HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-09-26 - Orange Coast PilotTOMOMOW:
LOUDY
FORECA8 TI ON A2
Seevlng Newport Buch, Cott• Meu, Huntington Beach, Irvine, Lagun1 BHch, Fount1ln Y1U•1 Md louth Orlftl9 C.IMY
ORANGl-COUNTY. C ALIFORNIA THUR SDAY SEPH MBfH 1b t~H'> /':,CE N TS
HB man goes to Mexico's r .escue
Fire captain take$ vacation time to aid
digging crews searc h ing for survivors
By ROBERT BARKER
Of ... ~ .... 14-!f
When It came lime to report for
work Monday morning, Huntington
Beach Fire Capt. Victor Subia turned
up missing and the department's top
Congress
extends
oil ban
By STEVE MARBLE
OfllleO., ........
WAS HI NGTON - Congress has
extended until Nov. 15 a moratorium
on leasing federal oil and gas drilling
rights offthe California coast.
The extension, gi ve n finaJ approval
by voice vote of the Senate Wednes-
day, is designed to buy more time for
passage of long-term legislation to
resolve the offshore dispute between
the California congressional del-
egation and the Interi or Department.
The Senate action came as part of
the continuing resolution to provide
money to run ttre federal go vernment
for the first part of fi scal 1986, which
begins Oct. 1. The House approved
th at package Sept. J 8 and it now goes
to the White House for action by
brass wanted to know where he was.
Wednesday morning they found
out. Subia's in Mexico City.
Wi thQut fanfare, the 42-year-old
Subia put an for vacation time when
the two big eanhquakes hat Mexico.
He traveled to the stricken city to see
how he could help
In a telephone call "patched
through" by a Tuscon. Anz., ham
radio operator on Wednesday, Subia
put in an urgent request for air bags to
lift heavy rubble olT v1ct1ms trapped
10 devastated bualaings an the stnckcn
capital Caty.
He also asked for flashlights, pry
bars and cutting torches to help him
1n his srim work
Subia didn't provide much anfor-
mat1on on his own rescue etTons an
the telephone conversation with
Capt. Jim Kettler. Subia said he's
work.mg with Mexico Caty Fire ()c.
partmcnt rescue workers an the
outskirts of the city.
"There's no doubt an my mind."
Chief Ray Picard said Wednesday,
"that Vic as out prying th rough debns.
tryrng to save lives.
··1 know what's going through has
mind. There's nothing more frustrat-
ing. You know there arc v1c11ms
buned there and they might be alive.
You want to hf\ buildings with yo ur
back and hands but they're not strong
enough."
On Wednesday, Picard lined up
four air bags from Parateh Inc an
West Frankfort. Ill. Company official
Peter Nielsen said the bags. "were
made for th as lond of operation" and
promised to send them to Subia ai.
soon as air lransponat1on could be
arranged.
The announu ment over a con-
ference telephone call an Picard's
office ~t up excitement amona fi~
department employees on the fifth
floor at Ci ty Hall.
Picard next arran3cd for TWA lO
n~ the air bags from Chicago's O'H&Te
Field to Los Angeles without charge.
Western w1ll pick them up at LAX
and take them to Mexico City for free.
(Pleue eee AID/ A2)
NB firm
hired for
jail site
search
-Will join Irvine
engineers to study
pote ntia l location~
By J EFF ADLER
Ol lMO.-,l"tloeltaf!
__ J.rcsidcnt Reagan~
The present offshore lcasine mora-
torium, the fourth consecuti ve an-
nual ban approved by Congress,
expires Sept. 30.
· Supervisors ha -..e launched another
suc-selectaon stud\ for a ne" max1-
mum·secun l\ count) jatl b) hanng a
Newpon Beach firm that will worlc
with another enginecn ng company to
assess nine potential sites.
..
Congrcss.ional action follows the
failure of Interior Secretary Donald
Hodel and the California delegation
to settle the issue last summer.
A proposed July se ttlement which
(Pleue eee COAST/ A2)
Coaat
The county Board of
Supervisors refuses to
delay awarding the con-
tract for court-appointed
attorneys./ A7
Boating
America's Cup syndi-
cates are spending as
much on shrouds to hide
secret keel designs as on
the 12-meter boats./81
Sports
Two area volleyball play-
ers are chosen con-
ference players of the
week./C2
Entertainment
Medleval plays are
beautlfully recreated in
''The Pl ale Called Corpus
Christi" at UC lrvlne./83
INDEX
Boating
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
Comics
Crossword
Death Notices
Entertainment
Horoscope
Ann Landers
Opinion
Pollce Log
Public Notices
Sports
Tetevlson
Weather
81
84
A3
8 5-6
C4-6
84
C4
A8
82-3
C6
82
A6
A3 AS
C 1-3
83
A2
Buddies reunited
Pat Collin• of Newport Beach can go back to eleep now -
b.la pet macaw Rocky la back where he belong•. The bird
&ave Collin• eome an.doua momenta when it flew off thi•
week. See J>aCe A2.
Shortcut gone, reactions mixed
By~Y SAAVE DRA
Of ... Dellr,... .....
•Residents 1n a Costa Mesa neigh-
borhood arc trading convenience for
safetr after the closure this week of a
subd1v1s1on street u5W as part of a
shortcut from Adams A venue to
Placentia A venue.
Swan Dnve. the last leg of a detour
fo r motorists heading east from
Huntington Beach, has been bar-
ricaded at Placenua.
Roughly 2.000 cars a day were
cum ng 1hrough the Mesa Verde
South tract. mostly to avoid 1he traffic
uush t'"er)' ~edd.i:. morn ing at the to gel here." said ( .1n1illc Bono v.hu
Adams·Placent1a intersection laves about a block from i'he closed
Those motonsts arc now being street
forced back into the rush-hour con-Bono rs not the o nl} one who\
gestaon. And they arc bemg101ned b:r angry. treet signs announcing 1he
neighborhood residents v.ho nov. -v closure ha H been spra~·pa1n1ed red
ha"e lo take the long wa) ou1 of the 1emporar) bamcade\ have been run
1ract. 0' er. and a freshh ·lard concrete curh
Some ~omeov.ners are more than was chapped ·
ha pp) 10 make the 1radc:. bu1 1he .. ..\pparentl} some people obJcct
grumbling gc:ts louder on streets s1rongl) to 1h1s." said Herb Bum ham
clo'ier to the hamcadc. ass1stan1 Cit} trallic engineer.
"lt'c; hom ble for us. I don'1 kno" On the other hand resident Tom
hov. much more gas "e use now dnd Moore c;a1d he wac; tired of 1he lar\
it's harder ex pla1n1ng to people ho" 10om1n11. past his home on ..\lhatrosc;
On\ e :he li~t leg of the detour
·· .\lbatross was lumtng in tu .i drag
stnp." Moore said "The' 1mon,e·
n1ence 1s beuer than ht'1ng impaled b\
a Buick's gnlle a1 I.I o'clock a1 n1gh1
Moore wa~ Onl· of1he rec;1dent5 w h"
lOmplarned w the< II\ ( t'unnl earl\
this \Car aboul the moaonst~ 1um1ng
right off .\dams 10 .\lhatro\:. Dn' e
heading south to Swan Dn'l' and
1hen 1ra"elrng ou t to Platen11a .\\
enue
To a le'S l'r l'\tt'nl the \honl ut \~J'
al .. o used 1n re' rrc;e from Plall'ntra 1,
(Please see SHORTCUT/A2l
LSI\ of Ne wpon Beach will JOtn
Kenned ... Jenks with office's in
If' 1ne. as consulung engi neers on
what as C'Xpected to be a I )-month
project to e"alua1e nme propo5W
sates for a 6.000-bed Jail and forge a
recommenda11on to superv1so~.
The firms an con1unct1on with
-.C\ eral other smaller consulting
groups .... ,11 complete sJle-sc lC<.'t1on
studa~ an~ en' aronmental documen-
tation for the project. at an ant1c1-
pated cost of S28li.OOO
upef' 1~rs have been ...earchmg
for more than three \Cars for an
appwpnah ~("-alrt' 'iiie somev.herC'
1n I rc:r-•tl' ~l tlUn Jr thC' 1.0UOI\
\l.hert" lht'\ l Jll build .i ne v. co unl \
J31 I. neede-J to re Ire' e v' ercrowd10g
'" the main 1a1l in Sa nta .\na
Etlon' to find a su1tahlt' k~at 1on
ha' r met "'1th pol111,.il oppos111on
ln•m h .. imeuv. ner., near '>t'\ era
pr pnseJ '•It'\ and !11n.n.f supel' 1sors
111 tx-grn 1hc "1e-\C."h.-!.l11m pnx C\:.
Jnl'\I. 10 .\UlW\I J 'J 4
Tht' rirm' .i.n l'\IX'l tl·J 1 ' rt·tum
"''th .,lime prt·l1m1 na f\ rt'\1•mmen-
J Jl11•n' on a JJ '>tle 1n ahuut I\ ur
1~11>f'llh'> ....:i1d P.iul (are' Jn did,·
(Pleue 8ee FIRM/A21
Laguna's
schools
weighing
criticisms
OC Supervisors approve
pact for freeway authority
By LISA MAHONEY
Of IM~ Not 118ft
Cnt1c1sm lobbed at U\guna Beach
High School recently by some of its
alumni will be considered when
rcvaewrng educational programs.
schools Supenntendent Ball y Barnes
sa id. But complaints that the school
dad not adequately prepare them for
life at Stanford and Berkeley probably
should be taken with a grain of salt, he
added.
High school teachers and counsel-
ors try to impress on students the
demands of higher education. but the
messa$e "doesn't become something
that 1s real to them unti l they
themselves experience it," Barnes
said.
About 50 members of the class of
1984 responded to a fo llow-up survey
from the school district aski ng them
to rate their high school education
Superintendent Billy Bamea
and descnbe their current endea vors
In wntten comments. more than a
dozen al umna cnt1c1zed Laguna
Beach High School for lem ng Stu·
dents c;kate through classes. prn\ 1d -
ang poor English instruction and not
emphasmng study skills.
A lesser number gave the school
high marks an science and ma1hemat·
1cs and pra15W ind1 v1dua l tcat hers
for their efforts.
(Ple .. e eee SCHOOLS/ A2)
Vote of 3-0 endor ses
chargtng developers
for road constructi on
By JEFF ADLER
Of IN Oe!IJ l'llcK It.fl
The Orange ( ount\ Board lll
uperv1sors 101ncd tour t 1t1c ..
Wednesda) '" appro' 1ng a legal
agreement that e\.l.~ntuall~ v.ill lreate
a regional freewa) authortt\ to go'·
,,m the fi nancing and constructmn ot
the proposed an Joaqu in Hill\
Eastern and Foothill freev.a,
In appro' mg the tv.o J01nt-po .... er\
agreements by a 3-0 'ote. 'iupel' 1<.or.
once again endor;ed the notion of .i
freewa )' plan that .... ,11 aSSt"ss de-
velopers hu1 ld1ng house<; or com·
mercial buildings near 1he frt-e"a''
fres for frttwa)' con tructaon
The dev C'lopment fee!> would P-1'
4 4 percent of the estimated S '4~
mr lhon cost of the 'ian Joaquin Hill'>
Tran!.por1at1 on corridor. "ht\h
~oulJ ,oursc.· through tht "M'lJ
h""Othds and ~"' perll'Ol •t lhr
c:<.um a1eJ $516 m1ll1un I 1•u1htll and
F astern 1ransponJ11un , • 1rnd1'r'
tunher 1nl.rnJ
.\lthough the l••unt• .1ppr.•\l'd 1h,·
Jgreeml'nl\ e,1Jhl1,h1n >! ·hl'
Juthortt\ 11nh i11ur ,, I , till''
1n' oh ell 1n the dl" l'h•prnd\I ll'l'
progra m. ~.in Juan c ..ip1,1r . .in11 'an
( kmentl' I >range .inJ \nJhl'tm
ha' e al<,1\ J ppnn l'd thl' Jll.rt'l ml n"'
( 1t1r<, thJt hJ ' t' 'i:t h Jppr "e thl
JgrC'l'ment ,re.1t1ng •h1· \,1n l,1c1<iu1n
Hill'> Juth1lrll\ Jre l '"1.1 \1 r"a
IPIOC', \.e'-'port EkJ1h Jnd \ant.1
-\na l agunJ Rl'Jlh ~h1,h "'J'"' l'd
w 101n hJ' rc:1elled th1 r1 ·~r.1m
l 1111·' ah.it ha'l' ,,., t11 .lfl'fl"t' 1h1·
c1grt'emc:nt .1nJ tee 'lru, tur1 1111 thr
F1>oth1ll anJ l.1~tnn c 11rnJor
authonl\ rnl ludt• II\ 1M \,1 n1..t .\nJ
1 um n and ) Mba l 1nd.1
l nder the agreC'me n\' tr r lrl·1·"'J\
authonll<"\ "Ould a1ln\t '' ·r hr •t·r
progrJm alquare nght 1•t "J' ..ind
authon11• final 1.ks1 ~n Jn1I , ,1n,1ru,
(Pleue eee FREEWAY I A 2)
Poll s upports
new highway
construc tion
5, PHIL ~'f-.llH:.R\1A!\
Of 1"9 Doily _. l lefl
< tr .in~c ( 11 l rl'\11,k nh .art• hi,•
,11n11n~ m1 'l I '"'1.,i1l'J "tih lhl'H
trl'l'\'d'' JnJ .1 "'-r''"' in~ numlx'r
tx•ltl''r ,,in,tru, 11.•n ,ii nt·w !'\1g.hwa''
'' tht' ,, .ult1•n •h,· c )rangl' l 1•110I\
\ni.uJ "unn ind11..1tc'
l lw rx .ii' 'h mnl ~.1 ll'"Jt•rat'
1\I '•'U 1 lrJng1 ( dllOl\ ~h1,h
1n,lu.h ' 'l'\•p.•n 'fk.i.t lr,1nr Jnd
l .1t1-un.1 !-ka,h ta ' " nc-.. fn'l'\1.3\S
011,rt• th.1 r lhl'il cw111-ht111r' 1n tt'ntral
c ''Jn~, ( uni .,. 'l11 h 1 lud1·, l 11<ita
\k,J .J • '-ii I \I J
R ., .. ' I ·'l "'' 'tJd\ .t•O·
,1 "I ,, I I I ' 1l 'l'drl h1·r..
(PleHe aee POLL/ A2}
Water from tap as safe as a mountain stream
Experts say t h ere are very fe w
water contamination proble ms
By TONY AA VEDRA
OtlMO., .........
An alphabet soup of DB P. T C'I:.. TH Ms and other
chemicals as brewing an pon1ons of Cal1 forn1a's water
supply. But j ust how dangerous and widespread 1s the
contama nataon?
Many thirsty consumers a~n't talona any chance •
abandonana their taps for the guaranteed safety of honled
water.
1 Yet Metropolitan and Oran e County water d1stnct
offi cials say the consumers arc JU t pounna money down
the drain. Aside from a few isolated cases, the tap water
throuahout Southcm \ahfomia is as safe. ta"tY and odor
free as anything comana from the Sparklctts mi n and h1'1
coneaau I\
-·
And ll costs less
"I'm very concerned about people ~pending hun
dredsof dollars a year for bottled water. solel y on th<' hJ'''
off ear," said Mtke McGuu~. water quaht)' managl'r tor
Metropol11an Water D1stnct 1n Los Al\geles.
"Contamination problems art sattered and l nn
fined to small areas." said McG ui re. chief them 1st tor 1ht•
wholesaJe company that channels water to dastnct an "'
southland counties.
"But people arc generally c;kept1cal of the govern·
mcnt a(ld they've r'C<."Caved a lot of prt ·~ that ~uppons
them." he protested.
Newspaper headhncc; wnm ot organic \OlvC'nt\
~1son1na around water an lhc ~n C5abnel .ind Santa
O ara valleys Morr stone 1ell of the fum1sa nt
dibromochloropropane (D BCP) and e1hyhne hyt'>rom rdc
(E08) contaminating dnnlina ~upphes in the San
Joaquin Valley
McOuan: conceded that MWO wa~ having prohltm\
clos"'a the fl oodgate on the bad pubhcat~
t least half1hc litt'attr u~d bv I' million pc-oplc from
\ C'ntura 10 thC' M<'\l<.:U n harder come' lrtlm thr d1• . .ir1l t
ThC' amponed ""1ltC'r rs u~ to \upplrmrnt I01.·al v. 1·11,
which arc morl' cual" contaminated 1han th<" '\at mmrn
10. San Joaquin nd ( oloraJo 0 \ t'I"\ \Upfll\ IO~ .... -1~ () .... \'
McGu1rt
With the gnt.,.,th nt andu~tf) tOm<'" tht· pott•n11.1J ""
l'hem1cal 'Pall\ .md other mishap\ 1h 1 1..1n J"ll'lnn lhl'
around water 'i<l tar polluuon ha~ no1 \r t ... ~en .1
foothold on tM v.a&er wpph 1n Onlnttt" < ounh tt n ""'" re lat1Hh nt"v. to 1n1lu\tnal .... a~t('s
..
Fourth of a 1erle1 o n water auppll••
Oa\l' .\rgo ot tht· n ranllt' 1 t•11n 1' ".111·1 l>l\tnn t\
hOfll'fUI 11 nt'\ l'f "I'll
• '°K' far "l' hin t•n t uno" ca·.I t1l41 rum h ti hl ~nmrd
al'\\lUI .. "1td \rg11 t h rd ('"l~lnt't'I "'' 1h1• J(lt'n .. ' tha t
m1,n1t<H' rough I\ I tlllll < 'rJn(lt' l PU Ill' dnnl rnjl .\nd
lm[l.Jtllln W(.'11\
l h1v.r,t'r h<' n11ird a'' noo ll•lllnn )l..l't hnc 'J"ll that
d(1'<.'d thrt'<: .\nohl'1m "rll\ an 11.1x: ant! .i J'>(l1\t,nou'
Ct•n•t"ntraunn ot chrnHl .11 \oh t•nt' l1nsnJ rn t'ntl\ in
~imr 11' in<' 1mgn11on """' Tht prnhlrm' ht' \J\\ .trr unJt'r u1n1rol Ru t h..-
,on,t'dt'\ that \l.hC'n .l wrll "r1nllutC'\I rcgardlt"\\ of II\
IO\nt1nn and ""hrtht'r ,,., u~ h1r .. 1nnl 1n(l llr ....,atrnn&
Irma ~·an<i -11 'ml' the rcputa11un of tap "'altr
throughou t the 'l<lll'
( on\tdt"r thal \mC'm·an' \pcn,t <4hOut \ "'OO m1lhon
.innuall\ on bottled \\J.ter Mom1' ei. Lo~ <\naclec;. n
(Pleue eee WATiR/A 7 )
~
-1
.
I I
Al * OranQ9 CoN1 DAILY PllOT/Thurlday, September 26, 198&
Fowl play fingers footloose
flier after sleepless nights
Newport macaw fancier finally learns
never to send a man to do a bird's job
atop the tree aU day Tuesday, tbco
Oew away when Collins took a break
from his viail.
"I hadn't slept in 39 hou'1, and I
went home to take a shower. l was
only ione 20 minutes, and he was
gone, Collins said.
By SUSAN HOWLETT
o-... ~ ........
Paa Collins tned e"Cf'Y'lu na -~
even called tbt firt deparunt"n\.
But the JS-~car-old Ne•l'lf\ ~"b
owner of a macav. \hat ()to. \bt \'\.W
$µnday learned m lbr end \hat buds
of a feather flock t ~ •
Collins said he OC''ft' t.bouabt
Rocky, his blue--and-.o'd ~' p&l'T'Ol.
"'Ould fly awa} Dunng ~ fi,-e )UTS
Collins bas ov.'lled h.im, Rock> basn•t
C\ICD tried
But Rock) IC'ited tus V.'llllS Unda)'
J.l tbe 13th Strttt park on the Balboa
Peninsula. Co1J1ns s~nt almost four
$leepless days and nights trying to
eatch his pet before Rocky was lured
back to bis cage by a pau of fellow
fowls llircd to coax him out of a tree.
"I never thought he would fly away,
but he got spooked," Collins said.
Confused and probably dismayed
by the situation he had gotten himself
into. th~ 1,800 biro roosted on a
µulity pole in an alley between 12th
&.Dd l )lb IU°ee'\S S~oday.
.. .tk mJed there aU ni&bt because
br dida"t bow wbat to cfo." Collins
Slid. \\'luk Rocky roosted. Collins ixd 1n IM alley. watcbina bls pet
•t~ l1w tall ~ and U"Yina to Wk
tumdo .. "ft.
ympat.bt"tK' rui<knts watched the
e'naw in fulilit) and brouaht ooffcc
so C'olliiii' could keep an eye on
Rock}. ··tt was really neat to sec aU the
people come out aod brina me coffee
and clolbe:s and stuff." Collins said.
.. All l bad on was a pair of sbons."
Wortcn from the f.diso11 Co. tried
Monday to come to the rescue, ridina
to the top of the power pole in a cherry
packu. But Rocky was fri&htened
away apin., this time Oappina bis
oOVlOC wings toward Bay lsland, a
private community off the peninsula.
Rocky perched a toe a tall pine tree
and watched as the fire department
tried tocome 12 l!Krescue.
"He was so ~. there just was no
way," Collins sa1d. Rocky rema.ined
But Collins didn't Jive up. He
searched the area until 1t was almost
too dark to see. He was about to call it
quits Tuesday niaht when he saw
Rocky fly by.
The real heroes -o r real macaws
-so to speak -were put on the case
Tuesday b)' the infamous Bird man of
Newpon after Rocky was spotted in a
tree near the Balboa branch of the
Newpon Beach Public Library.
Collins and the Birdman, Siu
Meinschein, put two Rocky look-
alikes in the wayward bird's cage
Wednesday morning. The squawking
of Meinschein's parrots of the same
persuasion caught Rocky's attention.
"It was his (Meinschein's) birds
that talked him down," Collins said.
Collins, an independent sales rep-
resentative, said h1s life was brought
backJ.onormal aft.er Aocky wuhomc
once again. "I'm just glad to have him
back.," Collins said.
-FREEWAY AUTHORITY ENDORSED •••
From Al
uon of the freeways. The authonties
would be dissolved once the new
freeways arc accepted into the st.ate
hi~way system.
'These agreements represent one
'of the greatest cooperattve efforts in
the history of the county," board
Chauman Thomas Riley said before
the board's unanimous vote. "I
llclieve the key element of these ~ments is the opportunity for all
'.,,anies to share in the decision-
making process on an equitable
basis."
Supervisor Bruce Nestande, who
left the meeting before the vote was
taken, called the program the "most
important thing t .. county has done .
to square with and meet development
in county."
Supervisor Harriett Wieder was
absent in observance of the Jewish
Yorn Kippur holiday.
In approving the qreements, how-
ever, su~n postponed for one
week actJon that would revise the fees
developers actually would pay for
freeway development. The delay was
forced because of an error in postjog
notice of the board's proposed action. ·
Supervisors arc expected to a~
prove the revised fee structure, wrucb
would create zones of benefit in areas
near the proposed freeway, next
week.
If apprQved. developers near the
San Joaquin Hills Transportation
Corridor would be charged$ t ,305 for
every sinale-family home they build
in areas closest to the freeway while
those built farther away would cost St.GU>. For the Foothill and Eastern
Corridors the charges for single-
family homes would be $I ,295 and
$920 respectively.
Commercial propeny in areas adja-
cent to the San Joaquin Hills Corridor
would be assessed at a SI. 75-per-
~uare·foot rate while buildings in the
second zone would be assessed a $1.30-~r-square-foot fee. For the
Foothall and Eastern Corridor the fees
would be S 1.80 and $1 .05-per-squarc-
foot respectively.
·POLL FAVORS NEWHIGHW AYS •••
From Al
Were released this week. The survey,
which has a 3 percent error margin,
Involved telephone 1nterv1ews in
June with 1,008 adults Orange Coun-
ty residents selected at random.
When the poll was first conducted
in 1982, 32 percent of the respondents
said they were satisfied wtth the
freeway system.
In the 1985 survey, only 18 percent
said they were satisfied.
Survey panicipants were polled
concernmg solutions to the freeway
problems.
Eighty-six percent said it was a
··good idea" for employers to offer
:jiicentives to workers who travel to
.ud from work by car.pool. .,~ When new freeways lanes for buses
and car pools' were suggested, 69
percent of the respondents supported
rhe proposal.
But few residents -only I 7
percent -laked the idea of toll roads
for new freeways. Such highways.
common in the East and Midwest.
require motonsts to pay fees accord-
ing to how far they travel on the toll
.road. The fees help pay for highway
maintenance and improvements.
Orange County residents expressed
more support for the concept of
developer fees, in which builders of
new homes and businesses in the
areas that would be served by the new
freeways arc charged assessments.
Orange County supervisors and
many of the county's business leaders
have supported the idea since last
year's defeat of Proposition A, which
would have raised the sales tax to help
pay for transportation improve-
ments.
But the developer fee plan bas its
critics, partiClllarfy in ICTin~ a arow-
ing city where many of the fe.:es would
be collected.
The critics say the proposed fees
will simply be passed on to con-
sumers as higher prices for homes.
goods and services. They also claim
the fees will simply promote m ore
development without relieving exist-
ing freeway congestion.
But supporters say the develo~
mcnt will happen anyway. They
claim the freeways arc needed to keep
traffic off local streets.
In the UCI survey, 56 percent of the
respondents favored developer fees
for new freeways.
Breaking down the parucipants by
region, however, the researchers
found differences in attitudes toward
the transportation issues.
Construction of new freeways was
favored by 43 percent of those who
live or work in the south county, and
developer fees were backed by 61
percent. Jn the central county, 33
percent favored new freeways, while
48 percent supponcd developer fees.
Since the survey was launched in 1982. support for new freeways has
been growrng, except for I 984. Survey
director Mark Baldassare said the
1984 drop was probably associated
with a backlash from the Proposition
A campaign.
Baldassare said freeway congestion
wilJ probably contribute to the grow-
ing fragmentation of Orange County
that was uncovered by the 1985
survey. He said commuting problems
will prompt more south county
residents to try to find jobs closer to
their homes.
FIRM HIRED TO SCOUT JAIL SITES ..•
From Al
board Chairman Thomas Riley.
Carey added that the engineering
firms would review but not necess-
arily accept the conclusions reached
by the county task force in previo us
si le-selection st ud1es.
Nine remote areas of eastern and
southeastern Orange County current-
ly arc considered candidate sites for
the new jail. They arc: Black Star
Canyon in the eastern county; Prima
Dcsecha cast of San Oemente; Pico,
adjacent to the Prima Desccha site;
Trabuco Creek, just east of San Juan
Ca(>istrano; Irvine Lake east of
lrvtnc; Rancho Lomas, in eastern
Orange County; and Santiago.
Gypsum and Coal canyons. all in
remote eastern portions of the coun-
ty.
SCHOOLS WEIGHING 'BAD REVIEWS' ...
From Al
"Sometimes what happens 1s, 1t
• takes a year .to gel away and then 11
becomes easier to say, ·1 think you
guys should have been tougher on
me,' " Barnes said.
However, student co mments can-
not be d1sm1ssed, he said. "I can
assure you there wtll be a lot of high
school English teachers who wlll want
to address their comments in a very
positive way," Barnes said.
The Laguna Beach Unified School
D1stnct has sought graduate o pinions
on the high school program for
several years. Observations from
araduates are helpful in refining
pr0W11ms, accordin1t to Barnes. "We
Just Call
642-6086
O•llJ Pttot
O.Uvery
ta Ou•r.nfHd
1.1<-1 I ,..,.y II .,0.. 00 ... ~ ...... "°"' Plllle' °" !I lOc rn c ... o.to<e Tom
think it's valuable," he said.
And graduates' critJcism of the
English curriculum is not entirely off
base, he said. "It is a problem that is
facing us and i.a a costly problem to
solve."
Teaching students to write well
poses difficulties for school districts
because of class size, Barnes said.
Teachers usually instruct fi ve classes
of 30 students each a day and it is too
time<0nsuming for them to regularly
correct I 50 papen, he said.
"In the last seven years we have had
to cut S2 million o ut of an $8 million
budget. We have not had the re-
sources 1n order to adequately staff
our high schools and middle schools
in order to lower class sizes and
increase writing assignments. It's
kind of a Catch-22, •• Barnes said.
Laguna Beach schools arc piloting
an effcct1vc Schools program this
year that may help improve student
achievement. the superintendent
said.
The three Rs plus four other basic
subject areas at the high school will
also be scrutinized during the next
three years to see if they comply with
state-approved cumculum, Barnes
said.
The hj&h school teachers and
parents wiD be lookmg carefully at the
h.igh school program, he said
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Marketing Olttclm
Peggy 8tevlne
c1a~c.1futd 0lll'('f0r
VOL 78,N0.219
( l
Sprinkles may splatter the Coast
Cloud• from a low preuur• area off 1he coast wlll t>rlno a dianc. of eprlnki.& to Southern Calll0tnla tonight and Friday,
the National Weather Service nld.
The low preaaur• area waa centered &oo mu .. off the coaat
eartytoday and waa moving tutward. The wtathtr servrce aald
relnfall amount• from the eyttem would a'* age anywhtt• from
a trace up to .15 of an Inch. Temperatur .. wlll be cooler, with
hlgha at th• beeches from 68 to 73 Friday and 72 to 78 In th•
Inland vatleyt. O,,.,nlght Iowa wlll be In the 601
Along the Orange Coul It wlll be partly Cloudy through
Frldey. Sfight chance of aprlnktea Of fight showers tonight and
Friday. Low• tonight 60 to 86. Highs Friday at beachea 88 to 73
and Inland valleys 72 to 76.
U.S. Temps 64 311 1111 4t
113 t7 64 52
77 5t
112 53 ,,. 73
54 411
52 ~ 64 ~
84 71
75 ~· 74 1111 1111 47 5t )6
19 73
76 57
1111 73 ee 52
73 44
82 &a 75 52
70 Sii
•11 211 8 1 43
72 68
eo •• ., ea .,
84 M 80 76 711 51
.. 54 ee 411 ea 37 ee 44
113 M
72 72
111 111 111 40
.. 48
l!JJ!Jh.. &\. ~-~ l'"OHTI. '11.9~ ~ ~ We1m -ColO.-.
Sl"IOwe1a Aain n_,m.. Snow Occluded ~ St1lt01\try Ay
HOCNI W .. -~· lol()M US 09ol O' C-ce
Calli. Temps SenJoM
latlllAM
latlUI CNz a.tile M•le
"'9DAY
11 eo 17 1111
70 52 .. 66
em ....,.
24 , ...
2-3 11111 2-3 ,..,
24 ,..,
2-3 ,..,
h2 poor
PoOr
1' 51
3'08 •"' IULm.
Extended
3:12 p "'· 11:11 p.m
0.0 u 1 2 u
Sun Mt• toctey 11 1·44 p.m .. rllel Fl'leley
81 1.44 a.tn end Wll IQlllll 11 1:43 p lft
Moon r1eel IOCl9y M 1:00 P lft., Mb F rtdly II 4 24 Lm end ,._. lglll'I II
l:lt p.m.
Rebel kidnappers contact Duarte
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador
(AP) -Rebels claiming 10 hold the
daughter of President Jose Napoleon
Duarte apparently made contacl with
the Salvadoran leader a$8in, a day
after they reponedly imposed. a
deadline for the release of34 rebe1s.
Wednesday the Associated Press
monitored 30 minutes of faint trans-
missions. which jumped across sev-
eral short-wa ve frequencies. One
voice identified itself as "The Pedro
Pabl0Cast1ll0Command," wh!l'h hal)
claimed respons1b1hty for the Sept. I IJ
kidnapping of lnel) Guadal upe
Duane Duran. 35, a nd a woman
friend.
Another voice. which 1dent1fied
itself by the code name of "Jupiter."
sounded like Duane's.
The voice said, "We have not heard
COAST OIL ...
From-Al ' Hodel rejected would have permitted
leasing in 150 tracts c urrently
protected by the moratonum. Six of
the tracts were located off the coast of
Orange County. No leasing wo uld
have been perm m ed in 1he remainder
of the protected areas until the year
2000.
Members of the Califo rnia del-
ega11on introduced a bill Sept. 19
which would implement 1hat July
agreement and 1t was referred to the
House lntenor Committee. Cali-
fornia Senators Alan Cranston and
Pete Wilson introduced 1dcnt1cal
legislation the same day.
the message of Ines Guadalupe, nor
have we received parts of the com-
munique. please repeat to make sure
we have not lost part of the messaae ...
If 1herc wa!> a message from Mrs.
Duarte Duran, 11 could not be beard
through the whine of the weak radio
signal.
The rebel broadcaster said, "In
relatron to our disappeared comrades
there 1s clear evidence that they were
captured by the secunty forces and
the arm) .. We demand an expla-
nation for each of our missing
comrades."
Sources have said the government
only has in custody 22 of the 34
people sought by the rebels.
A voice from the iovcrnment side
said, "We are seeking more infor-
mation to find out who is here and
who is not.'' an apparent reference to
the jailed rebels.
-The government has talked to the
rebels via a Red Cross-supplied radio,
and expressed willingness to nego-
tiate. But government sources said
Duarte also wanted several kid-
napped mayors to be included.
Mrs. Duarte Duran, the oldest of
the president's six children. is
divorced and the mother of two.
AID WITHOUT FANFARE •••
From Al
Victor Subia
Other local officials arc trying to get
flashlights, pry bars and other tools
re uested by Subia
~-~"'~ wbo_was.bom in Los Angeles
and has relatives in Mexico. has made
frequent visits to that country.
He's worked closely with Meucan
firefighters to ho.Ip implement mod-
em proceedures. according to the
chief, and has appeared on Mexican
na1ional television in that endeavor.
Subia, who's been with the Hunt-
ington Beach Fire Department since
I 968, is commandt'r of o ne of city's
hazardous materials teams. He is a
past wtnner of the depar1p1ent's
award ofment.
"This is typical of Vic," Picard
said. "He's always been a leader who
talccs charge without tall<lng about
It."
SHORTCUT BLOCKED IN MESA ...
From Al /
Adams.
After conducting several hcanngs
and polling residents, the council
voted in Apnl to plug the shortcut at
Swan and Placentia. '
On Monday, small sawhori.es with
flashing lights and a few larger
barriers were placed acrosl) the street,
while work began on the $5,600
barricade by DcAnno nd Construc-
tion Co.
The fi nal hamcr. to be completed will be able to cross the barricade, but
rn the next few weeks. wtll consist of a "99 percent" of the traffic will be
few trees planted o n a 6-1nch high discouraged from taking the shoncut.
curb. A cleari n$ will be provided for City engineers monitoring the traf-
emcrgcncy vehicle~. fie crush on Adams Avenue the past
"The curh won't be high enough to thr~e mornings noticed that can from
stop a large fire trut k. but a standard within the residential tract were now
tar won't d n vc over 11. unless you're adding to the congestion. But
w1lhng to scrape pans and axles," Burnham said it was too early to
Burnham said. gauge the degree of the impact on
He conceded any off-road vehicle traffic.
.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
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•
LBULLETIN BOARD Citizen UCI discussion set
on county survey
~-----ii
A T~c J.tnphcataons of the 1985 Orange County
nnu Survey. an o~go1n.a . anaJy~is of count~
den:iograph1es and pu~ltc opinion, will be reviewed ~ur:inga panel d1scuss1on Tuesday al?: IS a.m. in the
niversny Club on the UC Irvine campus.
Dr. Mark Bal~ssarc, associate professor of
SOC1aJ eoology and director of the survey will lead
the program, presenting a summary of the survey
finds. an~ what they mean to the community. The
meetmg.1s open to the public at S 12 a person, and
reservations may be obtained by ca11ing 856-79950.
Opera p r ogram• offer ed
Irvine Valley College as offering three opera
prog(ams this fall in the college's Forum Theater.
The performances will be held Sunday, Oct. 27 and Nov. 24, all at 2 p.m.
Wendell Phillips, former singer and opera
mus1colOJ1St, 1\ directing the special performances.
The cost as SS for general admission or $4 for groups
of five or more. Call the college's community servac~s dcpa~mcnt at 559-1313 or 559-3333 for more information.
Democr ats plan barbecue
David Stein, Democratic National Committee ~~and promrnent Orangc-Geunty-E>cmoerato
will discuss national issues and candidates at a
barbequc for local Democrats Sunday.
The picnic, sponsored by the South Orange
County Dcmocratac Club. will be held from I to 5 p.~. at .Rancho Mission Viejo, 28811 Ortega
Highway 1n San Juan Capistrano. The cost is $5 for
adults and S2 for children with further information
available at 240-8665.
Teachlng work•hop ln Mea
. Effective su~stilute teaching will be the topic of
a SIA-hour seminar scheduled Monday by the
Orange County Dcpanment of Education from 8:30
a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
The workshop, tailored to meet the needs of the
elementary substitute teacher, will be held in Rooms
Cl022-24 of the depanment's facility 200 KA!mus
Drive, Costa Mesa. There is a S30 fee and
reservations may be obtained by caJhng Fred Lange
at 966-4383.
WbeelclJalr marathon set
-Tuesday's Handicapped Awareness Day at
Irvine Valley College will feature a barbecue and
wheelchair marathon. with proceeds going to the
Rick Pfost Fund. Pfost. a student of the college, lost
all his possessions in a recent fire which gutted his
apartment.
The barbecue, co-sponsored by the Associated
Students, is scheduled from 11 :30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
Those wishing to sponsor a wheelchair rider may call
the college office of student development at
559-3319.
lrvlne Ebells to meet
The Ebell Club of Irvine, a philanthropic and
community service organization. will meet Tuesday
at 7:30 p.m. at Southern Californfa Savings at Jeffrey
Road and Irvine Center Dnvc in Irvine.
The group will discuss its major fundraiser. the
Share 0-ur Smiles auction scheduled for Oct. 6 at
Heritage Park in lrvmc.
Women'• network meet.
The newly formed Newpon-Costa Mesa
chaP.ter of the Women's Business Network of
Caltfomia will conduct a luncheon meeting Tuesday
at the Golden Truffle Restaurant.
The event is scheduled for 11 :30 a.m. Those
interested in attending should c.all Melve at
496-6627 or Pat at 642-323 I.
Divorce recovery offered
A divorce recovc7 workshop is being con-
ducted by St. Andrews Presbyterian Church in
Ncwpon Beach for divorced and separated people of
all ages. meeting Thursday evenings through Oct.
24.
The Rev. Bill Flanagan is conducting the
sessions at 7:30 p.m. in D1erenfield Hall at the
church, 600 St. Andrew's Road at I Sth Street. Call
631 -2885 for informauon
Thuraday. Sept. 26
No meetln&• 1cbedaled
PoucE Loe
Scouting for mcouta
.A 'peen fot' la MCkin& In Ora.nee CoUJlty u the
Girl Scoata hold a coantywlde membenhlp 4rl•e .
P'oUJltain Valley mcoata Chelaea Jordan, Chandra
J ordan, lllMy Jonee, Amber DoaClu, J enn.lfer
German, Cher Scholz and Aahlle Scholz (from left)
d.laplay the banner they ralHd to commemorate the
two-week drl•e at Mlle Square Park ln Foanta.ln
Valley. The drl•e contlnuea throach Oct. 4 .
7percentincrease
in UCI enrollment
straining spaces
Chancellor's ex pectin
new scien ce building.
more construction soon
By ROBERT HY NDMAN
Ol lMOellr .........
When classes resume Fnday at UC
Irvine, uoiversily officials wtll be faced
with the continuing problem of finding
adequate space for a student population
that has grown by 7 percent over last year.
An estimated 13.600 students wul
attend UCI this fall . Chancellor Jack
Pella.son said Wednesday. The increase i~
far above the 2 percent growth UCI
administrators have been hmatang enrol-
lment lo in recent years and makes this
year's student population the highest in the
university's 20-year history.
"We're pushing lo the outer hm1ts wtth
the space we have, but we anl1'eipatc more
construction in the near future,.!' Pcltason
said at a breakfast meeting with members
of the local media.
A $30 m1lhon physical sciences build-
ing. for example. as expected to be
completed by the time lhis fall's incoming
freshmen become seniors. Other buildings
arc being planned whale funds are being
sought.
Mcanwhale, UCI administrators have
been resourceful in finding adequate space
for the un1vcrsny's growing enrollment.
Pcltason said.
Large lecture classes meet 1n the 3 70-seat
theater at the Edwards Cinema complex
across lhc street from lhe UCI campus.
Earlier this . year. Commerce Bank
donated a 3.000-squarc-foot building
which was remodeled to house thret
classrooms and relocated in A trailer
complex on campus
A second temporary building,
'
purchased by the university, sits across the
campus from the Humaniucs Office
Building and contains seminar rooms and
offices.
In addition, two 60-scat classrooms and
a 200-seat classroom will be ready for
computer science and cngmcering stu·
dents tn October.
But finding classroom space of\en 1s the
easy pan. Pcltason saad. The uni versity
also must build office space and labora-
tones for faculty members; dorm1toncs,
lounJCS and study areas for students, and
faciltttes to house a growing cultural ans
program.
This year's freshman class represents a
diverse group. UCI officials say Accord-
ina to the admissions office. the class is 52
percent Caucasian, 34 percent Asian. 8
percent Hispanic and 6 perc"Cnt black.
Pcltason said the uni versity intends 10
.. take advantage of the cosmopolitan mix
of the students.
.. Wt' want to ma1nta1n and improve the
quality of life on campus for under-
-graduates and take ad vantage of the
diversity," he said ... Pan of 1ha1 1s the
improvement of the 24-hour campus so
there arc plcnt} of act1v1t1cs going on.··
Currently. one-lhtrd of UCTs students
live on campus. onc-lhtrd hve close h)' in
other housing and the other third hve with
their parents and commulc. c;a1d Wilham
Parker, assistant exccu11ve 'ace
chancellor
UCI as becoming more attracuvc 10 high
school senio~ In lhe past ~"cral )Cars
about 3 percent of Orange Count) 's
graduating high school seniors choSt' to
attend UCI. Parker said Thal percentage
has increased this year 10 about 4 5
percent.
Statewide. 12 5 percent of high S("hool
St'niors arc academically chg1blc to attend
one of the Un1ver•ntv of (aliforn1a's nine
Chancellor J ack Pel taaon
campus<"s. ~~en peTlcnl of the graduates
actuall v do enroll a1 a l "<. campu~
Whtie L'CI 1s bus~ attracting studt>nt\
adm1n1strator'> also are bus} recru1t1ng
fa culty members at a rate of 30 to 40 a~ car
Faculty recruitment. Peltason said.··,.., the
most 1mponant thing v.e 're doing here ··
The chanccllorsaad lacult' memhcrsarr
att racted to L'CI b~ the orPonun1t} 10
work in the forefront of their ficldi. of
e\pert1St' as well as the challengt' of helping
the uni\Crs1t~ gro'-'
The hagh cost ofh, ang an Orange ( ounl\
often acts as a deterrent. but Peltason said
those obstacles arc often o' errnme '-'hen
prospt-cttve facult~ member-; are tn·
troduced to the fa' orabk damatc.-1n
Southern Cahfom1a
··we bnng them out here an Januan un a
da) l1"e this then apologue for lht'
weather:· Peltao;on \Std That u<,ualh
does 11 ··
operated laundn ' . .
cited for
aidingin-
capture
By STEVE MARBLE
Of ... 0.-,,... .....
A Westminster man who helped Costa
Mesa police solve a buralarY by stallina
two men who tried to sell him stolen
property was honored t.hts month by the
Cahfornia Rental Association.
David Lee. a contractor. was credlted
with helping pohce capture two men wbo
stoic nearly SS,000 worth of equipmcn1
from Cnssman's Rentals in Costa Meu
last Apnl.
PoUcc said Lee was approached the da}
after the burglary by two men who offered
htm a "&J'Cat deaJ'' on the stolen propetty,
which bad markings from the rental yard.
Lee called the Costa Mesa renta1
company and then stalled the suspects until policu.rriL"1.._ ____ _
.. I thou&ht 1t was pretty courqcous of
him," saad Dean Crissman, owner of the
rental lot. "hjust shows that when people
get involved we can combat crime.'
The California Rental Association.
which rcprescn ls about 1,200 buaioeues ~
the state, gave Lee a check for SSOO and a
plaque during recent c.crcmonies in Los
Angeles.
"'Theft is a lremendous problem in lhc
rental business and when someone like
David Lee comes along, tt makes you feel
great," said Bruce Evans. exccuuve direc-
tor of the rcntaJ assocation.
Fairview
apartments
approved
Costa Mesa planning comm1ss1oners
this week approved a subd1vis1on for
phase two of a 550-urut apartment com·
plcx at Fairview state mental hospital.
The tract map, for 406 low-rent apan -
ments. must still be brought before the Cit)
Council.
Senior Planner Mt1ce Robinson dc-
scnbed the unanimous vote Monday as
rouune, cxplamang the subdivision was
needed to build the project in phases.
Constructton began last January on the
first 144 low-rcnt apartments on a 54-acrc
sate at lhe northeast comer of the hospn.aJ
grounds
State offiClals arc hopmg the $22 malhon
housing project will help attract and ret.am
workers at the hospttal on Harbor
Boulevard. A. 55-year, rent-free lea~ bas
been given to Fatrvt~ Management, a
corporatton formed b} Butler Housing
Corp and pnvatc investors for tht'
pro pen~
0BITUARlf S
Ire neann Gardner
service today
ura \ t'S1de sen lCe\ '.l.ert' scheduled
toda' for lreneann Gardner of( osta "1esa.
a long11me resident of the cit) v.ho died
"1ond;l) at her home he was 58
Mrs Gardner a secretan formerh
emplo}cd b> Jabsco Pumps. had ll\cd an
Costa \.iesa for the past 30 \cars
She 1s sun1,ed b' her husband Da\'1d
James Gardner and a ron. Da' 1d \\ 1lham
(1ardner both of Costa Mesa. Jo\lso
sunl\10g1shermother Irene K~fcofLos
A.ngelcs
~n ICt'S v.erc to be conducted b\' the
Re' Bruce \1e"'mficld of the Hamor
Tnn1l\ Baptist Church 1n Costa Mesa
Interment was to tollo'-' a1 Pacific Vie"
"1emonal Part.. '-'llh arrangement~ 1n
charge of Pierce Brothers Bell Broadwa\
\fonuan of Costa \.iesa
Hit-run suspect followed
by witness, nabbed in HB
sess1ng narcot1 ts. In a separate 1nn-
dcnt Hollis Anne Hal11da>. 21 . and
Mano [)(I Bello. 21 . were also
arrested on the same charge .\II four
were taken to Orange Count) Jail and
booked.
-1. th1r l \tok a $b5ll .:ar \tl•rcu and
nngwn "\U. on suspicion of dnving
under the intluence of alcohol Har-
nngton v.a' stopped at I 25 a m
Thursda) on Glennc)'re Street
A Huntan~ton Beach woman was
scnously inJured late Wednesday
when she was struck an a crosswalk by
a hit-and-run dnver who was arrested
after being followed by another
motonst.
C)'.nthta Canady. 29. was crossmg
Pacific Coast Highway at Sth Street
about 9:30 p.m. when a man drivina
at a high rate of speed ran a red light
Ca.ta lleaa
A 52-ycar-old resident an the 1000
block of Warren Lane filed an assault
with a dea.dly weapon charge against
one of his nc1Jhbol"$ Tuesday because
his nei&hbor reportedly allowed his
two Doberman pinsccrs to attack ham
and his d<>a-The victim told poli~ he
waswash1nahiscarin the driveway of
hts home when one of his nci&hbors
walked by with his two Dobermans
ofTthc leash. One of the d<>&s ran from
its owner and stan~d attacklna the
v1c11m's dot which was on a chain m
the victim's front yard, accordina to
rcpons. The v1cttm told pohoe when
he tncd to stop the fiaht the owner
pve b1s other dot the "kill" com-
matld resu.lt1~ in it attackina him. He
was able to aet inside has house before
the dot couJd irtjure him. Hts dot had
lo be taken to the Newpon Harbor
Animal Hispit.a.I for treatment. rc-
pons said. • • • Four golf club wonh $80, a
bl lcctban worth SlO and a cu stereo
and struck the pedestnan. according
to police.
A second motonst. 1dcnt1ficd as
John Berry. 36, of Huntington Beach.
followed the hit-and-run driver for
more lhan th ree miles and then
contacted police after the driver
pulled into a mobile home park at
2187 1 Newland Street. police said.
James R. Weeks, 29, ofHuntinaton
.
wonh $300 were reponed stolen
Wednesday from a yellow 1976
Chevrolet Camaro parked in a park-
ing area at 288 1 Bear St. Tuesday
night. In a separate incident. a $60car
stereo was rcponed stolen from a
white 1983 Ford Ranier parked 1n the
lot also Tuesday niaht. • • • Pearl carrinas. valued at SI SO. a
calculator, valued at $36.SO, eiaht
Morpnsilverdollan. valuedat$2SO.
and $300 in cash was rcponed stolen
from a woman's purse while she was
at work last Thursday. Police rtporu
u1d the purse had been left unat-
tended an a dcst drawer at the lame of
·the theft. • • • • A told Mercedes key chain valued
at S 1.192 was rcponed stolen from a
Mercedes dealer at 2600 Harbor
Blvd. Tunday while the victim was
havina the car rcpai(ed.
l'f ewport Beach
A $600 c.u \lereo wu rcponed
stolen Tucsdav from <t blue l ovot.a
Beach was subsequent!) arrested on
suspicion of felony hat-and-run dnv-
1ng and susp1c1on of dnvrng under the
influence ofalcohol. pohcc said. He ts
being held at the City Jail in heu of
$10,000 bail.
Canady suffered a fractured pelvis
and head injuries an the anc1dcnt he
as bein.g treated at Fountain Valle)
Regional Hospital.
Celica parked · at the comer of East
Bay and 6th Streets. • • • Officials at Sails Development Co.
reported Wednesday that someone
stoic 1 112 telephone poles from one of
lhc company's constuct1on site!> at
Sundance a.nd I 9th Street. The loss
was estimated at $75. • • • A SSOO meat slicer was rtponcd
stolen WednC1day from the Five
Crowns Restaurant. 3801 East Coasl
H1Jhway
I
ll"Ylne \
A car \t~ worth more than $400
was reported stolen from a vehicle
parked 1n a lot at 3H3 Mi chelson
Dnve Wednesday • • • J(IWclry valued at $2,000 wac;
rcponcd stolen from a home '&Iona
Aqstone Wcdncsda\' . . ' Frcdenck Char1C1 Acuna. I . and
Robert AllCTI Sampson. 24. were
am<ilcd at UOO Irvine C'tntcr Dnvr
W~ne\dav o n \\1Sp1c1on of po\·
-------~~--~---~----~,~--~~~~~--~~~~~~
dad $ )00 J.i m.igt' lo the.-'-' m1.hno. ot a
'-'hate IQt\J \'u~,v.agrn lt>n\ertthlt"
parl..ed in th1 I ill OP hhl\." ol
BrnClkhur\I \1n·1·1 th~· \ 11.t1m told
Hu ntinSton Beach polale Tue,d,1\
frwelry valued at SI ,9SOand S 'Din Sou th County
cash were reported stolen from a -1. mu,talh•ned mJn '-'llh sand'
home an the 9800 block of Mam-blond hair Jr,nC' tnll' a La una Hill<,
mouth Wednesda} Polt ce rcpom hell sen ••t" 'tdll<'n ~' 38 Lake
said the thief also ransacked the-Forrest pumped 211" gallons ol hou~. g.i~hne and ,I•" t• l'llT '4llhl1ut
• • • pa) ang ~ edne..J,I\ allemoon -T ht' Someone reportedly stoic a ..-.allet ga<.\\a~ ,.ilued at ~:'ti containing S 120 1n cash from the •••
bedroom of a home 1n the ~00 bkx·~ \ ~I It • .ii. ul.\I• r .rnd .\ S 1 I.If II 1
of 6th Slr«t Wcdn'csda) t'lectnl 1q'll·" ntl·r <'J'll'nl'd" werC'
• • • ~tolC'n lwm .111 I l ''"' homC' 1n thr A S200 camera wa\ reponed ~tolen ~2QOO hh-... i.. "' Rn.trd•itt iht• \I\ 11111 from a burg~nd> 1981 1 o'ota (or-told poltn· l IH"'•1.i\ olla parked an an Alpha Beta super-•••
market lot. 6700 Warner .\'e. · Orangt' < 1'un1' \hentf., ,kpu11e\
Wedncsda)' mornan\ conli5'ated t"''' nam· in .. h nunJUtrna
• • plant~ fn"lm tht• h.h ~ \Jr\I nt a South
A resident an the 6600 bloc!.. ot Laguna hnnll in th(' 'lll<IKI hlud. '''
Halifax reported Wedne'lda) that Pacific ( 11.\,1 High" a' 1 UC'"4.1a\
someone stole his 1benan husk) morning
which was chained up 1n h1\ had L n-b yard &CUD• u.:&c
• • • Poh~e arrc\trd lkrn.uJ Pctt"r H.H Coan~ totaling SI, I 00 wen.· rt'·
• • • ..\ pur<,e v.a' tal..en from an un
locked 'Chick parked \\edncsda'
afternoon near Poplar trttt and
(,pres\ Dn\C the' 1ct1m told poh\.e
The los<. "'as e'i11ma1ed at S:'.!30 • • • The' 1cum ofa Tuesda' robben on
Boat C an~on Dn't told pohcc. lh<"
su .. J)C<"t ~ho is lr.nov.n b' the \lcttm
toolr. s.: 000 1n a ~u1tcase · o weapon
v.as u~d • • • .\ ha!.~ guitar 'aluC'd a1 StiOC.1 wa\
~!Olen T ue'lda' on from a South ( oa,1
H1ghwa' location the '1ctim tilld police • • • Repon .. of a prov. IC'r toolr. pol1 .. c:
out to a Blue~1rd l an\ on [)nve home
earl\ Tuc'lda' Offi.:C'r\ determined
thl• \u$p1c1ou\ nu1ses on th<" roof wen-
nN tho~ of a prowlt"r h(l '-'fvet. t\ut th.lt _..,,a r:llu)()n • • • .\ \ •"•ng \tatul" \3lu<'d at Sti~ v.a'
\l<,lt'n lr0m .1 ~outh < uast H1ghw;n
tiu<.in<'"' tht• \ 101m told PQlt(C' 1 ut'\da~ at)cm1"1<)n
ported stolen from a car wash at <N~:?
oameld t Wednesday Deputy preve n t s s urf s u icid e
P'oUJltaln Valley
Cash totahna S '8 and JC''-'tll"\
valued at$ I ,97S "ere rcrone \tolen
from a home 1n tht I~ I 00 hlod. of
ytvan R1\.er \'.cdne~' Poh<'t
~ports '-11d tht' thief ptne-d cntf')
throuaJ'I an u1»ta1'1 blkon\' nd left
throuih tht front door • • • A Hunttnaton Beach re 1dtn1 rt
poncd Wcdnesda> that a tAll blond
haired man commmed a lt111·d It t 1n
front of her while he wa do1na het
laundr\ it a G1r1icld A venue l01n
\ shcn fT\ deput' '-' h1> pullt'd 1111
ht~ uniform and d1' t'd intn tht' 'ur1 ul)
\unset tk.ach latt' \.\ t>dnesJa, I\ bean~
credited v. ith helping \a\(' tht' lite <1f a
man who appartnth tned to dro'-' n
tum~lf
Ocput} Richard Ham\ ..-.a<i. <i.um
moned to a hca<'hfmnt "'oltl
WC'dnesda) r"enina after a 2~ \Ur
old man contallt>d poh<'<' and \l1<1 he
WI\\ amna to lr.111 htm\('lf On1nge
( ount) \ht•r1fr, 1 1 [)u, l OI'"" '31d
\\hen tfom, <im' N h<' J".
~"\' <"rt"J th<" man·, motel room ""'"
C'mpt' Ham., w;allC\1 onto tht' Mach
"here h~ '-i"' il pcrr,on na.ihna 1n the
\Ur1 Ol\On '\.&td
Ham~ loolr. ofl h" uniform. dt'ttl
into the 0<.t"an and '"Im after thr
man who rTporttdl~ tned to fi&ttt ofl
Ham\ and a \talt hftauard who had
h«n c~lled to th.e 'JC'Cne
The man was brou&ht h9rk 10 ~horr
nd taken to l "' o\fam110~ Gcnm11
Ho pllal, when-ht' ~'Ill he ht'ld for n
hour\ for oh~f'-ah<>n
"
· 1
A4 * Ofenoe Coeat DAILY PU .. OTIThurectay, September 28, 1985
Lottery
ge.tsa
jump in
SF store
Stat~ to suspend-
grocer' s license
for starting early
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The first
tjckeu of the state lonery were sold
illeplly eight days before the official
kickoff by a San Francisco merchant
who called it a "ripoff' for the
playen.
The ..first unofficial winner
Wednesday was John Coleman. 37,of
Novato in Marin County. He woo $5
on a $1 instant-winner scratch-off
ticket -but he'd paid $27 for the
tickeu.
,,, I pt ltl
The winnings were paid out of the till of SmiJty's Market o,e,_ Bayshorc
_8olllCYard,_wlw:c lottery officials
CleiCCiu1ed a few hours later to
confiscate the unsold tickets and
temporarily suspend the lottery
lJoense of proprietor Steve Stephan.
1'tnfWliiiaer JOiin Coleman aeta 56 for $27 -lnveetment.
Stephan said Wednesday morning
in an interview with the Associated
f'ras, "I jumped the gun. I broke the
ruJes. I've caused a big hoopla and I'm
baving put fun."
But by afternoon in a Sacramento
meeting of the Lottery Commission,
Deputy Director Chon GutiCrTCZ said
be and director Mark Micballco "see
no alternative but that his (Stephan's)
license be terminally revoked."
Gutien'C'Z added aft.er the session
that other stores were apparently
obeying the ban on sales until the
official Oct. 3 kickoff -with parades
and ceremonies -of what will soon
be the country's biggest lottery, with
sales of SI billion or more a year.
In a separate development
Wednesday, San Diego radio station
KSDO complained that the lottery
inappropriately let its promotions
agency, Needham Porter NovcJli,
play the lead role in selection of the
first four radio outlets that will
broadcast grand-prize drawings be-
ginning Oct. 21 .
. Officiall.y, the l~ttery is to pay
mstant pnzes ranging from $100 to
$5,000 from state lottery head-
quaners, but there's only an average
of one SI 00 prize in every 4,000
tickets.
Stephan added in the interview, "If
I had lived 200 years, J wouldn't have
had the opportunity to see all these
important people in my store."
referring to the crush of news re-
porters.
Bilingual program failing,
U.S. education chief claims
WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S.
Secretary of Education William J .
Bennett. labeling the government's
bilingual education program a faHurc,
said today he will press for changes to
allow more schools to offer intensive
English classes instead of instructing
in students' native languages.
Bennett said it will be up to school
districts to decide what method
works best. But be made it clear that
he feels the schools have been
devoting too much time and too
many resources to teaching in
Spanish and other foreign languages.
Bennett announced the policy shift
in a s~h prepared for delivery
today an New York City before the
Association for a Better New York.
