Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-09-03 - Orange Coast Pilot. --------. - --- - TOMORAOWi . ··FAIR > FORlCAITI ON A2 . Serving_ Newport Beech, Co1t1 Mtaa, Huntington Beteh, Irvine, L19un1 Btteh, FountaJn Vlllt1 ind SovJb.Otl"9f County ORANGE COUNT'f C A LIFORNIA T'UE SOAV SEPTEMBER J 1985 -b C ENTS ·I~vin~· disturbed by airport pact -~ ' Mayor, council worrythatcompromise reactivates El Toro as alternative site By LISA MAHONEY Of the Oellr ........... Not everyone is happy about a historic resolution reached last week ovtr the future growth of John Wayne Atrpon. Coast Vintage cars were fea- tured In the Great labor Day Cruise, a three-day festival of street rods, custom cars and other• nostalgia-laden auto- moblles at the Orange County fairgrounds./ A3 California Would a new hotel and parking garage be suit- able neighbors for Olvera Street In Its Los Angeles park?/A4 Nation . A French-American team finds Titanic wreckage, proposes making site a sea memorial./ A5 Sports The Angels hit the pivot- ing point and head In the right dlrectlon./C1 Baalneu This businesswoman has a sweet deal In Laguna Members of the Irvine City Coun- cil arc disturbed by clements of the compromise between the Orange County Board of Supervisors. New- pon Beach, the Airport Wor~ing• Group and Stop Polluung Our New- pon atler 20 years of lltagatLon and acnmony. Deputy City Manager Paul Brady said the cn y 1s concerned because the compro(l'lise required county super- visors to repeal two rcsoluuons that for years have stymied the search for alternative sates to John Wayne Atrpon . W1•hout those resolutions, the door as open 10 consider commcrctal airltne use at El Toro Manne Base Brady said. something Irvine official~ oppose. After two letters and a personal pica by Mayor David Baker failed to keep the resolut~ons tn place last week, council mcmben. decided 10 meet behind closed doors tonight to sec 1f there 1s some way for the Cit} to intervene in the agreement to ensure that El Toro does not become subject to an alternative !>1te stud)' Brad)' said Clly officials don't want com- mercial t11ghts at El Toro because they would generate the same problems that Ncwpon Beach has been battling for nearly 20 years. • Increased air traffic over lrYtne would mean more noise and potential for crashes. Brad)' ~1d Now that Newpon Beach ha!. Delly "'°4 ....... ..., -· lchw..U solved 1ts problems wtth the a1rpon, ··-we JUSt don't want tt shafted from one locauon to another." he said. Ken Dehno, assistant city manaier 1n Newp6rt Beach, said he doesn't believe Irvine should be worried about commercial u~ of El Toro AJthough tbe military base was once rccommen(jed by the Southern C:tllforn1a Assoc1auon of Govem- (Plea.e .ee AIRPORT I A2) Traffic. deaths takea holiday Until cycle rider dies in Mesa crash early this morning By TONY SAAVEDRA Of -DMly l'tlot It.fl ~narlcd traffil .smJ a lat.al accident 10 Costa Me~ tollo"'ed a relat1\.el\ calm Labor Da\ we-eke-nd that at- tracted thousand'> of sun Sttk.er~ to art'.'a beaches and Jammed the Balboa Peninsula. No traffic death' were reported on Orange (ount-. treewa)s dunng the long labor Da\ weekend. however minutes alter the hohda) ended a Cost.a Mesa "'om.rn was lolled when ·she "'as thrown lrom a speeding motorc)cle that hit a eurb Beach./A7 . INDEX Won't be lo~g until beach la bacll to natives After the lAbor Day holiday onalaqht of lnlandere went del Mar. watching boat.a aail by and the aurf rumble below. home, half a dozen blrda perched on Arch Rock off Corona Soon they can wander over the aand ondiaturbed again. The "'oman. "'hose 1denttt)' was wlthhcld pending not1ficat1on offam- 11). was-a pa!.~nger on the motorc~cle dnven b' \ 1oor 81ela1at 24. of<. osta "viesa RJdaJa( "ho r«e1\ ed manor bruises dunng toda\ ., I~ 4'1 am JlCtdent 1o1.a\ arn.·,te;>d tor tn'l:'>t1ga- 11on of drunl..en dn' 1n~ .ind' eh1, ular man\laughtt'r \<ltd C my '-k'8 pultlt" \g1 Rill lkthtt·I ~ Bridge Bulletin Board Business Classlfled Comics Crossword Death Notices Entertainment Horoscope Ann Landers Opinion Police Log Public Notices Sports Televlson vteather cs A3 A7-9 C6-a C5 Fortunetellers ·' fu_ture costly? lhl' m11t11rl\\k "'a' •ra,d1n~ l'J\I on .\J.sn1' -\' nut• .st ahuut nl •mph "'hen t •11 J ,ur" r.l.H 1h1.. 1n tl.'r- ..n1111.1 •I \I'"-' \\'Ilk f J'l \did fklhtt"I f 11l \AI POldn '4 ,l'<"ll'dt'J from lht" m. 1i1r,' di.' "h1.t1 '11.1.IJ~d '11nw ca ca C4 C7 C4 A6 A3 C3,8 C 1-3 C4 A2 By USA MAHONEY Of .... Oellr ,... ltefl Laguna Beach may be the first Orange Coast city to give up its ban on fonunetellen-withrn cit)' limits. Bowing to a state Supreme 'Court ruling that a similar fortunetelling ban in Azusa 1s illegal. the cuy ton1gh1 will consider scrapping its ordinance and allowing starga1ers 10 set up shop -for a fee. In a precedent-setting decision. the Supreme Court Aug. 15 ruled that .\zusa could not keep lonunetellers and other s1m1lar bus1nesc;es out ol the commun1t) because 11 violate~ F1r1.t Amendment nghts After the rull ng, officials of Laguna Beach. Costa Mesa. Irvine and Foun- tain Valley predicted the} would haH' to change their laws that ban for· tllnetellang. Laguna !kach ( 1t) Manager !\.en Frank sa)'s the ordinance 1s reall) 10 protect gullthle pcopie from thl.'m- 'icl ves Aslrolog). tea reading. 1:ax-fr~e Police need gun financing thrown a Way by forCourt 'Stalker' susnect protested r By tbe Associated Press residents who captured him By ROBERT BARKER OftlMO.-, ...... llMf Backers of a $25 malhon complex designed to provide housing, meals, Lransponauon and convalescent care to affiucnt S(ntOr Ctllzens may face an uphill battle when they come back before the Huntmgton Beach Ctty Coun·cil tonight to seek ta x-exempt financing. The four-story Palm Court project was approved by the Planning Com- m1ss1on and moved ahead Aug. 7 when the City Council split 3-3 o n whether it should be approved. But the development that includes 192 apanmcnts and a 60-bod convales- cent <;arc facility nee~s four votes to get tu-exempt financing. LSS ANGELES -Unless in- vestigators locate a gun used in some of the "Night Stalker" slayings. 1t may be 1mposs1ble to ltnk the man chased br. a mob and arrested to all the ktlhngs. authorities say Meanwhile, the lead detecti ve on the case said poltcc had erred in adding two slayings to a hst of 14 victims of the killer. And a newspaper reported today that the dnfier arrested 1n the case went unrecognized within a week of the killer's last known attack b) a traffic officer who cited ham for dnvi nga motorcyle without a license Ri chard Ramirez. ·2s. who was arrested Saturday. is bC"11eved to ha ve dropped or thrown a gun while being chased by angry East Los Angeles The mob chased Ram1re1 ahrr hl' allegedly attacked a woman tn a car and reportedl)' tncd to break into several houses "lfwe don"t fin~ (the gun ). 11 ma~ be 1mposs1blc to link some ol the hom1c1des to the '>U'ipcct." ..aid !>henffs Lt. Dick Walls The Shenffs Department dc- 1.cnbed the gun only a~a small-caliber pistol, but a police hullelln issued before Ramirez was captured said the killer had used 22-cnhbcr and 25- caltbcr pistols 1n some of his attacks Department spokesmen said the} could not confirm ne"'spaper rcpo,rtc, that 1n'"est1gators have recovcn·d al least one handgun believed used h) the killer. One repon said mo!it ol lht· victims were shot to death with onc ol tbe pistols. Focus ON THE NEw s palm1stf) and othl.'r lorm!> 01 '>larg.11- ing ma~ dupt: the unsuspecting out ol 1ht'.'1r mane~. g1' 1ng them nothing but faker) rn n·turn. rrank and um, rnl<, ul -.ornt' oiher n t1t''> -.a~ Frank "'111 ask the ( 11~ < ounul w repeal the furtunt•tl'iltng b<ln 1o1.h1th 1o1.a., tirst adoptl.'d 1n l ll'i 1 In 1h platl.' he sugge<,to; hcl.'n'>tnl.( th,· '>1.'Cr'> at a ratt: ul SS(l(J a }Car If adopted a' <,uggt'\tt·c.J the ne"' ordinance regulating lununelelkr' would t:lkt' eflcl.I 1mmcd!ateh 1n· R ichard Ramirez •• ~kan\A.h1k 'ha1tr' \~t I r,inlo. ~alerno. lcad 1n\t''t1~.11me1t the '-i1gh1 Stal lo.er 1a~I.. ltin l' 'J1d Jrlel ll' l'' ha'c linl..t>d 110h 1-l ,1a,1ng' 111 tht· kilter f~q1 aJJ1thHlJI l..dlintt<. "l'fl' m1\tal..enh adJt·d h' tht· I ,,, .\ngt·k, Pol1CC' Dcpannwnt 1n .1 ruhlil 1nh11 ma11on rt'lea'><' \akrn11 '..i1J ··The anlorma11e1n in lhl' hulh 1111 wa\ a collahorat1 \l· l'llnr t tx-1 \.\tTn tht rap1a1n'I nl tht• t~q1 h11m1ud1• (Pleaee eee STALKER/ A2) \ICJd of altl·r lhl' U\UJI llk!.l\ "·llllll~ pen~ . Fran!. rn11mmenJ~ trea11nt1 1ht· matter on a.n urgt'Ol' has1-, ll1 ·a,1rn1 - m11e conlu\lon .1nc.J c.Jisrup11nn Laguna fkat h appcar' tn tx· 1 I grt·.11 1n1erclit to lllrtunt'lt'llt•f\ -\ < 11' Hall '-1.'lrctan ,ontJlled tht• t.f..i, ..illcr tht \upreme < 11un deu\lun 'i.J1d her ph110l' \\J) lo.l fll flOglOf UIO\IJOll\ "'11h inqu1rtt'' lr11m \t't'r' wh1 • "Jnt,·d h> I.no" h1>" '>lion thl'' u •uld o1pc.·n l11r hU\IOC\\ ~ lt"t fl• •I •l < r ·r-1rwJ H1t•IJ ·" \.\,], \1111 Ill 'CJ,ll>J\ JI ( ,,,,,J \k,,t ( •'' l.11 tit<lJ\ Ill Ill u pf $.' '~,. l,1 I fi~ ( .t it •r .1 Jl,~h ... 1, l'.11 r11I rn \Jr (.,J \!JJ rqi.·rt~..! th.it .Jnnlht'I I~· "' 'dl"J Jn Tl~lll drl\lh \Ao l"ft JI ft'';l•d ••0 frn'"•t ' n C lrJn,?C (••Un\ '' t" hl th l"l d.i .• ..:l l..l nd (P leHe •ee TRA.FFIC/A2) Night Stalker's victim:in Viejo now able to talk Prosecutors hopeful he can testify i n LA ·s case against Rami rez B> TE\'E MARBLE OflhoDMly ..... llMI Bill <. .trn\ lhl' \\i\\111n \ , 1 1 "h11 "'a' <;h,11 thrl'l tinll' in tt, 1.1. h\ all' attad .. t•r til.'!11 q·d 1.1 ht Ill• \i1ght .t.tll..l.'r 1'n""''''"''1t111' 1n.J Jhk Ill tall.. JlU>rllin11 111 lri~n.i, .1n, rl'lall' ec, \nJ pn"t'lUIPr' 1r l 11' \n1. ' .1nJ Orangt· < 11unt\ \J1d i.·d·" 1 .lrl hupt"lu l ( arn' 1'\l'nt11.1l " Jt"lk ll' te,t1h .tgJ in\l K ·I .u I Ramm·r tht' p~t' ,u,pn 1 111 '•tthl \t.111..t'r \IJ\IO(t' ( .irn' u1nd1t1nn \.\,,, 1p).1.t.1• d \Jturd,1\ lrnm tnltlal '"'ti "" .1 11 \ I<' l\ " I h, II """ I' \j l"li\ll I ' \ 1 '\\1111 ) Ill .. d [)\ 1 h I '" tl1 ,,, .. 1 I r.111 ' 'P• t-1 'O\.ll'i ,,,1 •1ld 1 .. J.1, 1r ll"n.1n. 'I) \ •u ~ .1)1 ""l ,1 ... \r I tr I.. 'l 11.i.J l'1 •ltl I .1 I .1 ' I ' .1pp('.1 ' ''1.I\ t'< lh• 'l~h: "t.i1!.t'!' I II.ii \ • 11 1 ll .11 'l" "I. pf' 1~d1·1h I th.11 .Lt11·, h,11 I. I• I h1 1,1n I tw "11.d i. l~t' ha' bn r ll nl.1ll\ 1. lin li.l'd t ..i .., 'tl'h '' .111.1 ti '""' -J\'-JlJ ,, 1 •r \u._ _' .1 1.111 ltl1 l•)thl t. hi the ' t "tall..t 1 hr. H 11\11 ( .ir1 ' 111 ·' '1ngk·'''"' h1•nw 11111 hrt-..t1 .1 Pr\< f.h<' 1ntru,k1 ,h,11 1 Jrn' 1 llh I t.1d thrt'l 111111·' .1nJ thrn t°'<•11n,1 111.1 1.11"'<.·d thl mJn' ~~·\t".H .ild (Plea~ ee-e VIEJO/A2 1 --------- And Bob Mandie, who apparently holds the swi ng vote 1n the impasse. 1s rcqui'red to absuun from voung because his family holds property rn the area of the proposed site on an abandoned railroad nght of way and Atlanta A venue. The project qualifies for tax-ex- empt financing because it would provide 20 percent of the units at so- ctlled moderate rates. But Council man Don MacAlhster. a lcadinJ voice against the prOJCCt. today cntacized proposed charges. School belles ring in own f aShion show "Monthly payments of S 1.500 to $2,000 sure as hell don't sound mOderite to me. • he declared. He also auacked the density of the prOJcet that caJls for 48 units per acre as the htghe!t density prOJCCt 1n the city. Other offi cials ~Y that the area. only bl6cks from the bench, may be too ac 1vc for a senior c1ti1cn use. Rut senior representatives feel that the i1e 1s appropnatc and that they shouldn't be shunted to lcp desirable arca.s he mcct1na starts at 7.JO~p.m . > Jeans. oversized shirts most popular ~-. student ~uniform· for return to campus By SUSAN HOWLE'M' Of .. ...,,.. .... Newport Beach bos'lt'I a 1.ane1y of fashion shows where h11h - chcekboned models 1trut t~ lat~11 . but there's a lYJX' of clothe'lho.rse that to many 1s very important -but doesn't qitte make the society paac This display of fall style take~ pla~ not 1n a Bullock's W1lsh1rc des1ancr lounac. but rather 1n whit thoM: in-the-know call "The Quad;' a I centrally-located stage of concrete at Newpon Harbor High hool Yes, this parade of tttn-age ego pr-bed 1n the v1ctone\ of that all- 1mportant shopp1n1 \Prtt wtth Mom tSJUSt arovnd the comer It's time for the awo1ted schoolyard 1rad1t1on ol the unoffictal vet famed back-to- M'hool fl'hton 'lhow The Ncwpon Haroor quad. on<c empued wnh the h111tr of \ummcr. 1' sure to make a fl'hton \ta~mcnl \cpl Q 1ha1 "'tll pt<rhai>-' ht• mMc 1mpon..n1 tti .1 d'n,un 1t·en-agr "-'I than the latr\t {1UH1 hnc lo tht• · MlCl?lttC\ of R1-xkn nm(' met1me\ 1h1• Wt'athcr dt\C.'\n'1 coopcrntt with tht' l htll< "" ot dot ht'' carefullv l:11c1 0111 tht' 111ght hclnrc t ht' big da) "I remtmhcr "'hen 11 dtdn t mattt'.'r If 1t '#1'~ 100 Ot'\lrtt'f OU~dt'-~ W41' going to "'l"ar lh.ll hrand nt•v. l'a hme"' 'weatt'r 11 1t m.u.k ml" \v.t·111 to dt'.'ath." said one tormt'.'r pantt IJl.lnl 1n the h•J~\Chool la\hton \ho"' . uth}anli \tudcnt\ h.n t' .iln•Jd\ 111.rn up a IC'\li nf 1hr11 l.l\t 1lltcrnoon' at the heal h to \hup .at ~nu th l v.i'I See today's special Back- to-Campus supplement for school opening news and more fashion features d11 n• le \hill .11 th1 ~f Jlh h \ l1•I ••I .:1 I\ 11nH ID "' lh their "'""'' .11 11111~ h .. 111d in tlH' altt·rn1>\1fl \ht• ,,11.1 Thr 11111•1 fl 1111· ... ·nt.lll't'' di Bu ll lt"l '\~1tl tht lun, h·ttmr gptht·nng nl 'r\li f'l''t I l.irh.11 ,1nd 11th<'r hti h· Plata Ju.ord1n~ hl l \nO nJnnt'I\ \\hOc'IN\ r111m1~ .. II\ ma ... l' Jn 1nfor · .,pokc'iwoman fnr ll\JlTcx1. \ mJI ~nv; mJ 1 f I \hh'111' ' { iut"I\ I led the hlilk. to .,th,>111 rc'fl<'"'" Jn,t lh1 ••Hf\11t'd \l\lt·, h\ ~ illtc- t'\C'n alr('lld\. ha' nt'l'n '11f'<'n111 • \m11h 1\n thnr ti1'lt din 111 the n~ 11.rnn<'I'\ '-ltd "hnnl \C',H ·\ ">alt''i"'oman 1n 1h1 't 1>un1t i\'1 "r rl' 1,t•l hn11 ,1 v.h11k hun1h ol 111udr ""1111n 11t the· 11C1J1ul.u lkf\Jll-t •UC''>\ lt"itn"' 10,1 '1'"cr,11<·~ \h1ru. · ll'lt Ol \\llf(' \.Jtd \ht' I\ f\1C'Jll\ duo.' "'31d Ont"\: It• irl '' J hc\'Tl' 1111 hU'ttn ~1:'1<1ut S 2~tlOl 1 tn ha\ ... ·11' "Khnol '· '''': (Plea.ee Me FA. m~NS/A2t • ' .. . r I ' . . Al Orwlge Cout OAJLY PILOTITUelday, s.ptembef' 3, 19U AFL-CIO president warns of dangers of imported goods BJ tM AnoeJate4 Prest Americans bit beaches, concens and bl.tbecues, and politicians pre. ed the ficsh at parades in Labor Day tributes to tho nation's worlcen - threatened. accordina to aovemment and union officials, by a tide of imported aoods. .. What l tee today from the arusroots up is not a weak, sick. discourqed labor movement." said AfL.ClO chief Lane Kirkland at a Labor Day brcalcfut in El Paso, Texas. "The tabor inovemeot is the fint line of defense and the only real avenue of Pro&reSS · for the plain people an this country." Kirk.land warned that unions, as well as the economy, stand to lose from the growing trade deficit. President R~ ended his va- cation at his California ranch Mon- day and flew to Independence, Mo., to lobby for his tax reform proposal in his first speech opeh to the general public since he underwent cancer surgery. Sunday he issued a Labor Day messaae urging labor and manage- ment to "work hand in hand to tmprove the position of American products in foreign markets." By midnight Monday, 397 people had died on the nation's highways during the thr=~y Labor Day weekend. The National Safety Coun- cil bad predicted that the death toll would be between 4S0and SSOduring the weekend that began at 6 p.m. Friday and ended at midnight Mon- day. . In New York City, tens of thousands of marchers represcntJng APL£ I pl II Preeldent a-can ...-k• ln Independence, llo .• to kick off Illa tu reform camP&ICD. ' hundreds of unions paraded up Fifth A venue to press for more jobs. "This is the high holy day of the working peoJ>le in this country," said New York Gov. Mario Cuomo, who marched with Mayor Ed Koch. "It's a day to remember the role unions have played in our prop'CSS. It's a da~ to recall what the situation was before unions." Labor Day was wet and windy on the Gulf "Coast, where Hwrica.ne Elena came ashore with winds over IOOmph, ripPincotrroofs, uprooti.na ~. flooding biahways and lcnock- ing out power to thousands of people. More than.500,000 peopl bad evacu· ated in Aorid&. Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana as Elena approached. But on Southetn California's beaches. Los Angeles County lif~ guard Phil Tobar predicted a bigger crowd than Sunday, when more than· a million bathers flocked tQ the ocean. "This is the last weekend at the beach for a lot of kids," he said. "It's.insane, it's cuckoo, it's Valium time," Los Anales County beaches dispatcher Tom Overmire said ... We have 47S,OOO oily bodies anoint.in& themselves in the sun -and 27S,000 of them tried to drink their way throu&h six-packs for breakfast" In San Dieao. hundreds of volun- teers completed a ~foot sand model of"Slecpq Beauty's Castle," which desianers claimed to be the world's laraest sand castle. Beverly Hills heid its first-ever Labor Day bash, With 100 Rolls.- Royoes chauffeurina celebrities at the bead of the parade and gourmet food stands lining its route, which in- cluded posh Rodeo Drive. TRAFFIC SNARLS AFTER HOLIDAY ••• From Al CHP officer. Paul Caldwell said the ~-.-------------------------~~~~: 'h6~J:;;~;ii:x.~.~t;f~?1~· .... 39.9 .dJeon·nation 's highways work traffic was snarled this morning by a light rain and unanentive By die Auoclated Presa motorists. --Traffic accidents around the nation claimed the lives of 399 people over .-"Crash wise, there was not a beck of the three-day Labor Day weekend, the National Safety Council says. a lot going on last weekend. This The council had estimated in advance that between 4SO and SSO people morning, we have fender benders all could die in traffic accidents between 6 p.m. Friday and midnight Monday. over the place," said Caldwell. California motorists had their safest Labor Day weekend in I 0 years, with "People are probably still thinking 44 deaths reponed on the state's roadways, the Highway Patrol reported. For about their weekends. And there's a the same time-period in 1984, 69 deaths were reported. bit of prcap1tatioo causing some slick The Labor Day holiday is traditionally one of the heaviest driving periods roads." of the year, according to the council. The overcast skies and morning About 400 people could be expected to die in traffic accidents during a drizz.le, followed a warm holiday tbrcc-day, non-hohday weekend this time of year. council spokesman Bob weekend that drew more than O'Brien said. S4S,OOO beachgoers, mostly families · The toU last year was 441 over the Labor Day weekend. and picnickers, to H1'ntinl\On. New-The biahest Labor Day death tolJ was in 1968. when 688 people were killed pon and Laguna beaches -where d . th three-da h rd temperatures bit 7S d~ Monday. .;;.";u;;.n;,;;n;:g~e;.;;.;.;.;.;.;;;;.Y~,;,0;.;.1;;.a;;.y~.----------------- A crowd_of 60,000 threw down spaces. He said lifeguards were kept busy towels at Huntington City Beach on "Parking meters were just maxed Monday pulling some I SS people out Labor Day, where lifeguards rcponed out," said lifeguard Brian Malloy. of the water. He attributed the large 30 rescues -50 for the entire "There was no way you could have number of rescues to the warm ocean, weekend. " gotten more people onto our heavy surf and inexperienced swim-Lifeguard Sgt. John Ba.nh said the beaches." mers. 2-to-4-foot waves and riptides caused little problems for the weekend crowds, many of them attracted by the ·Ocean Pacific Surfing Cham- pionship, which closed Sunday. AIRPORT PACT ••• Few troubles were also reported at Laguna Beach, which lured only light crowds of 30,000 on Saturday and Sunday, with 3S,000 showing up on Monday. Lifeguards there reported 7 S rescues for the weekend, as crowds dropped about 25 percent from last year's holiday. Conversely, the Balboa Peninsula was swamped with suntan-oiled tour- ists, reaching daily crowds of more than 90,000. Park.illion the peninsula was. at a premium as throngs of motorists JOCkeyed for t.he empty From Al ments as a possible site for a1rpon expansion. it is not the only possi- bility. "There arc lots of other sites ... No one is pointing the finger at El Toro." Newpon Beach and others working to resolve discord over the airpon sought repcaJ of the resolutlons because they were hindering efforts of interested vc>ups trying to find alternative sates, Dclino said. The repeaJ chaJlies the supervisors· position to one of neutrality, be noted. "It's i ust son of opening the books at this point... We're saying let's open the book and in vestigate all those opponunities." Chino Hills and Santiago Canyon have also been considered as airpon alternatives, he said. Delino wd it would be "too bad" if Irvine filed litiption to block the airport compromise. "There's no intention by the city of Newport Beach to foist any of their problems on another city," be said. FASHIONS FOR BACK-TO-SCHOOL ••• From Al the same stuft." Meanwhile, clothes-conscious teens at Corona del Mar High School surely won't be upStaJcd by their cross-town rivals. Tbetr beach city quad also will come ahvc next week with the colors wom by new and returning students. "I don't think they really flaunt their clothes, but they all look really nice the first day," said a Corona del Mar High spokeswoman. "They all seem pretty summery the first day." Dawn Hannum. of the Red &g department in Robinson's, said the back-to-school crowd 1s beginning to build as the fim day of school draws Just Call 642-6086 near .• She said students from locaJ • high schools and vacationing youths from out of state are buying up the new styles. Typically. two sisters will come jn with a set budget from their parents for their before school year haul, Hannum said. "They'll come in with a set amount that they're allowed to spend, and they'll spend the whole time fiahting on who gets to buy more stuff. Jt's re-ally fu nny," Hannum said. Guess is also a top seller at Robinson's, Hannum sa1d. She added that fashions by Jag arc also very popular this year. Wbat do you llke about tbe Dail)' Pilot? Wbat don't you like? Call tbe number al left ud your meaaa1e will k recorded, transcribed and dellvered to Ule appropriate editor. The same U ·boer answerin& service may k used to record letters to tbe rdltor on any topic. Contributor• to our Leuen column mHt Include tbeir name and telephone number for vertllcaUon. No clr'Cnlatlon calla, please. Tell u. what's on )'oar m&.r \. ClrcMMllon TWIG~ o.:I!': ~~AA~~E Daily Pilat Clwlfled ~ nuea-ten All olMr ....... "*' .. iG-4121 MMNOPPICI Keren Wltlmer Publtsher 330 Wwt.., It. CoaM ..... C.\ ....,..._loo IMO Ccilte ....._ CA 92629 It QurMteed WOtldlrA'ldeY " 1°"' 00 no!'-~~~ 530pl!I c.1~7P"' MCI "°"' OCIP't _. lie Cll9wW'IO S.turOey IJllCI SuNl9y ti WOii dll -~ "°"' COfl1 by , • '" ~ llelln • Frenk Zlnl fdttOr Aotemery Churchmen Controller I 0 I m ll"d ylt>JI 009)' ... .De.__, 'I c~ ..... Tatap."'MM~ Moll °'1111(111 Counly ..___ ,.,_ -- I f ftoMrt L. Cenl1'911 PredUC1~ Manege1 How.rd Mut .. nery AdVef1111ng Otrector OoneldL.....,.. Circutallon Manager Peo01•a.vtn1 C1assmed Olrector '· ~~~~~ ~ Temperatures hitting the skids A WMttw aywtem moYtne aouth through the ttatt todey wlll oontlnut cooing off 8outhern Celtfon"8 through Wedneeday, the NallOnll WMthtr a.r'itOe Mkt. The cout.i .,.... wffl drop Into the eo. tonight end rMCh high• from 70 to 80 Wedneeday. Pertlel c:+oudlnMl wlH_glw way to auNhlne by afternoon. Along the Orange eoeet It wttt be pertty oloudy tonight and Wedneedl)' moml~ becoming tunny In the afternoon, H!Qtl• both dl)'9 70 to 80. Lowe tonight In the eoa. From Potnt Conception to the MuJcan Bores. and out 80 m ... -Inn« wetera, meetly aouth to aoutheut wlndt e to 12 knott tonight end WectMlday momlnt becomlne aoutt'rwelt to weet e to. 11 knota With _1 ]o 3-foot Wind we~ WectMlday an.,noon and evening. SCjJfthweet ewellt 2 to 3 feet. Partly doudy through Wedneeday morning cteatlng In the afternoon. l.-Veg19 .. TS U.8. Tem" Uttle llloell .. 7t ~ .. .. .... ~ IO 78 • HI 17 IO ,. I t MIMll 8eeoll 74 t1 w...-.. 14 ··<t)~ fl"ONTI· Warrn _ ColO..-. St\Ower• Rttn F-.itr•H Snow Occludt O..,.. S111ion11y a,. ~ : M_..l,IOll 12 .. N•'-' W"""' $9M<t NOA• U $ 0.0! OI C:-.<o .. ........... .. 70 ~ 11 .. """" Ol1leM 11 14 AlllwM .. .. ., .. ....,. City 12 72 .... YOltl .. 71 lerMOW t7 74 Al'9llll 101 11 Notfolll. \la. t4 .. Calif. Tem1»9 ., .. 9allim«•. .. 17 Oll*-'9 City .. 71 tlel\09 10I u ~· 72 OIMlla ~ ' .. t2 16 n u ... on.Mo HIOfl, IOw, IOt 24 llOUl'tl endinO 11 I ~ 10 ~~la 14 .. t..one...,,. II ., ... .. IDS IS I.Ill . ts tT 9oliloft 72 ,, ""-"• 12 .. ... ......, II 86 MoNO'M 11 81 lllff9lo 71 u==: If aa lklc.it• M 11 Mt. W1leOn .. .. .. . .... ,_ .. .. Olli#lo c...-7t 11 ~.Or 10 u 17 to lltllll~ lot 71 ~.a.c .. 1' M ~ 17 .. IS ll'rovldeuoe ~ IS .. ........ ~.w.v. ti N =rcny .. .. 70 ., ~ .. u CMrlotte.N.C. II IS S7 aa tana.metdlno .. ., ~ , 11 N 1& 41 P-lllooi. IS 11 .. 72 l'llno :::..tt:Clty ... .. bn Oallt'l9I =:.u ., ~ " 87 72 58 ,.,,.,_ ,. 11 .. ., II Louie IO n IS .. Cle¥llelld 71 :: ti ,..._ Tln"'9 to 1& S--10 ., 51 taftllAM 74 64 ...,_ 72 51 lenllCNI Colllm!M-.Otl. .. 51 tell LMI• City 75 S7 71 .. T"-Vt/llfl>f t7 IO C:O.-O,N.H. 72 103 IO lenDlego 71 .. OelleH"I WCW111 17 74 len.Antonlo .. n ..,, ,rendloO 17 51 Y-""'Vtt 15 .. ..,, .iu.t\,,.R. lenl•..,... IS 81 17 58 ...... 71 u l100lll0ft 77 67 = 70 ttJl'9' tp011 t4 n High. 10w fOf 24 hOut• enclltlQ 11 I P ''" Tl dee 0..MOIMI 92 10 4t ·== Detroit 7t ,. ., DulUlh 56 6$ TOPlltt 92 .. TODAY 11 l'MO t 1 72 T-100 74 8-ldlOw 1:31 p,111 1.1 ,..,... le at T ... t7 72 Surf Report ,... .. SS Wlllllnflotl .. 10 .....-AY ==~ 1$ IO MaMa .. • '"'• 12:Ha111 4.0 .,.. : Wllkaa._ 71 65 l.OCATlON ICZI tHAN t:07 Liil ,. Ot.-F• .. ='-" 1..S fM l'lrtl IOw Htntord n u ,H9wpot1 1·2 poOf a-id lllgll 12:stp,,,, 4.1 ~ 10 S3 Eztended 40lll~.~ 1·2 PoOf ~IOW 7•24 p l'f\, 1.7 HoMlulu • 74 22nd.,,., H9wpot1 1·2 = 81#1 ..i1 tod~y II 7• 1!J,n1., ri-Howton 97 71 llllboeM!lp 1·2 ~......,. 91 ., ~and~ob*and L...-9elOll 1·2 PoOf Weoneedly 111:21 a.m NII flOlll\ Jaclbon ...... 7t 72 ~ w1111-..., H10N 1n Ille San~ 1..S PoOf Al 7: 15 p ITI Jeell_.. .. 72 ...,.,., tol0w70l ... t"9 ........ .... ~ .. Moon"'"·~·· .... p.trl., -.,,__, ST S1 to .. ._*...,_ lrllMd ~ heldlr.mon:~ w~a1 10· a.m.. anc1 "'"891111 Kar-.Clty 1 1 12 i.-In -uppa-.. to_,..,...,., .... -10:08 p.111. VIEJO VICTIM ABLE TO TALK ••. From Al fiancee. The woman, who was able to free herself and run for help, has been guarded by Orange County Sheriff's deputies since the attack. She bas returned to the Christana Drive house only to coUect belongings and ~o longer lives at the house, said Lt. Dick Olson. James Enright, the assistant district attorney in €>range County, said he is encouraged by the improvement in Cams' condition and said he is hopeful that the Mission .Yiejo man someday will be a chief witness against the Night Stalker suspect. Enright ~d it appears that his office eventually will file charges of burglary, robbery, rape and assault with intent to commit murder against Ramirez. . He said the Orange County case, however, would follow the c.asc that prosecutors in Los AnJeles arc as- semblin' against R.am1rez. Enright said if his condition permits, Cams couJd be called as a witness in Los J\ngeles also. "I talked this momina with the proseuctors in Los Anaeles atfd we'll coordinate our case with them." said Enright. "They have the biggest case, of course, so we won't interfere with them." The attack in Mission Viejo, how- ever. fits prominentJy into the "web of evidence" against Ramirez, sajd Enright. He said evidence gathered in Mission Viejo will be" vital to estal:>- lishmg that Ramirez as the Night Stalker. It was a witness in Mission Viejo who netified authorities that a suspicious looking man, driving an orange Toyota station wagon, was seen near the time of the attack.. The witness was able to supply a partial license pla.~ number. The car was found later in Los Angeles and was examined by crimi- nologists in Orange County. A finger- print was found in the car that rcoonedly matched. Ramirez' prints. Enright said this evidence dovetails with evidence found in Los Angeles and Sao Francisco, where the Night Stalker is blamed for a murder and several bu'llaries. STALKER SUSPECT'S WEAPON SOUGHT.~. From Al divisions," said Cmdr. William Booth, LAPO spokesman. .. "Then: might I» some answers that I'm not in a position to know. When it was banded to me, we bad discussed 1t considerably. I asked if it had been blessed by our buddies in the Sheriff's Department. I was told 'yes,' " Booth said. The police bulletin actually had listed 17 homicide victims, including William Carns, 29, the most recent known victim of the killer, who was shot in the; head three times Aug. 2S but not killed. Police said Cams was added be- cause he was in extremely critical condition after the shooting and not expected to live. Cams was reported in serious but stable condition today at Mission Community Hospital in Mission Viejo. Police declined comment on news repons, citing unidentified sources on the task force, that a Los Angeles police officer cited Ramirez for driving without a license within a week of the attack on Cams. Despite Ramirez' resemblance to a widely circulated drawina of the killer, he was not held, the paper said. Prosecutors worked through the weekend to assemble a case against Ramirez, who was born in El Paso, Texas, and recently lived in Los Angeles and °"San Francisco area. Prosecutors expect to file charges against Ramirez by early Wednesday. said Chief Deputy District Attorney Gilbert Garcetti. Garcetti ipdicated that the initial filing. required within two court days of arrest. may not include all the charges to be brouaht against Ramirez. "We will make 01.1r decision based on available evidence at the time we have to charge," Oarcetti said. "But based on the ongoing process of uncovering evidence, we expect ad- ditional charges later if the evidence warrants .... We expect in the next week or so to have additional infor- mation." Ramirez was being held under constant surveillance in a tu&h- security section of Los Angeles Coun- ty Jail for investigation of murder. Sheriff's officials declined to com- ment on his demeanor Monday. Garcetti refused to discuss repons that Ramirez has been linked to satanic activities. According to news accounts, victims may have been mutilated, ritualistic feasts consumed now thru September 30 SEPTEMBER SAVINGS 20o/o OFF ALL BULBS IN STOCK FULL FLAT COLOR DISCOUNTS 4" Pote Reg. ~ NOW '17" flat Pony PKke . R9f. •15• NOW 112" ftat Color PKk• Reg. •11,. NOW 113" flat PRE-ORDER ROSES . SELECTED TOOL& • NOW AND. UPTO 2QO/o0FF SAVE 10o/o Include• rakM, 1hovel1, hedge 1hear1, hand tool• AM LING. ' Newport Nuraery end Garden Center 1500 eaat-coaat hwy., newport beach 644-9510 .. ,, open Mon-Sat 8:30-5:30 Sun 9-5:30 free local dellve s , •I I BU LLE TI N Bo ARD Barbecue to assist assa~lt network . The Orange County Sexual Assault Network as sponsonng Its first Western barbecue from 2 to 7 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 29, at Bommer Canyon Pan: in Irvine. · ~A.N is a nopp~ofit association dedicated to a1d10g v1ct1 ms of ra~, incest and child molestallon. The group is raising funds for the first 24-hour, seven-days-a-week treatment shelter in California for suppon and assistance to men, women and children v1ctim1zed by sexual assault. For ticket information, call 538-7878. Parliamentarian• to meet Theta Unit of the California Association of Parliamentarians will meet at 10 a.m. Thursday, Sept. 5. fo~ the first meeting of the new season. The mCC1mg will be held at the Town and Country Bank 12535 Seal Beach Blvd., in SeaJ Beach. · ' For mort mformallon. call 548-2675. Sernce. council to meet . The So~~h Orang~ C<?unty Community Ser-v1ces Counc1l 1s ccJebraung ns I 0th year of service to Orange County at I I :30 a.m. on Monday, Sept. 9, at , Mercury Savmgs & Loan, 23021 Lake Center Drive, m El Toro~ Chri~topher Townsend, public affairs director of Stein-Brief Group, will speak on "Growth and Development m Orange County: The Next JO Years." The event 1s opne to the public. Admission is $7.50. For funher mformauon. contact Brenda Ortega at 495-4636. CPR work•hop set Earn cardio-pulmonary resusc1tat1on cenifica- tion following a fou r-hour workshop Sept. 28 at Orange Coast College. "CPR for Citizens" prepares panic1pants to t.ake action m unexpected emergencies and those completing the session will receive a cenificate mCPR from the Amencan Hean Assoc1auon. The workshop runs from 9 a.m. to I p.m. in OCCs faculty tiouse. Fee as S 15 per person, and S20 for two. For more information. call 432-5880. Comma.nlcatlon tralnlng Las Olas Chapter of International Trammg m Communication will meet Sept. I 0 at the Gnndcr Restaurant an Wcstrninister. The organiz.auon 1s devoted to improving communication and gli'e'Sts are welcome. Additional information as available by c.alhng 848-7430 or 842-9569. Folk dancing Saturdays The public 1s mv1ted to Israeli and international folk dancing every Saturday night at the Seal Beach Community Center, 3333 Cloud St. 1n Seal Beach. Cost is $4.50. Call Marilly Brame at 859 .. 8344 or Beth Brown at 533-7667 for fun her an formation. Chrlstla.n Women Saddleback Communities Chnsuan Women's Club will hold its monthly luncheon Sept. I 0 at noon at the Holaday Inn 10 Laguna Hills. The theme "Spanning a Yam" will feature a demonstration on homemade sweaters Swallows Needlenest of San Juan C.apistrano. -1 Cruiser$gO back to '50s at Mesa show It was show and tell time at the Orange County Fairgrounds over the Labo!' Day weekend. These vintage roadsters were pa.rt of tl\e Great Labor Day Cruise, a three-day festival of street roads, custom cars and other nostalgia- laden automobiles paraded by members of the Orange County Cruisin' Association. In ·a displa_y reminiscent of the movie .. American Graffiti, .. more than 800 pre-1966 ... cars converged on the Costa Mesa fai!'SJ'ounds . for the weekend rally, which also included a model car show (lowerleft). Many of the classic autos were advertised for sale or, at lower right, "adoption." / __ __... __ _ . { Or1ng. Cout DAILY PILOT /Tueed1y, September 3, 1915 * AS . Luncheon and nursery reservati ons must be made by Sept. 6. Call 364-3201 or 495-4263 for luncheon reservauons and 495-8584 for nursery care. The luncheon costs $7.50; nursery care is free. Huntlngton claBB of 1955 Viet refugees bridging own language gap The Huntington Park High School class of 1955 will hold its 30th reunion Oct. 19 at the Grand Hotel m Anaheim. Information as available b:r calling ( 213) 928-6 77 2 or 923-4222. By tbe Associated Press Ten )'Cars· after a1eon fell. Vietnamese refugee!> in Orange Cot.>nt} are facing a new problem -hov. to communicate with their children Many Vietnamese adults "ho came to the l n1ted States an i 975 could barely speak English and had trouble learning a new tongue .\decade later. English has replaced Vietnamese as the dominant language among yo ung refugees. Tuesday, Sept. 3 "The children who were born in .\menca or ha' l' been here since 197 5 seem to ha ve fo rgotten their natl\ c language.'' Minh Vo. a bilingual educauon teacher. '>aid Sunda~. "The} ex prcsc; themselves better 1n English than m Vietnamese " • 7 p.m. HantlDgton Beach City Council, C1t:r Council Chambers, 2000 Mam St. Wednesday, Sept. 4 Yo spoke at a graduauon ccrcmon't for some 4, students who have been stud}1ng V1e1namese th1~ summer at the V1etnamcS<: ( ommun1t~ (enter 1n Santa -\na • 7 p.m. Huntington Beach Plunillg Com- ml11lon. City Council Cb.ambers, 2000 Mam St. The students. from S to 16 ~ear.-. old. presented .-.l..11\ about problems between themsehn and their oarl·nt' sang folk so ngs and danced in trad111onal coc;tume<. PoucE Loe Irvine bank heist suspec_t .shot five times by police By ROBERT BARKER Ol._o.ly .... IWt James C. Ballentyne, the gunman who allcgedJy attempted to hold up a Crocker bank branch in Irvine Fri- day, was shot at Jeast five times and perhaps more by three Irvine police officers, it has been disclosed. Ballentyne, 62, of Anaheim, was still fisted in criticaJ condition today at Western Medical t:enter in Sant.a Ana after undergoil\g two operations. He's ~n unconscious since he walked oul of the bank at Douglas Plaza, 19000 MacArthur Blvd., with a 4S-calibcr pistol in one hand and a brcifcasc stuffed with $40,000 in cash Fountain Valley A woman, after being arrested an the 16800 block of Mt. Eden on suspicion of drunken driving. as- saulted a police officer Saturday niaht. Police reports said that aficr the officer had handcuffed the woman. she kicked him m the groin four umcs... -... Thieves, attem_plll\I to bur&lanze a home in the 9400 block of Ef Blan.co sometime since Wednesday, leO with lets than half their 1001 after so~e­ thma fr\ahtened them away, pohce reports said. Accordina to the rep<>~ tbe SUI~ b•d placed s I ,49S 1n audio/V1deo equipment and ,1,109 an m1~1laneous item' oumde the in the other. Leaving the bank wtth bank em- ployee in tow, Ballcntyne allegcdl} pulled his' gun on officers who had been alerted that a bank holdup was in process. Three .policeman -a patrolman and two investiptors -opened fire. The shooting has been turned over to the Orange County Distnct At - torney's office for investigation. One Irvine officer has said he's heard runaors that Ballcntyne was shot as many as 12 µmes. Sat. R,ichard Bowman said today that the number of shots hasn't been determined but he said the suspect was hit by more than fi ve slugs. He home but only stole $504 an silver- ware. • • • A buraJar stole a stamp and coin collection, valued at $'180,000. from a home in the ;soo block of Tnnity River Circle o er the weekend. • • • Bufllan, possibly using a pa" k_ey, broke mto MllOoha Cleaners, 18049 Mqnoli&St .. over the weekend .and stole $400 in cash from the register Haattncton a.ch A S700 auitar was reponed stolen from the bedroom or. home an the 17700 block of Van Buren Monday • • • A res.icknt "' the 600 block of I Sth reponcd Monday that ~he \IW R said the bullets ma) ha' e fragmented and caused more than one \\Ou nd ln,est1gators from the d1stncl at- lome) ·s office are probing details of the shootmg and will hand their results over to Irvine officials who will determine ifthe shoottng abided with or violated local pohce depart- ment policy, Bowman said. Ballentyne d1dn 't fire has 45- caJiber pistol, but 1t was loaded. Bowman said. Bowman said pohce don't know what prompted the aaing suspect to allegedly go out and try to ro.b a ba"k. Ballcntyne's wife told her he was aomg to a mcctina at the time of the holdup._ Bowman sa.1d. youna man break into a neighbor's home Monday afternoon The v1cum reported later that the thief had taken SSO in cash. • • • A stereo, a color TV. and Jewelry, valued at S 1,000 was rtported stolen from a a home m tlte 400 block of Coral Reef Monday. . -. . Somume 1n lhe pan week a bura&a.r reportedly stole S600 I!' ;~welry frOm a home an the 2 I 300 block of 8rookhurst trect. . . . \ E.nten na throuah a dog>e door. a bura1ar reponedfy ~tole $1 ,200 1n Jewelry. S25 10 clouuna. and a S7S stereo from a home m the 19900 bl ock of Potomac sometime 1n the pa'lt tv.l'l holding hand-pain ted fan s r O"!e. li ke ~gu~en Da1. 1-t. attended the etas'\ hccauo;e the' fou nd the' "'ere forgetting thl' mcJr ing 01 )lmple \1e1namest' "'nrd\ .. \f\ )On "a~ horn in \ "wn, J. OJ.11 .in·..\ mcn1 an I-ta t" snter an·d '4 ent to ar .\rae· a~ r•e,, h .. 1 Tuan ..aid "He'> no" an the \t n~ ~·.1Jt .in,1 ri '"' 1 n ' . r•w ' ~pent "'Ith .\ment a!"' "I came 10 thl• l n1tcd States v.hl•n I \\JS -t " lJa1 \did "I ne' l'r realh karned ho"' to read and"' n1e \ 1etnJml'SC \!~ mother brought me to the cla"'t'' tx·,,lU-.e she <,.i1d I 1\as for~ett1ng \ 1ctnamc-;e "The onht1mt •.!<'1't0 n1·.1r \ t<tOJ'l'e°""1'Jtd1n.,n "llh mc and m' " 't i,t ... 11c :r.:tn~I\ I ·'J' .:1 ·;1ng \t J r1·J 'tha t he "'Ould 011: Ix· .11'>11· h• l rnn "1:i1,,1:1· at all in \ ICtnamese;-With U\ • "This sc..hl)OI ha., helped me." \did Dar a hu<,k~ lc.'l'n ager who comb\ h1) hair ltke the ~oung Eh 1'> Pre,fc, and "'ears.,., h1tc loafer'> Jnd hlack bagg' pan I'> Hien Thai J Huntingt in lk.:td1 ·•1,1,h nl\I v.11h th rl'1 ~ou ng chlldrt>n \;lid h1' tam1h \.Jnll· t thl t n1ted '>t:ltt'' 1n I q I Tht• l h!IJ n·n hd\ l' ,, Jd ll'-1 I ndl'~ thl r aC>l ltiur \ear., Tha \J1J '\. " ' '.n t 1 'h1·m 1u '>I OJJ\ \ t'l"'3!'1;h''' Dai \dtd hi'> m11ther J ot•c;n 't knt'"' mu,h t ng.h\h hu1 '>hC doe' I. n<rn' · the h.id "'onh · · It I U'-C a hJd "l1rd Oa1 ~1d "11h .1 In"' n ·1 w grounded .. \\ hl'O lht' \ ll' J 'l l''l :1f\: ,JIU~ h.rL: :ht' !i.1<1 I•• \.gu~cn r uan 12 cnrullt·d ht\ ~-\t'J l-l•ld ~·'n 1n lhl da\s becau'>e tht· \O unl<\stn h.1, n11 t k Jrned li;i,,, \ 11.·tnarne'>t' learn J!x)ut !ht \mtr .. .i ".t' •I 1 •, \.gan Hoang 'J •d ''' \ •l tn.!!11l''l "·s ' 11 ,, ·n .1r1('" U\l"m' Thl· ho'·, la.1gu.ige. pw hkm Tu.in ,,11J .in'l'' :r n h1~ parent~· ,U1,,e\,ll1I ad 1u'>tmt·nt 111 th1 \n11:n,Jn "J' •' hie Tuan " a l hem 1'1 and h1' nwthl'r 1, J n .-i.-, :ri n, eng.1nel'r T h1 .in~1;.i~t pr1 IJ .:ir ''.l'TI ·r, :-x '"' :t" , h ,Jr t 10~ j)rn1,k f'l • 'hl \ \1 v.ctl.. Polll l' hl.'11l''l' tti, ,u,rt·d 1' the\ 1c11m ·s '>ll'l''*ln \\ h" '1 r •. J'lixh on another, hJr11.c ~-. . ome11mc \IO(l' Th ir,J J\ a tiur glar. entering thrt1Ugh J • JI 'ildtng glass door br0\tt> int11 J h 'nll' .n tht• 17500 bloc l ol Bt•t I.." .111 ran'J.l ~l·d the residence and '-Ink J ')~<k t '11.k •1 cassette recurdl'r J.nJ S' ,,l(• 1n ll'\\ el11 • • • -\ $20 pur<;c .. ll nlJ.1n1ng ,red1t ,JrJ, and $~0 in l J'>h v.a' rt·f)(1ned ~wlen from Tobin Reali\ '1.$2 \\nmcr A\c., Monda' afternt,nn .... om11me O \l"f the "ee lc.nd a ·burglar $ ~~\) an i0tfa·e cqu1pmcnl from the ~ .. Rrcl'lc Pet Ccmetc-n IQS.$~ Bealh'Bh d lmne .\.handgun and SI \000 1n gold and salver ate.RU were reported stolen from a homr 1n the ~00 blocl ot Roo~velt unda\ night Police re- ports sn1d the buJJlar gained entn through tht unlocked frnnt door • • • E1ght,-fi.,.e ca~s of bct'r 'alued between S200 and $400. v.e re re- poned stolen from trnub 01stnbut- 1na. 3 Holland. Monda\ • • • -*'tarste'm> worth more \han S400 was rtporttd 5tolen from a 19 4 Toyota four wheel dn\lc pickup parlccd 1n the carport of a con donumum romplr' 1n th<' I "400 block of Jordan "'v('l'lut' \1ondav mo.mint • • • Ewin Warren Rodger\. \~ v.a, apprehended ai th( comer ut (.)u1ct- moon and "'1nsa1I Monda\ on susp1c1on of reccl\ mg 'tolen prop- crt} As hlS wamnt'I v.ere from OU \ ut 5t.atc. poh~ e\~ t<"d ht\ N tl to be m t'\Cess of S 50 000 Newport Beach \ s,.,-, tx1c11 n'• t11r 'J.' rn~ rtl'" }!Olen trom a 'kllll'x'JI PJ T t'J ! Costa Mesa ...... l'OJ 0 ! 3 p ll'r IO th~ "'I( l>f "-" ..... ' ' ,h, :' t rt t ~•. n 'It I Ha fr1,n1 \11met1 mC' 'unJ.1, • \I . . . \ $511 l h.1k1 h.inJi".l~ "1•:,1 ,reJ11 card and $'i11 1n J' rl'poned stolen 1rom a 'e~I•'" llondaC1,1c parl ed in J •'I 1;') 'I' t-l~k of .\hal(\ne ~unda' • • • \ burglar re ponedh 'h', l a~h from \\ heclht)u~t' t" l'n ,., :1111 \\est Coast H111h"'a' 'u•1,l.1 . . "' -\ Santa \.1on1ca r"1drnt rt r••rll" f nda' that a lh1rf stole the ,1J l l'" m 1 'To'rs off h 1 he1ge Pol"S4: h<" , "' pa•ked an a lot 1n the 2~\ t'ih>\. i.. • \\. rst Coast H 1ghv. a~ The lo'' .tr', damage v.ere both ~umated at S' ' C '0C "t'r• 'lt'" .1, ,;ar J ... ,,. •..t :l' ' J 'hH~lt' ,, \ ,\t1 \~ i' •'t It J '\ n .... •r n ~ " " ~ 11 \1 ' 'l'" I"• •• 'l'ml•t mt 'u .ta J,, T"1.Tl.t~"a'11.'r.h ' ~ . . . \'' '1c:re11 and ~l '\' "•J"'l''.J .. • • :'>~'< .... v.a' r~p.,nrJ 'tolen Hum ~ '1 t' 1r; lhC' '\ \ • lik~d. "If \.{'\ 3l1,1 \I J.11 P 1.1 l•l' "!'< r ' y 1J lh< th1r' ..i ... ,• ~::-. h \ thn·"' n~ .a rod . i..o.:.., he h<'llr 'l'm "''"J,1~ Seven seized in Sacramento market. restaurar1t holdups ~( R .\ \.1 E"-TO I .\Pl -hotgun v.1eldmg hand1t~ robbed two all·night markca and tv.o restaurants Mondtt' and ~hot tv.o e.mplove"Cs befott polH t took ,1, mcn al'td a Juvenile into cu,tod\ Both c,hoollnl 'I.Cli m, undt'""-rnt _sufl(r) at L ruvcn.at\ Med.teal t.cnler l11t C'l('llt"t "-OUnd\ and were rtpnncd 1n \(nous hu1 unhlc 1110d111on < )nr v.as 1dent1ht"d "Chm Ha mrttin 11< "'ht' .,.,orh .11 ,, ~4 hou1 re..iaurant IJ\ ~'lu lh \a\rl\mt"nto Thr other '1e nm "'3' Ho,1,t1n \1 "-a'i~n Jf a ~taurant cmplo\C't' 1n t.a~1 \atra· mcnto .\uthf\nt1l'\ -.;11J th1• \('\Cn men n.I l L I c \\th! \\l'rt' l!'a\ ding in IV.I ,ar' 'urTndt'rt"d "-1lh1'\ut a 'tru"k "hen tht'\ "r:rl' c,111p1~:J on a lll\ \treC't Ol'J r tht'•l11':Ull•ll'' I 11ne "' the rt,hN-nec, f l)U t)f lh11-.e l3k('n IOI<" 'U\100\ "'ert" t\1<,l<e~ ,,n , h.a ' \'f roh~f" an11 n'~ul t "'1th a dead(\ "-"t'apon Thr' -\err 1dc nt1fit"J ~' P.l\C Pu k1n' 'J :i nt1 \1 1\ ha t.'l l t"c Pr1 l..1n\ l I\ both 111 \.ic ramtnt11 I dth 1 .lmllo ~ti Jddre" unl..nl1"-n .\n\I an unaden· t1heJ IU' C'n1k The o ther 1 ht't<' v.cre relca~d afit r q1.1c<it1on1fll, ""hcn 11 ... , detcnmncd the\ v.err a· Quam tan~\ of lhc ar re'1ed men and v.ere no\ involved m thr n me' Space fixup crew returns to-Earth EDWARDS AIR FORC~ BAS£ (AP) -Discovery's astronaut awooped out of orbit to a pre-dawn de11en landing today to end a sen· sadonal SJ>&cc -,alvaac miss1on that restored Ufe to a derelict SSS million satellite Commander Joe En~e and pilot Dick Covey guided the roo.ton space plane to a touchdown on a hard· OICkcd sand runway at 6: I 5 a.m. l>DT, mnc minutes before sunup, after a 2.9 million-mile journey. "Looks like th is bus ll oomina Hof\en and Bill Fisher rewned and b1a unknown now 1s lbc condition of home.'' En&Je commented an hour clectric&tly cncraited the Syncom 3 Syncom's aolid propellant rocket, car1ierashcllredbrak.inaroekcts bl&h utellite which had been disabled wbich 11 dcsiJned to boost it to a above the Indian Ocean to drop tlie ainoe it wq launched by another stationary orbit 22,300 miles hiJh. In $huttlc out of orbil and stan it on a 1huttle crew in April. its present 23(}.mile-high orbit the fiery dive throuah the atmosph~re on Hushes Communieauons Inc., payload is useless as a communica- a course over t6e Pacific and across owner of Syncom 3, reported that a tions relay station. the California coast north of Los around station had checked the Dorfman said the satellite will be Anaelcs. satellite and found its batteries aod manuevcred in the sun for several Two loud sonic booms cracked as liquid-fueled rocket systems in aood weeks to allow the 8,000 pounds of Discovery descended. Its fusell&e shape, despite four months in the solid propellant to thaw. If It docs ~ot iJistenina in the rays of the rising sun · deep cold of space. h J k Id de clop as it-circled overhead and made its "Outstandina," Engle said Mon-~=~ !~~~d' ;.~~ s t1~u rock;t to approach. day. "Tbat's.aood news." explode when commanded to fire. .. Hawaii volcano eruption breaks three-week •truce' By tile A11oclated Pre11 VOLCANO Hawau -A fiery fountain of lava roared 1,000 feet into the niJht sky as another major phase of eruptive actt vlly broke a three-week ~n~ of quiet at Kilauea Volcano. scientists sa:id. The 36th phase of ~~vity in~ e eruption that bcaan Jan. 3. 1983, started Monday af\emoon ~1t ountaimng of about 100 feet at the Pu'u O'o Vent and ga1ncd,strcna.th as night ~pproaC'hcd, said staff colog1st George Ulnch at the U.S Geological Survey s Hawauan Volcano Jbscrvatory. The fountaining created a lava Oo~ t~at .extended more than one mile to the southeast. "but it poses no threat to life or property at this time," said an observatory spokesman H~-intcnsity xenon lights had illum1oated tbe runway at this flight test center earlier but were turned off before landing because 1t was lisht enouah for the astronauts to sec the strip, I Durina a week in space the SianaJs received from the 7'h-ton l+uahes plans to send the igniti9n stronauts dropped off three com-satellite by Huahcs engineers showed · l Oc 29 ti t l ving munications satellites for com-that only about a (ourth of the liquid Sl&J\I t. . Heart tran•plant pa en mpro merciaJ customers and. durina two fucJ fro:ie in a steering rocket system. "The next question is whether t.hc TUCSON Anz _ Anificial hean recipient Michael Drummond ha~ bold weekend space walks, James van Officials said this was no problem. engine will turn.over," Dorfman said. been taken off a respirator and was able to get out of bed, s111n a chair and watch --- -and they fired up the thrusters to spin Hecalled the repair job a .. remarkable television. and exercise his hands bv squeezing a rub~r bat~. Bu~ while JCPenney Presents ~ ····'-·• Ct100ee one of tt.. ...... pothlt ofter91 95etoun1x10 '10oft4U 5 Chlld'• Color Pot1f1llt Chlld'• ~ 3995 -..........-~ FAMILY PORTRAIT8 NOW AVAll.Aall Sej:>t. 4th & 5th 11AM TO 1PM and 2PM'to IPM the satellite for stabilization. achievement" that "demonstrates Drummond 1.5 now breathing 00 h1s own and keeps showing signs of S(c e Dorfiman P-s1·dent of what the space shuttle and the II 1 v 0 ' '"' ' improvement, doctors at University Medical Center say it is sll too ear Y to Huahes Communications, said the manned program can do. ' decide when he will be ready for 8 human hC:lln transplant. Jan Rooney, ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~! hospital spokeswoman, said the 25-xear-old assist.ant supenna~kct manager, DO YOU HAVE HYPERTENSION? We are investigating a new medication s hown to be effective in t~eating h y p e rtension. Participation in this study includes M.D. Superv is ion, lab testing, ·E.K.G.s, medications, and is free to all participants. For more information Call After 2 PM 640-'7412 the youngest person tO receive a.Jarv'ik-7 pump, rem&l?,Cd in cnucal but stable condit~on today but "his vital signs arc looking good. New Jeney fire deatroya 3,000 job• PASSAIC, N.J. -A spectacular bla1e that destroyed this c11y's industnal center wiped out the Jobs ofup to 3,000 workers and left 500 people homeless, officials said today. The fire,.which one official said could prove to be the worst in the city's history, was controlled shonly before I a.m. today, about l ~'h hours after it was reponed Monday afternoon. said firefighter Roben Weiss. One 65-year-old volunteer firefighter from nearbr Secaucus died of a hean attack while fighting the blaze. Tone waate cleanup fund periled WASHINGTON -Members of Congress are expressmg mostly pessimism about meeting a deadline 10 renew ,he "Superf und" toxic w~ste cleanup effort, now at a near standstill because of the uncenamty on Capitol HilJ. The House, which has the most work 10 do on Superf und. returns from Its August recess Wednesday, with the Senate not due back until next Monday. Between weekends and four days of Jewish holidays this month .. Con.g.rcss has only 16 scheduled work days to wrestle with a complex, contentious issue and get an acceptable bill to President Reagan before the ex1s11ng Superfund law, enacted in 1980, expires at m1dn1ght cpl. 30 '•Poeh' prlaon for Tenneaaee financl.er? li~~~~~~~~~~~I ATLANTA -The minimum-secunt) pnson w.here financier Jake Butcher will serve 20 years for bank fraud andy1x evasion has a fe~-decorated weiaht room and cable TV. but the w.arden bnstles at suggestions tt s too posh. Butcher, World's Fair financier and twice a Tennessee gubernatonal candidate bcfort his bank empire collapsed 1n 19&3. was scheduled to begin his ~nten~e today. Butcher, hoked to 12 Tennessee bank.failures. was convicted in Apnl. Jazz drummer Philly Joe Jone• dead Warning : The Surgeon General Ha s Determ ined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health Kings, T7 mg. "tar", 1.2 mg. nicoune; Menthol 18 mg. "tar". 1 .2 mg. nicotme; Lights. 10 mg. "tar". 0 .8 mg. mco11ne av. per c1g·arette by FTC method. : 19858&W TCo PHILADELPHIA -Jazz drummer Ph1ll~ Joe Jones, who played dunng the 1950s for the Miles Davis Quintet. has died at age 62. Jones, who ~1ed Friday at his home here, contributed to more than 500 record albums m a career that spanned fourdecadts. He was at the vanguard of the evolution from the pre-war big band styles to post-war "cool" Jaz1 Heavy cuualtiea ln Afghanlatan aklrmlah ISLAMABAD. Pakistan - A Soviet assault on gucmlla supply lines m eastern Afahanistan has resulted 10 heev} easuaffies for both the Soviets and ant1-aovemment Afghan juemllas, diplomatic sources said today. Spokt;smcn said the Ss;>victs arc airlifting rein forcements almost daily from the capital of Kabul to the fierce battle raging in Afghanistan's Paktia province. Swedlah heart recipient atrlcken s°10CKHOLM -The first non-Amencan recipient of a permanent I artificial heart has suffered a stroke and 1s tn an mtcns1 ve care unit at Stockholm's Karolinska Hospital. a hospital spokeswoman said today. Leif Stenbefi, 53, who had appeared to make the fastest recovery of any permanent artificial hean patient, suffered the stroke "a few days aao." Uld Karolinska press officer Tania Blanck. I Beirut bomb blast ldll• driver BEIR UT -A car bomb exploded prematurely at a roadblock in Israel 's I security zone in southern Lebanon today, killing only the driver, Israeli milit.try sources and Christian radio stations reported. The Lebanese Arab Socialist Baath Party. whi ch is pro-Synan. claimed rcspon~ib1lity for the early morning blast 1 Byrd •optimlatic' about aummlt aeulon (50 FREE ~ER CARTON!) MOSCOW -Senate minority leader Robert C. Byrd said todav he felt "a little more optim1st1c" about the U.S.-Soviet summit in November aficr a delepuon of senators met for 31/J hours in the Kremlin with Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev . Byrd , speaking on NBC's"Today" show from Moscow, said the senators "came saying we wanted to open a dialogue. We think we accomplished that." 25 great tasting cigarettes ,,_ for the price of 20! ---=~"' ~ R\cb\and ti~ • Leftiata bomb Weat German firm• 1 DORTMUND. West Gennany -The Revolutionary Cells, a leftist terrorist group, claimed rcsponsib1hty today for bomb attacks against two computer finns that caused almost S 1.4 million in damage. police said No I injuries w~~e rcponed in the blasts, which struck companies 1n two West German c1ucs Monday. Sovie ta vie for cheaa champlonahlp MOSCOW (AP) -Challenger Garn Kasparov drew the white pieces. giving him the advantage for the opening game ofh1s second effon to wrest the world chess championship from fellow-Sov1et Anatoly Karpov. Kasparov received cheers from the chess fans who packed Tchaikovsky Hall Monday when he drew the white pieces. entitling him to the first move in today's open ing game. " One fire quelled; eecond raging Fircfir.htcrs in the state of Washington contained the worst bla1e 1n Olympic r'lational Park history while a stubborn California fire that consumed at least 2,08cfacres in a rugged canyon oear Vaca~llle continued to frustrate more than 650 firefighters . The Olym~ic park fire. across Puget Sound from Seattle, may cost taxpayers S2 m1lhon. Rand y Jones, assistant park su~nntendent, said Monday. Authont1es arc looking for whoever started 1t t)y bu1ldmg an illegal campfire, he said. Jn the Vacaville fire, rugged terrain and winds gusting to 30 mph hampered fircfighten' efforts to tame the blaze. said California Dcpanment of Forestry spokeswomitn Darlene Bristol. LA park cutback plan under debate LOS ANGELES -A county plan that would reduce the s11c of El Pueblo de Los Angeles talc H1stonc Park has 'tate and local officials debauna whether it would rtv1tali1e one of the city's oldest areas or subvert it with commerciaJism Under the plan, the size of the 44-aere park would be cut by about 25 percent to make way for con truction of a 2~room Spanish renaissanct-style hotel and a five-level parluna p~c for SSO ears. The park includes the famous. rcd-ttlcd Olvera Street. which is one of Southern California's top toun~t Attractions and draw\ mo~ than two million people a year. Two California women mlutna in Java RANCHO PALO VERDES -A pair of Cahforn11 women have been m1ss1nas1nce board1ngn small boat two weckuao for a4().milc tnp toa remote campinf spot on the Indonesian island of Jav , the father of onc.11ys. R1ckcy Btrkow1tz., 27, of Rancho Pala. Verdes, and )udath Oalc Schwani. 