HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-10-23 - Orange Coast Pilot'
'Have ihey caug im?' Protopappas
sentenced
to 15 years
yROBERT AR
Of IM DdJ f'lltf ltaft
Parent , school nd police re
tightenina unty measures to
protect scltool children followmg
three rooent all~d k1dnappmg
attempt in Huntanston Bench.
In some instances, keen ~r
ent I concem -if not fear -has
e calated in neighborhood , ac-
cotding to parents. Some young-
5ters reportedly h ve see" a car
similar to on older model green
Chevrolet the suspect nll~dly
Forecaate on A2.
s dnvsn nd h ve become
hysterical
01'he kid re really fnnd."
ad Shelly Repsher. n p rent of
two )'9ung daughters whO alt nd
Kettler Elementary School at
8750 Dorsen Drive, •• nd the marents are concerned ··
R~her, who J>reviou ly ha
been able to stand in front of her home and watch as her daughters
walked to school, has uined
walking them 10 nd from the
(Pleue Me l"EAR/A2)
ByJEFF OLER
OlllleO.-, .........
form r CC)$.t Mc d n11 Tony
ProtopapPf wa scnt ctd to three concurre t 1 ~ year to hfe pnson terms Monday for the anesthesia·
overdose killings of three paucnts m
1982-and 1983.
The sentence, pronounced by Or·
anit County Superior Coun Judge
L.u1 Cardena following 1 da)-long
sentencao=na m the Santa Ana
(P eee DEKTIST I A2)
............................
Vlctim'e ltln 111& JKken &11d Dlo~ IDwat ........
COAST IDlllDN
-
TUESDAY OCTOBER 23. 1984 ORANGF COUNTY C A LI FORNIA :?5 CENT S
Coast crashes· kill woman, tot
I
'Minor injuries' claim Newport victim;
girl dies after falling out of truck
injuries she suffered when her car was
broadsided in a Corona '"del Mar
intersection police reponed.
Apparently, the woman suffered
internal iajuries. She died at Hoag
Memonal Hospital in Newport
Beach about four hours after the 10
a. m. collision at Pacific Coast High-
way and Marguerite Avenue. said
Newport Beach traffic investigator
Rick Bradley.
Bradley said Ramsey, drivjng a
1977 (.:tJc,.·rolet, was not wearing a
scat belt. Her car was struck by a truck
driven by Oark R. Vanwick. 26, of
Fountain Valley.
By STEVE MARBLE
Of ... .,.., l'W hllf
Seat belts might have saved the
lives of an elderly Newport Beach
woman and a )..year-old girl from San
UC Irvine
basketball
coach Biii
Mulllgan suf-
ferecf'a mild
stroke Friday
In Biiiings,
Mont., and on doctors'
orders, will take a couple
of weeks off from his
normal coaching routine.
/C1.
Coast
A beach parking lot at-
tendant got a message
from the heavens: A mar-
riage proposal. I A3
CaM.fomla ..
An expert witness says~
the children In the ~
McMartin Preschool ca
are terrified by thel' al·
leged molesters./ A4
Nation
Urban Man's on view at
the Metrozoo In Miami -
and attracting reco'd
crowds./88
World
President Marcos has or·
dered seven military men
prosecuted after a report
accused them of plotting
Benigno Aquino's as-
sassination./ A5
Mlnd&Body
Feeling woozy In a
Jacuzzi? Better alt down
qulckly./81
Entertainment
Ambition overcomes In·
experience In 1 'Cat on a
Hot Tin Roof" In Mission
Vlejo./83
INDEX
Erma Bombeek
Br1dge
au11et1n B~d
'Bulfneu
Cellfornla News
ct .... fled
Comlcl
CrOMWOrd
Death NotlcU
HelpVourtelf
HoroecQPt
Ann Landerl
Mind and Body
Mutual Funds
Net16n81 News
Opinion
Potlce Log
PUbMC Notion
Sport•
StOOk Marketa
TMYtllOn
nt.t9'1
WMthet
WOridNewt
..
B2
84
A3
85~
A4
C4·6
94 ce
88
82 cs ·92
81-2
86
A4
A8 AS .c ..
C1~ 87
82
83
A2
A5
Juan Capistrano who were killed
Monday in separate car-accidents,
authorities said today.
Inez Esther Ramsey. 86. died from
what at first appeared to be minor
~rB
Van\\iCk, driving north on the
Pacific O>ast Highway, was not cited.
Paramedics at hrst judged
Ramsey's injuries to be of a minor
nature and amnged to transport her
Nancy Reaga~ in OC to visit
suppor~ers, teen d~ug center
T ..... '• h '1i program funded by the unty. F)lriet lady tours Santa Ana s p oenix ouse. Phoenix House representatives said fi '> L.a b G1 Q I' ' 1 ' 0 "" Monday's visit ·was Mrs. Reagan's C eercu y p VO unteers D range third in the ~st four years.
Following theSantaAna visit, Mrs.
By ROBERT HYNDMAN that I can do in addition to what I'm
OflMDll!r,...IUff . already doina. please let me know,"
First I..ady Nin Rn.po made said Mrs. Reagan, who has made the
two brief stops in Orange County crusade qgainst drug abuse one of her
Monda.)' afternoon to tour a drug top concerns in recent years.
rehabihtalion center in Santa Ana Chatting with four teens who were
and t~twale.;iipUblican Pany accompanied b) their parents for the ~olurbccnln Ot'Antie.' fim lady's 3 p.m. ~isit. Mrs...Reapn
StOJ)pin1 fon visit at the Pbocnix was a kcd ~hat:message she had for
House in Slnta Ana, Mrs. R~n young people faced with drop.
Old the t~-age residents, "We need "Say no," me quickly rephed.
you clear.eyed and clear-headed." The Phoenix Hou.~ has 70 adults
"There's a lot of 1pcoplc out there and 30 adolescents unde!'loina drug
MWq~ohelp}'ou. lftherc~sanyih1ng tthabilitataon treatment through a
On.Jy ~ Coast cities
take stands on· 36
~ost opppse tax cut.
but.fear backlash
..
Reagan ped off to Orange Count)
Republican Party hea~qu!U'1Cf5 in
Orang'C where n enthus.aast1c pther-
inachantcd "four more years! aubc
entered the buildina."
In a bnef add~s to 58 oounty
Republican ~oluntccrs. Mrs. Reagan
said .. These arc the folks who really
~in election • •
These last two weeks. as you know.
arc &0ina to be vCf'), '\Cl) difficul~"
she s11d. ..But as I id at the
convention. we'll make it one more
(Pleue eee NAJllC'!' I A2)
to the hospital as a precauuon, m tly
be<::ause of her aie. Bradley id.
Meanwhile, Shannon Meccico. 3. was lc.illed Monday montln,g w}\en she
apparently fell out of a pickup tnK:k
her mother "'BS driving on OnCfJl
llipwa) about five miles east of [a
Pata A~enuc, said catifomia High-
way Patrol spokesman Ken Daily.
Daily said the young girl was ndu1a
unrestra10ed in :the passenger &eat of •
the truck. rudi was tra\d1"' at
boUt 2S mph. 1
-he ap~tly opened the dOor
somCho • saidDaiJy.
A passing motorist oppcd at lhe
accident scene and P''C first aid to the
girl, who •was pron.ounad dead at
Mission Community Hospital 1n
M1sston ~ICJO, Daily said.
Billy ·Martin
found innocent
in CdM ruckus
By STEVE MARBLE
Ot .. DllJ .....
Billy Martin, the fiery ex-m rutF.
and J?layer known for his ruIMns with
umpires. finally got an arbiter to rule
in his favor when a NewPort Bcacb
juc4c today found him not guilty of
being drunk in public.
Wearing a gray suit, blade cowbo)
tiOOtS. a ms 'tie and :a 'IOmber 'Aire Manin aid he'd rather bneball
than courtroom strategy f ollowmg his
victory an Harbor Municipal Coun.
.. I'll answer a baseball gucstion if
you have one. .. Manin said before
ducking out of the courtroom with his
, attorney is tow.
The former New York Yanees'
manager was arrested April 13 after
ewport Beach police found him on
the front lawn of a prlfriend's house
(Pleue eee BILLY /A2)
f
Badham revives
his challenger's·.
anti--Israel stand
' By &OBERT HYNDMAN
Of .... DlilJ ........
Rep. Robert Badham hu ac:custd
challenger Carol Ann Brldfotd of
havinJ.a .. shoot from the tip" attitude
on political issues -speaficall), aid
to Israel.
At a candidates forum Monday in
fountain Valley .. the ewpon Beech
congressman produced a letter writ-
ten to him two yean ago t?,• Bradford
that called for cuttin& miliwy and
economic aid to Israel.
"This is a good example of het
'shoot from the lip' philosophy on the
(Pleue Me BADRAJl/A2)
Santa Ana winds
bring clear skie$
Fnm staff aJHI wire repor11
Seasonal northeastCtly San\I Ana
winds picked up speed toda). brina-
i ng dear 5kics and ·warm "' thCI' to
Southern Calif omia.
Gust of up to 34 mph were
reponed this mominga1 JOhn Wayne
Airport. ~'here \akt'--Off and landing
~ttem we~ cha at 9 a. m. so . "
planes would be traveling anto the ,..;nd.
Ralph Odenwald. air trafli man·
ager of the aiq>0rt's tower. said the
alternate path IS used v.bcocvcr the
wind becomes ruona and cha
dlrection.
.. Instead of takiftl off .south over
{Pleue ... WIMD8/A2)
Missing girl, 3,
feared victim
of kidnapping •
RBI.£
-
~1-DAU..i PtLOTnUMOIW 0GtGlll•23 1814
'Dangerous desperado' gets
I 00 years for bank holdups Clear and windy along the Coast
.
tour pnor nk holdups.
0.Vld Dean Dahlen" 24, of La
Habra""'' described by :rCdcral Jud Jamts ldcman a ··dangerou dC$·
pcndo" who had no rcmonc for his
vic:um1 and presented a clear m r
to society.
BILLY MARTIN INNOCENT •.•
From Al
in Corona del Mar. Police said
rieiahbors had complained that
Martin was outisde scrnmina.
Police said they took Manin to jail
bCC:ausc he was unable to care for
himself. The ex-manager W1lS bailed
our after four hours by his &irlfricnd.
Judge Russel Bostrom ruled in
Martin's !a\ior today afterJook.inaat a
series of photographs and determin-
ing the woman's front lawn could not
· be interpreted to bC a public place.
· 'The question of whether Martin
was intoxicated did not come up.
Martin, color and controvmiaJ u
a ball player and man.aaer. has had
alcohol-related run-ins with the law
before and once got in trouble for
allegedly punching a marshmallow
salesman in the face during a barroom
incident.
In the Corona del Ma.r incident,
police claimed Martin and his &irl-
friend got into a spat over travel
arrangements for a horse he had
purchased for her.
Martin's girlfriend reportedly was
set to testify in his behalf tOday but
h ientcnoe, m de up of four
SCP ratc25·)'ear tcnns, as believed to
be one of the harshest ever handed
down for bank robbery conviction.
··1 don•t rcalll a. sentence th t
Jo°" d fcdCT11f nrosccutor J m
Berliner.
was not called bca\use ofthc3udge·s
ruling. Bolh tdcs llateed to waive a
trial and let Bostrom make the
decision.
Martin declined to comment on the
ca9C as he entcrca the courtroom and ~in as he left a few minutes later.
A former ma~ with the Yan-
kees, Detroit T.,ers, Minnesota
Twins, Texas Ransers and Oakland
A's. Martin now is a scout for lhe
Yankees.
The cit-manager, however. is per·
haps betteT kno~ now for his role in
a television beer commercial.
: WINDS.BRING CLEAR SKIES •••.
From Al
Coaatal
1 SuRF REPORT
-------
= .•
M = :: ft u ..
.. $7 = ;: " .. M .. M 41 ~ N 87 .. 81 66 1• eo 78 ,,
83 to 11 10 M M
" 61 .,. 11
., 12 ... " .. 11 11 .. M q .. et .. ff eo u 711 to
" 112 .. 711
41 l2 65 .,.
.. 117 47 2• 61 H a .,
11 St 11 .. 67 •• 12 ..
to " .. 63 7t ,,
the beach, the planes arc now takiris The National Weather Service 80 to 85, witb low$ tonight 42 to 52.
off north. Landings arc coming in predicted low humidity, with Mountainiarcas will have north to
from the south. Usually it's the temperatures droppin1 durlna the northeast winds of20 mph to 35 mph.
opposite way;• Odenwald said. . niaht. with overniaht lows of 35 to 4S and
Temps Eztended
He said north and northeast austs 4 Winds will blow from l 5 mph to 30 Wednesday hiahs 54 to 62 in the
bad replacedtheusualwindsfrom the mph in the canyons, with resort areas.
south and southwest. temperatures ran.ging in the mid-80s The Santa Ana winds will blow 1 S
The Oran1e Coumy Fire ~n-Wedncsdayafterovemightlowaof55 mph to 25 mph in the deserts, with ;
ment reported no wind-related lnci-to 60. ovemiaht lows ranaina from 34 to 44
dents as of 11 a.m., though the Costa The National Weather Service in the upper desert and 45 to 55 in the
Mesa Police Department received a predicted Wednesday highs at lower desen. Wednesday highs will
rcportofapalmtrcc<iownonasports beaches from 75 to 80, preceded by 'range from 66 to 74 in the upper
car in the parking lot at Mesa Verde overnight lows of 50 to 56, and highs deserts and 77 to 85 in the lower
Shoppin& tenter. Wednesday for the inland valleys at desert.
KIDNAP SUSPECT •••
From Al ·
wcarina a yellow baseball cap and
&lasses at the time. The vehicle .is
believed to be a Ford &:onoline van
with beige cu~ins in its rear window.
Sberifrs deputies said they have
had no luck locating the man.
The task force, formed Monday,
may be expanded in the coming days.
said department spOkcsman Jim
Bryant. He said ·detectives from
kidnap, homicide and crimes ~nst
children divisions a.re included 10 the
task force.
A ground search of the area that
involved more than a 270-member
search party was halted Sunday
afternoon. Bryant said the search
team scoured about 10 square miles
of the remote desert area.
Meanwhile, members of National
Kld Print have offered a reward for
information leading to the where-
aboutl of the blonde-haired airl. The
amount of the reward wu not made
public.
People who want to contribute to
the reward fund should call the
Orange County Search and Rescue at
828-3200 or send donations to Na·
tional Kid Print, P.O. Box 5548,
Buena Park 90622.
The sheritrs department is asking
anyone with infonnation or antone
who was in the Joshua Tree area
Thursday contact authorities at (619)
367-95'44.
From Al
committee that processed the league's
resolution opposing the initiative.
MacAllisttr added he was sur-
prised so few Orange Coast cities had
gone on record on Proposition 36,
especially in light of the unanimity of
ofinion exprcued when the League
o Cities resolution was passed in
September.
Another reason few cities have
staked out a pos'ition on the measure
is that many public officials feel it is
inappropriate for their city or the
county to involve itself in a matter
being submitted to voters.
lrvine Assistant City Manager Paul
Brady said members of that city's ~ouncil all arc individually opposed
BADBAM REVIVES ISRAEL LETTER •••
to Proposition 36. .
••Historically, however, they felt
they didn't want to act into a political
debate on a Statewide issue,.. he
explained. .. FromAl
issues," Badbam said.
Badbam's presentation ofthc'Sept.
24. 1982. lctter caught his Democratic
challenger off guard. Bradford had
just. voiced her support for the state of
ilsrael. · '
··rd like to see that letter a bit more
closely," she said. but declinedfurthcr
comment Monday evening. "
.. Past records come back to haunt
~sometimes," Badham replied.
The issue is expected to come up
again this evening when the two
candidat~s fi r the 40th Congressional
District meet in an 8 p.m. debate
at UC ine's Fine Arts Village
Theater.
According to a Badham aide, the
Jetter from Bradford followed Israel's
invuioo of Lebanon. lo it. Bradford
asked Badbam to support a move-
ment in the House of Representatives
to cut off all aid, military and
economic, to Israel
Bradford also said she hoped the
people of Israel would "rise up and
remove their sick leaders."
Although Bradford was un-
available for comment today, her
campaign strategist, Harry Hiner,
said the letter should be considered in
the context of when it was written.
Bradford does not deny writing the Newport Beach City Manager Rot>-
Jettcr, he said. ert Wynn cited a third reason for not
''It was in m~nse to a particular asking council members i11 bis city ao
issue and even~ ' Hiner said ... h was take a stand on the bellot initiative.
at a particulir {><>int in time when , "I thou~t the publiC would thinJc\
innocent people ll1 the refugee camps we were taking a;position that would
outside of Beirut were being be self-servine. I did not want to place
massacred." ~ it on the a1enda because people who
Hiner said Bradford ••has a great read it would think v.ie had an ax to
deal of compassion for Isracr' and grind or an interest to protec:t. ·• he
does not now advocate cutting off aid. said.
"She feels it•s kind of ironic tliat However. Costa Mesa City Ma.n·
Badham is bringing this up," Hiner agcrFred Sorsabal "'id he felt it was
added. •11 think he's trying to veil lhe imponant for council membcrJ in his
fact that h.is rc<:0rd on Israel is pttky city to formally state the city•s
d.isll\al." position.
"We have to take a stand and
NANCY REAGAN VISITS COUNTY ••• ~ Oalty Piiot
DetlV•fY From Al ·
for the 'Gipper.'" answered all the questions he was
asked." ·
inform the voters," he explained.
The Costa Mesa City Council
voted 2-0 last week, with three
members abstainina. to oppose Prop-
osition 36. The memben who at>S.
tained personally oppose it, but felt it
should be left up to voters, Sorsabal
said.
He also P.Ointcd out that Costa
Mesa council mcmberl voted unani·
mously to oppose Proposition J 3 in
1978: .
The Laguna Beach City Council
voted unanimously to oppOSe the Wl
issue in September, said~aty Manter
Kenneth Frank.
"Thia is a question directly peni·
nent to the city of Laguna Beach. lfv.te
don't tell pe_ople, how will they
know?" he asked.
Frank said that not only has the
council taken a position on the
measure, it also has sent letters to
various community aroups and
ne1ghborh00d usociationa stating
the city's case and urging they too
oppose Proposition 36.
"Por us, it's a bia deal,·• he
explained. "Our situation is differeot
We're more dependent on the prop-
erty tax than the biger cities because
we don't have the sales tax base.·•
Fountain Valley City Manager
Judy Kelsey said council members in
that city haven't publicly discussed
the issue and won't before the
November election.
Ma<'Allister . said Huntington
Beach C:ity Council members are
willing to let the loCal League of Cities
chapter take the lead on the issue. The
city hasn't taken a position on 36
because ••not enough City Council
members feel thef want to raise the
issue at election time when they are
running for election," he said.
FEAR GRIPSPAREN'ES ••• From Al
campus as a safety measure.
And she refuses to permit her
children to play in the front yard at
their home in the vjcinity of Atlanta
A venue and Magnolia Street.
"My little boy ('4 years old) asks
each <tay 'have they caught the
stranaet?' We tell him no, that he still
basto play in the back yard,'' she said.
Repsher said she is seeinf more and
more parents walkiDJ their children
or forming car ~ls.
School officials are hoJdio,g as-
semblies to warn children to stay
away from strangers and police
officers arc scouring areas for the car
- a 1968-72 model Chcvrolete
Impala, Biscayne or Caprice -
beheved used in abduction attempts
that bepn Oct. 3 near the area of
Gisler School, 21141 Strathmoor
Lane.
ORANGE COAST Clrcul•tlon 714/642-au
Dally Piiat Cl•••lfled *fvertlalng 714/M2·5e11
All other d9p•rtmente M2"'4121
MAIN OFFICE
330 Wttt Bly SI C:O.ta ..... CA
t.lal llOdr-8oo. 1580. Colla Meu CA II~ Asked by reponCt'S to assess her
husband's performance in the Sun-
day evening debate in Kan$as City,
Mrs. Reagan sa!.4, .. J thouaht he was
great. I , thoU&ht my husband
Earlier in the day. Mrs. Reagan
visited a group of elderly people in
Rivenide and told them the issue of
age and her husband has been put "to
bed once and for all."
· Denouncina reports that the presi-
dent may be too old for the job, Mrs.
Reapn was quoted by the Associated ·
Press as saying, "It's not true and he's
shown that it's not true. I think it's.a
non-issue. I think it's insulting to an
awful lot of people."
I• Ou•ranteed
Mor!da)i Frioay n you CIO noc ,.,... :youi CleJ* llY
!> 30pm cdbetor• 1 ~"' ..-.0 yo.JI copy ..... be
1Je9Yt!ed
&.!Ufoey lllld SUndlv II
yOU 00 not r«elll• your copy by 1 • m , ca• betort
10 • m tnO yOUf copy Wiii bt~td
H. L. Schwartz m
Pubhsher
AMemary Churchman
Controller
.DENTIST GETS 15-TO-LIFE .••
Clrculatfon
Telepttonft
Stephen F. C•razo
Production
Manager
Doneld L. Wllll•m•
Circulation
Manager
From Al
courthouse, means the 39-year-old
dentist will be eligible for parole in 71h
years.
Deputy District Attorney James
Cloninger. who asked that Protopap-
pas be ordered tg serve his sentences
consccut1vely, said the term meted
out by the Judge was a "fair sentence,"
one with which he had no quarrel.
Defense attorney Robert Tuller
said he planned to appeal Protopap-
pas· conviction on three counts of
second-degree murder "as soon as
possible."
Tuller quoted Protopap~ as say-
ing. "It lSn't what I hoped for, but it
wun't totally unexpected," after
sentence was pronounced.
Protopappas. who appeared pale
and tired during the proceedinp,
seemed composed when the sentence
was handed down. The curly haired
dentist was dresseil in a aray-plaid
suit, white shirt anll black tie for his
courtroom api>earancc.
The one-time Laguna Beach resi-
dent who ran a S l ·million-a-year,
higli-volume dental clink on Costa
Mesa's 19th Street bas remained in
Orange~ _ County Jail in lieu of
17.SO,t>OO tiiut since liis July 31
conviction.
A six-man, four-womanju,.Yfound
Protopappes aujlty of killing 23.ycar.
old Hunt1naton Beach resident Kim
• AndreasKJ"I, lJ.year--old Sacramento
resident Patricia Cnven and 3 l ·yCAr·
old Coata Mesa resident CAthryn
Jones followina a hiahly publicized
four-month trial.
The prosecution presented
Just Call
642-6086 .
I
evidence mdicatina Protopappas neg-from Protopappas' hometown .. JD
ligcntly administered overdoses of Price, Utah, other dentists, friends
general anesthesia to the three pa-and past patients.
tients., causing their deaths. The Patient Dotti Filsinger. 72. told the fllll~~
defense contended 1he deaths were court Protopappas had corrected a
"unfortunate accidents," caused by dental problem that she had been
medical Cltcumstanccs beyond the sufferina from for close to 40 years.
doctor's control. Defense attorneys "I'd love to go back to him. We
Tuller and Hollis Dyer asked the need Dr. Protopappas baclc," she
court to place Protopappas on proba-said.
tion. Rudy Sickler, a patient and friend
Kim Andreasstn's mother, Ulla who shared a common interest in
Isaksen, said she was relieved when photography with the doctor, dc-
Protopappas was ordered to pnson. scribed Protopappas as a charitable
"He belongs in prison," she wd man who never demanded payment
outside the courtroom. her checks from him when he could not afford to
stained with tears ... I thou&bt, thank paX
God. now it's over. It's been so Iona. •i•d ta.kc my (children) ther~ this
so difficult." , afternoon if he'd get out of here and
DuriDJ'the hcarin~ baksen as well practice dentistry, without hesi-
as several of Craven s relatives tesli· tation,'' he said.
fied how the deaths of the girls had Another patient and friend, Ray
affected their respective families. Hunt, ~tificd it would be a ••sreat
, Craven's sister-in-law, Rula injustice" to society if Protopa_ppas
Craven1 said the emotional damaat were imprisoned. And another, Costa
caused oy the P,rl's death had "spread Mesa resident C.J. Kirk said, "Tbis
like a cancer' throu$1J the familr. •mile you see belonp to him.''
:·There bas to be some Justice. There 1 The testimony from Protopappas•
stiU a lifetime ·ahead of us of supporters drew cheers and applause
emotional problems1" she told the from many in the courtroom. but
court. drew an admonishment from 1uctae
Herdauahter. Briditt Craven, •id Cardenas.
·her c::I~ friend and relative Pa· In scntencina the dentist, Cardenas~
tnciawas the "metal, bond and aJue acknowledged the pain and sufftrina
that held the family together." of the three victims' families.
Testifytna on Prot0pa_ppa1' bchitf "My heart ~out to their fam1l-
were to witnesses who characteri1cd iea," he &aid. ''My heart 1oea out to
the dentist 11 a hard-workina, com· .Dr. Protopappas u well. rt'1 difficult
passionate and charitable man who and sad to lose all he lost. Dr.
cared deeply for his paticnu. The Protopappas' life basically i de-
witnems 1nclll4c:d family friends stro}ed forever."
Wbal do yH like abolil Ute Dally PUot! What doa't YM llke? CaU t•e
m r 11 le.ft aad yHr me1111e wW be recorded, 1ru1ertbed ud klJ rid
to &Jae approprlale e4Uor.
ne aamt 2'·MU u1wertq tervlce ma)' be 1Hd a. rec.hi t.t&en 11 die
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ponsonng o free, &emor c1ttun flu?hot clinic on friday,
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a1>e11 c.lub schedules boutique
The Junior Ebell Club oflrvine will hold a Christmas
Boutique on Saturda~. Oct. 27, at Umvenity·High Sch.ool
Campus Drive at Culver, in Irvine. More than 100
crat\srhen and . mcrchams wall be offering Christmas
wares, bas~ets, JCWe!ry. oma~ents and wreaths are;JUSt a few of the nems available. Children's toy~ will also be for sale.
Ught rcfre'Shments and home-baked go:ods will be
available throughout the day. The boutique shopping
tloururc from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. ~ S l donation is requested.
ACLU to hold potluck brunch
The Amencan Civil Libenies Union Orange County
Chapter will have a potluck brunch on Sunday. Oct. 28, at
10:30 a.m. at the home of Pat and Haskd Shapiro 287
Evening Canyon Rd .• Corona dcl Mar. ~ , Chapter delegates and ahei:nates to ACLU Southern
Cahfotnaa Annual Alsembly will be elected. Candidates arc Jackie Price, Don Hallard and Henry Fagin.
Guest speakers will be Paul Hoffman. legal director of
l\CLU Founoation, and Jean Forbath, director of Share
Ourselves. Topic will be "Shelter: A Fundamental Right." For more information, call 6314460.
l•rael Fair elated Sunday
The 12th Annual Federation Israel Fair will be held Sunday, Oct. 28, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the Orange
County Fairarounds.
There will be kosher ethnic food. Jewish/Israeli
exhibits, arts and crafdts. gifts, books Judaica; sames,
door prizes, and continuous live entertainment
Admission is $3 for adults, SI for children 6-12. and
children under 6 are free. For information, call 530-6636.
P08tedltortolecture
Benjamin Bradlcee, executive editor of the Washing-
ton Post, will give a lecture entitled "Washinfton and the
Pre!IS" at UC Irvine on Monday. Oct. 29, at p.m. in the
Herita.se Room of University Center. "'
Tickets to the lecture are $5 general admission. $2 for
UCl students, and $3 for other students, senior citizens,
UCI staff,· faculty and Alumni Association membcl"$.
Tickets are available at UO box offices, or caJI 856-6617
for mail, telephone or credit card orders. For more
information. call 856-6379.
Gillld to meet Wednesday ·
St. John Vianney Guild will meet Wednesday, Oct
2-4, at 10 a.m. at Promontory Point Oubbouse, 200 Promontory Point Drive, Newpon Beach.
Speakers will be June Van De Noort, hospice
ooordinator, Town and Country Home'"Nursing service;
Vivian Thomas. directon ~nstian Service Agency. and
Sally Sullivan and Sister Ellen O'Leary of Casa Teresa.
Topics will cover home health services for the
tenninaJty ill, help in providing special services for aged
parents. commuruty outreach programs for the lonely and
isolated, care for pregnant young women, and op-
portul'lities for volunteers. For more information, call
673-7713. .
Hnpltal offers free lecture
Anaheim Memorial Hospital~ 1111 W. La Palma
Ave., is offerina another in iu senes of free lectures on
Wednesday, Oct. 24, from 7:30 to 9 p.m. in the Double
Eleven Auditorium.
Dr. Melvin Tonlcon, heart specialist, will present a ,
aumma~ures modem medicine has developed
to treat the·h·ean patient. Angioplasty and strcptolcinase,
two new treatments, will be explained. He will also discuss
the recovery process and what can be done to assist
reliabilitation. For more informllion, call 999-6()64.
CALENDAR
Tuaday. Oct. 23
• 9:30 a.m., Oru1e Coa.uty Board of Sa.~rvtaon,
Hall of Administration, I 0 Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana.
• 1 :30 e.m., Oru1e County Plun.bal Comml11lou,
HaU of Administration, 10 Civic Center Plaza,SantaAna.
........ •
Oran~ Coast DAllY PU.:OT/:r~ OalolMJr 23 1tM * Aa
..., .....................
Knife wielder held
in Mesa Plaza fight
• Ready for Halloween
Oa band at tlM post aad &obllD la.ulo11 at Barbor Sh~ Center
la Coeta 11 .. recently were J111.tca P'al.rbun. 3, far left. dr t•e4u a
co-e; Lama Ruftlcaft, s. u Cl~tra; aad ftlDplre C&thyCll.De.
7. • e. The neat ... open for clllldren from 3 to 16 Je&n of ace.
.
E Ucl k f e d wagen Squareback on Huntington x-wor er 1ne , gets ::.:~~~~.,..1~·.\~~=.~c:.«~~~ $6.600 Sunday when a ll'uef stoic her
purse while he was dancins. in a
Fountain Valley club. Lois fcmuein
told police she left her punr under a
table while be was on the dance floor
at The Hop, 18774 Brookhurst Street.
aoout I a.m. Sunda)'. She discovered
thC pu~ and its content.$ mi ang
when sht rctµn:icd to the table. police
said. Tbereal'c nosu rectsin thccasc.
C.ta Mesa .
A bicycle valued a.t $200 was
reponcd stolen from an open garage
in the 3000 block of CJc,darid'
Avenue Saturday sometime between
11;30 Lm. and 4:30 o.m. Probation in bribe-rv c~se ~I:,~." di~~ rrom lhe .., J ~ . Someone cut ofTthc lock toagaraae
for UCI. in the 6000 block of Huntington and If Superior Coun Judge David
Caner had imposed a jail sentence,
Grooms could have cha~ his plea,
his attorney N. David Gady said.·
"He pleaded guilty to avoid the tarae amount of triaJ expense and to avoid the risk of being convicted,"
Gady said. "Probation won't mean
very mueb bc!caute Mr. Crooms isn't
the type of fellow that's a law-
breaker."
. By acctp ina 1he plea amnacment.
Groomsqteed that h~would not file
a picvanceafter beins fi~Thunday
from his job as a 1enior upcr-
intelldeftt of facilities mangemen&
·~Da Beacb 6000 block f Walton. •rry Brief. 43, Wl arrested for ButlJal'S atot~ •• • SSOO Schwinn
alNledly dn~1n1 undc_r ~he influence bicycle from a parking lot at Ooldcn of ald>hot Monday nijht on Paa fie • West ~liege
Colst H{lh\va~ south of liso Pier. -• • • • aall was act 11 Sl.SOO. A car window was mashed 1n the • • • ' vicinit)' ofE.d1nacr Avenutnd her ~David Charles Barker was arrcst.cd and $20 m ca h was stolen.
or allcatdly dnvn\& under \he in· • • •
uence of atcOhol early Monday ThieveutolcSIOOinclothinafrom omlna in the 1300 block of Nonh a Ford Tems:-o an 'lhc 19000 bloCk of
Coill liiibway. Ball was t t Huntuigton Strttt s:1.soo • • • 1 • Thieves tole a SI SO moped from a .. ~ lleich an unlocked prqt an the 4600 block
someone smashed a kuchen \YI n• of Qpcrctta, • • •
Gqw and atolc S20 ca hand a SlOO Somconcstole1S400stereo from 1 te~1•1on tel from• residence in the evrolet El Camino m the 117000
Before his arrest. Grooms said he took hand ·tools and elcctncal tools pl~nned to rctite in May 1985. He had valued at St .500.
been employed by the universit)' for tmne
4Yl J:8:~ arrested by cam~s police A Schwinn cruiser was rcponed
Sept. 2S after he allegedl~ offered to tolcn Monday afternoon from a
award a S 150,000 uruvers1ty contraCt home on Walnut A venue. • • • to IBK Associates oCYorba Linda in A microwave oven aad tra.iler ures
eAchaN;C for an annu-1 payment of we~ 11ken from a consuuction ite
SS0,000 for two ycan. plus a share of on Green moor.
the company'.s poss ·profits. Police • • • 11id he also demanded a share of the Tire were sla hed on a car parked busi ncss. . Monday at 4162 Tnbuco Road.
0 ·-h • • • ' ady nou;v t at oo mone)' ever A blue Murray mot<><ro bake was
changed hands. -.L.~~re-po·-nca stokn near the comer o
block ofBcich Boulevard. • • • Bur&tan Slolc $30 and Ctedit cards
from a car at the Oakview Ccn1er. • • • A l S-ycar-old airl said a nude man
made an appcararu:e wtule he wa
"lk1n1 near the equcstnan center at
Central ParkJ • • • Tires re 5hi bed and a rear \'lCW
mnTOr wa broken on a car parked 1n
the 1etnil of tennis coun an the
4000 block ofHctl vcnu • • • $4,000 Buick Apollo wa stol n
fi m the ·4'00 block of l Stti trcct • • • llu vc tole a 60 t rco, 100 in
cash and 1 Wl)stwatch from a Yolks·
II
Harvard Avenue and Main trctt.
Newport &eacb
A S250 Slc~ was tolcn from an
unlocked garage on \M 000 blodr: of
West Ottan Front. ~ ••• A woman reported an.ga proWlcr
peck ng through a 1ndo"' of her
rcsid nee on 44th lTCCl. • • • bout $3.200 wonh of propcn ,
inclu<hna 1 con tton of ~•luab
IYCr dollars. tolcn from :a --rn1dcnct on ncs Coun. Police 1d
the bufll1r1 pparcntl cntcn:d lhc
dcnoc throua,h an unl kcd rear
door. ·
Fontaln Vall9.
Huntington Beach housewife l t
700 jn ca5h nd jcwclf) valued at
• • • A Los Pews Circle residence v.as
robbed of toOl and a tool Chest
valued at $1,SOO between 4 p.m.
Saturday and 5 p.m. Sunday. Police
qy, the thief entered the Dnid
Whcclcr home lhrouah an unlocked
side door. • • •
• ~ Sylvan Rh'tt apartment as
burglenzcd ofjcv.'Cll)I valued at $6 lO
sometime Mond{y aftrmoon. Dawn Cooper of 12068.Sylvan River told
police a thief pried open the $1idina ala · door in her ljvana room while
she~ away and took her te 'Cln.
• • • Ro lice believe juveQiJes arc rcspon-
Slble for the burglary and ransactin
of a ctmroom at Kaiser Elementary School. 2130 Santa Ana ,,.c:. over
the weekend MLSStnl from the room ~IS S3 and a box of cand:Y'bir$ :and
com nuu. Elltry •'&S apparently
throu.ih a window that was left
unlocttd sometime bet\\CCD 8 p.m.
Friday and 7 a.m. Monday.· • • •
A l..quna igucl woman ""ls
arTCSted Monda)' for allc:gc'(fl)' teal·
ing $506 wonh of dresaes from
Nord trom department store in the
SOuth Coast Plaza. Julie Ann Mione,
27, was wen into cu tod\• on
u pkion of &mnd theft. •
Huntirigton teen held
She'•~up
S. Africa Harvard male-only club& town vow they'll stay that way
raided;
348held
SEBOKENG, South Afri~ (AP.)-
J\bout 7,900 sold1cn and {><>lice
sealed on-the black township of
Seboken1 before dawn today and
searched thousands of homes, arrest·
in& 348 persons in an auempt lo
defuse a two-month outbreak of anti·
aovemment rioting.
Police gpokesman LL Henry Beck
told reporters at the nearby white
town of Vercenigins thert was no
resistance to the raid m the township,
about 40 miles south of Johan-
nc.sburg. and no shots were fired. He
said 348 people were arrested by
midday in one of the l~st domestic
security operations since the Soweto
aOO:apanheid riots of 1976.
By Utt Associated Preti
CAMBRJDOE, Ma -Nine malCJ-only IOcial dubs at Harvard
College. one of them almost 200 )'CAR old, have voted not to admit women. a
dedslon that oould result ln lhetr lbcan,t cut ofT from the universi!Y, of11cia11
said. ''The fu1ure t :uncerwn," Dean ofStud_r~ Archie Ep~ 111 wCl Monday after announctna the vote results. "But the coll~ feels ll must resolve the
inconsistency between full acoeptanoe of women an the Harvard communitr,
and the discrimination of the clubs. The situation ss now unfair.to women. '
ThcComm1ttec on Colleac Ufc in a May resolution asked the clubs toconiider
admitting women, and said that if women memben were rejected it would
consider urging the university to sever all ties with \hem. "The clubi have to come to terms with Jhc growiDJ role of women in society. These students have
to learn to view women not 11 potential sexual or romantic pannent Epps
said. .
WuJJlngton Tbae. bac~~ RM6UJ
WASHING'.rON -~e Washinaton Times today editorially endoned
Ronald Reagan's presidential ~~ti on bid, saying he is "comfortably within
the mainstream of American values" and his opponent. Democrat Walter
Mondale, is not. The newspaocr'1 editorial said Mondalo showed a
"<tistressing inadequacy"' on world affairs and had left an "a~~ mark" on
domeruc policy, while Reqan has "held a steady coune dunna his 1erm4 .. Serious difficulties rema10, to be sure, at home and abroad, but the
improvements achieved in four~ of the Reagan-Bush administration are
not to be deniedl" the newspaper said. •
Three llrelJgJJten dle bJ blue
Yan Yan, a ~t panda on loan to the Loe
Aqel• Zoo from Cblna, ponden the life
abe and Ylni xtn h&•e bad durl.na thelr
etay. Thoaaanda have Ylalted the pandu elnce their Jaly 21 arrtftl. The depart for
home on Sunday.