His office released the text in
advance, and top Education Depart-
ment officials were holding a news
conference here to elaborate on the
changes.
Celebrate Health Awareness Week
Sept. 29-0ct. 5
Costa Me .. Medical Center Hospital
Hear physicians speak on health awareness,
what you can do to enhance your health.
Oct ober 2, 7:00 p.m.-8:30 p.m.
Call 642-2734 Ext. 284 to reserve your space.
l.CIDI Coate MeN Medical Center Hoapltal fffiCl 301 Victoria Street Costa Mesa, CA 642-2734
Bennett charged that "after sound
beginnings" in the Civil Rights Act of
1964 and the Elementary and Second-
ary Education Act of I 965, the federal
policies governing bilinguaJ educa-
tion '"went astray .... Too many
children have failed to become fluent
in English."
The government has funnelled SI. 7
billion in bilinguaJ education aid to
school districts since 1968.
Federal civil rights officiaJs in the
1970s began pressuring school dis-
tricts to teach limited-English speak-
ing students in their native tongues,
and until 1984 forbade schools from
using the funds for classes that only
relied on intensive English instruc-
tion.
"After 17 years of federal involve-
ment, and after SI . 7 billion offederaJ
funding. we have oo evidence that the
children whom we sought to help -
that the children who deserve our
help -have benefittcd," Bennett
said.
He said the administration would
not "give up on the promise of equal
educational OPPortunity ...
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Two burned to death in S. Africa
By tM Aaaoctate4 Pre11 submit wnuen summations within 20 days to a three-
judfe panel. The prosecutor, Leonardo Tamayo, sa1d he
JOHANNESBURG . -i:wo blacks . apparently decided not to call rebuttal witocs.v:s ~use they "would
suspected of collaborauna with the wh1te-mlnori~y only repeat what they have already s:ud.'
aovemmcnt were burned to death by other blacks an
separate incidents, police said. Police beadQWltters in
Pretoria also said Wednesday that an officer fired into a
1tooe-throwin1 mob outside Port Elizabeth and killed one
black man. Riot patrols found the charred body of a black
woman in Lanp township near Cape Town, police said, A
badly burned black man, who also was not identified, was
found in Queenstown in the eastern Cape. but died in a
hos pi tat
Greenpeace probe open•
Tripoli battle toll 203
BEIRUT -Rival Mo lcm m1htlas blasted one
another with mortars and rockets today an Tripoli, and
officials said more than three-quarters of the po~ulation
had fled after 11 days offightina that claimed 203 laves. No
casualty figures were available today from the fighting,
which degenerated mto runrung battles along the ce ntral
boulevard after dawn, police said. Police said three people
died in battles today on three other Let?anesc ~arfronts:
PARJS -Prime Minister Laurent Fabius told the Sidon in south Lebanon, Soule el-Gharb an the halls cast of
nation that a meeting with former Defense Minister Beirut, and along the _G~cen Linc that davades the capital
Charles Hemu and the ousted secret service chief into Moslem and Chnsuan sectors.
convinced him the two were responsible for the bombing E 1i L ~ fl d ~ rtu
ofaOrcenpeace protest ship. A formaljudicial investiga-ng. Su ~armer n S ~0 ne
tion opened today against five French soldiers suspected of THIRSK. e ngland -A farmer and has helper found a
leaking information on the Greenpeace scandal to the crock containing more than 1,500 gold and silver coins
French press. Fabius met Wednesday.with Hcrnu and the that apparently had been buried in a Yorkshire cowshed
ex.chief ofthe General Directorate for fatcrnal Security, for 300 years. But a coroner's inquest ruled the treasure
Adm. Pierre Lacoste. Afterward, he made his weekly belongs to the crown. The coins -30 gold and the rest
nationwide television appearance. silver -glinted in the soil and were pulled out of the
ground by farmer Christopher Grecnsit and laborer Brian Aqalno murder tr.lal ends Robins~n. who were repai_nng the shed at Castl~ Fann
near Thirsk. The oldest com was dated 1560. dunng the
MANLLA -Pro~utors ann~unced _t~Y thc.LroW> of .Queen £liz.abeth L An inquest jucy_declar.ed Wf?~d call no more ~~esses, eod1':li the ffi'!1 of :2=>~Wedncsday that the coins were treasure trove and
mibtary ~en ~nd one etVlh!l~ charged an cor.mectJon .,_vith therefore crown pro perty. The hoard w:all go to. the Bntish
the assass10at10n of oppos1t1on leader Bcmgno Aquino. Museum which said the finders will receive several
Presidjng Judge Manuel Pamaran ordered both sides to thousand dollars in compensation.
Easterners brace for Hurricane Gloria
MOREHEAD CITY, N.C.-Coastal residents from
South Carolina to Maryland boarded up homes and
businesses and moved inland today ahead of Hurricane
Gloria, packing ncar-130 mph winds and billed as one of
the most· powerful hurricanes to threaten the East Coast
this century. The National Weather Service issued a
hurricane warning for the coastal area from Cape
Romaine, S.C., to Cape Henry, Va. The bulletin said
hurricane-force winds were imminent and coastal flooding
of up to 12 feet over normal tides could be expected when
the storm hits land as early as tonight. Gale-force winds
ahead of the hurricane's eye were expected to hit the North
Carolina coast by early afternoon .
.,
Tutlle imports rollback OK'd
WASHINGTON -Defying veto warnings, lhe
House Ways and Means Committee approved today a
large rollback in textile imports, the storm center of the
congressional debate over trade. Supporters said the bill
was needed to cope with the nation's mushrooming trade
problems.
Nocutsinsugarprlcesupports
WASHINGTON -The House today defeated an
effort to cut sugar price supports as it embarked on
consideration of a contentious S 141 billion. five-year
rewrite of the natfon's farm and food policy. The vote was
t 63-142. The sugar program was the first iss~e to be
debated on the House floor as lawmakers decade how
much of the burden taxpayers artd consumers should be
asked to bear to support farm subsidies ranging from milk
to peanuts.
Panel OKs Miller as OMB head
WASHINGTON -The Senate Governmental
Affairs Committee on Thursday unanimously approved
President Reagan's nomination of James C. Miller to be
director of the Office of Management and Budget. Miller,
cbairtnan of the Federal Trade Commission since 1981, is
expected to win easy Senate confirmation by next week.
He would replace former OM B Director David Stockman.
who left Aug. I for a job in.. New York with the Salomon
Bros. investment firm.
Lava spews from Kilauea
VOLCANO, Hawaii -Red and yellow lava spewed
ur to 800 feet into the night sky and came within one mile
o homes before ending its fiery eight-hour display,
Kilauea Volcano's 31th outbreak in 21h years. A river of
lava from the Pu'u O'o vent 12 miles east of Kilauea's
summit advanced to within one mile of the sparsely
populated Royal Gardens subdivision before halting
Wednesday morning. Since January 1983, Kilauea has
been eruptang about once every three weeks.
Mobile missile launcher shown
LITC HFIELD PARK, Ariz. -Two aerospace
manufacturers workin~ as a team an an Air Force
competition have unveiled a mobile m1ss1lc launcher that
would lower itself to the ground 10 avoid damage from a
nuclear blast. The 82.5-ton tractor-trailer vehicle, called a
,,,~
Gloria wbipe up a atorm off Ea1t co&at.
"~ard bed mobile launched mobility test bed." was display~ Wednesday by Goodyear Aerospace Corp. and
the Boeing Aerospace Co. during a roll-out ceremony at the
Goodyear plant here. Seattle-based Boeing is the prime
co.nt.ractor with overall responsibility under the $49.9
m1lhon development contract, while Akron Ohio-based
Goodyear is ~esponsible for construction of the vehicle. G~year said a Seattle firm. PACCAR, provided the basic tractor.
Schools OK birth control bid
C HICAGO -A family planning clinic at a high
school thal has "a problem with babies having babies" and
where officiaJs say every third girl gets pregnant drew a
vote of confidence from the school board despite
arguments lhat it encourages promiscuity. The clinic, at
DuSable High School, which has the highest teen
pregnancy rate in the city, has drawn fire for its family-
planning activities since it opened in June. In a stormy
meeting Wednesday night marked by chaJJenges from
right-to-life groups and individuals opposed to family
planning. the school board gave the clime condiuonal
approval and asked Superintendent Manford Byrd Jr. to
establish guidelines for it.
Woman h1ts $1 millionjackpot
LAS VEGAS -A widowed car saleswoman from
Hallandale, Fla., is SI million richer after hitting a jackpot
on a progressive slot machine at the FrontJer Hotel.
Patncia Mason. 46. hit the jackpot Tuesday night after
playing the machine for about three and a half hours said
hotel spokesman Jim Seagrave. The jackpot wa~ not
ann<?unced until Wednesday afternoon because state
garnmg agents had t<_> verify the win was legitimate, said
Seagrave. The machine had been installed less than two
months ago.
Seagrave said Mason arrived in Las Vegas on a visit
Tuesday afternoon and went 10 the casino before going to her room.
FVwoman'santi-abortioninitiativeOK'd
SACRAMENTO -The sponsor of a second anti·
abortion initiative was given the green light Wednesday to
be&in circulating petitions to qualify the measure for the
California ballot. Secretary of State March Fong Eu gave
the go-ahead to Susan Sassone of Fountain Valley, a
member of the national board of the American Life Lobby.
Her initiative would barthc spending of public money "for
the killing of innocent human individuals from fertiliza-
tion until natural death." That would include abortions
and mercy killings.
Czech defecton arrive in U.S.
SAN JOSE -U.S. Olympic hammer thrower Ed
Burke's 13-montb effort to help a leadina Czechoslovakian
sports scientist defect has ended in huas and tears of
happiness with the am val of the scientist and his family.
Ladislav Pataki1 38, his wife Gisela, 36, and £heir daughter,
Noemi, 16, tanoed here Wednesday night after fl ying_from
Rome, where Burke said U.S. immiaration officials
aranted the family asylum as political refugees .. "America
promises me a possibility to better use my abilities and
those of m y daughter and my wife," Pataki said. "lfl work
hard here. and I learn, l will be a success."
Pot farm crac~dottrn worklng ·
REDWAY -State Attorney General John Van de
Kamp says Lbe Campaign Apmst Mari.Juana Planting -
CAMP -is swima to reclaim Northern California for
law-ab1dingciti2cns. Van de Kamp held a news conference
at CAMP headquarters Wednesday at the invitation of the
sheriffs of three counties makina up the "Emerald
Triangle" -Humboldt, Mendocino and Tnnaty. The
"Emerald TrianaJe" produces most of the state's potent
sinsemilla marijuana. The neW1 conference was held at the
soutbem Humboldt County headquarters for CAMP, in
the &I River Conscrva11on Camp. also a state pnson
camp.
Cop stabbed by rape •aspect
OAKLAND-A veteran Berkeley police officer was
stabbed at least four times by a rape suspect in the third
violent incident an the Alameda County Courthouse
complex in seven months. Inspector U.rry Lindcnau, head
of the Berkeley department s sex crimes unit was in
critical but stable condition after Wednesday'~ attack.
Alameda County sheriffs deputies and district attorney
investiftors chased the alleged assailant, John Arthur
Lea, 4 an Albany plumber, and caught ham about two block~from the courthouse. Lea had come to court
prepa to stand trial for the alleged 1979 and 1983 rapes
oftw Berkeley prostitutes. But the trial had been delayed.
Boy, 3, dle. from AIDS
. SAN BERNARD11"'!0 -A 3-year-old boy born with
incurable AIDS has d1ed at loma Landa University
Medical Center, a spokesman said. The younastcr
identified only as Michael. died Wednesday. hospital
spokesman Dick Schaeffer said. The boy's mo ther had
been infected with acquired immune deficiency syndrome
by her husband. an intravenous drua user who later
dnappcared.
Miller •ubpoenu FBI chlef
LOS ANGELES -Sayina FBI Director William
Webster has made statements that mi~t help formeT aaent
Richard W. Miller in his espionqc tnal, defense attorneys
ba"'.e subpoenaed Webster to testify about the aacncy's
pohcaes. The subpoena and an accompanyinaaffidavit for
Webster were filed "a couple o( days aao." defense attorney
Stanley Grcenbcra said. They are aimed at refutina
prosecution testimony by ~uthor John Barron, who said
tbe FBI would never use au own aacnts to J)enctrate a
hostile antelli,encc ope:raoon such as t~ KOB. he said.
• ----------------
..
Quake rescuers
find 3 babies,
hopes brighten
But offtctcils admit
time's running out
to find survivor$
MEXICO CITY (AP) -Three
babies found alive in the rubble of a
hospital rekindled hopes more
survivors of Mexico's killer earth-
quakes could be found, ~ut offiClals
said time was quickly running out.
Late Wednesday, Mayor Ramon
Aguirre's office said officials had
c-0nfirmed more than 4,000 people
died in a great earthquake last
T hursday that measured 8. I on the
Richter scale. and a second qua ke the
following day that registered 7 .5.
Po lice said 4,596 people had been
killed. T here was no immediate
explanation for the different figures.
Officials originally said the q uakes
m ca.sured 7.8 "400 7.3. but ehaflged
the figures based on readings from
several d ifferent sources.
Aquirrc's office has said 417 bu ild -
ings damaged in the back-to-back
quakes will have to be razed. On
Wednedsday. Preside nt Miguel de la
Madrid met with city officials to
begin a review of construction codes.
land use and building density.
Aguirre estimated 1,500 people
were still entombed under toppled
hotels, office buildings and resi-
dences, and hopes some may still be
living brightened when three infant
girls were found alive 1n the ruins of
the 12-story Juarez Hospital.
The three babies, whom doctors
said had been born on the eve of the
Thursday quake, were found by
rescue teams wi thin a space of about
21'2 hours late Wednesday and were
reported in good cond1t1on earl>
today.
O nce removed from the debris, the
newborns were wrapped in blankets.
placed in incubators and taken by
am bulance to another hospital.
Shortly after midnight, rescuers at
the Juarez site also recovered a
woman patient, identifi ed by doctors
as Rubalcad Pena. She was found
apart from the infants.
"I still have some fnends up there I
am just hoping, hoping." said hospi-
tal orderly Jose-Luis Negrete. tears
rollinJ down his face. The Juarez
Hospital collapsed last T hursday
with hundreds of patients and staff
members inside.
Rescue work continued across the
ravaged city, but officials expressed
concern that many people entom bed
under crumbled buildings had been
buried too long to have survived.
"People can live five to six days,
but there are extreme cases of peo ple
in good phy ical condition or who
· had taken large amounts of liquids
who live lon,er. I think we are
reaching the ltm1t." said Dr. Jesus
Aguilar RodngueL. director of Juarez
Hospital
U.S. Ambassador J ohn Gavin told
reporters he also believed time was
running o ut, but that rescue efforts
would not stop while there was any
chance of fi nding survivors.
• "The sad aspect is ~at within a few
P\ours our hopes of being able to puli
people out alive will have vanished ,"
Gavin said Wednesday. "Pa tently,
lime is runnin_g out."
He said his initial estimate of
I 0,000 dead based on an aerial survey
he made was "probably still relatively
correct "
He said the embassy knows of fi ve
Amencans killed in the quake. and
that another 28 were still unac-
counted for a nd thought to have been
an hotels toppled by the Thursday
tremor. A sixth American died of a
heart attack ina Mexico City hospital.
officials said.
At least 46 other tremors hae t-•en
registerd by Tuesday night at Uk
National Seismological lnslltute. All
measured 3.5 to 5.5 on the Ric hter
scale. far weaker than the killer
quakes that struck last week.
De la Madrid ordered secu nty
doubled in the hardest hit areas of the
m y. where sporadic looung has been
reported 1n damaged or abandoned
buildin~s.
Jose Dom ingo Gamdo. my police
operations director. said Wednesday
night that 32 peo ple had been arrested
on looting charges 1R the past 24
hours.
Commun1cat1ons and tra nspor-
tation slowly were re turning to nor-
mal but at least 2 m1lhon Peo ple.
mostly 1n southe rn Mexico City.
remained wtthout water for the
seventh day, However, international
calls remained v1rtuallv impossible.
Schools had been schedu led to
reopen Wednesday but the Federal
Education Department delayed the
return to classes until Mondav.
I
Contributions from around the
world continued to arrive in the
earthquake-ravaged city. The pres1-
dcnt1al press office said late Wednes-
day that 43 coun tnes has sent aid
"'~· Dlalnfectant l• •prayed on
body of earthquake victim.
I
Tremor jolts
central Chile
SANTIAGO. Chile (AP) -A
strong earth tremor shook central
Chile early today but there were no
casualties or damage. 1he government
reJ>Qrted.
Tht' earthqua ke measured 5 on the
Richter scale and struck a1 I 33 a.m.
PDT in Valparaiso. Chile's second
largest city, the government's Emerg-
ency Office said. The quake measured
4 on the Richter sca le in the capital of
Santiago
T he U.S. Geological Surve} in the
Washington suburb of Reston, Va.,
said preliminary data indicated 11 was
centered about 75 miles northeast of
Santiago.
The quake was felt across a 336-
m ile stretch of temtof) in Ct'.ntral
Chile, where more than half of(h1lc's
11 m1llton people li ve.
The a rea is the same that was hi t by
a massive earthquake on March 3.
That q uake. which measured 7 8.
killed 178 people. inJured thousand'>
and left tens of thousands ho mele'is
Panel says state revenues
to trail 85-86 expenditures
SACRAMENTO (A PJ -Becautc: of an tlCOnomy
"mired in s1u&lish v owth," a state comm1u ioo say~
revenue wdl trail expenditures this fiscal year for the first
umc .since Lhc defia t ye&r 1982-U .
James Burton, execuuve secretary of the C'om
mm1on on State Finance, told the panel Wednesda).
"This 1s a development that needs to be watched ...
The commission, set up to help forecast state revenue
trends. issued a September quarterly report estimatrng
that the state will spend $406 m illio n more than 1t takes in
during the fiscal year that ends next J uJy I .
Thai means CaUfonm would end the fiscal year wnh
a reserve of $909 m 1lhon, S 131 m1lhon less than the
amount budgeted by Gov. George DcukmcJ1an and
lawmakers.
The state started the fiscal year w11h a reserve of
about SI. 3 14 bilUon because of funds left over fro m
1985-86, Burton said.
T he last ume the state spent m ore than it took in wa)
in 1982-83, when the nation was 1n the midst of a
recession and California ended the fiscal year with a
budget deficit.
The comm1ssioo c1tcd a "disappointing" national ,,
economy
"lksp1te the cxpan•1onary m oneiai; pcbc1es of Lbc
federal reserve board durinJ the past I 0 years. the
econom y has rem a1 ned m1rtd 1 n stuwsh arowth. ·• 8urtoo
told the panel.
"Surging 1mpons have deprcsled cmploymcot and
earnings m the manufactunnasegmcnu o f the econom y,"
he added. "Moreover .. la1ge defic1t-related borrowina
requ1~ments will continue to put upward pressure on
interest rates
"Thus our current outlook caJJs for a contJnuatJo n of
the rect"nt panem of slow a nd em t1c aro wtb for the next
several quarters."
Burton said the .. big question" is how qutck.Jy and
strongly the econom y will respond to efforts to reduce the
value of the dollar
In California . Bunon said, import compeutJon and a
general slump in the electronics 1ndusuy have had a
part1cularly hard impact
"Our sole 1m ght spot 1s the housing md usuy, which
in the first six months ol th1s year surged at the strongest
pace since 1978," he said.
Summit preliminary
cordial ;uneventful
UNITED NATJONS (AP) -It
smiles and handshakes took the place
of agreements, Secretary of State
George P. Shulu and Soviet Foreign
M inister Eduard A. hevardnadu
might have no differences between
them.
But Shultz said the 1wo d id not
agree on a thing, even though they
appeared to get along wonderfully
well in a four-hour meeting Wednes-
day that was intended to help set the
stage for the summit m eetane between
President Reagan and Soviet leader
M ikhail Gorbachev in Geneva.
Switzerland, Nov 19-20.
They sm iled frequently, shook
hands o ften and spoke deferentially
of one a nother in appearances before
reporters, both before and after their
meettn~ at the Sov iet U.N. m1ss1on
here.
Shevardnad ze will confer "'tth
Reagan a1 the White House Fnda> 1n
another 1mponant pre-summ11 meet-
ing.
While there was wtdespread specu-
lation that he' ardnadze might be
prepared to unveil a new arms control
1nitiat1ve, that didn't happen in
Wednesday's meeting. Shuhi said
"We did no t rea ch agreement on
an) of these items," hultL <;a1d of
their agenda of differences. partJCu-
larl> on arms control.
Nevenheless. Sh ultz ..aid their
talks were "most wonhwh1le" and
were conducted in a n "eas> and fran ~
atmosphere " He even received an
apology from 5hevardnadze for not
having attended a United Nations
meettng where Shultz spoke on
Geor1e P. Shula
~fonday
Shulu said the talks foc used on
arms control issues. particula r> th<"
deadlocked Gene' a arms control
talk<;
Arrested publisher fr-eed in Taiwan
MONTER~'t PARK (AP) -The publisher of a
Chinese language dail y newspaper. based in Monte~)
Park, who was arrested in Taiwan last week on charges of
v1olat1ng that country's anu-sediuon laws has been
released from custody, the paper's editor sa1d
Lee Ya-pin~ Chen. 62. the poohshl'r of the
International Daily News. was freed Wednesday b ut was
forbidden to leave Taiwan. said editor Anthon) Yuen
"She was released on her personal guarantee. but she
has to report to the authon hes whenever they want her
to." said Yuen. who spoke to the publisher by telephone
The publisher's husband. Tao Chen. a U.S c1uzen
had appealed to President Reagan and Congress for aid in
winning her release
Mrs. Che n. a l ' S. resident ahen .,.,as arrested Sept. t 7
by offi cers of the Ta iwan Gamson Command v.h1k she
was in Taiwan on bus1ne<.s.
he .,.,as accused of using her nev.spaper to ad..,ocate
reun1ficat1on ofT:uwan v.nh mainland China. which 1s a
'1ola11on of the island go' emment's anu-sedmon lav.s 1 f
con•..icted by a go\ ernmcnt tnbunal. she could face the
death penalt~
The State Department lodged a strong protest. l<illtng
the dt'tenuon an act ,,, 1n11m1da11on and harrassmt'nt
again .. t people from T:uv.an who arr h \tng 1n the l n1lt'd
State'>
HOAG HOSPITAL'S 552 CLUB
Extends Special Thanks
to the following individuals and companies for their generous contr ibutro ns as
Rudolph E. Anderson/Ca ro l J. Griffith
Beatrice Grocery Group
Bikini Haven -Alice J. Sumner
Dr. and Mrs. Lawren ce W . Browne
Cherry D ivision of Textron Inc.
Clarke Marine Insurance
Commercebank
Corbett, Steelman, Davidson & Balmages
Corona del Mar Properties
William A . Coulter
The Daily Pilot
Dave E. David, M .D .
D el Taco
Gary and Sandra Ec k les
Emerson Electric
Foremost Dairy
Marguerite E. Forgit
Foster, Jones, & Donovan
G & G Prod u,ce
Geneva Corporation
Genisco Technology Inc.
Gibson, Dunn & Crutc her
Jim and Barbara Glabman
Richard Harvey
W AGONMASTERS
for the 9th Annual 552 Club Western Barbecue
September 26, 1985
Dr. an d M rs. Fa rrell G . H inkle
Holiday Inn, Irvi ne -Jack Bernsme1er
Jeffrey D. and Jani ce Howes
E. F. Hutto n & Company, Inc.
The Irvine Company
Irvi ne Florist
St ephen, Yvonne & Sarah Kru p nick
Douglas La m brose & Asso ciates
Lear Siegler, Inc.
Lear Siegler, lnc./Transport Dynamics D ivision
Mr. and Mrs. W illam D. Lu sk
The M acklin Companies
Bob and Jane M cCaffrey
M cDono ugh, Holland & Allen
Mr. and Mrs. Ro be rt M . M cintyre
Hotel M eridien Newpo rt Beach
Missio n Photography
Nashville Netwo rk
Natio nal Bank of Southern California
Newport Balboa Savings & Loan Association
Newport Beach M arriott Ho tel
The Newport Eme rgency M edical Group
Newport Printing Systems
Mike and Dianne Nisbet <
Paul C. Nyquist
O 'M el\ eny & M vN'-
M r. and Mr~ James F PJrl-.N
Parko Electronic~ Compam Inc
The Perkins Compam
Ram part General, I nt
\V Patr1d, Ra ne\
The Orange Count\ Rcgl'-ter
Ridgew ood DPvelop mcnt
Carol and Bill Russell
Ru':>tv Pelican Restau ra n t . In<
RW B Party Props
E R \ k.ott and Com r an\
Candice ,.1nd Roger rhnapp
.\I and Ruby chwab
l'cur1!\ Pacif1( "'lat 1onal Ban ~
l1m lemons Import~
'°)OUth Coar,t f lectrt<. lnr
Mr and Mr.-, Lvle teelman
T 1me" "11rror Cable T elf'\ 1-.1 on
Todd c;, En terpri .. e-.
United tatl'' "1armc-Corp-. 'H '\' T w.1in
M C A. El Toro
Mr and Mr,. Larr\ Vv V\ .rn~l>t.'r~
\ oung' M ~at Mar"-(\t
...................................................................................................
WAGONMASTER'S contributions and the support of hundreds of add itional
participants at the annual. barbecue will help provide the most modern life-
saving equipment for Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian's patients. Advance
reservations required.~For further information, call 760-5917 .
A& Coat DAIL y PILOT !Thurtday, ~tember 2e. 1985
••When we visit a foreign land-usually on the double -we do not
trouble to put on thefootwearofthe Inhabitants: we continue to wear
ourown pumps, or sandals, or loafers, or boots."
INS advised to
steer clea~ of
auto pursuits
High-speed car chases are ~pectacular on television
and in the movies. In real life, they are public safety
hazards. Most police officers approach them the same
way they approach firing their weapons at humans -
they avoid them until they have no other options.
Police know what car chases and shooting incidents
have in commen: they often end in death.
Late Sunday, the United States Border Patrol
chased a county man suspected of smuggling illegal
aliens into this country. The pursuit started, as many
have, at the San Clemente checkpoint. It ended 45
minutes later in Riverside where the fleeing vehicle
crashed in a field. The driver and one passenger were
killed in the wreck.
According to Harold Ezell, western regional
commissioner of the lmmif.:ation and Naturalization
Service, the accident was 'typical of the dangerous
lengths alien smugglers will go to in evading arrest.··
Ezell's observation -in addition to being
stunningly insensitive -tends to suggest that it really
takes only one to tango.
Certainly, the smuggling suspect instigated the
incident. Certainly, the Border Patrol agents were doing
their duty when they attempted to take him into custody. ·
But, just as certainly, this hurtling race along the pubhc
freeways put literally hundreds of innocent travelers in
jeopardy of a fate as serious as that which befelJ the
suspect.
There is, it seems, a better way to handle these
situations. When a suspect flees from the border
checkpoint, the agents should follow -at a controlled
rate of speed. At the same time, they should radio for
helicopter surveillance of the suspect's vehicle. Police
helicopters are as plentiful as seagulls in Southern
California and should certainly be available.
A helicopter pilot can easily, and safely, track the
escaping vehicle and transmit information that will
allow officers and agents on the ground to apprehend the
suspect while minimizing the danger to civilians who
might otherwise be caught in the action.
It's not the way they do it on TV, but it hurts a lot
more to be in a flaming crash in real life.
• Opinion• expressed In thla speoe are thoae of the Dally Piiot. Other view•
expr"Md on this page are tho1e of their authors and artists. Reader
comment la Invited. The Dally Pilot, PO Box 1560, Coat• Meaa, 92626. Phone
6'62·6086
Let's fallow Britain's lead
and send the Soviets home
Sensible to make it tougher for Soviets
to conduct subversive activities here
WILLIAM ' F. It was rather refreshing, I thought,
to have the old Kremlin lash out in
retaliation against the British ex-
pulsion of Soviet KGB agents posing
as diplomats, by expelling British
diplomats and journalists posing as
nothing other than what they in fact
art. It came at just the right moment,
after Mr. Gorbachev had spent I 2
days more or less non-stop spooning
with Western journalists and
diplomats in Operation Ingratiation.
BUCKLEY
have lau(thed him out of town. And
the West German scandal came only
one month after we discovered that
San Diego is one pan a retirement
community, one part a military-yet complete. Why? Well, a Soviet industrial complex, one paI1 a ganglion of Soviet spy activity aimed spokesman would no doubt siah and
at penetrating naval intelligence. say that the Soviet Union lS always
_Along comes Caspar Weinberger, running into labor union problems. d d fd C'; d Sometimes one has to pause and our evotc secretary o eiense, an wonder, wonder -in the haunting
he makes a concrete suggestion. refrain of the Negro spiritual-at the
LETTERS
The effect was quite wonderful,
recalling that glorious moment in the
'30s when the children's radio idol
Don Camey would read children's
stones for an hour or so. and one day
at the end of the hour commented,
1 "There! I guess that'll hold the little
bastards for another night," the
Back up for a moment. It has sheer stupidity of the American
recently been highlighted in the press government, at so fundamental a
that the new Soviet Embassy in level. Well, along comes Mr.
Washington presides over the city in Weinberger with a proposal to do
approximately the same way that the something about what is going on. He
Eiffel Tower presides over Paris. If has a concrete recommendation,
the KGB had approached the city of namely to send a bunch of Russians
Paris ~nd asked please mi~t it lease home. ~he Eiff~I Tower .to facilitate the There arc approximately t ,000 of
anterccpt1on o~ radio and tel~phone them in the United St.ates, protected
traffic emanating from Pans. and----bydiptomaticimmunity. Bycontrast,
France had. acceded to the reque~t. the we have one-qua11er that number in
difference •.n the ~dva,ntages C~Joyed the Soviet Union. Moreover, every
by the Soviet U~1on in Washington movement of our people is diligently
would not be noticeable. watched. Theirs, with a few excep-
-------------trouble being that the little bastards
'Enough ls enough, ' city
says ol drilling r1gs off HB
To the E<lttor:
Recent surveys have shown that
Orange County residents oppose
offshore oil dnlhn~ by a margin of
2-1. and a maJOnty of California
residents also o~pose all owing further
offshore 011 dnlling along the Cali·
fomia coastline
These people, like the c1t1zcns of
Huntington Beach. are concerned
about a lot of the risks associated with
oil platforms. We question the Ions-
term effects on fish and marine life.
We worry about the hazards these ngs
pose to navigation and boating and
locaung on-shore facilities to support
them as well as the damage to our
beautiful beaches and our tourist
industr\
Our C1t; Council has finally said
enough is enough We already have
five platforms off our coast and one
undeveloped lease. which holds the
threat that even more offshore plat-
forms may be developed. There are
those who th ink that Huntington
Beach doesn't care because we
already have 011. To set the record
straight, Huntington Beach d~ care'
As ma}or. I am speaking for the
many di verse segments represented
an our city. fhesc include people with
interests in business. recreation and
lhe environment. Jn recent years, the
city has worked nard to overcome its
old negative image. A few years ago, a
government survey of the coastline
called us an ugly ci ty because ofall our
onshore 011 development
We have gone a long way toward
~han&Jng this image We took a
detenorated bluff covered with rust-
ing and abandoned pipelines and.
with community suppon -includ-
ing that of the 011 company -made at
into a beautiful shoreline park for
$trolling and bicycling Now we arc
trymg to rejuvenate the rest of our
downtown area
In 1960 we had a population of
11 .000 Todny our population is over
180.000 Th1'i growih came about
becauo;c people lo' c the ~OHt and will
make many sacnficc to lave close to
II.
However 1htC!l-. Counc1l 1sproud
th:i1 despite a ~at deal of popu·
ORANGE COAST
. Daily Pilat
lation pressure, we have preserved
our en tare coastline-nine miles of it
-for the use and enjoyment of all of
the public -be they from California.
or Arizona. or Maine or New York.
Thousands of visitors come here
for surfing events. Our beaches arc
packed -all the parking lots are
filled to capacity. This as the way most
summer weekends are in Huntington
Beach. Our beaches are a top tourist
attraction. and tourism 1s important
to the economy of Orange County
Jn 1984, tounsm generated almost
S4 billion in revenue here. If you
reduce the appeal of our beaches by
planting oil rigs on the horizon. you
will reduce county income substan-
tially. We don't believe that our
millions of visitors want to look out
to sea and sec a vast expanse of 011
rigs. They want to come here. as they
have for generations, to enJOY sea and
surf as far as the eye can see. Let's not
cheat them of this.
We do not ask for any consider-
ation not given to other environmen-
tally scns1t1ve areas of the coast. We
believe Orange County's coastline
deserves the same protection that was
wisely afforded to other v1sitor-
serving areas around San Diego.
Malibu, Monterey, Big Sur and Mann
County. Surely our resource is as
important. serving as it does so vast a
population as the Los Angeles-Or-
ange County metropolitan area.
These petroleum resources that
exist here should be a resource of last
rcson. In the event of a national
emergency, it could be made ava1l-
ablc w11h1n a very shon time.
We ask that Congress incl ude the
I 0 tracts off Orange County and
Hunungton Beach in the moratonum
until the year 2000. J'm sure there arc
other tracts with less far.reachi ng
impacts that can be substituted for
these. tf all the nation's cits Lens could
vote on this issue, yo u would certain-
ly find that the will of the people 1s to
prtscrvt' the Cahfomaa coastline and
an particular Oranae County's for
future generations. ·
R TH
,,.. Zlnl
fOllOt
T0tn Teff
MllNOlflO lelllet Doft,..., °" ldllOt c,... .....
~· fCl!tor
BAILEY
Mayor
all beard that because the radio
operator had neilected to switch
Carney off the air. He paid for that by
expulsion from the airwaves for a
probationary period of one forgets
how long.
Gorbachev won't have to pay so
prolonged a price, because Operation
Ingratiation has a natural audience.
and soon he will be back smiling his
petulant smile and telling children's
stories about has love for ~cc, and
there arc th ose who will dnnk it all in.
It has, to be sure, been quite a
season for spies. A cursory look at the
headlines an West Germany during
the past month raises the question
whether there are more communists
sn East or West Germany. If Joe
McCarthy had ever said about the
United States that communist pen-
etration was at a level it in fact
reached in West Germany. why, even
Mrs. McCarthy and Roy Cohn would
Super-modem equipment sprouts tions, have the run of a free country.
from the embassy hke the bristles of a Why not send th.rec-quarters of
porcupine, and no conversation not them packing? Do we rcaJly need 10
conducted in super-scramblese is safe years of congressional hearings and
from detection. A casual telephone State Department investip tions to
call from the secretary of defense to validate the good sense in making it
the secretary of state, ifthere is such a just a little more difficult for the
thmg, can be picked u~ by the Soviet Soviet Union to carry on its
Embassy, and studied m the Kremlin subversive activities within the Unit-
and at the United States of America ed States? It would be absolutely
and Canada Institute hours later. splendid if the president were to pick
Meanwhile -of course -our up has fountain pen and sign the
request for a new embassy in Mos-relevant document. I would put that
cow, now over 20 years old, was pen in a solid gold frame. hang it in
grudgingl y granted, and we were the Smithsonian Institution. over the
a55i:gned some acreage roughly I 00 c.aption, "The Weinberger Mani-
feet below sea level. Not content with festo."
that. the Soviet Union has diddled Wllll•m Bactley /1 a 1yedlc•IH
and dawdled. and the structure is not colamal11.
Corny ad ca11Jpalgn for Kellogg's flake
John Harvey Kello~ sold the
world's first com flakes Wlth the claim
they curbed lustful desire. Eaters of
same were less sexy, he averred.
Today, wllh an ad campaign like that,
he wouldn't sell a flake, what?
You wonder where California's big
towns got their names? The fou nder
of the Cahfom1a missions was Fra
Junipcro Serra. He came from Petra
on the Mediterranean island of Ma-
JOrca In has home fnary were the
chapels of San Francisco, San Luis
Obispo, San Juan Capistrano, San
Buenaventura and San Diego.
lo getting across a stretch of water.
a motorboat is about five times more
efficient than a du c k .
Hydrodynamically speaking. I don't
often get the chance to speak
hydrodynamically. Only now and
then.
Claim is unhappy people don't eat
popcorn.
There are rare people who know a
face is a face when they see one, but
don't know whose face it is, even the
face in a mirror. The disorder is called
"prosopagnosis."
The people who move to Los
Angeles in 24 months outnumber all
the people who ever lived or died on
the Oregon Trail.
L.M. Boyd 11 • 1yadlcated
col•mal1t.
Most learn little from travels
There ·~a great paradox m travel.
The cliche that "travel is broadenfog"
1s a de~pt1vc half-truth rt can be
narrowmg as much as broadening,
and usually 15. the way most peoplt'
travel.
The best way 1s to go somewhere
and stay as long as you can You act to
know the people. understand a little
of the lanauaae. and come to ap-
preciate the common bond ofhuman-
aty beneath the different customs.
The worst way is to enaasc in what
most Amencans call "travel. .. This 11
to try to take in a much as possible 1fl
the shortest amount of time: the
syndrome commonly known as if-
this·•S· Tuesday-it-must-be-Bel~ um .
You do not "broaden" yourself 1n
any sense by this hag_hly condensed
1t1nerary Rather. yo u do only what
other tounsts do, ~e only what they
!ICC. and return home with photos.
tnnkets, and a distoned view of the
"nauves ••
Most of the stercot) pea and preju-dice~ you brought on the trip arc
confirmed or even reinforttd. You ~c rvcrythana throuah the eye, of an
.\merican and 1udgC' evervth1na b'
SIDllEY
HARRIS
our standards. It 1s as (oolish as
drivina by kilometers and measuring
the distance by miles.
Most of us accept the old saying \hat you cannot comprehend another
person's s1tuat1on until you have
walked at least a male in his moc-
casins.
But when WC visit 8 foreign Land -
usually on lht' double -wt' do not
trouble to put on the footwear of the
inhabitants. we continue to wear our
own pumps. or sandals. or loafers. or
boots.
Evtryone 1s a product of his own
culture, and everyone wears colored
spectacles that a.re tinted b> his own
cult-ure. Thert 1s no such thm& as an
"objective" appnusal of another cul-
turt -unlc4''1 and until we h8\t'
stayed there long enough to change
spectacles,
Even in our own country: ~onsider
how our attitude has sn.ifted in
relation to the "c.owboys and In-
dians" myth long perpetuated in
American popular history. A century
ago. there was no doubt in our minds
that the cowboys were the "good
guys" and the Indians the "bad guys."
in recent decades, we have learned
that thtre was at least as much
brutality and unfairness and swindl-
ina and terrorism amona the settlers
as amona the Indian tribes. We now
admit that the natives were treated
unjustly, in violation of all our
Christian and democrauc rhetoric
It took us a century to wallt 1 mile in
the moccasuu of a people who Ii ved
amona us; how can we possibly do so
in a few weeks, tourina on a strange
continent, hvi na only on the upper
level of the social and economic
ordt~
This as why travel is not broad-
ening, but flattening. as we do it,
Sydoey Harrl1 11 • 1yedkak<d
~lt1m.U1.
SYDNBT HAJlal8
column let
JACK
AIDEISOI
and JUSLPH SPL AR
French
case on
AIDS kit
strong
WASHINGTON -Scientists 1t
the prestigious Pasteur lqttitutc in
Paris claim that U.S. rcseirchcrs have
stolen Credit for UiCFrcnch 1 scovery
of the AIDS virus and illegally
~tented a blood-testina kit that
identifies the presence of the deadly
virus.
At stake may be a Nobel Prize, not
to mention miJJions of dollars in
royalties from the sale of the patented
test kits. The French want their share
of both &Jory and money.
The F'rcnch, threatening court ac-
tion, have sent documents buttress-
ing their claims to the Health and
Human Services Department, de-
manding recognition of U.S. re·
searchers' reliance on the Pasteur
Institute. The documents, seen by our
associate Corky Johnson, present a
powerful case. Herc are the hi&h·
Ii ah ts:
•In the spring of 1983, Dr. Luc
Montagnicr of the Pasteur Institute
reported his susricion that a virus
was the cause o the dread disease.
American scientists were cager to
learn more. An article Montagnicr
wrote for Science magazine was
edited and endorsed by Dr. Robert
Gallo, chief AIDS researcher at the
National -Cancer Institute.
Mootagnicr met with Gallo and bis
team to discuss the virus. and
subsequent correspondence was on a
first-name basis.
•Letters from Gallo to Montagnier
asked for virus samples and per-
mission to clone them. A receipt for
two samples of the French AJDS virus
was signed by a Gallo researcher on
Sept. 23, 1983.
•The French stipulated that the
samples not be used for commercial
purposes. Other samples and infor-
mation were given to U.S. scientists.
All this was long before Gallo filed for
a patent. The French claim Gallo
used their information to find the
AIDS virus and develop a test kit,
wh1ctrwantre"n-pimned.
In an interview, Gallo disputed the
French claim, asserting that the two
viruses were not the same. He said the
French have not adequately isolated
the AIDS virus.
•The French filed patent appli-
cations in Europe and the United
St.ates several months before Oallo's
aroup. The U.S. Patent Office granted
Gallo's patent, but has yet to act on
the French application.
•In a letter to a colleague after
Montagnier had identified the AIDS
virus, Gallo acknowledged that he
had not yet succeeded in isolating an
AIDS virus himself.
•The French charged that U.S.
doctors allegedly broke American
and international patent laws by
faHin' to disclose the French con-
tributJon to their AIDS research.
The French say their documents
present a "prima facie case that the
Montqnier team was first'' to dis-
cover the AIDS virus. that the GaUo
patent is based on information "de-
rived from the Mont.agn1er team" and
therefore is not valid.
The French charge further that
Gallo breached a contract with the
Pasteur Institute by usmg the virus
samples the French sent him in
developina a oommercial product.
The F~nch made three demands
that must be met if the United States
is to avoid coun action:
I. Public rccoJnition of the Mon-
t.aanier team's "mvaluable contribu-
tion in first finding and identifying"
the AIDS virus.
2. Freedom for the French to
market their own blood-test kit
"without any lea.aJ problems."
3. A share of tne royalties from sale
of the U.S. kit, in return for which the
French would allow it to remain on
the market without legal action.
Footnote: In a series of memos to
each otherk. Health and Human
Services omcials stated they can
successfully defend the U.S. patent in
court and raise the question of why
the French, if their clai ms are ac.
curate, haven't marketed their own
test kit in Eurooc.
SPOOK.JNG THE POOKS: Con·
cem about terrorism has reached
almost panic proponions at CIA
headquarters in suburban Lanatey.
Va. Our soura:s there tell us that even
the day's-<:nd pickup ofoffice workers
by their spouses has ~me an
occasion for tension. The employees
wait ouuide various tmildinas fo r the
fam ily car to show up, and every now
and then someone will foract a
bnefcasc. leavina it on the sidewalk
This sets off an all--0ut security
response. with officers sealing off the
area and handling the briefcase likt a
terrorist·planted bomb
EXECUTIVE MEMO: You thank
we don't need tax reform? The
Internal Revenue Service is buying
7,000 copies of"The Relaxation and
Stress.-Reduction Workbook" to send
to 1u field offices. "It's rough ou1
there." explained an agency spoke •
man.
Jadl Nlfler..oa aad Jou,. Sfw•r
are •1edlcatf!d ciol•melJIJ.
' -
Of~ Cou1 DAILY PILOT/Thureday, Sept~ber 2e. 1985 A7
WATER PROBLEMS UNDER CONTROL ... rromAl
Francitco, Sacramento and S..n
Dieao are listed amona the top 1 O
bottled water markets m the nation
a_"ordina to the We.stem Watt;
Education Foundation.
America's fears are being fed by
reports of acid rain, ground water
contamination and, ironicall y, pun-
fyina processes that ad\JaJJy create
cancer-causins chemicals.
Touaher drinking water regu-
lations are being considered on feder-
al and state levels. Meanwhile, local
and re.gjonal water d1stncts have
stepped up their own monitonng
systems, hoping to regain the public's
trust.
Metropolitan Water recently com-
pleted a $6 million laboratory in La
Verne to analyze the' various
chemicals and organisms m its water
supply. Testing last spring showed the
water to be relatively clear of any
pesticide residues, said McGuire.
Much concern has concentrated on
the effects of acid rain on n vers
supplying California with most of its
water. The so-<:.alled acid rain or acid
fog is moisture that condenses around
sulfur dioxides and other exhaust
particles in the atmosphere.
In some cases. lhc..p.artJclll4ry up
and fall from the sky.
Lakes in the northeastern United
States and Canada have been con-
taminated by the falling toxins.
However, McGuire said the San
Joaquin and Sacramento rivers con-
tain minerals that neutralize the
acidk substances.
The district also filters the water for
clay particles and silt, chlorinates ll
for bactcna and m1lles to sodium
hydroxide to prevent corrosion.
However, the purify1na proces be-
<..1lme dangerous when decomposing
material merited with the chlonne to
create: the suspected carcmogen·
trihalomethancs (TH Ms).
Metropolitan Water handled the
problem by substituting the chlonne
with chloramine, a compound less
likely to merge with organic substance~.
The district also budgeted about
$4. 7 million this year to clear the
water of strange tastes and bad odors
that are naturally cr-eated by algae.
"When water doesn't taste good,
the automatic assumption is that it's
unhealthy. That's not true," McGuire
said.
In Orange County, most of the
drinking wells, roughly 200. are
locatmg nonh of Newpon Beach and
Irvine. Af\er testing SS wells in key
locations, the Orange County Water
Distnct proclaimed that the aquifers
were mostly free of pest1c1des.
However, investigators found
dangerously high concentrations of
trichloroethylene (TCE) last July in
three wells just southwest of the
Marine Corps Air-Statton in El Toro.
Two oft he wells contained between
I 0 and 25 pans per billion. well past
the five pan hmit placed on the
1ndustnal solvent.
Since the wells, around Sand Ca-
nyon A venue and Barra nca Road, are
not used fordnnking water. they have
remamed open.
The imgation water 1s laced with
the same solvent that forced the
HB man guilty
of loan sharking
By "e A.11ociated Press
LOS ANGELES -Four men. one of them from Huntington
Beach, who prosecutors said were organ121ng loan-sharking action 1n
Southern California and Las Vegas were convicted by a federal coun
jury of extortion in the malang and collection of loans.
In delivering its panial verdicts 1n the six-week trial Tt1esda:y. the
jury acquitted a fifth man of one charge against him. Jurors failed to
reach verdicts on 14 racketeering and conspiracy charges. which were
the major part of the government's case against seven men on tnal.
The seven were named in a federal grand Jury indictment as
associates and members ofa cnme family
The panial verdicts were returned aftera1uror wrote a note to U.S.
District Judge Matt Byrne Jr .. saying that he was under .. inordinate
pressure" fr6m fellow jurors to change his mind on unresolved counts.
Despite the note. the judge o rdered the Jurors to continue their
deliberations Wednesday. The panel already has deliberated for seven
days.
Among the men found guilty was Vito Dominic Sp1llone. 48, a
resident of Upland, 40 miles east of downtown Los Angeles.
Prosecutors aJleged that Spillone, who spent five years in federal
prison after being convicted of loan sharking 1n Chicago. led the
operation.
The others convicted were John Clyde Abel. 41 . of Chicago; Frank
Citro, 39. of Las Vegas, and Frank Serrao. 56. of Huntington Beach.
The men face maximum prison terms of 20 years Qn the
convictions already returned.
A fifth-man;-John-Jamcs-&rro. 46-, ~ Hacienda ttei~tt -wn
acquitted of o ne of four charges again!lt him. Prosecutors said Barro
was the No. 2 man who approved the loans.
No verdicts were returned Tuesday against two others. Joseph
Bolognese, 52. of las Ve~s. and John Meccia. 5 1. of LaSalle. Ill.
The only charges against them are the conspirac~ and racket~en ng
counts. which each carry a maximum sentence of 20 years 1n pnson.
Retirement chief considered
The Orange County Board of
Supervisors agreed this week to study
whether the county needs a ses}arate
retirement dcpanment to oversee
operations its $636.4 million retire-
ment fund.
Supervisors also agreed to beg.in
recruitment of a retirement adminis-
trator while the study is in progress.
The request to create a county
retirement department was for-
warded to the board by the county's
Board of Retiremeot. That entity
I
~I I
closure of several San Gabtjel Valley
wells in early J 980. It is allQ the wne
chemical that clouded the San Dieao
Creek aft.er leaking from the Marine
Corps Helicopter Air Station in
Tustin.
The degreaser is used at the
military bases to clean aircraft.
Water district officialsarc reluctant
to blame the El Toro air station fonhe
well contamination, altbouah t hey
concede it 1s a possibility.
"The logical culprit, though we
can't say for sure, is the Marine base
because they use solvents like that,"
said district spokesman Gordon
Elser.
With the nearest drinking well five
miles away, Elser said the polluted
wells arc not an immediate threa t to
consumers. The district has planted
monttonng equipment in the area to
detennine how far the TCE has
.spread.
Elser was confident the cootamina-
tton would be curbed before it reaches
drinlang supplies.
Besides the TCE problem, the
district has been battling against
renilizerrcsidue infiltrating wells in
Tustin and Garden G rove. The soil
has a high level of nitrates from the
fenilizer used on strawberry patches
and other fields.
Elser said the district is considering
a $500,000 nitrate 'removal plant that
would dissipate the chemical by
blending water from different wells.
<>ranee County Water Dlatrlct chem.lat
Janet Zander uea a au chromatograph to
o..lr ........ -.. Lee~ ...
teat for YOlatile oraantca ~ the water
aapply.
Also some wells in nonh Fullenon
were closed in the late 1970s because
of a high concentration of selenium. a
type of metal, in the ground water.
Elser described well contammat1on
10 the county as isolates:'. saying that
increasingly tight state and federal
regulations on waste disposal and
water standards would prevent the
problem from spreading.
"As time goes on. laws are getting
more stnct." he said .. I don't thrnk
Orange County will ever get as bad as
the other high industry counue'
because of the new safeguards."
Board refuses to delay attorney contract
By JEFF ADLER
Of tM OellJ ,-.. Ital!
A contract to provide coun-a~
pointed defense attorneys for in-
digent defendants when the Pubhc
Defender's Office has declared a
confl1ct-of-interestsparked a conflict
of 11s own this week between super-
visors and an Orange County Bar
Association representative.
Attorney Paul WaJlin, chainnan of
the bar association's criminal law
committee, asked the Board ofSupcr-
visors on Tuesday to delay award of
the $6 million annual contract for 30
RU Ff ELL'S
UPHOLSTERY lllC.
For T~ Rest of Your lite
1922 HARBOR BLVD . COSTA M£SA-S•8 1156
days to explore an alternative method
for choosing attorneys 1n such cases.
The county contracts with pnvate
attorneys 1n each JUd1c1al distnct ~o
provide legal services to defendants
unable to provide for their own
defense 1n cnminal cases when the
public defender cannot represent
them because ofa confl1ct-of-mterest.
UsuaJly conflict cases involve mul-
tiple defendants who cannot afford
their own attorneys. In such cases, the
public defender is assigned one of the
cases while the remaining defendants
arc assigned to private attorneys who
Watc h for Kids
J Ii' Ullin llSUUICE
('t) ~ Non smoker ,,.:;JI -~· Rates
~~, 831 -n40
4'1 Old Newport Bl•d.
Newport a..cti. Ca.
Or:ange County's
easy
listening
radio station
•
contract with the county to handle
1he1r defense for set fees
In asking supervisors to dela~
award of the two-year contract.
Wallin asked the board to consider a
system in which judges would choose
from a panel of attome)s who are
available to handle conflict cases
rather than assigning them to a 'iingle
law firm.
He said the system he was ad vocat-
ing could save the count) several
nulhon dollars and was in line with
recently adopted state leg.islat1on
urging counties to adopt the panel
concept for conflict c.ases
·'Wh) let one attorney monopohze
the contract when you can have 50 or
100':'" ~alhn asked the board ... Whal
possible benefit 1s there to the count)
to rush to Judgment"\•·
But supcf'\1sors \Oted 5-0 to let the
contract as propoS&d after a represen-
tative from the Count}' Admm1s-
trauve omce assured them that
stat1sttcsdo not back Walhn'sconten-
uon that the system would save
mone). he als0 said the county's
Judges have endorsed the contract as
proposed
OF SWITlERLAl"D
~A
2A
B
•• ~12e~
() ] (I
(1 lll
~-10
Robin ...
.=om fort comb1n<'d "'1r~ super1'
craftsmanship make chis lu"'
sca ck he-el a fall t.norice
Brown ur '1 .1\\ 1..ill
~ ~LLlj~ s~oes
99 Fashion Island • Newport Beach • 759-9551
Warrung : The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is OanQerous to Your Health. Bol and 100-s Box Mtnlhol lm thin O 5 "'9 ·111· 0 05 mQ. nocottoe. Soti Pa<l l.ten1hol ind IOO ~ 81!• I mq
111 ', O I mg. n1co1ine. 100's Sott Pick and lOO's Menthol & mg tar 0 4 mq 111(01.ot, 170 s 1 mq m 0 B mQ
n1cot1n11 I'#. pet r.1gera111, FTC Repon Jin '85. Shm$ 6 mq. ·.,,-, 0.6 mg n1coime a-. Pl'' c1qarP11e b~ FTC me1tioa
-'~~----_._
INS advised t o
stee r c lear of
a u t o pursuits
High-speed car chases arc spectacular on television
and in the movies. In real life, they are public safety
hazards. Most police officers approach them the same
way they approach firing their weapons at humans -
they avoid them until they have no other options.
Police know what car chases and shooting incidents
have in commcn: they often end in death.
··When we visit a foreign land-usually on the double-we do not
trouble to put on the footwear of the Inhabitants: we continue to wear
our own pumps, or sandals, or loafers. or boots.'' -
8TDNltY RAJlJUS
coJamelM
JACK
AIDEISOI
and JOSI Ptt SPl AR
French
case on
AIDSk.it
strong
WASHINGTON -Scientists at Late Sunday, the United States Border Patrol
chased a coun·ty man suspected of smuggling ilJegal
aliens into this country. The pursuit started as many---ia.-.a
nave, a The San CICmentc checkpoint. t ·en eo 45
minutes later in Riverside where the fleeing vehicle
crashed in a field. The driver and one passenger were
the prestigious Pasteur Institute in
Paris claim that U.S. researchers have __
-stolen ere lt or e rencli tscovery
of the AIDS virus and illcplly
~tented a blood-testinJ kit that
identifies the presence of the deadly
virus. killed in the wreck.
According to Harold Ezell, western regional
commissioner of the Immigration and Naturalization
Service, the accident was .. typical of the dangerous
lengths alien smugglers will go to in evading arrest."
Ezell's observation -in addition to being
stunningly insensitive -tends to suggest that it really
takes only one to tango.
Certainly, the smuggling suspect instigated the
incident. Certainly, the Border Patrol agents were doing
their duty when they attempted to take him into custody.
But, just as certainly, this hurtlin& race along the pubhc
freeways put literally hundreds or innocent travelers in
jeopardy of a fate as serious as that which befell the
suspect.
There is, it seems, a bener way to handle these
situations. When a suspect flees from the border
checkpoint, the agents should follow -at a controlled
rate of speed. At the same time, they should radio for
helicopter surveillance of the suspect's vehicle. Police
helicopters are as plentiful as seagulls in Southern
California and should certainly be available.
A helicopter pilot can easily, and safely, track the
escaping vehicle and transmit information that will
allow officers and agents on the ground to apprehend the
suspect while minimizing the danger to civilians who
might otherwise be caught in the action.
It's not the way they do it on TV, but it hurts a lot
more to be in a flaming crash in real life. '
Opinions expressed In thl1 1paoe are thOM of the Delly Piiot. Other view•
expresMd on this page are lhoM of their authora and artlats. Reeder
comment 11 Invited The Dally Piiot, PO Box 1580, Cotta Mesa, 92626. Phone
642-6086
LETTERS
'Enouah ls enouah,' city
says ol drilling r1gs off HB
To the Editor:
Recent surveys have shown that
Orange County residents oppose
offshore 011 dnllinJ by a margin of
2-1, and a majonty of California
residentsirlso oppose11ttowing ftrrther
offshore 011 dnlling along the Cah-
forn1a coastline
These people, lake the citizens of
Huntington Beach. arc concerned
about a lot of the nsks associated with
oil platforms. WI! question the long-
term effects on tish and marine life.
We worry about the hazards these ng.s
pose to nav1gat1on and boating and
locaung on-shore facilities to support
them as well as the damage to our
beautiful beaches and our tounst
1ndustn
Our Cit) Council hao; finally said
enough 1s enough. We already have
tive platforms off our coast and one
undeveloped lease. which holds the
threat that even more offshore plat-
forms may be developed. Th~re are
those who think that Huntington
Beach doesn't care because we
already have 011. To set the record
straight. Huntington Beach does care!
As ma)'or, I am speaking for the
many diverse segments represented
1(1 our city. These include people wi th
interests in bu!>inen, recreation and
the environment. In recent years. the
city has worked hard to overcome its
old negative image. A few years ago, a
government survey of the coastline
called us an uglyc1 ty because ofall our
onshore 011 development
We have gone a long way toward
changing th1'i image We took a
detenoratcd bluff covered with rust-
tnj and abandoned pipelines and,
with community supp()rt -includ·
mg that of the 011 company-made 1t
into a beautiful shoreline park for
'itrolhng and bicycling Now we arc
trying to rejuvenate the rest of our
downtown area
ln 1960 wr had a populauon of
11 000 Tod:iy our Population 1s over
180,IJOO This growth came about
hecausc peopll' lo ve the coast and will
make man'.> \acnficcs to hve close to
II
tlowe .. cr the C 1t\ < ounc1l 1s proud
thot. de,p11c a itrc'tn deal of popu.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
lation pressure, we ha ve preserved
our entire coastline -nine miles of it
-for the use and enjoyment of all of
the public -be tbey from California,
or Anzona .. or_Maine or J'.'ew York.
Thousands of visitors come here
for ~rling events. Our beaches arc
packed -all the parking lots are
fllled to capacity. This 1s the way most
summer weekends are in Huntington
Beach. Our beaches are a top tourist
attraction. and tounsm 1s important
to the economy of Orange County
In 1984, tounsm generated almost
$4 billion in revenue here. If you
reduce the appeal of our beaches by
planting oil rigs on the horizon. you
will reduce county income substan-
tially. We don't believe that our
milhons of visitors want to look out
to sea and see a vast expanse of oil
rigs. They want to come here. as they
have for generations, to enjoy sea and
surf as far as the eye can see. Let's not
cheat them of this. ·
We do not ask for any cons1der-
at1on not l\1ven to other environmen-
tally sens1t1ve areas of the coast. We
believe Orange Coun ty's coastline
deserves the same protection that was
wisely afforded to other vis1tor-
serving areas around San Diego,
Malibu, Monterey, Big Sur and Mann
County. Surely our resource 1s as
important, serving as it does so vast a
population as the Los Angeles-Or-
ange County metropolitan area.
ihese petroleum resources that
eust here should be a resource oflast
resort. In the event of a national
emergency, it could be made avail-
able within a very short time.