27, of Palo Alto, were last seen Aua. 17 and were considered overdue Aua. 22. ' -... \ Residents mop g.p from stor.m oD Gulf Coast BILOXI, Miss. (AP) -Armed police and Nation.al Guard troops petrolled araa of the Gulf Coast today u authorities and residents bepft lddil!& up the damqe from Hurricane Elena's torrential rains and 100.plus mph winds that s(>liftteted ~ flattened bouaes and Pttcbod trucb like toys. Authorities in Pucqoula -one of the two hardest-h it areas -said that almost every business was severely d&maacd when Elena roared ashore MoD<fay after five days ofzia-zqgjng throuab the Gulf that forced hun- dred.a of thousands of people from their homes in Florida. Louisiana, Miaiaaippi and Alabama. · businesses was ao utens1ve that none could open as u.W today. "Ri&bt now, it'a Ufl\e to get back on o ur knees and get this community ~c~ in shape," said ~son County Civtl Defense Directer Wade Guice. ·~we've been thouah this before down here, and we've always had the spirit 1t takes to comeback and rebuild." Orang• Ca,at OAILY PILOT/Tue.day. September 3. 1915 • Al Alleged. terrorists detained in secrecy HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) - Demo nstrations outside the courthouse where 11 alleaed Puerto RJcan terrorisu art to be arraW>Cd wilJ be even t.araier when the I f arc brou&ht from their secret cells to face a 1u<fac. an orpniz.er $aid. The 11 , wb.o were amona I 7 people named 10 a fcdcra.l 1ndtetment stem· mmg from the Sept 12, 1983! robbery of a Wells Fargo depot in West Hartford. were to be arraign¢ today 1n U.S. District Court. "Damaae to property is devastat- 1naaU aJona the coast, especially some of the areas like Pucqouta, G ulfport. and Biloxi -downtown the business areas are wiped out," Gov. Bill Allain said today u he bcpn another tour of storm-damqed areu. Herb Sully, a Red Cr~s volunteer worker, described ~oula as "bombed out," said.Amcncan Red Cross spokeswoman Terri Gautier in Mobile. "He said there weit trees in half, houses collapsed, scm15 turned over. He said he saw one Goodyear. store where all the~ was was steel &irders. Completely gone. It looked filce one big tornado in the whole town." • The hurricane's highest sustained winds quickly dropped after it hit land just before 8 a.m. By late afternoon, winds had dropped to about 40 flpb, just above tropical storm stiCngth, and aJI hurricane warnings were djscontinued. 1 Two of earllt~:'identa who were allowed to Florida Mll"Ye)' 90me of the propertlm return to Jn Rock beachfront llooday ln d• maced by Ba.rrlcane Elena. Under ugbt secuntx. a military aircraft was used to bnna them from Puerto Rico the U n1ted St.ates late Sunday or early Monday, and they were being held at a location authonties refused to disclose even to defense law.,)'ers. Allain toured Jlfkson County in southeastern Mi=ippi late M on- day and said the ma or of Pascagoula. a city of29,000, to d him damage to Early today, the remnants of Elena were over north<.cntral Lou1s1ana and heading nonhwdt at 12 mph. Schools in seven southern M1ss1s~ sippi counties were closed today because of hurricane damage, said state School Supenntendent Rjchard Boyd. He said no estimQLe of damage to the schools had been made. Allain activated the M1ssiss1pp1 National Guard and a spokesman said about 500 armed guardsmen were sent into the coastal area to prevent loot1ng. along with 200 state troopers and other law enforcement officials. Maj. Gen. Nat Troutt. head of the state National Guard. said reports of looting in Pascagoula early Monday "have not been substantiated." The mayors of B1lox1, Gulfport. Pascagoula and Ocean Spnngs set an 8 p.m.-t~wn curfew. Duslc-to- dawn curfews were imposed in Bogalus and Franklinton. La. Strike marks year of anti-apartheid rioting .. They're not an Connecticut They're in the nonhcastcm part of the country. J JUSt think that l.lntil the arraignments. WC will make aJJ necessary arrangements to maintain stnct secunty," said U.S. Attorne}' Alan Neva Defense attorney Wilham Kuns- tler, contacted at his office 1n New York City said Nevas refused to tell him where those arTested in Pueno Rico w(fC being held JOHANNESBURG. South Africa (AP) -Thousands of students walked out of high school classes today in the black township of Soweto to mark the fint anniversary of South Africa's bloodiest year of anti- apartheid rioting, witnesses said. The violence that bas claimed the lives of more than 650 people. almost aU of them black, began a year ago today. On the second day of a black miners' strike against selected coal and sold mines, both union and manaacment claimed they were win-nina. At one mine> not targeted in the strike, manqement reponed it had started firing miners who were strik- ina to show sympathy with fellow workers. Soweto residents said some stu- dents roamed from school to school, forcina others to leave their classes. The initial walkout in the Meadowlands district spread rapidly across the black township to involve most schools by early afternoon, the residents reponed. c.eremo n1es or protests 10 mark the anniversary. Cynl Ramaphosa. general-sec- retary of the union. said the number of strikers was down to about 18.200 from the 28.000 he said were out late Monday. However. he said the min- ers still were winning their siruggle. Soweto residents said secunty forces d id not move against the students. Because of the anniversary of the outbreak of unrest, school attendance was already low. res1den1s said. No violence was reponed by late lh1s mo rning. Last week, police banned any In the miners' stnke, the firsrcalled by the 3-ycar-old, all-black National Union ofMinework~rs. rpanagement said only four mines were still affected, down from six the day before. Mine spokesmen had no new figur_es. They said onl y 12,400 had been out o n Monda} T he extent of the stnkes could no1 TWA crew identifies killer of StetheITI WASHfNGTON (AP) -Three crew members of the hijacked TWA flight 847 have 1dent1fied the terronst killer of Navy diver Roben Dean Stethem from photographs the FBl sbowed them, the plane's co-pilot said. · "We were able to pick out one of the photographs," from six mug shots, said First Officer Ph1hp G. Maresc.a. Stethem, 23. was shot and lulled when he was a passenger aboard the plane that was hijacked June 14-after talieoff from Athens. Greece. tethem was beaten and shot Jun~ p in the plane's cockpit, and his body was dumped on the tarmac at Beirut lntemauonal Airpon. The two other crew members. Capt John L. Testrake and 8en1am1n C. Zimmermann. the flight engineer. could not be reached for comment Their hom e 1clcphone numbers are unlisted. FBI agents interrogated the passengers and three crewmen afler their July l release by Shute Amal m1ht1amen. r Frerich-U.S. team locates long-sought Titanic wreck found in 13, l 20 of water about 560 miles off the Canadian province of Newfoundland. the Frer.ch lnsututc for Research and Exploitation of the 1he ship san~ deeper into the wa ter and th( lifeboats we.re tilled with "omen and children. Sea said Monday. • The Fre nch-U.S team has not The owners ha<'J claimed the ·suggested bnnging up the ~hip, bul Titanic, the largest \hip afloat when tt has proposed making the sttl' a sea was launched fr<lm Southampton. memonal. be venfied mdepcndentl) Black mmers cam about 350 rand a month, S 1 5 7 in terms of a 4 5-<ent rand. Wlutc miners arc paid about 2,000 rand. o r $900. A s·mall demonstration by Pueno Rican groups was held Monday outside the federal counroom to protest the arrests. • cs PARIS (AP) - A French-Ameri- can team says tt has found the long- souaht wreck of the occinliner Titanic., wnicb struck an icc;berg ~d sank in the North Atlantic on its maiden voyage in I~ 12. More. than 1,500 people di~ in the ship its buildcn called unsinkable. The Titanic was the bigaest. the most luxurious and supposedly ~c safest liner of its time, and 1ts passenger list carried such names as American financier Jo hn Jacob Astor, industrialist Benjamin Gug- aenbeim and Isidor Straus. of Macy's. All three were lost. England, was un~ink.able because it liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiil -.-.-.l-lliii1-•i1-•liil•lii-double-steel hul\ was divided into 15 I ~Hilt~ do it \\ it h .. a p-waterproof co mpartments. A fortune in jewels ,and other ·valuables is believed to have gone down with the ship in the purser's safe. But It hi~ an iceberg that cut a 300- foot gas~ across several of the comfll'i\inents and sank on th( night of -4,.Prit 14-1 5, 19 12. A total of 1.513 peq,plc died. but about 700 managed tq, get to lifeboats and were saved. Among the books inspired by the disaster was Walter Lord's ''A Night to Remember." The highly regarded ftlm of the same name depicted the hours of anguished waiting for help as The wreck, which has been \b( object of numerous searches.. ~s ;t(_;o ~lor Active Children" I , CHILD CARE: ; For Working Parents. After School Activities, j Sports, M.Uners, Art. Ages 5 yrs.-12 yrs. REGISTER NOW 131-1181 Ideal for Working Famllles. Free Transportation. Tuition from $25 to $35 weekly. No One Tumed Away for Lack of Funds. lewport Children'• Center &•lmlSllllOllOL • Gymnastics • F 1tld Trips •Horseback Rldina • Swimming • Aan 2~ to 7 yrs i FIEE 11• l11i1tnti11 ..... ,,,. 114/111-1111 Stanley D. Monson Karen M. Monson Owners/Co-Oittcton 20221 Cypress St. Santa Ana Htlehts. CA 92707 Pr oviding qualfty before-and- after-school care for children In grades klndergarte~th A Part of the YMCA Before-school begins as early as 7 00 a m After school runs as ldte c1s 6 30 p m Program sites Jocat~d throughout rhe Newport/Mesa Schoof D1swcc. serving the communities of Newporr Beach CosrJ Mesa. Coronoa clef Mar. and SanrJ AnJ Heights Y-SUNSH INE COMPANY • I\ IJCt'n\1'•1 I>)' rn .. ""'"'vi Jl•lc 1n.,1 • P10>11Clt\ 1r;1mporr .. 111on 10 pruq1 "''\•ff'\ • Prov•df'S d.i1ly Sn.t< II\ • Optr.itts 11>1ou9nou1 rrit \Cl1<>01 '"'" ,. · H"' wt1Hr.t1nt'C1 qut1..r .. a , ,,, •~1 u ,,, -~ti s a 11'".tOt• ro-cn110 """ ,1 111 • I"''' Mita Q~\ (I •It\ , .... nm ... q I t"l<l !•·P\ ,,.nq .. " •1'01" R~glstratfon B~gfns A ugust 20th I l'f>•Cr II Hmltrdl • \• fl11t •'~"'"'' ,.,~ IY••~.tbk ,,,, (. 'HkJrri -111r-v• t "'''*'" tr,.,l()t ,ttt t 1 "' r''I ,_ .. t . "" .... NEWPORT-COST A MESA YMCA 2300 Unfve Or., Newport Buch 92663 Don't compromise your home and family with Imitation tiles ... I ~' • UFETILES pass class A, the most severe fire tests • UFETILES are available in many styles and colors • LIFETILES are warranted for a lifetime • LIFETILES are easily applied over existing roofs ... Get the tacts. call ,LJ?J,r' .. 1 ,~l'r - 714 /822-4407 • 818 /784·0454 • 8001533-8899 ~Beautifu l f ;:,:'for the good hfe ~ LIFmLE' Corporatlon • Manufacture rs of Southern Ca1ttorn1a s Best S~lling Rooting Ttles ~---.... ~. - ~ u It·~ and pill .... f/1¥ · ~t·dat iH·~-~ t ran<Jl 1 i I izt·r~. h~ pnot ic .... na r- t'ol ic~. a m pl wt a-(I rnirw ... and • .-. I ~ a n l H q >rt ....... a 111..... . \ 11 o f t ht · 111 1 ·a 11 ht· ~ 1h11-.1 ·d l 11 tl H' 110111 t n I addil'lion. \wl. \dlt'11 ta k.·11 .tl11111 ·11r ''''Ii ,1 d ta ... t • r. .. a 11 I w I t't I 1. ti .1 .. '' • · II . But t lwn : ... :t '',I\ nut If ... callt·d Can ·l 111t. ( .1n ·l 11 it .. 111 T 1·-. .. t1dh tn·al:--nlof't• 1wopl1· f11r .1lc-11h11I .t1 1d dru~ prohlt•nt ~ than :111~ otllt'r prl\ .tlt' pr11µr;1111 a\ai lahlt" \nd it ' .. ,1 ,,til.tlilc · .tt ,1 l•H'.d 1·11t1 1- mt11ait~ hn:--pitil W \lJ ~111 1. But IM.·f~1rt • trt'atntt·11t t .111 lwµin . \1111 11 .1\1' to t·an· t'tlolll'h lo 1·:tl l \11d tu d11 111.11 \1 11 1 r-. ha\1' tu rt'roµ11i14 · ll1.1t , .. " 11r ... u1111·11 11t · \11t 1 lo\r ru-.·d~ hc ·lp. If \ntt don.I. \n11 <'all IH · ... 11n · 11 1' 1111•· 1hi11!!. The ilrohlt·m \\ ;11 nnh µ..t ,, .. ,. ..... l~~ talk 1~·Nma ll .' '' ith :1 ( :an ·l nit c·oun~'lor. cal1 "" lotl.I\ al dw 1111ntlHT li ... t•·d lH•l1n\ ur .t'a ll u ... toll-f~t 't ' ,tt HOO-H.) 1-tUl H. CAREUNll ohod y rares th \~·ay ~rt~ <It,_ ( 714) 65()-1()9() C:O~T \ \lES \ '1 EUIC \I. CE"' E~ ll OSPl1~\I. \Ill \14 "ltU\ -.1mn . .... ... .- I I ·'Jerry Brown had his Med/1les, b&.t they never killed anyone lllte Jallsco cheese dld. · · . Gu£sT EoiroRIAL ' More to quality education than the three R'S By DR. JOHN W. NICOLL Just how· should the quality of a school or school system be measured? "' To be sure, when quality is defined in terms ofitems that constitute the input factors of a school system - e.g., wealth per student, class sizes, characteristics of staff~ size and types of facilities -it is possible to arrive at quantified measurements and comparisons. Equally true is the fact that one may measure certain output characteristics, e.J.; scores on tests1 dropout rates, units completed in certain areas, scholarships won, etc. These input and output factors are important and necessary measures of school quality; yet, there is something more: the educational process. This may be .defined as that which happens to children a$ a result of the input factors involved and which results in the output of the schoorsystem. TOii HOUSTON LA clepafJm&JW ~ Jac1 .AIDEISOI and JOSl PH SPl AR ·sattle of sexists ready_ to resume Fireworks seen when equal pay comes up in House It is this writer's belief that there arc at least four major categories of the educational process and that the degree of their presence bears directly upon the worth and quality of a school system. 1. Individualization of the educational process: This may be defined as the status and treatment afforded the individual student. It deals with the way in which a school's program is oriented to the specific intellectual, cogn'itivc needs of each sudent and with the way in which a school meets its responsibility to help young people become effective individuals in a democratic society. Soviets 'stir up pot' against South African government WASHINGTON -The Battle of the Sexists was raging not and heavy in the fiouse when Congress took off for the summer. and there's every indication that it was just a sneak preview of the fireworks to come when it reconvenes tomorrow. What lit the fuse was a proposed study of women's jobs and pay scales an the federal government. But the actual issue-, whether the federal government should act in- volved an the controversial concept of "comparable worth:' or equal pay for 2. Humanization of the educational process. This may be defined as the cardinal fact that a vital goal for education in a democracy is the recognition and preservation of the humanity of the individual student. It is not enough merely to regard him as intelJectualJy and physically unique; each Student must be seen as a human being with emotions, feelings; the whole gamut of the effective component, a being who needs Jove and support and success. 3. Recognition of creativity, originality and diver- gent thinking within the educational process. This is the area chiefly concerned with the existence of maiiy ways of demonstrating intelligence in addition to cranking out scores on PSATs, SA Ts, proficiency examinations, and the rest. 4. Group activity as part of the educational process: This concerns itself with the student as he isa member of a peer group and with the school's responsibility for equipping him to be a successful member of adult groups. It is concerned with the way tie learns to Jive and to associate with other people and with the way in which he learns to work with others for the not-so-uncommon good. It profits societr. littJe and the individual less if the schools graduate skilled intellectuals who are social isolates. Surely, the quality of the process of helping children ~co~e functioning adults, ~amily .members a!'ld citizens 1s as important as the quantity of input and output .. Dr. JoluJ W. Nicoll 11 1aperiJJteadea1 of 1cbool1, Newport-Men UIJllJed Scbool Dl1trlct. Exactly one week ago today Presi- dent Ronald Reagan made a most si&nificant statement -one you probably overlooked because most news~pers played it down, and certainly tele vision news infrcquentJy reports anythina that is sianificant. President Reagan said: "lt would be naive to believe that the Soviet Union is not stirring up the pot against the government of South Africa:· You probably wonder why that is so. The answer is quite simple. The Soviet government as definitely plan- ning either an attack on the United States or a defense so strong it will feel comfortable about' doinJ anythinJ it pleases an Central Amenca or Afnca. And. bf course, a strong defense means a weak defense posture on the part of the United States. The s:ime week that President Reagan made his statement. the New York Times ran a story headed ·"Study Finds U.S. Need for South Africa Metal." Here, in part, is what the Times' story~ys: "The strategic importance of South Africa to the United States has long been stressed by the Reagan Adm inis- tration, but a recent Commerce Department report paints a new portrait of strong American de- pendence on that countr}' for strat~c metals that are critical in industnes ranging from aerospace and pct· roleum to jewelry and glass making." Strategic me~ls. as well as orecious WALTER Bu11ouc1s metals, are bout.ht and seld by the London Metals £xchange. During World War II much ot (1flr strategic metals came from the Soviet Union. Now, according to reports. whenever a person from the London Metals Exchange asks the Soviet Union a price on a str"tegic metal, the Soviets JUSl say none is for sale. It isn't, because they conclude it must be for the United States. You and 1 and other Amcncans know there is no intention whate ver for the United States to attack Soviet Russia; but do the Russians know 1t? No. the y just bdicvc what they want to believe and the fact that Un ited States companies are trying to stock- pile strategic metals is taken by them as sure indication wc"rc getting read y to attack. With Afgha nistan a fact and Nicaragua a fact there can·t be much doubt about the Soviets' objectives. So, the pru4ent observation of Presi- dent Reaaan. It is also imponant to point out that platinum is used as a catalyst to react with other metals. It 1s al~ widely used to make electrical products and 1s an agent in refining gasoline and makingjcwelry and glass. After South Africa. the Soviet Union has most of the rest of the world·s platinum. 16 7 percent. The largest alternative source of cht.omium is Zimbawe, which has 11 percent of the world's ~sources. The Soviet Vnion has 3 percent. Chromium is an essential component in stainless and high-strength steel. For most of its major uses. there is no substitute. The office of Techn ology Assessment says about 90 percent of the manganese imported into the United States is used as a hardening agent for steel, and no other matcnal can be substituted. South Afnca holds 70.8 percent of the world0 s resources. and the Soviet Union has 20.8 percent. Vanadium 1s used as an alloy an itlakang steel and is a key component 1n aircraft bodies and engines. Chromium and manganese arc the best substitutes. I've i.pd a great deal of mail lately with qu~stions. The foregoi ng does not pro vi~ all the answers, but af you want more \drop me a line at my personal offic'a and i'.11 try to put. the answer in su&:ceedang Searchlight columns. , W•lter Barro,.,~• 11 tbe D•lly Pilot'• loud/a~ p~IJ1ber. \ \ . . Somegu;yshaveita11-timesl4\ \ Gun shop worker echoes caution ln face of killer To the Editor: dnnk of water In our Love and War man's files is an historical footnote about Black- beard, the pirate of the Spanish Main. He had 14 wives. Most of them still lived after he was killed in hand-to. hand combat. The record shows they each went into deep mourning. Those sc1ent1sts who daily check out particles in the air over Hawa11 - there are a few. occasionall y -can tell when the farmers in China stan to plow. Am told boiled whale blubber is of a taste and texture qunc lake coconut' meat. To buy a new car an Norway, the buyer needs 80 percent cash. L.M. Boyd 11 • 1yadlc•ted colomn/11. Just a note of thanks for the editorial "Guard Agamst Panic In Face Of Serial Killer" 1 work 1n a local gun shop. and am witnessing first-ha nd all the panic and chaos that people arc eJtpenencang. People from all walk~ of life are purchasing gun s fa'lter than we can write them up -people who haven't a clue as how to ~afel) operate a weapon. I have watched this mindless panic for the past three business days and 11 hasn't even begun to slow down . I only wish that more people would have read your cditonal on the issue. I myselffecl very sa.fe 1n locking my doors and windows and leaving some bright ligh ts on. I am by no means naive to the fact that this 1s a terribly dangerous man; I am merely lcttina my common sense rule over an y fears. Duke won't have easy run in rematch with Bradley The thought sickens me to think of how many accidents y.idl be caused by these panac-stnckcn people They sleep with their finger on the tnajer and arc read y to shoot at anything that moves. The~ could cod up shootana their own child. who is mcrcly,)Valkang down the hall to get a Thank you again for the ednonal. ft affirmed evcf)thing that I have felt regarding the mue of "The Niaht Stalker .. Bradley adviser claims his hands-off approach makes governor vulnerable Some of the youn&er. sclf~stylcd "New Idea .. Democrats around Cali· M.L.J . fomia fear th11 the seeminaJy in· Midway Caty cvitable 1986 remitch between Gov. Oeukmejian and Los Anaclcs Mayor Tom Bradley may look a lot like their 1982 con teat , which ended in an upset victory for Oeukmejian. Clarlfles P .R. campaign costs Amona their criticisms of that the coaltt1on of cities as they Bradley campaian are these: It was articulate th~ concerns ,.,. .. rdina not agrenive enou~, it failed to To the Eduor I thin)( it 1s important to know the~ facts before making an edatonal statement. In your August 14 cdttonnl. "Can dcmocracr, survi ve w1thout P.R. folk•' aid?' you state th8t the c1t1e5 of LAauna Beach. NeWl)Ort Beach. Huntlnaion &achi. San Clemente, . and Th~ Coonty or Oranae County have ha~d a professional PR. person for S2S.OOO. That as not true' The coahuon of Oranic Cou nty c1 ties has coml?11ttcd onl y S6,000 for a penon to coord1natt the act1v1t1e~ of ORANGE COAST Diily Pilat, · -.-make enouah links wnh other Dcmo-ofTshorc 011 The real P.R campaian cratic campaians and its television is be in& sponso~d ~Y th~ W~s~em Oil ad1 weren't in tune with the concerns and Gas -'.'ssoc1at1on 1n hanna the of moat Californians. firm of M1x ner-Scott for a reponed , for those Democratic doubters, six figure,. Bradley's deputy mayor and current Please be more thorouah and chief political adviser had ohc answer responsible Wlth your information the other day: Not to worry. before cntic~ing the work of Oranae Al Tom Houston, the former head < ounty c1t11cn$ and elected officials. or the state Fair Political Practices ROBERT F. GENTRY Commission. sees it. Dcukmcjian Councilmember these days ia playina into Bradley's Laauna BcJch hands. Hi~ alC?Qf style of aovemingl re- rnamina 1n Sacramento mosl or the time and refusina to pt involved in ,,.,,k ZJnl '°''°' Tom Tait M111141Q\nt fOttor Oon ,.., .. , City IO•IO< rouah·and·tumblc matters lih the co ntaminated Jalisco cheese episode make the governor vulnerable, Hou~ ton say~ ~ _, l!ay 01 IN ~ti ]JO """' B•y !I• e ..... AW-corr~• • Bl>• WI Cr ... lheff !t00<1t fdllOf And one recent statewide poll confirm~ that 1mprtu1on. showing Bradle~ would beat the 1ovC1T1or by four pcrccntaae points if their elec· llOn contest were held riaht now. •-C• 12t1e Bradley. of course-. had •n even btgcr leA(t ovtr all Republican com- I crs at a similiar staae four "yean ago and still lost. But lhe very presence of Houston. an aarenivc former aide to ex-Gov. Jerry Brown who bas cleaned house on both Bradley's staff and his city comminion1 Is evidence that the mayor is aetermincd to avoid a disastrou1 rerun. . Houston indicated that "mis- manqcment ln fovemment" will be a maior theme o Bradley's attacks on" Deu~mtJlan. - "Food and A&ricuhure is the most obviously miamanqed state aaen· cy,'' aaid Houston. "He put a arower( Qare Berryhill) in to run a depart· ment that should serve consumers. Jerry Brown had his MedOies, but they never killed af)yone like Jalfsco cheese did. Brown hivould have been personally involved. "But this aovemor took a walk and th as is only one instance or his doing ~It." • Toxac.watte. care or the elderly and veterans afTWin -where depanment employeetused 1Mide information to buy homes at below-market pnccs - are some other areas where Houston says DeukmcJaan can be profitably attacked. long lines at the Depart· ment of Motor Vehicles arc another. "The, governor 11 responible for fhese depanments and they arc just not beina man&Jtd." Houston said. "Anythina lake 1t under Brown and people would ha ve been all over ham ., 'Just a thinker. nnt a manaaer.' But THOMAS Euu Bradley 1s a manaaer. u nothina showed better than the 1984 Olym- pics. But even Houston concedes that Californians are not ".all over" Deu- kmejian. Does that mean the aov- emor is coated with Ronald Reaaan· like political Teflon ? No,. says H'ouston, who has de· tailed polls to back his views. "Oeu· kmejian acts hiah marks for controll· in& the state bud&et, but he's an unknown quanity beyond that to most people. People don't have a likinaorreal warmth forhim . lt'ulso a myth fhat belna tiaht on the bud~t makes him a &ood administrator.' Despite all that, Houston concedes. Deukmc11an Wlll not be an easy mark. He will rai1t more money than Bradley and his appointees will beat the bushes for him. But the Bradley camp takes h~ from the fact that every time De km(J1an blasted Bradley durina mayor's spnna re-elcction dfnt. Bradley's ,tandina an the polls <t.1nt up, peak1n1 with h11 68 percent ~I vote And] says Houston," It doesn '/take many altsco cheeses to start b"1din1 an imaac as a bumbler " Ttomu lllJft 11 • S..u I~· IHllH col1ma111 M ,,.,, tnfn. I Jq'bs of equal social value -has been overshadowed by the rancor of the brief pre-recess battle. lntcrrlpeflte personal attacks, questioned motives and ill-concealed derision have characterized both the public debate and remarks made off the floor. The brawl started when Rep. Mary Rose Oakar. 0-0hfo, introduced legislation ordering a comparable- worth study of federal jobs; 1t sailed through committee and appeared headed for passage. In what Re- publicans call "dama.gc control" and Democrats call "dilatory and frivol- ous" tactics, GOP members in- troduced more than 150 amendments on the House floor on July 30. , The ringleaders of the opposition, Reps. Richard Armey. R-Tcxas, and Dan Burton, R-lnd., claim this was the only way they courd intercept the bill for proper debate, since the House has no provision for Senate-style fil ibusters. Some of the amendments would have packed the commission in charge of the study with presidential appointees certain to be hostile to the co ncept of comparable worth. But there was a strong suspicion that the Republicans were trying to laugh the bill to death. Among the sub1itlcs proposed for the bill by GOP amend- ments were: •The Sexist Socialism Act ... •Feminist Folly •This is What Happens When the Democrats Arc in Control •Being Railroaded Through on a Greased Track •Let's Soak the Taxpayer Ap.in •Done by a Loaded Commission he $320 Billion Mistake "Humor can be used to deftly make a debater's point," said an aide to Burton. Oalcar was not am used. She said the cndmcnts reflected a "narrow and meaning mentality," and showed e pathetic quality of what they arc na to do." akar is a 45-year-old former collt'\ge professor and drama coach. She ~Y become the first woman ·speak of the House some day, and will cc · nly be the next chairwoman of the Ho Democratic Caucus. Usually:; and composed, Oakar was biting ir her comments to our I reporter Stew rt Harris. ~ever ~fore in her nine yei~ on Capitol Hall, she said, has she ficarl 1 such "sexist ... outraaeous" ~tatcment! • as those directed at hJ bill. "There's tla old ada&e my· mother used to say: When you act outT!'ae<>UI comment;t, ou have to cons1.1fier the source,"' s said. •• Oakat nicd, however, thalfS she had call=Armey "an idiot," as th~ OOP co ssman's aide said she had. "I t nk it'• a much too serious i11ue," s~ said. "I never called him any namn -iemptfoa 11 It miJht have bee•." • Oakar includes comments from the Rcapn administration amona the unsavory r~etoric she says has been unlea1hcd on bet bill. Pretident Reapn his called~1i~ of com· parable v1orth "hareotaan~" while Civil ~· ts Commiuion chairman Claren M. Pendleton Jr. hu ll1d It ls "th looniest Idea since 'Looney Tu net came on the ~reen." "ltflas been a ayatematic appf'Oldl to iise th i1 study becaute they..,. 1t ll spill over into the private sec r," said Oakar. NSUMER REPORT: The b- administrat.ion '• policy toward Soviet Union moves in my ... Jtnoul ways. While lta anti-Soviet /hetoric mnain1 as flinty 11 ever, tbe word we eet from Fogy Bottom it that the administration ia about lO end the bin on direct imporu of Russia.a tun that wu impoled more than 30 years aao. That emberao wu evaded by bavi"' Soviet fun pn> cestcd an another country before import to the United States. State Oeptrtmeot sourcet say the direct 'mport would lower the eott of coe&a made with Ru11lan fun. Jed ....,.,.,.. u4 J...,. S,.r .,.. ,,..."" m1e ...... • Orange Cout OAJLY PILOT/Tu.-dey, s.ptember 3. 1988_ * A1 COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TAAN8ACTIOf4S , Al She can have her chocolate and eat it too Business has been sweet for La una Beach woman who sells -and ea ts - chocolates Chocolate lovers from Laguna Beach t9 Santa Barbara can sample Sauser's unique flavored turtles. They can choose from raspberry. lemon, cherry, mandann orange and peanut butter then decide on th ree lunds of nuts and chocolate educauona l services and children's telev1S1on at the Public Broadcasti ng Service, Sauser said she needed httle encouragement to turn what be~n as a Chnstmas gJftmakang project into a new career. ,.. By LISA MAHONEY Of ... Delly ...... l tafl Ahh chocolate. Dark and bmer smooth and milky, sweet, creamy white. Leigh Sauser of Laguna Beach knows the seduction of ch<>s:olate. Gooey turt les, crunch~nut clusters. thickly di pped fruit: these arc what dominate her thoughts every day. But Sauser is not your average chocoholic, though she loves to cat the confection. Sne is a chocolaticre -a chocolate maker. Sa user, 42, is the owner of Azhmerc Chocolatierc , a 21h-ycar-0ld cottage industry that took off recently wnh the additidn of a rctaal outlet at Laguna Village, 577 S. Coast High- way. Business has been so sweet lately Sauser said, that she's hi red nine part~ time employees to help her grow. And someday she hopes to operate a chain of gourmet chocolate shops, says the Nebraska native who knew nothing about business or chocolate making three years ago. Since its beginnings an January 1983, Azhmere Chocolaticre has moved ou Sauscr's kitchen and into a makes · n So uth Laguna. Its wholesale clients a about 50 and ~uh the addition o retail outlet - the company is showing a profit fo r th e first time, Sau.scr said. "If anybody asks af you can ~tart your own bosmess, I say yes." Sauser said. Azh mere confections are hand dipped and perfectl y fresh. Sauser uses !10 preservatives. but plenty of 1magmatton m creating her chocolate fa ntasies. Formerly a teacher and public television executive. Sauser said her ignorance of recipes and rules re- sulted in her unusual chocolates. And I raves from taste-tester fnends con- vinced her she was onto a good thing. Unlike some other candies that have a thin coating of chocolate surrounding a sticky center. Sausef s sweets are mort than 50 percent sofid choco.late. This gives them a soul satisying texture which as heave n ·to true aficionados. Fresh 1ngred1ents and no anific1al additives mean Azhmcre chocolates cost more than many others. Tunics, the most popular item Sauser sells. are $4.98 a quarter pound. Under- standably, Sauser describes her cus- tomers as the type of people who ''when they decide they arc going to indulge, nothing but the best wtll do." Special flavors 1n Sauser's soft center chocolates change each month. In September, it's apple cinnamon; pumpkin 1s tops an October; Novem- ber features cranberry and look for sugar pl ums in December. Sauser's chocolates have a free form sculptured appearance that prompts so me passersby to ask af they arc art work, she said. But the Azhmere style came about quite by chance, Sauser said - j ust th e way she got involved in candy malu ng 1n the first place. Low on funds two years after qu1tt1ng her pos111on as director of .. "I would have done an)thing because m~ mone) was almost gone," she said. Tired of pressured careers, she fou nd melung chocolate, d1pp1 ng yummy centers and dnzzhng the Azhmere trademark atop her conf~ tions an 1ncred1hl) relaxing way to pa} the bills "I Y.Ould be up at 5 a m., put on Mozan and dip my chocola te. I was so happy. )'OU wouldn't believe 1t...Of all the careers I've had so far, at as definitely my fa vorite" Come noon. Sauser would change°" an to street clothes and hawk her wares to gift and specialty stores from San (Pleue eee SWEET I A8) - - ,. OMly ""'" ........ .,, Lee ... , ... A chocoholic who lo•ea her work, LelCh Sau.er of Ashmere Chocotatlere ln L&Cuna Beach ob'riouly enjoy• her work. Above ahe aamptea M>me of the profita . ·it's back to work and there is plenty SPI make~ stock offering accelerated exercise option for hold- ers of Irvine's exastmg public \,1,ar- rants These "'arrants are scheduled lo expire Dec 31 · recent!) indicated that 11 1s explo ring earl) commercial apphcataons of 11~ tech no log' • • • By JOHN CUNNI FF ., ...,_ 4"""91 Retumina to the job scene after lettina the mind, if no t the body, rest durina the summer. Americans are fi ndina that thinas really haven't chanacd that much. Tbe old issues are in the same place they were left last June, ready to be duned and put back into aervice. There is still a budaet deficit, and the national debt oeili na will, as expected, have to be raised apin. The employment situation hasn't chanaed much. Neither have interest rates, the aross national product, inflat ion or the other numbcn by which we rate the condition of the economy. Tu reform? It's rifht where it was a bit tattered from bcana manhandled by those lobbyists who didn't take a vacation. It is still viewed by the ...-ik in the same old way: a aood l'dea, but not when it huns me. A very few issues have become a bat sticky in the hiah humidity, and at least one1 protectionism. has heated to the bo1hn1 point. Ironically, it has done so as the dollars weakens a bit. makina it easier for Americans to export goods. The old arauments among econ- omists and futurists arc right where they were a few months ago. That is. they continue without any resolution in sight, ~ving employment to those who devise them and headaches to everyone else. Will the Federal Reserve tighten the money supply? Will the dollar fall further? Wall the stock market rise'> Will interest rates decline? Wall inflation return'> Wall consumers continue to show a mild degree of confidence? Nobody knows the answers to these questions. but that doesn't mean the search will end. If anyt hing. it is likel y to intensify for the very reasons that nobody ctan prove the other wrong. Only tame and events give the answer. Looking back, some things may have become clearer simply becau,..- .. they have been around so long that everyone has had ume to focus on them. Many observers now believe that loans to less developed nations. for example. aren't likely to brina down the world of international bankina - not when banken possess the skill to renegotiate terms to infinity. And it is probably clearer to most people that budaet cutting is eas1er planned than accomphshcd, since defense is untouchabk and so, it seems, are social we11ifre programs, whk h account for 34 percent of aovemment spendi na. As happens from time to tame an the economic cycle. a desire for the b1' and easy buck has caught hold of millions of Amencans. Business Week mapz1nc enimates that state lotteries now are one of the biaaest consumer industries, with sales up 36 percent to $9.4 billion in the 12 months throu~ June 30 But that isn t the only evidence of a pmbhna spmt. Real estate invest· ment vehicles have proliferated. as they do when money as relatively cas> to come by, and some of them have lost their customers' wa llets and sh irts. This as a recumng phenomenon. and the scnpt seldom vanes. In the latest example, Equity Programs In- vestment Corp. convinced people to in vest in its program of buying single famil y houses, the income from which was known to be 1nsuffic1cnt to handle the usual expenses. such as monpge payments. Unusual buymg and selling of another sort has also packed up. Reading your newspaper, you might wonder what as the business of SPI Pbarmaceutlcal1 lac. of Costa \.iesa announced thal at had entered into an ayeement for the public ofTcn na o 726.666 shares of its common stock. }00.000 shares of which will be issued and sold b) the company, and 426,666 shares of which will be sold by cena1n selhng shareholders. The shares were offered at a pnce ofS 10.50 a sha re Proceeds to the com pa n) irom this offering of approx1ma1el) S2 3 malhon wall be used for acqu1s1uons. workingcapnal and general corpora te purposes The ofTenng "'a~ mctnaged b' Prudential-Bache Securltlts Inc. and Ra1ncber Pierce Reflaea l ac. .SPI Pharmaceu11cals devdops, manufacture., d1stnbutes and sells pharmaceuucal products pnmanl) in the L'n1ted t.ites. "1e>.1cu. Canada. Europe and ( entral .\menca ~ .... lrvlae Sensors Corp. of Costa \.ie\a announced that 11 1s considering an FREE FINANCIAL PLANNING CONSULTATION "Our one year CD rates your interest~' ''9.27°/o · annual yield" r "Now, that's instantly interesting !" busi ness: to ~II goods and services. or 1 • • • 10 I buy up other companies, often I 1' • ' I against their wishes? "' ' ' For the most part. however. th e Jame• Alexiou, If"\ 1ne Sen~ors president. sa1d that the proposed option co uld 1n' 01' e the issue of add1t1onal warrants to holders who choose to accelerate exercise of their e\1St1n g warrants for a specified pnce grea ter than the market pnce of the \IOc k In 1ne ~e"l\ors 1s pnmanl~ engaged in the de' e oprncnt of infrared focal planes and aHoc1ated electronics for use 1n a "'1de 'anet\ of m1litaf'\ aophcauons The compan' has also Httacha Ltd e"cuta'e~ sa' the' ha\C added orders for Soil m1lhon worth of l' S products to ""hat the co mpan) hopes "'Ill be a SJ.SC ma Ilion bu)ang spree that will help ease trade tensions ~tween the t natcd '\tate' and Japan The :m pon promotion ·cam 't\· 1ted .\mencan eompan1c\ 1n I \ states s1:-.:-e 11 amHd more than a "eek ago accord ing tc h1ro "a"ada an C\ecutl\c '1ce pre,1Jen1 <11 Hitachi 1he "orld s fit•" 1arge\I t'lectron..:' co mpan' Opt~n an au ount at\\ estmark an Ci bt.•cor1l' ,1n n, ,.,, r • Cluh mernner Rece 'e one hour rrpt• c O"''"' '<l' n '' " i\n 1ndept>ndt'nl lert1T1ed Finan<. al ,,, .1f'nt" ' h ~.11 · '' nn ,nc:;t c;o .. ,hat h,l\E' \.OU ~ot to g.1 nl Dt'tc\ 1 ... -:n HlH2 "Instant Interest" makes a difference in your earning power! Compare rates. l kpc ,..,,t) 1000 or morl' 1n ,1 12 ·month ( [) ,1t \ \ P~tn10rl... .md ,m .1ml >unt equ \a t•n• 1, -, or \nu• tntal annud 1ntt0rl' ... t .., 1mmed1att''' p l,H t•cl 1r1 \ nur nl'\\ ,h. l tJlJnt L \tr,1 \ 1el d th.ml-.,, to lri .... t,11't lntt1re .... t plu-. <lUtlw1,1:1 nwmbl'r-,h1p n our.'', L''tnr' l uh Comp.Ht' our • 1:t•' ln1 rc,\c;{' 'n11• t ,1·f1 ,..,1;;, p '" t" \( \ \ t•...,tm,HI... business and economic scene. and to MARK some extent t~c J?Oli ~ical scene too. is 1 WEST C A' /I NGS BANI.I'~ remarkably s1m1lar an September to .;:Jl"\Y I ~ what 1t was in June. -- I • • t"RMAAA ',, ,,,; ·t t ··nt• • . 't 1>\\ e great ~rate advan~ 9.00 Current Yiel d• 8.64 % C'urrrnl Rate 10.20 < urr""' ' 1t'lt1• 9.75 t urnna Rart ·c.,.,,.,,,..ICISl'0•~111>•Nil 611 1 m"""'ul!letOOs~ot $'l>OOO l sa•tl'rct•tP"•I f;rc~• .. , .'". 1•1•~ • 1i1 '"'-'"'ll'r •'Cl \ 1 1 i , ' . ' ... ... , .. dtpO '°' Giit t'• 11 lllt lllf!IO .r•t•Ulll'• Int •n1 •H0"'1>¢11f1CllO ""Oil'~ l O!' 1 )6~ 65tn' '•• '•' t•• 11t Hui) r •ta cr1"Wf •:.IO" • ••• YI• ••a; , I tl.."41tUU Ell""'Ot ,.,.., bf •d~O· .. ~ 11 •"' ~ .... l)yt .. '~~···· ~fl"' "' I • • .. ' • -• lb•····. , .• '" • , ... . Open your account today. all the toll-free Financial Line now: (·800-423·RA ~K . ~ Ycan of' Safccy • A 9'CtS Over S7 81lhon \.\ 11h Ill nflkl"i <o('f \ 1n11 c )ranjtt < rn1111 \ I 1111110,1 11111, Great American ~;~:~:,~1!'t' ~:,~~:~.n , .. 11(\ ~;:~:::~~ ~::~1:·1 '6uf advantage bank: Rolhoa P(nlMul11 H11ntm1tt11n Rt.1,h \~11Utr.h "·" !-aplsu no Rtl\< h I .. ~""" Rt;\\~ '(" !"•rl l\t'JI.' h Cit.--~ ~ ...... · L..-... ...., \o J.-·• '"" ~· ....... -.. ~· ..,, t "' '-• ¥\ ""' t I J FSLIC --................. I Ir .llll!f "·'" ( lt'mt"nlt '·'" < lt'mf'ntr '' rmd P1, •' \.tn l1111n l "'11"1rAn<• \\ot"lhr1J~. .• I • ' I .U ~Coat OAJLY PILOT y, s.pteimber 3, 1985 SWEET BUSINESS •.• hompqeA7 Dleao to Santa Bart.ra. Unlike moll other chocolate boxes that bi~ lheir product. Alhfl'lerc's arc made of clear plastic and dcsiped to ca uce. Eallng ·'chocolate -e'icn tlct 1ourmet competitors' -as one or life's ultimate satisfactions. Sauser believes. She points to studies that compare the pleasure of chocolate indulaenoe to being in love or the exhilaration a Iona distance runner NEW YORK (AP) -f.l'le followltKI lt\t I ll'IOWt the New York Stock ExCNlnoe at~• •n<I warrant• that have :a "" ,,,. most rnd dOwn ,,,. moat be on i>trc•nt 1Q 'hanoe r9911rc:1 .. n of ume lor Fr day. :I No \tcurllltt tredl119 below S2 art lftQ· ·1,1ded. Net and Ptrc.t1taoe chanoes ar• the dlffartnct between the ortv~' doaltle orlce and Frldav'a J ~.m. Of'I~. Ntme 1"\l C(l ~ i ~o~w~~~:nd, t'~ I l~ ~. g '!:l • ~~OF~cl ~ 1-HP . s rnd A ~U 111. ~o . 6 n arll n 'l'J 1 p , J onald1011 l o ·• 8 ~ndrsn~rn ~" + ! UP ·1 9 OIGlor 018 + 2 Uo t 10 Varco ~ + y. Uo OTC UPS & DOWNS .. ..-.....,.~-- Name >n~g. ~.~hind Ar ,.ti1tmv1ns feds after poUJldioa out .several miles II proof'. But if consuminf. chocolate is so obviously dellthtfu • what does it take to please a cl1ocolatier who works with the wonderful stuff all day? Says Sauser. "If you really want to make a candy maker happy, you take a bite and say. 'mmmmmmm."' ... Mu1uAL f uNos Mailbox Rentals *7 mo. Mlnl-Storage110-40 mo. with this ad ( 1 roll per person). ONE ROLL OF 100 22¢ STAMPS FOR •2100-good until 1 Oct. 85. NO WAITING IN LINE. ,.; FREE: I e c t r o n i c I a n g u a g e classes Chinese, Russian·, German , ·French • 24 hr Phone Answer '15 mo. Spanish, • copies 5¢ • Fu ll·Serv1ce TRAVEL • Airport Shuttle • Lounge coach chartering • Western Union • Fiim developing • Exec Desk Space '150 mo • Passport Photos '6" 21 56 Newport Blvd. Costa Mesa A «OUIUJ 11t111rwl "/' IO I/ 00, {)()() tll"'"''"" '""9 of I )'Mf uflb 11 S. ()(}() mllflmum Applwl 10 ltrm 11/ I war \uh1t1Jt1f11JI /l'lf>all'r /11r rarly u'flb drOll'l.ll Ann~ ~1'/d IJaStd ~eveo .089% YIELD one It takes you only minutes to get the Money Matrix CD that wor~ best for you. Just decide what amount you want to invest. And for how Jong. , .700% RATE ... . nn rump<iundtng uWri mll'r'sf u ltrfl mt drpt.ru for im11rr '"""' Rat" ~11·"1 and fl'ml.f SUhJ"<I /11 cbon/(f' 1nt/J(1u1 nqllr' Rott tf!« t11'f' tbmuxb \tpltm~ 6, /98$ / • • • COS I'/\ MF.SA WN ~ Bri11tnl St 1r 1> 9800 C1ARDF.~ CiKO\ E l~l'tl (,ankn Cam\r RIHl ~~I Xhl)O lll'NTINC1 TON 81-:ACll "'830 Edl11~1·r Av~ IHH UZ2 l.AGl NA lllll.'i ! 1118' El I oru Rd .. II ZXlh ORAN<j~ 1965 .\ Tu~tin Av1 l)"'q lhlO ~~.Al Bf.~C.11 '«11 P.1nfll 111,t\I llw' "''1-1 AA'~ . 1 l STIN MI F 1\1 lit IH! 1'>+1 t • Div ". \Mt I.I ti ci.e • .,. Oran~ Coaat DAILY Pll.OT/Tuele3ay, &lptemb« 3, 1915 NBU • -~ ~~· ~-- NYSE COMPOSITE TRAN SACTIONS TlllllY'I Ol.111• .... Stocks in decline "'IEV. YORK ( .\P) -tocks suffered a broad decline 1n rclau"el) light trading Tuesda). although the market tnmmed m losses m the final hour t11 The market'!> setback e~tendcd the general!\ lo\>Cak performance 1t d1spla)ed dunns Augui.l. which brokers attnbute largely to investors' uncerta1nt) about lhe economy's outlook A trade group Tuesday added support to those , who think the economy remains 1n a downward trend. The National 6\ssoc1at1on of Purchasing Management. representing corporate buying agents, said a survey pf lls members indicated lhc econom~ wcalcencd further last month. WHAT AMEX DID WHAT NYSE Dm NEW YORK l APl Seo ) PT"ev Adv~nced Todem def. ¥eel '* ~r 1~ ,m AMEX LEADERS Coto QuoTES S...c !Ml wono golO "'•C:• T -·· l~ "'"'""'ii ••••"II S33S is .. o s0 •· londoll a !l.,.,OOl'l l1a1ng W6 00 uP S ' • ,_ .,,.,'IOO.., '" "9 '335 •e 011 so se I '••MNl1 ll•1ng $33$ l • oll S 1 OJ Z..tlcfl l•t• •"~•noon bid we ·s oH SO '>O i.n· ~~ lllU<I H9ft<fJ a ".,....." $3.J& oo 011 s • as I ,...tll.,.d '336 •O up SO • S 1111...,.,d filOtUted '3S3 n "" sc •e NY c-1 QO <l ll>O' "'CY'I" .,..,., SlH ~ •L S~ X, METALS QuoTES ncnangecl 13 oral lt'ues New n gn1 3~ " New IOW' IS 9 NYSE LEADERS NEW VORK CAP) -Sain, 4 om Pf'lct end nt l cnen11e of. 1ne llffetn mosr ecllvt New Yor11 Stock Excne~ '''u''· rr ad l ng n a 11onellv •' more rnan 11 ... ,,,. Travelers ~n C1Jllld1t CMCor asrnAlr~ MewP1r1 Occiden• ?11 Norfnd PS All 1cnttd IB~ AM Core> Soerrv Co Pin AITI w esr1111E1 M1dSoulJI USHOfN Dow JoNES AvERAGES NEW YORK IAP> -Final Dow-Jon" erages tor Ste>. 3 5 OP«!H L.9W M C o 1333.67 1 ' 1m.eo , n 19---( J t mn !tTh m~)H= i~ tnous t'06s 400 Tren ' 197 300 Ulill 1 '26,'iOO 6SS!k 13.619 000 NASDAQ SUMMARY famous 1a b<il.s .. ~'v.'OOVl ?"'~:yi ~l~ r-..or.~r ... ~ ·c;o . .. • j \ / I Orange ~t DAILY PILOTITueeday, September 3, 1985 ' . WHO EL E WANT TO LOOK YO NGER WITHO T GOI G TO A DOCTOR? " . . A~azi~g New _Formula FrOin Beverly I lilts Le~_ You .Take up To 1() Yeats Off · . Your LookS WithOut The ,, FOR JUST $39 And Expense Of Plastic Surgery · Have ·you ever thought about having a /ace lift? If so, perhaps you should · wait. Surgery, as you know, is very expensive, and many people feel it should only be used as a last resort. Not only that, there is now .. a new product on the market that lets you take up to 10 years Qlf your looks without the expense and trouble of going to a doctor. This product was devel- oped by IMrs. Ernest Borg- nine and many of the top stars in Hollywood abso- . lutely swear by it. In fact, Ruta Lee, BrendS:t Vaccaro, Connie Stevens, Maureen Dean, Jed Allan, Bu.ck Trent and Debbie Reynolds are just a few of the impor- tant celebrities who use and enthusiastically endorse this product. ~ascinating. It is a mysteri- ous formula that comes from the roots of a cactus plant that was first discovered by the Aztec Indians hundreds 'of years ago. And, until re- cently,. this remarkabll'. look- young treatment was only available in certain very remote sections of Mexico. This , formula is certainly not cheap but the stars who use it ·say it works like· magic. The entire process takes only half an hour and insiders say there is nothing like it for anybody who wants to look years younger than their actual calendar age. It is easy to, use. All JOU do is apply the formula to your face and wait. "The cream is pink when you apply it, and gradually turns white," says Tova. After it turns white it should be removed. One of . the great things about it is • • • Actually, he looks so g-ood many '' of his co-stars have accused him of ,, having a face lift!. • • "I'm so positive my formula will ta!ce years off your appearance, that I'll not only send you a refund if you 're not 100% satisfied, but I'll send you a free $21.00 gift immediately just for trying it." ~ -Tova Borgnine q ply go ahead and order Mrs. Borgnine's formula by mail or telephone. Then, as soon as it arrives, try it out in the privacy of your home, and take a close look at the amazing change you will see It's easy to order. Just complete the order form below, and send it to Tova Borgnine with your payment--. Or, if you prefer to pay by credit card (Visa, MasterCard, or Ameri- can Express), just-cgll 1-800- 36-TOVA-9 (1-800-368-6829) toll-free at any time (24 hours a day, 7 days a week). in y~ur mirror! After that, if you are not 100% satisifed, simply send back the empty product container and Tova will see to it that you get a complete refund with no questions asked. ~~~~------------------lliiiiiiiil--iiililliiii---iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiii..miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~-=-~- If you are in the Southern C~lifornia Area, you may pick up the pro uct at8920Wil- s hire Boulevard, Beverly Hills, between the hours of 8:30-5:30 Monday-Friday. And what about Ernest Borgnine? Have yo u seen him Saturday nights on hi s new hit T.V. series "AffiWOLF "? If yo u have, yo u probably noticed he looks younger now than he did 10 yea rs ago. Actually, he looks so good many of his co-stars have accused him of having a face lift! But Ernie swears it is not .true and, at .a recent press conference, he stated that the only reason he looks younger today than he did 10 years ago· is because of what his wife Tova has.discovered. What has Tova Borgnine discovered? The answer is I ) • I ' that there is no guess work. It 'knows' w·hat to do by itself!" "But the best thing of all," says Tova Borgnine, "is the way it mak~s you look years and years 'younger with the very first · application. In fact," she says, "this is what I. call a 'no excuse' product that is backed up I OOo/o by my personal guarantee." Would you like to try this remarkable discovery? Would you like to have the ' -' beauty of youth without the scars and expense of sur- gery? If so, here's how you can try this amazing formula without any risk at all: Sim- Remember! You can't lo se money but you can lose years off your appearance! Important -Free Gift: All orders mailed within 10 days will receive a free gift worth $21.00 of additional Skin C·are products. · 4C5T Copyrighl T'OllA Corpo•altOll 1985 r-------------------NO-RISK ORDER COUPON ------------------, ... TO : TOVA BORGNINE (Please 1111 1n and ma11 1ooayl) 1 c/o TOVA CORPORATION VITAL NOTEt The Penthouse Orders May Be Charged I 8920 Wilshire Blvd By Calhng TOLL FREE ! Beverly Htlls, CA 90211 1·800·36·TOVA·9 (1·800·368-6129) " Remem~r It .. TOLL FREEi Dear Tova: Yes! I would like to look years younger by using the formula you have discovered. I am enclosing $39.00 plus $2.75 postage and handling (Total $41 .75). I understand that if I am not 100% satisfied, I may return the unused portion in its original container within 30 days of receiving it for a prompt and courteous refund of the purchase price of the product 'No questions asked. NOTE: Check here 1f you wish to order by credit card -VISA MasterCard American Express CREDIT CARD NUMBER (all d1g1ts. please) EXPIRATION DATE L PAINT NAME SIGNATURE (required 11 charging) ADDRESS CITY/STATE/ZIP PS Checks and t.1oney Orders should be made payable to the TOVI\ CORPORATI ON and Caltforn1a L~~~~~~~s~~~~':.~~~~~~~~4~f~ ~~~·~~~4_2:.2:~~k!~u-------__ !.:.1..9~~--_J . ' I ~· [. I. ' . \ j I ~I J ' ' . 2 -8-* To School/An Adwrtll'ng Supplel'Mftt to the D~Y PILOT/Tuesday. September 3, 1985 ¥aungstliclents r-eali:ze educa!tion important to their future careers 8' .IOYCI ICNIMA.eooLOvtCH ........ C:.r I 151 I ,- "'fM foundation of every •t•t• la the education of It• youth. " -DIOQfllHN Student• wm aoon be exchang- ing their eurfboard1, euntan lo- tk>na end late morning lleep for notebook•. gym ck>thel and homewcn. For <>range ·coat ltudenta. eummer fun 11 over and ~ belt• are ,..cty to toll for aM the Mg«. and not-ecHaO« future poHtlctana, entertalMta, ldentllta and prot.uor9. Kevin Mort, an articulate 7- ~-old whO attend• Gold- envlew School In Huntington Beach, haa air~ determined tt\e Importance of education. "School It ~ for me be-cau• I want lo learn about hlltory, geography and the eolar eyetem, '' uJd the eecond grader. "I think maybe I'll be a farmer," he Mid when uked about hla future career. "But, I don't want to have a lot of anlmala. Just a cow and pig." However, with a tittle peer preNUre from hla friend Scott Wood standing nearbyt Mori made a quick career move. "No, lnttead of a farmer, I'm going to be a gaa engineer Ilk• my dad," he said. Nl,.yMr-old Nlcole (Nicky) Chavira, a dark-haired beaoty, said that without schqol •h• wouldn't be able to do what lhe loves belt: to read. J "At IChool," ahe Bald, "we 19'fn a lot .of things. We learn to read and do math. If they didn't tMCh ul how to read, I wouldn't be able to underetand lettWI or book1." -Chavtra said that her favorite teacher waa In kindergarten. "I _ __, la a B-aver-oe student. admitted that to him, mott 1ehool 1ubject1 are borlng."Klda lhouldn't have to go to echool," he said, "be- cauM the "'bjeeta, with the exception of P .e. and math, are boring." Yet, Lawton la pragmatic about needing an educatlon to further hl1 career plans. "I want to go to BYU and be a pro- feulonal football player. Math help• me to better underatand "At .chool, we lam • lot of tbln6•· II f.IJey dldlJ 't teach u how to rad, I woaldlJ 't be •ble tc> andentand letten or book•: 0 llked Mr1. Saklda because she wu real patient." Chavtra Bald after she gradu- atea from her parents' alma mater, UCLA, she wants to work at her famlly'a ltaUan restaurant. Another honest perspective on · education came from Chad Law- son: "We go to school to get an education so when we grow up we wtll know Iota of things In order to get a good Job." However. the fifth grader who -Nicole Chavira the football plays .. '' When uked If h4l.. wanted to change hla vocational plans of playing football to follow In hla father's footatepa u a hl1tory teacher, he emphatlcaHy answered ... "noway, not the way I feel about school." There la llttle doubt, after talking with theee youngsters, that more and more emphasis Is being placed on students to plan their future goals at an earlier age . "I need a good education IO when I grow up I can get a good Job," aald a emlllng Juon Thoma. a Mventh grader at Meaa View In Huntington a.ch. "School hu·taught me to rMd, under1tand math and IPMk cor- rectly so I can communicate wtth other peopte." Thomaa said hit future plant are to attend high achool, play soccer and then to go to college. "I want to be a profeaalonal soccer player," he said, "10 I hope I wlll get a acholar1hlp to a good college." Teresa Tembreull, 13, la not sure wtlat her future holds. "~aybe I'll t>e a dance or piano lnatructor ... or maybe a doctor. I'm not eure, but I do know that I want to go to college, take a lot of cl ..... and work hard to get a degree," ahe said. , In t'llgh school, the pace really accelerates for atudenta In mal<ng declaJon1 about on their future. Dana Douty, an 18-year-old senior at Ocean View, under- stands that only through educa- tion wtll ahe be able to•achle9e her goal of becoming a lawyer or a contract sports agent. "For me," she aald "I want to (Pleue lee STUDENT /Pace 3) Stadenta will reaume campa.a life nut week. . Eliminate fear on first day of school Schools face drug, alcohol problems A i i 1 l-..n.Ji d t ' --personnel plus a complete rea pr nc pa s ~ eve e uca ion s networkforstudentsandparents best weapon in battle against abuse on how to get help for an alcohol or drug problem. 