Beck said the white-minority gov-
ernment was demonstrating io other
black townships that "it is our
intention to restore law-and-order."
Law and Order Minister Louis Jc
Gran1e said in a statement that the
prolonged unrest was .. not only
fanned by revolutionary elements but
is also exploited by criminal and
intimidatory forces. The government
has decided that this lawlessness must
be curbed with all available means, ..
OUNDALK. Md'. -Worken sifting "foot-by-foot" through the rubble of
a furniture store today found the body of a third firefigtiter who died in a ra&in&
five-alarm blaze that irtjured seven others, authorities said. Police · said
Monday the firefighters apparently were trapped when the'roof of the bWJdina
collapsed. The blaze began about 1 :30 p.m. at Shiller's Furniture and
Appliance Store, apparenily 5parked by a work crew'• cuttina torches u they
removed a large, metal sicn from the roof, authorities said. Wasco County clerk elated
ov~;r vote rtile against guru SearchliglJts flashed across rows of
small bungalows as the co~bina
operation began about 2:30 a.m.
Convoys of armored troop carriers
Ford recallbJ6 Ranger plo~a,,.
DETROIT -Ford Motor C.O. has recalled nearly half a million 1983 an<t
1984 Ranger mini-pickups for free replacement or repair of fuel hotes and
clamps. fuel cap tethers and secondary hooC:i latches. Ford sai~ Monday that
some of the trucks may need more than one repair. The company said at had
received no reJ".Orts of accidents or injuries resulting from the problems. The
automaker said some 2.~ and 2.3--liter enaines llave fuel hoses that can PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - A f~~~judge h~ refuse(! to stop voter
elipbihty heanft&S scheduled by of-
ficials afraid that followers of an
Indian guru would try to take over
Wasco County by packing voter rolls
with "street {>C<>Ple." u:s. Distnct Judie Edward Leavy
on Monday refused to issue an
injunction against Wasco County
Oerk Sue Proffitt, who on Oct. I 0
imposed a blanket rejection of all new
voter rqjstrations and ordered the
hearings.
Lei'!)' _scbedwed a hearing today
on a R.ajneeshee request to move
some of the eligibility hearings to
R.ajneeshpuram. Rajneeshee lawyers
araued the commune.city's residents
would have a two-hour drive to The
Dalles for bearings.
"I'm elated," Proffitt said of
Leavy's ruling. "It means the people
ofWasco County know that their vote plaintiffs feel threatened," said Assis-drove throuah the streets and police
does count. it does have meaning." tant Attorney General Robett Muir. in battle carnoufla&e spread out on
But Ma Prem Isabel, a Rajneestiee "11ieyarelfeleagu~.Tbereissocial foot
spolceswoman. complained the rilling strife. However, no law-abidina per-CiUie Ram phi, an auto service
leaves the final word on voter con has reason to feel threatened by station attendant. said, "They were
sej)&!Bte from the fuel pump.
CALIFO RNI A
-- ----- - -eligibility to Proffitt, who "openly bas this p~rocess," on the streets when we woke up."
a bias against this commuruty, (and) Officials "can no longer presume Some soldiers, carryina semi-auto-Sen111rate 8 nv trJal• .and'IJf . openly has expressed her bias aaainst that those •people submitting the ma tic weapons; warmed themselves r--r .T -e·
the newcomers from the streets of cards are obeying the law." .M~ said. at ft.res. qthers stationed themselv~ LOS ANGELES -Prosecutors will seek separate espionage trials for a
America." Acting at the -sf#Je's ll1S1Stence, · along matn roads but took no part m former FBI counterintelligence aient and two Soviet emigres, probably to be
Proffitt said each would-be voter county officials said-lliey imposed the the searches. able to use the defendants' statements aaain5t one other, a defense lawyer says.
would get a I 5-to 20-minute hearing rejections to prevent voter fraud. Police carried out searches, waking U.S. Attorney Robert Bonner said Monday he would seek to have. Richard
before a lavryer, and that she would They said they feared the Rajneeshees many residents with a pre-dawn Miller, 47, the first FBI qent ever charged with esps:· o , tried setmaaely
decide on eligibility later in the day, were importing thousands of the knock on the door. They distributed from Svetlana Ogorodnikov and her estranged bus Nicolay oa<>rod-
talcingintoconsideration thelawyers' nation's down-and-out to help elect pamphlets explaining the operation nikov. Miller, Ogorodnikov, 34, and O&orodnikov, 51, peadcd innocent to
recommendations. Rajneeshees to county offices. · and uJ'&ing students to return to charges they conspired to pass hiahly classified state secrets to the Soviet
Attorney Swami Prartbo Subhan Two of the three county com-school. Can and trucks were checked Union. U.S. Oistnct Judge David v. Kenyon scheduled a trial Dec. 4. said the. voter rejections were dis-missioners' positions are up for grabs. at roadblocks.
criminatory because they weren't The Rajneeshees say they plan to Police placed orange stickers on .,. __ ... _,. n111nel t.~t 'o• ~o-latlon
imposed until a busload of Ra-back two write-in candidates -houses they had cleared. Individuals ~-""'• r--AU .1• • Y'.I
jneeshpuram recruits show~ i.tp at possibly includinJ Rajneeshpuram who were cleared received orange LOS ANGELES -The Harbor Commission violated the state's open
the county courthouse to register. Mayor Swami Krishna Deva -for stickers reading,' "I am your friend. meeting law by holding an unannounced interview session that preceded
"It is understandable that those the openings. Trust me." selection of Mayor Tom Bradley's aide as director oftbe LOs An$tlcs Harbor, -...:..:..~....;.... __ _:_ _______ ...;.._~_..;_ _____________ --::=::---...,(he city attorney's office said. The commission failed to ~st notice of its Oct.
2 meeting, as is required by the state's Brown Act which guarantees public
access to meetings of public officials. The city anomey's opion eame durina
testimon.Y at a Monday meetina of the City Council committee investiptina
the appointment ofEzunial "Eze" Buns, a longtime Bradley confidant and top
flEll
Accounu in.sured up to $100,000.
Minimum tenn of 6 months $20,000 minimum deposit.
IATE
aide, as executive director of the port. ·
Hedgecoc~ trlill set for Nov. J
SAN DIEGO -Court officials say a sepanate trial is likely for Mayor
Roger Hedgecock, who along with three top political backen has been charaed
with perjttry and conspiracy in an alleged campai&n fund laundering scheme.
Hedgecock, in the midst of a · Nov. 6 reelection fl&ht apinst La Jolla
businessman Dick C.,-lson~as waived bis riaht to a preliminary bearing and
is slated to go on trial Nov. l. The mayor bas said he wants to get the trial under
way before the election so be has an opportunity to prove bis innocence to the
electorate.
IRS uecatlon tlJreat told
SACRAMENTO -An airline pilot from Benicia is being accused of
thTCatening to "execute" an Internal Revenue Service agent for ev~ $1,000 be
is assessed in taxes. A hearina began Monday in U.S. Magistrates Coun in
Sacramento in the case of Eldon G. Wannan. Assistant U;S. Attorney Fred
Morrison quoted Warman as sayinj, "If any property or money is taken from
me without due process, l will seek out and execute IRS agents at the rate of.one
per S 1.,000." Morrison also read a letter Warman wrote to the IRS in which be
said be had a shotgun by his door and would use it on laX aaents who bothered
him.
Woman auaulted twice In day
SACRAMENTO -A 30-year-old woman bas told police she was
assaulted twice in downtown Sacramento during the early morning hours of
Sunday. Police said the woman had driven to a Jirlfriend's home, and was
getting out of the car when a man "'1th a knife forCed her into another car. She
said sexually assaulted her, then forCed her out of the car. While lookina for a
telephone, she was picked up by a man and two women in a car and tjken to a
telephorie. But while she was dialina the telephone, the man grabbed »crby the
throat, choked her and stole her purse.
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Military gets blame in Aquino
MANILA, Philipp nes (AP)-The
uwoman oft an mvcstagalOI')'
boardaccused n11rforcegeneral nd
x soldiers today of plotUllJ the
1S&ssinatton of oppo iuon leader Ben~o Aquino, nd President
Ferdinand E Marcos ordered their
bnmcd1atc prosecuuon.
Cruurwoman COruon Agrava'
121·paac repon did not 1mpbcate
Marcos or his chief of taff. Gen Jfab1an C. Ver, 64, in the alleged
con piracy to ik1ll Aqutno Ver, ho
commands the 200.000-Strong armed
force 15 1 rel tive nd dose Uy of
the 67-)·car-old Marco
Another rcpon C.lpcctcd to n me
higher officers and more soldier was
to be relenscd Wcdnesd y ~ the
m&Jorit)' of the fivc-memticr panel.
1".hc ch 1rwoman sa1d he spltt with
the other board member& because
they conduded Ver was one of the
plotters.
But M rco , who ap 1ntod th
rd QCptcd the ch 1rwoman's report dunng televised ccmnony
af it were that of the whole p;inel He
ordered 1mmod1atc prosccuuon of
Dng. Oen. Luther Custocho, bead of
the A viat1on Sccunty Command
signed to protect Aquino. nd 1x
soldiers m o special c1vlhan court on
Ch81JC$Ofplotting to kill AQUll)O
"'God know5 m)". men nd I re
without gullt an this crime," td
l>~ .............................. ~ ................................ ~ljll!l!!ll~~~-
i Roll call OD death
Aboat 90 people are e.tlmated to dle each
1 day ln Koran ln nortbem Ethlopla where
1 eome 100,000 famine Ylcthn• ha•e
aathered to recel•e emeraency food aup-
pllee. E•ery m~ tlae corp1e9 are
wrapped ID rat• for buiial.
.
, New Baja border crossing epen? ·
I
.
McMartin
children
terrified
• nahnr1Wil¥ ll"lr"'lllnfl ad(l.f'et'-~IC!luall)'
la
ktsmaru -·-1 Li
"""-' cmnJ to t procata. he laflll'd
Aqumo's follo~ lO the cam
paign of mt.am1da1Jon and ~re
that has heightened tenticmt en.
d ngcred so many hvcs nd
bcsmuclted lhc very rcputauoo of our
reeubhc.•·
Marcos Wd the ca oukl be
prosecuted by an orobudsman ma ~l court set up for try11'1 araft and corrupuon chaqa qaum aov-
cmment cmplo)'ftl and ollidals He
asked the mvestJpiory board*> Ulist
m the prosccutton, altboup 11 cannot
am~1i:!0:~ndan~ :-o~~ OPEC to cut production
!?1~~~~~;r,~1~~~il.°!i:1~: to bring up the price of oil another checks on her famlly through . -
the night to make sure they are safe. a 8 .... _ .. __ __._ .. _ ... P
child lhcrapist testified. Y UR: Aa~~ ren
Expert ~tnm K~ acf..arla.ne-c;ENEV A. Sw"itzertind -ey O~ oil mm15tm wet~
offered the eumP.les on Monday as agreed to cut proouction to shore up their $2~pcr~rrel benchmark pncc to
she bcaa!I her tcsumony on wh~ · the face of pnce cuts hv th~ countrtcs. The 'proposed reductions still i'eqwre
the chaldren from McM.antn approval at ncitt week1s:mecllngin Geneva ofalf. IJOPEC memben.:SOPJ'ClCS
Prcschoo.I arc fit to ta~e the wi.trt~ at today"s meetina. who spoke on condition of anon)'Mity, said the ans would
st;and -m penon <?r vta cl?se-arcun require unanimous approval to take effect. Sheik Ahmed z.ati Yamaru of
video -and tesllfy a~nst seven SaudiArabia.the 13-mcmbercancl"sbl&ICSIProdooerat4millionto5million
people accused ~f molesuna them: barrels a day, said the rcd'1C1Jons would be·~just cnouah to bring the oil price up
Forty-two children allegedly V1rere to the official price ... He refused to elaboratct sayina only mi au members of
molested over several years. prot-the Organization of Patroleum Exporting Countries would be involved ecutors say.
Seven defendant including the
7~year.-old pre-school founder. Vir-
girua McMartin, have been c~
"th 207 ~ounts of child molcstauon
at the Manhattan Beach school.
The children Mre interviewed by
Mcfarlane, director of the non-profit
Children's Institute International
Terron.am kidnapped pnetlt?
WAR.SAW, Poland -~ figures in the outlawed Solidarity labor movement say the kidiil ·ng a pro-SOiidarity ,nest; tbc-Rev. :Jer:zy
Popicluszko, may be link to an anu-union ••terron1t ~atina m
northern Poland. Janusz Onysikicwic.z. former national an for the
union, said the underpound press bad documented Slmilar abducuons iD tbe
Torun area. about U' miles northwest of Warsaw. "1bey wwcrc always
kidnapped. driven •war. maltreated pbysic:aJly and mentally, and released
after a relatively sbon tune," said Onyszk:iewicz. speakina to rcponm after
attending a Mass for the missina priest in Warsaw Monday eveninc-More than
2,000 people attended.
Los Angeles Municipal Court
Judge Aviva K.. Bobb declared Mac-
farlane an expert witness over the
objections of defense attorneys who
wd she had led the children tn lines
of questioning that elicited un-
founded talcs of molestation from Actor Werner dead at l/Jl
them.
Macfarlane &aid in court that a 4-
year-old became "extremely agitated.
nervous, distracted.. when told she
must tc5tify at the hearing.
She said the girt believes defendant
Raymond Buckey. a former teacher at
the school, .. can bend ban and that he
MARBURG, West Gmnan,Y-Actor 00.arWaner, Yt'bosurrtdin suCb
filmsas''JulesandJim~and0'Sb1pofFools, .. wasfounddeadillhisbotdroom
today, police said. Wemer1a61-year-old Ausuian who lived inl..icCb1a1stein,
died of a heart attack, police said. The actor came to Marburg lO address the
theater association Monday ni&bt. but canoclled became be was feeling ill,
accordin1 to a police spokaman wbo spoke on condition of aoonymity.
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The an-Tbe new border crossing, built to He said commercial traffic laries has magic keys he can unlock his jail
nouncement by Mexican officials ease con[tCStion at the San Ysidro and the immigration and customs doorandunlockberhouse"andharm
LebaJJW cJuJJ O.D bomb •nnfnnary
that they planned to open the new Port of Entry five miles to the west. complex would be opened during the be~ S·year.-old girt showed similar
Otay. Mesa border crossing w~ a main~ will serve c~mme!'Cial traffic offiC1al inausuration of the crossing, anxiety, MacFarlane said. regressing
• surpnse to U.S. Customs officials, -when at opens, officials said. tentatively set for early November. to thumb sucking and carrying
BEIRUT, Lebanon -Lebanese army troops and Druse militiamen
claShed with artillery, tank cannons and roCket launc:ben today at :tbe
embattled government stronahOld of Souk el-Olwb in the bills above Beirut.
There~ oo casualty report.S from the fi&htina. whic:b took~ on the first
anniversary of the suicide bombing of the U.S. Mari.De an4 French
headquarters of tb'e :multi-national peacc\eeDiD& force.. which ended iu
mission earlier this year. A memorial serviOc for the U.S. &Dd ncnch
servicemen was planned in OuistW:l US1 Beinn. and'maitioG of lhr
anniversary of the bomb attac:b was made\>)' :the Cbristi&n-con.troUed .. V oicre
Of Lebanon ... radio station.
< who said th% have not yet _received around a blanket. The girl also
formal noti acation to begin oper-JuanAiitonioRojasoftheMexican The U.S complex at·the border suffered .. ni~l tet1"()fl. .. conducting
anons. Secretarial of Urban Development crossing was completed in April. But .. bed checks' as many as nine times a
"My office has no knowledge of it said Friday that passenger traffic construction on the Mexican side was night to ensure her family was safe
(opening)," said Alan Rappaport. would begin flowing throu&b the delayed by construction and funding after being told she would have to
r district director oftbe U.S. Customs station on Monday morning. problems, forcing postponements. testify, Macfarlane said. in San Diego. "We are not prepared." ~.:.:.::..:~:...___:_:..=.:._ _ ___::__ __ -..,...__,._,_;...._ ________ ~....,.-...:..:..--------------:":"----f~---::-:------:--.......,...--------
' r ~!though Mexican officials had
announOcd ttiat the new border
station would begin partial oper·
ations Monday, Rapport said that
until herecciveda formal notification
from Washington, D.C., U.S. Cus-
toms would not beain its operations.
There was no immediate expla-
nation from Mexican officials Mon-
1 day about the snafu.
,,--~-------~"-!
RUFFELL'S
UPHDLSTEllY, llC.
F• Tiie lat Of Yu l#t
it22...,. awo .. COSTA llSA-su.nsa
THE
RELAXING
SOUNDS
OF THE
HARBOR
\KDCM
103.1
FM
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' •
INVITES YOU TO JOIN OUR ANNUAL
SKI SWAP
SATURDAY,OCTOBER27TH
10·5
Bring your uaed clothing. 1kl1, bOot• and binding• to nil them at our Parking
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and boots: Mii your equipment n the 1wap or •• wlll buy It from you for th•
amount we ntlmate the ltem1 to be worth. A •tore credit. for that amount, Will
th•n be 1 .. uect and muat be uMd October 27th aod 18th. Etther way you wi I
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•1UD9 equipment and clothing welcomedrt
AND
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ewper1
To Doonesb.ury, or
not to Doonesbury?
That"s the question
The nation cheered when Pulitizer Priie-winnins car-
1oonist Gan-y Trudeau ended a 2~month sabbatical and
returned Doonesbu.ryto the nation's nt\vspapers.1llree weeks
into the new run, reviews of Trudeau's biting political satire are . cd • mu . .
A newspaper in West Virginia has <fropped the strip and
another in Chico has suspended it until after the November 6
election. Both cited an outpouring of negative comment from its
offended readers. Editors at other papers admit the heat they are
~---.,ffHCH. ~'Over Doonesbtnyismaking-them think-about gcttjng the
cartoon out of their kitchens. Meanwhile, Doonesbury fans -
and they are legion -rejoice.
Readers of the Daily Pilot -who either were deprived of
the strip or spared from it during its first decade, dependin$ upon
their point of view -have greeted it with a combination of
equanimity and outrage.
Honestly, we haven't made so many people mad since we
published ... well. no sense bringing that up again. Still. the
numbers have not been overwhelming. We've bad about a dozen
telephone calls and a handful of notes about Doo.nesbu.ry. The
most frequent objection is to Trudeau's lampooning of
· President Reagan. Along the Orange Coast. if Reagan fans don't
outnumber Doonesbury fans, at least they are more vocal.
· One caller tried to pass offhis partisan complaint as a matter
of artistic preference.
"What comic strip, if any, did you discontinue in order to
make room for Doonesburi!" be asked.
We informed him Dr. Smock was the innocent victim.
There was a curious pause.
••oh. Well Dr. Smock was one of mr favorites. I think you
should put it back and get rid of that awfu Doonesbury," be said.
The sentiment was expressed by others, but more of the
offended suggested we inovc Doonesbury to the Opinion page,
where, they feel, its political content might be more appropriate.
Never! We'd be as likely to publish the wit and wisdom of
Karl Marx in that precious space.
That single page six days each week is the sole vehicle for the
expression of the mooerately conservative philosophy of this
newspaper. "Moderately" may be the ker. word. We maintain a
<lelicate balance of conservative and liberal columnists and
cartoonists and tip the scales to the right with our editorials on
local issues. Letters from our readers tend to shift the tone of the
page naturaJly a little farther to the right.
Doonesbury does not reflect the political philosophy of this
newspaper. To publish it on the Opinion page -EVERYDAY
-would present the wrong impression of The Daily Pilot to its
readers.
· Doonesbury wi11 stay where it is. It may be a political
cartoon, but it's still a cartoon. If it's not very funny to some
folks, others find it hilarious. The serial nature of the strip may
make it difficult to understand for those who don't follow tt
regubirly. The same can be said about Judge Parker, a staple of
the Pilot's comic page.
Trudeau is not the only cartoonist who attempts to interpret
life through his art. The late Virgil Partch oflaguna Beach did it
magnificently with his Big George., Charles Schulz does it
regularly with Peanuts and Jim Davis makes sport of us all in
Garfield.
Trudeau's ability to find humor in our political system is as
significant. The fact that he infuriates so many people while
amusing so many others indicates the importance of his
contribution. The Daily Pilot would be less without Doonesbury
and Pilot readers would be denied the ability "to witness a
national phenomenon.
Moi~_pump-out stations
would cuTtail pollutton
:To the Editor:
After reading the articles in the
Daily Pilot regarding the pollution of
Newport Harbor, I find that none
mention the lack of pump-out facili-ues available. It's a disgrace for a
hitbor with some 6,000 to 7 ,000
boats to have only one pubhc pump.
out station. This pump-out, which is
located near the Coast Guard dock, is
nOt only inoperable a ~t deaJ of the
ume, but the dock it s located on is
uted by inconsiderate boat owners to
wash their boats. while others arc
waiting to use the pump.
It seems to me that instead of
spending uu money to .. study" the
problem over and over, that an
adequatenumberofpublicpumJ)':'Out
stations be installed. The conditions
.as they are now, and have been for
years, encourage boaters to discharge
their holdina tanks overboard. After
all. how many boaters are aoina to
take their boats into the ocean just to
discharge their holding tanks? .
A CONCERNED BOATOWNER
Art In Motlon weekend a treat
To the E.ditor:
I live a few doon up from the
:U,Una Hotel, and enjoyed The
Weekend of Art In Motion so much
that, tonith t, after seei~ parts of it on
Channel 6, l thoupt I'd Just write you a letter.
11 is ao nice to live in such a creative
community. How lucky we all arc to
hive so much talent in so many facets
around us.
The Art Jn Motion Weekend was
entertainment for everyone. My
guestS certainty enjoyed it. This cype
of sho,.. brif\IS the community
together. and 1 would Ii.kc tO thank all
lhe participants who volunteered
their time and efforts to make that
show po iblc.
JOYCE ROON
l.A&una
~ 'fo 1he Editor: amopa our friends. Hi' AM ruson-
Pat Buc:hanan•urticlcsa~creatina ins ii an island in a disturbed world.
lommcnts. all complimentary. MURIEL OLDS
TBOIL\8 SLL\8
Taous
EUAS
••nlat
In H1g~11~
·· _J . tech •. ~ isn't a
I ~ b
'' \'\W., SltCt ~OUR Dt~t. '10U1~t l\lD ~Off \t\\lt. Ul'\URN \~ ~· PO..\.S ! "''
AAO ~ ~ti ~Tl 'fit:Rt Tf.l.K\~ f... WD MK OCt. 5'< t\tX\ JUL't ~ .. "
Are your household items
. ·• worth space tliey take up.?
Walter Burrouglu is on vacation.
Jlis Searcbli&b.t column will resume
Nov.6.
Just by chance. I hit on the solution
to the problem of hoUIC clutter. It's a
foolproof system for dccidina what to
throw out and what to keep. Here•s the idea; .
Fint. ~ out how much your house or apanment cosu you a year.
If you own the house, include your
mortpg.e.. taxes, electricity, beat and
repair bills. If you rent the house or
apartment, add everything to your
basic renL Say your house costs you $7,SOOa)'_~·
Now ~re out bow many 1quare
feet you re pra~ for. It'• easy eno~ The sunplest way is to
multiply the lensth by the width and if
you have two floors, double thaL Say
you have l,SOO square feet in your
house.
To decide bow much each 1quare
foot costs yo~ divide the money by
the feet In this catc, it wouJ4 mean
each 1quare foot of space costa you SS
a year.
Next you estimate bow much SJ*% is taken up by various items in your
house. ·
The trick i1 to decide whether the
rent for the apace they're taking up is
worth it. I fint looked at the
refriaerator ai a test case. It probably
occupies six 1quare feet of floor apace.
(rm not ~cubic feet.) Jfit does. l ahould 1t six times $5, or $30
rent a year. or the refri&e:rator. it'•
worth iL J don't throw out the
re.friaerator.
"Hats Off to Larry" wu u funny u I
used to think it was when the Irids
played it. a~ I have usigned a yearly rental 111DJ space of$25 to the stereo player. Six
years at that~ is $150. lf1 been
R costina me about $9 a minute in rent OOIEJ to listen to a little music. rm civina
•••••••••••• the stereo outfit to a charitable -orpniz.ation.
. . items ~t I We've.Uottedmore1pacetoboolcs
deternune can go m the cold liaht of wedon•treadthan toanythinaelsein
thete ~rental ~ . For in-the boute but books are not nea<>-stance, there s an ~ve li~ I<?ve tiable and they ®Jy take shelf space.
seat over at one Side ~f the bVlJll You can•t puta price on the pleas~
room.. rve ~ways bated it ~d no one . books ajve you. J have books I know
ever ans on •L I aueas thlt 1t ~ up rn never re8d ~n but wouldn•t
more O~r space than the reftjgerator. think of parting with. A bia book like
Pro-rating the cost of housms. that a. dictionary tat~ up about one
couch.compared to~e.pl~~1t bas square foot of space. rm willing to
ever pven anyone Sittinl !D it w~uld rent that much space in the house for ~Y make the dump its destiny. SS a year for most of the books I have. SittJ.ng would have cost me severill
dollan a minute.
Many yean 110 when the children
were youna and loved bad music, I
bought a stereo outfit complete with
record player, q~·inch tape play-
er and AM-FM radio. .
ln my closet, 1 have at least1 four ~ of ahoes that are perfectly good
in all respects ex~t they hurt too
much to wear. They re on the floor in
the back of the closet, which I conc.ede
is the low-rent district in the house.
Nonetheless, they've been there foru
long u lQ...-yean and must have
accumulated at least $IS each in
unpaid rent Faprina it this way, it's
gomg to bun less to throw them out.
rm going to symmaticalJy a:l!: rental amount for everytbina ·
up apace in the house or in the praae.
I may set rid of that Flexible Flyer
yet.
Thi.a stereo outfit. which looks
c1as.sy enough. wu never very good
but it must occupy five 1quare feet of
space. In the past five yea.rs. it'• been
used l 0 times that I know of. On five
successive Christmasea, I've put a set
of eiaht Christmas-records on it early in the morning and played them throUfh breakfast and openina cer-
emoruea. Tbe sixth time I've used it
was once durina the halftime of a
Monday n.igbt football pmc when I AM1 R#lle1 & • •~lefl
got cunoua about whether the record colou&ht.
Khomeini maybe planning
pre~election embassy hit
WASHING TON -Has the
Ayatollah Khomeini pven Ronald
Reapn the evil eye? Aooordllia to
intelliaencc IOW'CU, the ajed leader
of1ran•1 MOllem fanatics believes be was raponlible for 1immy CMter's
defeat four yean qo. Now be wants
to put the ame spell on President
~ d . "th . n.P ma ness 11 not wi out 1t1
methods. Iran has~ bankrolled
and diruted Shiite terroruU who are
reportedly plannina one or more
bombina attackl on U.S. facilities in
the Middle Eut before election day.
U.S. intelliaenoe received what one
State Department insider dCICribed
as a «apccific .. wamina of a pro.
election Itri.kc just• few da1' ace>·
Al a retUl\:,;eral embusies in the
resion have placed on fWJ alert.
They include those in Kuwait, Oman,
Blbtain, Jotdan and, of coune.; Beinlt
The flood of intellisence tipe has
created a problem tbo\lltl. There
have bcCb 10 many threats Of viOlence
.,ainat U.S. cmbuaies In recent
weeb that some anal)'ltl suspect a
deliberate clisinformauon campaisn.
The aim would be to cry .. wolft" IO
often tba'1 when notbins baODCDCd. the American embuiies would reJu
IOCUrity and make a real an.ck euier.
~ i• deliberate milinforma·
uoa ~ pven out10..,. down our ~"' one IOUIU told my u-lociite •Luoene I .apado.
The Sbilte terrorin.a" Jo~ 1oa1 i• notbina 1eaa than dri 11he
JACK
AIDEISOI
Partisans on the committ.taft'bave
been quarrelina over th~Oal word-ina of the report. but at thi1 writin& its
main points include theae:
•Contrary to some press repons, ·
the decision to tnovo the embassy frofn West .Bei.rut to Eut Beirut was.a
sound one. Morale was poor at the old
Location becaUJe of constant tension;
Eut Beirut IClCmcd less vulnerable to
tem>riat attack. •R~entoftheextra Marine iecuri~ deW.l with LcbanelC l\W'ClS wu a positive step. The Le6enese
perfonned well, and a visible Marine
presence outside the embassy build-
Ull was considered an invitation to
attack.
•The toughest criticism the report
will make is that some of the most
fuAdamental security meuures bad
not been taken at the embassy. For
example, while officials waited for
concrete to set so atecl gates could be
put in poaition, a finale truck Parked across the entry road at the riabt place
would have been enoulh to block the
bomber'• truck.
The s~ who have been draw-
ina prwe in recent monthJ . in
administration circles, were less lhao
helpful: They allowed terroriataroups
to o~te m,e1y in Syrian-controlled
a.reu of Lebanon. It'• also j)()Slib1e
that tbe Syrians let the truCklo.d of
ext>losives pass throuab their chcck-
po1nu.
J•ck AHenoa 11 • 1Yf14Jcat-'
col..W.t.
Drunken duck walk
Ducb Wilk tuny u~y. but the
SO ducb in oee Brititb Columbian ftoct Mlbd ra1 funny ... They're
~"police &aid. Su~ cnou,h, lbe
ducks were dNnt. A bulb learcb
turned up a .neuby moonahiner"1
still. The CMIJes. oftket1 Coatnbut·
ins ao tbe ·ddlnquency of dueki, or
IOIAC Mb. Anyhow, the)' 801 the
Q, Mmltive tribelpeople in A&ica
keep~ belrial witll much later in
life ttWl do moet Americanl. Wby?
A. lt't qweser there.
O. ~~the '"'calpt"' Uled in violins ud the lite called
cataUt wben 1•1 telll)' mlde of ibcep
111tattnesT
sure bet
'Not entirely a
growth industry.
says researcher
"Kiah tech. not hiah taxes" is the
way of the futw-e for Amcric&;
President Reagan' trumPeted tbe
other day in a ca.m~ apcetb.
But here in California, tbe heart·
land of American hiah technoJOI')',
thinp aren't quite to simple.
Yes, Hewlett-Packard Co. -the
1tate'1 oldest and 1arpt electron1ca
firm -reported recently that profits
arcup•7~t.
But just one day earlier, Amdahl
Cdrp. had reported a 44 peroent drop
in its earninp. laYina oft' hundreds of
employees.
And a week later, Gavilan Com·
puter Corp. laid off 68 percent of iu
work foroe and cut the er\oe of iU
briefcase computen -mtroduced
with a lavish rollout jutt 17 months
aao -by 36 pm:ent
Meanwhile, the Reaearcb Develop-
ment Corp. of 1apan fired a shot
across the bow of the Silicon Valley,
whote nickname stems from one of
the main demenu in the miao.
comP!Jter chips used to provide
machine memory. The Japanese firm
said iu acicntiJu have developed a
method for i:riakina pllium anenide
crystals, which many indUltry experts
sav will eventually replace silicon.
•·we•re in a war," said Oavilan'•
president, C.W. Rea.
It'• clear this war already bu its
sba:re of winners and loten, with
plenty of cuualtiea ahead. And a recent ~rt from the Univenity of
Califonua at Berkeley has a cau-
tionary mepqe for cities countin1 on hiah tech to insulate tbem from future
recessions. Ira a pmble.
The rep()rt by Berkeley's Plant
Oosures Research Group (ound that
while hilh·tecb firm• have created
about 146,000 jobl in California since
1981, they've alto laid of 43,000
workers.
"lt•1 not entirely a arowth ind~.
u some people think," said PhiliP-
Shapira. one of the Berkeley report 1
authors. He counted 1•1 separate
hi&h-tocb staff cutbackl &Pd plant
shutdowns in California. Industries
with the most hiah·tech layoffs in-
cluded ain:raft., computm and offioe
machines.
So state and l~ ievmunents.
Shapin warns, should be chary of
investina ac:arce public ret0un:cs to
attract volatile industries.
Some of the b.iab.:ttJch layoffs are
clearly cauled bf 1*1 auetJWork on
the part of mdustry planners.
Gavilan, for in1tanoe, entered the
portable computer market just u
Apple, EPson. Tandy Corp. and Hewlett-~ were introducina
similar machines.
And Atari became overly dePen·
dent on the faddish video pme
market. ·'
"When you have 20 or 30 com-
panieseachplaoninatoiet IOpercent
of the computer market, it'• not
arithmetically poaible," aaya David
Sanden, director of corporate (k.
velopment for Hewlett-Packard.
Sanden links the current "ahakina
down and aortina out'' in California hi&h teCh to chanlCt rnldc in Ccdetal
caf?!tal pins taxes .U ycara qo.
'When the capital pins take went
from '40 peR)Cnt to 28 pen:eot, it
became attractive for invetton to try
to make quick profits. .. he said. .. rt
createa latte souroea of money. So
there were more compuiel started
than tbe world needl bec:au. ii'•
relatively euy '° -IDOMJ. And there have been more idcu funded
Ul&D can ~bly be IUOCellftal."
MeanWbile, the burteonina mamt
the new firm• bope co exploit bu :not been quite u exputiw a IOIDC
ex~ Where tome becMll bid
predicted • 50 peran& .,.. ,....
powtb rate in plnoMI ...._.
... lbrouP 1990, tbelCblll .....
been .,. " ~l, ICCIOldllll IO ~ r1111rdl flnDI.
But tMI proba_blJ won·1 damJCll
the eetbusialm of venture capitaliltf
who have dumpec:l almoet SI 'billioa
into new Cali(omia biab·tech buii·
ne11e1 over the =s• . ••vinualJy ~ D&00ft the Roor
lJ macd S1atet out of the Middle t.
Some mdminiltmioo c.'ritlca cbaqie
that Praident Relean bU ea-COW'leed tbia daatefOUI dream~ bis ,.......---------------~--------..---.· failwe to retaliate l!pinst tbe :&er· tOrista -or their q,onson -Who
~· A. An old Roman named Erutno
about A.D. I JO staned makina musi-
cal inattument ltrinp out of 9heep
iotestjnc. The demand became .,.eat.
It was oonsidettd ftcnletome bed luck
to kin a cat tbeft.lbouu tbal. SO Eraamo hit on the nOtion that ff be
idanified his product u ""'cacaui. ...
nobody would 1mhate It and nain i1
monopQI)'.
of i:rn computer w wil1 be oblolcte wi two rears." llid one marbt raearc:Mr. Tbat meua mere are
a>natant opponunibll lor new~
peniea and coaatant c:hallenlCI IO \be
old leaden.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
H. L. lctlWerta
Publittttr
,, ... a.a
MaM.glng Editor
TCNRT ...
City (JI
were ~aible for the two embuly
attiCb and the Marine m&lllCR in
Beirut. The critics •Y the lal'OnlU
have In~ dUt u • 8e that
they ctn ppera&e IPU\lt Americana with tmpwuty.
The la• in~~ hive.,._ ·.,....S ,iloal IO the Seftlte
Foreip Relatioaa Corftminee. Wldt.b
will .ooa •11ue fla lonHWahed repon ii•••••••••••••••••••·-on the Septcmbercmbuly bombina.
,.
Q. How many auh llC 14' or under
in tbi1 country set prq,n.tnt every Yeu'l .
A. About 30,000. A d 12,000 have
bvc birth •
The lut intensive camfl'll,n put on
by the Procrastinators• Cub of
mcnca was its anti-Mr prottlt in
1966-the demonstration qain t the
Warofl812. LM. &,-1 u a •iN~tel
~.
l
Sums up Elizabeth Lc\l' of Dita·
quest, a San JOIC market reeeardJ
firm, "The indUIU')' II .-..UY.
prosperous. witb an undenoae Of
imecurity. But hiib.tech ii ltill at·
U'llCdaa PleatYofvanu" capltll." ,....., BM.t,, ..... JW.taln. ... ,,.,..,.,., ....... '--
..
HELP YouRSELF
----""-~ - - --Heart benefit subtitle:
GiVe a teen 'Gone With the Wind'? aid t replace Magazine features NB mayor, ' I' d •· k first lady visits Santa Ana coo r1n ·:i-~:.e~
You can take away the balloon but you can't take
Tina think.I her ·away the heart!
parents are .. cool," Thewinddidn'tcooperateThUndayeven.inawith
and her friends qree. Oranae County Women's Council of the American
They're the ones who I ~llDA Heart Association ... there was supposed tO be a larJC provide ~e beer ~cas LI balloon outside the Newponer's Plaza BallroOm to carry
f~rthe kids on Fnday •~· out thcthemeofthecouncil'sfirit fund·raiser 0 Atound
ntJhU. ..They'll llL~•YJ •theWorldwithHeart." ' dJ:io~ anybo~:" aays ._ . ''The wind wasjusttoo strong," said committee
Tana s Dadi so we memberGlml78mallwood,addi!'l~·1~msoSOtTy."
may ~ wel cooper~ • It would have been perfect. OWner and pilot of the ate: Tina a.~d I understand each other. After all, I wu once love balloon, ltatbeya Ralu, was there sayina the a kid; too. fl ti trans .. SS fl . d' d . Tina is 1 S and her Dad i1 an.alcoholic. She is a prime oa na pon as . eet m ~ameter an seven atones candidate for bia trouble. tall and completely e~cm.:led with. h~ . _
. 1t•1 kids whose parents are alcoholic who are most Somucbfo~outa1deprops ... 1011deb~~soft· '1
likely to be vulnerable tq'the disease ofaJQ<>holism. And sculpture.dbouuballoonshunafromtheccdmamuch
alQOholism is, indctd';"a d.1.sease ... most often with aenetic to the ~~~t of the 30!J atten~na to lend a ~and to the roots. council in its fight against cardiovascular disease.
