1w1 corn1t1t ~ 'fH u,wy) '' senior muSdle blocker Camnile Lou '"'"' •• lnlN'e off ~" eN """, OOder with her block.in&. ::=:::'~~ iMI' :. :=.•: "It waa a &o6d day for us. but _it nr.1 """' ,,.., ... ._ T• "'ttW"tr• should be tou~er next weebi!' 111d "'1• IMMll ..... '* 'EV'·"'" .,.. .. c d • c h •1 w111 111c1, r1Ctlllflt ,.... Hr .. .;,. orona e ar oae r e '""''' &Omltfllne "911tY,,.. 1111 Nm Brande. '*"·" · · · ~ o.. t > r.c.. Meanwhile, UC Irvine was ousted AttMnlc:k no-12> 11 noon 161111' in the consolation round of tho Cal State FUilerton Tournament by Fresno State, U·ll, 1'·10. CLIPPERS ••• Prom Cl bill side which has been a lauahina tock n San Dieao will come fnto " town calimlna to be competition for the ettabll1hed L:aken. :rhi• is out of the question. The Oippen Will not compete anisticall)' and wiU not chilleqe the L:aken for customen beta use the Fonam clicntcle does not IO to the other PIJ'.l of town. The Ctippm will have a neiah~ bomood allto them1dves. If you could ~ict theanendance panem &hat will unfold. you eould own a franch seofyourown. . • , I CO LLE G£ FOOTBALL ------ Huskies domin~te No~ 3 Michigan, 20-11 Illinois stunne by Stanford; Notre Dame needs late tally OOUorlll H, Pacific II: Al Bettbly, Bean· senior Pea S&a&e H, Iowa n: Doui StranJ ~seed for one Gter.P Ten H • .iuww 1; TM 3 quanetbaek Gate Galbell. led a 21-point foUrth quarter . touCbdown and ·ran for another aod. N 1ck Gancltuo iahiCh llolt nueason-opcneuo IBoAoll CoUqe mi outburst lo give Cal over lhe T11cn in a non<-0nfucnce kicked a petrofficld aoals to lift the 12th-ranked Nmany ran uno more uouble m Atlan&a.11\0ben Lavene same. . -. · Uons tG;tbc upset of No. :S Iowa. lbc on!y touchdown on a I ltd and O. id & ~ After a scoreless third period, the Bears went ahead to fie ..Y~ run v -~ Prom AP dlipatcfft stay, 1l·12, at the 11an of the founh quarter on a 9·yard Miami U, hnlM 17: Sophomore &rllie r three~~ldl~l:n ~'"~fill !cchth an., ~d02 ...2.:..-,,._ ...... ~ ANN ARBOR, Mich. -QuartcrbaCk Hu .. Millen tou .... do n b Ed o • .a.... •uiA...Ath ... ftfth _ ... __.. H dri "'"" ,, ..,.., lUIC idci ·.... "" l~U IMll UK' connected on a 73 rd ri · .,. \al wnru Y PA{Ull;'ro. • •'IKlU "' .,..,~ umcaneson1eonQ1 ves vu timeainoel956-twoycarsbdoreBrvantresumedlO . . ·YI sco na pau to pht end Mark . and 94 yards in me third quantt .conna once on 1 .-•--de 1 -=-• -c --• Patuson early an the third qunner Saturday brealdna OJ>Cn OM• State u WaUJa1&oa Stale I· Quarterback Mike quanerl:*k sneak as Miami recorded a~ ~ mater to ve op a pcrenwai nauol,NM powu a t1iaht aame and helpi_na 'No. 16 W~shinaton to .a 2.0-1 I T~mczak, aeeina 1bis firit action of ihe season, led the over the host Boderm.atcn. YiCtOJY nru u, IAaltdllt 7: -Jdf' Atkin1 and Rellie co :qe f<?Otball upset victory over thtrd·ranked Mtchipn. runtb·ranked Budcyes on two fint·bilf touchdown drives Duoard ruShed for two ~ mch ·and Rcjjr· . · Patttt0n cauah~ the pau at the ¥ichipn 27 over tho as Ohio State whipped the Coua,an. • Oftl•'9oaaa Stale 11, Bewllq Oren U: CoWboy fflilli.,S ant.etoeptc(f two tn itbe end zone. nae• outstretch~ fingeropa of Garland Rivers and scampered · It was the first shutout in 43 pmes for the Buckeyes defenders Rod Brown and Mark Moore sOOtt.d 't>n onE bade for a touchdown as lhc ! 4th-ranked MustallilJI untouched into the end.zone, as the 2-0 Hqlkies ipcreased 2-0. : 1 • t interception returns while Shawn Jones ru~ for more routed host Lowsvillc. • their lead to·l7-:~. 3:44 into the-second·hatf. : . . . ,than lOOyardsCortbelCCond1trai&htpme~tb·ranked Sophomore Jeff Jaeger kicked field aoals of 2s and 38 Teiw H, Aabera U: QuarterbiclC TO<ta Doaac ran for Oklahoma Stato tuincG away ~happy na <men Arlioul'1 .. 0.rq• &.t· AUmlJ.tnkinumsodfor-.. yards for ~ashinaton and .fullback Rick Fenney scored on one touchdown and pasSed for another u the fourth· · • • louchdo\yn and ra_n for another to lead 1ht WildCau IO dlt a 2-yard dive for tlte Humes, wbo dominated every phase .ranked Lonahoms held off No. 11 Au bum. Nwrub. H, M1•HMta '1: Jeft'Sm1tb rushed for 1. 83 Pac--10 wm. ofthepme. . BrtC. Yous H,Tma U: At Provo, quartcr"'ft-k yardsandCrai&Sundbertthrewtwotouchdown~as 1 ........ M=- 8•--t ..... 1 .. 1, .. __ 1 lt: So h ._ __ ._, h. R . ~ ,..._ the top.ranked. Comhusten romped over the vwuna Artiou St. fl, Su Jose t. I: Junior w ~ - .... Ona ... UlllV • • e omorc quarterlJGI.;.. o n obbte o pused 1or one touchdown and ran for Oophen. -C.rawford rushed for 132 yard$ and ICOrcd ~. on *.i.:o: Paye shot down BiJ 10 champion Illinois with 29S yards another and linebacker M&rV Allen picked off two paues . yard run and 1 Sl·Y.ard pass reception, as the un DeVlll puaina as the Cardinal pulled one of its biaest upsets. as eighth-naked BYU won its I .. th straight a,ame. ~OklUoma ·~· Plnsbvp 11: At Pitubuflh, Danny routed Uie Spartans. ·paye led Stanford on four touchdown drives and . .. Br&dley1COredtw1cconplu~oncss.thanaf&C'dandalso Mark Harmon booted field goals of 51 yards, third lonaest FlortU State U, Kuaa1 11: Gre& Allen ihattered threw two toU£hdown passes tn leadi.na the lSlh-nin~ 0tei-!7, -Celorado it: Sopbomorc quandbldr in the school's history, and 36 )lltds. . ~ Aorida State rushing. scorina and all-piirpose runniqa Soonera ~ their romp over No. 17 Pitt and Oklahoma s Chris Miller threw two touchdown puses to Lew.Barnes ID ·· , . • recordJ and led the '18th-ranked Seminoles. . bcstswt so five years. lead the host Ducks. Notre Dame t•, Mlebl1u Stete H: At EaSt Lansins, • Mich., Irish tailback Allen Plnkett cauaht a !40-yard ------,-.. --.. --------------~---------------------------• touchdown pass and ran five yards for another score and Notre Dame rallied .from a 10-j)Oiot deficit in the fourth quarter to defeat the stubborn S~rtans. -Gauchos drop opener, 23-13 College, high school football scores TORRANCE -El Camino Colleie's football team spoiled Saddleback Coach Ken Swearinaen's return to where he once played and coached as the Warrion held on for a 23-13 non-eonference victory in community college action. Swearingen coached El Camino 14 years and once won a state championship. He also was an all-state runninJ back with the Warriors. COLL•OI Wtst Houston 30, Miami, Ohio 17 TexH Tech 44, TexH·Ar· UCLA 23, Lono Beach SI. 17 Cal Stal• Fullerton 21, ldahO llnoton 7 . OldahOma St. 31, Bowllno 7 Green 14 ArlzOl'la '11, Oreeon St. I • Soulher'l U. 10, Texas Stanford 34, INlnols 1' Southern 3 Al'ltOM St. a, San Jose St, O Lamar 10; N. Texa1 St. 6 Oreoon '11, ColoradO 20 A'*'° SI. 21, cam.on 0 CallfOrni. 21, Pacific 12 Al'k•nta• St. n. Tenn.·Martln 1• San Oleo<> SI. 51, Teicas·EI E. New Mexico 50, E. C«ltral U. Paso 2 46 St. Marv's 17, Wf\1111« 1 L.u=:-~ Pavne 7, Texas Fresno SI. 14, Cal Polv·SLO . NE OklahOma 20, C1nt. AMI.an· 0 ... , ,, . Panl'landle SI. %3, Sul ·-SI. 10 WDllam Pem M, Culvtr-SIGO· tonU Wlt.·Whlt-aler 31, Wit.· L.aCroue 21 Yankten 10, Dana 0 Ark. ·Pini lluff •• Uncolll 0 Aueustane,11. a. Hortfl Pant • a.toll 11, NW WllQnlln 7 llfnldl It. "· Mount Senal1o • ltnedldlne,K1111. M, Concordia, Neb. f1 a.tMnv. l<an. 16, Stenlne 12 lulllr 20, Wlttenblrt t Cat1tton If, AUOlbutt 3 Cent. Iowa"· •IMn 0 cant. St., OtllO 17, Ferri• St. 6 c.ntre 17, W~, IN. 16 CNcato 10, Principia 7 s.utl ·· Geor91a Tech 16, Alabema 6 SMU 41, l..oullvlllt 7 UU 47, Wlc:Nta St. 1 Wake Fci<est 17, Arr palad\Jan SI. 13 .,.,.,. MHllGft •• N.orlt'-0 ... 21 LIMl'tv leotlM 1•, 'Vlrotma II 1 · LMl!ostone M, Dill. of Columbia • 1t 13 /Ntrt HID I•. Catawt. 1' Ml<* Ttm. 11, Jeclueftvlla St. Mortis Brown I, Tt.llUtee IJ NtwWrv n. GwdlW•W.-1 st.~' a. lrtd89wattr, va. SellaOUrV St. J4, ~ MllCtlll 13 V.._,a Sf. 21. Se•annMI SI 7 w. Geortlt •1, Semford' WlnalOrt-laltm 40, N.C Central 6 ~ 1', Howard u ' . UC OavJs 3, Cal Lutheran o Nori~ SI. 24, Sacra· mento St. 13 In the 1eas0n open~r for bOth teams, El Camino broke out to a 17-0 lead at halftime, as Saddleback turned the ball over on its first two drives. The second proved costly as an interception on the hosts' 3-yard line was followed by a devu1ati~ 88-yard pass play from Larry E&&er to Grq 0 Holder which set the Warriors up on the Saddleback 9. One ·play later, El Camino convened as Eger connected with Mark Miller to make it 7-0. Santa O.ra 31, HumbOldt St. 0 Redlands 34, Sonoma St. 11 Cini. Wut\lneton 57, &. 0reeon Unfleld 30, Pueet SOUnd u PecNlc, Ort. 2,, w. Or890ll 2' Mld!Nlt Washlnoton 20, Mlchltan 11 Nebraska 31, Minnesota 7 Notra Dame 2A, MldllAn St. 20 Ohio SI. 44, Wmlnoton St. 0 Miami, Fla. 21, Purdue 17 Wlsc:onlln 35, Missouri 34 Penh SI. 20, lo~a 17 DaY1on ~l OtterMin • o.naaon ~ Kalemneo 21 DMrll 56, COiorado Col. 2l . E.,._,, 23, Mlnd'lftter l3 Elmflunt 3', lanldlctlnt,111.. 7 Hamtlnl 2', Concordia, Moor. 15 Hanover '5, Olflenca 42 HOM U, Dehuw 2' lllnola WaslVft 2', Cartllatl 17 Iowa WaslVft 31, Coe 1' Tenneuee 27, Utah 21 Florlde 63, Tulane 21 Vlttlnla 35, VMI 7 v~ 23, Marvtw 14 Navv 33, N. ~.,.ollna 30 -·.-Alcorn St. 52, Alabetne SI. 0 Clladel 2J, Prestmerlan 6 W. Vlrolnla 14, Vlrolnla Tech 1 Marshan 2A, E. Mlctll9an 11 Murrav St. 42, SE Mluourl 3 Ft. Vall¥ st. 14. MorlflouM 4 .... Oklahoma a. Pfttlbur9h 10 Army 41, Cotoatt 15 Wllllam &. MMv 23, Deta· wa,. 21 Fordhem 71, Catl'lollc u. 23 Hotv Crou 1', Rhode IMand 0 The Warrion padded the ma.rain with a field aoal and another Eger touchdoWll pass. but Saddleback came back on its fint possession of the secobd half. marchinf 80 yards on 11 plays. Cun Woods cauaht the first o his two touchdown receptions, an 8-yard toss frOrn quarterback Mike Douglass to ma~e it 17-7. · .. c:.me. 2J, S.dcllbllck 11 IHDIVIDUAL ITATIST1CI Scer'9 _., QulM1lw'I ..,.... ~ o o 1 ._13 S.O--Wnu, ..-; lrown, Et Camino 7 10 6 ~ 7·42; Schmid, 1-11 Currlt1 3·7; · T...mm.t, 1-1; Ooueln1. 1o-1or· EC-1.611111' t oeu from Eeter. mltlUI ~ · · . <CClrflilnl kick) ·ec-.*=k·IOll, 20-6'; Ntotn. EC-Coraulnl IS FG 1·2'; Eoeer. 6-17. ,. ..... EC-lllc:ftey 12 NH from EtMr (Cotaulnl k!O) Sact Doutlalt. 26-31·2, 349. EC-Etter, 13·25"0, 270. , 9taceMne Sad-Woods I NH trom Sad-Caot I· 1•· Woods Doullall (ltufkowul 11.lckl • 6-IS; Saltnu, ,.231 PaiatNra, 2.-51; EC-<>wens J NU from Evoer Currie, 2·~; Brown, 2·21; S\Nllar, (k!O faltecl) 2·24. EC-ttldley, •·14i Holder, MU from ~120; JKklOn, 1•'5; Moore, 1·•; Miiter, 1·•; <>weM, 1·3. n£.G~ltMJcl\S L-ANDING Wlaael'ofRe.tauaat Wl'ft•r•' 91her Award of Merit WIDE SCREEN TV 2.5c JUMBO DOGS •1.00 BEER • FREE POPCORN 3110 AIRWAY, COSTA MESA 9N JOHN WAYNE AIRPORT RUNWAY 11 lledrlet BYU 31, TulM 15 wYomlno 26, Air Fore. 2q ColOl'ado SI. 10, Hawaii 3 Texas CPll'lltlan 62, Utah St. Nevada Reno "· T•~· A&I 35 • Ntvada La• Veoas 21, New Meiclco SI. 21 Ntw Mexico '11, W. Tticas St. 0 E. Wast\lnoton 21, Montena SI. 16 . ldahO St. 47, Chico St. 23 Ft. Lawl~U, Mala, Colo: 7 Rick• lt. W. Montana t ltodtv Mountain 21, s. C>akota Ttctl 0 Tan.ton SL 11, Colorado Mints 1' W. Ntw Mexico 2•. Weatern St.,Colo. 13 Adatl'll St. 30, S. utan 20 carro11. MMtt 1,, Chadron st. is Seuthwest Arltan1aa 14, Mlulnlool 14 • Texas 35. Auburn 27 MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL Featuring • GIANT ADVENT SCREEN •COMPLIMENTARY HORS D'OEUVRES • COCKTAILS REGULAR Pill.CE • ENTERTAINMENT & DANCING AFTER GAME 18700 MACARTHUR. IRV~E 833-2170 .. 12 Florida SI. 42, kanaas " svracuse 13, Northwestern Iowa St, 21, Drake 17 Kanaas St. 21, Tennes ... Tedi 12 Kentudlv '9, lndlana 14 Ohio U. 31, Ball St. 17 Younostown St. 27, Clr~ln· natl 23 SW Missouri 35, Cent. Mii· sourl o Cent. Mld\loen 17, E. C.ro-nna 12 · Akron . 42, Western Ken· tuc:kv 7 14 E. llllnols 33, NE Mluourl 7 W. llllnols 34, s. llllnots 24 W. Mlctlloan 41, IUlnols St. Ta'ftor .1,, ROM-Hulman 1) ValNralao 2', Alma U Wllbalh 31, OU.et 7 Warttiute 42, Cornell, iow. 1' Wayne, Midi.. 13, Evanavllle 7 Wavne, ...0 . .a, Hullna 6 Lake Fenti 17, Concordle, II. 6 L.awrenc:e 2', ~. St.P. 1• Macelitlttr 21, St. Olef 1, Ma1*a1o St 21, N. Dakota St. 21 Mar9ntne '-'''' n, Lakellllld 21 Mavv .. SI. 11. Dakota w~ ' #1/J·Anl Nazarene 1•, UPDW Iowa 7 Mlllkln u. W...ton 20 MIUlulllcll Val. 11, WatNlum 15 Mluour'l-llotla 62, Pitt..., St. 1' • ·IN. Southern 27, SW OklaflOma 7 Mool"heed St. JO, Ktwnev St.11 Mornlnel* 17, s. Dakota St. 25 MufklnNn ~. ONo NortMrn ,. M*ukll-Omlltla 1 .. L ~ 12 NebrMll.ll W_,.,,. C2, SI'""°" 7 NE lllnola 1,, $1. ~.Ind. 7 N. Mld'll8en t•. MIM.·0Ulu1fl 1, NW Mluourl $1. 2', °'_,,. Vtll- lav St, 0 . NW Okletllima .cl, E'"""8 Si. 0 Ollvel NuarlM 2', EurlU I I SI. Amllf1M 37, MolWnoutt\, It. I St. Cloud St. 31, MJM.·Momt 21 SI. Jotv!'&, Mlm. '2, lelftill. Minn. 0 PRISINTS MONDAY NIGHT FOOTaALL • WIDE SC~EEN TV • SPICED CARNE ASAOA TACOS $1.00 • DRAFT BEER 75¢ 17 OZ. MARGARITAS $1.25 COMPLIMENT ARY CHIPS & SALSA 3901 W . Coast Hwy., Corona del Mor • 6-40-1055 0 McNttse St. 24, Nldlolls St. 21 s. Cerollna SI. 46, N. Caro-nna A&.T 7 · . Austin Pav 14, Kentucttv SI. 0 S. MlululPPI 3't Loulslan.11 Tedi 0 Tenneuee St. 42, Alabema A&.M 21 Tn.·Chettanoooa lO. w. C9t"Offna 6 Trov St. 17. FlorlcM A&.M 3 Mlulu'"' ColleM 7, SE Loul•lana 6 NE Loulslena 7, SW Loulsl· ana 6 . . Rlct\mond 30, Maine 13 E. Tenneuee St. 10, E. Kentuc:kv 7 Furman 34, H. Caronna St. 30 Geort4a ScMtwft G, C91tt Florida 21 Gullford 11. Da"'<lloll U Ha~ Inst. 13. Vlrftl1a UnlOA 11 ~St. 34, l'ralrte View' l' Lel'l!Qh 10, C-OMlciicut 7 New Ham1111'1lrt 21, Lafavette 7 Rutten 10, Temo4t 9 W. Vlttlnla St 21, W Va. Welttn 20 W. Vlnllllla Tec!it22, Weal UMr- ty 7 ' ~ Teel\ 5', ~ SI. 6 • ~21.~v. J lloomlllur't 2J. l.odl He~ 0 ludl1'll G . CW......Mti/tt/11 7 luftllO .... ~ 14 ~St.l7,~$t 10 en tomtdlcut n. Cor11enG SL 1 7 CWlon u, W•tl'Nlalt I Pa. ... Cout ~d U , RPI 6 C.W. Poll 21, Klll8l Pllll\I 21, tit Oetawen $1. 35 .. ..,._.tarn • OtlleWVe Va&. 21, ~ l• E._llrOUdlllunl 10, MollJdelr SI. Felmlollt St. 71, Wa~ 12 Fnlklll • Mantlll 30 .. Uab.11 7 ~ D, W .. MArytllt1Ctr7 J ~-Cltvll.~7 . ,....... ~.,.., 0 Keen 0, I ' Rlwnlde CC 14, Mt. Jacinto 0 Senta Monica cc '26, ~~3 LA Pieta 24, G ..... SM hrnarellnO VMltY ComPtofl 7 LA Vall9Y 33, cal L JV 6 0 Gro.mo111 1&2, San 0-.. -Pboenl• 10, $an Oteoo,.... HaGH SCMOOL Buena Pe!1{ 7:1 G<ende 7 FOOTBALL PARTY HOSTED IY THE LA RAMS .,..,~ ............ Yluehrr11_. 'Hid• Slater Erie ....... I am -:U..j . -~·IWPOR~--ilo . BEST HAPPY ~ HOUR * Giant Screen TV * Complimentary Hors o•oeuvrei * Complimentary Clams & Oysters * Live Entertainment After The Game 103 N. BAYSIDE DR. ON THE B AUTIFUL NEWPORT BAV 640-5123 MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL PARTY SATELLITE DISH • 10 FT WIDE TV PLUS FOUR 25 INCH MONITORS 17 OZ MUGS OF BEER• COMPLIMENTARY HORS O'OEUVRES • HAPPY HOUR 4 30-7 PM, M·F LIVI ENTERTAINMENT FOLLOWING TH£QAME -· foR lrl: R~cuHu ~ --- I ~ • • MAJOa L•AGW ITANDIJfOS AIMrtCH L...ut Ottroit TOtOf\IO' laltln'iort New York lcMton c...., ... "° MllWa QT DIVISION w I. " n n n 1• n 67 IO ... , '6 13 u n eAn DIVISION •• 94 -" ,i)S " • I 10 10 I> 4S • .t61 11 7t ., .Ml " n .. .5)7 w~ n 10 ~ "~ 61 "~ 456 161'1. 62 IS m 311."1 satw•V"•SC.... ._ H, Clllcaoo 2 Bolton 4, N..., YOl'k l Mllwauk• 7. Ballimot• 0 Detroll 2, Toronto 1 Cla ..... ftd 6. Oeklencl 3 MiMtlol• l, TtQI 0 Kanwi' Cllv I, S.elllll .5 TtMY'I 0amn c111c:aoo (Dots.on 13-lll at AMth <Romanklt 10-12) TorOlllO U.MnP t -7) •• Ottroll (Ptfty .... ., ISOSIQi\ (8oYd 10-10) •I N•w York (Re~t-S) Balllmort tC>evls 13·7> •' Mllw~M (Sutton 13-11) N\lnl'ftOll (Vlole 16• 17) at Tnas 1st-•rt 5-m Kansas Cltv ILt!Of•ndl 9·7) at S.t!lt CISatOial t-51 Oe'ltlal"C! (~it 3· S) 11 0.kla"CS I Lt"Vlor d O-Ol ~Y'sGamn Mllweull" •I Detroit, (n) Boston •I Toronto, (n) l•Hlmort et New York. lnl ClllCffO at Nllnnaote, (n) K1nW1s Cllv et ~. (n) Clevei.nd el Seattle, (ti) Texas al Oaklllnd, (nl Naftonal LNeue WEST DfVISION W L "ct. Ga San Oleoo S2 ~ .551 Atlanta 73 75 "3 t I"» Hou$IOll 73 75 "3 t !') Oedeert 11 n • 11 '°' c1ne1nna11 63 ts '26 19V'.I San Franc1KO 62 IS 422 20 OllQvO New York PhlladelPllla SI. LOuls N\onlrffl Plltsburoll ~ DtVISION 90 SI 11 61 79 70 n 11 n 75 65 14 9.,., 11~ 13 17Y'J 2s•~ SP#rdaY'• SC-~ S, Clndnnatl 2 Houston 3, s.n Oitgo 2 sr Louis 1. Pitttbunm 3 cn.caoo 5, New Yortl' Monlrul 4, PhlllldMoh .. 3 Atlant1 4, San Franclteo l T ... Y's Games DMew"S IVallnrue!a 12-151 •t Clncimett (Soto IS-7) N\o(ltrMI (LM lS· 10) at Pnlladtl!>Na !Hudson 9-10) San Francisco (Lesllev I · 12) 11 Atlanta (Matlltr 10-t) Plthburoh {Rhoden 13·9) It St. Louis (Horton 9·4) · New York (Berenyl 11·13) 11 Chlcaoo (Trout 12-6) San Oleeo (Thurmond 13-71 et Hou'lon (K'*"*° 14·9), (n) MllldlrV's o- ~ II A.ttanta, <n> N-YOl1t at PflllaOllol'I .. , lnl s.n Oiaoo at Clnclnnan, (n) San·Frandsco at Hol.Aton, (n) AMERICAN LEAGUE ~ 11, Whlt9 SOX 2 CHICAGO CAUl'OtlNIA abrlllll 1brhlll 4 I 1 0 BenlQUl rt S 0 1 0 4 0 1 I Sconlfl lb S 0 1 0 4 0 1 0 LVM d ' 1 1 1 •010 Thmurt 1000 3 0 0 0 O.Cncs lb 2 4 7 I 3100 Wilfono?b 1000 7 0 I 0 Oow111nglf 3 II 0 0 0 0 0 P9t111 d 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 RtJIUll dh ' 2 3 3 I 0 0 0 Grid! 2t> J I l 3 2010 Boontc 4012 1000 Narronc 0000 0 0 0 0 Sc:tlOflld JS ' 1 0 ' 3000 RL1wll Bo\tond lalnetrt GWalllr 11> 1(11111 dll SmalevJb Fletdlt u Halr1Jn 1111 Ovtlt1MI H P9dortl Ph MHllc OMallY pl\ Sldnntrc JCrv12b T ... JI 2 6 I T9'1ts M 11 1J 11 k*'elwlnnNI ~ 100 flt --2 Cellfllm&I 010 J40 >Ox-11 Geme Winning RSI -ReJICMon (10). E-9oslon 2, SQonlen DP-<lllcaoo 1, California l. LO&-Chk:.aoo $, Callfornla S 29-Fleleher, Grich 3&-«Lew HR-fltJac:kson (21), Grich (11), l.YM (%3), O.Clncn (ltl. .,. H ll Ill •• so QilQw *"" I., 1'-10 Nlel'Nn GN.non AVOllO 4 2·3 6 7 1 3 I 0 1 I 1 1 0 2 l·l 6 l l 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 I c:.Mw'llll WlllW.13-11 7 5 2 1 l 6 LSanc:Mz 2 I 0 0 0 2 Nltman pUCllad to 2 bllttr\ In the Stll T-2:30. A-31,SS5 8enl<tutl c:ar-LVM Oownll'Q o.ctntes BrO#l'I G'1dr' • Sc:onierl Miiiar Wilfong Narron Ra Jackson Patt ls Plcc:lolo 8oont SChofleld Thomas Burtetotl Tahlb Aneet awr•ees BATTING Al ll H Hll 312 S6 107 I 307 " 9? 3 466 13 132 23 .. , 60 132 20 490 7' lD 19 132 11 35 6 315 SS l'l ti 13S 13 35 3 17 l 1 0 2'ff 30 ,, 6 140 ' JS 3 •70 51 111 21 37' 51 16 2 117 17 24 1 '°' 32 11 l ~ 39 69 4 22 2 3 0 4 I 0 0 4952 '54 12SS 140 ""CHING ltBI .. d. 31 .343 29 300 ,, 213 13 274 10 771 20 265 53 260 13 2~ Im 33 .257 1S 250 1• m ,, .221 9 205 lO 199 20 .192 2 .136 0 000 611 .2S3 '" H 98 SO W-L IEllA AaM 29'i'J 25 IS 20 3· I 1.53 Cortlttt ~ 71 27 '3 H 220 Fortdl 16''> 1• 3 10 1·1 220 Sanchlz ~ 74 33 SI t -6 2.61 z.wr 11f'T m tt 11. n-. '" Witt m 213 14 m 13-11 u1 Romanick 710'h 211 S7 7110·12 315 Jol\n 170'h 20S S3 '3 1-12 "' Curtit tz\'J 26 9 12 1 ·2 4 76 Kaufman 59 ~ 17 3' I 2 •" Klson 61'h 62 27 62 •·4 '94 Slaton 1Q1"l 1n '' st 1-1 •ff leCone 2W.. 30 12 13 M 675 Sw1n S • 0 2 0 1 10 IO ()then 11 16 ' 5 O•I 900 Tet• 1lt21.'1 1.J7t 440 '7t 74-72 1 '4 Savts Sanchez 11, AIM 7. Corl>ert '· Klson 2, Kaufmal'I I NATIONAL LEAGUE Dedtef"I S, Reds 2 LOS ANGELES ctNCtNNATl S.• 71> Andnn3b l.Aftdrxtf Guerrwcf Marll'llllt SclOKla c ., .. .,, lb lttinMlll 111,,.,. a 2tl Henllltl. ... .-r111.i arhbl s 1 2 0 Mllntrd '0 0 0 S 0 1 0 Rose lb 2 0 0 O 4 0 1 1 It.OU. It • 0 0 0 310l Perir.ertf 4021 4220 Ca<lenolf 40 00 4 O 3 2 Krchck 3b 4 1 2 0 J 0 0 0 CllCPCn ss 3 o O O 4 0 1 I Knctev c 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 • Otsttr 71> ' 0 0 0 3 1 1 0 RltOOMll • 1 0 0 0 O'#chlnk D 0 0 0 0 Purprto O o o o FNYM! 1 1 1 0 Tol!"'ll • 0 o 0 0 w $'llfl 1000 Hllf'lle a 0 0 0 0 • s u s Tews • , s 2 sanw o.r.n Lee Allelles ... 112 --s ClfldllMtl -•1 •1-2 Gama WIM!no Rll -lltuuetl C4l E-S.• OP-toot Angelft '· Cincinnati :J LO~ AllOtlft 11, ClftClnnatl 6 29-Sa•. Sc.loKf1, Krencllltkl 5doKlt (2), Al'def10ll (lJ) $F-<ivttttt'O, l(nlcaly P. H It IR 88 SO • j 2 2 J s • s ~ ' 2 1 0 0 0 • 0 • • • 0 • 0 • I • 0 0 • 0 In 611'1 Hen111w 1 JU ' .. ,. . N•ttonal LNeue (~ l'rldllY'• Gtmft) BATTING lUO at batl) GwvM, san Oit90 •• 351. Hernenci.t, ,.._ York, .llt, s.ndberv. Ctilc.oo • .3". Cruz, Houston. 315, Rn, Plllstlllroh, .>13 RUNS. Salldbtl'O, Chi(~. 106, Samuel, PfllladtlPhia, ti, Wlool"'· s.n Dleoo. 91, Ralnn, Montr .. t, H. Ma!lhewl, Cllteaoo. 93. RBI Clfler, MonlrHI, 102; SChmldt, ' Phl~la. • 101; Cev, Chlcaoo, 91, Hernandez, N-York, fl; Cru&, Houaton, 90, Divis, ClllcaOO, 90 HITS; Gwvnn. San Oit00, 191, sandbero, ClllCHo, 115; Samuel, PMadelP11l1, 175. R11nn, Montrtal. 174, Cruz. Houiton, 173 OOUBl.ES: ltall!M, Montrtal, 36, Samuel, Pfllledllpl\la, S..: ltav, Pl!t~roti, 37; s.~o, cnaoo, 32; C>vrNm. clll- caoo. 2'; GCart•, Montreal, 2'. TRIPLES. Samuel, ~II, 17, Sandbero. ChlcMo. 17: Cru1, Houston, 13, Doran. Houston, 11; Revnolds. H°"'ton, 10; GWVM, Sall Dlt90, 10, McGM, St Loult, 10 HOME RUNS: Sd\mldt, Plllladt!PNa, 33; MllrPllv. Atlant1, 32, Cev, 0tic,oo. 25; Carter. Montr .. 1, 2.S STOLEN BASES: Samuel, PfllladalPllla, 6*, Wl09lns, San Diego, •S; Riina, Nl«I· lrMI, ... RtdUs, ClnclMall, '6; V'Hans. Plllladllohla, .. PITCHING ( 13 dtclsloml: Sutdlfft, Chi· caoo. 15· 1, 2.63, Horton. SI. Louis, t -4, HO. R..,,19v, PtllladelpNa, t-4, 3 '8, SOio, Cit!· CIMatl, 1S·7. 3• STRIKEOUTS Goocltn, New York, 251. V~ DMew'I. 212J Ryan, H~lon, 19'; Soto, ClllClnnarl, 1S,, Canton, Pfllladel· Phi•, 155 SAVES Sutler, SI. I.OU•'· '2; Smltll. tl'l!Qoo, 31; Hollelld, Plliladelllflla, 2', Orosco. N-York, 29, Gosta0t. San Oleoo, 2S fMelc numti.n N\4olc number\ for cllnchlno the division CllamolOl'shlP In lht Amtf'ICan Leeoue East, N1tlol'lal i.e.oue West Ind N1llonat 1. .. 0Ut East lt1umbtr Is • comb•netlon of wins bY tilt IH<I« and IO\MS bv tht MCOnd·Plael 1 .. m) 1...... Secand O.tre><r Toronto Numlltr 4 Chlcaoo Cubs NY ~IS San Dlei>O H9<J"'" Watet pClfo COLtiGI UC 11"""9 T~ UC IN!ftt 17., UC o.vts 4 s 6 UC OaVIS 1 0 I 2-' UC lrvlnt 3 2 3 .,_ 12 UC INilll scortne· Salv1tor• 4, Awtrkamo 3, Rossi 2, Olivier 1, Crow 1, Bell 1 UC ln'tne 12.. Ol,.,,,.,,.·Mudd 2 Clertmot1t·Mudd 2 0 1 0-3 UC lrvlnt l 4 3 <f-12 UC Irvine teorlno: Rossi 3, DIV 2, OllYler 1. Ball l, SalVllort l, Salaberrl1 1, Crow I, Miller I, WOOd 1. U.S. N11ttna1 11, 'Ve lf""'9 2 UC lrvlne 0 0 1 I-2 . U.S. NatiOnel ,,,-S 1 ~11 UC lnrine tcorlnO Dav 1, Salvatori 1. UC INtftl 10, UCLA 3 UC Irvine 2 2 ' 2-10 UCL.A l 1 0 1-3 UC Irvine scorlno Oolino l, Awtl"kame> 3. Rossi 2 Bt'I 1. Sarv11ore 1 °"*' Sc«-.. Peootrdlne I, UC S.n Oleoo 5 u.s N1tlonal 13, Loyola (IM.) 2 Callfornl1 10, Fr""° s1111 4 USC I, UC San Olaoo 2 Pei>otrdlne 17, Cal St1te FullerlOll 7 Stenford 1S, UC Davia I LOllO 8ffCll St1t1 7, Loyole (IU.) 6 California 3. USC 2 P9ooetdlnt 11. Freino Stal• a UCL.A t , Stanford 7 Ctaremonl·Nludd 4, UC San Dit00 4 USC I, Frtsno State 7 Calltornle 10, Pel>Ptfdtnt 10 US Natt0nal 10, Stanford S UC Divis I, Cer State Fullerton S LOYOia 11•.I 11, Clarll'ftOlll·Mucld 3 HIGH SCHOOL MNf'9 Laetue Teumamtllt (at 9alnMflt """) semHlnlll• Marina 11. u~ • Unlv1nlly 2 3 2 1-I Marina 3 2 2 .,_11 Univenllv te:Orlno Cartson ), Jordan 2. McCollouoh I, Semanko 1. Adams l Marina scorlno: Warde 5, Soel\Ovtdl 3. Larsen 1, 8r0lherton 1, Esslo 1 l'lrlals DewM¥ n. Mattna 11 Downey 4 4 2 7-12 ~ ~-2-..l 1.-10 Marina .corlno W1tde 4, Larsen 2. Brotherton 2. EUIO I , Spanovlcll I """' "'9ca l'euntaln V ... V IS, a.v.ttv H•a ll BtvtrlY Hll" I ' 3 ' 1-13 Foun111n V1lleY s 2 , 3 3-IS Fountain V1ttev scorino Ruzek 6. Nomura 2, Wtln 2, Pelers 2, Vin Ovli.e 1, Dalton 2 Wtmtn'1 vfleVbll COLL•GI cal Stilt I'~ Taut'Nlment (~lleuncl) FrHno Stilt Cltf UC lrvlnt, 15•11. 15-10 HIGH SCHOOL Onnet C..-V T~ (at~--MV~H•> .......... y Cor-dal Mer Cltf C•~•lf•no Vallfy, ls-t lH, Cltf El Modef\e, ls-1, 15-0, dt1 Huntllltton S.cll, lS ·I, 15·2, ctef E1 Toro. IS·2, 15-t, Cltf LO Aml9oi IS-2, 15-1 • Let m S.T\lttDAY~ It .. " P ST RACE One a C>rn1 Ctie.r1n (O'Owt r) 24 00 1 Ktfl PoWt ( ) • tN I (A ) A raciecl Muler Ori Tt crii. limo 2~ 21j. U l.XACT 4 l'l $) kl 116' 70 CO .. O a AC • 'Ofte mile pact Looli.lllo GOOd (Aft<IOnon) IUO SIO HO HIAlllllCI De~ (Ra\dlford) 7.20 UO Ooctor B•lltv (Plano> ~ Allo raC.CS Frostv Don. Miister Joh Cilenbumlt Carlo$, Just A Ftlla, Tvobl llme 1;511 2JS. U l.ICACTA 16-tl Nici tt2UO THIRD RACI. 011t mile NU sarm Outen (Ren l 1000 UO HO m LltOllt (~) ' '00 3 20 ... Onec!ln CO'O.v > l 0 Al>o ~ac.cl Profft50f' o.borna, Morrt N1tcffn, C1111t11ft WllM>fl, Pllll l\11y T~ U9 1/S U •><ACTA (6•,I oa1d UUO • FOUlllT'H llACI. One mtle Nee H111t1v V1ntr CP!eno) 21 00 6 IO )AO F1tfdlv Poffr111 <K~trl '60 3:00 Nv1llo Otl CMuel .. r ) 2 IO AllO r1ced NIAole Frllz. Two Ocaen1, V1n Rt.I Tlrnf: 1:56 3/S ~lftH RACIE. One milt 11eCe ~::;! =~~o~wv1~~ ,~: !~· Time Souare B1rOC1 C~rioos> '40 Al\O rKed Ooc1b< Don. JutH Bov, A..itVI Bro!her, Me• eurnbro, P1rkwav AdlOs, ~rt IC.Olla. Time I.St 115 IJ IX.ACTA Cl-SI oaid $33090 SIXTH llACIE. Ont mire pace. Striking Htlr (Sle'lllllfl) lUO 7 60 S 20 Im A Wendtrlt' <Parker> S 00 3 40 I.II Abner (ROMlll) 4.00 Alto reced Roslduke, H H Tremor. Bleelt Merk, J1ct.uo. Fallimenro Time I S7. P IEXACTA (1-ll paid SlSJ.90 llV•NTH llAC&. One mile oact. Klno 04 J111 (Pitre.el 12 60 6 40 4 60 Gentle Skip-(Patktrl S.60 4.60 I.A Olctttor (Ptllftan) 4 20 Also raced Miot!IY Melrlx, Jlil'IQle Law, Mister G, Prlnll'Nlktr, Gtan Mldby, Voter. Time 1.SI s.J •>t.ACTA (4·SJ paid st4.20 •1GHTH llACli. one mile OK"e. Delma trot. ICrOQllan) S.IO 3 20 210 Tact W1111 (And«ton) 300 2.60 B c Count (Kuebler) 3.40 Alto racld. Rtlnd1eck. Prlvv Counc.11, Svncooellon, Ciano· Time 157 115 53 IX.ACTA 17-Sl Paid S27 90 NINTH ltACI!. One mllt pace Nat1v• HIP (Parker) H 60 s 00 , 20 FrM Turn O<"tonl 12 IO S 00 Macllo er1vo' (Mardi~) 4 00 Atto r1c:.d Vtstld Power, Sul~n. O\llCh TrHI Time. I.SS 13 IX.ACTA IS-6) paid '2'7 SO 12 "IO( SIX (3-1-7-4-6·7/Sl oa•d 5'9•20 with 43 wlnnlno tlekels !lour llorMs). C1rrvovtr oool S21,2SS6' TINTH RACE. One mtle pece Tiit R1ldar (Plano) 6 IO UO 2.60 Burke'1 Brlolda (Ple<c.e) 3 40 uo Boniface (Rounl 4 20 Alto r1cld Tontuta, Brent Biker. Brookdelt Boy, Rustic Scott, Vlklnt, Lord Albe Time ISi' S s.J EX.ACTA (6-2) Plod '31.50 Allll'lda"Ce 11,00f Pomona SATUlllDAY'S RESULTS (3rd ef ll·•v felr "'"""9) Ali'PAl.OOSAS l'IRST llACI. 4~ f\H10n0S sour11trn Pn6e=lltl) 7 ..0 360 2 20 J111u1r XKE (9 ns) 4 40 2.40 Sir 01nc1lot < ) 2.10 Also reced· Mln ll11er Cup, Go Glldtnuf, Cff•Co Time. SS. U EXACTA 13·6) oald S5' SO OUARTCAHOASES SECOND RACE. 400 Ylrdl Azure HOPI (H Garcle) 7 60 4 20 2 60 Weldl Him Truek (E. Garcie) 00 3 20 Mikes Wrtard (Ader) 2 40 Alto raced RHI EISY Jet Two, FrlK O Otool Time~ 191' U •XACTA 15-ll oald Ul.00 THlllD llACE. 400 yards . SOvertion Eloht IE Grcal 22.00 120 •.00 SkYbo (CrHWl 3.20 •UO Pus II To Mt (Hlfll 3 40 Also racad: PR Man, RIO A Jtl, Kid Cllroma, Truckle F1lr, Rlstno 1.IOlll. Tlmt.; 19'7 U U(ACTA (3-Sl Pafel S1'8 00 THC>tlOUGHPEOS FOUllTH llACI. l 1716 mites OUrManlSob lM4MI 1100 SIO J.11 PolllnHtrous (Olivares) 7 00 3.60 TrlKe Otcca (OtloadillO) UO Altc> raced Rov·s Shenea Suitt Tlllr· ,..,,, Burnono eorn End•. J1dc'1 Gold. Fevtr, Jurv 8oJC Time 147 ' 5 l"ll'TH llACE. I 1116 milts Unbt1t1ble (Ollv1rts) 24 40 • 00 4.20 PrOPtr OtllvtrY (N\tnal S.00 3 20 AantH (Black) 3 00 Also roctd: Ctessv Monie, EHltrn Jo, Ju'' For Cllarlle, Joltv Wrlltr. PIJC My Poet< et Time 1 '6 415 n DAIL y DOUBl.E (4-7) oald $170 60 SIXTH RACE. 1 1/16 mlltt Fr---.no (Hansanl UO 3.20 2.IO CIUb Flush ClllO) 3 40 2 IO Juke P1k (Mefla) 3 IO Also raced~Ooc Hooley, Catch • Fool, Berrt Um,"Hlt Series, Time For F1nt11v Tlmt. 1 45 2/S U IEXACTA I 1-71 oald s.lS 50 SIV•NTH RACE. 6 furlonos OM Masttr (Dominguez> 19 60 7 60 UO Round HHd ICruzl •60 3 40 GOOd Tensions (Glllloan) 520 Alto reced Jtl Maneuver. HlohlY RumOttd, Sovlfelon Ruter, YUiii Bin Al Got,1. Time 1 11 315 EIGHTH llACll. I 1116 milel Z.n The N\4n (Frnd1) 23 IO 10 00 5 IO Ro-•ttt ISmlltl) I 20 'to B1g11v IH1nsanl '60 Also raced Shoe In, Bidl.'s A Kick, soecrecular &11u. Roval St Gtofot. Ttnw:' .... ttS;----u IXACTA 11·61 Paid $600 SO NINTH llACli. I 1116 miles Rune'llll1Y Ahead (Man•I aoo '20 2.IO Golden E (H1na.nl 3 40 2.60 Our Lerrv (Bleck> 2'0 Also raced Nordic sono. rrol•l'I Horse, tn A MtsMIOt Time 1 '4 415 U IXACTA (2•4) 1>11d S7S SO T•NTH ltACI. 6 furlOllQl lttslaOt (Ollvlfts) 3IO JOO 260 G• ~lul 104Meldlll0l 5 20 4 00 , Sa 1M Wttt (F•nandt1) '40 Alto rlCed El Jeotl, Swift RIO, Frvil'lo Clllck, Silent Aii111 Tl!'l'lt I tO 21S U IXACTA <•·21 oald SS1 SO S2 ~SIX CM ·l"*·2 4) NICI 11.34600 wllll :JO winnll'ICI licllett lflvt llO(tft) CltT'fOv• POOi S40,ll 1 4 I. •LIYaNTH ltAC&. I 1116 mlift ' Petrlek M<FIO C04l111rtl) 10 60 • 60 ( 20 F11MAOU1 Oed (Nltna) 7 60 4 20 Vat C>a Roi IEslreda) HO AIM rau<S. Amtrlcan $tenderd. 01nc.t>el, C~ 8Hrlf, Crv•t1I Orooi, AtullnO. NO'WI Time 1 '3 41$. IJ eXAC'fA (M l Hid SJ• SO TWILnH llA I 1116 t'l'lllH N1t'1 T me (Domlnouct) 1t• tJO 4,AO W?to's Got • Nitka IOCl•llfe&l uo oo Neutron IF•llll"*I) '20 AltO reced son N\a'J • It utl'tlns Ube, Gai. Wlle RellO Doc, TudOf t4t!lrY T~ 10 '1-$ U SXACTA U" Nici 5)01 AltenOanct '°·5'0 (estlmaltd) NFL NATl<»ilAL CONF&llPfCI $an nncbco Al ta ami NtwOMMna wm W L T 2 0 0 ' ' 0 • , 0 t I 0 c.ntr1ll PA " 37 n OilQ9ll 2 0 0 1.000 " 14 Dttrolt 1 \ 0 M $1 Grfftt Bev I 1 O SOO 31 51 Mln11C110l8 0 2 0 000 61 T1tN10 .. V 0 2 0 <000 :'17 Sl Int N'f'Glents 2 O f ~ o6o J6 34 Oollas/ 1 1 O .500 11 4l Pill~ 1105004'0 SI Louti I I 0 000 60 JI WesNftotOft • 1 o ooo • n AM RICAN COH,HIHCI w ... 2001llOOM ... 2 0 0 1000 S2 " 2 0 0 I 000 M 17 1 1 0 SCIO 20 4' I 1 0 .:$00St 44 ' Plll,llutetl c1nc1nna11 Cltvtlend Houston c ...... I 1 0 0 2 0 t I 0 0 2 0 ... , 500 50 '5' OOQ 39 • " 000 17 SS 000 3S '' M•lf'lll • 2 0 0 1000 ."1 2• I dltnaootlt • New Envtend NY Jets • 9uffaio 1 I 0 ' .SOO 4' r .. , • 1,· t o soo 21 •s r o 50040 J7 0 2 O 000 24 SI Tectav"s GamM Items at P11tsl>utoll (Cllaf'MI 2 at 1 pm.I lttldlrt ., Ka11su CllY IChl"'lel 4 •I 10 em.) Cl\k:.tlM) at Green Bev ICNlllMI 2 at •o am) Atlentt al N\llll'ltlOll Cincinnati at NY Jtts St. 1.ouls et lndlanaPOlls Seattle 11 Ntw El'IQland O.trott at Tomoa Bay Houston al San Ollloo New OrtHns 11 San Fra11Clac:o NY Giants at Wulllntton Pllllllda1Ph1a 11 Oebu Ottlver at Cleveland lCha.nfltl 11 • Dm.) MIMIY't Oemt N111ml 11 BuffeJO (Cl\IMll 7 11 •> COLLEGE UCLA D, L.ne &Md\ St. 17 SC.. .., OHt1ws Lono Beach St11t 3 7 1 0-11 UCLA 1 6 7 >-n 1..1-FG Cnlor SS UCl.A-Bono 1 r~ (i... kick) UCLA-FG lAt 37 UCl.A-FG lAt 22 l.B-Wlllienooon 4 run (()aouera kick) UCL.A-Andr-s 2 run (LM k~l 1.9-Willltrsooon 6 01111 from G1vnor <<>aouera kick) UCL.A-FG U. 22 A-40,13'2 TiiAM STATISTICS La Finl do.,,,ns 22 Rusnes·var$ n -10 PaulllO vard1 Jl2 Return vards S • PastH... 21·4'·3 Punts 3-S' Fumbles·IOSI S·3 Time of Possasslon 21 34 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS UCL.A 17 '9·1S7 141 97 11-20·1 4·45 1-1 31!26 RUSHING-Lone l11ch Stitt: Term>ltton, 6-15. Witllerlf)OOI\ 2-t , UCl.A: Wiley, 11-n. Andrews, Z3·'3; Gften, 2·24. PASSING-Lono S..d'I Stal•: Gevnor. 21·4'·3 312 UCLA Bol'lo, 11-11·0 141; Norrie o-H o, Stevens: 0-1-f O RECEIVtNG-Lono 8aedt State Lock· ttl, 12·1", Te11'1111eton, 4·31; Wlfhtrsl)O(ln, 3·4. Geines, 2-34. Palmtr, 2·16; Locv, 2-1' UCLA. Slltrrard. 3-62: Wlltv. )·29, Tlnl'ltll, 2-21. Oorrll. 2-20 . CS FUiierton 21, Jdahe 1 sc .... w Quarws ldallO 1 O O 0-7 Cal Stile Fullerton 0 0 7 21-H lda"-"Auker 11 Pall from 1.lnehan IN\cMonlote kick> Full-Lewis 1 run (Sltlnke kick) Futl-P11ts 25 oau from Allen ISl••t\ke kick) Ful~Pllls " PISS from Allen (Sl .. MI llldc) Fu.-.Red•ck 14 oau from An.n csreillk• kldcl A-USO TIAM STATISTICS i.M Finl Clown' 17 Rull'ltl·varos 27-27 Paaslno vards U7 Return yard' '7 PHses 21-43·5 Puo11 7·40 Fumbles·losl J-2 Penettles ·vards 3 • 30 Tlmt of ~saslon 27'29 CSF 'Z2 42-MO 25' 41 19-41-1 6•4S 1-1 7-64 »'ll INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Idaho larrow, S.-14, FuP· wton: 1.-ls, 11·'1, C:.tl!Oun, 7·45. Lodltll, 1-43, Rldlctt, HO. PASSING-Idaho, Sloan, 1· 17·2 1Jf, LltttMn, I· 12-1 75 Fllllfl'ton Allaft, 17-• 1 247 REC!IVING-ldallo• Ylfbtr, 10-121, Aulltt, S·'6, Smith, J-ll Fulllrlon, Piii&, 5· 101; Rldldt, 3·51 Ma O'M411• T(lmWatson Oanflotll IC J!tt JlmtfflfOtO ~y Mark McCumoet l#tnROWH Brad Fuon • Krauert Howarct Twitty C111"9ftCt ROM P.•YM $1tw1rt l.Mryf.filie 9111 ~ JtvHaa1 GervHa o JlmKeM Pe\11 Altnw ;..., r DoMle Hemmand 04iDr'Ot At Clllr ClllCN ltOdrkt"..-1 Mark Ca1C1v«ellle Bruu F1t11Mr Wt#IY l&aO.bufn :JOGltMudd R lck OetlJO\ Lon Hinkle Dave $tock ton Garv Krutotr , Andv 9ffn Cortv Pivin Cal¥1!1 Petit Ktnnv Kno• Torn IC.lit Jack Ftrllll MacO'GradV R_.Mtllbie •M*aGovt GtntS.uen Mick SOI Gavln Ltvenaon Nick Price Bretl UDPtr Mlkt Putnam Forrnt Ft1ler 01leOOUOIHI Mlkt$mllh JtffMllchd Jim Gallaolltt • Ron Strack Scott Watklnt Grier JcMltl Oat1Fonman O.A Welbrlnt Tonv SIDI Morrlt .-.1llKkY Af'4t/Norlll ltOd NUCkoh Mlfk Br00k1 .Jol'ln Hamerlk 0111• E lct1elber0tr Bruct Scxll$bY GreoPowtn NllkePKk ~Graham J.C Snead Oen Hal!Oonon WaYMGraclY LPGA to41rnllment Cat Kn, Wea.I\.) Kathv Wh•lwortfl '9·7S-65-'20f Vldd AlvartJ 7'·7'·'6-212 Mani Fl9\MrH·0ottl '6-73-n-212 JaMI Andtnon 72·11·69-212 Sllt!'rl Turn« 73-69-71>-212 Laura Cott 11-n·7t>-213 Donna H. Wtllle 70-74·'9-213 Jent 81al0clt 71·70-72-213 etth Oanltf n-n-6t-214 Amv Alcott 70-72-72-214 N\arltl'la Haoot 72·12·70-21' Marv ISalh llmmtnnen 75-71-61--21' LVM Cooke·Partltt 70-13-71-21• IC.are!' Permettl 73·61·7..,..215 Calllv Mo<w 73·71·7l-21S Otn4sa Slreblo 7'· 72-•f-i 1 S Sandri Pllmar 73·71·71-21S P1ttv Stlethal'I 12-12-11-215 Jo Ann wa.nam 70-13·72-215 DIOoratl Petrlul 73·13·6t-21S ea~• Mltrehlt n-n·~lS Chlrtotte MontllOl'nl(Y 71·72·1>-216 uurlt Rinker 74-n-1C>-21' NONell Friel 71·74·71-216 Kathy Polllewlll 70-7'·72-21' etvlfleY Davia 61-n-74'-21' Kall'lryn Youno 74·6'·7J-'l1' Sally Qulnttn n-69-71-217 Dawn Coe 10-n-10o-211 Cathy Revnoldl 72·10-75-217 90Mle 1.eutr 74·73·1C>-211 Lori Gerbacz 73·72·72-217 Collten Walker 75-75--61-211 JudY Eli• 75·74-69-211 K1tnv laktr 73·71-7..,_,11 LanoteMurlOka 7'·7'-71-211 Pat Mev•• 1s.-n-11-2ll JudY Cllt1t 74·72·72-211 ~ A11111n n-n_.,_111 Bevtrtv Kllu 74-73-71-211 Robin W11ton 70-n-72-219 MMv 0etono n-73-1._219 Jffnntllt Kwr n·76-11-21t Pia Nit'aon 61·7'·72-21' Anllo Okamoto 71·77·71-219 Jarltvn ISrllz Jo-71-11-219 Holtls Stacv 74·7'·6f-ilt Olannt oe11ev n-n-11>-21' ~ Smllll 76-72-72-220 All1telldr1 RelMlrdt 71·75-n-720 Wflr'ld SeNwa lilwltatlGMI , (at O.,..._, N.C.) N\J1IM Barber Jo-6'-69-207 Ptler Thomson 691,.._2'07 ~IM LaMlno 69-73·69-211 Blly CeN*' 7'-'8-71-21J Mllit Fttc:lllcll 74-71..,._213 Arnold Palmtr 71·'9·7..,..21' 8ob ~lbV 70-7'·7l-21' OOuo s.ndtra n -'9·7..-215 Cllartes Sifford '9·74·72--215 Jerrv l•rt>er 71-17-73-215 GtorM Baver 70-13-72--215 JolWr K•llnka 7J·6t-n-21s llOd l"Ul'IMlh 73·70-n-215 C...U ~ U.JdWton .11·14·11-21' woooea10G• tNVITATIONAL PIUI HerlllY 75-'9-72-216 aovs Jim Codlran 72·73·71-11' Lii,. OMlltft Lee EIOlr 7'-74·.,_217 Teem seotil'lo· 1. Mlsslort Vlelo 75; Tinlin Fred H... 74·74-6fo--217 130; Foothll 1'1; Simi V•ttev 172. El Toro Sob Toskl 73·12:12-217 lit; Santi Ana 1'9, Hawtllofnt 2051 Alta Art Wal n-7l:.'7'1-21J. Loma 213, Mltltkan 717 GtM Ullftf' 70-13-75-211 1n<1Mctual rnutts. 1. Wlllllworth Jtea Flkll 71·n·75-2" (H1wl110rnt) IU2; 2. ltlollr (Mire Co.ii) Fl'9d Hawkins 76--61·7.,_211 1':32, 3. KMPO cesotr1n1a> ''~; '· 800 McCelllster 73-73-n-21' Sel>orer (Sant• Monica) 16·4', s. Varon Ari $11\ltfltone 73·6'·79-111 (Levzlno«) 16;52, 6 Cuttod«o (Simi Vel· Gordon Jona 71·7'·7.,_,19 leV) 165'• 7 0 l(.lefl'I (Mlulot'I VlttO) 17~; Bob Stone 1)-7,.7o--21t I Kaft tFool1111) t7~: t , Lemos <Footlllll) OOuo Ford 74-73·)2-219 17 03, 10. M. Matnav (NllHIOl'I VteiO) 17~ Den si.11 74-72-7>-219 MkNt ~ Jim Ftrl'M 7'•70-7>-21t T .. m seorlno; I. Cor011• dtl Mar-75. 7. Jim Serber 75-73·71-219 Un1versl1Y ts. 3. Buena Part! M;' Or•net Orvlllt Moodv 7S·74·70-21t 176, S TemPlt City 146; 6 .Vrovo 14', 1. Howle JoMson n-n•7.,_21t Gardetl Grove 25'; I Sonora 274; t RoCrlne 9 ., Ma•w.. 7t·7MG-219 Hlllt 303; 10 K1ttlla 316, Al Mafteert 74· 7 l-7So--n0 1n4lvJGUlr rtwns :wtmfl., tuntven11v..--.,,--nn-1m.-..1a 10-7S· ?S-120 1J 16 1 SC.reline Cluena Park I 16.21; ~ Ktn Townt n·76·7.,_m Shrum (Diamond Sar) 16 2' 4. Moot• H1rvle W1rd 74·19-69-222 IOr•noe> 1'30, s Costantino ITemP't Cllvl Ktl Naolll 61-71-76-222 1':36, 6 Wll&on (Arroyo) 16 41, 7. Kenon Matoft ltlldolPll 7S·12·76-223 CTemPlt Cllvl 16_4', t Ortiz (Corona dtl 800 Erlcllson 77·7•·7S-22J N\4rl lUS. 9. Coombs CCOrOl'le dtl Merl Al Baldlno n·n-7S-2'24 "'7, 10 Varou <S.uou•> 16'.53 Suck Adam• 79·1r73-227 Small DIYIMlft Tom Nl111orl1 79·7'· 72-227 THm Storino· Mountain Vi-JO, 2. Mika Sovelllk 7J·7S-1t-W Meonoll• 13, 3 Wooclbrtdoe 121, 4 Br .. l.lnde 13t; ~ La9U118 H 143, 6 SOUth Pasadlne 174 lndlvidual rtsUlts 1. Serratos (Mckint1lll Vlt'#l 1s 4', 2 Gontllti (MaoftOlle) 1603: 3 Castelleda (Moutllalll Vitw) 16 43, 4 ~ (Moro Bnl 16 ~. 5 0$tk.ind ($outh Pesacltna) 16 SJ. 6 Gomtz CMOunltln View) 1657; 7. Mlr'Mtz (Moullll irl View) 11()0: a Sindalr car.. Linde> 11.cw. '· V111v•<1t (Meo"°'11l 17 07, 10. (ht) Hwant car .. Olifl4e) Ind $a!Klltz (La'$a .. ) 17:0f JUN~S ... ,.. OMMtft Team ICOtin9 1. l"oothln ... 1. Simi VatltV 93, 3 MIHIOl'I Vltlo 124, 4 MllllllAn 1U. s El Toro 202; 6 Santi Ana UI; 7. UDland MS; I. 8tvtnv H1 45'. ll'ICllvlOull rtWJIS: l. llmnw (Mmi Val· i.-t) IUO, 2 Franco (Foo l 16~. ) ltaueew111 <Foof1lllll 1•~. 4 Oercla lHt'llllll'IOtflt) 17.'.G: S i'ACFaddlln IEI Toro) 17!04, 6. Andlrtell (Mire C0&t1l l1R1. 1. ~ (Mluloft Vlt ) 11M, t Nevi CS.nte Anal 17.12. t S."~ (E"*'lll.ll) ill 11. lQ. McGNt Ulml v y) 17 ll. MMeOMU. T•m sanio 1 '°'°"' c1t1 tMr • 2. e;,1.ndt 110, , trvlne llt, 4 (tie) Sa\IOU\ •tld lllollno H a 114 ' Crtfflltl Y111t¥ 174, 7, Arrovo 2SS •• TtmOlt City 2IOJ ' Saftlt P:t 311: 10 s.onora JN. tndtvldUll rtiullt 4 A -~1 l&enle Ana v y) U:42.; 2 lloMrodl lkUIM) 15:511). P<.iz (Sauvull 1' 11, t lmtev ITtmllll Cltv> Ul6,: l OelNnl (Ka ) tU4 '-IUna ( fa!ldal 16 I, 1 1 ( IOri ) • 1' I Cort 1 lStftla Vain) t ., (Buena P.rk l .t1 • 0 Outllr.,. (Arrovo) 0....IMfllNne OAVIY'S LOCKI" (......,. ... di) -213 1noien 460 11on110, 2 ~wlell. a rotk n.n, 1 c111co beat, 10 hncl bau, 1,201 11'1PO•ll. ' aklN<:k, 11 ·~ NIWPOllT LANDIN• (New""' a.a> -JI IMIWI 14S l>ontto, 11 bU11tt tuna, l ~-'all, 31 ..... JI meun., 1 ~ Lasorda thinking miracle CINCINNATJ (AP) Orel He h1 r allowed Lo Angele Dodge'l Man r Tom sorda another ni~t to dream of miracle turday. . Hertluscr to sed 4 th·c·hincr. lo bttak personal fo~r me to 1n gtrcak nnd boo t the rs 10 their founh s1ra1un vjctol}', ·2 o\fer: the Cinc1nnad Reds. h' the rst time the Dodgen have won four trn1Jl't s_incc June 24, b~t they'_rc till mU'td an founh pl cc m the Nauonal Lcafue W~t Jrailinf San Diego by 11 'h games with JU t 4 to go. . . However, the founh·stra1ght vic- tory Saturday niaht had Lasorda ins1stina he's not re~dy to ute for a runner-up positton. despite the Dodgers' 71-77 record. "We're trying to gel fint pla~. What arc )'OU talkinJ about, second· place'!" usorda said. "We're not eliminated. arc ..... e? ' .. You've seen miracles happen, haven't you? Why can't they happen again?" Hershiser got a fJft that was at least unusual if not muacuJou Saturday night -offensive help from bis teammate . The Dodgers ~red al! five tun~ in the middle innmgs, paCed by Mike Sciosc1a's three hits and two-run double, to make things ea&y for Hershiscr for a chanac. "He pitched a good game, and he had some runs to work with," Lasorda said ... But they (the Reds) also hit some balls nght at somebody for a change." Hershiser, 9-8. lowered his earned run average to 2.49, second-best in the National League. He had a 2.23 ERA in his previous six stans, when he had to settle for four losses and two n<>-<1ec1sions with little offensive help. He struck out five and ...alked lhrce Saturday for his first victory since Aug. 9. Los Angeles loaded the bases an the fourth against ~kie ~tarter Ro!1 Robinson, 1-2, wtth Bill Russells ground out producma a run. Pedro Guerrero walked with two out in the fifth, Mike Marshall sin&led • and both runners scored wb.en Scioscia bit a softdouble. UCLA •.• Prom Cl Beach State and San Diego State. "There's been some pressure in that UCLA is considered one of the powerhouses and you're expected to do well . Once we work these knots out I think we'll be all right. "Being the undbdog (against Ne- braska) will definitely help. Now we arc the ones look.ma. It's a little different being the undm1og than when you're expected to blow some- body out." Saturday's "blowout" never ma· terialized a the '49ers put on a herculean efTon, including a SS-yard field goal by David Caylor in the first quancr, punts of 60 and 75 yards by Jeff Carter in the first half and a defense which continually broke the Bruins' rhythm with solid efforts. "We're disappointed,"· said Shep- pard. "We're good enou&h to com-. pctc, but you h&Nc to get that first win:· The 49ers bad a 12th player on the sidelines in Todd Han, who is recovering from a broken neck suf- fered when these two teams met two years aao at the same site, and Gaynor and Sheppard touched on the subject for a moment. "It was a little bit of an inspira- tion," said Gaynor. "But he didn't want tt overplayed. He just wanted to make us proud.'' Added Sheppard: "Hg's ~ust another 49er, like any other 49er. • The Bruins had no inspirations aomg for them. ... -Ouanerback Steve Bono went out wtth 1 sprained knee and his replace- ments, David Norrie and fonner Fountain ~alley star Mall Steven , were unable to make significant contributions. Donahue told reponers afterward they didn't have enouah time or paper to write down the thinp he was concerned about and admttted that "fourth-quarter domination" repu- tation his team had earned the past two yea~ na not sunacc<f yet. "We were just hanJin& on in tbc fourth quaner," he admitted. "And I understand Bob Devaney 1s sayina Ncbra!ika is better than at wa a year &JO. If that'' accurate, well .. .' He didn't fini h the statement. He didn't hove to. Connors to meet Teltscher in final LO ANGEL£S ·(AP) -Jimmy Connors defeated I )th·seedcd Ramc h Krishnan oflndia, 6-!4, 7·S in the 1em1finab of the Pacific South- west Tennis Open Saturday, then 11id he's tired and plan to cut down on hi schedule next rear. Connors wil face Eliot Tellschcr in thi afternoon'' finals. The thard· rd Tcltschcr scored 1 7·6, 6-3 VlCtory over Dan Goldie a Stanford junior who made it into the event through thrte rounds of quah(yina. Connors quickly fell behind 0.2 in the opcnina set before Wein& a J..2 lead, then had to rally 1n the second 1 10er Kri hnan came from S-3 to uc 11 at :S-.S. • ••1 was tu'Cd before I out hue, rm worn dov.'!li" s11d Connors, lM 1op seed in 'this tournament after losm1 an lhc m1fineh the U . ppen last --.u . "I'm h tuna the bill jOod, buuherc 1 po nt 111 'he match 11tiltn I I~. Ws nolh1111 a wed off won't curt "Connors said . .. ORANGE COAST TOCKS Here •llJ the atock market activltlea .of publicly traded Or anae County flrma for the week ended Friday, Sept. 14. Data provided by Newport Securltleta Corp. . -;-i------------i·--------1-1u1·11ra---, , • --;----, 1llM • Hl&DOOUTOS 1 PIODUCU 11caun P~lce1Prlo• • Cf.S 1•11 1ru1 JI 1 101.1101 •ltl llC1 I I l.OCAT10ll • I I 109·0h09•1• QIAlilJ! • f 1 fllCll t I Ill 1000\a 1 ................................................................................ -c-···--·.-----··-·······-·-··----·---·-·····-··-·--·· I Air Calltor. AC•~ 1 Alpha Mloro A\.111' } ... ,., Pace. 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PAMI •I Ptuor Corp. rt.I • •9 Ptoorooarlloo Pell' aewport hao11 tr•ln• .. vport S.aoll lrwlne &nahel• hvp0rt Bf.ell ,,,..,.,. C:o1h ltHa Ill• ... Or enc• .. vport h1011 lrYtll• lr•h• s. .. t. ·~· Airline tUtrotOll~U,. Sn oee •ld1. • •leot. •••l Cat1te1r1nence Dental tt..ltn •a•n .... 111.t • l!f& Tut f4ulp "''' or Tepe l>rl••• Micro lnro. s1et•1 011 field -.~Ip, "'"''"' S.r•IU SUUOftl ' Wedin\ '411lp. lloc~ .. lcal'Pr04uat• HSDAO U!lllAO PC.St US!lAO U AO OTC &IDlO J,6) 9.,o 6.H 1.11 o.91 ~.oo 1.38 USDAO ~.I] ~UHO o.aa IYH lf,6) OTC l.n IUS!lAO 110 llASl>AO 2. )O OTC 2.~o T.00 1.88 T.00 :J,,o O.T~ !>.00 I ,38 ~.I) p.ae 11,2'!1 1.n ltO Z,6) 1.~o An•~•I• area S." Juan Cat 0r ..... Anallel1 ,.,.OH" f004 ~od. USDAO ,.50 J.to S & L noldtn1 era.""' 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T.11 OTC ,. • ~o ,. • ~o H:ID&O 1,J8 1,~0 IAIDAO }.T~ z.\O USl>AO 6.00 ,OO ' IASDAO 0169 0.6t l&SDAO 6.00 6.~0 IASDAO ·O.JI 0.11 USDAO 16.~ 11.1~ IASDAO ).6J ).TS IASDAO •.so ··~ UI :r.H 9. :rs ASll 1).2'. 1),2!1 IASDAO 12.~ 1].00 USDAQ 1',00 1).11 l\oetl• Colla Mou """'"·· USD.\O ~.so s.so , ..... 1. •••DOl't IHch S.•t. A11a 1 ... 1.. • La11>M llauel llHl,.OlllU USDAO 11.1s 10.so S.•11111• & t.o111 ore •T.61 u.o aAYlftU & loett HH 2•. TS 29.h Title raa11,.anoe ••SDAO 26.~ 16.00 N•••Y encr. & oonat. 11sc 16.1J 1a.oo P\uorooar~on plaatloa l.\SDAQ 11.61 11.18 IC .10 3'.0 10-Jt•SJ •C .~ t.O 6-)0-8) MC IZ.931 • 12·]1°8) •Z6 .9 .so 16.!1 12.11-8) .1.0 1,u ,.,,, 1-u-•• •).9 ,10 99,. \2·)1·Sl -1.0 , 11 ''·' 10-')1-!1 NC (.1ll • 6-10·8) •c .11• n.o 11-11·•) •!.8 ,60 11.3 1-10-•• .~.T l-12 1.1 11.31.11 -2.1 .60 19,2 11-~1-8) •),1 1,1) 16.1 S·Jl•t• IC ( 1. 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S06 ·)67 I, 100 30 2,T11 -20 1,100 l,601 I,~\ 1.~11 1.ns ~~ -11,aoo S,OS7 ~.600 13,•~'f 21,100 l,231 COMPLETE NYSE, A•X COllP081TE TRAN8ACTIONI, Cl, 1 Behaviorist.mistake put ~anagement ~n w~olig road By JOHN CUN llFF "'-....._ Aftliy91 NEW YO K -;-Do you obtain &ood perfor ancc from workers by btins nice to them -by bcina .. pcople-<>ncntcd;' as they y-or by entian exciting and directing· them with matcnal incentives and .rewards? A bit of both? Perhaps . .But that hasn't prevented ia wide rift from hnm,gdevelopcd between t.hebchav- 1onsts, or "people people. .. and thox who lend to sire s C\.."Onom1e5 in the form of p3y, bonuses and promotion opportunities By paying po auvc attenrion, ug- IC t the t;cha\·iorh~ producthrit} can be impTovcd. Noo~nsc, say Ronald Smith, usociate dean of lhe University of Roche ter's Graduate School of'. Management. He d~n't believe it. , In fact, he "8ys, "payina positave attention will have little beneficial effect if emplo}ees fact poorly de- signed ancentive systems or if de- cision-maluna rights arc not properly assigned." He ates instances of where the behavioral bias is so strong that wrong conclusions sometimes arc • drawn from the facts -facts,Jle says, that. rcaJly arc evidenee that tbc UnivCT$1ty of RocbC'Ster has the correct approach . " e m ge is contained an lhe ··corporate and · Market O~aation n currieuJum dc\Clopcd it>y two economist , William Mcddi~pg. for· mer dt.an of&he bool, and .Miobatl Jensen. profcs$0r pf finance nd business administration. Its evolution followed a battle l ROchester bet ccn behavioral sacn- tists and thOse who thmk 10 more economictcrm "ltwa a ubstanuaJ bettle," says the dean. ··Most bcha - ioral scientistS left." The $Chool has remain'cd con- vincec! of rts po moo in spttc of a spate of books an SUPPort of behav· iorism ... We think we are upponcd by the evidence," he 5a)S. The behavioral theory be an- dicatcs. often supports itself by draw- ing_ incomct conclusions from the eVlaencc -even ignoring the ob- vious in order to do so. :rhe bad behavior ofbehavioralists has a Iona history. say Schmadt. citing pioDCel' eJtperimeou con- ducted more th.an SO ycan ago at Western Elcctric•s Hawthorne works near OUcaco, and often used in behavioralisl teJttboob. Orange Coun y Int. F.i~c women were chosen from (he" plant, put anto a room 'by tbemttlves and ot»crved they dicf tM1r repalar Job of &S1Cmbtin& complex dcc- tromcehanal SWltcbcs for the ldo- phone mdustl). noe the women ofk.e4 harder \\bile bcina obterved 1led1D me view that they did so beapsc they believed they were pecial and that anention WU bcing paid to lbem Therefore. the bchavtonst con- clusion that pafina • auent1on to wo~en and t.rcattna them as spcieial wall help production. m1dt main- tain iho\\ever. lb.at the experiment wa n't perfcaJy controlled. · He notes that the women woitcd and received bonuses. on the pet· formance of a .,.oup of five. mall enoujh for each woman .to mfluence the other. Morto\'er, CSe-vlces ere insWJcd in front of the women to measure their productJon. .. They were consaous of how mt they worked. They were aware of whit othcn were doi~ and of the bonus involved;' said SCb.midt. He Cans the conclusion L llhat attitudes chanacd performance and that pe,y didn't make mudl diffcrcnc:ic -··a toa1 mUint.erpret.ation ... one that bas pen.iited for !balf a oea.twy . Amott. 50 Por letter L. PITI ~I Oenerel Auto. 01111 sz or111 110..d. OlSll H Gelden v. 11. 01111 • S• Qradoo Sy at~ ""111CO ~' Oreatweatlloap Wl 56 1141-lld Co. TffCO La11111• 11111•1 A111hal• Jet1ta ... Santi A•I S."ta Ana llentt. Alie hvtort .. aoh ,,.eoaat oOftorei. IASDAO 1,6) •.61 Mlnlaoe11Ut•r ,, •• · ~•SDAQ 1.61 8.00 Medtoal d••I••• ot'c: ].so 1.so IC .18 1;,T 12•1'·1) •••• Ct.29) -7·10-1) llC • 2~ ".o 6·10-8' I C (,21) ·ll· S-11-h )2,)1) h,119 •.•96 11,100 . ",600 ~1 -11,619 2•6 691 2,100 •.su 1,•00 L9nder .Contec:t Rete Pta. Yra. ST Kellonetloe MLI ~9 "°"' Wealth HHCA S9 lr•lne U111or USlt 60 l.aa•r lrMJ. L.l!I 61 Laae,...d Cor' LA~~ 62 Ltbertr ••ti. - 6] Lion c"ntry 6• l.41ther Mff LUTllD 6~ MoCoebt Cor,. -" ...... u,., .... ""' 6T Mloro D MCID' 61 Mloro Cet1eral llCtll 69 Mlol"Oaeel M3CC• 10 llo,..ho.ite Ind MllS' 11 ICSl 0. u Cor' MSl ' Tl latl lfueatl llC • fl latl 1 .. tt• IMCI T• laU L•llor ITLI TS leu1lea POOd IAllC 76 1•11°" hll ICU ff levpo't Cor,. llllP' Tl l~rt l leot 11111 U lev-,ort Pu.,. IVPll ao •• ,,..,.. • -• II 0.S.tlea (J• U 0.-.1111• lenOOf'I • 9) Paolrte Jelen PSI I I• '4tro.lntr•l• PTM •s """ Nydr~ PSUI 16 Plue C-. PLU IT Prtel•J' Coe. PDC • 81 P"l"t,.onl• PTll' 19 OualltJ Sp1. OStl• to II lndYatrl•• alt 91 aep.Reeoul'Oa IEA•1 91 ao.-1c V•at ROPI ,3 RultJ Pelloen RSTT t• S.n/ler Corp. SIAR 9" S.eha111c 011 HAit 96 llll•Ofl .... II.Cl• 91 Sll••r•r••t SLY I 91 aitlth latl. Sll I 99 Stand1rd P••• SPP • 100 Stana ftJdro. STOW 101 Sterle\ Corp, STAS 102 he<llo11, tne. SVC 103 S11t0ftetlo1 • 10• Teohnol•SJ Mllt1'41T1 • '°' Teletl I• COllP - 106 T .. ,.su11 T9'41• 107 Tre111lerra I• TllC IOI Ultra Me411tal • 109 tr••r•t•• ULTI' 110 Y1leno e lenll - 111 •1roo tnt 1. nc • 112 •Lt Corp. YLU 11) YTI Co,.p. "11t• 11• VCS Intl VCSI 11~ V••tn lllU. wn 116 Ve1waroor1 "' • I IT Wutern Dl1. VDCL Ill vt ll•rd Co. ~ 119 "'"" lllt• .. , wuu 120 W1nn'• Intl. va lr•ln• Santa An• Coeta Mua ,,. ... ,.. Colt•" ... Hunt, luoll Laf<1na M 11 le lllobll hoeu UI 7 .oo 1.00 ,.,.,. ~·11~lln1 d••I•• IASDAQ 11.so 11.~ Operete hoapltala IYSI 1T.OO 11.~o Mo,.t1•1• 1an111n1 IASDAO •.so •.so Power Con• a Laaera KHlth Car• tn~e-red focal plane • ..lel•n\1 tl.-Jtn Medloal lnatruee"ta .. nllln1 WI ld 11 re peril I ll411 •••• 11.6) IASDAO 7.00 7.11 US.DAO ) , 2' 3. l!I ••sM>--~.so t.~ WAIDAO ).SO ).~o oTc e.oo a.oo OTC llQ 10 Coeta Meea ,J.alr•••noua Cat~eter IASDAO 1.00 1.00 !1.1~ ... oo 1.~o ~-0 1.U 0.9• •.oo 6.so ~-00 1.6) ~.TS 1.1~ lr•lll• r lut utet• • "'"'· OTC hnts. •••ell Sa•tnc• • loe.n .,, Po9'lt.l11 •alley Mtoroooep1ll•r lqu\,, HSllAQ tr•lne H1croe011p11ter Seal•• IASDAQ S.eta Ina S..loOtld~tor prdl. IASDAO Pullerton tndu•t~ proc:eu ••"· IUIDAQ Coit. Meaa Data ent,.J te,..lna\1 levpo,.t leaoh H11a111 r••ou~e• d•••I. UI 9.TS 10,61 nn "·~ 19.31 l&SIAO 1,06 1,00 lr•lne Det1t.el NH\th '-"t• 1111 llOle Cent•,. l&s:IAQ S.SO S.1' IASDAO 9.2!1 t,1' IASDAO 10.00 10.1' IASD&O 22.~0 23.SO ful \er ton hat rood rut.11rant lr•I•• Dru1 Dh<:OHl'J P001nta.1a ••llo LaHr/O.Uoa t.:au11. '911\a Aft• ••V1"1rt .. •ch •••llO,.t hacll AUIMle Pou11taln fell. Anellele • Sa11ta Ana At1•ll•I• •-rt heel\ ltwport leech '"''"· . Tu1tln lr'fl11• llewport leacll P11ll.,.ton tr•ltH Irwin• .... POrt .... 11 T111tln lllene Perle levtort IHoll Coate lhu S.n c1 .. ent• lr•ln• Oar41H Oro .. P11llerta.i lrwlnt lrwl11• YlllM IUlh ... ,.rt .... ., lr•ll11 lrwln• Nlle,tOft 0!-1n1• Coate ...... 1 .. '111• "'·~··· 0.rdeD Oro .. T-..tln ltvPor\ 1 .. c11 P01J11t.lll ¥el. Ful ler\Ofl fltot. MHllr. lnnr. USDAO ).1' 3, 13 0.-111 •tar. •Aso•o !.31 3.,., Moaplt•l dl•I· -lta IASDAO 1.61 Z.SD Into Proe-eut11 Pro4 UI llO llO .. ,...,., OTC 1.so 1.~o llec. lnatr. A •1•· IYSI 11.T., 11,ll 011 PSI IO •O Sohr llHtllll Sr•· USllAO 0.11 o. 19 "'llll•h•r ••••• , Ma~ IASllAO l.~o I.SO "-Coftatruotlon llSI 1,.6) l'S.1' Coapcite,. Prl~•n... USDAO 21.zs Zl.Z!I COllput.,. S1at.,.. • OTC }.00 llO llellll P11M1tt111"e ' lfSI 1.18 I.I) JoJOlla a.an,,,.. IASDAO 1.00 1.00 PlHUO P•l la leateurent chain ..... T•l•PllOft• Sret. 011 a11d OH Mt1 l•t.1reted Ciro Molllle hOllH °'llll•a' toola l eq, IASl>AQ S.00 S.00 •ASDAO 16.SO 16.1' 1asoao e.so 8.oo IASDAO 2.ll 2.lt USDAQ 19, 13 19, T~ UI s.61 6.1} IJSI 1'.00 1'.~ Noee OOftatr11ctlon IYSI 1•.1s IS.SO Water ,...., •• , d•• IASDAO 6.88 6 .•• P!\ot1e An..,r 5"Yo llASDAO •.TS •.61 Mrc Pall,.lc•te<I Prod. ••SD•O 11.13 10.1~ ProJ•ot .... aortvar• ore 2.63 2.~ "8r•etln1 S.r•lo.. usoao I .2\ 1 .~ Coeputer parph. 9e1. OTC o. 7., o. 7S "ldloel t11atr ... 1nta Oil 6 t•• asp. & dr • ltedtoa Itta £111lneert•1 & Coeal ...... "' 011 r1etd tooh & -.. 14edlcal product• OTC O. 16 USDAO O.TS OTC 0.06 OSDAO 19.h OTC !1.1' USC 2.H USD&O f.00 0.1) o.69 0.06 19.00 ,, l'J 2.6] 9.n 1111,&roh,,lanllawtra. IASDAO 2.7~ z.ta leaouro• ••co••,.., IASDlO o.88 o.18 Oil and CH HSAO 0.'9 0.6' Coll111Ut•r cont,..llera ASC 2.1' 2.so S..loOftdllOto ...... ,.. AMIJ 10.00 10.00 •-ca/Ma~ Prod OTC ~.oe _,,oo DI•. Moldlns c,,.,. IASDAO •.6) 1.11 -?.~ ·~· 11.1 01-07-81 •2.9 .91 19.2 9·)0-8) I C .71 6.l Ol-31·1• •11.7 .•1 18.• 6-10-0 .1.e • l'O 11.1 6-10-0 IC <.•61 -10·02-1) .~., t~) • 1t...,, . .,.... IC 1.171 • 09-10·11 IC .)0 26.7 IZ•ll•I' ., (.061 -12-11-•3 -6.2 (.Oil -6-l0-81 IC 1.01 1,0 S·)l-8) •ll.O 1.•9 2.6 12-11·13 11C .2• 10.e 10-11-•1 .1.1 0 -12-11-8) •l.2 .22 26.1 10-02-ll -6.T .11 IS.9 1-J1-9J ••• o 1,6) 6.~ 01-11-0 ••• ••• 22 .0 12-11-13 ~.'I (.Ill • ll·]l·I) ••• ., .'7 11.2 12-11 ... l It .10 1),1 6°)0-1) •Z.!1 .OS 99.• 12·)1-ll ••• 1 .u •2.0 f-,Jl-1) -1.• .20 .11.1 <-•n -•.9 (.091 IA ,11 IC .0) •l.O 1,99 ... 1~ l'S.6 12-31-ll •-30-6• S-)t-1) 3-Jt..a• -11-11-1) 6.S IZ-30-ll -12.31.eJ ·~O.O (,Ill -12·)1·1) IC .~ 30.0 l-31·11 -2.• 1.10 9.0 1-11-1• IC I.TO 12.~ )·2'-81 IA . 36 )·)l•IJ -J.O .11 fl,t 1·30-83 IC .1• 7.1 10-11·9) IC .6~ 7.T 12·31·13 -1.~ .70 l).2 1·31-1} .,.9 t.•)l -6-30-1) .~.T .01 99.• 1z.31.93 • 3. 3 (. '2) -9-tt-•l •l.9 .Tl 8.t 6-)0·tl •l.9 <•.1'1 -12-)1-1) •S.1 1.n fl.} IZ·Jl-0 llC (.•61 • 9-30-83 -1.• .II ~.1 12-]1·0 -1.1 1.•s '·' 03-~-·I -1•.' .)6 6,) 1-1•-•· •c <. 11 • 2-21-11 IC .2) l.) 9-30-1) ·20.0 (.Ol) -12·11·8) -1.l C.Zl l -10-)1-13 IC (,I) -6-10-8) -1.1 .'2 H.• 1.31-11 11C (1.T•l -12·)1-I) -8.1 (1.061 -ll-31-9) •).I (.•) -12·)1-I) ···~ c.111 ~-11-IJ IC .ll 7.) T·)l·I) -t.1 (.ZJl -12-11-IJ •II.I (2.~) • 6°)0•'3 •c .10 99 •• 6-10-•1 V. (,U) • 12-31-11 •'·' I.DI •.I 9·)0-1) P11l lerton Auto Part• & Aoo. ITSI lf.1' 18.00 ••.) 1.l• 10.3 11-11-8) 120 • .s8 11,IOO •9, 1•s ]9,000 1,91• '·' 0 6.)2) l.2~ 1'0 ~.•Tl 191,019 T0,9,1 ),161 2•.•u •.•n 61.111 1s1.~o• 200 11',)0I 86.7 .. 3,)10 20. n• 1..I09 9.•s9 •.910 16,700 1.61' 11,'22 20,209 811 1,111 113,931 "'· )16 11 ,Sll · 97 ,eos •.•96 12. 139 )0,0T1 2',00• 2,019 21,'67 )6, 17S 696,900 131 •SS I 26,192 ••••• 19,)SS 7.T•O •.8)0 9.~S) s19 ),)00 1, 161 "·~" 11,98) !16,200 1.sn 11.210 s, 111 1,sss ,,,)29 •9.692 '.»~ 210.s '' 1,398 •.soo -1, 1so ~1 .,, -120 -•n UT 10,a,• 1,106 ' I, 111 '21 •.060 9,QSf ~01 z.200 1.060 '21 •.TO . 236 ·'·"o _.,, 11• ... 10.••• 1,110 -!1•2 llS 10.299 1,11) l,•03 )IT 1, 1•s 1'9 1.ns -~i -1,519 9TS -9•.~oo 6.321 -~· SM 1,196 763 -i.u• IS6 -SJO -1,700 -1.~• •.•1• -2.01• -11.IOO -l,961 .1.•10 292 -TIS -2.•11 1.•1• -19' 6,1~ 117,992 f,160 Fixed-Rate AdJuatable Rate AdJuatat;le Mortgage Wrongful firing suits caused by . AU TO UPHOLSTERY a, Sta:1tte, MERCEDES SPECIALIST sloppy: pro edures Among the techniques Watson suggests: SPE("IAL OF THE M<lNTH ORIGINAL GERMAN SOFT TOPS FOR 230 -250 - 280 -450 - 380 -SOOSL '995.60 Completely Installed Fullerton S&L Any loan officer Pacific Coast S&L Any loan officer Long Beacn S&L Any roan offlc8i' . . . Lender Contec:t Santa Paula S&l Any loan officer Sears SaVings Bank Any loan offk:er Hemet Fed S&L Any loan CStflcer Lender Cont.ct Long Beach S&L Any loan officer Glendale Fed. S&L Any loan officer Citicorp S&L Any loan officer Evidence and documentation which support the firina of an employee are vital to a company's uccess in defending costly wrongful discharae lawsuit a leading !abbr law expen told cxccuhves here. -Do not promise employees that they wall have permanent emptor.· mcnt in the company or that they wttl receive any specific salary, promo-771 W. 17 ~h St~ Costa Mesa Ca ll 6 46-984 1 "Over the past scve'ral yean, fired employees have filed growins numbers of laW5uits, often devising new arounds for wronif ul discharac claims," said James P. Watson, partner in the Los Anictcs-bascd law finn of Cox, Castle~ Nicholson. tion or benefit, unless you mean it. If!~~========================~~~ a company docs find 1t necessary to make such re~sentations in order to keep a kc~· employ~_. it ~hould make ure they arc m wnttng in a contract which specifically reserve~ \he right to terminate with or without cause, as circumstances require: -Do not violate proccdurc.s or other policies set out in employee handbooks: -Do keep a written r rd of all reprimands and other "fonnal" criti· ca ms made of the emplo)ee' per- formance: 11111 Sill llEll c11m ESTATE Above San Lw.s Rey DoWll.S, overlook.i gorgeous rolling hills with mount.a.in VlCWS and ocean breezes. 1~ usabl 14 3 acres of 1enUe land and 2 a.ere ioning otfen many potentiA.l Ulel i.e .• excellent hone ranch and/or subdivision. Many tax advan availabl wath this.&¥0Cado and citrus grow. European elepnicoe • ln approx. ~300 sq_.ft., ~ &droofn. 7 Bath home with many exquisite features .. Latge pa o and pool, perf entenamrr~nt are . 2nd lma1l h use and 2 ad~g ~ls (10 ae. ll+ acres) to\aling 36 acres also available. OWn r will 11 all or pan and rill boundaJ'.y adjust. ~000. UEl•R Ill 111111M FAllLm .. 111/U 1· 1111 111/1H·ll4J . .. S.·111. 17 S.·pl. l' :;., ... :.? I s.'.·pl. }. l ~·1tt. 27. St·p1. 2a St~pt. ~) Cull1 "n .. --..,. 13.875 14.000 14.250 Int. Rete Pta. 11.50 2.00 11 .600 1.50 11.750 2.00 Int. Rat• Pta. 10.625 • 2.5 11.250 2.0 11 .250 2.0 2.50 250 2.75 150 2.50 250 AW\Ott. Yra. 2 250 150 6mo. 5.0 emo. 4.5 Amort. Int. Yra. Adi-Cep 250 12 mos. 5.125 300 12moe. 5 350 6moe. '4 . . ... , .. . . l0.1111 ~pm 2prn I Oam. 2pm ln I )Piii p111 .r .. J" , ~ I l t , ' . . • • ... .... .. : '1 I 'i i ' o:J;: :;:M_ • .:-~• .;.::.;::is~u~ .. ·:: .. :scsg. ~='l'!·c. tt ~.::s ~=;i:=s ==. & S••,~·;s~~~;; 1'·· ·~•s s-• ·~~ ... ~••-& # ,,. r ··" :: ~ •= """ .... ;j:-: .• ~ -::s7 .... 1r~~u ..... 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'1"++ ~-ili-~$ir;. ... .., .• ~ " J E ¥ If : .. ~~~• ... ~ ¥~-~~--~=~·~~··~~~~C :y~ vS:~ ~1 I . •SJ";Jif~i15 . r:#r::#.>-·~' .. ···~S .. lfiSifa<~5-•i:i•• :GS :II' • ·~ iil!iiiliif,f,;i!i!:i~ 1·s1i11~!f illii~:i . !!fl ·~~~ ~ ~· f ~ 5 1 • k t r ~ I P ' ••• It •"' .· c •• .. I ~L ~I·"= .·c : a;;. . ... a .... 11 .. lSO!=! ·S:SS•= ~ ... 9 .... ,z i?2i~~:ro!;ii~·1i .:•~cl1::!!lasi1-..a~il.:11~liir. •ai!S !11. ~•i•-•~~-~~= ~~w·•~1·~11cG~~~c~~xcTUM•'~u=~ I ·II' f1'6SS6-J.~il•t1• .. s-.:.-s~·-& fl' ·6,11'6$ •1E;s$:;Ct1• · ill' ~'" ... ;;::·1 .. 8:0 ........ ~d ...... ~-... ~·•::s ••-:;;:: •• a=a ...... 'os · 11:1v .. """J-1. 'C' ~ •. •lifl'F'll,' 1r::~• ··~~ 11,~ ~ s:iJ ·II>' ... 1 ... :~11' •• l -:. ~·,st§'•t .. ~»i~~·ii1ff•f:1· i•1s.11ti. s,,,,~,,, .. ·!.',.~ .. » i + + +++ · T·+ +% + . +I¢ T + c;:;. ; 1 + • i;. 'S :1.•11;11$0. SS' ;~#.' ,,;s~r .,..,:,$ $ ,,. :'6• •• .. ~ .. ~ e ·I-;'? -~;:~:1.::11:,lt fijliiiiJi•;:il1ili11illall-=1 11, ti• ~ii1=~111~1,,~1r•J,·;ir.11a11•ii·1Q,t1r•'~a1j ii 1 ifi .!~llf!l!fl!llll!~l!l!llll.!,111.!!lll:flll ~-I e,~~W;s-w i• ~ ~ ~ ~~ -~iik ~~·~· ::1: .. \"•; .... va , =c • :o: .. c~ll • ,IS •· 1aacn:-. •••'E I lilf i!i:dic .... ~a~,.i:~ll~ll.li~~i:ll.;al1e1~•11;.l1! 111. 1~;·;ISsJ11•ill1;~11tllJl1!·ft;i~¥f1!Jl1ll•I .... : ... iiii1'J•.illir111.1·111i11~1·~itl1fl11'llll i t;·r !¥!~,!~·121.J't'!''!!!!!?!.!•:':''l!!?Jl!! ~ •'S!F ~jj: ~ , .,... • •• si,~•••s.s ~•.s•.~'Sf$.••••I f '-e t•? i I 1· .. I . I ~ . . . • NOTIC9 IHVITIMO atOI The County Sanitation Oil1ricta of Orenge County, c.AfOfTlll, receMI ...._ eel bids until 11 00 A M • T~. Sepl 2S, 1984 Bidl mutt be received al the Olt1r1Ct1' Admini.tratlve ol- flcee by the d•t• Ind time ti.rein1bove Mt forth. al wNd'I time th9y.. be put>- llcly °'** 9nd examined 1t the office ol the Oiltnct1. 10844 Ellil AY9nU9, Foun- tlln Vllley, Calttomta, lor the ' 4 flt&:IC f«lllCE followfng FURHlSH, DELIVER ANO Pl&JC f«lTIC[ FICTITtOUt 9UIMlt SUPPLY CHLORINE IN NAIR ITATDIEHT PlB.JC NOTICE BUU< AT PLANT NOS 1 FlCTITIOUt aotMU The lollowlng l*IOf\a are ---------ANO 2. Speallc:ltlon No NAm ITA~ doing bu.in.a as: F1CTmOUI BUSIN1EU C--015 The fOllowlng peteOn1 are CREATIVE SOFTWARE N4a. ITATIMENT B6dl must be submitted doing bYslneM as. SERVICES. 345 Uni"9flfty The lollowlng person •• on the tonn supplied by the W-K ASSOCIATES. 42S Drive #M2, Cost• ~. doing bullnMa U ; Dlltrlct1 In eccordence With Hill Street, Lagun1 Beech, C&lif. 92627 • WARD MANAGEMENT 1111 prcwltlona of the apec;lfl· CA 92651 David Allen Okazaki, 345 COMPANY, 2,10 Newport catlont Welch H Bo)w, 425 Hill UMerllty Drive #M2, Costa Blvd. •1. Cott M .... C&lll. ' SpeclflcatlOM. bid blanks Street, 1..agun1 ee.dl, CA Mela. Cellf 92627 92627 9nd futther lnfonnatlOn may 92161 Tim Kent Okaulcl. 345 Oon1ld A W1n:t. 116 beobt.INledet the aboVe.0-Ka!Mrine K Boyer, 425 UnlYefllty om. IM2, Cotta Kings Place. Newport .d,....: t~ SC0-2910 Hiii Street. Laguna Beech. Mela. Cellf 92627 Belictt, Callf. 92863 Of 982·2411 CA 92651 David A Okazaki This bualn.u 11 con· Ted Hoffman Thia butlMu 11 con-This statement wu filed ducted by-1n lndl't'ldual Chief ot Procurement & ducted by: A general plft· with the County Cllfk of Or· Donald R. Ward property nerlhlp enge County on s.ptember This statement wu hied PubWled by the Or1t1g9 W.icti H. Boyer 6, 1914 with the County Cleft of Or,· Coat Deity Piiot September Thia statement wu filed '2M711 anoe County on September 16. 1984 -.Ith the County C1er11 of Or· Publlthed Orange Coat 4. 1914 ______ s_u.._m-t anoe coooty on Augult 21. Delly Piiot s.ptamber 16, F2M4M 1984 23, 30. October 7. 1984 Publiltled Orange Cout PUlJC NOTICE ,_ SU-231 Daily Piiot September 9. 16. Publllhed Orange Coat 23, 30. 198' F1CTITIOUI 9UIMU Dattu Pilot c-tember 2, 9. Plll.IC NOTICE su-22 .. NAm ITATEIEHT ' ....., The following pet'IOn II 16. 23, 198' F1CTmOUI llO ... U doing~ u · ,. Su-2t8 N.u. ITAn.NT PWUC NOTICE THEPAICESOUACE.OE-The folowlng per90n • ---~----SIGNEAS FURNITURE PlBJC f«)TJCE .doing butineee ..-FICTITIOUt IUIMSI OUTLET, 4035 tMYenon BOOTLEG WILLY. #202 NAIR ITATUIENT Court. Fountain Valley. Calif. flCTITIOUl luatNeU 2424 Newport Blvd , Cotta The fOllOwlng perton 11 92807 NAME ITATIMENT M .... Calif. 92627 doing buslnea U '. Jactc Amoroeo Jr .. 1276 The folloWlng person1 are Sendra Lee Mcearter, 561 BEST ACTION SER· Glenneyfe. Laguna Beedl, doing bullneu u · Promontory Or W . Newport VICES, 24635 Via San Calif. 92651 WEST ELECTRIC, 21n2 Beech. c.llf 92ee0 F~nal)do. Mlulon Viejo, Th•• bullMU 11 con-Feirtane Circle. Huntington Th11 bu.iMel 11 con-Calif 92692 ducted by: an lndMduat Beec:h. CA 92646 ducted by; an lnc:llVlduel Dorothy M. Scollard, Jadl Arnoroeo Jr William Mortimer Wiit, Sandra M<:Cart• 24835 VII San Femlndo. Thll statement was tiled 21772 Falrtane Circle, Hunt· This statement 11ru fffed Mission Viejo. Calli. 92892 with the County Clerk of Or· lngton Beach, CA 92646 with the County Clet11 of Or· Thi• bu1ln111 11 con· ange County on September John Richard W•t. 2'1181 tnge County on September ducted by· an lnd1vlduel 6, 1914 Kiowa, Huntington Beech, 6. 1914 Dorothy M Scohard F25411t CA 92646 '254120 Thi.I llatement WU filed Publiehed Orange C:O..t Wiiham M W•t Publllhed 0rltlg9 Cout with the County Cler1c Of Or- Oeil)' Pilot SeplemW 16. Thll ttatement was filed Daily Pilot September 11, ange County on September 23, 30. October 7, 1914 with the County Clertl of Or· 23. 30, October 7, 1984 4, 198.4 SU..230 ange County on August 27. SU·229 F254411 --MU--C-NO_Tl_CE ___ t984 Fmet1 Nil.IC NOTICE o:~~.ec'~;!,"t, ~t Published Orange CoU1 23. 30. 1084 F1C1TTIOUI au ... H O.,ty Pilot September 2. 9. FICTITIOUS 9UHfEH SU-225r NAm STA~ 16 23. 1984 MAiie •TATDllNT The following ~ ate 253391 The loloWlng Pl'90fll ate doing butlneel ... doing bu~neel ... Ml.JC NOTICE CALIFORNIA POfllDS YESTERDAYS f.REAMS, FICTITIOUS 9UllNEU 12891 w .... n. Suite B. PlB.IC NOTICE 1142 Austin s . Coat• HAiie ITATUENT Garden Groye CA 92641 Mela, CA 92626 Dave L• 'wooten Jr FICTJTIOUS IUllNESI Mlch•I• Chrl1t11n11n, The followlng person II tat01 Hoetllnl Apt o Hunt~ N~ ITATURNT 1142 Austin St • Coata ~ng ~~ KELLY •noton Beadl. CA m'.4t ~:; ~rie: ::'ton1 are ~c:t!:~ 1800 Coral ENTERPRISES, 1803 Tustin l'hls buslneta 11 con-THE MONEYMAKER Place Newpo..i ~ CA Aw .. Costa Mela, Calif ducted by:.,, lndMdull 1901 Newpor1 Blvd •231. 926&3 ' 92627 ~~:.:::-:::filed Cotti Mesa, CA,92627 • This bu1lne11 11 con-ROblrt Borr-:_l.!:ell'f·J!.3 with the Count" Cieri! of Or· John M. Muterton. #3 ducted by· co-partner• Tuatln _!ve .. .,.,.,a . ' P .. rl. Leguna Niguel. CA Cella Abbott Calif. Hu27 =County on August 14, 926"'7 Mtehell CMttlanMn Thia bu1ln1q 11 con· 1 ~ T'u bus•nesa 11 con-This 1t1tement wu flied ducted by an lndMdual Pu Or Cout dU'.1ed by All lndlVidual wtth the County Clerk of Or· Robert B Kelty blbhed ange John M Masterson ange County on Augu91 24 Thia statement was filed Dally Piiot Auguat 26. Thia stetement wa flied 1984 • with the County Clerk of Or· September 2, 9. 16. 19148 ith the County Cleft of Or· F25S780 anoe County on September _______ s_.,.,_•20_ Inge County on Augult 27. Publlthed Orange Coast 4• l984 Pt&.IC f«)TIC[ 1914 Delly PMot Augua1 26 F254415 F2U111 September 2 9 16 t984 Publllhed Or1ng1 Cout F1CTITIOUI BUllNEU Pubtllhed Or1ng9 Coat ' · su-209 Dally Piiot September 9, 16. NAIR ITATEMENT Daily Piiot Secitember 2, 9, 23, 30. 1984 The followlng pereont .,. 16, 23. t984 doing bus1neA11: Su-2141-------Ml.IC NOTICE SU-223 PllJllC f«lTICE WESTERLEY FRAMING. FICTITIOUI aUS1NHI i--------- 3151 Airway Avenue. Suite Pml.JC f«lTICE NAME IT A TEMENT FICTITIOUI 9UllNHI T-1. Co111 M11a. Calif The lollOwlng Plf90'\I are NAiii STATEMENT 92626 FICTITIOUS auatHEU OOlng bUl&nell ... Thi folloWlng persona llrl NlchOles Pappas, 3 151 NAME STATIMIHT INTEGRATED SYSTEMS. doing butlnea as AJ<'ffay Avenue. Suite T · 1 The following parton1 are 11581 Tustin All9f1Ue, A· 144, (a) E QUI LINE. ( b) Cotta M_,, Ca11t 92626 ~ng bullnMa u; eo.ta MeM CA 92627 EOUIUNE MOBILE FAR· Larry Rlool. 3151 Airway COORDINATED SYS· Ronlld J 'Tripp, 251 23rd RIERS SUPPLY. 408 Awnue, SUlta T·1, Cotta El".lS. 20421 Bayview Av· Str .. t. Costa M .... CA PolnMttla,porona Del Mar, M ... Calif 92621 UI, Senta Ana. CA 92707 92627 CA 92625 RLB Marlnll, Inc., a Call-Robert S Tripp, 20421 Thia buslneN 11 con-David Bowlu. •oe fornla corpor.atlon, 4000 Bayview Avenue. Santa Ana. ducted by All lndlVlduaJ PolnMltla. Corona Del Mar, Mac.Atthul' BouleV•d. Sulla cA 92707 Ronald J Tripp CA 92625 700. Newport Beedl. Calif !Thi• bulln111 11 con-.lhla 1&1temeAI wM I e ~""·~6 -92660-li:JUCtid 6Y' MTndiVld with the County Clerk ol Or-Poinsett • Corona Del Mar. This bu1ln111 11 con-Robert S. Tripp ange County on Auguat 21. CA 92625 ducted by • general pert-1 Thia statement wu flied 1984 This bu1tne11 11 con- nerahlp Ith the County Clertl ol Or-F25'121 ducted by· 1 generll part- Atq\ard L Beauchamp County on Augult 27. Publlthed Or&nQ9 Coast nerthlp This statement wu f'*' 1 Dally Pito1 s.ptember 2. 9 Oevid 8owlel with the County Clerk of Or· Fn.a 16. ~3. 1984 This 1tatement was lllld ange County on September Pubhthed Orange Coast SU-221 with the County Cleft of Or-e 1984 111y P11ot September 2. 9. ange County on August 23, F254701 16, 23, 1984 t964 . Publlthld Orange Coast Su-219 PUBLIC NOTICE ~1 Dally Pilot September 16. Publ1thed Oringe Cout 23~ 30, Octobf1 L....liM flB:1C HOTtef EJcnTIOUI IUllNEll f Augu • SU-234 NAMe ITATEMINT September 2, 9. 16, t984 HARBOR LAWN· MT. OLIVE Mortuary • Cemetery Crematory 1825 Gisler Ave Costa Mesa 540-5554 PIERCE BROTHERS BELL aROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadwax Coata M .... G-42·9150 •AL TZ HRQERON IMrTH & TUTHILL WEITCUFP CHAPEL 427 E 17th St. Coata M ... 848-9371 PACIFIC VIEW ~LPARK Cemetary •Mortuary Chape4 • Cttmatoey 3500 Paclf c View Drive Newport BHCP'I 6<44·2700 ,, FICTmOUI 9UllHIU The followlng per'IOnl ate Su-21 t NAME STATEMENT ~?G~E9.:PR1SES , .. "'C NOTICE The following pertonl we ' HIUU doing buslneaa as 19531 Airport Wey South, ---------1 BENICIA MARINA 4000 Senta Ana. CA 92707 F1CllTIOUI 9UllNllt MacArthur 8oul9"1rd Suite John E Porter. 27741 NA• aTAftMENT 700 Newport a..ch · Calif Paseo Eateben. San Juan The follOWlng peraon 11 92&8o · · Capistrano. CA 92975 doing bullnea aa Beauchamp Enterprl... Ann Porter. 27741 Pueo FINO THE CHILO FINGER Mutn• DIYltlon 4ooo E1t1b1n. Sin Juan PRINTS CO, 8400 Edinger MacArthur Boulallard Suite Caotttrano, CA 92675 Ste H204, Huntington 700 Newport Belch. Calif Oreg Porter. 27741 Pueo Beech, Caltl. 926<97 92Mo • · Esteban. Sen Juan Gary Wayne Plclc1n1. Rlcnard L Beauchamp Caplttrano, CA 92675 8400 Edinger Sle H204. 4000 MacArthUr 8ouleV1rd' Thi• statement 'WU flied Hunungton Beach. Callt Suite 700 Newport Beech' wtlh the County Clerk of Or· t26"7 Catif, tM · anga County on Augus1 27. Thia bu11na.a1 It con· Richafd L ~P 1984 ducted by In lndlvldual Thia atat911W>l WAI fifed 'ism7 G.W. P~ 1111th the County Clerk of Or· Publllhed Orange eo.t Thia stetement •at f ed 1nge County on September Deily P11ot September 2, 9, With the County Clerk of Or· 6. 198• 16, 23. 1984 ange County on Sec>tembar ' F2'4710 Su·2f7 11. 1914 Pub11"*2 Orange CoU1 ns.1 Daily Piiot September 15. ..,.1c llftTJCE Publithed Orange eout 22, 29, October 6, 1964 '"UIK. nu Deily Pilot September 11, SA-219 23. 30. Octot>er 7, 1964 SU-236 PlBLIC f«lTICE FICTITIOUI 9UllN«lt NAME tTATIMCNT Tile lollowlng peraons are 1... P\EUC NOTICE F1CTmOUt .., ..... l ... ... ·- I ' • u Auto ·sales, housing and em\ployment-the segments of our economy on which ·so much of classified depends-are · 1ooking better than they have in a long time. We're feeling good about that and the opportunity it gives us to off er you a -----Digger, Detter-tlian-ever classified section.. If you haven't read classified . te , co1ne enjoy a brows~. through our coluffins. ·-You'll see why We're feeling good about classified. 642-5678 . . . . ' ·. • . THE DAIL X PILOT CLAS IFIED OFFICE 110 R I Telephone Service: Monday-Friday 8:00 .M.-5:30 P .M. Business Counter: Mond~y-FridaY, · • 8:00 A.M.-5:30 P.M. DEADLINE Pl08Uf.ATIO~ \londn' Sat. Tursda·, \Ion. \\ t•dnt'~cfu, Tut''· ThurMfu, . \\'c•cl. "Frida~ · fhur . Saturdcl\ fridu~ Sunda~ · Fri. DEADl.l~t; 11 ::in a.m. i::m p.m, i:_:m p.m. i::m p.m. i::m p .m. :~:00 p .m. :~:00 p.m . · CANCELLATION & CORRECTIO~S: CarH"t>llationi, and l'Orrt'l'liom. mu' br madt• on snm.-d~adlinei, as abO\ ~. Pleasf' ask for . a t•ant·f'llation number when <·an<·c>llintt your ad. ERRORS: Check your ad dail~ and report errors immediatelv. Tht> DAILY PILOT ar.sumt" liabilit~ for the first inforrect insertion onlv. CLASSIFIED 642-5678 Ill& YIUI 4 Bdrm PATIO 4 Bdrm SPACIOUS 3 Bdrm CONOO 4 Bdrm 3 CAR GAR 5 Bdrm 3 BTH BIG 4 Bdrm 3 CAR GAR ~ 4 Bdrm POOL 4 Bdrm GOLF VIEW 4 Bdrm FAIRWAY 4 Bdrm POOL/SPA For details call 751-3191 C:::SELECT .~PROPERTIES llYllE TIUllE , ......... ,.,,... IPll UTWIY I .... , 1-1 Come by or call us anytime to aee this lovely 3 bdrm, 2 bath home. Recently reduced from $289,500. This ii one of Corona del Mar's FINEST V ALU!S in a great resid. area. -just a short walk to Balboa Island. Fashion bland, New- port Center and the bay & beaches. New roof. entry & kitchen flrs & beautiful French dooz:a-all added . within the past 2 yrs -AND -there is an assumable $189,300 existing loan! Th.is relocation-owned home is vacant and CAN BE SHOWN ANYTIME! ........... &tale l14/llt-11l1 OPEi TODAY Clean. cool I roamy Monaco w/sltJl&hb, bay wiMlow, dtdls, etc. $242,000 ...................... 2025 Port Bristol, tMi, NB Cutt and cont1q11r~ 1 8*m, den, uJllhb and class 08;'000-.......................... . C"1hanctniYltw,4 Bdrms, 4 ba, pool/spa & oeat I 11m1 rm $450,000 ........... : .... 1421 Kinrs Rd, NewPort Beach Lari• South Coast Plaz• area, 4 Mm, 3 ba, very secwt, very attractive, vwy spacious $169,000 ............... ,.,3917 Teakwood, So. Santa Ana L111est lot, 4 8dnn ·with le• cmrid patio, ftrepff • ind sport cMt $379,000 ........................ 1230 Sand Key, tMi CdM . r Wide wortd of a m, du* tlder heme bta.-., rtmlCWH $125,000 ............... -... 3028 Ocean Blvd, Old CdM , Classic c.ut, alcllJ 4 ......... aunt hst, 11)1, • btaclt $635,000.,., ... .,,. .• ,,.,,m ,.,,.223 PoinsfttJI, Old CdM Chlrmill Cell wta, b11ct tt bNch. 3 '*"'. 'l stsJ, llta tf htl ' $439,000. , ....... n ............ 302 HetiolF9'"1, Old CcfM Cool. delft. ctnt..-1r1. J ..... ti.II• ,.,., ptllo .. _,.... $450,000. 4515 Hampden Rd, Cameo Shofes, CdM U~IC>U fi()M ~ REALlQRS , 875 6000 24•3 E11t iOQ11t Highway, COr00t d•I Mar .......... 2 ITllY l~-FlllTAll VII.LEY 3 Miles to Ckean: 5 BR (l down), 2 3t.a Ba. F.ating area in kJtch n, formal d!Jling rm. Huge~ ~h Tudor style family home. Hardwood On. 2 fire- places, pcx>l lize yatd with block walls. 1 Yr. Home Warranty protection. Fam- ily neighborhood. ,,... 1111,111·-ltthat141 1181 Estate •1 Lllel1 114/114-0111 OPEN TODAY 1-4:30 1336 Gal11y, Dover Shewn ..... '" ..... ~ ...... $915,500 Beautiful liome & view w/1ndoo·r pool & retractablt • roof. 4 Bd, ' Ba & pwd rm. ' 1330 Galaly, ~Ver Shorts .................... $7751000 New hsting .• ~dramatic home w/bay & night hght view, courtyard, with pond, pool & putting green. Ftt land. 32 Ima Loa Ct, NB (12-4) ....................... $164,000 Newpc>rt Crest condo 2 Bd, 2~ Ba, some ocean view. Comm. pool, walk to beach. . 760 Via Udo Nard, Bl (1-4) ......... -..... $1,725,000 Larre S 8d Bayfront. best locatioJI and next to rreenbelt. Choice 45' lot lllTl.U 1M I••• (1 ... It.) .... .....,1.1 Recently remodeled 2 Br, 2 Ba on R-2 lot. Natural wOod cabinets, built-ins, F.AU. heat, mum ceilin.gS. F\&lly carpeted, auto sprinklers. new paint. Vacant. lntr (M) 111-4111 h11llpl2Wlll let U1 Helf Y • Sell Y ,,, p,.,.,.,1 The Daly P'lot off en JOU tm taact silt ad • '* "ftctwe PaJt" wtthnds fcir just S2S per day, or 2 days for $45. • 11111111 a pldst, or wt1 photoiraph it for ,. .......... , .. . e. ...,... . -642-5678~ Ot>Ughtful 3 Bdrm home on the water with shp and 1de lie Catt\edral ce1hn 2 fu't'places. Spacious MBR suite with smin1 room overlooking the water. Large pauo & balcony. Aho income from l Bdrm apart• ment over earage Reduc:ed to $425.000 Ownu must sell. JAllll IULTY • 0 .. UITIM lllmllNll.1111 Lov ly Newport location. Entenninmg horn with flowing floor plan & ph- isticated curb appc L 3 Bdrms, 2 ~ BathS with pacious f rruJy room open- ing. to larg pool and deck. $350,000. Call MARILYN HILL. RUIOfNllAl lllUl (SlAT( Wf!YtaS UI• YIEW lllU 1211,IOQ It's rare to get such a perfect 2 bedroom plus den home-but we've got one and it's decorator perfect! Beautiful custom built-ins, re- modeled kitchen that's truly stun- ning. Extra deep lot with lovely large patios. RARE 200' PRIME ISLAND POINT HOME -4/6 bdrm, big dOCl<(s). play lawn & swim beach. Walk to ocean fun. 7 car (p8rklng. Low owner fin. $750,000 (land Incl.). Open Sat./Sun. 1-5 0Wner(9-5)650-0202 BUY DIRCT a SAVE ULll& POllllU MUllYWCI ' IWlllS UCWICl 1741,000 Two separate 2 Bdrm homes on extra large R-2 lot m great rental locauon. Orily one block to beach wtth f tre- pla and garages. Large assumable loan. Only lOJ, down. Just reduced to $230,000. '" •.. ., UNOAY. S PTEM 6 IM Exciting Ocean & Jetty view , 4 Br, 3 Ba. 3700 sq. ft. car parking. $1.285,000. WEST UY &ft UYFlllT htwH•IA.hllea1llHl11• <f BR, 2 BA. inimaculate house on 60xl20 ft. lot. 1()41, dwon. 8()41, financ- ing, fully assumable. owe 2nd. IPU ..U UT/In 10-1 1111,• IElllEl .... 1 &llMFULl-flaY• Enter through the enclosed courtyard and parquet entry. Large f&lJilly room overlooks quaint red brid< patio. fte:- modeled kitchen. A solid value at .$116,900. Call for f~ de~. THE REAL ESTATERS MYEl-EI IEW IEHOTlll Tl 1211,000 IPO UT/1111-1at1t41 i.1111 lriff Spacious 4 Bdrm & d n . 2 'h baths. Two 2 car garages Largt> lot witt-. room for pool or RV parking ..................... Ml·INl - THE REAL ESTATERS Highly u~ed 4 Bdrm. 2~ Ba, fonnaldiriing, library, family rm. mas- ter suite. cul-<l -sac. Lovely large ~ with pool. pa and much r:nott. . -111&1~--------- SI. OISTl PWI ITUI. !Ir, 1\4M ~ .... "-llPtua ........... .., ..... tnett Lovely wut tn excell nt' shape. but I must sell NOW. Has carport with storage, aecunty gate, solar heated pool & .Jacu.m, exe • room and unas . ....... lll-111lth-.wlla..nll PICTURE YOUR HOME HERE Private Parties Are Welcome C• Cla11lfiff, 642-5671 for infof'mation & surprisingly • low cost •'" 11'.IT llY IH CJ to SOuth C t Plaza, ou nding 3 BR. 2 ~ BA, home on comer lot. Kitchen Wlth all amenlt1 flreplace m living room, and skylights. Garden window. Close to pool and spa. Low~t pnced condo in develop- ment. Do.Ma Godshall. $135.000 YISTl m Ull Full 5ecu.rity highrise • luxury bayfronl living! 1 BR unit newly refurbished. ~t view location. Bo t s.hp available. Martba Mac- nab. $279,000 Ill CUT 1-f llRWlY LOClTill This elegant 3 BR, 3 BA single level townhome features the ul- timate in quality, detail & conve- nience Includes pool, spa & air conditioning. Danny Bibb. $725,000 &m1no1 lllLIEIS Buildable R-2 lot on Peninsula. Excellent rent.al area. Older 1 BR home plus 2 car garag~ now occupies lot Rent now -build later. Martha Macnab. $193,000 USUTIE OREi UYS SIU Priced under market for quick sale! 4 BR, 3 BA home with large family room, patio. Located on a quiet ~ul-de-sac in Woodbridge with pools, parks, schools, and tennis nearby. Larry Dyer. $185,000 RECITJYI VIEW llli Spacious 4 BR, 1 level home in one of Newport Beach's most exclusive areas. 24 hr. guard gates. Beautiful golf course. Outstanding day & night view. Great home for entertainment. Maxine Propp $875,000 Incl. Land. WEllEll lmUTI • Beach area condo in security gated area. 3 BR, 2 'h BA -2- story unit. Immaculate. Steps to boat slip & beach. Reduced to $269.000 with land Martha Mac. nab. Llf Ulf cnmY HEICI Lido Nord Bayfront! Lg warm fanuly home (6-7 BR), 3 car gar- age, or 1-2 BR apt w/garage. French doors, bnck patios & floors, crown molding, fireplace in master su1te Dona Chichester. $1,295,000 lellTIWIOI I IElllll New on market. Large 2-story farmly home. 5 BR. 3 BA. dining room, Cam1ly room One.BR and BA downstairs Prerruum lot with spa Belle Partch. $224,500 UH UYFllOIT--ISTlTI U1E Under a million. Great invest- ment. 3 BR plus large playroom with bath over garage, pier and slip. Barbara Aune. $995,000 Ill CAIYO~llCI I TlllSUI ThlS 5 BR. 4 •,2 BA custom pool & spa home with a contemporary fl.air offers a scenic faJrway view, a reduced ask.mg pnce and great long term fmancmg w/very low interest rate Danny Bibb. $995.000 118 CHYOl-YIEW Best buy in Big Canyon. A Deane ''Monaco" with a superb view of Catalina, oc-ean and sunsets. 3 BR, with afided family room, walled garden spa, and sauna m master bath. In addition, French doors open lD an upstair.s sun deck. Lucy Rose $525,000 SHCTICIW Liii ISLE UYFIOIT Rare opportunity for choice lo! cation on the Bay. 55' frontage with large deck for entertammg. 5 BR. many exceptional features tatlored to lttxury livmg. Pier and slip for large boat. Joan Lewis. $3, 750.000 Ill OJIYO._"IOYEI" IODEL Lovely 2 BR. den home. Prime cul-de-sac locauon. end unit Wonderful garden setting w/maturc Jandscapmg. Private community Martha Macnab $34g,ooo ltl OAIYOI 0 FlllWAY A tx-aullf ul town home on a superb location HJgh ceilings, wall.1 of &lass and mflrble Ooors add tO the soph1st1cation of this remodeled and f'xpanded Deauvtlle, now 5 Bdrm and li- br•ry Lucy R . $665,000 644-6200 ,, IUIPOI• Two bedroom condo, e.1t- cetlent condition. Price It right 1628-C lowe St. E&llY TIE IUOI lnVltlng 3BR 3ba home. Latge SYnny patio. Prl· vate community offers Wide beech, boat dockt, tennta court. 