81 JOYCE 8CHERER-800LOVICH Dillr .... C:.r I If I ...... There Is good news and bad news for high school adminis- trators. The bad news: yes, there stlll are · drugs, alcohol and dls- clpllnary problems; the good news: through education, kids are making better decisions about the direction of their llves. Wllllam Wetzet, assistant prln- clpal at Estancia High School In Costa Mesa, said his school Is attacking the alcohol problem thrpugh education. "Alcohol has always been a problem because It's easy to get and-aoclally acceptable by the kids. Now with groups like PRIDE (Parents Resources and Infor- mation on Drug Education) we are better able to educate the kids and parents about drugs and alcohol," he aatd. PRIDE la a national organlzaz. tlon that provides workshops and seminars for parents and schoof ''Any function we have on campus." said Wetzel, "Is well supervised. The parking lot Is brightly llghted and teachers supervise the coming and going of kids. Most of us have been In the business long enough to know the problem areas on campus." Or. Darryl Stucker, prlnclpal of Huntington Beach High School, said he Is not sure If It's the students or thelf parents "we must appeal to for changes In the abuse of alcohol. piiiiiiiiii~iiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"1 · · Par en ts have to st op pr ovl d- 1 ng champagne for the prom limousines, or a house where llquor is easlly .accessible. The awareness of the problem Is not Just teen-age awareness. but rather a full-family awareness," • LOSE WEIGHT •,STOP SMOKING • IMPROVE YOURSELF fASll.Y- COMFORT Allt. Y-rEltMANENTL Y WITH HYPNOSIS IA Cllfl today for a heatthler, happier yoo ~ f7 J4J 472-HYPNOSIS f4976J 'If 2790 Harbor Blvd. he said. Stucker said there are severa~ factors contributing to the pres- ent campaign sweeping the na- "'H 1 Nl ,, fat Ad•msJ Ste. 309, \l(fTH l T/fJ\ (.'II.. c M Oii [ c ""ARD c HI ' " osta esa 92626 OlflECTOf! tion concerning drinking. "Take for Instance the group MAOO (Mothers Against Drunk Drivers). There are enough angry DISCOUNT TO SENIORS AND STUDENTS CUARAHT£CS R£SUL TS Dear World MY YOUNG SON 1tarta to school um week ... It's all goinc to be eort of strange and new to him for awhile, and I wish you would IOrt of treat him gently. You eee, up to now he's been king of the rooet ... He'1 been boes of tbe backyard ... His mother baa always been near to soothe his wounds and repair his feelings. But now things are going to be different. He'1 going to walk down the front steps, wave his hand. and start out on the gr~t ad· venture ... It is an adventure that might take him acro11 continents, across oceans ... It's an adventure that will probably include wars and tragedy and sorrow . . . To live his life in the world he will have to live in will re- quire faith and love and courage. So, World, I wish you would sort of look after him . . . Take him by the hand and teach him things he will have to know. But do it gently. if you can. He will have to learn, I know. that all men are not just, that all men are not true. But teech him alsO that for every &COUndreJ there is a hero.: .. that for every crooked poli· tician there is a great and dedicated leader ... Teach him that for every enemy. there is a friend. Steer him away from envy, if you can ... and teach him the secret of quiet laughter. In sch..ooL World, teach him it is far more honorable to fail than to cheat ... Teach him to have faith i11 his o.,;~ 'fdeas. even if every· one eays they are wrong ... Teach him to be gentle with gentle people and tough with tough people. Try to give ,my son the strength not to fol· low the crowd when everyone is getting on the bandwagon ... Teach him to listen to all men -but teach him also to filter all he hears on a screen of truth and take just the good that siphons through. Teach him, if you can, how to laugh when he's sad ... Teach him there is nQshame in tears ... Teach him there can be glory in fail· ur~ and despair in success. Treat him gently, World, if you can. But don't coddle him ... Because only the test of fire makes fine st.eel . .;. Let him have the COUf'o age to be impatient ... Let him have the pa· tience to be brave. Let him be no man's man ... Teach him al· ways to have sublime faith in himself. Because then he will always have sublime faith in mankind. This is quite an order. World. but see what you can do ... He's such a nice little ·fellow, my son! By DAN VALENTINE Harbor l~awn ·Mount Olive ~1~n101·ial PHrk · ~lo1·tua ry · \Jausoleums · C1crnatory SERVING All FAITH. 1626016LER AVENUE , COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA 92626 f714t 540-MM • Beautiful parchment copi suitable for framing av1tilable at our office. parents and enough dead kids to make a tremendous change In our legal system In punishing drurtken drivers .. Also, there la Iota of media coverage, even severaJ -graphic ads seen on telev slon, concerning the results of drinking and drlvlno,'' he aald. Stucker said that there Is no way he would turn his back If he saw a kid under the Influence. "I'm going to do what's best for the kid, even though the student may think my help Is not the best," he said. Stucker said there are four steps takttn concerning alcohol or drug abuse: recognition of the problem, discipline, prevention and care. Even though both principals agree the alcohol problem plagues high schools, they also agree there Is a definite trend towards students fulfllllng goaJ objectives. Wetzel said he thinks students today are making better de- cisions. They seem to think things out before acting on impulse. "Perhaps It's the Education (Pleue Me SCHOOLS/Pace 3) SAN DIEGO (AP) -The first Journey to preschool should be taken In tiny steps. says Or. Vernon Faust. a psychologist and educator. It may be a giant step for a child, he says, and small doses of preparation are the best way to Introduce the youngster to school. ------ A professor at United States International University In San Diego. Faust suggests the parent first show the child the outside of the school, then go on another occasion to meet the teacher, and finally visit the school while other children are already attending. "There are two scary elements for a child going to school for the first time," says Faust. "One Is separation from the parents and the other Is unfamiliarity. "By having the mother or father make repeated visits to the school with the child, you not only make the child famlllar with the school, but you also help the child associate school with the 'parenting' figure." He offers these other tips: -Start talk Ing to your child about school at least a month In advance. -"Play" school with your child, Involving other children and parents.If possible. -Sign your chlld up to begin school with another child who Is already a friend. Take the children to school together. -On the first day, have your chlld dress In famlllar clothing, rather than new clothes. A shirt with the child's name on It Is a good Idea, too. Sendlng a favorite stuffed animal along Is also a posslblllty. BACK TO SCHOOL WITH > Sl~t :o~H SHI.•: co .. ONA DIEL MAR MEADOW MAX SOFT COURT MAGICIAN VANDAL EPIC AIR EDGE •33.90 DYNO 33.60 ZOO SHOES 26.24 CURT CANVAS 27 .85 BURT ll.AZER 74. 95 TYPHOON 44. I 5 TURF KING SALi INOS t.a-e5 1 15.00 15.00 13.25 16.65 16.55 17.45 ss.oo OFF StiOa ltlSOU WITH THIS AD °"'° ...... Second Sole 3331 E. Coast Hwy. Corona Del Mar 673-5538 l GEAR UP FOR 8.6CK-TO-SCHOOl ... ~~ Denm~ l,eo.<ls Origjnot 501. In ,..,, COlofi. 100'-COftOt\ stQght leg. &~~~ 56 FASHION ISLAND · NEVJPOITT BEACH· (714) 644-5070 . ' .. J Back To School/An Advertlalng Supplern.nt to the DAILY PILOT/Tueeday. s.ptembef 3, 1815 -3 !,£!_~LS FACING PROBLEMS ••• Ref ormatlon Act mandated Into law the summer of 1983. Stu- dents are realizing that there la an opportunity on this campua to get a good education. lnatead of some bUket-weavlng ctau, they are opting for an English or calculus course. Stucker echoed Wetztl'a evatuatlon of the bllt's Impact on the directions students are tak- ing. "There was a public cry for better education; for kids to gradua'e with competency In reading, writing and arithmetic. The pa ... ge of a major reform ahOW8 the public aupport of better education," he aatd. Stuclcer aa1d ~hat eduoauon hu butcally returned to the 1950s and 19808 In Its expecta- tion• of what a student needs to become competent. · "From 1958 through 1965," he said, "thef'e was a heavy puah for more sctence and math. Every- one was going to be a tolentlat or engineer. Now we are getting the same push; the difference Is that STUDENT VIEWS ••• P'romPace2 have a successful Job and be self- supporting. I know that In order to accomplish both goals. I need a good ed4catlon." Douty, who dMdes her time between varsity cheerleadlng and varalty glrl's basketball, said that school has helped her academically and socially. "I've learned how to cope with a lot of different people. Ocean View has so many students that It has helped me learn how to handle a variety of situations," she said. Douty said If she could cr'9ate a new class for the· present cur- riculum, It would be titted ••Fam- ily.'' "The class would be specifi- cally for problems arising In family situations. It would teach kids how to work out the prob- lema," she said. th• key word today 11 com- putera .. .In the 1905• and 1960att wuapace." Stucker aald education of the 1"970t wu very lndtvfduaftzed;- wrlt• your own currlculum, do your own· thing a. It wu too loose. Growing publlc Mntlment changed that atrue1ure and began atepa for a "'•Jor educa- tional reformation," be said. Wetzel Nld education la once agaJn more demanding. "Kida can't bypaa&cl ..... like they did before. Senlora are now tighten- ing up their lut year. Foyr or five yeara ago, a eenlor could kick back. Now with the atrlcter cur- riculum and the unlveratty regla- trara looking carefully at that final aem•ter, aenlora are having to prove they are aelf-motlvated through their flnaJ aemester." Stucker uld he emphaatzea to students how quickly high school end a. "My point to the kids," he aald, "la that school offers two things: an academic atmosphere and a large setectlon of co-curricular activities. Students can Join clubs, athletic programs, apeclal Interest clubs or song and cheer:· Schooldne Bontnc ap on a llttle math before ecbool beCbul are Dana Cook, 10, Coeta lleea and Matthew Schoenfeld, 9, Bandqton Beach. ' Already atten~ claMfJ9 at Ora.Dae Coaat Colleae ta Karen Sprtnaer. 19, of lrrine, who enjoy• a abort break ln the eb.ade on campua. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- • .. NE\V;PORT CE~TER .. FASH ION ISLAND Fall is in the air at Newport Center Fashion Island. Enjoy a festival of music, the latest in fashions and thirty new stores · opening in the Atrium Court. AL'S GARAGE turns boys into we/l-dre 1_:,sed young men with everything from <ihoe-. b1r Zodiac co Ruff Hewn slacks. Choose rrom assorted sizes and co'.:i.r" SOIGNEE can take you to lunch ar rhe Ritz with elegant style. Build J complete \\arc/- robe with sweaters, blouses. ,k1rt~. bt>lt and evening attire. Near Bullocks Wtl<.h1re THE LOOK gives yo 1i1 the mo't c. urrent fashions for men and women . featuring updated styles with a European influenc P . Shown is the black leather bag from th c·ir la rge collection of accessones CHARLIES, a traditional favorite tor \our Fall wardrobe. Classic styling and cJ,, tinctive dress making offer the pertett f,hh- ion solution.Near 8 u /lock \ V1lshm• ' _...... ··-'""'-til*f•"".,,... .. tl/H ,, .......... , ~ . Use your NEWPORT CENTER FASHION ISLAND charge card at the<.e pec1alt\ stores and restaurants for all or vour (.ii/ shopping needs. LANZ presents 1l5 ne\'\ Fall :,hof:' c olleu1on with all the color and P'<C Jtemen! or thf' ... ea- son. Find the /a_ce'.:!C in tashwn .... ,hoe' dnd accessories from '-UC. h ramou' namt>' a' Echo . 9-We~t and mart' "M USI C IN THE AIR:' redcunng a ft-,f!\ c· ,,,,..,_.£.,t -'flt-,..., '1- ronnH'nC Join u, dJ1/\ throu~h 'ept _!11 \' ..+ .; - Thur~ & Fr1 6 pm -8 pm "at ,\ )un 7_' ~fl-.! T1" 1ui.:1 •d' the center BENETTON torec a't F.1 1 tn f)t' .. t' h ~~t''' l' ~ ,,\. ,i:t r •I l'< If 1n \ear' Sh0\\11 are (\\o 'H'' '"• ,,.. t'( lie> t•1,1: " ' 1· if "1:t 1 \ (/' cfOlt'fb tll '"" 1'<1 {l,Jfll ... #, It , NEWPORT CENTER FASHIO I LAND ' 'f t•t \\,h I , ,,t~ ()l)\f.>• n1enth located 1u-.t oft Pac 111c < 1J.1't H1 ~h" ·'' l>t•f\\ 1•1•11 /,1rnhorPP Jnd MacArth ur Boule ... a rd in '~'' p<>rt Ht•.ll 11 •h\ • r ' " .,... ~.,.,c;~ 'nt' Ht>bll~ I •<U•r & ,.,, """'"' . ' "'. ' iof, 'flt ,,,.. , \* 1 l u.Ai • .. -.1 ~ .. -hi•~ ,, th \-4 f j ..,.,.,,,...,,, 4 ')., "'.,, , t ,,,, '\•If•(·~,,. , --I ' 4 -Beck To School/An Adwrtlq Supplement to the DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, September J. 1885 Varsit:r_look, splas.h_y colors give~ higJ!i marks by students Youngsters will be returning to school In update classic Amert can fashions ., IW LASH the varsity look with emblem ...,._c:-.. , ' 1 cardigans and vests In bright What ecores high marks from splashy colors, the experts pre- echool fashion trend-Mtters Is diet. KlUjut want to baTe fan and Baater Brown apparel leta them with eue ID theee epoa t) Oeece pant Mita. Accordln-g to Blllur Wallerich, fashion director of Saka Fifth Avenue, South Coast Plaza, this fall's theme song could be "Born In the U.S.A." as youngsters go back to school lh updated ctassk: Amerk:an (•ahlon. She aald -ttte school-spirited varsity look with bright "Class of '!6" baseball jackets over bright jeans and fleece crewnecka over bold plaid pants are the "In" togs this fall. The look for girls will be highlighted with tartan plaid and tweed jumpers and blouses with ties. Emblem cardigans and vests are updated with bright ties, cuffed· pl aid pants cropped to the · ankle, and shQrt pleated skirts. Wallerlch said lots of novelty sweaters with appllqued charac- ters such as teddy be~rs, penguins, Bullwlnkles, cars and dogs wlll be popular In acrylic knits, wool and handmade sweaters In toddlers and girls and boys sizes. The novelty sweaters, she said, look great worn over stirrup pants, one of this year's hottest Items. She said boys' clothes also return to the classics with plaid shirts. crewneck sweaters and perennial denim In jeans and jackets. What is out this year, she contends, Is the stlfarl look and knickers. What is relatively new Is what was formerly considered as clashlng -"pattern on pattern" and the "print on print," shown by top designers In palsleys and plaids. According to Buster Brown --Back to Campus W earing the classic Cole-Haan hand sewns- A tradition for the e ducated. 119 Fashion Island • Newport Beach • (714) 759-1622 • Bullocks Wilshire Wing ·~/,-~~~:·-. ,.; -J:r,~~~ .. ~ '.9 .. '. ·"":.. 2 ':. ·• ...,,,':. .... ·!',.s : -;., ......... ·l"irit1 · OAKBR~~~Vl~LAGE SHOPPING CENTER __________ _ End of Summer Big Savings are yours While we make room for Winter Stock! 24351 Avenida de la Carlota, Laguna Hills Sale Just South of the Laguna Hills Mall ~ . .. • • Now Thru Sept. 8th , - Denim, the peremrlal faTorlte .chool fuhlon, llu a new attitude with contem- porary •tyllna. Oatflta (abo•e) are by Gaeu . ~ I and Da.td PeyMr. 'BlCh enertr prlnta brlalhten the aeuon for the yoa.ncer Mt. coOecdon la at Saka Fifth A Tenae. representative Nancy Ingersoll, r.;o~~~s;;~1r-1C"""'=':~-:-::--::---:--::;;iT;-;;-~ 1'The best dressed kids will be wearing pint-size versions of European chic with prrnts featur- ing graffiti, slogans, emblems and quilting." She said Buster Brown's back- to-school collection reflects the spirit of this fall's fashion. The fabrics are fleece, quitted cot- tons, corduroys, a renewed emphasis on denim, knits and thermals. For boys 4-7 and toddlers, the big news Is Insignias and emblems on sweaters, jackets and sweatshirts. Vests are very (Pleue aee VARSITY /Page 5) na.wpon. buxh ~1 fO~uon ~lord , 11'tt6't't ':JJ70 \)..lfl.5(,WOQd Vllklqq 1001 \MZSl>M:xxi blvd I 21~203 3273 po~na '':,south ld ka.aw , 818/ 50't 935~ mon :.hrufh 10t.o9, ~Lutdoy l0to6 t su11d.oy noon to~ GEOMETRY TAKES ON NEW ANGLES. 7acial -'71Z114 ?laie & ?tai!d With Neo-Geo. This season's stand9ut has a rakish charm all its own . .,. Peaks, poincs. angles and imprinted texture complemented by the impact of shine. We make the' difference between ok and extraordinary. Sept. 3rd thru Sept. 6th 1/2~/ce on "Look Your Best for Back to School" ALL HAIRCUT /STYLE & ALL FULL SETS OF ACRYLIC ' 842-2220 l=Ia i ( 0 flci i l ·· [xp!CS6 17455 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach WE'RE A SEBASTIAN ARTISTIC CENTER. ~:..s:::~~~~~,!'::,r:AL. INC. Mistie Centef '• a tr8demanc of lebeetlln 1~ • • . ~ • BIC ahlrta, Jeana, uncon•tructed blazen &net decorated bl&h-top aneaken will be popular on campua. VARSITY LOOK ... FromPage4 popular and will be worn over knit tops with corduroy Jeans or 1will shorts. Geometric print shirts with related plaid sweaters, and mixed pattern tops are also featured. In meanswear. Ingersoll said. there Is also a return to details. such as wing collars .. bow ties and pleats. GrrTS,4-oX-and tOcJdlers, wTII be wearing overalls, jumpers, pants and tops In quilted and padded fleece. Poplin pants banded at the ankle are being shown by Buster Brown. along with "lots of clasps, latches and pockets for girls to keep their special treasures." They ..are also showing long- torso drQpped-walsted knit dresses in asymmetrically banded styles with whimsical motifs. For the high school or college age student. the look is denim with oversized sweaters, shirts and vests. According to a national survey of more than 6.500 under- graduate students at 17 colleges and universities. compiled by Levi Strauss and Co .. punk is out and preppy Is in. ' ihe preppy look outnumbers 'the punk look three to one. When asked to desert-be the f ash Ion look at their school, 31 percent said preppy, 17 percent said earthy. 11 percent said high- fashion, 11 percent said athletic, 10 percent said punk, and 21 percent said other mixture of looks. Oversized shirts, ~weaters and sweat shirts top the basic blue jeans in bright colors and oat- terns. ENROLL NOW Fall Semester Starts Sept. 10th HAWTHORNE CHRISTIAN SCHOOLS ALL-DAY KINDERGARTEN Kindergarten thru 8th grade. • DoOr-to-doar transportation naiable • Before and after school care for • Reasonable bitian students of -.ortin1 parents • Daly p1ayer • Arithmetic, Reaclnc, Spelnt (with Phonics) emphasized • Good disclpine An Elementary PrivMe School of D1stinctton Founded in 1942 IN FOUNTAIN VAUEY: 16835 Brookhursf St. (N. of Warner ) 714-962-3312 Call or Write. for Further Info rmation 1 EDINGER AVE. A SALE FOR EVERY BODY. TAKE 153-203 OFF NYLON WIND SEPARATES. ' Back To School/An Advertl8'ng Supplement to the DAILY PILOT/Tu.day, September 3, 1985 -5 Money's wasted on clothing kids won't ever wear IJ ,EVE .LAJUt o..r,...c..,. .. ,, ••• When It comes to buying school clothing, It pays to be particular. Students' tastes have changed. They are highly Influenced by their peers and are more fashlon•consclous than ever, say fashion experts. "As a parent, It ls Important not only to be aware of the child's fashion preferences, but to shop for quality and value as well, "according to Tina Betesh. co-founder and designer of Choozie Wear.Corp. · Here are several back-to-school shopping tips to get the most from fashion budgets: . -Take your youngsters shopping with you whenever possible. Even young children have definite preferences and favorite colors. Older chtldren can b&qulte vocal about their Ilk es and dislikes. with comments Ilka "yuk, I hate that." Buying something you think your child wlll llke or just because It's on sale Is no bargain If the child refuses to wear It. -Mothers must be aware of their child's taste In clothing. If a child Is set Qn purchasing something you don't agree upon, try to find out what It Is the chlld likes about that certain Item, such as trim, sleeves or material. Then try to gently steer the child to another, more suitable garment that has.some of the ''favorite'' touches. -Be a quality-conscious shopper. A ·'bargain'· that falls apart after a few washings or wearings Is no money saver. To scrutinize workmanship, turn the garment Inside out. Check to see that seams are straight, over-stlched and matched where pieces are joined. Seams.,should be finished with no loose threads to unravel. Stress points, such as pockets and belt loops, should be reinforced with "bar tacks" (over-stitching). Buckles and fasteners should be high quality and securely attached. If workmanship Is poor 1 the garment may not last the season. -Make sure the clothing fits comfortably. Kids grow by leaps and bounds, so It's a good idea to leave some room for growth. Armholes and waistbands should be nonrestrictive. If possible, try the garment on your child before making your purchase. Sizes In children's wear vary from manufacturer to manufacturer. so don't guess on flt. -Children want to dress well and conform with their peers so they don't stand out. If they feel uncomfortable because they believe they are dressed differently, It may interfere with their social interactions. sense of self-confidence and ultimately their school performance. It can pay off In the long run jo listen to what your children say, and to give some attention to the local trends. -Older children, who get caught In the designer or brand-name craze and "have to have" that particular garment, can sometimes put a strain on the famll)l'budget. When this occurs. parents need to set aside what they consider a reasonable amount of money for clothing and help their teen-aQer plan how the money can best be spent. ~ ~~~~~v~ . w 0 ~ I -~-~~~~\ ~ ~cwport Ballet ;\cadcmy rt:W CLASSES NOW Efl¥)l.LING • PRE-BALLET AGES 4 • 5 • 6 • CLASSICAL BALLET-BEGINNING THROUGH POINTE • AGES 7 AND UP • SPECIAL BALLET EXERCISE CLASSES ARE FOR ADULrfS CHILDREN • TEENS • ADULTS 2632 SANTA ANA AVDH, COSTA •SA-M6-7644 Minimize Foreign Accent Change your speech pNnunciation . . ' lnltlal Consultation FREE Call for appointment FAMILY HEARING AND SPEECH 18124 Culver Drive, Suite D Irvine, CA 92715 786-6800 --'-HlclllClnf'• °'Queen's Cup l O'I'" lhJe lcw 11'-cn <!t1d woma> llilcbo6c ~ ~ JQQO Vcv~f" H .te ltnn~ "'-" • • f'f' 'hl • ~~N~M.te ' • .. ,, Buie blue Ian 't enougb for 90me people, r,o they are copyln& a E~pean look by creatt.na their o~ worb of denim art with bleach, dye and paint 6ruahea. Preview our ~rest fall sweater collection ever-Crazy Horft -Genesis -Max Bradley - Shapely and more ... '5 off arly fall aweater in atock u~til Sat. Sept. 7th . 673-4510 3467 Via Lido Newport Beach (Via Lido P laza. next to Lido Cmema) Come feel the Scalidia difference~ -- .- .. Don't miss our back-to-school dream sale. \\e rt> \\r,lpp1n~ uµthe c.l1n1n1t~r \\ th,1 .. pt'l .1 p.H ,h.?t' tn ('t'l1 \Clll ".irm .1nc1 , 11:' 1 >in 'l ll~11u1 th•• ,, 1 1 ~ i \t'.U I 1ir .1 .. h11r1111111 ·11nh "1111 ,ll' "·" .. ~11" 1111,1 "'<1' "l' '-11 ,Hldt.t lln\11.n 111lll11fl1•r .ind h·.~tl11·1 ptlltt'-' I 11tnh111,tlll Ill 'ttHI II 111\C' 1'11· ltl\11.. .111d 11111 111 11\11 "llllt'I 111111\ I t•,1th1'1'\ d1 t\\ r , , •ml! 1rtt•r \nd 11ur ptl 11 1\\" '"'ii I h1 • p \rnr .. lt't'I' 11.., 1 dr1 Hll "'" ~ l\\111 11·q '125 l ull '~I~ '. 52 South Cont Ptaza only lower level· near Nordstrom ' . ' ..... _. '.'ht1 '166 •q -•22 1 (i14l 549-9046 PM1e ~ ac~t• .. 1 - 8 -Beck To School/ An Advertll&ng Supplemen1 to the DAILY PILOT /Tueed~. September 3, 1985 _. -Wh~r-e' s yoUr child's sehool?. Check di!!ectory:~ .,,...,~.Tai .............. The fOllowtng llet lncludel the ta-..t Information on the MVefl echool da.trkrta along the Orange Co.at. Addltlonal tnformetton fmlY be obtained by calllng your dtltrict office. NIWPORT ... U ut• ID ICHOOL D1811UCT 1801 18th St., Newport Beach K-12 Enrollment 18,284 lohool8: Andenon K-~. 1900 Port Sea- bourne Way, Newport Beach 92880 Bruce Crockard, Prlnclpal -7~90 8eoll .., Conttnuetlon High, 390 Monte Vista Ave., Costa M ... 92827 St., Cotta M ... 92828 Betty Kratzte, Prtnclpal 556-34'78 CeHfornle K-8, 3232 Callfornla St., Cotta M ... 92828 Scott Paulaen, Prlnclpal - 556-34'88 Beac:tl 92860 Dennie Evan1, Principal -780-~320 Coete ..... Hlah, 2850 Fair- view Road, Coata J.4 ... 92828 Frank lnfuslno, Prlncipal - 556-3~ Davia 7-8, 1050 Arlington Drive, Coate Mesa 92626 Paul Twedt, Prlnclpal - 760-34~0 ••tenole High, 2323 Plac.ntla Ave., Cotta Mesa 92828 Robert Francy, Prlnclpal --. 7&o.3410 Harbor View K-8, 900 Gold- enrod Ave., Corona det Mar 92625 . 8111 Knight, Prlnclpal 760-34'16 KlllJbrook• K .. 0 ,3155 Klllybrooke ne, Cotta M .. 92828 Le¥( Fannon, Prlnclpal - 558-34'84' ~. i 92863 780-3200 Biii Kappele, Prlnclpal - 780-3450 ..., Street K-6, 3100 Bear Coalege Park K-6, 2380 Notre Dame Road, Costa Mesa 92826 Michael Hiii, Prlnclpal - 556-3476 Corona del Mer Hlah 7-12, 2101 Eastblutf Drive, Newport Ken · Kllllan, Prlnclpal - 556-3430 •nelgn 7-8, 200 Cliff Drive, Newport Beach 92660 Larry Alford, Prlnclpal - 760-3472 Kai.., K-8 , 2130 Santa Ana Ave., Coata Mesa '2827 Mettnen K-8, 2100 Martnera Drive, Newport a,ach 928e0 Alvln Zeidman, Prlnclpal - 760-34'66 Newport 11ementerr K-e. (Pl ....... ecaooU/P7J ,J How to briihten test-terror blues •1 The Aleocleted ~ notes on the lectures In outllne ·roo many atudents spend too form, developing a personal much time worrying about achool shod hand so they can take exama and not enough time accurate notes qulckly. preparing for them, aaya the Other suggestions offered by founder of the nation'• largest Kaplan Include: teet-preparatton program. -As you read textbooks and It'• called the test-terror blues, other materlals, underllne the and whether tt '1 a apeltlng quiz, a main polnta of each section with a mid-term, the SAT or a graduate hlghllghtlng pen, then summarize re.cord examination, taking the these points In your own words In Big T•t toom1 for many aa a fate the margin. worM than death. -When you finish a textbook Symptoms Include butterfttes chapter, answer the questions at In the 1tomach, sweaty paJm1, the end and then check your temporary amnesia and heart-answers against a study guide or stopping anxiety. with your teacher. "But students don't have to -Don't just memorize lnfor- sutfer to be high scorers," says matlon -make sure you under- Stanley H. Kaplan, pr..ident of 1tand the principles Involved and the Stanley H. Kaplan Educa-how you solved the problems tlonal Center, which haa more before going on to the next than 120 permanent and 250 chapter. aatefllte center• In the United -Keep almpllfylng your notes States, Canada and Puerto Rico. as you study so that eventually "What they do have to do Is one or two key words wlll sum- learn how to study, review sub-marlze whole concepts. 0..., ,.._. ....... 11J C""1 YMMllMa Ora.nee Coaat Collete freehman Bret Johna appean to take cluaee, lnclacllnC euma, In atrtde. jeot content with greater under--Develop an overview of the standing, Improve reading com-materlal by understanding how prehenslon and analyze and or-chapters relate to• each other to ganlze materials." form 8' unified body of knowl-enough time to clear up any during the test; If you eat too To overcome their pre-test edge. questions you might have. Take It much, the digestive process may jitters and perform to their best -Don't cram for exams at the easy the night before a test an<L lU9J>lood away from the brain, abllltles, Kaplan says, students last minute, but start reviewing get a good night's sleep. .,miking you feel light-headed. should start from the first day of your notes about two weeks -For standardized teats, see -If the teacher allows, take class to take well-orQanlzed before the test. This wtll give you If you can practice on past tests some raisins or candy Into the r=========================================i to get used to the type of test for a quick energy break and problems you'll be asked to to relieve tension. solve. · -Always leave extra space Start ofi on right foot with grooming habits Sy the AMOClated Pr .. • Putting their beat foot forward ahoul~ be taken llterally by school-age youngsters, In the opinion of a Chicago podiatrist. "Parents should encourage their chlldren to adopt foot grooming habits that wlll stay with them for llfe," says Dr. Charles J. Gudas, cllnlcal • professor of orthopedic surgery at the University of Chicago. Heel-to-toe health Is an Im- portant part of total fitness for acttve children, according to Gudas, who Is a member of Or. Scholl's Foot Health Council. Gudas says parents can play a major role In helping their young- sters start off on the right foot concerning care and grooming. ''The basics of foot hygiene - dally washing, drying thoroughly and using foot powder -are Important to help prevent com- mon foot problems," he advises. Councll recommendations on what parents should tell children Include: -Wash feet dally. paying partlcular attention to the area between the toes where lnfec- tlon-caualng bacteria tend to gather. After WJshlng, dry feet thoroughly. Moisture can be a breeding ground for bacierla that cause foot odor or the develop- ment of athlete's feet. -Cllp toenalls straight acro11, not rounded, to avoid lngrowns.•· -Chang socks every day to avoid foot or. Regular use of a deodorant powder or spray also can help prevent odor. -Wear shoes with sufficient cush,lonlng to help absorb shock when running, jumping or bounc- ing on hard surfaces. -Don't exchange shoes wtth friends, because the pr.actlce may contrltiute to the spread of such Infection$ as athlete's foot or plantar warts. -Check the flt of shoes on a regular basis. During rapid periods of growth (which vary among chlldren)a chlld may need new shoes as often as every three months. Set sights beyond eye·-chart testing Mindy wearing: sheeting & ~ibbed cotton aqua pants and top.by Daddy's Girl at '29 .. & •32•. -Make sure you have a well-after you answer an essay In balanced but not too heavy case you think of addltl~nal By th• A•eoclated p, .. , · quick vision screening or suc- breakfast thJL .moming _ot an Information later, and always ParentJ_ wbo want their chll-...tesafully 'paaaed! a-school eye exam.lfyoueattoollttfe,youmay look over the entire test before a rentoseethelrwayclearlyback chart test ·has perfect vision, be disturbed by pangs oHlul')ger you hand It In. to school should not rely entirely since no check has been made of l.oturing Beoch Town• Quiksifv« ... w Sid•Out Maui & Son Club Burmya Daddy's Girl ... Jam min ~ BPAND It's Not too Late 369 E. 17TH ST. (Senlnd Joclt·ln·The Box) COSTA MESA 63 1-6520 to Enroll In Fa ll Semester Classes at ORANGE COAST COLLEGE OCC s 15-Week La te Start Classes Begin MONDAY I . ~ SEPTEMBER 9 ~ -OCC O ffers Yo J Convenience Affordab1ltty D1verS!ty and OUAUTY 1 Opt'n RPQ•,trat•on ·~Underway Tnrougn Sepl 13 1Appo•n'mi>nt5 dre not needE'OJ Call Today For Registration Information (71 4) 432-5772 - Join Now and Get One ·Month's Dues Freel THE . SPORTING HOUSE Where Class Doesn't Cost • T "• 500'""9 Hout• t'I• ytll1ng you ne.a 10 h ep you1body1111nel btt ulllul Fe•tur1n9 •Neut1hu •l •lt Cyc iu •If Aecqutl!U ll Cou<I\ • VOlltyb1ll lnd0011 •ln01•10"•I E•erc1te P10911ma •Stun• SIH m J1cuu 1 •Lu1uuOt.11 Loc••' F•c1••l•t • •llu•etball •2S M11tr !,,. l ane lt P Pool & Sun Ot o •2 Sano vo111yb1\I Cou•lt •Ci1•nt Scr•en f V •SOC't•I Acl1•1l1t1 •Ae11a"'1nt •C11110 C••• • 1nqu1r1 Abou 1 Ou• Co•por1te M1mb11''"P• Tnt $p0thn9 Houu Wllt rt llttulllu• llod•IH ll991n 3601 Jamboree, Newport 811ch (714) 752·0565 Wh1t'1 more. you won't 1lw1ys ou(trow It For you women. 1cne may 1ppe1r for the first time In your eerly twenties or thlrtlH You must fece up to It quickly Even If you're )ortun11e enou&h to out1row It. ttle physical ind emotion.! sc.ara can 1111 ' lifetime With the medlc1tlon1 ind trellment.t developed by noted acne resetrch doctor. author, 1pe1ker ind former acne sufferer. James E Fulton. M D .. Ph D , you'll loln the 80'° of our patients who hive their ecne under control within two months ~cne may not be your fault. but only you c1n do t0methln& about 11 Acne HHlth Care Centen In tern a tlona I 845-7510 HO\.ln1 t AM to I PM MWF-1 ,.M to I PM T 6 Th-I AM to I PM S.L 771 W. 17th StHt Co.ta M ... CA ndT ( . on the traditional school eye eye coordination, near vision and chart, according to a vision many other Important skllls." speclallst. Zaba says the best way to "The eye chart -an out-make aure chlldren have all the moded test that has been In use required vision skllls Is to have with few changes since 1862 ......:.. them undergo a complete op- measures only what the viewer tometrlc examination, preferably can see clearly at .ao feet," says every year from the age of 3. Or. Joel Zaba, vision consultant -Such an examination, he says, to the Norfolk, Va., publlc school should Include a battery of tests system. that cover a review of the pa- " Parents should not assume tlent's and famlly's general that a chlld who has received a (Pleue aee ltYE/Pa&• 7) t> CAREERWEAR SPORTSWEAR ACTIVEWEAR SWIMWEAR MON.·SAT. 10--6 SUNDAYS CLOSED Sheri's ST. GERMAIN SALE l11111i•'>1Jt!" ri•rn~11·r· . .j,. .. ,,. fr,~, '.!H•r !" p I'll'. 142-57&4 1610 W COAST HWY NEWPORT BEACH Standing out quietly. Poplin, Corduroy and twills available in plain or pleated f rants-tailored for comfort 645-0792 17th & Irvi ne Avenue, Newport Beach j Awaltln& the echool bell All decked oat In their back-to--ecbool tot• are Brandon Bqbee, 11, and Anabella Tirado, 8, botb of Co.ta lleea. While walktna or rldln& a baa are popular waya to travel to achool, Brandon plcka a akateboard and Anabella a bike. SCHOOLS ••. FromPaae8 14th Street and Balboa Boulevard. Newport Beach 92661 Frank Keller, Prlnclpal - 760-3454 Newport Harbor High, 6QO Irvine Ave., Newport Beach 92660 Tom Jacobson. Prlnclpal - 760-3310 tMwport Height• K-6, 300 E. 15th St., Newport Beach 92660 Charles E. Godshall. Prlnclpal -760-3464 Paularlno K-6. 1060 Paularlno Ave .. Costa Mesa 92626 Ro_bert 0. Miiier, Prlnclpa._- 556-3482 Pomona K-6. 2051 Pomona Ave., Costa Mesa 92626 Sandy Bundy. Prlnclpal - 760-3462 Sonora K-6, 966 Sonora Road, Costa Mesa 92626 Ned Hall, Principal ·- 556-3480 TeWlnkl• 7-8. 3224 California St., Costa Mesa 92626 Scott Paulsen, Principal - 556-3433 Whittler K-6, 1800 N. Whittler Ave .. Costa Mesa 92627 Cheryl Merkel, Principal - 760-3458 Wllaon K-6, 801 Wiison St.. Costa Mesa 92627 John R. Clarke, Principal - 760-3428 Paraon• 8peclal Education Center, 2350 Canyon Drive, Costa Meaa 92627 Jerry Shannon, Principal - 760~ 90ard of Education: Forrnt K. Werner, president: Sherry Loofbourrow, vice presi- dent/clerk; Jim de Boom, Judith A. Franco, Roderick H. Mac- Miiian, Kenneth L. Wayman, and Tom Wllllams, membera. Opening Dar: 8ept9mber I lua Information: Parents must pay for their child 's bus transportation. The cost Is $15 for 20 achoo I days payable at the begin Ing of each 20 day period: In return for payment, bus paaaea wlll be luued to each child so that he/she can ride the bus. However If the child llvn close to the school he/she must waJk. The determlnatlng distances are: K-3 -1 mile; 4,5,6 -1.25 miles; 7,8 -1.5 mllea; and 9-12 -2 miles. Busing will wlll not be avallable for students living within these radii. Reglatretlon Information: Parents should call the district and tell the secretary where they llve. She wlll tell parents which school their child should attend. IRVINE UNIF1ED SCHOOL DISTRICT . 5050 Barranca Parkway 92714 P.O. Box 1953~ lrvlne 651-0«4 IK-12 Enrollment 16,568 lchoola: Alderwood a.lea Plue K-6, 2 Alderwood 92714 Lynn Bogart, Principal - 559-6754 Bonlt• Canyon K-6, 1 Sun- dance Drive 92715 Dorthea Musa, Principal - BM-8111 Coll•te 'ark K-6. 3700 Chaparral Ave. 92714 , Beverly Khalll, Prlnclpal . 551-3871 C...,.._ K-6, 2 Thief A'". • 92714 Robert Burrough•. Principal • -78&-3008 . D•rfteld K-6, ~ Oeerfletd Ave. 92714 • Su .. nn• Wiegand. Prlnctpal : -559-0100 I ~--Dm.&CTORT/N) A .ENROLL NOW CHRIST CENTERED TEACHING Huntington Christian School 1207 Main St. (at Adams) Huntington Beach llmllAITEI • 1111 IUDE E1t11ll1ll DIJ C.. 7AM-IPM Abeka Curlculum ............... Music Program Computer Experience ........ Cred.Teachers JIJCI Ziek 688-0048 .) Principal A .~1\JELI ESE'S PRESC HOOL. l :\t. State licensed School. Laguna Beach "Chlldr•n W•nt to L••rn" Positive attitudes toward learning brought to llfe through creative teaching. Emphasis on Fine Art With European Flair Academic Training, Spanish, German, French, Orama, Cooking, Gardening. Orff Music. All In Beautiful Garden Surround- ings. HOT NUTRITIOUS LUNCHES HALF & FULL DAY Agee 3-10 • 494-7388 751 Manzanita Dr., Laguna Beach Agee 2·10 • 489-5527 21542 Weeler Dr., So. Lagun• P,.Sdd;ot td.aaeotbu ... _________ _ ... , .Gerber. Childrenll Center. A GOOD BEGINNING THAT LASTS A LIFETIME1 1< At Gert>«. your chlld't emotional, aoclel, phy9lcel and lnt.u.ctual ne.d• .,. cerefuUv and an.cttonatety met by people who underMand c:nlldr9f'I .end how tMy ... the wor1d. • 1\111 cleY PfOlltWN • llollf dty P.09'.,,,. • ~""" .. • ~ and 1'1tt tc11001 P'OQI-• 1l111ielNe CNICI onen1.i ~ • ~\Ne &l'IYO'~ ·~~·"Ill,.,,.~ Pettflt Vltlt•tlona w~ Any r,,,,. ~LINO NOW"°" 'AlL ... ~ ro AQI 10 ::-::c~ ~232) . I Back To School/An Advertising Supplement to the DAILY PILOT/Tueaday, September 3, 1986 -7 • EYE-CHART 'tESTS OUTMODED •.. PromPate8 health and eye history, an exam-dlnatlon also should be Included, a child has a vision problem, tte lnatlon of the eye's Interior for add• Zaba, who la chairman of aay1, Include• a tendency to tit signs of eye disease or general the American Optometric As-very close to the television Mt, health problem~ and tests fer a soclatlon's communications squinting when looking at dl11ant variety of vision skills. division. objects and holding reading ma- Tests for depth perception and terlal either very cloae to the noM color vision and eye-hand coor-Early warning signs Indicating or more than 18 Inches away. Westcliff Plaza 17th & Irvine, Newport Beach (714) 642-7061 CHRIST LUTHERAN SCHOOL 0 NOW ENROLLING for Kindergarten thru Grade 8 "A CARING SCHOOL WITH A CHRIST-CENTERED EDUCATION" Extended Day Care Available 548-6866 760 Victoria Co1ta·Me1a • CARDEN OF HUNTINGTON BEACH • privet• echool empHlzlng ecademlca Carden Curriculum Pre-School-Grade Eight Open the Y••r around 8:30 A.M.-6:00 P .M. 536-1'41 721 Utica HunUn9ton hach Edith Hanlon. Director /: -~ -~~ ,:11i 9 r--··~·-~~: --,\- ; Vn z e~cu:O :: l CHRISTIAN PRESCHOOL /' --· ~ 2'. YEARS (,RAOF. 8 7 A.M ti PM • High A1 .. td1 m1r St.rndard<. • Bible Centt-rN Curriculum • Cred•nt1alf'd Tea ht'rs • L1m1tt'<i <.ia.ss :::-11e • Aru & Sports Program • Full T>ay K mdt'rl{al"U'n • PN' K m<let~ rlt-n Prul(rrun • 9 Ac-rt-1'e11ht' • Hot 1 .uni h Progt .tm • Extc-nrl('(i Da~ Cnn• 645-9755 Pacific Travel School 25 15 ~orth '.\'l ain. Santa Ana. Ca. 9:l701 ii ----.. OR 1 'GE COl ,-) \. 1 '~) PIM 1TE H.CREDrTEO TR H f, 1CE '\t) \l HO<JL American Airline Sabre Ccmputer TralnJng MORHl,_G AFTERNOON EVE NING CLASSES Call (714) 543-9495 . USC Certificates l/C11•nt-r• 1·r1ur ·k1 1/, \ ' . '.\1anlll{t"mt'OI ~ fft'1 ti' t'"""" for \\ nmt•n .\n ~·~I ~ I on t'\/it,,... , 1'11~• I •f I • ' • lnte rna11111111I Hu .. IOt'"" !t>, . . . :,, ... L'S Orange Co unt~ Center ,... , ... I•· \ , ., ~ When achool Just Ian 't enough ... Marden Center otters you and voui LI' tldn>n -;._,, ... t/On$ to problems at school for 1morovt"1ment in • reading writing ana matn • following dtrect1on6 • controlling emotions • makmg and keeping lrtend'> Merdan la a private nonprofit school ror children from 2 through 18 ~ears prov1d..mg • educational and psychotog1ca1 testtng • developmentlff pre-sehool • complete day school program • •c•dem1c tutoring • 1nd1vtdual end family counseling lt.udm Merc:lan Center of Ec:1ucat1ona1 'htH8C'~ Est 1~62 895 w 19tt'I S1 Costa Me'A CA 9282" 17141e31 ·6•00 ' .._ ___________________________________________ _,,. _________________________________ ~~~----~~-.;-.------ ' ' ' a I 8 -Bacl( To School/An Advertlalng Supplement to the DAILY P9tOT/Tueaday, September 3, 1985 I ellnY DIRECTORY LISTS SCHOOLS, LOCATIONS ALONG ORANGE COAST ••• .......... ? ._...._. K-6, 155 Eastshore Drive 92715 92714 Bob Bruce. Prlnclpal Sharon DeNtsJ, Principal -8M-7500 552-7228 Woodbridge High, 2 El Camino RMI K-6, 4782 Meadowbrook 92714 Karen Ann Lane 92714 Greg Cops, Prlnclpal Eug.ent..,. Bedley, Principal 1-786'-1104 551-3090 Board of Education: registered or regl1tered In Juty or Auguat. late reqlatratlon II per- mitted but It on a apace avallable basl1 only. llu• Information: The district buees only thOM 11udent1 who llve more than four mlles away. Et Toro llertn. K-6, 8171 S.E. Gordon G. Gretchel, presl-OCEAN VIEW SCHOOL DIS- Trabuco Road 92709 dent: Helen Cameron, clerk; TRJCT Stuart Cunningham, Principal John Ftynn, Mary Ellen Hadley, 16940 B. Street 92647 -559..0818 and Bruce Lee. members. 847-2551 GrMntree K-6, 4200 Man-Opening Day: September 5 K-8 Enrollment 8,453 zanlta 92714 Reglatratlon Information: School•: Clay White, Prlnclpal Parents should call the district Circle View K-6, 6261 Hooker 551-2301 and tell the secretary where they Drive 92647 Loa NeranJo• K -6, 1 llve. She wlll tell parents which Barbara Caison. Prlnclpal - Smoketree Lane 92714 school their chlld shoulp attend. 893-5035 Dennis Gibbs, Prlnclpal Also, the district offers an open College View K-6, 6582 Len- 652-5171 enrollment program In which a nox Drive 92647 Northwood K-6, 28 Carson St. student may attend the school of Samuel Landes, Principal - 92714 his/her choice If space permits. 847-3505 Joanne Hodder, Principal -The district also offer$ a year-Creat View K-8, 18052 llsa 551-8567 round school year at El Camino Lane 92646 Santiago Hiiia K-6. 29 Real and Vista Verde, which Mary Tlntor, Principal - Chrlstamon 92714 began their school year In July. 847-1270 Marilyn Boyd, Principal . Bualng lntormetlon: Parents Ooklen View K-6, 17251 Gold.- 544-5362 are required to pay $125 a school en View Lane 92646 Stone Creek K-6, .2 Stone year to have their chlld bused. Michael Merz, Principal - Creek South 92714 847-2516 Tom Perrle, Principal -HUNTINGTON BEACH UNION Harbour View K-8, 4343 Plck- 551-1201 HIGH SCHOOL DISTRICT wick Circle 92649 Turtle Rock K-6, 5151 Amalfl 10251 Yorktown Ave. Roland Skumawltz, Principal Drive 92715 964-3339 -846-6602 Ron Moreland, Principal · -Enrollment 17,062 Haven View K-6, 16081 854-7002 School•: Waikiki Lane 92649 Untveralty Pertt, K-6, 4572 Edleon High, 21400 Magnolla Diane Hobenslefken, Principal Sandburg Way. 92715 St. 92846 -846-1325 Craig Ritter, Prlnclpal -Jack Kennedy, Principal -Hope View K-"6. 17622 786-2011 962-1356 Fllntstone Lane 92647 Vl•t• Verde K-8, 5144 • Fountain Valley High, 17816 Gayle Bowles, Principal - Michelson Road 92715 Bushard St., Fountain Valley 847-8571 Barbara Barnes, Principal -92!.01k8 K 1 P 1 1 1 Lake View K-6. 17 451 Zelder 786-9207 IVI e as er, r nc pa _,_ Lane 92647 WMtwood ... lea Pfu• K-6, 1 96H2-33tf01 t •---h H~h 1905 Patricia Multlaupt, Prlnclpal- Uberty St. 92714 un ng on --.. • 842-2589 Dan Thomas, Prlnclpal -Main St. 92648 Martn. View K-8, 5682 Tllburg S«-9670 Daryl Stucker, Principal -Drive 92649 R8ncho •--.IAAA I I t '536-2514 p I I meda.te 1:8," 4861'~':c~=~ Marina High, 15871 Spring-84~"'s~4 Enderson. r nclpa - Road 92715 dale St. 92649 MHa View K-8 17601 Avllla John lmmon, Principal _. Ira Tolbln. -Principal Lane 92647 ' 786-3005 898-6571 ° D Moss Prlnclpal - Lakeelde Middle 6-Bt 3 Lem-Ocean View High, 17071 842~~608 ' mongraas 92714 Gothard St. 92647 Oak View K-6, 17241 Oak Donald Erger, Principal -John Myers, Principal -Lane 92647 559-1601 848-0656 p Sierra Vlata Mlddle 7-8, 2 . WHtmlnater High, 14325 84~~59Buffehr. rlnclpal - Liberty 92714 Golden West St., Westminster Park View K-8, 16666 Turn- David Holmes, Principal -92683 stall Lane 9264 7 838-5440 Robert Boehme, Prlnclpal -Janet Reece, Prlnclpal - Venedo Middle 7-8, 4 Deer-893-1381 847-6008 field Ave. 92714 Wlnteraburg High, 17200 Spring View K-8. 16662 Trudy John Tennant, Principal -Golden West St. 92647 Lane 92647 552-4771 Philip Haynes, Prlnclpal -Marilyn Koeller, Principal - trvln. High, 4321 Walnut Ave. 848-1774 846-2891 92714 BoardofTruat ... : Star View K-6.8411 Worthy Gary Norton, Principal -Linda Moulton, president; Drive, Midway City, 92655 552-4211 · Brian Lake, vice president; Sher-Karen Spane, Principal - S.E.LF. Alternative 9-12, 311 ry Baum, clerk; Ronald Marcus, 897-1009 W. Yale Loop 92714 Stephen H. Smith, trustees. Sun View K-6, 7721 Jullette Len Casey, Principal -Opening Day: September I Low Drive 92647 786-5190 Aeglatratlon Information: Robert Vouga, Principal Unlver•lty High, 4 771 Campus Students should have either pre-84 7-9643 Don't forget stereo in the survival kit What items do college students consider essential to make their new campus environment a happy second home? A new survey otters advi ce about a basic "campus survival kit" from students who have already been through the process. An alarm clock (84 percent), stereo (77 percent) and blue 1eans ( 170 percent) were ranked as the top items. according to the Levi's 501 report. a survey conducted among 6.500 undergraduate students at 17 colleges and universities nationwide. Next on the list are a back pack (61 percent) and typewriter (57 percent) followed by some basic clothing Items. Including T-shirts (50 percent), sweat shirts (50 percent) and extra socks (44 percent). A television set (50 percent) rounds out a ranking of the 10 favorite choices. Generally, the Items students treasure most seem to be practical and familiar. That's not surprising to Or. Michael Solomon. a social psychologist at New Vork University, wh o studies consumer behavior. "People like to have some parts of their past lives with them when they move to a new environment." he explains. "Comforts from home can help ease an adjustment. adding something familiar to a new situation." Blue jeans, for example, are a natural priority for a student's survival kit, says Solomon. Thery're the most popular fashion item on campus; students say they wear blue jeans 75 percent of the time on the average. "For many students. blue 1eans are Mke friends. No matter what the campus culture Is like, your blue Jeans will flt It," says Solomon. Preppy look r~ted tops by students By th• AHocleted p, ... When it comes to campus fashions. preppies will out- number the punks by a 3-1 ratio when students go back to school this fall, according to a na- tionwide poll at colleges and universities. Asked to describe tne fashion ·'look·· at their school, 31 percent of some 6.500 undergraduates said "preppy," 17 percent re- plied "earthy," 11 percent "hlgh- faahlon." 11 percent "athletic, .. 10 percent "punk," and 17 percent "other •· The survey at 17 scf?oels was conducted tor Levi Strauss & Co H part of an ongoing student research program by ASK As- sociates, Inc., a New York market research firm, end NewaW8et( on Campus. It indicated no single fMhlon "look" that Is being worn by college students everywhere, with diversity the main constant from campus to campus. However. several f ashlon tr~nds were noted In the study, with basic. five-button, button-fly style blue jeans remaining a strong favorite. Students said they wear Jeans 75 percent of the time on average. Other trenos Include oversized shirts. sweaters and sweatshirts, often In bright colors and pat- terns. Nearly half (48 perc.nt) of the students say the big top• are "hot" fashion Items. Fifty-nine percent cast a vote In favor, of Jean jackets, many saying they favor "denim art" such aa hand-painted detlgns on the back. ' VU .... View K-8, 5361 SIHOn Drlve92&49 Don Devor. Principal - 8•&-2801 Vleta View K-8, 16250 Hickory St., Fountain Valley 92708 Patricia Monahan, Principal - 8•2-0626 WHtmont K-6, 8251 Hell Ave .• Wmstr. 92683 Wllllam Leacher, Prlnclpal - 847-3561 Nueva View (Spec. Ed.) Pre-8, 17132 Pinehurst lane 92647 Wllllam Wernett, Principal - 842-8718 Board of Truat ... : Janet Garrick, president; Shella Marcus, clerk; Marianne Blank, Debra Leinweber, and Charles Osterlund, trustees. Openlnt Dey: September I Aegtatratlon tnformetlon: Parents should call the district and tell the secretary where they live. She wlll tell parents which school their child should attend. Boa Information: Routes are established based on distance and safety factors. Parents should call the district secretary to find out If the district provides busing for their chlld. Schedules are also avallable through the district secretary. HUNTINGTON BEACH CITY SCHOOL DISTRICT 20451 Cralmer Lane P.O. Box 71, 92648 964-8888 K-8'Enrollment 5,551 School•: Ethel Dwyer Middle 6-8, 1502 Palm Ave. 92648 Alan Rasmus~n. Prlnclpal - 536-7507 John H. Eader K-5. 9291 Banning Ave. 92646 John Conniff, Principal - 962-245 1 Emeet H. Olaler Middle 6-8, 21141 Strathmoor Lane 92646 Ian Collins, Prlclpal 962-5556 Relph E. Hawea, M.D. K-5, 9682 Yellowstone Drive 92646 John Skinner, Principal - 963-8302 Wiiiiam E. Kettler K-5, 8750 Dorsett Drive 92646 Clyde Glasser, Principal - 536-7567 S.A. Moffett K-5, 8800 Burlcrest Drive 92646 Robert P. Landi, Prlnclpal - 963-8985 JOMph A. Perry K-5, 19231 Harding Lane 92646 John Magnuson, Principal - 962-3347 Agnea L. Smith K-5, 770 17th St. 92648 Rita Jorgensen, Prlnclpal - 536-1468 l • IM80 8owen Mtddle 6-8, 9300 lndlanapolls Ave. 92646 Don R. Pate, Principal - 962-7738 lkNwd of TFU9tMe: Brian Garland, prealdent; Karen O'Bric, clerk; Sherry Barlow, Pat Cohen, and Gary Nelaon, trustees. Openlne Dar: September I Regtatr•Uon Information: Parent• should call the dlatrlct and tell the eecretary where they llve. She wtll tell parent• which achootthelr chll should attend. Bua Information: Routes are establlahed baaed on distance and safety f actora. Parente should call the district secretary to find out If the district provides bu1tlng for their chlld. Schedules are also available through the district secretary. Fountain Veller Schoof Dlatrlct 17210.0ak Street 842-6651 K-8 Enrollment 6,855 School•: And,_ A,.vatoe K-8, 19626 Lexington Lane, Huntington Beach 92646 Ed Lavelle, Prlnclpal - 962-1337 . Roch Courregee K-5, 18313 Santa Carlotta St. 92708 Judith Blankinship, Principal -962-8853 JernH H. Cox K-5, 17615 Los Jardine• E. 92708 Judy Montgomery, Principal -962-•408 Fountain Valley K-8, 17911 Bushard St. 92708, 962-1335. Merry C. Fulton 6-8, 8778 El Lago St. 92708 Sonny Morper, Principal - 842-•419 Robert Glaler K-8, 17720 Las Flores St. 92708 Jim Dutton, Principal - 962-6617 Kaauo Maauda 's-8, 17 415 Los Jard Ines W. 92708 Marc Ecker, Prlnclpal - 963-8359 Fred Modlola K-8, 9790 Finch St. 92708 Carl Dane, Principal - 962-8836 Wlltlem T. Newland K-8, 8787 Dolphin Drive, Huntington Beach 92646 . Ned Powell, Principal -' 962-3359 lao)lro Oka K-5, 9800 Yorktown Ave., Huntington Beach 92646 Waldo Price, Principal - 962-8825 Urbain H. Plavan K-8, 9675 Warner Ave., 92708 Catherine FoUett, Prlnclpal - 962-8828 . Samuel E. Talbert Middle 6-8, r t 9101 Brabhem Drive, Huntington - Beach92648 Peter Murphy, Principal - 962-4420 Hlaamatau Tamura K-8, 17340 Santa Suzanne St. 92708 Tom Thompson, ~rlnclp' - 847-8529 Board of Truat ... : Roger Betgen, president; Suzanne Moore, president pro tem; Ann Galas, clerk; Carol Mohen, clerk pro tem; Stephen Einstein, trustee. Opening Day: .. ptember I Aegtatratlon Information: Parents should caJI the district and tell the '8Cretary where they 11v.-. She wtll tell parents which school their chlld should attend. Bu• Information: Routes are established baaed on distance and safety factors. Parent• should call the dlatrlct secretary to find out If the district provld• busing for their chlld. Schedutee are also available through the district secretary. LAGUNA IEACH UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT 550 Blumont 92651 497-7701 K-12 Enrollment 2,363 School•: El Morro K-5, 8681 N. Ooaat Highway 92651 · Judy Chrlspens, Principal - 497-7780 • Top of the World K-5, 21601 Tree Top Lane 92651 Frderlck L. Good Jr., Principal -497-7790 Thuraton Mlddl• 6-8, 2100 Park Ave. 92651 Ann Becker, Principal - 497-7785 Laguna a.ach High, 625 Park Ave.92651 ' Anthony S. Ortega, Principal -497-7750 Board of Education: Dan T. Daniels, president; Charlene Ragatz, clerk; Harry Blthell, Carl E. Schwarz, Janet S. Vickers, members. Opening Dey: September I Reglatratlon lnformetlon: Parents of children K-5 should call the district and tell the secretary where they live. She will tell parents which school their chlld should attend. Bua a,tc:Wmatlon: Routes are establlshed baaed on distance and safety factors. Parents. of children In kindergarten through eighth grade should call the district secretary to find out rt the district provides busing for their chlld. Schedules are also avail- able through the district sec- retary. Canipus casuals co~f y Dilllr .... ,...... WbateTer coeda wear on the campaeat~eCoutCol· ..... ,,,a oaJa lte eve the emplt.Ule la on ftl'lety and _.rort. A u.mpll~ le ebo•n by atadente (alockwtM from •ppn left) Lealle-Raadler. 