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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-10-08 - Orange Coast Pilot. • . • :, :1 • ORANGf COUN 1 Y HBman has his own lottery By ROBERT BARKER °' .. °"" ......... A 25-ycar-old Huntington Beach man is facing charges that be allegedly started up and operated his own lottery, Police Department spokeswo m an Joanne Bergstrom said today. The suspect, Kenneth Ran- daJI Hard, who has not been arrested, allCJedly sent 5,000 fliers to HuntinJton Beach resi- dents announcing the $1 -per- ticket game. He allegedly solici- ted players to send a minimum of $5 to play the game to a company identified as Hard- castle Enterprises at a post office box in Huntington Beach. Apparently he sent fliers to (Pleue eee LOTTERY/ A.2) • Coast Patti and Samuel Frus- tacl are suing the doctor who administered fertlllty drugs to Mrs. Frustacl, who later conceived sep- tuplets./ A3 Nation The Supreme Court has refused to revive a lawsuit against KTLA over an 8- year-old segment./ AS World Workers continue their search for victims of mudslides and floods that killed dozens In Puerto Rico Monday .I AS Sports Irvine Hlgh's Terry Hen- igan has the Vaqueros' football team on the move./81 INDEX Erma Bombeck Bridge Bulletin Board Business Classified Comics Crossword Death Notices Entertainment Horoscope Ann Landers Opinion Paparazzi Pollce Log Public Notices Sports Televlson Weather A10 A9 A3 84-6 87-9 A9 89 B10 A8, 10 89 A10 A7 A8 A3 BlO B1-3 A10 A2 .. __ --- TOMOMOW: RAIN FORECASTS ON A2 Servfng Newport Beech, Cotta Meta. Huntington Beech, Irvine, t..guna Beach, Fountain Vllley and South OrMgt County c Allf ORNIA I l It ·.i 11\ 'y 1 ll I qfl .. C II 1 ·111· /',( t NI ·, 109 ho~es cracking in Mesa Geologists hired by Costa Mesa to find cause of north side's natural upheaval causrna the houses to settle. A survey conducted by the North Costa Mesa Homeowners Assoc1a- uon ended Friday with 109 house· holds reporting dam~ apparently caused by ground subs1dence. By TONY SAAVEDRA Of .... °"",.. .... More than 100 north Costa Mesa Youth rescues 2from blaze By ROBERT BARKER Of IM °"'1Noe118'1 An 18-ycar-old college student braved flames and blinding smoke to rescue a woman and her young granddaughter fro m their burning home in Huntington Beac h t h is morning. Dennis At- tencio was on has way to classes at Gold- en West College when he saw the fire and heard ATl'ENCIO peo ple scream- ing that a woman was trapped inside the burning home at 839 I Amster- dam Dnve. Attencio, a former football player at Los Amigos High School. Jumped an eight-foot concrete wall and ripped out the house's screen door. Ima Hendley. 56, handed ham 3- year-old Crystal Hendley and Atten- cao carried the little gi rl to safety. (Pleue eee YOUTB/A2) homes have reported cracked walls. buckling patios and other damages as geologists continue studying the underground movement that may be The city has allotted $25,000 for gcotcchnical consultants Leighton and Associates of Irvine to explore Dellf,... ...... _, t..-....,_ Huntington Beach firemen work o•er Cryatal Hendley. 5, u the girl'• mother. Mary. looka on. Irvine exploring annexation of El Toro air base Ma.Tielivercouldkeep field from becoming future civilian airport ----- By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of IM Delly Noe la.It Some Irvme officials want to bring the Marine Corps Air Station, El Toro.into the city hmtts. hoping the change would prevent the base from becoming a civilian airport. Col. Jerry Shelton. community plans and liaison officer for the base. confirmed today the Marines re- ceived a letter last week from Irvine Mayor David Baker askmg them to explore the prospect of annexation to the city of Irvine. About 10.000 Mannes and c1v- 1laans work or lavt" at the 4. 700-acre base. which is federal property, Shelton said. The base. northeast of Irvine, as an unancorporat~d county temtory under the jurisdiction o f the Orange County Board ofSupervisors. David Baker Paul Brady Jr .. Irvine's assistant city mana$er. said Baker's letter called for a Joint study by thecaty and the Mannes concemang possible an- nexauon. He said the Mannes could benefit by having the cat y set fi rm noise and air crash gu1dehnes that , would apply to encroaching develop-Airport. which 1' operated b~ the ment around the base. county. But Brady said the letter also "That's the pnmary purpose of the pomted out that the city wan ls 10 proposal." Brady said prevent the El Toro military a1rlield The Mannes also oppose com- from accepting commerc1al-c1v1han merc1al use of El Toro flights to relieve busv John Wayne (Pleue eee IRVIJlfE/ A2) the subterranean movement plaguing netpborhoods between South Coast Drive, Bear Street, Fairview Road and Sunflower Street. Another S I 0,000 has been al- located for surveyors to measure sttt:cu in the nine residential tracts 1 for any movement. The cracking was first reported m mid-Scptembtt at three homes oa Redding A venue, but more eta"': were discovered in other areas the homeowners' association launched its survey. More than 7S homes had reported damages by Oct. l. Spokesman David Leiabton said (Pleue eee EAllTB/ A2) PLO pirates boast of killing 2 Americ-ans Palestinians seize Italian luxury liner wtth 413 passefi_ge'rs By the Auoclated Prus Palestanaan hijackers who seized a luxury Italian cruise shapcarrymg 4 I 3 people claimed today to have lolled two Amencans, according to Western diploma tac sources in Syna and radio reports. The h1Jackers threatened more deaths unless 50 Palestinian prisoners an Israel were freed. The claims could not be venfied Estimates of the number of Amen- cans aboard ranged from two to 28 Presidential spokesman l..arry Speak- es in Washington said there probably were about a dozen Amencans. and "less than 20, for sure:· The 23.629-ton ltahan ltner .\chtlle Lauro was h1Jacked off Egypt late Monday The hijackers said the~ were from the Palesune Liberation Front. a dissident group of the PLO. Western diplomatic sources in Damascus. the capital of Syna, said that Italian Charge d' .o\ffaares. Pietro Cordone. was told today by theS}nan Foreign M1n1slr) that the hijackers claimed 10 have lulled two .\men- cans "We have no confirmauon," said the diplomat. who spoke on cond1t1on he not be 1dent1fied The shtp was off Syna, but after Syna dented at perm1ss1on to enter 1ts tern tonal waters. at began saaltng west awa~ from Syna. one Western diplomat an Damascus said Cordone said the ltaltan govern· ment has refused all contact wtth the pt rates. "We're ahgnang ourselves wtth the A.merican pos1t1on. that 1s not to nego11ate wnh terronsts:· he told rcponers Radio stations an Israel and Leba- non earlter reponed that the hijackers boasted on ship radio ofhavmg lulled one .A.mencan and ofthreatemne that they might kill 12 add1t1onal hostages. Later. Israel radio said two people were killed aboard the ship by the hijackers one .\mencan and the other of undisclosed nauonahtv M1cke-. Gurdus. Israel's· best known ·radio monitor. told The .\ssoc1ated Press the information com~ from his own "very good" sour~. but declined to elaborate (Plea. eee CJlU18£/ A.2) Coast soil's DDT said left over from before ban By ROBERT HYNDMAN Of!MDellfNetl .... Traces of DDT that conunue to show up an local soil samplec; are leftovers from use of the pest1c1de before the 197 3 DDT ban. the state Dcpanment of Food and Agnculture said Monday. In their report to the Legislatur!' Food and .\gnculture officials said the} found DDT stabahzed 1n ~ti samples but dasco-.ered no e\ 1denc!' that the pcst1c1de was stall being used The study. which tncluded thrtt und1sclosedOrangeCount~ sttes. "'as ordered bv the state .\ssembh last vear after studies showed that .DDT IA.as still being found throughout the state. According to the stud~ DDT residues. or its :hem1ca.I breakdown ran survlVe in the sotl for I 2 or more ~ears .\bout half of the DDT applied before the ban 1s ~ull in the so il o r the "ater contaminated b' the so1t DDT was llsed for nearh 30 vears an Cahtom1a before n was banned at the end of l 'r-'2 after scaenttsts found n was a cancer-causing agent that could threaten human health and "1ldhfe Whale traces of DDT are still being discovered an sotl "ater plant and fish samples. the te-.els do not 111d1cate a current health threat. said Joanne Schneider. an ev1ronmental special 1st for the state Regional Water Quain~ Contro l Board "Through our own studies and trom the Depanment of Health Sen ices. we·, e determined that there t~ no apparent health nsk:· Schneider ~td thas morning "We kno"" fro m (Plea. .ee DDT/A2) Mexico City quake patrol tales of heroism, heartbreak · OCJail release program boosted Huntington fire captain lends his expertise 'lo rescuers after devastating earthquake As the buildinp in MeX,iCO City came crashing down virtually all around him, Huntington Beach Fire Capt. Victor Subia dug bis way to within I 5 feet of several children trapped in the ruins of their pre- school. Subia could hear noises from the younasters u be slowly made lus way thro~ the rubble. He ma.oqed to crawl m bis tiny tunnel until be could sec one of the younpten. But that's as close as he could get. "I worked there for 12 hours and all of a sudden I realized it had been 3'h houn since I beard anythina," be said. But no matter bow bard Subia tried, he couldn't penetrate the rub- ble. The next day, when heavy rescue teams were able to lift the debris. they found the bodies of about 2S dead children. StruahnJ to keep his emo tions in check. -Subaa said be was prepued peycholC)lically to do what wu oeoessary to save the younptcn if he were to tulCh them -even 11win1 off thdr arms and lep ifthat would free lhem from debria. Subia. 42, wbo put in for vacation time to 10 to Melli«> O ty to help out an rncue efforta. related stories of heroism and hea.rtbra.k after h1s return to Huntington Beach this week. On one occasion. Subia said he stood within several feet of Mexican President Miguel de La Madrid who wa' threatened with stonimt by angry ROBERT BARKER NEWSMAK[R S survivors who had h~ rumo~ that he wanted to demo!Ah a budding where victims had been trapped alive. "They were note10 n<>1e and there was no doubt in my mind what woutd happen," Subia said. But the threat was averted when the buildina was spared. In another teet1on of Mexico C1ty. people we~ t~ppcd an a. buildJna. Nc&tby wu dnvcn ru in to pull them out. But they never returned. They were tra~. too, he SI.id. Subia a nauve of Los Anaeles who 1a1d he iost relatives an the disaster, saw blood stains on the s1de~alks at the Juarez Hospital where relatives had ~n tnjured themselves while kneeling to pray. The hosp1tal was npped by the quake. he said, and about 700 people were missing an the debns. There were reports, he said. that several babies had been bom af\e~ the death s of mothers. Subia, who slept m the patio of the MeJf.ico City fire station -no overhead roofs were for him -acted as the liaison for Mexico City Fare Chief &nato Peru Gonzales and earthquake rescue teams from Amen-ca. France. England, Germany. Morocco. Algeria, Peru and other nations. He was made an offi cial senior officer Wlth the Mexico C'ity Fire Dci-ttment Soon after h15 amval 1n Mexico. Sub1a made a call to Huntinfl: Beach Fire Chief Ray Picard, see · heavy rescue equipment. Picard was able to secure four atr bqs used to lift heavy buildinp from an Illinois company and arranaed air transpOrt. Sub1a said Monday that within 1 V> houn of thetr amva.l, the air bqs ~re Wied by the British l"C9CUC team to SIVC tWO trapPC<i 8-year-otd Jlrlt. While meetma with Picard and other fire department friends, Subia conveyed other fint-hand obterv .. lions of the put disaster in which more than 7.000 died: •A number of Ma~.!;men (Pleue.. I A2) .._ .................... Baa1lJaCtml Beao.la f'tre C.pt. Vlctor l!labla 1111.owa uta Ile won~ ~e rw.e. Tiile wMte one •tcnlft• Illa Mllior omoer nata.. By JEFF ADLER Ol_Dellf,.. ..... In an effort to keep the populatton at the Orange l ount~ Jail within federal coun-mandated guidelines. the Board of upervison has ap- pro\·ed expanding tts <ktentaon rt· lea~ program. Y.hach permits ~rtain people arrested for misdemeanors to be released on their own re'· cognizance Super. 1son \-Oted 5-0 toda) to authonze the Mun1c1pal Coun-run operauon to hire six addmonat detention relea~ offiet'TS at an annual cost of$ I 3.560 "Tbt' detention release unit 1n the Central Mun1c1pal Court has played a pivotal role an our curn::nt pt'O<lessang acttvitaes." Sup("rv1sor Harr1ett Wieder said in rttommendina the prosram be expanded The County Adm1nistrauve Ofticx estimated that tM extra officen will rel~ an additJonal 330 arrestees per month .-ho ware not considered. nsk to pubhc safrty " County Admininrauve Officer Larry Pamsh N1d the cue'* of detenuon release offic:cri bu pown from 3.830 catcs e>er lDYClllptOT'S (.,___.JAIL/A.2) I I I J I . t f I ~rans't panel meets la Irvlae 260 road projocu face Iona delays. If the money i1 diverted it couJd be l'Clhufllod within counties or placed io a common pOt to be used by lhc neediest counties. Commiujoo Chairman Bruce NettaDde II.id Monday be e&pecta a betUc between counties that want to keep landtc:.~ monoy and coun- ties that want 1t for their own projects. "From a 11.1teWide penpective, we c:u'l put money into landscapina when the road deficit is 10 enormous," Nettande said. "We've acmeo down to buic prioritict." Nescande said be i1 leanina towasd 1upportina lhe laodlapina money 1~p1 but only if counties already l!Ct*Juled to receive that mooey are &ivcn leeway on bow to spcod 1t. The commiwon wtll meet at the 1rvine Mamott Hotel. A dlff erent perapecdve 8teTen Lollmen of Anaheim takee a look at hl8 car after ~ awar__ ~om the accident on Paclftc Coot IUCJlway in Newport Beach a..n.barmed. Lollm•n told police that a car ran hlm off the ro.d eut of Bayalde Drl.-e and then left the ecene. CRUISE SHIP HIJACKED .•. From A l .. There is no official confirmation," Gurdus said. Israel army radio said in its initial account that its information came from the Christian Voice of Lebanon radio satioo in Beirut.. Israel army radio said the American was lciUed because of delay in opening nego- tiations with the hijackers. The Voice of Lebanon said that in addition to demand.iDJ the release of SO prisoners held ID Israel, the hijackers also were demanding the release of an unspecified number of Palestinians from Italian jails. Italian news 3.1encies quoted the Italian Foreign Ministry as saying the hijaclc.crs were armed and had a large supply of explosives. The Voice of Lebanon said the hijackers threaten- ed to blow up the vessel if any boats carrying armed men approached. The station said a boat with envoys of the Palestine Liberation Organiza- tion was approachin& the ship. In Tunis, Tunisia, the PW earlier today "vigorously condemned and denounced" the hijacking, and de- manded that the hostages be freed. A maritime radio p ickup by San Sebastian radio in Spain said the hijackers numbered 12, according to spokeswoman Trudy Hill, who monitored a conversation between the captain of the hijacked talian ship and a warship from a nation she refuse<l to reveal. Hill said the conversation in- dicated an American man 40 years old was k..iUed. She said the radio pickup indicated Venezuelans, Braziltans, A.rgcntmcs. Peruvians and Spanish were among those aboard. Sixty-seven Amcncan pas.scngcrs who had been aboard the ship earlier, but who got off in Alcu.nd.ria, EJypt.. said that by their count, 11 Amencans still were on the ship. Various sources reported that those aboard included possibly six or seven British women among the ship's crew, two Israelis, perhaps four French citizens, up to 30 West Germans and 26 Swtss. Most of the rest of those aboard. consisting ma.inly of a crew of about 3 50, were I t.alian. Israel radio said initially the ship was beading northeast.. apparently toward Beirut. A maritime radio station in San Sebastian also reported lhat the captain of the cruise ship told a nearby warship it was beading for :Qeirut. A Palestinian terror squad leader named Samir al-Kount.ar headed the list of prisoners whose freedom from Israeli prisons was demanded by the hijackers in excbanae for the ship and passenaen, Israeli officials reported. The officials said al-Kouot.ar was captured after a 1979 raid on the Israeli coast in which two Israeli hostages, a man and his 5-ycar-old daughter, were killed. T he man's widow said in Israel that the publicity arising from the raid made al- Kount.ar a symbol and that was why the hijackers sought his release. A St.ate Department task force was set up in Washington to watch the situation and the Israeli Cabinet met in Jerusalem to discuss the hijacking. The flagsh1 p of the U.S. 6th Fleet, the Coronado. today left its base in Gaeta, north of Naples, accordillf to navy spokeswoman Chief Patncia Hooks. She said the departure bad been scheduled but could not give its destination. Italy's slate-run radio reported Italian warships and reconnaissance planes took off from Sicily and several ships were diverted from the Ionian Sea off the southern tip of Italy to head for the Egyptian coastal area. There was no otTICiilJ confirmation of the report. The Italian military was rcponed placed on alert. The ship docked Monday at Ale.x- a.J1llria and hundreds of passengers got off to tour Egypt. planning to rejoin the ship later in Port Said. The ship embarked for Port Said and was seized at sea. The Spanish station Onda Pcs.- quera, monitoring maritime radio messages, said the captain reported earlier that the passengers and crew were calm and in good condition. Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres said today in Jerusalem that no aovemment has asked Israel to re- lease any Palestinian prisoners. "We did not get any demands. We do not have to answer," be said. U.S. Navy spokesman Cmdr. KendeU Pease said in WashinJton that the United States has miht.ary ships in the eastern Mediterranean, but that he did not know the cruise ship's exact location, and did not know if any American ships were nearby. He would oot comment on whether any American ships wcrc ordered moved because of the hijack- int"""'tian officials said they learned of~: hi~aclcingabout 30 miles west of Port Said m a radio report by the hijackers' commander, who ident- ified bjmself only as Omar. IRVINE EYES EL TORO BASE ANNEX ••. From Al But in a tentative settlement in- volving the county, Newport Beach and two homeowner groups. county supervisors recently rescinded two earlier resolutions that say the El Toro base is not an appropnatc site for a civilian airport. That action alarmed some Irvine officials, who believe it could open the door for eventual commercial flights at El Toro, rcsultins in noise and traffic problems for lrvmc neigh- borhoods. On Sept. 20, the city of Irvine filed su1t in federal court to block the airport agreement and to stop the county from rcscindln$ the El Toro resolu4ons. A hcann.g 1s set for Oct. 21. Col. Shelton said Irvine's annexa- tion letter is being forwarded to Marine headquarters tn Washington, D.C., for study. "The local command must main- tain a position of neutrality m any annexation attempt, so we forwarded the letter without comment," Shelton said. Asked what type of control over the base Irvine could .obtain through annexation, Shelton said, "This is just such an initial st.age. I have no idea what any annexation agreement would say down the line." In 1976, the city ofTustin annexed the ncigh~rina Marine Corps Heli- copter Station. "That has been a very successful annexation," Shelton said. "As a rule, the city (of Tustin) does not come in and niakc rules that apply to the base." Supervisor Bruce Ncstandc, whose dlstnct includes the El Toro base, said today said the base may eventually become pan of Irvine, "but at this point, I do not support 1t." Ncst.andc said the base 1s sur- rounded by too many unincorporated communities that have not decided if they wish to form independent cities or merge with existing cities. Until they decide, the Marine base should remain in neutral county territory, Nest.ande said. The supervisor added, however. that he remains opposed to civ1han or joint use of the airfield at the El Toro base. Nestandc was the lone super- visor to vote against rescinding the resolutions that hsted the base as off limits for commercial flights. DDT FOUND IN COAST SOIL 'OLD' •.• From A l our own mussel watch program, however, that DDT is getting into the water, and we're study10g what we MID do to stop it." State health and environmental officials llavc long suspected that DDT is carried into waterways by runoff from agricultural fields. Last Auaust. state water officials reported th.at Newport Bay produced the hiJ,hcst DDT levels of all areas measured by a st.ate toxic monitoring program. DDT lying dormant in the laborat<?ry tests have delayed aoy soil could ruavc entered waterways conclusions. throuah erosion of channel banks and Schneider said the Food and A&n- the ~ii dlsrup\ion caused by con--ulturc department's conclusion tliat vers1~n of agn~ultur:aJ fields to com-DDT has not been used since tbc mcrci.al and m1dent1al development. 1973 ban is beina treated with Schneider said. skepticism. . In an effort to more accurately "lt could very well be the case." she 1dent1fy tb,e source of the DJ:?T1 th_e said, "but at the same time. we don't water qualaty board has collccu:o soal ~y.-ant to Jive people the imprasion samples to measure pesticide levels. that we're letting our auard down We But Schneider said problems with the juat don't know." · HEROISM, HEARTBREAK IN MEXICO ••• ham A l , became dehydrated and suffered kidney damap bccautc of lack of water. But perhaps more seriously, . Subia said, they ~ wracked with niahtma.ra and emouooal problems atf.e:r bavi111 to stand and watch victim• bum to death bccaute they bad no water to put out firn. • .. Miftd.~" l()li1lics. Subia : S&Jd 90vemment fla t bed t.rUCks ma.de their rounds d1stnbut1na millions of rolls of toilet paper and tortillu to the homeless. •A.rmy troops bavina to u1e force to keep crowd1 away ftom earthquake victim1. "I believe the crowds have lo be kept at least 1,000 feet away. The no11e 11 horrendous. When you are inside a tunnel, you couldn't hear the victims. .. •Tht k.now-how of the Southern c.Jifom1a firefighting team from Oranac and Los Anaelet counties. "They were in tears when they arrived. They couldn't believe the heroica of the people. They alao were real ex~•· Mexican officials ettim1ted 1t would take 12 hours to free victJms in ope the bwldinp. The Southern C1hfom11ream101 ro the Vlctim1 m 58 minutes n I Get out u mbrellas Wedn e s d ay An AIMkan etonn 9Y9lem bMrtnQ down on &outh«n Celttonll9 wtl brtna lnor1 •• d oloudtneee end Mt the atege tor rain W.ctntllday, ttt. Netlonel W•lMI' Servtce Mid. Forecut«1 Mold there wtu b9 a .a percent chanoa of rain tontgttt end w~ In the moun~. deeert1 9f1d 009ttll .,.... Alona the Orenge co.ti It wttl b9 moetly doudy tonight and Wedneacfay with Chane» of lhoMta. HlgN Wec:t.,..y ~to 70 Ovem6oht tow. ae to e2. From PcMnt Conception to the Mexican Border -Inner we-.: 8outtl to IOUthwest wind• 10 to 20 knot• tonight and Wedneedey. 8outhertY ..., .. 2 to 3 r..t. Cloudy with Chanoe of lhower. ton1Qh1 and Wec:tneaday. U.S . TemP8 .. ..,.,,.,, ti ==:'qo.e 71 •1 AftdlonOe .. ,. ....... 70 ,....City • ,..,...,, 13 ....,_. ea ..,,.,.. IOl*ll 74 lllrMtdl 3t ... u loeton 64 .,... t1 c:...,., M ~on.S.C. 70 ~w.v. 10 awton..N.C. t 7 ~ u =::.a 71 71 ~ .. ~Oii. .. c-d,N.H 12 ~Wonl't 12 ~ • 0.-74 o.~ • °""°" • OulUtll .. EI P-17 l'llrtl9nlla 42 l'wgo .. ~Amplde 87 e7 Of.if ... 30 ... 36 63 .. 4J llO 5J • 40 64 ao 30 45 47 18 e1 ~ .. J2 M 5J 41 llO 30 • 52 36 •1 64 3e Ill SI SI 41 87 " 12 13 74 117 ,, .., 78 56 t4 Tt t4 oe 5t M ~ ::~----------a.nt-.-...,.------1,~eo :~ :: Calif. T empe a.n1aMonlc9 n .. n e7 71 4t HIQll, IOw, tor24 hour .. nell!IQ •15 • m 12 .. Btl9'111111C1 78 Ill .. 41 Eln*• 81 48 ., .. f-78 5e 64 4S ~ '4 S2 13 341 1..oe ,.,.... 10 ea eo 41 o.icw.o ee 56 86 lit ,._ AoOM 76 47 .... "-4'1111"' 13 &7 110 ao "'°'900d City 10 u t4 42 "-> .. •2 87 ~~ 75 55 75 83 ~ 16 M 13 86 hn Diego 13 6& 55 lit ... FrWldeoo 87 57 87 57 ..... ler1*9 17 6J 57 44 81odtton 74 M 71 64 Hlgl\, io. tor 24 ~ encltnQ •I 5 p m 37 24 lll6rltow 78 12 e 1 40 8W10C1 77 M 19 ea Blythe ea t3 111 e. Cetellna 18 64 71 17 M~ 73 55 91 48 MontoY1e 78 ea 11 e6 Monterey e2 eo 90 38 Ml Wlleon 64 48 Surf Report Tides llZI IHAN 1·2 POOr 2-3 poor 3-4 POOr •·2 - 2 ... -· 1-3 poor 1-3 POOr TOO&T 11·&7&.m 6:2!1 P·"' u •• Hertfonl e6 33 .....,. 32 111 ....... 87 .. ---------Newporl 8Mcfl 73 t4 Extended =:,,. ~; ~ .. ~_,,., 12:llO &.m 7·43a.m 12142 p I'll "24 pm 03 4 3 27 52 HoftollAu 80 n HcMlofl n .. ... lllPalll 11 llO ..._.., .... 78 48 ~ 15 51 .._ .. 40 ~City 70 ta T wo boys killed in home blaze ~ 74 5' ... 8em«Cllno 12 83 ... Gebttel 76 t3 8enul ~ 78 64 S-.CNz 16 56 9un M1t locley el 8·21 p m . ,,_ w.on.cs.y 111 e:53 a.m end -~ e1e·21p m Moon -today llt 3•30 pm. ...... W~lll 1.S9Lm.,end-~ et 4;0tp.m. WOODLAND (AP) -Two 16- year-old boys died in a house fire early Tuesday, officials said. night at the home of Paul Donis while Dorris' parents were out of town. Jeffrey Germain was spending the Both appeared to have died from smoke inhalation. EARTH MOVEMENT CRACKING HOMES ••• From A l questionnaires were malled to 927 households in the tracts north of the San Diego Freeway. Nearly all the damages were re- ported in the Grecnbrook and Mesa Woods neighborhoods, the tracts closest to two major construction projects suspected of causing the land movement.. City-contracted soils expert Arij Poonnand is investigating theories . that excavations for the I 8-acre South Coast Plaza annex and for a large apartment project drained ground water from beneath adjacent neigh- borhoods, causing the land to settfe. Poormand, however, reported the area contains a shallow layer of "perched water," moisture-filled silt and sand that is prone to expanding and contracting anyway. He warned that other factors ma'y be causing the movement, such as ovcrwatenng lawns. City Planner Perry Valantinc said markers will be placed within the next two weeks in the yards of 21 b<*les to measure the ground movement. Additionally, monitoring equip- ment will be insen ed up to 30 feet deep to find out which direction the ground water is moving. LOTTERY SET UP IN HB ••• From Al addresses on a mailing list he had obtained. Several of the addresses o'n the list were for police officers, including top- ra.nlcing administrators. Police got in touch with California St.ate Lottery Agent Wayne Mackley and obtained a warrant to search Hard's resi- dence at 17372 Zeidcr Lane. They found lottery pa.ra- phcrnalia and a minimal amount of money when they entered the home at 7 a.m. today, Bergstrom said. Bergstrom said police plan to go to the District Attorney to press misdemeanor charges against Hard for allegedly oper- ating an illegal lottery. In the fflcr to prospective bettors, Hard allegedly made inferences that his "miru-gamc" lottery contest was associated with the authorized California State Lottery, according to Bergstrom. He also allegedly said that now that the state lottery is legal, all lotteries are legal. Lottery officials told pohcc, however. that Hard is not an authonzcd dealer nor as- sociated with the California lottery, that all lotteries arc not legal and that they can't be conducted by mail. YOUTH SAVES TWO FROM BB FIRE ••. From A l Attencio then entered the singlc- family home to help the older woman. Smoke was so thick he could hardly sec, Attencio said later. But he manqed to get behind the woman and pushed her to safety through the door. The woman suffered second and third-degree burns, according to fire officials. She was taken to nearby Lake View School where she was airlifted by a Life Flir.ht helicopter to the bum ward at UCf Medical Center in Orange. The little girl, and her aunt. Cindy Hendley, were ta.ken to Humana Hospital of Huntington Beach for treatment of congestion and smoke inhalation. Another occupant.. Cindy Hen- dlcy's son, Jusun, was not injured. Cameron and Mary Hendley. Crystal Hcndlcy's parents, also rn1dc at the home but were away at the time of the blaze. officials said. An unidentified HuntingtOn ~ch firefiJtiter suffered a back in1ury fighting the blaze. JAIL RELEASES •.. Cause oft he fire, which broke out at about 8:40 a.m. and was extinguished in about 15 minutes was not de- tc rm in cd. fjrc department spokeswoman Birgit Davis said. It caused about $85,000 damage to the structure and contents of the home near Warner A venue and Newland Sttcct. F rom A l annually in 1980 to 4, I 11 per in- vestigator in 1984. "Dentcntion release proposes reaching another I 0,000 cases not currently investigated due to lack of staff," Panish said in a memorandum to the board members. "If the curTCnt release rate of 40 percent of investip - tions continues, an additional 330 arrestees could be released per month." During 1984, 6,275 people were released on their own recognizance whjlc the detention release· team modified bail in l 0,389 other cases. Detention release officers arc as- signed by the Municipal Court to investigate the back.rounds of people arrested for misdemeanor crimes as Just Call 642-6086 they are being booked into the overcrowded main J&il in Sant.a Ana. If an arTCstec meets very specific criteria, the detention release officer is authorized by the court to release the person on his own recognizance or reduce bail. The officers, usually former police officen, "evaluate each defendant's attitude, character. personal and community ties to determine P-fOt>- ability of court appearance if re- leased." accordina to material sup. plied to supervisors. The officer also attempts to verify financial and employment data sup. plied by the inmate during the personal interview conducted with each arrestee. Debate tn water board race set Orange County incumbent Donn challcnaer Patricia candidates forum Cost.a Mesa. Water District Hall will face Aynes durina a Wednesday in Hall, who also serves on the Costa Mesa City Council, is seck..ina to retain is water board seat in the Nov. S balloting. The forum will begin at 7:30 p.m. at the Mesa Consolidated Water District headquarters, 965 Placentia A vc. Wltat do yoa like about tbe Dally Pilot? Wltat don't you like? Call tbe aamber at leh ud yoar mesu1e wlll be recorded, transcribed and delivered to dte appropriate editor. Tiie same U -ltoer uswerto1 service may be used to record letters to tbe editor oa any toptc. Coatrtbators to our Lette" rol11mn must lochade tltelr Hme ud telepltoae aamber for verification. No clrculaUoo call•, plea1e. Tell ua wltet's on yoar mind. Clrculetlon 71UMZ.asl D:J= ORANGE lilly Pilat c ........ ~ 714/M2-81'11 COAST AM ottMW dlpert"*'te 142-4321 le GU91entMd MAIN Ofl,lCI MoncMy t ''°"" " '°" 00 Kwen Wittmer l30 Wwl .. )'SI Cotta -CA "°' -your oeoe< b'J' t.14111 eoor-So• 1580 Coe1e ...._ CA 92G?t S 30 p m Clll Oelot• 1 p m Publlthef encl ~ e«>v .,.. oa Copyt>llf" 19U 0r .. 709 C:0.1 ~ c;o.._.., ~ --f'CI -ttonee -....raltona 9dl!Of1el "Niii« or .a..1- S.!l#!My " Sunoly ~ Prank Zlnl RoMma,Y Churchm en ,.,.,,., • ..., mev oe rep.~ w!thOoJI llC*>illl I* 1">11 oo 1101 ,.,.._ rev (dttOf Controller miMloll ol COO'(flglll -COCy t>y I • m ca• blffot• 1 O • m eno yw cocy ..,.. 9econo C4-poe~l)A!d ., Coel• ....... C.llomia oa~..i Robert L. Cantrell °°"8W L. Wllt&MM C Uf'I I U IOO) lop! oO" t>y carr• lb 2& monlhly Clrcui.tlon Production Clrculatloo Dy -· S 7 00 IT'IONNy T1l1~ M1nager Merntger "" Orllt'09 c-Oiilly PllOI Wiit\ wr.:tl .. ~ Ille ~::-+. ~ ~ ... 0r.,.. C°"'4 ~ "'°"' ....., ... ~ ~ ..... .....,,.. ... MWwd ~ How.cl ....... ,..,, ~~,..._.......,.