39BMCOnBay.1398,000 111-1111 l.atrJ Pfister l1alter l.Malalad IOM ~~· um11T11PLD peclou1 owners unit overlooking maJn chan- nel + Mndy ti.ech + 3Br Yental. Income '23.000 annually Atklng $915,000 Owner/Agt 644-9513 1AL11A ISLI. Olnlll A t,.dltlonal laland cot- tage '°' • weekend ,... treat Of wtnter/eumm« rental property. One of the f.w 2 bdrm homee 1t111 avaumi. In thtt prtc. category. $285,000 - ~All HI Hh"IT llOMt ' lft<. REAL ESTATE l7MIOO WITEll VIEW ON THE LAKE. Two bedrooms + den. SF.cURITY OATFS. Walk to Huntm n Beach and Pler. Home has many amenities + LARGE A - SUMABLE LOAN!! WfwAc11h luOJ SoltlHltter er lrteu O"'" CEITUllY 21 IElll 71•1112-1111 11•1110-HH '::~~~' S@ tloUlA-8' t.~s· l4'1-.4 ..,. CVf • '°""'" Ott!O·'O~ •h• o ocrn111b:.d •a<d• below •o ~. 0 td"'O • •~4• Ptlftt _...,,. of -· .. ,. .. _ ... I H 0 T G U 8 I' I I I 11 ,, 11 U N S 0 I I I . I r I I G R I H I W I I · r r I I l U R C 0 A r I I I L 1 U S R U P C ~ ] r • 1 I .... ... , Un.11-fEIUH 2 Bedroom + den or 3 bdrm, 2 bath home 1st TO can ba uaumed at 10% Interest and ... ler may carry 2nd TO With 20% down. Priced to M4I at 1329,000. WAU KfHO~l tlO~U IM. REAL ESTATE 9'1·1400 J PETE BARRElr REALTY J PETE ' BARRETI . REALTY •28' 1ba, yard, geflQe. utll pd. GOldn-Weatm $695 no pets 752-6822 3BR 2ba, frplc., 2iler, lncd yd. $800/mo. 963-3695, eV9I 5 PRINTED PATTERN M386 StztS 1-11 f .. HOMll FOR IALE 2RDROOM 2921 4th St, Corona del Mar 875-8000 $208,000 Saturday 1-5 ** 1229 8a)'lkSe Or. Newport Beech 831-1400 $850,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 720 Gotdenrod, COM ~7211 $199,000 Sun 1-4 • 10 Morning View (T Roe ridge) Irvine 155-2830 $299,000 Sat/Sun 11-5:30 3028 OoMn, COt'ona del Mar 875-8000 1725,000 Saturday 1-5 324 Poppy Ave, Corona a. Mar 873-8494 $350,000 Sunday 1-5 2 BR plu1 FAM RM or DEN ••23 BMchcomber Or, Jasmine Crk, CdM 831-7300 1575,000 Sun 1·5 23· Hlf1Qrat1, Turtle Rok ,lrvlne 844-1200 $222,000 Sat 1-5 9 Northampton, Belcourt Hiil, NB 844-6200 $560,000 Sat/Sun 10-6 * •9 Ocean Vllta, Sea Ille, NB 844-6200 $535,000 Sun 1·5 2025 Port Brlltol (Harbor Vu Hmea) COM 675-8000 $242.000 -Saturday 1-5 1951 Port Locklleigh, H.V Hms, N.Bch 844-9060 $269,500 Sunday 1-5 1~o.c:tway, Santa Ana 040-WU\ $97,000 Sunday 1-5 * 7928 Southwelt, Huntington Beach 962.:ee91 $175,000 Saturday 12-4 .- --- .... ·""" .. 1215 Marlnera Drive, Baycreet, NB 831-7300 $395,000 Dally 1-5 •• 1724 Mlnorca Pl.,(Meaa Verde) C.M. ,432-9103 1174,900 Sat/Sun 10-6 **308 Morning Star Ln, Dover Shor91, NB 631-7300 $885,000 Sun 1·5 1528 Orange Ave,(Corn. Patmer)Costa MeM 873-1800 · $215,000 Sunday 11-4 2333 Cornell, Cotta MMa 548-2313 $134,900 Sunday 1-4 ••1064 Peacador Dr, Dover Shoret, NB 831-7300 $550,000 Sun 1-5 •332 Polnaettla, Corona del Mar 631-7300 $525,000 Sun 1-5 2377 Purdue, Coata M ... 645-0303 $189,500 Sat/Sun· 2-5 11 Rue Verte, Big Cyn, NB 644-6200 $849,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 20181 Spruce St, S .A. Hts, Back Bay 642-5200 $159,000 Sunday 1-5 1349 SUIMX LaM, WEltcllff, N.B. 842-5200$234,500 Sunday 1-4:30 48!DROOM 2542 Clrcte, Bayahore, NB 644-8200 $329,000 2333 Cornell, Costa M~ Sun 1-5 546-2313 $134,900 Sunday 1-4 *" 18 Cypr ... Pt (Big Canyon) Nwpt Bch . 759""9100 $1, 100,000 Sunday 1-5 . - 9 Hermitage Big Cyn, NB 844-6200 se~.ooo ••8 Jade Cove, NB 780-8333 $~25,000 Sun 1-8 --· . • 1019.Marlan Lane, Wntcllff, NB 631-7300 $495,000 Sun 1·5 * 1328 Mariner• Drive, Baycr•t. NB 631-7300~5.000 Sat/Sun 1-5 *"'1878 Maul, M ... Verde, CM 5-40-0373 $375,000. Sun1-5 2952 Maul Place, Costa M ... 648-2313 $239,900 Sat/Sun 1-4 **404 MOt'nlng Star Ln, Newport Beech 844-9060 $550,000 Saturday 1-5 ••34 Morr.o Bay, Spygtua, CdM 751-8190 749,000 Sunday 1-4 2029 National, Coi a M ... 548-2313 $118,900 Sunday 1-4 #9 Monaco, (Harbor Ridge) Newport Beach · 842-3850 $625,000 Sunday 12-4 •223 Polnaettla, Olde Corona del Mar 875-6000 $635,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 1829 Port Taggart, NeWport Beach 759-9100 $335,000 Sunday 1·5 · * 1934 Port Trinity, HV Hrna, NB 844-4484 $339,500 Sunday 1-5 ••10 Royal St. oeor;., Big Cyn, NB 6«-6200 $665,000 . Sat 1-5 *1828 Santiago Or, Baycrelt, NB 631-7300 $385,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 •1227 Santiago Or, Dowr ShOt'el, NB 631-7300 $525,000 Sun 1-5 1148 Santiago Or, Dover Shores, NB 631-7300 $650,000 Sun 1-5 ** 1024 E. Balboa Blvd, Penln. Pt, NB *2001 Santiago, Baycnt, Npt Bc:h . 631-1400 $1,050,000 Sunday 1-5 873-4400 $345,000 Sun 1-5 *1338 Galaxy Drive (Dover Shorel) NB . ••3607 Seabreeze,HVH, COM. 873-7300 $985,000 Sat/Sun 1-4:30 844-6200 $475,000 Sat/Sun 1·5 •1821 Leenrd Lw, a.;or_., NB 831-7300 S388,000 • Sun 3-5 * • 33 Montpelier H.Rldge, NB ~200 saso.ooo -sun 1-& 122e Potent Dffle, OcMf' Shofee, NI 831-7300 1845,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 201 e s.nt1ego 0r. OcMf' Sl'IOree. NS 831-7300 "488,000 -Sun 1-5 •• 14 TrafllQar, H. Adele, N8 7804333 t1.•.000 Sat/Sun 1-e 220 Vla Genoa. Udo ..... N.8 .~~.000 Sunday 1-e e&e V1a Lido 8oud, Udo Ille, N.8 ~eoeo 1&1&,000 Sunday 1-.a **239 Vie Udo 8oud (Udo ..... NwpJ 8Gh 759""9~100 S1,&&0,000 Sat/Sun 1-6 19DROOll 103 Via Udo Soud (Udo IM) Pfwpt Id\ 759""9100 $2,950,000 Sunday 1-6 IMpluaFAll•orDeN ***107 Mitford, Cam Stn, COM 644-4200 s 1,598,0000 Sat/Sun 1-4 * • .,..17 Ridaellne Dr •• Harbof: A6dge 53~7 $5.'~ 1Mllllon Sat/Sun 12-5 ***101 Via Udo Soud,NB 675-6181 14.850,000 Sat/Sun 12--5 CONOOI FOR IALa 28EDROOM *32 Ima Loa Ct, NB 873-7300$184,000 Sun 1-4:30 ***V2525 0cMn BIYd, #G4 (CdM) . M0-8t59 $389,500 Sun 1-5 * •25 See llland, Newport a.ch MS-0303 $285,000 Sunday 2-5 38EDROOM *1 PaJoe, Rancho San Joaq., lr"1ne 759-1501 $117,500 Sundsy 1-5 *2018 Vista CeUdal, Bluffs, N.B. 98().8.411 1184,900 Sat/Sun 1-5 *430 Vista Grande, Bluftt, NB 759""9100 $218,500 Saturday 1-5 **T80 Vla Lido Nord, Udo, NB ••3384 SummerMt, Cotta Meaa . . 4 BEDROOM 3 BEDROOM 673-7300 $1,725,000 Sun 1-4 ... 11:. "303 ·~,,.. 900 Sunday 2-5 ~"""' ~-. •2156 Vllta£ntr8da(Blu"9) ~Sch •'2723 5th St Corona del Mar Rd H~h ) NB ~7208 1349,500 Saturda" 12:30-4 *1421 Kings (Newport ta 1921 Terealta Lane, Harbor Highlands, NB 759""9100 $218,000 1-5 ' 675-8000 $450,000 aturday 1-5 631-7300 $175,000 Sun 1-5 1207 n1..·....: G oo~ ShOt'el .. ~r.a--n_.. ----*2124 Vista l.ar9d0, 8tuftl, N.B • Uf\IW um, ...... ,runD\in ••1218Polarl1,NewportBeach ---.·-· ••14Torreyl'Tnea,BTgCjn"Nlr ----75g;1so1 1209;000 Satfflun-1·5- 873-4400 '444,.600 unday 1-5 548-2313 $5SQ.OOO Sunday 1-5 644-6200 $895,000 Sat 2-5 4515 Hempden, COM 500 Rockford COt'ona del Mar J 1826 Tradewlnda Lane, Baycrwt, NB TOWNHOUIEI FOR IALE 875-8000 1450,000 Sun 1•5 759-1501 S295,000 Sunday 1·5 831-7300 $339,000 ~un 1-5 30l7=opes4a~oJOt'ona del~~Sun 1-5 1230 Sand Key (Harbor Vu Hiiis) COM *4639 Tremont Lane, cameo Shores, NB 2 BR plue FAM RM ot DEN --------fS-8000 $319,000 Saturday 1-5 831-7300 $595,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 3• Sea ts&and (Fotd & Jambof'M) N.8 . -~=,~~ ~1-5 "1~~~~~~~~.,~)c=.~M~.-------8-7_0 _W_._2_m_h_S_tr_M_t_,Col __ ~-M-.-~--------~m~~ ~w • lt32-8451 $1~500 Sat/Sun 12-4 848-7171 $119,900 ~ &i!'d•Y 1-5 1409 Santan.cla Terr, lrvlne Terr., N.B - 759"" 1877 s278,500FEE Sat/Sun 1-5 399 Seville Ave. Balboa Penlnsuta 1102 W•t Burns, Santa Ana 873-«00 $&47,500 Sunday 9-5 759-1501 $155,000 Sunday 1-5 214 Vla lthlca Udo, NB 1 875-8181 1420,000 Sat/Sun 1·5 3917 Teakwood (SC Ptza area) S. Santa Ana 201S WlndWard, Baycte1t, N.B. 875-8000 $169,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 631-1400 $292,000 Sund,y-5 2425 W. Camden. Santa Ana , ,, ua~2313 $104,000 Sunday 1-4 **828 Via Lido NOt'd, NB V2125 Yacht YankM, Seaview, N.B . .,_.. 780-8333 $2,350,000 Sun 1-5 844-9060 $388,000 Sunday 1-5 1 llR plue PAM RM or DEN 383~f;,'3 8~:=1 BMch Sunday 1-5 254 E~ng canyon Ad. (Shorectftf) CdM 87$.1181 1525,000 Sun 1·5 ••3465 FuchM (Oreenbr()()t() Cotta MMe 54&-2313 1187,600 . Sunday 1-4:30 •• 1900 OWaxy Qrlve, Dov« Shot•, NB 831-7300 1545,000 Sun 1·5 **1110 St. Bllboe Penln., Npt Bch -..eeHs.489,000 Sunday 1-5 2711 HarbOr View Or (HVH), N.8 7804333 1&95,000 Sundey 1-6 1961 !MM Ave (Cotta Meea) 145-7078 •1H,OOO Sat/Sun 1·5 Ml Jt.lnlpeto Meea del ~. CM 7614191 1137,900 ... .un 1-6 1122 Keel Dr, HVH. COM 8444200 1$48,000· Sun 2·5 •••TOO Ktnge Aoed, Cl!ft Haven. NI . . 131·7300 1'5tl,OOO .SUn ,_g ,. 118 Meckenlle. co.ta M..a Mf.231) 1134,900 Sunday 1·5 'f 124 Via Trteite, Lido Ille, N.B 873-4400 $-"49,000 Sunday 1-5 2409 Tu1tln Ave, Back Bay, C.M 873-4400 $269,000 • · Sunday 1-5 4 aR plue FAM RM ot DIN *2107 Arbutu1, E·Btuff, NB 644·8200 $275,000 . Sun 1-5 28 ROyal St. 090t'ge, Big Cyn, NB Sun 1 a . 644-8200 1995,000 .., 1621 Bayalde Or. CdM 831·1288 11,085,000 S.tSun 1-S ••801 Beyaide Dr, PromontQt'Y e.y, NB 631·1400 11, 1&0,000 sat/Sun 1-s ••1toe OMlbftdte,-~-IMot\ 75M100 1329~ Sunday 1:30-i:30 911 catt OrM, Cliff Hawn, NI 631·7300 "430,000 1108 Dennlt, Cotti ~ Sun 1-5 M&-0303 SS31,900 Sunday 1-S 1441a....Jo,,DOY9r8hen9, Npt IMch 548-5641 1295.000 Sit/Sun 1-S * 1330 OliUY Dr, hycrelt,NB 87S.7300 1775.000 Sun 1_.:30 ) \ &BEDROOM 2801 Island view Dr. Corona del Mar 8"44·9060 $385,000 Sunday 1-5 5 BR plu1 FAM RM or DEN * • 8 Trafalger, Hatbor Ridge 440-4888 $1,950,000 Sunday 1-5 2215 Alt• Vtata, Eaatbtuff COM 64•·6200 $299,600 Sat1Sun·1-6 21 August B cyn, NB 84~-8200 5.000 &m 1·5 •5 ue Font ne, &jg Cyn, NB 844"'200 $&85,0bO • Sun 1· •321 P&uia Udo(Udo 111) N8 67~7787 $850,000. t/S\m 1~ ** 2 Ohlnnel PllCe tifs)t 631·7300 S&50,000 *. 20 Cypreea'IPolnt, Qenyon, 631-7300 ,000 * • 14 0......,., H·RdQt, 7e0'"8333 S1. SO;c>oo ti n 1-S 3 BR plua FAii Ml ot DEN 301 Vista Trucha. Newport~ 640-5751 $198,000 Sat/Sun 1-4 DUPLEUl1 & 1 211r~lllr 512 Orehtd, COM &44-7211 $325,000 lllR 18" 28R Sun 2·5 ..... 1 ........ 1. 11 ~ COtone-dill .... -------~~ 75 19 21 t/a.ctl - • plus tM IRVINE MIRROR ~HUNTINOTON BEACHCOMBER every Wedneeday at no extra chat get CALL TOOAYll . FRLlfl y OIJf Deity PllOt Service DlrectOfY Repreeentattve • Ml-4121 Ht.I. Two Bdrm, 1 beth, clean AY&IUIU llW upper unit $515/mo, No 1Br. frig, range, laundry, pets 641·9352 pool, carport. No pet1 S4951mo. WE IFRI I ClllCI 931 w 19\h St 5-4~92 Want. -.ctlon of grNI BACHELOR apt w/refrlg. living? We C8t1 offer any· Ulll• Incl No pet• lhtng tr• small apt to• $300/mo 64M382 • Bd hM. If loolclng In CM. NB, or HB think of us first Eutslde. 2 bd 1 ba lrplc, 10< that cholc. Ideal llv1ng. patio, angl gar. S750/mo TSL MGMT 642· 1603 Agt Car()( 759-9100 NB REAL TY 675-1642 E..SIOE 2br quiet garden apt gar no pell $550 548--0185 We!it:field E·alde bach apt Frig, &PUTmEITS stove, nu crpt & paint. Beautiful garden apta., Utlls paid No gar/no patio.. decks, spa. No pets. S3eo 111 & last pets. Ideal 1 l*IOn. Wkdya 2Bdrm, 2Ba $865 call aft 4PM 549-3875 398 W Wiison 631·5583 E..Slde Studio hOUM prl· WESTSIDE 1 BDRM vale Quiet Utl pd get· NHI & CIHn U75. dener $«{) mo 645-3453 682· 1700 lllTUTll w .. tald• c M 2BR 1ba, aJI utU pd New ept/drps. S-490/mo 2 8d 1b• close 1650/mo, S300 aec Call to 1hop1, bUHI & Beth., 831·5230 schools 2276 Maple TSL UUIE•EIT M2·11H Kenneybunkport ? Isn't that the boat that' won The America's Cup in ·75 1 • r ., ,.../ ..... II you rt not· suit •ho {or w!lll) lltnntybu"'Po't wu Oon I I~ bad yOu a not alOnt lltntttybu~~Pofl rS ont of 14 i1~h11<'l1vtly dtlle1tnl apartmtnl tloorpl•ns ~I S,1w1nd Vt! 1n Hut1l1 toA ~acll s-11•1nd 1111 t s 1 tt ult of totally prrsona zed proftWCnal ptann1nt Tilt ~ nd ot •tttction yoo dfiervt A oerletl bltnd ot nAturt &M ltv -r. st!ed in 1 forest ••lh b.!Dtllt bfook1 tnd Clll er DOnds coo'ed br na•u~l °'"" bf fl Add IO ,,,,, te court! S• !Mllf!1 oooti • wa and • '°"•'"' 1 loc1t1011 '' ihooOtra •nd r111ptcymcnt 1nd • 101 ' ll!•tt a:iyo!\f •Ollld ~Oid) {bt!I tl) .an4 11110 oom one and two lllt rlmrr.ts ndla• J Pointe Nlguet Aportmenb Leos•no Office Open 10to6 .. -.. .... .__......_~-.1~E.::=::;:....,..;l~ffR~ ltlt WutN llM It& ...... llM ltl• WMW II• l9 Wu-.. WnPllT llUITDllLP DentalANC9tAOA.out1 Eurc:ln ln1truc,or1 .... ,._ ..,......... HITlm IMO!at. opening tot an Put t int• Mon-Fri Ing, tum Orienled, 'f 112 &o/Hr WI lrl" ...._, Full & pett"*"' lrnmtd $4.lif pirif UOf.NTS PRU ~ dttl! 11:'30am-2pmHetd Ume,Me 13347&1 Wort!o..nwu220-231' ,,,_. 1--. ,__ .,v;ew 2-4pm A S150l01Utt n11minecw. ~x, nwnut11c:tu,.,,J~ w.ttr ... &Countert_4elp ....._. hourt swt MtHt ..._ & D Ren11 • roes cp911111p Muett>e 11 ronment, Yltled esvti. !~~ can George, HO\lfl 10tomlo3pln PIWwtta b• bo"d•ble Cat "**1t """' Cotta ~ Cit!Nnreq th good pay nd ben· NtwPOrf Hllt>Or Art N a ~ no. nMt nap. MQMUtY Ideal tor .W· MIN c.al 3-8 M •flta •llldlW MUMum•SMmt .,.~ :"~ •• ~10~1'•::i: ~· Ca11494..c322any llAllTlllml ~~mlKI f!llUl/1111111111. PIT lunQI & 9velhlfta Nii l~-Flex h1'I 640-2955 Pvt Cluti. Mon-Fri Newport u.ach 1t ... _i. ...... Al>iitY btwn M , , ....... , HOUSE Cl.:EANING aft/evea, non-arnkr Equal Oppomm~ bURO!R KIHO 2015 Accep1Jng app1Jca11on1 fAITllY 111.P Ctwtttrnn do mature 752 7903 mp1oyer MIF/H/\/ Harb« &Nd CM =~~itlOn Uvu Fri f'ern/M1le, ln1pect1ng, you nMd U'lat =:~1:-. 1--~-------- IUllUL counter/Kltch9nri.lp.PIT eatCoulHwy,NB =~·='=r':.'i ~=~~op ~m!"'no ---~----1 ii:Eeim10illmr:i>i;(Oi~ M•Jor Newport 111ch FIT Tummy Stutter ... ~ • .....,... .ocurate& "-ve good eye ~8-0757 anytime Q.Per nK 1474800 .. AARAA/'--··· ...... com-761·35eo 11 15101 Goldenwett, nr •lnht WIU ,, .... "-t• --------riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ;;yt;".;;;;i Ml ume Botta. Huntington 8ch M:.. p1ant. 5'4'MMu 111m1D11 -Tlllllllll entry lev.1 pOalllona for CUSTODIAi Hiring: Food Servet1, Aellable woman to 0-.ln Exper. In marine engin,., -~~----CRT OPERATORS ' 8artendet1 & AINlt FIT eec>ef 'oniworlr.· Mekendl onf9 Cere and dleMll, b9t1c: etel;trOnlc;s Perm PIT.._.. ~734421. DATA ENTRY P1U Tlltt Maneger1 Apply In per. lnG parentt 3 t"'1&ger1 coot< fat efderly llld)' 1' naotno. to malnteln 8734424NB,akforG ACCOUNTING • IOn between 2 ancU PM, Room & boerd .Stitt Reh r~ulred 644.2120 fleet Of tall& power tJOatt Of ROH, M•W·F aft . ', GENERAL CLERICAL Immediate opening for DRIVERS lmmed Salary e>pen. -In Dani Point ~tact IOMVTu.!ThUf an 6 pm ~/83Wt90/Fr• We on. • ~ FuH tlS!M ><tnt benef111 & Cu1toOt n to work In Reta r~ulrtd 720·1977 ........... Mtny8wtndlt, 831-7190 f Pllm ll•Tllllll saUrJ to btigM•'*" 'bp- WOOllng oondltlon1 Con-F&lh on lallnd lhopplng TIW n• for ~nd appt. .......... ......... * t.t'u11mum ot , ,..., phOna =ty for Jood :: n*1I ..ca ... , Trpe II& 11,.C.t _Lynn 8tan1fleld, center. DutlM Include Full or pWt-tlme ~ tor hotef In !Agurle 8eaell 1.._llllUL1 ....... ~, 11, ~ ~~ ,_ exi>« In buQ' office ••-·-pey ·• •Pf .. Some._.... -6IOO cteen•ng common .,... MA ~ helpful tlonlat. Ute typlno & EnglialVSpantsfl ~· "'iront ........ o c appear ._... -.,,. ..... ..._. ,_.. !Jall1 r "'1>"_, penoo 1ing 1GI*' ..,...._ We AVCO and eootdln1ung a?9Q11 but not MCeU*'Y wll phoMexp U/Hr.824W. ~a must Houra 5-'1 rormyNo S11'1Qei11V11te ~ n::""~ ~ ~ ~~..,,.,.-. ,_.... FINANCIAi. SERVICES projecta Must be abi9 IO trein rlQhl person Apply 11th St, CM PM. Wed-Mon. Q.-. ofe, 661-eoc>t 2.,.,...""1 o· .. ....._ ,....., T +a •'4a..lll'OftlW1911k Call 8 etc k e John'a lowing 8YC300 E. ...... .,.. .,.,_ ....... --1 820 ~-!*'t•E Dr. ~-: v:CU=~ A~~w: 17th It. CM.646--4843 Fuli.tlme bOat Cleanlng a ~e:Xf:;. ~mery. ....... .,,. ,_ENJOY Y ... OU -DA '18 aoptm 760-101 P1 f~ ~ Nl'lf]>Or~\ qual P«tOn on Monday or DRYCLEANERSndUllPf, mllnt. Neat appwtnee, _,. ...., UlllTllT R y llmTil •IT (7l'J~t ~ Tu.ldayfromlam·noon rHp ~raon •• Apply en1nu1IHtlc. herOHOUSEWIVES:Ewnextretront&bllc:a.otclr Ing& TOYOURSELF Comegrow usJEntry to 7 am-2 pm Pe y t • u wot\«. DefMI ai<p pref. money Whft9 'I04.lll chit-np req Hra fie 8end EARN S20CMIOO WEl!KL y level position-phones ,g 644-« 11 AAY • Entry lelMI THEIR'l llE Cleenar9.3060'd ~~~1s-'1'°'1ooinMr· ~~·,n .. ,!!• 1ri •c"ool r~toP08olt7351. Ph.ewa751·2382 gen•r•I omce. OP· ~~ 1" acsNon1ge1-~. OUIJOAL n Newport 81, NB ·-...... .. -.,, ..., l.aglJ'\4Niguel,C•.92817 PU·l •llLAml ~t,gto lam wcwd an.llAL:UlmBI """"1 1313~11iU. Part ttm41, l·Spn\. Typing, COIPAIY ORY CLEANERS flU/lWI '" HSKPR·COMPANION--~··•LL L.... SAM to 12PM. Huntington Pf Nr etrport nee0,, na1on pr ... die cau erryMO-ph<>nee, 1tatementa. Cd Need counter help PUT/Tm Wiii AIDE-Meture lady, llve-...a ,...,.. Beach.,... 536-14<41 .,... NB S700 plua repair pen on eit• ,_ ... _. aft. 2PM, 14'-2282 L.. Augustine, 2939 E. PCl'f, CdM OpportunltlH available In. CdM 720-041& --.a.J,.Jm J ••• ,... DOE. 850-1141 ~In~~ Clerlclll Humlin Aetouroea With the LOS ANGELES HulelerlSalMman. Cati\ If )'OUr are lntereated In ., DmJWf ·-· ~·R._. llil--1-• lllPT/lYPllT 500 Newport C..ter • ELlmlllU/Ulll. TIMES Ciroulatlon o.: comm dally, own trw. Hrntng 135,000 to ,......, dgbt tJl)tnO Md • Non QO(ltr~ Newport ee.ctl Arc:Ntec-Ori~ #820 Ff time. Loc1t work. pertinent ln our door to 842-1447 SS0.000 or more In com-Immediate openlna '°' ~ 65J-338t f..°:wt"*"'U:::""t:; tualllnterior Dee6gn firm Newport QMch, Ca 92680 549-7984 1\199 door newepaper ..... INTERIOR DESIGN milalona llrld ere willing P<*tlon In the preatoom 1ti end ~ W/dl.-.riminating Cllltltel. Equal OPPortunlty Electnclan/Marine. Only program. GuarantHd FLAIR FOR COLOR? ~ ~.;-~orlll ttl;:;; ff :..IOC9t 8outtwm'H~ 1l9 lmt stattJno ..iary 0onUct ryp1ng 75wpm, .ocurat• EmplO)'tr M/F ~:,~; .... n::c'wffety. =~ w,-P"': ~-Lwn to eoordinlU• wilr Aeaity lithe n!:,.t Pf• .°:.r,., ~com-~ Perao11ne1 Mgr. at =ng•k~ll•maJ:alr~: NTIEmY . ... Opm. >T~~ln~m 1: ~'a~~r Uglous, mo11 growth peny .benefit" paMt .,-.. IElllU.LYICI .lJ3El320-0102 'MIF Must be Mlf·moUvated. Prlv•te College Inlet· ELECTRONICS provided. Potenll•I to tra!"::r/PT 0~:11:' II ortent~ n1me In real.... cation. m11&Tlll Non-amok•r. P•raon-viewing tor FIT clerlcaJ Nrn S300 plua per Wl4lk • teta. repere yourMlf 0••111a111••y IPPMTll..., 11111 PD• •ble. S.nd , .. ume & d1 ASSEMBLERS For an lnt«Vtew. call: • • ~I n<YW for the next real .... ""'"' .. ''' Good driving • must Mlary hll1ory to Diane ~~'~•r ·~·u11•.n,try1n•cxluperd•. ft 957-2381 ext. 1204 RESIDENTIAL CLEANING tate boOml I . Cateel r olp-IHLJ PILIT FIU.·'lm Salary, v1cat10t1, ~k J-•iiiiiiiba;;/iiiiii;il J h D World F Sal portun t H av1 l•b • "' n-mYPlllTlll ....,,. "*"ance~ Doo n100rn sealgn. 833 typing, filing, phon••· llllllll .. _..__ngtoSoreman:1500/mo' . M+ln. Uc.nttng training avail· 330 w. Bay St .. C.M. Ull' D~ w t s-·..!..· ...-.. utt• e, N.8. xero•lng, etc. Detail lfJH laef:.J:ie4 contract 1 b t ""''"" able. To 1ntet'Mw call ••2 ••21 We ere looking lor • ·-1·-• • ,....,. ... 92883 m nded. Proteulonal ~ Mw-rl... .... a orer. par ••Pf 1yr fluentengtlsh Walt Maclborakl or. Vikki -~ m•ture. highly pro-1~~M 81(~ Clrcle. Cl«k:aJ puranc:. Cd M1 Abbot ... time. Exterior/Interior reg aean cut}bondable et Merrlll Lynch Realty at printing feaionaJ lndMd. wl1h •· ' ...... The W•I Orenge County 546-3009 Mon thru Thurs ,.. .... ..... ... e~t:u:.:.i:~ Npt Bch l42...e824 546-9388 or 847-850e1 Label Co needs orgena.d ~ t*Pf'IOM .... l·s..~-can-~F-IT-. _for_buay_ Municipal CoUrt la ac-8am-2pm. EOE·MIF. reM M..,rllts 114 perennlala, & pestlctdee, Join our brand new ~ l*torl to IMrn to oP«· Must be Cllp&bie of~ pharmacy. Accuracy, etft· c:.ptlng apJ>llaltlona for DECORATE INTERIORS U..1,.W......., Stop by 1555 South tomer Service verlfl-~. TUml ate label pteat19 I. .wt· llng busy Rolm ~ eieney. Good wfnumbera Deputy Clertl I. Sallry Color/design. PIT. to .. ....,...... Coat HWy, Lag. Bch., cation dept. AM/PM hra ProOuctlon control: ship-laty ~t. Must aystemandt•eaccurete •must. 54e-2 24 range 11052-• 1382 atert. WUltraJn. 775_5447 • .,.,. ......... AdrnitW>fc. for lPt>· EOE av.ii. PfT cell Kelly at ping & receMng, cu. heve good dextertty & legl_ble rn•agee. ~-1.8.-:.._7='----:----b-._;.,....-'f..., ..... ,---_-_,,,_.~- monthly. Typtng a mutt. llrat eM ... ,..., USA TODAY 554-4900 tamer ltaaon, U161tant to mechaniclll ablllty. Cell per191a reQUW'ed. Lu. .... ··-.... ~ for fuf'thei Information DEC o RAT 1Na1 A RT •lf•l•s," ...W l8"111r/....,DIM owner. 557-3381 831-1833 for tiPPt typing •0-45 WPM. Godd ELECTllCAL r.:':n~=\:t. phone714-896-7181. ~.!;e.s~™oppty.WlU ........ ,... f~~,=3t llUYllD.U .IOT.111111 PlllT..,Pllm ~mZnt'~F~'= Mutt bave top pro- COLLEGE STUDENT PIT. .Wet I~ --a... 11111 Yll1 te .,., ........ --•11 ~t cell Frankie: CIHIU Ill.El t...ionel skills. Xlnt ~~~7-= =-·=.C~T~ .... ~.;;;;: exP~~good :::: • M~~lilableln .,.;:-.... (l14)1U-1212 . E.SD.COMPANY Mlary.M3-07'8 bOOkkMplng hrs. Wiii train. "3-7395 tntlHt '8J M4 typing ablllty-proftdency Temporary assignments Must tie 18 yr1 Old MY9 PUlltl llaETllY -l /F/l/Y • N9 an~ opening WAIT OlllTPIYUUI llUIEUDlT Maeftts. w/flgur ... 10 key by nallabl• for u -dependable tran'apor-nuded for para· =-~~= in=-~= .1IOO •• + L---· w211..a11a touch. Xlnt co benefit.a. perltnced:. Word Pro-tetion.Experlencehelpful leg9l/~.poeitl0n who~ln~ S12-1400/mo644-65t2 .... fer __. Coata M .... cau Miilie ceeeor-but not '**"'Y Elm •1th Hunt1t1gton 8eed'I .w:ie .t---'------ Mlnlmum 1 yr exp.know 11·2 Mak~ aanctwk:flea, • ...,.... after 9 am 145-5800 • Secretarles/typiata $450-500 per month. cal taw flrm for 2-3 ctays llllP_!!_,~ .... The~ .. .,.. kloll· IHMTllY f /1 loan• and llena. t&KlnQ or and •tc. 1n111ma llG (80 wpm) 10ltl'I to 4pm. pM.Only •ICJ*. '*'°" ....---.. ""' -· I t Ill b 111..mnDUI.. -~ RJVIERA RGL~S WINES AND • • Swttc:tlbo#d oP«ltor1 1•2 ••aa lhould ~y. Chrllta. enthullutlc Individual ng C?' w e an -- PERSONELL SERVICES SPIRITS (next to 'Alpha 11112 EistllM It GENERAL • Data Entry operators .. --847-6041 wttl\ frlendty phone...... entl\uat .. tic:, --ric ~c:: ~ t:~ 20828ullneMCntrDt Bet•) 1804-4 CulYef Of., ,..... 0 1211•' WORK lntervlewswlllbehelctb9-u-··n·•··· "* and1ront offa IP-~:~=~ 851"°379 aulte2901rvlne92715 Irvine. 78&-7880 , .. .., •• .. tween 10am and 3pm ·-~---RODUCTIONWORKER puranoe.Lrtetyplngreq - 833-1410 DELIVERY PERSON PIT EOE M/F fM Thura Sept 18 and Wtd If PlllTI• OD1U Run audio caMtte d1J9~ ~ In per900. Klno In-lent wagea. benefits. end lllMTllf e. et 1 aept 19 at· Located In "!ewPort e.ch eating & I09dlnQ equip-dustnee, 1981 MIOGaw, actnoearn•rt PA.AT TIME Giii r~alble general help-ceptlon opportun ty. T 0 D 111 w. A.Wrucsa Pallud• hu opening for tun time • ment. Train on 1'rat lhltt Ir v In• (Red h 111 & P"-1PPt'1 at Dinner, p/tlme. 499--2271 fK/ orallhop.54&-8214 Looklngtonpertof\whO 1 1 1 Sutte1.1SanClemente MCretaryln ..... _.rt. thenlWltc:hto'2ndlhlft. '4acArthut) · E.S.l.MPllY ~~8= &lk for the Chef. Ill.MIT Plllll !!tt~':"~~n = TEMPORARY INC NOT AN AGENCY men t . • p 1 y range $4/Hr to at&rt. 325 Chnton Part-time atternoona. Beach 111Y99tment firm. W&IDllSl/IUllUL NEVERAFEE S1100-1200 p/mo. Cell TheCreaUveWord RECEPT/SECRETAAY co.ta..._12e28 =:tor-:i.:=:: OMI Must have good, drMng Must be/ able to work .S lPLBTJ EOE M/F/H Hatold Lloyd 642·9'70 281-8273, t7885 Skypartt tor Int ~n firm. Con-wen 20-25 tn per.- LEAD-DAY MAN record. Call 833-1883 be-undef preaaure & be Wiii-Cell tor appointment • ewct., St• 82• IMne. t.ct Ctndy N-3337 Equal Opportunity (Mon-frl) In lt'I ~ Top Salary guerantMd. tween 10:30-1·30 slngkH~~atartr~ualtt_!!le, Conbolt~ 111-1100 I ........ a 8c:h oceanfront 2 PERSO~~~AE OF PIT opening for Dakin UITALOlllll.TllT ~ merit Alllstlone Dap9ir1.-Apply It\ person The VII· .. .., ._, --.-· Robtna.D..,......,,-M· 0-~ ...__._In,.__._ •u-"*"'· &icc•afut c:an-27 * •n·ar IFO.. br, 2 b&. beaut. tum. prof. SOUTHERN ORANGE F Call-~e''o_b __ on' ly --::.:::-"..:.:::::..a;=: ---~ lag• Inn, 1 Marine, -Lanita 75 -893e fem avr 25 pref. S420. COUNTY • . • -,. -"!V --Elcpet1el1Ced IMture. Ful dldat• wtll tyi>e 55-eO Balboalal&nd H~=~.:.-.:ti::: GltlFrlday·PITgeneralofc mo. 497-7019 or nHds RN'S, LVN'S, 875-9191 ::-''eid..:-°" tor': orPatttlme..~ wpm, hue working COUNSELOR . career orientated. Xlnt mMiitl help, lite typing a filing, 476-3100 AIDES &. COM PA· e ... 11111 llllT • ~~you Mon 1711' M . Tue 18UI ~ofcletlCltlO<-. llNTf beneflta & smry. can IEUITlllll bkkpg payroll. 720-1820 UUL IUllTUY NIONS.for private duty In Full time· expanding '*Y'e enioy meatinQ ~ & 11-7 Of'ly. Llrge liZlld lbtl ::W ~ "':c; PlllATill Mon-Thur. 640-0300. MaJor Newport 8Hch '11 •-Litt ti home caMa All lhlftl. buelM9a we k>c*lng for • gr.-"*' ~..l_~~ Item tne LB.M. P.C. Xlna ..-.in_ ftnance/INurance com· ..... ga on experience, c>edlaties to gerl•tnc.. 2WHEEL TRANSIT ATH"t' ~ a ._. woman In ...... ~·-working cond1t1ona. -~ 40 Hr•. medical, vaca1tlon, ~~~13•733mkr, Nwpt Bch, 859-5881 Call now 960-7121 growing company, we 112•7493 Salary com~n .. uon S&•7 per hour MOf tamllel =rin:: ::;t;:~ exper. H.8 ~ --Nursing REAL ESTATE ASSIS-want lo talk to Yo" ~ S7~ pttw. p-.. CM- SuPerviN lnatltutionallxed ' • !• D;!ttlno thef~ •ITlllLTllE UYE·•.IELPEI lllU TANT needed. Local top ~ plu9 commiallon. For Por-che, Ferrari, t.ct Lynn StenaflekS, fwenile on.nders, pn-~':.~~ou ~v!"': INSU E Sherman Gardena la Own transp. H.8 FIT.PM. lhlft. CHA Of' producing 9Qent needs EJI~ beMflta cal ~ MUST IWW 64'-5800,.._,. matllyboyauptoanewr-• hat' -'-S.OlorVIQePrealdentand aearchln~ for an 645-4872 experience nece11uy. help. Must be licanMd, Mondayl.Tueedayl0-1. PROVEHtt'8dtrecord c ...... u ... ::~""'_..,...,... • of 30-40 houri MCt1 camper t 1 not""''"'"' Controller of our expand-Ask for Mr. Wn,,_ lind GOOO ,.........., ~ se., • ....,..~ ....__._. Out'-................ till-u.o, ..., It now wtth • 1""" lnsut'•A-division en•getlc 11dworklng PIT WORK. venallle per-ConvaNiecent Hosp1tel, experienced & ag-(714\&.f.s-.m , -··•"' 620 N9wpOr1 C«'ller Dr ...._ -,......,._ Cfaaelfled Ad "'V ........ per.an to uut the gar-aonneededf mall Newport 8Hch. Xlnt graaan.. to .-st In .. ,_ reootd 131-3222 ~ .,._...., E ' Ing-In for e.ent atatf · needa • hlghly 8"111ed. den ~plant apea.uat operation. ~ox. ;~ Mnefits, dental a medl-facets ol rH ldentl•I .... IDTI Ask for DeYtd ·---~:., qual mid-week and weekenda, well organized, detail one tun time bells Xlnt p/Wk (lncludea Sat r& eel Insurance 142...,.... --. marketing I. ahOw-EOE SALES I Phone Survey. ~·1 and tor both day and...,.. minded lndMdual. E•· IMmlng opportunity can oc:cu. wttday) more fbr ~ ._. • Ina of property. SurplUa •---•aalllD PIT, M-Th. 6-8pm. o c , _______ _ nlng 1hlft1. Prevloua pectenoed In 1tatlatlcaJ Dorothy, $13-2288 Mon-Chrlalmu-nd own PIT.,...,!'..'ns-t'~ ..... 1. o( qu•ll'••d ••.ad• _ _., -Atpt. Pat1Y 7sg.1090 smETllY/TTPllT group supervision •X· ,,,,,.. typing With ability to meet Fri aam .... pm tran1p $5 hr CdM .,.. .... ...... provided pfUI • top Gardel\ Grolte.,... SrMI ..,. tr•iea1ptlon word perlence and/or course eNI of tun• f deadlines. Typing 80 7eo-ts22 · 16835 Btoolchurst. F.11. prod\lcing otnc:.. Salary compleX apt+ utll -t 1 Ex· Santa Ana Manutac1urw proc ~ FIT' Sanr. ~ ldn ~r ...... ~~ ~-a u" plus, ~~anET1N88 plus 912-3312 +atrong commissions. perleca requi~:..~ Meda r•poo~ per-Ana. EdmoWI N.wport ---.., "'" ..,. Hotel . ...--High tocome powntlal. metntalnance .......... son to perform dertcal Fwy55&-1333 cation•: Orange. Santa • !}I t,,. New Vice Prealdent r• Maintenance -.-.. For appointment call Pretw couple. dutiee I errends. T~ ,_..;._ _____ _ Ana. Trabuco Canyor J "J qulr• bright. energetic M•Jor "-<>rt/Convention MYWe.I position.. 099" to Patl'ld!. Tenore 831-1268' TSL llllllEBIT 45 wpm. Call JIU SICDY /LEllL •nd LP• Elalnor• ar... ~~~~u~lo u::~g di~~ = .. ,:~r:v :,~ APPLIANCE ~~~~~~:. ~= or 780-e702 142· 11N 54CM871 op akft1s I el(plr. Or· Apply lml'Mdiatety taphone. Opportunity to 11 now lnt~ng fore: IAllTEIOCE train $860. p/rno. tor IUNllllU IEUITllY/-= · elf., flulbler No reeumes learn personal computer. . N>J>t. j:all ~r. Gerrlton, • Npt 8dl Architec1Yral firm .-nl ofe. mngmnt. Xlnt benefit pack• and IAIQUET yrCHllCIAI 682·5&43 IATRI.... . nd1 aggreutv• MU-Word-S1#. & ...... of (714) 834-284<4 ~....-....,. condlt._a. Con· Ji To watch kJd9. 9 & 13. starter to...,,,,. t«' .... / humor ~. RIPf'f to COUNTY OF ORANGE ~~t"~ynn st';~afleld, lllllPElll llllEO IOI. ESlltl -Monday and Thursday te ~png & ~ S...... M. 4000 McMtu. PeraonMI Dept. 644-5800 CHEF r Excellent carHr op-Front ol'ftce, exper'd, •Int Income property ap9Ctallst 2:3o-6:30. 673-5381 dutlee. Xtnt orguilla-Ste 880. Newport Bw:tl, Hall ot Admlnlltr•tlon AVCO poi1unlty 'iY811able now salary I beMflta, New-wanted. Newport L.aQUn• .,.__._,_. tionel s .. req. 4 day""· Cell. t2MO 10 Chllc C..ter Plan For etas.sir!~ Ad 5 y..,. exp•rl•o~ In a for akllled •PPllence ..,..,. 8eact\ 833 2060 Pr--'i-•7''' ... 50 ._........ __.... H" -~ _1_ Santa Ana, Ca 92701 FINANCIAL SERVICES high volume banquet technician. .,.,.. -.._. .... " ~ Counter help on the New-non-..,,_ .. ......,.__ __.-1 ~" ACTION 620 Newport C..ter Or. production, preferably Painters wented, ex-IUEPT It.Ill TYPIST Port pear. 813-3152 SECRETARY AOUIN AS-C. Actv.1. agency not For other County oppty'a A DA~~l f'tLOT New~~~~ty Equal hotel ex(*lenpa. Must irw.Pecmc, the r..iden-ptr!~~•1d1,,_wl7t5h1_9o1w03n entry level. 45 wpm man Rest•ur•nt-Sandwtc'h ~T. Pit, In flex Air-aherl>. organRed front call our recorded~ AD-VISOl em~ be well organ12ed wtth ttel development and --• ""''· local Ft Valley ~919 Sl'lop, PIT Count« help port ar.. M.,or In-otc per900. Good ~ at (714)834-JOBS .....,)'_ college or apprentice m1na.gement dlvtslon ot 7..... tiurMCe co.Gd• Cell pet901'1811ty, typilng.. Xlnt Affirm. Action Emptyr M/F 642·5671 'training pref9n'ed. Euro-the lrvlne Company, PllTT111 a~Tll•IT 955-12471971"1 ~· btwn tam-1 2 noon grammar & spa11ng Top : HOROSCOPE • SYDNEY 0MARR pun ttaJn#lg a plu1. man11ge1 and maitntalna UIUIY IUll !;~ 11 RETAIL SALES. Are ycu {714)151-lt29 P9Y & beneftta •7~143 Must IMrYe It. ablllty to ....,.,.. apanment pr~ Substitute Cterk pollttona Part uui..-am-pm tnd of being broke? t-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-. deal wtth a variety of )ects In lrvlne Md New-needed for. Mon-Fri, S5 . p/hr · Looking for 5 ambllielua I people. port Buch. We.,. IMk-._h_ _ _: IMO 842-3998 peo pl e who e r e Ing technicians with 1-3 ~ -lnt1r91ted In healttl I W• otter excellent ben-~ expel~ In ap. Mle l.arary Th• fastest draw ln the nutrlt•on. Top co"'-eftta. Send letter ot appll· pnanoe rwpalr and ,... Clerlc•lfpubllc contact WHt . • a Delly Piiot rmsaion & training Cell cation or apply In~ ptacament, electrlcal, •JtPef. dulreable, must Qaasifled Ad 842-5878. ~17 Monday or Wedneeday plumblng end related have on-call minimum --------•--------10am-1pm at the Perlon-8"1 A neat appear-evailabillty. 19 tva/wk, ;,.· ______ ...;......:...-------, net Dept.. ance, your ability to meet days, ev91, I Saturdays. Clerks llEIATll the public and 1 good Job $8 18/hr. Applications •••M111WI record .,. atso Import-avallabl• at Newport """ ant. c.nter Branch, 851 San Ra ... •TEL Clemente Or., Newper1 ..,.. ' We Wiii provtde an exc.I· Beech 92660. Retum 1380 Harbor llland Of. lent salary and benefit application to. Ubrery San Diego, CA. 92101 pacit•, uniforms and Administration. Newport Equal n.......v1un11y moat tools. Pleae apply Beach PUbllc Ubrary, .,,...,..,.. In person Of call (714• addreaa ..ume .. •bow ___ em_p1_oyw ____ 1 720-2877 Aling dMdllne 1011/84 THE IRVllE PART-TIME. Vat*! hours ctllPllY to ~ ..,ty A.M weekend• Mutt haYI d.-IRVINE PACIFlC DIVISION pend&ble Yehide (small e1o~c.nterDf. truck, van, 1tatlon ~=-CA92680 :::> ~--: = .,_ Must be dee*\· Equal Opportunity dabJ• Contact Greg Employer Hyde Monday thN Frldey • llllTlllm 1U1 betwMn 9 30 llrlCS t0·30 0 hra wffk, SS hr. leil"'lll~--M·2·""43·2·1·· ~~~~~~~~~~Mo.~~27~00~.Aak~~for~Sonn~~~ ~~-·~---~-- ~ KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES! 1 • CIRCLE K-MARKETS J DEER Vl1LLEY RESORT Work a1tl Ski at h11ric1's Pr••itr Ski lesert A representative W111 be in Costa Mesa to interveew for wtnter seasonal employment. For further information prior to Sept. ~. ca11 11) (80~-·~- 1619. On Sept. 19. call (714) 540-2500. As for Georgia Tay- lor . District Managers II you fl'IOY wOr •"9 t<>'-"'Q boy\ & gttk ond dfl job\ otc> not for yov ton~ o COf'lt"• 1n the l'e""'POper c•rcvlo °" •·~Id lhi' n a uni~ pOltt Ol'I ~ dOl!y tlotolle~ & r~....ard, • th lli"Pil "ff 911 • Bay I CA 92626 • c .... a.tr l llat. SlQL UIRED F\Jl,L TIME/SALARY PAV COMMENSURATE IHTEAVl!W: 873-7130 1UCIUIAIH P/Ume. 9:15 to 12:15 am daffy. Hunt Bch area "' so hr. 78&-7521 IYl9 TUOllll /Pl '°' chrtttlan tcnool. Apply 18835 Bl'~tlurat It FV 862-3312 HUI OUT l &ILY Ptl.IT. PO. BOX 15ro. Co II MeM, ca 112826 142·U21 elt. I02 ester reb yt Mete Ruhy 4 soc*a. I taok lnclude<S S1500. •93·2811 tvea .. \• .1 I I ..... SOUTHWEST I .. 82 320! & '4 t 5281, bOth 1elnt cond. both fully loaded Buy 101 rema n· A•tt1 WHtM I020 :::.:~~;:9~:" or -IU1UTOAd '84 911 CARRERA OPE. S500 6 up fOI • running Blue wlblue, loaded, c are. Call 1nytlm• ~~alln $38 350· G45·•800dya eeo-&211or963-9011 ~ YL1' · 642:1251 evo i wttndt ' 110 GUI 111a1 8ale5 servtc .. lMltlng ·a• e 11 CARRERA co PE Sell~ c:at. lntlant CUh * *•*.!!!. Rtdtblack, lotded•unreg tor your car, Any make Of DCILL:lll nnunllY 100 ml S37,750 0.yt model. Paid tor oi not Pll·IWID llW's 84M800 E~ 842· 7251 Get our price first Bill MAXEY TOYOTA 19202 a..ct1 Btvd Muntlngton Beech te2-0a29 78 320i Iulo a/C(578VCX) 79 320l 4tpd t /r( .. 53885) 80 32016ap t lr(1JWB 133) • 80 7331 alt I'd( 1ASX048) ...__---.,,..,.W=l--l"""'l=J--80 320t 6lp '1r( 18ENT98) 11320I Sec>d-.'ttOOOtM) CLW 0••1 81320iA/Ta/r(1DAG9e4) -81320i~'S'(1d~8e0) WlllY USED CARS & TRUCKS COM! IN OR CALL FOR FHllPPUIW. C<>rrnler-OeLlllo 01m1L11 18211 BEACH BL VO HUNTINGTON BEACH 14l-10lltl41·1111 WIWUTYMI OWIRDUll S.. Ronald Dec. THEODORE ROBINS FORD '2060 HA•llO• lllvO COSYA Ml\A b4l 0010 81 3201Sapatr(11hc:359) 9173315spf d(351•891 92 133CSI kl' d ( 1eN•40l 12 320l 5act •'rt 1 .. 1• 1e1 82 320l5apt/r(102Ft•5, 13 320l 5sp L'd( UrMe3) 13 320t Sap t/r(1fWIS 15) 13 320l 5ap ·s· 1aas905) 13 528E Sap L'd (958441) 13 3201Sap11r(1ttJ•90l 13528E 5ap low( 11fd384) ~R (114)111-1111 . 208 W. 111. Santa Ana CLOSED SUNDAYS LARGE SELECTION OF NEW 61-USEO BMW'S! LNIWOl .. W VOLUME SALES SERVICE & LEASING 3670 N. Cheiry Ave. LONG BEACH (No Cfletry exlt~5) <71•)111·1110 tract.IM Welcome OPEN SEVEN OAYS 6750 M nchelter Blvd 81H1na Patti (714) 121-1010 BRIS'OOL AT ED1NG£R m SANTA ANA Ml·OllO YAMll,YSlN ~ MIKE lcKEllNA'S . SOUTH COUNTY MOTORS ®· 1114 llllllT OMYEITIILE Wolfsburg Edition 48 moC E t;. o $7311 74 ., lb per mo TOP 113 520 S4 CAPSIS,499 "12$00 CAP 1ed\Ktl0fl Aaldu81 15'00 28 @ 1114 10110000 11111 OASI UCIJ 48 mo o I! l • sm . tupermo TOP S 12.0 It 20 CAP 112.000 Aelidull $578& oe @ 1114 ¥111101 IL eomoC EL ~ 1229 Ill • 1811 '* "'0 TOP S t•.6211 80 CAP St489S 12000 CAP redUClion Jleeldual 15840 eo ' 1114 llPILSE 411moCEL e sz 17 lb '* "'° TOP I U 040 911 CAP 1 11 500 • SSOO CAP r.CSUCllOll Re..Cual 15269 78 Ask 8ob in Leas ng NABERS CADIJLAC 78 Malibu wt/bQI etr-pwr- radlalFOrio ownr S2•95 648-9514 547-5982 1982 MONTE CARLO Air Cond .• Power Steer & Brak. ... Au1o Trana. v.a (312155) M785 24 rno/24,000 ml MN · cntn:t. aub/prlOr aale 18401 8Mch Hunt 8°' ·847-1707 80 CAPRICE CLASSIC ~, allYer V-8 IY*fY Extra $6800/obo 644-452A '78 t.Aont• cano Landau, evet)'thlna plut aunroof. $3500. P.l», M&-2800 CONNELL CHEVROLET 'X.." I f.1 · t • • I' ' I " I \ ,, ~ ., \ S4b-I 200 , .. Hti ·a 1 Ford Mustang ""l ·Top", Air Cond, wire thee! cwt ( 1CNG995) • ' $ot988 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 19202 a.ch H2.0829 '17 Muetq, e cyt, w. nu paint, stereo. ~ deal\ S2400 obo. 650~ '17 Mustq fatbeck 281, AIT. PIS. am I-trade, nu radials $1500. 559--8811 '73 LTD Station Wtg0n, gc1 cond., etc, pwr efeer, $800 obo. 646-1313 111111 CUil --OKA'r', 6ET UP! l1M 601N6 TO WATCH MV PROGRAM! ATrENTIGN I WORl:D ! MISS ~USS8UD6ET QF:f 984 rs HERE TO TELc U5 ALL WHAT TO DO! , I 8UNDAY,aaPT .. ••R1e,1eai Mi SS - - - -- --- - ----- - -- SO! MISS ''~AVE .IT ~ER OWN WAY '' DOES IT A6AlN ! .· r- f- --------~-~-" Hl, BLONDIE! HI, RED _! DENNIS THE MENACE AOOMIC STRIP! JUDGE PARKER I LOVE TO NICKNAME KIDS AFTER THE COLOR OF -:THEIR HA'R ! ~ f . • Hl, NANCY! --WHEN CRAIG RETURNS TO HIS SISTER WHQ EVER HEARD OF A J2-YEAR-OLD 6Q'( . BEING DEPRESSED, SIS? HE'S JUST A LITTLE MOODY,,,AND THAT'LL DISAPPEAR WHEN I SPEND A r----------.. .. BETH'S HOME, 'SHE EXPRESSES CONCERN ABOUT DAVEY'S BEHAVIOR COUPLE OF DAYS YOU MEAN YOU'LL HERE! ONLY BE AROUND TWO DAYS? . --fl~-'<Ot.P 1;pn-~x- YOU LIED TO ME, CRAIG! YOU HAVEN'T BEEN LOOK- ING FOR A Joe! YOU'VE BEEN GAMBLING! I WOKE DAVEY UP AND HE'S REAL EXCITED TO KNOW THAT YOU'RE BACK, DAD! HE'LL 6E RIGHT IN! -, . . HI, PEPPER~ ... And we' 11 put- it in the newspaper! Howcanya tel I'? We.ALL Jook bad.t \ I I I by Harold Ledoux · I DON'T KNOW EXACTLY YOU HOW LONG I CAN STAY SAID .. ,BY THE WAY, l YOU HAVE A CASHIER'S WERE CHECK FOR YOU GOING TO FOR $ 2,000 ! SEND ONE F=OR JUST • 1,000 ... JUST /45 I THOUGH1) IT'S MADE ON A LAS VEGAS BANK! LJ)OK, I KNOW 1ME J'AC.K50N5 MADE A LDT OF MISTAKE$ 5ET11N6 UP-~1~ ~.,.AND I t(NO(}J WE. ENDED UP 6Efrl~& 11CJ<effi roR1ME w~ ClfQ I • MOON MULLINS SOI ~1'5 ALL. I~ 1ME PA5i !iJ4BJ'UE FINALW GOT 1MEIR ACf 106EJME.R AND OJE.'RE HERE AT~E ~' s:> L£r~ lllsr~ rr ! ARITHMETIC HoM~WoRf<' AGAIN! WoT A BlJMh\E~ ( you THINk ~URMA-rH ISTOU~H··· ------- .. you SHOULD S'EETHIS! BUT W~ <5EJ. RUSTY, .. ou:r OF CLASS WEIREONLY . ~UM:::..A~N~-~r-'~ DOCTOR SMOCK ® 11"'5 e>ESeN A LON<S . PAY.' ::t CAN use A s-r1 FF eet:r ! . SO WMAT'" A"'E!! YOU ~RINKING, POC?- (.{)/tlE ON I DEREK '" 00~ CDN\PLAINING OK/11.J ••• . . HOUJ Ml>Qf FOR A SMALL c.ocA ~ ANY'"fHtN<S W11'"H A t.-ISH-r IN 1-r! by George Lemont "T'"H IS Pt,ACS IS PARK BNOUCSH 1'"o ee A i'HRee-MINu~e e>A.,- WASH.' ..... ... II> B ... I , , ,. .. •• ~ • 7 CAN YOU TRUST YOUR EYES? TMn are at least six differ· ences In *••Int details between top and bottom panels. How quickly un you find them? Check answen wfltl those below. 6' .. n ,w•JIHJl\j)fd. lu.lA11'P•1-.11~a s l!le~lltP" 1•M ' 6utHllM t! 6oJ;I ( 1u• ... 11!P ti do1 Jiii\() t 6utHllM t • llJO~JI08 t ~ ... •1110 ·-------by Hal Kaufman------- • SYM·POSY·UMI Names Of :tht'M flowers .are ...-nted in rebut form .at rit"'· You .are asked le study the mwtra· tions tor dues. How qu ddy can you name the thrff flow.rs shown? IP"JCllU1N ll•JPwl Actdtd t-.o A BIG, llGQUESTIONS 1. What gets bigger ttie mcH you takeaway? ••• 2. What geti bigger the more you contract It? 1w v t ~ v .;;. 'l 13 .l'i v • .17 0 • ~s 16 is 12. • 7 ~-6 (~ . ·3 1' -.. l9 • • 21 20 & f " l ... c f ... • I • ~ ~ '1 • 2 . - '-1 FLAME-OUT! WMt can you draw to complete the curious fire-fighting scene above? Add missing lines to find out. I < I - ~ HEADLINER I Use cr.ayMS or coMnld pencils. c:der' ... dra. scene above as foUows: 1-Red. 2~1. W... 1-Yel .... 4-Lt . broWn. S-Flesh tones. 6-Dk: l'Mft. 7-at .......... ~ ....... . 5nll81NDEI sco.• 'It pOiMs tar.,..,. ...... 1et11rs Ill tMWDrd..._ to form ·------+---.... two=•• .. ··--· LAU•HTElt .... ,_,._ ..... THIN tcore 2 ~fl eedt for ell .... Of lour ........ "' "*'-______ ........, __ _ .......... 1hte.tten Jry .. sare_. ..... ,......._ 1ftft A'ttt ..i.A9ow-.cii-4 For Better :or For Worse :by Lynn Johnston· · M lCH Aa ! P\C.K y~ ONDeRWEBR WR OFF7THE SlAIRWElL f ........... ~--..,..------...... .-.~~--lX>HN, RRE1BE. PA~ AND SHlRf ON lRE 8ED Posr DIRfy? ORDO :lRe..yNEE-0 -ro BE:: HUNG UP? I ~WHAi A Hol>SEllKE 1RfffWOULD BE.L\KE,MOM ! WHOLEFf:A Wf:.TTOWEL ON 1He. ~H?!! ... -- r • .. RE-MEM6€.R 1'0 &E.1 6U11'E.R ON 1'\.\f, · roPCORN, ~ORM~N \ 5lGJl-L. ~E.~ 1 AM ON A~Oll-4ER ll-tRIU..lN'7 01\IE. U)\"f tt IJ&ND'l . (,Ot NG 10 -n.~E. MO\llf.'j . 6'-\00L.D Bf. RQMAN'flC.,SUT U)f. ALWA'l!> JlJ5T 6l'f 'f~ERf. t,l Kf. 6\RAN(,~ l116 NOW OR NENf..R \. l\1t, 601 wMt,N 1. 6l\ 6ACK. c>owN t-lf.~I GORDO ® SHOE 10 6E-COMf.. tf\Of<f. .-----...;;.::!!'!IC'? ~?~R\\\lf. ~ C 11184 unlt9d Feature Syndicate.Inc. • lo wt.~P~, l1M GONNA Pu'f M'{ f\R~ AROuNO \.\f.'2 , ~"O G,\\IE-\.\€.R ~ 6\& \(\~6 ~ NO .. .I ~·r WANT ro SPOO ~T. M~ MONEk' ... -, 1t.-\l? . \? GOMPL,f,\~t.'/ RlOlCUL.OU~ \ ' by Gus Arriola · . •. lay .Jeff MacNelly ;.:· .. ;,-------~·:- SAVE25C ~~1 On~lf SPAGHETTI SAUCE Sl.000 Sl.093b ,,...----~~~-~-~-"' ~~ Qly ~--...,....~----~~~~--.---~~- s-ZIP -----.., ............. _.,_..,...., .. ......_ OIW-'•11tu ••Me:ra \f.i~am ~orlllltllOlllt .... ,.__, __ ,... .......... ti. __ Cl,_. 11¥""11 ~ ""'M liY ..... FREE PASTA M'FUND P.0.80ll47m ............. ... ~ --------.., .... _,,,, -lll!llglldll'l.l 11•USA ,,_.la_,_,_.. -.................. ~-Rlll ... ...,c::i...i .. .... =·~ ......... ~ _., ..... ., ...... . ........ .-i .... 111•-......... ....... ,...__ ......................... -• •C:....-Sllll ~ilr1f1 ........... I "¥1 -·-•&.•Ct.•a.a.n.•••& ............ 11 •9"'1W_ ............ _ ..................... .... ___________ .,.. ... llWT.._ ... "'-0.-_,.. ....... . CllllMIS ..... -.. ........... _ .......... . e-.•~-c..-r• .... . 4. I I I . I r--------------, YES I WISh 10 take edvantaioe of yout La Vegas _ VIP V.cMion opponun1t~ J tia\19 encloMd my '9Nf'faUon f• (Chee!\°' money ordetl for S29e for two people. Pleasp eenc:t my vacation lnvltallon 10 the ac:Jdresl below. I undera1and I have unhl .l•ftv•rr ti, tHe ID talll ""f "'9C8tllln. (PleaM mal!e ~ peytlble ID ~ Wottd Yaalllon CfuO) Mell To! VEGAS WORLD HOTEL..cASINO; Dept. 303 2000 LM \48ga Btvd. So., Lal Vtgal, NV 19104 Pl4Miii r..a the "Pr1vtieoea & ~ttDM" of ~ ln!fltatlon ~ to make the moet of Yo'# vKatiOn and to know egc:tJy ~I ycx.i•,. entitled lo recei'le Cfwge my 0 VIM 0 ._. .. t-Clfd 0 ~ &preu CwdNo , _______ bpDete ___ _ Ac1dr9aa, __ ;._ _______ ~---- Cltr -------State -~ ---- ~ -------------~ I Wl9tl lo ~ my f9MMllOn for ~ folowtnt arttYat date] .. _......;. ____________ ,, ··~-- 0 , ... CMlll my NMMllOn .. a ...., •• Signetr.n L~--~!!.-~~~~~..:J \. .. .· I I • I it. "It's reached the ~int where rm not going to be able 10 do an)1hing for anyone unles.s I take some time off," he says. ''I'm e.xhausted." From OO't\' on he 'U 'work six rronths a year on the show instead Of nine. And with RunaUXJys. a ftlm shot in Van- couver. in the can. Selleck chartered a vacht for some de- --....:.. Served R&R . Com· panion: His step&>n. Destination: No- 'where in particular. D >1 \1' ~ ',o I \t' I" \~'I''' Secret agents are about to take vet another drub- bing at the movies. this ti me from director Stan Dragoti, in his remake of the Frerich farce Th~ Tall Blond Man With One Black Shoe. In the film, hero Tom (.Sp{a5h) H.anb is mistak· enly drawn into a web of intrigue by CIA agents who end up looking a little sillv. Not sur- prising!)'. the CIA refused to allow • Here comes the bride. Jee. nlfer Beal•. who tripped the light fantastic in last summer's f105hdance. will be tal<ing a trip to the altar as the mate of Frankenstein in the Columbia film The Bride. Sdna. the lead in,r of the rock group The Police. has been cast as her horrific hubbv .... When Can· dke Berseo was asked to consider a bobk: igning part to hype her autobiograph)', KnQ(k Wood. she qu1Ckly knocked the notion. "Thanks. but I'm too .shv;· was the t'an- did explanation. ·'J'-.e never don that son ofthing befor •, nd J don't think I can start now.'" any cameras in its Virginia heddquarters when Hanks and his co-stars. including Lon Stnaer;. and Dabney Cole- man, recently converged on the capital for location :>hooting. 8)' the way, }OU won't spy th~ movie with its original title. It's been renam- ed The ~an "''Ith One Red Shoe. since Hanks i neither tall nor blond. 0 The incumbent vie~· presidential couple has a \\ell- honed reputation for keeping their pri\'ate life private. Still. Barbua Buab recenO • spoke to Fam/1} Weekly about her 40-w ar marn , the vice pr • 1dent as father 10 their fi~e Tom Selleck, who once children. and life as a politi· pas..4ied up Raide,s of the lost c1an·~ wife. 'k because he Willi too busy On mamage: "I think a good "ii h \la num, P. I • has had hU5band doesn t make ht~ w1f COYl•a Photo of John M dd n by F.d Zak feel left out, or has children. I've loved what I've done. But partially becau e George shares. With all hi · f au Its. Georse Baab is a glorious sharer. He·~ wonderful about that. I'm teasing about his faults," she adds "He doesn't have many." An example of his sharing? "Before George accepted the job as head of the CIA, he call- ed our old~ boy, George Jr .. and asked, 'How do voo think the job would affect y0ur broth- ers and sisters?'" Is George Bush a good father? "He certainly wasn't very strict. He believes in trusting your children, much more than I: 'They're able to drive the car at 16 across the country. Trust them.' 'They're smart enough to come in out of the rain. Trust them .' That's why I'm white-haired. But he ~as always right. They always h\:ed up to what George ex- pected . His ~realest quality as a father \\as that he believed they could do it, whatever 11 was. I remember when Jeb, our second eldest son, hit a hardball ri~t o\·er the fence and rhrougn ttie neighbor's upstairs window, and I was frantic. I told George, 'You've got to move home plate.' And George said, You're kidding! The upstairs \\indow? My God. that's fAbulous That bov i a real ballpla\·er. "'~ · · On retirement: ··George said -this is early in married life -I might just as well tell you now. I don't ever plan to retire. And I now realize that he'd be miserable if he did, and therefore /'d be miserable if he did. But he also relaxes. He plays \\ith the (six} grand- children. He can tum off pret· ty fast when he \\ants to." What does the Second Ladv think about 19 . "I don't worry about it. I think people who have an- nounced for '88 have lo~t their cotton-p1ckin' mind~. Who' 8Qing to listen in five years unless you've done something right todayT' 1 On political life: "The pluses are really thrilling. If you live in Washington. if you tak advantage of it. it's like going around the world and ne'\ er havi~ to Pack a suitcase.. 'f ou ha\ e to ~ what's nght f r you and do It. If \'OU SU home and ripe and don't ~ out and ent m, ~---_......,....._ _____ __...,,. it's not going to be t ... " • • ' ' • ... • much fun." Botto~ Bob Newhart cannily defines his ~uring comic persona as that of the onlv rational man in a skewed world. "He's trying to tell others just hcN.• ~· the world is, but they think its perfectly fine and ignore him," he ex- plains "I see myself standing on. the edge of a crowd. whispenng to the guy next to me. He starts lau i . and the \. 1\ '• \.. . • ' guy next to him asks, Whal '>did he . ' ine i · an• overheard ind of humor. almost an eavesdropping.~· Fans can look forward to a double doSe of eavesdropping thi:. fall. '~rt will be Ill()\'• mg into its third n. and late-night run from l sen will off r rehef from Jobany, Ed and Doc. 0 Eh• .Joonrte 'Kaufman " h A o !ilmmer m )~ Robt1fr ",,,. ddet m l.<i Afllltlt>s. and Hou RosenbetJI m R'OS/i111Rf00. D e ttM FAMILY WEEKLY, All ftgflts ,_...S. f ... r r I I I I t I I I I I I I I I t ~ I I I I I ''You lmow ftlm, Myrtle," men .ay lo thl!lr U1lDe& ''& .. 1111! one an that CD11111&~ the one who breah throagh the paper.'' MAYBE OT. BUT AFTER MAKING COMMERCIALS WITH GUYS lJKE BIUY MARnN AND RODNEY DA . GER.FIELD, THIS FORMER NFL COACH WAS CRAZY ENOUGH TO WRITE A BCXJK. nett er 5ilW me c:oacb sn-" I )'t!il back. '1.ess l did thal finl <XJmtuercAil in takes. wtuch I~~ a kJt. but . turned out to be a recocd. It's raRll une guys 60 or 70 IO get it jlS the way the p~ duces ;and di1'dOa wad. Wben my boys and J returned home. Oa'·e Newhouse. the sports columnist tor the Oakb1d T~ ~me about making the commercia1. I told him about the 30 takes. and he . ed it in his a>l:umn. BiDv Martin was manasi06 the Oatland l.'s then and he apparently read Oaft's aJlwnn The next time I saw BilfY. ti! pall O\'er me. ''The cornrnercial I did with George Steinbrenner," be said. '"we bad less than 30 takes. - '1llar's nol what they «>Id me." I shot back. letting him laU the bail 1 guess you're j1Sl a llde **9 than I am. Billy; you need a little more time k> do it right.... . "You ~ ~ ~ -Billy said, '"putting me down in my '°""'· .. Billy had grown up in 8efteley, nghl next ID Oakland. bu! after all my y~ with the .Raiders. I~ Oakland was my town. too. Soddenty ~ had a friefld. I feud . nex1 commercial," ltUy ~!J'" won't need 30 takes.· ln his next oornmen:ial. Billy was a cowboy m a black bat saanding at the bar with his back to Jim Shoulders. the rodeo cowboy. ear the end. Jim says. "You see. you don t wanna ges filled up when you're out there P.unching dogies." Then he~ says. Ain't that righ~ cOwboy?" and· caps Billy on the shoulder. "I didn't punch tbat dogie," Billy says. . I happened ID be in ~· York the day they were shQOting that rommerdal at City Umits, a bar in Gft!enwich Village, so I dropped by. After"'lbout 30 takes. they ween't near finished. -stick with it. Billy.'' I said. "'See ya later." I had fun needlins Billv, but the number Of takes doesnl iiecessanly mean you're good or bad al making commercials. "Thal's excellent,· Bob Girald1 likes to say, '1>ut make it better this time." Thev do ~ take. And another. And ailother. You can say you,r lines perfectly each time. but Bob will like your expression or your attitude in one ~er than in another. Or he won't like the reaction of the people in . the background. the extns. ThoR extras are ptofes:8<>nal actors.. Sometimes they overact and Bob has to r9llind them to cool it. Bob doesn't ti.ave that tro0ble with me or the other IU)'s. He knowS we're not actors. We're not even sup- posed to memorize our lines. If we did, Bob knows the wonts woUld sound like ~ memorized them-di. Instead. he wants us to be ounelves in white\fer satuation the commerdal Cllls for. "Pretend. " he tokl me one time. "the Raiders itJsl lost with two .am IO go." When the commercial hat Rod~ Oanaerfield in it, Bob wants think of Rodney u • Jerk. • ldulz. Bob cloen't want us to chirp ."Oh ... no ... not Rodney" like we're in the third grade. He wants us to put on sour faces and grunt, ''Ah, no, not Rodney!" like he was the last guy we want to have bowling With the match at stake, or the last guy we want to br'ifl8'in as a relief pitcher in a soft· ball game. In our bowling commercial. ~has to walk through a bunch of. us to get to the alley. When we taped it, some of us decided not to let Rodney through. Rodney was standing to the side waiting for his cue, all pumped up, but Bubba Smith, Oi(k Butkus, Tom Heinsohn, °'8coll Jones ana J just stood there like a wall. Rodney couldn't even see over us, much I~ get through us. ~ "You guys," he grumbled. "I lc:new ..: you were going to do this to me." But for all the qos involved, the guys really get along great Nobody tries to upstaee the others. The reason for that, I think, is that our personalities are pret· ry much .the same. We're competitors and we're hams. When yotJ think about it. Mickey Spillane the author isn't that much different from Billy Martin the manaaer. Tom Heinsohn the ~etbaJJ player isn't that much different from Dick Butkus the football player. The on- ly one who's different, quite obviously, is Lee Meredith, the blonde Mickey Spillane calls "Ooll"-the only woman in the commercials. Lee's a great gal. She has to take a lot from all the guys, more off<amera than on-camera. But n~ has to take as much as Bubba Smith, who has a way of asking for it In our boardroom commercial to determine who's the "most popular" guy in our crowd, several of us speak up on our own behalf, including me, before Mickey Spillane asks for a secret ballot. At the lectern, Rodney declares, ''Gentlemen. we have a winner," and then Bubba stands up. looks ar a little slip of paper and announces defiantly, "Says .here the winner is ... Bubba Smith.'' But it wasn't quite as easy as that. him too. he's black." lhen I heard lhern both yelling. "Bubba's refusing to pay," Many Aid "I thought I was the arbiter," l llid. • "You were unW you said he's White!" The week before the Super Bowl that season. Pat ~mmerall arid I put f!Very player on the 8enAals and the 49ers on camera for our 1tV interview spots. When 'llie got to Cris 1 tOld him about the bet and asked him to settle it. 'What can I tell you, Bubba, .. he said, starina into the camera. "I'm white." Trouble seems to follow Bubba around. When ~ did our dblll1flll)e coounerdal. Bubba was runninS to sec- ond base when, wham. he crashed into Red Auerbach. whole dpr went one way ind whole hM went the· other. nm 71w hdty cooch was tOl«I olf the fWltl alWr hil Roan won tltt 1977 Super 8o11JL same day, Boom&>om Geoftrion was using a special softbalJ glove with a bi8 "Down. the way the anow is point· hole in it. When the ball ·wenr through i!ltl," Billy said. 'Throw the paper down it. smoke came out. The lint take, Boom this time, Bubba, throw it down!" held the glove up ln front ot him instead On the first take, Bubba stood up, looked at the paper and announced. "Says h.ere the winner i:s ... oh. shoot.'' Bubba had forgotten his own name. With that, everybody in the room got on Bubba. especially Billy Martin and Dick Butkus, who decided to make up a cue card for Bubba with his name on it. We don't ordinarily use cue calds. But as soon as Bubba stood up in the next take, Billy and Dick held up their cue c.ard. • "Says here, .. Bubba said, "the winner ~ is: .• Bubba Smith." · "Cut, cut," we heard Steve Hom say. "No, no, Bubba, you forsot to throw the piece of paper down." "Oh, shoot," Bubba said again. At the table, Billy Martin grabbed another piece of paper and wrote another cue card with "throw paper" on it. The next take. Billy held up the card as Bubba· stood up, announced, "Says he~ the winner is ... Bubba Smith" and threw the paper up in the a.Ir. "Cut, cut," Steve Hom said. "8ubba. you throw this paper dou.Jn. not up." By now, Bubba was steaming and sweating. Al the table, Billr. drew an ar· row on the ''throw paper ' cue card. Bubba finally aot it right. T~ satisfy ot to the side. The ball flew through the Bob, he had to do several more takes. hole and hit him in the gut. It took us hours to do that commercial. Next time," he said, wincing, "next Billy pulled anoUier prank on Bubba in time. 111 remember." our bowling.alley commercial. In that Next time. In our commercials, rhee one, Dick Butkus picks up a bowling . are a lot of next times. And a lot of fun ball and says, "Hey. Bubba, this ball times. Al the end of that softball com- doesn't have any holes in it." Bubba merdal, I break through a paper irabs it, slams his fingers in it and says, billboard on the outfield fence, yelling. Now it does! .. Aetually the ball's three "Wait a minute. this game isn't aver yet holes had been covered with black I aught thar ball.:' I had to do that scene paper. But when it was time to do that a few times. After my last take. Bil~ scene. Billy substituted a regular ball. He Martin was standing out there near me. had chalked what looked like three "Put another paper billboard up holes whtn the holes should be. He there," Billy said to the wOrkmen ... , slipped that -ball to Butkus. who would want to try that" hand it to Bubba during the scene. but Instead of just breaking throu&h the Butkus decided to double<J"tm Billy. paper legs.first, Billy dove through. He "Bubba; this is a bad ball." Dick skinned his arms but he got up whispered. ''but don't Id on." laughing. By now everybody was out With the camera rolling, Butkus there laughing, especially big Ben handed him the ball. but Bubba forgot Davidson, who played defensive end on Dick's warning. Bubba tried to slam his the Raiders for me. fingers into what he thought were "More paper." Ben called in his paper-covered holes, then he realiad he hoarse voice. "l want to do that.'' had been ha(t . 'There's no more paper," one ot the "Oh. shoot," he said. workmen said. "U you're going to break We all forget our lines, or rotjet what through the fence. you'll have to f'J we're supposed to do. but Bubba through one of the wooden panels.' sometimes forgets faces, too. one day ''What the hell, why not?" Ben said. I was home when the phone rang. Mar· Without another word, Ben crashed 1y Blackman was (ailing from where through one of the wooden panels. He Bubba and Dick Butkus were doing got up laughing and ran over to me. their golf<00rse commercial. ··t-tey, coach, M he said, .. remember when "John, they want you to settle a bet," I did tharr· Marty said. "Is Cris Collinsworth white I remerribered. At practice once. our or ~k?"' ~ delensive players were. under orders not ~ At the time Cris was a rookie Wide to tackte me~. just rouch hun. receiver with the Cincinnati Benaals Ben aot so frustrated a1 not beine ·able who wu to play in Super Bowl XVI. to hit a.nvone that on the last p&ay ol "He's white.'' I said. practice he chased a ball<arrier all the "Are you surer Marty sMI. way across the field, touched him, and ''Yeah. I'm sure." · kept on ruMin& toward the wooden "'That's what Buttcus says. too, but ferlce thll surroWlde.d our practice field. Bubba says that COilinsworth is blatk. CraSh-he went riaflt thn:>UF the~ They bet SH)(), and you're the arbiter. and took a whole panel of splintered Whatever you Ay, thaf s t." wood with him. "He's white." I said. "Remember U\11 day ln practice?" Bel In the baCqround I heard Dick yelf. W¥ 51ying ·to me now aftef our com. ins. "I knew Collinsworth is white. J met mercial. , .. Remember thll? .. him," then I heard BUbba ytlllna. ··1 met They never chJnse. Rr F,.._, Wc.o;u • ~ "· ; GEnlNG BRIEFED ABOUT HOW WOMEN CAN BEST COPE WITH S'IRESS M och has been wrillen late. ly about the causes of 5lrPSS and hou1 to counter· act as polentially calami- tous effecrs on our health. But until uery recently, no one bolhm!d to look careluJ. ly at the issue of whether men and women experience stff!SS dilfertntly. Dr. Geof8ia WiJki~Lanoll, a psychologtsl Irr private prodice in New York City who teaches at tlw Mt. Smai Medical College, saw evidence of a special "stress syn- drome " not only in her female patients but also in hetsell. Her book The Female Stress Syndrome: How to R~ize and Uve With Jt (Newmark~ Pre:sSJ lS nQl just for the women who suffer from strm (and who is immune?) but also for the men they live With Dr. l..anciil spoke · · ani Cook abo"t bJ!I findings in an interview for F.UflLY WEEKLY. Cook: HOw do mm and women ex· ~are. dlftermtly? Lanoil: Women are raised to feel guilty if they don't do everything they should do. Men are more likely to feel guilty if they do something they Shouldn't. Q: So women are wonted about =: f:' ~~~ ~re worried about be- ing bad. And that ''should" list never ends; ifs much longer than the "should not" list. With their list of "shoulds.'' women drive themselves into exhaus- tion -and into the symptoms of the female stress syndrome. • Q: What are tboee .ymptoma? Lanoil: Some are particularly female (misraine headaches, eating dLSOrders, anxiety attacks), and others are unique- ly female, which relate to the female reproductive system. While these latter are not necessarily caused by str • they are certainly 1&Sravated ">' it: menstrual and men~u~I problems, premenstrual tension, infertility and sex· ual dysfunction. Q: You lalk ID~ book about tbe .. Four D'e." ,t.a'noil: The · "Foui"' D's" are tge. emo- tional symptoms of !his ~rome. They are: (l) depression -wtlen a woman 1s ' crying and doesn't know why (this is not the same as sadness. say. when som~ one is dying); (2) 'disorganization - when you can't remember what you've fOiiotten ; (3) d«ision-making difficulties. like standing in front of the meat counter for 20 minutes trying to dttide what to buy: and (4) an increase in depemkncy ne«ls. which include lar\Wles of rescue. Q: We teDd to ueoct.te a Mr'eM 8pdra•e With tM HfYpe A" 19ale · a~ the ~ bard- drt~. La.noil: But you see, women are raised to be '1'ype A's": they are perfectionists who make all their roles priorities. And then we further stress ourselves by overscheduling an<1 refusing to drop ola roles simply because we've picked up new ones. If you work outside the house. you stm come home and are in charge of dinner and the children and the social life and the laundry .•.. Q: Sbou1ct we alow down? La.nOil: The trick is to take breaks, to .nlax before you ~too tired. Typical- ly. a woman wont rest until the whole world can see that she~ exhausied, un. til everyo:ne else Slves her permission to stop. What a woman-has to do is give herself that permission. Q: Can bUlband.t bdp? Lanoil: We have to be careful not to ex· pec;t a man to resc~ us. by permission. giving or~· Men have thei~ own problems. their own stresses, and 1t s not fair to expect rescue. On the other hand. we can take a lesson frof'(l men: they have the right tdea. They make time for therruielves because they are raised to judg themselves rrioSlly on job p_erformance; when they are through with their jobs, they relax. A woCT)an judges herself on how much she is giving to everybody. so after she takes care of the job, she takes care of the house. and the kids. and the husband. She might do herseJf a big favor, for in.stance, by Slopping on her way home from work, picking up a magazine. having a cup ol tea, and gr.·· ing herself some time before She into .her next demanding situation. I I l t I I I I I .Don't have FIT GUIDELINE H£1GHT IX 2JC Jlt • 11· 150-1,. 1~n• 5"0'" 1so.1• 1~Z2910s Sr 150-184 t~23U• H ' ISS.-179 ~ 11CH191111 220-2311ba u · 1I0-1701s 175-210• 21~~ .. H 1&>17•11)S 175-2ci "" 210-249 ltll ~s 1~17UI$ 175-1,. 1111 tM'9 H 1ttJ1Mllll 115-24911• H 1 IBA IOS 11H<W .. sr 165-179 IM 1111).231 .. B ISS-H• IOS 17S-234 .. 510 1$5·174 IOS 175-2J.t .. s U" 1~·17•1111 ,~ .. 60 1SS-17• lbl 17S-23' 1M " --r 255-304 250-304 2»304 ... 2»304 2•5-299 2te>-2" .. 23H89 m.2MlOS 23$-2" 23s-2MIM ' I ~ O!! !!lCIMOllli _, CClltl1uCWI M WW a.t Gii "- lrlft ""' llM l$lM!¥ _, . .... tor '°"' ~ ,.. ..., CIOOM 'Oil sat II fllll-~ lllO IDf rw ~ yo. "'IOIH O!OOM ... ""'*' ... TOE STYlE sat COlOA O Aedorc.o o u ~; • I 1:113912 14 Os-t 0 2X :1 lll3N =lX ,. I ou " ~ 3t JJ I ... .....CfteCkl.,.... IO~ ar.no.. inc. I I I I ..,.. ..,.._ ...,i;:o; I I A511 If I Ci!) SI• Zci I I Pl'ION nourt) '1 Gl 11~7 I L~--we_"'=-=~~~'-----------------J ... I I' I HARRIET VAN HORNE'S MONTHLY COLUMN ON LIVING TODAY KEEP COOL WHEN · EI.ECTION POLmCS · A year after the 1980 election they still weren't speaking. I refer to my dear, ornery old friend Charlie and his red- he.lded -and hotheaded -son-in-law, Kevir.. It took weeks of shuttle diplomacy by the other members of the family to etfect ·a truce ·in time for Christmas 1981. The argument ~casually enouRh with after-dinner ruminations about tile respective competence of Ronald Reagan and Jimmy Carter. Then somebody touched a raw nerve. In no time an idle chat esc:alated to fierce co~ bat over gun control, abortion, welfare mothers and the true color of Ronald ~eagaii's hair. eat er 1gerent brought the other around, and a friend- ly, easy relationship turned suddenly bitter. That won't do. In a presidential election year we are all caught up in the Great Debate. If we are not. we should be. Democracy depends on every citizen's involvement Age, sex, race and level of education Over 600 pages of favorites and fantasies. A popcorn machine. Rocking horses that come in four friendly sizes. A BLACKGLAMA• mink coat. Sears will even Sh!J>-A-Gift. Stop by your Sears · store for the magical, merry new Wish &Oel<. Or call toll-• free 1.aoG-45).2900 IOiLty. (In UUh W00-662·25.00) HEAT UP make no difference. Every vote is equal and every opinion important. The real enemy' is apathy. I recall two eJderly ladies rocking gent· Jy on the veranda of a New England inn back in lhe troubled summer of '68. Each was standing by her man. "Hum· phrey may· just win, you know.'' said one rocker. ''Maybe so," sniffed her longtime frierfd, "with all the riffraff voting for him." The other chair abrupt· ly .ceased its rocking. "Are you assum- ing that only the best people will be . voting for TriCky Dick?" There is an example of how not to conduct a Great Debate. As any 1V moderator will teU ou, the ame is u the minute you ose SJ t t e issues or allow insult to replace reason. • But at this moment. on street comers ~bac.k..po~in tavemsJ hot tubs and l~ectseminars, political pwions are rising and civility is on the wane. Post-election feelings· are bound to bitter this year. for 1984 finds our society Polarized . . For the first time ever, there is a woman, Geraldine Rerraro, running for vice president. There is an incumbent president charged with favoring the rich, punishinlthe P<>Qt and forgetting what C::iay it is. bove an. there are the battles over women's rights, school prayer. abortion and censorship. The Democcatic party. traditionally In a presidential electlol1 year we are . -all caught up In the Grea.t Debate. II we are not, we should be. concerned with social welfare. this year finds itself tom. Too many factions are seekins shelter under one umbrella. £ach. day generates fresh arguments, and keeping a reasonable tone is not easy. - Americans go to the polls to vote for an omnipotent father, for better times. for a safer world. PUlling this lever. we tell ourselves, will protect our jobs and our future. So much is invested in that -moment.behind the rurtain -is it any wonder we rage at those who question our ju~nt on Election Day~ AnybOdy who finds contemporary ~ politics a nasty business should dip in- to the annals of 19th-century elections. Democrats in 1864 called Und>ln "a grot~ue baboon" and "an obscene clown.· In 1828 the el~a)'lt John QUin- cy Adams dismissed his opponent. An· drew Jackson. as "a sav~ who can barely spell his own name.· The savage blew Adams away at the polls. Giv.en the incendiary nature of poli· tical argument. there are rules to ease the tensions and keep the colloquy ra- tional. The Earl of Chesterfield wrote some advice to his son that -still holds true: "Never seem wiser or more learn- ed than the people you are with." Political . d~~tes are. rpo~ sati$fyi!lB when the·match is between equals. n·s unfair to argue with people who lade your education, or your access to information. The P.OliticaJ climate would be gentler this year if religion were not such a ma- jor ISSue. When a political discussion turns into a quarrel abOut such volatile topics as prayer in public schools, birth ~~· is likely to be generated. Excusing myseU from such imbf08lios, I have taken to quoting England's great statesman F.dmund Burke: "Politics and the pulpit," he warned, "are terms that have little in agreement." IW Harritt Von llofM iJ aw«~ essayW ui.o UJrills. on a tJOritry of subj«ts I DI YES! Send m. the 1984 I . Sears Christmas Catalog plus a S2 l merchandise certifte.lt~ good on any 70 Sors pure~ o( S10 or mor~. I 0 I enc~ check or money Ofder fOf S2. plus applicable wles tax. I 0 Chargd2plustntomySearsChargeaccount1sub1«ttoapprovafl I My karsCbarge Accounl Num~ es. • • I I . I 55 LL 53738 . I. • . ~:. ·~--~ l ::....--::--.:-------=--:-:--=-·~ ...... ~===,..,,&W=~----"'.":' f)l,/ftht-a~~~~~~~------~-:,=·===-=-==-=--=--=--=-~-- $15 000 000 IN PRIZES • 100 trips to Florida Cyptt11 Gardens for four. 1 f flying roundtnp on Eastern Airlines and staying I Order from the new ~ars Wi~h Book by October 6 nights at the Crenelefe Retoft I 31, 1984, and you can be an instant winner. • 1,250 Pobroid Sun 660 Autofocus cameras I Wish Sook Sweepstakes Prizes: • 1,000,000 color portraits from Se.rs Portrait I • 101915 ~ t..ncer ES cars Studio and 17,000 Sea.rs merchandise cmifiutes f No,...._,._, forht..,...Uf'lldolfi<itl~-PllfU•Mllws-tW!lll._ You~hell~Ololdtf SwMpllalrftYOld I ill --•lMlll11111011..t Oitlldctol ~ ClMMS "Jiil awe> Tl«OUGH fOURTH P'RllU M\Al • RlQMO IY NO\ltMllll 21, 1"4. . . . L ' I fUNDRAISIR decides just how many "dishes for eight" will be needed for the anticipated crowd. With the proverbial "apple for the teacher" in mind, our dinner theme celebrates the abundance of fall's finest fruit, apples are featured in many of our menu choices, and a vari- ety of colors and types are piled high in wicker t>Mkets to adorn fOod tables For fun , fill a big bushel basket with apples and have guests guess just how many there are. The prize? What else-a freshly baked apple pie from the committee's best pie baker! flJNO.RAJSER DINNER MENU "I (shown In phqtQtVIPb) Apple Ortddar ~ Soup Marinated Braised Rump ol Bttl wuh Appia and Two Oruons Pon~ White and Wtld Ria Pilaf &ti ~ cath Appia 8ro«oli and BeJJ ~ Salad Apple Oup wilh Crmm Cdfet · Teo· Mi/Jt AllMIGIVRIOUP stinins !or about S minutes. until vegetables are wilted. Sprinkle in flour; stir until smooth. z.. Add aDPle juice and milk. MJXture wi1i appear cwdled. but thls will &sappear. Continue cook· ing, stining, until mixture comes to a boll. s. Add grated cheese and stir CM:r medium heal until cheese melts Taste. addina salt and freshly ~ pepper if desired Serve hot m muss. soup bowls or CUJ>L Gar· · nish with thin apple slices if desired . Makts 6 ~ 8 9t1tings 2 a.-llllfleJ:: ~~mlud~ ~ Ir\ leMll CMlll wide blD peppeacoma 2 dow. .,UC. alk'!ed. I ...,_ beef nmrp 8 carrot.a, .-'flCI ud cut brto Z.IDc:b c:banb I lb. Spmlllb oolom. cat iDto wee wedlet I .,_ nd (Ba iMidll4 ~. CllllDto ..... ..... 2 red4ldnned ...... ad Into ~~· l. Combine apple juice, cider vtnepr, pickling spices. pepper- corns and &artic in a deep, non- COITOdible container. Place beef rump into marinade. cover loose- ly and refrigmle lor 8 hours or up to two days, turning meat several times to marinate evenly. %. When . ready to ovCn-braise. place ~ and marinade in Dutch oven or deep roasting pan. Place c:arrou around meat. Cover seo.ue-: ly. Oven-braise in 3509 oven for I hour. · S. Add onions and apples. oover and continue to oven-braise for 1 to 1 ~hours or longer. until meat ls fork-tender. 4. Ufl out.meat MlO !enlin8 plat· ter, keep warm. Uft out canoes. onion wedges and apples aM ~ around med. Re9et've pan jukes kJr rt'o serve. cut meat mto slices, serve with pan gravy (recipe klOows) .m onions. carrots and IJ> pies. M<*s 8 Jltl'l.wt8S •pAJtiiiYY Pu=,,... ...... \4 mp ~,,_,. 1 mp-... Va ttrrpaoa-. or to tMte Few twt.19 hlbl)' pound ...... pepper, lo tlllEle J. Stralfl pan liquid into saapan; dJscard spices &rld .aarhc. 2. Blend ftour and waler &olether in a oovered jar, ~ urd wen. mixed.. Stir llour·wa&!f ci>rnbination into pan liquid and heel IO boiling. st.imng. Season wilh salt and ~ per. lf gravy is IOO thick. add a lit· tie men water. WHnl AND WILD lllCI ..... I (kL)pkc. ... P*Md wild rtce ada 21 = = ........... butta . orw.,t.e · I ~CM..._ chdmlb, I (6c&) cma eHced ~.....-Q9=~ ... ~ ~ aipc:Mptlled,....,. I. ~ ~ pn and wild ra mut acxordinQ co package direc- tions, usina 2~ cups water and 1 tablespoon butter. %. About 5 minutes before ra is finished cookina, add water chest· nuts. mushrooms. oela.v and j)ll'S-ley; stir with fork to mft11f."COVer and continue cooking until rice Is tender and ~es are heated th'°°'1. 3. Tum mixture Into serving dish: fluff with fork. M<*s 8 ~ UDCAaUGIWml A"'8I s lart red ...... alced • ~ llCJal --8ted butter or-.. lue I .... bialt red~ coer..ty ............. about 10 cape Va alp Wiiier ~ CllP red wlue \llDtpr S trillh111aa~~ ~ ;::a.;,..,,_...,. FO'md l. Cook and stir apples in butter in Dutch oven OVf!I medium heal 5 minutes. %. Stir in n:rnamina if9"dienb. Heat co boili~ reduce ht.at. Cover Ind simmer undl c.abbil8e ii lender, 15 co 20 minutes. M<*s 8 servings 2• ... lncml ............ .,...,. ...... J:;-~ .... ~~.....;.. 2 0 ....... --Jake ~aipoltweal ~ aip ...... al I 9lllfl• Ola• ltJ1'e ••' d Vt ' ,, ......... ..... \4=•·......, ...... ,.... ~ 1911MF Ef9DDI•• ..... fainlmutd on ~ 16) 2'4000 167312 24000 167320 . }4000 lb 7906 SAnJROAY SUNRISE . 1 cup DEL MONTE' Pineapple Gtapetru1t Juice Onnk 1 · ~ DeUclous aooie. · oopeeled. ~ed "and cued OR l can (8~ OZ} DEL MONTE" Applesauce • 4 lee CUbea Contine 119edientS 111 blender CClltainef C<Mlf and M on ~ OOtll snm11 and wen blefl1ed Pour into oiasses Sprtnkle wnta cimamOn and seM lmmedialety 2sermos 111 oz eacn> J I I I I .1 ;I 1. . Fluffy Lamb Finds a Home Once '}~n a time there was a beautiful, snowy white lamb named Autty. She was soft and cuddly and very, very sweet. But she had no home. She had no friends. So She was ver(. very sad. One bright 5pnng_ morning, as fluffy was crossing the meaaow; she came upon a small. silvery pool of water. She looked down at her reflection and sighed, "I wish I had some friends!" All of a sudden-out of the slcy-down swooped a very, very naughty crow. "Caw. Caw!" lt was such a scary noise and Auffv was so very, very {t:ighrened. Bue. just at that very moment, whcri She ilioUghc all was lost. Auffy pecked out from under her long. long eyelashes and saw a handsome scarecrow step in front of her and shoo a"'-ay the nasty crOw.Benmd nim wa.s a group~ happy characters (she <lidri't know their names yet. of course, because they hadn't been intro- duced) and th~ were all smiling at·her. . .. ~11 be your friends~ said the scarecrow gently. "We're the COUNTRY YUMKINS~ C.Ome home with us!" they all said. And each one gave Auffy Lamb a big hug and a squeeze. Auffy didn't know whether to laugh or tty. But she was very. very happy at last. From that day to dUs, Auffy Lamb has lived with herOOUNTRY YUMKIN• friends. She has a home. She has good friends. And for a lamb, that's quite enough. SAVa UM ON YOU. NEXT PUaCHASE OF ANY DEL MONTE• -..----CANNED VEGETABLE PllOOOCT ' nlS!!!!!P.!!C!'U•~~...ia I Al ... ,.... ..... b cbllhn's.,,. EICll wD I ...... al llP ID 115-00 r...-..m.'='~':.f ..... ~ · 1 :::.c:-::-c' .·rw::a'&.':.-=: ... cai-.... ,..,. ····---·· --lii~·--=· l•= I .... Dll-c..,-..· Ollr.eG ... 72M,~IM&2'731 I .... __......._~~~~~~~,....~~.,..~~~~~~--~~ a .... 1111:.c..-.v.a • 1111 •:izr.M . .,...111111., 1---0lr sm ~ I !t OD I Z.O.-•lllCtllClltOlll*• ........ ...,. • .,. ... ~,....*tHO~ ., .:;;.. D I E-aif.a'irio~#"i:t·c.~~~-Q.·cW-1 ~ IOC L _______________________ _l..._..~~~~~ lb7301f ' . have one o one ambi And for we made_ the best 6-1 - Plym~uth Reliant K ~ •matcan &•llletMte:t+edlekllm"fl~ dleJ Wlpl t.tlldr ••e,tTlrie ... .. . 'The K-cars were the first six-passenger cars in America built with fuel efficient front-wheel drive technology. They are the best value in a six- J)3.ssenger car.• They have the highest gas mileage, the lowest price. And they're th~onl~ cars backed with a 5-year/50,000-mile Protection Plan ... For 1985, the best value in a six-passenger car just got better. ... lewMIMyaa•IHflelN~eJt,IWbttkeu . · and euedle*"1q. From headlamps to tail lights. we redeSigned the K-cars to improve their aerodynamics. The drag coefficient is down to a mere 0.42. With their new air-slippery design. we were able to increase efficiency and make them quieter than ever before. Wt'ft lmprcmd the eqine to lift you better performance. A family car doesn't have to slow you down. The K-cars pepp>" 2.2 engine. one of the best Chrysler's ever built. has been further refined to give you improved performance. Together with fmnt-wheel"drive and rack-and- pinion steering, you g~t the power and handling todays highways and bal:k roadS oemano. . . . . . M<1. I For four years. the K-cars have given you the best gas mileage of any six·~~er car in America. We give you E3S mileage the competition can't:~ city est. mpg. 33 hwy. est. mpg.••• And to make ~ure you don't waste a drop, a new gas sa\ing indicator light signal when to Shift gears A for optimum fuel efficienq~ W DqeAriesX 1. 'WtllMtklewettfdce,.Wt'reldlldlelewea. Don't let their shiny new looks scare you. Whether you choose a 2-door or 4-door sedan or a wagon, the K-cars are the most sensibly sticker priced six-passenger cars in America. And that~ for a car thats impressively equipped. Now to every fini h we've added Clear Coat paint for extra luster. And forl985 there are convenient storage pockets on driver and passenger doors and a full length console on bucket seat models! And much more. •&ift.J'Oll the HSI llllillAmcrkan.cars. Chrysler had the low 't perreQt of NHTSA safety recalls for '82 and '83 model designed and built in North America. ln l983alone, the imports combined had more than 3 million recalls. American manuf.acturers had almost 2.9 million. Of the staggering 6 million cars and trucks recalled last year, less than 7,500 \\ere Chrysler built. and only 416 of these~ re K-cars." We lift,... tbt bat backed .American c.an. Our quality gives us the confidence to back every new Chf) Jer. Plymouth and Dodge car we build ~ith a 5-year/50,000.mile Protection Plan on the engine. dri\'e train, and against outerbody rust-through. at no extra charge. It gives you one priceless extra: peace of mind. I • Theres no Short rut to being the besL It takes hard work. nd·w 're willing to work hard. But we need your help. Thats why we're riding out port cards to ~very-new car buyer. With ~11 improve ourselves, our cars and our deal r sef\ice. W just want to be the L • TbeNewau,.lliC.••1111•• we dodt want to be the Maest.Just the 11est. ---------------------~ - ----------- RINDUllU (connntt«J from pa~ 121 l. Tnm broccoli stalks and cut each stalk in hall, lengt.hWLSe. Heat water in ~ kettle or OUlch O"Yen k> boiling. Add broaDi stalks and • boil for 2 minutes, jl.dt wd the color ctwwes Drain broct.'Oli lmrnediatdy and place in shallow pan, addina oold warer and ice rubes: to chill down as qu1ekly as possible. · 2. Cut broccoli into attractive. diagonally sliced bite-sized pteaS. about 1 ~·2 inches in Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. Jeneth Core and seed red. yellow and green ~ cut ioo aboot 2xY.inc:h strips Com- bine'brocmU and pepper !trips 1n lartf! bowl. S. In ;ar, combine cider vineaa.r. lemOn ~ice, olive oil, veaetable oil, mustard, salt, pepper and sugar; c:ovef set'\.lrely and shake jar weil Smokers, now there · ~e two ways to get gifts to blend. Pour dressiils over Salad; stir With spoon IO mix thoroughly. Best made jusi before !ef'Vi~ Maltl.s 8 Jtrtings iNiLi Cii• IYa c.,. ~brown ..... 1cup~~noar 12 t.blupOON n ,bed ...... or ..,...nne ~ID I cooldDc ....... ..,_ S lie. Ya MMp a an po.ct cte on ~ t!FIJQlm poand ....... Gnimld rind cl I leliMJn Jalce "' in --ft.S md Mlf"" Ice a..~ l. Prtheal oven to 375'. 2. Combine the supr, ~rand butter in a mixing bowl and mix well wtth the linsers. Set aside. S. P~, quAiter afid core the apples. Cut the apple quarters into thin slices and p~ into a bowl. Add cirmnamon, nutmeg. lemon rind from Raleigh and Belair: • and lemon juice, stir well to mix. 4. Spoon the slices mto a 9x9x2.fnch square pan. Cover ~ with the butter and su~ mixture, spreading everny. You've always been able to get gifts free by redeeming the coupons found on every pack of RALEIGH and BELAIR. And of course, you still can. Just save those coupons. and redeem themfor any item in the Raleigh-Belair Gift Catalog. From cookware to cameras, tools to toys. these gifts are yours FREE for smoking RALEIGH or BELAIR. And now, with the new Coupons-Plus-Cash Option, you can get gifts faster than ever ... · at special low prices! Just save 100 coupons, send them in with the amount of cash specified and ~---~ Y.OU can order: your gift right away. With two coupons on every pack and a totaJ of 28 in every carton, they add up fast! SO au or write for your Raleign-Belaif Gift Catalog today. Then lean back and enjoy the rich tobacco taste of RALEIGH. -· Or the light menthol freshness of low tar BELAIR. Call 1-800-626-5510 TOLL-FREE for your free copy of the new Raleigh-Belair Gift Catalog. There's no charge for the call. Call Monday through Friday. 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m: Eastern Time. Toll-free nwnbervatid only in the Continental U.S. Or mail your name and addres , including-zip code, to:· .. RaleiJZh-Belair Catalog P.O. Box 12 Louisville, KY 40201 5. Bake tor one hour until topping ls msp arid filling t5 t>UbblY. If pan ov~. Place a baking sheet or sheet d fOil under the bak· ing dish to catch the NOOYe". Serve warm, wfth a spoonflJ1 of ~. or vanllla ice cream on top, if desired. Makes 8 SVVlllgs FlJND.RA&:R DINNER MENU 412 Hol Mu/l«l Ap,. OdtT Apple lAmon OiicMn ' Noodla Romanolf All Semons Vegetob(, Salad App/It OanbeTy Cobb/a ~-T~ ·Mi/Jt NOT MU'19 ...._. CIDlll I ........ cider, dMdecl IYa c.,.W-.. lwbolltdowe ............ 1 k I Ill DOii ....... D\llMI • .. 9 11 lllkU I mp ,.s.t ill'* or derlt biow'a 0:::...,,,. lddl.t for pnl1ab fopd1111.a) I. In covered &qi salJCepOt or kettle, !!lln-mer 2 cups IRlle Oder. waler, doYes. albpjct. nutmeg and cinnamon sticks 10 minutes. 