8bella llcCartlay, Leelle lltoa.s, ClartedJaa Pfptedt. Duey Wroblew9k, Alll8oo Cook aad Beth Oenhen. ,. • . Dlily Pilat TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1986 r!1 • Chhrleadera may even have to und•rgo drug t•tlng. C2. Borla Becker la knocked out of the U.8. Open. C2. . H~r~or ~eady to take wr·aps off big guns . , Foley has the bene it of impressive line; Giddings says the Sa ilors will take to air By ROGER CARLSON OflMOellr .......... With back-to-back Sea View League cham~ionships and a 12-1-1 tcaaue record an that span. one might think the time has come for the wave to subside, for the ups.-and-<iowns to fi nd their way to Newport Harbor High School. Such, however. does not appear to be the case for Mike Giddings and has Sailors-it's still high tide with what appears to be one of the top quar- terbacks in Southern Califom1a and a supporting cast of linemen that emanate the community college look as they prepare for the 1985 prep football season. · Let's put quarterback Shane Foley -a 57 percent passer as tJunior wuh a ticket to college s1ardom rcquinng only his signature, aside -for the moment. Available to Foley arc receivers Kevin McClcllaod (6-2. 226). Mark Cra1g(6-6, 196). Steve Reed (6-3, 211) and a speedy Andy Sheppard, backed up by Keith Maxwell -althou$h only McClelland has caught a pass in varsity competition. And in front ofh1m 1s a line which almost defies a pecking order For instance· •Jason Neldelman. a 6-3. 210- pound senior guard and middle linebacker, returns with all-league credentials. · •Chns Sylvis, 1n the wing~for the past three years, has blossomed' into a starter's role as a 6::4, 282-pound tackle. •Scon Craig, at 6-4. 241, as listed at left tackle, a returning start~r. •Pat Patem1e, a 6-3, 20 I JUnior. 1s at left guard. •Gus Hurst. 6-0, 21 l, ts .backed up by Rtclc Roberts (6-0, 212) at center •Chuck Wa~1ck, who dtd n01 play as a Junior, is a backup tackle at 6-2, 237. •And Steve K.alatschan, a 5-1 l, 187-pound JUntor who wa!> the MVP on the sophomore team. balks up Reed at ught end •Marcus Kelso, at 6-0. 24 7. pounds. leads the defense at tackle along with Warwick, Hurst and S<.011 Harbin in the Sailors· 4-3 That sophomore team . as well as the freshman team. swept to league cham p1onsh1 ps a year ago. 10 comple- ment the varstt) 's endea' or!> "·The ke~ ts up from .. S2)S C,1d- N.ewport football outlook Head Coach: Make G1dd1ngs 1th1rd year) Overall record: 24-9-3 tafT: Bucko Shaw (linebackers. defen-.e, rb'i) Kent Paul (secondary, special teams, wr) Jay Johnson (offensive line, defensive hnt'l Rick Roberts (a<Jmin1strat1ve assistant) League: Sea View Nickname: Sailors.Colors: Blue and (Jra~ Offense: I-back; Defense· Pro 4-3 J 984 record: League 6-0-1 (co-champions) Overall 9-1 ~2 1985 schedule Sept l' ~anta .\na Sept. ~O at Ir\ 1ne Sept 26 at Huntington fkach Oct. 4 Estancia• lat()( ( J Oct 11 Saddlcback• Oct. 18 ( osta Mesa• Oct. ~S at Laguna Beal h" Oct. 31 L'n1 vers11y• Nov ~ Woodbndge• No' 15 ( orona del Mnr-9 (nt OCC') •Denotes league game i\ll games at 7 JO dangs. wbo bc&Jns his founh year wnb the Sailori "Craig and Nedelman arc back but a couple here have to come on. Actu.all) our omns1ve line ti very unsettled "We'~ fat We look la.kc we've been dnnkang beer 1n the NFL But our linemen arc all growm& and they're strong." Fofey. who completed I SO of 26}. attempts for 2,223 yards and 17 touchdowris as a JUnJOr, as the obv1t>us centerpiece on this squad. although 11 1s safe to state the Sa.lion (Pleue eee 8AD.,,ORS/C2) Slotback KeYln McClelland Quarterback Shane Foley Runnlng back Bryan Wildman For Giddings, there may always be One more coming Foley & Co. a re the big lures this year~ but,1.985 won 't be the end of the t a lent When Mike Giddings took the reins at Newport Harbor High School a lot of people thou~t the love affair might bea fly-by-ni~t situation- that the well-traveled Giddings would be around just long enough to realize the fruits of his labors with the 1981 Steve Brazas-led sophomore squad before moving on toa·new challenge. Well. 1984 came and Bra.zas had long since left. but Giddings was still there. guiding his Sailors to the Sea View League co-championship Wlth a 6-0-1 record. And, he's still there w11h quar- terback Shane Foley at the controls an 1985 -and there arc rumors of a sophomore pros~ct at quarterback that may keep G1ddi ngs anchored even longer. It's ruming out, however, that It's a lot more than this ind1 v1dual or that group proving to be the lure. It's the basics. .. People close to me say they thank I need 1t, .. aclm1ts U1dd1ngs. "It'!. a good outlet and the kids seem to believe in what I'm doing." Asa walk-on coach without a single on-tam pus assistant. Giddings has guided the Sailors to a 24-9-3 record over three years, three s1ra1gh1 tnps to the Cl F playoffs and prospects of even better things to come "h's not a win or lose type of thing," insists G1dd1ngs, whose coachingcarcerhasspanned 26 year<; with cx~nencc in high school. com- munttycollcge, maJorcollege, the World Football League and the National Football League. For several years now he ha s made a living with a scouting service fort he NFL-so you'll get few arguments on Giddings' expertise in the spon of Roe ER CARLSON PREP SPORTS football. Y ct. here he 1s. sttll tn the high school ranks-an~ loving 11 ".o\s long as I feel I'm corHnbu11ng 10 the kids," sa\s the Newpon Bea1.h resident. "I hkc 111 feel I'm an influence on them .. Newport Harbor football has 1n· deed had ats ups and dov.ns 1n the pa)t 5hears-1n the firs\ 39 \cars there wercJUSt two big momenis-thc 1942 Sun!>et League champ1 onsh1p team ofWendell Pickens and'a standout 8-1 club 1n 1949 coached b\ A.I Irwin The Ernie Joh Mon-Don Lent-Bill P1221ca era of the "'Os put Harbor on the map. bu\ the three )ears pnor 10 Giddings' am,al found the aalor. at a low ebb Wlth a combined record ol 6-21·3.' What's made the difference' "Jfr,e done an} thing nght hl'r<' .. $8\S Giddings. "we·, e got the big k11.h coming out If \OU control the line lll scnmmage 'oucan v.1n" "The kids art' bright 31 ;-o.;ev. pon and we rai~ a lo t ol n:one~. ·· The mone' transforms into the necess1t1cs. such as that extra leg machine tn the we1&ht room. Despite has coacfimg background at higher le' els. tt's mil the tugh school arena wh1ch-G1dd1ngs finds his most cnJq)ment .. This 1s v. here the fun 1s," he says .. , ou ha' e the attention of your pla\ers in high school "Right nov. to stt a (Chns)S)'I\ is 0r (Kc' in) McClelland develop. There 1s such a d1fTe~nce between the 1un1or and sen ion ears It'!. e~cttang '"The' 'r<' fi red up " .\ndma,bethat"stheke' tothe \.f1ke G1dd ngs puule -tlred up - becau~' 'Li ~an lo' e him or but II sfair)\ C'na1n\ou·11 agret"C.1d- dtngs 1~ ti•l'.'J up It's nitty-gritty time for Angels Johnstone plays a trick on ~xpos . Ha os roll ine inf ourth inning to batter Tigers DETROIT (AP) -lf ttte Angels bang on to win the American League West, they might mark their Labor Day laugher against the Detroit Ti,,crs as a pivotal game. 'This is the nitty~gntty lime fo r us," Angels' catcher Bob Boone said af\cr Monday's 11-1 rout. "We did not play well at all in New York. but Texas swept Kansas City to help us in a very big way. "For us to win, we must play our best every day. It's 1n our hands." The Angels won big-with a nine- run fou rth inning -against the defending World Series champions, and they did it without sluggers Reggie Jackson and Ruppert Jones. who were given the day off by Manager Gene Mauch. .. It kind oflooks like it's us and the Royals," Mauch noted. "That's the pattern that's been established." The Angels now have a 7-3 record aaa~nst the Tiaers this season. When asked why he thought hi s club was so touah on Detroit . .Mauch replied. "I haven't a clue." TodaJ'• a.me A1111ll (McCMklH 8--9) at Oetrott (PWy 13-11) Time: ':35 p.m. TV: None. Redto: KMPC (710). home runs for three different maJOr league clubs. The others were Dick Allen. Bobby Bonds. Rocky Colavito. Jackson. Dave Kingman and Frank Robinson. The 38-year-old Evans hit 43 home runs for the Atlanta Braves in 1973 and 30 for the San Francisco Giants tn 1983. "l probably won't get a chance to savor this until the off season," Evans said. "It's a great honor to be an the company of those six other guys. though . In 20 years. people will see my name on that list and say, "Who's he?'" George Hendrick blasted a three: · run home run and Bobby Gnch homered with the bases empty to supply all the offense the Angels needed. Jim Slaton held the Tigers to four hits in eiaht innings. Then, after allowing two singles Wlth no outs in the ni'nth. be was relieved by Donnie Moore, who retired the side without allowtng any runs. .. , . ..._...... His p i n ch hit gtves Dodgers 5-4 victory. ending 4-game slump LO .\~uf:a..,1 .\P1-l1 1.uulJht !>aid that Ja\ John,tonc;: onh pla" on holtda~s \l.hate't'r hl'H·na1nl\ ~d • the Los .\nge lC''> Dodger' J rc.1,••n 11 celebrate Labor Da' Johnstone' lincJ a pt"•h hat 'ini.lk to nght field v.1th runnn'> Jt 'l'•• r ,I and third and ont.> out \1 <1nJa, n1~ti: &1' 1ng the Dodgers a 'i . .i '11. 1<1r, '"' thC' 'Mo ntreal Ellpo~ and .. n.qip n~ their lour-game I0!>1ng \trrak. It was the 3M-\car·,lld J11hn'I• nl ' sc-cond hll of th~ sea,11n .1nJ h1' · r' ')tl1Ce .\pnl 1-l He hadn't e' t"n pl.n l'd ''nu th lliunh of Jul~ hccJu'e t1! h1r .in.1 t'·" ~ problem'i 1hnt kept him 11 1t1 disabled llM .unttl hr \.\,1, ·" 11' 1tr11 undav TheiT arr tho'>t' '~ hP hJ \\ pressed thC' l1p1n iun thJI thl' r ' thing the mu,h -tr.~H·kJ I tii '' •rh wa~good tor 3n\ murC' "·1' h ''' 1 '' • humor to hl'lp kl'ep thl' 11·.u11 I " ,,. r the final month of thC' \t',1,1 •1 But ManagC'r Tt'm l .1,111,t.1 '" ;J'I, Dodgers. v.ho arrm·, 1.llr' l1•1ln '!tone's ofT-fiC'ld .in ttl' '"II !1•1! th1· ld\-handC"d hllt<'r'' 1'n 111· ,1 t.\lrnt' could help the d uh The lone bright spot for Detroit was the 30th home run of the season by Darrell Evans; a solo shot on a 3-2 oount leading off the seventh. Evans .became only the seventh mltjor league player tO' hit 30 or more "We feel pretty confident," Slaton sa1d. "I'm just tryina to take 1t a game at a time. We're in a pennant race risht now and I want to live.them as many &ood innings as l can." The An&el1' Jlm Slaton turned ln a laboro ua afternoon Monday, holdlDC Detroit to four hlta in elCbt tn n ln&•· .. \l. e knev.·1n thr m1,nth 1't °'<"rt~r.1 hC'r v.hen tt get J,,..,. n h1 thl' d··~ l.1" v.e'd loo._ up and or,('(' J,,, · l .1c.nrda !iatd "He'' a gu~ "h1,·, httn thNe before He doesn't grt r.11tlC'd · .\s for JohMll\nc. hr 1uq v.,rntt•d Rams off er to insure Dickerson for $5 million Oeorgla Fronttere1 the owrM:r of the Rams, and her chief nqot1ator, John haw, broke their silence on Eric Dickenon's holdout Monday af\emoon. Frontiere said the Rams have offered to purchue a SS mU~~n ycarty in$uranor policy fat a cost ofS60,000) for Dickenon in cate hl suffered a career-cndina nvury. She abo aaid that Shaw, the Rams' vioc president or finance. contacted Oickenon's 9dvilen 1 week after their prus conference on July 29, but nothina came of the di1euqjon. • After Eric's pre s conference. I told John Shaw that i( he's worried about injury C)l'Otection. call 1.nd HSUl'e them wt wUI take I ' career of that," Fror\tjert said. "At which time, he called and mcntJoncd 11 to Mr. (Jack) Rodn (one o( Dickcr~n·~ advistrs). At th.at time, they wcrt not 1ntemtcd 1n mttt1n1 Wlth haw and Jay Z)'IJ1lunt (Rams arocral counsel)." There has bttn no contact 'Ince that \1me. Frontlere said. Fronticre expressed surprise that Oictenon. who wanes a three-year e"tens1on to his current contrat1. 11 still holdina out. "l really don't know why (he won't rtport) 11 be'a wtlUna to honor btscurrcnt contract, a\ he 1&1d at tbe prtts conference," she said. "W c ·, e nevtT aald we would not nqouate an l extension to hi~ contract " Reached at his home. Ro<ln dl"n1rd the basic thru'lt of Frontiert' con1erit1 on thll thC' Rams art doina 111 the) ca~ 10 end the holdout. 1 "If ll was. JU.St .&n uuurancc J uc... II the whole is.sue wa $60,<X>O. we arc not so dumb \hat Enc would not havt rcponrd to c,_mp," Rodn said. "He has al read) lost S 1 Q0.000 The whole i uc makes no ~nsc " Rodn repeated hLS contentJon that the term of \he extension -not an 1Muranl.'e pohc) he himself could purcha~ -1 v..h.it D1cktf'\On nttds before he will rcpon. " nc must be paid as one of the top running ~ ' • hal~S. onC' of the top pla)ef\ 1n lhl· jldm<' R,xtn \8td "Whenever the Ram~ art' v.1lltntt to do that, v..e can &l"I thl\ whole thtntt <o.elllC"d "fnl can be in camp tl\ 'W tdn<''><ia' ti the\ .arc "llhng to negotiate a ta1t r11en,wn .\!though D1dcr:s.on's ad\ 1~n lm inall .. ukcd for an 1nJun-tuaran1rrd e\tC'n\lon thC'\ ha\f no ironclad agrttmtnt 1n mind "If the\ will d1scu-.~ an C'\ten\llm · Rndn Slid. "e\ C'r\ thin& I~ nC'gt'11~1<' " . ha" alw mamtatnC'd 1hftt ftt nt' llmt dttl ht rrom1~ tC\ nctot1att a l t1ntr;h t t'\IC'n\111n "' )1~ ~erwn da1med 11 hi\ prtli\ l llnfercnlr · •\b lu1eh not ~h~v. \Aid '-1• terms "'Crt dt~US~ TozdtlJt•• Game Montreal (Smith 15-.C ) Dodgere (Herahlser 13-3). Time· 7:30 p.m . TV: None. Radio: KABC (790). t•• 'h1•v. l .~n \Ill pl a\ F-.1r 1hC' I.Ht ;, Jj'' I r !l•ll .1 -.ea,,in t. pr11•l [Tl\'~ I Ill ''J'I • ''" 'urpn,ed that lo,1nj!. I'll t-in kt' Kl.'JrJ11n .:: • el<.'1 ted to pot, l1 1.1 r m v. 1th runner'> on 'l"l<lnJ .1nJ th1r,1 .inJ ••nt• 1lut 'I iu h,t, · t n.'mt'mht'r that \lananu ()un,.rn v.a' 1·11mintt up \pla1m·.1 lohn\lo n. "hl V.3\ r11n, h Jl!111g h1r "Inn n11 p1t....her { clflll' ll .I/I ..1 • .:: tfr I.I. llJ J h,\\t ht'l•n h.trl1 ' ,!,11.Jt'Jll' UI\ l11\c' l 11•n1.11l / , .. ,re.I rr .. n• thsrl1 Pn l1•hn,1nm·' h1l '" th1 l>1•..Sgrr' l'\ 1·ri.kd their lt'J\I in lhr "-.1t111n.1l i l'.1~1.11· \\ 1•,110 'l°' c'n g.tm t·> 1o11·1 \,rn 1 hl·~ '' '11, ti It'll 1nh th.rJ l'l.l11• h' , '~ .l • ~ ck,1\1nn h •hr "-<""' 'I ' ~ \lt'h Rams obtain Duck worth l 'll R.1111' mJdr a tra,k t.11 J n111,h-m•t•Jcd v.1dl rc-1r1,er anJ "'""' II\ C' fll3' C'r\ otl thC' mster to rr.i, h the .i ~ man rcgular-sea1,on hm1t \h,nJa, 1 ,, bl.11'1c r thrir 1 nC'\pencnce"O v.1Je fC'l'Cl\C'r u\rps thC' flam~ ~nt r('<.er' e tac ldC' C.1ar. .,_,,..,. als._1 anJ Jn und1\\..l1l<.cd draft choice Ill I hr \a" Die " <. harge"' for hlunh 'l'Br v. 1dC' 'C'trran Rohbv Dut i.. '-'11nh To reat: h thC' regular-St'ason ro'itC't limit, lhC'\ ~eblcker <.seorae <\ndrtv. 'I on the tnJurC'd re~f'\e h<;t and put four pla)rrs on "-II' C'r~ At hu ~ i modH& lunchfon . Roh1n~n t''Prh~ dch&ht w11h the trade. but wu uneas) about the wa" er hst He refu~ to "'"'e the plav<"f'\ he put on WltVC-f"\ "\l. e were loolona at 1 couplt' of r'C\.~t,tf'i " Rob1n\On S&Jd ''This wa the one that worked ou\ , j t ' ... Dilly Pilat TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1985 ChMrl•edera ·m•r even heve to undergo drug IHtlng. C2. Borla Becker la knock9d out of the U.8. Open. C2. .Barbor ready to take wraps off big guns Fo ey has the benefitofitppressive line; Gt tngs says the Sailors will taKe to air By ROGER CARLSON Oflllehl!rl'W ..... With back-to-back Sea View league championships and a 12-1-1 league record in that span, one might • think the time has come for the wave to subside, for the ups-and-downs to find theit way ~o Newpott Harbor High Sch()ol. " Such, however, docs not appear to be the case for Mike Giddings and his Sailors -it's stall high tjde with what appears to be one of the top quar- terbacks m Southern California and a supporting cast of linemen that emanate the community college look as they prepare for the I 98S prep football season. Let's put quanerback Shane Foley - a 57 percent pas~r as a Junior wi th a ticket 10 college stardom requanng only his signature. aside -for the momenr. A va1lable to Foley are rece1 vers Kevin McClelland (6-2, 226), Mltt'k Cra1g(6·6. 196), Steve Reed (6-3. 211 ) and a speedy Andy Sheppard, backed up by Keath Muwell -althou~ only McClelland ha s caught a pass an varsity competition And in front ofh1m 1s a lane which almost defies a pecking order. For 111stance: •Jason Neldelman. a 6-3, 210- pound senior guard and middle linebacker, returns wtth all-league credentials. •C'hns Sylvis, 1n tht wings fo r the past three years, has blossomed into a starter's role as a 6-4, 282-pound tackle. · · •ScotlCra1g. at 6-4, 241 . 1s listed at left tackle, a returning staner •Pat Paterme, a 6-3. 2011un1or, 1'> at left guard. •Gus Hurst, 6-0, 21 I, is backed up by Rick Robens (6-0, 212) at center · •Ch uck Wat'W1ck, who did not play ai. a Junior. 1s a balkup tackle at 6-2, 237 •And Steve Kalatschan a 5-11 187-pound Junior who was the MVP on the sophomore team bad.s. up Recd at tight end •Marcus Kelso, at 6 0, 247- pounds. leads the defen..e lil tackJe along wtth Warwick, Hur'>l and Scon Harbin 1n the lia1lor.,· 4-3 That sophomore team as well a) the freshman team . swept to league champ1onsh1ps a year ago. to 'omple- ment the varsity's endeavor\ , 'The ke y 1s up front \a)S G1d· Newport football outlook Head (oach: Mike <J1ddangs (third yeari Overall record: 24.9.3 Staff: Bucko Shaw (linebackers. defen~. r~) Kent Paul (secondary. spee1al teams. wr) Jay Johnson {offensive line, defensive line) Rack Roberts (admin1strat1ve assistant) League: Sea View Nickname: Sailors (olors Blue and C1ray Offense I ·back. Defense Pro 4-3 1984 record: League 6-0-1 (co-<:hamp1ons1 Overall 9-1-2 1986 schedule Sept 13 ~anta .\na \ept 20 JI In inc \cpt lf) at Huntington Beach Oct. 4 E'itanc1a• (at()( < I Oct 11 Saddleback• Oct I IS C O'>ta Mesa• Oct ::!5 at Llguna Beach• Oct 31 l 'n1 vers1t)• Nov g ~ oodbndge• NO\. 15 ( orona del Ma,.. lat 0( C ) •1.>enote\ league game. All game'> at 7· 30 ding~ who t>ea>ns has founh year with the Sailors. "Cra1a and Nedelman arc back but a couple here have to come on Actually our offensive hne lJ very unsettled .. We're fat. We look hke we've been dnnk:ing beer in tbe NFL. But our linemen are all growina and they're \trong " Foley who completed I SO of 26) attempts for 2,223 yards and 17 touchdowns as a Junior. as the. obvious centerpiece on this squad. although 1t 1s safe to state the Sailors (Pleue Me 8AILOR8/C2 ) Slotbeck Ke'Yin McClelland Quarterback Shane Foley R unntn1 bac k Bryan Wild.man For Giddings, ~here may always be one more co~ing Foley & Co. a re t h e big lures fhisyear , but 1985 won 't be t he end of t he talent When Mike Giddings took the reins at Newport Harbor High School a lot of people thou~t the love affair mi&ht be a fly-by·na&ht situation - that the well-traveled Giddings would be around just Io na enough to realize the fru1tst>fhis labors with the 1981 Steve Bnuas-led sophomore 1quad before moving on to a new chaJlenge. • Well, 1984 came and Brazas had long since left. but Giddings was m il there, guiding his Sailors to the Sea View Leagueco-<:hamp1onsh1p with a ~I record. And, he'sstill there with quar- terback Shane Foley at the controls in 1985 -and there are rumors ofa w phomore pros~ct at quarterback that may keep Giddings anchored even longer. h's turning out, however, that it's a lot more than this ind1v1dual or that group proving to be the lure. It's the basics. "People close to me say they think I need 11, actm11s<..i1dd1ngs .. I rs a good outlet and the kids seem to believe in what I'm doing." Asa walk-on coach without a single on-campus assistant Giddings has guided the Sailors to a 24-9-3 record overthree )ears. three straight 1n p<1 to the C IF playoffs and prospectsof C'>'en better things to come "I l's not a wan or lo'ie type ot 1 th1n g." 1ns1stsG1ddmgs. who~ coach1ngcar~r has spanned 26 )ear\ with e~pcrience in high school com· munitycollege. maJorcollege the World Football League and the National Football League. For se veral years now he has made a Irving watha scou11ng service for the NFL -so you'll get few argumrnt'> on G1dd1ngs· expertise in the spun of Roc£R CARLSON PREP SPORTS foo tball Yet, here he is. still in the high \Chool ranks -and loving 11 "As long as I feel I'm contnbu11ng to the kids." sa~ s the Newpon Bca1..h resident, "I hke 1n feel I'm an influence on them .. Newpon Harbor football has 1n· deed had its ups and down!> in the par,t 55 years-in the first 39 )Cars there were Just two big moments -the 1942 Sun~t l..eaguechamp1onsh1p team ofWendell Picken!> and a standout 8-1 club in 1949 coached b' '\I Irwin . The Ernie Johnson-Don Lent~B1ll P1z:z1ca era of the '70s put Harbor o~ the map, but the three )cars pnor to Giddings' am val found t~e ~a1lors at a lowebb~1th a combinep record of 6-21-3 . What's made the d1fferem.e ' "lfl'vedoneanythingnght hae sa}sG1dd1ngs "wt"' e got the big k1d\ coming out Jf,ou control the hne ol ~nmmage "· u can v. an ·· .. The k1d\Jn:·bnght at "-e"' pon and we raise c1 lot of mone~ ·· The mone' transforms into the necess1ues, such as that extra leg machine in the weight room Despite h15-coaching background at h1 gherle,els 1t'{st1ll lhe hlah school arena which G1dd1ngs finds his most e~o,me~t - 'This is where the fun ts," he says .. , vu have the attenuon of)our pla~ers 10 high school ··Right no"" to Stt a (Chm) ) h is ur Ke ' 1n 1 \it cClellapd develop There 1s such ct difference between the 1un 1or and s.en1or vears II'\ e'l.u ting ·The' re ti rt'd up .. .\nd ma' be that's the .ke\ to the \f1ke Giddings pu11Je -fired up - becaU\C \ u.anlo,eh1mor but 11 s fairl\ .. c.-n;un \Ou.:JI agree-< 11d· di ngs 1s iirc.-d ;.ip .It's hitty-g~itty time for Angels Johnstone plays a trick on Expos Halos roll a nine- tn fourth inning -=---to batter ·Tigers DETROIT (AP) -If the Angels bang on to win the American League West, they might mark their Labor Day laugher against the Detroit Ti~crs as a pivotal game. 'This 1s the n1lly-gn1ty ume for us," Angels' catcher Bob Boone said after Monday's 11 ·I rout. "We did not play well at all in New York, but Teus swept Kansas City to help us in a very bit way. "For us to wm, we must play our best every day. It's 1n our hands." The Angels won big -with a nine- run fou rth, inning -against the defending World Series champions. and they did it without sluggers Rcagie Jackson and Ruppert Jones. who were gi ven the day off by Manager Gene Mauch. "It kind of looks like it's us and1the Royals," Mauch noted. "That's the pattern that's been established." The Anaels now have a 7-J record apinst the Tigers this seuon. When asked why he thou1ht his club was so tough on Detro1t, Mauch replied, "I haven't A clue." Toc1&1•1Qe•e Anllfl (Mceuklll t.9) 1t Detroit (P9try 13-11) Time: 4:35 p.r'n. TV:None. RedlO: KMPC (710). home runs for th ree different maJor league clubs. The others were Dick Allen, Bobby Bonds. Rocky Colav110. Jacksoit, nave Kingman and Frank Robinson. The 38-ycar-old Evans hit 43 home runs for the Atlanta Bra ves in I Q7) and 30 fortheSan Francisco Giants 1n 1983. "I probably won't get a chance to savor this until the off season," Evans said. "It's a great honor to be in the company of those six other gu ys, thou&h. In 20 yean. peeple will see my name on that hst and say, "Who's he7"' Gcorae Hendnck blasted a three- run home run and Bobby Gnch homered with the bases empty to supply all the offense the Angels needed. Jim Slaton held the Tigers to four hits in eight innings. Then. after allowing two singles with no outs in the ninth, he was relieved by Donnie Moore. who retired the side without allowina any runs. ., ............ His pinch hft gtves Dodgers 5-4 victory. ending 4-game slump LO .\;'-.( 1f-I f-'i I \1'1 -Jt 1.t•lild tx <Mild that JJ\ Juhn~lllnt' uni\ rla\\ .. n holidaH ~hate' er hl·, l'l1Jinh ll.t1'c the Los .\ngrle\ Dod11t•r\ ol rl'.I'• '" I• 1.clebrate l aht•r Da' Johnstone hneJ cl ptr. n htl ,1n..:lc to ngbt tie Id ""1th runnl"r' ,ti ,l. •t d and third and one out \111nd.n 1o1~h1 gnmg the l>1kigers a ' -l '1l111r. '·1 tht' Montreal E\po' .tnd 'nJpfl n11 their four-game lo<.1 ng \tri·.11.. It ~as the 3 ·\ear-nld l11hn,1 '1 \CCond h1l of th~ "'a'11r ind SIOC(' .\pnl 14 He hadn't e'en plJ\t·d '", '' fourth of J uh he<. a UM' nl h 1p .111.l '"'°' • problem~ that ll.t'pt h1n• " 1t11 disabled h\t unt il ht• "'·t' h 1 ' 1t ·.1 \unda' Then.. are tho~ "'h•• 11,t' pressed the 11p1n inn th.11 tht n' thing the muth-tra,t'lul l11t111't •ll wugood for an)mOrt' ""J' ht"<'n'< I humor to he lp l..eep thl lt'.H 1 ... ,,. 1 the final month of th<' \CJ\• •n But \fanagrr Tnm I .1,.1r.l.1 •I ·ti Dodgrr~ ""hn appn·l 1.11c' I •t n stone''I ofT.firld ,1n11,, ,,,11 lc•h th1 IC'fl·handed h111t.•r'\ n.n IH'hl t,11~·nt' l'ould belp. tht' l luh ToJJl6b.t'• o..me Montreal (Smith 15-•) Oodg.,. (He,-.hllef 13-3). Time: 7:30 p.m TV None. Radio KABC (790).. a t l• 'h''"" I ,an \1111 pla' f ,,r thr l.t\I •• 1!.1 , I ' ~"t J --ca'••n i. rrt•' r II ,,. I I k \•.i'' 1 ' •• 'urpn,c.-d thdt l11'1ntt :11i. ht•r ktl l{l .irJc on ~ • clt•1 It'd tu I' i. n t• him"' th runnt·r' on 't•,onJ 111'1 t trJ JO.J ••IH' •'UI ' 1u h.H c l• rrmemht· th.it \\Jr .tn• Pun, Jr "-:t\ , 1n 1nit up '" J IOl'll l.1hn,1t•n1 "ho "d' pin. h 11 in)! lu \qllf\1!1~ f'llh ht"! l ,ut." , I > .11 -l : I k "', •u ,,t h,I\ ht•t•n h.u 11 • d••tJhk ,,p I '"l' ( 111n1.1lt·1 "n11·,1 ••1 :i1 th1rd t•n I n\l••n1·' hll ,1, tht I >•"-l!lrr' t'\ 't•n,tc .1 tt1 r Ir.hi n tht 'Jt1• n..1 I l'.~ 1t \\ t '' 111 \t'' rn ~JnW' ' 1 ...,oil 1 •11·11 • "t'1d1 tt·ll 1nt11 1h1111 rt.J\ t h, '•r !l J I. J dl'll\t11n ;, lhl '-e"' \-11\.. \kl' Rams obtain Duckworth The lone bript spot for Detroit wH lbe 30th home run of the kason by Qarrcll Evans, a solo shot on a 3-2 cbunt lcadma off the seventh. Evans beame onl y the seventh major leque player to hit 30 or more "We feel pretty confident." Slaton said. "I'm 1ust tryina to take 1t a game at a l1me. We're in a pennant race riaht now and I want to &JVe them as many aood innings as I can." The Ancel•' Jim Slaton turned ln a laboroaa afternoon Monday, hold.lnC Detroit to four hi ta ln el&ht lnnln&•· • "We l nev. 1n the month''' 'wP•C"n ht'r ~hen 11 get\ do" n 1 1th\ .t •11 ,1.1" ~e'd look up and \t"e I.I\ I <i'Prd.1 \aid .. He'\ a gu ) "'h"' h<•t•n lht·r~ before_ He tiocsn t get r..tttlcJ .\s for h)hn\lonr h r lll\I ~antrd 1 11, lo{ .11•1' ni.1.le d tr•nh• t11r J ll\111 h !lr1'1ktl IA.ldt Tl'(('I\ ('I and 1,1,1\.. .;,, pl,I\<'" ••11 thC' r<1\t('r 111 r(',11.h the J 'I ni.rn rt'gular \l'a,on hnill \1 11n<ld\ ~ l ,1 l'<•l,1rr th<'t r 1ne \J)f'rH'n1.ed "'l•lc rt«r,e1 l"rp" the R.1m' 'oC'nt rrlo<'r' <'ta t kk <.an t<..t•~ alc;li.1 .tn1.l .in und1'1( ln\C:'d draft c hn1t ('tu the , .. ., D1t'g11 ( h1ll'"g('r\ tor ltiurth \c.-a r 1A.tdr '<'trran Rohhv Ou1."-"'•H1h -R8.U1S offer.to insure Dickerson for $5 million Georaja Front1erc, the owAcr of the Rams. and her chief nqot11tor, John Shaw, broke their silence on Enc Dtckerson'1 holdout Monday afternoon. Frontlere uid the Rama have offered to purchue a$$ million yearly insurance policy (at 1 coat ofS60.000) for Dickerson in ca1e he 1uffeftd a carttr-endinJ 11\Jury. he alto 11id that Shaw, the Rama' vice president of finance, contacted Dickerson'• ldviten 1 week after their pre 1 confeRncc on Jul1. 29, but nothJna came of the ditcu11ioJ". • Afttt Eric's pttas conference, I told John Shaw that 1( he'• womed about i~ury pn>1«t.IOft. 'jll and usurt them we will tab .; ,I'' carccr of that," Frontaert said "At which ti me, he c,alled and mentioned 11 to Mr. (Jack) Rodn (one of D1ckeN0n'\ adv1acn). At that time. they were not interested in meetina with haw and Jay Zytmunt (Rams 1~:neral counsel)." There has been no contact 1nce th.at umc. Frontiere said. Frontierc expressed surprue that Otckenon. who wanta a th.rtt·year exlension to h11 cumnt contract, 11 11111 holding out. "l realty don't know why (l\c won·t report.) 1f be't wtlllna to honor his current contract, as llC' eaid at t.be pttUCOnfertnce," she u1d "We've neYtt taad we would not ncaouatc an t'xtens1on to hts contract .. Reached at his home, Rodn den1td th r bu 1c thru" of Front1ere·, contentton that 1hc Rams arc do1 na all they can to tnd thr holdout "lf 1t wu JI.lit an ansut,an« i. ur 11 1hc whole 1ssut wa $60,000. we arc not'° dumb that Enc 'A'Ould not have reported to c. mp · Rodn said "He has alread) losi S 190 CIOC L The whole issue makt's no ~nw " Rodn repeated his contcntton that the terms of the exteMion -not an in;,uranrc pohcy he hims.elf could purcha~ -" wh111 Dlckcnon nC'Cds bcfort' he W1 II repon "Enc mu't bt ~1d u one ol tht 100 runnmll 6a1.ks one of tht' top plhtM> 1n thC' µml· Rodn u1d "~ hene,.cr lht Ram' •re ""1ll1n1 tO do that. WC can le\ th1\ whol(' thlO(l \C'tllrd "Frie can be in camp h) \\-edne~1t\ ii thr' ., art' v.1lhng to nrgot1att a fair t 'IC'n\lon · Althol.lib 01C:ken.on's advucn ungin-.lh 3\ked tor an tnJuf'\.'.luarantttd r'trn,wn tht'\ haH no ironclad l ltttment IO mind "If the\ will d1~u'' an C\lt'n\1t1n R<xin ~1d .,, en thin 1\ nr nt1ahk haw also matntaincd that at n11 ttmt' dtd he • prom1~ to negotiate a , onira, t t \lr n"nn, ,,, 1)1\kenon datmt'd II hi\ ('ft'" I onftftrht' ".\h\Olutel' not " \ha"" \aid 'u trrm'I Yot'N' d1 u'~ · 11> ~t'at h thr ~tu lat <,('a\lin rt,.,te1 hm1 t, th<'\ put hnC'had.er l reorge "ndrt'-"\ tin th(' 1n1ul'C'd restf'\ e h <it and pul fo ur plnen. on wa1"t'r\ °'l hi\ ~~kh mrdJa luo neon'" Rohan'°n e'.l.prc'sed deh&.ht wuh tht tradC' hu, wu unu .. c; 1hou1 tht "''an rr 11\t Ht' rrtu~ to name thr plavrn ht pu, on wa' ''C'f'\ -"\.\ r wcrr louk1na at 1 ro 1o1p,le of ~t'l\tf'\ Rob1n\On \&td · Th11 wa\ lhe one 1hat worked 0'4l j I l , .. Or-. 0099t QA.ILV PllOTITueedey. s.ptem.blr 3, 1885 Prem AP 4ltpa&ckl Ouarterba~lcs, point &uards and even Ill cbeerfeaden at mo~ than .SO m.v<>r collep will be tested for drup tbis year as schools crack down on the use of iUepl narcotjcs and pcrfonnanc:e--enhanci na substances. Most small collqcs responding to an Associated Press survey said the cost ofsuch tests were prohibitive, but mlijor schools apparently have decided that thC' need to assuJ'C a .. clean" athletic program is wonh the · price. · "It would appear to me that most inst1tutions have been initiatina druJ education proaraws because of the widespread acceptance of the fact that drugs are being used," said John Toner, atbJetic director at the Uoivenity of Connecticut and a former president of the NCAA. "Followina the example of the United States Olympic Committee. colleges lJ'C coming.to rcali~ that tcstina is part of the education program." Tbe AP asked athletic departments at 38 colleges and universities nationwide iftbeir athletes were tested fordrug use. Twenty~ight said drua-testing programs were in effect or would be in effect by the end of September. Several others said they were studying drug-testing proposals. Toner, who heads a committee looking into mandatory drug tests for all NCAA schools, said last week that 50-60 Division I scJ'iools wqe ®nducting some form of drug tests on athletes. Di vision I is made up of the biggest members of the National Collegiate Athletic Association. Quote of the day Rick R•odea, Pinsburgh Pirates pitcher, on the possibility of surrendering career hit No. 4, 192 to Pe~ Rose in a scheduled Sept. I start against Cincinnati: "It wouldn't hurt me if be broke it (Ty Cobb's record) against me. He has gotten about 40 hits off me, so a few more wouldn't bother me." J Rlpken leau O'a.wlth 8 RBI Cal l\Jpba rut t-0 homers and drove • ln su r'1ns Monday to power BaJtimore peu Oakland. 12...it, 1n an American ~ue pme. Ripken. who drove in a first innma run with a aroundout, keyed a sevcn-ru11 secondtnnina with a duce-run homer, his first blast in 16 games. He bit his 20th home run of the season • two.run shot, in the ei&hth off Jeff KA.Ater .•• Elsewhere, Geor1e Brett and ICa1 McRae hit solo home ruos and Ma.rt Gllbku • allowed follf hits over 7¥> inninp and Kansas City polled a )..2 victory over the Cbicaao White Sox. The victory snapocd a three-game · losing streak for the Royals and kept them 2"'2 games behind the Angels . . . Mllte Easler hit his se<lOnd arand slam hgmer in three games and Tim Lollar pitched a tw~ hiller over eight innings to carry Boston to an 11-2 victory over Texas ... Tim Te.tel and Tom Bnuautky homered and Mllte RJpken Smt.&Moa gave up four bits in seven innings, aivmg MinnC10ta a 6-l victory over Milwaukee . .,, lJoytl Mtffbf singled home Erale ~u in theleventh to snap a 2-2 t1eand lead Toronto toa 3-2 victory over Oevelahd ... Dave WWleld drove in four runs with a three-run homer ana sacrifice fly and Dave J\lpetU picked up his 24th save as the New· York Yankees defeated Seattle, 8-7. FV woman cycllata aparkle BEVERLY HILLS -Tom Schuler of lit Downen Grove, Ill., won the 30-mile men's professional race Monday as part of the I 5th leg in the Mayor's Cup bicycling series. Two Fountain Valley women stood out, Madonna Harris taking fourth and Marvela Harris ninth. Schuler, 28 was timed'in 56 minutes, 18 seconds in nosing out Joel Stetina oflndianapolis in the race on the strccts of Beverly Hills. Schuler and Eric Heiden arrived in the Los Angeles area only a couple ofhours before the race. having flown from Italy where they took part in the World Cycling Championships. The two were taken by limousine from Los Angeles International Airport to Beverly Hills. a distance of about 10 miles, amving at the site of the race about an hour before it began. • PETE ROSE COUNTDOWN Clo.IZJI In on .Ty Cobb Wbat Rote did- Monday: 1 He was 0 for 3 with a waJ~. scor- ing one run in the Reds' 4-1 victory ' over the Cardinals in St. Louis. - King win'• LPGA tournament .. SPRINGFIELD, Ill. -Betsy King !I birdied five holes on the back nine Monday to break out of a tight pack and claim a two- stroke victory over Janet Anderson in the LPGA Rail Charity Classic. King. the 1984 LPGA Player of the Year, made pars on the first nine holes before her birdie spree started. She finished with an 11-under-par 205 in the 54-hole tournament. 1-._ At one point late in the tournament, six playe rs were tied for the lead, but when others began to fade, King got hot, sinking five birdie putts, all rrom within 15 feet. Meta pound Pad.ree for 18 ~ta _ leJll Benudn wtnt S.-for·S with a Ill two-run homtt ~Y ltaldl& added a th.n:e- run clout and the New \7 ork Meu had 18 hits in routina San Dieao. 12-4 Monday . . niaht. cli mbing to within· ~e of St. Louu 1n the National Leaaue East Hemaftda scored four runs and drove in thl"C'C, Kniaht drove in four a.nd Darryl Strawberry contributed three RBI ... In other NL aames Dave Parker hit a two-run homer in the sixth innini powerina Cindnnali to a 4-1 triumph over St. Louis behind eiaht-hit pitch.in& by Tom Browala1 and Job Frueo. .. Tom Foley beat out an iflfield sinaJe and later scored on pinch- hitter IAI• Apayo'• deublc in the l Oth inninj to Jive Philadelphia a fifth straight victory. 4-3 over San • Francisco ... Mike Brow. hjt his first National League home run, a three-run shot in the first innin,a. and led Pittshurgh to a S-4 win , over Atlanta ... Eric BUiock'• 8tra"'9rry first major league hit, a tie- breaking, two-run pinch double in the fifth innina helped Houston defeat the Chicago Cubs. 7-2. Kobe entera bid for Olympia KOBE, Japan -Even though the • 1988 Seoul Summer Olympics are still three years away, cities are'already bidding for the 1992 Games, grasping any op- portunity to promote their cause. . South Korea also has represcntauves here to spread publicity about its plans. Seoul arso will stage the 1986 Asian Games. Televlalon, racllo TELEVISION 10 p.m. -BOXING: Channel 56. 11:30 p.m. -TENNIS: U.S. Open high- lights. Channel 2. RADIO 4:35 p.m. -BASEBALL: An1el1 at Detroit, KMPC (710). 7:35 p.m. -BASEBALL: Montreal at Dod1er1, KA.BC (790). Newport Barbor Blgh'• top football proapecta for 1985 Nystrom sends Becker packing . Pl•yer Pos. Ht. Wt. Com meet Vince Brc{tfus CB 6-0 160 Sr., backup quarterback Rex Brisb inc CB 5-6 145 Sr., receiver u a junior Sterli~ Coberly K-Rec 5-10 160 Jr., 11 FG, 2 at 39 in '84 Mark raig SE-FS 6-6 196 Jr., u[, from sophomores Scott Craig LT-DE 6-4 241 r. returning staner Shane Foley ~~ 6-2 191 Sr .. 57%, 17 TDs in '84 Guy Greeley 6--0 162 Jr., ufi from sophomores Scott Harbin DE-OG 5-11 187 r., backup lb in '84 Joe Johnson OLB-OG-C 6-0 202 Sr .. unanimous all-lca~ue Dan_Hill DE. 6-3 224 Sr., did not play '83 or 84 Peter Howser FS 5-10 163 Sr., moves from line6acier - Gus Hunt C-DT 16-3 20 1 fr., backup c.enter as soph S. Kalatschan TE-OLB 6--0 231 Sr., sophomore MV~ Player . Poi. Ht. Marcus Kelso OT 6-0 Keith Mu.well SE 5-10 Kevin McClelland Slot 6-2 J. Nedelman RG-MLB 6--0 Pat Paternie OG-DT 6-3 Steve Recd TE-OLB 6-3 Andy Sheppard FL-CB S-1 Steve Sheppard CB S-10 Chris S~vis OT-OT 6-4 Masof>f hompson OLB S-1 1 David ullar MLB 6-0 Chuck Warwick LT-DE 6-2 Bryan Wildman RB-CB 5-10 Wt . 247 174 226 211 201 211 159 165 282 174 197 237 163 Comment Sr .. returning starter Sr., No. 4 receiver as Jr. Sr., 19-IOS yards vs. Irvine Sr., ret. all-league Jr., up from sophs Sr., backup TE in '84 Sr .. 46 TD rct vs Santa Aoa Sr., did not fclay in '8~ Sr .. waiting or 3 years Jr .. up from so~homorcs So., only $op on team Sr., did not play in '84 Sr., 2nd all-league in '84 NEW YORK (AP)-The Swedish army is taking over the U.S. Open tennis championships, plundering hopes for a Dream Match between John McEnroe and Bons Becker. sixth, also won Monday. Wilander, taking the court after Nystrom's victory, beat Greg Holmes 7-6, 6-1 , 7-S. and Jarryd ou.tlasted American Tim Mayotte 7-6, 1-6, 6-4. SAILORS WILL BET !\KING TO AIR BEHIND FOLEY. • • Four Swedish men are sull ahvc going into the quarterfinals. So rather than the top-s&ded McEnroe against Wimbledon champion and West German hero Becker Wednesday night, it will be McEnroe and Sweden's Joa.kim Nystrom. "It couldn't be an~hing but inspir- ing," Wilander wd of his couo.- tryman 's victory. "I thinlc he plared great, and I'll} real happy he beat him. ... Right now, I th'ink Joakim is 11 good a player as me." t All but one of the top eigbt women's seeds made it to the quar- ters. Monday's wmners included Lloyd, No. 2 Martina Navratiloq No. 3 Mandlikova, No. 4 Pam Shriver, No. S Kohde-K.ilscb, No. 6 Zina Garrison. No. 7 Sukova and No. 11 Steffi Graf of West Germaoy. From Cl appear to have all of the bases covered. Sterling Coberly, who kicked 11 field goals as a sophomore. gives Harbor a silver-plated kicking game: Bryan Wildman, formerly Bryan Guptill, returns at running back; and Joe Johnson, Nedelman and Reed anchor a form idable linebacking corps. Johnson, Wildman and McClelland may become a revolving door at running back to keep the running attack fresh. Johnson, at 6-0, 202 pounds, was a unanimous selection for all-league honors as a junior linebacker. and figures to be a candidate for All - Orange County honors before he's 1hrough. And a move to a one-back offense with the emphasis on passing has another key in the presence of McClelland as Giddings' "ace" back, a slotback who can serve as a blocker such as a tight end, or as runner, in the style of a puntshing fullback. But, it's Foley who gi ves Harbor the label as the team to beat tn the Sea View League. Giddings winces as he dwells on Foley. because (I) ·he hates the Steve 8razas syndrome of 1982 and '83 8.CraJc when the .. can't miss" label produced an attitude of "can'Close," which of course was dispro..,·cd by Huntington Beach and El Toro, as well as Valencia in the playoffs in '83. "It's really a concern for me," says Giddings, "getting too high on this team." And, it is a team sport. Without sup'Port no quarterbaclc survives. But, when pressed. Giddin~ will tell you: "I've seen the (Steve) Brod1es. (Bill) Nelsens and (Pete) Bcathards ... he's (Foley) going to be someth ing. "lfl had a rating list the category of ·arm' might be No. IS, but Shane has as good a total arm as I've ever seen in high school. He can lay 1t in long or short, there's no question he has a gifted arm. "But he secs things. I don't believe in audibles. not even with the pros. But when he comes to the line he has the option of calling one of two running plays or one of two passing plays. And he's right 90 percent of the time. ''He sees the field , he knows the game and he has pretty well dedicated himself." At6-I, 191 poun.ds, f..oleyaveraged 6.0 yards a carry in the playoffs a year ago ( 14 carries for 84 yards) and when necessary, will be in the secondary at safety. During spring practice he was the big attraction -to the extent on one afternoon alone, USC Coach Ted Tollner, UCLA Coach Terry Donahue and a top Notre Dame assistant were virtually side-by-side on the s1dcfines, taking mental notes. "He's really going to be highly recruited," continues Giddings. "l 've told his mother to jet him a separate phone. He's a senior in high school and it's important that he enjoys it." Giddings has switched his of- fensive system to take advantage of • Creative Cuisine Recipe Contest . Enter Your Favorite Recipe And Wini CA TEGORIES 7. Q UICK AND EASY/DO-AHEAD DISHES-Recipes for cooks on the go or those c~ught with unexpected guests. 2. REGIONAL -Rec1pes fea turing American cuisine from the East to the Southwest and parts in between. -· 3. MASCULINF TQUCHT""M en who are enjoying the kitchen, share your fa vorite recipe. 4 GOURMET-Recipes ydu use when you want to impress the epicurean in your life. ~ • ONTEST RULES Frttr•nrJ must be prlv•te lndlvldtMh. No commercl1f entrtet wlf/ be Kt:rpted All rntr~ must ,,,. tr~, ,double 11»ctti. Entr1nr1 mun be 10 or over Dlify />/101 rmpfoyttS ire no1 •fl1lo1t· Enrrlfl ~ propHty ol ttt. 0.1/y />110( •nd annot be rlf!turned. Entrks mu1t bf' postnvrk~ by ~tmrber 1a1h. 1H5 or df'llvertti to 0.1/y Pilot, d o ClflMIVl CUISINE ~con tONrrsr. JJO w Illy, Cent• Mew, CA 92616 by S 00 P.M . September 1ath, 1H.S, WlflflrN wlll be INtured 1kxi1 with t~r r«l/>f' In the Crutlvlf! Cu/Jin«' t«'tion runn/nf /fl ~ 0.lly Plfot on Wedrt~y. October 2, 1965. Winnlf!rl nvy entC'r more thin OIHt at~ory. E1eh entry mUft be •«omptnllf!d by •n entry lorm Of copy ol •n entry form H wen•• • typed ,,.,,,,.ph e1rpl.tlnlnf ·why the .rntr1n1 I/kn.the r«lfH' ind when W~ flkrt to uw tftr r«l/>f'. Thrtt f1n.tl/J tJ wlll be ch to rtlcpt.tr In """1.-<>lf Twldly, ~ptrmber 1', 1HS. CREATIVE CUISINE RECIPE CONTEST ENTRY FORM NAME OF ENTRY: CATEGORY: ENTRANT'S NAME: DAY PHONE#· EVENING PHONE I/: .. the obviou... gomg to a one-back offense 1n the style of the San Diego Chargers or Washington Redskins. ··we're $01ng to throw on offense,'' says Giddings, who has shelved some of his previous blocking theories. turning to a more simplicated format of shoving the ball down the oppo- nent's throats in the running game. But first, it will be top-seeded Chris Evert Lloyd against Claudia Kohde- Kilsch of West Germany and Hana MandJikova against fellow Czech Helena Sukova in the women's quarters todar. Also in acuon are No. 3 Yann1ck Noah aplnst amateur Jay Berger, Swede Stefan Edberg against No. 4 Jimmy Connors, and Frenchman Henri Leconte against Heinz Gun- thardt of Switzerland. Defensively the Sailors arc chang- ing style, too. goini more with man- to-man coverage with a heavy rush, as opposed to zones, although Giddings says he still has his zones ready and he's not entirely satisfied with his secondary speed .. If there's an Achilles heel for the Sailors it's a lack of team speed and quickness, and depth. McEnroe, still No. I although he has not been at top form this summer, did his part Monday to set up a showdown with history's youngest Wimbledon champion by dis- pat~hing Czechoslovakia's Tomas Smid 6-3. 7-5, 6-2. Raiders cut 3 to get to 45 EL SEGUNDO (AP) -The Los Angeles Raiders cut three players and placed third-round draft choia Stefon Adams on their injured rt· serve list Monday to reach tbc National Football League roster lirnlt .. We have six who may have to go both ways," admits Giddings of his 52-man squad. "It'll be a juggling act to keep them fresh. But the steady, patient Nystrom, who went lo five sets against Becker at Wimbledon and lost to him again two weeks ago in Cincinnati, was too much for the tight teen.ager this time. of 45 players. _ Wa1vers were asked on runniaa back Dan Reeder, a fifth-round draft choice from Delaware, free agent offensive lineman DwiV't Wheelir and free agent wide receiver Gordon Jones. "I think he felt it more than me. "The big question is how long it will take to blend. Can some juniors come on so the key seniors don't have to go two ways? "We're a team with one prospect (Foley), one suspect (McClelland) and a bunch oflc.ids who bad better get better each week." Everyone was talking about Becker against McEnroe in the next round." said Nystrom. "This victory was very sweet because at Wimbledon I thought I played my best grass-ooun match ever, and I still lost." Adams, who played wide receiver 1n college at East Carolina, WM converted to defensive back late in his senior season and had played cor- nerback during the exhibition season for the Raiders. Fellow Swedes Mats Wilander, the No. 3 seed, and Anders Jarryd, seeded Lions taking advantage of power play Fountain Valley, Edison and Marina high school footbaU teams all fi&W'C they're in the hunt for the Sunset League championship -but there's someone else to worry about -Jim O'Hara's Westminster Lions. The Lions appear to have their strongest team m years with only a lack of experience at quanerback and fullback keepina Westminster from ..---------. havina a com· ~ S 11-Velencle ) S»-Pec:lflce S27-El T«o (et MV) ~ltrOel 010-.t LI Wllsotl Ol~dlton' 02S·~I Hin. leecll' Nl~ln. Velrf" Nl-91 Merlfle (Wm)' Nlr-Octen vi.w• ..... "' °'""· AH OlmH et 1 JO. pletc picture at the outset. O'Hara 1s movina toward an offense with double tiaht e nds and a flanker in order to exploit his team's power. Defensively the obvious cor- nerstone 1s at linebacker where two returning start.en (Todd Weaver and Mark Smith) arc joine.O by sophomore Ray Smith. Ray Smith (6-0, 217) was the sophomore team's MVP in h1s freshman 1Ca$0n, and Weaver (6-1 , 219) arid Mark Smith {no relation), at 6-2, 207, haveO'Hua in aood spirits. "You can call them Manny, Moe and Jack. h's 1oin1 to be a whole ldt o( fun, he says." Jon Ostltt, a 1c1uor nan.leer out for the first timt; rates u the Lions' fastest with 4.o speed 1n the .0 . De11>ite the fact the Lions can boast I 0 retum1n1 starters. there wiU be aix juniors and a sopbomott st.anina dcfens1vcly, and in the offensive hnc there arc three juniors and a sophomore Westminster outlook Co-coach: Jim O'Hara (3rd year) and Jack Bowman Overall record: 9-11 (O'Hara) ~ Staff: Jack Bowman (defensive coordinator) Stan Clark (offensive coordinator, offensive hnc) Don Presby (strength coordinator, defensive line) Steve Osborne (offe nsive backs) Bob McAllister (q uarterbacks. specl.al teams) Kevi n Kappen (assistant offensive line) League: Sunset Nickname: Lions: Colors: Red. Black and White Offense: Pro-I: Defense: 4-3 1984 record: League 1-4: Overall: 4-6 Weatmlnater High'• top proapecta Player Poi. Ht. Wt. Mike Austin FS-QB 6-2 180 Herman Baine RT 6-2 221 David Brant (' 6-3 21 5 Keith Covarrubias LG 6-2 214 Mike Cover RE 6-2 195 Dean Eddy SS 5-9 160 Mike Engen LT 6-0 212 Jack Evans TE-DE 6-3 195 Rob Farrington LE 6-3 194 Anthony Fierro OT 6-0 261 PcteOill LT-TE 6-4 222 Steve Gulley Q8-{'B S-11 171 Gilbert lsuc RT 6-1 240 Matt Jones Rec 6-4 I ftS Dean Kontoes RC S-8 141 Gary Lewellyn RG-DT 6-4 23 1 Robert Martine1 RC · S-11 170 Jon Ostler FL S-10 155 Terrence Perin FB 5-10 190 James Rubalcava LE 6--0 195 Danny Sald4lna FL S· I 0 l 58 JaaSckhon OT 6-2 208 David Shelley TB S· I 0 174 Mirk'SmiO'i RLS-TE 6-2 207 Raymond muh LLB-FB 6-0 217 James Solley r e 6-2 190 M1kcSpain PK-TE 6-2 185 Mic.key Sternisha. F'S 6-0 I 58 JohnTrani OT 5-10 187 Robbie Turner FD 6..() 21 s Todd Wea ver MLB 6-2 207 ' Commn c Jr .. up from sophomores Sr .. all-league in '84 Sr ... returning staner Jr .. up from sophomores Jr .. up from sophomores Jr .. up from sophomores Soph, up from frosh Sr., '84 starter at OT Sr., alt. '84 starter Sr., '84 lelterman Sr .. '84 starter Sr. '84 starter at CB Jr .. up from sophomores Jr .. up from SOl>homo~s Sr., '84 letterman Jt .. up from soehomora Sr.. 84 Starter r .. runs a 4.6 40 Sr .. '84 lcttmnan Jr .• up from sophomom Sr. retum1n1 starter Jr .. up from sophomores Sr., '84 starter until ttun Jr., ~4 Staner Soph., SOl>h MVP in '84 r., started last 4 '84 pmcs Jr .. up from ,.'Ophomom Jr., up from sophomores Jr . up from sophomores Jr .. up from SOP,homores Jr .. 841taner r • , FoR THE RlcoRo ' ~ . . .. " MA"°" L.•AOU• ITANDINGS Amerk.M LM9Ue Meth K1Mea CllV 0.kl•lld Clllcego S.a ttlt Mlnnaaofe Taae1 Toronto New 'VOf'k Detroit 8 ettlmor• aoaton Mftwevkff Clevlle lld W8ST OIVIMOM W L 7• ,, 70 SI '7 "' "' 65 60 71 St 70 49 ti I ArT OIVIMON 12-49 n .u 70 60 .. 60 62 .. St 69 41 .. l"ct. .5'S "'' .Sii 4ff •st .•57 .l77 .62• 597 .Slt 531 477 '" 3St 2~ 1 9 14 14 24V, 4 11'1'1 17'1» " .... ,,..,, lS ltlt-Muron .... Ahanta. t2. lllla•kw, c111 '---'l!IMll, 90, H.,r, 't Loula, ff J Cieri! St Loul•, 14, G Wlt\Oll, lllltuledelonla , ll HIT~GM. St Loula 174, OwvM. $&/I Oltoo, lW, H8'• St Loula, IS), ••lnea Moflt•fft, '"· 1111.,hr Clncl~u 1'1 Sernutt ltrlllade!Mlla, i.1 DOUll.l!S-Pari.., Cincinna ti JJ. ... .,,, St Louta, 31, We ta.ti\ MollllHI, lO Crua. Houaton, tt, O Wll\Oll. Pllllael.iolll• ,. TRIPLE$-M<CiM. St L.Oul• ''· $am~. Plllta<MtPl\la, II. COiemen. St l.oula, 10; lt•IMt. MofltrHt, 10, Oteel<Mn. S.11 lllrenehco. 7 HOME RUNrMvrPllv. Attenl•. )4, o_,.,.,..,.., o.e.en, JI, Perl\". Clncl11na11, 24, Hor11tr Atlanta, 23. Scnm1e11. Plliladal· Diiie , 23 STOLEN 8A$Es-<ot•m•n. SI Loul\ "· Raina•. MontrMI. 52. L0"41•, Cn1caoo. 44, Mc:G ... SI LOUii. 42, S•mvtt, PnltaO.I Diiie, 42 PITCHING (I I ci.tlalon\)-Franco Cln dnnatl, 11· I, I 49, Goooen, New York. 70·4 I II. Htnlll..,, ONetn, IJ•J, 2.29, Hawkins, S•n 0 1'90 I/ 4, 1 91, B sm1t11, Montra•I, 1S·4, 2 /6 a... Atemtt. MONDAY'S IHSUl.TS I I J1ll ef •·lllttlt "-"'"' ,__) , .. ST ltACI . One mite Hot Cllar~ (Teuler> Sty Horl1on (WarCIJ HO )40 JOO IOIO 600 Sonnv1 Country tMv.ller) Tfrl'll 2 04 II S u •x~CTA (J·l l 11ele1 Ml 50 H COND ltACI . One mile. Eve 0111t1fv <Pi.reel 210 WUCI Joker (Sleeth) Brown 81111111 (Ve llenellngl\am) Time 1·01 U I XACTA C7· IJ oeld $7 ~ TH•D ltACI. Ont mite N. Bo Bo CSnarren) 2 40 King Of Rllvtllm (Pitre.I Flv Fty Fla111v IOeuntl•l 'to , 10 2 10 2.70 , 10 ) 00 7 70 , 10 770 .HO ,~ ~A hi CNntv atuk (at...-~-••· a.> 10S tetav Ktno. '21.1~ . ., Je ntt •11e1arM111, 17 I 17 -Nencv LONI, 11' 100 MAr., 8111 Zl'l\nlrmn, 11,°" .. c;e tllv MorMt, •·S" Oete Eooellng , 6.S9t Mertlle NeuM, •.Ste 210 llal Slllnntr 4,S1' Cllrlt J~n•on. 4,Sll '" Jan• 81•16Ctt, 3,•s ,,, 0 I)., " •7·6' 11· .. ·•1 71 ·•7·10 69·73·'1 '9·71·•• 69·'9·71 n n " 0 1111 llldtalletlellt ., PltlMNt"Oll •• tCanu1 Cit• ., He-Or1Mnt Mltnll •• Howton flft~le et Hew Yon Glalllt SI t.ou11 11 Clnellnd S..ttre et c111e111ne11 Temoe Bn ., c11ic..o MIMIY'1 ~ W1'11l11ttCH1 a t 0 " IC!lenl'el 1 et • om t <:.-... . ~Y'• ker"t Allt>eMe 10. o.oto11 " w.-.,......,...ctteM BAH BALL ~LAffllt Zorn tops listofQBs cut in NF reached Elahi teams c hose to cut peneneed backup qua.rtcrbeclts Mo <lay in order t() reach the Natio F0i0tball Leaauc's new. lowc:r, fi 45-man roster limit . The Seattle Seahawks cut an 03 mal mem ber of their team. Jim Zo The left-hander, 10 100 es wi Seattle. threw for 20, 12r:rds MeMllv'• k8"H Alleeta 11, Oetrolt I New York I. S..ttle 1 Tor onto 3. Cllvetend 7 8ettlmDrt 12, O.klenel • eoaton II, Ttxes 2 KertMI• Cltv 3, Cllk•oo , STlttKEOUTS-Goooen New York, ,It, ~to. Clnclnrwill, 119, lhan, Hou1ton, tt7 lflMNuelll, Les A~. 111, Fernellelar New York. 14S SAVES-RH•OOtl. MontrH I lJ Le Smltll Chlc.a1><>, ,. G~MIOI S.11 01'90 21 0 Smit,,, Hou1ton 70 Sutt« Atlallla, 70 T 111'18 2:00 JI S U I XACTA < 1·41 oalo '3S 10 , ,OU .. TH IUC•. One mile Doctor Oort (Pierce) SIO Slloreflnt (TOCICI) GOOCI Froat ISteetn) HO lOO HO 360 300 HOlll1 Stecv ),)17 ~rel 8011rtll ~.371 JIJ Allee lt1t1men, 2,70'1 T,,.,e .. HeulOl't, 2 70'1 MlllCIY "'-<•, 7, 10'1 Pet Braellev 2,701 Katllv Po111ewell ,,701 Ii 70·'4 10 7l·6t 71 71 10 73 71·'9 ... ,. ... 73·70-70 11·11 70 17·'9-n ANGELS-AC11ve ttel Oarvl kon~• oulfi.IOer Cetlecl uo OW Srnttll !Mtc,,.. •uflno Llrwirn af\d Devon Wllltt, out llet0«1, and Oerrtll Miii« 1nfletder. trom Edmonton of the Peclflc Coeat LMGue BALTIMORE ORtOl.Es.-tt\c111ee1 Bltl Swa_t._ ~ lrom Rocri.1t" 04 rne 1111er11ett0ne1 LMGue Purc"8MICI the 'on llKll of Ltllll S.lleta Kell\' Perts l llCI TOtl'I 0 MelllV 1nf...o«1. 8r•e Heven1 ClllC,_ ellel Leo Herne~1 Outl-t•om ROClltster 107 TDs. Zorn, 32 years old, tw • contrac t that calls for a $4S0,0<» '81ary this year. Other veteran quanerba~c·uJ."*~r::w . were Jack, T~f7)00n b y 1l\ll Bay, .• -S:.; Bob A velhnl by')be ~o. 1~~-, Bo b H olly, b)' AtlaJ\~~. tq ~ • MlnnKOll ,, MllweukM I TMIY'IG- Allelh (McCH lll" 9-t) et O.troo CPerrv l).lf), n I Oelll•nd CRllo 2· ll et 8alllmore (BOCI dlclltr 12· 131, n S..llle (Swift 4•11 at New York tNlel!ro ll-9)," ao11on (~1ur1t • 10> •I hall <Ho1.1911 14·12), n Ct'llcego CS.ever 12·91 et Ken"' Cttv I S.114"'1\elllft 1'· SI, n Mllweukff (Derwin 7-IS) et Mlnne1ote CScllrorn 1·121, 11 WtdMldeY'• Game1 A1191h et Detroit. n Clevelelld el Toronto, n Oakland et B•lllrnor1, n Seettl• el New York, n Chicago et Kan111 Cltv. 11 Mltweuk" el Mlnnn ote, n NattoMI LM~ WUT DIVISION W L Pct. GB Dedoen 7S SJ S86 Clnclnnetl 69 60 SlS 6 l S.11 0 1'90 69 61 Sll 7 HOVllOI\ 61 68 473 1411'> Atla nta SS 74 426 70 > S.n Frencl1co SI 1' JtS 24'? EAST DIVISION St LO\Jfl 11 SO 609 New York 1e S2 600 I MontrN I 71 St ~ I Cllletl>O 63 U 4" Ii • Pt'llledelclllla 63 U 4" IS > ,.llllt>urgt'I 41 U l?O 37 1 Mendlv'1 S<wn ~ S, Montrael 4 I 11 1nn1nou Pltt11)\;rgll S. Atlante • Hou1ton 7 Clllceoo 1 Ptllleo.IPlll• 4, San Francisco t 10 IMlng1) Cfncfnoe1I 4, SI Loul1 I New York 12. San 01'90 4 TedeV'I Oe mft MontrH I <Smith IS·•) ., DoOeer'I (Har1lllMr 13·31, n F4oullon CHnthCOCk I· I> at Chlcaoo lTrout l·•l Ptlfladtt11hle <Hud\on 1 Ill et Sen Fran CIKO (Hemmak .. •· 10) AMERICAH LEAGUE Anelli 11, T19er' 1 CALtl'ORNIA DETitOIT Pettf1d Grlcn 711 Owntte tt Banlou1 lb Oowntr>g H Wl"ong1t> Lin"" e1n Handrc1< rf OMllter rt Boone c $c,,0111e1 u JKHow1 )b abrlltll S I 2 1 ) 2 ' ' 0000 4 0 t 0 4 ' 0 l 0 0 0 0 S I 7 I s 7 2 ) 0 0 0 0 s 1 ) 1 • I 2 0 $ ' 1 2 w 1111 ... , 20 l remmt s• Ftvnnu KG1l>to11 rt ASa"cn1 rf LNPann c MCH tlllc DEvn1 Cll'I NSlmn11t B••gmn 111 Lemon ct B•Oklll )ti Grutlll Ph eb r ll Ill l 0 0 0 4 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 l I 2 I 3 0 1 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 3 0 ( 0 I 0 0 0 40 11 14 II Tmt1 S<Of• by lnl\lflvs ll I 6 I Cetlfclmle 001 '10 000-II Detroit ooo ooo too-1 Game Wlnntno Q8t -Ptltll (fl E-JKHowtll OP-Cellfornle I Oetroll I LOB-Celltornle 1 Detroit I 7B-Lt11ar11. Boone Scnof1etd l B-Ptttl\ HR-Henorlo. (21 Grich (9). 01Even1 (30) IP H It ER 88 SO Cetlfomla Sitton W 6 10 6 I t ) OMoore o O o o Detroit Tanana l 1 ll . I 6 6 2 1 LOCHtl ) 4 4 2 0 Cerv ) I I 0 0 0 Neet 0 0 0 0 I Hernenoi l 1 o o O 1 T enena o•ctl>ed to S 1111te•s 111 tile 4tn Staton oncneo to 1 t111ttefl '" •ne 111n1n HBP-ScN>fletel D• Tal\<lne WP-Sl•IOll T-247 A-19 703 ~ATIOHAL LEAGUE Dodeon S, EXllO\ 4 MOHTitEAL LOS ANGELES •br ll~ •llrll~ S 0 I 0 Ounca11 n S 0 0 Q S 1 1 O Bltunett Ii 2 O O O 4 I t 2 Lendr A Cl l 0 0 0 S 1 2 O Marsnel rl S l 7 0 ' 0 I 0 Guerrer 111 S 7 3 0 I 0 0 0 MaOIC" )ti 1 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 8ell0r lb I 0 0 0 s I l 0 MIOnClo cl I 0 ' 1 Time 2 01 21S '''T H •ACI . One mite OuPPIC.tt (Al\Cle~Of!I 210 Kiwi' Sono C01Frellco> MoY11teln 8vre1 !Will<•> Time I S9 31S Time 1 ~ 31S l l llCACTA Cl ·O OllCI W.00 SIXTH RACE. One mlla Ftvlng R~• <Meler) 9 20 • 8oot>v Trap ISteetlll Mtttlng Moment (Sllerrenl Time 200 ltS 2 60 210 900 HO s 40 S70 l20 11 60 6'0 • 60 U I XACTA (6·71 oelCI l 19? 