There is a 25 percent chance that the son of an GlorlaOsbrbakwascbairmanoftheeventwith
alcoholic father will be an alcoholic, and ifboth parents are Carol Bers as her co-chairman. ••Behind everr alcoholic, that risk rises to 50 percent. Clinically, it appears succcuful chairman there isa committee," wd Gloria
that dauahtm are not much safer. introducinahercrew-NucyMallea,A die] If you believe statistics, a 1tudl out of Johns Hopkins Greeafleld, Evelya and Harp Gedber, Sudia Brod.le
Hospital says that 23 percent o our teen-aaen drink Mary AID Wellt,JoaauM.W.1 Jo1eeFalilllte.r '
alcohol, mostly in the form.of beer, at least once a v.ttk. Mana1 Reed,SmallwMd,Jo~eSwwan,~e.
These same younpters are h~ely to consume five or more Normu, Jo41 Ferrapmo and Ed.le Tcilakaa. bot~ or cans on these oocu1ons.; . Abo, Pam GOJd1telD, council pra.ident, Served u
It s. too bad that youth does not protect one aptnst ex~fficio on the committee. Durina the social hour Pam ~;;>~~l~hc!~tfn~~w:th!tf.ii~e!s7~~~~faacare rsc~ttinaabouther~andSaai'1)dcparturcforHona
Look around at your local bifh sdlol and consider that ~~. , e nex~ day.~ iliahtly-undeNl\~we&thcT Pam three out of every 100 aenion dnnks every day. said, I m f:akina thIS flu back to ~em. .
Teen·•ae drinkina often starts With c~rimental Wells 1.1 elated over her 1p~1n~mcnt by Tom Jbley .. aoinf. &Jona with the crowd" mentality. Peer pressure tothe~tatu1ofWo~en'1Comm1ss1on, nounath.•~hcr ~vat11 and alcohol use is often spontaneous and schooltnawuinehlldcare.HusblndLollwutallciba
unplanned. Our ldd1 do not mean to act seriously involved aboutaettina tQltthera Cdclmtya<>lf tournament &o
with alcohol, it's just that sometimes it happens. benefit the lmmunoloaySoeiety(anotbCrioterestof
Tina beaan 1mokina and drinki"' an 0ccasion1l beer Mary Ann's).
at 13. She.dian•t even need to rely on~ _preuure.
Her parenu had supplied her riaht an their home.
After all, the in wa1 a happy-a~lucky, beer~rinkina family
who believed that k.ida nCe(i to learn to drink properly.
Tin1·1 Did took his reapOntibUhy aeriously. Tina would learn how to drink 11 pan of her education.
Tina'• Mom knows her husband bas bad a drinltina
PtOblem. In fact, for yean. &be been coverina up for him. Consptnna. however 1nadvtttentJy, tw become a WI)' or
life for her. She just doesn't know bcnu.and hcrdau11ner ii on her way to becomina another victim. It &akes an awfully perceptive tecn.qtr to rec:otntze
and ldmit to a personal Inability to drink alcohol 'Yiithout
alcoholic effects. Askin& for that may be a bit too much. If Tana's flmtly had suffered from a history of
diabetca, I'll bet her pamlll Yt'OGki more likely have
educated her about the potential •ian• and daoaen of that
diteatc. T1na and her pan:nu need hdp to understand.
• Beina a httlt •bit atcobohc • someth na like be.ma 1
httle bn ~ant.
Dr. Alati Is 1 mlfTlllC and Bmdy rbenpllf ln
CoroM dd Mar. She lcoma your mpon If you Wllb
1 ttt>ly. pa1t enclote 1 um.Dtd. self .. ddrrned em-eJQpc.
HELP YouR SELF
Feel woozy
in Jacuzzi?
Take a rest
m
<S
Write ro Un<U Allaz1.:. PhD., Clo Dally Pllor. P.O Box T.a Wen •nd Gloria Not4 ~CoJUt1MCll91~6. , 'A_,,d"'dae'World.Stll •rt'.
lla17 bD Welt. '*1la.Jolle ud Jim ll1Uer llboatlaet
appOlJltment to tatu orwoaea Oolllml..So • ~1~nc:v
•
I
OrlnGt Oout DAILY PILOTnueecs.y, October 23, 1914 •
HELP YouRSElf
---~--
Companies' wellness programs paying ofJ
Ounce of prev ntion worth
more than a.pound-Of cure
ounce al\d 11 half of cure.
~Hptue.rcUe
You can now lry an-scat workouts on Eastern and
Western airlines wath Gilda Marx's new tn·ftiaht audio Wh le some corporauon are challenging employee cxcrciK upe. On Jess helpful a1ilines or at rourdcsk. you
health QO a . oth rs are uSlng an ounoe of prevcntton. A can make u~ your own workout. A chair is the only
rc«nt urvey of Fonun SOO companies reveals that in· rcq1>ircd equipment. For tancn. here are a 1cw Marx
house health Otcilitics are growing in J>Opulanty. Over a moves to try if your scat mate isn't too nervou :
quarter of these companies have an on-premise health -Shoulder Rolls: Bend forward &Ii&htly. place hands
dub; nearly 20 pcn%f?l have outdoor spon ar~ • • • oo knees. Press your <Shoulders back. Roll them up, and The~ ofm·hou~ health proaram 1 _quickly drop. Reverse, moving houtdcn forward, roll up and
becoming n 1mponani cntcnon for prospceuvc em-down.
ployccs. In .. The 100 Best Companies to Wort For In -Arm tretch: Reach arms up Look up and &rab
America" (Addison-Wesley, S 17.95) tbc autbon dte these hold of an imagineey rope overhead. Reach aad stretch
PrOgram an index of concern for employees. while keeping buttocb finnly planted in your seat.
But the tangible payoff ~me this su!11mer in a ~tudy -Hccl·to-toe: ~k at your toes. Lift t~ up toward
by James M. Burcke, an editor of Chicago's Business your nose, and down. L1f\ both heels. Repeat, hftma heels,
Insuranc:.c m~ne. then toes, in rapid ).UlUssion while lceepina your legs as
Companies that iftitiatl"d more than four health or still as poslib)e.
wtllnCS5 cffons in 1982 reported totaJ medical and health Marx also sugcstsa. voidina all liquor (it dehydrates).
costs at 6.9 ~tot total payroll. Companies that took drinkin4 at least four glasses of water ana stayina away
no health inatiatives paid 9. 3 percent-nearly half agairi as from ~p1cy or salty food .
much. An ounce of prevention is already worth at least an . ..When you -.rrive "' your dt-stin:uion," Marx
A rose by any other name
might smell much sweeter
DEARANN LANDERS: I am
writing in response to "A Respectable
Hooker, .. the woman who was miser·
able because ofber name.
Havinamarricd into the Hooker
family IOyearsago, I found that a
senseofhumorcan make all the
differcnoc in the world. The best
defense is to be ready for the wise guys
and beat them to it. -
When lam introduced and some-
one snickers., I say, .. Yes, my name is
Hooker-as in Happy."
When kec::ei ve obscene phone calls
asking, 0 Howmuch do you charge?" I
reply, ••More than you can afford,
Buddy."
Believe it or not. thereareadvan·
tageS to being a Hooker. Your name is
rarely mi pelled, and no one ever
forgctsit-H.H. IND.C
DEARB.B.: lbave ~from
BMken la H ltatel, u well a1
Ca.Uda, Puama ud Mexico City. AD
wlto wrote, wttlaoat ezceptJoa, saJd
tffJ were pned to be Booten ud to
Md wtdl die aee4Jen. Bere'1 a .upt
nnaU.. Same IOlll· secoad •use.
•• l:aDEIS
classroom lineup or a doctor's office,
·the spectators could hardly wait to sec
what I looked like. Whenever I was
introduced I was invariably as~cd.
.. What did he say your name was?"
I learned to go a1on1 with the joke~
When people discovered that the
teuina didn't bother me it stopped. ~nathi~-AHOARAT
DEAR BE.ABT: A rose b'/ UY
u.me woaJd smell u sweet.AM 110W
we'll pat dae matter to rest. I'm 11re
all dae Rooters will be sratdU.
••• DEAR ANN LANDERS: fi~e •
figure out ways to get unemployment
compensation forextended time
periods. Mo~v«. his mother has
been sendina ham money on a weekly
basis.
I've seen parents come to the rcsc~
when emergencies arise, but to bail
out young marrieds with weekly
s:hec:ks. though it may look like an act
ofsenerosity,crcatesanunheaJthy
dependency and can ruin a marriage.
Tell all parents if they want to see
\heir children happy, they should
allow them to work out their financial
problems on their own. -
LEARNED THE HARDWAY IN
CINCINNATI .,..
DEAR CINCY: Belpeubecrip-
pUqlf lt d.lha res,...lbWtJ from
a4al&cWrea topareata f., u
uteded pert .. •f tlm•. 'ftere comes
a UmewMla die entdel mut be
a.ronaway ud dtepatleatmaat
Jeana te walk -.ler Illa ow. ,.wer.
Parat.a wllo ,...mM CM mK~ Hip.
for too Ins. tlo tlletr dllWrea •
favor.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: A recent
letier from the family named Hooker
brought back some not-~fond
memories. My family name was
Hoar.
yearsqo I married a man who was
well educated. had worked at several • • • part-time jobs and made very littl~ Got tho~ widdinl bell blues over
money. Ithoughtl saw qualities in cost ... 1u~tlist ... whatrowear.:.
him that would permit us to build a and other derails? Ann Landers'
&ood life together. "New !Jridc'sGwde"will help. Fora
Over \he years I had to put up with a lot of teasing. obscene pbonecalls
and the usual boring wisecracks.
\\1len my name was called ia a
In the last fiveyean,hewas hired . copy, 1e!JdS2plusa/oIJ1. self.
and fired two dozen times. Two yeats-' addre$sed, stamped envelope (37
ago he stopped loo.kin& for work. His ~nts postaae) toAlln Landers. P.O.
principle occupation is trying to • Box 11995, Cbic:aio.111. 6061 I.
Biting off territorial claim
J watch a lot of anim al documen·
taries on tele vision.
same table and have the same seat
each week in the bleachers. We park
in the same spot every day at work,
use the same stall in the restroom.
take the same route to and from work
every day, and stake out our pew in
church.
I don't relate to them at all. I can
wa1Ch a turtle lay her eggs with tears
streaming down her face and feel
nothing. 1 can watch a snake devour
something furry and not even wmce.
When a lion has sex every I 0 minutes,
I don't even stop eating my nacho
chips.
But I am intrigued hr the animals
who 0 stake out territones." The cats
who do it by scent, the birds by song.
and the seals by pure force.
That I can relate to. Man ts
E11A
Bo11Ec1 I've written before about the terri·
tori.al ritual of an aerobics class. I
entered a class for the first time a few
probably the most territorial animal }'Cat'S ago and was told 1 was standing
who ever walked the face of this earth. 1n someone's .. spot" I moved. I was
We all do it. It's a habit we set early in standing in another woman's .. spoL ..
our life. We sit on the same seat on the hnoved. After five different •Pots. I
~hool bus every day, eat lunch at the finally ended up wlierc no one wanted
-------------~--------------.• .in the front row next to the mirror.
'Ilieres no
place like home ···for~
At home Instruction for all ages by QUallfled Instructors. ~ ~th, reading, En9llSh, foreign languages, all musical
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LOW rates with no obllOatiOns T\Jtortno scheduled at vour 9 .. ~
convenience 476-0929 uNu•n10 OFFICE HOURS 9am-6pm Mon ·Fri
5000 Birch Street, suite 3000, West Tower, Newport Beach, CA 92HO
CENTER CATION
YOUR CHILD-LAZV, SLOW
OR LEARNING DISABLED?
FREE SEMINAR
ON LEARNING DISABILITIES
TUESDAY, OCT. 30th, 7 pm-9 pm
SPEAKERS
Peter Wilhovsky, M.A., Special Educator
Barbara Jessen, M.0., Neurologist
Kenneth Fineman, Ph.IY., Clinical Psychologist
Hoag Hospital
Cafeteria Meet,lng loom
301 Newport llvd
~~N=--"'-ewport ,leach
Call for le1ervatlon1 -971-5'111
<
I
It was three yea.rs before I could work
my way to the back row.
At our house, we all have "our
chair" at the dinner table. Mine is the
one closest to the stove and heaven
help anyone who sits in it and expects
me to take four more steps to get
where I'm &oing.
My husband also suffers from the
Archie Bunker disease. His living
room chair, throu&h years of use. has
his anatomy set in cement. No one
has gotten beyond the posjtion of
hovering over and saying. .. ts this
your chair1" He'll tell you.
Alt of these territorial conquests
pale to the one we built our house on a
few years ago. Unknown to us, we
infrioJed on the permanent homes of
scorpions. spidcn, crickets, lizards,
snakes and foxes.
They &et our attention in a million
little ways. They appear on our patio
uninvited, crawl up our waits, bide
out in oursbowcrandshoesand when
we open the mailbox )'ell. "Gotcha!"
The way it is explained to us. they
were there first -about a billion
years aao -aod old habits die bar~
That's why they bite you and try to set
rid of you.
A woman tried to take my aerobics
"sPot" last week . It works.
Expecting?
Don't ov:erdo
Eurcitcdurina~is•aood tbi• but even ~ ;thiaa can be
tarried 100 far. MediQ.I expau ecro11
the country are ptherina cYidenc::ie
thal heavy oercitt duri111 prepucy
may not be such a JOOd idea rot the
baby.
StUdia It Loma U8dl Umvershy
in Loi An&cles ud Columbtl Una· vers1ty in 'New Yon indicate that
balvy curctlC dimi~ blood OMr.-
to the Utend and the plKenta in favor
of the mov1--. naaternaJ mulda. A reduction in plaQm.al Row mtricu
nuuienll ddi\terid IO the blby and
Caft manl fetal .,owtll.
The~-•Udia lhOW daat lilbt Of' ~ .. nadte acMlllv ... ......,.. * ~·r~ Pld'1 of'blood 9t0!na so the pblcmta evea lf It dimuulha die unouna of
blood ftow. Bua too mucb oM:mte
ovemdel butlHn fcta'J 11~ •
~i&ht not 1« Kcith in any marathons, Vanny Fall dcscnbes him as "resihcntly ahvc. He seems. wilhin bi1 -~~.ow.n,,lbanly. paramctm..aJba.ppy. t'VCD healUi)·. ~ ,IXtPite, or perhaPS ~use of. ~heir ooionoui
assoctauon witb drup, many rOckcrs have long
Rockjocb
For those who nimain unoor\vinceci that the '70s arc
over, here's the proof. ROllil\J Slone mqumc is telling
people how to JC' of'f drup. ·
The pubhcauon·s new book. "How To Oct Off
Drugs .. (S1mon & SChuster. S6.9S). follows through on the
mo t significant chanae in the rock world since punk.
Rockm like Miele Jaaaer. David Bowie, Ktith Richards
and Rod Stc\va.n arc choosing cumse over cxc:.css.
Before the last Rollnll Stones tour, Jaaacr sequestered
himself in rural Massachusetts and followed a regimen of
stretching and j<>Jaina to pttpare for the rigors of the road.
David BOwae ·discovered the value of fisticuffs and
incorpQrated shadow bo~na into his most ('e(lent tour.
Rod Stewart. the original Rude Bo1, has toned down
his act. Onoc an on·s~c brandy-<1uaffcr, Rod 'the Mod
now runs in mini-marathons like Manhattan's Pepsi
Challenge.
• • Even Keith Richards ~ms to be clea!'• Whik you
BOULLOl'f-BARTOLIC
St. John Vianney Qiapel in New-
port Beach was the setting for the
wedding rites of Nicholas Ilene
Bartolic and Robert C. Boullon.
The bride is the daughter of
NcwpQrt Beach residents Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Bartolic. She and her
bridesmaids wore wedding apparel
from the Laura Ashley wedding
collection. Bridal attendants were
Erin Bartolic, Sheila Watson, Gina
Ginalli and Carolyn Boullon.
The bridegroom, a resident of
Covina, is the son of Dr. Robert
Boullon and Mrs. Evelyn BouUon. He
was attended by Pat BahoJic, Tony
Bartolic, Joe Wheatley and Dick
Dick.iason.
ambivalent about them.
Swotatmet
To develop each mind and body for peak Performanoci
throughout life, C · 'ports medic Robert Arnot, M.D.1 believes that each c1 t n oc:eds to know bis or her natura
J)9rt and how to do t at it. 'J':tiat's possible now that
scientific ad vane r be&Un to give us tests for \he many
body-mind sys s used in each SP.<>"· Amo1•1 "SPonl'I
elcc:t}on," just pubhsl)Ald'by Vi~ina(SI 7.9.S) •• ~pcllsout.th
pcc1fic self.test on leven maJOr SPorts: ,imna. runn1°"
tennis, windsurfing, swimmmr.. cro.ss~untry •ldi~ biking. They arc tough, but practical.
The book off en a beautiful vision. About one-half ot
us. the Harris Poll repQns. suffer life's first humiliation in
athletics. general)~ in a 5pon pushed upon us by pa.not or
t*her. In Arnot s democracy ofviJor, each of us plays a
pretty good game of something. •
Americu Heala. Mapdae Stnlce
Lalle WIU pla19 a RQNl•n ballerlna ID tile mo.te ... Tile Cowboy and tbe Ballertna.••
tonlCht at 9 OD Chamiel 2.
** ··~ l.lnlpoon't VICdon" (1983) Ctlfyy Chatt. aererty
O'Mallo '
(8) MOT NB:at•M.Y
1'BEV90N
(I) IROTHER8 Q
(%)MOVIE ••lit "How FWll)y Clfl 681 It?"
(197&} Lua Anlonlll. ~
Gilnnl(J
-11 ..
li='IPmAI.
ODOOOUfU g ... tlGHTlJE ....,,.,AU.Bf
trimmed with hand-sewn seed pearls
were appliqued on the neckline and
bodiceoftheaown. Herlonatrainand finger tip veil were trimmed with
matchina lace.
She was attended by her three
sisters, Debra Ann Carter, Becky
Heckhnger and Kathleen Mitchell
and the step-mter of \he bridqroom,
Brooke Wilson. Aower &irb were
Patricia Carter and Kim Hecklinacr,
nieces of the bride.
The bridegroom is the son .of
Duane Lyle Workin&er of Saratop.
The bride's brother, Fred Chytraus
was best man, and John Chytraus,
another brother of the bride and
Brock and·· B'ryce Wilson, step-
brothen of the bridqroom, wen
ushers. The couple greeted 200 guests at the
University Club at UC Irvine during
a reception followina the ocrcmony. •
They will live in Costa Mesa after a • 1...-__.---...i; • .,.._.....,.__.. _ _..._...._....,
A reception following : the cer-
emony was attended by 200 auesu at
the 811 Canyon home of the bride's ~rents. Prior to the ce~ony, Mr.
and Mn. Duane Workinset hosted a
luncheon at the Sad41ebeck Inn in San .. Ana.
wedding trip to Hawaii. She is a
special education teacher for the I.Os
An4clcs Unified School District and
he is in the administration depart·
ment for Northridae Hospital.
were solemnized at the Los ~naclCs
Temple, Oiurch of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints.
The dauahter of Mr. and Mrs. F.
The coupte arc rcsidina in Full-
erton and ~Ian 1 trip to Hawaii in
December. She is a travel~' in la
Habra and he is finilhina has IChOol·
ins in business manaaement at c.i
State fullenon and ii also employed
at Howard & Phil• Western Wear.
WORJmfGBR-CBYTRAU8
The ScpL 28 Wcddin& nt.cs of
Rachel Jean Chytriui-of Newport
Beach and Craig Arnold Workin&er
Gordon Chytraus of Newpon Beach
wore a bridal aown of white orpn1.1
trimmed with Alencon lace from
Brussels. Medallions of lace flowers
F,IRST LADY VISITING •••
Prom Bl
November iuucalona wilh the makeovera offive other
women mayonaround thecountty.
"When the IDllUioe dilcovcred dletewm IO
many women mayon. Uaeydecided IO choose six &om
cHia that are~ toeveryw. I'm ao prOUd lbeycboee NewponBelcb. Jbeydid the mueoverin a
coeference l'OOln ofCiay HaU Ind lhcn the pieture was
m8dein tbemarina. This wu in April and the team
stayed in town three days.
LUPUS AWARENESS
ham Bl
pubhc. ··The hbranes had very few boots on the subjectt
but wc'Yc con11cted them and they've: been Vff1
~tive.''
Fnou says &hat he is .. Vet')' optimasuc"' about \he ~bihly of~ advanca an the ueeamat of lupus. ~;,.~-:~=~~~-==~,~~
that in five or 10 yean, we'll tee new wayi of tratina ......
.:For m0tt infonnauon on lupus or the support IJOUp,
pbonc the Anhrilis Foun&tion 11 S47-591.
••tdon't wear much makeup. but I plCked up~me
tips. I'm wearina mOt"e eye abldow in the evenina. It wu
afUn thinatoc1o:· • • • I aawam and._., ..... , Martin Luther
Hospitll'sAutumnAmbi'oliaSaturdayemiiqat1he
Anaheim Hilton Hoed. (He'ton the MLH fouodauon
board.) She wad about havi~diDnerwith.,....
lslftlU in Maddd one week afrerhit<:olta Mesa
cnaqement.
But,lherullyexcitinath1naforRurtywuNMeJ
.._ •• visit Monday at lbe Phoenix Hou1e.(Rustyb
chairman of the board of directonat PH. a~
rehabilhation center in Santa Ana.)
PATIENT BATTLES
P.romBl
1n Los A~la vtsated her. The wife had lost• IC$ in 1 waier lkil'! IClCident ... lt'en-llCf. The YJltt rally made. d•ffertnct ••• Mid BrilCOC Who
now counteb for the•• armnm. . .~,.~ ...
Ptmipe bccaute he hates to 1c:e bis mother .. ck. scou
says he wan11tobe1 Dh)1itll thmP' t when he 11Qws up.
so he can make people 1fcd better.
Williams' 'Cat'
hi~gh-intensi
. ..__ilrama in Vie o
One duna you ~n say about lhe
Minion Vaejo ~laybouse -when
• you can find it-i• that it'' not afraid to take a~ance.
Last sprina. th~ Mission V aejo
players, back home after two years an
Lquna Beach"' celebrated with a fine
production 01 "One Flew Over the
Cuckoo's Nest" at Mission Viejo
Hi&h School. Now, relocated but 1ttll
in Mission Viejo, they're prescntina
Tennessee Wilhams' volatile "C.at on
a Hot Tin Roor· in a slightly flawed
but ienerally impressive rendition,
this time in the La Paz School
auditorium.
Toi
Trils
Canina a novice actress in the role
of the sensual MWie is risky busi·
ness, but Teri Anaelinedoesn't fail for
lack of Uying. The part is beyond her,
but Angeline attacks it with de-
termination, stumblina. predictably,
in its subtleties. Likewise, Clint
Richards carries off the role of her
embittered ex.athlete husband as
convincinaJy as one of his limited
~xperience is ab~e. al~ho~ dwelling
too much on his drinkina problem
and not enou&h on bis inner aaonics.
)
' Williams was one of the theater's
· most brilliant. and also most tormen-
, ted, pla}'Wriahts and ·much of his
penonaf anxiety over his homosex-
uality bubbles to the surface in "Cat
on a Hot Tin Roor• in the form of a
subplot which keeps its main charac-
ters, Mqaie and Brick, at arm's
length. It 1s a subplot only because of
the power with which the playwriaht
endowed his charactci of Bia Daddy
-an accoml'lished actor can usurp the play in this role.
Rebecca Hayes. though far too
young for Bia~ama. manqes to
convey the essence of her fli~ty
character if not the ache of rejccuon.
Rene Surratt achieves an intensity
level second only-to Knon"s as the
avaricious Mae (though she should be
obviously pregnant), while Bob Hines
as her bookish husband is playing
fan:e where only a suggestion of
comedy is required, therby negating
his effect.
rCllnt atcbard8 and Teri Anaellne •tar ID the llUalon Viejo
Playhoue producdon of "c:!at on a Bot Tln llo_of."
Thia is precisely what Ted Knorr
accomplishes in the Mission Viejo
production, tcnderina a Bia Daddy
whose bark and bite are equally fearsome and whose volcanic anger
sbakes1he_pftcn. Knorr registers an
this surface emotion without sacrifi~ ins the bean of his character in a
splendidly modulated performance.
PRIME TIME SOAPS
Bruce Coen as the doctor and Brian
Wolf as tbe preacher lend nervously
effective window dressing to . a
strained situation. The prescncl ot a
large conlinJCnl of kids -Randy
Gress, Chnsty Bcrwangef, l.iarc
Bccby, Michele Bccby, Courtney
Augustine, Michael Johnson and Jeff
Bcllentc -adds a layer of familial tension. ·
Director Robert Michael Conrad
has done a oommendable job with a
cast short on experience but long on
. ..
enthusiasm. His ·=-eat .. is a cut above
most plays of lesser consequence
perfonncd with experienced actors.
··eat on a Hot Tin Root" continues
through Nov. l 0, playina Fridays and
Saturd.a~t 8 p.m., in the auditorium
-Of. La School... 25151 Prade:ra
Drive, Mission Viejo. Ticket infor-
mation may be obta1ncd by calling
673-4601 or..841-045 .
Richard slain on 'Falcon Crest?'
BY LYNDAIHIRSCH
FALOON CREST: S(>hee'f'is hires u-
sassin to shoot Richard 10 bed. T flTY ttts
visit from her ex·husbtrid Joel, who
claims their marriqe never leplly ended.
Joel tells Terry he'lldoanxthi~toaupport
his cocaine habit Posina as Otbercy,
Riebmann gives Angela suppon. Aniela
-STAOUI Ot-11
63H110 .. ,. Ml*'* Ill." 1214070
CGIJA llSA lDMIDS SOUTH COM! P\AM~21ll
cmTA lllSA
CllWMDSfND
1llll ill 1.iO I
a1m0 CDWMDS SMXIUtla Ml_.. ..
[OlfMDI llMIS!lY e..•11 u.-.,~SOIM
(213) .,..,l -CllDOlll IM-al
Dn(l pend
and Lance lake over control ofn~paper.
Cole and baby Joseph move back.in. With Maaie and Cbase. Ma&&ie and awe
upset by amount of time Cole spendina
with Melissa.
PAPER DOU.S: Racine decides to let
David use Laurie to model Tempus fashions and then plans to destroy birn by
ordering Laurie to only do fashron work
for E11:pectations. Wben Grant questions
David as to why he need.5$<400,000, David
stonna out. When Blair lets it slip to Grant
that David's former partner Nick 100k
money from loan ahark. Grant pre~ to
loan David money. Wesley decides to
befriend bis steemother Marjorie. Julia
not happy at Taryn's new modehna
assignment or her plan to make video
ttt0rd with John Waite. Michael comes
down on Laurie for lookina too aophi5ti·
catcd in the Expectations ad. At school,
Laurie teased by other classmates. Con·
Utruc:tion workers on Michael's site inake
crass comments about Laune doing
cheesecake ads. Mark tm.ks date with Sarah in order to take Racine to New York
rib restaurant..
ST. ELSEWHERE: As the ourses"stnke
ORANGE ~l
ruaas (I)
IZ4S. JOS US 10 10~
.... (PS)
1'00. uo. '"' llDJIW (111.U)
31S. IO
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l-tO J IS. $10. 1 0 IOflO
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llUI CUii fl ... llJ
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MISSION
=x:~. .
continues. Lucy comes off picket line just
Iona enouah to assist Ehrhc:h and Elliott when they operate on Jerry, one of the
in)ured fittme'n, for a blecdina ulcer. Silvo
fri&htens Cathy Martin when be tosses a
basketball at her. Cathy Martin is apio
raped by a ski-masked attacker. Westphal
is certain that Peter White is the ral)ist. but
Jack defends his friend. Peter swears to
Jack be didn't rai>e Cathy and asks Jack to
help him find his wife and children. Luther
and Warren do plaster Job for Craia, who
tries their patience with anti-black com·
ments. Craif is pleased with job until he rtaliz.cs they ve plastered his k:itchtn timer
into the Wallboard. The firemen aaree to
see female ps~hiatrist and Michael ad·
mi ts that he's afraid offrre and ciies that as
one of the causes of his dru& addiction.
Shirley goes to the near-catatonic: Cathy.
.sa:ran& she's sorry she ever accuted her of
askin1 to be nped. C-'tbY telb Shu'tcy,
"Cathy's f.One and she's not comina back
anymore.'
* HEWPOfU BEACH •
4 ruQI IXUY SnlllO ·cmnar ~
14S 440 'ls.Ill ltlO
* SO CO AST PLAZA •
Stevie Wonder sttll
atop sin 1es chart
The followin& are Billboard'• bot RCOrd fins 111hey appear ln next weck"a blue of
BtU~ mapnnc-HOT 1SINGUCI
1 ... 1 Just Called to Say I Love V'ou"
ievie Wonder (Motownl
2 ~ribbtan Queen Bally Oct.an
(Jave-Arista,
3:·Hard Habit I() Break" Oucaeo (Full Moon·Wuntt B1os.)
4."'Purplc Rain" Prince {Wamtt Broa.)
5 ... 1.ucky Star"' Madonna (Warner Bros.)
~."Wake Me Up Befort You 0o-0o··
Wham (Q.ll~bia)
:7."01\y:te_Oatk Side" Jolla Ca&itt: The Beavn Brown Buld (Scotti 8rol.
8 ... 1.e1·1 Go c~· ~ a
Revolution (Warner Bros.) 9 ... l 'm So Excited .. The Pcrin1a men
(Plane{)
W. .. Soqie Guys Have All lhe Lurt"
Rod Stewan (Warner 8f'OI.)
I J ."'Cover Me" Bruc:eSpna&itecn (Cc>l·
limbia) .
12 ... l>rlve" The Cars (Elektra)
13."Bluc Jean .. OaVld Bowie (EMl·
America> J•:·e>tJert Moon" Dmnts DCYoupa
(A&M)
i.s:·1 fttl For You" Olaka iKban
(Warner Bros.)
m 6 ... Belter Be GOod to Me" Tina tfumer
(Capitol)
17:.\\'ho WCMS lbe.e SbOes"?'' Elton
John (OefY'en)
..... -••Pia 52Hl3t
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SaJJ_y P'letd
flLACa ••TMK NSAllT IN> U:41 l ;H 1:01 'hH t :SS
How•rd £. R•lllllS ¥. ~STOllY
.. ) AT 12:IO 2 ••0 •:SO 7:00 • l 1U
MOWPLAYMG
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AU.OP-.. ...... c ......... frNee.,...._D....,_
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by Garry Trud FO Y WINKERBEAN by Tom Batluk DOONESBURY
,
O€Fl e me. R>L.LOWI~ : (%) DIMIN15ME.D CAPAGriq
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
____ ...__by Bii Keane
-...=--'"::... -~-~ ---, ---------"~ommy, would you make my hair in
knots like Julie's?"
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
-.
"Marmaduke is so jealous. he won't even
let the kids have a pup tent "
GORDO
GARFIELD
00 YOO LOVE Mf MORE THAN YOO LOVE FOOP, GARFlfLP?
llOON MULLINS
JUDGE PAR.UR
.-------------------------------· by Virgil Partch (VIP) s_e_o_E ____ ~---
nr{)tf\ ~~
BIG GEORGE
..
"It'• an old ·collection of desert Island
cartoons he found aomewheN hereabouts."
DENNIS THE MENACE
by Hank Ketcham
1 WHAT D:> 'THE LATE 61ROS AAVE 10 EAT '2 •
~01'~~
).~1~1#··,·· .
MERE'S TME WORLO
FA#CAJS 50ft6EON ON MIS
~V 101ltE OfEAATIM6 ROOM
DRABBLE
VOtJ ~6EOHS MAVE TO
MAKE A LOT OF HAAD
DECISIONS, DON'T VOU?
I Wl5" ~ COU&..O 1"1NK
~ 60MfT'4tM6 MOR~
\~1'EWGE.NT TO 00.
by Gus A>rlola TUMBLEWEEDS
by Jim Davis
e
0
0
~~I~~ tf~E: FffOM 1141! ~ FOfteS15, L.t:JP(f
PASQUAL.£ ANP MOMMA &IG . PUPPETS ?
NO. PASOO\LE.. WE.'v.E. NOT efG-PUPPETS ... WE. rNJIE. AJCl)()ND t
ALL EW ou~saves ! 1
. },
j
I
I
0
by Jeff MacNally
by Charles M. Schull
I JUST CAME FROM THE
CAFETERIA •• I MAD TO
CMOOSE BETWEEN TME
LEMOH PIE ANO THE
CHOCOLATE CAKE ..
' by Kevin Fagan
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
MY, IT1S QUIET·" DoN1' LET
I BRIDGf TIPS FROM THE 'fOPS
. ME INTERRUPT. .. WHo WERE
'YOUT~l<rNG
..l,; 80UT? -~-~.,. ...
by Harold Le Doux
Hoth vulnerable. South deals.
NORTH
+AKQ•
O QI07
0 785
•84% EAST 'WET
•S73
~se•3
0 109
•J975
+ J &OS
~AJt
O QJ832
•QIO
0 TH
+tt2
...01' 52
OA K4
•AK83
Th bidding:
tli West
INT P&fl , ... , ..
• Open1nl( Je.d: T n or 0.
f..a1t
Pua
uniplifi d by Terence Reese in a
book .. 8 rid go 'l'i P!f from the
Masters." It was pu~lishcd in 19 0
nt SI o. but th book i now available
nt $5 Cplu 75 cent po tngcl from
The Bridge World, 39 West 94lh
St .. N w York, N.Y. 10025. Or. if
you order two annual sub criptions
from lhc magazin (ench $221. tho
book is yours free.
OMAR
SHARIFF
nothing hut, as il turned out. stood
lo gain a lot. N«?t unnatur.ally,
dciduer suppo cd that pade5 were
br aking 4 2, 50 he continued with a
p cf lt'1 his nine.
Now declaN!r l d hi king of
h rt.11 in an attempt to c:reat al'\
entry to the table. Ea t held up th
uett, and declarer continued with a ·
heart to the 10 and Eaat'!I jack.
CHARLES
Goa£t1
t~w l1for1Hlloa 1bo•t Cud •
G•re•'• new aew1etter for lt'1Ce
pla1en, write Goft'l9 Rridp I~ Uer,
1909 hnaamlnton Aw.., Palayra
.J. 77.
' f
I
J
-
Orange Coul DAILY PJLOT/Tueeday OcloMr' 21. 1IM
COllPLE~E NYSE COMPOSn;E TRANSACTIO•, 117.
Un~mployment .a thing
of the past for the U.S.
'Megatrends' author John Natsbttt
says process will begin In 14 months
Unemplo~cnt in America is
quickly becoming a thing of the past, a
leading social forecaster said today.
John Naisbitt, author of .. Mega-
trcnds," predicted that within 14
months, more people will lie leaving
the U.S. labor force than enterina it.
uwe•re headina for a labor sh~
in 1986," Naisbin ~id. He said it wall
last for the ttst of the centul')'.
Naisbitt made his prediction dur-
inga speech about .. the changing U.S.
economy."., He said the nation is
moving from a self-contained na·
tiorial economy to ·an integratt.d
global economy.
Otaracteristacs of the· change
outlined by ~aisbitt include:
Archive contract sets record
-A move toward a ul\ion-frcc sotje!)'; .
-One-third of all new busi-
nesses-about 200,000 annual-
ly-started by women;
..!.. Third-world manufacturing of at
least 30 percent of the wor1d'1
products.·
Naisbitt said the United States bas
a big competitive ed~ in the new ·
global economy because it owns "the
richest mix of ethnic groups" in the
world.
He p!Nicted the fastest-growina
sector of the U.S. economy would
continue to be computers and related
services. Other fast-growing areas will
include health care, nutrition and
.Archive Corp. announced Monday design into our systems. Archive was fitness, leisure activities, entertain-
the award of a multi-million dollar able to meet our very stringent ment and travel, he said. ·
contract to supply streaming qualifications... "We're beeominga nation of clerks
cartridge tape drives to ConvC!Jent ArchiveCorp.isthepioneeroflow-because so many of us are involved
Technologies of Santa Clara. Calif. cost, high-performance 14-inch with the processing of infonnation,"
The contract represents the largest streaminf cartridJe tape drives. The Naisbitt said. Oerks need to pay Groandbrealrlnd ceremon•
14-inch tape drive pact in industry company sSidewmder, SCorpion and more attention to fitness and they -----e J
history. · FasTape product families are de-have more free time than farmers, he Two lrYlDe com pan lea, Baalneaa
According to Tom MaJcmann, vice signed to backup Winchester disk pointed out. Propertle9 DeYelopment Co. and Am.I• •
president, marketing for Archive in drives ranging in capacity from 20 to Naisbitt's speech was delivered at a A8eoc. Ady...+1.a-.. and Pabllc RelatlOD9,
Costa Mesa, the contract amount l-8&-megabytes in small business two-day seminar-OD .. Executive Ex-J I ;a f "·~ 1
exceeds the ·Combined value of all computers, \t/ord·processingsystems. ceUence" at the Westin Bonaventure 0 aeu orcea recea tf to hold
contracts signed by Archive in the last personal computer add-on Hotel. The seminar was presented by '10GJldbreaklu ceremonle8 for the 18-
quarter. subsystems, and other mi~ and the Allen Group Inc., an educational 8tol'J' WllahJle..1'ol'llUlDdle BallcllDC in LOii
Under the teems of the agreement, minicomputer applications. firm based in Provo, Utah. An&el•. Plct'llrecl are: Bau_ llmnper,left.
Archive will provide 5-14 inch r-------------...:._...:._ __________ ___,.---------...,.-,----:--=---...,.---...,.--:..__----,..--------------=---,-
Scorpio, model 5945L, tape drives to
backup 50 megabyte Winchester disk
drives in Conve'ient's megaframe
and miniframe systems.
The mcgaframe acts as a multi-
processor Unix-based machine and
as a share resource processor for
Convergent's line of clustered work-
stations.
The miniframe 1s a high-per-
formance 680 I 0.based v.inual mem-ory machine running the Unix oper-
atton system and is 'sold primarily
into the office automation market
According to David Caplan, vice
president and general manager for
Convergent, "As OEM suppliers
ourselves, we have to bC ~cularly
selective about the equipment we
A big year
for McDonald's
McDonald's Corp. Monday an-
nounced record net income. revenues
and systemwide sales for the nine
months and third quarter ended ScpL
30.