2. Add rtmainlna apple cider arid brown susar. hell. stimns. until ·suaar dmolve5 Keep warm. do not boil. SerVe from lar8' heated puncf! boWI into cup.1 or mulfS. Gar· nish each SftVing with a cin~ stick ~ir· rw, if deiired Makt:s 36 ~ JrJVUWS WHAT'S COOKING IN BOOKS , O ur rurrent round-up of new and noteworthy cookbooks begins with an expansive, dekghtful book of discovery ror gardening and cooking. The Joys of Gardening O:Jokbook (Garden Wa:t Inc., Troy, N.Y.), by Janet Ballantyne. ll-was created for vegetable gardeners and anyone else who l<M!S fresh vegetables. Profusely illustrated with full-color photographs and step.by~ep illustra- tions, this book provides a bumper crop of inviting recipes and many helPful tips. A well-researched book with in-depth descriptions of outdoor dining situations, . Everythins~ · T~e5 Better Outdoors (Alfred A. Knopf lnc.l by Oaudia Roden, is also a great read. Hundreds of recipes and inspirations for everything from unusual picnics to wedding feasts and backyard barbecues are detailed in a marvelous flow of words and pictures. For getting down to the riRht scale, there's nothing · like Weight Watchm Fast and Fafiulous Co<ikbook (NAL Books/New American Ubrary). Intro-: duced by Je.an Nidetch, the founder of Weight Watchers, it incorporates the ever-evolving Weight Watcher's Pro- gram with its t 984 full-exchange food/diet plan, offering upbeat, up-to- the-minute recipes. Another real find for the weight· conscious, The Pasta Lover's Diet Book (Bobbs-Merrill), by June Roth, MS., features pasta (a complex carbohydrate} with light, easy-to-fix sauces arid top- pings. The book is well-grounded nutri· tionally. Roth has designed a complete t '4-day menu plan that promises to help you lose up to two to three pounds a week, with.~a at lunch and dinn r. JeJ Fuel (Villard Books), by Jeanne Jones, is billed as the new food strategy for the higtrperformance person. A smart, contemporary guide to wing. it emphasizes fresh vegetables and salt· free, low.fat cooking. with a 7-<iay jet fuel menu. It also features shopping and cooking tips and easy. mini-style recipes . . Japanese Cookins for Heahh and fitness (Barron's F.ducationaJ Publishi~ Woodbury; N.Y.), by Kiyoko Konishi, erpphasizes wholesome foods and cook· i~ methods that preserve vitamins and minerals. Estimated cooking time plus calories, proteins and arbohydrates are listed for each recipe. Brroduinners Too. Th~ Second Ris· ins (Rodale Press, Emmau~. Pa.). by Mel LOndon, presents more of th unending joys of baking for novices and experi· enced bread baken. alike. A fresh-from- the-oven collection of recipes for yeast breads, qukk breads, brioches, muffins and so on, the book is lively with per· f 17 sonal anecdotes and recipes from friends and loved ones. Finally, for those who are panicked by poaching and think a l1lO\me is just a big deer with funny antlers: Th~ Fear . of Cookin~ (Houghton Mifflin). by Bob Scher. Billed as "The Absolutely Foofproof Cookbook for Beginners and Everyone Else." it takes would-be cooks into the kitchen and guides them through the preparation ol various dishes. With the aid of Scher's com- prehet'l$ive n\41lUal, even the most timorous cooks can feel at home on the range. 0 (7-0AYFREETRIAL)-. ..... ._ POLO TOPS AT A .. PERFECT PRJCEJ I ONlY s997'h EACH (when you buy any two) . PLUS FREE MONOGRAMMING! ' 1- TRY OS ON FOR StzE ••• FREEt Teemup'fOUlfawrite S*ltl. jNns. IMtl and ........ with ... stwp.. looking Polo TQP9-arid make a hit every time you're outtoplayt Eacte top spo11s a ltyfistt two.cunon pleckM trant and comtooable knit adfed sleeves. . And now you can add plz:zaz:z and 1'8111 pel'90f\aflty to 'fOUI polo tops •. wttti yo.x moc~. We1 llCtd 'fOUI ini'*t FREE! ChooM your tops in vtbrant solida °' ~ ltl1p9s that Wiit atay crisp and colorful for yeara, lince they're made from long·last1ng 100% Celanese Fortrel spun potyester. Just machine nth ·n· dryt Order today end get your Polo Topa at the petfect priOll 1 I I I I I I YES I Please rush my TWO Bl.AIR"' Polo·., Tope for a week's FREE TRIAL Then l'M send just $19.95 ($22.95 tor women's sizes), plus postage arid ~r8Cl.m them .. myupenM I and owe noltling. O To.,,. ewn more. rvw encioeed my payment rt<1#. plus onty $1 .15 toward postage end hancling I com-BLAIR wi1 pay the balanc:e. Al my money wtl be instan1ty refunded lf I'm not plMlect TO ORDER CtlOOM oolots warMd and .... yo.I I .a. in the 1PPopriat• box:ee. sa. ........ 10, 12. 14, 11 11 Women• •. 40. 42.... I p • ~ 1 YQIJ'd .. ea to l'l'O!Og!lm 'J04JI Polo Tope. Pf1nt ~ W. '"'I tiala In the order. you want them to ~ 1t'• • ~ touc:h-yo1.n FREE lfOm Bl:AJR ~rTW.SHE [] [j El 801701 ~, I a • 0 ... ----...----....,...-;,----------- mm ""'' ~ & -I .......... ..., tsamJllilii • ......, OtH I IOllerOIM~M~U I.Al ........................... Mell~to:--.WAFWllN .. M1..a I .................... ~ .... .-. • I l "1 fUNDUIA• (Crm(lllU( d from JXJS•~ J 61 2 ca.-ftDe *>' br-..d Cl"Wlll» (optional) 2 ~..,.... ~ <.'Oftd and cat 1nlo wedc- 2 lemoiM, ml lnto ~ Booqut't t:I ~ l. Ri~ chicken under cold water; pal dry. 2. In non-<x>rn:>dible pan, combine ~e juice, 1 cuf> lemon juice. vegetable oil, garlic. salt and pepper. S. Place chicken in marinade,~ as completely as possible. C.OVer and refrigerate for 4 to 24 hours Tum chicken once or twice during the marinating time. .f. When ~ to <x>ok. p'lace chicken on roil- lined shallow baking pans and bake ·in preheated 35()0 oven for 35 to 45 minutes or until fork-tender. 5. Alternate method: Dip marinated chicken pieces in evaporated milk, then roll in crumbs. Place chicken on foil.fined pans and bake as above. (Chic.ken may be served hot or oold.) & ~ chicken on serving platters and garnish with apple wedges dipped in remain- ing lemon juke, lemon wedges and parsley. Mak~ 8 SltTVl1l8S MOOD'" iOM•NOllf • 2 buncba f2 a.pa) elced l"eell oman.. UR "bite llDCI ~ ll"fO ~ Ya cup bn9d cnambe J. Cook nocxfles in salted boilins water~ cording to padtaae dirtdions, slightly under· cooking them as they will oook further in the ~ Drain noodles in colander and run cold water over them. 2. Make sauce: In large saucepan, melt ~ cup butter. Add Oour and stir until lmOOlhJy blended Add salt. pepper, TabaSco and milk. He.ti to boiling, stirrins <X>llSWltly until mix· tu re is thickened. · · J. UghUy grease a 2~-3-qt ~Layer one-third d lhe noodles in ca.wrole; top with half of sour aeam. cottage roeese and green onions, and one-thlrd of the sauce. Repeat layerifl8. Top with remairung nood1es and sauce. ' • 4. In skillet, melt remaining Y. cup butter, add bread crumbs and stir until lhorooghly coated. Spcjnkle buttered aumb5 over fOl> of ~e. Bake in 350' oven for about 45 to SO minutes or~ Wbbly. If dish\$ made ahead and refrlgeraled, bakins time will necessarily be longer to heat through completely. MaktS 8 sawrgs 2-24 hours. st1rrina frequentJy to marinate evenly. M* 8 sm;ings &..uCi••-Y co.••• ·~..., 2 ..,,. •II a ana ftour ~ R.MpooG p'OUDd c:mn.aon 1.4 twp :s:-9 Jllldmet ~ :9 cnnba~or ~ wbole bfTTy c:nnbeny ~ 1 pC. half4Dd-balf CftUt (optioftal) I. In mediurn-Jized bowl, sift toAether floor, .sugar, baking powder and salt Cut in butter until mixture ~~k5...m.li~Cll.Unbs"---L-2.. In small boWt, lightly beal em with fork: stir in mllk Add aD 11 once k> ~ ingrediients. stirrins ;ust to molslen. Set aside. S. PrepaJe ~ filling: Combine I cup sugar, 2 !_ablespoons Gour, cinnamon and nutmea Tos su&ar mixture With the sliced apples and the cranberries. Tum mixture irr k> Aargt aucepan Of kdtle cook. ~ rim medium heat until eender. aboul 7-8 minutes. 4. Pour hot mn.,. into 9x9x2-inch baking pan. spoon on biscuit topping. Bake in pre- heated 400° oven 20-25 minutes. Serve With• crwn. Makes 8 smin85 (COOlln~ on~ 20) FOR YOUR HOME 7SO FiMh W»Od lJr.e An E~ \~ W:lod Ftn1loh-lhe original 0..nish Oil in<~ 1927- ..eaf,, pornes. finishes. hardens. proce<ts from wuhin whh une applicat10n. Outla surlMC! co.th l to 1. ~lC().OENSIS, Booli.let, FREE . . 751 ~ ,_.. SUinl And Odon. Brochur ~nbes two safr, II~ products th.at ptt.'- ~the beaut) ~your Ql~. Ont~ old ~1dized unne l.lln~. the other ~1m1nat odor) ClEASCRAFT, Brochure. FREE 752 ~ Spl.nMndtr, kec.1)> ~ u'I It'<? bathroom iloof. ~ ~1ppery fbm. mildew, dry rOt, sUbflOOI' dam.a . T.lh'S lhe pl.ct of an ~pens1w ~~' door E.u1I m t.1llf'd, no tools ~ SPLASH-ENDER, li'l;C .. l1ttt.iure, fREE 75J wmdowl For ~ins. aep&ac~. New Const. l~ full<olor boollec an~~rs tne>'t •'led ~ions about wmdows. ~110 door\. Sectt0n~ on ~ling. l'f'Placins w1n- d<M~. ~. more. ~ photo$ of \\1ndw. idf>~ AN0£RS£N CORP., Booklet, FREE -~::it-1-w ravw ..,.,.. tt1biid Litt ..__ 1t.~1Llb~ for ull or i.pnng pl.truing. OiiCCM'f o.gon Bulb Fam\"i; ~ Mld ~ beautiful ~it'!-. Send for our colorful btoctiur.. QR[. CON BULB FAAMS. Brochure, FREE . 715 Modem 1.-nttnl Door repl.te~t for worn out ~n hatchw.-; dOOf. Anr.11C11W!. e.l\y oper•ttng. ""'1ng )let>! door tldd!> ton\ll"n- 1enct' 10 )Qlr ~. ~ b 11~11 bt ~ms rfP.111r, repb<ement cous. THE BILCO COM- ~NY, lfroch\ite, FREE GIFTS GALORE 7S6 ~ us. ... lnemwtioNI MWc.ary ~ clc:1tt11ng. pac.b, ar, collect1bl~. Qual· llY ootdoor sport <1nd WOflr. clothtn C.mp1ng equ1~1 l.ownl pn<.e-. gu.lr.tntet'd. Fat I deft~rv. Colot1ul • <40.:pg fa IV" intt"f ut<1log. \i\A.c;c;• ARMY• :'liNY•STOif. Catalog FREE 757 ll~ theClothittfort-~nUndH s'I·. Quality, comfort, (OfM'nlefl<e. 10p ~11'l(' brand Ult\ h1rt>, s~ater~ 'portswear for ICJdol'tt fNI\! loin OUI sattSlied c U\lofTle6,. for piompt M"rv1ce order c<it•I tod~ RICHARD'S. C.mlug. FREE 758 SM On Our Unlquot Photo Products And Film ProctMlna -lf't Ch put )OOr photo on • lE'y nn fOco mu punt~. ochPt' N 11tng u~ms. BABY ~LLE T PHOTO CO .. Brochure & S 1.00 Of! CC>OpOnl fRCE 759 llldt'"I Outdocw AdWntum begin with., trip ihrUUgh rhe Eddi Bauer cat.llog. Beg hOO d clothii'lg. ~~ rf'Crt".ltional l'qulp:. mem-all pwmtefld 100 • g11~ f"-our qu.,l1tyi»(ked .awiwl ISSUfi S 1.00. CODIE IW.J(R, IN Catctlop, SI 00. • • 760 9"kr Cipt at • kttotr Price. fac1of'Y- lr\Nl direct 1rom lamp.t, rw11on\ llllf'. Clf!-l' c.ap • 1.11 Ch<!r 100 d1ttcren1 t u~rom-m.Kie c 1(¥&B There\ one kM' vuur l.ihlc, one IOf ~, priu~ THOMPSON CIGAR CO. Qet;iil\ FREE 7'1 Jiaww Puulft To Otdf.t! -Made trom \OUf Pfl(iio Cir.I\\ 1ng. pO\lt'r-:-"From S4 00 f1rst time ~-Chaco~ C ndv Mold that ma~ l'A~ puule PuulJ olien/d1;countcoupom \\Orth S25 00 Included JIG \ M~RO. o..,. ~ount CQUPOO ~. Sl.CIO FREE HEAL TH HINTS 76J :Stop ~ins for VitM!tlits! Buy v1wninsat•discount ~ 1,000pmducnand "''lt" • plu) val~blt" discount coupons. The hr~ Ql,l'lrl)' at unbel~ty bot. pric.s trom t~ nation~ d1,count v1t"mln le.ldt"r. SOV VITAMINS, u~log. FREE 1'4 l.me ~.The and ne way to Shm d<M-n without drugs LNm ;about an am.v1ng ON ~akthrouith ior appet•le control to lose ~gt\t. Send IOf }QUI FRU informat111l" ro,e,uch report. VlCl~ PRODUCTS, Reopot!. FREE 765 frft Plinnina Guidt 1clk )QI how to~ ~ on bud -pnced Insurance ~Gin buy dir1.1Ct-bv-m.t1I. Uie ind HNlth plans ~!able in -.11 ~.GERBER LIFE. PL.tin ng Gulde, FREE 7'6 Otlomy Suppl~ -SM> 20~ IO 60% on .,our co~t~. 11e<xtom): and ul'O'>lomy 5u~ pJlt"). UfT) .lll ma1or m.anuf.ictu~ product~ BRUa MEDICAL SUPPLY. D~ounl Cai.log. FREE products at bekM reLlil pl'IC~ ~ S,000 Bow\ 1n k. \\tl speoalize m Arcftel) BONHUN· TE \\'AREHOUS£:. Ut.alog. FREE 17J Sa¥t! $l0.00 on fM1Grlt••Needlecr•f1'- hc1t1rig. 100-page c•l.llos ind~ d1M:ount coupon~ 800 quilting. x-stIICh, ~I. needl prnnc. latch.hook•M'd holiday er • Instruction books, pattems supplie. 2 ~r sub5Cription. '"THE CRAnERS' GALURV". 5 issue-., $2 00. ·sPECIALLY FOR YOU n4 frtt l'flP Showc.w OI s.tnp Cll.llog! $.a\e up 10 SO on Slightly Imperfect l' Hosiery. name brand undet'We.,, lingerie and more. Ma_qerUfd, VISA. 100 • SatiU«tton Guarantee! l SHOM:ASE. C<ILllog. FREE rn Lldies Super Slim Shoe for k>na or au•. ectra. narrow lttl. Width~ MAMA. AMAA. AMA. ~12; AM, AA, Mt 9''1·12. Booo, fl.au, Ynd.11ls, C•\wls, Ii~'"· d!"l"u ~~ MOONEY & CILBERt Caulog. FREE m H«fp ~On ... fen with~ hatd- books 17,-~ lncorpor».on N<Jn.Pm(rts; PartrleM1ps, Sofrwal't' Llw; Llndlordllen.nt R1,ghn., Sm.II C&.ltlll) Court ~nkrupcq. ~-e; ~I~~. and more OLD PRESS,.C'&alog. FREE 780 Thoulandt Ol ~ All ~ 50.000 'M>rd book ~ls h<M to set thousando; ol free lhing~-9.000 ltee ~~ (ttt ~. {~ • books. ~ grocenes-MlmedUng ior ~ young()( old ROBLIN PRESS. Book. SJ.75 . 711 After DNth ~ Wt Uwt ....,., If so ~f Could a b.'tng GOd pun1ih '" hem lnettdible! The Bible Is qu te ~ar on chew potnt • Send b "When a ~ Dies: MVN PUBLISHERS. Booklet. FR££ 712 W .................. Ctu1\fS IO~ bf-M'is~ bltte~~with MMn- ture. s.il dle ~. Briltsh Vi'1P" bl.Wk, ~ Ind~ with consen~l shlpmllirs. 6 & 12 di,' ~ auiie from $42>. WlN~ MER,~ Bed; P.'..EE FRE~ 713 Soul Tr.wit In • ~Id oi tnedsoc.rny. l\'htft do pl scandl Ha.oe )OU embraced~ ~ &.uefyf ~!he Ancient 5dence o( So.d Ira.el, gnes. mehxk~ In C«' .Pub ll~IOl'I ECKA KAR.~ FR££ 714 TM finttt School ht ~ N.Y. St.- Legrsbture called Joseph Bum Schoof "'the • ~ oc.astanding Khool in the wati:hmlkina trade: Sine~ 1945 we·~ put people~ ttwy belorlg -At 'Mm'.! JOSEPH 8\Jl.OVA SCHOOL. ~FREE Money-Saving Catalogs for You 785 Wrddirc ~iontty From 0.-.. ~ Ml.cob UQJos mwr.111ng popu1M ~mg 1n ·~ & t"ndosutes; ~ hne c:J ~ mof1't, ~eption llml l.cMl) gift ior ~ d n • llic:tU.1 in Wion 5"1~~ included Direct fron1 The Information Center , {W.\ \\ tDDtl'l.G STATIO ERY. Ciua!Qg. FREE 767 for flltople ~h 81~ Control~ lefn5 .-Booltl<'I. ")bu Are NO( AIOM: eiplain .. ~u~ ot urin.lr) 1ncon1tnc0<t", treatment ;)nd man;igement. From Kimberl~· Cl•rl Cor· por•tlon, makM ot Depend d1~blc undt--r· garmt"l'll and -.h1eld . ~IMBERLY-CLARK CORP.. Bool~. FREE - HOBBIES 'N CRAFTS 761 lole Pl.lyi"I CarMI ol 1antas\, ~lure, \\<Jr. ;and ~lf'fl<:t' hC11on aa .. c ~\, book ... mod- ule-. •nd ac:ces!-<>n~. Leading m.inufactu~s and be-st S('ller. rep.~ 01scou,,_ pnc~ foJ\t r~pon~ GR ... H ... M GAMES. Cat.ilog. FREE 769 LUm to Fl)-~~ans~ moss com- monly ...... rd QUNIOM ibcxJI m1 to th ~ the .~tva ol being a pilot Included ~a \\orldwide duK1ory ol C~\1\1 Pilot Tr•ining Cmter CESS~1'AIRCltAFl COM~NY. L11eJa- tutY. FREE no SUmp Collfct"'& -free Ca1al09 1ull ~ h.u~in\ 1ncludrn1 <mf'1gn, U.S., and B.N.A ~ p.ad.~h. ;)lbum' WPJ)llt':! and acr~..o r~. Plu' St.lmP' on Appr<J.;il-Bu) onh \\hat }W hl..e-Re-.um Bal.lnce. A.\\ESTCM STl\.'-\P COM~~Y. C.l~log. FREE 771 ~Of_,, 'ltR.I rec -.(?~ ~ 11- rul rulk:olor net>dlepoint St.~l«tm sews. Cat.\ •nd 1ntoonahon aboul t Club An 518 \'alue trom THE :'1.:lEOLCCRAFT CLUB or l'\MERIC. ... S4 00 n1. SlSO fn ~ Offm &ch Month! Cut grcx.t>ry bill trom 40lt to 60 . ~san J S.umvr. TV'~ "Coupon Queen· and F•m11\ Cirdc rt'!funding opert will er.c.h )QI ~. RffU:o-;. OLE BUNDt.t i'2 Boollet, S2 00 7n CGlden Illes ol GeorP -Brun "id- ~' II I bnd-Sc Simons kland-~ lsbnd- flmie nJ.tnds ~•port Cffy ~ Hi~. Golf, Shopp n -.J.000 hotel/motel fOOm\ G9LDEI' ISLES, Brochure~~. FREE 778 Christbn Ufe in the Modem Y01cf -I( one 1 to Ii~ in fidt"l1tv IO Christ, tu~ moral dcc: 1\100 m!Jl.t be n'Wde on Chnstian princ:1pl . A thought·PtCM>~ing J>imphltt CATHOLIC ISFORM ... TION SERVICE. P.amphlet FRlE 78' P\lblrsh-.,, 0-n Cookboc*! P~ mune\ m.»..t"f ior r.Msinc much nttded funck b "<.hoot diuf'Ch(as <ind CIVIC OfJMlll<ltlOnS. :-.;o mon~· d<Mn, lrte 11nanc1ng. COOKBOOK PUBLISHERS l~C .. Complete Kn. FREE 717 How .., c..h tn on the boom in hrruft6. edftJOn c:OllKtOO pWeS. c~ pa. wl1«1ot'' s\a~ L:it com.in t~ ~ b ~nn1ns coll«ion. \\bffd'~ ~ IRdq c~-tn ~'ec1or\ ~ THE BRAOfORO EXCHASGE, K1 FREE If \IOUI' <'°""'*" hM lwochura or aWap to offer the rudm ol the lnlonnad.ln Cen- ltr, pte~ •ri•~ on ,.... corpont. let· terhud IO the .tdrel below b ..... FILL IN COUPON AND MAIL TODAY! r ------------~~-~--~--------, FREE USTIHOS: (Jult c:itde in I*' dMif9d llllmt) 750 751 752 153 ./754 755. 7M 757 I 751 790 712 713 7&4 ..715 7M 717 l 111 111 770 772 774 775 777 111 I m 111 112 783 · 78' 715 ·711 111 I ITDl8 OFFEMDFOR llOfE~ (J"Ulteircle inpendelit9d *""'· "*' ~ ctleCk or money I order'°' toe.t amount. Mai. checkl p9y'llble to~ I 111-11.ao 711-12.• m-M.• I .. --~--m-sz.• m-a.• 111-An 1 ..__ I -·· I ADllMll~~-=~:l'"'":"~~~~--:~=----~~~-::::-::-:::-:-~~~~ .... ..., .,... .__, I 762 c.,. foodNll ,.,. -Sl.lrc NW\ " 1h ii Mil ~tfuoom se.11 ShOWln[l In l.l of )O\Jf loM'lrJIP 01 ~I~~ on top.~ 1de cl 772 "Amttk11\ fawnte Atc:heil SU9Pl~--=- l1d ~ed In s<h(Jol m rnlo" F1K •II flt'e Discount A~· Suppl\/ Cat.11log ko.ltu~ ~•nwM ~ •• I Mt nltnl Md~ dMflY """',., ...... b~ oa.rs .... Nu41...... ... 1 eoupone._.Mc1....,tM.......,..._ .. '* ... ,...;1"111or...,c -•••1•• I . MM. TO: MMDE PUIUCATIOMI. P.0 800( 20CM,OEPT E FMillY WEEl<LV I CUNTON, IA 52735 SEPT '16. t9l4 c:meEML OfflCD: ,_ Mof'&h 11*"1....._ CIMon. "'ana I ln,I ~RION £NTERPtUSES Brochl.lll' fRlE mou...nds of name bt nd Ar~ and re"'1 I -- ------~~:..ttie..~~~.:-~-.:.~_-: _____ J H your au~ la out of ..,.cl811y, nwt&.cl .-...... of NJ'Z cnM:kwa, PfMH melt your IWM, 8ddl---cOIM to: llTz-I RCA lirfiHE ~RUT INTDTMm.,. ,,0 .. 411', Young Amlrlca. MN MM, Ind f'ICetve the NQund tonn Offer ~ only In U.a.A. and void where Pt"Ohlbittd by .... OfW ........ 01oemt11r 31. .... ..,. COllftllTa Dll'IAIL8 ON nm AllDOl-ll'KIAU.Y ... CID~ nc.uc:1a. m 111TZ MC1'MIU a YOU8 MallCIMI ... 8C:A WI• - fUNDUllD (continued lrom ~ 18) s pqa. (S oz. eedl) lemon flavor lftatln 2 ca,. ~ water 2 cu1»9 cold water I aap dairy 80W' cream 1Yaca1»9~ I Or&Jlle, and teCtlOnecl I apple, cored and dkecl I aip c:ouwly chopped walnuts Crlap lettuce leave. for prnJO I . Dissolve gelatin in boilinj water. Add cold water: chill until partially set. 2. Pour 1 ~ cups gelatin into 3-quart mold.. cruu. Add sour cream 10 remaining gelatin; whip with electric mixer until fluffy. Chill until slightly thld<ened;.fold in fruit and walnuts; pout Into mold. Chill until firm. S. Unmold onto servi°' plate and garnish with sma11 cnsp lettuce reaves. Makes 8 servings OLD-fAllllONID al•ITIW 2~ II». beet dluck, cat Into l 'la·lncb aabea 2 taaa ... s,cc ... nortenluc or vepta oU l can (JO% oz.) bed bou.lllo~ .,. cap water 2 teupoons Worcuterthlre .. QC.e • 2 dov .. prUc I medlum·•lu onion, tllc:ed 1·2 bay leaves I Ya teupoons ..it, or to t.ute ) teupoon sucar Ya teupooa trab.Jy crou.nd bllick pepper ' Ya teupooa .weet P11Prika Dub pouad allapb, or cl~H • carrot•. pattd ud quarterecl t potatoe., pared and quartered I 1A lbe. amalJ wblte ooiont ~~ .... S tahle911 a ona noar 2 tahle9pooDt ftMly chopped pan'ley I. In Dutch ov~. brown meat in hot shortening. turning often to brown evenly. Add bouillon and water: stir. Add Worcestershire sauce. garlic, onion. bay leaves, salt, sugar, pepper. paprika, allspice; $lir. Heat mixture to boil· ing; cover. reduce heat and sim- mer 1 ~ hours,. stirring occ.asionally. 2. Remove bay leaves and garlic, add carrots, potatoes and onions. Cover and cook 30-35 minutes longer or until vegetables are tender. S. Make gravy: Skim off as much fat from liquid as ~ble. Pour off liquid and measure ·2 cups. Com- bine ~ cup water with 3 table- spoons flour ~ly. Add slowly to measured reserved liquid and pour back into Dutch oven. Cook an<J stir until bubbly; cook a few minutes longer. Serve stew in bowls. Sprinkle each serving with a little chopped parsley. Make 8 servings Recipe It from the Alderloat• United Metl\odlat Church D®t>e F9fl'Y, New York. It hat bMn uMCI IUC· c ... fully fOf many church dinners. .wm• 4 Goldee~DeHdoat ....., cored and coeneJy ct.o,I*. 4 ~ .. uerlu'aut, rtued ud dralMd J cup appli JW<i ~ cup flnely cbopped onloo 1 lUlpOOD CU1lW.Y .eda r .,. tup llne.ly dlopped ,.....,. I. Combine alt Ingredients except parsley. Cover and simmer 10.JS minutes or until mixture Is thoroughl)' heated and apples are tender. Spoon into serving bowl. Sprinkle with parsley. Great as a side dish with a pot roast, roast ~ or baked ham entree. · Makes 8 servmas IW BUCKLING DOWN TO MAKE SCHOOL BUSES SAFER By HoV:Jord L. Rosenberg F or:t}'-eight states now have laws requiring the use of seat belts in pri\'ate ~cars. Yet f!tlery Try it forthe price. --You'll smoke it ·for the Wlfning: Thi Surgeon General Has Determioed Thlt Cignttl Smoking Is Detierous 10 Your Htmth. weekday morning between September and June, some 22 million children across America clamber aboard yellow buses and set off for school, none of them buckled securely into a seat. The only person on a school bus who even has a seat belt is the driver. • Are these vehicles safe? Interviews with federal officials. safety experts and parents reveal that, thanks to stringent new requirements mandated by the savemment in 1977, school buses built in the pa.st seven years are significantly safer than earlier models. But there are still serious problems: • Many communities continue to use buses made before the tougher stan- dards were set, and these vehicles lack current safety features. Experts estimate that only half of the nation's school bus fleet was built after 1977. • • Despite the introduction of new buses, nationwide statistics on school bus injury rates over the past seven years have remained about the same - 4,500 injupes per year -according to Physicians for Automotive Safety (PAS). • No national criteria exist for establishing minimum maintenance re- quirements for school buses. Where state rules and regulations do exist, en· forcement is almost nonexistent, PAS • reports. Before the Department of Transpor· tation issued new standards for school buses in 1977, these vehicles were often extremely hazardouS: When an accident occurred , rivets joining the sheet metal tended to pop apart, creating jagged edges that caused severe injuries. Metal hand-hold bars across the seat-backs could also be hazardous in the event of an accident. And the buses' fuel systems were inadequarely protected. adding to the danger of fire and explosion. The new government resulations acj. dressed these problems by requiring all joints and metal ·patts to meet stres.s specifications. Seat badc.S were to be rais- ed, padded for shock ab9ort>ency and designed to "give" in a controlled way during crashes; window escapes were more dearly marked, and the buses' fuel systems were to be construded to guard against punctures or ruptures in the tank or the gas line. The result is that school buses today "have an excellent safety rerotd.'' accor- dil'l.8 to Cart ash, chief of the accident nvestigation d1v1sion of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (COflltnUftl on ~ 24) 22 on 8/lfY size 5 Cor.cenbated '" lantiy detefgent. ... • .; l • • I I . I I ! ! Howl Togeelw .,,,,,, your diet ,ou'll ... Slim inch after Inch .. ~ and keep onslimmi g! SAVIHGS FRO•. • (J! OUR FACTORY TO YOU/ llADE IN U.S.A. '°'~' FotWCMMftl Rawn._ from 2fr ""°'91 54". flafmenend _,,~ M-....or Ol'Cter llllO b $13.50 and M#I ICllOOL BUI 1AfDY rub. The NHTSA's Carl Nash believes that seat belts on schoOt buses are "pro- (N HTSA). "In fact ," Nash insists, bably not necessary and certainly not "children are certainly safer in a school cost~ffective." bus than they are in their parents' cars." Carol Fast, president of the National Nash cites statistk.s showing a 35. 7 per· Coalition for ~tbeJts on School Buses, ,.. ,. """-' o...y,-.... .. _.. ~ r.-,i, cent decline in fatalities aboa;rd~sch~oo~l -J-!'.st!!..ro::.=n~!....d~i~l>!Crees=·:.-;S~h~~u'°"'"': ........ "-'":"''e"-i t--1--+-----~ow ... 111ciu, ~iMlll~,._-f"-+lii118a1• ~:, :C'atZ; ~tJ-'-,=------rH-t-fuTl:l5'~mii:~nL1118Tail<I T9 an says government's passive-compartmentali· HOW llllCM WIJQHT YOU lOMI (Olll QMt!) I , 1 ~~:=::::~~:!::;;',~~I there had been a 20 percent drop in the zation system "does not provide ade- , .. I J.~ ~t$j i lr.:':,:.j . .:r:J-.::":.:,!!!...:::;.O: 1 death rate the year before that. quate protection in rear-end, lateral or I-" 9lf'l'Wlaodn0 The latest government figures rollover accidents.'' Equally important, 1 1 • ....,, .. Woflwl• 1 ~-'-i ~I PYa . 11 1 available indicate that in 1982 there Fast claims, "is the educational value of : : : were 104 fatal accidents involvinS seat belts. Only 11 percent of the 1 r-• 1 school buses, yet only 20 children an American riding public wears seat belts. I IL , ..... -... .-.. , I one bus driver actually died aboard the The school years are the best time to I ~ ·•OCll9dl Otcr...:= i:=: J' ~ buses. Most of the fatalities involved educate children to wear belts. This is FW111 09' 2 _,,., 90"9 S °"'"91 ..... --~-..... cno......,..,~~~ YOU -· .. ~ -.!tied W11t1 ,_ F"9o1•t r.__ '°"....,. -.,. ..,.._ _ 30_,, lora~ ........ OI ..... __ ,._~ _ _,,., I cr .. gup•oyQ.--OWgitQvtSA E>P o.. --other drivers,' adult pe<iestrians, or a great opportunity to help a whole I =:.,.. . 1 children hit by school buses. Jn sbcup generation of children to think of buckl· ! ~ s.. ~ • ~ 1 contrast, more than 1.800 children in~ up in the same way they should '------------------:J below the age of 15 died in accidents in-thmk of brushjng their teeth." GENIE FIQUAt TRIMMER i~-----------------~-~--~---~ ~~~~~~M~~~~ri~ ~~~~~~~~ the same period. Rep. Peter Kostmayer (D.-Pa.) intrcr HOW TO QUILT ~ Making e patc:hwotk quill is a pleasure with th1Sbookbytheed1torsofConsumerGulde. • You start by selectlf'g the quilt you want from plctuf'es of <Nflf lhirty finished QUiltS ~~ m full color. To make things easlef'. Consumer Guide g1vee you full<S1zttd PJttem pieces you can take right from the pages of their book You also oet to· scale piecing diagrams with clear. S1mple 1nstruc· tlOns to guide you in aaembltng your quilt. Beginners can choose from sUch favofltes as Square within a Square, Fox and GHN. Dia- monds and Squares, Birds 1n Fltght aod StreakS of Lightening On the int~ l8Yel lhecholCeS range from classics hk8 Hands Alt Around to the simple. but dramabc Clamshell design. And for expeneoced QUiltera. a treuute trove of quilts from many generations inciuditlg lhe 19th centu· ry Feathered Stars to contemporary dnignt lllce Urtle Giant and Filh. Pine and Doves No~ so many quilts have t>tcome iie.rtooms and collector's items! ~t SS.95. PATCHV.OAK OUIL TS IS a value that's hard for any QUilttf to pus up. So don t mtta out. Order your copy of PATCHWORK QUILTS today. ------..ua.LISHRRS CHOtca QUA.RANT•• This IKM* is fully guaranttld ti you are d1ssat1$1:'1d 111 any wtY you mty rlhtm It for a pr~ end tun reful'lcl To ORDER• Send yow Mme, edd,..., zip codt and dMdl Of • ~order for.SS.ts~· 11 .00 ~Ind heft. dltngto~Cholce.8oxGOlpt.M1·FWA,Ken8'ngtonSt8tlon.Brookfyn.N.Y.11211. H. Y. MCI N.J. reektente edd epproprWlil ... tax. P1eete pnnt ctMrty ta.n.r., Offloet 1348 39VI St • ~NY 1'218lUS Cunenc:Y°"'Y c 19M~ChoQ . SAVf I OnJet two for S11 :00 plw S2.0<J ~ and ltend#lnfl. However, Arthur Yeager, a New duced JeAis)ation in the House last April Jersev dentist and one of .the leaders of to provi<fe incentive grants for states re- PAS,· charges that the seemingly im· quiring seat belts in all new school pressive safety record of school buses is buses. And the NHTSA itself is planning based mainly on figures pertaining to a study this fall to find out whether trips to and from school. He claims that children who use seat belts aboard government data supplied by the states school buses are more likely to use seat often do not include fataliti~ aboard belts when riding in private vehicles. buses used for field trip$-despite the Fast and Yeager alSo dispute the gov- fact that 50 percent of all fatal bus ac-emment's contention that seat belts cidents involving school children occur aren't cost~ffective. The cost of a new during these excursions. For example, school bus aver~ between $30,000 Ja.st fall a Los Angeles County report and S35,000. fts useful life is 13 asserted that "statistics provided by the years. Since fully equipping a school bus California Highway Patrol show that for with seat belts would cost only an addi· the past 10 ·years [in .the entire tionaJ St ,000, according to Fast, a com- state] ... five pupil passengers were kill· munity could ensure the safety of t'd" aboard school buses. The report did children aboard the buses for just S77 not Include a 1976 field trip bus acci· per year, per bus. Yeager estimates that dent in Martinez, Calif., that killed 29. it would run about $18 million to equip Carl Nash maintains, however, that the every school bus in the United States NH1'SA tries -to whatever extent with three pairs of belts ~r seat. .possible -to include .field-trip-related "What:· he asks. .... is a child's life worth, sdlool bus deaths in its statistics. anyhow?" Yeager and his colleagues at PAS ap-Despite conflicting arguments and plaud the government's efforts to im-jumbled statistics. it's dear that the prove school bus safety and concede school bus being turned out by manu- that much has been done. But even fac:turers today is dramatically safer than though the new federal standards call for the school bus of yesterday. But school bus passengers 10 be enrased in something else is clear, too. To the a front· and back-padded "compart-parents of the handful of children who ment'' that incorporates ''passive" safe-are tatistically certain to die in .school ty features, PAS and other consumer bus accidents sometime this year. they groups contend that the most basic and aren't safe enough. IW vital step toward safety will only be taken when all large school buses are equipped with seat bdts. And there's the ------------------ In) BLUI!! SHll!!LD '¥'-" of Ca I i f o r n • a •&&I I....._ . ~ Remember, that's Shield! Cany the Canilg Card.• Blue Shi81d of Calitomi8 . . r-------······------------...... ~----------~---.. Find wt more about ·etue Shield, call }OUT local Btue Shied ~ office, your ~ Ot .brcket or return thls mupon to: .rd:-, ... Blue Shield bf califomia, ftease send me without obligation, Box 7168 complete details about Blue Shleld's: San Frandsco, CA 94120 Individual and Family Flans San ffancisa> (415) 445-5292 01Underage65 a Over age 65 Los Angeles (213) 642·5455 0 ~coverage for rrrt ~ PhOne • ~~-----------0 Check this box to recew a direaory"of Physician Members in your community FW·7 ... ___________________________________ .._ ___ ~------~-----...,.,.-------······· ·----.I 1, Sl•I YU, Sl•I Okay, enough of these namby-pamby aero- bics exercises. It's time to get tough . Move over, Jane! Beat it. Victoria! Master Gun· nery Sergeant Bill Dower (Ret.) has produced the "Armed Forces Workout" record and video tape. Dower, a former Marine drill instructor, definite- ly has the power to motivate. It was Sgt. Dower who in- structed Lou Gnssett Jr. on the fine art of drill instructing for the movie An Officer and a CJentleman. And should you fail to end up look~ like Richard Gere, it won t be Dower's fault. Dower keeps you going in the finest Marine Corps style: Calling cadence, snarling, yelling phrases such as "Get mad at it! Stay touszh! Don't you love it? I love ii1" Dower is a firm believer in physical fitness. In 1966 he was told by doctors that he was permanently paralyzed. But after developing his own pro-J gram of weightlifting aod f isometrics and rigorously stick· i ing to it , he completely ! rehabilitated himself. k How did Dower prepare to 1 make the recording? Well, t Dower says of his listeners, ''I i just imagined they were my ~ troops." FaJI in! 26 F wiu Wrnu • ~BUI '" • IV!!~ . ~a.iii painful.The new coaling would keep the catheters clean. Experiments will ~n this fall to test the effectiveness of several new coatings, and if they pan out. you can be sure that the housewares industry will be quick to make ~ ol the new technology. Before long, you may have less trouble set· ting your '88-' out of the ski11et than keeping them in there. rect zip code automatically. IRD president Kenneth G. Bosomworth .speculates that soon "the five-digit zip code - or for that matter. the nine-digit zip code -will be where \t be- longs: in the US. Postal Service computers, not in oor heads " So it looks like Zippy -the What do people read before postal mascot -is on his way they retire for the night? Here out. But not nght away. "I im· are two reports: ~. ne," Bosom worth sav., •'the J-Bill Moyera. news analy.t O A plans to break the news . and Com.meotator, CBS gently to the Postal Service." "I have to mention two .U.-lllAIW .... .__-----+-=----.......,.---------~-4-000k.S.-Dftiohin9 Amnicn .. ,_,· 1_,... Sometimes it seems that llUDD•• TAl'lll Norman Col'Wln is a pas.wnate th zip code is mis-Ever wonder why the summons to war 38ainst the named. One incorrect foods vou thought were bad taste and sleazy standards l'IUCll ON YOU You may think Teflon is slick, but apparently it's not slide ~ for the medical ~· h seems that doctors are in need of a super-slippery substance with which to oombat inledions con- 1 r acted from supposedly "sterile" equipment. An estimated 50,000 people die every year from complic.ations caused by contaminated catheters. To battle contamination of m«lkal equipment. scientists at the University of Florida are working on new coatings that will be so smooth th.at even bacteria will not be able to ding to them, making permMently sterile medical equipment possible. The researchers, however, face some sticky pro- blems. Led by Dr. Christopher Balich, they • are trying to understand the basics of how substances adhere to a surface. Once they solve that, they wiU be able to address the medical pn¥>1em. When they do. the first use for SUpet'~ will like-: ly be on cath~r kidney stone patients. These tubes can become encrusted with kidney stone material and embea themselves in the body. Removing them can be OOth ':-;. that have contaminated digit in the five-digit number at "~ when you were a the end of an address and your child are now some ol your fav. American life like a low-grade letter can be delayed for ~s, orite dishes? No. it's not that the fever. undermining the values Well, here's some news we re taste of spinach has change(t in that make this a great nation. happy to deliver. the pasc couple of decades. It Endless Enemies by Jonathan International Resource may be that you've changed. Kw1tny looks at the results of Development Inc. (lRO) reports Two Australian researchers. America's wide-ranging inter· that the Congres.Sional Office 6f p J. Oark of N~e College ventions abroad. These elcr Technol~ Assessment (OTA) of Advanced f.ducation and quent books add up to the best will recommend that the post D.G. Laing ol the CSIRO OM-one-two punch for moral dari· office r~uip its sorting sion of rood Research, have ty I've seen in a long time." machines with scanners that confmned that people's last Keith Lawrence, reporter. read all four lines of a letter's do shift with time. The two Owembc>ro, Ky.,~ address and then add the cor-.scientists asked 300 Australian /nqulttr . .--~:--g;.'7'::::~,...:-~~· _, ·schoolboys betw~n the · 'Tve been reading a lot of ages of 8 and 16 to rate Harold Robbins and Louis their preferences for L'Amour lately. I've been several food odors Near-reading Robbins' The Carpet· .... --~-~~~-~~~ ly all the boys liked bagaers, which I've had for 15 chocolate and spear· years and finally got around to mint, but peanut bJtter last month to unwjnd after t>ea.ked with 14-year· covering the state general olds. Chicken broth and assembly." · beef gravy grew steadi· ly in appeal as the boys .. llTllDAYI aaed. And J 6'year~lds (All Viron) Sunday: Lauren li~ed coffee twice ii.! •0~ h o Id Bacall 60: Peter Falk 57; 8.B. muc as <7'year-0 s. King 59. Monday: Anne Ban· What dOes all this mean? Ors. Laing and croft 53. Tuesday: Robert Oark posit that changes Blake 46: Greta Garbo 79. in taste are directly Thursday: Sophia Loren 50. linked to the Mh of Friday: Larry Hagman 53; Bill new hormOnes that ~ :Murray 34; Stephen King 37. company puberty. So Saturday:JOhn ~82. when your I +year-old asks for a cup of java, get ready for his voke to change ~1 \ f \\I t .. 11, t \ \• \\ I I .. I I 14 I 1,, • I I I I' I 1I11 1 I \ / I. I I 11, 11 1 -. rowa ence ... for less th·an·$l·a foot! ...... ...._, & ~INCo . . .. > LOG . DjDijiilc Ciao Former Loa ADielea Ram• footlMall player Fnd .. Banter," a aew l'fBC police action-Clruiaa Dryer tee•• ap wltb Stephanie Kramer 1n Mrl• debatliiC TafllMlay at 9 on CIMumel 4'. ••Nn'&&.-...D'?' II ........ "...... lJ _.came ..... .... =..=·----_ ....... • 111lr1 .f" _TV ..... Putting .'Heat' on 'Dallas' Robert Ginty stars in new cop show set in Hawaii ___ _ By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of.,. Deir ..... •ta« Robert Ginty should be worried. ___ His new ABC series "Hawaiian Heat" has been 11ven a 9 a.m. Friday time slot OJ'.SpoSltc the CBS blockbuster "Dallas." And the Hawaiian setting of this show 1s certain to prompt comparisons with another hit series. "Maanum. P.1.'' But Ginty, talkma by phone from the islands, cenainly docsn 't sound concerned. "It would be nice if I could bitch and complain," the actor says. "But the fact is. I wake up ever)' momina and look at Diamond Head and the Pacific Ocean. I'm liv1n1 in a fabulous house. t mean. what am l supposed to be depressed about'>'' ,His series character is equally enchanted with the locale In "Ha\\ai1an Heat." G1nt) play_s Mac Riley, a Chicago cop who flees to the islands with panncr And~ Scn~owsk1 (played by Jeff McCracken) fhe l"-"O ~ome detectives on the Honolulu pohcc force. But don't e'1pcc1 "Hill Street Blues" among the palm trees. "Thiuhow i as much a cop "ihO\\ as 'M- A-S-H' is an army show ... Ginty say . "h's a story about two working clus blue--collar guys who are ocst friends. They've come to the end of the road (as Chicago cops). And they say. 'Let's take a chance at tire and start all over again in Hawa ii.' "Hawaii is one of the ~ta~ of the ~how. Attractive women are one of the stars oft he show. Fast cars, boat , action. fun ... But it's all fantuy. Anyone who believes an} of the~ stones are true (should) go and check out a psych1atmt. To me, it's .son of like 'Ghostbustcrs Go to Hawaii.' " For Ginty, it's also a lona·a.,..uitcd chance to play a lead role an a tclc1; ision senes. He had rqular supponina roles in ·+---"Baa..Baa....BlacJcS~p" and .the original CBS version of "The Paper Chast. •• Then he moved on to a stric of action mo' il''li, such as ··1 he Exterminator," which haH' be~n ~cularl}" popular 1n ~Ut()pc. I think. most actor · are trying to &\'l our of tel~~1sion ~nd into !~'3tu~ film~.·· .Ginty says. I was 1n m} ninth picture wuh no stoppina in siibt. I was makina mosicy for ~omc .pcop~. mainly :ill ovcrwas But I wanted an Amcncan audience. I w•mtl'd to come home.'' H<: _adds, "I have great. rc!l~t for ttlev1s1on. It (uses) lhc same Panavision ·camera t~t eve!) .major motion.pictun: in the world 1uhot with. And anythmuou do tandina in front of it aan be c1;el') bat as good IS anyth1n1 you'\e sttn on film. Unfonunatd)', a lot of telcvmon trel on oflike oolytstcr c:loth1n1 -at can st3n to Robert Ginty affect the wa\ )OU breathe. But that's not nf'Ce s.af). There can he hrilliant per- fonnancc!> on tc:k\lision. "I know on the other hand that the show I'm doing i!I not going 10 change the face of tclc~ ision. It'-. JU'it an entertaining show about two worlong clac.c,gu)~ having fun in Hawaii." And what about the inevitable com· pansons to that other scnes '>Ct in the t'ilands? .. 'Magnum' " a pn1;ate Jetcc1i1;e who h\<CS in a rnillion-doll:ir man ion and o;olvcs cases. I play a cop," Ginty explains. "It's much like 'Paper Chase' and 'Room 222.' The>'te both aoout schools, but the shows arc diOerent 1n stvle and character We're a much more 'downtown' show.'' · Ginty also point'\ out that when Tom ScllC'Ck amved to launch "Magnum" a few yea" ago. he had to endure comparisons to Jack Lord of"Hawaii F1ve-O.-- "Now. I hhc to face the compari~ns to • Tom Sell ck.'' he C.\plain ... And maybe in fi,e more )can. there will be another person who will ha,;c to put up "ith beina compared to BobCiint}. lt''>just the nature of tht bus1ncss. I lhin.l 1l's flattcrina." The dc:tccthcs ol ''Hawa11an Heat" don't lhc: in a plu~h m:in ion lile Magnum'!I. lnlltcnd. the) rec,ide :a coed bo:irdmg hou~ on the bt'uch, which "111 allow the handwml' <"Ops to meet omc shapcl)' )Oung women in ~nty all1rt. • "It''> una\'01dabk that you'rcgoina to sec a lot ofnllrarti\c pcopk be,·:iuc,e Jt'' reallX bad TV to show filt, ual~ l)('ople in b1lin1 , ' Gmty ~ "P<'Of>le do wear btlini'I in Ha\\:UI. lt''I \Cf\ much a p.1n of the how and I'm not again 111. Bui I'm '.\S )Cal'\ otd'. f JU~t hope we gel to d1rttt our cncf'llcs toward 'howang adult rclatto1\ hips w11h the women in th<.' hou ... 1m•tead ol 1u t concentrating on what their clcav• looks like" Still, the question remains: "wiu bikinis. Hawaiian. scenery and fun-lovina cops~urc enough viewers enough away from .. Dal- las"? "The1C auys arc identifiable to the workina class audience that should have its own show on TY," Ginty says. "l don't think there's a lot of people out there who live like •oallas.' Ifl had 1 choice between this and looktna at an otd famtly in Teus that's been carrying on with each other for five )'eal'S, I'd watch this.'' Ginty says .. Hawaiian Heat .. is ABC's most expensive show because of its location shootina. He thinks the net~ork bas placed it on opposite .. Dallai .. as a shrewd countcr-programmi~ move. He says the network as also proVJdma strona promouooalbclp. "I'm probably the only person on the face of the Earth who b.as not seen the commercials they ran for us durina the Olympjcs," Ginty says. ".I was at a pany where somebody thouaht I'd won a medal because they'd seen me in the Olympics so often." Even so. Gintyclauns he keepsbisactina worle in perspective, with his family !'Cmaining the numbcronepriority. (Ginty 1s mamcd to actress Loma Patterson, who starred in the ''Private ~amin" ~ncs, and he has a son from a prevaous marriaac.) "We're not going to cure any cancer he~ ... Ginty admits ... We're not aoinJ to enlighten a lot. We're going to entertain. I hkt the show for that. h's not a pretentious show. And there arc some pretty silly things · on television. Every momin1 I wake up and thank God I'm not doi OJ· Automan.' " . TV nDBITS: "Pryor's Place," the new h'\'e action children's series sta.rrioa llld- ud Pryor, Wi.JJ debut at 10 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 22on CBS. The show is set in a spcciaJ nc1pborbood populated by cbildcn and other characters from tht imqinations of Pr)or and producers SW and Many lnft. • Academy Award winner Elk9 Bvs,. will s\ar in .. Survivina: Family in <:'risis.,' a tbr'tt-hour ABC film conccmi~ two families in which teen-age children commit suicide.. Burstyn will play the mother of Zacl Galli1aa. who ~nlly appeared in the hit summer movie .. Gremhn~." Sid Caesar, who kept tcleVlsion's tint generation lauahjna.; is now completina a book and vidcocauctte to keep those older '\ icwcrs in "igorous health. Ca~r is aimina his health and c~en:i~ prosram at senior citizens and travelina nc:cutivcs.. "Youth is wasted on t~ roung-except if you're in sha~" he said. He turned to e•erclsc after he oonqucrcd his akoholis.m. He found 1 new way of life. He now does l.SOO c crciscs a day, sill days a week. Sunday.Sept. 18. 11&4 3 . I -Networks Women will get equal time Female sleuths abundant as fall scheudles revealed By FRED ROTHENBERG UT........._ ..... NEW YORK -Call it equality of the sexes if you hkeor rccognjtion that women are controlling the dial more, while men opt for spons and cable movies, but the new television season offers an impress• ve- ly greater number of female lead charav ters. And many of them have invaded the macho world of cnme-fightin&. TV's emerging women may not do u better -they'll probably be canceled as often as male cops and gumshoes -but they'll do 1t a bit differently, solving mystenes and 1nvest1pti11J murders wuh their wiles, wits and w1gles rather than weapons. Consider the following: -Angela Lansbury in CBS' "Murder, She Wrote" is an cccentnc mystery novelist who talks to the audience, offenni clues as she ties up all the loo$C ends by the final commercial. -Lindsay ~aaner is ;:Jc sie.~· a pohce pSychiatrist wno believes U1 fiahtin1 cnme non-violently. But ABC, concerned with the show'& dawdling pace. ordered one action sequence per quarter hour. Jn the season-opener, Jessie is threatened by a hosta&e-tak~r with a rifle, rides shotgun in a hiah..spccd car chase and gets attacked by a k:nife-wieldina nut case. -LoniAnderson and Lynda Caner plar, detectives in NBCs "Pannm In Crime. • Elegant and stylish, they wouldn't be cauaht dead in Columbo's seedy raincoat or, even worse, lookmg hke Chris Cagney or Mary &th Lacey. Theydon'tca~guns. "Glamorous can be wonderful,' said Anderson. The protestations of Anderson and Carter aside, one ironyof1h~upcom1~ TV campaign is that "Cagney &. Lacey,' the CBS show that came back from the dead last spnng. has helped Hollywood modify. some attitudes. "female leads an TV have not been husely successful," said Peter Fischer. co- produccr of"Murder, She Wrolc." But now, if a woman can run for vice president. she can be a ratings success ... or failure "'Cagney & Lacey' pavrd the way;· said Harvey Shephard, CBS' senior 'ice president for programming.. One result as that male-female roles are becomina more interchangeable. On ABC's "Who's the Bo s? .. cx-boitcs Tony Danza plays a male housekeeper for an ambittous ad cxccuuve (Judith Liaht). ··A man can do meaningless. unproductive work just as v.cll as a woman," sa)'s the woman' mother (Kathcnnc Helmond) in approving the hinna. This gentle nod toward modem1t_y may be the most posit• ve aspect of the 1984-85 season. Many of the other themes raised by the 21 new series suucst that Hollywood is still a fantasy factory obsessed with violence and dedicated to the principle that imitation 1s always afcr than innovation. Action-adventure sencs such as 'The A- Team," "Magnum, P.I." and "Simon &. Simon" arc successes. so 10 fall programs adopt their daredev1ltry. In NBC's "Hot Pursuit," a woman 1s framed and convicted of murder. She and her husband go on the lam from the police and a onc-e)ed man. Brandon Tartikoff, president of NBC Entertainment, quotes producer Ken Johnson as sa~ing.. "I'm not nppmg off 'The Fugitive.' I m ripping off ·t.es Miserable .'" Jackie back in 'World' role ff aliens like the one 10 NBC's "V" actually visited Eanh"lnd turned on TV for the first time. the)''d think America wa a nation of cnmebusters and that no bod> got hurt 1n car crashes. Nmc new programs BY LYNDA HIRSCH Q: Can you tell me why the actress who played Pat Ashley on "One Life to Live" left ttte show and what she's now dou\g? - Mrs. R.8.. Roanoke, Ya. : le J1elde Coartney left "Oae We to Live" wltea lbe Pat Atbley 1toryllae ru oat. Jackie, whose previoas soap role w11 •• Allee Mattbew1 Frame oa .. AAolber World,'' weat rl&bt back home to AW, w re IH II aow seea as Dr. Alice Frame. 9: I'm an avid viewer of the weekly 'fV scnes "St. Elsewhere." On the p~m. the real name of the ho~pit.al is St. Ehgjus. My question. put simply. is why use an a.k a name such as -St. Elsewhere .. when the producers of the show could use the real name for its title? Was this action pcrl'onned for technical or personal reasons oo the pan of the wnters? - N.F.S .. North Fl.1Myers, Fla. le Tkre are "1u reaaou for ~ title " t. El1twlllere." Flnt of Ill, lt'1 a Jab at tbe ll"'llal btcaate It'• DO& CODtfdel'ff BoltM't OMtt • tbe allow. Alie, le atecllcal u.,o. wlllea • ~Ueal comes. la fr•m OH el CM nrtM• ~t." IM>tpl&al• - Le., St. LUe•a, St. Vlacn&'s, t. Patrtcll't -muy Umn members of tbe em~r1uc1 room t&aff will .. ,. "We jHt cot a truder from St. Eltewltere." Aid fluUy, Marls 4 Sunday, Sept. 16, 198• Tinker. wbo produces tbe show, thoopt concern police. undercover agents and "St. Ehewbere" was a catclay uu~ _and detective All have car that flr. !iptn and be wu rt&bt. can balance on two wheels. Q· for 20 years I've been 1 big fan of the NBC's "Hunter'' and "Miam i Vice," lovely Mlllette Alexander. who played Sara back to back Fnday night~. arc so violent Mcintire on "Guiding Light." can you tell th~'U make NBCs old "f'rida) Night me why he's no longer on the show and if Fi ts" look hkc pillow fi&hts. she'll return?-N.W., Muskegon, Mich. n "Hunter,': u~c<Cns1vc football le Tile Sara Mclatlrt storylbte teemed lineman Fn:d Dryer, who used to cha to ru oa& oa "Galdl11 Ll&bt." MUJette took down quancrba~ks, 1s a Dirty Harry-t)'pe a leave of abtuce f>at wa1 aenr really cop playing by his O\\ n rule~. The: Miranda called back. Slit'• done lot• of ot•er soapa, d.ec1s1on is not o~c of th~?'· "You have the lnclacllDa "Edee of Nl&bt," wile~ abe n&Jlt to rcma n silent .... h • ~ells one thus played a duJ role. Rllbt aow .s~e II+ he s Just ~kc~ into ~~consc1ousne s. work.ln1 oo lier plaao tecltotque. (Millette .• The . M1_1"1~ police con ultan1 for la a flee ·~cert plaaltt and was oace M1am1 Vice quit b«ause of c-ertam .mimed to Jamlt ffammentelo, 100 of c.h•"?ctcn1at10M of law enforcement ac- Otcar HammentelD.) t1v1t1cs. The stylish show featuring two Q. On "The Youn~ and the Rcstle s." undercover cops. poun~s to the beat of can you tell me if Dina. John·~ u-wifc. fists, fa t cars and a bamo-flavortd stereo plf>ed on a soap Iona aao'l Ali.a, can you $0Undtnack. It will be t~c: fil'5t network tell me if the actress who played Victor's proaram s1.~ulcast on ~.d10. m~thcr has ever been on a soap? -1 .S. .. . On CB Covcr·Up, Jon-Enk Helium • Ch1caao 111 ' as a male model and former V1c:1nam hero le Ma'raa· Adams, wbo plays Dl11, bas <sh ~cs o~ "Th~ A-Team'') "'ho join beeo •HD OD several aliluthne eod Jennifer 0 ~c11l in an. 1nvc\t1gallvc. part· daytime abow1. OD t•e daytJmt acaae • nersh1p . Shes the bo , mo~t or th~ uml'. ltowever 1be ls bt1t remembered 81 Bell~ "l have a th1na about clothes.'' he tells OD .. SccNI Storm." A1 for Victor'• motbtr, her. "I decide when they come off." wlao receatly died oa iM •M•. aut wai Be fcake 1 back. He docs a lot of his famed movl• ac&rat Oorottay McOalre und(n:over work topics . wbo u remembered for: sac• blu .~ · • ABCo~ns us MondaynigJ:u lineup Wtth Hite~'• "Spiral &alrcase" ud tlle "Call to Glory" its wcll·rccchcd ummcr toacb.lal "FritMlly Penaaalon." scncsabout fam1lvand ir Force life tn the (Pleue He NltTWORKS/Pqe SO) _ .... my .... __ _ ... ,. •II ~L*n .. ,. C...11ll1n wm. ...... ..........,. ....... ...,., .. lc1J1n ............ .... ..... ~ .......... ............................... ,..., ............... u... ... .-. _.. ........................... (II) Cilw.) . AriEZIDCll 1111 QI!) INCW. CAM Polowa tM "°" of ....................... .....,,.... ....................... ...., ... ftl1dl11n.W11. .. ··1 Clll.D .... --.. , .. CilL!ml WO DOW -,.,... ..... ...., ............... .... ... .......... &•: .............. . ..... ===·· ....... ..... -~ .... I MoQ(1tw .. . .... , . •Be -M.l.AfM _. 0.. 11 .. mr ... 11111z .... nha ...... _. ·--t&ed ... SRll&afl prdtulsft 11•llcr ... .-.._ .... .., ............... tWry ..... ..... .......,...... ........ .... 1111 ''".., ~ .... (1 ··= 9 kCIT _..M: ~ .... .......................... ........ U.'JLaeeMa--..... (11w.) . •••En11 NOWt0LMt0• • T11e I ......... I 111111w _. ...... ._ ......_ ..... Arfl ., .... . endtMIMAlt91tsu .._.....,If ... ~:ii .. • OIMI.._.,,,_, ..... ... .. ...., ......... -................... ..,.c .... ....... ., ................ ,= lft a llfOl'IM IPIRU arsd lliJ ... al Cufn•..,. ttl Clwtl .. • lftd...., (tlw.) ... ICMOGl.I ............. ,..... .......... , . ., ............ - end .... tll 11111 dlec ...... "' ... im ~ ....... ,.,........ ..... ......r..(R)C111f.) Kirk Jewelers Watch&Jewelry Repair. Most Battery Replacements $.1.95 Chain Soldering ~.SO Ri ng Sizing from $8.00 ~trk hckr; ha.'i the °scnices )'OU need the mc>'lt for the lea.'1. All ~ork b done qu11.;kly and dlicleml). \\Ork like prong ~1. QOnc ~ ung, for ~hkh we also h~ a larcc-;ck\:1ion d fTl('IUntinas to c~ trom, or chain hortcning. Bring in )'Our favonte ri~ for frtt cleaning and checking an}'time. It\ a onc-.-.top con~ for' lU, from u Kirk ~lcr C\J)Cr1 watch and jewrlry repair. Count on 11. klOll'f" hi:is fl llbN-1111 on tltt ,,,..,,,~ c·o ca thll Harbor Ccntrr (114) S4~-941S Can<'a!a P.ir\. • [ agle Rod; • Manhauan ~a..:h · R \l'r dt: • l hou~nJ Oa\.' ·1 1 "' • I I i I I I I I I I ii ' I I .• -·. -~. I ~. I iU1'n!f!ICI fl~ ~. -~ ·~ ~~ . ; !Gui~!. i!i :i!.d ;i!,lf ii.I ,J~1i ! I !ri! I111UiJI J 1,r!l 11 ! r 21 I 1 .. • ~I r -0fl .. 1 ri -0 I .,, ~n1 su ;1tt11-'"'i-un 1n~1f . 11; ih!d db r!u lfn r;u ·: n:•tl'lpi l:l· I· ·11!L-i·1•!1.·~s1.~1 l1·'.·•1"' ~E11 . . . ti I . ~ r If tr i l!I? . ! 9' f Slfl I o !I=~ i f:~ lh_ :: f . JI i: iUa 11!!.ifln 1 I ;fi~!(s ~i~= ·-· 'I 11 . a & °' ' 'I :1·11• ,. ; '' P•1r1 11·= -.;,-! (l._11 ·-I . I·! r~B'§' 1( I f > ,. ' .. ! J -I 'Ii Is s cs ; e. ti •' - 11!1 ·"11· ;·1 ._-'. . 11.u 111111,1111!. ~1·111!, ~; .... ;! '~~ , -I ,,, . . I . I .. , . ~·ii I I 1 , ~( f >!1 I ~ ! I " · . I> ti.. · : r1 JM I :I 1 Jrt~ &I I f ! e_! · s '·· 'id ... ulfn•1111e1111i~11:i~1r1l1 JflfflisfllSl.'rsl_,. 'lf21l1!ii'lf!JfUll1 I "liflli(l!tln. 1 .. 1•11 1•i I g ~.-· t I l ''J : r: I l !I! 0 t I ~-~.15· t .. I ! !lg·J~, · · rfl ~~i .. 111 ... 1-,f;!J.: tnli .J~'Ju · p~Ul!1. 1 .. li~ iilt' f1~d'~" .r . jltt1l.!!1I11i· . '1 l!a ~' hd:; ·Ii!. J1!I hhthi .. t 1 >I .rs ::I HlH l _fl:·""' .1 . ~· .. Daytime •ITYl•-Mlllll .. .. .. Mil ....... .. .. .. .. .. ,,.. .. .. A&ernooa ....... 11191 IOOYu•·•• m DATI OICUUWD ""*'~ l~r._CllU~·· ... , °' ...... .., .. Sunday, S pt. 16. 1ea. 7 -*' 8 Sunday, Sept. 16, 1984 .. . I --ay •CH>-* "Eddie Macon'• RUil" (1983. Orama) John Schneider, Kirk Douglas (1 hr,35= .. ,,, . llCMI ''Sierra Sue" ( 1941, Western) Gene :,~ SmiJerBumette ( 1 hf.) l:.OC. llllWY .....,..,. .. flCllCU,_ c.._ ...u:-•-w--11 a..,,,.. ,.. ..J (!) ~ ICMILL.a CE)~ l!OOTUU. Auburn et Texas .. R),J~min.) .. ClmlTM•ca.om• .. CAnMll'•IOO ----9C1181--... DllM D•111• nlLOGllAT=I YOUTM•TMI NelYllAll · _... ... ... IOOll ITRM. Ll9n' "A ConversatlOO With ltzhak Perlman" Host Martin Bookspan lntefV.ews the lsraelH>orn lllOlinlst who discuues his childhood t>out with polio. em1gratt0n to the U S and development of his International career. (R) ( 1 hr.) CC) llCMI "The Black Rose'' ( 1950, AdventUte) Tyrone Power. Orson Welles ~hrs .. 1 min.) .n.•nt1um llOVll "The Black. Stallion Returos" ( 1982. Adventure) Kelly Reno. Teri Garr l! hr , 43 min ) CZ> llOVll "Winstanley" ( 1975, Orama) Mites Halhwell, Jerome Willis (2 hr$ ) TillY •MMAUllO .. WWIT101Umt .. TODAY't..,._ • -.TY ~-ua WYUM LITllmm• U(llf ,_,. -1MI Ol 'AITM ..alCN.11 CIUICMMTMI NOm ... IOOll ALL•PFRMADAY A young g11I Uving , on Venus. where the sun shines fOf two hours every seven years. tans victim 10 a classroom prank while waiting for tho sun to appear. Adapted from a short story by Ray BradbUty. WllADYCU_. TMll.lllCll _,WiiiH CO?llTimrT 111A"CAT UrTUMICAU ...... ....,. GUmMCMt·llMCM w.v • .., QICOll) --=--if•Wlla DOflPTUmlAM mMm rn.r tl')Q NelYllAll llON "The Bunker" (1981, Orama) Anthony Hopk na. Richard JordOo. (2 hrs , 30 min.) )llCMI "Gizmo" ( 1977, C>Octimentary) l hr .. 30min) •111M1C.-.V01C1 M IOOD ... M TAlml Nlf/lllfMI ..., -TMllOIOT m01au11•111 oua.1111•11 LAMY,,_. um~ U.G'ID Oii.Vii .., .. AQUIY POflft ,.....,,.__,.. · WAYCfTMml 1:11 llCMI "A Man Called Horse'' ( 1970. Adventure) Richard Hams. JUdith Ander- son~~ 30 nwl) .. WYml•lll '°""_...,. unu...::. • ll.O'fD Oll.Wll ..,. .. __,PALWB.L ........ c.. • .- -mmTCIQQ ... ..,. . I .-1c•1T011Y , • llCMI "Daffy Duck's MOV1e. Fantastic Island" ( 1983, Comedy) Animated Voic- es by Mel Blanc. ( 1 hr .. 18 mtn.) llOVll "Professor Potter's Magic Potions" ( 1976, A<tYenture) Richard Wi- son. John Warner. (1 hr .• 30 min.) CZ> llO¥ll "Hercules" ( 1959, Adventure) Steve Reeves. Sylva Kosctna ( 1 hr . •1 lm1n~OllOD • ... co••-•c• U&M.•NamY WillilmATCALYMY FMil9laC I. MCI -· n.-! :I Q) -CJ) :::> CJ) -· =-;II;" • (D' (I) CD ~-0 (b Q) :::> < CJ) .. .. l ::'TU ... tm CAlllT'OIY .,,. "Profeeeor Potter's Magic Potions" (1976, Adventure) Richard Wi- son. John Warner. ( 1 hf •• 30 mtn) • ~CAllTOWIMAU. lmTM .... DMm.tocm • OUL~ ii WU.a.DWll"f rr••••• TMIMCKICllAWI OMI .. WllCCMlm .._umOP1111wm llCMI "Prince Valiant" ( 195-4, AdVen- ture) Jamee Mason, Janet Leigh ( 1 hr .. 40 min.) · tlOlaCfDBMIMCI Cl)IR TODAY •a• DAYCfNmcG~•--y D ISTM COM.Am •111•.-011 I .. ·-/ ACll'MIAll I IAl'llAI UWA11••"UtAflOflll -~nnah Smiles" (1982. Adventure) Mark Miier, ~an Scott. OO hf .. 4Sm) ..,ecana llOVll "Airplane II The Sequel" ( 1982 Comedy) Robert Hays Julie Hag-!!!>' ( 1 hr, 25 mm.) lSJ MO¥ll "AU The President's Men" ( 1976. Orama) Robert Redford, Dustin Hottman (2 hrs. 20 men.) RETIRING ••• ~ ->< (b -· ""' < • --COIE TO THE auun OF IEWPORT u;· ::::> -·o 'tJ ::::> -co ::r ~CD ~ :::s ""' £·· • ; en g -· ::::> < i CD • Daily Pilat Classlfled Advertising • 24 Hour Aides • Private & Semi Private Rooms • Full Activity Program • Home Style Dining Room "' Full Maid Service • Transportati~n To & From Ors. "' Beauty & Barber Shop • 24 Hour Security Service . A LllURY ROIREIEIT sm111 AMBULATORY 400 Hilaria Way Newport Beach (714) 642-5861 AMBULATORY AND NON 393 Hospital Road Newport Beach (714) 631-3555 Sunday.Sept. 18, 1984 9 .- lunclay Coal. -· ~ flOOTULL Regional coverage of Chicago Bear• at Green Bay Packera. Atlanta Falcons at Minnesota V1lung1 °' SI. LOUIS CarcMals at lnd1anapol1S Colts i ~ POOTIAU.' LOI A~ Ra1deft at Kansas City Chiefs (3 hr•) · "llCMI "Hills Of Home" (1948, Adven- ture) Edmund Gwenn. Donald Crisp (2 hrs) acaecom Cl) M. FOOTIAU Atlanta Falcons at Min- ~~~~-) I_ ..,.,_OllD .. , ...... MM,.... Neal Gabler and Jef- fr~y Lyons host an informative look at What's new at the movies ~'"' ..... P•OULNWa ,_ Wotld Couples Championsh p f.'!lr (hve from H11ton Heed. s C.) (3 cm· A RCW. GIFT A teen-age boy Is forced to choose between playing on his high schoOI baSketball team and rehears- ing IOf his first professt00al baU.t role ( 1 hr) MOVW "American Madness" ( 1932 Orama) Walter Huston, Constance Cumm1 ( 1 hr. 21 min.) C)W TOOAY -(11) RD, 1"0 WOILD 01 AlmALI -=r. tCHIUD TftlQHfZM ......... DOOCBDUIOUf IODl~TID CllC..ul llCMI "Aunt Mary" ( 1979, Orama) Jean Sta=too. Marlin Balsam. (2 hrs ) li)PBtl UllllAMCI C) ~TOADWMMll . -1nmwm•1A-..U ........... *9 9 TO• A..ouMCID LUIM>PP llAll IA•W. Los Angeles Dodgers at C1nc1nnatl Redt (3 hrs) ti) llCMI "The Last Time I Saw Arch••'~ (1961. COmedy) Robert Mitchum. JaCll Webb \2 hr ) I W W CITHIATM flOQ'9 Ol IOCtlTY MIO~ ATIMCTIOll llCMI "Edd•• Macon's Run" ( 1983. Orama) JOhn Schneider, Kirk ~las. (1 hr .. 35 min) llCMI ''It Came From HotlywOOd" • • (1982. Comedy) John Candy, Oen ~k~ hr. 20 m•n ) tw ~ M-...U. San Franc:tsco Giants at Atlanta BreVM (3 hr•) 1d(!) UftMt New York Mets at Chicago cub1~r's.1 ~ 1t:tl I COLI· AID flOQ'9 Ol IOCllTY , MON "The BMk'a JOb" { 1979, Com• tdy) Peter F•lk. Warran Oates (2 nrs • 14 min.) PMCMl.l ROC« Wl"len Sprocket tho dOg gets cavghl in the Fraggla hole, 11'1 Gobo Frag=o rescues him (}J "OOQ<lbye Pork PM!" ( 1981, Orama) Kelly Johnson. Tony Barry ( 1 hr .30min) 10 Sunday.Sept 16, 1984 .. , ,,..tfoom ~ 111 lt•W. New York M ts at Chica- go Cubs or •nothaf game to be dele<· mined Viewers note Mets et Cubs w1H not be seen ln New Yoric or Chicago (2 hrs . ;~ .... e lftliM11 "Ser~ant Cfobb The Choir That Wouldn't Sing· A vlttage choir seems to be hic:ting something when a man 1s hunted to death over the edge of a quarry J:!>~MOll (16 llA TlOIW. QIOOUPHIC "Gorilla" Examines the endangered African moun- 12:11 ll•••ea.- MOUllCALLI ...... PMOTOQMMC MOii MON "Ttle Final Opt;on" ( 1982. Ora· ma) Judy Oav1s, lew11 Colline (2 hrs. 4 min) · 19 8 M. fOOTUU. Los AngeloS Rams at Pitts:"~ Steelers (3 hra ) D Y Location Me>oco lndepend· ence Fiesta at the Pomona Civic Center ~hf ·~-"-~ 1:. "Hollywood Of Bust ' ( 1956. Comedy) Dean Marttn. -*rv Lewb (2 hrs.) I ..... ,,,,..u llYll&n "Serg ant Cflbb Mad Hatter's HOiiday" The sergeant iS called 1n when the dtSmembered remains of a body are dl5Covered on Brighton Beach Q C 1 hr) G) .._ POOTUU. Houston Oilers al San 01:y:~~~ I TMIMTI ... IOUTI t1I TMI • Mike Weaver vs John Tate (March 1980 1n Knoxville. Tenn). (A) (I ht,) llOVtl "Th41 Blood Of Others" ( 1984, Dram•) Jodie Foster. Mtchael Ontkean L~ hrs. 56 min.) C1J llO¥il "Trail Of The Pink Panther" ( 1982, Comedy) Peter Sellers, David Niven. ( 1 hr • 35 min ) MOW'8 "Madame Bovary" ( 19&0, Ora· ma) Jenn.tar Jonas, James Mason I 1 hr • 155:1..M•TMI tll ,_TIOOP ,,,,.,.. ................. TMIMTI .,.. "BaloYed Infidel.. ( 1959, Ora· ma) Gregory Ptck, Ooborah Karr (2 hrs, 311'11n) CZ) MON "Deal Of The c.t11u1y" ( 1983. Comedy) Chevy Cha&e S1govrney W111vat. (1 hr, 38 min) ., ........ mMD _,,..''The Ambushers" ( 1967. Com· edy) Dean Martin, Senta Betger. (2 hrs) .• llCMI "A Gun In Th• Houu" ( 1981. Orama) Sally Struther•. D1v1d Ackroyd {.gh~•· • rrttx 113e•· (1e11, Sclence-Acl > Aobett Cuv11tL COnald Plea net {2 hrs.) e 1MI IU.ll COClln't Carl6 Maria Glull'll cOllefucts the Loe Angeles Ph11har · monic In Bee1h<M!n'1 Symphony No 2 and Schumann's ''Manfred Overture " R).( O\r.) ..... IC:mm.GGY MITG Mmll World Elidvfon SP3 iOOO (fr=· BelgtUm )~ (1 hr.) ·-29 .... QWAMAL t11 OC*IPUTIUt~ . .... ..., TO• AlllCMICID 110vt1 "Sprlngliekl Rifle" ( 1952. Western) Gary Cooper, Phyllls Thaxter 2 hrs) GlllATllT .-one u ... ·~--OQY 2:11 cm"*"" • llCMI "Challenge To Lasaie" (1~9. Orama) Edmund Gwenn. Geraldine Brooks. ~s) tTM . T1tlMlft NIO fUTIWAl ·~ I A&lUIDIUTa.G AUTO MCleO SCCA Budwe!Sef Pro Sports 2000 (lrom Lexington. Ohio ) ( 1 hr.) (l ) llOVIE ''It Came From HoflywOOd'' ( 1982. COmedy) John Candy, Dan ~k~ (1hr.20m111) lQJ "Gilda Uva' ( 1980, Comedy) Gilda Aadnet. Don Nove o I 1 hi • 30 m~l · llOVll "Still Of The N " ( 1982. Suspense) Roy Scheider eryl Streep 1.! hr • 30 min ) Ml@ UNIUIO WOILD Of ~ eout- TIAU n CIUJIDCMAM.11 o.TMI ,...ecm t11 . ._cm u.u. TOIY ..,..,. *RIAL An tnlarv>ew · Wllh James Camet'on. the only SUfVNOf ot a .':>J.':~iU' 'E QUMTlllUIM • COMCD'f The band made popular by lhe hits "Harden My Heart." "Find Another Fool" and "Take Me To Heart" performs bef<>< an audi· ence al the Hollywood Palace. ) MOVIE "Harcules" ( 1959, Adventure) Steve Aeevr... Sylva Koscina ( 1 hr , 4 7 min) .. IJ 1..a ''Pac1fte Southwest Touma· ment" (2-li:.Jo ~ =IACIJwmt DAVI» ~Mn lj llO¥IE "Frankenstain't Castle Ot Freaka" ( 1978. Hotrot) Rossano Brew, Michael Dunn. (2 hrs.) BnDTAllmNTTlltWID Featured a pu~view of fall piogrammlng on the thr" ma1°' netw<><ka, cable TV. pubic broad· ca~tiOO and synd!Calion ( 1 hr.) G» llCMI ' The War Between Meo And Women" ( t972, Comedy) Jack Lam· moo. Barbara Harris (2 hfs ) CE> llCMl • p1t1c's Choice" t 1963, Come· ~) Bob Hope, lOciUe Ban (2 hrs) W WAU.=wm "Cr1Si$ For Banking Stock'" oest Mar~ Bidatman. wnlOf v1ee e>reG1C1on1, OppermelmCH & Co • Inc Cl;) IAWM.l San Otego Padrta t Hous· ton Astros 12 hrl . 30 min ) I .UT Ct9I Of IM PMMCllCO ..-rm Hl*1femcneAM.YTMI .... -........ d · AGIMCUl.TUM U.U. FACI TMI MAT10I , .... ,,,,,,,,_,. ··---·---PM9CIPC&W. l ) llOVW ·Gandhi'' ( 1982. Bl()Qraphy) Ben K111gsl y, Candice Bergen (3 hrs. 8 min) ) llOYll ·•rn Bunker" (I 81, DrarM) Anthony Hopk,ins. fVc rd Jordon t2 htS • 30 mlt\ 1 GIT1WI. T1tl .. llCMI "() H W 1"" (' 2 OfD ............ 111111! ... --------~-----------~---- C AUTHORIZED SALESISERVICEIBATISFACTION J AMC-JEEP ORANGE COAST AMC-JEEP-RENAULT 2524 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -549-8023 CREVIER MOTORS 208 W. 1st St. Santa Ana _:.. 835-3171 CADILLAC NABERS CADILLAC 2600 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -540-9100 ALLEN CADILLAC·GMC- OLDSMOBILE 28332 Camino Capistrano San Diego Freeway West or Avery Pkwy Exit 831-0SOO 495-0800 CHEVROLET CONNELL CHEVROLET 2800 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -546-1200 ""'- Daily Pilat CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ATLAS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 2929 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -548-1934 FORD THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 642-0010 -540-8211 HONDA UNIVERSITY HONDA 2860 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -540-0713 ISUZU SOUTH COUNTY VOLKSWAQEN·ISUZU 18711 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach 842-2000 I • --- PONTIAC BOB LONGPRE PONTIAC 13600 Beach Blvd. Westminster 892-6651 -fl38;.2500 I STADIUM PONTIAC 2225 E. Katella Ave. Anaheim -385-1919 Across from The Big A PORSCHE-AUDI CHICK IVERSON, INC. 445 E. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach -873-0900 TOYOTA EARLE IKE TOYOTA 1966 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -648-9303 VOLKSWAGEN SOUTH COUNTY VOLKSWAQEN/ISUZU 18711 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach 842-2000 VOLVO EARLE IKE VOLVO ¥ 1966 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -648-9303 ' Sunday,$ pt. 16, 198-4 11 .~. lunclay Conl. ma) Edward Asoe1. Martelle Hartley. ( 1 hr., 27 min) ..... uu. a.. MC ... Q .. , .. ... WAU.nmT~~ -::::. ~ "The Election A ~iew From New York" Guest New YOfk Mayor Edward Koch .. ( 1 hr.) ..,_ flOOT GUii a••• POCllT •I IAll)I Robert Woods vs U J Puckett (R) ( 1 hr ) CO .,_ "Robinson Crusoe" ( 1975, Adve<itu~lmated ( 1 hr • 26 min.) <.m THI CAll'I com»T IHOWCAll Many of today'• top comics are featured 1n this performance taped at San Francis· ;~cyeal club. The Other Cale. •WmAu.mALL "The Push For Excel· lence Cla5lilc" Uve from The Hortzon In Rosemont, llllnocs · (2 hrs ) .. ..: ... ... AIJCI •llMCtCOl-AIC ... Q • RQAL CM9 Follows lhe stOfy ol two fam1hes and the care of their premature infants at a i;pec1al nursery m MadlSOO. WIS. .,_ "American Madness" ( 1932. Orama) Walter Huston, Constance Cumm ( 1 hr •• 21 min ) mH YOHAU. .... ~lve~r_. ..... . . ., .... llOWll "The Oaring Oobe1mans" ( 1973, Orama) Charles Robinson. Tim Cons1d1ne A group of con men train a gang or Doberman plnschers to carry out a series ol robberl99. but they are outsmarted bV a young Jru:llan bOy who loves the dogs. (2 hr• J D QJ) ..._ J00tUU. Denver Broncos at cmATUT H•CMIDO llllOllU TO NO/Ill , .. lcie:.8fr°Ans t3 hr• l .,_ "Cops And Robbers" (1973, Comedy) Chlf Gorman, Joe Bologl'\8 Two tong·time ~men frus1reted with tow pay fOf unrewarding work decide to steal S 11 milllOfl and retire (2 hrs ) l •iiUIAt DA A profile of phyS*C1St VictOf Wetsskopt revea~ the breadth of h11 inter nts as • moslc·IO\lct and ~111zen of the world CR) O ( 1 hr.) .... IOUT't t1I TMI '111 Leon Sptnks .VI Muhammad Ah (November 1978 1n Lat=), (R) (1 hr) (0) "Hammett" ( 1982, Mystery) Fredtffc forrMt, Petl!lf Boyle Mystery writer Oash•ell Hammell'• former detec· tlve agency boss t11lk1 him into 1m.est1gat· Ing the d1sap~rance of • weU.conoected Chu~ost1tute 'PG' (1 hr .• 34 min) } "The Black Stallton Returns" C1982. Adventure) Kally Reno. Ten Garr A bOY goes 10 the Sahara Desert to find his beloved bl ck Arabian stallion which was recla1rood by ill p1ev1ous owner. ( 1 .. .. .._lMATl\19 hr,"3 .. 1n l:CMLi 12 Sunday, Sept. 16, 1984 ,. l ~-M (I) •..,,.. (Season Premltfe) Correspondents Mike Wansee. Morley Safer. Harry ReaSOOCf. Ed Bradley and Diane Sawyer provide lnvettlgat1ve re s. prohlel and features ( > hr ) · GI) ava ..ooM (Season Premie<e) Ricky becomes annoyed when his new friend Alfonso (Allooso Ribeiro) ctairns that Michael Jackson taught h•m how to dance Stars Ricky Schrodlf and Joel ~ins U L 'CHAii TO I.ft TILfntOM A fund ratSer to benefit the social service pro- grams of Chabad. with scheduled host Jan Murray and other te1ta1nment oelebr1ties (2 hrs.) ~=llMCH 15 LOI LOIOL #1) A Tm TO DMCI This documentary c.ptures the Grammy win· nmg Southern Cahforn1a rock 'n' 1011 band Ci) CMTU Animation and live action show the planning, bu11d1ng. habitation and Siege of a hc.lional 13th-century Welsh caslle, with additional on·location v1111s to castles throughout Wales (R) ( 1 hr ) ..a IOUTI Oii ntl 'M Muhammad Ah vs Leon Sptnks (September 1978) ( HIO ComQ ATTUCTlOm ~) (1hr) ( llOVll "My Favorite Year" ( 1982, Comedy) Peter O'TOOle. Jessica Harper A d1psomaruacal lorm8f matinee ldOI hai trouble copmg w11h the pressure1 01 a hve TV pertounence during telev1s1on's golden a_g_e 'PG' ( 1 hr .. 35 min) (ZJ llOVll "North Oallns Forty" ( 1979 Comedy) N1~k Nolte, Mac Davis Groupies pill popping end att.mght party· ing begin 10 take lhett toll on two lun·lov· tng but Ovtlf lhe·hlll tootbllll players 'A llY AllOTO MUtA.111 ,... ~,-i hrs) 7:11 fm Nl(Y••-W'*l .. ID .. (Premiere) Sev• en-year..old Punky has been abandoned by her parents and is foond l1v1ng In a ... vacant op&rtment Stats S01e1f Moon Ftve and George Gayne (Pan 1 of 3) Em LOW,. II.OW A 111bute 10 custom cars Lahno-style, which are characterized by crushed velvet 1nte11ors, chrome, hydrau lies and expensive siereos. (H)flMQQUROCl When Sprocket lhe dog gets caught m the Fraggle hole, u·s GobO Fra le who rescoea him 7:11 y Oii DllCOftRT .. (I) Ill (Pteml re) a !Ofgo tf rson {Shetrnnn Hem$1ey) becO on ol the patients at Chicago'• Clark Sir . 1 Hosp1· tat Eme1gency Room-whO 11 nted by Ila 011erburdened ~att, Ster& Elllotl Gould and itnne Moody. ( 1 hr.) D UD ~ MllR MICtiael I~ I up tor murder whf!n he attempts to help a ~u· tiful toy designer recov r a Mt ct 61olen ... schematics. (R) 11 tu ) • 8 •--A --.0 Oii ..caull COW. TUU W ~'°:AMI Dari Aykroyd and X:ue Mldler t\Ott this award now Iha! will name "Best Perfoimance 1n a Music Video." ''Be I Video of the Ytar," "Best Conceit Video.'' '8 t Male Video." •Best Female V1dt0,'' and 12 other awards (2 hrs ) I L.IUh'LUOlntl .... ,..,.. .,... ''Mzlma Alriea' Myst t!Oln Spring" Aichara ey nar1a1 a look et th v111 ty 01 crealur that vi 1t Kenya's M1Jma Sonno '°' nouri$hmont 8f'ld thest'P t lhat make 11 thelf home. ( t hr ) Ci) llAl1"DNCI TMIATM "Pr1v11e Schulz" A street-wise German, just relea~d from jail whele he served • sen· tence lor tralJd, rs dtafted Into the Army and aSSlgned to S S counterMptOl'lage t~art 1 ol 6) (A) Q ( t hr ) (CJMOVW "The 8fink'1 Job" ( 1979. Com· edy) Pettf Falk. Warre<i Oates Several avtttage men from aSSOfted backgroundS join forces to rob • well·gt.tarded armored car. 'PG' (2 hts. 14 min) IPOmlCDTa . lllO¥W "Sakharov" ( 1984. Ofama) Jason Robards, Glenda Jackson FollOws . the hie of Andrei Sakharov, the renowned nuclear physicist from the Soviet Union who invented his country's hydrogen bOmb. Q (2 hrs.) (OJ MOVIE "Oarnel" ( 1983, Drama) T1mo- 1hy Hullon, MaMy Pallnkln. Based on E l Doctorow's novel "The Book Of Dan- iel ' A graduate &1ude<it probes the events surrounding his parents' e>cecutlOO as Rus.s1an nuclear &PteS 'R' (2 his • 9 nun) rsl fllOVll "An The Pr8$1dent's Men" ( 1976. Ofama) Aooort Aedlord. Ovs11n Hollman Based on the bOOk by Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward Two Washington Post reporters eicpe11ence constant setbacks while uncovenng the scandalous racts behind the Wat11gate break·lf'I 'PG' (2 hrs . 20 min ) · UMTTA .. ..,PM.WILL 1:9 LOU.wfl ~ flOOTIAU. Long Beach Stale at UCLA (3 hrs ) •IJ (I) llOVll "Some Kind Of Hero" ( 1982 Comedy) Richard Pryor Margol Kidder A war veteran turns to • hie or c.r1me alter the government refuSM 10 give h11n back pay he earned whtle being a prrsoner 1n North Vietnam tor s1>c. years (2 hrs) 0 81) lllAll VICI (P1emlere) Detectives Sonny Crockett and Ricardo Tubb& reluc rantly 101n forces to pursue a dangerous and evasive drug i;upplier who has slain sonieone ciose to each of them Stars Doo Johnson md F'hihp Michael Thomas 2 hrs I !JllJIMIA WOM.D Oii MCOl•t cout- TIAU 0 HAllDCUT\I AND MCCO•CIC The fudge goes to the nation's capital for what he believes win be an appoontmef't 10 the US Sup1eme Court, CR} Q (1 ht) · L 'CMm TO UPI.....,,.. (COWT'O) llOW9 Coach Of The Yut' ( 1980) Robert Conrad1 (2 hrs ) Cl) IOUD IOt.D . &l MUTWllCI T1'1ATM "'Prklate Schutz" A 1 w t ·w se German juSI retealied from )81T whet• he rved a sun· tel')Ce6 for fraud. s dralted lrtto the Army and awgned to S S counter plonaoe (part 1 ol 6) lR) Q ( t hr ) m lftlliiiH "Sarq f\I Cribb lfhll Chou That Wouldn' I Sing ' A village choir ms 10 be h1d1ng ometh1ng when • man la hunted 10 death over tile edge ol a quarry. A) 0 11 hr) MOVW "A St1eetcar Named o.Klre" ( t951, Orama) Vivien Leigh, Marlon Brando A Southern belle lot.es her unity wh1lo try no 10 prtsef11e her fade<! 0 tillly against lhe ha1essmen1 of het hallh and bf'Ul1sh bfOlher·rn·law (2 lltt, 2 m n) :-J llO¥ll "The Wot Id ACCOtdlng To Carp" ( t982, Com y) Robin Willi • Mary Bein Hurt Based on Jonn lrvlng 1 novel The son 01 an unm n e<I prep .MJhoot nut b omes suoc fut -Sanday CODI. author but hls lame Is eoon oversha-dowed' by that ol hll c~ding feminist mother 'R' (2 hra. 16 min ) ... ICOTT ... OP8t I.II "Soc:tal Conce011" A special panel of higtt echqol and college students part1e1pate In a roundtable d1scusslon on communicahon with Sue Rusche from "Families In "ction" and Cec1I Alexandef l! hr.) d (l) llOYll "Across The Pacitic" (19.-2, Adventu1e) Humphrey Bogart Mary Astor During World War II, a spy plots to blow up the Panama Canal (2 hrs.) -1 = laa¥I rr Oil mTI Featured artificial knuckle implants, video games as physlc31 thefapy, bodY and tingerna~ i nt1ng; (A) ( 1 h~ II.LY~ •ADI 'AanTowae m WM1 Of .-T • "Anne 01 Cleves'· Henry mames a German princess 10 lorm a political al ance When the maneuver la is. the mamage Is annulled l1 hr , 30 mtn ) rt ) llOWI "Savannah Smiles" { 1982. Adventure) Mar1t Miiier, Donovan Scott A runaway rteh girl taQS along with a pair of bumbling fugitive cnmlnats 'PG' ( 1 hr 45 rTliO ) (H) MOVll "The Vetdiet" ( 1982, Drama) Paul Newman. Charlotte AampNng An alcoholic Boston lawyer pulls htmsell together 10 bring an unpopular medical malpracttce case to trial against strong opposition by the courts. the archdiocese and his own chants 'A' (2 hrs ) -@ llOVll "The Petnl1ed Forest" (1936. Orama) Humphrey Bogart Bette Dav.a. A writer lmdS 1omance when he runs 1nto a uang of klllers 1o A~1zona's Petrified For- 8$1 ( 1 hr . 45 minJ .. ., araUHB Tiii ._Featured a preview ol fall programmiro 011 lhe three ma'°' networks. cable TV. public broad- casting a~ndicatoo ( 1 hr.) _.,, MOltl PLYllO CIW:CJI ( llOVll "The PUssycal Syndrome" ( 1980) Two leshlon models flrld lhem- selves in tor some supr1se plctu<e taking aboard a vacauon cru1s. ship near Greece ( 1 hf , 33 min ) (0 llOWI "The Final Option" ( 1982. Ota· ma) Judy Davis. Lewis C<>lllns An anti- nuclear grotJP seizes control of lhe Amett- can Embassy 1n L0t1don and warns that government hostages will be murdered it 11s demands art not met (2 hrs • 4 mln ) I IROTl .. CM'TIUY•UMQ .. NGAYINllTIPMI · tW l'J\a£:.r__, L 'CHAii TO Lii TILITNOll (CONT'D) ,,_,IWAIUIT v--. a ~o A p1ay w11hifl a play using an old man's ballad to lamfl.'ll tho misfortunes of CaltlOHlta's egrlcultural worker' ( 1 hi • 30 min ) • rsi ITUl9Ant • ..,,.,.. WllQ ntAT-. ftw C81 ... tut .-Y9GITIMM. PWllW .... Q Cll ... . , ...... .,. "Secrets" (1977 Orama) Susan Blakely. Roy Thimes-A young woman turns 1n delperatt0n 10 promiscu- ity when she finds she's uneble 10 solve the perple11111es of het unheppy marriage. 2 hrs.) ,..,,A&.wa.L ......... ....,..a. ..., ..... .,. "O'Hara'• Wife" ( 1982, Ora- ma) Edward Asnet, Mariette Hartley. An attOfney declde8 to pun the pkJQ on the llfe·supportl~ equipment on Which hit wile is SUrvMng and eventually reoervea counseling from hef ghost 'PG' ( 1 hr • ~7 min) C2) flOWW "The Toy" (1982, Comedy) Richard Pryor, Jackie Gleason. A roolt~ honaire hires an unemployed bl11Ck men as a plaything fOf his spoiled young son 'PG' ( 1 hr .• 40 min ) m•cwa 1WD HOUftlOOO c:a.o.• Featured: an interview With "Hotel's" Jamee Brolin, a IOOk al the efforts to keep the legendary "HOiiywood" sign lit all the time; a look at some of rhe IUmm8I' hims geared toward lhe you~ market, a report on the battte of the ::i,netS on "Dynasty" and "Dallas." 1ttl i .,,: "It Happened One Night" (t93.-, Comedy) Claudette Colbert, Clark Gable A newspaperman shields an hetf- ess lrom her father's agents hoping to get • a scoop .• (2tn .. 10 mln.) • @ llOWll "Footllght Parade" ( 1933. MuSIC81) James Cegney, Joan Blondell A teak 1n publicity hampers e d1rect0f'I attempt to make a comeback (2 hrs • to min) CC) flOWW "Gandhi" (t982, Biography) Ben KlngSJiY, C8ndlce Bergen. Tr&Cft the hie of Mahatma Gandhi. who led demon- s1ra11ons of paSS1Ve reslStance in Otder to gain lnd8pendence fOf lrldla 'PG' Q (3 hrs • 8 rtlll1 ) a. WllCM&'llNllTlllACI• JllQ.UI ···~ ... M llCll.D TcmoMOW IOWlM Lucky Strike FUter Classic ( 1 hr.) tm'ICAUlllCOUB• 1t1I .,_ "F Seon Fitzgefald And Tha Last Of The Bellel" ( 1974, Orama) Rich· ard Chamberlain, Blythe Denner. Writer F. Scott F1tzgetald meets hla future wife Zel- da whila ti. IS stationed in }tie South. (2 hrs.) • IOT..._T ...... Q:l9 DOeMM "The Pete< Pan Syndrome Men Who Ha~ N8Y8I Grown Up" Psy- ctlologisl·authof Or. Den Kiley explotea the IOClO-psychologlcal symptoms suf- fered by men who have chOeen not to . grow up and how mothefl end lathers can ~1··~!r:.~;;•" -(1 ~-~~ LllL-...•A-TODMICI ••-dOCUmentary <:eptvres the Grammy-w!n- nlng Southern CahfOrnla rock •n• rOll bend. R) ,,,,,_., ._ -•••au .. -.,. "The BIOoct or 01'*-" c19&4, Drama) Jodie Fosr • Mie:hMI Ontkaan Baltd 0'1 Iha novel by Simone de S.U.. volr. Two iov.rt encountef ~IQ odda when they attempt to keep thelf loYe from falling apart In Pat• donng WOftd ww·~~= ~ l#fO Mall N'-SCAR 200 (from Darlington, S.C.) (R) ( 1 hr., 30 ~ (O)M Olm C-. ~ W• Many of today'• top coma we teetwed In this performance taped at Sen Francte- co' 1 comedy dub, The Other Cale. • ... "Fr1day The 13th, Part Ill" (1982. Horror) Dena Kimmet, Paut Krat- ka Unwary teen-agers travel to a remote cabin et Crystal Lake. the ~alklng grounds of a ~ monater who wearu hockey mask. R' ( 1 hr., 35 ITW\.) • d(Z) .. "Deel Of The Century·· (1_963. Comedy) Chevy Chase, Sigoorney Weaver When e high technology uttr• weapon turns out to D8 defectrve. Its man- ufacturer hires an arms hus11er to dilpOM of It. 'PG' ( 1 hr • 38 min ) tt1M ="Kid Dynamite" {19-43. eom. dy) EaSI Side Kids, Pamela Blake. The Kids get into more trouble than they can handle, but somehow manage to squimt out~·~·· 30 min) w -.co.L IOT1ll a. C81 ... iiiiifWATCll rrt10ell• I " ... m ... -..,"* ....... MMIJ • Hiii,_ 1:111 .. "Siil Of The Night" (1982, Suspense) Roy Scheider, Meryl Streep A psychiatrist beco'!IH 1ncrea1lngly involved with e myste<lous woman who wu the mlstreu of a murdered pat..nt. 'PGd t hr , 30min.) -~-llAllTUO ~=-"North Oella.s Forty" (1979. Comedy) Nick Nolte. Mee Devis Groupies. pill-popping and all-night party- ing begin to take lheif tol on two fun-lov- ino but over-the-hl'll football players. 'A' tthls.J . W (C) .. "Humongous" ( 1982, Hoo0t) Janet JuftaO, 0.vid Wdaoe A disfigured murderer stalks e party of fPlels teen- egera weekending on a remote nd. 'R' t ht .. 35 n'Mn ) .. Nml• Ill 111,_0Q . -~AT'IUCTlam .... ...,..., _ _,, ...... ttl _,. .. CM"f M•UMQ w .. "Sakharov" ( 198.-, Drilma) Jason Robare». Glende .Jackton Follows tha life of Andrei Sekti.rov. tha <•IOWl'led nuclear physicllt from the Soviet Union who lnvtnted h count.,Ys hydl'ogen bOmb. ~2 hrs) •1•-s111 •. ··"~· a -·-· 411111 ... "Nana" ( 1934. Orame) Anna Sten, Lionel Atw!ll A beautlful and mat ah&tlc woman IMme the melllWlQ of heW· • tache when Iha 1>ecof1'tee lrwotYed wtth a h&nd80me lieUtenant { 1 tv • 29 min.) •CC ... "The Bliek . " ·oeso Ac:Mnture) Tyrone P , OrtOn w ... A t3th-<:enttiry EngliSh Saxon travels On· entel c:aievan routes 9etktng trlde Mc::f 811 (2 hrs.. , min ) I Sunday.Sept. 18. 1964 13 -Monday _....._Movies_ •CZ> "Lady On The Bui" (1983, Drama) Sonia Brage (1 hr., 26 min.) •al) "The War Between Men And Women" (1972. Comedy) Jack LMnmon. Barbara Harns (2 hta ) •CB> "The Wild Pony'' (1980, Adwnture) Marilyn Light stone, Art Hindle. ( 1 hr . 29 min.) CI) "Grand Hotel" ( 1932. Orama) Greta Garbo, John and Lionel Barrymore ( 1 hr .. 55 min) 19 CC) "The Bridge On The River Kwa1" (1957. Orama) William Holden, Alec Guinness (2hrs,41 min.) •CID "G'Olel The World Cup Challenge" ( 1983. Docum4tlltary) N1rrated by Sean QQonery ( 1 hr • 38 min.) CD) "Gandhi" ( 1982, Biography) Ben Kingsley, Candice Bergen. (3 hrs., 8 min.) (I) "Five Deya One Summer" (1982 Dra- ma) Sean Connery, Betsy Brantley ( 1 hr, 50 min) •CZ> "Goodbye Pork Pie" (1981, Drama) Kelly Johneon, Tony Barry ( 1 hr., 30 min) -CC) "On The Weterfront" (195', Drama) -Merion Brando. Eve Marie Saint . ( 1 hr .. 48 nwl.) ®"List Plane Out" ( 1983, Drama) Ja,,.. MIChatl Vincent, Mery Crotby. ( 1 hr .. 