30 HVINTH RACE. One mite U11c1t Ho«i (Park tr) 2 60 Trou 1cn1 Prlelt tG•undvl S.vlolt Lo•d (SprlOQl) Time· 1·S7 4/S SJ IEXACTA (4·9) 011?. $17 90 lllGHTH RACE. One milt 7 20 2 10 340 240 140 SlllP'l King CBenoutt'I) 77 ~ II 40 Emarelel Outing !Aut>lnl 10 40 710 700 1040 Smokln Wllo tMarcne nd> Tim• 1 S9 3/S n I XACTA (1·9) Pe•d $399 40 NINTH RACE. o,,. mile PICt Advance Perk (Cr0Qh1n) 10 60 S 040 • 00 Satveelor CP1enol 4 00 4 20 LQOlr.lng GOOCI 1snerre111 7 20 Time l st )IS IJ EXACT A (J·9) PalCI 172 00 U PIER l'ECT SIX 1>1IC1 l 12 196 20 with tour wlMtrl (lhl nor~') i>atCI l9• 90 with )OS wl11nen Cflve norH ll TENTH •ACE. 0... mile e>ect Stra1gn1 Elgnt IK....01«1 4 80 l 60 1 60 Bottoni' (TOCld) 7 IO l 40 Nlml>le Yan~" 280 Time 101 4 S U EXACT A 1 S-9) oe10 Sii 90 Attenoe,,ce 6 619 O..~r MONDAY'S RESULTS tl4ltl o! 42-dllv ltlw~tel meetlntJ ,llUT RACE. 6 lurlOl\gs Rock C1nvo11 (Plncavl S60 Swett Winkle (WerCI) Etegent Ke11v tEndQvet> Time l 11 SECOND RACE. 6 furtonos 3 80 120 600 4 20 a oo 21 4 Jo AM Weiftem. lot4 Julie Pvnt, 2.0l4 Pe nv Heve1. 2.0l4 Sellv Quinlan. 2.otl Jene Crafter. 2.otl K1111rvn Young, 2,otl 2U Cet11v ~rlno 1 ... s Catnv Me111 1.614 8art> TllOm.l . 1,614 SteDllenl• Farwlg, I.~ O•t>onh Sklnntr 1 .... "' l.eurla Btelr 1,• 13 Oet>Ole H•ll. l,41? Senor e Pet mer, 1.412 ' Bart>era Penelergut 1,417 Lvnn ACI"'"· 1,417 217 OffdM l.a lktr, I ls.3 OenlH Stret>lg, I, ISl Snlrtn Furlong l, IS1 lllckl Atv.,er. l.ISl Lvnn Con11ttlv l, 157 Jen• Lock. I, I S2 111 Pennv Hammat 133 Nancv Scranton 133 C•tllertnt Du11oen 13) Jove• K11m1ar1•1 133 Otennt Oall•v. tlJ ClndV HUI W Su1le Peoar tlJ Betn Solomon Ill Caro+vn Hiit 133 lit Btckv Ptarson S99 Ro11t Jonts, S99 Linde Hunt S9t Alll 1on F nnev S9t • no Clnelv Flom, "'4 Kim ShiClf'llln. "" Cetnv Krer1trt 4<M Nanc• Whlte·Brewtr U• Pem Glt11111 4.43 Sltvla Barto1acc1n1 443 Jerlty11 Britz 443 Heerher Orew, 301 Lenore Mureoke. 300 Alke Miller, 300 7,.,, ... 7'·6t " 73· 71-70 n -n -10 71 73·70 1l 10· 71 H 70 70 n n 10 74 70-71 71·71 71 11·71·73 7S·n ·61 74·73·69 74 10-n 10 74 n 73 70·73 ,. 74·69 70·71-70 nnn 11 7l 7l 11 n 11 11-11 7S 71 11 69 77 71-70 7•-73·71 7• n -11 1•·73·71 n n-n 7) 71·7J 7l 71·7• 71·71·7S 73 l6·70 n 11 10 7S·12 n ,. 7l n 7S 7S·10 7S·7• 71 16-n -n 14·14·n 7l 7•· 73 16 70 74 11 73· 76 DETROIT TIGERS--Slgneo Se>er•v AllcMr M>ll, maneoar to • two •••• contract e•ten11011 NEW YORK YANtC.EE!r-Rec•tleel Oen· 1111 Rumuuen, 11ltCntf allCI Ru HuCller lllflekMr trom Cotumou1 04 ,,,. tnter· natlonet LMgue OAtC.LANO A 1-ftec.elled Curt Youno BIN Kru_. Jeff ICell« allel Tim Conrpv 1111cherl Cna rlle O'Brien c.iitclle<, Steve Kt...,, lnffefeler end JOH Ce 1111to. out· llelCler, from Tacoma of Pactllc Coe It LHOue SEATTLE MARtNERS-Recetleo Oannv Tertal)\;M, 111or11100 trom C•tgerv ol ,,,. Pt ciflc Coelt LH gue TEXAS RANGER!r-Actlvetao Larrv P1rrl111, Oulfllldar TORONTO 8 LUE J.AYS-Recetteo JoM Cerutti, ollcllar Ktttv Grut>t• 1111re1 O.Mtmen, •nd Rica LH CI\ ellO Ron Sneonero. outlle\Clef1, from SvretuH of the t111trnetlon11 LH Oue R.ie11ee1 Ro11 Mun~me11 •llCI COiin McLeugll11 PllClle<\ IQlllNI La'89'11 OOOGERs-k-Recelltel Gll~to Rt•es ce tcnt• s10 Braem. llnt ~Mtm.n-out rltldlr end F'ra1111t111 Stu~ allO RalOll Brve111. outtie~1 lrOtl'I Alt>uoueroue of fh. Pacific Coe11 LHoue Rec,alltel JoMt Gon111ei. o.ithefou !rom Sen Antonio ot me Tuu Leegue Purc,,.Md tnt contract of Stu P~SOll. oulfielel¥ trom .Atou oue<oue CHICAGO CUBS-fhUllt<I R999 .. Pat •arson ellO Oeve Bae•CI oltc"9f\ from 10..,a ol ,,,. Americen AuoctttlOll 61\Cl JOllM'r At>rll>O. Clilcn.< trom Plttl~ of Ille EH ttrl\ Ltlgue Pv•cheMICI Int COii tract of Jon Perlmen. pilctl« l•om towa of tl\t American Anocletion NEW YORK METS-ActlvaleCI Mook .. Wiison, ourf1t<cler, Ron Garoennire anort tlOD. •llO Brue.• 8ar~vl, 111tcn.r PITTSBURGH PIRA TES--TraOtel BtM Meellocll lnfleloet to ,,,. LO\ Al\Qtle\ Ooog.,, for """ !Me vers to lie ·nem9<1 later OotalneCI R J Revl\Ol<I\, outtleleler. on wetvars trom Lo1 A119"e. " -of tne l>lavars to oe nemeCI In tl'lt MeCllOCk 1reoe ST LOUIS CAROINAl.S--Rectlll d M oroskl, by San Frannsco; Ja, P1sarc1k, b y M 1am1, John W itkowsldt b y Detroit, and Babe;Laufe n berg. br Washington M o rosk1 was c ut for the second 11mc this summer H e was let go two weeks ago b)' the Falcons. for w bort he backed up Steve Bankowk.si la.II y ear u n der the old 49-m an roster rule. .. It's Just wro ng to hav e to go to 45 play ers." said Washingto n General Manager Bobby Beath a r d . ..It's a temble t hing for football and it'J tcmble when you have to release 1 player hke Babe Laufenberg.·· L ions Coach Darryl Rogers h.ad been hoping o wners w o uld pass a ruJie allowmg teams to keep an ad(iitionll quarterbac k as a 46th player, but wu d1sappo1n1ed "Quanerback 1s a ve l) vulnerabe pos1uon and 1 reall) wanted to keq> W1tko wsk1 •• said R ogers. "I wantdt the e)(tra quarterback (rule ) n ot Ju• for us, but because 1t w ould be best f« the league There arc a lot of teams that will have to g o ''mh two quarterbac ks ·· i\nothcr baclcup. Oh.,er Luck of H o usto n will be unav ailable for thrcir or four w eeks because of a shghtl~ ftac tured left ankle. the Oilers an· n ounced .. Atlenla (Jonn1011 2·01 el Pltt\llurl}fl (Del.eon 2· ISl. n Clncfnnetl (Tlt>t11 7· IS) at St Lout\ (Foracll 6·S>. n New York (Agultera 4·Sl al San Olego (OreYKk'r 11·1), n WtdnftdeV'l Game1 MonlrH I et Otdlters. 11 Hov1ton 11 Cnlceoo PtlllaelelDlll• et Sen Francl\CO AU.nta at P1t111>urgl'I. n Cincinnati 11 St Lout-.. n Rai11es If Lew2t> Dawson rf Brooks u Francn Ill WhllrO Ph Geterrg Ill Waltech lb Wlngllmd Fillperld C S Tnplll 111'1 Butere c Scn11or P Burke o UW1,,tn11ll Lucesp Slll11111111 lleeroon o S 0 I 1 Whlllld Ph t 0 I 1 l 0 1 0 R Wlllml II I 0 0 0 IOI) Brocl<.Dll 1000 I 0 0 0 Sc10\Ct8 t 4 0 7 0 2 0 0 0 JC.011111 cir 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 Sa• 111 A 0 1 0 l 0 0 O Ca1t1io p I 0 0 0 Sln lln Suezen !Stevens) 140 Cetn Tne Snow (PtOroial Mellceetortnougnt 1v11en1uet1> Time l 10 600 •40 1 40 S.60 s 40 n DAILY DOUBLE (4 111Paid1J200 THIRD RACE. l·l 16tn m1tei F11r Waler tPlncavl 7 40 •40 120 100 •20 s 70 Bert> Bun11ow1k v JOO Baror1 Mlzren1a. 300 Su,an Sender\ JOO Merv OeLoru1. 24 I K.,•n Perm11t1, 240 Jud., Eltl1, 2~ Cerotlnt Gowan. 240 Pla NllUOI\, 740 16·74· 7t 17·71·11 17· 11 73 74 14· 73 16 11 1• 16 71 7• 77 I) 77 73·77·77 73·76·73 ,..,. 74 Ra11C1y Hvnt, CAICl'ltr, from Otttenoma Cltv ot tne Amar1c1n Auocletlon Signeo Oouo Bair .Pittner SAN OIEGO PAORES-ActlveteCI RtCll Gouage, oltcher Called uo G•IQ &ool<er Lull De l eon. Ed w o1ne. ano Boo Pet· tt r1on, C>ltehl•s 1ne1 Jerrv Oevla out· fle1oar. from Let VIQu of tlle Pacifk Cou 1 LH gue Tide gains 20-16win in wild one_ -l I\ THE!'<S Ga l >\P l -Mike Shula threv. a I "'-,ard to uchdown pass to Al Bell w1th 16 ~onds rema1mng to Iii i\labama to a 20-16 Southcasten C'onfercnle '1c tol") over Gcorgla in I game ot w ild rnmebacks M on~y night New YO(ll ar Seti Otego, " MA.JOA LEAGUE LEADERS Amwican LHeue BATTING tl70 •• °"'•l-8ooos. Bo1to11 364. &refl, Kensn Cltv lSS. It Hendl••on. Hew York. 3ll, Mattlnolv New York. 321 &oalte, Oakland. 312 ltUNS-R Hen0tr1011 New YO(tt, It I Rll>ken. Bettlmore ts. E Mu,,ev 8ett1 more. 91, Bretl KenM11 Cltv. • Wlllteker Ootrolt, •. Winfield. N•w Yorll ea lt81-Mattlnolv, Hew Yor" 109. E Mutrn , 8eltlmore, 103, Wlnffeta, New York. 9•. Rll>llen, 8alllmore. 93, B•t tt tC.antu Cltv. "· G 8 eU, Toronto, ea HITS-eooiu . Boston, 190, Mett111111v. New York, 170, P Breelltv, Seetlle, 1S7, Bucknt•, 8011on, 156, Brett, Kensas Cltv 1Sol, Coo~. Mllweullff, 1S4, WllM>ll, Kan· 111 City, 154 OOU8LES-Melllngtv. New York JO. Buckner, 8011on, 37. 80QOI. Bolton, lS. Coooer, Mltweukff, 34, G W1tll!tr, Cnl c.aoo, J7, TltlPLES-Wllaon, Kan1e1 Cltv, 19, But· ier, Ctevefend, 11; Pucllall, Mlnnesote 17; 8.,fteld. Toro1110, a, COOC>tr. Mllwnukff I , Farn111e1ei Toronto I, P 8 r11dlev. Seettle, I HOME RUNS-Fl1k, Ct'llcego, l3 Oa Ev1111, Detroit, 30, Batt>onl, Kense1 Cltv 2t, G TllornH. SHttle, 18, G Bell, Toronto, 27 STOLEN 8ASES-R HlftderlOll, New York, 60, lllltft11, Alleetl, 42, WlllOll, Ka/IHl Cltv, 40, Butt«, Clevele nd, JI, l Smltn Ke11M11 Cltv. 32 PITCHING (I I ci.thton1)-<iutdrv New York, 17·S, 304, Seti.tnagen. Kansas Cltv 16·S, 2 ti, ltemartkil, Af'l9lt1, ll·•· 1.91 BlrtM11, Oektalld, 10· S l S6 Cowtev New Yori!, 10 S, • 01 Hlgutre Mllw•u•N 11·6, • 34 STRIKEOUTS-Blvleve11. Mlnne1ot1 1'6, F 8annlller, Chlce1><>. 154. Morrl1. Detroit, 15-4, Wiit, A1191t1, 147. Burn1 Clll(•oo. ICS SAllES-0Ulte11t>e,,v, K1111e1 Cllv, 31, Htr1111\da1, O•••oll. 21. 0 ~ •• All99f1, 24. Rlgllettl, New York 1•. J Howett Oa kland 73 NattoMI 1.ffeut BATTING Cl70 et 11111)-McGH, St LOUii, 369, Harr . St Louis, :171, Gu~. Oedotn, .lit, Reines, Montru t, 312 / Gwynn, Sen Diego, 307 • RUNS-MurDllV, Atle nte , 99, lhlne\, MontrHI, 96, Colemen, St Lovl1, 91, McGN , St Lovlt, t i, O~, 0Netn, .. Mt.IC NOTICE 0 0 Q 0 HOwflt 0 0 0 0 0 I O 0 0 Ma•1a 11n t 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 N1eC1nfur o 0 0 0 0 StullO\ Ph t 0 0 0 C01a1 o o 0 0 0 JOM\1n on I O 1 1 Tot.II 4l 4 11 4 Totef1 l' S II 4 ktre bV llWflOS MM!ft'HI 200 000 001 00-4 Lii A,,..._s 020 001 000 01-S One out when w.nn1no run lCoreCI Geme w 1n111ng RBI -JOl\nstOll• 1 l t E-Fltrgereld L08-Monl•H I 1 LO\ Anoate1 9 ?B-Lew 1 MatCIOneoo Sc•O\C•a Nll1tfleld Sea HR-Oawlon I ISi SB-<:.uerrpro 101 MedlOC• 41 F't1gera1e1 ISi Ra•net IS21 S-CH l•llO MM!ft'HI Scn11or Burlo.e LUCH RU•don L 2·7 LOI AneltH Castilo Howell Nitdnfuer co1 .. w .•-2 HBP-MaCllOCk ., ••6 '" H R EA 88 SO s l 1 s I 0 1 I") ) 1 0 , 1 I b~ Bur~• U.S. Open I I l 1 I 1 I I 0 0 0 0 1 I 0 I ' 2 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 ' 1 T-J1S A- Cat New Yon> Men'I feur1tl reunel llMle\ Joe•tm Nvstrom ( Swtellnl Mt Bor., BK"'' IWest G1rmenv1 6-l 6 4 4 6 6 • JoM McEnroe (U S I <let Tome\ Smlo cciecno~veti;lel 6·l 1 s 6 7 Mets Wllanoe< <Sweoenl Clef GrlQ Ho•,.,., (lf'S 1 7·6 6· 1 1 S .Anoers JerrvCI 1Swt0ent def Tim Mavotte IU S I 1 6 1 6 6 ' w_., i.ur1t1 round 'lntll' Cnrls E Yert LIOvct I u s I O•f Roo111 Wlllle (US l 6·7, 6·4, Mert1111 Navrelltova (U S ) Cetarlne LIMov1,1 1Sw1<11n) 6 4. 7 s. He11e Mandllko•ie tC 1echosto•tk•111 dei t<elhv Jorde n IU S J. 1 S, l 6, 6· I Pem Snrlver (U S I def .A!vcla Moulton CU S l 6·2, 6·•. Ctauole KoMe Kltscn !West Gar manvl di'! Wen<lv Turnt>ull CAustrallel S·7. 7·S, 6·2, Zin• Garrl1011 (US > def Kete GomrHtrt tu S >. 6·l . 6·7. ~••l•n• su~o•• IC1acho1IO•t kle) oet Carling BHHll (Can eoe>, •·6, 7·6, 7 s Mat1tann ISteve11\I tee. Stealer I DttePIOu"a ve) Time I 42 1 S l1 I XACTA CS 61 Pl lO '11l 50 FOURTH RACE. 7 turionos Soore La Per 1p1ncavJ 4 40 C1tv View I Velellruei.l Cut Bv Gteu IWere11 Time 114 2 S )00 160 320 280 • 40 flFTH RACE. One mite on turl Strew Toro1 19 20 11 60 l 00 Ceoano t P111tav l 60 1 IO '" Sft Vo... (MeHI l 40 Tme l l4 lS U ElCACTA 111 Pe el sl71SO SIXTH RACE One mll• Sevennen 1 Secrer (S!>mll.rt 1 80 0 K ;11 Sievenll L•Clv E ccetter P11>Cav I Time I 39 •70 300 '70 110 160 SfiVI NTH RACE.. 6 ' tur:onos Sante Roaa P"nc• CS1v111) 19 60 '.O l 'O Sure To Fire 1Hewlevl J 60 110 Private Jungle Clla11nzve1a1 300 Time 1 14 7 S U EXACTA 14·2) 11a10 l llf SO Jl .. ICK SIX lll·S-5-1·1 41 Pt ld '31.1•• 'O to tour wlnnfno !lcllell (six t\Or\tl) PIO SI• Conso1et1on 0110 12.07310 10 68 w<nntnO llC'~tfS (fi ve hOfll\ I EIGHTH RACE. I'• miles 8eroen1own !Toro) 1170 Mv H•b•IOllV rMezel Flr\t Norman IStevenal Time [SI NINTH RACE. 1 1 16tr1 mitts 6 00 420 460 J10 00 Lend a IH•wltvt 12 00 6 60 • 60 Frtano Cenvon 1Stevellll 6 80 410 A Kin FO< Ke •llt OtlehOUUt 'f91 • 70 Time 1 4~ $S EXACT A Cl-61 Ol ld 112) so S7pAILY DOUBLE 12·81 Ol •d ~S IO ,,te1101nce 23, 961 OMO SM ftlhlne HEW .. O•T I.ANDING (N•woert 8NCll) 91 l llOlerl S COCI, 30 t>onlfo, 26 11ne1 on' 133 catlco oan, 7 t>errecude a vettowtell 3 \cutofn 1n mec:tltrtl. 14 roo111n DAVEY'S LOCKER (NtW-1 8"dl) 7S1 engttll l7 t>errecuoa, 73 t>onlto S •t llowt111t 14 roc-11111, 1 hallllut. 2<M cellco ben . 7'1 H nd t>eu, 60S macttertl, 6 lCVIDln I ceoe1on 74-11 77 2U A11ne te.e11v, 212 ~ Marlene HelXll 199 Clll<IV FIOD, 19' M·J Smith, 19t 71 74·,. 76·7• 74 13·71·14 1'·1'1·1• Shlt•ev Hemttn 119 ,. n ao NFL eJChlblften ltltndlnes (flnlll) NATIONAL CONl'E•IHCf Ram1 San Franc•tco All1n1e New OtlH M NY C.111111, Delles Wesn1ngto11 Pn11ec:1e111n1e St LOI.Ill Well W L ) I J ' 1 1 t l e n t T PC1 Pf 0 ISO 11 0 150 •• 0 500 80 0 2SO 8' S 0 0 1 000 I 19 0 0 1000 19 0 0 1000 18 I 0 ISO as 720 soo u Cantrel Minnesota 3 I 0 ISO 80 Detroit I 1 I 37S 60 Cn1cego I 3 O 2SO 74 "'"n Be, 1 l o .2so Sl T emcie Bev ) 0 2SO 6S AMERICAN CONl'EREHCE Kense1 C •• Denver Se,, OllQO S.e11•t Raiden Welt ) t 7 1 7 1 7 1 j EH i 0 0 0 0 0 7SO t9 500 69 500 10 500 aJ 7SO 71 PA J7 n 19 .11 11 so 66 n 6S IJ 7S '3 91 •s 90 S9 7o SS 11 ' > 0 0 0 0 I 500 •1 1' M 1arn Ne,.. Eng,enCI NY Jl l\ 6ulfato (U''C•n~I Cte ve<e110 P11t1ourg" Hou>ton ' ' J l 0 ) Central 7 7 0 1 2 0 ) 0 0 S11ndllv'1 Geml\ 500 10 69 150 100 96 7SO 91 111 ns 69 111 soo 9'1 107 soo n 10 1SO 96 106 100 J\ 91 O htr't o! R...,._r S..lOfll Rem• at Oen••• New Vorl\ Jel\ et R•IOer\ Sen OolQo •' Buflato Sen F renci"o 11 Mlnntso•a Oe1ro11 11 Atlanta Grtt n Say et New E no1a11e1 SAN FRANCISCO CitANTr-ttacalllO Matt NOkH . c.a•cntf lrC>f"I !.Meveoort of •ne Tt••• League l'OOTBALL NlfteMI , ..... L- RAMS-.ACQu1ted 89.0C>V O'uckwOOll ... io. rteelver trom S.11 Ole90 1n t M:lllll'GI tC)I' Garv Kowaf\J< Offei!llve ttctlle allel t i' undlactoMt<J 19'6 oral• cnoKe LOS .-NC.EL ES RAtOERS--T•aOtel Teo Welts .,.._., beek IO the New Yor• Gtenf\ .n u C"8119t tor en uncllacloMCI outt cn6Ke 1>1.ceo S•elo<' "°'ms oe!tn•1v1 ~ck 0" ""''eel rel-tr.• WatvtCI D•n R-'""'""II 119<• Ow1g11t W'-le< offtns1v1 1nema" a'I<! GorCIOI\ Jones wioe rece111er ATLANTA F' ALCONS--We•veo 800 HOltv ouarteroec• E "'''' H•rrv wlO. receiver ·w.,,oe Ce1on a.ien\1vt Dec~ 1no Svt•esttr S"ll""P\ runn1"9 oec~ Pl•C.O Joe Petfailr n •enter ·ouaro on fl'llUfeCI ''"rve BUFFALO SILL~-W•••eCI Tom MullaClv, llgnt eno PteceCI Bo Harr11 allO J1mes s. ... , o~ •l'leO•cke" 011 1111ured ,. estrve<J CHICAGO BE AllS-We •tel 800 Tnomal Plac~•«"'•' Jim ~rrlWY 11neoaick•r Antnon11 t-4utcl'!i1M>n runn1no D•t• ano Henrv .,,...ach1tr Cltftnuv1 •ecklt C1NCtNN.A Tl BE NGALS-We••eo Steve M1101ow llntoec•e• Pete Koen a11en>1•• MO Lee Oa vl\ end Seen T~mes cor nt •t>eC<\ end Kt "' Leiter Ilg"' •no CLE VEl..ANO BROWNS-We •tel M<'t Pru" runn1no oaC• Dwight ¥'¥•1-...,. w•M 'K•·vt r A•ror Brown 1iMO.CAer """ D Hogoaro a.ftn\ •I O.C• ll'CI S<c•• 8o1ze• otte1'1S ve 1•1\e~af\ DALLAS cowBo·vs-wa •ao lfo., Sor•"O' ... ,,.,,n.,,o oac'-. Ovtlf Mar r ' "" O• rec1 "'' Seo•• Sneso...•oer ,.,,.~C't' •"Cl Cari Howara •"Cl ll-c:•. E•l"'O" cor ~tti.1c11., Act v•teo '~@"' •ea~ ~°"" Jtn~.r' w·Ot ""t<• Vf " OENVE R BR ONCOS-C.i• S'o" S,l4nlt.evaQe :>v•"'•roec• Jame' ttv•on otte"' ve •&c' e Darr•"' Co,,..ee""• neO.Cl<t' lfooer ec•10n Ol'le"' •• oec• 1.ar ... o C,,r ' Brew•' ,.ut\f'•"Q 06C' DETROIT ~•ONS Wa vto ~en J9"• "' "'larfbeC9' JOf'\f'\ W ''Ow\t. ~uer~ert>ec._ 1ne1 Lerrv Lee g.,arCI P•ecl'd W 1 •"" F • 1 ltll 1ete1" eno J•""O lot'"\O" 1,,eoac.-., ~f't "•v' K'I , ,,., "' GREEN &Av PACKERS-We weo Qa. C '°"" ru""'"O oaci. E '•C 'l•fll•<>ll llf'el>IC-tr aM Kel'I SllllS °"''"''"· O•<• S1g11eo Butoro Joroan '"'"n"'g oec• HOUSTON 01LE RS-P1eceCI Ow•""' Cru•cM111e1 •vnn1ng lll C• 11nd \tf vt er-vent ... ._.. •.c-elvtf' °"" inn,, .. ~ 'f'~.,v• w11veo Tooo s.eoeuon 11na1>1c't• •"O Jtroma Fol•tr oatt nllv• eno P\&.IC NOTICE P~l.IC NOTICE Mt.IC NOTICE >\labama v.h1ch had l~ most of the v.a, before falling behind o n • ' blocked punt "'1\h 50 seconds left. had n o umeouls "'hen 1t \tarted a 70- .. ard dn\e • hula son of \.11am1 Dolphin ll I ( o a c h Don hula \.(>nnetted w11h Ci reg R icharson for I fl 'ards Bell for 26 and R ichardson again for 12 beto r<' finding Bell a lunC' at the (1eorg1.i 'llO tht' I"'-~ ard ~11nng pla\ Bell a 1un1or college .tran~Jer. also c augh1 J ltH·ard T D pa~ ... 1r11m hula tn the "K'l <lnd 4uaner Fr<"~hmar Tc.-m ~c.-bster bJ.x-kC'd a punt 1n th<' final 1111nut<' .md 1un1or C ah tn Kur) poun,t'd 11n 11 tor a 1oud1d11v.11 II.' gi' t' C 1t•11rg1d J It>-I \ lead G a rlits still N o. 1 in t o p fue l fie ld l 'Dl .\,.\PO l I l .\P • -Don (1arlit\\3"h1')\e,en1hl ",,11a m a l Jrai rll Ing 11tk" 1nl' ., ,l\ llt" II rut II' the 1r1,ph' , a'>t' · 1 hi\ ralC' h .tt1 mMt· nw.rn1ng u mC' than l'\t•n ,a,1 '<'.if' { 1.lrl1t' \.lid "f h \\('J I l°m 'n tht• V.J\ to l ~ 1n,tun "l•rlJ 1 hamp111n<,h1p \Cl) le"' fl<'•lpk h.1,, v.nn had. to·ha\k 'a110nal l h~1mp 1•n,h1r' anJ now I°'( J 11nt• 1t tv.11( Im '<'" thnlled ahout tha1 (1.irl1t' ,,.,.in l nJ1an,1polls Ral"l'"·" J>:.ir I>. ,pt·l'J 1t•t 1•1 J llf 2(!J 00 mile' rx·r hlHll 1•r th1· ~ '' \hmJa\ ·~ S-lu.ll(.14 1 "'t.1n tn thl' L•r Fut-I 1.hamp1on,h1r PmtlC NOTICE ._.,. ,,. ti A"~ 1 " t lunt91t\ 111 l t•~ •II' •• Mar. CA 92825 'CASH. pey1101e 11 time of Thlt butlnese wu con-sele 1n l1wful money or the ducted by • limited penner-Unlled Ste1M. ell rlil.M tllle, K·11t7' t/llp 1nd lnteresl In tt'le 10t1ow1ng SONAL PROPERTY ABAN· DlllDllC NOTICE DONEO O N OR BEFORE l"UUL 51 14185 AT 24B l1 SAN 1 __ ..;..;;;;;;,;;;;.;.;;...;..~.;.;.;;.__ l'ICTrTIOUllUIMll K-1-FtCTlTIOUSIUSINU S VI NCENTE, MIS S IO N l'ICTITIOUl llUllNIH NAM( ITATtM!NT FICTITIOUI I UllNfll NAME I TATtMINT IT A TU 1t(Nl Of AIANOOHMINT OF UH OF flCTITlOUS IUll~ll NAMl ·~ tt. • '1 • • _.,,ees of ~ .. i ~ .. wl11 •"'fl"\ Srhoot 'ICTJTIOUI llUl*lll Tllla t111emen1 wu filed descr1fled property 111\.teted NAMI ITAHMIENT wllh the County Clefk of Or-tn aald County end S tele VIEJO" 'SUCH PERSONAL NAMI STATPRNT The 10110 ... mg per10ns e •r NAME STATtMINT T'le lollawtng pert<>n' •'" PROPERTY CONSISTS OF Tne fotlowtng petlonl .,. 'dOlng Ous1nes1 as T~e l;)llOW•f'IQ P«IOllS are fd0tng OUSAOMS .. The lotlowlng P«tont "' 1nge Coun1y on Augv11 1~ LOI 55 ol Traci 7383 u doing t>ualneta H O.VCo Ill 1985 fl\own oy map on Ille In 2915 RO<llllll Sulle F ·200 Publllllt<I Orange Cout Boole 11638 PllQ99 6.C3-845 ol Coa te MeH. Celllornla Delly PllDl Augut1 20 27 M11p1. records or Orenoe 92828 Seplem~ 3 10 t985 County Celllo<nll BEOR~~N UVINO dotngbuellllUH WESTGROVE P.AZA 0 '"II bu1•neu u o/I( ·oPFU PROPERT•ES R M URN KITCHEN NEWPORTECOLOGY.22 1111 Garden Grove Btvo t<..••1111 A55oc1a1u 3200 •792 Jame' Ctrcitt :oC FURlll REFFUO 8 FREEZ· Hlfmltage Len• N p B CA •200 Oaroen Grove C11t Br ~!OI StrM 1 Su11e 660 Hunling ton BH C" C.• 1 ER, F M RM FURN OIN· 928e0 lforn1t 92~ t Co'11 "4•H Ce 9:?626 tom•e 926•9 Byron M Tlrnutz•• T-794 The purported at•MI ad· INO RM TAB LOVESEAT Donna Mte ROllll 22 Lawre nce Sutck Ltng OSl 5.,-..ce Compeny G IOfge T"omH c>-a•1 J• FILE.CAB GARAOEPARA· H..-mttage Lene. Newpotl 7111 Gt rde 11 Grove Blvd 2•'9 •LatoeForfft 0rt"' El 4•91 James C.rcte • PHER .. ALIA ANO OTHER BNCT h. CbAA 912660 I •200 G8'0en Grove Cal• Toto Ca 92830 cA Ctlt· Hunt•'1Ql0" Beach "'• TruatM. 900 VI• lido Nord dr .. , and Other common NewpOrl a..c11. Calflornl• a.elgne11on, 11 any, ol the 92863 P\&.IC NOTICE r111 properly dHcrlb1d MISC ITEMS hll "' nets 1 con· fOrf\tt 92841 •0•"11 Corpor1111on1 torn1• 926•9 Morlnello, l e rone a dvc1ed by •n tndtvlduet Th11 business 1 con l'111 1:1us1n911 11 con Tn11 Dvt 1neu I .. on Ted RodrtgueJ. 2930 &11 T 42t20 11>0ve. lor wtllCh 1he undlf· Orengewood Avenue algnO<I makn no repreMn· Anetlelm. C.lllornl• 112808 YOU ARE IN DEFAULT lltlOn or w11r1nty II S59e Hotchn, AttOfM YI el Law, OonT ne MM Rooeel fl•--' uc1ed b~ 1 ltmtte<I oertne< Ou<lld 0¥ I gene< I i Oltl duel~ by I ll •nd•v•ouel 4tJ1 l lfcfl .,,...,, lutte 1'111 lletemen .... .... fltp nf'fl l'llP 0 Tt10MAS P'IA q _A 11Aer1holl A llA1nclll ... UNDER A HOMEOWNER'S Oak'-' Terrec;e, lrvtne Cell· 100, Newport -..Cll, CA <Nllh the Counry Clefk of Or-LAWRENCE SUtCKt l 1NG Donall.a Srhr•'* D•n* rn11 1111_,,t w., Iii.ct •ng• County on July 18 TlltA 11e1em11nt w., hied w Oon1t1ue CN11rm11n ot ""'" 1ne C0unty Ctllf' •1 O• • V "-I .._. ASSESSMENT LIEN DATED ••r 25"2 ltll "'Ye, ,.,._.,...' JANUARY 4. t985 UNLESS lornll 8Mch, Callfornl• 112eeo YOU TAK" ACTION TO TM pvrport41d own11r ot Publielled Orenge Coeat 2986 ,,.1_, lh the County Clerti ot Or thfl Boera tn91 count) Of' "uou•I 18 Dally Pllol September 3 10 Put>ltallt<I Orange Coeei C0unl'f 011 J11tv 29 Tn11 ""flmeo1 w11 111.a 198~ Thl1 bu1lnHI la COii· PROT£CT i. YOUR PROP-.. Id rHI prPt'l(ty '' 11'1• time ducted by: • OIOlftl plrt• T of the As~menl Lien WH n«MllP ERTY IT MAY BE SOLO A OAlllO L WHllE ANO L 'l'N 11185 T-812 O•lt" Pllol Auoust ll. 20 27 19 5 .. 1111 tll@ Counr,. Cler" ot Or· nt4111 ' 1'2924S7 :ange C01.t111., on Jul'f :?6 I Pub11.n.a Oreno11 Coatt Mlfltlt ll A Manclllll A PUBLIC SALE IF YOU NOA WHITE Thll lllf9fMn\ wll flt.cl NEED AN EXPLANATION Stkl Siie will ~ mtde ITATI MINT Of' P\.8l.IC NOTICE SeQlember 3 l9e5 Pub!llflod O••nge Cou 1 1995 1D•1t~ Pttol A1.19ut1 10 r T ns II)' Poot Avgull 20 27 ,~ S~tll<"l:'lr .I tO l98\ '83 with lhe County Clefll of Of· OF THE NATURE OF THE wlthoul w11r1nty expreN or AIANOONMSNT Of ano• County on Augvll 15 y PORUoc;OEUOl~~O~Li"g:,~~ lmpl*I, f"90"dlnQ 1111•. poa-Ull Of' ,ICTITIOUI 11186 · eettlOn. 01 tfleull\brtnoot. I UlfHlll NAMC ton\1>111 .l 10 llle5 Pu!lh-'*1 Orallg* Cout I , ... , TACt .4 LAWYER . 10 P•Y lhe tum Of Piii dv. The following por1ona Pubtttn.d Or1no• Collt NOTICI Of' I AL( H~·· lllHHIMtlla. h&v• •bend~ the uM Of llllCTITIOUI ......... T 7114 Daily P1t01 Augvll 20 27 i--P\.8l.--l-C-NO--T-IC£--1--P\8.--IC_NO_T_IC_E __ iSeotemoer 3 io ,9116T. reo Deify PllOt Augu1t 27. S• 11Oi"o 00S•Pl~~I :~ :::~ ~HSOf'lebly H llfneted C09le, 1111 Flcllllou1 Bv1lnH1 NA .. ~TATWllllNT tember 3, 10, 17, 11186 •AUMQARTNCR 1 .... ctiargea. Ind lnlOfMI In Ne mo IMOv1 1tv1 l'loor Tht! lohowing l)efllOnt tr• T 80? En1r1noe o 1,,_ amount of s 1 420 oo M111n1tn1nc. 2•60 Newport doing t>ullMM u ---------I ROUP, 1111 f OWfl t nd OATEO A1ui i 14. 11185 Blvd '' Coat• llA• I CA (A)OPB ENTERPRISES "8.IC NOTICE Covnlry Rold. '30, Orange, TU9'TLE OClt Tl"· 12827 Bl TRAVEL CHAIR MANU· C1Ulornt1 In 1M City of Or 9'ACI COMMUNITY Al · TM lll1et111ous 9 uefnfla ACTUAING (Cl HOLIDAY ITATl•NT °' IK'08 C<iunty of Or•nQe. IOCIATION I Y: "OMtct D ..... ,.,,. rolerrod to ll>OYI WN CHAIA COMPAAY 12 ,, A8AMDOUMIJfT Of Stitt Of c.tllornla, uMler IM .._, of ..._...._ a 111tc1 In Ortn0e CounlY on ltl'lbtldOI L~. Newpot1 UM Of ~TmOU'I POWOI of Sile purlUI M to ~ e &..w ~tttoft July 28 1"'4 Fllf NO e..cti C.Ufornle 112MO IUIMll NAiii 1,... terme ol 11\0M C*1aln 1H1town 1 Ceun"7 ..._.: I' 281450 . Gregory Peul 8e loue T~ IOl':Jl p1 11one Cownenta Con<llllOM. and ~11.0f""P c.-..MI ThtoOO•• J 1e 11 Oltlon 121ICemtwi0ge~.H9w- ha"9 eband lhe ute 01 A111r1e11on1 roc0<dod on ... ('t '4) ..,Jo,o H11tt 2.C$0 ~ 1111(! 11Met1. Calnom141 t2MO th• l'lellllou• lu1fneu S19t4mo.t '· 1070 In 9ook P\I~ 0r"'OI eo..1 •2. COlll ~ CA 92827 Ttlte bullneM 11 con ...... ,INTAll. HOMES. m2 p~ 716-711 Ill· iff't Pm>I "~ n , hp ElllO Ol)'tHlk .... m .. d· ~en~ 1178l.411nSltM1 t1A llVI~ elutlYO ol Otticllll ~dt lembef 3 10. 1985 0•-0 R ! Q 0 lfY PA U l Calilornll 11714 OI Orenge County. Cali-' t 70~ Thie t>ulln9N wu con Hl.OUS TIWI Fletltloue ButlMM lofnl•, 8eufn91tlnet I Roup, ctuetO<I by .,, lttOMnulJ Tllll tt&MINnl ..,.. ll6ltd NlfM ""9rTed to atiow,.... A l •w Corpore 11on. _.. •t· l'\llUC NOTIC( Thia tt•l*'*'' wu lllOcl 1111 t,... County C.\ Of Or· filed In Orenge Coun!Y on torney fOf TUATUAOCI( Mll\ 1111 County Clttrlt Of Or ~ty on Augull , .. Aprtl "· 1tl2 "l.C NO TtAlllAC E: COMMUNITY NOTICI °' tllOt CountY on •uov I 14 '" 5 l'-1173141 ASSOCIATION. i-atlll'I 10 "'94.IC IA.LI 1915 ,_ PNflp H ~-1171 S.C:llOn 13st Of lN CMI ON 1111&/H A llllUI LJC ~bltthod Ofenge eo.et Putlll~ 0r-. eo..1 Ml tn it,_ I A. 1N1ntt CA Codt OI the Slltl Of Cell AUCTION WILL 8l HEl.0 Olllly PtlOt AVQ1111 10 '7 a.ty Ptt0t A.VQusl 20. 27. t2714 lofflll,WILLHll ATPUa.. AT 800 PM AT 2202 S ~tfN'ftW) 10 lllU eptttmbef 3.f0 1911 Deto l#nbto ll01 0 11 l lC AUCTION TO TH£ MAIN. S ANTA ANA, me t 7N T 782 1tM Ttrt~ '0otone oel HIOHHT 81001!" ,OA P\JBl.IC SAU: 18 01' PEA . lt·1- ,ICT1TIOUI IUMtlH P\Bl.IC NOTICE NAMI ITAT1MINT TP\9 I011Qw111g C*tont .,, l'ICTITIOUI llUBINlll 01ng t1u 1 1n eu at NA .. ITATIMINT AM NO BAA HlllS l 161 I T1't41 lotlowtng 0«90"t• .,. 1rwey •--Sv•1• N d04ng bu.,_tt u 0111 Meu Cl lllO•'I • r tT"IESS f tRST •••• 2826 "dObl So.1111 Circit Aoac BtemaleA ltmoed e C1" tcVtl'MI C•Jtl~n•t U 7 IS d l1n corpor11to11 1887 Jo•-.11 Nee! Z11m111!\ onge SlrMt TOfC)(!lo On 8'114 Adobe South Ctme ario CantOI M4S "'" Aoe d t•tr•n• C a111or111e T'hlt Ovttn .. t II CO!\ t927 '~ led t>y a COfl)OretiOfl Tl\11 bua111ua " ton lflllTlalee Ltrlllled Jeltrl'f O~t41d by an tndlvtdull SteYW1 V1c18 flr-Widient J0StPl1 N l llMANN Tlltt 1111~1 wM lrlti() Tllla flll-'l WU tite0 II ,,... Counly Cfet\. ('If Or Miii 11\e Cou""' Cler'! °' °' Covntv on •uou•1 1 1 enoe Coull"' Oii •uou•t ,. s ,,es ,....,, nain2 Publ•tflld Ofl"QI t i f\111'111.,,_, Or~ C t i >1111)' Ptlo1 "V9ut1 27 S-o Daily Pttc:tt A UOV" Xl H ~ .l ,o n 111u 1~·tf'll'* ' 10 1tt1~ ' &01 T 711't • P\alC NOTIC£ -..,, 1.~11<'""'"" pers '"' "''"' aOflf\dO"fld I,_. .iW OI l~f' r c • "0• ~ Bus r-fls• ... ..,,. :lia G•or, .. ""'"'a"'.:> • \. "0~"~ ''"'6 V1·- (,1 "'I , " \A Q;?• '4 •,"'"'"{' ._. tV .. A ! •AM ,,.,. 'II, I !•fl< t "<l•C•'"'1 I bo ... ,,,.,, __ , ·~ ,~..,, ano con· .] • ~~· , •••• ., the R"SQIUl•O• I. ..,.. R.~ll•O. R<11 tu! or llfO Af. • , ... , ..... "'•""u""' 'T\Onthtt f'•tf C"l'f',..,~' ._,, .,,. '•"" ' •• " !'IM s"a .,.,. !'.14' i.,... :r111 S H 6 00 ~ 'euroom ~mo('; ,. ~·"•l"•• mOt"thtv r"I •Ova"Cf' ,....._ ,,..,m•mvl""' ='fl\-tt"llfl"' • ~ * \~·''••Qu~nl "f, Clfltit'\<1~ '"lh NO A1l1u-t~ I I\• • ""u•ll~ 4'f ~""• ~~,, rt • dll6 ••l•nn ' <..fl(u• t' ' lel"'"t 0.C.>O'°f ,.,,1111 tW' •toQvtred •.,r • 11 ul R"•"llO "la..,. r'"' .a •o •t:o<'.,. .. ,., Mecl r • il"' Cour-•; "' Oc1o!>f'• :· ·<1~' i E '<O ~ • •4 •93B Pl\11·~ .. ... .. a"'M ~a·" c;, .......... . 9:?' •• Oet• 5,,.. ,,. alu ~fltr..C<'I Ye <. • q:e:• ·~~:. •:,, (l!ln• I. <~uPll••C> 'O•"'fll ,1r C'"Ce t'11nt T "-•• t'hJloin.-,ll "ill'•' f'" dueled 1:1, • 1'"'''"" p•rt• "' 1n1u Th1A •l'll11v~11"'1 ..... '"'"° .. 1111 "" Cl'tUn!\ l ._.., ~• "'11 11.e prope1,al' '"<'1.110 De •Cl drt','<M IC! '~)l.IN• AIN V•l• ~E· SfHOO. OtSTflltC,.. •":'1CuA1' S'RfET l'OUN- T .\IN 11-'ll~' 1.. .. ltFORNtA 112 ·oe TflEP><ONE 17i.C ang• Counh o~ •uou•' '' 9 41 66!oi AT TfNTtON 1~&5 1C" AR01 JONE$ Put•O•~ O••no• c 11~1 fOUNT AIN V ALLl1 Ottl~ P•t(ll '•Qi>1' :'D tCHOOl 041TllltCT llOAN> S~ttmlltl• •o '1119\ • 0, '"UITlfl Cl.,11, loerd ol Trwi... AUO~tt n ltUI ~ ""'"'"'IW'<l '••nge COMI 0111\-PtlOt AuQutl 11 ~ ,..,,r. ' llJ lot~ T 11t USI THI DAILY PILOT .. ,.st HSULT" SHYICI DlltCTOIY FnT Rt\ul\ ServlC't> can 642·'''' ht UJ - • a <>r.,.. C0Mt OAJL Y PlLOT ITUMd11Y. s.ptember 3, 1885 Gimme a D-R-u:o T-E-~T at 1nany ·1najor colleges Prom AP ..... let.es , Ouanerb&c.ts, pc:>int auards aod eveo • cbecr[eadera at more than SO major collqes will be tested for druas this year as schools crack down on the use of iJJepJ oarcotiC$ and perforqiancc-cnhancing subsunces. Most small colleges rcspondin& to an Associated J>rcss SW-Vey said the COSt Of SUQh tests were prohibitive, but major schools apparently have decided that the need to assure a "clean" athletic program is worth the price. "It would appear to me that most institutions have beeo initiating dtua education programs because of the widespread acceptance of the fact that drugs arc being used,' said John Toner, athletic director at the Univenity ofConneeticut and a former president oft he NCAA. "following the example of the United States Olympic Committee, COllC&C' arc coming to realize that testing is pa.rt of the education program." The AP asked athletic departments at 38 colleges and universities nationwide if their athletes were tested for drug use. Twcnty<ight said drug-testing programs were in effect or would be in effect by the cod of September. Several others $aid they were studying drug-testing proposals. ,, Toner, who beads a committee looking into mandatory drug tests for all NCAA schools, said last week that 50-60 Division I schools were conducting some form of drug teslS'on athletes. Division I is made up of the biggest members of the National Collegiate Athletic Association. Quote of the day Rick Rhdea, Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher. on the possibility of sumndering career hit No. 4, 192 to Pete Rose in a scheduled SepL I start against Cincinnati: "It wouldn't hurt me if he brolc!'it (Ty Cobb's record) against me. He has gotten about 40 hits off me. so a few more wquldn't bother me." I I Rlpken lead9 o•a With 8 ~I cal lla,tea bit two bomen and drove • in six runs Monday to power BaJlJmorc pelt Oakland, 12-4, 10 an American l:acue pme. Ripken, who drove in 1 first inna.na , run with 1 aroundout, keyed a eeven·run seeond inning with a three-run homer, his firat blast in 16 pmcs. He bit his 20th home run of the season a two-run shot, in the ci&hth off Jeff K.aJter ... Elsewhere, Oeor1e a ... u and lfa1 McRae hit solo home runs and Mark Oolna allowed four hits over 7Vi ioninas and Kansas City ~tcd a 3·2 victory o~r the • Chicago White Sox. The victory -'11111• snapped a three-game losina stiuk for the Royals and kept them 2'h pmes behind the Angels .. , Mike E11ler bit bis second arand slam homer in t.btee games and Ttm Lollar pitched a two- hittcr over eight innings to carry Boston to an 11 -2 victory over Texas ... Ttm T~eJ and Tom Bruusty home~ and Mike Rlpken SmJ&Uoa gave up four hits in seven innings, giving Minnesota a 6-1 victory over ~ilwaukcc ... Uoyd Motebf singled home EraJe w .. u an the seventh to snap a 2-2 lJe and lead Toronto to a 3-2 victory overOeveland ... Dave Wlafleld drove in four runs with a three-run homer and sacrifice fly and Dave Rlpettt picked up his 24th save as Lbe New York Yankees defeated Seattle, 8-7. FV woman cycllata aparkle ... BEYERL Y HILLS -Tom Schuler of ml Downers Grove, 111., woo the 30-milc men's professional race Monday as part of the 15th leg in the Mayor'~ Cup bicycling series. Two Fountain Valley women stood out. Madonna Harris ta.kina fourth and Marvela Harris ninth. Schuler, 28, wa"S timed in 56 minutes, 18 seconds in nosing out Joel Stctina oflndianapolis in the race on the streets of Beverly Hills. Schulcrand Eric Heiden arrived in the Los Angeles area only a couple of hours before the race, having flown from Italy where they took pa.rt in the World Cycling Championships. The two were taken by limousine from Los Angeles lnternationaJ Airport to Beverly Hills, a distance of about J 0 miles, arriving at the site of the raC'e about an hour before it began. PETE ROS~ COUNTDOWN ClotlbJI tao.a Ty Cobb ' Wbat Roae d.Jd MoDday: 1 He wa5 0 for 3 with a walk, scor- ing one run in the Reds' 4-1 victory over the Cardinals an St. Louis. King win'• L~A tournament SPRINGFIELD, Ill. -Betsy King !I birdied ft ve holes on the back nine Monday to break out of a tight pack and claim a two- stroke victory over Janet Anderson m the LPGA Rail Charity Classic. Kina. the 1984 LPGA Player of the Year, made pars on the first nine holes before her birdie spree staned. She finished with an I I-under-par 205 in the 54-hole tournament. At one point late in the tournament, six players were tied for the lead, but when others began to fade, King got hot, sinking five birdie putts, all from within I 5 feet. Meta pound Padra for 18 bl ta :: &el .. Berau4H went S-for-S wilh a Ill t\\IO-TUn homer, Ray KaJpt added a thrce:-run c:Jout an.d the New. Vork Mets had 18 hits in rout1na San OJcgo, 12-4 Monday . . niaht climbin1 to within_. pme of St. Louis rn the NationaJ League Eut. Hernandez scored four runs and drove in three. Kniaht drove in four and l>arl')'l Strawberry contributed three RBI ... I~ other NL pmes, Dave ~ar~r h.it a t~o-run ho~er m the SLXth rnnina, powcnna C1ncinnau to. a 4-.l tnuf?l~ o-..;er SL Louis behind c1gbt-h1t p1tch101 by Tom Browai.t and Job F...-.. .. Tom Foley beat out an infield single and later scored on pioch· hitter Lala A1uyo'1 double in the 10th inninJ to jive Philadelphia a fifth straight v1ctory, 4-3 over San Francisco ... Mite Bro .. hit his first National Lc;ague home run, a th~run shot in the first innin-. and led Pittstlurgh to a 5.4 win over Atlanta ... Eric B•lloclt'a Strawberry firsl major league hit, a tie- brcaking. two-run pinch double ip the fif\h inning helped Houston defeat the Chicago Cubs, 7-2. Kobe entera bid for Olymplca KOBE Japan -Even though the • 1988 Seoui Summer. Olympics are still three years away, cities arc al~ady bidding for the 1992 Games, grasprng any op- ponunity to promote their dtWle. • . South Korea also has reprcsentauv~s here to spread publicity about ats plans: Seoul also wi 11 stage the 1986 Asian Games. Televialon, racllo TELEVISION 10 p.m. -BOXING: Channel 56. 11 :30 p.m. -TENNIS: U.S. Open h1gh- hghts. Channel 2. RADIO • 4:35 p.m. -BASEBALL: AD1el1 at Detroit, KMPC {7 10). 7:35 p.m. -BASEBALL: Montreal at Dodgers, KABC (790). '\ ~ewport Harbor High'• top football proepecta for 1986 .. Nystrom sends Becker packing _ ' Player Pot. Ht. Wt. Comm eat Player Poa. Ht. Wt. Comment Vince B~itfus CB 6--0 160 Sr., backup quarterback Marcus Kelso OT 6--0 247 Sr .. returning starter Rex Drish inc CB 5-6 145 Sr., receiver as a junior Keith Maxwell SE 5-10 174 Sr., No. 4 receiver as Jr. Sterli~ Coberly K-Rcc 5-10 160 Jr., 11FG,2at 39 in '84 Kevin McClelland Slot 6-2 226 Sr., 19-105 yards vs. Irvine Mark raig SE-F'S 6-6 196 Jr., u{, from sophomores J. Nedelman RG-MLB 6--0 211 Sr., ret. all-league Scon Craig LT-DE 6-4 241 r., returning starter Pat Patcmie OG-DT 6-3 201 .Jr., up from sophs Shane Foley ~ 6-2 191 Sr .• 51%, 17 TDs in '84 Steve Recd TE-OLB 6-3 211 Sr., backup TE in '84 G uy Greeley 6-0 162 Andy Sheppard FL-CB 5.7 159 Sr .. 46 TD rct vs Santa Ana sixth, also won Monday. Scott Harbin DE·OG 5-11 187 Jr., ufi from sophomores r., backup lb in '84 Steve Sheppard CB 5-10 °165 Sr., did not fclay in '84 NEW YORK (AP)-The Swedish army is taking over the U.S. Open tennis championships. plundering hopes for a Dream Match between John McEnroe and Boris Becker. Wilandcr, takmg the court aft.er Nystrom 's victory, beat Greg Holmes 7-6 .. 6-1. 7-5, and Jarryd outlasted American Tim Mayotte 7-6, 7-6, 6-4. Joe Johnson OLB-OG..C 6-0 202 Sr., unanimous all·l~uc Chris S>j!bis OT -DT 6-4 282 Sr., waiting or 3 years Dan Hill DE 6-3 224 Sr., did not play '83 or 84 Mason ompson O LB 5-11 174 Jr., up from sophomores PctcrHo~r F'S S.10 163 Sr., moves from linebacker David Tullar MLB 6-0 197 So .. only soph on team Gus Hurst C-DT 6-3 201 Jr., backup center as sopb Chuck Warwtck LT-DE 6-2 237 Sr., did not play in '84 S. K.alatschan TE-OLB 6-0 231 Sr., sophomore MVP Bryan Wildman RB-CB 5-10 163 Sr .. 2nd all-league in '84 SAl~ORS WILL BETAKING TO AIR BEHIND FOLEY ... Four Swedish men are still alive going into the quanerfinals. So rather than the top-seeded McEnroe against Wimbledon champion and West German hero Becker Wednesday night, it will be McEnroe and Sweden's Joakim Nystrom . "lt couldn't be an~hing but inspir- ing.·· Wilander said of his couo- 1ryman 's victory. "I think he played great, and I'm real happy he beat him. ... Right now, l think Joakim is as good a player as me." All but one of the top eight women's seeds made it to the quar- ters. Monday's winners included Lloyd, No. 2 Martina Navratilovr. No. 3 Mandlikova. No. 4 Pam Shriver. No. 5 Kohde-K:ilscb, No. d Zina Garrison, No. 7 Sukova and No. 11 Steffi Graf of West Germany. From Cl appear to have all of the bases covered. Sterling Coberly, who kicked 11 l)eld goals as a sophomore, gi vcs Harbor a silver-plated kicking game; Bryan Wildman, formerly Bryan Guptill, returns at running back; and Joe Johnson. Nedelman and Reed anchor a form1dabtc lineback1ng corps. Johnson, Wildman and McOclland m~y become a revolving door at rilnning back to keep the running attack fresh. Johnson. at 6-0, 202 pounds, was a unanimous selection for all-league honors as a junior linebacker. and ftgttrcs to be a candidate for All- Orange County honors before he's lhrough. And a move to a one-back offense wuh the emphasis on passing has another key in the presence of McClelland as Giddings' "ace" back. a s1.>tback who can serve as a blocker such as a tight end. or as runner, in the style ofa punishing fullback. But, it's Foley who gJ ves Harbor the label as the team to beat in the Sea View League. G iddmg.s winces as he dwells on Foley, because (I) he hates the Steve Brazas syndrome of 1982 and '83 8.Cra!C when the "can't miss" label produced an attitude of "can't lose," which of course was dispro""Cd by Hunnngton Bcal:h and El Toro, as well as Valencia in the playoffs in '83. "It's really a concern for me," says Giddings, "getting too high on this team." And. it is a teaqa sport. Without suppon no quarterback surviycs. But, when pressed, Giddjngs wtll tell you: "I've seen the (Steve) Brod1cs, (Bill) Nclsens and (Pete) Beathards ... he's (Foley) going to be something.- " If I had a rating list the category of 'arm' might be No. 15, but Shane has as good a total arm as I've ever seen an high school. He can lay it an long or short. there's no question he has a gifted arm. "But he secs things. I don't believe an audibleS, not even with the pros. But when he comes to the line he has the option of calling one of two running plays or one of two passing plays. And he's right 90 percent of the time. "He secs the field, he knows the game and he has pretty well ded•c.ated himself." At 6-1 , 191 pounds, Foley averaged 6.0 yards a carry in the playoffs a year ago ( 14 carries for 84 yards) and when necessary. will be in the secondary at safety. During spring practice he was the big attraction -to the extent on one afternoon alone, USC Coach Ted Tollner, UCLA Coach Terry Donahue and a top Notre Dame assistant were virtually side-bf-side on the sidelines, taking mental notes. "He's really going to be hi&hly recruited," contjnues Giddings. "l've told his mother to Jet him a separate phone. He's a senior in high school and it's important that he enjoys it." Giddings has switched has of- fensive system to take advantage of Creative Cuisine Recipe Contest Enter Your Favorite Recipe And Wini CATEGORIES 1. QUICK AND EASY/DO-AHEAD DISHES-Recipes for cooks on the go or those caught with unexpected guests. 2. REGIONAL-Recipes featuring American cuisine from the East to the Southwest and parts in ,between. J . MASCULINE TO UCH-M en who are enjoying the kitchen, share your favorite recipe. 4. GOURMET-Renpes you use when you want to impress the epicurean in your life. CONTEST RULES lntt1nrs mvJt be pr/v1te lndlvlduih No commercllll entr~ will be Kcepted. All entrH!1 mvsr be typed, dovble l{>Ked Entnnts mint be 11 or Olff'!t. Dilly Pilot emplo~ .tr• not ellflbk. fnlf#el bee~ pr~rty ol t~ O.lly t'llor ind unnot be rerurMd Cntr#es must be pofltNrlted by ~tm~r 1•tll, fHS or ckltvered to 0.1/y Pilot, c/o C~M Tlvr CUfSIHl IUC1'f CONTE5r, JJC W Illy, C<>tt.t Mftl, C"°' jJ616 by S 00 P.M ~ptember flt/I, IHS. Wlfl~ wffl be featurt'd .t'°"f with the-Ir r«lpe In tile Cre.ttlve CulslM J«tlon 1unnln1 In rite 0.lly l'llot on Wed~y, Octof>rr 1, J9U w~ mey ~more thtm'OMut~ &di f'Tltry mllft be ~ted by In entry form or copy ol 1n entry form .tJ Wfn It 1 typed pt1r'6r.tplt t'xplllnln1 why rhe enrr.tnt 11'1.n the r«ipe ind when he/Jhe /1'1.~ to u~ rfie recipe. Thref' fin.t/IJll will be c~ ro t»rtkp.t• In cook-off Twsd.ty, ~prember 14, fHJ. CREATIVE CUISINE RECIPE CONTEST ENTR'( F-OAM NAME OF ENTRY: CATEGORY: ENTRANT'S NAME: AGO RESS! DAY PHONE#: EVENING PHONE ii: l the obviou~. going to a one-back offense in the style of the San Diego Chargers or Washington Redskins. "We're ~oing to throw on offense," says Giddmgs, who has shelved some of his previous blocking theories. turning to a more simplicated format of shoving the ball down the oppo- nent's throats 1n the running game. But first. it will be top-seeded Chns Evert Lloyd against Claudia Kohde· Kilsch of West Gcnnany and Hana Mandlikova against fellow Czech Hc1cna Sukova in the women's quarters today. Also in acti on are No. 3 Yann1ck Noah1 against amateur Jay Berger. Swede Stefan Edberg against No. 4 Jimmy Connors, and Frenchman Henri Leconte agamst Heinz Gun- thardt of Switzerland. Defensively the Sailors arc chang- ing style. t~. goi nJ more with man- to-man coverage with a heavy rush. as opposed to zones, although Giddings says he still has his zones ready and he's not entirely satisfied with his secondary .speed. If there's an Achilles heel for the SaHors it's a lack of team speed and quickness, and depth. Y? McEnroe. still N.o. I although he has not been at top form this summer. did his part Monday to set up a showdown with history's youngest Wimbledon champion by d is- pat~hing Czechoslovakia's Tomas Smid 6-3. 7-5, 6-2. Raiders cut 3 toge~ to·45 EL SEGUNDO (AP) -Tb~ Las Angeles Raiders cut three players and placed third-round draft choice Stefon Adams on their injured i:r- serve hst Monday to reach tb.e National Football League roster limll of 45 players. "We have six who may have to go both ways," admits Giddings of his 52-man squad. "It'll be a juggling act to keep them fresh. But the steady, patient Nystrom. who went to five sets against Becker at Wimbledon and lost to him again two weeks ago in Cincinnati, was too much for the tight teen-ager this time. Waivers were asked on runniaa back Dan Reeder, a fifth-round draft choice from Delaware-, free agent offensive lineman Dwi$}lt Whceltr and free agent wide receiver Gordon Jones. "l th ink he felt it more than me. "The big question is how long it will take to blend. Can some juniors come on so the key seniors don't have to go two ways? "We're a team with one prospect (Foley), one suspect (McClelland) and a bunch of kids who had better get better each week." Everyone was talking about Becker against McEnroe in the next round, .. said Nystrom. "This victory was very sweet because at Wimbledon I thought l played my best grass-court match ever, and I still lost." Ad.ams. who played wide receiver m coflcge at East Carolina, WM converted to defensive back late in bis senior season and had played COf'o ncrback during the exhib1tjon SCJlSOn for the Raiders. Fellow Swedes Mats Wilandcr. the No. 3 seed, and Anders Jarryd, seeded Lions taking advantage of power play Fountain Valley, Edison and Marina high school football teams all figure they're in the hunt for the Sunset League championship -bul there's someone else to worry about -Jam O'Hara's Westminster Lions. The Lions appear to have their strongest team an years with only a lackofexpcnencc at quarterback and fuUback keeping Westminster from ......------~ havina a com- plete picture at the outset. ScMcMe S 12-V•lencl• S2C>-P.clllc8 527-EI Toro (•I MVI ~terO.t 01~1 Lii WllM>n Ol~dtMlll• 02-S-111 H111 ~· Nl-F111 VeAev• ~I MerlM IWm)• Nls-<>ce.11 V..,_. •1eegue 08rnt "" ••met " 1 ;JO O'Hara is movina toward an offense with double t i&ht e nds and a flanker in order to exploit his team's power. Defensively the obvious cor - nerstone is 11 linebacker where two retumina ttartet1 (Todd Weaver a nd Mark Smith) arc Joined b y sophomore Ray Smith .. Ray Smith (6--0. 21_7} wa$ the sophomore team's MVP 1n h'is freshman season. and Weaver (6-1, 219) arid Mark Smnh (no relation)1 at 6-2. 207. have O'Hara in &ood spin ts. "You can call them Manny, Moc and Jack. It's ~oina to be a whole lot of fun, ho says · Jon Ostler. a senior flanker out for The first lime. ra~ as the uons' fastest with 4.6 speed in the 40 Despite the fact the Lions can boast I 0 returning starters, there will be six juniors and a sophomore stanina defensively, and in the offensive line there arc three jun1on and a sophomore ,, Westminster outlook C<Koach: Jim O'Hari()rd year) and Jack Bowman Overall record: 9-11 (O'Hara) Staff: Jack Bowman (defensive coordinator) Stan Oark (offensive coordinator. off'ensivc line) Don Presby (strength coordinator, defensive line) Steve Osborne (offensi ve backs) Bob McAllister (quarterbacks, special teams) Kevin Kappen (assistant offensive line) League: Sunset • Nickname: Lions. Colors: Red. Black and White Offense: Pro-I: Defense: 4-3 1984 record: League I ·4: Overall: 4-6 Weatminater High'• top proepecta Player Pot. Mike Austin F'S-QB Herman Bame RT David Brant C Keith Covarrubias LG Mike Cover RF. Dean Eddy SS Mike Engen LT Jack Evans TE-DE Rob Famn.sto n .LE Anthony F1en'cr OT Pete Gill LT-T E Steve Gulley QB-CR Gilbert Isaac RT ·Matt Jones Rec Dean Xontoe1 RC Gary Lewellyn RG-DT Robert Martinet RC Jon Ostler Fl. Tcrttncc Perin FR James Rubalcava LF. Danny Saldar• FL Jag Sekhon OT David hellc~ TB Mark Smith RLB-TE Raymond Sm11h LLB-FB James Solley TB Mike Spain PK-TE Mickey Sternisha F'S John Trani OT Robbie Turner FB Todd Weaver MLB Ht. Wt. 6-2 180 6-2 n1 6-3 21.S 6-2 21 4 6-2 195 5-9 160 6-0 212 6-J 19.S 6-] 194 6-n 261 6-4 222 S-11 17 1 6-1 240 6-4 185 .S-8 141 6-4 23 1 S-1 1 170 S· 10 I H S-10 190 6-0 195 .S-10 l.S8 6-2 108 S-10 174 6-2 207 6-0 217 6-2 . 190 (>..2 185 6-0 I.SS S-10 187 6..() 21.S 6-2 207 Comme.t Jr . up from sophomores Sr .. all-league in '84 Sr.,. returning stancr Jr , up rrom sophomores Jr .. up from sophomores Jr . up from sophomores Soph, up from frosh r .. '84 starter at OT Sr •. alL '84 starter Sr., '84 lcttcnnan Sr., '84 starter r '84 stancr at CB Jr , up from sophomores Jr , up from sophomores Sr., '84 letterman Jr., up 'from '°P.homores r., 84 staner Sr., runs 1 4.6 40 Sr .. '84 letterman Jr., up from sophomores Sr. retumma starter Jr .. up from SOtJhomorcs r., '84 Slaner until hurt Jr., '84 starter Soph .. soph MVP an '8"4 Sr. saned last 4 '84 games Jr .. up from sophomores Jr .• up from sophomores Jr .. up from sophomores Jr., up from SOP.homo~ Jr .. 84 taner • ~ I l ~ . ' .. ~ ~ L•AOU• ITANDtNOS Amertc. LM9U4t .,.. Kensa1 Cttv 0.fl.lenO Chlceoo Seattle Mlnnt1ot1 Tuaa l oronto New Yor• Detroit llaJtlmore llo61on ~llWlukff 1.levllancl WIST DIVIS.ON w I. 74 S.7 70 ff 67 '4 u •s '60 7t tt 70 4t I I •AST DIVISION n 49 77 S2 70 '° .. '° " .. st tt 47 ... ~Y'•SC­.,.. 11, Oelroll t New VOfk I. S..tlle 7 TMonlo 3, Ci.velellCI 2 9elllmore 12, Oeki.nd 4 901ton 11, Ttxa1 2 Kansa1 Cllv J, Chic.DO 1 Ml"""°'' 6, Mllweuk" I Ttd9Y't Ge"'" l'ct. 56~ S47 .Sll 49' •5' 457 371 .t 26 .S97 S3I 531 4n 46 1 Jst Ga Allelh IMcCe1klll 9-tl 11 Otlrolt CP11rv • 13· 111. n Oe•1enc1 (Rllo 2-11 a1 aenlmo<• teoci dicker 12· ll), II S..tlle (Swift •·II et New YOf'k tNlellro IJ·9), n 9otlon (Hural t ·IOI el hu1 (HOV91'1 14-121. " ChfceDO IS.aver 12·91 er K•n1as Cltv IS.berlleoen 16·5), n Mftwaukff (Derwin 7· ISi el Mlnne1ota (Schrom I· 12), n WMM .. v't Gamet AllMh et Detroit, n Ci.velend at Toronto, n 0.llland at 9alflmore, n Seattle at New York, n (hlC•DO ar Kenu1 Cltv. n Mflweukff at Mlnnetola, n Nettonel L .. 9'M Wl!ST DIVISION w I. Ded9wt 1'S S3 Cincinna ti 69 60 Sen OleDO 69 61 Houtton 61 68 Atl•nla SS 7• Sen Fr anctsco SI 7t SI. Loult New York MontrH I Chtcaoo Phlleclell>hle PltlJbul'Oh •AST DIVISION 78 ~ 18 S2 71 S9 6J 66 6J 66 41 87 Pct. Sl6 SJS SJI 47) 426 39S 609 600 546 ... ... 3?0 Mlfldav'• k Wft Ded9wt S, Monlreef 4 ( 11 iMlnO\I PltllburOl'I S. Atla nta • Hou•ton 7. Chk•DO 2 Pflllaelelonla •. Sen FrancJsco !Minos> Cincinnati 4, St Louis I New VorlL 12, Sen Oleoo • T9der s GarnM Ga 6 I 1 I • IS , IS ~ )7 110 Monlrffl (Smltfl 1S·41 at ~' (HershlH r 13·31. n Hou"on (HHtllCock 1-11 et Crilcego (Trout 1·4) Phllaelele>hl• CHue11on 7· ll) 11 San Fran· Cl\CO !Hammaker •· 10) Allenla (Johnson 1·0) If Plll\burol'I (Ot Laon 1· IS i. n Clncfnnell (Tibbs 7·1SI al St LOUI\ (Forach 6·S), n New York CAoullera 6· 51 al Sa n Diego (OrtYKkv 11·11. n WICIMMlev's Gamet Montreal et Decto9en. n Hout tort a t Cnlceoo PhlledelOhl• al San Frencl\co Alla nla at Pllltburol'I, n Cincinnati et Sr Louis n Ne w York at San Oleoo n MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS Amerken L .. we 8.ATTING ()?0 •• oa•ti-Bovg•, Bo1ton 364. 8rttl. KensH CllY, 3S5, R Htnder\Oll, New York, lll, Metllnolv Ntw VOf'll l?t 8ocl'llt, 0.klencl, 312 RUN~ Hal>Cler\on. Ntw York Ill RIC>k..,, l ettlmor1. 9S, E Mv<rev, 8111•· more, ti. 8 rt tt. Ken"' Clrv, II. Wl\lleur, Oetrolt, II. Wlnfl«ICI, Ntw Yorio. .. R81-Met1lnolv, New York, 109. E Mu<rav, Baltfrnott . 103 Wlnfletd. N•w York, 94, RIC>k•n. llaltlmM•. 93, Bretl KtnHt Cllv, ... G Biii, TOf'onlo, .. HtTS-8CXX11, 9 ot10t1, 190, Melllr>Qty, New York, 170, P B,.o!av. See t11e. 1S7, Buettner. Bot ton. 15', Brett. k •n•H Cllv, 1S4; Cooe>«, MllweullH, IS4, Wlllon, Kan· tat Cltv, 1S4 OOUllLES-Mtfllnolv, New York 39, lluckner, BollOn, 37, Booos. Bolton, JS, Cooo.r. Mllweukff, 34. ('; Wetker. Chi· ceoo. 32 TRIPLES-Wllt0n, KenHt Cflv. 19, Bui· 1er, Clevalencl, 12, Puckelf, Minnesota, 12, llarfi.tel, Toronto, I, COQPer, Mllwaukff I, Ftrr11n0e1, Toronto. t , P Braoiev, Staine, •• HOME RUNS-Fisk. ChlcaDO. 33. Oa Evant , Detroit, 30, Bell>Ol\I Kan, .. Cllv, 21. G TllornH, s.auie, 11, G 8111 Toronto, 27 STOLEN BASES-It Htnder10ll, New YMll. 60, .-.mt, Aneth, 41. Wilson tc.ansas Cltv, 40, llutlef, Cle\letenel. 31. L Smith K1n111 Cflv, 32 PITCHING ( 11 OKCllont l--Gulorv New VOf'k. 17·5, l .04, S.berne~n. Ken\H Cltv lt ·S. 211, ltemenldl, Aneeil, ll·6, l.91, Blrtsas. Oakla nd, IO·S. 3 S6. Cowiev. New York. 10-s. • 01. Hlouara. Mftw•uk.M . 11-6. U4. STRIKEOUTS--8tvl•ven, Mlnn1101e , 16', F ll•nnlster. Cl'llcaoo, 154, Morris, Detroit, 154, Wlft, Aneeb, 147, llurnt , Chlceoo. 14S S.t.VE~lten~rrv. Kentas Cll'Y. )I, Hernanele1, Detroit ?I . D. Mewe, A,_,, )4, R'9t1et1I, New York, 14, J Howtll Oa kland, 23 N1ttenel LMeue BATTING (320 •I Delll-McGff, St L.OUll, 3'9, Htrr, St Loul\, .321, Gll«T'8f"e, Decto9en, .Jll, Raines, Montreal. 312, Gwvnn, San OleQO, .307 RUNS-Murohv, All•nle , 99, Relnel, MontrHI, 96, Coleme n, Sr Louil , 91, McGff. SI Loult, 91; G~•. Dedetn. " " 11191-MUf'tlll\Y Allenre, 92, Pa rktt, C•n tlMall, fO, Htrr, St Loul1, "· J (lark St Loul1. '4. () Wllt0n, Pha.o.torue. a> HtTJ-Mcc ... SI Loul1, 174 C wvnn. San Ot.oo, IS6, Herr, $t l.OUJ1. ls.3. lllalne1, -6\ol11rMI, 14', Parker. Clnclnnall, 141 S.muel, Pllllao.loflle, 141 0009 1.E-S-Plfk.... Cincinnati 1', Herr, St Loul1, )f; WaNath, Montrt•'· )0, ~'1.11, Houaton, 1'. C Wfl10ll, Phllao.t1>1111. TllltPLE$-MCO... St LOUii, 1'. Sa muat, Phlladel0'11e, 11, COiemen, St Loult. 10. lllalnet, MontrHI. 10. Glaelelen, Sin -=rancltco. 7 HOME JtUNS-MurPhv, Ati.n111, 34, Gvarrera, Ded9w\. JI, Parker, Cincinnati, 24, Horner, Attenl•. n. Schmlot;~11.e1 ... C>hla, 23 STOLEN llASES-Colemen, SI Louis, M, Rel~. MontrM I, S2, L01>e1. Chlcaoo, 44; MCGH . St. Loul1, 42, »muel, Phfl•Clel Piii•, 42 PITCHINC (II O.Cl•l0t1\)-Franco, Cln· clnnatl, 11-1, I •9, Cooden, New York 20·•. I.ti, HerilllMf', Dldlen, 13-J, 1.29, Hawkins, S•CI OteQO, 17 •, 19t, B StT>lln Montre•I, l S·•. 2 76 STRIKEOUTS-<.OOOt n. New YOf'lo, 219, Soto. Cfnclnneff, 119, Rven. Hou11011 117, VeMn2ueta, L., A,,..._,, 177, Fernene1e1 Ntw York, 10 SAVES-RHrCIOll Montrt•I. ll, Le Sml111, Chlceoo. 21. G01saot Sen 01eoo. 11, 0 Smith, Houston 20, Sutler Atlenta 20 AMl!AICAH LEAGUE .,,..., 11, Tieen I CALll'OttNIA Ol:T .. OIT Penis cf Crlc112b OWhlte ft llenlou1 lb OownlnOlf Wiifong ?b Llner11 011 Ht norctc rt OMll!errt Boone c Scf'IOflld" JKHowllb eb r h Ill S I 2 1 l 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 • 0 l 0 • I 0 I 0 0 0 0 S t 2 I s , 2 l 0 0 0 0 S I 3 I • I 2 0 5 1 I 2 Wttltekr 21> Tramm! u Flynn " KGIO\Oll rf ASencr11 r1 LNParsl'I c MCuf lft OEvnt Oh NS1mn11f Btrgmn lo Lemon ct Brokn• 3t> Grubt>C>h Tetals 40 II 14 II T.-111 Store bv tnnlne\ ab r II bl l 0 0 0 4 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 3 1 1 I 3 0 , 0 • 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 l 0 I 0 1 0 0 0 ll I 6 I Callf9mle 001 tlO 000-11 Oetrtlf 000 000 100-I Game Winning RBI -Ptflll II) E-JKHowt ll OP-C•lllornle I. Derron I LOB-Ce lffornls 7, Detroit I 18-Llnertt, Boon. Sc.nolltta l B-P1t11\ HR-Hendrick (21 GrlCl'I (91 OeEvan1 (301 IP H R ER 1111 SO C•llfomle Staton W,6 10 • 6 I I ) OMoore t O O O O De'l'rlllt Tanana L 1 IJ 7 & 2 2 Looer l • 4 2 o Carv ) I I O o ONHI 0 0 0 O I Ht r"anor I O O o 7 T ans na e>lctllect 10 5 be fl er\ ,n tl'le 4th Slelon e>llC"*d to 2 11a11er1 '" tl'lt ninth HBP-Scl\Of1elo OY Tentnt WP-Slaton T-2 41 "-19 703 NATIONAL LEAGUE Dodgen S, EXPOS 4 MONTREAL LOS ANGELES llaontl If Law 2b Oew10n rf Brool\s u Fra ncn lb Wl'lllrOC>l'I Ga1trr11 lb W•llach3b Wlngnm cf FlfrgerlO c Hholn oh Buttra c Scl'ltrelr 11 Burke o UWll'ltn Oii LllCll\ o S1'11nt\ on Reerelorl P •b, II bl s 0 1 0 s 1 2 0 4 1 I 2 S I 1 0 • 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 s ' ' 0 S 0 I 1 l 0 I 0 I 0 1 l I 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 000 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Duncan u Blluuellli L.enorx cf Mtr\l\e l ti Guerrer lb Moeltck lb Bailor 3o Mlelnoocf Whiff IC Pl'I l!Wlllmt ll Broci. Pll Sc•otcle c JGon111 or Su 1D Cesllto o How@ll o M11tuk1>h Nledt1fur o StuDb\ ol'I co •• , 0 Jonnsfn Oh 0 4 II • Tet•h S<we l>V lm!n9:I 1br11bl s 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 S I 2 0 5 2 ) 0 1 1 0 0 I 0 0 0 I 0 I I I 0 1 2 I 0 0 0 1000 • 0 1 0 0 I 0 0 • 0 ' 0 1000 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 I I JtS ll • ~.., lOO 000 001 oo-4 Les A""'9l 010 002 000 01-S 0,,. out wl'len w1nn1no run tCOf'eel Ge me W1nn1ng RBI -JOhnl lont I J E-!=lt1~r•ld 1.0 8-Monlrtel 1 LO\ Anoetet 9 28-Law 1 Metaonaoo. SCIOscr• Whltllt 14, .Su . Hll-Oewlon 1 ISi SB-G..arrt ro IOI MtOloc• 1•1 F•t1v.ra10 SI Rtone\ tSi2 S-Cu ll!•o IP H R ER H SO ~ ... Scl\liOr Burke Luc .. llearcion L.2·7 LolA~ (U fllO Ho wall Nleelntuer COie: W,•·2 H8 ?-M1101oci. .,,496 s l 7 s 1 0 2 ' ) 5 3 I 0 ) ] 2 I bv Burke U.S. 0oen , 7 l 2 2 2 I t 0 0 0 0 I I 0 t , 1 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 ' 2 T J 2S A- (et N-Y~) MM'• 194Jr1tl reund ~ Joa••m Nvltrom ISweelttll oet Bor•s Btck•• (Welt Germenv I 6· 3 6 • 4 6 6 • Jonn McEnrOt' IU S t oet Tomas Smid (C1ec11o~v••••I 6·3 1 5 6·2 Mall Wlle nde< (Sweelenl Oet Gr119 Hotmu (US I 7·6 6· 1 7 S. Andert Jarrvo !SweOenl Ciel T•m Mavotte IU S 7·6 1 6 6 . Women'l IOur1fl round ...,..., (Plrls Evert LIOvel r US Clef llobon Wnlte W S.I. 6·1. 6-4. Mt rhna N1vrat11Qve IU S ) Catanne Llnelov•\I CSwed•nl 6 • 7·S, Hane Menollkovre IC1tcho\10vak.la l Clel Kefl'ly Jorde n IU S I 1 S. l 6, 6-1 Pam Shriver (US ) Otl Atvcle Moulton (US I 6·2, 6·•. Claud!• KOl'lele t<.lllCl'I (Well Gtr manvl Clef Wtndv Turnbull l.t.u\lralla l S-7, 7-S. 6·2, Zina Garrison IU S I def !Care Gompert (lJ S ). 6·3. 6·2, Hti.ne Sui.ove CCrecf'IOslovakle ) Clef Cerllng Beuell ICen· aelal. 