We ask that Congress include the
I 0 tracts off Orange Count) and
Huntington Beach in the moratonum
until the year 2000 rm ~ure there arc
other tracts with Jes~ far-reaching
impacts that can be substituted for
these. If all the natio n's dt1zcns could
vote On this ISSUC, rou would Ce rtain·
ly find that the wit of the ~ople 1s to
preserve the Cahfom1a COMthne and
1n particular Oran&e C9unty's for
future gencmtions.
RUTH BAILEY
FrenllDnl re111or
TCMtt Teft M~felltor .,..,.....,
CltyfAMor c, ... ....,
Spone IOllor
Mayor
Let's follow Britain 's lead
and send the Soviets home
Sensible to make it tougher for Soviets
to conduct subversive activities here
WILLIAM F. It was rather refreshing. I thought.
to have the old Kremlin lash out 1n
retaliation against the British ex-
pulsion of Soviet KGB agents posing
as diplomats, by expelling British
diplomats and journalists Posing as
nothing other than what they in fact
are. It came at JUSt the right moment,
after Mr. Gorbachev had spent 12
days more or less non-stop spooning
with Western journalists and
diplomats in Operation Ingratiation.
The effect was quite wonderful,
rcyalling that glorious moment in the
'305 when the children's radio idol
Don Camey would read children's
stories for an hour or so. and one day
at the end of the hour commented,
'"There! Lguess thatll hold the little
bastards for another night," the
trouble being that the little bastards
all heard thai because the radio
operator had neglected to switch
Camey off the air. lie paid for that by
expulsion from the airwaves for a
probationary period of one forgets
how long.
Gorbachev won't have to pay so
prolonged a pnce, because Operation
Ingratiation has a natural audience,
and soon he will be back smiling his
petulant smile and telling children's
stories about his love for ~ce. and
there arc those who will dnnk it all m.
It has, f6 be suF.5Ccn quite a
season for spies. A cursory look at the
headlines 1n West Germany during
the past month raises th~ question
whether there are more communists
in East or West Germany. ff Joe
McCarthy had ever said about the
United States that communist pen-
etration was at a level ll in fact
reached in West Germany, why, even
Mrs. McCarthy and Roy Cohn would
L.M. Bovo
Bue KLEY
have lau~ed him out of town. And
the West German scandal came only
one month after we discovered that
San Diego is ·one part a retirement
community, one part a military· yet complete. Why? Well. a Soviet industrial complex, one part a ganglion of Soviet s~v ae1i vity aimed spokesman would no doubt sigh and · / 11. say that the Soviet Union 1s always at penetrating nava mte~ence. running into labor union problems.
Along comes Caspar einberger, Sometimes one has to pause and
our devoted secretary of defense, and wonder. wonder - in the haunting
he makes a concrete suggestion refrain of the Negro spintual _at tbe
Back up for a moment. It has sheer stupidity of the American
recently been highlighted in the press government, at so fu ndamental a
that the new Soviet Embassy in level. Well, along comes Mr.
Washington presides over the city 1n Weinberger with a proposal to do
approximately the sa me way that the something about what is going on. He
Eiffel Tower presides over Pans. lf has a concrete recommendation,
the KGB had approached the city of namely to send a bunch of Russians
Paris and asked please.mi.ht it lease home.
the Eiffel Tower to facilitate the There arc ap~roximately 1,000 of
interception of radio and telephone them 1n the United St.ates, protected
traffic emanating from Pans. and bydiplomaticimmunity. By contrast,
France had acceded to the request, the we have one-quarter that number in
difference in the advantages enjoyed the Soviet Union. Moreover, every
by the Soviet Union in Washington movement of our people is diligently
would not be noticeable. watched. Theirs, with a few exceir
Super-modem equipment sprouts t10ns. have the run of a free country.
from the embassy like the bnstles of a Wh y not send three-quarters of
porcupine, and no conversation not them packing? Do we rcaJly need 10
conducted in super-scramblese is safe years of congressional hearings and
from detection. A casual telephone St.ate Department investipuons to
c.all from the secretary of defense to validate the good sense in making it
the secretary of state. 1f there 1s such a Just a little more difficult for the
thinL.caJl ~J>kktd..u~ by.the S.oYic.L -..Soviet Unian.._10 carry on its~ Embassy, and studied in the Kremlin subversive acti vitjes within the Unit-
and at the United States of Amcnca ed States? It would be absolutely
and Canada Institute hours later. splendid if the president were to pick
Meanwhile -of course -our up his fountain pen and sian the
request for a new embassy in Mos-relevant document. I would put that
cow, now over 20 years old, was Q.Cn in a solid gold frame, hang it in
grudg.ingly granted, and we were \J\e Smithsonian Institution. over the
assigned some acreage roughl y I 00 caption, "The Weinberger Mani-
fcc t below sea level. Not content wnh festo."
that, the Soviet Umon has diddled Wl//lam Buckley 11 • 1yndlcat~
and dawdled, and the stru cture is not columal1t.
Corny ad ca11Jpalgn.for Kellogg's f!.ake
John Ha rvey Kello~ sold the
world's first com flakes wit h the claim
they curbed lustful desire. Eaters of
same were less sexy, he averred.
Today, with an ad campaign hke that,
he wouldn't se ll a flake, what?
You wonder where California's big
towns got their names? The fou nder
of the Cahforma missions was Fra
Jun1pero Serra. He came from Petra
on the Mediterranean island of Ma-
JOrca. In his home friary were the
chapels of San Francisco, San Luis
Obtspo, San Juan Capistrano. San
Buenaventura and San Diego.
In getting across a stretch of water,
a motorboat is about five times mbre
effic ient than a du c k
Hydrodynamically speaking. I don'1
often get the chance to speak
hydrodynam1cally. Only now and
then.
Claim 1s unhappy people don't eat
popcorn.
There are rare people who know a
face is a face when they sec one. but
don't know whose face it 1s, even the
face 1n a mirror. The disorder is called
"prosopagnosis."
The people who move to Los
Angeles in 24 montfls outnumber all
the ~ople who ever hvcd or died on
the Oregon Trail.
L.M. Boyd I• a 1yodlcated
colamlll•t.
Most learn little from travels
There 1s a great paradox 1n travel.
The chche that "travel 1s broadening"
is a deceptive half-truth It can be
narrowing a, much as broadening.
and usually 1'i, ~e way most peoplr
travel.
The best way is to go somewhere
and stay as long as you can. You get to
know the people, understand a little
of the lanauage, and come to ap-
preciate the common bond ofhuman-
1ty beneath the different customs.
The worst way is to engaae 1n what
most Americans c.n~·travel." This 1i1
to try to take 1n as much as possible 1n
the shone" amount of time: the
~yndrome commonly kn own as if·
th1S·IS• Tue5'U y·1t·must-bc-Belgium
You do not "broaden" yourself 1n
any sense by this highly condensed
111nerary. Rather. you do only what
other toumt4' do, sec only what they
'iCC, and return home wtth photos.
tnnkets. and a distorted view of the
"natives"
Most of the \tercotypes and preju-
dices you brought on the tnp arc
confirmed or even rc1nforctd You
\Cr evcryth1na throuah the eyes ofan
.\mencan. Hnd 1ud~ cvervthma h>
SIDNEY
H1111s
our stJndards. It 1s as (oohsh as
dnv1ng by kilomete~ and measunna
the distance by miles.
Most of u accept the-old saying
that you cannot comprehend another
person' '1tuat1on untll you ha ve
walked 11 least a mile in hi' moc-
casins.
But when we v1 \ll a foreign land -
usually on the double -we do not
trouble to put on the footwear of the
inhabitant~. we cont in ue to wear our
own pumps, or u.hdals. or loaf en, or
boots
Everyone 1s a product of his own
culture, and everyone wears colored
spectacle that are tinted h} his own
culturt Then-is no such thing as an
"obJcCt1ve" appnmal of another t'u l-
1ure :. unk'>\ and un11l we h•~c
st.ayed thl'rc Iona enough to change
spectacles
Even 1n our own country, consider
how our atutude has shif\cd in
relation to the "cowboys and In-
dians" myth Iona perpetuated in
American popular history. A century
ago, there was no doubt in our minds
that the cowboys were the "good
guys" and the Indians the "bad auys."
ln recent decades, we have learned
that there was at least a much
brutJlity and unf11mess and SW1ndl-
in1 and terronsm amona the settlers
as among the Indian tribes. We now
admit that the natives were treated
unjustly, in violation of all our
Chn st1an and democratic rhetoric.
It took use century to walk a mile 1n
the moccasins of a people who lived
among us; how can we possibly do so
1n a few weeks. tourina on a stranae
continent, livi ng only on the upper
level of the social and economic
order'!
This 1s why tr3 vel is not broad·
enina, but flattening, H we do it.
yla~y Harri• 11 a 1yo41<:a1t!d
rol•m•lfl,
At stake may be a Nobel Prize, not
to mention millions of dollars in
royalties from the sale of the patented
test kits. The French want their share
of both &Jory and money.
The French, threatening court ac-
uon, have sent documents buttress-
ing their claims to the Health and
Human Services Department, de·
manding recognition of U.S. re-
searchers' reliance on the Pasteur
Institute. The documents, seen by our
associate Corky Johnson, present a
powerful case. Herc are the high-
ligh ts:
•In the spring of 1983, Dr. Luc
Montagnicr of the Pasteur Institute
reported his suspicion that a virus
was the cause of the dread discaat.
American scientists were eager to
learn more. An article Montagnier
wrote for Science map.zinc was
e<tited and endorsed by Dr. Ro~·
Gallo, chief AIDS researcher at the
National Cancer Institute.
Montagnier met with Gallo and his
team to discuss the virus, and
subsequent correspondence was on a
first~narne basis.
•Leners from Gallo to Mon~ier
asked for virus samples and per-
mission to clone them. A receipt for
two samples of the French AIDS virus
was sijned by a Gallo researcher on
Sept. 23, 1983.
•The French stipulated that the
samples not be used for commercial
purposes. Other samples and infor-
mation were given to U.S. scientists.
All this was long before Gallo filed for
a patent. The French claim Gallo
used their information to find the
AlDS virus and develop a test kit.
which was then patented.
In an interview, Gallo disputed the
French claim, asserting that the two
viruses were not the same. He said the
French have not adequately isolated
the AIDS vi rus.
•The French filed patent appli-
cations in Europe and the United
States several months before Gallo's
&roup. The U.S. Patent Office aranted
Gallo's patent, but bas yet to act on
the French application.
•In-a ~tter -1<> a colleague after
Montagnier had identified the AIDS
virus, Gallo acknowledged that he
bad not yet succeeded in isolating an
AIDS virus himself.
•The French charged that U.S.
doctors alleaedly broke American
and international patent laws by
failing to disclose the French con-
tributton to their AIDS research.
The French say their documents
present a .. prima facic case that the
Montagnjer team was first" to dis-
cover the AIDS virus, that the Gallo
patent is based on information "de-
rived from the Mont.agnierteam" and
therefore is not valid.
The French charge further that
Gallo breached a contract with the
Pasteur Institute by using the virus
samples the French sent him in
developing a commercial product.
The French made three demands
that must be met if the Uni1ed States
1s to avoid court action:
I. Public reco,nition of the Mon-
taanier team's "invaluable contribu-
tion in first finding and identifying"
the AIDS virus.
2. Freedom for the French to
market their own blopd-test k11
"without any leJAI problems."
3. A share of the royalties from sale
of the U.S. kit, in return for which the
French would allow it to remain on
the market without lepl action.
Footnote: In a series of memos to
each otherk. Health and Human
Services omcials stated they can
suooessfully defend the U.S. patent 1n
court and rajse the question of why
the French, if their claims are ac-
curate, haven't marketed their own
test kit in Eurooe.
SPOOKING THE SPOOKS: Con-
cern about terrorism has reached
almost panic proportions at ClA
headquarters in suburban LanaJcy,
Va. Our sources there tell us that even
the day·s~nd pickup of office workers
by their spouses has become an
occasion for tension. The employees
wait outside various buiJdlnp for the
family car to show up, and every now
and then someone will foract a
briefcase, leavi na it on 1he sidewalk.
This sets off an all-out security
response. with officers scalina off the
area and handlina the bnefcase like a
terTOrist-planted bomb.
EXECUTIVE MEMO: You think
we don't need tax rcfonn? The
Internal Revenue Service is buyina
7,000 copies of "The Relaxation and
1rcss.-Reduclion Workbook" 1osend
to us field offices. "It's rouah out
there," expt.incd an a,ency spokes-
man.
Jatt .._.,.... u4 J.,.. Spur
are qNk•le!I tA ±1a.
-...
Orqe Cout DAILY PILOT/Thuf'Mjay, $ept9mbet !8, 1985 A7
}!AFER PROBLEMS UNDER CONTROL ...
francilCO, Sacramento and San
Dieao are listed arnona 1he top 1 o
bOttled water markets an the na1ion,
acootdina to the Wcstcm Watt'r
Education Foundauon.
America's fears arc being fed by
reports . of ~cid rain1 gr~und water
contam1nauon and, 1ron1cally, puri·
fyina pr~s that actually create:
canoer-caustna chemicals.
Touaher drinkana water reau·
lations are beina considered on feder·
al and state levels. Meanwhile, local
and rejional water districts have
stepped up their own monitonng
systems, hoping to regain the public's
trust
Metropolitan Water recently com·
pleted a $6 million laboratory in La
Verne to analyze the various
chemicals and organisms in 11s water
supply. Testing last spring showed the
water to be relatively clear of any
pesticide residues, said McGuire.
Much concern has concentrated on
the effects of acid rain on n vcrs
supplying California with most of its
water. The so-called acid rain or acid
fog is moisture that condenses around
sulfur dioxides and other exhaust
particles in the atmosphere.
Jn some cases. the pa.J1lcles dry up
and fall from the sky.
Lakes in the northeastern United
States and Canada have been con·
taminated by the faJ hng toxins.
However, McGuire said the San
Joaquin and Sacramento nvers con-
tain minerals that neutralize the
acidic substances.
The district also filters I.be water for
clay particles and silt. chlorinates 11
for buctena and maxes an sod1urn
hydroxide to prevent corrosion.
However. the punfyina process be·
came dangerou!I when deeomposing
maternal mcrJed with the chlonne to
create the: suspected carcinogen:
tnhalomethancs (TH M s).
Metropolitan Water handled the:
problern by substituting the chlonne
With chlorammc, a compound less
hkcly to merge with organic
substances.
The district also budgeted about
$4.7 million this year to clear the
water of strange tastes and bad odors
that arc naturally created by algae.
"When water doesn't taste good,
the automatic assump1jon is that it's
unhealthy. That's not true." McGuire
said.
In Orange County, most of the
dnnking wells, roughly 200. are
locating nonh of Newport Beach and
Irvine. After testing SS wells in key
locations. the Orange County Water
D1stnct proclaimed that th~ aquifers
were mostly free of pesticides.
However. in vestigators found
dangerously high concentrations o(
tnchloroethylene (TCE) last July in
three wells JUSt southwest of the
Manne Corps Air Station in El Toro.
Two of the wells contained between
I 0 and 2S parts per billion. well past
the five pan limit placed on the
industnal solvent.
Since the wells, around Sand Ca-
nyon A venue and Barranca Road, are
not used for drinking water. they have
remained open.
The 1rrigat1on water 1s laced wnh
the same solvent that forced the
, HB man guilty
of loan sharking
By tbe A11ocla ted Pre11
LOS ANGELES -Four men. one of them from Huntington
Beach, who prosecutors said were organmng loan-sharking at t1on in
Southern California and Las Vegas were convicted by a fed eral coun
jury of extortion in the making and collection of loans
In delivering its partial verdicts 1n the six-week trial Tuesday, the
jury acquitted a fifth man of one charge against him Jurors failed 10
reach verdicts on 14 racketeering and conspiracy charges. which "'ere
the ma.ior paf't of the go vernment's case against seven men on tnal.
The seven were named in a federal grand Jury indictment as
associates and members of a crime family
The partiaJ verdicts were returned after a Juror wrote a note to .S
District Judge Man Byrne Jr .. saying that he was under "inordinate
pressure" from fellow jurors to change has mind on unresolved counts.
Despite the note, the judge ordered the 1urors to continue their
deliberations Wednesday. The panel already has deliberated for seven
days.
Among the men found guilty was V110 Dominic Sp11lonc, 48. a
resident of Upland, 40 miles east of dt>wntown Los Angeles.
Prosecutors alleged that Sp11lone, who spent five years m federal
prison after being convicted of loan sharking 1n Chicago. led the:
operation.
The others convicted were John Clyde Abel, 41. of Chicago. Frank
11----1•-cnro 39", uf Las Vegas , and Frank ~rrao. 56-:of Huntington Beach.
The men face maximum pnson terms of 20 years on the
convictions already returned.
A fifth man. John James Barro. 46. of Hacienda Hc1~ts wa~
acquitted of one of four charges against him Prosecutors said Barro
was the No. 2 man who approved the loans.
No verdicts were returned Tuesday against. two others, Joseph
Bolognese, S2, of Las Ve~s. and John Meccia. 51. of LaSalle. 111.
The only charges against them are the consp1ra9 and racketcenng
counts. which each carry a maximum sentence of 20 years 1n pnson.
Retirement chief considered
The Orange County -Board of
Supervisors agreed this week to study
whether the county needs a separate
retirement department to oversee
operations its $636.4 m1lhon reure-
ment fund.
Supervisors also agreed to begin
recruitment of a retirement admm1s-
trator while the study 1s m progre'is.
The request to create a county
retirement department was for-
warded to the board by the county'i
Board of Retirement. That entity
-currently governs tne retirement
plan, which covers 15.325 workers
employed by the county. the Orange
County Transit D1s1nct. the city of
San Juan Capistrano and other small
independent agencies.
lfa separate retirement department
were created. it would repon directly
to the Board of Supervisors through
the rcurement adminastator. Current-
ly, the reurement adm1n1strator and
his staff report to the county through
the Tax Collector-Treasurer's Office
closure of several San Gabt;el VaHey
wells in early 1980. his also the same
cbemical tl'lat clouded the San Dieao
Creek after leak.ina from the Manne
Corps Helicopter Air Station 10
Tustin.
The degreaser 111 used ·at the
military bases to clean aarcraf\.
Water dastnct officials are reluctant
to blame the El Toro air station f orthe
well contammat1on, although they
concede it is a possibility.
"The logical culprit, though ~
can't say for sure, is lbc Marine base
because they use solvents hkc that, ..
sa1d d1stnct spokesman Gordon
Elser.
With the nearest drinking well fi ve
miles away, Elser said the polluted
wells are not an immediate threat to
consumers. The district has planted
monitori ng equipment in the area to
detennine how far the TCE has
spread.
Elser was confident the contamma-
t1on would be curbed before it reaches
drinking supplies.
Besides the TCE problem, the
district has been battling against
fenilizerres1due infiltrating wells 1n
Tustin and Garden Grove. The soil
has a high level of nitrates from the
fenilizer used on strawberry patches
and other fields.
Elser said the distnct 1s cons1denng
a SS00,000 n11rate removal plant that
would dissipate the chemical by
blending water from different wells.
Orante County Water Di•trict cbemiat
Janef Zander uaa a au chromatograph to
Dlllr .... ,..._., LM p.,_
teat for voladle or&anlca le tbe water
•apply.
Also some wells in north Fullerton
were closed 1n the late 1970s because
of a high concentration of selenium. a
type o'f metal, in the ground water.
Elserdescnbed well contam1nat1on
an the cou nty as isolated. sa) 1ng that
increasingly tight state and fedt!ral
regulauons on waste disposal and •
water standards would prevent the:
pr"blem from spreading.
··As time goe'i on. laws are gelling
more stnct," he said "I don't thank
Orange County wall ever get as bad a'
the other high industry countte'>
because of the new safeguards."
Board refuses to delay attorney contract
By JEFF ADLER
Of .... DeltJ ..........
A contract to provide cou r.t-ap-
pointed defense anomeys for in-
digent defendants when the Pubhc
Defender's Office has declared a
co nfl1ct-0f-1n1eres1.sparked a conflict
of 1t.s own this week between super-
visors and an Orange County Bar
Association representative.
Allorney Paul Wallin. chairman of
the bar assoc1ataon's cnminal law
comminee, asked the Board ofSuper·
visors on Tuesday to delay award of
the S6 million annual contract for 30
~~~~~~~~~~~
days to explore an alternatrve method
for choosing attorneys 1n such cases.
The county contracts with pnvate
anorneys in each JUd1nal distract 10
provide legal services to defendants
unable to provide for their own
defense 1n cnm1nal cases when the
public defender cannot represent
them because ofa confl1ct-of-1n1erest
Usually conflict cases 1n volve mul-
tiple defendants who cannot afford
their own attorneys. In such cases. the
public defender 1s assigned one of the
cases while the remaining defendants
are assigned to pnvate anomcys who
\Natch f or Kids
>. /j' IAHITI IHUIOC(
~· ~ Non '>mOkt'r . ;,, l~. Rate·, o i . 831-n40
441 Old NeWpclft 81Yd
Newport hech. Ca.
O~ange County's
o ·-"
easy
listening
radio station
KDCM
10!1.1
FM STEREO J
contract with the count~ to handle
their defense for set fees
In asking supervisors 10 delay
award of the two-year contract.
Wallin asked the board to consider a
system in which Judges would choose
from a panel of attor.neys who are
available to handle conflict cases
rather than assigning them to a single
law finn
He said the system he was advocat-
in~ could save the county several
m1lhon dollars and was in hne wnh
recently adopted state legislation
urging counues to adopt the panel
concept for conflict cascs-
"Wh) let one anomey monopolize
the contract wheo you can have SO or
100'!" Wallin asked the board. "What
po~ble benefit 1s there to the count}
to rush to Judgment''"
But supef' 1sors voted 5-0 to let the
contract as proposcd af\cr a represen-
tative from the County Adm1ms-
trau~·c Office assured , them that
stans11csdo not back Walhn'sconten-
uon that the S)Stem would sa"e
mone) he also said tbe county'~
Judges have endorsed the contract as
proposed
BAIJ.Y
...
Ill'~
(, 111
!A (, 10
B
Of SWITZERLAND
Robin ...
, ,)mfon combined 9.1t h ~upert
cratrsmansh1p make rhrs lo'A-
scack heel i tall t.nor1rt'
Hn )9. n t1r n .. \ \ ' "'rt
~ #-"'i~ SHOES
99 Fashion Island • Newport Beach • 759-9551
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health Bo' ind 100's Boa Mtnthol lm than 0 ~mo "111· 0 0~ mq n1colln1! Soft Ptrl MentMI and IOO'• Rot I mQ
"tai", o l mo. n1co11nt, 100'~ Soh Pack end 100'~ Men1hol !>mo 111 04 mg n1rn1ine 110 ~ 1 mq • 1.11 O Ii mq
n11;o11n11 av per c1garet11 fTC Report Jll'I '8!> Shm~ 6 mn ~tar". 0 6 nl9 n1co1r11r •" pri CIQM'11' b~ nc mp1ho1! .,,
.I------·----~ '
•
A8 OrMge Coat DAIL y PILOT !Thureday, ~tember 2e. 1965
NOTICa INVITING 81.AL!D 81DI cc.a
LOcltlon A • W"'* A*IUI al Nlc:ho4a
L.ooatlon 0 • IOl1.1 et 8ota1 Clllce
L.ocatk>n £ • GolOenweet II Talbert
NI.JC M>TtCE
Al Lump Sum
A2 L.ume> Sum
Bt L.umpSum
82 Ll.lll'lp 81.Wf\
C 1 Lump Sum C2L~Sym
D1 l\lmp Sum
02 L\lmp Sum
Et Lump Sum
E2 Lump Sum
In eccotdMoe with the provialona of Section 1773 of tM LAtlOr Code, the State of California,
Dlr9otor of the Depart"*"t of lnduatrial Relatlona ahall i»tttmlne the general prevatllng rate of
WIQll. eppllcable to the WOtk to be done; coplee of the lat•t ~ w11ge rate determlnatlona
.,. on ft .. at the office of the City Clerk and tM office of the Olrecior of Public: Work• of the City
of Huntington e.eoh, Celtfornla.. ~ Md ~Ilona, together wtth. propc>MI form, may be obtained at the otric. or the
Otrector of Pubtlc WOf'ka. City kalt, HuntJngton Beec:tl, c.Hfomla.
No bkt wlll be receNed unlaa It la made on a blank form tumllhed by the Director ot Public
Worita. The apec'8I att9ntl0n of proepec11"9 blddera II called to the propoeal reQYlrement•. Mt
fottti In the ~tlone, for f\Jll dlrectione • to the bidding.
The abov9 quanthlee are approXlmll• onty, btM"Q gtY9r1 u a t>.-tor the comparflOn of bid•.
Ind the City of Huntington 8Mc:t'I doee not expreea or by lmptbitlona agree tha1 the actual
amount of work wllt oorreapond thecNth but r...,..,.. the rtgM to lnctMM or deer .... the
amount of any ctw or portion of the WOtk. u may be dMrl'led '*'"''Y or expedient by the Dlrecior of Public: Wortca.
• Contrector lhall eubmtt a Hat Indicating all mater18'• and equipment to be ueed on thl• project 48 houra In advance of the prejob conference.
AJI bkt• wtll be compar9(1 on the ba4a of the Director of Publk: WOf'k• •tlmate of the quantities of work to be done.
&JbetlMlon of aecurlt lef fQf an_y ~ wlthheld by the City to INUr• perlonnanoe ahall be
permitted In accordance wtth p<o\ltek>n1 of the Caltfornla Govetnment Code, Sec:11on •590.
Each bkt lhall be made out on a form to be obtained at the omc. of the Director of Publlc
Worka, o.v.lopment Wing, 2000 Main Street, Huntington 8Mc:t'I, Cellfomta: lhall be 9ealed and
filed wtth the City Clerk at the CMG Center. Second Floor Admlnletratlon 9ulldlng. 2000 Main
S tre9t. Huntington Beach, Caltfornla. on or before 10:00 A.M. of OoMbef 1, 1•. and lhall be
opened by a committee compoeed of the City Clerk. the City Attorney and Director of Public
Workt or their authorized repf...,,tallve and the reeutta of said bidding Wiii be reported to the
City Councll of aaJd City of Huntington Beach at their regular meeting to be held on Mond ay, the
11et of October, 1 ... at the hour of 7:30 P.M. In the City Council Chambera In the Civic Center
Of M6d City of Huntington Beach, and shall be ected upon by aald City Councll at the regular
mMtlng of Ootobef 2f, 1111.
The City of Huntington Beectl, California reeervea the rtght to retect any or all bide, and to
eooept the bid deemed for lhe best Interest of the City of Huntington Beech, Callfornla. t.:'l orde< of the City Council of the City of Huntington Beech, California thla .......,..., 11.
ATTEST:
Ald9 Wentworth
etty Cleft!
P\8UC fl)TICE ~ oe ootalned fly CMlrlo ~AAl;~L I ; A ~
-....-;=;;;...;.;;;;.;.;,;;;,;;,_-1(1t4) S8M~7 Of (2tS) P\8JC M)llC( w M)TIC( "*''tot r1T-: ~~ the esay Wore'"' lleAl NOTICa MOTICa 0-h 111 tt1e1 oen Oeder· ~~ Oetlcl hptemt>er 18, ~ ~%"'-=-:~':i.~~~c;c: ~.... IMS "AN ORDINANCI OflTHli ~AMT MOTIC• Seot.-r\ber II, 1"8
171111 -.w ftAC~~~ CITY OF HUNTINGTON TO H IONfUY OWNIJt loot 9082, Pao-set of 111C IWJ.Y Mid BEACH AMENDING THI! YOU ARI IN OUAOLT Aeoorde, end OWi
T.t. ... ~ VICI "=':.r.-l.O. ........ HUNTINOTON ISl!ACH MU-UNDt!IU DUD Of' TRUST, he a.nd dMCtlt>H end
\MT com D -u.. __ A 111._ NIOlltAL COOi IY AME.No-DA no 8•Pt•mb1r H. on 1 MIP menced
PACWIC IOVIMION • h:i..... -.;.....:.•= ING SECTION tO 44.010 1Mt. UNLE88 YOU TAKI "A", etteched to thet ~.I eppolntlcl Tt\lltll .... ~CA -(7M) Rl!.LATINO TO PARKING OF ACTION TO PROTECT llln NOllcl recorded De-'"" t._.no N-.....,_ OVlRSIUD VEHICLU ON YOUR PROPIRrf. rT MAY bet :)t, 1970 In BOC*
ecnMd d9ed of tN1t Will. ~ Or.,.... CoMI AATERIALHlO.HWAY8" I~ SOLD AT A PV8UC 1, ltac>e 1 of OtfticWAll. SELL AT PUeUC AUCTION -..,... l neoNel: SAi.£ If YOU NEED AN EX· corda.
TO THE HIGHEST llOOEA ~~I l~=ber 2t, Ordlnanc1 No. 2185 PLANA TION OF THE THIS DEED Of TRUST IS
FOR CASH ANDIOA THI! ' ' Th-3 II 1m1nd• 1111 H\lntlngton N A T U R E 0 F T H ! SECOND ANO SUBJECT TO
CASHIERS OR CEATl,.ll!D a..dl M\lnlcipll Code to PROCEEOINQ AG Al NS T A FlMT TRUST DEED NOW
CHECKS 8PfCIFllO IN provide that wt..-hloh-YOU. YOU SHOULD CON• OF RfCORO
CIVIL CODE SECTION P1B..JC NOTICE W1Y metklnOt CIMr1Y 1n· TACT A LAWYER. TN •tr111 lddr111 or 2t24h(PllY•b• .. ttNllmeof dtc.fl llOll on-•1,..t petlt• On OCtOber 9, 1985, •I ollw oommon dlelonMlon NII In lewfUI f'l'IOMV Of lhe It.._ Ing In l'tont of realdlntlal 10:00 A.M. OAL·WESTERN of Mid proPlffy. 679~ 81E~
United 8111•) .. right, tltte Motloe el o.e...tt PfOl*'Y f~ any artlrlal AECONVEYANCE COR· RA CASA ROAD. IRVINE. anc:t Int--tonW)'ld to ~ANT NCn1CS lllghw1y 1191 out In ail>Mo-PORATION, 1 CalHomle cor• CALIFORNIA 92719
anc:t now held by It \lndlr IF YOUA PROPERTI 18 IN tlOn (I) of S. 10.44.070 of the por1tlon u duty ~nted Niimi Ind ICldr ... of lhe
Mid Oe1c1 Of Truet tn lhe FORECL08URE BECAUSE Huntington 9Mct\ Mu~ Truet• \lncW and purauent ~ry It wflOM rlQlllet pr~ Mreln.ett., di· YOU ARE BEHIND IN YOUA Codi, en oWttlnd VINcll to Oelcl ol TrUlt rtiCO<dld the Mii II being oonduoted: ICl'lbed: PAYMENTS. rT MAY 81 meyperkorltendlnlrontof Oc1oblr2. 1911, .. lnlt.No. BEVERLY HILLS SAVINGS
TRUSTOR: AL.FRED J SOLO WITHOUT ANY 11#1 relldentlal property tor 2523. In bOOll 14242 Ptol AND LOAN ASSOCIATION,
MC EVIi.LY, GERALD C. COUR'T ACTION. end you not mor. than twlM (12) 628, Of Oftldel '*°'de ln C I 0
VAN DEA l<LOMP mey haY9 lhe llgal rtom lo oonMCVt .... hO\lrt tOIOlcl or the o"'°9 of tN County ,.._ 8HEARSON/AMERICAN
BENEFICIARY· ANAHEIM bring yO\lr .ctounl In OOOd unloed Pllllf9WS or prop. oorcs.1 or Orenoe County. EXPRESS MORTGAGE
SAVINGS ANO LOAN AS-•tanestno by peytng ell of wty, or 10 "'"''-" COM-ST1t1ofe.itfomla.,.IC\lllcl CORPORATION, 1201EAST SOCIATION yourpeetdul~ltplut !Nfclll llMcll or r~tt by CAROL 0£ ORAW, en HIOHLANO AVENUE. SAN
Alcorded October It, permitted OOltl end ••• tolhlp<emi-. T'heerterllll unmarrl1d wom1n WILL BERNARDINO, CALI·
tHS• IMtt No 83-.-e1741 l*ltll wltl\ln lfw'M months ltr .. tt ... fortll In IUbllc> SELL AT PUBLIC AUCllON FORNIA 92404
of Oftlclel Aecordt In lhe of· from the d•I• ,,. notlcl of tlon (I) of ""' Huntington TO HIGHEST BIDDER FOR Olrectk>M to the &boY9
floe Of thl Alc:orOer of Or· dtnult -reoordld. TIMI 8Hch M\lnlclpel Code CASH (peyM>le .. lime of P'°'*ty mey bl obtelnlcl ange County; amount II PLUS 1"4-1M6 S.10.44.010 1re u follows Nie In lewNI moMY ot lhe by rl<l\!Mllng Ami In writ·
Mid deed Of '"'" ~ PROPERTY TAX .. of SEP· Adame AYltlUI. AIQOn-United Slit•) At the Nortll from the blneflclary senbel the followlng: TEM8ER 7, 1985. end wlll quln StrMI. At111111 Avenue, front entrlnOI to IN county llln 10 d1ya lrom the first
PARCEL 1: lncrNM unlH Vol.I' IODOUl'll 8annlna A--. 8olM AY.. CO\lrlllO\IH. 700 Ctvto pubffelllon of'"" notlcl
LOT 97 Of TRACT NO blcomll current You m~ enue. Bolu Chica StrMI, Center 0rM WM!, Sen11 Seid U1e w111 be mecle
$433, IN THE Clrf OF no• .,..,. to pey '"" enor1 BtOOllll\lrtt Street. Bulhlrd Ana. CalHornle all rlgllt, 11111 wltllout COYerllnt °' Wlr•
COST A ME.SA, COUNTY OF unpeld portion of YOU1 90-Str .. 1, Center A~. Ed-end lnllt•ll con~ 10 rll'lty, 1xpr ... 0t lmpli.d. 11
ORANGE. STATE Of CALI· count,_.. thougll full pey· Inger Aven\le, Edw1rd1 Ind now held by II under to title, poN4llllon or en-
FORNIA, AS PER MAP AE· "*"' "' .. demanded, but StrMC, Ellll Avenue. Gll'tllld Nies Deed ol lrust In lhe c\lmbflllCll 10 Ntllfy lhe
COAOEO IN BOOK 178, >'°" ~t PIY the amount A--, Goldel1.,..t Str .. t, P'C>PlftY Mt\llllcl In Mid unpaid belenoe due on lhl
PAGES 49 TO 50 IN-111ted •boVe Gotll11d SttMI, Gr1h1m Count; Ind Stltl delcrlbld noll MC\lfed by Mid Olld
C l US I V E . M I S • Unle11 the obttg1tlon Street, H1mt11on Avenue. .. of Trutl 10 wit: SN, 113.81,
CELl.ANEOUS MAPS. IN being fOfetlOlld "pon per• Hiii A~. lndlen~ PARCEL 1: Unit No. '21 plu9 lhe lo4towlng e.tlm1ted
THE OFFICE OF THE mll1 I aono-pertod. >'°" Avenue, M1gnoll• SlrMI, .. "'°"'" Ind delctloed. In coat•. •llPlf\... end Id·
COUNTY RECORDER OF heY9 the teget right to stop McFldden AYlnlll. Newlend IN Condominium Pten re-venoee 11 the time of the In·
SAID COUNTY the foreclOlure by Plvlfl9 Strllt, 8-ventlellth Street, corded on Septembef ,8, 11111 publlcetton of this No-
PARCEL 2: 1111 1ntlt1 1mo\lnt di· Sleter Avenue. Sprlngdlle 1978, In Book 12945. Peget lloe of Sate: 11t1m111d
A NON ·E XCLUSIVE mltldtKI by your creditor SlrNI, T1lb1tl Avenue, 904 to 971 lncluelve. ol Of. tNet .. 'e 1111 Ind C0911 In
EASEMENT FOR INGRESS within thrll month11ft., the Wtid StrMI. WllM!f Av· flcl1t Record• of Mid Coun· the amount of $2,069.78,
ANO EGRESS FROM SAID elate of recordltlon of lhl• enue. Yorktown Avenue ty. plus lnter•t on the unpeld
PARCEL 1 THROUGH LOTS document. which d1le ol r• THE FULL TEXT OF THE PARCEL II· An \lndlvtolcl prlnelpll bllll!Ce at the r111
195 ANO tee OF TRACT OOfdlng llpPMr1 hereon. ORDINANCE IS AVAILABLE on.1hct1eth (1180th) ln11re1t OI 17 5% per annum lrom
NO. 3433, IN THE CITY OF To tlnd out lhe ernount IN THE CITY CLERl<'S Of .... I tenant In aommon In lhe 311185 to dlll of Ule, plua
COSTA MESA, COUNTY OF you tnllll pey. or 10 11range FICE fee lnter .. t In ln<I to the tile c;ti1rge1, plu1 any Id·
ORANGE. STA TE OF CALI-tor peymentlo llop Iii. for• ADOPTED by the City common lrM of Lot 2 of v&nOll the b1nef1ciary may
FORNIA. AS PER MAP RE· clo11.1r1. or If yOur prQperty le Council of llle City ol Hunt· Trect 9680. u pet m1P Nied bl 11;1hor\rld 0t obligeted
CORDED IN BOOK t 79, In forecto9Yte fOt eny other lngton 8Md'I et 1n rlQIJler In Book 435, Pages 19 to 2 t to pay prior to Uie.
PAGES 49 TO 90. IN-reuon. oontlCI ROBERT A. ll'IMtlng h4lkl Mondi)', Sep-lnc:llJllve. ol Mltolltaneou• YOU ARE IN DEFAULT c l us I v E 0 F M IS • BOYD. 817 N Btoedway tembef 18. 1995, by the lol-MIPI. record• of Mid COun. UNDER A DEED OF TRUST
CELLANEOUS MAPS. IN "O", S1n11 An1. CA 02701, towing rOff call vote: ty, u IUCh term II deflnlcl In DATED MAY 27. 1911. UN·
THE OFFICE OF THE (714)550--0512 AYES: Councllmen: Kelly. the Miele entlti.d .. ~LESS YOU TAKE ACTION
COUNTY RECORDER OF II you heY9 11r1y ~tlonl, Mec.Alll1t.,, Mendie, Beiley, nltlone" of the Dec11tatlon OI TO PROTECT YOUR PROP·
SAID COUNTY you lhou4d contlC1 1 llW)'lt Gr.-i, Thomu CoYen1n11. Condltlonl end ERTY, IT MAY BE SOLO AT
PAACEL 3: or the government eoency NOES. Councilmen Nooe Ael1rlctlon1 d..OObed In A PUBLIC SAlf. IF YOU
Fth-332 AN EXCLUSIVE EASE-which mey heye ln11.1red the ABSENT Councilmen. "Subject to " below (the NEED AN EXPLANATION
MENT TO PLACE ANO loen. Finl9y "Decl111tlon"~ OF THE NATURE OF THE
~ublllhed Orange Cout Dally Piiot September 20, 26. 1985
Drnrn No11cis
ANWILER
J O HN GEORGE
ANWTLER, born
191~. Monroe, M ich·
1gan, passed away
September 24, 1985.
A re.ldent of New·
port Beach, aince
1948. o wned and op-
erated Jack's Sport·
tng Goods Store on
Balboa Wand. During
World War II, was
Flight lnatructor for
the Royal Air Force
and Test Pilot for
Lockheed He is
survived by son, John
Anwiler of San
Diego; brother, Ecf.
ward Anwiler of
Michigan. Services
private. Donations to
Sea View Lutheran
Plaz.a. 2800 Pacific
View Dnve. Corona
del Mar. CJ\. 92625
BLACK
rtaJC N011C( rtaJC NOTICC rt8JC fl)TIC( __ MUC ___ NO_ncc ___ ,MAINTAIN UTILITY LINES Rem.mW, YOU MAY c m °' "'*'1NGTOH PARCEL Ill: Eallment• .. PROCEEDING AGAINST
--------------...;;..o,.;..;..;.,;;.;,;;. __ ---------!---------ACROSS LOTS t95 ANO LOSE LEGAL RIGHTS IF llA C H, Allol1 M . MtlortlltntheSectk>n1entl-YOU, YOU SHOULD CON·
NOneaTO ........ a...GA&..MOTICI I(.... IMOFTRACTN0.3433.IN YOU 00 NOT TAKE Wentweftl\,CltJ Ca.tl li.d ''CertalnEallmlnttfor TACT A LAWYER
JOHN MAC LEAN
BLACK. Passed
away September 24,
1985, Newpon Beach.
Memorial Services,
Friday, September
27, 1 P .M • Pacific
View Chapel. In Lieu
ot flowers, donations
may be sent to: ALS,
Llndenwood College,
St. Charles, M o or
your favorite chanty.
Pa cific V i e w
Monuary. Directors
644-2700
CMDfTOM Of fl'ICTmOUI .,..... I ~•MCI • ADVU1WNT THE CITY OF COSTA PROMPT ACTION Publllhed Otenoe Cout C>wner." end "Suppot't. set· DATED AUGUST 211.
IUlJ( ~ NAl9 ITATlmNT MO • .,. Notlcllaller9byglven that MESA. COUNTY Of OR· NOTICE IS HEREBY Deli>' PllOI September 28, lllmenl Ind Encroechment" 1985
, ..... ,., .. ,., ThefoMowlnaperlOnl.-"ANOROt~NCEOfTHE on A\lg\111 22 1985 ANGE. STATE OF CALI· QIVEN.ThllGLENG.BOYO 1995 oftheAnleleenttti.d "E-I HI A .. I ON/AMEllUCAN
U.C.C..) doing bu1lneu u :tc1TY OF HUNTINOTON 165,000.00 U.S. 'wrrencf FORNI.A, AS PER MAP AE· II duty ipp()jnted TrwtM Th-314 ,,,.,..,, .. ol the Decllletlon. IX"'H T"UIT OHO
Notice .. hereby glll9tl to Diamond• R us. 230 E. 17th BEACH AMENDING THE WU Mind •t Santi Ana. CORDED IN BOOK 179, under. Oelcl of Truat dltld PARCELIV EUlll'lenllU l l ftVIC l l , INC., Al creditors of the wttllln St., eo.t1 Meaa. CA 92827 HUNTINGTON 8EACH OR-CllffOtnle from the °'M9I PAGES 48 TO 50 IN· MAACH 9, t982 Executed Plll.IC M)TIC( ll.lc:tl M1ement1 ere pwtlcU-TMllTll, a Y QWWN A.
nwnlcl ,,~ llMlt II Ditti Myor. Inc.. Coltl 0 I N A N c E c 0 0 E B y County Shlrltf Dapertment c L u s I v E 0 F M I s . by CHANG I( CHOI, JEAN· . lltly ... lorth In thl Anlc:te ca...wLAM> ..... T AllfT
buNI .,.,,.,_la lboY1 to bl MeM. CA 92827, A C..... AMENDING SECTION tOe1 (Orlgfni lly HIHd on CELLANEOUS MAPS. IN NIE K CHOI, YOUNG KA L.IQAL NOTICE entttHld "Eailmlntl" of the VICI Htl l 01011ff, 110t
mlCM on per.onel pr()plfty lorru oorpotetlon TO PAOVIOE FOR CHANGE 05-30-85 tromthltnriol• THE OFFICE OF THE l<IM end RAYMOND KIM u C>NMNAMCI Oec11ratl0n of Covenante ...................... ..
herelnlfl• delctlt>ld. Ateunder Eng.elh1tdt Of ZONING FROM HIGH-tt&O ~Oldel Benz. VIN• COUNrf RECORDER OF Truetor. to MClUt9 'Olt1aln NO. rm Condltlont Ind Rellnctlon1 ............. CA ea.. (114)
The neme(1)n bullneee 780 Promontory Orlw weet' WAY COMMERCIAL DIS· llC 12012027297 ... ,. Or~ SA I 0 c 0 u NT y . T 0 obllgetlonlln f1vor of RICH· "AN ORDINANCE OF THE In "Subject to:" bllOW (IN .. ,., .... 71,, •lit..,.,
ld"'-e of 1119 tntendlcl Newport BMch, CA 92827 • TRICT TO HIGHWAY COM• .. County 8'*m oapert. PROVIDE WATER, ELEC-ARO H. SUM MERL. Al VIN CITY COUNCIL OF THE "Muter Declerlllon") under m ' .
tnll\•on 1r1: MILDRED This bullneu te COii· M E R C I A l O I S • mtfll, Stnta Ana. Caflfoml&) TRICITY, QAS, TELEPHONE WHITE, ROBERT A. .+ CITY OF HUNTINGTON IM Sections hMdtng1 . In Publllhld Otenge Cout
EDNA NEWLAND. 1541 Elm dUC1ed by: • corporetaon TRICT -SERVICE STATION tor ~llon of 2 t USC aa 1 AND SEWERAGE SERVICE MA RY A. B 0 y 0 . I I B EA c H A D 0 p T I N G euch Anlcll entltled u fOI· Diiiy Piiot Septembef 12
Str..i. •8. eo.t1 Mite. AleunderE.nglltlan:tt ON REAL PROPERTY Anyl)Wlondealrlngto~ FORSINGLE-FAMILYRESI· Beneflclery.recordlclAPRIL AMENDMENT NO. 2 TO low9: "OwMr1 Rlghtl end 19 28 1985 ·i---------
Clllfornle92fl28. Tf\11 ltllement wu tiled LOCATED OH THE IN metter In the United OENTIAL USE TO SAID I, 11182 11 ln1trum1n1 THE ~~BRIOOE SPECIFIC Outlel, UtlllllM Ind Cebll ' ' Th-291 CARR
The locltlon In Otllfomlll with the County Clerk of Or· SOUTHEAST CORNER Of Slit• Olltrlc1 Court In order PARCEL '· SAID EASE· 112230 of Of1lclal Record1 In P~N Televlllon", "Suppor-t Ind EL M ER• L 0 U ( S
of IN cNef llCecutlYa office wige County on September BEACH BOULEVARD ANO to oont•t tM pro~eble MENT TO BE ALONG THE thl Otflcl ol thl Recorder 01 IYN<Wlta 81ttllment", "Eneroeoh-Pl81JC M)TIC£ CAR or prlnclpel bullnlll office 5, ,915 ADAMS AVENUE (ZONE CIUll tor ltlls Mtzut• muet SHORTEST ANO MOST Ot1nge County. CllllOtnle, Ordln1nce No. 2797 ment" Ind Community Fl· R. beloved hus-
of the Intended t,.,,.,.,Ot 11: ,._ CASE NO 85-5)" me wltll the Flleld«lt 'Agent CONVENIENT ROUT£ 8E· O.Cril>lng the lend therein em1nd1 lhe SHbrldge clllllel Euement I UMllOHI band of Pauline; lov.
Nml .. lbcwl Publllhed Otenge eo.1 .~ In Chvge Oruo Enfor~ TWEEH THE SAID PARCEL ... LOT 'OF TRACT 1012. Specific Plln by adopting PARCEL v· EHem1n1 (CrTATION JUCMCIAl) tng lather of Elinore All otber buelneM narMI Delly Piiot September 28 Zone c.. M-5 ll'nlndl menl Ad~t1tlon p 0 1 ANO THE NEAREST PU&-COUNTY OF ORANGE, Amendment No '2 10 the over Lot 3 of TrlC1 tale u NOTICE TO DEFENDANT
and lddr .... Ulld by Ille OctOber 3. 10. t1, 1985 • oi.trlc1 MIP 13 s tOet Boll 12t09 Senti Ana ce.1~ LIC UTILITY EASEMENT STATE OF CALIFORNIA AS S..brldge Specttk: Pl1n pet m1P lllld In Bo<*.,.., (AV1IO I Acutldo) "Cathy" Ghiselin;
trlnlferor within the PU! T~ tnn~of·prop.'. lornli 92712 1 ct..m end SHOWN ON THE MAP OF PER MAP THEREOF RE· Seid S .. btldge Specific Peget t5 to 23 I~ of A L l PERS 0 N S also survived by two
lhr .. )'eW'l lte: None. erty zonlcl C-4 (Hlgtlway COit bond oi S2 500 00 In SAID TRACT CORDED IN BOOK 35 AT Pt1n .... lorth development MllC4lll1neou1 M1p1, , .. INTERESTED IN THE MAT. grandchildren Ser·
Thi neme end buelnlll Commerclel Dle1rlct) t ~ tM form of • ~· • PA.RCEL 4: p A 0 E 5 0 F M I s . Ctlterll lor eo+ let .. of cord• of Mid County, IOt the TEA OF THE VALIDITY Of will be h Id Sa
eOdr-of thl ttlftlNr... "8JC NOTIC( SS (Hlghwey ~ Clr'llflecl dleCk made ~ A NON·~XCLUSIVE CELLANEOUS MAPS IN property IOClled ., th• purpoll of drllngege bin-THE INDUSTRIAL DE· Vlces e l·
1 r e S AN 0 RA l . Olairtct MrWll etltlon I*-Ible 10 fN U S Dapertment EASEMENT OV~ LOT . 93 THE OFFICE OF THE RE· eouthMlt comer Of 8Mch efttlng IM pr()9erty cort· VELOPMENT BONDS IN· urday, September 28,
STARBUCK. 1901 Oelew11e. 1( .... , mtttedj located on the ofJultlcl or·~oved eur• OF TRACT 3-433 IN THE CC>f'IOER OF SAID COUN· BouleYard and Adema Av· veyed herein, provided th" TENDED TO BE ISSUED BY 1985, 1 P .M . at the
Huntington BMch, Cell· fl'ICTmOUI ....... ~comer of BMch ty onor 'beifore0ctober 9 CITY OF COSTA MESA TY enue Amendment No. 2 IUChdreinagelhallnot\Hl· THECITYOFIRVINEBY~S Jehovah Witness
fomle 92648 MAim ITA~ ~d end Adi.ml Av IMS An lndlgency petltton COUNTY OF ORANGE' Slid ot>llQetlone ~Ing modlfle9 Section 0. t 11 Page reeaonebly reetrlc1 the In. RESOLUTION NO. 85-'00 &l" •ftndom Hall. 2277 TN pr()9erty pertinent TN 104lowlng l*'IOnl Ire enue -m be !\led In lllu ol COIC STATE OF CALIFORHl.t. AS I no11 fOI IM tum ot 12 to reed 11 followa_ tended Ille Ind en!O)'ment YOU ARE BEING SUED • ..,..16
lweto la dltcttbed In gen-doing b\lllrlW M: SOMER-TH.E FULL TEXT Of THE ~. Ot ........ thl 'prop-PER MAP RECORDED IN 1450.000 00 thll • brMCll 0 . DHtlap11111tl ...... of Mid Loi a. BY P~INTIFf (A Ud le.... Canyon Drive, Cost.a
.,., ea: 8todl In Trldl, Rx· SET . The Cottegea .. Roi-OROIHANCE IS AVAILABLE wty -411 bl edmlnlltretlwfy 800t< 178, PAGES 48 TO of, end dlfeult In. "" obi!-...... PropoMCI develop-The •treet lddreat end demltldendo) M esa In le r men t
t\lrll. Eq\llpment end Ing Ridge, 3161 AitWflf Av· IN THE CITY CLEAt<'S Of· forlelted puttuenl 10 tO 50 INCLUSIVE Of MIS-gltk>ntl for whkill IUdl Oe1c1 f'l'lltll wltllln 1111 SMt>rldge other common delignetlon. CITY Of IRVINE Harbor Lawn-Mount GoodWll ot I ctnaln ~ enue. ~ N. Colla Meaa. FICE USC HIOI end Wiii be dllo-CELl.ANEOUS MAPS IN of Tr11tt la MCurlty llu oe· SpecltlC Plan .n.11 .comply H any, of IM rMI prQperty CAM MO ...... 1J ~end la loeel«I 1t: CA92828 ADOPTED by u. City i>OMcs of eOoordlng 10 ,_ THE OFFICE OF THE cured tn that P•Y11*\t hes wltlllhelollowlng atenderda: de1crlb1d abov1 I • If you wish 10 defend thle Olive M emorial Park.
15-48 Adame 8trMt, /IF, BternelleL.lmlted,ACett-CounclloltNCltyOfHvnt· lntereetedpertlel' fMI ·COUNTY RECORDER OF notbelnmecle of.$431148 1 U... l)lmlltted -Thi purported to bl ta 1ewsuttyouheye untll0cte>-Underthedirectlonof eo.a. Mele. Celffornla. The •d••n C«POfl tlon, 1817 lngton 8-:Jfl .. "' ,.., petHlon for r~ t! SAID COUNrf, FOR THE INTEREST ANO PRINCIPAL f9'lowlng U-lfe petmlnld BtlllWOOd, Irvine, Clllfoml1 ber 211. 1985 10 ,,.. I iyp.. Harb 0 r Law n
bu11Mm Mme \INCi by IN Yonge Street, Toronto, On-mMtlng held Monday, s.p.. mitigation of torteltur wl1h MAINTENANCE OF PARTY PAST DUE THROUGH SEP· within the apeclflc pl1n ., ... 92715 rwrtnen 'llPO'IM 11 lhla M 540 Mid ·~ .. Mid ~ tlllo, Canade M'51Y5 t.,,,,,., 11 1M6 by.;... fol-th• R11ld1nt A .~, In WALLS ON OR ALONG THE TEMBER 1, 1985 PLUS ALL (1) AtN A ••• Atteched or TM un~necs Ttull .. aoun ortuary. ·5654
catlonl la "LOTUS AOOM". Tht1 bullnMI le con-lowing ro11'c:.11 v0t.: . Cllerge f"""lntg to Ill BOUNDARIES BETWEEN t98A-85 PROPERTY TA)( detlChed relldent11I unite dl10l1tm11nyt11blllty for tny A letter 0t phone call wm MC MURTRY
Se6d bull! tr"*-' .. ,,.. ducted by: a e«porMJon AY!S· Counclmin· Kelty us c. 1 te end 21 CFR SAID LOT 98 AND SAID AND P~NAL TIES THEREON Ind rel1tld recrMllonal , .. lncorrlC1MH of thl .. ,.., not protect you: your type-c L R
lendlcl to bl conlUINNlted eremei.. limited, J4t#tr~ Mec:Allit., Mandie ·~· 1319 ; 1•1319 8, without ,.._ PARCEL 1 lh1t by rMIOn thereof. the elllt ... : lddrHI and other aommon written 'M90'lli mu11 be In A A B . MC
•• the office °': ACTIOH A. Stavln. \Ilea P1"91ident Green, Thofn.. ' · Ing i"c:lalm end coet bond . PARCEL. 5: prnenl blMflctery uo<I« (b) Area B" -Alt!Mlhed dellQnatlon. If eny, al\OWn propet tegll lorm II>'°" wlllt MURTRY, age 99, of
ESCROW. INC .. 800 Nortll Thie lt*'«Mnt .,.. flld NOES· Coundlmen· None lteildut A ent In AN UNOIVIOED .82 PER sueh Oe1c1 of TrUll hu CS. rnldentlal unite Ind relltld llereln. the court to hMr your cue. Costa Mesa Survived
Tultln Avenue. S\1111 G. wtttl tN County CW1' of Or· ABSENT: Council min· c-.. I CENT INTEREST AS TEN· poalted with .. Id duly IP-reoreallon1t llcillt1M. Said Nie wtll tie mlde, but II you do not Ille your b da h · Do . M
Sant• An•. Cllffomle. Or· ... County on September Flnle¥ . c..· AQ..a~ ANT IN COMMON IN ANO pointed Tr\111 ... tueh Oelcl The ., .. cleelgnlllld •• without c;onvenanl or WM• rMPOr111 on time. you mey y ug ter, na .
enge County, on°' lfter ()o. 5. 1Mll CfTY °' HUNT1NOTON Dlt•:' September 11 1985 TO LOTS 185 ANO 1ee OF of Trull ind Ill doucmente Sub Ari.I B 1 within ArN B renty, ,..,,_ °' tmplled,,.. ION thl c.. end your WllQll. Luckhardt of Coste
IOOlr t4, 1M5. Thll buHt ,_ a 1 Ac". A 11 0 .. .. Publllhld Otenge Cout TRACT NO 3433. IN THE IVl<tenclng ob4tg1tlon1 ... ITllY be developed with of. g11dtng tltle, P<>lllUk>n. or money Ind pr()plfty mey be M es a ; 3 grand -tr.,.,., II eubject 10 Cell· Publllhlcl Orenge eo..t w........,CltJCllftc ·Delly PllOI September 19 CITY OF COSTA MESA. C\lred 111.,eby, 1nd the hce1nd/0tcommerclalu-encumbrences, lncludlng ttllen wlthOUt furttiet w1rn· daught C I
tomle Uniform Commerclll Delly PHot September 2&. Publllhed Or Coelt 28 October 3 19811 . COUNTY OF ORANQE. unoerligl'llCI dOM hereby aibJ«1 to the requirements f .... chlrgee end expen-Ing ltom tM court. ers, aro eoo. Section etoe. October 3, 10. 17, 1985 o.ity Pllo1 $epl~ber 28 • • Th-300 STATE OF CALIFORNIA AS decl•r• Ill 1Um1 NCUrld Ind lllndlfdl .. , forth In of the Tru•I• Ind of IM l"ller• .,. Ollw legll ,.. Moore of Arcata, CA.
The nll'nl end ldd,_ Of Th-310 lNl5 • PER MAP RECORDED IN lh411'1by lmmedllllly d\le the C4 Oletrlct tNlll crMted by llld Oelcl qulremenl1 You mey "''"' Dr. Mary Luckhardt
thl person wllll whom Tll-3l2 800!( 171. PAGES 48 TO and pey1bll end do. her• (cl Adult dlnClng end/Of of Trvet. to pey 1119 rem.in. to cell In lttOfney right of Raleigh N o r th
ctaim. ~ bl fllld II: AC-Ml.JC NOTICE 50, INCLUSIVE OF MIS· by ellct 10 cau11 IN tn111 llye entert.inmenl u • po. Ing pr1nc;1p.i tum1 of tli. -•y.11 y0u do not know any •
TION ESCAOW, INC .• 800 N MUC NOTJC[ MUC fl)TIC( CELLANEOUS MAPS. IN proPlftY lo bl IOl<l lo 11t1ety mlt'f °' l«lOndery UM 11.11>-not• 11eured by Mid Oelcl 1t1orney. you m1y e1111n II· C ~ ro I an a • H elen
Tuatln Avenue, Sult• G. a...GA&..MOTICI THE OFFICE OF THE the obllg11ton1 secured !ec1tottiellluenoeof1c;on. of TNll to wtt· "49.368.00 torneyrefereno11ervlcl0t1 Wilson of Akro n .
