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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-11-19 - Orange Coast Pilot1:1111 11m11 < MONOAY NOVFMBfR 1'-4 1111.1 Barbour man, stabbed to death Wife says she was kidnapped, ra ped - by masked man inside condominium By STEVE MARBLE her 30-ycar-old husband stabbed to ud ROBERT BARK.ER death in their sccurity-tifht Hunt- ot IM Dellr ,......,. · ington Harbour condominium. A woman who said she was raped Mel Dulay Dyson. a financial and kidnapped early Sunday told • consultant who rented the three-story' police she returned home and fo und condominium. was stabbed numcr- We asked Coast resi- dents what they have to be thankful for this Thanksgiving./ A3 ' :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: Callfomla President Reagan will be handed the task of mak- ing cuts In budget./ AS Nation A high-ranking Cuban de- fector says Castro hates the U.S. 'totally.' I A4 Personal incomes are up, but Americans are spend- ing less of It.I A4 ·~:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: World Rumors abound that Philippine President Ferndlnand Marcos Is re- covering from major sur- gery./ AS At least 80 people die In natural gas explosion in _ M.!xJpo City.I AS _ Feature The secret to wilderness survival ls finding food and shelter with the ous times in what police described as a .. vicious assault." Dixie Dyson told police she made the discovery at about 2:40 a.m. al\cr the kidnapper released her in front of a grocery store near the intersection of Warner A venue and Golden west Street in Hunting1on Beach. . The Dyson's young son and a 7- year-old cousin who was visiting were not harmed. Apparently they slept least amount of effort.I A7 Scouta keep in good ehape Food Before any fowl felony Is committed in your kitchen Thanksgiving Day, call the turkey hot- line. staffed by food pro- fesslonals./C1 :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· Sports Former Edison High star Rick DIBernardo and his Notre Dame teammates will be in the area Wednesday, preparing for USC Saturday./81 The Rams lost big at Green Bay, to the embar- rassing tune of 31-6 ./81 Jun Wacmt. 8·, of Corona del Mar Den 10, Pack 330, practice9 chlnupe while Phlllp Bamabe~er. 9, of lrrine Den 3 , Pack 318 ne&otiatee the rope brlqe at Saturday'• Ezplorer and Scout Pair at Anaheim Stadium. Drizzly birthday for Mickey Mouse By the Associated Pre11 "' Mickey Mouse celebrated his 56th birthday at a drizzly Disneyland party where a little bit of rain was the uninvited guest Instead of cheese Sunday. Mickey received an "Our Hero" parade. Youn~ visitors got a party complete with birthday cake. hats and balloons. park spokeswoman Debra Garron said. Youngsters also Joined in a Mouscrcisc workout and those under 12 received headbands and records. Some older kids -nine of the original Mousekcteers -donned mouse ears and for an onstage salute to the venerable motion picture and television star. Performing were Bobby Burgess. Darlene Gillespie, Don Grady. Bon- nie L}nn Fields. Lonnie Burr. Tommy Cole. Sharon Baird, ShcrT) 1\lberoni and Gubby O'Brien. The celebration wound up the Magic Kingdom's "Mickey Month." Despite cool weather and inter- mittent showers. the weekend crowd was normal. Garron said. through tbe enun: episode in the condominium at 16411 Martin Lane in the Broadmoor HuntJngtoo Har- bour complex. police investiaators said. According to ·police reports, a burglary was reported at the same address on tfalloween. An antruder apparently broke into the con- dominium throuah an upstairs bath- room wi ndow on that date and took $300 in cash aod $500 in watdies. Police said lhCTC is no reuon to poli~ reported. believe the k111inp are rela.ed. Offiocrs did not say whether there According to Lt. ~ Price, Mrs. miaht be a conMCtion between the Dyson told homicidt 1nvetUp&on buralarY and this weekend's kllhnc. thaJ sh< and her husband went 10 bed lhe Slayi .. was the aecond in less Saturday at about IO:lO p.m. Sbe COid th.an a week an Huntinaion BC'ach. A officers she awoke several b<Man later 38-ycar-old woman was found bccau~ her son waJCOUlbins. strangeled in the bedroom of her "She went Up$tairs tofus bedroom apartment near Huntington Center y to comfort him and fell u&eep thctt," on Thursday morning. (Pleue Me ~A2) Sheriff, coroner conflict probed Nestande claims 'inherent conflict' in two positions By JEFF ADLER Of .. Dellr,... .... Orange County upervi.sor Bruce Nestandc said today he will ask the Board ofSupcrvison Tuesday to look into the "inherent con1lict" between the shcntrs duties as the county"5 chief law enforcement officer and its coroner. In Orange County and 38 other · eaJifomia counties, the sheriff's and coroner's office arc merged into one, a joint ~sponsiblity Ncstande said he believes represents a conflict of intcn:st for the sheriff. "I happen to feel thCTC'san inherent conflict m the same person in- vestigtallng Jail deaths and poticc- involvcd hom1Cldcs:· Ncstandc said. Ncstande said he will ask the boa.rd approve a 90-day reYicw of lhe JOin1 shcnfT-coroner's role. The re- view would be conducted by the County Admmistrativc Office and · the county counsel. "ShcnfT Brad Gates doesn't agree with me, but I hive---tong-fdt-Uris way." Ncst.ande acldcd "I support Brad and will contanue to support him. Brad Gates 1s not the issue. But 1t docsn'1 mean I can support continu- ance of the JOant ~pons1biliues ... The question of the dual role of shenfTand coroner surfaced agaJn las1 (Pleue eee 8BEIUFF / A2) 2 UCI students continuing --ast to feed hungry And they'd sure like to r aise cash before Thanksgiving By PH[L SNEIDERMA."I; Of -De1tJ Ptlo4 Ii.fl Two L'C If' inc graduate s1udent\ "ere continuing their public fast toda~ to ca ll attention to world hunger problems. 'owing .10 forgo food until they raise SI 0.000. The students. Johannes Van Vugt and .\llan AfTcldt. have been consum- ing onl} water smcc their fast began Thursda~ The) have also been hvtng in a tent in front ofUCl's Umvcrsm Center 10 pubhc1ze their fund dnve: .\fTeldt said early toda} that the pair have alreadv raised about $5.000 (Pleaae eee UC IRVllU/A.2) Orange Coast College's basketball team Is gear- ing for the 1984-85 season with Its opener TuesdayJ81 Entertainment Karl Malden avoided meeting the man he portrayed In "Fatal Vlslon."/AI C0caine king in court today, Newport woman _sexually faces 45-year prison s~ntence assaulted by masked man A maked man armed with a knife brok9 IMo a tlllllJport l9liah apartment, MXutlly ...ufted a 26-yeer..old WIWb ....... dll•t d her for not tocking the apartme.nt. pottce weportld .._. INDEX Erma Bombeck Bridge BuUetln Board Buaineas California News Claaslfled Comte a Crossword ' Death Notloes Feat urea Food Horoscope Ann Landers Mutual Funds National News Opinion Paparazzi Pottoe Log Publlc Notices Sport a Stock Markets T.._.,.efon ThMtera WeMher World Newt y A8 A10 A3 C9 A• 85-7 A10 87 C12 A7 C1-8 88 AS C7 A• A6 A7 A3 BS, C10 81-• C1 1 A8 A9 A2 A4 Others in largest West Coast drug ring have-all received the maxirpum terms By STEVE MARBLE Of .. Dellr .......... Alan Charles Mobley. the Hunt- ington Beach 24-ycar-old who con- trolled the largest cocaine nn1 ever uncovered on the We t Coast. was being transported to federal court today where he faced a possible 45- year pnson sentence. .\ graduate of Fullerton High School who reportedly wanted to become a lawyer. Mobley has been portra}cd as the strong man of a cocaine network that smuggled more than a ton of the drug into the count> last }Car. Mori: than two dozen people who ~orked as drug runners for Mobley ha' c been sentenced. nearly all draw- ing maximum sentence and 1ough parole cond1uons. Moble} was lo ha \C been sentenced earlier this month but the datl' was delayed because his attome) was out of1own Thc far-flung cocaine empart ~as rcponcdl) .;mashed 1n Mny when federal. state and count) drua agents (Plea.e eee COCAIPflt/ Ai) The Intruder, apperentty blond and tlhOt1.. ...,.. .. ._ Oceanfront .,.rtment at about<4 a.m. &.tndllr _,. .... d • ••s•• to perform a sex llCt, offtoera Mid. ·•Maybe nextttmeyou'I tock your~·· .. .._qulllll her assait#lt a ret1Wtttng befor9 t'9 llft. .. - The vtctlm Aid 9he wa UMble to o-t a~ ..... ii beCaUee of the mak he wore OWJr h6a --. .. ,..., .. appeared to have cutout eye ho6es and tMI ._ mM w a._ a dart( )adcet and d.nt ~ta. There' s .. h9pe for night mare that runs in cycles Victims of premens trual syndrome aided by vitamin t~rapy for hormone ~isorder BJ WA MAHONEY Of ... ..., ........ There were some da)'\ that Linda. 29. couldn't cope. he would feel dcl)f'CSSCd, 1mtablc, anitiou and tJ.rcd. Those day we~ a rtaular IS the alcndar -H prcdiet• able as her mtn1trual cycle. Linda, who asked lhat her ~al name not be uled. he uffi from premenstrual l)lndromc. a " ' - homfonal d1 onlcr afTcct1na an est1- matt.'<1 40 percent of women and one that the mcncan medical communi- ty 1s slowly rccosn111na a{a lcg1t1m1te ailment The 'i)'mplom oflinda'\d1\0rder. which PM experts bthcvc ma) be caused b) a lack of the h rmo~ pryccstrronc. made her quit a d mand1n1 but rcward•najob. she ,.1d. nd ahhouah lht hu found a panaal 1---- core throu&h '11.amin therap , Linda ~}' thC' remnants of P If )mptom put a strain on her mamagc de ;p1tc havin1 an understand.Ing hu band. Lmda.~hohvc 1n(')rangeC'ount). 'oluntecrtd to talk about herd• rdtr btfort a group of about 30 ph) 1c11n and ht.11th care prof~ 1onals attcnd- 1n a tv.o--Oa PM. training cou~ la 'v.eck ponsortd b PM · .\ct1on nf ll"'1nc. a non-profit rorpora11on offer· ma mformauo.n and refCT'l"ll 10 \\omen and the medical communll) atlout PM . the oounc I\ d~1Jnl.'l1 to tC':ach health C3rc pro" lder. ho" to .. ! • l"C'('<>gn1zr and lrtll the ofl-m1s- d1agno5('(! di..ordcr A.bout Q(l() health can: profc 1onal a 'car haH under- 1one the tra1n1ng 1nC't IQ :!. a PM o\ct1on ~pol.c-sman sa1d PM ct.on. v.h1ch rtloc.a tC"d tn 1a fr m Mad1~n. Wis ~•~ founded bv a former ~uOercr. Var- a1nia Cassara. IO 19 . ( as ra <,elf· d1agno~ the t"au\t of htt \t'-en.· but prro1ctablc mood swm1<1 afler rtad- 1n about P 1S and p1onC't'nn1 progesterone trtatmcnt at a mC'd1C11l librat) Th( tn~~umt'nl\, v.h1ch he 1ra\CIN 10 En~and 10 ""-"<'"<'· C'Ul"Ni hrr of1 hc Jcll.,11-and-H~de bcha,ior that sht- sa) ~as rulc-d b, her men trual ~le. l pon rctum1n to the United tattt. C as~ra lormcd PM c11on 10 inform mher v.omen about the dis.- order and the po s1bk cutts. Prtmcn trual ndrome manifest 1t~lf 1n dtfTcrtnt v.a) 1n daffttcnt v.:omen Tht' S' mp1om both ph Sl· tal and emo11un.il may r&nt'C from mild to ~"rn·.' a sara sa cmollonal .. , mplom 1n ludt ten- \IOn, dc~'u1n, an'1et) or pani at ~ • Cl)IOI tpr no rea'°n. mental c~nfu\lon. ,·ra-.: 1n~\ lor food or al- (Pl eee V1T AlllI1' I A2) " . •0rang1 Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 19, 1984 WtAIHH~ ~--~ Laguna bond burning ends .communitiy's 10-year de,bt Clouds shouldn't bring raip. ~ T~n years of qullrterly payments ---- ' went "P io smoke unday as Lquna &:.ch residents in the Victoria Beach-RocklcdJe area burned their •ow-rcti~ underground uuhue am- " provcmcnt bond. The nei&bborhood was the firs1 10 Laguna Beach to transfer utility wire 1 u_ndc'lfound. Howard Dawson. Vic- thoria Drive resident and president of .t. c neil,hborh(>Od association at the lime. said. O.wson. with the help of former r)layor Roy Holm, torched a copy of tbe half-million-dollar bond that 220 tlomcowners have been paying off for the last l 0 years. The lllNt In a 1«iee of ttormt moving touth out of the Quit of AIUka will tprMd high ctouct• ~ Sou•hern California but bring llttltl chance of rain Tuesday, the Nallonal Weather Service Mid. The c.nter of the 1t0tm w .. hNdtng towatd northetn Nevada todiay on a ttaek not llkefy to drop thowert In Loe ~. f0<ecuters aaJd. Highs Tue.dey Witt be in the upper 60t to 70 In LOI Angelea and the valley1 after OYef'nlght lows In the 40a to SO.. The bNchee Will hav. hlgns In the mld-601 to low 70s. Overnight low• will be In the ~Os to mld-501, with gua•y canyon ,wlndt. • The mer~ry will reeoh the mld.,...Ot to mld-501 In the tnoontalna after lows in the 20110 mld-301 and gusty wind a In the nortti.m rangea. In the deeerts. temperatures wlll reach the mid-SO. to low 80• In Owens Valley, 60• In the northern d...-ta and low 10 mld-701 In the southern stretches. Lowa tonight will range from the mld·20a to mld-30• In Owens Valley and the 301 to low 401 In northern arMa, with mld-501 to low 60s In soutM<n deserts. Sunday'• light rain and drtzzi. dropped .02 Inch at the civic center to .08 Inch In Woodland Hiiis. at.et fella &l 30 ' Rosaura Ulvestad. one of the "organizers of the bond bu ming. said about I 00 neighbors attended the tcremony and brunch al her guest ' house oclcbrating the final payment U.S. Tempe .. Lo •• 21 HMllofd •7 37 ....,,,. 48 29 H-15 711 Calif. Temps Si n B•<netdlflO Sen G•.,,._ SartJOM 511 '8 m "' 113 50 85 61 89 60 44 "' 51 :I& -on the bond. AltMlny Albuquerque Alt\wtllo MdlO!-O-Attenll . •5 3-4 •5 27 25 11 74 113 4e 31 10 •5 44 38 74 55 36 13 411 3t '6 40 44 24 411 17 13 8' 39 37 58 47 •6 17 311 25 38 34 43 35 75 112 36 .. 45 U 47 41 36 33 52 24 35 19 43 21 25 07 57 311 06 ·10 27 16 48 22 •O 21 Hout!Oll 89 4f lndl9Npolla M 31 High low for :14 h0ut1 9l>dong 11 5 S...11 Ane $11111 Cr"1 Ulvestad said each homeowner was assessed about S 1.600. approx- imately S 175 a year each, fo r the ••fnstallation of underground utilities in the neighborhood. And. while some chose to pay 1heir share im- mediately. about half of the home- owners have been paying off their part ofthc bond o ver its JO.year life. At .. 1>11C Cliy Au1Un BaltllTIOfe Blf mlngllam Biemaick Boiee Bolton 8u1!81o Jtc*t0n,M• 7a 51 JllClctOn.... 80 13 ~ 3-4 29 Ken•u C11y 37 32 , usveg.. M 51 Lnt .. ROOk 4' 39 LOUitvl... 40 37 Mempflls 62 4 ' M1~ 8"c:ti 78 7S MllW-• :a& 22 M'*'°StP14'4 30 t9 ,....,,_ 47 40 ,.._ O.IH<\S 81 M -VOftt 44 31 HorlOI ... Va 00 49 Oil .. hOme City 311 35 OmaN 42 12 em 1o01y Bak•al...O EtM.t.I Freano Ll.llCHtlf L°' AllQOlet Oakllnel , Paao ROblot RedBlvll Redwood City Sact.,_,10 ~ Sino.go Sen ft l<>C•.cp Slnt18w~ Stoeklon ~ 48 Ta,_ Valley 58 42 V<>eem1t• Vty $3 •II M 35 81 49 83 49 82 41 tlO 44 6t 47 54 411 61 42 65 ~ 112 50 65 .. Eztended FI•' end wllmet l'oaMDlo gutlY Sen11 Ana w1n<11 b't ThriaQNlf>Q Dey a1'd fodty m111n1y ,_ peaM HiflM 65 10 to 70s Low• "' 40s to mod 50a ~ 41 --~~~~~~~~--Dawson said the neighborhood, one of Laguna's oldest, "looked lake oobwebs had taken over" because of .,.., ,...~., ...... e.6MM .. c.,., CMneelon.S C Chet ... 1on wv Chatlolt• H C c~ Chicago Cm!fw1111 Cleveland Columl>le,S C Columbua,Oll Conc:Ofd,H H 08'1 .. ·FIWotlh O.yton O<l11>do 93 61 High, low. ptec:l1>1t111ori lot 24 hours Tl des • 1111 the utility lines. Residents ap- P!oached tbc City Council with the idea of paying for the undewound instal1al1on themselves in add1uon to .P.llvin& the streets. add ing bnck ~dcwa.lb and installing old-fashion-~ Boston streetlights. E:c-mayor Roy Holm. rit[bt, and ez-nelgbborhood uaocla- tlon preaJdent Howard Oawaon burn underground utUJtiea bond. .. We've been enJOyang the VICW ever since." Dawson who called the bond burning "highly S)mbohc," said. Former cit)' councilmen Jon Brand and Carl Johnson also attended the ceremony as dad present Councilman Neil Fitzpatrick. ~·-Jij.J:litfilH1iii,];Jiil:.._ _______________ _ ,._ Oenver 0..MOln4tl Oet10tt Duluth EIPHO F11tbank1 F1rgo Aagstatl Gr and Rapid• Surf report LOCATION Huntington Beec:l'I At-Jetty, Hewpott 40tf\ S1ree1, Hewpor1 22no Slroot, ~ Balboe Wedge l9gUI\• 8eoe'1 S111Cler'n4Wlle W•tOf temp. 112-63 $_, direction. eoutf\"'"t llZE ......... 3.5 good 3-' lw 3-4 lair 3... • ... 3 llW 2 Ill< 2·3 ,.,, ending 1t 6 p m 81n1ow 8lfl Bolf Bi.hol> Blyttie C.leltN lOllQ BNcti Mont-. MonlOfoy l,lt Wiiton ~•BolCh OntlllO P•lm Sptll'OI PaMden1 Ri...,.ide 10 51 m m 62 28 11 44 6t 48 eo so S9 47 S9 ~ 47 311 65 ~ sa 50 75 48 57 48 m 411 TODAY 1136pm MOM>AY 12 24 Im 6 •7 lltn I 2!>pm 7 32pm 4 1 oa 83 03 4 11 StHI Nit IOday a l 447 pm rl- lUHClay ti 6 30 am and Mii IQlin Al 4 •7 p"' MOOI> Hll 11 2'~ p.m . ··-TUffelay It 3 49 1 m arid Mii it 3 28 p m, ~·uc IRVINE DUO FASTING ••• From Al . and hope to reach S 10,000 1n another , couple of days. worst:· Affeldt said. "Now. we're doang OK. When someone comes by and gives us a donation. we get energy from that." said. ··Hut l:.th1op1a ts nol 1he only place in the world where people arc starving." Driver dies in Coast Highway crash t, "We'd be grateful if we can eat for Thanksgi ving," he said. But Affeldt added that he and Van Vugt would conunue their fast through the holiday 1f1heirgoal as not reached. Affiedt ~ad the drive actually should net $20.000 because a Laguna • Niguel business. the Stein-Brief . Group. has pledged to match what- ever the students raise. Several other students have joined in the fast. but Van Vugt and Affiedt • are the onl)' ones camping out to publicize the effon. "The first couple of days were the He said news repons about thl' fast prompted man} residents to make special tnps to UCI over the weekend to donate. Funds raised through the fast wall go to Oxfam America, an rnter· national agenq that provides relief to impoverished people in Africa. l\sia and Latin Amenca. In recent ""eeks. headllnl.'s ha'e focused on severe starvation prob- lems in Ethiopia .. We've heard 1!,lat 7,000 people a days are dyang an Eth1op1a." Affeld! Affeldt said a physician was ex- pected to examine ham and Van Vugt today. If there is a danger of per- manent damage to their health. Affeldt said he and Van Vugt might add fru it JU ice to their current "ater- only diet. But he said th<.' attcnt1on !.houldn't be on the UCI students· cond1t1on. "What's 1mponant is not John and I and our fast." Affeld! said. "The point is chat there is more than enough surpl us wealth around here. So wh) I!. 11 taking more than fi ve days to raise SI 0.000?" SHERIFF-CORONER PROBE ASKED .•. l'romAl week when ll was reported that lhc confidential mental health record!. of a dead inmate were confisca!$d b). SliCriJrs°1)epanmenT)a11 o 1c1al on orders from Gates. The records. which are held lo be confidential under the law, were taken from a coum:r mental health team which was ordered from the Jail during the 1nc1dent. The records pcnaaned to inmate John Ray Stephenson. who died 1n the jail Nov. 6 apparentl:r of wounds self-mflacced with a razor that was 1n his posessaon. Gates has maantaancd chat as coroner he 1!. cnmled to the confidcn- oal recor<U ... as-pa~ a-dealh investigation. However. his inter- pretation of the la"" is at odds with a legal opinion rendered in 198 1 by the Count ) Counsel's Office which said slate law requires a coun order for the release of such records. ince the anc1dent. Board Chair- man Harnen Wieder has requested that the county Grand Jury in- ves11gate the case. Among issues Ncstandc would like resolved by his review 1s to whom a separate county coroner would repon and whether tht o ffice should be -e-ittt I Vt"; Nesiande said tha1 in the case of the shenff-<:oroncr's JO ant respons1b1ht}. even ihe ap~nce of a confl1ct-of- in terest ~d be evidence enough to suppon such a review. The supervisor. however. declined to comment on the specifics of th e case. "I don't what to get involved in that issue. What triggered m} com- ments were calls by the mcdta," he said. VITAMIN HELPS PMS SUFFERERS •.. From Al 1t. Colbert said. "But we stall have miles and miles to go." By TONY SAAVEDRA 01lho 0811y f'tlot ltlfl A wrong-way driver 1s dead and a female pedestnan remained m serious cood111on this morning after scpl\rate weekend traffic accidents along the Orange Coast. The weekend came to an end Sunday night wi th a head-on collision that left 39-year-old Kenneth Hoff- man ofSurfsidc Colony dead. and led to the arrest of an Anaheim man. though he was noi believed to be directly at fault for the accident. Hoffman was killed around 11 :45 p.m. after his car veered into the opposite lanes on Padfic Coast Highway south of Warner Avenue in Surfside and plowed into a vehicle dnven by Robcn Baca. 29. Officer Kevin Dougheny. a spokes~ man for the California Highway Patrol. said Hoffman's car was head- ing south in the nonhbound lanes. Hoffman was pronouced dead at the scene, while Baca was transponed with minor injuries to Humana Hospital in Huntington Beach. where he was arttsted for investigation of felony drunken driving and man- slaughter. Baca was booked into Orange County Jail. with bail sec at $5.000. said Dougheny . ··1t doesn't say in the vehicle code that you ha ve to be at fault (for the accident) ... said the CH P spokesman. "II only says thal ifyou'redrunk, and if you're on 1he road ..... Jn an unrelated accident Saturday night, Bonnie Jeannine Sheets, 30. of HARBOUR MAN SLAIN ••. From Al Lt. Price sa id. Mrs. Dyson told police she awoke later and was walking back to the master bedroom when \he was grabbed by a man with a nylon stocking pulled over his face and a kn ife in one hand. The intruder. described as a black man. about 5 feet I I inches tall and of medium build. reponedl)' raped her. Hethen forced Mrs. Dyson toa garage where a famil y car was stored. police said they were told. Mrs. Dyson said the kidnapper ordered her to drive him from the complex and then got out of the car near a grocery store . She said she rel~ home and fou nd her husband dea-din the master bedroom. Detectives said there were no obvious signs of a break-in at the condominium and that nothing ap- peared to be missing. Police said Mrs. Dyson was taken to Humana Hospital Huntington Beach for treatment and tests. An autopsy. to be performed today. will determine what time the husband was killed and the exact cause of death. police stated. Santa Ana suflered ma1or injuries after she tried to cross McAnhur Boulevard and was hit by a Cadillac. Ncwpon Beach pohce traffic 1n- vest1gator Rtck Bradley said Sheets was coming from a restaurant in the area and fa iled to yield to oncoming traffic. "The be!.l lhang we can determine is she was running across the street and just d1dn'1 look." said Bradley. The woman was taken to Fountain Valle} Community Hospital w11h a fractured pelvis. concussion. ab- dominal bleeding and a broken leg. Sheels was an serious condition today after undergoing emergency surgery Saturday night. The driver of the vehicle, Robert R. Bucy. 43. of Orange was not cned for the accident. The couple reponedly had been married nine years, but police woulQ not commenl on a published report that they recently had been estranged. Officers also would not say where the two worked. except to note the Dyson was employed an Orange County and . his wife worked as a clerk in Los Angeles. "They apparently always spent the weekends together at the condo, .. said Sgt. Ed McErlain. The 226-unit waterfront con- domanium complex is near Peter's Landing and has a security gate. cohol. Some physical manifestations may be water retcntjon causing bloating and breast tenderness. head- aches. backaches. cold sores. sinus problems, asthma attacks and sc11- ures. she said. helpless. unable to cope and dnvcn lO the point of suicide by the cycle of crashing emotions and ph}s1cal alls But women aren·1 the disorder'!. onl} vacums. according 10 PMS A.ct1on htaaturc. hs man1festa11on!I can affocl whole families an the form of marital strafe and child beating. ~ufTcrcrs can't conirol their outburst'> and tho~ dosc~I to them often bear the brunt of their rage. P M S Ac tion advocates progesterone as a trea1mcn1 option for women who suffer from the From Al COCAINE KING TO BE SENTENCED ..• All the symptoms may occur 1n women who do not have PMS. Cassara said. A woman might nor- mally expect to have cramps and some bloating dunng menstruauon but would not suffer !hi.' range or perhaps severeaty of symptoms 1f c;he weren't suffenne from PMS. disorder. Although changes an diet. be · · c b' I certain vitamins and exercise arc said conducted a massive sweep. arrestang lievcd to be la vane an olom 1a. A I 10 relieve symptoms in some women. people in Orange County, Los An-but one of the fugiti ves are related to Cassara believes progesterone should geles and Florida. Mobley through marriage. be readily available for those it does At the time of the sweep, Mobley Of all those arrested. Mobley by far and his wife were on a weekend trip to faced the longest prison sentence. not Mexico but were arrested when they Early this month. one ofMoblcy's top Theuscofprogesterone.oneofthe flcwhometwo days later. coca ine distributors. Mark main female hormones. to treat PMS Four people who purponedly plar.-Mcfarlane. 29, of San Clemente. was began an England with Dr. Kathanna ed ke y roles in the cocaine ring stall sentenced to 25 years in prison with a Dalton. Dalton injected the have not been arrested and are 40-ear parole term to follow. hormones in 10 her own body after ";!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!@~~ Mobley and the others pleaded guilty to various federal drug charges but defense attorneys said they will appeal. . The prosecution·s case against Mobley and th<.' others is built largely on wiretaps. Mobley's attorney, for one. said the government's use of wiretaps in the case wa s improper and that that would be a basis for appeal. One kc)' to diagnosing those who do suffer from PMS 1s the absence of symptoms after menstruation. PMS sufferers typically describe fcell~g unl ike themselves dunng pan of the month. one that 1s tense. imtable and depressed compared 10 1he1r normal fochng of well being. Cassara said. Despite a h1ghl} pubhc11ed case an England an which a murder charge agaanst a woman was reduced because shewassuffennga bout of PMS at the tame of the faial stabbing, the vast maJonty of those with the disorder do noa commit c:n mes. Treacv·Colben. PMS Action public information of- ficer, sa ys. What 1s criminal 1s the way that wt>men with PMS have been diagnosed as having psycholo$1cal problems and been "hysterect1m1zed. ans11tut1onali1cd and tranquilized. That as far mon· cnmanal," she said. discovering that pregnancy cured her I menstrual migraines. The placenta. which provides nutrients to a fetus in the womb. contai ns massive amounts of progesterone. Dalton thconzed that the increased hormone an her system cased PMS symptoms. SHUTIERS CUSTOM QUAUn SHUTIERS In Linda's words: .. When I'm premenstrual and I get depres~d. 11 overcomes me. There's nothang I can·l handle when I'm pC>!.t- menstrual. I have more energy. I'm more easy to iet along w11h ·· Women with severe PMS ymp- coms arc prevented from lavang full laves. Cassara sa)'s. The)' may feel Just Call 642-6086 PM S Action's educational effons aloni with those of others working to leg.1t1m1ze PM as a medical not ps~chologacal disorder. have resulted an thx:tors 1n even. state who can treat .. Avoiding certain foods. a vitamin supruement for women called Op- ti vite and exercise are also suggested treatments for PMS. PMS Acuon can be contacted by writing to P.O. Box 19669. Irvine. CA. 92713 or calling 752-6355. What do you like about tlle Daily Pilot? What don't you like? Call tlle number at left and your meuage will be r ecordd, transcribed a.nd delivered to the appropriate editor. The same 24·hour answering service may be u1ed to record letters to tbe editor on any topic. Contributors to our Leiter column must include lbelr nam.-and telephone a11mber for verification. No clrculatlon calls, ple11e. Tell us what 's on your mind. ORANGE COAST D~t ClrcUlatlon 714/M2-4m .. Guer•teed ~ FricMy II pOll 00 riot ...... yOIJt l>llJ.IOf t>1 !I :lO II M ~ IMIO<t I fl I'll and '(OJt C"t>Y .... t~ . ~.., $atur0ey ""° Sundet H you dO not -"°"' C09Y Or 7 • ,,. , .. Delo<• 10 • "' Wod pOUt CCIC1'r ..... l>O........., Ctrculetfon Telep:toMe DailyPHai H.L. Schw•rtz Ill Publisher Frenk Ztnl Managing Editor Ker•n Wittmer Advert1s1ng Director RoHm•ry Churchmen Controller C'"•tfled edYertletng 7141142-WTI AH other dep9rtmenh 142-4321 MAtN OFACI! :no w ... Sey St Coll• ,,._ CA MAI llCklt-Bo• t6e(), Coecl MMe CA 8?&2G Copvroghl 1963 0.lm\ll I~ Company H<l -llOt,.. 111U1tr11to111 edolonel mentr °" eo.ttt• ,_, ... ..,, mey t>o ~ ""'"°"t IClC.tllll '* ,,_ DI CCIC¥'Vf'I Designed, Finished I Installed FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABlE ON THE MARKET TODAY ..• AT FACTORY DIRECT PRICES! c111(714)548-6841 or 548-1717 Roben Centrelt Produc11on Manager Ooneld L. Wlllleme Circulation Mana VOL. n , NO. J24 HEllWOOD~Uf ACTDIY 1977 Placentia Avenue • Costa Mesa, CA 92627 ' I - Arts, crafts Ale slated at colle1e b Th~ 19th annual Holiday Ans and Craftl Sale at ~den West Colleae i1 scheduled for thia Saturday a~d I · 8 t'rom 9 1.m. to 3 p.m. In the Edlnacr Street P1rkina • ot at the Huntin1ton Beach campus. For a SlO fee on each date teUen of pmonally created an and craft pieee1 may re~rve apece throuah the community services office. Shop~n. who will be admitted free, will flnd ha.ndmade items for aivlna and decoratina at reasonable pnce1. Included will be Chri1tma1 ornaments. photo adlbums, picture frames, sand ptintlnp.Jewelry, pine cone ecorated baskets, holiday wreaths, table decorations, teddy bears. dolls, ceramics, woodcrafts and manzanha roots. For more Information, call 89S-8367. l'ltneu proarama offered Three exerci1e proaram1 will be offered at Oolden West Colleae in Huntinaton Beach beainnina next Monday. Two Monday and Wednesday prosram1.are 1ehed· uled -"Exercise for Out-of-Shape Mel} and Women" from 6 to 7 p.m. in Rec Ed 211, and "Exercise for Out-of· Shape Women Only" from S to 6 p.m. in Rec Ed 218. The Proaram fees are S2 2. More advanced students may resister for "Learn How to Teach Aerobics," to be held Mondays from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. in Administration 136. The fee is $30. Advance reaistration is requested in the colleae admissions and records office. Call 891-3991 for more information. Fraud aemlnar at OCC ----- Engaged CM couple winners of subscription contest Oret Axton of Col1a Meea ta)'t be aad bM .,.._ Lori Raina, just wuted to tublcribl to a.i. ••1-.r v.ihen a camer came 10 tbeir door o6"4 Olly PllDI wblcriptiona and a cba.noe f'or 1 Caribbela Cndll. But the couple, wbo u y tlley've ~ ._ .... .,.,. .... h .. a in !Mir lives, will tpmd tbdt boaeymoOi • • 11'9 dlr "Love 8oeW1ylc" crui1eeou1WY oft.be •••PIPll· ••IJ'a pri!ct, Jf 1 rea1Jy fte1&:'4 lainea. ll. laid. "I'm realJy &ookfna f'orwant 10 it. We've.-._. .. a cn&ile before, Alton. a 21-yeer~ pilot Mid. 1 Alton'• name wu cbolen hen about lS.OOOdMww, Don Williama, Pilot cimalation ~. Mid. Raines didn't believt Williama -W 11111 CIW to_~ the couple bad won the ctu.1le vahaed at man 1MD SS.000. ''I lhouaht eomeone wu playi~ajolreoa me."•..._ The cnUIC winner WU oriainally IUppoeed IO -.. prize before January, Wiiiiams Mid, but oa A.xloe'• reqoest, be ananaiect to turn the trip imo a weddims....,t f'or the coupte who will exch&Qet VOWI March llm Colla Mesa. The Altona will Oy out or Lot ~on ~ JO for Su Jwu1 .. Pueno Rico where tb9 will boltd a PriDClel Cruises ship for their week·~ adventure. • . "I hope I don't aet scalick. •Raina l&&llbed. • Oranae Coast Colleae's Consumer Resource Center will sponsorc a free seminar titled "Consumer Fraud" Tuesday at 9:30a.m. in Room 111 ofOCC'sSocial Science building. Ore& Azton, Lori Jlaln• will baYe & free hODeJIDOOD oraJM. Attorney Diane Kadletz will instruct the seminar, which covers the most prevalent types of fraud, available help resources for victims and future protection apinst such crimes. Call 432-5732 for further information. Pet cllnlca acheduled 'What do you have to be thankful for this Thanksgiving?' Pet Prevent-a-Care of Westlake Village will be .------------. holding clinics in the Orange Coast area Sunday. The first will be in the Westcliff Plaza parking lot, 1 llh Street and IrvineAvem1e,from IOa.m. to noon. The«on~Will beat Mesa Verde Center, 2701 Harbor Bl vd. at Adams, from 2:30 to 5 p.m. ~ Pet Prevent-a-care has been offering major im- munizations for dogs and cats at low cost in the South Coast area since 1979. It has now expanded to the present total of five mobile units serving the California, Oregon and Washington region, with future plans for expansion. If you are unable to attend one of the aforementioned clinics, and would like to be placed on the mailing list for future clinics in you r area, please call (213) 706-1224. CdM chamber plan• meeting The Corona del Mar Chamber of Commerce will meet Tuesday at 7:30 a.m. at Sherman Gardens, 2647 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. A continental breakfast will be served. Subjects on the agenda will include "Shoplifting Prevention' and "Pri- vate Person Arrest," with speakers Officer Tom Little and Detective Tom Talman of the Newport Beach Police Department. . The annual "Christmas Walk" will be held Dec. 2. I rost lrvtae Law clerk ow y a eter LagllDa Beach A11l1tant coater The Merchants Mixer for November will be hosted by Mayur Cuisine of India. 2931 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar Nov. 27, from 5 to 7 p.m. Guests arc invited. For reservations and information. call 673-4050. "Not a lot right now, I'm wai ting for bar (exam) re- sults. I'll know after Thanksgi ving. Bu t, I am thankful for my girlfriend ." "My JOb. I work for JM in orthopedics." Women lawyers to meet Patricia M. Schnegg, partner in the Los An~les firm of Knapp, Grossman and Marsh, will be featured'~aker at the luncheon meeting of the Orange County Women Lawyers next Monday at the Orange County Medical Association. 300 S. Flower St., Orange. Social time will begin at 11 :30a.m .. with runch served at noon. Cost is S 11 :50 for members and S 13.50 for non- members. Schnegg will discuss the Hishon case in which the U.S. Supreme Court held that employment practices of law firms were not exempt from Title VII of the federal law.For reservations and information, call 979-2362. LA shopping trip planned A Christmas shopping trip to discount centers in Los Angeles will be conducted Nov. 28 from Newport Beach. Sponsored by the St. John Vianney Chapel Guild, the excursion leaves at 8:30 a.m. and returns by 4:30 p.m. The cost is S 12 per person, and further information may be obtained by calling 673-771 3. Jay er Newport Beach Pro1ramer Monday, Nov. 19 Larry Mllltr Newport Beacla Salta mau1er rm thankful that things aren't worse than they are. Because as of now, they're pretty bad ... "( have less to be thankful for than my brother Larry (Miller). I'm thankful I live so close to the beach so I can drown myself. I don't have to tra vel far." • I :JO p.m., Oru1e Couty Pla.uht1 Comml11loa, Hall of Administration, I 0 Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana. Mesan: faces perversio.n charges invo.lving girl, 9 A Costa Mesa man was arrested Sunday niaht on cha.raes of sexual pervenion involvina a 9-ycar-old airl, police said. Terry Davis, 29, was booked lrrine A 69-year-old woman was slightly injured when a purse snatcher pushed her to the around and stole her pocketbook Friday. Police say the thief. a black male, accosted the woman about 2:30 p.m. as she walked to her car in a Culver Drive park.ina lot. Stolen was the purse and its contents includina S 11 S in cash. .... Tools and aluminium moldina worth $2.600 were stolen from a construction site at Barranca Parkway and Von Karman Avenue Friday n.iah t. • • • Charles and Associatespn Marconi Street reported the March tbef\ of SS.000 in electrical equipment. • • • Four stereos were stolen from recreational vehicles in a Travel Land Way sales lot Satu~y. The stereos. valued at about. 1700 apiece were ta.ken af\er the thieves uled 1 m(ster key to enter lhe vehicle , police say. T •• An undeterm ned amount of jew· elry was taken from a stored \'tfiicle on Con tNOlion Censer Easl. • • • JOfl' L C'1mberot wa wa ar- . -- -around 9 p.m. after police were called to a home in the 2100 block of College A venue. Davis was in custody this morning in lieu of $25.000 bail. rest~ Monday at Culver and Irvine Center drives for possession of ma ri- juana. He was booked at Oranae County Jail. • • • Thieves slashed a convenible top to steal a car stereo on MandJalce Way Saturday. I • • • A Parkview Street woman said someone stole a turkey she lef\ in a shoppina cart outside her apartment while she was carryina other ~ries inside S"'"day. Handqton Beach Someone pried off a dead boll to the front door of Custom Creative Ccramics1 10026 Adams Ave .• and stole S4.000 in aold used In dental procti5CS. • • • Thieves pried open a door to Carson's house of Dot Qroomina at 18310 Beach Btvd. and 1\ole $25 in coins. " • • • Bu!Jlan smaahed a rear window in the SOOO block of Manha.II and stole a 19-inch television stt vaJUfd at S600; mltedlaneous ~wdry v&lutd at $400 and a S 100 coin collttt1on • • • • Lt. Jack Calnon would not release details on the case. but said Davis was suspected of four counts of sexual perversio child molestauon. Someone stole two 12-packs of beer valued at S 13 from El Don Liquor. 8462 Indianapolis Ave. • • • A man believed to be the same suspect slashed tires of two vehicles parked at nearby homes on 13th Street. • • • A driver of a Toyota truck is a suspect in the tbet\ of $200 from a money tray at the back of a service station. 16471 Beach Blvd. • • • Thieves tWlsted off a doorknob to a rcsic:kn« in the 16000 block of Arlington and stok two telev1s1on sets valued at $480; a camcr1 valued at S200j silver valued at $700 and about 11.100 in U.S. C'01ns plus unknown amount of jewelry. . . l Buqlars stole a t .SOO ylvan1a video casscne rttorder in a residence 1n the 7900 bl()(k of tark. P'oanta.l.D Valley n El Toro teen•aer reported unday that someone had tofen hts custom-made surfboard O\'tr the wttkend while it was leantna apinst an a,cquaintan~·, lll'llt on the 17800 block of ~ Alamo trttt t1 Lagoa Beacai Sy1tem1 progHmer "Ronald Reagan. I think it speaks for itself." mt otoma Newport Beacai Pro1ram1 ualyat ·~G~ friend_sh1ps: .. LA shootings claim 4 lives LOS ANGEL.ES (AP)--Four pcopl_e were killed and seven injured in six separate s.hoou~ durina a weekend of violence. authonties sa1d. In addJtion. the body of a woman believed to be a homicide v1cum was found in an alley. Th~ of the attacks were believed to be pna-rdatcd. -Jn the latest attack. a man believed to be about JO was found dead inside the Girl Talk bar about 1:50a.m. today, Sgt.. Jim Cole said. Two men were found wounded outside the bar on south La Brea A venue, Cole said. One man. who wasn't identified. was taken to Cedan- Sinai Medical Center for treatment of a stomach wound, Cole said. His condition was not immediately available. Jose Gama. 30. of Los Angeles. was shot in the left arm. He was 1n s~ble condinon today at the hospital. said a nW'S!og supervisor who declined to be named. Cole said details oftb--C sbootina were sketchy, but It may have stemmmed from an argument. Oscar ttrocchl Haatlngtoa Beach laterior landscaper lt r ma 1 Meanwhile. a Los Angeles woman remained in extremely criucal condition today at Martin Luther Kma Hospital after being shot in the bead. satd 1 nursing supervisor who asked not to be named Haallqtoa Beacai Sa lea mu Michelle Britton. 30. was apparenll) shot Sunda) mommg after she got into an 1J1Ument wtth another woman at Bntton's home on I 18th Street. Cole said. I'm thankful to be in America (born in Argen- tina) and have the op- portunity to be successful." .. A great day. Every- th1ng's been nice -- people, weather. mone) and profits." Robbin Wright. 27. of Los An&elcs was booked for investigation of attell}pted murder, he said. Also Sunday morning. police found the body of a woman about 30 years old tn an alley near Grandee ... venue The loss was estimated at S 120. • • • A woman who works in an office on the 10800 block of Spencer R1nr reported Saturday that someone took money from her purse while it was let\ unattended in a desk drawer. The loss was $309 in cash. • • • A Huntington Beach teen-ager reported Saturday that someone stoic his red Eaale Rider bicycle while it was parked outside the Fountain Bowl. 17110 Brookhurst St. The loss was estimated at SI 00. • • • A resident of the 16200 block of San Jacinto reported Friday that a man broke four wi ndows in his front door.. after he refused to loan the man money. The damaac was estimated at $300. • • • :\ resident of the 17200 bloc~ of Eud1d Street rcponed that someone stole a $200 Kodak camera from his liaht blue 196 7 ford Mustang. while 1t was parked in i -carpon. CoetaMeea T"'o automobile T-to~ worth $500 apiece were reported stolen sometime between 7 p.m. rnday and 8 a.m. Saturday at 2368 Harbor Blvd. Entry was pined by forcina the door lock on the driver's side. • • • A home in the 2400 block of Elden "venue was reportedly ransacked somcumc between 4 p..m. Saturday and 4 a m unday. The lo wai unknown. accord1na to pohct Entry was throu.ah a 1de W1ndow • • • would·bc buf'llar pvc up Satur· da) when he removed the SCtttl\ ofh window. but couldn't act the window open Pohct reported the attempt occurrtd around s· )() a m. •h1lc the re 1dcnt4' slept at the home 1n the l400 ' block of Queens Coun, • • • • A 25-year-old Santa Ana man was arrested Sunday for allqedl) stealing a $29-pair of bolt cutters from the Sears department store at South Coast Plaza. Carlos Sepulveda Wence was booked on suspicion of pc-11~ theft. La.fana Beach .~ purse and its contents toaether worth about $75 were reported siolen Sunday afternoon on South Coast Highway. • • • i\ gray1sh~grccn car cover was stolen in front of a Flora trcet home early unday. • • • I\ shotgun and m1sccllaneous camping equipment wctt reported stolen Saturda) afternoon on ~I Mar. • • • Marlon Elhs Mclaughlin. 26. was cited on suspicion of posscssm.g ltss than an ounce of man1uana Mcl..aughhn was stopped by police on Glenneyrc trcct early Saturday • • • A w1tn~~ to a reported indt'C't'nt exf)(>'Uft dc9cribed the ~ as a white male 1n hts 20s wtth short brown haar. The 1nadtnt occurrni Fnday n1aht on South Coast High- way. • • • camera wonh about $90 was reponed stolen Fnday cvem ng from a home on Glenncytt St~t • • • A 1976 tan Ford ~r:ted &iolen alona South Cout H\&hwty wu reco~emS unda)' monuna by police at Blutbtrd Put Newport lhacll A ~ (1\lt'Jtt le wonh ncarl S200 "-as t1tolcn from an unlocked garaae on West Balboa Boulevard . ••• Nearly $6,000 wonh of Jewelry was La.ken from the masler bathroom of a residence on the Balboa Peninsula. The resident said &be last ~w the 1ewell) when she remeved followma a dinner party. • • • A blue I 0-spccd bicycle was stolen ~ from an unlocked praac on the 100 bloc~ of 39th StreeL The bike was \\Orth$ 150. o • • • :\ S4.000 diamond neck1ac::e was stolen from a rcstdcnoe on lbe 400 block of South Bayfront. Blaze wreaks $25,000 loss at CdM horrie .\ fitt caused about S25.000 dam· age to a Corona dd Mar home eafty Sundal:'.!_ acconhna to the NcWl)Orl 8.:c.ach fl"' Dtpar\?MnL Thr fire broke out sbortly before 3 30 a.m. at 2l4'h Camanoo Ave. Thr OttUptnt of the botne. OonSon Waa.ner. escaped without injury. f"' pokeswoman Jayme Fretr said. Cause of the blaze 11 unknown Hd 1s under invest1ption, Frwr satd. Fu"C offioals estimated the fti'e cau!ed $20,000 damaac to \he home and an •ddlllonal SS,000 to tie contents oflhe bom lt took firefi&hters t S minutes 10 mntrol lhc fire. "No other homes WttC dam11ect Thittttn fireft.ahttt&. tWOClllJftCSt_l fi~ truck and I paraJMd UNt rcsoondcd to the alarm. -_., Orange Coast DAILY PILOTl~ndaY., NovemtMr 19, 198 .. Libya plot included murder, hijack Captured agents reveil plan to take F-16 Jeiflghter, kill Egyptian leaders CAIRO. E&Ypt (AP) -Libyan he said. "How can such o man be left .. nb aJTC t~ 1n Cairo in a plot to loose?" kill a Libyan uilc have confessed that Ru~hd1 said God Ire) hinC'r. 4 7. they also planned to hijack a U .. -London und t"o MalteSt' were also built F· t 6 JctflahteT and a inat( arrested m the plot 1 he four arrested Eayptian leaders, Egypt's interior agents are currently being 1n1errog- ministcr was quoted today as saying. ated by state ~cunty pro~u11on The weekly ncwi.paper Mayo, pub-authorities prior to being served with h hcd by the aovcrning National an official 1ndictmenl. Democratic Pany. also quoted In-"Confe ion by the leader of the terioc Minister Ahmed Rushd1 us group $hO\\C'd that one of the pnnc1- saying the Libyan aaents ptom1~ IQ pal aims wa to gather information introduce their Egyp11~n col-about the F-16 and to explore the laborators. who in fact were under-posstbilit) ofh1Jackmg one to Libya." cover security pohce. to thC' inter-Rushd1 was quoted by Mayo a national terrorist Carlos. saying. Rushdi cited purponed con-Egypt has received 80 F-16s from Chancellor Helmut Kohl and Bnt1sh rnmc M1n1~tcr Marprct Thatcher. On unday. President Hosoi Mubarak 1d evidence from the four naenls pointed to Libyan involv~ ment in the Oct. 31 assassination of Indira Gandhi. India's prime minis- ter. The L1~an new aicncy JANA can1ed a Forc11n Mmistry denial of Mubarak' alleaat1ons. Ru hd1 met Sunday with the am- bassadors of France and We~t Ger- many t" hrlt'f 1hem on infnnT'ltHinn 53id to have been obtained from the aaents. Ru hd1 said Gill confessed that after a sassinatana Bakoush, he planned to establish an investmrnt company in Eaypt to serve as a cover for further terrorist acts. Cuban says Castro hates U.S. 'totally' fcssions made by Anthony Gill. 48. the United States and another 40 will said to be the leader of the four-man be delivered b)' the end of next year. NEW YORK (AP) -Cuban of America in the lowest terms you team sent b)' Libya to Cairo to air force commander Gen. Abdel-President Fidel Castro speaks of the can im,gine." assassinate former Libyan Prime Hamid H1lmr said. United States "in the lowest terms Llov10. 48. chief adviser to the head Minister Abdel-Hamid Bakoush. Rushdi said L1b}an agents also you can 1maa1ne." makina improved of the Cuban State Committee for who has lived m the Egyptian capital confessed that Lib)a "planned to relations bctwetn the two countries Finance from 1977-80 and chief -;ance 1977. a sassinate some Egyptian leaders unhkel). says a defector who was a adviser to the Minister of Culture Egyptian security used pictures and blow up some vital Egr.ptian high-ranking Cuba.Tl official. from 1980·82. moved to Montreal in i.howing Bakoush lying in a pool of installations in a manner s1m1lar. to Jose Luis Llovio Menendez. in a late 1981 and to the United States in blood to trick the team into believing what happened in 1976." He gave no thi'ee-hour interview published in 1982. the former prime minister had been details. ~veral U.S. newspapers today. de-He surfaced publicly for the first killed last week. Bakoush appeared The Egyptians blamed Libya for scribed Castro as an impulsive, time Friday. telling a group of invited alive with Rushd1 at a news con-explosions m 1976 1n a government impassioned leader who~ foreign reponers that he and his wife had ference Saturday. building housing ~veral min1stenal policy goal is "to make a lot of Cubas bttn granted official asylum last Today. 1n an appearance on NBC's depanments an Cairo and on an everywhere... month. "Today Show." Bakoush called for an Alexandria~Cairo train. "Fidel hates totall y the United Speaking of the Cuban foreign economic or diploma11c boycott Egyptian officials have said since States of America:· Llovio said policy, Llovio said. "The y want against Libya to protest terronsm. the arrests that the Libyans were Friday. "He hates 11s institutions. He Nicaragua and El Salvador. After "There must be an actton b~ the plotting to assassanate several world hates its policies. He hates everybody that. Honduras and Guatemala. you whole world against this Khadaf} ." leaders, including West German here. He speaks of the United States can be sure ... -::::=========;;;;;;:::;:;:================-:-.--------------1 However. Llovio said his experti~ RUffELL'S was mostly m domestic affairs. He Early Bird Dinner Specials 16.9S Prime Rib or Fresh Fish described several blunders made UPHOLSTERY, llC. under Castro. saying aides arc unwill- ror The Rest Of YN life ing to check the president's im-pulsiveness. 1922 HMSOR BLVD .. COSTA WSA -:-541·1156 At one point, he said. Castro The Pros ' Since 195 l decided to plant 110 million "catur- ra" coffee trees to provide a "green belt" around Havana. Castro failed to C 6mplete D inner With choice of check into the soil conditions. how- • Nn r10N --- Am.erlcans niaking niore but~they're spending less By U.e Anoclatecl Press WASHINGTON -Americans' personal income rose 0.6 pe.i·cent last month but consumer spending dipped 0. I percent. the poorest show1na on the spending side in eiaht months, theaovemment rcponed today. ~e Commerce Oc~nment said the 0.1 perttnt drop in personal consumpuon pendmg. which mcludes virtually everylhm& except interest pay.ments on debt. compared to a 1. 7 percent spending surge in ~ptembcr. That .1ncrea1c foflowcd two mooths in which corisumer spcndina had po ted no gain at all and pve analysts hope that t.he ecohomy was finally rousing from its summer doldrums. Celll•t Ra.e dead at 68 NEW YORK -Leonard Rose a world-renowned cellist whose students incl uded Yo-Yo Ma and Lynn Ha~ll . hes died of leukemia at age 66. Rose died Friday at White Plains Ho pital. near his home 10 C~ton-on-Hud50n. He had t.aug~t at the Julliard School since 1947 and served with orchestras such as the NBC Symphonr, the Cleveland Symphony and the New York Philharmonic. Jumbo jet engine catclJe. fire LA VEOAS Nev. -A chartereq Boeing 747 fumboJel with 496 people aboard was forced.to return to McCa~n International Airpon ~1~ an engine cauJht fire. authorities said. None of ttl~ passen.gers or crew were 1nJured. One engine on the fQur-engjnc Overseas National Airways Jet caught fire moments aft~the 3:2~ p.m. takeoff Sunday and the pilot. Capt. Robert lll\.uer,"f<!llowe~ emergency procedures. made a circuit of the airpon and landed 1mmed!ately, said fire department spokesman Jack Bailee. There f~re was out. by the ume ,l.he plane landed. "but the engine was pretty well gone. Bailee said. • Salvaged atellltes In good •IJape CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. -Two satellites recovered by space shuttle Discovery's astronauts are 1n good shape externally but will require considerable internal work before they can be returned to orbit. NASA says. The Palapa 82 and Westar 6 communications payloads were lifted out of the shuttle's cargo bar. Sunday and were moved to a hangar for servicing. including draining of volat1le hydrazine fuel used in small steering rockets. Marie O.mond, hubby •pllt PROVO. Utah -Marie Osmond. married two years ago to former Brigham Young University basketball player Stephen L. Crall. has "temporarily separated" from her husband, a family spokesman says. The spokesman told the Salt Lake Tribune the couple, who became parents ofa boy last year. decided last week to spend some time apart. "They are in a rcconc11iation period and will not be issuing any funher comments or statements.'' said the spokesman. whom the Tnbune did not identify. The couple made Los Angeles their home after the1~edding in the Church of Jesus Chnst of Latter-day Saints' Salt Lake Temple. soup or salad and dessert !""~ IAlllTI IHUWCE-ever. and only 15 million of the trees 1. survived because the 'soil was not , 4 to 6 PM -6 proper for them. he said. Mafia trio convicted ln murder /, 7 D A W J Non·smoker Llovio also Said Ca~tro once had IJI Ilk' fl -Rates rice planted in an area too arid for the PHILADELPHlA -The murder convictions of a reputed Mafia ON THE PEN1NSutA 11 b crop and had vast amounts of a crop chieftain and two other men stemming from a bloody war over gambling. drugs BALBOA 801 E. BALBOA 673-7726_1 1 831-n40 calfed gandul planted as feed for and loansharking pierces "the myth of or~nized crime's invincibility," a 441 Old Newport llhd. cattle. only to find that cows would prosecutor says. Harry "The Hunchback" R1ccobene. 74, and Joseph Casdia, S Newport llMch, Ce. not eat it. 41 . were found guilty Sunday offirst-degree murder and conspiracy to commit • ,-l9iiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil"l?.~~~-~-----""'1 murdedntheMay13.-1982,contraculayingofFrankMonte. Vincent Isabella, () ~ PROFESSION AL • Complete Carpet Repair ~ -46. was convicted of third-dcgr~ murder and providing the hired killer with MAID . Flooring. and Sub·flopr Repair Pennsylvania Crime Commission as .. an oldtime LCN (La Cosa Nostra, or ' • Carpet Restretching the death weapon. Prosecutors claimed that Riccobenc· -described by the ER VICE Mafia) member" -had Monte assassinated after learn tog a contract had been FR~GEN YOZURT SHOPPE ~ ftNNEIL'¥ put out on his own life. u (Company's Coming!) n-.-. S•S.1837 For the holiday. try our special pumpkin yogun in cup. cone. 673-4913 "............ Lie J 1s100 or pie. Nothing else r ~ measures up _,....Im .. ,... -.,.. . ~ -~ 'J~~""""-~-, ... ~ -..;;jJ-....... . ~ ~, ~N"""""""-~ ~ DHCER SIGNALS Of PINCHED NERVES 1. Hudaclln. Dlmwss: llbrtd VISIOll 2. Neck ,ain, fichl ~.Spasms 3. ~ hin, Pain Down Arms, lbnbntss In Hanek 4. 'ain Bttw111 SholAdln. Oifficdt Bmlhilc. AbdomNI ,. !I. lowtt &d ,ain, lfp Pain. P111 Down Leas • Free Conmtation & Spinal Screeninc. 10 standard Tests. • Tm Means No Deductible & No Co-Payment. • Most lnswance Accepted as f tj Payment with little or No Out-of -Pocket Expense. WHY? No o-m•. No t.Yfth .