~ Or11nge Covnl, ~ :-:::~'*"" ... U>W. ,.,_ ...... M11keting Olrect°' Clauln.d Director '-'""""'Olcllll Co.ta "'-~~ l~'°9"" ---VOL 7' NO. •1 ' College Night set for Harbor High CoUeic-bound juniors and seniora are invited to at?tcnd ~II~ Ni&ht Wednesday evenina in the Scboys and Sirls ayms at Newpon Harbor Hiah boot. The event is scheduled from 7 to 9 p.m. and lS sponso.red by the Newport Harbor and Corona del ~ H1&h School PT As. It will provide students and ~e1r ~nts with the opj)Onunity to obtain mfonnatJon on the schools of their choice. Amona the schools to be represented this year arc Briaharn young, Dartmouth, Gcoraetown, Harvar~/Radchffe, Nonhwestern, Smith, Southern Methodist, UCLA, the University of Chicaao and Vassar. Chamber plan• LB maer The Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce will bold its October mixer from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m . Wednesday at l....as Brisas Restaurant on Pacific Coast Hi&hway. A happy hour of food, m usac and prizes will be featured and there will be a no-host bar. A donation ofS3 will be asked from chamber members, $5 from the general public. Utlllty meetbJg slated Cos~ Mesa ~idents are invited to a speciaJ community meetJng Wednesday on public utilities in the city: cable television, telephone, water, sewer gas and electricity. ' The session. sponsored by the city Chamber of Commerce, will begin at 11 :30 a.m. at Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club, 170 I Golf Course Ori ve. The SI 0 fee includes a buffet luncheon. For more information, call lhc chamber at 650-1490. Women set tar tal k Marilyn Blake oflnvestmcnt Tax Strategies will be the guest speak.er at Wednesday's meeting of the Women's Business Network in Costa Mesa. The session is scheduled for 11 : 15 a. m. at the Golden Truffle Restaurant, 1767 Newpon Blvd, where the organization meets each Wednesday. For reservations, call 642-3231 or 496-6627. Foot care lecture slated Irvine senior citizens will hear podiatrist Dr. Alan Weiner speak on proper foot care Wednesday at I 0:30 a.m. at Nonhwood Community Parle, 4531 Bryan Ave. No reservations arc necessary and aJI ages arc welcome. Transpon.ation for older adults is avail- able upon request by calling the Irvine Senior Center at 733-1055. Bloodmobile In Newport The Red Cross bloodmobile Will be at lhe Ncwpon Harbor Lutheran Church, 798 Dover Drive. Newport Beach, today . Blood donations will be taken fro m 2:45 to 7:30 p.m. Call 548-3631 to make a reservation to donate. Sale, social ln CdM The South Coast Alumnae Club of Pi Beta Phi will bold its annual Arrowcraft sale and sociaJ Wednesday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Sherman Gardens, 2619 E. Coast Highway, Corona de! Mar. The saJc will raise funds for the club's many philanthropies. The public is invited. Seminar on anger at Y How to deal positively with anger will be discussed Wednesday at a free seminar offered by the Center for Family Counseling at the Ncwport- Costa Mesa YMCA. Therapists John Taylor and Barbara Royal will explore the complex issues of anger and its positive effects at the 6 p.m. program. Reservations are required and may be obtained by calling 642-8380. CALENDAR Tuesday. Oct. 8 No meettn11 1clledaled ----. -....... _ - Or8ng9 Cou1 DAIL V PlLOT nu.cMy, October 8, 1115 * A.I .,.., ......... .., i.. ..,_ Newly named to the 2 -year-old Newport-ce>eta Bowley. Ralph Rodheim, Dick Obmert, ltd lleu Senice Club Ball of P ame for eernce to their Kohlmeier. Roy llcCardle; and , eeated, Jim Perry, communltlee are. top row, Pred Owen a, Gordon Dean ReaYle, Lee Pawluk and Prank Pine. 10 top service club members enter Hall of Fame at YMCA By TOM WRIGHT Of .. .,.., ......... The first woman and nine men were inducted into the Newport-Costa Mesa Servi~ 9ub Hall of Fame Monday. This is the second year service club members have been recognized for thctr contributions to their clubs and communi- ty. The HaJI of Fame is based at the Newport-Costa Mesa YMCA. New inductees include Lee Pawluk Soroptimist Club International, Irvine; Gordon Bowley, Rotary Club of Costa Mesa; Edward J. Kohlmeier, Exchange Club of Newport Harbor; Roy McCardlc. Costa Mesa K.iwanis Club; Rjchard "D!ck" Ohmen, Sunrise Exchange Club of lrvmc; Fred Owens, Costa Mesa K.iwanis Club; James "Jim" Perry, Corona del Mar Kiwanis Club; Frank Pinc. Newpon Center Kiwanis Club; Dean Douglas Rea vie. Ncwpon-Balboa Rotary Club; and Ralph Rodhcim, ExchaJlie Club o t lrvmc. They jom 1984 Hall of Fame members: James Ballinger, Orange Coast Lions; Lewis W. Dinger. Costa Mesa Rotary; George Hammond, Costa Mesa North K.iwanis; Norman Von Hcrzcn, Exchange Club of Newport Harbor, Hal Moloney, Sunnse Exchange Club oflrvanc; and Clair Nelson, Costa Mesa Kiwanis. The Newport-Costa Mesa YMCA also recognized three 1985 area service club projects, nominated by individual service clubs and judged by their respective city councils. The projects were Judged on their benefit to the community. Those selected for honors were. Costa Mesa K.iwaois Club Nonh's for joining With the Share Our Selves group an providing food and toy baskets to needy families in the city. Forty-one club members assisted and the cl ub spent S 1.200 on food and toys. Ncwpon Balboa Rotary Club for ra1smg funds to install 46 Lifelines -an emergency medical alarm tied to Hoag Memorial Hospital. The alarm system enables senior citizens. the handicapped and convalescent people LIVlng at home. to receive emergency reponses from the hospital. Soropt1m1st Club of Irvine for host10g an annual Picnic for the Developmentally Disabled. The affair involved 145 de- velopmentally disabled youths, their fam- ilies, Hi-Hopes, Discovery Twtrlcrs. the U.S. Manne Corps. Phoenu House, the lmnc Police, lf'Vlnc Youth Scrvu::cs and 31 club members. About 84 service club members attend- ed Monday's HalfofFamc luncheon at lhc Ncwpon Beach Mamon Hotel. Photos of the new Hall of Fame members will be placed in its display at the Ncwpon-Costa Mesa YMCA. Beckman donates $40 million for campus research institute Irvine man's gift to University of Illinois wt~l finance institute focusing on human brain and computers By U.e .A.soclated Prets URBANA. Ill. -Because of an lrvanc man'sgenerosity, the University ofllhnoas will build a $50 million research anst1tutc where scientists from many fields will focus on the processes of the human brain and how they might apply to computers. Their work might lead to a better understanding of how learning occurs and how machines can be made to learn, developments an medicine and factory automation, more powerful computers and improved air-traffic control. univer- sity officials said. The institute was made possible by a $40 million git\ by Irvine industnalist Arnold Beckman. believed to be the largest git'l by an and1v1dual to a public university. l rr officials said. The mstitutc will contain two units. The Center for Matenals Science. Com- puters and Computation will focus on the physical sciences. Research will include complex integrated clcctronacs. and artifi cial intelli2cncc in computers. The Center for 81ology. BchaVJor and Cogniuon will focus on the hfc sciences. Work wtll mcludc trymg to determine how genes control hvang.cells. how nerve cells transmit infonnation to each other. and how they are organized so people can think. The governor. state lawmakers and ~nivcrsuy officials 101ned Beckman and his Wife. Mabel. at a news conference to announce the Beckman Institute for Advanced Sc1cncc and Technolo8) Construcllon 1s ex.pected to begin ncx.t )'Car wtth the anstJtute opening an 1988 The state pledged SI 0 m1l11on to help get construction stancd. Beckman. 85. 1s founder and chamnan of Beckman Instruments Inc .. an Irvine. a major manufacturer of sc1ent1fic instru- ments He said he packed llhno1s because he wanted to repa)' his. alma mater. and "because m-. roots arc here ·· Beckman 1s a native of Cullom and attended llllno1s an the earl;. 1920s. In add1t1on. he ..aid ... This was the anst1tut1on that had the Potential to be the leader" Frustaci suit filed against doctor Fertility drug which produced septuplets said improperly used By SUSAN BOWLETI' Of .. ...., ....... Four days after the laat survtVlOI sepruplet went home from an ~ County bospual, a Los Anaelca attorney filed a Supenor Coun lawsuit today apinst the doctor who adminUt.ered fcnility drugs to Patti Frustaci. In addition to Dr. Jaroslav M.arik, the Tyler M~ical Oiruc an West Los Aaatles is named m the lawsuit filed by attorney Browne Greene on behalf of Patti and Samuel Frustact. Greene Slld the Frustacis' medical bills have already exceeded $1 million in connection with the landmark multiple birth an which onJy thrte babies survived. The Frustacis became national cclcbnties May 21 when Mn. Frustaci p ve birth to the first reported scptuplets in lhc United States. The 30-year-old En&lash teacher learned she was pregnant an fanuary, but did not know unul late March, when she under- went ultrasound tests, that she wu carrying seven fetuses. She had been tak.ang the fcnility drua Pcrgonal for three months. The seven infants, 12 weeks premature, wcrt de- livered by Caesarean section. One was sullbom . and three others died later. Greene said the suit alleges "the im- proper use of fertility drugs and the lack of monatonng the consequences and medical condillon With the use of these drugs prior to conccpuon ... Retrial sought in MacDonald family slaying From staff and wlre reports RICHMOND. Va. -Mishandled cv1dcncc and post-tnal confessaoos could prove that former G reen Beret doctor Jeffrey MacDonald, a former Hunungt.On Harbour rcs1dcot. did not murder tus wtfc and two daugbtcn at Fort Bragg, N.C.. 10 1970. his attorney told a federal appeals court Monday. "The pTosecuuon never proved that MacDonald com matted this cnme." Brian O'Neill said in urgmg a three-member panel of the 4th U.S. Circuit Coun of .\ppeals 10 vanr his client a new trial. But .\ss1s1.an1 U S. Attorney Bnan Munaugh said a new tnal would simpl) reaffirm that MacDonald "was conVlctcd be'ond am reasonable doubt." MacDonald was convicted by a federal coun JUI') an Raleigh. N .C.. in 1979 of fa1alh stabbing and bludgeoning his prcanant v.1fc. Collette. 26. and has daughters. K.Jmberl~. 5 and K.nstcn, 2. He has insisted the sla ymgs were committed b' a band of drug-crazed h1pp1cs v.ho 1.n"aded his apartment and chanted. ".\c1d is grooV); lcall the pl~." The case received renewed attentJon m 1983 With the publication of the best· selling book "Fatal Vision:· which was subsequent!\ made an to a tclcv1s1on m101- s.cncs. Mac Donald. 41. 1s servmg thrtt con- sccuu' c hfc sentence!> an a federal pnson an Bastrop, Texas His conv1ct1on was reversed b) the 4th L' S. C1rcu1t Court 1n 1980 on grounds he had been denied a speed) tnaJ. But that ruling was ovcnumed b) the U.S. Su· prcm<' Court Former ballplayer Sudakis faces county cocaine rap Coast Plaz.a parlung lot Monday. • • • A $200 camera. $30 travel bag. and five wetsuits valued at $780 were reponed stolen from a RGK Water Contact Equipment store. 2121 Placentia A vc .. Sunday night. P'oantaln Valley deadl~ v.eapon. Newport Beach A. S 1.000 typevmt<'r was rcporttd stolen from the la"' fi9'1 of .\lien. Matkins. Leck. Gamble. and Mallof'\ 3 C1v1c Plaza. over lht' wttkcnd • • • Police reponed 13 break-ms over garage of a horn<' 1 n the 7 300 block of Corsican over the weekend • • • 4. S.:!50 safe conUUnanJ $500 in Jt'well) and a com collect1on valued at between S6.000 and $8.000 was reported stolen from the unlocked garage of home 1 n the 9100 block of MC'dltcmmcan Monday afternoon. By STEVE MARBLE Of .. ...., ........ Bill Sudakis, a former infielder for the Los An&eles Dodaers and the Anacls, bu been ordered to appear in municipal coun in Westminster Oct. 16 on cocaine cbaraes. Sudakis, free on SS0,000 bail, could be sentenced to six yea.rs in prison if convicted on charaes of posseuina and offerina to sell cocaine, accordina to Deputy Di1trict Attorney Jim BrooU.. The former major leaaue ballplayer, who now lives in Hunt- 1AC1&D&Beach Mi10Cl1ancou1 items wonh an ctti- mated S 1 900 were stolen from a Miramar Street, the victim told poUoe Monday. • • • Nikon camera equipment - valued at Sl,40S -and $7SO cash wu reported stolen Monday from a 01viota Drive reaidenoe. • • • Nearly $200 of mcrcha.ndise "' stolen Crom 1 South Coat Hiahway bualnesa. the victim• told polioe Monday. • • • Police armted two motorists Mon- day on 1uapicion of drMna under the Influence of alcohol. CUundra 0 . Robettlon, 37, was anated at 9:30 p.m. on~tb Cout Hiahway. Mila Roche , 32, wu armted at ll:JO a. . on t....,un.a Avenue and \ angton Beach, aJso is charged with carrying a semi-automatic firearm, said Brooks. Sudakis, 39, was an infielder and catcher for the .Dodaen from 1969 to 1971. He played for the A.nfcls in I 97S and bad brief stints with the New York Yankees, New York Mets, Texas Ranaers, Qeveland Indians and Kansu City Royals, ac:x:ordina to record books. He and another man, identified u Theodore Earl Turin.a. 27. were arrested Sept. 27 in Westminster by HunfiDlton Beach police and Ora.nae South Cout Hif':al· Three other motorists were ar- rested earlier on the same clwJe. John Oft:aory Stawiclci, 23, "' UTetted at 2:07 a.m. Sunday on Mountain Street and South Coast Hiahway. Tbonw Patrick J.cbon, 27, wustoppedat 2:20a.m. Saturday on North Coat Hifbway, near Sunshine Cove. Enc Howard O'Conner, 2A, wu anntcd at 12:42 a.m. Satu~r. ~t Irvine Cove on Nonh Cout Hiahway. lniD• A man drivina a white Toyota p1ckup truck~¥ stole S~. I 0 In lllOline &om 1 ICfVlOe ttatJon 1t 14446 Culver Drive Mooday ~ nina. • • • A TV and a 1tereo equalizer~ County Sheriffs deputies. Authorities claimed the y purchased SI, 700 wonh of cocaine from Turina and later confiscated 2.2 pounds of cocaine wonh $200.000 at a Huntinaton Beach residenoc that Turina and Sudakls both listed as their address. Brooks said both men we~ armed and that a small amount of oocainc also was found in Suda.leis' car. Both men used property to S«ure a bond for their releuc from jail. Brooks said. Suda.leis' bail was re- duced from $$00,000. ~PQrted stolen from a borne in the 400 block of Deerlield A venue Mon- day cveniq. • • • Eiabt Loa Anacles Rams llcket.1 valued at S 168 wctt f'el>Ortcd stolen Monday from a borne 1n the 17400 block of Arm1tton1 A venue. . '. C.asb totalina S 1,200 was reported stolen from the safe at Niapra Dinkina Water, 17842 Cowan. Mon· day. • • • A red Schwinn beach CNJICT bicycle was rq)Of1ed stolen &om in ftont of a tchool at $9 Ea&)ic Run Monday The bike wu rq>0rtcdly won.h between UO aM $200. c.. .... A $74~ car stereo system was l'tpor1a1 IU>len from I while J 974 Volkswleen 8\aaputcd an the South A resident in the I 0300 block of Slater A venue reported that while he wa_s on a busmcss tnp last week someone stoic one of the tires off his maroon 1985 Nma n Maxima parked in front of his home. The loss was estimated at S375. • • • A stereo. a TV set and a video cassette rccorder.L worth S 1,500. were reponed stolen rrom a borne in the 9200 block of Anson River Sunday niant. • • • A SSOO car stereo was reported stolen from a black 1984 Volkswqen Rabbit J)&f'kcd 10 front of a ho me 1n the I OlOO block of La Hacienda Sunday niaht. 8oath Coa.nty Jewelry valued at $980 wu ~ ported stolen lut Md from a San Juan Capistrano home in the 26400 block of Paueo San Gabriel. Polioe f'Cl)Ona said the thief enkf'ed 1.hrouah an optn door. • • • AS 1,000 pair of eamnp and a $200 watch were ~rted stokn from a Ll&una Hilla home in the 2SOOO block of De Salle Tbunday. • • • A supcrvitor at 1 J H.E. COMtruo- tion site at the coroer of t.auna Woods and Ambelwood ln t....,una Hilh reponed Tbunday that an u - employce uaauh.ed tum with a . 22· caliber bandp.n. The victim tok1 police that the 1uipcct was upeet over a pa~heck that didn't clear the bank 0.Vld Wheeler, 3~. was subeequcnll} anuted on susp10on of auault W'\th a • the weekend at an office building at 3737 Bi~h St. Although notb1ng was rcponed stolen 1n 10 of the break-ms. m three of tht' mCldcnts, computer equipment .. atued at $4.590. a type- wntcr vaJued S850. rwo radios valued at S 100 and two table lamps valued at $400 were reported stolen • • • A black IQ85 Po~he 91 ISC con· vertiblc was rcponed stolen Monda' from a publlr garaae at lOO Caine) Lane The car wa5 rcponedl) worth $45.000 Ban~n ch Four wliec covers valued at $300 were reported stolen from 1 196Q Mercedes parted at Murdy park Monday evenma. Ir •• Someone reportedly stole clectn cun's tools ''alued at S200 from thr • • • .\resident an the 300 block of Coral Reef reported Monday that 1 thief broke tntO her home three weeks 110 and stole three gold nngs layma by the JI CUZZl The loss was estimated at S l.040 • • • .\ wallet. cred11 cards. a chC<'kbook and a camera lens. worth $300. were rcponed stolen from a 1972 Mc~ 459SL parked an the prage of a bomt' in the 21600 block of Brook.hunt lrttt unda~ Police reports wd the c•r and the prut' were unlocked Ir •• " SI. I 00 ,,dco cassette rtt0rder. a S500 co m collection and $300 1n Jtwelr;. were reponed stolen from a homr 1n the 8400 block of Modale Suoda) Pohcc reports wd the thief forced open lhc praac door to pin entn Bandi t gets lottery tick ets Poboe 1n Hunt1ncton Beach were le&l'Cluna today for a b&ndi t detcn bed U Dlot loolun& and clean<ut who mack off wath $400 worth of lottC1) tJckets from a local card and 11f\ shop Hununaton Beac h police apokeswom.an JoAnne Bel'Jltrom teld the theft OC'C\lrTed abonly after noon Monday wbC't'I a man came into Royal( Pal&f Cards A G1ft:s on Atlanta "venue and bouaht a lottery tJckct from the store owner .\t\cr complcmcnt1na tbe OWDC1' on tht' wa~ 1elcct1o n of metebanci.ia in the shop. the man uked if be ooWd have tome empcy boua to ux for matltna. Befptrom MJ4. Wben the owner ~turned from lbe beck room with tbt boxes. the man WU fOOC: and IO were 400 of lht lottery ucrcu. TM wapcct a delcribed as about 26 yan old, 5 fee\. I I llllQa tall. waahiftl I 70 pounds. and baYlQI sbon. black hair I ( I I -Qt'ange Coelt OAtLY PILOT/Tue.day, October 8, 1&85 ~ ··High-r ise offi ce fire does ~$20 0 ,000 d alllage in LA LOS ANGELES (AP) -Aarncs enaulfed oftkea on the 21 at floor of a Wllahire Boulevard hiah-rise and cauted S2SO,OOO damage before firc- fiahten extinauished the blaze. -Windows shattered from the 10- ten1e beat, showering the street below with aJasa, as flames licked from three office windows Monday night at the 30-ctory Equitable Life Building aaou the street from the Am- ba.uador Hotel. More than 180 firefighters and three helicopters l"C$ponded to the ~tcr alarm fire, wbach was put out 1n 50 minutes. city fire spck.esmao Larry Ford said. An unidentified security guard wiu taken to County-USC Medical Center for treatment of smoke inhalation, Ford said, but the injury was de- scribed as minor. About 30 majntenancc workers were in the office building at the time of the blaze. Ford said. 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The minimum depo:ill is only S'i()() Gt>nt>rally, the higher the deposil and the lon~er the rerm. the better the rate and the b1AAer the yield Of course, all deposit'> are insured up 10 S 100.000 by an a,tenC) of the Federal Cio,·emment \nd don·1 forget, your depmtL\ are hacked by the strength of a company with more than $7 5 billion In ~IS. For more information. vi it or call your neve.'>t Imperial Sa\ings hranch. or call: 1-800-CHEK-NOW ( 1 -XOO-li.~-5669) • H lmPf!s~!tion "!tot<" ind 1ctm• 'ltht<• 1 "' • h.intct """'""-'' n<.C•<~ '''41tl"un1tAf II< n.111• '•ff urh ... 11fi.lr•"•' • . \Vhere Tomorrow Begins Tr>day ~ .. Newpcm ~nttr 550 ewpon <;enter Dmt \c•wpon Beach. CA 92660-7011 ("7 1,.) 6'H-I .fn I Hranch Manager Sharon ~ R<·r~k<: Videotapes of spy suspect counting money disallowed LOS ANGELES (AP} Videotapes showing Cll-FBI agent Richard Miller counting money can- not be shown to jurors because prosecutors never told the defense team that the tapes cllisted, a judge ruled. U.S. District Judge David Kenyon ruled tentatively Monday that the tapes might have changed the entire defense strategy if they had been turned over as required earlier in the case. "You can't do this to either side at this juncture," the JUdge said ... This would raise a very senous problem in my mind." Miller. 48. the first FBI agent charged with espionage, is charged Wl. 'th passing classified documents ti) his Soviet lover, Svetlana ()gorod- nik.ov, for transmission to the Soviet government in exchange for promises ofS65,000 in cash and gold. One of the tape segments tha Kenyon ruled could not be admitted shows Miller counting money at hi desk. During a special hearing to evalu ate the tape question, prosecutor said five copies of FBI survcillano tapes had been made prior to the star oftnal, and two of those copies wen given to defense lawyers Joel Levin• and Stanley Greenberg. However, Assist.ant U.S. Anorne: Russell Hayman conceded that th1 two copies gj ven to the defense lacke< sections that the government trie< Monday to introduce as evideno against Miller. Instead of those cruciaJ sections the tapes received by the defense hac one minute of a scene from a balle and 10 to 15 m inutes of a blank snowy screen, as well as an advertise ment for a movie. 4th suspect caught in college killings LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two colle$e students might be ahve today ifthearaJl~ed killers had not received probation in a similar case last year. said police, who arrested the "fourth and finaJ suspect" today. On Sept. 30, UCLA student Michelle Anoe Boyd, 18, and Cal State Northridge student Bnan Ed- ward Harris. 20, were abducted near the UCLA campus in Harris' Honda, police said. They were found shot to death Sunday off Mulholland Drive in a field near Interstate 405, the San Diego Freeway. Stanley 8. Davis. 23, Deandre Brown, 21, and Damon Redmond, I 9, were booked for investigation of murder and are being held without bail. Donald Roy Bennett, 2 I , was arrested at his South Central Los Angeles home at 12:05 a.m. today anc booked for investigation of murder said police spokesman Sergio Diaz. All four were identified as gan~ members living in the Firestone arc2 of Los Angeles. Police said Davis, Brown and a third. unidentified individual we'"' involved in an incident that closel> parallels the Harris-Boyd case. In May, 1984, UCLA studen1 David Kingsmill, then 2 1, was leav- ing his car in the Westwood area when three men abducted him at gunpoint. They took him to a field near Mulholland Drive, robbed him, stole his car and left him there, unharmed. Later that month, sheriff's deputies arrested Davis and Brown after they were stopped in Kingsmill's car. city attorney's spokesman Ted Goldstdn said Sizes Qf lottery prize to grow on schedule SACRAMENTO (AP) -Officials say they won't boost lottery pnzes ahead of schedule, even though the first game is outstripping forecasts. The lottery reported late Monday that during the first 97 hours of ticket sales, the gross was $56. 5 million, and 942 players reported winning $5,000. And it assured winners who ac- cidentally scratched off the squares marked .. void if removed ... saying they will get their prizes but it will take a few more days than usual. Lottery spokesman Bob Taylor said the ever-increasing "prize struc- ture for the first three games was approved by the Lottery Commission in public hearings several months ago. The structure has remained the same." The commission adopted. with virtually no changes, the ~e st rat~ developed by its lottery ticket supplier and consultant, Georgja- bascd Scientific Games fnc. Scientific Games' plan for the next 12 months calls for continually greater prizes to be offered as each of the constant "instant-winner" scratch-off ticket games begin their two-month run. Top instant prizes are expected to increase 20 times from the current $5,000 to SI 00,000 by the sixth game. The system is aimed at holding the interest of "decliners," those who participate enthusiastically at first but gradually lose interest ... Yup- pies," or young urban professionals. make up a large portion of the .. decliners," according to Scientific Games. Navy codes conspirator given lOyearsinprison By tllle AHoclatecl Prett SAN DIEGO -A man accused of talung part in a plot to steal Navy secrets and blackmail the Secret Service into buymg them has been sentenced to ten years in pnson. The alleged conspiracy was cracked when someone tried to sell Navy crypto1traph1c cards to a Secret Service agent for S 1,000 and the promise of immunity. Frank Xavier Pizzo II pleaded guilty Mo nday to five federal charges in the case. Defense attorney Frank Murphy requested a two- year sentence for the 19-year-old, who has already served 13 months in prison. U.S. Attorney Joan Weber argued for a harsher sentence. saying Pizzo bad reneged on a promise to cooperate with the government in its investigation. Jn exchange, Pizzo would have been sentenced to no more than five years in prison. When he flunked lie detector tests. however. the deal was called off. Little Rlchard Injur ed ln car crash WEST HOLLYWOOD -Little Richard, the flamboyant 1950s rocker whose bits included "Tutti Frutti" and "Good Golly Miss Molly," was seriously injured early today when his car crashed into a telephone pole, authorities said. "His condition 1s serious but st.able. suffering from a fractured ri&bt leg, possible head injury and a rib fracture. He is conscious." Cedars--Sinai Medical Center spokesman Ron Wise said. It took firefighters 15 minutes to remove the 52-ycar-old singer, whose real name is Richard Penniman. from the wreck.age of his Nissan 300 SX spons car. Marlnett 'tricked lnto fetus burial' LOS ANGELES -The Marine Corps claims it was tricked into participating in the controversial burial of 16,000 fetuses. saying it was told the military color guard was needed for the burial of a Vietnam combat veteran. "They lied to us," Marine Warrant Officer Chuck Henry said Monday, a day after a araveside service for the fetuses which had been the subject of a three· year court battle. Jeanette Dreisbach, coordinator of the service, said, "We told them that it was a funeral for babies, unnamed babies .... We told them all along that we represented this committee (Americans Commotted to Lovina the Unwanted)." Henry contended t.he Marines were told that "at was aOing to be a funeral for an unnamed veteran and there would be a number of dianuarics present. W&have twom~tatementt-from aH th~ Marines thatshe1alkecha." Fuel leak plugged with hand during re.cue SACRAMENTO -A national auardsman plugcd a leak with his hand for 25 minutes after Sunday's eiatu-faclit crash to keep fuel from drippinJ on a car in which two women were tra . Pvt. Keith Roe. 19, was credited Monday by actin.a Sacramento Fire partment chief, Georse Bicker, with helping save the women and rrcvcntma a much worse flrc in the 33-car pile·up on Interstate 5 just north o Sacramento. Authorities blamed the wreck on smoke from • arus fire. More than 40 people were injured. AIDS te.t .aught tor lood wor ken ~AN FRANClsq.>-The city's top ~u~uon official says he wtll consult med1caJ expert• to decide whether school dtstnct employees ihould be a; ven a mandatory AIDS test. Carlos ComeJo, actina pubhc school iupcrinteodent, said Monday that be will propose a comprchcnaive AIDS poliC)' to the school board ~ithin a month that may include a plan for t~tina. The San Fraod1ro Chronicle repcrted Tuetday that ComeJO said his recommcndationa will include a proposal to test food handlers and possibly othen amona 8.000 employees . .. . .. Court will rule on affirmative action cases WASHINGTON (AP)-With the future of racial preferences an the Amencan workplace at stake, the Supreme Cou.n began its 1985-86 ter,m Monday by agreeing to decide a pair of affirmative action disputes. The C<?Urt set .the stage for what could be its most important decisions on ~cial equality of the 1980s by agreeing to study cases involving firefighters in Oeveland and sheet metal workers in New York and New Jersey. At issue in the Cleveland case 1s what emplo~~rs can do in seeking to an~egrat~ their workforce by giving minority m e mbers s pecial preferences. But the affirmative action plan spelled out in the consent decree between city offic1aJs and the Van- guards was challenged by Local 93 of the International Association of Fire-fighters. !he predominantly white union said the plan unlawfully dis- criminates against whites. Court rejects KTLA libel suit In the sheet metaJ workers case the justices must decide whether co'urts WASHINGTON (AP) -The Su- may force unions to adopt fixed flrcme Court has refused to revive a quotas or ioaJs to increase minority be.I and invasion-of-privacy lawsuit me{Tlbership. ~st Los Anacles television station The two cases. to be decided by LA over a "Moneywatch" scg- July, join another affirmative action ment aired eight years ago. The court, without comment dispute already on the court's docket Monday let stand rulings that thrc~ -a case from Jackson, Mich., over out the suit by two businessmen who collectively bargained plans aimed at say their then-fledgling photo inven- protectinJ minority workers. tory business was irre:m'?f\,hanned The high court issued orders in b fi hundreds of other cases Monday. In Yan un avorable K LA-report. other action, the justices: Arthur A. Smith and Michael J. • Rejected the appeal of Rita Lopez had intended to photograph Lavelle, former head of the federal and inventory property in private homes and businesses to facilitate government's "Superfund" toxic police investi11ations and the filing of waste cleanup program, who was I V"" 'f f convicted oflying to Congress. insurance c aims 1 any o the prop- • Agreed to decide in a case from erty were lost or destroyed. Tacoma, Wash., whether high school The two requested that KTLA give their business. Sharp-Eye officials may discipline students who Enterprises. some publicity. Both make speeches filled with sexual men were interviewed about the inn~endo~ but are not legally obscene business, and those videotapes were or disruptive. used as part of a segment critical of • Refused to hear the appeal of a their service. Massachusetts woman who says she A KTLA reporter said the service was wrongly denied custody of her was too expensive and viewers could four daughters because she is a "born pholOJiaPh their own possessions. again" Cnristian. California courts dismissed the .... ,.,,. 72x45 120x45 144x45 48x54 96x54 120x54 144x54 •8x63 72x63 96x63 144x63 48x84 72x84 96x84 120x84 72.95 120x95 144x95 --. -------- BUY TODAY -HANG TODAY Cloeeout lelf·Ltned (A .. 