Chairman Fred L. Turner reponed
that systemwide sales rose t 6 percent
and 12 percent for the nine months
and third quaner ended Sept. 30,
respectively. Net income per com-
mon share increased 15 percent for
both the quaner and nine-month
periods.
Turner said, "The continuing abili-
ty of the McDonald's system to grow
profitably as reflected in our third
quaner and nine-month rtsults.
We're especially proud of the double-
di&it sales increases against the third
quarter of 1983 when we introduced ~Chicken McNugets nationally. Also,
for the first time in our history, nine-
monlh S)'$temwide saJes.incrcascd by
over $1 billion. To date, this billibn-
dollar mark has never been ~chieved
even in an entire year. ,. .
"We also continue to achieve
important milestones. We recently
opened our 8,000th restaurant, had
our second stock split in two years,
and signed a contract with the U.S.
Navy to open and operate
McDoriald's restaurants on bases
around the world. We plan on serving
our 50 billionth hamburger in mid-
November and achieving Japanese
sales of over I 00 billion yen by year
end. During the third quaner, total
assets exceeded the $4 billion mark
and stockholders' equity neared $2
billion.
"We have also taken steps to better ~age our arowth. Ed Rensi has
been elected president and chjef
operatin1 officer -McDonald's
U.S.A.; senior vice president and
zone manager Bob Beavers has been
elected to our board of directors; and
we will be adding a fifth U.S. zone to
our operating tructurt."
Care expands
size of board
Card Enterprises of Orange an-
nounckd Monday the election of two
additional directors by it~ board of
directors. •
T.his will increase the number of
directors from five to seven. The
newly elected members to the board
of direc:ton are John F. Gnmdhofcr
and David E. Sorensen.
Grundhofcr is a senior executive
offiC"Cr wtth Wells Farao Bar\k where
he has been anoc 1978. He is
currently the executive vice president
And group head for Wells Fai:go's
commeracal banking sroup.
GNndhofer hu been involved with
both retail and rommcrcial banking
since l 960. He currently hold direc·
1onh1ps m SC\Ctal orpniutions.
SOrcnscn was founder, chaarman
and ~idcnt of North AmCrican
Health Care Inc., operator of 26
nunina facthU~ wh1oh was ~uittd
by Care Enterprises in September
l 984. He was a vice president with
Beverly EntcrpnteS and president of
Shastina P.r'Qpenics. a public com·
J)t.n}' ~wncd by Bcvcrl)'. from '969
to 19?6. •
• . . "\bu'llget ~on -cruises --· -· .. · ·~
w&ti)UllopenaMoney ~ CertificateAccount.
If you think saving wont get you anywhere in this to Alaska worth $8000. There's no obligation. Just fill out
world, it's time you. opened 'a Money Market Certificate an entry form at rhe Pacific Saving Banlc ne~"t you .
Account with Pacific S~ Bank. For up-m--the-minure money marl-et certifi~·rates
Not only do these accounts pay high money marlcet and more information. call l-800-PACIFIC (l-800-71)..4342).
interest, for a limited time they come with substantial. or mail in the coupon below.
savings• on luxurious Cunard cruises. Money Market Certificate Accounts from Pacific
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Olhft cnalln. c..::cpt S..-Gerd -.W Cti&IW, may be Ma!W>i. llPOtl requnc.
Just deposit $5.000 from a source other than an exi t·
ing Pacific Sa~ings Bank account. You11 save on Cunard
Princess Cruises ro Mexico or Ala5P. or on Cunard/NAC
Sagaijord Cruises to Alaska and the TransCanal.
Enter the Pacific Savi:.. Bank/eanard V:IP Sweepttakes.
You could win an ll day Sqaijord Crui f. r twO
Savings Banlc. Isn't it about time you goc ~mewherc?
•Oitrount-of'fft mids D«Crnbo r - - - - ---~
Jl. 19&4 em'bm bcbe 0eum· I ~rm 1nimstcd'" 11 imo-. ~
bu 14.1985. Only oiw ~r 6mo_ tyr_ ~ Mmm Qml.fkate I
ptr &nul1 Oitroun11 a1t offt.red I Actoun nd WlllUld '*' ft'IOft ll'lbmaribn 1 bV Cunaid ind lltt beacd OC\ • Cunard'• mes rcr J'ft'OI', double I Name,__.... __ ._. ___ _
('ICCUr-n<Y and ma, no( be uMd
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ca rrr crubt Minimum I S tnidesb Cunri PriMeSS ~ Bnc1fte tc'!C.,...._ __ .____ 11
&ilrirc Plldar SIYi amrcners I . I
lie eu,tbk :ion, at txl s.nd lO Nik~ Beftk
bllarice a( Oaobet IS. P, 0 I
lnen:ate(I b, It~ $5 00 m I ~-,... ,a.
<UUJUJ<ITn• rt«Oum Cunard l'rin I ·.....-a Mela '""' l I
L------~~
B\OFIC S\VING5 BANK
I
• -Ti..
'
• 0nnge Cout DAJLV PtlOTITUllday, ~--23, 1914
New product activity crimps DWI revenue
Jeffrey BrlU• Jo n• Lagu.aa
firm a• new pro} t manager
DWI Corp. Mon y rcponcd a net
l0t 0[$216.000 on tt~enues ofS3.4
million ror th fi I rcnded June
30. This compares wuh a net tou of
$36,000 on revenue of $3.1 .million ror the previous fiscal ~r.
Roben K:Fujioka, ch11~an nd
chief executive officer of ilie Irvine
finn , said. ••JntcMi'lle new produc.t .
development ctivit)' Mlverscly at·
fcctcd caminas lbrouahout the :year. Ho~cvcr, the write-off of cenain
capitalized ttems in the founh quarter
and year-end dJustments to earnings
rcsultin from the meraer of affiliate compan1 tnto DWI TCJUlted n a loss for the year.
"Desi'° West. our dcsl&n and enJinecnng services subsidiary. bad
an excellent year and continues to
el;pcrien~ profitable arowtb. How-
e\ er, its earnings were not ufficicnt
to fund the compan)''s new product programs.
"Mana,iemcnt has decided io
move its new produet development
businest out idc 0Wf by ~oinin&
other venture panners wnh the
capability and reiOu..rces to take the
products to the marketplacie. DWI
\\ill profit from ownerlhi{> in the venture or hcenslf!t ro)'alllea. Thi•
"ill enable DWI to duea lll raowcet
10 maximize •he PQwth f.Olentw of
11J basic service b.wloaL •
DWI, doana business u Desian
West, is a lcadiN industrial detiin
and cn&inecnna tttVJCC company1 It
providn desiin and product dtvelop-
ment tcrvfces to muhi;natfonal com·
panaes.
Sales rebound·
behind projection
CArJ Karcher Enterprises Inc. an•
nounctd at a securities analyst meet· ing today that sates . had not re·
bounded as quickly 11 had been
projected after the Olympics lull in
Southern California.
As a mult, with spe'ndini continu·
ina to develop new markets. eaminas
for the 12 weeks endina No'<. 2 could be as much u SO percent lower rban in
the like periOd a year aao. • ·
Carl Karcher Enterprises is the
owner and franchisor of397 Carl's Jr.
restaurants.
Ur s ~No DowN s
.Irvine nsidMi ~., o. ....,.. ihu :J9iae4..U.-1.11Una Hill1 rmn or
H..U., BllllMn. m. a1 projec:i manaaer for the newly expanded tenant
improvement divilion. BriaP ba1 been tenant amprovement construction manaer ror 1t4WY1i1 C..ll'UMn tnd 1'lle XeU C.., and brinp 20 years of
c1penence in construction to his new pofl. Amona Hedley's tteent tenant im~vement PrO~ are BeJ c...raa. Plua in Newpon Beach. The firm builds office, industnaJ and medi~ oroject1 throuahout southern Califomla. '···· WUUam E. Tayler oflrvane ha1 been appointed senior project manager (or
DAVCON, lae. ofTu1tin, with responsibility for manaacment and aupervision
of ~or commerclal and industrial projects. 'Iaylor brinas 18 years of
enain«rin1 and construction manqement to his new ~t, nn&iq fro.m offi<ie complexes to medical f1eilitits, research laboratories and industnal plants. • • • Vladllt A. CoHtlloJ an Irvine resident, has been promoted to western
rcaional sales ma~r tor Bolte Ca.ad• Corp. in Santa Ana. Condino has
been with Boise Cascade for five years, m0t1 recently as national aocoµnt
maftl&Cr of the composite can divitaon. In his new post, he will be respanlible
• NEW YORK <AP> -The fotlo.!Nlno 1111 for sales of comnncite and plastic packa•ina for fOOd and non-fOod products in ahow1 the Over-the·c;ounter . r:--.... ..., . · Jlocka al\d w•rrents that have eon• up the region. which encompasses Cahfom1a, Wash1naton, Oteaon, Anzona,
the =~·~rwfc the~! ~Md on ·Utah, Nevada, Idaho, Montana and Hawaii. ~~0 •• ~~f~~~o below l~ or 1000 Mlcbel M. Grabeadlke is the n;w•saies mana~~r the Jrvi1e hd••~fal,
di •t and ~cent•~ cl\an= art the Returcll a Denlopmeat Co •• based in Newpon h. The Irvine resident
bl ~~and =9~ 1a~•t>ld ':-~~no comes to the firm from Cu1htnan & Wakefield, where be was an industrial l'.Sf broker in the firm's Ontario office. In his new post, be is responsible for lot sales l FMi•me L• v. ''\ UPPcti. . and the investment building program in the Irvine Industrial Center. His s ~F~=~ WI v. n H: . employer is overall developer of the.9~acrc lrvine lnduatrial Center.
r~o' 1 ~ 2 H:. Georce T. Pilfer has joined the ooanFc>fdirectOff orEmaluCorp. of ~ov yn ~ BP Costa Mesa. The Aorida resident bas been a director for SWcota Systems, Ille. J~,~ -u: 1 since 1980, and is chairman of the board for Mlaatome C.rp. Emulex
Brood 1M UP l · manufactum communication, disk and tape controllers and subsystems for ~g wt ~ ~g 1 DEC computer systems, 11 well as enhancement products for the IBM PC.
rvo un 1 Op 1 . Y -<' h ~ • • ~ · · 'd f · na1 ··a n Up l . David E. ~aear ·~II promot~ to senior vice prest .ent 0 f'CIJO
Manuf ~ Bg ;. affairs for FHP, lac. of Fountain Valley. LeSueur, who joined the company in
Nt 14 UP .1 1974, was formerly a vice P.resident of FHP's Utah region. His new position
He> rt. B: ·1 includesmanaiementofactlvitiesjn the California, Utah and Guam rqionsas
vk 14 Up : supervision of the company's Medicare pr~m. the FHP Senior Plan.~ =.• un 5~~ Hg : Cons~ction is und~r way on FHP's first hospital, adjacent .to the FHP
le; 1 ~P .• Fountain Valley Medical Center. . pn WI V~ P A • • • r3~'lrr1 'Ji ~ g ·I Bob Mo•Jo11 has been promoted from customer service supervisor to ~ oo NS • manager of customer service for Commanlty CabltvltJoD Co., a subsidiary of
N•f' La t _chp... Pct 'he lntDe Co. In his oew post, Motions will continue to supervise seven I U customer service representatives, as well as increasing the company's emphi1is
wt = 12 on telemarketina and implementing trainina seminars. '
n • • • ~ = ~ M&rct11 W. R.imiey has been elected president ~d chief executive officer g" -. ._ of the Cal·Amerlcaa la1aruce Co. and its sbareholder, IVM Bolclla1, lac. Cal :itf;. -2~ American is a newly formerly property and casualty insurar, and the fmt li 1~n '~ 1i licensed insurer to establish its home office in Miasion Viejo. The Mission arl~ Viejo resident was preyiously deputy insurance commissioner and chief of the
1
gx~~ ~ )~~ rate rcaulation divuion of the CallfonaJ.a Depanmeat of lil1aruce. -,,.
ar un ~ us run -ra /4 -~ It deFr 1 14 -I~ rwTom it -'h '11r un 1 ¥4 = 1~ e m-~
'
1·
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In 1000Unt tor one oetendar ~r. Rate 8Ub).ct to Change
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OD
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I OAILV PLOT/Tu
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•
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Tll£SIArs CLISllC PllCD
-
I NYSE LE~DtP S
I
I AMEX LEADERS
NEW YORK CAP) -$ain, Tuesday price eno net chanoe of the 10 IT'IMt •ct!v• AtnWIGen Stoctc Exchange 1$5Uei, trad nst
natlon.ttv al more th™I W~ebB l 28'h + W K arnu l , 11"'2 -~
Ind l , 3~ ·+ \'I omc>Coo 15', 914 -~ IE Comm 12(, 9"'1 -'At
talOil 1131 3141 -~ AdamRusts 111, 2• .... -~ Tex IAlrCt> l , ,. -:-. Wst~i9ltal fi. ii,; Calmat n 9:J 19
I NASDAQ SUMMARY
- - -
GoLo QuorEs
------------
-
M ETQLS Quo1Es
'•.
· That'sanaptdescrtptlonofboth business and
business people along the Orange Ooast. To keep tr ck of
wherecompanlesaregotngandwhichpeopl a r h lpi g
themgetthere,just watch 'Cr ditL ne' -ev ry da in li
Bu sin s tton of your n w llilJ Pil
-
Don't feed tile Homo Mplena arb&Daa at 111••1'• lletrosoo.
Horrlosapiens urbanusreally
attracting the ga wkers at zoo
MIAMI (AP) -Record crowds three-day exhibit to more than 10,000,
marched to Metrozoo over the weekend about three times what it was for the same
to stare at an attraction shipped in from period last year. Profits for the zoo were
Spain but which they could have seen on about $20,000, be said.
any city sidewalk any day of the week-For three days, Vidal ate, drank., slept,
Urban Man. read newspapers, watched television and
•'This has been beyond a shadow of a used the telephone next door to the
doubt the most pop,ular eXhibit we've Galapagos tortoise, to the delight of
ever had at the zoo.t • said Rick Hensler, pwk.ina audiences.
marketingdirectorror M~ozoo ... We've Vidaf, a mime who bas taken his
had people standina there for hours and exhibit to zoos in Italy, Germany and
hours." Switzerland after first showina it an
Hensler said Urban Man. also 'known Barcelona, Spain, charged Metrozoo
· as Albert Vidal, 38, or Homo sapiens S 10,000 for round trip fares for himself
urbaiius, hi~ the attendance during the and two assistants, expenses and a two-
Orin and bear It
Kamrar ...,.wa1 Patro1 .... a.a. Bnnm Olo• wlllle waec.._, a patade ta Baldwta City u We 4eput-
week siay in Miami, Hensler said.
Metrozoo paid half and the Metro-Dade
Cultural Affairs Committee picked up the
other half.
.. I think it's a modest fee," said zoo
director Robert Yokel. 0 rm illways
suspect of a society that thinks art is
cheap, and I think of this a~-an art form. I
don't think you can buy ait any cheaper
than that." . , ~
Some people, though, criticized the fee.
" "There's been so much attention to this
;,10,000 fee that it's kind of surprised
me," Hensler said.
D f ~lH N OTICfS
I
I
-
AtI;anta fot nowbere llonctay m,bt. u Kenny Jobnaon (left) wu damped byVIDce !tewllOlbe, uut Art.lam Ca (n,lat) ... ~ 4lowD nu..._ Ot-c lld•• C•J ..... .._
Dickerson fumes while Ellard zooms ~~ ~
Some late hits anger running back~
but in the end, Rams breeze, 24-10
ATtANTA (AP)-Eric Dickerson
wasfumina.
"They really hacked me off. They
have no class," the Rams runnin~
back said of the Atlanta Falcons
defenders after helping his team to a
24-IO National Football League vie~
tory. Monday night in a nationally
televised contest.
Dickerson. who ran for l '42 yards
on 2S carries, includina a JQ..yard
touchdown run, charged the Falcons
with hitting late on numerous oc-
casions and was particularly incensed
at Atlanta defensive back Tom
Pridemore, for an alleged Lardy hit on
only his second carry of the night.
"It was No. 27, I don't know his
name. I think he wanted to do a head
st.and or a hand stand on my back
after J had been down what seemed
like five minutes;• he said. "It was
ri&ht there on lhc sideline and a
rel'crec was right there and said he
didn't see it. I think somebody needs
glasses,"
He said that wasn't the only cheap
shot, but "that's the way they play. I
guess \hat's what the coaches down in
Atlanta teach them.
.. I'm not saying it's dirty, but J
don't think it's real good football. If
they want to plaX that way, they ought
to go to Russia, ' said Dickerson.
The · 6-3, 220..pound speedster,
however, didn't let it bother him in
his performance, scoring the Rams•
first touchdown on his I ()..yard sweep
after only I :03 of the second quarter
before letting Henry Ellard do the
rest.
Ellard, the NFL's leading punt
returner, who helped act up
Dickerson 'ucorc with a 29.yartl 1punt
mum, cauaht a 9-~rd TD~ from
quartcrnaci 'efl' Kemp only I :08
later, then closed out the 21-point
second period with an explosive 69-
yard score on a punt return with 39
seconds left before intermission.
Mike Lansford closed out the
Rams' scorinc with an 18-)'ard field
goal in the fourth period. The
Falcons, who had beaten Los Anp:ln
two weeks aao 30-28, couki..manaae
only a 39-yard field goal frOrn Mick
Luckhurst in the second quarter and
scored in the ctosin1 minute on an 18-yai'd pass from Steve Bartkowski to
Stacey Bailey.
Ellard, a second-year player from
Fresno State, who suffered a bruised
thigh and sat out the second half, said
his punt return TD "wasn '\the end of
the pme .. for the Falco• .. bult it
probably wn a big letdown.''
In addition to the offensive per-
formances by Dickerson and Ellard,
Rams' Coach John Robinson said the
key difference from the loss two
..
weckSagowas thedefense .. WhichJust
pla~ed better.-:
"That's two weeks in a row that
we've basicauy kept a ieam from scoP._nl until the pme was out of
reach, ·said Robin.ton. The Rams
defeat.Cd NeW Orieans 28-10 a week
aao and now have won four of five
games for a S-3 record. ·
The FalcOns, whoec o&me has
been missina the last two pmes,
losinc a 19-7 decision to the Ne.
York Gianu a 'M.ICk ap>, man.,ed
only 211 yards apinst the Rams. 73
in \be tceond Ulf. ud ~ IO
~5 .•
.. We've aot to start thinkina about sttin&ina some wins tO&Cther, .. said
Atlanta quarterback Steve
Bartkowski. who bit on 20 of 31
puses for oruy 144 yards ... we·re not
aoin& 10 have many friends uabl we do... .
Most of the crowd of S~861 left
early in the fmal period after booina
the home team on 1evcral occasioas.
The Falcons manaied only 11 fim
downs.
Team owner Rankin Smith had
criticized the ~m af\cr the Giants•
pme for iu perfonnt.nc:e and
Bartkowski alluded ltO it after tbc
pmc.
... saw a lot of cffon ou1 ihcre. even
moup '' wun•t reflcdcd 1n the score.. We need to find a way to anm:t \he thinas that are breaking us down,•• be
said.
'"There may be a lack of comrru&-
mcnt - a commitment to each other:"_
Dodgers sig~
Howefor'85 T hey're all getting a kick·· out Of things·
I
field aoatsof39, 39~ 37. 36, 33, 29, 27,
27, and 20 to his crcdiL He kicked
four qainst Saddleback., the last with
four 5CCOnds left llftina the unbeaten
Sailors to a 26-26 tie.
· LOS ANGELES (AP) -Relief
pitcher Steve Howe, suspended
for the 198'4 baseball season
because of repeated involvement
with drugs, has siancd·a one-year
contract with the Lds Angeles
Dodgers,. the team announced
Monday.
Howe, 26, spent the last month
pitching for the Dodgers' entry in
the Arizona Instructional Leaaue.
.. We arc pleased with Steve's
progress in the Arizona Instruc-
tional League and the Dominican
Republic is step two in his
preparation for the 1985 season,"
said Dodgers' Vice President Al
Canlpenis.
It's bcainning to look like there's
only pne sure way to keep yourself in
a football aame these days -and
that's to make sure you have a
standout place-kicker at your dis-
posal (ask former Oeveland Browns
Coach Sam Rutigliano if you're in
doubt).
When football was in its bcgjnninp
-well. when Rutgers and Princeton
played that first one in 1869 you
couldn't even run with the ball, and
the passina aame didn't get its start
until decades later.
For the first nine yean the only
scoring in the pme was by kicking the
ball throuah the opponent's goal and as late as l 883 a touchdown was
worth but four points, and the field
Oilers are primed
for tlie great effort
Huntington eyes · .
upset over Edison
in Sunset wars
By ROGER CARLSON
Of ... Oelr ...........
Beach Goich Georae P11COC aya:
aoaJ five points.
Such a life it would be for such
Oranae Coast area prep standouts as
Newport Harbor's Sterling Coberly,
Ocean View's Andy Austwick,
Edison's Tim Bontrager, Estancia's
Keith Hodge. Mater Dei's Gary •
Coston or Fountain Valley's Micky
Penaflor if field goals still held such
premium.
Roen
CAii.Sii
PR EP SPORTS That's just the bqinning-there's
also Marina's Pat Penner, West-
minster's Ricky Gates, HuntinJtOn
Beach's Darrin Tomasick, Jrvane's
Mike Henigan, Corona del Mar's
Steve Satchell1 University's Will Fer-
rell, Woodbndse's Jay Middleton,
Costa Mesa's Adam Beck and Saddle-
back's Todd Maxwell.
For tho9C that arc on their way to
the CIF finals, the season is but half
gone, but the aforementioned place--
kickers have already made their
marks felt.
For instance:
•Coberly. a sophomore, has nine
•Austwick hasfield&oalsof'40, J.4,
32 and 2S yards. Two of those came
when OCcan View just miSscd in a
14-13 loss lO Western.
•Bontraacr. a junior, tw field
goals of .-1. 29 ahd 23 yards. His toe
was the difference (2+20) against St.
John Bosco.
• Hodac tiu booted field coats of
'47, '44, 3~. 21 and 20 yi.rds -the 32-
yardcr the difference in a l i7-1'4
victory over lquna Hill
•Coston. another junior, kicked
eight field goals in Mater Dei's first
four games-from 37, 32., 32, 32., 30,.
25, 25 and 23 yard.$ OUL
•Ptnaflqrs nioe field goal& have
come from 44, 4'4, 40. 38, 34, 30. 2'4,
22 and 22 yards. The ~yarder beat
El Toro. and Mi ion Viejo just
miucd an u~ except Pmaflor was
there with his boots of 38, 30 and 22
yUc:ls in a 2'4-19 wio.
•Penner. a junior, has clicked on
6eldaoalsof27. 27 and il yards. He
was the difference in a 10.7 '1ctory
over Scrvite. .
•Gates has connected on cffons of
40, 38, 36, JS, 32 and 27 yards. His 3S-
yarder beat La Quinta (3-0) and
Ma&cr Oci fell. l S-13, bccau of his
field goal of 38 yards. •
(Pleue 11ee IUCUIC3)
~~1JM:Sn ~ !Ds and no security?
ld 1-~ "'.-AlE<llSon , it takes plenty ml Su 'OAe_ tokeep aflrstteamberth
By RICHARD DUNN
Oelfr .... Co;u; 'I •1 I
Quick, name a hiah sdloolquancfblCk tbat throws
3'46 ~s-includ.ina five touchdown peucs-in a sindt
pme ror one of the more eotcnt football tcams in Wi
p:ncration, and still hls:iob 1n1CCUJ11y.
Edison Hi1h School. recoani.zed as a steady feediftl
lf!.>Und for b11·timc collqes., has such a quarterbadt -
Keith Jarrett, who last Friday niaht set t.bc Or&nF County
football world on firc.
He completed eiaht of 11 pa and made e~cry one
of them count.
But JatTCtt is still aware that hisiob as field pcraJ of
the Daily Pi1ot•s top-ranked team in Oranec County is ftOt
The fiaht out in the back lard is
approachina -Edison Hiah s foot·
ball team, ranted No. I in the ClF Bi&
Five Conference and in the Daily
Pilot's Oranp: County rankings, once
apin puts the chip on their collective
ihoulcten for the benefit of the
Huntinston Beach Hi&h Oilers
TbUrlday naaht. .
.. we·re aoina to have a bonfire
Wednesday and the kids are aoina to '••• be juked UP. for Thu.'lday. We'll be
exactly .--iantced with a ~ifkation stamp. He did his belt apinst Ocan View, however, to
FountaJn Valley and Manna.
mcanwhde, the other two title con·
tenders. wait until Friday where they
10 up ~inst ().2 opponents.
Herc s 1 look at each of th~ three
Sunset Leaaue aamcs this wee!(:
~ (l-1, l·I) at H••u.ta. B..a (l.f·l,J·l):"Riaht now they"re
findina out how to win m lhc Jut quaner," sars .Edison Co.ch Bill
Womnan. "They're l·I and riaht in
the thick or n. "tbeY can come at you"' 1th many waxs arid that's what thclr offense Is
delianed for. "fle•:re ri&hl next to them on the
map, thcar lklds know each other and
that'• why 1bete's 10 many upttu and
ran1tlh1np ·•.
The Ch•flttl enter in.Jury rn:e.
Ir what W«kman 11ys d<>bft' convince you lh11 one shouldn't be
m.-. cOuider what HuntiallOft
ready.just like last year.
"It's the kind of same ~ play
for. Our k1d1 arew up with a lot of
their kids and we have somethuw to
prove to them.
"There'• the transfer thin& (Edison
hai lbcnefiued at times with transfers
from Huntaf\l\On Beach. eetlcina
areener pesturcs), and because
Edison his been on top to loq. Our
kids want \O be there.
.. lfwc can reach the intensity level
n•s ao•nJ IO be 1 ~·Pm! "
Hununaton Bead\, too, aooon:hna
to ~KOC. cnten 11\jury free.
W11 ..... W(l-4,tol)n.P....-VaU.,(M,W)1tS. __ ._.
.. ~e bis up ft'ont ddlial~ and
they hive I PUliftl ....... II
Fountain Val~ CoKb Mike Mainer,
M> 1 daetibina Watmumer. bUt
oould v~wcll be IA!kina about h1• l'"IMl' .. M199"T~)
teCW'C bD IPOltlion. At Huntinaton ae.ch Hiah, lbC site oUarretfs recant
setunapttfonnan«. the 6-1, l:'lkM>UndetlOOk-'van~
of IDmt k>09C ooven,e tn the Seahewt ICCOndaty to brelik
two actioOl records and es&ablilh another durina EdilOll~
42-0poundi"'ofOceen Vrew.
It 1tlll 1an t ~ t'ftOUlh. Rner'W quarterbeck Millit
A'*9ovic 11wa1una1n theWiftll Aw ... pee so *Pan aftd
~ Janeu 11 •Dl' 1tme. '4COICh (Bill) WOfttman Mid lf OM of UI ll doias
bedly ... Janett ~ .._ btMt WMkl lllw Ilia
dUCe aDd lbe other WOOi 9" IMdled."
Jamu let 1••11• nicotd for Plllins ~· hid I 91 ·yard ... IO MM: Palo. t9'e loltles\ DOCMCOt Ill
pm 1n the ldtool's ~·~~:-~~lied Ken ~·1 l 9111
milt wtth ftw aerial mucnaowna. Pink St\am' (l 979) IDd Mtiot (1981) bcO Md 344-~ _......., ad tht ~VtCM compltcioft ""*
.... -. • 1111..-SNm ha& Mike Doaeter ban U. ~Mtup. tMt '" ntelf should be 1tnoulh 1t"or any coem to
t btfort reollciftl ln1 ~ Rillal? Wrona ... BcforeiheltUOfteven rted." larretttaid, .._,_ _ _.
(Plnw .. 8Dl90R'a/Cll S11111n 1 lleta~laPlayeriftMW.a
Rutigliano fired,
Browns assistant
named to replace
NFL conalden draft, USFL
AP~kMI
0£VELAND-m Rulialiano Yo'U EiJ fired ,as h d t'Oleb of me Ocvetand 411 t
Browns Monda) and replaced by def en ive
coordinator Many Schotteobeimcr.
Rutj&liano, S2. coach of the National Football
Le ue team nee 197 and also a vice (>fCS!dcnt, was
asked to remain with the Browns• front office by owner
AttModcll.
"I think I was treated fairly,•• said Rutiiliano, who
had seen the Browns filll to l-7
aftcrSunday'stcdious 12·91o sto me 2-6 Cincinnati Bcnpls. "The
only advice I have for Many is.
make .sure you can kick field
goals.''
Schottcnhcimcr, 41 , in bis
fifth year with the Brown has
transf ormcd the Browns' once
weak defense into the top.rated
unit in the American· Football
Conference and rated seoond
overall in lhe NFL. Schot-
tenhC1mer previou)ly was a defensive coach with the
Detroit Lions and New York Giants.
~Oftliedi1
ModelJ, who said he considered no other. can·
didatcs for the job. He gave Schonenheimer a contract
running through 1986.
Dr. TOftJ .,_,,on 1he condition of LOI A~
Cltppert bUketlMll etar Biii Wiiton: 0 tt ...,.. to
me that 811 It pie~ wtlhout sry rep'd to hie toot
no'lonflr worrlee 1Mt he might br'9llk It -or The two-year-plus deal was offered to Schot-
tcntieimer because ... ooacb romlJll on in mid·tenn
requires a tenn in which he can put his imprint on the
team," Modell said.
breik MYthlnQ ..... He II no men of• medal rtlk
Ruti&liano had a contract through the 1988 NFL
season. tie said he will let Modell '~now by January
whether he will stay with the team in another capacity.
now1Mn ~ .... on the......, .••
Waitz changing her attltu~e
Cube, Anael• seek free agency
NEW YORK -Grete Waitz, the m silver medalist in the inaugural Olympic
women's marathon, doesn't lose often. But ·
when she does, it no longer is a "disaster ...
NEW YORK -Two more Oticago • CUbs pitchers, Dennis Eckersley and Tim ·
Stoddard. were amo seven players who
filed for free aaency °tionday, the Major
t;eaaue Playen Associition said. /
That brought the number of Cubs f~nt
pitchcn to four and the total number of declared free
aacntsto 37. RickSutclift"e, theaceoftbeCubsstaff,and
Rick Reuschel filed for free agency last week.
"I have chan~d my attitude toward running." the
31-ycar-old Norwegian admitted Monday. "Four or
five years ago, ifI didn't win a race, it was a disaster. But
when you get older, you . realize that the world of
ruJlning is small compared to other things in life."
Despite her more cuual approach to running. the
former school teacher is an overwhelmina favorite to be
the first women's finisher in Sunday"s 15th New York
City Marathon -an event she has won five of the past
six years. . Also among those declarina free aaency Monday were two members of the Ansels, pitchCT Craia Swan
and infielder-outfielder Derrcl Thomas.
The free.agent rc..cnt!,Y draft will be held in New
York on Nov. 8. The deadline for filing for free aaency
is midni~t Oct. 29. Oubs have until Nov. S to try to re-sian thear free.agent Players.
In addition to her smashina sucoess in New York,
Waicz has won the 1983 London Marathon and the
1983 World Track and .Field Championshiups. cap-
tured the World Cross Country Championship five
times. and finished first in the t'Egs Mini Marathon
five times.
Bruins' situation
. s _tilJ unchanged
UCLA must win
every Pac-10 game
for Rose Bowl bid
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Another
week. another big game for the UCLA
Bruins.
The-two-time defending Pacific-I 0
and Rose Bowl champions, sttll ahve
in the ~ for the 1984 conference
championship but hanging on by a
thread, play Anzona State at Tempe.
this Saturday.
And Bruin coach Terry Donahue
didn't mince word at his weekly press
conference Monday. With one con-
ference loss already in the ledaer, and
with the likelihood that two losses
mean elimination from the Rose
Bowl race, the Bruans have no margin
for error. .
"It is essential for us to win to stay
alive," Donahue said. "We will have
to play fantastically to get it done. 1
think 1t will take out best effon to win,
but we arc capable of giving our best
effort."
The Bruins haven't plaled fantast1·
cally this year, but they ve shown a
knack for survival. Last week.. they
came back from 7-0 and 14-7 deficits
to beat Cal 17-14 on John Lee's 18-
yard field goal with 2:58 to play. The
week before. the Bruins defeated
Washington State 27-24 on 47-yard
field goal as time ran out.
.. The last two weeks. the players
have done a good job in the mental
aspect of the game," Donahue said.
"It's easy when things go astray to go
mto a shell and not respond. ln1tcad,
the team bas responded in a positive
fashion."
The UCLA offense is still operating
at less than peak efficiency. Against
Cal the Bruins pined just I 25 yards
through the air. with Steve Bono
completing 11 of 22 paSSC'S. Bruin
rushers accounted for 16 I yards on 33
canies. but only one of UCLA's three
scores, their second touchdown, re-
sulted from a long drive.
The other touchdown and Lee's
a.a.me-winning field goal were set up
by Cal turnovers deep in Bears'
territory.
"We had numerous opponunities
to put points on the board, especially
considenna the field positaon we
had." Donahue said. "We were
disrupted primarily by penalties
(nine for 58 yards. most of them
either motion or holdi~ penalties).
When you act the ball inside the SO as
often as we did, you ought to be able
to generate some points."
But the Bruins' defense gave
Donahue something to brag about
with its best day of the season. In fact,
apinst the rush, the Bruins set a
school record by holding Cal to
minus· I 3 net yards rush in~
Winslow
maybe out
of career
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Kehen
Winslow. the Nation.a Football
League's leading receiver over the
put llx ~··Wit not know for llx
months ..._he Clift~ return
to f ootbillt, a Ban Pleoo Chargera phvstcian Mid Monday. Or.. Gery lone Mid the llga-
menta tn WlnslOW'• right knee
looked Uke "spaghetti •.. like a
couple of mc:>p ends" after tne tight
end went down following a catCh fn
the fourth quarter of the Chargers'
444-37 l6S8 to the Loe An~
RaJdera on Sunday.
.. The Ugamenta had atmoet .n
explOlk>n..ffke appearanQe,'' Mid
LOIN, who operated on Wlnek>W ,or 2'h hoUrt Sunday~t. "tt'a a
~. veryMVete ln)ury.'
WJnalOw was r8moved from th9
field on an electrtc cart tollOwtng
Injury, whleh came after he
made a twls1tng ~tch or a Dan
Fouts paea and WM hit by R8Jder:e
lnebacker J9tf BarMt.
He declined to talk to reporter• after the game. Loue aatd Monday
his patient's re.ponM waa "YfllfY
appropriate. If he hadn't been
upl4K after being Informed Of th1t
nature of Injury, I'd have beef'i
worried."
Cllppen maintain optlml•m
LO ANGELf.S -The Los Aqrlts m Qippcn re an o,pum1suc bunoh ap.
oroadlina the n ofthe 1984-SS NauonaJ ~asketbaJI A ociatlon 1eason, thctr first 1n
LosAn cle
1 There arc m ny reasons for their hi&h hOJ>CS.. :not
the least of "hich 1 the phy seal condition of Bilt
Walton
Finally, h appears the Iona h t of &nJUrtes uffcrcd
the 6-1 l center is 1n the past.
Watton, Who tum 32 next
month, ys he 11 no lon~r
bothered by hb left foot, which
has caused ycan of .,.in and
required several ~uons, or
any of the other i!\,junes that have
kept him away from the bUkct·
ball Cloun. For the first time 11nClC 1976, he will bcain an NBA l(.aSQn in
what he and the team doctor __ _. Tony Daty, call excellent physical
hape. 'Ihat is., if he can avoid
injUrY or Jllness betwetn now and next Saturday nit.ht when the Chppers, who moved from San Diego to J:os •
ngclcs last pring, open the season at Utah auinst the
Jazz..
0uri1'& the exhibition season, he has been .
consistent if not brilliant. More important, he ,.has
averqed almost 24 minutes .a pme and hasn't been
seen hobblina once. 1 •
.. I really haven't had any iDJurics to my leg since
my right ankle was operated on at the end of the l 982·83
seuon," Walton said last montti. "I just had the broken
hand (last season). I had a very productive summer and
I'm looking forward to staning the season. It isn't a bia
deal:'
In his 10 NBA seasons -he couldn't play in three
of them because of in.Juries -Walton has broken his
no5C five times. has had three broken fin.aers. recurring
bone spurs in both ankles, a broken lea, two broken
wrists, a broken hand, several knee operations and
SU'iery to repair nerve damage in his right foot.
Burri• demanda to be traded
OAKLAND -Oakland A'1 pitcher Ill Ray Burris demanded Monday that the
team trade him, after the club refused to
aive him a long-tcnn contract.
The A's last week a~ to exercise an option on
Burris' contract to pay him $500,000 for the-upcoming
season.but tbeclub refused to extend the pact two more
years, as requested by the 34-year-old pi(cher. •
Traded by the Montreal Eltpcs last season. Burris
had a 13-JO record and an ERA under 3.00 until the
final month, when he finished at 3.15.
"You'd think that when a auy works hard ... and is
a winner, that's the type you keep around," Bums said.
"I guess not. For them to suggest J won't be the same
pitcher in two or three years ... that offends me.,"
A's vice president Sandy Alderson declined to
discuss negotiations with Burris' agent
fr9er.ll' Francia oat 1'ltb ..... _
REDWOOD Cln' -RUii Fnnaa.
considrttd bY the San Francisco 49et'I 10 be • II• the best blookma tiah1 end an football, will
be oul ~t least a wet\ and 1>9111bly a month wnb a neck ituury, Caleb 8111 Wal h saic!'MoJlday.
lnlual X-ray1 after unday's 34-21 victory
Houston indicated the 6-toot-6, 242..pQund Fran
suffered a fracture of the bone at the top ofhss 1p1ne, bl
another sci pf X-rays taken at a hospual revealed n
fracture. ' Francis was to undcrao a lh1rd set of X-ra
Monday and another tet Tunday before tee
phys c1anscoulddetcnninehowlonabemiahtbeout
the lineup.
Conferepce honon PCAA fi
OuarterbaCk Randall Cunni.am or
Nev&aa-Las Veps. and linebacker Nick •II•
Holt of Universit)' of the Pacific. on
opposina sides lut Saturday, were named
Monday 11 the Pacific COast Athleuc Association
football players of the week.