36 min) "Young Culkfy" ( 1965, Biography) Rod Taylor. Flora Robeon. ( 1 hr.. 50 min.) I . (%) "W anley" ( 1975, Drama) M!lea Haniwe11. Jerome Wims (2 hrs ) l'!) "Conipltacy In Teheren'' ( 1947, Adventure) Derek Farr. Pemela Stirling i! hr., 30 min ) -(1l) "The Fighting o· Flynn" ( 1949, Adven· ture) Hetene Cart«. Douglas Fnbanka Jr. (2 hr&) -a "Men In War" (1957, Drema) Robert Ryan. AldO Ra'/ 12 hrs l -Aflernoon MoVles- •m "About Face" (1952, Musical) Gor· don MacRae. Eddie Stacken (2 hrs.) CC) "Victim" (1961, Suspense) Dirk BQOarde, Sylvia Syms ( 1 hr., '40 mtn ) (S) "Romantic Comedy'' ( 1983. Romance) Dudley Moore, Mary Steenbur· Q!!'· ( 1 hr , 43 min ) lZ.J "Yor" ( 1983. Orama) Rab Brown, Corinne Clery ( 1 hr .. 28 min.) W OO "A Cry For Love" (1980, Orama) Susan Blakely, Powers Boothe. ( 1 hr .. 40 min) ©) "10" ( 1979, Comedy) Dudley Moore. Bo Defek. (2 hrs ) W "Grand Hotel" (1932, Drama) Greta Garbo. John and Lionel Barrymore. ( 1 tv .. 55 min.) 29CC) "Bral05torm" ( 1983. Science-Fiction) Nata~• Wood, ChnstOphef Walken (1 hr • 46 mm.) "Ball 01 Fire" ( 1942. Comedy) Gary Cooper, Barbara Stanwyck ( 1 hr , 51 min.) • "The Wald Pony" (1980, A~ture) Marilyn Lightstone. Art Hind ( 1 hr • 29 min) 1111 "The Toy" (1982. Comedy) Richard !:rycx. Jackie Gleason ( 1 hr., 40 min) -~l "Say Amen Somebody" (1983, Doc- umentary) Thomas A. OorMy, W Moe Smith. (1 hr .. '46 min.) "The W12.1rd Of Oz" { 198~ Fantasy) 1Anll'n8ted Voicas by Alleen Outnn. Lome Greene (1 hr , 18 min) .. "G'Ole!. The World CUp Challenge" ( 1983, Documentary) Narrated by Sean Connery. ( 1 hr .. 38 min.) .. ) "The Grey Fox" ( 1983, Weatem) Richard FarnSWOflh, Jackie Burroughs ( 1 hr, 32 min.) 1::9 (?' "Goodbye Pork Pte" (1981, Orama) .Kelly Johnson. Tony Barry. (1 hr .. 30 min) --•Evening ·1·... . CIR . IA Po0tuLL M11tml Dolphins at Buf-talR~a.: 15 min) . iiiLOiO LIUMDOfMM:M•PAllOUI IA flOOTIALL M11ml Dolphins at Buf· I··~~. ~-.oil llOWll "On The Waterfront" (195', Drama) Marlon BrandO, Eva Marie Saint Only one man musters up enough COUtege IN THE Daily PilOt 14 Sunday. Sept. 16, 1984 -Monday Cont. to challenge • P,0We1tu1 mob leader who holds the dOclt WOOtfS of a big city In an Iron Of1p. ( 1 l}r • .a man ) AUTO Meml°'NASCAR 200 (from Oar=· SC). (R) (1 ht. 30mln) (Q) "Gandhi" I 1982, BIOgtaphy) Ben Kingsley. Cal'ldlce Bergen Traces the hfe of Mahatma Gandhi. who led dernon- $1ratlOl'IS bf pa9Slve 1esistence In 0<def to gain Ind pendet'lce f<>< India 'PG' (3 hrs .. 8 m1rt) .,. "F1111 Days One Summer" ( 1982. Orama) Sean Conne<y, Betsy Brantley An Alpine vacation f0< a moun· ta•neet1ng Scottish physician and thlt young woman travehng with him beeomes the venue for personaf revelation 'PG' I 1 hr •• 60min) maecc v.-.Dm -... AUCI IMCIB/~.WW ~YW -IOU11CI Henry Fonda end Myrna Loy star es a married couple who reflect on their 50 years together. DICIYAllDftl NI Cll ... .... LOWllOAT PA llMAZlll An interview w11h · actress-comedienne Cero1·eurnett, a 1e1 lskle;-::: .... 01,.,,.. VOY• f//11111 -The crew docks 1n Rockland, Me end '"' a film Ofl whales in the Caribbean. a Vllit with Katy Payne who studle& whale songs Q llON "Krull" ( 1983, Fantasy) Ken MarshaU Lyselle Anthony On another planet, a pnnce facet many teals as he toes to regain his kingdom, rescue his betrothed and light a labulous beast 'PG' (1ht .57m.n) (%) llCMI "Hot Touch" (1982, Orama) Wayntt Roger1. Mar.-Francet P1Sie< Two men who own a company that euthenlt· cat .. prieetess pa1t1t1ngs become Involved In a team ( ltv • 32 min ) I PACll l fll.ACa fill I OM 1111 TOW Featured: in Greece. stop at the site of the t896 olympies. Par· tflel'IOn, a flea marl(et Ind a calt with tableSldt bel~danc1no IE:!-n NOftl'lco.MT c..1..:..0-:.':F:':r = • .tA.lfVtY of $e.l(IJ8f abYs. of children. toe~ on victims, pttpetratOc"S and pre- 11entive measures. ease st1Jdle6 and inter· vlows a1e feeturt~ ( 1 hr .. 30 min.) POCarallMDt 'trek Shots from1he Ll'g9ndafy Pocket Btlliatds Stars Touma· ment (A) PM• I llOCI Wembley beCom an apprtnliCe to 1 magician who comes to i fetm at Fraggle ROck ,..., ... 1111 .. "BUilet FOf A Bad n" ( t96A, We tern) Audi Murphy, Darr McGavin A be~ t vows to klH the .man whO marred his ex·wtfe (I hi • .-o mm.) •G ICYICMWMe-.;ltml ArMn· oa kidnapped by Central AmctlCAn reb· t wt'IO at• plOtttng to nett t tr Wt IR) Ohr) m us• Am f!MC11CAL (Season Prem re) Featured btoon r frOt\'l Jl.IUe Andrewe' v rletv seriea. Robert Klein present• a "Streeta Of New Y°'k" Mgment newt bloopeta; f<><· eign comtnercialS, practai jot<-. Ed McMahon and Ok:k Clark return u series hOsta. ( 1 hr) U _. "A Touch Of Class" (t973. Comedy) Glenda Jackson. Geofge Segal A Br1tl$h diVO<a.. meecs a happily married Amelican and agr8!19 to a week-tong fling i E:L" · I:' "Twelve Angry Men" ( 1957, Drama) Henry Fonda. Lee J CObb A man hOlds out against 11 fellow iuron When they decide an accused mU1defer'a ~It befC)(e he II p<oven innOcent (2 ~'bn11-..~ -11-'U.OQ llOYll "EndlMS L~e" ( 1981, Aomanc:e) Brooke Shields. Martin Hewitt. A 17·year-old's obMSslve love f<>< his 15- year-old girHriend leads to parental con- 11 ta and tragedy. ·a· . C 1 ht .• ss min ) PABm TILl.1MIA1'M "The Boy Who Leh Home To flnd Ou1 About The Shivers" A curlOUS young man (Peter MacNICOI) accept• a sorcerer-king'• cha! leoge to spend three night• In • haunted castle Christopher Lee and Dena H• co-· star. Q ( 1 hr.) m u~- ... • 'TIC TAC DOUIM LMIOAT .... MUULm IUTI 90ln'IC8RWI ... ClltAll~C111MI ... _ W Cl) Uft l AU.a Aftet Kate quits he< job at the travet agency, she and Allie go into bYSlnesa for therntelVes selling A~'s bal<ed goods. (R) 0 f.m -Af..lATM tDll Over 75 new and returning star1 C91ebtate the 1984-85 se&son. leatured ara an eneemble produc· Hon number with women f<om the prime- time $1\0ws Harry Andlfson's comedy- magte act, and • dance number by Alfonao Ribeiro. ( 1 hr ) ... DOMCOIYILL ..v ... ICIT ••AL: .._ fllatt Nancy Salter takes a ctou-up vteW ol hie and learning al L A '1 Le Conte Junior High. l1 hr) Ill _., HMNflluat Features four piece choreographed to Stravinsky's musk: by Peter M1rt1M' "Eight Eaay Piec- es," "Tango," "Piano Rag MUSIC" and "Concerto FOf Two Sol<> PiJnOt. '' (R) ( 1 hr) CC) .vii "The 8r1~ On The Rlvtf Kwal'" (1957, Orama) Wtliam HOiden. Alec Gu1nnest. During WOfld War II. • Bllt!Sh eOIOnel 100 hie "*' become part ol • J>.fiSOn tabor camp gang '°'~ by the Japanese to build a jungle br•dgt (2 tin • .-1 ':oln.. (I) .. ''The Sender" ( 1982. HC)(ror) Kalh<yn Harrold, ~o lventk. A f\Jrry of ~ pathie h811ucinati0nl 11 unleashed at • psych atnc h0spit11 whtn • 1Ulcldal patent with uncontrOllabi. J)tychlC pow· Si&ldmlltta A' (1tlr,30rNn.) (SJ.vii · MeMlttan" (1979, Comedy) Woody Atieo. ~M Keaton Af'I 1MeCUre N Yortc comedy WT1ttt bt .. k• up with hlS teen·ag Qltlfriend to date an outlPO" lien jOUrnal t wtiO recently l'lad an atta r th his beSt blend 'A' { 1 tu • 00 mfn ) llO¥ll "Or nd Hotel" I 932, Drama) Greta Garbo. John and Uonef Batrymore A day In the llVet of U. lnhebltante of Germany's Grand Hotel btiogs thefr ~lhs ' ther. ( 1 hr., 55 min~ ~ llTatCOCI "' W CM.&. TO..., Col. Sarnae ts Uligned to lty a top-MCtet mls9IOn 0\19' China. MCI Carf obtal,. an airfield near Edwards Air F°'ce Base ( 1 tv.)' • II?) flOITMlf Of .-cA ''Loulsiana'' ( i ht.) 11::11 fJ Cl).....,. Dick agr .. to hOst •talk ahow bYt has ltOOOd thooghta when hlS first guest I'S a men with the WOflcfs smal- est hor5e. (R) (I) llCMI "She Cried Murdtf'" (1973, Mystery) Telly Savala.a, Lynda Dey Geofge Atter w1tneulng a mur<*. a young model has trouble convtncing the ~of that fact. ( 1 hr .. 30 min ) QI .-Td•rT 'TW Featured. Sally Field d*"-her upcomeog rOle in .. Places In The Heart." (I) CG.I• POOTULt. Notre Dame at Michigan State (A) (3 tvs ) CO) MDWll ''L.acial And Gentleman, The FebYlous StalN" (1981, Music41) Diane , Lane. Aly Wmtooe The me1tone n• of i • tno of female punl\-rockaB leads ultt-• mately to the11 selhng out In the big-money world ot the music Industry 'R' n hr. 27 minL • -a Cl) CAmmY l UCIY When a notorl«>Us bounty hunter shows up on the trail of a bail-jumping criminal, Chns raoes to get the wanted man hrlt. (R) ( 1 IV.) Df.D ____ TO&MTO• W The octogenarlen appeatl In a sequence of sketches with guests Bob Hope. Catheone Bach, Arte Johnson and the Los Angetes Rams cheerieedel's ( 1 nr.) . l&':':..wrr CALL TO...., Col Sarnac It •SS9*' to fly a top-secret mlsston over China, and Carl obtains an airfield OMI Edwards A11 F0<ce Ba'le ( 1 hr ) fD C09llOIMl.Sexua11ty. race. religion and fan "Y dynamics are among the top~ eJCplofed by 200 Califomte teen-agers who spend a week t~ther 1n • progrem sp<>t\SOfed by the Natl0081 Confttence of Chrishans and Jews ( 1 hr.) '1i) -ICllOOU LOOb at ~ public high schools, r-= the strengths and "' kneues dite 1n the 1983 Carne-gie Report on Amencan !'ligh ~ (R) 1 IV.} M W.... OI COCA• Dtspels myths about the drug cocaN through the trve stories ol • bast<ttball superatar. a high school bMuty queen, an auto factClfy wor=~=·t. (1 ht) .. 1•1'1-.a.lWOOI .,. "lnctcscreet" (1958, Comedy) Cary Grant. loglid Bergman A rtch A"*._ can and a EurC>pMn actr ... tall In 16Ye alth9Ugfl he cfalms 10 be martltd (2 hrs. 5mtn) -••• w ... _. "Se.I( World" ( 1978, Fantasy) Leslie Bovee. Kay Parker. People IVf*·. lttg from mlld torma of • sexu.&1 d)'SfUne. tion Nek t'*tpy •t a rttOrt .,,.,_ ttW trOtiC fantasaet are indulged ( 1 ht., 30 ... min .. '* ~ ..... .... l111£!1WIUU.. ... "You U So Diep, My L0¥1" . Sunday. Sept. 161 19M 15 -·~Coad. ( 1975, Orama) Barb.Ira AndefsOo. Oon Galloway. A desperate man dt8COYef'S that he must have a girlfriend as well as a wife If he le to fulfill his needS for both love and . Ji: hr., 30 nun.) ea•• ICll.mOCUllTI 1MIGOOO..._. .. "CuJo" (1983, Suspense) Dee Wallace, Denny P1nta\KO. A woman and her young son are trapped In their car at an Isolated auto repair yard by a huge, ra~· (1hr,31mln) ~--"L::Trap" (1976, Suspense) Fiona Richmond. Robin A&kwlt:"I An army vetef'an aCCldentally becomes Involved In a mystef'l()US caper when he moves 1n10 a fuend' a luxurious apartment. ( 1 hr . 20 min) (%) MOVll "Deal Of The Century" ( 1983. Comedy) Ctievy Chase. Sigourney Weavef' When J high tachnotogy ultra· weapon turns out 10 be defective, its ma~ ufa<:ture< hires an arms huatler to dispose of It. 'PG' ( 1 hr • 38 mlfl ) llllON a AION * Fun Lowtne Da•ecttwa 1tll ~~~~~~~~~~K-C.~~,...-a Cl) -I -A.J. and Rick are hired to capture a teen-ager who has used his home compute< 10 crack a bank's automatic le lef service (R) ( 1 hr 10 min }_ 11 GD mlT • CAMC* tiost: Johnny c.r-son Guests Robin Williams. Dfeamglfls. J1m&;o~R) (1 hf,) R tm) MIC ... ..m.19 15 llml "Stiletto" ( 1969, Mystery) Alex Cord. Britt Ekland A dlstrlC1 att0<ney Ines to nail a playboy count who IS kllling thugs Of'I behalf of a gangster friend (2 hrs. 5 mtn.) • =••Ol IMMUICllCO IS LA..-T .-CA SC!leduled John StQ86Slnger. prot8SIOI' of poljt1C&l 1e1ance at Trinity University. San Antonio. Tex.as, on wars and confllcta being fought In the name ot reUglon; Urban Institute econo- mist John Palmer on President Reagan's hrat three yeara In office. (1 hr.) "' (Q) .. "Mighty Joe Young'' (1949, Adventure) Terty Moore. Robert Arm- strong When a gorilla le raised by a young girl 10 Africa, a press agent tnea to bring ft to the U.S as a nightclub act ( t hr .. 34 min) • m•c:a.u1 1W(C')llCMI "Angelo, My Love" ( 1983, Dra- ma) Angelo Evans. Michael Evans.An American gypsy boy 1r1e1 to retrieve a tamity heirloom wtuch was etolen. 'R' (2 hrs) -Tft*"Z.. MmMBO llOWI "Tell Me Thal You Love Mt. Jurue Mooo" ( 1970, Dr•mt) Liza Minne!- -llondnv .. .,.._ •tm "I Love A Mystery'' (1967. Mrlery) I :i Lupino, David Hartman. (2 hrt .. } "My Faif Lady" ( 1964, MuSleal) Rex ...,. rriSOO, Audrey Hepbum (2 hrs , 50 noo I 16 Sunday, Sept. 16, 198-4 Ii. Ken Howard A facially disfigured young girl, an epileptic and a crippled hornoSaic· ual &hara an 1partmant where'. together they struggle to cope with the outSide world (1 hr • 40 min ) tt9 (11)llOWI "K1ng'1 P.rata" (1967. Adven- ture) Doug McClure, Jail St. John An American colonel matct. w!ta with pttates in 18th-century Spain while trying • to win a woman'• love ~hrs.. 10 mll'l.) tt91 f.D LA11...rwrnt VID~ A&11911Taecocl ..-Tl _,.•L.A. TIJDAT ••• llefT ... llOWI ''Tha Outside Man" (1972. &Jlpen&e) Ann-Margret, Jean Trlntig· nan1 An unknown M man relentlessly tracks h11 target through lhe streets of Los A~-~ (2 hrs ) • !J Lent. -UC M ln'LI --YUM ...,..... ta:a Ole LOCA1DI "Robert Kleln. Child Of The '50s, Man Of The '80s" The comedi- an perlcxm& 111--oew mate<ial In concert {j h~J 111111) Cl) .-•MI Wiil Sally McMillan is kidnapped, and her abduct°'' demand a pnce1ess Rembfandt as r1nsom (R) ( 1 hr , 20 min.) tll9 CS) llCMI "Five Daya One Summer" ( 1982. Orama) Se•n Connery, Betsy Brantley An Alptn& v&e1t10n fOf • moun- taineering Scottish phySIClan and the young woman traveling with him becomes the venue for personal revelation 'PG' ( 1 hr., 60 min,) -1-MlrWf HGU.nfOOD CLOllUP Featured; an Interview with ''Hotel'•" Jamee Brohn; a took al the effcxta to keep the legendary "HoltywC¥><f' l'gfl 111 an the time. a look 11 some ot the summer films geared toward the youth market; a report on the battle of the =• Of'I "Dynasty" and ··0a11as" (1)1MI~.- ., llO¥ll "Girl On Tha Run" ( 1958, Ora- ma) Efrem 'Zimba 1st Jr., Erin O'Brien A prrvale eye IS hired to find a nlghlctub Stnger before a klller does ( 1 hr., 30 min.) -IA-N.L("> llO¥ll "Double Exposlnt" ( 1982. Suspense) Michael Callan, Joanna Pettet. The murderous n ghtmares ot a d1slurbad photographer begtn to take on a lite of thetr own 'R' ( l hr. 35 min.) llO¥ll "The Infernal Trio" ( 1974. Ora ma) Romy Schnelder, Michel Piccoli Three people become rich by arra!'lg•ng the murdefl of wealthy acqua.n· tances (2 ~ tll ,,._, ... llCMI "Sidekicks" ( 1974, Comedy) Loo Gos&etl. L•rry Hagman A con team makes money wtlet1 the while man "sells" his black comrede In the ptt·Clvll War West (lhr.,= ....... LA&Mtt• (2) "Hercules" ( 1959. Adventure) Steve Reev SyNa KOIC)nl ( 1 hr .. 47 min ) 19 ) "8 1 I 2" (1963, J!1ntasy) Marceno Mastroi.nn1, Cleudia Cardln&I~ (2 hr;s., 16m1n) .... •COJ '•Monsagnor" ( 1982, Drama) Christo- Reeve. GOOl'Aeve 8Yjold (2 hr$) • "King Of The Mooma1n" (1981, Adventure) H1rry Hamlin, Joseph Bot• tom ( 1 hr. 30 min ) AUTO MCM World Endurance Spa 1000 (from Spa, BelgiUm.). (R) ( 1 hr) bll(H) llCMI ''Last Plane Out" (1983. Dra- ma) Jan-Michael Vincent, Mary Crosby. A iournal16t thoUgl'lt to be a CIA agent t>eeomes entrapped In Nicaragua during lhe last daya of the Somoza regime 'PG' i1 hr • 36 min.) ~ (t) llCMI "Lldy Chatterley's LC>Yef" (198 1. Orama) Sylvia Knatel, Ntcholas Clay Based on D H. Lawrence·• story about the wif• of a paraplegic Engllst\ ans- tocrat wtio tll<es her husbancfa" game- k~r as her IO~~ 1 hf .. 45 mll'I.) .. :J CIJ Cll... Alai ... 1::9 ... ...., .. MQMT • 11••Tm1 M . MOVll "EV8fY1hing You Al'Waya Want- ed To Know About Sex (But w.,. Afraid To AS!()" ( 1972, Comedy) WOOdy Allen, Gene Wilder. A setlfl ot comJc lketches spool Dr David Reuben'• beat .ng book in additlOn 10 other ueorted targeta. .. i·R·r':io _, ......... llOVll "Breathless" ( t983, Orama) R;-:hard Gere, Valerie Kaprlnsky A tr ... spirited auto thief unantenhonally kl e patrolman and lit« de'<lek>pa an obse&- $tV8 attraction 10 • young woman 'R' ( 1 hr .. 4 t min) . • ) llOVll "M0011gnor" ~ 1982, Dr•ma) Ctvistopflef Reeve, GenevteVe Bujold An ambttlous American prieat'• MCl.llar activf- ties tnclude mafia deals 1nd carnal affalra 'R' (2 hrt) --~'"'". ...... ,...(R) 1:11 llOVll "The Innocent" ( 1979. Orama) Giancarlo GiaM1nl. Laura Antonelli. In early 20th-century Italy, a tragic tnangle develops involving a dlaturbad man, hiS wtte and hla-lnttlress. 'R' (Dubbed) -(1 hr .• 55 min! W (f) CllCMO'I ...,.__., m' .. "10' (1979 Comedy) Dudley Moore. Bo Derek. A successful songwriter, disturbed about teaching mid- dle age. d&Qdes 10 chase alter a beeuhfut g11t on her way to her wedding, 'R' (2 hrs) .. @ ..... d (S) .VW ··eau or Fire" P942, Comedy) Gary Coop«, Barbare St1nwyek. A group ot prissy protes90ft researching a diction· ary ot American alang become Involved w11h a gang ol thog9 and 1 cabaret ainger. 1hl.61min.) 4191 M....ne MIHI• ':'.a ...... .. llOWll "The Toy" (1982, COmedy) Rictwd Pry0<, Jackie Gleason. A multlmll· liOnalre htret •n unemP49yed blac'( men as a J)l1yfhlri0 tor ~ apolled young eon 'PG' I 1 h1 •• 40 min) "Deal 01 The Century" ( 1993, Come· dy) Chevy Chase, Slgoutney w .. ,,.. ( t hr,38mJn) • "Oon't Go Neer The Water'' ( 1957. Comedy) Glenn Ford. GI• SC.ate. ( 1 hr., 47 mil\ ) -CC) " Ja " (1939, w ttml 'Tyron Power. Htt'lfy Fonda (1 hr., 45 min) 6D "Thft Cr Coeka100" C1958, MVS· . I: -hasd!y Cold. tery) John Mills, Rene Ray. ( 1 hr . 30 min.) -«l) ''Something For A Lonely Man" ( 1968, Orama) Dan Blocker, Susan Clar1<. (2 hra.) -· ''The Poppy Is Also A Flower" ( 1966, Advef'lture) TreYOt Howard, E.G Mar- shall (2 hre.) · CI> ''Thi World According To Garp" (1982, Comedy) Robin Williama. Mary Beth Hurt. (2 hra., 16 min.) 1WCID "French Postcards" (1979, Comedy) Miles Chapin, Blanche Baker. (1 hr., 32 min.) 1d "Gandhi" (1982, Biography) Ben Kingsley, Can<lloe Bergert (3 hrs.. 8 min.) 1*GJ "Pete Kelly's Blues'' ( 1955. Orama) Jack Webb, Janet Lelah. (2 hrs,) ~"A Family Upside boWn" (1978, Dra- ma) Heten Hayn. Fred Astaire. ( 1 hr .. 38 min) (Q) "The Music Man" ( 1962, Musical) Robert Preston, Shirley Jones. (2 hrs , 31 min.) -®''The Bunke<" (1981, Orama) Antho- ny Hopk\ns, Richard Jordon (2 hrs . 30 min.) W (.%) "Hot Touch" (1982. Drama) Wayne Rogers, Mari.Frances PtSlef ( 1 hr . 32 min.) M (C) "Brian's Song" (1971. Drama) James Caan, Biiiy Dee W1lllams. ( 1 hr , 15 min.) MIC%) "Hercules" (1959, Adventure) Steve Reeves. Sylva Kotelna ( 1 hf • 4 7 min ) Ml eel "Thi Grey Fox'' ( 1983, Westem) Aiehard Farnsworth, Jackie Burroughs. ( 1 hr .• 32 min) •CID "Swallows And Amazons" (1974, Adventure) Virginia McKenna, Ronald Fraser ( 1 hr., 32 min ) •Cf) "A Covenant With Death" (1967, Mystery) George Maharl9'. laura Devon. ~hrs..) CO "Melanie" ( 1982, Drama) Burton Cummings, Glynnis O'Connor ( 1 hr., 49 min.) (%)"Deal Ot The Century" (1983, Come- dy) Chevy Chase, Sigourney Weaver ( 1 hr., 38 min) •cc:) "8 1 I 2" ( t963, Fantasy) Marcello Mastroianni, Claudta Cardinale (2 hrs.. 15 min.) .. lillllilveaing-. ..... go ... Cll ... ~= Ct9111f IAT'l\DTM UUCTICA ...... '9Cllf .... OCIAll• llM IOU1t Of Tiii • Roberto Duran vs. Sugar Ray Leonard (Jl.Jne 1980 In Montreal). (R) ( 1 hr,) (ID llOWI "Y0t" ( 1963, Orama) Rab Brown, Cortnne Clery. A young warriOf 1rtes to find his Identity In • prehistoric land ftlled with trying reptiles end other awesome creature• 'PG' ( 1 hr., 28 min.) "IMAUON Peter O'Toole 11 Prof Hlg· gins. Margot Kidder 11 Eliza Oollttle and John St1n<11ng la Col. Pickering In thll per· formance of George Bernard Shaw'• clas· SIC comedy chronlclu'IQ IM Pf'Ofesaor't elfOf'ta to mtkt Eli.la !)<Menl•ble to tocl- etv C2 hrs) · lllCI YM DYii • .. ... TllB'I et911!1Y AUCI llACIB/~-IMOUI . -. ""flOIT\l9 I ....... ,,.,..TMIAITI MO¥ll "King Of The Mountain" (1981, Adventure) Hany Hamlin, Joseph Bot- toms Three young LA. bachelors devOte their ane<gfe& to the sport of dreg racing. --1·PG:&.Oll1'MI ... ~ 719 Cll... . .... UMIOAT ...... P.& ~ Prince's co-&tar In "Pur-pte..Rala.'.:..Apo!LonlaJ(otero: San FWlCIS- co'=le messengers ~ ..... lf6 ft1u•n Ta.MT Featured an 11n•e:t£n Joe PHlcopo .,,,,,,,, YOYMI Ol TMI -Back at .... the etew taos a whale and track• It: a \11811 to GaJlaudet College, the world's onty Ubefal arts college for lhe deaf. Q (() flOCllT •I &MDI Robert Woods '18 U.J. Puckett (R) (1 hf.) CD llCMI ''Ear AaOUI" { 1982. Come- dy) Paul Baflel.,..ary WorOllCY. A down- on-the1r·luck married couple dllCOYef thal they can make the money they need to buy their dream d10er by murdering sex ~verts 'R' ( 1 hr .. 25 min ) W llO¥ll "Saint Jack" ( 1979, Drama) Ben Gazzara, Denholm Elltot. A achtmlng American expatriate sets up an empire of black·mar1<et actlvltlaS and prostitution in the busy streeta of Singapore 'A' ( 1 hr .. 52mln) m ,ACU a N.ACU 1':a 8 I Oii 1141 TOWlt Featured. while explor- ing the Greek Isles, tour )et·eettera' Myko- nos, see a demonstration Ir) aandtemak-1ng. taste sea urchin and spln~h pie, and view Its rl!lhgloua sldt; on Sanlorlnl, the truth behind Its notoriety as the loel City of Atlantia I GHAl&YfllUD IYI Oii LA. Featured a look inlidt l06 Angeles' "teen clubs": a \11$1t to a Los Angele$ area nudtSI camp for a "family weeJ<end": U.S. Boerd Salhng Champion· l~,ih~;:::"n St<M~ ............ ,,, ....... • CMl.D lllUM. --""'' YOm CMlio .-e IMCMl.D DOW Children 1n tht early elemenlary grades criaeuss ways to cope with touches that make lhtri'l vncomfon· able. Q ' (OJ IAIBALL ~nsas City Royals It Call· ~n~~ (2hra. 30 min.) Ned?).,. ••rtie Th rd Day" (1965, Dr•· ma) George Peppard. Elizabeth Ashley. An amnetf8c ta accused by hla wife end cousin of murdering a woman and her ,chtld (2 In . 30 min.) .. a Cl) I I I Or. Howard Shamfeld devel- ops a romantic Interest In hi• bo&8'a slster, and Of E.,._ Sheridan confronta her lather'• growing eenUlty D e M Aol'Ull (Sffson Premlirt) The loam illee to Miami to wtge war agatnsl gangsten threatening 10 take C7lfef( a resort hOtel owned by two Mltera. Start George F>eppard and Mr. T. (1 l'lr.) 8 _,.."Giant" (Part 1 of 2) (1958, Drama) Elizabeth faytoc. Jamee Deen. Based on the story by Edna F-erber. Texas ranch hte and the putSOtt of Oil wealth affectthree peopl&. (2 hra.) . 0 a ,.....~-Janet gett mat- ried, Terri relocates to Hawaii and Jeck &hares an apartment With Vicic)'. u the long-time roomma1es separate. (Part 2 of l~)WLD 11111'•*-'Aft ~'Too Much, Too Soon" (1959, Biography) Dorothy Maione, Errol Flynn John Barrymore's daughter. Diana, suftert heartbreak despite being wealthy and famous. (2 hrs.) aa llOYA "The Cllmale Crisis" Climate predictions and hazard warnlnga for the next century, based on the effect• of aoer-~ =~-w.iJ~QIL. Dm IMOULD am9 A group of 10-yeer- olds discusses problems with babyatttera, sex-role stereotypes and commonlc:atJOn with parents. & ~ _,.. " acuta" (1979, Fantasy) Frank Langella, Laurence Olivier. In e 1913 Engi.sh coastal town, an aged pre>- f8SS()( seeks vengeance against the cen- turies-old vampire who murdered his daughter. 'R' (1 hr .• 49 min.) (() ..... ..-r• The Men Who Played The Game (R) CID llCMI "A Streetcar Named Desire" (1951. Orama) VMen Leigh. Marlon Brando A Southern belle !oles her sanity While trying to pretet'W her faded gentility against the haraaament of her harr.h and bruUsh brother-In-law. (2 hra. 2 min.) (I) llOVll ''My Fair lady" ( 1964, MCJSI.. cal) Rex Harrison. Audrey Hepburn. Based on George Bernard Shew'• "Pyg- malton." A Brltlsh prof8SSOf tries to teacn a lower-class Londoner how to be a la~. 'G' (2 hra., SO min.) • m uO'CLOCI ... • 8 Cl) •ATM As the Korean conflict comes to an end. resoMng the w.rtlme careers of the men and women of the (077th Mobile Army Surgical Hoepltel, they face the dlfhcult ta5'( of .. ylng oood- le to each other. (R) (2 hra • ~ mfn.) TICTAC--LMIQAT Bf'latAl'tl••-wn 1"llllln ~tured· an lntef'View with comedian Joe P11copo. G) IWf .. A,.,_..,_ The war ends with South Vietnam's Mrender , when North Vietna,,,.. t&Ms enter §!lg_onon£il30, 1975. (R) Q (1 hr.) (I)90RTIC:mliM {[) .,_ ''OCfoPUSSY" ( 1983. Adven- ture) R~ f!Aoort, Maud Adams. Aided by a beeu11ful smuggler and a trader lo art forgeries. a Russian ger«al plans en attack agains1 W•tem BJtope. end lt'a up to Brit!Sh -oent Jamee Bond to stop him 'PG' l2 hrs., 10 mfn.) •D ....... (P ... miefe) Uriorthodoic • LOI Angeles pol!Ce Sot. Rick Hunt• It reluetantly tea.med with v1vecloUa under- cover detective Sgt. Dee Dee McCaft to &OIV• a series of aeemingly unfelated Slay· lngs of young womet\ Stitt Fred ~ an<1s~;9;Kramer. (2hra.) . 8 QI (Pren'\left) P6lict l)tyCNlb ·· lrt5t Jeule Hayden combinel profeleklnel e)(pertenee with a _,.. of compettion • Sunday, Sept. 16, 1984 11 she dealt with violent cflm1nals and their victims Stars Lindsay Wagner and Tony Lo Blanco. (2 hra.) I=_,. Scheduled. CBS news- man Mike Wallace. comedian Ronnie Schell. actress Sherl~n W':ei'. ( 1 hr.) • IClf IOll.W.: ...... t1I VIC). LillCI A portrait of the nature of family Ylolence eeen through the ey• of the YIC· \!!!1111 presented. ( 1 hr.> (E) ... 'I mA1DT ••ITI Highlights of the 19~2 Miami Dolphins (R) · CZ)llOVll "The Infernal Trio" (1974, Ora- ma) Romy Schnelder. Mlc;hel Piccoli. Three people b.come rich by arranging the rnurdeta of wealthy acqua1n- tancet. (2 hrs.) 8a NJ1MD ... tl'ICl""CMCOCI--flM8TI •Cf) mN "All My Darting Daughters" ( 1972. Comedy) Robert Young. Ray- mond Massey. All four daughter• of a wld- owe< plan to wed In 1 aingle cefemony ( 1 ht .. 30 min) Ii) M ~ TMAT-..cA11 U&.,.. AICI Explores the limitahon ol pretlden- llal power by Congr .. thtough the dtS· cu6SIOfl of a hypothetical case. emong those speaking ere ·fdtmet Pl'aldent Ger· aid f<><d and retired U.S Supreme Court Jus=~toqart.Q (1hr.) -1··--• MT\111 f111111 Ullf 1Ml~TMATDIUCA11U&, AICI Explores the limitation of preslden· tlal power by Congttu ttvough the clts- cusslon ot a hypothetical case; among those speaking are former Prtlkient Ger- ald f<><d and retl<ed U.S Supreme Court JuJlice Potter Stewart. Q ~ t hr,) . CC) llOVll "Jesse .James' ( 1939, Wett· em) Tyrone Power, Henry Fonda Jesse assumes an alias and ma-rriet In an attempt to go straight t>Yt he Is dogged by bounty _hlJnters 'PG' ( 1 hr , 45 min.) CE) ""9 IOUTI fll 1"1 • Roberto Duran vs Pipino Cuevas (January 1983 in Los Angeles) ; Robefto Duran vs Davey Moore (June t983 In New York). (R) ( 1 tir ) 00 nm n11u .on• • ..,. co.-C8T Phil and Doi'\ Everly rtul'llte tor the fttst trme in ten years. perlOfming such hits as "Bye Bye Love," "Wakt Up little SU$1e" and "A" I Have To Oo la Dream" trom the Royal Albe<t Haff in LondOn ( 1 hr.) (aJ llO¥ll "Bad Boyt" ( 1982. Orama) Sean Penn. Renl Santoni A young hood· ~accidentally ,kilts the younger brother of a tetn-age dOpe dealer ®'Ing • police Chase and Is sent to a t~h reformetory 'R' ~ --1--"Thole Oaring Youpg Men In Their Jaunty Jalopiet" ( 1969. Comedy) ~H. Tony Curtis Monte C.rlo Is the llCtne f<X an lntJfnatlOnal car race In Whl<:tl drivers attet'l\pt to sabotage each otn«. (2 hr• , 3S man ) -!·* WT ... .,.~ llOWll "I Like The Glfll WhO Oo" (1977) Al8na PWlz, Gunter ZlealerThe young neptitw Of a aw1ng1ng uncfe finds he must confC>fm to a new tdeatyle to ,_1,n,iizci); e8'':.f0 min I ..... ..,..Ul'9t. .. "My Dar!lng Oaugtilert' AMl- 'l8fllry" l 1973, Comedvl RObett Y~. -18 Sunday, Sept. 16, 198<4 Raymcind Massey The marr1ed daughters of a widower decide to 'have a reunion, not knowing their fathet's own plans for rem!rryJli. ( 1 hr .. 30 min.) 11t1 ib!IOM 80UD ICU HITI MOOOOl•l•OM ..,....,. lllO~A~ _,, .. CAWTM•LMQ llON "The World According To • Garp" ( 1982. Comedy) Robin Wtlbams. Mary Beth Hurt. Based on John INing'a novel The aon of an unmarried prep school nurse becoroes a successful authO<, but his tame is soon oversha· dOwed by that of his crvsacMo feminist mother 'A' ~s • 16 mll"I ) 11:1' I Cl) • IPICW. ID TOlllHT Host, Johnny Carson. ( 1 hr.) I ODOCCUl.I aJ MC ... ...nm llO¥ll "Caft Him Mr. Shatter" ( 197S. Adventure) Stuart Whitman, Peter Cush- ing A hired kr 8f becomes ll'IVOlved 1n a mawve plot to assaSSinate the leader ot a · smaU East African nation ( 1 tv •• SS min ) ·1.... -tT1BTI t1I Ull PllMalCO : LA,_.., ....CA Scheduled: Bever ty LaHaye. founder and president of Con· cerned Women for Ameoca. on pro-faml- ~-•nh-lemlntst Issues ( 1 hr.) W COUHI '°°1UU. Long Beach State at UCLA (A) (3 hrs.) MO¥ll "Eddie Macon's Run" ( 1983, Orama) John Schnel9er, K11k Douglas An escaped criminal becomes the quarry of a ruthless law ofllCet. 'PG' ( 1 tv .. 35 min ) m..Ant A Mr ... NIQ 111CWI __ 1ttl llO¥ll "Brian's Song" ( 197 1, Ofama) James Caan, Billy Dee Williams Two loot· ball ptayer5 5hare a rere fr.-ndshtp until cancer ct111ms one of them, 'G' ( 1 hr . 15 mln.L -G (I) llCu.TT Steve tries to solve the kidnapping of a wealthy soclaltte whose tlusband resents the Intrusion •ot the ce, (R) ( 1 hr .• 10 min) T'llJIMT ZOlll • m °" HOU.YWOOO elOWl "WIU Penny" ( 1968, Wealam) Charlton Heston, Joan Hackett A cow· boy tries to 1tay out oHrouble wh le a new front•et'awoman trlN to build a new Ille. (2 hra L (Q)lllOVll "The Music Man" ( t962, MU&I· cal) Robert Preston. Shirley Jones. A fasMalking salesman comes to a small town 1n Iowa to orge7ille a bOya' band and 1oa<Nef1ent1y fella tn love with an unmar- rlt(f llbrenan. (2 hrs .• 31 min.) Cl) llOWll "Monsignor" (1982, Orama) Chr!Slophet Reeve, Gent'MVe BujOld. An ambthaua Ametican prMMt'a secular actM· ties 1n Ila~ nctude Malia deata and carnal atfaira 'R . (2-=~ Gl9 8 e &.All wmt OAWI Wif b dbtJt Sdleduted, act<>< Harry Dean Stanton, comedian Joel :n· ( 1 hf ) I.,."' ,_,.. ~~o H••••n ... llOWll "Paper LIOn" (1968, COmedy) Alan Aide. Lauret1 Hutton. An 1m1t1Nr trllt to ht hlmaell into the w0<1d of profes-"°"'' footbaff (2 hrs J ILM.n •CMmll "'-. .. ~CMmA • W .,. ''Counterfeit Killer" ( 1968,j)fa· ma) Jack LOfd. Shirley Knight An undet· cover po1ic.m1n inlirtr1tt1 a cr1ml ring to ---~~~-- expose the acllvltlet of top et1me leaderS. i hrs.) m'Tr#U.TONT mN "Orengo" (19S7, Orama) Jett Chandler, Joanne Dru A Yankee Civil War veteran attempta to reconstruct a Georgia town he plundered Utjng J>O$illve. rather than VIOient, means. (2 hr• ) e 110¥11 "Guns ot Oerknees" ( 1962. Orama) DaVld N~. Leslie Caron. A man'• search fC>f meaning In life leads him Into Latin Amenca.n political upheavals. i.! hr .. 30 mm ) ~CC) llOVll "Rachel. Rachal" (1968. Ora· ma) Joanne Woodward. James oi.on, Repelled by a lesbian encounter. a t~ trated schOOlteacher ha• a boef, unhappy affair with a man before moving on to nev. surroundings 'R' ( 1 hr., 41 min.) ®llCMI "King Of The Mountain" ( 1981, A<Nenture) Harry Hamlin. Josepb Bot· toms. Three young LA. bachel0f1 devot• their enetglet to the sport of drag racing 'PG' 1_1hr .. 30 min.) 1:• IJ Cl) C:OUW Columbo investigate! the mu<cler of the former partner of ar advertising man who leads • double ~le a! a ~Y (R) (1 hr .. 20min) I MTPAftOL t.1' PAl&T..., MOU.Yl'OOO ct.09• Featured. ar Interview with Biii Bixby; a loot< at the spe. cial ellecta from the movie, 1'Extermlnato tr'. a rep0<1 on the MW "cops anc robbera" shoW1111eheduled for the fall aea son. what can ha~ to you II you ta~ Into cable Illegally. Gl) IOWM l IWl'l'WI wLAllw*'-•• (%} 110¥11 "Goodbye P~ Pie" (1981 Orama) Ka•y JOhnaon. Tony Barry J young punk steals 1 rental car and dfivtl ti across f.lew Zealand wlth the polace ir • pursuit and encounter• a host of charac ters.= the ~'A' ( 1 hr .. 30 min ) :&1a1.:,.,., -~ llOVll "The Verdie!" (1982, Orama) Paul Newman. ((hartotte Ramphng A- a1cohol1C BostOI\' lawyer putts himset together to bring an unpopular medic& matprachct case to trial against stront oppo611iOn by the courts, the archc:liOCeSI ·1 •nd~-=~~,~C.V llSfRAIUIT ...... ,.. .. llOWll "North 031111 Forty" ( 1979 Comedy) Nick Nolle. Mac Oavls Groupies, plll·popplng end atl·ntght party Ing begin to take therr toll on two fun-lov Ing bol OV~«lhe-hlM footban playeB 'f' i! hr •• !>8 min. I tll(t)llOVll "Love lrap·· ( 197&. Sutpente Fiona Richmond Robin Askwith An arm vettfan aecidentatfY becomn lnv61ved ' a mystetioti~ ca~ wnen·he movet Into . lrieod' 1 lu111.1rious apartment ( 1 hr., 2l min) • 8 tlOWll "A Covenant With Death ( 1967, Mystery) Gf<wge Maharls. L.aut Devon A sympetlletlc young judge atrug ~·~~mutO. cue. (2 hr•) • .,. .. TheCloclC' (1i4~. Romance Judy Garland Robert Walker. A aallc £e~rchci fran1icany fOf • young girt he me and tell In love with dUtlng a C:hanoe meet tOQ wtult he wat on en t!Of'tt·hour leave ~hrs .30min) • ~ = T ..,_ The wor1c of todly h<>tttsl young Wfftttt, dlrtCtors and etar re gathertd togtlhef In ltiOrt film. Ylde '\ I , f f , ' I ) and an.mated Mgmtnts. ( 1 hr.) (%) llOWll ''Lady On The &4" (1983, Drama) Sonia Br~. A young ~ fiods sexual enJOYment on a bus ftlled with strangers 'A" (1 hf., 26 min) •;FMTM• ..... ,,_(IQ W CllCAIO'IPMT.'90IT ._ ''M~" (1982, Drama) Christopher Reeve, Genevieve Bujold An ambitlOus Amer1e3n poest'a MCUlar activi- ties in Italy fnClude Mafia dealt and carnal . ·•Cl) "Swallowa And Amazons" (19~ Adventure) Virginia McKenna. Ronald Fraser. ( 1 hr . 32 min.) •CCJ "Treasure Of The Four Crowns" (1982, Adventure) Tony Anthony. Ana Obr~oo (1hr.,40rTlltl.) .. Gl) 'With Thia Ring" (1978. Orama) Scott Hyland. J'?Y.ce DeWitt. (2 hra ) •CZ> "Winstanley ' (1975, Orama) Miles HaUlwell. Jer00\9 WilllS (2 hts ) •CCJ "Traff Of The Pint< Panther" (1982, Comedy) Petw Sellers. Oavld Nrven ( 1 hr., 35 min) "Romantic Comedy" ( 1983. Romance) Dudley MOOfe, Mary Steenbur· Q!O ( 1 hr., 43 min ) • CO) "Daniel'' (1983, Orama) Timothy Hutton. Mandy Patin!(ln (2 hr1 , 9 min ) • "ProtMIOf Potter's Magic Potions" (19t6. M\lenture) Richard WilSon. John wa . (1 hr • 30 f1lil'I ) ) "YOf" ( 1'~83, Drama) Reb Brown. C&1nne Clery. ( 1 hr .. 28 min ) -CCJ "South Pacll1e'' ( 1958. Musical) M1tz1 Gaynor. Rossano BraUJ (2 hr• . 51 min ) Of' "A1rpl1ne U The Sequel" (1982. Comedy) Robert Hays. Jutte Hagerty. ( 1 hr . 25 min.) "Forever Darling" ( 1956, Comedy) Lucille Ball. Deal Arnaz ( 1 hr . 36 min.) "Hercules" (1959. Adventure) Steve Ree\les, Sylva Koecina ( t hr , 47 min.) a;) ''Ne\18f To Love" (1940, Orama) Maureen O'H1Ja, Adolphe Menjou ( 1 hr .. 30 min) -Gll "Bus Riley's 88ck In Town•· ( 1965.· Orama) Ann-Margret. Michael Parks. (2 hrs) -a "OoCtor 1n L~•" (1962. Comedy) Michael Craig, VltQ1nia Maskel (2 hrs ) • 11:9 "Eddie Macons Aun" ( 1983. Orama) John Schneider, Kirk Oouglae ( 1 hr 35 mnl -· ''Myster From Beyond Earth" 1977) Documentary (2 hr' ) ' Slapstick Of Another K1nd" ( 1984. Comedy) Jttry LeWIJ. Madohne Keho. (I ht .. 27 mtn.) (0) "Six Week•" ( 1982, Dfama) Dudley Moore, Muy Tyler MOOfe ( 1 hr .. ·47 min) l "GOOdbye P0tk P19" (198t, Otama) Kelly Johnson. Tony Barry (1 hr .. 3~ min) -CC') "Thi B.g nx" ( 1978. Myatery) Rich· ard OreyluU. Susan An paci'I. ( 1 hr., 48 mtl'I) W (S) . ''Still Of The Night" ( 1982. $usponse) Floy SChotdef. ~I Str p f1ht ,30mln) •Clf) ''My Favor te Y r" ( t982. Comody) Peter O'Tooie, Jetlica Hatpet ( 1 tw. 35 attalts 'R' (2 hra ) . -econ ....... ell _,, ... CM'TIUY•LMQ -Tiii....,.. llCMI "The Grey Fox" (1983, West- •n) AJchard Farnswooh, Jec:t<le Bor- roughs A formef prlSOO inmate ~ to rob tram, meludlng a can.dlM ra«oed.. 'PG' l 1 tv . 32 min.) ., •••• ,...00 llCMl "Saini Jack" mtn) ©)"The Sender" ( 1982, Horror) Kathryn Harrold, Zeljko lvanett. ( 1 hr .• 30 min.) CD "The Toy" ( 1~2, ~) Alchard ~or. Jackie Gleason. ( 1 hr .. 40 min.) d (CJ "The Brink's Job" (1979, Comedy) Pel~r Falk. Warren Oates (2 hrs.. 14 min) W (%) "Winstanley" ( 1975, Drama) Mileti Haniwe11. Jerome wons. (2 hrt.) .. (!) "Young B ly YQUng"· ·(1969. West- ern) Robert M1 chUl'fl. Angie Dickinson · . 2hrs) "Race For The Yankee Zephyr" (1981, Drama) Ken Wahl. George Pep- e!fd ( 1 hr .. 48 min ) l:llUf) "Romantic Comedy" ( 1983. Romance) Dudley Moore. Mary Steenbur- gen ( 1 hr., 43 ITlt(I ) --Evening •ODD ... Cl9t Cll ... lil/LGIO TIIB'ICO.Mtf IATTLllTM UUCTJCA . ai•••.ollf .... ' MTRODUCllQ llOLOQY llCMl "Treasure 01 The Four Crowns" (1982, Adventure) Tony Anthony, Ana Obregon An adventurer end 1 group of daredevtts set out to retrieve a pair of ancient golden crowns that have myshcal ~perties 'PG' ( 1 hr .. 40 min ) (0 ) llO¥ll "Six Weetcs" (1982, Orama) Dudley Moore. Mary Ty18' Moore A mar· ried Conaress;onal candidate *°"'" increas•ngly lnvotvtd In the liv96 of a we y New York women and her leut<• mic daughter 'PG' ( 1 hr • 47 min.) (S, llO¥ll · Eddie Macon'• Run" ( 1983. Otama) John SCh~fdef. Kirk Douglas An escaped er mintll t>eeomes the quarry of a ruthtess law oltk:er. 'PG' ( 1 hf., 35 min.) (21 llO¥ll "Yor" ( 1983. Orama) Aeb Brown. Corinne Clery A young warrlOC' tr to find h Identity In • prehlatoric land ft too with nying r_,,t lino othei awesome crNtures. 'PG' ( 1 hf .. 28 tn l CllCI VAi D'llCI -... .,....0(9Ntf Ma ~,~ ..... ..... ..,... ~·-~ NA UM11 Gene McComb VI Oliver M1llef for the U.S Light M d<ffeweight Championahlp, IChtdU1ltd for nine rounds iom Lake Charle La ) ( 1IV •• 30 min ) .. , ... 1111 .... .... LM•T Ben Gaiz.ara. Oeoholrn Btiol A schemtng American expetnate Ml9 up an empwe of black-market activities and prostitution In !he busy streets of Singapor 'A' ( 1 hr .. .52 min.) .. (8) ... "Night Of The Juogler'' (1980. Sospense) Jamee Btolin. ci'lfl Gormen A former police officer launches a desperate search thtough 1he streets of New York City for hd mtSslng da~hler. ml$tai\enly kidnapped bye psyehopethlc Cflminal 'R' (1 hr .. 41 mtn.) I ':i. ~ Actor Paul Newman markets his own brand of popcorn, a 10- o=Hta~lnstructor i ::.n.~ To.GMT Featured an 1nt9'View with actress Nell Carter Ttml'IOl9MY .... Ol '°"1'\INI .,,,.,., llA9C OI WATDCOlOM .,,. "10" (1979. Comedy) Dudley Moore. Bo Derek A successful songwriter, disturbed abOUt reech~ mid-dle age. decides to en.. alter a ut1lul girl on hef way to hef wedding R' hrs • 3min) e;)PACUIPUCU ?all tOIMTOft Featuied thet 100 mcleS of canals which 11e given Amstl!fdtm 111 1111e ot "Venic:e o the North", a tour of a .Dutch diamond cutter's w111&S, the town's red ~t d1SlflCI BW fAl&YNUO m (II LA. Featured Johnny Mountain attendS the Scottish Highland Games. male prost1tutt0n In L.A.: mult•pie peraon- ahties . TIC TAC DOUGH .. ........ tMATlUNI WOP•e.c.tAn "°""COURT W..O. WILD WOii.i OI ..... , I I ca.b lllUM. ... WHAT YU ca- .,. llGA.D QIN Unc:omtortable end sometimes dangerous 11rua11oos for ·~ lescents acted out by the Minneapol IDu· sion Theater Company are disc~ by teen-agers in the a!Jdience ( 1 hf ) ) IOT ICl'aAM.Y 1"I ) llCMI "Goodbye Pork Pie" ( 198\, Drema) Kelly Johneon. Tony Barry A young punk tlHIS a rental ear and drives ii ace~ New ieetand with the police In • pwsult and encounters a nost ol cherac- t8fS a lne way 'R' (I tu • 30 mtn ) mTMAT 1':11 al) llCMI "They Shoot Horses. Don t They?'' (1969, Orama) Jane Fonda Michael Sarr~ A OepfM$lon.era d.il.nce marathon IS entered by a )'Ollng couple In need ot the prize money (2 hr& • 35 min ) •& llCMI "Cannon Run"' (1981. Comedy) BUtt Aeyo~ Dom Del u Various Oddba char ctll's compete In a eoa11t·to-cout auto r ~ Al (2 his l 0 6' llGIHWAY TO MIA (Prem ere) Jonathan Smith. an ng on probet;on sent to Earth to hefP people In need, en! ts the aid of an ll Polleo otfleer lo 1 plan to llelp an tkierty w n and her tr ve the r r tlr 1 from deStrvctron St rs Mic landOn nd Vle1or Ftencn. (2 hr$ ) Sunday, Sept. 16, 1984 19 D llCMI "Giant" (Part 2 of 2) ( 1956. Orama) Elizabeth l'aytor, James Dean Based on the &t~ by Edna Ferber. Texas ranch hie and the R_Ursu1t of oit wealth affect th<ee people (2 hrs.) D @) nll PAU. OAlf (Season Premiere) Colt, How1e and Jody pursue a p<etty bail fumper to a resort hotel in search of a $3 million stolen treasure Stars Lee Maiors and=.Barr. (I hr ) ~ ... :.Un l:'"Merrllt's Marauders" (1962. Adventure) Jett Chandler. Ty Hardin In • Burma, Genefal frank Merrill and his men try to destroy a strategic Japanese village during World War II (2 hrs ) fD A WALi MO*t 11tl .,;TW•Blll'l'llE..,IPllH ca. MY WITM al. 90Ym Examines the Impact of changes during the 1960s, Including automatton and computerize· lion. to show how much American society has been forced to accept In a shor1 time Q_(1hr.) CC) llOWll "South Paclhc" ( 1958, MU'Si- cal) M1tz1 Gaynor. Rossano Brazzi. An American woman felts in love with a Frenchman while stationed as a Navy nur&e in tha South Pacific duung World War II (2 hrs . 51 min ) ----.,. "Stapst1ek Of Another Kind' ( 19'M. Comedy) Jerry Lewis. Madehne Kahn A woman gtveS birth to unattractrve twins who are messengers from another planet sent to solve Earth's problems 'PG' (1hr .. 27 min) · ~~~ ATMIAIT CClmUM OaVld Brenner ho&la a perfOfmance by veteran comles Carl BaUantlne, Shelley Berman, Norm Crosby, Jackie Gayle, George Gobel, Jackie Vernon and Henny Young· Ima~~~-=) .. T1CT~DOUGM ~ LOVllOAT 1WT11TA&1•-••nn TOllQHT Featured, an Interview '(ifllh actre£S Nall Carter. '1!) AWi.Li TlllOU9l1MI TWBIWIHca. MY wmt al. 90Y9I Examines the impact of changes dunng the 1960s, 1nclud1ng automation and computer1za· t10n. to show hOw much Ame<ican society has been forced to Kctpt in a short time. I(~ .... .. u.:•AJlll)I .. ...... lCIT ~ U.'I TOMOMOW The tconomlc end 10Clal ch8nges and chai.. leng1ng trendS of L05 Angeles are F.ed (1 hr) ll'OllTaOOI( (IQ llCMI "Double Jeopardy" ( 1955, Mystery) Rod Came<oo. Jack Kelly A wealthy real estate man attempts to v1ndl· cat1 h1msell from charges of having mur· dered an extorhoo1st. ( 1 h< , 10 min.) llCMI "The Toy'' (1982. Comedy) Richard Pryor, Jackie GleaSOl'I A multlmil· llonalre hires an unemployed black man aa a plaything for h11 spolied young son. 'PO' ( t hr .. 40 min ) ........ llTCllCOCl....n •CJ) llOWI "Skyway To Death" (1974, Suspense) Bobby Sherman, Stefanie Powers Snow hampers rescue efforts alter a pe ·filled Hnat tramway Is It ltated 1 ht,, 30 min > ID •A M¥1VM.Aloot<at 20 Sunday. Sep1 . 18, 198• the cuiturel. political and religious Hie o1 a na11on located m a remote area of lhe eastern Himalayas and barely !ouched by the 20th century. }'h',) (E) llOCllT •HW. Robtrl Woods YS u J, Puckett (R) ( 1 hr.) ·CH) Titl llYllTIUTOH: CRUIADIMO ••••O.nllAlt -;'&a DAN• .. ,_ Inter· nationally renowned pholOJOOrnellsts Grey Davis and Claud~ londoo rry to drscover who Is killing the most eh~1ble bachelo<s in New Y()(k before Davis himself becomes a Vlcllm. ( 1 hr.) D GD tr .... ca Auschtander's tight against cancer takes a turn fOf the wofse, and Mor11son dates for the ltrst time since his wife's d.ath. (R) ( 1 hr.) • = T'n11 Ullf 15 IMUTMt A....,._ UVIYAL A look at the cultural, pohtlcal and rel.g10US Ille ot a nation localed In a remote area of the eastern Himalayas and barely touched by the 20th century. ( 1 hr.) (ff)IUT .,_ • 1"1 mt CIRAOI A comedy about a successful lawyer who has the chance 10 realize hrs adolescent lenta$1es abOUI a beautiful former schoolmate Stars Tim Matheson. Annelle O'Toole, Kath=arrold and Jim Belushi (1 hr.) ''The Stud" ( 1978, Dfama) Joan Colhns, Oliver Tobias A wa1te< advances hla career by gteeptng with his ;s9~~A;i5 min) .,.(ll)llCMI "Stranger On The Run" (1967. Western) Henry Fonda. Michael Parks A murdef suspect la ruthlesSly hunted by a New Mexico lawman. who It unconcerned with the man'• guilt or innocence. (2 hr&.) ..... w ... I PAU.Am-CW•.W.O..,. DOll.-.cA MGMIMCMWIDl.Y mVll "lrraslstlble" ( 1981, Orama) Samantha Fox. Richard Pacheco A bored husband Is sent on • Journey of sensuoim adventure ( l hr , 26 min ) )tm.l'M 1W DDCl)®l fl)'1'..a TAXI · ROWMlllAITll'I~ llCMI "Trapped" ( 1975. Suspense) Jame Broun, Susan Clark Upon recover· Ing from unconsciousness, a man awak· ens 1n a cloMtd department 11out ancl dis· COvif S tl\al II .. protected b)' VICIOUS dogs• tht.30m1n) ..,. ...... ICIUD IOLD Nrrl MIOGDl•l•DM ~ • COMCUT The band made ~ar by the h ts "Harden M)' Hea1t,' "Find Anoth r FOOi" and "Take Me To Heart" performs befOle en audi· ence at the Holri;ood Palace .olTtca llOVll "Brealhl-Oss" ( t98J, Orama) Richard Gere, Vaierto Kaprln&ky ... A tree· sp1111ed auto thief untntenhonany kills a patrolman end later develOP' an obses· s1ve a11rac11on to a yoong woman 'R' ( 1 hr. 4I1r11n.) lnllAOVPU .ml •·e,reathle$1" ( t983, Orama) Ric.hard Gero, Valtw1e Kapr naky A free· spirited auto thief unintentionally kills a palK>lman end lot r develops an obS tive attrectlOn 10 • young woman R' I 1 hr. 41 min.) • 1WIJ (I)•••'.&. Magnum 'joins a pro toot~n 1 am n tra ning \o protect an old friend whO mav be I it 1 rg I of en $50!1· sin. lRJ (I tv .• 10 min) 0 8) tOllQK1' Hott Johnny Carson Scheduled actor Jason Bateman ( 1 ht ) l ;o=.~ .,. .. Angels In The 0Utf1eld' ( 1951. Fantasy) Paul Douglas. Jane Le•gh. Cele611al forces spur the P1ttsbuf ! P11ates on an unusual winning 11ruk (. hrs.~ • l1'MITI °'WI fWQICO 15 LAllJIGlff AlmlCA Scheduled· ex CIA agent David MacM1chael defends tu cnhclflm ot Pr8Sldent Reagan's Latll Amettcan pollCy ( I hr ) ,..-World Couples Championsh11 finals (lrom H11ton Head SC.). (A) (. hrs) .OJ llOYll "The Sender" ( 1982, Horror Kathryn Harrold, Zeiiko tvanek. A flurry c 1e1epath1c halluclnalions 1s unleasl\ed et psychiatric hospital when a sulctd• patient Wt.th uncontrollable psychiC pov. ers 1s adrnlt1ed. 'R' ( 1 h< , 30 min ) m111ew1 1bel(S) .ml "Sllll 01 The Night" ( 198~ Suspense) Roy Scheider. Meryl Streep , .. psychiatrist becomes 1 mereesingl 1nvOlved with a mysterK>US woman wh was the llllStress ol a murdered patten 'PG' (I hr •• 30min) ' 129 ~zc. . mm HOU.nrooo llCMI ''Once Upon A Time In Th West" (Part t 01 2) ( 1969. Western Henry Fonda. Claudia CardctWle A gur tighter auempts to coni<ol a valuable tree oT land n 19th-cenlury Kansas (1 h<, • min) _ 1 ~ llOYll ·"ftW Big Fut'" ( 1978. Mystery A1ch1ud Oreyiuss. Susan Anspach A unconvenhonal pr1Yata detective, whO we deeply involved in the '60s protests. drawn into a case 1n11oiv1ng pohlical co '.!:Piton and murder 'PG' ( 1 hr 48 rrun ) ~(!Z) .ml "The lpcress File" ( 1965, Ou ma) Michael Caine. Nigel Green A prl· oner ass~ned 10 British Army lntclilgenc 1s comm1ss1ooed to retrieve a defecle sc1ent1s1. (2 hrs. 10 min) tl:il D G) LATI 9IClf1' WITM DAVID l.llnlml Scheduled Biii Cosby, Gretchen WardE (demonstration of medic.I oddities). Mu America 1985. ( 1 hr ) I MIMDtm:MCOCl-,..--m- MmMmo ............ llCMI "Popi" ( 1969, Comedy) All Arkin, Rita Moreno A Puerto R;can w" owet plans to set his two 1on1 ad11t1 in tt ocean ln hopes that they wilt find a bell homl L~~AMmLI ... TIMI 1M llOVll "Hardhat And Leo• (1980, Comedy) KeWI Dobson, Share Gtess An amorous construction wixk begins a complicated and humoroc romance with an e1trach11e sex educa11c teacher (R) (I hr .. 20 min ) 1M (H) llOVil "Ah'plane II The Sequa 1 (1982, Comedy) Robert Hays, :Julte Ha erl)' A commercial pace shultlft comp ny 01t1rnp1s 10 keep a pilot from reveall• the problems with 111 first craft bafore lakes olf on 11s maiden flight PG' (1 h 25m1n) ICMAM.a CMAM.110MntlflUIC8 ttl llOW9 ''The Outglder" ( 1967, M) leryl De11en McGavtn. S n G rr~ ptlVllte de1ective hfred 10 tigat tamale ambeulet (2 t'tr I mT 0. U. TODAY ... •· 11 Snnd' f~ 5 Ad>it • ~ -Weclwclay ~Id. . ~ ( ) 9 I t ) n s s I· I• e d .. n s n ,_ e !f ~· il· ig ll · .. &· A a n lure) Ralph M•er. Mafia English A btothef and 11Sttl' tetk vengeance on the French Foreign Legioo, whom they be eve murdered their father O[lty to later learn that the actual killtf was a member ol their own family (2 hrs ) e llO¥ll "Act One" ( 1963, Biography) George HamDtoo Jason Robards The lure or thMtClf hfe pcoves too strong for a Jewrsh bOy. ( 1 ht • 30 min.) • (Q) llO¥ll "Daniel" ( 1983. Orama) Timo- thy Hutton, Mandy Pat1nk1n Based on E.L. Doctorow's novel "The Book Of Oan- 1e1.~· A graduate student probes the evenls surrounding his parents' execution as Ru$Slan nuclear sp• 'R' (2 hrs • 9 mm.) • CZ) llCMI "Saint Jack" ( t979. Orama) Ben Gazzara. Denholm Elliot A scheming American expatriate sets up an empire of black-market activities and prostitution In the busy strHts of Singapore. 'A' ( 1 hr . 52 mm.) di( llO'ftl "Eddie Macon's Run" ( 1983. Orama) John Schnelder, Kirk Douglas An escaped criminal becomes the qutrry of a ruthless law office<. 'PG' ( t ht,, 35 min ) W •MAY..., UNTAIMAT- ROWMllMl1WIUUGM• 19 llO¥ll "Naughty W'tves" ( 197<4. Com- edy) Brendon Pnce. Jacqueline Logan A young man from the country finds that his iob as a door-to-door eelesman in London has some unexpected bOnuSeS R' ( 1 hr .. 20 min.) •Cl) "Goodbye Pork Pie" (1981. Orama) Kelly Johnson. Tony Barry. (1 hr . 30 min) •az> "The Spiral Stalrc9se" (1946, Suspense) Dorothy McGuire, George Brent (2 hrs) •CCJ "My Bodyguard" (1979, Orama) Chua Makepeace Adsm Baldwin ( 1 hr • 38m1n) ·11:. ... .-TWATCM 1:9 W&DAT&.Mm .,.. "The World According To Garp" (1982, Comedy) Robin W1lliams, Mary Beth Hoo. The son of an unmarned peep school nur• enjoys • life full of adventures. C01ncidences and bizarre 191char:s. 'R' (2 hrs. 15 min) ..,,.MUllT ., .... ,_ ' • .,.. "An American Dream" (1966. Orama) Stuart Whitman. Janet L1tgh A telev1S100 reporter It caught between the syndicate lor expoeing their police con- nections and the police for his wife's mur- der.~~-..CO ~ llO'ftl "Gaslight" ( HJ.44, Suspense) Charles Boyer, Ingrid Bergman. A d1aboli· cal husband sets out to drive his wife insane (2 hrs .. 30 min ) ~-=-"Conf8SSIOOI Of A Window Cleaner" (1974, Comedy) Robin A~ with, Anthony Booth. A Btllish window cleaner puts a sparkle Into the Kvee ot the many women he beds down. 'R' ( 1 hr .. 30 min) 1:9 CC) .,_ "The SOidier" ( 1982. Adven- ture) Ken Wahl, William Prince A ruthless CIA agent Is sent to neutralize a Soviet- backed ttc'ronst ptot to hold the Mideast hostage with nuclear explosives 'R' ( t hr, 30 min.) NI "The Blood Of Others" ( 19a., Ora· ma) Jodie Fost91'. Mtehael Ontkean. (2 hrs .• 56 mrn) CZ) "The Toy" (1982, Comedy) Richard e!Yor. Jackie Gleason (1hr.,40mln.) •l.C.l "Torn Between Two lovers" ( 1979. Orama) Lee Remick. George Peppard ( 1 hr , •O mm.) ~ "Curse Of The Prnk Panthef" ( 1983. Comedy) Ted Wass, David Niven ( 1 hr .. •Om1n.) -~·Ami• .... ,...., I llOWll "The World According To Garp" (1982. Comedy) Robin Willi8ma. Mary Beth Hurt. Based on John lmng'a novel The son of an unmarried prep school nurse becomes a succesaf\11 author, but his lame Is aooo CMN'aha- dOwed by that of his crusading feminist mother. 'A' (2 his.. 16 min l .. 1 CllC..,.....,mol1' ... econ -...,. .. M...-rl ..... ,... .. '-*"' .. .=.':$-.=.~"= comtCS can Ballantine, Shelley Berman, Norm Crosby. Jackie Gayle. George Gobel. Jackie Vernon and Hermy Young- man lt hr .. 20 min l .. IUTLHI •MITM QRAal A comedy about a successful lawyer who has the chance to reallle his adolescent fantasies about a beautiful for"* schoolmate Stars Tim Matheson, Annette O'Toolt, Kathryn HarrOld and Jtm BelUshl ( t hi'.) •tcJ llOWll "Trail Of The Piok Panther" (1982. Comedy) Peter Sellers. David N1Ven FOiiowing the cftsappearanci of bumbling French police detect111t Inspec- tor Clouseau. a TV reporttr tntervlewt frieods. family and enemies to put togeth- er a profile ol his fife 'PG' ( t hr ... 35 min.) "Grease 2" (1982, MU$iC81) Maxwell C8ulf1eld, Mtehelle P1t1H8f (1 hr.. 55 min) •Cl) "Hot Touch" ( 1982, Drama) Wayne Rogers. Marie-Frances PISltl' ( 1 hr., 32 min.) .. CC) "Who's Afraid 01 V1rg1ma We>o'f?" ( t966. Orama) Elizabeth Taylor. Richard Burton (2 hrs • 9 min ) .. A Lady Without A Passport" ( 1950, Ol'ama} Hedv Lamarr. John Hod1ak (t Under New ManageJDent St•1'\'1ns: \II fo'.11tlio; ~ Dean A. Dempst)' Ot•u•J Muacu I larbo1· l~cl\\11 · ~<)ttnt Olire ~ lcn1oriaf PHrli · ~ 101·1 unrr · • • µfknw'd S. IDdalck ,-P.-11...naJC......... Costa Mesa's Only Co mplete Funeral Facilities PHONE TODAY FOR FREE INFORMATION 1625 Gisi er Ave. Costa Mesa (Gltl•r Ave . at HarbOr Blvd.t 540-5554 Sunday.Sept. 16, 1984 21 f · hr .• 12 mtn.) m "Back Door To Heaven" (1939. Ora- ma) Van Hetun. W1tlace FOfd. ( 1 hr • 30 min.) -a.I "Ollllnge('' ( 1945, Orama) Lawrence Tierney. Anne Jeffreys ( 1 hr • 30 min.) -· "W1thoUt Retef'Vatlons" (1948. Com-edy) Claudetta Colbert. John Wayne (2 hrs) tW(J) "Deal Of The Centwy" (1983, Com&- cly) Chevy ChaM, Sigourney Weaver. ( 1 hf .• 38 min.) tW® "Eddie Macon'• Run" (1983, Orama) John Schnetdef. Kirk Ooog&aa (1 hr .• 35 min) _., ...... 11ov1 .. - -· "Mary. Mary" (1963. Comedy) Deb-bie Reynolds, Barry Nelson (2 hrs ) CD> "My Fav0f1l1 Year" ( 1962. Comedy) Pater O'TOOle. Jeak:a Harper (1 hr. 35 mlo.) (I) "ONI Of The CemUfy'' (1983. Com&- dy) Chevy Chaae, Slgoutney Weaver ( 1 hr., 38 min.) •CC> "All The Prnldent's Man" (1976. Orama) Robert RedfOfd, Dustin Hottman ~ hrs.. 20 min ) W (l) "The WOfld According To Garp" ( 1982. Comedy) Robin W1lllams, Mary Beth Hurt. (2 hrs .. 16 min.) W ® "The Bunker" (1981, Drama) An1ho- ny Hopkins, Richard Jordon (2 hrs .. 30 min) •CD> "Hammett" ( 1982, Mysttfy) Frederic FOfrest. Peter Boyte ( 1 tw , ~ min.) (I) "The Next Ona" ( 1982. Scienoe-Ac- llon) Keir Dullea, Adrienne Barbeau ( 1 tw'., 35 min.) -~"David And Lisa" ( 1962. Orama) Keir Dullea, Janet Margolin ( 1 IV , ~ min ) •CD "YOf" (1983, Orama) Reb &own. Cotinne Clefy ( 1 hr • 28 min ) -~ "Challenge To Be Free" (1975. Adventure) Mike Mazurk!, Jimmy Kane. 11 hr., 28 min.) •OJ •'Smokey And The Bandit Part 3' • ( 1983. Adventure) Jackie Gleason. Jerry Reed ( 1 hr, 26 ITIU"L) Cl) "Grease 2" (19e2, MUSieal) Maxwell CaUlfleld. MIChelle Pfeitter. ( 1 tw' • 55 min) CZ) "The Toy" ( 1982, Comedy) Rtchard Pryor. Jackie Gleason. ( 1 hr , 40 min.) -go ... Clll ... 22 .. /LOIO ,._..CO.MY Mm.TM tAUC"nCA •• •1190M" .... .... .. "TOfn Between Two Lovera'' (1979. Otema) Lee AetNelc, Geotge Pep- Pllld A woman devoted 10 het husband and tot\ becomea romantically involved Yrith 1 ohlrmlng, tophlsueated erchltect. 11 tw'~O min.) (I) 1111" .. W.Harokl Petty vt. 0'9'1 Rlchardaon fOf the NABF Bin· tatnwwlghl ChampiOMhip, acheduted for 12 rounds (Jive fWom lat Veg.n, ,_ ) • (2 '" • 30 min ) (8) ... "0.1 Of Thi Century" ( 1983, Comedy) Ch1-wy Chatt, Sigoorney w .. "* Whet\ a high ttehnology ultra- *Npon IUfl'lt out to bt defective. 111 ma.n· Sunday, Sept. 16, 198'4 ,, -------~-- utacturer hifn an arme hustle< to dlepole of it. 'PG' l 1 hr .. 38 min.) cm~ DIC:aVMDYll .. ... Tllm'I Cf9#1Y ... IMCI" ,.._ ..... -..flOlnm IUIAllTBTllllU9IMMITI COlllAlTm.,.... -DICSYMDYD -.... .... LMIOAl .... Q '.a ••ttJlll F.na.•sts 1n a Seventeen Magazine cover g1r1 contest. daredevil motorcyctiSt Reckless Rex . mo-= WOllAll ... anaTAINIWT TOlltlfT Featured Bil- ly Dee Williams dlSCUSIM hie upcoming rOle~=~ l;r=:: -The Mffnl ·~ beached and the captain's life 1a jeopard- tzed. a look at the U S. Army Environmen- tal Research Labs Q CO .,.. "The Real Glory" ( 1939. Ora- ma) Gary Cooper, David Niven A military dOCtOf aids In medical and polttlcal 1reas 1n the Phillpplnes following the Spanish- American War. ( 1 hr • 35 mtn.) CO) ... "Footloose" ( 198... Ofama) KeY1n Bacon. Lon Singer. Teeo-egera In• small town fight '°' their right to dance at\d etage a prom despite oppo<lon from their con&eN1t1ve parents 'PG' ( 1 hf . 47 mll'I) 9'0Ca•TMI• .,.. "0.at Of The Century" ( 1983. Comady) Chevy Chase. 'Sigourney Weaver When a high technok>gy ullra- weapon turn• out to be defectr.-e, Ila man- ufacturer hires an arms hustler to dispose of 11 'PG' ( 1 hr • 38 min ) I PACllllUCU 1:9 t Cll M TOR Featured. tn Holland. tOUf the Delft porcelain faetOfy, lessons 1n cheesemaktng and shoecarvlng. the tullp tradition. I GD 'Al&YflUD m Cll LA. FeatUfed a volleyball showdown In Santa Barbara. a profile of a 5-4-year-oid nun who competea In running [~~Tn9 ..... CCUlf ......... fJ/l .umM.t CMUllllM&.--WMAT\'MCHL-lllU.D..,. High school students discun MXual usautt and lhe ways to entteipeio and mln1m12er!sk1 Q ( 1 hr,) "'"''... . M Q1HICMI "Lavera And Other Strangers"' ( 1970. Comedy) Gig Young. Anne Jack son A modern young couple'• cour1sh1p and wedding ate lntetrtlatad with tho llvet of thtit lamil11t and friends (2 hra , 5 m1n.l_ • 8 (I).,.. .. '"' Magnum comes to the aid of a women who was Injured a1 an appwen1ty Innocent tryatandlr In a freak llQCiOilOt whit he WU pufltiing cnrninal ~ti. (R) ( 1 ht,) D Cl M COllY tMOW (Premiere) An obstetriclan IN1ng \n New YOfk with hia lawyer wit• and t"91r lout ch1ldl'9n Ines to nd QUltf ntghl et hOme. $tat'1 BUI no Phytiela A~•AUen e ''Soldl Of Fortune" C1963 Adventure) Clark Gable. SU81n Hayward An Amefiean ph01ogrer;:>her Is rescued from impriSOnment In Red China t>:· 1 gun- runner (2 hrs. I . G ®) NOfU DO Tlll CUZllfT ,_ (Premiere) Bert Convy hosts segments featu11ng ordinary people caught In unusu- ; aJ si~ 11.D .,.•Win ~'The Islander" ( 1978, Orama) Dennis Weaver. Sharon Glass A rehred mall'lland lawyer buys a Honolutu hotel and becomn entangled wtlh a runaway w1tne6S, a U S SenatOf and a ruthleS.s mobster = fD 11.D ~ "LMng With Witdhte'" Marty Stouffer Illustrates how we can best hve with and preserve our natural he11tage of w1ldltfe. (R) CC) mVll "Who's Afraid Of Virg nia Woolf?" (1966, Orama) Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton A casoal get-togethet between two university prof8"0fs anc their wives explodes m 1 night of psycho- log1e11 furor that reveals the Inner tenslont and marital tu1molls etfecttng one of the couj:)leS (2 hra. 9 mio) CID -Tlll l9IL Hosts Len Oawaon Nick Buon1cont1 ( 1 hr ) mVll "Deal Of The Century" ( 1983 Comedy) Chevy Chase, $igourne) Weavet When. a high technology ultra weapon turns out to be defective, its man ufacturer hires an arms hustler to dcspoM of 11 'PG' ( 1 ht . 38 min ) m aouoca 11111 •0 G') PAl&Y'111 When Elyse is Stricker with gambling lever on a business trip tc Atfanttc City, she risks her job and th< tam11i._S ~ 0 WV M IOUt (Premiere) /. streetwise, tuo-1ov1ng man Is lhe house keeper '°' 1 beaU11lut c0tpatat1 executM with a sophlflhcated hle&tyle. Stars Ton: Danza end Judith Light c;i I nc TAC DOUGH UMIOAT llf1'8Tll.IW TOlltlfT Featured Bit ly Dee Williams d•SCU5Sel his upcomtl'lf rOle on ··0y~ mwALT'd m.._ Cl) 11'18'•¥1 "Serge1nt Cnbb Ma• Hatter's Holiday" The sergeoant Is called it when the diamembefed remains of • bod are di&covered on Brighton Beach. (R) c; ll'u I ~ • Cl) -a -A surgeon h1r• A.J and Riek to prove that a man wino him 1s faking parapl-:9.i•. but even th S1mon11' beat tricks can t CO.• lh! fraud t Sland up (A) ( 1 ht ) 0 ID ~ The relat10fishlp be-twee Sam and Oiane t>ecomea strained whe She tries 10 present him With a Pof1ra11 c herself painted by an eccentric ar11St (R l ..hlJ ®l ounDQ .... MmlCA ITAlW Al.Mt -TM IATT\I Tony Randall hosll this update o lelenllst • eltOftS to pr&'/tnl hea11 <Use CB!)C8f 1nd car acc1<SM1t. ( 1 hr ) • ICS'f •-.&.: WATa WU&.TM M Jiowa Clete Roblfts narrates a tuNey c the polllic• and playera behk'ld Ca torn1a' mo&t 11 lua~ rnource watet (1 tv.) ..... OQ .,.. ''Eddie Macon'• Run" (1 · Drama) John Schneider. Kirk Doug A isceped cnmlnat becomes the quarry of rut taw,plt1eer. 'PG' ( 1 hr .. 35 min.) llOWll "The Toy" (U:IG2. Corned) Rlcharc>Pryor, Jaekle G ~ A. muttim J ! ) ) ' f I , .. I> 1f • l. n • ) I· liona11e hires an unemP'OY.ed black man as a plaything IOf his apoiltd young son. 'PG' (1 hr, 40 min) ©) lllWll "Curse 01 The Pink Panther" (l983. Comedy) Ted Wass, David Niven A bumbling New York City cop Interviews a host ot supSaCIOOI chllractefS W'I hl8 1rweshga11on of the theft ot the tat>utoos Pink Panther diamond. 'PG' (f hf .. 40 fl)'~ North Dallas Forty" ( 1979, Comedy) Nick Notte, Mac Davis. Groupies. ptll·popping and all•nlghl party· ing begin to take their toll on two fon-lov· ing bUt over·the-hil football players 'R' ~hrs) ~ - ~Mn'CMCOCl..-rl • llCMI "The Mom1ng After" ( 1974. Drama) OlCk Van Dyke, Lynn Carlin Through pre&aures in hit jOb and the respon11bihhes ol hit uppet middle-class ~le. a man starts drinking and eventually I06es au he ever worked !Of. (1 hr , 30 min) 6'i) llAITDllllCI TltlATM "Private Schulz" A street-wise German, just released from laU where he setved e sen- tence lot fraud, Is dralled Into the Army and asslalled to SS counter8$pl()Oage if'art 1 ol 6) (R) c;J ( 1 hr.) CE T(» U. IODIQ Harold Petty vs Oreg Richardson IOI' the NABF Ban- tamweight Champ.onstup, scheduled tor 12 round$ (from las Vegas. Nev.). (R) ~hrs. 30 min.) .. 01) llCMI "Paris When II SluJes" (1964, Comedy) W11l1am Holdel'I. AUdrey Hep- burn A wntar neg1tets his work while ChaSing hlS seuetary atound Pans (2 hrs.ts ~ -a Cl) ~ Aher a woman Is murdered 1n h1a office, Hammer must hnd out II ha was actually the ntended target {B) j I hf.) 0 m MLL. ITMIT a.ua Renko gets cold feet minutH before hit wedding. Daven· port makas plan& to fly to Paris, and thtee loan shark• ulze a jail bUs (A) ( 1 hr ) B m ... • t • (Seasoo Prerrue1e) Corre- spondents lni;luding Barbara Walters. Tom Jarriel and Geraldo Riv-er• present lrwesttgative reports. special teatUtes ind personality profiles Hugh Downs returns as series host c;J (1 hr,) iJ MTUllt Ol 1'MI '*' 8) 1M11M MMIA "The Kingdom" The h1s.- t0ty ot the Saudi Arabian people is traced. focusing on the economle end pol1UC1I eVOlutiOn ol tha country under King Faisal A) J.:oh!J.. ) ~ .. WT wrm, .... _., ~ --1:·--...... ...,. ... LNMI M. MO'll'I .... CUit llO¥M Looks at the careor of the turn· of.Iha century traveling showman who lnttOduoed much ol rural America to the plCture c:omlA~ IT'UmA'ntT_..l.IUCYQ .. llCMI " he Puuycat Syndrome" ( 1980) Two fa6h•on models find them set fi 1n tor &ome auprlM pfClurt taking ab04ra • vac11.on Cru•ti hip ntar Creee 1 hr • 33 tn n_J ,tjl a mm .. TAii . .,.. , ..,.. uu.e • llCMI "Savage" (1972. Dr mal &r· bara BtM. Mart"' Landau A supreme court l\omillee lnvtlStlgated by a TV n comment 'YI m {1ht '30mn) TMl&ild• .. ....,"" 1'MI toOD ,. ··-.WW "All The Presidenl't Men" ( 1976. Otema) Robett RedfOfd, Dustin Holtman Based on the book by Cart Bematein and Bob Woodward Two W11t11ngtoo Post reporters experience l:onatant tetbacks while ~enng the 1<:anda10US facts behind the Watergate break·tn. 'PG' (2 hrs. 20 min.) llOWll "Cu,o" (1983, SuspenM) Dee Wallace. DaMy Plnteuro A woman end he< young son are trepped In their car at an isolated auto repe11 yard by a huge. ra~~ tv .. 31 min.) .WW "Private School" ( 1983, Come- dy) Phoebe Cates, Betsy Rossell. Teeo- aged boys Visit the all:-01rls • Che<ryvale Academy for eome tun ttnd adVenture 'R' 1 hr . 37 min ) .,.. "The tnfemal Tno" (1974, Ora- ma) Aomy Schneider, Michel P1ecoll Three people beCOma nch by arranging the murder• of wealthy ecqualn· tances (2 his ) 11:11 fl Cl) lmWIUlf DtCk and JoaMI learn that a very old human t>ody· iS buried lfl the inn's t>uement. (R) D m TmGHr Host JoMoy Carson Schedu ed Steve Martin, actress Annie Pot:od~ 1 9 1& ... ..num I .WW "Battle Beneath The Earth" ( 1968. Science-FICtlOO) Kerwin Mathews. VMaf'le Ventura. The Chinese p<epere to attack America by tunnelillg through Earth and placing nuclear weapons under majOr U S c1tle8 (2 hrs ) . I VIQM ... 11-11 Of IM MAllCllCO LAW ~CA SchedUled author and lecturer Leo Bu5eaglia ahares excerpts from hit new boo!< "Lovtng Each Other". Dick Van Patten, star in an epi· sode of the new fall PBS childfen's series "WonderWorks " ( t hr ) (0) llOWll "Debbie Ooel Dallas" (t978. Comedy) Bambi WOOdS, R Bolte A sexy young woman fjnds a un.ique means ol earning cesh 1n order to try out tor• Texas =~team ( t hr .. 10 min) 1ttl(11) llCMI "The Outsider" (1967, M~ ttfy) Darren McGavin, Sean Garrison A pfwate detective tt hired to investigate a female embeulef. (2 hfa.) -11'Rmflm mCMe-...YWOOO MOVll "Once Upon A Time In The Weat" (Part 2 of 2) ( 1969. We&tern) Henry Fonda, ClaU<ile Card nale A gon- l~tet a11empts to control a valUable trtct ol iand tn Ulth-ntury Kansas (1 l'lt • ..0 min I ...... _,N ___ ,,_ .... -_."The Ofdeal Of 8111 Carney'' ( 1981, Orama) Ray Sharkey, Richard Crl!!MA Bbsed on the true story ol a man woo oes a k>ng legal ballle to regain cuslOdy of his two sons aflet he surfers en accident In the Army ReseNts that reM- ert fllm a quadrapl le (R) ( 1 ht .. 65 m1n.L HD m ~11Wlft'MOAWltLlitU .... Scheduled authOf L 1$1 Blmb8Ch. Karel SouO k (went OVflt Nla~ra F In • ber· tel) (I hf , I ............ QICOCIC-,.. ~· Mm~O ..... " ... ..._ '')'he Se11QhUnter1" I 19G8, West rn) Bur~ ' ,...... h.il" 1 •rar!t. A fur trader tracks down a bend ot scai.. phunters to regain his stOlen furs and free e kidna.pped NeQfo •~ (2 hrs ) LM,,AW<MmLI VOYMI llAIMA11 Gene McComb vs ~ f'i4 fO< the U S Light Middleweight Championship. scheduled IOI' nine rounc:IS (from Lake' Cherlel, La I (R) ( 1 hr. 30 men.) llCMI "Deal Of The century" (1983, Comedy) Chevy Chase. Sigourney Weaver. When a high technology uttre- weapon turns out to be defect1'te, ltJ men-- ulacturec hites an arms hustler to dispose Ol 1t 'PG' ( 1 tv .. 38 tTWl I 11:9 .,_ "The Next Ona" ( 1982, Scl- ence-Ftellon) Kw Dullea. Adrianna Ber· beau A man from the future b<eaks the t11Tie betrl8f and lands on an llolated island (1 hr . 35 fTlln ) tM llCMI ''Piggy's" ( 1983, Comedy) Jerry Butler, Laur• Smrth. Thr" unem- ployed college graduates try to run a bar but only manege to tum a profit when they turn tt Into a bordeUo ( 1 hr , 20 min) W 8 llON "Shadow Over Elvefon" ( 1968, Drama) James FraflCISCUS, Leslie NaelSen After the she<1tt rTUders a young boy. an incouupt1ble man sets out to bring dlgOlty back to the hearts of the townspeople. (2 hrs) ...., OIU. TOOAT .,. "Kansas City Confidential" ( 1952. Mystery) John Payne. Preston Fosttf. A gang ot bank thieves blaze e trail lrom Kansas City to central Amenca leaving only a playing card as a clue to the r wheteabouts (2 hrs ) G> llCMI "A Fever In The Blood" (1961. Drama) Efrem Zimba t Jt., Angie Oickio- son A seneattonal murder trial becomes a _ pavm In the pollhcat games played by a senat<>t. a d1stnct attorney and a judge n thelf separate bids 10 become governor 1 hr, 30 min.) .WW "Breathless" ( 1983, Orama) Richard Gere. Valerie Kaprinsky A tree- spinted auto thiaf uninlentlOl'lally k1 a patrolman and later develops an ob&eS· SNa aurachon 10 a young woman 'R' ( t ht. 4t min) tll(C) llCMI "The Groove Tuba" ( 1974. Comedy) Ken Shapiro. A1ctulrd Setzet TeleviSIOfl cliches are satwiled in a series ot &ketches and 11bald spoo 'R' ( t hr~ 15 min.) • tit .... ,...., M --·~ "' ...-.nmu.u. -IE~IWTWATat -' '11 .. "Night Of The Jugg '' (1980, Suspense) James tirolin, ciitl Gorman. A former police officer launches. daiP41fare rch through the 1trMt9 ot New York City '°' his mClslng daughtet. mistakenly kidnapped by• pcyt"°P9thic crl 'A' 1hl .. •1min) ta mVll "Knlghtridflf'" ( 1981, Adveo- turt) Ed Haroa. aty Lahti A group of bikers ride with a traveling,.,_ nee lair encl dlteevet ttult the le atruggle aQai0$1 evil •• 11 in modem t also .. ·A· ~~i . 25 min l .... MUIT • rnnw .. .. "My Bodyguard" r l970, Ora· Sunday, Sept. 18, 198• 23 ma) Chris Makepeace, Adam Baldwin The new kid at a Chicago high school makes friends with the tchOol outcast and ' together they etand up to the cruel gang that had persecuted them both 'PG' ( 1 tv., 38 min.) •(%)CMA&d~OIMPUI- -·.,.. "Once You Km A Stranget"" ( 1969. Drama) Paul Burke. Carol Lynley. A chotlc tries to get a golfer to kill he< 18tnst (2 hrs.) •llMTIUO llCMI "Thirty Seconds Cher Tokyo" (19«, Orama) Spencer Tracy, Van John- son General Jimmy Oooltnle prepar• tor and commands 8-29s 111 bombing mia- slons over Japan. (3 hrs.) -l'riclay -Momlngllovlell- •(%) "North Oellu Forty" ( 1979, Comedy) Nick Nolte, Mac Davis (2 hrs.) •ct> "In Love And War" ( 1958, Drama) Robeft Wagne<, Jeffrey Hunter. ( 1 ht . 51 min.) •GZ> "A Woman's Secret" (1949, Orama) Maureen O'Hara. Melvyn Douglas (2 lvs) Nl(H) "Klng Of The Mountain" (1981, Adventure) Harry HamHn, Joseph Bot- toms ( 1 hr . 30 ITllf'I ) (%) "Gal Young 'Un" (1979, Comedy) Dana Preu, David Peck ( 1 hr . 46 min.) .. CC) "Tomorrow" ( 1972. Drama) Rober1 Duvall. Olga Belltn. ( 1 hr • ~ m111.) CO) "Billy Jack" (1971. Orama) Tom Laughlin. Delores Textor ( 1 hr. 52 min.) "Romantic Comedy" ( 1983. Romance) Dudley Moore. Mary Stetnbur- ~ (1hr ,43mtn.) •w "U~Fire" (1983. Drama) Nick Nolle. Hact(man (2 his. 8 min.) -(CJ "Bel Infidel" ( 1959, Orama) Gre· ~ Peck. Oeb<>fah Kerr. (2 hrs .. 3 min ) CH) "Sakharov" ( 1'UM, Drama) Jason Robards. Glenda Jackeon. (2 hrs.) "Madame Bovary" (1950, Drama) Jennifer Jones. James Mason ( 1 ht • SS min.) fD "Sidewalks Of London" (1940, Ora- ma) Chari.. Laughton. VIVlen Leigh ( 1 hr., 30 min.) -(Ill "The Phantom Of The Ope<a" (1962, Horror) Herbert Lorn, Heather 5eer1. (2 hrs.) -· "Tenteon Al Table Rock" (1956, Ora· ma) Richard Egan, Dorothy Malone. (2 hrs) -· "I Died A Thovland Tlmea" ( 1955, 'Orama) Jaci< Pai.nee. Shelley Wtnten ~hra.) (Cl "Savennah Smtles" ( 1982, Adven- ture) Mark ~ii • Donovan Scott ( 1 Iv . 45 mm) (8) "A Streetcar Named Oe$1re" (1951, Orama) Vrvletl Letgh, Marton Brando (2 tws , 2 mtn.) CD> "Daniel" (1983. Drama) Timothy Hutton. Mandy Palinlilln (2 hrs . 9 mm.) "My Bodyguard" (1979, Drama) Chtit Makepeeoe, Adam Baldwin, ( 1 hr., 38 rnln) "lht ChoMn" ( 1981. Orame) Maxi· 24 Sunday. Sept. 16, 1984 -~~--- ' ~-=-"The WO<ld Accor(tjng To Garp" ( 1982. Comedy) Robin W111lame. Mary Beth Hurt. Based on John lrvlng's novel The eon of an unmarrliitd prep school nurse becomes a IUCCeSlfvt author. but hls fa~ Is soon over&ha· dowed by that of his crusading femlniat .. 1mo~~ (2 hrs , 16 min ) .,.llll 1WOO Ml CMICMO'I,_.,-...., -.o"..ax -econ ......... d ... "Just Tel Me What You Want" ( 1980. Comedy) AQ MacGraw, Alan King. A wealthy bUa1ness tycoon thinks he m1kan Sohell. Rod Steiger ( 1 hr., 48 min.) •CCJ "Gigot" ( 1962. Comedy) Jackie Gleaaoo. Katherine Kath ( 1 hr • 44 1T1U1 ) CID "I.alt Plant Out" ( 1983, Orama) Jan- MICheel Vinc.nt, Maty Crosby. ( 1 hr . 36 min.) (l) ''Blockade" ( t938 Adventure) Madeleme Carron. Henry Fonda ( 1 hr , 2Smm) ' •@"The Th111g" (1951 Science-Fiction) James Arness, Dewey Martin. ( 1 hr., 30 min) • "11 Came From HollywOOd" (1982, Comedy) John Candy, Den Ayt<royd. ( 1 . hr , 20 min ) · Ml CC) "l omorrowt' ( 1972. Ota ma) Robeft Duvall. Oloe ~ "' ( 1 hr .. 43 men.) 00 "The Water Babies'' ( 1979, ~anlasy) Animation and live ectlOn James Muon I ht .• 26 min.) • "NobOdy's Boy ( 1982, Drama) Ant· mated. Narrated by Jlm Backus ( 1 hr .. 21 min) • J "Krull" ( 1983. Fantasy) Ken Mar· ahall. Lysette Anthony. ( 1 tw •• 57 min ) ( "Gal Young 'Un" ( 1979. Comedy) Dena Preu. David Peck ( 1 ht., o45 min ) •07J ''With Six You Get Eggroll" (1968, Comedy) Dons Day, Bnan Keith (2 hrs ) --lil·venlng -g a ... .... 11/LOIO ,_..~ Um.mTMUUCTICA ....... 9Glf .... ---~ llOWll "Beloved Infidel" (1959, Ora- ma)'Gregory Peck, Oebor•h Keu Writer FA Scott Fitzgerald h8s 1 torrid affair with columnist Sheilah Graham (2 hfs • 3 min.) • ! ............... ...na Dick Cavett reviews Amencen transponatoo, Including paddle wheel steamlhtpt, the Wright brothers at Kitty Hawk nd out• apece exploratlOfl. n.-.,. ., •-w111ie Nelson & Family" The country slnoer performs "Always On My Mind." "Whlakey River" and "On The ROid Again." (1 Iv , 30 min) ll0¥9 •·Aomanhc Comedy" (t983, Romance) Oudley Mocxe. Mary Steenbut· gen. Two sucoesaful &oectwAy Wrtting oartners tnd a pan.onate rtlahonahip h8$ his mistress wen In fine until she demands he put her 111 charge of a r~t· ly acquired movie studio. 'R' ( 1 hr . 52 m1nJ..: ta ALDOCTOA ...... ,... (JI) llCMI "MonStgnor'' (1982. Orama) Chrlstopher Reeve, Genevieve Bujold An amb1tioua AmeflC81\ priest's secular actrvl· hes r.nclude mafia deals and carnal aHarrs. 'A'=) (Q) "Jeiemy" (1973. Romance) Robby Benson. Glynn11 O'Connor. Two teen·agera 81\COUnter love foe the first ttme, but not without facing many awk· ward 11tuatlOn5 along the way 'PG' ( 1 hr • 30 min.) G (Jl) I DMAll Of,.._ that lasted nine years 'PG' ( 1 hr.. 43 min) · DICI YM DYii ..... Mm'lef9Mf'f AIJCI ....,,.._ ...... -.OlflOll'Nm Mil CAWO.I · DICI YM D'fll Ml1=.eT =~ An inte~llW with "Fal· con Crest" star Lorenzo Lamas; highlights ot pest Em;r.:,w.,ard ceremonies . .aelC llnBTAI_,. TGelQHf Featured an 1nteMtW with recording art1'1s Daryl Hall and John Oates MTUALI -Ol llOll'Mll .,,,,,,, ........... -M Ill Hosts Len Dawson. Nick Buoniconh ( 1 hr ) llOYll "Cur&e Of The P1t1k Panther" ( 1983. Comedy) Ted Wal$, Oa111d Niven A bumbling New York City cop lntervleW9 a host of SUPSICIOUS characters 1n his investigation of the theft of the fabulous Pink Panther diamond. 'PG' (1 ht., 40 min) llOYll "The Chosen" ( 1981. Drama) Maiomtnan Schell, Rod Steiger. Baled or Chaim Potok' s novel A friendship slo~~ develops belWMn a WO.Idly, aM!mllattc Jew and the son of a Ha sld1e rabbi. 'PG' l hr . 48 min) PACUlPUCU 1111 IAW.U. Atlanla &aves at San Oiegc Padres (3 hrs ) 1llt 8 WAICI CW m1UL A behtnd·tho cameras gUmpse into 1he making of thf eight·hOUt productt0n of the up.com1~ m1n1·aetlea "Mistral's Daughter." BGD,Ala.YflUD · M OI LA. Featured meet 88.rbau Edwards. th 1984 Playboy, "Playmat• 01 Tho Year". a look at some amaz1n' com backs athletM have made Iron Slump petlOds; a lool( at some sexy ant attractNt aenlot lad• 11CTACOOUIM ........ l'MATl\19 --~ . ...... -.r ......... °' ........ ·----· .... M-.a. Texas Aal'lQtfs 11 Calll0t A (2 ht , 30 m.n ) I , ... M --FMU• ' . .. (() THI CUCU 06 MAJ2NI) (Season Pretrllefe) Bo and Luke recall how they rebu t the General L.. from a wreck, dOdged gonf rt from the etook• who had used it as a get way car. and MV9d Uoele Jesse's farm 111 a road race Stars Tom Wopet end John Schneldet. (1 hr.) 0 fl) DIM..,..,. IT1 ROAST A panel of oelebr1het. inclodlng Bob Hope. George Peppard and Nefl Carter, pays tnbute to Mr.Tat the MGM Grand Hotel. Las Vegas. Nev. (R) ( t hr.) ... "The Lady Kiiier•" (197 t. Mys-s) Burt Reynolds, Norman Fell A ice detective discovers that a friend of 1s"'is a murdefer and a student finds out that hit llOClng instructor Is Involved In a rrMJrdar.1~1~rQJ . 8 9 (S..son Premlett) Ben-'°" goes undercover to find out If the lleo· tenant governor IS taking brtbel from a construction company Stars Robert Guil· laume and Jamet Noble Q o.-...wu 8) H•Ml lot Aogelel Dodgers at Sill FraOCISCO Giant• (3 hrs ) m llCMI "Vendetta For The Saint" ( 1968, Adventure) Roget MOOft, Ian Hendry An adventurer and rwo ol l'Ms glrl- friendl atrempt ro deltroy the Mafia (2 hrs) fD WAll..-ral-•lftllW ~ WAL&. tTmT wm "How J1tn Rogers Did Ir" Guest· Jim Roger1, Rogers Hold- ~ llOVll "Under F1rt" ( 1983. Drama) Nick Nolte, Gene Haci<mel\. Two Ameri- can journalt$IS and a photographer cover the Nicaraguan war whde a French double agent uses photographs of rebels to search tor key Sand1n1ata leaders 'A' (2 hrs.8U'J. • (EJ... ,,, --(IQ (ff) llOVll "National Lampooo'1 Anlmal House" ( t978, Comedy) John Belushi, · Tim Matheson Two new college fraternity Qledges Join Delta House. the zante1t and wildest gang on campus. and help to fight the effOfts of Iha school'• sinister deen to have 1hem expelled 'R' ( 1 hr .• 49 min.) CIOllY, 111.L.1 l utM • COiCBll The veteran rock band performs hlta lncWng "love Th• One You're With" and "Suite ~~~1hr .. 48tnlt\) ... 1 QI IMI• (Season Premlefe) While Webster befriends the fudge, Uncle Phln1p fights lhe Papadapolis godparent• lo win legal custody ot tl'fe boy. St1r1 Emmanuef Lewis and Sutan Clark (Part 2 of 3) Q .TICTACDOUIM , ~=IT'mT-''How Jim Rogera Old It" G I Jim Rogett. Rogefa HOid- ~ •*•••wcowrr "Jarv1a IV Initiative Debate'' L .. ding pokespet· '°"' w\11 speak for and against the Jarvit IV tax·cu~re. "°"" ... . .. Cl) llO¥W "Burning Rage" (P~ miere, Drama) Barbara Mandrell. 'Tom Wopat A government geo10Q11t lnvnhgatlng under· ground coal lir• flnds a TenntaMt town gripped by fear and INrnt her only ally I the county agent. (2 hr• ) D Cl) llDWll "Time Bomb" (198'. Dr · ma) MOfgan Fairehlld Joseph 8o1toma. The leader of an International tttrOrlst grOl.lp ~ to hljlok a ~icat_ed ermOJed Y9hlcle tranlPQf1fng nuctMr ruet actOA ii exaa (R) (2 hra ) I .::WMM lllAT ICIT D-.L: ~ NOfl Gregory Peck narrates the emOhe on the personal experiences of transplant ~tients. their lam! end donor• ( 1 hr.) . .-um ~(91) llCMI "Trad Ot The Pink Panthaf" ( 1982. comedy) Peter Sein. Oevld Niven Followlng the d$8ppeerance of bumbling French police detecttve lnspec· tOf Clouleeu, a TV reporter Interviews friends. famiy and enemiet to put toge1h· er a= of htS life 'PG' ( 1 hr,. 35 min ) (%) "l,lnder Fire" ( 1983. Orama) Nick Notte. Gene Hacilman. Two Ameri- can journallSla end a, photographef cover the Nicaraguan war while a French dOUble agent uses photographs of rebels to search for key Sandinista leaderl. 'R' (2 ~ ~~fl001UU. .. (!) MOWll "Beg, Bonow Of Steal" (1973. Adventure) Mike Connors. Kent McCord Three disabled veterans rob • mueeum to finance a businels venture (1 hr.. 30 mtnJu UUTI Gene McComb vs. Oliver Miller fOf the U S Light Mlddiew.ight Champiotllhip, ICheduled fot nine rounds (from lake Chetles. La ) . (R) ( 1 hr .• 30 min -1 = MOUITOM (Saesoo Premiere) Framed fOf two murders. Matt &eeka help from his Uncie Roy 10 prove h11 Inno- cence Stars Lee Horsley and Buddy Ebsen. O (1 hr) D .... ~a TMI..,..., ..,. ._I fD UID MMIA "The Race With TllTle" The &OCl81 and cultural dilemmas posed by the infusion of Western technology ln e country ruled by conventlOnal lllamlc c0de8 are explored (R) ( 1 hr.) ~ TMI OI. ~ Examlne1 the linen· c1al po:wer wielded by the smaller Arab states of the Pers!an Gulf and their future ~) O (1 hr) CID llCMI "Krutr• (1983. Fantasy) Keo Mar hall. Lysette AnthOny In an unearthly world, • pnnce must face many l•t• u he trl8$ to rega n his kingdom. reacue his betrothed and fight a lebutoos beast, 'PG' 1 hr •• 57 min.) 9CMI "Trading Places" (1983, Com- edy) Eddl8 Murphy, Oen Ay1troyd A W .. • 10-do executive. a ghetto-bred con man and a pr06tttute deYIM a plOt ol revenge agairl5t two conniving t1nanclefs 'R' CI hr .. 46min) D..C.IUCH PM'nl A ...... c:w•.A- TICll A tnbutt to the tOOth annlvenery of the Wa$hingtoo Monument leatUting the Beech Boys. Julio lgleSlas and Rll'lgO Starr. ( t hr.) -mfTTMCll .. IC'TY:TMl--C... -••••••n ... ,,. 1.• o•••-- 10WA11aU11W1LM*• llO¥W ''Partners In Cftma". ( 1973, Adventure) Lee Grani. Lou AntooiO ~ judge and h9f ass stant use three playing cards to help find an 1mneslac't hidden loot t 1 hr • 30 min ) tl)toLatcUlln • 1M.otl Of ICOT1WI C41 •a "Between The Covtta" 1 hr) .,_ ··B ci< Eme It" ( 1978. Ora· ma) lBuf Gemsef. Angeto lnfal\lt A betutlf\ll young A,,,.,an phOtogrepti« hal. set of rornenoe encaontera whllt ....... on ~t ill Kenya. 'R' ( 1 hr •• 36 mn) Cl)9'am .. •:• CD ... MILM .. MlCCIUl 11' "'"°' (I),,. flOUCe,,. ... -....... e.r Thie cone.rt t8ped in Motltleel tae- 1\Jl'et the lnnovattve bend ~ songs ifv'.b1ann "Every Breeth You Take, "KlnQ of'P~."· "T• In The Sahat1" and 11111 ~y.=&~ ( 1 hr.) 1tt1 (%) Cll• • awRm Tut wml Guaet: ~S=woode 1W 8 Cl) "The legend Of Web F., Woman" (1979. Orama) Raquel Welch. Bradford Dillman A Blackfoot woman In the Montana terntoriel of 1874 flees her tribe after commtt1ing murder to avenge her husband's death (R) (2 hra., 15 min.) D e TGll•IT Host: Johnny Car80n. Sc~~Cyndll.auper. (1tv.) l a -=--~ .. ''Hammersmith It Out" ( 1972. COmedy) Elizabeth Taylor. Richard Bur· ton. In exchange tor rlchea. • young Intern helpa an inlene mal'I 81Cape from an mun <2 hts.. 5 ~ • llTY ~AW Dan Ayt(~ and Bette Mldler hott thil awardl lhoW that will name "Best Petf~ In a M~ VideO." '8-at Video of the Year." "Best Coneett V\deo " "Best Male Video," "Best Female Video.'' and 12 other awardS ( 1 tv ) LlllnUIO#TMl ... MmNmll ..,........, .,_ "It Came From Hotywood" ( 1982. Comedy) John Candy. Dan Aykroyd The worit scenes from old 8 rnoYieS, &ncluding exce<pts from the fitma of Edward 0 Wood Jr .. director of "Plan 9 From Outer Space" and "Glen Or Glen-*'Ida· a ;;;,;o mm.) • MCMM*S llCMI "The Big Bus" (1978. ~ dy1 Joseph Bologna. Stockar(j Channing, COrnt>leta ·with bowfing •ftev and awim.; ming pool, the world's fint ~· powered bus emt>ar1(s on a denger·flled cr°"1:8~trtf (1 hr .. 40 min ) • U ~IU Ci Scheduled· Adfn Noel Gaylef. former director of the Nation- al SeCuoty A~. on his WOfk with an organaa1100 for reducing the 1hrMt of nuclear war. former pola detective Bob Leuci. the reej..(jfe "Pnnce of the City," on his new bOok "Doyle'• Oi5ciples " ( 1 tv.) NA., Pantl90nie ln Vegas ln~ila· tional second round (frOm Las V Nev.) • (R} (2 bi's ) (J:) liDWll "$ex Wond" (1978 Fantuy) Leslie eove.. Kay Parker, People sottet· ing from mild lonns of a a ua dy'Sfunc- t.on seek thetapy II a rOCOtt v.hefe lhelt •Ollc tanta iea a1e inClulQtd. ( 1 rv .• 30 mn ) lOl llOVtl "Bad Glib" (1981.1..~~·.ieriture) Pia S~. Jasmine Ou8ay UQ' teulng makes them the targels of a veogeU Boy Scout and his brothef ( 1 tv • ~ min ) (S) ... "Ladies And Gentleman. The Fab\JIOUS Stalna" (1981, Mullcal) 06ane Lane. Ray Winston. The meteonc t• of a lrio of female punk·r~ttt IMda uttl- mately 10 1hear selling out in the blG-mont'Y world of the rri.1SIC lndultry. A' (l IY .• 2) -O;nj.1UCll Sunday. Sept. 18, 1884 25 CH> llOYll "Endless t.ove" (1981. Romance) Brooke Shields. Martin Hewttt. A 17-year-old's obsee&Ne love 10< hit 15- year-old girllnend leads 10 parental con- fhcts and tra~edy 'A' ( 1 hr .. 55 min.) 12::111 0> llM)A mff YIDIOI A&IMDNITCNCOCI.....,.. IOOGWU: ¥IDIOI ............ llCMI "Busting" ( 1973. Drama) Elnott Gould, Robert Blake. A pair of vice cops '" Los Angelet get the 1eu-1han- rewarding IOb of arresting the "little guya" while the real criminal masterminds go free. (2 hMlu.c I.OWi. AMIT1LI lllMI "10" ( 1979, Comedy) Dudley Moore, Bo Derek. A ·successful songwnter. disturbed about reaching mid· die age, decides to chase after a beautiful girl on her way to her wedding 'R' (2 hrs . 