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"•'•Sc. 6 'N-•perf ... , •• 641-5150 ~= (8181 967·•221 • WEST LOS ANGELES 2139 STONER AVE 12131 272·•300 e SAN FERNANDO VALLEV • Said they will decide in the case ensuing lawsuit, ruling that the of an accused Czech spy whether KTLA report represented constitu- people may be forced to testify against tionally protected opinion. their spouses if both spouses aff 1-;==================================================================================================================================-~ accused of participating in a crime Affirmative action -caJled .. re- verse discrimination" by some of its critics -bas troubled American courts for decades. In a landmark 1978 decision, the Supreme Court upheld the use of "race-consciousness" in medical I school admisssions but struck down the use offixed numerical quotas for admitting minority students. In 1979, the court ruled that employers -at lea.st private, non- governmental employers -volun- tarily may give minority workers special treatment in hiring, training and promotion. The court in that ruling said even employers with no proven history of racial bias may offer the special preferences. But those early rulings left to the future any determination of a line of demarcatJon between permissible and impermissible steps to help eliminate vestiges of past rac1aJ discnmination. The Reagan administration, an outspoken opponent ofraciaJ quota.s, wants the court to limit aJl affirmative action plans to helping people who personally have been victi ms of discrimination. Most such plans now are not aimed at finding individual victims of bias but instead target minority groups that traditionally have been under- represented in certain jobs. ln the Oeveland case granted review Monday, a federaJ judge issued a consent decree in 1983 that calls for about haJf the promotions in the city's fire department to go to qualified minority candidates. The Vanguards of Cleveland, an association of black and Hispanic firefighers, had sued over alleged raciaf discrimination within the de- partment. OBITUARIE S 'Black Jim• McConahy Funeral services were scheduled toda_y for James "BlaclcJim" McConahy of Costa Mesa, who died Friday at Costa Mesa Med1caJ Center Hospital. He was 64. Born in Pennsylvania. M r. McConahy was a retired commercial painter who had lived in Cota Mesa for 25 years. He was a veteran of both World War II and the Korean conflict. He is survived by his wife, Leola; a son, Royal McConahy, and three dauahters -Sharon Israel, Grace Pruay and Robin McConahy. Also surviving are two brothers, Richad and Marvin, as well as numerous arandchildrcn. Services were to be held this morning at the Pierce Brothers Bell Broadway Mortuary Chapel in Costa Mesa. Interment was scheduled at Veterans national Cemetery in River- side. William Harlow Pond . A Mass of Christian Burial was 1ehcduled today for WilliarnHarlow Pond of Costa-Mesa, ~ -died Saturday at Fountain Valley Com· munit)' Hospital. He was 62. Mr. Pond. a recently retired elcctri- C1&n, wu born in Chicqo and had lived in the area linoe 1971~ He had worked for Macfarlane Electric. A Navy veteran of World War II, Mr. Pond was a radioman and also wu the featherwciaht bo'Xin& clwn- pion ofthe European Theater. He Is survived by his wife Marpret, and two aons, Martin Pond bf Costa Mesa and James Pond of Fullenon. 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CA 42~bl°' 1 7 14 1754-11"\~ 1 I J Senate warned, nation insolvent WASHINOTON (AP) -Tbe Re- .._ ldminl1tratioo warned tbe Seo· ate teday that aovonunent checks will belln boundQa tometime Wcdnea- day unJea the lawmakers restore Uncle Sam•a borrowina power, Sen- ate ~ority Leader Roben Dole aid. Dole, who conveyed tbe wanuna to tbe Senate said the Treasury was ;u,,llna its \x;;u to maintain solven- cy tnto Wednesday. uwe·rc advised today by the Treasury that they may be able to avoid default until tomorrow some- time," be said. That may be enoUJh time, he said, for Conpas to oeaouate an end to the stalemate that bas blocked action on a bill raisin.a tbe national debt because of a controvenial amendment d~ si&ned to foiu balanced budgets by fiscal 1991. The aovemment has reached its lepl debt limit ofS 1.824 trillion and, without new borrowmg. will be&in f&lllna about $20 billion a month behind in its payments. The administration. which sup. ports the budaet·b&lancina effort. baa been warnina ofimpendina problems since last last week. But the cash crunch wasn•t noticeable Monday. "The government is •oi:"f, on in an absolutely normal fashion, • said Ed Dale, a spokesman for the Office of Manaaement and Budget. Still, the administration insisted it would soon be out of the money needed to back aovemment checks. "All those with 1ovemment claims -whether Social Security recipients or defense oontJ'llClors or holden of aovemment securities with intemt payments due -would then be unable to have those claims honor- ed," Deputy Treasury Secretary Rich- ard Da.nnan said Monday. Dole wu meetinJ with GOP sena- tors and Democratic leaders. seekina an agreement to untangle the Senate lO&J&m before week's end. Aides say Reagan backed secret CIA replacement fund w ASHINGTON (AP) -Facina loss of conaressional suppon for Nicarquan rebels early last year, President Reapn approved a secret pla.n to use assistance from American citizens and U.S. allies to replace CIA funds. CWTCnt and former admims- tration officials say. White House officials chose retired Anny M~. Gen. John K. Singlaub as the chief fund-raising contact and Flexible five-year, lOOlk financing and advised him bow to structure the cam~ within the confines of neutrahty and other laws that bar U.S. citizens from supporting foreign wars, said the sources. White House spokesman Ed Djere- jian refused comment on Reagan's rcponed approval of the plan to go outside U.S. government channels to continue supplyina the rebels figh ting to overthrow Nicaragua's leftist gov- ernment. In the past, the White House has insisted it "neither encouraaes nor discouraaes" the private fund-raising that sprang up after Conr.ss - anaered by the CIA's m10iog of Nicaragua's harbors -refused to continue military aid to the rebels in spring 1984. But government sources, including one senior administration official, • I 11?5% start. You'll qualify for our low rate just by opening a Home Federal checking account and using our annual percentage rate. described the behind-the-scenes White House role in orpnizina and advisina the aid network as much more extensive than bas been ac- knowledaed. The network has allowed the ~bels to continue military operations dur- ing the IS-month cutoff of direct U.S. assistance and circumvent con- aressional efforts to shut down the CIA-supported war. Police guard Farrakhan at NY speech NEW YORK (AP) -Louis Far- rakhan, the fi rebrand leader of the Nation of Islam, uraed an overflow crowd of 25,000 at Madison Square Garden to seize economic and politi- cal power and called for a renewal of pride and righteousness among American blacks. Durina Farrakhan's three-hour speech Monday night, police ringed the square-block Garden, vastly out- numbering about a half-dozen protesters who waved signs from across the street. The controversiaJ black leader has been under fire from Jewish groups and others for remarks they said were anti-semitic. Police Commissioner Benjamin Ward, who is black, had advised protesters to stay away to rob Far- rakhan ofpubhcity, and major Jew1sh organizations urged attendance at synaJogues rather than demon- strattons against him. In his impassioned speech. pep- pered with references to the Bible and the .Koran, the Moslem holy book. Farrakhan took note of the politicians who condemned him 1n advance of his appearance. Glrl sees her own mllk carton photo SALIDA, Colo. (AP) -A 7-year- old girl who spotted her {>hoto on a milk carton d1splay of missing chil- dren has been returned to her father's 'Custody in Aorida. Bonnie Bullock was living with her mother, Vickie Bullock, 28, and her mother's boyfriend when she saw her picture on the carton and showed it to a playmate whose parents contacted police. The little girl was reported missing by her father, Karl Bullock, two years ago and was reunited with him over the weekend. Al'W ,, ala Mudalldea kill 60 Workera cllC throqh the mad and debrla of denatated abantytowna tn Ponce. Puerto Rico, .eektna more Tlctlma of the madalldea and Oooda that killed at f'eut 60 people Monday and left entire toW'D8 cut off. Arafat claims U.S. attempted to ~kill him LOS ANGELES (AP) -Vasser Arafat, blaming the United States for the Israeli raid on his headquarters last week, says he may end his Mideast peace effons unless the Reagan administration will "stop trying to assassinate me," a published report says today. The Palestiman Liberation Or- ganization chairman told the Los Angeles Times Monday that the peace process can proceed only if he receives "guarantees from the presi- dent of the United States ... that the attempt to assassinate me" won't be repeated. During an hour-Iona interview in a closely guarded villa in Tunis, Tu~ nisia, Arafat said the United States was to blame for the Israeli raid against his headquarters in that city Oct. I . Although he said be remains "com- mitted to the struggle for peace," he said the raid forced him to reassess the PLO's panici~tion in a joint peace initiative wtth Jordan•s King Hussein, he told the newspaper. "First of all, I want a guarantee from the president," he said. "I want a clarificatton, a clear answer. Is the decision to kill me still operative?" Intense Beirut fighting ended as truce imposed BEIRUT (AP) -Police said today that a truce ended heavy fiptting between Shiite Moslem milit1amen and Palestinian guerrillas near a west Beirut refugee camp that kilJed seven people and wounded 28. In Tripoli, Syria completed deploy- ment of 1,000 troops and disarmed rival militias in an attempt to keep the keep the peace there after three weeks offighting. Police said most of the casualties in the Shiite-Palestinian fighting that flared for three hours along the southern fringes of west Beirut's Chatilla refugee camp Monday were combat.ants. No breakdown was available. The fighting pitted Amal, the largest Shiite militia, against guer- rillas loyal to Palestine Liberation O rganization chairman Yasser Arafat. A cease-fire called by Berri and the Palestine Salvation Front, a Syrian- backed guerrilla group opposed to Arafat, held through the night into the early morning hours today, police said. Witnesses said Berri and his allies did not call the truce until guerrillas broke out of Cha ti Ila and pushed the militias back about 100 yards. Heavy machine guns and rocket- propelled grenades were used in Monday's hostilities. SurePay system to make your pay- It's really that easy. Because now ments automatically. 1r:=============================~======;;1 Home Federal's new ca r financing And don't forget, we can help you is as flexible as it is affordable . make otqer important purchases, Along with a great low rate you too, with personal lines of credit, can get a good long tenn , up to home equity loans and home mort- five years. And a loan of up to gage loan s. $25, 000 . You can even finance But hurry. This off er ends 100~ of your costs-including tax November 15, 1985. And it could and license. be your last chance to get both the That means you don't need a car you like and a loan you can live trade-in. And you don't have to come with. up with a penny to put down. Noth-So if you've already found your ing could be easier. ~~l~ car, find your way to the nearest Except for the way you pay. ~ y ~ Home Federal Or ca ll toll free Because at Home Federal, ~ ~ 1(800) 554-2626 for inform- it's all taken care of at the ation and an application. •F.xamplt': It vour lot1n lot.11" $1l.OOO, vuur bO monthly paynlt.'nt.., Mt• JU"-l $260 6:3 Offer mav bt> withdrawn at any 11mt'. Lertain rt'~ln1 l1<1n<i applv Credit approval subierl to .;tandard (lUilhhrat1ons cntt>na L.A. cot ·~TY Arcadia 44!l-3220. Beverly La Cienega 652-8562. Heverly Hills 274·6066. Glendale 240·9333. La Canada 790 7111. La T1iera fi70·8626, L A Downtown 625-2099. Larchmont 462·6463, Lawndale 3il ·46I:l. Llll<.oln Het~ht~ 223-1164. Manna del Rey M:l.3·4141. Palos ~rdes 377 ·H666. Playa del Rey 822·2905, Redondo Beach 316-3341 . Turrance 378-1226, Ykstchester 6iO-Ol50, ~st Covma 962 3441. \\est Los Angeles 4i8· 7789. Westwood 474·3503 SAN FERNANDO VALLEY Canoga Park 348-4141. Northndge 360-2326. Sherman Oaks 986· 7401. YtbodJa.nd Hills 703· 1221 ORANGE COUNTY Bolsa/Goldenwest 89!Hl934. Bnstol/MacArthur 979-3600. Fullerton 993· 1200, HuntUlgt.on Beach 536·6511, Huntington Beach. Newland 964-6667. lrvme 854·8121. Laguna Hills 770-7171, Laguna Niguel 495-2880, Newport Beach 640-1634 , San Juan Capistrano 493..()6()1, Santa Arui 1167·2400. Seal Beach 898·3481, Tustin 730-6995 RIVERSIDE Cot TY 1-iemtt 929 104() SAN LUIS OBISPO COUNTY Morro Bay 772-4477. Pa~ Robles 238-5750. Pismo Beach 773-4804, San Lws Obispo Downtown 541 ·2600, San Luis Obispo/Madonna Plaza 544-7111. SANTA BARBARA COUNTY Carpintena 684·4113. Go&eta 964-3571. Lompoc 736· 7502. Montec1to 969-5989, Santa Barbara Downtown 966-1781. S B./Milpas 963-1442, S B./Northside 682·4025, S B./San Roque 687·5546. Santi Mana 922-8481. Solvang 688-8069 VENTURA COUNTY Camarillo 482-4011. 0)31 646-0141, Thousand Oak• 497-9588. \limtura 04~ 11211, '*ntura/Victona 644 897i. 'M-i;1 la~· V1llak't' 496-9500. ' ' • ... \11·1111~ I I"' ll ' Orange County's easy listening radio station KDCM tD!l.t FMSIERED Tunisia crowd hit by gunfire TUNIS. Tunisia (AP) -A Tu- nisian security guard today opened fire on a group of people in the main business district on the island of Djerba, k.illin¥, one and wounding several others 'including some of the Jewish faith ," the official news agency reported. ~ccording to the agency. Tunis Afnque Presse, the attacker "sudden- ly went crazy" and began shooting. The attacker was overpowered and a s~ial_security unit was investigating the inetdent, the agency said. The attack came one week after Israeli aircraft destroyed the bead- uarte!"S ~f the. Palestine Liberation mzat1on in a Tunis suburb .. ng 61 Palestinians and 12 Tu: ru11ans . • 0 , HAPPYI GET 'SNAP ome pictures-of your to shoots per wants home · The ne~spa n d\sp\ay in your lbltS; bttS or t>onr:~ ~e?lll (Q\\eCtlOn 0 net tO shOW off b~~r c.onstrl<.tOU orb \I/hilt This ls your c.ha . See today's classified section for the HINTERIORS" the Dally Piiot contest. ' entry form for HURRY I -...,, -----· -------- INS raids not welcome along Orange Coast 6fficials apprehend peaceful residents at street corners, demanding to sec identitication papers~ commuters~ puUed from buses and ta.ken to detention centers. Once in custody, they are not assumed innocent ~ntil proven guilty; it is up to them to prove their innocence. No, this is not the Soviet Union or South Africa this is Oran~e C?unty in t~e last few weeks. lmmigratio~ and Naturalizat10~ Service agents twice in September conducted rai~s mto Orange County, questioning anyone who did not look American -that means anyone who looked Hispanic. The agents grabbed people on their way to work at bus stops and on buses, gardeners in residential neighborhoods, workers in agricultural fields and at other jop sites and those seeking work at job pickup areas. All told, the two raids netted more than 480 suspected undocumented aliens. !he 400-plus aliens ~mmediately shipped back to Mexico are more than Just a faceless horde in this country illegally. They are men and women who have sold what little they possess to pursue financial security for their families and in some cases to find a safe haven from terrorist killers. They are pursuing the same American Dream that brought our European grand- parents to the United States. The g~stapo-like raids on Hispanic neighborhoods and work ~·~es by border patrol agents are degrading and dehumamzmg to the men and women questioned or taken into custody and are a disgrace in the eyes of Americans who beljeve in the democratic and human rights concepts on which this country was founded. Hispanics in Orange County must constantly look over their shoulders for the emigre and make sure they always carry proper identification. A Hispanic-looking Irvine resident cannot take a morning jog without carrying proof he is in the United States legally. Does his blue-eyed neighbor have this same fear? The sweep on Sept. I 7 included the parents of children attending Costa Mesa schools and the second raid on Sept. 30 netted a pregnant woman and her young American-born child; they were held six hours before the young mother could convince agents she was in the country legally. In the past INS agents have picked up and deported teen-age children who had absent-mindedly left their documents at home. Many people die each year while trying to sneak into this country. Some are killed in car accidents while fleeing from border patrol agents; others die of exposure and accidents in the desert; and some a murdered by bandits that prey on illegal aliens. These people know the risk they talce when they attempt the illegal border crossing, but their dream of living and working in the United States conquers any fears for themselves and their families. The border patrol's raids damage more than the lives of the hapless victims they manage to capture. Southern California's economy also is damaged by the raids. Sweeps in past years hurt Orange County's agricultural industry and recent raids in northern San Diego County forced Del Mar Race Track to close because there were not enough grooms to safely handle the horses. AJiens are not taking jobs away from United States citizens. Ranchers and other business owners say these unskilled and ambitious workers are the only ones willing to take on the back-breaking jobs that domestic workers shun. Nor are undocumented aliens a tax • burden on society. Surveys have shown that workers in this country illegally are too afraid of deportation to apply for welfare or to seek free medical aid. The TNS raids in Orange County are not wanted. The city of Costa Mesa has in the past asked the INS not to make raids in the city and Santa Ana officials criticized the latest raids in their city. Businesses do not want their workers grabbed away at any time; homeowners do want to see their gardeners racing through resjdential street fleeing from INS agents; and no one wants to see multiple freeway deaths that couJd result from a chase by border patrol agents. Opinion• expressed In this ~ are thoM of the De#y Piiot. Other vtew. expreMed on this pege are thoee of their authora and artt.ts. Reeder comment 11 lnvtted. The Dally Piiot, PO Box 15e0, Coeta MeM. 92e26. Phone M2-6086. Residents should settle where incoJDe dictates To the Editor: I must agree with the editorial on September 24 that .. Newport doesn't owe poor a cheap home with view." Wbethcr residents of any beach communjty or any wealthy area work for it or inherit it (or win a lottery!), the fact is they have the money to pay the pric:c and to maintain the hfcstyle. Money is the name of the pmc, not d1scrim1nation. I live in a modest section of an Otanae County aty. Surei !'d like to live in a well-to-do area. Of ooune, I would love to have a bia. spacious ORANGE COAST DailyPillt boUIC. Surei I'd Like to hvc on tbc beach. But 1J cam my riaht to do tha\:.bcn and if I can afford it, and not me a community was forced to make way for me just because I decide that I want to live in one of the most expensive areas of the state and feel 1be community it oblipted to make a place for me. Am r discriminated apinst? No. Am ldeniedhousina?OfClOune noL I simply li-ve where m y income di<> tates! ,,...a.. Ylot To. T811 . .......... ldltot ,,_,.., Cllye.or ~(~ S. WERNER Costa Meta Or.nge CoMt DAILY PILOTIT~. Oc1obet I. 1816 A7 ''As de la Toi re applled a metal fencepost to the head of [Night Stalker suspect RJchardJ Ramirez, he cl earl[ was Jn no mood to cue oltjuat because Ramirez Is a fellow LatJno. • ... Sr lHUH 1c H r W~TU Bn111111 Flying off on wings of s,f t thought It seems as 1f it's only every few days now that the federal govern- ment, vta NA.SA. stans another shuttle into orbit. Every time I read '~ .. AAt> lrt\S,.COM~. \~ Tttt. SO% CUT WC:Rt LOOK\~~~,,, II about a launch into spac:c. I think NightStalkercase helps redeem high court ruling about a long-time friend named George Fnedl. He ltvC1 tn Coron.a del Mar. Maybe 1t was 20 years ago; I h.ave no exact way of keep1Dg a record of ume. Anyway, it was a long ume ago and NASA was having troubles. George. wbo became a fast fnend of mine before he moved to the Orane,c Proves Latinos won't be lenient on other Latinos One of the controversial decisions that come so often fro m the Cali- fom1a Supreme Court has fi naJly been redeemed. But it took a dra- matic event lilce the arrest of the suspected Night Stalker to demon· strate that the court was right. The ruling: Prosecutors may no longer systemau cally ellclude Spanish-surnamed people from juries. Exclusion of Latinos from cnm1nal Juriet trying c.ases involving other Hispanics accused of serious cnmes bas been a routine prosccutonal practice in California for more than 10 years. The presumption of many deputy district attorneys has long been that Lall nos will go easy on other Latinos, making convictions harder to obtain and letting some criminals go free. When the state's high coun made its ruJing in the last week of August. it seemed merely a bit m ore grist for the mill of the anti-Rose Bird c.ampaign Even though Bird didn't wnte Lhe decision. she djd concur tn 1t. And It was wntten by Cruz Reynoso. the court's lone Hispanic justice and one of the three liberal court members whose nonnally routine rc~lection will be severely challenged next faJI. The ruling was a landmark. for ll put limits for the first time on prosecutors' ability to e1r'~de any THOMAS Euas Juror they wish by means of a peremptory challenge without gJving a reason for the exclusion. Now defense lawyers will be able to prevent such peremptory chaJlenges 1f they detect a pattern of systematic elimination of potential Jurors with Spanish surnames. Since Bird and her liberal col· leagues in the court's majonty had already alienated the state's pros- ecutors Wltb a long stnng of dcets1ons many interpret as "pro-cnm1Dal," the latest ruling seemed simply to be more ammunition for their oppo- nents. But then - only three days later - came the arrest of 25-year-old R1ch- ard Ramirez, suspected of being the Night Stalker, a killer who invaded dozens of homC1, murdering 16 Californians and assaulting or raping 21 more. Night Stalker victim s were ethnic.ally d iverse. ranging from a Taiwanese native to whites an an upper-middle<lass tract m Orange County. But most of the victims h ved 1n the eastern suburbs of Los Angeles. Although most weren't Hispanic. the largely-Hispanic populace of suburbs hke Rosemead and Monterey Park was temficd. Neighborhood vigilante ,. Coast. was sent for by the btg shots ID gro~ps were tormed and hundreds of NA.SA. ~tlno subur~nitcs toolc tu ms stand-George d1dn 't tell me this, but the 1ng watch at mitit. fact ts they were )USt tbts side of being When RamlJ'CZ was finalJy ar-franuc. Things JUst weren't work.mg rested. it was principally thr?ugh the out the way they had been projected. cffons of those aroused H1sparucs. George, an upper division elec· The deputy shenff who clamped tncal engineer, had been in the Navy ban~ffs on b1m was also named His Job was .. naval rcsean:h" and. of Ranurez (not related to the suspect). course. you know what that research The ~en who cha~ b1m down bore conSLsted of -figuring out how to S~sh surnames hlcedc la Torrcand make other eflSinc:ers' ideas work. Pinon. Pan of the btg problem was gctung The central po~nt they sec~ed to be tenable contracts from outside sup- maktng was that tt made no diffcrcn~ plies. Another m inor problem was a to them that Ramirez also was difficulty with labor -teaching men Hispanic. As de la Torre applied a and women how to put p1CCC$ met.al fencepost to the head of together and be sure that the pieces RarnU'CZ, be clearly was in no mood would work. to case off just because Ramirez 1s a NASA made George deputy ad- fcllow Latino. miruslrJtor and, after about a year. In fact. the enurc Latino commuru-they t(Ad ham tt would be fine 1f he ty surrounding the East Los Angeles would become the top man. George barrio-neighborhood where the arrest didn't want thaL He wanted to do occW'Ted was so overjoyed at the research -to figure out how to best capture of the Spanish-surnamed dcsllfl the shape of space vetudcs. suspect that a street carnival de-Hi s research uncovered a copy of vetoped spootancoully outside the the agrttmcnt between the Signal police stauoo where the aocUJCd Corps of the U.S. Stat.es Anny and murderer was taken. Wilbur and Orville Wri&ht trading as Nothing could have driven home Wnght Brothers of 11 21' West Third the Bird court's point bener than that Stn:et. Dayt0n, Ob.io. incident: Not only wcrc other His.-Just last summel', after Georgucad panics noc inclined to IO~ on the lb.at I was to Wk to the memben of suspect because be shared thcu ethnic the Oasis lmior citizens group, be cbd roots, they were likely to be tougher a m~ thin.g for me. He gave 11 to me. on him than anyone else wouJd be. The Signal Corps paid the Wn ghu And if Hispanics c.an be tough on the $25,000 to bwld a hcav1er-than~atr Night Stalker suspect. why not also on flying machine That mcluded dmgn- other Hispanics? ang It as well as building It So this 1s on~ ruling that very lilcel) Here are some of the general can't be used agarnst Bird and tier requirements and supulauons. coUeagues. ·· 1. Bidders must submit with 1he1r 'nomas Elia1 la a Sota MoaJca-proposals the followmg; based colamll.lll oe state IH•n. A. DraWlnp to scale showing the -111,f1iii:t;c.u1t1;,1g4.1,t.11w.i---------------- gene,.1 dimensions and shape of the flying machine which they propose to bu1Jd under thJs spcc1ficat1on B. Statement of the speed for which It IS dcsi.gned Mengele may still be alive, despite contrary evidence Some suspect story of his drowning. discovery of bones an elaborate hoax WASHINGTON-In the face ofa U.S. pronouncement that Josef Mengele is dead. we had the tementy last June to suggest that the notorious Nazi war criminaJ might possibly be alive and thumbing his nose at the world. Our suspicions have now been heightened by intriguing new repons. First, let us concede that the evidence of the death-camp doctor's demise tS impressive. Forensic ex- perts have examined some bones from a Brazilian grave and concluded that they arc Mcngele's remains. Their findinp are supponed by letters and other documents provided by Mcngclc's family, plus the testi- mony of those who purportedly knew him ID Brazil. Yet some of our intelhaencc sources still arc not convinced. The medical evidence. they say. is cumulative but not specific. The documents and testimony don't always jibe Wlth other. m o re authoritative evidence. They can't shake off the tantalizing suspicion that the evidence or Mcnaele's drownina in 1979 could have been manufactu~ as part of an elaborate hou to throw off his pursuen. Just u several aovemmcots were closing 1n on Mengele, Wlth m1 lhons of dollars in reward money on his head, the 1979 grave suddenly gave up its bones. The timing was too convenient to satisfy some Mengcle hunters. Besides. they say. he was an accomplished swimmer. Now here are the latest repons. •The Israelis have refused to close their file on Mengele and have sent an cx~rt back to Brazil to rcvtew the evidence. •A source close to the lsraeh in vestigation confided to us that the Israelis have obtained a 1982 letter ID Mengcle's handwriting. If the le tter can be authenticated. he could not have drowned in 1979 •Both Israeli and Amencan 10- telligencc a,enc1cs have p1clced up repons of Mengcle slghtinp in Para- IUAY m the 1980s. The btcst was an Auaust 1984 C IA dispatch that "un- confirmed s.lghunp of Menacle were reported in Paraguayan border cities." •The CIA also learned from mem· ben of Paraguayan dictator Alfred Strocssner's staff that "Mcnacle sent COSTe$pondencc. includina Chnstmas cards. to them from Portupl unul late 1980." He reportedly traveled beck and forth between Portupl and Brazil. JACK AIDEISOI and JOSEPH SPEAR r: k_-.; •Some Israeli authonties, accord- ing to a source who has talked to them. beheve Mengcle 1s ahve toda). hiding 10 Paraguay •SectTt CIA cables. meanwhile. report that Meniclc has been traffick- ing in drup under the alias "Enrique Waldman ·or .. Hennq~ Wollman." THE OMBUDSMAN: A self· styled "Mad Taxpayer" wrote us to complain that the warden of the Federal CorTCctional Institution in Lexmgton. Ky .. was hvma m "regal splendor" after usmg funds for re- decoranna his home that ~ sup- posed to go to the Federal Prison lnduslriC$. A spokesman dented that an_y remodcli04 was be1na do ne, but a pnsoo industncs official. CathenM Morse. told us. "Tbe warden ~ust bad bis home remodeled for S .. 3.442:· paid by pnson industncs. "There really couldn't have been too much repai.r wort needed.·• she said. New drapes cost S 12.000. and the rest went forc.arpetandext.cnorpainung. hd .U.. ... Utl J__,. ~r att ~Id ~rua.Utls. Hospital hunts for right eu phemlsm Out LanaUIF man is appalled by the R:RC>rt tha •One b0tpital s.ubltltutn for the word .. death .. what it thillb 1s a better term: .. ncptlve patient care ouic::ome .. Solar •tdh~ in uotbcr SO yan are eapeaed to provtde tbe ee.nh- around with 24-hout dayljpt What th11 will do to your body clock I do not know. and neither does our Oucf Proanorticator. Costs twtee as mucb to run • vacuum deancr for an hour u 1t ~ to watch TV for an hour So •Y tbolc ' who monitor clecUic bills.. vou·rc wutsna money. Honey. Put that lh1na away. and come watch the pme. No rooster 1s ever hcn--pecked L.JI. ·~ ,. • 17"4kaid ce! , ' C Statement of the total surface area of the supporting planes. D. Statement of the tot.al we1ght. E. ~ption of the engine which w11l be used for motive power F The matenal of which the frame. planes and propellers will be con- structed. (Plans received will not Ix shown to other bidders.) 2 It 1s desirable that the fl~ ang machine shouJd be dcsi~ed so chat 11 ma~ be quickly and easily assembled and ta.ken apart and packed for transportauon ID Ann} wagons. It should be capable of being assembled and put 10 operating cond1t1on in about one hour 3. The flying mach1nt" must be designed to carry two persons having a combined weight of about 350 pounds. also sufficient fuel for a flight of 125 miles." So. therr you have 1t and that·.., what the Wnght Brothers supplted F1f\ccn vears later. m l q22. had I been able· to do so. I should have thanked the Slil\al Corps. Why? Well. I was an coll* and had a frate~1ty brother who was an -Vmy flye~lfe used to take me out to Sand Point tn Seattle (then an Anny field) and treat me to the expencn~ of flyi ng. That spnna the C.altforn1a ctTW was racma the Washington crrw on l..&ke Washington. SpcctAtors were following the race on ferry boats. In th~ days the ntCtS were a minimum of four mLles and my fnend offered me a chance to take pictures from the atr To cnterta.ln the crowd. ht flew up into the low-hana1111 clouds and kicked n into a sptn l don't le.now how tt 15 today, but in those da)'1 to come out of a spin the pilot would thrust the stltk forward That' what m y friend did The pilot turned o n the swtteh. Tht el'\llne couahed but refused to star\ &ch cockpit had as.par\ boostcf tn ll l reached forward •nd spun 1t as fut u I oouJd. The cqjnc pumd. The plane nahted itldf smoothly. I was lO the forward c::ocq,.1 10 I could climb out on the W\OI. wnp my lea around a ltnat aod anap the first pectuta ever takeo of a crew f'Klr from the air They appeared Dmlt day ln tltc Sean.le Times.. ~ you·~ bond tr, an old man's rcmun~ bat I uswe you that. when Gccqr fnedl pYe me lhu ScnaJ Corp ..,oement. 