Sante Ana. Celffomlll 9270111 MO'T1CI CW AO~ ~I COUNTY RECORDER OF 1herlby dltlon.i 1.1911 permit Ind the wltll lnt.,•t tlweon from legll IJd otflce (lllled In thl Ohio; 3 great grand· ::n~~ ':!v~9!cs~:. =r The~ ~ .. ICI on ~~,tr.= "AN~~EOfTHE SA~~g~~:~· ADDRESS: t9~:TEO· S.ptemblr 7• :'~'9r~.83~t~d~ ~1~~~="'= ~~ qve II In· children: ~he aune to
be0c10ber 11, t985whlchll Weter Oletrtct Boerd ol DI-1MO tiierO.CS. Benz, 300 CITY OF HUNTINGTON 2448 MARSEILLES WAY "°9IRT A. 90YD, IY nanc.codl P4UI00111 lndenyldv11no11 treguenM11C111elonjudlclll California ln 1914 and
IM bualnlll ~before UW r~ori voted (~1) to ho4d I SC, VINdl Identification BEACH AMENDING THE COSTA MESA. CALI~ OllQH D. 90YD, ... AT· Oii production wttllln with lnllrllt Ultld Ilene un pico 0. 29 lived in Costa Mesa conlUmml~ dlll ~ public Menno lo eonllder • No ttlt2012027297 wtie HUNTINGTON BEACH OR-FORNIA T~Y .. 'ACT the drllAng llland1 lhown on The blMflcieryun<W Mid Octot>fe. tt85 p1ra l>'M-11 l927 Sh
ttldeboYa. dlf9ctor ... tncr .... ofupto lltz*1 11 Sent• Ana. c.a. OINANCE CODE BY YOU ARE IN DEf'AULT MCHAN> H. ~M. Exhibit "A" ltlllll comply OelclofTru1lher .. olore1x· 1111er une r~a eecrlt1 nee . e was
Dlted. Septembef 13, 5 percerrt. f0tnl1 from tM Orange AMEN DINO SECTIONS UNDER A DEED OF TRUST OllQH D. 90YO, ... AT· with thl prov181on1 of the ecuted Ind Oellverld 10 the a mequtn1 en .. ,, corte Past President of the
IMS TN publlc 11 lnvtted to County 8"er1ff Dapertment 9373.t , 9374. 9430.9, DATED 1015183. UNLESS T~Y....,ACT "0.1"0l11rtct (Atttcle9a)of underlignld 1 written Die· Une can1 o uni ltanld1 Cost.a Mesa W omens
..... .-. ........... com"*'' In writing. or or• (orlglMI)' llU«l In Hurl1· M12.2. ANO BY ADDING YOU TAKE ACTION TO Al.VIN WMTI. a v OllQH lhe Huntington Beech Otdt-llllllon of dlfeutt Ind 0.. ,...,ontca no .. olrecetl Club and a member o f
Tru'*'• ly,etthepublchllrlngto be tngton Bwt!, Celllofnle by THERETO SECTIO N PROTECT YO~R PROP· D. 80YD, ... ATTOMtl'Y· nenceCode. T'heetMIO.-mlndforSlll.1nd1wrtt11n protecelon. tu reapue1t1 th F U . d l endr1 L. lte rhall, held Thurldey, October tO. the Or1ng1 County 8hertff 9730 83 SPECIFYING ERTY, IT MAY SOLO AT ....... CT Ignited u Off lelend w ... Notice of DeflUH Ind Elec-eec:nt I m1q"ln1 Ilene que e ~rst nlle
Tr....... 1995. II 7:00 p.m. In the Oepertment on 05-30-t4)tor CRITERIA FOR THE LO. A PUBLIC 8A . IF YOU MAf'Y A. I OYD, •Y S1t11111111 be tubject 10 the llon to a.It. TM underlignlcl c;umpllr con 111 for-Method18t Church of
Publllfled Otlngl Coeilt boltd room II INS ~ vtoletlon of 2 t USC 881 Any CATION OF AOUL T DANCE NEED AN EXP~NATION OllQH o. aoYD, ""' AT· requirements of,,,. "O" 0. CIUllCf Mid Notice of De-m I II d • d • I I. g I I .. C<ista Mesa. where 8
Diiiy Piiot September 29, lie Avenue. Coete MeM. CA. S*900 011ir1nQ to pleo6. the HALLS A NO AOUL T OF THE NATURE OF THE TOMt!Y..._,ACT lrlct(Artleleta)oftheHunt· leuH 1nd Ellc;tlon 10 a.It to IPfoplldu 11 Ulted qutere M e m o rial Servtt'e
1t85 Wrlllen commen11 lhOIM:S matt« In tM United St .... ENTERTAINMENT" PROCEEDING AGAINST ltMeolC .......... c-lngton Beach Ordlnence be recorded In thl c:ountY que 11 corte~uche tu ll be h $
Th-305 bl lddrMMCI to tM General Olltrtct C°"'1 In Otdlr to 9'fll0Pele! YOU. YOU SHOULD CON· ty of Or ... ) ... Codi. All prOVlllont of Tiiie wller• thl reel P'C>PlftY .. cuo WI eld unday'
c ~
0 -·--l'O u
l'O
E cno ~!: w z
~--·-..
~ ·-... -
Manager end racetv9d et lhl conte.t Ille pr<>Oebll cw Ordln1nce No . 2791 TACT A LAWYER. Oft ........... 7, 1-15 of lhl H\lnllngton Bwtl locltlcl SI ueted no preeent1 au September 29, at 3
lbove lddr911 prior. to the f0tltlln etzure,mu.tflllwlttl 1m1nd1 tlll Huntington 2449 MerHlllH W1y, bolofe-,IM .. ldel'll8llad Munlclpal Codi 11'11111 be C AL·Wl l TlftN RI· repuee11 I tlempo, l>Oede PM. Friends may t'ali
Oc1ot>er 10 "*"Ing. • tlll R11ld1n1 Ag1nt In Beecti Ordln~ Codi to Colll M41M CA 92827 I NotarJ fluMo In eni tot compli.d wltll COHVWYANCl COR'°"· P4Wdef' el cuo. Y le pued«'I th M ~ The 011trtct fxee\ltlv1 Ctwge, Oruo Enforcement edd loeettonll cr1terl1 to "(If 1 ,,,. lddr ... or ltll COUfttyMdl .... ,,.,. TlWFUU TIXT Of T-..: AnoN, Ma C-'fto Del qult1rauaa11.r10,tudlneroy at e ortuary, r11 ·
Secretery •• IYlll&ble to fl· Admlnl1tretlon, P.O. Bo• """ dance flCllltlM. llve common dHlgn•tlon ol _.., .,.. .. ,., DtUQH D. OROINANCI II AVAIL· -loutt\, ...... -.. otru COMI de tu propledld day, September 28,
Cllllelllnqulrlelprlortothe t2eot.81nt1 Ana,Clllfomli en1.,t1lnrnen1 b\lllnllMI propenyluhowiuboY9.no aoYD,.,_...,llnown to AILI , IN THI C ITY Otete, CA t210I, (ltl) lln1vttoldlclon1fporperte from 7 PM untll 9
hllf'lng. encl commente di.It'· 92712. • c1a1m end ooec 80d dlecotheq1111 within the w1111t1ty 11 given u to 1i. ,... (Of PfOftd te -t"9 ca...M I OfflCI Ht·H41, •r: PreddJ• de 11 eon1 PM Sat"--'-f 6 Ing the hMrtng. bond of ,,,280.00, tn '"" C-2 Community 8\11lneH comptetenee1 or correct· at1111 of Htlefeotorr ADOPTED by the City ...,., Trwt .. '1 .... Of· uteten otroe r11qu111toe PM. 8u.1Pu..MyPr?m
P\lbllahld Orange Cout form of 1 cUlller'• or Olttrlct. c-4 Hlghwiy Com· neu)... Th• beniflcluy •wtdet-) to M tM ,.,._ Counell of IM City of Hunt. "°" legalM Puedl que u1tld to nvate
D•lty Pltot September 21. oertlfllcl ctiectt f'l'llde pay· mercllll Ole1rlct. North Hunt· under ea1<1 Oelcl of Trult, by wttoM -• •·•nl1Md lnglon BMcti 11 an revvt1r D1tld. Septef'l'lbet 9, 1985 quter1 1t1mar 1 un 1bogldo mterment at Wcst-
October 3, 1985 M>le lo tN u. s. o.p.n"*" lngton Center Spec:Hlc Piii'! r111onof 1 brllCh0r dlfllift to h WttMft in.tr-•• mwtlng held Mondey. Sep-Published Or1nge eo..1 lnmldl111men11. SI no con-minster M 1 Th-307 of Julttoe, or l!PP'o-..d .,, .. 1Ublec1 to the epprovar of 1 1n tN obllgltlonl MCured ttte Att1tMr-tn-h ot of tember 1e. 1985, by thl IOI· ()Illy PllOt September 19. oce 1 un •t>ooedo, l>Ulde Pa k Memodraa i---------ty, on or bef0t1 October 9, oond"lonll 1111 permit. thereby, herelolore ... ..CHAM> "-IUMll9M., towing roll cell vote· 28. Oc1ot>er 3, 1916 lllmll' • un llfvlclo di refer. r on on 8 Y · . P\B.IC fl)TIC( fH5 An lndlge!IC)' S*ltiOn THE FULL TEXT OF THE ecutlcl n dlflveted to the ALVIN WHITI. llM>elRT A. AYES: Councilmen: Kelty, Tll-299 encll 0. abOgedol o •uni Septem~r 30. 1985.
•---------may bl llled In .._,of 1 COit ORO.NANCE IS AVAILABLE l.lndlttlgnlcl 1 wnnen Die-80YD, MARY A. 80YD end MecAllllter. Mendie. Bali.y, ollclne de 1yud1 legal (VM e1 Under the 0a.l'e<.'Uon
,Ki1ihOUIMIH•.. bond. OfMrwlea. '""prop-IN THE CITY CLERK'S Of-teratlon of Oefeun llnd o.. IOltMWl1d11d" me IMt Gr.-i. Tllomu Ptlll.IC NOTICE dtrlC1orlotelefontoo) o f Pierce Br th MAim ITA~ wty wlll be edmlnMtr~ FICE m80d tot Sale Ind wrltt111 ... ,.... HMorll>ff 1111 NOES. Councilmen None Thi obJ«1of11111 ectlon II 0 ers
The lollowtng l*'90nl .,.. forltil1lcl purl\ltnt to tt ADOPTED by IN City notlcl of breech Ind of eleG-.._.. .. NCH.._ N. 1UM-ABSENT: Councilmen· ..!~,... 10 obtlln 1 Judgment Ind Be 11 Broadway
ClolnO bullnlll.. U.8.C teoe. end""' ea.~ Councll of IM City of Hunt· flon. to cauM the llndlr· ...... ALVIN WHrTl. llKJe. ~ ... ::::"·-.. ,":'.... dlctee Of ,,. court y ... Mortuary. 642-9150 S 0 U T H CO A 8 T pOMd of ICCOrdlng to l9w lngtOI\ 9Mctl el In reguler llgMd lo Mil Mid pr~ IRT A. 80YD, MMY A. c m °' HUNTINQTON •nv• -d1tlng the 1MU1n01 of c:er. NOTEREADING SEAVIC£8 intereetlcl perttee f'l'lllO/ f11e 1 meetlflO held Moncs.y, Sip-to 11tllfy Mid obli09flonl, 90YD, ....,.._ .. .......... I I AC H, A I I a I e M . T .I. •tan teln tnd111trtll ~1t
3830-H Souttl ...., Str .. t '*"Ion tor r~ or i.nblr te. 1ta11. by '""..,.. llnd thlfaefler the "ndlr· .-lllllNt ow.. ,.... • w ...... ._ CltJ ct.tt on Oc1ot>er t , 1986 It bond• 1n tM eggreg111
81n11 Me. Callfornla 927~ mitigation Of tortelt\#9 wtttl lowing roll call vot• llgnlcl CIUllcl Mkl notlcl of A...,., "' •eat. Publlltlld Or1n9e Cout t 0 . 0 0 A M lof'l'IO\ITll OI not 10 noeed
LauflOtiMCol-.. 3e30-Ill• Re etd1n1 Ag1nt ltl AYU: Councltmen K.llly. breac;hlf'ldof-.ctiontobl .................... OlllY Pllol Sept~-2e. SHEARSON IA~ERICAN M.000.000. wtllcll '""City I~ So\ltll Beer Street.' s.nte Cherge l""u1nt to 1t MacAllet•. Mlndlc, 8elt9y. recorded Mercll 22, tM5 11 ,......,._, ...._, ....... • 1985 SEltE~~~ISC8ESTAUST DEED lndlcetld 111 Intention 10
A Callfomlet2704 u.s.c. t 118 end 21 °'" ar.n. Thom• Instr. No. 95-099673 of Of. c ....,., M llJll OMol Th-J15 .. • INC . AS lllUe by AMolutlon No
';a,;11 bu.ine11 11 con-1318.71·13'te.11 wlthOul IM-N0£8.Councllmen•Non1 llelelAecordllnthlofflceof 1110r.,..c..e,,.,...,.. TRUSTEE or Suc;c; .. eor 16-109, pur8Ulflt to Ordl-
cruc:ted by en lndlvtdull 1ng 1 c111m end OOlt bOncl. ABSENT Counottm1n Iii. Recorder ol Otinge ....._. • ..,_ .Nft1 a, "8.IC M>TICE Tru1tM or Subetlt\lted nance No 92.5 of Ille City.
LAO-AA OtANE COLVER p ....... &... ..... ,...._ ~ County; t• .... Tru1IM, oltlllt oerteln Oelcl The objlct of tlllt action la I Thie'"'*"""' ... flllcl ..... Apnt'M ~ CrtY Of' HUNTINQTOH s.ld .... wtttbemlcll but PvblllMcl Orenge Cout I( of TNll IXKUtld ~CARL. lllo to Obtain I ~t
wlththeCount;C..ofOr· Caal:R().85-0()46 a l A C H , A llo le M . wltlloul coven1111 or~.,. Ollty PtlOt SeptemC>lt 19, ........ TIMI =~~~~~y8rE1K ET•Od and~ .. fromtllltlcoun •noe County on Augul1 7, o.te: Sept~ber t '· IMll _.........., Cltf Cllftc r.,,ry, ·~ ... 0r Implied, r• 2e. Oct<>blf 3. !O. 1995 ~ ,._. .... ~ HUSBAND ANO ~I ~-...: lhet >'°" bl tor.vet barred
11086 Publtlfted Orenoe eoeat P\lblllltled Orenoe eo..1 g1rdtng 11111 pc)IMllMlorl or Th-303 .--... • •ov lndtoreclolldffomcon111t· ,_ o.My Pt'°' 84iptember 19. Olilly PHot S..,tember 28, enoumbf1noea. 10 pey 'the c..e.11 recorded MIY :ltl 198 I u Ing tM vllldlty of Mid Bond•
Publllhld Ora Coelt 28, October 3, 1985 . 1915 r1m11n1ng prtnctp11 II.Im of . (Sec 9504, Subd. 3, tn11rumen1 no. atO&e, In •nd pr00Mdfng1 ral•ted to
Oalfy Piiot Sept4111'1"Cr II 12 Th-301 Th-312 the notl(I) MCUred by Mid u.c.c) bOOll 14078, pege 1137, Of. their ~Oval. I 19 2e 1n.s • • deed of Tru1t with tnterett Notlcl "hlrlb)' Given by nc1e1 '*°'d• of Orenoe TN name and eddr ... of
· · Ttt-278 •-11r Mnnl'r .. in 8lld note'pr<Wldld, llCI· l'tllllC M>TICl tl'llt undlrelonld th1l 1 pub-County, Ctlllornla, and the court ta· (El nombr9 y
,--.n, "'"~ rtBJC NOTlCE ll8"0ll 11 any, llndlr 1111 ... -lie Nie of th. tOltowtno cs. puraianl lo 111•1 oertalll No-clracclonclel•cort••l:8"·
1erm1 O. Mid O..CS of tl'\lll '1Cnn0ue W ... I ICflbld C0111tere1 wtil bl tlce of Default end E.llotiof( pertor Co\111 of the St•l41 Of It·--'1CTITIOUI autMll ,..._ Gtler end • held at tN hO\lf of 12:00 to 8111 thereunder reootdld c.llfofnlt, County Of Or· ACTmOUI .._.. ..._ ITAW of the T=~ .,.:~ N.U. ITATl..wf o'OIOdl PM on IM ltll dey Mly 24. 1995 .. lnelrumant enge, 700 Ctvto c.t'ller OtM T~f~~-. TN follovMg 1*90M ere IMW C<lltlCI by lllld 0..CS ~ ~ '*T!~ of Octot>er. 1M5, at &17 Sen no, 15-t8M114 of Offi*I RI-W•. 811r111 Anl, Cellfomi.
... ~.., ...--.. -· ~ .... _.__.. L o1 T--"""""' --.. ""'""' Nleol9 Ot . ~ BMch cord• of 111<1 Count;. ""' 92101 flCTl'TlOUI lllU9Mall dolnO ~ •. ~ -.,, --ta; otu• ~· .... ""' bl held Cotteoe. 948 Coron1do, County of Orenoe. State 04 \Hlder end purl!Uent ao Mid ri. l\IMI. MOrell Ind M.U. l"fAT'DmWT Ridge Cfllt ''&I AllWfrf "°°""· 1548 Adlrnl Str••t r "4-. Oc1ot>er 11 1916 on Coat• MH1, C1lllornt1 Calltornle Oelcl o1 Tru1t ... et public llllC>ftOM number of p11.1n.
The I041ow!ng l*'llOnl .,. A~ Suite N COit• -~· ~CA /;,;;,·rn In ""'~to ·,,: 9282& 1 t 7 t A" d I. I D . auction for c .. ti. l1wfut tiff• ettorMy ... (El nomtlt-. ~~ .. rs:=~;.:~.; A c.n. 0••···~;.I. &l~~g·~~ blllldlng toclted It tot ~n,~oor~Lll c;~ 4392110&2. Llc1 nH mOMy ol the United ..... II dnx:lon y I ""'"91'0 di Clrde. t CA 92.114 ..-1 .... A .... <IU'ol•tlon' tll7 heoh. CA•*' South...,... StrMt Otenois ~'...~& .. A ~~'i ~..: ,.A 41U8E ol A"*1ca, •t THI! NORTH ,...,onoOeleboQ.csodllO. ... -• _..,,... T Cattfomll 92tM ' ' ....,...,.......,,......,I -"" Thll notlcl .. glYlfl In IC· FRONT eNTAANCI TO nil mendltltl, •): ITAADUNG, Judith £. Ult•&., 2t9 Yonoa Stttet. Tor~to, ()n. Ni bullnell ta con· At IN time Of 1111 Initial 92821 oordlllOlwltlltheprOVltllonl COUNTY COURTHOUSE, YOCCA, CARLION & Mir=•· Cerone Mer, I.to Cllt\ldl llU81Y5 d\lct9d by In lndMdull publcltt.lon ol tllll notlcl Thll bualnMI II aon-of Secrtton 9504, 8"tMsMllon 700 CIVIC CENTEll °"'"' RAUTH. A Proh••~ Cor·
CA 25 rtii. txltlNM I• con-8endrl l ltatbuell IN total ""°""' ol t ........... d\.leted by • GOfpOtltlon (3), of lM Uniform Com-W[ST, SANTA ANA, CALI· potltlon. FRITZ R STRA°'-·
T."" bvtlMN 11 c;on-ducted~ICOfPO'•llon n. ttat.,.,.,.t ... fRld l)lic:f bll9r'lce of_ ... _ Ven Ooor·L .. C<>rpot· "*dalCodl olll~SlltlOf FOANIA .. tllat rtgfle, title ING. NANCY AAO!R
ouc:ted by .,, lndMd\111 ....... ~ ~ with""' County Ctlrll "'Or· getlon llQKed -""'lbo¥e •llon. Judith J IMlll'len. CellfOfnla " lntltMt con-...,ed to WHITl!HrAD. MO H9wpott
Judith £ Ulrey A. Slev4n. Vice ,,...;,.,.., lf'IOI County on ~-clllctlbed deed-Of ,,,,., Ind Pt~.. ....... DA TED S..,tl'llOlt 23. end "OW held by " """" c.tlter onv.. 8\1111 1il00. fhll llte1ernent _... flled re. 1tetement ...,.. flld 20, 1M& eltllNnlCI • ,_ •tallfl'lefll ,,.. ,.._ 198$ Mk1 Oelcl of TNll In the ~ tMaof\, Ce11fotnie
wHh IM County Clet1lc "'Of· wtlh ""'County c.t "'Or· ,..,,,. Ind • oC:-.:~ :-::-:-. with '""eounCounty Ctlrtc of~-A M lfll c A .. c 0 L • ptopeny lltueted In Mid t2MO. T~ (11 4) ~~ty on Sepfemblr :'TINCounty on s..>••IW Ti.:;,'c;:~&:t.'Q. ':,~ 11 tt,"57 M ~ "1 on August 1 • umw.. co. . .-r a. County enc1 Stet• deacllbed '40-703$
,_ · ,_ AM. CA 92705 H II IM*I.,._ lh1t 1t the t 5 ,,_ ....... Dr • .._ .......... ... OATt f'«MI HP 14
P\lb411hact Orlf'IOI eoa.t ~ Or--eo.t !tubllNcl Orange CoMt time Of .... IN °'*1tno blO Pu Or COMl ....... CA tltet, l f 1 ltAACfl 1 LOI M. of IM5
Delly PUot 8'91.nblt 28. ,.,_..,. Pt'-' ._ -, .......... .._ ... o.it, Plot hptember 21. may bl .._ ttlen thl local ~~ .._. lnV8 ..._ t2 W.0111 ......,, ..._.. TrlCt Ho tfft. In the City Of Lal A. M.AM:t4. Ct.W. Oct 3 _, "" .._ _,,._ .. .., 0c1oci., 10 11 1"5 lndabtldi-due ,.WV\ ._,em,_ • ......, lt'vlnl, u '*"'IP rlCOtdld =--) a Y1 It. WMrT'I. Ober 10. 17 IN& Oc10C. 3 10 17 1915 . . . TM total ~tlcl Ill. e . Ocloblr I . ,.., P\ltllWled Orenge COl9I In 8oott 278, Peoaa • t. 42 n (D th ..... ,
Th-320 . . Th-309 Th-30t being In .,,,.... on -= Th-296 Delly P!tot =•ember 21. Ind 43 Of M~ ltubllltlld 0r-. Coul
the ~lt!O bid II CC>mCMed Octot>er 3. tH Th419 ~ty In,:;,,::::-of Of.:: =-~ 1~~ ~1
' ... ' ....
Pll!flCE BROTHERS
Hll MOADWAY
MORTUAftV
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642·91Ml
PACIFIC VIEW
MliMOAIAL PARK
Cemetery • Mortuary
Cllapel • Crematol'y
3500 Pac1llc View Drive
Newport Beacl'I
64•.:noo
HAAIOR·LAWN-
MT. OUYE
Mortuary • Cemetery
Crematory
16.25 Glater A11e
Colla Mes.
540-555•
c
For Ad ActM>n
Cal a
Daiy Piot
AD-VISOR
642&5678
t
..
D1ily Pilat THURSOA Y SEPTEMBER 26, 1985
Syndicates boasting breakthroughs
America's Cup competitors spending
as much for keel shrouds as 12-meters
By ALMON LOCKABEY
0.-, .............. .....,
at Newport, R.l.
f n San Diego, Dennis Conner, loser
of the America's Cup in 1983, 1s
making a bag thing out of last
Sunday's introduction of his new 12-
meter tars and Stnpes on which he
will pin his hopes for revenge against
the Aussies and their winged keel
Australia II Conner has dubbed his
syndicate Sail Amenca '87.
After a couple of months of
simmering, the Amenca's Cup pot is
boiling again this week with claims
and counter-cla ims reverberating
from Perth, Australia across the
United States to England and Europe
On the home front. Newport
Harbor Yacht Club's EagJe Syndicate,
led by Gary F. Thomson. 1S'touting a
"major breakthrough" 1n keel design
as the result of recent computer
tesung at the California Institute of
TechnoloRY and design headquarters Guy F . ThomM>n
'
And an the San Francisco Bay Arca,
Tom Blackaller and designer Gary
Mull are beg.inning to make plenty of
noise about a new 12-meter now
taking shape at Stephens Ship yard in
Californian's first year
offered 200 adventures
Replica training ship carried
cadets on 18 trips, to HawaU
By ALMON LOCKABEY
IMl!y"94 ....... Wrttw
The 93111-foot train1n~ sh1g Caltfom1an is back home in Southern Cahforrua w11h I .000 nautical miles under
her keel dunng her first year.
During that time she has earned more than 200
young cadets on 18 cruises, including a three-month
voyage to the Hawaiian Islands and an annual tour of the
CaJjfornia coast.
To mark the first anniversary. project manager Steve
'Christman made what he called a "report to the
stockholders" at a luncheon at the Ri tz Carlton Hotel.
The "stockholders" were contnbutors to the buildmg of
the training sh ip. The luncheon "!as com pliments of Ri tz-
Carlton management.
The report also was a plea for funds to help meet
operating expenses and pay the interest on a SI million
loan.
The Californian's voyage to Hawaii was her first
ocean passage since bei ng built on lhe beach in San Otego
last year. In add1t1on to her youth trainin~ duties. she
sailed to the Islands at the request of Cal1fom1a Gov.
George DeukmeJian to represent the state in Hawaii's
Tallship Parade.
PAPARAZZI
------
Seventeen days after dcpanrng the coast, tbe ship
dropped anchor at Lahaina. Maui. There the cadets
exchanged places with another dozen young men and
women who Joined the ship for two weeks of cruising.
In Honolulu the ship part1c1 pated in the July 4 parade
of sail offWa1k1k1 Beach led by the 316-foot Japanese sail
tra1~ing vessel K.a1wo Maru The event drew tbe largest
fleet of spectator boats e"er seen off Diamond Head,
according to parade director Michael Neipres.
Ahson Watt. senior cadet of the year, attended a
special reception at which she presented Hawaii Gov.
Anyosh1 a gift from Gov Deukme1ian -a replica of a
pistol given to King Kamehameha Ill by the crew of the
U.S. Coast Guard cutter Lawrence, the first Coast Guard
vessel to ever v1s1t the Hawa11an Islands.
The Californian 1s a rcphca of the Lawrence and her
v1s1t came 131 years aflrr the onginal event.
On her return to the mainland, cadet crews were
again exchanged at ausahto and the ship reprov1sioncd
for the tnp up-nvcr to Old Sacramento where she helped
celebrate another Nau11cal Heritage Society project-the
nailing of the last Ueck plank in the construction of the
storeship Globe.
The Californian began her career as the state's
tallsh1p by leading the Parade of Sail that was the kickoff
for the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles.
Dunng the first )Car the ~hip's cook. Jeanne Felton,
served 21 . 900 meals.
Stockton for St. Francis Yacht Club'~
Gold~n Gate Challenae.
So much for the three West Coa~t
syndicates. Most startling news from
the Ea!it Coast is that John Koltus. on
whom New York Yacht ~Club's
Amenca II Syndicate pinned its hope
for returning the Cup to its pedestal at
the downtown NYYC -where 11
reposed for 132 years -has resigned
"because he did not see eye to eye
wtth some ~ynd1cate members ... Th1s
leaves NYYC with three new 12-
meters -all called Amenca I I -and
no No I skipper.
.\nd now a new voice 1s heard from
Amenca's heartland. Former Olym-
pian Harry (B'uddy) Melges. world
sailing ace fro m Zenda, Wisc .. of all
places. has announced boldlv that he
plans to win the (up 1n t 9~~nd sh1tt
11 from ocean waters to the Great
Lakes.
Melges. 55, selected by the Chicago
Yacht Club to skipper a 12-metcr for
tis Heart of Amenca campaign, has
been called Amenca 's greatest sailing
resource He has been a champion 1n
nearly every class he has tackled.
including an Olympic brorue medal
1n 1964 and gold an 1972
And speakmg of breakthroughs
Harold Cudmore of Ireland has
announced the BnMh S) nd1cate for
which he will serve as sk1p~r ha\
come up w11h a new de'>•$n ( H~I)
closely guarded. of course) 1n v.h1t.h
lhe Bnts arc sure the) will beat tht'
upstart Aussies. Cudmore I\ a ""ell·
known and popular sailor 1n
The Californian put on 10,000 nautical mllea during her
Ont year u a training ahip for young Southland cadet..
A
Southern Cal1forn1a where he has com~ted in Long Beach Yacht
C tub's ( ongrcss1onal Cup more than
s1ll t1mes.
lron1call>. vtnually every cballena-
ang synd1cate_1s clajming a "break-
through" an lceel and underwater
de!>1gn and. as a result, 1s spendioa
almost as much money shroudina the
underbod1es as 10 bu1ld.tng the boau.
\1ean"'h1le a meeting of all
<.hallenger~ at l'lewport, R.I. Monday
and Tuesda) wascxpected to reduce
the num ber of hopefuls by req~a1
them w post an additional $50,000
performance bond guaranteeing their
appearance at the challenger scncs
starting lane an Western Australia in
October I 986 (There bas been no
(Pleue eee DEL8/82)
Regattas
taper off
Yachung acuv1ty m Southern Cah-
forn 1a will begrn sinking into the fall
doldrums this weekend.
On the home front. three yacht
clubs ha' e scheduled events.
Bahia Connthtan 1s stagJng a
regatta for the fntemauonal Star
Clas~ Saturda) and Sunday; Lido Isle
YC 1o>.ill cater to over-30 sailors who
will be ti) mg their skills -or lack of
same -in the Sabot and Laser
clas~s and Dana Point YC will S.Cod
Performance Handicap Racing Fleet
skippers south on the Oceansuk
Argos' aturda) and Sunday.
In other Southern Cahforn1a
) achting .\ssoc1auon areas·
Los Aa1eles-Loa1 Bea~
Lmle '\hips Fl~t -lnv1ta\lonal Scnei 'o 2 (PHRF) ~1urda' ( abnllo Beach YC....:. Fall Se~ ~o 2
1one-<les1gnJ Saturda~
Sula MOD.lea Bay C ahfom1a YC -Four O'clock Bell race (Hams Sen~ No 4). Saturday.
King Harbor YC -Autum n Regatl&,
~turda)
Pacific Manne~ YC -Man-Woman
rate ')unda~
Su Diego
'11mon Ba) 't C -Geary-18 lnv1ta·
1100.&I. \a1w-ci.). Suoda~
~n Diego \T -One-<les1gn Regatta
l')tar Etlhell<..-~2. J.24 PO. Saturday,
..,unda'
f°l\.can\lde 't r -5abo1 Fall Senes.
\uncu'
Dashing black-tie sleuths solve Catalog Caper
Committee memben Dara Bowen and Diana
Bromlley atood watch at a clue boz.
I
Sandi Roeenblat aad Colleen S.plDoea were
ready to 1l•e oat treuare bant prtan.
Hunting in Neiman-Marcµs
rewarded with prize of cruise
By VIDA DEAN
Delly l'llol ttyte RdllOI
One of the poshe\I par\le) an many a month
glittered through thee\en1ngSunday at Ne1 man-
Marcus .. khcg light' were searching the skies as It mos.
Rollses and other luxuf) \ ch1l lcS pulled up for valet
parking, and glamorouc;ly drcc;scd patrons began an
unusual treasure hunt
The smart-looking. blad .. -11ecrowd of JOO wel-
comed by ( h1 ne\e dragon dancers. "'alkcd through an
Onental gale to be greeted b} master sleuth .. Charlie
Chan"
The\ ""ere at the Fashion Island store for the
Catalog (aper benefiting the .\mcncan Diabetes
Assoc1at1on
For lO minute<; the group mingled. chatted. sipped
and tned the hot hors d'oeu' res from numerous serving
islands. tht.· usual benefit t) pc social hour
AndTHEN . thcrace(trcac;urchunt)wason. With
clues clutched 1n their hands. guests scumed about the
store. excitement. bewilderment and sometimes frus-
tration 'lhow1ngon their lace!.. Once a due was solved .
they were given another clue and took off in another
direction S1xt)·S1x pnze!. were at stake.
A "1 akes Two to Tango" clue sent Jeff Pero to the
shoe departmt.•nt from then: "the woman did not need to
wax her floor<," took him to the beauty salon.
"Slo>n boat to Chana" directed Harriet Seloa to the
travel department
"I didn't know Nctman-Marcuo; had a travel
department." said Lee GorQlley seen ctrcltng the second
floo r four ttmt''> tn less than five mt nut es.
"Wh1ms1cally on the wtld side" had Hannes Tulvlg
an a quandary and sod1d "Elton John's Bludean baby"
'Tm givi ng up. after all 1t'<1 Sunda) ... said Tul"tg(with
wife Bari).
"I think I have the \apor;, .. said 8W111y Pero.seated
and waving hercomm1ttcc memt>cr fan. "I've run up the
escalator too many time'> ..
"I've run out ofluck and 1he) have run out ot
clues." c;a1d Sandy Whitman. .
"It's all a matterofluck.'' said committee member
Diana Bromlley. "I was in charge of the treasure hunt
and put out the clues. but I can pla). because 1t has
nothing to do wt th knowing the clues. It 1sall luck."
No. I lucky person there was Dr. David Rodibaugh.
He and wife Katia~ will ht cruising aboard the Sea
Goddess next spnng. "I wasofTtoa bad stan, it was a
long ume before I started ge111nggood clues." said happy
Rodibaugh 'iltting with friends Oebl and Bruce McLean.
"l cuncd 11. Look at me .. I'm perspmng. I ran all
over the store seven time ... ~1d Judie Muto holding on
to the second pnzc, a $5.000 fox Jacket. ·:1 worked on the
committee and I'm a customer here It 's poet1cJust1~."
she added. Hu'!hand C.rmelo stood by sm1hng and said.
"l was hoping she would win something nice ...
When all the pmes had been wo n 1t was \une to
relax. dance to the music ofLyan WUll1 and v151t the
food stations The Pennington ofTenngs included chttK
and pate. four kinds of pancake . four k:tndsof e!_Sta plus
filct mi1oon for sandw1chc~. · and1nav1an salmon arid
1rres1sttble dessert '!trawbc'mc:i. 1n wh11e chocolate.
lemon mozart. blackout chocolate cake Wlth chcmes
and m1n1aturc fruit tan,.
Dunnga bntft111\e at the m1kc cha1rpcrson SudJ
ltottablatl wclcomt"d guc:'!t!I to the event alona With
(~leue Me TUASUU/82)
Soon-to-crulae David and Kathy Rodibaugh
celebrated wtnnlna the caper at Neiman-
Oelty l"ll04 ,.._Illy l•...,,.
Marcus benefit for American Dlabetea Aa-
aoclation with Bruce and Debi McLean.
Mark and Sbeny Jobnaton wonder where Hanne.a and Bart Tul"C rellled d....._
tbeJ aboaJd bead when t.bey aet thl• clue. toelal boar before bun tine beCan ln earnen.
----' '
'·
82 Ofange Cout DAILY PILOT /Thurlday, Sep•embet ae, 1985
Good parental influence negated by sick society
DEAR ANN
LANDERS: This is
in answer to the
teacher fr o m
Dubuque wbo i
quittlna because she
"can't l>ear to see
what we are doana to
•he aeneration that
A1111
luDEIS
until m y parcntscamchomc -someumes9or IOo'clock
at na&ht. I did not become hostile, I didn't use drup and I
did not steal. My gndes were good and 1 never aot into any
trouble. When I married at age 22 I was still a vif"l,in.
'COnscaence. He bas made our hvcs a nt&htmare.
Eventually we had to banish ham from our home because
of the criminaJ f nends he harbored. The troopers and
police were always at our door looking for someone.
I become enraged when parents arc blamed when
children so wron.g.
wlU be able to relale to. I laave uld ~atedly Oaal peer
prea11re ud oa111de laflHJH:eS cu udel'ID1M ud evea
deatroy die efforu of lov11t1 parn&a. TM muy ,.,_,,
U1ue day1 are feellD& pJlty for Will• t~at are aot daelr
faalt. • • •
is expected to lead us
into the 21st century."
l ~ with her until she dumped on partnts who
are "too busy making money."
When our son was born l was thrilled. I decided to
stay at home and be a full-time mother. I was always
available to chaperone a class trip, bUe a cake, have my
son's friends in or drive them to a movie or a ballpmc.
My husband coached little League summer af\er
summer. He helped with the Soouts. went hiking and
camping. We had splash parties, pajama pafties.
Halloween par11es -you name it. Occasaonally when my
husband and I went to a movie or had dinnerWlth friends,
grandparents btbysat. No strangers for our kid.
I would like to remind "Dubuq ue" that parental
influence counts for nothing when society at large is sick.
Our children are exposed to fi lthy lyrics, pornographic
magazines, 1exy ads and trashy films. Freedom has
become a license. What parents teach in the homes as
undone on the outside. Now, thanks to television. they
don't even have to leave their homes.
DEAR ANN LAND ERS: I understand most donors
to sperm banks arc medical students. How do they know
that one da¥ their own progeny won't meet and marry a
brother or sister? Wouldn't the results of such a union be
disastrous? -UT AH.
DEAR U.: Not nece1urlly.
I was a latch-key kid from the age of 7. Both parents
worked and had neither the time nor energy to do the
thinas most parents do with their children. I was an only
child growing up in New York City, let\ to m y own devices
Everything we did revolved around the welfare of our
son, but in the end, all our efforts oounted for no thing. The
boy is a drug addict. a thief with no morals and no
Unlike the kid with his finger in the dike, there seems
to be no helP.on the wax. and IA(e'verun out offingers. Isn't
it nice that 'Dubuque ' is a teacher and has a job she can
qui t? Parenthood aoes on forever. -ONE OF MANY.
Genetic• expert• 1ay laalf-brotbert u d 1l1tera woaJd
llave only iO perceDt of tile "family" 1ene1 compared wltll
full-blood brotllera uad 1l1ten, wbo wo .. d laave 100
percent. Even wltb tile latter tile clllld woald be OK,
ule11 tbere 11 a bereclltary dlaeaae la &lae family. OP' AR ONfl:O 'M.it"k vno '""it 1•tt.-r mUUODI of people
...
Riders tofightdiabetes Mesan
seeking
Cat title More than 11200 Orange Countians
are slated to jom McDonald's Million
Dollar Bike Ride Against Diabetes
Sunday.
County riders expect to raise about
$100,000 to fight diabetes. the na-
tion's No. 3 k.iller. The m inimum
pledge for riders is 25 cents a mile
with each route ranging from two to
20 miles.
Riden collecting $50 att eligjble to
win their choice of prizes in 11
categories. Top money-earners can
win a 1985 Chrysler LeBaron con-
vertible or a 1985 ~a Ray Monaco
I 8'h foot power boat and trailer.
officials said.
All entrants will receive coupons
good for one regular-sized $Oft drink.
hamburger and order offrench fries at
McDonald's.
To enter, riders can pick up sponsor
sheets from their local McDonald'sor
the Orange County office of the
American Diabetes Association.
17744 SkyPark Circle, Irvine. Riders
solicit sponsors to pledae a specific
amount of money for each mile
ridden.
According to Dr. John Mace,
president of the American Diabetes
Association Southern California Af·
filiate. Inc .. diabetes affects the war in
which the body uses food and ra1ses
the sugar levels in the blood. Unless
TREASURE
From Bl
Gayle B. Dvorak, vice president and
general managerofN-M; Collea
Espl.Hta, store fashion director, and
Dr. Frud1 RbJe, president of the
Orange County chapter of ADA.
Saw BoaaJe and Bntt Lambert
(Wynd ham Leigh). Jeu Zalkla1
(soon to open Splash and Flash in
.. A WONDERFU L SU RPRISE. A SPECI AL
MOYI E PEOPL E WILL TALK ABOUT FOR
THE REST OF TH E YEAR."
(8\ \t(J/l\(\f, \JU\ l'tJlfuJlut•
"You'll go awa y feeling good!
'American Flyers' is a fin e m ixture
of romance, humor and tears
with action sequences among the
most exciting ever captured on film.
Guaranteed to increase
the viewer's adrenalin."
\/II 1nRA l'O\T R•oH.-.J
"An entertaining. sure-fire fi lm
about rooting for the good guys."
f\l/HT•l\\t/\f ftl\ft Ill ,, .. , .. ,.v \f•I•
"O h. I loved this movie ...
·American Flyers': a JO}OU~
celebration of life. F.unny.
exciting. touching, it' a wanner' ..
•• f/f( -I' \,~ t·"'' A~•., Ar
American Ayers
A WWPAOOUCTION A JOHN BAOHAM ·-AMERICAN FLYERS
-KEVIN COSTNER QllW10 GRANT RAE °'-WN C~ ALEXANOAA PIWL JANICE RULE
-: FRANK MORRISS .::: LEE AfTENOUA -GREG MATHIESON -;: STEVE TESICH
-i: GARETH WIGAN-PIWLA WEINSTEIN -: JOHN BAOHAM
pr_; t)......,tt~C.M.,..O _ ............. .._.__ . ...._ ...... •DOLBY STEREO mmm "IL'lm~I·~ DIWIWIS fl TlllO
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SZ9 5338
COSTA MBi
u-v.;i r-r"''fi 1'1-411t
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Edwa«>s Hafbor Tw ll
531 3501
•EL lOM>
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8,. 8181 I
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E.ow.1r01 Ct1"141m11 Wnt
ftq1 393,
controlled the disease can be life-
threatening. One out of 20 people -
an estimated 800,000 in Southern
California -suffer from the disease.
Dr. Mace said that money raised
from the bike ride will be used for
research, youth services, teaching
programs. education, speakers bu-
f.UUS and free literature printed in
both English and Spanish.
Krist Biakanj a of Costa
Mesa wi ll compete against
more than 200 of America's
top Hobie Cat skippers for the
natio nal Absolut C up
Hobie-18 title, sta.rting Sunday
at Clearwater, Aa.
Atrium Court), Ka .. y and RJclaard Barwl~ (she ~ lookinJ Wow! in a
sparlchna bustier, the "an" evenintt
wear from Beverly Hills, and a wrap
jeweled skirt), Dr. Geor1e Breau
with A.,..__ Del!:.'e Patte and
Remy Blkllall. the rt MeLeu1,
Slterry and Marti Jelmatoa, s.lrley c.nn. (executive director of the ADA chapter) ... Mar1uae Haaloa
(happy over her da}' of beallty prize)
and ob, yes, the carrtaatea• were
there. Jolm and Mary.
Biakanja earned the right to
compete tn the champio nship
regatta through Oct. 5 on the
basis of his overall points total
in local and regional competi-
tions during all the 1985
season. according to Sandy
Banks, executive director of
the Wo rld Hobie Class As.
sociation.
The Hobie-18 is a light-
wei&ht catamaran that has
been clocked at speeds in
excess of 27 mph.
'1HERE'S NEVER BEEN A COMEDY QUITE LIKE
'AFTER HOUR~/ A RACY, RAUCOUS RIDE
THROUGH THt NIGHT BOUND TO LEAVE
AUDIENCES REELING WITH LAUGHTER."
"What 0 pleosure It IS to watch Sconese Oooll He IS most&lful HIS 1moges sporl(le,
hlS IOll9 cA l"nOlllemOklng 181190ls 1t1e11 In ~ dazzhng cut ond ctos&-up The ccut Is o dfeom ..
.. ·Anet Hours' 1s the yeo(s t:>est st'IOOQv 000 siorv o dellnous and
c hallenging comedy HtQhtv eniovoote1"
• -~ OC"QPO 5c."<'1t .. * * * * (HIQheSt Roting) Mortin Scorsese's ingenioui new
ti1m gem Will stay wi~VOU
long aftet you hove exper·
ienced 1t The film Is definit&-
ly on ong1nol. unlike a ny cA
Scorsese's hims. 0< t0< !hot
mottet unhke onv film "
_,.,~ "/€ N'; 'lf!MCt .,,_,,.. IOI
A Wtld tunny Ond wonoet·
tul ong1no11 A dellCIOVs. tO(>-notcn comedy··
Hf" •-1t~ ~ AJO~V1•
"A true block Comedy Aner HOIJ(S IS
o g1eo1 movie• "',.. "'°""' lf\'.J08"fber'tt'"-· .... ,,,
'Hllonous tosc1not1ng
tngt1ten1ngtv tunnv ono
auite o n;ght on the town
'#-'W •JI>-~,_4 ~ ~~
TH( GlfJf" ~· PlllSl"l'S ~ OOUf!I( ~ ... Pl>OWCIV. Al'TFQ l<OIJC!!>
llOSANNA AllQu£TTf • Vf-lllOOU •!HOMA$ CHOll(, • GIM'flH OUHHf • '"'°" ll()Al'<l!MJ • Tfq, GAAi! 0.. MfAAr>· AIC>WIOO<lfCM-•CNHlll!Nt 0 '1AllA• PQOOuCl()to Cl!SIGNIP Jfllf'l• IOWNSEND
MUSIC BY HOWllAO SHOllf • EDITtO 8'r IMH .... ~"'( D • OtlltClOQ OI "'4()1!.XA_,,..> lollCl<AH llAU l;Ai.IS
-nfN Ill' JOSfPH ..,_ • PllOOUCfO BY #>MY ROl!llCSOH GlllfJIN WNNI AAO llOllflll I Ulll~-
R ~. OA<:r£D BY 11A11111< 'iCOllSfSl Q.· ,~·_. ~j.;_]
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OllTA .U 751-4114
EDWMDS TOWN CDml
llAllE 634-2553
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BARGAIN MATCNEES I FIRST 2 Plfform1nc• Mon•y Tin S.tlrily (Except Hoti•ys & S,.C. E,.11ment1)
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KEELS SHROUDED .••
From Bl
report out Newport on 1he meeting). Challenge).
Currently there are 16 challengers
from six countries attemP.1ing to raise
from $8 million 10 $15 million each in
their bid to win the Cup. said to be the
"Holy Grail'i of yachting. They arc:
St. Petersburg.. Aa .. YC (Florida
State Challenge).
Sag Harbor Yacht Club.
New York Yach I Club (America II
Challenge).
Royal New Zealand Yach t
Squadron.
Newport Harbor YC (Eagle Syndi-
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Royal T hames Yacht Club, Eng-
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CMUV ·"6 O.lldren Un~r 12 fRC l Uni~' "101td/()ptn 7 lO Wkd.I
When she was Jan she was very very good.
but when she was bad she was ...
ITAITI ,._, ..Ut-S"' _._.
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-• raaJ1C QIMa .... IM-U.l
Keep an eye on local government
in the
• Daily Nit
s
-j•• ... -.. --·-· ~
. ...
-.. -....... -.... .. t•--•Ja• dtft• ...
I, REV 1E w
Ancie~t plays superbly
recreated, at UC Irvine
By KATHLEEN C\JMMINQS o.itr,...c..,.,,,.,,
U:C lrvioc brinas t<>selher PO>
f ess1onal actors and tdlolan of
Medieval thcatCT to re-<ftlCC,.in an ha "!'~gnificcnt simplichy, the ear'ly re-
ligious plays, a nd suc:ueda brillian~
"The Plaie Called Corpus Christi,
which consists of fl ve 20-minute
plays, 1s presented by Ute Pocwed •
Research Program in Medieval
Theater Studies, as part of the ftnt
conllnuinJ medieval theater fcttinJ
tn the United States.
For contemporary morslity to ap.
predate the medieval spirit as ex-
pressed in these plays it must be keiJt
tn mind the human conditions that
existed in the 13th and ·14th century.
In these tames God revealed himself
to man directly, makiq it lets
difficult to accept the awful lhinea
that r\appened to many be attributin&
tbem to the will of God. Man needed
only to Jove and obey God and have
fai th, that whatever happened to him,
the eventual outcome would be to his
good.
The Old Testament stories of the
fall of Lucifer, Adam and Eve, Cain
and Abel, Noah, and Abraham aad
Isaac, had direct significance to the
medieval Ii ves of both the people wt\o
performed them and the audicnQCS
who enjoyed them. However, even in
our skeptical age. these st.ones pluck
deep chords of recognition. We kn~
they arc as much a part of our cuhu~
and collective conscio usness as dle
"bag bang" and evolution tbeoriet
(and for many. take almo1t
equivalent size leaps of faith to
believe).
As the audience gathers oo the
stage, where we view the plays, we
enter an atm osphere of maaic. TM
bufc· rough-hewn timber set, beauti-
ful y designed by Douglu-Scon
Goheen, looms ma1estieally through
Director named
fo r kid s' ch orus
Dr. Joanna Medawar will be lbe
new music directo r of the Irvine
Children's Chorus and the new Irvine
Youth Chorus.
Medawar has a doctorate in choral
conducting fTom USC nad currentJy
is on the faculty and teachina the
Women's Ensem ble at Irvine Valley
College.
·Otto Coelbo, Mebr Maneoarl are Noab and wife lD .. Tbe
'1ale Called Corpua Cb.rlatt0 at UC Irvine.
a fbt pierced by amber-pink hght-
tieams and accompanied by vesperal
voices. When God, performed wtth
convincing eloquence by Professor
Edur Schell, emerges from the mist and·~ to the angels ~thered o n a
IWa}'lQI bridge above middle-earth. I
bappily cleared an empty space in
front of my agnostic mind, and gave :;re•r up to the spiritual glamor of 1t
Particularly o utstanding 1n this
production is the feeling o ne gets that
the actors are really atuned to their
characters, not simply doing an
academic exercise that leaves little for
the general audience to munch on.
T}le costumes, designed by C"huck
Goheen, are as authentic as one could
imagine and beautifully vaned in
teittlln and style. greatly enhancing
the overall effect.
There are m any fine performances,
but some which stand out are those of
Schell, Otto Joseph Coelho llJ (par-
ticularly in his role of an ox land Ron
Richards' Abraham, and Gerard
Babb and Ken Jensen. Other cast
members inchidc Matthew Sullivan,
Gina Adams. Gerard Babb. Mary
Workman, Paul Lovely, Mehr Man-
sun, Patrick Miller and Karin Ben-
nett.
The Middle English text was
adapted by Robert Cohen, Ste phen
Barney and Edgar Schell. All deserve
much credit for creating a luminous
evenan$ of excellent entertainment.
(It's ironic that a production with
this degree of intricacy and prec1s1on
would almost have to be sponsored
by the institution promoting the very
sin that got us mto trouble in the first
place: eating the fruit of the tree ol
knowledge ) o
The play will conunue at 8 p.m
tonight through Saturday and Tues-
day through Saturday of next week.
Tickets arc SS T uesda} through
Thursday and $6 for Fnday and
Saturday. They are available at C l
box offi ce. 856-6616.
"WONDERFULLY GIDDY KNOCK-ABOUT
STARTS
Fll>AY
COMEDY:' -K•thleen Cu·roll,
DAILY NEWS
PIERRE GERARD
RICHARD DEPARDIEU
'"\R-&1\\£ '"£~"°'" 1'9!> A 1....,..,, (la"'' ~ ... 1
edwards LIDO CINEMA
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"fW~OIT llA(.M
EXCLUSIVE
ENGA~NT
The chi Id re n · s chorus and the 1---:z:::-~---.,.--~-.....,,--...,..-...,::--::::--=--:--=--::---=::--:::--:=-~-:=--=-:::;;:::-:::.-
YOU th chorus arc accepting new
members through October. Infor-
mation may be obtained by calling
786-9448.
'' ... A lively film of both substance
and laughter ... "
-KEVI N Tl1( IMA~.
I OS ANGECES TIMES
a -.
NOW PLAYING
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S29 ~lJ9 irore• 7~"' 5' I •Q~ H \ Meil
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COSIA MHA lllVINI 4'I l7ll
(O .. llOS C""!m• f dwllO! IJn'"'"''I OMllGI l•n"•9/94!1' 8!>4 8811 Contcl()1M&J.6 1!.S,,
~ ........ 6« .... , ... 09 ............... J
... CREATOR' fl AN
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THI TODAY I HOW, NIC·TV
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CATEGORIES
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den gone nautical? Enter your favorite room designed around a
particular theme .
HOBBY DISPLAY-Attention Collectors and Hobbyrstsl If you
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CONTEST RULES
Th11 CON•S' ·i tft~\·Qf·ftd 10 '&<:~ ,.,., , ... ,OQt ,.,\freon j)''V O(CIJflfJ"' o l o ~" QI 1(
mob 1e ~· cw 'veohour'1 y1){ h• ct~~,., •n' .-"'r ,.\ nr,,. fl v 1 ""-1ot ·f'tl '· t' " • t \
Offte.e cotOOOfy o"CI ~ I~ rfi'll•' ·~ r 11"'" of •tlft •t-"'' ,,.,,_. 1>'"fl<>' r\ t n ,, .n, .. ,,_
~entry •Ofm ond ""~'' > c:.W-•c"Q,•1rti t 1•~ ""'#'!'';-, .. ,. "~"~ ,..v\t bflll .,,. lJlf'• l ,.st,
detcr•OllO<l ol 11>e enr•y l'!>o•OQ• ir "' OMO"" l"('fA'"v or 1~e l>o I\ P "-" ?" • ?"" • t ..
r.ilifned En••·f'\ musl t>e po,1m•11\,.,j t, w,..,,.,,,,,,lY 0.-•loC•I'• •)11> 19A~ • 1,.,, .. ,,. • • ·• •
Oo.ly 1'1lo1 c o INTERIORS 'l30 W !\ti. (, ''" ..,.,.,., (A 926}6 l·v) U( r ·• ' t ,.,
198.S Wlfln"n w•ll bt' leo1u1f\'1 ",,,. ,., 1n•l 1 l~>".>U•,wll• '" ''' ln•f"'•<)•\ v• 1 • l ,1-,.,1
on Oc1obet 2•rn 198S Dtloly f' ",, '""•~<l•"ll' "'" "<>' ,.i.a 1;4,. t "•on1, mu•' 1" 1 B ,, •. " I
Or o._., ond mu11 r•\1d~ in 1r,f'\ (ft, 1, ~',fot i' ul''' ur 1J1M r>o•liy P1io1 rht."'' q1 at 11 ,,..
l)hofogrOiP" t~f" w1nn1nq !"!ntrir\ h' ,~1hl1• 01.or • ,~,. lnt,ar,or\ \f'rt,c')r' (on•fli\10"''-rr"i • ""'"'
"'OfO fhol'\ Of!• l'cJt•qori,-ohkQvgt' ;i,')f'\I,.. ..nr. nrit1-, 11-'' OfftQCl•'r· w1U ,.,., , ('ln\ .. 1nr....,1
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• • Tne Wild Lile 198-(1 CllrtSIO-
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Tom Selleck vtalta
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h our premiere of
.. Magnum, P .I." t.o-
ntcht at 8 on CBS.
Channel 2.
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• • • ·., Julla 119 771 Jane Fonda
Vanessa Redgrave
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• M Orange Cout DAILY PILO'T /Thurtday, September 28. 1Q85
I
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FUNKY WINKERBEAN
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THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
by Bii Keane
"It wasn't just a 'love top.' It
was a 'hate hit!' "
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
by Tom Batluk DOONESBURY
I -,
BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) SHOE
e f
f
J
i
.. Tonight we're spotllghtlng our pot roast
with noodles."
DENNIS THE MENACE
by Hank Ketcham
l ..
i J
I
rve a:>r Jt.Ja< ww '™'' WEEK, ~~.
PEANUTS
His wus a st ory
t ha t had to be to.Jct.
' l6
BLOOM COUNTY
by Garry True
by Jeff MacN1
by Charles ~. Set .-----------------.
We ll .ma ybe not .
by Berke Breau
0
0
.\ '\ f~\-4-~_4'~~
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnstc
'It's been a hard day .. your ·welcome
home' 1s the last thing I need!"
llXN·T~WHY
MICHAEL MAKES
SUCH A f'RO-
DUCTiON OOf ../
Or A LmtE. B\I
OFKot'l~K!
~ Musf eE 'THE LICENSE NUMBER OF TUMBLEWEEDS
DRABBLE
No~MM-1 ,wt
»!>T &OT A.
~E.CALl
GARFIELD
MOON MULLINS
KNOCK KNOCK ...
,A.ftA' JVST NOW
<SETTING HOME,
You BUM. ?.'
JUDGE PARKER
(
PO ME A FAVOR ,
WILL YOU
~-.,.,..... ... .......__ ·--
~---==••reeeCAuSE HE LOVED
IF YOU KNEW WHO MV L vou VER'!' MUCH
NATURAL FATHER WAS ANO I DIDN'T WANT
\/VHY DIDN'T YOU TELL ME? YOU TO HATE HIM
_,........ !="OR WHAT HE 010'
~E CAR mAT HIT 'mi PCX.>R MOMMY.~
by Kevin Fagan
FO~QOICt( RJSU~ 15, 'TA~ A
CLASSIA~V At' 1N-n4enfe~ PE~NC~
.
-.\k
ROSE IS ROSE
by Jim Davis
by Harold Le Doux
Hoth vulnerable. North deals.
NORTH
• AK4
-:>KJ 92
..J AK
• 8652
EA T
• 962
• 7 3
WET
•QJl085
/ 85
)QI08 5 3
+J
<>J9 74
• K 1097
0 TH
• 7 3
A Q 1064
oJ 6 2
• AQ43
The b1dd1n1<
North Ea1t
I NT Pau
3 • Pa11t
4 C> Pa111
4 + Pa11 .,... ., ...
. outh
3 ~ ... .. ~
8
Wut
PHI
Pa11
P•H
Pa111
Opening lead. Quren or •.
Thi• •wf'ret of 'ucct-'' on many
h.rnd11 •~ kt> ... p1ng nn !\('curate count.
Thut 1" trut• both for derlnrl'r and
thf' d1•ft•nder1 All l':ut n edt-d to
ftnd the winning dt•ftnse hf'rt was
to work out South'1 dtstrihution.
Afl.-r ~outh mndt-a forci ng jump
1n heart.,, North cue btd 1padH to
• ...,hn" a m1ot1mum no trump with
... I Na:D A I WffiM-LR .
by Pat Brae
COUNT'S THE WAY
good heart support. A cue·bidding
sequence then accoun ted for all the
controls that South needed to give
him a shot at the slam.
As the cards lie. a clu b lead would
have left declarer with no chance
for his contract. However. we wou ld
OMAR f)
SHARIFF .--~ {
not nave found t hat lead: our~oice,
loo. would have been the qJ.e'n or
padea. Declarer won the king.
drew trumps in two rounds. cashed
tht> ace of spades and rutred a
spade. After cashing the ace king of
diamonds. declarrr led • cl ub from
dummy.
Eu t playtd seco nd·hand low, and
declarer fo llowed with • low club. A
!lurprised Wtsl found ht had won a
trick with the jack of club , but hf'
di d not relish having tht> lead Hti
chost' a diamond. IHclarer ruffrd on
the tahlt whilt d1scard1ng A club
from hand. And t ht club fin tue
landf'd tht slam.
I~rlftrer'11 lint or play madf' hi~
hand an open hook Since he coulc
have ruffed a diamond on the boar<
had he had another diamond. he hac
to have started with rive hearts a nc
fou r clubs.
If declarer's clubs were a'I gooc
as the A Q J. he could make ht slarr
CHARLES
Go REN
by taking two fin esses in t he suit.
Therefore, East should have ha d
his deCenaf' on the premise thl\t his
partner ht ld • singleton club honor.
East rould have t.aken his partner
off the ~nd play by inserting the
king or club wh n that !!ult was ltd
from dummy. No mftltt'r what
dl'clarer d id now, t hf'rt wu~ no way
he coulH avoid loStnlJ two club trick,
for down one.
For laforaadee •bettl Charle1
Goree'• Hw H•1a.u er for bfids9
pl•yen, write Goren Bridie l.elter.
1909 C'laa .. laMa A\le., ('!Ha.ilia·
.... .J. 08077.