3m1n.) • WU llOVll "The Ugly Ametican" (1963. Drama) Marlon Brando, Eij1 Okada. An 1dealis1ic ambassador to a Southeast Ast- an republic as confronted with ho61ility m h11 h05t natt0n (2 hrs.) ([) llCMI "L~y Jordan" (1942, Dra- ma) Alan Ladd, Helen Walker A military deserter redeems himself by exposulg a Q!_ou=azi aoems. (2 hrs.) W "Which Way To The Front?" (1971, Comedy) Jerry LewiS, Jan Mur- ray A ragtag band of World War II Army re1ec1s form their own brigade and sat out 1n a red-white-and-blue yacht fOf Germa- ny 10 kidnap a Nazi held marshal ( 1 hr . 30 min) llOVll 'An Ottlcef And A Gentleman" ( 1982. Drama) Richard Gere, Debra Winger. An undisciplined 8V181lon officer candidate mee1s his match 1n a tough Nevel driU instructor while, off base. rornanc1ng one of the local town g11ts. 'R' ~hrs . 5m1n) w ...-JTUCll tll llO¥ll "Society Affairs" ( 198 I , Ora- ma) Harry Reems. Veronica Hart A con -Salurcl man-lothario deCldes to exploc1 his reeem- blance to a shy m1fhonaire. (1 hr., 20 mm.)' ' W CI).,_ "The Prey" (1980. Drama) Debbie Thureson, Joel Bond. When she fnends go on a h1k1ng trip. they are hunted ~bf a 5 ;;1e11ous creature. 'R' c 1 hr •• 20m1n ' •1 CIMaPORLR W llCMI "On A Clear Dey Yoo Can SM Forever" ( 1970, Musical) Barbra Str .... nd, Yv" Montand. A y~ worn· an discovers she has ESP While trying to curb hef chain-smolong (2 hrs . 40 min.) ., ... ..... ..,..uu.. AUTO UC. SCCA Budwerser Pro Sports 2000 (from Lexington Ohio ) -~)~ riw:.c. ms -THI lllL Hosts· Len Dawson, Nick Buonicont1 ( 1 hr.) tlt ..... (C) llCMI "Humongous" ( 1982. HOfror) Janet Julian. David Wallace. A disfigured murderer stalkt • party of feckless teen· agers weekending on a remote island 'R' Ohr .. 35 min.) • U llCMI "Great Day In The Morning" ( 1956, Adventure) Wgm11 Mayo, Robert Stack. In the days preceding the Civil War, Gold Rush lever runs high in Colorado as inhabitants unw1tt1ngly become bitter rivals (2 h:,{ (!)-~ IUO m lllMI "Lost In A Harem" ( 194.C, Comedy) Bud Abbott. Lou Costello The throne of a srt\all kingdom up for grabs IS contested by two Pfop men and a singer. ~hrs.30min) C!S:UU.. IUD F001ULL 8im1na- 1ion or OtJahl1cation Final ( 1 hf .. 30 min ) (0) lllMI "Halloween 111· Season 01 The Wilch" ( 1982. Horror) Tom Atkins. Sta- cey Nelk1n. A young woman 1nvest1gates a Halloween mask manufacturer who may have been respoostble for her father's Q!_uesorne murdet. 'R' (1 ht, 35 min.) {~ llO¥'m "Jaws 01 Satan" ( 1981. Hor- ror) Fritz Weaver, Gretchen Corbett A snake exl)ert, a hospital chief of staff and a Pfiesl )Oln foroes to hall • demonic cobra'& r= terror 'R' (' hr .. 30 min ) n ~ ~ ...... °' COCMm Dispels myths about the drug coe11ne through the true stOfies ot a baSkttball eoperstar, a high school beauty queen, an auto factory worl(er and a psychialrtst ( 1 hr.) d CZ) llO¥'m "The Chosen" ( 1981, Orama) Maximilian Schen. Rod Stetgef. Based on Chaim Potok's novel A lnendstl1p slowly develops between a worldly, asaimllated Jew and the son ot a Hauldie rabbi 'PG' ; hr .. 48mm) 1r:11 A110TT • C01tB10 .. CAITOOll .... .,. .... d lllMI "Savannah Smiles" ( 1982. Ad\lenture) Mark Maler, Donovan Scoll P. runaway rich girl tags along W1fh a pair o• bumbling fug1t1VO criminals 'PG' ( 1 hr .. .CS min.) CID llCMI "Natiot'\al Lampoon's Animal House" ( 1978. Comedy) John Beloshi. Tim Matheson Two new college fra1em11y pledgea join Delta House. the zaniest and wlldes1 gang on campus. and help 10 tight the efforts ot lhe school'• sinister dean to 4c11 rf,V= = 'R' (1 hr. 49 min) d 11 llCMI "The Affair" ( 1973, Romance) Natalie Wood, Robert Wagner A sensitive love song composer, crippled by polio, fallS an love with a d1v0fced man who enriches her lite. ( 1 hr • 35 min ) 41:11 ~MBtco. I CC1m.-nwCALlll) ....... .,,A11111111 ITMCADI d llCMI "My BodYguard" ( 1979 Dra- ma) Chr.s Makepeace. Adam Baldwin The new kid at a Chicago high school makes friends with lhe school outcast and together they stand up lo the cruel gang that had persecuted them bOlh 'PG' ( 1 hr., 38 min) l lOODDAYU. .-T..al lllMI "Gunfight At Comanche Creek" (1983, Western) Audie Murphy. Colleen Miller (2 htlf..r ·=-:.=&. 1:11 ~ CIWUI ~TAI.It wrnt Guest. RQger Spottiswoode. 1•1•,,. .. ,.,.. .... • •111 ... t&• .,. LHlll)M'( --~--YountAleM .... .. Pmcll .,. "A Femily u~ DoWn" 11978, Orama) Hitkin Hayes. rred Astaire (I hr . 38 min ) ... ICIUTt °'nm,. Marvin Hagler va Vito Antuofermo (Novembef 1979 In Las Vegas. N~i (RI (, tu I ,...... Wembl y becomes en apprentice to a mag1C111n who comes to ~rtor~le Roc;k. lQ) IT A young girt 19 torn between the desire to make it fn the mu11C WOfkl and her mother'• w1ah tor htr to ~tsue a mote pttCtiC81 career. ( 1 hf I CS) ~'"Don't Go Neer Tht Water" (1957. Comedy) GltM Ford, Gia Scala 1 ht 47 nun) .,_ 'Anna CMsue'' ( 1930. Of•· ma) Greta Garbo. Char ~ford C1 -laturclay Con1. ht., 26"mtn.) .. ·e:..-.::.-...... ITOOlll ommcmon .. ZOOMWI 111.DICMOOll ..,Oii . ...,.., MWVAL "Mztma Africa's Mysterious Spring" Richard Kiley narratea a look at the variety of creatures that Visit Kenya's Mz1ma Spnng for nourishment and those that make rt their home. ( 1 hr,) t.-CMITOllY llOWll "G'Ole!. The W0<1d Cup Chal- lenge" ( 1983. Documentary) Narrated by Sean Conner;Y. ( 1 l'lr • 38 min ) m llOVll ' Lunt G Wet VlUage" (No .. Oat~=~-~1UM01'81 TMAT1911MOW IWl'1U AmlllCMITOIY ·-·-A llllCW. ..., A tMo-ege bOy 1$ forced to choose between playing on his high school basketball teem and rehears- ing for his first professional ballet rOle. ( 1 .. lhr.)~&POlmOI tll DMGWIU. . T8TM.I 1.W.A.T. 1Tm11 O/l IM PIUICllCO CGUm P00TUU. Kentucky at Tulane 3 ~~ ._,.~ ........ *" lflOIYtcmna llOWll ·'!.Th& lay" ( 1982. Comedy) Richard Pryor, Jackie Gleason ( 1 hr , 40 min) CZ> llOVll "It Came From HollywOOd" (1982. Comedy) John Candy. Dan A ki o d. (1hr .. 20min} Ml IMll••MD•.._ ALWll#eMQ .. t•I ftllOU. g l'O&I ROc:a TY ~ t.-CA'ITOPTa IGUAM POOTUM••11l I ••TAWIUIMmlAVIOR llOVll "Detty Duck's Movie. Fantastic le.land" ( 1983, Comedy) Al'llmated, VOIC-es bt_ Mel Blanc. ( t hr .. t8 min.) 911.umO/lntlWIB(R) llOVll "The Las1 Kfds On Earth" ( 1983, Orama) Jane Collina, Toby BridOe. ) llCMI "Young Csssidy" (1965. Blog· raphy) Rod Taytor. Flo<a Rot>eon (t hr .. 50 min.) -1 I :,o:.o PLACI (Premiere) TOP•VIDIOI OJ) M .. ICOOl'f.OOOll'tl,_, ' HCA IYAYlf' ALM: W TMI IAml TOfly Randall hOsts this update on &erentrsts' ellor11 to Pftvent heart diaease. cancer and car accidents ( 1 hr.) l ::.~.::- AU. .. Ml OLOHOUll • CODI. I ... comTT ''JaMS IV 1n1tusttve Oebalt" Leading .epokespet· sons 11tUI speak fOf and againSI the Jatvis IV 1ax-cu111no measure flOCU'Y ....... M1MtSOI• Fats "' •rv·~if'ne tR) c1 hr,) U TMI Ill Hosta Ltn OeW&On. _1N•~_; h<.J ¥IDIOllAT 9 1'MILrmllQ m¥ll "The Trackers" ( 1957, West- ern) Clayton MOOfe, Jay S lvemeels. ( 1 ht., 30 tn#l.) IM'Tll .... Lo.-... COGiii' '•DCMIOllml•IY .... '°"'_ MO¥ll •·cross Creek" (1982. Orama) Mary Steenburgen, Alp Torn (2 hrs . 2 1Wmiln~-~/MaADll ...... U•DCA'ITOP181 9 MC I&&& "The Amazing Bun- jee Venture" To Bunjte'1 amazement. he accidentally travels back to the 20th cen- tury with Karen and ArKty -but only after • he hods a peir of bunjtt eggs to bring with lho~R)Q u•w. ':m!ICM.._l.IY llCMI "The Greet Santini" (1979, Ofama) Robert Duvall. Blythe Danner. ( 1 hr , 58 min.) • {() IUNR IOUTI Oii M 'NI Muhammad Ali vs Ken Norton (September 1976 in New York) (R) ( 1 hr ) <ID my .... ,...,.. .. A comedy about a successful lawyer who has the chance to realize his adolescent lanteSles about a beautiful former schoolmate. Stars Tim Matheson, Annette O'Toote, Ket=arrOld and Jrm Belushi ( 1 hr.) CO "Sm1thefeens" ( 1982, Drema) Susan Berman, Richard Hell. ( 1 hr . 30 min.) ~.nm•nmum AD¥BIND•lflOIYI 11:11 ... .u. Chicago CUbt at St, Lovls cardinals (3 hrs. 15 min.) 11:118 COU. Wl Iowa State at Tex- as A & M (2 hra.. 30 min.) I """'°"""""' 9 All UCM IWY#e Guests Gary U S Bonds. Psychedelic FU<S. ( 1 hr) W..WMATIUAMM • rrtlWlltlOD'W'IMllD•• Da.YDIW"CU,,_ ... llOVll "A• The Praldtnt'a Men" ( 1976, Orama) Rob«t A9dford, Dustin Hoffman (2 hra • 20 min.) ........ u.1 .,_IYOCI. • .,_ "SOld"ier Blue" ( 1970, West· em) Peter Strauss. Csndlce Bergen. (2 hrs,) 1 ........ -·-._AT MJA'I Juba tourt a \lll'le- yard. leatUtea a ma.n courte of loW'I of pork Wellington and welcomea guest chef Rene Yefdon.. who preperee aalmon souf- ~~IWll.-rl•'H•ll AUTO UC. Formula I ltallan Grand P,,x (from MOnza). (A) (2 hra) ~ llOWW "Airplane II The Sequel·• (t982. Comedy) AobetJ Hays.~ Hag- erty. ( t hr • 25 min l.....a. I OllTMl•-------UC:. ... MOOf 11111 COLl.m WA. Nebfuka at UCLA i "'-. 30 min.L -.-ma• a --COi &19 fl001IML IOW9 al ONo State °'Nebraska al UCLA (3 hrl. 30 min.) 11§) ..... LUCY • m llCMI "Hard Way To Ole" (1991, · AdYenture) Bily Chong. Catt Scott ( 1 lht··:U mn~""' -··= w• llOWll '!The Anal Option" (1982. Or• ma) Judy Davis. Lev.19 COiiins. (2 hra.. 4 .min .. ...,. l ==T W.AU.: '°' ..... • OP Cl9IA A special report from China's nort.hwestemmost pl'Olltnc:e, XJn.. Jiang, Is preeented by the first AmlricM teleYlaion team a~ Into the prcMnc:e lince the Communilt ~ ceme 1o ii In 19"9 (1 hr) OCUll• llOWW "Crosa Creek" ( 1982, Orame} Mary Steenburgen. Rip Tom. (2 hra., 2 min.) CO llOVll "The Orey FOJt" (1983, w ... ~ em) Richard Farnsworth. Jeckle Bw· r~ ~hr .• 32min.) t:ll I .. .,..' --ATMllOWlll ..... ...:t-•· IOY•lllJlaYM ... .. ...,._."Mellow Yelow 500 Auto Race"~~ TO. l'JilD" .. WLD,WUWIY I.,_ ... ~ -.... Oii lflOl1'I Scheduled: Donald Curry vs Nono L.aRocce for the WBA Welterweight ~ tld9, scheduled fof 16 rounds (!Ne from Monte Csrlo) •. ( 1 hr .. 30 mlfl.) m .. "The Perfect Furlough" (1969, Comedy) Tony Curtis. Janet .t.lgf\. (2 hrs) . • llOWll "Wonder WOff*\" ~ A<Mntufa) Cathy Lee CtOlby. Montalban. (2 hrt ) ...... A~-#.Ak>e*at the eWtural. pol1tleal end ~ life of a nation tocated In a remote .,.. of the ea'1etn Himalayas and barely touched by the 20th cefltury (1 hr.) l tmWL•M•Ul -..:y-·· NA ml Panasonic Las Veges lnvtta- tlonal third round (live from las Vega. Nev). ghrs) r -._ rn.L .. "''Ole* Cavett r8"'9WI the lr'IYenllonl which cha"Ofd the Amencan Wft'/ of Mt. lndud- lng thoM of Benjamin Ffandn. Thornea Edlaon. Robel'! Fulton and Aleltandlt Graham Bill (Q) llOWW "J.nxtd!" ( t082, ~) • Bette Midler, Ken Wahl ( 1 ht., 45 mil\) .,.. "H•cute&" ( 1983. AcMnture) Lou F.rngno. Sybil Denning. ( 1 hr,. 41 mtn.) llml1191f ......... Ml'O .. -....... TCllU'•Ml ..... ~"'"' )] WID lu.tll19 .. .. QUAii Cl..ul TMll Wlftl OU.: .. Sunday, Sept. 16, 198'4 27 -Saturclay Cont. R~er Spott1swoodil •D 9'0ll11CON "1984 Lad181 Pro Bowler1 Tour. MllwlUkM" ( 1 hr ) l nlmlTOOGll M IWltY IOYI I UICY DMW llYI-,,_. Cf) UT1\lllOUllOlntlflllAM • IOWA "The Climate Crisis" Climate predichons and hazard warnings lor the next century. based on the effects of IOlr· I~ fOUll fuel consumption Q ( 1 hr.) 1111 llCMI "Ryan's Oaughtef'' (Part 2 of 2) (1970. Orama) Sarah M1ln, Robert Mitchum (2 hr1 ) CAMB L11 •u11•1 a llCMI "The Bridge On The Rtver Kwal" (1957. Orama} William Holden. Alec Guinness (2 hrs . 4 I min.) (ff) llOVll "French Postcards" ( 1979. Comedy) Miles Chapin. Blanche Baker LI hr , 32 min.) (1J llOVll "The Star Chamber' ( 1983, Orama) Michael Douglas. Hal HolbrOOI< LI hr . 49 min ) cz., llOVll 'Vol' ( 1982. Orama) Tarlk Akan, Senf Sezer ( 1 hr . 51 min ) I llOTOllPORTl lfrmlA11CllW. .. WMl1\M . .. nm!~ I Im IODIQ Ricnard Sandoval vs Edgar Roman IOf lhe 1wBA Bantamweight Champ1onSh•P lttle. scheduled for 15 rounds (ftom Monte CarlO) ( 1 hr ) m••••1uu., m T011nB """ -.n am "' IOOlll WU "' °" PAT lllT Or Frank F1eld and nutrrtlon expert• otter facts and advice on notr1tion. obnlty, dieting and exe<clM. B•llMCMOf-.. CGUIGI POOTIAU Nebraska at UCLA 3 hrs) ITMTMI · llOVll "Call Me OraQon'' ( 1978, Adventure) Bruce LI (2 hrs.) "'""Ol ntl"" llOVll "Dfiperate Voyage' ( 1980. Adventure) Christopher Plummer, Chit Potta (2 hrs) ti) .W. "A Summer Place" ( t959, Ora·. ma) Troy Donahue, Sandra Dee (2 hrs ) • WU AlmlCA "Uvtng With W1ldhfe" Marty Stouffer Jllu1tratea how we can beet llve with and preserve our natural herttage ol w ldlife. (R) : u•·m-•a,..•-cauw flOOTULL ICClmM>AM llCMI "My Favorite Year" ( 1982. Comedy) Peter O'Toole. Je&sica Harper. 1 hr .. 35 min) ) llOVll ''O'Hara'• Wife" (1982. Ora- ma) Edw.ard Asner, Mariette Hartley. ( t hr, 27 min) mna-•counn1M1C • 11 lllO.WCT CHOlllTllCIL Featured stlJd· let that ar being done by the National _ Mean, Lung and 8lOod Institute and the Stanford Heart Research Progtam ott the vartou methOdl ot reducing cnolelterOI I~ AVBM .. INCW. Some ot the wOt'ICl'G top·ranked mite~ compete ; om NewY0tk) AT THI llCMll """ AVBM .. .,.cw. Some ot the wC)(ld'a top ranked milers cornpe1a trom Naw VOl'k) ( 1 t\f,) .....,. llMIC Of WA'l'KCUM CCU. fl001'ULl. North Carolina at too CoUeg {3 ~rs . 30 min) • ... ••(I' ! WOfld Cup Chai· •• ( 1 Ooc tarvl Narrated by 28 Sunday, Sept. 16, 198~ Sea=~~. 38 min.) -119'.-·---~IUYIOOI ..,. ...., Of ..,.. Scheduled Donald Cutry VI Nino LaRocca '°' the WBA Welterweight Championship tltl•. scheduled f0t 15 roundl (from Monte Car~i4!.r" 30 min.) ~ MO¥W "Madigan" (1968, M~tery) Riehard Widmark, Henry Fottda (2 hra ) -~ ... TMIMCIAl .. W • MOVll "People wm Talk" (1951, Comedy) Cary Grant, Jeanne Cra1n. ( 1 hr , 50 min.) (%) llOVll "Anna ChrtStle" ( 1930, Ora· ma) Greta Garbo, Charles Bickford ( t hr., 28 min.) I':)._. CCMlfTYTOOAY •al) llOWll "The Fighting Kentuckian" ( 1949, Adventure) JOhn Wayne, Vera Ralston ~--~ 1:11 UMI ... AUCI ntl ROCOOM» .... , *'°"""° .... • --ATM.IA't llCMI "All The Presldenl'I Men"' (1976. Orama) Robert Redford, Dustin Hottman (2 hrs , 20 mtn.) maw..KTALI ... llOIWeCI Of m1MI. A beh1nd·lhe· cameras gllmpae into the making of the eight-hour production of the up-coming ilier:·"· o.ug ....... M ...,.,All'l'n Tiii WBI Featured Interviews with actress-comedienne Lily Tomlln and actress Karen Allen (1 hr) QJ '90Vll "Planet Earth" ( 1974, Solence- Ficllon) John Saxon, Diana Muldaur. A 20th·cenlury man ls aeol through a time warp into the 22nd century. ( 1 hr .. 30 min) um.a----~ ...... ~ llCMI "The G.'ey Fox" (1983, West· ern) Richard Farnsworth. Jackie Bur· roughs. A former pt1SOO nmatt decides to rob trains, incJudirig a Canadian raJroad 'PG' ( 1 tv . 32 min.) llO¥ll ''Easy Money" ( 1983, Come· dy) Rodney Oeng81111eld, Joe Ptsel A man who likes to .. t. drink and ~e to exce• stands to win $10 mrnioo If he NC· r1liee1 h wOlldly pleasures for one year 'R' ( 1 tv, 35 min.) . IAla.. ... .. 0 (1) ... Mlt.mEmEOlmM. .. = ... '*',,.. MIO A'TTUC11Dl9 llOWll "Under Fire" ( 1983, Dfama) N k NOite, Gene Hackman. Two Amett· can 1ournallit1 and a photographer cover the Niearaguan war While a French double eg nt u photograph• of rebels to search for key Sandlfldta leaders 'A (2 hrs.. 8 mfn) l ....CAl._.._ •• c .. a.rrrrCM~ 19 -.t•A ,.. .... The yMr's holt ent t lnmen1 '9 ~ Jn • bohlnc:M cnes ~I ptb ta the n •I day bfotdcalt of lht th Annual EmmvAlilH'rdt 11 MNT IM:ll wmtDAVID_,..fl COU.. llOOTUU. USC at Arizona State (3 hrs ) II IYIC*~ Featured. a fuhton makeo- vel' '°' thlee Olympic contende11, a v111t to the WOJld Chllmpie>n MotorcrOM competl· tion at the Loe Angeltt Coliseum, Las rcu-C09CllT--w '=w OI THI llTI Celebtitiet and contestants perform thetr own vetllont ol favorite hit songs. Co-ho.ts Dick Clark end Allen Fawcett are joined by Sally Struthers, Toni Basil, Stephen Blahop. Rita Coolidge end Frank Stallone. 111lm'ICO.lltf WUUIWAll '"'.....,.. 00 IT Y~ IHOW A look at hOuse- hOld wiring . (A) (8) lllT IHI .. THI mt._ A comedy about a successful lawytt who has the chance to realize hit adolescent fantasies about a beauttful former achoolmate Stars Tim MatheSon, Annette O'Toolt. Kathryn HarrOld and Jim Belushi. ( 1 hr.) llCMI "DoctOI' Detroit" ( 1983, Come- dy) Dan Aykroyd, Donna Dhcon. A timid college professor 1s rectulted to take the place of a pimp. and soon finds h mMlf en)Oy1ng hes new occupation 'A' ( 1 hr .. 31 min.) m.-_.,.,.., 11 1:9@ 1A•M.L Atlanta Braves at San Diego Pad~hrs) ~1 .. :eumTMAT,,_ ' MOU Cl.OllW Featured Liiy Tomhn talks abOUI her upcoming movie, "All Of Me",• report on wtly game shows have such endunng popularity In daytime television, a prol1lo ot "The Love Boat's" new lady, Pat Clous. ~,,, .. IYIOllMIDMO TOO CLOllN COWOlf llCMI "The Greatest $how On Earth" ( 1952. Orama) Charlton He54en, Betty Hutton A c11cus owner and a trapeze 1tar tie lor center s1age amidst the exciting P-8~ of th! big top (2 hrt , 30 min I 9 ,_... Neal Gabler and Jtf· trey Lyons hOst an inlOfmattYe look at what's new at the moYlel IEJADWUlll I 009U19allMCUI llCMI "'Daffy [).Jck'a MOVte' Fantastic Island" (1983, Comedy) Animated VOte· ~ by Mel Blanc Bugs Bunny, FoghOfn Leghorn, POfky Pig and others start a foorney on Daffy Duck's smaH 151 nd 'G' tttu ,t8min) • e MIWOll (Sea~ Preml8'e) Flylng with Santini to Texas, Hawke plans to repay a debt to a buddy who wved hit bfe in l/1etnam Stare Jan Michatt V1~t and Ernest BC>fgnine. ( I hr ) II ID ,.._ • ~ (Premiete) Two women private det~hvu anume ownership ol a San Franclleo-baaed agency willed them by th man to whom bOth had been marrkK' at d1flor1nt times; CarOlt and Syd t r h11eC1 to protect a lamous rock 11ngff (Vaneua William•> Stars Lynda Carter and Loni Andtfson. .., h~ LM IDAT (Sea$0n Ptemlefe) Goer.I stari Patty Oukt Astin. Berl Convy. Lydia Coo'9n and Engetbett Humperdinck t I th a new cru dlrtctOt od atup'1 1pholographtr on an akomen cru'M! Stara GaVln Macleod tnd Bernie Koe>en o n hr • 30 m1n ) • I -lalunlay Cont. I I I G ~ IAW1'U 1MI IWO mM AllinwatJIY Highlight• the histOfy and achievementio of tht NAACP. featuring petformancee and tnbut• by entertain· meot cetebr1tte1 (2 hr•) T'R*fTn:. . Oii ITAfm .-CA Guests How•e M!fndeM. Donald O'Connor, Kenny Ran· kin. Sha Na Na. Suzanne Somera. Tiffany Renee, Les Ballets De Trocadero (A) (2 hrs) • ICIT '°'9MMI llC)CW ID •• ,.. Oil MD M CIUl:lla -.Amt The laautS In the conftict between the oll lnduatry and enwonmentallst1 over a chain of Islands Is inve=ed· (1 hr.) ~ Of A U'ltOI Expk>l'ee the prob- lem of llhtera~nlted States (!)COi.La 90llT CID llOVll "Air plane 11· The SeQuel'' (1982, Comedy) Robert Hays, Julle Hag· erly A commercial space-shuttle comp•· ny attempts to keep a pllOt from revealing the problems wrth its ftrsf craft before 11 lakes off on 11s maiden tt.ght 'PG' ( 1 hr . 25 min) CID llOYll "Deal Of The Century" ( 1983, Comedy) Chevy Chase. Sigourney Wea11er. When a high technology ullra. weapon turns out to be defective. Its man· ufac1urer h11es an arms hustler to dispose of 11 'PG' ( 1 hr . 38 min ) ) fAlm TAU ntlATM "The Boy Who Lell Home To Find Out About The Sh111ers" A cu11oos young man (Peter MacN1cOI) accepts a SOfcerer-klng's chal- lenge 10 spend three nights 1n a haunted caslle. Chri&lopher Lee and Dana Hill co- star Q (1 hr) m llOYll "Ballle Of The Commandos" (1971, Adventure) Jack Palance. Thom- as Hunter A small team ol commandos Is assigned 10 destroy a powerful German cannon before 11 can be used against the Alh"hrs) ··~ .... .. fMfAl'f-- 1 llOVll "Nurr.e Edith Cavell" ( 1939. ama) Anne Neagle. George Sanders The story of the heroic Enghsh nurse who was executed by a German firing 1quad for atd1ng refugees duung World War I Is told (2 hrs) CD MOVll "Under Fire" (1983. Orama) Nick NOite. Gene Hackman Two Amert· can J0Urnahst1 and a photographer COiier the Nicaraguan war while a French double agent uses photographs of rebels to search for key Sandiolsta leedets 'R' (2 hr&. 8 min.) M CtlfAM ~ TALll wmt Gue&t AQQer Spottiswoocle. • 8 Cl) CO¥a W (Premiere) Mac Harper and Oanlelle ··oa111" Reynolds. undercov- er agents for a aecre1 government agency, pose ai a male model and • high-fashion photographef to dt5cov8f why Oan1'1 hus· band was murdeted Stare Jon Erik Hex· um and Jennifer O'Neill (2 h11 ) D CD MOT~ (Premiere) An auto- mohve eng1nee1 who has been framed tor murdm IS rescued from police custody by her husband, they floe to New Orleans, begml'llng • CfOP·COUntry Od~y to avoid lhe law and the real klller1 Stars Kerrie Keane and Eric Pter~tS I ID CCIT • ....., .... ou A look Is taken ti suicllJe among children under '':;.V ol 1wet11e ( 1 hr ) ) ) ··cross Creek'' ( 1982, Ora· rn I Mary SleenbUrgen Rip Tom 811sed on 1ho m mofra ot Mar10tle Kinnan Rawi ings In 1~28. an ambitious N ~York wnt· • er 11 hor atthy hu$band IOt the mor oeac WI eK tenee of Florida Oflf'IQG grove where she plans to write Gothic romance nov• 'PG' (2 hrs , 2 min,) cou.a• P001UU. North Caronna et Boston COiiege (A) (3 hrs. 30 min) MOVll "Hercules" ( 1983, Adventure) Lou Ferrigno. Sybil OaMing. A auper- powerlul Greek demigod must btttle mecharucal mons1ers to rtte0e a kid· ~P!d~ 'PG'O (1hr.,41 min.) taU «I OUOITLOWI (Premiere) A man's g11ef ov.r the tragic dUth of his wile leads him to dedicate his Nit to track- tng down love<S separated by time and clt- cumstances. Stars Tony f!ranci<>U end Ann-=-~hr .. 30 min.) IMOT .... AM.YTMI ... -.... llCMl "Capture Of Bigfoot" ( 1977 Adventure) SteftOfd Morgan. Katherine Hopkins. The legendary Bigfoot threatens people In the northern snow country and an unscrupulous buaines&man plana 10 capture the beast for his own personal f (2hrs) IOUDIOU> IAUDI AIAllA ''Of!, Money And Poli· ticS" The final epiSOde of the series inves- tigates the SaudtS ea an emerging euper· power -what they intend to do with their power, lhe•r ob}ect1ves In the Middle East. and how lhey intetact with lhe Ulllltd States. (A) ( 1 hr I CID ml LOCAtm "Joe P19Copo Spectel" Comedy sketches end celebr~ lmP8f'SC>' nations. with guest Edcfie Murptly. ( 1 hr.) • (Q) IOT1W W A bawdy, adults-only le~ (1hr .. 30mln.) --.JTUCa•QWITIUl1W -~ TOOQ.Oll POR C090ltT -IAYPa..tMl.....,MD FRUla• The smallest city to tiold a major league professlonel sports franchtSe of any kind, Green Bay, Wisconsin has sustained an organization which has excelled and surpassed football teams of larger cities. ( 1 hr.) .. Un.AY...,..PMm MOVll ''Tha Pussycat Syndrome" ( 1980) Two fashion models find them- selves 11'1 tor some supnse picture taking aboard e vacation cruise sh•P near Greece._J 1 hr • 33 min.) 1•1D8CllatGD ... M1ll' ml lMI"" 90Wll "Right Of Way" l 1983. Drama) Bette ~VIS. James Stewart. An aged cou- ple take drastic steps to prevent tfteir .sep. aralton (2 hrs ) ti) .,. "Morrill'i Maraudtcl'' ( 1962. Adventure) Jell Chandler, ty ij&(d.io. In Burma General Frank Mttrill and his men lry to destroy a strategie Japan.-village dutlllQ_World War II (2 htl ) ID laOIY OP ICOm.t CWI "SOtt\eth1ngsG01 ToGlvt" (1 ht.) A1U11.m 11m llCMI "Prrvate School" ( 1983, Come- dy) Phoebe Cates. Betty Ru.stll Teen· aged t>Oy$ visit the an·g1rls Cherryvtlo Academy for some fun and adveoture 'R' { 1 hr . 37 min ) •j)) llCMI "Playgirl" ( 1982, Drema) Veronica Hart, Semantha Fox. A we.tthy patron.s diltrit>Utes her "fevOf'S" to tev· eral men with htr publlahtf·husband'a ~•. bl.it fells In lovt th • rrval writer. 1 hr .. 23 mtn) A mAmQ f • llCMI "Night Games" (1980, Fant•· ay) Cindy ·Pickell, ~ry ~. The \lfc. tim of • childhood traum , • voung wom· en's fear ot any sexual contact with men threatens her marriage and her mental sl1a':f ~T( 1 hr •• 40 mm.) 119 ..,, 1IAClt 1~ llOWll "Luv" ( 1967, Comedy) Petet Fafit.~Jack Lemmon In hopes ol relieYlng hlmMtf of M w\le. a men bnngs home • 10iC1dal derelict anct lntroducel them. (2 his) D CD IANl»AY mrr Lift H05t Don Rickles Guest: Billy Idol (''Wh t• w~ d1~·=1::i~ (1 hr., SOmln.) AIC ... Q ~o • •• IDBtT ... l•ROCCI• ~ "Forced Vengeance" (1982, Adventure) Chuck Norris, Mary Loula Weller. A karate expert uaea his skills to dr1Ye mobsters out of a Hong Kong gam- bling es1abhshment 'A' (1 hr . 43 min ) ) .,_ "The Slud" ( 1978, Orama) Joan Colltns, Oliver Tobtas A watter advances his career by sleeping With his boss's wile 'A' ( 1 hr . 35 min ) 1W D MOVll "The Silencers" ( 1966. Come- dy) Dean Martin. Stella Stevena A sem- reltred spy IS aSSlglled the task of trailing a defector and preventtOQ him from dis- closing top-secret 1nformat100. (2 hrs • 15 min) 1Ztt0 MOVll "Tea And Sympathy" (1956, Orama) Deborah Kerr. John Ketr. A..,.. 11-ve prep school s1udent becomes Intimate w1lh lhe understanding wife of a hMdmM- le<. (2 hrs. 20 min J. Cf) ... ,. lllT .,.. &l) DAVID .... "Russia And The A.JJ- Nn People" Gues11>. authols David Shipler ("AUSSla: Broken Idols. Solemn Dreams") and Hedrick Smith ('1'llt Aul- sta°'"). (1 hr.) (Q) MOVll ''Wici<ed Sensations" (1981, Orama) John Leshe. Annette Htven. A woman gives her husband his walking papers after witness ng. his voyeurtatle activities. ( 1 hr .• 20 min ) ~ 8'ACI Mm YIDIOI .. ..,,Tu.Cl.. UM fUlllA11 Of TMI 1'UA IAMlll IDWAllDI -Cl).,. &MOUCIUlla (!) .,. "Women Of The Prthiatoric Planet" ( 1966, ~FICtlOO) Wendell Corey, Keith Larsen The solt SOtVllloJ..of • spaceship crash rematns on the l'MIW plan- et with a gttl from the rescue 8hlp to 1tat1 a new cultllf•;<2 tvs ) IOCl*~CA ~erdict" ( 1982, C>l'ame) Paut Newrnai'I, Charlott' Aampling. An alcohOfiC Bo&ton lawye< pullS hJm.lt together to bong an unooooiar medlcal malpractice case to tt\ei .agaln5t strong oppo6111on by the courts, the archdlocelt and hl9 own cf'ien1$ 'R' (2 tn ) WllOClllmlUCA llmCA'ITOP18 ITAllUICM ... .,.., ... .,_ "A Walk In Tl'le Spring Rlltn" ( 1970 Romance) Ingrid Bttgman. AnlhOl'ly Quinn A happily married woman finds herself falltng in love w11h a mountain man while she la vace11on1ng with hef' hus- band ( t hr • 30 min ) NA IOU.Panasonic Las Vegas lnvl1a- 1tonal thlfd round (live trom Lat Vegas. Nev.), IA) *Wtl "MumM 01 The ~I'' ( 197 t, Sunday, Sept. 16, 1984 29 l -saturclay Cont. Drama) Lea Massari. Benoit F«reox. A young boy diagnosed as having a heart murmur IS accompanied by ht& mother On a fateful v1S1t to a spa (2 hrs.) W @ 91QHTTUCll CC) llOYll "The Innocent" C t979. Drama) Giancarlo ·Giannini, Laura Antonelli. In early 20th-century Italy, a tragic tnangle develops 1nvolv1ng a disturbed man. fits wife and his ml61r8$S 'R' (Dubbed) ( 1 hr , 55 min) t1I MOVll 'Everything Yoo Always Want- ed To Know Aboot Sex (But We<e Afraid To Ask)" (1972, Comedy) Woody Anen. Gene Wilder A 681'198 of comic sketches spool Dr David Retlben'a beet-set11ng book en eddrt100 to other aM0<1ed targets. 'A' ( 1 hr, 27 men.) ta I) llOYa "The First 36 Houfl Of Dr Durant" (1975, Orama) Scott Hylands, Katharine Helmond An 1deall1hc young aurgeon finds h1a career at stake ea he confront" the reaht1es of medical ethics l hrl) LOITlllPACI . AIC .... llOvtl ··r~e White Warrior" (1961 Adventure) Steve Reeves. Georgia MOii A tribal hero leads his people against a iranrucal czar (2 hrs ) -.... ' QOCWJ~ vmlOI -llCMI' "Tugboat Annie" ( 1933, Com· edy) Marie [)(easier, Wallace Beefy A wor'kfng woman and her sh1tt1ess husband stay together out "bl love for theer son. ( 1 hr, 45 min.) (0 llOY9 "Truck Stop" ( 1982, Orama) El zat> th TUfner. Jean Mar1t1 Pallardy A variety of trucker• compete for the attec- tlons of the proprietress of a roadside din- er. µhr,) 1:111 ..CT:AIPICW.~ 1:11 llOWll "Chubasco" (1968. Drama) Richard Egan, Christopher Jones A youth resolves some Inner conflicts when he OlnS a tuna fishing fleet (2 hrt,) •-.uneuo ... M llOWll "Love Trap" (1976, Suspense) Fiona Richmond, Robin As with An army veteran accidentally becomes inVOlved In a mysterious caper when he m0\18$ into a friend's luxunous apartment ( 1 hr., 20 min) •(C)llCMI "Angelo, My Love" (1983, Dra- ma) Angelo Evans. Miehael Evana An American gypsy boy trtes to retrieve a family helrloom which was stolen. 'R' (2 hra.) JD llCMI "Frencn Pos1c1rda" ( 1979. Comedy) Miles Chapin, Blanche Baket. A group of American students become enthralled with the country al\d Its people white atudylng 1n France 'PG' (1 hr., 32 min.) -~llOftl "The Final Option" (1982. Dra- ma) Ju<ty O.v\1, Lewis Colhna An anti- nuclear groop Miles control of the Ameri- can .Embassy In London and warns that government hoatagea wlll be murdered It 11s demands are not met (2 hrs , 4 min ) llOftl "It Came From Hollywood" ( t982 Comedy) John Candy, Dan Aykroyd. The worst scenes from Old B movies, includlng excerpts from the hims ot Edward 0 Wood Jr , directot of "Plan 9 From Outet Soace" and "Glen Or Glen- -Sports Cont. P'romPage2 m .... IC:HOOl.~ --Saturclay ... WIU1UIQ -1WIU1\llQ . 1W M•ALl . AD¥Bn'\NI. "°""' ti. COUHI l'001UU. low• ..... et T-..MM(21ft..•,.._) APIESJQOI -1 MCllOMOllAICOT -COUltl fOOTIALL ........ .. UCl.A(iln..•nMft.) -llelworks Cont. FromPaie4 early 1960s. ··call to Glory" bumped 1hc prcvrou ly announC'ed ~ries in that slot. "StttC'tha~k ... an ~hich Re~ Smith play~a cop wnh a computcmcd motorcycle that can leap the "Dukes of Hauard" General Lee in a inak bound. Not to worry "Ou~c " fan . The show that 1009' harrd·jump1ngawa) from "Wide WorlJ of oons" ~on't be lcfl in the dust. CBS plan to soup up the Gcncrnl Lee with more e MiCrntcd siunts. miniature cars 30 Sunday, Sept. 16, 1984 and trick photography. Bill Cowy ~ys he's rcturnina to TV in rc~ponsc to its violence and crashing cars. Cosby's scrie, is one of two new sitcom that feature fam1hcs with oriainal parent\ and kids intact. The other ts CBS' "Ch<trlcs an Charge," StartlRS-• ott Baio .1!> a Jive·•n b3b-y ittcr for wor~an~ parents. In other new rom~ic . CB ' "F..R." stars Elliott Ooqld as a di\OKcd doctor who moonlights in an cmcl'i<'nc>' ward to make inds meet: NB • "Punky Brewster'' is about an abandoned 7°ycar·old girl who moves in with 1 cranky old I ndl rd : CBS' da"'PG' (1hr,20m.n.) t:all llOftl ''Murdef ~ Aemoved" (1971, M~tery) John F0<1ythe, Barbar• Bain A "perfecl crime" 00" awry when • scneming doctOf murdea once fOf love and then has to klll agato. ( 1 tv.) MM= "Wh1s1hng In Brool<lyn" (19'43. Comedy) Red Skelton, Ann RutherlOJd A radio detecuve makes enemies With the POiice. a criminal and a baseball teem. .. ) llOftl "O'Hare's Wife" (1982, Ora- ma) Edward Asner, Mariette Hartley. An attorney decides to pull the plug· on the Ma-wpporting equipment on Which hla wile ls survlV'1ng and eventually f9C8IVtt couneebng from l't9f ghost. 'PG' ( 1 ht , 27 min.) •aTODAnw llOVll "F B.I. Girl" (1952, Mystery) Audrey Totter, G80fge Breot. When lhe tyndicatt tr• to eltl)OM the govetnC>f't CfllTUNI past, • J)fetty girl la tel up ... decoy to gather evidence on their plot, ( 1 hr .. 30 mm.) ClD llOftl "Alrplena II: The Sequel" (t982. Comedy) Robert Haya, Julie Hag- erty. A commercial apace-shuttle compa- ny attempts to keep a pilot from reveahng the problems with Its fitll craft befOJe it takes off on ita maiden thght. 'PG' (1 hr .. 25;J. "An Officer And A Gentleman" • ( 1982, Orama) Richard G«e. Deb<• Wioger. An undlSClplined aYlation offlCef' candidate meets hrs match In a tough Naval 1 drill lnstr~tor wtille. oft base, romancing one of the local town gm 'R' (2 hrs • 5 min ) • -...... °'.,..,. •. , ...... DIMld cwrr "" .............. "' ... WllA.....,••r•~•·~ ................. -( ............ Ctfto).; (1 lw., .... , ...... ~ ~ 79 8 cou,m P001'IAU. UIC .. Art11i1M .-.... (lln.) .. ID -IAf PAClml 1MI tumlfMD PIMCI• lM •••111..., .. MM• ............ =····-... ........ o1.., ............ oeMtn .... •• -....::fi111aa .................... -,:1111• ....................... (Iv.) ..81A1-AY90lt'l)MI ··orcams'' is about a rock bind. Bes ''It's Your tvfove" is about a connivina 14- ycar·old being rat std h~ hi\ 1nalc mother: and "Who's the Bo . • has Danza and Miss L1gtH rach contributing one child. The-onl) drnm;itic shows that arrn't action-adventure are pure fantasy. ABC's "Glitter," about ;a go~sip magazine, treats JOumalism like "The Datang Game." "find r:o. ot Lo t Love," wnh Ton)' f rnnc:1vsa a:. u Jo.gooder n.-uniting lost· lovers. is a hrart·shap('d peg that wall pcrf(.'(tl)' fill \he hole left b) the cancel~ ''Fantas I land" on ABC. _. ................ ----------~----..,..,_..~~··~~-~~ 2 3 " 19 ,, ACROl 8 1,5 Shown. Geofge on "Webster" 11 Janet on "Three's Company'' 14 Kate Jackson role 15 Not prime time 16 Another spelling abbr 17 Glass or Ely 18 ID for Uttie 19 ··-Bovary" 21 He's Cooter Dilly Pilat CtassU.ed Advertising 642.s878 33 That 1s abbr. 34 Joanna on "Newhart'" 36 - -Gordon 39 Quincy's m1heu •O A Reiner 43 Richard Sanders role •5 Mary - 46 Mr Karloff 48 Joanne - 49 Enlisted man. abbr 50 Freeway or Boomer, 23 "Dynasty" subiect 2• Mr. Hurok 25 Hankenng 26 PutdOwn 27 Coach on "Cheers" 30 Miss Verdon 32 MellSS8 on "Falcon Crest": nit 1 Maud or Mason 2 Jack or Chris 3 Sign-off for Wallach 4 Roman 14 5 Michele Lee role 6 " -and Andy" 7 Sprinted . 8 Brancusl. e.g. 9 Romano 0n ··T.J Hooker" 10 "Gloria" star 12 -Mahal 13 -Donahue 20 Valie 22 Compass pt 23 Grand -Op<y 28 "My Mother. the -·· 29 Dianne - ---30 He was Buck Rogers 3 1 " -W1lhe Winkle" 34 See 5• Across 35 Played Fish 37 This -tj,ouse·· 38 Played Chicken George 39 James Gregory rOle eg 51 N1moy, to pals 53 Hatfanem 54 Role for Henner 56 Amy linker role 58 "Road-" 59 Danza or Randall DOWN 40 Ernest Thomas role 41 "Truth - · CQnsequeoces'' • 42 Newsman Moyers 44 Word for Willard Scott 46 Femur or hbia 47 "Voyagetothe Bottom of the -.. 50 "Gunga -" 52 F1!be<t 55 "-Act of Love" 57 ID.for O'Neal SOLUTION r:"'T'":"'T:~---~~,......,....,..-......,.... -Word ·Gmne FH .. L IN TME MISSl~G LETTERS IN TME '\TV ~D.>11 Ba.OW. IR 11 I 11 INISI ICIOI I ID~I . I ~ I IKI IVIAINI IPIVI IEI l IAIC I ~ ISi IRl IVI J Sunday,$.ept. 16, 1964 • 31 &TA IS BORN! ) FREE CANVAS CARRYING BAG WITH PURCHASE GOOD THRU 9·22·14 •'LL SHIW YOU HOW ERSY TM MI [ INTI SI Ptraoaal Computer is to •••· 1 friendly computer from a friendly store: THE HOME COMPUTER STORE. Of the 2 ~5 m1llton pe<~)le h\111~ 111 Amenc1. on Ira trawon know how to use a comnuter. \\'hich 1s wh' Apple mwnted Macintu,h"' SANTA ANA · TUSTIN/OUNCE • • • {1111\N (.t l (llJN l Y ~AL 11 l J l l ~IA ~O C t N J', Ex-cop says cities slandered him Claims CM police passed on admission he smoked pot to his Laguna employer:i:; But Lux •ys someone in the Costa thinaju.st came on all at once ... Mesa Oepartmen~ P!C . f:...qu~ . .LUx aid he wu in the nuddlc of a Beach poltee otficiall pnviJcied divorce and his 1-)'ear-old son re-informati~n about hi1 history of,d.rua quired cosUy ear au,.ry when lhe Ute, whtcb Lux had willtnfy department investipuon bepn last pro•i<lcd during a polyarapb eunun-· April Lu> !"id ltis problems made a\1on. Lux then became the lafle1 of him a .. walkina ltuketcase ... I didn't ~ internal police deputinent ·in-want to put up with thaL .. /' i><>~" he uod. "ff) wan«d the job 1n Costa Mesa I thouaht at least I'd be hOll<lt "Then they aocusecl me or dnig abuae," Lux said. But he refuaod to etabo<lre, -.,.. in,e. .. We'dj111t end up in,anotbtt surt hketlu1-." However, Frank did •y, ""Gcmer· ally the oat.... of what be ~ A former Lquna Beach cop who mianedinMayafterbein1aa;uacdof drµj abuse has filed a SJ million · claim qain1t the city of 1..qun.1 Beach, and a similar claim apiost the city of Costa Meu, dwJina them both with libel and llander in the me Teammates help out a Ir lend whoee belongings were destroyed In a fire at herhome./A2 Bids will be opened Oct. 17 lor 657 offshore oil tract•, Including several oll odangeC6unty./ A7 ~~x;.~o;:;:.;sz::~~=: California A Century City shopping plti;a sustains en esti- mated $4 million In dam- age from lire.I A3 :;:-,.'».'«"X•»X..V/.(•!-!•!•):•»Xo!O:.,....V»: Nation A heart expect says pacemakers are often Im- planted In patients who don't need them./ All ~;:>»>:™»c««-»»»:«> World In MadagQC&t, natives maintain such ctosa ties to their ancestors, they often take bodies out of their tombs end throw a party./ AS Singles dances catch on lnCllloa.--tothedeUght of the ruling elite./ AA Style Amen Wardy Collectibles are popular choices to wear to the opening of th• Anaheim Hllton./81 . ---·· Help your.makeup keep Ila cool during Septem- ber heat waves./B2 @~.<;:o:;:;;;:.:.;:-:•»»:"X«-:.:-:-; Sport. Reggie Jackson hill his 499th car-homer as Angela cruise past Chi- cago, 11-2./C1 Golden West took advan- tage ol numerous mls- takea to score a 21-3 victory over arch-riv al Or- ange Coast./C1 ltntert.lnment Two musicals In Sen Clemente and a comedy In Costa Mesa arrive on the theater scene this week./111 Travel Jaded travelers can get lar lrom the madding crowd aboard the luxury cruise ahlp Explorer ./BS ~~~~ .. -::;.-:;.~-.:-x·:>:< Baelneu Treating employees pollltlvely to Improve pro- ductivity la nonsanse, aayaoneexpert./C5 >X~">...,,..'««*-"*-':'O). .. »>."-:·:OX-:- INDEX Enn• 8ombock 8<ldgo ---Colllomltl - 114 114 C5 A3 Cl111M'Jed °'_ .... ,_ Hor- Ann L...-1 --Opinion flllt>UcNol-8etvtoemef1 lporto -MWklll • 01-' ee 114 06 114 A3 A8 ca A7 ~ ... ni .... ,. r.- "#•ttw World- ' 01-4 C&-7 81-3 :Ve'ti 114 A2 A3 . . of Information about bis put happened is ro:urate... -William 0. Lux, 23,a former Costa Mesa Hi&h School quarterback, bad been 1 cop in Lquna Beach for three years when he applied for an openina on the police depanment in Costa vestip.tion in l.quna Beac:b, and Lux. said the drua; incident hap-- before It MS over he ret~ed. pcoed .. almost two yan qo," durin& Lquna Beodl Cltid' of Police Neil PutuD wu unavailable at his office Friday afternoon. but Citf ~ Kon Frank laualled at Lia 1 tep0<1al• .admission. 11iatdocsn'lconespond to wbat'I OQ the lie detector test and what be told the cliitf."·Frank said. £leanor Weaver, C.O.C. ~ .-.. tant city attorney, denies that aoyone 10 Colla Mcu 9r0vtded !")' isaf«· mation to 1 _..una Beach oftici.lls. Sbe MesafutApril. , .. Not because of 1uil1.,' Lux. uid in a period of 1eparation from his wife. atelcpboneinterviewFriday ... Every-.. tt _wu 1 one.-time thin&. a littlt: . . CUtles in aand s....----e Intricate wodt OD Dlan91Jaad 8ote1'1 entry In aandcutle con-(left) while -Welbie of Coeta lie.. pata the ftnl1hln1 toacllee on Illa cutle. Catamaran owner 'lucky to be ali.ve' Double Bullet's skipper recalls harrowln hours c lngtng to the hull waiting for rescue By ALMON LOCltAllEY °"" .................. Bob Hanel, owner-skipper of the ill-fated 6S-foot catamaran Double Bullet, is beck at his desk at his Custom Lithograph firm in Los All&C>kl. .. luclcy and thankful to be alive." Double Bullet. the record-shatter- ing catamaran into which Hanel poured nearly a half-million dollars and almos' a decade of his life, lies at the bottom of the Atlantic Ooean about 700 miles off the coast of Newfoundland. Tha1'1 where Hanel and his fivc- man crew abandoned it as it lay awash and mortally wounded after hitti.DJ a piqtially submeraed tree trunk dunng the Transat TACf race from Quebec to fl'1.nce. As visiton walked into his l..os Anteles industrial area office on Friday, however, Hanel was on the phone conductina business u lhou&b b~ hid not been plucked from a possible watery death Jess than a month before. But in a luncheon interview in a crowded, noisy restaurant a few minutes later, Hanel described in detail the harrowing 19 houn he and his crew spent clin&ina to the un- damqcd port-bull of Double·Bullet before they were rescued by the 81~ foot frci&hter American Pioneer, one ofanumbcrofvcssels that had picked up Double Bullet's .. mayday" sip.al. Amona those wbo pthcred to bear the tale was Mike Kane of Newport Beach, who lost bis own SS-foot trimaran, Crusader, last year in a race against the clock from New York around Cape Hom tci'San Francisco. Crusader was lost in heavy weather off the coast of Chile after roundin& the Hom. As for the Double Bullet. .. reports that we bit a loa and pitcbpokd (end over end) were not correct." Hanel said ... We actually hit what appeared (Pl--lo&IPP&ll/ .UI ......................... Jim OncomblDeefact. fu!MJ Oil lhwport llartlor_,., I • • • Ai...t 70tMma ... l.000ptrddputl8CG•lt• K11 I OMltl• lDaandlletmda1ats-lllleeclalatlaeklc1to«ofVDllledWa1 of OraJlle Coant,.'• $17 million fand-n'"•l CUlpUcn. Beat victim fP!eeii-U~/.UI Su.spect tries to hang himself Believed to be first suicide attempt at Irvine Police Station llenta Ana MPlaomore Chrlllie J'I-wu oneof 11e•eral performennportedlrfelled i.,.-~tbat-IDtothe-at lletmdar'• en. COQJltry meet at lnlne'• WDNbrldle Hiib School. n-wu a.led for heatahautloa. -PoeeC2. Capt. Sandbar's harbor lore to be taken with grain of salt Jim Orr's the first to admit Is cruise blurs fact, fantasy ~ "'Good afternoon. ladies ·•and amllemen. and wckOmc .aboaAt tbe'- R\lllUfK:ent river b6at.-tht...PaYJlion Queen." . Jim Orr. better known u Captain Slndbar. is oft'a,pin on a 4S..m1nu1e narrated iour of"bcautiful Newpon. Harbor." On', 37, maneuvers the Pavilion Qua:• -a doobie«<ktt obscfva· uon boat -up and down the harbor chanotlJ bctWttn fOur and ICvtft tima a day, five or M• dlys a wedc. poiAtina out the huurious waterfront homa and h• yodlts o( ~ Harbor. On has be<n plylna the harbor for 17 ,_,.. -Ii• yun for the Pav1hon Quttn and t I ytan for a n val tour company. .. Qv<r and ovtr tv«Y day of the year e~ccpt Thankq.1vina and · Chnstmu. On poun ovt lk1s. fia· uru. bdbt _.P and plenty o< ' • • . _ _:_ \ KAREii llLElll PEOPLE IN THE NEWS malari<y about the ewpon be I""' up in. and loves. T1t<re arc 11 ,000 rqiste....r yachts •• the -and 20,000 ..,.11er. unreau:tertd boa~ Orr \dis. ~is pauenaen. many of whom are tentOr t1Uicn1 or out-of·towncn who've rttMI about Ne--port's opulcntt. They'"" oome to pwlt. "On ournpl tbe homt ofOeo11t 'Burnt and mu tbne. the holM with thcawninp, btkmo to Dr. Bc«Mm, the 1tdcnust."lJrruysamoothl)1 1n10 h11 hand-bdd m1croplrione. The pmornem oa a .....,.. aft<!.. noon tour nod and pGtnt toward vanoiis bom<sand )'ldlts that sµbjcct of Orr's oanation. IOa.k.ina in his words and Utlcril'IJ oohs and aha over the real estate pnces On: qUOlel IO aJibly. SOmC of the hi&hli&hts °" poia• out on the tour. the .. inlCmaliocWly known Wedlle"i,.tbetwohomcsotdlo end of Balboa rninsula ooce - for Kloa Gillette: a us,ooo - -bwlt on the side 01 a chlf II China Cove; an all-solar powaM home on Balboe Island: tbe -home Of John Wayne (aiWO)'I I tav<>ri<e~ and the Balboo Bay Ollb, .. wbtrt the miltiooaua come 10 pla " ~ '' the Ont to admit that U.. dishnc1ton bcl-weta rtahty and an- .Uy on.. becomea blutml on the tour which touns.ts hive com~ tooisney1and·s"lunaJcCNitt ride. (On hka to coll it "Newpon's....- to tht love Boal .. , Early dunna 1 ttttnt euunion llil p()inaed out a vac:ant k>t whert be aaii4 1 .. m~mi1hon doUar .. home wu beina bw1t for 1 .. famous · " -then he named the SU • , . 'TI ammatescomethro_~ . for victim of Costa Mesa fire By 1\08 l\T BARKER ' .... o.tJ Plot ltetl wardrobe, with thanks to canna teammates on Amber' soocer team and to their families. I • Amber • mS didn't have a .. th•na of her own left to wear at Newport Harbor H~ SchOol Thur&-*>'• the day after: flames gutted her family's two-tory home on 16th Place in Costa Mc&&. The airls dropped in on Amber Saturday where's 1he stayina with her grandpattnts and pre ntcd her with fi vc s 100 bills. "It took me by total surprise/' she said. "They were so thouahtful, it'a All her new school clothes were like a miracle. I didn't cry when they destroyed by the fire. So was the torch · were here, but I did a lot after they her brother Se n carried when the len." Olympic Relay went throu ine Amber already bas aone shoppin.a earlier this summer. and has pun:hascd a jacket. belt, r. . 1 ft · h d . shorts, 1.kirt and hat. A icw Items c 1ll t e dryer ma e It She said her brother, Sean, alao has throuah unscathtd, but they were reason to be thankful for the kindne onlytowcls -no clothes. So 14-)'ear.. or others because American Telc- old Amber bad to borrow a dress from phone & Telearaph officials have sent an aunt to wear to class. him a new Olympic torch and But v.hcn school resumes on Mon-runnin.a unifonn.L rcpl•cina the ones day, she's going to have a new destroyed in the urc. ,,. , . . Amber was an ouuiandma aoalic on the Newpon Harbor A YSO 1occtr team t'or l 3· and 14.year-otd airls, a friend said. She was Jelectcd to compete in a tournament in Cal&aryl Canada, and helped &park the Toca team 10 a second plaoc tlnilh, S~c said She'll be trytna1 out for the vanny ie.m next spnq. Carole Steele, a friend said Amber's ~r teammates .. felrter- riblc" about the fire and wanted to do aomethina. ao they decided to con- tribute tbe money for acbool clothes. Amber said her tlmlly believes the fire, which caused an estimated S 160,000 in damqcs, was caused by an electrical short. Sbc said the ftmily plans to reconstruct and remodel the house. No one wa1 at home when tho fire hit. ' Eztended . '::t. .. ,. fllOllt end f'llOt'Nllt ..... ., Cllelld9 wllft lllOttl)' IAllWt' 'itf/'f Wllftl 10 flOC da)'I WenCf ~ l'N(. IO 110nO tll9 ._.... to O'IW 00 --ln!Md~ ~ .... ,.. IOI teflllld 70. • ' Temperaturea r, Le Al'Oetft 41 ::i=qut 11 " .. IO Mdlofeot .. .. ~ 17 .. A114111ta IS .. AllMllC City .. to ~ t7 fl leftlmor• 11 .. ~ 70 " 12 10 llel!IWC* .. IO ..... .. IO 8o9loll to .. ._..,.. ti 70 eun... .. .. ~vt. 11 .. c...-10 n By Tbt Auoctated Preti ONrtMton.I C. Cllfirt9IOll. w Ii • Ohlnocte.H C E Ot\ltlend COUf\llle.IC ~.()!\ ~.NH o.ia.-" Worth QtylOll .,.,,.,.., O.MolNI Olltnllt °'*""' 11,MO IVlllllVtlle ,..,.,.,.. 'WVo =:.... ONstf ... ~' 11 7' .. II • .. ft -If ., 11 12 .. 4' u ,, 71 ., .. ll ea .. " H M n .. IT u t2 71 •• :J 1oa ta .. ~o.NC Hlrttord Helel'9 ~ Hoftoll.llu .. ~ II l~ I R [ p 0R1 Howton ~ '**-I.Mt .... _.. ~ i<...aty LMlieQM Tlde1 TODAY ,..,... hlgfl 11Ua.lft II ,.,.., ... •112 a.II\, u ltoOl'f hl(;ll 1l:llp.m , .. a_,oiow 111pm.. u . MONDAY H 1:1111.ft\ 0 L°"" UU1 Plft. u lull '"9 lo::r at 7 p "'~ ,._ Mo!*r et U7 a.m. ""ir:: at IM pm. Moon,...tOdtYat I '°'"'" ..... 1 Sf p m. IN rllaa eoelll .. 11.IO P 1111, 1111 14 14 14 -~M Amber xm,aard, fourth from left. With frteoda (from left) Ja.Ue Jobneoo, llellMa ATLANTIC CITY, NJ. -Miss Utah, Sharlene Wells, a Mormon who says she has "absolutely no skeletons in the closet,•• was crowned Miu w,,...,......,TIMKeM -America 1985 on Saturday niaht, llelcblor. Jenni Beach, Janet Ba.rna, ltllen cndina the most scandalous or the 8 1 A--. .. ,_.__ oueant's 63 ycan. Miss Wells, a 20-year-old resident or Salt Lake City,. ·ilif'tW her arms around Mias New York, Mary-Ann Farttll, and then migea Miss Ten- nessee, Shelley Ma~ra u she wu pronounced tbe winner in l national- ly televised s ow and bff~ a capacity crowd of 21,000 pco·~ at Convention HaU. Bunter .. Alea tee e, vvu·m.Te 81aug-. "4'rrm a Mormon from Utah and CON TINUED STORl[S ··EX-COP CHARGES SLANDER ••• From Al .. so di putes Lux's claim that the • information obtained from a poly- &ra.J?h test is "privileged." • I thlnlc he's mistaken," Weaver said. She will rcc-0mmcnd denial of the claim to the Costa Mesa City Council this week . Frank will also recommend denial of the claim against the city ofLaauoa Beach. Lux is currently employed in a paintins business and as an assistant footbaJJ coach al Santa Ana Valley Hi&h School. Ris Laauna Beach claim cites at least S 1 million in damages caused him by lost wages. medical expenses for his on that his work-related insurance didn't cover, attorney·~ rees, and mental and emotional pa.in and sufferina. Lux also claims he's entitled to at least S 1 mlllton in punitive damages. The cost of damaa- es oocurrina in the future are un- determined, accord.ma to the claim. "I'm tryln& to act my bead above water now," Lux wd, aJthouah he is still tryina to raise the money he needs now for attorneys to punue the claim mcoun. "lt's not the moo~, it's Just to act my name cleared ... it s bumiliatina to my family and friends. "What hurts is that I rcatly Hked working down there ... I have a lot of friends still there " said Lux. He said be souaht the job ~osta Mesa for a hi&her salary, as a "career move." lie aocused the Laauna Beach department of not standina by iu officers. "What I did was wronar it really hurt my career, but I'm sull a &ood COJ?·" Lux aaid. , 'Maybe they thouaht my mental state wasn't Jood ... I became a liability. But instead of helpina me out they investipted me." Lux said he was more imprctsed by the Newport Beach po~ depart- ment's recent hand.lint of an officer in trouble. "They didn't suspend him, they let him work. ~verybody'a human ... I was &O~J throutJl a divorce, they bad no riaht to do 1t · .. What happened wu in the put, on personal time-it didn't affect my work -and they accused me or somethiM outrqeous. They went afterme~>T .,.., ........ .., .... 1(...., : The Parillon Queen ..U. the 1'ewport harbor cbaimela eneral tlmee each daJ. • • ~CAPT. SANDB~R PLIES HARBOR ••• :• Jl'romAl · ' , . . ~·lilot reporter on board that day. ~·:.., .. The joumaUst is just back from .,• cw York. where she's been writinf .: er well-known Broadway column, , announced coolly, much to the ieponer·s shock. t Thcaray-haired ladies down on the ! ssetJJtr deck smiled --and· nodded :<oward the vacant lot while Capt. . ndbar chuckled. "Yolfve aot to take all this with a ttJe srai.n of ..... he says. Indeed, the captaJn of1be Catahna ,· lfoliday (a ship owned by the same company as the Pavilion Queen) is ntificd u ownina one of the more pulcri1 homes on the tour:as is the ·former captain of the Pavilion Queen -"a biJlionaire acht man ju t in from I rel nd." doina, they don't mind," he added. Pelicans, sequJls, seals and even JBY whales surface occasionally dur- tnl Orr's tour. On the recent tour, scorct of friaky mullet filh jumped up out or the wann harbor waten, attempt.tna to shake paraaites from their bodies. Orr arcw up on Balboa bland and much of the information he Jives on his tour is Newpon Jore and lqend he picked up in his youth. As for the re~~ the comforuble blur or fact &DO fiction are pen of what makes his job fun, he says. "Who's to know, nahtr• be asked, u he swuna the Pavllion Queen around in the lido Channel and headed back toward the BaJboa Pa\.ihon. · There re locals who never tire of Ii vina their vi itina friends a thrill on the-tour, Orr said n incon. picuous- ly palmed business card or a w.h11per arc all he needs to throw a hulejoke or two into his tour n.amtion. .. I mention someone who's tamna 10 a pomoaraphic movie, or 1f tbcre'1 a very proper little I dy aboard. a k "JJ\Vshe· in h1 hare • " he 1d Oft id h acts •au ktnd •• on the tou~ which runs 4S m10utcs and costs $4 ror adults. "The area appeals to them -thiJ is an area they re.ad about all over the world in.books and see in the movie1," be said. For many, he added, the Pavilion Queen is their only chanee to ride on a larae boat. "Some of them think this ia their yacht." he said. But the Pavilion Queen isn't euct· ly a yacht. The boat wu buih in 19-4 t and christened the Del Mar. ~.OJ ~~rid War U, she caf!ied up to SOOC1vilian1 between San Di~o and a military air talion on COr· onado llland, Orr aid. When tho Coronado bfi• "''*• built, the Del Mar was refitted and moved to Ne~n Harbor. ~nd, day in and day out, the renamed boat fa.athfully plows throuaJ> the harbor, alona with her skipper. • ... And on your riaht. Pir.te't Cove. One !1'.'0vie aroLip even came in and ptintci(t &IJ the rocks white to make it loo like Antarclica. The cove was once lhuett na for Wall OJ ncy's 'Peter Pan.'" Never mind that ··rcter Pan'' 1s an aJl-animauon film. Uke Orr ) , who• \0 kno that ahould say it all," Miu Wells said. Miss Ohio, Melissa Bradley, 23, of Mansfield, who was once accused of sbopliftina. was chosen as the first runner-up. The second runner-up wu Miss Mississippi, Kathy Mannina, 22, of Drew. Miss Minnesota, Lauren Susan Green, 26, of Minneapolis, was thii'd runner-up, and Miss Texas, Tamara Hext.; 21 , or Fon Wonh, WIS the fourth runner-up. CoNTINUEU S10R1Es Her crownina ends a year lbat uw V1nessa Williams, ~1. ofMlllwdbd. N.Y., become tho ftrst black t6 Will the contest and the first \voman to relinquish the crown after Penthouse mapzinc published nude photo- araphs of her -taken before last yeaf 1 contest, in its SCptcmbCr · ue. Miu Wells Wis crownief b er predecessor. SUz!tte Clartes. 1, of Mays Landina, o ~iked Miss Williams in July. iss'Chaf(ca also Is black. Sharlene Well• SUSPECT :ATTEMPTS BAMGING ••• Fro111Al bar and restaurant m the vicinity of Main Street and MacArthur Boulevard, accordina to Norden. The two men reportedly bad kicked Driscoll'• car and exchanged words with Driscoll, wbo allqcdly aot a knife and tumed on the two men, Nord.en said. .Pi'f'coll bad been, drink.ina. aocordttij.tQ Norden. Norden said the incident is be- lieved to be the tilit s1.Uctde attempt to take place in the frvine Police Station. Irvine doesn't hive iu own jail facility but ~ inmates in the holdina room untll they're released or transferred to other jails. Police officen bad intended to tranafer Driscoll to Oranse County Jail, accord.in& to Norden. Driscoll was alone in the holdina room at the time of the incident. SKIPPER HAPPY TO BE-~ l'romAl to be a partially submcl)ed tree trunk on Saturday, sut days after the start of the race .... It was just a Jlancin& blow and, after a quick inspection, it ap~ there was no damqe. 1 But the blow apparently weak- ened the hull , and the next day (Sunday), when the wind and seu bad mcreased-we were logins 2S knbts in 8-10 foot seas -we were aware that we were ta.kins on water. A quick look below showed nearly a foot of water over the starboard bunk.'' Hanel recalled. "The increased pressure of the seas and hi&h speed apparently bad rup- tured the hull. We knew we were m deep trouble.,. Hanel said he JOt off a "mayday .. on the ARGOS (a satellite sianalin1 1y1tem required to be carried on all the racina yachu). "I aot off the sianal at 9:40 a.m. and I undentand it was monitored in Paris within 10 minutes. We already bad donned survival suits and were attemptina to launch the life raft when a larae wave turned Double Bullet over. The life raft was carriai away when the 3/16-inch line parted. It was probably fortunate, because the six or us probably could never have survived m the life raft in those heavy seas." Late that afternoon a plane Ocw overatabout 500 feet 1'It didn't even wauJe its win.as, like in the movies, ·Just Call 642-6086 I but we were Jure they_ fiid teen us . It beaded back toward ~ewfoundlaud." Hanel said when lie and his crew saw the li&hu of'thefttiabter early the next momina. tl,iiY 041it it miaht be one of the raa~ tiditL "We started ttisft the strobe ligbu we bad itra-.. o~ our survival aear. Before lo~ ate ship ftS alonpide. It was a•esome loolcin& up at that bia 1 as it ~ttlled and rolled in the heayt teas.~t times, all we could ace wu ns bottom:• Hanel said the most limo~ experince wu P.tfi!ll abOafd the freiabter, which bid dropped a Jacob'a ladder over the 11& and started throwina tines to tbC crew of Double Bullet "The lines did not have taops and it was nearly impossib1e for ut to tic the loops because we were so weakened by the wciaht of our 1urviv• aur and water in the boOU. "Yes. it was cold. T• told us aboard the rreiahter t.6at the 'Water temperature was 61 d~, tNt it seemed colder." Eric Witte ofCipbtrano Beach, the youngest and stroQJht R( the crew, w11 the first to att abo&id tne Ship. "He told the crrii' to tie'cloOft in the line so we could ttt thC!'6l1dver our beads. Theo came lk"'-"ch~ or c:limbin.a that JKOb•.l llldrkr an our heavy pr," Hanel sltd. Han~l dcmed rcP+r(s 1hif teveral Bob Hanel of the crew had bruises and were suffertna from hypothcnnia. "We al1 came out ofit unacathed." The laat Hanel and hia crew uw of Double Bullet, it wu atilt beina buffeted by heavy seas. It is prctumed to have sunk. An aircraft search several days later failed to tum up any silJ'.lS of debris . Will he build another catamaran? "No way," said Hanel. "I've re- tired. Double Bullet pve me six fearl of fun and adventure, a couple or coveted records and a number of trophies. Now its back to busincsa." Wbat do you like ab09t Cllt Daily Pllot? Wbat doa't yoa Jlkt! Call 1'• nambtr at left dd yoar me11a1• Will be recorded, truscrlbed aad dellvertd to &le approJrtale editor. TH Ame H ·lloar uswerlD1 servlct may bt used tt record leUtn tt tM editor o• uy 1.,1c. ONi.,.,..,. lO "' IAtttrt colama mast llCIMe tMlr name and teteplloH aaMer for vtrtflcatlon. No clrcalallon calls, pleue. Tell 11 wt.aft oe yov mlad. • ORANGE CO.St D1ilyPllt Clrculatlon 114/M2-4m Cta11tfled edwertlllnt 1141142 .. 71 AH other depertmente M2-a21 MAtN O'PICI ' 330 W 'I II COU. MN CA. I.ta ~ I I COstt H. L. Schw•rtz UI Publl h r Cltcutatlon · ToltphonM AoHmary Churchman Contra ler Stephen F. Carazo Production Manag r • ' Or~~ OAILY PILOT/Sundey, hp-f8, ,.,. .t9 • N .Hlll~ • Reputed crime fl6iire Soviets seize American vessel found ezeeuted ln N.J. Ship seized near Russian territory tbt area d found no "&Dot rt. Hr.l.le)'-...0 As lhe Coosc Guard -preponnt to launch a ICa1th mw1oa.. 1t was notdied by the Slate ~rtmenl thlt the So".cu It.ad tfl16d \be vntc'l aod ....,. holdi., the CttW. Mil of 111t AJatb wbah"I vm..,. or G1mbtU on La-wraxc IN:ad. TlleState~f-lrYllllM> C•ltltA<1 them thf'O<llll lhe SoViel UolOft.he..S 11 Th .U-IH "'- as Soviets hold five Americans increw . GLOUCESTER TOWNSHlf, NJ. -The body of reputed' orpnjud en.me ~U? SalvatOtt t:'etta wu ditoovered here, 1be Vic:tlm another 1~nt eleCUtion 1n a c:ononwna vl\4'rwor1d power 1trua1e 1nvolvina ca11no-rich Atla.ntic City, authorities said Saturday. An autopay showed lhlt Tetta, 27 '#bote body wu di.covered Friday ftJ&bt aJonaide a rOld in this towft toutheast of Pbilldelphlo, bad bocn !bot h<'i<:e In ihe bock of the head at cl0te ~n~.,.jth a llllalk:alibor wtaPon • ..,d 0..,,.. Ktrns, a spokesman for the ....amucn Couaty prosecutoc'• office. JIJne accldent probe could ~e moatt. SHJELDS, Ky. -Federal mine 11.fety officials plan an "extensive" invtt~tion to find the came of a c:o&1 mine rock fall that killed four miners and dtiermine if there were any tafety violations. Officiala from the Mine Safely ud Health Administration could i'neet u early 11 Monday with county ltlte and local officials to make wianmenta and plan the examination of Wednctda¥'• fltaJ accident at Bon Truckina Co. '1 Buraer No.2 mine in Harlan Coun'ty, 111d John McOrath, an MSHA tpoknman. The investiption could take from a couple of days to a few week.a, and a few months oould pua before .M~HA i11u~ i~ final report on the ~ident. McOra~ uid Saturday. But he SJid ufety cit1uon1 could be made within a monlb to 11X weeks if violatioa1are found. • Re.tan .. ,.. AmerlC. Cloe.a 't WIUJt ...,. WASHINGTON -l'rcsident R-n de<lared Saturday that America .. caa be entrusted with military miaht" because '"we don't like war we never have." ln a speech before the National Italian American Foundation the P,l'Hident said peace i1 the fint and last key to ensure lhat the United siaies 'will &!ways be 1'haven to the immiartnu whofve enriched it. And to enaure t~e peace we must re~ain mili~ly 1trona," Reqan uid ... Down throuah our b11tory most Ammcan presidents have uodtntood thiL We're not &n expanaioniat country or an imperialist country," he said ... We seek only to protect, never to act 11 the aaareuor ... Armed man nabbed at caadldate reception SYRAroSE, ~ Police briefly detained a man with a hatchet and lcnath of pipe concealed under hia coat Saaurday outside a hotel where Democnlle vice presidential c:andidlte Geraldine Ferraro was titendina 1 fund-raiser, a spokesman said. Police spoiesman Rod Catt said loC:al authorities and the Secret Service decided there was no reason to hold the man, wbotold police he lives in lllinoia. The man wu atandina outside a hotel where Fenuo 1uended I fund-rais.ina rcoeetion after deliverina • foreip-policy speech at S)'tlCU5C Univenity, Carr 111d. Yeater .IJu 'right •tafr u liaater LANDER. Wyo. -Air Force Geo. Chuck Yeqer, known for bavina the .. riaht stuff" u a teat pilot. displayed hit &kills 11 a hunter Saturday u he brOuaht down bis buck anteloptJUlt 13 minutes into tht 41 It annual One-Shot Antelope Hunt at Lander. The event draws celebrities from a variety of fields. CALIFORNI A Ffre.dam.,e11 Century Clty •hopplag plua ANCHORAGE, A1atb (APl - Five Americana were bei.111 btkt 1n the Soviet Union after their 12().foot supply veuel wu scizod near So"i.et temtory, lheCoutOuard Wd Satur· day. • "We don'I tnow why they're io tuttody or where they were taken ioio custody or a.oYtht"f else, .. said Petty Office Mike Hilley j.D Juneau. The latt repc>ryed location or the Freida K was in the Chukchi Seajutt south of Polnt Hope on Tuetday. The tsp of the Seward Pen1n1ula, which the Freida K"""'ldhavebad to peu on its way beet to Nome, ia only about SO miles from Soviet territory. Hilley uid the Homer-bued vmel wu mum1na from del.ivenna fucJ and water to Pol.at Lay, an EW.mo villqe 160 mda nonheut. It wudue in Nome on WednClday. The Cout Guard WU told that j' WU overdue late Friday ifter Terry Thoms. who leuts the ahip.. flew over .... ;! 7 "The Sovieu -the -Oepanmen1 Fndayoftlus UIC>deo~" Joe Real' a tleplrtment 1poktsman ill Wfllllill,l!Oft. D.C, Mid tul\lay. .. , .. ~ the RUHaaDt beheve ~ strayed into tbrir Wilen. We don t blow dthat's the cue." Tbe c:rew"t laA known IOC1t1on bdoft b<ina picked up by the Sovl<U wu in the vicia.ity of the Bay of Providence, Reap t1id. The .,. lJ about 60 milH..nonb. Reap u.1d tbie St11t Otpen:meld fl'O\lkl no1jaK a formalatattmtat• the lnadent and addiuonal ..,.,_ m111on woWd 001 be forthcorid .. ""'11 eorly ..... -k. • The last rejlOl1Cd --al die YeMC( Lt ... pretty normal J)ieQI: \0 be at" OG a mum tnp fronl Point Uy. HillevtaMS Hafley • d the -1 11 O'O'lled ~ Kemp Paluca Seafoods of O.h1th, Mann. and leased II> Thoms ""1 I.atty Edmundson offlomer It's another boy for Princess. Di 'We have nearly got a full polo team.' says fatherCharles LONDON (AP) -Princess Diana pvebirth Saturdaytoa~und, 14- ounce boy, her second child and the PC'WCSt heir to the I 000.year-old British crown after his lather, Prince Cbal1H. and brother, 2-year-okl Prince William. .. We have nearly aot a full polo team now," ~ ao --avid polo player, e._ulted 10 crowds of well- wisben btf ore ilf:ldin& oll' for "a .still drini." Polo it plaY<d with four players on honebeek on each team. Buckin&bam Palace annouoc:ed that the Child WIS born It 4:20 p.JJ). (11:20 a.m. EDT) at St Mary'1 Hos()ital, I~ hours after Diana wu adnu«ed in the early stq;cs of labor. Charles, who two years aao became the tint royal fatherC:'1et to attend the birt.b of an 'heir, was again praent in the de~very room. Outside the 132-yoar-old red bricl: h0$pital on a west Londoa beck street, cheen., applause and poppiq cham-e corb s=ted the ..,.. nouncc:menL Scores of well--wishen bad pthered behind police bar· ricadcs throu&hout the day. BridJh -rtpOl\I bad said -Charlet, 35, and Diana, 23, _,. hopu11fora1irt. If the bobyhad boon a 11rt, she could have betll supaMded in the royaJ line~· mblequeat aon110 Charles and Diaoa. "Her Royal Hilliness and tbe cbilcl arc both well." t6e pe.Jace ll&temtat said. A palacupokqm•n •bo sool<e~ condition of not besna :ctentificd, said ........ the child .... born, Cbat1- rusbed IO the te~booe IO. tell LlaQ mother, Queen Elizabeth ll, who is vac:ationill& with other memben or the royal family at thdr Bal~ Sl:oll)and ........ "Tbetueenand all the royal ramdy are deli led." the apok.eunao ti.id.\ The by joins bis father ud brother u a ponce orwaJes. Like bis brother, the boby ........ npected fO be oamed ro. -da~ The London boolunakina 6"" William Hill said the odda favo<ed G«qe over a variety of Olber common kioaJ.y £na1isb names 1ucb as Edward and Henry. Elvis wu \be Iona shot a1 m.1. Harold Broob-llaker, din:cloc of Burke's Pee the bible of 11n1isb nobility, sai'JT.' ls "known in royal circles Charlet plans to name one child Geoqe ... LOS ANGEUS-A fire thatsutted onettore in tbe fashionable Century Square lho_ppina plau and sent smoke pourina throua.h seven otben Saturday momiDf causedan estimlited ·$4 million damqe, autliorities said. The fire wu f'CP.O"CC1 at 9 a.m., an hour before m0tt shops open· in the outdoor plaza, 10 miles weat of downtown Los An&elea and on the ed,e of Beverly Hills. It is part of the Century City office, hotel and theater complex. There were no employees or thoppen in the stores when the fire broke out and no injuries were re potted. GM talks keep on as pickets~march --~ Officer •lala, pollce m,..t1ffed . SAN DIEGO -Two men were anated Saturday for investiption of murder, but investi&ators said they had noUearoed a motivc..io a shootina that left one city police olfioerdcad and two wouhded, one of them critically. Polioe were citina two men in a parked car late Friday in Balboa Padr: for drink.ina in public and providina alcohol to minors -two teen-qe airls in the auto - when one of the men opened fire with a semi-automatic hand&un, homicide Lt. Paul Ybarrondo said. Rookie police officer Kimberly Tonahill, 24, shot four times, died at UCSD Medical Center about 10 minutes after beina airlifted there. Patrolman Timothy Ru~pp, 31 wu in critical condition and on life suppon aystems Saturday at UCSDMC while 9ary Mitrovicb, 26, shot in the left shoulder, was in fair condition at Mercy Ho1p1tal. The arrested men were identified as Victor Casillas, 23, and Jotclito Cinco, 2S. Fntemlty prank Jeau to art:t111tll No national strike deadline set; more talks slated today DETROrT (AP)-Nqotiators for General Motors Corp.and the United Auto Work.en union baruined on a national contract all day Saturday, u pickets mare.bed outside 13 plants struck .over loc:al issues. There was no indication if~ had been made in national barJ&inin& on the critical job-security issue. Talks were to resume this momina. Picket lines were set up just after midniab.t Friday at 13 plants in local protests involVln& 62,000 employees of the aiant carmaker. Leaden: of the alrikina locals said the walkouts were desi&ned to keep pressure on GM while 1JA W Presi- dent Owen Bieber and his barpinen try to reach a new contract. GM and jbe union baruirted for most of the day, and at ):2S p.m. EDT, called off talks for the ni&bt A union auu:ment said procreas had been made "in some areu. Many differences mnain, however.• Company officials said oothlna ofTacially. The union has demanded the fint raise in three yean on its S9.6.l-an- hour basic wqe. Cost-of-livina pay- men ts \OW S3.Qi4foru avmee ..._. ofS 12.67. Theuruonp.vc upmd!igM of dollars in con.tr.ct cooet91l0Ql i-a )'<an ..., wb<n tho il>dusuy - I....._ JllODey. but this yoar GM u makina record profits. Union head calls strike by mistake DEWITT, N.Y. (AP) ->.. ..--w--. p1Gil1Ud It 13 -II ~ Corp..,..,.._ .. munlry, ·--Nreona..dey c.c•• d • ltrtke he lllld he ...., __ "no __ _ not to." UAW Local 145 Pl 1llclonl Didi llOlclllll -he otdar9d .. ..... by 1,300 -at • """"' Body plant Ill 12:22 Lm. F1JLLERTON -To the men of Delta Chi the panty raid was just a harm.leas prank -but to the police it was burslarY. The incident took place Friday ni&htat the Alpha Delia Pi aorori!r houii at Cal State Fullenon. "These airla were lqitimate!Yterrificdovcrthis, said Sat. Glenn Deveney, bead of the buraJ,arydet.ail. But Delta Chi chapter president ftich Prior ta.id, .. It was a panly raid It's a routine thina that happens several times a year. The problem wu they didn't know who we were. Once they found out who we were, they didn't want to press charges.•• WU.oa, Deatmejlaa toa Jloadale barba OAKLAND -Gov. Georae Deui<mejian and U.S. Sen. Pete Wilson threw a variety ofb&rbs at Walter Mondale-inciudiq an exhortation .. to do a liltJe FritzbuStiDJ .. -at the state'• Republican convention Saturday. Wilson delivered a stingina and wide--~ denunciation of Mondale and the Democnts u 1 prelude to Deukmejiah s remarbat the Hyatt Reaency ... You remember Fritz." Wilson told an estimated crowd of SOO, "He's the one who keepsshowinc up at the end of all those stories about Geraldine Femro."The aovemor made the fritzbuatina remark in response to two Il)Cmben: of the Collqe Republican C.Ommitte.e who llDC a venion the hlt movie theme son.a Carolizians begin-toadd up hurricane toll_:_ ""Gbottbusten," with Mondale u the WJ<t. Abalone dlver ldlled by uuk SAN GREGORIO-A diver was killed Saturday i>¥ a p<a1 white shark that &ribbed' him U he WU fishin& for abalone. 5st. Denni& Bentley of the San MateoCountySheritrsDepartmmtsaid the ml;D, who be did not identify, was divina about 8:30 a.m. POT otf Piaeon Point, which it about 40 milet south of San Francisco, when he Wit suddenly pulled under by the lhart: about 150 BOUVIA, N.C: (AP) -Tlu<t days after Hurricane Diana blasted onto land along the North Carolina coast. damqc assessment ·crews scoured the Kardest-hit areas Satur- dJy,..Mk!iq UP. the toll, already more t.ffin $6S.S million. "The damqe ln the tomadoei (last March) was obvious,,. sald Russ Edmonston, spokesman for the North Carolina Department of Crime Control and Publ.ic Safety. ."But with this storm, the real damaac is not easily visible .... We yardsofT1bore in about ISfcetofwater. A partner put the injured man on an air mattress as soon as hi•friendem~on the surfacel but the officer said hewu Groom's apparently dead u be p>t 10 th~ b. WoRto · plane loses __ _.._ ___ heart on way Rlot Yictlm• barfed la Soat.IJ Africa to wedding SHARPEVILLE, South Aliica -Carryina 34 coffins !boulder bi&b, several thouund chantina blackl Saturday marched from two mass funeraJa to MANDEVILLE. La. (AP) -A ceme1eries where the~ victims of fierce riotina two weeks qo, Jn Cape s"utterina motor fotced a pilot en Town on Saturday1 'cltnt Pieter W. Botha bristled at criticism of South · route to his weddina in New Orieant Africa'• racial policies by U.S. Democratic ~idential nominee Walter to prccariouslycruh-land bit si..nalf-- Mondale. and in Durbaqt six nonwhite oppMiuon leaden remained hokd up tnaine plane on the Lake in a Britilb contulase. Policeuid black towns.hips around the nation were qWet Pontchartrain Ca.useway -but bit after more than two weeb of almost daily rio11na. marrilee plan&")!'tte ttill Oyina h.iah. No one: was 11\ured when Jo.eph Debtor COUJJtrf• WIUlt dlalop~ = ~= orlit17.0: .:::i.N.:. MAR DEL PU.. TA. Ar)entina -Ministen of Oadl1 indebted Latin fon:ed landina on the southbound American t"Ountrin 11y their call for • direct dialoeue with induttrialited Lane of l.he 26-mile cauteW1y into countriet ia an ittempt to add political penpective to lbe rqion't economfc New Orleans on F~·da aftcrnOon. dilemma. In a decW.llon issued Friday nlah~ the 11 Ca-Group M'la ·~-· ~-• countries invited wealthy countries to par\rci1>1te in a .. direct political 1 "°· w°"""" •oa was"""~· dialotue" which the lfOUp &aid it hoped coukt be~ 198$, ''In thit = !:' !~~~:-l:~ communiq~ or Mar dcl Plaia, we have apin acknow that the debt · oal Ai ... _ b. · cannot continue to be considered u a simply economic or nancial =m, nauo rpon wlK"n 11 tftillnc . bepn sputtenRJ•round 4:$0Lm. He but that it h11 dttp political connatiom," Colombian Foreip inlster notified the Atfl'On tower \hat be Auautto Ramim. <>Campo laid. wouJd have to mate an C:l'M'IJCnc:y Red Cro• alm• to brlcfle .KOl'eall clla..,, SEOUL. South Korea -Red Cross olliciali llom the nonh and south or divided Korta a.re to meet Tucac::~tiin another tfron to opo an nch&Dlt aimed 11 bdtcrina lnttt-Korain ons. Prt:tide9t Yoo l..banf-IUn of I.be South Kofton National Red Cross said Sat~~ nlaht Seol!I woukl ICtid a dt~tion of rivt IO the truce viii.. of Pannlur\jbm 10 meet five Red C..O... oll!Cials llom Nonb ltorea. Technfcally, they are to di!cu11 a Noni> K....,. offer or f1ood aKl to South Korea. But much 11res1 i1 beina put on bfotlder aspects orthe meetina. II Will bl the fint time in over 10 ~ean that the Red Cron societiel of the lWO countnea •Ill have 111 down tOIJC:lhtr to deal wtlh hoftltllil&rlan tu- landina. He 11id tht era.ah W®kl bave: no efl<ct on bis wedd!ni! to Wendy 0.:kens. 23, or the New o.1cons suburti orMc1&1rie. Howtvcr, Mllaoo's ft.the< said the ca-y touchdown had canttled lb< couplo'l plans to I" on thttt hontymDOn lo Ille plane. "They're still flylna." sai<I Joseph Milano Jr. "They',. ao>na on a commm:ial airhntt... · have to ao into bomes and check for status, was about 4SO miles southwest "Once the eye itJclf eecs beck OWS" structural daJ1laae." of Newfoundland at 6 p.m. EDT the water, 1t acts ti.ck. over its IOUh:ie Meanwb(lc-, tropical storm Saturday. and was cxlM'C1Cd. lO @n:.._of encrsY.:., Case said Friday ... H E.d.ouard died otf the Mexican coast, tinue iu. nort.beasttrly course for e"er, we re -norlooiii'ij rot becominaatroP.,cald.epression.Fom-another sU 10·2• hours, forecasaen c.plosivctypeofintensification."' casters predicted li~ movement out ~ ~· : The main thrat likely would be to of the tystem o~t. lt s !)Ver water now and poses no maritime interests. not CO&Slal No deaths or injunes were blamed major threat, .. Sue Yeaman of the dents. he said directly on the norm. National Weather Service at Ralciah · llamqe hat bocn estimated al said earlier. Deputy White H0nte presa more than $6S.S million, and ttie total In Coral Gables, Aa., forecaster rewy l..arry Speakes sald he did continued to "mount Saturday as Bob Case of the National Hurricant know when President R~ wollld people who lefl the the I ten Fnday II>' C.nter said tbe chances that Diana declar< Nonb Carolina a disaster a chance to examine their pro:perty. could pict up strength are "probably .to enable the coastal region to qualify Diana, reduced to tropical storm ~ aood.. . for redcn.J relief assistance. . • ,' •• sr cel•bn1tna 11AJ1.T'1 iou. ua1._., l'lt- 11a1. llacbd -borD ..... _ ......Uy die tlllle llAJlT aent lla flrat I.... ol comm11wn tllroaCb. tile tobe. • • Export of 'kiddie porn' sparks N. Europe debate Danes, Sw dish, Netherlanders say demand-by U.S. part of problem pubh hed in f 01 c1gn m zincs" hu.·h arc hipped ck to Nonh nten . .An added problem for police is the diffi!ring le 1 e of&e ual consent in J1ITC'rent countnt"s. 1he1 I <.'on nt agt" 1s 15 in D nm1u k an<l Swctkn and ~OPF.NHA JEN, Ocnm rk (AP) llcg;ation th t child vomo- graphy 1~ Oowing mtQ the Unned States from Scandm via and the Netherland have rekindled dtb:ltc here on how to control pomogmph)'. Officials m Denmark. Sweden and the Netherlands acknowlcd d that charges made by the U.S. Senate and the media on imponcd child porno· graphy contain a grain of truth. But some authorities questioned the ong- • 1nal source of the material and argued that the U.S. market for child porn is a big part of the problem. Ripping Up cars • serious business ORLA"IDO. Fla < .\P) -Orange < ount~ Fire Chief James Cragan is o <;urc h1!i men can rip the roof off a car faster than anyone else that he's lx't h1\ shin -and his badge and helmet -on 1t This brutal-soundmg competition 1'\ all 10 fun , but with the senous 1nten11on of demonstrating ways to \JVe people trapped in cars by auto Jcc1dents It all takes place at the lnter- nauonal Auto Extrication Compct1· uon in Toronto on Sept 21-23. in "h1ch teams from 15 fire depart· men ts will strut their stuff. Se' cral fire departments have already tak~n up Cragan's ch~llenic From M1ss1ssauga. Ontano, Fire Chief Gordon Bentley wrote to say." I ha'"e checked our team's credentials and have already designated a spot to place your helmet in my office " Fire Chief Walt Chapman m Dc- trott bets his shirt against Cragan's helmet. "My men will prevail," Chapman said bluntly. "With names hke McGowan, Winchester and Gozzarado. how can the) fail?" From Tampa came word from Fire Chief Anthony Coniglio Jr. that he not onl) wagers hrs chLefs helmet "but also my badge .. And. he told C~i:>· "l'm !~king forward to rece1v1ng yours. The Orlando team s six members have nicknamed themslvcs "Carbusters. We ain't afraid of no wreck." The} are. however, somewhat con- cerned about the challenges "Detroit's where they build them. They probably eat cars for lunch." said ftrefigbter Jay Hoskins. nc p:trk to the nonhcm l::u10-18 in the Neth rland'I, altho~h pc n d bate on child pQmogaph) pcndin I lation ther would lower wns the NB(' program .. Siknt u to 16. • Shame.'' hown on Oani~h tclcvi ion In · thC' Netherlands, pornography 1n ugust ha:i been illegal .sin<~c the turn.of the 1 he bro:tdca t 1d Denmark is the * ccntul'). although the ban i.s rarely center for commercial production C'nforccd A draft bilM'>cforc the Dutch and wholesale di tribu11on of the parliament would decriminaliLe m tcrial. \\hilc ttic Netherlands h the trade mall J.:in<1s of pomognphy. center for mail order and retail sales. Too~ Faber. pokc)woman for the aimed itn hillion-dollarmarkct in the Netherland)· Justice Mini try, stud Uruted States. officials know child porn i m de Danish newscasb showed pan ot there but feel they can do little to stop the program, and the re ulting uproar it. prompted Danish officials including ··1t 1~ \Cf\ hard to di over." Ms. Pnmc Minister Pour Schlcutcr to Faber said: "h is mostly a fam1I) make pronouncements that these business ... done 1n prhate and charges must Ix' investigated and laws thercfort \Cl) difficult for pohce to tighteru:d . detect," One Danish expert disputed the ShL ..aid that when ca5es are br0<.idcast d1scoven:d officials pro ute on "I won't )'(the broadcut) wa~ all charges of child abuse. That onl:> a p.1ck of lie • but when H is said that happens about three o' four times a hu amounts of child pornograph) vear; she said. are pouring into the United State~. · Klaas Wilting. an Amsterdam the first question is: Who 1s buying at? police spokesman. said a recent raid Child porn has largely disappeared revealed child porn in 20 of the cuy's from Denmark," said Berl approximately 120'\Cxshops. He~1d Kutchinsky. a University of Copen-an unspecified amount of the ma- haaen criminologist who helped write terial appeared to have come from Denmark's 1980 ban on child porn. Denmark. . "Police have not come aero s 1t. Officials in Sweden. which cnm1· and there have be no reports here of nahzed child porn in 1980. said the) its production or sale," Kutchinsk)' were unaware of any production or said. • cxpon of pedophilia matenal. Police 'ubsequently searched two But Falkenland said U.S officials premises and charged four Danes had requested an invest1gauon of two with violating the 1980 ban. But Swedish companies as pan of an officers insist they always have en-alleged international child porn nng forced that law which provides jail The two companies are suspected of terms for producing it and fines for cxporttng material that had been distributing. -photographed in the United States, Scandinavian officiaJs al~ reacted pnnted in Denmark and ferried to to a sencs of bearings on chHd PQm in Sweden to be returned to the United the U.S. Senate's juvenile justice States. subcommittee. In tesumony Wednesday. two experts stated that Scandinavia and Southeast Asia were the heart of a world-wide distnbution system of child pomograph)'. For Danish Justice Minister Erik Ninn-Hansen, the distnbuuon of child porn 1s a separate matter from the productton of it. "There isn't a shred of proof that the pornography Amcncan customs agents intercepted from . Denmark was produced here," he said. However •. he said he plans to discuss the Danish parhan:ient's JUS· 11ce committee the possibility of ra1s1ng fines and makmg d1smbution I of child pomograph) punishable by Jail sentences Currently, only producer~ or thoc,e ~ho cause child porn to be produced go to Jail "The lu re of sex from Scandinavia" 1s part of the appeal of the 1mpon- export scheme. said S1g'"ard Falkenland. who heads the cnmmal di vision of Sweden's customs agency But he added that other benefits of the system arc the reduced chance of getting caught and the low penalties in some European countnes. He alleged that the photographs are made m the United States. and then 60% increase in measles not alarming A TLA ~T \ ( .