1 re..tmJd wfiy I ba~ ... IO ptefW b IO many ~B. ....................... ,...,., , ..... ,or OM , ------··-- -___________________________ .,__ I\ 1 I Ma~ie recovers bufli.as amnesia By LYNDA HIRSCH DA.LLA.8: J.R. conVlncet Qayton and Miss Ellie that Sue ElJen needs to be committed 10 a sanitarium u ahe is unable to overcome her drink.in& problem. Pamela conunues to be stalked by a stranfU. J.R. pretends friendliness With Pam 1n attempll to ~ control of stock Bobby let\ to Christopher. Oiff'teUa Jamie he plans to ~t cloter to Pam ~n a~ effort to make ocrtam she doesn't 11ve m to the cunnana J.R. Jack befriends Jenna .. orietu and deeded to join the order lum1elf. Havina survived the explosion, ~and Richard try to deal with their tl\iunca. Richard. crippled by the blast, bira a fem.a.le auomey1 Jennifer Jordan Roberta, to help trap tne uboteun ~d alto to put hi1 financial est.ate beck .in order. Magic, aufferina from amne1ta, finds it lmpouible to aoccpt Chase as her husband. Dick and Jue llardn, 11.ary Jo and Joe Wlnkel.m•nn, Laa.rt and Rik Mumma, Jane and Rick Roblneon talk Ch.rlatmu. DYNASTY: Telfi;a Warnick that he's put a SS million price on his head, Blake secures the release of Krystle and Alexis. Back in Denver, Jeff tells blake he believes Fallon is alive and plans to search for h.er m California. In California, Fallon adm1u that she knows nothina about her past but was drawn to the Colby name when she noticed it in a newspaper. Steven gives a tearful euloax for Luke. A~m furious when Claudia tries to comfort the bereaved Steven. In New York Slmmy Jo meets Joel, who is Rita's qent. Joel aelJs Sammy Jo he can set Rita to pose. as Krystle. When Krystle refuses to &Jve Sammy Jo an ellra SI 0,000 from the trust fund Daniel set up, Sammy Jo vow& revenge. HILL STRl!!ET ·atua: Ray's prom0r uon to captain of another precinct 1s almost halted when the retirina Capta1n Eutlaod considen st.ayina on. Ray's replaocment on the HiU, Norman Bu nts, a less-than-ethical poliocman, calls Eastland aayi na everyone 1s delighted that Lhe over- t he-bill cop tw decided to resign. Mayor Ozzie Cleveland's son Lee is picked up when spotted in bis mother's car which was re{>C>ned stolen. Oeveland's wife Leona bep her husband to drop the characs so that Lee can go into a detox center. When her pleas fall on deaf ears, she asks Frank to make the same request. LaRue tries to warn Harry that his continued samblina has become a com, pulsion. Loan sharks teU Harry they'll lel him off the hook if he gives them poh~ infonnation. Harry meeu two men 1n • darkened alley and is viciously stabbed. Bclker's gjrlfnend Robin is pregnant. Christmas Company looks merry By EVE LASH Ollfr .... C.I 'I 1•11 I A Christmas party in October? That's right folks-carolers we~ sinsinaand candlesglowingat the 10th annual Junior League ofNew- pon Harbor's Christmas Company community support party at the South Coast Plaza Jewel Court. Oose to 400 supporters, patrons and sponsors were recoJ.nized for their support and contnbutions. Event chairman Mary Jo Wla.kelmu.a (with husband Joaepb,) ofCoronadel-Marsaid, "This year the community has supported us in every aspect. In fact, no one has said no to us. I think it's sensational." The league expects to raise $I 50,000 from the Christmas Com- pany at the Orange County Fair- grounds Oct. 21-24, with 35 special- ty si.ores selJing wares. Jue MartiA, league prcsiden t said, whilegreetingguests, "We're thrilled(with theproJections). We put this money back mto our 82.00 mn.n... "IUITY .... community programs. like the adult daycare center. And this party isa great way to say 'thank you'." Bob Fl•or, m!_!Wing with wife Martb, said, "This is a very pleasant event. It is nice to be back (at SCP) to keep a tradition here at South Coast Plaza fOing. And, it is nice to see friends.' Lynda and Bob 1UD1 oflrvine were found talking with Caro and Randy McDonald of Corona del Mar and Dlue Dlelal oflrvine. ''We were just talking about my new business, ajewelry line called J(jng CoUections. r have to sleep with m y CPA though to do the work, but he's my husband." Near the food fair (by six SCP restaurants) were LHri and Rlk Mamma nibbling and chatting with Lffand K.C. Redmond. Mumma said.joking, "We were just talking about what's important in life: God. family and m y country. But, after that we get into illicit sex and football.'' Redmond said, 'What's import- . MIDWEEK DISCOUNT PRICES 1&•ECT•Y ant to me 1s m y family. frie~dsan~ skiing. In fact. weareplanmnga tnp to Deer Valley, Utah." Ju e and Rick Robl.Daoa ofNew- port Beach said, "This is fun ... a good opportunity to try restaurants I haven't tried. I really like the fettucine from Alfredo's." O ther restaurants offering th ear wares were the Back Bay Rowing 1and Running Club, Meyerhofs. Bennigan's, La Baguette, Pronto · Ristorante and Ghandi's. later several Junior Leaguers and spouses dazzled the crowd with theirmodelingabilities in outfits from Cache, Jaeger, Beaujon Paris. Fila, CharlesJordan, Alex Sebas- tian, Gingjss Tuxedo and I. Magnin. Prancing down the runway were Jody and Scott BaJ'llbam, Helen Cooper, Jolm HopklD1, Carolyu Mclaeney, Llz and Michael Toomey, Ll.Dda and David Travi11 Beverly and Carol Willgerotll and theAuors. 82.50 .. TIBTIU eowaros UNIVERSITY 854·8811 :Alo!PUS OR WES' QI :.J. •ll' A.Q•,)', <R(,Y ,c .... , .. .... 1111,MI ''Wtla&f" Ill .. --~1 .... -.n..,..,1t1t1 "Pia" (I) ... , .. edwards LIDO 673·8350 lll[WP(JRT lll~O AT ,100 ,1DO ........... ,_., 'U_.. .. na +wn --~•11 (Tll mt) UM ...... edwards TOWN CENTER 751·4184 BPs·~,, SAllf '.J'< Ac·" __ ,,,,_1.1 ·, -~AS'P.AlA J I f • ,rt ,,, • , • ..._., I ,.., .. TIE IOI." Ill , .... ·---~ •Clllr'IPIJ 1111. NI ''UaTIM FITm"INI 1111.lltl, tldt .J edwards SOUTH COAST PLAZA 546·2711 SRISTO,&SUlllFLOWEI'. COST UIESA •.. .. 'f ""r r ' • ' ,,,.. • Y •nm~ ... nml ".--, .. .,_, ....... 'CF '•I' llJ ~ ~-FU•' l'Pl-11) ....... , -.n1.., .. ., ..... t.,. ~ ·~-· (I) na + 1111.t.. UM .. • ._ .. .,._ ,., ''PH-lftf'111-111-a-1-•-.. .. Ml,1 .. (N ) .... ''llAllf" .,., ...... tNI •nm--~ --. ..,-....... .... , .. ,.,. eawaros CINEMA 546·3102 '1ARBOR BOULEVARD' T AOAl.IS cos TA ~ESA ........ , ...... ............ --~, ...... "UY•1-IUI" --~llll,1111 edwaros MESA 646·5025 !ij[WPORTSO\.JlEVAROA' ·~·-COS'A~[SA .., .... . ._ .. ,..1., ....... IUn U M Pl.a ''RftUW'IPl-llJ •1t --" lrtl, ... DIUMIM" •1 "l' ..... '(IJ ''UaTIM FITm"lPIJ --" ..... , .. '"" ''P&-W&'I llftllM" .. {N) 'Tffl war IPCJ • •111rm1w· "91 .,.,... nu +~ Ml,tldl UM '-'"*I --.... ~ ·--. ....... _. . .., llA" (I) ~·· (IJ 1111 ..... , .. t•11 .. ~ tllll ~"tC-11J edwards SADDLE BACK 581 ·5880 El TORO ROAD AT ROCKFIElO .... , .. IUI" --~1-MI mn.11m1 ''PUWTr' 111 -.nlaM. t .. ... -~ • CUZ'f'' lPll \... l1tl, .. L ·cRU na "Tlll-.,"INI UM ........ ''PH·lftf'I 111611•" .. --.... ._ ... .., -.n1111.•tl. t•11 ......... ., .. ""'(fl.11) ,_,., •. .,., .. •nm--~ 4m,_ ......... ,._11J ...... ,.,. .... ·~-· (IJ .::. •tl.t•11 ....... • ._ .. IPl-11) flYEll" IN-11J ... ,_ ... 411mnml ''UaTIM FITm"INJ ,,,.. ...... ,..... . .......... ...,. II.II ta.._ lm 11.l edwards SOUTHCuA57 LAGu "4A 4')7 '711 ';,l)~·-.. )AC..'••'-• a·HP•_.A,,,.,, A ,__,••1 3f& •• ._ __ H_ "" Tiil i ·~-·­....... ..... UM.._. .. ,.. ---___ .. .__ ............... '1111..,..,.. ...... "PH WIFI __, ... .. • Ulla Marie AlcuWu oohed and aahed over the business/career day- time dresses as Claarlotte Laafer said "It almost makes you want to work. I love the purple two-piece knit fTom Ja~er's. It's stunning." Also enJOytng the fashions were Jeff and Karen Armou, Mlffy and Joe Granata, Kathleen Flanagu and PaaJ Lower, Joe and Brace Corbett and Stepbanle and John Hopkl.Da. Junior League promotes volun- tecrism and develops the potential ofits 800 members for voluntary participation in community affairs. • • • FALCON CREST: G.fll dcc1de5 to invesll~te Anna Rossini s past with Emma s help. Greg discovers that Julfa was pregnant with Dominic Rossini's child and they had planned to get ~~ after he d ivorced Anna. After Dominic s death in a fire, Angela sent Julia back east 10 a convent where she save birth. An1ela told Juha that the baby was stillborn. In fact, the child Chns1opher was raised by • • • KNOTS LANDING: Mack and Nurse Wilson uncoverdocumenuat the hospital that prove Val's twins were not stillborn. Abby bums the records that connect her with the babies abduction. Visitina the adopted parcnu, Karen male~ a plea to the unstable Mrs. Fisher. Karen persuades Mr. Fisher to return the twins. • • • ST. ELSEWHERE: Pre-empted. Night baseball playoffs leave fans out in the cold By FRED ROTHENBERG AI T........._Wr1tw NEW YORK -It was Bowie Kuhn's coldest hour. But let the fo rmer Washington Senators scoreboard boy who grew up to be baseball commissioner tell the story. Here's his play-by-play: •• 1976 World Series. Game 2. "Brisk" 1s an understatement. Re- porters who covered the first Sunday night World Scnes game thought baseball had become a Winter Olym- pics sport. Throughout the game - nobody remembers the score, only that the temperature was an the 30s- the coatless Kuhn kept a stiff, but blue, upper lip. Ri verfront Stadium. Cincinnati Yankees and Reds. I remem ber the day very welL I remember at being very bnsk," And. yes, he was wearing long JOhns. Kuhn. now counsel for the Man- hattan law firm of Willlue Farr & Gallagher. still doesn't understand I UX UR'f THEATRES 5 2 7~ 1'1 1wo M.au 11\/ee•a•y" WALK-INS * I " M•I Only S•lu•O•Y•._Sun O•Y• c. HOl•O•v• Unleu r<Olea 4 614 2553 1901 I lilliiW ....... Mil ........ ~O:!:R.!!.A~NCI Mt11opol>1•'!..) MARllE IPG·1 :I) t :a . C9'1EATOR (R) 1 00 AMERICAN FLYE R .,..._UI SHOWS AT 64S C.910 5 1LVIERA OO (PG-1:JI 8 ~~Prrllllr•'\809 Achtr>tur• (PC) (, !>!> BEVER L V HILLS COP (Al 9:05 P1u1 Co·Hn Wrlneu (A ) 6 !oO c;1.u1;;;z3(d3 •=•Julj 6 J &~\~~.1 Ac::r::•) JA GGED EDGE IR ) 1 05 l 2S !o 4S B 10 & 10 H A F TIE R H OV RS IRI 1403 •0!>40 I 4 0 & 9 40 aACK T O T HE FUTURE ~) I. io. S.>CI, S:SO, 1:00, 10:30 K IS.S OF T HE srt0£R WOlllAN IR ) I 00 J 10 S 40 80~&1010 -'GH £.S OF COO(,.; l:JI I 10 ) .2'> '> l5 I 45 & 'l H THIE GOOS M UST BE C RAZY lPCI I Oi 3 20 ~ H 1 >0 I 0 O~ COMMANDO (A ) Plu• Co H 1I Po rky" Ae.enqe (R) DAV~ ntE DEAD HOUH lllf The C em etery IA) ll'IEE W£E'S BIG AOYC .. TVRIE (PC) P lu• Teen Woll f PC) R AMBO FIRST B LOOD ~AR T 11 IR ) Plu• M•d M.t• B•vonlJ f Hu11<J,.,du1Ht" (PC t l J MUTILA TOR IR) P1u~(,,Htt \..1-.i,tCJr l \l,1rHI (R) W£1RO SCIENCE CPG·l:I) Plu\ F't,ql\I N t9n1 !R I *PACIFIC WALK-IN THEATRES* BARGAIN MATINEES I FIRST 2 Performances Mon•)Y Thru S.tur•v (Except Holidays & Spec. Enp11ment1 LAKEWOOD Center .Puu1u1""''-trt1. c...--·; DOUT mHO ,,.,. fOHDA AONIS Of GOO ,,...,, 12111 ltM 4tU .. 2J ltU 1"40 DOU'f tn•o 04UC• NOllllll INVASION USA ti) ·-~···••r00 10.• DOU'f maso ITIVIN M'tl\IUO NUINn aACK TO THI PUlVlll !N I 12tM ltM S1IO 7141 'M J OU-CLotl MAJUI 111e1 .... )fOO .,.. 7 ....... llrOO lAKEWO D (enler Soulh !lll>IM tltl /f-ITY II.Del A .. DAY Of fMI DIAD (MO OM ._ 17 MMrmll lltM 1t4t 4tM JIM "It lltlO MXiii (NI ' l9UI l'IOl1' ,,.. ... THI IMllALD PC>alST (I) ,, ...... "'" DOL.aY ITIMO AMlllCAN PL YIU , ... IJI lto41, Jtl01 StU , 1.00, 10.21 LA MIRADA COCOON 1,._111 lb4S l rOI ltU 7t4S IMS (HU<t( NOllllS INVASION USA 111 Ii«! J1U S1JO 111' 1Ch40 OU ... '40M MAXll lNl 1 lsJO J1» •.Jt ........ la.JO DOU'f muo ,.,. POHDA AGNIS Of GOO l,..U) l11IO 1•» •1» .. u 1140 IMS COMMANDO 11) 1.oe ~ 1100 , ....... 11100 GATEWAY JAGGID IDGf 111 1r00 ~u ••• 7>4J 1°"° PU Wlt'S llO AIMNT\111 CNI 121)0, ., •• '''° l.T. IXTU TIHUTllAl t1'91 2121 •1JI 10.41 MAllll (l'el ' YIUll "°" ......... MASK 1,..u 1 ltU WS IMS IOU'f .,_, l'l'IY9f ..._ ,_.,.. aACIC TO ntl fUTUll !l'el llTUIN Of THI LMNO DUD (1Q 12tH 4tH I .JI PllOHT NIGHT (ll ,.., ..,. 1 .. u *PACIFIC DRIVE·IN THEATRES• 1. '"I OOONIU ,,.. 2. OHMUNI l"'I 3. OMOITIUmU "91 1. ,Ml ... 1111 2. A V1IW TO A KILL IN+ 3. AMllKAH MNIA 111 «•];t;]:t'°• fllCJQI arl/IA ,,;,... l'tWIM ...._ .....,,.. IACK fO ntl PUTURI ,,_, llYUL Y HILU CO. !! JMOl.O IDOi 1111 CllMH Of 'ASllOH 111 SUHll •• , .. lt 1..., ,,. W ,,..,, ...... ,,... '"" .. """ .. ............ '-l1141tle COMM.UfDO 111 TMI TlltMINA roa (ti """" ........ .......,. UCK fO THI PUTUU'"' nlN WOlP ,,.. Lo HABRA ........ A ':lil l. ''·~· • DAY Of TMI DIAD IMO GlNI .,._ 11 ...,,... NOUSI IT M CU9Tll'f INV~~llll 10 TO MIDNtOMT 1111 .. Wll'1 .......... wataD ICllNCI ,..,. why post-season night baseball had become such a cause celebre. The subject is bound to resurface now that Toronto is in the American League playoffs that start tonight on NBC. ABC has the World Series, which will have all night games for the first tame and coulo fimsh as late as Oct. 27 . "It really was an easy decision to make," said Kuhn, referring to put- ting the World Series in prime time in 1971 and then experimenting with weekend ni~t games five years later. "As commissioner. I always con- sidered myself a populist and con- cerned myself with getting the game out 10 the most prople. You didn't achieve that by tucking the World Series into a Wednesday afternoon." It's been suggested by the Players Association and others that the regular season should start earlier to ensure that the crown jewels -the playoffs and World Series -have better weather conditions. But Kuhn said he djd a study of October weather and found that two weeks earlier wouldn't make an appreciable dJf- ference . He docs think, however, that a neutral si te in a warm climate is an alternative worth investigating. The benefit from post-season ni$ht games has been more viewers, which translates into more advertising rev- enues for the networks and more bucks for baseball. The negatjve has been the perception that when tele- vision says j ump, baseball says. "How high?" "It really is a good pannershap between baseball and television," saicl Kuhn. "Our interests coincide. If we're reaching the Largest number of people, we're both doing our JObs." Sometimes, those interests have been at odds. For example, Kuhn preferred that post-season games start at 5:05 (PDT). but the networks wanted 5:35. Baseball gave in. How- ever, Kuhn said he held the line in other areas, such as nixing TV's plan to join some regular season games an progress. He also noted that NBC opposed extending the playoffs from five to seven games, which will stan this season because Com missioner Peter Uebcrroth exercised the seven-game ~ption that Kuhn helped negotiate into the current TV contract. Kuhn, who was commissioner from 1969-84, said he generally didn't tell TV how to run its busjness, the not.able uccpt1on beina when he fought agajnst Howard Cosell's par- ticipation an the ABC telecasts. "I thought he had been much too much a critic of baseball to be suitat>le for .a national broadcast," he sa.id. Kuhn lost that argument with AUl' Sports President Roonc Arledge, who believed Cosell brought entertain- ment and a storvlinc to the broadcast. Many feel Kuhn's position was truly in the best interests of baseball. But no Jonaer Kuhn; he's now a Cosell conven. "Today, if I see an ABC' p me and Howard isn't on it, I'm deeply disappointed," he said. "HIGHLY ENJOYABLE I" mTI .. 1'Sl'41 .. -TO-.cona .._,,.,.,,..mnu -&M-ts5J ~ a....u.,.., FUNKY Wl~KERBEAN THE FAMILY CIRCUS by Bil Keane "It 's a fly slopper." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson /() 6 &. •• , t-o•-•o1t•Sr~•'" &es.v "We'll make sure Veronica knows when visiting hours are!" DRABBLE ~ilMf.~ 1 WI~ 1~~'iA1..~ \~ "'6" ~~L. 10- GARFIELD JUDGE PARKER IT 06 t-kJT M-i fALJ\..T 1'M ~ Cl.UL.0 GWllJi?I <••· .. ...-.. -.. Orange Cout DAILY PILOTIT~, OC1iObet I , 1M6 A8 by Tom Batluk DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau 10 • BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) SHOE by Jett MacNally i .,. "Is It all right If we join your nature hike?" DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham < ' \ t ., } 1 i Q '/MRe.ARET SNEAKE"O UP ANU KI SSeU ME ... 001 l EAASEL) IT II CM, Wf.U. 1 GLlf.~ ~ f'E.Of'\.£ J~T (;,QOW UP l oo fA6 TI IILL~ET 7/-t FIRST AIP KIT.' by Kevin Fagan by Jim Davis by Ferd & Tom Johnson I'M AFRAID TUIS 5~ Wlt.t. TAKE. A ~ITTLE MORE TIME MERE,9'CE. by Charles M. Schulz r---r-~--~~~~~ '10J 1.vl.'LD BE ~ R.\tLROA D (R0::'51Nb 6lJARD'.YOU COULD STAND 8'< THE TRACK.S AND WAAN PEOPLE TMAT A TRAIN WAS COMING ~ --4 --- ·"--<{~ ---- BLOOM COUNTY ANYIJCPY WHO'S 1HRr .? b Berke Breathed ru flt/([~- FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE CAN I HAVE. lHE. PHONE. AGAIN , M1ct1AEL? "'1\CHAEL:THffi"5 A LONG-DISTANCE. I WAS ON lKERE. f lf\"3 -AND CX>t{\ yoo-u-uST CAU..I A Sf:C." 1/ :::.. Me:,, ' 1 m;;...--------~ L...J;;::::=:::J~::!~~ '--------.....J -------{1 JJ TUMBLEWEEDS YOO so~e KNOW ',bU~ P't>K~~1 ACf: llO·I ROSE IS ROSE BRIDGE North-South vulnerable South deals. NORTH • AQ9764 I::.:> AQ76S2 0 V•kl •a WELL, I SMOIJLO. MY filmolfR WAS A CHAMP'ION "'V!:~IJ'aAi ~1\1~. de&ll by hand at the table. not b~ computer' outh"s hrsl two bids confirmed a long. strong club suit and a hm1ted hand. East West lur ked 1n the bushes before entering the auction. t hen competed to t he five-level As i by Pat Brady spades Instead. he would rufl 11 lo"' spade "'Ith a high trump. then dra"' all the tr umps. Nut he would lead 11 heart to the are (a safety play lo protect against a singleton king of hearts wit h Eut I, and discard tht> king of diamonds on tht> act' of WEST •V4*1 <::? J 4 EAST •KJt08SU \:' K 10 OMAR ~t O AQJ 8U2 • 9752 SOUTH • VMd "983 0 10764 •VeM o K9 •AKQJIOSO The bidding. 8 .. Ui WHt NM'tll F..ut SHARIFF .-~ CHARLES GOREN by Harold Le Doux t • P.... t o P ... 3• 3 0 3• s o ARE 'IOU THE M'r NAMe·s SARA T ~1oe P... P... 5 1:1 Pua the C'ards he. Wf'~t t an make f1vt' dia monds. so North South did wt>ll to 1gno~ the 1nlerfert>n« and push on to a vulnerable slam 'padt>s Aftt>r dt>clarer returned Lo hi!! hand with a ,padt> rurr. ht> would then lud a ht>art toward tht-queen Thul4, he would lose only one heart . . eLJT V0U CAN CALL Mt! SARA i 'Ll!T'S SIT OOWN I I IN.ANNA TALK TO VOU BEFORE 'tOU eel! eeN • t•P ... PuaPue OP.,ninr IMd: Two of 0 Tourumeot playen often com plain that c:omput.er-dealt banda lend toward halt distributions. Certainly. lbe wei~st hand we ha•• ... 11 for 1ean Cl'Opped up dur inr tt.. Splnptd T•m Champion ship al the recent ACBL Summtr National Champioruhlpt in L.u Ve1u. Howtver. t he bo&rd1 w1r. ' .. Wt11t led • devilish low di&mond and declart'r. a duphcate af1c1onado rather than a rubbf'r br1dre pl&yer. ruff~ and lned to cash the ace of t pad • for a diamond sluH Wf'!lt ruffed, and tht> defenders simply sat back and wutMt for their hean trick -down ont A rubber bridge uperl would i.ave had little probh•m with the h°'land. He, l oo, would ruff the o~n •n• lead. but be> would realize there was no hurry to cuh the ace of On t h111 lane . the contract fa ib only 1f West ~tarted with a 11n1lf' ton hurt lower t han thf' king. But 1f t hat v.ne th• d1str 1but1on . dec:laru would a lway!' havt' to bow t he knf'f'. l(tvt'n the early play rw~~Ca.rt.. a-..· ..... ,.,...._ .. ....... ,a.,..,.. .nu G... ....... WU.. 1tot c1w.a.._ A .... c•--• ... N.J. MO'n. AlO -7:30- 1 MUSIC F£STIVAl WHAT'S HAPP£NNGH ROCKY AHtJ FRIENOS w·A·s·H NEWLYWB> GAME WILD. WILD WOALD Of ANMAL.8 G~ &I SAN OIEOO AT LARGE !~~TI& * t * "Secret HOOOI'" ( 1984) PtllUp O.Tid Paymer and ltrtaty llcl'flchol 8tar in ••Lo•e. llary. •• tbe tnae etory of a woman who o•ercame MemlnaJy laaarmountable obeta- clee to become a pbyatcian, tom,ht at 9 on CBS, Channel 2 . Biker Hall -t.00- l ~O'#N **',;"Will: G. Gordon Liddy" (1981) Robert Conrad. K1ther1ne Clnnon. D MOVIE •• "Portrtlt Of A Strwer" ( 111711) Lesley AM Wwren, Edward Her· mann. 8 (]) WHO'S TME BOSS? (!)COMEDY BAEN< wmt MACK AND.JAMIE Q)a!NEWS Cl) MOVIE • * "Tilt Way W•I" (196n Kl<k =Robert Mitchum I w~ A COMMEHTAAY ev GWYNHEDYEA m PfWSE THE LOAD • MOYIE ***~ "Bnlte Foroe" (1947) Burt LAncMI•. tune Cfonyn. (C)MOYIE ••••,; "Mr. Blandlngs Builds His orwn House" ( 1948) Cwy Grant. ~~ • • • " 10" ( 1979) Dudley Moore, Bo O.ell. CS) FAERIE TALE THEATRE -l'.30- • 9 GROWING PAINS G TIC TAC DOUGH (!)LCM BOAT Q) P.M. MAGAZJNE -t:OO-fJ (J) MOVIE "Love. Mary" (Premill'e) Krlaty McNlchol, Mall Clertt a ®J MOOHUOKTING l£ ............. ~tR i=MLON> ···~ "Thll Obecuf• Object Of Oelirt" (1977) F.-nendo Rey, C.olt ;~ *. * "Reuben, Reuben" ( 19831 Tom Contt, Kelly MoGlllis (.l)MOVIE * H .. .._,, Ullt A Wheel" (1983) Bonnie Bedella. e.i Bridgel. -9:30- Cf) MOVIE * * ,,.., "Thi Heft Wrth Heroes" ( 1968) Rod T ty1ot, Claudll C.dinlle -10:00- 1 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT eNEWS ~FAMILY HONOR t •"A "The Sherlff" ( 19701 Ossie o.~BUSINESS l =~:e CAL.UNO All SPORTS MOVIE • • '-' "Fltestaner'' ( 1984) David Keeth, Drew Barrymote (ft) FlAST & TEN -10:15-«m AEUGIOUS PAOOAAMMINO -10:30- • ~=PRASSE {fi) NOT~~ Y THE NEWS -10:45- (:5) INSIOE BROADWAY OH SHOWT1ME -11:00- • 8 CJ) ®lat NEWS I CARSON'S COMEDY ClAS&CS WKAP IN CINQNHA Tl l ~~UGH BUSINESS REPORT CANDI STATOH-SUSSEWa.l GBOXJNO ®MOVIE ** "They Call Me Bruoe?" (1982) Before you get drunk and drive, read this DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am 18 years old and I would like to share my story with your readers. Call 1t a warning. Six months ago I was on top of the world. My best fneod and I went to Hawaii to attend college. I met a tcmfic guy the first week. (I'll call him Peter.) Everything was great. But it changed in ooc night. My roommate, Peter and I were coming back from a pany. We were all drunk. My roommate was driving. She lost control of the car, ran ofTthc road and we flipped over several times. Peter was k.illed instantly. My roommate and I spent months in the hospital, but we didn't complain. We were lucky to be alive. Uotil that accident, I never be- lieved anything I had heard or read about the dangers of driving drunk. I always thought the cops were just out to hassle people. I would give any- thing if we had been arrested that night and put in jail. 1 thank the good Lord that no other car was involved. I couldn't live wtth the guilt if we had killed someone else. Ann, please print my letter. If JUSt one person gets the message. somc- thin$ good will have come from that homble accident. -Lots of Regrets Al• LAIDEIS in Honolulu. DEAR REGRETS: Too bad life 11 aacll a llanll tead1er. It 1tve1 •• &be 11ade flnt ud tlle ln1oa later. '11aaak1 for wrtt1111. . ~ . DEAR ANN LANDERS: Can you use this? I hope so. It had a powerful effect on me for reasons you can guess. Sorry I don't know the name of the author. I am simply -A Qajly Reader in Illinois. DEAR READER: I cu , lDdeed. nan yoa for 1eadlD1 It OD. TRAJ EC- TOR Y In the lonely gloom of his room a man sits and writes letters to his children who never answer. He remembers that he never bothered 10 answer the letters from those who loved him when he was younger. It begins: This is mv last will and testament: J leave to you all that I have in your care and keepma. May you never worsh1~ ~atenal thinp but work for the JOY an it. And remember that someone loved you from a distance, Which is the only k.ind oflove some men can give -Dad. . Another pain clenched his hean for the last time. . A neighbor closed the lids on his old red eyes. . And forced his mouth into a pleasant smile. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am writing to you because "I COULD care less." I wonder if the millions of educated people who use this phrase ~ue they arc saying exactly the opposite of what they mean. The correct wording when one wants to express total indifference ts "I COULDN'T care less." It irritates me every time I hear 1t. -Perfectionist in Tyler, Tex . DEAR TY: Welcome to tbe cl•b. I 1et t11J1 complaint at leaat oace a week. Of coane yoa are rtpt, b•t ufortuately, too muy people wlto tortue &M luru1e coalda't care lest. So much for straight answers A lot of parents complain that their k.ids won't give them straight answers. They ask them questions and they get s1lcncc in return. Koppel. He never asks a question that can be answered with a yes or no. He asks how they feel about something or what their reaction is. r;::===========================================:;;;1 ~~· MatglUX Hemingway • "Come Play With Me" (1980) Simone Salllon. Brigette Lahaie (S)UOVIE I always got a stnught answer. but 1t was never the one I was lookmg for. ERMA BoMBECK ''What arc your feelings about taking out the garbage?" I asked . Orange County's easy listening radio station KDCM tD!l.t FM SIERED * * "Thi Wild Ute" ( 1984) Christo- pher Penn, Eric S Iott CZ)MOYIE * * "Mysteries" ( 1979) Rutger Hauer, SyMe Kristel. -11:»- I CJ) SIMON & 8AtON 8 BEST Of CAR80N COMEDV BAEAK wmt UAQ< NIJJNllE. I =NEWSNOKTtH l =flVE.() LATBIGHT AMERICA l!)MOTOfMEB< EID PRAISE THE LOfl> -12:00- " ALFRED HITCHCOCK Pfe9fTS U EYE OH HOU YWOOO G JOKER'S WILD (!) INOEPS«>EHT HEWS ®l MORE RE.Al PEOPLE m 100 et.ue ,_C)MOVIE * t * "The Blues B<olhers" ( 1980) John Belushi, Dan Ay1uoyd. "Sweetheart, would you like to take out the garbage?" "No, thank you." "Do you want to be the only one at Aunt Dodo's wedding 1n bare feet wearing raggy shorts?" "Yes." "Do you want your mother to leave home and never come back? Let me put it this way, do you want a little time to think about 11?" "Yes to question one No to question two ... I explained to my son that raw honesty 1s one of the most overrated virtues in the history of goodness. I said. "You have to refine 1t to make ll digestible." His eyes lit up, "You mean hke politicians. No matter what question 1s asked. they answer another one." "Something like that." I said. "How about taking out the garbage"" "How about the keys to your car?" "What's that got to do with the garbage?" I asked. "I asked you to do something." .. And I countered with something for you to do. We both have some- thing the other one wants. Now. we compromise hkc the politicians do." I explained to him that method was pretty obvious in the hands of amateurs. There are ways to prolong a straight answer that somehow docsn 't seem so ... so harsh. "I got it," he said. "You just buy a little time until you can lay the truth on someone." "Right. Now will you take out the garbage"" "Is 1t garbage day'>" "Does 11 make any difference?" I snapped. "Then it's all nght 10 wall a day or two." "Did I say that!" "You don't remember what you said? How do you expect me to?" Then I remembered about Ted "Negative." "When you think of helping your mother. descnbc your initial reac- tion." "Negative." Finally, I shouted. "Take out the lousy garbage!" He said, "O.K .. so why didn't you say so in the first place?" 'Brothers' airing segment on AID-S LOS ANGELES (AP) -The pay television comedy "Brothers" will take on a senous subject for an e pisode on the health threat AIDS. The episode. called "The Stranger." will first be cablecast on Showt1me Oct. 23. Tht story centers on the isolauon and fear experienced by a person with the disease. . U we had to pick Just one destgn to represent the entire David Hayes tall and holiday collection. we agreed ti would be the black wool crepe suit With its silk charmeuse trapunto stitching on lapels and cutts It shows you Just how much luxury goes lnto each piece. how much care is given to each detail. how well the Hayes tailortng fits this season's trend to dressed-up days and dressed-down nights The three-piece look W1th white silk charmeuse artist 's bow blouse. 4-12. $600 Robinson's Designer Dresses. 85. Newpor1 Robinsons A ROBINSON'S CHARGE? IT'S EASY k• ·st 'Jomy Just perc:.onally present your Visa MasterCard. -Card and 1dent111cahon to one of our salespersons and we'll open Carte Blanche or The American Express on account you con use 1mmedlalely ~ ...... ...._. ______________________ ....... --. ____ ~·~'·-------------------------~_._~·~==>- l \ .. .Dally Pilat TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1985 PIHeburgh M8n119er Chuck Tanner looklng for new Job. 82. Woodbridge High creek• CIF top 10 footbell poll. 83. Winging it, Henigan style Dellr .............. Irvine High'sfootball program thrives, and it· s obvious there are some reasons --------- There's supposed to be a rule around somewhere statin• a require- ment for occasional "rebuilding." You just don't keep riding the high wa v~ after suffering major losses to graduation ofblue chip football players. Irvine High Coach Terry Henigan, however, seems to be one who isn't too interested in following the rules -in fact be carries it to the extreme. For the uninform~ three of Irvine's best in the school's footbaJI history-three-year starters Jeff Bielman, Remy Rahmatulla and Mike Henigan -graduated in June, and there were no obvious replace- ments in sight. So what's happened to the Va- queros, a team which went 5-4-1 wt th the Big Three a year ago? They're 4-0, and looking for more, ranked No. 8 in Orange County and No. 5 in the highly-regarded CIFSouthem Con- ference. some time, dunng a ~ven-year tour asanassistaotto Western High's J1m Everett (including the Bob Acosta reign of I 971-72), duri_ng four straight drives fbr a CIF playoffben.h as Cypress High 's head coach, and for the past four years in which Henigan 's Vaqueros have gone 4-5-1. 6-4, 6-5 and 5-4-1 . So what's so hot about 21-1 8-1 1n four years? Well. the previous four years at Irvine works out 10 5-32-1, capped by an O-lOclub1ust before Henigan took over. Henigan would be the first to tell you summer programs arc o verdo ne. He keeps up with the competrnon. but the job ts not all-consuming. So what's the secret? Henigan has sev- eral. Terry Bemcan bu bla lrrine HJch Vaqaeroe off to a 4-0 8tart, the beat ln the echool '• blatory. But this isn'tanything new. Hen- igan has been pulling strings now for First, he went to the basics and has molded together a six-member on- campus staff, many from the West· em-Cyprcssconnect1on. And, be- cause the Vaqs' program does not have the Pop Warner-deep back- ground some powers possess. he He passes the.credit Tars' Foley hasn 't got ff me to lounge a r ou nd in li~elight By JOSEPH DUDEVOIR 0.-,,.. Ceo ; 1 ...,,, The intensity level of practice 1s at a fever pitch. The hitting is harder. the yelling louder and the mood a bit more serious. It's the week of the big one and It shows on the players' and coaches' faces. After four tough hours. most of the Newpon Harbor Hi&b football team is headed for the lockerroom. There's still a few players on the field honing their skills as darkness starts to cover the field. Finally the rest of the players come off and call 11 a day. Quarterback Shane Foley. one of the last, picks up his gear and heads out. "We're getting there," says Foley "But this 1s SaddJeback we're playing, so we have to be at our best. So far, we haven't been able to put four quarters together. And if we can't against Saddleback, forget it." SaddJeback (4-0, 1-0 in league) is the favonte to win the Sea View League title and the Sailors are one of a very few &iven a shot at stopping the Roadrunners. And if Foley and the Tars can string four good quarters together. Newpon. could find ttselfin the dnvcr's seat for the duration of the season. the game he finished 'I or 18. 21 2 yards and one interception. For that game-breaking performance, Foley bas been named the Daily Pilot Player of the Week. If he can put two such halves together. you might get Foley to say something good about himself. But as 1t stands now, it's like pulling teeth to get the senior s1gnaJ caJler to toot his own horn. 'Tm JUSt trying to get better all the time." he says. ''It's the guys around me who make me look good. This isn't a one-man game. There's no way 1 could do any of it on my own." The only things you can get out of Foley are the items he needs to improve on. which aren't many. "I think a quan.erback needs to always improve his reading of defenses." he says. "I think I've got a little ways to go in that department, but I've improved a little each week. 1 could also stand to be a little more patient back there. And I'm still working on my dropback and setting up in the pocket." Foley has shown up lo this point he's far enough along to be considered major college matenal. He has the stze at 6-2, 191 pounds. the smans that belie his age of 17. It all adds up to the potential that would to be a wonhy addition to any college program. But Foley doesn't like lo talk about potential o r college. He only has one thing one his mind -the present. "I don't want to be considered someone Wlth potential. r want m y talent to be fully realized. Potential IS only that and nothinJ else," he says. RocE1 CAILSOI PREP SPORTS brought to Irvine an offense which he feels he can always find a Wlnntng comb1nat1on -the Delaware wtnged-T . "l can't ever picture myself not running it"' says Hen1gan. "It's an offense that doesn't rely on JU St one person. Yo u don't have to have the great thrower or the great tat I back. We have good size this year. but usually we don't. Therc'sa lot o fangJe bloc!O ng which gives smaller kids chances, there's a lot of m1sd1rect1on in the offense and with so many defenses so aggress1 ve , it helps. .. And, it's excttmg. The kl(S& enJO) running the offense. We have four backs who arc a veragmg 50 yards per game." four backs prc1Cfltly combine for 866 yards rusJuna-216 yards a pme-With number of carries for thosefourstanersat 27. 