-'
teau
........ _. .. ---=~ ...... ~""'-'-·-----
Oranoe Cout OAIL y PILOT fThurtday, September 29, 1986 * 85
COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, Bl
Major stock exchanges to open -i
at 6:30. a.m. beginning Mon day ~-A:~i: J 1~ ~~ ~»~m··~~ ~n :rn R~· t~~l ~1~\·11'H ~ ~°' I
:t"..;l ~t ~I.\>. l'+4 c~ !~1 ~ ~;'~, IJ 1~ 1 11~ $ ~r 1 ~ SE f:;JJ LOS ANGELES (AP) -Alann open "There is no benefit to Cahfomia 11e.:w= Grw111 1n; Ht Hltnc.o gij t l~W~11o11o· e ur1"-PvMm Fund• '"u111.. F
clocks wdl be going off a llttle earlier "I
0
have sevcraJ clients who have that I can see," said Donald E. t,=.1 ''*"~ flr'1; Jg 1~il ~ '}a1 ~~rv jU ~t a:r~ 'rn '~ I'' ~~1 ~ ! on Monday for West Coast stock more than one broker," Connell y Nickelson, president of the retall =, . 11 ~ n~ """"'14 1 g4JJ r,~ U ~~ ~~ Ni I A~ 11 IC' · brok~rs as they try to meet the new said. "lf they call and I'm not here, l brokerage arm of New York-based A~P 111v• ' Func11. I~" ,'.~ 1
11~ .. t:-I( 11rn ~;: 9 ~ f, ft='~ It working hours of the major stock could very well lose some business." Paine Webber. . :ft: ~ ~t ~~~ It JS an I aS 1t It ,J.'W I -~ l II~ '~ "' I "
exchanges. Th~ ex~ha.nges hope .an ~rhcr Thecbange1sexpcct~dto 1nc~ase 1~ ~t ~~:11 JJ.~UJ ot M 1'f ,.~ r.~•WI L ~':rE• ~0° I . ~ ~
For the first time since 1974 the openi!'& Will increase thetr business. expenses for the vanous . regional t-~·~ lt 1 ~t ,~I 14i 'f:~ ~~ ,,~ 'l* ::vrt, 'h."ls ~t io1~~ t ll t tt Gr~ a~l I I . I ~h• ally New York, American, Pac:afic . and espe~ullly with European traders, and exchanges, such as the Pacific Stock Ai ~m'7.i3 ~v$e( jf l 11. l i~ ~ Im 'ill ~·~-:!Oe ·~B 1rn ar~ I I l W:."'.ld.. llU over-the~ounter stock exchanges possibly lead to 24-hour stock Exchange, whose 100 floor-trading 5f,nc ~~ 11~ H~ 9 r, ~-ij J~• F4t i~o 11 r1,•i itl 111«1m 1•
have changed their tame schedule I() trading. employees in Los Angeles and San ~~ 'ffQ i J ~~ rn ht ; 4 v;!._ ~i a~ IF ,1~ 103' ~VV! I ~ .. L ~ open a half hour earher at 6:30 a m But f~w Sou them c;ahfomia brcr Franc!sco will have to com~ in earlier. ~comF ~ 9:'~E~ 'M~ ha ~ J .x1.,,.911';f°el'llaKA H ~' F"'?f ?l ~to 2'!'.!'11 l§O-FCI ~ at PDT · kers bcheve the extra time wlll create Pacific exchange president Jam Atutur• t cOluml>la Funot er. 1 11 &CINI ls.oo 10• rw11> Hun .o ~ E• 1 Fe1
I So~e California brokers aren't tOO muc.h new business for West Co.a~t GallaJl!er said co.sts will increase, Al~.fr11·n '1 l.t ~eel ~2 ~ a~ ~~,1 ,~n !Ht v~~[ 12ij6 ·~ ~ ~7,o 1e u 1J.ft ~~~Cl lJi i ' i!'"Cenlur~\" ~
happy about it. trading houses. Most early morning cspcc1ally for overtime.and compuu:r Hrv;v J:n 1oi7 )':Im 'i. « l ~ .Yr'~ ~D at u!XGv~ ,:~,I~ ~;., 1.-r~ i!,o;f ''t . lm Mt
trades from the West are placed by use. . ~~ F1 ~~5k rJ ~~~1 Prflh ~= F~1 1 L ~~~~ J ll ~t it:Z-13 · 1 ~.' W '~ John J. Connelly. a panner at the clients the day before so the opening "Some argue (that) now we'll sec •"'" ' M 11 H ~"' 8 ~ ~~'i rn ~~ carra 1 'ti Htmiso Dod'l1/lr: u i vl\T.ic! • downtown firm of Crowell Weedon & "won't make a bit of difference" in the same volume spread over the ,...,., ~ 12 13NL 1~d t ' H~· '}U N ~ 1 • I Lior. tN =~ a:-:_:._T UQU• .Ni. u~,,., '°'fot? !:!L
Co said he will sto p talc.mg the bus stimulating new trading, said Mary addiuonal ltflle," he says. "What is "~= vlc.
1
62 1007 i~~! t~ 1 1~ t;; !lJ ~~ ~~1F':i1e1 l~ 1• 'll =· 1tfl ~tt ~~Gl*~E '
0
" ~ It' Ii ~t
ami'insteaddrivehiscarm sohecan ~ia.nco,abroker.atYaeger Securities clear is lhatwedon:thaveacho1ce.lf ~fvr3 ,·~11~~ ~=o;j.dG uu a~ WrTdt h• Nt ~1118 1!U l ~r.,~~ 1ul St ~'t:.·:,, irn ~t ~' I ... ~ at
be at his desk when the e~changes 1n suburba~ Encan<?. . the NYSE ex.tends tts hours, we have ~~YI ' . It l~~.p .U:t 16,&i Fl~I a!l'"%~1<>jls' ll S7 . K" i .. 1 ~n 1 ~~': "'l!:'i ~lnco le lnl ~t =~~ kl The carher opentn~ mst~d affects to follow... MO,,. . IO. r re;; Frm· \ieo I ft l' 45 Of RI I I . HTCllOI S7 ML Sc Fli • ,_rx~ lO Hl · wvev 1}.gf 14 mru 2· 11 ff vi I l § US G¥1 t ,.!Ch 11 4 +4 N~ a x M~ unified M9"MI a narrow group o stocks traded The Big Board has changed its Tte11 'rn ii: 1nvQ1 J ,.,,, • K~·-"'-'lo I Nct\1"' H~ N ~ t ~t g=: 'II ~L
across the Atlantic Ocean, which hours several times since the New = ~.Pili ~t:"' 7 ~ I l l::ft~ 1 261~ ~~: u ~ lht :t =r:~,c:.· lrn = ~M:o rii' I =t
Howard Johnson mo~tly ,helps Eastern brokerages and York Stock Exchange opened in 1792. 1~~... ,,,~ 1!j~ ~ ,:_~12~ ~~fr 'If 'In 1~ ~~ 9712ff =t ~~~ ••• l2t3 NL Grwln ll';' a~ ~ 14 .. t instttuuonal traders The most recent occurred in 1974 n1r1> I 13.' ~le;~ 10. UI fO-tO 1 ~ u• Or =t APOiio %~ ,.L 1ncom } ~1«1 Funcl/'2 1~
.. The interest of Manhattan came when the closing was extended half a~ ~~m 4 . 'HJ ~A ~ !8h =t ~ ... "Ell: 1 ~' ~: M; 'I • NI-t::fon 17 =t ~f.0 ~ ~-S/~''7 tM
•UIZ chain sold to before California," said Bianco. hour to 4 p.m. EDT. &~~ l . I ~.'llF Jtterlo ,. NL F'!i' :~ 0 'H N~ 1nY1' r r }·143 =t N~~~-0 Ii» =~ ~:F~ I ~ ~t ,~iGih, ·t t ,f~ Hrrbr 11 0 't1? r:GI r 11• NL lcnDo t 10 t IC.PM r 1t NL Nuv"" 1 t N TsF"5 I l/i NL r nc '"'" H Yid I . ,. I vGI 14.32 NL \loOO 9 22 9 T ~Fr r 1 Nt OlclOom ?I n Security FUlllt• H Ill( ', tr ··~ Mun II .42 I H Vici 13 21 14 OS Fle•Fd 10.21 L l(ldl>ff r 12 N ClmeM 11 0. NL Action u • 'n<.Of • " ~ Marriott Corp. ~~!Id P.·'-tt ~~1 ~:~:F ·,~a at ~~. G~ lJ( ~·Grtiijn =t l"1i~F0l,~ ~ ir. 11 ~~ tf t i Vtfllr .6' Ii~ 9!,!IOll t,! ~L Grw1tl 111 NL (:;,'Ji\' • NL olnt 1 ~ i l6 Ullre ii f .. $C.Ene . Amer!Ca11 Ul'i r.~rl.t I .4• L lntOM 'i! =t lnv11 ll NL f 1 14 ~F U Vant vle9> 6.'
BOSTON (AP) -Howard John-~ 8~ Ii ~~ lut...d" '1 .14 I ~ r'' ... 1 I ,, n .. L L•~ 'h ~t H 19 l ~ ~ ~,· I ~I:: 'er~ ·1 NL
SOD Co., the nationwide chain Of NaW YOltK CA .. I CunFeo 1'41 11\ IC.eman ll'" llll. 9111 !"• A ~ull l \6· ~~~ I ·fl ~t Frltr Gr~ 1 L•.zi['i'llfr 'fa. ll 19 ~vJ., l~ In s.tl"':,; G{~f 8r_,,, lj ~t
orange-roofed restaurants and ~o,.:-: OBA 'i~ 1::2 ~~!A tl ~~., 1&'• 1&~ !uoac . 1t. Oelawere GrOUP O~;C ffi 1i~ ioldfci 361 NL RO<"'< 12 l4M as11o. I~ 16 Jtfl 1~ep 19 ~t
motels,wassoldthisweekto Marriott ~-'!.-.!!1""" rt ~0~m ..._~. r KlmO.I ~ ll''> ,l~ ~ t~ ... w,v tH~ Pf:ff ~'· ,t"~. 1¥1 ~:ti! 1~1 'P' ~~o~" '~ ~t ~~ '~.~lH8 &.~ ''*• ·~:t "•~IFro 10 !_'!LL ~ Corp.andPrime Motorlnnsfor$300 ~l"~*ri ir:o ·2~'21" :::Jis·~.~.1u·~ .~;: .~~ l?t: ,1!H ~1~ . :. '? ,~ ~~ .. lt 1i1" Ll~L~~TJ =~ 1~;11 1Ul 1~,B :Tult: 11)~? V~L ..... ,i~ =t ~ million, but it COUid be years before ~~~ ~.,~: c:: ~i: I~ ~= mi lt u~ r. ~;~(' i·n l · ~ Jl'G 111
1
.• \ .~8L 81::!°" t· j 0~ ~·-~ : ~ ~C ~fa~• 1~l/ lo ~ ~;;-t,• 7 !.11 S ~ ll NL V\ travelers see any changes in the 60-;;;i;.-... weeies Crv J ..... 3l;; Lenee. ,.. .... ; n:~ J"' '1:,"'J!)I tt I . It AG ·fl t 'noa'o 1 } t•dfb':1 1211/1241 ~!a.1e* ,.., 11011 NY To ,., ~ ~. a ~t
year-old roadside inst itu t ion "I~ Ir ~~ 1·~~~, ! :: I::~~: 5\~ ~ 3~f,!·~1:~ ~H•~~rod 1. 1 N ·2A of~ 1.U L ~.1r. • , , Ll:::lnr lH8 ~t ~or~•"'or\~°I\ NLI 't.~1: s1~ • • ~t? l~:g ~t led nicknamed HoJo's. ~~~Prl lJ,A 4 ~ ~ ~ ~,l~fri ff~,~~ .... ~~ 'Ar~:· Ill ';6«5 ~t ~ ti r.~ =~ ~~oG.Jlw :rn IHt L~~ S.v.11',, NL St~ Yd l!i :t ~!t~ sn, ~1 v1~r:r"Ts02.1n The company,which once doma-~~111 4'4 2~ ''°" ~ tr11.ard if.,,.~ "".,, AIT\Me<I 3'. ~,'6 io. ,04111 ~Fff~1 1 'l'l Nt ~' tl2s NLPa1newt00tr Hlvio ,4 7 TaFr11 14fOoo
nated the eat-and-sleep business A~~~ '"' ~ ~ U ~ 'n ~E 11~ 21~ ' ~ ~:?: ,J 1 1i:y i:nr.8"'11o'f2o oo ~111l+v '¥jt ~t L~ftitt~-•• , 1 ~ ~~ l!ti l~tl ~~Gr 149 1 v!'~Gf.~1626
along the Country's htghways, has ~31'~ :: '-~,;: I .. 14 "'-!Pl " -h ~ ~r.)v I~~ 6HL 0••'!1\ Gr~O NL 11:~ lt.t# ~L g.~ ~ IO!~lt ·i ~ ~~,_t: rn•rill ~ f!tt 'l~il IV:,f • tt '4 ::t AdvOr '1• ~ w.;. ~l:.-i k~ =~LP '3 ~ 66.... Ve.MM 14~ IH• Amslno 1.20 NL A i!:o 13" ~ EIK Inv lncom ,. . HIYl(I 10 tt I OM s :rn ,, I ,r, 71 '1 NL been losing mone y SinCe 1980. Its ~A!~~l~n ,,SI» ,,sr: ,~,, 1... 7_ Me'VPI VtTl>I ' ~ .... 11.... A .. HOVOhlo<i. Cert~ 13 '4 lfnln 11.07 "IL le1Fr 6-A 1 IS t1111Go f I rwt?I I• 0 IS a"fo 107 47 NL . h I . I G f L N °, 1 s s I \6 rM.O \It I..... Fnd e 10.~ 11.d Orevt ,,.. IJ_ WnTr 1Uf NL h HV ., I Jf ()lymp • I s-;o.. .cl SI L ·r: f'3 00 NL owner, t e mpena roup 0 On· le UC 'i'~h\4h1t20~1 9·16.-1 · wmt, •n ""' Jnconi US S,27 GNMA 'I " ,.L fi"T' 102~ Nt VelAo 999 10 70 Tu E• 9 M 1019 ~' 1127. 122S id 1' 11• NL don,hasbeenloolungforabuyerfor ~~~· ~l;v· ~rir ,. ·~~~ 34l~f1~ llcn• '" ~ stock 1~ 123 ,,.,1. 1.11 N~ s 3SI ,. Lulf\eren aro P••Wld 11 62 HL ,._ F11r>01 s.c '° "'NL .. G 1.... ... :,is l I' C~JWI "~ ~,'·.· &eMoll Grir ln1erm I ,66 N !. Lu 111 NL Funo li! 1tl1 PtM So I~ ,.L A -1(;, l~ll ,.L Veneuard r? more than a Year " rMt ... ... "" ~.!:it" ' wEIS• -~ ~~ NL L~ II i'O 20 I"' Sec 11 NL 1ncom ~ P...n Mu 6'9 NL 4lllnc f!lva1I ~~~. ~
Th . d T sda =~ );n 3:~ fa~:"' ~·' ,~ .... , d~ ..,.~ ' ~:;;~p I r ~~ ~YT• lj a =t :~:=Er , lt :t Ma~1Flna~ ., E'.'" n.i , .. ,, ~; ' 1l ~ ~ )S Et
they ·.~~-;;3:i·~~ ~v • .;· H~w~:J ~· ',/t':i: fill'•' ij~ ~ ij;::' & 11~ :#l ~I ,, ug .~r.~ i' 1
1/4 ii:~ E~~~~ ·;J ~'~ ~~ J21 ·~ ii~ i:a,:t! ~~{ ifa Uti ~~ ~n ~tH1 ~ Ml ~: s~ !:~~i~~ f~~"rteR~~fitsca~~ig3n~ :"' G ~··1tt1 1·1: ~~ ~ r.; ~. n~ ~ l~~\L : ID~ ~v~m U·il Bt E~~~tll. 11·1 ~~')J~A 11i~·~ '1~ ~r" 1·,·n l~~ ~lp ,;,u ,;N~ SolG: r H~ 13~\ ~~"It ., St ~=fEill> fflf-~·~dt14 FF~rmll u~ u-~eP ra~• ~ ~El ,,., =~~m CePll~ ~rw1ll t ~n L'l.• 11 N~ ~ 42 lo ~ P110rlm Grp_ ~~ 1l70 \' ~ NL ~I tll " •· ForOf~IO 'h .~ ~rr; <:.. )v\H l·l4 F~I 9 NL HYIO , Haw•I T• 915 101 ~ 1 ~ti PA..R 13JI ll .. ~ 10 1 Im ) NL " -•• "'....., ....,. ..., !ME 11 • F 976 NL lllC80l Heerncs 11 06 11 M 13 t• GNMA. ISI01'l4'1 SoOol r12!1 t T ~ ll HL ~v111:t, ~ .. ~~:~1 .~ i"' ~ ~·· 21"" l:: 'h, 'f; 8tf PNC:.• IO SI NL =~ 1,,s Ui ~·~ l¥:1 ~t ~ 11 Ii = ,w jt Sc>X"'1' 't•1 =L ~1vao \~ :t aoo o ,,,,. Fr•SG ij l!~ ~~ q·· ""'° le<U<'> tll'') 113 ,;rrFo °Yf .. NL ... utts 11t1 l ~"°" Grove MMe l,, 10U I,...,._ Fvno ~ • ,,,s NL 1r.eno i. NL OTC UPs & DowNs p~~m ~ya ~ 1" ~~!r.-· 11» m: ltmA ~fl': 8~onF~o t•.O NL ~Eiaoo11 1~~7·t \'~ aonci~lll r i:-.: ION~ ~~ ~~ 1~~ ~ 4~l5 [10~00\~' 421 1 ~ rnrv, ~ ! ~t ·MA ~ n; 'I• ~ NMkrn "'• 2~ i= :lit ·~ CePAP 21 SI Nt VS pl ,. , ""' r 1135 l MSF 1 19 11'5 'I lnC 16 lllCO , ,, I MuHY NL >n an11 l ~ ~~~,· •"' ~ ~~'OSG. ,~ Im t~·,".' .~I 'l·~ Mii.di 11 40 1\4 Imp Id .1~ 6. Wiii r .34 N Mal9-• g fl .. L 11 ll'IC 14. I '"'""' l 02 I l Mulnl 'W· NL
NEW V~K (AP) -T~ following tis! [. ~ 21\ NII' a tt"-ff,.. l ,.. or. 1 ~ :~t: ,,J warr~n'l~r that 1hev; ~nl~~ ,J..ncr' 1~ ~ i-17'14 'J~ ~~.:,!. 2 ~ :...,1: t~k~Bo fl 2 u'rl a .. r 'f Pl N ae>l•uno',1 10 11 :~ 1'gS: ION9 =~~ t~ 1~'9 &~~ 'il: ~t ~~'ear;/ ' ~b the most end dOWJ' lhe most based on ...... 3.. -Act llS 190 ..... ~ I ... u~ .. ~ ?S .. ?6 ~ ~PllG I ' at Nw•nc ' • .. v Mu 1 1• 10 °" 8G H h 'JI HiVIO I 4' .. L ~ ,, .. L I .. ~ percent of ~henge for Wedntso.y 81yyoor -Glf"Pld '"'• ~~ NwtlPS \/) 1~ Ui Enr • 4 • OYltv CJ Par mt I• is SS Prtc.M 10 '' NL eoSc -vall lnCom 3' HL ro l2 f f9 I NL N llleS I adl belo 12· 1000 s l.,-)2 j ""' Gvroo.. • 1 ..... Ho•el .,, ~ u Sur '1'• 11~ II 9S L F'tftfl " II? llhSlcio 794 1)1 FC:fTm l H• NL 11111 1 ,, .. L u v• I '° IU 3 I .. L
• o securlndi r ne w or ~.;,.,, 1·· ~ ~ii I\ ~'h._'j; NudPll ·~ " u lr1'. 1 'f· HiYld 1u 1 HL Felrmt 11s6' NL 1o~Mu11.>a1 >111nc i ll ,~ H Er• '\i NL 1" 1413 1s5l t NL sh~er1e1s 1•ndre -~i··~ che.....,• art, 1.... 2 '-• 1 ~"" .,, t ~ uvaa1 }''~ 1.~ ca1Mun 1002 NL Frm &G 12 • NL 1 IAU r '41 NL HI Qo 1 t'2 1 \ ,. HOr •1 1 NL 9'-IG r 1001 HL • ,.L ~ .....,, ,.,..... ,,... ~ ,,. a•r I ' ~ 1• U11wHll ... •• Cel'lerl Grl Fifc11eo F11U' I Eo r '°' NL lnt~lcl 1 n II 5.1'1Tr8 ,.L w1n11'1C 487 HL .IS NL di er~ belwMn he previous Ci s"" L n ~ :z .,..,~ s "' ~.... uPe11P l ,, . ., Eoultv I NL .,.. 11 Nt I ~di ~veil I lnlrm I " l T • r l .... '" 20 n 21.l' Wndt II SI NL pr Cl and Wednes-_y's lasl Of bid price. e~'c ~ 1 lf!>dl,n ero :~,. f!'" VaelR ' f. 16~7~ lnco ,. a\.. l!Ch 37. ,. 111 r SSS NI.. LIMal S tu V -" --H LI I le &ono Gro Vt'\lll't ~°"'i' UPS iW' "' CllQJi' ll -. Vt lNll • m •I l L T lnl 121 NL I Af: 'Pi •t7 MunHI t 97 T1Fr11 9~ ,.L om SI ~~ t=I NY~.,, 7. I ?•
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11
.0 el " ' """' 4 '1> H"'r F 1" P ... ')2• ValLll '7 LI L Fd0t'llr 9 NL I Eo 221 llt Munlin 1 If 1 T cF~I ~ HL 1tver• l \ ~P eo 1 NL • ellOllG 21 2 •. Hooen ~ oco 1 ··~ ' • ve,.0111 ,,.. 167oti F Lt 1 L GNMA 11 NL 1 ~' 6 t PecFo 'i's '1 M sa.1nPTE ' 1 • 50 RPf' Ea 1• NL e11rad ~.... ~ Hoov... 2m ~ PC,l. inl 6 ~ Vecirc. l7 '• We'11 Ar Gwin 10 NI. I • • I Pnn1a I 0. I Pr~vleft ~tFr"' t 10 t5 NL l~PI 10 ft 12 O'> olouv·~I u UI} ~" "· UUPP ·.·, p5wl ' .... HJIR\ " ""' Pc·G~eR -,'': •• 'i••;-... V~ro • ) I • ll'-.. 65 NL HI •cm 11 09 12 f'3 I " 16 11 I SciTcn u ' • .c NL S1Fr"' ' 1'" NL WP(; 10~ ..
....... ,. .. 1 ' I\ Pe ,., ""' ~,•,,Ttc" 'I" I • a.i.n 11'7 117S 1nco 10 NL 1 •nl St• f lllriRoc 9fl NL 1ncOl"I td ,.L ''" ,.,, ,.~ We I;;~ S• '"· • Pf .. -..,. e~ ' ',"'!· i ·· H llC HS . .., P• "'/ Vlc1r•S 1 • '"' C.••tn ew1QC1< HIYtO 10 ft ,.L ~I ,.. v • o. • ~ SP' Va• 12 19. ll t• J"CI •O SJ NL 1'"' 1"" waus• 1 t oo
"'mS .. ' ~'"' !"'°'he t ~,~Ell~· ,f':"'.~ ft,~ ww~s··~ d"' ,,, •"°" J 96 I •I I . NLI I Proo 617 MtCIAHI • I ~76 AOIPIO • NL lnv'9 .... ••>• INOOO Strumn etut ~ 4"°" I >.a ~ "-Ml llll'> 12"" ~ E 1 11 • iullC~ 17~· I 1• ~I '8~ NL I. ,.0 tf9 Moo AM 6 7 lf P..-1 .. 1 mr rwl" ' SS.SI NL W.i<;iro ••• JO it
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:moSev '/• I/• U.p : ll IA ~ 'Jo lfCEnr 2'111 2,,, elrlle 13~ 24 WldCOM ~ • r• Hllnc I ll 11 elMu Jff. NL P'rKM/ •47 • 0 LG G•• If II ~ ~-,s,·, '8.il >IL tnvn t lt Nl YnFO f OI f lt I I Bnchs 26'h + 3 UP I 1 e '" 'Ill 2S't. 1511'> fn· R v. S·J2 WmorC -· .,. .,,,. ! 1 F1~11y In•••• JO) T• l so '' 1n1ov 10 N.,li ;;;bf' r 13 H NL Anoe f7 NL Pi~ I , >IL
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I ~~:.r~ 'it. 8~ :1 a~I "' ~ Jer~r1 ,1~2.. Pr~ li"'h~ ~~:F' ;i;ij:j~J NEWS from all over Californ ia I .1·1y ,,.,,I ...
ModuHl\ltnt •t.o up 9.1 :,~~ • ..., ~ 1:=11 ~·~ ~ ~m~'" d..; 1·... l'"Luo,, 1' , . 1·5 rounded up each d ay 1n the
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@(_l!JIW ______ _
YOSEMITE ENGRAVING. ClRCA 1860
~~------------~~---,-~------~~~~~~~~-~o
Interest checking just got more intere ting.
;\in\\' thrnu~h Ot'tnht·r, t hl' . \mern:,u 1
sa,·ing~ M~L'<il1ll11'1 CIW<. king .ll'<..'l )lll ll
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~AMERICAN
bllSAVINGS
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88 ~8 Orange Coul DAIL V PILOT fThuraday, 8-i>lembet 2&, 1985
(
)
Olv l'I kle• I.H I (~
IS 1
TllUISllY'S OLlllll PllOll
Div I'• ~ LJ>tt (,flt .. " -~ '.
Stocks close lower
NEW YO RK {AP) - Stocks closed mostly
lower Thursday although they tnmmed thc:1r losSC"s
late 1n the session.
In vestors looking for .. barg.ains" following the
market's broad slide 1n the two previous sessions
helped pnce~ avoid a more severe dechnc. traders
'\Sid.
Stocke; have Ix-en dnft1ng lower 51nce Mon-
da). when pnccs <;oared following the an-
nouncement tha1 thl· lJntted States and four other
countnes would try to lower the dollar's val ue on
world currenry markets
But the 1n111al ent hus1a~m over the dollar-
wcakcning effort ha 'I hcen replaced with growing
pessimism. Anal}\ts are suggesung that the efTort
might not work over the long term and that, 1f 1t
doe~. U.S. compan1ec; would not realize the
benefits for several Quarters.
WHAT AMEX Orn WHAT NYSE Dio
NEW VORK (AP) S.P. 26 Prev
adv~nctd Todel d•r"
eel Md il~ PJ ¥~~?;:'' 7~~ 71~ =~w~' 3f 23
AMEX LEADERS
--,
NEW VORK (AP) Siie,, o
and ntt ch•~ ot tne ten mo1t
Yo ectlve Amerlcen Stock E xch1noe luue.s. 1r1dlno n ellone llv a l more t h t n $ 1 =,VIMMLAI~. 4,111 ~ljir,.~nt 1f 'l t:: ..:j. j~ ~~~ll~P lh: a:7. -'Ill ~~'tr&'i.e~~b 1 ... : ,6 • .., -"· t'°PfK 141, 111h -''• Intl 123, 4'h + 'Ill Ech081v g 121. 13~
GoLo QuoTES
METALS QuoTES
'
NEW VORK (API S.O. 26 Prev
Adve~ Todm ~~ Dec:lln ¥nch,~O mi •s 0111 Uut$ 1'1i New nlglu ll New IOw' .,
NYSE LEADERS
NEW VORK (AP) -Seles, 4 o.m price and net cnenoe of the llflHn mo't active New York Stock Eic chall99 lu ue,, lre dlng ne llooe lly a l more 1111 n \l . ~"'u?.. •l~~urML.•11· 9,3 I~ -''• eetrlce 3. 41, +I~ tn Fooo '2 ?9 1 'h +3~ IBM 2:m: 12 ~ -11• RlcnVlc:k 1.7 • Vt +S1h Mont Pow l,S • ~ -•11
HCA 1,4 , -11,
!ouldlnc I, , il'I•
xxon l·m· I ~n,~n;i, l: ~ ~t~ ~ Mtrl!Lvn l· 1 , J~ -;., ITT Coro • • \Ill +1~ ~~~~'fla. T '. ~ '4
Dow JoNES AVERAGES
N1me A~IOC g~v:~; ~lcvM~ ~ntr APO! $1\rMed l.[llQPtl I COPr8 1o
Bally Pilat THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 2a. 1985 [i1
Baaeball'a drug problem• have llttle effect on ada. C2.
Two Coaat Area volleyball atandouta honored. C2.
Angels take their act on the .. i;oad
10-game trip starts Friday.
including four_in Kansas City
By CHRIS MONAHAN
OllllJ ..... Cefrt •• .. I
The An~ls finished the home half of their 1985
season drawing over 2.5 million fans, but now, to
paraphase a Broadway tl)usacal, they're getting their act
together and takinJ it on the road
Following their 7-4 victory over Chicago Wednesday.
the Angels depaned for Cleveland this mommg to begm
their season-ending 10-game road tnp.
They leave with a one·half $3me lead 10 the American
League West because Kansas City defeated Seattle, 5-4.
By the time they take the field an Clevela nd Fnday.
they could have a one-game lead or be tied. depending on
what the Royals do tonight in Seattle
After losing the first two to the White Sox. Manager
Gene Maucta said It was important to get a wan as they
leave for the road. T he Angels won fo ur out of six on the
final homestand and Mauch saad that was enough to
prepare the Angels for the final I 0.
"We won four out of six, I'd say that gets the JOb
done," he said. "I'd hke to be a little greedier in the next six,
but I'd take fo ur I fi t's the nght four and at's four in-a-row
I'll take them ...
The four games Mauch refer'i to are the four the
Angels play 1n Kansas City (Monday through Thur!>day of
next week).
Wednesday's win was al'iO important 1n that 1t
combined all elements of the team. T he Angels got eight
hits, half of them driving in the seven runs, the big blow
Juan Beniquez's founh-an ning. three-run home run to left
field. ,
"1 can't overstate what Juan has meant to this team,"
Mauch saad. "He se~ little traps for pttcher; When he
lhmks he's going to nght (field) and he knows that the)
think he's going to right, they throw him an inside patch
and he hits ll deep."
..
AKE&ICAH LEAGUE wa'I' _,
W L Pa Ga
4llph S6 66 .566 Kansas City as 66 .j(;l in ........ ,...s.c...
Aaceh 1 Oiicqo 4
Kansas Cjty .S, Seattle 4
T ..... &.1GUM
Aapla,&dlt
Kansas City (Lttbrancit 164) at SatUe (Swift
S-9) (bdio: KMPC. 7l~1 at 7:30)
Pnll.,-10.....
Aqm at Oeveland (Radio: KMPC. 710. at
4:l0p.m.)
Kansas City at Minnetata. (D)
l\DlAINING OAMBI
ANGELI (l0) -Away (10): S.., 27. 28~ 29, Oevdand~ 30, Oct. 1, 2. 3, ic.n .. City. 4, 5, 6,
Te.us.
KANSAS CITY ( 11 )-HorDt (7): Sepe. 30, Oct.
l, 2, 3, Aqels; 4, S, 6, Oakland. Away (4~ Sept. 26,
Seatt1Ci-l7, 28, 29, Minnesota.
Note: In the event of a tic, KaMu City will bolt
a one-pme p1ayoft'Oc:l. 7.
said Bcnique-7 "It's bttn worlong, I'll have toll)' 1t more
often-."
Perhaps more important than the htttang, was the
Angel pitching. which appeared to be closer to where 1t was
in the first halfofthe season, when at was leading the league
1n ERA
Ron Romanick c 14-8 >gave the .\ngels a first balf-type
performance. p11ch1ng a strong six. before faJten ng an the
~venth He allowed six hlls and four runs, three com mg on
home runs. He struck out three and did not walk a batter
The ~el•' Doq DeClncea alldea Into
tb.lrd bUe with a tnple In the tblrd tnntna.
0.., ..... ,.._.., ..... It ...... '
Chle&ao'• Tim Balett awalta the throw u
amplre Rocky Roe loob on.
"They've got scoutin$; they watl'h you play and watch
you hit. I take my first swmg as af I'm trying to go to nght
Then. when they throw inside. I can pull It with power,''
··v ou·d lake a pretty game. a spark.hnggame. but down
the stretch when everyone as playing for the mo ney and the
recogniuon. all games are dogfightll;' said Romanick
"Chicago ambushed us the first 1wo nights and I was able to
nullify them .. (Pleue eee A.NGELS/C2)
Dodgers lose, but gain
Ferna ndo blow s lead ;
LA h om e for fina l 10
HOYSTON (AP)-It was a game where
Houston Manager Bob Lillis was ejected in
the fourth inning but was smiling at the end
ofthepmc.
It was a game where the Los Angeles Men lost to the Astros 6-4 on Kevin
Bus two-run homer in the 10th inning and
still reduced their magic number for
winning the National League Western
Division title to six.
It was a game where Fernando
Valenzuela pitched for the Dodgers and
held a 4-0 lead through six innings and the
Dodgers still lost.
Strange.
"When our patching staff gets a lead, they
rarely relinquish it," said Mike Marshall,
whose two-run triple in the first inning
helped the Dodgers to a 4-0 lead.
''When you gi ve Fernando a four-run
lead goin~ into the seventh. you can usually
bank on 1t"
No rest
forOCC
defense
Pirates m usffind
a way to con tain
explosive Gau c h os
By DENNIS BROSTERHOUS °' ... .,..., .........
But the Dodgers got sidetracked on the
way to the bank as pinch-hitter Tim
Tolman keyed a four-run rail)' off
Valenzuela with a two-run single in the
seventh and the Astros tied it at 4-4.
The score remained deadlocked until the
10th when Jim Pankovits lined a one-out
single to right field off loser Tom Nieden-
fucr, 7-8, and Bass followed with his two-
run homer for has first hit 1n 11 at-bats in
the t.brcc-game senes.
Despite the loss, the Dodgers' magic
numbcf' dropped to six because second
place Cincinnati lost to Atlanta 4-2. Now.
any combination of six Dodger victories or
six Reds losses will give the d1V1sion title to
the Dodgers. The Doc1$ers begin a 10-pme
homestand Fnday against San Francisco.
Los AnJelcs Manager Tommy Lasorda
had hoped for a better break.
··we could have knocked two off the
magic number if we had won tonight,"
Lasorda said. "Before they scored the last
two runs, the only ball they hat hard on us
was the home run (by Glenn Davis in the
seventh)."
Marshall's threc-ba11J1,e r and a wild pitch
by Houston ~tarter Nolan Ryan gave the
Dodgers a 3--0 lead in the first inning.
Los Angeles added another run 10 the
controversial founh inning when Laths and
Astros' shortstop Dickie Thon were ejected
on successive plays.
Lillis got the early trip to the dressing
room for alleging Greg Brock interferred
with Thon's attempt to field an infield
chopper by Valenzuela
On the next play, Valenzuela was forced
at second base on a grounder by Man ano
Duncan but Duncan was safe on a close try
for the double play at fi rst base. Thon
protested and was ejected.
"I had my say a little too long this time."
Lillis said ofh1s sttond ejection ever 1 n pro
baseball. '"He did interfere with Thon ..
When the Dodgers open the three-game
sencs with the Giants Fnday, Lasorda wall
send O rel Hersha ser to the mound, fol-
lowed by Jerry Reuss (Saturday) and Bob
Welch (Sunday). San Diego then comes in
for games Monday and Tuesday, followed
by Atlanta for two games and a season-
endang three-game sencs with th e Reds
Dod•ert
Cincannau
Natioul Lea1ae Wes\ W L
89 63
82 68
Wednesclay's Scores
Houston 6. Dodgen 4
Atlanta 4. C'mcmnau 2
Today's Game
Pct.
.586
.547
GB
6
Dodgen. idle
Atlanta (Bedrosian 7-13) at ( and nnau ( Mc<1af-
figan 2·3)
Friday's Games
San Francisco at Dod1en (Radio· K .\B(. Nil.
at 7:30 p.m.)
Houston at Cincmnat1. n
REMAINING GAMES
DODGERS ( 10}-Home ( 10) Sept ~-. 2b 29
San Francisco: 30. Oct. l. San Diego. 2. 3 . .\tlanta 4
5, 6, Cancmna11
CINCINNATI ( 11 J -Home (41 Sept 2<>
Atlanta. 27. 28. 29. Houston. Away (7 ): Sept 30. Oct
I, San Francisco; ::!. l. San Diego. 4. 5, 6. Oo<lger>
Note. C'ancannall has a game in Ch1cagu that wall
only be played 1f 11 1s needed 10 decide the d1\ asaon
title
The tradition continues
Fan s and feelings are always therefor
Hllntiqgton Beach, even if wins aren 't RocER
CARLSON
When Huntington Beach and Ncw-
pon Harbor high sch ooh meet 1 n
football toni~t. 1t will renew a lot of
fond memones for many oldt1 me rs
And for Oiler fan s, there are a lot of
times to remember, because of the
uniqueness of the school, beginning
at the tum of the century - start a ng
basketball in I 906and foo tball an
1921.
many of the Oilers that werc thert· an
the 20s. 30s. 40s. so~. 60s. 70\ and
now 80s. are stall there
And 1t'' prooftrad111on can lOmt
without winn1ngeveryth1ng an sight
Far ~ at for the Oilers m football who
have tasted league champ1on~h1p'
only 10 1926. I Q46, I Q66 and 11Hn
In fact, 11 wasn't long ago that
accoun ts included that dreadcd
stat1st1c·
"I t was the 01/e~· eighth strJ1gh1
Hrn1rdx-t.r1't• ~..,, \\lrTl.tn' 'I"''
Ollt'' ..
In .1JJ1t111n 111 thl "'• ll'' ura thl· lal·l,t
tht• ( )1kr' h.1J an11th1•r pr )hkm -
dpath' .11 tht 111p It's not quite a point-a-minute
offense -Saddleback CollCJC has
tallied 90 in two games ( 120 minutes)
-but indeed it's a potent squad that
the Orange Coast football team will
face Saturday night at Saddleback.
JuonSchmld
Huntington Beach football coach
George Pascoe obviously ~asn 't
around then, nor 1s he a product ot the
Oilers. But the feeling 1s there. hl''s
convinced ofthat
leagueloss /1 "as the 011C"~ ·I .. ,h
straight league loss Ir "a~ th<'
Oh' 11•u\h n11um ~Jnll'd lo tallt;
ahout 1tl11rthl r1'l11rJ hutha'l'\uu
,., N \Ct'n < j r11h n t umh' ~·1·tht '
The Gauchos. in fact, are tops an
the state in the community college
ranks in points scored af\cr two weeks
of play after mauling El Camino
(48-14) and San Bernardino Valley
(42-10).
r to perfection 10 the fi rst quarter,
spnnting out to a 21-0 lead thanks to
three touchdowns by Bret Mersola.
The first came on a 21-yard run and
the next two were on passes by
Schmid.
"Oh, sure," says Pascoe of tht• cva-
present tradition.
"We got our first wan (against
Corona del Mar) and I got a letter
from CapSheue. He thanked me for
the win and he called it 'has tnnhda\
present.•••
0 1/ers' (would) ou hel1c' l'''J 1 'th
straight Jeagut• loss
There were a lot of rcasoni. tor hJrd
times in the 1970-82 era. brought on
mostl y by the creauon of new <;(:hool'
but the depression seems 10 he 0' n
~he"' j' 1h1• "'1lc '1l long-11mc
Hun tangtt•n Ucj 1h h,1,i..e1hall10<1d1
~ lmcr< 11"1h,dunng lhd)tler'
hl'\\iJ\ on th1•u1un' .rnJ 'he v.J\n t
thc onh 11m• unhJPP'"' th thr tinal
(Plea~ tee OTLERS/C2)
Oilers,
Sailors
tangle
Estancia, Irvine,
ov also on prep
schedule tonight
.\ hea'' \Chc-Oule -for a Thuf">da -.
,-1s set 1on1gh1 w11h lhe Huntington
·aeach-Ne"" port Harbor football
game h1ghl1sJ1t1ng rhe .action Four
other gamt"s 1n"oh 1ng area team arc
\Cheduled tonight. all he~1nnang JI ., 3()
Herc'<; a capsuk loo!. a1 t•at h
s~wport Harbor 11 ·I 1 VI ffaac-
ID(IOD Bea('b IZ-0 >. 11 · .. \he .itS th
mee11 ng hctwern !he I"' o ~•th Harhor
up b} a ~7-lt-1-.i edgt• Lllh boast'
standout quanerbad,., \hanC' fole~
ol Harbor I.SI! lnr "4 fnr.r~ 'ardsand
l T~I ~oc\ .iµin<,t the Oiler\ fo~:
"apoh <-1 to .i11l1r ll\2 \ard<, .rnJ n11
1ntercept1on,) \11c Hun11ng11 n
Bealh H11lh Los Amigos I I-l 1 vs. Estancia
11-11: Sean K in~ade get' h1' 1h1rd
\l:lrt lnr the faglc' v.11h "'v11ke Rn'it.'-
1 1n1 pt>n\ aled 1n lor starting Jut' a
v.ee latcr n tht• \t'J \ 1e1.1. I e~ut'
orx·ner "'111 '-t""'P< n Haroor IJn
\,1l01)nald pJd"' th1· E.agll'' runnin~
game a~dlfl'>1 4uarterhad. Hill
Thomp\on ,\. t 11 \1\t' '-t•v.pon
Harbor ll11lh Gardena I O· l 1 \'S ()('ea_n \ 1~w
11 -1 I. C1ardl'nd' \1oh1lJn\ h41a'1
major c11lkgt• prn\pc\ l' Br. an Hr11" n
at ta1lhal L. and Pt•e \.\ t't' \math JI "' ull
recel\<.'r Ocean\ 1t'v. 1n thc m1d"'l 111
1 alkr non-kagul "ht·dulc " II"\ 1ng
II• find •t' ,,fll•n\1' \arc "-e,tm1n-;1cr
High
Tuslin 12-0 1 vs lrv1nt> 1?-0 1 ltmm'
Ra 'c ln<'' 111 1.1.l'.n t· h1' magh again
lorthl' Ir' 1 nt \ J ljUl'I '"· "'h11 'h<I\. l..l·d
"-e"'J.ll1" ltarh.1r lfl-~ti a "'<'t'I.. ago
Tustin·., dckn,1\l· rt•putal1nn tigurn
111 get a guild tt'<.l \11e II' am· H1p,h
an ta~ Ana ( 0-! Iv' Matt r r>c1 1I·1).
l odd \1artf11)\ ll h ll'.h1' \1alt'I I )(·1 '
na'ls-haDtl\ \1nnar1 h' ""1th \•1 lom
pkl1nn' an .. ,., atkmJH' lnr 4 ~' \Jr1h
1n )Ul\l l\1.11 jt.!Oll'' .\ la'-tt'T \antJ '\nJ
.11unter; "1th 4uJ nt'Tha1 I.. l nl Tum-
t'r at the.-\11ntr111, '°'111 \antJ .\na
&'"I
And the OCC team that wiU try to
contain Saddleback is orfc that JUSt
suffered one of the worst losses in the
school's history -.54-9 to Fullerton. So. on paper, this one could be a
mismatch of mammoth pr('port1ons.
But, it's impossible to convince
Saddlebeck Coach Ken Swcanngen
of that fact.
But thcSaddleback coach is wa ry of
OCC's wishbone. something unique
among the Gaucho opponents.
"It does eresent problems," Swear-
macn admits, "because no one else
runs it and if a team can run ll well,
they have an advantage over an
opponent who's never seen 1t."
Mcanwh1Je, OC'Cs Dick Tucker
must find 1 way to rqroup has troops
after the Fullenon debacle last week.
And he's not about to throw 1n the
Sheuewas the Oilers football coac h
when they shared the Orange Leagut·
crown with Anaheim and Fullerton 1n
1926, among many other endeavors
over the years.
Shcue, who tumed 90rttcntl). I~
JUSt ~rt of the Huntington Beach
tradition. one which has been main-
tained because of the fact it's not a
bedroom commun1tyat Huntington
Beach, there isa downtown area,
thert is an on-campus stadium and
Danny Thompson created a ~J' r
ofcxcnement at Huntington Bea1 h
that had not be-en c;('en an )ca~.
although there" wasa dap1a\t )CJr
(2-7-1).
Yo u might argue that the~-7-1
mark was a product ofa lot ofiough
close losses. but that W114' the ~tOI"\ 1n
the 70s, too, a lot of ncar-m1s_~s
"Roy(Brummett) wa~ talking
ahout 1t the other day," '3}S Pas<'l'>e
"Whenhewa\theheadroach ("'2 ~~,
the) battled Anaheim tOt'·tO-tOt' and
11 was the samt' with Dave Van
Dickerson will play,
despite broken bone
g ··0ranae Coast is going to come 10
rett)'. mad this week (after last week's
um1liatina loss to Fullerton)," he
said ... One same doesn•t make a
football team and ifour auys enter the
pme thinkina it does, we'll act beat.
"This is the (Miuion) conference
opener and as far u I'm conC(med.
both teams arc Q.-0 enterina this
pmc."
Quartcrbedt Jason Schmid has had
the responsibility of mwna Saddle.
beck's continuous nc:>-huddlc "hurry.-
up" offentc ao 10 far this season.tHe
hu responded by completina 34 o 54
pau attempts for SlO yards and fi ve
touchdowns in the two routs.
"Jason tw made u1 really look
aood on bed plays," said Saddleblck
9uarterblck COICh Bill Cuntny.
• He'1 made some bed decisions. but
that's toina to be com:cted."
Ap1n1t San 9emard1no, the
Gauchos used their bl1ukne, offense
(Pleue eee OAUCH08/C2)
Fv· s Sharpnack dealt f o Oak land
Whale the Anacls' deal to ac·
quire Don Sutton from Oakland
brouaht the ~year-old home (he
lives i~ t..aauna Halls), the com·
pletiog of 1t tends a local patcher
away (rom his home.
The Anacls anno unced
Wednesday the two manor leque
plays:rs usianed to Oakland to
complete the deal made Sept. 10
with Oakland.
One of the two is Fountain
Valley H1ah product Bob Sharp-
nack. The other pla~er wu
Jerome NelSon1 from Pcn\8col1.1.
Fla, the Anaels' third-round pick
in the June draft "It is not thll we wtre try10g to
&rt nd of them," said An~el
Genenl Manaaer Mike Port,· It
11 rather that Oakland thouaht
cno ua,h Qf the cahbtr of these two
playcn to get them for Oon
Sutton. It 11 a tnbute to our
.couts, •• well as to the talent o~
thOK two youna men "
Sbarpnack, a thrtt-year naner
for thci Barou wu I 0-1 with
thrtt saves and a I 05 l:.R'\ an
1985, has S<'n1or year. and helped
them to the ('IJ. S • .\ title He
struck out 11 7 batters an 85
IOOI~ and batted 148 ~1th HI
R1't
hall)na< k, who on1."t \J1J 11
wa has dt'C'am to pla) for tht
Anael,, w., a S(t'ond·round pack
1n the June draft ·
He wa' a ''tnN to \.alem the
An.scls' A aflihalc, whrrt ht' \\J\
1 ·l w1th a 6.85 E.RA
Rani' 1 nan ~ h.h I.. I 111
D1cll'r'o°' "'h ,utll•rt•d j 1 r.tl l..l'd
h.')nc tn ~IA le t1 h.snd and J hrul'IC.'d
right .1nl..lt 1 n lhr HJrn' 1ll111r. 1l\ rr
thr \t·altsv.L,, n <x·attk \1 onda'
night dad n1'1 pr 11 ll((' v.1th th1 1 luh
'-' cdnc:\da' •
D1d.er;on ~a' ,lre'""d tn '"rat' J\
the Ram'> "'""' 1hr11ugh dnll\ 10
prl'f).1rat111n tor tht'1r gamr \unda\ in
~nah~m \tadaum .tgdtn.,1 th<' \tlanta
FalcoJ(\
Tht' duh la\ted thl anl..k hrul'<.' a'
tht> re.t<.on D1l k1•r")n "a' n1)t pra1 t11
mg He rf'fu~d wmmrnt alter lht•
"orkout
( oach John Rnh1n'ltrn hl11.1.e,cr
<iald f>1<.l..t'f\1ln "c ould rla\ 10011)1
'""' ." and that 1hc manor 1n1unC''I
\houldn't \lo~ ham at all '
01<.kcf"\nn "'ho'd hct'n a umtrt1 1
holJoul m.lM h" IQ~~ Mhut 1n the
''-~4 , 1<.lm\ 1•\l't the \(tlhav,.I..\
ga1n1ng I \u \o&r\1 ' and '4.onntJ. thrtt
IOU\ hd\l'-'n'
,..
th \Ulkred 1h1 , r.I\ kt•d ~'"' "'hrn
he hit hi\ h,tn\1 •'0 .I \t'Jllk fll,\\C'I \
hr I met
··1 I.no"" 1 "'·" ,1 hrlmt't
D11 L.er-.nn '-1111 I'\<" ;111\t I, .tn -.c.·r th1·
\eahav.t. t"mhlc·m 1'ni(r,1 Hd un rtl\
hand ··
· 1 ht J,,., l ilt .lllC"tl II n111 .I n'\, 1nr
prtihkm 1<.1h111\on '411<1 T ht''
ma\ nnt n en h,1' c 111 u 1'1 11 ..
It d1dn"t '\lip the• Jll r,m la1lh:i\ t.
\fond;n ll1~l..t'l\cm ~utT~ft'd the an
101"\ tic-(1H't hi: m4Jc 11 4 '-\ard run in
the four.ih 1.1uartcr tlnd tnunt'r C •iH
T'('tt l11emtlnt 1oa1d Dad.enon hadn 1
hct'n lOmpla1n1n, of an\ pain TU<''
Ja,
·1 thinL. tha1 tht' onl) thanjl th.i t
would L.ccp ham out tof the lancupl I'
prnhahl\ a hrnkC'n nt't k.," RobanS<m
'l.llld
Thl' Ram' 1n1111tll\ had not rT
'caled the IOJUI"\ anJ Rohin\On \aad
'" C'Jn~I\ th•t the anformathln wa\ m1\handlC"d ·
C.lelM la BantlJVtoa a.ell
Cetebritjes ineludnt& Muhammad Ali,
Randy Shields, Los ~Jes Ram {>layers
and cbeerleadcn., and T9 personalities wllJ
be at the pand openina of former
hcavyweiabt contender Jerry Quarry's new
satellite IV store Saturday an<t Sunday in
coajunction with a benefit for the Oranae
County_ Special Olympics from 12..S p.m. at
18042 Beach Blvd., Huntinaton Beach.
W<-oa coecbJ.116 coane
An eittention course dcs1,ned to prepare
students for a non-credentialed (walk-on) coacbi~position, Qr just to increase the
knowl e and skills of youth coaches is
beina o ered by UC Irvine on Thursday
ni&hts beJjnnina Oct. 3. For every satellite syslem sold during the
pod openina. SI 00 will be donated to the
SpeciaJ Olympics.
ihc seven-mcetina course from 7-10
p.m. is ta~t by Roben J, Huattes, La&una
Beach Hiah pnnciP._&I. Hughes started the
movement in Cahfomia to quaJify non-
teacher credentialed personnel for
coacbina positions in high schoolrin 1976.
Coaching philosophy, emeraency first
aid, and the psycboloeical aspects of
adolescent sports participation will be
covered. Guest speakers include Ray
Ptutko, commissioner of athletics, CIF
Southern Section; Bill BoswelJ, district
athletic director, Huntington Beach High
School District; K.atella athletic director
and buJcetball coach Tom Danley, and Art
Resnikoff, UCI Counselina Center.
l.alan eftla.atloa clbtfm F'rceinj~evaJuation clin.ica fOf school
age athlct ow beina bdd by the
STAAR Spons cdicioe Institute on
Saturdays from 9 a.m. to I p.m. at the 10uth
end of the Fountain Valley Recional
Hos~ital and Medical Center campus,
Euclid at Warner in Fountain Valley.
Orthopedic.sports medicine specialist
Alan M. Strizak and oenified athletic
trainers will evaluate those recently in-
jured. Follow-up will be available if
ncteSSary.
The fee is $102 and enrollment can be
done by mail application, in person at the
Univenity Extension registration office.
comer of Verano Way and North Circle
Vitw Drive, on campus or by phone with a r
Visa or Mastercard by caJling 856-541 4.
No a ppointment is necetsa.ry but par-
ental pennission is required. Students are
asked to bring a school ID card. For
information phone 662-0114.
<ner die Uae tocunament.
Cllppen • ticket. oa ule
lndivjduaJ game tickets for all Los
Angeles Clippers pre-and regular season
games arc on saJe now at the Los Angeles
Sports Arena box office and at aJI Ticket-
master outlets.
Teams are being accepted for the second
annual Octoberfest grass Over-the-line
Tournament at Fountain Valley MiJe
Square Park. Saturday Oct. 5, and the
second annual Octoberfest beach Over-
the-line Tournament at Huntington State
Beach, Sunday Oct. 6.
The Clippers open their home pre-
sea.son schedule Oct. 5 against the Golden
State Warriors at Rancho Santiago College
(formerly Santa Ana College). Their only
pre-season ~eat the Sports Arena will be
Oct. 14 against the World Champion Los
Angeles Lakcrs.
Entry fee is $21 per team. Teams may
have four members, including one
substitute, and will be guaranteed four
games. . . . . .11 ..._,; Men's and women's div1s1ons_wi ""&'n
at 9 a.m. For information phone (213)
6~2298.
The regular season home opener wiU be
Oct. 26 apinst the Houston Rockets.
The Sports Arena box office is open
Monday-Saturday from JO a.m. to 6 p.m.
Volleyball stars honored
Evans (Newport Harbor, ·Pepperdine),
Oden (Irvine. Pacific) lauded for play
CoUcge volleyball programs in
Ca!jfomia are benefitting from a
bumper crop of taJent from Coast
Arca schools.
Two conference players of the week
bail from Newport Harbor and Irvine
high schools.
Pepperdine University outside hit-
ter JaUe Evu 1, a Newport grad, has
been selected the West Coast Athletic
Conference player of the week. And in
the PCAA, the University of Pacific's
Elalu Oden (Irvine) is co-player of
the week wlth Hawaii's Reydan
Ahuna.
Evans had 20 kills, a .328 hitting
percentage, and nme digs against
seventh-ranked Cal Poly (SLO), then
followed with 25 IUlls and a .286
hitting mark 1n a five..game loss to
fifth-ranked USC
Oden. a freshman middle blocker,
helped the Tigers improve their
overall mark to 5-0 wnh wins•over
San Jose State and Fresno State.
Ag.amst San Jose, she led the team
with J 7 kj lls, seven blocks, 12 digs
and registered a hitting percentage of
.448, her lowest of the season. She
leads Pacific this season with 18
blocks after her season-high of seven
against San Jose last week.
Brooke Herrtastoa, a freshman out
of Corona del Mar, joins Oden at
Pacific. She has 13 k.ills to her credit
so far trus season, and bas staned four
games for the Tigers.
* * * Edison High product Andy Slllclalr
is expected to start for the Stanford
Cardinal when it hosts the Teus
Longhorns Saturday.
A sophomore, Sinclair is a 6-5, 26()..
pound left guard.
* * * J ... ca.o.Leaclaoflaguna Beach is
currently playing in the boys 12-year-
old division of the third International
Tennis federation World Cham-
pionships.
Competition for the Spon Goofy
Trophy began Wednesday and con-
tinues throuah Sunday at Lake Buena
Vista, A.a.
* * * Glen Stracluul of Huntington
Beach leads the Cal State Dominguez
OILERS F OOTBALL ••• From Cl
authonly.
All that vanished, ho1.1.ever. with
new blood at the top
"The sophomore class 1~ bigger
than o ur offensive line and the
freshman class has a lot of skilled
kids, wt th probably the best quar·
terback in the program other than Joe
Napoli," says Pascoe oft ht' present.
"I really believe Huntington Beach
1s goin' to make a resurgenC"c in all
spons.'
Thursday the tradition continues
wnh the 48th mccung between the
Oilers and Newl>On Harbor. and
Pascoc's loving 1t.
"There arc braw ng ngh ts 1 n-
vol ved,'' says Pascoe. '"ihc trad1t1on
of the beach cities schools beating
each other is there. How many years
was it that there was just Ncwpon and
Huntiniton Beach., You had to go to
Lona Beach or Laguna Beach to get a
pme o n the coast."
The 31-year-old Pascoe, the son of
the late Ernest Pa~. appears to
have found a home at Hun11ngton
Beach.
Ernest Pascoe was Edison H1~·s
fint pnnqpaJ and the Chargtrs
success frOm vartuaJly yur-ont' can
be traced directly to Piucoc and bis
early deciajons.
AproductofFountain Valky H1ah
as an atbJetc and a.t ln aJSJStant
coach. theOilcncoach was on his way 1n tbecollqiate rankuun wuwu before a bou1e-clHnin1Job
at tht U n1ven1ty of Anton• flnl'hed
that.
In addacion to sc.cunna the top
f ootbaJI post, he also married Kim
Hedge, the Oilers• pepsters adviser.
this past summer.
When Pascoe entered Huntington
Beach it was under a bi.a cloud in
1983.
Just before the season be&an Greg
Henry decided to take the f'freman's
JOb he had souah t for several years.
and Pascocwasa hurried import
from Fountain Valley, leaving some
long-time assistants a little bent out of
JOIOl.
Danny ThomP19n's presence wu
enough to put the OiJcn an the
winner's circle that first year, and now
Pascoe has a hand~picked staffhchind
him.
Losing Thompson to UCLA wasn't
easy to overcome, but perhaps the
toughest was when his principal, Ann
ChlebiclU left forareener pastures in
the Saddleback Valley area.
"She was what turned it around."
says Pascoe. "You have to have
someone up in the office wt thinks
what we're doina is important. Sure 11
was(a blow) when I heard sht wu
leaving. But I think we have one up
there now, too (Dr. Daryl Stucker)
So now it's down to 2-0, aoina for
thrttstrai&htapfostan old nval,
whkhJustnappens to be pretty
.burned upoverbeinacmbamssed by
Irvine.
The playen arc b1ger, t1ronaer.
faster and better prepatid. But Olp
Sheue would probably tell _you, the
butterflies that were there 1n the 2~
are ~1111 there.
Halls men's ~r team in scoring
with four goaJs and one assist this
season.
The Toros spon a 4-2 overaJJ
record, and open CCAA play
Wednesday at home against Chap-
man College.
* * * Toay Gay of Costa Mesa is one of
1,250 athletes selected tf> participate
in the lronman World Championshjp
triathlon Oct. 26 in Kona, Hawaii.
Guy is a U.S. Mail carrier who bas
competed in the Orange County
Marathon. the long Beach Mara-
thon, the Bakersfield Triathlon and
Ocean Air Tnathlon in Palos Verdes.
* * * Geoff and Tracy Worley ofWood-
bndge won the corporate tennis
tournament at the Irvine Community
YMCA Family Fun FestivaJ at
Woodbridge South Lake. Tennis
Center last Sunday.
The Worleys defeated Susie and
Granville Swope in an 8-6 tiebreaker.