-.... No cryatol ~net.lion. Juet M enormou1 Mloctloft of ,,.. I pr•·o--4 fun lty lnt•met'-lly·known d.1l9nen -.. prtc .. you cen't '"'''I WEDNESDAY ONLY HOLIDAY INN 3131 BRISTOL ST. DAILY 11-6 PM And. don't mfH our exceptloMI ..t.ctloft of ,,•·o--4 en4 _.. ... fvn tt-.lt look -4 •-1 Iii• -(\wt nw•t "9 cle111fi.4 •• NC.Oft4·h-4 vMI). TRAOE IN YOUR PRESENT FUR NOW I We Speciolizt in ThoM Hard to Find Siztsl 1·w1LL1AM P. BRACCIODIET A, M .D. A"!NOUNCE~ THE OPt~ING OF A HEADACHE AND STROKE PREVENTION MEDICAt CLINIC Spec1ohz1ng "' • NeurOIOQICOI dtOQr>OS4S ond treolment ot heodoche dlSOfdet'S •Second o pinions regarang heodOChe dlX>ldefs • 5trolte prevention Wllllom P 8rocclodleto M D . F A.E s Director Otplomote 1n Neurology Amencon Boold ot Psycruatry ond N8Ulology Otptomate 1n Electroencepl'lologrOPhv Ame11con Boold ol Ouollltcolton in~£ G Membei 01 lhe Amen con Academy ol Neurology ond lhe Orange County Meo1co1 Soctely Fellow Am011con EEG Society Office hOurs bv oppotntmen1 W'95uper10<Avenue s...t11e4 NewpoitBeocn CAW66J (714) 645-8502 NEWPORT HARBOR SHlpYARD CLEAN & PAINT BOTTOM $6.50 Per Foot Labor Only STEAM CLEANING $45.00.hr. YARD LABOR $40.00 Per Hour HAUL OUTS TO 75' -75 TONS/Marine Scale 223-21ST STREET NEWPORT BEACH (71 4) 675-2550 Every second counts. Would you know what to do? Red Cross will teach you what you need to know about life-saving. Call us. We'll h~ Will you? - + t:8:: ."'-,.......,,, ... ...___ 11 CALIFORNIA 'Su.J!.er Fly' ~~r stabbed WEST HOLLYWOOD-Actor Ron O'Neal was to fair. stable condition Sunday. a day after he was stabbed 10 a restaurant following an argument. and the man he had been arguang w11h surrendered to authonues. O'Neal. 47. who appeared in the film. "Super Fly.'' was stabbed about 8 p,m. in the restroom of the Melting Pot Restaurant on Melrose A venue. Los Angeles County sheriff's Deputy David Hogan said. He was ta~cn to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center where he was in the intensive care unit overnight and moved to a pnvatc room Sunday mornang. hospital spokesman Ron Wise said. James Nunya. 39. surrendered to West Hollywood station deputies about 7:30 p.m. Sunday and was booked O'NEAL for investigation of assault with a deadly weapon, Deputy Lynda Edmonds said. He was held in heu ofS2.000 bail. O'Neal, born in Utica. N. Y .. began his acting career with the Karamu Theatre in Cleveland. then moved off- Broadway to appear in "Amcncan Pas1ora1c:· "The Mummer's Play" and "No Place to Be Somebody ... Domlnelll belonging• auct1oned LA JOLL1'-An auction ofitems belonging to imprisoned businessman J. David Dominelli raised at least $750,000as 5.000people flocked to purchase luxury cars. an works and famous autographs. a spokesman sajd. In one of the costliest sales Sunday. Humben Cozza of Rancho Santa Fe paid a record S 116.000 for a 1956 red Mercedes Benz gullwing. Joe Molina. the auction spokesman said. Baby Fae autopsy re11alt. due later LOMA LINDA -Weeks may pass before surgeons at Loma Lmda University Medical Center know exactly what killed Baby Fae and what might have saved the first infant to receive a baboon hean. an official said. It may take that long before full autopsy test results are in, Ed Wanes. a vice president of Loma Landa University. said Sunday. He said he didn't know how long it would take for doctors to analyze the results and decide how to proceed with future transplants. Gary Coleman '•tl•factory' LOS ANGELES -"Diffrcnt Strokes" star Gary Coleman may be eating home-cooked turkey instead of hospital food fo{Thank sgiving as he continues recoverinJ from his second lddocy transplant. "He's been eating solid food," his publicist. Larry Goldman, said Saturday. "The doctors are very. very happy with his progress. If all goes according to plan, he should be back home by Thanksg1vang." Thc young actor was 1n "quite stable condition" today. Ga• price. dlp to new low LOS ANGELES-Retail gasoline prices ha ve dipped to their lowest level this year. with motorists last week paying an averase of $1 .1867 per pllon. according toa national survey. Industry analyst Dan Lundberg said Sunday his weekly survey of 17.500 stations in 50 states found that the average price had dropped by .39 cent from the previous week. 'The highest gasolihe got this year wasSl.2121 in May. WoRto I•rael reject. Lebanon payment demand NAQOURA. Lebanon -Israel rejected Lcbanaedcmands forthe release of pnsoners and the payment of up to SI 0 billion in war reparations as taJks on the withdrawal oflsracli troo~ resumed today in this border town. As the third round of talks opened. Israel s chief delepte an stead stressed the need to agree on meuures to protect Israel's northern border after an Israeli withdrawal from Lebanon. which it invaded almost 21h years aao. Turk diplomat ...... m.ted VI NNA. Austna-ganman shot and killed a Turkish diplomat today, finng t~rce times at close range a the envoy.slowed his ~a~ at a stopli&ht, police said. An anonymous telephone caller claimed the k1l1tn1 on bthal( or an Armenian Cl(tre17"iSt group. The United Nations rcaional hcadquaf\ers identified the vf(Um as Evncr ff1un. deputy d11'C(tor of the U.N. Center for Social Development and Humanitarian Alfa1n. Police spoke man Franz Grucnbeck said the v1ct1m was killed bya s~ot 1n th~ h~d. H~quoted whne scs as sayina a man on foot approadled the diplomat s car as 11 slowed for a rtd lightc. - Antl-dra6 emplo7ee11 WJed LIMA. Peru -The U.S. Embassy was tryina to determine today whether drug traffickers or Maoist auerrilla~ earned.out a bloody assault on. a jungle cam~itc in which at least 15 employee of 4 U.S.-financed anuo<oca1nc pr0Jr1m v.erc killed. police poke\man s.aid the attackers. timat~ by urvavoN to number between SO and I 00. opened fire on the slctp1na v.~rkcrs ~Ort dAWTI urctay. Pohce said IS woricrs were ktllC"d. thttt wttt m1mn1 and two were wounded Otange Coaet OAiL 't' PtlOT !Mondmy. Nov9mber ,., 11M Marcos .illness n~ed by. palace Cuts la budget to be 1 lt ln the hands oflleagan Philippine leader reportedly under oes _ surgery for incurable kidney condition - Gas blast kills 80 in Mexico MEX IC'O CITY (AP)-A series of explosions at a natural gas processing complex tnggered a huge fire today in a suburb of the Mexican capital. sending smoke and flames high into file a1fanawrcctct~"l'le!arby-homes. Early reports said at least 80 people were killed and hundreds were in- jured. Alfonso Olvera Reyes. mayor of Tlalnepantla. wh'ere the ex plosions occurred, said by telephone that "nearly 400 people were injured and 80 killed." A rescue worker said he personall y saw 35 bodies. The fire was still burning four hours after the first explosions. Hundreds of residents were evacu- ated, some on city buses that were diverted from their regular routes. Many people fled on foot, some clad only in their underwear. Dozens of ambulances were seen movi ng in and out of the suburb northeast of the capital. The injured were taken to several hospitals. At one facility. reporters said th e injured were crowdi ng the hallways. The Red Cross said it had no preliminary figures on casualties. Arturo Escamilla. a worker wi th the private volunteer rescue organi~tion Laser. said more than 30 acres in the poor, crowded district were devas- tated. by the initial explosion. His brother Isidro Escamilla, also a rescue worker. said. "There were people coming out of there all ablaze." He said the explosions sent sections of flaming gas pipes and other construction material raining down on nearby homes and otheT buildings, setting them afire. .. to do if you should ever smell natural gas. · , If your burner flames (range, furnace, water heater) are leaving soot deposits or giving off an acrid odor, call us immediately. ---i3e carefotwith-unvente room r .. on l'fh ,,,.. If you've ever had a whiff of natural gas, you kn·ow it's not French perfume. But thats one big reason its so safe. We add the smell to natural gas (which is normally odorless) so you can detect even the slightest leak A slight odor near an appliance usually means a pilot light is out. But if you have any doubts , just call us. If the smell is strong, open the windows and doors. " ~ Don't light any ~,~ ... matches or tum B ~ anything electrical on or off, not even the lights. Any . electrical switch could cause a spark Alert everyone in your home and get out. Alert your neighbors nearby. Then. rail th e Gas Company. (But don't use the phone in your home). If th e gas odor is outdoors it could be even more serious than a leak indoors: .· . :. t=J~u·.: ' # 't • • • I) . . . heaters. They can cause fire, asphyxia- tion and deadly fumes such as carbon monoxide. If you're not sure if your heater is safe, call the Gas Company. We11 check it And be careful where you dig. Gas lines are under your property, so call us before you excavate. We11 help you find them. So call us right away. ,.. - Even if you don't smell gas, we hope 0 you11 keep safety in mind. Never store any flammable materials near a gas appliance or your gas meter. .6 SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA gas COM~V .. . . ... ... , . r J ·:· ... 1' I J ! on Beach shoul redeVf?lqp flood control plan The devastation delivered by a flood is so total, victims require years just to understand the extent of their losses. Weeks after the swirling water has invaded a house, a famil y will discover the first photo ever tak~n of their baby is missin$-Month~ after the flood has sloshed through the first floor of their house -leaving dirt and debris in its wake - a couple will search for income tax records that were destroyed and discarded during the cleanup. Worse than the loss of the carpets and drapes, the furniture and the appliances, the clothes and jewelry, the photo~phs and the documents, floods steal our connections, especially those connections with the past that cannot be replaced. Just ask the 200 families that were whose homes sustained more than $13 million in damages when storm waters broke through two earthen flood control channels in Huntington Beach in March 1983. To minimize the possibility of a recurrence of that d isaster, those flood control channels must be widened and paved, storm drains must be repaired and pumping stations must be built. Much of the job is Orange County's responsibility, but the city, recognizing its stake in the project, has agreed to contribute to th e job in order to speed its progress. • To accompl ish this accelerated construction schedule, Hunti ngton Beach must create a redevelopment district that will generate the needed revenue. To create a redevelopment district for a fl ood-damaged region -under existing regulations, which wi ll change in January-the city must act quickly. That requires passi n~ an enabling ordinance. To meet all the deadlines, Ci ty Council m ust act on that ordinance toni$ht. There is so me opposit ion to the creauo n ofa redevelopment project to deal wi th flood control. But the alternatives, it appears, ensure delays in planning, financing and construction. Ultimately, that means a delay in much-needed protection. The City Council should adopt the redevelopment ordinance tonight. Heights pref e;rs rezoning over annexation with NB To the Editor: I wish to pro1cs1 SPON's current effons to have Nev. port Beach annex anta Ana Heights. A.s a longtime resident ( 18 }cars) of 4ianta ..\na Heights. J feel I haH'.' more at stake than SPON to use m) property as a tool to ma}' be block the growth of the John Wa)nl A1rpon. The existing cond111ons of the airport arc facts of life and 11 is more than likely that the airpon will grow. In a poll of A-I property owners most impacted b} tne noise 1n Santa Ana He1ghts.11 was found the}' favor a change 1n Lon1ng fi:om A-I to PA. Their general consensus wao; that this 1oning will accomplish se,eral changes needed nov. · I. Increase compat1b1ht) betv.ecn ·anta Ana Heights and the existing John Wa}'ne Airport. ~. Increase revenue tn th<: Count} of Orange. \. lmpro\e the tratlk flow through and around the airport area. 4. ComP.hance v,,1th the 1986 noise compatib1lit) la" 5. Heighten the aesthetic appear- ance of a blighted area 6. Increase the health and safe!\ of e'eryone. including the animals: b~ removing them from under the direct flight path of huge Jet airliners. I am hopeful that the Newport Beach Ctt} Council is aware that using the proposed annexation of Santa Ana Heights as a move to stop airport growth would be an expensive and weak tactic to use when the real issue 1s compa11b1ltty between Santa Ana Heights and the ex 1st1ng John Wa) ne A1 rport Rezoning, not an- nexat 1on. 1s the 1ntc:lhgent mO\t' to make C'mon Orange ( ounl) supervisors -Ma ke a DECISION' JOAN HULSE ~nnta Ana Heights Dearth bf dope on s treet 0 V..i, there nrr a time in this ccntul) v.hcn the \treet users couldn't get morphine and heroin'' ..\. Twiet' In 1931 when govcm- m<:nt cconorntc'> lOn' ul-.cd. and the monc) to hu~ dncd up during the (1rcat Dt•prt.'\'>lun :\nd in the early 1940'> duri ng V. orld War II when the French hawn labs \.\ere put out of hu<,1nc<,\ h~ the 1.1.ar dlort Padcrn,c,k1 knr1.1. l 1beracc's mother It "-3'> thl· great Polish pianist Padcn:v. c;k 1 in fa ct. v. ho \uggested: I. That the little l 1berale at age 7 be gl\en a \cholar\h1p to the Wisconsin C ollcgc of Mu!>tc. And 2. That the rhild prod1g~ drop h1<; fi rst and \Ct0nd name\. Wlad11u Valentino. to be kno"n onl} ·a!> Liberace Maybe }'Ou·, e read that Liberace o nce per- formed regular!~ under the name of Wahl'r Busterkl')., He did That was not Paderew5k1\ idea Q Who IO\C'ntt'd the ruhbcr ball., \ Nobod} knov,,s What 1s known is ( tiristopher ( olumbus took some oddly shaped bo4ne1ng ball\ from Ha1t1 back to Europe and that wa Eu rope'~ first glimp<;c of such < 1irl h11tne'> \mile morc th~1n bo} hab11:'> do Hardh ,1 \oul 111 the l ngl1-;h- \fX•ak1ng "'urld doe\ not know that "bookkeeper" U'>t'd to be the onl) ~ord v,,1th thrl'e or mor<.' adJatent double kttcr\ I h<.'n along l ame the OAANGE COAST Daily Pilat zoo employee. the ··raccoonnook- keeper." Afier that. the shipyard drydock man. known as the "Oood- doorroommaster." Finally. he hired a parttimc assistant. the "flooddoor- roommoonltghter." Behc' e that's the limit. Q. Is 11 true that (1cn DougJas MetcAnhur "'a' related both to Frankhn D. Koor,cvclt and Winston Churchill'> A. D1stantl}. A s1\th cousin to Roosevelt. an eighth cousin to Churchill. The an cestor in common was Sara Barney Belc her of Taun ton. Mass. Obsent·d F1nlcv Peter Dunne· "lfa man 1c; v.1sc. he get\ nch. and ifh~ gets nch. he gets foolish. or his wife docs. That's 1.1.hat keeps the money moving around.·· Rapid K epi ~ Ye~. sir. a -spermolog1 !>t" 1<; a lOllector. all nght. but a collector oftn-.ia O'erheard: "Hav ing a good ~ea~· "Best ever Could break evrn ' Q t lov. do )'Ou pronounce "ghot.,1"? .\ I remember th:u one "Fish." h's ··gh" a\ in .. touah." And "o'· as ui "v.omcn " ..\nd "11" a~ 1n "emotion " \o "ghot1" 1'1 pronounced "li!>h." L.M. Boy d Is • 1y11dlca1ed rolumn/11. H. L lchwarta Ht P'vDltlMt ''-*ZMI J.1~£01or Tom Taft p ,...,.., -· °"' c.i .... ~ el )30 w ..... , ,, Cot••""-AdOt-<Of•tepOf-Oo 10 lcn l ~ c-...... CA mn C I}' [OIOr Cr ... lheff !JQortl fooor ' ~; ''A·poJttJcal appointee•• IJinoranceofhl• dutlea I• u1uallyoutwe'1hed bythedJplomatlcaklllofht1profe .. 1onalunderU1W•. •ndhJ1ea1y accea to the president can compenaate for a wealth of JrrltlJtJng J ncompetence. • • 1 Near-miss has him thinking about synchronized lighting Variety of systems available to make traffic~w better" I ')av. something trul) fnghte n1ng the other da}. What \cared the pants off me ma) or ma~ not ha' e had something to do v.11h the traffic-light S} nchron1za11on problem that IAC ha,c. but m} optn1on 1s that 11 dcfin11cl} did Let's tal.c a .. mall break to talk ahout the traffic-light problem some more ..\nn·s car had a small problem. so I took 11 to the garage. I went up Magnolia from Pacific Coast H1gh- wa \ to Talben. I turned left on Taibcrt I proceeded to about tw o blocks "'e"t of Beach Bouk,ard I caught l''CI) ltght 1.1.h1lc 11 was red. I don·1 r<:all} know v.hy I menti on that fact I npcctcd to catch c' cl) hght red I decided to '>Cc ho~ other c111c'> handle their traffic light problems I called th e C'tty ofSan Diego. The} have a popula11on of930.000 now. as 1.1.ell a~ 83 'i controlled 1ntcr~ec11on~. Tht'} use several S) stems. and 1.1.hrther their lights are coordinated desx·nds upon who )OU talk to The S}Stcms the) use include traffo:-actuated (sensors buried in the street at intersections). t1me-basc coord1nat1on (lights set to change at specified time in1enals) and a '>)'Stem called C altrans 170. This last •i>stem. as clescnbed to me. got me sort of excited. The last time I talked to our men, I was told that there 1!> a .. hard-wired" system being installed at the present lime. first on Brookhurst with Warner soon to follo"' A ver. conservati ve cost estimate for onl} opening and closing the trench nothing else. on half-mile centers ( Brookhurst) is $8.000 per light. That's JUSt for the trench. The Caltrans 17p. a microprocessor sys- BILL HARVEY tern aoout li ke an Apple computer. costs S6.500 to $7.500 per ltght. It can be run either hard-v. ired or on a time- base S)Stem. That sounded great to me. $6.500 per lt~ht instead ofSS.000 plus wire. conduit and the guts to run the thing. By the wa}. the problem exists tfirougftout inc count). I'm using Huntington Beach as an exam- ple because that's the area I'm most familiar with. 1 called our gu}s. 1 learned a fev. mon: things Yes. they knew of the Caltran'> 170. and the lights on PCH and Beach Boulevard arc controlled b) this S) stem. Being state highways. these two streeti; rnme under the JUnsd1 ct1on ol ( altrans (the state Depanment ol Transportation). as do all freewa} ramps. M> own experience has been th<it. depending on tramc conditions. these two streets arc !>omet1mcs S\ nchron1zed and somet1mc'i not. · I repeated the stat<:ment that I've encountered the most in mail on the subject: that the hghts are apparent!) set 10 go red at eve!) intersectio n. !>O wh} can't the) be set to go green? I learned that the lights. at least 1n Huntington Beach. arc not set at all ~ They each operate on their own lmlc timer. totall y independent of each other. And. apparently. that's the wa) thcv'll be. far into the distant future. Why'> Because the city of Hu ntington Beach is engaged 1n installing a S} stem that will C' entually result 1n S)nchronized light!>. but it's going to take lots of}ears to complete. What do we do tn the meantime? Aha' Catch 22! There 1s a relati vely inexpensive system that could be installed. and 1t v.ould work. at least better than the present system. The problem 1s that 1t would be a temporary system. As more of the _QJanned system came into being, the temporary system would be deac- tivated. Based on the resounding defeat of Proposition A. these guys ha ve got to watch their budgets. How do you 1ust1f)' the additional cost of a temporaf} system to the taxpayers? Cost of this system. based on 84 traffic lights in the city. would be about SI 00.800 Is 11worth1t to you to ha' c S} nchron1zcd lights? They need to know. Write to me. care of the Pilot. and I'll see toll that your letters reach the proper people. Even a post rard that sa)s either "Yes" or "No" will do. Herc's yo ur chance to be heard. Now. let me tell you what scared me so badl). I was northbound o n Beach and stopped for a hgh t at lnd1anapohs. The light turned green for me. so I started off. I had to slam on m} brakes as a woman. south- bound on Bea('h. turned left onto lnd1anapohs. directly 1n fro nt of me. She was in a brown C'ad1llac. There was a very pretty blond baby. probabl) 1 or 3 years oW, hanging out of the window on the passenger side. That's exactly where I would have struck her 1f m) brakes had failed or I had been ~lower reacting. and where the centrifugal force of her left turn was the most se vere. Had the door of her car not been completely secured, that baby would ha ve been 1n the middle of Beach Boulevard. directly tn the now of oncoming traffi c. She knew she was running a red light. so she went through at a pretty rapid cl ip. There is. sometimes, justice in this wo rld. There was a pohce car directly behind her at the light. and he turned on his lights and went after her. lad). I don't know where you were going. but I hope 11 was important enough to nsk a baby's hfe. Columa/11 Biil Harvey /1 • resld~at of Huotlagtoa Beacb. Ambassador shares blame for loss of Morocco as ally President hamstrung by rewarding ----political ally with sensitive post WA HJNGTON -Presidents the works until it was too late for have been rewarding political allies anything but hand-wri ngi ng. Though with ambassadorships practically the Libyans had been couning King Mnce the birth of the republic-to the HRassan of Mo~occo for over a }eilr. occasional embarrassment of the eed was so bllthelr confiden t of his u d b 1 1 h close fhendsh1p with Hassan that he nite tates. ut on Y rare>' w1t. • discounted evidence that the k1na an> seriou<; harm to the nation s mi~hl not be completely loyal to the foreign policy. , United tatC$, A poht1cal appomtce s ignorance of It was a measure of Rccd·s detach· his duties 1s ~suall~ outwe1~cd hy ment that Ile was vacationing in the d1plo mat1c ski ll of his pro-Maine when Morocco's "fncndship feu1onal underlings. and his easy treaty" with Libya wos announced. :icce s to the president can com-Old hands in Foggy Bottom and on pcnsate for a wealth of 1rriuu ing Capitol Hill weren't surprised that incompetence. Recd wa!l. lttcrally, so far out of 1t. But 'iomcth1ng went wrong v.-1th the Recd ha<; admitted. in conversa- trad1t1onal \3feguards when Jo<.cph 11ons with irate mcmber!I ofCongres , Werner Recd \Ct out o n the road to that hl'i old budd) Hanan informed Morocco tn 1981 ( him of the treaty with Libya only an The rcc;ult wac; c;1rateg1c d1'3 te1 hour before the monarch announced for the Rcaa,an adm1nistrat1on: the 1t to the rest of the world. For years the a'>tonishtng union of a supposedly ambHSDdor had oc;~ured anyone staunch U.S. ally, Morocco. with the w11hin earshot that he had "un- virulenll )' ant•·Amcrican di<'· precedented" accec;s to H3!i~n and 1111or!lh1p of Libya. his inner circle. 11 would be unfa ir to lay the Reed's behavior ac; ambas~dor Morocco·LibJ an rapprochement was based on h1~ liubl1me ('Onfidencc solcl> 111 Recd s door. The Cl is sttll that his close rclauonsh1p to Ha sen trymg to fiaurc out what happened. en~urcd cont1nu1na U.S.-Moroccan and the agcnc) will have wme hard solldarit)' Reed once had the sentry Que tlOM to an wer before outraacd boxc'i out 1de his Rabat re 1dcncc t"ongre\~1onal committee\ p;un1ed red. white and blue. and But Recd can cruunl) bear a larac named tbc hou\C Viii .t\mcnca \harc of thc hlnmc for the White When the MorocC'nn pt1mc min1'itcr Hou\C'\ r.ulure to lea1n ~h11t was tn had lea w1ttr thc 4\cnatc f oreign Jacl AIDEISOI RclauonsCommittcc in Washington. Recd unfurled a large banner to welcome him. In fact, Reed suffered from a severe case of "clientitis .. -a malady not unknown in the Foreign Se rvice. He ang Hanan's praises to Coniressand 1he White House. He helped engineer an intclligence·sharina agreement with Morocco that pve Hassan mformation that U.S. py satellite had picked up on the Pohsario rebels in the disputed western Sahara war. Tlits;igreement and~eral others arc now under rcvic~ tbe Whtte House is undcrstandabl}' leery of shari na 1ntelli cnce with Qaddafi. For all his claimed intunacy with the Moroccans. Recd is 'often rid1· culcd by them. An ambanador'is supposed to be the president' eye and Cal'$. as well as the mouthpiece for an admin1s· tnu ion's views Once aaain, an American president has been hamstruna by having a n un- profeu 1onaf ambauador ~ a ~ns1t1"c forc11n cmba '· Jact Altdtf'IOI 11 a 119dJc•IH col•m•l11. J AO& AND&aeoR ool••na.t PAT BuclWIAll Drama ··'Ju. stifles' klll,ng Reagan WASHINGTON -Friday after President Reagan's re-election. Citizen s' Theater in Glasaow, Scotland, hosted the world premiere of"J udith." a play by RolfHochhuth, the radical dramatist whose "The Deputy .. accused Pius XII of moral comphcity in the Holocaust or Europe's Jews. Several years afier "Deputy." this wunderkind of the German theater produced "Soldiers." It argued that Winston Churchill had conspired in the wartime murder, in an air ctasb on Gibralter. of the chicfofthe Polish government in exile, General Wladyslaw Sikorski. For that base libel, Hochhuth was forced to pay S 130,000 to the survivi ng pilot of S1korsk1's plane. Hochhuths's newest bid to re- capture his radical chic pre-eminence 1s a modernized version of the Old Testament story of Judith. the her- oine who insinuated herself into the favor of Assyrian King Holofemes. then besieging Jerusalem. savi ng her city by be-heading him with his own sword. Hochhuth's "Judith" hHas il.' tftcme the intellectual and moral j ustification for the assassi nation of Ronald Reagan. Dr. Francis Loewenhcim, Rice University historian. first came upon Hochhuth's wo rk in the orig.anal German. and brought it to this wnter's attention. From his dcscrip. t1on. and reviews carried in the Lo ndon press. herewith a preview of coming attractions. The l'rotagonisr.-tudith, an attract· 1ve widow in her th irties, a dauahter of the establishment, lives in Wash- ington with her lover, Gerald, a CIA official who is on the White House press staff. A successful joumaTist and media star. she has a brother, Arthur. a chemist. partially paralyzed and in a wheelchair. havini suffered from ~ent Orange dunng the Vietnam ar. The prologue to the play takes place in wartime Minsk.. where the Nazj commandant -modeled on an historical figure -has hired an attractive young Russian woman named Jelena. Fluent in German. which she disguises, Jelena makes hesclf avai lable to the gauleiter. She eventually places a grenade 1n the bed he shared with his pregnant wife. Act I opens with Judith and Arthur deploring the foreign and defense policies of the president, who is never named. but who apparently believes a limited nuclear war can be fo ught and won. larJely in Europe. even though I 00 mil hon will die. The news arrives that after 12 years and four presi- dents, this president has ordered the resumed production and stockpiling of poison nerve gas. Quickly a plot is ha tched to assassinate him. Gerald is to provide access to the president, by getting Judith an inter· view at his stables -the president is fond of horses; Arthur is to pr-0vide the poison gas: and Judith is to use a perfume spray to deli ver it. thereby killing the president with his own Jn the final act. Judith. and Gerald arc skinny-dipping in the Potomact when the radio blares the news that the president has collapsed and died. "after he began to suffer shortness of breath during the afternoon:· While Gerald expresses remorse. Judith exults: "A female civilian practiced a- prcventive strike aga inst one who intended 1t for 100 million. That ts not murder. That is self defense ... Throughout the play, and in the notes appended, Hochhuth suggests parallels between Nail Germany and the United States. between Hitler and Reapn. The Guardian calls it a "brutally elcpnt production, .. with the set described as "ofTcnna an appropriate Germanic 1mqt of America ... Accord1n& to Or. Locwcnhe1m. Hocchuth suucsu that the join\ chiefs uric<S Ike to launch a pre- emptive strike, that the Dallas poli~ murdered JFK.. that the ClA blew up Lord Mountbatten because he op- posed U.S. nuclear plannina in Europe. While Hochhuth contends "Ju~ dith" is mertly an eitploration of the araumcnu for and apin1t aauuina- t1on. not ajustin(ltion ror mur<knna the prt1tdcnt. there 1s little doubt about where the playwfiaht ~mes down. And if some ahcnatcd, bitter youth can draw from "Taxi Driver" tbc idea of shootan.J the president to impress an actress, 1t will take no leap ohhe 1maaination for 10mc Rcapn· hater to discover here the absolution he may be seckina ror riddina the world of such a menace 11 Hochhulh'i pre ident . from aucmlla thCjMf, we move 10 tc=rronll theater • P•rrltt llll<'h&fui 11 • 1jHlcaU4 ~l•m•ltt. -·- Orange CO.St OAILY PILOT I~, Nouaal• jl, 1IM . Sav~ strength to ~urviVe outdoor GOiden West College museum exhibits show simple waysto find food, shelte~ tJLE OF 3'S You Can Survive: 3 .mtn~1te w ithout au 3 hburs without !>twit ~r 3 d, ys without wott•r J wr.wks w1ttiout to(,d By JOYCE BODLOVICH "You should never ao to the mountains or desert without bem1 'properly prepared,· " Brenner said. "Otheiwise people can end up in a great deal of trouble." Consequently the first display case shows contents of a survival kit. While ready-made kits may be purchased at a sporting goods store. many peoP.le create their own. Some of the basic items incl ude: water- proof/windproof matches. candid. utility cord, tinder tabs. first aid needs amd water purificauon tablets. "Water purification tables arc very important," Brenner said, "because Giardia. an intestinal parasite, is becoming quite prevalent in the mountains. If you don't purify the water. the result can be very severe." ............................... The Rule of3's, largely printed on a card restin& beside the contents of a survival kit insideaglassdisplaycase, represents the theme for the current Wilderness Survival Exhibit at Gold- en West College's Science Museum. Curator Candace Brenner says the display can be useful for those intending to enjoy the benefits of Mother Nature. How to start a quick fire is shown in another display. Different types of leaves. grass and moss are suagested as available ·material that will ignite immediately. Anl.mal• are part of wlldemeu •1ll"Yi•al ezh.lblt under- written by Amlnoll USA and REI 8portl.ni Gooda. C&mptna enthaaiut:a who learn new .. tdoor ..tety technlqa.,_ at mueam ezh.lbit won't be lD tllla dllem•• "We have tried to deal Wlth four aspects of survival: shelter, fire, food, water and a little first aid. Just by studying the exhibit, you would be better capable of surviving," she said. The museum, tucked unobtrusive- ly in room 114 of the Math-Science Building, under the leadership of Brenner and associate curator Kris Lattin has definitely put forth a studious effort to teach the necessity of being ready for emergencies out· doors. "It's much easier to light a fire with matches than trying to make one with two sticks." Brenner added. Betausc shelters can make a dif- ference between life and death, the curators have constructed model-size temporary quarters for the forest, desen and snow. "The cold and heat are the first things that can get you." Brenner said. "H ypothcrmia and heat stroke are the real killers." Hypothermia. Brenner explained. 1s caused when the body beg.ins to lose heat faster than it produces 11. Symptoms arc lack ot hmb control. confusio n and drowsiness. "Be creative," Brenner said, when making a shelter. Forest shelters are made from fallen trees. branches and leaves. Plastic sheet shelters are held in place with rock, din. bark or anything available. Snow shelters get a little more ~omplicated arid require cutting blocks of snow slightly longer than your body. "You should always have a cutt1ng tool as part of the survival kit. The less energy expended. the better." Brenner emphasized. The same idea applies to construct· mg a desert shelter. Because of the heat. tht shelter-builder must make sure the effort required for construc- tion docs not cause the loss of precious body fluid. • Therefore, Brenner suggests. stay- ing under a car, if possible. If not. then try pulling some bushes together to create ~ade and digging out the topsoil so the remaining din is cooler. "Water is critical for survival," Brenner said. ''So we show the proper wa} to construct a still. We also . explain other ways ot obtaining water." Food. the lowest pnority m"terms of survi vaJ, 1s exhibited w11h copious representatives of the plant family. -T "It's eas1erto find plants than to tr) and trap animals," shr said. "Also. grasses 1n the area are echble and the seeds from the gra~ arc a quick source of energy." Brenner cited cattails as bemg an excellent edible plant that also can be used for i nsultatton under, a jacket after the heads of the plant open. ConcemmJ. inJCCU and animals. Brenner's philosophy 1s "i{ it moves. cat 11." However. she added, think about the energy )'OU will spend trying to snare an ammal. Decide if it is worth 11 and if so ... animal life is more abundant m tbc water. "We are not sayi ng." Brenner concluded. -that you'll be an expert when you leave here. But at least we are opening up new ideas. then suggesung further sources of study (reference books) easily accessible." -·- ...................... c....... Wade Roee, Stanley van den Noort, Saaan Beard, Don Hanna, Robin and J .K. Leuon, Janet Jordan, Linda and Raah Hill with Jean Leichty party before lab toar. UCI's medical 'miracles' ra·scinate Re Search Associates Visit molecular genetics was outh ned by Dr. Bert Semler, ,..... who explained that research continues into thc- ----,,.---------f..,,----d~----mystenes of poliovirus to learn how it uses tts genetic labs 10r scienti le up ate information to'causedramaticchangeswithin--the infected cells. It is a path that may lead to development of new vaccines and anti-viral druJS for the prevention and cure of many illnesses (i ncl uding the common cold). he indicated. Members and guests of Research Associates, a suppon group of the UC Irvine College of Medicine, looked at slices of the human brain, "listened" to the sound ofhum~n tissue and envisioned medical miracles of the future during a tour of campus laboratories. Then they dined at the Uni versity Club and helped pay tribute to Dean Stanley van den Noort. · Research Associates i~ a group interested in learning more about medical science and, in particular, the work at UCI, rapidlygainins world attention as a leading medical research center. · Athalie Clarke founded the organization and was at 'thcdinncrparty/tourto present van den Noon with a lovely glass memento (a surprise)as the first annual research achievement award. Among the "miracles" unfolding for th visitors was the world's only PET Scanner used to st e human brain for schizophrenia, depression. anxie and other mental illnesses. The group also watched the Radiological cnce machinery that de.a ls with ultrasound. a technique that scndscxtremely higb frequency sound wave$ toa portion of the body to examine for abnonnalties. ( UCl has become oneoftheleadets in pioneering ultrasound imaaingand diagnostic techniques.) Demonstrating ultrasound was Dr. Leoaard Ferrari (who sat with 1 Geor1e Hewitt and Vivian Hall at dinner). Further work on the study of microbiology and "Don't you hope they are working on whatever we might get," asked Connie Morthland (secretary-emcee) as some Associates discussed what they had seen on the tour. Others there were vice president Jean Liechty (husband Doac wascelebraung his and Donald Duck's 50th birthday at the Orange County Sports Celebrity banquet in Anaheim that honored Peter Uebenotb). Mary and James Roosevelt (she's program chairman), Flo11 (membership chairman) and Ed Schamacller, Gerll and Thelma Muller and Mary Ann and Lea MUler. Also, Dolores and John Vlrt11e, Ed McGrath, Barbara Grady, John Robinso•, Tom and Emma Jane Riley and Doa Hanna of Western Propenies, who was talking about a client who is interested in constructing a major medical and research facility on the campus. • • • • Invited guests. close to 250. attended the 20th a nnual ChristmUGift Sho p Preview at HO!!& Mcmonal Hospital' Conference Center. They wen: served cham- pagne and hors d'oeuvrcs as they looked o ver.@ sparkling array of prospective presents for sale. (The following three days the sale was open to the public.) The event raises funds that go to the hospital as part of the Auxiliary'sannual gift, explained Vlr1lala W11lllllstoa1 president. Pew LlDtoD serv~ as chair- man of the sale. Shoppers included the Carl Coslows, William Reekers, T)aeodoreStelnmetnand Richard Moat1om· erys, Mr. and Mrs. GeorgeHoa1ll,Mrs.RayFord Bulloch, Diane and Michael Stephens (hospital adminis- trator). Vada Taylor, Dr. Michael and Dlaaae Nisbet, Candice and Roser Schnaop and Tami Parrott. ' . . The fo rmer sales office for Harbor View Develo~ ment became a "concert hall" recent I) as Gerry and Christ.a Long entertained with a chamber music conctn in the I ,()()().square-foot living room of the structure which 1s now their home. The pianist was MarUyn Bentley; Ge IT). whp used to play with the Metropolitan Orchestra. wa~clarinctist and former Los Anseles Philharmontc orchestra. member Romneya Waala11 was cellist 1n the Brahms and Beethoven pr<?&ram. The 60gucsts included a number of the lrvinf Co. employees(chairman of the board Donald Bren developed Harbor View) including Joe Bentley, outside legal counsel and husband of Mani) n. the Sam V anlaadln&bams, Val Smiths, Sam Hayneses and Bill HJtchcockl. Others were Carrie Lou and Emil Kuri (he designed D1sne) parks) and Roma and John Gurney of Cameo Shores. who was formerly a Metropoh tan Opera ban tone (he'salso the fatheroflnd) racer Dan Garney). "Once or twice a year we have e"entsofth1s t) pe," said Gen). who jovially said he 1s a clanneust reincarnated into real estate. ,, ' .. ., Diane Wellner uad Sandra Frank pTeYiew Paparazzi is edited by Dail} Pilot l.' le Ed11or \.'1da holiday ,ut Mle at H~ Baepltal. Dean. .. , ' J I• I Orange Cout DAILY PILOTIMond1y. NovemMr 19. 18&4 . . Baldnessamatterof hlllrtoday,gone tomorraw DEAR ANN Sen obit womcncouldn'1rare le 1bou1 baldne s. l DEAR PENN: rm,.i. .......... ., ,_Ille cu,. lMl•ldul fellj'Wtoere'• lllepool IUle!" -• r<f•rtM LANDE~: How hayeenjoyed thct0mpanyofmaleswith th1ck.aorgeous , JCH1Hatbeca81elamMWqlDMbaUU..l1. Pl•Mlttm• &otllleNewBe4fordra,.. 'hateom••• •1t1sree&M wl&I about letuna me use hair. as well as tho~ who have none. Let's face it. for most uow lf tllle mtdla report altllow·•P oe Wt ela1t•1 lH1llter. Ja1tlce O"rte R. Ea1dHl111 weleeme4 Heat)' yourco~umn to say A;... of them it's hair today and gone t~~on:ow. aetlv1Ue1. Here'1 U.. cu,. rm 11r• a few mllUoa readert wtt• "Wt.ere &MMD 11 Ute dama female reporter'! All somethn-a to.t~ bald 111111 The 1«ure man knows what 111ns1de his head is far wlll alM t.e WU., mad. rlsllt, are yoa ttady, baby!" .. men of Ame.nca. more Important than what IS rowina on it. To me, such a A female11ew1 reporter ... verb•llY lllaraHed at. After &Ille luellleoa, Haa .. m .. ,di It .... dirty Ian;' uin&le I ... IUS man is loaded with se11, appea . -A WOMAN OF GOOD lucbeo• of Moa&iomery Coa&y, Pa.t coaunalty teadera. tbtaa. b•• IC w11 fuay. I bope 1lltdlda t take It to Mart. I woman in my 30s LM TASTE IN LAS VEGAS ne u .... HoneCompuy, uall·muuoclal tleb, blvlted woulda't1111IU1er for &Ille werld." who never thouaht DEAR LU VEGAS: All tllose bal4 mn "' &MNaN reportert a. conr l&a auuJ luneoa, wlllklll featare1 Oee local poUtlclu,Albtrl L Herrmau. •MdW Ml ~ldnessdetracted . ( pba1 to love yM. At>'" pe6a&ed "'· '"" Mver an•• oa bawd)'~" ud coaM4y aklll. nn reper1er Meredltll a&teacl tile lucltHt, retlpH from lie cle 111 prolett ti 1rom a. man's ap~ran_ce. Wha~ I d.o find un~tuact1vc to a bHy 1tttet. M. Hury appeared, &Mel•'-membtrt at flrtt refaled to Ute memt.era' t.ehavlor. the polnt of revulsion) 1s bad haup1eces, flak1ni11.uc. an~ · • • • allow 8-er 10 nter, b•t die• releattd. f . , • ~ . , v;orst ofal~, thll rcm.,-kable phenomenon, th.e at.rdo wath DEAR ANN LANDERS: l am enclosing a newschp n..pr .. W..tof ..._,,..,,a.Mr• J. Hau1.m, Di coverhowro ~dare balfwlfhour fi/11"1.. hook. lit t~ t>.ck ftinacar<>'!"noutabout a foot and ~wirl~•cross fort he lady who was upset by the decision of ajudee in aaDOucedlllerpretHCetiJ' aayla11Mcl1bwa1 DOt &M and sinker. Ann unders'bookler. "Da1Jn1Do1•nd the top ~f t~e head in an effort to create the illu~ion that Canada. She should check out what's happenina nght here ptOJitr place for a wemu. "I bve •ever allewed a female Don 'u ... will hdp you ~ more Poi~ and su~~ou~I. something is growing there. in the USA. We have a few ju<t&es who could use a lesson la t~I• room Mfere,'' Hauam u.ld. Ai Ille •pH•. wolllM9 on datel. ~nd SOccnt.ulon1 with a long, 1t1m , self. Whyd<!n't Lh~ men just weara.sif.n that says. "I'm on victims' rights.-BOILINO MAD IN PENN-moved.,,..C&Mroom,aervbasfoodudelearl•t &a8-le1. ttddre :Wenvdopc, with your request to Ann ndcrs. \)aldandtrying mydamedtstto htde tt' '? YLVANIA Heary•1pre1eacewautbowled1edbyboota1.0ne P.O. Bo,'( J 1995(h1cago. Ill. 60611 . . Merchan·dising mystifies When a merchant or a shopkeeper is born. his first words are. "Please, GQd, please send me an Erma Bombcck." • I am the quintessential consumer. 1 buy quickly. I buy often. And 1 have absolutely no taste whatsoever. lfthe sleeves are a little long, I'll roll them up. If the hem is uneven. I'll walk wtth one shoulder higher than the other. If the color isn't quite what I want, I'll sit in bad light. There isn't a retailer who cannot recite the digits of my credit cards from memory. ~Y husband says I am the only person in the world who can run up a S 136 ch"arge at the carwash. Having established my credentials as a shopper, I will now proceed to question some of the mysteries of shopping that have astounded me for years. . How come I have never seen a tire that wasn't on saJe? Or a Housewares Boutique that wasn't going out of business? Beauty shops never go out of business. They just have big signs 1n their windows that read, "MOVED TO A NEW LOCATION." How come people who sell used cars assume we are all hard of hearing? If we needed those kind of decibels. we could~'t qualify for a driver's license. And why is 1t perfumes .and cosmetics are never sold by American women'? They arc always Europeans with hairdramaucally pulJed 10 a bun in the back and accents so thick .you can barely understand t~e name <?f the product. The only things Amen- can women sell are laundry de- tergents and toilet bowl cleansers. Why do they put seats and ashtra)'s in dressing rooms? It is not my favorite place to entenain guests. Possibly the onJy person I would allow in the room with me as I am chan$ing my clothes 1s someone who has given b1nh to me. I have never in my life seen carpet that has not been marked down from its original price, or that is guaranteed not to last a lifetime. (If this were true. Doe~·your child need safety seat? Effective January I , 1983. ------------ California adopted the Child TR•fflC Quiz Passenger Restraint Law. " Which of the following best describes the law? A) Every person under 18 years of age must wear a seat belt while riding in a vehicle. B) All children under 4 years old or weighing less tban 40 pounds must be secured in child safety scats when Fidi ng in •••••••••••• vehicles. C) All children under 12 years old must'f>e secured in child safety seats when riding in vehicles. .1 D) None of the above. Answer: B. Under 4 years old or less than 40 pounds. In California during 1982. over 4, 700children under the age of 4 were killed or injured in traffic accidents. This figure dropped to JUSt under 4,400 during 1983. Parents who say they cannot afforp a car seat should be reminded that seats are available for less thhn $40. Car seat loan or rental programs are available to eligible Orange County families for a small deposit through the Orange County Trauma Society. Que1tloa aad aa1wer tuppUed by the Newport Beacll Police Depar1mnt. · then how do all the carpet stores SUI}' in business?) Wh y is it men who never sew sell sewing machines and men who never vacuum sell sweepers? And if you wearajuniorsizearid arcover SO, you have to jeopardize your hearing with fun ky music to buy clothes. How come shoestores always have big signs on them that read. "OPE N FOR BUSINESS'"! What else would they be open for'? · And why would toy departments have everything close to the floor when they know children will try o ut everything and ... forget I asked. I just bought a three-foot teddy bear and the baby is 26 years old. Merchants know what they're doing. Decorate with fruit, vegetables By EARL ARONSON Thanksgiving season 1s a good umc to use and display honicultural products -flowers. fruits and v~g­ etables -in the home as a sign of thankfulness for the harvest. Back in Colonial days, table centerpieces were made of fresh fruit, substituted-fo r unavailable fresh Oowers. Red and yellow apples. oran,cs. grapes and bananas can provide a colorful arrangement. So can com, carrots, cranberries. seeds and nuts. Some of your display items won't last long with hungry Thannpving guest.s around. But the addition of dried flowers. colored leaves, grains and bright autumn chrysanthemums, evergreen brancheJ and acorns will add to the .significance of the bounteous autumn season. Arrangements with dried ma1erials can be enjoyed fora longtime-even until the Christmas holidays. If the fresh fruit vanishes. replenish it. Corn. peanuts and cranbemes have long been a pan of the Thanksgiving tradition. Corn has been perhaps the most imponant crop in the Americas. The first Europeans to see corn growing were crewmen of Chnstopher Col- umbus· ships in 1492. Fields of corn st ubble were found by the Pilgrims when they arrived at Plymouth in the late fall of 1620. A KOCt:·TV 1 PUBLIC AffAIRS SPt:CIAL I THE JEWISH Ht:RITAGE: AN ORANGE COUNTY VIEW -· or A• a follow·up to tllc ht•tortcal r.as •rta "Hertt•ac• CtYlllz•tton and tbc Jew•," ncwaman .Jim Cooper and •••la fro• t•e local Jcwl•h community wlll rcnect on both Ute l•pad of Ute PBS aerie• •nd tbc slgntncancc of the .Jew I ah pttaenc:.e I• Or••ae county. TONIGHT • KOOfi-lV / 50 .. 9:30 F.l'I. "•de poNlblr by a arant from Ille Corporation for rubll< llf'oadca .. ln9. ... 'l .. MNltG -t:to- 1• NlWI IWt'Y °"YI AGAIH 9 NR. FOOTIALL tw.TTOtw.T LftlTYLll OF TI4E llCH NllJ IF~l~Ntt ITMTM< ·-IVOflT tNTNJ0UaNG llOLOQY mlNIWI ...... CB) =AN OY1<£ *** "AM The Algtrt MoYet" (1"3) Tom CruiM. Ctllg T. Nelton. (l)MOW U "Staying AM" (1983) John Tra- YOlta. Cynthia Rhodtl. -t.'30- I HIONIWI LAYEME l MN.fY =~ILEHAEA NEW9HOUA I =OOMPHIC Vl8IOH I ODO OOUPt.I • g MJ; NIWI NIGHTUHI .... NllJAUIN Vl8AI 810tl81MON 1'0CWI • MOYIE· **'~"Rabid'' (f979) Mtflyn Ctllm- bert. Fm Moor•. (%)MOYIE o•'h "The Right Stuff' (1983 Sam Shepard, Soot1 Glenn. -12:00- 1...,..'...,.. 1WIUGHT ZONE THMEM&O MOYIE ***"The Hatdel T~ Fiii" (195e ~~ ... l ~IAH FR.+MCllCO ~,.. MOYIE U "Falcy Tlltt" (1978) Doti ~~ Rlctlltdton. • t "Porky'1" ( 1981) 0111 MonlhlD, Mlrk Hefrier. -12:*0-Qt WHEE. OF FOA'TUNE GTHATOIAL -7*'-8C88NEW8 8 S100,000 NAME ™AT TUNE et.CMIOAT D Ill LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID Woody Allen and Diane Keaton •tar ln their ~ O.Car·wtnnlng movie ••Annie Han•• tontcbt ~ HfTCHCOCK at 8 on KCOP. Channel 13. ITHRHM&O -~ Cf) NlW8 Cf) MOVIE ~ GMYTHEATER (.t)~ THE SECOND COMING """!K; e Tlf&'S COMPNtt e WHEE. OF FORTUNE G S-t· 1 CONTACT (A)Q Cl) p .M. MAGAZINE Q!.EYPNVf CH).., .. '"' ..... "An Ana" To Rtmtmber" tt'h "lo The Glit1tf Plilee" 11977) u • "The Secret Of N.l.M.H." (195~u 0.!!"~~~lh Kttr. Barb1ra Hefshey. CMd E\19rttl. (1982) Animated. Volcel of Elizabeth m>-n_... r11:n1i-: AN e LATBflGHT A#/EIW;A "'"'' ORANGE COUNTY Vft Hll'tlllM. Dom ..,.,.\liW 9 ENTERTAIMHT TONaff -12:AO- (Q) MOVIE ID'l ....,,.,_..,. .. Tw· IW~ Cl) MCflll..L'AH & WIFE !~ * * t "Spring And PO<I Wine" I 19701 Jlmel"Mtson. Su1111 Gtorvt. ***'.+ "The tittle Fo1es· (1941) ~M~ Betit Davis, Herbert Marsnall (J) MOYIE • -10:00--1:00- eNOTMDMllFOOTIAU. HllHnJGHTI. -7:ao- 8 20HTHUOWN ** t 'h "The Righi Stuff" ( 1983) I Cl> CAGNEY" • ._l lACEY Sam Shepard. Scott Glenn • iw;nao -l:aO-I Sf"( 8 HOLL YWOOO CLOIBJll' (f)MOVll I Qt FAIAY FBJO _,.,If CINCIHNATI D TIC TAC OOOOH e AMERICAN P\AYHOUSE CJ) LOYE IOAT G Tld OlD HOUSE t "OtMtt Trill" (1935).John Wsyne, Mary Kornman. I PEOPLn COURT WILD. WILD WORLD OF NeMLa eWCNISMOMS • ENTERTAIMHT TONIGHT 0 CAU. TO GLORY 8 terr AGE: CMUZATIOH AHO G CAU.Nl AU SPORT8 TI4E JlW8 (8) MOW eMOYIE· ... ~ "The Couch" (1982) Gtfll'lt Wiiims. Sfllrlly Knight. Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH CJ:) THE RICHAN> BELZER SHOW * ** '.+ ''The Right Stuff" ( 1983) -t:OO-Sam Shtc>ard. Scott Glenn. 0 emRTMMNT TONIGHT -1:06-e HAYE GUN. WU TRAVEL i=:m- (O)MOYIE KATUAWE ;• "Lone Wm! McOuada" (1983) ATAL Vl8IOH Ct1UClc Horns. David Cerrtdlnt. (l)MOYIE .. ~ "Rumble Altl" ( 1913) Mtt1 Ollon. Midtey Ro&nt. -e:oo-NlW8 8 Cl> 9CAAECROW NllJ MM. KIG ll9V ONmH -10:1~ • HENTAOE: CMUZATION AND • ™Ara HOU YWOOO THfJlWS -1o:30- -1:10- • "ICM LAN & WIFE 8 Qt TV'S ll.OOPEAS ANO PMCTICAL JOISE8 • eMOYIE o DON CORYEU e INDEP£HOENT NEWS e Al.RB HfroH(',()Q( e EUAOPEAH JOUANAI. -1:ao- PAEIENT8 -10:4- CC> MOYIE 8 NEWS **** "My Flir LadY" (19M) Rex -11:00- t'tt "The Guyw Trtgedy The Story Of .Im Jones" (Plfl 1 of 2) (1980} Powtr1 Boothe, Ned Beatty • JOKER'I WIU) Cf) WKN' If CINOHHATl .flTUAl.8 Harri.on. Audfey Hepburn. (%)MOYIE * *'~ "Oodes'Ka-Otn" (1970) Yoshl- e e <1> oa e NEWS e rAXJ .MOYIE HU "Annie Hall" (1977) WOO(jy Allen, Diane KMlon. 11118 Zushl. Kiyolto T tnOt· G ICTV •MnRSOHS • AOCKfOAD Flt.ES -11:80- 1==.. -t.15- • CALI. TO GLORY -t'.30- • (I) NEWHART • lNCE1' I CLIPPER PAEVl£W 8 Qt BEST OFCAASON Ex-convict goes 'legit' becomes a Broadway star By MICHAEL KUCHWARA AP Drema Writer NEW YORK -Charles S. Out· ton's story is the stuff that builds Broadway legends. Al 13. he dropped out of the eighth grade. At I S, he was in reform ~hoot. Two years later he was in the Maryland Penitentiary for what was to be the first of a series of prison terms that eventually would total more than seven years. T9day, the 33-year-old Dutton, er recent graduate of the Yale School of Drama. 1s a star on Broadway. He is the lightning that sparks August Wilson's blistering drama "Ma Rain· cy's Black Bottom.'' the tale of four blat k musicians who bicker during a recording session for the legendary blues singer, Gcnrude "Ma" Rainey. The play was praised by the critics when it opened in October. but it was Dutton's performance. as the bitter. eitplosive trumpet player named Levee. that was especially lauded. Now there 1s talk of a Ton) nomi- nation and a major theatrica career. Movies and television are sure to follow. The adulation is especially heady for Dutton, who J"W up in an East Baltimore housing project. His parents were separated. His father, a truck dnvcr. died when he was IS. Heston longs for 'old days' "I was the middle child. the only troublesome kid," he recalled recent- ly, sitting backstage in his tiny dressing room at the Cort Theater and willingly talking abu1 his turbulent childhood. "My mom would still like to think that I was bcinf influenced by the older guys, but blame nobody but me. No society stuff." Dutton says. "I wasn't a poor, hungry kid. I always had food on the table. J could get anything." And what he wa nted to get more than anything else was his freedom . "I thought there was more happen- ing on the 5trcet comer than the classroom. I really believed that as a kid.'. he says. On lhe street they called him 'R\x: -without the k -and because he was athletic. he took up boxing to earn the respect of the older guys. And his sehooling suffered. "I was a smart kid. I could do the work. Until I quit sc~ool in the eighth ~radc. I went through without fail· ing," he says. "There are so many people now I wish I could find and talk to and apologize to. They were hammering me over the head saying, 'Look. You're an intelligent kid. Don't get yourself in trouble.' But I d idn't Ii ten. I was on a journey of destruc- tion at thuimc.." That journey bqan in earnest in 1968 when he got into a fiaht with a man who Dutton said attacked him with a knife. "I wrestled the knife from him and didn't really know that J mbbcd him until four or five days later, when I heard he was in the hospital," he says. LO NG]LES {AP) -Charlton The man eventually died. and DUt· fie ton. wh<>?C career dtvelopcd dur-ton. plcadina auilty t<> charses of 1na the tud10 system. 1s one attJ>t , man laughter, ended up with an IS- who misses the moguls and the old month prison scntenoe. day . Seven months later. he was back on "I can't 1maainc 'Will Penny' being the street and with a chanac of made now." he said of one of his altitude. favonte roles. ·•i w•tdiffercnt. I wa never a bully. "h would be said. Lo be 100 sof\ a I never stan cd fiahts. t>ut I was lry1na tOf)'. C'an you lma11ne Orson Welles to live up 10 my nickname." he said. trying 10 do ·citizen Kane· toda>1' Within ,.ll month • he w&J back in "A ml)or studio would make $0 to prison. this time for posse s1on of a 60 pictures a )'ear and employ a deadl)' weapon. permanent cadre of pcrfonnc • White 111 Jail the second time. he producer . writers and tcc'hn1ciaM. It wa involved in a d1stur,bancc. The wa cuy for an actor to build a career price was a scnt<.'n<'c ot c11h t more do1n1 a lot of picturt''i." ~ rar~ a net he ended up at the l Maryland Correctional Institution in Hagerstown, Md. It was by chance that a friend ga ve him a book of black plays. They fired his imagination. Soon he and some other inmates, with the help of a social studies teacher. were puttinJ on plays for the rest of the pnson population. But Dutton still attracted trouble. and he was severely suibbcd during a fight with another inmate. This time, -1t forced him to think about the future . He received his high school equ1valency diploma and a junior college degree while still in prison. He was released early and ended up at Towson State University near Balti- more to study drama. "My talent was shaped at Towson. I've always had the ability.'' he said. "But that 21/J-year experience gave me a desire for acting and a depth that I really cherish.'' At Towson. he studied under Paul Berman. who encouraged him to apply for a scholarship at the Yale School of Drama. His audition in- cluded a soliloquy from "Macbeth" and a speech from Steinbeck's "Of Mice and Men." He was accepted. At 29, he was one of the older students at Yale School of Drama. But he flourished under the 1ehoo1'1 extensive tnini"t in 1pcech, move. ment and history. Duuon alsocauaht the eye of Lloyd Richards, head of the dq1ma school and the Yale Repcnory Theater. who cast him as Levee in a readina of"Ma Ra iney" at the Eugene O'Neill Center 1n Connecticut. A fully stqed version of the J>laY was done last sprina 11 the Yale Rep. and Dutton repeated his role. ~ow he it on Broadway and there 11 no tumina back to h11 old trcct-fi&htina days In Behimorc. "I ut.ed to have auys from other neighborhoods say, 'Where 1s her It wi1 just Mee m tM ~terns. I think about it when I to blck borne. I tee omc of those &~YI I used 10 fight.'' Dutton says. "They're 35 now and mamed and have kids. 