32, 32and 55. Henip.o fell 10 love wuh the Delaware winged-T nine years q.o when be saw tbe University of Dclewarc in a televised divi11onal playoff game, and the 10tracas1es or the offense int.ngued him. "We bad been pretty suc.cessful throwina the ball in my first two years at C~rcss," recalls Henigan ... But I wasn t really excited about throwtng the ball and I was look! ng for an · offense similar to Western. the Hous-- ton veer. I was listening to the commentatortallun•about thes1zc factor. the m1sduect1on. not needing the super tailback or quarterback and 1t kind of drew m y mt.crest. "That spnng I went to Nevada- Reno to learn more " Since then Henigan has gone to Delaware and 1n tum brought others west to learn more, and this year 1s 1he fi rst ume the complete package is 1n But Jrvine·ssucccssgocsa lot deeper than fonnatJons. It goes back to a non-league game in I 980 at Western High. where Hunt· (Pleue.eellEl!OGAJlt/82) Last week against Estancia, Foley put together IWO great quarters that were good enough to carry Newpon to a 42-27 win. Foley rifled five to uchdown passes and completed 7 of 13 attempts for 155 yards and a 35-7 halftime lead For "And I avoid thinkjng about college. The only thing I'm thinking about is Davidson --Field and Newpon Harbor football. The rest will take care of itself." (Pleue eee llARBOR'8/Bi) S b.a.De Foley ge>e8 o•er mcouting report with Newport Harbor lllCh uaiatant co.ch Dellr,....,_...,_ Bucko Shaw. Fo ley threw fiye TD pa.a lut week -all ln the flnt half. Whitt: He symbolizes Jays' surge TORONTO (AP) -If one player symbolizes the T oronto Blue Jays' remarkable nine-year surge from expansion team to champions, it could be catcher Ernie Whitt. Whin, one of only three original Blue Jays remaining on the team, has overcome personal trials, cspeciaJly this year, that mirro r the hurdles the team cleared on its way to the American League East title. Whitt was sup~sed to pla~oon behind the plate wt th Buck Man.inez. but Martinez broke his leg and aJl the duties fell on Whitt's shoulders. Later. one of those shoulders was bruised, but Whitt had to keep pla)'.ing because there was nobody else. He responded by hitting a carccr-hi&h 19 home runs while doing a solid job behind the plate. "It's unfortunate for Buck what happened," Whitt said as the Blue Jays prepared to open the AL playoffs toniaht (Channel 4 at 5: 15) against the Kansas City Royals, champions of the AL West. "I know my playing time would have been dim1rushcd if Buck could play. But be still helps me with the betters and the runners. It's almost the same as when he was healthy. "We have a very close relationship. We've never looked at each other u competition ror a position. I think the pitcben feel comfortable with either of ua because of that." It ia that 1eo1e of toeetherness that seems to account for the ~t balance on the Toronto ballclub. h is a team almost totally devoid of stan, but one that still manqed to win 99 pmes. A ~ in the Toronto clubhouse rcada; 'This team was counted out ICVcral times by manr people, but WC did not hear the call.• Al Oliver huna the lllJl aft.er the Blue Jays clinched 1be1t hal(-pennan1 and it will stay up at least throuah the bat~f~ven leque playoft\. ·•1 think everybody had doubts. stattina when we were in New York three weekJ aao." Oliver said ... , reel we bavedemonatrated championship cbanctet ... The Blue Jaya took over fln1 place on May 13 and led tbe Eut alone the rat of the way while butlina beck every challen,e that was thrown at them. / Valenzuela gets the nod on experience LOS ANGELES (AP)-Experience guided Los Angeles Dodger Manager Tommy Lasorda to his decision to tab left-hander Fernando Valenzuela to stan in the opening game of the National League playoffs. While Cardinals Manager Whitey Herzog contemplated loading up for Valenzuela. 17-10. by statting a lineup of nght-handed h ttters, Lasorda predicted the best-of-seven matchup Wlth St. Louis will be .. a vel). very exciting playoff." League's leading hitter. Wtlhe MctTee. who batted 353. Their pnmar;. weapon will be their team speed Led b} rookie speedster Vince' Coleman. who sWlped 110 bases to set a rookie r~ord 1h1s }ear. the Cardinals figure 10 fo rce the action wi th aggressive baserunnmg. run that won the pennanl tor Balt1mnrr 1n the founh game of the I 98 3 pla) offs A.sited about the switch. Herzo~ ~1d ... , don't l no"' )Ct. l'"e got to ""etgh that one ·· "It's not a tough dec'ISlon," Lasorda said. "I want to piLch Fernando first. When the playoffs start, forget about all the records and stats. He's been through this before." "The Cardinals are the bes1 m the league in hitting and in defense," he added. "And they have two 21 -gamc Wlnners. St. Louis ts a very, very good team.·· Speed bein~ ~hat 1t 1s 10 the Cardinal!>. Herzog surpnsed Monda) when he said hr was pondenng the idea of keeping some of 1t in rt~~rve m the senes opener Hr said he there'" a poss1b1hty that n ght-handed h1tt1ng T1w Landrum could be used 1n place of Coleman Dodger pitching ""'11 be Herzog\ ch1rt concern. but he added that the 1mprc)\ ed Lll' .\ngeles defense also 1s a strong point He 'Wild Lasorda·s d~1s1on to shift Guerrero bad. Ill the outfield from third base and instalhn~ rookie Manano Duncan at shon<;top ""l'rr le' mO\eS Valenzuela, a 17-game winner this season, will be matched against St. Louis Cardinals' left-hander John Tudor. 2 1-8. in Wednesday night's opener. The senes figures to matc h up contrac;11ng styles of Wlnning baseball. Valenzuela, 24, has a 2-1 record and a 1. 96 ERA in three Championship Series starts. two m 1981 against the Montreal Expos and the other against the Philadelphia Ph1lhes m 1983. "They have the speed and we have the power,' said Dodgers outfielder M 1ke Marshall. whose 28 homers ranked second behind Pedro Guerrero's club-leading 33. The Cardinals will be led by the National Coleman. a switch hitter. ha<. had mon: success batting from the left side Landrum batted .280 as a pan-ti mer for thr Ca rds th1' season and 1s best remembered for the home .. Duni:an reall) pla~ed "'ell He wa<. w much 1mpr0\ed from the first ttme we "°"' 1hcm unttl the second time:· Herzog \<ltd .. The} ·.,,e got some (ht tters I "' ho can pop 11 but their s1.antng p1tchmg has bttn their st~ngth for "0 \tars: hr s~ud Sea View collision: Tars vs. Saddleback ~ It's only week twO. but title fi gures to be on the line By ROGER CARLSON Of ... Np ......... A year aao Newpon. Harbor and SaddJeback hooked up in a 26-26 thriller. the only time either failed to win in Sea View League football on the way 10 a co-championstup. Friday niabt they tanalc apin -at Harbor -wtlh the winner taking the inside lane to the league title. "My inclination is that we'll need about SO points," says Harbor Coach Mike Giddings. who saw his Sailors &ive up 20 second half points to Estancia an a 42-27 victory lut week, a pme in which EstanCJa had two touchdown pesses nulu1ied by penal- ties. "Our secondary has been ptayina really well," says SaddlebKk Coach Jerry Wllte. "Bui they haven't been tested. The thjna with Shane Foley (Harbor's ~uarterbeck), he throws two incom etion1 and then he com- pletes one or a fint down. We have Sol to force them to do other thinp ... Tbe duel pits the two offensive powerbOUICI o( the leque. each al 1-0. But in addition to offeOIC, Saddlebec.k po$KUCI a defente which has shut out three opponcnta.. and in 16 quanen. has aJlowtd just one touchdown. 'I "The one word I would use to descnbe them 1s 'explosive."' says Giddings. who knows be must 10 into tt with two of his major weapons probably unavailable. Joe Johnwn. a hard-nosed middle linebacker with tailback duties. too. went down with an ankJe in1ury agamst Estancia. Center Gus Hurst is also nursing an 11\J ured ankle. And while Harbor has that star- studded t>assing game with Foley and a bevy of good receiven, SaddJcbeck can boa.st of a quarterback with virtually equal statistics. Fint-year quarterbeck Myron But- ler, a senior, has completed 31 of S2 pesaes (59.6 pcrocnt) for 534 yards and 3 tDs.. That's not as much u Foley's 845 yards. comina on 62 of 110 (S6.3 peroent) for 8 TOs. but Foley bas not had a Glenn Campbell to rely on. Cam~ll. a 200-pound tailback. has rushed for 4 7S yards on 56 carries (8.5 averqc) for the Roadrunners.. "In a pme hke this it's the bta play-." says Otddu1p, "and they've IOI 1.J'Cmendous speed." .. Al far u we're concerned we're not aoint to let them have aood field position, uys Witte. "We can't let them drive the ball up 1n our end of the fidd "I don't think we can put a lot of prenure on their quarttrbeck, thouah becaute their llne'110 biaand they take amaU spUta. It'll be touah, but this is what's fun. 1t11 be a aood one." ......................... Bu1>or recel-.er Mark Cra.tc. OD Ilia way wtth a toachdown pue acam.t &.ta.Dela. Elsewhere 1n the Sea View Lea&ue thi1M1ek: f!.atuda (t-1) n . w..,e,wse Cl .. ): Woodbndar surpn9Cd Corona del Mar. 13-0 last week, but therc's no surprise factor cvuicnt for the War- rion Tbunday ni&)\t at Newt>Ort Harbor. ln eddttJon to ahowtnt t.betr potcn· uaJ epiDJt CdM, Wood~ ap- pll('(j a ll-14 loss on Esi.aoaa a ycaI aao "They've aot an oumand:tna d<'· fente wtth e-acellent bnebeictcn and (Pleue .. a&A VISW{B2) . ' Rams not ready for awards, yet Robinson· s ploy: He accentuates negative-things From AP dl1patdes Probabl} concerned that the Ram' arc gomg to st.an thmltms the} 're an undefeated-type team. Coach John Robinson 1s ignorina most of the positt'e and accen1uatmg the negative Despite the fact that the Rams art' indeed one of JUSt two National FootbaJJ Lea&ue teams with a perfe<:t record fi ve weeks into the season. Robinson's able to find things to dislike about his club's pla, At his weckJy m~una wi th rt'· porters Monday, the Rams· coar h looked back at Sunday's 13-10 ' 1cton over Minnesota and S11d h<' wasn·1 pleased that the V1kinas controlled the pme most of the sttood haJf. and that his team was not ph '1call-. dominant. "The physical part comes first and fineue nelt for the t)l)( of offen.r ~ have,'' he wd "I was ver) disap- pointed tn our penonnance fro m a phyi1cal aspect.. He abo said the V1k1np' ablhty to hold Enc Dtckcnon. who tct the Nfl s1~n rush1na record last year. to SS yards on 2S cames wa 1n pen bea'"' tM)' ~ k.eyina on the run and the !lams "'t'ren't able to h ·cp them off-balance b' passing ··0tcter Brod. did well. completed 1-' of 20 and was about a yard hetter than (M1nneso1a quarterback ! Tomm~ Kramer per pass attempt." Robinson said "But I didn't KJ "C' him (Brock ) the chance to ~all) thro~ ltlce 30 times. get done the things hC' ~anted to do .. On the pos1t1ve s1d<' Robinson com phmC'nted th~ pla~ of thC' Ram ~· \Pf'{'tal tea msand the "<'r3PP' att11udC' of th<' club as a whole The Ram~· defenst" <sa'rd thC' '1ctof) whcn. on the las1 pla) of th<' game. the) <;top~ Minnesota run- ning back Damn Nelson cold one vard awa\ from thc Rams· C'nd rnnc ··'\1 thr ronclus1on of that pla' 1 thought maybe this team doe\ ha\e somethina special... Roh1nt0n said "We almost lost. but found a way to pull 1t out I think that will pa) d1 v1dends down the road." Lauah1na. Robinson said the I Q8S Rams have a spec1al kind of charac- ter "I think 1f we we~ 9CCn as sophisticated. smooth, hot, instead of weird overachievers wanderina drunkenly from quartcr·t~uancr, I'd be womcd." be said. "1 am almost gleeful 1n 1ump1na on all o ur problems . One of the bnt th1np about lb11 team lS that it's not pat. It's been de1cribed as a weird collcctJon of ovet'Kb.aevtn Our only salvauon we have 11 \0 .,et better " M 0rMge Coeet 0All'1 PILOT/Tu.ctey, Octot. 8, 1888 . Prep football players of the week HARBOR'S FOLEY ••• homBl Foley hu been tbinkina about Newpon Harbor football for quite some time now. H!s uncle •. S~ve, F~1 went to Harbor ~d '1layed football m the mad 70 s. """° his arandparents. with whom h~ Uves n~w, have been Newport Harbor boosters for quite sometime now. .JlllumaT Conaa de1 Mar IOIDt AJlfOBLOVIC ltdl.9on The 6-0 I 7S-pound juruor linebacker had five solo tackles. nine wists and one caused fumble. "He's been aood every week." said Coach Dave Holland. The 6-0, I 7S-pound eenior was 13 of 17 puSJna for 282 yards and four TDs. "We lived by bis arm. He was on the money." said Coach Bill Work.man. •~~~~-------------·---------------------OLLY DAY Coetallea The S-11, 227-pound junior offensive 1uard "djd a really &ood job of pick.illJ up the blitz," said Coach Tom Baldwin. "And did a jOOdjob of blocking." DBNl'QS ADY roantatn van.., The S-11 , I 7S-pound 1enior wide rccei vcr tied a school record with l 0 catches (133 yards). Keo Margerum ( 1976) and Ride Hat- field ( 1975) share the mark. ·--------------------~ ·------------------~ ROBJlfLLOYD ltatanda BILL CRAFT Marina The 6-0, 180-pound senior transfer from Colorado ran for 122 yards on 21 carries.L. many of those yards on second enorts, and blocked well. The Vikings were idle because of their early-season 9-9 tie with St. Louis High in HawaH, where Craft scored a TD and and was in on several tackles. ..,. ____________________ ~ •~~~--~--~----~ DAJlRYL SKil'fl'fltR Banduton Beach SllAJlfB FOLEY l'fewport Barbor The 6-2, 190-pound senior completed 9 of 18 passes for 212 yards and five touchdowns. He also ran for 22 yards on five cames to guide the Tan' offense. The ~. 170-pound junior defcnsjve back recording five solo tackles, three lead tackles and three assists. He aJso punted well for the Oilers. *----------------------·~--~~--~~~~- DltAM FORD, PETE SCHllITT LUanaBeach dOth defensive lineman proved to be the instrumental spark that the Artists needed to beat Costa Mesa. 24-7, and move to 3-1 overall and 1-0 in league. KltVll'f BARKll'f8 lntne Redskins in 27-10 triumph WASHINGTON (AP) -George Rogers and John Riggins each rushed for more than I 00 yards and Wash- ington's special teams and defensive urut combined to bottle up the St. Loujs offense Monday night as the Redslcins handed the CardinaJs a 27-10 NationaJ Football League de- feat. Rogers rushed ·25 times for 104 yards and Riqins I 7 for I 03, the first tame two Washington running backs have rushed for over I 00 yards in the same game. The Cardinals, pinned deep in their own territory most of the night, started inside their own 26-yard fine on their first nine possessions. The Redskin defense intercepted four Neil Lomax passes and sacked the St. Louis quarterback four times, keeping the Cardinals out of the end zone until the fourth qWlrter when Washinston held a 20-3 lead. The victory. before a sellout Robert F. Kennedy Stadium crowd of 53, J 34. raised the Redskms' record to 2-3. The Cardinals. who haven't won 1n Washington since I 978. fell to 3-2 and dropped one game behind Dallas in the NFC East. The loss also marked the Cardinals I I th defeat in 13 games against Washington. Before he was knocked out of the game late in the fourth quarter with a pinched nerve in his shoulder, Lomax completed 18 of 33 foH-16 yards HENIGAN .•. From Bl mgton Beach was locked up with Cypress. At ha1ft1mc Cypress honored an asmtant football coach and proceeded to lavish him with praise and thanks which exceeded anyt hing short of the retirement party for Anaheim High's legendary coach. Clare VanHoorcbeke. This foran assistant who had stepped d own from h 1" head l·oach 1 ng JOb~ What had led to all 1h1s wa" the fact Henigan had resigned because he was offered a job in Roseberg. Oregon But after he made his dec1s1on the rug was pulled out from under him. and Geoff De Lapp had already been named as his replacement at Cypress. H1sreaction to the dilemma'> Rather than demand to be re1 nstatcd as head coach. he proceeded to ass1'it Delapp wnh the 1ntens1ty ofa first- year rookie. "It was a matterofpnnc1ple," s.ays Hentgan. "But when they gave me that night 11 really meant a lot to me. 1 really en JOY Irvi ne, it's a great school. but l would have never lef\ Cypress had it not been for the Oregon thing. But in the long run it worked out pretty well." The 5-9, 185-pound senior center filled in rucely at middle guard, contributing four lead tackles and one assist. He also did a fine job blockfog. ., ........... Dezter Manley (72) of the Redaklna cloeee ID on St. Loala quarterback Nell Lomaz ID Monday'• •ame ID WuhtD&ton. SEA VIEW FOOTBALL .•• From Bl down lineme n," notes Blanton. While Woodbridge's forte is de- fen~. Wamors Coach Gene Noji is aware of Estancia's offensive abih- 11e'i "All their running backs are tough." says NoJt. "They didn't get JI O yards by I uck, not agamst Newpon. I was impressed with Newport (Harbor defeated Estancia, 42-27 last week), but I was really impressed with Estancia. "And they have all their injured players back. Eric Dom (receiver) looked 100 percent to me and Mike Rosellini (quarterback), he looks awfully healthy to me." Corou del Mar {0-1) v1. Coda Meta (1-1): Early bragging nghts arc on the line for these two Newport- Mcsa District n vals "Losses haven't discouraged them," says CdM Coach Dave Holland of Mesa. "And the quar- terback, Paul Rodriquez. can throw at any level, deep or whatever." Holland is hoping his team can snap back from a I 3-0 upset loss to Woodbridge. a game in which Holland describes as "flat " Costa Mea Coach Tom Baldwin, meanwhile. is countina on traditio n to help carry the Mustangs, not1nf "Our lods really like play1ng CdM.' He's in a quandary, however. figunng out which offense he must stop -depending on who starts at quarterback for Corona. senior Tod Bearbower or sophomore Mitch Melbon. UaJvenlty (0-1) at Lapna Buda ( 1-0): Artists Coach Cedrick Hard· man isn't the sort who'll offer a lot of mformat1on on the opponent, but in the case of Un1vcrs1ty even he'd have a tou&h time denying the task for la§una Beach Friday night. ' I know that Craig Belle can run," be says, "I've watched him. He's the guy we have to stop." U niversity Coach Rick Curtis, meanwhile, is trying to find the ri&ht combination to help take some of the pressure off his tajlback with a more balanced offense after a 28-0 loss to Saddleback. The Trojans' 1-3 overall record is extremely deccivina -those three losses are to teams (M ission Viejo. Irvine and Saddlcback) with a com- bmcd record of 12-0. "We're fortunate to be where we arc," says Hardman. "The coach that wins is the coach that makes the adjustments during the pme1 not on Saturday momina. So thats whit we're aoing to do. All I know now is that we have to contend with BeUe, we need to make the adjuatments and ao alona.·· SCOTT TOlllmf& Unl't'eftlty The 6-0, I SS-pound jumor defensive tackle recovered two fumblet, recorded seven aolo tackles, five usjsu and man- euvered well all over the field •~----------~--~~ DA vtD TOWl'f81tl'fD Woodbrtqe The 5-11 , I SS-pound junior had 91 yards on 17 cames. • I wish everybody on the offensive line could be player of the week," said Coach Gene Noji. •~------------------- llIIUt O'C01'1'f0R Mater Del The 6-2, 215-pound senior mside linebacker graded out to 87 percent, had 65 points on the performance chart, the highest ever by a Monarch. *----~--~--------- llARC OBll Ocean View The 6-0, 180-pound senior had rushed for 94 yards on 23 carries, blocked well and "when he left the field, he was empty," according to Coach K.arl Gaytan. •·----~--~----------- MYRON BUTLER Saddleback The 5-1 O. 160-pound sent or completed IS of 17 passes for 253 yards and one touchdown. He also ran for an 8-yard touchdown in Saddleback's 28-0 victory. SPORTS BREAK P~ates' shakeup includes firing of veteran Tanner From AP dilpatclaet PllTSBURGH -Chuck Tanner, the • ever-optimistic manager who skippered the Pittsburgh Pirates to a world cham- pionship and three second-place finishes in nine years, was fired Monday as part of a shakeup that will put a local public-private partnership in control of the team. Tanner said the decision was "mutual," but made it clear he was ousted not by current club President Dan Galbreath but b a new ownership group headed by Malcolm "Mac" Prine. "They didn't want me and I didn't want them," Tanner said. "I plan to remain in baseball as a manager for another I 0 to 15 years. I'll be somewhere and if s going to be good. I want to win more world championships." Prine , the chairman of Ryan Homes Inc .. indicated last week when his group signed a letter of intent to buy the financially ailing Tana.er Pirates that he favored a "clean sweep" approach that would bnng m not only new owners, but also new mana,ement. Tanner, 56, was asked to step down with two years left on his contract after the Pirates· worst season m 32 years. He said he hopes to begin talking to as many as six major league clubs within days. "All the clubs know 11ow that I'm available. I'm going to be with a club that's going to do well." Tanner said. "I have a lot of alternatives and I'll do what's best for me overall. I want to work for an owner who I can be loyal to, like I was to Dan Galbreath. "My loyalty is to the Galbreaths. The game has lost a lot by the loss of the Galbreath family. I know the game has to go on." Quote of the day "I think if we were seen as sophisticated. smooth, hot, instead of weird overachievers wandenng drunkenly from quarter-to-quarter, I'd be worried," -Rams Coach Jolm RobiaaoD, on his 5-0 team. Lilli• fired •• A•troe manager HOUSTON -Bob Lillis,.iwho guided • the Houston Astros to a winrung record in three full seasons as manqer but never to the playoffs. was dismissed Monday and offered a top-level job in the organization, General Manager Dick Waaner announced. A replacement for Lillis, a member of the Astros organization since 1962 when the franchise formed, would be announced later this month, Wagner wd. Wagner said he hoped Lillis would remain in the organization but felt that a change needed to be made because the Astros bad not risen far above the .500 level under Lillis' direction. Wln•low return• to Charger. SAN DIEGO -Chargers tight end [il KeUcn Winslow. sidelined by a knee injury •II• almost a year aao. will practice with the team this week and could be activated for Sunday's pme apjoat Kanaas City, Chargers Coach Don CoryeU said Monday. WinsJow, a three-time National Football Lcaaue Pro Bowl selection, tore knee lipmenu durina an Oct. 21 , 1984 apinat the Los Angeles Raiders. "I always wanted to 10 to Newport/' ~l'~ .Foley. "When l was freshman I went to Palm Spnnp ffilb but I wasn ·1 happy there. Tb11 is an a~ with a lot more competition, as far as footbeJl aoes. Gettina better seems to be Foley's focus when you u1c him. "As far as statistics or cert.a.in areas I'd like to improve in, the only thing I can say is I'd like to ae~ ~ with the rest of the team. We all need to pt better 1fwe re goina to do the things w~ think we can ~is year. r. And as far improvma myself. I think r could show better judgement before I throw. I still hive a ~dency ~ act too fired up and force a ~1 when .I should eithet: eat 1t or throw it away. And that comes wttb better readina of the defenses." . . Jn last week's pme, Foley read Estancia like a cheap djmc store novel, throwina TD passnof27, 9, 16, 30and 13 yards. . "They (Esta.ocia) were ~litzi~& a. lot a.?d Shane di~ a heckuvajob," said Coach M1keG1drunp. The beat thina he djd was change the snap counts. "When we move the ball well it's because everybody is doing their jobs. Shane would be the first to tell. you that when everyone does their jobs, his becomes easiet:." And Foley agreed. "When the g~ys ~P ~ront 11ve me some time," he said. "I have the easiest Job 10 ~e world. Our two guards, Jason Nedelman and Scott Craig are ~o of the best in the league. And the other guys arc comma around too. "I don•t want to take anYthing away from Estancia. because they are a good team, but we couldn't have beat.en Saddleback with that und of a performance. "That's why we've been so intense in practice. We're trying to get that kind of thing out of our system." When hearing Foley, you'd think he never relaxes f~r a minute. But there is one place where he takes off h1s game face. "My grandparcn~s live .on the beach," b~ says, "and after a hard-hittmg Fnday night of football I like to go out o n the sand on a Saturday and just fall. al~p... . Foley will probably sleep a lot eaS1er this Saturday af he and the Tars can can aive Saddleback the 'old one-two' -as 1n first and second halves. Globetrotters pick woman BURBANK - Lynette Woodard, the m captain of the U nited States gold mcd.aJ- wining 1984 Olympic basketball team and holder of the NCAA women's career scoring record in basketball, was selected Monday to be the first woman ever to play for the Harlem Globetrotters. "It's a wonderful feeling, I'm so excited I can't hide It " Woodard said after the announcement was made. "i'm here there's a lot to be learned. and I'm ready to work hard. I have the basic skills to be a part of thjs team. I'm j ust going to blend in and let it flow.'' Woodard, 26. is a 5-11 guard from Wichita, Kansas. who attended the U niversity of Kansas and is the top career scorer in the history of the school. men or women. Fullerton's Redick honored Wide receiver Com Redick of Cal [il State Fullerton, comerbaclc Anthony •II• Dollarhide of Fresno State. and safety Alvin Hom of Nevada-Las Vegas have been selected as the Pacific Coast Athletic Association football players of the week. Redick a 6-0 180-pound sc01or from Los Angeles, was ho nored u the offensi ve player of the week for his performance in Fullerton's 20-18 victory over Sao Jose State last Thursday night. Dollarhide. a S--11 . 200-pound senior from Ventura, and Hom . a 5-11 . 188-pound Junior from Hanford, were honored as co-defensive players of the week fbr their performances last Saturday mght. Umpires say they'll show up NEW YORK-Thebaseball playoffs. • threatened with a waJkout by major league umpires, will begin tomght with regular officials on duty, Richie Phillips. attorney for the union, sajd Monday. "We are going to work in Toronto," Phillips wd. "I won•t say anything beyond that." Jim Evans, Dave Ph1lhps, Ted Hendry, Vic Voltaggio. Darryl Cousins and DaJc Ford are assi&ned to the series between Kansas City and Toronto. The umpires' contract calls for coverage of best-of- fivc playoffs. the format baseball has used since 1969. With the playoffs expanded to a best-of-seven this year, the umps arc seeking increased fees for the extra games. A strike last year forced baseball to use amateur and college umpires in all but one game of the National and American League playoffs. A settlement arbitrated by Commissioner Peter Ueberroth called for iocrcues to $1 0,000 per man for the 12 umpires assigned to the playoffs and a $160,000 contnbut1on to a pool for distribution to the remaining umps. Television. radio TELEVISION 5 p.m . -BASEBALL: Kansas City at Toronto in opening game of American Leaaue playoffs, Channel 4, 6 p.m. -PRO BASl.ETBALL: Lakers at Boston in NBA exhibition (delayed), Channel 9. 11 p.m. -BOXING: Channel 56. RADIO 5: I 5 p .m . -BASEBALL: Kansas City at Toronto, KNX (1070) 6 p.m . -PRO BASl.ETBALL: Laken at Boston (delayed), K.LAC (S70) WEDNi!SDAY'S TELEVISION Noon -BASEBALL: AL ·playoffs Kansas City at Toronto, Channel 4. WEDNESDAY'S RADIO Noon -BASEBALL: Al playoffs Kansas City at Te>n>nto, K.NX ( 1070). So oow Irvine has Henigan. the winged-Tand those top on-<:ampus assistants, and although the Vaquero, may complain that they don't belong 1n the powerhouse South Coast Leaaue. don't believe 11. They may be short on enrollment, but they're verylonaon savvy, Here's a capsule report on baseball's best in 1985 Vikings split ·polo games LONG BEACH -Minna H11tl'<s Vwn11 spht a JMlir of water polo pmes Monday in the Sunny Hills Tournament, held at Lona Beach Poly Hiah tak..ina an 8~5 dcc111o n ove-r Foothill. thet? losina •. ~ (}. s verdict to Sunny H1ns. The V1k1na.• were wtthout their No. I hole man, Mike Hania.. who wu out with I bone bru11e. h Sunny Hilll, ranked No. I 10 t e \IF 4-A. wn ltd by Eric Blum·• five &Qals A bnef look at the unoffi cial winners of ind1v1dual battina and pttchinJ champ1onsh1ps in the I 98S b.sebalJ 1e1son: aATTIMO MtMt•• AL-Oerr tll l w.,.., Ottroll, 40 @Ytnl btcenw ltlt ftnl N'i1( 10 1111 t0 hofM runs In• MalOll In bolll 1Mtvtt 91\d 1"8 flt-ii TW •Inc» llHWl'll Ceall ·~ ltoctlv Colavllo In 1'6i lo hit 40 llon'8 runt In I MtllOll Al JI, Evant alto It Ille oldMI DleYW to 1111 40 llOtMfl In Ille Al'llt'ie.n LtHUt. Nl..-Otlt ""4Jr~y, Alltl'llt, J1 Mu<,,..,., .. , • c.e..-""" '°' '*'-' tfl.,. llllllnt l6 fOf lllrM COftttatllW ... _. ........... AL-<>on Malllntilv, ,,._ Yorti, lU Meltlnelv'. 1'91 !Of ti .,. ,.. !Mii '" "" ~ tlftet Oett .. , .. ..,., 1'f wlltl IN Clnc'-11 ... lft 1'77 Md !tit ,,,_, .., t Ytnl!M •Ince Jot ~·· , .. In ,,. Ht ..... flnl Yeta.tt to 1tM ,,_ ......,. In •ai alM» lloetr Matis' 10 Ill IN l NL-0.ve 111'tr11.,. ClflCJMell. ltS ,,.,".,. .... c.t,_ hlell. ~ .... 117,,. l\td tor Pl11Mur9'1 In lt77 ............ AL-WtOt ...... lotlon, ._ ..... won fllt MCond INllllne Ill" In lllrM .,..,. Hit ,_, hllt WWt ti. lnOll In Ille '"9lor ..._. In ii VMrJ la.be ....,.,.,,.,., 2AI, tno trOOlltvn Ood9tr•l rllMlftt ll•lfl ... ....,. In IN AL Md 1 lltl ll·llmt In !flt INWr" ...._. ..... tltcl 1 rMlor·llMYt record.,., lllttll!e t.-iv Ill iu .. "'" Tiit ,_.d WM ... .,., Cl'ludl l(lllft of ,.. PN1ec1111111e Pttllllft In lnG. Of ._.., ,AO Mn. 1'7 -· """"· IWMllllll IN 1'9COtd of 1 .. Mt "" Wtlllt WlltOfl of I(.,,.._ City In ,,. NL-wtlllt McQ.el, SI. Louis, m . MclOee It 1M ""I twllelt-Ntler lo IMd IN NL 11-...... •-In 1m Wftll Clnc;t!Wllll, end 1111 ,....,. ... It IN lllltlttl ever .., 1 twtkn•fllltw In Int NL. MCOw't 21' llltt ert Ille "'9'1 b'I t Cerd!Mt MM» Jot Torre "941 no In "71 .......... AL--lcllt Y ~Mfl. Htw York, a Ht lltollt !flt Vt!IMe record of 14 wt IW l"r111 /NINI In lt1' ~II ltlt flnl Ai. ... .,.., to "" JO ., ~ '*"'" Mid ..... ,. • fl'IOt't .... '"'"'---NL-V!Me CIMl!mtn, St Loull. lit COlen'Mlll .nettered IM rOOllle recotd of n Mt In lfM by ~·1 Juell S.""'91 He It OlllY Ille fourltl N'JW In melor·leHlll lllt!O'Y (Mlklfy Wlllt, Lou ll'OCll tllf ~er. tl'lt °""") IO ..... 100 01 mott """' In t --· 0.-.. AL-()on MalttnefY, Ntw Yorti, • Tiie .-lDftd -"' • ,_ Mattlftety he• led "" ma11t ~ 111-...... tMflnt AL ... .-... .. 1Mce Trlt ...__. (1'20-D>. TM a art IM MOtl by t Yt!IMe .tnct Lou GefW'lt ltd tlw......,. ......... m-,_.. S2 In 1'27 NL-0.ve l"WUr, ClftcJMell, '1 lt'I IM ltllrd time In flit CetMr Jtlel l"'er1ler Ml hll more ''*' .., do\*" In • -'°" HI• cereer 1111111 11 •J. In 1m. ... AL--~ l•toerlOfl, Hew Yertl. l .. Hefld«'tOll NI IN lllollffl ... '°" lottl In tlw ElllA fOf t tltrter lf'I 1M fMltrl t1"a ... Ole ...... tine» Ttd Wl!lt.mt'I 1'0 In Ifft encl Ot~'t 1.12 fOf II Loult In I .... OOOlllll .... t IN mott by t Ytnllet llnm Joe OIMtttlo'1 IJI In 1trlft9 ol 4' tnnl,,.. wlltlout .,.....,_en_.,.. IV\. "'7 NL-0. tw.JIJlty, Alltnt•, I ll Seconcl·fll9ell Ul'Mf IOlt l, Mvt fifty llCO(ed I) 1 rum In lta. wtltl 714 runt KO'ed In 10 ... tont ~ '9flll• NCOnd eitNno ....,_ Awon'• t1' on h tll-tlml ..._ hi "1'CMM9 ~ AL-4ton Ciuldrv, Ntw Yorlc, n OuldrV't 22-6 man wa1 hit betl tlnct Pit Wffll f t-> In lf7t. Ht It IN eevtlltll Vtftlil" 10 win 20 or ,,,_. Ml"ntt. • NL-owltflt Goodin, Ntw York 14. Aflw 1lartlnl tlw -ti 6•l, b;. I( -It of It dlldtloM -lndudlnl 14 alr .... t. Ooedtll 11 ltlt vountMI mMtrll tllds It Win 20 -"'"• ... ,. "° ao e1 20 ,..en. '*" mtfltM w flil'9 •vi-" •ue. H ....,., 1t11 ~ MA Al.-0.-. 1119', TtrlftlO, J & A cerw IOw ttr lttltl lfMI • Item reciorc1. Mlttt'lne IHI......,., la. ft't ltle ""1 l""8 t aiu. Jev ._. -1111 lllA lttlil NL--c>wltiflf ~. N9w Yon-1 P !Awftl ......... AL--9«1 ·~. Milo_..., 1k Oftollt rteklftt ~ _,.,. 2,,. ,.,._,...Ill '6 ... '°"'• ll't "'8 flnl time~,_• a ltt""8 In ttrlk-m. Hll cw.,-flWI .. 19 Ill tfP2 wlltl ltlt TwlM NL-OWllllt Goodlll, New Yot1l, Jll Two YMrt In l"8 llefl'8 W ._. .,,..._,. CIOWlll Ootdtn tlrudl out 10 Oif ,,_.. ~ 11 tim.t 11111 -· ~ l6 In WI,.......,,.. ... Intl IM OIM", Ht lflcl ...... ac... Wt IN onlY tltc:fttt1 .. ,.,. -°' """" Ill eedl ..... flrlllwtM9MM. ..... AL-Dell QIJlu .,.., W..... City, 11 . ,ourltl ~.,..., Ot ··~ ...... ti. ALlllM..._Ht,.... thltfl•W. ........ -.. , """'"· 11 ..... """' ~ NL--"" • ..,..,_~. •t ~"' ~"""' ... ,....-., ... .., ........ ~,, .... , ............ ....... 