Cunninpam, a 6-4. 198-pound 1itnior from Sant
Barbara, completed 26 of35 throws for 288 yards a
four touchdowns in the Rebds' 3S-2 I viClQrY ovc
Pacific to cam the PCAA's offcn11vc honor. Cunningham also punted four time avef'lli
48.8 yards per punt.
Holt, tiny. for a linebacker at 5·9, 160 poundJ
logged 11 solo tackles, assisted on two others. made t
uckles for losses and recorded one quarterback sack t
gain his defensive rccoanition.
Pac-10 honora football •tan
WALNUT CREEK -Runnina back El
Rueben Mayes of Washinaton Sta~ and e • •
comcrback Anthony Parker of Arizona 1
•
State were named Monday the Pacific 10
Conference Players of the Weck. MaYis, a junior, had the best day of his career iJ
leadinJ WS':J back from a 28·point thi~-quart~rdefid
to a 49~2 vactory at Stanford. He earned 29 tunes fo
216 yards. including four touchdown runs of 53, 39. :
and 22 yards. He also took a screen pass S3 yards for 1
fifth touchdown.
The 216-yard rushina performance was the thiry
best in WSU history and the best in the Pac-10 tha
season. He leads the conference in rushing and i
ranked fifth in the nation at 123 yards per pme. Parker, a freshman, broke open the game in ASU'1
-4S·l0 win over Oiqon State with an intcrccptio1
returned 61 yards for a touchdown. Parker broke cigh
tackles on the TD return.
\
,,.._.....
Saratoga Si:l
&IJQ&ankle
career over'
ARCADIA (AP) -The carcc1
Saratop Six, considered a s<
contender in next year's Tri
Crown thoroughbred racn. might
finished after only four winnina rat
Sara top Six. rqardcd as the bcS
year-old thoroughbred racing on
West Coast this year, has a .. 50-!
chanClC of being saved after suffer.
an injury Monday, aClCOrding
trainer 0 . Wayne Lukas.
Lukas, who is a part-owner as "
as the trainer of the S2.2·million cc
said the injury occWTCd near thee
of a training run. There was
apparent cause for the injury.
.. He was work.ina sl~ fur1onas. •
at the 16th pole, I heard it crack Jilc
limb," Lukas &aid adding that 1
injury to the small bOoes in the anl
• of the left front leg appeared to ha
"shattered both scsamoids.''
. Lukas said a specialist was bei
flown in to operate on the ankle an<
is hoped the broken bones could
fused with I plate.
"I've never had a horse traioin&
strong as this,•• Lukas said.
Trill.Der and part-owner D. Wa111e L1i.ku •tanct. with un-
defeated Saratot• Sm recently. Colt•• career may be onr.
Saratoga Six, a son of Alydl
Priceless Fame, had been schedul
to race the East Coast's top 2·ya
old, Chiefs Crown, in the l 1-16 m
Norfolk Stakes at Santa Anita tJ
Saturday.
Chiera Crown also has won fd
times, but has lost three outings.
EDISON'S JARRETT.
From Cl
"People and parents thought (Angelovic) was going to
start.
Prep football Players of the week
"I knew, at fint. Mike and ·I were sharing time,
battlina it out until the last week of summer practices. And
ever $incc then I've had the job.
"'But.at anytime, ifl do poorly or bad, he'll haveit(the
quanerback posidon). There's no real security." Jarrett doesn't have too much to worry about after
flrina five TD passes even though Anaelovic is, perhaps,
capable of doma the same. Recently at Notn: Dame
(Sherman Oaks}, reserve Mike Gray rushed for five
touchdowns while rcplacina an injured all-league tailback
Sean Curran. Curran has since reclaimed hit No. I pot.
.. He did not play (varsitr.> last year, so he'1 one of
those l'IYI that's an unknown.' said Workman ... He's one
of those pap people will come in and look at and ask. "Who
is this auyT • . ••tte had a llOOd oi&ht, thouab • .And his .receavcn
c:auaht ~ ancl he had aood protection. He just had a put ni&ht -it all adds up and tbat•a what happen ...
What haooened is Jarrett ea.med himself the Daily
Pilot's prep Player <>f the Week for his acoomplilhments. i.t\nd when your talkina about the reccivera-you mean
Riek Justice, who cauaht three of Jarrett's pa for 220
yards. all for touchdowns.
'-<>uf recetvet1could ~open tiCCause Uteir scconCSlry
was playina man-on-man, Jarrett explained of his record· settina feat. "It mcanu lot 10 me, but ii really hasn't set in
yet. maYbe after tho seaaon it will.
.. Witutina 'alwaJS comes first and all I'm concerned
about now is Hunhngton Beach, (which c play Friday
ni&ht):'
He also had a 60-y&rd touchdown Pl to Penso callca
baek-so realistically, Jam'tt COUid've had more than 400
rd i
Detroit'• Sim• out for the year
PONTIA Mich.(AP)-DetroitUonsrunn naback
Bally 1ms i out for the t0n after havin, su'F."Y to
repair hit injured right knee. Coach Monte Clark said early
toda .
11;t11 underwent Uf1C'Y at H ry Ford Ho p1tal In
Detroit. Dr. Roben . Tt•~. the ccam phYJidan, 1d he
-rcpat one tom rtdagcand two torn li.J mcnt 1n ims' k.nce. .
TOD BEARBOWER
Corona del Mar
The junior quanerback re-
placed the injured Bobby Hatfield
in the first half and completed
seven of 13 passes for 57 yards. He
also played well on defense.
·------------------~ TUA!f PRAM
CoetaMeu
The S-S, 130:.pound JUn1or
comerback-rccciver deflected 4
Newport paucs. ..He covered
very well. JUSt played a &ood
game," said Coach Tom Baldwin.
•~~~------------~
111K1t ROSELLOO
E•tancla
The 6.2. 17.S·pound junior
quarterb C'k tossed 23 pa ,
completing nine of them for 76
yard , and .. ls 1mprov1ng each wo4 ... said Coach Ed Blanton.
·----~--------------CBRIS P ARK8
Newport Ha.rbor
two-way stancr (center·
middle linebacker), the S-9, 188·
Pound scotor rqastcred elfh.t
dies and graded out an lhc. h1
90's on both sidts of the ball. * ____________ ...._ __ ......, __
KENT CBE81JEY
LU1lDa Beacla
ltfc Cleanly stnpptd the 11
from a WOOdbri~c running back
and nn u 89 )'lrW the other way
before n caUlht t the l•)trd
hne. He also inter«pted a
1
•
~·, .
. ·.. ..~
~ ~ ...... :4 •,.. .
BILL WHELAN
Ocean Vlew
Coach Karl Gaytan, on the
S-11, lU·Pound defensive end.
"He has done everything I've
asked him to do 5ince I've been
here. He's been consistent."
G ·--------~-----
TERRY REICHERT
Fountain Valley
The S.10, 2QO..Pound junior
fullbatk rushed for'.72 yards on 13 cam es, including one TD. He also
made some outstandina blocks in
crucial situations
·~~--~~----~~~
DAVID FLETCBltR
Marina
The S· 11, t 80.pound senior
linebacker was in on 18 tackles.
including nine solo • and P.laytd
solidly throu&hout the Vildnp'
31-21 setback to Fountain Valley.
··~-----------------RAM>Y HATCH I
Bantlutoa Beaell
T:hc .S:J ,I, 20.5·Pound junior
hneb&cker had 10 solo tackles.
th rec usmsand one 1ni ptio11.
"He' been consi tent all year."
sa· -Coach Georac P11COC.
* lftVE PRAJlfK
lrYIDe
, lihc :S· 1. 140.pound naor
rushed for only 14 )'lrd1 on fh-e
carnet, but he cautht 11~ J)Ula
for .411 yards ••He also blocked
II." said blC'tl Tm) Haupn
TOllDOB88 Unlftntty .
He not only had four solo
tackles and three aui111, the 6-3,
21 S·pound defensive lineman
caused cault'd heavy pressure on
CdM's quarterbacks.
·--------~--~~----DW A TD ARMSTRONG
WOocl~e .. The S-lO, 170.paund Junior
defensive end "played his best
overaH pme of the year. And he
made a number of key stopt and
taC'klcs," said Coach Gene NoJi.
•~--------------~ CBAllLU ANTON
Mater Del
The junior filled In nicely in a
rtterve role by rushina for 116
yatd1 on 29 carries. He also
cauabt three panes'-for '39 yafds,
lncludina a 27-yard touchdown.
•~.__ ____________ __
IUCO: OATU .. , ... , ....
He KOred ul the Uons' points
wnh three field aoal1, one from 40
yards out. and the other 1wo from
32 and 26 ~.He also ha<l three
punts for a 40-yard iavcrqc.
*-----"'!'------------
JO SD SAL
l•idl9'ack
The 6-3. 180.pound junior
helped keep hit team unbeaaen by
catchiaa tflree mmponant P9llel ~~ S7 ~rdl (one loueb·
doWI) 1n 1 31·7 viaOry.
.,
n
5
11
0
I
A
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..
)
)
-
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of
•id -pie
be
es,
2-
e
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ng
to
eU
tit,
nd
no
rtd
ea be
tie
\IC
Dg
I it
~
as
ll'-~
ll'-
ilc 1is
Ur
Third annual Turke
No, it's not John Doe, it's James Smith
who will fight Holmes for world crown
'
From AP 111.,.&dlet
I Jame1 Smith, employed in the
Nonh Carolina corrections symm dee~. in I 981 lO try profeasionai ; l?<>x1na., to make me aJewl>ucks •.• a ~ little Christmas money."
! Now he aays,. 0 l'n\ excited. 1 feel
, very &ood to be fi&htina La""" 1 Holmes." .• , · j T~at's ri&ht. In ·his l .Sth f!Aht. 29·
f
year.old James .. Bonecruahcr" Smith
will fiJbt unbeaten LatrY Holmes, the
prtnu« hea vywei&ht in lheworld. for
the lntemauonal 'Box1n1 Federauon
titkNov. 9at Las \I~
'"The main uuna 11 people don't
know me," Smith said. "h 'Would htlp
this fiaht if the p~s aot behind it. But
1 can unders\ind." •
The truth ia, a lot of people consider
the match as Holmes' third annual .
Turkey Fi&ht.
In 1982 Holmes battcftd Randall
.. Tei~· Cobb for U rounds us puu.IJI
a decision on tbe day &MTbaiWlliv~ ina. Lu• year on the day ·after
Thankttlvana, he AOpped Manis'
F:l'lller an the first round HBO.
wb1dl wdl tel«att the Holmet-Snutb
fiaht. wanted it beJd Nov. 23; lb daYJ
before fllln~vina. but Holmes
uad he wanted nearlier.
The Frazier '1ctory, wbicb was
Holmes last fi&htz pve Holmes a 4S-O record, with 32 mockoull, Jn a pro
career datina back to 1973. smith is
14.1 in a career that bepn in 1981 -
I I
l
1
FnR THE RfcoRo ~---.;_...----:-::------=-------------------~CKS ...
..
'•
\
' l I
I r l
t
MPL
NATIONAL CON,D•NC• Wttt w LT flct. ,,, ,,.
s.n Fr1nCtaco 1 1 0 175 214 10 ...... s 3 0 .us 114 m Attent1 3 s 0 '375 174 m N1wor1Mns 3 s -o .. 375 110 191
Chlcato Cenlrll
5 3 0 625 171 13' Detroit 3 5 0 .375 15' llO T9mN8ev 3 5 0 .. 375 '" 200 MIMetot• 2 6 0 .250 163 ~ GrMntev 1 7 0 .125 137 1'l ....
St.Loula s 3 0 .625 241 1'9 W11hlntton 5 3 0 -'25 217 143 Dllll• s 3 0 .625 157 l70 NYGla11fa 4 • 0 .500 13* 173 Ptllledllpfije 4 4 0 .500 139 143
A.MmlllCAN CONPaR,NC•
Wnt Denver 1 1 o· 115 163 99 .....,.. 7 I 0 .175 215 151 SMHle • 2 0 ,750 220 15' Kensa1Clty 4 4 0 .500 141 15'
Siii\ Dteoo 4 4 • .!00 t21 211 C..11
Plllaburetl 4 • 0 .500 165 170 Cincinnati 2 6 0 .250 132 1 ...
Cllvllltld 1 7 0 .125 10'2 150 Houaton 0 ' 0 .ODO 1CD 234 ••If Mllmt I 0 0 1000 267 117 NY Jets • 2 0 750 201 JS7
NeWE"911nd s 3 0 m 1u 1" lndllnlOOlla 3 s 0 .J75 151 206 luffllo • • 0 000 l36 233
MeMIY'• SC.. llema 24, Allen11 10 ..... .,..~ Sell Fr111daco If ll •
Denver et_..,.,..
Clnclnnefl II Houston
lndlelleCIOlla 11 Della
Detroit •I GrMll aev
Mlllnelot111 Chlc.190
fffw1 OrlMM et CllVllal'ld
NY .Hta et tffw Enoland
All9nfl 11 PlllMlurOll
St. LOUii el PhllldelPhll
TIMPt a.v el K1nse1 CllY
BUffeto 11 Ml1ml
W11hlngton ., NY Glint• MMll!lv, oet. 2'
SMUii 11 s.rt Dleoo
Raml 24, '**" 10 SC.. ... Qulr'9n
Rema o 21 o r-24
Alllnll 0 3 0 7-10
Rema -Dlchnon 10 run (l.anlford kid!)
ltlfl'lt -!lla(d 9 "" from Kemo (Lansford kldl)
ATL-FG Luekhurlf 39
lt1m1 -El•rd 6t llVlll rflurn (~d
kidll Items -F'G Lansford 11
ATL-a.lltv 11 pen lrom lertiowikl
(Luc:khunt klc:k>
A-.:52.Nl
OAMa STA T1STICS •4N'M Al First dow11t 16 • 11
Rushft-vwda 41-lN 25-7'
P1ssl111 Vlfdl 113 131
Return verd1 113 3
PlllMI 14·19·0 20-31-0
Sick• av 1-6 3-16
Punta S-37 6·41 , FumOIK·tost 3·3 6-3
P9nellln-verd• t·97 t-60
Time of .-0.Mallon )1;39 28:21
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING-4tema, Dlektraon 25-142,
CMCllflllcl 7-'l7, Rtddln M1. Kemp 2· (mtnln .,, Aflant1, Rl90• 20-661 ••rlkOWlkl 3•11, HC>doe 1-9, Sta'"" Hml~ 1).
PASSING-ll1rns. Kemo lA-1'"°'"12',
Atlante, lertkowlkl, 20-31·0-144.
RECEIVING-Rems, Crtnt 4·11, Brown
3·7•, 01.Hll, 2·13, Guman 2•f, E .. rd, 1·9,
Dr.Hll 1-5. Dlekenon, 1•2. Alllnt1, HOd9t,
6·55,. Rlvol. 6·24. hlln, 2-32. Larldrum
1-9, A..Jldlaon l·f, CHr 1·7, Curren 1·7,
Sl1me1t 1-4, C.Denson Hmlnus 2).
MISSED FIELD GOALS-Rimi,
Lansford 41 AUenl•, Luc:khunl ~. 49.
1.We"""9ton (45)
2.0kllhoma (7\"J)
3..T11111 la~)
4Hebra&k• s.arion.m YouneC3>
6.0tllo Stele
7.LSU (1)
l.Mlaml,Fll. t ..SOUttl Cerollne
IOOlr.111\olN Stele
118oalon ColleM
12..A\lbUrn
13.Ge«ol•
14.So. Mlllllodl•t 15.Fl«lcle Stele
16.Fl«lcle 17.lowe
11.we1t Vlr111n11
19.Penn S11te 20.Soulhern C1I
7-0-0 S-0-1
4-0·1
6-1-0
7-IH
6-1-0
S-0-1 M-0 ··-o-o S-1-0
4•1•0
5·2·0
5·1-0
4-1-0
S-1-1
5-1-1
5·2·0
.. 1-0
5-2-0
5-1-0
.
1,161 1
1,121\"J 2
1,0M\.'J 3
.. 5
'26 7
142 •
129 10
751 9
719 11
613 12
512 • 500 16 ... 1• 370 6
342 15 m 11
319 " 30I 20
122 lt
60 -
HIGH SCHOOL STANDINGS
S4lftMt Leeeue u..e
WLT
fdiM>n 2 0 0
Fount1ln V ... y 2 0 0
Merine 1 1 0 Huntlftt*I IMeCh 1 1 0
OCffll vie. o 2 o
Wftlmlnlt•' 0 2 0 .,,.,...,.. 0... (7;.11)
o-111
WLT
6 1 0 s 2 0 4 3 0
2 4 1
1 6 0 3 4 0
Ed!IOfl vt.. HonliMIOft IMeGtl (II Of.not
COMIC ..... )
,,...,., ....... (74f)
Wttlmlnattr n Fountatn V111tv (af
Huntinoton IHdl)
Ocean View ¥1. Merine (et Wnlmllllttr)
SM View a.....,.
LANUe OWf"ll
WLT. WLT ~pon Hlrbor 3 0 1 S 0 2
'8dd11Mck J 0 1 6 0 I
Cofone Cit! Mar, 3 1 o S 2 o ~llllMctt 2 2 0 l 4 0
Unlwtslly 2 2 0 J 4 O
Ealenci. 1 I o 2 5 O
Woodtll'ldol 1 3 0 2 S 0
Costa Mftl o 4 O o 6 1 "'*"'' Chmll C7:») Co1t1 MtM va. University (11 lrvlne)
Estencla va. COl'ona det Mar (11 OrenH COISI COlllOe)
L.eo~ma '"d'I ti NIWPOrt Hert>or
WOOdbfklol VI. Seddlebl(k (II '8111t Ant Bowl>
SOUff\ CoHt LHtiM
Leawe OWtfll
WLT WLT El T.or.o.... 3 0 0 S 1 0
C.plstr1no V1111Y 3 1 o 4 J o
Mlssloft vi.1o 2 1 o 4 2 1
Irvine 2 2 0 3 4 0
lAgulle HW. 1 2 0 2 S 0
De111 Hiiis 1 l 0 1 ' 0 Sin Clement• 0 l 0 1 s 1
,......"'. Olml (7:)0) Cvl$1re"° VllilY VL Lffune Hiiis (II
MIWOll Vltlol '
Gll'lr el ll'Vllle (11on·IM9ut)
, ..... "'. GlfMI (7:31) Dini Hiiia 11 Sen Cllmln1t
El Toro et MIUloll Vleio
°""°" ICMcMea TMIMIDAY
OrMel LMtiw
V&lenda VI. Melll\Olle Cat La Palme Pri) .,.,..,. u...,.
Ktnned\I YI E1!*'81111 (et Vtlll!Cle) Cenlurv L...,_
C1nvon YL Vllll ,..,. (If Et Modine)
FRIDAY ..... UHue
811!\0tl Montoomery at St. PetJI Meler Del 11 PIU1 X
etmurv Leleue Orln111 et Et Mo<llne
S.1'111 Alie Vellev vs. FoolhlM (•I Tustin>
Tusll.n vs. S.11t1 Ana lat Sent• An•
&o.#1) .,.,..,. L9"ue
Cypress VI. LOll'I (at Le "-Im• Peril)
Plc:lflcl YL El Doredo (at V1tenc:Je) °'""' 0..-.....,. Boise Grinde vs. Slntleeo (11 G1rden
Groft)
Gerdel\ Grovt YI Rencho Allmllos <et
8o1A Gr11ndll
. ,,__IV&....-
Buena Pt~ \fl, Sonote let La Hellral Fulllrton va. Sonny HUii (al ,_ Perk)
L• Hlbf• .,.. Trov (et Fullenon)
~L.-._Aneheirn at Wnlern
S.vanne et &rM-Ollndl
IA'Tu.8AY
~.....,.
s.rvlte YI. Bilhot> Arnet (II Le Pelme
Pa1'11) Ganllft GfWe ~,
Le Quinta VI LOI AmlllOI (•I aotse
Grinde) .,.,..,. LMIU9
K1tetll va. Los AllmllOI (II Wnternl
a.. A&amnos
MONDAY'S ltllSULTS
(lit .. lJ·nllflt fair "*""9)
AflPALOOSAS
FlltST RAC•. 4 turtonoa-
Double lrlstl (Mltdltl) UO UO 2.to •
IN. QulUtv Time IS Burns) SIO 3.IO
OOUOle Adobe CJ. Burns) UO
AllO raced; APCIY Holme, Southern Wino,
'Mlllkev Mo«! RI~, Run On Gin • nm.: 52:4
QUMTEltHOttSIS
HCOND RACE. l50 verCIS.
"' WetleY (Mvtnl UO 3.20 3.00 Diel Talent (8r00k1) 4 00 UO
Wrenollr Golan Bov CGercl•I 5.IO
Abo rlCllCI Br etliff n, SUrnoln Slkk,
EllY To Sir, NSH Short OllC, Gtnttlc
E6". The Wav To Go, Aca Cold T1rM: 11:30
TH•D RAC•. 350 v1rd1
Kid Chrome !Gercl•> 6.00 4 oo no
ltNI e '1sv 518" (Tl\Omll) 560 3 IO
Fer IS Nuff (Flouet"OI) 6.20
Abo reeed: Pesa 11 To Me, Ronwn E~lre, Chlcedo Rib, GO Mel Go, Alive
Wire. All Host.
Time: 11:15
SS IXACTA (6·21 1>eld aS9,SO
f'OUlllTH lllACL 6 ful'tono1.
Oriental lenller <Dmneuzl S.60 4.00 3.40
Lucky All (OrttOI) UO 4 IO
Kine Nume (Lozova> 6 00
Alio raced· lnfriOUlne BetlOlr, Ev11ive
Tvr1nt, FINI Rlflecllon, W1tll1<'1 lttd,
Look'N E11v.
Tlme1 1:13 l /S.
"1fl'TM RAC•. I 1116 miles.
Sfteell Spy ($tewns) I 40 6.00 uo
Pride Of The FIMI COClvetfl) l2 40 UO
Mlefltv CMMlf ICllrk) UO Alto rlCld: ~II Au Leif, Fl!'$1 lllOe,
ROllUe Prince, lhaton MeolC, SO.newev.
Time. U7 2JS.
SS llXACT A (4·11 Mid US4JO
-... • Same Day Service
-• Certified, factory·trained technicians
•SAVES 1WE
• EARNS EXTRA $
• IMPROVES EF~Y
I °' t " '
I 15801 RoctMld M .. Suite l • 1n1M. Cllifo• 12711
' (714) 17D-3363 L,...___. ____ _.. __ _... .........
• ..
~
Prep1 foot ];>all
Ii
SUNimT L•AGUI 2ll.ong Beach Wlllol\ 14 IADDLmUCk (6.+1)
•DISON <•·1> 7 ldllort 17 41 llnteAMVellV ' •1 W.llak• 6 t HUllltneton IMdl " M &lnta AM 0
14 Colton 3 OH-Fill. Vllllv (el Hll 21 LI H*1I • ' a.Mine 10 f'l2-Merlne 21 c.ta /Mu 0
24 St. JOfln aoKO 20 ~View 21 UlllYenlty " 33 Notre Dime (Sl\lrOelltl 7 S•A V1•W LIMu• 2' Newport...., 2'
17 W .. ln'tlMler 7 JI EllMCll 7 a ac-V1eW 0 CO.OHA HL MMl (5-21 02t WHlll1-(SA aowtJ
025-Htn. lffc:fl (II OCC) i4 Hunt111110n leech 10 N2-CdM (al Not. HwtMlr}
N2-Ftn. V1llev (Ilg Al 6 Sin C""'9ftlt 0 Ht-el LMune leocfl
Nt-t.MrlN (et OCCI 7 CIOlttreno Vllllv '11 14 L.ellUlll l9edl 1 UNIVnsrY (J-4)
9 Woodllrldte 7 7 lrvllll 11 POUNTAIN VALLaY IS.21 13 Cotti Mela . 0 0 Mlaalon Vlelo 21 17 Mlle< Del 13 6 Unl""111V 10 21 L-.-Hiia· 0 17 II TOl'O 14 026-Ealencle (11 OCCI 1• E1tencll 2l 2• MIUlon Vlelo 19 Ni-;t1ddl1hdc Cat NH) 17 S1dM1cll • 1S Servlt• 16 N,.._.t Newport Herb« 21 LNunl IMdl ' If Lone leech PolY 20 10 c-Clll Mar ' S2 OcMll vi-'l 0 COSTA MHA (M•l) 02~e11t1 Mesi (11 Irvine> 31 Merine 21 • 9°"1Grlndl 7 N,_.., Hartlor (II ll'vlN) ou-.;.w .. 1m1n11« (at Hit> 7 sannaeo 31 "9-'!WOOdllrldoe (el !NIN) N2-edlson (Bit Al 0 LO$ Allmltoa • '*"11 HwttlllOton 8Mdl 0 SaddlMleck 21 woo~io.a <2·S>
10 LlllUlll Beach 14 16 Laeufte H .. • HUNT1MOTOH aaACH 12-4°\) 0 Cotone clel ,,.., 13 7 Twin 21
10 Cofone Oii MM 14 0 .... llotf HlrllOt :u • Sell MerCIDI " 17 Damien 0 026-Unlwralty Cal lrYIM) 14 ........,. Hlttlcr 2' 24 .... POf1 Hartlot , 24 N2-Woodbrldll (ltf OCC) 7 c.-.. Mar ' 16 LOllll leactl W11M111 JI Nl-€1taiQ 111 OCC> %3 aNeftda 14
U /Mier Del 14 • L.-leedl u t Merine 14 IS'TAMCIA (1-4·11 oat hd••1cti CSA 1owO
16 • Wftlmllllter ' J OC..n View 21 H!-Colta Mell <et OCCI 025-Edlton lat OCC) 17 LMUlll H .. 14 ~(lllr'Wll)
N2-"0c:Hn view 2t s.ii Ciamenl• a Nf-Ftn. Vallev (II HI) 2l univ..11Y 14 SOUTH COAST Lm..U•
0 NeWDoft Hlt'OOr 26 C:APllTRAJIO VAi.UY (J..J) MARINA (4·J> 1• Woocllnlee 23 14 FOOINI · 22 14 EIPWlllUI 26 7 Slddlebeck 31 22 E~ 10 Ser'llle 7 026-CdM (II OCC) fl eor.. Clll Mer. 7 Footll• 26 ..,._, L89Ulll IMCh 21 Sen Oern811N 13 Le Quint• 7 Ht-Cotti Mesa (II OCCJ 1' Dene H• 2t Mllilken 12 11 lrvtne
14 Huntlneton atacti ' LAGUNA llACH U-4> 2t Mlllllfl V1elo 21 Founteln ve .. v 31 0 auene P•rtc 14 026-Lelune Hiiia (el MV) 026--CcMn View (II Watr) 6 Elsinore ,, N~ •
N,.._,.t WtttmlMter 7 01111 HIQI 6 N9-EI Toro (•I MVI N9-Edlaon (11 .OCC) 7 CorOlll Cit! /Nr 1• 14 Coate /Nse 10 DANA HILU ti-'> OC9AN YlllW C1·6) 7 Unlvenltv 21 7 Sonor• 21 Est encl• , 14 WoodbrldOI 0 I Torrev PIMI
10 Le Quint• 2t 02t-1it N-lllOl'I H1rbor ' ~Beedl 0 Cypress 31 N2-E1tencla ' Miiiion Vllio s Garde/II 26 N9-Saddll0eck 0 Cloistr-Ve/lfft\f 13 Wntwn 14 • El Toro 0 Founteln V111eY 52 Nl~T HARaolt (5·0-2) 20 lrVlrie
0 EdlM>n C2 17 Senti Ane I <»>-el Sin Cllrnliftt• 026-MarlN (af Wntmatr) 20 lrvlne 7 H,.....I Huntington 8octl 24 . HUnfinOton 8Mdl 24
~H-(a1MV)
~°'"° Hiib ..,_., W..tmiMttr .. 2' Woodbrldoe 14
26 l!slendl 0 •L TOltO (S-21 W•STMINSTSR (l'4J 2' suir1111ct 26 32 CHiii Pwk , Le Qu1nf• 0 )4 C01t1 Me.NI 0 14 F-t•lnV..,
11 Peclflca 14 ~a..cti ' Vlllftcla 15 Servlle " Nl-Onfvlr'lltv let lrv)nt) ,, lrYlne
1S Mei.. Del N9-COl'one dll Mer 13
taxTM llACL 6 tuttllWI.. .........,.. tJ 8urllN wa ..-u. San G.llenl ISlllClll 4AO UO
Jim Burtle lfeniendnl • UO
AM raced: T..,.. Tlme Pel, De·
lnlleeWI, terdollno. Olea M&Mtoen. R•IM
A FUN, Ga .. nt Tele, Fresh Frenk. Tlme: 1;11 415
SEVIHTH .RAC•. 6 funonos.
NnlnOll'Wtwotller (Olvrs) 4..tO 3 00 2.JO
Down Tile SIOPt (Toi'o) .UO 3.20
Jurv 8o11 (LOlOV•) uo
Alao reQCI: tnlllld D1ncer, SUnnymead
EllPftU, Kellv'• Fire, Klnodom Kerrv.
Tllonhlvn, Hell To Pill.
Time: 1:11 2/S. .
S.S IXACTA <t-51 paid S32.SO.
llGHTH llACL 1 11 li mll9'.
Ster Snow CMene) 33.00 12.60 uo
Ael'tff5 (Mell) 4.20 1AO
Classv Mont• (Lozova> 5.20
AllO reced: WNsltew ty, SurPI...,.,
Jeyhewk Glboulff, ~Nipper, EllCM.9h
Rope, Wlltodon, Blslceto.
Time: 1:46
NINTH llACI. 6 ~
tncllen Art (MllZI) 7MJ 6-00 S.40
8 \noo lets CJ 9Ul"na) • 11.IO t.IO
Colrndo ROM (Scott) 7 00
Also rlC8d; Ecch~. Broedwtv'I
Pride, Cermela Kev, Rosie's Tonie, Rovat
Chorus, Folk's VldON, Tile OnlV WIY Out. Time: 1;1t.
SS IXACTA (3-6) Hid SlS&.00.
U i-tCK SIX (~7-10-4+4) p.efd
$27.070.IO with tt-.e wfnnlllo tickets 11111
hOr\et). '2 Pldl Siii consolehon Hid
11,04100 •Uh five wlnllin9 tlekell (11•
llotMll.
TINTit RACll. 1 1116 miles.
Armltt (HenMn) 2UO lOM 16.40
TeMelMI Rite (Toro) 6.AO UO
Crvstlll Court (/N11) I UO
"''°read: Bunker, A~lll•, Blillcl Sclof.
Ttme; U•.
SS •XACTA (S·l) oald 1344.so.
•LIVIMTH RACE. 1 1116 mrtn.
Plulobelirsl COtlvarnl . ·UO 3.40 3.20
leOleY (NOQllH) lUO 6f0
Tent Telk (White) ._20
Also receo: Pierce's DrHm. 5'-In,
,., •• DrHm, RNIO, Sirius PIM.
$2 IXACTA (S-6) H id '46.60.
Attlndlncc. t,779. '
"'
33 L.--.... .
Doop ... tlsNnt
DAVaY'S LOCOR (""'"'9 a.di)
-69 aneterL 2f7 bonito, 7 ahMllheed, IO medteret, 3 V9tlowfln, 12 aitlco lies&. 4
IC\llpln, 2 bullet 111111.
N•~T L.ANCMMG -31 1/llllers. 1S5 bonito, 22 bll11, 7 ~. 2 white ftlh,
127 medle<et.
NHL
CAMll'91LLCOMP•RINCE SmvtM DMlliM W L T '°" G" GA Edmonton 6 ' 1 ll 41 10 CatoaN 4 2 0 I 3S Z3
WlnnlPeO 2 2 0 4 " 11
v ancDU"• I s 0 2 20 11 K• 0 s 2 2 20 )4
....,..~
St. LOI.lb 3 2 0 ' 21 16
Clllcffo I 3 0 ' ,, 27
MlnntMltl 2 .. 0 4 19 t1
Defron 2 4 0 • 2S )1
Tot0nlo 2 .. 0 4 14 2'
WALU CONPllt .. tCI
NY IJlendWI
A!lladetohla NV'~enoen
Walhlnoton
PlttSllul'etl
NIW.Jersev
Hertford
Buftelo
Montr•I
°'** Bo.ton
ffetl1cll OM.-4 2 0
l 2 1
2 2 I
2 2 l
2 3 0
2 ) 0
• 34 30
7 2' 16
5 11 20 s 19 II 4 15 16 • 19 21
' 24 1t I 27 2S
7 " 14 6 2' 27
4 " 2t
..
7
1S
0
20 •
11
21
1
t4 ,,
·M
13
0 17
21 14
20
log
i4 o... ... a WtrrWll
O»-oe IWlellll V1lltD
.......... Seti °"'*"-Nt c-VIII¥ (et MV}
21
.W.IM) ~"' 1 ......,,, Har1*'
7 Tlllllll ~· El Toro :u lln Clllrnlrit9 • c.lstreno Vellly U 0...Hlll
02S-Getw N2 Ntll•loft v .. NI L•N Hiii
LMUNA H9LU CM) • Waa..._. !M Eltallcll • UllMlrUtY 2' Mmelr ~ El Toro
MIMIOll Vlllo a SM C*'-'e OZ5-<-..o V...., Cal MVl N2-0ene Hiia Cat MY) ....... .,....
..... v.JO ( .. l·U 21 ,_ Dllee MotM
21 UnMnlfy
19 ~ Vlley
14 DIN ...
14 St. JoM loeco
11 L-..ne ... 0 CMillrlllO Vein
01'-EI Toro N2--ef.,..
Hf-Sin CllnW1te
SAtl C:LUMl"'11 (1-S·I>
13 Sent .... 0 eor-.. ,,.,
21 Eltancle
15 c.t&r-Vllln tt trw.
6 Mt. Mf9IMll (SOI ,....,... ...
02t-DINHllll H2-El Toro . ..._, Miiiion v ....
• ANGaLUSL.mAGUa
MATml NJ (._J>
IJ Founleln V.,,,,,,
• SMel Ml VIII¥ 30,,...... Am ,, Wealmntw
14 ~IMCll I...,_.,.,..
21 ...... Ment••• y m6-1t Piia x Hl-SI. Pwl tSA .... ) Nt--s.• (SA leWI
I
• •
1
:IO
21
" n ,. •
u
17
21
!M 33
21 7
' 0
14
J " 1 •
7
6 • 2t 14
21
21
17 0
16 IS u • 13
~Cl
•Tom'Mriclc'a iilllYe .._ ._ 41,
47.42.38,37,27.27.23ad22 ...
He bdl'Cld he .Ne•po.1 H.-
(24.24) with a field ..a ud his dine
1field .,U and PA~~ dw Oilcn OD
top of Westm1QMCr' (16-9) .
·~·sbooled fidd plsOl42-
and 22 )Wdl -and thal ... me difrermcie in a 2().18 11pee1 ol
Capiwuo Valley.
•Satcbdl'1 3~ beat Wood-bridlC (9-7). .
· •Ferrell'• boou bave bce2\ from 23
and 22 yards and be WU lbe ultimase
dift'ererice in a I 0-6 dcciaion owr
Corona del Mar.
•Middlcu>a bit &om 40 yards OUL
•Beck bit on a 30-yarda.
• Mu~u·s have been from 30aad
22yard&.
Now -boW w08ld you like 10 be
the one rapoDlib1e for Pickiaa anAD-
Suneet Laipc or AB.Sea VllW
lalUe kicb:r? ·Ma~ ••• , iaDy needed Is •
~ in ru1es -pm me.,..• colk:ea OD tbe Mme~~ Wida lbe
pro1 and make lbem kic:kwimo.t ny
.. peel."
1'be pros mUll do it without uy
suppon to put die mu~ as oppOled
to the preps and c:OOeees
* * * Fountain Valley Hilb and tbe
Vikinp of Marina mimed a ..od bet
Wl week -they ~ the cMDce IO SbOwer a man wsth a pitud oln.s
at halftime. oae wbo aide boda of
thoee IChools. but lost in the sbuftle
WU former Fnunt1jn Valley-fonner
Marina Princip9I Dr'. Paul ......
Gttatl'f'OIF8IDI-or poor ones fot
that mancr -are built &Om 1be 10p.
and 8er)ler WU a pat inftueDce m
those two schools' athlecic prop'alDI,
u W'Cll as other areas. ·
He has siDce been dianiued be-cause of a fN'WIHDendlbOD by •
~ superintmdmt, appuendy
com~ a vendet1a.
Never have I 11ee11 quite sudl a self..
destruct situation u that of lbe
Huntinston 8eK.b Unified School
Dillrict..
SUNSET •••
From Cl
own team.
.. The key far us is to ~re their
quar1ertlack (Ted McMillen).
.. But I think a Jot of words and facu
OD them are wamd. Actually. I'm
prinwily concemtd with Out team
and if~·re ready or DOL ..
W~ enters with ruonina
back David Shelley doubtful because
of a sprained. pkJe. and the Lions
have their baCks to the wall. knowia&
t.beir only hopes for QU&lifYin& for a
CIF Bi& Five Conference· playoff
berth rest with three str&igbt \ic-
tories, bcjnning with fOWlWD Val·
ley.
'"We're smaller and slower ... say1
Westminster Coach Jim O'Hara. ..We don•t score much, so we11 have
to hold them down and hope that M
can cause things that'U be favorable to
us."
~ View, 14, .. t) n. MarlM
(44, 1-1) at WesmalMier: ··we can't
afford to let down, .. says a cautious
Dave Thompson, Marina's coach.
•'Jf WC don't get by this J&D1e then
the other game (next week apiost
Westminster) doesn't me.an muc~
.. They'll be pretty hungry, they've
made a lot of mistakes the last couple
ofwccks." Ocean View, wb'icb tils lost by a
combined score of 94-0 to f.dison and
Fountain Valley. is bu.rtioa pbysiCally
with linebacker-punter Ke,·i n
Meehan (knee) and quarterback St.an
OISiewski (knee}both very doubtful
forthepme.
"We match up with them size.
wise, .. says Ocean View Coach Karl
Ga)u.n ... but we don't talent-wise.