GAUCHOS ... From Cl
't6wel or this season. not with the
conference season still ahead.
"This team still has a lot of
potential," he said. "It's the same
bunch of guys that tied Golden West
in our opener."
Saturday's game marks the third
straight for OCC against an Orange
County opponent. And the Pirates
have not fared well in recent years
aP,inst their neighboring foes, com-
piling an 0-1-1 mark this season,
1-16-2 in their last 19, and 2-19-2 in
their last 23.
In trying to combat Saddleback's
hurry-up offense, Tucker 51ys, "It
means your defense must play thjngs
pretty straight. If executed properly,
the hurry-up offense can put the
defense at a disadvantage.
"And Schmid is a very fine quar-
terback with areat natural talent. He's
blessed with a cool confidence that
rubs off on his teammates."
In another game Saturday:
Golde. West (0.1·1) at Taft ( 1-0): rt
may be payback time for the Cougars,
who were stunned b)' the Rustlers,
21-17. last season in what may have
been the upset of lhe' year in com·
munity colfqe circles.
Since that pme, Tan has not lost.
winnina its last nine pmcs, includina
Saturday's 28-6 dcc1s1on over West
Hills. And lht Couprs arc ranked
No. I in the recent Southland com-
munity collqc poll, a spot they
occupied before last year's loss 10
Golden West.
Taft. always toua,h to beat at home,
bnnp a 14-pme winnina streak at
Taft Hip Sta<Hum into the 7:30
pme.
The Rustlers will enter a bit
shonhanded, u wide ~iver Andre
Shourds hu been listed as doubtful
for Saturday. The .ophomore suf·
fered a knee •njury on a punt return an
the 9.7 toss to Rancho Santiaao.
ANGELS HIT ROAD ••
P'romCl
"They onJy h11 the ball bard four times otTbim ... the
lhrce home runs •rut the tnple," said Mauch. "When you
take the s1101 out o(the bat all but four timC$ in 6¥> inninas,
that's aood. .
"Nobody is disappointed in the p11cbes tha~ (Carlton)
Fisi and (Ron) Kittle hit, only the one that (Tim) Hulett
hit. Those two (10 IGttle and Fisk) were not cookies, they
JUSt whacked them." .
After givina up the back-to-back home runs to F1~k
and Kittle Romanick retired Daryl Boston and Ouie
Guillen ~fore beina relieved by Donnie Moore.
Moore aJJowed only a sin&le to Hulett in .the seventh
and a slnafe to Fisk in the ninth, on the way to his 29tl,l save.
Romanick bad struaalcd over the month or so. After
startina the season I 3-4.,ne had aon.e ~over his last eiahl
starts with four no-dec1sons. He had g1ven up 32 earned
runs ~ver 34V, inninp, an BRA of 8.4S.
··1 told him two weeks aao that ~e last th.ree :-vceka
would not be easy, especially when Y'?U re not pitch.in& on
a reaular basis," said Mauch .. " I told him I n~ three more
wins and he sajd he would g1ve me everything he has aot.
which he has done.''
"I'm not pitchina u well as I did in the first ~f. b~t
the teams have aottcn \ougher the second half. wd
Romanick. "I got the monkey off my back two or three
stans a.go, but the bottom ~ne i' winn!ng. . .
··To still be in the rotauon means I mdoangsomethlD&
naht. I'm finally getting fC?W&rded for the things I've been
doini right," said Romanick.
His rewards from the Angel offense startc;d early.~
Pettis followed a walk to Bob Boone and a sma.le to p~ck
Schofield with a two-run double to left-<:enter field, glVlng
the Angels a 2-0 lead. .
They added an'?t~er run in the. third on a. rare tru>le by
Doua DeCinces, dnvma, home Onan Downing, who had
walked. it was the first tnple of the year fo.r DcCinces. T-he
last one he hit was 13 months ago in Balttmo~.
Leading 6-2 in the fifth inning. the ~gels ~ent back to
a little little Ball, tho style most associated with Mauc~.
Bobby Grich singled, stole second and went to third
on Fisk's throwing error. With one out, Boone dropped a
squeeze bunt in front of Hulett at third. driving home
Grich with the Angels' finaJ run. L.,_ _ _;.__-:.. ___ ...;a....=..------
* ANO•L NOT•S -CIMllnnan of Ille 8CM1rd 0-Autl'V _.Id ~· IN o.llf ,.... ....... ~ ......,_ ......
oeme 1tw11 he wOllld lie ttvlne 10 Kanus Cltv tor Ille Anoels' 1?ur-11•me ~-with Ille Royall betlMl"I ~v. bul, expres111111 hi• OPllmlsm,
follOwed 11w11 uo bv u vlne, "I 111ou1c1n•1 lie 90lne. I mould lust 11av l'IOn'le
and wait for them to come l'IOme." Tiie ~. If lllev win Ille American
Laaoue Wftl WOUid return nome Oct. I I for Ille 1111ro oeme of Ille AL
CIMlmolonth.0 s.ri.. .......... Jedi-. wno remalr11 one R81 •hOf'l of
1.400 hat heel 1~ .....n ""lne Ille llet on Ille 11a1 rac.nllv. Jacuon.
11e..b.ws .. -time IMdlw In 11r1t-m, ha• wnlfled 10 llmH In hll la•t 17 a1-
11e11 •.. Add Jlldlaon: He "-• Ille now-lftfamous ci.uw llMlt MYS he 11411•
50 c:.nts oer 11c11e1 1or -... -sold over 2.4 mlllon. lncludlne WednHClav
nletll llM 1e11 AllOll hOma ..,,,. ol Ille ner, Ille Aft9lll dr-2,567 ,427 tens,
rManlnll Jackson m.oe "3.n:uo tievone1 his 5'7S.OOO wiarv •• The AnQe11
wlll Olav lhelr llnal 10 MmM of Ille ... '°" on Ille roect lllr" In C._,.tland,
four In KanMs City and ltlr" In Te11u . In Clev ... nd, the AnoelS wll tllrOw ~·Witt (13-1), Diii ~ (lS·f), end IUrtr MICCalllr8 111·1ll. In Kanws
City, It wlM bf> I~ f'a...._._ ... IA-'J\ •-._..... IU ·l l Wiii and SYllon
Bobby Grlch ateal• aecond in the fifth inn.int
aa Scott Fletcher leape to catch ball.
In Tuo. II Wiii 0. MCCH lllll Of' .. llllflll (6·10) llnd Ceno.tarla tor !tie
llr11 lwo 11eme1 In Ille '"'°" finale, II wNI be Romanick 11 llM race Is ~
end Wiii 11 II l'"'I . Flrsl ba-n Red C-took Tuescs.v nlofll olf In
oose<vanee of Vom Klt>C>Uf', the JewlM\ Dav of Alonemenl. He wa.s ~ •
1>'1' Orange CCMlll COiieiia Pl'Oduct De"" Salllw'a .• Ce1c11er .. 9-'1
1111111111 11reek llOPHO al nine games .. Sox catcne< ca,,._ f lM'a l7lfl
nome run In Ille wventh WH 1111 llrd ., • ca teller, bf'eall.lnll Ille Amerlcen
LH-me rk w l t>v Oetrot1•s L.-..ce "''~"" In 1"1 • O.Wllte • llretdl In J~ In which ne wa• 4·'4, i.41fi.lcler arlafl °""*'I SllM IMda 1ne Anoen
In oemes (142) at·t>all <•>. run1 17tl, lllh (l:n> and oeme-wlnntng RBI
(12) Ht •• t l\O •KOnd lo ...... Jadis.an In RBI (wlln II, 10 Jeclli.on's 13)
Baseball ~s. drug
proble1n doesn't
ad up to losses
...
Royals slip past Seattle, 5-4
Bret Saberllageu won his 19th game a
arid Louule Smltb singled home two runs in
the RoyC\ls' three-run seventh inning as
Kansas City broke a I 0-game losing streak
against Seaule in its 5-4 victory over the Marinen
Wednesday night. The Royals remained a half game
behind the Angels in the Amencan League West ... F rom AP dispatches Rook.ie Mike Greenwell '• first maJor·league homer, a
NEW YORK -Baseball Com-a two-run blast in the 13th inning. powered Boston to a
missioner Peter Ueberroth is worried that 4-2 victory over Toronto ... Bert Blyleven continued
some advertisers may be re-cvaJuating has mastery against Texa!> as he
their spending plans following recent disclosures about pitched a fivc-hmer to lead
drug use by some well-known players. Minnesota 5-1 ... Rudy Ready
But severaJ major advertisers and media outlets singled and doubled. scored twice
surveyed Wednesday rcponed no changes so far m and made a key diving outfield
sponsorships of baseball games. grab against Bahimore as Mil-
"As evcrvone is. we arc concerned about the waukee won, 3-0 ... Joe Nlekro
• problem," said Greg Niblett, pub-won his first game as a Yankee as
lie relations manager for Gillette Don Mattingly drove in four runs,
Co.'s safety razor division 1n two on a home run. and New
Boston. York beat Detroit, 10-2 ... Bea
But he said the company was Ayala and Chris Bau~o hit two-
"malting no plans to withdraw Saberba.Ceo run dou~lcs and nght-hander
our suppon or marketing plans · Keltb Creel posted his first victory of the season as
from baseball." Cleveland beat Oakland, 7-2.
Niblett said the company felt R eds Mets l ose· Cardin a ls win Ueberroth was aware of the ' '
gravity of the problem facing the
sport and was "dealing with the
Ueberrotb problem as effectively ils he can."
"We don't see any reason to overreact immediately
and pull the plug," he said.
Gillette makes razor blades, Right Guard de-
odorant and Foamy shavjng cream. ln addition to
advertising regularly on baseball broadcasts. it under-
writes tbe All-Star baseball game baJlotinJ and
conducts a special promotion in connection with the
World Series.
The costs of the All-Star promotion alone can
approach SIO million, Niblett said. He declined to
cstJmate how much Gillette spends overall on basebaJI
adverstising and promotions.
Michael Moran, a spokesman for the Ford di vision
of Ford Motor Co., said he had seen "no indication of
any changes being planned" in Ford's advertising on
basebaJI broadcasts.
Quote of the day
Bob Keaney, Seattle Mariners catcher, on
whether be would favor mandatory drug testing
for major league players: "No way. I hate
needles."
No reaponae to Ueberroth .
NEW YORK -Response bf officials a
of the Major league BascbaJ Pia en
Association to Com missioner Peter Ue~r-
roth's drug-testina proposal has been
vinually unanimous -they have refused to respond
directly to bi~ request.
In an interview with the New York Times, Gene
Orza, the associate general counsel to the-·players'
union, said· that to his knowledge no team bad
responded in a yes-or-no fashion regarding the drug
tests, as requested b_y Ueberroth.
Accordina to Orza, players from each of tbe 26
teams were sayina that althouatt they felt something
had to be done about the pme's drug problems, th~
thought Ueberroth should make his proposals throu
the union and not ask players to respond individual y.
"He got an answer from the players," Orza said.
"The answer was that if he wishes to discuss matters of
this nature, he shouJd do it through the appropriate
channel -the union. T he players resent this kind of
thina. They're not votina."
AJthouah Ueberroth would not comment directly
on the results of bjs ~oposal, he did say: "I'm very
pleased with what's ao1na on. Baseball players are beina
thouahtfuJ, no matter what their rea01ion. They care
very much to clean up the imaae of the pme."
Ueberioth sent leuen to all players on Tue~y.
ask.ina them to voluntarily submit to tests for illcpJ
drup such as cocaine in order to dispel what he termed
"the cloud hanaina over baxball."
The players were requested to respond by Friday
BYU pard enroll• at Loyo la
Chns N1kchev1cb, a Startin& auard m
dunna most of the past three acaaons for
Briaham Youna. has decided to enroll at
Loyt>la Marymount Univenity to play for
the Lions.
Rookie third base man Wade a
Rowdon'• two throwing errors 1n the 11th
inning allowed the winning run 10 score as
Atlanta posted a 4-2 victory over Cincin-
nati Wednesday night: The Reds remain six games
behind the first-place Dodgers in the NationaJ League
West ... Elsewhere. Tommy Herr htt a three-run homer
and Vlllce Coleman stole three bases and scored three
runs, leading St. Louis to its sixth straisht tnumph, a 6-3
decision over Philadelphia . . Pinch-hatter Cltrl1
Speier '• two-out single in the
bottom of the mnth mningscored
Dave Lopes from third base and
lifted the Chicago Cubs to a 5-4
victory o ver 1he New York Mets.
The loss dropped the Mets 31h
pmes behind first-place St. Louis
JO the NL East ... Rick Reascbel
won his fourth straight decision
with a fi ve-hitter and Tony Peu
drove in three runs a11 Pittsburgh
beat Montreal, 8-2. Reuschel was
Hen working on a four-hit shutoµt
until University High and Saddleback College product
Tim Wallach hit a two-run homer m the seventh, his
21st of the season and third in as many games ... Steve
Garvey singled twice to drive in a pair of runs and Grate
Nettles drove in two runs with a double and a single to
help LaMarr Hoyt to his 16th victory as San Diego beat
San Francisco, 7·4.
McEnroe well enough to win
SAN FRANC ISCO -John McEnroe ~
says he sull isn't feeling well aJ\er suffering
from a stomach virus that knocked him out
of a tournament last week.
But he was well enough to give Jimmy Arias a
headache Wednesday night in the Transamerica Open
tennis tourney in San Francisco. McEnroe waited
almost 2V1 hours past the 8:30 p.m. scheduled time of
his opening '!latch, then whipped past Arias, 6-3, 6-2.
"l wasn t feeling that great, but J plaJcd OK."
McEnroe said. "I fell better on coun than off."
McEnroe said he had a big letdown after losmg in
the finals of the U.S. Open earlier this month, then felt
sick JO Los Angeles. where he had to pull out of his
semifinals match.
No. 4 seed Eliot Teltschcr had a tougher time m a
second-round match. which was panly responsible for
delayina the McEnroe-Arias match.
Tcltschcr blew a match point when he nettt'd a
volley in a second-set tiebreaker, but c.amc back to win
the third. set in a two hour, 25 minute duel apinst Vijay
AmntraJ.
In other second round matches. Robert Green of
Boston beat Mark Dickson ofTampa 6-7, 7-S, 6-2· Brad
Gilbert of Piedmont, ('_ali f.. beat Peter Flem in, of G len
Cove, N. Y • 6-2. 6-2; and Tim Mayotte of Bradenton,
Aa, gatned' Victory over Mike Luch o( Ann Arbor,
Mich., in ._,..alkovcr.
Televlalon, radio
TELEVISION
9 p.m. -WRES'M.lNG· Channel S6 ..
11 p m -BOXING Channel S6
RADIO
7 30 pm. -8 A8£11AU. KAnaa11 c 11y at
Seattle, KMP (710)
I.
..
~ I I . "
~ L•AGU• STANDING$ Amenc.n LMtw
Aftlilh
Kensa1Ct1v
Chic.0o
0.kl•nd
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Mlnnu o1e
Ttxu
WHT DlVlltON
W L .. " ·~ " " 7l 74 71 71 ,,
10 •2
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10
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Toronto'
Ntw York
llalllmort
0.lroll
lloston
Mllwaukff
C1tvt1end
IAST DIVISION •s s. .,.,
19 ., ~ •
79 11 517 IS -,
19 1) S20 1• 1
7• 16 S()O Jt 1
., •• 444 71
SS 9' JV 41 ,
WednffdaY't Scwu
ANlk 7, Clllete>o 4
Clevtlen<I 7, 0.l<lt n<I 2
llo"o" 4, Toronto ? Cll lnn1n11u
New York 10, O.troll 2
Minnesota s. Tues I
MllweukM 3, &alllmore o
K•n•et Cltv S, S.1111, 4
Tocley'' Gemes
&011on CS.lien )-OJ et Tor on lo 1 Alex · l l'IW 16·1), n
De troit CTtrrelf I)· 10} ti New York CShlrley 5·4). n
Mlnnttola !Smltnion 14 n1 11 ftAH (Gu1m1n 1·21. n
9elllmort CO MarllMz 1? •1 ., Mii
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K•nsa1 Cl1v (Lelbrenol 16·1 •I S.ellle ISwlfl ~9), n
Chlce go IBtnnl"er 7 141 a1 Oall.lan<I
(CO<llrOll 13· 12), n ,11de.,..., Geme\
Anet11 II Clevtlen<I, n
801ton al Oerroh, n
ll11t1more et Ntw York. n
K1n111 Cltv t i Mlnnt,ola n
Toronto at Mllwaul<M, n
Tuu a 1 SH 1tle,"
Cnlce110 ., Oakland. n
Hetlonal LMeue
WEST DIVISION
W L
°"9w1 " "3 Clnclnne ll 12 6'
Hou11on 71 14
Sen Oleoo 77 IS
All•nt1 62 lo
Sen Francl\CO S9 93
IAST DIVISION
SI Louil 96 S6
New York 9'1 60
MontrH I 19 1)
Pnlll.dt41>11le 71 79
Cnlcaoo 71 ao
?lllsbur11h S1 98
Gil
6
II ,,
76 ' )0
4
II
24
24''
41
Wednndly's kWM
Hou11on 6, ~1 4 ( 10 111nln11u Cnlcego s, New York 4
PlllSbUr11n •• MonlrH I 2
Allltnta 4, C:lnclnnell 7 I 11 1nnin<•._.,...
SI Louis 6, Pt!lle<lelPllle 3 V-
San Oleoo 7. Sen F rencl\Co 4
TedlY'l Games
All•nlt IBt<lrO\lan 7· 131 e l C•nclMefl
IMcGt ffl111n 2·3)
New York IGOO<lt<'I 71·41 •• C111ce110
(At>reoo l-01
MonlrH I CGulllCk\Otl l) It) el ?II·
11our1111 ( Rho<len 9· 14)
Phlllt<lelPhle Cl( Gron 14·111 et SI Louis
ITu<lor 19·1), n
l'rldtY'• Gem.1
Sen Francl\Co a l ~'· n Pllll•oetPttl• •I Cnlcego
$1 Loul• at MontrH I, n
Ntw York al Plll\burgh, n
Hou\lon •• Ctnclnna ll, n
Sen Oleoo at Allanle . n
AMERICAN LEA<;;UE A,,..., 7, WNte S.11 4
CHICAGO CALll'OltNIA
Law If
FltlChr 70
Helr\ln pn
Lllllt2b
llelne\ r1 GWelllr lb
Fllk c
Kittle <lh
llo11on cf
Guillen n
Hulell lb
T .... s
•b r II bl •0 r h bl
4 0 I 1 Cerew I b S 1 2 O
3 0 0 0 8tl'llQVI rl ) I 2 3
t o Q. o Oo,i;nlno u 3 I o o
0 0 0 0 OWhltt 11 0 0 0 0
• O O O OtCncs lb • O I I 4 0 1 0 Grlcil 21> 3 I 0 0
J I 2 I Llna rea Qh I 0 0 0
) 1 I I Sconlrs dh 1 0 O O
4 0 0 0 Boone c I t O I
4 0 0 0 ScllOlll<I u • 2 2 0
J 2 l I Pt llll Cf J 0 I 1
U 4 I 4 Tetali 2' 1 I 1
ktrtbV...,.,..
Cl\kaee 001 010 100-• ~ 021 JIO Oh-J
G•me Wlnnln11 A81 -Pelll\ (7)
E-Flsk OP-<hlctllO I Cellfornie I
LOB-<nlc.eoo •, Callfornl• 6 28-Pelll\
Certw 38-Lt w, OtClnce\ HR-Benloucn
(I), Hulell CSI, Fl11< ()7) Kllllt 1101
Sll-Grlc,, 131 s-Ptlll\ Boona. l(llllt
IP H It Ell 118 SO
Chiu ..
Burns L.18· 10 4 7 6 Splllner I 1·3 ' ' Tenner 12·3 0 0
~
Romencll W.14·1 6 2·3 4
OMoore S19 , 1-3 2 0
HB~llk bV Romanick
Tenner T-1 <IO A-ll,029
Poll<lor
Miiier
Btf\IQUtl
Sconiers
Cerew
Gerber
Oownlno
Ptltl1
Jeclllon
a oon•
OtClnct1
Grlcll
Jones Ne rron
Line res
Scnofltld
Howell
Wilfong
Henorlck
Whllt
Kff<lv
T.talt
Aneel 1ven911
BATTING
AB R H H"
I I I 0
31 6 12 0
1'1 S2 120 I
89 14 2S 1
tl3 67 llS 2 es a 23 o
489 77 131 20
41S 64 109 I
4JI 62 111 26
C31 36 108 s
393 46 97 11
4.44 10 101 II
377 "' 90 11 129 12 19 s
J7 4 ] 2
410 41 .. •
I)) 19 77 S
2 ll IS 40 4
41 s s 2
l • 0 0
0 0 0 0 s. 116 700 1217 10
PITCHING
6 l J
0 7 1
0 0 I
• 0
0 0
Boone Ov
Riil l'c1.
0 I 000
4 116
'2 JIO 12 ie 1
36 778
6 271 12 270 31 76l
83 2SJ
S3 2Sl
12 ?'3
.. 140
61 739 u ns
J 719
)9 71S
18 203 13 , ..
6 171
0 000
0 000
t S3 2Sl
IP H aB SOW·LERA
Moore tall) es 21 70 a • 1 s~
HOilen<! U I 7 10 lJ 0· I I S7
Cllt>urn 93 82 ?S 43 9 2 1 OJ
Wiit 23211) 110 9S 161 lJ I ) J1
LU90 79 l 79 ?I 4 I J 4 Hl
·su1ton 714 113 SS t7 IS 9 l91
ltomenlclt. 117 200 62 S7 u I • 09
dutlon 19") 19 • 6 2 I 4 17
Ceno.t•rle Sl"1 SI 19 4l 6 1 4 14 Sitton ,.,,.., 161 "3 60 6 10 4 37
l eM 37 44 14 IA 2 2 4 lt
McCu km 174~ 114 6l 19 11 11 4 74
Corbett 411 49 70 24 l l 4 t9
k ncht1 S7 , 63 n lO 2 o s 91
Srnl1n s s 1 3 O o 7 70
FowlllH 1 8 4 S 0 0 9 00
T.tell U7J 13'1 4tt 6'S U ·U 3"
Se vtt Moore 29, Cliburn 6, S1e1on I
S1ncht1 I
•Willl Artlltl\
•5fet0n tote1,
~enMnf r•cff •t • -.nee
AMERICAN LEAGUE
••sl OMt*I
W L f'ct. GB
T0tOlllO 9S SS tJJ
Ntw York N '2 ~1
lllMAINING GAMIS
TORONTO CIOI -Homt (4) S.01 26
8011on, OCI 4 S, 6, New Yorll. Awav ••1
Seot ?7, ?t, 7'. Mllweukff, Ocl t 2 )
Oe troll
NEW YORI< (Ill -Home Cll St ol 76.
0.lfOll, 77,,. ,. 30 Belllmort , Ocl I ,
J, Mllweullff Awev UI 0<1 t , S. ~
Toronto.
Nol• Toronto Pl•• en uMcl'lt dule<I llOme
Otl'M wnn ll•lllmot'\ tna1 will onl\t o.
*Vf<I If 11 '• nff<le<I to O.CIOt 11\41 Ol•l\l<tn
lllle
HATIOHAL L•AOUa l•Jf~
W L l'ct Oa SI Louil ., '4 619
Ntw York ,, 5f '°' >
lllN\AINING OAMIS
$T l.OUIS llOl -HOfM 11) SePI 16
PNi.o.tPhle, ()(1 I, 2. l Ntw YOl'll, 4, ), 6,
Chlceoo Awav Ill S.01 ,,, 1t 19.
MonlrH !
NEW YORK 110) ~ lJ) S.01 ()(1
4 S 6. Montrtel Awn I fl S.01 2'
C11tcego 77 21 '9 Pllh~r1111 0<1 I 2 l
$1 Louil
NATIONAL L•AGUE A,.,. .. ,,~
LOS ANO•LIS
Ouncan n
L1n<1n cl
M.a<llCll. )b
An<M'n lb
MelUl<Ph
Nleonfur 0
Guerrer 11
Merlhel rt
SclO\Cla C
Brock lb
Cabell Pn
Su 7b
Ve1en11e o
Wl'lllll<IPll
RWllmt pr
BellOr JO
eb r II bl
• 0 0 1 s 0 0 0 l , 0 0
0 0 0 0
t 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 4 I 2 0
4 l I l
4 0 0 0
1 I 0 0
I 0 0 0
4 0, 0
2 0 I 0
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
HOUSTON
Ooren 20
P nll.ovlll II
lleU Cf
GOavla lb
Muonrv rt
Gerner ll>
AlhbV C
Clttf\ICU U
TllOtl" llPtna u
&111ev c
Avan p
llullOck Ph o ... , • .,. p
TOlfNtl'I Pll
Celnoun p
Rlvtre pn
ab r II bl l 0 0 I
4 I t 0
S I I ?
3 I 1 1
4 I , 0
4 0 I 0
3 I 0 0
0 0 0 0
' 0 0 0 j I I 0
0 0 0 0
I 0 0 0
I 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
I 0 1 2
0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 Totell ll 4 ' J Tot.is )4 •• ' ~cor• by li'W\1t191 LO\ A"9111tl )00 100 000 0-4
Houlton 000 000 400 1-t
Ont O\tl wl'len winning run \COrct<I
Game Winning Riii -Beu (6)
E-MedlOck OP.-LO\ An11t1ts 2, HOU\·
ton I LOB-LOl Anlltlt\ S, Hou•lon S
3B-Mar•h•ll HR-GOevl\ 11'), Beu ( 141
S-Velen1ue1a Ouncan SF-Dore n
I~ H It •R llB SO
Let A"99tl
V•ltntle 9 4 , 4 4
Nlt<lnfuer L.1·1 1·3 2 , 0 0 Houlton
Av en 6 s 4 4 i Oawlt v ' 0 0 0 0
Calhoun 1 I 0 0 0
Solano W 2·7 1 0 0 0 I 0
HBP-Ma<llOCk bV Rven Wf>-Av11n
T-72S A-16,9SS
Men'• tou~ment
(It S.n l'reMIK•l
Flrll lttufld SlfttMt
Jonn McEnroe tU S) Off llmmv Arin
tu s ). 6 3 4·2
S.Cond lteulld Slntlt•
Eliot Tell\Clltr (U s ) dti Vlltv Amrllral
tln<llOI, 6·4, 6·7, 1·5, Aot>trl GrHn lU SI
Ott Mar• Olcl<\On IU S l 6·1 7·S, 6·2
Brad Gilbert (U S I <Ml Ptltr Flemln CU S )
6·2 6-1 r.,,, MellOllt IU s I Otf Mll<e
lteCl'I I U S I WllkOvtf
Women'' toum1mtint
(et New °'1MM)
Se<ond R Olllld Sltltte•
.t.Mt While IU S l Ott Zt"t Gem\On (U.S I 6-2 6·2, ltH Bonatr CU SI Otf
1C11nv Rina ldi (US l ov <lt faull, F>u nul
Loute (US I Oet Lori McNell (US I 6·1.
7·6, Wtn(jv Turnoull (Au\lratle ) <ltf Wtn<lv
While IU SI. 6 4. o I
Hletl 'ctlool 91111
Merine 14, GertMn Greve 4
''""" E Robtrl\O,, (M l IO\I IO Hu<l\On 6·1
oel Oaw\on. 6·2 Otf llerre11en 6· l
Jacob\On CM) IOsl 0·6 won. 7·6 6·4 B
Heenraet\ (Ml IO\I 4·6 WO" ' 1 6·2
DeuClttl
L1a119·1C Robtl'l\on (Ml <Ml Cenada·
Neum1M 6·3, dtl Offrt·K1lro~. 6·1, Cit!
Rlo\·Brow"· 6·0. Ma 1111tu·B11nort (M l
won. 6· 1, IO\I 1 6, won, 6 0, Shi Varven
!Ml won. •·2. 6· I, 6·0
Coil• MtM 11. Trebllce H•' 1
Slntlt' Tuc•er CCMl Otf Eu tv 6·3, Ot f Mclin,
6·0 dtl Mver 6·0. Sohr• ICM) won 6·4
6·3 6-0 Chang ICM1 I0\1, 1·6 wo" 6·7
6·0
DeuOltl
P11mer· Tlvl()( ICMl a.I Coroneoo
MCNtd 6· I off McNeil McNtll 6 I Off
Pevne·Wlllaro 6·0 At0e10·Frt1 ICMI won
6· l 6·) t.·0 Nuacnttrietn Ot v ICMl won
6 I 1 S. 6·0
W•t.r OOIO
COLLl!GI
Lov .. • Merymeu"' 11, CJ\eprnen •
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Ora,_ Cont 14, Mt San Arminle l
Orange Coe SI 6 3 2 1-14
Ml S.n Antonio 0 1 0 I-l
Orenge Cou l \Coring St1w1rl J
Mlrtn<le 3. Oou11le\ I. JO"O 1 ICtlter J
CnrC\lenHn I Perez l
HIGH SCHOOL
Ha,i;p0t1 Ha~ 20, $tO<llelMCJ! 1
SedOleo&ck I O O 1-2
Newport HerbOr 9 4 1 S-10
NtWPOrl \COrl1111 Li tl>e , Wrlol'll 4,
Nowparu 1 2 Miller I Crumln\ I, Cum·
mlno• 6 Fairborn I Brven I C.lttoro 1
COt'-cMI Mer 14, CHte Mew I
Corona Otl Mer • 4 4 7-14
Colla MtH I I 4 1-I
Coron• Oe4 Mar \COr ln11 L ~'°' 4 \lime
4 Slorv l Her"'°" 1 Ouno .. I
CO\la MeH \Coron11 PnllllP\ 4 Cren\naw
1 Dunc•" 7 L•lweck I
Utunt BMCll t, UnlVtotfv I
Unlvtrsllv 3 0 3 2-8
Laouna Beech 3 1 l 4-9
Legune Beech \Coring Tr•11er 4 Moore
l OemO\tl/ 1, OavlO\On I Hohn I
Wemen's velevt>al
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Seuftl CM \f Cenfwtnet
Orange Coesl off Fuller1011 IS t I~ IJ
IS·7 Gol<lt n WHI Ot t Ml h r Af\101110 IS 4
IS·6, IS S I•
°"° '" ttv.rn. Nf!W,.OltT LANOINO (Newpert
h•d'll -SI 11no1tr\ 11 oon110 I t>tr
r•cuOa U Den. It rock 11th 4 '""'""'•d
4 sculPln, 2S bulltl 1un1, 360 meci.ertl
DAVIY'S LOCl<llt (NtWOM1 ... Oii
-H e no1er1 69 0011110 ) coo. 27 cellco
o•o 16 'ono ben. U mec~er•I 1
•"H l>1"4t <I. 7~ elba core
DANA WHARI' -17 anoltl'\ 171 04!\\
., bonito, l n•llbUI, I ""'°'"'•II Srock "'" 111 fT\llCU rtl • \/lffOslltt<I I Ku!Oln
Thls week's prep football
Tb~ a•m~ Tk odd1 1'0NIOHT
Newpon Hurbor c11 Hunllngton Fk3~:h
Los Amigo-. v~ F\tanc1a at Newpon Harbor
Gardena V'i Ck.can Vu:w at We'ltm1Mtt:r
Tuslln 111 Irvine
Hun11ngton Beach h)' l
f V('n
C 1arc.kna by IO
lr\>lf\I.' b) 7
Maier De• b) 7 Santa Ana vs. Mater L>c1 at ~A Bowl
FRIDAY
Corona dtl Mar at Capistrano Va)ley ' c 01po Valley h> y
Lor. Alam1to) vs. ( osta Mesa at NcwJXH I It arbor Los Al by In
Edison v~. Banning at Veterans Stadiun1 Banning b> 7
f oothill vs. Manna at Westminster Manoa b) 6
Mission V1CJO vs Fountain Valle) at Jf unllnKIOn Beach r v b) 3
Laguna lkach al Dana Hills E.ven
San Marco~"~ Woodbndgc at Irvine \ctn Marco!> b> 7
SATURDAY
Laguna H ill~ vs Un1,crs11 y at lr.1ne
La Habra vc;; ~ddleback at Santa Ana Bowl
[vcn
bcn
t.os A.lamltos
WEDNIUDAY'S lllUUL TS
(>Ottl .. 4f·nltfll "'"""' ,,_._,
l'IRST RACE One mlle Pe<:t.
Bleck (hfflell ( T tHltt) 7 00 J 00
1(001 Jeu I Vellen<1ln1111em1 l 00
Sonnv\ Counirv (Mueller)
Time 202 l S
U EXACTA (8·SI pa 10 i2190
SICOND RACE. One mile trot
Pt •t v l Valle nc:lln1111aml HO l 20
11111<1• (Kut bltrl l 20
O\o Sllffdv (l<HvU
Tltn4 2 00 2• S
l3 EXACTA (3 I) 1>el<I i 19 W
THIRD lltACE. Ont mile pa(e
GH Gff Je<M ICroona nl S 40 J 20
2ariu~le CT 0001 l .a
lndle n Comt l IMevtr I
Tlmt I S9 4 S
~ EXACTA 14 II Pa•O '71 lO
l'OUltTH ltACE. One milt 1ro1
M•one Mev,,.m tPlt rce l 3 2Q. 2 80
BIO SllOI (AnotrtonJ 4 40
Hlgn GreOtr lBt U rl
Time 1.il? 41S
f'll'TH RACE. 01'\t milt Pace
Run Bult CCroorie n> 3 80 180
·Kerr Hanover (Leco\lt} S 40
Loro All>e \AnOtr\onl
Time 201 4 S
Sl EXACTA (1·91 PllO ISi Ml
SIXTH RACE. One mile oece
3 20 190 u o
HO
760
• <I()
180
HO 4'0
160 H O HO
SPtt<I 0 C na r11er I Te u re r J
IUO 6..0 no uo 600
1080
Buwes Girl\ S ... lhl
Huricene Sendra 01Franco)
TlrM 201) s
U EXACTA 0 11 Pa·O l112 JO
SEVENTH AACI One mt1e Pact
?IHH SOUffll IGrunOvl 4 80 ) 00
Heicvon Holloev IPlt•c•l 6 IO
Olamonlt Skl~r !Lac~evl
Tim• 2.00 11s
U EXACTA Cl 41 Pt!O '30 60
EIGHTH RACE. One mile Peet
Primo (Hllll l 40 ) IO
Peter Fin n l hnlerl S80
JOH Oulet'I fOttenllSI ~."'4 2 00
"1 EXACTA 16·41 1>e10 l l630
NINTH RACI ~ mole oace
Slick $wlk I Pierce> I) 00 6 20
Nellvt Hunter ISPrtlllll 8 60
MalltH Hunter l &a .. n
Time I S7 1 S
ll IE XACTA 11 II Pa10 \192 90
0 0 u o
IH O
S1 f'ICI( SIX 13 or 1-1 or ~-7-1-6·11 oalO S4 747 .0 10 ll• winning hCkel' I''" hQr\HI Pick Six con,Ole!lon oalO s 119 60 •o 12•
llCl\t l\ lll1tt llOr\tU
TENTH llACE. Ont milt Pbct
Oun• Lt ch ( SIN lll) 4 <I() ) <I() 1 60
l1Qhlnln11 Slim I Beker 1 2 Ml 1 Ml
Mltn L•<IV tller1ero111 4 70
Time 2 01
U IXACTA I J i Dt O P980
Al•tnoel!Ct l 1S2
PomOM
WEDNESDAY'S RESUL n
I 14ltl .. ll·dtY t•lr rnMflne)
OUAltTEltHO•UES
l'IRST ltACI JSO varo1
Oar!\ lvorv (Herl) 1710 S .0 A 40
Call fne Ae lH fllrook\I 410 360
Aa lH Him Eo v I Fl11ut roa1 9 80
Tlmt 17 99
U EXACT A 16·8) Paid 194 SO
SECOND RACE lSO varcH Mll<H Ru1tr IAank1n1 79 70
Rt11e1 Aumor I Hern
Aoollo Jonn CH Gert••
Time 17 74
8Ml HO ao no
240
U I XACTA S •• 0110 '22S SO
THIRD RACE JSO varo\
Comu nc11cnm• Baro 10 10 10 00 ) 00
LH vt m Slen<11n11 Creeue• I) 10 I 60
lflweru rlChmen E Gare e 900
Tl,,,. 17 IJ
JS EXACTA 1 4 Pl 1C! SJ&e SO
THOROUGHllAEDS
l'OURTH AACE 6 / tvrtono,
l'oret11ner !Enrloun • Q 10 • 20 J 10
&arltr (HOlllnll\WOrll'll S 00 ) 80
Philio Nolan I Honun1 l 80
Time I 18 4 S
l'll'TH RACE I I 14 milts
GOIOt n Stvlt ICe\lenori • 10
Bo1ln.O.I (Jin t
Couri Ace Oom1nout1
lime 14SJ S
)10 J 00
1 Ml 41-0
S&O
'1 DAILY OOUllLE I I Oa•d S 19 •0
SIXTH RACE 6 lu•IOnQ\
Jeni\ V·OI• So•1U s 00 ) 20 J &O
Men1111 Ben~ Mall'' • N011v"1 I 100 a 20
lrl\n Mt n •11• I Ha nlin l •0
rime I 11 I s
U E XACT A IJ 61 Pa cl \JIZOO
SEVENTH RACE 6 l1;roone>\
"'" Wor10 !Mena) \60 lrlln Rainbow (Ce\lanon 1
Git! Book IC•ut)
Tlmt l 11
U EXACTA 1• Ii r>a11l 179 SO.
EIGHTH lltACE 6 tuflono'
280 J 60
260 1 •0 IJO
lmPUl\lvt IOll••reu SAO t 00 JlO
860 410
Ault Tnt Sun IS1e111n~ut 73 80
Mena Me"'"" IPteu
Tl"" l 11 11 I XACTA ) 41 PA o \14 ~
NINTH RACI! t turlo"ll'
Wino Swffl IHen""' 100
Aovel Clt>oultllt !CH I•"°"
Meri a m <Ollveru •
Time I II J ~
JS EXACT A ' ) r>e d U 7 SO
I I~ mite\
310 110
'60 ) 00
lto
TINTH RACE I
Sttemeo 1 Hanutn)
S1n111t1 1 OOv11rt\ •
Mv i;toll Le m1>ert1
o.o uo no
100 260
\00
Time I &A
"EXACTA " 11 D••C! u•oo
12 l'ICI( SIJI I I I 6 ) or 9 t 9 116 o
•I 17120 to s• wtnntn11 1,0111 '. "<'''.'' n Ptc~ S•~ conwa •·on P• o \SI 60 10 to.
wl"nlng hC'''' lllve i'IOt\ht
ELIVINTH RACI t
All,aCN (0rltOt)
Sar ' Hero•,,. Ca1•enon
Me•klltlltf ( e nrloutll
TlrM I d IS
16 .... u
))1() l<I() soo
)00 2Ml u o
•S IX ACTA I• t t Pll•<I \ 111 W
TWILl'TH llACE l loi ITlll<t\
Pierce' Or .. m <F11ro11 1100 100 o 60 ~ 1&10 t'>co11 1 11 •O tO 80
Mu ter Act cltoor111ueu 1 to
TlrM2 19 1S u IXACTA II ,, oe10 $t1t. \()
12 DAILY OOYILI 1• 11 oa10 lltO to
Alten<le nct 11 )70 ct\llmelt<l I
Odds
NFL Sundev
•1t1m1 9 ovltf Allen1a
•New En111eno 1 over A11c1tn
New York Gle n!\ • o•tr •f>nllaoelPllia
·cn1c1go 6 over Wer.n11191on
'St Loul' 1 over GrH n Be•
'Oe1rol1 S over Tamoe Bev
Dalles 4 > over • Houllon
M•nnH ota 1'., ovtr 0 &utt1io ~•Ille 2', over 'l(anu\ Ctlv
·oenver 1 over Miami
•New York Jtl\ 9 over ln<llenall041\
•sen 01'90 4 over Clt velano
'Sen Frencllco IS -, o••' New Orie•"'
Moftcley
•P,lhb1;r11n 6 l over C1nc1nn••
000,
COLLI GE
A,. T~ 20
Auourn S , over • T enne''"
0 1r.1enoma IS , over 'MlnnH o•a
lowe 11 '> over •1ow1 Stttt
•F1orloa Stale "' l(enH \ no O<IO\ •on10 S1e 1t 12 over WohlllQton Slalt
SMU 10 O•tr ·Tcu
•01<1enom• Slate v\ M1em" Onlo no
I LSU " •<lie
9 Penn S1111e S over Ru111er\ l•I E a\I
q u111erford NJ J
10 •ArktnH\ "' Ne,. M•A•CO Stelt "°
00<1•
11 FIQrlO• 1 ., O•tr ·M•U IUll>Ot S•t1•
ll 'Mlcn111en I '> over Mervleno
I) UCLA 1 .., over •wu n1n111Qr1
U &YU \ 10lt
IS Al•Dema 17 O•e• 'llanot•OHI
I• • Ntbr 1\1<1 ta 1 011er Ore11on
11 Marvla"O l , un<I« "M1cn111en II USC 2 over • .t.rl1on1 Slate
It Air Poree V\ "New Meaico. no OOd\
20 'Vlrolnlt 1l , over Nevv
•-oeno1u nome Item
l'rom HlrTtll'S S-1'\ llCIM
Communltv , .....
SOUTHLAND POLL .. n . khMI RK«<I 1'tL. 1 Tell 1·0 O 116
1. ~OdltMO 1·0·0 Ill
l Ce<r,IO\ I 0·0 9t
4 &ue"f1toc1 2·0·0 79
S A•nchO S.nl •llO 2 O· 0 1>7
6 Fullerton I l·O S4
1 Sou1nwt1ler" 2 0·0 s~
I G1t"<1•1e 1 O 0 41
9 Mr San An1on10 1 0 O ll
10 Ml Sen Jac1n10 2 O O ~"
Olntf\ rtcttvtn11 vole\ Rlvtr\•Ot
11 I 01, 10, Moorp1r1< (2·0·0) 9 LA
\CulllwHt 12·0·01 1 Collellt ot 1111 OHtrl
l J O·O) 6, Gron monl 11 I -01 2 Palomar
1 0-01 1
...
W9dnesdaV's tr•nsacTlons
BASKETllALL
N•"-' Bn1tefbefl Auocle!lon
LAKERS-S111ne<1 AC Green •orwe•O
10 • mull1 · vter conrr a CI
OE TROil' PISTONS-Stgna<I Sot nce•
Havwooo for•aro .tnd ,:,.eema n W •lliem\
Quero
tNOl.t.NA PACERS-AeltalllO &rvan
Nerrto ouero
PHOENIX SUNS-S1Qnt<I Eo P·nc• Mt•
•or'll'ltl•rd 10 a mu1t1·v@•t contfaC'
,OOTllALL
HelloNll Fooft)el LH-
IN( ,NNA Tl BE NC.ALS-S•Ol\t<I rom
o.n,~1 1neoecker
HOUSTON OILERS-WavoeO Htr• t
Wa"' ano Mtl<e Hol\ion w1oe rec11ver1
MIAMI OOLPHINS-Announce<I lnel
Pete Jonn,on tu11oac1< enoeo "'' 11oroou1
over e •u m 1moo\ed we10111 •1""'' ov o• 1n11
ft')r \lverance oe¥
HOCKEY
Nall-I Hoclltv LNtut
&OS TON llRUINS-AMounce<i tllt ~II~
01 •n• Club a'IO int Bo••on Garoen •o •
11•ouo needt<I bv Ja nw!S F Brennen ena
C.oo••h wooo ior SSO ,.,lll•on
OE Tli!O T RED WINGS-Au ll"e<I I.."' '
PuHV anQ Ml " Lal'orul 110a,1enotr\
Oev•O Koro lil •c' Zomoo a"o Teo Huell"9
'"""""''n Bu• McRae G1en Mt,.o\n
Gorov Rot>trhon rto S~" ano Garv v af errrnu• cenlt r\ Brien Sn•,. a no Don
Shew •111M w 119' anO Pterre Aubr. tttl
w•"V •o Ao1rqooat• o• ttt• .,,,.,,, C•"
Hoc~ ... LHOUt
M I NNES OTA N ORlH
STARS Ae1eneo &reo Pa1mtr ano B111
Jonn\on lorwaros A\\lllr>t<I &ob L1••0
•or .. era ana Woro 1<.omo"'"' llO•"tnoer
10 S1>'in111 tl<I ot 11'14! Am•"''" Ho<•" LH Qul Au1gne<1 Boo Ortot' T ,,,.,
O An<1rta •"0 R•cnaro AOOli torwaro'
end Pn. OtGatl&no anO Aenov Cameron
Otlt"\tm•n to '"0·•"•-1\ 01 "'" '"'•' •••·on• 1-<o<'h Lea11ue St"' Ow•ll"'
Mut '"' G•r" McC01gan LI '"' Dt ?a1me torwer<ls eno M11<e Beroer •no Tom,.,,
\IO<J"' dfft Mtmen IO '"'" U"•or ...... ,
NEW JERSEY OEVILS-Au1gneG l(a 1
F flf\tn •"0 Snewn MecKen11t l)Oa'lt\
Mltnett Bolduc Murra• Brumwell Ntll
Oevev Oon 0 1t1r1cn A.Ian HtDOlt lion!
Mer• eno Rob ?elmer OtlenHmt " Roe••
Troll1t r i...ev1n Foller Mcnlt Ht,,oersOI'
eno 1<.1v n Me •wtlt i.tr wl~' Larrv
F tova f m Lt,.ardon Buel S•efen" •"O
'ttve hu11ura '"''''' ano C.•to Ev •1.1\l'lt •\I<• ?eu KOb•••r 1 Heer or Mer n
It• pn (..o• en<I Mlle" W1l\Dn n11n• w "II' •o
M•·nt ot '"• ...... ,'<•" HOOtv Lf t\lua
Sen• "'" F trou\CI<' Ofitn .. m an t nd K '"
V.cL••" oo.• t •o 0\"41•1 01 '"• On••• ..,o<~n 1. .. 11.,. Se<o• Jam•• ""'<"' ""'
ot•tnH"'•" to G_,..on Qt "'• ()tl•a• o
1-<o<•h LHllU. lftlto.ct Mar• C•"Oll •"
w•llQ ar>O lt•c• 8 er1t.ovl(ll center
NEW vORt<. AANGERS-AutoneG 1<,uri
•.1e1nenoon1 ri11111 wing 8rve" W•"" otlt•l\t~" lorwero e fl<I Stev• McKtn11e
ottenHmen to Sall L••e ot •ht 1,,,,,
l\a tlOn•• Hoci.t• L ••Out
PHILADELPHIA FLYEltS-Ant>Cun<M
1ne1 Tooa BtrMn center "'' retort<! •o Pur-a D<'ott!HIOtlel QOlf C.,_
WATER POLO
----
Artists ·surprise
University, g ..:s
-Newport Harbor.
Sea Kings. OCC
also put away wins
Laguna 8t<lch thah stunned lxu-
vers1I> whi le form prevailed in 1he
othc:r two prep games Wedncsda>
afttrnoon in Sea View League water
polo
On the commumt~ lOllege leyel
Orange Coast took the mea<iureofMt
·an Antonio
Herc's what took platt'
Laguna Beacb 9, Ual\ltrtlty 8: Tile
game was close throughout, a~ neither
team assumed more 1han a one-goal
lead, when Enc Dcmpsc) converted
on a 6-on-5 s1 tuat1on with fi ve
seconds left to decide 11
The score was deadloc:kt'd al 7-7
when Rob Moore tallied for ~una
w1tb 45 seconds remaining Un1ver-
s1I) knolled lhe game 30 seconds later
to !>Ct the stage for Dcmpse} 's game-
wmner
Tom Trager had fou r goals for
Laguna. which evened 1ts league
mark at 1-1 and movt"d to 4-5 overall
Newport Harbor tO , Saddleback Z:
The ailors scored nine goals 1n thC'
first penod and b) halftime held a
13-1 advantage before taking 1ne
league wm at Newpon
Bnan Cummtn~. ajumor, threw 1n
s1' goal<. and l\.1ark Wneht added four
to lead Newpon, 2-0 Rob uebe.
Shahryar Nowparast and Roben
Gifford had two goals apiece, while
Chm Miller, . Enc ('rumuu, Jay
Fa1rboru and Pete Bryan had one
score each.
The Sailors met Edison today 1n lhc
first round of the South CoaJt
tournament at Newpon .
Corou del Mar 1 •. CM&a Mesa I:
The Sea K 1 ngs opened lcquc play
wtth the wtn over the Mustangs (I· I )
al Costa Mesa.
The Sea K.tngs' Jason wk.ins and
Enc VinJe were credited with four
goals apiece, while Mike Srt>ry added
three, Bill Hannon two, and ~rck
Dundas one.
Tim Phillips led Costa Mesa wnh
four goals, wh ile Chris Duncan bad
1wo and Tony Lltwack and Alex
Crenshaw turned 10 one goal apiece
Corona del Mar's Frank McGcoy
saved six shots on goal and 10 1
defensive help from lfob Seely and
Jeff Harvey
Jn communi college acuon:
Oru1e Coa1 14, Mt. Su AatoDJo I:
The outstandi lay of Coast goahe
Mike Hinz.e ap e offensive power
of Rob M1randc a Karl Stewart
sparked the Pirates tot cir fourth wm
1n six games.
M1rande and Stew accounted for
three goals apiece. Jeff Jones and Em
Keller each added one.
OCC travels to Cypress for a 7
o'clock; pme tonight.
Tollner gives film
a very bad review
He 's disappointed
in Trojans· eff arts
in Baylor game
LOS A.NGE LE~ (APl -..\ da> at
lhe mo-..1es d1dn 't change out hem
(al Coach Ted T ollner's opinion of
the T rojarrs' pertormance in last
Saturda) night's 20-11 upset loss to
Ba\lor .i.fte~ards Tollner \aid that the
Trojans had been beaten at their own
game. running the football and stop-
ping the run ..\fter '1e"ing iilms of
the LOOtest he ..aid mu1.h the same
thing
"I was d1'..appo1nted that we
weren't able to control the hne of
scnmmage on e1tber ~1de of the ball "
Tollner said Tuesda\ at his "'eek\\
met>t1ng "'tth reponcr-. ··ofTensl\t>I}.
"'e didn't \1.orl' "ht'n "'t' v.ere 1n
pos111on lo Sulrl' Dt:lt'nS1\t>I) v.{'
lan'1 allov. an 11pponent 10 con\ en
1ha1 mam third-<luv. ns ·
The t°Xth-ranl..t'd T ropns 1-J
gained .~!Sii \Jrdc, 10 :'h .. tor Ba~ lor
but "a)tC'd thrc:e \ll>rtng op-
ponun111es -•>Ill' t111 J m1~!>t'd fit>ld
goal attempt and two after being in
first-and-goal s11uat1on!. 1ns1de
Ba ylor's I 0.yard ltne.
Baylor li nebacker Ra) Bell) inter-
cepted a pass at the goal hne to end
one threat and the Bears' defen~
tu rned back four running plays start-
ing from their 6-yard line late 1n the
game
Ba) lor, on the otber hand, con-
vCf\cd e1gbt of 13 th1rd~OWf\ situ·
auons and even gambled once suc.
cessfully on fourth down late in the
first penod The Bears finished the
game with 203 }ards rushing. the
most surrtndered b) Southern Cal in
18 game~. and hmned the Trojans to
153 -.ards on the ground.
"We've got to get more production
out of the total running game and we
v..111 .. Tollner said
In two games. the Trojans ha'e
rushed for 320 yards ( 2. 9 yards per
cam l and the' ha-..e not scored J
1ou1..hdo"'n on the ground
Tollner allt'd Southern Cal's run-
ning auacl.. thus far "so-so... and
blamed the problems OfH~<'"'" ,.
unit as a "hole •
Tht' Tro1ans open Pacific-JO<. on-
tert>nce pla\' \aturda~ night aga>n'l
'\nzona 1a1e in Tempe . ..\nz
Czech sports scientist
defects with U.S. help
'i-\' j()~f-I .\Pl \ leading
l zel ho~lo' al..1an 'lp<in' \l 1enl1'>t "ho
defrcted "llh the h<'IP ••It \ <>hm-
Pll hammer thrll"l'I Fd Hurr..l.-ar·
n\cdherc"11hh1'itam1\\ V.ednesda}
n1gh1 Sa\1ng ".\ml'rl\J pronll\t'~ me
.1 pos~1bil11' l•t tx·ucr U\l' m' abd1-
t1e'>"
I .1J1,1a, PatJl..1 la h" v.1k tmt•l.i
lti .rnJ their Jaughtl·r 'oem1 I ti
landed hert' a fur IT\ inl! Imm Rnmt•
"ht·rc: l \ f n1h,I\\\ 111li1.1al\ ga'l'
him !ht• it1• .tht'.hl IP u•ml· II• lhe
l Olll'J \tJtt'~
Burli.c "h11, :.imnl lhl' I \ 1lag 1n
thl' ''JX'nintt ,rrm11n1l'' 1•1 thl' I Ql\4
()I\ mpll t iJnll'' grt'l'tt'd 11.11.i r..1 and
h1' larn1\\ JI lhC' a1rp.1n P.11.1!..1
hru'hl·d tc:ar' tn'm h1' l'H'' ,1, Ac1rli.~·
l'miirJ1.l'd him
PJ1.1!..1 "hn dl'' d11pt•d "1t•nt1lh
trainintt pr,ittrJm' ltlf trJ1. Ii. .rnJ lil'IJ
Jlhktl"> \'II' 'tJ' \\1th anotht>r
C Lt"1. h. '''".ti.. .1n Jl'll'• "'' kna 11 u~.1,1 .. tin \ln1Jdl'fl \Jill'' h11mc
tl'r .1 '>h1n1 1 me I h~ 1a1111l "'111 thcn
nh1' l ti< JI! tnon' Tlh•u'I' donated
to" nh•'IJ\C 1n l '" C • 1111'. near
Burl...l' ' h· ml
P.11al...1 'aid hi' •k• 1<kd to .:uml' 111
\m1•ni·.1 thrn· ,,-.ir, ·'IL" hecaui>c
'\ntl'rl•'<lll p!tlllll\1'' 111. ,\ f'lll'>'>lhlhl\
t.i tx'ller u'r lll' .1h1''11t'' .ind thll\t' l)f
m' J.iughtri ,m,l 111'" ll' II I ''l1rr..
h.irJ hcrt .ir ,! I k.u n I "'tit ht' a
\U\1.1.'\\
Bur t' ... 11J 1'.1:,1 ,,
11n his ideas \1n athletll training. an1I
added that ht' npects Patal1 "111 heir
..\menca·s ni. mp1c etTons
Marina. Mesa
post tennis wins
The g.irh 1enn1s team from \1annj
and t osta \1t'sa htgh\ tool.. a t'lr··.i~
lrom kague pla' \.\t"dne .. da' anJ
~ame awa' "'t1h ea)\ 'it 1onl''
I hC' details
Marina 14, Garden Grove •· 'itn'n~
doubles pla) from the: team\ ot
knn1kr l 1nng-1'.1m Rolx-rt,on and
\fon1ca "ih1-Kn'>t1 \ ar.an pa1.cJ th«
\'1!..ings to '1ctor. (l\ er ~ 1.ir,kn
uro\ cat \tanna
The '"cton mcncd \1anna ht'
O\C'rall "'llh the Opt"ning '' \uno,t·I
Uague pla\ SllltC'J 1 UC'\tfa\ ,\!l.'.H'l'I
Huntington Eka1..h
Costa M tH Ii, Traboco Hills I
fhl' M u~tang~ "''n their t1rc;t m.1h •
of tht> sea on a~ Mana I Ul l C'r pu, '"
the \1ustang' in ,,, I 'n).11\''
v.1nning t\lo t) ')('l\ Jt l<"e
l\.1t>sa alc;o n·1..c1 \ C'd .i '>lr•'"tl ell '
lrom tht'u 1,1p ,foubk' tt>an
\ alcne Pal mt 1 JnJ .._,,m I a' lor -..d
lo~t onh t"'• 11.Jn t'' n thr thrl't" 't''
Orange County's
~, easy
· ~ listening
Rustlers, OCC win conference volleyball openers '"'-' MERCEDES I radio station
Golden West and Oranac C onc;;t collcgt>S turned m
three..pmc sweeps Wednc~ay nisht to open South c oast
Conference women's vollcyh311 play
Here's a look:
Ool•ea Wut J, Mt. Saa Aatoalo 0: F-rc'ihman l 1u
Man free turned in eiaJ'lt $Crv1ce ace' to leftd thr Ru<itlcl'\ to
a I ~4. I S-6, I S-S win over the Moun11e\ at M1. !-\A(
Sophomott ece Elias put in• 10-kill efTort to mo"c
1ht Ru•tle" to 1-1 ovenill <1oltlrn Wc~t hom Ornnac
Coast Fnday at 7
oatt 3. F1llrrton 0: \oohomnrc lHJl\11.k
hmcr . rnc~c . m> tht hnd C•ihl k 1lh 111 lt>aJ lh~ P1rul\., toa
15-4, I ~-13. 15-7 w1n over the '1~111na Hornet\
Fre hman m1ddlt blc)(:kcr M•l.'hcllc Lutortk had fhr
kill~ and S(rvcd nine stro1~h1 i.x>1nh for (oust I 2-1 1-01 in
the final ~me. while OUl\tde biller Margo 1'UC\lt'f also
111rncd in fi ve kill!.
Follow your
team 171 the Daily Pilat
1
r•I • •• • J 1 • 2 ) J J
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.,
House of empoe ta
C ·O ·M·P ·A ·R ·E
0156
NEW C PRE OWNED MODELS
KDCM
IDB.I
FMSIERED ··--
r
\ ) ------------
-~
06 0rw.ge CoMt DAILY PILOTl'Thuraday. Septemblr 29. 1985
• • l.inea, 6 0Q'I. M DoOan. • Ada may can.C"*J early, but no port.Ion of ~~t la .Wundable.
• Addtdoft&l Unee mil,)' be p\ll"Chued for $2.00 ..ch. • Prlcee muat be Included In th• act.
• Ooee not ~ply to lh. ru.I .. iata, r~t&l. ,.,.,. ...i., ot beJp wanted clMalncatlone or au&omoblJ" prtc.d ove,,J2000.