9IW dUll """' Harbor's task: stopping No. 2 Sa dleback rate second in CIF poll; WOodbridge No. 9 Saddlcback Hi&h, emeflina as one of the Central Conference•s power- houses, moved into the No. 2 position tn the conference's Top 10 CIF football poll Monday followi~ its t~ird shutout of the scaaon Fnday n1ghL, a 28-0 victory over University. The Roadrunners ( 4-0), fourth tn the poll last week., encounter Newport Harbor (3· I) Friday tn perhaps their most important matchup of the season. The Sailors, who defeated Estancia 42·27 last week, arc No. 5 in the Central Conference, movina up from the No. 6 spot 1t held last week. The two schools tied last year, 26-26. and shared the Sea V 1ew League champ1onsh1p. Sadd.&eback bas outscored 1t1 oppo- nent• this aeuon, 89-1 2. and as Just one of three teams in the CentraJ Conference still undefeated. Full- erton (freeway), ranked No. 4 and Santiago (Garden Grove), No. 8. arc the other two. Woodbridae (3-1). following a 13--0 upset over Corona del Mar. cracked the Central Conference's top 10 for the first time ever. The Warriors are ranked ninth, pvin1 the Sea View l...eque three representatives in this week's poll. f.dison (3-1 ), which came from behind to beat St. John Bosco, 28-27, retained its No. 7 position in the 811 Five Conference poll. The Chargers arc the ooJy Orange Coast area team 1n the conference's top 10. Irvine (4-0) has moved into the Southern Conference's No. 5 spot - up one from its ranking last week. The Vaqs handled their first South Coast Lea&ue assignment with no problem Friday, downing Laguna Halls, 33-7. * * * * * * ,. ... ~ 1. Fonl•ne 2 Lontl 8Mch POlv l ll&holl A~I • Servile S. $1 P1ut 6. Rlv1nlell POIV 7 ....... I Crttlll 9 EIMl\howtr 10 A1tm1nv I. V•i.n<:l1 1~ J. LI Qulnl1 4. Fulltrton S. Ntw"'1H•rtliw 6 LI Mlr•d• 1 L• H1C>r• a S.nrteoo '· w ... ,, .. 10 8tflllowtr I El MOOtnt l Min ion Vltlo J Lvnwood 4 Aowlmncl s. ""'- " C•Pf'lll1no V•lltY 1 LO\ AHO$ I. Wttl Covin• 9 !II•> Loa Al1nillo1 9 Ult) Et Toro I Sen•• 8•r1>er1 2 Hoover l. Schurr 4. Slnll Monlc.e s. South Torrence 6 Alo ~ 1 Muir • o~nerd 9 Newburv Perk 10 Ventur• Big Five Conference LAetlue It_.. ,.._, Last WM Cllrua a.it l · 1 13' e..1 P11m $1>flno,, o -o Moor"-l ·O 12S llMI LA S.nnlno, It· 10 A"99!0\ 4·0 110 llMI St. Fr1nc", 21·0 Anoetua 4·0 101 llMI Founl1ln V11i.v. 27·7 All9elu' 4-0 1' &Ml <>c.an vi.w, 12·0 Cllrua 8ett 4-0 7S 811t ltldl1nd1. 14·0 S4#IMt >-I M 9Mt St. JeM htce, Jl-27 Del RIV 4·0 JO a.ti SI G-VllVt, 7·0 Cllru1 84141 4·0 24 a..1 COiion, 20-1 Del Ro 4·0 16 8111 Plul X, 11·0 Central Confer ence Or•noe s.. View GerOtfl Grove Fr-ev SM View Suburl>ln Frt1w1v Gerdtn Grov• s.. View wt>uro.n l-1 ••• l -1 4-0 J-1 l · I )-1 4·0 )-1 l·l IO 67 6S so 4' 45 JS 13 11 1 8tt1 Trov, 30"0 ... , Unfwnltv, •·• a..1 Sonor•. n-3 8HI R1nct1o Alenillo1. JS 6 .. , ••twlda, 0 ·11 L0\1 to LOI AHO&, 2S·O 8t1I L81<twood, 2l 0 8111 ~w•lk, n 3 ... , c.-... Mitt, ·~·· Lo,1 to Hewtllorne. 1' 14 Southe rn Conference Ctfltutv •-0 South Cot1t 4·0 Sin Georltl V11leY l · I Sltrre 4·0 Sell9I CMU 4·0 $oulh Cot't 3-I Sltrre l-1 Sltrre 3·0 Ernolrt 4·0 South Coetl 2·2 IO 71 61 SI 4' lJ 31 ,, 12 12 Coastal Conf er e nee &llt !>Int• Ant V111tv. 40· 14 8111 Sin Cllmtnlt. 27· 12 a.ti l 8 Jorden, 21 O 8u1 C•nooe Per•, 24-7 ... t~H .. ,)l.J LO\t to Et Toro. 17· 14 8Ht L• Mlredl. 1s-o !IHI South HIN•. 24·n BHI l otrl , 71 1 8tet C•ol\lreno Veti.v 17 · 14 Clllnntl 4·0 111 BHI Hueneme. 29 0 PecHlc 4·0 106 Beet Sen Merino, 24·6 Foott ·:1 •-0 t9 Bttl 1.8 Mllllk1n, 43·l3 81v 2· I 81 9HI ROlll"9 Hllll, 47· 20 8•v •·O 64 8ttl Mir• Colle, 71 · IS Ct\8nnt4 l ·O· I 63 8t11 O•n•rd, ll·l PecHlc l · 1 SS LOii lo North Torrence,,,_,. Clllnnt4 l -1 )6 LO\I to Rio Meie. ll·l Marrnonlt J· 1 27 Beat Chennt4 1111nd\. 14·0 Ctwln114H )•I 10 BHI Sen Merto&. 21 0 Desert-Mountain Conference Ltuzl,_.. Stnt1 Clere Notre Oem1 (ltlv l (tltl YUCllOI 4 (tltl C•t•o. .. , 6 SI G-vt.vt 1 CerPln~I• • MoorPll'k ' ... ~. 10 Mlrtlftlt P'°'-' Frontier ~Ill wMlll Frontier S.nt1 Ft Trl·V1lllv Trl·Vt lln Frontltf P*- 4-0 J-1 4·0 )·I 4·0 , 2 3·1 l·I 1·2 M 120 106 " 7J n 62 •1 l9 n II Beer Culver Cllv 20· ll 8"1 81'110o 0 1'90 40· 13 Bttt &Nurnont, IS·O e .. 1 Cotehtlle Venev, 37·0 BHI O.• Perl< 33·6 l.0tl to Cru ol. 1·6 Bttl Fiiimore. 3'·7 Lo'1 10 EI S.OundO 19 11 LO\I 10 Herv•rd, 11 ll 8tet Rim ol Int WO<'ld 41 13 Eastern Conference ICl•rtmonl 2 ,._.,,.. 1!11Mllnt 4-0 90 &tel C.tendof• •S·6 8HI Atte Lome lS· ll 8ttt MotlttOtllO, 21·0 BletJ W Nortll 11·1• 8t1t Corona. 41 0 LOii to 8111 Gero."'· 19 0 8t1t llou mH d 20-7 9u t Senla Fe. 13·7 8t1t 8uft>1nk, IJ 10 LO\t to W.,1 Covina H 21 81Mlfne 4-0 11 l &.it G••cMin• 4. Norco Wf'lflrnont l -1 " lvv l -1 6S s. Artlng!Oll lvv l 1 SI 6 "'°"'Mlello Wtillrnont J 1 33 7 Temoll Cltv Rio Ho<m 1· 1 2S I El R•ncllO Whllrnonl 3· 1 20 9 Lt C•Nld8 10 South Hlll1 Rio Hondo l ·I 16 V1tll VIII• 2· 1· 1 IS Inland Conference I llt lt.v Chrl1ll•n 2 Onl•rlo Chrl11l1n 3 T •h•Clllol Olvmol< 4·0 100 BHI So Cel Chrl,llen. 62 0 BHI 8rttl'lrtn, 7·6 Btel Sll1ller 21 20 &tel C•oo Veri.v Cnr , 40 14 8tet LA 81011,t Cl·) Bl•• Sliver v11i.Y. 46·0 Beet Or111111 Lulhtrtn, 77 IS LOii to Sotr~\ fNll) l2·7S lo,1 to Merenellle 22 IS Beer Strre no, 1J 0 Olvmolc 4·0 16 OfllrHnvo L•roe 4·0 .. • Whltlltr Chrl•tlen S Montc11lr Preo Otvmolc 2·2 t.t f.ll)fle 2·2 4S 6. Perecltl• 0.Mrt-lnvo Ltroe 3· I 41 7 Mertl\lll\t e 91,noo Olvmolc 3·1 » Oturt·lnvo Ler11t 2-1 31 9 Or1n111 Lvt"4tren 10 AQUll\ll Otvmolc 3-1 ~ DI An11 2-2 e Northwestern Confere nce I Cenvo,., ISi Goia.<I •·O IO But Notre D•rne (SOI 21 14 2 AtHCldtrO LOI PW.\ •·O n 8HI Sen Lvt\ Oohoo, l1 0 l Vtrl>l.m 0.1 C1ml110 Rut 4-0 ,, 8HI Se<re, 2'·1 4 HtW!llornt ac..n A·O SI 8tet 8ettflowtr, 19 14 S LOMPOC Northtr'n l ·l 46 &tel S M SI Jo~ 14 1 • uorltlo LOI Pldr., 4·0 41 Bltl »"•• Merle, J0-10 7 Anltloot Vl lllY GolClln l -1 )I) But 81kerdlet<t. 30 1 • ltl9Mttl Northlrn J·I 10 11 .. 1 P110 llOOlt\, n -20 t North Torr•nc• Oct1n 2-2 13 BHI Muir. 29 ?I 10 RldOt BurrOUQh• Goldeft l-0-1 • 8t11 T rel>IK.o Hiii•. 17 1 Southeastern Conference I Chtrter O.~ Montvt.w •·O 100 8u t 811dwln Peri.., 46 6 2 Dl•mond h r Heci.ndl 4·0 90 8HI MOlllClllr 74 0 3 Ctntrel 0.-l·Velltn J·0-1 ,, Tr.cl SO MedllOn, J· l • Arrovo Mlulofl VllllY 4-0 .. 9HI NO<'lhvt.w, 12·0 S Sen Olme1 MOnlvl-l·O S9 l!lttl Ed9twood. 26 9 6 ADO!t V1lt.v $en ""°'"' l ·I 4S 8Nt LI SltUI, 21 0 1 LI Sltrre $en Andrt11 3-1 l3 Lo'I to Al>Ot. Vt1i.v 11 0 I Geneah• Heci.nd• 2·2 31 8111 Chino, c.t 14 9 Sen &.rntrdlno Sen Andfe11 ]·I 26 8eel HHOlf'I•. 1·0 10 Aru .. Montvi.w 7-0-2 10 8ttl Slerre 111111. ~-14 Nation's top teams compete at UCLA Area standouts - vie in three-day - volleyball tourney Most of the nation'• top collepate women's volleyball teams will pther at UCLA Thursday for the three-day National lnvit111onal Volleyball Tournament. The tournament...__which includes '26 playcn from the vnante Cout area competinJ for such powcrhoutes u UCLA. USC. Pepperdine, University of Pacific and other top teama. is considered to be the premier women's collqjatc event outside of the NCAA pl1yoff1. Top-r1oked UCLA and No. 2 USC head 11 of the nation's top 20 teams competina. All-American honon a<lCOmP1ny 17 playen into the tournament. anctudina USC• T rKY Out. a thRc- time Alf-American out of El Toro Hl&h. Arc. 1tandout1 indudc three-time defmdi .. chamj)ion Padftc'1 Brooke Herrlnaioo I.Def Elaina Oden. con- a.idered the D&UOft'I top two m:na.ill lut year. HerriJlllon, out of Corona de1 MN H~ wu a member of the West team at 1Ut eummet'1 Natioul = FCltival. 0ctm. Lut ~· Clf of \be yar, and tbe li.ltcr of font AJ}.Amcrican KJm ()dm. II an Irvine HIP ar..tuate. Darci Pankard, of Laguna Niguel. comes off what San D1cao State Coach Rudy Suwara called, "the best freshman year of any player I've coached."' JuJie Evans. from Newport Harbor H1ah. and Sue McDonald, of Laguna N11uel, form one oft.he nation's most productive outside bitting tandems. ranki~ eiahth and seventh r~~­ tively an national kJll average Teri Donohue, of Fountain Valley. is a pre-season All-Amencan scltt- tion for Cal. Lori Zeno. a Founta1n Valley resident. is playina elllrcmely well oomina of knee surgery for UCLA. And Andrea Redick. ftom'Corona del Mar Kiah. i11 top player for Pacific. Seven of the tournament's I 7 champion• have aone on to win the NCAA titJc. includina 1evcn double champions in eiaht yean from 1972-79. Five pools of four teams each wall teparate the 20-tea.m field. rcp- raenti°' nine states, and an entry &om C.a.Jpry. Canada. This year wtll lntroduc:c a new t.hree-of-five-pme match ,<onnal, up from two-of·lhrtt pmes in previous yan. Three m1.1n count in Pauley PaviUon wdl be uted for action bqinnlnt Thunday at ~ p m Fnday Pf!'CI bclin at 10 Lm , with quar- terfinal actiou slated for 6:l0 p.m Semifinal pmn will ~n 11 9 a m Sa1urday, culminatina '"th the cham· p.onship match at 8 p m. . . -- ~ • • t I • • °"""""St. u. ~ ST l.OU'1 OOO.••• c;.....,.. Cetdlet1 n Tom Nieto .. .W..t kloK .. u Darrel Porter 1 Sit,,. Yeeo« ........... ........... " '"'" 0.J.-.u. 10 On• Al!Olf.on ,. Torl'I Hl'r 21 8ob lallOt It Mike JoroenMn ' Oreo BrQCI>. ,, Tom Llwlftl 23 E'* Cltlllt ' T tr rv P.ndlttOll 12 Mart.no Dunc.In I Out. Smtih S2 1 111 Medlock ~ 25 Llfl MelUllll 16 Sltvt 8r•vn 3 Slt11t Sea 7 Cner C.otno ~ n Jeck Clerk ,. P9dro GUlf'rero ,, Vince Colt~n .. l(en L•nd<M u• 2S lrl1n Heroer 10 Cdv Maldon~ 21 Tllo l1nd<um s Miiie Marmet! SI Wltlt. McGM 45 T errv Whlttltld II And\# Ven SvlU ~ l"tlcNn 37 8ot>C>v Ce&llllo 47 Jotciuln Anclut.r 17 CerlOI 0111 )t 8111 C•rncio.tl SS Or .. Htr"'I-~ 0 1nnv Coa 40 R lc.k Hontvcutt .. Kif' 0 1vt.Y 43 Ktn Howtll 31 8oO Forteh ., Tom Nitdtnflltl' ., Rkkv Horton .. Dtnnl1 Powell so Kurt Ktoihlrt .i Jerrv lttuu l2 Jeff Llhtl 34 Frl\d V11tn1ueta .. JQlln Tudor 35 8oO Wllcll Ter..,.-KanMI Cttv r9Stwl KANSAS CITY TORONTO CatcMrl C.tm.s • Jlni Sunaotro 13 Jeff Ht1rron 12 JoM W11111n 17 Ern .. Whitt ~ lllfllNln •S s ...... 8•lbOlll I Tonv Ftr11Anot1 I 8 udd\I lll•n-n CICll Flt<lltr Client 7 Om.co Gtrcl• s 2 4 20 9 lS 11 ,. 3 IS 2l 6 11 40 23 2S 17 JO 71 2' )l Gtl>f'u. 8fttt 16 Gerlh l«O Ool• Conceoclon 4 MeMYLM Greo Prvor s ~•net MUlllnllu Frenk Whit• 0 Al Oliver Oufllltldert 26 Wllllt Ul>ihew Dent loro Ou"'4llden Lvnn JOlll• 29 Jeut Bertltld H1I McRH " G.or11t a.it Oerrvl Molt.v .. Jiff 9urroogh\ Joroe Orte 00 Cliff Johnion Pet Sll«ldln IS LIOod Molll>v Lonnie Smlll'l ,. Lovl1 Tnorn10,., Willie Wilton ~ P'tfdMn )I Jim Adler Jot 9ecll w "" l3 Oovll A1ta1ndtr 8ud 911(:1< 3' 8 111 C•udlh Merl< GuOlu• ,, Jim Cllncv Oennv J•ck '°" 49 Tom Flier Mike J-so Tom Htilkt Mlkt LIC0t• n Jlmrnv Kev C Lti1>r1ndl SJ Denni' Lemo O Qulwnt>errv 46 Gt rv Uveti. 8ret SeotrNetn 37 0 1ve Stlec> MA.JOA LEAGUE LEADERS AIMf1c.an u..ue (~NI) 8A TTING (400 11 1>1t1l-6oQo,, 801ton, 361. 8rttt. K1nw' Cflv • .llS. Mettlnotv Ntw York. l74. ll Htndtraon. New YO<'k 314. 9utltr, ci.vet.nd. 311 RUNS-R HtftellflOn, Ntw VO<'I<, 146 Rlpktlfl, 9ettlmort. 116, Ow Even,, 8o"on. 110, E Murr•v, 81lllmof'a, 110, 8rtll, K1n•11 Cttv. 109 RBl-Melllnoiv. New YOflr. 14S. E Mvrr1v, 811tlmore, 12•. Wlnflekl. New 'l'ork, 114, 8elnt\, Chlceoo. Ill, l!lre11. Ke n .. & City, IU HITS-8ovo,, 80,1on. 240, Mtt1lnotv, N1w Yori<, 211, 8 ucf\ntf , 80\lon, 201, Pl.tcktll. Mlnn"ote. 1'9, Beine,, Chle•!10. ltl DOU9LE~Melllnolv, New VO<'k. 41, Buckner, 80,1on, ~. 8009•, Bo"Otl, 42, COOC>tr, Mllw1ult.t1, :W, 8rell, Ken\ls Cllv, 3'. G Welk tr. Cl'lle100. ll TRIPLE!r-Wllaon, K•"se' Cltv 21. 8ut ttr, Ct.vet.no. 14. Puckett. Mlnnetol• 13. Fernendez. T0<"011lo, 10. B•rli.id, Toronto t, Gulllln, Chlce !10, • HOME ltUNS-Oe Even~, 0.troll, 40, F111r., Cllkeoo. 37, 8•rt>onl, K.•n .. s Cllv, l6, Mtfllngly Hew YO<'lr. JS. G Tt1omH S..llt.. 32 STOLEN 8ASES-R H•ndtnon. New 'l'ortl, IO. "'"''· All98h, 5'1 Bvtltr c .. vt11nd, 47, WlllOn r<en\ls City, 43, L Smith, ken .. , Cllv 3' PITCHING ( 12 Otc•1ton,1-Gulorv. New York. n -6. l 17. Slt>t<"'9tn. K1n\I' Cllv 20·6. 217. CJIMml. A"91ft, t .), 1.091 Kev Toronto. 14·6, ) 00, Cowltv N-Yorlr. ,,., 3 ts Ol•on. a.111"'°"' 1·4, l •1 STRllC.E OUTS-81vteven, Mlnntso1e 106, F 11•""''"" Chlcloo. 1t7. Morrl• O.trOlt, ltl, Hurat, 9oston, 1'9, -· Aneeh. llO. SAVE$-Oulwnl>lfry l(e n\I\ Cllv, l7 8 J•rntl. ChlCIOO. l2, D. Mewe, ~. ll1 Hefntnou , Detroit )I, J Howtf1 Oelr.lend. '29 Rlo"4tlll, Ntw Votlr., ?f NafteMI LMW. l'INll) BAT TINC. <400 11 11111)-McGM , SI Loul•. lil, ~U«T'Wt, Oe41111n, .J201 Rein "· Mon1r .. 1, 370, C.wvnn, Sen Dltoo, 317 Perlr.tr, Clnclnnerl, 312 RUNS-MvrO/lv Allente 111. Reine> MonlrH I. I IS, McC.... SI I. oul,, I)• Stndl>lrO. ClllC1110. 113. Cote• :.4n SI Louil 107 R 81-Parur, Clnc1nnttl, l?S, Murpnv Allenle, 111, Herr, SI Loul' 110, Mort11nd Clllceoo 106, G Wilson. Phlledelonte. 102 HITs-McGN , SI LOUI\, 216, Perlr.tr Clnclnne11 191, Gwv1111, Sin Oleoo. 191 Stndot<o. Clllc100 IU . Murotw Allent1 llS OOU8LE~P•rktr, Clnctnnerl, 0 , Ci Wllaon. PlllllClllO/lla, » Htrr. SI LOUii JI Wl lllCh. Mor1trH I 36, 8r00111, Monl•H I ).C, Cru1 Hou"°"· 14. Htrntnatl. N"" vori., J.C TlltPLES-McGH St lout' II, ll11n "· MQfttre11. 13. S.mvet. PhlledtlC>llle. 13 Cc>i.m.n SI LOUii, 10, G1rntr, H°"'lon 10 Dodgers favored for Series LAS VEGAS (AP) -The Los Angeles Dodgers, buoyed by strong p1tch1ng and playoff experience. have been tabbed by Nevada sports books as the early favonte to wan the National League playoffs and the World Sen es. Bookmakers are~edictmg the National League rs will edge the Amenc~n league oronto Blue Jays, a club many books picked last spnng to win the AL EasL Thr odds fluctuated somewhat Monday among the state's two dozen lcpl spons books. the only place in the nation where sports betting is legal. But early lines favored thr Dodaers to beat the SL Louis C.ardinals in the National Leaaue and the Blue Jays to defeat the l<.ansu City Royals in the American Leaaue "The ~rs have power, they have aood p1tchina and they ha~ four pm es at home," said Sonny Reiiner of the Castaways Spons Book. "On paper the Doctacrs and the Blue Jays look hke the favorites, but that doesn't insUtt them gctt1n1 in." The sporu book at the MG M Of'lnd Ho tel and Casmo posted early 8·5 odds for the Dodaen to wtn the World Senti. ~ C.anhna.Js ~~ hated at I I ·S, the 81~ Jayi 2-1 &nd the Royals 1.2. The Cast.aways listed the Dod&rn It 7.5 to 'Mn the SenQ, with Toronto S-~St Loui1 5--6 and Kansas Cit)' S. 7 . 1 ne C'ae11n Palace sporu book lasts both the Dodtcn and the Blue Jay1 2· 1 favon~ to win the World ~with the Cardinals h.sted It l-1 and the Royals 9·2. Rei.ma u1d ~ Royal• ha~ t~ playoff uptncn~ to wm t~ Am.en- c.an Lnauc 11tle Orange Cout DAILY PILOTITUMdey, Oct.ob1r 8, 1985 • • • • • • : • • • • • • • • • • • N,L NATIONAL CONPa••NCI Wttt WL T P'ct ,,, ~A ·-s 0 0 1 000 102 ., N1wOr ... n• 3 1 0 '°° 113 fl7 Sin Frencltco ) , 0 .00 10 91 All9'111 0 ~ 0 000 94 16? c ..... Chlceoo s 0 0 1 000 1'3 • 0.lrOlt l , 0 600 100 114 Mlnntt0l1 l , 0 600 110 103 GrtenS.v , ) 0 400 117 11l Tenioe 8ev 0 s 0 000 as , .. ... , 0 11111 4 I 0 aoo 132 " NY Glt nll ) 2 0 600 l ll .. St LOUii ) ' 0 to00 Ill 133 wunlnoton 2 3 0 400 13 Ill Pllll1Cllf9hl• I 4 0 100 5' 13 AMallKANCON,EllENCI Wftt Denver 1 2 0 600 ISi 121 K1n .. 1 City l , 0 600 121 104 ....... ) 1 0 600 llS 100 s..11i. l , 0 600 l).C 143 Sell 01'90 2 3 0 400 ,,, .... Gentrel ci.vet•nd 3 2 0 600 93 " PJllJburgh , 3 0 400 116 " Clnclnnt ll 1 4 0 100 I•• "" Hou•ton I 4 0 100 " 107 .... Ml•ml c I 0 800 Ill es NV Jtt• 4 I 0 aoo 120 17 lndlentOOll• 7 ) 0 400 " 11) N1w E"911nd 1 l 0 400 90 11) 8 Ufft lo 0 s 0 000 '3 149 MeflMV'I k- W•lhlno1on 11 St Loul• 10 Sllftd8V'' ~ llem1 11 T ernOI 8ev fCne".,.i 1 •• 10 1m) New °''""' et ll•ld9n 8 uff1to ti NtA, E no11na ci.vttena ti OU\lon Dlflver •' tndl•ntootl1 0.trOll 11 W1Vll"9ton Min-I• v1 GrHn Bev et Mllwtult.ft 61 N1w YO<'ll. Gli nt' •I Clnctnn•ll Ptlll1dtlotll• •• St louh Plllll>vrOh 11 O•llu K•n•H Cllv •I Sen 0 1990 Crilcaoo •I S.n Frencl.co At11nt1 ti !>telllt ~.,.,~me M11ml •I Ntw YO<"k Jt h 1C11ennel I el ,....,. fMtbal lcMcMe ,_tlDAY Cir•rnbll"9 Sltlt •• Ttnne'"" Stele n SAT\JltDAY Wttt UCLA ti Slel'llord WHhlnQIOll •I Celllornl• Wf\nlnotOtl Srelt •• Ore90n Ste le Stn Jote Sl•lt •• F•.,no Stelt n P1clflc el Nev10. LH Yeo•• n St Merv·, ti Ce l Lulntren Sonom1 St e1 Cel Stitt Nortllfldoe n AIU" Peclflc ., Redl•nd•. n Cl1remon1 Mu<ld •I Whittie< n U Sin Oltoo at O«IOtfllll. n l • Verne •' Pomon•· Pill tr ltedlllt Ct l St••• Fvtterlon •I Ut•ll Sta rt Siii Oleoo Slttt •I 8 YU Ut1h 11 Ar11on1 Stitt n Ml 110\lf' • ti C 010r IOO IOlllO S••I• 81 Monllnl EH ttf'n W•Vllnoton •• Neveoe Reno Cotor•OO Slelt el New Ma.,co n Monl•n• St1te •' NO<'thtrn A,, 1ont " '°'"° et w.o.r Stele n H1w1ll 11 Wyomtnci ... , l!lo,ron COlleoe at Armv n Alf FO<'ct ., Ne•v .A••l>lme •' Pe"" S••tt NO<'th Cerotlne Srett •' "'"' New H•mcnnlr• •' Buci.ntll Det•w•rt Ste It at Connec t1cu• Herve•d et Cornet! Colo•lt et Oarrmov111 801ton U"lvt rtllv 11 Ot lewere J•fTll\ Madl•on al L•'•"'•"• ~"°°" "'•"o •' Ltlllon Rlcnmona ar Me lnt Me1 .. c11uttlh 11 Nor•rtte\ltrrn l!lrown er Penn Coturnble •' Prlnu•o11 llutoe•• er TtmPlt Hotv Crou al Veit Seulh F londe Sl•I• 11 Auburtt Vlr9lnl1 •• Clem\on W•~• For"' •' NO''" Cerou,,. Ovke •I Sou111 C••O'ln1 TtflntUM •' FIOr•d• Wl\lern C•rollne •' Gtof'ol• r..-... LSU •I V•ndert>lll n Mlu 1u 1001 St•t• er 11..,,rvci.v " Sout,..rn M1u ln 1001 11 LOUl\vll~ n T ui.ne 11 MemPflis St•lt n C1nclnnell •' Ml•m• F're ~ Gtl>f'OI• v1 Mlu1u loo1 •I JIC~M>" r .t.u,lln Peev et Morthlld Sl1te s.i... HOualOfl $tM 11 ~ '"°"'.i.n., n Mlnhel ., '"'m." EM*ll Kertlue'llY •I MIOdlt ,_... $•••• Hic:ftall SIMI 81 S.0Ultlef11 U WwMirn l(ellfllCllY 1 t C911trll FIOr~. n O.~ 1t Tllit Cll80ll n Eut C.,ollne 11 $W 1.oul.Menl Yo.M91towll Slti. 11 T--flCfl le•I T-St1i. 11 VMI ~ St-•I L~ TICh n W11141m l ~y ti Vlrtlll'I T ec11 ~· 10w1 11 Wlw;ontln 1ncn.N1 •' Ofllo Stitt Mlc:Noln 11 Micl'llMn Sti tt ~I• 11 Northwttt•n llllnol' et Purdue Ki n .. • el IOwl St•t• Ttn•·EI Peao •• 1(911t S••tt tl'ICll•ne State et Hotllll'n tow• l1M Stitt t i Otllo U Ml1.rnl. O el Tot.oo. n Nor"-11 Mlehlffn •• We1tern tlllnol1 Clfltrli Mlchillln 11 Wtttern Mlcnloen 1uu·Art1ne1on •' Or11<t lttlnol' Sttlt 11 EH IWn IM1110l1 9owllne Gr-•I EHtt<n MIChloall, n ........ Lono 8eech Ste•• 11 Tut ... n ,.._, ... •t Okllltoml St11e. n Otcilno<'l'll o Tt111t 11 D1~H Hou"on t1 Teu' A~M Arlll"W' ., Tt l<H TICll n TCU •I Rice flevlOt el SMU 11 WIO>lll Sl1t1 11 Wnt T ,,.., Stele NO<'lll Tt•ll Slit• et Atll.1nM1t ~let• 11 NE Loul,l1ne 1t Ll met n c-.. ,.,..,. AP' T~ 11 .ecM'll "" ~ I IOwe t)4) C 0 0 I I}/ 2 Okie110m41 I l•l l-0-0 I 10. l MICtllQln (/I 4-0-0 1.037 • Fro-1e11 s111e,p1 • o o m • S Okt.h0m1 Sltte (1) 4·0·0 "6 • 6 AntlnH \ 4·0·0 I06 10 1 FIOrlOI l ·O-I 119 11 I Pent! Stele 4·0·0 70 • 9 Ht0rHke )· 1·0 6S6 12 10 Alel>I~ 4·0-0 6SO 11 II llrlohlm Yoono • I 0 S7' IS 12 Aut>vrn ) I 0 SI• I• ll Air Forte S 0 0 •Sl II 14 TtnntUM 1 0 1 4A? 16 IS Otllo Sr•t• l I 0 cJ0 S " So MelhOclltl 2 I ·0 JOO J II T , .. , l ·O·O 170 lO 18 Gtof'Ole l · 1 ·0 161 11 19 8evl0r c 1 0 IS9 19 20LSU 1· 1·0 llS I Other' r"8lVl"9 vote' UCLA llM Ar Ion• SI. Mlern1 Fie 11, rnalena l3 Army 23, Mlnnno•• 13 Arl10N1 St•I• ,, Ut1ll ' Marv1ena 1 Wet"9noton 6 C.tl>f'11•• T91:n s t<en .. , 4 Bowllf\9 Green l . USC 3 P\;•Out I, Vtrolnl1 1 Tlnfth , ..... HIGH SC..001. ~LS cu• •-A 1 Pelo\ v .. e111. 1 Mlr•~te. l Wl\I 180 4. C-dll Mar; S. W~1 • S.nte 9eri:>ere, 7. Ml,_1 a 8tveftv HIMt • lloNl"9 Hiii•, 10. ....._, Hll'tler Cll' , ... 1 Tnouw nc1 °''' 2 W1tlle11t l S.n Me rino. c Mtltr Del S C1eremott• • r<•tt1t1, 1 L• Cen1d• I C•merlttc1 9 Cvonu 10 LO• AllO\ Cll' l·A 1 La Quln11 1 Indio. l Cn•nilntOt. 4 Vellncle S -Lomc>e>c 6 Norlll•ltw 1 Lovl•~llre. I Sen Lui\ Ot>IH>O 9 Cenvon 10 Lo\ AmlOO\ Cll' 1-A I Ol1mono 9•r 1 Cele l Meviletd Park, 4 C!llOwlCtr., S L• Rtln•. 6 Pewaen1 POlv 1 Wtttr~ I Sin•• Vne1 • Cet><lllo 10 S• Jo~ 1s.r111 Mer e r v~,......_ HIGH SCHOOL ~LS O~ 5·A I Mir• Cot •• 1 ,....._, H~J l S.nt1 Moniea ._ ~ Beedl1 S St JoWQh fL•k-000 • .,..,.......,. 7 S.nl• l!leri:>ere I Gt M 9 Ml•t' Ot l 10 Oo• P.,.OIO\ CIF •·A I .. ..,,... .. V ... YI , Marll>Orouo" ) Tor••nce • Nol•e Oe~ Ac.aoemv S C"•mlneOt 6 L0"9 8eecll JO'd1n 1 Lono Btecll Wll•on a E•oer•ni• • H~ ... Cl,, 10 S•n Crttmen•t Cll' l ·A I Rim 01 "'' Wor•d 1 81\noo Oitw I Se•"• F, c Norlt Vitti S La Can10. 6 Cenvon IS 1 Sonore I ll••••••de POI• o l"ltlll IQ HH Wilson Cll' l A t Nororootl 1 C elei:>e'9\ J Rov~• • (henn"I l•l•nd• s er........ 6 Olt mc>n<I Bar I "'n•!'lel<" I H....,., o l"<llO IQ Uo-ena Cll' l·A 1 w.,,,,.,,, c e111orn1e '"' '"•" 7 Co" "'"" ) B•O Beer 4 <"•" .. 0.tr. s 81'1\00 Un•on 6 LA 8•01111 1 Whitt"' C"' 111en I Merenellla 9 Pu.ell•• 10 Nor•llv~w Cll' SnWll kMett F • "" •Olll S.c ''° He10111\ 7 Mllm moU• ) C•ml>Oell H•" C 8rentwOOO ~ c .... o .. •<• • Mev1"40 1 "'•...oen• Polv a Celt 9 SI Mar91rtt'' 10 HOlv F 1mllY 0, )·A 1 ~., ... .,,, J -'ffiWO. 4 ..,.. ..... l L.a Helbtt, t B""'9 ........ 7 T orfenct, I It~.' ~. 10 ,..,_, Hl&t4 tCMOCX. GaU Cit' 4•A 1 • ....__. H...W1 t. • .._,I. f»eloe Vttoet, 4 ~V l"wll, S. l...e9lllll Beed\1 • wn1i.q; 1 TilouMNI OINl1, a. 9-. t , C:.-• ,,,,_, 10, Sltn4 Vltll!Wot (Jfl ).A I Arrovo Grano.; 1 w~. ) ~. • £~111'1te. ~ Herl, • Mor...o V....,, 1 S.utui. I Bl.._ Mont~, t Et 1t1ncN1 It. M9tw 0-. w .......... HtGt4 tCMOOL S-VHtb T--lf ---.. ~ .... 5 F oothll 0 1 1 2--s Merine I 2 ) ,_.. Merine KOl'lng Scl'lue>M+ 2 McClene 2 W..,_.., I a rown I Ler-1 9uOmen I S-V H .. IO, Mlt1M S Merine 2 1 I I-S $unnv Hiii• 1 l 4 1-10 Merln• .cor1no 1..arMf\ 2 9uom.n 1 B•o•n 1 w ....... ,... .... HIGH SCHOOL Cll' 4-A I SunM Hiii•, , LOll9 918C1' "'"'°"· l. Mlwtien H8'11erl 4. ~I ~ C.- dll -r1 6 S.nte Ane VtlltY T Lono ae.cri Polv I VIiie Perl< t _,_, 10 GM1I Mftl Cll' l -A I Et Oo-eoo 2 El TO<'O, l MIUIOn Vle.O • lltvtf'"°8 Polv S S.n Cltmlnte 6 HH WltlOn 1 Mire C.0tt1, I !>lnle Monlcl t ltow11na 10 !>In Goroon!o 0..., ... ,..,.. OAVIY'S LOC:KI• (...._, a..dll -1t •noll<• 1 o.rrecv<11 121 DOnllo I vetlowtell 2 •ock coo 11• c•tico beu SJ .. no o.n tl 5 meca.,et 11 KulO'n 2 •nlle "'"· t l'-"9e0 Na~T LANDING -II •-• 47 Deu' • DOnl•o I "'"°"' I l>MICll. ,.. l>eU •-a.di l roca llVI. 11 meca .. 11 DANA WHU' -I I engJt" 132 Deu l DOl>llo 2S I •ocll llltl, 1).C "'-" ... " )1 1eu101n 10 """"' CJ'C)C)vttle M9fMliay'1 tr'lllUCfteM BASEBALL A~L.--OETROt• TIC,ERS-Treoe<! Ju1n &tr-one,.... 1!100 Melvln cetc'- ena • Oll•t< •o oe "'""° "'" to in. Siii r::r enct.co C.•11"' •or 01ve L•""°"'' l"4 Er c t<•no 011a.r, ""'" "'°"" c••C'-Ma"8MI~ >iOUHON ASTRO~lreo l!IOC Ll"I\ ..,...._ PITTSBURGH r>1RATE~lreo Cr.uctr. r-.... -BAS«IT&ALL ..._ ........ ~ LOS ANGELES CLtPPERs-<ui N!Oe' LIOVO 8000v Pent\ •no o.... Surrlt guerd\ l!IOSTON CEL T1CS-We•veo It.ca Le mo •"<I llon w1111em\ torwerO• PHOENIY SUNS-W•lvtd Levor\M Devi' ou&,.a UT A,.. J AZl-W• •tel Ml•cnetl ""°""on •nO O•••O PoM •o•we•d\ 11nd ll1• 'iell 111.i••d ,OOT9Al.L N1_,.....,L_ INOIANAPOLI~ COL TS-We1ve<1 "''' !.cntlcn•t r Qutrte•i:>e~a "'C"••'~ C..-oroe ... ClllC• llOW ''"~ PHIL A OE L PHIA E AC.l ES llt"".0 S•d C,lllm1n av•• ••IHI(• coecri w ... SHINCi TON ll[OS•INS S oneo Oovo l!lernet1 llf"en• ·~ ...a We ""° J~ • •••O•• llntDlt •er ..OC:l<I y ... ~HldlWL-M NNEs o ·• 1o1 0 11· ... ST "'llS-ACQu••.O D••• l •"l>t'•·• ,. t""~n '"' ,,.,. •t•vf'" tJr•U MONTRE .t.l A"'AO•E NS s.<>1 AH•• Turrotte C9"tr • "°"" "'.,.,,~-g..,1 .wino enc Qomu'lu c sm~• e"d J~" f'O<'dlc IM'llfl~n '<>~ ..... !Yoo<• o< '"' ... meflCll• HOC•h \. .. Ill.A : 1he Daily Plot ! readers want to see yow work. S.D11it • : photos of yow local office, professioi18I or • i retal design for ptllllcation in CU' i llderiors section • • • • l.~:~~:!!.~.~.~.~~ ................... .. ' COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, 88 Newport S&L names new assistant vice president Hotel game puts fans in huddle Newport Beach resident S.eUey Spuseoo has been promoted to awstant VICC presjdent and branch manqer of Newport Balboa Savtap ud Lou A11ocladoa'1 Corona del Mar office. Spurgeon has been with the finn since 1984. She previously held posts at the Buk of Newpert and Newport Nattoa.a.I Bau, as well as with bterWeat Savt.p ~ of Washington. She is the great-granddaughter of William H. Spurgeon, founder of Santa Ana. • • • • GU"'1 PHates of Newport Beach has been appointed president of PNA 18Yettmeat Corp., a newly formed nauonwide compa!ly specia.lWna in real es&ate sale/leaseback financing for the financial SPURGEON FUENTES REDMOND industry and based in Newport Beach. T he firm is an affiliate of Parker Nortll Amertcu Corp. Fuentes brings 20 years of experience in the financial industry to his new post, most recently as senior vice president, CFO and treasuttr for Colambla S.vtags & Lou. • • • Lee R. Redmond DI has been appointed EquJdon's vice president of marketing for San Diego. He wi ll be based at the Irvine firm's new regional offices in San Diego. Redmond is a former vice president for Tlte Regency Group of Jacksonville, Fla. • • • Eclaa L. Moe of Newport Beach recently returned from the lltb Auul Conveation and Expo Vision '85 of Ute Opticians A11oclatioo of America in Las Vegas. • • • Miriam Lohky b terior Desig:n of Laguna Hills has been selected to design and model the intenors at Mi11loo Viejo Co.'1 new Laurelmont townhomes in Laguna Hills. • • • Jolul Flore of Laguna Hills has been named resident manager at the Ne~rt Buell Marriott Hotel ud Tell.ll.is Clab with responsibility fo r overseetn$ the rooms, front desk. secunty, ho usekeeping, and gift shop. Fiore previously worked as country club manager of the Rucllo Laa Palmas Resort in Palm Springs an addition to his experience at The Tennis Clab Hotel, and the La Qal.Dta Hotel Golf ud Teuls Resort, also in Palm Springs. • • • Edward J. Matt1u1 has Joined CXC Corp. in Irvine as the Computerized game puts cocktail lounge patrons In Monday Night Football huddle By JIM KATHCOCI D.-r Nel C#rl ' •1 I Monday Niaht Football fans will soon be able to match their play. calling skills against the pros at the Irvine Hilton when the hotel chain kicks off the Hilton/QB! Challenge this month. The program is the product of a Joint effort of Hilton Hotels Corpor- ation and the game's developer, NTN. Inc., of Carlsbad. The satellite· transmitted video game will aJlow fans to call a play of their own on a Schools teach art of power By JANET STA..OIAR All 1 'Ptw .... WASHJNGTQN (AP) -Students at some of the nation's most pres- tigious business schools, clamoring to get a leg up-.on competition, are Oockin$ to courses that teach about power, influence and staying on top in the tough corporate battlefield. ''Th~ are lining up in droves because they have JOtten feedback from their summer JObs or business school alumni, that power and leader- ship" 1s an important part of manage- ment, says John P. Kotter, a professor at the Harvard Business School. "Power is a reality ... not to stab someone in the back, but in getting a JOb done." hand-held controller during the pro team's huddle. Fans accumulate points for every call that matches the play the NFL quarterback runs. Their score is immedjately tallied and compared with up to 63 other players in the room on a separate video screen. said James C. Collins. Hilton's senior vice president of marketing. A permanent installation wtll be tested at the Irvine Hal ton as pa.rt of the national debut of the system Monday. "QBl may be the most excitinA thing to happen to televised football SID. ce the emerJen~y of. th~ M_o nday Night pme," Collms sa_i~. 'It 1s ~S)' to play and makes a sptnted partlCI· pant out of a Monday Night Football viewer." Licensed by the National Football League, QBl emerged as the product of two years of research and develop- ment Coaches Don Shula of the Miami Dolphins, Bill Walsh of the San Francisco 49ers and Hank Stram of CBS Sports make up Q Bl's "Blue Ribbon Panel" of coaches wbo helped develop the game Collins said. "Most football fans think they know m ore about the ~e than the next guy," Shula said.• QBl provides them with the opportunity to match their play<alling skills against family Birtcher center to open and fnends. It's very competitive and represents the ultimate stntlCfJY foot· ball game." Permanent showcases similar to the Irvine Hilton installation will open in other cities in October and November. Durina its first year, QB I will be played In conjunction with nationally televised football gam_es only, said Don Klosterman. cha.ar- man of NTN. He said it is a very competitive concept and hopes to expand it to other sporting event~ ~d some of the more popular television game shows in the future. "When we roU out QBl nationally 1n 1986, we will be playmgas many as five games a weekend •.. " Klosterman said. company's president, and chiefoperattng officer. and as a member of the board of directors. Mattiuz. who recently served as Nortlleru Telcom, lllc.'1 executive vice president of operations, assumes responsjbility for CXC operations. He was with Northern Telcom, Inc. for 24 years. Says Donald Press, a graduate of Darth mouth's business school who is now a senior product manager at G<"neral Foods Corp. in White Plajns, N. Y.: "It was probably the most useful course I took in business school. II was an injection of the real world." In the course, Press said, "real· world game playing" was done, such as situations in which m ock bosses had to fire employees, or there were co~rate misunderstandings in Birtcher <>ranee County Tech Cen ter. a $34 million baalneu park Khedaled to open in la te No•ember, I.a the flnt baalneu park ID the county to Include a child-care facWty, accordlnC to lta Laguna N~el de•eloper, Brandon Birtcher. The 986,300-.quare- foot com plex, Ju•t we.t of the. Coeta lleea. Freeway on Dyer Road, will devote 6 ,500 mquare feet to a child-care cen ter ID bopee of attrac~ qoallty tenants to the compla. the dnefoper ..td. Amon & the te11&11ta a.re Dean Witter Reynolda an<f"Burger Kln&· Realtors say now is the time to buy .. which supervisors listened to dif-~~r~;:C,~~~~~~~~~&~ to dccide how Home store onens along Coast Professors teaching the corporate r by many real estate people through- out the months of depressed sales dunng the latest recession, and state- ments to that effect w<"re issued by real estate offices all over the country. power game say their courses don't • • • directly delve mto sabotaging the guy Siandard Brands Paint Compuy • • • pher for 3 1/2 inch ngid computer Charlton A.11oclate1 recently an-disks. Consumers m ay not have money to take advantage of ma rket up the ladder. Rather, they offer has opened a new Home Decorating instruction on how to promote your-Center m Cost.a Mesa at 61 O W. self by putting your best foot foward Seventeenth St. nounced that it has been selected by Plus Development Corp. as its sup. By JOHN CUNNIFF u...,._~ NEW YORK (AP) -With memones of th<' bad days 1n mind, reaJ estate people are determined to keep the latest sales boom going beyond expectations. Spread the buy-now message. urges an edjtonal in weekly Realtor News, a publication of the National Associa- tion of Realtors. Encourage clients to "take advantage of the moc;t favorable economic condn1ons in a long while." The advice might be correct. be- cause inflation seems to be under control for the ume being. And mort.pge rates seem unltkcly to move very far in either d1rcct1on after having fallen 1.5 perc<"ntage points in 12 months. However, while the message might not fall on deaf cars 1t could confront empty pocketbooks. because con- sumers have been spending faster than they've been earning. Debt burdens are up, savings rates are down. In thei'4ffort to a void the deepd1ps that periodically wipe out housing markets -and cause massive layoffs among real estate people -the realtors are appealing once again to the profit motive. "The investment value ofa home is better now than during the last five years, and 1t should improve dunng th<" next few years." the cditonal comments. adding this advice: "Homebuyers today may expect an after-tax return on their housing investment of as much as 20 percent over the next few years." Surh advice was considered taboo Those empty pocketbooks. how- ever. might make It difficult for buyers to exploit the market for profit. Installment-credit debt reached a record-high burden of 18.5 percent of income in July. and perhaps 19 percent in August. The latest savings rate was an anemic 3.4 percent, far below the eight-year average of 6.1 percent. While the current low interest rates might be encouraging peopk to ouy, in spite of their debts. they might also be producing a problem ror &l\he future,. Many of th<' current sales, 1t 1s felt are being "borrowed" from the future. Jack Carlson. realtor chief econom - ist and ellecut1ve officer. notes that the interest rates "are encouraging people to go ahead now with purchases they otherwise might have delayed until later this year or next year " There may, however, be a bnghter side to the debt picture. Some analysts observe, for example, that the high consumer debt percentages may exaggerate the true picture. As an example, Merrill Lynch points out that several factors might make today's high rates not stri ctly comparable to years before 1980. There seems to be evidence, for example, that for short periods of time consumers prefer to leave money in their interest-bearing check.mg accounts and use credit cards instead. The longer payback penods on automobile loans -more than SO months now compared to 46 in 1983 -also might distort th<' figures because it means that whtle debt 1s maintamed longer, it also places less stress on the holder as a way to get the boss to do things The new fac1hty becomes the your way. ' company's 43rd retail store 1n Some courses also stress how to Southern Cahfom1a. build a power base to avoid getting mugged by fellow corporate climbers. Executive seminars on power and "interpersonal relationships" are also proliferating across the nation. "Power is like sex IS years ago-it was a dirty word," said Leonard Grecnhagh, professor of the Dartmouth's business school in New Hampshire . "lt wasn"t nice to think of power. You were better off to talk of motivation." At Dartmouth, which has the nation's oldest business school, a course titled "Eltccutive Power and Ncgotations," has become the most popular class m the school's history, with nine out of 10 candidates for a master's dcgrcc m business adminis- tration enrolling. At Dartmouth, as an most other business schools, "corporate game playing" situations are videotaped so panicipatcs can analyze their effec- tiveness. Stanford University offers "Power and Politics in Organizations." a class for students who want to get on the fast corporate track -and stay there by not getting sideswiped by one's own lack of office wisdom. Kotter, who wrote "Power and Influence," a book based on his popular course. says enrollment rose from I 00 when the first time the class was put on the Harvard curriculum six years ago to the current 425 studeots. H. J. "Jerry" Zoffer, dean of the Graduate School of Business at the University of Pittsburgh, says a decade ago business schools did not offer courses which so blatantly dealt with "interpersonal skills," many of (Pleue He POWKR/86) • • • Paclftc Mutaal Life Insurance Co., based in Newport Beach, has estab- lished the Pacific Mutual Foundation with an endowment of $3 million. The fou ndation will be the main vehicle through which the company contributes to community health, education. arts and other charitable programs. The company plan'i to augment the foundation's gifts with additional corporate funds. Contnbut1ons 1n 1985 will exceed SS00,000. Guidelines and cntena for con- tnbut1ons arc available by cont.acting the Pacific Mutual Foundation at 700 N<"wport Center Dnve, Newport Beach. • • • Newport Plaarmaceatlcal1 IDter- naUonal has announced 1ncre.ascd revenues for the fourth quarter and the fiscal year that ended April 30. 