4·6. 7-6. 7 S LM AM1m1tM MONDAY'S •ISULTi ( UWI .. 4'·Ntftt Ml'lllt1 ,,_..,..) llttUT lllAC•. One mile Hot Charoef' (Tt o ler) 360 UO )00 S1v 1>1orl1on tWarol 10 IO • oo $on11v• CO\illtry (Mueller) 910 Time 7"04 t1S ll U (ACTA IJ·I ) o•IO 1'1 SO SICOND ltACI. One ,.,,, .. e: v• Oentlfv c Pl« ct l 210 Wiid Joller (SIM llll Brown Begglf (V•lle'l<flnollem) Time. 2.0 1 U •XACTA 12·1) H IO s7 50 TH•D lllAC•. One mllt R llo llo (Sherren) 2 40 Klno OI ltlw1nm (Plerct l Flv Flv Fllthv (Offtntl1) Time 2 00 l1S 2 to 1 10 120 210 300 2 20 2 10 120 260 2 40 U UCACTA (I 0 e>elel US 10 l'OU1tTH ltACI:. One mill Doctor Oon !Plerta) s IO Sl'lorellne !Todd) GOOd Fr011 !S1Mrn1 Time ?~I 2 S llll'TH lllACI:. Onf milt Oul>C>IUtt Aneler\OllJ 1 IO Klw 1 ~ tOIFrancoJ Mou111e1n B11ro WllJ(e) Time I S9 l rS Time 1 S9 )IS SJ l'XACTA 11·4) 1>t1C1 '600 SIXTH lllACE. One moll F1v1no Rootr IMt1er) 910 Boot>v Trao !S ... 11'1) Meltll!O Moment !Snerrt nl Tlmt 200 I S 360 3 00 S 60 HO ) 00 260 2IO 900 s.o S40 S?O 310 11 60 600 860 U l:XACTA {6·7) oald S19130 SIVl'NTH ltACI'. One m ile uncle Hoto ! Per or) 1 60 Tronecn1 Prioe (Grunov) St vle>tt Lord (Sorl1191) Time I S7 •IS •l l'XACTA C4-'1) Pe•O 11190 •tGHTH lllACE. One mile Sklo'' Klno (Baf'IOutn) 27 40 Emerald Outing (Aubin) Smokln Wf'IO (M•rchendl Time I S9 l/S 120 2 10 340 240 140 11 .0 780 10 40 100 1040 U l:XACTA (l·tl oelel ~ 40 NINTH RACE. o.\e mlle e>tee Aovance P•rk ICroohenl 10 60 S 04C) • 00 Sa1vae10t I Ptenol • 00 • 20 LOOlllllO Good (S,,.rrtnl 7 20 Time LSI l S SJ •XACTA tl ·91 oa10 '1700 U ~l'R,ECT SIX 1>1110 I 12 ~ 20 wfll'I four winners '"" llOr~l oald st•IO with )OS winners Clive "°'~'' TINTH lllACI'. One mlle o•ce S1r1lont EIQnt (Kutboer) 0 0 l 60 160 Bo1tom1 ITOdOJ 7 IO 3 40 N1m1>1e 'Yt nkff 2 IO Time 201 • S SJ EXACT A 1 S 9> oe10 111 90 Aneno•nct & 629 Del Mar MONDAY'S lllESUL TS (1'1h of O ·dllY -eutl!Orld tNeftntl FIRST RACll. 6 turlOllOl llock Canvon (Pinc.vi S 60 Sweet Wl""ll CWardl Elegent Kellv cEr1rlouezl Time 111 SECOND RACE. 6 tur1onol Slu lln Sutian (Srevtnl ) I 40 C•ll'I Tl'le SMw IPedrozel Meilceatortllouoht CValen1uel11i Time 110 J.90 J 20 600 420 800 Sl DAILY DOUllLE 14-111 otlO ~200 THIRO RACE. 1-1 1611'1 m11t1 Fair Water r Ptncav I 7 40 4 40 l 20 Me•ll•~en ISr t vt n\I 7 00 • 20 ltl SIH tr fOtlal'IOuU•ve) S 20 Tot'l'lt I •2 1 S $.S l'XACTA (S·6) 1>11111 Sill SO ,OURTH RACE. 7 furlong, Soore La Par (Poncav J • 40 C·•v V tw Vaienruetel Cur Bv G au Werell Tome 1 2• 2 5 300 260 120 290 • 40 FIFTH RACE. 0... "'''e 0" •urf Sirew Toro) 29 20 11 60 l 00 C•be IO IP ncav • 3 60 2 so 1 See vo... Mero 1 3 40 Tme 1:µ35 U EXACTA •1 2 1>410 \17150 SIXTH RACE 0.... ""''" Sevenna~ t Secret (Snm-r 7 IO • 20 l 00 0 IC Jtt r Srtvenu • 20 2 90 L•CIY E •Celltr P'"''"' I 2 60 T•me 13' SEVENTH RACE. 6 l tur.onot $ante Rota Pr•nce CStvn\I 19 00 • 40 l 40 Surt To Fife 1Hewlevl 100 220 Prl111tt Junote 1v a1t n1..ata1 3 00 Tfl'l'lt I U 2 S 15 EXACTA 1•·21 oalO SIU SO U ~ICI( SIX C ll·S..S-l·I·• oatO '32 1« 40 10 tour w•nnlno r•c"-•'' ~,.~ norw1) Plclt Sox Conwltllon P<llo S2.073 20 •o ~ .. 1nnlno 11c~et\ ltfvt non•n l EIGHTH RACE. I • mole\ llarNl"'lf'O'°n t Torol t??O My HaOotonv !Me1a 1 io,rst Normen !Stevens) T 1rne 1 S4 NINTH RACE. l·I 1611'1 m ilt\ 6.00 • 10 • 60 320 • 70 Land•• IHewlt'VJ 1700 660 •60 Frtsno Cenvon !Stevtnll 6 80 • 20 A KIU For Katie 1D••ll<>uSW1•e> • 70 Time I •S 15 IXACTA 1·6J oa<d S2?J SO U DAILY DOU&LE 12·11 oa10 '8S 90 ""en<la nce 23 961 I •• OMS>'""~ NEWPORT LANDING ( Newe>0rt 9MCh) -91 angier1 S cOCI )() oonlto l6 H iid ot u 133 ta llco oeu, 2 t>arrecuela I vtllowra1I l \CUIC>ln 27? mtckertl 1• rockfltn DAI/IV'S LOCKIR (NewMrt ... c:llJ -7S2 enoler\ 17 oerracuda . 73 bonllo. S ••llowtell u rocktlth. 2 hlllbut. ~ cellc'l ban 2'1 H OO oeu 605 mec1<ere1. &-- teule>ln I t at>tron P\8.IC NOTICE Mir, CA 92825 CASH. l)ayable at time ot SONAL PROPERTY .t.BAN-1---------- LPIGA Itel c:Nrtt\t 0.aVc ,.,~ .... l!M l1it'I King '77 .7~ ., Janet AnMr\Oll, 11, I 12 *. Nencv Looer, 11 100 Merv Btl'l lmmrmn, 11,°'9 109 Call'lv Morw . 6.S9' Otte E-llno, 6,S91 Mtrfhe Nau ... 6,S9' 210 v ,, s •n!Wlr. 4, S79 Chris Jonnson, •.S71 211 J•M BtalO(to., J .. S H0t11, s•acv l .Jn Merci 9o1ar1n. 3,ln 211 tll Allee Rlflm•n 2,702 TP!erlH Heolon, , .102 Mlnov /!lv:x><e, 2 702 Per Braellev 2,701 Kell'lv Po1flewalt 1 701 114 Jo Ann Wollam. 2 OM JuHt Pvne, 2,0M Petty HIYH , 1,oe. Sallv Oulnta n 2 ,Gel Jana Cr•tter, 2,093 l<•tnrvn Youno 2,0l3 21S Catl'lv Merino l.61S Cethv Ma111, 1 614 Bart> Tllomu l,tk. Stee>l'lenl• Farwlo. I 61• Oaoor111 Skinner, '·"" 21• Laurlt Bl•lr 1.4 lJ 01t>Ole Hell, 1,412 Senelre Patmer. 1,412 Bero.re Pll\Clergu t, I.,, Lynn .t.dama, l.• 12 211 OffdM Latktr, I ISJ Oenl11 Streolg, 1, ISJ Slllrlev FurtonQ, l,IS2 Vicki Alv1r11 I, 152 L vnn Conntllv t, 152 Jane Lock 1 1S2 111 P.,,nv Hammel 133 N1ncv Ser enton. Ill Catherine Ouogen, m Jovc1 Kermterstu Ill Olenne Oelltv.133 Clnclv HIM. Ill SullePaoef' 133 'etl'I Solomon, 13J t •rOlvn HIM 133 21t 8.0.V Pear\Oll S9' R011e Jonff S9' L.lnell Hunl s .. Attl\Oll F nneY S9' • no Clnov F10m ~ Kim Stlopmen, •'4 Cathy Kratrert ~ Nencv Whll1•8rtwtr ~• Pam G•at1tn U3 S11vle llerroteccon U3 Jerllvn Brllr, U3 Heall'ler Drew 301 Lenore Muraok.e lOO Allee Miiier lOO Barb Bunkow\~v 300 B•rt>ra Mirranle )()() Sulin Senoen 300 Merv OtLono 11 1 Ktrttl Ptrmtre• 2~ Juelv Ellla, 240 Caroline Gowen 2•0 Pie Nlln on. 240 m Merlene He~ '" C•"<lv -=-19' M J Smotn 19' ,,. u n., 71·6' .. 7l .. " ,, ., 10 6'·13·'7 '9·11·'9 69·69 11 n 12-u 65 n 11 15 7& .. 10-n ,, ,, , ' 70 n 11·69 " 71·'9 1)· 70-70 n -11 10 n ·••-n 1•·1.2·6' 1'·69·'9 73-71-70 n n -10 71·73·70 7l 10·11 15· 10· 10 7) 12·70 14 10-11 n-11 11 71-71-73 75 13·'8 7•·7l·69 74 70-~ 10·1•· 13·10 7l 14 74·69 10-11·10 n n n 71 13·13 71·73·13 71·7HS ,. ,,.,,, n 11 10 1•-n-11 1•· 73-71 74 73·71 n n ·n ,, 12·73 7) 71 74 11 n H n 76 10 11 77 10 1s-n n 74 73 n 1S· 1~· 10 7S·7• 71 76 n n 1•·1• n I) 1• 73 76 70 7• 11 7l 16 16 , •• ,, n ,,.,, n 11 13 ,. ,. 7l 76 '1 ,. 76 ] I 1' II I) 12 • 11 n n n 76 n 1• 1• 1• 1• I I 17 11 ,. ,, 16 1• 1• 13 n I• ,, n '• 16 n eo ,. NFL HMbmen mndln9S ( 1""'811 NATIONAL CONl"lllllENCE West W L T l"<'t, "" PA Rtm s l t O 150 '' l7 San F •a"c \CO l 0 150 19 n Allenoa 1 0 SOO IO I' New Or•u n I l 0 150 U 71 EHi NV Glanlt ~ 0 0 I 000 119 I,__ O•tlu 4 0 0 I 000 19 SO Wu lUl>Ql<U\ -4 0. l>-I -It &e PnlledelD1'141 J I 0 750 8$ n S• LOu•t 2 ) 0 S00 « 6S Central M Mtto•e J I 0 750 IO IJ Ott•q t I 1 I l7S 60 lS Cnoceoo l 0 2SO 74 4J G•H" Bev l 0 150 !J 9 I Tamoe 8ev l O 150 •S qs AMERICAN CONl"EltENCE <.an\ts C •• J)erver ~nOltQO S.e•ttt lll•lcler'l '"Cl •"•l>O ' Al1•m Ntw E"O •"0 NV Jel' Bullt<O C nt·nna• Cttvttard P H1t>url1P'I: liOu\10" Wet! J l 0 1 1 0 , 1 0 1 0 ) 0 Ent > 0 1 , 0 t 3 0 l ,) J Cemral 1 0 1 0 ~ ,) SundeV'I Gamet ISO t9 90 soo 69 sq S00 10 I& soo aJ ~~ 2'i0 7l 17 soo 67 " 500 10 .q 150 100 ~ HO 91 117 1~ 69 ti) ..00 ~ 01 soo 11 90 HG 9• 106 .lOO ·~ 9? I SI• rt Of R 191M r SM""' I Ram\ at Oe nve• New Vor~ Jtf\ •' R1I~ Sal' O•eoo el Bvtla10 San Fr•ncitco a• ""'""~•o•a Oe•ro11 •' •llal't• GrHn Bav at New E "g'•"O Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tueedey, September 3, 1945 C8 '"° _._,, •• Pin.-.,. ICtt!Mi <ltv Ill New CX1Hn.t M!Mtll et HOU110fl li'llllNe!Ollle • I Hotw y ort. Olah•• St Loult et Cll"41en4 s..11i. ., CllldMatl Tempa ltV t i O\ICHO ~'f'tGelne WHl\lntton al Dellet !Channel 7 •• • o,., I c..... MIMaY'• SC.. Alabama 20, G_.011 1' w..ecenc1 treMecttem aAsaaALL AmMc.M l.M9ua .t.NGELS-Act1vat.a O•rv1 konl.-s outt111e1er Celled~ O w Smlln C>ltci.er lhi'lno Llnarn no Devon Whtie , out t1~1. 1110 Derr Miiiet lnllelder trom EomontOt' of '"" Pacitk Coatt I.Moue BAL TtM0!1£ O•ICX..Es-RKlltaO lllW Swt 09lftv, C>llcller. from ROC"-'tar of ,,,. 1nrerne1ion.1 L.NOIA P\lfdllllO Ille con· •racf\ of L8'\n ~k•t• Ktffv Peri, •no Tom O'Ml"-v 1nl1~s a r" Hevent. e><tc"9r end Lao H«nenoe1 6um.ioer. tr om Rochelle< DETROIT TIGEllS-SIO...O Soa"v Al\Cler\Oll mtn•oer 10 • two·•••• con>re< 1 .... ~~ NEW YORK YANKEEs-Reuueo Deft· "'' lle1mu1wn. oltcner •no Rex Hudie< 1nfleleer. lrom ·C01umbU1 of tne tn1.,. neflontl LMOut OAKLAND A t-lletalled Cu~• Vouno 81tt Kru_, Jeff Kelte< eno Tim Conrov olrcnert Cl'larlie O'B•llfl catcher St911e Kiefer 1nflel0er, •rid Jow Canaeco, Ol.tt fielder, from T ec:oma of Pacific Co"t LHOut SEATTLE MARINEllS-lltcellt O OeMv T ertebull, tnortstoo from CelQerv Of the F'eclflc CoH I LH - TEXAS RANGERS-Actlv1.11eo L.err t P1•rlll\, oulf~ TORONTO 8 LUE JAVs.--tlecelled Jonn Ctruffl. oh~ Klllv Crut>er troro o"em en. and R>ell Laacl'I eno Ron sn-o, OU!f1410t<l tr°"' Svr ecuw of the 1ntern•tlon•t Ltaoue RN•l«I Ron Mulsalme n ancl COlln McL•IJlllin o•ICller~ .......... L .. _ OOOGEllS-Rectlled G11o.r10 lltvtt cart,,.,. Sid llrtam llrst oewmen·out flelcler •"Cl l=rer!tllifl S•ub01 •"Cl Rt Ofl Brven• ou•t1eta..1 trOt'T' Albu<Jw<oue of tt>t Pacrtrc (OH i LHO.Jt lltce!led J0\11 Gonre>tr outf•-• •rom !>an AnlonlO ot •l'le Tuai LeagOA ""'t"•l«I Ille tontrt(1 ot Stu p_..W" outt -lrOt'T' AIC>v oua•oue CHICAGO CUBS-lltu'led RIK>lltt Pao· ''''°" ano Oavt BHrd O•IC-\ from 1owa 01 ·~ •mer can AUOC:lt"<>" •llCI Jont>nv Abrev<> OllC"9< l•Ot'T' P11t1f1efd of ,,,. Eu t.,n Ltaoue Pvrcl'la'80 ,,,. tO'I· •ract of JOT\ P.,lman oifcl'ltt from !owe ot "'e Al'l'le"te" Au ocle1ion NEW YOllK METS-Atllveteo Mooatt >'Vil\Ofl outf>e!Ot!r llon <.troannort •non· l•oo. ano Br..c;e B.,tnv•. oltcl>er PITTSBURGH Piii" TE S-Tr•CllO lllN MaOlotk 1nflt111er to the LOI A noe4n OOCIOe<t to• tnr" o:Ma ver• 10 111 nemed ater Ootalna<I II J Rtvnotcll outt1110er on ••Ive<\ lrom Lo1 An~\ u one ot •!'le otavtrl •o bt nerneo In Ille MaOloo treoe ST LOUIS CAROINALS-fttcali.d llanov Hunt carcner. from 0.lll'IOm.a Cllv ot "'" A,,.,.r ca n AlwclellOtl S•One<l Oouo Baor oltcMr SAN OIEGO PAOllES-Acttvatao 'ttCf'I Gone~ D·•cr,er Catted uo Greg Booli.e< Lu•t OtLeon Eel WOlna ano 8oo Pao· •erton DifC....,I •nd Jtrrv 0 8Vll OUI• 'eooer trom LH veoas of the Pacific Coe" LteQue SAN FRANC sea G<•NTS-llKalled Mall i'otootl te•Cl'l¥ trom Sl'lr•veoor• ot '"t Thai Le•oue l"OOT9AL.L ... tleflel ,.....,. L..- llAM5-Acou•reo Booov O..c>.wor'" • oe •Kt v..-from !>an O•eoo n ucf'le~ fOf' Garv Kow•••" o+le<>\lYt •Kkll al'd t n ..1no1\CIO$f<! '916 O•al• CllO•C• LOS ANGELES l!AIOEllS-T•eoao Tao N•Hs ~' ve oac~ •o •ne Nt• Vor' G1ent\ n •~Clll"9t •or ... ..if\01\C.O\ld or•" cnot<e ?tecao S•e+o<-AOll'l'll oefer••v• C>eCk ')"' n yreo ... u-,. ,. N e ved Oen 11-r ·..,on•no ~· Ow Qnl VII"-~ otf...,1 vt' ,,,.,...a,.. t "CI <.oroon J~l •-oe rece•¥ef ATLANTA l=ALCON$-W11veo 800 H04tv Ou•••e•o.c' E'"" oe H•rrv w•oe •ect •ver Wence< Cu o" ~en\lvt INK• eno Sytves!er S•~mot '"""'"0 Dae• Ptacao Jot P.,.~, f'" e-n•er ·~..,arcs Of'I •"Hurftd rtwrve BUl"FALC S LlS-Wa ·Vt'O Tom Mulladv t1gn1 ero P•acl!d Bo Her• I ano ,.,.,., Se11wr0gn• ~•oeckt'r& on nlvrao 'l!J.ef'V9'Q O •IC AGO 8E•RS-"'1e vto Boo T'<omH olacr• c•., J•,... Mo•rl~v 1neoacky An1no"'"' _ Hµ'C"•J.O"' r1.1nn1no oac• eno Ht"nrv wec111~ otle,,,,vt ••c••• I.. NC INNA TI 8ENGALS-We1vao Stt"' Y.<1 o•ow oneotn•• Pett l(OC" .,.....,,,ve 9"0 ~te Dev t s~<l S.al" T"IO""H (0' l\t •t>ecu •~ l(t '" Lt\lt r 'gl"• _..., CLEVELAND 9110......m-w . veo ........ Pr .... ;. .. ..;nf'I 1"10 oec ll Ow gM 'IY6 ,.,. w CH .. t<• ,.,,., Aa'o,.. 8"0wt\ ri•04K"-f' 0 0 MooG••O Otft"l •• D&e• ""0 Seo·• BCHt " otff l\\ ..,. ·"'e,....a~ O"LLAS C0"'180VS-""I vlO Qo• SCH" .,0, .. u"'" ..,.0 ~C"-0..if" .. "iarr l -Ot ·tee ve-xo" S••••C>•"~' ~~~ ano Ca• MO .. a•1 8"0 Q<•v Eat .... <>" co• ~ .... oec•• •c• .... "° ·~,.. ...... ,eo fl'for J•f"!« ·fll\ f# Of Pf'(f Vf f" OE NVE~ BRONCOS-(.,, So• S•a"'•"'aoe :J~"·•,.~c' ;a,.,•• l(t•'~ l)ffen\ ve 'ac• e :>er"t "" Co"••"'' ~eb.K•ef' ~ex>@'" .J&<''°"' oe"fP"'' Ye c.1. • $1"0 C "Ir \ Brtwer ''-'"n•~ bf(' OE ·1101· L•ONS-"'1• VtO " .. Jt!'• .. , ""• iO.Ctt JO"'l"l -h ''J w \• ~u.a1ne'04C• •f\O ~,,.,.., L.H O~llfO P &< ~ 'N a * ~, 11111 utt•v •"C Je"'tt JOl'<'W" "•O.c.ker 01"1 "'u"ed ,.,,~ ve GREEN B•'I' PACICER!t-Wa ved Q1• C"'Ou" '"V""•"'Q 0..C.. E,.~ 'ltl 'Of\ •"toac:~er 1no "'.,, s1111, oe•e"' •• b• • S1gneo Bui<l'O ;oroen '"nn•no oec .. HOUSTON OILEllS-Plecao Owev~ Crutcnl••d •.;nn1"g t>ac• ano SIO•• 8rv1n1 '# O• .. K elv_, Of\ 1n11.;'t'O rt\~wf we l•eo Tooo S.eoeuo" 11,,eoec,•• •'" Jerome I= Ol't' o.ien\1ve t"O Zorn tops list ofQBs cut in NE reached E1&h t teams chose to cut pcnenccd t>aclcup quarterbecb Mo day in order to reach the Nati Football Lcaauc·s new, lower. 6 4S-man roster bmit. Tht Seattle Seah'awks cut an~ ma.I member of their te&m, Jim The left-hander, in 100 games wi Seattle, threw for 20, 122 yuds I 07 TDs. Zorn. 32 years old, bu t contrac\ that calls for a $4SO,<Q sal~ this year. Other veteran quanerbaclcs cut were Jack Thompson, by T ampa Bay: Bob Avellmt, by the New York Jctlj ~ob Holly, by Atlanta; Mak,& MoroskJ. b} San Francisco; Joa. Ptsarcik, by M1am1, John Witkowski.· by Detroit, and Babe Laufenberg. hr Washington MoroskJ was cut for the second tame this summer. He was let go rwo weeks ago b} the Falcons. for whor9 he backed up Steve 8artkowks1 !Qt year under the old 49-man roster ru.Jt. "h's JUSt wro ng to have to go to 4' players," said Washinaton General Manager Bobby Beathard. ••Jt's 1 temble thing for football and it's temblc when you have to release 1 player hkc Babe Laufenberg. .. Lions Coach Darryl Rogers had been hoping owners would pass a ruk allowing teams to keep an additJonal quarterback as a 46th player, but was d1sa,epotnted ··~uartcrback 1s a very vulnerable pos1t1on and I rcall) wanted to lceef W1tkowsk1," said Rogers "I wan~ the extra quarterback (rule) not Jut& for us. but because It would be best fcs the league There arc a lot of teams that wtll ha'e to go with twO quarterbacks " .\nothcr backup Ohver Luck of Houston will be unavailable for thrtt or four "'eeks because of a shghtly fractured left anlle the Oilers an- nounced Tide gains 20-16win in wild one .\THE:": C1a I .\Pl -~1ke Shula th re"' a F -~ard touchdown pass to '\I Bell Y.1th I 6 ~onds remaining to ltO .\labama to a x~ 16 <ioutheasten Confer4nce 'ICton o'er~orgJa 1n a game of "'1ld ,omebacks Monday night .\labama .... h1l h had led most of the .... a~ bctorc falling bchtnd on a blcx Iced punt .,..,th 51'1 \ttonds left had no timeouts .... hen 1t \tarted a ~o. 'ard dn'e 'hula son ot \11am1 Dolphins· Coach Don lihula -cinn('("ted ~1th vrc-g R1char50n tor 16 'ards Bell for 26 and Richardso n again for 11 befort finding Bell alone at the Georg.i.1 'on the 1 1-~ard sc'!nng pla~ Bell. a 1un1or collc-gt transfrr. also ~aught .1 l n-yard TD pass from Shula 1n the S<"cond quaner fre\hman Tem "ebster blocked a pun1 1n 1he linal msnutt and 1un10T (.th in Rutl pounct-d o n 11 for a tou,hJn"'n 10 g1'C' Georgia a 16-IJ leJd Garlits s till No . 1 in t op fuel field l'Dl..\'..\P'ill .\P Don l1arht~..a''" .,,.,r,.,rh "'at1ona1 Jrag "a1. ng t • t' ... ·nc :ra• ir· I ,.ti 1" the 1rnph' .. a,, "Thi' "au.· •.'I,! ~ irr :-r1t'.t1-:1n1t to me 1:-iar ~'c-., ... : '<'J"' < «trht\ '>d id ·Th,' Im ,,, 1hr "1, w a \\ 10\1\ll'\ \\ ,• ~ mru•l"\h p \en It'" ~·'Pk • .. •n ha,~ '''had. '\atonal h. r • ,r,,r, .1'1d now I 't' 1.1'1nt• 11 · 1 rr t'r\ thnllc-d al°'nut •ha: t 1.H. 1' .1 • In l 1 .in .i pu Ii' R.llt''-'J' Pa!\ 'rn·J •t:1 .rJ ,,1 ~ti' UO milt\ pert, .. 1r t!w AJ \l,1nJa, \ SJ\ 0 I I \ ("\ :t-1· r r Tuel ,hamp11'r'r , POOUC NOTICE P\B.IC NOTICE MllC NOTICE l't.8llC NOTICE Thlt bualness WH con· sale 1n ltwfut money of tfle OONED ON. OR BEFORE Ml.IC NOT1CE 1(.1..,4 ducted by • llmlted partnt1r-Untied S1111n. all rlQM mi.. 5114185 .t. T 248 11 S AN I FlCTmous I UllNl'H ,ICTI'TIOUI IUIMll ahlp and 1nteres1 1n t~ tollOwlnQ VIN C EN TE. M 1 SS t ON FICTITIOUS IWIJWll NAME IT A UMl'NT IC.-1- "'CTlTtOUI IUllNfll NAME ITATIMENT "CT1TIOUI aUllH~H I TATIM!NT 0, NAME IT A TIMIN'T AaANDOffMEl>CT OF N .... IT"TI...... Thlt statement was flied descril>ed properly lllluated VIEJO SUCH PERSONAL NAME ITAT'EMfNT The r<14towinn ~t 1,... .. ,. "' wHll Ill• C()U()ty Cl«k of Or· In satel County end Slate PROPERTY CONSISTS OF The lollowlng e>ersot1s are Cloong 0usonm a~ The f()llowlng pertOnl are enge County on .t.ugUll 12, Loi 55 of Tract 7383 II BEDROOM FURN LIVING ClOlng bulln.st 11.9 WESTGRO\IE o .AZ.t. Troe 1a11ow1ng per~• a•tt UN Of 'teTmous 1.101ng DuS•nesl at a UllNEll NAME T QP~a PROPERT ES .,,. •011ciw·nQ o.-1 ""' •' o"" "!< :>e<SO"s are dOlngb\lllnMIU DevColll. 1985 shown by map on Ill• In AM FURN KITCHEN NEWPORT ECOLOGY 22 2915 Redlllll Suite F ·200. Pvbltlhed Orange Cout Book 9638 pages 643•645 of FURN REF RIG & FREEl· H.,mnage Lane N p 8 C A 7 t 11 Gard~ u•O•e 81110 Cost• Mall, Ca llfornll Deity P"o1 Auguat 20, 27 Meps, records o r Or109e EA. FAM AM FURN DIN-926e0 . .~2: 9~:.", ........ •e Ce I .J ~ ~t..S ,.,,, IS \II( to , ,. A•noc lll'S .voo B• ~·' <;• ee• Su te ~ c .. -........ " ~· 9?626 ••92 J1me9 Corct8 rC "'•"• tOl!'dC~ '"4' .,,., :>' l"u"' noton B••C"' C 1 11. ,,,. < c• '•Ou• Bu •~ .... 112828 Septeml>ef 3 10 11185 County, Calltornll ING AM TAB LOVESEA T Donne Mee Aon19 22 Lawrence Su•C' • ,.n •ornle 92~9 Nemfl •c: G C'• ... -.. • 1•c ByrOtl M T arnutur' T -794 The purpo<1ed street Id· FtLE CAB , OAA.t.OE PARA· He<mlltge. lane NewpOt1 1111 Gerd~r G"'"' Bt"O DSl ~t<:• co.-.c:ia ny 2·~0· l A•f FNa-:tt Ot•\1"9 E• ' • o Ca 92630 A Call-•o•n·• Co•t'l'."•t•or Geo<91 •t1.)ml S 0•111 Jr f .\ • "0""1"' ••f, '"' Tnnt ... 900 VI• Lido NOfd , drMt a nd ot"et common IPHEANALIA AND OTHER Beacn. CA 92eeo •200 Geroen G·~ Ce •'92 Ja~ Corel@ .. c St "' •'"'fl ~ • ;i;• • Newport BMch, Ca llfc>fnla P\8.IC NOTIC£ dNIQn•tlon. tf any of lh• MISC ITEMS Thll bu11n11~ Is con-lorn•• 9264 t • Hurt,ngtOI" Beach C11 r.,. '><11 Ow• B '·~o 92:: Rodriguez, 2930 fall reel prop•rly dH Ctlb•d Morlna llo, lerone & ducted by I n ,ndlVIClUitl Tll11 OU,•"•U S CO"• torn.a 92~9 "''"" "'"" ..... '• al' • ~ ~· Or=wood ........ nu•. T uao lbOV&, '°'which Iha under Hotcten. Attorney• •• Law, Donne Mae R~ Fueled o~ II •m•ttl<l ciart ..... •" • tlut •""'SS ' con .l.,tt~ b• 8 ;)fl"llfA t'8rl f't'll'•O •111a Dut oneu s con l•leC .. v• •"~" °" ·· An Cl llfc>fnla 9280t YOU ARE IN OEFAUl T llgned makes no rec>feten· 4131 ltrcl\ lt..-1, lutt. Thll Slllement wH !tied tp :1ucleo D~ en ,,,Cl,Vtdu11 Oc100.• ; • · .:.• t < ' Mars~ll A M1nclllH. UNDER A HOMEOWNEA'S llllOn or warrinty 11 S696 100, Newpon -..Ch, CA with the County Clerk ot Ot· L.t.WRENCE Su•C11 , NG G THOMAS PAA" JR F 1'•1839 2582 Vlltl Orl\19, Newpol'I ASSESSMENT LIEN DATED Oakley T«rlce. lrvlne Call-t:lllo '"rs County on July 18 Tl'l•I tlatemant WU , lflO ~thUfl Sen• N>• Ot ,..194 W Oon11f'lu• C "••""8" of "'"' SC\&rO • .,,, 1111_.,I w19 Ii'-<! Pnthp " V ,.,.._ ., __ ,. "'•"f ..... -1, "2 • ..,, J.t.NUARY 4 1985 UNLESS lornl1 Publl~ Or1n99 Cout 29 S tP'I ,,.,_ C~nt• c. eri. .J' O• ..,.,,., •n• COu"ll Cw\ 1.11 Ot Mein 5,,...,, .,,. '• " ~··....., "'" • """ · TM purpon.c:t own« of Daily Piiot September 3 10 '211* • Counl 'OI' JU'' 29 itnge C(l\ll"lv or A.U91Jtt 16 112• 14 Thia b v1ln191 11 con-YOU TAKE ACTION TO N ld real prperty at lhe time 1985 T .8 l2 Puollsnec:J Orenge Coett 19 • ~ Clueted by a gener•I part· PROTECT YOUR PROP-of Ille Aueument Li.n wu • O•lly Piiot AtUQult 13. 20 21 ,, ,,.,.n1p EATY IT MAY II! SOLO AT ot-tC MnflC[ S 3 98S r"'' ~···~" waa Meo ... ,t-1ne Cwnt¥ Ct.wt. ot O• ange C .,,.., on Ju•• U •-=1e ~ 1985 l Da lt 5,,..r, o '*"' 1IM Ten en Out>l"ni!ICl O••"Ofl Cou t Me• C4 !;2e:• , .. Mlt'll\lll A ~ltlelllu A PUBLIC SALE IF YOU DAVID L WHITE ANO LYN· ,.~ ~ eotember 1 T-HS Tllll 111\em.nt wu fll9d NEED .t.N EXPLANATION N~~!! wlll be de ~. STAJSMUn' CW De '' "'•IOt 41JQu~1 10 21 1 T111a l\ul•''•'" .. 1• ,.~ S~t.,.,t>er '\ 10 1915 ovc1.a !:>• • ..., ,,__.: "" ,. with Ille COvnty Clerk of Or· OF n.E NATURE OF THE me , ·~ nge COlJ ty on Augull 16 PROCEEDING AGAINST without w•rranty, expr ... or '\JAH,.. , ..... TITIOUNT CWI P .. 1>11111*<1 "' •119* Coe.11 ;)11 • C> ('I ""0"tl 2() 27 Se p1....-.,., ' io 19ae. t-783 ••""' ~9&8 n . YOU, YOU SHOULD CON-Implied. r9gardlng 1ltle, l>09-1uitN.u NAMI , ... 1 TACT ,t, LAWYER. MNl<>n. 01 •t1cumbr111CM, P\8.IC NOTIC£ P\8.IC NOTICE r ~eo Th11 ····~"''"'' "' •• I ..._~ Wll" '"• c "l;~t, ... ,_., , ' l•not Covn•• V" •uo .. ~· : 1116$ • PuClltM<I Or•no-Coaet NOTICI ()ti IAl.I to P•Y I~ ~um ot p .. 1 du. Tiit loll::J ptr1on1 Diiiy PllOt Augutt 27 Sep· On SeplemMr 17. 1985. HQm4IOW,,.r • •~t•. n•ve tbtlld tlle uM of ,tCTlTIOUI au1M1• I K-1-..... 3 IO. 17 lHS 11 10 oo AM 111 the Mtln rnaonably Htlmated c0tta lht Flc;tllloue Bustn .. t NAMll ITAT'IMOfT l'M:TITIOUI au.-.. .. -----------P\iblllhftc'I l! UQ41 A-' P\a.IC NOTtCE 011~ 1>1101 '·•o..i•· • POOllC NOTICE ttm_.-· • • T-I02 Entranc. IAUMOAATNER 1 .... ctllrQH. end •ntefett In Nam• lnno•o ttv• Floor Tiie totlowlng pereol\t .,. 1 NAMC ITATUllNT ----------& ROUP 1111 Town Ind tile •mount ot I 1 420 00 Mllnl1W11nce, 2450 Newoort doing bvtlneN N Tiie "lol!OW<"Q oefl0tll1 lie FICTITIOUI aUllNIU 'ICTITIOUI eu .... aa "8JC fl)TIC( COuflttyRoacs •30 Orange DATED Augutt 14, 1985 8MI •2 Costa Mfla CA (A)GPB ENTERPRISES 'dolt,g Du s on eu 1 1 NAlllll I TATIMllfT NA .. ITAT'IMINT Ctllfornl1 In Iha cl1y ol °': TU9'Tl.I "OCllC Tl"-92827 8 ) TP.AVEL CHAIR MANU AMONO 8A'l HlllS ', .. ' ""' .... ' w ·9 '*'°"'••I! n.,. 'Cl'' .... ~ 0.-tOtlt ·~ l'TAtt•NT °' ••. County Of Oringe. "ACI COMMUNITY Al-Tiie FICtlOOvt luetn•H r:ACTUllUNG !Cl HOLIDAY .,...,., ·~Uf Su ff! ,. '(lo1 Dvt u" »"Q ~· .. MAICl'C)IJ..wl'Otl Si.la ofCelltornta.unde!'lhe WIAnoN,aY:~D. NttM retetr«Sto•bO,..WU CHAIR COMPARY 1211 Ot ll Meo C ll'O••'I ~ ... £SS ~IRST 6484 "1 ... 0 A' \F 'LOOA UM O(I fltCTITIOUe p-of Sele purtutnt to "--et ...... ,_ a Flied '" °'MOt County Qt\ bfldOe l ene. Newpot1 1e 400M So..t" C•rele AC*I MA.INTfNANCE W'' f ._,_,, fllAMI lfle tern\t of t!IOM '*111n --.. a Law c .. ,.. ..... ,. July 2t ttt.4 ~Lf NO 8eectl Camomla t?MO "'"" N l•l'll·t.CS 1 Can uN ,,, Ce t()lnoa 92• 15 w11nut ""'•nue Ora no• Tiie ~ pe,..onl ~tntl,Condlttona.ano 111;tew"l~"-d, F·~&1459 Gregory Paul Belous d it n coroorat on 1ae· JoHtil'I 111ea1 Z•~•nn CallO'n 192&&• htve • tile uee of ,_ .. 1t1c11on1 r9COfded on ...._.,Or-.,C....,,. Tlleodott J•c• Oiiton 12llCfllT\~~ ,..._.. Of1Qt Str"t Toror>to C>\· 6A•4 400M So.;tf\ Ora. O>aoo111,...,, G6l&.ryn \lie "tc:11t1ou1 l!lu11ne" Septembet t lt70 In 900k I ff14) "7""70 H•ll•. 2'50 ~\ ~ 9Mcfl. ~Nat2MO "'° Ctn.a. ~us ivs Ao•" •v r e C•111orn11 203• C W•"'Vf ~.....,_,. o,. Nune-PINTAIL HOMES. 9302 p11g91' 176-791 lf't· Pl.lblllhed Or~ Oou1 •2 Coat•~ CA 921127 Thit bull,,.._ It ~ Thia Ck.o.,ne tt a c(I" t:··~ •"Ge Ct h•Ot"n" 92M~ llrt Mlln Street, ·~IM~. IW""' of ()fflClal -.cofde o.Hf Pilot Augult 27 ~ !OWi 0 1119 HMte MrN .0. .CS by tn ~ tad t>y 1 COfi>Qf'1IO" r"•I out r en 1 con fh·t Du11neu • CO"· C416llomle 92114 of Or~ ~ty, Cal._ temt>er 3 10 IN S dfeel 0 A E Q 0 R Y F' A U l ltama6M lim•t.-1 Je!t•..,, nucted by en~""°"* lducteel by an lrld~ TN Actltloul lu neat lom't.8'umgll1n.&Aoup, T-715 TIM~ -oon-l!l!LOUS $1aw1 V'lc•P~t 0 5(ilt .. N ltfMANN C11AALOTTlGALAZ'fN N~ ~to 9bO¥I wM A l aw Cofi>ot•tlon, • •1· P\8JC NOTICE duet9CI by.,, lnOMdwal Tr.1 iatemer\t -llt9CI Th• tta t_,t wu t ieci • ..,,, ,,.,.,.....,, ..,.., ,.., '"'• ttlt...,.nt wu flled flled tn Orenge County ~ IOtfleY fOf T\JPITLt M>CK #lltlrn:.·~b;:' .. ..'~ ti\ Ille COllflry ~ of Or· " tfle County C•• Ol Or • ,~ IPl4' C:O\.My CWlc ol Or ..,..,11 tile ~~ C.11 of Or Apttl 14, IM2 ,IL! NO TEi AAAC! COMMU NITY NOTICI cw ~ Coun~ ~A·-=~· County on Augvtt t 4 County on "UOU-1 ~· e"V" Cl'vntv {)t\ AU91'~ 14 11;x: C-1'1<1'\h,,,.. Ay0wl1 14 '·tl13141 ASSOCIATION.~.,,. 10 "-*JC IAll ....,_. 5 5 ·~e~ u~ ~ llMlo H MCNll'l*I, 1171 Sac1ton t)~ Of ttle CM ON t /1lltS A PU8llC 1 5 ,_ ,.__, ,.._, M1lfl 8tt9M MA, IN!N. CA Codi of the State of Cell AUCTION WIU 9! HtLO '1ub1•"*' Orengt Coul Pub119Nd Or1lftQll CoMt ~ .. h'l.-.a Or11n99 ti Pvt><•-1\eO Ora,. t 92714 IOt'nle, WILi. StLL AT PUI AT too ,. M "' 2202 s lly PtlOt AT' '° t 7 F'tlOI .... ~ 20 21 c-C>ow-t ""9V•1 Xl 2: o .. " ~!IOI AtUQu•• lO 27 cw. ~o. 1901 Gal LIC AUCTION TO THl M N, '"NTA ANA. THf l.-rlber 3. 1 ltl& t.mb«, lO. 19'5 ~·..,.r;..· ' 10 1M~. S.Otembet 1 \0 t •t• Tanece. Corona dal H IOHUT llOOIPI ,OA PUik.iC ~l[ •• OF PIA· T ,.. T·T•~ u 1.1 .. s.,,.,.,~ ·, ... ~, .. ~ P\BIC ..OTIC£ ,OYNTAIN VA\.,U Y ICMOOl Otln.tCT NOT'ICI 0# !U)()ttT ION ~ Ml°'-UTION Of INTIWT TO I.UN a~UI otaTNC f MAI."°"'"" Nv F S ,.(' ll~ JtV(N •044 T,.[ Cl)\ Iii TAIN \I •[' C\C. .. 001 t)l!'IT .. .(" ~ K •ll ~ thlJ1 ,.._ !~'!!",; tl'I P'OC.,,!) "'I 0\(1' NO 11..0.,'1 1l'lt ., .. ,,()(\ ... Ou~ AOOM ['I 'I 1":1 D-21 ot I~ 4R' ... UI\ C N.r l LA5 V, MO()\ l"U I" II i '\(I() ... •' ... ,. .. , Of' a. -fl'<. , .. t. ......."l"f •"'t" , .• ti"• ~ ClllQut'" 1. C'<'Jl;l1C1•""C• • 11 0 0"C8fl"llf 1n• "'("!•fill" ,..,, 11\.1 0-f' .O• J'f'•...-<' I • '~· AIN VA\ f .. <..(" '\-,, OISTR•C• • -: • •• !;-qf"E 1 ~ou,.. • 4 "' "A-. Ev uA, tl'ORNIA ~;''08 '[L[P,.0 Nf 1'141 '4 2 l'6c;1 A'TfNTIQN 4PQl tONFS ,OUNT AIN VALi.if ICHOOl Olln.tCT 90AM O' TAUITIEI Cla tti, .... dof Tnn'"9 4 • .guu n •98~ Oubtt•nflC ''range CC>M o~"' 11,io, A"9"•' n ~ ff"T'tle' " 10 ·~· .. T.111 USI THI DAILY PILOT "FAST llSULT" SUYICI OllECTOIY For Rf"SUll ~rVl<'t" l"•ll 642·1671 bt. lU • I • C4 ~ CoMt DAILY ptLOTITUMdey1 September 3, 1985 -7:30- 12 OH THE TOWN QIFNILYFBA> ™" INCAEDB.E EVE OH LA. Cf) MOVIE t U "The Only Gllne In T Ol#n" (1968) Werrtn Beatty, Btzablith Tey- lot • FAM.TY TOW£R8 (D)MOW t • ~ "St1t 80" ( 1913) MW Htm- lngwly, Erle Aoblm. -10:00- lf smt ... IBTON 8TEB.E .. MAC:IGfUER l LOUD SWID FAWLTY TOWERS EWNNG AT POPS IBtll>THEac:ee IOlllNG MOVIE U 'i\ "Alaltot" (1980) Robert kit· st•. l\Obll) -·· FIMT"l TtN PAPfR CttASE -10:1$-• PSJOIOUS PAOGfWiAIN) -~ I TIC T/IC DOUOH llJUIENOEHT NEWS FAWl. lY TOMM WA~ Of PRA'9E MOYIE +t'i\ "Streets Of Are" (1934) Ml- c:Nel Pert, Dllll9 LMll -11•-11x,•(J)®'Qt~ ILOUGAAHT ARCHIE aJNKEA'S PLACE IAANEY .aJ..EA ON STAGE LA. a181E&SAEPOAT CNO STAT°"'8USSEWB.l !:¢r8COURT tt'ii "Unt~ September" (1984) Klren Allen. Thierry lherrnttte (Z)MOYIE t "APtwodrte" (1982) Valerie Kapn- sky. Horst Buchholz. -11:1$- .... MOYIE *** "Feint" (1980) Irene ,Cira. Bany Millef. -12:»-• CB LATE NIGHT WITH DAVI> L.ETTEMIAN • Al.RE) HITCHCOQ( PAE89ITS i=Tltf&O *** "Knock On Wood" (195') ~·MW lettering. H 'ii "8 ... Must Ole" (1973) Darren McGtvln. Pltrlcia Hell. l 'HocWtS HEROES lOYE.. AMSllCAN STYLE FAW\. TY TOMAS ENTERTAIMHTTONIOHT !::J:THE-LOfl> t + * "Once Upon A Time In Amerl· ca" (19841 Robert De Niro. James Woods. -12:.S- CQ)MOYIE * * t "Feint" ( 1980) lfene Cara. Barry Miiter. --1•-I = MOVIE • .. "Ftmlle Artillery" (1973) Dennis WfWVel, ~Lupino. ·9 NEWS 6DP~RYAN -1:10- {C)MOYIE * • "o.sty Force" (1983) Wlngs ~.Joyce lnglla. -1:30-DNEWS Ill SEATS 82.00 AT EDWAIDI IEA (111.Y) -~ =11.Y) -CllEllA WEIT (TUEi.) ••• , •• (118. a WEI.) -w -·· (TIIEI. a WED.) tm (WED. •YJ-•VElllTY (WED. a 111111.) . FIUITlll IAWY (WED. a Tlllll.) edwards NEWPORT 644·0760 .. [WPC/P" ([•, [fl B['W[[ .. ;Ao,tB:,,~ll, "4A(AR'M<JR ·~---­"UCI ll Tm Rl'm'' "UCI ll ll •• ,.,._ .. IJ1JI, a.-. ... 1111,1WI (Pll edwards SOUTH COAST PLAZA 546·2711 BR~'C•.S S ... •.,>w[r J','Ao,ll')l J , ...... , rll ''' · • -,· '"1'''1 ''REii ~---· (I ) ... lml 1111 .... ,,., , ..... edwards BRIS TOL 540· 7444 B~ '>1 0, A 1 o,tACA~'H~R ')l .. 'AANA ~,, .. "Tffl., .. 11111, lltl,.,.. ........ , ... ,., eowaros CI NEMA 546·3102 '1&RBQR Bvu.E 'ARD ~. &C A~S :os.' llo!ESA ...... ......... S2.50 ~ l:OO --"~'II) hll,wt .............. llllTM." .. , ......... ,,.) "IUI. ..... . , ...... , .. (Pl) edwaras MESA 646·5025 N[Wl>QR TBOtJl[VAllO l ' ••1'H ~' JJ~'A o,t(S& "t. T.'' fNJ 1111, lllJI AU SIAT$ $2.00 Tm• ... ''PlllllMIW' ... "-.. edwaras ~iUNTING TON 848·0388 Ol A ... B•NL l • , .. ~ ..... , .. " .. "'114(.' _ .. llf ..... . ' . "UCI ti Tlf film" .... --~ 1111 WI 'Cl• nm•• l tM.'1M, ll!M e war s · '.Ao,tP,5:,1< l;[')''J' ,,,[r;.;A,~ ':':i'~~Y ,' • Wll + '-SUI MlllU ''YllmEElr' 11.i.-.•11 llJt, ... 1~ llt ...... llllTM." (Pl) , .... , ...... "-Wltil" (Pl) ., .. , ...... ...... ..,. .. (I) lilt, Jill,., .. ltll, "" :--•"(Pl) + WI.NI WU "fr'. (Pl) IUI 1121. •:41. I.... I ., ... Tl.·--------- ''THI Wllf'' tJ•.t• ..... ... Ml,1NllNI ''IEIU 1ta" (Pl) , ... ,... .... , ...... , .... edwards SADDLE BACK ll TORO ROAD A 1llOCKFtEL0 .._,,,.. II.JO ti Jill "PHWH'I• llVRnm"fPCI 1JiM,J1zt, •M ....... , ... 581 ·5880 E, TC/R(J "•1111 "Tfftl Wllf" _ 1 ... (Pl) 1 .......... , ...... , ... "' 1 ....... , ...... ...... .... ICBCf" (Pl-ta) lilt. 1111, I ... -.aA\11) 1Jtll, Jtll, .... "W1-lta'' (N ) 1111,1111 IJ111, .... ,t .. "YUi• "IUl .... '(N ) TIE.._ .. ,,., ... , ... IJ111.l•.•M ........ (Pl) •11. IMl(I ) \... 11121,Wl,MI ~ edwards VIEJO TWIN 830-6990 SAN 01EGO i W • T(I LA PAZ ~ C MR<~ANl A y 5 S·C.~ , [ ;(, "C••1rr IM ... ~""<•> ....... I ... "YUi•• ..... 'Ill , ...... edwards MISSION VIEJO MALL 495·6220 so rw v TQ CROWN VALL EY BETWEEN R()BrN50"4S & YA•(') , ..... , • ... '09 NtOWt "' a ... "-..rffll'' "UCI Tt !Jill. JIM, WI film" l'IJ 1.-. .. 11 .......... ... (I ) .... ll!Jt ~.1.m "TUl...,"INJ 11 ........... ........... edwards SOUTH COAST LAGUNA 497-1711 SOUT«C.OASTMW• Al BROAO'NA • Ar .. ,,HA .. "flfll + _.'(I ) ....... 1111, .... "Pf!Wft ... AIK'llM" (Pl) ''UClllTm . ' -~ .. fl'Tlm" .... "f '1181 ., .. ...... , .......... ""· 11111 ttrat, NI, .. ........ ,... ... 11-------u.• "",. _______ .. ''Pft·Wft'1 • "YUi • ~ .. I'll TW •Alll 'Ill tt•t•WI, lt,Nl.MI .......... IMI ,,., 11111 e WIU I Cl MA!>· 111 IOI SOC AI CINEMAS lJCUNA HlllS MAU ... &e,11 'l9Wa aul M .. -ani•ta hi ... 1Ue • ra.. nan • TllMI .,,_ "NCI Tt 'CB•ll 111111 FUT•" lPtJ ,....,.. • (I ) "Wll :,&.;.. 111 - , I • • • .. Married women have come alongwaysin.ce '71 letter Dear Ann Land------------·--4. Keep hi~ tomach foll . I · S. Keep hi scar clean . ers: am moving ; 6. Keep the ksdsquieu~d away f~m h1~ when he from one apanment comes home at night. ~uesuons can dn ve a father crazy -toanotherandjust A h tack.Jed the awesome 1111 espceially ifhc doesn't nowt e answers. . red jobofclearingout "" 7.Gsvehimplentyofsexnomattcrhow t1 youare my book~se. 1· •.... or what kmd of day you have had. I ran across a LARDERS 8. Don'task him for money. . column of yours that 9. Starve yourself sf you must. but stay a s~ze I 0 I had placed in one of forever. Never01ent1on the fact that he h~s p.ined 30 my booksand for-pounds and the scams in his pantsarcsphmng. gotten. The date was July 20. 1971 . 10. Don't tell him yourtroubles.'A_woman who stays When I read it I laughed out loud. Has the world home all d~ shouldn't have any.Just sign me -A changed THAT much? f find it hard to believe, but there 11 MamOe'agaer M~:~~~T~~~l~~~~~~1~snu us know what tt takes was. right in front of me! CP fB h I Lo Your answer threw me fora loss. It will throw you, to keep a marriage toget.h~r in the sty o rot er Y ve. too. I am enclosing the column in case you want to share ll Many a truth 1sspoken 1nJ~St~ • with .your readers. Keep on keeping on, Ann. You arc Dear Ann Landers: I am a 3,..~r-<>ld sin~c mother bcner than ever. -A Fan In Newport. Calif. with a 4-year-0ld son. I Jive with my mother. It 1~ not the Dear Newport: Yes. I djd laugh. I also blushed when 1 best arrangement sn the world but l have no choice. read my answer. I do want to share the column with my My son has begun 10 use four-letter woR!s a lot.an~ readers. Here it is: my mothec says it 1s my fault beqiuse I refuse to whip h1~ Dear Ann Landers: After a quarter of a ce11tury of bottom off. We have had some bitter arguments pver this marriage, I finally learned the secret of wedded bliss. I and I don't know what to do: have listed lOruJes which I guarantee will work for all I detest vulgar language and cnnge "':hen. my.~n ~scs couples. Of course. these rules are for women. There are no words he picked uptn the street but I don t_thsnk st 1s nght rules for men. 10 beat him because ofit. Will you please gi ve me your l. lfhc says, "I won't be home for dinnertonight, opinion?-Chatta nooga Mother . don't wait up for me," don'task where he isgoini. Such a Dear Chat: AU eblldrengo tlarougba 1tage wtaere tlaey question gives the impression you do not trust him. use dirty words. Tilt> bestapproacta It to 1lmP,IY say, "We 2. lfhecomes in very late,doll'task where he has don't ate tbatkfnd of lanpage lD tlll1h0He. 'Doll't been. Such a question gives him the impression you are beeomt' byaterlcal. ne shock effect 11 wbt tH cltlld 11 insecure. aftu. When be fall• to get tile desired result Ile will stop. 3. Keep his clothes in perfect cond 1 tloo. Ted Knight moving his TV . show across the Golden Gate By JERRY BUCK APT ........... Wrtl« LOS ANGELES -Ted Kn ight's syndicated comedy series is going through yet another transformauon. hut he isn't worried. appeared on ABC sn November 1980 Even before that there wa!. the Bnllsh series that inspired it, "Keep It 1n the F:amily." After three years ABC dumped the show because of poor ratings. But producer D L. Taffner anao Metromedia stepped 1n 10 rescue the show. It went back into production "Too Close For Comfon" ss being canceled, but most of the characters ' will reappear in 1986 in a new series called "The Ted Knight Show." . for syndication for another two years. The experience of"Too Close For Comfo rt'' ss 11ot unique Other network castoffs ha ve found new homes. "Fame" had tough going on NBC. but it's enjoying prospcnty in syndication. "The Paper · Chase." discarded by ABC'. was pitk_ed up lir!.t by PBS in reruns and then b} the Showtsme pay network fo r new shows. I Knight is smilinj all the way througb it. He has a nght to smile. He drives a Rolls-Royce and plays tennis every day. Panin~ his flat stomach. he says. 'Tm still married to the same woman. I have three great kids, I own my own home. I have a steady JOb. What more could I want?" Maybe another five yeaQ on the air with his new show. "Too Close For C'omfon" first Two other network rcfu~ees, "What's Happening"' <re111led ------- LUXURY rHfATHS WALK· INS * ~·;.i(vrii.:;''~~~~:".:~~i * CITY CEnTEA CJ 634 2m I 1901 ) ORANG( I Metropohun OOOZILLA tpG-t >) SHOWS AT 12:10 2:10 4:t0 1 ;10 1:10 &. 10:10 ~llltENTALl"Q) 3 :30 &. 7:40 GHOST8USTEAS (PG) 1;.20 5:30 .. 1 :40 GROILIN5re) SHOWS AT 1 :10 3 :25 5 :401:00 &. 10:15 COMPllOMISIMG POIMTIOlllS C•> I: 15 3 :20 5 :3cf 7:40 &. 9 :50 Nll'.WEE'S-A•uw ... e (l'O) AT 12:00 2 :00 4:00 1 :00 1:00 • I 0:00 REAL GbtliU5 (PG) SHOWS AT 1 :35 3:40 5 :45 7 :50 .. 9 :55 ltOF'THE Oil (Rl SHOWS AT 11 :35 2 :20 5 :05 7>:50 10:25 SILYEllUUJO C'PQ-t'.,· 11 :30 2:U 5 :00 7:41 &. 1 O:lO. In 70MM -.ACK TO Ttc Walt Dl1ney •1 aLACK FUTURE Cf'Q) 1 : 1 O CAULDllOtl fl'G) 3:30 5:50 a :10 &. 10:30 12:00 1:55 3:50 5 :4S 7 :35 1 :25 / 70MM OfUVE -INS •011c • lllO~ STADIUm ~ P~sErc,~,,,~J, The Co~~t 'IP"Pl ·l 3) GODZILLA P'G·U) Plus Co·Futur• Fraternity vacatlon(A) REAL 'OENIUS (PG) Plus CO·Hlt My Sc:lenc:e Projec:t (PG) NEWEE'S•G ADVDn'UltE IPQ) Plus Polle:• Ac:1demy f'1rt II (PG ·t l) llAD MAX ..,._. T-a•a •••I (fle-tlQ R1mbo l"lrst Blood Put 2 (R) WEIRD SCIENCE ..-0-t lQ Plus Frltht Nl91'11 (A I I f\ M IH f\1 If\ (;/\I I W/\Y .... TUI• TMI •IDN• IMI ...... 1111 , .. CDINID ••=-• 1 ....... ,.. 11• •LllM AND l&.000 119 1 .......... , .. 11\l<I WO I> '' "''." ..... r.n~:1 .. 11 • .-~ ~ :1. ANAHEIM m11111aw•-•• rn *AMllUCAN ........ * 111 • ·r·-~ ---1 ;1 : 1111•1 •• -. n "· -,·, ca 111111•,.,..• 1 .............. , ... ------nM•M ..... . 1 ........... ,,. •LllH a ll.000 • ......... " .. ~NINM• I ......... 11111•11 WllllPJ\l'm C-111 •neMM~ ...... • U ,..,. Vl\CMllN _., • _.,.,_ MllllM IN ACTION 411 • IUMMlallNJM .. ' WW.. ICllNCI ~'" ~:,~ loHABRA "'°"A J!)J.11 ·'·~ ' ooe&IU.A , ....... PU~ VACM'ION• ______ ,_.. Mell '° '"' """"" ......... ..... GfMUWM-• ..,...,.. .. ,. "What"s Happening Now") and "It's a Li ving." will soon find new life in syndscatton. In "Too Close For Comfort," Knight played Heney Rush. a car- toonist who housed his grown-up daughters sn the same San Francisco apartment building where he lived so he could keep an eye on them. In the new show. Rush buys into a Marin County newspaper. across the Bay, and moves there with his wife. played by Nancy Dussault. J. Bullock. who played Monroe Ficus. will also join them. but the two daughters will not. Warren Berlinger and Pat Carroll will be added to the cast, "'It'll have a fresh look." says the white-haired Knight, who first gained fame as telev1s1on anchorman Ted Baxter on "The Mary Tyler Moore Show." "'It'll be almost a different I show. _but not quite. The daughters won't be 1n the new show. We decided it'd be a ltttle silly for Henry Rush to be on the Ooor wtth a glass to his ear hstensng for his 30-year-0ld daughters to come home." Knight's wife. Dorothy, is director and treasurer of the Pncc-Pattenger Nutnt1on Foundation. - "'We have nothing at home but fresh fruit. fresh vegetables. and no processed food.'' he says. "No white bread. You can fight toxins by ,eating properly. I've lost a lot of money by turning down Jun'k food commercials because they dispense toxins ... ~RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY INC. For The Rest of Your Life 1922 HARBOR BLVD .. COSTA ~SA-548-11~ GtEMLiNS MIUPlll UA fllJftS I tS2 .. H3 •UPUI UNA 'Ml< Dll·ll 121 .. 070 IMT&•M £DWMDS CIBA cono m .. m .-na•u UA SOUTH COAST S.O.OSM nTm £DWMDS SAOOLOAU Sll·SUO mm £DWMDS~ ss1•ss u..a AMC FASHIOlt $qtlM£ cm> m.0113 -,ACllC OIMll DI ... '34-tlll ... , 1111 UAWUTWalD M.l ftll -snncm COOIJ 134-?M) ...,. ...... ,.... mwe MMNM UA...,, ..,,_ c--.r-c.... 1\1"' .. ~--W4'11 =.::r ~-, ...... llM!or r..ai.aoi - . .. • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tu.day, September 3, 1885 CS PUKKY WINKERBEAN by Garry Trudeau q' THE FAMILY BIG GEORGE SHOE by Jeff MacNally ... c.c....-... -' ,_......._._ ... CIR CU~ by Bil Keane "Mommy! There's the plane that drove us ; to grandma's." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson "Behold. 'Hamlet Marmaduke.· the melancholy Dane!" DRABQLE ~MAN, t JOt> T ~i VP \'-'f. Ne T 1. ~~~ \?l,A'l \Jou.£~MU..1 GARFIELD q "l "That's Moorehead. He's the Independent one." DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham .I /I 1 J 1 t ' by Kevin Fagan by Jim Davis &.ORP.L9t>R MIS SION IN LIFE I~ TO ~EK OOT EV1LWM~f.VER IT MAY LORt< e;) 0 0 MOON MULLINS . FACTORY FRESH ... ,A~, JUST LIKE 1HEGOODOL.D >AYS. '12 ~ -... c ~~ I I IJ J1 •• by Harold Le Doux PEANUTS SO tryto ~t ' that seat rirst by Charles M . Schulz r--~~~~~~----. T --8E ~LL i(10H-C"O THE"' HAVE IN·~LIGl-H MOVI ES ~ ----~ ~ • J • b Berke Breathed !!J/N6t€ NH I - I 1 QV/T// " FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE I DONT11-i1NK voo UNDE~NDHOW ~~\E M~ITT To f'i\E ,t.Jbt1N ! (~. TUMBLEWEEDS ROSE IS ROSE BRIDGE East W est vulnerable South deal<i NORTH • K 9• -:>AK 73 0 1063 • J65 WEST F.A. T • 1 • Q 1062 ~ 109865 ~ J2 0 98% O AJ S •tOt•l •AK 72 SOl'TH •A J 853 ~Q• v KQH •Q8 The bidding· s..di Welt I+ PaN ! NT PaN Pue Pa .. ~•rtll ..F.ut 2 + Pa" 3 NT P a11 ')peninR lud: Ten of ~ • In a maJOr •urpri~t'. AuAtria and bratl quahfitd tor lhtt 1985 World ~am Champ1on1h1p1. to ~ htld nut month 1n Brazil. by t.ak1ng t ht' two lop apot.a 1n the ~~nt Euro pean Champ1on1hip. Pre tourna m~nt fa vorilu Fran<'t wttr• tttd for third a long way bad~. and sut'h 1t.alwart1 as Poland. Rrit.ain and Italy nev•r evn lhrulf'ned Th Br1lll1nt'y Pr irf' wf'nt lo juJJ by Tom K. Ryan by Pat Bradv 'lJJ ~ 't{XJ ~·r NEW A R>5H ? .\' .\ n ; TOO '1 \'' • Swedish <1tar Ander.: Arunlt'll tor this bl"a utdul effort .tiz.1 1n-.i Belgium The Lov. landt>r" h.H1 reac.-hed three no trump .1tt1 r ~drth. 'ltuc.-k for a re<.~>"" h 111 temporited with 1 14 0 duh' West led t ht> ten l1f h1·.1 r h • 0MAt (~J SHARIFF ... Declarer won with tht lung and 'IU(' cessfully h nrs,t>d tht' Jark of 'ipades Hr <'ll<iht>d lh!' qu,•c-11 nt hurts and tht>n lrd t ht-king ,,f dtamonds Bruniell. ,.ttlnfl Ea~t reaJ1zf'd that dtt<'lArttr ho~d to take> fivt' spadtt tr1ck~. l hrf'f' hl'arl<1 and A diamond If ht hf'ld up thf' arr of diamond,, df'<'lartr would 1~\11dd~ discovftr thf' 4 I <ipadf' di" '"'on l\nci would '"''lc.-h the atl~c.-k lo d1a monds 1n an t'frort to build up a~d 1 t1onal traC'ki 1n that •u1t Thf'refol"f', Bruntf'll won thf' a('f' 1mm~rl1alf'ly Th• deff'ndf'rs rould ••t up & Uurd club (rick. but Rrun&f'll sav. that he had no ••ftt d"rard on thr 8C'f' of htt•rh To rorrtct that def1 \"wr11 \ flr 1n11 l1 r•r1tt1t .. • .. n • 'It .1 .. 11 .. 1111•('1 !11 ·,hlflt•cl 111 I """ 1 fuh : lt'c· .1t1·r v. ,,, :: 11um:r.' .1,h1•1l I h• k1n11 .if ,p.1clt>' .1r.d: !'11· ,.. • "'• .1r:- '''"' Hr n11 l'I 1, .. 1:i1•1'1 '"• 1N • 1.h, l 1t•1 1.ir1•r h.111 n1 1 n1 • • H• n.1 1 CHARLES GOREN ' •c• 'urrt>ndt>r thl' IPad 1n onf' ~ult 11r tht' nther ,,nd ,1<. .. non •'" tlw il1.f .. n,frr' iza1ned t hr le-ad I hr' 14 0111rl ~w .1hlf' t1l ., .. 1 lht>1r thrt>e rlull trirk• tn 1n,ur1• th .. •wt lk,•uhlf' dumm' d1•rlar..r ran j.!f't homf' h\ phn ing t hr tiurrn nl rluh" v.hf'n Brun1ell lrd that "U1t hut that v.cluld N> a lf'rrihlt> pla~ If tht> h11th rluh honor• "",.rf' 'Pht. dt>elarer m1.cht ht" gnin1it do"' n on 1t hand that ""•' unh1•1tahlr .. fot l•fonnet .. o abo•t f tlvW.1 G6n>o'1 MW H7'Uelt4!1t for brid1t' p&.ft>"· writ• G1r.o Bridp ul&.r 1909 C ln1a&aleM9 An , rl• .... lo .... ,,J 08077 ' , I 1 e 11 -\R. • 4 Lin.. S 0.)'I. 16 Dolan. • Ada may uncel urlv. bu1 no pottion of pay!Tl«'nt 11 relundeble. • AclclitionJh may be purchued for S2 00 ••ch • Pr1eea m111t be included in the •d. • ~ no1 •pplv 10 1lv rHI e late, rental, or help wanttd cl&eei&adonl °' au~ priced ovtr J2000 Call 642..-56 78 • l\v11l1blt vnlv 10 priv•te puty 1dvertJ1rrs .ellu'I mtrchtndile. ..,_ * kit 1:::1'...,...,•z '""' !alual.W Aprta•••· Val. Aa•••· yai.-l11rta .. t1, .at. , Office 1 .. 1111 z114i1111 w ..... .--------------.. ""'ii HU UNbcOAbS/NEXCtoMS Dia• Ptlat U!! lal~ Cnta lltta 2724 ,..,.,, It••• 2711 e:r~• o::~~eki,•o:: ::' ADVERTISING ft.L llU/lUll f .. t ''" tenant provld,. WW Tl lllll&f PtallHll 2707 Large 1 Bdrm, gar, no *LIVE ON WATER• 1nclda otc furn S300. mo. · -----, ........ ~ ' . -. . ,._ -· .... -__. .. M DAILV N.OT Cl 4SStrlf0 OlhCC ~ovns l~S....C:• M F eoo AM &00 PM ~Coun111 M l e 00 4M ~()() Pl,I .;.: :. ·- ,~ A. . I _...,. .. -, -.~ ' Af\y e-"'OU"f ftOf N ..O witP\ff\ )0 .. ,.., ., '""'•ftid w• N \~OM.I ... Oil.ii "°' M'ntf:eO to ,,~. CP\ef9" (~tM Jt • ,, o4 •"'9 _ .......... -monm •M C.olKUOft CMI' aftid any tfftiOtl -................ . .•. . ~ -. s , . . •. '- ... . . ~ .. L ... '· .,,__. ~ •. · .... ~ ...... Info 539·8194 hit Alty 28r 2h.S750. fee#et,3 t AA. eatport, new drpa I peta. 1980 Anaheim. 20· Boat allp evall. Cherm-149t w. Baker, su11e 3, ARTIST Pluett OCMn vu condo on OPEN LABOR OAYI TIUIDT 111·1111 orpt1. 1124 W. Balboa Shown by appt S4851Mo Ing qu•!nl lbr. no pets. Costa Meaa, c a. 92828 Kaanapa ll B e h . Hllll••un p Blvd.'600.mo.673-5198 545-32291831-7279 relsreqd,utllpald.older •556·3900* Furnllhed 2BR/2ba Flex --eaata pref S850. 850-8145 -- -Growing dally newspaper to any otr. 1288,000 val~ PllP lllllDllT Va1117 W4 Ill 11111 H• IOI IUIP I OLUI Oceanfront 3Bd 2ba. Ip, I latlatll on the Orange Coaal w/12151< low Int In 11•/llM111 2Br SIM>O. 9127 f .. *8759 Spaelou1 2 Bd 2ba with ~er laun. $1300 S.ept 15-IHtlll 2911 needs Imaginative. pro-, " .:...~ llY UIT Tl twit TILDllT Ill llM Dsh/Wah bit 1 1 • 5 )9 0030 duc11ve layout artist who ... •••mw I 2-•t«y 3+2 l'tplc, gar & • ' • na, pr v une 1 1819 44-400 •If Zoned C-2 AIC. undeulandamereh1ndl1· 2· 1111 ..,.... Ptalaaala Ul7 pool S900 mo. F .. OM3 YEARLY by beach w/ =~·7~~~~~-~~~~~ll-OPEN HOUSE 917-918 pvt blh Covered patio Ing 10 de.Jgn advertising ~ ... ii:: l™ TILDm Ill-.... ocean view. 2br. deck.gar 6306 W OCEANFRONT Waler & trash pd for' a varfetv of ellents ....... .... ... lmlll I .... ll saoorrno Inc ulll. 873-5429 SP&OltH --4Bd 2b• .. fp, din ., ... bit· $225/mo Ste p 130 E OU< dlseri~lnatlng m11 -*Jllilll lllll View declt & gar. fee'8750 lut. ltac• U4i YRL Y BALBOA PENIN $7251mo 2 Bd l'h ba '-Ina, gar, laun. S2000 Yrly 17th St, CM 548·78l7 ket demands qualify and Plan 1. 2Br +Oen. Guatd-TILIUIT Ill-... IRULIW M llAll Newly dee 1BR. no pe11 twnhae. encl gar, lndry (619)944-0030 style ed gate, pool•. tennla. GREAT PENN. LOCATION Cozy 2Br M50. fee#H3.4 S600lmo, 81~ rm, paj~ ~ ~1~;~•· Oceanfront 4Bd 2ba. gar, OlllU HL IUI Newspaper production ~O~~:,:t!~ WINTER RENTAL TllUllT Ill-.... nai t Ir TSL MGMT ~2-1603 levn.lp $1600 Sept 15· 11t noor office on Coast knowledge helpful A.Dill· $279.500. C.il 131-M38° 3 B~2u~~~B;;:11B~rn Frplo accent• $495 2br e;;:;Ja; & 331 W~terlronl 2 BR. t'.A,BA wlgar. New I June 15 (6 1919~30 ~:'nT1or1~1~0:,, s~~~,;~, :rn~~ .w~~~,u~~I:, ~=: DUPLEX 1Bd lba ea Eatate Store.'875-1771 famlly ac:>Ot or llnglel at ~~:od:~ 1B: ~!!>a~ crpl•. drpa, blllns, fenced Stat• Ctllt ••trt ample parking and utll· paper exPI( an edvan- 12to.ooo 717 FERNLEAF 53M100 Beet Alty lee r pa 0• · yrd wlpa1to Water paid 2719 Illes $750 per mo tage."1.oslllon 1s full time . 64<Pl182 by Owner Hiii.Mi Ill... PRIVATE BEACH CONDO S2000/mo 875"1909 836-4120 Cell .~-~.PM . 2BA 2ba condo. Catport. Hll~E&ln good beneflla. aelary •----------------Garege blltne. fee-5357 3BR 2ba 2 ear gar ale nta .... 7 4 667 Victoria E .. $635 spa & pool $775/mo. • 171.••Ao commensurate with ell· OUPLEX-2Br 1ba ea ' ' ' • .., 2'39 Oranna "O" $850 -I I I nd So-of-PCH 9275 oo0 Tll.DllT 111-1111 end unit. Redec. S1175 1Bdrm l525 stove relriQ •-·· 1 545-7131 or 73t-5168 perienoe. nqures a 521 c.matiOn. By Own;., Yrty '400'• bech bungelow ~1 ~5~M95~~gent. pool. No pet1 423 'w. Bay VILLA MADERA Famlly 3Br 2ba Condo w/deck, Prime NB business Iron· ~eosuug~.es Ar: o .Dtr~~~~r~ 873-024 1or87~1541 crptd decor ocean otoae • • Call 760-8083 complex. 2 BR 2b•. cptd, poolljac. $695 gu tage on \/la Lido acroaa Dally Piiot. Po Box Pr9mlum duple• lhOu· hurry 53Ml90 hit fee laat. 8-r .. ar 2241 1 Bdrm GARDEN APART-~~:S~T!~~:·fa~C~i~ j pd. Avl now 63l·5988 from Hughes Plaza. 1560. CO$la Mesa, Ca. Minda below market •t cerna .... , IW Harb& area eta; 36drm MENT. Stove & relrlg. No gar. Mo 10 mo. Ga1/wtr 1 •"·· 2100 750-1000 SQ II. A/C, 92626 1329K Prln only Bkr 2b• upgraded kltch lrs>'C peta,$510/mo 548-1377 pd, no pet1. S7001mo. parking Mr Lawson o···•E "O&ST 720-9422 I l&ZD.• llPUIJ gar balcony view S700's lBr 18a 1920 Wallace S800 dep. 2324 Elden. 1 Bdrm w/house prTv. Nr bus 673-7300 _.. • IPTIUIS IDT MT Lat~ 2~ aundecic view & 539-8190 Best Alty fee upstra. Frig, no pet• 5460 Apt 1. 642-5155 !~~1~ ~~1~PJ::~?57c:;t•r Cta•trcial l&IU PILOT 58R 5ba, t>onua room. ~sea;;~ lniat 2244 Sierra Mgmt 550-1015 WE IFFH & OHIO ICOM. Lge. rum rm Pvt l1at1l1 2911 cos1!3~:S~c~.5~2626 Pool. Drive by 10 Mlallon 2er 2be fcld yrd gar gym 1Br 1Be Apt $550/mo W1n1 a Mlectlon of great pat101entr. Gar prkg. Shop/StoragefOHtce Bey. Try '475,000 YllW Ml ITIPI Tl tennla, pool. patio, patrol: 1872 Monro via. Rey llvlng? We can offer any-Relg. No kltch, no smkg. 528 aq 1115315 mo re•• Advertising lurna Ritt. 780-1468 State BMch 28r, gw & no pets S975. 548-7234 973·8816 thl~ from• amen apt to no drinking/parties c Mesa c.2 932•4190 CUSSIFIED telii ina lff4 motell1000 mo '"#8750 **IEITILI* * 2Br 1Ba. 571Joann.2 per-~j :s:~"H~ t'i::1~~ ~~ ~:9~~j6~o util Incl Shop/StOf'ag-e /-0-ffice-ADYEllTISlll lllUIWm~ii•~-iiia~--··· ll1.llllT 171-1111 sons max S5 lO No peta ttrai lo~ that Choice ol -528 SQ lt/$315 mo t20 E Full-llme Telephone Sales -CALLUS REGAAOING SlerraMgmt550-1015 CdM. Walk 10 ""-h. Very 23,d St ttUnll 20 & Reduced to Sltl,000. 4Br WIY llLIW 1111111 IRVINE LEASES Ideal IMng "" Position Sales ex----------1--------""I 38a, 2 aton.e. quiet cul-Luecloua 3+2+frplc, gar lntH hast lealt, 1Br 1Ba.$520 t S350 MC. TSL MGMT ~jt ~~g ~I: l~n:~rn ~~r w~~:~~· 20 • 21 M~ln 11_2_9 _ perlence preferred ~uc. Bkr 720-8730 OntyS11009/15 fee#e423 7••1• 2Br lBI S6l5 •MOO !MIC NB REAL TY Aelrlg/mlcro No kltch. Waterfront Bldg 1350 s/I Typing 45 wpm Good ----------. --171-1111 _. No pell. 831-8427 We11stde 2Br 1Ba N.; Quiet n/amkr $425 u1111 avall 3333 W Coasl Salary plus Commissions •-• Falltalfll .... Ylew •~• $ and Benefit Program ...... t. ..,, ......... Ille w/eool breezea. 3BR CdM .... _ ... , ... le 2.... UI •---L •••t *M ... V8'de redec<>r 3Br crpts, drps 680 tsl Incl 759-1363 Hwy. NB Mon thl'u Fri 9-5 I Call Kathl-1 Olson for ,..,_,,, -• •• .,. -• AMI 2Ba, patio. gar. dlw. f/p $650 deposit Waler & - --..... 1112 ltMral 1112 1 Y.ba, famlly room home 10t1 of chatm fprlc D•n-•• ya•ft 1895 No pets ~0•2495 gas paid 548-2562 Lag Bch rm. pvt be. W/D lttH[t 2922 an lnlervlew 1ppo1n1- S139,900. C.it Pat Cobb. gar S700'a oth«I avail - -$400 1/2 ulll Mature NEEBiifOAAGE SPACE? ment *TIE ILIFFS* ,. ....... .uo 675-2013 or 546-2313 539-6100 Beat Alty fee 28r 2ba, lrplc, gw $650 •COZY 1Br Bachelor, e .... hack 2740 emplyd la~ 494-7348 ,,.,, ... ,. FIEE IUllE CIHT "FAMILY HOME" LllATlll REPOSSESSION: 3BR LARGE 3BR 2~b9, a1epe TIUlllTalk to beech.IFleeMllll6241 garege, no peta S450 111' 28r 2ba gar no pets Malure M/F Furn. rm/pvt Sa~e Hatbor Seti StOf'age I l&IU PILIT Lrgat tndl 4Br + bonus rm, Beavtlful cuatom 2 11«y fix.er. Try S 124,000, lo to OCMn. S 1425. no pet1, last & sec 6"'6-2389 grdnr $625. 'mo 16132 ba, !nets laundry & utll All sizes Info 775-2305 330 W Bay Street 38a. Magni toe. Lite. bflte home with 4Bdrm1, down. Agt. 546-n39 IMI0~229, ~22e 2BR Cottage 0oean view *Modern 2Br 2Ba $725• Parkside Ln $500/mo f'JB 760-1448 _ ---Cos1a Mesa. CA & airy. Offered at S218K 3Btht. wood plank floor. I INc• I IJ>'C, gwage. walk to t>ch 600 Hamllton #A 102. 1213) 518-3698 or AaatHct•Htl 3002 (714) ~2-4321 (LH). Land avt at $34,000 Ing entertalnm«1t .,.. npr! SloOo w1utti 499-2181 Drive by 111 645-7009 (213) 639-3599 R1t1ll,J!1t1b 2t04 SPIRtTUAL READINGS UllW. HSPnll ........ I h . with pool, deck, covered Br •STUNNING l g 1 & 3Br **LO 2Br 2Ba. Walk to SUWI MTIL Advice In All Ma11er1 & Full-time ALL Dullea, .............. I patio and IP• and huge llYFlllT ba, Iv t · *~ ' ':Iva:"'& Gqule~ 2Ba Garden Apt. Pool bch Bate. gar $750 No Wkly rentals now avall Counseling 1815 So El I lronl & bac;k s4ihour .,.. private back yard. Nowlsthetlmeto enjoy a peta. Lg bckyatd. M25 nge r '""'· 11 S555&S7257t0W181h n.ats 760·17t31857·1776 s1•n1 k& 227 C I R IS Cl iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Anxious Mllerlll Asking mo. Agt. Liz 646-3827 water pd. Ocean view · ""' ..., w up. 4 New-am no eo · an e'1' I 754· 1396 llZY lllTlll $329,500. 751-3191 :::U~B1:, '~': 2Br lBa Cohdo In Meea M 75 lit + MC 497~287 3Bd 3ba. 2 car gar. no HUNTINGTONCAEEK port Blvd. C.M 846-7445 Llc'd 492-7296 ---------.111~ sp ~t ECT lamlly room. h.ome Pier & VenM 1 IM Kida ok Cu.tom lrg 3 BR 2ba hm. pets.n·1mkr $775/M avl APTS Luxurious 1 & SEA I SUI LIDIE LOSE WEIGHT NOW!-&P&ITIEIT IAIAIH ;;;ric:L ! sllp, near sandy ·beach. Submit ofpet1.'SJ50mo: Open beamed celllng. 911 ~2-75281760-14t8 2Bdrms. A lew Bachelors 10-29 Pounds per month 21 Units. Costa Mesa No CutGre .. eo.t E~! .... '!",ochaotmelon.· PROPERTES AaklngS890.000.A~ Ca11Anne831·1288 Spectaculat ocean vu. S525. 1BR. clean. earn.at. avl Starting $650. 3026WtBe.CoashtHwyf 1'Nrvew-Guaranteed 850--0958 pets. Experienced. semi--·....... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil "~ A II c-5 S 500 ,.._ 848 1613 btwn 9 5 only por I C ·re rig, ---rellred. 855·06~5 Ne at and clean 1 buy! va ....,..t 1 . 1 /mo, drps, refrg. no pell 724 . . -$140~ wksgl.nodeposll. Loat Feu• 3004 Bedroom on a large lot. llLIU1111 IAUl IJll IUln 111./laat + S500 cieanlng James St.·D, 673-7787 2Bdrm & 3Bdrm Units avl Alli IECIWllC A mua1 ... -so call 111·1111 dep. Mlehael 499·3861 S565-7451Mo L ~aut, lmmed Priced fr $700-l1at1l1 to Wheel Allgnment, Brakes, 546-2313 11H,lll Nlg. SIM>rea 3Br 2ba hM. 1Bd & 2Bd af bll-lns, SB50. 675·6173 Sbrt 2901 Tune Up Newpor1 Tire Below market pric». U1tt • G J&"•U llULn Ct 3000 E c · H modern condo Leaded' 2Br 18&, gar, no peta. uard lll'lnla pool beech. frptc Must see -2Br 2ba. bale/pool, CM. FOUND ADS r. oast wy, THE REAL ESTATERS glata entry Tlted noors •DISTRESS SALE Npl Hgt1 2178 Plec»ntla. Apt E. S1200.'taeownr499-3838 366 Avocado I t It • 2769 N·smkr. S275 + 12 elec Corona dei Mar Living room. Famlly j 3Bd, den, 2ba $210,000 '625/mo. 545-7983 Ii I ust TIL •• .., H2-1101 •?rr IC Dave 7141722-9237 room. Brea.ktut room. 652-2416 ()( n&-lOSl MESA VERDE 4Br 1v.ea •• t. rn. 4Br lum. Yrl~ ARE FREE &Ill Tiil SHYIOI Formal dining room Ull• ... I ,1250 Gd 1 1 .. 1 te ry. arml~. $620 Ealde lg 2Bd 1Ba. Winter No fee. r 2BR 2b1 CdM home to ahr and llgCht repairs. N~ DITlm .... Breekfu1 room Form.i ---R L r ~~ 7~4 .. g cell, etc. 2 BA, famlly rm, pool. Pvt patio. 2 per1 675-4506 wllh M or F n-amkr Prol Calf: ._ Tire tr, 3000 E vua.::ot •1~ dlnl~. Atrium. Wet bar.l lleath&Mttfttlnt on owe • 2 be, $1350/mo. (714) max.Nope11 646-5137 2Br H~Ba, pallo, gar. nr S.75/mo759-0281 Hwy.Coronadel Mar Balcony Community Palattel' FRENCH COUN-llUT·LmL Ill 495-8823 8Ul1940--0«0 Hoag, avt 9/1,,. $750/mo CdM shr apt $432.50 mo 142-1171 UIYSITTH Extremely 1 built home TR't' lUDOR, mOfe thin 3 blth, gar S775lee•7801 I hH• mle81iBJIU 731-0595 Open Sat 11-2 $2200/mo Income needed RESPONSIBLE S 1 t With lot• of character 2 elegant. 5300 IQ 11. 11 TEUIEIT 17MIH 4237 HILARIA WA 't' to quality 760-8267 t0·5PM Lite cleanlng Bdrm with hardwood rooms. Ocean & City Local references SS/hr floors and beau11ful atone lights view estate. 1"3""B'""d,..rm-""'2~Ba-~M,...on_t..,.lc-e""tt-o new TIWl-H **Brand nu custom 2Br Clean resp M/F shr 3Bd -fir~ for cozy wtnt• ·~~jl~~~~IMust llquldate la< out ot twnhme. wanr/dryr, gar, drpa/crpta, flreptace. 0.1'" ftr lilt 2Ba choice area Frplc, ~~:si~o 5~~ 9~85~~11 SCRAM LETS 751·8003 get togethert. L#ge lot area Miler. Sacrlflc» et patio $850 Agt 550-1015 back yard S975/fn<l yrly. Frplc, vaolted celllngs. dbl gar, patio $900. No pets • Banking w/frult treH. Call I $999,000111 Laat ol the Dye 752-847"4 or gar pool & spa. No pe11 760·1713 or 857-1776 Fem 23-30 yrs. N-amkg 2 ANSWERS HHEl ASSISUIT 846-7171 Harbor Ridge bargalna. 3Br 2Ba, dbl gar, nice evea/wknda 731-3128 1Bdrm S720·$745 W&TEIFIHT br2 ba$365 mo + -..utll LllJl&TWI llPllUTIYI For personal" prevt.w call yard. no peta. 906 W. 2Bdrm 2'~Ba S915 * * Avail 9126 (213)432-7514 • Ground . Bawdy -· •-Patrick Tenore 831·1288 Wiison. S975 545-7983 3Br 2 ba. 2 frplcs. hot tub, 666 W 18th 645-2739 Beautlful 2Br 2Ba Apt .,. ----C TE 11101&1 THE REAL ESTATERS Piii lllllT 1111.Yltl If Ylll lllL llTATI IY Ill Tt·llLLlll I ,........ llLl PATllll TEllll 111·1211 --·-I den. mlefo-wave. child a "--E I "' Fem ahr 4 Bdrm Apt 1 loth -Incise A5bdrmSouthportmodel or7eo-8702 3Br hae, air. grdnr Incl, petOK.$1450.~6-1378 --!;7h, ~coa~"'Jl~·c:;· mlle Ir beach. $375/Mo WATCHING A sell-starter to aulsl In with breathtaking pan· • ·~~~W-M pets ok. No chlld ren. rnct ulil. 650_4093 Dally deflnllion Cons-lhe development & con-oramlc vlewl ol lhe entire. .,1 r • $850 557-6063 3Br 2Ba. lg lam rm & llvtng Wt:!