• Available only to private party advertiMn Mt&, mt_rchandi& r
Call 642-5678
.... ..-.. ..... fer Ille ...... ler lalt 't=VW p~ ta lat. Atutatab, Val. ...,.ntt, uat. Apr!lltatt, Uat. V111d•
........... 1112 ...... 1111 ... k 1111 ,._... ... zuira liiii 1111 "--·-.... n· .. ,.~.. .... _ ... ·---.... k 2711 ....... ne7
atNIT P•.. .. IU-IY IWlll 2ir 1L &ndo. pOOi/Jec, Bl!AUTIFUL BIG CANYON .---.... •• ~. Condo 2Br 2'~8a. au"ken prvt home to Chair 8 :c:::.==;;;;:== ............... ________ 1•-.. ... iiiiioo .... iiiiii;,.,.~~~.-iiP;.;w .. p;;:;p;~'""'!'~ift~ -.__. __ ,_ -n-.. --••--..... Ski Uammot'h. cloeeet
11.u Nice 2 Bdrm 2ba ~ .. 38A, bonu• room, great So. Co Plaza, S725. or;::i,3!!2~~~eg-VALY. iXLaoA PENiN. ...~ w!'t ...... .-ct~~gtM• llvlng rm. 2 car gar. t9'1-Aent11M 7141793-9860 ••--nome located In Newpott view, ueoc. pool, tennta 551-5932, 866-8479 n 1 Men. 1eo.oo..1 mo. Newey dee 18R, no P9'• ---=-L• -=-a -· nit , pool & aecurlty. 1 blk -nll1m AJ Tarrac• mobli. home $370K. WOl'k, 97M7M 2BR 1BA duptex, lf'9 yd, no Ag ' MOO/mo, 87Me0e ~~:::~;: ~ .:.inr .:r~ to PCH. A.vi lmmad ltatala It .... ~· a. neer tna watet HorM. 780-9718 p.tL S85C) + MCuflty. BIO CYN CONDO, ..... ctrW Li Iii ftD IPUMITI a 48d hM. It loOklng Ir 850-2080 Of' &.4&-9147 IUn IHI
Fumlehed Of unfumlltled. Of' not mucn money. -.wit '-" l 1952 M9Y* 54~3"484 ";~o~p'.lon. ~r~. ~:! 2& 1L. nu CJ11, pelnt, ~~:,.!~ct;._ AJ!i CM.NB,« HB think ot u1 tBdrm nr Dover & w .. t-; LXd. NIGOet SHRS: 2
View or non-\ll•w. 1ox4 UObG hOf'M (to be 2BA H~BA townhOUM nit/ , no !*I $1800, dfw, w/d, trig, pMlo, t cat paid. No pete: fttat fOI' that cnolee o· clltt. POOi, bltlne, no pe11. BAe avall. amenltlH
lecnetor. 1 Bdrm. 2 Traditional puffed out of park In ·~· w/d hkup, gar No $24 K. 75~9242 oer 1&50 873-6354 Agt 2Bdrm w.ea 1700 Ideal llvtng .... 2-1-~ Avail Oct '· $800/mo. Lv Frplc, gar. Nr beh. L .... Bdrm & 3 Bdrm unha. AH eo.t Mela) S2000 p •ta. Av a I I 1 0 I 1 2Bdrm 28a 1720 TSL MGMT -""" Meg 846-8648 Sngl or couple? $400/Up, In~ heoh Of' Cof-Realty ........ t ~,,., 845-645e « S845tmo. Call Craig Eieg.nt 8-Gtl Hou .. 38' 2Br 18a, aun room, trptc, 398 w . Wiiton 631·5583 "--· Pt at •7 957-<>974 a" 7:30pm OM del Mar. Our condo ....,. · 831-128e wl).c S1•95/mo. Avail aundeck. 3 bttce to bcn. ---------_.. •
llllw,g Inventory lncludel 681-7370 llU .U nowt e.4()..8208 Agt Very charming $850/mo. ..._ iiim,;;;;;;;;;,p;;.;.;;Ap;.p~t-. "X"'li·u~ti"'lh!t'i;t~ 'ill•111110' ""!Jh• 1111" Avt now. ahr 2br 2b• C.M
tcwne bank t2'x 52' FLEETWOOD EXECUTIVE CONDO. 876-9115 ~•liBJIU Included. CloM to bch b !WC> bo·Jronm ••IH' twnhee. gar. pool tip w/d
repo111111on1t Call '°' Ull llU IUlm home with .,, 8'11 32' EX· Bayrldge/Belcourt Hiii. 2Br 28a, frplo, lg amdeck, $385/mo. 8e 1-6142 micro 1500 540-S 131 oet• That wondettul "Olde" PANDED LIVING ROOM. 2BR 2ba. frplo. Arnef1ft1ea great bay vi.w l 1300 mo. IPUMITI Balboa Pen. 3br 1350°+"
qu.itty IMllng. Choice KING SIZE BEDROOM. A •NEW PLUSHI 3Br 2'~ 11350/mo yrty 5"4&-§71 c.Jt eve 873-1308 &-9pm lmm~i.te larQ9 Garden llUI Yft Y.tutll. 111/1u1, avt 10'1
(714) 673 ,400 ~12·:~n U:g;g= gr .. t 1aroe k1tc":1 & 2 at'I TWnhme, gar. Avl Harbof' vi.. Knoll Condo CHARMING 1 BR with ~~·P aS:-u~t~~Yu ~·::: O~n1: onm~~:s P!:i~ 873""904 evening•
(t.ae opt poaall*I). bath. Aot· 540-S ": 1 ~200111T· u •Ill tot Lea. 3Br 21A8a, 2 car tingle encloMd garage, pool/spa, patio/deck. No moat eecluded tcenlc Bal Penln -Male. mid 20'1 . ........ I le. NB Beaut. 2BR 2ba, patlO ..... -• gar Sl&e5/mo. 840-532• SMO. Agt. 759-33!9 pets. blufta. Spaclou• 28drm '* 1n I st yt>ar's rent reap, 10 ahr 3BA $250/mo
141-IMl..,....l ::·=·~.'8'f:.:.o~ 111-.. 11 tr lM-1112 WE lllUITEE c.lt1.... 2724 218<1Bdrrmm 1"•Ba $605 ~w~~· f~_P8a~l~si '":t FURNISHl D or 673-3357 Ive mag --------.,,..,...~=-==~'=""---=:':"'."'-DRAMATIC Sbr 21hba, all 1Br pd '' $105 O CdM hM to shr. mstr bdrm Ctnu .. lllu llU SALEORTRADEf«RVor amenltlel.Jogtobch xtnt *L~Seleo11ona ~garS495gaa • 2250VANGUAROWAY l-&441 UNruRNISHE w/pvt bth. Carpon. gar.
DUPLESC-2& 1&; .._ ~ :r.;~g~~"'f~ area. $1150/mo, 64°1035 :~ac;:.* .::':'dally ~.f~. =~: ~:; r:. 640-9628 « 631-<>960 lut. k 2741 f1Tlt£SS w/d. $675/mo. 67S..S 122
So-of-PCH. S275,000. Citizen Mobll• home 2BA 1BA oondo In Mela *°'*' 1 b.ys 9~ but 646-5282, 850-&463 lYllUIU MW 2BR 2ba. cpta/drps, dllh-CUTllS, TE .. IS, Fem to shr 3 br Balboa
521 Carnation. By owner part!. (213) ~707 Ver<M. 1 yr leeM. Kida *Delly phone updat• adul11 pref.lno pett. 1Br. trig, range, laundry, waahef, dlepoeal, porch SWllll•C. plH Penln apt. S350/mo + ..,., ma STU&. 673-024 1 Of87~1541 •-~-p lJSI OK. Encl gar. Submit on •Guaranteed Placement 28drm 1'.~Ba.. 810 Joanne pool. carport. No pets coin lndry, garagt last 873-4904 Avl 1011
L...,, .-ntt'r_ _peta. 1750/mo. Call Anne $550/mo $695/mo, 846-6451 1111ch 1110re! Sorry,
SlH,111 c ... cD triP'x :tr;HR 1 58X 631-1266 TIUIDT ~~:~ ~~6'!~:~d. 93 1 w . 19th St. 548-0492 ·-••• no pets. Models M2~ cr::t.'.'s;~~/~o~: Excellent South oeat •W SHJ,211 twnhae atyle tlo & . ., ~ -. ULL 111-1111 111T,..., open d1ily 9 to 6. .....
Plaza area. Upgraded Fantastic , Value In CdM. Fully «Mp. • crood I~ Ii~ ~I i. Or Stop By 28drm, private patio, leun· 1~:,~Ae:k~E~:v;1~~s $550/mo. 1 BA 1 BA. lndry d utll. 751"8575
andlot .. ~ .. ~:. 000Laroe91 Quality well maintained. term ..... land. l170K 1.___... 2830 Newport Blvd dry $540 No pets frplc 9nct patio Carrx:: room, cloee to beach ~ Mature MIF. Metr Br, H B · ~me .....,, 3b 2.L~ . .,_,, b ........... 1 ,..,.-A .. _.._, 11 -546-9950 • · • 4932 Charlene Cir '1'9ti tiouee-gsr -yard-pool t¥•%. 1&19/PITI. Call lor r ,..,... ~ y " ........ • exc . ""'' 1 • ,,_.,_, Wll1IUff pool, apa, Quiet. No pets TSL MGMT 642-1603 VV
more l nlormatl on ln town1weekonly. 63 -1266 E'akMhM.$1100 2BA 2BA trplc Pool 2Br1Ba.571Joann.2per· IS95Up54&.2«7 Apartmen" $400+d9if~ut~'9':s
54tr2313 Princlpals only. 840-2687 38A 2ba, garage balcony Cable Gu & ~ eone mu $510 No pets. ••y•• -· -SUWlll YILUIE avt now-Y •
THE REAL
ESTAT&:RS -"
-•• .. Ill Eu*cond. -No......... ... ....... A'd .... ·No Sierra u.....mt S50-10t5 - -H5W N"wpc1r1 "·•~th "u Met. adult toshrlux. home . -. Frptc petlO gar~ & .....,.. ""'· peta. ~ 2Br 2Ba. 1000 IQ ft gar ' tho ' acrost from S.C. Plue Lo Priced$439K75~9070 waterp.ici.'842~968 11000/mo.631.0211 2Br18a.lgpatlo,pvtgar, Jae. Redecorated: No ftY•T1 I llt1l11tl "I••" S37S+'nutll.64 1_8 180 "~ • l ... Newpor1Helghta2Br2ba •mall pet ok. seo<>tmo. pet1S895/mo 855-0685 1.1lll11\1•11
"9Wll Ill -.. '""-DllWfllT EASTSIOEauper28A;2BA frplc pool,gar,nopeta: Calll.any54&-S882 AM,631-610JPM. Llvewtlereyouheve c,lil 'ilH M/F t hr 3Br NEWPORT ~ U~=-p~~ =t ~"J· ';:. pksJ, ~PPft( lat, '1aat & dep. Aefe. 2Br Apt up1tatr1, garage. 2 DELUXE NEW CONDO •Spectaeular epts N{·wpnrt 6t>M h No SHORES Condo $285 t mll11YI Ill& YllM fllTllTll Piil. -11 Tlmea Grose $4e9,000 loft ·.,. :;,.., r , ft:.· $895, mo. 875-2520 ~s mu. $550 1at. Eastslde. 2Br 2'nBa. dbl * 1 & 2Br, 1 & 2Ba suit ea 'h utlls. 631-2366 IJll,NI • UITlm Pride of Owner No Peta, satS. ~-3898. Spacious 28r 18a. Nr bctl. lut + eec 845--4280 gar w/opnra, frpk:, pool, :~r,acl::;ownhouses """ 11 \II'•"'-• ''" NEWPORT, BEACH ehr lrg
QUALITY BUl~T 'f"lly 49drm, 2Ba, garden L&F DEVELOPMENT CO. ~ec:utM 3B 38a. f ii.. Garage, frplc. S900 Win-*LA MANCHA APT.* epa. No pe11. S900. mo •Pr:C:te balconles or 111 '''11 1 HOME yea( md. non-smkr ehowplace. rec ous. atrtum alley acceu and 720--0707 r .,.,.,"' 1., lee 876-4912 Bkr 2 Bedrooms1&25-$675 675-9797 Garden patio. 645 -1104 lem S375+ utll 646-2106 :'~ch':~ F:~ $1~~.~'.'l~ro, J~~ ldaatrlal Pn_.t_ lS'll i~ kt ~s&age '~mun n No pet•.
642
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5073 i.:~~.B<l~":a,::s',,:v! WIY •n laata Aa1 27IO NF;:.~ ~~kr ~~ &~ ~,~no pl~~~~~ Jake, Agts 54&-2313 7500 if. Q st:ndlng lnd Lg 2Br 18a.. gar, w/d hllup GATED VILLAGE COM-·~~t l~ ~ r~~ $495 No pets. On Vlct«le *3 LIQtlted tennis courts 1Bdrm. South coast vmaa 673-8717
bathroom.. Sp.rkllng bldg In Cotta Meat 1&25 No pe11. 21710 MUNITY. 2Bdrm 2'ABa. MoMCwta 54-0336 near Newport Bt11d •2 SWTmm+ng pools $825 ~ S300 dep. Aak tor NEWPORT lar""" •""'lud...,. w/1200 ., omc.. 2 OV6f-Pt.centl• 545-7983 1800 aq. ft. Of PURE 990-2962 .. ----...... pool. 3 car garage. Quiet heed d00r1 coffee bar LUXURY. Oerege. SPA In •MESA VERDE deluxe •Streams & ponds Tammy at 645~0303 home, non smkr fem/on!}>
cul de sac. Cell for t6" claar'•nce. Cali Meu Verde nr perfect 2bf mallet' tult••· Dining 2Br 2Ba. lndry, garage E-elde 1 lJdrm upetalre :~:rz~~!!.11 sem OIAIT YILW $375. + '!. Ulll 964~5652 'f.f:.~\~ent to aee. lllA Yllll Chuck Wood at 644-7500 1'41den1S:-:9 ~ room, woodbumlng "'~ S750 No pete 840-24915 ::~t sfe~~m~,W~~I. 1 bdrm condo downstalra. N~mkr shr small 2Br 1Ba
THE REAL
ESTATERS
Beautiful expanded 3 Of' 4 George Elkins Co. :..0 Atty._ • =te ":.~EJ=r *New modem 2Br 2ea 2 No pets 544-2140 WHY NOT CALL nice SS9S/mo. Joyce Apt nr bch 1n Nwpt
bdrm, country French llWutM 1125 --··-· LIVING onty 15 mlnut .. aty Twnhme. Gar, trplc ... EXTRANICE .. Lg1Brb1 111-1111 Weltze 631-1266 S2S8•utlls.Ev646-9848
home w /apa. Owner HaveCUh -wouldlilCeto rs•• -toSo.Co.PM!za,justwt S900 mo.675-49128kr ,.... IUWlllYILUIE .~ii.~\·? Nwpt 8ch3brl'IOuM toati1 anxloue. has bought buy Units In Coate Meat w .. talde 2Br 18a., patio Nlpwort 8IYd & mouth ot 3er 1ea Cottage. New crpt w/pool. No pete $495. • • ~ ; : w/non smkg resp prof'I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil another. Hurry. Only or 0 C Sally 540-7507 ~2d. 7carpon00 · SMS/mo. Sen Diego freeway. 2•73 $775 No peta. 2Cl2S 643618 Af1 3:30 15555 Huntington VIiiage Ji 1 blk to bch, furn. frplc;,
---165,000. J~ Watt:re · · vu -1 OtMgeAve.831-S4398y E.lden,AptB646-Cl519 Beeu11ful lrg 2 Bd/2Ba Lene, from San Diego w/d,d/wS39S.631-8430
631-1266 PRIVATE PARTY PLUSH CONDO 2Br Den .. appt only. , Condo, W/D hkp, pool, Freeway, north of Beach Htk Ctllt llttrt Prof.IF w/deughter eeeka II.Ill Tl llWI •. WILL ISSllE Over etreame & laJl1. Dbl 11o .. a 3BR 2 l'lba, luxury T /hte apa, 2 car gar. frpl, micro. to McFadden, west on 2715 prof.IF to ahr 3br H.B.
Anractlve near new 3 I•~"·~'\ gar w/~ dr mlcfo dlYt laata Aaa ..,.. apt. w/frplc & gar. No $900/mo. McFadden. bedroom condo In au-~:: M ortgagu, C o mm. hku as1000'54g..24...1 H .... a;; 2tw 26e bluna petl. $775, 679 w 18th 782 WESLEYAN BAY 1~~-------Spacious 2 year old 29r Condo. n smkr $325/mo
perlOr locetloo. Matt8' ~r!_. :c::: Properties, Apt., Motel•. p flt vlded & ssoo· St. 631-8213 e" 3pm Tll llllT M2-1IOI 18A. Lrg yrd, nu cpt/palnt 2B• Condo Security + utll+S250 dep.
•ulle wltJ'I pr l vat•t111..,.•~-•-o~t ... H .Unlt•,:.......,._Et .,SharpWea1aldeDuplex. ~:, detall~5'39-8~:aerw .. 11ideCostaMeaa No gat. Nr bch. 1 d°' gates overloolle plne 963-0762.261-6360x304
sundeck, large llvlng ,._ --.._. omea. "''"'"""'"' c. !Jpstalta. 2Br t8a. encl Best RftY fM , lllTllT II .maybe..$575• ~ trees '& waterfall. Nr SC Prof male 40+ Fairview a room wtth fireplace & 4 BR 2 'h b •. A• k I ng DEFAULTS-No Problem! gar. New drpa, crp1a $600 1 ~Ba. patio, bltlna, d/w l~rt lt1ck lm Plza $850 mo 644-2967 405. SC Ptza. cl•. an 5Br •
front deck. well equipped 1179.900. Mak• reaaon-Call NOW 8arn-10pm + dep. Mutt ltand CJedlt hatk CNat •ttrt S7~~moA ~~· 1~",n~~ ~~,r~·01~ :S~::i gar 2-r 1 I!, patio. gar. nr .... , 2 CM $325 ~ $50 432-736Ei
kitchen end eeparate able otter -I'll tlK• It (1) 337-5959 Checi<, No pets 770.-5629 2Zll gt~6 ~ M O O ._
laundry. Just atepa to Pvt pty. 643-2322 SHOUTS VALUE v eg 1923 P M NA Hoag $750/mo. No pets. Lao BCh rm, P"' ba. pr:JlOs Ae1p prol. ~hr 2BA 28A
oceanfront Submit all of· 111.~ an.. II lt•tall Free rent cozy cottage fOI Unfurn. 3bf 1-hba, ale. $525. 1BA, clean, carpet, TIL MllT 142-1181 Avt now. 731-0595 · S~OO 112 u1il. Mature baytront Ltdo Isle time
tera. Aeklng I 148,500 • llt d ties SCP etllld lawn aervloe. no gar., drpa, refrg, no pets 724 LARGE Bach Apt. w/lge 2Br 18e 1770 yrly, Gar emplyd lady 494-7346 Pvt bci1 $725. 770-5605
(land lnduded)631-1400 48A 'llba. Aakl ng ltaMlfa-1-L.. nnee torudetanlrla pettok,$650.557-8063 JameaSt.-0,673-7767 patio, gd loc. S39S/mo. S S 2 I F $H9,900. Make reas. nan• ee un -4pm on y Pvt rm be gar pool tor Aespnsbl nsmk 1·2 l\lde
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V.Atl HI HO"l
H0 \11 .... hK.
REAL ESTATE
131-UOO
offer. I'll take Ill PP. •NM111* A b FuaiaW S54S/mo 2 8d 1ba apt 8S9W.19th.CM. 309'h-36thSt;dshwanr M/Fn~k.nr bk bay 'saso 6 • OK.ahrsmall beach
843-2322 lalt.ta lalui 11M Tlmed rtt• 1700 3bdrm upper unit. lndry, lmmed Neat South bout Plaza 2Br 2ba apt, gar, 1 blk to + $100 & refs. 646-6423 = ~~~7~1'~~~ ok
la.H 61\;mtng 3 Of' aBr 388 melloW.,..encloeedp ltlaM ... occupancy. 18drml585/mo,aecdep beh, Oci. 1 occupancy. Room fOI' rent non smkr _ lut.ltack _,, home Stepetobay 1rp1c bltlna lelaure patio at 2276MAPLE only.Dave966-1136 $900.molee.631.0560 ""'HB home walll to • Am ln3 BAduptex 1/2blk
....... fam~.gat,lndryS1,.oO 53M190e..tRltyfee Ci..n,;;;:p:ifu1ar1L. TIL~M2-11U PLUSACOND0 2Br0en. **38R 2BAfrplc,gar ,... $3 '60 5 to beacti. $310/mo ~
--------• 1168,500. $70,000 aa-Wntr 675-8688 Avl nowl -STIP L•t•I 'h blk to bay, lndry. Win-$595/mo 28<1 1ba, patio. Over streams a fella. Obi yrly. Nr bch, SJ..t.sp. beach 00/mo 9 ·21 t tst11ast 673-8549 Iv msg
aumable at 10'!.% Ill Oct Cetta •na 2124 3Br + patio. Only 1775. ter $650 uts pd 675-8888 pool, ldry room, E/sldt gar w/elec dr, micro. di • VIiia Rentals 675:~12 ltttl1,Jltttl1 2904 Ammte shr 2Br 2Bs compl
•
15th. (S67 4/mo.) 3Br Other'a Avail lee#64Cle cerm ••• .., HU locatlon, close to all. hkups s 1000 549-2447 '" MlllYI IT UllU IUOI furn M/F 45 t. Cls to bch, ~~~~'s.~~g.3l. 3:.~is1::1~i1!~ TILDEIT . 111-1112 OESlONER1S furnlehed ._, ~ ... BA2Y llOI POOL Patio, trplc, X-lge GATED VILLAGE COM-llTll •I HB Smklng 0 k_!_4o-0293
., • "3-8740 By Owner. ~S50<>de9. 631-t236 _ TownhouM. Frptc & pool •--• • 2Bdrm Apte Eastalde MUNITY. 28drm 2'hBa. w1<1y rental•. Low rates Ammt needed $400/mo 'h •---L 21 _.. DU'a. Ptlat 2221 11195/mo. 873-0898 1&20 Ealde 1g 28<1 1Ba $680. Call 557-2841 1800 aq. ft. of PURE S145 & Up/Wkly. Cot« block from beach (Npt) lt!l!!!,_ltack l ...... ~-.... on AlllR St. gp;amr Cetta .... BM pool, pvt patlO. Xtra nice. Pvt , Br. trpk:, pool. patio, LUXURY. Garage. SPA In TV, maid aervtoe. tree Call att9f 5. 646-4917 111-. llKH a;;:;;;ing 2it tum fiou•. H11bor View. 4BA 2'nba, 2 pera max. No pets gar No pets 399 w Bl) maater eultea. Dining cottee, heated pool & Siiare 2Br 2Ba NB M or F
I .,_.._ 1_, d ocn vu, trpk:, 10", yrd. 2 frplc, 3 c ar gar. 18r DUPlQ. qul9t. Ywy 540.0130 or 646-5137 St. S59S · 650-6357 room. woodbumlng fire-•tee:>• to ocean. Kitch'• $367 1 •..;' elec All Ill All I Ul.I LITS 285K ...-w/ un own XJnt toe S 1000/mo. Steve $2000/mo 1st & laat + cJMn. 1 empty d Adlt. No place, microwave oven, evall. 985 N. Coast Hwy, amenities 542-0155 South of the h"'hway, In OR S10K leaM option. 213/459-7789 S200clngdep497-700S peta$435548-1021 S6752Br2Ba.2patlos,ld) Quiet 2Br 1~B• 4-Plex. private patio. ELEGANT LagunaBeach,494-5294 ~-..,.......---=-
'V Poaltlve cun flow With tee, frig, gd loc 549-2750 Utlls pd 1800 No pets. LIVING only 15 minutes Wanted fem shr 4Br Dpb ~~ •• C:::~h~u~~~ ! 1Ummr rental• 650-9100 t!Jtrt lt1ck 2119 But. ltack 224 l&U M •• a" 5pm. Av1 10/1 3-43 Cebrlllo 760-8083 to so. Co. Plaza, Just east IUUll Mllll $325 •1. ullls bsytront B11
block and e hall lrom IY IWUI -WllTll 55+ LANDMARK CONDO ALL UTILITIES PAID $675. mo. 2Br 2ba. tpr1c, tBr ss25' Utlll pd. Lndry Nepwort Blvd & south of Wkly rental• now avell Is. Chris 548-6477
b eac h and b l u ff. 3BA 2'ABA Udo ltle 507 47 yr old retired bulineu 2bf. appll, gar .• pool, avl ~.,.~':.~!:!; patio. lndry tac, gar, no Upper, carport. No petE ~ ~ tr:r,~IJ:~3 ~~t :v~C~ ~6-~~~ Wan1edprof M/Flhr love-
S3SO.OOO. lot, Street to Strada, lrg man from Wyoming look-10/1. $775 mo. 96()..1651 deelgn teaturH, pool pete.n Nice loc . 208~ 383 w . Bay 760-8083 ange ve. Y • ly home tn Irvine $425 •
game room wtw . Prln-Ing for • home with boat For ie... 4Br 2'hBa, 2 etry, bbq, oovr'd garage, aur-Thurl ' ~8 S.C. Vlllaa, nr SC Plaz.a appt only SU I Sii Liii£ '"' utlls Lisa 854-0509 l ,~~,~~ 6~~r S clp811 only 673-1393 slip for 43 " eallt>oat. Wiii-3 car gar, pool, Jae, gaa rounded with pluan land· 1&95/mo. 2Br 1Be up-1br, pool, Jae. wetoht rm, VIiia Balboa-Versailles 3026 w . Coast Hwy, New-Weatcllff. NB Beautllul
--------• BY OWNER . Low price 4 Ing to take care of home tire ring, BBQ, grdnr & ecapl ng. No peta. etalrs. Avall 10/20 Ne $550 gas Incl W/Cl7~886E 1Bdrm & 28drm. A variety port Beach, retrlg, TV rm, ba, hOt tub N/smkr
quick sale. 38<1 2ba. lg llv whlle preparing boat to pool aervlce 11350/mo. Furnlthed 1Bdrm and pets. Reta req'd. 3007 Home (2t3) 434-5457 Agt 631-4960 $130-i wk sgl, no deposit. $475 • ulll 722-1429
IOUI ,.HT ... E sell around tna world. Wkdys 848-0503, Wknde fumllhed Bachelor. Jeffrey Or. Ownr/Agt rm, lg lam rm, epa, ex-Home needed from Dec 1 840-7656. :Rl5 Wiiton 842-1971 559-6221 Sharp Weatllde Duplex + llOlllE tru . $165,000. 631.0262 ·as to July 1 '68. lmpec-Upstelra, 2Br 1Ba. eno
3bdrm,2bath owneraunlt M..._IHIP cable references. Cell Solld 3br 2b• 2-story lut. ltacla B4i $750/mo 2Bd 1'h8a gar.Newdrp1,crpt1$58C upst11rs w/maet8' bdrm _,.,~ 3071632-6823 days or gourme1 kltch nr storea TownhOUM. Gar, lndry + <Sep Must atand Cfedl•
& bath plus flrepl~ 2 Newport Fixer 4Bdrm 307-635-359 1 eY/wt(nds. achll 1715 kids dlal ml..,. '9111 room, nice E/elde loc. cllecl(. No peta 77().5629
bdrm Income unit down-Only 6 yrs old wtth pool. Alk fOf' George Hain. S3M190 Beat Rlty tee QUIET RESORT LIVING 2829 ORANGE A.VE
ttal rs w /llr ep l ac e Only $269.900 Hurry, 1-...1_1 ••u •Spat1lllng hM1ed pool Tll •llTM2-11Q ...,..81iBftU Seasonal rental, rarely call Key at 962·7788 ...... hfllnlhW UYlll ...., •Court yard view dining ~ ,.
vacant. Lrg assumable IESPHITllWIEI Geatral 1202 **IEIT™** •VIGnett•BBQareu 1st T.O ... •Twtlght dine In court yrd ••~ TIWl-11
MARIA BEACOVITZ IEEIS Tl llLLI LlNDLORDSlREALTORS CALL US REGARDING gazebos W..:::WLI-=-.. 0eHM Ftr lttlf
MARILYN TWITCHELL 2 BA. 2 Ba. flrepl~. Fu1 lree tenant provldra IAVINE LEASES •Spacloo• Apartmente IPUTllml Frpk:, vaulted celling•. db
Pool/epa Security. In Info 539-6194 Belt RI~ lntH hett lealtJ •You~ own pvt patio Like bfand newl All utlltles gar, pool & spa. No pets GE 759.9100 VIiia Balboa $149,995 OC's RENTAL EXPERT lM-llM •Gourm9t kitchen paid. POOi. gar, no peta. 18drm $72(
ltt'1 T• Ttrml Large 3 Bdrm unit w/encl •New dOYe tan c:rpt 18drm $585 28drm 2'1l8a S93C
Joan Howe 675-76ff Pv1 p1t10, 1 blk to belctl, 4BA 2'~ba T/hM clOM to •Lrg walk-tn ctoeeta 28drm 1Ba $890 666 W. 18th
evall lmmed. 11200 yrly. UCI. CroM St/Culver & •Gated COYered prkng 301AVOCADO642-9850 845-2739 or ~163 IOUIFlllT Unlveretty. Avell 10/1 w/etorage PlllOTllLIW ~llllllUL.n $1400,213/306--0633 3Br 2Ba.. 1021 Valencla. Trl plexl 2Br 1'hBt PllP lllAlmlf Turtle Rock view home, 1 ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED No pete. $725 mo. Call aft Townhome type '69f COLDWeu
BANl(eRO Bank ~~ ll'lle 4 1141111-1111 yr lse, 4BR. 11800/mo. t8d, 28<1 & 28<1 Twnhme 3pm 631-6155 mo. No pe1a 54e-560S
bdrm, 2 batl'I, prime lo-Fran Lugo, 557-4373 Furnished
cation on tna sand. Thia lalMI lalaM 2211 Century 21 Executive Vlllt our model Dally 9-CI.
--....... -.. I• not • teardown. Bank 11350 4Br 38a DUpl9x, ;.HI k Sorry, no pet.a. IUE =ML 11&1 Wiii llnance long term dine rm den patlO gar LA QUINTA HEAMOSA wll<W.-20% down. Della No peta YrtY. New0 crpt 3ba OC*W\ view, dbl 18211 Parttalde Ln, H8. I ,IOO DtlQedo 631-1266 (213)395-3s11 gar, decke. lmmae.. kid• .. 1 ... _.1 Enjoy 61de COfone del 1 •ii• M ok. 11600. mo. 499·2715 · -._
Mer llvlng at this flneet ~ r I >_ R I 1600/mo • Bayfront 3BA • -II I Ull Ii rt ~~ 1ocat10111 Older home on j= J:t 2BA, lrplc, lrg patio. ':'f•al t•t ~ ~
40' lot with panoramic -~---~-· 675-7009 or 8715-8405 A";; conao2a; 288 up-~ extra .
ocean view 4 BR. YeartylS12S mo Cute 2br etalre. Walk to beeetl. Comp!. tum. $1100/mo
aunroom end DA ~ guest HIMll Ml.Mii patio, ga~age-° perking: Call after &pm 49S.0.57 842-4335 931~3910
IUlte Ch1rmlng 28r 1be--hM . Nr bay 875-3063 I •---L •-t DECORATORS bMutlful 144-IOIO Owner desperate Wiii ~ .,... ... tum. Condo on the wet.,
exctieoge or cash oul. •-•L-.. 2 ~21% Lth condo. 11795/mo 873-0896 125.000 dn ..,_ Walk to bMctt 11300/mo _____ __,__,,___.__,,,........_
PnJa1u Ul7 W/541·5753 H/873-6302 OCEANFRONT APT
WOODLAND YILLAGI
APA•TMlllTI
Comt & en1oy Out &11dtn \lylt apls Ouitl cotnlorlablr lovmt
~lose to lmway~ & So Coasl Pl11a ~hllt ooly minule~ lo lht
beach G1r1gu m1~ble NO PETS Pl (AS(
NILS • UH • LJllllY IHIS
Ulmlll ' ....... .
111--....... ,.
2m111•1 1111-1111
W , llUT I •t WITU IHl.
141 Pltua•
TSL IUUllMIT lM-Ml1 142·1IOI·
For Ctassilled AO
ACTION
Can a
Daily Piiot
AO.VISOR
642-5678
BURR WHITE
RE.Al TOR. IMC .
67>4610
. Winter rentel. lbf S550
Oceetl mlet yrly 3bdrm hm 2 Bdrm N.8. duplex horM. mo. Incl utll, no pat• •••••••••••••••••• I~ decor dbl ba & AdJ. to watet, Oc1 t. 548·1930 Of 873·7~ gar atone lrplc St tOO Yearly. (818) 2~710 539-CI 190 Beat Alty fee OCEANFRONT iharl> 2Br, *111'1 Ill* garage, no peta.1&25. Stepe to bch BaCh $550 2Br 2ea ...--. A~ tnOW wtntar 1118) 795-3011 Sell things t•t with Dally Yrty. utna pd 210 .. th St. • ,.......-. .r-~ • _____ ....,....,,...,... __ -:;:::::::=:=::::=:;;.ll~P~l:lo:t ;W:an:t:A;d:•=== Rear 875-'7840 Lv mtg Only 1&75. F .. #..-.54 St999 to bct1 38R. "9f, TlUlllT ln-1111 w~/dryet S1100mo
'*'Mat c..~ ~ .i'h .. ' J) -c ~c..· "" C.rta1 ••I ... UU 3Br 2ea 2 car oer .. H v. toe OMw 975-3384
'91llll v~~~~ .... ~(f"v .... 2& 28a BUpt; •. frpk, Hornea.S1475/mo+aec. Lg MW decor 1Br Dpbt
fndry rm, peta ok. $1300 631·1286 Maril 644-0793 Nice yrd. Gar, ltepa to • =':°...,::f'-'::, :!: lse Avl now 780-1.996 SYOO'e 2bdrm 2ba view bay 6 beh. Yrty SISOtmo ..,...,,_,.,..,,,,.,...,_,. t w in ter $750 /m o .
[ H " A R N I r I I I r
• ~::~~.;i~&~·u r r r 1· r I' r r 1
I '::.~~ .... 'OI I I I I I I I
--.uTIMnrtnll ................
28' 2B• ac>«tK ocean YU. gar touch of cJaaa or leaa 7 1 • I 8 7 5 . 7 5 O 8 o r
Frplo, patio, yrd, 2 car gar 539-e 190 Beat fee &t9/37&-210. Of' Df1Ve t>-,
St550 mo 7804342 UTllllT 1401 w . eay. I 3BR 28A, newt)' painted SI*: 3bf, Fm/rm, trml
Int. neutral crpt. avail din lmmed OQQUp. Well Atutmnb Val.
lmmed. $1250/mo. Agt iooa1ed. S1~/mo -'
876·8000 * * • * ..... ...... 1711
$475 CdM hm ott PCH nlUll Lii 26R 11X ;:t)! 6d
truly appeallng d«:or l Laroe 8eohelor w/Mp. 1., a Re I au' n dry' ~ child fine hutry !~t•--In ~~~! .. 2~ 795/mo. '497..,.7e 53M190 Beat Alty fee -"'" n-• "'VV _. ., L~ 3BR 3~ tip, gar, 8-44-7211 Agt. Im ..
pt11o, at999 to bcn S t395 8eyrldge Condo 28' 28a. 1 + 1 + utMa pd P.c ok
M0-42281980-4229 Meg m t loc. S1350/mo. Call Yrly 1&5<>. ,..,1751
L .. &.42·9405 TIUlllT ll ...... 1 •BEA IFUL WATER
VIEW 2Br 2'A8a TwrihN. BEACHFRONT 2 sty 38R la'L-..
lplo, dbl j" S1 550 2ba, $1700/mo. yrty IN ._
873 735 I 81814•1·22 .... •ft 5pm. Pl&lanla 1717
_V_wy_n_lce_2_8r' 1Ba r.., BllW'8 CONDO Linda Very ;ma t&r, ~·
unit, gar . evau lmmed j plan, 38r. 28a. 11800 mo. No P«I 1at, .... teOO. U SO/mo 875-1854 722-4522 Hear beech.17t-51M --
GRAND OPENING
mle8tiBJIU
APARTMENTS
825 CENTER STREET
COSTA. MESA
Come Nrly to ~ your ~k of thMe
~lf\JI brand new 79 ~rt"*1ta Going
faatl Occupancy by Sept. 20th
aACHIJ..OM P'ROM 1411
1 MDM>OMa P'ROM 1171 t al>ftOOMI t\li aATH P'ROM ...
2 UDAOOlll 2 aa TH P'ROM l7'N
f1aturlng pool, apa, private patio. and
deck.a. a-reoe °' carpot1. Buutltul abun-
dant land~.
Off/ICI ONN DAILY •.JO AM TO 1 '911
Located at the corntl' of Center S trM1
and Pll<*ltl• AV9rlue
842·1424
Sooy, no peta
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZlE
ACAOll
1 C.ttll1cate
6 Le1rs
10 -Hesnanan
t.C RellQIOUS If!
p1eoe
15 CN1m1C81 tull1x
16 Mr Gardner
17 Goose genus
18 Hockey strateoy 20 Aalan rete
21 Disgorge 23 Airmen
2.c Hammer p1rt
25 Volcano
26 Gl~ln
30 Wtnd9'et
34 Cle<gyman
35 Obstacles 37 F11h 1tory
38 Expertly
39 Coalesce
41 Brezll at91e
42 Scottish
eKplorer
•3 Lend point
44 C0<n1et
48 Emanal•
48 EndlnQe'I
50 Bitumen•
52 WOf1i un111 53 Mluouro feeder
56 El -IHH
57 BIO· or Pee· -
60 Revels
62 Funcllonaf
64 R8'Wtat1on
85 Green shadft 66 Soo11ers c;1ty 67 HlulS
68 Hutrted 69 Trident
DOWN
1 Argument
2 Movie
3 Leftovers
• Nellve 'lull
5 Zoroes1ro1n11
6 Rely
7 Plenty obs
8 · -hear lh1sr
9 Snooted
10 Do over
1 1 Pl1n1tt
I:? Beel P8r1
13 ShOuts lor
a11en11on
19 Ran ~round
22 Held back 24 Ouarry 25 E oJ OED
26 Trunk •ltm
27 01 Clll4MI
28'°4111•
29 Nurse Cavell
31 Home
32 Stree1 5ouno
33 Time e>e"Odr.
36 Measur1no
mslrument,
•O Insect egos
41 Stones
43 Bar stools
•5 Meat dishes
•7 Say1
49 H&rve11te11
:'> t Rea tr eons
S3 C&bfll
!>4 llahan ••It'
55 Own up 10
56 Wh1mpe1
5 7 Root P•f'C•
58 Mr\ leuQhlon
59 C1osot111fl(I
61 Gr11tu11v
63 Mnle '"'i>eP
ca
ttn• Hl4 1 ...... ll !tit Wu... 11 Jtlll Wu... Fatalmt HU tllawu 1111 hwr IMta 7111 .... ...,.IJllJ
;a& •aua llU.,WllTD -• HlllU a... Ju~ ........ 1117 &re e pc Bctr'" wt Po iru11y a1ec Hoec>kel 1.c1 ~. u::;c;:; EeeUto. 1111 .. 1 1111
ESCORTS No ~lee '* m y. Pff, Iona *'"' Poe 9¥911 Fine .tor• aeektng qu.11. AUQIAd eXNt D•Y• saso .... 1275, 00 eond $500 Wn.lcMk' S50 18'. aurr91 toe> w/t.-0, -•. _ ... ,UAL. • -ml ltl-14. 50/ht. Daya. Call Hte: 10 to 2 0t 11~ fled Illus-to11, Pro-onty Own tfat\19 Good I 4CM-4480 or 4$4-1~ 8eotlde Commod9 t20 t>r 1t1d t1ew f 13. HS '" _ _......, 1
...,..., '
ettilRLV tootclng for 1 2355 ~ 1~ fOt App\. Mk P~ Celt tOdey fwlotlal tpl)Nranc• kind/good Nlft 5'2.fi 1M HU1ein .,26 aof~ A5 allt.et $ 10. Al Jdn1 ~ndt 731-3055 = ::.o -:: em·
rnor• orHtlve llvlng llftl l °' ..._. '°' appt. die 152-t131 Full-lime. 54W403 ,._,_ llH din Mt 1;00, dbl sen& __ cono ~8-90&6 ,_ •-". 7 .a --------
1tt.,uttve? H3· 12U ; 1 WXY A6NOC mTIL UlllTll'f LlllL WTllY ea1 -_,.. poe1 b9d M5 rnApte SW liP.Pi'""'•ii!i""..--..--.-iiiiiii"
Dya.131 .. 211 Ewe United Alfllnee ,J~U,: General Oenlatry. &p'd. 4 TO '2300/MO c M --. mfg. =-~ •AH Rm Ciftene. end u: us. MM-4~ ~ ~~~~00 '*'11· 1n Hit m m;i ~· Good IOt 1 ~. day WM6<. X·ray 16cenM. PoelOont avaMeble In UtJ.. comm ~ l'l ·1..,.. + bled( W/ye/ltOW 9Y'19, 2 Inga -.ood IC4.llptur.. tlM r'g, VHF, tter.o. ·-----..-~~ -ao or belt M&-4l5I PIMMnl aun'oundlnge 6 gatlon, lri t\IC>1oy, Cot· around ~ r Po9't= ine!M Call lot Int~ , _.,...,.. e1c S25--S600 l45-0ne many extraa e 1ttlp 1nc1 or-petlent-. No atne*· porale, "-' !.IWe. we c.a B.J Mi·l033 ~28 &..ES 857-1133 '3900 dtl to p $210/mo !!!!! ~ 4114 Ing. '" Funlon laland . .,. • .,, AIJttttCY ~ ~ H 0 uklJ wt. 173-21811~ mtg
e7'"'-n87 Wliiiit•• ~ .. ~1~~78340-4100 or !zing In the P4ae*'Mnl of ULDP.WP/T J M~'l.r1"9rr turn '17 '™ V9lf'f Od OUUlllllTll ~~~~~~~~~L:::J~~~
.,.......,_,,...,....._-.,._----• llAlllN .,...,.._ Leoal Sect.Catlee. Pteue Vlang Ylang. IM0...()11 1 AK; J~RRIE1 R PSU1PS ~labjld = ~;;;tc;'0• eond A ~nt9g. lnttrt.r PWllally re9t0ted ""
S70. S"-oataee. 731 W ...._I llWI --IL·----call for A,f>pt. Mary Hick.. amp on re --ment Mull Miit 1750 off M S-0 04
1
eth St No S Coeta HIQhPrOflt1 local Ar• -•• ._..,_, A~.1101DoYe,8ulte l&LllllPI 1275 831·8898 MOVING SALE 8aautlful Jonn M4-915e lft&pm 6M1 .,
1
M9M t i3-77t7 ' Wiii Train Part Time FfT .-.oeptlonlat. o.p.n. 270. Newport BH.c tt CYatom, Imprinted promo-h*I". new navy w/walnut trim O.Uxe 27' Sell~I Pu1 • No Emp~ No dable, mature. •s>er'd. 714/471-8134 Ilona! glfla, J*'t.1-thlrtt, . couch, loveeeat & r• Ml Tl.rf MW ·n 8' I " head room
Ger. 10x2t ator9119 only OveftlMd. No setllng. Nr s. c . Plaza. 6-$5 .... 553 •to. 100,000 llwnt, eom· 2 x lout wXRDROBES cllner. chefry 9ndtal>lel, Director Uke M'W I 100 lmmac Med & ahoW9( ALL MAKES!
drywell Nned nr H.Hrbr 0'9tlt Tax e.n.flt• -• -•• .UT 111111 P/Tllll mlHlon only. Paaado Both o.k, b9V.i.ct mlr· exec dN kt 11ng1e b9d , 645-0104 Sturdy. roomy, tut, cs. S1i9 ~WJI. CIOMd eno
N5/mo. (213) M().9513 Mr. Wolt.r (714)838·5620 K
1
-•r EJ(perd. Apply In pereon Productlone 957-3073 rora $200 Men. Old Iron 8' bookc;aH. m11c Orum aeta, Luowln & pend_able, !uni XJnt V91ue comm 11•, OAC ADl-ii\il HI en n e v a e 11Do0 a..i.•a Market. 1080 So. twin bed $40. 531-8539 8S4-34 tO p ..... 1, 1._ ~ 5•1...... 4CM-5714 Mah Off9r O.Clvert Arly l MM ...-. 4 un, bath9r/Groom4W need9d eou1 Hwy Leguna Beh UUl TUllU -----...... " .,.......... 'uv AU. UfUI LUii -~.~s=iyi':r. .. ::::1:0~1 T , 'i 40.. tor KenMI nMr oc Fair-• · 1m!Md Ol*llng for HIQn Anllaacn H l l RATI AN"'· 4 piece Mrth obo. 642·5077 8~578 .. rlae ltilp. t ll •
• .. grounds. Wiii !rain. M9dlcal Recepllonltt, 2. School grad 1()()1(1""' for -tone nower pattern.'°'' Of11-r - -lHl •H-1Hl 1 MONTH FREE RENT Wfdow ha1 money for 5-49-9799 dyll/wtc. P9dla1rtc prac-nra1 ttep In a rew;'dlng I Ill APPU&ml rocking chair, lamp . .nd &Ht ualtut/ •LlllllATlll• ------~-
111 Oo'ter Of Suite 14 TD't . S t0,000/up no 1~. Ello In M9dl...Cal & c&r9". Full time entry ~ 957·8133 tbl 1250 cash 642-5964 lt•ietat 1221 LOST OUR LEASE LlllJll Tl WIE
Newport 8Mch 831·3&81 cr9dlt "''no P9NltY Call ORIV~or O.Otal Lab. Int bllllng. Gd typing level po9111on. R9qulr• •W.11 W.11* Salem HouM eolld mapl9 1 wa-.. ea1 • All Inventory and equip.. &•YS&.11 PlllllTt
Newport a.ct'I Oenlton A.MOC 873-7311 Pit, lorColleg9Slu· tkllll. 845-4870 Mra. ment1· Good driving,.. din tl>I /4 II $395 ...,..._,_ --meflt It COii and l>elow W ter ~ 0C •pvt ent, <Senta. U• own car. I + Ataten COl'd hard worker neat Aefrlgeralort 1129 & UP coi:: I d~ c l~ll ft S.oretartal dHkt $76· MARINE Mtwdware Elec· ... M##: f1t5. ~.; ..... Avail •• , WutN S1 Ml. Apply at 2474111 New-• • Wuhefa see & Up I n rm 6 t ·-s 100 Cr9denu S76. trtcal plumbing metal• .........
* *
port Blvd. C.M. 648-50M PlllTll IPPIDI• :=:·~ ery.,1 gu/elec SH & Up lure, Ilk~ new, s7 Lrg 2 typawrller 11ble S50 lumtw toots twen1ng1 HUNTINGfON BEACH
S25 aq ft otc w/catpOrt on * * Of'lver NMd 1\111-tlme No exp OMV prlnlOul at time~ ALL APPLIANCES :n/~a~~~ Chairs 115--125 Fax Ma-1 wtncn... e1c e1c; CHRYSLER/PLYMOUTH :=novi:rs!98~Y· mtPPll HIGH SCHOOL GRAD ::io~Ulb~~ ~;~~9 •ppllcauon. Apply at ,..., l1arMt"4 cond $250. 7M-7l21 ~ta~85$; '7°~121o2bo UM lllPYAll 8<42-0&31 640-518'4
572
-F .... ,.. (~mall Pro ... ) (FEMALE OK) EV9nlnga btwn 8-9prn. 271>e Harbor Blvd, C.M. httl-t ......... Waterbed, air lname, Ian.-Rent""' Office Furn Good ~~er:,~ 7272 1Aatt1 Wu... 20
"'""' , _.,.,/mo. • .,,..... K • e:i~lent Job for r.-ponoc-··-.. -·-UNIQUE FURNllURE tastlc "'"' $50 720 1950 "'V l . ~ 3975 Birch, Newport Exc•ll•n1 op-porturilly. """' peraon. NMr" ""N/PllllL m F II ;:-0 ... ~---1947 s. Main St ~, -'91ec1IOO By prlv pty, can , ... 30 Mon ·Fri Sat 9.3 • "'IU.
BMCtl 541-5032 A.gt Nie. wor1(1ng condlllont. Airport (55 & 405 Frwya). Now Hi.t.w. Pan & Ml-Mu ... ~"•.!}!·~~~-Sante Ana larlft •·•n deltver An 642-0289 Our Lou 11 Your Ga1n1 USEOCARS & TR KS ., _ __,,_1 .._.Ji Must be ove< 21 with ex· """' '" ..., .. ,....., ~ -..i C.. FO CdM'• bMt otnc.. 1425-o,.;,.c,,_, ..__.., •. Neer cellenl dr1Y11 rec«d & a time. Ughl IYl>lng. flex· I.net cuh~ Mndwletl Btwn Edinger & WatflfK on PiHM/Or=... llli~ Deeb 70 a I COME IN OR .. tL R
1 1100 Incl II A/C. • · Airport. (55 & 405 Ible hours. 14:&o lo 11811. kl ' Main St. See tlle Beerl ---flll bflAls&L ut • • pltg, Freeway) WIN pay top SS proven A-average 3857 Birch St. OC Airport ma ng, preparation lulJJO l~rt ... c~ 61 '9 Schafer & , conaole 35' k for PO'Mlf Boat 0
)anl1or. 2855 E Cout tor malur• accurate de-School Record. Drive 75t-8808 WO<k, ores. taking. $4.50 _._ ptano, llke nftfll S 1200 2 t Ba Ibo a Cove, ~L!".'"'