That's been the diff~noc in a lot of
our pmcs." · •
642-4321 GE ··.·1··
..
l ts V1e1tl• ,........ leh Wu ...
rlWMlt ..-0 lntab Onertultlll 4111 -
Brczw URGE m; a= m . • •• 1 BEAUTY SALON COUNTER , ·A •net't-.....,...... ".,.
11net.H!5 ~!'~·~ Pool tbl. ctr TV, 2 trpa. lllLWf ..... . ASSISTANT Clelnwt. Expertlla cw Pt.ttma. IGI""' ror1--. NJ. 6 ONE PAlfT
earn-cpm":'::'nu MM&5& Sipe 14. Call: 54Mt11 111P111 AIU """*" end gm •tore on CdM. T.......s.t. 640-1900 wtl train. 642..5411 ~70 ,....._ 1n Id ...-. 1WE flOllTlON
-7 ....,.....,.,~...,,-:-=--,,,.---,:---4347 aq. et. Frwa etandlng bUl)IM..-Aw. Flnfble COUPl:ESEARNAEXTRA wlXlnt df"""9 1'9COrd. .._...__.
IN NEWPORT BEACH 2Br 1Ba nr~. 1725 lntaJ ti bldQ. 00c ft. N.N.N. IMM '20,000. 873-llOO. M •UL s1ooo A/MONTH PART Uva In Na.;.cM-CdM ktll • tlelfl ..._ • ,cal
.gr .. tplac;etoUveOf'lthe yrly, frplc:, gar, d/w. 1 .._. (714}144-4910. Wl1effrontHome91nc. WNULUlllTAIT TIME..c.184M547 --. nupo"ld to 80IC c.n.,.._._.~
tJpCer Bay. Private 3ot-38et; ... M110-12 IUn -.. W....,LT.,..,lt. lawt.._t to llll«k bUey ~ 4prn-1ou1. COICll rMm. ca. ::,':..~
t...a.., di-. fs'· "r.::r-;;~.~!;1'0•' ~. 2:~ ~· J:;:c,~ ci~ ~. h= lduilill ...... flU ~U:: ~~ _!ill__~~ o::.::.. country "" .._ ~ .. ~ ••...-.. ' _.... ....,.. ....._ Caff 54~ Imo 759-0808 ... tab 2t2t -•••--anml perm I l, but not ..-~ -_.,. CA UC req•Cklo eqi nc. dleil -*'·--,._
nopet.e.U 514 -<>411 oc Airport, Fathlon peta. Fem to lllr H.B condo 11ooeqn.wlrmd0&. tn ~-•"op nec111831-f300 ......... lfl1111• M.oreoorY_,,.. ,, .,.
IHAOY l.USH l.NDSCPE ltland, c:onYenlent ehope 48R 2ba, yrty •1400imo. 1350 Ind. utll. 3/4 mt to 2offlole&WlfehoUM. Top ment. oc. toc:atlcin, • btk ,.,........ 1131 Pfllcm11111 CM ••
llrtQht Top.,... 1Br on elgh1. Bay vtft,.112 blk ocean. ... ............. ,2 ...... 7.... ioc.Uon.17M251 tr ............... 1~ ....,.,..... • I I • 1111,111111 155() 6 up Pool: epa, bbq. Srnglae 1 l 2 Bdrm Apart· Super elalr1 54$.2241 ""'' .....,..... • ...... _.. °"' oceen. ,_ """ .....-r511 II I 11 II
Quiet No P91• manta & Townl'loueea ... Clmt1te 1171 Fml H/emtcr, ""In. ....... BB iio:::=-':""12 '-::" 1, Fpui:-.c::::-3 ~30-~ "' r ..... .... -........ , MESA PINES 54~24'47 from l720. (Mk about minimal chlldeat• + $180 , .• ._......... ........ .... "1'91 ecotlO.. car or tructt. • 111111 tumlthed apt.e, complete •ROOfny 2lff h\L: i;tC, mo lrvtne twnhme '*' 1500 tq rt N9wpol't Blvd, momhe SUent '*'"* for emalt ~ Cell .., 11800. mo. OOllwtffl'on. ....,...m,...iac-rv.
PAl.MMESAAPTS. wlthTV,lln«1•lutaneil•, anc:t o•. Walk to beech ucis53--0884aftar~ Colt• Mell. "450lmo, gi .... calf John fo,.ippt.17a.71oo .............. M\'91belltlll10 9lt8ln ,...... .,.. In
E.utSldeC:'· 1 .. }1 ~I.:...!U0r5 .. CN81o1 maybt ranted tor ehort M25 mo, (213)278-4584 F/prof n .,,,k ..... , 2.._ 1 full Call Agt. 17M 700 7'"8880 Ive name & 1· Ml_..,... E.11= II,.,... P.U.C. '500.000. MO ~. "" -tarm or longer). On Jain•..... .. .. , "' STORAGE CENTERS OF ..... _ lM1 a.... U. llablllty req Cllll bet. -twni-4841-9880 ""~Rd.at8anJ"',..."fn bafum.aptlflC.M.$300 AMERICA Stora11a ltltWU... 1111 Prtvateld\oo4 _, ,...__ -•ft itA-.
Hui;9Rd. ._. .. Fumroomnrsc•L'.Jac. +!Mi~1t~7743 1vmecf epacae avellabla. or:.t -111111'91 Appty:18135&00khu1'9t t-11•
1
MM1P/t/I..., • .34:132e-· ..,... .. s·••llflllfl ....... .,, ..... nt,..11•1
WWI lffU A 111111 144! 1100 pool 1275/mo Incl utlla t.g tum nn/ba In Npt apt. location.~ ml from Hoeg .. FY "2-3312 FOOD PREP Pn ~ a.11 .... '& .. -u::O~ :::,..Ol'l~~o=~ Female Ol'lty. 551-1737 1na1poo11epa10Yf'!I. Nice! Hoapttal. 1eoo ~ Cafettatla help wanted. CUSTOMER SEfMCE 11:00 to 2:30 + on. &LJll.1m
thlna fr a1mall apt to 1 lafge bedroom In co.ta N/S 1375 mo. ~83'T.o3n Aw, CM. 831 AtiJr. The Otl)y Plot le---~ a Mat~ P"90t!· 5 dayl a axp. r-..p lndN. for blaa. ......., ~AIU.tu·
4 Bdhia. n looldna In CM, Sp"clous C•nnfe ont Mee& S300 mo. +'Autll. Mala prol 2e..s8 non-tmkr for 811 or Betty. brlgl'l\~~~ab !: .,.. t:30dam ~ no tomw brOllw. 1 Girt ofo. teum. ne.:mt1 Margie NB. or HB think of ut ftttt .. '"":I Call after 4, 848-3137 ehr lga Npt Hgta home. a..........11 3111 motiva-·-·-to·-w •• k. n • p" 0 n. Vatled c:tutliae, & bldcpg. FU L CHARGE BOOK
for tti.t otiotoa Ideal IMng & two bfdroom ~pb Lga rm, baih, IOYafy home, A~ now 142.-3442 Diana SPIAffiJXl REXbiHdS ~ :": :.i=. 17M403 aft• 4pm f45..9351 K~EPEA PIT 14· 1i
TSLMGMT l42·1803 ml fr bc:h. Female M/F25+,nlamkr.2brl'IM AdlllCe In Al Mettert & MUst be accuraie wtth 111111n•T1 --..... tws/lllt! ....... Oflcl'1 __ ....,,..,,,__,,~,,,,---
NBAEALTY '7'"1"'2 $250/mo~1789 S300rno.lhruU.Nrbdl, ~ 1815 So. B flgurH. hperlanca --..no•• Alllartq"dCll4Je.;701C
OH THE BEACH qulilt ll'M. 1-42 ... 110 CWnlnO, Ae91, San a.m. t:=:: but w8I itmn. Ull ftll 11... PIT. trS'191 agency. Own ~l:Fll!ld Room & bath, pitvat• an. MIF AmmlC•> needed to Uc d. 492-7211 ' beneftt I**· WlllLft car.~ "1-8040 Ml...l1lm NY
,a1111y •-trance. Avail Nov 1, Dys help ftnd & ..,, 3,4 bdrm Led I,.... JIM IOI· Balety open. ~ N• YoU an "In-home IEW NIT/lm-Mr.--,..... ....... .._ .... _ •un ~ .. -~ r ...__ ,. __ ......... _ ,....._ In pw'IOfl to the Delly ctoe•r .. 7 Oulflty ...OS. n..--.... lt ........ ,_ .. _ ........ _______ _
8P111111mg dean &g apta tor gm._. a _.,....._, "'WI ·-....... .,.. -""-· Piiot, MondllY ttw'u Fr1dey t pot91'1tlal. .,_...... ·-· -... _ • I .-2
-I
tamm.w11or2c111Jd,.,, FURNISHED or "42·5373 541-3311.n.apm ~HAM°' '2-4PM. 830 ~'°'...,. L.aTI• ~~~ ,.. • ...,......_
Nr ptrl(. Heet pd. No UNFURNISHED Am/CM ... '300/mo Ind P9raot1to..,..3bd3belg fnllllrl IM w. Bay 151,. Coaia....... w u-...-._.:.-.-._ pertrnet In cu dOof to 'rnllle & -.a ...... peta. · utll. 111/lelt. Mala non H.B. 1'0me Wltf'e '350+ UUl1ll Nl.J Ca. Ulm a n~ ..... ,.,,.,_ ~ doOr ~ ..._ hQurs. 9i.t 16/Hr .......
a&dtm.2Ba IMS HEALTH emoker. !11 : Tom utll.Mltta9e0-0125 AR£fR£E APT.MOR.WANTED FITlndWkndagoodpsy, .:r.:orF\llumaphona program. GuarantMd be bondabra. Car
NW. Wiiton 831·5583 CLUBS. TENNIS ~9·2504 ProrlreapN/tmkrM/Fltlr Aetnd mall preterrwd. Grc:iwd\ Co. 51.ocadone .... (aflemoon & 9¥9-~ _..,. plua com-1.,::1 If . .,._. tor llht-lut. ltae• 17ti Rtlth ... ttla HM l.g NB hme pool/ten wtk Cd No *VT dutla 22 un11-. ~In l*'IOft nillQ tNftt) million. Hours: hm to 2 denta. C.-4M 4322.,.. Hr tbi'. dbl gar, pool. sw~~MIN~tlur,. BRANMEW Uotel. tobch"450+83M722 it: E-BMfNB.752·2514 :SOH~R:'csAS~ •DELIVERY AEPAESE~ ~:~tpM.~1-ume_. _____ _
cloH to ahopelbcl). muc more orry. Room rate on ..... + '5 Rmmt Bal Penn Baytront IG-1111 . TATJVE(Mustttavuecn· to wn $300. p1ua P9t alAIHNI .
1et/1'1 + '300 tee dap. no pe~ Models off w/ad. 'A day rat• avl. comp. Fmt pref, no lae Allll'f, Wlllll -omy veh.ida) _. For an 11 .. 1111.w anted; ••P•r. pro· M50 mo. 498.-1078 aft e open daily 9 to 6 2544 twwport Blvd c M 1550 n1-3955 175--2128 Wknd9 only. S•art mkj;.No-OUIFHR/llllD •OFFlCE MANAGER · No c.11· • ·' .-, f9aaiona& to care tor
Latw ilack 2741 ~d · e!So-aaaa ... Rmm•• wanted 25-30 to F~~~acsc...!o: ~ :!:: :':~81 ~twn up~ LM~ru~'~1:u= ~=:= W·2M1ext.1204 =: :=1-,:•d;: lmblos nr bCh No kltch . UlllA 1001 help nnc1 & thr •place tn gery, Vic. Bayetd• a onty. port .,.. •ecuttve. Ir· penon. we wll tl'Ut-youl general auto.. for _,... & 1:1a
$350 & 1375/mo N tao Utt MITIR 111 NYllpt lkh. JOl'll 83 M3o40 JMmln.e, CdM. 844-7040 AlgUMlr hre. Mlr1. 2 Y"I Call Oetlnls et 831..s331 HELP! able to "** Englllh
Inc 494-504 ~7-4801 .. l Apirtrnents 'JllllAA FOUND: •m•tr baby 111111'. 111111' dl'Mng .. ~ OI Nead~ In m:r ~ !Mn~. OUllea ~ •-=' .. Cc iidt i,ewport Beuh So. Wkly rant.a.. 1135 & up. ltatala Wut.. uv. Chlnuahua ft brn w/wht Mlrl. 2 yra retlll upar. 11m1111t ~ • mTJL llllltlll food bualnaH. Part ~ .-n lr°'*'O ~ • .,. 170016thStreet ColOr TV,,,.. eoff ... Femexectol&h:'.Nnt epot. Vic. Falrvtaw & UL11 CllMr.s.ttzburg. Ralatlonthl & pie tlmelfulUmaS42.w3 (_,.cfrwlf*'la).t.un-
2000 air 3BR. s2'Aba. ram (at Dover) heated poet. & ttepe to rm or "" •I& near wu.on. CM 541-1451 ll'ma&I (213) 137·1503 ,.5pm ottented ~ ~ «y,ehopptng& ... CIOOll.
rm, loft, fml DIR. 2 car 642 5113 ~·~11~~ W/be)'.Exttrat~to FOUNDVng ,bl</wtltmata ........ for. progr............. IElllM... I~ Hr•: Mon-Fri
gar. Gr•t Nwport I.a. • L.agunaeiach,49.t;.52'4 '900.f.44..J07& • ..iF doo"***'ltwthailted F.A..11.~~111•1 n MaJor ~t Beach ~rlanF/tad d~21 ~;:.,~afe ant..,; ~1:.r:::~ loc. '1500, 831-4300 . Ntwport Buch No. WMtlaret 546-1775 .,... Flnanc:e/lnaurMQ9 Co ..,__ ume • .,.,.. l\alpM; Hn 7~ DIMIM4-11M!for IPPL
Udo 1e1a Wetartront. Pvt 880 I011nt Avenue · IHI IU lllTIL OIUet lntah 2914 LOST K l'I d ,.....,fUllttneenttY eflt• (ROA preferred» saso _.,000 mo ~f-liiititiiiiiiin•l-
beeetl. l.Mga custom de--tat 16th) Wkty rent.alt now avlll. 17Si WWW, c.U'. i66 aemblal :•H:,: A:,: A1J1 llTl&m !...ic..nc.I posltJone. 14().;7'22, w. & Mon-arnoti• pn1,' 640-1113 & _,Ill
luxe 3Br 2ba. Yrty_LM. 64S·ll04 $1211wk&up.2274N.w· aqftCJtdftrofc/lhop!weh 1y hair vcty Edllor\ HS Ndhonestdependablad9-Soma 'typing.; 10.ey I daye84e-12S4 9Clf1lng lttM1n. ftlna,
$1950/mo, 173-88&8 port Blvd.C.M. 146-7445 rm, pl(g 1295. 813-2654 HB. 918-5113, MM1114' t.._ $4-$10tw145-7..e eccountlng eicpar. pr9lla. Dantal/Ortho Rac:apt. ... W typing I. tel•!~one . • _... tm ml• but not nae. >Ont ~Ing Ben1111ta, 4~ Dye. Exp ~ -s-. th M 13.75. plllr.144 it022 o:.-•CANNERY VILL.AGE1' Lott: REWARD tor Otey & -•• oond. & blnatftt, Pi-req'd NB 142-a21 e..a-. _ I l•IMW Fr .. atandlng building• wttt, long hailted *'cat. l lght r.peara. •· Tn oont.:t l.ynn StlndlAd, .......,...""="'· ....,..-~=~"'="= _, --.. __ • ...,,..
1250aq ft & 180 aq ft $1 OCt/17. V.C: ~-& centeJ3000E PCH,COM 144. G 100 A'V CO DENTAL RECPT/SEC l850. Ccnetrucaon com-Fol--. &-
HOR OSC OP E
par aq ft.17MeOI P.C.Hwyl50-7278 FINANCW. SERVICES, w/lrleurlnee ..,,.. .... pa_'lf11Call Leura, ~ lmt Slete am-
400 to aoo aq ft. Rauofto. LOST SdlOOI ring Stena Ill.Ill UY.. l20 Newport Centw Dr, 4 dayt 54-IOOO CM 457 plOfmant. Top dollar.
SYDNEY
0MARR
lble.Allor~.17830..· Col~•· Vcty OoMny •="A~.: ,_pOrtleec:h.C.. EOE i-,~-:r-7.-.51 __ 4222...__..~=--
:l:at t~e1~~= :::na o1g.llac:.,,dy1'*:: e~t:12:30em. Wfid ILBl/ltMt. Clerk$ .,. ... - -- -
• & Sun on. M~ type so -s>m. T• CIRCLE 1· 'M&••ftW ~rt ov. n . --• 581-1514 Ol 85$-5748 • BELl. PERSON llltPet I phone .... aoma llng. ---as•• TMS n .112·'ta38
AIDllT &IU i..ost •ml Toy Poodle, mat1.Wt1Y; Full time, day & Plume. M ttwu F. SAM to LI~
•••••••••••IJ150 eq" prot ofc Meda IMCl!dnt ASAP. eve ehlfta. 12PM. Pit Of4...87'4 'I
• -•lwndw vlaW. 2311 Cam-CM. RewarcUS0-7311 • FOODSERVEAbdln-COCKTAIL WAITRESSES • I ... 1111111 •'m11• .....
Wednesday October H pue Dr #211 lrvtne. Cot-=--=a ~!:~m~· &,per nae. For lntaNtaw r1~ ~j k A .. I ARIES (March 2 l·April 19): Someone who is spending plenty of nar carcm ~ K:; SCRAM-LETS • VALET PlfVMI time. ~ Th\IF-&m Mpm :::.,/. r
money attempts to make a joke of it. Be fle1xibleh, but pro1dtecdrat y~ur own ::'·~Rm a Cott... ANSWERS Maturity '& nut appea1. 21 · OcMnfl'ont NB • Ollltlll
financial intemts. Plua budget toopho es t at cou in your ...00 Ph· 752·2414 mandatory. I.I.I...._. llSllTllT •••11111
resourocs. tons-distance call relates to social affa!r or jo4rney. eotta·M~ 345 Sq Ft p1ua Schema. Jerttv • SALES CLERK.8=! P&L •NIT Tm h 1 · =xv~
TAURVS (April 20-May.20~: ~ttend to details..ao.aJow. spar.for bthrm. avall immed. Group·Blttw :~f:~·,,,!::\opm & WIIlll•m tv lntervtewa Wednesday 9'--11 time. Focus on legal ~ff11rs, nghts and penmss10,ns, possible 1300. 494-3803 or BUY ME'S 8:30-5;30pm Tue.$at. Mauup10a100.plcle)'f:t.. A.M. at 2588 Newport Blvd.,
partnership and your m~tal status. Che~k source material. ~t ~Y be 548-3345 M~al~ ~0t>!: PtMM c.1 l4WOOO ~ 11ne1S**ao-1n Colta Meea (on Newport
necessary to make rev111ons, to begin a general rebualdmg or DESPERATE with 1 handful of Ext, 621 M-FMpm klclf .,.._ Mutt he'4 Blvd. at Del Mar)
refurbishing program. 11th ftOOf Euc ete comer an11elopas. "Well," ,.,. BaMJng C*\ := em.a Cal (714) 537-4340 for
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Communicate with those who ha.re otnca for IMMleut>-llt. Mid, ''Wt~u~·., · ~·~MCMeM!ct~· men Info. EOE
your basic ?deals .. A~bntd on ~ork m1ethods.h procedure1 dc~tls ~~.:i-'.,.~i ~f.a .. ma• and a BUY ~1~T
1.m
Upm-7am. onct '*""'' CMa. ... etan.d eo .,.
S .N.F. MESA VERDE
CONV. HOSP., 111 c.nlllr St.. Cmt• .._
548 55'5
connected with &~ll~&JO . one. rocu.s a so on c ~nae. trav~ • vane y, V*'1.ll seas.141_.784 11.,.....
aptc;t!l commumcation with member of oppo ttc sex. V1rao plays -
llJ'lificant role. . . lllllTIYI RITU an : arm CANCER (Jun~ 2 l-July 22): Focus on domestic 1d1u1tmcnt, 1 MO FREE.RENT t*ie. loW'O type to COl'-
chUdren, pleasure, travel. chari ma an~ physic.al. at~on. Loved one l.~ All~0::1t~ aids mrtcM ,..mo,llhlp communicates needs and descrv~ senous cons1dcrauon. . . ,,., aq ft 133-9170 Jody wtth..,,, '°" mMCU11na
LEO (July 23-AUJ. 22): Residence beco!l'cs moi:e exc1un1 pl~1 FuNon "'9nd c:tao-~ = : couldbctemporaryheadquanc~~orclandcsuoe.~ccuna. l..o<?kbc~tno oreteci, 111 9q "':Y yMr1 pt\8111 w11 ,...,_ ..,..;
scenes define term , check lcphtlcs and be posat1ve c.onocm1ng rights ..... Of mo1mo. cen for CONldarltton. The tot.
and penn11s1on1. oetalll. 710-1333 IOWlna' ..... • be
VIRGO (Aus. 2.3-Scpt. 22): Short trip may result in profitable F.09' l.EASE 1100 aq ft O*~ ~::: entc~risc Malec anquine , pve full play \0 mtcllcctual cunosity. prot. offtoa eulte. High ::' d,:· (~•
Relationship intensifies, responsibility incrcascs and money picture beM\ calffngl, catptta. Wllehl~ TYJMI). 20 to
develop!! •le. AMple l*'t<lnO· JOM 351ah (.Aellyt~ Hot doo-
LIB.RA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Study Vir&o mcnaao for valuable hinL ~::" 1= ~~'gO· ger, ab6I to trMC. o-n-
What appcatcd 10 be a Ion will be a gain -¥ou oou~d h1tjackpat. i:ocu1 m4,....t404 • ::a:; .;.-=.,:i,,:_
on iptymenla. collections, taxes and sJ?ecial ~us. You'll bc.nd C?f .,.., "°"' 106 to an.',....,_., ~ unn«"CSsary CJtpensc, you'll reach wider auClience and proJCCt as -.,, ..,.. office bldg, BMtfl ~(or Int
completed. r~ tor lmmeo oo.. octw kind of pt111c1111• SCOllPIO (OCl. 23-Nov. 21): Get re dy. for new tan, take cupancy. t1.Hlat oro-.. & H, ~:;, 00. l ~
initiative display courqe and p onecnna spinL Exude oonfidence. ""*-ooop :.V inwa::W...;:
make co~tact,, am nae for di~t appeals and perso.nal appeanncn. 751-tlll Ra H WMllt OMte • "-MiMM ,..
You'll scllo ht.an of matters and romance "Aili Oounsh. . . llTI&/.,. iOMI rt1umund.,,. uomAlllU (Nov. 22-0CC:. 21 ): You'll be anHtcd to)Oln unique Cholol ~~to-IH CONFIDINCe ,.... 1
lrOUP to share knowledae and ) ou could be offered lucnuvc oontrKL Clt!Orl on Paff. ._.,. ... of .... ...... *
Cycle 'remains hiah -jud_amcnt and antu1uon are on lafltt. Unusual llde Gfr~1-~oo IQ n. ~.!o, ;:. m~~: membe.rofo~nc x wm bceiOmeally. • SenJu9nCll*C•MO.CA a.. our • 1n todW"• CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan 19): Social acuvst es tncrca • tn\'Cl • • .,.... Aet:'r t2t71 • C1•••ldlundetMC8'-
oPPOnunitr Ullts, you'll be PQpular and .. lucky." Focus on pleasure, ~trom r,,,..:: 'TIONllt.
cmouonal rutfillmcnt and bu11n 5 or careet advancement Gtm1n1, HwJ .. llu1111 • ,,, -
Sllhtanus nativ~ prove :11noccc and play paramount roJes. =..:-~~et Ill .. i§ll H IHll• AQUAIU (Jan. 2(}.feb. I ). It Will be n ry to cbanae me I ,i4C wt ,.,.... '°° nr W Clil WI•
matcril.I lO check ufttS. to ttar down for utuma1e JJ?UfPOSC o 00 AAPOr1 'Pt\ oYn1t* ,, Into 1314111 .._,
rebudd&"8 on a more uttable tructurc. Soott>ao and1vid~1~1lhoU&h o v.M '4t-10l0 oNt HO ilfW...... ~I
ccmtrovemal, d have your best mtcrnts at h n 1nd you II me z 11•11
aware of it _ _.-., ~th l•.U bper 8IMtY '*' oomrn. PllCa (Feb 19--March 20)· Good lunar a pea co ·~•U'I>• II• •u ••'T lfld beMft\1 NcMrG ttivel p4an1 edu~tion ability to communicate needs in an1cul1te1 1f::. uu n on ttPtM• O\lllllM:T;;ICIQ.....,
p&ea11nt manntt You ii overcome la111uqc. dtstanQ! t.men. Oct l1tof ..':11121 CP~~ H111t CL ~c.nw • lfl13~ Idea on Pls>tt brina lntu.al ,atucs into harp. dear fOCUJ.
'
District Managen
If you erlfOY ~ ~ 1°""9 boy\ &
~ Ond •Ii jOba en ftOt f°' you, ~ o co...-r in tti. ~ clmllo-
tiOft htld' Thli i$ 0 Uftiqu9 poMtlOf\ •
. doffr '~·
on
I
t
•
•
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1111 !l!i!IJ!U!!L 1111 ..... Ill ..... ltll tilt ~~-~~-~· l!J~iia::;;ri~~~iit;~ ~~ ·----··-.,.wremPlllllliiatl 1M1Ut1m POOd11tPuP1.t...,,,Tt:1t. 31· lboll. Nk* Puc• r.aa..-..ni,..:a
tor U,Olffllt. •• ,.,, """'9d. OOlfllnG far Qt• AAT·TNI. v..-. ~ ""°"~a,. to yo1.1r .. ,..,. tlmt fOt WOf'Mr'I• Min, 8200 up Ml-2641 o-ADn • !Ml•. Asking ••ooo 175-ltlM --
typln9, '"•· ••P•r ;aniuid · 1ndhlch1 .. to '°,,!'::'~ ::!:r:.:-n~v~ :1:~•ttop C.M Aa!l\UI 1111 &1,o0o(11•~t.c f...a 1131 1131/mo.•k
tat.ao1 WOfl Wllt1' ~ ~ \lflh~ ltrMll n1-H1:2 UNRSDE mtibOE Olk ·111a·w.-w1ot11~. i75aW&n.iut....pwrwan c.E.Comm:er
I' ... <WW o.11: ttllf ol ""'9, "!'"'"' I •-1••• •• cbn Mllboll wllrtr '3200 ~ AU.-BAVE EAfJING 1111 n NII In erowino mtg. fl'rm "' , v1n, •••• on ~tldlool ..,,, wae IUFFNETCOU~~ ~~ oeo M8-I074 '-" MtQ ·,~!!b.' .. ~00·1:•mP•'· (114) -1en PIT, I,., tonn ..... fMllty (CIO•• to So. C•t .,,...on) lO ...._ ,..... • .... Pn motnln~.!L~'ot ol at.A "'IC"' _...... """""" --
' ~Irv ~2022 Ptla).Pr•v. Oto mqmt :::'" :~M = ----pN1iM9.lht~lnWI l40<l23I ~1111.n• '770000EPICt(UP ....... ... 1141 ~ ""get t)'PlnG • ~ d&bl C t--Q,.... •----... ,".'.~;.,."'*1ne U A.I e. ~II. wlthllC)'I automat~I _ -·--wtoom~tlon.ti;lll •· on.... tor H.I f(::hOOI ~. ore.as -rvv -82 p 21· Sloop· Pow.WSt...-lno lfai•&U ..!:.'!t .. _, __ , .... ,.quired. ~ of.. HydtM~ttln.I'= Pf'9f. .... 7M, IRlfTllf lllYlfl'llAlllD CFll211AW.SM~lt (1F27M4) An'l/fmfttrlb,ll'lf1,M,
.---.. t•r• ••l•rr ~om· t>ttWMl'l t~~ .. ~211 flnlllll--c.n..1.wo1t1m 1.Es 161.e133 CtbttlO eo.1 &t1oo. 811'1 sme ..,.., ton1b ... trtm, Spar.. ~ •th ...,_, a..m.°"'¥·-'-.a~ rtqUk"ff A9c9pt1on1111 Ullll awi.1..we P9dro thru 10/$0184. PrioeQOOd/1·29-M ~=.'~':" ...... Mwd
:::.
1"1 a~ ~b::,!11~ p.mu, =',!:'vu~~-~~~ =•·Tr;!~ ,,::::r::~ =~ra~:'~ lt~~=vr~°.J:a. ~~=::r: MtUlcUllM'S
prtl'd.S.A. 4 "*"·Send r.eume wttn EltPeJ. Wleoikl woun11nQ P1CMila,A...., C.M. ~· .. w1..,,.,. 1d0"'"'1Qf. c.M. · ~~~E.~ ·11 & ·eo a1it OMC 1-::.;;:c=.;:,,==~c.:.._-ll SOUTI COUllTY
MEDICAL tMlry~to: Ad. 210, bedcgl'Cund '°' o.c. Air· PRIVATE POST Off"tel -wwv MS.:2221 or «11-3111 8, Lono 9Mch C• TnKlka. Allio, ve, P/9, 'll U llMI MOTOIS -lllft~TIJ1 .. 0o =· =a :.:.., ~ ::W"'."': =--~ ~n~'Y1~ lllllTlll/llPllT ArtMg 1ictWMilopfrzr2 ..,a:-BldmuM bT~ PfB, ~".,,~~fr ,00-2.';0
1•0-.,.,6;:""' ... ,'. ~ nta7 t.64t--2Ht . Tape_lrMl!Crlptioft. word vr-otct.taaa.Ms-2203 ~ wtlh montv $6600.Pll\p • -,. -~ ~otn:'• P;::, .,.,,,. PlllPIUTlll P.:!~ .. 'nn:~;:: ===IT~ ft.t:1:tor(2dr) l22s. ~~:;: -~~ t,"!x,=: :!,':,,In~= ~ ,.._,,..~,._. • .,._ ,._,,l,pet!Woritn1M ,.._Sl('f,.:per.p!WI ... Front omot aipptll'WIOI FWf ~8U3 W1 &ctr,olrl1'6• mMe ~to TtrYY $l0300~ "8-0321 cer•d !or. SOK ml 1914 .,_.4dr lnsur•nce, typing IO cHl'opt.-0 om. In Or· 1191. o.y., ...., .._. ,. fOf Ool\nl 1514112 · Dlh\watlt' t100, e•s 8141 HQ911;1M. Mll\09 of bfd • · t13.l&O firm, 7eo-t571 , nm-1 •
""'""PIQ_bOWd;---......... IOed oftf)'. ywcl.Wknda.842·140! P/T&ECRET4RY-E nm/llOPT .... • durt 10 dAv&. EnWIOIMi 1§14 PCifd Truck, f250. ,,, 3000 ···-······ ••••CEL i.nt btl'IMttt. ""* 0.-Wril• -O 239 : ... CdM nrm ,. .. optnlnQ for -•1111 mwt •t*• ''Be.l.d Std". 3/4 tori. All, Nnl Qd.. ..... c.. ~ ·~ ~.J.~-·0 P;...;.~7 .... &PPTllTTlll .... t• ... ~!~ .. potlUve lhi=..nkl Mil· ~u,..r 1111 Owner,...,.... right 10 IOKMl.U200.H0-7HS Bl.qfPll, 4 IC>d. ~ Sll5.14-+ llXPlflOO 1:30 to s.. fltl ~ • ,,,__ ...,. . pltv ~ OOlftll ltalan. ~" -.... -· --~ fUlll ,21,etf. 78'-1185" !Ill' s•H•40 No st11f10 w . ~ be •bte to U.. trinNllMIOn moovat.i leO-~· '*1tt.x SP, t'lflA9 any or Ill bldt. Wean WJll #!>-.
-LL'llll ••rll&ST ...... Cell ...... m ...... , ........... ., ~·: .. ?-.:::~ ~.,.~.:." .. "::> lilrl6Mb 7tU 'ffCHEVRoMVll< OYEI 110 CN'Cot\13lll.S6
If .r,;:rn:-s'::.'o'J~~d :: lllLY PILIT 1;m',. UllD ....... , •• " 111: """"· ~-not 1715, mint, 752.fi"Tta IUP ... 21' llAT e cyt, AlllOmltl, Poww p,.()wMd Mm~ Rtsiduil S6.200.od
M0.000.0tmortlnCJOmoo ,,ITP!Tpo.a'llll )(Int :.~ometz r.n.n. ..i 111-:0.~: '"'"'" AH J250.Av.Unowe75-0234 ~itu~~) .T •• o~, ®''·'' mll1IM1t:nd .. wlllngM1tnopeningtor•S*t· ••141iephoM:r.:cMril. frOftl I CdMti•SJM700 1'*i :n31ithSt.-AplC.NI '3N8 ., ~ ·'
to WOl'1r. hltd torn, con. tlm• •xP•tl•nc•d, ..._. .....,. phOl'ttl I ttr • • cn&rnlna ~ 1 *'t9 • ..... .. 1••7 -·· p ~-• -.. lllNm .. _.... -" lnCOMt Mntlel Wiii trlln optlca:I -y ITL 1--t..m. fO(tttl'ler ~ kit· Z8 ....,.,r1ter ''"" rout good/1..,.... •• ._. "*= M«rlll Lynett ~"''-to ottMnwfthwi.xcltlng. d 1 ' •/T Na •• • ,,.....,. '......,.... ... _ .,, .... , ..._. w/Xlnt Npt Moor· BllLMAXEYTO'tOT.A 1-1 ~.~.,-1••• y•MAIDI IL ......_ ~IM molt pr-.. produc• q11•Uty •d fuodrlller. Hourly+ UI ••• f" • • Mon-Fri daya, up. ~. litna, .... -""'· . Ing. $15 000 875-e821 19ll02&Mdl 962..()129 ..... -.... ... llolou1, mo•t 9rowth ltyOUta. OOfnP9 & ft)w'I bonuaoroomm. 85().4157 30782 So eo.at Hwy fenltut UZI ' ~lwtl. 60rnoCfl •
or1'mld.,... In,....... let ..... pll09d deity Mt-0303 llllP• •••• , .. -t...g 8ct1 I ' •NEWPORT SLIPS~ LlilM:llitl NII ...... S2ftH •••• '* 11'0 t8t&. .......... yout'Mlf newrPtP"" eonc:.pt to • ..... I' COUCHES .. FrultWOOd Dlly/WMil[/Month. . TOP t1•.6H IO now tor tM nut fM6 .... flnllMd 111: Send te11Jme ~ " , '::e/.llOM O.C . ..:=· lllPPlll llP'f. con.. & .-2 ChOw 19b!M, Yachting AMoc. 048-0551 Nevf. cadllllle & l.lncotn TIP Ill PA• CAP \14,n5
W. boom. CW,.. op. only & QrOll c0pi. Of 9F YOU ARE TIRED of non-!-~· -=t otttc9 F/M, llhipplng upsr'. help-911 ldnt, 54~18 Pw"*-!t a6lc> wen19Cl O~~nr.:'.t: :Otor For PMIP91'9d tiOOO.CAP re(luCllOll
J1ortunltlt• avalllbl•. WOftt to: SICMi Hough, ~ iAt I number1 l per.;:~ 10 welt" tut but not nee. Wiii trlltl, 42 •• oM tbte, 4 cf)fl. >Ont. 31• a.rtrwn. llkte u. OK'. ~ (714) 751.LIMO M8iotd11Btni Anldu.i tss40 80
~ :=....,~ ~Dl~or~.r•~.'1:. :'*!,.be~: mainyn.t1.111QOod1 .....,.1 =:.:~~= Sec$4950805*-7739 CetlTomM&-3121 latt1la,.rtN llml&ftUll,,.J ~,1.,800 ,f1LIUll1Q
Witt Maclbor91d or vtkkl Box 1580-, 0091& M9ta. tot I lllC* phoM Job . p•raona 'I+ YP ng, 9flta. tult lllM WOl'k. Cd I' blk vfnyl coueh, woocNn Smell bolt w/ahors moor~ Top M«OlldMPrtcea
It MtrTW l.yncft AMtty et c.. 92t28 ' Sii+ c;omm. ......, .. , am. oramm•. Ht• dlctillon, 545-0413 trim $230, Tn.M.n Ing, xint ioc.uon kl N.B. ll07 Call Pet1t0tf\l'j 18711 Beach Blvd
54frt38e or 147~1 Sandt• 547-2129 ahort~··=H!: Couctl t100 Od cond l5000 080. 14&-51-42 1,•,,•,.111,...,.=.,,,,,,..,= ...... an Hun1u1g1on Beach
-·-·-;:::,. · 3151 ......, lllPPIHllHllllll ._.,,,_. sfoo!W..,.: samoldo tOB ·71 ioosl nu a;i;; •ilO· •111 llDOUU (ll4) 142·2000 _, .. _,_, * RUL ESTATE ••1 ES * ... "'"" '1 eo.t• .,. __ , .. _ . .,,., 8oottx1 • ..,.,, ... ,. .... ..,.,..,.,.., .,..,,,,.,1_,.,. ''I.. .,.. ~ c.. 92628 .a .... 1 w/6 vr-pp. In ahlpplng men t50. ~1 S..2'""300 aiC s.llboard. Pivoting JnloutStl500ffO.ll103 1-.::.:::.c:....:.c:.:;_:;:.;__,._..,.. __ ,,..._...,.,,.... • 'I •••••• UPI E CHI 'lllSTlllAL . . ~· ..... '" ....... , • ..,_ ... • ..... , ... w"001 ...... 10 ~-~-11st"•1 ·---·~. ;.:.:....,, ..,, ..., ..,: CDll II ......-. m ... by .... me only. • • t Io• t • o 111 t'. 1"' M 1 1 .... ,,_ SS00/080 .,......, ~ 1 Delwt• -·--=~a:=."= We are a 39 year old firm wholly FfT ~lJ14~Mutt =-~~':t~n:.:~ ~sm~ !lczcl11 1112 IUllDW '~!U.811!.~st.:~ ~-~= 91"Wal~.-id owned and personally operated by n1V. •llP« 1n· t..P1no' 119"1•, •r•notna 1111p--Iron pvro1 ce.ge 1foo Hu"ffYi 10 iPd W&J I 1111'• ovwpe'f!Tll"t•831...att ...,..,11,)831•1043
of'bllklltl. ~In per-It's founder serving the Commercial, ltlS'.&WtnQ Pnon-. gsri men1 with carr..,.., Ind Workout bench S25 Sc:mMn dirt bike W.oo •-· 1--------~ to 727 Yortttown, era! omc. duttll ~ ftnlllz:lng doclJrMntt fOI' Tr~ 126 4 lldder Scol IW,,.... 649-2042 ••--. M'f Ullftl A VW Bui X1nt tuMlnQ
Huntlnoton B••ch Industrial,· Apartment and Land SUMOJmo.~GaY't ~eccounl'"°.>Qnt b•Cil ch•lr• 110 •• ll""'I conctP60•t7-5853 lal-041f • Mantet:-We are ·not a 1ranchlse, Arnold c1 p1•1r•no· bltn9flt1.Appty1nper90n. 1131-8026 ea.~ .. 14 ..