§t:Fll!kt S22951mo. *ALSO• cjenc;e Is that Inner voice trol of l>udgel for owned herbor & N-port·s mag-1111'"'·-•' i8A2b I II rA'l, 2 frplc1. Many xtraa 2Br 2Be S 1395. Sorry, no Mature Fem wants same I hat tells us somebody Real Estate properties nlflcen1 1unaeta fro. m • li di 1 •. am rsmc, Pvt rm, SlSOO No pets 631--0262 APUTllllTS pets. 760•0919 to shr 2Bd 1 1/2ba E-slde might be WATCHING _Needs 10 Independently .. _ Thi n ng rm. nr · ~ c • • T s research & control ot ne1rry 1111,.., rooms. s Lae/Optto n Big Cyn S I050lmo, 734•8978 ABSOLUTE SELECTION Like bra.nd ne'jlll All utlllles OPEN HOUSE Sept 7-8 ..., wnhouse. moker p I 11 a beaullfulty cared for Condo 1600 IQ ft. goll s4oo lbr nettled on tree paid. P0611 gar, no pets. 6306 w OCEANFRONT pref S325/mo • 112 ulll traoaa budget tor owned Real and upgraded home atill course view. s 1500/ AT LAST! lined st/S675 2Br redone 1Bdrm $585 3Bd 2ba, bar, gar, teun,fp. 645-3379 eves/wllnds StrYiCH 3014 Eatate properties. Needs occupied b the original S254K. Bkr 720-9422 deoeorlbay view 2br yrly 2Bdrm IBa $690 S1800 Sept 15-June 15 M/F shr 2 Bd 2ba CM1--T""t"'l"'O"'ll ... l""F...,..OU_U _ _.. 10 Independe ntly re- owners. Land1c aped Prlvate beechl Ba)'VWwl $750/steps to H20 $750 301 AVOCADO (619)944-0030 Townhouse $365/Mo t ESCORTS ~':i'·fihal:o :~i~n~~~~ courtyard lead• to entry 112 house 112 mob lie l lt•t ltltal 2br w/ger meny others 642-9850 or 631-0960 3Br 2 ba DPLX, 1/2 blk to 1/2 utll 631-1087 898-2355 Jor eslabllsh1no ll<:l(ler & with 1 custom free form home lrg cor~ 2 Bd 2ba lenltt Yt1 Dal 539·6 l90 Best Alty fee beh, lge upstairs unit -=----fifing systems for the pool & spa on the view ..... . NB Apt Male, 2Bd 2ba, • tide. The 1at Noor nu frptc, pools S45,000. FHI At I••• Wltlt llPll YIEWU•I ~l:field $1050 Downstatra unll pool, pret prof 30 + $400 la11at11 Orr. 4014 budget department flmlly & llvtng rma With 67~-5278/873-3600 DuplelC w/frplc, gar. BBQ S900. 535-7106 + S200dep ~6-0194 All WI llllllSSH •Minimum 2 years Dank-:rt:'.i~· 8..!;:.1:-:: SUWlll wrTI YllW TELERENT STE87l5l ylarEITd 4 pet 1 . 7 1':.tll54I020 FAMILY AP&ITIHITS $625/Mo 1 Bd lba. encl NB lge home fem n-amllr II lllEY llWI ~:,~1(~~~~~:1• no1e .....,.. 3Bdrm + bonua. Aaaume r Sparkling clean large g11. close to bch, nice Bdrm & be S3851Mo ~ • Musi be con·~1entlous & mal dining. maid's & Apia for famlllea wl 1 a< 2 quiet loc High Prollla Local Area "" · laundry room1. Upstairs 111 s395K · Owner • Wldeal Seleollon BAYCAEST Spacious 3 Bd chlldren near park. Heat 1480 Monrovia utll 646-2 106 Wiii Train Part Time lltentlve lo delell are the muter aufte. 3 975-i753 or 780•9718 • Updated Dally home w/formal dining & paid. No pets TSL llllT 142· 1101 OCEANFRONT UNUSUAL No Employees No • Slrong verbal & written other bdrm• a large ehll-••ltilt ltan 11 • All Areas a Prtoes lam rm. A neet toe In an 2Bdrm l'l•B• 1895 opportunity NB t>eaullful Overhead No Setllng communlcallon skllls dren'a playrm.-Lbalcony •Open 7 Daya 9am-7pm iclnt area S1850/mo Agt 398 W. Wilson 831-5583 OlllOl IPT lllllTS furn home. Mature. Quiet. Great Tax Beneflll •Experience In 1111~. Asking $835,ooo cl.~~2:~:~~·~r; 675-8860 644-7211 2Br ,.,,.Ba Mo5. Wll'l/dryr. Sharp 2Bd. lb• w/gar. n-smkrs. 675-9629 Mr Wolfer (71 4)838-5620 :'~~~,! ~=1~i;:,~:i In- • - rms for kng sz tum Only a •R•-11-···· dahwshr. 3020 Fllmore. cath beam cetllng. Slone Oceanside furnished ••11-11 f••1e11s1 • Good typing skllla NI. ftlW (Ill.LI V.MI HI H<>' I · · Or Stop By --No natl Agt. 645-5&05 wlb frplc, RIO. 2100 luxury condo. Maller Br -._ -1211... ttO"ll., IM:. S17.995. Cell 636-7870 211011-..rt lh' Only stecn to aand S600 -,... Haven Pl S795/mo a vail $650/mo Hm IEWNIT IUCM For more lnformallon .. c--Cod.-,_,, __ In REAL ESTATE • •-u I"•• -•r Large 1Bdrm. Feeir8759 BACH S510 & 1BR $610 ~6-9794 631-6722/work 557' -1300 MaJor Food Franchise now pteaM call F D.t C Per-"' _... ...,....., •• 1•1....... ..._.. ,_. Balboa Penlnauta Fae TEUlm 17._1110 PRVT 1 sonnet (714) 975 5 •00 ~ ..___hi c d --BEST BUY IN TOWN P•I o, carport -1v11llable for lop locallon • .. , __ ....,.' ...,.... on ° Beat E'llde nelghbOf'hood. POOL. SPA quiet. no pe11. SHiii llPUJ llOG Offloe+BR/ba In CdM hm In Newport Beach Turn Banking llvtng In grand style with I•-------• 24x60 on comer lot. 2Br. w/d hkupe, Ir~ lat-• lln nav1111YJ TOP AREA M Pl B 2B t & $725 fl .... many custom •menlllet L IM di I & • n-. eta net 2 r • + rptc gar new mo pro c ... 1n per-Key operation. Financing llOllllTIOI lh,uout T"-e'• .. 10 die Ma<e tamlllel are getting arge no rm. n ng tlced rear ~d w/pr vacy. 2Br nestled In Heights only 2650 HARLA 549-2447 carpetlngl lee.t5574 son 673·6009 msg In place $20,000 cash · '"" pi · .,..,. .. thl kltehenareawtlh,Jamlly 1850/mo. all 873-27"1 ••75 mol l-•"'54 TECHICIU for" atorage, 9Ynny patio the cam ng '--w 1 rm. Young adult1 • .., """ "'" Olllll ITllll •.a-TIUlllT 171-1110 Pleasant lrg rm F/m to Qualllled party on llrat andfullMCUrltytyatem year . II you have 1 ~come.S29,SOO.Agent OESIREDAREA TILEIEIT lll·HIO ._., n/smkr S3551mo Avi come b11la Call TFheed'erv1ranel Dolfelpceoalotl tlhne-au AAAA camper tha1'1 not getting 5 0-5937 Patio, nr beech! t•tM 05 Newport Island 1Br. Look-9115 CdM 759•9143 eves Franchise Dlrec1or, _._. uaed, Mii It now with a 4 Another newly redone 2br Le ... : Newport Shorea TILllEIT 111·1118 Ing for quiet a111e adult 800/528·0297 aurance Corp hu Cl __ _.....,. '"d I It E-1lde hm atyte rental gar houae 3BR 2ba trplce S570 50 306' R 2Bd I lmmed on..n1ngs lo _,_,"' •""rt la halfJ flyd kid• S515 gar ,1250,mo 6•50•6839· IUll llW Olll.,D Refs. . mo. • .. mmt ,quiet w crprt. ...-r per-liiiiiir=========--======;;;;;;; over 11>00 sq ft. nreplace •t•t-lllO* · · r• Nr SC Plaza S3t5/Mo + Help WaatH 5100 sons with the loi\owlng let Ut ~ YH Sell Y ,., p,~,! Cati Cla11tflM, 642-5678 for information & surprisingly low cost. & pvt encl yrd Near • Liii PElll~U 82 Be autllul Unifi + 1/2 ulll, 549-0234 _ .. _-~....,...,._...,.....,,, exper: RubenELaeS29 .995forE•1. move 2-3Br pad encloMd garages. 1Br Sp,wou,,inqlt' onl' •Wm* e M1n2yrsbenklng exper detafl• call 636-7S70 •P la lrplc gar yd 4 Pluah 2bdrm 2b 975 mo tBa. S550/mo. 2Br 2Ba a two bt'd•oom dph Shr 2BR CdM. $350/mo, Manlcurl1t fun-ttme, e11p'd In • note dept or loan klc 1/peta $880 hurryl Moblle home fee#6754 s8751mo. 887 w. 19th St. 1atllaat + dep. n-1mkr. Recepllonlat Perl-time dept SPACES AVAIL fa< new 53M190 S..t Alty fee TELllllT 111-HIO ~5-1740 960·7021 Mlchael Regis HalratXllat, SC • Ablllly lo type min. mobile homft buyera In EASTSIOE 3Br 1ea. new Newport Ellec Condo 2Br DELUXE NEW CONDO Very large 4Bdrm Corona Pita. Cyndie 5 0-8888 •Strong :~i~ written Coell Mesa, Hunt. Beach crpta/palnt. Lg yrd. Sml den dbl gar Tennis pooi 2Br 2V1B1, dbl gar w/opnr. del Mar home to shr New * IOlllEEPEI communication lkllls. & Laguna Hiiia. For pet ok Utlll pd. Grdnr S 1s0o/mo I~ 031-0580 frple, pluah erpt, e«malc cpta, cioae to beach. Xlnl Bankl~ eKper la r~lred details ca.11 838-7870 S10251mo.M5-8453 tlle, mirrored wardrobe loeatlon. S375, ca ll ltW.-hMla tfflel. 1 I P NewportHelght12br2b1. on Isl year's rent 213·474-8042 F "h'" Or lhs posltlOn txl· ac .. t rtJ~ 1 E-llde lrg new 3Br 2Ba, den, lge front room w/ door1 In bdrm1. 290 Vic· S [ ull c arge thru flnenelal mum Hlary wlll not Ill· 2 AoO§g , e Q yrd. lrple, 2 car gar Avt beyvlew, frple, bltn•. lge torta F-3 Al Nwpt Blvd & FURNI H D or Shr Bay:!ront apt, prof M/F statement Menege MY· ceed $20,000 p/yr and Xll --... 1~s·"."' .. n t5"'• 911. Kid• ok $t125/mo iar.grdnr lncld Avt9/10 Victori a S9751mo. UNfURNISHED 25-•0. mu1t ba neat. eralaet1 ofperaoneland wlll be baled atrle11y on \NIN •.... "' '7VV " c 11 ••5 IVU>• 1 815.n.70.7 re•n n smkr 1375 plua bualneu bOOka Mature prlo & _,. 1 dn $159,o;nn 497~287 a .,.. ·uarvo a< appt 1500/mo 6•6-~02 • • ...... . . r exper. vuuea1 on ~ Fl ""--1·• .. -1 Br ·-all b I dep 875-1202 Plf•on with min 3 yra The FD I C off••• great II flt1 your budgert 2br Ocean full ateps away! .,.. .. .,. • _,, u flTIUS nper Flmlllar with beneflll pael(ana lnclud· nr actna/1hopa kid ok Xlra sharp 3br 2ba hm cozy w/1011 of nat wood CEITHS TElllS Wan1 M/F lo help find & IBMI PC. Well establllhed Ing Den111 & viiron n•-k· S 5 1 0 o t he rs • v a It Slone frpte d1hwshr S975 $485 No pet1 990·2?62 SWtllllc. ,tis' CO·rent 3BR C.M hie by company Ple ... nt & II· age If you wouldttke 539-6190 Best Alty lee 539-8100 Best Alty fee Newly decorated 2Br 1Ba • I Strry 911 Craig 546-'IMIO tractl\19 otflee on lhe more Information, pl .. M *INEW PL USH I 3Br Wellkept3bfoNPCHmod S5751mo. NO PETS Call MC llOrt ~ .. _. • ltatlb 1atH weter EMPioyee In· call pe rsonnel I I 2'~B• 2 11ry Twnhme, neceslltles lrpl( too er after 3pm 83t-6155 IO,.'·_., Voul)g, •ngJ prof male ~~~'':a~,,~~ St~~ 975·5•00 EOE la)... K" Avl now S1200 lncd yd around S I~ Ealtllde NICE lg 2Br 1Ba °"1 .,.,, 9 te 5· Nett• clean, quiet rm, 1 lmMed opening BOAT WASHER Full Time Ptala1al1 2107 75-49t2/754-1792Bkr 539·8190BeetRltyfee patio, gar, bltlna 1700 ~ d or2bdaptNB,CDM Cell MAIL RESUME TO fOf S1llbo1t Dealerahlp oPJ ffit eEXcA 38 r 2ea l&lllll DUL. n Ull Apart•nta ParaJa•.. 81s-13oe or M2-4834 00 Joe 1114)599-7874 Ir.·~ Eddie 842-4788 upper unit, S 1100 mo G•r Nr bMcl'I r .. .-7fo5 p I le 1 I BOOKKEEPING W 2Br 2Ba unit s 1000 soe TEUlm Ill-..... rt hr~er .-.Pte1 Apartmtnb • • I anted E Oceanfront. Avall 915 IHO 2Br + ger SS75 1 .. #8318 laratH fer hJf hll, Oa 12111 PfT for Accounting 0 1- (71 4) 999· 1144 2U2~1ATll700 C.rtaa••l•ar 1121 TIUlllT 171-lllO i Nt wpur1 8 u <hSo a..t &•llTOLllll ~(keplng~·~~;~t!r I~!~ ltatala •••an hr•ll• .. by Bay. 91110 8130 S150 bvlltlna 9/ 1 tee•"48 Townhouae. Frplc & poo New etptl drpt paint' need• b1ek office per-OO'T Fiii TIAT mo. Clll evee 871·9437 TIUlllT 111·1110 S1195/mo. 873·08te etc. t 575/mo 1so'~sae2 • 642-Sll l ion. challenging PO•ltlon 8 l.otto"~ ._"•'• o' '~• • tw .,.,.,~h ...t ,.,...,,,,,. ~ WINTER. Furn. 2BR, lrplc. Trlplel( w/lrple, g•r & DESIGNER'S rurnl1hed !·lld• IQUMky clean 1Bf I 1 70,c~,18~~i'~:rr,·I feat paced NB reetaurent ,,.lpful. Call 631-3651 t ..... Mela Verde EKec Hm 2 eita na ,. .. •a--Newport 8..ach No Mu1t be able to h1ndle 111111 JllT • nfront Snt.~ -. 11y 4 B~ 3ba t IPI Gar-2 B tu J ...i.. _.,_ RX<1 lrvinl' ~v1•1tu1 atr .... pref lllp. Cell Col· ao... •o •Ct'~ 'h' '"'o • """ .,, .. , -...... d I I r m uu., ... Jt. owner 2 Ari 1 'Aba Townhae IM· 19ct (2 t3) ~24·9423 111111111 1 tal. 3Br 8"oh Cottage en ng Mf1I oe & water rielrt doOr Privacy -.. ... 0 O/W fdl I htltl Quiet aree 1 blk to pd S1450/Mo 548-9950 ~ n·amkr 848-2323 tur• bit-In "1 • • 645·1104 Gr~mar SChOOI '950 Npt Hgh11 a,.. clean 2Bd ' Frplo. prlv ger 1 prlv &I IUYllU SILL IY to right couple 875-8080 1ba, yd, pallo S735/Mo &!~~ ,.~!2~~~ ~~:o Ctlta lleM 17 The Orange Coa11 Dally TILIPlllEJ Big Cenyon Condo 2BR NO PETS 548-8880 Piiot II looking for help·ln 2be """"' .,. I I -- -111 Ad Servloee Dept PIT or F/T et1...i..-I · """"'' ,....e, enn1 SHARP & CLEAN 4 BR WAAA.m •• VILLAGI A'eaponatbllltlea will In· ........ ,, .. Y"'·ra C~T Ho $1450/mo yrty 551-3398 ,,.., so Coat & occ ~ ude pick '""' .. ...... - L100 BAYFRONT3Bd2b• Wiiiy gardening aervioe &•lia•TMlllTI el up •nd Cle-A1•oclete1 Tele· t T 0 L C H 1 · furn WINTER RENTAL $1175 Pl( mo 544-t950 APA 572 Sq Ft $830/mo :~:~h.:~s.1d:;oe:~~:~; mirkeOng, 953-8870 I I II r ; .,.~·~:.:'·=. 7:"i:::·.: 87S-8118/(ll 18)2111·80e2 Too 111•1 E•tlde 1br cttg ytly 01 .. 1nter rentlf Conoe ' '"'°' 0111 1•rdtn \ltlf IOI\ comlor11bit ···nc ~ 'r..'~~32N:;por1 ad•. end a ~!~ 0 c~r::;ENTER HELPEA. -· -. -" ~ ""Ol'I t'e --LIDO ISLE 4 Bdrm S275 jual ,.,,,ed otheta 842·8305 2 1~108 'IOW to lrtt••Y' 56. Cout """ wMt Only mlllllll\ IO lltt other d~lea ......... tdate '·own Cet. no tluv-... --------,i s 15001Mo 875-7887 Of avail 639-8190 Beat fee ' bu<ll ~aatt ••••lablt HO~ IS PlUSf 18 Sq Ft o e n 1 mull be extremely ~· gards Pleaee 7$4-1820 l 1s 1 1, c1r "i 1 1 0 -. ...... ,. , . ....... (8t8l 33S-&535 v1111 8albOI condo 28' ~~.:.R~TP~J~· ........ vu· LMmT-g~U:1~~~reg2~~,~~ ~='~· :"!': = ct~oe:.,:~ !'::::t Ml r -••• !: .• ·~~'1..: ·,.•:. :: f •.: LIDO ISLE 2 Ba w I o c ea n" I 1 w Winter 873-788e ... 1111 M'a .._. ,.ea-; .... ,. Olhen N 1 ' $4 P/hr 675-27~,_ " ,. ~· Winter 2 8f 2ba, dbl ger, 11350/mo MO.ot22 RM -:--------. ......... --.-..11 .,... .,....._ .,.6..,. ~ r..ume Attn LIM .., ...... •N4f•IO r I' I' 1· I' r I' ,. I lrplC, r;,110, no pet• WANTE~AMIL y Arut!ta"· I....... -.Sl 11 ~': ~8~:· ~CC:Ji Smlt.h, !-~ -·-a~~-. _....._ flrtn ,,_. ou _ . . . . _ . . . $1200/ 875-4143 4 IW. 2bt hee ·No eo.ta ...... ...... UM UI. •n I Ill wJTU -. Hwy 17&-.e900 anytime ~·--• ._.......,.,. ---• a U'.·.•,',.,',A•._.,j h t J I I I J J I J w•--M .... nr OCCISo Cout 111.f~ clout peraon needed to ., . . . . . , ..._ .... , "'"'""' P1ua 112 Bite·~~ R LWonHJreet VJ;Wf NI,....,.. ••HIT 1• I /Pt p • In 1111 cahter & stock h19h .:...:.:.:.:~:....---_..i......i.._'--.._...__..___..-i.._.. 2Br, IQ kttCMn. P•tlo. get-toe encl yd $1000/Mo 2br 1baS1200mo yrly, no ,..,_, Ml·llN iec>Olmo ... 5 w 19th si -f Uhlon Europu n .~m AMswnt • 1 ege U11la pd 875-1832 i vt 911 551·3748 ger . Incl ulll 473.5429 7$1·1120 173·1990 ..... ...., a.. tHll bOUllque Good pay ,_. --------L.i.--~!!!!!!!!!!!!!""'!~~~~~~~~~--------•Lbecca 844 ~? I O O G U Rr~ '. I I I I' -I I [}AWBY I I' I" I· I , ( ' -___ ._ ..................... __ .... _ ... __ -.-... ---------------------~--------------------. -~· I ' { I r •• ..... HM ••• • •• ,.. II CHtLD CAN.. MetUN ledy ... I ·n•s IOl>fcMcMOd~ _.,. on wtcdy artn1. Aeta r D I C 11 ...-1no fUH tltM lt\llne.. Own eat 7M-340e OOllectOfa In the lrvtne ., .. to pe<tOtm continu.-CHIU> CARE Wanted M-oua COll«:tlon effora on W~. 8.4M My Balboa delinquent 9000Unta At la hme. Art 5Clfn 87S.211411 PW1 of OUf llquldat~ you CHILO CARE for t 1 mo old wtll b9 lnvQlvad wtth eon- In my N.8. home. N/amkr tac ting borrower a t>y PfT am'• M-F 752-70M l>hone lo r~ dell~ t>twnt-11amwtcctya.fWa quat1Cy Pf~. You ...... UftlTlllll lHlllTUllmYI Neadad for New H<>met and Recruitment Advertlalng SalH 11 rapldty expanding local dally newapapar. Agreulve, aelt-dl•· clpllned Individuals may earn excellent Income (aalary + commlaalonl, benefit• and advanoe- meol oPPortunlty. Agen- cy or newspaper ••· will review t>orr~ f11N & recommer'ld action u neceeaaty. You p0ateaa knowledge Of COt\IUIMt Credit coli..tloo prac:tlo• & Ptoeeduree u W!lll u tamlllarlty wttl'I COIJecUon laws. Thia poaltlon r~ qulrM Kint v,rbal & writ. ten akllla. Prevloua bank- ing or finance exper. a plu1. Salary wlll not ex- ceed 1 19,000. p/yr, Please tend your resume to F.0.1.C .• alln: Peraoo- nel. P.O. Bo• 7549, New- p o rt Bea ch , C a 9211511-744549 EOE par lance necauary.l•-.. ------g::,;:,eume Attn: Pavgy OllllELOll MtJlll llAIT IAILTPl.IT 111w.a.,at. httl ... ,O& CLERICAL ClEllnPllT Part time carrier counMI· ore wanted. Help bOy• and glrls aollclt new aubacr1ptlona on their ~ rout ... Mutt entoy WO<klng with 10-13 yr olds Eerty evening hours wont days/ lleJClbte hrs. Commlaston only Cati Bruoe Emsley 842-4321 ext. 206 HAllEOIAST l&ll.Y PILIT Orange Coasc DAILY PILOT /Tueeday, September 3, 1985 C7 ls.I...... 91 , ... PID l<!NN L H L.P NEEOED IMMfDIA TEL Y ,. "4tf /P 1 lertry & ~·· !~ Qin•'• Ptzza. wknda, :~:'~J!I duty INVENTORY nee:.: for • ,;., p.ced ON1 .,. Mw "4 UC> .._,.., tnvt1tmen1 firm In llM Ille W11tt4 ...... 11 .... JSll -..--....-;;;;o;;:;;::...._.::,.::;zi nmYJ!lteA Puk Xke ..... lar 6"t1•Mf )(Int pea 875 8244 Of Pl uma po11uon ava11 700-2538 1173-1121 LMfte .... CdMar GOO<l l)hOne ettl· nu. Tm PH Eng ::ring & .::d AlDTQRS q~ll• and ~el MC· PAIT Tm WMI Salary opan '111ma rat1r1al Ill.I* req Hra ~~~:. ":rh 1~t~.,~ Ptt1 -Hl9 Contact Monty "2·1374 &. Lby r~ wtlt/gry .. '-'= SOLICITOR State Farm ounn ... $8, 54~7 :;K '"~ i5~-e&OC>°°"! tiUNTING OH~H OpportunlllH av•Uable 145--4$35 btwri 9am to 2 y..,. o f '**'t •>4* T -4pm S 1100/mo lncldg With IN LOS ANGELES noon Of 1...:ll)m fOt Nancy LOtlg twm lllllgrnNnt 1n1Yrane. ~ Fat appt TIMES CkoulatlOf\ o.. LIU&. IHllTAIY-TIP PAY 760-0505 Uk ror Cindy Ina Gold boo11 TUM· b~ ••tt T3'-8978 Joe CHRYSLER/Pl YM<>U'l'M Tnuraeveepm &53--1115 ft __ M2~1 MG-51M --~ 1 f ~rlean Indian ~8 e.rtr.-n Twtn o.tr<Mt htM ...... ITATIHllY Ba•k•t• incl ApacM OlaeM,xtmcooo ~1...,......, ____ ......., .... ="*'~ "°:: h 12111... * VOLT * =T~l1!J'~·~-prograM. Gu•ranteed Wa are M agency ~· floe dealt• tN1tt.11e, r• hOurty wage ptua eom-lzlng In IN placement ol Tt•,.,WJ hniHI llable, '*'°" lat racep- mluton Hour•· 4PM to i.Qal atatf O!*llOQ lo tlontat & Uta MCfeta1lal 9PM Training l a litigation, Corpotate. (714)835-9261 dullee Salary com· ptovlded. Potentlal to Real Eatata, S.nlcruptcy SANTAANA mensurata on ••· SJ!!ER Mfn '300. ptu• per week & Tax. Call tor APPi 2 tot E 4tn Street ~ 759· t080 Fo~:;2in3t681"11ew. call: IAIY llllU llllOY Sulte235, Santa Ana Atk lot Mra Covington •S&LEI ULEI* 2!'h~=n~~o~.5~::r~j~ • 1 ext. 1204 1 tOI Do.,. St. Ste 270 (7'141852·1560 ~tall Sales JOBS Relrloerators $129 & Up rigging 113,500 Sllp GENERAL OFFICE flex I.I. 411·11H N:~:g=~~7:grH W.LIWI 11111 EARN Wasners $$9 & Up poaslt>le 847--0472 PIT hrt to grow w/Co ,..v Dryers, gi&stelec S99 6 Up " Exp pref. 845-2000 · L(UI, llOllnllY acrosa from 0 .C Airport P/T S.alel Aulst req. for ALL APPLIANCES CAPRI 30 Fully equlpted ---------With min. 2 yrs lltlgatlon Eoe M/f lovely Hallmark 11ora In MONEY F , ... I ....... Ready 10 race $17,800, llAIRlm.tST a>ep & word prooeaslng H.BIC.M bOrder, to work I •1 1ar • Brad 432-5880 Comm. or ltL rantel Busy for sole Practlctlooer llRIEI mana.m eves & wndl Prev e>eper PRIZES (HtllHt °"4ttlH lido t4 nd• WOl'k $400 ~ salon. Occupy lmmed. N/smkr pleue call tor All anma. c.rtlfled °'train-an advantT Xlnt rate ot UNIQUE FURNITURE trlr Craig 2131820-6470 548-4565or544-9619 appt 633-35711 MS Must be mature & pay Cal Helen at T.RIPS l947S Main St or714/675-8816 Interested In permanent 963-4064 Santa Ana I ll&lllnLIIT Lii.AL IEOlnUY ~p1oyment Mesa Verde Retail sa1ea Btwn Edinger & warn« on l lir A Deeb 702. 2 Hair Production• 250 E. tor lltlgatlon & t&JC at-Coov Hosp, 661 Center LAiZ HSltll lSUll THIS Main St See the Bear• 1 40•~oorlng tr: Nwpt Arbr 17th St Costa Meea, Fen· torney Non-amok er St C M 548-5585 Shoe Dept needs FIT 111·1220 I l0.500 For datalli ~I tasltlC locallonl 546-34411 Newport Beaeti Send re-NurilllQ Sales Person/ Aulit ~• •••£R Open 10-6 Sun 1~-5 (6 t91234·304l a.sk for Wayne. Shop 11 auma to Hiring Pinner. II I '1 ->UMm ---being rem~. 5000 Birch St. Suite • • Mgr Good ""· fun 4t· Fuai tart --6025 Newport~ lor 20' mu 2900. N"port Beach, Med-Surg, Crltlcal Care. mosphere Wiii Halo htherlq ttae 5 mirrored sofa tbi $260. Must clear t>noge• Now UJRmLIST Ca 92660 Emergency Rm, or Care Salary plus comm Please WLY ptLIT rust vel<Sr swvt i~ ... ., Av11labla )\rt 642-0289 min. 3 yra exper ro current -Unit Costa Mesa Medical call Stacy 840· 7810 S """' cut. color, perm tech· LIFEGUARD (certllled) Center Hosp, 30t Vic-SALEs::IJFOrnaJo lews,a,.r. 125 2 twn bedl S~ SLIPS AVAIL 25 28.30 32 nlque Work with or SS 00/t)r 10am-6pm. Call torla St, CQJta Mesa "The Baker' II you are lo0k1ng for extra sofa & lvseat S300 As-3333 W Coast Hwy N B without following DaSu Byron or Biii 645-0550 642•2734 tPendlng money or hke sor1 011 painting.a S50· Mon 1nru Fri 9am-5pm Italian Bakery & cale 1 1 Ilk M S250 7 pc ·dineue aet Salon. 640-1900 llllO&l IEOln. IFFIOE IELP located In the new ln1lne s~~t~o~noll~ e:i~ s 100 All beaut cond w:on\ecl R NB she>-34 Sa11- •••E Ull Med Recpl/Data Entry, Cleflcal, no typing. good ~=~~~~a~~~~~cf"~:~~ Farm, or wtn Prizes and 644-1337 a11 5 !Of •uu;''7:0.~ange Live In, n·smoker to assist lull time, Mon-Fri days for wl numbera, rellable daytime salesperson & Awards, Call us nowt We 7';-Brown chamay ttnr In care ot female 111valld medk:al lab In NB Good 642-3372 or 960--0120 have~• openings In llke couch $75 673-6071 S1ll.Ma1i1 7021 Stat• In CdM nMd1 Sales MIAIOn & Pomo $9500 #/elltf PIP 51a.9220 P.,aon, FIT 6 01ty9 Xlnt EV91 al1 8PM 1175-9043 1Nt1 S.ll 7 If =~:::n:::'~1~~~y lrrllaacn 1111 121 va!.i.bONI. nlC; eona. , .. , ~· need• • little woo. $400 L!S H7-6t33 Ol>O 759-3447 " you haw tne deelr• tor a "" or UMd vetllde we 118.,. IM wey to !Ina.nee °' ...... ?_~ approvala Uft•TllAY'I OW.llWI Ml-IHl •2-nu urmm WlllYAU..U USEQ C~RS I TRUCKS COM £ lk OR CALL FOR nn A1PU1U&. 0.ULLO ......n 11211 BEACH Bl VO HUNTINGTON BEACH u1.-11Mt-W1 WIWAITY• OUAllUIUll See Ton Salary + room & bOard. b$1eflt1 & working cond afternoon /even Ing C M H B or F v 662-2392 CM ... s alary 646-4403 Beth lfFIOl IUlllH ~~~~s~.::1..~ ... ~ji 642-4333 I .. , FllllTIRE ~~,:~!~~~Hr:.d~~ Medical Responsible. bright ~ht---SA-LES-II Fornalo TELEPHONE R~ LES 957-8133 sail $250 645-6268 ~~~~~~~~~~ •••• Cl111l11 Sn. •lllOEmllllT FI T nand career person tor - Great W•atem ~· one of California'• lead· ~~~~~~~~~I Ing financial lnllltutlons · hu an Immediate open- ing tor a Clerk Typlat In our Costa M ... branch. OllTllll HllYIOE OLEHPUTTI•E Thia 11 an entry level poa-The Dally Piiot hu lm- ltlon. You will learn the mediate opening for Cus- varlous types ot loans, tomer Sen1lce Clerk to preparing real eatate loan work In OIJr busy Clrcula- doc:umenta, maintain d• lion Oep1rtmen1. Mull be partment rues es well u dependable and •ble to other general duties handle heavy phones Typing of 50 wpm Is re-with a pteuant telephone quired. voice 20 Hours p/week Monday -Friday. Call we offer competitive 642-4321 for appt AMI salaries. and e>ecellen1 for Tracey benefft1. For Interview,--------- appoln1ment, pleaae call Leticia Tampa at. (l14)l1t-n10 (lt4) lll-Ul1 lllUT WEITElll UYllll , Equal Opportunl1y Employer M/F/H Clerical OLEH""IT II you're a ~ll-1tarter and lleJClbte about Job a11~n­ ment1. the F.0.1.C. has a Job tor you. Our dtvlllon of bank llquldatlon cur- rently hu openings tor llvefal ciert< typlat Who l vef'age typing IP"d• 50wPM. The F.0.1.C. of- fers a greet be11eflt1 package Including dental & vlalon coverage. It you would like more Infor- mation call personnel. at 975-5400 EOE Clerlca.1 FIUOLEHI The Fed«al Deposit 1n- M.1ranoe Corp. haa lour opening• for Ille clerks To qualify you mu1t have 2 yrs exper. In filing. sort· Ing & ctfectllng all torma ot dooument1tlon. Exper. In a bank's note dept. Is 1 plus. The F.0.1 C. otter• a greet belleflta package Including Dental & Vision coverage. Please call personnel. EOE 975-5400 OUllTYPllT to asel1t In typing, llllng and other clerical duti.s Typing 60 wpm req. Own 'car a must. Call Judy, IATAEmY Full lime Muat type S()wpm EJCper helpful. N-smkr pref Nr OC Air· port Call 7141851--0517 Michelle. NIWPOfl Western Corporation IRWllY HIYDI for dental lab. Mull hive own car. S+ mlleage. P/tlme. Please eppty at 2474~ Newport Bl. CM 646-5068 IEUYHY F /T opening for dellvery & mlac other work. Op· portunlty to learn WOOd· working trade wtt'1 poas- 1 ble future advance- menta. Good driving re- cord a must. 645-6843 IHT&L OllEllST Progressive genera.I prae- t Ice needs R.O H w/e>epaoded duties 011 Thursdays 646-<4801 DENTAL RCPT SCTRY OFC MGR. 4'~ days Insur exp 546-3000 DENT Al RECEPTIONIST lor busy NB practice 631-4238 uma Experienced Bobtail Spill A>ele DtlVer Must know L A. and Orenge County 35 to 40 hrs/wk Xlnl ben· eflts Huntington Beach 554·1560 lllWH Now hiring lull & part time drivers for the South County Dlal·A-Rlde Pro- gram Paid training. Uni· forms. $4.25 p/hr start. 859-9115 642-4321. ext 316 tor HWH appl. WAREHOUSEM,AN For ' Him 11&11 1oea1 area Must have MIU ptLIT good driving record 847-0424 Help wanted lmmed. Own varied duties at growing "The Baker" Energetic seff·starters No Queen Size Water bed. Ai ft 1010 •"Ol IFFIOE P/1 selling. Salary & cash darto: wood neadb0a1d & rcra J"r transportation 645-0961 -small company . Call Italian Bakery & care Non-smoker. family prac-morns or eves. 675-0212 located In the new Irvine bOnuses dally 756-0290 lootboard han~carved ·77 Cardine! 177B 19501.-.... -.. ... .,.."""""'.,...-.~ Hospital tlce c M 545 9304 (8 41 Ranch Market complex In padded rails S u o nrs total Full IFR Well 111.-EP llllUIOE llLUR ' -· -·-• • * IFFICE lnUL * Fashion Island needs 63l·1719 I m&1ntalned Eng checl\1 OllllllE 414 UlltTTIH OUH IHIO&L HOEPTlllllT credit. collectlon, genl ofc. daytime salesperson & nPHITTH/ -OUI SlrOng s 16.900, call This 2 °' oomea with pis Courteous, lnduetrlous FIT or PIT, some wlcnds afternoon /e vening PISTE IP ••TIST Jtwtliy 5214 7141866 -920 1 or 11.tra cap fuel tank. ale EIHIEllY II OLEll person tor buey otfloe in & eves Kovens Jewelers, F/T & PI T -.-• v es / w It" d' I 1 1 4 I pran & more (Sen0002J C superv1s1or l adies t4K gold opal ring 585•56,.. 585_,. ... ,.,., ..., osta Meu Medical Nwpt Bch Lite typing & Mr Nielsen, 546-4510 Contact Susan 640-4279 Immediate opening tor 3 53 eta surrounded t>y 5 -"""" HUI Clnter Hosp., 301 Vic-llllng Mlllla 646-8824 I ' I G torla St .. Costa Mese. PUTTIIE S&LH 8Jtper typeseller Must diamonds Appr $1948 aqc" 1012 ORAN E COAST 642-2734 IHI LICHA Riii lmAPO HLWUY Tires ;nd Auto Sen11ce ::;:, h;;.~.:;1par~~~.:'. as1tlng S800 556-7453 Bennouo Bike 12 Spd Sil· 2524 H=R~i:!t Mesa Housekeeper or House-&mlllll 2am-6am, lite van necess-Newport Tire Center. ground hefptul Xlnt t>en-•i sctllHHll 6211 ve< 60cm 6 mo old 111n1 l4l-UH man tor proleaalonal man 6am-2pm shift. contact ary Xlnt money New~ 3000 E Coast Hwy. CdM alill Including meet~ & 2-<:r1&s.Jen-..• ~ .... eoun•ry cond $900 invested, sac- K I Th S l B ach .. , UT"' • r1f1<:e SA75 673-3600 V -..0 live-In Newport Beach ev n e port ng e are a a II SECRETARIAL ASSIS-dental insurance. con-pine S65 ea. New Hot IDI ~ References required House, 752--0-565 759-0630 anytime TANT FfT position type genial atmospnere Con-poont lrostless Ing s.de Tr1ilt11, "'7 .. ,·c-he·vy-V"'an-·au-10-...p""1""s ' Must drive & speak Eng· NEEDED IMMEDIATELY PlllT TIIE 50 wpm. pleasant iur-2'ac91' Alissa. 642-4321 eXl t>y side w11ce maker 22 Trutl 1024 p i t> V8 new tires ISh (213)595· 1820 Lucy roundlngs In Newport cu tt $750 Kong sz Oak mu 11 1 a r run s g d ELECTRO position• avaJlable at the Bch Call Kim 644-8325 hdbrd $75 King 52 bed 25 EXCEL Traner loaded 1950 5 6-67 Insurance IEOI Dally Pilot newspaper IUllf ctlST $150 antique pine w1e•tru air neat micro '0b0 ' 2~ Ill. TICl I CLHI UIOAL working Saturday and SECftTUY IAILY PILIT dresset $350 650-0125 $5900 Sam 673-1331 84 Ford ConYersion Van The Irvine otflee of the WEllLEIS Sunday mornings Eatn tor Bond trainee lln· 330 w Bay Street 760-7052 fully loaded xlnt cone! Federal Deposit In-· $4 50 pa< nour ptus gas surance) po11Uon 1n small CoSla Mesa Ce 92627 Jonn Wayoe Tennis Clut> I $5970 126781 S6r no1 suraoce Corp. has Im· M"' 2 Y" recent exper allowance Must have Costa Mesa branch or-1_.2 _ _.321 Full family mem~rsnip Aatt Lt11ia1 9010 BAY STREEI 64>5267 mediate opening• In our long term & Short term large car or pick-up and floe Good office skllls. .. .. SSSO call 644· 7765 or 492-1742 Insurance Dept T hel assignments t>e at leut 18 years old take charge peraonallly I Wec1d1ng Gown esqu1s11e * Leas1'ng * entry level INSURANCE TIP PH Call Bruce 842-4333 req Salary open Ask for white. ..,,sweetheart CLERK requires the fol-, Apply btwn 8·3 Joe. 556-0070 WAITRESSES, day &. neckline. secqu1ned from LEASE lowtng e>eper: * VOLT * PASTEUP IEClln••y night Day Gn111SandW1ch l>\Jst to waist. accented •Typing 40 wpm t -Man 1550 Superior Ave w t rose t>uds over • Famlllarlty with POllCles T Opening available 1n our MarketlOQ co. nds sec1y c u ' Gerf's Restaurant · shoulder & train Tapered FROM US1 & premiums. ••,IFll'J ltniHI book pasteup area Per-w/bkpg e>ep Must type _ •r sleeves. buttoned v- I A•t•• tarrt t4-- Aalli tl07 1 82 Audi 5006. 1tl pou lble amenities white Call 497-5721 a Xlnt Ye!'bal & com-1714)835•9261 manant part time pos-60wpm, wtt'1e ability 10 J1lt1 Waatt4 SlOS t>acto: full sktrl wtcath • muolcallonskllls SANTAANA lllon,Mooday10:30amto organlte procedures lor MAN FAIO Y C tra•n.Sz 5-7 N-.S1450 CREDIT OI Sacr111ee mint con<I '°"" •Must be conaclenclous 1 2101 E 4th Street appro>e 6:30pm Tuesday growing co $300 wk A ompanloo Sell $750 645.7742 -miles S 15,000 OBO 11141 & attentive to details I 10am·lo approx. 5·30pm. start C M 645-2905 n·smkr, lllnt cool\, seeking lll I L I I ~ I «7-8270 As a TECHNICIAN In ourl Suite 235. Santa Ana NO exper. nee Apply -----11 " e ·in s 1tuat1 on Womans 2~Tounng Bike latl twt I 1 __ -al ll lnsuranGe Dept. you will 1714) 852•1560 Penny saver, 166 o Sf On · 1&1.EI wlincome 673-3887 $140, Pioneer Centrex 2 Hr Approval . I .... ~ be responsible for NEWPORT BEACH Placentla Ave. Coste Part time. Apple llE XL NT COM PAN IQ N / Combo Stereo Ces11 lmmed Oellvel'f OAC • Verlflcltlon of 3848 Campus Or Mesa ~·P ~ Lom, 662-3661 HSKPR. live In optional AMlf:M Turntable Radio BAY STREET mwn Hllf'UI Insurance on all real acros.s from O c Airport -rs8091e wno need People I Sen ltat ltttl4llt Non 'moker Xlnt refs s75 548·5~ _ DELIVERY DEPARTMENT estate loans EOE M/F That's what the Fl tlme Chevron 3000 Call 796-0791 aft 5 Mcl'R[U'S DlNI •Placing comprehensive -DAILY PILOT I F Co M C -5505 S~rtt"•I "--"'a ,230 141-1211 412-1142 " Ul DIWR llablllty lntM.1rance on WANT ACTION? SERVICE DIRECTORY ain1tew~a 858 ltl _ .-.... Open 9.9 6 days Moo-Sat I M·F tlll 9. S-S 1111 6 F D IC owned property Ctusiled Ads 842-5678 la all about! !Have tomethlng you want eaut lovat>le Himalayan P OL TABLE 4X8 beaut -626 S Euclid St • Review of property fO< to Mii? Clasalfied ads do & Per11en kits 6mos. hve cond slate wood cun1ecl Compare Detore you buy FuUertoo. CA adequate coverage 11 well / Ca ll NOW shots CFA reg ~150/up tags.all access Must Mii ClualtleO makes 1t euy 714-6806300 • Ma1nta1n1ng ticklers R El All MA NAG ER 642-~78 548--0562. 540-11 29 ssoo1b0 120-3880 842·~78 213-691-6101 In a current status •Preparation ot monthly & .SALES POSITION reports • Computer Input Candidates must have ap- propriate experience Banking tS a plus M&Xt- mum salary 1s $18.000 plyr The F.0 .1.C otters a great benefits package, Including Dental & Vlslon coverage II )'OU would llke more information. please call personnel, at 975-5400 EOE JEWERL Y SETTER Jew- erly Store on Newport Beach needs diamond salter. Expenenced with pave, cnannel. etc (Min 15 yrs exp.) Famlllarlty with custom labrlcattoo & wax work Pleasant work- ing environment Call Manager (714)6«-8325 Theodore & Theodore Man of Beverly Hills is looking for experienced, enthusiastic individuals. Seek- ing manager/sales posi tion at our new Fas hion Island Atrium Court in Newport Beaeh. Great ca r eer o ppo nun ity for motiva ted person. Please con- ta c t H e idi B eese my er. 213/276-969 1 $2.17 per day Tnat s ALL you ~ ''f tor 3 lines. 30 day m1n1mum 1n the DAILY PILOT SERVICE DIRECTORY CALL TOOAYI• ISi FOR LOIS ac- carr••ry Expert Carpentry Service Repair· Remod · 1-Addlt1ons Doors-etc 548-4980 BUILD OR REPAIR Walls, stairs ralllngs doors. windows. moldings =•76 106 Don 962-8202 _..-....;;,,,o,,;;,j.__ ___ La .. 1uri•1 Clean uoseTree Trimming LANDSCAPE-MASONRY 'I' ard Ma1n1 •Hauling Lano!'Cap1110 all pnases Mfl\E 650-3263'" doroe Br•ck block stone lrN! .. st Mike 499-4C ·~ Complelt> C1ean-Uo gen I Rici< o61 9!>84 nia1nl r·ee ,,.,,,mong lree I ests Mauro 631-4997 Loe.Ii & l~f Strrice Garden Service e~per LOCK 15ocf6R dependable pro! For All '<ey Senncei~ Free es11ma1e 548 2572 895 289" THE GARDENERS J111ta!!_ Lawn & Garden Mainl '!"B"!!R-1C .. K~w·VO~R·K-S"'m_a_1_1 _o_o_:s 969 2120 Newport Cost a Vesa Patios·Oecks·Remodellng I nnain1 clean-ups mov.1nq1 • t •Pin wa11coverino •n sta11a11on Reas Consu11- cint AsS1gnmnt 'iB 1.5590 I • E PERT Paperhanging at tleas qates Work Guar I ... all tor free es! 963-7531 1 Pluter/lerair "I E~f peter> plaster1t'lg ·uslo"' 18' 1urong qi..a11t~ ... oo Proolems-No P•OD· lt"'IS : 326864 55a-•8J' Homp O• Apt s int E~t Pat:,. wori.. ·'' 4 bonded -t40&J" 44 I 142' I Custom Res1dent1at Work •• ''""'ie Ret s 5•<;.3 •5 RC Cons1ruct1on 646-4031 lree tr m t:=ree Esttmaies Mt'llDI , Mr Estrada 645 3J8 1 -..;....;.-.._______ Plaa~i•t QUALITY FINISH WORK ' • llC MOYIH• • ...... .......... ~----1 •m• all EASY ASSE~Bi:TWORKI ·---------'-----============= $600 per 100 Guaran-I Your Dally Piiot Sen11ce Otrectory Represent a live Entry &FrencnOoors our Raallr-aa o ·c~ 4 CAREFUt 2c tirH •lH-1HO Specialty llC =389432 AMERICAN HA"'OYM.AN l., RA "ES •• 38046 •Gooo IObS dooe •tgM• Pl tlme Mon thru Friday. teed Payment. No Ex· Super Sendwlch, 675 perleoce/No tales Oe- Paulerlno. Co8ta Meea tells send sell-addressed 545-4897 111mped envelope· ELAN COURIER -Own car. Full· VITA L-9 0 3 , 3 4 1 8 time. trexlble, Law Enterprise Rd. Ft Pierce, 548-«!82 Fl 33482 ....... ····Daily Pilai. • • • • • • : CDLLEOTDRWllTED : • • • Part time optnin~ 111 La~una Hf'a r h • I area. Earn up l o S6.00 per hour for : e rollecting for monthly subsrriptioni.. • : Experienre pr.-fer rt'd but no1 rt"· : e quired. M ust bt> al lf'a~I 18 ~f'ar., old. e • Ca ll 10 AM · l PM. Mr ~irklan <I. • • • • 642-4321. E:ct. 207. e • • : OllOIUTlll IEPT. : • 142-4121 EIE • • • • • e ORANGE COAST CAIL Y PILOT e • )lO w Ba, 5,, .. , Co.ta M9" (..A 926?1 • • AN EOUAl OPPORTUNITV (MPI OYER e • • •........................ : I :-·· ••••• Daily. Pilai : MS••ma : • mu.LMllfl•••--•' • : -Will, Liii ... Tllll : •lf you are in High School or Jr High • :apd wou ld like to Pam $25.00 to : •$50.00 an commissions and more t>ach • :wcek-g1vl' us a call . Y ou can work • •PART TIME m the aftt>rnoons and : •evenmgs ~11.d still huvt• t1ml· to cnpy • : your summer Wv oUt•r l'Omplete • • training and providt> lransporation : • plu gf'('it pr1u-s, trip;. and plenty o f • • MONEY' Thi. •~ not 11 paper route : : at'ld 1t ls not ven day~. WP.Pk Conw • • help U5 gt•t nl'W <'W wnwrs for our • : newspaper ·and havl' • good ume: e while you're doing 1t Comt• OUl and • : M'(' wh t WP nre tolkmf( about and : • you'll be glod you dtd C..nJI toda.v and • • &uart tomc:,rrow' Coll Mr Earl • : ~8-7058 or 241 -84 32 : e ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT : : U0 W a.1 $tfWI ( <'t1• M-. CA tM77 • • AH IOUAI Of'fl'OflTUNll\' fMP10Vffl • ··~~·····•••r•••••••••··- '> SYDNEY 0MARR Wednt.tdey, September 4 ARIES (Marc h 21-Apnl 19)· tnve to be direct. independent. to imprint your own style. and 1fyou do th ts you will sho w a profit. Debt:. will be collected, pay m ents made. lost an1cles returned. TAUR US (April 20-M ay 20): Family memhcr helps insure grt•atcr degree of security. Timing is on your side. in1u111on nngs true. Fllrmer "teacher" becom es ally, helps you w in major point. GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20): What had been a source of concern 1s eradicated. Spotlight on celebration . social ac1iv11y. wardrobe. bod} image. Y ou 'll be asked to entertain. to present your own v iews. Take cent.er stage. toss aside shynes~. CANCER (June 21-July 22)· C ircumstances swini 1n your fa, or You could suddenly hll financial jackpot Emphasis on ro manre. powers Qf persuaStOn, abtllty tO gel your OWn W3}. Corum Const 631-7975 Carpentr'r fenc no w " 552-04 10 v'latr>r lleale•s • D•soosals Repair D~rs-Alterations dows plumDmg mar111<1 •A-1 MIYll "' * ;)RA NS CLEAR From S 15 142-4321 .... 30t Remodel-Panel·Loclcs-etc tub encl nau11ng Pl~ • F 3uce1s 01soos.11 '"!eater ---.-Wltldow-Fences·Cabonet Ano Yes Jesus ls Lora CLEAN& EXPEPT 85'·960• M&M ·22 906E Acctaaha1 35 yrs e•P Jerry &42•0567 •C = 10405 636-82U O•lf 25 1e<1r'I e'per ence * BOOKKEEPING by DECKS-WOOD COVERS l•C T , '6 •:.>E •3 1°\S3 Marge & .ludy 15 Years iCtaeat Ceacrttt Compe111,ve Prices E \IX"rl Service ~ "leoa11 32 yf5 eap Resor. Com"' exper free est 969-1967 Driveways patios paths 10 ,eiars e•De• 75•· 1620 •• ABC MO\ 'NG •• Lt ·a0~35 96•-89 19 Ou•o..k ·arPll.O llf 18046 ~EW ~EP.t.1R Oua t\ No 1 tl' 1 sm.tl reasonao1e 1 f,~ "'S' tC 0 63 I 23'!) Frankhn Acctg Serv•ce elG No fOb too small •GEN HOME REPA·RS Bus & Personal Income Reas Micltey 536-0553 Pd11tt Drywall Carpentry LORA"(~'"• 04 'l Tax Preparation 548--0345 ICltilll Cue etc Gar, 6•5·5r· PTL Stale of the Art bus acct Chllt1care mv P'lome trans GE"i Home Repairs e1er soltwa1e modules Carter I to school ,11, t>ack CM-NB carpentrJ 01umo snee1 STAHIK COLU&E STHEllS IOYllC CO. Orsnge Co Ongonal Studeint Mcwt>r~ 1nsureo ... oe l .'A 4J6 64 I 84;r NEWWarer-ou~t' SIC\•.tQI' RMfi•t Wp Clo roots all •vC>i!S Call us !or P"Onei ~uotes 64 2 f 1 <. 1 uctonseo & Co 979-05501055 I arec1 Call 650-0258 roc11 repair5 547 17':? Acoastical Ctilia • Ch1IC1care my l'lome nr oc HANDYMAN L.ARGE ancl :11rport NB &C.M area ~mall I 00 ir ALL' M a1ic: LtllODI St.cretariil qultlle -'cousllcs e- spr ayed 01 remove Ory wall Repairs 847-7901 A41litioa'{,ltat411s * NEEo T REMODEL l) free estimates 100•·· Financing * QUALITY WORK Beach C11tes Remodeling Pnone 673-8122 lie 207461 resp rl'l!i 852 9:.39 53 I 55 79 Pat or I've m:sg Poa r c l\50 '15 6'2 821'\ SeniCt.I CHIL ORE NS CORNEA I HOME REPAIR Carpentr , :-11 '" 01' Mu.,•Qve -.-"!"e"!"c·s'!"'eoc_r_e1·a-r•_a_1 §P.,·s-L·e-1 Prescnool 4 Daycare. •n fences & gates tree trom \d A .7eccP'l1r11 a A my home 20 yrs e1'.P rels dump runs C M & N 8 • . te1 5 •esumes repor1s av~il ioc near Placentta area Jim Wllyte 6•2 7206 _P_1_an_t_1_11...,_____ "" ~•<1&<,I' .a11 646-9836 & Vtctcma '22·6087 Plumb ·Elect ·Carpenlr\ l=llljf r A "'''NG a, tlo(I" Secaritz E ~e>e, Ch11dc.ve m, Horne 1'.'a•l'll·etc Depend ab 8 a•r.., '6 •'" 0' "'1100"' --c--o~M~,....~ ... ~R~E~SP.t"l!!O•l--Reas Paul 720-0 13q lh" us .... '« 28064' W11stchtf areia 11ge 1 up ·r , • • 963 4 , •4 1= l'·Bu•o M~•ca1-Pan1c refs Bartoara S•8· 7800 Haali•t L .. ctPC' •veo Monofor•no TENDER DA' CARE 1 • .. '"!f_H_A .. U~L-IN•G--M-O.,V·1·111,.G-.: V.1('1<11 • • 'ia$ 603(.' LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Be ready for ~hange, travel. a vanct' of cxpencnces, rare opportunity to elevate standing. M ember of opposite sex becom es staunch ally. Your views finally arc vmd1caled Gemm1. c.niltl age 1·5 Mv l'lome Garage & Vero Clnuo~ S.wiat, Ahtr1tita1 CM NB are-a 548 1239 Jon 6•~ s •o. -· Virgo, Sagittanus perso n s figure pro m1ncntl) Cusiom Res1den11a1 work VIRGO (Au0 • B-Scpt. 22): Dilemma C'<ISIS -whether to remam Clean-Timely-Reasonebtto Coattl"ltrl Ou•"'' YI. "r' A!· Lowtosl p 'lt'V-!=-.r' (. "" a •f'8 "'"nne1tf' 63 •8 C D 751-6943 ht•4'1543 ~ or to travel. C hoose course leading to greater \CCUnty wtthout upsenmg ;eaer1l domestic harmony K ey •~ diplomacy You hav• marvelou• •REMODELING .. ' RESTORAT ON DELTA HOME INC opportunity to strengthen financial structure * 1 LIBRA (Sept. 23--0ct . 22): Confidence t~ resto red. secret i &•RREEPP~A,RCSEMENl af'JtHHU HHllCI "' .lBr 1 'Ba w 2 car gar • CLEENCO • Citt•n ups & riaui."9 Frt<e 11111 645-6-.3-0 0'°'' 11AUL ING & MOV "'4G Prompt Service T"•"~ you• Lewis !>•O 7866 revealed. you'll have chance to prove major point. Dec1S1on connected (Free estimates 2• nrs1 vou FINISH YOU SAVE wilh law and m oney w11l go 1n your favor Answer.> arc found behind t price for design plans On your 101 lrom $39 999 LIGHT HAUL1Nc; M<'~•nQ scenes. Court maneuver could involve ind1scrct1on engineer1ng construe tOO .. F1n1nc1ng 0 A C Dump runs 1vard gd•&\lt' SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 2 1 ): Emphasis on I,..,"' aff81,...., po"'cr lion can ~ve Y°" SSS 956 56 to 18001325·6·60 • day~ Dave 645· 18 16' --63 t-30•5 642 0289 authority, responsibility, ti m e element. Y o u arc 1.·apablc of meeting * •HOM~TE"-* * D~11l TRASHBUSTERS T71i a1 Sem ce l 1censt'<l ¥ yo•no Serv•Ct r .nanc.111 .. ega• E• L I I "nnf! 6•5-62'' ' Wi•••• Cleaai a1 challenge and deadline. Relationship mtcns1fics. could invol ve manta I Archtlects & Coniractor5 ""R•te..,.:c•o""'m-m·e-rc··a·1-0·rvw-a·11 Const & Res1d ' ciea" ... r status. Capncom native plays maJ·or role. • s 1 co m 1 trH e~t V•c 722-6~•0 Air .C1dit11ai•1 Pt"C•• !ling '" m 'tl t ••, ~ l <P•t '-•et i Qt' I Of' S;o<1 f • '""o' S•ut ~<" S' lO I q1cc0 s wind<' ... WHr I rr19 "<l' "CH1trk1111g & clean '<.r_.,, 1..au".1•8 0621 I 0 \,jT f \' ~A NTIN\,J "'""'"'"' t-4. ~''~ SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): Reach beyond what appears 10 •----.... ~-!'!'-!~ and R6s•d 1 FrM es1 be a limitation. M ore persons will speak up 1n your favor. Spothgt\t on CA S SV11 Co 4 2.8827 548 8923 toe• 383924 Keast Cl t1aia1 employment. pets, depend ents, health Roadblock to progrt-ss will Htg AIC Ael rors "' EF t1 ROBtN1S CLEANING bee d I AmanA AIC IY' IC ~59263 ectrl cal SERVICE a tl'lr~·,,f11., """''" .\ •r1 "lf'a .,,., 1 _________ .,. Qu,tU•h w "~ tN" "!l' om e stepping-st one towar s goa . .., "'""" CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 1 q): Get to heart of matters. be dtrr<:I. A.at'•lt ~ PlHISI UHTllC eiean hOY~ c;ao 08~1 creative, and do not fear change. enano h1sh1tght<1 !>t}'k. verve. Parking Areas.• RepA1rs Ou•111>-work tr• flit Are vou took1ng tor 1 d .. panache. physical attraction . Yo ung person aids m making Mgnificanl Resurtec:1ng-Sea1eo1111ng "2~513 ~-7401 I pend1b1e cieaning ~..,. decision. Leo plays Oulstand•n.a role. SAVE MONEYll 631 • 1H RESIO COM,V L 'IND 26 I Vt()8? She<• 7&0·9U~ AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Fcb. 18)' Go low. ched small .pnnt. be 9.~ittia yrs Do"'" o..in work L•c lcu1tom Clellning Homf>\· meticulous where detail art conccmed Vou o wn $ometh1no of value -1 •H90at ~18'681 ~lott.c .. -c1ean uoa·lree Ht " Mother of 2 wtH babysit 11'1 ~I • ---1 ~atny 8• 7 78!>, attflf )pm PA1NTf~ NfE(I~ W0 111'" Int E·• "'""!)~ ,.,,,,, t i.n ~f. ''"' "'~ .... ·~ """' 014•"' • Ill t' 0 ~ lll.'I" SOI T ><FAN "" "" ING c\ O[CQRA'IP\410 1n1 E•\. "'"' ....:! !}'I• b• 10 -someone wants it bu• is rcLucuant to pay K now It. protect stlf ~n '* Cotta ........ home •"" Mn1ct clinches. Another Aquaf'lan fiaurc prom1ncntlv BablM ...ic:ome Mon llA&.l ISOllTS LTI 11~ & on clean•no l>'t Paf!.ri•t PISCES (Feb. I q.March 20) K ey I lO be vcrsattlt Wtthoul lhru '"only 548 5061 .. EeeorH •eooYouards ..LODI Pieu. 0 11 tor "" l-... x-~,-H.IN~O-IN ....... A"'16-a•s-11 sc~ttcnna your force Pcnqf'\t'I hont on arow laracr. many will be INity S.rrict •Fltllftt Contvltants '"'""11• 8'2 67'6 '1ANGIN(i ~ R1PP1N(i drawn to vou. you'll ha~""etlanct to air v1e~s b(fort DCr'CCpt1\IC •Or!Vt!'S 4H .4!>54 I Jaait1ri1l VISA ""l 6"] •5 1:' • d f, fi · 1 b1f, Lo.. W'910fll NOW• Be lllm , • 'au 1ence. 1n1nc1a p1C1Uf't lf'OWS t lor..,,_ ...... Vit!On f 1y1a1 -' A A Matnt LOWESl '~RTH1NG INTERIOR~ IF SttPTEMIER ' IS VOUR B RTHOAY ynu'll have rarr Hypne>MCent• ,55 oaae tf~t REPAtA i;:: & PRICES Com"WWCAat A ~•N_C,1NG s:R1PP1NG opPortunity to expand honto ns. to traHI. to b( nd of rcstnct1on~. to VIM. MC acoec;>ted ~cs wOOd chain lint. ~11•1 662 323!> 1SA M 6 ... 1 ~1 ' 01rtwtlh fame, LO be v indicated where views and talcntsarc con~med ....... , t Fr•_, GraQ 968 ~,18 JANITORIAi. Clf ANING ANOYS W,tU~CQ\/(RING Y ou arc pcnpatetic. seldom ~ttsfied with Slitus quo. rebellio us. -• • SERVICE r ... "' Oreg 1n11at'4atoOt1 & ~ovat creative and dtd no t fit into family pattrm. It 1s not unltkely tha 1 you lenfn 1 llrinl!I t.l t !>M 1 e t8 33!> 584" Int l'•1"t1no '48 13 were sc~rated from one or both pan:nt,,at n:lat1vely eaO,. age You MARINE o.a-1 Mect'I~ Tiffi JAN1TOC\1AL ClEAN1NG t•p.-r1 wa11co~r1no 1n hive ability to arouse cunos1ty. to 1nsp1rc o thers to 1h1nk l n \lc'1ohcr. FAST PR~ SERVICE., T0c>PeG rflm0¥9d C:141an ( ommf!fc1A1RM>d1 B1do• I 1ta111too« Rt'lea Co!'laul\ N••• ,,ort• ..... , ... ,., f r 11'4 la.-if'ltd Ad "' 110' ' •" A OAllY "l01 A.o.moe M J-'411 you make new start, )Ou could also fall m dh 1n love R~ Paellet 64~ 7 l94 I uo ,,....., lawn• 751 ~· 7& GOOd r.u 631 & 19• ,,,,, •u•on.!"'lnt '18 1 -&~90 -• • ..... ~-~!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!~ .1 ... °'!"89 CoMt DAILY PILOT IT~. Sec>t.,,,ber 3, lNS ... , ... __..;;;;i..:..:;:::.. __ I Atlll, ...... u-ouulde. "91de '°' '!!!!!!!!.!!!!..~~ 1111 ~llllf PmUC Mme( --~~ ~"""·~Main 1n9o.r1t>eO ~ PWLJC ..,.._ ~~-----:.:.::.:,.. - -IMI, • ..._ T•I .~~1 =Aveto~0r .. "°"' =~~ 'Y ""'~ MUCMmCE e , ntc • 8 '80!LD0lollc*t towml 2 .....__,.. tH,000..00 LOCATION 0, THE Lote1of Tr11CtNo "425 K·~ eTA,.._,.CW --~ ........... .--..._...,._, °' ,... a --..1y " ed .,.,..,. =:. In ...... of xtra•. Muat ... 1 ton. 9f9Y 1 own~ .. to0 91 .... ,........., l erme ~ .. Qlllfl In... WOM; The wottc 10 be per. In IM City ol Newport ADYPT-.wf-wn"MDAA*AL MOii 213/~5171 aft 8pm t71S.059C)ore7&-0sffobo "-'tae IU!I ~ ot tf'9 Unleed '°'1Md.....,llloOlted lwlfl, CouMy ot onnoe NollGellMnbygMl\tM.1 •A11nmt1I• n .......... • •-on ... or pert Olllfl I"' IN Qty of~.~ 1-... of Caltomle,. •~on A\il\ill 1). 1815, ONaA,....UNDllR ~ H 'I 1 EIOO, e7K ml gd cond No. ~ 121 301 tnd ....,_ .. tdaiOid ~ ~ ~ ..... 8u.t b9-"'ICI r9COf'ded In boOll 331 '50.000.00 U.S cur19nCY m1'TDOUe ~ .. ; i 172Wi; orange, UCIOO Call Fred In the~ Court of note l9GUf'ec9 ~ ~1111 1 tween Aw anc1 Oul>M S-0-I to 14 1ncM1¥e of wM ..ind M eenta AM. MAm cawtte. 1Unroof, $1700 e31·12M PP he Sc• of~ tot or Tw Died on the P"J9'" Or . Milcellaneoua Mepe, 1n IM C.itfofftle trom Ille Loi Alto I 080eso.--1•18 County of OrllnOL erTy IO'*· T911 pet cent of I OftCNPTION OF WOAK: I Offloe Of the County "-" gelM SherffT'• Dapert"*'t TM foloWlnO per.on hM Ol\la • 13 Rune go Yin ... C~tneltt tJU In the M'an• of the !Mate amount btd to lie~ TM WOf1t to lie ~ OOfdet of Mid county, (or~ eelald on~ 25. wlthcnWll • • gerwll part· top. Gd tlr~, .. ·k1', •te'' '*1 -;1, ,nx ml on L~J ~OeclMllS. tdl.~ • ........__. ~"'°'*~'* 11m-'1 EXC!ftTINO T'HI!. AE-,t". Ill 8Mll AM. c.11· 1W11fromthe~.*9Npop. -... v ........ ,,.,.., Holice i. llentby QN9n ttlal -or-• 10 be In wnt-,,_to Wnxe. otw '"°"" .. Oii, ol 11aht .. min.. bn1a "°"' • 1tl3 TO'J'Olt. lntlng undet the flctRICM S2300/bo8181332-47&3 reblt 32 1 w/turbo 350 ~ wt11 ... It Int Md wlll be~ 8t a nd d,.111•0• lmprove-'erell.rnlnetllrtQhfa.netUf'al VIN; JT2AA.,.L.3D002tt27 bullneM'*"9ofA.C.&.On tran, C.tm pnt. nu criit. nv111 Mle, to the l'llOf*I !!:!. ~ oflOe M M1 menu. ,,.. r191111, and other 1~ the Loi Angelel Sn.tff'• ;the ,._,.... et 2•1' V11141 WE Will NOT BE U N OE ~SOLD' ·m vary ateen, mull Mii belt b4dder euilfect to .,.,,. •fler U. Int publ-COMPlnlON OF WOAK: hydrooarbo111 by wlllt· ·~ment) for Ylolatlon Of Wsy, Newport 8NOh.. CA 13200 OBO 85()..5 7 41 llrmatloll of Mid Sii-~loll '-W llftd befof'9 Al WOlj( II to be c;ompleted eoever neme known that , 21 USC N t Al!1 pereon CS. I HM3. -, -1or Court on or aft• the ... te of Ule. within tlOoonleCMM WOtk· I mey be wtthln or uncser the llrlng to plaCil the metter In The flctlllov• bull.,_. ~Corvette ConYWt. xlnt 1011\ dev ot Sec>terober oe~ tttll 21 day of lnCldayefromtn.dllte~ ~ ot land ~vel'he United Stat• DlltrtGt name1t1tementtorlhl'*1· cono. ~rime, tlr" a tt85etlheottic.ofC«lturY Aio*. ttu. fled 111 lh• Notlc• to.dMCtlbld,togetherwlththe ~llnordertooon•the nertt11e>waaflledon.JufVV, eng I 10.000. or ,,.., .. , 1 OMA. m Avenlda Del I(_.... M. ..,..._, P1ooMct. I per~tu.t tlOflt of drllllng probablec.uM tor thl• Mil• 1t&4 In the Cou11ty of Of. offer ( 1JLV800) BAY 11. Sen C:em.tlte. CA -,.-. C.... ...... · AW.\IU> Of CONTAACT: I mining, txplotlng end OC*: ure, mu1t flle wltll the Aeel-anoe. FILE NO. '251590 <STREET, 845-5387 o r 2 6 7 2 l Te I e phone • .,, T..,_, CA ..... The Owner rM«W1 the atlng th«efor and 1tortno In !'*'' Agent In Ch1t91, Drug Full Name end Add,.... of 492-1742 14-492-5-413~ County Of t1...._1'tl, A..._, ..., rlglll. attar c>penlnCI bide. to 111\dremovlngtneaametrom Enforcement Admlnll· the Per.on Withdrawing. -range, State of Clllfomla. ......_ ,.~ lilly or all bide, to Mild lend or tny other land tretlon, P.O. 8oll 12808. Keith MorrllOl'I. t 133 OOld· '8.4 Cemaro Z28, 6 apd JI lhe right, tltle and lntereet Ra,IMl\4 '· .._, Ix· welw eny lntor~ In a Including the right to wnl~ Sen11 Ana. Cellfomla 92712, enrod Ave., Corona Del Mar. HO, Ttop1, loaded! 811.14J f Mid o.c.Nd at the ti,,,. ..... ., .......... "..... bid. to inek• -da .,, IM t toek Ot dlteetlonally drill • clalm end C:Oll bOnd Of CA 92882 S9CISO. PP 751·5583 or dNth and all the right, lh 11 •1 :L . In""" of the Owner Ind to and mine trom tendl other 15,000.~. In the torm .of • S!Oned: Keith Morrteon 983.-SM t ')(2ee PP 111e and tnt.,...t fhat the.... Pllbll9Md Oninoe Cout r9feCt 111 other bide. tl'ten laid hind on or CIN cuntet • or oertlfled check Pul>Mehed Orange eo..1 Ill ot Mid cl.cHUcl nae ~ PllOC Auou•f 27, 211, PROPOSAL OUAAANTEE ...... tunnell • Ind llhaftl mf(le PllY•ble to the U.S. Dally Piiot Auou•f 20 27 IEWCUULEI ISEIOUW.EI WEllY OWIUll lllTllOIS red by ~atlon ot 1:ew .._,ember 3, INS AND 80N08: Each bid e11a11 Into, tnrough or ecroee the Department of Juttice. or s.c>t9'nber 3. tO, 1985 · · r othelw!M othel than or 1n TW400 b• 1ccomp1nl•d by a tublurlece of Mid land and IPPtOved eurety. on or T-717 dltlon to that ot Mid de-certified or CMNer'a Ohed( to bottom eucn wt11pttoC..o before Sept9'nber 18, 1985. . at the time Of death, "8.tc Mft,,_ or by • corporet• 1Uf9'y or dlrectlonally drlMed wette. An lndlgency ~tlllon may 1--.-11111-.,.-Mt\-TICt __ _ n Ind to .u the Cllf'llln real ""'~ bond on the fofm fvrrw.Md tunnell and anatta ~ be llled In llel.I of • ooet .-~"'"" oe>«tY lltuated 1n C"Y Of "*'C NO~I by the owner 11 ouarant .. and beneettt or b9yond the bond OthltWIM, tne prop-1 ___ _.__..___... __ IC)lltrano 8Mctl, County A oommuntty rNettno w4ll that bidder wlll, If.,, llWllrd exterior limit• thereof and arty will lie admlnlttr111vety tTAT'lmN'T °' I <>rang., Slit• of Cai-be he'CI by IM C"Y of lfvlne 11· m* to him In ac-to redrill rwtunnet ~ f~tld purtuent to 19 WITHIMlAWAL rROll omll. pertlculary Clelcttbed to eo11c1t Input oonoeullf'n GOfdlnce wttll the tenn1 of "'411nt.in. 'rec>a1r. ~and U.$.C. taot. and wtn be die-,...,,..... follows. to wit: OOlllbte atternattw .,..,;; hie bid, pr0tn9tty Meur• oPeret• any IUCh we14a or pOM<t of eccordlng to law ONRAT1NO..,...,... UNDIVIDED ONE-loiALF lor the~ rafiroad Workmen'• CompenMllon ml,.,.., wtthout, nowev.r. the lrtterMted pert ... may Ille. 'lennout ........ 1121 lnt••t In and to unltn-l1gflt-of·way ttlroutf't Honn. lnturanoe and llatllltty In-right to dtlll. mine, etore, ex~ petltiOn lor rem/Ulon or MAm o\llld real property In the wood. The l1Qflt-of·way 11 turanoe, ex.out• 1 OOlltr9Ct pfore and OC*at• thfouQfl mitigation of IOl't.lture with The fOllOWlnO Pl'IOtl hN 1111 ot Calltomla, County located •bout ~ ti.-In IN required form and Ille eurtace of the upper 500 the RHldent Agent In wltl'tdrewn N •general '*1· f Oranoe. deeoribed aa: Lot 1ween ery.,, AV911Ue Md lum1911 Mt~= !Mt otthuublutfaoeohald Charge pureuent to 19 '*'from the~ op- 2 In.Bloc« 111 Of Trw:t No. lrvlne Soulevtird In the VII-fcf the lalthfUI land .. r......o Ill the deed u.s.c 18111 and 21 CFR aretlng under the tlc:tltloul • 11 lhOwn on 1 MllP,... Ilea of NorthwOod Md ru Of IM contract and for the "om The lf'Ylne Company, 1 13 US 71-1318.8 t without fll.. buslnase name of s.ven dad In 8oott 27, pagee 1 "om ~ Road to~ pay!Mnt Of Clelm1 of ma-W•I Vtr(llnla Corporet~ Ing •claim Ind co.t bond. St• Shirt Laundry, at 12791 o 10 lnolullve, ol Ml .. Or1ve lerlatmen and la borere t900rded July 27 1979 In Jt .. td11tt A1ettt 111 W11t..-n, Ste. 0 , 0.,.den 1aneou1 Mape, recordlof ~ OOfMwnlty "*''"" I~. Said oheclt or l>ook t3248 PllCll. t t711 Of· C...,.. Grove. CA 92641. · ~ County, Callfomla. will be held et 7:30 m • .., bidder'• bOncl ehall be In an llcill Aeoord1. C-: A0-15-0037 The llctlt1ou1 bullne.a "'1.0 . .f 123-303-42: 1/2 -September 111 ;:t/'1n' t: amount ot not .... than ten PARCEL 2: euernente u Date; AUQutt 23, 1985 nemutatement lor the '*1· 25,000 00 Oeertleld eonimunitY Partc ( 10) percent of the amount of IUCh MMmenll -plt11cu· Publllhed Orange Cout oerahtP w .. flied on 218185 ,.. ______ ..,.~! T1tma of Mle cun In :aw-multl-purpo11 room located the bid. TN Faithful ~-larty Mt forth tn the Article Dally Piiot Augu•t 27, Sep-In the County of Oranoe ii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ...... 1211 .... 2.11 ... 2 I money 01 the United et 66 Deerwood IMM ~ lorn'lllnee 8ond lhall be not entltled "Euement•" ol the ,19'1\ber 3. 10, 1985 FILE NO. F-2842~2 . " " " 1at11 on sale, or part cull lntereeted peno'.n1 .,.· In-lee& than OM hundred ( 100) Dec1111tlon ot Covenanta.. T-805 Full Name and Addr ... ot LAROE S ELECTION OF Open 9-9, 6 days Mon-S at. nd balan<:e evidenced by vl11d to attend thll me.ting l*oent Of the total.amount Condition• and RelttlctlOn• I lh• Perton Withdrawing: NEW & USED BMW'S! ote MCured by MOrtgage For f\lrthef Information c;8li ot the bid price named 111 IM recorded Auguet 12, 1974 In -Elin Er11vu, 720 Jamee Sf., LMI IUOl UW Ptrtc~t 9157 'l'lft'~~~P--t! .... ..,pr Tru1t Deed on the prop-Jennifer White 11 (714) oontract T'NL.aborandM• book 112111 PliCll 1887 01-P\8.IC NOTICE /IA, eo.11 Mlle, CA 92827 VOLUME SALES ·19 928 Petrol blue, low ml. • '°told. Ten per cent ol 8e0-3935 lertatl 8ond......, be !lot .... llcial Aac:ordl of Mid County Signed: Ealn ErNvu SERVICE & LEASING pamP41red, belt offer. ount bid to be cMpolited Plll>lt"*i Orange Cout llhan one h"'1(1~ (tOO) I*· (the "OeclaratiOn"}. K·IG01t PubAlhed Oranoe Coat 3870N.CnerryAve.LONG Days,731-118t Mllton Vtlft 1171 551-8432or996-5890 th bid. l)ejtyPllOISeptember3 tO oentol thetotllernountof The total amount of the Nottoe_..... Dally PNot Auguef 20, 27. BEACH . 82 Fl I llfl O Bld1 or otter1 to be In writ· t985 ' ' .IM bfcl prtoe nemed In the unpaJd prtnclpll balance. of.._,,,.._., September 3, 10, 19115 '80 9 11SC Red (838ZSR) renu o m • 4 ng and will be l'IC4llved at T •13 1cont1'81Ct. ·Only bonds.~ lnt.,..t t'*-on t__,her '"""1 •t T-7119 (No. Chefry exlt..06) • '78 244DL 4 dr auto A/C mpg Air, auto, etc. Xlnt he 1tor...id otnc:e et any ... lby compenlee wnlch ere With reuonabty. ' .. ;;:;;;ted ttmil:M .... ,JlH)lll-lllO Whtsl S t9 l 25. Retall PS/PB, iter~. Per11111: cond. S8500 87S-1800 1me '"" tne flrtt publl· ~~ted "A" or "A+" 1n the coat•. ••pen ... and ad· No. A 121 3011 fltllUC NOTICt 1 ~I w 1 24 .6 26 Our price weft mamt . lo ml ucrt-Ptatiac tlon her90I and before Ml.IC NOTICE BMt1~tlnQ ~"wilt be 111n011 at the time of the In-In the Superior Court ot ...,._........_ .. ---.. 0~~ S~VE~~~ $20,500 BAY STREET flee $2750 661-7688 • .-..... -.. ___ ...;.;.;~rll• ol Nie. accep.., f'""allure to eubmlt ltlll putMatlon of thle No-lhe State of Cellfornle, for ,.,..,,,....,. __ 64S-5267 or 492-1742 ' 0.ted this 21 day 01 K4Mll 9CeeC>tlble t>ond• wlll be tic.•• $2M,819.03 the County ot Orange. MAm ITATl•NT '82 Volvo GL T, xlnt cond, uguat, t985. ADYltUW CauM of rejection of bid. Currently dated Cutlletl In lhe M'1tt1t of the Ettlll The tollowfng l*IOnl are * Bay Street * 63k mi, crulM control, l(tftMtfl 11111. O.rMton, Notleeleherlbyglventhat PREVAILING RATES OF Chad!• or Certified Check• ol Lilyan J Bodi. Deoeued. dOlng bu"'-u : loldedl S8700 997-84118 PacMc C.-HWt-on Auguat 8. 