'They say 'Man, I looked for you for a week once.." And when the)' flnlUy found me. wcJu•\ took off our coats and staned fiahtma. Today. we j ust lauah and Joke about 11. •• I ' r Malden keeps artistic distance By JERRY BUCK .,,.......,.,..., LOS ANGELES When Karl Matden signed for the role. of Or. Jeffrey MacDonald's father-in-law in NBC's "Fatal V1s100:· instincts told him to avoid meeting the real Freddy Kassab. Normally. when he pla ys an actual person. Malden tnes to get to know the man. He lived with Futhcr John Cor- ridan . .for 11 day5when h~d1d "On the Waterfront." He talked with Gen. Omor Bradley for hi s role in "Pat· ton." In his 111tcs1 role. Malden stars in a two-part. four-hour drama baseet·on the case of MacDonald, a former Green Beret ph ysician, who in 1979 wa~convicted of killing his wife and t~o daughters, nin~ years after they died. It was the pers1stence ·of Freddy Kassab, the dead woman's father. 'th~t eventually sent MacDonald to pnson. Kassab spent years writing letters and buttonholing officials. MacDonald. who has a motion for . a -retrial pending in U.S. District . Court in ltaleig-~. N.C., maintains that his ·pregnant wife, Colette, and ht$ daughters. Kimberly, S. and Kristen. 2, were killed on Feb. 17. 1,970. by dr~a-crazcd hippie$. At the time, MacO'onald was an Army captain stationed with the Green Be~ts at Ft. Brogg, N.C. as a physicnm. "My instincts told me not to see Kassab," Malden sa~s. "I hud no loaical reason. Every time before that I'd ployed a ~rson I'd want to see and talk to him. But l had a dual role to play. lh the first half Kassab is convinced that his son-in-law is ;nnocent of murder. Then. ht's takert by surprise and suddenly comes to believe that he's guilty. "This man hud changed so much. He was so dedicated that I did n'twant to be inOuenced by that wheo I played him as convinced that Jeff wa 1nnocenL When I finally met Kassab I knew mr instinct was right. .. "Fata Viosion," adapted from the book by Joe McGjnnis, also stars Eva Marie Saint as Mildred Kassab. Gary Cole as ~acOonald, Barry Newman as MacDonald's lawyer. Bernie Segal: Andy Griffith as a U.S. Justice Depanment lawyer: Gary Grubbs as the U.S. attorney, Mitchell Ryan as an FBI c1cnt1st. and Joel Polis a an Army lawyer. Malden said he has received some nit1cism for acceptina the role be- cause many people still believe Ma1.:- P onald 1~ innocent. .., aot quite a few letters from people who tht>uf.it I shouldn't do the part." he says. · All the letters were from the Carolinas. My answer 1s that a J ury of 12 men and women found him iwlty. not me.'' • MacDOnald w,as not brought 10 trittl until 1979. At one point he wa~ freed for 18 months when the U.S. 4th Circuit C'oun of Appeals found his constitutional rights to a speedy trial had been violated. But the U.S. Supreme Court overturned that rul- ing and MacDonald is now at the federal pTison in Bastrop, Texas. He will be eligible for parole on April 5. 1991. when he will be 47. • Mal9en says as an actor he, had to figure out for himself a reason why Kassab would believe so fervently that MacDonald was innocent - then become so convinced that he was guilty. • · "The thmg I used is that he fooled me ... he says. "My intelligence. my d1gn1t)., my integrity were abu'led. ~ thot's whut madr his guilt srtl'I\ stronger. Afier 1 met Ka sab I (eh that maybe he felt the ~me way. , "At the time you're playing a real pcrwn 11'5 a great benefit to talk to the person and sec him and develop a character. but once you're done you have ~ome.J!ep1dat1on. Is he going to hke it? ~ "When we did 'Pauon.' George C. Scott and l used to talk. He'd say. 'Yoo have the advantage ofbetngable to t<i lk to Bradley.' I'd say, 'Yes, but he's also going to see 1t afterward."' Maiden's probably best known for his lon~·time starring role as Lt Mike 'tone in the ABC series "Streets of San Francisco" and for his com- mercials-for AmeACan Express. ~ This is Maiden's third film with .5aini,. Their first was "On the Water- front'' in 1954. The second was "!\II, Fall Down" i11 1962. Malden won an Academy Award in 1951 when he reprised his BrQadway role as M1t<.'h in the movie "A Streetcar.Named Desire." He says he watched about 20 minutes of the A BC remake before "I fell asleep." . Karl Malden, Eva Marie Se.lat pore over trial record.a ln "Fatal Vlalon" minUertee. coaclaclJ.DC tontclat. Those kids on 'Sesame Street' are 16 now ----------1.. -----Educational program for pre-schoolers has broadened its appeal over Uf e years fleupagusex1sted ... ,, could have been keeping children from di vulging things to their parents," said head writer Norman Stiles. live of the seven human cast mem- bers black or HisP,anie, is set in the inner city. but in recent years. it has traveled to a nearby farm to broaden its appeal. Hownow Brown and the Moo Wa ve. Grover, the eharac1er who did such a splendid impersonation of John Travolta in "Saturda) Night Fever," will make his debut as a break dancer. By FRED ROTHENBERG A'TMYle*tWrlte. NEW YORK -~·Sesame Street," public television's precocious pro- gram for pre~schoolers. has turned sweet 16. This award-winning. entenaining- ly t.'0ucational series began its 16th season today. As with any teen-ager. "Sesame Street" has all the answers: we supply the questions: -Whic h of the the human and puppet characters remain from th e November. 1969, debut'! Only Loretta Long. who plays Susan. and Bob McGrath. who plays Bob. arc originals. Puppeteer Jim Henson created the Muppets' Big Bird. Bert & Ernie, Cookie Monste r and Grover for the show. All of them arutill .ar-0und.. -Why is Kermit the Frog the only character to star in both "Sesame Street" and Henson's "The Muppet Show"? Kermit was Henson's first charac- ter. and he has been pan of other Henson productions. The rest of the original cast of inanimate characters were 'created by Henson expressly for "Sesa me Street." -What was the educational goal of "Sesame Street." and how has that evolved'! ''The original emphasis w.as on numbers and letters:· said executive produce r Dulcy Singer. "We were · · ~ 1 o Specialists say one way of deal ing trying to prepare kids ior schoo · ver with child abuse in both the preven· the years, the curriculum has grown tive and therapeutic stages is for to include feelings, the role of women , chi ldren to have complete con lidence career awareness. health. environ-.. about talking to parents. mcnt and computers. In addition. "Sesame Street" this -"Sesame Street" dealt wi th death season will also attempt to familiarin· last season after Will Lee. the actor chi ldren wi th hospitals and make who played Mr. Hooper. died. What them less threatening through th.: impact did that have? si tuation of Luis (E milio Delgado) A follow-up study. in which 31 breaki ng his arm and going to the children and 20 parents were inter-emergency room. - viewed. indicated that. for 4 and 5-"We'll follow the healing process:· year-olds. tht: messages about Mr. ·said Singer. "We'll stress that the Hooper'sdeath were clear and readily injury was accidental. that it doesn't undt•rstood. The information on happen all the time. We don't want to death was less clear for 3-year-olds. worrv kids ... Parental response to the program was "sCsame Street" also will continut• "But if we're reaching the middle class and not fhetto kids, we're not doing our job.' said Singer. -What else will be new this season? "Sesame Stree1" is gelling into 'music vi deos. One video will be called "New Moosk." featuring -Why do so many adult celebrities. including Loretta Lynn, Jane Curtin and Sid Caesar this season. appear on a kids' show? .. We don't want older brothers and sisters to come in the room. say that's a baby show and tum 11 off." said Singer. Charlene Tilton out as 'Dallas' actress overwhelmingly positive. its work with computers, and. en-LOS ANGELES (AP) -A.ctrcss statement sa id. Tilton was on the "These 1tndings suggest." the study courage the development of creati ve Charlene Tilton, who co-stars on show for seven years. said. "that television can be used writing skills with the ke yboard. "As a TV's ··Dallas" series. has been droP.-"While Charlene was surprised and effecti w~y no1 only to educate chi I-result of worh~ with computers. we ..ped from the show because there wiis_ disappointed, 'she looks forward tcr dren but to help parents ex press their know now that kids c;an create wri11ng no development left for her Lucy future projects and will leave feelings and beliefs about death with before their motor skills are de<-Ew10g character. her publicist said. amicably." their children." veloped." sa id Stiles. Tilton was surprised when The blonde. 5-foot·tall Tilton has -Will any imponant issues be -What was the original target producers opted not to renew her been pan of the rich and powt."rful ra ised this season? audience for "Sesame Street." and cont ract. said a statement released by Ewing clan on "Dalla!>." since the Indirectly, the program will touch has that changed? her publicit y firm , PMK CBS series ~n. She will stay with --WHt:IM l.Jll IN Minna •• UA Mu~l ~ '00 co:. 11.(M Pllllll UA MOW 8 -nz4~J cosu lllSA fOWAll!,., MA CCIII!!> 91941'1 ti IOIO lO...•l!OC W)OC[~ '>SJ~I GMDCll r;aow: fll¥>AAOS 1111 Sl!JOOo ~,o u o, .... I (IWAm UNWU:<.lh 8'141111 u-.. AMC rlSIO ~ 7111HI061• -LA._ ..saoCAmm \ ~ll 1611 OUIG -~MAi i &..110~· OWll UA ancoola '34 l'Jll -.ra• fO-MOS 81!1S10l ~llu E.,_Tll ltwAT J' DUI «'ll~J IOTWGJO Uf.lll!SJWCSTU lllAtl 1'3~ on the issue of child abuse by giving It was designed to reach the "The term ination results from the show until the season ends . Big Bird's so-called imaginary friend. educationall y deprived cllild in urban Lorimar's creative decision to no __::.:.:_....:.:::.:.:.:.....:::::.:.:=-.=.::....:=::.:.:....:.:..:..:.:..:.._U::=============~ Mr. Snuffieupagus. mo re credibility. areas - and still 1s. The show. with longer c~pand _her character," the lUXUfrY THfATRfS Several adults will finall y believe he r.:==============;;;;1------------1 Firn Twt llllt-Sll--.s * DRIVE-INS :t~ exists -an important lesson that O"l Y 12.75 U1tlets Not•I might per'iuade kids to talk openly Amel'it.a's /vrmWft mocho> wi th their parent s. ia .. m.r Clldmr&w The big JOke on "Sesame Street" was that nobody except Big Bird and QIHtedy of rlw ,,,.,! the audience believeo Mr. Snuf· ~the:r STADIUm a IJJ 1111,'Stlf"! !!!at S!tf"!!! .. teHT ~ T-.. COlllET s ....-,-~ "'"' ecr-1" .. rvn V 1lley Glrl (") Elvis' 50th birthday promotions planned ~±: --- ..... you .~ -·--..... ... . --NOY/ PlAYING -- 8R£A UAMows 990-4022 BUENA PARK PM:rflc's Buena Park Orr..e In 821 4{110 ~ Edwaros 5.lOdleback 581·5880 f'OUlitAIN VAil1:Y Edwards Fountain Valley 839-1500 ~UST THE WAV YOU A•E crGl SHOWS AT I :20 3:15 5 :10 7 :05 .. 9:00 OH GOOI YOU DEVIL ('wii) SHOWS AT 12:00 2 :00 4 :00 6:00 I :DO .. 10:00 THI~ OF "EA•TS C•> SHOWS AT l :30 & 1 ;00 Tiie Auor'1 Edge(PG1 l ) •t 1 ·00 5 :)0 .. 10:00 Sall)' FltlG PLAC:U IN THIE tCAllT (N) U :45 2 :55 S:OS 7 : IS & 9 25 TE•ltOA ... THE AlSL.E.S C•f Titlltrope (R ) I. Purp t Rain IAI THIEi" OF HIEA .. TS C•) Plus Co·Hlt Body Doulllt (A) LOS ANGELES (AP) -El vis Presley would have turned 50 on Jan. 8. an occasion being marked by at least two cable TV specials and a year- long RCA Records campaign aimed at both old fans and "a new gener- ation who wouldn't remember those days."1 The centerpiece of RC A's promo- tion is a six-record .. Elvis Presley-A Golden Celebration" set that -in- cludes previously hard-to-find early performances as well as some ma- terial whose existence was previously unknown. exciting find." RC A is also rerelcasinga number of Elvis classics. including "Blue Suede Shoes.'' which is going to have a video on MTV. Ms. Deary said. Elsewhere on cable TV, HBO 1s showing '7'Elvis: One Night Wi th You," consisting of previously un- released footage from a concen taped for Presley's 1968 TV comeback special. Showtime. meanwhile, 1s putting together a one-hour tour of Graceland conducted by Priscilla Presley. NOVV PlAYING -- BUENA PARK UA Movies 952 4993 HUNTINGTON BEACH Edwards Huntington 848-0388 ~ EdWards University 854·8811 iACUNA BEACH Edwards South Coast 497·1711 LA MIRADA SRO Gateway 523 1615 ORANGE AMC Orange Mall 637-0340 WESTMINSTER UA C1nemd 893 0546 El vis authority Joan Deary, RC A's west coast pnfduct development mahager. says she considers the aJbum 's greatest his torical finds to be tapes of two conccns Presley ~ve !n hi s hometown of Tupelo, Miss. in September 1956 "on his fi rst return .ft after he became a national star." r IJUllJ4 tHl/C1111w1 S..11t DH AMO AT OAK IUOO'S 111 11 • Deary said she discovered the Tupelo 'tapes -and some other new material -last year when Presley's estate gave her permission to search the music room at Gracel~nd. his Memphis mansion. "They were in unmarked boxes." she recalled. "It was an extremely A D'fvlLISHLY FUNNY MOVIE 'Very funny ... belly-shaking laughs'.' -USA Todoy ·---o • ~·~llC>Wlt0¥f'••' 0 ........................ ....... --· AfWICIM 01111 ,,...,so .. MNfC flfl(A ~2'~339 .. ,... IJA MOWS 8 ~1 49'J COSTA~ f OWAAOS SO COOi PlAlA S4i 2711 llllll'ITOlllCACH rJlWAllOS IUll..CIOfl mo.let .. [OWAl!OS W0008llClCl ~\I 06~~ lA._. AC f ASttlON SOUAI(" mn n1on3 ' lAmAOA SAO GA mm ~ mm1 wa-HUs lAC® HUS MAH 16U611 llSDW'.JO M1$$10ffV1U) MAl I 4956120 r.l.alf •aCM lOWAAOS ff WflOfl I ~40760 OMME CNOOK '342m SM 111111 CANfaMIO MISSOl lllllli m ·~•s llUIWllTQ lOWAAOS taMA west n1393 ClllU •• 'IS\OI I• I JUST fl( WAY YOIUll (l'C) 12 lO 110 oo i JO a JO 10 JO loMIRADA ~ A....._ Oii IUl111lf1 (I I 11 JO 4 20 • 10 !Ml Ol IHAl IO 00 Cl> 11\ fi l'J 10 O'I Tll JmWTi. C-) IH 'J l~'J .,,7\ l l 'J lnlr.I AJST Tit_ lfAf YOU All( (PG) IH., 14., 40 b4., 10 IGfS Ol•lttt 1 ... 11.A Mttt• lllloll ll ••• "' 11 ...... ~. llllHl Of Tll COlll[T (l'G-ll\ 17 JO ! IO l l~ b JO S tC 10 1U A SOlDD'S STi.l (Mi) I/Ill f\HO ~l.,8~!0 '\ AMA()(US ll'C I .. ,, -· I • Tll LITilC ._... Gal (J) 11 JO ., JO 10 10 Tll uron ll>CI CK> JOO 800 M$$lllt " ACTIOll (l ) 1 no / io tio l JO ~ 10 10 '° PACIFIC ORIVE·IN THEATRES• IUUU \ • 11•1110111 •• tll\HI IMI • ORANGE ~] ' IUS I Ill ""' TOii Alt( (PC) PUIS llOCO I (K ) llCHf Of fl( CMl (PQ. IJ) ~II\ TRlllllT lOll •-tm la HABRA .. ~ .. u ,Illl'.T ._, I · " MISSION BUENA PARK 1'MRE ALL OF 11£ CPIQ) Plus Co ·H •t No Smell Affair IA) UA Movies 952-4993 Edwllrels Woodbndge 551 0655 TEAC.-llS C•> AT 3:40 I. 7 :<l0 All Of Me (PG) at 1:45 5 :50 I. 9:50 NO SllALL AFFAIR C•J SHOWS AT 1 .JO l :JO S :lO 7 •30 & 9 :30 Ei mg,1f3;121 ~~.~:i i =:,,~ THC E~~-:~;r; ,., COSfA MESl EdwanlS Bnst04 540 7444 coST'AMESA Edwards Cinema Center 979·4141 ORMGE Clnedome 634·2SS3 ~ f>Ktftc·s Orange ~In 634·9361 • f€WPORT BOC~ • OM GOO r~Oln c...:1 I • 111 ltl Ol'l!'l"ll Oii\ Cl I lit WOll l°" tK IJ1 l • SO. COAST PLAZA • IOWN ClN !f~ \ c I•• fllr ••• IOWN CINllll '" 4184 SOUtH roASI ~···. ~~ lllSSIC 11 •Cfl011 •• • ... t .. • I*"' '"GOOS U f • caan ~K1 l•Slll(lllll '"-II• i ue•MiOllt.,._ ,,. 111 OI C •rcl1 10 00 $ , •• C~ll• •K rt•cr5 •ttu; ,, ,flt, 1flit J ... ' ' Oii ... mi IUl 1P'GI .. 1&1 or • '"'' r " n • •I (NI SHOWS AT SHOWS AT 9·1 D G HOSTaUSTE•S (flllll) A sot.DtE•'S STORY I COUltfTRY (PG) 7 :00 & t :OO F lot Born (PG·l l) Plus C o-Feat ure at 7 ·OO G remlins IPG> ORIVE·INS Open 6·45 WU•V1/6 JO Whnd1/ Cluldren 1111411 12 FREE U1tt.. Notwd ALL SEATS $2.00 AT EDWARDS MESA. • IRVIJ€ • -°' '""' r-11t1 l~·Hll c....,.o. .._, ,, .. uu ·~ 811 1 iiiVDSiil ~°' "'"' 1-uc1 1>41111 ·,11..~ ,, 11/0ltAl l I ,, ~ ... .,._, 't 1 l• t •\t"'~ !'{. ;b I ·.·. · .. llftUSITl '-"' ...... 11t u 11•' l!IY I(, I• 1<• lltl ~·Hl l 1•1111 ~·i:.i . .. • WESTllNSTER • CIN£MA M \' , •~ _,. OM ti(X> '°'' Of VI K -.. 191 I~ J\ ..... ... ClffMA WlSI ... , l~I IW1 CIN(MA MST .. ---.. ... , ,. .. _.. 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'If U4 8'ii'i\ii'il • . ·-..... u• l\ICU Ill IO U ' II'(. 111 Of • K • ~IO 10 2IJ 1111 lim >WOhll "- 1 • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, Novemb9r 19. 198'4 PUNKY WINKERBEAN by Tom Batluk DOONESBURY AND Al50, r:~ A MERE rEN DOlL.Af'5 E'l-'TRA .,. THE FAMILY CIRCUS "Grandma got out some of mommy's toys from when she was little, but we're only allowed to look :fit ~hem." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson ,,.,., 0 , .... ,,.._,, ..V• ,.,..... ••• ft ............ - "Next time I get the top bunk ... 1 got bonked twice during the night by your bone!" BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) ,,_,, w "Face It. George. You're accident-prone." DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham I 0101HEY KAVE HOSPITALS MiEN 'TOO WERE BORH OR WE.Qf 'IOtJ tt:WEM4~?" ~ I J l Ml>M~a:POIU· AJ/·l'flll<IC6, tH HaQIB) 1() M5fNT'>W wrm HS TRAll'fltMLIWTIA'ltJM· ' /Ahf)/ SHOE Oint Eastw-etxi is back in actien '1n this most recent with a new ~lease. entitled, effort Clint launches "Dirty Rarry Gets Annoyed: hiS usual aS9auH: . C:5 a!~~~_.fil ~-bad guys ... /~~ (=l'j;~I :;~ ~ ~<?A lfJ• .. ~~r~q I JV ST SIGNED UP FOR A 6REAT NEW COURSE ... DRABBLE I~ 'TUE JUMBO PIZZA f>l6 ~ To fU.0 R:>UR? tl-1'1 ,'fl: ~ • .., ..... -....... .._. "' ... -., 0-tt~ ..... j...,............... ... ....~ IT'S CALLED CONTROVERSIAL FRENCM 1'1-lf.N G1vf. ~ A JVM60 l'I Zl A lt.lm~ l'El'f1E.R£>kl \ FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE ...--~~~~~~~~~-- by Jeff MacNally ,, " by Kevln·Fagan by Lynn Johnston Go, 1"11 KE..! St<AI~! GEi lHRr511,cLlYI TRY1NG10 / IN IHERE, BOYS! Go KEEP UP1RE TEf\M SP\Rff. f\Re: YOO KIDDING? 1 'IY'\ \Ry'tNG lb Kl=.E.P WRRM ! IEAMGOll ) ) YAAAAB'/l --- GORDO by Gus Arriola GARFIELD by Jim Davis POC f!>O'I.' MOW'5 !NI FAVORITE OM, "TMING5 ARE PRHTY MOC.M LITTLE 6ROTHEA ? ,...---.,.,.. TME SAME. ME.RE, WILP PARTIE~ JUDGE PAR.KER R e"T\.JRNING HOME AFTER F IVE l N THf! MORNING CR.Al(:, FINOS .ASeEY'S NOTE TeU..INe:. HIM THAT I BETH IS lN THE HOSPITAL A N O HIS SONS A.RE AT SPENCER FARMS ' ,. GOOV ilM E'eJ, TME U50AL. .. HuF?RY u p ~ THE SN,AP, CR,ACK'L~ AND Pop IS S'T,ARTIN~ To PETE"R.OUT , ~----p I , by Ferd & Tom Johnson COMIN<i ! l CAN'T STAND SILENT CERE;AL . ~'--- ,.. MEANWHILE SHI: MAO A AAlR. NIGHT, MISS SPENCER• NO. ~R BROTHER HAS NOT BEEN JN TO SEE HER YET I r--.r.--.... ' BRIDGE Q.1-A:. SouLh. vul nerable, you hold: +A83 7AQ8762 0 95 +K6 Th(• bidding has proceeded: South We8t North Ea1t I '? Pa86 2 + Pa11 2 l'ass 4 PaH ? Whal action do you lake'! A. -You mighl argue lhal South ha a minimum opening bid and. therefore, should pa s. Hut that is la zy thinking. 1)n any hand where North ha first· or second round dia mond control. 12 lri<'ks could be a near cerlainly. For instance, give !'1nrth "lffiP h1>lding lik1•: +u .1 Kxx OKu +AQJ u Regardless or the defense, North can make a small slam at no trump. To investigate the pos ib11it.ics. cue bid four spades. Q.2-Aii. South, vulnt-r:.hle. you hold: +KQ "AK873 O A952 +73 Tht• bidding ha, procet>ded: North F.ut outh I + 2 ¢ 7 What action do you lake'/ A.-rt Is 1rmpWng to double, but your rC'w11rd might be insutnc:icnt. \'t111r •· i ,. can ,ur.-ly makt gnme, and lam 1s not out of th · 14ue!ltion. 'ince a new suit by ru ponder Is forcing. all we would do for t he momPnt la bid two hearu. Q.3-Roth vulnernblP, u Soulh you hold: •J85 ~Jl~2 O K952 +73 • The bidding has prO<'f'edetl: We t orlh F.Ht outh 1 O Obi Pa11 I Pu• 3 + Put 7 Wh 1 llct1on do you takf'/ A. -first. wt trust you know thllt, in this CQllfn~r. North'• JUmp Is ANSWERS TO WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ not forcing. However, 1t does show a very good hand and. probably, a near solid suit. Therefore. we would venture three no trump-the gain in dosing out the rubber if Wt' sue cecd is worth the risk. Q.6-1',;a,st Wes l vulnerable. as South you hold: + K65 c:;J AJ3 0 A4 + 1098r.? The bidding has proceeded: South Weit North Eaat 1 + Pue 3 + 3 o ? ~.4 -Nl•1ther vulnerable. as South · Whal uclion do you take'! you hn!rl· • A. -It might seem that you should + KQ63 J S 0 AKQ82 +Q7 tt>ll your partner about your di1t Thc b1drJ1ng ha proceeded~ mond stopper by bidding three 110 South I o I + ? OMAR SHARIFF WHt Pa11 ., ... North . 1 <:7 I NT £a1t P••• PaH Whal do you hid now'! I A.-Since ·pnrtnt•r hu bid twice, be is unlikely to have tt dend minimum. so it might seem Lhal you should take your chances at three no trump. However, in view of tht> par· tlal misfit. we would pr<>ee d cautiouly and rai e to two no trump. Q.5-U-Oth vulnerable, as South you hold: +A76 c:>875' O K983 +13 The hidding has prO<"eNJcd: North l!!Ht • oath W .. t I (;:> Pa t 2 <:i • Pa" 3 + Pa 1 ? What do you'bid now? A. -P11rtner i11 trying for game and looking for help 1n club . You have un cxcellPnl hand for him -four card trump upport, an ac and a king. a nd a l'lffinr value where h n • d al Jump lo four hearl9. CHARLES GOREN trump. However, you have no idea whetht'r that is the right contucl. The torrt-ct action la to pa • t bcr by 1onouncing that you have a minimum opening bid and leaving the decision to partner. Ill' might el.-ct to double. a decision wl\.h which you would heartily concur. llow do you cbooM th• IM1t ope•· ln1 lead? Charlet Gort n hH the an••Hr. For • copy of "Wlaalaa O~nlna l,ud1." Had lt.85 t "Ger••· Lead•.·· care of t 1 HW peper, P.O. e •• GI I. Pat..y • , .J . 08065. MaltC" <"ht'clt payabl o N •• paperboolce. \ ~. • ppz J ..., .... MONDAY, NOVEMBEA 19, UMM B After nine 1•m .. , McKinney qulta •1Kan ... Clty co.ch. 82. Nebr•luletlH ,.... ....... cruclelloee toOk .. ~.83. · Ano.ther roller coaster Irish to arrive on Wednesday J DiBernardo, Fighting Irish on the rise at right time for Southern California By ROGER CAR~N they've been on a roller coaster, welt 0t•o.itr,......,. the Irish have played that pme, too.' Notre Dame's 44. 7 rout of Penn They lost three s1raia)n in South State Saturday has set the stage for Bend ~is year and were 'hard-pressed what could be one of the college to defeat Navy. football 'season's biggest comebacks Th~ coach (Gerry ~aust) ~S.. bee.n -and Saturday's collision agai nst o.n a hot scat for so longJhe subJCC.t as USC at the Los ,i\ngeles Coliseum is simply ~rt <?f everyday conversauon obviously a pivotal game forthe Irish. ~~d at t~as tame .of the ycar1 frankly, They're 6-4 and pressin• for a spot ,. .11 scold in Sout~ Bend, Indiana. in the Top 20 with a bowl bid a virtual A lot of negatives? Maybe, at leas1 certainty if 1hcy can get past up-and-~Y Notre pam~ standards, but down USC. linebacker Rick D18cmardo, a prod- Rick DlBemardo But if Southern Cal's Trojans feel uct of Edison High in Huntinaton 130yards, 130 licks T_ch t ' -h t p k -including 10 for 84 sn the first haJf. _ a SW a aC erS Sa Y "The Packers defense was what we prepared for," said they gave Ra ms. Dickerson Rams a~ard Kent Hill.") f~e had executed, it could.have been a different story. Any time you lose you can point to -mistakes." MILWAUKEE (AP)-Green Bay quarterback Lynn "We pretty much took ourselves out of any chance of Dickey can appreciate good defense. especially when 11 winning the football with the huge volume of mistakes we comes from has teammates. made sn the first half." Rams Coach John Robinson said. The Packers, permitting only two first-halffield aoals, "Green Bay dominated the second half, took complete whipped the Rams. 31-6 Sunday for their founh control of the third quarter from the outset with the first consecutive NFL League victory. interception and I think that was the story of the game." • "We weren't domrnating the game offensively," Green Bay improved its record to 5-7 to stay alive in Dickey said. "but our defense did a super JOb of holding the NFC Central race. The Rams, Wlth hopes of a wild<ard Enc Dickerson down and not letting ham have the big run. playoff spof beginning to fade , fell to 7-5 in the NFC West. "Just tb give up six points to a team like that with Enc Ivery, who rushed for 77 yards on 15 carries, helped Dickerson. I think it was a total defensive effort." the Packers to a 14-6 first-halflead on two I-yard TO runs. Dickerson rushed 25 times for 132 yards, but the He was making his first stan of the season. Rams were able to generate only 297 total yards. Lewis' interception of a Jeff Kemp pass, his sixth of "Dickerson may have got over 130 yards. but he also the season, came with 5:24 remaining sn the game to give got over 130 licks," said Green Bay linebacker Mike the Packers a 31-6 advantage. Douglass. "He'll feel It tomorrow:· The Rams, unable to generate any consistency on Green Bay got three touchdown runs from Eddie Lee offense. could muster only two first-half field goafs by Ivery and a club-record 99-yard interception return by Mike Lansford. Tim Lewis for another TD. T~ Rams took a 3-0 lead with 9: 19 rlmairung in the The Rams. with the Packers keying on Dickerson. was first quarter on Lansford's 21-yard field goal. The Rams never able to generate any cons1stenc)' on offense. had moved the ball 57 yards on 13 plays to tJic Green Bay "Fonunately, we were able to contain Dickerson and 4,. but opted for easy field-goal attempt on a fourth-and-one not let him get a long run," said Green Bay linebacker John s1tuauon. Anderson, who had five tackles and one interception. "We The Packers went up 7-3 with 1:43 left in the half on knew the Rams' strenNh was their running game. We were lvery's one-yard plunge that compl~ted a 12-play, 73-yard able to contain Dickerson. and therefore nullified his march. The drive was kept alive by a pass-interference call impact on the-game." on the Rams' Carl Ekern on Lynn Dickey's four-yard pass The Green Bay defense, wtrich has allowed only three to Paul Coffman at the Los Angeles 13. touchdowns during its winning streak. interc.eptcd three Lansford's 50-yard field Boal with 2: 14 to go in the passes and recovered one fumble in dismantling the Rams' second quarter came after missing a 45-yard try on the run-oriented offense. previous do~n. He was given another chance after center "The Packers have a good defense," said Dickerson. Joe Shearin was called for a false stan. whose longest.run was 10 yards. "Bw it's not the best we've Green Bay put together a four-play, 60-yard drive in Beach with AU-Amencan credentials ah prep. seems unfazed by it all. A 6-3, 224-pound Junior, E>iBemardo's fortunes have been on the upswing si nce &he day he decided to heed the calJ of the Irish after being a USC fan since he could remember. ··we·ve had our ups and downs," admits Di Bernardo, .. but that's going to happen. Everything 1s pretty com- fortable here. "People say the weather is bad, bu1 hey, I love the weather. h was 25 here today and it was · really cold · 1n practice. but 1t keeps you on your toes." Staying on yourt~s is what's i1'sall about at Notre Dame. because the Irish generally find themselves facing a sche<tule of what amounts to l t bowl pmes a year~-because cvery- t1me out ifs the same story, the cornpnition is up for Notre Dame. ··Tnafs true," says O.Bcrnardo. "No matter who you play. Sometimes that's aood. tho u&b. "(love the pressure. If there were 1 couple of seconds left 1n -a basketball game, I would like it to be me with the ball. I'd rather the pressure was on me than someone else." The pressure was on the Insh recently when they were on the roa~ against LSU (which had belted USC. 21-3), but "The Pit" atmosphere for the home team backfired. "I( was our best win of the year," (Pleue 1ee NOTRE DAJU/83) Notre Oame·s football ttarn ha~ more than JUS\ 1 game with USC on Saturchy on its schedule. The lnsh amve at Lona Beach Airport Wednesday at 1:30 and aside from pracucc (expected •o be at UC Irvine), a fietdhouse pep rally will be held at 6:30 p.m. Fnda) at the Anaheim-Marriott Hotel and a postpmc commu· nion breakfast at the~ Sunday morrpna a~S Persons 1ntert$ted in any of the Notre Dame Club of Oranse County's funcuons can obtain further information by callma 641-2100 or 772--0888. faced, by no means. The runs1were there, but they were only I :45 to increase its lead to 14-6. Ivery completed the 1...--- called back.". march by divintt sn10 the end zone from the I with 29 •~ .. .,...._ The Rams were penalized 13 times for I 09 yards, seconds left in the half. Green Bay'• Eddie Lee Ivery dlvea over goal line for TD ln 31-6 win o~er Rama. Sophs put Sues in solid Martin: Raiders' time has come MiraCosta first to test Pirates in basket ball ByCURT SEEDEN Ot u.. Delly l'tlol ..... Three retuming sophomores and two other sopb'omores who played at Orange Coast College two years ago provide the core of Pirate Coach Tandy Gillis' 1984-85 basketball team. And you don't hear Gillis com- plaining too much l\l><>Ul his return- ing personnel. "We'll be compelillvc with anr, team we take the coun asainst .• insists Gilhs, who 1s entenng his ninth season as OC'C's coach. "We won•t gel blown out and we'll play everyone close." His Pirates face their first test Tuesday night when they play host to MiraCosta Colleae at 7:30. Gillis' optimism stems from the return of 6-3 forward Garinn Monon and 6-5 swingman Shaughn Ryan, both of whom missed last year for different reasons. And both were sorely missed by the Pirates who finished the 83-84 season Wlth a I J.16 record. Morton and Ryan will JOin three other returners who saw plenty of playing time last season. 6-7 forward Brad Farmer. 6-2 guard Mark Goudge and sophomore Guard Pete Toomer out of Mater Dci Hi&h. The hst of talent doc n't stop with the sophomores. either. Gil1ts• top Garlnn Morton recruit may be Jon.hnston, the former Estancia High standout who stands only 5-10. But what Johnston lacks in height. he makes up with aggress1 veness. · Johnston wilt be OCC"s starti~g point guard after lcadin~ Estancia lo the CIF finals two years sn a row. The Sea View League MVP last season ands a first-team All-CIF selection. Johnston 1sf11 born floor leader, and Gillis is expecting big things. "Jon is a smart. tenacious playe r who gets things done on the floor," G1lhs says. "he's the kind of gu) who wants to get the ball sn tough situatiops." Gcnina things done on the floor 1s somettling the Pirates didn't always do last season. OC'C was much taller last year. but the Pirates didn't use their hei&ht to their best advantaac. The t 9"84-8S Bucs arc considerably (Pleue ... OCC/83) Chiefs fall prey to methodica l ga me; LA remains in hunt for wild card spDt LOS ANGELES (A P) -Veteran linebacker Rod Manin of the Los Anselcs Raiders is aware that the defending Super Bowl champions don't have much margin for error these days. Fact 1s, another loss could rum what hopes they have for a playoff bcnh. So Manso 1s doing what he can to make sure there aren't any more losses. "It's time to get a roll $01ng and get momentum," Manin said after scor· ing one touchdown and setting up another Sunday in the Raiders' methodical 17-7 triumph over the Kansas City Chiefs. "We wanted to prove we weren't dead." The victory broke a three-game losing streak for the Raiders. who now have an 8-4 record with four games remaining in the National Football League season. The Chiefs. losers of three stra1&ht outings, fell to 5. 7. Los Angeles remained three games behind first-place Denver and two games behind runnerup Seattle in the American Football Conference's Western D1vis1on. The Broncos, I 1-1. and the Sea hawks, I 0-2, both won handily Sunday. Since one of thoSt two teams will · almost certainly win the AFC West title and the other will most likcl) grab the AFC's No. I wild-card benh. the Raiders are probably pla)'lng for the second AFC wild-card spot. New England, also 8-4, is their main competition. Martin. a 6-2, 220-pounder who was the Most Valuable Player in uper Bowl XV near I) four )'Cars aao. scooped up Kansas City quarterback Bill Kenne~ 's fumble and rumbled 77 yards 10 break a scoreless tie with 4:44 remaining in the first quaner. Los Angeles safet} Mike Da\ 1s fo~ed the fumble. Kenne)' had been trying lo pass from the Raiders' 20- yard lane. It was still 7-0 when Manso hll Ken ney as the Kansas Csty quar- terback was trying to pass again late sn the second quarter. Kenne} fumbled and Howie Long recovered for the Raiders. setting up a 48-}ard sconng dnve that was climaxed by a 12-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Marc Wilson to wide receiver Dok1c W1lhams v.11h 13 seconds left before halftime Thal was all the Ra iders needed The punchless Chiefs. who managed only 182 yards in total offense. were held scoreless until Kenney tossed a 3-yard touchdown pass to Withe Scott w1th I :41 remainmg in the game. . "The one 1.n1ng we can do 1s come out and leave everything we ha\e on the football field,' Long said. "We can't count on a tomorrow." fviansn. who had three mtcr- CfV>l1ons as the Raiders whipped lh<' Pluladelphia Eagles 17-10 in uper BowlXVonJan.25.1981 .madet1,e tackles and assisted on Ii ve others to spark the Los Angeles defense against the Chiefs "We need big pla\'S from the defense.'' he said "W1thout a doubt. this game was a much-needed hft. \\ c wanted a shutout but 1t was not for us today ·· The Raiders haven't rcC'o rdC'd a shutout smC'c blanksna San Diego 24-0 sn the openina aame of tf\e I ~77 season. The) mlght ha"e had one had Kenny K.ing not fumbled late an Sunday's game. Steady L&bonte maintains his title pace RIVER tDE(AP)-OcoffBOdinc got a break andiwon the race unday, while steady Terry Labonte JUst continued to do what he's been doma all year in capturin' his first Winston Cup season champ1onsh1p. Bodine, tryina to keep within reach of lcadin Bobby Allison with just four laps to ao and darkncs fallina on the ason-end1na Win t()n Western .SOO Grand Nahomtl suxk car taet. suddenly found h1m~lf on top when Alli~n uddcnly headed for Lhc pit' w1lh a nat tart. ··He ( ll1'0n) v.a really suona all the ~ay around th• rat'e track.'' Rodine \:lid. "Ca1C"h1na him would have been a touah act to pull off. I'm &lad I didn't have to fact that. · "He h.ad a Oat tire and that's too bad. bul it' ju t pan, of rac1n•" Labonte wrapped up the nch and prtstifious season championship by finis h1na 1 solid third. The pressure on the youna driver had been build Ina throuanou1 the t1nal weeks of the ason. bu1 he rtmained ou1watdl) cool to the end "We ran the kind of ratt v.-e wantl'd to run.'' Labontt no1ed. ··we ran a con~rvat1ve race. -t ()nC'11m~1owanh the end oft hi ral'c. I fdt I had a chan~ to lud. But. ~en I pot up w11h the auyi ahead of me I felt I couldn't really pa without abusin• the car. so I backed off. The one 1h1na we didn•t want to do today v.as abuse the car .. Lobontc. who ufTcttd a broken nose. arm and knttcap, as well as facial injunes. ln a temfyma crash two yearuao an this race. was flanked b)' his bcamsna v.-afe. Kam. and his mother unda)' v.hcn he added. "This ts a lot happier da~ than 11 v.as a couple of )Ca" ~o • The dcc1 1vc I 2·milc ract. v.h1ch v.a dcla)cJ at the stan for nearly --chm hmm b} rain. finished undfr hta" clouds as the sun set. lcav1na th<' 1rand Jt1onal \lock ca~ v.h1ch have no hahu. runninaa1 spc:edsofup to t 70 mph sn the near darkne s The pttsti110U) -\R utle earned Labonte, car owner 8111 Hapn and hu team about SlSO. from the nch season point fund. Labonte. 28 or C"'orpu Chnst1. Teus,-camc into the 'lOth and final ra~ or the ~ason nee:d•f\t onl)' to finish SC\enth or better to I\ ure huruclf of \humna ou1 Han) Gant, his ncamt pursutr Gant ran a strona ra c. but faded to eia.hth at the fin1 h, cndina the Kason 6! point txhsnd. Llbontc•\ C"hc • rolct 1pntc C ~rlo S ran nav.-lc~sh (Pleue ... LABOPIT&/82> I . -~ NFL scores Packen 31, Ram• 6 Raiden 17. Chief• 7 Ollen-Sl, Jen 20 Bean 16, Lion• 14 Bill• 14, Cow~y• 3 Patrlota 50, Colt. l 7 • • ••••••• .. , .. . . . .. -.. . Brown• 23, Falcon• 7 Bronc08 42, Viking• 21 £&Cle. 16, Red•khi• 10 Giant. 16, C&rdinala 10 Seahawk• 26, Bengala 6 49en 24, Buccaneen 17 Chargen 34, Dolphins 28 (ot) Lakers in a groove with 4th straight Wor th y gets 24 to spark victory over Milwa ukee l""<.1 U:.\H){)D <.\Pl -The Lo~ o\ngele'I Lak<'~. last season's runner· up for the National Basketball A • oc1at1on utl<' but ofTto ~IO\\ 1an 1h1<1 campaign appear to be building up team. The L3ker1. Y.tth Jame' \\ onh' sconna ~4 point!> sn a pm<' markt"d h\ &ood defense, do .... ned the Mahuukce Buck-.. 96-8Q unday night to notch their fourth consccutl\c tnumpl\. The \. IC'tOr) put thr Laker; at "·5 and to within ooe pme of Pactlil Dauuon-le.:adtng Phoenix Th<' Bu h K-4, arc a hall-pme ahead ot h1ca o tn thr Central OJ\ mon "We''c pl&}l'd good defcnS<' the past thr<'t' or four 13mr'.. !.aid Wonh). "'ho h<"lpcd the lake~ reel off a I -~ \purt 1n the C'lo,.1n1 momrnt\ of thr fir<ot hJtr .nd earl} moment\ oft he third quancno m o\.t' ahead to \tay, S6-46 "M11 .... aukec pla~td 1 rontrolle<S tempo pme ·we "-'Crtn't able to fC\ our fa tbrcal. 01ng," "onh) 1d, ..b\Jt "' did plav good dtfrn " Te~ C. ummsn pal"t'd the Buck with 29 points. and Paul Pr<' St\ addf<i 17 K&rttm \hJul-Jahh:ar and f Jll" 1n • "1\1 1 ·· John\On ea\ h l h1ppcd 1n ~o -point for the-1:1\.r" PJt Rak\ the Lalel'!i· lOalh !I.aid hl'\\a happ' h1\team v.a~ablctov.1n \k.,p1te ha' ing their poore l shooting n1~h1 of tht• season "It please\~ that. for the tiN lime th1., <>cason. ~e -;ho1 undrr 50 pcrc<"nl and .. 1111 v.on .. Rile' said af\er the I J~l'rHonnl'<'ted On Ju t 44 4 ocn•ent Freedom Bowl: Iowa invited loY.a v.111 he snv11cd 10 plav 1n the tirst flttdom Bowl football ~me at nahe1m . tadrnm Dec ..6. aC'\'ord1n1 to puhhshcd rtpon l003\ nic C. cd r Rapid~ Gueuc rtpon<'.'d 1t v.as told that Frttdom BoY.I offi,111 dcctd'-"d !'lund:t~ n1aht to 1nv1tt Jo....,a. de<1p1te tht- HawkeH'f 23-11 los!> to Mannc- ~ta tun.la n1iht. "It' t'l{\uled," \11d a \OUl"C't quoted b) the Guettc .• , ou can ' that 10 .... a and the FrttJom Bov.I .. ,11 ~•an an aarcement.'' Bowl hid c~n't bl' officialt c trndcd until nt'U turd&). 1~~ ac. 6-;4-1 \lt1th a rqu&ar ~a~n mcrcmam1naat Ha11tt11 i on De<' 1. The Ha11. kc\t' fint\hcd sn a II<' fc1r founh 1n ihe 81 Ten ( onfcrtn :-c at ~ '·I RutSC" and nm rt thr C'qntcndcf'\ to pt.,~ lov.a. .. L After nine games McKinney resigns asKC Kings coach From AP dlspatcbes KAN A CITY, Mo -Jack Mc Ka n-m ney resigned unda,y as head coach of the Kansas City KtnjS and Phtl John on was hired for his second tour as coach of the National Boskc1ball Association team. - • The Kings and McK1nne} 1ssuc.-d a101nt statement announcing the unexpected change!I. The Kings. 1-8. have the second-worst record so far in the yo ung NBA season. .. I do this regretful!} because fo r the past two months I ha"e been working very hard to get the team straightened out and turned into a solid NBA club." said McKin ne}. wh o had spent the three pre\ 1ous season coaching the Indiana Pacers. "T~ mg to do this has oc- coml' ntremcl~ frus trati ng to me:· he added ''The stress has given me man} slec.-pkss night!>. McKinney until I have reached a point of being burned out." Johnso n. who has tx·c.-n an assistant coach at Utah, was fired as Kmgs' coach dunng the 1977-78 'ICason and replaced by Cotton F1t1~1mmon~. F11Ls1mmons held the post unti l hc resigned at the end of last season to become coach at an Antonio. Krngs' general manaeer Joe ..\xclson said McKin- ney's departure.-was not b111c.-r. New Jeraey'• Low geta ahutout Ron Low stop~ 3S shot to record ~ his fin.t Nauonal Hockey Lcaaue hutout ' in rnore than sax }'car unday nl&ht in a 6.0 decision over the slumpina r')rw York Ran1ers Low hud 11 easy ttme collect1n1 his lirc;t' 1ctory 1h1s )'ear and n~t shutout, fourth of hlS career. since Mar<'h 28. 1978. when he was with Detroit. Preston notched has fir t career hat tnck with a goal in each penod ... Pat LaFootaJoe scored on a slapshot near the end of the 1h1rd pcnod lo give the New York Islanders a 3-3 tic with the Philadelphia Ayers. With the I landers tra1hns 3·2. Lafontaine took a pass from Duane SutJer and fired from the top of the left foceofT <:1rclc at 17: 18 oft he penod. Ne v. York took th ree shots dunng the fi ve-minute overtime, and Ph1ladelpl11a tri ed two as neither team scored ... Peter Stastny scored a goal und two assists and has brother. Anton, chipped in with a goal and an assist to lead th e Quebec Nord1que 10 a 5-3 triumph over the.-Chicago Black Hawk!>. Paul Giiiis broke a 2-2 deadlock midway throuih the second period on a breakaway from his own'/ blue ltnc as he notched his third goal of the year. Famous Star wins Meteor Cap ~ I NG LEWOOD -Longsbot Famous !!2 Star. ndden b) Kenn} Bla<'k. rallied strongly th rough th.c ~1rc1ch Sunday and v.on the S69.400 Meteor Handicap at Holl}"ood Park Sent off at 26-1. Famous Star out finished heavily favo red Debunaire Junior. ridden by Chris McCarron. b> 1 11~ lengths an a rare spnnt race on the turf. hananie. ridden b) <;and> Hawley. fini shed third a head back of the fa\ ontl'. I ) l· : I "'-.......... -----~~ • "Jack exprcssed ha-; anten11on to resign laltt Wednesday. asking me to be releast:d of ha~ duties as soon as possibl e ... Axelson said in a pre pa red )tatement "His decison was a total surprise to me. I qu1ckl) reviewed the s11uation with managing partner Gregg Lucken ball and decided to approach Ph al Johnson. once before our head coach ... .\n English-bred horse trained by Darrell Vienna, Famous Star covered the fi vc furlongs on the grass in 56 seconds. JUSt one-fift h off the track record set by Beaut iful Glas~ an 1982. In winning. Famous Star defeated nine older horses. three years old and up. and earned $42.400. Ignored b) most of the crowd of 31,407. Famous Star paid $54.60. S 15.80 and S7.20. Debona are Jumor, thc 3-S choice. mumed $2.80 and $2.20 and Shaname pai d SS.40. Geoff Bodine raiaes bla handa in triumph after winning the Weatern 500 atocll car ,,.,...,.... race at Rl•enide International Raceway. Terry Labonte won the overall crown. Johnson was gi ven a contract CO\t•n ng thrtl· seasons and the balance of 1h1s year. Axelson '>aid. "Phil saw us pla) Fnda} n1gh1. plus dunng the preseason and obvaousl} knov.s our strengths and weaknesses." Axelson said. "He'll do the Job and v.e'll give him all the tame It takes." LABONTE KEEPS PACE TO WIN TITLE ••. Qaote of the day OklahOma Coach Barry 8wltuf. after two gc>9&-ffne stands In the Soonors' win over Nebraska 8atutday. "You saw something you don't see maybe once In a lffetlme twice. They put that th!no down there twice and they said, 'Stop us.· And we ufd, 'Go 8t..ad and ICOfe. Beat us.' We stopped U. No. "'tt.-m rn the nation twice." Kings get Shutt from Montreal Krngs of the National Hocke} League , LOS ANGELES - The Los Angeles ~ acquired ve teran left wing Steve Shutt from the Montreal Canadaens.. unda} an ex- change for future considerati ons ··Has ex pericencc will hel p u!I. Mainly. we feel that he can help us on the power play - an area we've been really st ruggling m." said Rogae Vachon. general manager off he Kings. ,hutt. 32. had been with the C anad1cn<> <>ince the 1972-73 season. The Kings ra nk 20th among the 21 NHL team!> 1n effecti ve ness on the power pla\. The team got off to !IS worst stan IO ha story. With a record of0-6-3. but has recovered. w1nn1ng eight of the last nine games Steelers face Saints on TV NEW ORLE ANS-For New Orleans [!] Sam ts· linebackers Dennis Winston and c II• Rickey Jackson. tonight's game aga inst the Pitt sburgh Steelers as more than JUSI another National Football Leagur contest. v.h1ch wall be tele\ 1!>ed on Channel 7 at 6. "It would be one of the.-b1ggc~1 th nils ol m) li fe to beat the team I used to pla) fo r ... Winston said. Jackson played has college ball at Pittsburgh . v. here Hugh Green got all the no11ce. "Yes. I was the gu) pla)ing the other linebacker. but I was also the guy making a lot of bag playc,.'' Jackson said. "Thc fans knew me "I stall have a lot of friends an Pamburgh. and I lake Monday night games. bccau<>e 11 g1,cs them a chance to see what r m doing now." Nets rip Supersonics, 102-97 SEATTLE -Michael Ra' RKh-m ardson scored 13 of ha~ 21 poani., an the third quarter ~unda~ night as the :--.cv. Jersey Nets defeated the Seattle ~uper- Sonacs. I 02-97 m Na11onal Ba'>ketball o\'>\OC1a11on action. The victor) was the "lets' second an a'> man} nights and evened their seven-game road tnp record at 2-2 The loss snapped Seattle's two-game winning c;treak. Zendejas' big moment on PAT TEMPE -Arizona State placekicker EiJ Luis Zendejas has become maJor college . •II t foo tball's all-umc leading scorer on a si mple extra-point , but he says. ··That was the hardest thing I ever dad in my life." The senior roccer-style kicker entered Saturda) night's game asainst Colorado State needing two potnlS to pass the D1v1s1on 1-A mark of 356 points. set by former Pittsburgh running back Tony Dor~eu from 1973-76 "It v.as hec11c all v.eek. There were so many 1Aten 1cws. so many th mg$ let do." Zendejas said . "It was enjoyable for a while. Then it got a bit tinng. It got to the point v.here I wa~ telling ~ople. 'Leave me alone · I tned to forget about at Fnda) night. I didn't even rea lize 11 was game-day until I woke up at th e hotel." W11 h members of the media from around th e count!) 1n attendance. plus a near-capacit) crowd of 67.143 at Sun Dc\11 Stadium. ZcndeJasfied Dorsett's record on an extra-point w11h 5:41 rema1~1ng an the first quane~ · 1 lfowl'\ l'r v. 1th 35 second!> left tn the period. he was v.1dc left on a 46-yard field goal tr) although it set another NC .\ .\ record for career attempts at I 02. Illinois routs Sooners, 81-64 ~PRING FIE LD. Mas-;. -Center m George Montiomel) ~ored 17 point<; and helped conta in V.ayman T1~alc a-; ~c- ond-ranl.cd lll1 no1~ rou1cd No. S Okla- homa 81-64 Sunda) an the Hall of Faml' Tip-Off Classic. It was the biggest margin m the sax years of the game which opens the college basketball season. Tisdale. a two-time All-American. scored 19 points -eight below las t season's average before fouling out w11 h 2·42 rema1n1ng. Eleven of the 6-9 Tasdale's points ca me when Montgomery wa!> resting. Montgomery. a 6-9. 235-pound senior. who led the saggmg Illinois defense on T isdale. was named the game·'i most valuable playe r. He also paced Illinois with I 0 rebounds. The Fighting Illini. co-champions of the Bag Ten last season. methodically rolled up a 41 -10 halft1me lead a!. Tisdale was held to eight points. The Soon( rs raced back at the start of the second half w11h Tas~le hitting a three-point play a nd Lanv.ood Davis contributing two goals to cut the margin to 45-41. Televlalon. radio TILEVlalON 6 p.m. -PRO FOOTaALL: Pittsburgh at New Or1eant, Channel 7. RADIO 6 p.m. -PRO FOOTaAU.: Pittsburgh at New Orleans, KNX (1070). From Bl and the cautious youngster kept out of trouble throughout the 119 laps on Riverside International Raceway's 2.62-male. nme-turn road course. It marked the 17th lime this season Labonte has finished in the top fi ve. incl uding three victories. Meanwhile. Allison, who a year ago clinched his first season title in this same event, fought off a steady procession of chatrengers througho ut the da)' and appeared to have the race within his-jrasp as he pulled away from second-place Bodine with about 10 laps remaining. However. Allison's Chevrolet. whi ch had led since lap 72. suddenly di ved for the pits near the end of lap 116. has right-front tire going Oat. .).!lason finished SC\enth. Bodine. who inheri ted the top spot. was unchallenged the rest of the wa y as ha'> Chevrolet crossed the fin ish li ne five seconds ahead of Tim Richmond's Pontiac Grand Prix. It was the third victory of the season and his Grand National career for ·the 35-year-old driver from Chem uni. N. Y. The winner averaged 98.448 mph as he collected $31 ,900 for the victory. The race was slowed four limes by full-course caution nags. A light ram began falling steadily about I 0 minutes before the race NASCAR officials did start the 41 - car field under a com bi nation of green and yellow flags, counting four slow laps before the rain came down heavier and forced all the cars to stop under a fed flag. The drizzle stopped and. after a delay of almost exactly two hours. the cars ran e1_ght unofficial laps to help dry the twisting track. ran four more laps under a ireen-yellow combina- tion and officially took th e first full- green nag on lap nine. Thc sky remained dark but the racing was not interrupted again. Labonte. who staned from the pole. got the fi ve-point bonus for leading a lap when he led the first time around under the green-yellow. But Watching it ellp away he lost the top spot to Darrell Waltnp when he pitted for fuel before the TtJtt- -grcen flag came ouL Irvine, Sea Kings in SoCal playoffs Irvine High will travel to Poway (San Diego) and Corona del Mar will trek to Roosevelt of Los Angeles m first round games of the Southern Cahfomia girts· voll~ball cham- p1on!>h1ps (D1v1sion I) Tuesday night. Undefeated Irvine. which captured • the CIF Southern Section 4-A title Saturday night wi th a three-set sweep of Edi son, will meet the Roosevelt- Corona del Ma r winner the following week (Nov. 27) -if the Vaqueros defeat Poway Tuesday night. Semifinals and finals m the Southern Cal playoffs are scheduled Dec. I at Golden West College 1n all three divisions. Richardson sanks1x ofo;even shots from th e fi eld 3!> the Nets built an 86-74 lead late an the third quarter after trailing at halftime 58-57 7:30 p.m. -PRO HOCKIY: Calgary at Klngt, KWVE(108 FM). Seattle'• Gerald Hendenon (rlaht) watchea a l009e ball 10 lnto the handa ol lllchael R. Rlcharcbon of New Jeney in Sunday'• NBA actlon. New Jeney won It, 102-97. CELLULAR MOBILE PHONES 1675°0 Includes tax & Installation or 46.46 per mo. oec • • over 10 yrs e11p in mobile com C e 11, Inc. • bnetcase phones ava11 14 26 .. 1344 • same day service & installation 7 r-• at your locatlon or oors • call tor free demonstration 17855 Skvoark Cr. Ste. A Irvine • lact~ trained MMCe It's Easy to Find Hard to Find Prices Too. ...... 1111&.. ~ IO lllOll\tlt CU OAC T oCtl PIYl!lllllS 131.161 T•t•I drlvuw1y 12.30t (6-12~1 '11_& .. L• 81111 5-apted 41 l!IOntllt CH OAC To111 pay111tnl Sl2,Ht Tota l D11vuw1 sm 79 1s. 04111 11-l&UHILI lOldtd 41 111011t11t ctl OAC Total PIYllltllll SM 1S212 To111 dlfvuw1y 1162114 (Ser nt3) '828~•TAI '248~•TU '278!!.TAI Bruins get soccer win • Spain golfers win; FRESNO (AP) -Shaun Del Grande scored his second goal of the Americans 12th season <;unday to gi ve lJCLA a 2-1 ROME (AP) -Lanny Wadkins victory over Fresno State an the first and Tom Kite were the more well- round of the NCAA soccer playoffs. known players. But Jose Canizares UCLA's Roland Schmidt scored at and Jose Ri vero were the win nefS..:.., 9:08 m the first half on a rebound shot C'an11ares and Rivero teamed Sun- to put the Bruins on the board. day to lead Spain to an eight-stroke Fresno's lone goal came with 13:05 victory tn the 31st World Cup team left when Mark Masich scored. golf tournament while th e favored The Bruins had nine shots on goal American duo tied for 12th. compared to Fresno's six. •F · K h M I Canizares shot a 4-under 68.,.5un-re no s ennet ays made a ast day and finished with an 11 -under-datch effort to send the game into oven.me on a long throw with 45 par total of205, and won $25,000 for seconds left. In a scramble m front of the lowest ind1v1dual score. Ri ve ro the Brum net, Fresno's Per Ben-had a 70 for a 7-under 209, g1vin,a the Jaminscn leaped to Oick a head shot to Spaniards a total of 414. The ChmC!IC teammate Kevan Williams. but team from Taipei and Scotland tied m1\scd has mark and the ball sailed for second m the tournament over th e.-crossbar hortened from 72 to 54 hole because ~.....;;.;.....;.;.;~~=:..:......--------. ram wiped out Thursday's opening "Good service. good coverage. ~price- Thats State Fann insurance.·· Al CAITO •SIUICE ACHC:Y, llC. h u1 ,.. ... A tHllllAN(t • 546·9222 2900 Brtstof St .. A-101 C~ta Miu -. .. ""' ~· ,,..,,.., ... ,,...,.,. round. The victory, the founh for Spam in the past eight World Cup tourneys. earned each pl&)'Cr $30,000. The defending champion U.S. team wound up 11ed with Argentina and France at 436. 