NURBESAIDE branch or divlslon controlled by l1ouna' Ben. R.O.P. :!. ~~~aeoeo.111 llffnllfTlll 473TOYOTXCAIN60k JTOOINIEFlll 8!-~:";·,~~.~
Pw1 time ....,Inga tor others. On the spot management 31522 El Camino Reel, ' LES 961-lt33 POP-TOP,CAMPER I Ill's cut1+ STOP 131.-4082 •4lll*Ok: llm mM•. In O d I San Juen Caple. (114} SHOP HELP/DRIVER ' (151TJG)
Hunt. Bott. 431-1821 decisions. pen oor managemen · 418-311&. t8-H yn okl. Mutt t11w Matt,.... ...., Twtn seo. S2ll8 TO CHOOSE FROM tin 1171 -liiiiiiiiiiii;--· / ·No waiting for an appointment. Afflrm1tlwAc110n Emptyr gd drMna rmcord a clMn Obie $86. o...i 1100. Prfc9Qoodl10.-29-14 1.ou1rd Atd S&&ll&lllltlT. Opening for 2 Commerci&l·lndus-1-11T cut]70-.0102/ 7N-9094 KJngSt20. 837~ BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 1-$11•81"9 2doofCouP9..I 11·-
.. .-. trial people with ablllty who want the tor ..:;5~ Pt'M.'.>nea. TUOID Sofl-.b9d te". xlnt cond. 1m2 BMCh H2.0829 8750 ~,.!:Blvd u4M ---r · II.Mm freedom to work any territory or Ntet'/Plno&"*'e.Appfy Pr•·Klnd•ro•rt•n . l200.calh.e73-9M4 r 1 121-IDIG BILLMAXEYTOYOTA
lot PFMM ~ 1n "°"* type of. property. No farm system. in Ptnon· 3151 Alrw9r. 9AM-1PM, ~Ff'!. A Solid oe1c 1abll w/8 c:hllrs tt2021Metl 912-out
........ -T c.... Plese call for an ,·ntervlew appoint-Bldg F, &.Ill~ 109• Costa CHILD'S PLACE. PRE-A 2 sotld"beklWIWIChelr -~ &M.&544 I ... 1111 23511 oro Rd, B Meu (IPPfY .-11:30 am) SCHOOL, Me-4318 bet ttooll: 843-9772
Toro. w.6881 ment. · TIAml Sotld Aoc:k ,_.. dlnlf19 111rtyCln/ ·~200~. = U::
WESLEY 1. TIYLll ca. RECEPTIOllST .,......,_ ""'"'~ ....._ ..,, ............. ....,. lcte1tn IOll k>OO.ceo.,e-19,, 1L-=-=='-'-"'--'~ tMI ':::,~~ 1 Chic Pim· l..tte 2ll, .__. ..... lmm9dllit• R9C91>tlonl•t ·try. S1111 $4.25 tv. Ed Of" cabln91 J750. 548-70$4, · 1 1 ownr. ,78 2002 lhelp In/out, 8760Mancn.ttr81vd ev • •o•n t
Sarvto9 DirectofY In the _........, potttlon IVllilabl9 •l ow Upsr'. 1"9q>..842.cl181 Unique Couch makll &' 8200 ml, run• gr•I. lb 88 000 Orig ml $4800 BU90ll P#k " Clpa60. 8*/Stw, -.a,
DAllYPM..OT (114) ....... 110 EITorooftlce.::h:;: T.i.ptioneS... round bed, $200. ~ nrnewS350,NW013 o&o84e..111e&r5--t!'J04 (11•)121-IO t11p9,C/B,.a ..... Qor • .... _ ~~-.~ .. PAlllCI ....... "'· -..... ., """"'' GS 250 ,,_ ..... ,~ .. ..
(714) 548-7058 .
;;:::..-:::.:-_, 1za.. WI Ctlelr A ottOftlll\, '50. bfkt xtnt COnd 75 mpg "82 835cll "4/1M1tl, lo ml. '85CADILLAC8 = :~or::1ca:. We ~•19"/ n91C1 20 CU.tom wood lltnp ISO. 1150. call &45-0490 llr, IC)Oflen:, BBS. Mutt l199down
lion •*-_.. NOllPArY· amblllou• psopl• ror 842-4244 .12 Honda 650 N~ 11911. $23 • .COO. 432· t 131 ao-d End
Pleau cont•ct K•lly ~ ~ .a..tlalng. WhlteMCtlonalmlrt:Mtbt 1000 m1 11900obo&iDW "838MW52e.SispdwMe eomm.rdllt...
Hadlock •I (714) o W._., _,_YJa ,_...... iattsched, Pd $2500, aefl roomcOnd 98&..(1321 •• wond ___ m ...... • .. •nu52 .AU.-SAYEASL..EASINO 858-0825. wy. 9 '-" tor 1250. 646-8181 · (714)W·tt11 -llUIY Li Ill Ktttt 1 .. 11 iOtO mo . ........, 521-2201
IMPBw.UYllll S4.-t101hr '*'• o--ou. 11• " '77TOYOTXSUNRXOER NABERS --.... -'°' ... c..i. .... uu .......... "°""', ... T,E) .v-. ..--c•,,..uc
Equlll()pportunlb' ~~~worti:C.-: lntlqu• lurn, knick· -~,.. ~·~ NIL
Emplo)'lll'M/F/H knack•, •kl •quip, *** S~LNail'l9 LAAGEST8ELECTION
tlLIPllllE llLIOIJll ClothM. tool.a, dr..,._, Prlceoood/10.-2'-14 '***'**** ot'9temocW..IOWmlMgt 1rm1um Exppref.Lowlyrerno<S91 btankett, butt• pot· 81LLMAXevTovoTA o01LLDT..arm Cedtl«:t1n1outt.n D~~~ _.::1 ~~ ~~-= :l:=.'~MMemc:i 11202a.cn te.t-0829 PU-IWIRlllW't C.Ufotnie1S..ut1~
phene. typtog, Ille bkkpg .. t>-7922 MOf. Sal -,,,.,_ 1,30 bit tff11Jt1 fff0 77 32014 .. afe(8 .. RfP) 140• 1110
exper.req.833-1280 _...__ ·~Inc .. 1111 1t320ieutoa/1'(27UST) ~~eft -~ lu.51'"-...... 90320i5apa/c(2atd31) _.,.,, ,, ..... , Lat .... my IWO top Set. . 5400 ...._AW. 90320lhpl/ft_faM7H!
Gd phOM manner, use produoers am,cS 1310. mult.,.t•mlty. Clothing, 9032015-paJl'(tan•185
Ofcs-ln Wport are11. Hrs: MCh working 24 hra. No petite, rMnt-msd, new I0320l5-pllr(1ben'7MJ
S..5. TlmtnY 5<46-5217 ...... no cold calla. l'm vtcs.o tlpM, bikM, TV'L HONDA TOYOTA 11 320I ~lll'(1DIJE4i7) 1~~-~----1 _,,,.IC<,.._ -DATSUN 11.-a1•1D4G ... )
116 CllTWO. bfown/tM IUua 1117 Int, rune xfnt 11100.
Restaurant mollWtsd gr99Ctypeoplt9 llbctll&attU 1211 ._LL MAt<ES ... 1199 Down. _..,. '1 llTPIPPEUll'I wtlo nwi to mllk.• 1op 1011tbl ... if!,15 ... wtr CM>Mdlndcomm'llNN. St 320t5tp'S'(1=:1 ·11 J.a Wsoon, ;;a, all•~ Me-21oe
PIZZASTllE doliars.Seteppt'lfor1M heltw $40. Ping Pong No Flrlt ot Ldt. No 0.-:~==~~!..J:Zl Ir••· good condition. 72 lmpmi91Clnl cond 1916. $3900. 54()..8811 ffe..1757
lmmed 09ef'lll'IQI. PIT, fttlx· HOfldtl'f Inn Tr.v.t Club. tal*I l-40, wooct· car c.r-P«*t. No UCen• r=., !2 320l 5ep91'r(37M29)
lbletloura.App+ylnpw-Work In Colt• M ... O..S50751.fi791mtl7 ~any-rr7 52320l~a/~l ltrtl llll ~20oBerrMCaPrtcwy ~~2~rfQ~ W~T~ctub. (711141J1)432 ... ·1 E :~=1·~1l&0g442t •'111111111&
IMne. EOE agt9'.atv9, ""·•t•rt.... n tlml!Y memberMlp. .. u-93320t 5-psll'( 1GLKl24) * 17250 497-3386 1--====~-1 need epply. Call tllilf" S750 OBO 4""""'794 f -93320l5'Pllr(1twt815) ''77COR0CLACOUPE •WTAllAIT• llpm, 761-4222 K·sz W1rbd 1250 2 Mr !.eutng,S..,Aaontlll 13320ISlp'l'(010612) VsryCleln(l35TYQ) •PUPU. Tm ..... IY ltOOll can. $50 ClMdt Domeltle-fOl"tllOn-Ellotlc 935211f5epl'd(96&441) $19tl8
·---~~---'80 ClT A TION ___ ,.,..,
AUtomeUc, /tM Cond, Power at..,, St.,.,
CUMtte Pi..,-..... IJNI, Ytl'/ a.,
(1AOZ248J ..... *** TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZtE
... soma LAGUNA HILLS oak 1rfm ISO 840-ll11 11·1-•1 13 528E< l'd(1HIW809) ...... 1111'1 la now lnteMlwlnQo tor: Magic lalind Mbrahlp, 93 528E mlt ld'd(207194 ·n CELICA F•PID.1111 STOCK charl•r w/all rights. f4:833c91-61pld2mnl WIAllConcl.Bl.,.,,T..,. ~ tor ocunfront SALES 11750, c.11 649--8851 (=U}
hOlel. 9top by 1 ... So. g:r.~&ouNT N4UG.SOF4(""'1Jl7'.0n (11")111-1111 1'1'1' eo..t Hwy, Lag. Bc:h. tor SOlfCrTOR bed(llt new} 1150, twn POAl EAC " ·eo TERCEL
'78 CAMEAOZ..21
AutorMtlc. &HARP
(7&3UXW) -*** ,,,__.,, .......
ACROSS
1 -de combat
5 Indian llU.
10Chlck•
14 S19award
15 Yalf1910n'
1e Diii herb
11 won.iW11h -· 19 hklrnohUI: var.
20 Wat.-heat..-
21 Ttt lor -
22 Poot w-.n
23 Wood a1rlpl
as can .... us canal :ze Pwent: Informal
30 Scotch river
31 lnluf9d
34 Amerind
3e Poartll'+le
31 M.,t drink
31 PMCOCk now-•
42H•dwood
43~atory
Mg&nl
UProwl
45Tlmtaol .....
47 WMltl Parl
4t Youngster•
50Pon
5 1 Ftench rlwr
!3 lmpor1 lu
• ' .. ..
"
" ..
•
55 s,,..
58P ..... alaw
e, Ruael.,, city
12 Union firm
641 Monat•
15 Doled OU1
.158 Cows ol old
81 HodgepoclQe
81 L•tl•• 61 Be ... )lctd
DOWN
1 Ahinewine
2Codelor0
3 Upt"Ollr
'Ne•l lo Aug
5 Oi1semlna1e
8 The Atlar
7 Skim over
a Though1s
9 The •Ille
10 Sult maker
11 lovt1 ot the
Englillh
12 OlsgulM· var
13 Aatound
18 HOUMw;,.g
24 Dekot• dltlact 2$ A.,,11· attire
28Sludln
Mrlou1ty
27 S09oP plWll
28 s.1.,-y
dlttrlbulor'
• '
eppt. No phone cah. HOlJS""••piun btd/hdbrd $40, beiiQ9 NEW ·8 H 208 W. 1at, Slnll Ana Bt..-.o CU..U.. V9t'J ~ ·~ · ¥f1'/I chr/ottomen $35, llltl Wut.. toB CLOSED SUNDAYS dWl(457YZf) anuL uus "' -'°"""" ... .,,_ .......... 1...,..,;-.,,,.,,~-1 ~;;;;:;;;;;;::;:::;::;:::::~I .....
811.1. MAXEY TOYOTA
19202 BMc::h 1$2..(1121
PREVIOUS
PUZZLE SOLVED
Prom.. AM J9twta1ry a or -4prn Mm-Frt. or by cMiml: a chr S15, eMdt: ml GAii..... 1 • * * * Gifts. Npt BCf1 873-9334 appt. 24100 Llgune Hlltl ctlelt(blue)S15, Box fYPt' a.II your car. lrwtafll c..n LARGE SELECTION OF '78 CELICAOT 11o>il@iTj:<f'--:-RO~l-iiM~o\l~.~Ef,OE~Mi/iFmiiiiiii.T fan ·new 115 Smell BBQ tor)'OUI"~. Anymekeor NEW & USED BMW'S! w/AlrCond, Wlr•WbMI 1Rothchlld• A••---tu-lllllllT 15 9m1 OOffM tabtia M rnodeil.Pakllorornoi. LMll&ll... Cvrt,SttrSO,PlrlMITlf'M
CONNEL i
C HEVROL ET . .... " ' . '
29 l111er19ciion
31 Hiccup IOI.incl
32 An1elope
33 FUrnllure
3$ Bronn or M--37 ,._,,,
40 Bil ol wit
41 Any whlll-
4fl Writing veer
48 LID9agM
• •
=:rTT'1 taurantposUlona av•ll. 11rM1 N Iron 15 N9W ..i atOM Gel01¥Pri09ltrst. VOLUMESAlES (943VNW)
Expsr.pref.; ••ded for •WPOtl ...,.. White w/blult trim BlllMAXEYTOYOTA SEAVICE&l..EASING S38U
~ ' '11 r
S4b· I 200
51 Bt11"'1 -
" °""""""" 53 Jodgm..I Oay
54 lfT1981lln9 ..., .....
55S11mm11
57 SoHci1•
!!II Vouet\el"
IHI Sti.ci.
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Appty°'r~i.=~~!,7 e. ~:;.,~~~~ '20 T,out.r 15 Mor• 192028Md1Blvd 3870N.CMrryAv-. ***
•.:::CoMl=-::..-.,:!:.·.:Cd::M:_ __ l--M=on,,.-=F"rl". "'= .. ::2033::=''---mlle. 84&.2788 Hunttnaton e..cn {NoL.~~~""'l ·~ C?~~.!J-FT-."'"" r-:;;;;_,====;;,;_: 1· -Bcf'I Tennll ctub "'*""" 982-0ltl ...,_,, ......,., .. u,..., """'lY ..,... 'nSTAllONWAQOH ~ '°"" YlUTPllllll ·~l350+1350""" s•• "'SR••• lt14)IH-ltll eutomellc.pl.-'I '"'"""·•-·'-llfYll/ULEI ITTllUIT tet&«-6474 .. .,. ... t,.,..,.Welcome <1GTV4a31 MH•,CIMn,.1111(M18WV)
$300 +Weekly 14 p/hr •llrt No Upt. Junk & Tr.,-,.portatlon OPEN SEVEN DAYS M781 588
SteakalttdSeatood A.P91'/ In per9on 1630 Univ. Athletlc Club FREETOWING "::::;=====~;;1 'l3ca1t'LrFTBACK· '***
Mr.Fazio 542.3883 MlllnSt.ntM , Mbt9hlpl3001850-7757 Ru• 213/8374239 lb.tna iflf wtthAUICM'nll!iC.PISl..,.9, l,11£8COATSTATION
route AlETS NEEED tor ··-Dflke hdltut/ WE '" ·71 516. :tito, oOOd 1r•• Air Cond, SUnrooJ, mor9 Ls.n.. ':t~O:.. ml-. 111¥11/ULU clualv• Newport R••· Jele-t IZZI OLUI O&ll port1tlon. A.lklno llOO. {1 ... CBVl311 4) St.-.o, ExtraCleln
l300 +WEEKLY l•urant. Call btWn ro;;;;;Pliilp..-co;;;r 64M51.f *** (1CGU2an
S1M61:alndS..tood ~.873""'808 '300 Gety MM400 or lllfllGll '72 510 ngon 4 dt wto •82CELICAUFTBACK '3411
Mr. FIZlo 542-3883 AITERIESS for Clltef1rlQ 135-6331 runaDOQdS.795845--71578 AlrCOftd,PowwStMrlng, *** Mr"'tlc. Al)S)ty kl P9f90n I.~~~~----~ BILL MAXEY TOYOTA COii~~!.,_ 2119 e: Coat tt.y. CdM "-'tldenoi1, _ f"'•• '75 8210 litehbdi, td eng, snwpiJ~80921 ,19202Btoad't tu..aat
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l"9'n0t• 11 mo9 o4d like USED CARS & TfUJCKS ~:in:=ln~ W&IJllUl/Wlllll MW. COit '900, 6ElL COMEINORCAlLFOR
Meta. erlsctlve Oct. 18. Wlc. fOf wtckatt>Nk9t MOO firm. 7~5 JID &PPlllUL
our n•w comml••lon lunch ..mo.; hm to M G.A 21" teble mdl TY Cotn\ilf.--0.-UliO~
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mlMk>n .. no-by .... Mutt M nMI., MOO firm no-oas HUNTINGTO,. BEACH
lno""" 20 _._.....,. ""'_.._ ...., ... l:'--~-·..,--~~1 Ut .... t1 Ul·IA1 a WMk. 11'• poellblt to --r~~E~-4PM Pwu INtl 711
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BIUMAXEYTOYOTA
19202 9-Ctl M2..0S21
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•
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DWMf"-.itM
• •
I
•
'Have ~hey caugh him?' Protopappas
sentenced
to 15 years
.---Huntln(ton children, ~ren~v111g
In fear following kidnap attempts ......,._
By llOBl!RT BARKER
Oflle!Wll' .........
Parenti, schools and police are
ti&htcnin1 securi1y mu.sum to
protect tchool childrtn followin1 three recent all~ ltidnappina
atiempts io Hununaton Beach.
ln some instance-.. keen par·
ental conoem -if not fear-has
etealated in nel&hborhoods. ac-. cordioa to parents. Some youna·
stcn reponcdly have $CCn a car
similar to an old~r model sreen
Chevrolet the sus~ allegedly
•
was drivina and have become
hy•tmcal
""fhe klds are really af'*id,"
said Shelly Repsher, • ~t of
two youna dauahttn who attend Ketller Elementary School at
8750 Donttt Drive ... and the
J>lrtnu art conoemed."
Repsher, who pre\liously has
bet-n able to stand in front of her
home aod watch as her dluahtcn
walked 10 $Chool. hat 1,1ancd
walking them lo and from the
. (Pl--FSA.A/ A2)
. '
•
By JEFF ADIZll .............
FnnTI« Costa MCNI dftaUll Tony
Pmtopappr11 wu tmtcnad IO three
concumnt tS··~r to lift._ pnsoa
terms Monday for the aontbnll·
overdose kittinaa of three pe:11tn11 io
1932ond 1983.
The ICY\tcnCC, prbnounccd by Or·
angt County Superiot Coutt lucfte
Luis Cardenal Cotlowlna a day-Iona sentent1~~n1 in the Sanll Ana {P -DSltTlaT/All)
CllllY 1111111
TUESDAY OCTOBER 23. 1984 ORANGE COUNTY. CALIF ORN IA ! I '-'l'
Kidnap suspect search widens
Huntington girl, 3, still missing
after disappearing at desert campsite
Thursday afternoon after walking
_10:ward a restroom about SO yards
fTOm ))er parent's camps.ile in Joshua
Tree National Monument, near
Twentynine Palms.
dirk blue van, was seen less than 50
feet frorri the restroom at about the
time the younaster disappeared,
By STEVE MARBLE
.Df .. ...,,.......,
A 17-mcmber task force investigat-
ing the disappearance of a 3--ycar-.old
Huntington Beach girl who wandered
UClrvlne
basketball
coach.Biii
Mulligan suf-
fered amlld
stroke Frida
In Biiiings,
Mont., and on doctors'
orders, wtll take a couple
of weeks off from his
normal coaching routine.
/C1. ·
A beach parking lot at-
tendant got a message
from the heavens: A mar-
riage proposal. I A3
:::::::::-.::::;~:::::;:::;:::::::::::;o:;::::::::s.:::=.:::;:;:: .. !
California j
An expert witness says ;
the children In the !
McMartin Preschool case•
are terrified by their al-
leged molesters./ A4
Nation
Urban Man's on view al
the Metrozoo In Miami -
and attracting record
crowds./88
World
President Marcos has or-
dered seven mllltary tnen
prosecuted atter a report
accused them of plotting
Benl!lnoAqulno's as-
sassination.IA$
,:;:;:;:\'.::~;x;:~::;,.~:~~=-m:o.o;:;:~
. Mind a: BoJty
Feeling WOOzY In a
Jacuzzi? Better sit down
q_ulckly ./81
~ .... ).""?.~..;X=~~=~-::=:=:~
Entertainment
Ambition overcomes In-
experience In "Cat on a
HoN:ln RQOf" In Mission
Vlejo./13
INDEX
ErmaBombecl<
=nBoord --Colltoml•-
0111%1
COmlco
C-d Dodl-
HolpY-Horoecope '
-~· Mind-Body
MutulllFundo --Opinion
P-Log
PublcNol-
=-Mo11<ot• •
82 ~
114
A3
BM
A4
C4'8
114 ce
118
82 C5
B2
B1-2 ee
A4 AS
A3
88,C4
01-3
B7
82
83
A2
M
from her parcnb' desert campsite last
week, has intensified its search for a
middle.qcd man seen nearby the day
the Jirl vanished.
' Liura Bradbuiy disappeared
Authorities fear the child may have
been abducted.
A San Bemardiii.o County Sheriffs
spokesman confin:ned today Lhat the
wanted man, reponed.Jy. drivina a
The man is described as having
gray hair and a pot belly. He was
wearing a yellow baseball cap and &lasses at the time. 1be vehicle is
believed to be a Ford EcoDoli9c van
with beige curtains in iu rear window.
Sheriffs deputies said they have
..., .... _...Llit,.,,_
8a.,..._llnlce1'eetandewtth1'anCJ Reaa:anatana4-toGOPTOlan-.. .
~ancy Reagan in OC to visit
sbppQrters, teen drug center
I a Y! ours Santa Ana's Phoenix House
cheered by GOP volunteers In Orange
prognun funded by the .aunt)'.
Phoenix House representatives said
Monday's visit was Mn. RCl&lft'S
third in the past four years.
By llOBEllT HYNDMAN °' .................
First Lady Nancy .Reapn made
two brief stops in On.nae County
Monday afternoon to tour a drug
rehabilitation cchter in Santa Ana
and to COJ11T3tulate Republican Pany
volunteen in OOlitlJC. -
Stoppina for a visit at the Phoenix
House in Santa Ana, Mrs. Reapn
told the teen-qe residents, .. We need
you clear<Y'Cd and clear·headed."
"lbere•s a lot of people out there
wiUins to help you. If there's anythina
that I can do in addition to what I'm
already doing. please let me ~now,"
said Mrs. Rcqan. who has made the
crusade qainst druaabux one of her
top concerns in recent years.
Chatti1t4 with four teens who were accompanied by their parents for the 6nt lady's 3 p.m. visit. Mrs. Reagan
was asked what message she had for
)'()Ung people faced with d"!f'· .. Say no," she quickly tephcd.
The Phoenix House bas 70 adulu
and .30 adolcscenu undcrgoina drug
rehabilitation treatment throuah a
Following the Santa Ana visit. Mn.
Reagan sped off to Oran&c County
Republican Pany headquartcn in
Orange where an enthusiasticP'tbtr· ingchanted ''fourmorc~n!' assbe
entered the buildina. ...
Jn a brief address to .SS county
Republican 'YOluntccn. Mn. Rcqan
said .. These arc the folks who really
win dections."
These last two weeks, u-you ~ow,
are goin& to be very, very dit1\Cult,"
she said. ••But u I said at \be
convention, wc11 make it one more (Pl--1'AKCT/A2)
Only 2 Coast cities
take stands on 36 -JEFF·
ADLE•
Moat opta':e tax cut,
but.fear ckl&sb
frorri votl public -
Dnoitc a unanimous vote by
ofllciaJs from ciues beton111w to 1he Orongc Coun1y division of Ille C'al•·
fomta l.eope of Cilift IO actively OJll'!!"' ProPoltl>on 36, only !WO ol
"" <>nnac Cool air ·-1o 11o taken a position OD the. m-tJMNaa
m<Jsurc • City countil membrn in Olli
M-~nd 1.uu .. llcoch s1&ncl o((>ne
in voteina t6cir opposition to the
JlllYll IV ,,,_..,, ""'idl b.ke 11
CnMPnlGN '84 landntark ~. Proposition
I ), would fon:e wide-.-nging <hangn
in the way loctlaovtrnmcnlJ raise tu
rtvtnucs and apen,te. respcc.t.IW eoffen and. con.queatly.
But t1ty cow.ncils. in Ncwpon hamptt aovemmenll in provldtna
8mch. Irvine Hu.nttncton Betcb.. M:rvten.
Fountain VaDly u well as the County· One re:uon aty('Oundh hlvelbitd
Bolntof'SuprnllOftlllhavedecided away ft'om 11.bn,.a position on the
qain11takift&1 siand-eilhet for or rneuure li council mtmben few
ta11111t-.Utttpaattvcdwiddyby ~ns a t.u.aat mouure in 1
eltaed teadefs u an onerou• and county ~lvtd to bt a hotbed of
11111 lis'ly wwr.. refona antHu ... 11Wft1.
-.... "They're hrful of fCllllll people
Cily m1naim ol Onngc Coou mad OI lhcm, • uplaul<il !>oft
at DCI the coant1'1 th* adminlt-MacAlhttcr, a Huntmcton Beach
uataw offi«r all repon: s-slllt of counctJman and chairman of the
Pn>posi1ion J6 "°uld advcncly dt.. . o..n., Coon1y lAlll\I< oT Ciua
rupl 11>< now or .. , doHlln into 1beir (Pl--COUltCIUI/ A2)
l
>
had DO luck localiJ;g the man.
The 1aSk force, formed Monday,
may be expanded in the comiq days.
said department IPOkaman. Jim
8ryanL He said deicctivCJ from
kidnap, homicide and crimes •nst
children divisions are included LD the
task force.
A sround search of tbc area Wt
involved more than a 270-member
-pony -bolud _,. •
afternoon. Bryan1 .aid the -,
l<aJll IOOURd lhoul 10 square miles ofthe _ _, __
Meanwhile. membcn of N11110M1
Kid Prilll have ofieRd a -IOr informal.ion Mad.int ao the wbcfe..
obouis of the bloade-hairul Pl Tiie
(Pl m.-QDMAP/ASI
Badham revives
his challenger's
anti-Israel stand
BJ llOBl!RT HYNDMAN chal ...... otf gumd. -llod • dt .. ...,,...... , .justvoioedbersupportf'ortbc*lleof
Rep. Robert Badham bas accused lsrael.
chaUe.naer Carol Ann Bradford of .. rd like to sec that 1cuer a bit matt bavin& a .. shoot from the Ii)! .. altitude dotc:ly , .. she said. but dccllDOdfurtbc:r
on political issUCI-specifically, aid comment Monday cvenina.
to Israel. • .. Past records come 1*:k 10 haunt
At a candidates forum Monday in you sometimes.." a.dham replMld.:
Fountain Valley. the Newport Beach Tht iuuc is. e~ 10 come DP co• ••• p1od""'4 a kUcr wm.. ll&in dlis evcni.. wbte die tw9
tc.o. to him iwo-yem '*" tJr. BndfiJrd. cepdidek=lfor&be..._C c · r1' -· .... 'I that caUed for cutting rmlitary and DiMrict $11111 meet in an 8 p.m. debate economi<l aid to IJBCL at UC 1rvme·s Fme Ans Viflllie
.. This is a good example or her Tbearcr.
•shoot from the lip' P!1il090phy on the Accordin& to a -.Bad.barn aide. I.be
issues," Bodham said. ICIW from Bndfonl ~ lsrod"1
Bad.ham· s praentation of the Sept. invasion of Lebanon. In it. Bradford
24, 1982,. lettcrcaught bis Democratic (Pleue-BA DRAM/ A2)
'
Santa Ana winds
bring clear skies
t~ Orange Coast
' From • ..., ud wire.._..
SeasonaJ northeasterly Santa Ana
winds picked up Sl>CCd loday, brina-
ing clear skies and warm weather to
Southern CalifomiL
Gusts of up to 34 mph were r:eported this morninaat John .Wayne
A.irpot1.., where take-off and laDdina
patterns were chanpd at 9 a.m. so
planes would be uavdiq into the
wind.
RaJph ~nwa.ld, air tnffic man-
ager of the aiflK>J1'• tower, said the
alternate path 1s used whenever the
wind becomes strong and cbanacs
direction.
.. Instead of taki.q off south over
the beach, the planes are now \akiQa
off north. Landinas are comina in from the south. Usually it's the
opposite way," Odenwald said.
He said north and northeast susts
had replaced lhc usual winds from the
south and southwest.
The Oranao County Fire °'l"'t-menl reported no wind-related tnci·
dents as of 11 a.m., th®&h the Costa
Mesa Police Department received a
rq>Ott of a palm tree down on• IPl~
car in~ parkina lot at Mesa Verde
Shopping C.n1er ~
The National Weather Service
predicted low humidity, with
temperatures dropping durina the
niahL · Winds will blow from l.S mph tolO
mph in the canyons, with
tc:,ures ranging in lhc mid..SOS
W ay aftcrovcmi&htlowsof.SS
1060. .
The National Weather Service
predicted Wednesday hi&hs at
beaches ftom 75 lo 80, p1ecedod by
ovcmi&ht lows of .SO to 56.
B.ank bandit gets
100-year sentence
By STEVE 1llAIUILE ...............
A man who hdd four Irvine bank
employoco hos .... in• failed robbery
try early this tnooth was sentenced.
Monday 10 100 yeon in ~ for
four pno< bank holdups. ·
DovKI Dean ~ "24, ·or-1:11
Holn wos describod by ltdenI '"""' Jamci ldeman a1 a .. clTaerrou.s ~
pellldo" who bad no remono !Or bil
Tttl1za pried ape1t a ,..
••111111111 .. -... .
victims and .,.....1ec1 •dear._
to tcicicty . The ...,.,_ made up ol ...
ICPlf'llC 2S..year tmrll, 11 belie wed ..
be one of the harshest ever t 01 t
down ~bani< mbbery .,.. ........
"I doa' -11 a -.. -~--uid l«ICral PIO*._._ -.-11u1wllo1be(t~1-in JrvineQloncoflM-
(PI ......
.... 111) • ..-........... . --==:re.11••11 .. 11 ........
.._,.21•11•1•&11•,....•Tl•mllll..
of •1• 12, llW .. 2 RIJ2 • •11
OOllQ..,.
I
t
Two Coast accidents fatal
to Newport woman, SUC tot
E ARBLE
Of .............
t bdt might have vcd the
lives of an cldcrl) N~n Beach
oman and a l-) "Old girl from San
Juan Caputrano ho vrcrc klllcd
Monday m paratc car accidents,
autbont1 said toda).
Inez f.sthcr JR msey, 86. died from
wh t at 1tirs1 appeared to 1be minor
ir\juries she suffered when her cat was
b ded m a Corona de! Mar
intcrsccai n, pol cc rcponcd.
pparcntly, the woman uffercd
internal iqjunes. She died at Hoag
Memonal Ho~1tal an ewpon
Be ch about four hours after the IO m. oolhsion at Pacific Coast HiJ!t·
wa) and Marauente Avenue, said
Ncwpon Beach traffic mvcsuptor kick Bradley.
Brndley said Ramsey. dnvaoa a
1977 Chevrolet, -. .. s not nng a
t belt. Her car was 5trud: by a truck
driven by Clark R. Vanwick, 26, of
Fountain Valle).
V nwick, driving nonh on the ~ etfic Coast Highway was not cued.
Paramedics at hrst Judged
Ramsc)'s Jnjuric to be of a minor
nature and arranged to transport her
to the h piUllas prccouuon, mostl)
because of her lJC, B dlcy id.
Meanwhile, Shannon Mc<:\.ioo. 3,
\\ killed Monday momt!li when she
apparenUy fell out of a pic1'up tru
her mother was dnvina on On
Highway :about fh·e miles cast of
Pata Avenue, said C lifomi High-
way Patrol spokesman Ken 0 ily.
Daily said the young girl was nd1ng
unrestrained in the passenger at of
the truck. whach was 1ravtlina at
bout 25 mph.
" he apparently opened the door
'°mehow," said Daily,
BANK BANDIT GETS 100 YEARS •••
From Al
federal otlenses a J)CrSOn can eom-
mal"
Berliner sa d be a kcd ldeman to
give Dahlen a '·substantial .. sentence.
T}le prosecutor said he was surprised
and pleased with the sentence.
Dahlen has }Ct to be tried for the
Oct. 12 failed hlnk holdup in Irvine
but Judge ldcman said he considered
1he facts in that case before handing
down tbe I 00-year sentence for the
prior bank robberies.
The La Habra man was convicted
an August after plcadillg&uilty Lo four
bank holdups, one in Corona del Mar.
Dahlen originally was ch~ed with
nine bank robberies but five of the
• charges were dropped in exchange for
his guilty plea, Berliner said
Danlen was allowed to go free in
late August after his mother posted
$50,000 bail.
Four days before be-was to be
sentenced for the bank robberies,
Dahlen allegedly kidnapJ)cd the man-
ager of the Irvine bank from her home
m Tustin, tied and handcuffed her
husband, and forced her to drive tlim
to the bank.
Irvine police said Dahlen held the
manager and three Qt.her bank em-
ployees hostage for three hours. The
hostages wen able to escape· un-
harmed. Dahlen remained in the
bank another four hours before he
was captured. police said.
Robert Launders, Oahlen's at·
tomey, said he belives his client may
have staJCd the holdup attempt to iet
money to fund 'a getaway. He saad-
Oahlen apparently tried to kill
himself with a handgun while inside
the bank. Launders said he was told
the gun misfired.
Berliner. ~id the U.S. Attorney's
office has not decided if it will
pro5CCutc Dahlen for kidnapping ill
connection Wlth the failed Irvine
bank holdup.
Dahlen is being held at the federal
correction facility at Tenninal Island.
F EAR GRIPS·P ARENTS, KIDS •••
From Al .
campus as a safety measure.
And she refuses to permit her
children to play in the front yard at
their home an the vicinity of Atlanta
A venue and Maanolia Strccl
"My little boy (4 years old) asks
each ~y •have they caught the
urangcrT We tell him no, that be still
has to play in the back yard," ~he said.
Repsher said she is seeins more and
more parents walking their children
or fonnin.a car ~Is.
School officials are holding as-
semblies to warn children to .Stay
away from strangers and police
officers arc scoaring areas for the car
- a 1968-72 model Chevroletc
Impala, Biscayne or Caprice -
believed used in abduction attempts
that began Oct. 3 near the area of
Gisler School, 21141 Strathmoor
Lane The most recent incident
occurred a week ago Monday when
the suspect. described as a man with
tatloos on both arms and having a
beer belly, allegedly grabbed a girl at
Huntington and Clay streets and tried
to dl'af her into his vehicle. She broke
free wt th the help of a comptmon.
In the second attempt on Oct 8, the
man allegedly pulled aside two girls.
aaes 6 and 7, in the area of Moffett
School. 8800 Burlcrest, and de-
manded they get in his car, police
said. The girls ignored him and he
drove off.
Police say they have received scores of telephone calls from people
who may have seen the suspcct's car.
Many cars have been stopped but
none have turned out to be the
targeted vehicle, according to Octet·
tive Arden Fick.
NANCY REAGAN VISITS COUNTY •••
Prom Al
for the 'Gipper. · ..
Asked by reporters to assess her
hU$ba.nd4s performance an the Sun-
day evening debate in' Kansas City,
Mrs. Reapn said. ... thought he was
&fC8L 1 thou&ht my husband
answered all the questions he was
asked."
Earlier in the day, Mrs. Reagan
visited a voup of elderly people in
Riverside and told them the issue of
ace and her husband has been put .. to
bed once and for all ...
Denouncing rcporU that the presi-
dent may be Loo old for the job, Mrs.
Reagan was quoted by the Associated
Press as saying. ••1t•s not true and he's
shown that it's not true. I think it's a
non-issue. I think it's insuluna to an
awful lot of people ...
BADHAM REVIVES ISRAEL LETTER •••
From Al
asked Badham to suppon a move-
ment in the House of Representatives
to cut off all aid, military and
economic, to Israel.
Bi'adf ord also said she hoped the
people of Israel would "rise up and
remove their sick leaders."
Although Bradford was un-
available for comment today, her
campaign strategist, H&n) Hiner,
said the letter should be considered in
the context of when it was written.
Bradford does not deny writing the
letter, heSlid.
.. It was in response to a particula:r
issue and event" Hiner said ... It was
at a particular point in time when
innocent people in the refusee camps
outside of Beirut were bean&
massacred."
Hiner said Bradford "has a great
deal of compassion for Israel" and
does not nowadvocatecuttingoffaid.
.. She feels it's kind of ironic that
Badham is brinaina this up;' Hiner
added. "I think he's trying to veil the
fact that his record on Israel is pretty
dismal."