Hwy 875-8900 anytime pendabla • Oeparl~ent new llltle Pick-Up tor ttr to etert Neer Redhill & Open 10-e: Sun 12·5 Court ard Sale, Sat Antq 66 l-6 l80 S300tmo 673-l 4~ _, .. _.1
EXEC OFFICE
. Man Le1 lal ·C Print Shop. GOOd t>en.-PUT TIME Bakw, Cotta Mesa. Call Mic Su cheat & &eWlng mecll, • 18211 BEACH BLVD
F .. N>Px 2oo~ ~~ B:'e 250~321~ •all ~~i att;k~!i'~~:! poslllont available et Ille ~o1e1.!~-1~ 74 o:,rom 0t~f.:i8''~1m~r:~~. ~~~·:~~e~m~l lftrt&aJ '"41 230 iS~gs ;;~~a~leC~8~::0H~ HUNTl~TON BEACH l~tolcl\lrn$250/mo. *lllYEll* 250-3212 Dally Piiot newapaper -pm 1y ex1ruhelt&probe,e1c.8 oo;,,lngoors«-1651 W'Nl5SR~ EOuiP 16
1
NB 9-5 Mon-Frl Ul-tlllsMl-1111
1491 W. Baket, Suite 3 . working Saturday and IAllWlll... mo'snewl275.722·7204 AmproX-Stlff maat StOO j -··--
Co.ta M9M. Ca 92828 ' Mull have neat ci.an ap-FMI PllP mlll Sunday momlnge. E.arn nMda mature & reap per-17 11 F lgld 1 B111tbl• I Wte1 Hawaii edJ booms Up to 28' POWER BOAT "~ _, •-•
• 556-3900 '* pearance. Mu11 bring AH••-•---• $4.50 per 11our plus gas ton for C.M. toe.' Call co~d 11~ : rt.~~~9;~ GINs 6212 170 New trtttr basket· End ue NewPon Beach OLIAI 1111 UIJ
current OMV report. -·-"'55-allowance. Mutt have btwn 9_11am 64s,..1100 ° 0 l>alls $25ea 854-~10 5.S·9878 SeeTony Ralal
Penlneula'Offto. Speoa for Start '4.50 per llr. 3182 ':1et1b~h~r:':1l~ng21· large car or pick-up and aak ror Marg~et ADMIRAL refrigerator :-3 CSom60pu~~ Sk700& LoveeeS7at TV ldit Wllltl ._ .. •7•.•111•
LM. ~ aq ft. Nr Balboa Pullman St C.M call r · ~ be at leut 18 years old dooor with lcemaker · ,,,_ cttr 5 l. · ' .,_" • -:,~61.,..7000. 875--9006 751·2860 F• llmll Call Bruce 642-4333 . IOlllL 111 MIYll needs some work, S2o0 Micro S60. PU truck reek ltllff 1232 L~-t>oard 951.1800
THIODOH
ROBINS
-,,,,-,----..,..,,.,....---,,..,...,,.---1 .. ,OE F II Ex___.___. Fl""' "'nlnn Im med. opening for OBO 722-7204 $50 Frig S50 546-83~ 25' Inell color RCA f v lic~clH ao1 •
Prime W•t~llff Dr NB " . ve-ln. Teacher In .....,...._,......, '"' ut "• .... HY Glen U certified ool d I .., •
7
rmt Quul-r~ta il whlchr. Few llrt, rm/brd Food Servers nHCl9d for Good beMlltt Mon·Frl Co '°11
1111 but r V· Reconditioned Appliances •ac~iHry v216 console remote control. 2511 rame fO-apd, all alUm
$1650/mo GrOM. ldeai +$100.mo. 645--2357 La Pel"'= at tn. New-9.5prn 840-6&&. fo( Bob. :~. b~~ ... vec:1~; Refrlgs/Watherl/Oryere King 0 l awn Front lhrow ;:: ·~;~ ~~r Old $500 hrdwre & r1m1 COil
FORD
lObO ..... soa Ill VO
co~'" Mt~• o4l 0010
atty RE •t G d h APT .... all porter esort. Apply Info or ,: I $50 to $300 1630 Su· mower S12S Edger $70 -crank. ttandle l>ar shift A~..:,._,;," .!~!'.7,..r. -I Monday through Thu,._ PHARMACY CLERK son. Laldlapawp YT n1 peril-perlor. CM. 831-3197 Cr aftsmen rear 1>an COLOR TV 19 Inch, good S190 6'2-0832 atl 8pm lJHfl 9022 ... ,....... ..... ~ .... -• Couple. Tuttln ...... 75 day 8:30-12 Noon Per· Exi>er: Nwprt Beach llM · r ns • • 1 I S I -I...,,,.,_._ _____ _ ,. __ __._, unit complex. Man-main-sonnet Oep1 1107 Jam· Mon-Fri 9-5pm Cali 2003 Laguna Canyon Rd. Whlrpool wuller end mower S75 ALL S2SO ~ ctureb 75. I STEREO. FUJI S-12-S 12 &pd, incl •ti .lfEP ~ .... _, ... _ tena11Ce, woman-otflce. boree Ad NB 640-6564 Ask r .Bob Leg. Bch. 497-2151 dryer matclled se1. wtllle, Jon 645-8192 urnta le am/ m radio 8 toe clips water l>Ollle .... Ull Exper • . • or . exoellenl eondlllon R k err Oel--J L I traclc. cass . 2 19 sp11rs seal l>ag n1gtt pressure CllElllH 414
1356 sq. Fl. apt. ca1r~~~1::ary + numar U&.11 P/T EllWATll SOTIY/ftlrt•rHfle $75 eectt ~0-5074 ~er~.;. te':ce tu~: $100 01>0 751-5190 pump $125 Ol>O 891-0280 This 2 Or comes wllll O'S
xlnt M ... Vwct.toc:. People needed tor ware-Some Installation exp. In Stable Individual. 3 days Frff ti lta 6022 bars wtblade guar3 ms I Pntr ~t-,--7012 Ladlet Bicycle Univega ~~:,SP ~·~~~~1S::~'0002'
545-411'3 TIU. SIUOITNS house sale In trvlne Sept ralngutt• work, r.ta & car wtt. Expr pref. 842-0307 . old & new Rockwell-Delta Sponour 12 IPd unueed
E&aywork,aarnS4-7/llr. 27/28. Great money. needed.$12hr.953-6014 SIOlna•y Chlhuahua-Terrler,1yrblk 1blsaws$125 89 1·0280 I *ST~L* $165 644·96l8 Slill
5000' Comm.find'! bldg In Call 650· 1316 Exper preferred but not -male, lntelllgent, gd This 197 1 24 Marauder ORANGE COAST C.M. on SuP90or Ave neoeh.ry. Call c:ollec1 llaPT /Ulml lmmedla1e opening in w/klds 968-1112 Seara Craltsman 10 · Cudoy lull heao. cockpit SCHWINN CONTINENTAL Jeep/Renault
850-2828 or 631_..814 UT I llAFT PllPLE 213/625--7000 9 to 2 pm Donavan & SMmane Los Markellng/Publlc Rell· Table Saw with castors M8'c 110 F1sn & tun tO spd 1>1ke Good cono 2524 Harl>Or Costa Mesa
Ind/Comm SuP90or Ave Full or Part·llme. Work at Angelee's oldelt iew*a Ilona Organl:zallon, In Persians pedigreed sttow carl>lde blade & asso<tecl Sttarp• $5 900 646-8330 $75 call ~5-778, Ut-1021
To be built. 1500-18,ooO home or thop. 667-0845 Gene<el Food Servtce It eeeklng en ••-beautiful trvtne office Given to quallfled good blades. incl 8' Dato set --'NOERSON'S YAC TS --1....-S PIZZA perl anced Rec ep-Mull 111¥9 word pro-home536-1692 $225 891-0280 610 Ed""'"'•ler Bal~• Caaru 1014 ,y AAAO
al l. 45' up. Agt 642·1HW!e AUTO PARTS -OellV91f'f & Pert-time Day & Evening. tlonltt/Cashl9r ror tMtr ceulPC ngel exC*lenoeT . IBM· raraltan H2S •i1ctllaa"11 6211 I ANNUA~L~FALL SALE 314 ton Ford truck wl selt l!'lj 1'!1
1
"'l'· .. · --.--!!"7Y'Y!"!'!""-~na Canyon Hwy. Beat Stock worlt, Female ap-Cell 7~612 Ask for Nwpl Bch 11ore Contacl II pful. ype SS+ cont Teardrop Camper ·79 VW 2nd own• ~i< Oii
IOC. Ample pr'kng. 1600 pllcantl weloome. Apply Mary or Joe. Mr. Balley at 844-57~ Have organl:zatlonel & 1 beige !tllr Barcolounger 2 BAUCE SPRiNGSTEIN 50 Ost Aft Cabon Trw1r llke new $6500 673-8886 eng, vef) clean Must Mil
a/I, ~ NNN. Call Art Automotive Supply Co.. administration sic.Ills Ex-S350. 8 green eol1 $225. tlekets for Sept 29th $40 40 Dsl Sedan Trawlef exn cond $3800 ot>o
2 1 3 15 9 7 • 7 7 3 4 0 r 1622 Newport Blvd., C.M. IEllUL ID.PEI, p /1 IEOEn /ltl Ofo cellenl benellta 558-4770 Neule creek Bedspread. FOR BOTH • 4o Pacemaur Aft Cabin ••ter l ibl IOl I L.a~r., 646-8326 eves
714/GM-1197Eve/Wknd Ralngutterwor1<.ttocklng lordevelopmenteo Some Val Sblue green floral S50 548-1283 137 CHirs Aft Ca1>1n '7S ••OPED 2 SEATER 83 Doane Ram Con
materlalt painting board• RE back . wlvel rocker $125. 32· D I Lii Flyl> o "" "' LIDO PENINSULA etc. S6 hr. 953-8014 e~ pr:,r~~50 or~~ p rt·tl SEC~ ARY Green upholstered cllelr •lllllfS llLJ 'Ir 13 r r!-jan u;~B Ex~~~e FOXIE GT LIKE NEW vefsion lo mo loaded P[~~l~a~~ ~:;~ IDEllL typing &g.ood phone ~esa m:31_23~~ Co11a S 100. 675-S292 Great Expeetlons oaung 30. Chris Expru Cruiser Only 2000 m~ $300/ol>O. xtras~~.750 5~0..:_9205
p/af 873-8004 873-3777 Newport Cent., co .. pluall tlable. Good benelltt. SECRETARY N.B. Com· lamps Xlnl cond Atklng $700. Greal Buyl 26'Sea1>1rd F/B Spts Fsllr • I .... rrt skllla req. Salary nego-. . 5 PC. OAK BDRM SET & 2 Club Memt>ershlp 10< sale 128' Ow.ns Exprs.s Crulter 642•294o 64 • 7156 A t. M
Aaa...,•ntl 'llANt olllcu, phone U · 646•4405 Uk for Cathy merclal R. E. Co. ttas an I $3251811 c 111 751•8608 Work (818) 302·2526 25· Sabreerall ExpCrulaer ttercycltl
1
...,.., perlenee a mus!, ac· · lmmedlateopenlng.Must Home(213)692-4638 Sct1ltn 1011.ID 9111
curate typlat. good •Pl ll01"111m have exeellenl sec:reJarlal I Buaell baby crib, xlnt BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN 47: Vagal>Ond Ke1cll 73 BU LT X CO 3 56 ·77 5501, xlnt cond. 4 9'><I
tor flgurea. data entry For Lew Firm Pll. Airport skllls, prolesalonal ap. ~ond 190 obo 545--7937 Tickets Choice seats 14 1. Morgan 011 Ketch, Osl Pursang 7 4 MON TESSA recec:la grn, snrt 1>1aupkt
Psyc Hie helpful. 6AM-3PM, S 1000 Area. SS/HR 850-1190 pearance, good lele-Boy' a nlght1tand dresHr l t0/2 S l25ea 546·5128 4
3°8. Mariner 5Katch, Ost 250VR, $250 ea Both 9'4K mo $6000 731-0595
to $1100J mo.&40-1813 phonemann«.~nowdlc-1 ~ mlrr0t gd cond S300I Mlk••"erSpm I Yankee toop Qel x~lhac>e 780-0689 -llOIPTlllllT tatlng equipment & word-ol>O 8<42:9124 -=1 3o··cai sroop • -SlPWTl Hl8'W
BKKPA/SAlES PERSON MllllL IFFlll Need adult profwlonal star. R.E background I CUii Ull 111 lll 28 Morgan Sloop 76 Honda GL 1000 Gold· DEUVERV DEPARTMENT
RE .DINGS FuH time. Re1all for tra-Phone exper, good math with atrong communlca· prel'd Call Patll at B l!FF~T . dark w ooo 4ft lftft l2ftSIO 126.LugefSloop Wing l>lk 101sotcttrorM M l'REN'SBMW ft dltlonal clothing llore In epl, type 50 wpm. FfT !Ion organization & ad· 833-2238 I 6x18 Lo~pcoflurn I J 25 Coronado Sloop Sl800ol>O Oy751-0488 C r\
•GRANO OPENING1t Npl Betl 645-0792 CM. Diane 551-7007 mlninalrallve 9klllt. For Seely/PR Asst. 25 ttrs/WI<. ~o:;~er Only I __!all I~ 1141 I BEST SELECTION EVER Ev ·~nd 646-5725 M·F 11119 S·S 1111 6 ... IL ..... P/T Key front omc:. poelllon. Type 55wpm Prefer SIU·' 1COLOR TV $100 China ALL QUALITY VESSELS 'fAMAHA 250 ENOURO 626 s Eucltd SI
Our a.at $40 RMdlng. ..lllfll $5 hr. Afternoon houra. typing nee. S 1300 10 ttart dent w/Eng or Journal· 1 Ofexel dining set w/6 chrs service tor 6. S30 Misc PRICED TO SELL TODAY 1000 m1 •ncluoes covef Fullerton CA
Umltedllm9only S2S. 210 3 yrs exper. Malure Claudette831·59M wl~~~· ~~· 1am Ma) S5/hr to start & new country pl11d\ S2·S30 Worth V'lngoul SOME SLIPS/MOORINGS & special tOOls S•OO ·14.5806300
Advtce In AM Mattera & with aupervleorlal eblllty. ~. So~i.-una, 92&77 x Call Teri 714/646-8422 upl'IOI $400 llrm 722-6582 752·A Center.C M eve 6-91 (714)646-9000 891-0280 213-69 l-670 •
Counaellng. low. mar· All phaHt or book· lllllAL lff10I -. nana, h........tneee, bull-kMP!ng plua uel91 with 20+. nex · houra week. IE-SHIPPING/RECEIVING --~ financial M ll t saJ "~"' .,.., _,.._, ORDER PROCESSING Mee & auc:ceN. Spiritual, 1· a resume 0 ary negot. ,_..,.. 1....., Heavy phonee, mall & fll-12 Year old dlstrlbulor ol
palm I card r..otnoe Beecon Bay Ent9rpf'IMI. UI -;nu .. .-. Ing. Monday-Friday 8-5. onlc:e equ1pmen1 has an 8'90 .,....,._, Cetera to 290 Newpor1 c.tt« Or, _.. --$4.50/HR Meul & Sona opening. WI" train right
pertyl ' vwtou8 funo. Newpof1 Bc:h, Ca vaeo 'fT Nlng. phones. :t· 966-1510 Karen per'IOn Company paid Mftrthia I tlone. etc. In So. Coat BOOKKEEPER . Full typing, nl amkr pr 'd. benefits. Mon-Fri 8-5. . I S.tn Cuz!at!J llad~H /tu•tupial P1ptri.!1
.,.. for. tM peat 18 c:Mrge bkkpr M9d9d In ~ w~.::,~orp· .~i llOIPWIST "" for Cllar11e or Kurt Complete patios Covers. AMEAltAN HANDYMAN Proleaslonal Land..,_,.,..,, C-all -rL>f-PAPf""' LADY
)'Mrt. Uc d. 34204 COM! churett otfc. Maintain all 7 ... ~14 ·,.51...os17 M'_.._.,_ PART TIME, WMl!ends. 642-9383 $2 17 d Deck C _.,._ '" " Hwy, o.na Po4nt. llnenclal record a & o ,.......,,. A.E. otflce In Newport per ay s oncrete walk·1Carpentry len<:lng. wtn· Incl sprinklers.,_ lawn ?erfect•on ar •eas rares
.aae __ .a If •••.1.aa rv-• r...,.,.,-...., ~ •11-1w•-m Center. Ideal for student. ITlftAIEIJ • ways Block walls Room dows, ptuml>mg. matlite. reas rate Manu 432·868 t Free est 673 25 '9 _. • ..,. -... ,..~ ..,...... "" .....-._ .. ,.. ,.. Tlla1·s ALL you pay ror I addns t5yr exp 646-4834 tul> encl, ttaullng, etc ·
watlng. building & aav-Exper. Fun or part lllM. Call Carol Ven Alper Mon Store In CdM need• Sales 3 lines. 30 day minimum -1 ,j I II •,j~ftl And Yes Jesus Is Lord I ••11a~ P111ttr le 'r
Inga acc:ountt. Prepar• Apply In person tllru Fri &«-9060 EOE Person. Fil 5 Days. Xlnt In the ••••• • •-• ••• (llc=304051 636-8244 -accoun11 payable, and 1 o AM. 1 2 N 00 n 0 r llOIPT /Ulll USIST working conds. Espec:lally DAILY Kite cal> etec p1um1> BRICK RK Small 1obs '"' · ~I oatcf'I p1as1e""O payroll IBor pa. yment. Aeq 2:30·5PM . 3099 So. _ ___. r-'lable nAI' ....... tor fine c;lientele. 675-1010 , 1mmed es1 (818)965-7632 Clean-up Service Yards Newpon. Costa Mesa cus!Ol'T" te~tur•ng oua ·~ u• ol 1 M computer ec-B
1 1
S C M ,....., "' .. -· ""'" I , garages rental prop -Irvine Rel s 675-3 t •s wor~ Proo1ems-No P·~:
1
c r sto 1· oata esa new Newport Beach l>usl-'l'tl n1a••n1-PILOT Repalr·Ooors-Anereuons haul111g 63 t-9132 Sieve 1ems' 11J268f'.4 5$<L ·9_. •
counl ng aystem. all Art . neaa Off by noon Wiii •~"5-" 11• Remodel-Panel·Lcx;l\s-etc , •0Yia1 Mclntoth et 631·281f0. llST/IUTISI train. 722•1245 'Assistant 10 sale$man Off Wlndow-Fences-Caoinel DECKS-WOOD COVERS --•------'10""'t' or Ap·: "' E••
Menner-Guest Bookk9ep41r/Secretary Mature peraons needed to · by noon. Cell btwn SERVICE 35 yrs e•p Jerry 642-0567 Comoe11ttve Pnces t AIC IOYlllt Pater wo•~ __ \ oor.ol"C
QUMO-~are! FfT for conatructlon co. woni Full-time In Fine Rest1uran1 8am· 1pm 722· 1245 10 years e•per 754· t620 QUICK & CAREFUL :: · 4060-.a.ti. '.;24
SQUEALER Good typing & bkpng Dtnlng Room. Experience TIE ==1111 TILEIUllmll DIRECTORY 1101111 Tl FlllSll •GEN ~OME Rf PAIRS LO RATES r 13ao•6 1
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
Questlon:Whatdoyoucal akllls a mull. Knowledge preferred. Apply Monday lEITI Paul557·4758al1 5 Painr Orvwall Carpentry H2-0410 _P_•_•_lt_ia,..1..._ ___ _
a pick-up truci< ttaullng f I b cotll hel l\JI lhru Thursday 8:30· 12 Nellonally known Holel dozen and a half pigs 0 ° ng p . Noon. Personnel Dept, It accepting resume• for clleln Pll appt. setters CALL TOOAVJI I c .... , Coacrtlf e1' Garv 645 527;" PTL *A· 1 IOYIH * u hr £1 •lH·1150
Anawer: An elgh1H Non-amkr. ~>5271 1107 Jamboree Rd. NB. Aaslstenl Managers Mall $4-S 10/Hr Commissions ASI FIR LOIS 1 Driveways patios pattts "4ANDYMAN LARGE and CLEAN'-EXPERT \'Gooc obs done··;~·•
SQUEALER. USllll/IEOIPT to:619SleepyHollow Ln. &bonusesM·F,5--9 Sat-YourOallyPllot etc No 101> 100 small small I DO IT ALL Ov~25vearse,ptorience OR4 ... SCL.EAR~•or-~ i
...----.--__,,-_,...,...,...,,i Fff pfT l*p w'6l1ed for •llOLWEll Lagun18each,Ca92651 urdays 10·2 Cell Doug ServtceOlrectory Reas M1ckey536-05S3 5315579Patorlvem59 Loe r t16428 ~30 •JS.1 r:a.,~e1s D1sposa .-.ea·e· Lett ,.... Faelllon Island Retall SS/Hr + Ml. Musi llave No phone c;alls please 75 1-5150 Representattve Remove asp"al1 or1v~ HAUL·A·WAV Hanovman ••ABC ·•01.1~0 •• 8 ... ·960• M&M ":.'1·906~
at ore. M utt be ex· trans. 731-5232 1•2 ••21 d •ot " ~-IYI '~ r•lauranl TOO YOlJNG ~ ·-I • • ways replace w co11crete All type carpentrv tree Q..iod careiu r tJ8()4b E .. pert S~•ce & ~epa1r
pertenoe, neat & reliable. •SIOLIAlllS lttltse~IW lfffHrHt brlCk block wrk 539-0345 111mm1ng yrd ciean·uP LO RA TES S52-.J4 1c 12 • •s •!\P Aes1C Ccmm
Call for appointment Kirby Malnt 631 5272 I C .. , fQR AIRLINES? etc' Call Jett 5•8·7830 ~·c -4J<l0.• l64-ll) •Q! 844-5070 E.O.E. · • Potlllon ave I Hn er. · Acc1Htia Ckili Cart ST&llYll"' COllE11>E HOUSEKEEPER Llv9-ln or cheese, wine exper ttelp-• I Ptumb ·Eleci ·Carpentr)I • • "IEW Rf PA P Q..,a ·~ N umaa1ou W&Sll Oul for couple. Exp lul 2407 E Coatt Hwy, Immediate Openings lor F.ranklln Aceto Taxes. CHILDCARE New 1>01n & Pa•'\1-etc DepenOable mllm llVllS co. CbS ... ,.,al "aSfl"llt'> e
F /time. wHkende In · w/rets pleaae. 675--9322 I COrona del Mar 10 anarp guys & gall tree llnancal statements As· up S 10 day in my Laguna Reas Paul 720-0 139 eve Orange Co Orig•" r=ree •W c c 6~ • 2~,ic;
eluded. Call 844-4460 ---------to travel us ma)of cities slat With obtaining credit Bctt hOme TLC 494-4246 -Student Movers lnsu•l!'d Ml .... ll -.. IPlllllSn ana & resort areas wilt! lines & loans S48-0345 Chllde3re my ttome trans Bnlillt L•C: T 124 436 ~ 1-842" Ps7claic1 ~~~~~~~~~ .... All $8.05 11artlng rate Fine Ladl• apparel •tore unique business group. Low-cos! bookkeeping, to scttool & back CM·NB LT HAUllNG MOVING NEW Warer"IOUS4!1 St0tage .E .. u• .. o_pe_a_r_P_"_V_C,.,-,-, -T-,,--= DESPERATELY SEEKING $4'veral poalllont avellab.. In C.M Shipping, reclev· Must l>e 18 or older. accounting and dale pro-area Call 650-0258 Garage & Yard Clnups Nt1ic L•ueaa Cato & Pa1'TI Aeaoe• .... ~
Found a male gray tt SITTER. My N.B llorne With local oorp. Mutt be Ing. telling & merc;ttandlz-single, well~roomed & ceasing, State 01 ttte An. Jon 645-8 192 Pas• Preseoni ~ ~ .,; 'fl cat. vie Victoria/Harbor 7:30am-2pm. 631-6842 18 plus. articulate. 3 yr Ing. Part·Ume EvM 5--9 rree to start 1mmedlatety. 100 Darla, 979.0551 CHILDCARE Pre.scnoo1 Piano Lesaons 6'42-82 15 A a vice v" all., 811,.,~ 11, r. CM. &46-88
1
resident, ttudente OK. Some Weekends Call No experlenoe neeeu-1eactter learning lttrougn t1auimg Cleanups; paint S11on de Mus1Que 650-r!IE 0 , 6 •. il<:!t • -..oAll lll•I No exp. req. Call 3..SPM. Monday-Friday 11 -4 ary Two weeks paid Ace11tie1l Ctilia 1 I play •oes 2·5 839·8222 ong we1d•no ooo 1oos L•sa A Zecctt1n1 BA
Found bNutlful Cock Pick up al1er school, H.B. 964-2890 or S.A. 714/548-2622 training Transportation qulslte •coustlca ...__ •AR~UNO THE CLOC~ movona -oays •94·2341 MUSIC LESSONS Col •IHfiDf
Spaniel, redlati blond, t C.rden Hall. Care 1 to 2 541 8878 tor appt I I h d R 1 " ..--S • ----------Yf• YCfy Lot Amlgoe H.S. houre. 875-0._.5 aft 5pm. -· lnllL •llT urn s e e u rn sprayed or remove Dry· 7 Days-Large 'V ard' Hultla er'flct 199e proless(lt Soec1ah1y ClLIFIRlll&
775--1481 INSIDE SALES Store Mgr, Co-M~rs & As-guaranleed. For lnler· wall Repairs 847-790 I Sale-Heallhy-Free Envrm Stress Managemenr. SIOP woman kids 100 your SUPEROOF CO --•AftA •••y view call 5S7-3000 or --I Respite Care' 548-1545\' nome Grace"11 749-3524• • Found 8 R bbll ......,._,.,,. -I slst Mgr. Slzea, nllmlted. appty 1,, person 10 Mrs M•itieaa/ltaNtb smo111ng we1gh1 con1ro1 (l14 ) 144 Ul&
G : I unn~ ~ . Newport Beech-Fff. Call Full time l8Jee poaltlons In the nation'• moat ag· Pike al lhe Holiday Inn. -: C1ar1ttr Semct1 ... 1oyo 545-8828 lor appt Paiatia) • .
M':Jte ~at:Santa ~~!: 240-8073 or 497-4911 tile reader ad dept. tak-: gre11lve retailer of large 3131 Brlttol, Cos1a Mesa * NEED TO REMODEL? f.omputer Timesharing HANE DA MASSAGING MiE PAINTING By Alch· We o~ roots • •,;>Ft!> ~ n11
CM. 650-0173 CLEANING 17+ per/hour. Ing phone/ counter ads. I size lad let' apparel btwn lOam-5pm Thur.,. Free estimates S1a1e or the An ac;counllng * 111•••1 OPtllll* ard Sinor 16 yr• of tt11pp us 0' ot1oril" ::: 'l''"~ s Pleelantcomtortable of·• Apply 11 2301 Harbor day & Friday only 100%Flnanc1ng •"" " Y 642-1,,1•· cenSl'C FOUND F.m B....n wtll Mut1 have car. Ull't lice. Greet Job fo r Blvd, C.M. 540-7921 Parents welcome at Inter· "* QUALITY WORK soltware modules 7141675-8, 76 cus1omers l.te 2806'4 -,
tip on tall nr Megnolla & Cleanlng Serv. 9&4-"346 ma1ure, friendly lndlvtd· RETAIL SALES view Beach Cities Remodeling, Darta 979 ·055 1 Coen· 08Y week Tt1ant. Yoo' 963·• l l 4 Sterttari1l
Garfteld,FV"2-5829 GUiii ual ..... plyln ...... aon Pen-- -Phone 67~·8122 ~Ill •O~JO.tnSt "lptBeach n •1ueowP•tN.,.ING "-m'c•• n~~ 1eeo· Pla0ent11 llALLllll STllE TUTOR NEEDED for 10 yr Lie 207461 __ ..,,.. "' ~ ' >K Found luttllllgel1t yw-Old Sam-1pm or 3Pm-11prn. A,_ co'at M lull time aalee aaalatanl r• old gtrl. College s1uduenl -Commercial Orywau .,B .. e_•.-h.,•.1______ Ouaiity is our Polley '!!B'!l!EA"!""IS"'ec-\""s"'e-, -.-,-n;-
tortolH -•h•ll fe c at. Fil, benefllt. Harold. 250 ve, • .... ~ulred for lovely Hallmark prelerreo 751-4148 THE CONST co lie a c Spee1a1111ng on Comm I 2• llr ED• 1 .... 11•" 650 66
4
6 JEFF UC 8688 Dtetaroor ""' .... ::.:.
abandoned. &46-5e07 Ogle St.C M. 650-8463 INSURANCE MGR. knowt.-I H I Comm · resld'I, new/rmd'I and Restd 1 l=ree est ~ -:::' A A A PAINTING Int Ext In H B L·n.:la B-'l .•
Found lg Y'8flOW Lab nr CLERICAL edgelble In group med!-B~o::ri. "coa~~t "J!~: WAil.sf Prolesalon•l • 3M -5i21 548-8923 hc:J8392• •oooo ioosaone ngtt.... lOWEST poss11>1e price S . Al .
23rd & s.nia Ana Ave. cal plant. 648-7853 border. Prevlou• exper Shlpplnl &\.~e,,ce1v1ng Air C. .. itieaial Eltctricil Boast Cleujq 10 Step s.rvice 662·3235 twlaf, ter1t101u
CM831-1995 Personnel INSURANCE RATERS. anedvant9119Xlntrat•of Mon-rl ~-4 3 ROBIN SCL~NING CUSTOM PalnttngbyJlm Oua111'!' WOrl<. ... ·~
Found ma ~w/wtll PfT or Fil. $4.50 pfhr. pay Cell Helen, "3-4064 ~~~~~Ron & Sona c:,gs/t;.'Rec:' rr:.. ~~1 PllllSll lltCTllO SERVICE 111Nooogttl) L~ rate!l IOf sttutt9" ::~to "le~-:::~~_:'. ~ ••
manclnQt • 918 Clerk No axper. nee. M l-7853 SALES ASSIST P/tlme Amana A.IC syt le 459283 I Ouelltywor1t tree est Clearo hOU!M! 645·9 .. 4 t IQ\IVle oatlO lurn iron ...
Brooknural/Atlanta. .. .. tum! TyP9. 10 key Gd phone WerelMne/Stfft otl ~ It U25513 968-740t HooM'Cteaniflg carpets & ~nor "~est 634-4243 Tilt
9e&-8775 pff St ... ferrnAgencyln manner. lndut1 SalH F/T, Mo n-Fri Exper & ELECTRICIAN uotlO•sle') ..,,,..dows tote OAN SALYER PAINTING '•~.,.to-~-,.,-(1-n_t _I_• -l.-0-,.-~-.. --.,,F~O..,.,UN~O--...,M-..,S~.._--ml-I Full time potltlon evau-cOst• w... ~9222 Exper Pf9f 960-63etl neoeuary. good c;om-P ng Xr.. Repel,. & Lie "233108 Small large I I .... I . t 1•1 •212 LIC "4 25924 l.\IG JOB ~ ""'C~
blk/b;n·, M whi'ppeti ebl9. Wiii perform a var-SALES penx t>eneftta M8·3407 Reeurtecing • Roofing & 101>s & repatrs 5-48 5203 rwJ l lS ' • •v Call ~nyUme 964·20r ..,tiff' o•i<:e'o ~ • .. ty ol P«9Qnnel dutlel. ~ EOE/M/F/H Waterproollng• 531-4199 1 Com~c,a· ina "'~~
bm/wtlt; M Cocker mix Alto rHpontlble for ,.._.,uu. .......... RESIOICOMM'l 1N026 CLE "Nl "IG .. n WA'f
blk/brn; M Calm mix phoM, rett.t reoeptlonlat. Sell the flneet cuatom le'#· In atore and nom.. Full or Wiii ....... . la ittia yr1 Do my own work Lie nu'lu SCHOOL LOCAi
blk/wtlt; fl' L..b Q,~ blk; lerMlnallnP'Jt and flllng. airy & Swlaa Watehee toe petMllM Hourly·Corn-For Law Ofnoe Nwpl Beh rstlan m other wll • 27804 1 ~I 646·8126 •tols ~e11ao1e 5•8 6851'
F Qf'Y/wtlt long k en.. Spanlth r9Qulred. Exc:91· national & lntwnallonal mi..ton Prelw '9tell ex-Non-smoker S.Od re-babY9ll Mon·Frl CM/SA ~r::'st'!.tT1~ l •n1 benell11. Call cli.nt• Unique New· pwtenoe. Nettle CtMk. aume to: Hiring Partner, 1,99 Ml·93l 4 ,.G._r•-.•,_a_l'!!!1~1-!"'!"" __ _
F ounc:I wtllt• toy 7 POod ...
VIC WHtllde, Cotti
M..._&41~1775
(7 14)644-0120. Equal op-port 8"ct1 fine )ew91ry I Faahlon ltland Mr Torn 5000 Birch St, Ste 2900. --1 T•EES
p«1unl1y .mpl<>Y9f ml!. talon Benehtt Ex.,.-844-8860 Nwp1 Ben 92660 INN A Cut n
nllVN
COWANY
Q• d G' -." 'Topped rtll'T\Oved Cl&an r9q. re u•t• .m Pf•• LIC. f)rfv Home for Eld9ffy up ...,.. lft na 15 1_34 75 644-832~ Inquire ror Week/Month Amb or 1 · ..... ~ w
manager retell noo-amb S40-4101 Kettty C&B LAWN SERVICE
STOP 'I •• 11111ns ·= Mow-9<1~ IWIC:e mo $20
MOBCX:O
... t .. lat. S25 64~573'1 673-5126
II •W 111111 _s. .... m.,.tt"""""----Cl.an Up1•Tr• Tr1mrn1nc:;
IT.Ill aLEllll coXst biv1Nd SERvice varo Matnt •1-1a.u11no
Position~ available In Dana Point
Eves 3-1 1PM and nights 11-7AM
Good atartlng wage, medical In-
surance-, paid vacations, tuition re-
lmburtement. and management op-
portunities.
0111 114-ll ... 12•0 ., .,,., .•. ,.,...
Frl41y 1·11PI If
34138 Pecmc Coal H>tty, Dena Potnt CA
Underwaler Hull CIMnlng MIKE 650-3263
& M111n1 87~·739' Complete Cletm UP gM
COMPLETE SERVICE matnt trH trimming. fr!W'
Ouldttwe 6 OulboMdt ••• M•uro 631-4997
r:~y Marine 650-4444 Garden S.vlce •~Pt'
SHIPWRIGHT SERVICES d•P9f'Oabi.t pror Fo• Conetruct/~/Malnt fre. M hmat1> ~48-i~n
WOOd/ gtaN 30-0620 Lendt c;ap fl G 11ro111n1ng
t 'rim Tree' Ha1111ng
C1Nn ups l.O 557 4508 fl*' try
Re9alr·A9moc'.t l·Addttiona I TIE Ullt:IEIS
Ooor"'44c ~~NO Lawn 4 G-trOfln Malnt
8UllD OR MPAIR M 1-17'°
Web, ttalrt, r9111nge oocn. wtnoow... mo4dtn9•
•476108 Don 912 .. 202
·-
Homto C•~11n1no;;i b~ thf
Ovn4""' Ouo oeilrim
"'""" "' ,.,. 6')0-6:rs
Hom• & Ott•c fl rlf!nn1ni;i t'I~
JODI Plt',!lt' t ell tor,,~
8Slll~llllfl 1!4' 6.,,6
Jaoenett1 H°'i~l••n•l'IQ
Led\' Ex!>f'•>ence ~1.,
c~n1ng 642 ~ 19f.
VOi.ANDA MOUSECLEAN
SERV RfllU r•11eble •"* •flft &42-0405
Trtt Stmu
OUAL n n~Ef -~" .._
Tr"" OOIS .,,, ,,....l
clnuPll fl'\I '~ • . J Q INT EXl PAINTING
ML>Y~S & Apt R8H retus
Ouellty work 895-5755
LADV P"INTER Tpia1 StrT1ct
,,.,, E\t 1 t yr experience L1c:ton~ec +vt11• ~ • ..
rree fl'lt Rfl•~•bl• ... il"~··I I' ... 8~0 1924 or 957 5601 1.""''" ·;: '
'
\
'\
-
ce Orange COMt DAILY PILOTIThUf'lday, S..,tember 2e, 1986
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
20b0 HARBOR BLVD
(".'STA Ml \A b42 0010
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
20b0 HARBOR Bl VO
COSfA Ml ~A 1'>42 0010 '
STUDENT SPECIAL •eo ~10 hit>, s ap, rm. ~
tires, excel In & out.
$2995 obo. 8~ 10
..... 9125
PORSCHE AUDI
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445 E. Coaat H.;;y
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PP. $3900. 6#-9513 cond. $30,000, 673-1500 Sell Idle Items 642-5679 I
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441 E. 0.1st hJ., l1w,.rt leaoll
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835-3171
208 W. 11t St., Santa Ana
Corner of Broadway & .is1 St Closed Sundays
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1540 Jamboree Rd.
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G 808 LONGPR• PONTIAC
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OPa llCNIDAY ._ ... Ulft1I. .... P.•.
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Serving Newport Beach, Cotta Meta, Huntington Beach, lrvlnt, Laguna Beach, Fountain Valtty Ind 14Math Or ... CCMltJ
O RANliE COUN 1., C ALIFORNIA THllRSO A'1' S H 'TE Mllt U /ti 1'18'> ;~, ( (NT ~
BB man goe~ to Mexico's rescue
Ffre captain taK.es vacation time to aid
digging crews searching for survivors -------=-------
By ROBERT BARKER
Of .. °""' .... IWf
When .It came time to report for
work Monday morning. Huntington
Beach Fire Capt. Victor Subia turned
up missing and the department's top
Coast
The county Board of
Supervisors refuses to
delay awarding the con-
tract for court-appointed
attorneys./ A7
UC Irvine Is faced with a
student populatron ex-
plosion./ A3
California
A state commission
blames the economy for a
state budget deficit./ A5
Nation
The East Coast braces for
Hurricane Gloria/ A4
World
brass wanted to know where he was.
Wednesday morning_ they found
out. Subia's in Muico City.
Without fanfare, the 42-ycar-old
Subia put in for vacation time when
the two big earthquakes hit Mexico.
He traveled to the stricken city to sec
'
how he could help.
In a telephone call "patched
through" by a Tuscon, Ariz., ham
radio operator on Wednesday, Subia
put 10 an urgent request for air bags to
lif\ heavy rubble off v1cttms trapped
in devastated buildings in the stricken
capital Clly.
He also asked for flashlights, pry
bars and cutting torches to help him
in his Jrim work.
Subia didn't provide much infor-
mat1on o n his own rescue e fforts in
the telephone conversauon with
Capt. Jim Kettler. Subia said he's
work.mg with Mexico City Fire De-
partment rescue workers 1n the
outskirts of the city
"There's no doubt in my mind,"
Chief Ray Picard said Wednesday,
"'that Vic 1s out prying through debns,
tryrng to save lives.
"( know what's soing through his
mind. There's nothing more f rustrat-
mg.. You know there are v1c11m~
buncd there and they might be ahve
You want to hft bu1ldmgs w11h your
back and hands but they're not strong
enough."
On Wednesda)'. Picard hned up
four air bags from Paratch Inc 1n
West Frankfort, JIJ. Company oflk1al
Peter Nielsen wd the ~ "were
made for this Jund of operation"' and
promised to send them to Subia as
soon as air transponauon could be
arranged
The announcement over a con-
ference telephone call in Picard's
office set up excitement amona ritt
dcpanment employees on the fifth
floor at Cit)' Hall
Picard now IS lrylng to arranae for
an airplane And other local officws
arc tl)1ng to get flashlights, pry ban
and otbcr tools requested by Subia
from the state Department ofEmCJ'l-
(Pleue eee AID/ A2)
NB firm
hired for
jail site
search
Will join Irvine
engineers to study
po ten ti al loca_tions
By JEFF ADLER
Of -Delly ""4 .,.,..
uperv 1soFs ha' c launched another
s1tc-select1on stud\ for a new max1-
mum-secunt) county JCUI by hmng a
Newport Beach firm that wtll work
wnh another cngineenng company to
assess nme potenual sites.
U:S. and Russian nego-
tiators didn't agree on a
thing, but they got along
splendidly In a pre-sum-
mit meeting./ A5
Delly .... ,..... 117 L.M P•JM
Pat Collin• of Newport Beach can 10 back to aleep now -hi• pet macaw Rocky la back where he belonaa.
LSA of Newport Beach wtll JOm
Kennedy/Jenks, with offices 1n
Irvine. as consulting engineers on
what 1s expected to be a I J.month
proJect to evaluate nine proposed
sues for a 6.000-bed Jail and forge a
recommendation to supervisors.
Boating
America's Cup syndi-
cates are spending as
much on shrouds to hide
secret keel designs as on
the 12-meter boats./81
Fowl play finds footloose flier The firms. in conjuncuon wtlh
sc"eral other smaller consulting
group~. will complete sttc-sclecuon
studies and cm iron mental documen-
tation for the pro1ect, at an antici-
pated cost ofS289.000.
Sports
The Angels win but don't
gain any ground, while
. the Dodgers fall but gain
ground./C1
Two ar~a volleyball play-
ers are chosen con-
ference players of the
week./C2
Entertainment
Medieval plays are
beautifully recreated In
"The Plale Called Corpus
Christi" at UC lrvlne./83
Business
California stock brokers
will getting to work a half
an hourearller beginning
Monday./85
INDEX
Boating B 1
Bridge B4
Bulletln Board A3
Business 85-6
Classlfled C4-6
Comics B4
Crossword C4
Death Notices AS
Entertainment 62-3
Horoscope C6
Ann Landers 82
Opinion A6
Police Log A3
Public Notices AS
Sports C l~
Televlson B3
Weather A2
Newport macaw fancier finally learns
never to send a man to do a bird'sjob ~
By SUSAN BOWLET
Ofhl)elly .........
. Pat Collins tried everything -he
even called the fire depanment.
But the 35-year-old Newport Beach
owner of a macaw that flew the coop
Sunday learned in the end that birds
of a feather flock t6gether.
Collins said he never thought
Rocky, his blue-and-gold pet parrot.
would fly away. During the five years
Collins has owned him. Rocky hasn't
Laguna's
schools
weighing
criticisms
By LISA MAHONE\'
OllMO.-,"-llt.ft
even tncd.
But Rocky tested his wings Sunday
at the 13th Street park on the Balboa
Peninsula. Collins s pent almost four
sleepless days and nights trying to
catch his pet before Rocky was lured
back to his cage by a pair of fellow
fowls hired to cou him o ut ofa tree.
"I ncvertho ught he would fly away.
but he got spooked ,'' Collins said.
Confused and probably dismayed
by the s1tua11on he had gotten himself
into. theS 1.800 bird roosted on a
Criticism lobbed at Laguna Beach
H igh School recently by some of its
alumni will be considered when
reviewiAg educ.atlonal programs.
schools Supenntendent Billy Barnes
said. But complaints that the school
did not adequately prepare them for •
life at Stanford and Berkeley probably ----
should be taken with a grain of salt. he Superintendent BUly Barnea
added. a nd describe their curre nt endeavors.
High school teachers and counsel-In written comments. more than a
ors try to impress on students the dozen alumni criticized Laguna
demands of higher educ~tion, but the Beach High School for letting stu-
messa~e "doesn't become something dents skate through classes. prov1d-
that 1s real lo them until they 1ng poor English instruction and not
themselves experience 1t," Barnes emphasmng study skills.
said. A lesser number gave the school
About 50 members of the class of high marks in science and mathcmat-
1984 responded to a follow-up survey ics and praised individual teachers
from the school district asking them for their efforts.
to rate their high school education (Pleue .ee SCHOOLS/ A2)
ut1hty pole in an alley between 12th
and 1 l th streets Sunday.
"He stayed there all night because
he dtdn't know what to do." C'olhns
said. While Rocky roosted. Collins
camped 1n the alley, watching his pet
atop the tall pole and trying 10 talk
him down.
Sympathetic residents watched lhe
exercise 10 fuuhty and brough1 coffee
so Collins could keep an eye on
~ocky.
"It was really neat to see all the
people come out and bnng me coffee
and clothes and stuff ... Colhm said
.. All J had on was a pa 1 r of shorts."
Workers from the Edison Co. tned
Monday to come to the rescue. nding
10 the top oft he power pole in a chel'T)
picker. But Rocle)' was fnghtened
away agam, this time flapping his
novice wings toward Bay Island. a
pnvate com mu nil)' off the peninsula
Rock) perched atop a tall pine tree
and watched as the fire dcpanment
tned tocome to the rescue
.. He was so h1~. there JUSI was no
wa)'," Collins said Rock)' remained
atop the tree all da) Tuesda) then
flew awa} when Colhos took a break
from his v1g1I.
"I hadn't slept 10 39 hours ,rnJ I
went home to take a c;hower I --a~
onl} gone 20 minutes. and he "'3)
gone ... Collins said
But Collins didn't g1\t' up He
searched the area until 11 "'as almo,1
(Plea.e see BIRD/ A2)
Supervisors have been searchina
for more than three y~ for an
appropnatc I !~a~ site somewhere
1n a remote ~t1on of the count)
"'here the\ .:an build a new count\
Jail needed 10 rel1evt' overcrowd.Joi
1n the main 1a1l 10 Sant.a Ana.
Effons 10 find a suitable lpcaoon
ha\ c met ~11h pohucaJ oppos1uoo
from homeowners near St'veral
prop0sed s11es and forced supervisors
10 beg.in the s1tc-selectton process
a ne"· 1 n .\ugu~I 19 4
The tirms are e\JX'Cted to return
v.1th ~vme prehmina~ recommen-
dat1um 1Jn a ;ail ~lie 1n about four
mvnth' ...aid Paul (are\ an aide to
(Pleue eee FIRM/A2)
OC Supervisors approve
pact for freeway authority
Vote of 3 -0 end orses
ch arging developers
for road con s truction
By JEFF ADLER
Of .... Delly ,.... .....
The Orange Count} Board ot
Supervisors J01ned four c1t1e'
Wednesday tn approv.tng a legal
agreement that eventual!) will crt'ate
a reg10nal freeway authont~ to go1. ·
l'!rn the financing and construction ot
the proposed San Joaquin Hilb.
Eastern and Foothill frecwa}'s
In approving the two JOint-po"-t'r.
agreements by a 3--0 vote. supen 1\(1r.
once again endorsed the nouon l)I a
freeway plan that 'W1ll ass.e\!i dt•-
vclopers building ho uses or rnm-
merc1al buildings near the frcc'W a'.,
fees for freewa) constructton
The development f~!i -would pa'
48 4 percent of the esumatt'd S '.i~
million cost o f the San Joaquin H1lh
Transportauon corridor. "h1ch
1.<ould course through the u1a .. tal
foo th1ls. and 4 'i 'i pt'rlen t of the
estimated $516 m1lhon Foothill and
Eastern transpor1at1on 1.·orndor'
funher inland
.\!though tht· C•>unl\ apprl"t'd tht
agreeml"nt~ n1al:1l1<,h1ng thl
authont' unh lnur ut 111 1. ltll'\
1mohed 1n the dc1.elupm(nt-te1.·
program. 'an Juan ( ap1'>trann '\Jn
Clemente. Orange and \nahe1m
have also approHd the a1tn•1.•mt·nt\
C1t1es that ha\t' \Ct 11.) apprl\\<.' the
agreement creating the \an Joaquin
Hills authont' · an.• ( 1.htJ \k<,,i
lnine. ~cwport Rea1.h anJ \ant.t
.\na. Laguna Bea1.h . ...,h1ch "'a' a .. ~cd
to 1oin. has re1ectc!'<l tht• orop.r.im
C111es that ha1. e H"t to appW\ t' th1.·
agreement and let• \lrullure lti r tht'
Foothill and Eas1an i 1.1rr1J1.11
authont' include If'\ ine '\ant.i .\nJ
Tusttn and 'orha Linda
l oder the a€Jecments thl.' lrce...,31.
authontte<> "'ould aJm1ni<;ter the kt
program acqu1r<' n ght o f "'a\ and
auth\mie tinal Jt''>t1tn anJ urn\tru1.
(Plea.e .ee FRltEW A YI A2 I
Poll supports
new highway
construction
8} PHIL ~NEIDERMA!\
Orangt• C l'Unl\ re\1lkn1' arc be-
lt1m1:it1 more d1,\Jt1~fied """h then
t r~1.<d\\ and a g,rn,,..rng number
bellt'H' 1. llO"r\JdlllO of ne .... high .... a\\
" thl' \olut1nn the t >range ( o unt\
.\nnual %1"\t'\ 1nd11.Jtec,
The roll al<;o .. ho"-<'d that rC'Sld<'.'nts
111 ,,1uth Orangl t ,1un11. ...,h1..:-h
1nduJe<, 't'"'IX'n &a1.h lr1.1ne and
Lallun.i Rt·Jlh JJ\llf ne"' tree..._a,,
more than their ne1gh~1r' 1n 1.C'ntral
()rantzt' (. 11unt\ "'h11. h 1ndude\ ( llSl.l
\k<,.1 and \aniJ \na
Rt\\Jll\ 'I th1.· 41'' 'tUd\ l{)n
Ju1. tt•d h' I < 1 \mt' re~archt>r<.
(Pleue eee POLL/A2)
Water from tap as sitfe as a mountain stream
Experts say there are very few
water conta nlna tion proble ms---
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of .. Dlilfp .......
• An alphabet soup of DBCP. TC'E. TH Ms and other
chemicals is brewtna in portions o( Cahfom1a's water
supply But JUSt how danaerous and widespread 1s the
contamination? •
M1ny thirsty consumers aren't taluna any chance$,
abandonina their taps for the auaranteed safety of bottled
water.
Yet Metropolitan and Oranae County water district
officials say the consumers an: JUSl pounna money down
the drain Aside from a few isolated cases, che tap water
throu&hout Souchem C'ahfom1a 1s as safe. tasty and odor
free H anyth1na comma from the parkletts man and h1
colleaaues.
\
And i l costs less. 1
"I'm very concerned about people spending hun-
d~s of dollars a year for bottled \\tater. solely on the basis
of fear," said Mike McGuire. water quality manager for
Metropolitan Water D1stnct 1n Los Angeles.
"Contamination problcm5 arc scattered and con·
fined to small areas." said McGuire, chief c hem 1st for the
wholesale company that channels water to d15tncts m ~1\
southland counties.
··But people arc generally slcepucal of the govern·
ment and they've rtee1ved a lot of p~c;' that ,uppom
them." he protested.
Newipaper headlines .,..am of organic solvents
poisoning ground water 1n the San Ciabnel and Santa
Oara valleys. More stone, tell of the fum1pnt5 ~ dibTOmochloropropane (OBCP) and ethyhnc hybmm1dt
(EOB) contaminating dnnk1n1 \upphe'i tn the San
Joaquin Valley.
McOu1rc con~ed that MWD was having prohlem\
clo,1na tht Ooodptes on the bad pubhc11~
At lrast half the water used b~ I 3 mil hon pcopk from
The 1mponed wat<'r 1 u~d t(I ~uppl<'ment loca l "'""'
which a~ more ea 11 contaminated than the Sa\ramcn·
to, San Joaquin nd (. olorado "' c~ ~upph 1ng M'-' D '1.3\'i
McGuire
W11h the 1ro-wth o( 1ndu~tr. \°Omci. lht' potentu\I Im .
chemical spJll\ and other ml\hap' that can po1\.Cln th('
ground #lter So far. pollutton has not \l't taken a
foothold on the water \uppl) 10 Ornngl' ( ount' an art"J
relat1vcl) new to 1ndu tn•l "3~tC''i
Fourth o.f a aerie• on water euppltea
DaH' \rgp ot 1ht• c iranjlt ( ,1un1' '-' atcr 1)1\tnc1 1s
hope tu I II OC\ Cl "-di
'""''tar ...._ch.,, tn't un1. '" rfl'd Ill\• mut h 111 N-~omed
.i~wt ... ud o\rg1• \ h11·1 <'n tiint>t·r tor thr a~tm \ that
mnn1111r' rnup.hh I 01 'lr:ingt \ '''•nl\ \lrcll\
H1.11.'t'\ t'r ht n11ted a F1 ion ~lion i?ll~hne c;p11\ th.at
dol,('j threr \naht•1m 1.<rll' 1n l\i ~ lnd a po1<;0nou'
1.1'n(t'n1r.n1on 111 ~hl'm11. I \nht·n1' lound ~ntl\ 1n
~llmt' In int" 1m~tllln ...,C'll\
Th<' flhlhkmc; hr ~\' .m under control 8ut hc-
l\l01,~e' 1ha1 "h<'n a "-l'll " ~>llut~ -~rd'ns ol 1t\
loc<1t1un anJ "h<'lher 11' u\C'J tor dnnkm or waten
hma he-an' -11 ~111, th<' n·pu1:11mn of tap water
thr\1UJhllUI $he \lcltc
( om1dcr that \mcn1..in\ '~nJ about S 700 m1lhon
iU\nualh on hottkJ ...,,!Irr \.1110:-m·er Lo' -'ngcle\. San
IPleaee eee WATSR/A7)
')
I
Orange Cout DA.IL Y PILOT/lburlday, September 29, 19U
~ebel kidnappers contact
· El Salvador president again
SAN SAL V ADO~ EJ lvador
tA.P) -Rebels claim•fl& to hold the
daua!uer of President Jose Napoleon
Duarte apparently made con tact w1 th
the Salvadoran leader apin. a day
after they rcponedly imposed a
deadline for the reJcase of 34 rebels.
Wednetday the Associated Press
monitored 30 mjoutes of faint trans..
missions, which jumped across sev-
eral shon-wavc frequencies. One
voice identified itself as "The Pedro
Pablo Castillo Command," which has
blaimed responsibility for the Sept. 10
Kidnapping of Ines G uadalupe
'AIDGIVEN .•.
Prom Al
Victor Sabia
Dua.rte Duran, 3S, and a woman
fricn4,
An6thcr v01ce, which identj(ted
itself by the code name of "Jupiter,"
sounded like Duane's.
The voice said "We have not beard
the message of Ines Guadalupe, nor
have we received parts of tbc com·
muniquc, please repeat to make sure
we have not lost pan of the message."
If there was a message from Mrs.
Duarte Duran, it could not be heard
through the whine of the weak radio
signal.
The rebel broadcaster sajd, "In
ency Scrv.lces.
Subia, who was born in Los Angeles
and has relatives in Mexico, has paid
frequent visits to that country, Pica.rd
said.
He's worked closely with Mexican
fircfiahten to help implement mod-
em devclopmeots, accordina to the
chief, and has appeared on Mexican
national television in that endeavor.
Subia, who's been with tbc Hunt-
ington Beach Fire Department since
1968, is commander of one of city's
hazardous materials teams. He is a
past winner of the department's
award of merit.
"This is typical of Vic," Picard
said. "He's always been a leader who
takes charge without talking about
iL"
relatioo to our disappeared comrades
there is clear evidcnot that they were
captured by the security roroes and
the &rm)'. ... We demand an cxpla·
nation for each of our missing
comrades."
Sources have sald \be aovelnment
onJy bas io custody 22· of the 34
people soua.ht by the rebels.
A voice From the 4ovcmment side
said1 "We are seeking more infor·
mat1on to find out who jg here and
who is not," an apparent reference to
th~ailed rebels.
The llovcmment bas talked to the
rebels v1a a Red C ross.-supplied radio,
and exprc$std willingness to negcr
tiate. But government soun:cs said
Duarte also wanted several kid-
napped mayors to be included in any
deaf. M~. Duarte Duran. the oldest of
the president's siA ' children, is
wvorced and the mother of two. She
and a fncnd, Cecilia Villeda Sosa, 23,
were kidnapped as they arrived for
classes at a private colJcgc. One
presidential bodyguard was killed
and another was seriously wounded
by gunmen who escaped with the two
women.
The points of the guerrilla com-
munique that could be heard were:
"We have precise information that
Janet Samour and Aguinada Car-
ranza were in the mili8JJ hospital and
received medical attention."
Sa.mour is a gucnilla leader cap-
tured in December in the eastern t ity
ofSan Mi&ucl by the National Guard.
The sovemmeot says Carranza was
killed, apparently 10 combat. ---.............................................................................. ~
BIRD BACK AFTER FOUR-DAY 'FLIER' •••
From A l '
too dark to sec. He was about to call 1t
•'t:luits Tuesday night when he saw
Rocky fly by.
The real heroes -or real macaws
-so to speak -were put on the case
Tuesday b)' the infamous Birdman of
Newport after Rocky was spotted in a
tree near the Balbot\ branch of the
Newpon Beach Pubhc Library.
Collins and the Btrdman, Ski
Mcinscbcin, put two Rocky look-
aJikcs in the wa~ bird's cage
Wednesday momma. The squawking
of Meinscbcin's parrots of the same
persuasion caught Rocky's attention.
"It was bis (Mcinscbcin's) birds
that talked him down," Collins said.
Collins, an independent sales rep-
resentative, said his life was brought
back tonormal after Rocky was home
once again. "J'mjustglad to have him
back," Collins said.
POLL FAVORS NEW HIGHWAYS •.•
From A l
were released this week. The survey,
which has a 3 percent error margjn,
involved telephone interviews m
June with 1,008 adults Orange Coun-
ty residents selected at random .
When the poll was first conducted
in 1982. 32 percent of the respondents
said they were satisfied with the
freeway system.
In the 1985 survey. onl y I 8 percent
said they were satisfied
Survey participants were polled
concerning solutions to the freeway
problems.
Eighty-six percent said 1t was a
"good idea" for employers 10 offer
incentives to workers who rravel 10
and from work by car pool.
When new freeways lanes for buses
and car pools were suggested. 69
percent of the respondents supported
the proposal.
But few rcs1dents~nly 17
percent -liked the idc of oil roads
for new freeways. S h highways.
common in the East and Midwest
require motorists to pay fees accord-
ing to how far they travel on the toll
road. The fees help pay for highway
maintcnanqi and improvements.
Orange County res1dents expressed
more support for the concept of
developer fees. in wbjch builders of
new homes and businesses in the
areas that would be served by the new
freeways arc charged assessments.
Orange County supervisors and
many of the county's business leaden
have supported the idea since last
year's defeat of Proposiuon A, which
would have raised the sales tax to help
pay for transponation improve~
mcnt.s.
But the developer fee plan bas its
criocs, particularly in Irvine, a grow-
ing city where many of the fees wouJd
be collected.
The critics say the proposed fees
will simply be passed on to con-
sumers as higher prices for homes.
goods and services. They also claim
the fees will simply promote more
development without relievtng eA1St·
ing freeway congestion.
But supporters say the develop-
ment will happen anyway. They
cl&m the freeways are needed to keep
traffic off local streets.
In the UCJ survey, 56 percent of the
respondents favored developer fees
for new freeways.
Breaking down the participants by
region, however, t~e researchers
found differences m attitudes toward
the transportation issues.
Construction of new freeways was
favored by 43 percent of those who
live or work in the soufh county, ind
developer fees were backed by 61
percent. In the central county, 33
percent favored new freeways, while
48 percent supported developer fees.
Since the survey was launched in
1982. support for new freeways has
been growrng, except for 1984. Survey
director Mark Baldassare said the
1984 drop was probably associated
with a backlash from the Proposition
A campaign.
Baldassare said freeway congestion
will probably contribute to the grow-
ing fragmentation of Orange County
that was uncovered by the 1985
survey. He said commuting problems
will prompt more south county
residents to try to find jobs closer to
their ho mes.
FIRM HIRED TO SCOUT JAIL SITES .•.
From Al
board Chairman Thoma'i Riley.
Care} added that the cnginecnng
firms would review but not neccss-
anl} accept the condu•11on'i reached
b) the count) tuk fon.c an previous
slle·selecuon ~tudac~
Nine remote areas of eastern and
southeastern Orange County current·
ly arc considered candidate sites for
the new j ail. They arc: Black tar
Canyon m the eastern county; Pnma
Desccba east of San Oemcnte, Paco,
adjacent to the Pnma Dcsccha site.
1 rabuco Creek.Just east of San Juan
Ca~1strano; Jrvme Lake east of
lrvmc; Rancho Lomas. m eastern
Orange County: and Santiago,
Gypsum and Coal cJ!nyons, all in
rem ote eastern portions of the coun-
ty
SCHOOLS WElGHING 'BAD REVIEWS' .•.
From Al
"Sometimes what happen' 1<>. rt.
takes a year to get awa)' and then 11
becomes easier to '\a). 'I think 'IOU
guys should have bc<'n tou&her nn
me.' .. Bame'i c,a1d.
However studt'nt rnmmcnt\ can·
not be dasmmcd. he 'ill.Id "I can
assure you there ~ 111 be a lot ol high
school Engh sh teacher., "-ho will want
to address their comml·nt \ an J H'r\
positive way .. Bame'> ..aid
The Laguna Beach l nificd <x hool
D1stnct has sought graduate up1n1on<.
on the high school program for
several vear-. Obscrva11on' from
graduates arc helpful an refining
pro~ms. accordinll to Bame<. "Wr
Just Call
642-6086
D.._,11 Piiot
!>Mt very
te Ou.rent.-d
~ f r09y I
tOt ,,... .,,..., "'.,,. '
,
think it's vaJuable," he said.
And graduates' criticism of the
English curriculum is not entirely off
base, he said. "It is a problem that as
facing us and is a costly problem to
solve."
Teaching students to writeo-well
poses difficulties for school distncts
because of class size, Barnes said.
Teachers usually instruct fi ve claS5CS
of 30 students each a day and it is too
11me-consuming for them to regularly
C'O rrect 150 papers. be said.
··in the last seven years we have had
to cu1 $2 million out of an $8 m11Jion
hudget We have not had the rc-
\Ourcc\ in order to adequately staff
our high schools and middle schools
in order to lower class sizes and
tncrcasc writing assignments. It's
kind of a CJ!tch-22," Barnes said.
Laguna Beach schools arc piloting
an Effective Schools progra~ this
year that may help improve student
achievement. the superintendent
s~ud.
The three Rs plus four other basic
subject areas at the high school will
also be scrutinized during the next
three years to S« 1f they comply with
state-approved curriculum, Barnes
said.
The high school teachers and
parents wifl be look.mg carefully at the
high school program. he said. #-......_
Wbat do you llkt eboat tilt Dally Piiot? Wbat don't you Ukt? Call tbt
numbtr at left and your meuag• will bt' recorded, tran1crlbt'd and dtllvtrtd
lo U.t appropriate editor.
Tbt Hme U-hoar an1werln11ervlct m•y bt' used to record lettu1 to the
1·dltor un any topic. Coatrlbtltors to our Letters rolomn m11t Include their
nAm t! and telephone number for verification. No clrculaUon calls, please.
Tell us wbat'1 on your mind.
Karen Wittmer
P•1t>llsher
C lrcu .. tlon 714/142-4133 ca..ettled edVert ... nt 7141142·511'1
All other depertment• 142-4321
MAIN CWflCI
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Clrcvt.tlon , ... ~ ..
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Robert L Canlt•ll
Howard Mutlenary
Mtr•itt•no ()lrtctor
Donald L. Wlllt.am1
( , 11ll1 ><
l,A;ir,JIQ .. ,
P99g1 IJevln1
1 ~ > 111 .. '1 rJ+rftt' I• 11
VOL. n ,NO.•
•
Sprinkles may splatter the Coast .
Cloud• from a low preMufe .,.. oft tM coaat Wiii brtng a
c:hano. of aprlnk• to Southern c.lttomla tonight and Friday,
the NatlOnal WMther Service Mid.
TM iow pr...ur•.,.. ... c:«11..-.d eoo rm ... on the eout
Mf1Y today and WM moving tMtwerd. The weather ..W. Mild
rllntlll 1MOUnt1 from the ey9lem would llYW9G9 ~·from
a trace up to .15 of 1n Inch. Temperaturee wilt~ cootet, with
hlaha at the beae* from N to 73 Friday and 72 to 78 In th•
1nranc1 valley9. Owrnlght Iowa wlll ~ In the 80a.
Along the Orange Coett It wtll ~ partly cloudy throuoh
Frtdey. Slight c:hanoe of eprlnk ... Ot llQl'lt ahOWer• tonight and
Friday. Lowa tonight eo to N . Hlgha FrTday at bMchee '8 to 73
and Inland valley• 72 to 78.
U.S. Tempe &4 39 16 ...
93 87 ... 62 11 541
82 53
" n 51 ..
52 S3
... 66
.. 71
15 se 74 .. .. 47
!It SI .. n
75 57
" n .. 52
13 ..
82 50
711 52
10 se
.. 21 • , 43
12 se eo ... ., 73
.. 43 ... ...
to 711 78 ,,
.. 64 .....
.. 37 ....
93 ...
72 72 79 .,
81 40 .. ~
•• ~~ ~~:: c~_.
Sl'loweta ,_. F~rlH Stlow Occluded..,.. Sttnonwy .._.
Nlltotlll W... s.iv.ee NOAA U $ Oeo1 Cl C-'t
Calif. Tempe 17 IO
17 ..
70 52 .. 116
Surf Report
Tldea
... ....... 2~ -2-3 Mir
2-lt '* 24 , ...
2-3 '* 1·2 poor
1·2 poor
TOOAY 2:37 p.m. .· 1.6 1:37 p.m. II.I
PM>AY
3:0la.m. o.o
t:25Lm. 5.2
3.12 p.11\. 1.2 t·11 p.m. a.e
Sun -I~ M 9l44 p.m .• ,._ ftldlly
•• e:44 Lm Md-.~., 1:43 p"' ..._ ,,... lodey "' 1:00 p.m.. .... fricley 111 4:24 a.m. Md ,._ ll9llft M t:Mp.m.
Forecasters say showers
won't linger along Coast
By STEVE MARBLE
ot ... O..,,......,
A lingering tropical depression that
shoved humid air over the Orange
Coast Wednesday and set off light
showers early today is eJq:~cted to
break up and give way to cooler
autumn weather.
The early morning showers
dampened roadways and slowed
commuter traffic. but produced no
measurable amount of prec1p1tat1on
along the coast. There is only a 20
percent chance of ram tonia.ht and
Friday, according to the lilational
Weather Service.
Weather stations ii) Costa Mesa.
Santa Ana and atop Santiaao Peak
reported no rainfall this morning.
The only repon of measurable rain-
fall was at the Villa Park Dam w,hich
showed a scant 0.02 inches of precipi-
tation. according to Emmett Frank.Jin
of the county's Environmental Man·
angemcnt Agency.
Franklin said the seasonal rainfall
to date ranges from a high of about
half an inch in Santa Ana to 0.15 in
Costa Mesa. The average rainfall in
·the county on this date is 0.22,
Franklin said.
The damp, sticky air that blanketed
the coast Wednesday was caused by
the remnants of Tropical Storm
Terry, which hovered off the coast of
Baja earlier this week, a weather
service sookeswoman said.
Oouds and daytime temperatures
in the low 70s arc expected through
the weekend.
KGB official reportedly defects
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A Soviet
diplomat who was a high-ranking
member of rhe KGB intelligence
service defected to the United States
after disappeanng last month in
Rome, according to news reports.
Vitaly Yurtchenko, 50, could be the
highest-ranking KGB defector to the
West since the 1930s. when two
generals in the Soviet intclliaencc
service flcdMoscow during the purges
of Josef Stalin, it was reported.
NBC News said intelligence of-
. ficials confirmed Wednesday that
Yurtchenko had defected. The of-
ficials were not identified.
NBC said Yurtchenko was re-
portedly familiar with KGB oper-
ations in the United States, Western
Europe and Latin America
A newspaper said Yunchcnko tiad
been undcrgoinc debriefing by the
CIA somewhere in the United States
for the last six weeks.
The defection is the latest to be
reported in a series of spy incidents.
FREEWAY AUTHORITY ENDORSED •••
From A l
lion of the freeways. The authont1es
would be dissolved once the new
freeways arc accepted into the state
highway system.
"These agreements represent one
of the greatest cooperative efforts m
th.e history of the county,'' board
Chairman Thomas Riley said before
the· board's unanimous vote. "I
believe the key clement of these
agreements is the opportunity for all
panics to share m the decision-
making process o n an equitable
basis."
Supervisor Bruce Nestande. who
let\ the meeting before the vote was
taken, called the program the ··most
imponant thing the county has done
to square with and meet development
in county."
Supervisor Harriett Wieder was
absent in observance of the Jewish
Yorn Kippur holiday.
In approving the agreements. how-
ever, supervisors postponed for one
week action that would revise the fees
developers actually would pay for
freeway development. The delay was
forced because of an error in posting
notice of the board's proposed action.
Supervisors arc expected to ap-
prove the revised fee structure, which
would create zones of benefit in areas
near the proposed freeway, next
week.
If approved, developers near the
San Joaquin Hills Tran~nation
Conidor would be charged 1,305 for
every sinalc·family home cy build
in areas closest to the freeway while
those built farther awar would cost
$1 ,010. For the Foothil and Eastern
Corridors the charlcs for single·
family homes would be S 1,295 and
$920 respectively.
Commercial propeny in areas adja-
cent to the San Joaquin Hills Corridor
would be assessed at a $1.75-per-
squarc-foot rate while buildings in the
second zone would be asscued a
S 1.3~~r-squarc-foot fee. For the
Foothill and Eastern Corridor the fees
would be S 1.80 and SI .OS-per-squarc-
foot respectively.
The
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46 Fashion Island (714) 640-8310