22 st rokes behind Spam. \anmtrcs and Rivero began un- day two ihots ahead of Scots Sam Torrance and Gordon Brand Jr .. who wa also the individual leader af\er shooting b7s an the first }wo rounds. Af\cr four holt ortnc final round. the • panaards led by four strokes Thr n. on the 489-yard. par-S fifth . ' tanizares hi1 the green wath a 3-iron on his second shot and holed out from 22 feet for an eagle. Torrance matched that with an eagle. but Rivero birdied the hole whale Brand took par, giving Spam a five-stroke edge and a comfortable cushion. ··r wasn't nervous after the fifth." Rivero said ... The pressure was off.'' Canizares s&rctched the margin to sax strokes on the par-3 11th hole, holing a btrdie putt from 12 feet. Brand and Canizares bogeyed the par-4 12th and Tomvacc mi ssed an easy putt to take a double·boaey. ' Newport Chri•tian travel• Saturday Newpon Chnst1an H1gh's CIF eiaht-man football championship aame (small schools) against Hespcna Chnstia n wi ll be played Saturday night with the opcnina kickoff scheduled for 7 o'clock at Victor Valley Hiah. He pcna C'hristiao won unday' coin 01p to become the home team for the tttle pme ancr actt1n1 past Cal Lutheran SaturlU.)'. Ncwpon Chns~ uan·s Conquerors advanced to the finals by 1cttan1 ~ t Bloomington C'bn t1an Fnday ntaht. • Colle1e fOotball: P-A-R-1-T-Y .... ~ Sui:prise: Dolphins IOse! Cha rgersendMta m t'sstreak at 11 : Bills win first 14-3 over Dallas --- From AP dlap~tdaes SAN DIEGO -Buford McGee bounced off-tackle and scampered 2S yards. for a touchdown 3: 17 into ove.rt1me Sunday and San Diego rallted.,from a 14-point deficit to end Miami s unbeaten streak with a 34-28 comeback victory. ,. The Dolphins lost for the first t,ime m 12 games this season and fell .One shon of the National Football League record o_f I? consecutive re.ular season .v1ctones set by the Chicago Bears 1n 1933-34. The loss atso p~eve~ted the Dolphins from chnchan_g the AFC East Division crown. The Charters trailed 28~14 after three quarters, but rallied behand quar:terback Dan Fouts' pinpomt passang for a pair of fourth~uarter scores that forced the overtime. Fout s. who set club records with 3 7 completions and 56 attempts, good for 380 yards. hit Charlie Joi ner with a 19-yard scoring strike I :31 into the final period to make it 28-21. Fouts then directed a 91-yard 19- play drive that <rte up 10 m1nut~s of the founh quarter and culminated tn his fourth touchd<?wn pass oft he day. a 3-yarder to Enc Sievers with 51 seconds to play . Elsewhere in the NFL Sunday: Billa 14, Cowboys 3: In Orchard Park, N.Y., rookie running back Greg Bell scored two touchdowns, one on an 85-yard run on the first play of th e game, ~s the Buffalo Bills shocked th e heavily favored Dallas Cowboys for their first win of the year. Bell. who gained a career-high 206 yards on 27 carries. broke through the middle of the Dallas defensive line and outsprinted several Cowboys' defensive backs to the end zone to score 21 seconds into the pmc;. 4tera U , 811cc:aaeer1 17: In San Francisco. the 49crs lost defensJ ve back Ronnie Lott on the first play of the game. and Wendell Tyler killed two early offensive drives by fumbl· ing deep 1n Tampa Bay territory. "We misfi red enough to keep it close." Coach Bill Walsli said after the 49ers beat the Buccaneers and as. sured themselves oL acteast a wild· card benh in the Nr1... playoffs. "The game could have been a• three· touchdown victory fcir us, but we fumbled and Tampa played some very tough defense.' Btara lS, Llona 14: In Chicago, kicker Bob ThomH salva,&ed a sput- tering offense with his third field goal of the game. a 19-yard effoft with two seconds remaining to lift the Chicago Bears to a victory over the Detroit Lions. Bears quanerback Steve Fuller set up the wmning field goal with a 27- yard pass to tight end Emery Moor- ehead that placed the baJI at the Detroit 19. Stabawka 26, Bengals 6: In Cinctn· nati. the Seattle Seahawks' ball- hungry defense set up one of Zachary Dixon's two touchdown runs and Norm Johnson's field goal in a victory over the Ctnci nnati Benpls. Seattle's aggressive defense made the difference on a snowy and rainy day that forced both teams to play co nserV'atively. The Seahawks forced five fumbles. recovering three. had two interceptions and a safety. and kept Canci nnau out of the end zone on four deep sconng threats. T Yoon llcDonald · Eagles 18, Redaldna 10: In Phila- delphia. rookie free agent Andre Waters re~ kickofT89 yards for a touchd and rookie Paul Mcfad- den kicked hrce field goals as the Philadelphia Eagles beat the Wash- ington Redskins. Washington's Mark Moseley had just given the Redskins a I 0-9 lead on a 33-yard field goat with 5:26 left in the third period wheri Waters. from little Cheyney (Pa.) State, broke loo5e on the ensuing ktclcoff. Giants 16, Cardinal• 10: In East Rutherford. N.J., the New York Giants, who have had a roller coaster }'_Car. arc back at the top of the NFL East. thanks mainly to Ali Haji- Sheikh's foot. a stifl ing defense and a bumblin~ St. Louis Cardinal offense. The Giants got all 16 of their points in the second half to beat the Gerry Fauat brtna• hl• Jrlab to the Col- laeum Saturday In hope• of kee ptna ·~..,.....o momentum toward a bowl berth with a victory over use. NOTREDAMEONROLLERCOASTER . • • From Bl says Di Bernardo. "Those fans were so obnoxious it got us really crazy." The USC-Notre Dame rivalry is one of the bi& ones in college football with Notre Dame holding a 28-23-4 edge, and when the game is held an South Bend. there have been some emotional moments. . -· But here. in Southern Cali rO'm1a, it's not qui1' the same. Oh, it's big. but when ~mes arc won for "The Gipper. · it's usually in South Bend. not 1n Los Angeles. "USC fans arc too laid back." says DiBcrnardo. "But 1t yo u go to the South, they'll die for their team. When we beat them (LSU) they claimed we were lucky." The LSU victory was definitely the team's highlight of the year. so far. but DiBernardo's big moment came aaainst Navy when he intercepted a pass. "I was so e:mted I didn't know what to do." he; says of his first colleaiatc interception. There's still another year left on Faust's five-year contract as Notre Dame's coach, and ahhouJh it's very doubtful the administration would cut short a commitment, it's also obvious that a victory Saturday. a bowl bid and another victory would certainly take some of the stina out of those three straiaht home losses to Miami, Air Force and South Caro- lina. "We (the players) don't blame ·anything on Coach Faust." says I D1Bernardo. "He's trymg, and we're trying. Coach is really a neat guy and you just have to go out there and play ball." A.nd. there 1s that fact of hfc the Irish must deal with-they can count on the competition playang tts best. "Everyttme we approach a game everything is on the line.'' says DiBernardo. "because we're Notre Dame. It's ai-ot of pressure, but you ha ve to go out there and play." The media hasn't exactly been easy on the Irish. either. but DiBernardo sa~s Faust counters some of that by rrlusing to allow area newspapers access to lnsh practices if too many negatives are forthcoming. Such tactics. however. don't ha ve much clout against papers out of Chicago. Los Anaelcs or other major ct tics. "The LA Times had a couple of an1cles last ~ear and quoted a couple of our guys.' says D1Bernardo. "They exaggerated a lot of stuff about how our practices arc. "At first our practices were kind of hord on the freshmen, but he (Faust} 1s leornmg. There's a lot less hitting now (durina practice) than in the last couple of years. We were.,.always lo ana numbers because oft he acncral fatigueness of the season." It hasn't been total roses for Di Bernardo. who was touted as one of the nation's premier linebackers out of Edison. .l\s a freshman he barely made the Missouri ·tires POwers COl.:UMBI A, Mo. (AP)-Warren Powers was fired today as head coach at Missouri because of arowinJ "ncptivily" surroundina the football prot11m, hanccllor Barbara Uchl· tnf. said. 'This is not an action we take llahtly or easily;• Uchlina said. "We a~ aratef'ul to Coach Powers for what he has ~n doina." However. U~hhna 111d "'There 1 a kind of' ncaa11v1ty that has vav.n around the p0raram and ~t believe 11 is time to make a cha nae.'' Athletic Director Dave art qreed the lack of success in the Pf'Ottlm had aenerated nCflltive fcerlnal amona alumni athlettc commmce members and also was reflected In dwmdhna home-pmc attendance and a drop on season tickets sale . Missouri to t to Kansas 3S·2 I , aturday 1n their tcason finale for a 3-7·1 mark. their first los.1n1sason1n ~"tn )'U~ under Po~rs. Po""-cn' icvtn-)car rrcord ~-. 46-3).3, .. special teams squad as the ccntcr- snapper on punts and place-kicks. "I really kind of blew it my first game." he says. "I was so nervous that first year and I realized if I wanted 10 pla) I would have to start dotng something." This past spring he broke his wnst. but didn't realize tt was broken until the summer when the pain had not di sappeared. Now. as a junior. he still has not ~en able to guarantee himself any- ing more than a shO'l each wcek unng practice to secure stan1ng duttcs. · "M> coach (Bishop Hams) has a philosoph y that whoever is playing well in practtce is the one he feels will play well in the game," 58-¥5 D1Bcrnardo. who has promised himself his best practices o the year this week 1n order to get that nod before the Southern California crowd. This 1s D1Bcrnardo's second and last v1s1t to the Coliseum. at least on his personal schedule. He says 2S-dcartt weather keeps you on your toes. but when football is over and done, he's comina back to Southern Caltforn1a with his si&hts set on corporation marketina. SQuthem Cal has already clinched a berth tn the Rose Bowl as Pac-1 0 champions. so the pressure is on the Irish. who may be in line for a bowl bid with an impressive aamc with the Trojans. "It could be a low·scorina pme," 11ys OtBcmardo. "But I doA l wa.nt Steve Beucrlean to hear that. But, 1t could be. I know U C 1s a touah- hittina team." Bcucrlein 1s the lnsh's sophomott quancrblck out of Strv1tc Ht&h School. Also in the Notrt Dame attack is offensive auard Larry W1l- ltam1. a product of Mater Oct H11h. While the lnsh fceJ they've en- dured • seaton or "up .. opponents they'll enter this one with a couple of disllnct tchan~s. First, they're on the road, where wcek in •nd wcek out they've proven touahcr than when al home. nd. they ha"c ttltt me advantqe UCL had aptnSl la t v.tt~. a lo means Ju t that for the ln'h Cardmal . HaJt h1ekh had three field aoals after m1wn1 his first two and Mark Ha)'M hed two intcrctpt1ons for the C11nts as 't. Loui turned the ball over six times. OUera St, Jen ZO: In Houston. Warren Moon threw three touch- downJ>8sscs -two to Tim muh - during a strina of 31 unanswered points to lift the Houston Oilers 10 a triumph over the New York Jets. Oilers running back Larry Monar· ty rushed for over I 00 yards for the second stra11ht week and iced the pme with a 5 I -yard touchdown run 1n th.e founh quart.er that completed Houston's 31-poant surge. Patriots S~r Colts 17: In In- dianapolis. New England quar- terback Tony Eason passed for 292 yards and four touchdowns. thre-c of them 10.i>e[lick Ramsey in the first half. as the Panots cruised to an easy win over the slugish lnd1anapolts Colts. Browna %3, Falcona 7: Jn Atalnta, Cleveland's defense produced an NFL record-tyi ng 11 sacks and Paul McDonald hurled a pair of touch- down passes as the Browns beat the Atlanta Falcons. Clay Matthews led the sack parade with 31/2 as lhe Browns nailed Steve Bartkowski 10 times for losses total· ing 89 yards and Mike Moroskt one time for 6 yards. Two of the sacks of Bankowski for~d fumbles, the sec- ond scndtnJ the Atlanta.quarterback 10 the sidelines with an injured nght ~nee early an the final penod and he Will miss the rest of the season. Broncoa 4%, Vlldn11 Zl: In Denver, John Elway threw five touchdown passes in less than three quancrs of playing time. sparking the Denve r Broncos to their 10th straight win with a rout of the Vikings. ,,, .......... Fred Dean of the 49en droD9 SteTe DeBerl for ab'-loee ta Sunday•• 24-17 win o•er Tampa BaJ at C&ndlestlci Park. Forsakeofacoupleofinches It was that close tnNebraska's bid to beat Oklahoma LI NCOLN. Neb. (A P) -Jeff Smith has rushed for I. 992 )ards 1n his career at Nebraska. 935 of them thts season. He'd probably trade all those yards for a couple of anclies. The football was on!Y an inch or -two lroin O~lahoma s goal line· wl tll just over 51'2 minutes rcma1n1ng and No. I Nebraska 1ra11tng the sixth· ranked Sooncrs I 0-7 Saturda) -Ttm Lashar kicked a tie-breakmg 32-)ard field_g_oal 1n the opening..aunut.e of the final period -1n a defensive struggle PARITY ••• Pioli81 twen ft "Im, to ptay In • boWt game that could provtde • natlonal champfon. WMhlngton, ranked No. 8 ln the nation, could meet one of three Big Eight Cont«~ contenders In the Orange Bowt. The Big Eight '9Pf'lllntattve wtll come from emong No. 1 NebrMka. No. 4 Oklahoma State or No. e Otdahoma. The other at-Mirge tMrna that had bMf1 COMldered for the Or.nge Bowt were No. 2 South Cerollna Md No. 13 Boeton College. It got compNcated, however. wt*1 l*ttY etruc:k ...... thle put ~tind. Hetneka. needing onty a tte to dnch tt'9 B6g Etght, lolt 17 • 7 to Ok!Moma. That IUNly wtll coet the COmhulkert the No. 1 ranking. "W. were lucky, but lt'1 ow time,.. Oklehoma Coecta Berry 8wttl8t Mid. That'• one ~ of ~ttte~Of enyteem to dOmlftlda. But the HU.in ..,. not atone In'*"° unkM*y. South c.roMna, oertatntY not a ndlttonlll Power Jn tNa day of -*'O trdlon, not only WM Ul)l9l but bedty, and by 8 tMm that none oonekleted a ttv.t. The Mldlhlpmen of Navy won 38-21, ~ 31·7 at.hlltf- tlme, and•~•were out of the Orange lowt picture. ''We were wetklng around cam· pu1 tie week, and the on. mtd- ltripmen IMt wewould get Idled,'' Nevy talba Ak:h °"'* Ntd. be~een the nauon's two stingiest teams tn surrendenng yardage. "I thought there-was-no way we could be denied.'' said Nebraska's Craig Sundberg. who came off the bench and spltt time wtth Travis Turner at quarterback. "It was a big thnll to be an at the end and ant1c1patang ever)th1ng. It JU St (i1dn 't turn out." On third-and-goal at the I. fullback Scott Poner rammed the middle. but fi nebacker Dante Jones and tackle Ri chard Reed stopped him just shon of the goal ltne -an mch or two awa). maybe three. Certain!) no more. ·11houghl Scott scored. but I guess the officials didn't sec n that wa)." Sundberg said But teammate Harf) Gnmm1ngtr, a guard. d1sagreed . .. ome people thought .Scott got an." he said. "He was fiAhtmg hard. but I was nght there and he wasn't m." Nebraska. which had won 27 consccuuvc conference games, needed only a tic to capture 1u founh consecut ive outnght Big.Eight cham· p1onsh1p. But Coach Tom Osborne decided to go for broke.just as he dtd wath 48 seconds left in last season's memorable 31-30 Orangt Bowl loss to Miami. Fla. He called '49 pitch,' the Cornhuslcers' bread-and-butter play for many years. "We thought they would stack the middle up and that w.oukLopcn the. pttch ... Osborne explained Except that Olclabo~ anticipated that' Cr) thing. "They had to go Wlde because we were playing the heavy front:• Coach Barry Swttz.cr said. '"lf the) passed. the) would have made II ... OCC BASKETBALL ... From Bl smaller. bur 1ha1 doesn't co ncern G1llts. "Wr "'l're tall the previous two years bu t weren't pan1cularl) strong on the baoards Th as ream isn't tall but these players are aggresst\C and mentall) tough." G1 lhs sa)s ..\lot of that toughness come from ex pcnence -"'h 1ch "'111 be pro' 1ded b) Mon on and R~an. Monon averaged 7.6 points per game-two years ago and was the sixth· leading rebounder tn the conference -not bad for a 6-3 freshman tn the talent-laden Soulh Coast Conference Morton missed last season 1n order to go to "'orll. to meet a famil~ cns1s Gtlhs IS hopang Mcmon will go lO work on the coun th ts season 10 a' en an\ cns1s. R~an. meanwhile. was OCCs sixth man two years ago. averagang SI\ pE>tnls per game He suffered a foot tnjur:. howe,er and sat out the season "Shaughn has all the tools necess- an to become a Da' i's1on I pla)er." Gfllis ans1sts "He can pla) guord or forward. he's a $.rcat shooter and hr can reall) jump · OCC's osthcr returners -Farmeor and Goud~c -also ha' c respectable numbers lrom lasl )Car's campaign Farmer "'as deadh at limes from lhr baseline last )ear. and a '>'eight 1ra101ng program should mall.e him strongrr on the-boards. Goudge. out of Edison. h11 55 6 percent ofh1s shots a ~ear ago The other newcomers anclude ti-0 Patnck Drake out of anta ..\na \ alle'. 6-1 Lou as Hamgan. a 6-1 guard from Hunungton Beach and Chns i\ndrasfa). b-1 out of Tusun High. In add111on. Gtlhs has 6-6 rcd)han Anthon' Radov1c1ch out of Wood- bridge H tgh .. Rado' 1c1ch came 10 us last )'Car as a I "·\Car-old ftt"Shman who JUSt "'asn·i read) for college basketballl.~ G1lhs saH "He worked hard in pracuce iast >Car and has shown tremendous 1mpro' ement this year. lfhecontinucs to improve. he'll begin ro see a lot of pla} mg ti me for us. ·-rm looktn& forward to this season for one major reason." notes Gtllts. "This 1s one of the best bunches of kids r,c ever coached. The) work hard 1n practice, the} have a super anatude. they lake each other and the) 'l"f sman .. Ore.,.., .. ,, lc:NdlM ~ ... , NOV »-MireCotle (llOmol S.I Nov 1-.1 S." 01090 Mew Thur ·S.I Nov 2'·0oc I-Mlle\ E alO<' Tourfle!Mfll IOI OC:Cl T11..r ·Sal Ooc 6·1-SkVllne ~Ou•"•,.,,..,, WtCI OK l?_.-eiotner IP\omel ~rl 0oc ,,_., !'H I LOI A"99iel T u.s Ooc 11-et Cltru1 Tl\ur ·Se l , OK l7·1t-S.n Olego ~M To.imement Se• Jen S-Cvoreu• (l'lomel WtCI Je n ,_.I Fullerton• Sal Jell 12-S.dcliel)eCll' ( hOml l WtCI Je n 1....-.1 GOIOen Wnt• Se• Je11 If-Sent• Ana' (hOtnll Mon J•n 11-1 Cornoton• WtCI Je11 U-M1 Sen .t.111on1o• "Omo s.1 Je11 ,......,01 c...,.1101 • Se• ~eo ,._, Cvorou• Wte1 Feo .-Fullerton• (~l Ser Ft o ........_I Seod!et>eck • Wt<I FtO l>-GOlden WH I' (hOtnll Ser Feo 1'"'"'91 Sen•• .t.na· M{)'I ~eo lt-Cornoton· (llOmel weo FtO 20-et Ml S.11 Antonio• S..• Feo n-<.trmos• CP>omel • Otl'Olft $oulll Coe11 c~ M rM Afi no•HOUTne~• Nmft t i 7.lO D"' Clippersfallagain, 113-105 PORTLA D (AP) -~h chal Thompson's 31 points and I} re- bounds led the Ponland Trail Blazers to a 113· I 05 National Basketball Association victory over the Los Anaclcs Cli ppers Sunda>. The Blazen fell behind m the 6Nt half. S4-52. as Chp~r center Jame "-Dooa.ldson sc.ored 16 points and Marques Johnson added nine The Blazers came back 1n the third pcnod with Thompson sconng 14 of Ponland's 32 potn\S, That p vc them a narro" 84-82 lead aoana into the founh quan~ Lo An clcs tied 11 at 96-all on a JUm~r b). orm Nixon but K1k1 Vande~t&hc sc.ottd on a dn\c with flve minutes to at> and the Slaters wtre never headed. Vandcw~hehad 21 point and Jim Puson added 20 for the Slaters. now 7-6 1n the NBA's Pac1nc DM~1on Johnson ~"<>red 20 _po1na and Donaldson I for th Cltpptn. nov. •·8 Junior Bridieman or'f'd po1nb. ~re~ math had 13 and N1"<on I 2 point~ and a team-htgh sc'en assists for the Chppen. Lo "ngele outrebounded the Blazers S4~8 wuh Donaldson haul- ana an 15. But the Chp~rs madt' 22 turno"ers wh1~h resulted in 33 Blazer Marina to hos t top-seeded t eam Marina lltah 1~ tht' lone area team to ha' e a homt tennis match v. hen the CIF 4-.\ airls' pla)offs ~ume Tucsda) Manna "rll host top-seeded Palos Verdes at 2 o'clOC'k 1n a quanrrfinal match In other 4.1\ contest . \\ oodbnd e High tra,cl to plo~ sttond·Sttd~ M1ralef\\e and 1Zd1son the \o o 3 sttd. -..111 bt 11 Do Pueblo 1n nta Barbara The other match ha\ fourth· ~cd nta &~ra at \\ntlalc ,. .... points Ponland romm1tted onl)' I J turno' ers and Los 4'.ngeles convened tht'm into onh eight points. Portland Coach Jack Rams.a} praised the Los Anitelcs team "I thtnk the Cltppers a.re beainnina 10 come toacther and they arc becon11n1 a touah team to match up "11n ~·f\chal i'hompson l\ad an oumandlna \Ct'Ond half after truuJ· 1na a btt 1n the fiT\t half That abow~ areal dctcrm1nalton." Ram " credited Damell Valcn- ttne "1\h. a defensive spa.rk ll'l lbc \CCOnd half "He did a aood JOb on orm Na\on. didn't allow Nuco n to donu· nate the pme He also wtnt o"cr a bia foN ard lO &et I ~bound. that q cnt1cal and \a\ct' antercte>tN a Pl when the aame ~a ull in doubt." Va.lcnt1ne had 10 PQ10l t•&ht anms a.nd lhttt l't'bound' 1n 42 m1nut~ of~ . He hc:ld • 1~on. \tic C11ppm' h1ab· onna auard \o \ ~ po1nis and ~'en a \ISl I \ N~L NATIONAL CONf'P•NCI! Wet! w I. T Pct. ,. .. PA ' San Frenc.t\co II I 0 t11 33S IM lltMIS ' ~ 0 stl 2lS m NewOtlean• ~ 6 0 4SS 21• 141 Allanta 3 9 0 2SO 211 21' C-al Ch lea go • ' 0 661 2..0 197 Grfffl 6av s , 0 • 17 777 73• fem~ Bav • ' 0 333 t7• 292 Detroit 3 • I m 219 m Minne'°'' 3 ' 0 ?SO ?JS l)O EHi NYG!ant\ 1 s 0 Sl3 217 m wu111noton 1 s 0 513 79S 224 D•llH 1 s 0 Sl3 213 22J SI Loul' • • 0 SOO 3lS 269 Phllaoeloh•a s 6 I ~21S 2J<I AMEltlCAN CONFERENCE Wfll Otnver ll 1 0 917 269 171 sea111e 10 2 0 '" 3J2 176 ltllcltr's 8 ' 0 667 271 221 Sart Oieoo 6 6 0 soo 316 296 Kan\tJ CilV s 1 0 417 19S 7SS Central P11tsb1Jrgn • s 0 S4S HS 109 C1nc.inne1t 4 I 0 3J3 208 166 Cleveland 3 9 0 2SO 1S9 224 Hou11on 1 10 0 167 171 336 liUf M1am• ll l 0 911 318 191 New Eng•ana 8 • 0 667 301 262 HY Jtll • 6 0 soo 263 2SI ln01111a P011' 4 8 0 333 190 371 Buffalo 1 11 0 093 171 l?S ~-clinched w1ld·card ola•oll bl'rln SundlV'' Scores GrHn Bav 31 ltam1 6 ltelden 17. Ken!MI\ C•tv 7 Ch1ceoo 16 Delroll 1• New York C1ants 16 SI LOU•\ 10 Ctevelano 13. Atlante 1 Pl•llaelelohla 16r wunmoton 10 Buffato 1', Dall~ J Seallle 26 Cine e ll 6 N•w E notend SO, tno1a naoohs 17 Slln Francisco 14, Temoe Bov 17 Denver 42 M1nntsote 21 Houston 31, New Yori. Jel$ 70 Sen Oleoo )4, Miami 28 (ott Tonillflt'• G•ma Plll•buron al New Orlean\ IC!lanne• 1 .ti 6 o'cfockl Tllunda'f'1 Ga~s Green Bev at OetroO (Cllennet 2 al 9 30 am ) New Enoland at Oall,s (C!lannel • et I om.I Sundlv's G•m.1 ltama at Tampa Bev !Channel 2 el tO 111.tn.} tndlen11P0111 a t ltaldW'\ At11r1te at Cincinnati Bul1ato at WHl'llnoton Hou1ton at Cleveiend l(ans111 Cttv al New York G1•n" P!lllaO.ll)llla el St LOUii $en D•eoo al Plllsburoh Chicago at MlnllflOll $en FrenctKO at New Orleans ~•Ille at Denver Meftdav, Nov. 1' G•~ New York Jt11 at M iami Pickers 31, Rims 6 Score by Ouerten Rams Green Bav A-S2 031 3 3 0 0 14 10 Rems-FG LaMfOrd 21 s 41 0-6 l ) I GB-lverv I run !Oet Grecco ~·c• 117 Rams-FG Lansford SO 17 46 GB-lverv 1 run tOet Grecco ~.c .. 14 )t GB-FG Oet Grecco 11 2 39 GB-lvttv 1 run !Del Grttcco ••c•1 GB-T Lewis 99 1nterceAJ1Qn relurn tOt t· Crecco l<.ic~l 9 36 A-S2.031 GAME STATISTICS LA F <r1r<oowr1s 16 Ru1ne1·vards 3 t 166 Peulno vards 1) 1 Return vard\ 7S Paue1 I& 35 l ~du Bv 11 Pun•• 6 l~ FumblH -IO\I 2· 1 Penelflei· <ards 13 109 T Ima of f>oueu1on 37 O 1 IHOtVIOVAL STATISTICS Gii • 18 29 121 191 118 • 1S·27 7 l 9 ] l• 0 0 s-JS 1159 RUSHING-Rams 01co.er1on 2S 137 Redden J·1S Kemp 3 9 Grttn 8av tve"r IS-71 Ellis 7 32 Crouse ~ 6 Lofton I 6 Roaoers I I PASSING-Rams l<.emo U 3? 1 118 Oils 1 3 I 27 Green B&v 0 1ckev IS·21·2· 194 RECEIVING-Rams Da H•t S· 38 O•tl<l'rson l U Ella rd 2-7' Guman 2-19 Barber 7 II Brown 1·21 Dr H1~ 1·8 Crttl' Bav Lofton 6· 129. tverv 3 11 Elhs 7·8 Eoos 1·21 Jefferson 1 9 Coffman I S Crouse I 0 MISSED FIELD GOALS-Crtt" Bov Del Grecco S4 36 Rii<Mrs 17, Chiek 7 SGOA bv Ou11'ffn Ka n$U C1lv 0 0 0 Raiden 7 1 o LA-Martir> 11 lumblt return ktCkl 7-l 3-17 I Bahr LA-W1t11ems 17 oau lrom W1l\on IBe~r ~tCk ) LA-FG Ba!lr 'l7 KC-Scot! 3 oal\ from ,ennev •Lowerv k1CkJ A-48 S7S GAME STATISTICS KC LA 10 49 219 80 so 12·71 1 • 37 6·•1 s l First 00 VII\ 14 Ru\111!\ va rdi. 16 20 Peu1no vard\ 167 Re1urn verds 39 Peues 19 37 I Sack\ Bv 3 73 Punh 8 SI Furnble\ toll 1 1 Penolhts vards 6 4S T ,me of Poueu1on 14 11 17 90 JS 49 llfDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-l(an\as Ct1v Heard 1 27 Lacv l ·4 Brown 7·2 Caf\On I lminu1 81 LOS Anoele\ Allt?n 16 9S. l(mo lS 1' Hawkin\ 17 4S Wttson S ') Pruott 1·? PA:'>SING-Kansu C11v Kennev 19·37 ·1 19' Los Anoeio . Wllsor> 17·11 1· 103 RECEIVINC>-Kansa\ C••v Ma•Stll)ll • JS Scott 4·19 Car1on l SS Brown 1 n LOCY 1 ,q Pa•oe 7 18 w Arnold I , Jackson I 6 LOI Anoelf\ w .1 am\ S S4 (hrottenson ) 73 Alll'n l 71 Haw••flS I \ MISSED FIELD GOAL~ 11.en\a\ C Iv Low~rv 47 .., Rams (7-Sl 13 Dalla\ 10 C1eve•ono 14 P 11\0~•on 14 (.nc.Mal ll NY Goanl\ 28 Allnnta 78 Ne.., Ortl'ans 14 Atlanla 0 San Frnnc ~u 16 St Lou' 19 Cn•caoo 6 Gret?n B•• Nov 2S-at Ta moa Bav OM 1 New Ortean\ Dec 9 Hou\IOn Dec " 111 ~an F ranc1v o R•iders <t·4l 14 Hous•on 28 Green Bav 11 11.ansas C•lv Jl San 01t110 13 Oen•~' 7' Sl!ett" 23 Minne' '• 44 San 0 t'Qo " Otnv~r 6 Cnicaun 14 Sl81llP 11 K11n\o r •tv Nf)v 1S-tnd•l na0041$ Of' 1 "' M11m1 o,. •<>-at Detro•t O•r l6-P1th1>urol'l Af' Too 20 HOW THEY flAltlO 10 II 14 14 I} 10 10 10 )) II I) JI .. , 70 )0 ,, .. ?() l7 •(Ot) 27 17 .. 7 H "' tl>f' AUOCtettCI Prtn Too Twe!llv <~ •11• tt>Ott>all teems tared 1 Nt0teso (9 7·0> '°" 10 Okterw>me I/ , 1 \o\,111 Carotl1111 tt· 1 01 IO\I to Navy ll 1 I Nnl •I Clem\On, S.turdev l B••Ollam YOU<'IQ ( 11 0 01 &Itel Ute!I 2• 14 Nflal "' VI•" $tell, ~l\lfdeY 4 Okttnome Stell It I ti bnl tow• Stett 16 10 Ntlll tt Olllenome, S.lllfOtv S F=tor1e1a tt I I) llffl Kt11tu<k¥ H 11 Ntw• •• rtor ICJe Ste le, Dec I 6 lehofN ll ·l·lt IMtal NeOrHlla 17•/ Httt "' OltC.l!OfM Slllt S•fV(dt v 1 So<ill\tfll CeltfCltllie tt·7 0) ic.1 Jo UCLA 1t 10 Nol Notre Oame S.ltXO.<t • wesiwt111on no 1 01 ., .. , we.nl11Ut011 Statt 3' 1' 9 Louttlll!lll \l•lt 17-2· ll foll lo MiHI\• tiool 51ell " 14.. Nu.I TUUM, ~hlfUV 10 I e••' O I 11 O..t ruei Chrtttlen •• 2l Neal at levl<lf S.turd•v II OlllO St•lt It 2·01 bHI Mkll n 71. 11 T•-n C11r1l11M <•·2·0> iu,1 to T.,.., ,,.t) Hot et Texn AV.ii ~11.1r1Mv ti loJIOll C.olltOt (7 1 01 0Nt )vrecuM 24-" Hut el Ml•ml, no11C1e Seturelev. 14 Miami, Ftofi<le 11·.'I 01 wn Id~ Nut "' 9o"Oll C Oliff•. ~ n!Mll IS Ctoto•• 11·~ 01 lo\1 IO AUblJ(n 21•11 Nall Geoto11 Ttc!I, DI< I I• Soull\efll MalhOdt" 17 2 Ot btat Tu•• T~ 31 0 Na•t Ar~•"'•' $1hlf div 11 Flor•O• Stett 17 2 II 0.11 Tennen" Chlt1anooo1 37 0 N .. I FIOfidl Off I It AuDufn 1e J Ot l>Mt G-ola 21 12 Ntal et Aleo.ma Ot< l 1t Vir11on1e (7 I 71 l•ed North CeroMa l4 14 Ne•I M••vlal'd. ~turd•v 20 Cl.,.,\on 17·3 01 '°" to M•rvt•nd •l ?> Nut Soult\ C1rollna S•tui<l•v communitv collfft \dMtdul• THURSDAY'S GAMES MIUIOll Contwen<e Orenoe Coint el Senle .t.ne 11 11 m Son O•eoo Mua 01 P110mar t I am R1vtr"oe et Cttru\ 11 • m Sout!lwealt'11 ot Sen ~ noon S.Uttlarll Cel Center.nu Los AllQele\ cc al LA Soul!IWl\I 11 am SATURDAY'S GAMES pu.t con .. renc• GOiden Well at Be,erslietd t 10 D m Long Buel\ 11 Fu <erton 130 om Ml s.~ Anlon•o a• El Camino 1 30 u •n Pueoena at ra11 7 30 om SoutM<n Cat Con+ertnet LA \/allfV et Wl\I LO\ AnQl!lf). I nm e:a,1 Los Angelt\ al l A Pierce 1 .)O om Hl9h school 1lliVoffS ( H<oncl roulld, Fr.elev, l·>O om I BIG FIVE CONFERENCE !>e•v••• I 10· II v' M~""• 11 41 .,, Wr\t min\ter Fountain Vallr. 19 7l 01 Fonta1111 '9 11 A1ver\1Cle POI> 10 I at 80\~UU ArnM ti 1 II Lono 8eacn POlv 9 l <11 S1 Jo~n BO\tO (8 2 It CENTRAL CONFERENCE LO\ Amloo' f6 SI <1t La Morada 11 0 I Newoort Harbor (9 0 1t vt SuM• tMt\ 10 IJ at Buena Par• C,.,od•eoac• 110 o H a• Fu er1on 10 11 La Quonta 18·1 et Va enc.a 0 SOUTHERN CONFERENCE Lvnwooo ,11·01 vs E• To•o •8 ll "' Minton Vleto (Saturd11vl El Mooena • 10 IJ Ill LO$ AllO\ 18 JJ Esoeranra I 10 I• vs V111a Par> 18 JI 01 Et Mooena Foot,,, 10 I a• M•\\ on VP• 7 1 21 COASTAL CONFERENCE O•nard 7 2 11 ot C amaro•to 10 I Pa•ooena 1 10 11 111 T!lousMo 0<1> \ 6 SJ Muir 110 l I " Sa Ma Mono,, 9 11 al Santa Monica Co1ie11P Ventura I 10·0 1 • &' Cna ~ l\•and\ 9 I I DESERT CONFERENCE Agoura t 11 OJ 01 Bannon~ 8 1 MorolUlt fq 71 "' S• Bo~.iv1•Mu11• !9 1l Cetht'dra l r 1 41 1oa Yuca1Pa 18 )l V\ s• C,en1·• r.p ' JI M()(lroar> 16 4 I tba Santa C•ara 10 I '" '""" • • 6 ~ a t Perce Col·~t' EASTERN CONFERENCE c1aremon1 • 11 0, al Soutn Ht<\ ~ 6 Norco 19·21 al Uotano 18 7 11 Btll Gara~ I 10 II al TerT>Plf (,1, 8] Al11f19t0n II 0 at Sar1 Mar.n •8 INLAND CONFERENCE WM t er (nr.\••a" l I 0 n1 8 II 8r1v 6·St LA Lutneran '8 21 et Beoum(Jrol ii ) I O~tar.o Cnn\t.an ·,9 )I vs Monte•••• Preo1 t9 11 •bo Oe\er• 7 4 .tr v., h Cn• \1•11" 9 1 NORTHWESTERN CONFERENCE Can•O" 11 0 "' St Bprnaro 8 1 I Atasc adero •8 3 , l "'""'' 10 11 •r.a Cao11110 llO-IJ al San•~ Mar,.; 1 4 .c.n1e1ooe Valley • 7 11 v' Brvcllv Hitt\ 1·1 21 at Cul•er C•t• Hour SOUTHEASTERN CONFERENCE Ooomoro Bar 11 0 at o ... a"e 8 7 Arrovo 10 I v\ R ·~ Oa• q 7 a• C'narter Oa• H•Oti Keooe• '8·71 o• San Be.,>ard•n• 10 I Bald,..•n Par' 110 Ot 01 Anulf' Vattev . 10 1 EIGHT-MAH FINAU LarM Oivt\lon T~r o ~IOf"'i .~ ~o.1n Bllt>'·\t Sm.ttl D111111on NtiNt"iO'' c,.r,,1,an V\ He\Pttf•d CH1\t 1 01 V•rtor Vallev H1or 1 1>,.,, SoiurcMv HrQtl schoOI statistics LAST WEEK'S LEADHIS AuSl'ltnO C. enn (arr ooe S&ac eoa• • 11 141 Oa•e s ... 'll"'' IF o ·"'"'" Va 'h 10 112 ,,,,,, HO ... \Pf Nt<NPO" Haroorl 10 101 • C.•N 8er11am•n lJn ve'\•lv 1 18 96 ~ S"•""" Massev Ml''"" 8 69 6 f ~· Jone' Sado•e1>1tck 9 61 Pen1119 Snane Fo•ev tNewoo•• Haroo• 14 u 0 170 11aro\ 1 TD\ 7 Jnnn C.uc • ( Saddleooc•' 7· IS I 186 ... ,.,, I TD l Todd Mannov•ct Maltr o,.,, 19 U·J 1)4 v.ards I TD ' 1o.e tn 14''"'' f tl' " l7-1S 7 111 •••<JS I TO ' S•p.~ B~·o.- Marona 1 IJ·O Ill '"'a' TU Atcelv1119 I M1we M••o1e11 •Maler 01· 6 /'I 7 Paul Caroena~ 1Mater De., 6 &O I C "'" R1s'1 !Marona S 80 • Ho T ro.ion11 N!'w l)()rt Harbor, S 6S S ~ e0 Gr Ull\ f d \M S •S 6 Brao A•nod Unv~'''" 4 )l Scor1no Br van C,uot N,. ""''°'' •1 ,, t'Vt Glenn CamoOell ~al!O Plo"'' J ' o .. ~ I Saddltbac k 1 17 toe r .1 ~ ••1 C,r •UU\ Ed1\0n 8 Western SOO GRAND NATIONAL STOCK CAA RACE Iii RIVffS1<ltl Tvl>f' ot rar aP\ come><eteo ""a .,.,. ,~.,., ' a11fll'rftoe 'ort~O .,.. mp" I GPOU BOdone (f-!'vro1e• Monte r "''" SS 119. 98 448 7 Tim Rochmono Pontiac C.•anlJ pr,. 119 -~ Trrr, l \0-n1;. rn,.vrr ,., Mo"•"' C -.r o SS 119 J B E (>I' I O•O Jnu~OP•b •d 11'1 ~ 8er1nv P~r\On\ ( ~ ... , .,, M<Jn1e Cerio ')S 119 6 N"•' 8011Mtt I ""vroll't 'l'l?Mt Certo SS 119 l BClbOV A \O~ C• t'V•Olf't ,.,,.,,.,,,, r..ar 0 ,, •9 • 8 Harrv Ca"'• (tftvrr,,.• Mo••ll <1Ht1 SS 11q 9 He•\ne· MrGr.fl l'M·• ~• "'""" pr.~ 110 10 Ji;I• A••"m"n (.tpv"''"' Mf.J"'f (MIO SS 11q 11 0"'' E1J•n•ard1 C•'l'v• I'' Mon•t Ca r•o SS 119 11 Trevor B"v' Cana"" r ,, .. , ••'• t Mc lllP Carto SS I 18 13 e111 Scnm•ll Cnct>vrntct>I MM ll! r "rlo \\ "' 14 R·rP>aro p,.11v Ponl.&e C.•a'td P• 11 Ill IS t(.ckv Ruod ford fnu"dct>•ll••CI 117 16 C.r~ Sar~' C n•vro ~• Mo•11t Cerio S$. 11' 11 La• e SotH!<I PQnl••r. Cr11no F'rt• 116 18 Oerri•t Coot r11r11 Ttt•tndf'•Olrd "' 19 ').,mner Mrll n•11t 1 Cnt'••O't' Mofll~ Cerio S'> 11& ?O Dave Marr,, Pont ac Grand Prr• 11& 21 Aov Sm.in. C<1Md11, Pont1er C.ranll Pt , llS n Mo•Ol'I '>n•ol>fltd C,,, '' <f'I Mor1tl' Cario SS 111 ll 0noJ9 Htve<Oll C•f'vro•t• Montp Cerio SS 111 7• D•c~ Brl)O~\ t oro Tl\•mn.rtJllO 110 2S Clark Owvfr ~ or11 h•urtdtrborO I 10 :>6 A<UJv weiiec. P""t.oc Greno ~•· IOS •• 11 11011 r,,., 9, • A~"I tOJ 11 Kvlf> fltttv ~ord Tnvll<M•b•rO 9' ,. ,,,., ijoo1nM>r1 01d\r>f9b • Cutt11u 97 lO J tJ MC011ff ,. l'c>nt1a( Grand Prt~ 31 Harr v Go1Jl&r If' 8 "t ~ 'I tOel 16 17 P ul>f'<t G•rr•a e Ir• Reo•I 11 13 'Xntt 111\11"' Por1•·er "'A"CI Prt• 11 lA DarrP' wa11r.p '""v'Oltl Monie Cart0 $\ 10 )\ !Ion 80u< nerd l u•O Af'9111, {11 )6 Jtrn Bown llule• lh11•l .. 31 1101 o M((rav l"OllllAC C,,r41!Wj Prt• H It I~ IV\! •an (he'irtl fll Mcnlt t e•ta SS Sl )9 101'11 • r..O\ 0'<.l\~CI "' (~Ila\\ U JI) lor>ov A•""' 'or n r""" lflf l>1re1 " •I Pn,t P11r\On\ C.,,.vtwl Mol\llt C11rt0 ~~ u . ' I Prep football log SUNSET LEAGUE I) Maler Ot• IJ SADOL•IACK I 10·0· ll ll Watttfl 0 EDISON IMI ,. Lone •••ell WttM>n , .. •• $.tnle A~ ve~v • ,. Mlu1on llleto 71 •1 Wt•tla~t 6 1 EO•aon 11 ,. San•• Ant 0 37 S.11 Ctemefllt 1 14 Collon ) 9 Hun11no1on 8••<11 •• 21 Lo Hebra 0 ?S t;aolstrano Vellev 70 9 1lann1n11 10 , F ountaln v •lltv 11 ,. Coste MIMI 0 c" ,. SI JOM 90lCO 10 19 Mer!~ )4 ?t Vnl~enllv 17 3S LO\ AlemltO• 14 " NOlra O•me ISllerOa"•l I 32 Ocean View l) 2' NtwOOfl Harbof ,. N?.-Lvnwpoo Ill MVl 11 we,1mt11\l•r , JI E1l1ncla 7 •2 <k••" View 0 $EA VIEW LEAGU• 71 Woo<lbrlWI 10 ltlVtNa CS·4-1l 17 11un11ngton Beach 1 CORONA DEL MAit (4·41 27 Coron• Cltl Mer • ,1 l.lnlver~ltv 1 • 10 J.nunlain Vell1111 II 31 LtOunt Ottell 13 1 Hewoor I Heroor io IC Huntln111on Btech 10 27 M•r1na .. 6 Sa n Ctemen1e 0 cu• 1 Tustin 21 CIF , Capl\lrano Vauev 21 JI Norwet~ 10 .. Et Toro 3t 10 111\llOP Artie! II N?1-I Fullllflon 34 Sen Clemente n .. Leuuno 8tac!I 1 70 Ceo1weno Vall•v " rovHTAIN VALLEY If ll 9 Woodbrl<IOe 7 UNIVERSITY CS·61 1l D•ne Hllh 70 l7 Meter D•I IJ I) Co,la Mf\a 0 1 Irvine 21 ., Ge!lr 20 6 Vntver,llv 10 11 El Toro .. 71 E•lencle 0 0 Mlulon Vlelo 71 IS Minion Vlt!O lS f4 M1u1on Vla10 19 6 Seddlet>acl.. 21 21 L tQutlt HU" 0 39 Lauuno Hiiis 1 IS S.r\'tle 16 14 Estancia 73 19 Lonv l'I .. ,,, r>o•• 10 • Newoorl Heroor 34 It Sacldleo.ctr. ti LAGUNA HILLS ll•ll 52 Ocean V1tw 0 21 L111un• 8Mcn , 8 WOOdbrtOOI 16 Jl Marin• 71 COSTA MESA (O·f·ll 10 Coron• dtt ~' 6 14 E\11~11 11 " We$lmtn\ler , 6 Bo1" Gronci. 1 ?I Co••• MaMt , 0 Unlversllv 71 II Ed1\on .. 10 7 Senlleoo 31 s Newoorl Herbor 17 76 Mevtatr u 71 Hun1tngll)<1 Btocn 1 0 LO\ AlamllO\ 0 J3 WOl>dOr~o• 14 70 Et Toro 33 CIF 0 Saddltback 79 CIF 7 Min ion Vleio 11 1• Sr Fr•nc•\ iO 10 Laguna a~ 1• 0 v1•enc11 ,, 71 Sen Clemtnlf 1 N2l-ot l'onte"O 0 Corone Ot Mar I) WOODlltlOGE (J.71 1. Ceo1\lr11no V11teY 19 0 Newoorl 'Haroor 34 0 Oena H•ll• 71 , Vn1verst1v ,. 16 Laguna Hiiis • 7 Irvine )9 HUNTINGTON BEACH 11·7·11 0 WOl>dbr•dOt' ;i 1 Tustin 21 10 Corona dl'I Mar ,, 0 E\lencla 0 Sen Marco' 19 MISSION VIEJO 17·MI II Dam1el'l 0 .. Newoorl Haroor . 26 71 S.n Oieoo Mor\e • 1• Newoor1 Har1><>1 14 l Corone ~et Mar 9 16 Lono Bl'aCn W:t•O• 11 ESTANCIA <• S.t I 23 Estanc11 .. 71 Unlvttsllv 0 I) Mell'• Ot .. J Ocon View 71 0 L•Ouna Beac n .. 19 Fountain llelllY 11 9 .. 11 Laoun• Hill\ 14 10 SoOdlet>acl< 71 14 Dene Hills 3 M4r1f'la 14 St John BolCO 14 •• Wf:l''"''"''t'' 9 28 !tan Clemente 19 6 Costa MeH 0 11 La11una Hills , Eolson 71 13 Unlvef\llv .. " un111er•tt~ J3 I 0 Caplslr ano Vall11v 21 14 Ocea~ \/1tw J4 0 Newoort Harbor 26 l F ount111n """~v 78 1• WoodOridOf 73 SOUTH COAST LEAGUE 28 E!I Toro 21 , !taddtebacll. Jl CAPISTRANO VALLEY IS·SI IS lrv1nt IS 0 Corona oe• Mar 71 ll '4if n Ctemenlt 6 MAAIHA 11·41 " Fool""I 21 ClF " Espert1n111 16 39 Laguna Beacn 1& 72 E 'oerenia 44 29 Downtv 10 10 Serv1t~ 1 " Co\la Me\e 0 21 Corona ct.I Mar , N23-Foolhlll (!lome) I Foom111 16 21 Sen Clemenle IS 13 La Quint" 7 LAGUNA l'IEACH 13·71 19 DMa Hills 0 SAN CLEMENT£ II-I.ti 28 M11i>'an 12 0 8uene Par~ 14 18 tr11me 20 13 Senllooo 1 14 HuntinolOl'I Bt acn 9 6 E•••nore ?9 7' MiUton Vr1110 0 0 Corona det M/Jr 6 ,, Fountain Va ~ ... J1 1 Dane Hill\ 6 28 Laouna Hill' 1 ?9 E111nc1a 28 11 Ocean V tw 14 l Corona Ott Mar 14 70 El Toro 7S IS Ceo"treno Vallev 71 •1 WeS1m1n\lt' 19 IC Cosia Me'a 10 C!F n tr vine ~ IA Edison 11 , Vn1ve"1tv 21 IC El Mooena ll 6 Ml Mlouel (SOI 71 CIF 14 Woodbr•dlll' 0 1 Loouna 11111, 28 18 Lovo•a 20 6 Newoort Horoor JS DANA HILLS (l-71 0 Oana Hill\ 28 N73-Ser~••l' 1a1 Wm'" 16 Estancia 39 I Sonora 71 ' El Toro 37 l) Saoo•eoack ) I • Torrev Pines " 6 Ml\,•011 V1t t0 )8 OCEAN VIEW (1·11 6 Leciune Buc!I I 11 E11anc,a J ) Min ion Vlelo " 10 La Quinta 18 NEWPORT HARBOR 19·0·2) 0 Cap .. lrano va11ev 19 ANGELUS LEAGUE 0 CvP•eS\ 38 11 Santa Ana 8 0 El Toro s Garoe11a 16 20 lrv1nt 1 10 1r111n11 13 We11trn 14 24 Hun11n91on Buen 14 28 San Clemente 0 l=ount41n Vdl t!Y S7 26 Woodbrtdoe u 11 Laguna H•ll\ 0 Ed1sor1 •1 16 E stanc·a 0 0 Sen Diego Heh• 14 Marina 21 26 Sedelleoack 26 34 Hunllngton Beech 14 34 Cost• Mesa 0 El. TORO ll·ll 13 wn1m1n\ter ,~. 3S Laguna Beacl'l 6 32 Culle Park 17 Un1verutv s 14 Fountain Vattev W_,STMINSTER (C t i 34 Corona oet Mar I 9 Vattnete .l La Qu1n1a 0 c" )9 Irvine 11 Pac1f•C4' 14 ,, Btllftower 1 )J Lllouna H1 •\a ·~ ~,..,.,,u, 16 N2l-!tunnv H1U' lat 8uene Pkl " Dana Hill' Hollywood Park SVHDAY'!i ltESUL TS 1111t1 of 37-oav tti0<ouohbf'td maettnvl FIRST RACE. 6 lurlOrtg\ w '"'ll lJo McC1rron1 3 60 7 to ? to T run~ Mezo 3 40 3 20 )wel't Caoode f McHarouei S 00 Also raceo Mino Storrn Prl'ttn\e 0 Or. V.111 Proteuorn Fo1olr1g Screen Tome l 19 4 S SECOND ltACE One mole '""""" Junt• on IS•O•lle• q 60 S 70 A 00 Ir all c tuand Orrf9a I 7 60 S 40 "locno•a f0om•nouez t 8 40 Al50 raced F111a11en, Rnerve, Wut· moun1 Sauare, Cla\\IC ComPl!fllOI Hill To Pitl T mp I )I 3 S n DAIL y OOVBLE I 1 St oe•d s 16 80 THIRD RACE One m •• , Lanl'er v LOIO'r4 i 1180 S 60 3 80 r ir \I Slade 1 Dom1n11utll S 70 3 80 Pel \ Bes• !>l~ve1isi 3 co Al\O •aceo Rondon Wt'nalche ')nadnu•s1 Amoanador B•tlv Pen<nocuv T•rne I Si 3 S •S EXACT A (1 SI Paid s 158 so FOURTH RACE. 6 furlong\ Mt D•c!la I Mera I 8 70 • 60 I.; Aall•d Dancer f Pedroza I 1 60 Fd '" llV'cHarov•I 180 380 320 A. \O '&ltd F oroo11e11 Ht'• o ':> vmP1a A~•''°" Rovel T ·l'l'e t II •S e XACT A ( ~ 31 Oa•d \111 so FIFTH RAC£, One mile B••• fhe Buck <Pedroza! 24 60 6 80 '00 Larr 110 t P•ncavl l 40 180 W OOO\ La" llOIOVal 3 40 At\o raced Cold Nose sanv Pr.nee. E t B••C>\O O•omont• Dav 01 Aa1noows. S•01ta1e Tr11ca Oecca Norl!IWUt Fmt>tror Crime Free Ta~e A Re\I T me I 16 3 S \S EXACT A l 81 Ol•d \ 178 00 SIXTH ltACE 6 lurtono\ Lll'Oant FalCOfl <Mc(rrnl 780 JOO 180 Ca moanero fDe1a11ou1savei 2 40 2 70 MaQnlf1cen1 Encore (Meza) 3.00 Al\o r aced Wll!IOul Tears. E xcallus. (nrv\•lla C.r ttn Orc'1•d Br•ont Gtorv l me I 10 • S SS EXACT A 6 1 oa•d '47 00 SEVENTH RACE, Orie mtte Lach Tritbv 1L1onam1 S 70 3 20 1 •0 HOlioav Dancer 1De111nouuave1 160 710 Madam Farbl's McCarront 180 Al\O raced Ctur As Crotal. lrl\H' 0 Br•en. M·U EOOflY T•me 13S •S EXACT A 11 11 paid U3 00 ,, PICK SIX IS·7 S l ·6·11 oald S7S.670 80 ..,,tn \<k wlnn1no lltktls (1ix hOr\H S2 Pt( I( SI x con\Otallon e>etd \837 40 w I~ 18S wonn.ng llckell (five n()f\l!l I EIGHTH RACE. S lurlono\ Famo1.1• $tar IBiackl S4 60 tUO 7.20 Otoona1rt' Junior tMcCarronJ 2 90 2.20 \nanan•e tHawtevl S 40 Also raceo Rivets F actor No OtfHI, Boo Le Boo P11c M.ln"!I Eaoreumen Or Mantt Coo1 Frencllv Jell.CO Time 56 •S EXl'CTA (9 41 Pa•d 04300 NINTH RACE One mite on turf OH 8 0"0 I Hawll!v 6 90 S 90 ) 90 Otl Eoson Owns <McCrrni S60 SOO 360 VVt\ltrn IMeiat 9 20 Al\o raced Esluoenoo, llem Two, M&\H•e, Fabulous Dao, Poiv Test Time 1 •e J s SS EXACTA 12•1) paid 190.SO SS EXACT A 11 11 i>a1d •70 SO At1enoance 11 407 MISL wesi.m DIVIS"" w t. .. (, l l\ VtOI\ I.Har\ 3 0 1000 \an 0 1'90 Ttcoma \Nl(!lll• K1n1e1 ( '"' Ct tes l I 7SO 3 J .ISO I~·) ,SO 0 l 000 0 ) 000 0 ~ 000 SI l.Oul\ M•nnf\Ola P<ll\OurO'> lleU•mort Co\""7\ '""" •nd Clltl'tOO If H ltf'll OIYl\llNI • 0 J 1 7 l 1 ' 1 1 I 7 l t Suncif'l't k.trtt B•ll•mort 6 Co'"'°' I M,nH\O!I s Cht(tOO • Ttdl'l'I Oeflw• No e11T1n i.clleduied Tu.Mll'l't Oel'Ml N lltM•t \t llf'Ckilld WedMs.de'f'sGe~ Pllttt>Url1h 11 TaUM"N " l 000 ISO U1 '°° '°° lll lll Gt 1 • 1'' 2 l 1 I 1 2 1 7 'J 1 , NBA WESTERN CONFERENCE P•clflc DivlslOll w L Pct. Pnoen1a • • 661 Lekeo , s 583 Portland 1 6 ~8 Sea II it' 4 1 ™ CllOPtM 4 8 333 Go1oen '>tote 3 8 273 Mlelwut OlvlPon riOu\IOn 9 2 818 Oen••• I 7 800 Ulan 6 s S4S San Antonio 6 6 soo Dallas 6 1 462 KanSBs Cnv I 8 lll EASTERN CONFERENCE Attentlc Dlvhion e osion • I Pn11aoe1on1a 7 7 w asn1n11ton , s New Jersev b 6 Nt'w York 3 9 Ctfth'lf Divhion M·lwaukee • 4 C!locaoo 7 4 OtlrOll 6 s Atlanta 4 1 Indiana 3 8 Clevela nd I 10 Su~v'' ScorH uun 96 Mllwaukff 89 Portland 113, ~ lOS New Jusev 10?, Sealllt 91 Tonltlflt'• Game lndo11n11 111 Cnlcago TueMSev'' Gamu Plloen• x a 1 Liken GOiden Slate at Ntw Yorll. W1111\1n111on 11 P1111aoe101u1 Milwaukee al DallH Detroit al Houston Vta!I •I Kan'as C11v New Jer\l'V al Porlland Otm1u a1 Seallte Lik•rs 96, Buclcs 19 889 718 583 500 2SO 647 636 S4S 364 273 091 GB l 1, 3 ' 4 . ' 3 l ' • 7 1 1 , ) I 6 ' ' '~ 3') 4'' 6'' MILWAUKEE 1191 -Cummlng5 14 70 1 7 79. Preuev 7· 17 2·2 17. L•slfr 1-7 0·0 2, Dun111avv S· 12 O·O 10, Moncr1e1 S· 13 2-2 13, MOl\eski S·9 •·4 14, Devis 2·S 0·0 4, Grevev 0·0 0-0 0, HOdOU 0·1 0·0 0 Breuer 0-1 0·0 0 TOlll1$ 39·16 9· 10 89 L.AKERS 1961 -SoriOll\ 1·4 2·2 6. Worltlv 10· 16 • • 14 Abdut· Jabber 8· 12 • ·6 70, Coooer l 12 O·O 8. JOhnson 8· 16 •·• 70, Scott 4· lS 0 0 I, Wiike\ J·8 0·0 6, Kuochell. 1·3 O·O • Rambis 0·4 0 0 0 Totals •0·90 14·16 96 Score bv Ov•rten Milwaukee 26 18 19 76--19 Lakers 11 11 12 2t.-f6 ThrH·oo1nt ooal\.-<oootr 7, Preuev. Moncrief Fouled out-None Rt1X>unds- M llweu1<ee '5 (Cumm1no1 101. Lo• Anotl" SS ICoooer 9) Anfsls-Mllwaukee 26 IPrenev Ounteavv 61 Lo• Anoetes 27 !Jonnson II) Total lou1,-M11weu~ee 11 Los Anoeies 11 A-12.769 Tr1ilbluers 113, Clippers lOS CLIPPERS ( IOS>-John\on 8· 11 4·S 20, Whtte 4 8 O·O I. Doneld\on 7· 11 4·7 11, Ntxon S u 7·3 17. Smllh S· 13 3·4 13 Bric!Oemen 7· 11 I I IS. Warncfl. 2·S 1-7 6 Wellon ' S O·O I Caot7 7 1·2 S Totals ••·16 17·2• IOS PORTLAND ( 1131 -ThomoM>n 11 24 9· 12 31. vandewecihe 7 14 1·8 71, Norris 7-9 2·• 16. Pauon 10· 19 O·O 70, Vatenline • I 2·• 10. Cur 1 S 2-4 4, Drexler 3-6 O·O 6. Kar"v I I 3-• S, Scnetfler 0-0 0-0 O Tolels ..... 25 36 113 Sore bY Ouertws Cllooeri. 26 21 71 30-IOS Portland 11 2S 37 29-113 F"oultd ~I-None Reoounds-Los An- oeJes 60 IOonaJdM>n 1SI, Porll•nd 42 (TJ)Omo\00 17) AlSIS1$-l.OS Angele$ 24 ~lxon 11. Po<ttano lO tVetenllne l l Tol•I louts-LO\ Al\Oelft 2S. Porllencl 70 Ttchnl- Cll\-LO' A~s llleoal defen... Po<t1enc1 lllteal delenr.e. Los A"9tt•• Coach Lvnem . A-12,666 U -14 NCAA INd•rs TMm OHtflM G (W LI p" Avo Tul\8 JI 77·4 7116 901 AlaOlme SI 21 12·6 24IS M 8 Okleriome 3• 19· S 2'53 M 9 Meri.111111 l 1 7$·6 2589 13 S Oral llot>erts 31 71 · lO ?S69 '1 t Ntv Lu Veoa\ lS ,. t 2174 '1 I '" cn.ce go ,. n 1 2366 11 ' NortlltHlarn 37 27·S U13 90 • Aicorn St Jl 2l 10 ?4'7 to 2 Weil Texas SI ,, • ,, 2164 '° l Nor111 CtrOltN J l ,..3 1413 to I LOYOia Ill 79 20·9 7316 79' ~O"O h•al'd l 1 70 11 ?451 1' l SoY1" Alabeme 30 n • 2311 1' 3 SI Frenct\ Pe f1 11• IS 2140 1' 3 THm Oetel'IM Pr1rice1011 rr~no St Tu•ane OrtoonSI ttlno.s V•'~w .. t•!I •~ou11on leotl\I Norttlwl\lern l t,l(kMI! IOWI Noire o.,,,. C-,eot~town 10 C 1 l(~t\l(kV Jem11t Malll\on W'ruml"CI ' G (W•LI Pt1. f..Yt. 7' 11 !Ol40l SO 1 » fS 11902 W • 1t 11 lllW ~I 2t n 7161e SH )1 ?• S17)7 SU 10 n ' "'° .10 )I ,. 117'7 S4 4 ti ,, 161Slt w I 1t 2• St"' S1 l 19 tJ I UW ~1> » " 1mot sa J7 3' 3110 S1. 3• tf S 1t1S !ii I n U 141''1 M > '° u mni ,.4 , IC MATER DEi 16·SI fl 13 Fount•1n Vallev 17 0 lO Senta An• \/allev 0 0 30 Senta Ana 16 ' I) Wnlm1nS1er 15 " Hunllngton Beoc!I 13 8 Bl,lloo Amal 18 0 21 Bl5hoo Monloomerv 13 11 28 Plu• X 6 ?I 11 St Paul 13 14 14 Servile IS 70 CIF 0 10 SI Jonn BoKO (Ott 13 INOIVIOlJAL Sut1ne 0 G FG FT Pts Ave. Jakubltlr., Akron Jeck son Ala SI Current, BYU Huohe•, LOv·ll TiMSale Okla Dumars, Mc Nees Crawford. US 1n1 Ca0t, SD St Burl!, tone Wood Fulrln JKlo.\On. Ctnrlv Cra~e\ Yale Jo!llllOll GramOI Gervin, Tu S4 Mullln, SI Jns ~ewell Lamar McCla in. NewHem eraoAev. uSF S1evt n\, 1ow1St Yale\, GMa\On Carrabine, Har~rd McRooerll, Buller Newman.Ric.llmd J&ck,on, WTexSt Cllaoman, Davion Trve\dalt. CflaOI W•lliam,. Ind $1 Btard, Semfrd Mllcllell, Mercer Nori on. Te •A rf Oiiton, NO IH Harris , T ulMI Hel5el, Neutn Bellle, A1.1111rs Celn, MenM Stoc~lon, Cozaoa McKen111, Loy-Ce Acres, ORV McDeniet, Wlcl'ISI Lewis, LeS.te Even•. Mar•lll EPoerM111, ToleOo Binion, NC A& T Veuo!lan, Pill Gloson, Fla St Lvtle. w Cero Jone,. Slanfd HOOPII\. Neo CalleOoe. USA Young, Houstn SR 27 304 206 II• 30. I SA 21 30S 202 e 12 29.0 SR JI 312 742 166 27 9 J It 79 326 "' 100 27 6 SO 34 369 Ill 919 11 0 JA 31 ns 267 111 26 4 JR 2S 2S7 100 614 246 SA 28 2SO 116 686 24.S Sil 31 309 131 749 2• 2 SR 30 2~ 111 719 74 0 SR ZS 260 1'3 643 23 1 SR 26 2"6 117 60t 23.4 SR 29 2SS l6e 671 23.4 so 77 239 14' 626 23.1 JR 21 .22.S. 169 619 22.9. SR 31 217 136 710 22.9 SR 11 76S IOI 631 22 9 J R ?I 753 119 62S n.l JR ?t· 2S7 130 6'4 12-2 JR 26 200 17• S74 n .1 JR 26 209 IS3 S71 22.0 SA 1' 111 158 614 21.9 SO 32 273 lSS 101 ?1 9 SO 21 116 139 S9l ?I 9 SR 32 ?6' 163 699 218 JR 21 22S 161 611 21.8 so ,. 739 131 609 21.1 JR 30 276 93 64S 21.S JA 26 ·219 l71 U9 21.S Jlt 2t 260 79 S99 71.4 SR 21 235 103 S73 21 2 JA 31 17! 113 6SS 211 SR l? 261 m 6n no JR 2S 707 11l SU 21 0 JR 26 m .. ~· 70.9 SR 2t 229 126 SIA 20.9 JR 27 237 19 S63 70.9 JR 31 266 ll4 6A6 20.I JA 30 2Sl 111 619 20 6 JR 31 231 16' 631 706 SA 31 23S 10 63S 20 S JR 79 133 121 St3 20.4 SR 79 213 146 S97 70.• SR 31 2'3 1'3 619 70.3 JR 31 260 I 06 626 70.2 JR 1' 213 l3S S61 20.0 SR 31 239 141 419 70 0 SO 30 710 ISi S9I 19.9 JR 30 170 lS7 Sf7 19 9 SR 37 319 96 734 19 8 Fr" Throw P ... c.m." Cl G FT FTA Pct Alford. Ina FR 31 ll7 1SO 913 Carreblno. Harvrd JA 26 153 169 90 S Mullin, SI Jn• JR 27 169 117 90.4 Ferrv, Harvro JR 24 14 93 90.3 Cunnlng!lam.To SA JA 27 94 107 17.9 Golston. Lov·ll SO 29 17' 146 97 7 Benlev. ArlzSt SR 2' 112 121 '1 S Poller, ORU JA 31 82 94 17 2 Arnollt, Penn JA 26 87 9' 17 2 W!lilt, TnCl'llll SA 31 12' 10 16 7 Duncan, 1-tervrd SO 26 91 105 16 7 Dvll.slre. w Ill JR 23 96 111 86.S Armelo, No ut SA 11 13 96 '6 S Collln•, PennSI JR 27 76 at '6-4 Gromo• Feirf FR 2S 69 IO 16 3 Jeck Min, Ala St SA 21 201 23S 16 0 Tl'lOmH, OOU SO 31 129 l49 IS.9 Buroen, 51 L JR 28 103 120 •~• Tandy, E Tenn SO 28 114 133 IS.7 Perkins, NoCaro SR l 1 lSS Ill IS6 Miiis. Hohta SR 26 124 l4S US Wegner. Lsvlle JR 3S 12• 1"6 14 9 Five. Ricllmd SR 31 9S 112 ... Jl'nnlngl TxTecn J R 79 89 IOS 14.e Allman, N0Arl1 J R 28 II 10.t I• 6 Fleld GNI P ... c.ma .. 0 G fG l'GA .. ct. Otaiuwon, H~stn JR 31 ?49 369 67 S Hurl Alebme JR 30 161 253 66 4 Ewing, Gtown JR 37 242 36' 6S.9 GrHn. Ort St JR 73 13• 704 6S.7 Welker. Vllco JR 25 125 191 6S.4 Th0rn1on, UC·trv SA 19 lSl 736 64.0 . B•rklev, Auburn JA ?I 1'2 2~ 63 I Toomer FlaA&M SR 26 14f 1)4 63 7 Boldon. CnMlcll JR 27 ISi 231 63 4 Burke. Orlmlh SA 26 194 306 63.• Smrak, Cenl• JR 30 IS3 712 63 2 Johnaon, Grembl SR 79 2SS IOI 62 S Tucker. Bull« FA 21 157 2S2 62.l Rev.m. 5tanld SR 31 170 213 62.l Ftovd, HCrou SA JO 177 2'S 62 1 l<Ol!Glk, SMU JR )3 tll 3'° 62.1 Mullin, Prnctn SR t7 17' 215 •11 McDowell. Fla JR 79 lSO 244 6U Fisher, UC-SB SO 27 158 2Sf 61.0 Colemen, Md SR 3? 194 '" .0 t Buller, Nevv SO 32 l7S m 60• Tnomn. Cenrlv SO tt 161 26S 60.e JOllnMlll. W Kv Flt 19 147 242 60.7 OaYI,, SMU JR 33 219 Ul 601 Cefchlng,, UNLV JR 34 110 2'1 60.S • -~ Cl G .... AVt. Ole>UwOll, HOUsln S<urrv. LIV McOenltl. Wlc.hSI N•wm111, Ark l,.r "'"·Sb St Cron. Maine lrown, GWesll Sanden, Mt•Vtt Ol111otl, NC A& T ltOllUk.,SMU AOOlffl lt , I YU Pt'tlAlp, MIJVtl CtlleOOt USA Cmo. T-SI Norton. TtxArt L",MM\$1 lrenoon, Cr11ri1 ttrvslkowlell., Mont Atrtt,OttU ~ lo11nv c ..... MIDWllT Jlt ,, '°° 1J5 JR )1 •ll IH JR >Om 13.1 Sit t1 341 TU Sit ti ls2 12 4 Sit 17 »t IH Jlt,. m 111 Sit 2t >• 17 l Slit 2t lJS ll 6 Jlt » J7t 11.S Slit )I U2 11 4 Sit 21 m 111 J R lO m 111 Jiit " ,,, 109 Jiit ,. >04 10,t Jlt JJ U7 IOI SR Jl »t 101 SO >O 115 lU Jlt l 1 314 IOS'• Sit t1 m I04 lllt~ t i, 0-~ .. ---~ --. ----__ .._,._~ .. c ....... .., .. NCAA CHAM!ttONSHI" tel l4lltMllf """) Finl RWIMI. Sttvr•v • I 9 t m -Sl1nlord 123·41 vs. N•vv (23•21 10'.)0 • m -P..,_<llnt (J2· 5· 11 ... , UCL.A (lJ 12 11 Hoon -Ce llfOfl'lle (2l·•-ll vs Lovote· CllkHO 116· 12· I) 130 -USC 127 ... l) n Brown 131·S·ll CtftMNl!lell ~ •ends·~ om Ctlt~Ulill tamWIMb 1 end UO om ~Y'• k"'4Me I lO o.m.-71h Piile• 3 o m.-5tll olKt. 6 o rn.-3r<I ol•t• 1 30--ChamplOfl\l!lO c ..... SOUTHERN CALlflOftNIA INDIVIOVAL ' Tl!NNIS TOURNAMENT. 'ht UC INIMl Ml fk BHnam (UCLA) tied wltn ltoe»I• Wt1u (Peooerd1ne), S·S, rain dellvld (lo o. comoteted Wednesdlv at UCL.A, 2 o.m > D•nl Leal IPtPPff'dfntl leadlno Bred Pearce (UCLAI, 6-1, 1-2, rain clel•ved (lo oe comotettd at UCLA lodev) Bruce Man SOno Hine tUC trvlntl 1eadino David Llvlno••on (VCLAI. 7·5, 0-1, ·rain oetaved 110 be comoteftd lodav II UC lrvtneJ Corto5 Dil aura (Peoi>er<lint) leading Tim Pawu11 (USCI. 6·3, 2-1, rein oetevld (to be compltltd 11 USC Wedntld•v, 1:30 SemlflMls end Flneh Al UC Irvine. DK 1. 10 a m. •lld noon NHL CAMPBELL CONFEltNENCE $m""" DM\lon w L T Ptt GF GA EdmonlOll 1) J 3 29 99 SS Cel11arv 11 ' 1 2l 113 69 Klftel'· • 7 3 19 71 .. Wlnnloao ' 7 2 II 64 63 Vancouver ' 13 7 10 64 "' ""''" Oi\rlillln Cn•ceoo 9 7 2 70 13 71 St Lours 1 I I 1S S7 62 Minnesota • 9 s 13 67 19 Oe1ro11 4 ll 2 10 61 79 Toronto l 11 3 ' S? 79 WALES COHF£al!NCE Pafridl OMslM P111~0elo!111 11 3 3 2S '3 '5 NY l\lander5 10 7 1 71 9S '2 WHhlno1on ' 6 4 16 SI S7 NY Renoers 1 • l IS 73 7S PflllOUroll 6 9 I 13 61 71 New Jerwv 4 10 2 10 S3 " Adam• DM'ilon Mon1rea1 II 3 2 2• 62 '3 Bo" on 10 1 1 71 68 S7 Bul1ato 9 1 2 70 15 64 Heriford , 8 1 16 SI n Quet>ec • 10 1 17 69 7S SundlV't Sc- NY lsianotr\" l. Phlladltl>flll l New Jar"v 6. NY Renoers O Quet>ec S. Chtc•OO 3 Tonitf\t'• GI~\ "1:'e'lvarv"fl IC1ll9f; -,r-• -Toronlo at Montreat. n TueJOl'f's Gllnft Cntcego 11 Quet>ec. n WH!linoton 11 NY ••lander\, n St. Louis at Ve ncouver. n Au1trMian OMt'1 (If MtlbwrM, Au1traae) Tom Watson 8ob SJenton Crt11Normen Rooeer Oevi1 8ren1 Murrev FIMI ltnutts 67-72-70-72--211 72·69·72-ff-292 "·67 · 71-73-215 73-70-69·7l-21S Ian 8ek.er·F inc!I Mlkt Clavlon Terrv Cele Noel Relclll1e Mike Cotanclro Bob S11ear..- 0 1v10 Mtrrlma n Gerard Tavtor Mike Ferouson OuleMoore Ptler Mcw111nnev Pattr Sl!nior" Simon Owen 72·10·73-71-lN 70-71 ·69-76-2" 73·70-67·76-?M 73·72-6'-7)-1'6 71 -14·70·72-217 74-71·70· 13i;-?11 7•·7S·"·73-190 72·72·73·73-190 72·7'-71-73-290 7l-76·69·n-m 70·72·7S·73-290 73·72·76·69-290 70·69·74-17-290 71·71-76-290 Frank Hoo1to l(ylHta Han Pavne Slewan Gor<IOll Brend John Liller Liem Hlgg1n1 Sluarl R"" l(rls Moe Ohr,k _ 7S-73-70·7t-292 73·7S·7H)-m 10-13-n-n-m 72-71·72·7t-193 7S·72-7S-7S-297 7'·74 n-n-m n-n -n ·n-300 Paler HamOlell JohnCodwln Weller Goofrev 7S-72-17· 76-300 71-77-74·79-301 77·74•70·et-302 77-74·1 S·U-309 ~·s tournament I•• Mlvau-1, Jepen) •·S Simoson.us. 114,380 71·71·72-~m 8.~nor, W.Grm. 541,322 6t-70-72·71-2'2 S.8•tleslllf•, Son ' 19,934 70· 72 ... 7·7,_294 W.Wood, US 519.IJ.4 71·69-71-7)-114 S LYie, Brit S 19,'34 73-.. •72·7')-114 K Aret, Jon '19,134 10-11-n -n-114 J Miiter. VS 511.363 61·67·n -7t-2tS F Couotel, U !t 111,363 7S·70·71·69-2tS M.Kuremo10 Jon. II l.363 12·7'-68·71-29S S.Teketlelhl Jon, 111,3'3 73·71·6'-72-ltS G.Koch. U.S $7,603 72·69·70-7S-116 I AOl<f, Jpn '7,603 6'·73·72·72-2'6 H YeWCla, Jon '7,603 71·72-M-79-2" l NelM>n, US IS,"7 72·71·71·13-2t7 L Mire, US •S.4'7 72·74·70-11-217 • G,Arcller, US '5,497 71·10·74·7?-217 C.SJedler, U.S '5,4'7 12·67·74·74'-2'7 G Mar•h. Aut SS,4'1 74·71·69·7>-117 S Hoch, U.S Sl,'96 7l·74·6'·n-7'1 o EdWard•, us n ,206 72·70·74·77-m c 810, us "·'" fl-74-74-7S-2'4 H Green, US SU'9 1'·61·73·77-794 C Pfffa, U.S 'l,714 74· 73·7'·7S-2ff 0 1,1111, US s 1,311 7S·7S·7S·tt-307 x·won otavoff Wtetctnd traMlidMM IA5WIALL A'""kall LIHllt DETROIT TIGEltS-AMOulleed Iha tt• Uram.rt! ol lt()041f' Ct•'•· ollchlno COKh Acuottd Ille rta'9nellon of u t lt\ lrown, Nlllno COICfl t USKa •ALI. Nelltftel aeu.-.. Aa~ .. tlell KA N$A S (;I TY K tl'fG~f'lllOU'llCtO Ille re1l~llol'I Of JeC:ll Mcl<ll\llff, llffO COllC.ll, eno "'"'"' Piii! JoMICNI 10 rtOlec:'e lllm f'OOTaAl.I. Nt._..f' ...... LMtlW NEW Y~I( GIANT~ l lfnetl Orev. wlele receiver, on tilt lnlurtd rewve lltt Acllveltel AndY Hffclen, tlfltbecll.er WASHINOTON lltEOSKIN AC!lveftel ~rli. Murtltlv. ttf.iy. Placed Tonv ia.tao. Mfefy, on lht ll'IMM ''*"' 1111 HOQCCY ......... .._ .. L....,. ~OS AN~ELES KINOS-.ACQulred Sieve $noll. left w1119, from lilt Mo!ilrMI Cen· •<lll'lt IM lullll't contidtretton• PHii.AO 1.l'IHIA FL Yl:lt ...... T.m YOunt. cenfff, •llO Ptlll Guey, f'ltfll wtnv, trom Htnllev ol the Amtrtcan Hoell.av L .. oue COLt.108 fl OfttOA •ll'!IJ4t ~ Hell "9H loolMI CMCl'I ltr 1"-ltl) -- . - ---- .. IC NOTICE g:fC::n1!~ °::~'•O: ~~by J:.,~ .,_:. Pt8JC M>TIC£ IC·MNI ICf!'*I • lotlcwt. IO-wlt nett 1112 t4th 8trMt, __ _....-.....-,;;..;.;,.;;.;.._..._ MOnCa Of' 8M.I Ut9T "A" Aoom ~. ltct.mento, CA PM:TmOU9 .,_.. TO:,_... lril'" Mw"8I ~A~ ~ Unit C tM 14, not '-thttl l'tw (5) ~ ITATRMaNT l<IQN 24 ~ Irvin. ~.,,No 3tM ... Mid cMnd4ll dtyt In ectvllnOt ol TM tollowlno Pttton 1t CA Nf11 • • Unit IUhown on that otftaln blO OPtll!OO dttl, dOlnG CIUlll*a .. HOTICI 11 H•AEBV Codomtnlum Pltn tll~ ~ta tor lfnall buat· EC'~R ENTeR,RtSlS, 20 1---- 0IVIN tf\91 U. pr~ 0.-:::'~ ~-t Part Of 01411 new pr~ In,,,. AIWM'd lutttrlly &t , INl/'lt, C ... f 9Cftbed ~ co61el•at ...__etton of Cow-Of lflt contrect for the~ '2714 underU.~tolUm nanta, COtldltltOnt MCI Ae. IMfltloMd ~~II ftladt GunttM Ecer,toluU4Wf. lltd '•rt n•nhlp 0j •ttlC11ona rtCOt'Md June 16. by -.itlfnlltlno • ~td ly St , INIM, Ctllf t2714 VA'-HALLA VINEYARDS ~~2• In IOOlc 10175, Paot IO.m STD t 11 wllh the bid Ttllt bu..,,.._ la COfl• uec:u1ed ~RUIMll 8'IOh • • ol Ofllctal Atoofd• ln P'~ No l)fefertinee w.. ducted by an lndl\'ldull Md Mwvel 1 11 • Liln t tnt Offloa ol tnt County ~ be granted un .... lhe bid II Ounee M. ~ p I ' . COl'dtt ol °'1ln09 County, eceomplhied by Int STD Thia ltatamenl WM flltd • ~=it:'~·ntt·i ==: Cellforntt MCI a t/16\11 Ufl" 811 wl1h the County Cltfk of Ot· eold .... ''-1.1~---' • t dl'JkMd ln1er .. 11n ana to Lot Bid P'C>POMlt must bt ange County on <>ctobet tt. l•••••••••••••••iiiiii•i:---:--::-:---i":~~~~r,-i!l!!ll~~~-~-~~~~~--~~~~~-=w'111ttioftlo'U:;::i:.,: 2 of Tract No. 7513 M per tubnlllled fOf Int enllr• 1984 ... fp ... .. .... =· f '31.a t ............ ( • ..,, ,,,., recorci.d l.n 8oolc 2t7, WOt1I dttcrlbed .... n Of.. ,_,, T H E DA 11 \' Pl I 0 -- tllM Of:;..";"~ et :3: 33 Ind 34 of Mil-vletlone from ~ and Publlehed o...,. CoMt • 4 ,. l!U C....... lllt ••)l!t .... IMI OftMUnlt*98t ... ):o= ftrA ~=·In 1ht of· IC*lnc.tlon• Will not be Oeit'f PllotNoYembtr 12. 19. ttA: . lfl£D 0..-1-·1 :.: llOL R~ 1::=iliiiiiiiiiii-&i _ .. _ ......... iiiiiiiii ............ Nd a •• a .. a .... iO! ~ 2~1 1M4· •t 10:30 w~~ofTr:i~~ :n::~:"Di':.~14:,: 28'o.c.tnbtr). tM4M·211 'l1·J<'phone ... -n·1.-f'. 11T111"'9mT ~.._,..._ 0 clodl A.M., It tht mlln en-~ map tec<>fo.d Ir\ O.Oartment has the tigl'll to •• I 1M,IM Lm.. -..~ ~~':~~ 299.P,.gM7and8of waive any lrregulatlty In .