\P) -Federal health officials say they arc not alarmed b) a 61 percent Jump in measles (:ases in the first haJf of this year, because the disease IS Still far below levels in the pre.vaccination years. The national ('enters for Disease Control said that 1.7 59 measles ca cs were reported m the first 26 weeks of 1984. up 61 percent from the 1.095 cases reported m the first half of 1983. Altho111gh the measles case numbers are up this }Car. they arc "still far bclo" the number 1n the pre vaccine era ( 19 50-62). when an average of over 525.000 cases was reported annually," the CDC. said. "This is not a threat to the measles chmmation effort." satd Sandy Ban, a measles researcher with the Atlanta- based health agency Dear World MY "r'O UNG SON starts to school this week , .. It's all going to be sort of strange ancf new to him-for awhile, and I wish you would sort of treat him gently. _ You see, up to now he's been king of the roost ... He's been boss of the backyard ... His mother has always been near to soothe his wounds and repair h1o; feelings. But now thini;t~ are J(oing to be different. He's going to walk down the front steps, wave his hand, and start out on the great adventure . .. It is an adventure tha~ might take him across continents. acrogs oceans ... It's an adventure that will probably include wars and traged~ and sorrow ... To live his life in th.e world he will have to live in will require faith and love and courage. o, World, I wish you would sort of look after him ... Take him by the hand and teach him things he will have to know But do it gently. if ~ou can. He will have to learn, I know, that all men are not just, that all men are not true. But teach him al o that for every scoundrel there is e hero • . • that for every crooked politican there is a great and dedicated leader . .• Teach him that for every enemy, there i a friend. teer him away from envy. if you can ... and teach ~im the o;ecret of quiet laughter. In chool, \\'orld, tearh him it i~ far more have faith in his own ideas. even 1f everyon.e say ·they are wrong ... Teach him ~ be gentle with gentle people and tough with tough people. Try to give my son the strength not to follow the crowd when evervone is getting on the bandwagon . . . Teach him t.Q listen to all men-but teach him also 'to filter all he hears on a . c1een of truth and take ju t the good that €phons through. Teach him, if you can, how to laugh when he's sad ... Teach him there is no shame in tears .. . Teach him t here can be glory in failure and despair in succes . Treat him gently, World, if you can. But don't coddle him ... Because only the test of fir~ mak fine steel ... Let him have the courage to be patient ... Let him have the patience to be brave. Let him be no man ·~ man ... Teach him alwnya to have sublime fa1th in him elf. Becau e then he will always have Rublime faith in mankind. Thi it quite an order, World, but "ee what you ran do ... He' uch a nice little fellow, my on! • tionorahle to foil than to ch*:at ... Teach him to By DAN VALENTINE HARBOR LAWN -MOUNT OLIVE CEMETERY-MAUSOLEUM-CRE MATORY 1625 GISLER AVENUE COSTA MESA 540-5554 Checklilg him out A Philadelphia pede.trlan take. a wary look at newapaper-read.lng aculpture called "Catching Up,• which waa lnatalle4 at the Pour Seuom Hotel lut week. Nine of the lifelike bronze acultures of artt..t J . Seward Johilaon, all deplctln& people do::J day-to-day thing• In life, are teat- te throughout the hotel. China's singles·uow dance 'The Collective' at Pal ace The singles dances are an effort to save-= them from a bleak and lonely old age HARBIN. China (.AP) -Wtth the music pouring from saxophones and trombones, factory workers in their 30s whirled around the dance floor of the Youth Palace on singles night, the answer to many a Chinese lonely heart. The heat was oppressive but the young men and women went on dancing the foxtrot -once con- sidered vaguely naughty 10 China's communist society -and did .. The Collective" gravely and with dc- tenninat1on. • - Singles dances. begun early in June. are )et another of tbe many "firsts" in the new era of Deng Xiaoping, tbc Chinese leader. Endorsed by no less august a bod)' than the Chinese Communist Central Committee. the dances have been received with enthusiasm all over the country. Their aim is to relieve a serious social problem: the plight of hundreds of thousands -possibly millions - of men and women in their 30s still unmarried. They arc the unintended victims of an even bigger dilemma, that of providing food for more thana b1lhon Chmesc mouths. • To keep the birth rate down. and make it easier to feed these vast numbers, the Communist Party has undertaken a serious program of family planruna. Amongothcrthmgs, 1t discourages early mamages and a great many Chinese remain single well after the age of30 because of this. The singles dances are an effort to save them from a bleak and lonely old age. To encourage singles, the Central Committee created "The Collcct1ve." a dance that resembles the Amencan square dance. On one recent Saturday ni~t, 100 young women and 70 yo\ing men from schools, factories and entcrpnscs in the Harbin area con- verged on two big dance halls. each with live bands. There was no jazz or disco. The dancers ate ice cream and drank soft drinks-no alcohol. It was a sedate evening with the smallest undercurrent of excitement. Factory, school and other dances are not uncommon in China, but singles dances arc. • "We put ads in the newspapers and d1stnbute invitations to various units.'' said Li Ganshan, the dance director, a bcspectaclt¥1 woman of39. "Five couples have become engaged so far. That isn't much. but they arc temoly sby. They will change." Mai Hua, 30, is one who became cngaJed~ She is a kindergarten teacher and 1t was at one of the singles nilhts that she met Huan$ T1cnhua, also 30, a cooking ps distnbutor. •·1t was love at first sight " he said. She said, "We both enJOY music and singing and. of cour~. dancing. We dated after the first dance Since then. on our day off, we go to the theater together, to the workers club or JUSt stroll alona the Sungli River embankment. It isn't easy, but once in a while we arc able to be completely alone." She will bring to the marriage -the date is yet to be <>et -a considerable dowry, comparatively speaking. She lives with her pa.rents and has a tape recorder. a miniorgan, a radio, a bicycle an<i a black and white TV set. "I have nothing" said Huana. "A camera .... " She cams _.3 yuan($ 18) basic salary and 10 yuan ($4.20) in allowances each nionth. His salary is 45.20 yuan ($18.40) with 20 yuan in allowances. Each has saved 700 yuan (about $316). They differ on one thing. He wants her to bve with his parents. She, though fond of them, wants to have an apartment of their own. Through his company, be can get a one-bedroom apartment with kitchen, shower aoa small sittina room fgr two yuan 10 fen a month, less than $1 A 28-year-old railway worker and his wife served as their chaperones. "1 wish we had had singles dances before," the husband said. "It makes things so much easier. We dated while working 1n the umc railway repair shop. But we had to put up with JOkcs and gossip." Abused 'Chang Che~g' agai~ an object·of. pride Repairs under way on the Great Wall----after three centuries bankment." The wall's last caretaker was the Ming dynasty, which fell in 1644after an invasion by the Manchus who established the Qing (China) realm that lasted until 1911. BADALJNG China (AP) -The Neglect, CIVIi war, Japanese 1n- Great Wall, neglected and desecrated vasion and violent pohtical cam- for more than three centuries, is paigns by China's post-1949 com- bcnefitting from maJor repairs and I' munist 1ovemmcnt devastated parts crackdown to top Jounsts from of the wall. known in Chinc'ie as the spo1li na China's bigc l cultural relic. "ChanJ Cheng." · Amons the thousands of tourists Dunn& the 1966-76 Cultural Rev· who visit the stone barncr that olution, many pea anu stoic the travcNs the mountain~ nonhwcst of wall's stones and slab to build houses Peking are people who etch their and pia pens, m accordance with the name on the ancient facade, said Wei offic1al slogan ''U$e the past co 5ervc Fu.iu. a m iotenance supervisor. the present." "for every character (letter) they In 1980, a local Communist Pany write on the wall, they arc fined one crctary wa Jiu led for one ~ear after yua n (42 cents);' he said. his commune looted 700 bncl<s from Blue-uniformed police hunt for the wall and uprooted 3.000 )ouna ofl'r.ndcrl. pan ol a "1aorous new tree n~b • campaign personally cndor d by Wei. a maintenance upervi or n1or commun1 t leader Deng 1tn\: 1978, td the o"emmcnt 11oring and dubbed "Love our recently ha hown inc 1ng con· hma, Sa\C our CJrtat Woll.'' rn for th wall and many pea nt s \\lth other popuhtr touri t ite , ha'c returned the 1aM and tone . statc-sanc11oncd ha\\kcrs have t up "Nowe\cr:yth1n1 is b3 1rally fine," ta ils offomg cvcrythinJ from Great . he satd ••rt 1s just a question of W II T. h1rts to camel nde . maintenance." But 1dc from 1 1«.11on t B dal· ix-hundred orkcrs. luggi_ng in Pas , rc,torrd 1n the early 1960s, ton up ah~ mounuun • have bttn much of the I, 00.milc ram~n built to1hn ince .la t year to restore an more th n 2.000 years to repel 00..)'li'd sfrttch of th ,-. II dJ cent northern rbanan. 1s fallm1 apan. to the BadahnJ toun t nc. The The PcJran l:vcmna Ne • tale· reno~ ted portion open Oc,, I, run 1fiemoon tabloid that hclPcd China' national da). orpniz-e Ortat Wall repair fund In We 1d chc mtontion t Julv. 1d s>0n1on of the 'Ill ha~c . yuan( 10,000, wh1chcamc omc •• cd-mfi cd dtn cm· from th tatc and the Ure t Wall . repa,ir fund. The official press agency Xinhua reported Sept. 2· that dona- tions had reached more than 1.5 million yuan ($630,000). The rest of the monc)' wdl be used to maintain the wall and repair additional portions ncM )'car, Wei Slid. Historical references say Jt took 300.000 worker I 0 years to build the wall, which '!veraJCS 26 feet in height and 23 fcc:t in th1d.ncss at the base. • -• -t I ' ' adagascar's dead are popular as partygues Some have even taken l1 Ir ancesters up n plane and flown them around the island' EDITOR•s NOTE -On the ~otJc island of Madaga r off the oast of Afnca. the dead arc oc-ionally treated ro 11 nisJu on the own, c~umed from the grave ro g~t D acw hroud and go to a part). But lhe 1ndtnt cu tom of decorating the 1f11VQ with X-rated uuue hs fallen n hard time ty ROBERT WELLER ..-....~.,.... MANGILY GRAVE. Mad ga r AP) -Amona the M lagasy people, 'funeral wa the occasion for n orgy, and members of the Sakalava clan left iothing to the imagination when they :arve4 statues of thcii--depaned tnceston m the act of making lo\c. That, however, was the undoing of the stranic custom. The erotically explicit carvina.s were impervious to beetles and other insects, because they were crafted from. noxious camphor wood, but they fell prey t o pillaging tourist$. · By the time the government rook steps to protect the c-.irvings in the mid· t 970s, there were fewer than 1,000 Jcf\ in the 30 or so seaside graveyards uound Morondava on the Mozambique channel, which separates this · Indian Ocean island from mainland Africa. Now the an of death is a d ymg an. Only a few, small models are carved for tourists. 0 1t is taboo now to carve these statues for ttic graves," says Moron- dava's district officer, Philistine Haje. "That period of pillaging created the taboo. Our people arc very ~piritual. They did not like the desecration of the tombs. They also were a bit ashamed of all the attention." There arc few visitors now. Per- mission to see the grave sites is required from the village council, and the sites arc difficult to find. To reach the site from Morondava, it was a 45-minutc drive in a four- whctl-<lrivc truck, followed by a mile- lona trudge throuati sand and a thigh- decp crcck. • Protocol caJls for providing the village cider, who serves as guide, with a bottle of rum. The elder, who 1oes only by the name Tsiafindra, sprinkled a few drops of rum on the graves and asked for "the protection of the people hvmg here and for those of you who arc coming to visit." "It is very dangerous to come here," the cider says, rcferrin1 to hostile spirits. "We arc very sad that ~~ places. shouild have been hann- Catholic mtSS1 nary priests who hvc here say the dcr probably cited the spirit menace to dissuade visitors. But the priests, anthropologists and other scholars say there is no way to overestimate the close ties between the living and dead oo this Texas-sjze island, often called "a world a pan." The origin of the Saialava statues remains a mystery. Some '\Cholars ascribe the statues -which some westerners would find grote~tie and obscene -to an obscure fenihty cult The Rev. Jack Nculle, a Roman catholic priest from St. Louis. Mo., who lias lived 20 years in western Madagascar. says the statues "arc simply a celebration of lif c. People here used to Jive only to their early 30s." .Dise.aSe and cyclones claimed many. He added that funerals often were accompanied by alJ-night oraics. a practice he sa)'S his church has difficulty accepuni. But then this area is probably only eight percent Chris- tian, Neulle adds. Most of the nattves arc animists who believe spirits dwell in rocks, trees and animals. The Sakalava grave statues are less astonishina than many other Malagasy practices regarding the dead. Olc1r ancestors ·· 11le "retoumement" urely as the most publlcitcd a pect of the anoestdr cult Guided by strologcrs and "ombia 1•• (fonune tellers), many Malagasy remove their ance tors from their tombs ever)' few years, somcttme moving them to new and fllnacr qu rtcrs. .. The general th mg 1s to take out the body from the tomb and take it to the home village for two or three nights," Rakotoansoa sa~. "It dcpcncls on how much money you have. Some· Jean Aime Rakotoarisoa. director of the National Museum of An and - ArchacolO&)', heads a l 5-scientist team studying the island's unique cultural mix of people from Malaysia, Polynesia, France, Arab1a and the Afncan mainland. "The Malapsy durin& their lives live every day with their ancestors," be says. "Ancestors intervene in our daily lives. lfl want to build a house, I have to Dsk my ancestors if they aaree -even if I am a Christian. Many people ao to church o~ Sundil)' and then go to discuss thinas with c save i-:100 S399.88 ANAHEIM: limes the famtl) tays for scve I months af they re weallh). ''ln th retoumcmcnt, you rnu 1 in vite everyone ln the villa and kill one or two zebu (local cattle) and pig, nnd you rnuSt ha~e enou nee for all these people You also need musicians and new silk shrouds." F m1hcs often pend three or four month • mcome on a new lk roud for the corpse. Family combs often cost more than the family hou1e Retoumemcnt tales bound One has a mi ioniuy getting 1nto the back of a tau and nollcrng lhe driver an animated convt>rsallon Wllh an men partner. He was showing his dead brother round town and tclhng him all the latest jokes. bout in ' ule, R kot n says,' Yes n"' pouibie SQme h VC even put :tJmrantC510rJ ID a plane nd flown them around the l land ·· lt 1s Widely believed ttiat hardship will befall famahcs who nc&lect their ancestors -qu1cktr than you can y the gcnerolly Polysyllab1c Mala.psy names. The econom hard t1m here have bun the ccrcmon1es, though "Now s6me people.come for JUlt one day. wrap the body quickly sn a new shroud and pul n back sn the tomb," Rakotoansoa Sl)'S The retourncment ts only one element of a eomphcalCd tel of taboos that orcumscnbe island hfe Some • • savings m every ----.--r-. deparbnent A save ~200 . ~299.9S a pair • Thi-.. pair of f·hai~ i~ t·own'CI in 'it 100°0 .\n~ lie 'ehc•l fob{ '~ammty for hrn fu11 ~c·at~ nonnal \\t'<u.,n.·1.air or n>plac ·nwnt h~ lonsmto. R Choo~~ tlu~ -.mart tom·h lamp:-in brm .... or r •ramie \\ ith ~·oft pleatt~I ... ha le. C Thi ... harnl~nne <JU n -.izc· sofa .. I r i-.. tailon~I in a fo~ M'ari~ t•arthtmu' I lrn--uh n" hlc·rnl. D. :' ' ' on immon l.Wautyrcst f m._hion .'upn•nu· l)t '.'tl<linµ. 1\,'in. «-ar.h piece Rt'C'. 329.9:l , alt• ·t 69.88. Full. c .. u·h 1•it"c--c H•l!· ~~99.9.) .... I·· 2:. •>.AA. r . ~)ue.·n ~t Rei!. H~l9.9:l Salt• .)~ 1.AA l\m~ ~·t Htl!· rn99.9~ '""alP 7 lQ.88. l'm·x1lt't'h"(l fJllalit~ anti pri<·•~ µuar:rnl•:ot'<l to h,~ tlw ln\\~l i 11 hm n ••. Phon · 213·780·2244 WEST COVINA: San • ·I • M ~C:O. !MILY PILOT/SundOY, S..,tomb<t 18, 1984 'Ro1er and out• Booker T. Bone, a 1115-poDDd mutitt, filee hi.lb OY&r S.Jlnee with owner Lance Lowrey,. cropduater. !looker'• been •eartnc ...... for. rear. after It ... fcnUld tJaer atoppod hla erea from -terfnl wbjJUl:rfnl. Pacemakers goo d but overused? Doctor says 30 percent of cardiac devices Installed In patients In 1981 'unnecessary" CHICAGO (AP) -Permanent pacemaken -Medtronic loc. of c:ardi.a J>90tmakm are a .. fC?dlend" Minneapoli1; PM:etetter Sy1Lem1 lne. to potient1 who need them1, bu! still of Sylmar, Cali£• Ind lntmnedlcs .,. btina implanled .........,, in Inc. of Freep0rt, 'ru11 -decli~ pooplewboaehcart-rhythmproblema Immediate c:om.mtnt OD the aul~ could be corrected in other ways. a lines, company representativet ~id heart expert says. late ll1t week. "There bu been a areat deal of But an editorial aocompanyina the abuse of pacemaker ttchnolOI)' by auidclines said they may be \00 ri&id phytici.ana, which meant imptantJna and that indication• fOt pacemaker pacemaken in ~pie who ju•t don't implantation are sometimes unclear. · need them " 1&1d Or. Brendan Phibbs Many facton-some non-mediCll of the U'nivenily of Arizona at -can be involved, such u huardl Tucson.. involved in a pa1ient'1 job or the. He and colleaauea at' five other rcmo1tness of bis loca1ion, uid the medical centen have developed new edhorial by Dr. Anil K. Bhan4&ri and 1uidelines to bele phyticiant avoid Shabbudin H. Rahim1oola of t~ overuseoftbedevic:es. The1uidelines l)nivenity of Southern California~ appear "in the lritest Journal of the Phibb5 wa1.amona four physician• Am~ricao Medical Association. who 1estified two years qo 00 A ••combination of tanorance, overuse of paccmaken in hearinp overcnthusiasm and very hiah before the U.S. Senate Special financial reward" fuels overuse of Commmittee on Alina. pacemakers, Phibbs said. o Committee Olairman John Hein.i, He added that any ·patient who R·Pa., estimated then that the cost to doubts a doctor'• advice about the Medicare of pacemaker overute was need for one 1houldn't hesitate to seek up to$ I billion annually. a second opinion. r· Heinz last year introdoced lelit- Michael Ja~kson has traveling ch'"ef "There hasn't been enouah rcc:oa· lation to limit Medicare payments Tor nition that this is a very rmjor pacemakers. The le&i1lation is now ih intervention that chanae1 the pa· committee, his office said Thunday. tient's whole life;• Phibbs 11id in a "Properly used, this technolOSY ii a telephone interview Wc<VJ.esday. aodsend." Phibbs said ... It's savin& Implantinaapacematercosuupto fives and makin~ it possible for S 12,000, includin& hospitalizat.1on, people to function. • LOS ANGELES (AP) -SillJ<'r Michael Jackson may have beefed up his Victory Tour With tll@ latest in special effects, but when it comes to eatin&, his chef knows Jackson's diet must be strictly vqetaria.n. On the road; Mani Khalsa cooks every meal the superstar eats. He is an employee of The GQ1den Temple , Consetous Cookery and Catcnng Company in Hollywood, which sup- , plies all of Jackson's food -on tour and at home. "Everything is fresh, natural and . strictJy veaetarian," says Akasha Khala, head chef at The Golden Temple, which follows the dietary pracuces of the Sikh reliaion. The two chef• are not related. "We tent Mani with the exact recipes for Michael's favorite foods -enchiladas, whole wheat pizza and oriental salad," said Ms. Khalsa. Khalsa finds the in&rtdientt for his secret recipes at health food stores owned and operated by memben of the Sikh reli&Jon. Jackson, a Jehovah's Witness, is not required by his faith to restrict his diet. But be follows the Sikh's HALF PRICE TILE Italian Floor Ceramic ·-lr:---1.ootfor N tilgll .. T'lt" • 1'J." ftfQ. 1.• .. 1.11 sALE 84112 e • 891'2! veaetar:i•n ~en. Khalsa'• meals, but have not restric. Phibbs said. Major complications -Even without symptonl_I. "Michael is a very spiritual per· ted their diets like Jackson, who has blood clots or irifection that can lead pacemaker implantation may 'be son," s8.id Ranbir Singh Bhai, owner food catered to hi1 home in Encino. to death -occur in I percent to 2 necessary for 10me conditions affCfJ"' of The Golden Temple. "This plays a .. Mani and 1 have cooked for pe~nt of all cases he uid. · ina transmission of electrical lian1~1 aood part in his eatin& habits." The ,Michael on many occasions," said Yet at least 36 perctnt of the ift the heart. the team said. sinaer bas known the owner for more Ms. Khalsa ... We have aone out and 118,000 cardiac pacemaken im· The 1uidclines do not apply to than seven yean and their reta-cooked wi th him at the studio wheb planted in U.S. patientt in 198 1 were temporary pacinJ,. in whlch a tionship "just naturally evolved into )le and and Paul McCanney were unnceded.11id Phibbs.. i-ccmaker is placed outside the body a catenng contract for the Victory recording." Prescription drup. temporary only unti l the patient's heart rhythm Tour." "Michaelwillc:allupanorder~very · heart conditions and other medical-stabilizes or until a permanent Once the Jackson pany arrives a~ day," said Bhai. "We package the problems can cause heart ir· pacemaker i1 implanted. the hotel in the tour city, Khalsa is food for him and either he picks it up rqularities that Can be corrected with A pennanent pacemaker is a bat· given a special cooking area set up by or we deliver it to his home. We have less extreme and expensive measures, tery·powered pulse aenerator Jackson's management team. His been sending food for bim for ycan. he and his colleaa,ues wrote. suraically placed under the skin with family and crew memben also enjoy The plan was when Michael aoes to Three major manufacturen of electrical leads auidcd to the bean. -:::======--., Europe that we would send the food . by air, but the schcd""le wa1 too hectic so we sent someone with him so he · could serve Michael on a 24 hour ba!i' .. niroduced to the Golden Temple by his t X·manaaer, Michael Memick. Jackson enjoyed the food and quickly became a friend of the owner . .. We liked Michael, not because he • was a superstar, but because he was w;:nuinelr nice 10 us,.. said Bbai. 'Michae has not chanced with stardom. He is still the same Michael, the same loving penon." Coronary patients benefit modestly from exercising "The owner has always made sure that Michael was la.ken care of," said CHICAGO (AP) -People with Am«lcln Mldlcel -· heart d-who •-clal to Ms. Khalsa ... Michael knew he could combathadllngerarMygalnonly come apd trust \4S." ''refatMtty rnodtet" beneftt1 "He is real~ picky about his food," from their eff~L~lllarcMrl said Bhai. "Our food has been very l8kl In• report pul>llhedl fatllMt much to his liking. What we believe · week · ourselves, Michael believes. He trUsts TI'Miir condulk>n lteme from a . thaphe people who cook for him ar< lludy ol 148 m~ ,... holistic. He 1s concerned with the --k -· ~ spiritual aspect -the clean way of nown w.- preparing food the way he likes." .... -either' a hlltory Of "--' StartcdinlndiaoverSOOy~nqo, attack. exercl11 a1l•1d almt the Sikh's boast over I 00,000 Ameri· pain or hWt ~I II ....-Y· can memben who believe that the The IUbfecla ... clwlied Into 1tren in the w~tem lifcs~le ~ould two groupe: 72 .-,tk;tsl •ad In a be tempered with a vcgetenan dtet.. year...aong, ~!Id ...-clll progi-. ... _74 ........ ln •low-. -......... "~-... (c:Mngle outtlde al the_, -...... .,. reeponelbte tor the lnarl? 71 In -_..,..,, .. -.. --. lid Ill' Dr. -Frcalaher of Ille ~ ot Cdfomla SchoOI of M1dklll'll tn l,nl)fego. Time Saver Latex ALF PllCE PA' pr="'-~ ........ -•Cowers kt .... l OM coetf '"""°" .... and •ml glotl ll!Q ...... 17.• "'79Q 99 SALE ,--. ...._ 11"a .. ..,....,......, 1ata111 HALF PRICE-ROLLS! Vinyl Wallcovertngs • ,.. ;11t1d roll In •the••,....._ CORRECTION NOTICE had 8Ml'ollld lha'llld ..... .. lmproweme1"8 In tllelr o.Mill On 'page 28 of the Sears Sep. tltf'lW -Dl•ed Nltlng hllrt tember 16th advertlslnc sec--m-. Improved wark ......., tlon there Is an advertisement and trnpnwM ebllly' to '* In for #1204 Floor Jack. The copy MCI praalll -nHlled for 8lx "°'* dlopped out of"" Incorrectly describes It as -•.-· -::r: belnc;a2'h-TonF1oorJack. This •xe1cl11. 11 11 .,,up: one"" jack is actually _a 2 Ton Floor But "*9 _.. only llfllll ....,,.,onetorhMr't Ol1I -··-649-R!G. ,._. SALE 1111 UECIAL CLEAltAlllCEJ . ... _.. ........ _ -Jack. We sincerely regret this dln.enoee In e. way U. e--t blOll• of aloohalllm Md..,_ error. i(lelf -·•Ii ftlnalloMd, the ""-~ -.-, ~l~;;::;::;:;::;:;::;;:~;::::;:::;;:;::;-;!~cloclijjrorai;ij'•ijd~~iii.,.~Jooi~~milllio\~theif;i•:•~•i·lf411~f.if:i~~ U..for .... IMQ.1.11 SAl.t:Vtll'-M PRICE REDUCED 17%1 No-Wax Drybac:k Tiie AMlon, Fkntte, MonlltNJ Wood 1r a 12.. · ~IQ, Ht SALE 4~. PT. SANTA ANA 322 w. 17th Street 547-778 1 J. • °"'8ble no-wu wlnyl ptttemt l • flt:I rnott Roon --.. • All ,.ntm1 not Look for .... ~ •• .,.., fll Q. C.21-12.• SALE 321 •1 mJl,o. 1 ... :"&!.:... ~-..... .., r ,,......,. ...... ·-•4 T!IM M4 .. GI• ,...._T_w,-.a,_..,...,_ _._."""' ........... WESTMINSTER 15191 Be ach Boul•va r d • 898-3388 ' 1 SANTA ANA 2801 So. Brl1tol St. • Nur BegeB1rom St 5 57-1324· ~ r <.fa\otkell • ~o.tulle s r FRESH& SILK FLOWER A~RANGEMENT CLASSES LE ARN THE ART OF FLOWER ARRANGING BY ATTENDING OUR CLA SSES STARTING OCTOBER 15 CALL FOR MORE INFORMATION 21562 BROOKHURST HUNTINGTON BEACH . 962-6687 - 1 l I t 1 b I I ' •• Orange Coal D,t.ILY PILOT 1-,, ..... _ 11, 1914 A7 Bman picked top soldier Offshore oil tract . bids open Oct. 17 S .4GeraldF.llart.oonofJohn M*t11m Hart of Huntlnafon 11, bU been nam~ out1Wldin& dier of the month for the Medical mpony 11 Dwiaht D. Eilenhow.r y Medical Center in Au,u1ta1 Oa. ii a biomedical equipment irer. ••• Ainnan Bradl11 M. Mey Whote &t ft the former Debra ko11 of untinaton lleldi, bu been aui,n.d o Chanute Air Foroe Baae,_111.1 ~ ~molelioa baiic traininaat U1C1W1nd Ur Force Bite, Teus. He will rective a1tnaction in the fuell 1peciati1t field. • • • 1 Teri E. Btowa. dauabter of Joseph !. Brown of San Clemente. bu been t oted to-teJ'ICll\t in the Atmy. i1 a ca~nter with the 497lb neerCo.1n Fon Eu1ti.a. Va. • i' ••• > Clpt.Mlc-18.BUl,sonofJeanne , opaduick of El Toro, has completed .he Air Force military indoctrin1tion br medical ICtVict ofticen at Shep. i)erd Air Force Bue~ Tex.as. Hill, who :'eetived a master's dearee from UC Irvine in 198}1 will aerve with the Air Force Medici! Center at Keesler Air Forte Bue, Miss. ••• 1Bllll')' P. Pud11, son of retired II Sealed b1dt on 6l7 oflibore oil tr1ctl alona the Clllforaia coui. includina teVeral otr Oranee Count~. will be opened next month, the U.S. Department or In tenor announced. The 3.1-miWon-ecre otrmaa 11 \ht ~raest Mle of offshore oil drill1na ri&hU ever undertaken by I.be Depan~ ment oflhe Interior. £1ahteen additional tracts have been deleted from the sale since the most recent propou.I was issued by the aovem.ment a motnb q.o, includ· in1 13 tracll near Santa Catalina Island. Reat0ns for the ldditionaJ deletions were "basically en- vironmental," said Warren Sutherland of the U.S. oft"we of Minerals Manqement in Los An- aeles. The ·Rmaitrin& five deleted tracts are oft' the coast of Los Aflldet and Ventura counties. The Interior Department said in a One-parent families in job program By t•e .Uaoclated Press Four hundred sinaie.-paRnt famil- ies from Los An&clcs and Ora.nae counties will take part in a new federal job-trahtina procram. The demonstration proaram, dubbed Project Self.Sufficiency, was announced Thursday in Los Anaelcs. N,avy Master Chief Petty Ofim and Mn. Basilio V. Pandes of Irvine and JOtt"·A.. Ftortm•Ce Jr., son of Mr. and 'Mn. Joseph A. Florimonte of ffuntincton Beach'rbave completed tn Air Force RO C field trainina ehcampment at McChord Air Force Biie, Walh. Ptndel isa student at UC J,rvine, while Ftorimonte is a student at Golden West Collete. Both attend ROTC at Cal State Long Beach. • • • ' A.a.drew W. Luda, son of Wesley A. Landen or San Oemente, WU commissioned an Anny second lieutenant upon aradu.atina from the Officer Candidate School in Fort Mark l'fellon, dr111ed u pop 1tar lllclaael Jacbon. ill Hn'ed by kt. utr-Cfl)wder, • cook at Muine Corpe Air Station l:J Toro, at • llUC111&r Dntropb.y Auoclatlon Telethon cunlftl tlWI month. Crowder wu amo.., lhe 32 ltl Toro lluinee wbo helped out at the cunlftl. Jt will use S2S million in Housi.na and Urban Development funds to provide housing ISllltance1 child and health care, counseling ana job train- ing to S,000 families in 78 areas nationwide. . Included an: 200 families in Los Anaeles County, 100 in Oranae County, 70 in Garden Grove and Jo in Pasadena. Bennin.a, Ga. v c I i1 Now Offering September's Special *Good through S~e~ • '.ohi<<Ud !// VVl<.'1!J ROYAL KHYBER · Cuisine of India 1000 ___ , .............. ) Be«h. CA (714) 752·5200 JOIN US FOR A.--'----;::--.., LAKE ARROWHEAD HOME TOUR At th• 10th Annu•I Hom• Tour Sponsored by the lake Arrowhead Resorts Chamber of Commerce Sat., Sept. 22, 10 AM to s·PM A self-guided to11rofsomeof tl1earea's most 011 tsta11di11g lwmes. Enjoy a pleasant wine tasting I 011 tlie sliores of Lake Arrowhead. TICKETS ONLY $10.00 PER PERSON 111.00 Ch1rge for Wine T•ting Gl.ual Adv1nce Tkkets Av1ilo1bfe -C.all or Write ' 714/337-3715 LAKE ARROWHEAD RESORTS CHAMBER OF COMMERCE . aox 155, LAKE ARROWHEAD, CA 92352 PURCHASERS OF IRVINE COMPANY LEASEHOLD LAND All residents and homeowner& In Linda Isle, Corona del Mar and Newport Beach who purchaaed their IMaed land from .The Irvine Com- pany before Januart~. 1979 and were not Included In the r~t cla9$ action aettlement, pleau f&- lpofld to P. 0 . Box 2290, Newport Beach, Call- lornla 92858. Homeowner, who la In thl• altuatlon, 11 looking for others faced with this problem .. All repllee confldentlal. . W-249 .. . , . --...:. i C.Mdt.n born consultfng en&tneer, 6', 180 lbs, 40's, recently divorced and without custody of c.hlldren, nuent In French. about half way throu,h a law det'ee ... member of Menu private pflot, exceptlonlil tennis p141yer, enlo)i sktlns mm; mountain cabin, explorln& In motor home, camJMns ln hl&h Sierras, travels frequentlr ln Europe, loves musk and concerts and plays several mutlca instruments. needs lone walb on the beach at sun.et, would like to meet trim and athletk lldy with merry personallty, aood eduatk>n and successful -career, looklnc for Iona term relationthlp and possible marrtace and family. nonsmolter, who likes to ski. to hike and npedalty to travel. P.O. BOX 16686 IRVINE, CA. 92714 Weight No Longer to Scale Down to Size Go to the Diel Center Now Their Program Includes: • Private Daily Counseling • Natural Food • No Shots or l>rt1llS • -.jj\I< ~l lHE LOS,~ . • ~..a DIET · ~ ~1 CENTER· "' --,-- . .. Pl"' -tllat tbe ......... -made at\tr' d1tcuJJion1 wath the rmmbtn of the CalUOmll CouW Comm1111on and Oov. Gootte ~ lm<jllll. City official• aloDJ the Ora1* Cout have Connally oJ)l>OIOd the aile or U¥U off <>ranae County, •yina that l"'l<ntlll Oil $ptlll and ocan view unpeinnent wo\lld da.maee tM tourism industr)'. ""Mayot Robert Oeotry o( I aauna Beach bu called for 1 ban on o~ exploration be'lwcen the cout and Catalina Island, 26 miles offshore.. Despite the deletions oear Santa C.tlluta, oeveroJ tt1Ct$ lituatod be- tween the ialand and the Oraqe Cout remain o~ for Ille. The 1e11od bidt will be opmod on Oct. 17, JO Lm .• in the Los An .. les Convention Center. · Columbia freehman Kriltlan Tlaom•• atmauiaa of i.aaa.na B11cb earolled u a freeltmen at Colambla Ulll· ,,_ty ID !few York tlWI oammer after belDC oachi· ated from Deeilleld Academy, Deerfteld, -. lnllay. • • CdMman· on health council The vice president of health man· ~meat opcn1tions at ~ Mu1ual Life Insurance Co. hat been ·~ pointed to the Assembly of Delea~ of the Ori-. County H<llth Plan.'. Dina Councif. Rohen L Brolddus, who rq>- retenll Newport Beach on the coun- cil. is a Corona dcl Mar retident who lllso oerveo u dWnnan of the U.S. Academi< D<athlon, Los A"l'les. and is a director on the bolrd of F.LS.H., in Newport Beach. The health council educates con- sumen and acts u a catalyst for community coom::ration and Action in Oranp County. All membnt of the council boud volu.ntoer lbeir Jel'Vicr:s. ln•ex•pen•1lve• '(In • apen' liV) not high In price; reaaon•ble, =.. ..., .. Claulllod Adv«llslng e,42-5678 ----------------- DON'T IUST GO TBBOUGB IT - GROW TBBOUGR IT? Doorce'' · . SEMINA.ll FORDNORCED AND SEPARATED PERSONS OF ALL AGES Six Thursday Evenlnp Sept. 27 ·Nov. I 7'30.-9,30p.m. ST. ANDREWS PBESB'l'TEIUA.N CBllBCB Newport Beach -St. Andrews at 15th St. Acrot1 from Newport Harbor Hlth. $20 ReciStJatlon ........ -........a11631-28859'5-...n. ~OODEN HEART Orange County's •largest selection of Imported Antique and Reproduction Pine. An ever changing selection of one of a kind antiques plus gorgeous reproduction in Old Pine. Over 7500 sq. ft. of showroom. "------------..,...,,----. Courtesy To The Trade OPEN Mon.-Fii. 9 AM-5 PM Sat. 10 AM-5 PM Sun. 11 AM-4PM (714) 557-4410 . . 151 Kalm111 Dr., Suite M-5 CootaM... . .. l OrMQe CoMt DAILY PJLdTtSunday, Septembef 16. 1984 ':(TJ1 federalgo1lernmentJhasallo\VedtheautoJndus~. which would klllyou to av a buck, todllly-dallyon thelssueofprotecttverestralnts of 11 kind -the so-called pa Ive belt, ~hlch wrap around you when thedoorclo esandthemo tefflclcntrestra1ntofall. thealrbag." JUCBARD COREN • coJwamat Kind, carina stran6ers can stlll be lound ID CM RICUll CelEI To the Editor. I want to make known in the mo"t pubhc "'l)' the extreme k.indrh.' c; ~hov.n bv the famil) of Debbie H ubcr of Costi Mesa. The) took in a dog unknov.n to them but o loved by u~. f~ him and kept him O\lemight :ind called up the ne>.t morning when tht-)' saw a lost dog sign that we had put up. Anyone who has a famil> pct can understand the frelinstS we hap wht>n we lost and thC'n fo1.1nd our dog. But everyone hould know that the Huber family acted with compas.s1on tQward people thC') had never ntel. l'vt> always known &~ere are trul} kind. &1Vtng people till around and ahc) "hould be rccogni1cd. Thank )OU co &he Hubers from the bottom of our hearts. RODI LASSEN Co~ta Mesa Officer Pule got off too easy the Editor: The fhe<olumn b3nner headline sa) s ··cop pleads guilt) 1n court" O\ er the article in the Sept. 8 Daily Pilot The following information and names contained in the article should not be CoJiotten· I. tllewport Beach policeman Michael Patrick Pule pleaded gwhy to felony drunken dnving. • 2. California Highway Patrol of· ficers said Pule rammed a freeway median divider, drifted across all four traffic lanes. forcing another car off the road into a nver bed seriously injuring the dnver. 3. Tests revealed that·at the ume officer Pule's blood contarned double the alcohol hmtt at which one is judged to be mtoiocated. 4. Despite the position of trust occupied by officer Pule his con- fession offelony drunken drivmg and the seriousness of the injuries. Su- perior Court Jud&c... David Carter reduced the charge to a misdemeanor and put him on parole. Notoneda) in jail. not C\en a 'iuspension of a dnver's license. · . 5. Newport Beach Police Chief Pete Gross reviewed the case and de- termined that officer Pule will not even be separated fTom the police department. 6. Under these circumstances. how can the Caltfom1a Highway Patrol and local ~lice officers continue to hand out tickets to dnvers not nearl) as drunk, not in pos1ttons of &rust and not invqlving injuries or even acci- dents? The public will know that when one of"their own .. is involved, there isn't even a wrist slap. 7. Remember Judge David Carter's name. Eventually he comes up on the ballot and may be voted out of office. 8. Look to city officials for ap- propriate action. Name w1thheJd by requeM Halt amphitheater's support-· To the Editor: . Now that the Pacific Amphitheatre and the Neanderthal group (l really mean Neanderthal) have decided to sue the city of Costa Mesa O\er the noise issue maybe 1t 1s ume that the ci ty of Costa Mesa dropped its support of the amphitheater. How about 'withdrawmg'tbe police patrols that are probably° paid for b)' Pacific Amphitheatre from the Pa- cific Amphitheatre grounds. allowink them to be to charge of their ov.n crowd control'> How about wuhdrawtng the traffic enforcement and the use of the traffic signals at the end of an. evenmg's concert? • Maybe the city needs to undo some of the thtn&S that they have been doing in order to support the !amphitheater. Maybe it is time that the state of Cahfomia provided crowd control in!'tead of the city of Costa Mesa. Cooperation should get cooper· atton. Uncooperatton should get lln- cooperatton. The ci ty's cooperated, Pacific Amphitheatre hasn't. It's time that we uncooperate with them until they cooperate with the c1t1zcns of Costa Mesa. JIM DE BOOM Newport Beach . Share the park wi.th horses too • To the Editor Horses aren't all oats and ha\. ... they have a personal side too. }ou know. Jn fact, a horse can be quite an interesting fnend to have. The} don't say a lot but they are great listeners and great for entertaining other friends. For quiet 11mes or bus} times. a horse can be a great fnend and you can always JUSt nde awa)' mto the sunset. Please think about this. The horses and us need a place too. Wh y can •t we keep the stable~and half the trails and you ha ve th e other half? You don't need that big ~fa park. And 1 f )OU· re planning on butldmg houses. we ha ve too many anyway You're lea\ mg no place for an) animals. Part of 11 1s your fault. you don't make enough money because the place looks hke a du mp. lf yo u didn't close down the rent barn and let them take the horse!> to the beach, you would be loaded with money It 1s some people's dream to nde a ho~ on the beach. We could probably have the prcn1est stables m California 1f you would have helped us 15 years ago. but ifs too late now. You ha ve left all the work for us. We ca n·t do that without money and you're the kind of people who have it all but are unwilling to share some of it with the stables so that It could be so pretty and well taken care of If you will just give us one more chance and help usa l1ttle.1t ~ill probably work out so you won·1 have to make a j>ark that will probably get all trashed and so you won't have to spend $4,000 trying to ft.~ it. Our stable is one big family and you're breakmg us up. Most of us ha e nowhere to go. Please consider 1t. Thank you P.S. Why don't )OU J~ smaller park so everyone can be happy? From one of the very deprC"i~ people of the stables. MISSY CON W ..\ Y Corona del Mar Ocean trip ended it for mechanical doll ~ Mechanical dolls in the I 7 th Cl'O· tul) greatly intrigued the ph•lo<,opht·r and mathematician Rene Dcscanc., Oneexqu1s1telycrafted hfes1zc model he called Franchina. He iook her on an ocean trip to 5'-: 1f her walking mechanisms \\ould compensate for a slight deck roll . They did. She ambled along just fine. However. the ship's captain screamed she was the work of the Devil. and tos~d her overboard. Poor Dcscartc · Q Which is hiaher in wild<ard poker. a royal flush or five of a kjnd? Five of a kind. unless house rule-. say otherwise It that rose wint docsn t sparkle. it rain But why is tt rhey alwa ys work best on the passenger side'> Q Did you qy there s a fish that feeds on land? A. No. but I will. A fish called the mudsk1pper does 'hat thing. h e; C)CS are on turrets that protrude above the water's surface. When 11 stts 3 choice morsel on land, I\ kips ashore on fast fins. takes its bite. then goes back under. Tho~ hoppers who don't h \ e m California may not know that state became the fir t recent!> 10 requirt restrooms in supermarkets. You can become paralyzed 1n your was made from blue 1tr.ipe-.. • lcep. For a minute or two. A tncky Q. How many ticker uipe parade • .mental m«~amsm ~mct1mc frce1:- have ~n held in "cw ):ork Cit~? Ci ~our abtlny to mo'e ~01.1r v?lun· A. Only 27. At this wnun~ Lastonl· ta~ mustlc:,, so you "on t ph>s1~ll)' fore the 1984 Olympic mcdah<ts' , rxecu~c )Our dream\. How if~ tri - wa'> for the 1980 parade for the gcrcd ts not yet quite clear. ho 1agc:s back from tran, Ho\\ lo"! ~ave )OU been drt\img your car'! B11ta1n's Pnncc Charle Can undl"r~tand why windshield drove his \ston·Murtin convenihlc -A1persn~'erfoll1apan unul 1t~tart\tu for 14 ~l'af"\ ORANGE COAST H. l. Schwartz Ill Daily Pilat Frank Zlnl • Wn 1,1 ng (O•tOf Tom Tait ly Cl'°' Lumber firm reaps harvest of big bucks from Uncle Sam Louisiana Pacific g~ for handouts from various levels WASHINGTON -When it comes to milking the federal govern- ment for handouts. the welfare cheats and food-stamp chiselers, who have aroused President Reagan's tndigna- tion. can't hold a candle to Louisiana Pacific Corp. the nation's largest buyer of pubhcl) owned timber. The company goes aft.er the bag bucks. not penny-an te peculations I've al read) reported how the U.S. Forest Service -headed b) Lou1s1- ana Pacific's former general counsel and \ICC president. John Crowell - has obhg1ngly agreed to cut down 50 million board feet of aspens 1n Colorado in response to the com- pan> 's plan 10 build a waferboard plant there. Earlier. Crowell engineered a $600 miUion bailout that let Louisiana Pacific and other big lumber com- panies off the hook on their over- priced bids for government timber. But the Forest Service isn't the only federal agency Lou1s1ana Pacific has its hand out to. The company wants the Department of Housini and Urban Development to help finance construction of its waferboard plants in M1sstSS1pp1, M1chipn and Mmne- sota. with "action grants'' to com- munities where the plant Will be IQCated. · JACK AID EISON In fact, this profit-makingrcctpient of corporate welfare, which reported a sales growth of 26 percent last year, plans to put up as ht1le as $400,000 of its own money to build one $18 million waferboard plant m Minne- sota. Louisiana Pacific expects to raise the rest of the money from publicly financed sources at federa l, state and local levels. The taxpayers will take the risks; Louisiana Pacific will reap the profits The company laid it on the line to the town fathers of communities where 1t plans to build waferboard plants: no federal aid. no factory. My associate John Dillon has seen letters sent by Louisiana Pacific intended to pressure the local governments into applying for HUD's urban develop- ment action grants, called UDAGs. "But for the approval of the UDAG, Louisiana Pacific will not undertake the project," company vice p~ident John Hart warned the mayor of Two Harbors, Mmn. Hart's letterpled&ed that Louisiana Pacific would commit "a minjmum -of $400,000" toward the Two Harbors waferboard plant. Where would the rest of the S 18 million estimated cost come from? A $2 million HUD grant, $10 million worth of tax-exempt industrial rev- enue bonds, and the rest from a Small Cities Development Grant and money put up by Lake County and a state development fund. Despite the threat clearly expressed in Hart's letter to the mayor of Two Harbors. a Louisiana Pacific spokes.. man insisted that the availab1bty ofa HUD JTlnt 1s "not a detcrm1nin1 factor for our cons1derat1on to go into a community." More important. he said, is a good labor pool and proximity to a "fiber pool" - meaning trees. He was at least pai:t.ly correct: Louisiana Pacific docs plan to build plants in some communities without HUD arants to keep loan interest rate~ low. Apparently the company just uses the arants selectively. Footnote: Louisiana Pacific's cor- porate arr~nce is not limited to its dcahngs W1tti governmental bodies. Last year, a few days after it refused to sign a wqe-freczeagreement with the carpenten' union, the company board voted to give Chief Executive Officer Harry Merlo a $94,()()()..a-year raise. Already one of the nation's highest- paid executives, Merto now makes about $2.5 million a year-while his company hnes up for taxpayer- supportcd handouts. Jack Aade...0.0 11 a 1yndlcated colum1J/•t. Fritz' religious rhetoric ~eils his ulterior motives WASHINGTON -FolJowing his Christian Right that so terrifies the miraculous victory over 1tie Alaman-Liberal Left? ni in 496 A.O .. Clovis, Kina of the Well. as I understand it. they want Franks, who had invoked the God of p pomOJl"lpby recognized as a filth , the Chnstians during the b3ttle. AT 1lucrat1ve t>usiness, not a constitu- converted. accepted the Nice ne ttonal riaht. They want it reaulated Creed. and had his army marched to B out of the comer drugstore. They the river in battalionsafld baptized by UCHAlllll want less raw sex and violence on the platoons. Three thousand pagans TV $hows piped into the famil)' livina came across in one afternoon. room. If the local high school has a To read the semi-hysterical est.ab-Jemisoq declared himself a .. loyal French Club and a History Club, they lishment pre~~. RonaJd Reagan has Democrat," and said that most of his feel it should be free to have a Bible .something like compulsory baptisms congi:cgation was likewise registered. Club and a Lutheran Club. They want in store for a second term. With An outspoken supporter of Rev. restoration to public education of the Chaplain fialwcll deputized to con· J~ckson. who raised $800,000 for same voluntary prayer they knew as fiscatc all the hot tubs on the We!>t Jesse's campaign. Bishop Jemison children. Many of them support the Coast. brushed aside questions abOut his same tuition tax credits for parents of Goaded b) thesctditoriali!>t\, lurcd active in,olvement in politics. "The religious and synagogue schools that bv the promise of front-page publicit) black church has always been in Geraldine Ferraro did, before she for a failing campa1&n. Walter Mon· politiC'$, .. he-said; within the black went national. They want to sec Roe <Wle has decided 10 make .. Rclt11on community. people ·~1tsten to the vs. Wade, which declared access to an and Politics"acenterpieceofh1santi-pulpit. We mold the pow from the aboruon to be a constitutional right. Reagan as~ult . • pulpit." overturned, because they believe Fair enouah. But Mond:ile' deep. Had that Bishop• name been John unborn children have the same Goo· est concern. one u pccts, is not that J. O'Connor. had he declared that the given nght to live as the dcspistd Thomas Ro d Baptm i$ to become "Catholic Chu rch has always been in Jcwi h minority did in Hitler' Ger- our "'fatabl1shed Church," but that politics. "had Bishop O'Connor an-many. And they do not intend to the m1lhons .of conservative Prot· nounc.cd himself as a "loyal Re-remain silent. cstants. traditionalist Catholics and publican··"' ho had raised $800,000at So Iona as priests. pastors and Orthodoit Jew'\ could put Fntr in the ·St. Patrick's for Dutch' fall cam· rabbis provided moral sustenance. to hi'>tory books alonaside another pa1gn. had he added that Roman thcanh-warcauscofOcoric MtGov- prcachcr's son from the JJppcr Mid· Catholics "Ii t n to the pulpit. We crn. the civil rights position ofHuben west. Geo~ Stanley McGovern. mold the pow from the pulpit," well. Humphrey. the nuclear freeze views Mondale " pccifk goal, in attacv-~~ .. rdon the Cllprcssion. all hell would of Frit1 Mondale, their pastoral 1ng Reapn's links to rchgious group have bu tcd loose. letters and pulpat homilies were -1n pan1cular Prot tant funda· The reason Paul Lualt's ''Dear welcome. h was only-hen theybe&in mcntalt!)l!i -1 to frighten ba1,;k into Chmtian Leader" apix-,al to Prot-•• pcakm& out" in a fashion < tltat the Dcmocrnhccamp Yupp1 put off cstant pastor to rcgater church sounde<hu'\piciousl_y like luppon fur b> Bible Rclt prcnchcn. und 1hc mtmbcrs is condemned. and Bi,hop the social agenda of Ronald Rcapn, hundrt'd of thou~nds of Jcw1'ih Jem14;0n' public claim to have ftlis-that they wert' told lo get out of the voters decpl,).' offend d b> Mondale' tcrcd 2 malhon IS applauded. 1s pubhC' squart. prolon Cd 'l1lcnl"C 1n the face of the be<"ausc lax It want Reagan to v.1n What Mondale and his cohort of runtings ol I. u1 rarrakhan. and ht this clccuon and Bi hop Jemison ltbcral St!lbeS arc sayma • 1s that rcfusal lo fonh~h&b cond mn the ould me to him lose. religious con"rvalivcs are :s«on<I· an11-Scm1uc lur of th Re . J sc .. Intolerant of religion" "IS the,. class Amcru."ans. ccond .. class Jack\On, p ident' phrase. n~y out ci1iicn • who Clo not hare lhc same run has the ~lttonahst more thm have bcttu Cle pt1on ror nght as femina ts. abbm6na1ts, ~)'5 upset than Mondale pretends 10 be 1 1hosc town pc t ho pend each -all Mondale supponcn· -to not that< hn u n leaders are promot· h.,.1stmas -c cu me. Winter or ni1c. unite.and part1c1patccquaJ. in c ndi 1cs but h1l"h candid te r-t ti\' I -r man& the .public ' 1) 1n the politi I proc . 1he) m to be promou -hoot tom c ~re lhC pnndpal i . ''o. intolerant ot rell,gaon Wc41ncsda}. 'he Ptcs1dtnt orthc 1· on the lookout fi r prohibited sroup e.u .. tly the f}ght phrase. mtllto.n m"'mbcr auonal Rapmt sin11ns of 1lcnt N1 ht P•trlct B•ttua. II• wllalftl on' en11on. 1h Re' m:nd T.J, Wh t c. a tlJ 1 lhc ndn of 1 c.lunal••· f I I .. Where's the law Wllenln need? Green light for · allto restraints sorely needed W ASHJNGTON -I spotted Michael A. standing by the side of a country road, clutcbina the side of bis car .. He was disoriented and ~red. his face beaded with sweat. When 1 stopped my car to get a closer look, 1 saw that Michael A.'s car had hit a tree. "Don't leave me." Michael A. pleaded. Of course, 1 didn't. Instead, I reached for him uid he crumpled into my arms. With help, be made it to the front fender of his car and leaned against 1t. Below, water from the ruptured radiator leaked on the ground and a bit of steam hissed from the car. From across the street, a man ran out of bis house, saw what had , hap~ed and ran back to call the · police. Michael A. was injured and in pain. Almost 1mmediatcly, Michael A. s1'rted to apol~. Somewhat in- coherently, he said he had driven out from the city but bad stopped at a nearby stand to buy tomatoes. He \ 'removed his seat belt and, since be was only goina a short distance, he had not put it back on. The tomatoes had caused the accident, he said. One of them rolled off the scat, and when he reached for it be veered off the -road. He could not have been going ' over 30 miles per hour. For the nellt half-hour, Michael A. -short. about JS and with dark., wirey hair -repeated the saga of the rolling tomato. He cursed himself for stupidity, apologizing for all the • trouble be tiad caused. He had chest pains and a cut lip and he may or may not have been in shock. He had crackc:d ~ windshield With his bead and biiP lhC steering wheel with his chest. l feft sympath_y for Michael A - that and anger. Tbc sympathy came from the knowledge that l would have done the same thing. I worked once as an insurance investigator and so I know the value of scat belts. But it l had stopped to pick up tomatoes and was only continuina a short distance, l would not have re-buckled either. Michael A. could have t>cten me. He could have been anyone. The anger was directed at a dif- ferent source -at a federal govern- ment that has played around with the seat-belt issue for decades. It has allowed the auto industry, which would kill you to save a buck, to dilly- dally on the issue of protcctjve restraints of all kinds-the so-called passive belt, which wraps around you when the door closes and the most efficient restraint of &II. the air bag. It has done this even though it knows that we arc all, at one time or another, Michael A. Often we need to be erotected from our own foolisbiless. At the moment, the administration has compromised with reality. lf'.two- thirds of the states ~u mandatory seat-belt laws, the ~vemment will not require automauc crasb protec· tion, possibly air bqi. It's a rule written by officials 'Who are dnven by chauffeurs. In Wuhinaton. for in· · stance, drivers routincl1. run red lights. Smee the cops can t ,stop th.it. how in the world are they goana to enforce a maodatory scat-belt law? And even if those laws work, what iood are they going to do in one-third of the states where there arc none? As for Michael A., it would take a cop at the toma&o stand to make him buckle up. The fact that we fre rcsp0n11ble for our own actions is be~ond dlSputc and Michael A.'soontrit1on was proof of that. But it is also true that people will have accidents, that they will do something 1111)', and that they ouaht to be protected from their weakness: That, after all, is the thinkina behind I the move to mse the drinkina aae 10 • 21 : Kids arc i~~rienCed at dnni-ina and•~ more hkely to have traftit accidents as a' result. The imp• althouah rtot the fairest, solution is 10 :top them all from drinkin Michael A. was taken to the bospttal. his head rinama. chat ~undinJ in pain. SQrtd that his injuries were serious, maybe fatal . He cuncd h1m1elf for his pli&ht, certain he was the victim or hts own cartlcnncss. Later that ~ ahe onty evidence of the accident was a hlUc rip in the tree' liirt -rijtit abOvc the Pot where anolher car had hit it earlier. The tree always wtns. Nature bu done fbr it "What neither 1he aovcm· men I nor tile auto 1ndu1tryW1ll do ror lhcdnver-muc Ute U'i prot led in an ettidcnt. IUdJarl CMftl II a •JJHlk•W iM•••lll. • DOrothJ Doul Of Newport Beieh mOclehi a .i&morou town flt for an1 elaborate party. 1the co·elialrman of Orante Coanty Phllharmonlc 8ocletJ'• GOiden -a.ton Gala Oil FrldaJ w~ a creadon ln aUk claarmeue, ab0"9. ~~ of pearls and matchlnf blae catUJ9tal beada add a note of fublOD u doea her Judith Leiber .. little ' · lailJ l'llld SUNDAY • ... ,..,.. '•"' •.. modeled • Coet. llee•'aulutelo ltanew91ogen.B3. ~Mt·" At !Ubt; DOIOttiy la a plctare of eletance In anolher Amen Wanly Collec- dbfe of cat U1k 'fflnt accented with ba&le bea41DC • .&caln. a Leiber~ aceompanl-. flilton opens with Golden Baton Philharmonic Society gala ~one1Amcs~dhissociet> orchcslia"'inp~a) ror dancangandentertammcntthro~outthccven1na. tO USher ill flagship hotel . ThrcevoCalistswill~fcaturcdwaththc 14-piCCCfJP~P· . •·our gala comm attcc members arc so enthu iastic The opening of the new Anaheim Hilton Hotel and in planoina the laubchina of this mqnifiocnl marble· Towers, the flagship of the Hilton "fleet,~• is in the hand hallcdpalace:-actually~neoftbc ~!·mo t of the Orange County ~hilh~onic Society-a group .. spectacular Htlto!' hotels tn the oo~ntl}'. noted A which has been amngina eimting benefits and conccns Schumacher, chairman of the even ma. for more than JO years. The society is ta_kina this oppa"uni~) to h~nor When guests arrive Friday at th~ new hotel, the Donald L. Bren, chairman of~he If" an~ c;o., wat~ at closest one to the Anahei m Convention Center, 11 StCOnd Golden Baton AWard m recosnauon oflu strinpandduoarandpiano ontieredlevelswill outs!J!ndingCC?ntribution tothcan anOra~Count). serenade them. and has commitment to the opcnt!\I presentations of the The ho tcd codi'tail hour set for 7 p.m. will be held Oran County PerfomunaArtsCentcr in I 6. in the Pacific Ballroom. Afterwards au es ts will move to Henry trom. the rccipacntof thc first Golden the ldjaccnt California Ballroom for a umptuous ax-Baton1 is honorary chairman Qfthc pli oommitt courscdinnerwathappropriatcwinc"schoreoaraphedby .UndaVi rN th, eral'!'anqcrofVa r· Andrcla~chcr.exccut1v chef.(Bothroomsc:anhold Aon ndGrcenho Ana.he1m,i undcrwrit1 all l,400f6rd1no ;.&ncinJ.) flowtrdeoorandintcnorland pi forthc ""ta Daily Pilot Photos by l~ Payne ' • '\:Cry gcnerou donation to ucb a large part)'. he as one ofthedearcstgjrl Icvermet,"commcntcdEl . ''Tbcacncro ityofthe hotel, in addition to Visscr's and Lionel Ames, again clearly indicates how the bu in \\Orldaoanddocsbclp upporttheanworld by combining forces to cmate a alonou cclcbrataon." She addtd. (Baron Hiltonand a la con tin nt ofhi I" • tcsarcexpttted to attend.) "The Golden Baton Gal w1ll be an annual society- id fund-rai r. Thi ~carbC'gins'theneJ1.t30)'~n'o( theo nization·,cont1nu1 roltofcxttllencem music p ntations." Sen a on com milt~ arc Dorothy Doan co- ch 1rman usan Bc«hner, Pqg)' otton, loua Jones. Km t oy, Nanc Posch. Joyce Reaume .. Elaine N11eJd. ,. SChnc dcr. Georp ' pooncr, Jerry tc nandJcan Tando )'. R rYtltion anformation i l\'1lll bk b cam the OCPSofficcat642 232. --~ ~-----· 'Joaet•1,.., onroet""~CI m••nedonve homewlthlt.M She builds on her • image 06rotb) Doan ofNCYq>Ort ~~ president of Pelican ~. has resided an Newpon eeacb for 20 years. She hJts made her mart. on developing properties since 1969 when me entered the real estate industry by purcbasi~ residential income units. As prices of investment houses soared, she began building apart- ments and in 1975, she bUah her first condominium project. That led to other development projects of apart- ments. condominiums and office Pelican Properties. formed l 0 years aao. aJso manaees au the pr1)pC1tics they retain in OWDCl"5hip. Another division of the company is the .purchase and operation of properties v. hich are already com- mercial businesses that have a substantial cash flow on land that is zoned for a hi&htt and better ute. Ooe of those properties u located on the freeway at the Del Mar Raeetrack where 57 acres are being ~ into a major ~room hotel and recreation complex due to tan next year. . lo addition to her diverse build.in& arid dcveiopment expertise Doan is ~so the ori&in&l chairman of the ooaro of. ewport Balboa Savings and Loan Association wtudt $bc founded in 1978 with ei.Sht pa It was sold in t 983 at a rerord- bttaking price for the industcy. Hard work and commitment Ito quality are a '\·ital pan of outsWldi rq>utation 8chicved during her c:am:r. The same drive is applied to bcr volunteer work w:itb charitable. pol- itical and civic organizations. She is vioc president and treasurer of the Oranee County Philharmonic Society. the oldest musical orpniza- tion in the county. For the •Upcoming benefit for"' OC.PS, the fbrmaJ opcnina on Friday of the Anaheim Hilton Hotel and Towers, Doan is scnina as co- chairman with floss Schumacher. Dcian· attended Michigan· State University. the UnivCrsJty of Wash- ington and UC Irvine. wbctt sbc is president of the UCI Foundation directors.. The wife of Dr. Thomas Doan is a member of the Orance County Lincoln Oub and serves on the executive committee of the Orange C.owlty Council of Boy Scouts of America. As for fashion shopping. this busy ellecutive 'naturally has her own system, she said. as she took time out from a aowded calend&r to i>osc for Style at Amen Wanty . .. I call and make an appointment and they have the clothes ready for me to try on when I arrive. For evening I u ually choose black and white;' She added as she departed from her usual color scheme and stepped in front of the camera in a brilliant blue gown and a pandin& cut silk velvet coordinated with" accessories by Elaine Lau&hton. -- Loo KIN C Gooo -----=-==------- _ye coloring ea$l~r when peilcils keep their coo few months aao I had a up about ccpmgcool ... u unded good but l \hat ti me I d1dn ·1 kc it too enou ly. The dv1ccwa to \\Cl a towel and wnngitdn.Sproy ith fragrance and V101 Dw place in the frttzer foran hour. After you 5hO\\er and dry ofTcxccssv. ter. wrap )Oursclfin this icy cool "rap. Durina the recent hot spell-\\ hen everyone was complainingnbout the\\eather. theprobkmsofapplylng makeup and the dampness of clothes -it sounded terrific. topsdown into the ice. That kepllhepoint finn nd usable. orcoursc.~ou could ke pt hem sn 1he rt:fn emtor, but \\ho has umcto m ice thetnpto thckhchcn. Anothcrcompl int(be 1desthehe t)lhc rd rcrentlyfromaco-workerwasabouthcro1h kin. · Now. 01lybldn really isn't ll that ba . lh trong r. wtthstand the clements bctterand usually sta) b youn er. looking Ion crthan dry kin. But. on the other hand. at 1 more incltne(I toward • disturbance. develops larger pores and often looks pasty and shin) -and le sclean. lfit i) handled v.ith qut,)OU ct the positive~ rather than the negath cs. Here arc some tips offered by rese:irchers and de\ eloper in the Clinique laboratorie5: . I. Wash )Our face~ i1h soap, at least l~1ceada). That's the most important thing you can do to keep oil> clumpto ethcrmorc.gi\I kin duller.~ rscrlook Help forth• : Everyday u ofa louon m de for this purpo~-•l removes worn-out Oakes. com tn d&fTercnt trcnsths. For more" i orou e foll Hon, U) a granular crub. One that'bo1l-frcc, wnter·rin ble, and id 1 for the refincryofo1ly km 3. Steerclcarof puum dditionul oils on your face -no he.av) • .unventtlatedcrcams or moisturizers. lf)OU reall)•wantamoisturizerfordricrarc sorun) dry lines, use a light-weight one that's v1rtuallyoil-free. Th ls leaves . kin lookinggo6d, "ith a bit of hecn. but no h1ne. bnngs 11e 10 orche d , e pecwU) when hair falls forward 10 banas. An wcr: Freguentordail)·h 1r-wavun& wuhanoU-con1rolhn1 hampoo And,1fyouhavebanp con 1der etti111out from undcrlhem A smoothed-back hairstyle v your forehead more rand l chance of trouble. 7.Be rdsandmoustache couldhnvethcsameill effects sban -bysh1eldingoily 'nfroma1r.Thc skin tay wanner, 01 lier, more break-out prone. Answer 1s the me: Frequent hampooinaoffac11I hair and thorou:;insmatorcmovecverytraoeofsoap. halo helps to p )Our beard hon -then it's easier to part it nght do n to haarroot and"cxfohatc the skin underneath. ~ omeumcs you cnn come up with arcat ideas bom from necessity. • skin looking cleaner and fresher. And if you use a facial 4, TakeadvantAge of oil-free makeup base and oil· free sun products. 1 hey spare )OU more oil (and more trouble.) In addition. oil· free makeup can also endow you with a smooth \.·el\cly finish that minimi:res pare . Then. for blusher, u e powder or gel-leave the cream 1es for dner skins that can u~ the extra emolliencc. 5. Watch your mouth!·Lip•uick fe.uhers and blurs more when skin is oil>. If> ou rub loo e powder into the ' 8. Telephon , held tightly against checks, have a way ofoollecting tale 011 and gnmc that's been known 10 1mtate kin -c pecially oily skin. So before you "reach out," reach for a cleanser-dampened cloth to remove the messy telephone build-up This ought to be done at lea t I discovered a-hint fotsa\ inalipcolorandeyecolor pencils after I found them melting with the point breaking every time I tried to use them in my un-airconditioned home. t too IC a cup oficc cube 10 the-counterand befo oapespecially made for oily skin, with extra cleansing power but no uncomfortable harshness, )1ou can act even better results. ~foli te-thalis..rcmovtlhe dead skin flakes that 5urfaC'ecvervdav When skin is oily. these Oakes · lip area first, }Ou give the lipsuck a drier surface to cling to and help lt hold its line. 6. Oilyhairgoeswithoilyskin, and can beat the root ofsk!n breakouts. Dtrmatolo1iistsoften -.ee that oil) hair weekly. · 9. c'heap help: From time to time. throughout the day. pat a little cool water on your fee Ash evaporates. , it seems to tighten and f rcshen skin. h ~lso feels aood. I stanC'd '" '""'"' "'"""':"' ... ,,.,...,.the-pencils "itb metal • . . PAPARAZZI PLUS Leisure togs are trendy ~here's only 87days until ... Los Angeles is a mCCC3 for fitnesr minded people-wilh or without the energy and excitement of the Olym- pics. More and more the concern for a healthy body 1s reflected in the ·fashion mduslry, and Cahfomta epitomizes this trend toward ac- t1vewear. A major front runner in the casual clothing campaign. L.A. GEAR. re- cognized early that workout wear 1~ a necessary part of almost everyone's wardrobe. Along with this, a huge market for athletic shoes was born. Robert Greenberg. president of L.A. GEAR, sought to offer a shoe lhal bnd&ed the gap between athletic comfort and casual fashion. He created an entirely new look for the fashion athleisure industry. Amid the trendy shops on Melrose Avenue 1n Los Angeles. L.A. GEA R's stiop o,ffers an ever growing hne of clo1hing for men, women and chil- dren. its instantly rccogmzable foot- \\ear and such new accessones as hats, belts, socks and hosiery II> complete the look. h leadership in these contemporary categones has resulted m major international licensing agreemenlS secured by L.A. GEAR with such companies as Doespun/CaJabash , ln- der...a and Raphael of Southeast Asia. CUual clothing and foot- wear make L.A. Gear a •tyle industry front-runner. ... Huntington Harbour will be offering Cruise Of Lights at Christmastime -' It's not too soon to think of Christmas -at least not for the Huntington Harbour Philharmonic Commiucc. It's already opened an office at 16873 Algonqwn St. in Huntington Beach and to sell tickets for the Cruise of Lights set from Dec. 12 to Dec. 21 with four trips per night. .. People can't watt until the evcnin' before and count on tickets, • said sUdra Cloaae,chair· man of HHPC, recently while lunching at Pave in Corona del Mar. "We don't want to have disap- pointed people at Christmastime, bu.t that sometimes happens if they don't $Cl tickets early." D. Russell of Newport Beach •.. handsome Gino Gaadlo (son of Josepb Gaudio of Costa Mesa) will headline the program. The soloist has appcar.ed on Broadway, in . concert with the Las Vegas Sym- phony and the Orange County Master Chorale. Mrs. Patrick Nolan, 640-4027, is membership chainnan of the group . • • • Actor AJlan Gruener will be on hand Friday at the clubhouse (610 W. 18th) to entertain Costa Mesa Womcn'i, Club dunng an 11 a.m . meeting ... Ebell Club of Newport Beach will be holding its "Cotton Party" Thursday at 11 a.m. when a "help yourself salad bar" will be set Cruisers will travel miles of waterways hned with elaborately up. Also, at the clubhouse ~S 15 W. holiday-decorated homes. Jean · Balboa. Blvd .. Bal'?<>a) affair !11e.m· Railey is chamnan of this popular t>crs will place coins in ~ wishing event that raises money for musical well and make their own ice CfCi!m youth programs for Orange County sundae~. Proceeds ~!11 benefit ~"It Philharmonic Society. pied children of the Make a Wish Tickets-$5 for adults and $3 for program m Orange County. M~m chiJdren under 12 -may be ~rs. will celebrate th~ orgamza- obtained by gomg by the office tton s 75th anmve.rsary in Octobe~ .. Monday through Friday from Io Diane Nicholson 1s the new pres1- am. to I p.m. and selecting a time dent • • • and dale or by mailing a check The Junior Woman of the Year (made out to the committee) and a will be announced Oct 5 when the self addressed stamped envelope to Assistance League of Newport the office. Beach, Junior Auxiliary, sponsors a -------------------------• • • luncheon and fashion show Andy Wiiiiams fans will be gather-(Neiman-Marcus presenting) al the For the best in you··· be casual and carefree with a precision cut 'n style. N,ow sale priced, •14 ·ReGIS HAIRSTYUS .. TS .. 540-8888 546-7186 ing at the Pacific Ballroom, , Anaheim Hilton and Towers, on Westin South Coast Plaz.a Hotel. Sept 29 when he sings at the I 2th The six finalists up for the gold annual St Joseph Hospital Foun-medallion award (donated by · fi Th bl k · ffi · · Downey Savings) arc Linda Yuppa dattonbene 1l. e ac -t1ea a1r1s (YSP), Lynda Shea (ATSC), Jtarin S 175 per perso~. • • de RilyD.er. (Fullerton Ch!![.ity Members and guests of Harbor League), Sandy Brunick <Hiab View Hills Philharmonic have a Hopes), Mary Ann Jeppe (Newport treat m store at the TucSday mom-Harbor Junior League) and Donna ing meeting being ho tCd by Mn. C. Salyards, (Providence Speech and 20% OFF French Bra by 2 wee.le only Style #196 Style #103 .. 3 Vii I do ~e~ port lkar.h 673-7710 Cool and comfortable Water wonderland• •ur- round.ln& Dlaneyland Hotel : are the backdrop for these fun, fublonable and fa.nc- tlolial oatflta from AClldu' new holiday Une tbat doablea u •portawear and .ueetwear. Tbe man'• ov.t- Ot. left, bu a 100 percent cotton Jeney tblrt ($35) with contrut:lni cbellt and aleeYe 1trtpea anct 1bo!U of 80 percent cotton and 40 percent polyeater ttretcb twill ($27). Becky, near ~t. wean matcblnt roee- colored muacle eblrt ($11) and JM!lyeater-cotton •horta ($21 ). Larry'• red, wblte and blue ATP cotton tennl8 tblrt ($35) top1 100 ~rcent poly- eater double mtt ahorta ($45). Terri chOM a tur- quolae, ecoop-neck tank top with white meah bottom ($14)andmatchlng 100per- cent D7,lon trlcot rannln• abort.a ($16). Heanng Center). • • • Ellen Kaafman, administrator ~f the Jewish Family Life and Educa- tion Program at Jewish Family Service. will focus on "A~scnive ncss and the Jewish Woman" when shespcaksal 12:30p.m. Wednesday to Newport Beach chapter of Hadassah. Mio.Ila Posner, 536-0646 or Lorra1Jle Welncardt, 551-2690. may be called for further infor- mation. • • • Laguna Beach branch of Ameri- can Association of University Women Wllt hold a coffee at 9:30 a.m. Saturday in the Neighborhood Congregational Church, Laguna &ach, for members and prospcc- uve members. S1gnup sheets wiU be available for a Jong list of activities set for this fall. Jane Berry, 499-5151. is membership chainnan. • • • Transplanted BrookJynites in Seal Beach and Garden Grove have formed their own chapters to sup- port the City of Hope. The Seal Beach chapter will hold a potluck social meeting Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at 1806 Jamaica Road, Costa FASHION CALENDAR ---- ... Mesa. ..It was BrookJynites that started the group, but anyone can join," said Selma Marael, activity chairperson who may be reached at 957-0581. ThcGardenGrove..-oup meets Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at 12860 Euclid. Jerry Schwartz, 761·8670, has information on this chapter. • • • Wives and widows. of retired military officers or retired women officer-$ arc eligible to attend ac· tivities of OWLS (Officers Wives League). The next scheduled event is a 10 a.m. membership coffee on Wednesday in El Toro Officer's Club. Mn. Edwin Lons, 548~1685, of Costa Mesa is the membership chairman. • • • Patrons of the arts Will be board-. ing the "Tiki" in Newport Harbor at 7 p.m. Friday for a two-hour cruise and an opportunity tP meet mem- bers of Cylinder; Dance/Poetry (Theatre Ensemble: Pa-ssenJers who pay S3S per couple will CDJOY wine, hors d'oeuvres aad music. Cyhndcr, Inc. (Oran1e County's own modern dance com- pany) was organized in Laguna Beach .m 1981. The company is headed by Cyrus Parter, SS 1-4239, and Linder O'Roarke, (213) 598-2801. who may be called for reservations or infonnation. -..... And. one further item, on the sweet side is the Chocolate Extrava- gana '84 set Oct. 13 and 14 from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. al the Disneyland Hotel Exhibition Hall. Chocolatiers and confectioners from around the world will be there with samples and demonstrations. Tickets are $7 and l S,000 chocaholics arc expected to show. Childrcns Hospital of Oranae County wilt benefit from the event. Tickets. obtainable in advance at all Southern California Ticketmaster outlets or by calling 541-4659. also will be sold at the door. I. MAGNIN: Informal modclina of Perry Ellis. Ellen Tracy and Anne Klein de11gner sportswear is set for Thursday, 'noon to 3 p.m. in the South Coast Plaza tore, Pronto Ristorante and Forty C&JTots rcstaurant. Prescriptive repre!Jentative \\ill present climes on color wheel selection Thursday, Friday and Saturt1ay. Appointments available by callina 9S7-151 I. ext. 262. • • • NORDSTROM: Femgamo representative, Oifl' Barrot, will present a trunk how of the Italian shoes from 4 to Q p.m. Thursday in Men'sSboeson level one. • •• MAY CO.: A mm r for caretr·mmdcd women i scheduled at the South Coast Plaza tore from 6 to 8 p.m. Wednesday wtth Editor-at-larae Kate Rand Lloyd as speaker. A fashion presentation and h&ht supper also arc scheduled. Re rvatton ($5) ma) be made by phonina the executive office, t. 2644 at th tore. A seminar by Wenda Harris Mtllard, aeneral manager of Work1na Woman Ventures 1s t for It a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Saturday at th We tmin tcr store. • • • FA HION HOW: Women's Guild and &Jtool Auxiliary, Our Lady Que n of ngcls athohc Chureh. fa Ilion show luncheon set Sept. 28 in the P1mfic Ballroom at Newport Beach M.i u Hotel. Rcscn111on.s (US . c ch) may m de with Manlyn Pclls. 64~S03 . .Fashions. rrom ord trom. . • . . . . - BRIDAL HOW: A "D y o( Your Ufc" event t pt. 23 for brid thc&r mothm and families at outh Coast Plaza Hotel by Twyla Manin Hour1 re 10.30 a.m. to S pm. II pcct of wcdd1na Will be covered Tickets re SS per pc n . l Bl1har Wallerlcla, center, tal1e llul Tai~. left, and C&tlMrtne TlaJ9D wbat oadlt8 are trady for tlila fall. .. TetrJ Vella and Gall PaoH were dellpted by ~eu faablon parade that followed tlaelr continental branch. . . C.ity ofth.e Art~ ba.s desiga.-on mall -. . . City of the Arts ... that's Costa Mesa u proclaimed by Ma1or Dou Ball. Hall, attendina "An Evenina to Remember .. hosted · by the Ant C.Ommiasion of the Costa Mesa Chamber of C.Ommerce at South Coast Plaza •s Jewel Court, also proclaimed Arts Month. ••Everybody travelinJ on the freeway will know September it Arts Month in Costa Mesa, .. said Barbara Gra4f, party chairman ... Banners in three CQlors with the Arts Monih, Performina Arts Center and SCR logos are ftyina on Bristol and Anton streets and all over Town Center. It'• thrillina to seo ~11thusium that hu been aenetated. Next year we'll hiVe bannen down Harbor Boulevard.,. The bannen were underwritten by Georac AraYros. Harry Rinker. the Chamber. C. J. Scaerstrom and SOn, Donald Brialwn and Partners. Pacific Federal, Westin South Cout Plaza. South Coast Repertory and South em California Edison. Furtberenthuaiasm for the arts was aenerated when Da.W Emmet and Martbl Basoa were announced as winnersofanawardtobcaivenannuallytoapenon(or persons) who bu made outstanding contributions in the ans. The two co-founden and artistic directors ofSCR were presented the perpetual trophy plus smaller replicas to keep by Art K.idmu of Rutan and Tucker. (E.F. Hutton sponsored the award). Ted Baker, an Arts C.Ommissioner presented awa.rdJ to winners in a ~ter contest sponsored by 0nnee Cout C.Olleae (Bob Cnader'1 advertiaina clesiaD clau). Lava "hrdy received a SSOO South Coast Plazaaift certificate for fint place; Carol Latcola, teeond Dlace, $2S0aift certificate, and Karea Mets, a SI 00 SCP certificate. The winning posters were exhibited Ilona with work done by the Costa Mesa Art ~members (the latter will remain at SCP all month.) South Coast S)'Dlphony's strina quartet provided music, the tables were loaded with hon d'oeuvm and tbeeveninaconcludedwitbthedebutofexcitinanew _ fuhiom desianed by ttudents at FashionlnstitQte;of DesipandMerchandisina.(Itwasat this point that aboppen stopped shopping and moved to the roPed off area for a clo1er look). A few of the art enthusiasts there were Paal Brecbt (be'dlyina the barinen at the orchid j&!'dens). Betty 'hnlMill (co-founder oITLK Gallenes), Alice Lt1en, WalterLJ19H,JadBall(CofCprexy),NormaBertso1, Eric J.Uaon, E4 McFarbad,ArleDe Schafer and Jim a ...... • • • Fuhions by Ralph Lauren. Anne Klein, Perry Ellis, Rebecca Moses, Jean Marc and Kasper were paraded by Sab Fifth A venue, South Coast Plaza, much to the deliabt of members and guests of Sound ofMusic chapter, Oranae County Performing Arts Center. This WJS the second year BWu Wallerlela, fashion dircctor;had invited the aroup to view a collection -· th.ii time it featured desianer sportswear with a bevy of the 1C&10n'1 anclrosYnous looks. Before the show memben held a business session foUoWinaacontinentalbrunch. PrcsidentSlwiEA)'iu. welcomed (amona others) Jerri Mtrams, S9e Per· ew.ai, W19ilaE11J,Ma4eUMB1aen.U.Cat1aenae 1'1-. Bari hlvfat, Willa 8e'1epa,Marl• ftomplOll, LeeJ ..... Olerta Canu, Gall Paoli, Amy Vletll and ~o.w.w. ............... _, ......... Wearable •art• created bJ Pub.loll lutlbate of l)Mtlft and llerolaall- cUatn. atadeat8 wu modeled to die deltcbt of Soatb Cout PIUa puty-&oen and ..... ~by.Someoftbe eye-catcher• were. clockwtie fi'om left. a blue tlaaue paper bloue,a~Mtfor tile cocktall · hou. a coat ID the late.t 1~ and aafarl-lnaplred cloth• for the oat- doony mate. ~--.. .., ................. Ulllllt . Arlene &obafer and Da" Ball. talk art while Pat and Ed McFarland and Werner Eacher eye new atyles by atudenta. ... T:ralaer COllD ,ont, npt, atanda with etfU... and modm. from left. Chert Cun· -"'--~ \ Te8.m' s from Down Under; but are styles a cut above? -. . . Mesa salon benefits from international exchan e of tdeas Nev. Zealand•s national team of hair t)lists-en route to the world hairdrcssina championships 1n Las Vega -practiced for a fl.'CCk at Regis ton in South Coast Plaza. The team chosen to ~P nt its country la t November and has been cuttina. curting and Cl· pcnmcnting wuh nc t lcs in~ F cbruary. "~ For · the ch mpionshaps; each tyli ' had to compete in three cat on : an cvcnina t>le 1n,•9lv· na a hairp1~. a fashaona • cbm· mcrciaf cut for da r nd a ca ua1 'fYl that could bC cut nd blo n dry. they compete apinst repi cttntatives from 41 other CQUntri " ' he team -three bairdreucn Crbp, h~ck 4 our rh r p cticc CJ RJ&D, · ted. decided upon thrtt . _, • M OrangeOout DAILY PILOT/Sunday, 6ec>t9mber 16, 19"' Cruise sails filr from the madding crowd nonhw rd. There· Explorer travels where no otheF ftcr season, on route that cro , but e of pa fliCr here ldom follow, the estabh hed und -somch da home, othcrs;io1mn1 lane . . the ship u u continues the Journey One of the mo$t unusual gments throu&h wh 1 Society ExpO(bt1ons ofthi year' itinerary bl-gin:> at Punt calls tlle "Lo t I land1ofthe P cafic ... rena , Chtlc, in Fe ry. '>'hen The re 1 land lo t to time. For a m ny soned outh me 's ummer un till l he hap folio\\ in the kes of rides high tn the y. The EAplorcr Darwtn nd He)erdahl, and the am"~ there ftcr more than a month name$arcfam1h revcn to those Who of cruising alona the rim of Antarc-seldom tray far from home; Rob- tica. inson Cruwc bland, the Selkirk , tr'l"elctl. the ldeal ad-.cnturc 1 one that takes them so far from the beaten path that they no other tounst for weeb on end :-expeditions that encountet cultures completely un- touched by lhear own. lm~sibl inth1sagcofcasy occsa to everywhere? A small s.roup of traveler') -Easter I land, Pitcairn. Papeete. perhaps a hund~ d -will meet the 'Tonga. Fiji and, finally to Papua New Explorer at Punta Arenas for tw°" Guinea. Not at all. In fact, such n dventure can even be luxurious for tho9C with enough tihle to make the journey and die price of admi ion on an expedition ship sailina under w flla of an orpniution called Societv Ex- week crui~ nonh along Chile's we t The Explorer carries a fleet of coast. The ships ize allows the in1latablc Zodiacs, tho~ vcrSatile, e~pedition to travel through the . table boat~ popularized by Ja~ues coastal archipelaio where no otht'r Cousteau' television sencs. expedition program ventures. With this equipment, pas~ngers This wildly beautiful region ha visit places ordinary tourists never bttn de5eribed by travel writers as see -beaches, viUagcs, uninhabited having •• ... more 'fllounwns than the islands o remote ~hat the only Alps, more aJ.acicrs than Alaska and reminder of another world is the more fjords than Norway, s~eden occasional contrail strcal in~ribcd peditions Cruises Inc. • The luxury cruise ship 1s the Explorcfa,nd the journey is endless - the ~xPl.orcr's continuing mission is and Denmark combined." across the sky by a jetliner. The Explorer J?UUs into Puerto In the final analysis. the silence and Monnonthe 12thdayoftheleisfrtel}. distance arc a major part of the experience. On the voyage of the Harboring anger .. self-destructing Explorer, the traveler can become auuned once again to the sounds of nature and to the voices of culturcs- culturcs regulated by the ancient rhythm of the tides rather than the metronome of c1vihzauon, DEAR ANN LANDERS: lam a man------.... --------!"9 who was mamed 23 years. Rcuntly I filed fordivorce. lt wasn'tcasy. but I did it because I bad to. A11 luDEI$ I am not goinJ to try to make a cue for myself. I will sun ply enclose the following statement. When I ran across it, it changed my way of thinking. Forthe first time since l filed, I no longer feel angertowardmywtfcandbcr fam1Jy. I bopc you will print this statement for all the people wbo find them~lvcs pnsoners of anger. Perhaps it will help them as il helped me. The author is Frederick Buechner. I am-AN ANONYMOUS READER IN MICHIGAN DEAR READER: TlaaU.I for alwi.Dc I remarkably lulptfuJ Hlly. Boeclmer ls a pM)osopber of ao 1mall dlmeuioll. U Ids mn111e were beecled by ooe and all, tb.ll woahlbe a beallkler and bappler world. Ber:e It iJ: Of tbe Seven Deadly Stu, ancer 11 po11lbly tile moat fan. · To Uck your womuls, to smack your Ups over pievucet 1001 past, To roll over yoar tonpe tbe prospect of bitter collfroatatlon to come - To savor tbe last toodlsome monel of botll tbe pa1a JOO are pvlnc and tile pain yoa are 1ett1111 back, ID many ways It iJ a feast flt for a kins. Tbe dJef drawback JJ &Ut wlaat yoa are wolfiDI dowa 11 younelf. Tbe ueleton at tbe feut li yoa. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am writing in rcfereocoto "Honey," the woman who objected to service people calling bcaiwcetie. Doll, etc. 1 work at a resort hotel in the Catskill Moundfns. Over the years I have been a waiter, busdnvcrand luggage handler. I have been called Boy, Man. Son,Buddy,Pat,Jack,Jak.c, Boss, Red. Lefty, HeyYouandscvcralothcr names not suitable for print I separate these names into three cateaories-some I dislike, S9!De don "t matter one way or the other, and others arc amusing. But this I know: In a society where people must communicate, and there are very few name tags around, wcmusta,ct the attention of those wearcscrving~or those who are serving us) by callina that person somet~1~ If the name is nc1thc_r crude nor disrespectful.no one should resent 1t. Life 1s too short to get exercised about thtngsofsuch httlcconsequcnce. -MY GIRLCALlS ME DREAMBOAT DEAR BOAT: Whb I bad said that. Tbanks for a 10Ud and aensible rHpoDH. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: The lener from that lowdown skunk who called his illegitimate grandchild a bastard prompts this letter. Aftet several years of rebellion, our daughter came home pregnant by a married man. Beheve me, I know the heart.ache and suffennJa parent can go through wbcnsucha thing happens. I have been there and it as pure bell. Wetookourdaughtcranand she bad the baby. Her attitude changed completely when the child was born. Now our relationship is wonderful. We have our daughter back.and a beautiful grandchild, also. Maybe Webster terms him a .. bastard," but to us be isa blessing. He hasenbanced our hves more than wordscanexpress.-GRANDMA,ANYWHERE, U.S.A. • DEAR GRANDMA: Thanks for an eloquent tfttlmony. "Grandpa" sounds llke a world-clan bee I. DEAR READERS: We ban bad many request• •ver the year• for those haJtdt we conalder to be our favoritea. Tbat makee qvJte a Uat. For the time bel.Qg. therefore, we are devotin1 the Sunday colamo to a 1eriet of famou1 hand1. At the end of the series we will 10 back to our weekly quettioa and aoawer column. North·South vulnerable. South deals. WEST NORTH +AK 84 i;:;> 42 0 Q432 +AKQ EAST • J 752 <:?QJ973 O K + 109 i;:;> 1085 0 1098 7 + 1054 • J732 SOUTH • Q63 AK6 0 AJ65 • 986 The biqding. South West North E11t 1 0 Pasa 2 + Pa11 3 • Pas• 4 + Pu 4 <:? Pa11s 4 NT Pu• S 'V Pass 5 NT Pa11 6 0 Pass Pus Paas Opening lead: Queen of i;:;>. He looked like any other Ace of Diamond . except for one slight oddity -a small black skullcap was perched atop has head. "I am an Orthodox J l'\\ ... he explained. "Bridge is really a simple game," he pontifical<>d. "It's t.he players You won't find anything better than what Sitmar offers. Our new, Liberian- registered fleet, including the brand· new $150,000,000 Fairsky. Warm Italian hospitality. Spacious cabins. Sumptuous dining. And s parkling per couple. You end up paying about • the same for a Sitmar 10-day cruise (roundtrip from Los Angeles) as you would for 7 days on other cruise lines. entertainment. . And 'with our 1985 uper Saver pric.es. which include free air fare, you won't find a better cruise value either. $JQOOOFF THE PANAMA . CAl'JAL On our 12-day cruises January 24 to May 24. Save from $500 to $1000 per . couple. That's up to $5600 les.5 than Prinress' 14-day cruises. Up to $3500 I~ than their 1-1-day cruises. SjOO OFF MEXICO On ou.r 10 & 11-day cruises January 26 to May 22. Save from $400 to $700 $5QO OFF THE CARIBBEAN On our 10 & 11-day cruises January 26 to June 1. Save from $200 to $500 per couple. Plus, our new I I-day itinerary includes Cozwnel and a day explorirtg the Panama Canal. Sold exclusively by travel agents. Book by December 31, 1984. 5-~ ra1 mg r:1ddmJ< 's \ \iJrkJ" idt· c irncle to Cnu....;(..., SITMAR . SUPER SAVERS • Myatertoua atatuea viewed on Enter Island. a loat laland of the Paclftc. who make it complicated. All the e weird conventions and strange plays. Why, ir they'd simply learn to tnke their tricks, they would be far better orr. "Only the other day I played in a six diamond contract on this hand. It was m a rubber bridge game. All my winning go to a very poor Cami· ly of which I happen to be the head! "Now you must agree that six diamonds is an excellent contract. Ir I were addicted to finesses, I would have been de(eated. I would have won the opening lead, cro sed to dummy and taken the trump finesse. As the cards lie, that would have meant the lo s of a second trump trick for down one . "However, it is against my CHARLES GOREN religion to go down in makable con· tracts. Be ides, my Rabbi has a rule: 'When the king is singleton, play the ace!' If ever there was a time to apply the rule, this was it. "I won the opening lead in hand and immediately ~unched myself into the fray. When the king drop· ped, it was a simple matter to draw two more rounds ol trump and then rull my heart loser on the board. OMAR SHARIFF .. My denigrators accu e me of being lucky; some were impertinent enough to suggest I must have pdked, but that's not really fair. Jr trumps were 3-2, my line ol play would always succeed. Because of the mis ing trump spots, if trumps were 4·1, 111 lines were due to fail except in the event that his majesty . the king was unprotected. I wu simply playing the odds!" Getting a grip on lost luggage When they talk a ut ~travel, the good news is that sometime in this century, people will be able to travel on a shuttle to the moon. The bad news 1s their luggage will · end up on Mars. Wherever travelers ptber, the sut>- Jcct eventually gets around to lost luggage. They arc not pretty stories. Like the Olympic cyclist medal wiriner whose bicycle did not make it home with him ... not to mention his medals. Or the cardinal who flew on a commuter plane from Chicago to Dubuque, fowc, ·and watched the luggage holdmg his vestments bemg unloaded in Galena. And you don't want to know what happened to poor Roselyn Gordon of Ft. Lauderdale. Aa. · ERMA BOllECK Earlier this year, Roselyn went to Pittsburgh for the wedding of her grandson. It was a shame the wedding wasn't held in Canada, because that"s where her luggage went. The agent told her if she did not receive her luggage in 24 hours, she would receive S35 for "new-under- wear." The lugga~edid not arrive and "new underwear' was the least of her GREATLY REDUCED CLEARANCE SA.LE! ART POSTERS, NHAM EXHIBITION ~ CAT AlOGUES, ASSORTED ART BOOKS, PHOTOGRAPHY 800KS, GIFT ITEMS, CARDS OPEN TO PUBUC TUESDAY. SEPT 18TH THROUGH WEDNESDAY, OCT. 3RD 11 00 AM TO 5 PM NiWPoRT H~80R ART MUSEUM 850 SAN CLEMENTE DRIVE NEWPOftT BEACH, CA 92660 (714) 759-1122 worries. All she had to wear to the wedding were the slack suit and sneakers she bad traveled in. The family tried to come to the rescue. But the mother of the bride was too shon and too thm. Finally. they found someth1na to fit ... a blue maternity dress. They washed out the spcts and dried them with a hair dryer and Roselyn mardicd down the aisle between her two grandsons wearing a maternity dress and a pair of aold bedroom slippers. End of the story? Grow up. As they were catmadinner the waitress spilled salad all over the JOld bedroom slippers and the next ume around she spilled chamJ>a&Dc down the ma- ternity dress. It was probably nothina personal ... just an opinion. My husband is in the p~ss .of filling out a two-page quesuonnatn: on his lugagc that sat in Dall&? for. a month while be was vacallonina in New Guinea. They want every item in the suitcase listed along with when it was purchased, where purchased and the ori&inal cost. The clothes could gq out of style before he ICIS all the QUCSUOOJ answered. There is no place on the form for the clothes he had to buy in Port Moresby where they stock clothes for men 5_. or under (h.e's S-l l ). Or how he had to endure smart rcmarka like," Arc you on your way to a flOod?" I find myself. ~mpathizing more and more with the non-En&lish· speaking Yugoslavian woman f saw who boarded an airplane in Los Angeles wearing two wip and three fur coats. The woman obviously spoke fluent airlines. • I ; • Laurel le·arns Trent's hei; brother on 'One L fi_....__ BY LV DA HIRSCH ALL MY CHILDREN: Lcam1111 Joanna wu 1n Adam'• plane before n 1ook off, R t>Clicvo Ille may have been rnpo~ sible for h s crash Adam praumed dead When HalarY tells Tad they·~ throuah he ~ to marry the prqnAnt Dottae G!2 confronts Tony about causm,a Jenny• death and the duo Opt on the rooftOp When 'Tony pots a prl he thmlts I Jenn)' he falls over cdac of roof and dies. Thanks to Jpanna, Palmer learns Ross has an CA· wife Cynthia and a son AadteW. Palmer hlttt a pnva\C detective to (md them. As Oluck heads for Kentucky, he and Donna have kalful ~bye. Phoebe admna to Hilary ihc 11111 loves Lanak.')'.· LanateY. erroneous!) 1h1nlcm1 Phoebe 1nu6bed him for Horac.r, tum a his back on Phoebe. Li.za devises devious plan to sepaiale Ch ff and Nana. Zack becomes closer to Nana. Followina ber breakup wtlh Tom. Donna, returns lo ber fritndship with Zack. ANOTHER WORLD; Sally 11vcn hyp- nouc SIJllCStion to shoot CaU1n next time they mttt. Grant sccm1naJy a<XlCpts lily'1 proiutuic past. Cau cenain Cecile's been an bis apan.ment but Fehc'-thinks it may ' beCec1lc's&hos1. Blaine shocked Ythen she finds papers 1nd1catin1 Sandy pthmd evidence 111uoat Cory Corp. Mac heads for London to !':r to stop his bu incss woes. Mark and Ali&e reahu they lo.ve one Jnothcr. Larry and M.J. belinnana to believe Sally not responsibfe for bcr stranae behavior. MJ. learns hypnotist from un1venttv is not man who's been h)'pnolliina Sally. My&tcnous stranger rclcait'S Catlin from Donna's wine eel&~ LatcT Pt-rry plans rendezv u for atho and lly. S_pouma Callin 11y turns around and fim gun thl'CC 11mn. AS ftU!! WOflLD TURNS: Learn og Bttsy•a true ldent11y, Ru lyanaJy tel II her Jhe'a wanted by poll<lC to ibey must bah the search for her bab)'. Under hypnous. tevc rccatls a man U)'lJl.& to straQ&lc him and then tevc rcachina for obJcct and hlltma him on hC'ad Cra11 finds ca scuc Steve made while under hypno:.1s and ma Is cassette to Bnan, Russ tnter«pb call from tevc to Bets) Marcy m1s- tnterpreu K.1rk'1 friend hip for romanuc f«linp on hi J)lrt. Leamint his sentence has been reinstated, Cal ~Us aun oo Maaic and forces herto 10 with htm to t. Louis, ·where a man has altbi for Cal. Gunnar tails Dustin out of runnin.a away, CAPITOL: Myrna bcginna~ to believe Scoll)' as Kelly and Trey's child Brenda Plaa\ted by nightmares followin1 attack at Life MarbJdlead Zed happy ... h<"n he acts call from "froeman" who says he )las the d11mond and wanu to deal. Sloane hurt when she learns Thoma5 has befnended Kell). Zed admits to T)lcr that he paid Kelly's bail but won't say why. Ricky notices n11& on Qumn'siin$CT 1s the same ring Brenda's attacker wore. DA VS OP OU.R LIVES: Conttnuira to be blackmailed by Mu, Neil uses Diane's baby to p&n off as Bo and Mcpn's child. Madame X orders Alex to buy strip Joint calltd Beefcakes. Madame X then informs Pete she's hts new boil. Gwen &ivq Larry to opeJJ doll house THE PORT THEATRE 673-6260 Mo" llllle All Seall 1 00 ,,_NCHFIUI BURBANK (AP)-Jane Withers. around," she said. "So my _mother the child star who became Josephine, and I w_rapped each o~e.1nd1v1(1}lally, the lady plumber of television com-but I sa.td to my dolls. It sOK. kids.... "TM l1t1n ol lllrtil G111r1" mercial fame, is 1ettih& ready to One day, we'll take y~u .~ut for the display her collcctJon of more than whole worl to a n. TI:aM 8,000 dolls in a studio where.she aho Wtl£N-tN 90\JTHERN CAUroRNIA VISIT ~ STUOeO• plans to make family films. With the collaboration of Chuck Rice, Withers is building the studio next to Rice's ColorHouse film processing firm in Burbank. It will cost nearly St million, including the land, and wt.II also feature a run for stray dogs and cats she packs up until she can find them permanent homes. EWott Gould play. an oTer- bardened doctor In a boepl- tal emeraency room OD the preYiew epbode of .. E/R" tom.pt at 8 on C¥. Cluut- Withers, 58. starred 1n dozens of films and radio shows as a child. By 1947, she had collected 3,500 dolls, many of which were displayed during World War II in a two-year travelmg show that raised $2.5 million in 10- ccnt war stamp admissions, But when she married Texas rancher and oilman Bill Moss ... He didn't want to see all these dolls ul 2. • _.,.....,_.,.u..,~·· • ~-~ "°" ~ ... 879 9850 PAClflC ANAtl.IM Oii .. .. 5295339 flWff BR£A PLAZA lllJIA ,. 952-4993 UA MOVlS 8 ==BACll CF.NE WILDER'S • VICTOR DIW -- -·· \ICTOR ORAi •:r. •• OIUOrf l'CfUl!lS ~ QllSTAMESA • UA Cln«NI CenW 540-0594 OiWiGE Onedonll 134.2553 a>STAMESA ~Mesa f)4e.!llJZS • ?'mlm Cypr-aza.teeo •WiSriliiiSTtJi F.dwlrds FOUNTAIN VN.J.iV Fa!MyFour Cinema Wiit 181 ·3835 WISnlntS'TU Plctflc's Hl-Wly 38 DIM-In •1 ·Je83 963 1 J(J'J.; *~IN .... rxwiii tUnlliR* llACH 848-0388 EDW~ IUCTINCTON .. 8S41111 EDWARDS IJMRSITY LA *-A (213) 691-0633 Nit fAStlOH SQUi\RE UmADA S23l611 SRO GATEWAY 5 llSD VEO 830-6991 EDWAllt>S VU) TWIN I ~T BOCH 6«-0760 EOWAROS NEWPORT ~63Hm CNOOME ' SMTA AM 540 74" EDWARDS BRISTOC Ml'IWISTO 891·3935 EDWARDS CHMA WEST mn.sm 891'3&93 PACIFIC ttWAY 39 Oii if NOWSUOWING • llSQVIJO EDWARDS VO> lWIC 1»6991 S 0 fW'f TO 1.H AZ IOPOIT llACH EDWARDS N£WPORl 6'4-G760 .. •WPOll coot.• ''Many layered and funny, Alan Rud.olph·s ~Me' 1s an L A flower, a neon orchid- h1p, outrageous, beautiful." LA. __ _ " 'Choose Mc' is marvelous ' entertainment Amazing!" oeua......_ __ Qk~4L Ht a a ~rious comedy ~~ Keith Lesley Ann Bujofd carr~ine Warren Sal/Sun. 1'20, 3:00, 5:45, 8:00, 10:00 edwards TOWN CENTER Mon Thurs 6·00, 8:00. 10:00 "'' I ,. '. ~ Ill' ~7 51 4184 ~ ' •ii M t I & ·• '• • CO~TA MHA BO DEREK 9 A CANNON RUA ..,. Sl«)INJ ll TOIO 511 5llO Edwards Slddlfbatk An Adventure in&stasy ..... ,.,. ..... ~I •• _,, •• tmrTa. ~ QROVE SJ0-4401 Edwards Wtstllrook SAlff ... S-0. 7"4 Eftlrds 8ristal mMlil 634 391 1 FCUnAll YMlll 9'3-ll07 UA City Center fAMlY FWt 1 •Dolby Stereo ........ 11. STAOllll DRIVE ft .... , .. 121-4171 MNA PARK otl.ff CISTl 1UA tlM141 EDWARDS CKMA CEJmR SEE 'GREMLINS' . AGAIN . BEFORE IDU Hrf THE BOOKS! Im. ---o ·-----_..,,... ____ ....,.._ ~1111,...1 Ctsta 1ESA 151-4114 EDWMIDS/SMBOllt EDWARDS TOWN ClNlIR l.AGlllA Hl.t.S MAU Fm?• UWl tll-UIJ --.. ..em FAia Y FM EDWARDS llSSDt VUl llAl1 .. IS4-llll ORANGE 63HSS3 EDWMDS lJIYERSllY • mn an cma lUXUllY THIAnfS &~.Ja_:=:.8:::7' * DRIVE-INS:~~ :E~,~: Slflrr.[)fl()I :t3:::i !1:,!¥2£'!!!1!! s m13r.n·=·n.t161 •itns\!..~,! J fl.=.:::=r:r s "Olt Lowe OXIVaDa&.USS (N-1. At 1:10 J :15 S:U 71JO & S:lS lt1E:D DA-..,._,., Sftowa at 12:30 3 :00 5 :30 a :OO • 10:30 91UttP&.a IUUN (IQ AT 12:4S l :OI 5 2S 714S & 10:05 ClilH •astwood TIOHTaON: flt> Sllows at 12125 21IS 1:20 7:10 & 10:U elll Murny Dan Aykro,._ 8HOS'1'WUS'ntlS .,,., Stlows •t U :2S 2:40 4:SS 7:25 l 1S0/70 MM IMIMW~6~ T--eJIO...(N) Sflews at 12:00 2 :SO S:OO 7:30 & 10:H IN 70MM ~O,T .. ..._ .. (IQ "1ua '"°"'><'• <"> UllDCa THC 1 ••a11 -CN> a. H , VOL.CAM) (IQ At 7:20. Co1tu 'ftle DaaAl9CAN ....... 12:30 2 :45 S:OO Destroyer (li'G) at ~IUI Co-Hit C:o.1ta1t 7:11 & t :lO h OS S-U 6 l i2S Tfle Dfttroyer (!IQ) DRIVE UIS CW4re &Wlf. 1} JRU .,.._ ••O.-I•"'°*°" 1 ll ....._. -.m'° ---11 .... .... ~ 1111 ll~ Ul 1 '~ ltfO "IED 0. (PS. U) 12 lO. 300. s JO. 800. 10 30 WARNER bl : :t.1 ·'· ~ r.1 . - n in San Clemente, comedy in Mesa Two mu icals 1n n lemente - Toi Trrus • , p1Mond ys 1 ~ kcnd numn BA AGE-new communi· Oct. 14 t) th ter roup, dubbed the No Ba -0 Ban1m" ot the Ncwpon Pl yers, will m kc it dehut Sept. 28 T!hcatcr Arts r, ZSOI OllT wuh the comedy "Butterflies Arc Dmc, N WJ>Qrt Beach (631·.SI lO>, Fret.. 1 the Anaheim Cultural Ans f'ndnys nd i turdays t 8 pm. Center, 9JI N, Harbor Blvd., through CKt. I~ Anohcam .. ,.Hcrman Boodman -'1Tlle •·armer's Daal(bter" nt the dn'CCl the ow, which features one postponed f10111 la.,t V.l-tk -and a comedy reHval in Co~ta Mc comprise the week's newcomers on the Orange Coac;t theatrical c;ccne. llunttngton He ch .Pht)llou • Mam [) nc Burland, Robin John Price, Palau1 he d the ca~t under the: at Yorktown, Hunttn ton B ai:h Jue Ritke and Mary Steinb«h ana direction ofl..coc Childress. (832·140S), fndays and aturdny at runt Frtdays and Saturdays at 7:30 Sharing an opening night a few miles apart Thursday v. ill be "Kismet" at Sebastian's West Dinner Playhou~ and "Supr .. at the an Clemente Communit)' Theater. The latter shO"-was delayed a "·eek because of illness in the cast. Pl'l forman~e.s wall be g1 ven 8:30 through Oct. 13. throu~ Oct. 13 .... call 534°7691 for Thursd:a) throufh Saturdays at 8 -0 A Tomb Wltla a View" at the t1dcct·mfurmadon ... . p.m .. until <>ct. 3 11 ' the cabrillo 1-Aiiiii~iii~iiJ~iliiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiJiiiiiiJiiiB PlayhouSC', 202 A~e. C1.abrillo. an Clemente. Call 4Q2-0465 for ticket information. Bo Derek: 'Bolero' p ays bills Also going on the board Thucsday as "My Sister Eileen:· a reprise of an earlier production at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse. Meanv.hile. final performance of the long-running musical "The BCst Little Whorehouo;c A favonte how from the pa t w11l be re urrected Thursday when "My Si tcr Eileen" opens at the Co'ita Mesa Civic Pla>house. Kathleen Collins and Jennifer LaVisnc will pla)· the lcadtn$ roles with Pati 'Tambellina directing. Completing the la!Je comp.1n)i are Francis Donnelly. Michael Valencia. JeRie Cov. ley, Lou Kosoy, Brett Robinson. Douglas Hartman. Gloria Graham. Recd Boyer, Lee Prickewtt, Bill O'Neil. Leonard Hansen. Robin McFnul · and Pauline Thompson. C'uftam ume 1\._ 8:30 Thursdays through Saturdays until OcL 13 al the playhouse, 661 Hamilton St., Costa Me~. with reservations available at 650-5269. • in Texas'' wiJI be given at the HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Jphn and Harlequin Dinner Playhouse. 8o Derck say their n~· film. Millicent Rene 1s d1rect1ng "Bolero.'' may be n "sill>· bit of fluf[.. "Kismet" with Jfay Bradley as mus1- but it helps pay for their -'2-acre 'anta cal director and Deni~ Dale choreo- Barbara ranch. graphing the show. Peter QueS:tda "Oh. if the da) ever <.:omes when I and Celeste Tavera headline the cast. can raise money without Bo. then ) maybe I'll make a different .. on of Others in the company arc Richard film. But ri&ht now, what we're doing KJebcr. Lynn Dove. Dale Tracy. · h I · f; th h h h e Mark Rydzynsk1, Lee Waddell, 15 e P10f pay or e ranc w ic "' James Randall, Tracey O'Connell. love.'' said Derek. 58. who wrote and . directed "Bolero" with his wife as star Margaret Swayne, Lone Hope, Corey and producer. , Elias, Meta-Kate . Hellman. Susan The Cannon Picture., film was _,, Skadron. Kim Ulnch, C<?llettc y.'1g- relcascd without a rating, prcsumabl) an. Lisa Hell.fntsc~. Enc Leviton. because extensive nudity and 'lex John R10ald1. M1~hael Malone, scenes would have earned it an X David Hubbard, Bill Caneal and Completing a summer-long run at the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse is "The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas." with closing performances ~ Tuesday through Sunday. Curtain • times vary at the Harlequin, 3503 S. . Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana. and ticket information is &ivcn at 979-55 l l.. ~ It gro~d more than $4 m1llton Kevm Wiley ... Kismet" runs through dollars dunng its four-day Labor Da) No"·. 4 with perfonnanccs Thursda)'s weekend debut. but critics scored 1t as through Saturdays at. 8 and Sunda)S boring and silly. al l and 7 at Sebasllan 's, 140 ~ ve. "The critics don't worry us," Derck Pico, San Clemente. Reservations Also closing this weekend is "Man of La Mancha" at the Forum Theater jn Yorba Linda, 4175 Fainnont Blvd. Final performances arcs Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m .said. "But wh) do they feel the need to 492-9950. attack us? This film isn't meant to be Opening Thursda) after a week's taken seriously.·· delay is "Sugar;' the musical comedy .. The film is meant 10 be com);· adapted from the movae "Some Ltke Derck, 27, said. "And. listen, it•s so It Hot." at the San Clemente Com· Already on the boards and con ti nu· in& this week are: innocent. If Hugh Hefner \\ent to sec mun1ty Theater. Dino Palazzi, it he•d be bored to tears." · Chnstopher Caputo and Dino -"Salot Jou " at South Coast Repertory, 65S Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa (957-4033), nightly ex· TODA Y'S SUNDAY· PUZZLE I ACROSS 80 Library patron 160 Hall· Latin 34 Poon tree 108 Timber tree 83 Pours down 161 Glossy fabric 36 Listener's "loan'" 109 Flying toy 1 Oomeatlcates 86 Spread fOf drying 163 "Yankees" 37 Philippine native 110 Paradise 6 M1necar 87 Accelerate 2 wds 166 Jump bonny-style 39 Purposive 113 Soothed 10 Drives Into 89 Over there poet 167 -Oeum 42 T«mlnated 115 Droop 14 Olympic events 90 Chemist's habitat 168 Suitable ~Exact likeness 19 StiU 92 Embarrassang 169 Lengthy 46Gloomy 119 wonc hard 20 Oedalm wildly blu~ 171 Small amount 48 Route 121 Behaves 21 School test 94 AmerlC80 general 172 Rocky hill SO Discourage 124 Anatolian goddess 22 F~tens 96 Wandered off 174 From. Lat 51 Brazilian parrot 125 Gallops easily 24 Ledger entry. abbr. 99 Knowtedge 175 Take a nap 53 Pronoun 127 Definite articte 25 Gtrt for Dad 100 Sifted 1 n French lady friend 55 Lease holders 128 Digraph 26 Matured 104 U-boat 178 Cuchulain's wife 57 Ear: comb. form 130 King's taxes 27 Bl~: comb. form 105 Storm center 179 Oveqoys 58 French cathedral 28 Confused OOIS8 107 Caress 181 Unpleasant sm11e ~ity 132 Sweet potato 29 Neuter pronoun 11 t Winglike part 182 Ribbed fabrics 59Jog 134 Close to 30 Knock ahatply 112 Musical show 183 Cozy rooms 60 Go by bus 135 Bob bait f()f fish 32 Bofd outlaw 114 Threw 184 Leases 61 Yes Sp. 137 Alike 35 Care for medically 116 Elecinc unit 63 Bushy clump 138 Abound 37 Sudsy brew 117 Perlormed DOWN 65 Yet 140 Bu11ets 38 Mine entrance 118 Golf 9COres 66 Swinging barrier 142 Petty disputes 40 Scoop out 120 Hindu grant 1 Violent speech 67 Always 143 Ports 41 Playground item 122 Uncooked 2 Indian mulberry 68 Communists 144 Lode load 43 Street surface 123 Hindu mantra 3 Encountered 71 Desertllke .... Artlcie 125 Ancient string 4 Oklahoma aty 73 Scold 145 Soak flax 45 Allots instrument 5 Spirited hor• 75 Seize 146 Appeared 47 Church seat 126 Ore refiner 6 Game taker 78 More adorable 146 Health resort 49Thln 129 Perch 7 Great anger 79 Suppose 150 College ct*9r 51 Accumulate 131 Cheerful 8 Affirms 81 Goddess of dawn 151 JN ears away 52 Flee. slang 133 Body part 9 Awards for valor 82 Beam of light 152 Records on ribbon 5" Pied Piper follower 136 Cry of discovery 1 o Reconstructs 84 Lariat loop 154 Detest• se Senior · 137 French legislature 11 Chopping tool 85 Classafles 57 Anglo-Saxon eo1n 139 Totem pole 12 Beer Ingredient 88 American poet 156 Foremost se Long steps 141 Bark 13 More intelllgent 91 Honeycomb 158 Goin 62 Nevertheless 142 Push 14 Plane apott• substance 161 OJmension 64 Harden 145 Enigmas 15 Dismounted 93 P In MPH 162 Alaska oity 65 Totter 147 Feminine t1Ue. 16 Tin container 95 Cot IO two 164 Bolivian Indian 69 Norse explorer abbr. 17 Judah's son 97 Wheel groove 165 Shoe bottom 70 Cyprinokt fish 149 Frenchman's cap 18 Pleasing 98 Coloring agent 168 Enemy 72 Head: slang 153 Peel expressions 100 Exhausts 170 Pinch 7 4 Fender mishap 154 Garment edge 19 Leave In a hurry 101 Chowder bue 173 Raced 78 Roof edge 155 Slumber 23 Plant atalks 102 Uncommon n Siient greeting 157 Mimic 31 Fruit seed 103 Press for payment 176 FOtWard 78 Cobalt symbol 159 Poetess Teasdale 33 Drink slow1y 106 Taro root 180 Teletype. abbr. 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A) Chicken Picado $6.75 BreJst o( chicken sauteed with onions. bell peppers aAd tomatoes (well 5pked. but not hor). Served wllh tonillas, rke and beans. B) Beeflbstada Compuesta and Beef Burrito $5.95 A crtc;p corn ronifla lopped wllh beans, betf, lettuctt. tomato and guacamole. Served wlch a beef burrito and rice. C) Taco and Enchilada Combination $5.25 Our mo~t popular combination. Your chol e of a chicken or beef taco with a delicious ~ht.-c. e ~nchllada •• served with rice and beans. . -• 93·7513 .. '..J Off and rannln.g _ R11DDen bealn the race to the Onlab Saturday in th' aenlon 2A eYeDt at the WOOdbrldfe lnYltational Cl'OM coantiy meet. lnble lllCJl'• Tracy Wr!Ot (I.met) wu tbe wlnner of the ,Ula' 2A ftntty nent. l'""or dctalla, aee C2. Reggie move a step closer · tomagic500 Angels rip Seaver, White Sox, 11-2. to remain close By RlatARD DUNN D9IJ .... Ceil J 0 Always one for the dramatics. Rqzic Jackson picked on an old nemesis tocbmbone siq,closcrto hi mqical 500 home run nnlestone. After goina Owfor-1 l pft"f'iously this · ap.in_st Chicaao burler Tom Seaver, be picked quite a spot for his fint hit off the probable future Hall offamcr. Jackson slugge4 a two-run, fourth· inn in& homer, the 499th of his caner, to lead~Aniels to an 11-2 VJctory over ·er and the ~te Soit ~ Saturda Anaheim Stadium rocked for the se:cond st.ra.i&ht pme When Regie !~off oo a ~ver op'erina. deposit .. •na 1t deep over the ri&bt<e.nter fadd wall. A vocal crowd of' 31,SSS roared its approval as Jack.son went deep for the second straight pme. What the victory did •u hdp tbe Angels keep pace with co-leaders Kansas City and Minnesota, Who each secured •ins on the road later Saturday. - L .. Now it seems we have five or • • guys puttina it all together at the same The Wild, WildW.t ume. insteaa of bavi~ just one :IUJ hot. .. lJODby Gndh said. 1be :fact that Reigie's iboe>ting for SOO, il seems ev~y bcrc is setti!W exci led for him ... Jad::son's homer coWdn't have oomc at a more opportune time for 1k A.ogels. lt set the tone for the dUb, coming in the fourth innina "da Doua :DcCioa:s aboard on fiist and (PleMe .. AJIG&l.a/C2) Bruins hold ~D, again, to· post23-l 7 triumph Long Beach State extends UCLA before bowing in fading moments at Rose BOwl BJ ROGER CARUON °' .. .,.., .... ...,, PASADENA -UCLA's Bruins have built a reputation ovtr the past two yean here in their home at the Rose BOwl as a fourth-quarter team, but it didn't show Saturday as they held on to post an unimpressive 23-17 non'<!Onfercnet football viciory over Lona Beach State before 401132. Maybe it was supposed to be too ~. May0e it was because you know who (Nebraska) is scheduled to be here in six days. Maybe it's because .. . well, even UCLA Coach Terry Donahue was shakinJ his bead a little in disbelief foUowm-' his team's second near-miss against competi- tion aupposedly not up to snuff. "Our team found a way to win and lhafs imp0rtant," said Donahue, ·:and we're gcttioa ready to play the No. I team in thccountry(Nebraska). "Our team hasn't found itself, we're strualing. But.. there's ho~." TM Bruins cashed in with a touchdown with the help of Craig Rutledge's 33-yard return with an interception to the 49crs' 2:yard line in the first quarter, added three John Lee field ~s (two were set up by a fumble recovery by Mark Walen and an inlCfOCption by Herb Welch)and, yes. the Bruins did man.age an SO.-yard march for a touch$!own at the out.set of the third period. "We didn't want to JO ti.ck out there after halftime ttmid,"" said Donahue. "You can do that if you ·play not to lose and we did not want to tip-toe OVf>,f CU shells.'' The Bruins.. bowe'Vcr, never could really put the 49ers away as quar- terback Doug Gaynor, a 6-2, 213- pound junior. drilled the Bruins' secondary for 312 yards with 28 compJctions in 44 attempts. Those completions included a 6- yard scoring strike to Glenn Withers- poon, a 160-pound freshman who added a 4-yard TD run in the second half. Coach Mile Sheppard's Lona Beach State ,quad still bad a shot at a major upset in the fadin& moments. but Gaynor's fourth-down pass was interc:cptcd by Jame$ WashingtOn lO seal the venlict. leavina UCLA 2-0. the 49crs 0-2 against Pac-10 competi- tion. Gaynor was looking f'or bis favonte m:c1ver -split end Charles Look.en. who had aln::ady eauctit a dozen of his offerings for 189 yards. ··1 tried to bOld on as long as possible for Charles;" said GaJ"Of • .. because be hits the open are.a. But the Bruins' rush, the onl)' cffcetJvc defensive tooJ apin5t Gaynor, proved equal to the wk. The 49cn pve the Bnrin lOO many US}'~ poiots but Sheppard sh~ offhas team's turoovcnand called the twnina point .. .,, hen we bad fOuith and J I and didn't ae-t it," alud.ing to the 4§cn' las1:-PSP par.. Lee Knowles, a product ,of Marina HiP, m H ununaion Beach and the Bruins' defensive captain at inside . liDCbackcr, admittid ii wasn"l a ~tboOt eff'on, but tbcrc wc::rc U• tcnuating cin:umstanccs. .. e"Ve tried to keep thinp ua pe1,~vc"" said l<J.towlesaboUt the Bruins' sCbeduJe. v.'hidl found Saa Diqo State and Lona 8caob tatt prtc:cding cbrasb. ~t dJraSta I lht-.} ID yout miAd. ow, we're gccuna nervous and bavina probJems with Loac {Pleue ._ UCLA/C4) T it ans teach I·daho · a fe w t hings.i n win OCC d r ops Victory Bell Bucsdrop ball, too. and Golden West- capitalizes, 21-3 Five of CAstancda's fombtes came on punt and kickoff returns. and the Puates only turned the ball ovtt thm: times; But the Bucs' inability to hold onto the footba.lJ left them in horrible field position for much of the pmc. by BdJ Lytle with 2:1 4 rcmatDJfll &n the fint quarter. Heinle. a sophomore who threw for nearly 1,700 yards last season, over- came a rickety start to power Goldea West to victory io the season opener for both teams. Fullerton's opener at home a success In 28-7 triumph BJ CHRIS MONAHAN .Dlllr,..Cel• ,, ...... comer of the end zone. The Titans bad a chance to put some points on the scorcbOard JUSt before the end of the first half, takinf possession on their own IS with I: I to play. Allen completed five of eight passes to give the Titan5 fint-a.nd- goal at the Vandal one. On third down from the one, running back Van Campfield was tackled at the four and the Titans, out Cal State Fullerton is recognized as of timeouts, couldn't set the field goal one. of Oranr C-Ounty's premier team on the field before time ran out 1nstJtution1 o higher leanuna. es-in the half. pccially in the area of football. Titan Coach Gene Murphy uid the On Saturday, the Titan players team's fint half performance was a spent time leammgas well as teachina case oflettina down followina the two in their 28-7 victory over visitina road victories. University ofldaho before S,6SO fans •• After the two win~. there was at the Santa Ana Bowl. It was a homccomina of sorts for somecomplacencycominahomeand the Titans, retumina ~fter openina wearina the oranac jerseys,"' Murphy with road wins over Boise State and commented. "Wealsomayhavebecn Hawaii. It was the first time the a little overconfident."' . · • Titan• had played a pme in the Bowl ln the second half. the. Titans sinet 197S. · opportunistic defense, .which had The Titans spent the first . half intercepted_ two _passes an the fint, . lcamioa not to relax against visitina forced their third turnover when Idaho, as the Vandals jumped out to a rtserVe quarterback. Darci Tracy was 7-0'tmJf\ime lead on the strona right sacked by defensive tackle Ron arm of stanina quarterback Scott ¥ct.can and·. fumbled. Rcscrv.e Linehan, who cote~ the pme as the h_n~backer ~u s Maybury fell on ?t lead.in& pa ~r in Oivi ion I-AA. g1V1n& the Titans po~scs ion at their In t&c second half the Titans. who own 20. had obviously learned from their It took the Titans only seven plays mistakes, taught the pasa.-orientcd to cover the 80 ~s. with th'e Vandalu thinaortwoabouttheartof touchdown comina on runnina back pulina. scorina four touchdowns. Roy Lewis' one~)-ard plunge. three oflhem cominJ on passes. .. "I have to 11ve all he ~it to the ~~Y beat us up in the first half, QOaches (for the /oOd defensive ~ad T.1tan q~a~erback Damon .Allen. play) .. Maybury sai . "We watched 1 We JU•t didn t conetntrate m the lot o?fiJms and we knew uactly what fint half, but the d>ac.hea had con-they were aoing to run and when." fidence and stay~ wath the pme plan. We came toaethcr in the second Maybury recovered a.not~er half.'' 1 fumble at. the Vand&J ~S with J~St The Vandals struck early, scorina oyer a minute .to pla)' in th~ third their only points of the p~e on their qu~rter. Following an Idaho penalty aeconddrivcofthepme. Linehan led which ~ovcd the ball to the 2S, Allen 1 1even-play, 47 yard dnvc., cul· tosScd has first to.uchdown pess of the minatina with his I I ·yard touchdown game to Allen Pitts, who caulht two ~ to ~t end SCOtt AUkcr, who of the three Allen threw, to put the made a irat d1van1catch1n the lieek Titans ahead to ta)'. Col leae football scores UCLA fl, Loni 8ffCh SI. 11 C:.I Slaft FUlltrton n, IOthO 1 Sttntotd , nofl 1t Ot-.on 27, Colorl<IO 20 Arbone 21, OrtOOn Sf. I c.llforn It, hcfflC 12 .,.vitdl l•t v ... , H. Ntw Mex· lco SI 11 WetNntton 20, MlchtNn 11 Ntbr•lk• •· Mlrinttote 'I Notre OtM"M t4, MIC:ttltln St 20 Of*> 51, ~. WnNnltOrl I, 0 Mllfnl. Fie 'ft. Purdue 17 WltCOfttln i IWllOUfl Ptnn St. IO, IOwa 17 Gtontle Tldl 16, Ai.btrna 6 SMU 41, L:out1vt11t 7 LSU 47, Wlchlte St. 1 ~ 42, Pftl.ourttl 10 BJCURTSEEDEN Of, .. .,..,,.. .... Orange Coast Collece has bad a difficult time hold1na onto the cov- eted Victory Bell the past few years. and Saturday niaht the Pirates lost it r to Golden West apin, because they couldn't hold onto the football. Golden West. which relinquished the trophy for the first time in five years last season after a 24-23 loss to the Pirates.. is the proud owner igain thanks to seven OCC fumbles -si~ by runoi~ back John Castaneda - in a 21-3 victory before 4,000 fans at occ. .. This was probably the worst kiclCinf pme I've ever seen ia one game,' conceded OCC Coach Dick Tucker. "We dropped four or five punts and bad two bad naps. You can't do that and be successful ... The real suc:ccss story Saturday niJht was the passing of Golden West quarterback John Heinle and the emergence of former Edison ffiP. quanerback Ken Major as an soltd ~tend. Heinle completed 13 of 22 passes .for 176 yards and threw touchdown passes to David Applcpte for 9 yard. MIJ~r_for tS and BiU Brown for 9. OCCs lone score was the first of the game and came on a 33-ylrd field &oa1 ~lippers fearl ess or stup i d ? Jury ts still out on team~ s ~ove to ~os Angeles._ The Spons Arena management said they wanted to make lhc!.'lippers feel at home and that they were remodchna offices for the franc bi and 11uy said, "then put the offices in the cellar." The implicallon and indication are, of course, that the NBA team docs not fiaur.c to endure any less abuse here than it did in San Oitao. As callous sporu fans. in fact. tbeSan Diet<? pop~lation is serving an a~ prcn ticcslu p. Thejury. thtref~.1sstillout. The dcci ion ia pcnwnaas towhethcrLbc moveofthcQappcrsfrom the n Dieao Spons rena to the one in Los n,cJcs reOCCtJrourqe or tup1d1ty. Of course, somcllmcs tbc two make t ocllcnt bcdfdlowl. PcoJ)lc MlO peddle t • C Wtll tclJ )'Ou lhal Southcm catif1 • m re than hard ll. his far morcfnwrat· •na 11\lsmuch as tbC bChaVJ rof thc 1itkct ct.entclc bas no P9ttem. ulhtand pons hi t T)' many oommcndablccumf)lcsof 'rd ruot1on and bChavtorbut the move .. of tht Raidm from the kland Cob um to the LosA I· ' um rat amo lhe tol) I 0. Alt>avt mo~ his auonal -=-· .. There's still a million lhlllp .we need to work on. but r thouabt our execution of the football went very well." wd Golden West Coach Ray SbackJcforo ... Any time )0\1 can NA the ball apinst Oraogie Coast you have to be pleased... . _ Actually. tbe Rust1crs only packed up 84 yards net rushina, 74 by sophomore John Lamberton on 22 carries. . . ~ ··0cfcnsivcly, we didn't play that badlr,," noted OCCs Tucker ... Tbry didn t move the bill on us." The Rustlers really didn't need to move the ball offensively. Tbg> , (Pleue eee GOLDEl'C WUT/~) Ramshoplng to get ~ssing game ln gear r From AP dbpatclae. ST ATELlNE. Nev. -Running a red m li&hl can be costly. as the winner of the women's compet1tton in the ··world's Toughest Triathlon•• teamed when he lost out on the S 10.000 first priie. JacqueUne Sh.aw of Cal&arY. Alberta. had won the race recently atiWe Tahoe1l>u-t was subsequently told she was disqualified because she had run a red lial'!l on a. bridge near Marklccville during the cycling competi- tion. She had ~wurn 2.4 miles. t>iked 120 miles and run 26.2 miles in l l hours, 11 minutes and 32 seconds to beat all other female com~titors. · · .. I think if the offiCtals had been consistent, i• wouldn't have been so bad,'·' Ms. Shaw said ... I was the only one disqualified. There were a tot of traffic viola\ions. The officials weren't consistent." Race dutttor Charlie Lincoln said competitors were warned before the race to obey traffic regulations. Ms. 'Shaw had a 30-minute lead when she committed tht error. Angela French was declared the'waf\ncr. e.t leaden ~~tortou a U,nlike Frida)' ntght, the American Lnaue Wes1 c~te den we.-e victorious Clf ll on e top pot. In Seattle. WUUe Wtlt00 drove in a pau of run • and teve Balboal and Jorie Ot'ta homettd to Kansas City•s 18·hit attaek as the Royals came trom ~hind to defeat Seattle. '"' . ~ . Meanwhile, in.Arli!'&ton, Tex.. Mike Smltltsoa pitched a siA·hitter for tits first career shutout and Pat htum drove in the only run of the same with a tbird·innina single to lead Minnesota to a 1..0 victory ovtr Texas. Both Smithson ana Putnam are tx· Raqers. Smithson, 15-12.; struck out .f\ve and walked one. . . In other American League action, Detroit zeroed in on the East Division champion,hip with a 2· l victory over Toronto, im- provina its lead to l l pmes over' the Blue Jays and ttducina the m~c number for winnina the divtsion to four ... TollJ Armat blasted his m~or lcqu&-leadina 38tb home run, a solo shot in the second innina, and Many Barrett doubled in the ao-ahead run in Boston's three-run fifth as the Red SOx edged the New York Yankees 4-3 .... Robla Yous supported pitcher Bob Glbtoa'1 two-hitter with a grand slam home run to power Milwaukee to a 7.0 victory over Baltimore ..• Pinch-hitter Mike Bar1rove singled home the go-ehead Nn in the nintb 11 Cleveland scored three times to beat Oakland, 6.3. • QUote of the day Pittsburgh Steelers Pl'\l8ldent Art ROOMJ, Cube' magic n~ber at flve otter P~,ctng running ~ Fr•IWO Hlfrla on Roa Cey doubled home two runs liiiil waJvera. Football It a team game. Franco hae been during a four-run first-inning outburst and great player and atwayt i>Ut U\• team ~ Scott smulenn and tee Smldrcomblned • - hlmtelf. By not reporting to camp. he placed ut fn • • on a six-hitter Saturday as the Chicaao . position where we had no attematlve1 left. It would Cubs post~ a S-4 decision over the NewYork Mets and not be fair to the team~ pJayen and coachee to tet moved toward their fU'St National Lcaaue divisional thlt Situation continue.'' • · · championshi~ The victory aave Chicaao a 9'11-pme O'Meara e_.enda lead to thr-cushionover ewYork-thelaraesttirSt-placeleadin A&1 ~~ the East this year. It also reduced the Cubs' mqic number 10.five a.ames ... In other Natibnal Lea&ue Mark O'Meara, chasing that elusive, " first erofessional victory, compiled a front- running, 3-under-par 69 and stretched bis lead to three strokes Saturday in the third round of the Greater Milwaukee Open Golf Tour- nament. O'Meara, four times a runner-up this season, completed three rounds over the 7,0IO yard Tuclc.away Country Club course in 204, I 2 strokes under par. But the former national amateur champion, who went to Mi~ion Yiejo High and has won $316,236 without taking a tJtle, had a five-shot lead at the turn then saw it whinled away over the last nine. Tom Watson and Du Pohl were each three shots back'. at 207, while Keith Ferpa and Jim Neiford were four back entering the final day ... At Kent, Wash., veteran Kathy Wbttwortb snared a share of the third-round lead by sbootinJ a 7- undcr-par 65, and Vlcld Alvarez tied an LPGA single- round record with 10 birdies. Whitworth, 43;used only 26 putts in finishing with a 54-hole total of209, 7 under par. That gave her a tie for first place with halfway leader Maffln Spencer-DevlJD, who shot a I-under 71 .. . At Charlotte, N.C., MWer Barber and Peter Tbomaon carded 3-under-par 69s to share the third-round lead of the World Seniors Invitational golf tournament at Quail ffollow Country Club. Barber and Thompson were tied for the second-round lead· on Jhe par-72, 6,894-yard course at 9-under·207, four strokes ahead of third place Oeorae Lannlna. Slew o' Gold wins Woodward NEW YORK-Shifty Sheik, who has ~ run in cheap clairninJ races for most of his career, threw a scare 1010 Slew o' Gold, but at the finish last year's .3-year-old cham- pion prevailed Saturday to win the Woodward Stakes at Belmont Park. The victorious 4-year-old son of Seattle Slew ridden by Angel Cordero, overtook ShiftySheik with ~ sixteenth of a mile to go and posted a half-length victory over the Oscar Barrera owned and trained colt. "Was I worried?" asked Cordero afterward. "I was worried at the three-eighths pole, the three-sixteenths pole and the eighth pole. I wasn't afraid of Fit to fight b~t the second horse ,(Shifty ~heik), if they don't beat him today, they won t beat him any time. He can do better than that." Beams punishes Hutching• -SAGfNAW, Mich. -Thomas Gm Hearns, demonstrating has awesome punching power from the opening bell, knocked down Fred Hutchings twice and stopped him in the third round Saturday to retain the World Boxang Council super welterweight cham-pionship. • Hearns, who scored both knockdowns in the first round when he nearly ended the fight, had Hutchinas in trouble an the second and finished the match in.the third when he had the challenger reeling helplessly from a barrage of head punches. Steele~ partner etay unbeaten REDONDO BEACH -Top-seeded m Andy Fishburn and Jay Hanseth, both of Los Anseles, advanced undefeated Satur- day in the second day of competition at the ninth annual World Championship of Beach Vol- leyball. Also unbeaten was third-seeded Scott Steele of Laguna Beach, and Mike Fitzgerald of Malibu. Steele and Fitzgerald upended sccond-stcded Orea Porter and Gary Hooper. 22-25. 27-25 and 25-21. action Saturday, Houston slowed San Dieao•$ charae to the West title as rookie Glean Davl1' twQ;t out double in the eiahth inn.ins tc<>red Pbll Ganter frOm first with the winnina run in the Astros• 3-2 victory over the Padres. San Diego a. maJic number for win- ning the race thus remained at six .•. Terry Pndleic>A belted two doubles and drove in three runs to help St. Louis to an 8-3 victory Ce, over Pittsburah Pirates . . . Tim Rablff cracked a three-nm homer and BW Gulllcboll won his fifth straight decisiort as Montreal defeated Philadelphia, 4-3, snappina the Phillies' five-same winnina streak ... Rick Camp scattered aeven bits and Dale Mal"pb)' and Gerald Perry each dro¥e in two runs to lead Atlanta to a 4-J tri:;:'/.b over San Francisco. Camp, 7-6, struck out four walked one in pitchina his first complete pme of the season. Mean buy at Rlveralde today RIVERSIDE -Roger Mears, the -acknowledJed kins of off-road racina. will ride in three races today in the 12th annual SCORE,OffRoad World Championship at Riverside lnteroational Raceway. Mears, whose brother Rick Mears is a top lndy- type driver, who has won 19 world titles at Riverside, mostly in off road events. Mears, of Bakersfield, will dnve a mini-pickup in the Nissan Mini Metal ChAllenae a sm&le--seat Cltenowth in the SCORE Challenge ofChampioM, and a Chevrole~pickup in a four-wheel-drive event. The off-road four-wheel~ve event has drawn more than 200 of the top competitors in off-road racina. including factory drivers Ivan Stewart of Lakeside, in a Toyota; Wallcer Evans of Rivenide in a Dodge; Rod Hall of Reno, in a Dodae, and eastern champion Cun LeDuc of East Lonameadow, Mass., in a Ford-powered Jeep. . Teleri•lon, radio · TIL8V1810N 10 a.m. -PRO FOOTaAU.: Chlc9go YI. Gr.en Bay, Channel 2 10 Lm. -PRO POOTULL: lA Raldel'9 VI. Kan&a1. City, Charin.f 4. 11:15 a.m. -aAHIAU.: Oodgera at Clnofn- natl, Chann.t 11. Noon -IASl8ALL: MlnMM>ta va. Texu, Channef 7. 1 p.m. -"'O POOTaALL: R9m1 VI Pit· t1burgh, Channel 2. 4 p.m. -,...I: PICtflc Southwett Open, Channel 2. 8 p.m: -NO POOTIA&.L: Denver v1. CTevetand; CMnnel 7. ' MDIO 10 1.m. -PRO POOTaALL: LA R.aldert va. K8n ... Ctty, Kf\LA (1110). 11:15 a.m. -llA8laAU.: Dodger• at Clncln· natl, KABC (790). Noon -•••DAU.: Ct'!letgO VI. Angela, . KLAC(570). 1 p.M. -NO 'OOTaAU.: Raml at Ptt• t1bllrgh. KMPC (110). e p.m .... 0 l'OOTaALL: Denver VI. Cleveland, KNX(1070). -,-----------------:--,----~~~~-------- CRoss CouNJHY ' - By JOSEPH DUDEVOlR Dlllt .... c.ne .. lrwMel The Sea Kjnp of Coront dcl Mar Hlah ran away with the Divi5ion 2-A Sweepstakes award at the fourth annual WoOdbridae Invitational cross , country meet Saturday at Woodbridae Hiah. Corona ael Mar beat the heat and a fteld of 23 .other Division 2·A sc)\oola in the aenior. junior. and sophomore races to win aoina away. Fint-ycar coach Bill Sumner brou&ht his Sea Ki!l&S out inf~ ('77 in all) for their tint o\ltin1 of the season. Already tabbed the number one varsity team in4-Acrossoountry, Corona del Mar didn't disappoint anyone aa the. Sea Kinas scored with one of the most important 11sets a team can have -depth. • No one from Corona · del Mar placed higher than ei&hth in the senior 2-A race, but that didn't bother (sumner. l .. Wt've been worti~ n our b4$C t-Rork up to ·tbis poinl, sq I'm not worried about the ~, ii will com<'u we build to~ra the two 'mtcts we'tt most nlctCltN 11'-tt\c Mt. SAC lnvitadorill and the Clf. linals." he said. The only award Corona dtl Mar didn't win was ahe Gtaad Qum,pi n trophy, which went U> a'_ytfY strona Saugus squad. and ~ OUtmnc!ina Competitor awafd. wbn t;y> Jose Alcaraz of Santa Ana V4Dey. Akart"l turned in the best time th~ mett, a 15:42 clockina af®nd tne th~~-mue COUl'$e that featurcH an Obsiacle iibne of the runners could &hakt! -~n relenting heat. With the temperGture in the 90's, • the competitors found tl\emselves just happy to finish. let one .win. Thett were a few 1n,tattces when medical attention was ~uittd for the runners. One was Santa Ana aophomorc Christie floret, who was taken 10 Tustin COmmunity Hospital ror heat exhaustion. Others collapsed lO lhelr knees followina thrlr race , deurina a wet towel over theu bea<l and a drlnlc of water almost more than a trophy. The girl,. races were shonencll from the usual three miles to two to prevent others from wtltina in after- noon 1un. Competitors were uf'ICd to waier themselves down before. and after races and this seemed lo al- leviate much of the problem. Sumner's trOOP ~ to es- cape the worst of it. u ~·1 races were in the momina hours, Tracy Wriaht of Irvine Hilb won the a,irls' 2-A Varsity race witt\ a time of 19:23 to lead Irvine to the team title. University checked in with a sccond-placo finish. The Outatandina Competitor Award in the airts• division went to Mountain-View's Tracy. William, who ran an 18: 13 to lead her team to the l-A win. ~----~~~nbeate~ ·uc1 in final round · JChiefstest OfiJwn toUrnainent Raiders Anteaters cap day with easy win over UCLA finals of the Moore IAMue Tour- nament, but the Vikinal .il'Vict1m to a seven-&oal oulblirst by Downey's Donny Yamada in tilt fiillk. Jhe Vikinp bet:t..llnivenlty, 11-8 in the semifin~t, betiltid * fi•e-&~ effo~1~ Tom Warck, but they tell to pere · ly touah DowneY. ln. the The UC Irvine w>terJX>lo team bas _ championship llfhC.J1~ 0, at ..Bel· advanced to the fin~ fo~ of its-0wn moot Plaza in Lona 9each. . tournament after winruna three of Against Univ~ the V~ four pmes Saturday at Newport pulled away from a 1~~ tb:iid qUiritr Harbor High. dcadlockonaoalsbySttveS~cb The biaest victory was a 10-3 and Warde and then Id off':'the verdict over UCLA, a team which Trojans. had beaten hi&hly-reprded Stanford Warde, a third-team All'-ClF seleo- earlier in the day. tion a year qb, bid tie~ the In the win over tho Bruins; UCL ' Vilcinp &et eved It swen wilh his broke away from a 4-2 halftime lead third g0al oftbe day. Spanovich bad with four su,.iaht aoals in the third three aoals in the semifinal victory. quarter, two comina from Glen Downey broke open a S-5 game Awerkamp. Mike Dotina and with thn!t straiaht goals late in the Awerk.amp shared scorina honon in second quarter. Yamada had &iven that aame with three aoals apiece. Downey, which is also tlte Vitinaa, a Earlieri . UCI knocked off UC 2-0 lead in the first period btJOfe Davis, 1 -4, and Claremont-Mudd. Marina battled back. 12-3, before falling to the u.s: Scott Larsen added t 0 c6ils for National Team, 11-2. Alt>ng with Marina again,11 DOwney. UCl1 the U.S. National team, Cali-· MarinaaoalieMike~ot\)had fomia and Pe~pcrdine advanced to 22 saves jn the two .. mel. today's championship round. Fountain Vallet took fl'tth pJae» in ua opens against Cal at 9:20 a.m. the same toumam~t with .. a t).13 at Newpon Harbor Higb, then meets decision over Be~ Hills. Mike Pepperdioe at 3:45 p.m. today. Ruzek scored six • lo l)atO the J.R. Salvatore notched four goals Barons. for UCI apinst UC Davis and Fountain Valley opened a S-1 fiht- Stefano Rossi keyed the win against quarter advantaat. . Claremont-Mudd with three aoals. Marina's Warde, Larsen and Brian In high school action, Marina Hiah Brotherton alona with Jluzek t.nd outscored University 4-1 in t&e University'sMikeQiflsofieamedlll- founh quarter to captUre the semi-tournament honors. ANGELS ROMP ••• From Cl broke a 1-1 tie in the fourth innina. It .. I think when he (Realic) hltJ a waa hia Jackson'• 2ht homer of the home run he P•cb fht t•m \Ip," season and it juat seems a matter of Grich said. "'I think it t~ a llnle time before he becomes the 13th wind out ofSeaver~s llil ... ~' member of the 500 circle. ..Regie'sjust beari•d~~eflid · a &ood day," said l\tlael Ma~T The celebration hadn't died down John McNamara ... l .inm he'd it before Grich blasted hi1 18th homer into the left.field box seats,· the (500) so it can be belliod · •• · · th .. rve been lucky ~ ,1ht~1ait second straiaht same in which e two two home runs r._ bk bl\t~ dine at have homered back·fo-back. .-aood times," said~ii!bOD. ··rm 11ot The Anaet1 continued to terrorize malcina any prd!iCilCJll1 ( oi whCA I'm Seaver the next inn.in&. knockina the aoin& to hit num~ SOO). l'm iu•t probable future Hall of Pamer out. aoiftJ to take one ii'ltje .,, ~WOE') After the "\yhite Sox scored an Jacbon also raoed• RBI.tin to unearned run in the top of the fifth, center in the fifth~ nA· e the Anaels eruptC!i f~r four runa in the ·run 1wina, Just as dlt cnjWd beli1\ to bottom of. the iruuna. Ffed Lynn scream apin. "I was just toriftilo put homered with two outs, h11 23rd of the bat oti the belt;' explAineQ the sea'°n. . . Jackson. DcCinces s1naled and Bnan Down· But his homer off Staver was in& walked bel'ott reliever Randy enoush satisfaction for one day. ~ieman came on to surrender an ~l "There was a thrill there. I don't think su1gJe by Jack.son to center. which I've bad a base hit off him in l l Boston bobbled for an error to allow years" JackaOft Mid Downina to take third and Jackson to 0 He'1 a Hall ofF~r-you know 10 to ,second. . -even thouah he's not what he used Onch was walked intentionally to to be, he's not 11 vo~ Bui tvtn on load the bases, ~ut Bob Boone ~ted his wont days he's bCEn the ~t of all Gene Nelson with a two-run single to time " ' ~~h~2 . KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -Not since the Super Bowl day1 of Hank Stram more than a decade 11<> has so much excitement swirled around the Kansas City Chiefs. The firit Arrowhead Stadium sellout in three ye.an was a poa_sibillty today (Channel 4 at 10 a.m.) when the unbeaten Chiefs host the unbeaten, arch-rival, Super BowJ champion Los Anaeles Raiders. Add.in& to the festiv· ities will be a "Silver Anniv~" party celebrating the foundina of the old American Football Leaaue. Lamar Hunt, Chiefs owner and a prime mover behind the establish- ment of the AfL a quarter-<:entury ago. will preside at halftime cer- emonies honorina the 11 livina members of the '1Chiefs Hall of Fame." Forecaau called for a flawless autumn day with sunny skies and temperatures in the low 70.. • 14W~ should sell out," said a qtiefs t1cket official. Atrowhcad S\&diUm, seatinJ 78,064, was last stretched to capacity in 1981 for a game apinst the Raiders. , In the old days, before the Chiefs went into a Iona period of decline in 1972, , the Raiders and Chiefs swapped AFL and division cbam~ pionships and constructed one of the aame's most endurina rivalries. The 1984 Chiefs opened their second season under Jobn Mackovic by winnina at Pittsburah and Cincin- nati, the first time Kansas City has opened with two road victories since 1979. The Raiden, called by Mackovic '-'the most talented team in the National Football Leque," are 2-0 with victories over Houston and ~nBay. Of the pany, Raiders Coach Tom Florea noted, ••For one thina, it will Jet the entire city fired up. It will help aell out the stadium. "The people will act loud, and act to cheerina. and the atmosphere they create ?n help the playen. And so will JCCllll SOme of the areat playen of the championship years comiIJJ back and takina pan. I think it 1 an advantaae for the Chiefs." The Chiefs, who loll in cloae aames twice last year to the Raiden, wett installed aa 3-point undcrdop. In their two victories, they have not compiled li<ts-<>ut statistics. Cd¥ sweeps in volleyball Corona del Mar Hiah's &iris easily advanced to the final round of 16 Saturday in the Oranac County Volleyball Tournament. 1\Veepina l)llt five foes each by 2.0 counts at Fountain Valley HiJh. · The Sea Kinp were hardly tested in stoppina Cap11trano Valley (I S·8, I S-0). El Modena ( 1 S· 7, l S-0). Hunt· inaton Beach ( 1'· 1, IS·2), El Toro 05·2, 15·8) and Los Ami101 (15-2, l 5-1) in wlnnina their pool. THE BEST Pl.ACETO BUY ABMW~~ GOLDEN WEST WINS VICTOR·Y BELL ••• ANGIL NOfal -..... ~ wfth the ett111tlo11 toc1.1MO on his t>ll~ Ill llome '1.111•, hit .175 e11tre0t O'tef 1111 le ;I lie• oont unnollc.. . • ~~ I HM LVftll, wlt11U1t11111 til1~ ~, .. • ltt11t .315 dl.lflllt tl'let •Plft.; tl-'!1 ,~ The top two teams and top two third-place finiahen in each of aeven eool• were to advance to next week'• finals at Fountain Valley. ISAlSOTHE BEST"fll LEASE.A From Cl simply punted and waited for a fumble. lronicaJly, OCC's onl~ score of the aame was set up by a Golden West turnover. Lambenon fumbled on his own 17 and OCC'1 quarterback-turned· linebacker David Goodine pounced on the ball at 3:06 of the first quarter. OCC had to settle on Lytle's 33-yard field aoal, however. Golden West came back with a pair of touchdowns m the second quarter. The first was set up when Casi.neda fumbl~ a punt and the Ru1tlen recovered at the OCC 44-yard line. Heinle then hit Mike DiBemardo on a 37-yard pass play and two plays 1 later found Applepte tn tbe end zone just seven seconds into the IC(()nd period. OCC appeared to forae ahead late in the Quarter when quarterback Ken Laszlo connected with sophomore tiaht end Bill O'Neil for an 83-yard touchdown pass. The play, however, waa called back on a hotdina penalty, followed by an un1J)On1manlike con- duct call on the OCC bench. OCC was forced to punt with 49 seconds remainina in the half. but that was enouah time for Oolden Weit to score apin, thit time on Heinle'• J S·yard strike to M~or. Oolden West took advantaae of a l1x·yard OCC punt midway tllrouah .. \ ' .. the third Quarter and moved 36 yards in four playa with Heinle hittina Brown from 9 yards out. The Rustlers then made thinas difficult for occ to act back into the aame by consumina more than aeven minutes of the fourth Quaner on a lot11 d.rive that 1tajled on the OCC 12 .. yard line. "I'm atad to act the bell back on our campus, .. admitted Shackleford. Added Tucker. .. We can solve the problems with our lcickina (return) pme. We've just 1ot to protect our quarterback.•• 0..... Wtlf 11, Orente CNtt I ... 'Wtlll"'" Orlllff Coe•t 3 O 0 0-a Oelcltn w-. o " 1 0-21 occ-Lvtte » ,ro GWC-AH19ttlt t HU from .._lftll (Doan klcll) OWC-MeJor 1S NU from Helllit (~ klCk) OWC--erown toe.-fl>OM Ht!ftlt (Doan kid!) At1t11e11nc1: 4,000 '"'lmtled), INOMDUAL. ITATllTICI ....... OCC....,14ie'f, H•J01 Martlnit, 1·H, C..11M4Se .l•lt1 ~•. )•1t COOi!, •s1 "'°''· 1-71 ltndlrllk. M; uulo, .. fot. mt111n·• OWC-Wt11wtt11, U-7•. ,aaraar, ••U; Gt1'lt, N 1 H411nit, t-tor•mf!M•20 ......... OCC-4..tillt, M,.O, ff GWC-t4 12•tt•I, 176' l'M'Uf, M•O, W ....... OCC..o.etMltY, a-10, C•ltlftede, l·a; trewn, MO, l..i~ 14 G~lor, 5•.0, Dflernar4'0, Jollt, Afl• .... ,.. 2-20 ~. 1•11: "°"'"• , .•. ,.,,., , lft °1111 Miii 14 Hin*-... llit'l\lf MftlY Ill ,0 of hll lllt ~ fol' 1 ;ui evereM. H• hH rallM hi• tvtruf lt'OM 21' tit J1.1lv 22 IO .21• ••• ~'W•'vt ilot ,,,.,.. ~ hot with ti. bet• tna11 Ml11~1a, _.,.iw tot ~ tW1 llOI Wltl'I tne 0.la tl\en 1<111 .. 1 City 11'4 It • t .. m we're Mlllnt It teoetMr," ~ flM¥ Cktdl lfltr Sltl.lf'cllV'a 1-for•J ~. "Thi Pllctllnt'a COffllM l?if'~IM (....., z.... cornlnt lleClt (tr:= '""_.,) 11 helolnt llkt PffttWI off I) ,,,, (lltlt) llemMc:t." . • • Witt'• • ""'' ••• ,_'°'I'll• .,Jlti vtcfbl'y. H y ........ ""' tlmt hf't lltetefl Tlllt Ill~ "'lei 11111 ... aon. "Ht tltt t~I ~One," Witt Mid, rtcllllnt 11'11 tctlUPt. "tut lhlrt't '°""'"'"' ..... ~ '•in· him today.'' •.• lllcNN ...... <1'-UI fllCM ltO!Tllllk* (10-'2> •t "°°" t6dlv. Another player fatls urine test MIAMI (AP) -RIC~ Youns. a former Minnesota Vitbiit' runnina back hopina to make aOOd "1th the Miami Dolphins, f'ailed'1Hre urinal~is pan of h11 physical cumlnauon Saturday -the aeocmd ptot~vti Pt~er to do so in It many da team officials said. Youna. I nine-year veteran of tho National Football lMllue. WJt ~· by the Vikinp dwiat ll'ttOU&ft Un year. Youns 11 ·the ~ ~ broujht into Ult DolSlfti'll' Olln.P a~ an attempt to 'fill tM naftnir1& 1tilcie vacancy created wMn dt1 "Frink· hn uffeted a knee uijury ltit wtek. ' Senior middle blocker Andrea Re- dick sparked CdM with her all- arouncJ play and bittina. u did sophomore back-court specialiat Jill Harrinaton with her aem~ and senior middle blocker Cammie l..ou Doder with ber bloclcin&. "It was a &ood day for u11 but it should be touaher next week.•• said Corona del •Mar Coach 'Charlie Brande. .Meanwhile, UC Irvine wu ousted in the consolation round of the Cal' S'*tc Fullerton ·Tournament by Fresno State, JS-It, IS·lO. CLIPPERS •.• From Cl t.ll 1ide which has been a la upina stock in San Dieao will come 1 nto town calimil\S to bo com11CJition for the establlshed taken. Thil 11 out of the question. TheClipS)ers wJll not compcteartistieally and wiU not chaUenae the takers for cu1tomet1 bec&uaotheForumclientcledOa t aotofheotherpu:toftown. Tho Ci ppm will have a nel&h- borhoodall U> themwlvea. Jf'you could P.i'edict theattendance pan m that ~ill unfold, you could awn 1 fnnchi ofyour o n CoLLE CE FoorsAu - --- CaUleraJa H, Padfte U: Al Bcrekelys. Pean' 1eruor quartm.ck Oale Gilbat led a 21'1)0 nt rounh quarter outbwll IO sivc Cal over lhe Taaen in a non.confereooe pme. Paa caae H, mra 1'1: Doua trana JP!SM'4 for one touchdown and ran for ~ther and Nack Gancnano kic cd a pall' of field aoaluo bft the 12th-ranked Nman> Uons lO t upset of No. S Iowa. G rpa 11, AleM•• I: Tbt Ti iCh lost 1u io Boaoq Cot• 1ut .ran .anio matt trouble l1l. Jlobc:nJ.avc:ue.._._, __ . the onl__y touchdown on a I-yard Rill ud David Bd1 FromAPd pa~ ANN ARBOR, Mich. -QuarlCrback Huah Millen connected on a 73-yard sooting paSi to split end Mark Pattison cafly in the third quarter Saturday, bte"akina open 1 tight pmc and helpina No. 16 Washinaton to a 20-1 l collqe football uptet victory ovcr1hird-ranked Michipn. After 1 scoreless third pcnod, the Beats went lhcad to Ny, 13-n, at the atan of the founh quarter on a 9-yard touchdown run by Ed Barbero. tbrte ftcld ln OeoraiaTech't VJClor>. Miami H, Puftt 11t Sophomore BmUe Kosar 11\c !OM left the idt \Vllh .an 0.2 rcCord b' ~ &uided lbe fifth:ranU.d Humcanes Of! SCOf!Qldnves of 66 umc moe t9S6-1wo )Ut1 before BlJllnl mul'Md to and 94 yards in the third, guaner, sconQI once on a aJma m tcr t0 de :ctop a perennial nationll poww Pattison cau&ht the pass at the Michigan 27 over lhc outstretched fin&Cf1ips ofOarland Rivers and 1campercd untouched into the end zone, u the 2.0 Huskies increased their lead to 17·3 3:44 into the second half. Sophomore Jeff Jaeaer kicked field goals of 2S and 38 yards for ~ashinaton and ,fullback Ric~ Fenney scored on • 2-yard d1 ve for the Huskies, wbo dominated every phue of the game. a.le Stille"· Wu)laltoe S&ale t: Quarterback Mike Tomcuk. 1eeina his fint action of the season, led the ninth-ranked Buckeyes on two fint·half touchdown drives 11 Ohio State whipped the Coupn. It was the fint shutout in 43 pmes for the Buckeyes, 2.0. Tau H,A...,.17: Quanerback Todd Dod&e ran for one touchdown and pessed for another as the foun.h- ranked Lon,.horns held off No. 11 Auburn. quanerback mcak. 11 M1am1 recorded a comeback victory over the host Boilennaken. U 41. Leldn1lle 7: -Jeff Atkin• u4 '4lfll6a Du..PVd f\llhed for iwo lOucbdowm each and ..... OtJ&Mma Seate 11, &wllq Gree11 H: Cowboy Phillips ntcrccptcd lwo pu m lhc end zone, fUDD19 defenders Rod Brown and Mark Moore scored on one baek for a touchdown, as lhc 14tb'1'1Dkcd Must•• interception returns while Shawn Jones rushed for more routed hOSl Louisville. than :100yards for lbe second strliahtpmeo 13th-ranked Ar:luu!'J Otea• LI· A1frCd lcnkinsPIUCd fora. Oklahoma St.ate turned away ~happy Bowlin& Green. touchdown and ran Tor other to lead w Wildcau IO t111 Ntbrub II, M!ailaota 7: Jeff Smith rushed for I 83 Pac· I 0 wm. yard$ and Craia Sundbera tbrew two touchdown passes as the top.ranked Cornhusken romped over lhe mitina Arttou t. 41, J LI: Jwuor 111fbect Milar Gophen. .... Crawford rushed for 132 yards nd scored lWJ~ on • -• Stuford H, llUDoll tt: Sophomore quarterback John Paye shot down Bi_4 10 champion Illinois with 29S yards pessina as the Cardinal pulled one of its bigest uptets. Paye led Stanford on four touchdown drives and Mark Harmon booted field &Oils of S7 ~third lonpt in the ~hool's history, and )6 yards. • . . BrlllWD Y .... II, 'hlU 15: At Provo, quanerbadc Robbie lk>tco peued f 9r one touchdown and ran for another and linebacker Marv Allen picked off two ~ as ciahlh·ranked BYU won ill 14th 1lJ'ai&bt pme. Florida S&ate Cl, Kauaa 11: Grea Allen lhancred Aorida St.ate rushing. scorina and all-purpose runnina records and led the 18th-ranked Seminoles. otlaMma Cl, Plttlkrp lt: At ~ttsbwgh, Danny Bradley scored twice on plunacs oness than a yard and also thtcw two touchdown passa in 1eadina the 1 Slh~ Sooncn to their romp over No. 17 ~tt and Oklahoma's belt start in five y~. '"~ · yard run and a Sl·)"8l'd pass rcoeptJon, as the Wl ~ routed the panans. Oreso• !7. Co1 rad z : Sophomore quanedJlil:t Chris Miller threw two toudldown paucs to Lew BamcUD lead the host Dueks. · Notre D-me U, MJcllJPa S&ato lt: At East Lansina, Mich.; Irish tailback Allen Pinkett cau&ht 1 40-yard touchdown pass and ran ftve ~ards for another score and _~:.~er-~~~-f~r~-e~~btSo_.·~~-~:_:.ficit .. in-thef;-ounb College, Jiigh school footb&:~l scores auchos-d opener, 28-1 a COLL•G• Weat UCLA 23, Lon; 8"dl St. 17 Cal St1te FuUer1on 21, ldlho 7 ArllONI 'ti, Oregon SI. I St1nford 34, IUlnola 1' TORRANCE -El Camino Colleac's football team ~= :;; ~C,:~~ St. o spoiled Saddleback Coach Ken Swearingcn's return to C1tttorni. 21, Plclflc 12 where he once played and coached as lhc Warriors held on San Oleoo St. 51, Tex11-E1 for a 23-13 non-conference victory in community college P•;r. ~. 17, Whittler 7 action. FrMnO St. 14, Cal Potv·SLO Swcarinaen coached El Camino 1• yean and on<5c o won asutc championship. He also was an ill..state runnina uc Davia 3, Cal Lut,.an o HO\lston 30, Miami, Ohio 17 Texas Tech 44, Teua•Ar- llnoton 7 Ok.llhoma St. 31, · eowllno Green 14 .~Southern C1. 10, Tex11 southern 3 .. Lamar 10, N. Tex•• St. 6 AllMlo SI. 21, c.n..... I Atkanlal SI. n, Tenn.·tMrlln 14 E • ..._ Mexico SO, E. Cenlfal U .. Howwd Pevoe 7, Te1t41 t..uttwll\ 1 • NE Oki.horna 20, Cent. AIMn- aat 14 Pl/INllllllle St. 23, Sul ltou St. 10 back with the Warrion. Northrldte st. 24, Sacra· • In the season opener for both teams, El Camino broke mento St. 13 MldWillt out to a 17.0 lead at halftime, 11 Saddle back turned the ball Santa Clara lt, Humboldt W11hlnGton 20, Mlchlean 11 overonillfmttwodrives.1besecondprovedcostlyasan St.:ec11ancsa 34, SonotNi st. 11 Nebrasu 31, MJnneaota 7 interception on the hosts' 3---..4 lin~followed by a cent waShlnlton 51, e. on.on Notre Dame 2A, MlchlMn , ... fro.. G 0 St. 20 devasllti~ 88-yard pass play m 0 J'CI Llnfllld 30, Puett Sound u Ohio St. 44, Waahlnoton St. 0 Holder which set the Warriors up oo the bl 9. Pldflc, en. 24, w. on.on 24 Miami, Fla. 21, Purdue 17 One play later, El Camino converted as Eger aec1r... Wl1COMln 35, Mluourl 34 connected with Mark Miller to make it 7.0. avu 31, Tulsa 15 P9nn SI. 20, Iowa 17 The Warriors ""dded the "'"·o1n with a field ..... 1 and Wvomlno 2', Air Force 20 Florida St. 42, Kansas 1' -.. ~.. ........ Colorado St. 10, Hawaii 3 Svracuae 13, Northwestern another Eger touchdown~ but Saddleback came back 12 on ill fmt nnc-=-sion of the .-nnd half., marchi~ 80 yards Te1taa Olrlallan 62• Ut•h St. Iowa St. 21, Drake 17 ""........ ""'""" 11 • K St 21 T Mayv .. SI. 11, Oekote Wltlvn 6 on 11 plays. Cun Woods cau&ht the first o his two Nevada Reno 61, Texes A&.I •nsaa · • enneuee Md·Arn Nenl'llll 14, u°"' touchdown rueptions, an 8-yard toss from quarterback 35 Ttdl 12 1ow1 1 Mike Dou .. iass to niake it 17-7. Nev•c:t• Laa Veo11 21, New K1t1tucky •· Indiana 14 Mlllkln 2', WMlton 20 • .. Mexico SI. 2l Ohio U. 31, Ban St. 17 Mlutsslppl Ve&. 11, WuNlurn 15 New Mexico 'ti, w. Texaa Youn.gstown St. 27, Clncln-MJuourl-ltoll u. "'""""" st. n.£COlt\tl~ L-ANDING Wlaau of 8eetauaat Wntue• SUYeir Awutl of lleirlt WIDE SCREEN TV 2'5c JUMBO DOGS '1.00 BUR• fRtf POPC~N 3180 AIRWAY, COSTA MESA ON JOHN WAYNE AIRPORT RUNWAY St. o •natl 23 14 E. WHhlngton 21, Montlna SW Mlasourl 35, Cant. Mb• 7 Mo SOUINm 77. $W Oki.hornl St 16 aourl 0 0 ldlho St. 47, Chico St. 23 ll~~t. ~loan 17, E. caro- Ft. u.1114, Mela, c• 1 Akron 42 w-t-K--ltlc:ks 1', w. Montena 9 • ... """ -· 1t0Cky Mount11n a . s ou.o1a ludtv 7 Tedi o E. lltlnols 33, NE Missouri 7 TwtltOft 5'. 21, ColorMo MIMI W. llllnofs 34, S. lllnob 24 1• • W. Mkhloan 41, llllnols St. w New MIXIQD 24, Wa&lern 14 SI .• ~~~>,, -s u1-· -Teytor T4, ltOU--Hl.llrnM \1 _,,. . -· • .,, "' Velllerallo 36 Alme 24 Carrol, Mont. 14, CMdron St. ll Wllllufl ll, Ohet 7 SevthWeaf W"*'I G , C.,.,..., low-. 14 Arkanua 14, Mlulaslc»Pf 1' w..,.. Mktl. 11. l!ftllt..,.. 1 T•xa• 35, Auburn 21 Wayne, Hee>. 40, HulllWI 6 PllSINTS MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL • WIDE SCREEN TV • SPICED CARNE ASADA TACOS $1.00 • DRAFT BEER 75c 17 OZ. MARGARITAS $1 .25 COMPLIMENTARY CHIPS & SALSA 3901 W. Coo•t Hwy., COl"ono del Mor • 6'(). ~055 . NEWPORT'S Airporter Inn Hotel MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL BEST HAPPY HOUR Featuring • GIANT ADVENT SCREEN • COMPLIMENT ARY HORS O"OEUVRES • COCKTAILS REGULAlt PRICE • ENTERTAINMENT & DANCING AFTER GAME 18700 MACARTHUR, IRVINE ~33-2770 2607 W C0.4ST HWY 64 6.Q2Q 1 NEWPO T ~ACH * Giant Screen TV * Complimentary Hora D'Oeuvres • Complimentary Clams Br. Oysters • Live Entertainment After The Game SI Ma/YI, Kan 1A. Kal!M• :JmnWs Msdlloft • Nler9MN WlllY!I 23 SI. 2t s.tlnsw Val. SI. 24, Hlllldete 1• UOert.-.... Ill 16, Vlrvtale St 3 Sloua Fell 77, NW M1Meto11 3 U.W.S ... l4, Dbl, of Cotumtlle SW MIMelola 77, o.kote St. 0 · 0 SW kamu M. ~ ICaft. a Mtt"I ...... C.IM-J . ,.,.. ~Ola Tech 16, Alabama 6 SMU 41, Loulavlle 1 LSU 47, Wk:Nta St. 7 Wike Forest 17, Ap- Nlad\lan St. 13 Tenr.uee 'ti, Ut1h 21 Florldl '3, Tulane 21 V1rolnla 35, VMI 7 v~ 23, MwYland 14 N1vv 33, N. CaroClna 30 Ak:om St. 52, Ala.beme St. 0 . Cltadll 23, Presbvtwian 6 w. Vlrowa 14, Vlrolnla Tech 7 Manhll 24, E. Mld\loaft 17 Mllrrit st. G. se Mluourl 3 McN .... St. 2•, Nlc:tlols SI. 21 S. c.rofln. St. 46, N. Caro- lin. A&.T 7 Austin Peay 14, KenfUCky St. 0 • . S. MIUIUJppl 34, Loulslat11 Tech 0 Tennessee St. 42, Alabama MM.21 Tn.-Chllttanoooa 10, w. Caroftna 6 Troy St. '7, Florida~ 3 MlsslUlPPI Coleoe 7, SE Lou111an1 6 NE l.Oufslan. 7, SW Loulsl· anll ' Rktwnond 30, IN\ne 13 E. T..,,_... SI. 10, E. Ktntudty 7 Furm.n 34, N. Caro0na SI. 30 GIGt1lie ScM.i!ftafn a. cam F!Oride 21 " G\Motd '11. Oitlfidlloft 12 ...,,,._ ..... u. Vlr9Wa UftiOft Jllc:bolil SI, 34. Pr.in. vie. W l1 Mldlll T111n. '11, ~llt St. Mor11s 9town It, TUIU9ee U ,...... • w 22, Gentner-w.tlb 7 SI. ll'N'I 21. 8rldvlwater, Ye 1J • WlburY St ,., hndolPh- MMxltt iJ v .......... ~$1, w. GeerM '1, Jemloirtl' ~ 40, N.C c:.,tral 6 ~ "· tww..o u.' Fl. V...., 51. U, Mcntacue 6 aast ~'2,Pit~IO lormv 41, CotNte 1S m I. IMrv 23, Deta-••re 21 Fordham 11, CaU!oOc u . 23 Holy Cro.s 1', RhOde tsl&nd 0 Llhlotl 10, Connecticut 7 New H1mpahlre 21 , L.afllvetl• 7 Ru,._.. 10, Temole 9 w. Vlrvlnil SI. 21. w. Va. wesivn •• W. Vlrtlnll Tedi n, W•t Liiier• ty 7 WorCllll• Tedi 56, ~ s. .. • ~-.~VIM.J ....,.,,. 23. l.OCk Ha-• ~G.~7 lkdtllll ... Mansflltd 14 ~SI, 17, ~SI. tO Cent. C:eMeCOcut D , ~ SI 1 • OWtoll is. WM!lrwmr. ~ 11 COii! GuerG M, RP'I 6 c..w. '-1 21, "dnl 21, •• oai. .... St is. Hol'lt ... _ • Dliewwe v ti, 14 E. ~ M, Mm1da1r FelnnD!lt St ~. Watr ul1ur• 12 Ftnklll ~ Mer1H1 JO, UrMtu& 1 ~ IJ, w. Marvland 7 Onl1'e City M. DI• • 7 -· P9.. fl. F~ 0 Kell! 0, ·-e 0 Secramento 27. 19 ~H scHooL • Buena hr1t 'D, Grande 1 H OZ MUGS OF BEER • COMPLIMENT ARY HORS O'OEUVRES • HAPPY HOUR 4 30-7 PM, M-F LIVE ENTERT Af MENT FO&.lOWl G THE GAME ----. t I MAJOR Ll!AGUI STANDINGS Amllftcan W ST DCVlsaGN W L 'ct. 06 n n .s1c1 • 1S n :.SIO , u 'n ., ... ., IO •S. I .. 11 •S. I ". 13 :AO 10 •S 12 4'f2 10 IAST DIVISION 'ot1r9lt Torooto t.lllmOr• NtwYork to.ton • '4 Sot 63S &J u .J61 11 ,, 67 .Ml 14 ,, .. S31 14\'a , ....... nd Mltw• .. .. 11 10 m 16v. .. ti •St t6"" ., u 412 )l\'I latunlilv'I ac..... ,,_. 11, Cl'llcMO 2 lollOll 4, N.-. York 3 MllWP• 1. eattimOt• o OtlrOit 2, TorOfllO I Ctewllend 6, Qe11.lanll 3 MIMHOla I, T'IKH 0 K•Mts City I. Sta•tle S Tedlv'a~ CNUDO (001Wlft 13'13) •' A~ (lt~li. 10-121 TorOftlO IL.mo • 11 ., DelrOll IPwlrv 16•11 Botton llk>Yd 10•101 •' Ill•.., York <Rasmuuen l·SI •••tlJ'llO(• IO•v11 13·11 •• Mllw•uk" ISi.rtlOll U·lll • MinMtOle (VIOia 16· 121 at Tua> (Siewert S· 121 l<•ftMIS Cltv llett>r1tldt t·1) al Seattle (hro1H 9·Sl C1evtt1nd (5'tlulte 3 ·SI al 0.kl•llO (C.anQford O·O> · • MandlY'S GamH Mllw•uk" 11 Oelrotl, In) 8CKlon at Toronto, tnl 8altlm«• al New van.. (nl ClllCatO ., Mlnnnota. {n) K•nsu CllV 11 Af191h, In) Cleveland al Stallle, (n) Tens al O.klend. (n) National L .. gut WIST DIVISK>N W l ~d. Ga Sen DlffO 12 6S .SSI Alla'ltl n 7S 493 91'> Houston 73 7S 493 f , Dedetr't 11 n • 11"' Cincinnati 63 IS 426 1'1'2 sen Franc:t.co '2 as •n 10 Chlaeo NawYont PtllledelclN• SI LOUii Montreal PlllM>urGtl EAST OfVISION fO SI II 61 1' 70 n 11 11 7S 6S 14 $.atuNIY'I Sant ~ S, ClnclMall 2 ~stoo 3, S.n OleGO 2 SI LOIJIS I, PlllMM'Vfl 3 Cll<.HO S, Ntw V«k 4 Montreal •. Plllladelplll• 3 Allen11 4, San Francisco I Teday'1 G•mn '°' S44 9, SlO 11.., S20 13 490 171'1 436 2S\'> '*'""' (V1len1ueia 12· IS) •• ClnclnMll (Solo 1S•7l Montrnl (l11 IS-101 11 PnlladetPflla (Huelaon f· 10) S.n Fr•nclsco (I.Ashy I· 12) 111 Atlanta (Malllef 10-tl PflllblJrgh (RllOdln 13-9) •• SI Louis (Horlon t·•I New York tlwenvl 11-131 at Ch!Qgo (Trout 12·6) Sen Diego {Thurmond 13·7) ., HOUiton (Knecio« 14_,), (n) MmdlV'• o.me-s ~ 11 Atlanta, <n> New Y~ at Pt\lledeiPhla, tn) San Dieoo el Ctncl,_11, tn> San Fr*l?'ltcO at Houston, In> AMERICAN LEAGUE An91fs 11, WNt9 SH 2 CHICAGO fill.aw If Sos ton cf h•nnri GWalkf lb Klllle dh Smallevlb Fletdlr u Helratn Pl! O't'f>lllA u Pad«llptl MHllc OMallY Pl! Slllnner c JCrut 21> T ..... CAUFCMlHtA urllbl 4 I 1 0 4 0 I 1 4 0 I 0 4 010 3 0 0 0 3 I 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 BeniCIUt r1 SConl'"' lb Lvnn cf ThmHr1 O.Cncs lb WlllOllG 21) [)(owning If Petttsd AeJkll\dh Grich 211 Boonec Herron c Scholilc:l U •rlllli s 0 I 0 so· 1 o 4 I I I I 0 0 0 2 4 2 I I 0 0 0 3 I I 0 0 I 0 0 • 2 3 3 3 I 3 3 • 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 4 1 0 1 . 11 2' I T... M 111111 Scwl bY lnnlntll c:Hca.. 100 011 ooo-2 Cellfemta 010 MO >Ox-11 G•mt Wlnnlno RSI -flteJeckaon (10). E-eotton 2, Sconiers OP-OlfQoo 1, C.llfornla 3. LOB-Chicago s. Cellfornle S. 28-Fletcner, Grich. 3&-Rl.Aw. HA-flteJecksoo (21), Grldl (lit, Lvllfl (23), 0.ClllCH (If), I~ H flt ER ea SO ~ Stever L, I•· 10 Nieman G~ AGMtO • 2·3 • 0 I 2H 6 I 0 7 7 3 1 I 1 1 0 3 3 0 0 0 0 0 I ~ WlllW,13·11 7 2 I 3 6 LSenct.1 2 I 0 0 0 2 Niemen Ptlcha<I to 2 blllen In Ille Siii T-2l0 A-31.SSS ~quer Carew Lvnn Downing O.Clncn Ir own Grich Sconiers Miiie!' Wiifong Herron Re Jecuon Pellls Plc:clolo eoone Sclloft.id Tllomet 8urlnon T .... s A'"* awraon aATTING AB flt H H9' 312 S6 107 • 307 41 t2 3 46' 13 ll2 23 411 60 lJ'l 20 490 74 Ill 19 131 11 3S ' 315 SS 12 11 llS 13 lS 3 27 3 7 0 m 30 76 6 1.0 9 35 l 470 SI 111 21 311 SI 16 2 117 17 24 1 '°' 32 II 3 360 Jt " 4 22 2 3 0 4 I 0 0 4fS2 6S4 12SS 140 ~ITCHING ltBI Pct. 31 ~ 2f JOO 1• 2t3 13 274 IO 271 20 26S S3 260 13 2S9 1 2St 33 2S1 IS 250 14 236 29 m ' .205 30 199 10 192 1 .136 0 .000 610 .2SJ ,, H ea SO W·LEltA AaM 19' ~ 2S IS 20 3· t I.SJ COl't>ett 77Vi 71 27 43 S· I 220 FOf'Kh 16't> ~4 l 10 1-1 2.10 s.tncne1 ~ '' ll SI t-6 2'1 Z.M 171~ In 4S S1 12·9 3 27 wi11 m 213 ,. 111 13-11 :u1 llomanlel<: 210'1') 211 S7 71 10· 12 llS JoM 110 h 20S SJ 43 7· 12 419 Curtis 72"> 26 t 12 1·2 476 Kaufmen St St 11 34 1·2 411 l(lsoft $1 h 62 27 62 4·4 .,. Stelon 1'31'1 In '9 S9 7·7 06 L.tCMtt 2~ 30 12 13 M 6 7S Sw•n S I 0 2 O·l lOIO Ollle!'s 11 1' t s O·l too T... IJIJI_, IJ10 ... '71 74•72 J.H S.ve• Sanchel "· AH• 7, Corbell '· ICIM>n 2, K•ufmen I NATIONAL LEAGUE Dodten s, llltdt 2 LOS ANGILIS CINCINNATI S.11 21> Anc:IHnlb ~.,, Guerrer cf Mersnnlf Sdosciec 8rHm 1D ·a1tuue1u ltlvera JD Her1l'lhr o •• '"bl 5 1 , 0 S 0 I 0 • 0 I 1 J I 0 I 4 , , 0 4 0 l , ) 0 0 0 4 0 I I 0 0 0 0 l I 1 0 Mil'* cf ltotelD lttdl.IS" P•flltf rf Cl<lenGlf tc:r<tldl 3D Cncocn u Knc'-V c 0..ler 2tl Rltobnsn o °*""'*• PHtore• Fotev llfl Tolvtl' 11 Walhrlll'I Humtll as 111 s ,..., kiwea..~ 1llrllbl • 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 • 0 2 1 • 0 0 0 4 I 1 0 30 0 0 , 0 0 t • 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ' 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 o·o o 0 0 0 0 • 1 J, Leia...... .. 172 --s ~· -•I •l-2 Gemt W!Mlnt Ital -Bit~ ... W -S.w D~ ~ 1, Cincinnati 1 LOl-U. All9tlff 11, ClnclMeff 6 -•su. kfolcle Krtndlldll H -Sdolde (1), A!ldtfMlll Oll SF--Gutfren> !(nicety • H ttUllto • t , J 5 • ,.., I ~ • I • MO o I I 0 . ' 0 0 0 • I 0 • I ,. Naffonal L .. tue (Tlvwtfl Fl1da'f'a ~) 8ATTING 1350 at Mis): GwvM, Sin Ole9o. 351; Htrne!\de1, Htw York, .)It, Sandbert. Clltcego, ,316. Cruz, Hou1ton. )15. Rev. Plltlbul'Oll. _,,, RUNS S.ndbel'e. ClllcHO, 106, S.mutl. Pflllllc:lt!Phla, fl, Wl11glns, San Dleoo. 9t, Reines Montrnl, 96, Metthlws, ChlcellO, 93 R81· Carter, Montreel, 1oa; Schmidt, Phllac:felPllla, 102; Cev, .Chicago, 91, Hernander, Hew Yono., tl, Cruz, Houston, 90; Oe>ll,, Clllc.aQo, 90 • ., HITS; Gwvnn. San D~, ltt; S.llObel'O. Ch!Qgo, llS; S.mutl. etlilec:felOhia, 175, R1•nt1, MOnlrMI. 174; Cru1, Hou11on, 113. OOUIL.ES; Reints. Montre•I, l6, Samuel Ph ~la, 341 Rav, PlllN!ufgh, ll, Sanc:lb«O, Chlceoo. :n. Durllem, Chi· CHO, 2', GC.rtw. MontrMi.,, TRIPLES· S.muel, PfllladtlPllle, 17, S.nc:IDero, ClllceoO. 17, Cru1, Hou1ton, 13; O«an, Hou11on, 11. Revnold\, Houston, 10, Gwvnn, Sen DitGO, 10, MCGee, St. ~. 10 • HOME AUNS· Schmidt, Phllac:lalOhla, 33, MurPllv. Attenta, 32, Cev. ChieeOO, 25, ''~f0t.~'8~ke2s5 s.mue1. Phllac:ltlonla. 61 W109lns, San Olt90. 6S, ltl•MI, Mon· lrNI, ... Redus, Clnclnnett. ... VH•Y"· Pnllac:ltlr>hle. ... PITCHING ( 13 c:IKlSlon51 Su1cnff1. Chl· Cffl), lS-1, 2.6.3. Hortoo. SI Louis, 9·4, 3.40, RewleY. PfllleclelPl\ia, t-4, l 61 Solo, Cln· c•nnall, lS-7, 341 nRtKEOUTS. Gooden, New York, 2SI, ValenWtla. ~. 212J Rnn. Houston, , 194, Soto, Clndnnatt. 15'. C•rltoo, Pnneoet· !Ihle, 15$ SAVES· Sutler, SI Louis •2. Smith, c111uoo. 31; Hotiend, Pnll•~Phla, tt, Orosco, New York. 29, Gon•1>•. San Diego, 2S. . Malk numben Me11lc numbers lot cllnclllng lhl dMslon Chame>lonshlp In tne Amtrbn l .. oue Ea11. N•tlonet LM9ut Wtsl and Hallon•I Lnilue EHi <number 11 1 comb1na11on of wlftl by lhe leader Ind IOllti by Ille seconc:l·Plaee team) l...... s.cano Detroit Tor onto Nurnllet • Clllce90 Cubt NY Meis San Diego Hou All Water P"° COLLI GI UC lnltne TIU1'1111Mnt UC lrvlne 12, UC Davf1 4 s ' UC Oa\llS I 0 I 2-4 UC lrvlne 3 2 3 4-12 UC lrvlne teorino Salvelore 4, Awerkemo 3, Rosi.I 2, Olivier I, Crow 1, 811111 UC lfvtne 12. Olt,..,.,.,,.·Mllc:ld J Cleremont·Mudd 2 0 1 ~ 3 UC Irvine I 4 3 4-12 UC 1r ... 1ne scortno; Roul 3. O•v 2, OtMer I, Bell I, Selv•lort 1, Salal>lrrte I, Crow I, Miiier I. Wood 1 U.S. N1llenll 11, UC ""'1N 2 UC lrvlne 0 0 1 I-2 US H1llonal 0 S I S-11 UC lrvlnt Korlno Dav l, S.lv•tor• 1 UC !NIM 10, UCLA l UC Irvine 2 2 4 2-10 UCLA 1 I 0 1-3 UC lrvlne 5GOl'lno Ootlno 3, Awer1t•IYIP 3 Roisl 2, 8eq I, s.1 ... ••or• I OtMr Scwes Pec>otrd1nt •• UC sen DiaOO s U S H•tlonel 13. Lovota O• ) 2 Cetofor-n•a 10, FrHnO Stet• 4 use 1. vc San OleGO 2 P909e!'dinl 17, Cal St••• Fullerton 7 St1nford lS, UC D1v1s 1 Long Beach Stale 7, lOYOll Ila.I 6 CeUlotnia 3. USC 2 ~Int II, Frnno Stll• I UCLA t , Sllnford 1 Clartmonl·Muc:IO 4, UC San Otego 4 USC I, Fresno Stile 1 Catlfornla 10, Pt-dine 10 u s National 10, St•nford S UC D•vls I, Cal S111e Fulltf'ton 5 Lovoie (IH.) 11, Claremonl·Mudcl 3 HIGH SCHOOL MIWe LM9U9 T~ (at 8tlment "-Ul semtflMIS Marina 11. Unlvenltt I University , 3 2 1-I Merine l 2 2 4--11 Unlv•nllv acorlnll C•rlwn 3, Jorden 2, McCollouftt 1, Semanllo l, Ao.ms 1 Merine scoring Warde S, S1>11novteh 3 l.ArMn 1, Brothtf'ton I, E1519 1 "!Mis Oewnrt 12. Ma11M IO 0o .... ne., • 4 2 2-12 Marine 3 2 J 2-10 Merine Kor•no W•rdf/ 4, Larsen 2. 8ro1Mr1on 2. Eu o I, SPtnovld> I, Flflll ~ce r:1U11iatn VeltV IS, ~ H•s 1J Bevtt1v Hilb 1 • 3 • 1-13 Founl••ll V1ttev S 2 1 3 )-IS Founlllf'I Va!lev IC.O<lllG RuHk ' Nomur• 2, Wein 2, Peters 2. Van O'J'lt• 1, Ditton 2 • .>'-• Loi Alamltol IATWDAM RESULTS .... ' IT llACC One mlle -=oma T '101>W'itrJ Ul1 Kreuen Potlc>Y (kttOUtnl 00 ot CAndfftOll} l 40 Abo r•C Mii W , Don AJ>Olf, Gribbin. 1~ Bgy. Photnlll Jae\, Awon Ctl!lt Time 2m 211. U liXACTA t'Z SI 1>11ld 114UO SICOND •Ace. One m!lll Nt•. lootr.inv COOc:I (A'1dtf&Oftr \) 60 S,80 3 40 t4ustllnD Dole 11tetetttofc:1> no oo Doct0t h leV (Plano) 240 AltO rOUd Froitv Don Mealer Jolle, Gltftburnle C.rlOl Ju•t A l:'tll•• Tvolc.lt Time I ti f /S •3 IXACTA 16·tl oakt •IW90 THIRD "Aca. ~ rnne 1>11<e ~rm l\lltll (lt°"1\I 1000 UO HO Sem L.etona'(Al1<WIOn} 00 310 !er Oneclrn lO'Dwvw) J 40 A!\O riced PrOfHSOt OsDOrne, Metrrv Nardltt, GaPll II WOl$0!!4 Pint hv Time 1.6' l/S U IXACTA 16-3) Hid W.hO FOIJaTH ltACI. ON mait oaca Heoov Vlntf (PltllOl tl 00 UO S •O F emtv Pot"tr a it CK UIOlef I HO ) 00 Nv1lo Del (M I 2 IO .