DENTIST GETS 15-TO-LIFE ••• •
From Al
courthouse, means the 39-year-old
dentist will be eligible for parole in 7112
)cars. r--
Oeputy District Attorney Jame's
nomnger, who asked that Protopap-
pas be ordered to serve his sentences
consecutively, said the tcnn meted
out by the judge was a "fair sentence."
one with which he had no quarrel.
Defense attorney Robert Tuller
said he planned to appeal Protopap-
pas' conviction on three counts of
~ond-degrec murder .. as M><>n as
possible."
Tuller quoted Protopappas as 53)·
ing. "It isn't what I hoped for. but ii
wasn't totally unexpected," after
sentence was pronounced.
Protopappas, who appeared pale
and tired dunng the proceedin15,
seemed composed when the sentence
wb handed dov. n. The curly haired
dentist was dressed in a gray-plaid
suit, white shin and black tie for has
courtroom appearance.
The one.time Laguna Beach res1-
dent who ran a SI-million-a-year,
high-volume dental clinic on Costa
Mesa's 19th Street bas remained in
Orange . County Jatl 10 lieu of
$750,000 bail since his July 31
convictjon.
A si~·man. four-woman JUl'Y found
ProtopapP&S auilty of kJlli~a 23-yc~r
old Huntington Beach resident Kim
Andreassen. 13-year-old Sacramento
re5ident Patricia Craven and 31-year-
old Costa Mesa resident C.athryn
Jones followina a highly publici.ud
four.omonth trial.
The prosecution presented
evidence and1cat101 Protopeppa ncg-
hgcntly administered overdoses of
encral anesthesia to the three pa·
tient , cau an their Cieath The
dcfcn contended the deaths were
"unfortunate cddents,•• caused by
medteal clrcumstancu beyond the
doctor's control. Defense attorneys
Tuller and f lolhs OyeT a kcd 1he
coun to place Protopappa on Pfdba·
I
Just Call
642-6086
.
Dr. Tony P,rotopappu
t1on.
K.1m Andrea sen's mother. Ulla
Isaksen. said he was relieved when
Protopappas was ordered to pnson.
.. He belonp in prison:• she ~id
outside the courtroom. her checks
tainCd with tcaf'I. "I thought. thank
God, now it's over. It's been so Iona.
M> difficult.••
During the hearing. Isa~n as we~I
as several of Craven's relataves testa·
fied how the deaths of the ~rb had
affected their respective famtli .
Cravcn's sister-an-law, Ru1a
Craven said the emotional damw
caused by the J,irl's de~th bad "spread
like a cancer· throUfh the famtlf·
"There tw to be some Justice. There s
u11 a lifcume ahtad or us of
emotional problem , • !she told the
court.
Herd upuer, Orid t Craven, said
her cl fnend and rclauvc Pa·
triciawas the "metal, oond and glue
th.at held the family together."
Tc tifyang on Protopappas' behalf
were 10 witnesses who characteriled
the den1ist as a hard-workina. com-
passionate and charitable man who
cared deeply for his patients. The
witnesses included family friends
from Protopappas' hometown in
Price. Utah, other dentists, friends
and past patients.
Patient Dotti Filsinger, 72, told the
court Protopappas had corrected a
dental problem that she had been
suffenng from for close to 40 )'eat'5.
.. I'd love to go back to htm. We
need Or. Protopappas back," she
said.
Rudy Sickler, a patient .and friel!d
who shared a common interest an
photography with the doctor. de-
scribed Protopappas H a charitable
man who never demanded payment
from him when he could not afford to
pay.
'Td take my {children) there this
afternoon if he'd &et out of here and
practice dentistry, without hesi·
tat ion," he said.
Another patient and friend, Ray
Hunt, testified it would be a .. ~at
inju tioe .. to society if Protopa_ppu
were imprisoned. And another, Costa
Mesa restdent C.J. Kirk said, .. This
smile you KC belonas to him."
The testimony from Protopappas'
suppQncn drew cheen and applause
from many-=in l'.he c:ouAroQm, but
drew an admonishment from Judge
Cardenas.
ln sentencing the dent 1st, Cardenas
acknowled&cd the pain •iwS sufTttiQ&
of the three vicums· famda
"My htan aocs out to their fanul-
aes," he 1d ... My hean ,aocs out to
Dr. P,rotopappas a well. Jt'.s difficult
and d to lose II he lo • Or.
Protopappas' hfc ba ically 1s de·
stro)'td forever."
l\laat do ,)ff Uke about De Dally Piiot! Wba& doa',a )'otl Ull:e'? C.ll t~t
namf>fr at ltft aid yo.r menace wlll be recorft4, ttuscnbH a.II dell em
&o die appropriate Mllor.
1'Maamet44"ru weriq 1erv't1 may bene4 a. rec.N letun .. tM
II r .. u &opl C.•triblton to owr Lt&&tt1 col1m1 mnt lacl .. e 'tMlr
me •IHI tel pMIM! .. m .. r for YtriHcall11. 0 clrc1tl1tl011 call • pMHt.
terf •• wba1'1 on yo•r mtlid.
Clear and windy along the Coast
Coa•tal Mamp!llt
Ml.ml llHGll M~ .. ~--MtwOr-. a
New Yen ,,
Norto& V• 14
Ok &4
OmaNi 63
ONnclo .,
Ptln! 6Ptln0• It
~ ,.
~ :::.~ .... 71
Ponlllnd.Qr 61
PrcMollnce 71
==1'Cllr 1• • 47
Amo Oo4
~ 84
Swamento 71
Stl.Olill 61
St~T~ ea
S.it &.-.. CitY .. , ... 29 6An Antonio GO
114 •5 $anl>lego 76
40 HS...F~ 74 !I 41 :at hnoh.IM,1'.ll ..
" 2' St61 .. ol• .. 47
114 83 a.ta. ff ..
" ~3=:= .. 61
71 61 SIOuI eh 41 :u
" II SPc*-I\ ,.
87 76 Syr.cuw 13 :J es Ml TQC)fllil " 67 "TllCIOtl ,, ..
77 13 lulu 67 ... .. 81 WlllhlnG10n 12 .. ... 44 WICllita eo .. eo 31 W!ll<•ll1tr1 .. I! ... 60 WiltfllnGIO!\O. l't It
SURF REPOR T . . ~---~ -- - -
Temps LOCATION .. Eztendecl Hllntlngton 9Mdl 1·2
~~Hewpon 1·2 .. Le '°'" .~ 14 AlbMY 6' IO FM .ild -m llUI tumfnO COClllr 22nd81t-.~ 1.i t.fwllity with nigrl1 .. tnornlno 61 AO 1"2 =:t:'ll"' •• 41 COMt91 IOw cloudl. HtQM 76 to IS but l\ltnlftO ~ I 0egr-. cooilr VI•
8.ibol w.og. lllQllfla IMdl 0.1
IO U 1-2 McNr"91
AllAnll IO II dey L-IO 1012 Sall~ .. Waleltemp 13 ... Swell dll9Ctl0n IOU1~
~
COUNCILS HESITATE TO OPPOSE 36 •••
From Al
committee that processed the leque's
resolution opposing the initiative.
MacAllister added he was sur-
prised so few Orange Coast cities had
gone on ~ord on Proi>O$ition 36,
especially in light of the unanimity of
opinion upressed when the League
of Cities resolution wH passed in
September.
Another reason few cities have
staked out a position on the measure
is that many public officials feel it is
inappropriate for their city or the
county to involve itself in a matter
being submitted to voters.
Irvine Assistant City Manager Paul
Brady said members of that city's
council all are individually opposed
to Proposition 36,
"Historically. however, they felt
they didn't want to get into a politlcal
debate on a 4)1atewide issue,"~he
explained.
Newport Beach City Manaacr Rob-
ert Wynn cited a third reason for not ~ng.councd.rncmben:in b11cn '°
take a stand on the ballo& 1.Ubativ..
··1 thought the public would thank
we were taking a position that would
be self-serving. I did not want to place
it on the agenda because people who
read it "ould think we had an ax to
grind or an inlCrest to protect," be
said.
However, ~ta Mesa City Man-
ager Fred Sorsabal said he felt .it was
important for eounal mcmberS in his
cify to formally state the city's
position.
.. We have to take a Stand and
o:i:~:•
inform the voters." he explained, We're more dependent on the proi
The Costa Mesa City Council eny tax than the bigger cities becaus
voted 2-0 last week, with three we don't have the sales tu base.''
members abstaining. to oppose Prop-Fountain Valley City Manaac
o ition 36. The members iwho abs-Judy Kelsey said council memben i
tained personally oppose it, but felt it that city haven't publicly di~us
should be left up to voters. Sorsabal the i5$ue and won't before th
said. November election. .
He also P.Ointed out that Costa "I know.there isa divmity of view
Mesa council members voted unani-on 36," ~he said, but council membeii
mously to oppose Proposition 13 in have not brought up the subject in I
1978. political context.
The Laguna Beach Qity Council MacAllister said Huntin1to1
voted unanimously to oppose the tax Beach City Council members a11
issue in September, said City Manger willing to let the local League of Citic
Kenneth Frank. chapter take the lead on the issue. Th•
"This is a question directly perti· city hasn't taken a position on Jf
nenttothecityofLagunaBeach.Jfwc because "not enough City Counc
don•t tell people, how will t~ membct'$ feel they want to raise th•
know?" he asked. issue at election time when they an
Frank said that not only has the running for election." he said.
council taken a j)Osition on the The city managel'$ of the variow
measure. it also has sent letters to Orange Coast cities do qree on on•
various community JfOups and thing. If Proposition 36 passes, the
neighborhood associations :stating cities will lose tax dollars, ranging i
the city'' <"aSC am \l~ tti too the ftm year from an estrmBtCC
oppose Proposition 36. $200,000 in Fountain Valley to $2.t
"For us, ifs a bis deal... he ··million in Newpoi1 Beach and S~
explained. "Our situation is different. million to $4 million in Irvine.
KIDNAP SUSPECT ••• From Al
amount of the reward was not made
public .
People who want to contribute to
the reward fund should call the
Orange County Search and Rescue al
828-3200 or send donations to Na·
tional Kid Print, P.O. BOit SS48,
Buena Park 90622 .
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
Clrc uletlon 714/842-4333
Cl•alfled edvertlalng 7-141842·5871
All other department• 842-4321
MAIN OFFICE
330 WISC Bly St . Costa Mew C" MAI~ Bo• ISOO Cos11 MeN CA 92628
Ja Ou.rMtMd
Monday.f•IOly II ~ oo noc ,...... ycur PIPl!' l>Y
t.30pm c:d~e 7pm
_, YOil' <q'lv .. tie
~
S.turm1 .,., Suncsay tt ~ CIC l!OI retllille y.iur copy br7•rn ~ 101m. and your caoy d
tleOl¥'11Hd
~Schwartz Ill
Pubhsher
CopyrigM 1983 ~ co.fll ~ ~ HO _, llOI'-llulUlllClll&, cdi!orial nwttet 01 ed\lel1
meiu lter-lf'I)' .,. flJll'omaG ~ !*•
,,_cf oopyrigfll -
Rosemary Churchman
Clrcul•tlon
T ... phonee
4< Controller
\
Moll Onl9 CC!unlr . Stephen F. Carazo
Production
Manager
Don td L. Williama
Circulation
Manager
....... ta>4m
VOL. 77, NO. 217
SHUnEllS CUSTOM QUAUn SHUTIERS
Designed,
Finished
Installed
31 Years Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters
FINEST QUALITY SHU I fEAS AVAILABLE
ON THE MARKET TODAY ••• AT FAC'JORY
DIRECT PRICESI Call (n4) 54MM1 or A&-1717
1977 Placentia Avenue • Costa Mesa, CA 92827
\ •
.. •
r
l
l
s
l .
'Bavethey~aught him?' Protopappas
sentenced
to 15 years In fear following kidnap attempts
By ROBERT BARKER
Ol Ille Deir .........
Parcnt5, schools and police arc
tiahtenlna accunty mcuurcs to
protect 5Chool chaldrtn following
three recent all~ kidnapping
1ttemp11 in Huntmaton Beach.
In some instances, keen par-
ental conccm -1fno1 fear-has
escalated in neijhb0rhood11 ac-
cording to parents. Some young-
sters repbnedly have seen a car
similar to an older model arccn
Chevrolet the suspect allegedly
was dnv1ng nd h vc om
hystcncal.
.. The kids are really afraid, ..
1d Shelly Repsher, a ·parent of
t o young dau&hten who attend
K ttlcr FJementan-School at 8 SO Dorsett Drive, ''and the
nts are concerned."
epahcr, Who previously has
bee able 10 stand 10 front of her
hom and watch as her dal.Whters
walked to school, has .started
walking them to and from the
(Pleue ... FEAa/A2)
By I
Ol .. OllllJ._... ....
Former Com Mesa denhst Ton)
Protopappu was SCtltcnced to three
concum:nt I S.ycar to life pn.son
terms Monday for the anesthesia·
overdose ldlhngs of three pauents in
1982 and 1983.
The sentence. pronoUrtccd ~Y Or·
•• County Superior Court Judge Luss Cardenas followin& 1 day-long
sentencing hcanng in the Santa Ana
(Pl __ Me D&llT.18T/A2)
f IRli· 111111
lllt'~I•~, '" l "t>r-11 :> l:H1~
--------
oas e acc1 ents
owo
UClrvlne
basketball
coach Biii
Mulligan suf-
fered a mild
stroke Friday
In Biiiings,
Mont., and on doctors'
orders, will take a couple
of weeks off from his
normal coaching routine.
/C1.
an, ' -
e 1r ' 'Minor injuries' kill Newport victim:
tot dies after falling out of truck
By STEVE MARBLE or-.o.., .......
Seat belts might have saved the
lives of an elderly Newport Beach
woman and a 3-ycar-otd girl from San
Juan Capistrano who were killed
Monday in separate car accidents,
authorities said today.
lnC% Esther Ramsey, 86, died from
what at first appeared to be minor
injuries she suffered when hcicarwn
broadSjdcd in a Corona dcl Mar
intersection, police rq>ortcd.
Vanwkk. driving north oa •
Pacific Coat Hjpway, wasaotci~
Paramedics at first Judled
Ramsey's iajuries to be of a minol:
nature and arran;cct 10 traitpon lat
to the hospital as a precaattion, m~
because of her age, Bradley~-
Meanwhile. ShanDOD Meccico, 31
was killed Monday1ft0mina when s.bC
apparently fell out Of a pickup liutll:
her mother was driviDa on Or-.
Highway about five miles east of C:a
Pata Avenue. said California~ wav Patrol spokesman Ken Ol.ily. :
~
Apparently, the woman suffered
internal injuries. She died at Hoag
Memorial Hospital in Newport
· Beach about four hours after the 10
Daily said the youna Pf was rictinC
unrestrained in the resw:~,ICal Qt.
the ~ which was travelins at:
about 25 mph. .. Cout
A beach parking lot at-
tendant got a message
from the heavens: A mar-
~lage proposal. I A3
California
An expert witness says
the children In the
McMartin Preschool case
are terrified by their al-
leged molesters./ A4
Na don
Urben Man'son view at
the Metrozoo In Miami-·
and attracting record
orowds./88
World
President Marcos has or-
dered seven mllltary men
prosecuted after a report
accused them of plotting
Benigno Aquino's as-
sassination./ A4
.,.
Mlnd&BOcly
Feeling woozy In a
Jacuzzi? Better sit down
qulckly./81 _
::::::::::::::::.-:::::::::.-:...~:::!:!:::!::::::::::::::::;!:!::<:·
Entertainment
Ambition overcomes in·
•xperlence In "Cat on a
Hot Tin Roof" In Ml88lon
Viejo.JU
INDEX
92 e• A3
85-8
A4 c..-e
EM
C6
88
82
C5
B2
81-2
Be
A4
A8
A3
B8,C4
01-3
87
82
13
A2
A5
...., .... ~'-,.,_ Sil~ •16W~1f!111911 .. 'dewttb Nancy Reacanatan addreee toGOPYolanteen.
ancy Reagan makes 2
stops in Orange County
d d b proaram funded by the founty. Etr.st la y visits rug reha center' Phoenix House rcprcsenatives satd
heered by GOP volunteers In Orange ~ord~Y~e ~~~~!"rs. Reagan's
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of ... hlr,,... ...
First Lady Nancy Rc•n made
two brief .stops in Oranac CoUnty
Monday afternoon '° tour 1 drua
rehabilitation center 1n Suta Ana
and to conaralUlatc Republican Party vOlunaeen in 0ra.,.
StoppsnUor: • visit at'IM Phoenix
House i1l -s.n1a Ana. Mn. R~n
told the tc.e.n-• residents. ··we need
you clear-eyed and clear-headed:·
"Thcre';1 a Jot of pcoptC out there
willing to help )'Ou. If thett's anytlung
that I can do in addition to what rm
already doing, please let me know;·
said Mrs. Reagan, who has made the
crusade against drug abuse one of her
top concerns in recent years.
Chatting with four teens who were
accompanied by their parents for the
first lady's 3 p.rn. visit. Mrs. Reagan was asked what m~ she had for
young people faced with ~· .. Say no," she quitkl)' replied.
The Phoenix House has 70 adults
and 30 adolC$CtJ\ts undcrgoina drµa
rehabilitation treatment throu&h a
On1y 2 Coast cities
take stands on 36
l.>espttc a unanimous vote by
oftkial1 from atia bdo"ll• lO the Oranae County diVJatOn of the C.h· fomiA Uaauc of Cma 10 1C11vely
o~ ProJ'K)Sttlon 36, only two of
S1l <>Bnsc oa11 cuy couDcik hive
taken a po ttion 6n \he •"•••na
mcaJUtt.
City council 11..e11 ht 0.. Mesa and Llluna lelch stand alOne 1n vo1cin1 tftcsr oppo1mon 10 the
Jan'J1 IV meuure. which hke hs ,
landmark pm:lcccssor. Proposition
13 'woWd force widc-ranaaq chaqcs 1n the way local aovemmcnts rai.e w
revenues and operate.
But city coundls in Ncwpon
Belch, lrvi~ Huntinaton &.Ch.
Founiatn Valley:D wct1 ntheCounty
Boatd ofSupcrv1son alt hive dccideCl
It aaluna 1 stand -enhcr :for or
-whit 11 percc1vechr1idelyby ~~ ~ IS an onetOVS afta
.,....11lly cnpphnt aa-. rtform
~~~ of Oranar Coast dt .. lftd illif en9My'1mW9dm1n1
1nuve omm-all ~ s-•saar or Propolitt<>n 6 would M'lvcndy d11-
ruPt the now or .... dollars into the r
following the Santa Ana visit, Mrs.
Reagan ~ off to Ora.nae County
Republican Party hcadquancrs in
Orange where an enthusiastkptber-
ingcbantcd"Fourmoreyeal"I! asshc
entered the buildina.
In a brief address to 58 county
Republican volunteers. Mrs. Reagan
said "These arc the folks who rally
win elections.•·
These last two weeks. as you know.
are going to be vet")'. Ver)' diffacuh,"
she said. ••But as I said 11 the
convention. we'll make it one more
(Pleue eee NA!fCY /A2)
CAMPAIGN '84
respective cofrtn and. consequently,
hamper aovemmcnt in pro\'Jdina
scrvaca.
Onereasoncityrounalshavc ·Cd
IWI) From \I.kt I uon OD the
measure a council members fear
oppoltftl a aax-cut measure in a
county ~n'Cd to be a hotbed of
aftlMU ICftUIMftl. ' MfbtY'te rtarM acttn11 people
mad at them," c~atncd Don
MacAJhSttt, a Huntiftl\Oft BcaCh
counalman ind mnan .. _ of tbt
Ota uni l.eque oT ues
........... COU8CILl/A2)
a.m. collision at Pacific Coast H~
way and Marguerite Avenue. said
~ Beach traffic investiptor
Rick Bradley.
ey :s&J • n\.
1977 ~TOI~ was not wcanna a seatbelL Hercarwasstruckbya tnJCk
driven by Oark R. Vanwi~ 26, of
Fountain Valley.
.
~e a~tJy opened the door
somehow.-aid Daily.
Search intensified
for _kidnap_stispect
-· ,,I
,Huntington gtrl. 3. still missing
after disappearing at desert campsite
BJ STEVE llAIUU.£ °' .. ~ .......
A 17-mcmber wk force invcstipt-
ing the disappcarancc of a ~-year-old
Huntington Beach girl who wandctcd
from her parents' dciCrt cam))5ite last
week, bas iotensified its scarcb for a
middle..aied man seen nearby the day
the girl vanished.
Laura Bradbury disappeared
Thursday afternoon after walk.in&
toward a restroom about SO yards
from her parent's campsite in Jo~ua
Tree National Monument, near
Twentynine Palms.
Authorities fear the child may have
been abducted.
A San Bemaid.ino County Sbcrifrs
spokesman confirmed today that the
wanted man. "portedly driving a
dark blue van. was seen ICS$ than SO
feet from the restroom at aboUt the
time the youngster disappeared.
The mu is described as bavina
gray hair ana a Pol belly. He was.
wearing a )cllow baseball ~ and
jla$$CS at tbc time. The vehicle is
belie,·ed to be a Ford Ecoaoline van
with bei&c cuna.iru 10 ns rear wi ndo"'.
Sheriff's deputies id they have
had no luck locating the man.
The wk force, formed Monday,
may be expanded in the comi. da)
said department spokesman Jam
Bryant: He id dclcctins from
kidnap, homicide and crimes •inst
children divisionsatt induded an the
wk force.
A aro~nd scarth of the area that
invol\'ed more than a :no.member ~h party WM "-hcd unday
afternoon. Bryant id the search
team scoured about lO square mil of the ttmote desert area.
Meanwtulc. members of auonat
Kid Print bave offered a reward for
information leading to the ~
abouts of the blonde-bain:d airt Tbe
amount of the reward was n<M made
public.
People Who want to cxmtribu1e 10
(PleueMe IDDRAP/A2)
Sea search
widens for
Coast duo
BJ ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of .............
The search for r-o Newport Be.-.b men lost in rougb weekend ._
widened today with the Coast Guanl
extending their bunt arouild IM
Channel lslands and the COMllme
from Poiat FcrmiD soulb lo
Ocean ide.
A Coast Guard spokesman -.ill
searchers hue no intaition of p~
up the search for Steven Bailey, JS.
and Norm Seaona. .2l. :Who llft Catalina Island on Saturday after.
noon in a 12-foot mo\Or 'ff.
The pair. both experienced ailon emplo~ by a Catalina ferry 1e1 nae
hued tn Balboa. bad traveled IO IM
island Saturdaf momina abomd Ille Catalina oliday f~ _.
planned to return home in die ..alt
They left A vak>n HartiOr at ....
12:30 p.m. lO fOllow • filhi'lll "-
badc to Newport. But 111'G1111 ....
{PltiMe ... ...,.
Thieves get $57 ,000
In gems, machinery
I
'
d a blasts Br&dford
on her Israeli aid letter
Congressman produces note by candidate. economic, lo Israel.
Bradford lso id she hoped ~he accuses h r of ·shooting from the iltp' pc<>plc of Israel would "n up ad a remove their 1ck leaders.••
By ROBERT HYNDMAN oe-.o.lb,....,.
Rep. Robcn Badham has ocused
chall nger Carol Ann Bradford of
having a .. boot from the hp" ttitudc
on political issues -spctifically, aid
to I rael.
At a ndidates forum Monday in
Fountain V Ucy. tbc Newwtt Beach
congresSJ'\lln produced a letter writ·
ten to him two years ago b)'. Bradford
that called for cutting military and
economic aid to Israel.
.. This is a good cumple of her
• hoot from the lip· phjlosophy on the
issues.'' Badham said.
Bad ham's presc-n ta ti on of the Sept.
24. 1982, lcttcrcau1ht his Democratic
Although Bradford was un· ~hallcn~r off .. uard. Bradford had ._vailablc for comment today! her
Just vou:cd hcrsuppon for the state of cam1>4ign tratcgi t, Harry Hiner, bra~l. . id the kttcrshould be considered an ••1 d Mee to see that letter a bit more the oontext of when it was wntten.
closely," hesa1d,butdeclinedfunher Bradford docs not deny writing the
commtnt Monday C\'tnif.\8,. letter, he ·id.
"P3st ~otds,f<>me bad to _haunt .. It was in res~nse to a particular
you ometamcs, Badham rcphcd. issue and event • Hiner said ... It was
l)l'c i . uc is expected to come up at a panicular 'point in time when
1n ib1 evcnana when the. •wo innocent people an the refusee camJ)S ~nd.1daicsforlhc~Congress1onal outside of Beirut were being
d1stnct scat .m~t in. an 8 p.m. d~bate mlS)aC'l'ed."
at UC Irvine s Fme Arts Village Hiner said Bradford ''has a great
Theater. , . deal of compassion for Israel" and Accordmg to a Badham aide, the docs not nowadvocatecuttangofraid.
letter from Bradford followed brac1'1 "She feels it's kind of ironic that
invasion of Lebanon. Jn it, Bradford Badham is bringing this up," Hiner
asked. Badham to support a m<?VC.-added. "I lhtnk h~s tryin,g to veil the
ment m the HouseofRcprcsenta11vcs fact that his record on Israel is prett)'
to cut off all aid. military and dismal."
Irvine bank hostage holder
given 1 OO ·years in prison
By STEVE MARBLE
~ .. .,.., ......... be one of the harshest ever handed
down for bank robbery convtction.
down the l()()..ycar sentence for the
prior bank robberies.
Tbe ·La Habra man was convicted
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SuRF REPORT
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A man who held four Irvine bank
emplo)'ecs hostage in a failed robbery
try early this month was sentenced
Monday to 100 years in prison for
four prior bank holduPJ.
David Dean Dahlen. 24, of La
Habra was described by federal Judge
James ldeman as a .. dangerous des-
perado" who had no remorse for his
victims and presented a clear danger
to society.
.. I don't recall a sentence that
Ion~" said federal prosecutor James
Berliner. "But what he (allegedJy) did
in Irvine was one of the more serious
federaJ offenses a person can com-
mit."
Berliner said he asked Idcman to
give Dahlen a .. substantial" sentence.
The prosecutor said he wu surprised
and pleased with the sentence.
in August after pleading guilty to four
bank holdups. one in Corona del Mar.
Dahlen originally was charged wilh
nine bank robberies but five of Utt
charges were dioppcd in excba.Dse for 1
his guilty plea, Berliner said.
eo 35 to IS hell Clllectlon: IOUlhMM
The sentence. made up of four
separate 25-ycar terms, is believed to
Dahlen has yet to be tried for the
Oct. 12 failed bank holdup in Irvine
but Judge ldcman said he considered
the facts in that case before handing
Dahlen was allowed to go free in
lale August after his mother posted
$50,000 bail.
Dahlen is being held at the federal
correction facility at Terminal Island.
r . O.jljiil!Qiiji,J;il'I
FEAR GRIPS PARENTS, KIDS •.•
From Al
campus as a safety measure.
And she refuses to permit her
children to play in ftle front yard at
their borne in the vicinity of: Atlanta
A venue and Magnolia .Street.
''My little boy (4' years old) uks
each day 'have they caught the
stranger?' We tell him no, that he still
has to play in the ~ck yard." she said.
Repsher said she is sceinJ more and
more parents walking theu children
or forming car ~Is.
School officials arc holding as-
se mblies to warn children to stay
away from strangers and police
officers are scourin& areas for the car
- a l 96S. 72 model Chcvrolete
Impala.. Biscayne or Caprice -
believed used an abduction ancrnpts
that began Oct 3 near the area of
Gisler School, 21141 Strathmoor
Lane. The most recent incident
occurred a week ago Monday when
the suspect. described as a man with
tattoos on both anns and havinf a
beer belly, allegedly grabbed a gir at
Huntington and Oay streets and tried
to draf her into bis vehicle. She broke
free with the help of a companion. ..
In the seCQ!>d attempt on Oct. 8. the
man allegedJY pulled aside two girls,
ages 6 and 7, an the area of Moffett
SCbool, 8800 Burkrcst, and de-
manded they get in his car, police
said. The girls ignored him and he
drove off.
Police say they ha"e received
scores of telephone calls from people
who ma)' have seen the suspcct's car.
Many cars have been stopped but
none have turned out to be the
targeted vehicle, according to Detec-
tive Arden Fick.
EARCB WIDENS FOR SAILORS ••• From Al
and four to ~ax-foot waves forced
them to tum north about 12 miles
east of Catahna.
Two Coast Guard helicopters were
joined Monday by a large transport
search plane in the hunt for the two
men.
Bob Black, manager of Catalina
Passenger Service. which employs
Bailey as a captain and Segona as a
deck hand aboard th e Holiday ferry,
said the two men are knowlcdgablc,
experienced sailors.
Bailey has made the 26-rnile
Catalina crossing at least three times
before an the skiff, Black said, and
equips the boat with a hand-held
radio, flares, life jackets and cushions.
NANCY REAGAN VISITS COUNTY •••
From Al
for the 'G1pper ' "
Asked by reporters to assess her
husband's performance in the Sun-
day evening debate in Kansas City,
Mrs. Reagan said, "l thought he was
great. I thought my husband
answered all the questions be was
asked."
Earlier an the day, Mrs. Reagan
visited a group of elderly people 1n
Riverside and told them the issue of
age and her husband has been put "to
bed once and for all."
Denouncing reports that the presi-
dent may be too old for the job, Mrs.
Reagan was quoted by the Associated
Plus as saying, .. h's nQt true and he's
shown that it's not true. I think it's a
non-issue. I think it's insultinJ to an
awful lot of1>C9ple."
DENTIST GETS 15-TO-LIFE •••
From Al
courthouse, means the 39-year-old
dentist will be ehgJble for parole in 71/i
years.
Deputy D1stnct Attorney James
( lonmger. who asked that Protopap-
pas be ordered to serve his sentences
consccut1vel}. said the term meted
out b} the Judge v.a!I a "fa tr ~ntence. ··
one wath which he had no quarrtj.
Defense attorney Robert Tuller
~1d he planned to appeal Protopap-
J')as' conviction on three counts of
'lecond-degrec murder "as soon as
possible."
Tuller quoted Pro1opappas as sa)'-
ing. "It isn't what I hoped for; but it
wasn't totally unex pected," after
sentence was pronounced.
Protopappas, who appeared pale
and tired during the proceedings,
seemed compcscd when the sentence
was handed down. The curly haa rtd
dentist was dressed an a gra y-plaid
suit. white shirt and black tic for ha s
counroom appearance.
The one-ttme Laguna Beach resi-
_<knl who ran a S l·million-a-year.
high-vol ume dental clinic on Costa
Mc~·s 19th Street has remained in
Orange County Jail in lieu of
S750.000 bail ince his July 31
conviction.
A six-man, four-woman jury found
Protopappas guilty of kill in& 23-year·
old Huntinaton Beach resident Kam
Andreas en. 13-ycar-old Sacramento
resident Patricia Craven and 31 -year-
old Costa Mesa r ldent Cathryn
Jones followin a highly publicized
four•month trial.
The prosecution pre cnted
Just Call
642-6086 •
evidence indicatingProtopappas nes·
ligently administered overd<>SC$ of
genera l anesthesia to the three pa-
tients. causang their deaths. The
defense contended the deaths were
"unfortunate accidents," caused by
medical circumstances beyond the
doctor's control. Defense attorneys
Tuller and Hollis Dyer asked the
co urt to place Protopappas 011 prOba-
taon.
Kim Andrcassen's mother, Ulla
Isaksen, said she was relieved when
Protopappas was ordered to prison.
"He belongs in prison," she said
outside the courtroom, her cheeks
stained with tears. 0 1 thought, thank
God, now at's over. It's been so long.
so difficult." .
Dunne the hcari04-Isaksen as well
as several of Cravens relatives testi-
fied how the deaths of the ~rb had
atTq:ied their respective families.
Craven·, si1ter·in-law, Rula
Craven, said the emotional d.amaae
caused by the f.rl's death bad ''spread
like a cancer' throufh ~c family.
"There bas to be some JUSllcc. There s
still a lifetime ahead of us of
emotional problems," she told the
court.
Her dauJhter, Bridget Craven, said
her clMe friend and relative pa.
triciawas the "metal, bond and atue
that held the: family toacther ...
Testifyina on Protopappas' bcha1f
were 10 witnesses who eharactcrittd
the dentist as a hard·womna. oom·
passionate and charitable man who
cared detj)ly for his paticnu. The
wiin included family friends
from Protopappas' hometown in
Price, Utah, other dentists, fricndS
and past patients.
Patient Dotti Filsinger, 72, told the
court Protopappas had corrected a
dental problem that she had been ~uffcnna from for close to .. o years.
.. I'd love to 10 back to him. We
need Dr. Protopappas back." she
said.
Rudy Sickler, a patient ~nd frie~d
who shared a common interest in
photography with the doctor. de-
scribed Protopappas as a charitable
man who never demanded payment
from hi'\1 when he could not afford to
pay. •
"J1d take my (children) there this
afternoon if he'd get out of here and
practice dentistry, without hesi·
tation," he said.
Another patient and friend , Ray
Hunt, testified it would be a "great
injustice" to society if Protopappas
were imprisoned. And another. Costa
Mesa resident CJ. Kirk said, ··This
1mtlc you sec bclonp to him."
The aestimony from Protopappas'
aupponers drew cheers and applause
from many in the cour:troom. but
drew an admoni5hment from Judge
nas.
lnJentencina the cxntist, Cardenas
acknowtedlcd the pai" and suffenna
of the three victims· families.
••My hean toes out to their famil·
aes," ht said. "My hean aocs out to
Dr. Ptotop.ppas as well. h's difficult
and Md to lose all he loSl. Or.
ProtQpappas' life basicall)' ia de·
. troycd forever:•
Wltal .to 701 llllt 1bo9t tH Dally Piiot? Wllat iH'I YH llke? Call Ult
aember al left aM )'Hr messa1e will lie neonlH, lrHlttlbed Ud Mllvn ..
t.o ~e 1ppropriate Hlwr. ne ume H...., aa1werlq H~ mayltt nei M tee'9ri lttlen .. die
tdll., .. ~ ee,tc. 0.ltlMtMI M Mt Let..,. rihm• llMlll iaclMt IMlr amt 19' ~•ll•ae nmbtr ,., erlfk*U... • dtC91atlM cal11, jileate.
Tt.U et W'MI'• H JHr mlM .
J
•
COUNCILS HESITATE TO.OPPOSE 36 •••
From Al
committee that processed the league's
resolution oppcsing the initiative.
MacAllister added he was sur-
prised so few Orange Coast fitics had
gone on record on Prop()sition 36,
especially in light of the unanimity of
opinion expressed when the Lca&ue
of Cities resolution was passed in
September.
Another reason few citi~ have
staked out a position on the measure
is that many public officials feel it is
inappropriate for their city or the
county to involve itself in a matter
beina submitted to voters.
· Irvine Assistant City Manager Paul
Brady said members of that city's
council all are individually opposed
to Proposition 36.
.. Historically, however. they fell
they didn't ·want to get into a political
debate on a statewide issue," he
explained:
Newpon Beach City Manager Rob-
ert Wynn cited a third reason for not
asking council members in his city to
'take a stand on the ballot initiative.
..1 thous.ht the public would think
we were takina a wsition that would
be sclf-scrvins-l did not MDI to PJace
it on the agenda b«ause pe<.>plc who
read it would think we had an ax to
grind or an interest to protect." he
5aid.
However. Co. ta Mesa City Man-
ager Fred SOrsabaLaaid he felt it was
important for council members In his
city to formally state the city's
position.
"We have 10 take a sund and
Monday·f"llday " '°" tfOI ,..... your P9Pll' Ill'
inform the voters," he explained.
The Costa Mesa City E'ouncil
voted 2-0 last week, with three
members abstainina. to oppose P.rop.
osition 36. The members who abs..
tained personally oppose it, but felt it
should be left up to voters. Sorsabal
said.
He also P.Ointed out that Costa
Mesa couocal members voted unani-
mously to oppose Proposition 13 in
1978.
The Laguna Beach City Council
voted unanimously to oppose the1U
issue in September .aid City Manger
Kenneth Frank.
"This is a question directly peni-
nent to thecit)Cofl.aauna Beach. If we
don't tell people, how will they
know?"' he asked.
Frank said that not only has the
council taken a ~tion on the
measure, it also has stnt letters to
various community JroUPI and
neighborhood associations 'tatina
the city's case and urging they too
oppose Proposition 36 .
"For us. it's a big deal " he
e.tplaincd. "Our situation ts different.
We're more dependtnt on the prop-
erty tax than the biger cities becau~
we don't ha\e the sales tax base."'
Fountain VaUey Caty Man.ager
Judy Kelsey said council members in
that city haven't publicly discussed
the issue and won't before . the
November election.
"I know there is a diversity of vieW'i
on 36," she said, but council membel'J
have not brouaht up the subject in a
political oontex.l.
MacAllistcr said Huntington
Beach City Council mcmben are
willing to let the local LeaaueofCilies
chapter take the lead on the issue. T:he
city hasn't taken a ·position on 36
because :·not enou&h .City Council
members feel the~ want to raise the
issue at election time when they arc
running for election," he said.
The city managers of the varioWi
Orange Coast cities do agree on one
thina. If Proposition 36 passes, the
cities will lose tax dollars, ranJina in
the first )Car from an estimated
$200,000 in Fo\lntain Valley to $2.6
million in Newport Beach and $3
milli n to $4 million in lrvine.
KIDNAP SUSPECT •••
From Al
the reward fund -hould C'811 the
Orange County Search and Rescue at
828·3200 or send donations to Na·
tional Kid Print, P.O. Box SS48,
Buena Park 90622.
The shenlfs department is asking
anyone wath information or anyone
who ~S' an the Joshua Tree area
Thuriday contact authorities at (619)
367-?544.
ORANGE COAST . '"' lllilJ Pillt
Circulation 714/842-4333
c1 .. e1n.ct ad¥ertl1lng 714/842·5'71
AH other ~tt 142-t321
MAIN OFFICE
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S.llA'day !Ind ~ II "°" do not ,_ YClUf
...... H. L. Schwartz HI
Publisher
Coi>i"CI"' 1'83 Orange Coett Put>lllh!ng ColTlpel')' No
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