•--Nll--IC-NO-TIC(___ ~lonc.ltt\·tridrn ' StS,OOOdown Hoau.fy. H•&HI• ~~ CMc Ctnttt Or!Ylt W•t. =1:.ne:: ~tlyn ::: =•or to '~ any or .ti 1------.;....;.,~;..;..;;--Ing 12'~ ~ , ... P-V eo ft Wide I04 4 IN\. b. 7 t"l?'S-e17S SantaAna.Cfilffofn1et2101 corw. ttiown enc1 deft'*' No bid will be~ f1CTITIOUl 1U ... 11 8:!IO \. \l. :, :~O P. \I • ttsolmo P~t '*" au .. ,.... k> • I04 ~ Tht Pfoc-ty '0 tit eold .. "Common A,.. .. on tht ""'-' 1111 maoe on • aten-~ ITATnmNT Du .. 1t1ri;<> Cou1111•r: ~ write oft Oleen 3 ldrm S50K under liPP' J~!!=.!!!!.J!!L.Jll!! contlete of .6 unit.I In tht above·t•l•u•d to Con. dard form lurnlthed by the Tht tOllowlng pet90f\t.,. 1 ... n'dla t\om... ~all for Thitl P'°'*1Y """" bl @xm m . "'~· 1 ~~~~~~A~l!.~~f!SRHOISP OF domlnlUm Plen 0.01t1men1 and IS rnaO. In dOIPnoAC~IFICELEC .. T.RICC"... ~londa\ .~ rnla\ ... ·-··-· futh•t lnforrNlatton ~-.~E~7~ Ot&m6c OOMfl"" ltteel "' " · Excepting lhtr•lrom any tlCQOrdance with the "In· ..,..... .,.... ---&41-2.313 lttr. r-7"" he'lllllf!V -.oor•nt d • For Information ~n-pottlOn. of lots A and 8 of 1truetlon110 Bldd«S" PANY DESIQNEO SY$· u ()() ' "l 5 0() I, "I - -Furn or uftfur'I\ 111-1113 Ing tht Mle contKt either Uld Tr9C1 No. 7513 adJol,,. Proapac:tlve bid~• may TEMS, 5327 Humboldt u : "\.t~ •• : •1~ • 0 C _..,. W -1fontDupleJcOfltum- Aobtrt 8. Coldfwn, hq. or Ing said l.ot11, examine and obtain plane Drive, eu.na Pane. Calif I) I-' \I )f I\ F · Id OM neat perk, p&ey. i!.. bMltl W,_, tot d ' J\191 ,...._ ar off f1CH Fred«le M. Zinn. EIQ., both A1ao •xceptlng therefrom 1~clflc1llon1 and bid 90821 • • .~ gre>Uf'd 2 Bdtm, 2 ~th :.:!.. 1 ft -•"" w/-... mod"'"°"· ~ 11"9e l100'• ofttlt i.. firm of Her1, l(lnQ eny portion QI Lot A of .. kl IOfml by ca111ng'at Of malling Jaaon M 8'endt, 5327 I' l BI IC \ l'I 0 '\ I> I. \ I H . f \I ownet unit. French doO<•. ....... -_._ .,..... °' ~ Ill 2be ..,,,., l Coldren, ~ Eut ~ Trtict No. 7795 adjoining a req1H111 to the Office of tht Humboldt Drive, Buene l..cled gtea, ~-~ mf. i "'8$K 8GI 873-3771 S750 a.t tile 531M1*> polnte, Sult• 400, SMta Nldlott. ChlelotP1an1°'*111on1e1 Perk.Callf.90e21 ~londa\ f r1. ·k30 11.m. ~.000 "BR...,. ........... .__ ..... I Ane. CA 92707, (714) Alao.xoep11ngandr~· the above address tat. Anna L" Brendl, 5327 IJ,._,I Ul t1 ~fS " ,..,.,.i,eruwuuu ,..,..,.., l.AAOl!COHTl:Ml~RY 432-8700. lnguntothe Grant0<.lluuc. pllone numbflr •17141 Humboldt Drive, Buen• Tu£'.,da\·• !\ton 1 :~0· p.rn. ~tor•,l?MOOO :b:';':'ec,.":-'1~~ *flfdPIRI'• 3 9A2'4SM,u2'~CC>M 0.ltd: Noveml>tt 8. 1984 °"'°'' Ind aulgn1 from 857-5212 Park. Oallf. 90e21 w Pdne!'-da .... ., UC~. • . 30 p 111 ,., Room fOf • ...... wrv VAUtALU VMYMDI, H id 1/85th undlvldad A pay~c bond Scan-Juon Brlfld • . . ~~tlonel~ltt. $123.500 lea llfil....... JOYCE WALTZE ly: l(etl ......... ~ lntw .. 1 IA said Lota t and 2 Oard Form 607 in Jh• Tl'll• ltalement we• ltled Thur Lia\ "t'd. ~:;~() p.m. • .... ,,., w• u. ... UY 131-tMe '-'-• non-exclualve •n•men11 1NT1oun1otllfty1>41(cent of IN wilh the Col.lnty Cleft! of Of. l "hiirs. 1 ·rn 5 t hf ...... lier. · 28A 2~ SPACE 31 Pvbllaned Otangt Cou1 and non-exc;tualV• rlQhll ol contract p1lc4I mu11 accom-ange County on Ho.,.,,,~ f ru.Ja\ :. p.trt. * ........ * Mt-Tl21 300 E. eo.t H ........... . Dally Pilot November tt, way over. undtlf and vpon pany ""8tY contract lnvolv· e. l96' J v 3 00 r"5.,..., .... -., 1984 M·22t ::r;~~~ .. ,::~1~~ ~s~:"dllure ln e~ca.• Published Orange~ ..;~:~~d\a\ !.·~:: : p.rn. JASMINE CRK$335.000 laat. IMcll I =::;:.VIiiage ---------1ng or ocher atruclufl hU The01ueeulul bldd., will Dall~NOV9mbtr 12, t9, :~:()() p.m. 3BR 2'1tbe.t>Mutltul (1t4)1 3-1331 OLD COM-~ 3 P\lllC NOTICE ti.ti wected lor ~aty be required 10 enter Into a 28. 1>41t 3, l984 SPYGLASS $450,000 L.m lllJ lllT llT. -8d 3 be ,,.. ~ IJQM _____ ........ ...;...; ........ _ or dHlrable lngre11 or contractual agrMm410t In M-209 ( · \ , ( a..· 1 I ·1·1 , 4BR 2'1tba pool view _., llU.. •-• & tJ/tty with IWdwOOd NOT1CIOF .. , .... , ... vi.Ion cabltl, Che fOfm ol. "Standatdr---------• ' ...... \ tt' & HARBRVUHM&2eo.ooo _, FORONLYS24,500 -~ floon. 11500/nlO. DIATHOF undf'groundwfreeanelcon-AgrMment, IOfm STD 2" P\&JC NOTICE ('()ICl)L'("l I'~\ 4BR·XlntLocatlon Recetttly rem<>deted 2· may boy this 20' • 51 17a..t000Agt. MARY W. "°"°AN dul11 lor electrlcity, t .... wfllch..thall be binding upon 1---------' '... . ~ ' "'I; WESTCLIFF. $285:000 ttory home on 45' lot. ~1"8t hOfne wtttJ 2 I,,----==-.,,.,----:~ AND°' N iii ION phonM end oth« purPQMI lh• St111 ot Calllornla only '1CTIT10UI IU ... 11 11 3BR 2b• Mint Concl French doors. lHdtd 8<12 be. Lrg ·~ SO« w-28A 2be. on bch, ~~lta9' and accountrtment1 th.,.e-upon approvalbythe Slal•. NAMt!ITATl•NT •1"''' .1l1u11 ... 111d I 111ri·1·l11111 .. 111•1' CORONA DELMAR glass. ou d...ilt and &ltltchenar•·alioffOf'lt furnlunf,pvtgate.S1IOO, Tll ATK NO. A11M11 lo, MWerl, drains, 1i1rater, Tht contract 11 not binding The following person Is 111• 111,141,. 1111 .. ,. II II' 111.,1, 11 111 ""' "' ,1ho\1. 3BR 2b• Oollhouse! sunny IOI.Ith petlo In· porch. Young lldtta .,.._ utJl9 Incl. 815-3134 o all heh. beneflclarlM. gu and steam plpet and on elttltr party unleu and d<>lng buslneaa u · eluded In this 4 bedroom. come. Agt ~5937 SPYGLASS HtU ~ fM\ creditors and contlngenl accou\rementsthereto.1nd unlllll l11pprQY9dt)yap-WEST COAST STA· 1'11·.1 .. 1· .... ~ l11r .1 1,11111·11.1111111 lll-1111111, 3bathtlome.OWNER IN u-Jud ....... .........._ln,.._, ~.Oceerl .. ~ CfedltOfS. anCS pertona who tor eucn roof overhangs and proprl111 authorized 1t1t• TIONERY ANO VIDEO I I DISTRESS .. BRING OF-._B -... .,..F ...... ll ,., 1--· mo , _ v ... ..-.... 1-.. maybeothenol!Mlnt«•ted other enctoectlmll'lll ol a egenclM, lndudlng the Of.. SUPPLY, 18387 Solaa 1111111 11'1 \\ It'll I ,11111·11111 ).! \t1llf .111 FERS Wu In escrow -eec n u .,r c e ...... ,...,. .._ In the wttl and/or ettat• ol' Mkt °' dlaslmllar kind, Ind partmant of General SM· Chica, Huntington S'eectl. L'RIC()lh... $399,500CALL631-1400 $39,900. M1·20CM lll:'"~--:; ... ::;:-----ziEA"6 MARY W. JORDAN MMmenll on adjacent Lota vicea, 11 required Calli 92849 .. ~ ~ :~; A petition llU beer\ filed In Mid Tracts I°' root over· A" nonexem.pt 111t• con Sandra Spiro, 4091 Mom· ( lii·i·~ , 1111 r .id .t.11 h ,111.t -----....... , hMrt · 21id;;;:•Hiti:co;;;;;:lllll by ROBERT N. GORDON In hangs and othef encroach· tracts of S5.000 or more are lngstar Or .. Huntington r•·11111 I IAl Ill. O&PI Ill Inert 1451 yard, 2~ E. 22nd St. the Superlof COurt of Ot· menll,ofa llke ordlaalmllar subj.cl to 11a1e concractor Beech,CeUf.92848 1·rror .. 1111111 1·d rn l1·h . I Ill' ll \II ' Close to Bay, thlt llfand ShownSet/Sunb)'llPPt .,. County ttQUMtloa that kind, together Wltl'l tl'le tight nondlecrlmlnellon anCS com· Thia bualn•11 11 con· home tin brlelt, wooda Lg Vlew lot w/plana. lnalde "="'iWifo;;ri;t;;;;;<w:;ii;ii2 R09ERT ~. GOROON be to conwy Mid ~II to pllanc• r•qulrementa ducted by: an Individual ,, I H'> I .1 .... 111111'' I ea Iii It I\ f 111 1111• f I r .. 1 ri.:oi.---iiiiiiiiiiiiiloio........... and WWJ!llh in lhit 3 geted lnd6wl W• cc. 2 br TOM!lhome W--6de 2 ~ted u peraonal rec>-any person, nrm. public util· pursuant to Governm•nl Slndra Spiro 1111 orrc·i 1 111.,1.,111111 1111 h . bedroom llome with ion Owner (714) 844-1451 c.gw, lrg pedo, ~. reeentatflle to admlnltt8' the tty Of Q0¥9tnman1a1 body. Code Section 12990 and This stattmenl WIS llled Atlllng $380,000. CALL Oat .. ltatt aaoo 213-390-1005 . t111t• of the clecedent. Tht Alao •xcept.ing from Mid Calllornla Admlnillrallve with the County Clefk of Ot'· CI.A SS IF I EI} fl· i2-~h 7 H 673-e900. ., I SH 2 ...... 4br 3be pool petition requeeta eutllorlty Loll 1 end 2 all gas. oil, COde, Tiiie 2. Dlvlalon 3, ange County on November '·--------~--------• r~rty ~ 7 to admlnltl., tht .. tat• tlydrocarbon1, mlnet1l1 and Section 8201 8, 1984 1•8 •· "·attal lM• "'"Tl Hf HO~l Hewa!Ft0ndot·Grut 957~= ~~:~mo un<let the l~t Ad· ocher 1ub111ncea tying In acciordance wllh the f~ 18HI fer -It -• HOMt ., lee. buys for $3eK Pacific .,.--,-------- mlnlttratlon of atat• Act. belowadepthof500.00IM1, provlalon1 of Sec11on 1770 Published 0rllllg4I Coaat lta I lM2 WSI .. ••-• REAL ESTATE Coutllnt Prop 414-1399 $400 ~ rv ~ A hMrlng on the petition bUt without the rlgnl co ant« of the Labor Code. the Of.. o.lly Piiot November 12. 19, __ e_r_a ____ ...,....,._ -• a1_1.,.. pe11 ut._ pd cw see! 3br #lllbehtldon Nowmber29, upon th• 1urf1c• or p1nmen1 l'lu ucertaaned 26, Oecember3. 1~ *•SIPllPfln* lmmeculete 4 bd +family ---------·--------lucU., faraJ 2befncldothtn.i 196' at 9·30 A.M In Dept. subsurface of the property that 1he t8f*al prevalllng M-207 2Br houae on '.i\ ~re. room home on e large e.t D00u fM 53e-1190 No. 3 11 700 Civic Cent« above a depth ol ~ 00 !Mt ratH of wages appilcable ¥'! ..... corner lot behind the UIE Clll lllFf LIT · Cntn 1575 •v•T Df1V9 W•t S 1 A CA --------I 195,000. 75g..g 1s2 lniat I au • an• na. fOf any purpoM wl'latM>evet the coonty In whleh the work n11n•ic NOTICE getes In exctutlve Big Prime area between In-.,.. FeUbrook, 2 7 acrH. SHARP 481. Oule4 St. Obi 92701. 11 retenled in deeds of re-Is to be done are those rat• rUUL Canyon. Fr"hly painted. 1plratlon Pt ancs llt11e iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Cha rming 2BR older gw/yllfd, no S*• le50 IF YOU OBJECT lo The cord establllhtd and publllhed flCTITIOUI 1u·-·· OlllTIY OL.11 U"lll New dra ...... Neu1ral Corona Beach. Your SIMILES home Pool. ulew. mo. S50-8373/t7t.642! granting of the petition. ~ou PARCEL 2. Non-e11Clullve by the Director of lndullrlal -' ..-dre•"' home wtll com-• should alther ~ at \tit euements tor lngr ... Ind Relatlon1 Coples of the NA• ITATl•NT Magnificent Mesa Ve<Clo decot. Imm.di.le -·· Pat k 11 k • I• t t In g · S800 EASTSIOE ~ l'leerlnganchtateyouobjec> .. ,..... publlc uttllt._, -· wage,., .. are on nie ••the The tollowlng person Is golf courM home on the oc:cup.nc:y. Micki Cooper mend spectaculer vlttu this II the perlec:t tt•rter $1M.OOO 873-0187 home wtoar-ge 38r 28a = =-~he~ :J:; ::.,.~ fc:': .. ~,=~ 8"i!!1~~~F=-ot Plane d~~ gi:'~ ~AL KE~ ~~':r,~a13~:. ~~~~ 544.e200 ~~~':: ~ ,:1.IOfli>;~~ ~~ r.';:· ,:.,. bdt.';e.' ll hcWtt l • ____ M_.t_22_...-___ _ the heering. Y04Jf eppeer-but not llmlteCI co the COO· Siie lnapectlon will be held BUILDfRS, 126 E W"9Qn-patios. 3 car garage & S9~.0<». eau MARILYN Exoellent 10C:atlon. MOYe large i;;;;;nt;y Hawaii S"5/m0 IOWity 3 8d 2be anoe IT\8'f be In pet90n Of by 11ruct1on, Installation, re-wees . Nov 1111 10:00 A.M. Coat1 Mesa. Calif 92827 extra storage Spaclou• HILL In eof'ldltlon. $94.500. P<ot> fO< exchange or hOuM w/ yard. lndfy rm, your ltlOfM'(. placement, repair, malnlen· Fairview Stlte Hospllal. ThOf!IU Danie! Walker. l'IOme on a 1....-tv street A JltI112_ Hie. Pacific eo .. ttlne get'. d btt4nl, nice_._ IFYOU tAEA c~Fo~ ance. operation and UM ol .Victor Blel•lac ~!~f~9~~f"· Coat• M.... Very low s'.425~0001 Ce ll 'filsor' F'rop 494-1399 ~~· utl pd. Of a contngant er tor o all necessary Of d .. lfi'ble Cl'liel ol Plane Opet111on1 This bualn••• 11 con· 646-7171 .' I tht c'8cHMd, you mut1 fMe roadways. eldewalka and 111 ducted b'f an Individual ealty LIDO ISLE BAYFRNT HSE Tit N•*WI 'fOlK claim wtttl Iha court Of condulta over the follOwtng PubUShed by lhe Or111Q9 Triomas Oanlel Wllkll' W/dock for 90'+ y.cht. Ml 1• l>'eMnl It to cht personal deect1bed land Coast Dally Piiot No¥9mber This stalemer>I was filed Ull llU Cetta .IA I 34 Pool, apa 873-7873 • ,.._,tallve appointed by PARCEL A· All of the land t2. 19, 1984 . with tile Coun"' Clerk ol Or· tal AM 7 86-1172 Will trade P-'-0eMtt EASTSIOE 18r, new pelnt, Int court within tour months ducrlb«S In Parcel 2 of that M· 187 '' .,.,... * llSTIESS l&LI * -·• & d _...,. AV! nowt trom. the date o1 ttctt i. cel'laln deed recorded July i---------!ng, e98~ounty on Novem~ E.._.T .. ID'I Charming 5 ·BR home Condo at Monterey gar a yr __.. IU~Ollet••taPfovlded 11, 1872 In Book 10218, DllDLC NOT CE v. I .. ..,_.. Open Beams. aouth Sharp 2 bd condo. sec Country Clvb for S48-.31550f~ In Section 700 of th• Page 698 of Ottlclal Records , __ n_1U_l ___ I___ f2= IEUllT patio. oew kitchen ap-gate, near S.C Plue house/condo/eptt etc EASTSIDE 38t 299 widen, Probat• Code of Callfomla. In the office of the County K·14'41 Published Orange 1 Great Newport e.ach lo, pllenoes. Good financing, w/pool, 59e ~ carport. 8.80.~ Or1v. Merit (7 1•)5~1 1g gs, ~ pool. Pool fhe~tof Mi19 Oleil'fle wlll der of said oounty Notloe of .... of Dally Piiot No¥9mb« 12• 18 cation off of 22nd St R• ciOM to ttnnlt courts and Seciiflce~·SM,toO-Irvine 1 & d 1 1 not ellPif• pt10f to lour PARCEL B. t.ot• A and B ..... Pfotl8'1J at 26, Oeoemt>e< 3. 1884 M·20t modeled 3 8d 3 beth prlvete ~ terrific 3 bd only $79,999 assume ::::-----;;::---;--== ll Wu... l n r,;voo~mo. ~7 nc cnont~lll trom 1ht date of the ol Tract 7688, u per map Pm•t• a.le home with gorgeoua cus· vamlly living 10'~% fin Try $7000 min • ..,..., leac• 1 "!*~WE!'W'""!N'!IEllEllDl""'li"'50'!1""!Q!"'!!N!"!tl/Tl!IP§ ~ "STSI.....,, CL~ "N 2n· heal' notloe above. record•d In Book 294, No A· t 16023 tom spa situated In a ...._.O down. Great Investment· 4 llll llEn ISi less then 10 ~ o6d. c;.,. ~ """ ... • YO MAY EXAMINE the Pages 19 and 20 ol Ml•· In the Superior Court ol MllC NOTICE wooded backyard. Cus· Won·11as11 + . Mustcloleeecrow_~ort 18a l MW pelnt. Gar. HI• kept by the covrt. :!Jou o•Oaneoos Mapa, In the ot· lhe Sta ca of cautornla, tor com tllew0tk In kitchen• I'::::::::: 2511 W. Sunflower Nlee 4Br hme wl.eparett January -111 ~pe.la yrd """ now "501mo. 11• a person lnter .. t In floe of the County Recorder the County ot Orange K·1•70e and blll'lrooms. Iota of I• Call Patrick Tenore 600 tq It gye&t unit onty MllS1 be motivated. 548-3155 °' 9M M34 !ht... eal&le. you mey ....,. of Mid county. 1n the Maner ot Che Estate FICmlOUI IUllNEIS .1111 UITll 63\.1266 C+fcvle< driYe. pool. frutt ~the executor or edmln-PARCEL c . Loll A and B of FLOYD c SMITHA, Of.. NAllllE ITATE.wT ~"'"' ;28~~~ csoora trees & mucil more Own-752-2211 ~CM. lltratOf, Of upon the 81· of Treci No 7513, u per ceased The followlng persona aJf ··• IOEAlflllT era will oon~ Mrrylng lntalt 2 b< w/lge yatd. Corney tor the executor or map recoreled In BOOll 297. Nota 1• hefeby given th•I ooing bull,_ 11 Spacious. nicely r•· 1st TO Prtoed $297.500 ---------5'8-4589 eh 10llln ldmlnltttalor. and flle with Pegea 33 and 34 iot Mtl'-Che undef"llgned Wiii sell at LIGHT BRIGAOE GLASS modeled oceanlront FULLER REALTY 1--------- lhe coort with ptoof of..,. ce11aneou1 Mapa, tn Che ot· Private sale, 1o tile l'llghesl WORKS, t8t5 N 590 w Traditional home Just a shOrt walk L ._, I I I 112-1211 1.B_•_•_,.. __ F_uut_._ .... ___ ~:!'1~, ~ ~~ Ylce, •written requeet 1111· tlee of tile Counly Recore!e< end bell bidder. s..ibj.c1 to 1911'1 SlrMI, Co111 M... Realty' from Newport Harbor tWtr rnll lltrllf =iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii dine rm. hardwood ""· Ing that you deelrt apeclal of Mid county ' t:Qnllrmallon of NJd Su· Calllornla 92627 Yacht Club 4 Bedrooms. 3 BR 2ba on quiet aul de • r~. •el JIU 2112 dbl ,..,, lg iano-.-notlee ot the tlllng of an In-PARCEL 0. Loi A ol Tract ....... ,.~ Court, on or afler Che Lucille M Bear11, 258 631-7370 3 car garane L••na mat· s c Pl "·JI t UJFlllT ltl ... r --•----...... _..____ of ,..... ..... -. ... •-sac n< . a.ta ...., or ._ 2&: 2Ba t:=! w-... to yrO. AYI nowt S 1000/mo. V8nlOfY •"" eppt.._.._,t No. 7795, u per map re-23rd Oay ol NOV9mber 198", Sleflls Street, Coat• MeN. ter 1ult• and private deteils A,...,t 64 1 4300 ... ,....,,,. -.. tat• ..... Of of the peU-CO<ded In B<><* 299 . Pages .. the oftlee ot WILLIAM J CallfOfnla 92627 e n c I 0 •• d p 8 t I 0 .-·. • A real snowplaoe Thi• unit beactl s 1000/mo thf\l 5-48-3155 or 998-3434 Ilona or ecoount1 mentioned 7 and 8 ol Mlacellaneoua LENKEIT, 25251 PINO De Thia bu1lne11 Is con· IEU YlllE $795,000. Submit terms. olfe<t mast., Bdrm, den, June Call 790-5055 E.oe Qutet cozy 28,, yrd, In Section 1200 and l200.5 of Mapa In the office ot the Allcia. Suite 200. Lagune ducted by an Individual Large 4 Bdrm 2 bath on llTIO llWI 1 ·~ bath, b eautlful Iha Cellfomla Problt• Code. County Recorder ot said HUii. County of Orange, LUCILLE M BEARSS qulet street with llrplect, (7 l 4 ) 673-4400 H••ME 1102 2001 kitchen. security bulldlng Oellgt-~ .~. Poollum& t!_!dlt ~~. t~~m:'°'246~~ ..... "·"-ti county State ot Callfornla, Ill right. This etatemenl was fllecl near new carpet & drepet -r Low down . Asking ..,_,,,,.,...... V'H• ..... nt fowttl A.-ProvldeCI tl'lat this deed 11 tltle and Interest ot said ~ W1t'1 Che County Cieri( of Ot· & rtmodeled kitchen with T eke over llnanc no end $295 000 court S 1195 673-0896 Ot'ange Ave. 525-HOO Ctwle Vleee, CA •10 eccte>ted Ind mede aub)ee1 cealed et the time of dMll'I ange County on No¥9mber s«ytlghla. Cuttom tide move In! 13% effective UN IEAL.n I . 21.u dys CK 675-3435 wlmdt (11') .....,.1 to the benefits and burdens llld all Che right. title and 7. 1984 yard with RV access lnteresc rate Fantastic llJ-lJIO mat "" org•oui 3Br 2'~B• DP~blyl~t N0r•ll9• 1C2o•1•3t lmpc>Md upon lhepla~~1 lntetest that cne eatall ol Publl·~ "'-•,,,,,. ~...!.~ Priced at $187 ,000 opportunity Good 3 ""'5"'81.-w•,-.......... --. ·,_-.-rec:-•f•ec:-Condo, LR. fem rm. pool • ... ..., OV«nbtr • • acrlbed In said .,....., aid dec:.aMCS has acqulfad .,....,, VT-,,-..,.,..., 75 3191 bedroom. 2 bath hOme G C 0 • 2 ........... ,_ & tenn 364 Senta INbel 18, 1964 abolle tor the mutal benefl1 by operation 011-Of oth«· Dally Pilot November 19, 26. 1• Call now 545.2313 Bl ANY N charm 0 Gd aree CloM to ewtr'Y-MT-205 of the owners of any por· wlM other than or In ed· December 3, 10, 198• v$5ELECT , sty 38r1Pooll~a/petlot, thing $1395 651-1848 $1100/mo. 842-9797 ---------t1on1 1hereof b'f that certain dltlon 10 that ol said de-M-219 wllush Ian scaring Lat•••..... , ... Kid pee flne In $410 hlde-Pla.IC NOTICE O.Clatatlon of Covenants. ceased, at th• time ot d•llh. ---------PROPERTIES $457,000ll Agt 756-t540 _ ---'" out w/bttlnt & tree utllt Condition• and Rettrlctlon• In and lo all Che certain REAL Pla.IC NOTICE -:miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-OC~NFRONT DUPLEX Lower 3 Arch Bay 3it Beat lee S3M 190 K-14790 rKOl'ded June 15, 1972, In property alcuated In the OR· 1 $595K Best loc Assum 38a. PoOI $1800 mo .__ _______ _ NOT1CI °'IA.LE Booll 10175. Page381 of Of. ANGE. Counry ol ORANGE. FICTITIOUS IUllNEH LIDO ISLE CM R·2 Zone 3 8d 2b• + 1st S400K pp 673-7873 Avail 1211 499-'722 Large 2Br lBa duplex TO: Oevtd Fried, P 0 . Box flclll Records In the office of Stale of Calllornla, pal'llcu· NA• ITAT!MIMT rental rn rear Obie gar, wlgar, W/0 hkupt No •46. Plecentla. CA 92870 the County Rec:«der 1ar1y described as 1o11ows. The fOllowlng peraont ar• Marvelous 6 Br bay fro nt 78. on bay. pool. 101 62.~ 162• Full price TUIE lnprt luc~ 21H pett MiOOlmo 545-7983 NOTICE IS HEREBY SUBJECT TO AH cove-to-wil d .... ngbUs...__•.. S 35 OOO • I -GIVEN that tht property~ n1n1, conditions. r .. 1rlctlona Loi 40 01 Tract No ~98. 1n NITE·N:DAY ... CARPET spa 100' boat spa('(' Xlnt Fin $4,850,000. 1 • nssume oan Bat Penn Pt. 4 8d 2 ba soa Lovety lurnlthtd lloute Plan ah9ed 3br 2bl MSI· ICtlbed below, co1111er11 reservetlona. exc:ept1on1. theCltyolOrange,auhown CARE, 3185 Harbor Blvd . w/10% down WHITSON Want sm house/condo w l pool rn Newport tide family ti>e>t 1700 at undtttheAgrMmtntofLlm· eaMmentl, rights end right on 1 map thefeol. recorded Costa Mesa. Calll REALTORS 794-1787 etc. 673-3450 8eacf\ $1500 &44-4136 Beal lee S3M1to ll•d Ptrtnerahlp ol ofw1yofreoord. 1n 9oo11 199, pages 48, R.leh•rd Micheal Orone. C hanning Spanish 3 Br. 2 Ba o n 45' lot. VALHALLA VINEYARDS. One membtrahlp ol Third 49,and 50, of Ml9celll080UI 21492 Vlnlege Way, El TOfO, d eck courtyard. pier & shp $ l , 100.000. executed b'f David Frled, • Mutual, a Calllornla, non-Mapt, records of Mid Of. Cehl • Uml1ed Partner. w111, be-pront corporation, 11et•n-•nge councy Perry J Bleck. 21492, Vin· BAYSIDE DRIVE BAYFRONT CONDO ceu• of Limited P1t1ner'1 •ft• ,.,.,recs lo u "COtpor· • more commonly known 1age way, El Toro, c ant. o.raul1. be eold b)' th• allon", lubject co th• .. 1521 EAST SAN ALTO This bualn•H II COM· und«91gned at• public •UC· provlalont of the ArtlclM of AVENUE. ORANGE, CA ducted by a limited partner· tlon to the lllol'IMt bidder !Of Incorporation and By·llwt Term• of aale cash In law· Ship cul'I (payable at time of Mia of Mid corporation; and, lvl money of the Unlled Rleherd GrOSH In lawtvl money of the United One retldent rnembtraNp Stat.. on conlltrnlllon of This stllernent was tned Stat•) on Movembef 28, of Golden Rain Foundation sa1e "' part Clll'I and bll· with , ... eou "' Clefk of o 1984, at 9:30 o'ctock A.M.. of Laguna 111111. • C.ilf0tnla ~ ~ by note ae-•nge c~nty n~ OClobtr 2~~ 11 tl'l9 meln entrance to the f'IOnPfoftt corporation, '*• cured by Mortgage °' Tt\ltt 1994 Oftinge County Court~ lntfttt referred to .. "Foun-Deed on Che property to '2111• located et 700 CMo Cancer Clatlon". 1ubject to 111• told. Ten per cent of amount Publlshed Orange Coast Drive w .. 1. Santa Ana. Call· Artlclet of Incorporation anCS blCS lo be depotlleCI With bid Dally Piiot November 5, 12. fomla 92701. By· Laws of Mid corporation Bids or olfwaco be In writ· 19 26 1984 The property to be sold mor• commonly known u . Ing and will be rec.lved at · · M-197 contlttl ot 5 unlla In the 3198 C VIA BUENA VISTA, the aloresalel offlce al any Llt,!ITEO PARTNERStilP OF LAGUNA HILLS. CA time after the, first publl· 1--------- VAlHALLA VINEYARDS. Bids Of olfert to be ln writ-c11lon hereof and bef0<• J>OOLIC NOTICE FOf lnlormetlon cone«n-Ing and wlll be recel~ at date ol .. ,. Ing the .. ie contect elth« the atOf ... ld olftce at any Dated 1h11 7th d•y of NO· Robert S. Coldren, &sq. Of time aft« lht llrel publl· VEMBEA. t884 Frederic M Zinn. Eaq .. both cation hefeol Ind befOf• WILLIAM J LENKEIT. At· of tht law llrm of Hart. King dett ol aale. THE TERMS OF torney at Law, 25251 Pueo I Coldren. 200 Eut Sand· SALE ARE CASH OR CASH De Alicia. •200. Laguna point, Suite 400, Santa Ana. ANO TERMS Hiiis. CA 92653, A1torney(1) CA t2707, (714) 432·8700. O.ttd this tth Clay ol No-ror P•lllloner Dated: November 8. 1984 vembtr. 1984 FLOYD CARLTON SMITH, VALHALLA VMYMDl1 PHILLIP H, SIMON, At· ExecvlOf of the Estate of a,: Kart ......._. Oenw• torM'( II Law, 3812 W. said Oacedenl ,.,.. Sepulveda BM:! .• •240. Tor· Pu.bllahed Otange Coast PublilMd Otenge Coul reru. CA 90503. Altorneyt Dally Piiot November 12. 13, Deity P11o1 ~ber 19, fOf P•tnloner. 19, 1984 1984 RICHARD ROGERS. Ad· M·224 mlnlattator ol the .. 111• of --Nl.--1-C _NO_T_IC'."'"E--~=:'r~ange eou1 --P\ll--IC_NO_T_IC£ __ _....;....;..;;..-....-----Dally Piiot November t2, 13, l'tCTITIOUI IU .... 11 IC "911 11, 1984 _ __..... ...... ~.,...... MT·2t8 NA•ltAoa-• -;~=:.. Tht following per.one are -----------doing bl.lalMH ... No. A 126116 ,.~ Nemer 23~L~~i:v~~E.NJ:: In the SUptrtor Coun of ~ COlll MeN, CAlll. 92828 tnt Stttt of Clllfoml&. tor NOTICf TO Lawrenci. Ahn Maurer. flCTITIOUI IUllNHI NAMt! ITATIMINT The lollOwlng persons ate doing bue•neaa 11 THE PRACTICE BUILDER AO AGENCY. 2081 Bullneal Center Or •t07, Irvine. Celll 92715 The EvergrMn Group, • Celllornl• corporation. 2061 Butlneu Cenler Or • 107, 1rv1ne. Calil 827 JS Thia business It con· ducted by a corporation Alan Berntleln, ~Mldef'I Thlt statement wu flied wlll'I Che County Clerk of Ot· ang• County on Octobtf 28. 1984 ,.1. P~ Ofange Cout Delly 'Piiot November 5. u .. 11. 28, tH• M·195 Jetty & Bay v iew, newly decorated Mat Kai. 2 Br. 2 Ba. 40' pauo No w $575.000 PENINSULA HOME OCEANFRONT Exc1t1ng Ocean & Jetty views. 4 Br. 3 Ba. 3700 sq . ft. car parking. $1,285.000. WES:T BA y A VE BA YFRONT At N H. Y .C Trad1t1onal 5 Br SJX~tacular bay view. Owner fmanc mg. $1.050.000 LAGUNA BEACH HILLSIDE Pan oranuc ~an & c ity vcew. s pacious 5 Br. 3 Ba. Xlnt finarlC'ing. n ow $750.000 COTTON 'OINT EST ATES Custom 0<.-ean view lots next to Casa Pacifwa. San C le m e nte from $550,000. WESTWOOD VILLAGE Prime Enghsh traditional 3 Bd. 3 Ba 3 Frplc's, hrdwd fi rs, nr UCLA. $695,000 SILL GRUNDY . REALTOR i l •\ • "Y .... It• , ' • jo.4 r\ f\ • \ ,._ I f ' .... .... tti. Cou':Z of Of.,. CONTMCTORI 2350 Harbor BM:S. •208. "8.IC NOTICE ... ~ ~N"' attttL ~e;e,J.·~ ,..CT NO ... M •1 Cotta M .... c.tll. 92821 0 ~·I ~-b -::;·· -:. ~· "' "" ~ 8..i.d PfoPOMlt .... bt JeetllC4I R ~· 1155 l'tCnnoul .,..... -• ' -I ce::'1ct1tMrtby~thel rtoelWd at the Offtce of=~ ~~5 • Long Mm ITATWT ,.--C-A_E_W_H_N_..., t1'19 lll'\dertlOMd w11 ... 11 Ptenl °'*•'IOM ,...,.,.._ T111i bl.lain... It con· oJ:::::::: ~ 11• 1 I I I I 11 Pftvalt ..... to IM hlQMtt Statt Ho_,n .. 2501,_~er~ duC:t9d by • venerel '9tt· Kill ION DAT A A!· . and. bttt ()ldeler, -.iDtect to ltvd .• Cott• Mele • .-until .......-. oonfln'nttlon of Mid Su· 11:00 A.M. on November 27. ·l·~ Allen Mau,., SOURCES, tHO 18tll St .------- perlOI' Covrt. on Of ener ttlt ""'· It wt\ICtl time they WIM T'hl• lttlemtnt .,.. ,...., 1L1 ti. Newport •••ell, I r. R N B I 23rd day of NOVIMUA bt publlCJY opened and r,.ct ...tttl ... County c.tt ofl()f. Cellt t2M3 ...._...--... I' -r -r-1• at IM office of PHILIP for peffofmlng wortc to Countv on October 30 Aobtr1 Jaclt Kiiiion, 1MO .__...__. . .._ •• __._........., H S IMON. H12 w. Nmlltl ell ltbOr, met....._ = ., · tltt'I St 1u11. Newpor1 stPULVtDA llw .. sU1n •001•. •nd •q1.11pm•n• 1 ,_ a.en. Cellf t2M3 I ,. o L v "o 140,TOMANCE.CA~ neoMMtY to~ cx,.... P\lbllttled or COM\ Cerotyn AM Kllon, 19$0 _ County of Lot Angelet, plu• 1ppro1lm1tely Delly Piiot NoV9fl'I-: a. 12. '"" St IL111, ~ I I r . Stet• of c.ittomla. ell rttlflt, 270.000 aq. ft. of •idttlng 19 H , ,.,.. leeoh, Cellf tHl3 . . . . ttUe and lntateet °' Mid de-root lytt9m •"I " lulldlnO-' . M• llt Th11 bvllMM .. con· .-l---...i at the time of ~fl ,~ Suitt Hotpltal, In ~ W tlWNnd tlld .,.._ . end 11 the r!QM, title end IOCCf~ With plent and Aobtr1 J K*cln tmer-' that iM eeta.. of ~ION ttlefffore TIM atetement ... filed -6d ctec••••~ '* ~ ,,...,~_.be S]ented To .,e.. Yo"' ::;_111 ... """"'9 ~~°'Or· 11y oPertttoft of tew Of oftler· lo bidder• proper IP· ~· .,_ .,.. County M ~ ..,. °""' "*' "' "' ..,. prO'fed • "Smell eu .. ,.olf\9 pvblle. 1 . l984 dltlon to that ol Mid de-In llCOl>fd~ .-itt1 S.Ctlon pnone ,_ Ott• o1 JO"f'l1'1 IQ •"Cit~ f II ti I !ru1 1 r>01 a" (ll'lnO I'Cloo 1---------1pec1t1c111on1. and Did rted Par 1nars111p of of Iha•-firm of Hen. King Pla.IC NOTICE lormabycamngatormaillng VALHALLA VI NEYARDS, & Coldren. 200 Eut Sand-_ ....... ...;;..;...;...;..... ____ e~ttotheOfficeofthe e1n1cv110 t>y M•Tlon point•. sun. 400. Senta 0-5'0T1 Chief ol Plan1()petitions11 Sullivan. u •Limited Per1· Ana. CA 92707 (7Hl NOTICE TO Che above address. 1ei. ner, will, t>ecauN of Limited 432-1700 • CON~ACTORI p l'I one number I 7 1' l Partner s ~faull. be IOld by o.ted: Nov9nber 8. 1964 ,,_o.tECT NO. M MC•1 gs7.5212 the undertlgned 11 a publlc: VALK.AU.A VINIYA9'DI, ,,_OJECT NO. M MC• 3 A payment bOnd Stan· auction 10 the '14g'-t bidder 1J:, Ket! HllMM. o.-81 Sealed Pfoposals wlll be dard Form 807 tn cl'le lor c.3'I (payable 11 time of Pen- reoetved et the olflce' of amount of fifty percent of the Nie 1n 1tw1u1 money of t1'!e PvtlflShed ~ Cou1 Plenc °'*•tlon1 Falrv-contract Pf1Ce must eccorn-United Stat•) on NcMlmber Delly ~ Nov9mber 19. Slate Hospital, 2501 Haft>Of pany _.,.,,., contfact 1nvolv· 29. 1984 11 10 00 o'Clock 1984 Blvd ., Costa Meaa. CA unlll l1l9 an eicpendlture In exoeM AM , at the main enlr•n<ie ~220 2 00 PM on NOvembef 27. of S25,000 to the San Diego County 198~t wtilctl time Chey wlll T11e euoHSlul bldOer wm Courtl'IOUM locatf'C: II 220 --------- be p6blfc:ly oc>et*' and r~ be req\ltted to entw 1n10 1 Wtsl Sfoadlo) San Diego, •-.. ..,,.Tll'C for performing worl\ lo concractual egreement 1n CA 91101 n-.n."" ~ f\.rrn1sti all lal>Or matertal1 1"9 fOfm ot a "Stltl<lard Tile propeny to be sold K•1'1'11 tools. ind equipment AgrMmenl. torm STD 2 COOSISIS of 5 U!'lll 1n 1ht N011CI °' IALI MCffN~ lo Install Sid• wfllctl Shan be binding upon LIMITED PARTNERSHIP OF TO Wiiiiam L K•nl walks. curb• and gut18'1 • the State ol Calllornla only VALHALLA VINEYARDS Phases I & II Design enol· upon approval b'f the Slele For 1nlorma11on concern-Truatee, Kent Family Trust. -for curbs and gut· The c;oncract 1s no1 l>•nd:S I"" Che nle con11C1 either 1•23 Richman Knoll, Full· .. ~ .. .., .. ., 11'10ll CA 92635 18'1 lnttallatton at Fairview on ellhtf petty unleal Robert S Coldret1. Esq or NOTICE IS HEREBY Stace Hospnar ProvlO• un td It 11 IC>9f'Olled by IO· Frederic: M Zinn Eaq . bOltl 1peclllc1tlo n1 working Pfl>C>'1al• euthc>rtz9cl state of ttte la•''"" ol Han. Ktng GIVEN that ttle l>'ociertY O. drawings. cost est.maung 198"C• 1ne;tu01ng 11'18 O.. & COidren 200 Eat Sand-tcrlt>ed below, coflaterel -"'In I Fal ' ,.,~ .,_ S 400 ro. I undertheA~tof llm-•ov ~ton • ~ partment of ......,_al ....... point• ulll · .-n • lt•d Partn•ratllp of SI••• Hospital In •C· VIC.S 11 req\llrad Ana CA 92707. (7 U ) VALHALLA VINEYARDS cord•~ wltl'I plans and All nonexempt stat• con· 43?-6700 uecutecs b'f WIMlam L Kent' apeclflcallonl therefore traclt of S5.000 0t mot• 11e 0.led NOYambet S, 1964 TNMee of the Kent Fen•f Pret.rence Wiii be granted eub,ect to atat• CO(llt8C10f VALKAL&.A V1NEYAM>9, f l1ed Penns ' 10 bld<S.1 propetly •P· nonct•acrlm1nal10t1 end com· Sy: Kerl H-. O..W• .:;:1• ~ of umned proll9das '·S~&ls•nMS pltance requ1r e menu f'altfMf Penner'tdllfeult beao6dby In eccotClanoe wllh Sec11on pvrsuanl to Government Publllhed Otenge Cou1 Int und9!-19d 'et 1 putJMc 1198 et Mq , Tltle 2, Celt-COO. Sec:llon 12980 end 08'4'; Pilot N°"9MC-19, - lotnla AO!Nnlllratlve COde Callfornll Administrative 1984 ::c:tc.::.:':'t::': A~\Uttont tor pr•fer~ Coda. Tiiie 2. OMllon 3. M·22S .... ltl leWlul mOfMI)' of tM mvat be t1.1bmllted lo and $ec41on 8~ 1 Vnl"4 $~) Ol'I No¥8mber ~ by 1he OMot of In accorcsance w1111 tht P\ll.IC NOTIC£ 21 ,.. t t 10 00 0·~ -6 ~ Bu• prCWiaiOnS of Section 1710 • • ,,... 1112 14th SlrM I ot the Labor ccoe Iha Of.. K·KT• AM . et t"9 melrl entrenoe "°°'" 200. S.aarnereto cA partrnent Ilea ..c.,,..,_, NOTlCI ~IM.a to 1tote Orang• Covnty 16114, not .... 11\en IM (5) 1"91 lhe ....... ~ TO Hetyn Fl1ed. 40351 CourttlOuM IOCe1td et 700 oeltndat d•ya lf'I edvence of ,.tes of WtlQ9I ~ 1n Roell. Mountain Drive , ~ ~.~.::· bid ~ Cl•t• the county In Wl'llCh the WOl'll Fallbfocll. Col t2028 UI na • Request• lot amall t>u•· latobtdoneareth0Mr8* NOTICE IS HERE8Y ~~k'~:!~ ,,....,, ...... icelnlllelwaf'O •ttil)llthed •nd publlthtd 01veN ltlat the Pf'ociertY ct. ll!D PAAfN£A$HIP Of' Of t1'e OOl\tttct tor the et>ov9 by the OwectOt ol lndualrtlll ICltlbed l*Ow COll11eral VA.LHAL..LA ~l'YAA.09 mtntlOned ptO,ecl It lfttde "91e1Jora Coolea. of tM under 11'19 ~I of um. by eubmithng a comQleted -eoe re.tee M• ot1 hoe at tnt 11 e d P • r 1 n • r •ti IP o I flor ln9or1Nnb• OOtlCWn• 10nn SfO 111Wlll'l1M Did Oft1oe of the Ctvtf 01 P\ant VALHALLA VINEYARDS,=~'"'~ PtOC)OML Ho Pf ... tllOe °"'9tlON, FaiMllw -~ ~ ~ ,...._, M ._ OI bt grentd Ul'lleM 11'19 bid It Site ln1C>9Cttpn wf4I be l'letd • Omlted •wtntr. Wiit, ti. M Zinn. &q • bOttl ~led by Iha STD Thura , NOv 15111 10·00 A._. oellM OI Llmltt<I Panner'a r ~ ~ °'=~ 111 Fe!Mew ~. bt sold Dy the • llld propoMlt mull be Vietor 8 ,at \lndefMOned at • put)lte ... potnte. 8ul't aoo. a.nae auDnlltted lot the enure CN11f ot Ptent OD.r•tlonl tion to the~ b!Odllrlof Ana. CA 1270'1 (714) °' ... Ql .. 100 ~ oeac:r1bed tNreln Of.. 111 Call (payable at 1-. OttieO ~I. , ... iM110nt "°"' plM11 encs PuOl!tNO by t1'e O.entt 1n i.wtut moNy of ttle unltad v M.MALU ft9Y AMe. ~IORt wll not be Cout o.11)' PtlQt ~btr Sta'91) Oft ~ 2t. ....... ~echr!ilwMtbecauM 12. it 1ff4 ,. 1"4 1110 •0·~ AM .::.::' ....... tor ~· Of bldt The M-200 II the main entrenoe to the Dfc)etlrnenl Ma Int f'IOflt to S • n DI• go Co" rt t 't ~ ~co;: Wel\te t1fy .,.,...,..,.lty In I P\11.t( IC)TIC( Courtt\OUM loca1*I el 22() _, ~ ' b6cS 0t 10 re,Kt """ °' 111 Weet llt~ °'900. tlt4 ~ K·'47..c7 CA 92101 No bed be ~ ..OTICa Of 1AU The 9fOl*1) to bt sold ~t and It mat:lt In Vltta, C" t~'O VALHALLA VIN!YAAOS yeu 11 you t11ve a ~ .,..,. IN In NOTICf tS Hf~EIY fOf ~ ~ ~\Ml a Ml 09m"Q CMlfd, et tht lime Of 0..~h. 11M tt ..a . 11tlt 2, Calj.. DaltV Pilot ~P\l~t '* ~.!'!!! 1~ In tfld to ell Int .,,_ '°""9 Adminilftatiw CoOt Clwllled, IA1·5171 _ ... ..., -• .""'::":. .. •· • MAL. Pfoptf'ly .,_,..... In ~tiont lor ~ ..... •· 1.- ttMt City Of 1.-ouM Hiie. rr1U91 bt au~te.d to Md 10 unteee" • mfdla °" • ,..,... ro ,..~ ~ '3$~~ c:rt 6 un11s "" tN MON ~ 11• 111MtinG dard tonn PurnlaMd b'f tt1e ~C:l'I A~ •0. Ctlule UMIT!O ,AATN NH" Of! tti. c;.wnp1ng "bug" thlt ttNC1'9'1• to Dldderll. QJV(N tl\lt ''"' pr°"8f1J oe-Int ,,... ....,. coniect ti "9ed .... H ,... "'" .. 8 ..__ 1 -• PtOIP9C1rM DoOOer'll m~ aer1be0 below coltal .. •I Aoelerl S ~ Eaq or Cl_,,lecS M ~·· ...... .. _._._ •• _._._._. ____ 1_ .. _.,..... atlO 001.., oun• J IMI08' the ~1 of Lim· F~rlllterle~~M::_;Z,~tnrt:.:.:.;...:f=•:.:..:llOl=.:.tl::.J.:========~ t I I - c =----- - ,, .... '"' 11t11r ~"' lllltdMI 1w cu.""'" htatta1 hhlt111 PttJ S../lltlln ..... .., ......................... .. ·====iiiiilAPf eoXeR bCRXAdf 4iilffF6A liQ W hilfii6 Cwpenlry Palntng Repalr1 J. LEE eCEXAINdi 12 YRS EXP· I'm •mall IO'• ....... .,.., tOTXC EstP£fff§IRVICE Stal• law ;;;;i; .. that .. Ouat auto r~lr.r ... rate Ot'ywell·l'1tcn-Aepelr OUal~ k f t 10 yra t>IP. alt ph .... lncf Relldentlal & Corrim.,-clal. My prlcel ate 1ma111 Apt Re.kl air Ph•• lie & MAINT 20v..,.,_,,.,, COf'ltraclora who l*fOt'm etec speelallat. 65(),.8621 Car(*ltt)' Daw e.e-2990 ~"5"1 WO!' • ~.-,.01 apt, ,.id, mobll hm •RC . ALSO Carptt cleantng RON or BOB 850-8417 . 'feo 8520 PTl 953.-4293. MC ,.OOLS 839·1508 work OV«,S200 lnc:Ndlng "' " vvo-7&o.6520 PTl 95~293 ANO painting. 968-3752 ~ lat>or -"d mat.,lalt mual la'71ittlat. EXPERT Carpenter. reeld'I RESIO/COMM'l/IND 26 ALL PAINTING 845--•738 RICHARD SINOR'S l•lllL__ be tleeneed. UnltoenMd Mother would Uk• 10 commerot.i. remodeling yra. Do my own work. l~ ONE CALL DOES IT Alli llH Clttala1 Int. S460-up Ext. S750::f Newp0t1 Custom Painting duality AOOilng: Sr. cAIDf\ contractora ahoulO ao BABYSIT your child In my & doora. John 8'&-0•25 278041. Al 848-8 ~8 We fix h, br•k II. buy It Of AtQhland anic; t Aou..-Wash-PllCh·aell·P•lnl 18 yrs ol happy CU•tomer.. dllC. R•fs. I.le. #348877. ~t~~~r~c:~: a::n1~~ home. (114)241.0119 Ex..-Cer.....,..try ~ haul It. !14a..5009 hold Cleaners. llcentd. DAN SALVER PAINTING Lie. 280644. 875--0383 K. Funke 645..0193 u ,...... • ,....... · 1umer1. contact ""''Y DAY CARE IN MY HOME. -A9J>•lr-Remod'l-Addttlon1 Repairs, Painting, Drywall. Bond11nsrd/rel 982-5637 lie *'42592• RAINBOW PAINTING REPAIR Speciallat•S200 & Qrondle at SS6....otl With All ages. l .. rnlnQ ~lits [)oon..etc. MJ.•980 S.•rt1'try hnict etc. Frtie estlm1te1. HouMCleanlnQ 5 yrs ex.~r Call Anytime. 984·2017 Quality I~ our pollcy less Free •II. 30yre exp. an)' queetlona. Contr.c.. taught. 631-1827 C.M. Aepair-Doon-Atteratlon•. Embrota:fYi:Ohg. SPtCl•l-Gary e.-5,.5277 PTL w/good ref'• own transp. PARKER-BEECH Painting 8~6648 JEF,F Uc 8688 770.2725 anytime Waft tor'• Stat• lloenH • R~Panel-LOC:k• .. IC lte In Logo'•, P11ohes etc AMERICAN HANO'Y:MAN 964-•826 or '241.9553 Painting at 111 Best. Raf's. ••1;ri•h *JOh Henry Roofing* Board. 28 C:lvtc C..ter ..... ,. Stmct Wlndow-Fenca-C1blnet IN TIME STI t CH Carpentry fencing win-I h b d/Wll• est. 848·5637 648-6344 --·-10 • i" CM Fl roof re-Plaza. Room 690, San1• LADIES! EXPER MAKEUP 35 yrs exp Jerry 5.e-4413 988•2200 °' 631-3935 <tows. pl~mblng, niarllte, Ht=~a~r'I ::p.ar~llable. FINE PAINTING by Wayne ~ANT~~G/~~1~~~?:8 ' rJ:o~.rep'air~1..8-6213 Ana, CA 9270 1. ertlstlfaahlon model Is tub encl. roofing, etc. refs. Bondable 953-2829 Leffler. IXOYC, 10 yrs In VISA·MC 673•1512 offering maJte-up leuon1. Ctatlt Ct1Clttt Fir..... And Yes Jesus ls lord HerbOr area 751·9103 ltwia ~Alttrati .. I Reas.Chtlsllntl845-788.5. brivewa-. patl01. peths, (llc#30405) 8•7·2367 PAOF.·HOUSEClEANING . Expert Wallcoverlng In·' ·-FlrnOod quality split Have OWN supplles. 10 HSE PAINTING . INT/EXT stallatlon Aeaa. Consult· BAENO s cr .. 11001 ,4 FlOIAL •&llAlf . etc.. No Job . to llTlell. seasoned $30 '1' cord c:tellv 1-itANDYMAN LARGE and Y,rs e>1per. Kathy 8•1-7657 Quality at winter rates ant Asslg~mt 581.8590 Attecatlona1.. Need ri.ms eu anpt MfS-1334 Aeaa. MIOkey 536-0553 anywher9. Jim 636~561 small. I 00 IT Alli · Free est. Dave, 842-4583 • -or repa1ra·1 Call Bren- , ..,.. 6•8-7372 Pat or Ive msg. SCRU8·A·DU81 ~aeon· INT /EXT 20 y ars Ex,,_ NORMS WAllCOVERING c:ta-962·•098 for ·appt Mature depenc:tabt• Clta•l•~ ltmff , ble/rellable/re s. Y sup· · e ,,_,, Ali t<INOS. FREE EST. woman to babysit. gd Gar•taial l11li•L · plles/Jeanne 8'48~896 Average Room $29 +. Lto~330986 760•7211 •lllilll••••--• rets CM area 642~6072 HOLi AV SPECIAL -. Exterior stucco $130 -i • Tilt We will clean your home. . T EEi HliUl· OVE-REMOVI! Lu•1c1ri•J . materials. 6'2·0••2 •WE GALS SHOULD• ---~F .. R"e"e"'e"s"T,,_ __ AcctHti•t loat llaiat. Jolly or Debbie 64~701• Topped/removed. Clean· Fur'1lture, Trash. Trees PROF tAi:Jb~CAPE SERV •HANG TOGETHER• 15 yrs exp. Cv11om !)r ............. -c·-,-,-.-*--StrYict YOUR HOME OR BOAT up, new 11wns. 751·3•76 963-5415 NORM Bonded. 20 yeara In area. IUFIEll Pllltlll. 839-0730 ANYTIME Commerclal. 241·7039 Computerized Accounting JR1a Will BE CLEAN! Clean Up1•Tree Trlmmlrg LT HAULING · MOVING Tony Mcweeney 6•5·5124 lnllext. lreeest. Loc1l ref Pa~r ltaoval ~ · & Tax Services. 557-5218 MARINE MAINTENANCE Good help 11 hard to find .. Yard Malnt.•Haullng Garage & Yard Clnups Liataliat 10yrsexp. bOnded.lnsur. ; 15FF THE ~All ; ~iat lfmet Palntlngtvarnishlng/mtln. Est. Charlie 960-0376 Miff 650·3263 Jon 6•5•8192 ZXtfX's CIMO stRVice ••5773o(7l4)63~·59t 1 Paper removal, clean & extC.WPINd SERVICE MiiltH1/lta .. tliaf 640·6355 • COMPLETE CLEAN-UP. College student w/lg truck White Stretch Cad. Afford-PAINTER NEEDS WORK~ prep: Call Al. 638·6970 15 yrs exper. a.II fl.ids. 1a111.mi,. oo kHfiDI · · Ctatracltrl Gen. malnt. tree trim/re. low rate, prompt. Thank able rates.(71•15• 1·461• Int/Ext, ceilings. relln cab. Reas rates. Judi 5'9·7309 Bulia/Remod: Spec. kh, •s•m•a•il •9•us•11t•neiljs•s•e""'o·o"'k------Geatral movat. Mauro 631·•997 you Court 759-1976 CdM (26) yrs exp., work 3g8u3a7r. Pl11tt1 It ir Typing/Word Prooeetlng bath. ofc. rm add, patio ~... GEORGE'S HAULING Mo DI Davis Painting 98•-Int. t. patch p asterlng. Svc ~P sec all fields cov/dcks. bay wnd_w. Lie. Ing • Payroll • Taxes. lfllfTT·llOl •If, QUALITY LANDSCAPE No Job to Small ~ 8 O 446485. Steve 547.9075 Doug Luchansky 751·7781 Remodetta-alra: comml Maintenance. sprinklers. 895 6006 *A· 1 IOVlll* Painting & Wallpaper e· custom texturing. quality reas rates 4 · 1570 '""' cln ups Scott 8•2 3016 • CLEAN a EXPERT moval. Int/Ext. Reaso • work. Problems-No Prob· Competlve Rates for all l11iat11 Stmct and resk:I. l lc'd, bonded, • · • KRUEGER HAULING Over 25 years experience able 642-5937 Curtis lemsl •32886• 65•-7831 Wi a•1w Cl111f11 · types of Comm. Const. & Capital euslne•• S'"'""'ftes Int. For ••t: 552•9142· Why Not The Best. Install/ Furniture, trash. clean-upa lie. T • 116.•28 730· t353 Pl •L.ia - Resld. repairs. 20 yrs T In , bkp '°& ali~iher ATOM CONSTRUCTION remove trees, lawna, Matt 645-5089 t ABC MOVING t Ql&LITT OILY D • I l&S WINDOW SERVICE + You say when II e>1per 751·366211c ' oYifcegduttesf631-6688 Addftlona-patlos,roollng, ~~~~fc1e:!~ps~a,:f~~ngL Btaltla Stmct Quick careful~ T1380•6. 25 yrs exper. In O.C. Call HltrEl•lll·lllO Cl~~;'~'~t':l~ng7~:5:;t comes to huntinO. the 1001 ADllTIOIS Caltiaet Jltkiat ~~~~~ 7,~ &h ~~~.Ye aerv. Bert 545-~287 LOSE WEIGHT Oulckty 1 LO RATES. 552-0• 10 for tree est. 5•8~416 • 1 Do Plumbing Righi • thrill If\ gone? Turn Amerlc.nConst 639-0618 -porch repair. 557-6381 1 Safely. Inexpensive, STARYlll C'LUIE QUALITY PAINTING Oralna clear from $15 Balboa Window Washing your bow and arrow IPECl&L1 l&UIE Bt••Jllll supervlsed .. 5•8-6220 STllE-•IYIH--FAIR PRICES. FREE Repair faucets. dlap, etc. Serv. Spec. Holiday,.,.. Into dollars and cents CA.l.ns HJ Oii 1 ft.... -"1 •c O I I v1•' EST. JOHN 631·2050 Anytime M&M 642·9033 603 Balboa Bl. 673~ t35 w 1 t h a n a d i n .. .,..rs Competlve Rat" for 111 Bt1tia1 Orange o. r g na Pa *Ing Areaa • Repairs Resurfaclng·Sealcoattng Roofing Repairs. 631-4199 w __ a_ll_U_n_lts-.-E-n-tert_a_ln_m_en_t Entry ' French ooora types of Comm. Conat. & -Student Movers. ln1ured RALPHS PAINTING Expert Service & Repair Hollday Intro otter. Aver-classified. Centers. t<ltc & Bath cab· By Norman The Doorman Reaid. repair.. 20 yrs 2• •r 0•tH·1llO Lie. T12•·•36. 6•1·8•27 Reas. custom Int/ext. refs. 31 yrs exp. 16 yrs In area. age 1 story house $25; 2 _..,._ lnets. Refs John 855·8• 17 Oek & fir. 857-DOOR ex,per. 751-3662 lie. •1 Do Heating Righi Now\' NEW Warehouse StOf'age free est.. lie. 841-3588 , LIO #409035 96•-8919 atory $35. AJ'a 637-90381 .... _••.••_.i _______ ...., Boa111 Uafarai1~t4 Rn111 Uafarai1lat4 Aertatat1, Vaf. At1rtaeat1, U•f. aut ti . Olfict lt•lab 2914 Ptr1oa1l1 3011 1111 Wu... llM c.... .... 2224 lr•i•• 2244 • ..,.,, ltacla -2ut lalka Ctall .... 2724 LttDDI ltacla 2741 w!:::~:v. 26 thr!lli AIRPlllT UIA EIOOITl/lilELS UYllT ULU -IOW&mll 150 sq 11 prqf otc Outca!IONLY 835-9199 llLYPLa ... lOVEL y new Spanish The Springs tBr Condo by DELUXE TOWNHOUSE. Pt•i•Hli 2707 1Br. "'• blk bch/sllops. 3 at !amour Palm Springs w/wlndow view. 2361 flLL I p••t TIMI 3BA 3 I I tll "'95/mo 1 Bd 1 ba upper Utlls pd S555/mo Tennis Club, 4 adults. c Dr .. 211 1 1 l11iat11n -style t wnhse w/2Br running stream. Pool. Jae ba. rp c, e Small 18R. Walk to ocean unit, gar, Indy rm. close •94•9076, Eves 493•7137 $500/wk. 85•-7598. ampus •,. • rv ne, _.012 111/WMI n~Ba, court yrd & prvt & tennis S57S. 891-0999 kitchen'& baths, vacant. and bay. $500/mo,yearty. to.Jtios:>a . I 1 I to corner Campus & VOfl ftr Salt -. limited openings. Wiii patio, gar• prkng space. T I R k C 2 3 3 16th PI ace. Marshall Rily 675-•600 1923 Pom~a n I I Karman. Incl recep-Print Shop. FfnaUy a train. Call 5•0·7321 ext. ~~81 ·1321/515. S 1190098/·m3~3· ;:au ~l~e 3Bro~Ba. frp~~~:c~ _s_1_1_00_1_m_,,o,...._6_7_5-<6=-333-,--:=--Ctr••• ••• Mu 2722 TSL MANAGEMENT La~ ... litatl 2752 111111 290I ~~~:·:;:.h~:e!n~:e~~e: PROFITABLE business at 32 "'"' 0 ' gerdener. community Eastblul1 Condo-Back Bay 90.!ioiiiiiliiiiioiiiii...,•.-...oiiiiii"'"""' 642· 1603 ---2 Br 1 ba fiae. yrd, gar. a reeaonable price ---------Sp8<llous exec townhome. pool lactltles. Avl 12/11 view. 3 Bd 2 'ltba 2 Bd2baCondonr Chlna _S_H_A_R_P_W--ld_d_I __ 18 rm Garden Apt bltns,mlcro,lndry$280& S•OOtmo.752•2•64 $39,000 Incl equip & ATILmOOLll 3Bd2'1tba.2trplcs.2car $1150.644-7779 $1500/mo avail Jan '85 Cove$900/mo675·2•01 ·Se upexup· w t pool. No P•t• 'hutll.645·2365 AIRPOllTHU·lllFFO training. 673-7351 or lmmed. opening for a jar. S 1200/mo Nr SC 541-3329 Sue or 760·8290 stairs. 2Br 1 Ba. encl gar. $595/mo. •95·8221 673-8670 m1ture r-n. "'"'''°" to W/D hkup, new drapes & 2Br, n/smkr. Close to bch 700 sf· 3 otfca & reoept. --------~ ..... ,...... laza. Ann/agt 751·3191 LIJHI ltacla ZHI exe:utlve home. Pan-2Br 1ba. •260 Shorecrest crpts $550+ deposit. No l~rt hack 27H $450/mo. 26 1-622• 1300 sf· open •P plan. luiuu 0,p 4014 wort< In rfftiurant area. Baat. hack 2240 1Br cottage. ocn vu, frplc, oramlc ooean vu. $1950. ln. No pets, n-smker. All pets. Must stand credit lBfSSSO dahwsllr, Mg #220 or 675-3081 Will build tcr suit. AIM> __ • 752;~:5 daJ~le or clean. walk to beach Beautllully decorated. redone $750. 760.0326 cheek. 770-5629 lncl. No "'"'ts. Call btwn adjc 2000 sf. Ready for 854· evea, ... 00 paus rent & ut111 cory $600 /utlls "'99 2181 F nor unfurn 67"'53"3 --------...... Attractive! New! ~ola bed. occpv. S 1.25 grosa . ..,.._.. f_JI Tilllll.,... ~ttag~ w/appls nr ocean w ~ • ur · .,,... • LARGE 2Br 1Ba. Temp •STUNNING Lg 1 & 2Br 9am-4pm dally 5•5·4855 blue, $700 & ~aug re-87 R & H INVEST cJnrs. Best fee 639-6190 Ocean&. City 1.lghta View. H~bor Ridge 2Br, fOl'mal rental. Approx 4 moa -2.81-Garden Apt. Pool cllner $300. 850-7860 852• 14 Light Repairs 3br 2ba. xlnt cond S 1350 dining room, sauna & prvt $625/mo. 559-9265 "'65 & $595. 710 W 18th 18r Condo, 3rd floor, sec. • CdM dlx suites. AC, ampl Start your oWn Airport Newport Tire Center. Artistic 3br 2 bath abode mo. 497-4170 or 497·6080 Jae. Commlnlty pool+ LARGE 2Br 2Ba temp ren-Townhou.e nr bch. 2Br gat~fgf~· ~o~l~~ mo Clean. quiet. motivated to prkg, from $225. 2855 e. limo Service for as little 3000 E. Coast Hwy, CdM. $f~&~~~~~Y ~~lch gar ltnirt ltacla 2H9 tennis, security gate. Call tal. Approx 4 moa ·n..,ea. micro, al e, trplc, 675·4000 673.-8821 Rod. ~~t.~~,~~ 6~g~9:J150• Coast Hwy. 675•6900 as $2,000 dn & $850/mo. Babysitter needed, mom· Best tee 539.5190 38d ba, f·am rm, frplc. Anita 759-0780 Agt $675/mo. 559·9265 prvt yrd & spa, gar. No Clean q let non smkr 2br View of Harbor. retax 3 eo 3 119t84 LIM 11 0 0 S 1on1 lyM• lteftl Inga tll earty aft,!noon, LIDO ISLE by owner. 3 BO. Luxury 2 Bd 2ba duplex. 2 pets $825 6•5-5242 u • · creative envlronmnt 5 n erna n o or my home 5'4&-91vv !Mae 2244 ~~tj~st~~:3el3~~J'8ts ~;~~4oi;:: w~~~:~~o patios. frptc S9SO 420 Two 2 Br'a, Avail 12/1, !r::u·~~~~~'gfs.~~:!'! sf. gar 85•1•3 199 Nancy Coach 751·5'&6 BABYSITTING needed f()( S700's 3bdrm 2ba easily Goldenroc:t 861·0660 $595. mo Avall. 12/8, E·bul1 Condo, avail, shr Coaatmal Btlf Waalt4 5100 n~ yr old. My CM home affordable kids. hurry 4 Bd 2 ba spe. 10 steps to L.se ~t 3BR 2ba, pool. am $580 mo. 8th dn. no • I I 2911 -• only. Call 650-42•2 BestAltylee539·6190 the sand. $1700/mo· Open House Sat/Sun •P-ATII * dogs v1ctor1aSt.nrCa-·INNEWPORTBEACH w/lem, non-smoker. tlll Artist GOLF COURSE yearly lease. 673-3450 12•5 1707 Port Stlrllng_ W/ln walkl~ of the bch. nyon. 831-6812 A greal place to five on the $450 + utll. 720·1849 FllH STUllll ILH. OllllE CllST •IHllllnl* large L.fe~~~~~:n. 1Ba ef9h:S~~!~~~~~2br L~~:~~~~ rw~8:;~~: =~=~~~ency v~~x-~E~~ b=~~ ~~~~u~:::i~& 1~~!~ F~~m:!~~~~i'~n P.IRPO~~~~: 90c rt -DAltY?ll.Oi f~~t;1~~~a-1fe~nt Condo In Rancho San 2ba w/chel s galley $600 CONDO 3br 3ba. $1125. I .. 2111 carpet drapes encl gar pools, close to business, Clemente Apts 498-7726 (7 14)64'4-910 has an opening for a part· Cllll ""'1/ll•n _Joaquln Newcarpets& flataasllyyours 23316thPtaoe.67S..•333 • motmoutlpd$300dep OC Airport, Fashion Fem rmmte, mature, Wt1ltJl.T11lorCt. time experlenced .NB arch1teo1ualnrmneed1 drapes $1045/mo. Cati *111-1110* NEWPORT BAY CONDO 3 _ No Peta. 232• Elden apt 1 Island, convenient shops ntsmkr, to shr hse In Aaaoaactat•t• 3002 creatlveLa~t Artist to mature. PIT. typist r• 851-0892 or 6•0-0937 Enchanting 3br 2ba hme Bd 2 'hba 1860 Sq Ft, 2 Cnta Jltta 2724 $610/mo 6•2·5155 on sight CdM $350/mo. 720·808• produce quality ad oeptlonlst. Require good Lease/rent/Racquet Club upper s~·s w/gar nr car gar, sec _gate._ w/bo.t i8r w/l>Mm cell&,."' patio. Wl airiry I OHtCl or M3· 7323 SPIRtTuA[ READINGS layouts, comp• & flyets typing skills & phone lg exec tiome 2·stry, 5Br waves don 1 delay call s 500 28 53 ...., .rT s I t & 2 Bd A Advice In All Matters & tor a fast paced dally manner, flexible hou,... 3Ba. family rm + spa Best Alty tee 539·6190 slip. 1 ·Wk/6 ·12 Nr OCC Falrgrnds. Quiet Want a selection of great Ing es rm part-F/M n/smkr 23-35 4br hse Counseling. 1815 So. El newspaper. Concept to McCulloch Architect& S 1395/mo. 581·8007 Dys BAYCREST •Br 2Ba. New eves 989--4307 nghbOrhd $500 751-3531 llvlng? We can offer any· ments '1 & Townhouses 2 blks from bch $280/mo Camino Real, San Clem. )finished art. Send resume 759-9141 Nwpt Hgta lg lam hme. 2 Br 1'h ba twnhae, air, nu thing Ir a small apt to a from S 20· (Ask about S200 dep. 6'2·3860 Llc'd. •92-7296 only & xerox copies 011--------- or 548 • 0819 Eves ~1~~~~7,ncf:'n~at~ 1~~0t: 3Br, 2'n8a. den + lam crpt, gar. patio. No peta. 4 Bd hse. If looking In CM, furnished apts, complete Male NB apt, 2BR.2ba. work to: Steve Hough, Ollllll REITAlS rm, 3 lrplca. Completely $650. 645-4837 NB or HB think 01 us first with TV, linens & utensils, $350. Straight or non-SCRAM-LETS Art Director, Orange driver w/econ. car. S200 CALL us REGARDING security. 675"4063 refurbished. No pets. forthat choice Ideal llvlng. maybe rented for ahort straight OK. 631-66•3 Coast Oalty Piiot. P.O. wk/FT. $100. wk /PT IRVINE LEASES BAYFRONT 38r..-den S t500/mo. lnct grndr svc. 2Br 188 triplex upatalrs TSL MGMT 6'2· l603 term or longer). On Jam· ANSWERS Box 1560 .. Costa Mesa, 5•7-0587 Joyce $1950 w/o dock. $2100 a52.a113R&Hlnvest w/encloaed garage NB REALTY 675·16•2 boree Rd.atSenJoaqutn M/F avail Dec 1st. N.B. C 92626 ~ w/dock. Agt 851 ·1651 ----~-==--,...·-$550/mo. 754--0986 Hiiis Rd. block from beach $315 •·. -~~---* lllY(IS* f 'fi isofl Ba)'front, haa sllp for •5' ~~~~0&~~~1~rf9~~.~~i 2Br 2Ba. 2 c.r gar, frplc. 1 !'~~TJ-AJ~_Y~~l!pa, 144-1100 mo .. 1atllast M8·0922 ~;:;,c~0:;:,~ 1/2Ti•t1100/tH-Full/part time position•. It boat.• Br walk to ocean collect (619)2••·1860 frig, micro. W/O, pool. gar, Indy rm. no pets. M/prof, n-smkr to shr 2Br SHOWING Active retall ahop In CdM. Starts at $4. p/hr. Call ea Y I and elementary school. f iw spa. Heat/water Included TSL MANAGEMENT 2Ba apt CM S250+'h utll One old geezer to another: ~~ma:Jr:'.";~-~~ for 751-2689 I $3250 per mo. Call .. tia :== $950/mo. 760-9611 645.8122 2BR 2BA F/P 2 car gar. nr -t deposit 646-2178 or "There may not be any· .,..0-e-n-ta_,.l..,.,/O""'r_t.,..h-o--:R:-e-c_e_p-t. 7 8 6-1172 . Marltyn Twitchell Home style 2br w/gar incl 2 br Oetuxe 2 ba ocean, ava.11 now 5350+ Non·smkj fem shr turn Irv thing new under the sun, Water Io rd Crysta I Benefit•. ••n Oya. Exp !:.!! /J}Zk . den newer kitchen $530 Like 2 muter suites W-slde CM 3 br 1'h ~a 2 $500 aec dep. 6'5-8980 condo, 300.' mo. lncida but there's a .. tot moreol 11 Chan defier, 9 arm1, req'd. NB 842·2626 1 1 3 6 90 story, patios dishwasher, .. SHOWING $2400. 080 For appt. ____ ,____.,.....,....,....,,.,,,....,,....,,,~ Best lee 5 9-1 2 car g1r E·slde bit Ina kids ok no pets *lg 2Br 2Ba Bluffs utll. 552-o223 . 5•0· 1'•6 or 673-9574 DENT Al REC PT /SEC $800/mo 6•4-1211 agt $695 mo 650·7275 w/pool, 2 carports Fem to ahr spac ocnfrnl 2 Lt1t I r.... 3004 w/ln1ur1nce experience, 3880 Mlf~r~!on Drive l~iijiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiii A,.rt•t.ah Fuaitkt4 •MESA VERDE 2Br 1Ba, D p i h<111t 1825· No pets 752-582~ Br duplx year round In •OUEER* 4 d1y1548-3000 CM I• new decor, O/W, gar 181 I at Aurv •Br. walk to bch, lrtdry NB, fully furn. $395. II SILES 11- Turtle Rock Glen detached $595 No pets 833-8974 2 br 2 ba close to marina hkups, yrly. No pets 83 t-564• fOlJND ADS ns11 exec home. 3Br 2Ba. For Classliled Ad lalMI adulta pref. S750 $1200/mo. 752-747• No exper will train-If Retired peraon, gOOd drlv· frplc, Indoor atrium. ACTION *PENTRIDGE COVE* 675·•17• or 759-0650 S8751mo urly 38r 2Ba, Pr'bf'I F/M non-limkr lg NB Interested contact Paul Ing record.Call btwn Loacted on cul·de-sac & Call a lalu• 2'H 2Br 2Ba split level, frplc, , hme wlk 10 bch $400+ ARE FREE or George. 6•2·7211 8am-5pm. wkdaya, ireenben. "'> blk 10 tennis Daily Pilot LUXURIOUS 28 28 j 2 W/O, dbl gar. pool/1p1 Deluxe 3Br 281 w/frplc. frplo, D/W, lower unit. 639·8722 or 6'5·6668 831•1026 Pool $1300/mo nrdnr AO-VISOR ' a or $950/mo. 558·9200 bttlna, gar, balcony. No Avall 12/1Agt673·9060 Call: *FLORAL* ----------" 6•2-5678 people only. Gas pd. pets 559 719• Ammie needed Nwpt Shta El EC TR 1C1 AN / 1l;;nc;t.~8~5;4·~8~55~9~:==:==~~~~~~~~~~S~10~50~/~m~o~. 8~7~3~-1~2~30~=. •IEHOIUTH• • BIG CANYON 3Br 2'hBa 3Br 2Ba $300, 111. last+ •DEllllER• JOURNEYMAN,mln 6yra -; Lg 2 & 38r Apta. New crpt, Studio apt w/full kltch & ba townhouse. Yrly lte c:tepo 6'8-9478 aft 5pm 1'2·1111 exp. Tenant lmprov• -------------1 drapes, tile, etc w/pool. all utl pd $'400 Call Joe $1450/mo. 494-0250 Share 3br 2ba In COM FILL Tiii ment exper. helpful, No pet1. 6'2-5210 after 8pm 8&,..3653 Ill O&IYH WT $340 mo. Non·amoker Ea,U.lt llslt ltJlo clHn·cut, rnuat have S575/mo 2 8d 1ba, patio. aat. hacla 274 Privacy, luxury & MCurlty Sheryl/Mark 675·9665 FOUND: blk/Wht Border hr.r all ,ltaHt ,.,,, ~~~:rydrl~1;:0 :1aao:r:: HOROSCOPE SYDNEY 0MARR nice eaatslde locauon, 2Br Apt. ocean view 1775 + 1weeptng fairway view. lntala WHIM 2tff Collie mix fem, Vic. 23rd alal'J •ttttla~lt 770·0102 or 788·9094 pool. Indy rm. close 10111. mo. ubstalra. quiet, 2Br. 2Ba. dbl gar, plu1 Retlr:S ex-& wife dfflre St, CM 84~5158 llll•u• I JllFI 1•9 E. Bay duplex. 119 Hunttilcltcn many amenltl ... No pets. ...., ""' IUm.ai TIL IUl&lllllT St. 960-0725 or •98·4'690 Pleue call 644.0609 hM nr bch for Feb. only. Found: Org/blond male L--aa ltao• FIT. 831•2345 Non-smoker, r efs. Tabby Cat very gentle. --M2·1IOI Close to 1>9ach bachelor LIDO WATERFRONT: lge 8M· 7781 aft. 8pm Vic Turtlerock 8!4-8498 0.ataet .lael ah •• •m .. w/crpti & drpa S.25tmo. cstm dlx 3Br 2ba (71.41) .411.41·1111 ~ Incl ullla 536 ... 837 $1850/mo IM. 673-8886 flftl for LOST Mile Shepard Mix, " " " Dl•ID mlellliB.AIJ llLlll 1112•• NEAR BEACH: 3 BR 2ba ... , 2112 :~0a~:~~. ~~'l.::01' & * 11111m * With prototype •xper. to Tuesday, November 20 -upper apt. Frplcc + 2 c•r Warit;J Gar/storage Np1 1.,.........,...~o----,..--, Entry level. Unarmed ... wortc In develoPment of ARIES ( M arLh 21-~pnl 19)· I f~ou get your feet wet. go all the way! &PllTlllm 1 mtto bch. Frplc, enot gar. gar. s 12ootrn o. Agt wlloclc 241'\r acc. Wx15• REWARD: or•• altered curlty lnduatrlll position• product• for flll'I detec. Nothing 1s ltk<.