19115, WAGES:lnaccotdanc:.wtth payable 10 the TrwtM or Notlcel•her. ebyglwnthet NEWPORTVALETPARK· ..... llU ·76 CVCC, 11800 snrl, 5 * l ' * A t Dt i •J, T.,.,_, CA ..... $tt,t39.00 U.S. currency the provtaione of Section bidder are acoeptable 10 lhl undefalgned Wiii Mii 11 ING SERVICE, Ut81 eaSllg • M, •Ht C 1~1111, Att.rMJ '°' -aelncl at Senta AN. 1n3 Of the Callfomla LM>or Truat.. provided proper P~ate Mii, lo the hlghelt Coenaon Cir., Apt D. Hunt-·~ c.lltomla from the Senta Code, the QIMtlf prl'lllMing tlflcatlon 11111.,...._ and belt bidder eub)eet to lnQton BMcti, CA 92648 J;\jar 11 LEASE laick 9307 ~ f . a.ot. I•· Ana Polle• O.partment •rat• of per dtem wegee and From Information wtilch confirmation of Mid Su-David Doyne, 19t11 t uter of the 1-... of Mid (which or1Qlnally Mind the hol6day Md overtime WOfk In ihe Trutt• cSwna relleble pet10f Court on or art..-1111 Coenaon Cir·· Apt.D, Hunt· apd •lick shift. 94K ml, gd cond 644-6285 '8 6 Orig owner dOOd '72 Buick Lesabre. run• DI-Miit. currenc:y on Juty 31, 1N5, the 1oc1i11ty In wnldl the worti butfor whlch Truet• mak..; 10tn d•y of S..,temt>«, lngton BMcti, CA 9284t cat 27K ml. Chettnut brn FROM US! great $500. 979-191 1 Publllhld Orange CC>Mt from Oonulo Gultt.-z· la to be pertonned tla ~ r19reeentat:on or wit· 19115 11 the otfloe of C...tlH)' Thie bu1lnM1 le eon. TERRIFIC BUYlll 'II ti UIEIOY -------l:lally PHot Augult 27. 211. Aoueroe) for violation Of 21 obtained from the Director anty, the atreet eddrMI(•) 21 OMA. 229 Awnlda Del ducted by: an indlvlduel 1 19,700 720--0295 tember 3, 1985 USC 8111 Any peraon dealr· of the Department of lndu.-othef common deliCI· Mer, Sen Clemente, CA Devld Doyne CREDIT 01 IAllllAI TW-797 Ing to plaoe lhe matter In the trial Relatlonl, a copy 01 atlon ot the above de--9 2 8 7 2 ( T • r 1 p n 0 n • Thi• etatement wu hied I 41 • s 1 ag Down. Cloted end Pl&.IC NOTICE United Stat• Dlatrlct Court whlchlaonfllelntheotflceof bed property le: 7 MAIN-714-492-5413). County of .Mth the County Ctent of Or- .... M d 628 • d "....... All I.. • ....... I o I O '"C DI-"' NOTICE in order tooont•t the prob-IM City C*1I ot the City of AIL DRIVE, CORONA DEL Oran91, Stat• of Clllfornll, !'191 County on A.ugt.191 9, -az 1 • '" r <> ...,..., II ... I c mm "· " FICTITIOUI au ... 11 .-~"' able CIUM tor lhl• Mlzure, lrvtne Ind wlll be mlde avall-AA, CA. 92825 Ill the r~!:, Ind int••t 19 115 low ml. Whist $8745 Rell 2 Hr ~pprovll • All·IAYlll LWI NAMI ITATIMINT mull Ille wtth the Aeeldllnt able to any lnt••ted par1y S.ld property le being ot Mid at the time ,_ $&4'45. Our prloa $7395 lmmed Delivery OAC 800/228-8398 The followl"Q PlflOrt• are K·2000I f>.9ent In Charge, Drug En-upon requaet. TM oontrac-for 1111 purpoee ot pa • of dMth end Ill the right, Publlahed Orange Cout I I (#18899) BAY STREltT 714/432-1581 doing bu11ne1111· Netloe...... fOfc.mtnl Admlnl1tret1on, tor end any tubcontractor no thl obltoatlon1 MOUr~ tltleandlnterMtthetthe ... ~~Pllo1 Auguet f3.20,27, 845-5287or492-1742 ' BAY STREET BEARADISE C REA· of,.._.~ P.O.Box 12808,San!aAna, underhlmlhallpsynot .... yMldDeecfofTruttlnclud· tat• of .. Id deceaeed hu ..._tember 3, 1985 n .. tl ... I 149 Ca•illac TIONS. 2005 w. Balboa, :::::"'at Cal1torn11 921121 a clalln than the epecllled pr~alltng no, ... and expen ... of the acquired by operation of &ew · T-n 4 276 c j 1 ir214 Newport Bctl CA "'1¥....... and coat bond ot 250.00, In r•t• ot wagaa to .•II work-ru11 .. ·anc1 of Sale. or otn.t"wl• other tl'tan or In 116Ue.z Convertible. 1g7 l•l·llll •H· 1142 • • ssCpe. Orig 76 ml, 92663 ' In 1 .. ~0s· uA~t21 308Court of tne form of a caa11:..-·1 or men employed In Ille exec:u-Dated AuQuet 19 19115 addlllon to that ot Mid d• Lot blue, gd cond, Clea.n. Open 9-9, e dayt Mon-Sat. lmmac 1500. Nwptr II J\Jdlth" Frei. 2499 Santa .... <*'tllled chedl made pay-tlon of the oontract. c AL,, 0" NI A .... c.aMd, •t the time of death, Sl 2 ,000. Call 760 _ 9428 642-0795 Evaa 548-8823 An1 Ave Cotti Meu. CA he Stile O Calllornll, tor able to the U.S. Department LA80R REGULATIO N: ONYIYANCI CO..ANY In end to ell the certain r..i '85 Coupe de VIiie. rune 2827 "'Tn ~:~~~~~&tale of Jullice, or approved eure-he contractor lhall comply Mid T...., Itri t ' y lltuated In City of '74 450SL. re1tored to Ilk• new cond, mutt be aeenl Beat otfe< 731-1 181 '79 300SO. Lgt IVory, bam- l>OO '-&th, tunr1, MK ml, dealer maintained. Excel Cond.&40--0250 '81 300D (Llc.IBUH 1M) Whlsl S 14275. Rtl $18030. Our price 114750. BAY STREET, &45-5267 492-1742 'tlHOSLllW Smoke-11tver /beige In 11octc. CHICK IVERSON PORSCHE AUDI CHEVROLET HlghHI Quallly S.iH 6 Service CHICK IVERSON U S E COA11 Hwy Ntwporl Buch 673-0900 llllM +tax. 80 mo1. Drive away lnaalt HSI coat $2350. Total pymt• '76 Lecar, UR I !:19:8~~ 80 (Serla l •terftO, top.s tSO:~~ 111m111 LUllll II 842-0795 Ev 6'48·8823 tl2-12l0 T~t1 IHI ·Afoyote S tarlet. 87k ml, PP Hu cash for a 380 or S1800 obo &44·9128 500 up to S35K or 300 SO :::. :-=-:===,.,.,,,..,....---to S25K maxi Mult be 83 CRESSIDA, black, tan blue. to ml + peu 2 lrthr Int. 5 1pd, low ml. thorough mecl'tanlcai In· best otter. 645-8008 spectlons Cali Fred SELL Idle 111m1 with a 63 1-1 266 Dally Piiot CINllfled Ad --- great gd transportation, San Dee Fret, 1809 w ty, on or before September th Ill the ,.qulrement• of K.., I~ C1p111rano Beach, County I loaded, s 800 moving! Balboa, Newport Bch . CA 1 Liiyan J. Bock. 0.CHHd. 18, 19115 An lndtoencY !*I-Seot:on 1777.5tOQl1herwlth i, Ml1'Cort.lft Av· f Orange. Slit• of CaJl- 497_7340 92683 Nottce la,hefebyglven that tlon may be flled1n 11411.t Of a Other applicable '9Q\llr• .,., ... rtlulcft•, Cell· lornla, partlculaty deecrtbld Mary Karita RlchardlOrt, he und«lfgned wilt ... It COit bond. OtMrwl•, the ,,,.nt• of the Calltornla 11aa. T1l1pMn• No. 11 lollOWI, to wit· '70 Sedan DeVllle, gd 13831 WMl(IW Ln WMt· rivet• ..,., to the hlghllt property wtn be admlni.. Labor Code. 11t) 7"-.3111 UNDIVIDED ONE-HALF cond S800 848-8114 mln1t1t1 CA. 928113 :n=\i:~ ~~~S~~ tratively fortalted pu;euant DRAWINGS AND SPEC!-Publlehed Orange Coeet (1/2) lnt1t11t In and to unlm- • Tht• bu11nH• 11 con· 1or Court on or -:ft..-.;; to t9 u .s .c usot. and w111 fiCATIONS: A tun eat of Piiot Sept""ber 3 to proved real property In 1111 76 Eldo Convert Fully ucted by 1 gen1taJ part-tOtn d•y of Septlfnt>«, be dlapoeed of eocordlng to r-::C and epecfflcatlon• t7, 19115 ' ' State of California, County eqptd. Very clean In/out nerahlp 19115 at , ..... _ .. ..__of '"-t·-law. lnt1t11ted pertlel may • av ble for lnlpectlon T-t 11 of Orenoe. deecrtbed u: Lot Mutt sea. &73-7557 • San OM Fret ,,...,.,..,. ......, -·1 flle I !*ltlon tor remleelon hout ctlar91 at IN orno. ~In Block 111 of Tract No. .78 Blarrtu load-• .. 1 Thi• atatament w11 flled 1 1rOM. 5Aa'n22!,~~t•'. Diie.. or mlllg9tton of torlelture the Director of Public 11113, u .nown on 1 Mep r• · ..,, " per-th 11)1 Counly Clerk ot Or· ..,_,_., " with Iha Rllldent Agent In ot111 of the City ot lrvtne. corded In Boott 27, pagee t form eng, maga/1ptner1 oe county on A.ugult 9. ,2~~~ ... ',3T).e 1Coun• p h 0 n . Charge pureuant 10 19 plete .... of Mid draw-1'18.IC M>TICE to 10 lnclullve, of Ml .. 1nr1, CB, $2500 new paint. 1986 '"'"""" ty of U.S.C 18111 and 21 CFR . epeclflcaUona and bid oell1MOU1 Mape, rec:ofdl of me1 blue. 1 ownr Mrll F2U411 range, Stet• of Clltt. ornla, 1318.71-13111111 without nt-ocume nu m •.Y b• C 1171 0rlllQI County, Calt1ornla. rec. $6,000 ot>o 67>0599 PubllSheO Orange coast 1 thl rtgnt, title and lntart91 Ing •claim and coet bond. cha..cl trorn lbe Depart. IUf'INQft COUR'T Tu I 0. • t~· 112 -.9 5 Fleetwood C-" 5 OOO Dally Pilot Augutt 13. 20, 27, I llld decMMd et the lime 1'11lde1tt A tut lft t ot Publlc Wotlla, City Of' C~09'NIA, 125.000.00 . '""· . eptemt>er 3, 19115 f CS.th and Ill the right. Clwp f Irvine, 17200 Jambor" COUNTY M Tetm1 of Ille caan In lew· m l, loaded w/utras, ltle and lntereat that the... C-: A0-115-0038 Aoad, lrvlna, Calltornla 1.01 AMGIUI tut money of the United beige, 1 18,900. PP, call 111 of .. Id decMNd nu O.te: Auguet 21 , 19115 2713 Anon-refl.lndable,_; c-....,...., A taM St1111 on Ille, or pert caah 648-9358 or 5411-4022 quired by operet:on of law Publllhed Orange Cout f S25.00 wt• be cnaroect lor CfTATM>N and betance evidenced by . .NABERS CADILLAC LARGEST SELECTION of late model, low mllMge Cadllla~ In Or•noe County! s .. u1 today! 140-1810 2800 Harbor Blvd, COSTA MESA otherWIM otl'tlf than or In Dally Piiot Augult 27, Sep-II Mt of docvrMnt1. ,,..._ ,,_ ,_... note MCured by Mortgage ddlllon to that of Mid de--19'1\ber 3, 10, 19115 awlnge. apecifloetlonl and C"'*'Y Md Cefttref . Qr Trull Deed on the prop. Hied, 11 the time ot dNth, T 407 Id document• will be mlll· (AIANDOf-l!JTl Iffy ao eold. Ten P« e«1t of l'OUNTAIN YALLIY n and to all lhe c.rtaln rMl , upon reoelpt of r~• ("-: ~) amount bid to be depoelted ICHOOL oteTit1CT ropeny lltulted In City Of leter than 10 calendar lft the Men. of! ~N with bid NOTICI Of 1pt11rano Belch, County "8.IC NOTICE eye pflor to the d•t• Mt for ANTHONY IANCHll, Bid• or olfete lo be 111 wtlt· AOOl'TION Of ol Oranoe. Stell ol Call· Ing bide, tor an ad· Min« Ing and wlll be reoelvecl at ,.llOLUTION Of fornl1, partlculary deecrlbld ........ ~ ltlonal Clla'l' of 15 oo A Plfton who ehould be IN ator ... ld otnc:e at an a1 follow1, to.Wit: -••""--NT SECURIT . . d I d t iy INT!NT TO LIAN UNDIVIDED ONE·H '"LF Notice ;1 hereby given that FOR COM-IC are ree from the time eltet IM flrtt publl· IUM'LUI otll9'tCT 112) Int~ .. , In Aftd 1 "i on Augull 13 1u 5 LETION OF WORK: The cu1tody end control Of hi• cation nereot and before "EAL "'°"'"" -.. · o un m· $ 00 • • trllCt documentl c:aJI for perent1. date ot Nie. 9IO NO.-.. proved real prop1tty In the 5.ooo. U.S. curreN:YwM thly prOQf ... paym«itl To: Eugene Bryant (al· Dated tl'tl1 21 dey ot NOTIC E IS HEREBY State ol Callrornl1, Counly :,:1 Santi Ana, Cal+-upon the englnter'I leged natural father) Augult, 1986. GIVEN •THAT THE FOUN· ~~ ~~·~d~~ M : ~ot Sherltr•°'"~~~t:: tlmet• of the percentage Wh«Mbou11 unkllOWfl ICeftneltt 11111. O.roel4NI, T AIN VALLEY SCHOOL ract o. inlliy MtJ.ld July !& work ~ed. TN City Clndy Sanc'*z lk• Clndy -,.... c.... ...... DtSTRICThUdlelaredtnat :?~~~:Map r• 19~ In Sant!"1Ana c!...: llretalnten(10)pere«1t of Marie Sanchez lmothel'I • • .,, Tem:noe, CA ..... lt\e lollowtng real proper'ty lo 10 lnelualve '~ t lornli from • 111111' Old.. progr ... paym.nt u Whlr•boutl unkl!OWI\ and t1J.-.tl11, Attomey .., Ml.IC NOTICE TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE .. 111 not ba needed tor cell•neou• M a.' record• ofe-m 0 0 1 1 1 , v 1 N : for completion of to 111 PlflOn• clllmlng to be l•eoutor CIHlfoom purpoeea: Orange Cou~ callloml 3R47FllM49232t by the LOI he balance of the wort!. At the lather or mothel' ol Mid ~ ,, ..... ... One CIUll'oom and the Tu l.D • l23-~· 112 ~ Angelel Sheriff'• o.part· M raqueet Ind axpenM of minor per1on1 above ICMft9t 91 et. I.._ .. '* Grephlc1 .. Arte Room In s25 000 00 manl) tor vtolatlon of 21 USC N IUCOMllUI bidder, the named ~t. lkllldlng "B" of 1111 Educ. Ternu o1..,. cull 1 law 1141 Any P«*>n dMlrlnQ to tty w111 pey tne amount ao By order 01 tn11 Court you PllbUlhed Oranoe Cout llon C...tlf loceted 11 t7210 fvl money 01 the :J,,11_; p1eoe the mattlf In the lJnlt. alned upon oompllanoe are hereby cited Ind re-Piiot Augu1t 27, 211, Oak StrMt, Fountain v111ey, Slit• on .... or pert caltt ed Stat• Dlltrtct Court In th the requlrementa ol quired to ~ before the t9'nb« 3, 1985 Callfomla and balance :..~ .. --.......... by order 10 oontMt the prob-ment Code Section Judge Pretldlng In ~-TW-799 ACROll 1 MolMters 8 Tony 11 Permn 14 - -barrel t$ Claw te Prld9 t7 StrOll 18 HombrH 20 Hold back 21 Signs 22 Jaoged 24 Plng- 28 Entomba 27 C1n1r1es ktn 30 H11>ern11ea 32Dreu1tyl• 33 Mon1t1t 34 Egg1 37 Werbie 38 Of an era 39 "-Bede 40 Wiien 41 8111 42 a.mean 43 Comp111MCS 45 II wtde ol the m1t1! 48 Meager 4t Adriatic 1111nd 48 Ravioli dough 50~hecro"' 521nMCt1 58 S.t on fir• 5 7 S.1tle9hlp 80 Bad humO! 8 1 Weight unit 82 Fur 1ource 83 Hiii 54 Br11ther1 66 Coated 11 .. 1 DOWN t Boston - 2 S1l1m1nd1t 3 Bon•dty • Marc:hl"Q 5 Noll<! Unc11 6 FOOied 1 Amble a Too b•CI' 9 Negative 10 Gtnu1'9cted I 1 F0unt1tn C1<1n1<' 12 Throw out 13 1nltec1tonr. 18 C•1b1 23 t<noc• 25 Pronoun 26 Hang lire 27 Wlltll>ind 2e ea .. .,., 01 29 Ctrcul VIP T 30 Located 3 1 Wolfllh IOoll 33 Clotho or Alr09QI 35 Ming mem•nto 36 Singer Ed - 3t Ael\.IM 39 Oownrlgnl 4 I BullliOhter •2 Flrt l - u Can prov •S Nexl IO Man 46 DMded 47 Ct!)' on t,,. Nole 411 SIMvet 50 DC VIPs 51 Alltanee 53 Sikorsky S4 P I Ct1arltt 55 1rp1t1toon wtt "Srfflf b 59 Bone tun Tne Board of Truit .. ot .,....._,.,_, able f hi Mlz:ure 14402 Ind the prcwtal0n1 of ment 23t Rm 0-310 Of the Ille Fountain Valley School ~Tru~o:!, by ~engage ITIU9t C,:-wtt~ ,:,. 1 Allldeni h• contract document• above tntltled oourt, located Plltl.IC NOTICt Dl•trlcl reeotv• to 1-the arty llO aold T on prop-I .,t In Chlroe n..-En-alnlno to "SubetltutiOn at Criminal Court• Bldg. 210 lacllltlM 10 indicated above · "'Pit' oent o 1 dm' ~-Securtt...... W. Tempi.Loe Anoelll. CA. Notto.~ .... of under Ille t1tm1 Ind con-:::,r::, bid to be depoeited :,'~~~m=~·~:: PROJECT ADMINIS· 90012 on OCTO'BER 10 "9el "..-rtJ M dltlon1 ltlted In the ~ Bide Or oltefl to be I _. Cllttornla 92712 I claim AA TION: All qUMtlona rela-19115 II t :30 A.M. of tnai '9fv ... utlon ot the Board, RMOI-nd n "'"11· Ind coet bond of 1250 00 1 Ive to thll protect prlof 10 day, then and there to lhow No. NWP22239 utlon No 116· t 1 Ing 1 wi" be received at lhe form of 1 cut\ , · n penlng b id• 1n111 be CauM. If any you ttav.. why In the S"'*10r Court ot The minimum monthly ::!. •f:n:-%.o~':, at :f. certified Cf** m.: 1 ~ lracted to Mark Carrell, ,,.._ Mid peraon anoutd not be the State ol CINtornla, tor lflate peyment for the t1tm cation hereof Ind i::!e able 10 the U.S. Oeplrt,:t 71 .. )'!_!r3o7~2 EnglnMr at "-clared fr" from the con-lhl County ot Loe Ange!M of the i.ase shall not be 1au dlte of ealfl of Juetlce or IPP'oYed eure- 8 .. .,_,.. ., . trOI of hit parent• according In thl Matti' of the E1tat1 I h • n ly on or .bef Sep '( ORDER of the City to Iha petlllon on tile herein. 0' E Ls IE MA A J 0 RI E S720 00/montl't/clauroom .::o~~~ 1~;~~ 21 day ol fe, t985. An r~~s!: ndl ~t the City ot lrvtne. For lallure to ltlltld, you CRACKNELL, lllO known u • . n d l(ennetft M o.t lion may be nled ln lteu of 1 Oeted. Aug\.111 29, 1985 may be1c:IMmed gullty of 1 ELSIE MARJORIE NUGENT SJ64 SO /month/Graphics _, hcftlo C..t o=eton, coat bond OtherWIM tM CITY CW IRYM, aY: contempt ol court. and II ELSIE MARJORIE IB- Ar1s Room. The minimum wey, TOl'l'MM CA property ~II be ld,;_tni.. Y C. LACl't, CltJ You ere hereby notified of BOTSON. 0.C.U.CS. monthly leaM plymilnt for 11...a..1115 A-........ trellvely forfeited purauent ~u the provlllon• ot CIVIi Cede Notic. tt hereby given that U&t>aequent period• may be locutor • ·~·-• -10 19 u .s .c . t80ll, and' wlll ,...,.,,.lhed Orange Cout SS 237.5 whlcfl provide the lhe undef"llClned wlll Mii 11 •dl\r•ted 1nnu111y at the 0t.. "ar'fMftd , 9ecll 1 be dllpolltd of according 10 • ally Pilot 5-ptemt>.r 3. 10. Jud91 stiall lldvlM the mln<>f' Private 111e, on or '"" the 1r1cre dlecretlon. A 9ecur· '°"'°'of the i.._.. .f..:.; law lnt1t•ted pjM1._ mey ,9115 and the par1r111. It ~t. 10th day of September, 1ty/Cleentng Depotlt will be Oeoedeftt. Ille 1 !*ltiOn tor temlaelon T ~ 1• of the right· lo have counM1 19115. at tl\e Office of KATES required prior 1o occup•""" .... pr1Mnt. Thi c:oun may ap-& SCJoiWARTZ. A Pro-.. v, Publllhecl Orange eo .. 1 °' mlt._tlon of l~ture ••te Mftnl'r ....int counMI to ,__,_t reulonal Corporetlon. No commllllon 1n111 be Dally Piiot A at 27 28 with the Rllidllnt Agent In .--. nv1iw. ,...... ·-...·-· paid eny tioenMCI rHI eatat• 8-ptem~ 3 '198 5 • • Cherge puriuant to 19 1-Y-OU....;.~= .. -;.;;..;-~:;.:-.;;:.,-.. UL-T the minor whether or ..ot the 23501 Park Smento, /12t2, brOller In tl'tl9 regerd, and · TW 7,,,11 u.S.C. t&tll Ind 21 CFR UNDU:--;,:,1 ... 0 -.. mlnorll1bletoatfordcoun-Cal1buu,CA91302,Coun- tnere 9h1ll be no dedUC'llon • .. 1318.71-131811 t wttflou1 Ill-DATID .. DIClllll°'e1"?"'1To, Ml.and II they.,. uneble to ~ ot Loe Angelel, State of I lrom 1ny propoeal In de--Ing 1 claim and coet bOncl .. :z afford counMI, lhall appoint allfOfnla; lo the hlghelt and term1n1no the hlg.hllt r• "8.IC NOTICE 1'Hlde11t Atut i.-:.-'"cTtOUNUN Tllo Y,~OTTIAJCCT• oounMI to repreeent the l>Mt bidder, 11\d IUbJecl to spon11ble bidder C-. y....,_ " P.,.,,,, flrmatlon by Mid Su· Sealed propota11 to 1eaN K·200tt C-: R0....5-0037 .,.... ~TY. IT MAY TN !*ltlon hied herein 11 IOf Court, ell right. tttll I Sl•d pr<>Qe(ty mvet be ,.. Notto. of .. Dell: AUQUlil 23, t915 :u.IOl.D" YOUAU .. ~u lor Ille purl)OM of trMlng and lntet•t ol Mid ~ ~ved by the cMlegated ot-of,._, "..-rtr Publllhec] Orlll'lfl Coall1 , _ _..... • lhe 1Ubtect dllld for pleoe-11 the time of Oeath llClf II the Fountain Valley ,,...,.,.. o.ity Piiot AllO'* 27 s.p. LANATIOM. 01' THI mentletadoptlon end Ill the tli}llt. fltte .and Scnoot Ol1lrlcl Education .......... .... tember 3 10. lM5 . .. A T u " I 0 , T " I 0.ted: JUL 2e tte5 nlerMt that tn. •••te of ~tit 17210 0.k StrMI No A 121 308 ' ' T I08 ,,_OCllDtMO AQAINIT ,9'AfM I . IOLIN, 9'. Mid deouled hie IOQU4red Foun111n v11i.y Celtforn1a' In the Super10t Court ot • YOU, YOU IHOUl.D COlf,. K ..... Deil*tr by Ol*'ltlon of law or othlf• 92708. no 111et' than 2o0 he State of Calllofnll. for TACTALAWYUl DeWiltW.~C... other then or In Id· p m Friday Septamw 13, he County of Orenoe "8.IC NOTICE NOTICI OP i:c;-· L8ny C..-y, tlon lo that ot Mid 61- 1 1985 tn the Metter of the Eat•t• n.utnrt IALI C..., c-..., . at tne tim. of death, ~-+--+--B•lore ~ting eny writ· f Liiyan J. Bock, Decueed. CITY MW NO. -C C..tl ........ end to all the c.naln real 11npropoul1 the~IOlted NOt~l1'*'-byofvenlhat CAUPORMIA On~~ 30, tte5, l1t W. Teflt,.. ltrfff °'*1Y lltuete In IN Cl1y off~ enell casl tor oral bid. hi undereloned w111 NII at NOTtCI lfm1MG at 10·00 A.M at THE AEAA ( .... ) Loe ,.,....... C... I Senta Ana, County of Of· ~-+--.+--J dlnQ Any PlfllOn Who hu p,.1v1te ..... to fhe hlQhMf •t ENTRANCE LOBBY ON 5T~ r.r.-Ja ... 11, t74•1"1, ange, State of Calltomi., n.retOfOfl tubmltted. writ-and bMt bidder IUb)eet to NOTICE IS tH!AIBY STREET 01' CHICAQO ColMty., l• ........ At• ertlculat1y deecttbed • IOf. 111n bid mty aubmlt en Of&I nrmatlon of Mid Su· OIVEN thet IMMd bide will Tl'TLf INSURANCE COM· ..,...., tw D.....,_.,. .. OWi, to-wit· bid exGMdlnQ by •• .., ftv• Court on or •ftet IM be reoelvecl by "" City C*1I PANY. LOCATED AT 501 N. Cflldreft'• ..,..... A port loll of Lot 4 of Poll• percent (5%I the hlQl'lell lOtll dey of hpt91'11b« ot the City of irvtne, Cell-MAIN, In the Cl1Y Of Santa Publlthed Orenoe Ca.at den end Sidwell Tract M --+-+.-"9--J~...J 1 wrlllen bid The hlghalt tft5 11 tlMI omc. ot OenturY tornia for tumi.tng all plartt, Ana, County of Orenge. Delly Ptlot Auguet f~. 20. 27. racorded by mep on flta In r1199ontlble bidder •h .. I be t OMA, 22t Avenlda Del labor eervl<:el, material•. S tet• of California, OA\.t.-hptemb9f 3, 191!1 bOol! 4 P'Cll 824 of Ml1- requlred to exec111e tn. torm Mar, San Ci.Mn1e, CA loOlt, equlf>mlnt, IUP9flll FOANIA RICONVIYANCE T-785 oelleMOul Mapa In tM of· of ldM, IUClh format nu 2 e 7 2 (Te I 1 pho11 1 tn1nlP()f'tMiOll, utlllt ... Md COMPANY, I Calllornla !Ice of IM county f«IOfder of netetofore bMn aQ9roved 714-492-6413). County Of 111 ot"-lteme and tadflt._ Corporation, .. duly ap-Qmoe O~ty. by I~ &oerd of Tl\llt... Orenoe. Stet• of Clllfomle, neCIHUY there for, .. pointed TruetM under ltlat ·-W' • AC80 KNOWN AS 24114 Th41 SO.rd of Truet ... all the r1gM tltll Ind lntwMi provided In the ootltract certain Died of fNlt P · .--NOTICE 9onnle 1,.., Senta Ana, --~--&.-.JI shall male• th• Olt1tmlna· of llld deoi ti I IS II IM 1im.1docu!Nnt1. for Main Street ec,o"~"D by AICHAl'ID J. ACT n----C.ilforlll• 11on u to _,..Mr to teaM ot ci.etti and al tM t10ft1 tmc>r~t1 frOlll Thtel n , AN UNMAAAllD J -. --II Tetme ot .... caa11 111 taw- 111<1 llGlll!et Wftl'tln '*' ( 10) tltte Md.,,, .... that"". Ave lo Cutvw Dr lnOUdlng M A N • L I N D A l MAim eTA.......,, "" ~ Of the United dityt 1lt1t r90efpt Of bfdl tete of Mid detl nud ,.-. joonatructlOn of I'· 14 Ch-TAOUANml, AN UNMAA· The 'OflOwtnO l*'90nl are Ital• Oii oonflmwtton of lntormellon con~ntno acqu1rac1~01*'11. flan of..,. nal. together with •P· 111110 WOMAN M trwtcn. ~~ ~ 11: ..... or pwt GMf'I Md IMl-tn. propoul thould be ad· or ot,..._ ottw than or In purt.,,111c.e thereto, 111 '900f'ded on Oeoembet 21, • 8IYd ATS, 150 S 11* ~IOed by'*-... dr•Md to FOUNTAIN VAL• addition to that of Mid de-lttlct IOCOf~ wtth the ~~ lnllrVment No, t2~ ., Senti ~ CA by Mof10IOI Of T,,_ l CV SCHOOL DIST "ICT OMNd, et the time Of daetfl I ~tlonl Oii ... al the of Offlcl9I ._. , Died on IM property eo 172100AKSTAHT.FO~ lnandloallthloertaln,..;l~w otnieonetorotPvb-~ot~·~· ~~.:,~eel~ • .:... .............. TAIN VALLEY CALI· P'oe>«tY lltuatecl In C"Y ot .... orka. --·-"" ·-'W -'TV"' .. ona... -or-.tobelnwnt- FOANIA, 9270'1 (7141 Caplltreno leed't, County DATI!Of°"NIN09IOI: PCMW of .. tlMNln con-,M•,CAt2t211 encl wlll M reoeNied et 1142·585 I Alte ntlon Of onnoe. Stele ol ~ llcll wll be recetved M the telned,wtl ... al~.C-,~ l>U9l""9 It con· lfOtMl6CI offtoe et My CAAOL JONES totnl&. pf1t11Cu6ety cleeCftbed ~ Ol IM ~ Qet'tt Of !tie flan IO IN Ntf*I tl6dder tot by" .,. lndMclual after tflie flnt publ- 1' 0 u .. TA' M ¥ ALL I., .. IOlloM. lo 'wit. I City Oii '""" toc:Med .. c.ef\, or Cl-* ....... , ~ '°°" ,... . '*-and .,.,.,,. ICHOOLOllTMC.T90AllllD IJNOIVIOIO ~NE-HALF 17200 J aml>orff 9'01d, Det!Ow,,..._ ..... umeoe TNI lteternent ... llled Of .... Of' TIN9Tlll. Cleftl 91 ... ( 112) lnt•aat In and to unim-1 'Mne, Oefttorllla, t271S, .. In WM lnOMJ ~ IN -'tll ~~~1y Qett( Of Or· 0eMG AUO\ltl 21L_t!'I ..._. prOV'ed r• Pf099'1Y In the untll 10:00 a.m. on t.ptem. UnhM ., .... ~ Alnertce.. r.r, .......... , on~ I, !'toy A. IC...., act.. At· Ollt• A.UQUIJI n 1"6 State o1 C8*fom1a, 0oun1y 1ber 2t, ttU M wNdl ttme """°"' """'" ..,.._ Ot 1 "' orney tor Co·Admlnl•• PubllatMtd Oranoe Cou1 of Oranoe. ~ aa: Lot leno ptec. llldl ww ~,.,.,.. ~ M to'*"'*' '*"I ,... tcwa Wltfl.Wll-Amelled Dally PllOt Auguat 27, e.p. 46 Ill llroctl fl of Tract No ~'L ~ In COVllCll .. ~ ort ..... ~lnenoee. Pu~ • .2',:W. ~ !.-~ MldOt ~~ 1emb..-3 10. 'H~ ~ N thOWll on a MllP,.. """'"'bet'I. 9ld1 .,... De '""'"' .,,. • .., .,_ = ......,,_, ~. cv,u , ,....,__ .. "!!..~ ....,_. · T·eot corded 111 IOOll 27 Paoeit 1 tubmllt•d In 1ul•d now Mid by It • MlfllllP ember S, INS Not r.fMi at. ti, --~ ___ 0 10 t ...:..oJ M 1 ~~.., on '"'-fruM• In and to tha fdow-t ·T7f ber a. 1 TW-t03 BOARDMAN G EOR GIA BOARDMAN', a,e 82 of Newport Beach, puaed Augutt 31, 1985 in Newport Beach, CA She ia survived by two ION, Hayward Boardman of Orange and How- ard Boardman o f Fresno. 7 Grand· children and 6 ~·i • grandchildren. Ser- vice will be he ld today, September 3, 1985 at 10 A.M., at M el r oae Abby Mausoleum. Rev. Stanley T. Allen of the Covenant Presby- terian Church of Or- &ngft officiatiJla. Mc Aulay & Wallace Mortuary, directors. 902 N. Harbor Blvd. Fullerton. 525-4121. WOODARD DOREEN Y. WOOD- ARD. Beloved wile of Richard R. Woodard, palled away on Sep- tember 1, 1985 after a 2 'h year fight against cancer. She wu 61 yean of age. During her many years In La Canada-Flin trldge, Newport Beach, and finally Rancho Mirage. She devoted her lite to her family, her friend.a, various organizations and \ravel. In addition to her huaband she Is survived by her 900 and daughter-in-law Rick and Irene Wood- ard and there 2 chU. dren, Tommy and Danny; daughter and M>n-ln-law, Terri and Lance Polater: daugh- ter and aon-ln-law Carol and Gary Thomas and there 2 children. Je..e and Joel Memorial let'· viQe wi!Lbe held at Pacific: View Mem- orial Park, Newport Beach, on Wectne. day, September 4, 1985 at 10:30 A.M. The family requect Memorial Contrtbu- dona to your favorite Cancer Charity In lieu of flowers. Pacftlc V iew Mortuary. directlnc· 644·2700 f'tW9'Ca MOTHIRI ULLMOAOWAV MORT\IUV 110 BroadWay Costa Mee• 842·9150 HAMOft-UW- M'T. OUVI Mortuary • ~9'Y Cremetory 1&25 Giiier Ave CoateM ... 540-MS.. c I I OR ANGl CllUN I 't' ra 'te ·I Coaat Vintage cars were fea- tured In the Great labor pay Cruise, a lhr~-day festival of street rods, custom cars and other nostalgia-laden auto- mobiles at the Orange County fairgrounds./ A3 California Would a new hotel and parking garage be suit- able neighbors for Olvera Street In Its Los Angeles park?/A4 Nation A French-American team finds Titanic wreckage, proposes making site a sea memorial./ AS Hurricane Elena ''wasn't so bad'' say evacuees returning to their Florida homes./ AS TWA crew members say they Identified Robert Stethem's murderer for authorities./ AS The space shuttle Dls- covery' s astronauts swooped out of orbit to a pre-dawn desert landing today to end a sensational space salvage mission./ A4 A fl~ry fountain of lava roared 1,000 feet Into the Hawaiian night sky as another major phase of eruptive activity broke a three-week period of quiet./ A4 World Striking miners and absent students mark the first anniversary of anti- apartheid rioting in South Africa./ AS Mechanical heart recipi- ent In Sweden suffers a stroke./A4 Leftist bombers' attack causes $1 .4 mllllon dam- age to West German computer firm./ A4 Sports The Angels hit the pivot- ing point and head In the right dlrectlon./C1 The Rams have offered to buy an Insurance policy on Eric Dickerson, but he remains a holdout./C1 Wimbledon champ Borl!! Becker Is eusted from the U.S. Open./C2 Buaineu This businesswoman has a sweet deal In Laguna Beach./A7 INDEX Bridge Bulletin Board Business Classified · Comics Crossword Death Notices Entertainment Horoscope Ann Landers Opinion Pollce Log Publlc Notices Sport a Tetevlaon WMther cs A3 A7-9 cs-a cs ca ca c.. C1 C• A6 A3 C3,8 C1-3 CA A2 ; TOllOM'OW: FAIR fOMCAITSOllM Semng Newport BHch, Cotta Meta, Huntington leKh, lrvln., Laguna lelch, Fount.In YIMej and aouttt °''""Olmo l" Al If \.lRN IA 1 ll~ S(lA' '>IP 1 l Mut 11 t t •Ul'• , • ·I I NI•, e IC eat s: ~~ero, crow . . . eaves Won•t be long until ~ch la back to natives After the Labor Day holiday on•laUCht of lnlandera went del Mar, watchlnC boata aall by and the aurf rumble below. home, half a dosen blrda perched on Arch Rock off Corona Soon they can wander over the M.Dd andiaturbed acain. Fortunetellers' future costly? By USA MAHONEY Of -DellJ ...... ..,, Laguna Beach ma) .be the first Orange Coast Cll)' tog1ve up llS ban on fortunetellers w11hin city limits. Bow1ng to a state Supreme Cou rt rultng "that a s1m ill!( fortunetelling ban in Azusa 1s illegal, thenty tonight w1ILcons1der o;crapping lls ordinance and allowing stargazers to set up shop -for a fee In a precedent-setting dec1s1on. the Supreme Court Aug. 15 ruled that ..\zusa could not keep fortunetellers and other s1m1lar businesses out of the community because ll violates First Amendment nghts. After the ruling, officials of Laguna . Beach. Costa Mesa, Irvine and Foun- tain Valley predicted they would have to change their laws that ban for- tunetelling. Laguna Beach Cit) Manager Ken Frank sa)'!> the ordinance 1s reall)' to protect gullible people from them- seh es. Astrology. tea reading. palm1str: and other tonm 111 starg:u-s1ead ol Jfter the usual 30-da\ v.a1t1ng 1>0g may dupe the unsuspeu1ngout of penod their mone). g" 1ng 1hem noihing but ~ Frank re1.·ommends tre-a11ng the fakery in return Frank and n0ic1als ol matter on an urgenc) basis to ··min1- some other c1t1es ~y. m1ze confu~1on and d1srup11on .. Frank will a'>k the Cny ( ounc1I to Laguna Beach appears to be of great repeal 1he fortunetelling ban which interest w fortunetellers ~ <. it) Hall was first adopted 1n I 953 In lls place se'("retan contacted the da' after the he suggests licensing the seers at a rate ::-.upreme Court deus1on said her of$500 a \ear phone v.as kept nngrng rnn tan ti\ If adopted a\ ,uggested 1he ne" "1th inquines fro m seers" ho " anted ordinance regula11ng fortunetelkr<. 10 knov. ho"' soon !he' l'Ould opt"n for would takt' l'ITect 1mmed1ateh in-business Cyclist passenger dies in Mesa crash early this morning By TONY SAAVEDRA OflMO..,,... .... Snarled traffic and a faw ICCldcnt m Costa Mesa followed a natively calm Labor Day weekend that at- tracted thousands of sun Keters to area beach~ and Jammed the Balboa Peninsula. No traffic deaths were reponcd on Orange County freeways durint the long Labor Day weekend, however minutes after the holiday ended a Costa Mesa woman was killed wheo (Pleue eee TllAl"FIC/A2) Bank bandit was shot 5times Anaheim man still listed critical after aborted holdup By ROBEltT BARD:R Of .. o.ly,... .... James C Ballent' ne. the 1unman who alleged!) attempted to hold up a Crt>eker bank branch in Irvine Fn- da' was shot at least five bmcs and prrhap<. more b' three Irvine police officers. 11 tw ~n d.tsdosed Ballent' ne tl2 of .\nahe1 m. was rnll hsted 1n cnt1l.<ll cond.tuon toda) at \\ rstem Medical Center in Santa .\na aftrr undergoing two operaoons. HC'0S ~n unron!>C1ous since he walkc'."d out or the bank at Douglas Plau. I 0()00 Mal ~rthur Blvd .. With a -'5-calilx'r pistol 1n one hand and a bre1fca!>t' ~tutled ""11h S40.000 1n ~sh 1n the other Lea' 1ng tht· hank with baak em- plo,ee 1n tov. Ballentyne allqcdly (Pleaae .ee GUJOIA1' I A2) Police need gun thrown away by 'Stalker' suspect Nig~t Stalker's victim in Viejo now able to talk By the Associated Press LOS ANGELES -Unless in- vestiga tors locate a gun used in some of the "Night Stalker" slaymgs. 11 may be impossible to link the man chased bY. a m ob and arrested to all the killings. authonues say Meanwh1le. the lead detective on the case said police had erred 1n adding two sla y1ngs to a list of 14 victims of the killer And a newspaper reported today that the dnfter arrested 1n the case went unrecognized w1thm a week. of the killer's last known attack by a traffic offi cer who cited him for dnvmga motorcyk Without a license Richard Ramirez, 25, who was arrested aturday. 1s believed to have dropped or thrown a gun while being chased by angry East Los Angeles residents who captured him. The mob chased Ramire1 after he allegedly attacked a woman in a car and reportedly tned to break into several houses. "If we don't find (the gun). II ma) be 1mposs1ble to linl some of lhe homicides to the suspect."' said Richard Ramirez sheriffs Lt. Dick Wall!>. The Shenffs Department de· scribed the gun only as a small-caliber Mcanwh1k. 'hen tr' ~gt F-rank pistol, but a police bulleun issued 'alemo lead 1n' t•c,11gatllr l'f the :--.1Kht before Ramirez was captured said 1he talker task lorrt', '11d Jetelll\C\ killer had used .22-cahber and 25-ha"e linked onl~ 14 'ilJ\lngs 1t1 tht' caliber pistols m some ofh1s attacks. killer Two aJd111onal k1lhng~ ~en.· Department spokesmen said the\ m1stalenh aJdt·d '" the Lo, ~ngele' could not confirm newspaper reports Pohcr I.X'partment 1n J puhhl intM that investigators have rcco\Cred at ~ mat1 on relt-d\t' "'iak rnn ~1J least one handgun believed used b) "The 1n lormat1nn 1n !ht· bullt•t1n the luller. One report said most of the "as a collahoratl\ l' cllort hl.·t .... een tht' victims were shot to death with one of cao1ains ol the l\\11 hl'l111l ldc the pistols. (Plea.e eee STALKER/ A2) Prosecutors hopeful he can testify in LA 's case against Ramirez By STEVE MARBLE Bill Carns the \t 1~\lon \ ll°I" rn..tn "'-hO "3~ .,hot thrC't' 11me<. in thl heJJ b\ an attacker belle' t"d It' ht· t ht· N1gh1 Stalker 1\ nu" lOn)(·H'U' .inJ abk to talk. •ll"l'or<ling to fnl'nJ, JnJ relall' es .\nd pro~1.·u tof\ in lo' \nl!l'll'' :ind Orange <. 1lunt' s.i1J 11~.l\ thl" are hopeful(. Jrn' t''entv.ilh ,qll t.... able 10 tl·~11I' against .R1l hJr1I Ramirez. tht• pnm<.' suspell in 1h1 '1ght 1alkrr'>la,1n~' Cams· ,·onJ111on "a' u~rJ11l'd '\aturda\ lrom l nlll..tl 111 ..en11u' Jnd has 1mprtHrd ~llghtl) "'"~then. said J nursing '>UpeT\ 1sor at M1ss1 on l ommun1t' Hospital in M1ss1on \ leJO ""Hr'" d1,1ng mulh better·· said a tam1h ~poke~man reached toda\ in Bismark ' D ·· ~ Wttk q o we didn't think ht· had much ol a l hann· · c. am<. 11 n1'"" appears ma' be the "°1ght Stalker"\ tinal 'Kllm in an l'ld\ SM"\ of' 1olrni:c that dates back to 1-ebruan 1 he senal killer has bttn tenta11,ch linked to 14 murders and JI least =I ai.<.a ult ., On ~ug ~' .i man th 1.lught to be the '1ght '\talkt>r hrf1l t> into <.ams' 'dk)v. 'linaJe·'>ton home on ( hnsan- tJ [)n,e fhe intruder \hot Cams m !ht' head three time'\ and then bound .inJ rant:d the man's 2Q-vear-old (Pleaee .ee VILJO/ A2) 'llllllll!lllll ~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- School belles ring in own fas hi on show Jeans. oversized shirts most popular student ·uniform' for return to campus -~ By SU AN HOWLETT OllMO.., ........ Nc~rt Bcac~ boasts a vanety of fashion shows when· h1ah- chccltboned models strut the latest. but there's a type of clotheshorse that to many ts very important -but doesn't quite make the society page. This dis\)lay of fall styles takc'I plact not 1n a Bullock'~ W1l hire dcs1anrr lounac. but rather m what those 10-the-know call "The Qu d," a ~ntrally-located st41e of concttte at Newpon HarbQr High School Yes. tlus parade of teen~ ea<> prbcd in the ~1ctoncs of that all- 1mportant shoppina spree with Mom is Just aiound the corner It's time for the awaned schoolyard trad1uon ot the unofficial yet famed back-to- \Chool fashion show The Nc.wpon Harbor quad. ontt emptied wuh the haste of summer. 1-1 surc to make a fashion ~tatemcnt Sept Q that "111 pcrhap'I l'C' more important to a l'erta1n tttn;age \C.'t than thr latt"\t (1ucc1 line to the ~oc1ahtes of Rodeo On'C' Someum<.'s tht> "cat her d<'lc.'.,n 't cooperate v.nh the choice\ ot dothc\ carefulh laid out th<' night betorr the b11 da) ''I remrm~r when 1l didn't matter 1f it was 100 dcirtt outside. I v.a\ aoing 10 wear that ~and nc.'v. cashmert sv.eatcr 1f1 t made me sv.cat to death." said one former pan1c1panl in the hl&h school fashion 5how Southland students have alrt"ad \ aiven up a few of lhe11 last afiemooM al the bt'ach to shop at 'i:oulh c < rn Back-to-schcM)l lntor- matlon along wtth more fashions are featured In- side. Plaza an·ording IQ L\nn Flann('I"\ <;pokcsv.oman for Bullock's 'I frrl the bdl l -to-'>(hool r'C'"pon~ e'rn alrt"ad) ha" been c;upcnor ' Flann('f\ ..aid • <\ ~le111woman 1n thr 'oung ~t t1tude ~ctton of the popu_lar dcpa.n- mrnt ~ton' \ltd "he t\ Jll<"alh do<·, ahout S~ OfXl 1n t'lall-10-school S&IC'!i dunng he1 <.hill at the < ost.a M~ branch -' ·· ~ lot 1ll girl' d lmc 1n wllh their mom<. at lunch and 1n thr afternoon," <iht" \aid ThC' lloor n'p~scntat1vcs at Bull- 0\. k ·.,..aid the lunch-time plhenna of "'-ewpon Harbor and other h•&h· '14: hooters promises to make an 1n(or- mal showing of fashions by Guns., and the O\enu~ styles by Withe • m1\h on their fil"'lt day of the new hool 1.car "We rt ~ll1n& a whole bunch of Gueu Jeans and ovcnuad wru," said one ule 1r1 ''°TM'y'~ all buyina (Pleue ... r~/il) ""'·~ ·Labor Day weekend busy for.politicians, beachgoers AFL-CIO president warns of dangers of Imported goods .. , tM Au.claiH PT'eU Americans hit beaches, concern and betbecucs, •nd politicians pte1S- cd the flesh at parades in labor Day tributes to tbc nation's workers - threatened.. accofdina to aovemment and union officials, by a t1de of imported aoods. "What I see today from the grassroots up is not a weak, sack, discourlged labor movement," said Af"L.CIO chief Lane Kirkland at a Labor Day breakfast in El Paso, Texas.. _ .. The labor movement is the first line of defense and the only real avenue of PfOll"C$S for the pla.in people in this country." Kirkland W"1led that unions. as wcU as the economy, stand to lose from the powing trade deficit President R~n ended his va- cation at his California ranch Mon- ~ and flew to Independenoe, Mo .. to lobby for bis Wt reform proposal in his first speech open to the acneraJ public since he un.derwcnt cancer surgery. 'Sun.day he is.sued a Labor Day message urgina labor and manage- ment to .. work haod in band to imProve the position of Amcncan products ia foreian ma.rtets. •• 8y miclnilbt Moaday. 397 people had died on the nation's hiahways durina the threo-<tay Labor Day weekend. The National Safety Coun· ell had predic\ed that the death toll would be between 4S0and S50dunna llie weekend \bat bepn at 6 p.m. Friday and ended at midniabt Mon- day. In New York City, tens of thousands of marchers representing flundreds of unions paraded up Fifth A ven uc to press for more jobs. "Th.is is the biah holy day of the workinapco_ple in this country," said New York Gov. Mario Cuomo, who marched with Mayqr Ed Koch. "It's a day to remember the role unions have played io our Pl"OIJ"CSS. It's a day to recall what the situatioo was before unions." labor Day was wet and Windy on the Gulf Coast. whCTe Hurricane Elena came ashore with winds over l 00 mph, rippin• off roofs, uprooting trees, flooding hi&hways and knock- ing out power to thousands of people. More than S00,000 peopl bad evacu- ated in Aorida, Alabama. Mississippi and Louisiana as li.lena approached. But on Southern California's beaches, Los Angeles County life· auard Phil Tobar predicted a biger crowd than Sunday, when more than a million bathers flocked to the ocean. ··This is the last weekend at the beach for a lot of Jcids, .. he said. "It's insane, it's cuckoo, it's Valium ume.'' Los A., County ~he di..,at.chcr Tom Overmire said. "We have 47S.OOO oily bodies anointma 1hemselves in 1be sun -and 27S,OOO of them tried to drink their way tbrouah six-packs for breakfast" lo San Dieao, hund.rcds of volWl· teet'S completed a <40-foot sand mode) of ''Sleepma Beauty's Castle." which deaianers claimed tO' be the world's laratst sand castle. Beverly Hills held its first-ever Labor Day bash, wnh 100 Rolls- Royoes chauffeuring celebrities at the head of the parade and gourmet food stands linina iu route, whlcb in· eluded posh Rodeo Drive. At' San Francisco's Golden Gate Park. tens -of thouSl,Mls heard rock stars Paul Kantner aria Marty Balin, co-founders of Jefferson Airplane, at a benefit concert for the city's hungry and homeless. The annual parade and rally in Detroit drew about 170,000 people, police said. UAW President Owen Bieber and. United Mine Workers President Richard Trumka were among those who addressed the rally. Michigan Gov. James Blanchard led an estimated 4S,000 people across the Mackinac Brid&e for the 28th annual five-mile wall from SL Ignace in the state's Upper Peninsula to MacJci.naw City in the Lower Peni- sula. The annual Labor Day trek 1s lhe only time pedestrian traffic is per- mitted on the bridge. TRAFFIC SNARLS AFTER HOLIDAY ••• h.aAl she was thrown from a specdmg motorcycle that hit a curb. The woman. whose identity ~ withheld pending notification offam- iJy, was a passcnaeron the motorcycle driven by Victor Bjelajac, 24. of Costa Mesa. Bjelajac, who received minor bruises during today's l 2:4S a.m. accident, was arrested for investiga- tion of drunken driving and vehicular maa.slauahter, said Costa Mesa police Sgt. Bill Bechtel. The motorcycle was traveling eas1 on Adams A venue, at about 60 mph, when it bit a curb near the inter- section of Mesa Verde East, said Bechtel. The woman was ejected from the motorgcle. which skidded some 70 feet, police reported. Bjelajac was still in custody at Costa Mesa City Jail today iil Lieu of S2S,000 bail. The California Highway Patrol in Santa Ana reported tbat another 126 suspected drunken drivers were ar- rested on freeways in Orange County over the three-day weekend. CHP officer Paul Caldwell said the freeways were relatively calm during the long holiday, but the back-to- work uaffic was snarled this morning by a light rain and unattentive motorists. "Crash wise, there was not a heck of a lot going on last weekend. This mornin& we have fender benders aU over the place," said Caldwell. "People arc probably still thinking about their weekends. And there's a bit of precipitation causing some slick 399dieonnation _!shighway s By tile Aueciate4 Prat Traffic accidents around the nation claimed the lives of 399 people over the three-da)' Labor Day weekend, the National Safety Council says. The council had estimated in advance that between 4SO and SSO people could die in traffic accidents between 6 p.m. Friday and midnight Monday. The Labor Dar holiday is traditionally one of the heaviest driving periods of\be year, according to the council. About 400 people could be expected to die in traffic accidents during. a three-day, non-holiday weekend this time of year, council spokesman Bob O'Brien said. The toll last year Was 441 over the Labor Day weekend. The highest labor Day death toll was in 1968, when 688 people were killed during the three-<lay holiday. roads." The overcast skies and morning drizzle followed a ~ holiday weekend that drew more than S4S,OOO bcachgoers, mostly families and picnickers, to Huntington. New- port and Laguna beaches - where temperatures hit 7S degrees Monday. A crowd of 60,000 threw down towels at Huntington City Beach on Labor Day. where lifeguards reported 30 rescues -SO for the entire weekend. Lifeguard Sgt. John Barth said the 2-to-4-foot waves and riptides caused little problems for the weekend crowds, many of them attracted by the Ocean Pacific Surfing Cham- pionship, which closed Sunday. Few troubles were also reported at Laguna Beach. which lured only light crowds of 30.000 on Saturday and Sunday, with 35,000 showing up on Monday. Lifeguards there reported 7S rescues for 1he weekend, as crowds dropped about 2S percent from last year's holiday. ConveTSCly, the Balboa Peninsula was swamped with suntan-oiled tour- ists, reaching daily crowds of more than 90,000. Parking on the peninsula was at a premium as throngs of motorists Jockeyed for the empty space!>. "Parking meters were just maxed out," said lifeguard Brian Malloy. "There was no way you-could have gotten more people onto our beaches." Hl said lifeguards were kept busy Monday pullfog some I SS people out of the water. He attributed 1he large number of rescues to the warm ocean. heavy surf and inexperienced swim- mers. GUNMAN SHOT FIVE TIMES AT ~ANK ••• From A l pulled his gun on officers who had been alerted that a bank holdup was in proce$s. Three polic.eman -a patrolman and two investigators - opened fire. The shooting has been turned over to the Orange County District At- torney's office for investigation. One Irvine officer has said he's heard rumors that Ballentyne was shot as many as 12 times. Sgt. Richard Bowman said today that the number of shots hasn't been determined but he said the suspect was hit by more than five slugs. He said the bullets may have fragmented and caused more than one wound. Investigators from the district at- torney's office are probing details of \he shooting and will band their results over to Irvine officials who will determine if the shooting abided wi1h or violated local police depart- ment policy, Bowman said. Ballentyne didn't fire hJS .45- caliber pistol, but it was loaded, Bowman said. Bowman said police don't know what prompted the aging suspect to alleacdly go out and try to rob a bank. Balfentyne's wife told her he was going to a meeting at the time of the holdup, Bowman said. FASHIONS FOR BACK-TO-SCHOOL ••. From A l the same stutl." Meanwhile. clothcs-consc1ous teens at Corona del Mar High School surely won't be upsta~d by 1he1r cross--town nvals. Their beach city quad aJso wtll come ali ve next week with the colors worn by new and returning students. "I don't think they really na unt their clothes. but they all look really nice the first day," said a Corona del Mar High spokeswoman. ''They all seem pretty summery the first day." Dawn Hannum, of the Red Bag department m Robinson's, said the back-to-school crowd is beglnnmg 10 build as the fisrt day of school draws Just Call 642-6086 near. She said students from local high schools and vacationing youths from out of state arc buying up the new styles. Typically. two sisters will come in with a set budget from their parents for their before school year haul, Hannum saJd. "They"ll come in with a set amount that they're allowed to spend, and they'll spend the whole time fighting on who gets to buy more stuff. h's really funny," Hannum said. Guess is also a top seller at Robinson's, Hannum said. She added that fashions by Jag arc also very popular this year. They may not be veteran shoppers. I but ll)Ost of the teen-agers arc picky buyers, Hannum said. Several back1 to-school shoppers arc putting items on hold, travelmg through the malls and then coming back to purchase them later in the day._ A blonde dressed in colorful beach shons riffled through a rack of colorful coats in the Young Attitude department at Bullock's last week. Dressed for the 90-plus weather o utside and n ot the tame 1emperatures of fall, she pulled it off the rack and said. "God, I hope it's not too hot for school...this is really cute." Wbat do yoa llke abou& tbe Oall)' Pilot? What don't you like? Call &be number at left aad yoar message will be r~orded, transcribed and delivered to Ule appropriate tclttor. . Tbe same U ·bOtlt aaawerl.ng 1uvice may be used to record letters to lite editor on any topic. Cootributora to our Letters column must Include tbelr iname and ttlepltoH number for vulflcatlon. No circulation calls. please. Tell H wllat'a oa yoar mind. Clrcute"°" 114/M2-4m ~~~~~E Daily Pilat c .......... echeftlelnt 714/M2•N7t AH oCMr depert"*'19 142..qa1 MAIN CWFlCE ~ ,.,..., " '°" "' "°' M"9 .,_ pllj)f'I ~ s :JO p "' oea i.t0o• 1 p"' tlnd 'I°"' GOPl' .... 0. -..ea Keren Wlttm.r Oftnerel Manager 330 Wttt S.y St C.C.te ~ C.A ""'' I OOrtllt eo, 1 !l80 C:O.t• ~ CA 91120 1\.WO.OV tnO ~ " "°" dO "°' ·-"°"" OOfl'f ~ 1 • m ttll De'!Or• Fr•nk ZJnl r111to1 AOMm•ry Chu,chman Controller Copytigltt IN:) Otange CA\tit ~ ~ NU ,_, t!Of* ••tr1toona edt100'191 ........ O< MMll'I .. """" ,,...,. 1NY lie ,_,,~ .. wtff>aUI ~.. I* '"'"'°" oA COCl'f'tgllt - I0 1 m tn0~~-- 1» ........ ClrcJulMton T1l1,.:.0.,.. ...., ~c:c-· ----"'-- ' ( Aober1 l . C•ntrell PrOduc.tt<>fl MMllQf'r Howerd Mulletulry A.ctver1t'\1ng Ou('(;IOf - , Don•ld l . WNMame C11culalt00 M llnllg«tf '-"' 81evtna Cl sttled OlrectOf • l;<o-ond c-,,.,.,. ~ ., Cntt• -r.. ,..,.,.,.. 1Uf\$ IH 000! ~IOI« 0y c.a<•• t6 "' "'""ltllV "' ..,... '7 00 '"°"'""' VOL 78,NO. Me l T emperatures hittin g t h e skids A weetMr ~ ~ .outh through the ttat• today witl continue COOlf'G oft Southern c.ltfotnla through W«tneeday, the Natlonal W•ther 8eNlce Mid. ' The coat•.,... wttt drop Into the 808 tonight and rNCtl htghe from 70 to IO Wtdneeday. P.rtlal ctoudlnaee wtlt give way to IUMNne b)' afternoon. Along the <>rane-Cout ti wttt t>e oanly ctoucty tonight and W«tneeday morning beoomlng eunny In the afternoon. Hight bOth days 70 to 80. Lowa ton6ght In the eo.: From Potnt Conception to the Moie.n Border and out~ mliM -Inner Wet9f9, moetty IOUth to IOUthealt wtndt 8 to 12 ltnotl tonJgbt and Wtctneeday morning *<>ming ~thweat to weet 8 to 18 knots wtth 1 to ~foot wind waves Wedneeday afternoon and eYenlng. SouthWMt awella 2 to 3 feet. Partly doudy through Wedneaday morning clearing In the aH.,noon. LUV9" IMI n , U.S. T empe I.Riie Aoc« .. 12 ·Q~~ "IONTS l~ 99 .. t.. =-BMoll tO ,. Wwm -Cold~ .. 97 IO ~Deny 11 51 Mllw-* .. 14 91 Snowt11 !:!•"" Fi11111u Snow Occludt O ,...-St1tt0n»v ...... ="~ .. : M--81PIUI 92 .. IMI .. 70 N1"""-' Wei"'-' Sel'toc1 N()A.t. V 5 Olot OI C-c t Anclllor ... ., ...==-91 14 AllMlt 1$ 83 ee ~ N9w YOtll Atw>llCICl!y 12 " 71 97 74 ~ 101 78 Nortolo.V• .. Calif. Tempe ._._ ee 17 Ol!IMIOftlt Clly 9-4 IWIOP 91 M 72~ .. 11 ~ IOt 12 .,,.,..iQNll I .. ONnOo 92 75 ... IOw, lo( 24 llOUf9 anding ., 6 7S 12 8lllmwCk 10 49~ ... .. lotlQ ltedl II 11 --.. ~ ""'*"• 103 ., a.m u · 83 17 eo.ton n ~ ~.t: 12 ... laktRflela IS Mo;wOlllt flnllt .. 51 Ml.w.-t 72 81 .,,._ 71 t7 S3 c...., 7t ... . .... ,._ .. ... Oritano .. .. 7t l'oftlend. Or 10 52 87 eo PMnS..lnga f , IOI 75 °'*"91on.8 C .. 74 M i.-w Cl\eneelon,W V 91 &3 Pr~ loe Angelel 83 .. P...o.N 87 .. CMttottt,H.C 15 ==tty ee .. Ollklend 10 57 ~ .. 92 ~ ,. 13 67 PtlOAolllet 83 &3 8111l«nerdtno .. es ~" 11 12~ 10 49 Aed 8lufl .. • . .,,~ 91 .. .. " 17 Atd...-1 City 12 M 8111.loM 79 ti 17 8tl~ tO 7S 91 5e StnltAna ., .. ~ 75 :: 81"91•Twnpa a--10 ~Oii .. tO 75 s.ain. 72 !le 8tntaCNz 74 .. Concicwd,H H 12 51 IWI Laite City 75 51 San OltOO 7t 81 T.,_V...,. 81 50 o.IM-f'IWonll 87 74 StnMI-103 IO Stn FtlllCllOO 17 !le Y~e Vly 7t ... IS M San Jutn.P R. .. n 8tnl•BttW• 83 81 ~ 71 62 o.n-87 541 a-. SIOCkton n S7 ... n O..Mc*-.. 82 70~ 70 49 High, low lot 24 -· 9llOlnQ It 5 p.m TidM 6& Spok-Dltrolt 1t ,. 51 153 S)if-Oululfl 55 72 TOCMl!t 92 ee TOOAY fll>Mo 91 31 r-100 74 8-'ldlOW 6:31 p,m It f<elr.btn«• 58 87 ~~ Surf Report .,.tlVO flt TulN : WMfllnOton .. ftl*UOAY =""-*" 75 .. .. 11 70 Wldlll• LOCATION MDI IMAl'I l'lrM '""" 12:231.m. 4 0 OtwcF• • 50 Wlllt ........ 71 56 ~llMdl ,..., ""' FlrWllOw 8:07 t.m. I . Httttord n 62 .... I'(.~ 1·2 poot Second Ng!\ 12:31p.l'I\. 4.1 ....... 10 53 Eztended ~=NNpot1 1-2 pocw Second low 7.24p.m. 17 Honolulu • 74 22ndS .~ 1-2 poot Hol*Ofl 97 71 ...._ W4ldge 1·2 poot Sun -. 1odlly Ill 7: 1!J m.. 11- lndllllapollt 87 17 ~MO~ Glolldlt and L.-llMcll 1·2 poot Weon.dey •I 9 21 ""' Ml9 10M1 JllCill.IOfl. Ma. 79 n ~Witt! lllMY • ....,.. In .... aanewr-te 1·3 pocw 117· 15 pm. ~ It 72 ~ to IOW 70l lllOflO tM .._... wtitw *"!>: ee Moon 11-I~ 11 t:SI pm., a.ta "'-51 51 10 ... IOw tOt -lnMnd.....,. 8MI direction: _,..... Weon.deyet 10: ""''lndt1-IOMI ~City 91 72 l-ln tM upp« IOe to ... -. --at 10:ot p.m. VIEJO VICTIM ABLE TO TALK ••• From A l fiancee. The woman, who was able to free herself and run for help. has been guarded by Orange County Sheriffs deputies since the attack. She has returned to the Christana Drive house only to collect belongings and no longer lives at the house, said Lt. Dick Olson. James Enright, the assistant district attorney in Orange County, said he is encouraged by the improvement in Carns' condition and said he is hopeful that the Mission Viejo man someday wtll be a chief witness against the Nigh1 Stalker suspect. Enright said 11 appears that his office eventually will file charges of b~rglary; robbery, rape and assault with intent to commit murder against Ramirez. He said the Orange County case, however. would follow 'the case that pro~tors in Los An~eles arc as-- sembling ap.inst Ramirez. Enright said if his condition permits, Cam s could be called as a witness in Los Angeles also. "I talked this morning with the proseuctors in Los Angeles and we'll coordfoate our case with th~m." said Enright. "They have the biggest case, of course, so we won't interfere w11h them." The attack in Mission Viejo. how- ever, fits prominently mto the "web of evidence" against Ramirez, said Enri~t. He said evidence gatheted in Mission Viejo will be vital to estab- hshtng that Ramirez 1s the Night Stalker. -· It was a witness in Mission Viejo who notified authorities that a suspicious looking mao, driving an orange Toyota station wagon. was seen near the time of the attack. The witness was able to supply a partial license plate number. The car was found later in Los Angeles and was examined by crimi- nologists in Orange County. A finger- print was found in the car that reportedly matched Ramirez' prints. Enright said this evidence dovetails wtlh evidence found in Los Angeles and San Francisco, where the Night Stalker is blamed for a murder and several burglaries. STALKER SUSPECT'S WEAPON SOUGHT ••• From A l divisions," said Cmdr. Wilham Booth, LAPD spokesman. "There might be some answers that l'm not ma position to know. When it was handed to me. we had discussed at considerably. I asked if it had been blessed by our buddies in the Sheriffs Department. I was told ·yes.· " Booth said. The police bulletin actually had listed 17 tiomic1de victims, including William Cams. 29. the most recent known victim of the kmer, who was shot in the head three times Aug. 25 but not killed. Police said Carns was added be- cause he was in extremely critical condition after the shooting and not expected to live. Cams was reported m serious but stable condition today at Mission Community Hospital in Mission Viejo. Police declined comment on news reports, citmg unidentified sources on the task force. that a Los Angeles police officer cited Ramirez for driving without a license within a week of the attack on Cams. Despite Ramirez• resemblance to a widely circulated drawing of the killer. he was not held. the paper said. Prosecutors ~orked through the weekend to assemble a case against Ramirez. who was born in El Paso, Texas, and recently lived in Los Angeles and the San Francisco area. Prosecutors expect to file charges against Ram1rcz by early Wednesday, sajd Chief Deputy District Attorney Gilben Garcetti. Garcetti indicated that the initaal filing, required within two court days of arrest, may not include all the charges to be brought against Ramirez. "We will make our decision based on available evidence at the time we have to charge," Garcetti said. "But ba.sed on the ongoing process of uncovering evidence, we expect ad- ditional charges later if the evidence warrants .... We expect in 1he next week or so to have additional mfor- mat1on. •· Ramirez was bemg held under constant surveillance in a h1gh- security section of Los Angeles Coun- ty Jail for investigation of murder. Sheriff's officials declined to com- ment on his demeanor Monday. Garcetti refused to discuss repons that Ramirez has been linked to satanic activitjes. According to news accounts. vicums may have been mutilated. ritualistic feasts consumed now thru September 30 in their homes, and an mvened pentagram -a satanic symbol - may have been scrawled on walls at some homes. The victims were shot, bludgeoned, stabbed or had their throats slashed by an assailant who sneaked into darkened homes through unlocked doors or windows. The killings attributed to lhe Ni&ht Stalker ranged Mission Viejo to S&n Francisco. some 400 miles to the north. Despite a recent heat wave, many rcsiden1s shut their homes tigh1 at night and locksmiths and gun shops reported a surge in sales. ·Monday authorities said jewelry stolen in San Franeisco and sold in Lom~ in Santa Barbara County provided a crucial link in the case, with fingcrprintS linking the jewelry to Ramirez. lo Phoenix, Ariz., police said Ramirez was in that city last week, but said be apparently wasn't in- volved in any illegal activities there. Police Officer C.J. Hanselman said authorities were uncertain why Ramirez was in Phoenix. Ramirez apparently returned to Los Anaeles Saturday momma, shortly before his arrest. SEPTEMBER SAVINGS 20.o/o OFF ALL BULBS . IN STOCK FULL FLAT COLOR DISCOUNTS 4" Pote Reg. ~ NOW 117" flet Pony Pecka Reg. •15• NOW 112°' net Color Pecka Reg. •11•• NOW 113• flet PRE-ORDER ROSES SELECTED TOOLS UPTO 200/oOFF NOW AND .SAVE 100/o RoaH •rrlve Mid· December Include• r•kea, ahovela, hedge ahHra, hand toola AM LING ' Newport NurH ry and Garden Center 1500 east coast hwy., newport beach 644-9510 open Mon-Sat 8:30-5:30 Sun 9-5:30 >'I free local delive l s ,,,