-.Jso rocoo Ma.i• Fr111, Two Oceana. VIII Rtltl Time \J6 )I S~ ""H RACli. OM mile HC• TarPOrt Dotlnv {Anc:lr1nl 17 40 I 40 UO Megmn AtmellU'll IO'Owver) 1040 'AO Time S ron 1Sorlo9sl 4 .0 reCllCI IM Don, Jut" ao". '"Y' Brotl>tl', Me• 8urnt><o, Perkwev A :.os. Sm«I ICoela T.lme 151 11 S. U IXACTA (l·S) peld SJ3090 SIXTH RACE. One milt Pict. S rlklng Heir (Stewart) 1UO HO s.20 Im A Wanderer (Pertr.erl S.00 3 40 Lil Abnef" IR01en> ~00 Also reced: Rosldulle, H H Tremor, alack Mel".k. Jackuo, F.elllme.nto. ___ .....,. Time 1S7. U IXACTA (7·1) Pltd S15'90, SIVINTH ltACR. One mile oec.. Kint Of Jau {Pierce) n 60 UO UO Gentle Slllooer <Paaed SM oo LA Dlctelor tPatenen> 4 20 AIM raced Mighty Matrix., Jungle l..aw, Mister G. Prlnlmeker, Glen Mlc:lbv, Vot1r. Time l SI U IXACTA (4·SI P411d st• 20. llGHnt RACE. One mlie P*Q. Oalm6trol lCrOllhanl S IO 3 20 TKI Wave (Anc:ltnonl l.00 8 C COUl\1 ( K uet)le() uo uo lAO AIM> racec:I Rel~. Privy SyncOHllOl'I, Cla'IG counca. Time U7 llS. U IXACTA 17·51 paid 117.90 NINTH ltAC•. One mile s>Ke. Native HaP (Perkwl 1160 1SOO Fr" Turn <K•lon) 12 IO MechO Brevo tMerdlandl Alto reced Vested Power, Dutdl Tr••I. Time I.SS. 53 IXACTA (S-6) ~Id S247.SO 52 PICK SIX (3-1-7+6·1/S) oeld Mt• 10 with '3 wlMlno ltckels (four ll.orM5). C.rrvover PQOI, $21,2SSA9. T•NTit RACE. Ont mlle PllCO. Thi Raider (Plano> 6 80 UO 2.60 Burka'' Brloede tPlerce) 3 40 2.10 8on1lac• IRown> 4 20 Allo re<>ad' Toolula, Brent Saker, BrOOkdale·lk>v. Rustic SCOll, Viking, L«d Albe Ttmt 1 SI 4/S 53 EXACTA 16·2) Plld '31.SO • Alllndance \ 1,009. Pemona SATURDAY'S RESULn (3rd .. ll·deY felr mMtlftt) A"ALOOSAS flllST 9'ACE. 4\'t turlOnGs Soutr.em Pride (Smlltt) 7 40 3 60 2.20 Jaguer XKE I Burns) 4 40 2 .0 Sir O•~tlot IOcholl 2 10 Also raced Mli111Yer Cuo, Go GUCl«IU1, C•·Co Time SS SS llXACTA 13·61 oelcl 554 SO OUAltTT9'HOtUES SECOHD RACE. 400 varcn Arur• Hooe (H. Gerctel 7 60 4 70 2 60 W1ICll Him Truck (E Gercle) 4 IO 2,20 Mikes W11•rd (AdeW) 2.40 AllO reced RMI EHY Jel Two. Frl$CO OePot Time~ 1916 U EXACTA tS· 11 P••c:I S68 00 THIRD flACE. 400 verds Soverelon Eight CE.Gree) n.OO 7 20 4.00 Sk\lbo (Creeger) 3.20 2.60 Pau II To M4 <Hart) 3.40 Also raced: PR Men, Rao A Jet, Kid Chrome, Truckle Fair, Rli!ng Uollt Tlm11 1997 U EXACTA 13•51 Peld 116100. ' THOltOUGHBREDS fOURTH RACL 1 1/16 mile$. Our Men Bob (Mena) 1 l.00 • S 10 J IO Poltlnlltrou• (Ollvare1) 7.00 :UO Trtsca O.Cce (Otloac:fitto) 3 IO Alto reted' Aov's Shenee. Suitt Thlr· '""· Burning Both Ends, J~'' Gold Fever, Jurv Bo•. T mt 147 4/S. "IFTH RACE. I 1116 miles. Un1>ea111>1e (Olivares> 24 40 I 00 4 20 Prooer Oellverv IMenal S.00 310 A-•• 181ack) 3 00 AltO rec.CS Ciasn Monte, EHtern Jo. JUll F°' en.rte, Jolly Writer, Pi• My Poell.el Timel .. 4S 12 DAIL y ooual.E 1•·7) paid '170 60 SIXTH llACS. l '116 mlles Fr""'1httllno IH•nsanJ • 40 3 20 2 80 CIUb Fiu.11 IBlack) 340 2 IO Juice Pak (Mtne) 3 IO Al$0 ractc:I Doc Hoolev. C.tcll • FOOi. Berrv Um. Hll Sltlfl Time For Fantuv. Time US 2/S U I XACT A I 1-1) Pllld S.JS 50 savlNTH 9'ACI. 6 lurtonoa. Ont Mealer (Domlnoue1> 19.60 7.64 4 IO Round HMd (Crurl • 60 3 .0 Good Tensions (Gllllgen> S 10 AIM> raced. Jll MllMUYer. Hlohtv Rumortc:I, Sovereign Ruter. Vulle Bin, Al Goest Tl,,,., 1:11 3/S EIGHTH ltACE. I 1/16 mltel. Zen Thi Men (Frndl) 23 IO 10 00 S 80 Aos.ew111r. !Smith) I 20 4 IO Baoiev tH•nsen> • 60 A!lo reced SllOe In, BICk'' A Klctl. SOecllCl.llar IHu, Roval $1 Georp Tlmt 146 1 S U IXACTA 11·6) paid MOO.SO NIHTH ltACE. I 1/16 mllH Runewav AllHd IMaNl I DO • 70 2 IO G016en E. (Hat1Mnl ) 40 2 60 Our Larrv 18tad<l UO AIMI raced NOfdtC Song Trolen HOl'M, In A Menaoe Time· 144 4 S U EXACTA 12·4) paid 175 SO TINTH RACE. • furlOttGi lt15••oe (OlivarHI >IO l 00 f 60 Glverneaclut IOelo•dlUO) S 20 • 00 S.!JIM WHI tFernel'\Oell 4 '° AllO raced Et Jabel, Swlll Rao. Flvltlg Chick. Silent As11n Time 1 10 2'S U IXACTA 14 2) Da•d SSl SO $2 ~ SIX 11 I 1•1•2·41 Pllfc:I S 1,346 00 with JO w1nn1ng llcllals llivt llOrtn) C•IT'fOYer POOi MO.lll •1 t:LavaNTH 9'ACE. I 1116 ml .. s Patrkk Mc:Ftg 1011 .... r .. 1 10 60 • 60 4 20 Fat>ulOul Oad (Mena J 1.60 4 70 Val De Roi rn11racla) S 40 "''° rte.CS Amerbn Slenotrd, Otnc.tbel. Colof etarer. Crv11a1 Oroo1. Atullno, Nort>et Time 1 Al 415 al XACTA tMI Paid $111,50 TIWIU'TH llACa. 1 1116 rnllel. H•I t Time (Dornlng..-a) ltlO UO Wl'lo'1 OQ11 N;ck .. IOUY-l 610 ~ron crernaoott l racecl hl!Gff Mfflc, It Ube,~~. lttllO Doc, Tuoor I 'Time 1 4J 2JS U IXACTA (S-•l Mid 5»1 Al~ 10.5'0 (ttt1mat9Cll ' NFL NATtONAL CON,.H..cl Wl'S1 W LT I 0 I I ~ 0 110,500 110.IOO c.nnl ChJ<;1 D•ltOlt GrN!'t 81\1 Mlnnnol1 T11YUM1 Bllv 2 0 0 I 000 •l 14 l I 0 SA 54 1 I 0 JOO 31 SI 810 0003061 0 ' 0 -27 51 ••at N'l'Glarlls 2 0 0 1000 U M 0.llH 1 1 0 .JOO 27 41 Phl .. 081'1tlla 1 I 0 .$00 46 4S SI Lou11 I I 0 000 .. )1 WMl'llnolOI\ o 2 o ooo • n AMERICAN CONfl .. IHCI Wttt 2 • 0 1.000 .. .., 2 0 0 1 000 S2 21 1 0 0 l.000 .. 17 11 0$00'°" llOJOOSt"' Plll~ott ' Clnclnnall ,..., .. !Id Htulton CentrW I I 0 0 ' 0 0 , 0 0 , 0 .... SCIO 50 $4 000 ;n 47 ,J/00 17 SJ 000 JS St Miami lndi.naooc'i• • New England NY Jet• lutl1to ? 0 0 1000 63 ,. 110 .soo""' l 1 0 500 21 •S I 1 0 500 • 37 Ot000024SI T ... w'a Gemn ltllM 11 Ptlhburgh tCh•nnet 2 al 1 o.m.l ltelden al Kenses Clh• (Channel 4 at 10 am.t Chlcloo at Green hv (ClleMtt 2 at 10 amJ Allant1 el Mlnnet0t• Clnclnnell al NY Jt11 St. Louis at lnc:llanaPOll' Stalllt el Hew Enotend Otlrolt al Tim~ Bn • Houston al S•n 01eoo Nhl Orleans •• ~n Franclaco " NV Gi.nts et Wunlngton Phlla<le!Phla al OIH*' Oenvet' al Cleveland (ChaMel 7 at 6 o.m.) MlndeY'a Gome Ml1ml at Blifflllo (Channel 1 at 6) --COLLEGE UCLA 23, Lont hedl St. 17 lcerell't~ Lone 8"cll Stale 3 7 7 ~17 UCLA 7 6 1 >-23 LB-FG Cavtor SS • UCLA-8ono 1 run (Lee kick) UCLA-FG l.• 31 UCLA-f'G l" 22 LB-WllhlrlPOOll • run (Qcevuera kick I UCLA-Anc:lr-• 2 run (Lee kid!) LB-Wlll'lerSPOOn 6 NU f1om Gaynor <Oeeouera kick) UCLA-FG LN 22 A-40,132 T• AM ST A TtSTICS La Finl clowns 22 fltusnes·nrc11 15· 10 P*'•lnt v1rd1 312 Relurn vard• 5 P•stu tl· .. ·l Pun11 3·St Fumllles·losl S-3 Time of Poues1lon a34 INDIVIDUAL STATlmcs UCLA 17 '9· lS7 1'1 ,., l1·2o-1 •·•5 l-1 31:26 RUSHING-Long Buell Slat•· Templeton. 6-15; Wllnenooon 2-t; UCLA: Wtltv, 11·12; Andre'#s, 23·'3; GrMn, 2·2 .. PASSING-Long 8ffdl Stal•: Gavnor. 29 .... 3 312. UCLA 8-, ll-11·0 i.1, NMria 0-1-1 o. Stevena. 0-1-0 o. RECEIVING-Long 8Nch Slat•: lock· tll, 12•llt. Tamoleton, 4·31, WllherW>Oon, l·4, G1lnes, 2·J4, Patmer. 2-16, LOcv. 2·16 UCLA. Slllfrard, 3·62; W•lev, 3·2'. Ttnnell, 2·21, Dorrell, 2·20 CS FUlerton U, tdaho 7 Scwa 11¥ Ouamn · Idaho 1 0 0 0-1 C1I Siiia Fullerton 0 0 1 21~ Idaho-Auker 11 oeu trom Llnetien (McMoftiole kick) F ult-Lewis I run (Steinke klctl) Fu1t-P1111 2S pan from Allen <Steinke kiC .. ) Fut-Pltl• 14 pan trom Allen (St•IM• ktCk) Fult-Red1ck ,, pan from Allen (Slelmte kick) A-S.650 TIAM STATISTICS ..... First clowns 17 Rui.hlt·vard1 27-27 P1nlno yards 267 Aelurn vardl 47 Puses ?1·'3·5 Punll MO Fumble1·to1t 3-2 Penelfles·yarc:11 3·30 Time of POIMlllOn 21:19 CSF 22 42·260 256 41 19·4H 6·4S 1-1 7 ... 32:31 INOIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Idaho: Barrow, S-14 FuU· ar100 Lewis, 11·61; Calhoun, 7·0; Locto.ttt, 1·'3. Rtdldl, 1·40 PASSING-ldlho Sloan, I· 17·2 139, Linehan, 1·12·1 75 Fullerton: Al*\, l7·ll•1 242. RECEIVING-ld•hO Yarber, 10-12'; Auker, S·6', Smllti, 3·31. Fullerton, Pllt5, S· 101, R.CSIO, 3•S1. ..... ~O'MMre TornW1hOn Dan Poll! Klttrl,..W Jtm Neiford Garv Plltfll M,trlt Mc:C"'11Cltf L.ortll "oo.fl' Br•dfnon 11 l!l Kfl IJ"I How•td TwlllY Cle~llOM Pav11e Stt'Warl L.arrw Ml1• llllkllcler , ......... Gary Hellbenl Jim K•ne PM.t!Arl~ JWl'SI~ OoMlt Hel!\ft'IO!ld Gtor9e Arcnw OllClll Rodrf9u81 Mark Celee '<l9Cdlla eruce FlttaMr Woo4v Btedlbut" JOdll M4lc:l4 It ldl o.IPOI Lon Hlnlolt D1vt Stod!ton GarvKNeHr .ANtv eean C.orev Pavln Celv1nPMlt , I( af\11\1 Kno• TOtl'l ICll• Jedi F"ent MecO'Grtt<lv RoOW Mel'-'• Mlke~t GtMSelJlfl ~SOii Gtvln l,.even'°'1 Nick Price Brett UPPtr MllltPulnam Forrett Feiler 0"80ouglaH Mlllt$mllh Jfff N\ltcn.tt · Jim Getlagtler fltOft $1reck Scott walklns Gr'lwJonn Oen F«unan OA Weillrlno Toov S1111 Morrl1 Hete~Y AfMtv Norltl RodNUCkols ~Broo«s JoMHamarltL O•ve Eldltlbef'Mt • Bruce Soubby Greo~• Mlkt Pd LouGrellem JC.SMad Oen Hallc:lonon WavneGrMlv .1;; ........... ~.-- thlnking miracle N 1N1 A11 (AP) Hersb1scr · Ito red Dod Man r not er night 10 d 1urday. .Her ht er to scd livc-h1tttr 10 break a pc111onal fo~r· me losan.s treak and boo5t the rs to thear fourth straiii.ht victory, ·2 over the mcinnati R.cdi. It's \he first time the Dod crs have won four smiJ)lt incc June 2.-, but the)"re till mired in fourth place in the National Le ue West ttl\Jlinf • n Diego by 11 VJ game with ju t 4 to go. However, the fourth-strait.ht vic- tory Saturday night h d Lasorda msistang he's not ready to settle for a runner·up position, despite the Dodgers' 71·77 tC'COrd. "We'tt trying to &et first place . What arc you•talkinJ about, second pt C'e?" Lawrda said. ··we're not tlimmated. arc we? "You've seen miracles happen. h ven't you? Wh)' c•n't they happen again?" Hershiser got a fift that was at tea.st unusual if not miraculous Saturday• night -offensive help from his teammates. The Dodgers scored all five runs in the middle innings, paced by Mike Saoscia'-! three ·hit5 and two-run double, to make things easy for Hershiser for a change. "He pitched a good pme, and he had some runs to work with," Lasor<ia said. "But they (the Reds) also hit some balls right at somebody fof a chance." Hershi~r. 9-8, lowered his earned run average to 2.49; second-best in the National Lca1ue. He had a 2.23 ERA in his previous six starts, when he had to settle for four losses and two no-decisions Wtth little offen ive help. He struck out five and walked three Saturday for his fjrst victory since Aua. 9. Los Angeles loaded the bases in the fourth against rookie starter Ron Robinson, 1·2, with Bill Russell's ground out producing a run. Pedro Guerrero walked with two out in the fifth, Mike Marshall singled and both runners scored when Scioscia hit a soft double. UCLA ••• From Cl Beach State and San Otego State. "There's been some pressure in that UCLA 1s considered one of the powerhouses and you're expected to do well. Once "-C work these knots out I think we'll be all right. "Bem1 the underdog (against Ne- braska) will dcfirutcly help. Now we are the ones loolong. Ifs a little different being the underdog than when you're expected to blow some- • bodyout." Saturday's "blowout" never ma- terialized as the 49ers put on a herculean effon., includina a 55-yard field goal by David Caylor in the fint quarter, punts of 60 and 75 )'.ards by Jeff Carter in the first half and a defense which continually broke the Bruins' rhythm with solid efforts. "We're disappointed," said Shep- pard. "We're good enough to com- pete, but you have to get that first win." The 49ers had a J 2th player on the s1dehnes in Todd Hart, who is recovering from a broken neck suf- fered when these two teams met two years ago at the same site, and Gaynor and Sheppard touched on the subject for a moment. "It was a little bit or an inspira- tion,"' said Gaynor. "But he didn't want 1t overplayed. He just wanted to make us proud." • Added Sheppard: "He's ~uat another 49er, like any other 49cr. • The Bruins had no inspirations going for them. Quarterback Steve Bono went out with a sprained knee and his replace- ments, David Norrie and former Fountain Valley star Matt Stevens, were unable to make siarufica.nt contnbulions. Donahue told reporters afkrward they didn't have enou~ time or paper to wnte down the things he was concerned about and admitted that "fourth-quarter domination" repu· tauon his team had earned the past two yean bas not surfaced yet. "We were just hangjna on in the founh quancr1" he admitted. "And l understand Bob Devaney i saying Ncbra ka 1s better than it was a year aso. If.that's accurate. well •.. " He didn't fini h the statement. He chdn't have to. Connors to meet Teltscher ln final LOS ANGELES (J\P) -Jimmy Connors defeated I lth·sccdcd 'Re91csh Kiishnanoflndia, 6-4, 7·.S in the semifinals of the Pacific South· west Tennis Open Saturday, then said he's til'\"d and plans to cut down on hi hedule next year. Connors wall face EliotTclt her in thi afternoon's finals. The third· seeded Tchsc:hcr scored a 7-6, 6-3 v1c1ory over Dan Goldie, 1 Stanford 1u01or who made it into lhc C\'Cnl 1brough three rounds of qualifying. Connon quickly fell behind 0.2 1n &he o nina ' before tllina a l-2 lead. then t\ad to rally 1n the sccond II.ct after Kn hnan came ftom S..l to t Cit It )•5 • .. I was urtd bcf orc 1 came out here. I'm om down,° said Connon, lh top seed in this tournamcni after IOlll\J n the 11Cmlnna.1 of the ~nlut ·•rm llitUna the blU &ood1 001 th re wu • DOint in tht m1tcn When l lalled lt'1 noth~ a t otr n'I cure " Conn n 1d. \ t- t u .. • COMPLETE NYSE, AMEX COMPOSITE TRANIACTIONa, Cl, 7 ORANGE COAST STOCKS . Here are tht; atock market actlvltlea of publicly trad~ Orange CoU.-ty firm• for the week ended Friday, Sept. 14. Data pi:ovldetf by NewpOrt Secutltla Corp. Behaviorist mistake pi1t managem~n~on wrong road ;··-i •r• --j•·--...--.-.,.---, I I n--------,--1•• ---. •--··;----. 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I~· H,300 297 ,llO 22.z11 "'· 82 0 32,)2] 2,69) 10,;rso i~.•n )S,28• 18,169 110.610 2),0)0 to,200 ,, ,.,,. 1~0.000 200,000 ~. )00.•~o 92,96, )1,3•1 ~.,,. ..... fl' JOO n.600 120,MI 11,too ''·"" 19,000 I ,914 ~.s6• 0 .6.31) 1.2~ 110 ~.•n 111,039 l0.961 1.•61 2•.•22 •.en •9.0 1.6) 6.S 01-11-ta -61.1n 1.,1,so• 200 111,301 86,T .. ),310 •. , .a8 11.0 11-11-83 ~.9 (,It) -12-ll·ll -•.s .•1 11.2 11-11-•1 llC .10 1),2 •-10-0 .2.~ .os 99 •• 12-11-8] ••.• .~6 •2.0 7-)1-8) -).8 .zo •"·I 1.4)) -··· (.091 " • II IC .OJ •1.0 1,91 IA ,I!> +SO.O 4 rill IC .OS .2.a 1.10 IC 1.70 ... )6 ' .3.0 • 11 I C . U lS.6 ll·ll-92 •-10-8• -~-l•-•1 -·'·l•-•• • li-11-ll '"~ 11-10-•1 -• 11-11-tJ -12-Jl-ll )O.O l·ll·IJ 9.0 1-11-U 12.s 3·2S-U -)·ll-1) fl .• 7-30-'3 T.I 10·)1·1] I C .6~ T. l 12-)l·IS -1 • ., .TO 2).1 ,_,,_,) -!1.9 (.I)) • 6·30•tl .1.1 .01 99 •• 12-)1-1) •l,J C.'2> -9·2S-tJ .a.9 .11 a.• 6-10-•1 .1.1 <•.111 -12-1'-'1 ~.I 1.17 I,.] 12·)1-t) IC ( ,16) • 9-30-tl -2.6 .11 fS,7 11-11-11 -1.• 1.•!I '·' bl-2'-•• .U,l .,6 6.J 2-11-1• tt<: C.81 · Z-11-1• I C ,2) ], } 9•)0·'1 -i'O.O (.Ol) • 12-)1-tl -9.l (.211 -10-11-13 we t. •> 6-10-11 -1.) .11 16.• 1-11-I• IC (1.711 • 12-)1-t) -8.7 (1.06) -12-11-13 •).1 f.1) • l2•)l•I) •'·~ (.Tll -S·ll•tl •C .11 7,) T-31·8) .9.1 (.1)) • 12-11-•1 •II.I 12.l)S) • 6-JO-t) IC .10 99.• 6-10·11 IC C.181 • 11-)1-IJ ·~·· 1.01 •.I •• ,0.11 20.19• 8,809 ...... •,9•0 26,TOO •.63~ &1,01 10,209 llJ 1,122 111.•1• 116, 126 I I .~2· tl.~ •.•96 12, 119 )0,071 2•.00• 2,019 21.'61 36, "" 696.900 13e,.,)I 2a.•12 '·' . 39.~., 7.T•o 1,1)0 9.S'>l H8 ), )00 1,10 16,S8l 11,983 .,f>,200 ,,~1) 11,210 s. 131 l,~!I., 16, 121 •9.692 "T ,JT1 z10,s1• m -•.•98 11 •• .,, 11.soo no s11 • .,1., 1)18 2,i.,o )9.899 1.1u n,es8 ·H z:; ·t• SOI> -)61 '· 100 )0 2.111 -10 l, 100 J,602 ,.~~ 1,s21 T,u~ S2., n ,aoo ~.~1 S,600 1),6'7 lt,TOO '·"' ..,, -1 I ,6'9 2•6 "' 2,TOO '·'" i ,•oo '·"' •.~oo -1, ISO -SH -ssa •n ·IZO -•n .. , 10,ase 1, 106 I I, l ll 01 •,060 9.~T ~01 1,100 l,060 tZI •.Tt3 116 ·1,9SO _.,, ~ 10,h6 I .lTO ·'>'1 "" 10,199 1,11) 1,40) )IT I',.., 6, )21 -3~• 'JS 1,796 T63 -2,u• IS6 -s10 -l,TOO -1,1•• •.n• -1.036 -11 .eoo -2,961 .1,•10 292 ·TIS ·Z ,'1T I .•1• _,,. 6, I°' "'\hrtOll ,Auto Part• I Aoe. lfSI lf,1!> 11.00 ·•·l 1.7• 10.l 11-11-IJ 117 ,992 T, 160 8)• JOHN CUNNIFF A/l ......... AMtpl NEW YORK -Do you obtaan g~ pcef orm nee from ortcrs b) bcmg nice to them -by bcmg .. people-oriented " s they y -or by cntian&, exatin nd d1rccung them with material incentives and rewards? A bat of both? Perhaps. But that hasn't prevented a wade nf\ from having developed bctwttn the behav- iorists. or .. people ~Qple, .. and tho who tend to stress econom1cs in the form of pay, bonu~ and promotion opponunzu~. By payana posn1ve attention, sua-ae~t the behaviorists, productavit)' can be imJ>!'Oved. Nonsense, sa)s Ronald Smith, associate dean of the University of Rochester's Graduate School of Management. He doesn't beUcveiL In fact, he says. "payins i>ositive attention will have little bcncfictal cff ect if employees face poorl)'. de- signed incentive systems or if dc- cis.i.on-making rights arc not properly ass1sned." He cites instances of where the behavioral bias is so trona that wrong conclusions sometimes arc drawn from the facts-facts, be s&)S. lhat really re evidence that the Un1vemty of RochC$1(r bas tbt correct ppro h. The m 1s conumcd 10 t c .. Co~ratc d arkct ()Jpnaa- tion currkulum dcvdc>pcd_ by two cconomi ts. William Meckhng, for- mer dean ofthe hool, and Michael Jensen, proft r of finance and business administration. Its' evolutton followed a batllC' t Rochesttr betwetn bchavionll saen- tists and tho who think in more economic terms .. It wa a substantial battle," says the dean. ··Most behavT aoral sc:ientisu 1en:· The school has remained eon-vinced of its poguon in pitt of a spe&e of books in uppon of bchav- ionsm .. ··~e think 'we att supponed by the evidence," he '4)'1. The behavioral theory, be in- dicates, often suppon~ itself by draw- ini incorrect conclu ions from the cyu1ef!CC -even i,gnonna the o~ VIOUS ID order to d-0 so. The bad bebav1ot' ofbeba iortlists has a long history, says Schmidt. citina pioneer cxpenmenu cion- ducted more than SO )ears a.go at Western Elcctnc's Hawthorne works near Olicago, and often used m bchavioralist textbooks. Orange County ortgage Fixed-Rate Adjustable Rate AdJuatable Mortgage -Lender Cont8ct Fullerton S&L Any loan ottlc« Paclfie Coast S&L Any loan officer Long Beach S&L Any loan officer Lender' Cont8ct Santa Paula S&L Any Joan officer Sears Savings Bank Any loan officer Hem.i Fed S&L Any loan officer L4tndef Contact Long Beach S&L Any loan officer Glendale Fed. S&l Any loan officer Cftlcotp S&.L Any loan omc.r Int. Amort. Rete 13.875 Pta. 2.50 Yra. 250 14.000 14.250 Int .. Rate pta, 11.50 2.00 · 11.600 1.50 11.750 2.00 tnt Rat• 10.825 Pta. 2.5 11.250 2.0 :11.250 2.(L 2.75 2.50 Amort. Yra. 250 150 250 9nt. Ad c.., 12mo. -5.0 250 6mo. SO 150 8mo 4.5 Amort. Int. Yra. AdJ. CllP 250 12 mo., 5.125 300 12 mos 5 350 8mo&. 4 Wrongful firing suits-caused by AUTO UPHOLSTERY 81 Sta1tk1 MERCEDES SPECIALIST SPECIAL OF THE :\10~TH sloppy procedures ORIGINAL GERMAN SOFT TOPS FOR 230 -250 - 280 -450 - 380 -SOOSL Evidence and documcnJation which support -the finna of an employee are vital to a company's success an defending costly wroniful discha11e law uits,a leadanglaborlaw expert told executives here. .. Over the past several years, fired employees have filed growing numbers of lawsuhs, often devi,in& new arounds for wron&f ul discharge cl im ,'' said James P. Watson, panatr in the Los Angeles-based law firm of Coll, Cutlc &. Nicholson. Among the techniques Watson susgcsts: 1995.60 Completely Installed 771 W. 17th St., Costa Mesa Call 646-9841 -Do not promise employccs·that they will have permanent cmplO):· ment in the co mpany or that they will receive any spcc1fic salary. promo- tion or benefit. unle ~ou mean it. If a company doe find 1t nC'tt5Sary to 1-'------------------------'-------1 make such representations in order to keep a key employee, it bould make ~ure they arc in wntinJ in a contract which specifically reserve the riaht to tcmiinate with or without cause, as circumstances reQuire: lllTI Sii llEll lllm ESTATE ........... Loen -Do not violate procedures or other policie set out m employee handbooks: -Do keep a vmtten record of all rtpnmands and other .. formal" cnti- c1$m m de of th emplo)ee's per- formance: Above San Luis Rey ..Downs, overlOoks gorgeous i-ol.ling hills with mouhwn Vlews and ocean breezes. l~ usable 14.S actta of gt?ntle land and 2 acre zoniJ:li offers many potential i.e .. excellent hone ranch and/or 1ubd1vislon. Many tax advantaies availabl with this avocado and dtrus grove. Europe n e)1>oa~ in approx. ~300 aq_.ft., 5 Bedroom. 7 Bath home with many exquisite t tures. Large patio and pool, perfect entertainment area. 2nd small house and 2 adjoining parcels (10 ac. and 11+ .. S.·p1 . r: s, 111phum" IOam -Do treat •ll c1!'ployccs cq~lly -..·htn it comes to hin promotion nd termination: ) totaling 36 acres also avallabl • Owner Wlll ll all or pan and will boundary ad~t. 95,000. . - llEEll• Ill Tlllllll FIOILITT cl 111/411·1111 '111/111-IMl • S.·pl. I•> B11,i1w,., .. Lilnun lpm ~·111. 21 \\ h I i-. u ,·0111p11h·r! 2pm ~·pl . 2 l \1•h,or~rni: 10.un. 2,pm S.·pl. 2-( :.,n ... 1nu 1i1111 lTI 111. 2p111 Sc·pt. 28 \\ h,11 is t r111npuh·r~ lOam. 2pm Sc pl .~) !\l1~li1 ti 11 m Cull 110\\ fnrcl iuil~nncl n"St'nution ... : hh:!-1 • • " \ N y ~ ~ [ c 11 ~~ f' l 1 j 11 t TR A~ ~ .. 1 c 110 N s ------- IED'I • ftll1 Im, UIS,, CliSt I • J .' ' • MUC NOTICE NOTIC• IMT1NQ IMDI TN County Sa111tallon OlslflCt• of Orenge Cc>Ynty. Cahfomia, wlJI ..recetve ...._ ed bid• unhl 11.00 A.M Tueeday, &.pt, 25. 1984. 81d1 must be recelwd It the O.trk:11' Admlnlatr1t1ve Of· fices by the date Ind time hereinal>OYI Ml fot'lh, It 11rhictl hrne they wal be PJlb- lcly OPlll'* Ind exem.ned It the ofllce of the DlltrlCts. 106« Ellie Avenue, Foun- taittValley, Clllltornl1, fof the fotlowing: Pt&.IC NOTICE F1CTIT•OU• au 11 NAME ITAUMENT AllC!nUe Unit 10 1uscn. CA Ang4llo Or DI Huntington c NTER. 3300 l1vloe lt.V• 92680 Beach, Celif 92647 9fl\IO, Suite 101. N"1>0ft Ulwr~ Reed. 1978 Anne OreenbefQ 82, 1 c r 92660 Port Nelaon Jllac.. Newpot1 an AngOIO Dr. De Hum• SupeflOt Mini Storage, t 8Mch CA 26tl0 11\0ton Beach, Colt 12847 C forflla llmlteO partnet• Kathleen Aeild, 1918 'Th• bUalnesa la con· hip, 3300 lt\lfne Avenue. Pon NetlOl'I Plaoe, NewpcHt dueled byi an lnd1vldull Suite 101, Newport ch, hen, Ct\ 2660 Anne <1reentiero Calif 82tl60 lnll b!itln 1 11 con• 11'111 statement wa ftled Thia bu1lne11 la co,n· ctuc1od by' ~ nd wlth the Couroy Cieri! 01 Or· dYC1ed by. mltld partner· wife OOuntY on tember amp Lftrence K ~ 6, 1184 T~ 9 Gr nt, ltt Man· Th 1t1t9tneN. WU f Fa41tt eglno General Partner with Che Coynty Cletti of Of. Published Orqe Co I ~T!\it etatement WU filed ange CoUnty on Auguit 27, Dally Pilot September tG, wtth the Courity C1ertl of Or· 1984 23. ~. Oetotier 7. 1H4 .ng• County on SeJ>ternbet na17t SU·233 8, ~984 Publ hod Orange C~•t ns.m Dally Pilot Sec:i•ember 2. 9, Pt&.IC NOTICE Publllhed Orange Coast 11, .23, 1984 • oa 1y Pllot Septemb$ 18, Su-213 FICTIT10Ul llU99Nfll 23, ac>, October 7, 1 84 N~ ITATUIVIT SU 227 MOC NOT1C£ The L~ .. per.ona • -~..-..-.-...-----1CS01no --PlBJC NOTICE flCTITIOUI aUllNlll CORONA HILLS, 4242 ---------NA• ITAT'INOIT C~ Of1w, Suite F. New· FtCTITIOUI llUllNHI The lollowlng pereont are pol'I BMl;tl, Callf, 92&e0 NAME ITATIWNT doeng bullneu u Rich rd L. Owen. trutl" Tl'le IOllOWlng ~ton 11 CALIFORNIA AGRI of The Owen Family R .... o-doingbuslneH .. ENERGY LTD t301 Dov9 cable TnJt1, •242 Campue AL\: POINlS AUTO Street suite 2eo NCJwport Or1Ye, Sult• F. Nn.port TRANSPORT. 210 E 23fd 8Mch, cA tHeO ' Beach, Calli 926e0 St.. Cotti Meaa, Celll, Rob9n E.. Coll ea22 Bar Thlt but•flest 11 con· 92127 H.,bot QfM, •Huntington ducted by. • geNfil part. Robert PlrUr "°'*· 21 t 8eeeh, cA 12641 netlhtp Pllmer, Co1t1 M... Calif Tl\ll bus""' 11 con· Richard L. Owen. trim .. 92827 ducted by A 11m1ted partner· of The Owen F1m1ly Revo-This bua•n•u 11 con· lhip Clble Trutt 1 ducted by· an lndlvldull Robert E Cote · Thia 1t1tel'Mlr'lt w" flied Roti.rt Par11er Jonte Th._ atit9m.nt w11 tiled with the County Cleril ot Or· This ataterMnt w11 Iii.cl 11r1th the County Clerk of Or· anoe County on September th the County Cl«k ol Or· anoe Courtty on August 27. I , 1984 County on September 1"4 '2147n • 1984 f'2:53llO PublllMd Orange eo.t '214711 P.ubll$hed Orenge Cout Dally Piiot September 18. Publllhed Orlll'09 Coast Dally Pilot September 2, t . 23, 30, October 7, 1984 111y Piiot September 18, 18, 23. t984 SU-221 3, 30, Octobw 7, 1984 Sv-218 Nil.JC NOTICE SU-232 FURNISH. DELIVER A.ND 11111111C MnflCE FlCTITIOUI au ... u SUPPLY CHLORINE IN _ _;.r.;..;;;.;uu...;;.;..;.;."";;....;..;.;..._ HAAR ITATE•NT Nil.IC llJTJCE BULK AT PLANT NOS 1 RCTITIOUI auatMl!ll The followlng pettonl are•--------- ANO 2, Specification No NA• ITAT'fMENT doina buelnea u · '1CTIT10Ul llUU.ll C.015 The folk>¥r\ng pertona 1te -C~EATIVE SOFTWARE MAME ITATDIUIT Sida must be 1Ubmll1ed doing bU1ine19 u SERVICES, 345 Univerwty The following pel'90fl 11 on the lonn IUppiled by the W·K ASSOCIATES. 425 Ofive •M2, eo.ta M .... dolno bullrl9ll aa C*trk:t9 In ecc:otdanoe With Hill Street, L11g11n1 Beech. Cakf 92827 WARD MANAGEMENT .. prOYlllona of the ~n. CA 92&51 David Allen Okazaki, 345 COMPANY, 2110 Newport cationl. Welch H. Boyer, 425 Hill UnMM"llly Drive #M2, Colll Blvd 11, Cotta M .... Calif Specifleatlona, bid blria Street. Llgun1 Be.ch. CA M .... c.ltf. 92627 92827 Ind further Information may 92851 Tim Kent Olluakl, 345 Oon1ld A Werd, 1 HI be Obtained 1tthe •bOve 96-Ketherlne K Boyer, 425 Unlvertlty DnY9 #M2. Colt• King• Place, Newport dreee: telephone 540-2910 HUI Street, Leguna Beech, Mesi, Clllf 92827 BMch, Calif. 92883 « "2-2411. CA 92&51 . David A Okuakl Thlt bu.in... It con· Ted Hoffman • Thi• buttMN I• con· Thll tt1tement waa tiled duc:ted by. 1n indi'lldual Ct"9f ot Procurement & ducted by A generll pert· w.ith the County a.ti of Or· Oonatd R. Werd property nertt1ip enoe County on September Thia •t•tement wee tiled Publllhed by the Orange Welc:tl H. Boyer I . 11184 With the County Cl9f1c of Or· Coat Delly Pilot September Thil it11emen1 wu flied '214111 •noe County on September HS. 1984 ••th the County C*ll of Or· Publllned Orenge Coatt 4, 1984 SU.231 ColM\ty on Augutt .2.7 .. Dady Piiot-Sep -, ...... --.. ---ll"_Mn_TIC..;E;.;...;~1-"1"!9~ 23, 30. October 7. 1984 Publllhed Orange Cout n~u" nu ~ SU·231 Dairy Piiot September I, 18, FICTITIOUI .,..... Pubtllhed Orenge Coast .. _IC MnflCE 23, 30, 1984 NAm ITAnm.NT 09lly Pilot September 2, 9, r-nu SU.224 The follOWlng l*90n ts 18. 23. 1"4 Sv-211 '9CTil10UI au._u i--------- doing ~.. ..,... STATPIUfr flt&JC NOTICE TKE PRICE SOURCE. OE· The fOllowlng penon 11 -------- S IG NERS FU RNITURE rta.JC NOTICE dOlnQ ~ u : FlCTITIOUl llUatNEH OUTlET, 4035 LAa1Nton 800TLEG WILLY, #202 NAME ITATDl«Jn' Court. Fountlln Vllley, Callf. F1CTIT10Ul IWUM?ll 2424 Newport Blvd., Cotta The follow'tng l*90n 11 92907 ~ ITATEmNT M .... CINI 92127 dotng butlnetl u . J ecil Amofoeo Jr., 1271 The following pert0n111e Slndra LMMcCarter. 581 BE'ST ACTION SER· Glenneyre, Lagunl Beec:tt. doing bullMM.. Promontory°'· w .. Newpol't VICES, 24135 VII Sin Calif 92151 WEST ELECTRIC. 21772 Beech. c.111. 928e0 F1mendo, MIUlon Viejo, TM bUt ineu II con-F..,..,,. Cll'cle Huntington Thll butlneu la con· Calif. 92692 ducted by. an Ind~ a..ch. CA 9214& duc:'ed by an lndiVidual 1 Dorothy M Scollerd, .I-* Amofoeo Jr Wiiiem Mortarner W•t. SMdre Mc:Certer 24835 Via Sin Fernlndo. Thia statement was fited 21n2 Falt'llne Circ:te. Hum· Thtl lll tement WU llled MllllOn VJejo, Clllf. 92892 wtth the County C*1t Of Or· lngton 8elctl. CA 9264e with 11141 County Clef1it of Or· Thi• ~"••• '' con- enge County on $e9tember John Richard W•t, 2H8t ange County on $e9tember ducted by. 111 lnd1Yldull I , 1984 Klowl, Huntington Belc:tt, 8, 1984 Dorothy M. Scollard F214nt CA 92848 F2M720 Thll at1tement WU flied Publllhed Orenge Coett W1lll&rn M. WMI Publllhed Orange Cout wtth the County Clerk Of Or· o.ily Pilot September 18, Thia atltement wu filed D ly Pilot September 18. ln09 County on Sept_,,ber 23, 30, October 1, 19&4 with the County Clertl of Or· 23, ~.October 7, 1984 4. 1984 F ....... _1 SU.230 enge County on August 27, SU-229 ~ ---------198' Publlltled Otano-~· Pl8JC NOTICE F253ll1 P\BJC NOTICE oa11y Piiot Se9temt>er 9, 18. Publithed OreJ'lge Coat 23. 30. 1984 • F1CTJT10UI aullNHI Delly Pilot Septembef 2, 9, flCTITIOUI IW81NlU SU·225r N.u. ITA,.....,., 18 23 1984 NA.• ITAT'EMPfT The lollowfng per90nl .,. ' ' . 253891 The '°8owlng panotll It• __ IM_IDl_IC_NO_T_IC_E __ doing bu91nett at: doing bullMll H . r"UU\. C ALIFORNIA PONDS. YESTERDAYS DREAMS. FICTITIOUl llUllHl!H 12891 W•tern. Suite e. Nil.IC NOTICE 1142 Auatln St Coat• NAME ITAT'fM«NT Garden Grow, CA 92641 M .... CA 92628 Daw L" Wooten, Jr.. ~: ~U Michele Chrtattanun. ~ bU~perlOn 19 18901Hoelllnt,Apt.0.Hunt· A 1142 Austin St . Cotta .. BURRELL KELLY ~ ._..... c• .,..,. .. ,. The foltowlng per.ont are M..-CA 92126 " on ....,.,, " .,._. doing bullnen u c.i. Abbott, 1800 Coral ENTEAPRISES, 1603 Tutlln II bu$1nest 11 con-THE MONEYMAKER Piece Newport Be1c:tt CA Aw . Colta Meal C1t1I ducted by: 111 lndlvldull 1901 Newport Blvd, •231, 92883 . 92827 ~ =9:;.-!' filed eo.ta Meal, CA 92827 This bu1lne11 la con· Robert 8urr~9lly.Jt503 with tM County Cler'k of Or-John M Maaterton. •3 ducted by. co-pertnera Tcu~lt,1n.,.~11121" t• ... Cou "'""'' P .. rl, Leguna Ntguel, CA Celie Abbott I .,.., : nty on ""'lf"'at 14, an Mlehele Chrlltlanten Thi• buatneaa I• con· 1 1'212114 T!\tl bu1lneu 11 con· Thlt at1tement WU flied ducted by an lndMdull P\lblWled Orange CoMt ur,1ed by Ari iod1'ildual with the County Clertc of Or· ~ 8 K4'1y 1....,. n.n.. Piiot .... John M Muteraon enge County on Augutt 24 hUI 111ternent wu ,_, .,_, August '"· Tl'lll atllement wu filed 1944 • with the County Clerk ol Or· September 2, 9, t8, 1984 th the County Cl«tl 01 Or· f2l3'7tO ange Cc>Ynty on September _______ 5_""_208_ Inge Cc>Ynty on August 21.1 Publllhed Orenge Cout 4• 1984 F2M4t5 P\B.IC NOTICE 1tM Deity Pilot Augutt 28. · F251171 September 2. 9 18 1984 Published Orange Cout FICTITIOUI au1Mtl Pubh•hed Orange Cout • su-209 Delly Piiot Septembef 9. 18, ~ ITATEMINT Dally Pilot &.ptember 2. 9, 23. 30. 1984 The fo1owtng peBOnl .,. 1a. 23. 1984 . Sv-214, __ .;..MUC __ _.__NO_TICE __ _ dolnG bu11Met u • . rtaJC NOTICE W£STERlEY FRAMING, 'ICTITIOUS IW ... 11 t--------- SU·223 3151 Atrway Avenue. Suite PlB..JC NOTICE NAME aTAT'f•NT FICTmOUI auatNHt T-1, Coete Meu, Caltf. The foltoWlng penion1 ere N,._ t TATEMENT 9282& ACTITIOUI aul*EH d<>tng bultnea u The followtng peraon1 are Nk:hole1 P1ppu, 3151 ~ ITATE..wf INTEGRATED SYSTEMS, doing buslMSS ••· A.llway Avenue, Sul1• T • 1, The followlng pettonl .,. 1eae Tustin Awinue. A· 14', (.) E 0 u I LINE . ( b) ca.ti M..-, Ce.Ill. 92821 oing bUli'*I 11. Cotti M ... CA 92627 EOUILINE MOBILE FAR· laffy Riggs, 3151 Altwey C09ROINATEO SYS-Roneld J Tnpp, 25123rd RIERS SUPPLY. 408 Avenue. Suite T-1. Colt• EMS. 20421 Bayview Av· StrMl, Colt• M .... CA Poentettfa. Coron• Del Mir, Meisa. Callf 92121 ue. Senti An1. CA 92707 92127 CA 92825 ALB Mat1nu. Inc •Cell-Robett S Tnpp. 20421 Thll bua•neu I• con· D1vtd 9011rlea. 408 fomla corpotl tlon, 4000 Avenue. Santi Ana ducted by. Ari lndlvtduat PoenMttll. Coron• Del M1t. MICArthur Boutevatd, Suite 12707 Rona6d J Trtpp CA 92825 700, N9wport Beec:tt, c.111 Thlt bu1ln1u 11 con· Th" 1t11ernent was flied George Hiiton, 401 t2eCIO ducted by An lndlvtdUll With the County Clerk ol Or· PoenMttla, Corona Del Mer, Tht. bull,,..• It con· Robert S Tripp 1nge County on Augult 27. CA 92825 ducted by • geMrll pert-Thi• ttltement wa filed 1.984 Thi• bu1tne11 la con· neflhlp 1th the County Clerk of Or· F2Sml ducted b)" 1 general pert· Rich•d L. Bffudlemp • County on Augutt 27. Published Orenge Coul nerlhlp Thlt 111tement WU Med 19 011ly Piiot September 2 9, D1vld 9owlel with the County Clerk ol Or· F25Jnt 18. 23, 1984 Th•• 1t1tement wu hied enge County on September Publllhed Orenge Coac SU·221 11r1th the County Cl«k of Or· t . 1984 Daily P1tot September 2, 9, anot County on August 23. F254701 t8, 23. 19M 1984 Pub119hed Orenge Cou1 Su-219 Plll.IC NOTICE '253151 0111y P110t Sept.,nbef 11. FtCTITIOUI BUllNEH Published Or1nge Cout 23, 30. October 1. 1944 PU8UC NOTICE N .. ,._ aT·-•NT 0111y P11ot Augutt 28, SU-234 ,.,... ,. '"' September 2, 9, 18, 1984 F1CTmou1 .UllNHI The fOllowtng pertOnl .,. Su-211 HAR80A LAWN- MT. OLIVE Mo,rtuary • Cemetery Cremetory 1625 GISier Ave. eosta Meu 5-40-5554 PIERCE 8"0THER8 BELL 8"0AOWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway Coste Men 642-9150 IAL TZ HRGERON SMITH a TUTiflU W£1TCUfF CHAPEL 427 E. 17th SI. Costa M ... ~9371 PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK c.m.11ry •Mortuary Chapef • Crematory • 3500 P~flc VtflW Onve Newpo(t Bffch IM'4·2700 McMOftMtCK MORTUARY 1795 L R= Canyon un• beach. ca ·Q2 I • '4 4-9•U5 NAMf ITAT'fMENT dOlng bullneeau· The fotlollr1ng ~are JAG ENTERPRISES, Ml.IC NOTICE doing butineea aa· 19531 Airport Way South, --------- BENICIA MARINA 4000 S1nt1 Ana, CA 9~707 FlCTmOUI llUllNell 8ou ' Jotln E. Porter, 27741 NAME ITAT'ffll!NT ~OOC""hur =· ~~· Paeo Etfeban. San Juan The following pert0n 11 92e6o Newport Caplatrano, CA 92875 doing buliMSI II BMuchemp Enterprl... Ann Porter, 27741 P1eeo FINO THE CHILD FINGER Merine Dlvtilon 4000 Elteban. Sin Juen PRINTS CO .. 14()() EdlnQef MecAnhUr Boulev.;d Sufi• Cap11trano. CA 92875 Ste H204, Huntington 700 Newpof1 8e.tcl'I • Callf Greg Porter. 27741 Pueo BelCh. c.ltf 92847 92Mo · · E1t eb1n, San Juan Gery W1yne Picken•. Aichatd l BMuchamp Capestr1no. CA 02875 IMO() Edinger St• H204, 4000 MecArthur 8outev1td' Thll statement wu tiled Hunt1ng1on Beach, C11tf Suite 700 Newport a..ch' llrith the County Clerk of Or· t2&47 Calif 92Mo ' enge County on Augutl 27. Th•• bulln... II con· RIChlld L ~ 198' ducted by 11'1 lndMdual T""' ' ......... ~ G W Pldcent '"' ataternent •• ''-: Publaahed Orenge Coltt Th11 atatement wu filed with'~:'"~ Cler1c :~ Delly PllOI September 2, 9. lll'lth the County Clerk of Or· rf "4 Y Sept 18, 23. 1984 •not County on September' . ,,254n0 &1-217 tf, 1984 PublllMd Orange Coast / PVblilheel Or "=~ Catty Pilot &.pternber 15. Pl8lJC NOTICE Deity Pilot s.p=ber 1e. 22, 29 OctOber t . 1a:,: 218 FICTmOUI .U ... ta 23 '° OctOber 1 1"4 1-------·-NA• ITATEMllff , • • 8U.235 rtalC NOTICE TN fOllOWlng per90n9 •• Nil.IC HOTICE ·---------dOlng bu """' ... FICTmout au..... JA PRODUCTS, 3076 ,tCtfTIOUI .u ..... NAM ITATIMeNT Louin L11Mt,eo.t• ...... CA NAMI ITATIMINT Tne fo11ow1ng pel'9001 .,. e2e28 The toitoMng peraone .,. doing bullnesa 11 Arthut EclWtltd Vandetr.. dOina bullneea 11 " BURRELL KELLY .k, 3075 Laten l.Aln9. Colle MARKET TARGET RE· ENTERPRllES, 1603 TuttJn Mne, CA 12828 SE.-ACH 1041 W WllsOJI, Alie . CO.ti MIM, CA 12827 CarOI Cyr V1nderrH, Coata Mesa. CA 12627 Robert Bun .. K~. 1603 3075 Loren Lane, Coat9 Cheg 1p1ey 1CM1 w utt11t Ave • Col11 M•. CA MeM CA t2t2& W1110n COIU M CA 2827 Thlt t>utln... ti OOft• t2627 Thie bullnltl II Corte duetod by H~ 9'td Thia ~nffl I• cOfl• ueted by en Ind~ wo , dU(ttd by: en lndMCfual Robert 8 Kelty Cerol Cyr VlndenM Oreg 61'11pt9y fhil etatement wet fllecS • Tt»t at1tement we lu.ct Thlt etettwMnt w tiled rtth at'I County Clerk of Or· Wltl'I t CouMy C!M; of Or· wttl'l ltle Coul\'ly Clerk ot Or· County on September Counry on Al.lgUJC U , CoutltY on t ~2, t 1 • • ,.21*1 I ed OftrlO* Cont DI Piiot AUQUll ~. temtiet ~ I 1 M _:.:::=====::...J.:..!::!!!~---_:J..::.:..;_ _ _,_ __ ~::;.:20:,;_ Au·? O ' • .. u .. \ Auto sales, housing_ anti employment-t·he segments of our economy on which so much of classified depends-are looking better than they have in a long .time. We're feeling good about that and the opportunity it gives us to offer you a bigger, better-than-ever classified section. If you haven't read classified lately, come enjoy a browse thPough our columns. You'll see why we're feeling good ·about classified. 642-5678 , ' THE DAU.Y PILOT LASSU''IED OFFICE HO RS elephone er\'ice: onday-Friday :00 A.M.-5:30 P.M . u iness Counter: ionda)·l"riday :00 .M.-5:30 P.M. DEADl.1 ES' . Pl'Hl.ICA TIO~ l>EADl.l~t: \londu' ~111. 11 ::~o u.ru. Tut•?ida·~ \1on. l::m p.rn. \\ t·chu•Mln~ Tut'"· l::m p.m. Tlaursda~ \\ t•cl. l::iO p.rm Frida~ Thur . l::m p.m. Saturrln~ Frida~ :i:OO p.m . !'iunda~ t'ri. :i:oo p.m. CANCELLATIO~ & CORRECTIONS: Cant·t>llations and t·orrt•t·tiorn, ma' be madt• on sumt-dtaullint•!\ as aho,1t:. Please at.k for u <'8n,·ellation numbt>r \\hen c·1rnc·t•llintt your ad . ERRORS: Che.rk your aq dai1~ and report error immtdiateh. Thf' DAILY PILOT a umf' liability for the first inl'orrf't't in ertion onh. CLASSIFIED 642-5678 I • 11¥111 muo1 1211,aoo WUT & llY fM Tiii ._.,., a..Tllll Come by oru.11 us anytime to aee this -lovely 3 bdrm, 2 bath home. Recently reduced from $289,500. This is one of Corona del Mar's FINFST V ALUFS in a great resid. area, jUst a short walk to Balboa Island, FUhion Island. New- port Center and the bay & beaches. New roof, entry & kitchen fin & beautiful French dool"9-8ll added within the past 2 yra -'AND -there is an assumable $189,300 existing loan! Thia relocation-owned home is vacant and CAN BE SHOWN ANYTIME! ......... l111 lstllt lH/111-11ll OPEi TODAY Clean. cool I roomy Monaco w/lkYlchts, bay .mdow,dtcks,etc. $242,000 ...................... 2025 Port Bristol, HVH, NB Cutt and conttft1)0fary 1 8clin, dtn, sllylctrts and clau $208,000 .............................. 2921 4th St. Old CdM ctff hanrk1c vltw, 4 Bdr'ms, 4 bl, pool/spa I trtat '""'rm -$450,000 ............... 1421 Kmts Rd, Newport Beach lar&t South Coast Plan •H, 4 Mm. 3 ba, very llC\lt, YtfJ attractive, YtfJ spacious $169,000 ................ 3917 Teakwood. So. Santa A~ Larrest lot, 4 Bdnn with Ii• covwtd patio, flttCJit lllCI sport cut $379,000 ........................ lZlO Sand Key, HVH CdM > Roomy 3 Bdrm, 2 b1, near new concMl•mn. spa, ~slvltws $349,500 ............................ 2723 5th Ave. Old CdM Wldt WOftd of I vltW, clauk oldti home btaiUINy rllftOdtltd $725,000 ...................... 3028 Ocean Blvd, Old CdM ctmt cGlldal. alder 4 8dnn nl cunt hit, spa, • btadt $635,000 ......................... 223 Poinsettia. Old CdM Chlnrq CdM lfH, lllocl to bead\. 3 ~ 2 story, of trttt $439,000 . ......... ...... .302 Heliotrope, Old CdM Cool. dun. cn..-ao. J Mwt. NI• 1•d. patio ........ $450,000. 4S15 Hampden Rd, Cam Shotts, CdM U,_1jh M S REALTORS•, 676-6000 2443 E11t Oom Hlthwev. Corona del M r .. ti 2 nllY llAIT-FHltlll YALLD 3 Mil to OCe~ 5 BR (1 down), 2 \if Ba. Eating area in kitchen, fotnllll dining nn. Huge ~llsh Tudor style family home. HardwOod firs. 2 fire- places, pool size yard wlth block walls. 1 Yr. Home Warranty protection. Fam- ily neighborhood. Pl'fot 1111,tOO -ltfly1te~I · ltll Emf• •r Lllol• 114/MMlll OPEN· TODAY 1-4:30 1336 Gal11y, Dovlf' Shirts ............. ~ ...... $985,500 Beautiful home & view w/mdoor pool & retractable roof. 4 Bd, 4 Ba & pwd rm. I 1330 Galaxy, Oovlf' Shotts .................... $775,000 New hstma ... dramatic home w/bay & night hght view, courtyard, with pond, pool & putting green. Fee land. 32 Ima Loa Ct, flt (12-4) .... ~ ................. $164,000 Newport Crest condo 2 Bd, 2~ Ba, some ocean view. Comm. pool, walk to beach. 760 Via Ude Nard, Bl (1-4) ................. $1,725,000 large 5 Bd Bayf ront. best location and next to creenbell 01oice 45' lot. · OllTA 1111 111 ........ (1• It.) .,......,1.1 Recently remOdeled 2 Br, 2 Ba on R-2 lot. Natural wood cabinets, built-ins, F.A.U. heat. Dlum ceillngl. F\t.lly carpeted, auto sprinklen, new J>IWlt. Vacant. Iner (M) 12M011 ' E...a.paza.1711 . let U1 ,""' Y 11 Sell Y ••r p,.,.,t Tht Daly Plot off en you Uis tnd mt*' on u "Pkhlt Pac•" wttbnds t. just m I* ~y. or 2 days for $45. Wlllapktll't, or wt1photoiraphlt for ,. •• ....,ct.ar, •. e. •• .,.. 642-5678 Delightful 3 Bdrm home on thf! water with shp and 5ide tie. C8thCdral l'l'ihngs, 2 fireplaces. Spacious MBR 1u1\e with situnc room overlookins the water. Ler1e patio & balcony. Abo mrome from 1 Bdrm apart· ment over 1arage. ftt>dU('t'CI to $-125,000. Owner must ~u . .a&11111mn ' PTEMBER 16 984 • • I > •• n·--..... " ... Ultl9lat1• 11·---111m-EZ•••-m_Ni&.-_ 3:~'42::~~ '~~~'rr· •• , ..... '=CX:.:1 " 1 =· Lo l N J . En Cot. Wllnut Pl rw Weet· INI llm&I Well ...., 2-... 2 * CCIMl1. 1r:r -... vc y ewpott ocauon. nain ng · cliff 1195,000 645-7078 Blu Stev. 17a-1eoo beth condo wlW! .,..._ wfthnoOOMmOn_..&-s horn with flowing fIOor plan & ph· _..,.._ ___ _.... ... , 111WM11110 PoOI ~ • ...,... d !IW'8 a .. 2 isticated curb appc 1. 3 Bdrms, 2 ~ lull• Wit in k~ ,.,_ .,..,._, c=-.. a .. ..., Baths with spa.cious family room open-since 1U1t •n•.to0 """ Flll P'Ot It•.• ing to large p(>Ol and deck. $350,000. io. ~ ... Call MARILYN HILL. (714) 673 •t00 UllD&I Traditional Realty 631-7370 COLDWeu BAN~eR O llt5'0INTIAl MAt lSTAff lflMUS Ullll flEW .... 1211,IOO It's rare to get such a perfect 2 bedroom plus den home-but we've got one and it's decorator perfect! Beautifw custom built-ins, re- modeled kitchen that's truly stun- ning. Extra deep lot with lovely large patios. RARE 200' PRIME ISLAND POINT HOME. 416 bdrm, bfg dock(s), play lawn & swim beach. Walk to ocean fun. 7 car parking. low owner fin. $750,000 (land Incl.). Open Sat./Sun. 1-5 Owner (9-5) 650·0202 BUY DIRCT a SAVE Beautifully and completely remodeled in 1981, 4 Bdnni, 3 bathS, TOP QUALITY. Located on extra qwet section of beach. Call to see. Lf4Ja •""'1 ......... IWIDS ucUllOI . Two separate 2 Bdnn hom on extr large R-2 lot an great rental location. Only one block to be ch with fire- places and garages. Large umable loan. Only 10% down. Ju t ("(.'du<'e'd to $230.000. ........ tty (111) lU..WI (HI) 111 .. 11 ,.,~11411 ........ ' 111 Yla I.Ne.... ... ... , ... 1-1 M rve1ous 6 Br bayf ront 78' on bay, pool, pa. 100' boat space. Xlnt Fin. '$41850,000. BAWWllllJ Channing SpaniSh 3 Br, 2 & on 45' 101,, lflWlll d k, courtyard. pier & Slip. $1.100.poo 1------1 mT• .. Beautiful 3 Br, 2 Ba, playroom, fireplace. II IF 1111Lll beam ilinp. Xlnt fin.anong. $420,000. S2~S.OOO ... ..!I' ,_ 2 &di on ..._ lllllNI .. • QN11 CWww. Alr,.xtra...., •Oillloe IAYW llftl IHFllft .... . 8 A Heights 54~2647 remode61d ..... 1oc.:J11nc financing. 1721 000 Jetty & Bay view. newly decorated Mai11--llllllill---•1 l'13o64210M* Kai, 2 Br, 2 Ba. 40' patio. Now $645.000. Low&~~-&ilam PlmHU ... ....allT upgraded Hr ~= BAIHAADWOOO floor, Exciting Ocean & Jetty views, 4·Br. 3 Ba, towilft<Jme <>wnerw111 ... eo x t30 rt lot. N-. • on dotM'I peyment, .,.,,_ wen, but Pt'to9d 3700 sq ft. car parking. $1,285,000. Hurry only Sft,900 c.. .ccordlnO!r e11110,000. WEST •• , a-•• _.__. o.... 540-11s1. ***** -H -•r-• BA/HARDWOOD. At N.H.Y.C. Traditional 5 Br spcc!.acUlar ="u!:. ':;. ':: bay view. Owner fin. $1.0~.000. . ,._ _____ ., Ontylnt,tOO. .. ***** URU RICI ....... ORSE PROPERTY. s Bdrm ..... but~ pttced ~ ,propertr In tM ara.1109.000. 1111ms11111 &HI• fU LI -f&aY • Enter through the eDclomd murtyard and parquet entry. Large family room overlooks quaint red brick patio. Re- modeled kitchen. A solid value at $116,900. Call for financing details. THE REAL ESTATERS MmSlllES IEW IEllCTllll Tl Utl,000 lnl UT/Sii 1·1at1441 Wuy lrtte Spac·1ous 4 Bdrm & d n. 2 'h baths Two 2 car garag~. Urge lo' w1tt-. room for pool or RV parking . ........ u ....... ...., ..... ., ...... fll.LB-.n . ...1. Highly upgra.dN_t Bdrm. .:lli. Ba. formal dining, library. family rm, mas- ter awte, cul--de-sac. ~Y-~ backyard wtth pool, spa and much more. 11111 TIMSll ...... .111-llfft " ...... lll-2111 PICTURE YOUR HOME llERE Private Parties Are Welcome C• ClanmH. 642-5671 for information & surprisingly low cost. • 1£ T Ill ClllO Cl to Soulh Coast Plaza, outstanding 3 BR, 2~ BA. home on com 1· lot. Kitch n with all ameniues: fireplace .in living room, and skylights. Garden window. Close to pool and spa. Lowest priced condo m develop.o ment. Donna Godshall. $135,000 . YISTA Ill UIO Full secunty highrise -luxury bayfront living! 1 BR unit n w)y refurbished. Best view location.· Boat slip available Martha Mac- nab. $279.000 Ill CllYOl-fllRW&Y LOOITIOI This elegant 3 BR. 3 BA ingle level townhome features the ul- timate m quality, del.alJ & conve- nience. Includes pool, spa & air conditioning. Danny Bibb. $725.000 amm 1 111L1tas Buildable R-2 lot on Peninsula. Excellent rental area. Older 1 BR home plus . 2 car gara&e now occupies lot. Rent now -build later. Martha Macnab. $193,000-- llSEmE on11 SAYS SEU Pnced under market for quick sale! 4 BR, 3 BA home with large family room, patio. Located on a quiet cul-de-sac in Woodbridge. with pools. parks. schools, and tennis nearby. Larry Dyer. $185,000 DECITIYE YIEW HIE Spacious 4 BR. 1 level home in one 'of Newport Beach's most exclusive areas. 24 hr. guard gates. Beautiful goll course. Outstanding day & night view. Great home for entertainment. Maxine Propp. $875,000 Incl. Land. WUlllllmUTI Beach area condo in security gated area 3 BR, 2 1h BA -2- story unit. Immaculate Steps to boat slip & beach Reduced to $269,000 with land. Martha Mac- nab. LIYAIU COllTIY FIEICI Lido Nord Bayfront! Lg warm family home (6-7 BR). 3 car gar- age. or 1-2 BR apt w/garage. French doors. brick patios & floors. crown molding, fireplace in master suite Dona Chichester. $1.295,000 ... , .. ~ ...... New on market. Large 2-story fanuly home, 5 BR, 3 BA. dirung room, famiJy room. One BR and BA downstairs. Premium lot with spa. Belle Partch. $224,500 -. UDO IAYFllOIT-ESTITE UU Under a million. Great invest- men~ 3 BR plus large playroom with bath over garage. pier and slip, Barbara Aune. $995,000 II CllYOl-lllCE I TERISlll This 5 BR. 4 'h BA custom pool & spa home with a contemporary flair offers a scenic fairway view, a reduced asking price and great long tenn financing w/very low interest rate Danny Bibb. $995,000 Ill OAIYOl-YIEW Best buy in Big Canyon. A Deane "Monaco" with a superb Vlew of Catalina. ocean and sunsets. 3 BR. with added family room, walled garden spa. and sauna in master bath. In addition, French doors open to an upstairs sun deck. Lucy Rose. $525,000 IPICTIOIW LIM ISLE UYFIOIT Rare opportunity for choice lo- c~tlon on the Bay. 55'~ntage .wSlh large deck for entertaining. ·5 BR, many except1onat features tailored to luxury living. Pier and slip for large boat Joan Lewis. $3, 750.000 Ill CUYOl-''llVlll" IOIEL Lovely 2 BR. den home. Prune cul-de-sac location. end unit. Wonderful garden setting w/mature landscaping. Private community. Martha Macnab $349.000 111 CAIYll 01 lll F&llW&Y A bl>autaful townhome on n superb location. High ceilings, walls of gJ and marble floors add to the sophi.stlcauon of this remodeled and expand d Oeauvllle. now 5 Bdnn and li- brary Lucy Rose $665,ooO'"' 844-6200 REAL ESTATE ASSIS· TANT needed. Local top ptodUClng eg9nt needt help. Mutt be llcenMCI. experienced & ag- gressive lo Ullat In all f1ceta of realdentlal aa , marketing & ahow- lng Of prQperty. Surplus of qualllled leads provided plus a top • prOd~g omc:.. Safety +strong comm1 .. 1on1 High Income potential. For appointment call Patrick Tenore 631-1269 °' 780-8702 SIUPMlll- Two bedroom condo, ex- cellent 'COndltlon. Price la right 182S..C Iowa St. ULllA llLI. llTIAll tred111onaJ llland cot- tage for a weekend r• treat or Wlnter/eummar t'Wltal property. One of the few 2 bdrm homee atlll avallabte In thla price category S2S5.000 ~i\TI HI HO"'l ltO"tl '-1-. REAL ESTATE en..toO 1001 ICe 1 + gwat 8')t 1753 Plaza del Sur, gr .. t toe. acrota from park. $287 ,000/terma Marshall Realty 67S...-t500 , ... ••l •u 1022 ClltEO llllEI Drive by ~15 Camden. 3 Bdrma, 4 •n baths. pvt beaches. dramatic courtyard with pool. For-ever ocean and harbor view $750,000 Incl land. UYEUUllS llO-Hll - CIMCUlllO IPElllT 1·1 POROT LIUTlll ............ ,000 S Bdrm•. 3 baths, lnclud" master aulte and large lamlly room and off- atr•t parking for up to 7 cara. OnfY 4 door• from the entrance to Mal BMc:h. NOW on the mar- ket at only $489,000. • 9"-1111 ~ ~~ o•llfLD NEW ON MARKET GREAT RENTAL PRICED RIGHT 2/ 1 /Bachelor 511 ORCHID OPEN HOUSE SUN 1-5 J.Ann Doran Bkr 759-0919 Baat.letck 1040 OW. FM IPPT. Tl ID 4BR 2 story widen, ofc. library, 3 car gar $240,000 3 BR home, lreahly painted. new carpet, 2 car garage $125.000. • ., lloOartllt lttr la.llH jiiiiiii--oiiioloii!!!!iiit~~-- W&Tlll VIEW ON THE LAKE. Two bedrooms + den. SECURITY GATES. Walk to Huntington Beach and Pier. Home ha.s many amenities + LARGE AS- SUMABLE LOAN!! ht ftr l&•ah l1aor Sclll11Mtr tr ErttH a.,,., OEITURY 21 IElll 114/112-nll lH/110-0.14 '::~::.~' s~tt~~ -Q, ctrs· ::: -----",..'" C~t I POUAN 0 '""' o..qe ... ti ........ b4d worth bofio-"' "'°*• • ~ .. ~· ~ ""' ..... ,, of ~h "~. ,,,.. ~ t.Gi\IO'•• HOTGUB I I' I I I I' HUHSOI I I I I t I GRI flW 1 ·I 1 I' r I l!eMt IN l ale II 1 lnl Low downlxlnt auumable JU l!I • ., fin or IM opt. Avail &ndO, gr .. t ;;;::, lmmed. HVH Montego 111h% A~. 10'le dn. Beautlfully upgradtdl•------- Aal('g $95,500. 495-5903 thro\)ghoutl 3 br, 2 ba, I p 1350 lam rm, luah landec;aplng. a11at Ill ltQNt IMc~ lOll S289K pp 769-1530 *HUIE OI, * LOWEST PRICE IN NB. Lg 44. U 8 4 x gr CHEAPI UYFlllT Moblle Home (Lido Park) 27 U 7 311grCHEAPERI UTIU llUll Pvt bch 873-&e 18 EV99 Pr1ced to 9"1 fut 3 BA 2ba With 1 Bf Income liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Rick BY*'S 780-7292 apt. $195,000 24hra BKA Co-oP. Open Sat/Sun 1·<4 IUT WUTOUFf "SET·UPS MAILED 1504 So. Bayfront Big l>eemed famUy room iiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Homa Wood. Rltr. with cozy bride flfeplaoa, • lllTI 11 •. .,.71 planked floor• •nd bullt • .-.. In boolclhelVea. The IMng OlllU 11111&1 and family room• open Ont 3 bdrm, one 2 bdrm & through French d~ to one bachelor apanment. brick petfo and tncioeed 1 block north of PCH. beet( yard. 3 Bdrm•. 2 Xlnt oPpoortunlty. LM In fl~laca, double gatage on• & rental Income wltll allty acc;eaa. Call to beald•. 759-1501 Bkr. UYlllUl-RI UD 2 Bedroom + den or 3 bdrm, 2 bath home. tat TD can be uaumed et 10•;. lnter .. t and Miier mey ~ry 2nd TD wfth ~ down. Prloed to Mil at '329,000. IDT llYI 111. .. OcnVu Trf..MI comunty poo11tenro. nw belClt 6p~~.~plc.d~11ar bttnt Qd termt Npt Ctell 2-3 8r. drtn. £nd unlta . . . . • .. ·.· *-' .. " ' ~ .. If 11,\ I .... S2<45,000 142-1200 j PETE BARRETr .. REALTY PETE BARRETI . REALTY * Eutllde hOUM fet rent. 2 8d. Ofll'. ·~ yard S875 /mo • dtP 6<4f.e001 Of 852~ 3bdnn 2ba toOltlltd by 1pllt level ci.tlgn w/Owlttl klda Ole. upper MOO'a 63M190Wt• •2& tba, Ylld. o.,.aoe. utll pd. Goldn-W"tm 1&95 no P9tS 752·5822 38R 2be, trplc, 2 car §'; fncd yd. $800/mo. "3-3695 ...... ~ 5 PRINTED PATTERN M388 .. .. HOMll FOR SALi! 2RDROOM 2921 4th St, Corona del Mar 875-tOOO $208,000 ·Saturday 1-5 **1229 Baytkte Or, Newport 8eaCh . ' 831·1400 IM0,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 720 Goldenrod, COM 844-7211 $199,000 Sun 1-4 · • 10 Morning View (T Roe ridge) Irvine 955-2830 $299,000 Sat/Sun ,,-5:30 3028 OOMn, Corona d9I Mar 875-tOOO 1725,000 Saturday 1-5 324 Poppy Ave, Corona del Mar 873-8494 $350,000 Sunday 1-5 2 BR plue 'AM Ml or DEN ••23 BHChcomber Or, Jnmln• Crk, CdM 831-7300 $575,000 Sun 1-5 23 HIUQrua, Turtle Rok,lrvlne 844-1200 $222,000 Sat 1-5 9 Northampton, BelcoUrt Hiii, NB 84+-8200 $5e0,000 SaVSun 1<>-8 ••9 OcMn Vllta, Sea late, NB 844-8200 $535,000 Sun 1-5 2025 Pott Brtltol (Harbor Vu Hmee) COM 875-eOOO $242,000 Saturday 1-5 1951 Pott LockaletQh, H.V Hma, N.Bch 844-9060 $269,500 Sunday 1·5 I 1230 So. Broadway, Santa Ana ~ $97,000 Sunday 1-5 •7929 South'#eat, Huntington Beach 962-8891 $175,000 Saturday 12-<4 I BEDROOM • 2723 5th St Corona del Mar 844-1208 $349,600-SeturdaJ 12;00_. 1207 Blue Gum, Dover Shorea, Npt Beh 873-<4400 $444,500 Sunday 1-5 4515 Hampden, COM 87MIOOO '450,000 Sun 1·5 302 Henotrope, Okte Corona del Mar 1215 Mariner• Drive, Baycreat, NB 831-7300 $395,000 Dally 1·5 *•172<4 Mlnorca Pl.,(Mesa Verde) C.M "32-9103 $17-4,900 Sat/Sun 1o-e * *308 Morning Star Ln, DOver Shores, NB 831-7300 $885,000 Sun 1·5 1528 Orange Ave,(COrn. Palmer)Colta M ... 873-1600 $216,000 Sunday 11_. 2333 Cornell, Cotta M ... 548-2313 $134,900 Sunday 1-4 *•10&4 Peecador Or, Dover Shor•, NB 831-7300 $550,000 Sun 1-5 . •332 PolnMttla. Corona del M•r 831-7300 $525,000 Sun 1-5 2377 Purdue, Coat• Meu 845-0303 S189,500 Sat/Sun 2-5 , 1 Rue Vert•. Big Cyn, NB 84<4-8200 $&49,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 20181 Spruce St, S.A. Hta, Back Bay _ 8<42-5200 S159,000 Sunday 1·5 1349 SUIHX Lane, WEttcllff, N.B. 8<42-5200$234,500 Sunday 1-4:30 4BEDROOM 2542 Clrcle, Bayshore, NB 844-8200 $329,000 Sun 1-5 2333 Cornell, Costa Mesa 5-48-2313 $134,900 Sunday l-4 *., 18 Cypreu Pt (Bia Canyon) Nwpt Bch 759-9100 $1, 100,000 Sunday 1-5 ** 1024 E. Balboa Blvd, Penln. Pt, NB 631-1400 $1,050,000 Sunday 1-5 *1338 Galaxy orive-(Oover Shores} NB 873-7300 $985,000 Sat/Sun 1_.:30 **760 Via Lido Nord, Lido, NB 873-7300 $1,726,000 Sun 1_. ___ 1r1421 Kings Rd {N~ Helghtsl__NB 875-6000 $450,000 Saturday 1-5 * • 1218 Polaris, Newport e.ach 5-48-2313 $550,000 Sunday 1-5 5QO Rockford, Corona del Mar 159-1501 $295,000 Sunday 1-5 .. 9 Hermitage Big Cyn, NB 844-8200 $860,000 *•8 Jade Cove, NB 7~8333 $825,000 · • 1019 Marian Lane, W•tcltff, NB Sun 1-e 831-7300 $495,000 Sun 1-5 *1328 Mariners Drive, Baycr•t, NB 631-7300$345,000 Sat/Sun 1·5 *""1878 Maul, M ... Verde, CM 540-0373 $375,000 Sun1-5 ~9:le.~~~hp1me~a M ... ., Sat/Sun ,.._ **4CM Morning Star Ln, N.wport Beectl 844-90GO $550,000 Saturday 1-5 *•34 Morro Bay, Spyglua, CdM 751-8190 749,000 Sunday 1-4 2029 National, Costa M... ' 548-2313 $118,900 Sunday 1-4 #9 Monaco, (Harbor Ridge) Newport 8eech 842-3850 $625,000 Sunday 12-4 • 223 PolnHttla, Olde Corona def Mar 87~ $635,000 SaVSun 1-5 1829 Port Taggart, Newport Buch 759-9100 $335,000 Sunday 1·5 *1934 Port Trinity, HV Hma,NB 84~ $339,500 Sunday 1·5 . *•19 Royal St. Gec)rge, Big Cyn, NB 844-8200 $685,000 Sat 1-5 *1828 Santiago Or, Baycr•t. 831-7300 $385,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 *1227 Santiago Or, Dover Shores, NB 631-7300 $525,000 Sun 1-5 1148 Santiago Or, Dover Shores. NB 831-7300 $850,000 Sun 1-5 •2001 Santiago, Baycrat, Npt Beh 87~ $345,000 Sun 1-5 * •3807 Seabr98Z8,HVH, COM. 84<4-8200 $475,000 SaVSun 1-5 * •3384 SummerMt, Cotta Mm 845-0303 $246,900 Sunday 2-5 ___ 192.tTeralta lane. Harbor H~htands, NB 631-7300 $175,000 Sun 1-5 *•14 Torrey Pines, Btg Cyn NB 644-6200 $895,000 Sat 2-5 1826 Tradewlnds Lane, Baycr•t. NB 631-7300 $339,000 Sun 1-5 *4639 Tremont Lane, CaMeo Shor•. NB 831-7300 $595,000 ·Sat/Sun 1-5 870 W. 20th Street, Costa Mesa 1230 Sand Key (Harbor Vu Hiiis) COM 675-6000 '319,000 Sa!urday 1·5 // 941 Serra Way (Mesa Del Mar} C.M. 875-«>00 $439,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 33eO N9Yada M ... Verde, CM. 831-7370 S145,500 . Sun 1-5 1409 Slntanella Terr, ""4ne Terr., N.B 759-18n $278,SOOFEE Sat/Sun 1-5 214 Via lthlCI Udo, NB 875-8181 $420,000 Sat/SUn 1-5 Z425 W. Camden, Santa Ana 646-2313 1104,000 Sunday 1_. a • plue FAM RM or DEN S83 aJ:2~~ 8~:" BMch Sunday 1-5 254 Ewnlng Cenyon Rd. (Shoredttf) CdM --= 87S-1181 IS25;000 Sun 1-5 ••3488 Fuehtla (OreenbrOOk) CO.ta M ... ~2313 1187,500 Sunday 1-<4:30 •• 1900 Gliluy Ortw, Dover 8h0t ... NB 831-7$00 $548,000 Sun 1·5 * * 111 G St. Belt>oe Penln., Npt Bch 818 HHS489,000 Sunday 1·5 2711 tWb6t VleW Or (HVH), N.8 780-8333 *585,000 Sunday 1·5 1HS lrWMt Ave (Coeta Mell) &45-7071 1111,000 81t1Sun 1·5 .. Junlpero Mela del Mar, CM 711-3181 1137.000 tun 1-6 1Ut keel Dr, HVH, COM • tw-UOO '349,000 :..Sun 2-5 * * •100 KlnOI AOed. Clttt Haven, NB U1·1300 '1516,000 • Bun 1.:5 •1• ........ Cott• Mell ~13 t1M,OOO unday 1-5 "32-8451 $138,500 Sat/Sun 12-4 399 Sivllli Ave, Bilooa Peninsula 873-4400 ~7.500 ,Sunday 9-5 3917 Teakwood (SC Ptza area) S. Santa Ana 675--6000 $189,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 **828 Via Lido Nord, NB 760-8333 $2.350,000 124 Via Trieste, Udo tale, N.B Sun 1-5 673-4400 ~49,000 Sunday 1-5 2409 Tustin Ave, Back Bay, C.M 873-4400 $269,000 Sunday 1-5 4 BR plua FAM RM or DEN •2101 Arbu1UI, e-Blutf, NB~ .. 644-4200 1275,000 Sun 1-6 - 28 Royal St. 090fge, Big Cyn, NB 8<44-8200 1995,000 Sun 1·5 1821 Bay~de Or. CdM 831-1268 11,095,000 . . S.tSun 1·5 ••601 Bayside Or, Promontory Bay, NB 831-1400 $1, 150,000 ,Sat/Sun 1·S •;5~~~~N~nd~30-4:30 911 Ctltf om.. Clltf Haven. NB 831·7300 $430,000 un 1-5 1109 Denn , Oolta MeM 8<45-0303 1338.800 Sunday 1·S 1•41 Galaxy Or, DoYer Shorea, Npt BMch Ma.:5&47 1295,000 81t/Sun 1•5 1330 Owaxy Or, JBayetest,N 87~7300 1775.000 Sun 1..-30 846-7171 $119,900 Sunday 1-5 1102 Wut Burns, Santa Ana 759-1501 $155,000 Sunday 1-5 2015 Windward. Baycrest, N.B. 831-1400 $292,000 Sunday-5 ""2125 Yacht Yankee, Seaview, N.8. 644-9060 $368,000 Sunday 1-5 58EDAOOM 2601 llland View Or, Corona del Mar G«-9060 $365,000 Sunday 1-S 5 IA plua FAM RM or DEN •• 6 Trafalger. Harbor Rktge ~0-4888 $1,950,000 Sunday 1-5 2215 Aha Vllta, Eutbhlff COM 644·6200 $28.9,500 Sat/Sun 1·5 21 Augusta, Btg cyn, NB 8'44·8200 $695,000 Sun 1·S • 5Rue Font• ne. Big Cyn, NB 644--6200 $665,000 Sun 1.;s •321 Plazza Udo (Udo I ) NB 673-7787 1850,000. Sat/SUn 1·& ••3802 Channel pace. Npt ltland. NB 631·7300 &650.000 sun 1-s * •20 ~ POlnt. B canyon 8 631-7300 5,000 n 11~ •509 Oe Anza, COM · feo-8333 $$96,000 .. •1821 Leewlrd Lw, a.,cw-. NB 831-7300 1388,000 8un 1-1 *•33 Montpelier H.Atdge, NB ~200 saso.ooo aun 1-a 1228 Polwta OrM, ~ 8horee. NB 831-7300 1845.000 8at/8un 1-5 2018 S8nt1ego Dr, OoYet Shor ... N8 831-7300 S4&8,000 Sun 1-6 *•14 Trat.aa-, H. Ridge, NB 7eo-1333. t1,8'6.000· 88t/8Un ~ ' 220 Via Genoe.. Udo ..... N.B ~50.000 . luf*Y1-6 eee Vla Udo 8oud, Udo ... N.8 644-toeO 1615,000 8&lftdllt 1-I **239 'fie Udo 8oud {Udo ........ ldl 75M100 11,5&0.000 · 8atl9un 1-S 191DROOM 103 Via Udo 8oud (Udo .... , Nwpt ]leh 75t-t10Q 12.950,000 '~ 1-5 .. ,._, ___ ... ***107 Mitford, Cam Shrs, COM 644-l200 11.~.0000 Sat/Sun 1-4 ••""17 Alduell .. or •• ......_,~ 536-3347 15,:5 Mmton Set/Suri 124 ***101 Vla Udo Saud.NB e15-8181 M .e50,000 sat1Sun 12-e •32 Ima Loa Ct, NB 873-7300S 1&4,000 ***.,2525 ~ BIYd, #G4 (CdM) &4Mt59 '389,500 8un 1-6 ••25 SM laland, N9wpc>rt a.ch 84S-0303 $285,000 Sunday 2-6 38EDROOll * 7 Paloe, Rancho S... J09q .: IMne 75t-1501 $187,500 Sunday 1-5 *2018 Vlata caudel, 8'utf9, N.8. 960-M 11 s 1&4,900 s.t/Sun 1-5 *430 Vllta Grande, Bluffa, NB 759-9100 $211,500 s.turchly :1~ •BEDROOM *2124 Vltta L.INdo, Bluffs, N.8 759-1501 $209,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 TOWNHOUSES FOR IA&.e 28R-FAllRMorDEN 34 Sea Island (Ford & Jamboree) N.8 . 662-1873 $299,000 sun. 1-5 3 BR~ FAM RM or DEN 301 V11ta TNtna. Newport 8eeCt\ 640--5751 $199,000 Sat/Sun 1-4 DUPLIXEI 1 a • 211t'pNlllf 512 On::hid, COM 944 .. 7211 $325,000 1Mplua18" Sun 2-5 **1504 So. Baytront, Uttte a.lboe 111. 67s-.M78 1195,000 Sat/Sun 1..- IM IM.:t-18" IM,...1M,._.1 .. 5' ~ C>rchkS. corone • Mw 75t.Oe19 2111811ch Sunday 1.S • I .. a"atWLE UW Two Bdrm, 1 bath. clean "" upper unit. $515/mo, No 1Br. frig, range, laundry, pets 641-9352 pool. carport No pell $495/mo. WI lfffl l CHIOE 931 W 19th St ~92 want a Mlectlon of great BACHELOR epl w/refr'lg. llvtng? We can offer any- U 1111 Incl No pet• thing Ir a small apt to a $300/mo 646-4J82 4 Bd hM If lootllng In CM. _ NB, Of HB think of us flrst EutSlde 2 bd 1t>a frple, for thlt ch<>IC9 ldMI hv1ng. patio, sngl ;at $750/mo TSL MGMT 642-1603 Agt Carol 759~9100 NB REALTY 875-1642 E..SIDE 2br qul9t garden ---- ~LJres no pet1 $550 We!itfield E-1ld• bach apt. Frig, IP&ITllmS atove, nu crpt & paint. Beautlful garden aptl., Utlls paid. No gar/no patlol. deek1. apa. No pell. $380 111 & ,..... pell Ideal 1 peraon. Wkdya 28drm, 2Ba SUS ca11 att 4PM 549~3875 398 w. w'i.on 831-5583 E·Slde Studio houM Pf'I-WESTSIDE 1 BDRM vate Qu .. t utl pd gar-Neat & clHn $475. denet $4.o mo 645-6453 ee2-1100 Im • .,.. II W•talde C.M. 2BR 1ba, -1 all utll pd New cpt/drpa $490/mo 2 Bd 1ba, clOM $650/mo, S300 NC. Call to 1hop1, buHs & Betl'l at 631-5230 · 1Chool1. 2278 Maple TIL l&UIE•EIT 142·1IOI Kenneybunkport? Isn't that the boat that won The America's Cup in 751 .... ' fl.J "./' ..... If 1011 rt lllll s11r• •!IO (Qt •ll•IJ llfnnepbl.inkporl •1$ don I '"' !:Id ,ou rr not ''°"' ic,nntybllM~porl is Ollt ct JC dlSl•"'I '' y ~ Mtttlll aoaitmtnt fl()orpl~ns •I ~1•\lld v , 111 H11ntmcton 8u II S'•• nc1 VIII• ~ 1$ I rtSU!t ol IOIJ PffSOllJ' Zfd OfOftsSIO~ Tne •md ot a 140fl ~11 dtitttt A 11t1 :1 bltncl ot it1ICJft atld lmnc -H fld '" ' IMut * tti b.l 111 ~oeh and quiet pOMs cooltd bf n1lilf1 O< An l)ftft Add 10 IMI ftlllt COIKll •11'1 POOis ' ~a atld • rori.tn nt loc1tion l!fal s~ and "''P'O~l'llcnt ind you tt 10: 1 pla(t •nront •Oulcl oroudly un bomt 1h tn lltMtJOll~pom Ont efld l•O l'fdtoom ont and two bllll t~rtmtnts · and to•nllavtn • 2Cenrrol o~ • 2 T9'11' • Courts ReMrVeNow for Fal Occupancy Pofnte N9'el Apor1ment1 Leosing Ofhce Open10to6 -: I lllO .. COUNSELOR IDITY PllUTlll ....... Sl.47 '*hour HOROS COPE ' ----- SYDNEY 0MARr t We on.t exc:.llent befl.. ent1. Send tetter of ~ cation or awtY In S*90n Monday or Wednelday 1011m-1 pm at tM P..-.on- nel Dept: UEUTll UllllllUll Dn•TEL 1380 Harbor laland Or. San ~. CA. 92101 Equal Op~unlty Employer For Ad Action Cal a Daiy Piot AD-VIS{Mt 642-5678 Newspaper We Wiii provtde an exo.1- lent aawy and ~tit package, uniform• and moet tooi.. Pteue apply In penon Of call (714) 120-2tm • THE IRYllE . -PART-TIME. Veried hOul'I COIPllY ~=·M.:~,:~ IRVINE PACIFIC DIVISION pendable ~ (amalt S10NewportCenttrOr. tru.ek. v.,,. 1tat1on -efloOt ...,aoon> to Ulllt ,,.... Newpor1 Beech, CA 92SGO peper deaiet In lrWl9 ,.. Mv9' ~ 4Mpen- Equal Opportunily dabla. Contact Oreg Emp&o)w Hyde Monday ttvu Friday llll'flUMI llAI ~t'WMl'I 930 and 10 30 O hrt Wffk. t5 '"· • m only 842..t321 840-2700 Mk '°' 8oM6e • KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES! f . . CIRCLE K-MAUETS I DEER VALLEY RESORT Wert u• Ski at l111rio1'1 ht•i•r Ski lluert A representative will be In Costa Mesa to Interview tor winter seasonal employment. For further Inf ormatlon prior to Sept. 19, call (1) (801) 649-1000. ext. 1619. On Sept. 19, call (71•) S•0-2500. Ask for Georgia Tay- lor. District Managers II you enic>Y ~ Wl young boys & 91rb CM1d d~ tob' 01• "°' tor you. ton\ic:ler o cotfff m ttt. ~wt.paper circulo- ttOn t .. td Th11 ,, o vniq11e po"''°" wittl doily cholle~' & ,....,(l(d\. CNr openrn;• o•t 1mmedi0 ... Appiliec:m mv\t hO'ft o "°"• stcrtlOl'lw090ft or trv< k. Wt offer an e11ctllent solo!y w1th o bol'IU' pion ond go' o11owonce We ho OC'I oce t be fit pl<lfl tbclt lude ho\p1 totlzot!Ofl turQft(e, l1bofol V\X01 on ~ holiday\ . Ollom017 pm · 330 W. Bay Costa Me a, CA 92626 • A•tt1WuW toJ.O --·-··--------......... ....,._.,.,. ________ _ ,_,_, -S. 11 ARRERA CPE. u ko tttw(l:M F) i~·----- 10 OllPI H Yllll cab Root. tow ml (286ZCD) ''"' ** '12 IElll •• YIW FuU ~.I.ow Mllea (1FMS206) .. ..... . ..-. Bluo wJt>lue, loaded. $38,350 845°4800dy1, 642·72~1 evestwknda 'MI 1 J CARRERA COUPE n.otbl :.:._toaded-unreo 100 mt w7,7&0 OaY9 8'&5-4800 Eve a.2·7251 I 8RIS1'0l1 A'J WINGER . IN SANTA #.NA I • 'IZEl.flUll lllPI ... Cltrlallt. 8KIL UlRED FULL llMEJSALARY PAV COMMENSURATE INTERVIEW: 87~7130 I !COAST lltLY PILIT p 0 eox 1580. Colla M C. 9%828 142·4121 ut. I02 VOTER REGISTRATION Riding tes on1 HotsH WORKERS $8· 15 HOUR provided-all levels L•d po Pd 3 umee wkly No h 0 r u s a v a II • H e 71320! auto a/C(671VCX) 79 820l 4*Pd 11r(453WI IO 320l 6sp 1tr( 1JWB 133) IO 7331 alt rd( 1ASX044) --.... WE-~l-lf ___ 80 320l 5tp a/rt tBEN198) 11320l 51pd alr(OOO 199) OWi Oa•s 813201A1T1/rt1DAG*) -113201511). 'S'( 1dog860) WlllY USED CARS & TRUCKS COME IN OR CALVOR FIEIDPUIUL CO<mlef·OeLllto nm11.n 1821 t BEACH BL VO. HUNTINGTON BEACH 14l-1Dll;l41·11J1 B 1 32015•p 1/r( 1the359) 8 l 733161p I'd (351489) 82633cil ld'd(teiv"4.0l 82.320l 5td t /r( 1•J"4 HI) 12 320l 6sp air( tOZI= 145, 1332016ap l 'd(1fll't163) 13 320l 5ap alr(ltwi515) a2015tp ·s· 1315905) 836211Ets.p l 'd(956441) 13 320• 5lp •lr11 tti-'90) 13..528E 6ap IOw(11fd384) ~R (11•)111·1111 208 W. 1at, Senta Ana CLOSED SUNDAYS Couch. 2 end tables. cot•---.,,.----=---tbt, chr. $200/obo for all. '81 Santana 20', xlnt. o4 WE WAIT YM LARGE SELECTION OF 2878 Boa Vllta, ...... salt•. o/b, race ' Nfety GLUll 1111 UIJ NEW a USED BMW'SI Verde. CM, 540-9205 geer, SetOO 845-4270 SM Roneld Ota LMI IDOi ... Moving 13' gold relg. '13 WINDJAMMER 34. VOLUME SALES $100, ot't blkt 115, gry Loaded IOf cruising. Mult • SERVICE& LEASING Levolor bflnds $300, mlac Mil. 1451<, 499-38&8 38t~~cf ~b~~· housenold.e7~74 att9 DOWNEAST 38' $60,000 (No.Chefrye.iut-"405) Must Seit Mahog o4 Poctet with tenns. Loadedll 714 llH) 111-1110 Bed, N1teStand1, HI-Boy, 893-"4271 t, 1 ldal 1 1-A-.. & ,,._ blk lac ChlnotHrl•· •--------J HZ2 rade-lnaWetcome r,g re, x n ""'"' a,,~ Secty, Pink Chlntl Sote, 1-30 Ex-cond m111y X1ta ltfl OPEN SEVEN DAYS JmAWYU 1144! 7 TO CIHSE FRll 2121'• TO CHOOSE FROM 1·Guard Red 1·Slate BIU. 6750 Manchester Blvd Buena Park (11•) 121-1010 pear. $18~ 845-5.283 Wi"" 8..,.k Chr, Tbla, raceorcrutteMuat ... to _ .. _ _,.._._. .. ___ --------Practical NurM. Christian 1--------... -eclatatl 493 1611 MUST SEE. .... TUllUUSllTUT ladywantspvtduty.Mon· llECOllAPPLIAICEI Lamps, Sew Mach appr • '77JEEPCJ7 D1t1u Pre.IS l achool age. A,,.,.. Fri. tocat ref 564-5958 WASHERS. DRYERS. 951-1539 ()( 476·2039 laMt, lCtnt cond. Mu11 Mii. Hardtop, V-8 with --.!!""!'l.71'!!1"'e!'!2~1ol""l'•-- noon1 E.C E. credit a. Refrtgerator1 SSO·S200 Oak bunk bed• Xlnt cond S7SO OBO 837·5844 exceptionally low mllel xlnt cond. low ml =-:~=-------,;:-:::~ Balboa. 17:J..8233 SELL Idle item• with • ... ~f,!j{)222S8uoP9fr 6310r1~3M197 $250. 644-99M aft. epm' Newport 21 w/Harbor (BulnderLL .. 2,!JXKEY)(#T801YOOTTL~) $2300. 640-2574 lolla l!rct IHI Daily Piiot Cluaifled Ad ,.....,.. oorl"" Inboard VHF ,...,.. " 174 Silver Shadow Xlnt TDCIEI . W Pit Sofa beige lrg $975obo m .... • • 19202 Bach 982~829 '71 240Z $2300, 4 spd, cond Must ... Make C .. urc .. ·pr•schl. Must ••It Wut.. 5118 Bait UtN 9100 Ukenewf 5"48·1849 knot mtr. 111* muter. 8 4 1&1L ) IL.I 30 need work (188RVC) call • ..... 7 ,, ,. _ _ .. ua. 8 winches, pad w•lt """' 720-0735 ev/wknds offer 642·1803/842.,,.... ~~ET~JUCIEIC65&-4335·~..__~.~-~.' oa·i1y ,.1,01... Wd f-«ze br Mt 8pc $185 steer. -Make ot(er. 8 B! .. 'kl& XLT -------,.---=,-------::t'""l""i -=t .............. _ .......... --5pc $1.0 cash 851M>518 575-5139 Win trade '°' . 1 ... onoco. ... ....... '78 O•ttunGX ~'· power boat pkg. tuD power options. wtthStereo&Alr(298312) ·7f9CELICA 4 spd n.tnt Btaatlaol• This week OnlYI •72 25 fl xlnt cond ~80 11688 took• gd S995 645-7578 ~--.11 1114 '79 LUV Stekebed TruClc ' * * * 1 GRADE 1 & 8. Catholic A.-..-Ut Albin Motor .. ner Auto ("4T3&204) •78 Datsun '78 Corolla, 1 39K ml, llglon, math, soc:lal atUd· Our Di play Advertising de· Mag'IC ralaO<I Uemt;;;lhlp, pllot. RDF, VHF. New $3688 with Automatic and Air mechaound, good body lea. B.A Calif. credential. I k' ( $400. 861--4927 aalls & cenvaN Very BILL MAXEY TOYOTA Cond. (557UXV) cond $2000 834-9185 ~1166 Of 8'&4-0&60 partm~nl is oo tnf; or on am-l ,214 clean. Newport 11tp 12188 ;--78 C oll W ....... ..A r·11 t Jtwt ry 118.500 '"'--1er 57~7115 Tncltt to3S or a ag """' .,.,,., bitiou ~rson to ' an "" r y _ .,.... • ** * 10 ml ec fm/cu xtnt cond TUOIUS&IDE Pltime, 8:15 to 12:15 am deify. Hunt Bch area $-4.60 hr. 786-7521 tlYel TUllUS/PI fOf ctlrlstlan achoOI Apply 18835 Brookhurst st FV 962·3312 leu·I po iti oo. Gentleman1 14KConoord Windsurfer. Hlfly. Uled 177TovofXsA-SPU BILLMAXEYTOYOTA S3500obOK2·1793wkn Candidate bould rwi """" J:ood Manner Watch, Brend 1Wk:eS525. 857·14'48 1 wlthatereo&ahell 192028elch 962--0829 ,... ft---latlll In box paid (1H09757) -, '78ToyotaCorOll• communication .. kill ... flt>'<ibilit~ : $62'00 Mii for $3700 Sli~b 70U *** '75 280Z. xlnt cond, new Clean (523PPH) and an aptitude for learmng : 760~1556 after 5 pm 20•™at on cholC8 S()I '78MAZOAPU ~~·t':i:~C~~~P/A !2~8! tiuickl". ui--ellu•at •211 .npt mooring 13,000 ·with shed, SHARP •78 ToyotaCetk:a 1 111UK • 499 5249 eves &-9pm (1H20305) '71 280Z 2+2 1 owner.• Send R""unw to: 1!>1 HllD carpet .crubber • $2388 Spd, AIC. AM/FM, lo ml Uftback, Automatle r. () I r ·1 . w/metal backbrulh. Top Slip In Npt. Rent Of trade *** xlntcondS5750551-2594 Tren1 ,XTRANlce 4 )ran"t' '-'o a .. l oi '· 1 ol f I boat (862RLR) 1101 ICllJ. W "' . cond $275 Call Loyd or use 0 power • '78 Datsun Pickup II .... b P.O. no~ I ;)()0 ·. 873-8930 831·525"4 or 875-2858 Veryc•-anSh ..... .__ '78 280Z coope 1 OWMf 4 12988 Should be flm lar ... th ru • 2 -"' "'",.,_,, apd air cass Xtnt $6300 * * '* ber teatlng, compound· Co.,la '1f's.a. (,a. '>2b' h : l'lt x 1 IOlld slate pool tbl. 35' Newport mooring. (1L38258) 687·7000 675·9781 ave '78 CorollaSRS Ing, motdlng, etc Medical ,\ 11 n: LI ~A '-\ '11111 $400 obo "496-6853 Cho1ee Balboa Isl. lo-$2488 hllback. AM/FM C.h 1>eoet11s. vactlOn. profit _ cation. Fbrgll cruiser 23'. * * * '19 510 2 door hatchback, (05&YIL) lharlng. Starting aal"Y ORANGE C O AST D Ail Y PILO r Garden Equip lawnmower tralter(gd cond) 118,500 *** al e, am/Im steteo. idnt S3llO plWk Contact Don 1oo w f\A'I' -; 1 • < oc; 1 A Mf S• t:• ci>&:>b Meder misc; 1ooi. 595 639-3782 °' 538·1861 '82 CtleVS-fOPtcilup cono $3600 497.2903 13213 0 ... .. ...... 880 L'G .. RO • .... '1 ~ 552·3299 with Fl.._.g·-··a .. -11 ** * a ..... '"..,_ " --45'x 12· with 3 Bd 2ba d• .,,.. ,.._ ,,.. ·at 280 2X GL Pectcage ·ao Toyota CorOlta INC --------=-----------Juho lglesiH tktl great luxeapt.$2000673-7538 <2A56781l T-topa, Loaded w/xlr .. SunRoof,Stereo(29958) JEUPlllE Wiii seats ~ 1354 Aft 5PM see ad cl&ss 11 2707 S4483 New ttrea. Sharp! $9.995 $3488 Patt time wor1t In Santa IJll!!~············· Julio Iglesias 2 tc:kt1 9/29 Ava.II lmmed. 31 ' & under. '79 0:,:.\ Ton 7 ""' 8848 * * * Ht-0110 AA'ILY I .er. • MIKE McKDIMA'S SOUTH COUMTY MOTORS ® 1114 RAlllT OOIVEllTllLE Wolfsburg EdlUon 41 mo c I! l. S236 'I• • 1aa per mo TOPSIU20 64 CAP St5.40t $2500 CAP ttductlOn Aesid\111 $5600 28 ® 111• IClllOCCO S1IOO USI Ulll 4lmoCE L • 1236 • ,._ "1 rno TOP $12 01120 CAP 112 000 Atlld\ill '5 716 ot ® 111• V&lllOI IL eo moC E L 0 U29 98 • ta• P9' IT'O TOP 1 14 6M 90 CA~ 114.195 $2000 CAP ttduellOn Rnidual SSIAO 90 111' llPULSE 4S moCEL v $217 • IU per MO TOP $11040M CAP $11,600 SSOO CAP reduction Aetie.,.1 SS268 71 1_,. Player. c wtr• wt\l COYefl UEWF713) llUll .-.. ~. '11 El.llUll 11111m Fun l)OWer OCZT60fl ,,, .... Malibu wtlbge atr.pwr· rlldlalt-OflQ ownr $2495 546-9514'54'7'·5182 1982 MONTI! CARLO AlrCond .. Power St.., & 8rtlt•. Auto Trene, V:.t (312155) M715 4 mo/24,000 ml ..,., cntrc:t. eublprlor .... 18401 a..ich Hunt Beh M7·1707 IO CAPRICE CLASSIC "4dr allV« V-t ~ E.irtra $5800/obo ~8524 '7& Monte CW1o Landau, ...wythtng plue M'rOOf. $3500. P.l>. 848-2800 C ONNELL CHEVROLET .'X.)I II t I I• r I<. ' ""'' \ \1t ... S4i>-1200 I '111 Ford Mustang '1'-Top'',AlrCond, we sheel evtt ( 1 CNOtt5) $"4988 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 19202 8-Gh 112-0829 8 cylinder. ale, 111ck lhlft, 5404281 '87 Muatang. I cyt. atr. nu paint, ltel'90, vwy olMtl $2.00 obo. 16CM887 '87 Muatano rutb.at 289, Aff. PIS, em 8-treok, nu redial• $1500. 55t-ae71 '73 LTD StaUon Wegon, od cond .. elc. pwr 1t..,, l800 obo. 848-1313 Ana office. no •XP8f-nee. ~' ~ 00 A UTTlE Pac Aph $35ea 8'&5-3125 Ullt. avall. Newport L.and· Adventurer 'SE' J '79 Toyolt'" !1 1 Ce1(7"'~UOCpeX) ST Company wlll train. No l : ~ BUSINESS IN YOUR S03 E E..t,._, Loaded W euto. A/C, PIS, w "" r •~ t' ~ Magic ttland Charter Ing. _.-niter, ,~ $3488 Mlttng. salary. 5-9 Mon· ~~u. ~ OWN HOME Member1hlpf0tNle. NB.675--0574 crulae,snr1,Jttretank. s;rr~• *** A i.IBob•l'LHllng '74 Pinto. Gd cond. Frt 9-1 Sat. Ideal for High .....___ ~·r·~-:-~~·~''"f' . ., 675-7879evenlngs. N_,. lmmed. allp~ NPT blg Urea. m0te(1T03121) .81 Toyota Cetk:aGT 11000/obo, ~6-7459 School atudenta. Suaan, ·---, \ 9 .!_t ·, •• ~ ~ ....... $5488 Llf __ .. -A .. 1 18., .. VBZ) 187 11 Beach Blvd •------,,.......--=-662-5843 .-.. I ~...;~.: •. f (. J r· MAGIC ISL-AND Gold HRBR 40' power boat BILLMAXEYTOYOTA /1 • • i! " tb...,.., .. ,tner ~ Huntington Beach '78 Musteng. Cleen. Bl-~ -" ... J •• ..-!-·. ·•·. : · (-' './ Membership $500/obo rentlse 497-l8tO 19202Beac:h 862-0829 BILLM~:V~oYOTA (7 14) 142-2000 ::'1~1~~~:S:'· 1tLDIOIE WOii .~. • '7 ~ ! · ~ tak .. M0-5119 SLIPS avatl tor 27 h+ new ·74 Chevy Love P/U $875; 19202 Beach 962-0829 Patt time eYenlng work, no ~ Maple Tbl, 4 cf\rs (•2 )( and nearly new aallboatt. '72 Mazda RX2, seso. ' ,. .. I'll '76 Pinto Wgn, V6, auto, u.per. nee Company wm GAUGE SAU ADS NOW ' • >, i M ") SH5. II' Wooden John 675-9080 538-7.01/960-5536 r Uf• WE CARE gd cond S1llOO; Audi rl,,,. train. $81ary, no aelhng CLASSIPIED IY CITYI Dt~hy $85 . Ladlel 10 WANTED: 27' boat allp In '17 n...A.... Van auto air Btdl 9125 ·71 TR7 ShHp1~ln1, trlr hitch. Bteupunkl Oeph, 662·5843 SH auow Spd $70. 844-0780 Nwpt Hrbr. Needect 10/1. cua't'inrr:' Truly exc.i1enti '14 IHll CIYIC Blaupunkt cut AC Pwr ltW I lst4 em/fm 8 tr.at 142-0111 The Orange County Modern 8 cushion c:oucti No llV9aboard 851-23SO 54685 a.1•2547 $1351mo.$475down ant Mags·Beautlfull '79 MUSTANG red/Wh1 MllSMl1 Newport Beech l&IMI hlu• • ..,.,. ltac~ Ilk• new S98. dbl WANTED· Slip 31' 197"4 Ford Truck. F250, Ck>MdEndCommerc:W ::;~~9~!!~ or auto v-e '3500/obo pp =ngh•:or anc~~'."9:5 DECORATOR BORED-5263 NEPTuNE macreme brown plant Ber1ram, aide tie ok, call 31,. ton A/T n.ins gd l.eaM 730-2425 718-8352 wpm ci«lcal .-1111 re-Reedytoatartanew Cus-SAT SUN 8am·12pm holder w/ptantt worth Tom, 64~126 60K Ml $2200 980-7285 ALL·SAVERSLEASING VtlklWlfta 1173 '81 Eac«1 Wegon, 4 apd, qulre'd. 11156/mo to tom home lurnlshlngs LOTS OF FURNITURE $1SO, now $49. OU paint· • 1012 · . (71"4)432·1917 :'...., BUG ...... If I I pl• lt•eo 35mpg, Qreat os lngs S25. frame• S3. lacyclu Fiberglass camperlhetl for , "" • .... ut u nt. ceti<f S26s0. 541-s0e7 atatt + benefits. Call ~ end garage sale all at ALL KIN brown bean bag like new, p -eot PGN 10· $250 standard bed mint truck 78 Honda Accord, 2 dOOt, run• good, mull Mii • V 1-ll7S •----'-----lwHn 9.2 for appt rock bottom prices Boat seat• Kirby V.C: S60 new. now I 15. Lots -o7o 982-3528 . 1200 OBO. 2 tubelest auto, atereo. super cond MOVINGt S 1800 OBO O ..,. •14TEllPI11• 833-0<411,Ext 252 Sal/Sun 1510 Abalone cuum home computer of clothH, leather & anowttresG78-14S25ea S34SO . 5't1·S087 8"42-"49'8LvMag. • ·7& 2•56( Wagon ·MW Futlprtoe.lmmac.loml.ec TllOl lllYEllS Pl. Lltt1:1t~~; Island gspeama1ce'5er. '·,,"retaprrl0021600,118+.· sued• coat• & much ••torqclu/ OB.O. 548·1"430 '81 HONDA CIVIC 68 vw bug, lmmac In/out, clutch,br•k••"' !,."'S,.Pd pe at ster99 IN/buy oec N 1 11 m0te Come to 212 Chi· e--am 1011 •-t' ><tra Clean, low mlle1, Air reblt eng, amtfm •tereo, .JollCEI 121SO 84..-vv~ M • r 1 y I 7 3 • 13 4 & !~1on~=t {:ex~ 1~ CtHll ••I Mar oear rug. golf clubs & cago Ave, No 3. HB • K:wi . -l(H~, Cond, Stereo (018064) alum. whta, new ch.Itch, '82 Volvo turbo -.gon. It 67~ 1344 .,_ wltnd handllngflnefumitutetor 433 Hellothrope-Altey much mOl'e 230 1 7'1~ ParatlelPCHHwy. ~1kGSX~=~5•; Cl11uca 1045 $3988. $2800.849-2575 Ivory/It brn lntr Xtnt Most •11 New"palnt rblt deltvery Into ~ & ol· Bar Rafrlg furniture. ntc-Ln, s;~~11ci' · Racquet C1ub of trvlne ,1:, 645-0490 · · ·50$§1. Wegon. New BILLMA.XEYTOVOTA ·ee Karman GNa, good Con<f lo mllel "8-1409 .ig/MW· urn. lmmac. floes Phone tor an Inter· na~. more. Sal/Sun 8-5 transler•ble famlty mem· paint & chr~. 12800 19202 8ach 962-0829 llr• & body & runt well 1-1 ...__ ts· $2100 dy 310 • .-217 view M &,-7 486 (Mon· C • Garage Sale Fum . steteo t>ersttlp $&50 lnctud" '83 Honda Arrr:tW acootw. obo, 963...a866 Troy •82 ACCORD, 5 apd, ale, Non.1st. s2500, 97..SteS a 11, .... u ..-evslwltnd 8-40-4117 T u e s -T h u r s . Olfl HI equlpt, lkl equ1pt & much tranater t•. &40-8121 xlnt $375 499-2-470 p/a, c/c 4 dt 47K ml 10am-12noon) 3 apt garage Mle Furn more Catt 645-7529 SATELLITE TV DtSH/New Veapa 200 xlnt cond to &STll IOTII am/fm cW, si200 OBO '72 BUG, new engine lalck 1301 1i0iiiilaiiiin-.-1a.._ __ _..-.-. SUN 11-5 Book•. mlse Last ol the aummef .. .,. UM at home°' away Any mt. MaurtCIO 851·212S "494-0415 °' "497·3368 ~'!•,rranru'!:. bf~·.· ','~st 1683 eulCk REGAL hsehtd ltms CHEAP 1 T I 1t I . UlllU "'"' ·--· , .. mumo 1910 w an.ice eM k~y~hen w ~P::~anr~!!: ~!~~n·m~'Zhl~ m~.b~~ Motor Boan IOZO 18113 Never t1t1~/drlven. M1u1 141 oeo. c:i~-~~~t°31 or ~Jtt!!, w::~N 1~~: JOHISOl I SH Or11ct Co11ty'' oldut l.J1etl1il trt1ry •u lrr ,,,, '"" , .. ~·•lity. IHllllEllATELY MOVING SALE-Visit my bikes. toy1. baby Items. chatge $1275 to 11675. ·17ToyotaSunrader Dubonnet/Natural leather '7iMXioXRX1 wlndowt' ...... Auto experienced In display ad. home Everything In sight ski eqlp & m0te S08 Or-tncludea everything. Mini M01or Home(539T JE) With Air Cond (823VFR) '72 POP TOP CAMPER trans. gage pack, AM/FM mark -up, pas le-up tor sale Fridge. furniture. ange Ave Sal/Sun 9-3 850-2698 $5988 $99,899.99 14788 62K orig took1 & runs c:aae11e, crulaa (317900) and/or camera skills a kitchenware. pictures. Twin mallreH. Honda Self John Wayne -r.nnii BILL MAXEV TOY OT A SOU ARE A MOTOR CARS BILL MAXEY TOY°.J: great 12150. 675-n29 tUll s.aln. semct. I lt1111& 2625 Mmor lh• deflntte plual books. etc All good motorcycle. wH her. Club Family Memberlhp 18202 Beach 962"°829 215-691-0<406 t~B:each 962 29 ·77~ DteM1 Rabbit, SO 24mo/24,000mlaerv H ours a PP r ox qushty 662·2352 lad ... small 11ze clothing 1750, 78&-1638 TraUera ••rcNtt lfaa tits mpg. 4 dOOt, stereo, nu cornract-aub/ptloraate C.sll Its.a ~40 ~63 2PM-1030PM. Mon-Fn. B t It .. & much more 2781 Vista • -T t I04 f . . radlal1 $21SO ~1·5067 Salary to atart. 19 ·S10. H • IC• umbroaa Sunday 10·5 Olflc•fuaitue/ Hftl ,. ClassJc C<eme SO MGTD 59 MBZ 280SL. auto, ate. . •• p/hr DOE plus IMNtlth Sat/Sun l'fuOi(s more · k • ae 1 IUI Staretatt Tent Trailer Sips Beige lthr lntr, completefy all orlglnat, 1 owner 78 RABBIT auto, ale, 4 dr • ·~ 1319 ~flla, aaCtt lime & 11e· aurhng' access, baby ba Cltatate•lf a rt 8. fully eqtpped, hke new, restored I I 0 ,500 $15,500, call 831-0257 runs IUpef, Clean 12-495. P1•7C0-rWtl'l""l'lpllll'!ml! .... cation 10)'9, golf clubs, clot hits wJIMI barro eeo loota Beautiful exec dea11 3ex72 must MU $2000 Call 786-9724 '112 2"40D. 18,000 ml, man!-Dt54 t-soe7 E/84'-6533 \RD CAR 'ttTER. ~~~'7 ~ti!! Apply In peraon or 20701 Brookdale tables etectronlCS Muetl & chr, "8r w~re~rr~ & eV911 851-0335 FREE '59 Nash Metro-I• beige w/palomino Int. '78 Bug Conv. wtltlblue. l6"401 a..ch HuntBch Orig paint, leather Int. !)MM for appt 963·9251 Moret 211 Calle OeAnu 'f:{1:'d ~ :.Cc~:P ~ !t T Ill pollton Car. 798 w. Auto, air, c/c. tape deck. aml fm air Xlnt cond Mu.t 847•1701 ., ... rally wtieR, fat· Pat Tool lrfiat Sat/Sun aftr 1pm sell n!w 645.94.,.7 u r0 •1~1, 10.. Wllaon CM Mint, ot1glnal owner Miii $5600 786-43'° . _ fUt & very ,., •. 128so I II ,ii t -.-tl lty ... Aattt I• rtN _s1a,9~ 759-0461_ ·79 Rabbit Auto. AIC, 77 BUlck Electra Umlted OBO Part trade OK. I J O • Scholarahlp Fundralaer Ptl&OI Or UI 221 C(am1neii.\ype w/VW !! ·u 300D Turbo a.nthrlclte AM/FM. nu tlree, like new t;2~ ~~':o2~ eharp. °'97-6373 330 W Bay, Costa Mese Swedish Women's Educ-Whet • Wonder1ut World a upr ht ano. N ar• hltct\ $225. Blake A .. i 9107 t'ey/blk lntr chrome In & out. S2'700 548·8"451 , . (U••••'-il• (J14) 142·•321 ~~~~," c~~~.~~: ~~~: ~!u~?1=~~· =:~ ;,.~~ s~o~s~~e5:~5t: 0:;:: ::s..:~k ·78 ioosL nu dr1w train· 1.:~1t'i~,~~4;k• over ·~1r.R=~~~~ eoe:t. 6wti'ft:: ~~hr~iv:~~ ";!.,bf~~f. 188 e0ttx88 sOPAEMt houMhold 119"\s 1921 t Dally J>ttot CIH•lll•d Pi $550 H ~8 8784 S i IMO brat1 ... 1tMI radials. Xlnt 'll ....... UL 29K ml • H200 080 Whl1/t1r•. moon roof, Low ml., lmmac, new Croyden Terrace, (Turtle Ada To plac. your ad, ano • tat HI In/out 11500 ~2103 • ...., _.94.0415 _.97•33ee Ct'N cont, -11 power, Xtnt tlree 144.7439 SELL Idle Items with e Rock) Irvine. SAT/SUN call 842·5678 and tel 1 WHITNEY upright Plal'IO I &IDIOAI &nl $10,900 "497-3381 ' cond. Mutt Sae 75~9332 ·13 ¥. CUtla S 8tgtvn Deify Piiot Clasified Ad SEPT 15-18. 9A,,...PM CIUlilled Ad-VI.or help bench. Pecan wood. 1.,."5 NOYSE AVE &O CLASSIC CAR 1815 MB ·12 Rabbit COn>i. red3 •new "-.aillu 9M •m • 11mo~ okt ful 142 5078 """'' $150 963-1178 """ .......,L ...... ..... tir .. I wheels. 9K nit, .,_ b"· .... .,•.,., -,~ ~RVINE 183-1496 au• IEW '"'-........ COflvtW1I.-, 84&-01116 Of 833-3282 ·72 itxck FLEETWOOD pwt• ""mite 4-·1- I " 1 .. c11nsuru 1201 SUPERIOR COSTA MESA 5454171 IUTI THI CEml 17501 BEACH BLVD HUNT. BEACH t46-3220 lllTI 1111 # II 2995 BRISTOL ST ' COSTA MESA t79~780 llt'I TWOl lllMI t8~2 BEACH BLVD .,.UNT BCH te&-2.2e0 TlllMll 111111 2080 HARBOR BLVD C.OSTA MESA 842-0010 A•t• J.e11ia1 MIO 11 H SOUTHWEST m Int con d. Oa y 1. · .~__,,,_._......,._,,__ _ _..... &llf'S m .9900 Belly 12 Rabbll, rtd/bllll leatl'let S18SOobOMV Publlel\lng 13 CuttHa Supreme, • n. tnt, ate, auto lr•n•. 752-0271 lolded. 22K ml, SMN. 8750 Manchesi.r 8tvd BUeMPM!. 121-IOll ... 1112 'll 1211 FullY loaded, Mint oondltlon, Snrt, AIC, Ca .. ue. Low miles, Pricild to Seit! (HPJ270) IEROllEI IEIZ •teito tape cJectc, mao '78 s.v 1 ownr, nu da1 •=883-T-_27_88:------x-rxx NEWEST & MOST wMela, lo mll .. ge SISOO eng wlyr w•rr. Lk nu fl~t~ ' MODERN (Lie CTNTAL) 640·5788 In/out woo 895-3075 '1 h 80id DUltar FACILITY IS IN ANAHEIM HILL8 '83 Rabbit Conv, red & blk, '81 ELDORADO v·O xlnt Autom.tle, Alt Cond. PIS, Olli.ER lo ml, very clean. cond S 11 ,000 evH (61'4MIK) S 11,950 Matk, 840·1120 wknd1 714-064-3318 pp I 1HI ...... lee Of' 813-3295 •11 Sevlh Elegant..ntw BILL MAXEY TOYOTA . IVll II n Mate, all xtr11 only t9202 B4*h 182-0IZI (114) lll-1HO ya.1 ·llW&1E•• 10.000 mt, mint MUlt ·12 HORIZON auto, a/o, 4 OYE" 110 ""' IN 1 a f t • b • t t o f I • r dr p/a, ttnmacutete 13350 Tl MHll PM 1too192ato484.o&23 01s-41.-oe1 Ell*U33 14 l 85 CAOILl.A S199down CioMd End· COmm I L .... ALL.SAVERS LEAS NG ('9"4)432·'11971