•I) tu occur for ~ou in lukewarm fashion. Emphasis on Beeutflully landaacaped D/W, bftlna. amtc• alrm, 675-8170 or 9&4-3375 s40+· 281•2222·Annette male cat, has target pat-avail. Min. 18 yr1 old. tton and un~ter ~ intensity. Stong rela11nn\h1p. romance that 1s "serious." Money news is garden apta. Pool/apa. patio, witer pd S825• tern on aide & ID tags. Own transp. Better than couatlca. Send or bring Ood another Anc~ liitUC' prom nc·ntl" Pattol dects1. No pell. 53&-3849 after 6pm. NEWPORT CREST Condo Ofllct lt1t1b 2114 Vic. 4th & Avocado, COM aver•"'"' wage. We pro-reaurne to Huntington g • 'i. • 1 ; · 2Bdrm 1•1.S1 $650-$670 , 3br nr poolltennl1 675-5695 •-& Beach ~rol'I Group TAUR US (April -U·~la) 20): ~c~ approach is necessary. Break 181e18Jh ~2-0858 lg 11'1Br, dec!I with W/D S1100/moAgt 846·2235 CdM 2333 E. Coast Hwy i---------vlde guard card uni· inc. 21802 Surwyor Ctr. from past 1s imminent ~ "Ph1ladelph1a lawyer" may be attempting to 151e211t 5•8-2408 ~~~· m:~i~:8':.C~~; NEWPORT HEIGHTS 1 Bd 280 SF wl th lavatory PtnoHb 3012 ~':[,~ ~"~:~~~"':·~~ M.8. Ca. 92848 lmmecll· juggle agr'cement. contract. Be aware. protect self in clinches. You'll 2260 Vangu11d 5•0·9826 deposit, 840-3711 gar, am yard. $495 avail Ground floor 645•5383 Winifred van l"r contact 9am . Spm Mon thru Sat. i-•t_•_P_0_•1_tlo_n_. ___ _.. .... m eet exciting mcmtx·r of o ppo-;1tc sex . e.iutlful quiet 2 Bd2ba, 2 IUWlll Jin 1. 980-0579 Coata M ... 3•5 IQ ft 2 Bo11 101. Shadow, o/o t820 OrangewOOd, Suite Sell With EASEi GEMINJ (Ma~21-Junc :!O).Stud}Taurusmessage.Beawareof pat101.Moa1ut1 1ncl.622 VERSAILLES 2 Br rooma + ba $300 D1llyPll01.POBox1seo 213, Orange. Ca. lt'aa BREEZE details. fine pnnt Check legal nghts. permissions. Money is involved. Hamfllon-Ron MS..0477 YllUIE 2ba,penthouae with view: 548·3345 49•-3803 Coata Meaa. CA 92828 _9_7_8_-1_2_•3_____ Claaalfled Adi 8'2-5878 someone wants '>Omcth1ng that n~htfull~ belongs to you. Protect Bright airy a MW. Cpta a New 1 a 2 Bdrm luxury trplc, aec. 2 car patklng, techniques. '"'t'nt1on~. speC'lal services. dr1pes. 2Br 1¥.Ba apta In 1• plane. 1 Bdrm. no pet• $1 ,000/mo CANCER Uunc 21 -Jul~ 221: Dt"crsdy , perceive potential. see TwnhM. Micro, frplc, 2 28drm and Townhomes 6'•-0452 · t 't• t t F I · 'bl · cargar.w/open«.LakM, + pools, tennla. water· VILLA BALBOA. Spec-p1c ure 1n 1 ,, en ire y. oru~ on p easure. vanety. poss1 e JOumey. atreami a waterfall•. fall• ponda 0•• paid tntens1fied roman Ill rcla11on~h 1p. Gemini. Sagmanus natives figure 1n Pool/ipa. no ,...11 .•• 7,.. · · · tacular ooeantsunaet w . ... -.., " From San Diego Frwy 1 BA & BR/den, 1 'ltba, dynamic. dramat1t sce nario 549·2447 or 54~311& drive North on Beach to lrptc. MCurlty. Under· LEO (July B-.\ug. 221 Accent on property. security. safety. lorig-EASTSIDE 2 BR. 1~ McFadden ind W••t on ground gar. $995/mo. range J?Olic1es. You'll be a~ked to review. revise and possibly to initiate bath•. patio. No peta. McFadden to Seawlnc:t 845-2315 a "building program." Pc.'nod of confinement 1s temporary -aood MOO/mo. Call 64J.9960 VIiiage. <71•)893·5198 -------- news 1s forthcoming follo\.\1ng 1n11ial disappointment. E-llde 18r, MW cerpet 1 WALK TO BEACH. 1Br WllTOll" · VIRGO ( J\ug. 23-Scpt 22): Leave details for another tame. Forces paint. No peta. 2&e3--A w/drapH & cerpeta 1and 2 br apt• 756-18&0 tend to be catten:d. Keep op11ons open. C'all or message from relative Elden S510 875·9~1 t 500tmo. 536-4637 Lta1 BIO could result 1n shortJOUrne}. Y ou 'll learn more about moti ve~ puzzle e.11a; quiet 2 br 1~ ba lni•t fti4 i378 3Br hnr, nftmkr, will be solved. )Ou'll be happier. TwnhM wtpatlo, pool, ;;;;;;;;;;iiiiii;;;; prof, walk to bch, LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 22): You could htt Jackp01! pothght on carport• 6 laundry. Avail ....... 1160·20«, 839·1132 m onc>. payments. royalties. news concerning recent investment. 12/1 No SHM•. '890/l'ftO• 1 ...... ILll Coate M-.a 3 br, 2 ba hm, M aJOr dome~t1c changes occur. surroundings will be more beautiful. · Curt 11· f31-12ee Af••n•m. nr occ:. all prlvled~ Another Libra and a Scorpio pla) roles. e .. ld• qvlet c~ 28' hM, ... S250 mo. 549-3874 SCORPIO (Oct 23-No\ 21 ): Lunar cycle h1~. terms will be yrd, gar, ll'lared pool. No defined and changed in )our favor. Take 1nitia11vc in protecting dogeMH/~~~~~ techniques. getting rid of unneC'es~ary burdens. el!.pcnsc!t. Pisces ~Tnd:;;:5..3'35 individual wnnts to help. aids be'h1nd scene~. SAGITTARlUS (NO\. 2.l·Dec. 21 ): tud~ Scorpio mc!>sage. You hdvl' PO"t·rful alhescvcfl.1f not aware of ti. legal dec1s1on goes in your fo"o r Romantic s1tuat10~ will~ resoJ\ ed. you'll be happier and more secure. 'l <HI learn the ~cret CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Obstacle$ are removed. task is C'<1mplc1ed romance Oounshcs and wish becomes realtty. Favorablt for pcrsua\1011. sales. career or business advan~ment. Anes native is ltl\al "''II light to protect your interest~. AQl 'ARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 18) New start in new direc11on 1s fa\ 1m·d -d1<;pla~ pioneering ~p1m. Focus on professional' superiors. ch:.incc to ~tan business of your (1wn-. Y ou'll ae1 10 bean of matters. r~pcl 1alh \.\here love interests are concerned. PI ES (Feb. 19-March 20): .. ollow throuah on .hunch. Oain Cl' era II \ 1c"' l unar emphasis on travel. communication. education and \tdud) of ulmparat1ve rehg1on~. \ancer. Aquarius natives fiaure 1n \lt'nano ramtl) mcm~r makes corrcct1on and important , Lg 1 bdrm, pool, adult• pref.. no peta. WI~. $436 mo. 173-489' Have aomethlnO you WMt 10 '8ff? Olaallfled t<S• do It w•ll f C:ell NOW, 8'42·&111. District Managers If you enjoy working with young boys & girls ond detk job• ore not for you, conalder a corffr in the ,,.wapoper circulo· tlon field. This 'i• o uniqve poaltlon wit+I dolly challenges & rewords. Our openings ore immediote. Appllconta must have o van, stotionwogon or trvck. Wt offer an excellent tolory wl1tl o bonu• pion ond gos ollowonc•. We hove on e11cellent ti.Mfit plan that Include• hotpi· toliiotlon insuronce, llberof vocotlon ond holldoy•. • Candidates muat ho119 o dealre to be aucceasful ond be willing to work hard. If yov ttlink you hO¥e the quoNflcatloot, pleoM apply in perton tot Monday tf\111 fttaDy J. t 1 om or 2,.1"" 330 W. B1y Cost1 Mn1, CA 92626 on equol opportuNty em~r 1111 .... , .,.,..., M/f _. treln Uper ...._ Ing rnedllne Optr. Alt 3 lhlttt open New Co In C.M. Hrly/pltQe WOrl< HabllmOI &oanol M&-2200 Of 131~935 \ -------~ .-... - ... ~ ...... , ...... SI ........... i:~~~iillii!E~;; AKt9s'!·! for IMl I t'M.. lco "°"' LA on Mule ":::::: C: ~~=U.•.=.«.·-.--...;ioiiiiiil Prop MngV RE omct FIA' = ·~ ~ ..... Jen or ,.., 1125. .. "' ·-···· "~~~ titevyPhOMI li .. IYPlno. •viii tlw:ft or .... f0fl1ito 1.4$-0978 11 _ ...... _ -... ··~ ~~~~ mull bt vtbr'ent 'Good a nJolt!~z' .!i.,'3' tr•ln Anlique EnQCleh ,.. ,,.. IWI .... ---~ ._ - --~ Phon• voic.w111no to -._ $350 au 880 wlbutw -C Col•-• lllW ~ TRI ..... ttw* MO KlMIMll ....,_ All-MV!N TllWll•M•i ....,......,.,,. szoo llue/wflt t•12 (114)4»-tm U1·11U .._,...._.,.._ ~~~·=d~ •IU L n. 11•PT1111n .... I......... 12" bllllwht TV '30 It you lft lnttir .. tlKI In Ille bkkpg, teeret1rl1l .,_..., Y..W Stereo w /2 floor earning IU,000 to •xi>« 754'"'6822 • ....._ lilt: ........ M4 tPMk.,. 135 813-MM 150.000 or more In com-_..... _, J w T •-c~ ... "nie NbM~\! oompl, gtnd up, ptof ,.. "or. Ind fbtt etio w/t:M- mlN1on1 end ere wtlllng U•PTllUT Pl.Ill "91fttl. INIY II Ohn llYnt enn.. ivv to work h11d for It, con. F11t pec.ecl O.C Meg. ,.,..., IM~Tilet. Mmbrltlp 1160144-0381 N.8~ ~~. -----'----.tlllll'Ylllll lldtr thl•: Marrll1 Lyncti Medi therp. orgen1%4KI. l•H ... l• ..... n.... M1g1e tlland prw dub/ ~14.f PlllllUI Realty IL ll'le moet pr• non.tm01<loo front offlee • • •..., r .. t. membetthlp 1696. ~~~t~~f.798·45F/T. Hrallllellx. W.P/T,lfmuf•tllt he-1 __ .. 1 tlgloue, moat growth S*IOfl. GOOCI ptlone P*• • .,.,..,, 1111 "3.-3018/9H-890Ch203 enc.t>lu Pflflt, tedlbtk, leeYlftQ etate. 118,600 _o_eo_ o e-47141241·Ml1 i=-.---------.-......- ·eo XJe J-ouw Vanden .... m .. ,_, ete opening for orlented name In r .. 1 ... aonellty, ·typlno. grem· .l•llefH 14., I.I. PLllAL 11 ... 111 good r1f1. 831·8523 qualllleO perton. Herrlt tat• Prepere y<>YrNlt m11, llte d1ct1tlon, short· -------- PIM Clw .. /BlequM WW. 72 H4, 11 ·Ma. ,._ ..,.,...., loeded .... .-,,. ...,. .......... ,. , A« Avail S2&.900 Cell ~nit1 nMdtd to dtelgn for new t600, 1850. 1880 ex-now tor the next real ... hend 1 plus. Stn.._r• Tl~ nort1t In L90une Nlguel, lllllOLWEllll perlenc:e Mlpful. :ate boom. C11.., op. tume to NEW HOMES lmlYllWIU W 1 t t' ford Cry at 11 0191~..e 10 EJM&..()550 Ua.~ ... .,-iiiiiiiiiiilr--.....,. ._ ••--'--...o......--71 288 S&I. a:;c &Wn. 1 wm.. ... ownr. ""'Y deln. t5500. 112 Cbv. gc1 trwipo W 2eoocc ~ PP Me-367 oeo M.s102 mutt l\av. et 1 1 yr PART TIME. To work for TUllU portunltlH 1vell1blt. MAGAZINE, 3151 /llrwey for public opink>n pone Chtndeller, 9 arm•. exp.Fu1tt1me.s ·9200 J1na'1R~yAnn1 P~=~:~opentngeieo ~11.fg ~~~~1":'1i ~:..~:~e~e~e ~:, ~!y50~h~!.~ ~~; Uo~44f!0e7~~5Wt.1~J.~.;..._-.,.-..,,....;;..~ .... ~:::::;::~ ••lllY•Mn. Tues.·Frl. 5·2514 EJccellent compeny ben· W11tMeclt>orUlorPem, medebyreaumeonly hreh Aon"fl•ld. •u1c&1 1 I 'trn7RMMXU@b! Now 1cetptlngr;pp11. eflta. ContlC1 Stlltt Get-at MerrUI Lynch AMlty et ii-i -m 8~292 • • ,.....,.._meny .,,.. must ·n 2 enrt. tic, xtnt ·1 f oev ... .._ w1wt1t"" cation• for l*1 time food lllllllEEPEI lney 5'&-tW or "3-1310 ..... I -drum Mt a pc.. rn ..., Tom 5'4-3203 Mrlle» workere. Rate for b111y proleulonel. .... OUIT 11-.1 I.I.I. AccUl'at!~": IPtfltng !!.~ head• bl S lOO 840-0408 'II lflll •A llD oond. lllwr '*-'blue Int, tnt., uncter 471( ml. priced nu tir• met-. e&k ml below Wtlo411tie 8k'9 $5.11 p/hr. Min 3 hra Mon-Fri, 5 hr• plday IAllY Pl.IT Men/Women. Local lrN. • muaC Huntington .,..._,_ Fact equip'd. wl\ottof p/dey. Apply •t· 2985 Of'lver1 lie .• own lransp & 1u-a2111t IM Mull hevt own amtll...... 8ud1 Aesurch Group ..... ,,., .... .... OfUct ru11lv•/ xtr ... RMdyfor Imm.cf BMr St, Coata Meae, ret1. req. 476-7009 btwn I hlclt. Clll 540-2395 ext. 3 53&-.0e31 It Oulllfled '1iJ tal 1.u del.(3419) Cell T odey 114,000 180-9402 • eoott SIMO.~ '82 380SEC. lltv/blk lttw. John9on owns, S3l-12te 556-3273 8.30am-5:30pm wkdeys. -L-=e=G'"'A_L...,,S __ E..,.c=R=ET,,,..A...,A,...Y-~ ... SI HI I . ·11y P1·1 , ,~ Oedat·tylcal~edo~I Laec,,.,..~~-! ••nu I TWIT HlllllT ..... "!c~·w~~'.in":' ~f:'T. 3Q &:.fop m OAANG'ECOAST Inti, fUlly equjpt, immtc '85 CAOlu..ACS 481< 11'1 S38.500 PP S11900Wft 4~5118 or 883--1588 Ctoered End e e e e "" """"' ...,_.,,,., (OW!' 18 yrt) need.o by Couple for 60 llnltl In CM. lmmecl. opening. CUh Good for ema11 offo ~ •• ••••e exp dHlreeble Xlnt pro~ Ciienti lor Exper required with pai d dally CALL S625. xtre paper & toner AMC/JMp llllDT.... ~~i:9 · e skUls. N/amkr r .I. s.nct f11hlon pi'lnt. ·1how1, woman In ottioe, man to 540.7321 ext 5 Incl Lec). Betl 494-8555 2524 H~ ~;•Mesa • resume. to: hiring partner non-union COl'Ml*Ciall & do some melntalnlince. , --•• • e 18552 MecArthure blVd trtlde lhowl. Hourly rete Apt & ulaty-Beauttf\116yr TILDtlll TYPEWRl'TERS 9lec 1200. =--=------rll~ 77-e 9 s.def\, .wtnlf l714)432·1t17 Auct~Newpon Merrlottl--------- : : ste 42S. Irvine 92715 714-281-1143 old cmpt.w w1poo1/19a. IHUTlll & 1125 646-3542 evet. Tracks . . S • • l ..... er--llt1H) MODELS & MODEL Tll IUIAllllllT Women/Men .. rn 160. PiHtl Ch HI m ·13 Toyotl Pldl up 4 ;pa 1 t -24-M 10 AM Sharp NABERS -: FULL-TIME • OUltoi'iit.n TYPES'°' local dept. U2-11H p/dey plus cash P•ld errywood Hammon rrd~:irc:~~~-• OFFICE CLER" •. Currently workl~or not. atore promotion•. Call Rts11urent dally. No exper. nee. Will Spinet Orgen. mdl L· tOO, For eompetltlW P<lotl & C 11\1 'AC ..... ret• on 1185 NllLI. MOCN11, Jon~. LARGEST SElECTIOH " (213) 858-8360 train. FT /PT. 54<>-ee.4& mint cond $300 67S.3248 • • Contact P1u1. 2 2 New· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii lllTISI I OUllH ext. 8 aulhortied dlf rep of late model, low mltMge •: \ •'" '"'"' t:ir1·11l11tiu11 01111'•· '"'" .• MportechlnBllsvtd. MITOI lllft'e Exper. pref. Evea. &T ... elept)ol'le ___ S_•_les ___ _ •19' wknds . SPAQETTI ...... ,. ... • 11~1 t·ntr~ It'"'' 1·l1·rirnl p11 .. itiu11 : SOlllEW l&OlllllT Avelleble In: BENDER, 645-0651 .-.- Upright Plano & bench xlnt cond 1200 7S6-9263 ........ "'.. ... Cedil&lcl In Southerri _7_60_·_15_53_°'-~---1 Celiforrn.t S..ue~ 140-1111 • 11\lliluhlt· l'or lht• ri,:lit , ••. , ..... ,., T •111• NEWPORTBEACH. 111n&1L• .. 11 •ILYPLll..... Pr•.....__...&-......... • a.• • I e t • r LAGUNA BEACH -Amb1t1ou1 men & women, TV laiit ...,......., ,..........,_ • '"' 1u·r1t·111·1• 1 1• .. ir1·1I h111 ~i ll I ruin. e Acme Gridley make tet· AND LAGUNA NIGUEL. Expe<11les person for line no uper. nee. Cell now, j ' ToCllooMfrom OYEI 110 2900 Heibor BtYd. COSTA MESA e Po .. itio11 i111'f111l1·.. """~•·riuj.! • ups, high prod., Downey Experience preferred but quellty womens & men1 540-6695ext. 28 _._•.• .. rff._..,. __ """"'_ Jll llmlll •• ,111111111• ... l ili11>•, ''· ''''"' a111I cla1a •. eaxreper•·. Min. 8-10 yr1 not neoeasery. Earn shoe store. Top oom---------16"newRCAeolorTV.r• '" ,. 14'"" • ..,.,,. th pensetlons & benefits. TELUI mote, $260 642·2164· IMPMTI e 11r111·1• .... i11~. \ppli1·11111 .. h1111l1I lu· •. Omega 640.4443 ~.-..,.,..,. per mon · Should _expect to eerr Part.time, e>eper. nec --------Vua 9141 1oo1 OulllStreet < \I )IJ .I \( • I., No collecting. Cell 10am s2·.ooo. flrat VAAr. Call 23" Sulv1nl1 Tl/ fine 83 L K. , • 111•111. '"•·to~urk~ith1 ... 11plt·11111I • a1••imHS1m to 4pmMondey Frldey .. ,_ TransNatlonmBank ' . • • uxury""'stord&Mm NewportBetch I . . . 1 1 --~• -• .. T · Mr. Andertof), 759-9551 760-3000 cond. t>e1ut1ru1 cabinet. lae. no down Lo.ded w/ ••• a.aa • W\I' 11 1w .. 1ll,•· u11111u t'. 0 hour •Dynamic commerelal rMJ --•------,.....----S175642-355S unlqueextru963•9448 -.-- • ~ orl.. "1·1·L. \1rn11l1" ·t-ricl1n . • estate company eeeks IAl.Y Pl.IT Rn&ll S&LIS TOP SSS 25" Zenith C01of TV xlnt TIP••• Piii • ')turtinu .. nlur.' j., S'J~O/mon th. • hlghlymotlvated and pro-Ml-4111 In Perlumery Boutique In Females pref. Models and c:ond 1150 650•3407 Aalit .. 1, ... • .. : 1esslon11 lndM dual to Fashion Island. Newport Escona. (213) ae&-1984 Clanin MH FC>f Pampered • <.CM1cl N•mpun~ lu•1ll'fi1 ... \r>pl) in work In Nor1h Orange l~~~~~~~~~I Belch. Perm. part time. TU"ll Beeulllul 25" RCA Cir TV Meroede98enz e pn .. 011. \1oncln~."l'hur .. da~. :.?:00 : County In our e.wcltlng ... Wkndsemust.760-9093Com • $148 3yr wrnty Open '55JaguerXK:140Coupe· Ull?r.&nl&SI e t and fast growtnn mnet merclal Trevel Aoen· Sun TV Johns 646-1786 Rebuilt ~tne $3500 Top Mer__._ Pr.___ Pejd • '" 1t:CHf r .m. \ .. L for 1-.ilN•n . • .... • A---··---, 10 .. L ••• •• cy located,,.., o.c . Air· obo 760-8688 ._... ..._ • Ing dept. Need ttrong -·--u • -SONY stereo w1turnt1~. · C.rl P9tercw Rey • e typing and organlutlonel Young adults, If you can Unique IP<>fttwear shop pon Meklng ex~ ........ """""""ets, em/Im A t (a t_,,. --••••Tl •. • skllls, good phone per· e.nawer yes to: has lmmed. opennlng for oommerc1e1 agent, mutt ;dk, B'067s.3248 • H · "' --ORANGE COAST • sonallty. ·I need Chrlatmu money saJea peraon Xlnt ben· have 2 yrs exper. l fial Mllllll :e Q~JLY PJl.QT •. EXCEALNLDENST .. LABERNYEFITS -Enloyworl<lngwlthothet •fits and edva.neement knowledge of SA.BAE STEREO S75. COLORED '73 ~MOBuOd~.!'6g-'85 213 or 7141537•2333 • ,.. young tldults opportunltlea. Ex per. compute< Good ltlrtlng TV S30. 642-0670 tag-....,., .,....,. 1,.. • 030 e""t Ba" treet • Applicants hand deliver ·EnJoy hiving run and helpful. Apply In person salary plus benefits Ce.II To·"ibl S .. 71"-". d"''tal A-..1! ti Pmc~• tlS7 • 'h " .Y • • resumes only to Christine wtnnl""(cllM et Carosellis, 3432 Via Sherri, 756-0f566 "'' ,.. ~ .., .., ------• C M CA 926?~ "" o M I tuner, lSO watts •79 fo --...1 !Jc -.. '87 912. 5 Spd, fectory e OS ta e. 8, -I • Brackus. •btwn 1·5pm. -Live In outh Orange porto 114• lido ar na w•~a/w•-111 I h _ _. $325 OBO x. "'"'• ., • "'"' ....,..S, xJnt conc:I, $&200. • NEXUS Co••PANY c I/Ill....., N"' .. ,~ ••• Pc en....... ownr. lll<e new. cleen ;,::-..t otr "-•g •• 57 e "" ounty -..-. iv. SS 50 Hr, BUSBOYS $4.50 SS2·2886 $2500 646-7391 "" ._ ._ • • 4000 MacArthur Blvd, Call tOdey 62o-&006 lllllllt'S .. ,,, p/hr .,_,.., .... club ~ e S It ••oo NB A k f M T ru.&a o;;,o..,.... '""' . p hit 701" 73 914, black, gd conc:I • •• •••••••• •••••••• ••• •• • u e .... · · · s or r etry rull/part time. Days or Varied dey & eve 1hlft1 tWtr 1 • 50 S3800 OBO Cell Undllr40. · Ilk• Newspaper KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES! AGES 11-14 EARN lJ> TO $75.00 PER WEEK We now '"'' IS C>PtlllllCS for '°411' uttt bUwtn lo 5e(Ult IHcltfS tot The Or lllCt tout .i>at(y Piiot. Our u ews st.alt 1t l.30 pm Mid 1WO<l unbl 130 pm wettdlys On SllurdaJ, wt lwor\ 1 lew more llolln YOll .. wn Nny trips , and praes. alof1 witll urninc 1our own money , lhtrt rs no dellvtr~ oi colltchon 1nfOl•ed If you llf interested. plust "" Mr hrl MO COO( (714) 548-70~ •llllH eves. Positions evell. In lncld wknds. 496-5787 1c30 1 n~°"st~ngler3G5oodhp lll*ll IEW 548-9102 new(1.;.~~T-* RN CONSUL TANT * N.B & Irv. 786-48 t2 •••111111 n1•-..,,,. ...,. ' a _,...... F II I f•-Ible h --cond S1600675'-91"" &Ill's JmUllYll •1~ u t me, ... x our•. *13 000* lmmed. opening In our 11_._., • Must have strong back· ' I I b h f h CHRISTMAS SPECIAL 18"1 '• ..,.... .. I * * ground In p1yctil1trlc·tl· PERMO.GUAR.COMM. c~~c~:~tloo~: '.•~Pd Boston Whaler Best oner f--••-I 7 Tl CllHSE Fl• '14 OllPI H YIW cohol-chemlcel d•· (0nly4contac1sperday) 11 Atle 1 673-6000 pendency Intervention SALES·LOCAL Business ~:rr.'arc:;,';~·or we~!. 2 12l'I OHL Y 3078 mllel-L*• end In-patient treetment. S50K-$100,000 Potential house HP« req. Wllllng· HUTII• UIUJ• [ ~ TO CHOOSE FROM New 111<CV010) Conduct Intervention• In Daytime selllng. no travel nes.s to learn 1 variety 01 38' Luhrs, S. F .. glass, tw. • • t-Ouard Red 11&.m the community. LEASING COMM. EQUIP Jobs. Knowledo-of Or· dsrs. 12) eux gen. rec. • ' 1.Slate Blue .-... -. -llU HSPIT&L Fut Advanoement-Mgmt enge C~nty helplul. Job la tho. r~ar · Loren. A/P · IN IUENA ftAltt< 'II flll1Wlll IElllnYMIATllO AU ln&ILI IY PHii requires • good dnvlng VHF. ADF, current OR~HE • AlJOt 111111111 d F survey. mint cond, all of. - - - -~ ---OllTll Mon.-Frl. 7em-4pm recor . ull time O< part lers con1idered Contact 750 (lH) .... Ull IH·Ml1 llr.Mu ~:..@~' Cell John~JA67~ 6 ManchelterBlvd 1 L..eether,lowmffel IAUS CUii Si.t,tttr• l1tltiatry * llfJIELI llY• l~iOH tN IUENA ttM~ . ~~) PAlllT·TI•I 7 50 PIY rttet with loeel corp Seeking quallty workers. must bt 18 plus, U S Citizen Cell 2-5pm, 964-2890 PAITTHll ood money. 1hort hours. S700. mo. plus t>ooua. Own eer, 3-6am. Resl- dent11J MWspeper de- 11 very. Call 24hre. 759·0630 Of 642·831S Fest paced drugstore 213/1H -1111EH •CllllSIU* lllW tl U PORSC~E •AUC>t ,12 •R'Vll IR Alert & accurate Exper. Elec1rtc, gas, dlesal ~W..a.5 pref F/l,4wt1days&S1t. Jt~I Waatt4 SlOS Prtee1FromS8.900 6750MWICtlelt•Blvd fllctory2·tone io.7 S46-2121 LV. NURSE. Dey or 64.S-6812dys642·1178ev &lenePwk (Blue/Grey).Gf9yllel0uf sales Nights Excel cook ~J"9'·'9n (114) 121 ... IO int ,IO-lomMia(Stkl121 "llClllllYFUllS Ref's 646-9133eve ~~~~ff~~~~~= ~~~ iiiil•i 111.111 Opponunrty to sell gour· :!' SS l O 2 6 kt re OMC sea drMIS * * * * * * * * * * met foods & gifts for hol· Reder ADF, VHF .:•cEWITlm--r ... ELllUll ldeys Flex hrs, will train. oodlePups, Teacup, Toy, lethometer & many wtras ~ •1-a. Westcllrt Plaza 642-0972 Min $250 up 546-26-48 $39,950 476-1991 PIE-IWIEI UW's IMr" Feshion Island 640-6030 Ptll 5535 hill, Sail 7014 SALIS PEHll Blue & Gold MACAW. 3 yrs ·33 Morgan 011. ·71 dsl. v Resldentlal old Hand raised DOES hi 2 r 1 .~ P M NOT BITEI 5•1."•21 w Sir, ur ing geneoa ,.. roperty gmt ~ .,.. , 1 llb & malnsall Prioed PART-TIME, l/erled houra v Wiii Train 10 sell! pp 646-9195 ,.'!!~;;;;;;;;;;;;;!!!l~'!ll!!!l!!!!!~L to Include early A.M. v Resldentlal Income At!la'aacH 6011 weekends. Must have 0.. v Commercial • 8' SABOT. n-sell, xlnt pendable vehicle (small Xlnt facllltlea, good EL CTRIC DRVEA Xlnl cond S17S 642·5046 truck, van, station cllentele. constant leads. cond . $150. 498·1697 77 32014sp alt 896RFP 773201 4sps/r403480 80 3201 Sap ale 211%931 803201Ssps/r 1ena185 80 32015sp sir 1ben796 81 3201 Ssp sir 1 DUE497 81 320i WT si r 1 DAG964 81 3201 ssp ·s· ldog860 81 3201 all Si i 1 btb-408 82 3201 Ssp sir 1dzl14S 82 3201 5sp sir 1est416 82 3201 5sp si r 376629 82 3201 Ssp sir llgp.463 82 3201 5sp sir lfdc 103 82 3201 Ssp sir 1evd9to4 82 S28E al t lldl700 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROll I Bull of Ille - e Fired p1eoe 10 -opefl 14 Plumed bird 15 RUU11'1 - Mountains 16 VICIM - 17 SuspiclOUI 18 Slendeter 20 -m11e1t1 21Swemp 22 Program 11em 23 Petjurer 2!1 Returns 27 Bone support 30 Melt drinks 31 Sid word 32 Entire amount 33 Sheko Of lrlGOrn 3e Oeclelm 37 Shouled 38 Turn down 39 Plus 40 Pu1V«IH 41 Storms 42 Tllkl « lnstrul'T14tnts 45 Millture 47 Pet'Uclty 48 Belt pert 14 17 49 Carry 50 Ropeflbef !14 Helps to get by 57 Lone Ranger'• lldelclck 58 Mideast gulf 59 lnforrn9f 60 Join 61 In case 82 DC types 53 Adjl.isl DOWN t Fountain 2 Open arch 3 R1weerths 4Remlu 5 Eye problem 8 Yam, e g 1 Allen land aR .. ln 9 MOOM'lkln 10 Fragment 11 r .. 11 12 Pro•y 13Coas1c111e1 t9 Angi.cut 2t Oreuy 24 Sign 25 Ranked 26 Mll<I Ollh I 27A~I 28 Project 29 Avelenot.s 30 Choice Chops PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED 32 Cycle 34 To --1de111y 3!1 Pitch 37 Rugg.cl rock 38 Df11ter 40 a-!tc un111 41 Bubble 43 -mect1c1ne 44 Montlrous 45 L.-d Of' zinc 1 a a 460mlt 4 7 lies 1n w111 49 Impart 51 ThA11rop 52 Dene. move !13 Wronglul ICI 5!1 TV dial spc>I 56 Slruogle IM super!Qf lly 57 E11etoreen p11n1 II 12 13 wagon) to esslst news-VIP PROPERTIES INC. Hot Pt trig gold, xlnt cond paper dealer In .Irvine 675-2232 s250 0 80 548.3s32 area. Muat bt depen-1-------- deb'le Contact Greg SALES PElllSll I HY &PPLWICH Hyde Monday thru Friday Exper for ettlb. Motor· LES 957-8133 between 9:30 and 10:30 lzed & recreetlonal prod-•---------=-am. only. 142·"321 uctl dealer. Agressive. Magic Chef Micro wave 1 S • enlhulsatlc & capable of cu It memory temp probe closlng Good benefits. etc $290 64 t ·8993 NI lnUTHI 11l1ry & commission Retno s 150 gas stove answering Mrv1<lt exper Send resume to AOir SlSO wshri dyr Sl50 .. pref. Full/pert hme day Of 403, Delly Piiot, P 0 . Box d h ht s lOO 646-S8"8 ' evening•. 642· 1403 1560. Costa Mes.. Ca. _s_w_s _____ _ PHTI w Pllmlll 92626 REFR1G tii5~~:5 oBo Santana 27 Racel Crse Hond& OB Mooring avall cheap S 1s.ooo 631-8245 Mariat Es•ir. 7 11 Avon 6 person eenlster life relt. Oenlorth anchor (22S) 642·23!16 dys Mercury 4 5 hp Ef1f11ne OB $350 67!1-7678 su,.,-~ .. 7m BOAT SLIPS f0< Power Boats 34 FT or Less. 642·4808 Norltau expt< pref. 1 Hour S&LEI PEllll Photo, 646-2424 Full time. New Oellgner Relrlg Wesher Elec Perm sllp needed end lie Boullque. Fashion Island Ofyer 'Clean S"7 :2916 or doek for 41·Morgan01 ,. •.. OT Must have exper. & refs. __ _ Ketch Jim 879-034 1 H 760-7333 frff te Yta 1022 da)'l/871-46-40 eves 82 S28E Ssp I'd 1fnu306 82 633csi all 1900«2 63 3201 5sp Sir HWIS IS 83 3201 5sp S 010s 12 83 S28E Ssp L d 9S644 1 8J 528E a/1 I'd 1HIW809 8J S28E a111d d 207 19" 83 3201 Ssp S 3909189 ~ (714)135-3171 208 W 1st, Santa Ana CLOSED SUNDAYS ,.,... tllt W eoroite, nins well. S: C~nrtltt tlU spd $400 541-9267 76 &aro 8 cyt m mt - ---Gr .. t Cood $2800 Joan 'II ClllW 641-9600dy 54~ S199down c E Cornm«Clll leaM 78 Chevette, IU1o, reblt ALL-SAVERS trans. new brl!S. good (7 14)432-1977 cond S1950 78().1605 ~ 9171 82 Z28 Cam110, t7K m1 Y1lk1wa1ta 1olded: cust patni. perl ·1o Camper •Int $1&. cond $10,800 543--0614 •f213.S92-S840* 78 Rabbit 4 IC>d. IM, sheeosk1ns. showroom , $3450 OBO 857-1""8 COHN Ell CHEVROLET "-"ll.1't• r H OIHllUTll .. 'IS lnlll Startenshlre terrier f'~yrs SLIP WANTED ._ F Nd s 79 Vw Corw Blk nu eng nu Must be experienc.d In 111 PAIT TI• mt spayed all shots s For 41 It a~boal 1 _________ 1 top 60K mi 57400 obo ' ' i:-. i ' \1 t " \ S46-I 200 phues of newspaper for lovely Hellmark store In yard loves Kids 968-7138 Please call 644-7994 LARGE SELECTION OF 673·399S dys 673--0S69 r=--..,,,----......,,,..;..;;:;; production. Contect H B. Aexlble hrs.• artns Farailue 5025 licyclu ___ IOT2 NEW & USED BMW s• 80 Turbo DteMI Outler-tr Hit !!~~~~ffney, 642 "' 321 ' ~~~J= •• 'f'~.t~~~,i~ 3 sldechelrs S30:i5o ••. ·st claulc Cruiw 2§11 l~~~~~~· 1/t, stereo llke new ,-o-68..,,.....,.M~u-s-tang-""" ~Con:--v-.-comp--1 mark. 963_4064 liquor cabinet $1 50, •n· S100 nrm 875·9315 SERVICE& LEASING $2750 64&-7391 restor'ed, 289, .uto. PS. tlque l'tandcranl< vlctrole Cruiser S60 10 sp S75 Can 3670 N Cherry Ave ·91 Conv Rebbll. bill/Wht PDB. 1tlnt oond 964--094 l PIT Reap. adult. Good S&LEl/STIOI S90 7s9·1890 hold tll X·mas S48·2429 LONG BEACH top, 34K m1 S8000 080 '74 Pinto rblt eng 7,800 mt public/phone exp. lite Exp pref. Chlldren'sstore 8' Sota gold tones Xlnt (No Cherry ••lt-405) 644-4006 E11es nu 1r1nslredletor(S1750 bkkpngltyplng. Cell M·F. Petite Merche. Coste cond s 150 67S·S977 M1t1rc1clt1/ I <71•) 131-lllO 81 Scirroco 3SK ml. rep~s)S900 obo ~ 645-&460 11"'· Mesa. For PIT. 642'4714 Antique Chlnese_C_e_m_p-hor kMltn 1011 l'rede-lnsWeleome bl1upnk1 llke nu $6500 '78 Pinto Porthole wegOl'I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiii Secretaries wan1ed. two Chest $500 494-7346 Moped R.cer seeks 60-" 3 OPEN SEVEN DAYS 640-8590 835-7001 PP V-6 S3K ml, 775WCO •IUL ESTATE• PIT Positions evall for Beioe Sore S300 Ork Brn *r:<' S250 m11C 6"6-6SS7 IYtlll IO llfW $1200 650-4777 * SAUi * ~sy::1~!~ri:: Yll1YI Chr S7S 7S9-066S Traittra, Daina tll7 YOL"SWAIEIS ·82 EXP SPof14 spd .... T 1 1024 7 2·oz • " amtfm cas, alf. Utte New' 0 ... tr1lll·hH111trl1I 6pm for details Cmplt K-sz wtrbed S 1000 rift i .. mag tires '" .. $3499 548-84S 1 we ere 1 39 year old firm llOlnUY newSecS360646-1041 WANTED 181 or large< ~g?s9~~;:!1 '"out TICIMlffllll wholly owntld end per· Are you k>oklng for variety, DINING group, beaut tre.-Travel Tretter PP Wiii P•Y 1 aonelly operlted by Ill problem IONlng. protecl dllional w/chlna $900 ceSh Call (714~-6248 79 280 ZX Fully loaded founder serving the Com-orientated secret1r1a1 BO 213/592-S759'. A -L . toiO Xlnt cond Mint• S spd '" merclel. lndustr111. Apart· Potltlon Cell us btwn -ate 111111 $699!1 720-0429 ment and Land Martcet 9em-111m ror Interview I HY fllllltTllll •m •H Wt are not 1 lrencillM 957.a191 LES 857-8133 fN llSI 1 ~ brenctt or dlv1s1on con---trolled by others On the Secretary. dependable fO< KING size Watetbed, xlnt Lee.sing, Sales R4lt\111 spot men~nt de-1 person HB offtc. Typ. cond $9!1 964-5974 Oome9hc-Foreign·Exo11e cislons. Optn door man-lltlng. phones. hrs &-3:30, Mate couch. love INt. chf 111-4411 egement No waiting 'for non·smlu 893-1940 nr nu orig $1000 Mii $380 ----. • • • • "' ,1 I ' .... ,1 .. ~~ \ .... ,. w.... ... ., ..... 714-833 -1300 en appointment Opening SECRET ARY. depend· l King size Simmons bed, for 2 Commercial· lnd\11-per.on HB ottic. Ty!>. Ill-frame $13-0 etc 850-~ trlel people with ebllrty Ing, phones. h~ &-3 30, Oak An~Fum, Hanging who want the lrtedom to non-emkr 883· t~ Bren lamp. dtlk ctir • '-========"Ir: a.t --t t •• work any tlffltory or 1ype --------.. .,. of pr.......,tu. No term •vt-••11n••y orient rug. b•O•t NEWPORT BEACH 7• e R xz: SOUTHWEST _.... ' --644-5965or144-7897 -o "1 .. "''"'owner. oood 6750 Menehestet BtYd BuenePatlr. 114121-1010 tem. PINN C~OI' L1oun1 BMoh. Full time. _ -Aalt s.nict1/ cond smog certlfled "--+-+--4--+-.c1nitff i:faMie. ~r'°~"::d~i.~~~:_ o~i:f!',';!'!::; ~a':; Parts tolS s2100 84&-5492 1CMcPlaza,Sulte2e0 55-80 Wpm. Stert brH1/glus blr 1tls. din i9 L11tnl!ln1 conv new 16 Bta•a tlZS 111£ lcUHA11 SOITll co11n VOLISWllEll/ ISIZI Newport. 644 4910 lmmed Cell 497-2245' "'· col tbl Mii toll NC· Judg9 OTO eng-tr1n1 Karen M Jiidy tnll 9olld oak eh1ne cab, Perts 5 $900 &46 104 1 '60 A«Or'<I UC-Auto PIS .. Ttlt 1u1 .. 1 draw In lhe ... +~ ..... -+-+--4 Weat a Dally Pilot C....fllct ~ CM To&ry .. 2·6111. ---well unit. cot tbl Mt Much P'S FM Ces.s Sunroof lllllTllY mor• All 1tlnt 072-84111 Aatea ...... Mn $4500 "2-00.(! Light Meretarlel WIH•r~. Wll s 1000 ... ......... dull.. 76C)..8080 now S360 080 846-104 t S.U YoUf eat In ttrit Call' 1---• llm /lllPT we' buy 0ooo UMd FUffi. for yout Cat Any melr.1 or lmmed opening, p1rt Anttqwt & Apptianc:lel model fllid for Of not time, ftex hrl. QeMfll Ofc 833·H25 or 648--Mff Ott°"' pra tnt tklllt, I Ht eccur1te --BILL MAXEY TOYOTA typing, fblnt englllh. 2 Well kept be by tum from 11202 a.ch 8MS Y'I exp f'9q OIWl!fied etlb 10 w Ill• PrlOed to Hunting1~!-'h woB In busy -... &t•te .. quickl Me 0382 • ~........... • ottice ~lf'llO n.... 11, ... lat.t WI llY John Weyne Airport Ole USf!D CARS TAUCt<S 1 Saletry comtMNUfatt --C IN 0A CALL FOA w/up. ~ ~ ~ ...,, ''" ,.. AWIU• .. Call MtcN1M1 534-1911 ~Xtt ., "' . eonn.~ ..... STAT111 dtn .. , tbl1, rehtg .. ~ N~ man Mtdtd tor lemps a fT\UCh more t11 l t BfACti & VD South ~~y-40~ ~lt~~~n HUNTll'fGTON8EACH c>tllllk 6 nit .. 4"'"4141 (W tc11n a Oovetl 14l·IOl111 .. ..JU1 FIUEIUllEI * HOiii * HAS HONDA CARS W •mtn11tr Bet""'*' '2 & 405 F m • tit ........ SOUTH cou•n VOLKSWAGEN I t!tO ,, .. Qlll"'" lhP o., Ill 1111 13 Cuttw 44} new ti;;; l .,,.. ... eflt Ndt ptllnt HOO 080 642-431t ,.-tile lS ·72 tormuia 100. 4 epd 100k• Sharp, ~ OOod. St$00 ot>o 857~~ '77 TAANS AM, ~ paint. btown. 400 CC, IN c:c>nd 1tlnt ma.int MUST SEl,l '305 4tt-S1'20 ... BUENA PARK 91 FWY. ---_-.. ----_---~ ~ GARDEN GROVE 0 CHICK IVERSON Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi ••I E. C111t ltwy., l1w,1rt l11oh 173-0100 Highest Quality Sales & Service 0 NABERS CADILLAC ~ 2100 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA IESl (714) 140-1100 (213) 117-1218 • Best Pnces • Convenient Location • Great Location • Super Service • Courteous & Knowledgeable Sales People l: C) < w a> 0 RAY FLADEBOE HONDA # 11 Auto C11t1r Ir., lni11 In The Irvine Auto Center 830-7600 Complete Sales, Service & Leasing G) ORANGE COAST JEEP/RENAULT 111 In Thi W11t For Niw J11p S1/1s For I Y11rs _ 001nge: ~~~~fee Loast. LEASING . m~".~~·~:.~·vo • ACCESSORIES DEPT 549-8023 C) INTERNATIONAL MOTOR COACH INC. • 751-5488 DailyPi~ai class1 f 1ed ads phone 642-56 7.S EDINGER WARNER 0 THEODORE ROBINS FORD U.S.A.'s # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer Modern Sales. Service. Parts. Body, Paint & Tire Depts. Competitive Rates On Lease & Daily Rentals 2010 • ., .. ., ... ~ •• o ...... .. 1•2-00~., l@-1211 0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS INC. • LONG TERM LEASES • COMPETITIVE PURCHASE PRICES • HUGE INVENTORY dial MERCEDES 213/714 837-2333 Next to Santa Ana Fwy (5) on Manchester/Beach Blvd. G RAY FLADEBOE · VOLKSWAGEN # 20 1111 011f1r Ir., lnl11 In The Irvine Auto Center 830-7300 Orange Countys Newest Volkswagen Dealer Complete Sales, Semce & Leasmg 22 FRWY ' I . , 0 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2121 larlttr llY~., Ot1t1 1111 Over 23 Years Serving Orange County Sales • Service • Leasing 546-1200 S,.clal P1rts U1e 541-9408 MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM -9:00 PM SATURDAY 8:30 AM -6:00 PM SUNDAY 10:00 AM -5:00 PM 'e STADIUM PONTIAC' W•'r• N•w -W•'r• D••llng AcroH from th• Big A on K•""• Ju1t Weit of the (57) Orenge FrHway Sales • Service • Parts • Body Shop on Premises A11h1i• 2221 E. latella 311-1111 G BILL YATES YILllWllEI • POllOIE • PlllEOT SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE 12112 ¥1111 1114, ........ ,., ... ,. •• ••1-•111 111-•100 I . 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OWlelon - 0 World's Lsrgnt Select/on of IT\ Mercedn Benz \C;J 833-8300 3 Blocks So. of 405 Fwy. Newport Beach 840-8444 SMt1 • Uulq · P1rt1 • Sentce • W, S111, DOING BUSINESS UNDER A FICTITIOUS NAME? All new bu1lne11e1 u1lng a flctltlou1 name, mutt by law be regl1tered with the County Clerk. The DAILY PILOT provide• the form• end tmng 1ervlce1 tor our ~u•tomere. If you ere 1t•rtlng a new bu1lne11 call the DAILY PILOT for lnform•tlon end form• M2-4121 UT. 111 Dilly Piii - ... ave time, turn p reparation into a cooperative effort The holida)'. season has always been a Umefor shanng. That will never change. But something has changed about holidays. With more and more women working outside the home and increasing numbers of singles and single parent families, those festive meals cannot be prepared. as they have been in the past, by one person withJast-mtnute help fro m other family members. Ge ping together with family and friends for that special feast still makes the holiday. And bringing a traditional dish to share witb them is sharing at its best. Choose a dish that can be prepared ahead of time. carries easily and most important. travels well. · While the hosts prepare the turkey and table settings. the guests transport the rest of the meal. SAUSAGE PECAN STUFFING "" po\ind bulk pork sausage 1 cup finely chopped celery 'h cup chopped onion 'i'J cup margarine or butter Z packages (6 ounces each, lZ cups) stuffing mlr t cups brotb or water '1'J cup coarsely chopped pecans 1Z to 15 pound turkey In medium-size frypan. cook sausage un11I browned, st1rnng frequently. Remove sausage. Cook celery and onion in melted marganne until ten der. Pour stuffing mix into large m1x1ngbowl. Sur in celery-onion mixture. Add broth. tossing lightly until evenly moistened. Stir in sausage and pecans. Wash turke)'. drain and dry. Spoon stuffing in to neck and body ca' 1t1es. Tum wing ups back. Place turkey breast side upon rac~ 1n roasting pan. Brush ilin with vegetable oil or shortening. Roast in 325-degreeoven until meat thermometer reaches 180-185 degrees in thigh and I 70-1 7 5 degrees 1 n breast. To check stuffing temperature. remove thermometer from thigh and insert in bodyeav11y. Thermometer should register 165 degrees. If meat thermometer is not used, allow about 25 minutes per pound dependmgun-siuef turkey. When drumstick moves up and down easily and juices run clear. the tu rkey 1sdonc. Microwave Directions for Stuffing Side Dish: Increase broth to 3 cups. Crumble sausage into 3-quart microwave proof casserole. Cover. Microcook at high (I 00 percent) power 2 minutes or until browned. Remove sausage. Comb1necekry.on1on and margarine in casserole. Co .. er M1crocook al high (I 00 percent) power4 minutes or until tend~ Pour stuffing mix into large; m1xinibo"-I. Sur 1n celel)·onion mixture. Add broth. st1mng light I). 11r 1n sausage aod peca ns. Spoon into the casserole. Press lightly. Cover. M1crocook at high (I 00 percent) power 10 m1nutes orunt1I heated. rota11ngcasscrolc ''>turn after 5 minutes. VINTAGE TURKEY GRAVY .J Cllpl ~y ~· "'a cup apple cider or cranapple juice '12 cup flour l teaspoon brownln1t and seasoning sauce 2 chicken bouill on cubes t,ii teaspoon ground black pepper t to 3 t.ablespoons turkey drtpplngs Salt to taste Chopped giblets Blend I cup of cold turkey stock with Oouruntil smooth. Heat remaining stock and juice in a large saucepan. Sur flour mixture into hot stock. Cook and stir over moderate heat until mixture thickens_ Reduce heat. add remaining ingredients and cook 2 to 3 mi nutes longer. Serve hot. Makes about 4 cups. •For traditional turkeygrav). replace Juice with an ~ual1tmount of turlc'c' srock' . 1'11rkey Stock: Combine giblets. I teaspoon each thyme leaves and chopped parsley; I carrO tii nd I celery nb with leaves. chop~d: 'h onion. quartered: and 1/z teaspoon browning sauce. Cover with water. Season. Si mmer about 2 hours. Strain. Reserve giblets. HOLIDAY BROCCOLI A: CAULIFLOWER 1 large bead caallflower 2 bunches broccoli ----·----~-~ .. • MONDAY. NOVEMBER ~9. 19M 1 (2-oace) jar wbole plmien.. t teaspooe &rood aatme1 Breakcauliflowerand broccoli intoOo-.-erettesand 1 qurt vaaJlla ice cream, c.t iato dnmb wash. la) er in a 2-quart nngpan. Co,erhghtl ) wnh plasuc Wklpped l~lng I wrap. M1crocookat high ( IOOpercent)power 12 minutes Preheat oven 10 350degrccs Mix butter. Oour. brown and test for doneness. Release the steam. Cool about 5 suo~r and nuts 10 9 ~ 13-inch 0._en proof pan. Bake I::? to 15 minutesanddnan off water. Arrange in serving dish. - G h h f u in. n., m1nutes.s11rnngseveralt1mes.Removelcupm1~turcand arms w11 stnpso p1 m1ento. rv1a .. ..s IV':~L .... sc ........ rv~rn .. & .... s----sc:""'"t 'flaS""rd*-t::r-N ~Pre.'\ rt' iningmiAIUf'C'O\erbottom oTpan V.lth FROSTY PUMPKIN SQUARES fork. Bake8to IOminu1es-C oolslightl} I cup butter or mar1arlne, melted % cups all-purpose flour In :'-quart ~uccpan bnng "ater 10 boil Stir mgelaun 12 cup packed brown sugar unul d1'>solH·d \t1rin nr\t three 1ngrcd1ents Bnng 10 boil 1 cup chopped walnuts, pecans or peanuts and 1mmed1a1cl} pouro>.Cr ice cream in large bowl. Stir 1 cap water un11I smooth Pour o .. crcrust and top v.11h reserved 3 packaies (3-ounce each) peach navored gelatin crumbs. Chlill until firm Pipe v.h1pped topping in diagonal l pound 14-ounce can pumpkin pie mix lines~cro'i'> 1opof dc'i\Crt at sen ing 11me. Makes I :?-16 I tablespoon pumpkin pie spice 'iervmgs FOWL FELONIES ARRESTED ,.,..,...0 Te•tlng the doneneu of turkey• 18 Mary Jo Beratand, one of 44 food profeulon•l• who form the ••turkey patrol" for Swift & Co.'• toll-free Butterball Hotline. Before an) fowl felonies or kitchen capers can be committed. Amcnca's holiday cooks can call for help. To their rescue will come the Butterball Turkey Talk-Li ne. the nation's foremost .. turke}' patrol." which 1s ready to arrest any cooking problems whenever there ma) be evidence of fowl play. The toll-tree hotline staffed by food professionals is avail able to answer any consumer question about preparing the holiday turkc' and trimminJts. · · Armed with expertise in stuffing. trussing. cooking. carving. recipes and lcftovct' ideas. the service can bring order to any cook worried about doing more time in the kitchen tharl need be The turke> patrol "'"I be o n dul) through Dec. :!4. Monday-Fnda} from . 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. The Talk- L1ne "'"I also be a'ailable on Thanksg1\ 1ng Da) and Chnstmas Eve from 6 a.m. to 4 p.m. The number 1s 800-323-484 Dunng the hohda)C-.. the turl..e) patrol 1s summoned for in -depth questio ning. Last season. Y0.000 inquines. ranging from "Ho"' long should I roast my turke)'·> .. tu ··can I cook the turkc\ on m' truck·s manifold? .. were answered. The Talk-Linc has been counsel- ing cooks c;i ncc I 981 and sen cs not only as a resource for 4.men ca's cooks but as a research center for .\menca\ cooking habits. The stafT lcarnf~· for C\amplc. that there is a ron•11rerablc mterl·st in cooking Start a custom with Toast pork. Star of the holiday menu provides a bonus -several meals for a twosome This year plan a holida) menu around an appealing. easy-to- prepare combination of traditional and non-tradiuonal foods. A boneless pork roa t makes an impressive entree during the hol- idays. A three-pound roast also will provide enough meat for several meals for a twosome. ' When sclectin~ a pork roast. look for a delicate pink interior and a thin o uter laycro ffat. The fat bastes the meal as it roam fOr extra moistness. Fresh pork should be used wtthm three days of purchase. For longer toraac. wrap securely in moisturc-vaporproof wrap and freeze up to six month . Before pn:panng the meat for roastin&. get a head tart on a second meal. Tnm about "•pound from one end. Cut into cube • wrap tightl>. label and frce1c Place the roa t. fat 1dc up. on a rad. 1n a hallow roasting pan. ( racl.. 1sn•t e nual but 1t doc 8'' c hl·ttcr tc,ult ) l·or opllmum ten· demt'\" and ju1cine'i\. frc'>h pork should be cooked to an internal temperature of 170 degrees. A meat thermometer inserted into the cente-r of the roast is an easy way to determine doncness. In a 325- degree oven. a two-pound boneless rolled pork loin roast will take about I hour and 30 minutes. For special holiday Oair, brush the meat frequentl y with barbecue sauce during the last 30 minutes of roasting. adding real barbecue navor. '-\ccompany the glazed pork roast with an easy-to-prepare vegetable casserole. Celery Au Grat1n boa"t, a crunch> crumb topping and cream)• sauce ri chl y flavo('C(l with st)arp natural cheddar cheese. Pop It an to the oven while the roa t tand wa1tin-to be carved. low. gentle simmenna in picy· wcct French drc •Its 1dds c Ira flavor to pork cube9 and winter veaetablcs an Harvest Pork tcw. ('onvcn1cn1 pourable ulad drc - anai. arr fla vorful bnu ina liquid for less-1 •ndcr meat and poultry. Serve this satisfying one-dish meal with crusty French bread and a 1mple fruit and cheese dessen. CELERY AU GRATlN 1 ..., C11)s dlagoeaJly-cut celery 1llee1 Maraarine I Ubles,oon flour Dash of salt and pepper -.; cup milk .._ <'UP (2 ounces> shredded sharp cheddar cheese t Ublespoons dry bread cnimbs Cook celery in boiling water 10 minutC'i or until fork-tender. Drain. Mel\ I tablespoon qiargnrme in saucepan over low heat. Blend in nour and scasonlnas. Gradual!) add mill.. cook. timng consLanll). until 1luckencd. Add chceS<'. 'it1r until meltC'd. Pl~ce rclel) in 14 to 16-ouncc b3k1ng dish. t~p v.1th chcc'>C sauce To biud crumbs '\!\1th I tablespoon meltr<l marpnnc; spnnklt' oH"r '-"IUct Ba~e at lSO dctrtt"\.. ICl nunutcs. Makes 2 ~'""'""'· 2 carrots. cul Into thin sticks I small onion, sliced I small potato, peeled. rubed •, cup celery slices 1, teaspoon pepper ( oat n1l'3t wth nour Brown IO :' tabki.poon'> drc<..-.1ng 1n large saucepan o'er lo" heat add remain- ing drr\'itng and \\Bier C O\ er -;1m- mcr I hour ..\dd ~m:11n1ng 1ngre- d1cnh. C O\ er. conunur 'i1mmcnng 40 minutes or un til ml·at and 'CllCtablrs arc tender st1rnng c.xc.:nc;1onnll~ Ma~c~ :' serving ... " rr .~our Than A. ~s11 ins least in- C'lutlt-d the trod1t1011al cront'Cm ~un·. u~· tht• /dl<H ''" 10 pn:f)3n: Cronh<'rn Ma/1011 'a/nd CRANBERRY MALLOW ALAO I C1IP ct1oppt4 apple ~ u p mhalat•re manhmaU.•s '' e11p c~lery 1llcu ... 1, np •lt•le Hrr) cra•~rr atl(e Ute Kt WalHts. toasted C omh1n\' apple. mal"\hmallo"'' ,c1 " anJ vanh\'m uu"--e. 011\ hatni) (hill ~'cral h·ourc; r'c on ltttu :-t~O' n:J laJ plate' \pnnldt• "ith walnut'\ Make, 2 ~" lftl' VarS•tl•: Suh'\tllUlC' ~ rantx'n) or anic :\UC\" for whole~·~ <'rnnhcrn ~UC't. ,- smaller turke' sand brca'it ol turl.e' for the holida\ meal. .\nd ~-­ percent of all que'>l1ons wen: asl.l·d b> men. md1 ca11ng that more ml'n arc manning their roa,ter,· on the hohda,. .\dd.1t1onalh . tht· ~n1n· rcpc.lrt' 1hat ..\menca· 1s '\till hungr. for recipe information for the holida' turke~ and the 1nmm1ng1, .\lthough people 'eem to "ant to cat the '!klme Thanl.,g1' 1ng food' each \car. the Tall.-Linl' tound th.11 cook ~ are "illing to l'\pcnment with one or two ne'' rec1pc'i -in add1t1on 10 their old fa,onh.''i ..\nother emerging trend 1.-. th.11 ..\mcrica's holida' root...-. arc llHll.· tng for v.a}\ 10 free up thl'H O\l'I)' .\t'l'l·ording to 'anl ~ Kcxlngut't director 1of tommun1l'at1on' t11r \ Sw1lt &. (o "Man) people arc lalling tor turke~ roasting pron·durl''> for micro,, a, c and con- ' ct11on o' ens. co' ered kettle gnlls. ,mol.cr-cool.cr<. and counter-top r1la,1a.-. ··nm· l ,tlkr e'en wanted to roast h" turl.c' on a hot plate' Con- 'unwr'> arl' loot.mg for altemat1"e \.\J\C-. to roast their turke\S so their 11' l'O' arl' tree for the other hohda) d"hl''-. \\ hJtl'' a the lOOkmg concern . ml'mlx·rs ot 1hc Talk-Linc staff tx·hc' l· thcre 1" no cnmc masking a quc<.lltrn or two The~ urge cooks "ho arc clueless to remember ono thing -"'hl'n 11 comes to thu htilida' fea<,t. n c~ cook has a right ' 10 n1Jl.l' om· call. arid thanks to the T Jll.-L ine. 1herc·c-. no charge -;'· !'ie takes revenge l·on .leftover turkey While pumpkin pie is still Ameri- ca's favorite d1 h on Than~ gi ving • Day. ano1her pie may soon become t.hc cook's favorite on the day after ; -Montezuma Pie. LcflOver turkey. tomato enchilada sauce and a 'arkty of cht>eses are the simple ingred1cn1s of this tasty, attrac1ive dish. Moniezuma Pie is actually a stacked enchilada that appears with different tilling combinations in every Southwestern state. It is known in Mexico as Budin Azteca and in New Mexico it would be a lJed a SOj>a Seca. Whether served to family or special guests. the pie provides an easy-to-prepare, non-traditional meal alternate tp follow the tra- di tional tummy-stuffing turkey da).' • Moniczuma was famous for his vaned and del1c1ous food. How- 'cver. his guests. the Conquistadors. responded by stealing hi~ gold. killing his people and lea ving with his treasured va ni lla and chocolate beans. Hopefully. the only thing your guests wi ll lea ve with 1s this . I . recipe. MONTEZUMA PIE 1% ounces Monterey Jack cheese, shredded 4 ounces Mozzarella cheese, shredded I cup sour cream -... cup Ricotta cheese 3 cups cooked turkey, diced Z 14 ou11 cel cans whole ~billes 1 medium yellow onloa, pteled 8 1prig1 frttlt cllad\ro or parsley 3 tomatoes, diced I tablespoo11 batter % table1pooo1 corn or 1amower oil I ca1t tomato enclttlada sauce 10 cora tor11Uas ombine the Monterey Jack and Mozzarella h~ set aside. Com- bine the sour cream and Ricotta cheese: set aside. Chop and combine the chilies. onion and 4 of the c1IM'lro or parsley prig . In a skillet. saute the chili mixture in the butter and oil for about 3 minutes until the oni on is trans- lucent. Slir in the diced tomatoes and I can tomato enchilada sauce. Season to taste and set aside. Heat about 'h inch oil to 350 degrees in a ski llet. Immerse 6 tortillas. one at a time. in the oil for' a few seconds until softened. but not cnsp. Dram on paper lO"-Cls. Quaner th~ remaining 4 ton1llas. Add ad- duional oil and raise beat to l75 degrees. Then fry the totti"a quaners crisp. Butter a I 0-nlch pie plate or 11 to 12-inch round quiche pan with a sohd bottom. Layer the pie. making 6 la}crs in the following manner: tortilla. ~our crea m mixture. turkey . ;:hill and ~uce m1>.ture and shredded ::-heese. Spoon c>.tra turkey and sauce around the base of th e pie: top with ~xtra cheese. Bake at 350 degrees for 20 to 25 minutes. Wedge the cnsp ton1lla ;;iuaners around the edges of the pan in the cheese. and garnish with the remaining cila ntro or parsley sprigs. "ierves 6. Thia ecaled-down ThanU,ITlna menu featuree turkey with no-cook Cranberry, Walnut and" Apple Cider Stufftn& and a 1pectacular deuert, Cheetnut Bavarian Mold. ( SAFEWAY • 4 CSJ FREE-TURKEY e~-,, .. <\-\1 I •• ~ I ' . . . A .... ... ..... ,......,.. ...... ~ Mro Ho.4e 99c FtOlen lb =:°'~ I> 'I" ""81\nf ••••leu Twltep Atmour, Bul18f Bils•eo ,1 .. FIOlen lb ~169 -, FreshPorkRoast~ ... ~.99• " Sllced Bacon -... r • .... _ Honey Cure Hant "~·~~ •2 .. " , . -.-, ---....· .. ~~~ 1 -~- ••• llOG ~159 ~·. ________ __. 77~, ARMOUR HIN U.S.D.A. Grade A, Frozen TURKEY With C~~~on B;j~.; A-nd Purchase Of '10000• = (MISI I SpedelPrk•...._. 69c L•m•~ ~ .... AM Ml••·-"-«IMIM lb 1 Plea~ -------------------------~ r SAflWA Y TURKIY COUPON : I lf'I•\ v()On o<>O<S 10, om•, tt Armovr Fr01tn I 1 u.s.D.A. Grade "A" FREE * I : lle•Tvrkey... : I I . tt I,,, h) ' , • '' iO "' •ll(·'' ,.. '•". tr t• f ••• ot 1n. f ufl ... " Al ottoh( I A• · · n t -'"'on of .. "r1u'·\tr1 ••Pt:' I I fft•.,f·f f·l',. f':•fJ"'' 111 t'lfl {).•·ff .-·u)rtq• l'\ ~l • •1•11V • u .., I l•mtl 1T11fkt•v,..,,11u''""' Laupuo EA1.mos-. I 1 2~\184 I ~-------------------------· Avocados c-::-~ 4 ,.,, •t .. .................. ~r;:"49• ........... ~= =.ff• ... ........... ara-.d Mrs~~ Of Aol.ndlop 2 4.k lDll • ~~.,,.Get One Pnoeof .... . ' Pusupkln Pie ~ ........... s-.:~t ~.,,. ,&: ., ... Clall ... NapklM Cr••• a. •••• u:- :to 79• aae•-up .. :.c:::.. ..llyWlpes __,. .. lly Oii M~.,. ~-........... :;,;:.: , ·:,.:'I" • •ooo e.1y, .. 1 .. D• "'" .. 11<><• fl•"'" • i I 1 r.., 0u!ll0f S11111t; l\n.t ' ----11. f It-Ice •••t1H ........ • • -... 0-0 9iDr9r .... • Sent• Ane ~' w11y 11• t ' ~ 1 MlS~ton V1e10 • 1.1 7 \ "'"''' Dr It Wolnul. Irvine .. ------- SAFEWAY • 11311 NO CoMt H~.J.IOllO& Beld\ • • 24 Monerctl 8ay P1u1; l ouih Lagune I HOLIDAY MENU EiLEGAN'J:', YET ElASY TO MAKE Let's be sensible about cooking Thanksgiving di.nner. If you work and only have Wednesday evening and Thur day morning to s~op and cook, there's no way you alone can prepare the multi-course. multt-<iessen food orgies of by-gone Thanksgivi ngs. A scaled-<iown menu that won't overwhelm you or )'Our guest is 1n order. . Plaq to do the bulk of your food shopP,IOS on the wcc.kend so that yo.u leave Wednesday evening free for 1he one involved cooking chore. That s a spectacular festive C hestnut Bavarian Mold for dessert. Thursday you'll stuff the turkey with a no-cook Cranberry, Walnut and Apple Cider Stuffing. . Then-you-can make a choice between serving plain green beans or o~r drcsaed up version with herbed cninberry puree. If you choose. plain steamad beans, you might want to make a chocolate saUCf to serve w11h the des sen, CRANBE RRY , WALNUT AND 1) APPLE CIDER STUFFING ·1 nps 1&ale bread cube• ~ etlP a .... oaloa ~ teas,... peeltry 1e11oniag ~ Np fretll or (rotea craaberrlea, chopped' 'l'4 hpral1iu ~ c,. ~ walaats l ce, ,_... ;;,1e1, coarsely chopped ~ e., ~•,.e• celery 1 1~ aea...-11a1t ~ tea1poOD pepper Ya cap lttltter, melted ~ cup apple cider In la rge bowl, combine all of the abo' e 1ngred1ent!>. mix "ell. Use to stufl turkey. Makes about 8 cups. CHESTNUT BAVARIAN CREAM MOLD % envelopet uflavored gelatin 'la cep cold water l 'la cups milk t egg yolks I ~ c1p1 sagar I caa (15~ ouces) unsweetened chestnut puree 'I• cup clan nun l 'i'f tea1pooa1 vanilla l 1quare 1eml1weet chocolate. melted I plllt lleavy cream lna small saucepan. i.pnnkle gelat in over cold wa ter. Let stand I 0 minutes to soften. to a large saucepan heal milk. JUSl until bubbles appea~ around the :dge (do not boil). ReO\ove from heat: stir 1n softened ~claun unlit d1ssol ':'ed. In a large oowl. beat egg yol ks and sugar w1~h cle~tnc mixer 1:1nul very hght and fluffy, about 5 minules. Slowly add 10 milk mixture. ~llrnng con~tantl~ until smooth. Cook. over low heat. sumng constant!}. until custard th1ckem slightly and coats a metal spoon. aboul 5 minutes . In a la'le bowl. beat chestnut puree until !>mooth. Beat 1n hot custard. St1r in rum. van1Ua and chocolate. Cool. Chill over ice water. stirnng often until mixture 111ounds when spooned. In a medium bowl. heat heavy cream unttl stifT. Foldlnto chestnut custard. Into a 10-cup dccorau ve mold pour mixture C'h1ll at least 6 hours or unul set. To-serve: w11h tne tip of~ small knife loosen cream around edge. Dip moRI quickly in warm water. Onto chilled serving plate 1n ve n mold. Garnish with chocolate covered whole chestnuts. chocolate pieces. candied cherries and whipped cream. Makes 16 servings . · ci.ocolate Tria.ngles: Mell 6 1-ounn· squares sem1.,wect chocolate over hot. not boiling water. pread c' enl}" onto a rh1lled cookie sheet: chill in refirgerator until firm . Cut into 1nangles. Place around ha~ of C'hes1nu1 Bavarian Mold. STEAMED GREEN BEANS ALMONOJNE 2 pou11ds greea beans, stringed and ends cut off I teaspoon .alt l cup bolllag water I cup firmly peeffd light brown-sugar l,'J cup orange juice 'h cup dry red wine 1%-oeace packace fre1h or frozen cranberries 'i'I teupooa salt 'la te .. pooa dried thyme, crumbled 'I• teaspoon pepper 'la cup blaacbed silvered almonds 2 tableapooas butter In a large pol. cook green bean~ 1n salted boi ling water JUSt unlll tcnder. about 15 to 20 minutes. Drain and keep warm. In medium saucepan. combine brown SU$8r. orange juice. wine. cranberries. salt. thyme and pepper. Cook over ~d1um heat until berries pop and sauce thickens shghtl}. Puree in food processor or food mill unlit smooth. Keep warm. In small skillet brown almonds in butter unlll golden brown. poon puree over cooked beans and sprinkle with browned almonds. Makes 8 servings. ~HONEYBAKED ONE TASTE IS ALL IT TAKES! It will only take you a few minutes to take that taste. rt takes us a lrttle longer to perlect 1t Each ham 1s covered wrth rare spices and smoked over a ~pec1al}~lend of hickory and applewood chips for no less than~ 30 hqurs. It's then glazed with costly imported spices and golden honey. Spiral sliced for easy servtng. • 'fH4 U ,K,M t • BACK UP THE BiG BIRD WITH A HONEY OF A HAM. For a real feast this lhanksgMng. se~e dehc1ous HoneyBakedno brand ham 1n addruon to the tradruonal turkey. Your guests will appreciate the vanety. and you'll ~1ke-the convenience, because we've done all the work for you. A ham by any other name doesn't taste the-same. GIFT CERTIFICATES PARTY TRAYS NATIONWIDE SHIPPIN(i WHOL( OR HALF HAM 1H CAI AHNtl'"-CO.OMA OIL~ IL TOM>.i.!.NCIMTAI, 'llONO, HUHTINGTON MACH, LA HAaM. l.AICIWOOO, H04lTH HOU.'fWOOO, ~DGI. OMNGI, •ALO M.