1985. Newport's net income for the quarter was $79,000. compared with a loss of $434,000 for the fourth quarter o f 1984. Total revenues for the fourth quarter of 1985 were $2.5 million, compared to $2.4 million for the prior year. For the year that ended April 30, 1985. the company recorded a net income of $647.000 or S cents per share, on revenues of S 10.5 million, compared with a net los~of$2 million or 24 cents per share on revenues of S8.8 million for fiscal 1984. • • • David 8 . Tataami 6 A11odates of Costa Meu and the Parld!ae Gro.p, Arcllltecta of Jrvlae have been selected by the Harris Brothers to develop the building and landscape designs for the Village Drive Apart· ments, 1n Fontana. Get cash in hand for money in the bank. l Year, $50,000 Minimum 8.90% Current Yield• Current Rare New and maturing CDs earn substantial cash bonu ses on the spot. D1~cover the hi gh yield~ you can earn one-year account and pocket a $10 bonus. Term Bonli1 O~tns right now on CDs at Great American. Deposit the maximum of $100,CXXl for 10 I year S 10 per SS.IXX> The figu re at the left i~ just one example. years and collect $2 .CXXl cash . Discover 2 year s 20 per $5.IXX> Now ltx)k right and discover the cash you r yield and bonus now. honu~!' you can earn on the spot. And the ~ Open your account today. Call J year S 'O per SS.IXX> more you dc~it, the bigger your bonus. the t~ll-free Financial Linc 4 )'CV s 40pier $5,IXX> Oe~11 lhe minimum of S5.CXX> for a now. 1-800-423-BANK . S)'Ht $ ";()per l.S.IXX> •' N"lo1.t N'aof'll " 1lirf"""'h .f \\h •• t1 ,., mutt tn \\ ffli 1n. ff'~'"' •tth 1f\lf'ff'W tv-..nu, ~tu tht "'-'-"'-< h 1t an dtf'\ll\t •ftf1U.ll ~trthl ht\itd ,,_ ~ ,_,,,..,.. .,.,...., , .. ,_ tl'(h t '4. 1-llttN '"" lht hl't' tti•t ~'"" 11'tl ok.I rlfrtf'V •tll hir' lrtr on -.trr""''' fut •WV~,.., 41 ttv w1"J 1rvr"'' n tf" \uh\unu.J •Mtrt"' ptn&llt ftrt t•th •:thdrew..al '" r'f'U'tetrel ~\ fMff'ttw" 1• f'Nlrf' 1ntnru tww.u' IM·f<f" _._,,,,., .... ~ J..1h ''" ~ \f\\ ~\two" fhl-1nttrr\I u1r whtfei.t Mhfrw"Jf' IY•f\' Oftu •1pun N"'"'"""' 2 l'QM'\ Mti\lntUm t.fel'IL~ St c•ll Cil) IOO brs of ~fcfy • A~a.' Over \7 BtJJion ~llh Ill offi~~ ~rvm11 Ornn~ ( OU111\ l aguna HUis Or•~ S•nOemcnte Great Ameri can 'tOOr advdllUtge bank .. An11heim Ifill~ f-1 TC>ro ff11lbc~ hl•nd f-ounc.in Valley BaJhoa Ptnin(ula Huntlnaton Ruch C"llp•.,lrano tk-.h l •suna lkKh l airuni. Nl~I Ml,tjo11 V.ejo Monarch e.v N--porl Ruch S•n Ck.menu/Avenlda Pko S.n Juan Cap(straoo Wc'lndbridf(' -FSIJC ............. ••• c J _, r ,, - Orange Cout DAILY PllOTIT~. October 1. 1916 • POWER COURSES ••• ll"' ft,. ',.. ,!\t hom IM l-. j g wtucb &R VltaJ to ruq an the office n"' 1,"' I 'A betrarcby. ,;: 1 =r mi At that ume. be 1&.ad, ba1a.oa &beets ,~ ;: =·. n~ and economic theory were I.be re- ,.... 1-. g: . 1~ spectable thanas to study for • t\lo '°.,. ~ fft; business career. ,~r .. l! ,fi~ ~," ,.,, . "' it;·~ ~~i:!to~::.bn~ ~u'm°:~ _ counes at PittJbW)h, Zoffer la.id, ~:.Tl addina: "We look at the pobticaJ , , .... -..::nr , dirqcnaions of manaacmcnt. mclud-,, 11•• 'lt-~tlff~ ma aenina ahead, nctworkina. mcn-l1-. m: ~:I II Ill lOriQ&." ~,... l.2: ~·n -~ , Mcntorina? ,.-'"' v o I'-' n Y. "When you attach yourself to 1... , .... ", ·~ .... 1~ n · h "' .. r " "' someone with 1n uence an t e or- "' 1t ~c ~ 11~141 pnization who can move your career " ~ "' Vi forward. It ls one of the most ~ 1. -. recoanUcd pathways to suoocu in I.be "' manaaement world," Zoffer cit-~ ~ 1"'1~ plained. t2 w ~ 141 "If you hook your W&Jo n to the a ~, 2 s! ~ J~~ na,ht cnsjne. you move quickly, but 1f ,... wF , ~ ~ y,,u pick the wronll mentor vou ·~ U> ' .... -. ... 1U1 ~ " wbo&c career can~ aoto ecllP.K. and yo u can -your bead shoe off. .. Accord.in& to the ~ct of~ Power and 1Atluence" which 1s lbc book uled to teach the bJ&h acclaimed Harvard counc, the 1oformauon ii "estential for top rn.&naP.TS wbo need to overcome the. !n.rtpnana. foot· d.rlaina and polltickina that c:an deslioy "both morale and profits, for middle mM111ee" whn dnn't want their careers sidetracked by un- productive pawer 1truaJe1 ... and for staff workers who h~vc to 'manaac the boss."' RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTEIY lllC. For The Rest of Your life )922 HARBOA Bl.VO , COSTA MCSA-~ 1156 r LESS Daily ::!'1i1y MAKE MOC>El OAV WEEK 11.*fc-le05l see ae MOO Me<C40el llOISEL MIO 16 MOO Me•C.OM JOOCO S4t tb $300 Me•c.,_ lOOD '49 t6 J300 Me•C:.0-190E '3816 '2~ 1'1¥01·--~ IOCll Quail Street Newport 8eecti 71•1~9300 Mu1 uAt FuNo s "-• -Not • Olt ra:} .. ~JJ .. · . '' ..; .. ..... , . A m1*lttl lfll#f'ftl "/J to 1100, 0()() MtflbriH• ,..,,,, of I J«I' "~ I SQ ()()() """'-"' Applin 111 '""" 11/ I 11«ar Substa111wl {lrlQ/ty /(Jr tarfl· .143% YIELD ost • a I yr. 2 yr. 3-Syrs. Bonus* .50o/o . 75o/o 1.00% ~Rate+ Bonus** 9.20% 9.85% I 0.40o/o Yield 9.63% 10.34% 10.95% Above rates based on Sl,500 deposit . Rates vary according 10 amount of deposit It's Household's CD Bonus Plan that pays you extra interest It's probably the easiest bonus you·11 ever ea rn. All you do is open a Certificate of Deposi t at Hou ~hold Bank for 12 to 60 months and we P<lY you extra interest As much as a full I \ bonus for the fi rst 12 mon ths. That' on tup ut our refa!lar high inter- est rate At Household. vour earned inter- est plu!> txmus interest IS compounded dail\ ilnd vn ur .icrcmn I 1s in"ured up to SHX l.C M )(' b'r the F~LI(. ·fii,1111, 1nt1·11-..1 1' '"'th•· frN ,,.,,, '"'' \\t11l1· rh·· ,,,..,. r,111 I' lo!llollolllfo~'f fr or l'I 1111' lr'lll,?1h 1( fll\l•,lfl\1'111 Just $SOO will get ynu ·tarted But you can depoc;;1t as much as $100.000 Whatever the amount. it stavs liquid You can borrn .... (up to 90'~) on your certificate at any time and avoid the penalty of earlv w1thdrav;al \hu·11 be charged nnlv 2'. ()'\/f>r the rate of vour certificate RJght no~: Household makes 1t easv f() g1n,> V0Urif>lf cl OOnU~ JuSf I )pen YflUr en toda\· \ftn dll. rj11n I \'( IU rleserve J l rltlt> extrn" ··f,...f+;r.tl t.tYt ,, .... ,. ... ''llt"'·' 1h.t1 I"''''·' r\ ''" t•,1t!\ "lfltdr '"·' H.1 ... • 1•1 '"ii "'• 1, •,,,,,.,, • ..,, ... ~11 ANAHEIM: Eu< lid .111 fl''.c.1'111--7_1.7111 1. CERRrm.: 1 t~.!' ..... •llll1 ...,, _, _1 +.' ~ in HUNTINGTON BEACH: l~iX:! f~-.11 h Bhd -it-l·t '~'l • MISSIO°' \.1f..JO· .'In II \1,,rsz1wn1t I'~''' ->~ :-.. u "lf.WPORT BEACH : rM \1.1< ~rthur Hl\11-'H~ 11{1,-PL\CE:'fTIA I llltt Kr.11·111·r-~1 f {1• SA-..TA ANA CANYON: ;-{! f "1111.1 \11.1 • 111\1 • l«I _,,.,...._ .!h_ WESTMI""' TER: 111111 k.,11 I Hh. _,., ~1·• .\I" il•r u11 h•·' 111 '-in I h•i-.'o R1\• '''"' "' \nl.!• ,., \ ··nlur I "''" ""'' t 11i1,p• ti h ! " I I llllll• ... \t .. 11 I l111r. 'lr\.\I II '\I · In (11.\\1 t.l'\I • "°'' 1 \ \1 .;'' 11 '' ~i "' lor tndw-. G:r --l ENDUt .750% RATE u t/b.JrunJ/ 4111111o<.1/ \1c'td /'/(IJf'd I/ff l //lff f"'Urt41tl/( U""" 111/ ...... 1/ u it/I '"' tkf"ISll for ""''"' ttrm R"/¥ 'Mid 1Jrtd l(t'Yll1 fU~ I /11 I b<Jf!~ k1/b!JM/ "'l/l(f erso • • < llH" \1E..q ' ~' ' Hr1,1t• 'I I 11'1'<1 ~ {, \Rm,\ lrRI I\ I Ill \ Tl\t,f(I\ Bf . .\LH ''" .ti l~1m411in '' , .... \ ~'' -,,, hlm~1r \\t' "-+)\ ---~: l.-\(1[ \~ 11111..\ _ 111~' t r.m . RJ ll ~ ... 11 Jil(,, \ ru\fll' \I( American avings has been helping Califo rnians invest for the future since 1885. It actually lets you determine the s~ze. term and rate of your CD investment. Its that simple. All the more reason to c.Ul o r \'U it your nearest American avings o ffice, and put 100 years o f Americ1n strength behind your future securit): \f.U 8t:~Ui Throughout the last century, we've remained committed to pioneering sman, safe investments like the Money Matrix CD account. CENTENNIAL '885 !985 AMERICAN SAVINGS AND LQAJ\J ASSCOAn:.l'J Tl HI\ M l F ht \I \ .... ~ ........ °" :MT - 01:1 ~~· ti rt' IJI ,.., " ~ " ,! " ~ :; It -~ + It '-- I ~ --. . ,,. . NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS TllllAY'I ILMIH PllOll Stocks close with loss NEW YORK (AP) -Stocks closed mostly lower in quiet trading Tuesday after showing little movement in the latter half of the session. The Dow Jones industrial average man.aged a small gain, however. Prices in general remained under pressure from investors' concern that corporate eaminas for the third quarter will be weak relative to a year ago, brokers said. Companies th.at already h.ave forecast disappointing results for the quarter h.ave seen their shares tumble. Wall Street also 1s worried about an upturn m interest rates, particularly since the U.S. Treasury is expected to unleash a major borrowina proeram once Congress raises the federal debt ceiling. The government's ability to borrow more money is currently in check while the Senate debates whether to attach a budget-balancing amendment to a bill needed to renew the borrowing authority. WHAT AMEX Om WHAT NYSE Dio NEW VORI( (AP ) Oc1. I P Nf:W VORI( (AP) Oct. I ::~"· l Adv~:r !~=· New hlotta New low~ NYSE LEADERS GoLo Quo1rs Dow JoNES AvERAGES METALS QuoTES famous la b<Z.l,s ... lliiiil------------------------------------------------------------------------~~~~~~~~------------ . ' L. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Tueeday, Ocnober 8, 1915 CALL 642-5678 IF CALLING FROM NORTH ORANGE IF CALLING FROM SOUTH ORANGE I LOST MY O•R BUT FOU• HIM AFTER I PLACED All AD Ill THE CLASSIFIEDS. BBOOW ARE THE NEW CLASSIFICATIONS BEING USED IN TODAY'S DAILY PILOT •IAL lllAll F•IAU HOUSES/CONDOS c.~-!flCJ} 1o11>oo ,,_ •oeo lott.oc. '~wlo it)/J/ (Ot»ok°"° l.oc:• OH! (OtOftO chi~ lfJ)J (ouo ""-''° ,,, °"""'-no f l fo,o 1 JJ/ '-voii., I• __.... ...... __ ..,. .,..... ... ·--· . ,_....... (II( l-""9v< '~~, LOh 10th• I 'H .....,,~ V.-.,o Jttl ........_ ..... ,, '""9 \oo> ,.._.. 10/6 \.ol\ '"'°" CoP•'-''°"° I :))9 \on•o AN> 1 CACI ~o A"'O .... ~" IOI' ~ Coot• M-41 10il4 S.,.,...109....0 •Oii ,.,,...,. l()Q(; MISC. I .I . --•UO I H ")() a..oc:Jr1J10~,.._ II) ~,cot\ (#\'ph 11) '10t,1'4'\ fo .. ~ .. d I)}) '"'' .. , \o.. 1.00 Ovt Qt Co ••o,_,.., i n) Ovt O' ~·0'9 ,,._,..,., I ))0 ~'on<t\eit '°'''" c .. ,.,... 117) ••'°'" ''•",... I }IU r1-n. \ii\011t141 1,0() t l f •ch0A99" •OOU , f W.,,_d I ~1\ •lllTALI HOUSES/CONDOS ....,....OI ' I ~ ... Ql"ld 1 iltl! to'boo P.-wlo / 1 • oortt• 00"0 a.o. ,._ I 8 OIOl'IO ,:Ml YIC)f ] )4' Otf'O ~\O /tl• Dono 'o.n• 1•10 (I 1010 I )1 •o~Oill\ von • ., J' .l• ""'Mt~'°" a.oc.t--/140 "vftfw\(l"Ofl i"\0.tbov• /\•? , .. ,. t a.qvl\O hoc~ I Id ~OQynO H•lt\ /I )(J \Q9uf\O ~! 1111 \Oh JO'•t• 1 I )~ ""'"'°" V...,o /l&I ,.,..._°'°"' ...... 1969 *'-/110 ~ "'°"' (opft....... '111 ... 1220 . ... \oooOoA .... ~A"'O~·' ~Coot•~•o ~l-1.,,~ APART MINTS C,.,...ro tolboo "~ 6o'boo '.--wlo Dpl'\t!IQllll(lt.Olo~ ,,~0.l "-'a• \IQ~ 'ON!'~· ··---· l~HM' ,~,..~I iGM• fo••tf ~;\M()f'! ., .. to ,.....,~,.. .. (Kl'\ ~( .. ,,...n•• \Of" JUOl'l ( OPf\ltlfOo \,oMo Al'l(t "°"'o • "'° H,.•9"'" \ov,.,. c 00'' """··. ''"' ,,,~ I llo "~ ''"""' .... /Noh '", > 1 .,. ,,. '" '· ,,,,.. , ... ,,,. , ... . , ... . •.\o MISC. llNTALS O'loOo\ to~• ~.p .... , ·-· .,Otelt l'N)'•••· l•a Oh•..-1 •el'tlOlt *efttOh le, \fri~tt it_....oh WOll'>t•d ~~tfa·lt~t •'™oiv- 111" U •~ah l'VI Ill•• /11J6 ,,,, 1111 Ill• 1110 11 4() /14) ,, .. COMMlllGAL R.I . IAU/•INT ... "°""~ ii)(. ""'~'' '·~ \oW 1101 a-,,,...,." ....... '4 . '•". ,,,,q °"""""'•••.at ... "°"'"' .,,,. f>ucl ..... , ,.,,.....~ 1180 ft°"''"'°' i11"t tW O'"'f' p,OCN..., I'~ .......... RllAllGAL "''~"lo• ~ IYV ""'~' ~~~ lv<A a....-..uw~ JOIJiO .. ... ,~ C)poo~'"'' 19t'A ,...,..........,.. ""°"'~ 19 l ~ lo lOOJ'I /9 4 ,., .. 191 I ·--.,.,,~ '•r~M111•et \c.f\004'' '"'""''"""' f,a..,.. -..10 '°'• ...-o ... ,,._ IMMOYMIN1 '~ /~}) IV.JI j/)(;; ,)(JI/ t( " •• Ir 11 • ,.al' ..... , "6)1\ '''•'""'°"'°' ... ~'""' ,. .. ' "°'4'11 0 .. 0\ .. "''06 0-tce: '• # ... "~ ()I f,oa., ~" .., ... \..b\ ···~0"04 '·'"' ~·ol ,~ tf9'.~ ....... 'N~ ,~ l" MIRCHAllDlll • ,...qu., OIJ aopl>ON"•' /f('I+ ...... ~, ~ . i..,,.,,,"'.. w . ""'"' "' . • ~··".)'\ & fqiu.,......... 6()1(t I ~Plil~'' 1(.11. • , .. 1 'o... ~'1 .......... ., '"'' ~,. oOJ) ... ~............ oOl< oe..\ "°'' DbouMma PUBLICATION \ OEAOllJl4E Monday ...................... Frf. 4:30 p.m. THI DALY PLOT CLA8SIFl!O OfflCE HOURS T~e... .~~"':'l:M. Tu.de)' .................. Mon. 4:30 p.m. Wednelday ............. Tues. '6:30 p.m. ThunMSey ••............... Wed. 4:30 p.m. Frtday .................... ThNa. 4:30 p.m. S.tutday .................... Frt. 3:00 p.m . Sund91.-.................... Frl. 3:00 P+m. ......CourtW. Monda, ,......Y 8.'00 A.lit ·6~ p ... ,..,, ... ,__,._, ~\> ~°'~~ (J/J)) .'°""°' ' o.90"-oC.1~9 ... ,... o06() ............ Cooo• oOo ~ "'' ~•'"-' fl.n·~' OOIO GA•AGI IAUI -·ol --..-lolbno ,......,. ....... °"')l'IO ~,,,, .. , . .,~ ........ _ ·~o-•,,...., ·~~.....,.. . ... ~..,,.,...,Oil _.,.,a.... _ ...... ---~\WW\,...,.... ,...._pg ... e..oc:• ~U4"0 '.oMo A'-0 .._.gf'f'\. 11•v1a DlnCIOllY OIU/ ..... > ·' 6 II '"l• ' I• ~ . .. • ... • •• . ·~ A \1 6 •• ' .. 0 • o ....... ... Cl .. Y s-...-~ ftAllS ... TATIOll IOATS .,,ef"••n l(Jl • ..,_ •011 At' 1Ui4 ~~ lf;jJ) ~·"")\ >'o;• .... ~·~ .. •• ............... t ,t ""t.Joc• • ..., MI SC. .. , ~ . .....,,,..." .... ' ....... ,. . . ""''""'' •·' ... , ' .. ..., ... . . AUTOMOTIVE .... \f. • ., ... , ., •.• .". \ ,.,..,,...., •~·LJ1,. 1-• ···~-,.., ... ---·-~ -00 .... . .,.... ~· ""'"'"' ... ""°' "' "' "' ">· 9(1)• ... .. IMl latatt Ctattal 1002 Ctatral 1002 ••~ile Bt•H llOO Da11 Ptiat 2126 \12rt ltack 2119 Ctlta .... 2'24 Cnta .... 2124 Cetta Jltll 2'24 Latw hick ... rer .... I---------llLL IMll 60011 mlu SMO 2br 2be For lease Lido Isle avail •MESA VERDE 2Br 181 I Quiet 1Bdrm In Nwi:>t Hgta HEAR & SEE THE WAVES ,._ ~Ml + llfT Two cedar & maho0any 2' 52' FLEETWOOD overlooks Marina g a1 I now 3BR 2BA N~ pela uni upper Dshwahr, gar ....... ~B.AH I area. S525/mo Call Evee octromEAtr-FRONc:Ml'IT 2'erelmo9t1•a ••tn/Ml .. 11 Larg41 3 bdrm, 2 bath pre-lab homea In kit 1 x . trplc. kids/p ets hurr) s 7001 Bk '499.3~ $650 NO peta 6-4-0-2495 ~ u 631 -2916 N Id 1.,.. --.-..-..._ .... _____ hOme located In Newpart form Both for $10,000 home with an 8 x 32 EX· 539_6190 Beat Al fee 1 mo r ___ un1u In m . .._uni leat1al 1002 Heights. PLUS 2 bdrm, 2 548-6905 or 631·&494 PANDED LIVING ROOM I ty Harbor vu Hma $1800/mo •STUNNING Lg JBr 2Ba &PUT11Em Hin LIO&llll j B each Complet ell -;;;=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii bath apt above 4 car gar-KING SIZE BEDROOM " Baal. ltack 2140 I 4BR. 1 level, lk.lpet re-Garoen Apt Pool. rec rmt G den S750Tmo 2BA 1 •.;BA turnlaheel New c.pt • age. 4 YM" old Aaklng great larg41 kitchen & H • 2 beach b aJ I model Agt 6"G-5664 S725 710W 18th l l~macu1::_11~t~ly ~r d twnhM greenbelt lndry drapea garage, lgt ••• I.I $295,000 bath. Agt 54G-5937 e<e s arg ns ~STSIDE 2"' .. rm 2"'• I s Pc'a' P e d utg ur o .. nadna-room. all bulltlna I patios Weekty "'50 I t>Oth block• to ocean utllf I Ocean-vu enhances pM ~ ~-gv .,.., u 2078 Thurin Monthly $875 10 s 1200 ITllTlll lT Ceattt"' Leta pd eacti $450 539-619C hse wtencloaed pallo lndry tac $550/mo No pool/spa, patio/deck No TSL MGMT 642_1603 WINTER ONLY 497-6 l2~ UJ,llO T d ' f 1 I ·1 I Best Alty lee k ids fine Just $900 peta 1>4&-.4382 pets _ All In Nftpot1 8eectl or r a l lODS C!71tl 1225 SKIP TO OCEAN beach & 539-6190 Belt Any tee 3BR 2.,,_88 luxury TwnhM 1Bdrm MI05 SHARP CLEAN 1 BR. NO STUDIO wl kllchenettt Coron a de l M ar. Realty P:~fc;,~~wN~t!ms~~;1 park 3•3, dlnl~. lrp1e.l sEAWIND 5br 2to'.ba. 2 ap~. u;~=,~fr~~g e;' 1 ~~ 2~~~ ... ~~UAAD WS~~5 PETSc!:~~50 ~~/mu~~~~~~;:: Fur nlalled and un-631-7370 fT 837 2593 garS1200 963-5191 lrplcs,nlgllt llte vlew Prl-pea 540•9626 or B3 t -0960 _ ------ fvmlahed. Bachelor, 1 Alcove o lme -I vate pool/apa.-comm St 631-82 13 af19f 3pm -----Sl'larp Meaa Vero. 2Br \1..,.n ~ ... Bdrm, 2 Bdrm & 3 Bdrm liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili YMUIMm Leta ftt lalt 14 lmae 144 ten nis SHOO/m o 3Br Westalde Cost aMeaa. 1Bdrm S615 2Ba enc• gar No pell 2Bf2L 2 It /enci unlt•eome with views. F1ID • IUIT Beam•. brick•. MW9t' 0J * *REITlLS* * 760-6266. 760-6978 l '~Ba. patio, bltlna, dl w. 2Bdrm 2aa $750 S750 979-38-48 An 6pm 1 ~. St °'ro ~ °",,,,!; conlnclud~~·!~nbvenan~ IPT ..... I.II bdrm, 2 bath home, "' S,..Ut1lar lllff Ltt CALL US REGARDING SEAWIND 5br 2'r'•ba. 2 S725/mo Kida Ok. No 151 E 2 l at 548--2408 •aa-s I i950 G..2-~ Bkr _, ..,.. ...,.,.., " --•••• block to beach With help Flat • OVERLOOKING p I pets Avail lmme d ----·-----_. __ loreck>IUr•. Thla lend«repopricedwtll It could have s view 1 DANA PT HARBOR Ap-IRVINE LEASES lrplca. night Ille.vi:-r . 1>45•6646 Lv Mll,l 3Br 2Ba Untur 1027 1 $875/mo 3B R 2BA 28r 288 Nwpt Pwlln. Un- und« competition need• $334,950 pr ox io.ooo IQ It lm1t C.ast ltalty vate pool/spa comm _ Vai.ncta. No pets $725 twnnae EncloMd gar. tum. Yrty Gm . .,_ ~ (714) 673 4400 8 pelnt bNStt and plenty 497-7005 111·1IOO ten ni ~ ... 7'.,,~46°9~~mo $450 Furnl1hed Mobile mo Call afl 3, 631~1 55 ta.indry rm. yard S900 mo 675-4812 llkt COLDWeu BANl(eRO ••llLUI "'""' ........ Perlect Nttlng fOf viewing harbor beet activity. 50' ol Bey lront11g9. 4 BR. 3'1t BA Lc.ng driveway lead-- Ing to 3 car garage, dock apace l or 3 bOata: Land Included U.C-IOIO I TLC Lar 5 bdrm 3•~ L~ l (;U f t1(,~t i 760-62<><>. """' home. no pell Mature I 763 W tlhtl St ___ 1 ~ .. with ,::,,ty rm II-Realtor•. 675-&000 ....... Furnllhed Cla.sslcalty 4Br adult• Quiet, aecure. UT&UIA.. TSL MGMT &42-'"Y>"l38r 2Sa 2 •ory w/2: brlfY & cuatom pooi In I /Ced 3Ba• den S 1850 mo THE BLUFFS 1991 Newpon 646-3373 2Br 2Ba uni 1000 SQ ti. ~age Stec»~ 8" · well planned yard. rtll ••I Jlar 102 ... n II I 786-M82an9pmorearty $495/mo lBR, retrg, no gar,)ac9~~~ lllfe81iB.AH t200mo &42 r $265,000 CtattaJ 2102 in the morning JSR 2BA, 111ory End Unit pets, edits pref 724 St ~· :,.6 107 PM 1595 V .......... Studio B~~~ ~~Cd~~1 d~~~ 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, t blk to GREENTREE.3BA 2be. No ''Linda Plan.. Totall) 1 Jamee St•C 673-7787 ' ---TIWllHES ~ub ~· J2~;:fum Narcl18UI Agi 759-1Kl70 bch, NB. S1050 2 Bdrm, pell Lae s12ootmo 818 lreah Sl7001mo. Vacant S5501mo 2BA 1BA apt, OITTAll nn C.14'1 ,., .... men __ __,,,·..,..,,----,.,,-, 1 bath wlyard, E/alde CM J46-0440/ 888-5510 laatlqs I Ct. UPi* unit, laundry, 1m-12Br 2Ba w/gar Pvt patlc FrplC vaulted cetllnga. dbl DECORATORS t>eeuttful DUPLEX-2Br 1ba ea. $675. 2 Bdrm, 1 bath, HB. Ranctio San Joaquin 2Br .. alHO &lmlfl mediate occupancy w/wastl rm Quiet Ne ar .pool & spa No pets turn Condo on the weter So-ol-PCH $275,000. I blk to bch $895. den 2Ba top IOC Pool 2276 MAPLE pets. Watef pd S690/mo 1 i d S72C s 1795/mo 873-089e 521 Carnation Bi owner JACllS IUL n ;pa S i 100 . Ev 854:3598 • Under SSOO rents thlt Tll llllT 142· llOI' TSL MGMT ~2· 1603 I 2Bd~:!; 2"'1Ba S93C: LIDO VIEW LUX X-LG -L-m----•• -Tll--.-•• -•• -1 673-0241 or 67 -1541 ,.., ...... llEIT great NB location pa,., -IEASTSIDE C M 2Br 1Ba -666W 18th t Br21gBathl DR &.d«* ~ -Huge newer Duplex S3 1K -... , ... luck 2141 utlls p aid call las• $750 /mo 2Bd 1'1tBa den uni $650/mo 1>45-2739 964~1~ StSOO mo ~7ooe OlllU Ill IAI Income. $329,000 firm l1•117M1U 38 28A. "'v pets, chu-539-6190 Seel Alty lee Townhouse Gar, lndry Age~t ~5_3663 __ Exc.llent owner ftnlllcingl Prins only. Bkr 72G-9422 •.n .... I I • l dren OK Avail now Weatcllft JSR 2BA hM room, nlCe E/llde loc Triple•' u-;;f 2Br , • ..,Be Lrg 2BR 2b• Frplc. Enjoy cool bHez• on a _,_ I aa Sl 200/mo Bkr 499•3~ 2629 ORANGE AVE E-llde 2er1Ba, bearr Tow"home type S6Q5 balcony 1242 Rutland d elightful, aacluded, IOIYIOIWllllHI So. BaYfront exec type, · , ~~571~= gdnt TILlllT M2·1IOI ce1ls lrplc ~1r S700·1 1t mo Nopets 546-5605 Rd Sg()()1mo 631-0211 patio )Yet one blk from $4391< Agt 759·9070 uppet of duplex 2BA Architect design 2Br 1 J'tBa 21 _ la.st. sec S2 5 2 peraooa Utlls pd Encl gar Small Small tBr Condo at Vw · ocean. 4 bdrm•. 40 fl lot, 02 3BA + office, -.VatOf & Duplex Spectacular ocn Taatia n no peta 650-1798 turn1at1ed Studio 1 edll salllea Pool, i-c. aec: All! abundant atorage, ~ ta.... l 4 pier Avall now $2250/mol ...u Beaut landscape & all Off Redhlll 3br 2ba poo ~lFM!k:I LARGE 1Bdrm Apt W1tf' pref'd No peta $450 mo 10 15 $550 mo 650-852e garage, lrg rooms. Solldty U.008 DOWN Lora Vance RM ltors mod conven Incl lndry tiome kids tine ale just poo1 No pets So4 751mo 536-5308 or Mll-8251 conatructedhomew/mlnl 2Br Condo. 1'1t8a, ~., 673-4062 S1J50/mo Dy 494-8038. S700's no la.st 539-6190 &PUTllllTS 646-3618 Afler J 30 view from upper level Spa. Small Comp ax C • I Ila 2122 Eve 497-35« I Best Alty lee Beautiful Garden Apt• j-LA MANCHA ~PTS WE lfFll l.... "~ i. 111u' ""ll'• ~. 1475,000. $15,000 under appralaal trtal t r Charming 2Br hM. Close Pat101/decti1, spa HM t 28d !Bath $&25_1675 Want a selec1ion ol grM t ~ 1'..n rwd•PP"' J!'h BINNIE DIXON a t S g O, O O O B y Irvine Terrac. 38R. fam twn/bch. Fr pie, gar 1 ApartaHtl paJd No pets I rm llvlng? We can otter any- Ow n e r/ Ag t , B e tty rm,pv1yard.$1800/mo S1200moEvee494l-2027' -2Bdrm 2Ba $720 No petl &4S-5073 thlng lrom aamallaptto &45-9161 or 644-2270 No pet a. Joan Bracey I l S" lalH& 398 W Wiison 631 -55831 Large 2BR 1 'ltba, p1110 a 4Bd hse II look Ing 1n EASTSIDE 28r lea.FiP Unique Homel 675-6000 WfHI litat It ltlaa• 26_ -Dllhweaher Sarag e CM.NB or HB think ol us ~ 759-QI~ UPTO $900 OFF!!* gar+ gueet hM $145K JASMINE CREEK. 24 hr Monarch Te<r condo: 2Br '"' ••~ $700/mo Call 545-3229 tir,1 for that chOI<:. ot FORECLOSURES $5K On: REPOSSESSED HOMES P.P 758--9186, 548-0559 aecurlty 2 BR 2ba, den or 2'1tba. Ocean Vu. 2 lrplct. Nearly new 1 BR apt W~ LI n:::WLI NICE 1 BR I0'#9f, enc gar T~~~~~ 642• 1603 * Getelthef·Equlty w/12% , ---------poo1rmw1table tennis & 2 garages. $1250/mo S675/mo + utlls No Ir~ H••-m etc r~ refrldge nc ___ _ nxedOI' 10%ftxed 15yra FROM GOVT FROM SAU II LUii pools. Laue Si 850. call Litten Rlty 496-1772 or gar Agt 675-3331 ar-••11> pets So4&o' &42-SQ64 WHTWf YILWI •n I 'ii year s rent f URNISHE D or UN FURNISH£ C or 3/2/ 1 buy down-atll1 S 1 00 PLUS REPAIRS/ DELUXE DUPLEX 2BR eollect(6 19) 244-1860 L 2119 I IL p • l Like t><and newl All utlltlel ' S685 8'1t% nonev.eullflow TAXES THROUGHOUT 2b• .. unit. seo-9063 I • ..,.,, ltaca a ••• • ..... a paid Poot. gar, no pets POOL Patio, lrplc X-lge 2BR 1. Da. All~nderseOKS F H CA/NATIONWIDE! ALSO ta.... l 4 1 mouse ON CANAL 2'01 1Bdrm B $565-!~: 1Br $580 2Br $6&0 lSOC 64:a~;apa· no ~g17 Rlwralde Sa~ TAX PROPERTI ES lniat 1044 2BR 1fiA dup unlr trgYd w ith BOAT DOCK 2BR tbaiAOO molnct u1U: 2Bdrml a .., MC Unt E-~557 ·28'• Bernardino Co. 21M54-3000. Ext 506 no pets. '650 • ~nty' $1000/mo lse 831--0560 Illes. gar Please call 30 1 AVOCA~ 642-98501I Pvt--,Br uni. lrple poo1 westSlde 2Br l ba uni, flTllSS CEITHS. TElllS. Bkr. 7141924-0272 Claaalfled Ad• &42-5678 l1ITllllll ILll 1952 Meyer 54Q..J4&4 2BR 28A condo. golf owner 752-5710 Big 2Br 2•.,B1 Dplx Quiet 1 patio. gar, no pets J99 w ~1:0P:S505~~u lmma.culate townhome on •NEW PLUSHl 3Br2'~Be couraevu Sepgar S1400 2BR 1BA, unturn. frplC, Pi·~~=t o.~~0:85H':>~ 8ay St S5Q5 650-6357 • .. . SW\lltlC. ,-., let dt Ilea, Y" Sell Y ,., p,.,_,t,I Cal Cta11tfle4, 642-5678 for information & surprisingly low cost. 1---,,;;...[ _..N _I .,..c_E...---tl ., 0 ! I I r I . I ~,_.~ I beMl)lll e>4•Y*''' gflllMd Qramp11 Wllll • 110M11i. lf'l hll 1¥J 'but I COUl<tft'I ______ ___, -Oii " JVI C TM I 1.-.-.1~1..-1 -, ;;_,...I __,...I -1 e c-•'"'• ..,. ,...,.,,. ~ b~ •• ~ ............... _, -·· L-..L.._.__.. _ ___..._.. ---"'--,.. ' ......... AalnboW Falla, 2 bdrm•. 2 •try Twnhme. gar. Avt Ben &44-0141· 676-5736 oar199. Step• to beach ~k e73-833g6 or1>42·966E Claullled Ada 642 ~678 Daaa ..... .. . 2 baths. 1arg41 patio oft noiW S 1200, unlrn, 4eR 3ba Condo, UP· Yearty 67J-8955 Attrac . beam cetUnga. 26f muter aulte and llvlng YIW am&Ls .... graded Mirrors/teak VACANT: 3Br 2ba. $995 WOODLAND VILLAGI I unturn n ear Marin a room. Comm. pool, lovely 17Ml12 tr 714-1112 comm pool $1600/mo mo yearly 1328 W 496-9482 noon-5 30pm 0:.::·~:s~:xi:i 3BR. den, 2 story twTlhm, 2 ~!~~~ &-3~:48 11 ~I Balboa ·c ·. 535-3090 APART MlllTI But. IMck •ttt• lllrt! Strrt. ltO ,els . ....,, ••oily 9 to' U" IULn car oar. comm pool, no BAVCREST nu ••l •11 **Lg 29r 2Aa Walk 10 k $1100/mo C1."'' & , , nu• ;.• I• '> • 3Pf' Qu•tl com!0•' 1t r • r • 111·1111 e:•·;t""av'!i1 W/r«I Spec 3br, Fm/rm, trm 2::s:,~,.M:i~~· ovt •. ,.,.1, &:->ti .i'?H••~•• •n•i""•n"'t • ·•· ~-l~~~!7~S:f7 ~1 "'v•por1 8uchSo Dlana "•...,._j 631·12e6 dining. lmmed occup ut , llt«~ "d'dl~ n• it>•.,.. •l'\P\l.\SI t"' .., ..... ~~~ ..__ Well ~led Reduced IC 2 13-594--6561 wtldya llSf &fT .. ....... 1111 SHOO/mo 28R 1be. nu cpt. paint. NIU• SPU' LJ ... T 111111 $550/mo 1BR 18A, lndry _ 644-721 1 Agt d /w, w/d, frig. patio, 1 c:ar Ullllll IH0-1110 room. clOM to bMCh Bay Vu Unique Hm. ..---gar $850 673-5354 agt 1 IDlt... llM·H 10 1 4932 Charlene Cir Lg llv.11Mwl2m1trault• -•r11-• I lllllllllS UH-l lll s MGMT &42 1600 $45QK. Agt eM-92 18 afl 4. CONDO: 3BR 2ba. utll Incl Immediate poeaeaalon 2 t 2Br 2ba, f/p, gar, W/D, T L • Wlhr/dryr. 2223 Peelllc den OV9f'looklng Mair patio Pool/rec area IU, IUT ' H T wan• llCl. SUWlll YliUIE N UIYM LWll S 1000/mo. 63 1-8300 Channel. Exit cond I S 1500/mo. 499-1434 '" PHUllet P~-:'!~c~.,,\:"~ Don't wilt Ill bungalow 4 St 450tmo. &44-9513 2BR. qu ... convenient 1oc Tll 1Wl&1111DT l M-tllt bdrm 2 ·~ be ~/dining fam w/cnlld patio part BMutlful 3BR 2ba. 1 ml I 2 co.,.,ed pkng. PatlO &. rm ;p1c pool apa + bl Ila pd upr $300' • from bet\. S 1100/mo, Cal I pool. Walk to bet\. Avail 'l••••••••&iiiiiiiiiiiimli TENNIS.' a1695,m0' + 53M190 Beat Alty tee 846-0498 10115. ss10 673-5333 t S 1695 aec:, crd di req, pet Lg 28' 188, gar, wl d hkup • IAlfll Ll&llJ I DESIGNER'S furnlahed ok. Call 78CM702 egt $e25 No pets. unt, 2178D PreatlglOua elegant exet TownhouM. Frplc & pool Fabuloul 5BR 4BA. bey &. Pl.centll s.46-7983 modem condo. Lrg 3BR 11195/rno. 873--0886 Ht• vu H~ lot Aleum M ... Vwde I0¥8fy lg 4bf 2'~BA. w/dltl rm, frs*l, nn owe le28K 931-4e99 2ba, yd, ~tlo, Ql1 IOC nc pool, apa + TENNIS ;m,;;,:;p;;;;;;;...-.p;~ RVM~R • I ' ' ~' • \. ' \. Ml'>ll l b4'l 1104 GRAND OPENING 11 ... ~ c.... ••tr• LMI ~·you have .. '*Spectacular IPll • 1 & 2Bt , & 2Ba au1t• IJMI! Plan 28R S:: POOi. I '* Spec:IOUS townhOu.. uuna lndudee 991 &. '*~ condo !Ml. C>Wlw..,_, *Private balcon••• 01 1vc $&50, 87~800I llhc. lntala U l ·lllJ WIYMT1 ---• p«a 10-1 $11507&1-3898 S1ee&1mo • 1 1986 .. W1Y llTt "'--·· ',._ ,.._,_ • 2 t curlty. Crd. Ck. Rod. p« •3 Ugtlted tennis OC>Yrt• ,...... n• Private, quiet 2Bdrm, On Golf.....,._ 4 • 1 ry, O.K. unfvf, Cell Tel>-8102 •2 Swtmmtng pooi. 1275+1§&1 a;p AO I&'. mestaBllll APARTMENTS 2'Ar8a End Unit. Ocieein frplc:, 2'*~S 1460/mo Agent ------.,,....,--::-::-:--825 CENTER STREET *St,....,,, & pond• • I A..., 10115 w/Nfa. N/91M' vi.w. S182,500. Owner +MC. Agt 51-3191 COSTA MESA •Sofr;. no pet• Coa11 Meea 24 1-MOe 873-2803 --··-· -~ •FumlaNnQI a,,_11 ,..,. u.e Preetic;ou.. .._.,,t uec ~ of theee ICoucfl &. m.tcHno n . llLL. '11111 • IRJ Weetllde 28' tla. pettc Modetn Condo. Lg 3 28R 1'Ar8A, w/d Mlup, ger Come ~ to get your ,........ WHY NOT CALL Hoel cones Off ..,... Vac:ent-Nr Hoeg Hoep. yard, c:erpcw1, M60/mo bdrm 2'Ar be w/dlM\g rm, No pell Avail now . t>eeu1iful brend new 79 Apw1menta. GC>lng HJ~l 111 Looee ~ MOOI or 2Br Condo, lf~.ce. M2-1700 tpc, f)OOl. ac>a + T£NHIS H 45/mo Call Craig tNtl lmmedtet• occupency otr 640-03ll CdM dlhWBhr. weM'•d dry.. 28R 1BA, SNr'P Wea1aldt $1696/mo + $1916 eec.. 1;91-1211 W-YIL.LllE FiM ~ _... 2 _ "" g«aoa,pooll132.9000t Upptit t>uptu, end gar. Crd di req, p« <* Cell MCMU..C>Aa F1M>M.. """' -~7 rn- 1900/mo Ownr/Agt new drapee. cerpet• 7to-t702, ~ 1-~flROlll1171 1MM Huntington viaeoe1 be, no kit *''°'• "" 714/ell 1~ 16 aeoo+ dep, erd d** BLUFFS CONDO, Unde 2 IUllAOOell8 .. MTN f1W011 = L8N. tr om ~ = lf'CI Ulll CM M6 040I No pets. 7'0-5829 38' 288 I~ 2 MTN f'WOll Ft .-way~~ __ 1 on Fum rm w/be on bi H9 "'111111 Im.I P'8n Upgraded 0 Mcf1oou..-.. -N6 t>orttet. aoo. '-' 38r 288. hlmly room, pool TAK! A L()()t( unfm l 1too mo. 722..U22 28r 18a unf 671 Jo9M Mcfaddef\ lest Shr \It ..... ,,_ & tenntl 2 b1oc:M.1 to SqueakyClleal\ 2bf 4 famlt) EXCLUSIVE BACK IAV F0t 1 or2.1510 No peta. FMturtng pool, IC)a. ptt\'9te pettoa end ...... b .. ctl. S 1701<. U 5K hfM erptd dec:Of pvl Sbf 2'MMI unrvrn. Rec>-8*ra Mgmt 580-1018 «**•. gar91ge Of carport. Beauttful at>un-Fum "" wt~ Mt\ ifl down. S1&00/mo. No patlo aroundaac>O ru tlon f ac. avail. 28r tie OOf•'P'I•••,. dantlend9Ci1P4nQ;;Jcoty Letlrw ~C.M . .._V.. QUalltytnQ 79CM809 •UM111* 11790/mo. PflnG. ontv ftnlaNd. 2062 0..-. bet\. t ~ ~ lldtt twne 9380 mo, ttw ...._ Of' 8'ipet (-aide local 3bt &48-t429 Of '754-0802 Lantl aeoo mo 94&-30l1 Of1'IC9 a..M DAILY ... AM TO f fllll NoPM& U111 pd •04-420C Prof pet90fl Ml-e211 ...... .... 