~AM•INA. MHCHO MIUGI, •nYHllOli SAC!IAMINTO, SAN OllGO, SAN fMNCtKO, SAN '.l MHJA IAfllAM. SANTA MONICA. UNNYVAL.I, TOtl~flKI. UPUINO, VAUNCIA. ~OvtNA, WUTUUU VIUAGI. WOOO\NtO HtUJ I • .. .. .. ' . Don't be a turkey,~ "What wines do you dnnk w1th tu~kcy?" Basically, there art three points: (I ) · if you're having Thanksgiving dinner alone (I hope not) drink exactly what pleases you. but if company 1s coming, think of their tastes too: (2) Red wine really does go with turkey; (3) It's fun to put out a variety of wine types ifit is rve a variegr of a large·family gathering. A traditional turkey dinner is at ~nee a dream and a nightmare when ~t comes to matching wine. Turkey 1s a versatile meat in that it is sufficiently delicate· to accommo- date white wines, yet full-flavored enough (especially the dark meat) to handle pretty hefty red wines. h · i!1lll the side dishesih11tcomphcate things. · Heavily seasoned dressings, sweet flavors from.gelatin salads to candied yams, and bitter flavors such as cranberries all call for different wine types. Personally, I ·usually line up several wine glasses filled with an equa1 number of wine types, and have great fun seeing w~ich wine goes best with giblet gravy. or whatever. If you happen to be a fan of late harvest Petite Sirah with turkey, that's fine, but keep in "}.in~ that Aunt Matilda would probably prefer a slightly sweet Riesling or rose. If you have never tried red wine with turkey. be brave this year. I have enjoyed everything from Zin- fandel, to Pinot Noir, to medium- bodied Cabernet Sauvignons with turkey, and if you generally like red wines. chances are you will like them with the big bird. Since almost every wine type will go with som e part of the dinner, and since everyone has different tastes, try what has become a family tradition of some years' standing at my mother-in-law's annual cel- ebration. S he cooks dinner; I bring the wine. - t usually bring a couple of different reds. a rose (relatively dry), a White Zinfandel or other blanc de noirs, a slightly sweet white (Riesling or Gewurztraminer), and a dry white like Sauvignon Blanc or Chardonnay. A~Hhe bottles are-ptaeed in the middle of the table and everyone experiments. As often as not, we find ourselves fancying a wine we didn't think WO\Jld be our favorite. Any leftovers get consumed later with what else but...leftovcrs. CALAFJA RELEASES -Tile following new releases have nothing to do with Thanksgiving (though three of the four would be Stuffing ~iven a fruity flavor Thanksgiving is a time to offer family and friends the very best from the good earth -and to many that means special foods and wine to match. A traditional holiday meal usually consists pf various dishes that offer a widq_ range of flavors. But it ·is the turkey and, even more so, the stuffing that will influence the wine selection. When pairing wine and food, consider whether you want the two to complement or contrast each other. The following fruit and nut stuffing recipe appeals to a white wine like a Gerwurztraminer, rather than a heavier red. FRUIT AND WALNUT STUFFING ~ cup raisins dried apricots, cbopped pitted, dried prunes, c.bopped Gewantraminer win~ 4 tart apples • 4 pears 2 tablespoons lemon juice 2 teaspoons lemon rind, chopped 8 onces bacon, chopped 1 onion, diced 3 ribs of celery, chopped 1 up walaats, coarsely cbopped 11, teaspoon nutmeg 1 teaspoon dried gtnger 1;, teaspoon cloves 14 teaspoon salt "' teaspoon black pepper . Put all chopped, dried fruit in a medium-sized bowl. Heat wine until it has reached a simmer and then pour the hot wine over dried fruit. Allow fruit to "plump" for one hour and then drain excess wine. Peel and core apples and pears. Coarsely chop both fruits and place in large bowl. Pour lemon juice over fruits and toss. Mix in the chopped lemon rind .. Saute bacon in a heavy skillet over medium heat until bacon is well cooked. Remove c96ked bacon but leave ihc bacon fat in the skillet. Over m~dium heat, saute onions for 5 minutes. Add celery and saute for 5 more minutes. Place cooked bacon, onions and celery in the larie_ t2<>wl with the cut fresh fruh and temon. Toss in ch(?pped waJquts and plumped fruit. In a small bowl. thoroughly blend the dried spices together and stir i.nto stuffing mixture: Taste for seasoning. If you tcfrigcrate the fruit stuffing, allow it to come to room temperature before stuffing the turkey. Makes 13 cups. FRIED TOMATOES Green tomatoe1 Salt Flae wblte 1tonegroud cornme~1 Bulter Llpt or dark bl'owasqar Slice tomatoes about •/,·inch th ick. Sprinkle with sall and dip in corn· mtal. Fry in a large killct, in one layer. in a little hot butter, tumina once, until tender and browned. A few minute bcfort tomatoes arc cooked throuah. sprinkle with a httlc ugar. Serve it once. • J(ny IUD Made entirety from Sauv1pon Blanc (no blendina ll"ll)t'S). it was barrcl•fermcnted and then spent an additional four months in brand new oak barrels. It is very rich on the palate. so rich you might imagine a touch or sweetness. If $0, you'll be wrong. The wine is bone dry. A wine to handle tur~cy for sure. also rich cream sauces and fat, fleshy fishes like salmon. fine meal. I tasted them recently. RMwotd Cuyoa ltH CMnl•· w.as impressed. and here's a report. ury ($6.25): This is Calafia's Calafla 1983 Sa•vlpoa Blue . second label, and the second ($8.50): This wine from .. Honig Chardonnay released under the Vineyard," Napa VaJley, is a bit brand. Winemaker Randle John- pricey in today's market, but it is an son continue5 to use this label to sell exceptional example of the variel . Chardonnay. at a near &iv..eaway Callfornlan Turkeys N GRADE A. 8!-STEO. ··:49~. 1 m purchase. •With $35.00 min mk~Y dll'Y products, Total e~cludes cost ot tu~ L1m11 1 per tamllY 11quo1 and cigarette Item 69 ~~~l~~E~~~f~~~ .• , LB. • Boneless . "' Whole Ham price. that he doesn't think is aood enoufh for his Calafia label. This is one great vaJue. Aaed eiaht months in oak, it is much b1uer and richer than anythin& close to it in price. Thert is the kind of vanilla and butter bouquet and aftertaste you upect to find in wines selling for twice or more the price. If you like big Chardonnays, stock up now. C.lafla 1111 °Mea4 VlMyard'' Zlafaadel ($7.SO): Before you scream ··conOict of interest." I not only do not own the vineyard, rm not related so far as 1 know, and have never even met this Napa Valley "Mead~o grows great Lai1Je.End Rib Roast WATER AOOEO, LB f69 .. BONOEOBEEF LB 179 ~tf1~~~!~:~L~u~~~~ .... L8 .99 ~~~~85 ~~~~ ........... l 8 1.09 ~!!!!!~0 Isu~~l!., .. .. . . . . ce .99 ~~>:4~~R!~!~~!!es ....... ce • 79 ~! !'!e'!!!'!!!•/! !"!!f~~ ... LB -f .19 r After Eight 199 Dinner Mints 7 OZ BOX 5 TO 7 LBS ~~~!IE'!~ ....... la 1.98 !!~~CH~~~.~~·.~ .. ._ .89 F~~ ~a:<'~ f~~~~~... .. .58 !~~!!DE~a'!/r~ ~"'!:~' lB 1.97 ~ ~~~~ .. "!~':!'!' ~~'!!~JAA 1.89 !f.~'!!/'!,TJP.£~~~! ....... la 2.09 ~~ .. ~~.~~~.~~~~';!J4R 2.49 !~!r~~~~~~~~t LB .99--·~~-.~~~~ ........ La 1.·49- r HatYest Day 89 ~ot 8re:!c~LOAF • pt Lady Lee 1 ()9 A Whipping~~: pt Lady Lee 169 d>EggNog 6' OZ CTN r Peps/ or 179 PEP~!:' Pe~~z6 ~~~ PEPSI LIGHT OR MOUNTAIN DEW r Green Giant AS Nlblets ~~~~ .~1 - r Blue Bonn!Jt s9-snc~rga~'!o~ crN • l~~~tt~~ ~hoco11ti ~'e .1.39 l~~~l ~/~ ~/~Vfll tOt CAN .97 £D~':*~ ~~~~ C~~!z'!!t 1.39 lt!~~.E:!rm• Breed B9 ()fl 5lVEN ORlllN , • • 1• Ol l04'' • " l~.f!811e~• Butter .• 01 c,N 2.19 r~~!'!Jft s~· ... o, eo· .37 £VI• ~orator ~~!re' ·~a .75 l~i~'!.A!ubble ~!~ '°' 1.79 } ' I~!~.!OllOt(f I • . • 1\1• ,,, .99 P'~ram't 1 Crown 10J19' ,;;~r-"'" 101'1100• ''~ ~ "' IT~ I~~!!!C'-.'~ \'od~l .• Bfl 6.99 l~!!J!.Baam Bourbf!,n. •• ~. 9.99 , Our tfor•• will be cloHd TltenbgMng Dey, Thurtdey, No"mber U ,,0.- Your Holidav Food Center ., 0... -·--·-..-·--......... ..,.._ _, .. _,....., __ _, .............. ... C""""'' 1 ... "9 l,..•1 I-Mc 41ta ...... -· UMli ,....,. -...-... c-111 ..i.. I ' I the v1ncyara called Kiny Hawk? Because at" Owned bv. ltie Wri1du brothcn. JOhn and Ball Jobft·!llso happens to be the oraidena of Do ma inc Chandon, but · Opttatn this mountail\ vultyard H a •ick· line. Typacal of moun1.11n atas>tS. the resultinc wine is very intense. Don't serve this wine with twU)' dinner any time before the ~r 2004. • The bold wine is barely accesaible in its youth. but there as intcnie berry<hocola~ flavors, somesians of developing com plcxaty and CVC1")' indication it will ge marvelously. This is a win.e for tbc cellar, not the table. ·Hawaiian Pineapple LAA'3E SIZE Dellcloua Appia RfO Ofl GOt.OEN [AlR4 F4'NCY EA Delkloua Red Grapea SW££T 4HO D(;.IGI()\)$ • Bose Pears l4RGE u s N() I • Jumbo Walnuts "E"'C'IOP . •. . 119· .l&.33 .~.49 l •• 49 ... 69 ' ~~BA!~m· .... l8 .29 ~ !::':!!!!!~~~ ...... : ...... ~. ~.~ .29 !"Blue Nun d> Wine LIEBFAAUMIL~ 1 5 LTR BTL 699 P' Lady Lee "'9 ~e~~~~ujts 1 s o z CAN • I~ OR BUTTERMILK rcream 69 ~ LAD~~eese 8 oz P1<G~~ !"Soft 109 & Cream Cheese l(R4F T PHIL ADELPHIA 11 OZ CUP r~~~~';,:'~~hampag~"I l'l 1.99 I~~r· ... ~ .. , . .,o~·;~~~ 4.49 I!!!&e~'18 Chee• l l OJ ·~~ 1.99 l~rco Polo S.18~1 t "IA 1.99 t Ol C1ooe .69 Gifts of Good ru .. Cl'IOOS.. Lutllv Gilt 8'n.ll. t Of fteatl f.tu1ta Of 1(>11 f1,,0t•tell 11 s • dehc•ous w•v to eonvev vo•" tl'l•ni.~ d1111ng 11111 t.Pt"(11t 11rne ol v 1r I o • c• OrangeCout pAtLY PILOT/Monday. Nolfember 19, 1~ Vegetables dressed up -----Accompa nimen ts festive, tasty ...;._.. ___ _ a nd easy to cook -I Heat oven to 350 dtgl"C'C . (jrea~ 11. ~ S.inch (2.quan) b:lk1ng d1i.h. Rinse veietables in warm water: drain well. 1 a 1dc. In la11c saucepan. cook onion 1n melted mau:prine over medium heal until onion is tender. B/end in flour. alt. When it comes to hohday meal pepper and muptard : sur until · d · h smooth. 3 tables,... laorteradl It 1uce h teHpMll • ._ powder 1 4 lHtpooe &alt '"' teaapoon p('pper . ~ cup coar1e1y cru•bt'd aaltiae cracken % tablespoon• mar1arl11e or butter. melted 1, teaspoon paprika preparation. vegetable side ts es Gradual!)' add milk and wine: heal are often relegated to the back until 1hickened nnd bubbly, sumng Heat oven 10 350 dearecs. Grease burner. Major menu items usually cons1an1ly. Gently ur in eggs. chee!le 1 •1~-quan casserole. Rinse vegetables demand most of the cook's atten- and vegetables. Poui: inJo t>ai..1ng in warm water: drai n well. SeJ aside. tion. and even slightly dressed-up dish: sprinkle with almonds. Hake al In largl' bowl. combine mayo~rnaisc. ' vegetables can sce~overwhelming 350 degrees for 25 10 30,m1nu1es or horseradish sauce. onioi:i powder. salt with all the other Jpst-minute de-until hot and bubbly. Garnish as and pepper. blend well. Stir in tails. desired. IO to 12 M:rvmgs. vege tables. Spoon into casserole. Holtda) Corn Casserole and In small bowl. combine crackers, Tangy Vegetat>les arc two elegant TANGY VEGtITABLES marganne and paprika; sprinkle meal accompani ments that offer an II-ounce pac1ta1e froten broccoli, c' cnl) over cai.~erole. Bake at 350 interesting twist to fa vorite veg-ca uliflower and carrots degr s for 25 to 35 minutes or until H lid C etablcs and at the Same time are .--'f._c_a_p_m_ay_o_n_n_11_1e ______ '_b_u_b .... tb.i.:.y_a_ro_u_n_d_e_d...;.g_es_._6_se_r_v_in...;g~s-. ___ o __ •_Y __ o_m __ c_a_ue __ r_o_l_e_r_eq......:_u_lr_• __ l_lt_tle_a_tt_e_n_tt_o_n ________________ _ easy on the cook. Since· both festive dishes bake fo r 30 minutes, they don't require last-minute attention. A. an added bonus. several popular vege1ables are highlighted in eac~ dish. 'Holiday Corn Casserole fea tures a combination of premtum-quality corn and broccoli with a colorful accent of red peppers added to a "'ine and cheddar cheese sauce. Ideal for a holiday buffet. this tasty corn casserole is topped with sliced almonds and baked for 30 mi nutes. _ Tangy Vegetables is a festi ve side dtsh that requires no last-minute preparation. An attractive mixture of broccoli. cauliflower and baby whole carrots 1s blended with a 1es1y sauce that includes a hint of horseradish. The vegetables are spooned into a casser~le dish. sprinkled with cracker cru mbs and paprika and then baked for 30 minu1cs. HOLIDA V CORN CASSEROLE ! 16-ounce packages froten wbole kernel corn, broccoli and red peppers 114 cup margarine or butler Vt cup finely chopped onions ·~cup flour 3• teaspoon salt •., teaspoon white pepper 11 teaspoon dry mustard 3• cup milk 1 • to 'r'3 cup dry wblte wine 2 eggs, sllgbtly bea ten , 4 ounces ( l cup) 1bredded cheddar cbeese 'I• to •r., cup sliced almonds Follow tips, avoid battle with bulge While most Americans look for- ward to Thanksgiving as a day of unrestricted feasting, many of us can attest to the unwan ted pounds that often result from "Turkey Day" overindulgence. Skin n) Haven Restaurants. ~perts at watch in~ the waistline. share some of their li me-tested methods to help avoid the post-Thanksgiving bulge. -Cooking turkey on a rack will ensure that the meat 1s not soaking up unnecessary fat. -Remove skin before carving turkey and use a bouillon baste. both tncks to save additional calories. -(hoose while meat whenever possible. It's lower 1n calories. -Do not overcook vegetables as important vitamins and minerals can be lost duri ng the cooking stage. Butter or margarine should be restnced to little or none and salt '>hould be avoided .,.. herever poss- ible. -Use oon-fa1 milk instead of hca' > cream when wh ipping pota1oes. -Limit :vour.,elcc11on of starchy products (breads. potatoes. yams). -If yo u enJO) cockta1ls or wi ne with dinner. do so 1n moderation. · The new "lt1e" 'er.s1ons of wine and beer are also ca loric savers. -1 Fresh cranberries can be substituted for the canned in heavy ,syrup vanely. -The ncw S\\Cetencrs on the markcl can be used as a substitute or a partial subs111ute for sugar in man~ dishes. -Fresh fn.Jtts make an excellen t dessert -Plan wha1 you will eat prior to 'lilting down al the table. This will help you avoid spur-of-the-mo- mcn1 dec1s1ons 1ha1 are counter- producti ve to your goals. -Don't deprive yourself but practice portion control. -Don't eat what you don't want to. -Ea1 slowl). Savor each bite. -Purchase your groceries as close 10 T ha nksgi ving as possible. This lessefls the tem ptation 10 sample and may save an extra tnp to the market to replenish the goodies yo u've gulped in advance. -If you must prepare food in advance. make what you don't like ~t. Light luncheon treat Leftover shced California turkey served in pita bread makes an LB. IN-SHELL • NEW CROP WALNUTS "11 01. PACkAGC PEPSI COLA gg • AU VARl£r1ES NOOHTAIN DEW AND SLICE EA. • • LIMll l • c PILLS BUR\' PLUS CAKE MIXES · -------- •EXTRA FANCY c LB. NORTHWEST RED DELICIOUS U.S. NO. 1 • GARNET · APPLES 55~. • l·L8 STIC.K •REGULAR OR LIGHT YAMS • 9 5-0Z. TRISCUIT • 7-0Z. BETTER CHED<MR • I 0-01. WHEAT THll"IS AND IMPERIAL MARGARINE NABISCO il..<rJ.~ SNACK CRACKERS . • u .oz. { . MRS. SMITH'S PUMPKIN PIE Pl<O .. • LIMll 2 f ppe tw ng and low-calorie 11.mch- on treat. From an 8-ounce con- aincr of low-fat plain yogurt. set side 1/4 cup. Combine the rest with • teaspoon curry powder. 4 hredded carrots, 1/4 cup rai ins and table~poons flaked coconut. Price• on both pages effective at all Southern Callfornla Alpha Beu Marketa Monday, Nov. 19 through Thuraday, Nov. 22, 1984 Li nc four I.ounce pita breads that have been sliced to form a pocket with sliced cooked turkey. fill wi th carrot mix tu re-and top w11h 1 tnhlc poon plain yoaurt. Each !.)l'rv1ng 1\ le \than 100 caloric' ' \t. ~1 Put an end J.\;~ to your f~ · llolldav has le 9f Give Alpha Beta Gift Certtftc•te• No rUlhnQ about No Wlndering abOut We1 Pfe()ll't ~ hanaAOmO lull colc'lf You cen 1<>111e ycwr whal to give ~IC8tft fOf fttf'f <IOll4W Cllt'lomln811on 0101111• Wiit\ 11'1 ~Bet.a Git you Wish l•llltflnO at S5 001 ~ate The petf f, taV ww; lo uy FOf O\K intormal!'Ye btOChurt wtft'I O<cMf Haopy Holidays to ~ client '°"" eat (COiee! II 1 tol call Of wnt MIOCiete IM ().ft k ed • '· .. loutNtft CelHornl• •tNO CAUIANZtO ALSO AYAILA8L! m I. H8'1NWll¥d. IN All ITOAll Le HMrl, CA IOU1 (714) , ... ,,,, .. All-la-oae dlaa r I for smallergiJtb.erlags New lifestyles and bu~y 1ehed· For super convenience. the vea· tradition •.. re&aiina! .,,. ulcs often make It difficult to etablcs art added riaht to tt\c. pre~rvc Thanksaivma meal u·1· roasuna pan 11 tbc &ird C'OOks, AJ..L.IN.ONETllAN&IOIVJNODIN-•i ditions that involve rona hours or saving both clean-up tame and ND pre~ration. But. thanb to this enaery. l •• ...,. ,..._..._...,.a delicious new rtcipe, it's easy to For tantalizma flavor and won-~ "' ......, ., •· ..,._a prtparc a home-cooked bohday derful aroma. perfectty IUIOncd .. 1.., , meal withouupendina all day in th~ aotden onion soup max combines ~ .... , •• ..,,.,_ ;r kitchen. with butter and a hint oftamaon to S"tt te • ,.... ,..,.. _.._, t>' AO· In-One Thank11ivin4 Dinntr baste the v•tables and chicken ,..,,... :J is an clcaant feast for four. ideal for tender and J'wcy ... and to •ive the l .,..._ MMll w.tceli, ~- od t j r laM ....... -tfltn'9 • JI t ay s smaller hol day ptheri.np. chickct'l'a crispy. aoldcn crust. "'!""'• It features a roastina chicken. filled From roastfoa pan to a sin•1e 1 •..._._._.,.,,.,,..,....,, .. •* late ...... n.r... w with your favorite traditional stuf-servina platter. the All-In-One v. nf 1..,-:a•=••• fin&. surrounded by a festive amy ThanklJivina Dinner is~ to be 1 etlJ clMrry ....... 1 &tutted rout cblcke~ ~ aurrounded by an array of •etetabl•. of fresh broccoli, cauliflower and enjoyed alona with your tfl41t1onal Preheat oven io 3SO depttt. Blenc!n cherry tomatoes plusa sprinkling of holiday side dishes and desten. 19up m ax. butler and tafTllOtl; tct 11 slivered almonds. And you can stan your own aside. ~ t • li COUNf \ • Rt,GULAR, 8 TIHMILK 0 1 CLO\/UllAf SKAGGS ALPHA BETA BROWN-N-SERVE ROLLS ORK.EV WITH MINIMUM s100-PURCHASE• GRADE ''A'' FROZEN ~ •LARGE ENO LR STANDING BEEF RIB ROAST • 75e •I BOTTLE •WHIT£, PINK OR (OLD 0 CK CHIVASREGAL SCOTCH ·::n'u 1429 EA. ... --==~ MICHELOB BEER VALCHRISOR RIVERSIDE IOTO 20LBS. LIMIT ONE PER FAMILY MINIMUM 5100.! ---F-RE& MINIMUM 575 • 19¢ LB. MINIMUM 550 • 39¢ LB. MINIMUM '25 • 49¢ LB. LESS THAN s25 59¢ LB. "EXCLUDING LIQUOR FLUID DAIRY PRODUCTS ANO COST OF TURKE Y MUST INCLUDE A MIXED ASSORTMENT OF PRODUCTS ONE TRANSACTION AND NO ACCUMUL ATION OF REGISTER TAPES OFFER GOOD ONLY AT SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA ALPHA BETA MARKETS l HROUGH NOVEMBER 22 t984 LR NORBEST OR ARMOUR GOLDEN STAR BONELESS TURKEY MIXERS •l·UTER80nL£ 49c • Gl..,,GE.R ALE. CLUI ODA, T011jlCOR Sl\L r FRH TO'litC EA. GALLO WINES -:::::: ---_..... - • I SLITER 80TTLC • HCART\ BL RC NO~ HA8US Bl.\NC RHIN£. 18 RG ND\ 2~~ PIN~ CHA8ll , \IN ROSl OR HO RO l KAHLUA COFFEE ~!9UEUR 899 801 IL( A. Prtce1 on both pages effective 1t 111 Southern C111fornl1 Alph• Beta Marketa Monday, Nov. 19 through Thur1d1y, Nov. 22, 1984 . f n a t • x I 0 x 2·Lnch bake and roast ?! pan. arran,e chicken: brush with v. ·• butter mixture. Bake uncovered 1 " hour. bal.tina once. Arranae broccoli • and c1uhflower around chicken. and top with almonds: brush with remain-' ins buner mutture. Bake covered 30!.I minutes. Add tomatoes and baste with pal) , drippinp. Bake. bastingoccastonaJly1 , an additional 30 minutes or lfntil chicken is tender. On serving platter, , arranae ve~tables around chicken1 Makes about 4 servinp. ' •use 2 cups of your favorite .1 stuffina.. .t. Create turke~~ dishes with a ?ri foreign touch··: The Italians know how to coo~ 1 with fla1r and zest. So when Cali: fomia turkey is prepared Italian style, you cane~ a very excitin1 creation. Italian Turkey with Pasta Dress- ing begrns with a special treatment before roasting. to insure a moist. juicy bird. A mixture of butter and fresh herbs is gently massaged under the skin as far as possible around the breast. Now for Ote stuffing. ~lo'!fi with bread crumbs, add pasta s aped like melon seeds to give the stuffing an unusual appearance and texture. A combinauon of ingredients - celery. green pepper. mushrooms, walnuts and green onions. alongo with spinach -add color and flavo r. Brand> adds spirited 1oo4 taste. The finished bird has a uniqu~ Italian fla"or. Serve with an anti~ pasto tray of mannated green peppers. hot peppers. anicbokt hearu. bani-cooked qg. wedges an cl salami sl1~. Italian bread and a maxed green salad are-appropnate add1t1ons. One of hte best features of Cahfom1a turke) 1s 1ts ab1hty to take on the Oavor characteriS11cs of a marinade or basting sauce. Use this '-'Onderful asset to create turkey dishes w1th a foreign touch. For a taste of Japan. manriatc turke) 10 tenyak1 sauce or brush the sauce on the bird during roasting. For a Greek accent. a basting sauce that includes olive oil. basil and lemon juice could be used. The French might s1mpl) roast a turke) basted with butter. A. sauce made with deglazed pan Juices and broth "ould accompan) the.bard. When you expenment v.nh foreign flavors. let the rest of the meal reOcct the countf) of insp1ra- t1on The Japanese style turke) m1@.ht be served v. 1th rice and a salad of pickled cucumbers. The Gret.•lo. turkey could be preceded b) an appetizer tra) that includes stufTtd grape lea"es. A lettuce and tomato salad v.1th crumbled feta cheese '>'Ould be loveh. served with the bird For the French style ratatouille and sauteed potatoes. "-Ou ld be good choices. ITALIAN TURKEY WITH PAST A DRESSING I wltole California tllrkey (14to16 pounds I 1':1 cup softeaed batter t tablespoons cltopped freslll berbs or ! teaspoons drted 1 • cup butter I cup eac:lt clliopped celery, greu pepper, ma1broom1, walnuts "t cup 1rtt• Ollioas ! cups melon seed pasta. cooked 3 minutes• 3 •.., cups fine fresll bread crumbs I packa1e C I 0 onces) splnac:ll, thawed, clralned I eu butea 1 • cup ltrlliMly I teaspoon eac:lll 1111 ud pepper l 1ft lurli..c) brustsktn carefull) and v.orli.. hcrbcd huller made b" combtn· in& .,oOened butter and ·herbs up un der lo.in as far as possible: around lhe breast Saute cclef). greco. pepper mushrooms. v.alnuts and grttn ort- 1on m butter l minutes. M o. 10 rcma1n1ng 1ngrcd1ents 'ituff 1urke~ hghtly: brus.h "-•th melted butter. Place on rack. roost at J:!5 degree . 4"7 to 5 hours until meat lhcrmomctcr reg1stcn 180 to I SS deg~ 'lotc "Bakr ltf'toHr ~tuffina m 1rea~. co\c:~d C'3~strole dunna lalT 40 m1nut" or roa tmg •11 melon sttd pa t1 ·~ not avail· 1hlt ~ cup\ hJhtl) steamed nc-t ma) ht \Uh'illtUlt°d Cl Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. Novemb.f 19, 19M ...... . .. ("·· 111 } Nn G c.1r11t)~; ... N t) Gin1n 1ic_~ks ... Ever,1·body Wins Wit ti the Low Price~ Leacjl~r ~ (~ • • • ••••• • .. .. • .. :: . ~ ' :: ., • • • • • • • • . . • \ ' ) • • .. LIMIT 1 ' PER F~ILY 8-0Z 12/PACK 12·0Z FROZEN CUSTARD PUMPKIN Mrs.Smiths Pie sx. 46-0Z DURKEE 0 & C FRENCH FRIED • Onions 6·0Z s1.39 1 T~~~Y Gravy Mix • 075-0Z 39c FRENCH'S AU JUS • Gravy Mix w 075·0Z 39c LIBBYS COM~LETE • • • • s1 '05 Pumpkin Pie MIX · . . JO.oz • FRENCH'S CHIC0KEN OR MUSHROOM • 48C Gravy MIX ... . 01s-oz 9 MRS. SMITH'S MINCEMEAT OR PmnDkin FOREMOST • Whipping Cream . 16-0Z s1.09 DARK oR GOLDEN BROWN oR POWDERED A \ sac C & H Sugar . . . ., .. . 15.oz STATER BROS. NON-DAIRY • s1 39 Creamer . . . . . 22.oz • MRS. SMITH'S MEAL MAKER Pie Shell 9-INCH/14-0Z Pie STATER BRO~ FROZEN s~ 59 Topping ............................... 8-0Z 5~c .IL• PET 8RITZ REGULAR 75c 8-INCH/ 2 6-0Z Pie Shells ......... 9 ........ 9-INCH/10-0Z KRAFT WHIPPED TOPPING La Creme .......... ~ .............. 8-0Z 79c . ..\ . SARA LEE BANANA. CARROT, CHOCOLATE OA#RMAN CHOCOLATE S 1. 89 Dessert Cake ., ... 9 .12·19-0Z • SARA LEE BUTTER STREUSEL OR PECAN Coffee Cak · ............ . .11 .5-0Z s2.29 7.5-10-0Z ~ ------------------------.... ~ STATER BROS HEAVY DUTY • Aluminum Foil .. FOREMOST Egg Nog .. PILLSBURY Pie Crust VLASIC Sweet Pickles ..... COLUMBIAN . .. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Rice-a-Roni f ~~ CHICKEN, 75~ RICE OR HERB •: Stuffing & BUTIER .... 6 118·0Z ' Rep!!lds 1C'....:'I DUTY .. VU ALUMINUM • I s AA'~ 375SOFT x ... '7·~ Norther•• I $.. za= NapklllS ASSORTED 250·CT .Iii:.• 17 :: Holly Sugar CrustPle BEnY CROCKER t STICKS OR MIX . . ..... ...... .. ff•'"J No Games ... No Gimmicks ... Everybody Wins With the Low Price Lcadc~r' (,, ... .. . ... ,, .. b ~----- ' , , ~ BAR·S S• 2 .. Sliced Baeon ..... 16·0ZPKG £e ''7 BLADE·CUT S• 2.19 PorkROast ................ LB &e~ FRESH FOSTER FARMS Gfte Roasting Chickens ..... LB '11"7 BILL BAILEY'S -Gfte Roll Sausage . . . . 15.oz ROLL~ SWIFT BONELESS·OARK ~ 4n Turkey Roast ...... 32-0Z e ,...., SWIFT BONELESS·DARK ANO WHITE ...... Turkey Roast ..... 32-0Z ~ ... SWIFT BONELESS.WHITE s3 59 Turkey Roast . . . . .32-oz • SMOKED SALMON OR S• 99 Halibut . "..... . .. . . . ... LB-.... FRESH WESTERN $. GA Oysters-................ 8-0ZJAR £•~ ZACKY FARMS 10·20·LB AVG. WT. •• 09 Fresh Turkeys..... LB • 29-0Z QUARTERS hnperial Margarine sse 16-0Z Orange eoe.c DAILY PILOT/Monday, Howm• • ... f:I G8l'den Fresh PrvdUCe , LB. Avocados LARGE FANCY RIPE FUERTES ......... EA 2~ Great Guacamole! Oll''•.oMl lA4tr Oranges LARGEFANCY(PUREGOlD)NAVELS .......•. LB39° C b • FRESH TENDER ran err.a es ~g~~y ........ EA 7~ ' -Onions tJ:S.N0.1SWEE'f8ROWN ................. "7"" •• ~LB • SSORTEO COLORS Thanksgiviq cactus ~N EA •I.99 FLORIST OUAUTY • Chr)'santhemumSr.NEA •4.99 1-LITEA I 8-0Z 1 .5-LITEA )BERTI LARGE PITTED • sftc Olives . . . . . 6·0Z "~ STATER BROS Aluminum Foil I • 25·SOFT 53c LINDSAY MEDIUM PITIED Olives 6-0Z 99c ~AOWEAT ~EASONE~ OR CORNBREAD • 53c Dressing Mvc. . .. . .. . .. . . . . . . 12-oz c:~=~·US~···· ........•....... t6·0Z s1 .45 ~r;;l YO, CH~COLA.EANUT BUTTER 10 S·Ol s1.ss $eagram's9 Mbel"S 4 VAAIETIE~ Kraft ' JET 750 ...... ..._ .. _.,.1111~ PUFFEO OR • ~·ft ..... V ..... MINI 16-0Z KRAFT Marshmallow Creme . 13·0Zggc NONE SUCH CONDENSED • Mincemeat.... ······- C~~t;;,y&.o~u~o . Beer, Wine • ' UUquor 1 75-LITER 9.oz Sj .39_ CANADIAN Black Velv~ .99 ,BEER s2 45 Michelob Light 6112 oz BOTTLES • BEER s4 29 Coors 12112 OZ BOTTLES • EXTRA ORY. PINK CHAMPAGNE COLO DUCK s1 99 Andre 750 ML • BRUT CHAMPAGNE s3 99 Taylor . 750 ML • CROWN PRINCE Whole Oysters FRANCO AMERICAN Turkey Gravy FRANCO AMERICAN CHICKEN Giblet Gravy Smirnoff Vodka .... 1 J!>.UTER 12 YEAR SCOTCH Chivas Regal J & BScotch SILVER OR AMBER Bacardi Rum Gordon's Gin BOURBON 86 8 PROOF W;ldTurkey 8-0Z ggc 10 5-0Z 32c 105.oz 32t AMER1CAN Ke11ler I al Whiskey ...... "175-UTER -750 ML s13.89 750 ML sa.99 t 75 LITER sg_gg t 75LITER sg_gg 750 ML s7_99 Mince Meat NONE SUCH WHISKEY sz A ft S4·. ~ Canadian Club __ . 1so ML .~ 2•02 ~ ~-~~r-~~,..~~~!!!!!!!~--------P-ri-ce_s __ E-ff_ec_t-iv_e __________ ~~:l~~~~~,~~~A~D~V~ER~T~l~E~O~l~TE~M~~~ 'LIQUOR AVAILABLE AT STORES WITH LIQUOR LICENSE ONLY Mon, Tues, Wed, G RANTEE November 19, 20, 21 , 1984 At All Stater Bros. J Markets •••••• :~ No Garnes No Girrnrncks. Everybody Win s with the Lm\ Price Leader' (:J . l . . . . ~~· "-~-.. • YoUng Turkey~ Janet Lee• Grade A• Frozen 17 -22-LBS. AVG . Save 31 C"' LB.• 9 to 14 LB. AVG .... 73¢ LB. New York Steak Albertson's Supreme Beef Loin Less Than 6 Steaks $3.19 LB. -Bar-S -Bacon -- Janet Lee • Moisture Added 9.9 Half Ham $2.19 LB. Seven-Up Like Cola • Regular or Diet Sliced 49 1-LB. C&H Sugar Brown or Powdered Sugar Cheddar Cheese Mrs. Smith's Generic • Mild • Large Cuts . . Cream Cheese Janet Lee llMlA!:~.fl~I ~e 69 8-0Z. • ' Canned Ham Farm Land or Janet LH Gallo Wines 1'1.-Ttblo • Chteiio ai.nc • """" • Ae<I ADM • Hfftly tllt~ :r.s: 199 1.5-LTR. • ' 99 Random Weight Challenge Butter ~~eJ235 16-0Z. E-Z Foil Rack 'N R~•t Pan ~ or9Recta8"9Ular EA.• Ocean Spray CranbefyY Seuce • Jettied • Whole Savo ~ 1~:z .• 5 rincella Yams -99 15c 29 -0Z. • ' Pumpkin Pie 29 Ice Cream Knudsen • All FtavOf'I Sour Cream Knudsen • Hampshire S:~e 109 PINT Chiffon Napkins ~"' D~MA~ \~~ 73 SO-CT. • Nabisco Sn.etc Cr.ck«t • . Mrs. Culibison's • ' I Poultry Stuffing Mix Regular • Cornbread • q I • Save 50c 12-0Z. • Navel Oranges Yuban Coffee All Popular Grinds 39 First of the Season L B s Yams- Jumbo • Centennlel 5, L B s ___ Imperial Pepsi Cola Diet • Pepe! F,.. • R .... or Diet • Mountain Dew • Sb _, Margarine • Regular • Light Without Coupon S3.49 La Creme I 99 With Coupon Rolls .. Whipped Topping Janet Lee • Brown & Serve 8-0Z.• Tropicana Prices Eftectlve Thru Thursday, November 22, 1984. "ChMled" Orange Ju~ ' ':.oz.179 Pitted Olives ~ w. • LMte or Jumbo ,.:. .99 · c Copyright 1984 by Alber1son1 Inc. All Right• ReMNtd. MAllAK.ITY ftell 01 .._. .. ~WCI '"""'' ,. ~ lo "°' ..... , ..... _ too WI• ol oe !MIO. .... ~-j!IM• '" .......... t()!I .... ·~ --· -""'"'' 00 W. t-.. .._ ~ ,,_ ............ otec• el .-n•w• -.c-w II leo IWI• "'-...... 9'11 el MMt1 t llAIN CH(~I( -.. -......... \'OW .. ...., h - .. 1w ....... ·---~--....... .... 40C ·'B:r.'==C 22·0Z. Stare For Hmarsl ~ • ' l I 'Excellence' was about people ilanagement, ri.Ot a business · The problem was that too many thought. t he book was cure all for businessmen ---By .JOHN CUNNIFF .. , ...... AN!y•l NEW YO RK -ln two years since 11~ qublication. the book "In Search of Excellence" has sold mote than' 2.5 . million copies. a11d helped resurrect the Junken spints of American cor- pol'ate managers. It was well-timed. American busi- nesses had just come through a deep recession which shattered confidence and was constantly held up to critical and usually negative comparison with their Japanese counterparts. Afong came Thomas Peters and Roben Waterman Jr. with a descrip- t ion of some well-managed American companies. and they offered what they said were the reasons why. Their boo~ ran to the top of the best-seller hsts. The critics arc now catching up. and some of the views, such as those of Prof. Eugene Jennings, arc unOat- tenng, saying 1n effect that .. In Search of Excellence" 1s not an excellent book. "tl will not be a major force 1n the restructuring of American business to regain high ground, .. says Jennings, whd has served as adviser to several ofthe40companiesselected by Peters and Wa terman. "~fore magical than practical." he comments. "A book about how to manage people rather than a book about how to run a business." He explains that business manaae.- mcnt combines sales. marketing, accounting, ·finance. operatio ns, manufacluring, personnel, enJinect· ing. research and l<>gtstics into a profitable ·a nd viable· corporate purpose, strategy and plan. "People management is a part of it, but hardly all," says J.ennings, wbo teaches at Michigan State University graduate school of business adminis- 1ra1ion. and acts as adviser to corpor- ate chairmen and bpards. "T he authors would have us be· hcve that a few elementary ideas on people management will sustain high- grade profits and earnings," he says. adding that ''we have yet to prove the extent to which this might be true." Calling such an assumption "the magic of people power." he goes on to hst several more "magics." the first of which is the magic of the disappearing numbers. "The bc\Ok 1s a diatribe against the use of financial numbers to run a busmess." he ~ys. "yet fi nancial numbers are then selected as the yardstick of excellence. including net on equity. sales and capital." Next is the magic of convenient exclusion. T he authors found 40 I Rosscom p Cor p. set up s hop· in -Costa Mesa- companies with above-average per- forman~ an silt areas: asset growth, equity growth, rauo of market to l><>Olc value, and return on cap1talizauon, equity and sales. Jennings found .. as many dif· ferences among these 40 as any 40 companies taken at random from the Fon une SOO cqmpanies." Using three of the six measures. the professor, who has advised eight of the ~·s 40 companies for nearly two decades and has been a sometime adviser to silt more. discovered m ore than 50 companies that d id as well or bcuer. He contends that Peters and Water- man lost their halos the moment they put Atari. which soon ran into financial d ifficulties, in league with IBM :which has had one of the longest records of earnings growth this cen- tury. His other "magics .. : T he magic of basics: .. Elementary ideas. such as keeptng in touclt with customers, are the same as the fi rst lesson in golf, which is to keep your eye on the ball." The magic of reductionism: The authors. he says. maintain that o ne value must be focused on more than others. "But anyone who runs a business knows you cannot have simply o ne priority value. The best have three or four." T he magic of simplicity: "It is neat 10 read about the bias for action. but this simplicity hides a great corpor- arion's belief in responsiveness. which is good timing. prudent risk. proper hesitation. And. of course. action ... Magic of management: The authors don't disunquislf bctween- leadership and managershi4;> ... If they had ... they would have discovered an Rosscomp Corp. has combined its buildings in Cerritos has now con· entirely different world of excel-lence.' manufactunng, marketing and cni•· solidated all units under one roof with H is conclusion: "It is a.shame the necring operations into new faci li ttes the move into a new 50,000 square-authors do not describe a state of at Costa Mesa. according to foot building in Costa Mesa. T he new excellence that has to do with people Rosscomp President Rod Hosilyk. facility will enable Rosscom p to management rather than business The manufacturer of stream mg expand its manufacturins capac11y as · be I tape dri' cs. formerly located in three business conditions require. management. cause pcop e man- ----------------------....-------, agement 1s what the book is all about.'' ' i .. Good for you!--.... Det• 8denoee Corp., mMUf.cturer of computertzed helllll care Information aysteme, ,_ trMeterred .. publtc ,... ttone 8Ctlvtttes to Marketing -Dlrectlona, Inc. Daily Pilat 642-5678 tn addition to harldltng put>ffo retatk>na for Hemth Data Sci- ~. Marketing Dlrecttona already prcwtdee .. 8CMrUllng and promotionel lljppGrt .. egMcy of record '°' ... San Bemardtno-beled Hellhtl Data Sclencee. Genesis, The chemiCal dependeri.cy program that gets you through the hardest part The beginning .. ..... - A ml f.ll>ef'.)' day after. If )'OU'n..· taking thl' time to read thl~. you\•c already take n tht' flrs1 step towards a new beginning You rt•cof(nizc ll probll'm Gcncsl~ can help you the rest of thl' way. We provide profts lon2I tkpcndcncv treatment for people who want to re ume a produc tive, he althy and happy life, free from chemical dcpcndendc And we teach ou the skill to help prcvcnl a rclap!ie Trcalmcnt or powcC'ful addll·llon~ require rim~. patience and c:ompas~l(.tn ate 8uppon. ln addition to our profe lo nal medical trcrumc:nl. we fln<l thciw: arc: M>mc of our bc:st n1cdlcfnc~. Gene b comc:.s two war~ You an hoo'IC 10 .Ma In our four week ho4'pl1al I 1reatml'nl pc-ogram at ~ulh <..oa. ... t Medical C..cn1cr. Or, wt o tfc..'f a com· prcl\cnslvc ou1patlent program at our new lnstltutt.' for Uft\ acro~!I 1hc frccwa} from rhc Mission Vit.'jo Mall Genesis ts a proud part of the re peeled South Coast Mctllc.:al <.ente r Call for free consultallon anytime Oa)' or night· (71·0 499·229,. We want to hdp ou bcR)n your new life And every da happU)' after Institute fo r Life 27882 FOi s Rd una N1Q I CA 92677 ;s South Coast Medical Center ..1 ---- ~ Co11t DAILY Pll.OTI~, ~ tt. 1114 COMPLETE NYIE COllPOllTI TRANIAC~ C11. ~ .. .. . The electric Whlaper Albert Selman, rl.Cht, an d SL~ey MaM look OTer the new electric Whisper cu u.nTelled at Miami Beach thia week. The •' I UP s AND DowNs NEW YORK (AP) -The totlowlno 11$1 Ji ~AB sflows the Over·the·Counter vrod stocks and wer renls !hat have oone up Meoatch the most and dOwn the ITI0$1 based 011 PlvmrR 1>1rcent of ch•N • for Frldav. 1• gent Md No HCurrti.ft redlno below s2 or 1000 lS ~la shares ere Inc Uded. 19 Net and ~rcente~ chanoes are the ~"&er differ~• betw~n he r;evlouf dosing ~ V OSI bid pr and Fr y.·s las t>ld Pr ce ~rex PS m.n un Neme Last J!1i Pci Id s 1 ~llfclx 2 + · 6 Up U ~ ~IUHll.Y av4'o ky l{J) ~nv rs • nOlao It# ....... cu, made ln Denmark, la reported IO be able to cru.lae at 55 mph and bu a raac• of 65 mllea. r ... UP lU • 1'1nnoxn 2~ -~ ]. v. Up s Ptlnx m ,~ = ~ ~ I/, UP 6 P~otcol loo • •1. UP 7 A arCh . -r/.o ''l Jr'. Uo ' iorcc t = llh ,,. ''• Up r US Cl 23·16 3·16 Uo .• 10 MdwAlr l'e -~ 3 '• Uo .1 11 Hurc8 ·~ -~ 6 .. , UP g.1 u AOkl I m -In *·. ...., Up ~ Trnstct ''4 Up ~ " 'llr:'" ' UP It Hit wt . , Uo ~ I ~lri~f -~ ,,, Uo -~ I 4 Uo -~ ~ -'h "" ~ ::: l~ ~. l'>i h Uo ~j ~m~~nv 13'h p, Uo r-9 ~tr~, ~ v, Uo 4., .UR 5 Neslor • 1 uo 1· DO -~ Pct. ldW\/ s . -...., ' ~~·~ii 8 .. "fr't>Ott •'I• •,, UP 1 . 7>M ~'I Uo 1 . •'n 111 uo 1 . ?l~ 'I• Uo 1 g ~ OvER THE CouNTER » » l t;.Crv ' l3 l3 • 10 ISw ),1~. ,~! 1:8. ~ Gnl 1 . •~ ~oe 4!' .t,: un11b" 1 '> 1"'-urlrOl'I J~ J > elVn ' '• COl\Lll 'l 1 IPe' l~ 7 ldef8 I l., 16 ., EltNucl 'l 101 • E IMOOI JE~ ffili Emcor Elli!Cnv ""-Enlhv H ! i~ En""''" ._ '• EQ!0.1 1 , Frm<:. 23 n , F«r 10 , 10 , FtEmo 16, I~ FtWnFn 1·)1 1-16 Fll'IFI ' 67 1 .. 1 F1uroco IJ 12 > ForH tO 2 '• l • Frn,Co 6 '• ' Fr,,...EI J~ 4 \9 FrH$G 2 •• 1 ?•l• Frtmnt ,, I Fu1H8 \ 9 • t .\lo C.entlCl1 •fl • q" GnAul .._ r; GnOevo .1-4 ', 2 l 6 1 GnAtE\1 MU TUAL FUNDS \ Name L•r c11i. I ThouT s 1 Jolt -7 §!! n• A~lar -'h KelvJn '• -'" ·¥ A ISea s -111. l ·1 Am Adv 1 I • -?1"• • lmuoeo , 2 '1' •' •• ,. E ' .... I ... \ -· Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Morid1y, November 19. 198• ---i..---...: .. . ''THE AT&T PE •RITSA- BYTHE PERSONAL There's been a lot of talk about the AT&T Personal Computer. But th en there's a lot to talk about. · ~ Especially on the subj ect of best PC value for the money. Because the AT&T Per sonal Co"lputer computes two to three times faster than th e IBM PC. At the same time it's full y compatible, and can run thousands of business software packages to answer just about every business need. Context Switching, an A71'&T PC special feature, lets you put one oper- ation "on hold~' while you switch to another. Our high-resolution screen has twice the usual density for unusually ~ood graphics. And since this is an AT&T product , it goes without say- ing that the service and reliability are first rate. · Don't just take our word for it. See for yourself. 'Th1k to your AT&T Infonnat1on Sy tern s Acco unt Executive, visit an authorized AT&T PC Dealer or call 1-800-247-1212. AniT Information Systems. When you've got to be right. '· ·- r t•ROCF:8SOR MF!MORV (Df'O MODf:LI IHD MOOELI • f)J SK STORAO~~ (f)F'O MODf;I.{ (HD MODF:Ll I OPORTS IO!!l(HMHz CLOCK SPEfo:ll> ~K F:XP1'NDABLF.1U640K 2.'JllK F:XPANf>ABLF. m ~IOK 300 x 2 OOUBL~: SIDED/ OOUBl.F: Df:NSITV 300x I PLUS IOMR HARO DI K I R..~zrl. I CENTR<>NICS• l'ARALl.£1., I VIOEOl>JSl'l.AY EXPANSION Slm'S(l)F'D MODEL) 7 <HO MODf':t.l II OlSPl.AY RF.Ml.l'TION f'C·OOS COM PAT I Rl,F. CHARAC'ft:R MONOCHROME OKAl'li IC'S COl,()R ORAPH I~ PROPRlt-:TARY ORAPlllCS HICH Rf'.S .CONOCtiRO\lt-; HIGH RE.~ C"Oll>R ALPHANUMF.Rl\.S DtSl'l.AY C'HARAC"TER ..-ONT CHARAC"T'f~R A'TTRUJllTI-~ &$0).4(X) fW(),400 M<'Ol.l'MNS '~ KCM-~ lhltl RP:VF:R.~P.. UNl>l-:IU.INK Rt.INKING ANI> Jl lCll INT•:NRln' . ' On the ' , • r NYSE CoMPos 1r£ T Ht.~>)~~: :oMs ----••11rs a.emc PllCES D I J ~' J I ! ~ ~ A ' ; ,. :, ' . .) ~ =::iO':s . NYSE LlA OlRS UPs ~No Do~N s WH AT AMEX Oro NEW VORI< (API Nov 19 Prev 1f Toda1tt Advanced oafS6 .t Declined •1 ¥ncilan9e<I 233 m t) 767 otal iUUH 909 New hloni J New lows 6 • l3 AMEX LEADER S NEW YORK (A\>I -S.la, Monclav ,, e>rlce •no ~I en.~ of the 10 most KllVt Atnerk:IJn Stock c11dla11Qe lswn, trading nationa•v a1 more tl\an $1. TIE Comm 7ml 61't -1 AM tnll , 21* -• Wa~LabB 2Il 27•,. + • Prent Hall I 71~ -1' A\lrOledl 1• , 2._ + ~ OomePtrl 126, I 13· 16 Cl\emo Ho 121,400 ~" -• Am6ahl I II,; 1 -• PetroL~w I 1', ~ + " Crv\talOil 111, • -• NEW YORK (AP) -Most active over ·the·counlli' stocks suPC>lled bv NASO Name Ii Bid Askecl Ctig MCI I, , 711) 7~ -rPllSc I, ~ S'" -, g~~sO' '· 2~: ~ a~ -'· APPleC 740, Z3' t 23~ -' ThOuT s 7211·1 1~ 16;• -7._ ~1f8dc 611 , 't"• ll~ + • niCl'tl SI , I ~ 11 -1 uotr n •7 \fo 9 1tnovn Cl~.900 ~ 2~ -·~ GoL o Qu orls ME TALS QuorEs H(W '1'()1111( fA~ -Spot __,,_ _. ~ MMMy .......,_ '4U_.... _ _. NYeom.."""' """""~'" c...-,,.__,o ~ • llOWftd us a.i--· C....,. SI 90 -Pit ~ HY Coma• _,,~._,,,., ~ M-.?•-1··~ ZIN ·~'*"·•~ _ _, Tiii M 1UJ M.illia ""--Ne .... " I,,-.., & IW>TWI toftlW oaly QUOl•I .._ 11H1 C*WO,-.NYC:0.-~"'°""' ~, .. ...,_, U•l~OOp.-Ttlltftufl -Ye-• ,....._ WI00-~0000.-~~lf -NV That'sanaptdes riplionofboth business and business people along the Orange Coast. Toke p tra k of where companlesaregotn~and which people are h lping themgetthere.justwat h Cr dttLine ~:--ev rydaytnthe Business section of your new llily Pilat .. 1~--\ ,. n @. .. t' 0 ·r •r n u I) • It' t. 0 LS " ,_ " .. , ,_ ,, • --------- C12 * Orarl99Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 19, 1984 ---- Ml.IC *>TIC£ Nmnoue •Ill IHI PICtmoUe ........ P'tCTITIOUI ....... ... n•m • n ..... ITAW NAMI ITATlleff 1'119 ............ M Tiie ~ per.one.,. Thlt IOllOwlng pereon ~ ......... -Clolno bullflell .. doing butlneM ... A COUNT"V TOUCH. PACWIC COAST MARINA JAVANO & ASSOCIATES -~ Df'lw, Hunt· SERVICES, 19301 MtMM 1527 89nta Ana A~ = , C"'tofnle UM, Huntanoton leadl, Neiwc1or1 IMch, C-9 n ll .. t: 9uftla 81Wet ~2M41Emalt ~ ~ A Vt11 Orden, 62 -~~ Hum• 19301 Mauna ~. Hunt-Sant• Ana A~! = A.. I a..cf\, Calif.·~ . .,.ntom e-1n111on e.cte. Cellf ~ Tllll b~IMM i. con• Gary Allen G«don, 19191 duc:1ed 1>y: lnoMdUll ... ~ ~ It C)Oft• MIMn• l-. Huntington Q\lly A.. Van Orden -~ tll lndMdUll a..cn. c.llf, 92Mt Thie •t•telMnt ... llled lllZAIETH IURKE Thia buslneu ,, c:on· #1111 IM County°*" of Or· -.va. ducted by; • general part· ~ County on October 24, 1'11111 •111 nant WM llleO '*9fllp 198.4 .-... County Clef1I of 0r. RulMll e. Schuetz n.1• ~ .. -~ Oft ~ Tllll tllltment wu flied Publlllled Oranoe Cout --with Ille County Ci.ti Of Or· Deity Pilot Novernb« 5. 12, p 0 r l •• ~ '= =County on Octobel 22, 19, 28. 1"4 ....... Ma II h r 11, a ,_11 M·194 h 2 I l I 1. t. 1tM Publlllled Ortnge Cout IU-a1 Dally Piiot No1191nber 5. 12, • PlBLIC NOT1C£ MlftWWl.,...11 .... n.~· l1'e ~ pertonl ... ... llullr'9el •: IOlt '<>MOHA. APART· ~I. 904 E. Balboa. -c.iit. 92181 Mwy L ~. 904 E. ...._ ~. Cellf. 928e1 Nomwt M0)'9(. 904 E. Blilboa. ~.Calif. 926&1 Sendra lea Ellett, 1&542 =~~ Clrc1-. Huntington Cellt. 92&49 iNrie; J. Lall«, 7541 4th ...... Downey, Calif. 90241 Thie bua!MN It con-. cMMd by. • gen«el part· nentelp Mary L. M0)'9( 11119 ltlltetMnt WU flled w1tte Vie County Clenl of Or· =County on October 26. ,_.,. Publllteed Or9nge Cout OWiy Piiot No1191n ber 5, 12. 11, 2t, 1984 • M-196 DEATH NOTICES DILLMAN J OAN ELIZABETH DILLMAN, passed away_ l'f ovember 17. 1984 in Newport Beach. Beloved wife of Max D1llman, mother o f J ames Dillman of Costa Mesa; Elizabe th M cHone o f Porterville. Ca: daughter of Mrs Olive Leigh of Cov- ina, Ca; SlSter of WiJ- liam Leigh of Houy. wood, Ca.: Rose Mary Bradford, Hollywood. Ca: and Margaret Drake. of. West Cov- ina. Also survived by three grandchildren M ember Ca thol 1c Church Our Lady of Mt. Carmel. Newport Beach. Please call Mortuary fer serv1ce infonnation Family prefers memorial con· tr1but1ons be made to Hoag Hosprtal -?ien:e Brothers Bell Broad- way Mortuary d1rect- mg 642-9150 SHUYLER CLEO HAZEL SHUYLER. 25 :y r resident of Costa Mesa. passed away November 17, 1984, in L o ng Beach . Ca. .Beloved mother of ClJUord W. Shuyler o f Costa M esa, Merton Shuyler of Hutchinson, Kansas. Max Shuler of Cor· pus Cristi. Texas, and Frances Sunpson of Independence, Kan- sas. Sister of Karrie Bishop, San Diego. also survived by nme grand children and six great-grand· children Member of Order of Eastern Star. Hutchinson. Kansas, and local .Bowling League at Kona Lanes in Costa M esa.Funeral ser- vices Tuesday. N 0s vember 20. at 7.L30 P M at Pierce Brothers .Bell Broad· way Mortuary. Cost.a Mesa. Rev. Bruce A. Kurrle, Presbytenan Church of the Cove· nanl. officiating. ln· termeot Fairlawn Cem eterv HutchiMon. Kan5as Pl8U Brothers BeU Broedway. Direct.mg. 642-9150 McCOl™ICK MORTUAR Y 1795 ~ Canyon LaguM Beach Ca 92651 ·~e.15 ---LAWN· MT.OUYE Mortuary• Cemetary Crematory U525 Gisler Ave. C~ta Mesa ~0-5554 MlllCI MOT ... f'8 NU IM'OADWAY MOflTUA"Y 1 tO BroadWay Costa Mesa 8'42·9150 •AL TZ KROlflON 8MfTM a T\ITHLL WllTCL•F CHANL 427 E 17th St Co11a M•sa' 64&+9371 ". 19, 26, 1984 FOUND ADS ARE FREE CaH: 142-llll ,ICTITIOU9 ., ..... N_...ITATE•NT Tiie folloWlng peraon le .,. dOlng bulinea .. IRVINE CHRISTMAS TRE!SI 3001 Redhlll .. e Su It 1~ ,Coate Meta • Calif 92806 JOMph Pono 200e Port Ram,ate, ~ BNc:h. Cllll 2660 Thia butlnns I• con· ductld by: an lndMdual ' JOM(>h P0'1o Tlllt ltatemenl was tiled wilh lhe County Clerk of Or· ange County on Oclober 28, ===:::::::..........:== 1984 -,.,24 Pl&.IC NOTICE NOTICE Of TRUSTEE'S SALE TT-"15 Pllbllal'led Orange Coast Delly PllOt November 5, 12, 19. 26. 1984 M-194 YOU ARE IN OEFAUL T UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATED 05/31/84 UNLESS Ml.IC NOTICE YOU TAKE ACTION TO K·1'3M PROTECT YOUR PROP-flCTITIOUI 8UllNHI ERTY IT MAY BE SOLO AT NAME ITATE•NT A PUBLIC SALE IF YOU Tiie followtng peraona 1re NEED AN EXPLANATION doing bual neu u : OF THE NATURE OF THE GRAHAM LEDGERWOOD PROCEEDINGS AGAINST PHOTOGRAPHER. 446 Eut YOU. YOU SHOULD CON-Sevenleenth Slr .. 1. Suite I. TACT A LAWYER CO.II Mela. CA 92827 On 12110/84 a1 t 1 30 Graham L~. 445 AM PEOPLES INVEST-E"t Seventeenth S1reet, MENT & LOAN ASSN. as the Suite t. Colla Mesa. CA duly appolnled T ruSlee 92627 under and pursuant to Oee<I This busln1H It con- ol Trust. Recorded on ductld by-an lndMduel 0610 1184 as Oocumenl no Graham Lldg«WOOCI 84·226774 of Ol(1c111 Re· Thia st11ement wu flied c0<ds 1n 1he office of lhe Re-with Ille County Clefk ot Or· corder ol ORANGE County, ange County on October 22, California, eucuted by 1984 ROBERT L KIMMERLE. AN f251157 UNMARRIED MAN WILL Publllhed Ortnge Caul SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION 01lly PllOt October 29, NO- TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER vemt>er 5. 12, 19, 1984 FOR CASH. (payable al time M· 192 ol sale in lawful money ol the Un11ed Stales) at THE FRONT OF THE IMPERIAL T Pt&..IC NOTICE & L BUILDING 102 WEST --.;...;;;=.;:.......;.;;.;,.;,,;;.;:....._ FIRST STREET TUSTIN CA f lCTITIOUI IWIMH S2680 all right, 11t1e and NAME ITATEMINT •'llerest conveyed to and The fOllowtng peraons are now held by It under said doing buslneu u : Deed ol Trusl on the property SPEAKERS CLEARING 11tu1ted 1n said Coun1y Call· HOUSE, 425 Tustin Avenue f0<n1a descnb1ng the land Newpor1 Beech, Callfornt. thete•n Lot 73. Tract No 92663 2353, as -mown on a mar:r Dorothy N Beer. 4'2~ thereof recorded 1n Book 93 Tustin Avenue. Newport pages 38 and 39. Mis: Beach. C1llfornl1 92683 cellaneous Maps records ol Thia buslnesa It con· saKI Orange County ducted by an Individual EXCEPT THEREFROM tor DOROTHY N BAER a per10d 01 lofteen years lrom This statement wu flled and 111er May 15, 1952. 50% Nlth the County Clerk ol Or· of all oH. gas and other ange County on November hydrocarbon substances on 15. 1984 on or under satd land In the F'2IOI03 evenl that oil. gas and other · P\Jblllhed OranQe Cout hydrocarbon substances are Dally Pilot November 18, 25, P{Qduce<.I.. 1tteretu>m wiuun. ~mQ!.f i....P.1Q04 __ said period of fll1een years. SU-259 In commercially paying quantities ttus reservation sr.111 continue tor such ad-P\8.IC NOTICE 4aitoonal 1..-u-4 Oii 9u FtC-TITIOUI 8USMESI and 01her hydrocarbon NAME ITATEMINT substances shall be The following person ts produced 1herefrom 1n com-doing bualnus u ; merc1affy paying quantoties WALKER ENTERPRISES. otherwise. this rnervat1on 7247 Havenrocit Drive. Hunt· shall terminate hlteen years lngton Beach. Calif 92648 from May 15. 1952 on BOOk Wllllam E Welker, 7247 2360 page 376 Otficoal Re-H1venrock Drive. Hunt· cords lngton Beach, Callf 92648 Recorded Seplember 27. 'Thia business 11 con· 1954 '" BOOk 2826. page ducted by an lndtvldu11 4 14. Olftc1al Records IS a Wllllam E Walklf' quitclaim deed e11ecuted by This statement was hied Marie Turley qu1tcla1m1ng all With the County Clerk ol Or· rights. l1tle and interest 1n ange County on October 29, and to the surface and 1984 subsurlace area to a depth f251211 of 500 leet below the surface Published Orange Coett 01 said land Dally Piiot November 12. 19, ALSO EXCEPT THERE· 26, December 3, 1984 FROM an und1v1ded one-M·208 e1glllh 1nte<es1 ol all 011. gas and other hydrocarbon subs1ances and minerals Ml.IC NOTICE lying below a depth ol 500 ... ,. ....... OUI •u•-11 laet lrom the surface of said '""' '''' .,""' land tor lhe purpose ot ex NAME ITATE•NT ploiltng lor. developing The lollowtng P9BOOI are doing buetnesa as producing removing and A CUT ABOVE LIMOU· marketing said substances. SINE SERVICE, 2431 North as reserved 1n the deed from Tullln #H. Sanla Ant, Ctltt. W1llrem M Lansdale hus-92705 band and Wife. rec0<ded April 12 1955 in Book 3028 Thomaa N Thurber . page 315. Ot11c1al Records 25931 El Segundo, Laguna ALSO EXCEPT THERE Hilla. Ctlll 92653 FROM the remainder or all Richard VfJf'ry. 92 Alvo Alto Canal, Long Beach. o 11 . gas a n d o I her Calif 90803 hydrocarbon substances This bualneH Is con· and minerals lying below a ducted by 1 general pan- deplh ol 500 feet from lhe Mfstllp surface of lhe above land Thomas N. Thurbef but w11tiout the right of en1ry Thia atatemeot was tiled on lhe surface ol said land with the County Clerk of Or· tor the purpose of e•plo1t1ng ange County on November lor developing producing 6. 1984 removing and marketing F251117 saod substances. as re· Publlahed Orange Coaat served in the .deed from D II" Pll N R1ch9rft C Honer and olhers 2:. b.c~~t!~~::S,12, l9, recorded July 10 t956. in M-212 Boole 357 1 page 427 01- ficlal Records The street address and P\llllC NOTICE otller common des1gnat1on K-14751 II any ol the real property NOTICE °' IALE desc ribed above os purporlad to be 3 10 7 TO Pamela Wright SUMATRA PLACE COSTA Procell•. U S Aid. Waalllng· ton, O C 20523 MESA CA NOTICE IS HEREBY IM undersigned Truslee GIVEN that the property de- d1sc1a1ms any 11abll1ty tor any •crlbed below. collateral incorrectness ol lhe street address and other common under the Agreement ol Llm-1 t e d Partntrthl p ol des1gnat1on rl any shown VALHALLA VINEYARDS. lle<fl'1n executed by Pamela Wright Saod sa~ woll bi' made but Prooelll , u 1 Limited Part· w11hou1 covenant or war-ner. wUI, becauM of Ltmtted ranly eKpress or implied. re-Pliner'• default. be told by Q8rd1ng trtle, POSMUIOn Of t underalgned ... public encumbrances to pay the a tlon to the lltgMlt bid~ remaining pnnc1pa1 sum of IOt' cuh (payable 81 11~ of the notelsJ secured by said Oee>d ol Trust w11h Interest .... In le'tlllful money Of the 1hereon. 11, providf!d in said United Statet) on NOV9n'lbet 28. 1964 It 9 00 O'cJodl note(s), advances. ii any A M at the main ent;ance uder tile tetms ol the~ ot Trust lees ct\arge' •"<I to the Orange County expenses of thf! Trustee and CounhouM located at 700 1 Civic Cen1er Ortve Wett, o the tru,1s created by said Santa Ana. CtHfOt"nla g"701. Deed ol Trull IO·Wlt ~ $32.51001 reasonable esu The property to be tOld m•le conslstt of 5 unit• In the Tile 1>enef1<:iary under said LIMITED PARTNERSHIP Of Deed OI Trust hefetolore e~-VALHALLA VINEYARDS ecuted and del1vereo 10 lhe F0< lnfOt"m•ttoo concem-~stgned a wnlten ~-Ing the Nie contect elttl9r laration of Oel•u1t and De-Robef1 S Coldren, Eeq. Of mend for Sale. snd e wrlltell Freder!G M. Zinn, ~ , bolt: Notice ol Oetnult and Elec-of the law firm of Han. King 6 Coldren 200 Eut San<J-tlon to Sen The undersigned point•. S"'1e 400. Sania c.uled said Not~ of De· llK.llt and ftecllon 10 Seti 10 Ana. CA 92707, 1714) 432-8700 be rtc:Ofded 1n lhe county 0.led Novtlmber 8• 1964 ::olhe real prol)ef1y le VALHAl.lA VMYA .. 0 11 OA TE 11112/84 I Y: b rl HanMn. 0-.M ,.,,,., NOPLEI INVHTMl.NT Publt"*I Orange Cout 6 LOAN Al..... M Mkf 09'1)' Piiot Novtlmber 19, ,,.. ... , I r: ~ C. 1,. •• .--vH, AHtet•nt Vice •u .. ~·· 1120 lo .... ____ -- ~ ehrd .. Loe A...-. CA llOU (211) 21...-o? ~ .... ,. ll'\IOll"*I Or llnQ4ll Coatt Dally PllOI Nov~bef 19 26 Oecamber a.'"' M :>tft - For Ctauitled Ad ACTION Call a Daily Pilot AO-VISOR 642 5678 • 4 A a , u r Auto sales, housing and ernployrnen t-t·he segments of our economy on which so much of classified depends-are looking better than they have in a long time. We're feeling good about that and the opportunity it gives us to off er you a bigger, better-than-ever classified section. If you haven't read classified lately, come enjoy a browse through our columns. You'll see why we're feeling good. about classified. 642-5678 l ,. a . ... \ . l ... MONOJ\'f N0 11EMBE.R 1'1 1~lfil .Harbour man stabbed to deat Wife s a ys she was kidnapped. raped by masked manft n side condominium ous times 1n what p,olicc descnbcd a a "vicious assauh. ' Dixie Dyson told police she made the discovery at about 2:40 a.m. after the kidnapper released her in froQ\ of a grocery store near the intersection of Warner Avenue and .Goldenwest Street in Hun tington Beach. throu&h the entire episode in the condominium at 16411 Martin Lane in the,Broadmoor Huntinaton Har- bour complex. police investigators S300 in cash and S500 1n watches, police reported. Officers did not say whcthtt there milht be a connection between the butKlary and this weekcncfs killina. Police said tbett ii no .- believe the killi• are ielMed. Accordina to u. a.try Prim. ..... Dyton told homicide •:.a that lhc and her hulbaDd WCM IO By STE.VE MARBLE and ROBERT BARKER 1 OflMDellf .... l telt A woman who said she was raped and kidnapped early Sunday told police she returned home and found We asked Coast resi- dents what they have to be thankful for Jbls Thanksgiving./ A3 . :·:·:~;·:·:·:~:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:•:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: California President Reagan will be handed the task of mak- ing cuts In budget./ AS Nation A high-ranking Cuban de- fector says Castro hates the U.S. 'totally.'/ A4 Personal Incomes are up, but Americans are spend- ing less of It./ A4 :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: World Rumors abound that Phlllpplne President Ferndlnand Marcos Is re- covering from major sur- gery./ AS At least 80 people die In natural gas explosion in Mexico City .I AS :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:!:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·. Feature Tbe secret to wild erness survival is finding food and shelter with the least amount of effort./ A7 Food Before any fowl felony Is committed in your kitchen Thanksgiving Day , call the turkey hot- line, staffed by food pro- fessionals./C1 :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· Sports Former Edison High star Rick Di Bernardo and his Notre Dame teammates wlll be in the area Wednesday, preparing for USC Saturday./81 The Rams lost big at Green Bay. to the embar- rassing tune of 31-6 :/81 Orange Coast College's basketball team Is gear- ing for the 1984-85 season with Its opener Tuesday./81 Entertainment Karl Malden avoided meeting the man he portrayed in "Fatal Vlslon."/AI INDEX Erma Bombeck Bridge Bulletin Board Bustness Calif ornla News Classified I Comics Crossword Death Notices Features Food Horoscope Ann Landers Mutual Funds National News Opinion Paparazzi Police Log Publle Notices Sports Stock Markets Tetevlslon Theater a w_,_1 WOf1d Newt . A8 A10 A3 C9 ,.., 85-7 A10 87 C12 A7 C1-6 88 A8 C7 ,.. .. A8 A7 A3 .. es. c 10 81 .. C1 1 A8 A9 A2 ,.. .. her 30..year-old husband stabbed to death in their security-ti&ht Hunt- ington Harbour condominium. Mel Dulay Dyson, a financial consultant who rented the three-story condominium. was stabbed nu.mer- The Dyson's young son and a 7- year-old cousin who was visiti ng were not harmed. Apparently they slept Scouts keep in good shape Jun W&Curl, 8 , of Corona del Mar Den 10 , Pack 330 , practlcee chlnups w hile Phlllp Rarn•ber&er, 9, of lrTtne Den 3, Pack 3 16 netotlatee the r ope brldCe at Saturday'• Ezplorer and Scout Pair at Anaheim Stadium. I)rizzly birthday for Mickey Mou~e By the Associated Press Mickey Mouse celebrated his 56th birthday at a dnzzly Disneyland pany where a little b11 of rain was the uninvited guest. Instead of cheese Sunday. Mickey received an .. Our Hero" parade. Youn$ visitors got a party complete with birthday cake. h~tsand balloons. park spokeswoman Debra Garron said. Youngsters also Joined in a Mousercise workout and those under 12 received headbands and records. Some older kids -mne of the onginal Mouseketecrs -donned mouse ears and for an onstage salute to the venerable mo11on picture and 1elev1s1on star. Performing were Bobby Burgess. Darlene Gillespie, Don Grady. Bon- nie Lynn Fields. Lonnie Burr. Tommy Cole. Sharon Baird, Sherf) Alberom and Cubby O'Brien. The celebration wound. up the Magic Kmgdom's "Mickey Month:· Despite cool weather and inter- mittent showers, the weekend crowd was normal. Garron said. said. . According to police reports. a burglary was reported at the same address on Halloween. An intruder apparently broke into the con- dominium throu&h an upstairs bath- room window on that date.and took The slayinJ was the teeond ih less than a week JD Huntincton Beach. A 38-year-old woman was found slr&.Qldtd jn the bedroom of her a~nmcnt near Huntington Center on Thursday morning. Saturdayatabout IO:lOp.m.SM officers &he awoke aeveral ...., .... ~'* bt-r IOI\ wa ~ .. She wmt up5talrs 10iit ildni • tocomfon btm and fell_..~ <..-.-.......... ,...,,., __ • Sheriff, coroner. confliCt . probed J'l Nestande claim s 'inherent c on flict• in two positions By JEFF ADLER °' .. .,.., ......... Orange County Supervisor Bruce Nestandc said today ht-will ask the Board ofSupervisors Tuesday lO look into the "inherent conflict" between me shcnfrs du1jes u lhe county's chief law enforttment offaccr and ns coroner..- ln Orange County and 38 other California counucs. the sheriff's and c-0roner's offioc arc merged into one. a jo1m TeSpOnsibht)' Ncstandc said lilt believes rc~nts a conflict of interest for the shenfT. ~1 happen to feel therc'san inherent conflict in the same person in- vcstigtating Jatl deaths and polioc- involved hom1c1des." Ncstande said. Nestandt_said he will ask the board to approve a 90-day review of the joint sllcnfT-coroncr's role. The re- view would be conducted by the County A'\1m1ms1rauve Office &nd the count} counsel. .. Sheriff Brad Gates doesn·t~ with me. but I have !orig felt this way," Nestande added .. 1 suppon Brad and will continue to suppon him. Brad Gates 1s not the is uc. But 11 docsn·t mean I can suppon continu- ance oft~ JOtnt rcsponStbiJ1t1cs.. •• The quesuon· of the duaJ role of shen fT and coroner surfaced agam laSl (Plea.e eee SllERIPF / A2) 2 UCI students . . continuing fast to feed hungry And th ey'd sure like to raise cash before T hanksgiving and .\llan .\fTeldt. ha ve been consum- 11\g onl)' water since their fast ~n Thursday. They have also been living in a tent tn front of UCl's University Center to publicize their fund drive. .\ffeldt said earl) today that the By PHJL SNEIOERMAN pair have alread) raised about $5,000 ot , ... 0..., ,..., • ..,. and hope to reach SI 0,000 in another Two UC In me graduate student\ couple ofda)' . • were continuing their public fa 1 .. We'd be gratcfulif we can cat for 1oda) to call attention to "'orld Thanksgwing." he said. hunger problems. vowing 10 forgo But AfTeldt added that he and Van food un11l 1hc' raise St 0.000. \ ugt would continue their fa5t Cocaine king in court today' -T-h~-stu-den-i\ -Joh-ann_e .. _\an_V_ug1--(P-•eue_eee_UC .. IR_VIJU_/A2-) faces 45-year prison s elltence Huntington TfiCO Bell Others in largest W est Coast drug ring have all received the maximum terms By STEVE MARBLE Ot tM Oe4ly 1'1194 ..... Alan Charles Mobley. the Hunt- ington Beach 24-year-old who con- trolled the largest cocaine ring ever uncovered on the West Coast. was being transponed to federal coun today where he faced a possible 45- year prison sentence. A graduate of Fullenon High School who reponcdly wanted to t>«ome a h1w)'er. Mobley has been ponraycd as the strong man of a cocaine network that smuuled more than a ton of the drug into The count) la t year. \fore than tWO dozen people who "'orked as drug runners for Moble)' ha\C been sentenced. nearl) all draw- mg maximum sentences and tough parole cond1t1ons. Mobley was 10 ha-.e been sentenced earlier this month but the date was delayed because his attorney was out of town. The far-flung cocaine emp1rt wa reportedly mashed in May when federal. state and count drug a ents (Pleue eee COCA.Uflt/ Al) now just plain 'Taco' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--:;-~~~~~~~ There's Qope for night mare that run s in cycles Victims of premenstrual s yndrome a ided by vitamin therapy for hormone disorder -"" .. curt through \1tamin 1hcrapy, Linda sa)S the remnants of PMS symptom puts a stra1n on her marria&e de pitc h1v1na an undcrstandina husband By USA MAHONEY °' ................ There Y..erc some da) that undo, 29, couldn't cope. he would feel depressed. 1muablc. an~iousand uft(i. Those da wcrt o regular as 1hc calendar -as predict· able as her menstrual cycle Linda. who o kcd that her rtal name not be u5ed Sl)'S ht ~utTm from pttmcnst"':!•I "ndromc. :a T {. Ltnda. who h'e in OranaeCouTH). hormonal dt'IOrder afTccuna an csta~ 'oluntecacd to talk about herdt rder mated 40 percent of women and one . before a group ofabout 30 phy c11ns 1h:1t the Amcncan medical com mum-and hc~lth care pro~ 1onal attend- ty i lov. ly rrcoan111naa a lcai11mate "'' a tY..o-dl) PM: tra1n101 couiv ailment last wttk. The ~}mptom ofl1nd1' disorder. pon!.<>rt'd by PM. A~1on of which PMS c11:pcn believe may be Irvine. a non-profit corporation offer· caused b)' a lad of tht hormone ina information and rcftml to prasc!>tcronc. made ~r quit a de· women and the mcd1<"8I communit) m1nd101 but rtward1n&J<>b. he said. about PM · tM«W 1s, to ~nJ. althou&h ~r ha!> found. partial trach health c-art l'f'O' 1dtr'\ \ rc<'Ogf\tlt' and 1rtat the oft-m1s.- d1agnosed disorder • .\bout QOO hrahh care profe 1onals a ~car ha-.c under- gone the tra1n1na 1nl'C' I q ~ a PM. i\ctio n peke man '81d PM \cuon. which relocated 1n Ma) from 1ad1 n. \ 1 . "'a" foundrd b)' a former ~ufTcrtr V1r- s1n1:s , nc. :.ra 1n 1-q O Ca ra ~lf­ d1agnoscd the cnu of her vert but predictable mood ~ .... 1ng ancr tt J. mg about rM. and pionrcnna prog~ttron(' 1rcatmcht at a mcd1C11l It bran · Th · tru.uncnt • ""'~ h <t.he~raH•l«t 10 naJ;ind tor~u'.'I'<' curTd her of the kk>ll~and-Hydc bchaV1or lbat she ~> s was ruled by her mcnstruaJ cyctt. Upon rttumm to the United Stat~ Cassara formed PM Acuon ID inform other women about the di• order and t~ po 1ble curt$. Prcmcn trual yndrome mantfats tt~lf m different wa 1n difficttftt ~omen The ~)mptoms. both ph) ·- cal and cmot1on11. ma~ raQIC from mild to ~\ert. Ca\sara say1. mo11onal ., mptoms mcludc ten· \ton. d('plT'>\IOn an·octy or pan at ta k\ cf) ma for no reason. -ntal ronfUjlOn. aaHn for £ ()( aJ .. (Pleatc Me V1TAll01'/A2) I o.llyNllt~lllJl_C...._ Ex-mayor Roy Holm, ralde nt Howard Daweon burn underground utilltlea bon d. f·Laguna ends 10-year debt Ten yea r of quanerly payments went up in smoke Sunday as Laguna ticach resident!> in the Victoria ~ach-Rockledge area burned their now-retired underground utihtics im- provement bond. The neighborhood was the fir!>l 1n Laguna Beach to transfer utihl) wires underground, Howard Dawson, Vic- tona Drive resident and president of the neighborhood association at lhe time. said. :·~ o.is11u111,111.1;11mi----------------- t> UC IRVINE DUO FASTING ... : J'romAl !'lhrough the hohda) 1fthe1rgoal 1s not ~ ~ched. S:. ~ Affiedt said the dnve actually should net $20.000 because a Laguna ·'Niguel business. the Stein-Brief r.Group, has pledged to match what- He said news repons about the fast prompted many residents to make special trips to UCJ over the weekend to donate. starving." • ____ ,.....r the students raise. ~ •• Several other studenh ha ve Joined • in the fast, but Van Vugt and Allledt rttu"e Jhe only ones camping out to ~j,ublicize the efTon. Funds raised throuvi the fast will go to Oxfam Amenca, an mter- _national-agenc.y thaLprovides relief to. impoverished people in Africa. Asia and Latin America. AfTcldt said a phys1c1an was ex- pected 10 examine him and Van Vugt today. If there is a danger of per- manent damage to their health, AfTcldt <;aid he and Van Vugt might .add fru1LJu1ce to their current water- only diet. I I • ·' "The first couple of day!> were the .'~orst," AfTeldt said. "Now, we're doing OK. When someone comes b) and gives us a donation. we get energ} "'ftom that." In recent weeks. headlines ha ve focused on severe starvation prob- lems in Ethiopia. "We've heard that 7.000 people a days are dying in Ethiopia.'' Alfeldt said. ''But Ethiopia is not the onl) pla~ in the world where people arc But he said the attention shouldn't be on the UCI students' cond1non. "What's 1mponant is not John and I and our fast," Affeldt said. "The point 1s that there is more than enough surplus wealth around here. So why 1s it taking more than five days to r:11sc SI 0.000?" I.SHERIFF-CORONER PROBE ASKED ... l"romAl Yt'CCk when 1l was reponed that the confidenttal mental health records of a dead mmale were confiscated by I· .Sheriffs Depanment Jail 00lc1al on t• .orders from Gates. ' The records. which arc held 10 be • confidential under the law. werc taken from a county mental health team which was ordered from the1a1I · dunng the 1nc1den1. The records pcnaincd to inmate John Ray Stephenson. who died 1n 1 the jail Nov. 6 apparen1ly of wounds self-inflicted with a razor tha1 was in '·his posession. r,• Gales has maintained that as coroner he is enutled to the confiden- tial records as pan of a death investigation. However. his inter- pretation of the law 1s at odds with a legal opinion rendered in 198 1 by the County Counsel's Office which said state law requires a court order for the release of such records. Since the incident, Board Chair- man Harriett Wieder has requested that the county Grand Jury in- vestigate the case. Among issues Nestande would like resolved by his review is to whom a separate county coroner would repon and "hether the offic~ should be clectavl' Nestandc said that in the ca~ of the shenfT-coroner's JOIOt responsibility. even the appearance of a confl1ct-of- 1nterest should be evidence enough to suppon such a review. The supervisor, however, declined to comment on the specifics of the case. "l don't what to get involved in that issue. What triggered my com- ments were calls by the media," he said. i'··VIT AMIN HELPS PMS SUFFERERS ..• 1 J'romAl _;( cohol. Some phys ical man1fes(11ons 1 may be water retention causing t bloating and breast tenderness. head- ~1·aches. backaches, cold o;ore<>. sinus problems. asthma attacks and se11- '"urcs. she said. ~ · All the symptoms may occur m women who do not ha\ e PMS, 1 'Cassara saRi. A woman might nor- mally expect to have cramps and ~ 5ome bloating dunng menstrua11on • but would not sutTer the ran~w or perhaps severeity of symptoms 11 !>he weren't sufTerine from PMS One key to diagnosing those who ~-do suffer from PMS is the absence of symptoms after menstruation PMS sufferers typically descnbc leelmg unlike themselves dunn~ part 01' tht' r fJlOnth, one that is tense. irntahle and ,depressed compared to 1hc1r normal 1 .feeling of well being. Cas<1ara said. / In Linda's words. "When I'm premenstrual and I get dl·pres,{·d. 11 1.'pvercomes me. There·, nothing I can't handle when I'm post- menstrual. I have more cncrg~ I'm ,, r. more easy to JCt along with " Women with severe PM\ ''mp-- toms arc prevented from II\ 1ng lull lives. Cassara says The' ma\ feel Just Call 642-6086 helpless. unable to cope and dnvcn to the point of su1c1de by the cycle of crashing emotions and physical ills. But women aren't the disorder's only v1c11ms. according to PMS Action literature. Its man1fcstat1ons can atTect whole families 10 the form of mantal strife and child beating. ufTerers can't control their outbursts and those closest to them often bear the brunt of their rage. Despite a highly public11cd case in England in which a murder charge against a woman was reduced because she was sufTeringa bout of PMS at the time of the fatal stabbing. the vasl majority of those with the disorder do not commit crimes, Treacy Colbcn. PMS Action public information of- ficer. says. What 1s cnminaJ is the way that women wi th PMS have been diagnosed as having psycholo~ical problems and been "hysterect1JT11zed. 10st1tutionaltzed and tranquilized. That 1s far more criminal." she said. PMS Acti on's educational effon s along with those of others working to lcg111m11e PMS as a medical not psychological diwrder. have re ultcd 1n .doctors in every state who can trea1 tt. Colbert said. "But we still have miles and miles to go." PM S Action advocates progesterone as a treatment option for women who suffer from the disorder. Although changes in diet. ccnatn vitamins and exercise are said to relieve symptoms in some women. Cassara believes progesterone should be readily available for those 11 docs not. The use of progesterone, one of the main fe male hormones, to treat PMS began in England with Dr. Katharina Dalton. Dalton injected the hormones into her own body after discovering that pregnancy cured her menstrual migraines. The placenta, which provides nutrients to a fetus in the womb. contains massive amounts of progesterone. Dalton theorized that the tncreased hormone in her system eased PM S symptoms. Avoiding certain foods. a vitamin supplement for women called Op- 11v1te and exercise are also suggested treatments for PMS. PM S Action can be contacted by wnt1ng to P.O. Box 19669, l rvi•e. CA. 92713 or calling 752-6355. - What do you like about t be Dally Pilot? What don't you like? Call the number at left and your message will be recorded, truscrlbff and delivered to the appropriate editor. ' The same U -bour answering service may be used to record letters to tbe editor on any topic. Contributors to our Letters column must Include tbelr namt and telephone number for verlftc1tlon. No cl~cul1Uoo calls, pleHe. Tell us what's on yo ur mind. o~.:;' ORANGE COA~ Clrcutefton 714/142..ail CIMttfted edYerttefng 714/"2·.5171 AH otMr de"pemnentt M2-U21 It Qu.renteec:I Mon<lly ,_y II ,-., .,, l'IOI -'fOVI pa-1., S 30 P "' CAl btl •• I I • .,.., 'fOJI c...py ., c.. ~tO Daily Pilat H.L. Schwartz Ill Put>hsher MAIN OFFICE 330 w.t Sey 61 Coeta Mau CA ..... aodf-llo• t&eO Cott• MtiM CA 9262«:" Cooytoghl 1983 Orangit CoMI Pl&llllhnO ~ No ._. •or• ..,.,,.,iona _or.., _,._ or .,..,1 ... S.tut!Mly ancJ .,.,....,., II you On ""' ·~,,."" r nv COl)y by 1 • "' t ho-' ,.. •O a "' ...a ,_,.,., cw. •• O.Clflo ... .., Fra,."zlnl Managing Edito r Karen Wittmer Advertising Director "*"1 '*"" ..... , DI 1eptOCMleCI """°"' iP9Clll I* ~ol~.ghl- .. ClrcuteUon Ro.•m•ry Churchman Controller T•J>ftonea • Robert Cantrell Pr0duct1on Manager Don•ld L. Wiiiiam• Circulallon Manager VOL n ,NO.SU ' Clo~ds shou ldn'tbring rain The let•t In 1 Mflel Of atotmt moving toUth out of the Gutt ot Aluka wlU IP'Md high ciouda °""' Southern CMlfOrnla but bring Nttle chance Of rain Tuesday, the National Weather Servkle Mid. • n,. o.nttr of the atorm wu heeding tOWll'd northern N4Wada today on • trac:k not llkety to drop enowen In L09 A~. IOl'ecaat.,t tald. Hight Tuaday wlll be In the upper 601 to 70 In Los Angelel and the valleys aher overnight lows In lhe 40s to 50s, The t>MchM will have highs In the mld-601 to low 70s. Ov«l'llghl Iowa wm be In the 40s to mld-50s, with gusty canyon wlndt. The mercury wlll reach the 'mld-<40t to mld-$0s . In the mountain• a1ter Iowa In the 20s to mld-~Oa and gusty winds In the northern rangee. · . • In the deserts. temperatures will reach the mld-509 to low ~ In Owens Valley, 601 In the northern dese<ta and low to mld-70a In the southern stretches. Lo'*9 tonight wlll range from 1 the mld-201 to mld-30s In Owens Valley and the 30s to low 40s In "°'1hern 1reaJ. with mld-501 to low 60• In southern deser1s. ~~:~::c~ .. Suhday's tight rain and drizzle dre>pped .02 rnch al the cMc center to .08 Inch In Woodland Hiiis. ShOwera Aeon Fk.imes Snow Occlvd~O....,.. Stetoonwy A..r Na..,.... WN-Stt't<• l'jQ.U US 0.00 OI ~(• G••tl'.it1 51 30 U.S . Temps Hertford ~ 41 32 Calif. Temps Sen Ber-OotlO st ... .....,,. .. 29 9an0abflel m m .. LA Honolulu 15 78 SM.JON 13 90 Albeny .. " HouMon ee 48 High low '°' 24 -· endlftO ., 5 SW.la.Ana. 16 51 ='-45 34 lndl8nllp0tt9 39 3' Sallll C"a • so a.m 1oci.y 45 27 Jel:*ton Mt 78 51 8ak•tliald M 48 ,.,_.,,.i.y 44 m Atw:ttortige 25 18 JaoklOf'lvllle 80 63 Ei.rei<a ~ 42 y D-111• Vtot 51 35 •Oenl• 74 83 ~ 34 2t ,_ 13 49 Atlet\nc City 49 3e 1(-Clty 37 32 ~-5' 35 Auatlll 70 45 LaVagat 64 51 Loa~ SI 49 Bellmore .. 3t Llllle AOC* 44 39 Oalli.nd 13 49 Eztended 8ttft'lln9IMI"' 74 55 loul11111ie 4" 37 PMOllooe. 12 4 1 ~cit M 13 Mamph<s S2 41 Red Blun eo 44 8oila 48 31 M .. mt Beacll 7• 75 AadWOOOCny ., 47 Flllf llld warmer P-O<*Y &oaton .. 40 Mllw-• 3$ 22 Saclt-10 ... 48 Santa llna wind• by fhenll:::.:1. Dey lklna1o 44 24 Ml*-St Paul 30 19 Sallnat II 42 llld Fr1<11~ malnly ,_ pea.a. tgllt c...,., 411 17 NatltYlll9 ., 40 Sii' 049QO 85 56 65 to to 7 Lowa In 40t 10 mid 50t 0-1on.S.C 73 ... New Orlaanl 81 61 San Francl.CO 82 60 Chet1atlonWV 311 37 N-Y0<1< 48 34 Santa 81tt>e•• 86 44 ChMloUa.N C 61 47 NOrlOlll,Va ao 411 SIOC-10<1 62 41 OleyatlM 46 17 Oki.home Coy 311 35 Tl dee Chleago 31 25 Omaha 42 22 HIQll. IOW. 1>ftctp11a11on '°' 24 hOura ClncifYll U 38 34 Or1enoo 83 SI anding at S pm ' Cleve4end 43 35 Columl>ll,S C 75 82 8"rllow 70 51 TOOAY Columt>ut.Oll 38 34 j u rfreport Big Baat m m 8.cond high 1:34p.m 4.7 ConGord,N H 45 28 BithOP 62 28 Oellu·fl WOl'lh 47 41 Blytht 77 44 MONOAY Oa)'lon 3e 33 LOCAT10N l4ZE '"""' Cet1ltna 111 48 Flrtl tow t:r·24am o.• o.n-52 24 Hun11n91on llNch 3.5 goOO LOOQ 9aacfl eo so ~~ tl:47a.m u 0.M-35 19 Rlvat Jany,~ 3.4 felt MonrOYta 511 47 I 25pm 0.3 OelrOll 43 28 40lh SlrMI. ,.._., 3-4 ,.., Monterey 611 Sot SaconCI hlgll 7 32p m. 4.8 °""'"' 25 01 22nd SlrMI. Newpot1 3-4 fair Ml Wiiton 47 39 ElPaao 57 36 11.tlboa Wedge 3 la!< NewpOr1 a..c11 65 M 5'.in Nit IOClay II 4.4 7 p m , ,._ Fobanu oe .10 Laguna Beecn 2 lal< OnlatlO 61 50 T....Oey al 8 30 a m end Nit 80llltt et Fwgo 27 IS San Cltmante 2·3 ,.,, Pelm Se>rtn91 15 48 4 47 pm Aegttan 48 22 Wal• temp &2·63 P...-.. 57 48 Moon Nit at 2:~ P·"'·• , .... Tweoey Orend AMM4• 40 21 s ..... CliraGllOn _,,,,_, ,._tkla m 49 113 48 • m end Ntt 1113.26p,m Driver dies in Coast Highway crash By TONY SAAVEDRA Of Ille o.., "94 ltefl A wrong-way dnver 1s dead and a female pedestrian ..,remained in senous condition this morning after separate weekend traffic accidents along the Orange Coast. The • weekend came to an end Sunday night with a head-on col lision that left 39-year-old Kenneth Hoff- man of Surfside Colony dead, and led to the arrest of an Anaheim man, though he was not believed to be directly at fault for the accident. Hoffman was killed around 11 :45 p.m. after his car veered into the opposite Janes on Pacific Coast t-l1ghway south ofWamc:r Aven.uc 111 Surfside and plowed into a vehicle dnven by Robert Baca. 29. CONTINUED STORIES Officer Kevin Dougheny, a spokes- man for the C.alifom1a Highway Patrol, said Hoffman's car was head- ing south in the nonhbound lanes. Hoffman was pronouccd dead at the scene, while Baca was transported with minor injuries lo Humana Hospi1ah-n-Huetington Beach, where he was arrested for in vestigation of felony drunken driving and man- slaughter. Baca was booked into Orange County Jail, with bail set at $5,000, said Dougherty. "It doesn't say in the vehicle code that you have to be at fault (for the accident)," said the CHP spokesman. "It onl y says that if you're drunk. and l.f );OU '.r.e on. tbr road ... " In an unrelated accident Saturday night. Bonnie Jeannine Sheets. 30. of HARBOUR MAN SLAIN •.. From Al Lt. Price said. Mrs. Dyson told police she awoke later and wa s walking back to the master bedroom when she was grabbed by a man with a nylon stocking pulled over his face and a knife 1n one hand. The intruder, described as a black man. about 5 feet 11 inches tall and of medium build, reponcdly raped her. He then forced Mrs. Dyson to a garage where a family car was stored, police said they were told. Mrs. Dyson said the kidnapper ordered her to drive him from the comple~d then got out of the car near a grocery store . She said she returned home and found her husband dead in the master bedroom. Detectives said there were no obvious signs of a break-in at the condominium and that nothing ap- peared to be missing. Police said Mrs. Dyson was taken to Humana Hospital Huntington Beach for treatment and tests. An autopsy, to be performed today, will determine what time the husband was killed and th e exact cause of deatb. police stated. Santa Ana suffered major injuries after she tried to cross McArthur Boulevard and was hit by a Cadillac. Newport Beach police traffic in· ves!Jgator Rick Bradley said ~beets -was coming from a restaurant an the area and failed to yield to oncoming traffic. · "The best thing we can determine is she was running across the street and j ust didn't look.," said Bradley. The woman was taken to Fountain Valley Community Hospital with a fractured pelvis, concussion, ab- dominal bleeding and a broken leg. Sheets was in serious condition today after undergoing emergency surgery Saturday night Thedn ver ofthe vehicle, Robert R. Bucy. 43. of Orange was not cited for the accident. The couple reportedly had been married nine years, but police would not comment on a published report that they recently had been estranged. Officers also would not say where the two worked, except to note the Dyson was employed in Orange County and his wife worked as a clerk in Los Angeles. • "They apparently always spent the weekends together at the condo," said Sgt. Ed McErlain. The 226-unit waterfront con- dominium complex is near Peter's Landing and has a security gate. COCAINE KING TO BE SENTENCED ••. From Al conducted a massive sweep. arresting people 10 Orange County, Los An- ge les and Flonda. At the time of the sweep, Moble) and his wife were on a weekend trip to Mciuco but were arrested when they flew home two days later. Four people who purponedly plax- ed key roles in the cocaine ring still have not been arrested and are Designed, Finished Installed believed to be livme in Colombia. All but one of the fugitives are related to Mobley through marriage. Of all those arrested. Mobley by far faced the longest prison sentence. Early this month. one ofMobky's top cocain e distributors,' Mark Mcfarlane, 29, of San Clemente, was sentenced to 25 years in prison with a 40-ear parole term to follow. Mobley and the others pleaded guilty to various federal drug charges but defense attorneys said they will appeal. The prosecution's case against Mobley and the others is built largely on wiretaps. Mobley's attorney, for one, said the government's use of wiretaps in the case was improper and that that would be a basis for a peal. 31 Years Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters ~ - FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE ON THE MARKET TODAY .•• AT FACTORY DIRECT PRICES! Call (714) 548-8841 or 548-1717 ... HElllWOOD MAIUf ACTllY 19n Placentia Avenue • Costa Mesa. CA 92627 I f • 1 MONDAY Nll VI MUE A I'• ,,.,,.\ Coast We asked Coast resi- dents what they have to be thankful for this Thanksgiving./ A3 California President Reagan will be handed the task of mak- ing cuts In budget./ AS Nation A high-ranking Cuban de- fector says Castro hates the U.S. 'totally.' I A4 Personal Incomes are up, but Americans are spend- ing less of It./ A4 ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: World Rumors abound that Philippine President Ferndlnand Marcos Is re- covering from major sur- gery./ AS · At least 80 people die In natural gas explosion in Mexico City .I AS :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: Feature The secret to wilderness survival is finding-food and shelter with the least amount of effort./ A7 . ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-!·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: Food Bet ore any fowl felony Is committed In your kitchen Thanksgiving Day, call the turkey hot- line, staffed by food pro- fessionals./C1 :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·!·!·!·!·!•!•!·!·!·!·:·:·:·:·:· Sports Former Edison High star Rick Di Bernardo and his Notre Dame teammates will be In the area Wednesday, preparing for USC Saturday./81 The Rams lost big at Green Bay, to the embar- rassing tune of 31-6./81 Orange Coast College's ,basketball team la gear- ing for the 1.984-85 season with Its opener Tuesday./81 Entertainment Karl Malden avoided meeting the man he portrayed In "Fatal Vision.''/A9 INDEX Erma Bombeck Bridge Bulletin Board Business Calif ornla News Classified Comic• Crossword Death Notices Features Food Horoscope Ann landers Mutual Funds National News Opinion Paparazzi Police Log Public Notices Sports Stock Markets Televlslon Theater• Weather Wofld Newt • -. A8 A10 A3 C9 A4 85-7 A10 87 C12 A7 C1-6 86 A8 C7 A4 A6 A7 A3 B5.C10 81·4 C11 A8 A9 A2 A4 ·e mans a1nat ome· ~· . ' ,. Scouts keep in good ehape Jun waaurt. 8 , of Corona del Mar Den 10. Pack 330, practice. chlnupe while Philip Ham•ber_aer, 9 , of lnlne Den s. Pack 316 neaottatee-the rope brlqe at Saturday'• Erplorer and Scout f'a.lr at Anaheim Stadium. Drizzly birthday for Mickey Mouse By &be A11oclated Press Mi ckey Mouse celebrated his 56th b1nhday at a drizzly Disneyland pany where a little bit of rain was the unin vited guest. Instead of cheese Sunday, Mickey received an "Our Hero" parade. Young v1s1tors got a pany complete with b1nhdaycake, hats and balloons. park spokeswoman Debra Garron said. Youngsters also joined in ~ Mousercise workout and those under 12 received headbands and records. Some older kids -nine of the onginal Mouseketeers -donned mouse ears and for an onstage salute to the venerable motion picture and television star. Performing were Bobby Burgess, Darlene Gillespie, Don Grady, Bon- nie Lynn Fields. Lonnie Burr. Tommy Cole, Sharon Baird, Sherry Alberoni and Cubby O'Brien. The celebration wound up the Magic Kingdom's "Mickey Month." Despite cool wea ther and inter- mittent showers. the weekend crowd was normal, Garron sai'd. .. . e I .. Woman discovers . 'vicious assault' upon h.er release By STEVE MARBLE aM ROBERT BAllEll Of .. Olllr ........ A woman wbo said she WM raped and kidnapped early-Swldmr load police she returned home 8Dd foad her JO.year-old husband stabbed IO death in their security-·t Huot- inaton Harbour condomiruum. Mel Dulay Dyson. a fiunrie• uhantwho rented the du w itlA) condominium, was stabbed numer- ous times in what police detcribed as a "vicious assaulL .. Dixie Dyson told police she made the discovery al about 2:40 Lm. aft.er the kidnapper released her in fronl of a grocery store near the int.enectioll of Warner A venue and Goldenwat Street in Huntington Beach. The Dyson's young son and a 7- ycar-old cousin who was visitin& were not harmed. Apparently they slept through the entire episode at the rntdcooe on Martin I..ane jn the S-roadmoor Huntington Harbour complex, police investigators said. According to police reports, a burglary was reported at the same address on ...r.uowecn. An intruder apparently broke into the ~ dominium through an upstairs bath- room window on that date and took S300 in cash and S500 in watches, pohce rcponed. Officers did not say whether there might be a connection between the ufjlarv an t 1s wee en<riiiffin~ - The slayinJ was the second in less than a week in Huntington Beach. A 38-ycar-old woman was found strangeled in the bedroom of her apartment _near Hunti"l'OD Ceeter on Thursday mominJ. Police said there is no reason to bclie~e ffie kiflinis arc related. According to Lt.~ Pnce. Mrs. Dyson told homicide 1nvestip1ors that she and her husband went to bed Saturday at about I 0:30 p.m. She told offi~rs she awoke several hours later (Pleue eee HARBOR/ A.2) Wrong~way driver killed in smashup on Coast Highway Woman seriously injured crossing street in Newport ByTONY AAVEDRA Of IN Delly Pll<M Staff <\ "rong-wa) dn' er is dead and a female pedestrian n:maaned 1n senous cond1t1on this morning after separate "eekend traffic accidents along the Orange Coast. The \\Cckend came 10 an end unda) night \\Ith a head-on coll1s1on that left '\9--.car-old Kenneth HofT· man ofSurfs1de {'olony dead, and led to the arrest of an Anaheim man. though he was not believed to be direct!) at fault for the acetdenl. Hoffman was killed around 11:45 p,;n after hi s car vceTCd into the opposite lanes on Pacific Coast H1ghwa} south of Warner Avenue in Surfside and plowed into a vehicle dm en b> Robert Baca. 29. Officer Kevin Dou&hen). a spokctr- man for the CahfOnua Hiahway Patrol. said Hoffman's car was bead- ing sou thin the nontlbound lanes. Hoffman was pronouccd dead at fPleue eee ca.Aall/ Aa) Huntington cocaine kingpin faces 45-year sentence today Hun~ington :a~o •. Others In lar est West Coast dru ring "0 " than two dozen people who now JUSt plaifi Taco wocked as drug runners for Moble) have received maximum terms in prison have been sentenced. nearl)' all drav.---_ _ 1ng maximum sentences and tough By STEVE MARBLE year prison sen tence. parole cond1t1ons. Mobley was to ottMOellrl'llot•Wt A graduate of Fullenon High have bee n sentenced earlier this Alan Charles Mobley. the Hunt-School who reportedl y wanted to month but the date was dela)ed ing1on .Beach 24-year-old who con-become a lawyer, Mobley has been because his attorney was out ofto"'n trolled the largest cocaine ring e.vcr ponraycd as the strong man of a The far-Oung cocaine empire 'Aas uncovered on the West Coast. was cocaine network that smugled more reportedl y smashed 1n May when being transponcd to federal coun ~ than a ton of the drug into the county federal, state and count) drug agents today where he faced a possible 45-last year. (Pleue eee OOCADfE/ A2) . There are eome real ding dongs on the tooee, aa12 Ac .. Huntington Beech poUoe offtoef's. A wttneu Informed the manager of the Teco Bell r•r et 818 Pacific Coast Highway on Sundey night tt'9l a W... el people were In the prooeu of •te911nG the .......... i.~ Potlce reported that when ofllcef • entcecl • .._ Nllllll• bell WU m6uing. tti. wttneea WU~ gone Md ...... Information on the ding~ whO state the Teco Bii Ml. The IOU WU put atU2.51. There·' s ·h ·ope for-night mare that runs in cycles VicttmSOf premenstrual syndrome aided byvitall_:!tn therapy for hormone disorder By USA MAHONEY °' ............... There Y..Crc some days that Linda. 29. couldn't cope. he would feel deprts$Cd. irritable. an~iousand tired. Those days were as reaular a the calend¥ -as predict· able as her menstrual cyck. Linda. who asked that her ~I nam 001 be uM'd. A}'1 he ~uffcrt from prcmcn trual \)ndromc. a hormonal d1sordrr affcctina an csti· m11ed 40 percent or women and one that the mencan medical commun1· t is lowly rccosnmnaasa leaiumate ailment . The symptom ofl1nda'id1sorder. which PMS expcn behcvt may be cau5Cd by 1 lack of the hormone prose teronc. made her quit a dc-- mand1na ~I rcwardm1job, he ~1d. • nd. altho"IJh d\c ha found a partial .I cure through vnamin therap , Linda sa)' the n:mrusnts of PM symptoms put a strain on her mamagc de pllt having an understandina husband. Linda • ....,ho li ve in Oransc Count)'. 'oluntcertd to talk about hcrd1sord r before a group ofabout 30 phy 1cian and health care profes 1onals attend· 1na a two-day PM trainina coum last wetk , ponsottd b P 1" .\ct1on of t f'\11nc.1 non-profit rorponit 1on offcr-10a 1nfomlation and rcfcml to v.omcn and the med1cal commun1l\ ahout PM • tht cou™' '' dts1gncd to teach health {3rt flt\l' 1dcl"\ hov. "' 1 f'tl-ogm1e and tf't'at the otl-m1 • d1agno J disorder bout 900 health cart' profc\s1onals a \C3r ha-.r under- aone t.he 1ra1nma sinC't 19 2. a PM ct1on poke man sauJ PM~ .\cuon. v. h1ch I'( located in Ma> from tadtson. \\1\. v.a~ founded b\ a former suffcl'(r. Vir- 11nu1 (a ra. 1n IQ80. Canara If· diatno~d the ~u~ of her -;c"crc hut prcd1c1abk mood o;v.-1np afitr read· 1ng about P 1S and ptonccnna prog~tcront trntmcnlo; at a medical hbrar. Th~ treatment\ ~hlCh o;ht tra' rled to England to r\'\''" c , un"'<i J\cr of the frkyll...a nd-Hyde bchavt0r that sbt says v.as ruled by her ~nstrual cydt. Upon rctum1na to the-Un1ttd talcs, C"assara formed PM Acteon to inform other women about the dis.- order and the pouab6e cu~ Premenstrual l)ndrome man1~u ll If 1n d1ffen:nt "'l)'S 1n difftttnt women Tbe symptoms. both pbya. ca l and cm9t1onal, may ,... from mlld to vcrc, C'UMn •YL Emotional s ""P'OCM tncludc tat· ion dtprhSton. ana.iet) or pptc an ds. cryma for nG:~~--­ronfus1on. crav1 fot ifood or: lil- (Pleue ... VITA.1111'/ il) • Orange Cout OAILV PILOT/Monday, Novembet 18, 1884 CIA obsessed with hilting 'enemy count general· , Westmoreland says a ency·s ft u res magnificently. T hey never felt -and I aot this everywhere l went -they were getting a fair shake in the media." -----.Included ·old men. women and boys' NEW YORK (AP) -A 1967 dispute over the s1ze of enemy forces in Vietnam pitted soldiers on the scene apinst CIA analym in Wa h- , inaton. rctired Gen. Wilham C. Westmoreland, tbe former American commander io Vietnam. Lcsllficd today. Westmorclnnd, in the sixth week of h1s S 120 million libel suit against CBS. told jurors lhe CIA "seemed to be ot>sessed with trymg to increase the size of the enem~we were fighting." In the 1982 documentary "The Uncounted Enc y: A Vietnam Con- spiracy." CBS said Westmoreland deliberately suppre$SCd information about rising e'nemy strength in 1967 to coovince PTes1detH Lyndon B. Johr,:ison and.others in yYashington that the war was being won. Tesumony t<>9ay centered on the 'events leading up Lo a September 196 7 conference at Wcstmoreland's Saigon headquarters, where the fig- ures eventually rcponcd to Johnson. Congress and the press were ham- mered out. Those figures excluded communist "self-defense" and "secret sclf-<le- fense" forces fro m the e umate of armed enemy strength. CB charged the order of baulc was kept below 300.000 when it should have ex- ceeded 500.000. Blaze wreaks $25,000 l oss atCdMhome Westmoreland said his staff ot>- Jected to the higher C'IA figures because using them "would have A fi re t·auscd about $25.000 dam· meant including old men and women age to a Corona del Mar home early and young boys .. m the estimate of Sunday, according to the Newport enemy soldiers. Beach Fire Department. "We were the ones fighung the The fi re broke out shortl y before enemy, not the people at the C'IA.'' 3:30 a.m. at 2 I 4'h Carnation Ave. Westmoreland said. The occupant of the home, Gordon Also today, one of the 12 j uror5 Wagner. escaped without inj ury, fi re fa iled 10 appear on time and was spokeswoman Jayme Freer said. replaced ~ one of the six alternates. Cause of the blaze is unknown and U.S. Distnct Judge Pierre N. Leval 'is under in vestigation, Freer said. \. has repeatedly admonished jurors not Fire officials estimated the fire 10 be late for coun. caused $20.000 damage to the home On Friday. Westmoreland testified and an additional $5,000 to the about the ·difficulties of wagjng the contents of the home. '-" first televised war. It tdok firefighters 15 minutes to "My troops did a wonderful Jot1.--,· control the fire.N o other homes were be told j ury in U.S. Distnct Court in damaged. Manhattan. "They were proud of Thineen firefighters. two engines. a themselves and properly so. They fire truck and a paramedic unit were doing a difficult 1ob and doing responded to the alarm. ::-MIM!Mliiii•i;iimf-------''------------- cocAINE KING TO BE SENTENCED •.. 'l'romAl ....L' conducted a massive sweep, arrcst1n& ~,,people in Orange County, Los An- ..geles and Florida. At the time of the sweep. Mobley !:land his wife were on a wee kend trip to t>'Mexico but were arrested when they flew home two days later. c Four people who purponcdly ptax-•.Pi key roles in the cocaine ring still ~jaave not been arrested and are beheved Lo be hvine 1n Colombia. All but one of the fugtuves are related to Mobley through marriage. Of all those arrested. Mobley by far faced the longest prison sentence. Ea rly this month. one ofMoblcy's top cocaine distribu to rs, Mark Mcfarlane. 29. of San Clemente, was sen tenced to 25 years in prison with a 40-year parole term to follow. MA'hley and the others pleaded guih(to various fed eral drug charges but defense attorneys said they will appeal. The prosecution's case against Mobley and the others 1s built largely on wiretaps. Mobley's attorney. for one, said the government's use of wi retaps in the case was improper and that that would be a basis for appeal. ~ ....................................................................................... ~ ::CRASH KILLS DRIVER ON PCH ... o m Al C• the scene, while Baca was transponed with minor inj unes to Humana 'H ospital in Huntington Beach. where ':t\e was arrested for investigation of f..:cf'elony drunken dnvi ng and man- slaughter. " Baca was booked into Orange County Jail. wit h bail set at S5,000. .,aid Dougherty. ~ ··1t doesn't say in the vehicle code 4ihat yo u have to be at fault (for the accident).'' said the CHP spokesman. ·•1t only says that 1fyou're drunk, and 1f you're on the road ... ·· ~ In an unrelated accident Saturday night, Bonnie Jeannine Sheets. 30. of Santa Ana suffered maJOr 1njunes after she tried 10 cross McArthur Boulevard and was hit by a Cadillac. Newpon Beach police traffic in· vesugator Rick Bradley sajd Sheets was coming from a restaurant in the area and failed to )leld to oncoming tra ffic. ~··HARBOUR MAN SLAIN ... -,.FromAl because her son was coughing. .. She went upstairs to his bedroom to comfon him and fell asleep there, .. Lt. Pncc said. Mrs. Dyson told pohce she awoke later and was walking back to the master bed room when she was gra bbed by a man with a nylon stocking pulled over his face and a kni fe in one hand. The intruder. described as a black man. about 5 feet I I rnches tall and of medium build, reportedly raped her. He then forced Mrs. Dyson toa garage where a family ca r was stored. police said they were told. Mrs. Dyson said the kidnapper ordered her to dnve him from the complex and then got out of the car near a grocery store in Huntington Beach. She said she returned home and .. The best thing we can determine 1s she was running across the stree t and just didn't look," said Bradley. The woman was taken to Fountain Valley Community Hospital with a fractured pelvis. concussion. ab- domi nal bleedi ng and a broken leg. Sheets was in senous condition today after undergoing emerge ncy surgel) Saturday night. Thednverofthe vehicle. Roben R. Bucy. 43. of Orange was not cited for the accident. found her husband dead in the master bedroom Police said Mrs. Dyson was taken to Humana Hospital Hunungton Beach for treatment and tests. Autopsy results on Mr. Dyson are pending. The 226-u nll waterfront con- dominium complex is near Peter's Landing and has a security gate. VITAMIN HELPS PMS SUFFERERS ••• From Al cohol. Some physical man1festat1ons ma} be water retentio n causing bloating and breast tenderness, head- aches, backaches. cold sores, sinus problems. asthma attacks and seiz- ure,, she said. .\II lhc symptoms ma) occur in women who do not have P..MS. ( assara said A wqman might nor- mall} l.'x pect to have cramps and \Orne bloating during menstruation bu t "-Ould not suffer the ran$e or perhap'i scvere11y of symptoms 1f she weren·t suffcnn~ from PMS. hel pless. unable to cope and dnven to the point of suicide by the cycle of crashing emotions and physical ills. Bu t women aren't the disorder's only victims. according to PMS Action li terature. Its manifestations can affec t whole fami lies 1n the form of manta! strife and child beating. Sufferers can't control the ir outbursts and those closest to them often bear the brunt of their rage 1t, Colbcn said. "But we still have miles and miles to go." P MS Ac t ion a d vocat es progesterone as a treatment option for women who suffer ·rrom the disorder. Although changes in diet, certain vita mins and exercise arc said to relieve symptoms in some women. Cas~ra believes progesterone should be readily available for those it does not. W l.11Hfr~ I=------ Clouds s houlcln·'t bring rain The i.t ... in ...... Of ltormt movtng IOUth out Of thf Gulf or AIU't• wlM IP'.-d htgh cloYd9 Ov« SOUIMrn c.MfotN• t>UI btlng Mttt.Ohanceor rain T~•Y • .,,. Netlonal WNth«Sefvlee NJd The cent• Of the etotm wee hMdlng towerd ~htrn PMYeda tocs.y on a tr~k not llkefy to drop thowers In Loe Angetee. lorecattera a.tld. Hlghl Tue9day wlft be In the UPP9f 60t to 70 In Lot A~ and ll'le valteye after overnight Iowa In the 40s to 50a. . The ~ wtll have high• In the mld·60s to low 70•. ~hi low. wlll be In the 401 to mld-501. with gusty canyon ~ The mercury will rNch the mld-40• 10 mld-50• In the mountetns efter Iowa In the 201 to mld·30t end guatywlnd• In the northern rangee. In the deaett1, temperatures wlll reach the mld·50• to low 601 In °"'1• Valley, 60t In the northern deserts and low to mid-70. In tM southern 1tretcMI. Lowa tonight wlll range from the mld-209 to mid-309 In Owens Valley and the 30s to low (Os In northern •reu. with mld-509 Lo low 601 In southern deM<ls. Sunday'a light rain and drlizle dropped .02 lnctl at the cMc center to .08 lnCh In Woodllnd Hiiis. 0r ... ,, ... 61 30 U.S . T empe ff .. Heriford 41 32 Calif . Temps S"1hmerCIJnO Helene ... 29 hn Oebriel m m "' Lo HonOMu 15 76 StnJOM 63 50 Alblf'I~ « 21 Houtton 69 •e HIQfl 10. lot 2• !louft ending et 6 Stnte Ana ·u 51 '"!:l:::que •5 3• I~ 38 38 Sen11 Cr111 60 am tOCley Ml Ho •s 27 JllCllllOl'l,Mt 78 51 Bekenhelel 54, 0 T1hoeVIJ~ 44 m Ancl>or-.go 26 ,. Jaclt11011Vllle 80 83 Eutell• $8 .a YoMmit•Y"f 61 35 Allenla ,. ,83 ~· 3• 29 Fr....o e3 48 AUenl~ C!I> 49 38 KanMtClty 37 32 LlllG8tt., 51 3$ AUllln 10 •s L11V91>M ... 51 loe Angelel 81 41 8allltn0f• ~ 31 little Aocl< 4• 39 Oeklllnel e3 •9 Extended 8lrmlngNm 74 55 lOUl•Vllle 40 37 PuoAoblM 92 41 BIM\arell 31 13 ~· 52 .. Red &lull eo 44 .,.. 48 31 MillnlBeach 71 7$ AedwoOCI C11y 81 H F •" end _,,_ POAl«lle QtdlY '°''°" •• 40 Mlweull• H 22 Seer-to .. 49 SMte Ana ...ncll Oy T"8r*::."'f. Dey Buftelo .. 2• M&>IMll P...i ao 19 llllnM ., ·~ end Froele~ ,.,.,.wy -~ iOl\e C-.oer 49 17 ...... •7 40 Sen oi.vo 85~ 85 Ip to 1 lows.,, 409 lo mid 50e Clwte910I\ s c 73 .. NewOr!Nos 11 51 SM frlnCleCO 82 50 Chaneeton,w Y 39 37 NewYotll •• 31 98nt• Bllrblt. 65 44 Cl'l.notte ,NC SI 47 Notfol~.VI eo •9 Stoellton 62 41 c~ 49 17 Ol.lenorne Coty 39 35 Tides ChlCIQO 31 25 Omlh• •2 22 Cinc:Wlneto 31 !M O<tlnelo 63 81 HIO/I. io.. p1ec1pna11on t0< 2• "°"" Cleveleno 43 35 tnelt119 el 5 p m Col11m111t.S C 75 92 Bell tow 10 SI TOOAY Colllmbll1,0h 31 !M Surf report 8198Nr m m Second hlQh 6•38p"' 4 7 Conc:O<Cl,N H •5 28 8'&1\0p 62 28 Dell-Ft W0ttll 47 41 Blythe 11 44 llfOM>AY O.yton 38 33 LOCATIOtf SIZa lf4AN CateNn• 61 0 F1111 low 12:24 am oe o.n-52 24 Hunllnglon BMcn 3-5 good long 8Mcfl 60 50 F Ill :,:::r.: 8 •7 •m 83 0..MOIM6 35 19 ~ Jelly Newpot'I 3-4 llir MontOVUI 59 •7 Sec IOw 125pm OS 0.11001 43 28 40lh St•-. News>o<t 3~ IM Monl .. ey 58 54 s.cono lllQll 732pm •• Oululll 25 07 22noStrMI,..._, 3-4 , ... Ml Wiiton 47 39 EIPuo 57 31 8alOOe Wedge 3 ,.., Newporl e.aa. 65 54 Sun Wit 1oe11y et • n p.m , ,._ Felrt>eni.t oe .10 Legune 8eedl 2 ,.., °"181!0 51 50 T..-ley el 6 30 • m enC1 Wit .., el Fargo 27 15 Sen Clemente 2-3 Iii< Pt!m Springt -75 49 4 •7 p"' f'llgltatl ... 22 w .,., lefnp-S2-e3 PaMCMne !>1 48 Moon Mia et :l"53 p"' , ,_ Tueecley Orenel Aepid• 4() 21 Swel oir.ctlOn eouui-t ~ "' 49 at3 O•"' --.11 3,Mp m --El Salvador officials fear dependencyo_n U.S. cash Leaders say they're grateful for $1 M a day In aid, but must help themselves EDITOR 'S NOTE -The United States helps El Salvador fight lcflist guerrillas with millions m m ilitary aid. It also is handing over $1 m1//1on a day to keep the nation's economy afloat. Here is a report on that other aspect o f U.S. aid. By JOSEPH B. FRAZIE R ._ ...... ,.,... .... SAN SALVADOR .. EISalv.ador - Soanng U.S. economic aid 1s causing concern that this ·once self-sufficient country could become addicted to it. While wealth Salvadoran w..b.S> nea at the Stan 0 e CI VIi war fi ve years ago are returning wi th their money. foreign in~stment 1s vir- tually nil. ome economists and busi- nessmen predict an overhaul of its tradiuon-bound agricultural base is all that will get the war-battered alvadoran economy r,olh ng again. Amencan aid has poured m to help make up for the lost investment. help pay for nearly SI billion m direct war damages and keep the economy afloat. Most of the aid is economic suppon fu nds. known bureau- cratically by the 1n1t1ah ESF, in- tended for impons of essential American-made goods but there has been some evidence of misuse. U.S. funds pay for about 30 percent of El Salvador's impons and under- wri te about a third of the Sal vadoran government budget. ''Foreign capital will not come back 1n an y big way until the confli ct here is more resolved." said a fo reign econ- omist who watches the situation closel) and agreed to discuss the economy only on condition of anonymity ... Anempts 10 bring back foreign investmtllt ha ve not borne fruit. The major push will have 10 come from Salvadoran capital that left the co unt or is still here." ----- Between 1979 and 198 1 mated SI. I billion was sent a roa·d for safekeeping, mostly in U.S. banks. The drain is much slower now aod some eco nomists say it has vinually stopped. The Salvadoran economy plunged when violence picked up m 1979 and by 1982 gross domestic production had dr~pcd by 25 percent. The purchasing power of an average Salvadoran had dropped by a third. Economists predict an economic growth of 2 percent or less this year against-a popatmton growth or:nxror 2 percent with funher recovery de- pendent on the conduct of the war and confidence of the business com- munity in the fivc-month-oldgovem- ment of President Jose Napoleon Duarte. ome American assistance 1s trying to help find new sources of income beyond the traditional cash crops of coffee. cotton and suga r. .. These crops need to be main- tained but they will not be the growt h leaders.'' said a U.S. Embassy econ- omist, also speaking on a basis of anonymity. He said new kinds of cash crops. small manufac tunng and agn-bus1- ness are the keys to econo mic re· co very. Amencan cconomu: assistance. meanwhile. has soared, mostly to provide ESF dollars. which reached S2 I 0 million this year. Overall, U.S. aid now runs at about SI million a day and has totaled about SI bill ion since 1979. ..It is worrisome to fi nd that we depend on a million dollars a day from the United States." said Juan Vicente Maldonado. executive direc- tor of the National Association of Pnvate En terpnse. the country's most influential private entcrpnse organization. • J I "We thank the Amen can peop e but worry that it is esmblishmg a dependency on our part. It is not a normal relationship between coun- tries. The impact is tremendous but we know it cannot go on forever, .. he said in an interview. "Before 1979 there was no signifi- cant American ecof\omic aid. El Salvador does not like being a burden. It's not our style." "We can easily be the Taiwan of Lalin America.'' he said. comparing this country's large labo11 force, high output and r~lative-lac~of resources to the Nationalist Chinese island. ESF dollars are given to El Salvador's Central Bank. Importers apply to buy them. stating what they want and at what price. If the application is accepted they can get the dollars at the official rate of 2.5 colones each as opposed to the legal parallel rate of about 3.75 coloncs to the dollar. Businessmen who cannot get the ESF dolla'rs apply to the Cental Bank to buy them at the higher rate. If that is refu sed. they re ly on the black market. Businessmen can. however. over- invo1ce and wind up with dollars to stash in an overseas account against a still-uncenain future at home. An economist with close tics to the Central Bank says it works this way: A businessman needs to impon 1.000 un its of item X. which cost $1 0 each. for a total ofS 10,000. But in his invoice he prices the items at S 15 each, for a total of SI S.000. He buys the S 15.000 at the prefer- able coloncs rate. impons the goods and banks the other $5,000 abroad . The economist. who asked not to be identified for fear or retribution. said ... We have both the feeling and the evidence that some of this is going on now. One ke} to d1agnos1ng those who do sufTer from PMS is the absence of symptoms after menstruation. PMS sufTcrcrs typically descri be feeling unlike themselves durine pa rt of the Despite a highly pubhc1zed case in .England in which a murder charge against a woman was reduced because she was suffering a bout of PMS at the time of the fatal stabbing. the vast majority ofthose with the disorder do not commit crimes. Treacy Colbert. PMS Action public information of· fi cer. says. The use of progestero ne. one of the main fe male hormones, to treat PMS began in England with Dr. Katharina Dalton. Dalton injected the horm ones in to her own body af\cr i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!J! d1scovenng that pregnancy cured her I "In add111on we know that some ES F money is being used for such things as travel and low-priority im rts." •'mon th. one that is te nse. 1mtable and depressed compared to their normal feeling of well being. Cassara said. In Li nda's words. ..When I'm premenstrual and I get depressed, 1t overcomes me. There·s not hing I can't handle when I'm post- menstrual. I have more energy. I'm more easy to ~et along with." Women with severe PM S symp- toms are prevented from liv ing full lives. Cassara says. They may feel Just Call I 642-6086 Dely Plot IWwetJ leGu9rMteed What is cnminal 1s the way that women with PMS have been diagnosed as hav tng psychol~cal problems and bee n "hysterectim1zcd. institutionalized and tranquilized. That is fannorc cnminal.'' she said. PMS Action's educati onal cffons alon~ with those of others working to legiumize PMS as a med1C"3I not psychological disorder. have resulted in doctors in every state who can treat menst rual migraines. The placenta, which provides nutrients to a fetus in the womb. contains massive amounts of progesterone. Dalton theorized that the increased hormone in her system eased PMS symptoms. Avo1d1 ng cenain foods. a vitamin supplement for women called Op- t1vitc and exercise are also suggested treatments for PMS. • PMS Action can be contacted by wnting to P.O. Box 19669. Irvine. ('A. 927 13 or call ing 752-6355. WIUal do you tlke aboat tbe Daily Pilot? What don't you like? Ca ll "' number al left and your meuage will be recorded. transcribed arad delivered to Uie appropriate editor. The same %4-lloar answering service may be used to record letters to Uae editor oo any topic. CoDtrlbalors to oar Lftters column mall in clude "elr name and telephone number for verification. No circulation calls, please. Tell us whal'1 on your mind. OAANGE COAST Daily Pilat Clrcutetton 714/142-4333 Cl•1tfted edYettlelng 7141142~11n All °"* depettmenta M2~f MAINCWACE 330 W_, Bey St C:O.t• Mfte CA MotlOly f'.flQly " 10" do ftOI .... 'fl# '** Oy & JO p "' call tlllfor• 1 I) ,.,., ..-0 '°"' OGP'r -boo .-.-.a • H.L. Schwert1 Ill Publisher ..... .oar_ 9o• l!le() Ccsta ...... CA m21 Copyt""4 1Nl o.-. c-t ~ ~ No -11°"'9 ,...,.,_ ecll!01'91 ..,.. ... 01 eo..n• Frank Zlnl Karen Wittmer Managing Editor Advertising Director ROMmery Churchman Controller """" ....... l'NY lie tecwoouc.d WllhOUI tpeClll .,.,. ~°'~- Robert Cantrell Production l Manager Donald L WUHama Circulation Manager VOL n , HO. '2A .. • ,. 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