111• hOfMY epot klde ant !XlCUTIV! CONDO 28r unf -upet*8. ... Located •1 tM ciomer of Cent• St1-t fl\JfllN 9'\dO •1001 w lJl8 bet\ .. dMIXf WHkiABl!N many o th" av 111 ~ * 2br aea. 2 penona ,..._N H end ,,,_,... Avienue OCft aide of PCH L8e tMi pool. ~llNt.. IMIMt ....... , N\Jlolllf"O lf lllti "" r r I' I' r I Nft lwlury dbl wtde 131-4190 ... My... unf, AINnll• ... & ~ ~ ... "-1424 N'9 S650 752-1Sl1 .o~ ..... ~, 1'1ll W '> _ _ . . • . Mllim. ~ 9WI\ Uparld9d Sbdml 2be ftel S tSIO mo yrty ....-11 29t and ~ Clf'D8 ~ 0.-.. Ewa ...._., 11 Leo ldl ""-.,_,. .._ ..,_ ~~~10•~! .. ':!!'fa 11111•i I I I 1 Jsl ledt lay Low esown. • t 12s •10-899 k* M n3 w =-: No PMt Sorry. no pet• WANT ACTION? SiOO 111 ._ ....,_ ·--"'"' ~·~• • . • • -· eumetlt8 IOan $39,900 beatc bfttna 539-819( SELL Idle tten11 wltl\ •1 MOO 650-7427 Ct111'-' AOl M ,·S171 ~ -~7141 I 0 Lin .......... 1m.ll11 ea 1a20CM .... ~ ... Cely Piiot ().aalfled AO • mo --1 ... 11!"!!!~--"!!!'!!!'!!!!!!!!!l!!!"!!!!!'!!~'l-~~~ -----~- I I l: . • <>r.,. 0a.t DAJLY PILOT /TUMday, ~ I. 1NS Inter Now And Win $200.00 of Home Decorating Supplies from ·" ,.. I' ,., :,: ... Stoodard Brands Poot Co. HOME DECORATING CENTERS CATEGORIES , IOOM WITH A THIMl-11 your kitchen country? Ho1 your den gone nautical? Enter your favorite room designed around a particular theme. HOllY DISPLAY-Attention Collecfor1 and Hobbyi1nl If you havo diaplayed your collection or hobby a1 a port of t+,e decor in your home, thia cot.gory i1 for you. CllA TIVI PLOOI & WALLCOVlllNG-Non·traditional use of carpet, tile, wall and floor coverings qualify you for on entry in this cot.gory. IUSINISS 01 OPPICl-Design and stylo are now o necessary function of business. Tho category is open to offices designed either privately or professionally. CONTESTS RULES Thft c-It~ to ~ l'ftPON" from Ol"'f oc~ of o ho<M, c~. oportment. mobile hofM ., llwaboord yocM. COMme<dol entriel on onty oc~ for Ifie ~ 0t Office cotegory ond will be~ ill Ol"'f of Ifie 04tle< 1t1r" cotegor;.., To enter, c~ Ifie entrf f0tm ond wbmll o phote>gr~ of ttie entr)'. TM entrf l'IMl1t be 0«01'11pouled by o detcriplion of ttie entrf l'flotoorQflft• becorM property of ftie Ooity l'llot and cannot be retumed. Entriel mUlt be podWlorbd by Wedneldoy, October 16'11, 191.S or~ IO ttie l)oity 'ilot. c/o INTHIOt!S, 330 W. lay. Couo #Mto, CA 92626 by $r00 p.m. ~ 1 NI, 1 M5. WIMers will be ~red in ltOrin and ~r~t 111 !he "lftteriori" Mdion pubk~ on October 3ht, 1915. Oolly l'llot Mlpfoywt ore not~. Entranh f'lllllt be 11yeonold0t o_. ond mutt ....;de in ltie Ooity l'llot clfcvlotion -· Dolly l'llot ~·opt.en will pl\oloorQflft Ifie wonn.no entit'fl for ~ in ttie '"'-on MC1ion Coolwlfa1111 trtay ......, more it.on one ca1990ry oll+tovoh ew1ly one entry per <af990ry ....;n be com.def.ct. One WlnMf .,.r caf990ry will be ctio- INTI ANT'S ADDllSSc INTERIORS ENTRY FORM NAMls __ DAY 'HONI NUMllls __ _ IVINING ftHONI NUMllls __ _ CATIGOIY1 Send entrlH c/o The Dally Piiot lnt•rlora Cont•at 330 W. lay St. Co1ta MHo, CA 92626 11M 11 I 11' Leet I fleM 1114 ............... "" a.fMJ/Oltin tilt SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS RAOIOLOOY l lLLINO of· floe hM an lmmed open. Zenith • lewt l"11) l0t a matUr9, reepon. LI. lalt/lnt Nlaee ·Victim llbla lndlv. w/at laMI 1 'If gar. ape, M/non-1mk -·•-1_.. In .. CATCH expr, In det• en~. Con-1360 mo. &87-3381 ...... ., V1uH I I thOuld haY9 bMfl • t-M--,.. ... ~ 1-'422 ntt t>.-.it p1~ ... grtnned ._-_·_··-· .... _..,... __ _ Room wlpvl b9ttl. Coa1• ... _______ .,1 Qrampa with a twinkle In I.I.A M9M. Kh pttv '300/mo 1 too aq ft. N.8 . 4 tmall hi• •· "but I oouldn't ~ 1or buey Ortho of· 722·1301or543-75'2 omoat 3 oonMOtad. 1 CATCH on." fie» Orth<> •xparlence ltttl1/ll!t!ICl!fl :'::1• .~:td:::!. r: Pt UH I en HI ~. Full or pw1 Ulm iiiii unit of Waterfront Homee 3* time. 405-<>eOO ..,.... ~~~ .. :· Co111 Hwy Tllll•IUll U /LYI Wkly r.,,tall. Low rat• ' 1!8CORTS b.y tNft Charov.· E::r. 11~8 a Up/Wkly. Color S226/mo • 1ex20 epec;e, ltt--2366 oth« wtcnd . ex , T\I maid wvtoa n. 320 aq tt on Nwpor1 81, benaftta. t.Hd. lnar. Cell cott... heated pOoi 1 oat• MaM 790-2548 L'9tl1 I 380-8081 llapa to ocaen. Kitch'• •mllTMllfTll lutnttila Jlll,i~lliiil! ~~n:"~~= 1 MONTH FREE RE.NT PIANO INST. Your m . lit1111111111n111.1 guwmm. ~~~~~1 ~'::·B~5~1 160~~'.n!ct!:r= c!: Wkly rent.,. now avail CdM'• beet omoae. 1591. tl tomar aerAce. Aleo to ln-1 1~.50 Wk & up. 2274 11100 Incl utll, AIC, ptcg, la !711181 elude caah raoaipt poe- NwPt Btvd, CM Me-7446 Janitor. 21&6 E eo..1 ting, Sat.guard Sv-tam. lu I I.I L ... E Hwy 875-aOO AnytllM T..,Mn axpar. only. Mon.·Frl. PREST'"'IOUS ...__ nu--I • • 8-5. I 1300/mo. Maul I 3028W.CoutHwy.New· IU ,_.... -· 11-•-Sona.K..,..,,,He-1510 por18aach refrig. TV OffloM For Rant. FrOf'f' For exQJtlng wort! with cl'lll- 1130+ Wk agi, no~t. S1.15eq tt.2902Aadh1U dran 8mo' .. 5yra. Ina U111T•.PIT191 Ava. 638-1120 poemw, caring environ· Waaltandl a muat. SOfM V1uU1a ltatah SUB....._ 2.,013 ll'Tlall mant. New faclllllH , bkkpg. Call 9am to 12 2722 offloaa C.MavfOct.set& dynamic •t:"· lrvlna Mon thru Frldey. lg 81Q AW Cabin. POOi mo. Colleen &42-3777 552• 087 7141646-6118 tbla, eo1or TV. 2 trp1c9, •-tr• rtftrfJ PrtfHdna_l1 lllN UIYlll llMI'>• 14. 714/S4M918 Z?7I Mafat1tr1Hft llM need• ptttma emptoyM lutah ti hart .. 1111 M .. _1 untll Chrlatmu . ~ulr .. 1350 Sq. Ft _... II ..-.. education In bu1c ao-2724 xlnt M ... Varda toe lntarm.otata entry le~ counting & axpr. thru trial •To~P-A~REA-"'M19ES·A-P"'IN .. E'-"s·1 S46-4123 polltlon. Bllllng & oth« bal. Flex hr11. 752·2181 1Bd Ilk mlec. accounting dut•. •--------rm, • new, cozy *Offloa/Shop/Storaga• T I d 10 k ·-mPUl ll•n lrplc, encl patio. Carport. 2&4 eq ft I up, rHI. C.M. ypino an ay ,... -pool apa, Quiet. No pa\a c.2 0 let 5'&·J2•0 qul'9d. Computer train· F/C FIT for tmall Con11. 1595 up 5'40·2«7 · u •rM. Ing ottered. Apply In per· Co. Aoctno I Job ooetlno O.DT YILUll ton w/raaume to Tom exp. helpful SI hr to llart, Chr11tlan/F hu furn condo 0 31 t et 170 •~"1 Fuant .. at Robert Bain, non amkr S45-5271 to lhr $425. Pool/Jae. H. n 1 · Wllllam Fro1t & A1-1--------Hrbr nr lhoc>l 8-40-88M w/cutte>mef' perking. n· aoci•I•. 1401 Quall St. lllllll lff• ttqua • gift • matln~ • c T.....i n11 d t .. ~ Coate M .... Muter bdrm boutique. For lMM by N9WJ)Oft Bch, • 928e0 d;,~ du~ 9Bwn ~~ &ba, kltch prlv. furn. own« 875.e909 ADVERTISING mua t. Cail Judy , S280l mo. 5'0-M77 Ind/Comm. Superior Ava. 5'2-4321 • .xt. 318 for E'llda lharp 2BR, garage, To be bullt. 1500-11,000 appt. ""!'.' l:~Jfo001mo. No -11. 45' up Agt 842-oe&e ARTIST Mlltl IUIT pat Laguna Canyon Hwy. Bell lll.Y Pl.IT Fam 20-30 lhara 2BR 2ba IOC Ample ptting 1500 Growing dally newapepat 330 W. Bay St. In CdM w.MtM. A.,.it Oc1 1/1, 90t NNN Call Ari on the Oran~ Coul Coeta MMe. C.. 15 $450/mo. Pool & Ian· 2 1315 0 7 • 7 7 3 4 or needl lmaglnatlV9 pro-u;ti;uuHiiiftiMijHti" n11 720--0890 CM1t1na 71 4/984-1107 Eve/Wknd ductlV9, layout arttSt wno lllYlL URPTlllllT FEM 22-32 to lhr epac NB LIDO PENINSULA undarl1endtmerehandl .. O~u~ry, ~ Weatctltt home wtpool & Prime Comm. Ofc Spc 200 •no. to deelgn lldv.1111ng depend• ~pon ex~ !AZ '400+ u111 5-48-4100 to 5800 a.I. i vall. From 11 for a vatlety Of ctlenll. per lance and ablllty Fem. 2BR 1'ABA ......,t •"t plat 873-8004 873-3777 Our dlacnmlnattno mat· 720--0019 Uk for Catotyn .. -.. ..... kat demand• quallty al\d --------'300 + dap & ·~ utll• Need to eublet ll'Tltll at.. 1ty1a. Exciting oppty w/Nat'I 842-<4625 IW mag abOut 750 eq ft. bulcall)' Con1u111no firm for ~lll'f/Mllt SALO PomtOOn AV.-. NEWPORT CIHTIA. TrPC PwMllM In a ~ IOwpf"n. Wit ...,.,, oom-"'°C). --.1M7 putet o~attant and SALU1~~ tbout the stock rneritet Patt/M time you ~ _,, 0.. '40-MOO from 8;30 $100,000+ to 1PM. t.e.50-87 per hr. _., .. ,,....,, f Ml paoed N.1-P .A offtoe Annual CommlUIOn '* uper'd reeponelble A CAAl!A FOA YOU pereon. 65 wpm, Word HOWll Lf.A~OS ~roc•t1tno • ptu1 PRIVIOUI 81LUNO 20-.()9.41 !XPEAIENCI! NOT lllTY/llllllllTll NECENAAY Aeapontlble tor amall hlgtl WE TRAIN! ectlvlty omce. Qood ~::· Xlnt ttltphone bookk~. Wiii COAPORATI train r .. t &87 HEADQUARTE.M lllTYl•IN ,, ...... , .... AefUndab4e ~ 8:::lo. 8eytlc» Ard)lteot'• requnct on euppl• need9~R* pereon w/good = SALl!S Offloe ltelllt. Good THE HOTTEST PRODUCT a beneftle. ca1187~204-4 ON THE MAAKITI mllTP/T No !!!~~,OL., N.B. Ltw office, Speed & accuracy a11antlel. orcsant Ho trlMlll Com- lmmed. ~ Good ptata trlln~I ~I ~ay, hOUrt n.it. ahM· (702)7 1-4711 al\d raq'd. 844-8040 ITITlllDI ... ,. ..... St a In CdM neadl S.... "' Min 1 YM1 exper on 18Mj Peiraon. FIT. 6 Daya.. Xlnl Dleptay Writer to '#Otte '"I working oonc1a. Eapadalty MOratarlal eult• anvfr nne dtant•. 87~ 1010 mant Hre 8-2. Mon-Fri _ -•••....,. Airport.,.._ Salary DOE ,..,._.., _ 714·752·8llO Arttculata Sac:retWIM. Ho "' I/ typing to Ht apple. tea a I H Selery + Bonu.... 5 HO Hourt a day afttrne)OM. ---91-.-111----.... Call Mr. Sorkin 842-3400 r• for lntWVlew P/T wlllaxlbl• houra. ~-,-,...,,,....,.,,~-::::":""== Xavlar'I cf NB. &46-7&45 TELEPHONE SOLICITOR • Euy work. 1447/hr. IHf httll..., /lelM Call 86<>-1318 Expr. oonatructlon & bl Cl ... / ... Pfln11. Aefa. Excat comm tauutt 5'6-6000, 40~6997 ... 1"111TTU/ P&ITI IP llT1IT uam1•raa Exper'd cuhlar/hoet ... tor Fr9nef'l Bletro. AW'! ~ 4:30..e:OO PM. Immediate opening ro 1787 N.wport 191vd. CM. axper. rypaaau.,. Muat MKI have have mark·u F M .._. M ....... . axper., paat~p beet< or ot.-• ...... • ground helpf\.11. xtnt b9f'I· Kitchen. Accac>tlng ac>e>ll- affl1 Including medical & catlonl for FIT I PIT dental lnauranca con· llalad cold Una cooka. genial atrnoapher~. Apply at 228 E 17UI St. tac1 Allaaa, &42~21 m . Coat& MeM 291 llAllllUIT l&ILYPUT 330 w. Bay StrM1 Coeta Meu, ca. 92827 M2-a21 ....... /W ..... 11111 lahne111I DAY Shltt1 preferred Hemingway • Aa1t. 873.() 120 for AtfradO TIE 11111 11111 IEITlllAIT F/to ''" nlea CM Houaa to 1tora box .. & eaaea, New1paper production poll!lve Ofgantad lndlv M 11 ... , $300/mo 111 no need IOI' office .pace. knowledge helpful. Ablll· 10 Ulltt Office Mgr. Xlnt H S l1~tlngl"MUme9fOr u 850-5208 ft·...., Wllllng to pay '4001mo. ty to work under deed· twplngltalaphona, die· AMlatant Managera. Mall Ill raq, • ~m p,..,., c M 780-1570 llnea • mutt. Prior ,,..... , llYllT11111 ULD to: 810 ~oltow taphona & word pro-M/25-35 prof. only, cleln, la• 1_1 7 PAP« axper. an 1dvan-oeealng pr.t'd. 118,500 + Interior dutgn and Lana, Laguna • CA n.-mkr lhr 2br 2'~ba twn· a1tr... taga. Potltlon 11 part Xlnt banelltl. O-l lam furniture publlcatlon 02&81. Nophoneoella hM C.M. $360. &31-<4391 1260 aq Ii w!front ofc lo time. good lnqulrlea and 759•1358 Dabble n..01 local ulea people plMM. rMr drlv.ln door. No re1uma1 to: Stave 10 contact new account• . ...----=----........,m Mala prof non-amkr 30-3g machine or auto 11lop1. Hough, Ari Director, lllllll ••IOI Enthullaam and drtva a ltatral 1131 lhr Nwpt Hghtt home $550/mo. 829 Termlnal Dally Piiot. P.O. Boll Phonea, typing 50 wpm, mml~~~on· . Hbonlghu•,•,t ~~;t Mllllnl flflllJ '400. 5'2·34'42 Diana Way, CM. Oya 540-8352 1580, Cotti M .... Ca. good with number• & cal· -.,...,.... - MIF, 2BR haa In COM,,..,. Evea 848-<>ea 1 82828 culatOI'. Vatled ci«lcal plan Call 213-652·3508 Immediate openlnga for ..-' . A/P Clar1t with 1 to 2 yr-. furn Non·tmkr. $350 + 950 s Ft / fllc. & du11ea. Good b9naflt1. Brauner• Ranta Funltura, expar. 10 key by touch. ut111. 758-84&1 an &PM warah~N. 1C: foc.uon llAlll OIAIT Wiii train. 731·3551 1:00 Coate M..a. 11 Making a Good organlu tlonal M/F, 3BR CM apt wtfple nr Fwy cioaa 875--8251 IAILT PM.IT to 4:30, Tuatln. caraar orient.ad '*''°" 1klll1. Apply Niagara SC Ptu S250 ~ utll & dee> A""'O• MIOO ...,. ft lndua-330 W. Bay St. lllU[l\IATE lor • ..,.. poaltlon In Water, 17&42 Cowan, Non·tmkr pref. 5'45-le02 ;;i;1 bulldlng "b.tno bullt. eo.te Meu. Ca. 9~~e l'lllllUI rurnltura rental•. If you 1rv1ne. • LI/. _. enjoy mMtlng people iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii MIF lhr 3bf hae In H.B. nr For Info. can ag11owner II It• WORK and at• looking for a bch S275/mo.+ utll, &40-7000 or 873-2222 IYll ll I IYll great opportunity with • U ... , .. 181/lut dee>. 980-0888 ldl I The Or "'~-,.......... MIF lhr hM 2Br 2Ba. hct•I Puftr~f TUYELl.S.LI lnteMewtno now for 11'11 ~y.~g=t~~t~~~~ Pllotla~·~~ wlhrl dryr. C.M. Nr OCC 27H lm!Md opening.I lor 10 tollowlng polltlonl: you I B a11 u l er) ltl Ad Oaot '325 Rial 831-1131 CM tflpj;x • lrg 2BR 1 !BX ll'larf, young paopte who JR. TYPIST • ~5 wpm, S 1100/mo + lucrative ~llbllltlea well ln- twnhM 1ty1a, patio & gat are r .. to trevel Hewell, aceurate. Wiii train on ~~~~ G=~n:: ~~•ry ~ a'1.. ~•tt~no Fully dap Good long N.Y., Aa. and throughOl.lt CRT ,...... ' '' -tefm ..... land 11701< U.S.A. w/unlqua bull-· mant. Excellent t>enellt1 tear1hMt1, procaaelng excl Curt A Herbart1 11 ,,... group. NO EXPER. ACCOUNTING CLERK • All lnqulrlea wlll remain ad1, al\d a variety of &31·1218 NEC With 2 Wiit exp pd Allng, 11 typing, 10 k9'f conlldantlal. 'oth« dutlea. ~· "·~ 1J-.........t •• 1 ·~, · ~ram. ~I tranep. furn. RECEPTIONIST · Type 50 Apply In peraon Tueaday, ganlzad, r919<)na1bla and I ii~; R on the )Ob training pro-mull be axt"*'*Y Of· -;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;~=c===~!Jt;';;::u:;;:-co;; WUJSUAi Ap9UcMtt muat be neat wpm, front lobby, but) Oct 9th •t 1025 H11bor able to work well with • Complete patlea. covers PUllll wm• ----"!!I~ .... --~-·· ~ •nthutlHllC and am~ board. Wiii train axper'd Blvd In Cotta M ... b!Wft olhert. Dack1. Coner«• walk-Qualltywork. lrea.-t. LANDSCAPE-MASONRY Int /Ext. 1 t yr_ axper~. lallaHI i Fluaelal bltloua. Cuual working operator. t~q~:'C:Pg~ ~~io2/:' ~~h:4:me Attn: UM $2.17 per day That'• ALL you pay for 3 llnet. 30 day minimum Wayt. Bloci< wali.. Room '425513 He-7401 Landecaplng, all phUM Free eat. Reuonable. cond. & high P•Y· MM• TRC Temporary $ervlcea addn115yraxp&4M834 ELECTRICIAN dona.Brlck,blocil,ltona, 850·1024or957·5801 thla an xlnt oPPOrt. for •!500Campue 1124 NB. llOl•Tf&llll ll&mllUT lt• ...... M4itlen Uc.#233108. Small/large free .. t. Mike 491M072 PAINTER NEEDS WORKI I a Ii I I I I 0 f · T~i~=~~·Eo:e'::oY 852-9424 . Opportunl1y to 1111 IAl.f PILIT In the DAILY PILOT SERVICE DIEC TORY Kite cab., Mac. plumb. Joba & rapelr1. W -6203 Rick 881·9684 Int/Ext, <*llnga, refln c:.b. prtaaiUH 2114 TO START ANO L"' .. VE PllTTI•I Spaelallty Food1 and P.I. lta 1111 --=-=~::-:-:::-=-:-..,..,...,.,.,...,.,.~~ ---------(2.,) wr1 exp w-guat -~ Gltt1. Flax. houra, wlll lm!Md eat. (118) H5-7&32 RESIOICOMM'L/IND 28 C&B LAWN SERVICE Oevta Palnti "'o&,._3937 lLL 1&11 llllllUIS TODAY NEED APPLY TO IFfla WMI train. W•tciltf Plue. Oetfa leu, le. QtJI 0oor .. Rac>atr·Altaratton1 yr1. Do my own work. Lie Mow..O~ twice mo. 120· no II 1110 HWI ltrrJ PrlH ll"'IH2 Thi Dally PMot Clrculatlon Alie for Debbi M2-0972 Aamodal·Panal-Loc:k...ic #278041. Al 84M 128 125. &4 5737, 873-6128 TIP tlAUrJ P&m'lll High Pronta. Local Ar.. 10~. Mon.·Frl. Offlee need• a rallable, •·-ftat THr W-....... CablMt .. Wlndow·Fancet •--..1~ HAWAIIAN EXPERTISE Serving Orange Co. 22yra. W t al\d tibia ~ -35 yrl •"P· .J4tfrv M2-4587 .... _ TrM trim, top, remove, Prompt! Reuonable rat• 111 Train. Part Time •.llWILIY IAlll* ma ura reapon at the LOI Angalea Tlmea AME HANDYMAN .... ~... No Employ .... Ne T I __. ____ ... peraon to varlfy new Ot· Telarnantatlno office In clean upa. Siu 5-40-1808 Ref.,encea. llc#...._.50 Ovarri.d. No Setting. Full Ima or -1 Ofuun-. dara. NO SELLING. Cotta Meaa. With our CW Cart C=t~m~t~-QUALITY TREE TRIMINO * Ill• 1111 * Great Tu Baneflt1 ~ ~c:'or~~= Applicant mutt have a new commlaalon acala CALL TODAYll CHllDCARE Xf XNYfiME tub .;,a, haufinQ, ate ' Tree root1-1tumpa remove p i Mr Woller (714)838-5820 ~1,fg":: ~~· you can M rn more than a•• Fii Liii 8 Mo'• up to 3 Yura. TLC, And Y• ,,_. 11 Lord Clnu~t Cati 722· t 171 •rf•f Sun 12·5 M·F lam·6pm MANAGER Leern valuebl• office $200 In commtaa1on1 and ..a ref'1 ~579 (llc#30405) 836-32« Clean Upaer,.. Trimming F~THiRa INTERIORS ••rtllltl, f .I. l aklllt wonc wtth nl~ wagea by Mlllng onty 20 Your Dally Piiot HANGING/STRIPPING ' tobacfle>llona per '#Mk ServlcaOtrac:tory Chrl1tlan mother wlll DECKS-WOOD COVERS. Ylld Malnt.•Haullng VISA·MC 873-1512 widow hu money J01 lmmadleta opening tor lull pao9la al\d Mm 14.25 I . poealble · Rapreeenttttva t>abysll Mon-Fri. CMIS1' CompatltlV9 Prloea MIKE 850-3263 I TD'• s 10 oootup no uma 0111r1ct Manager ~1~c;!~ !~:~~~~:l t~!t 1 1000 ~Hr:',: .. 2..,21 .1t. aot at.. a.1-es1• 10 Y9W9 e-xper. 1s...1920 11111 ANDYs wALLcovER1Na credit"''"° per1alty. Cel• 8•0010 10:30 AM .,. nextble. High acnoo1 --------1 INFANT CARE My home. •GEN. HOME REPAIRS Topped/removed Cleln· :~~::~':o. ~8~1~v•I Danlton Auoc 873-7311 ~":i~d~~ E~~~.~~~ p,.... call Ell .. n to gradu•t•. coltaga l lU· ~~d~~'m.. =~= ':,~'0~~( up, new lewn1. 751-~76 E.x....,. Wallcoverlng In Aaa1aatn1tall helpful 1chedule an appoint-danta and Mf10r clttuna AFTER SCHOOL JOBS EARN MOflY PRIZES TRPS Al~lt~C.actttl ., _, ,...... mant. 842-4321· arFor9 ancouan rnagldtarvl'!_ apptyceti AROUND THE CLOC HANDYMAN 1.ARQE and Complete Clean-Up, gan·t atallatlon. Reel_ ConlYlt· ~ 212 We otter an axeallenl ban-EOE ... h"""-9't P4nQr .. Q,. 1 7 Daya.Large Verdi amell 1 DO IT ALLI malnt, tr .. trlmml~lree ant Aallgnmnt 581-8590 Leal• Ft... ! aflt program, paid va-540-0301 Ulif Pl.IT Reeurteci~ • Roon'l & Sal•Helhhy-Fr .. Envnn. 531·5579 Pat or IV9 mag. eat• Mauro. 83 t-4 7 •WE GALS SHOULD• Lost email wtilte seott' cation• & holldeya, t>onu1 PllllA9111111Tllf flU Tm PIT ••991m..., Wttarproo no• &31 199 Reaplta Carel 5-48-15-45\P Malnt cleetktpa mowing •HANG TOGETHER• dog. Cf'llldran• pat. need• program and dental In· Typing 50-e()wpm. FamlU. PUT-.. , ....... ,. A19halHapalr·pr1(lng loll HAUL·A·WAY Handyrruln tree irlm Free Mtlma1 .. i 839.0730 ANYTIME apac:lal diet. vie. Big Cor· auranca. Salary plu1 artty w/word-prooeetlng •-5 II you.,.. k>O\lng for .xtra apt. corn~x apacleilat ltaalal I All type carpentry. tr• Mr. Ettrada &45--338 1 on1Bch,1150 REWARD mltaege relmburaement. 11 dallreble & good tale-Opportunltl•• avallabla epand~ ~. or Ilka Joe 5'5-4259 7am-9pm ROBINS cLEXNING ~:i'C~:iJ:~~p, ShNbelTrM Tri~ Comp! Pl~la. 95~3333 or 873-8882 Applicant mutt apply In = ~=· ::~ In c:~~~.~lonA~ ,~'': :~taln. I(,!~ = Dr!Y9W•Y9 patloa path• SERVICE: • lhrooughty g11denlng. C6mpe1111v1 24 ~ D • lll-11H Found 2 tan Cocker Span. peraon et Oally Piiot. 330 · door to door n.wpapaper Fatm or win Prima and etc. No 'Job loo 1ma11' Clllll houaa. &45-0741 HOME REPAIR. Carper1t~ prlcee Chuck &42·0322 •Goodjob1donerlght\f Dalaey & Rad, Nwpt Hgt• W••t Bay St., Coat• RECEPTIONIST for .......... program. Guaran-Awatdl, Call UI nowt We Reu Mlck9'f 538-0553 Houaec:IMnlng, carpa11 & tanciea a ge'c!9, ""trim, • DRAINS CLEAR F 115 ar ... 752-5509 &3 t -7"8 Mau, Ca. Apply 9· 11 port 8Mctl Builder, ~t teed hourly wage p4ue have MYeral opanlnga In upholatary, window., etc dump runa .. M 1 H.B. lll•ry F DI r=.ter a.m. or 2-4 p.m. (Clrcul•· be •ble to handle buay commlMlon. Hourt 4PM C.M .. H.B. or F.v ::~:·:,::ate llnJIMlt,111-IJlJ. ar•.JlmWhyta&42•720t BRICKWORK. Small fob1 8~o:).M~22.90tie' llon[)apt.). phonee. fr~offlce~ap-to 8PM. Training II &42-<4333 .,. Com ctaJ 1 welcome L~ Newport Coit• Mesa fOUft) ADS M:n l/Dt 1 1 SlOI pea.ranee. vvvv · provided. High tchool .. --,8-----brlclelblock wrk 530-03-45 mer nq. lrvlne .,.:.f'a ,.7,. 317.. • Expert SeMca a Repair naCI a I non .amkr pref. 96 graduat.. tnd col~ ... nan tucMlit1 • Eern ;r----,...--..-----[T uNd . boVINd .,., u ..,. ~ • -1100·$200 wkly. PIT CLEANING MY WAY Gat. & Yatd Clnu ........ 32 yr1 •"P· Reaid I/Comm. ARE FR'EE Chiropractic A11l1t•nt. •••n•lllT PIT 1tudant1 encouraged 0 &4~8790 Aft 2pm. a .. THROUGH SCHOOL! Jon 84~02 9Tl81 Lie #409035 964-8010 Exp or unexp. Call 11 anJoy people a apply. Potantlal to wn Stetlon Jobi Aefa. S4&-e867 i UI ....... NEW/REPAIR. Ouallty. No 050·2301 w!: Ilk• the mornlngl $300+ per Weak For an --=-==-=-=:-::----~~t., Hulle~':.•1nj~ •Hm11,nnum •CLEENCO• ou1cK &CAREFUL Job1toama11,r...onat>1e Cal·. DENTALAatt,Ortho,ROA on. you'll Ilk• thll ona1 interview call 957•2381 • llTlllTlllm nt. Exper reap. 497.2582 CIMn-upa & Heullng LO AA TES. T 138048 FrM •t.. llc'd. 831-2~5 raQ, Ortho exp pref. 4 day Qood telaphona et~• ext. 1204 Staw'1 Detelllng need• COMPLETE SERVICE. Fraa .-t. John &4M730 112 H1Q M2·11ll Mon-Th. NB &42·2828. & ecc:uma typing ltCMla a SALES· HOUSE PLANT energetic hard working Outdrivee & Outt>oardl EUROPEAN CLEANERS. Hauling Ctaanupa paint· Self St ._Ex P17!~lt1 mu.t. Caft 5&7-1"470, ut P/tlme Hour11 flulble lndMduala to grow Ind Fr....., Mart~. 8 HoutedHnlnglGardanlng Ing welding odd fot)e oraga perta Europeen PIYChiC Tarot Bill. fa1 Tm 281 lor appt. Wknda. &46--0210 ~ with our oom- ulanl " ,,... .. t Aefa 495-2478 ~no. 1 daYa873-3603 *l·l mYlll* Catdl Palm Reader Put, llmlllf/119'. pany Lota of QPPOr1unl- Home Cleenlng by the CLEAN a EXPERT Praaant & Future. 1 free ? Found gray al\d wtllte male F0< tiuey C>nhodontlC Of· ~ /mTf ~ ty Cell 831 ~ Acu'Typa Word Procaae-0ynem1c Duo Comm'I 1111~, .. ,.., Over 25 yew1 ex 1enoa 850-2758 Olan. &31-8984 cat Corona def Mer.,.. nc.1Mn. dental exp. Good front offtoa llPPM'· HallrMttl Gift Shop. Full =a-:-A-=B~Y:-:::S""tT::T'"'E'"'R=--L-1 --, ~ng•• ,: ~~ rMld'l.xll refl 860-8278 ' fitw Uc T • 118.421 ~-1353 ...,._.. 6'M--'"9 helpful, mU.t type & :xlnt ~· Typlngc t~tn! ·~~maf.ii~:r"' =.m•rk W9ntad. Mothafty ~;; · Strw~i st ~ Found Ring oommunlcatlon 1klll1. P ona1 on good hotna w!wof1{tng Art R11Hrch Service Hm &~=rc!r'ir:! amold , ht~lroAop IT..,..llUlll m.•llA Ca11&31·23'6 Xlnthoure.&4<M292 790-1313 ..a910Hunt.8ofl Orendmothar l4yro6dln a.fora lnvmtlng call I •tlmate 5'2-874& UOyd, 21 lor llPP1 l,_.,11ft111 M. llPElllf OI batWMan 6 & 8 PM ONLY --&L I •1 p•1at lef'lool Ml·tlrna. Sa6at) big Mvlngl Mr Holl~ . Orange Co C>nolnal I FOtlN'l Slarnaae ouno -· . I y I Mgat. Rafi. &42-4360 "6-1138/213-374-75«. HOUMdeanlng 14 yr-. e"P. HANEDA MASSAGING Student MoYefl. Tntured (114) 144-2111 /l'IM colu;, Y. Meu Oral Surgery Surglcal •• ••eeeeee banlc , ratlable, rM1, lraa Ml. own *IUll.. 111* Uc. T 12~ &41-8427 cat w 079 334 AM't. axpertanoad. H9w-Ing· BEA S.CyServ. Typing Irani Plna.&4~0Me (7 14)87M178 NEWWatahouNSt0taga ROOFING recover, rl· Varda erea -1 por1 Baach. 720·9019 e e lll•l•ltilll 06ctatlon. Word Proc. L oan7day'#Mk pair•. hot tar, Ille, roek, awe tM forCatolyn • p •aT TIME • HMtnlmmadlat•openlng '" H.B. Unda. 8-40-1570 UTlL.. ...... 405 30.h St Npt 8Mctl IUllaJ t WOod, tree el1. 750-Mle Found em.it Turtle YCty • /'-• tor • ~ ~ 8~,:~~ eo!-~~=.~~:741 lt1ta1ICMllilll L¥Lg2~~!!': ...... Uai/AUltleai ~~:Pe3'~.e= .. Boy'• 1 =--~~:YN : OFFICE WORK I ~~ .. !.,or1n'::. ~ modutea. YOLANDA HOUS!CLEAN C.A.S Sw Co 482-tl27 mMI•. ~ 101 Kathy lnt.l&t P•tch PiUf.,lno. P:ound 8url 9oatd. eo.t• =· =: pay & • : =~:i .~~~ Kim Darla. 979-4551 SERV. RHI., rallebla, Htg A/C, Ref rpra hi EP: I tla' ouatom texturing, quality M ........ Call & ID. [)y9 : e EOE Firanklln Aoctg. Te1111. •xpar . refl. &42-0406 Aman• AIC IYI le 4Mat3 WOf'tc. Problem .. No Prob-&38-7877, E¥M M~ 11•2 1111111. PmT.. •• The Daily Pilot c:•cula•:on Office•. llnancel ... ~ti.,.. 1~1..-n•1~ FINE PANTING By Rk:tl· lem11#3218&4 8M·7131 " T mate Full-llme.Hwpof'tlemoh. u u Banl!"'l_ ___ _ 11e1 with obtaining etadh I " ~ • ard Sinor. 18 yr-. ot happy ound Yorky amer, · 1 yr exp '*I'd. >Ont P4'Y & 1 eed Ii bl t d • llLUll ttnea 1 1oar11 548-()3.48 A= 4'Haattngd0na cuatomara, Lie. 2to&M * NE,ED T0 1REMODEL? v1cty_ sp 8 rtngd.!:!! 1 benefit• 720-1941 1n a a re a e, ma ure an reapon·• , .... ..__ 1----....:......_:_.:.....::.....:...:~-U..,...,~~~~~~ Thank·Youl 913-4114 r .... , mat• .,,_,,HI e.40-• ...., • ibl f de NO• •1 ,._. Low-coat bookk .. ptng, lllTC c1a1 0tyw9!1 .... 100% Financing LOST 2 • ....._.. ....... ,~ ....... & ..._ IWM/ll lltfh •' e penon to ver1 y new or n. • ... 11 aoaoun11ngano<SMapr s~ 1n eomm1 gc;uc;u.mic:;N; AAtNBOWPAtNTtNG •OUAUTY WOAK -"t M&f."i,';;:;: 1 Cart..,_ pref. HIOf*t •SELLING • ...xc • •11 ~for ~. 8t91• of the An. and I Fr• .-t. IP'IY9d or ramow. °'Y'-~It our pof':iaa Beach Cttlea RemodallrlQ, Adema. H I Oy N7..t020 waoee In .,.. + bonut t . • ~"°"'9 ...; 100.oana,11~1 54e-te2311c•383t24 wattRepaira.947·7901 ~JEFF UC PhoM87a..e122 ev......&11 '..-Y2-"t.hclbenalflt•: Applieant mutt have• good phone• Prfttou• ::Z.:. •• ~ aupetiOt Offtoe a.w:. eu.eom c:at1*'ttY. tioma la trutiea ~., llT/m Lie. 201<1t1 Loer11ao IOtlO helAd blc a med tnar. •M.e075 • ~ Ii T . . ·u be 'ded : ptNnoesw•••.~ b aM 'fOA.K Word Pr~ rapelrt, dOof'I. dtywWl,J &&t-4740 fr~ .-ttmat• Ra1ldentlal/Commero1a1 ,.,.._ C.. VG1y KJnQa ~ omo. ~ for ~ 1 pe tona ty. r&J.n.ln8 wt proVl .• peittttw =......_ Ing neadl Marla '97·2171 Mactrtcal Miit• 68().2114 MUSIC LE~S. Cd-BIG JOB CANCELLED Hwpt lch 7f4114f.... Clllr•actlc office c.11 •Learn valuable office akilla, work with • Oii ......... taga profwor. ~ A A A. PAINTING lnt/£x1 Cheap prtcea. &42·2071 °' ~13142·1.2tlC) aao-2301 . I • I (714) ~~=~~ ... ..,.-I............. woman kid• too, 'fOA.K LOWEST poealble Pf1ca °' le nd 14 25 h '"' try RoOii!iitTIAd d ulat home. oreceva 7*3624 10 Step aarvto. N2-323! ~~~·f<>n:.:~:1 LOST • ••IMOnCI Mk f'ART TIMf: :ruce peop a earn . per our to: 1ttta1"""'1s"'9y ~-Aemod't-Addftlont fema6aex«: Mii ~ PtanoL.wona M 2.e.21a 01.ASOOWPAINTINO Pr~•*-6121 :,c.i,.,.vcry.M:=-'1 "~~~o::oa· 1•mrt! Monday-Friday, 4:30 to 8:30.•: ...... ••••l()nliy OOol"J MC. 548-4HC att. xlnt refl 412-33N Salon de~ lnl/EJct. 30 vr• ..,., . _.. ~ IVtLD °" A!PAiA Lie Prtv Homa tor w.n, u.. A z.ccNn1.1 A. ,.,... &42-121• loet 0oo. ame11 """• AADiOloov BILUNO Ofl· :s.t 6:00 to l 0:30 am. • ~ w---1ta1ra. r~ Waalt/Monttt . ...,.,b "' J.O. INT tEXT PAINTING ,. °"' LhW. .,. '° Crtclll.t l"Cl '* "' """' • ifla"9 • P1eue call Eileen to achedule an• 5' Billlk -a Apt ,.._ 1111boa MndOw WalHno Lao. 9dl 4M-&3.22 oPefling tot a IUI time ... 1 .A doora.'"7ttOl..,..Oon~" •20·2 non-emb 540-4101 K91hy I WwaNn ~work. lff.57~.. 803 8alt>oa II an-a111 dettl. Con1.ct M,... CflOW •appom· ""--t. 6,.24321. I 01 ... ..,....., -·1 ,.,.,,....,...-__,,~--,....,.,.... Lott; Keeahuncl/Huatcy (71•)ts1...,.22 llln>11 .. The IHtHI draw 1n the 18UX£(1i dXA&HiHO Window~. '916d'I, a/gry I mo taM. T• •. O : 1 "\\ llOf't .. ll Pml WHt • Dally Piiot Malnt ~. Tr• Have eomet~no 10 Mii? comm·~ wlN!la M CM "9wero SfW>C1 at home It'• ...,, • E E • Paul Ml7-47M •fl 5 Claealflad Ad 842-5871 ~ Fr• e.t &50-t318 Cluelfled ad• do It well I h9UI. "99 -531-7800 146-23741141-1081 ev -dMalfled 942·M11 ••• • •• •• • • • • •• •• • • • • • • • •• • !quit OpcMy lmpt fl'\ff/h .I I ... • - •••llUT 111.JPUT llTll 11111 llhfflluMU 2 commercial H~ l'MCh, 1 leath INCh & 1 SI~ INCh S300 1 Avallabl• In Newport Commodore computer Beach. Experience $650. ~831M preferred. but not Dynutar ,,_ aty19 11111 ~. Mu.t have• with Solomon 444 bind· pendable tran~atlon, 1 1 '60. 10-8'>d Sutetcl anct t1e oYel' 11 yMl'1 old. s"f oo 7eo.M68 ~ day ~ with --------no oo1eec11ng. Call ~ I UT f11111111 Piiot 10AM -4PM Mon· LES 957-8133 dey • Friday. 642--4333 iiiiiiii~====:iiiiii, King az hdt>oetd. Ct1b. •••• ' Twin hdb<wd. Antq. Fr. DIMES I f Ladderbectl roctclng Chf. Men or Women wttfl 0. Antq Cept. deetc. Antq ~biJllt}.\ pendabte '*'8 wented fOf Pine 8r9Mtront. Antq o.lly PIOt routea In Hunt· Shaving ~. 873-3493 A LINE WANT ADS lngton. Har1»or & Seel • ._. ___. 2 """""' BMdl--.Sorne~ ...... ,,_, pc ~'"'V ttone lnvolwd. Call At1 w •eutt s100. 864-1548 Btoedstodl 642~. NMrty,,... sino-MWtng machine, Model 834 wttfi wet11ut cebtnet. l275. T~ fHt"' dre• In th• 241--0158 WHt. .• Dally Piiot Clu1tfted Ad. Call Tod.y .__.-_, SS•• 142·5878. ....... .. i----------------- After School - Student Jobs! Do You Need $ Cash $ And A Good Job To Start Tbe New Year'? We are look Ing for Jr. High Wld High Schoof atudenta linCI othen who would. enjoy t8"clng wtth people linCI wor1clng wtth other 1tudent1 their own age. You C8l1 eem *26.00 to '60.00 MCh week In oommleelDM and MUCH MOAEI You cen WOftt PART TIME In the anemoone and .._...~ ttll Mve ~of,,.. time. You T BE FREE .AFT!A SCHOOL! w. offw ~· trelnlna linCI pro'llde t~. Thie II NOT A PAPER A0UtE ANO 18 NOT SEVEN DA VS A WE!J(J Come out Ind help .. get ,.. ou.tonww for OUtt ~and heW a or-t time ~ It. You "8W notNng to to. end a a.per to«> to Ollln. C.. tod9Y and ~you _.. ll8rt lomorrowf cau Mr. Ea.rt M•TMI ot Hl-Mft IMPORT ANT NOTICE TO PRIVATE PARTIES Sell your Item• for $50 or leu In our r.mou1 DIMeS-A-LINES pub- llM>«J e«h S1turd1y In the Dally Piiot. DIMES·A·LINE ada mu•t bfJ pr•pald .a mill or bring them Into t,,. OaJly Piiot offlc». EM 1Ure to Inell.KM yoor ptton. number or ad- d,_, In your lld, hive 1 prk» on eech lr.tn & no 1bbr9vf1tlons. DEADLINE: 12 Noon,,..., Coeta ..... Oflloa .... .., . .,... Coetall111,Ca. ... ~~ " --·- AC.-011 1 HUIO October t, 1 t8$ 5 way on ARJES (March 11-Apn l 19): Some who make grand10~ gestures 9 ~'7""ec10• or promises actually lack substance Know 11, protect <;elf 1n clinches 1 14 comoe1~11y Someone wants something for nothing -)'OU could be pnme target 1s Ten111 0<•' Love relationship continues along .. dtflerent" path. :~ ~nc'.. m.1 .... TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You havt' something of value. some 18 Pue>c>et- may attempt to intimidate you, but )'Ou r pos1t1on 1s strong lt'gally and 1e Lat1a1 otherwtse. focus on deadlines. pressure. rcspons1b1hty. intcns11icd 20 Bendagec> S 7 SN current• 58 Ammonia comoound 59 P1tl'I "91~1 6 • Roell •Olk 62 POllSl'leS 63 01av1no l1eldS OI 64 F'or1 Om 65 1'odl>•I 66 Ed1to• s 00 11 6 • P•eS<.1104!$ DOWN love relationship. 22 TrMt• ag111ri GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20): Keep plans llcJuble -you are g01ng to 24 :=~~1 , Mllk•"•kes be asked to appear before the: media or to t-mbark upon Journey. ~Eye ac>fN 2 Navat ....._ Relative could be involved. Mission 1s completed. you gain added 21 ve1n 3 Grad...,, recognition and perhaps more money 29 ~ • Otes ~re1aroa1 CANCER (June 21-July 22): Be direct. get to hean of matters. start ~ ~~':, ~..., 5 C::..'*'' dial<>JUC with .. special .. member of opposlle sc:it. You'll regain lost 37 Str•tllge'I' 8 COid , .. , prestige. you'll also locate article that had been missing or stolen. Ja ,..,. ~ 1 Traci un•t• LEO (Jul} 23-Aug. 22): Sense of d1rect1on. purpo~ Wlll ~ 39 MetPI eut>1 a 90 099r ... restored. lntu1t1 on nngs true. you"ll be at nght place at propiuous ~ = i.ing e •n.tru"*'' moment. Emphasis on chansma. personal11y. ph}'s1cal attraction 42 C>Mdloca.ci ~~ ~:::;~· Rcu01on indic.ated w1th family member or "old flame." -4' Elec unrt 12 c1.-.y VIRGO (Aug. 2J.Sept. 22): Forces tend to be scattered Give full I 4s Ut<.., arm 13 Collec:1ton1 pla_y to cun oslly. but focus on main Ob)c:<:ll ve. Someone behind sa-nes ~ ~ct>en ,,_...., ~~ ::: 1s fighlln& your batlk Know 1t, don'l 8J' cup the ship' Sagtttanan plays 49 Flee! 2s l(ong so lO Lummo• 31 Yett' S 1v~1 32 Survey"'O llA1 J 3 G•e•t pr et J 4 Ou•z JS Somtieu J6 moo. ) ~ ~ ue4 JOU• ce~ •O lntelhgent 42 OD• •3 G•M'. '•"~' .... T"' 9')8•" paramount role. I S3 A-y 28 Forttv1Qtl1 LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 22): Someone 1s planning a sufl)nse for )Ou' rT""--..-....... -......--... -......--..---- Emphasis on hopes. dreams.. desires. powen or pcnuas1on You'll break lhrouah to stunncng. fresh opponuntt) Romance plays ma1or role. Aquarian fiprcs in scenano. SCORPIO (Ocl. 23-Nov 21 ): ~ ready for chanac. tnavd. vanet't. invitation to prcslipous social event. Empham on deahngs wtth authorities. pin through wnttc:n word, possible budding of romance Gemini native plays outst.and1na role. SAOITl'ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dcc. 21 ): DomestJc adjustment fiaurcs prominently. Lunar emphasis on education. travel. philosophy. , reliJion. Hi&hliabt diplomacy, rcahze family member doc-s have ri&ht to make chanp .. L1bra native dom10att'S unusu.a.J scenario. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Define terms, keep rcsoluuons conccmina diet. nutntJon, acneraJ health You'll learn more about financial resources or othcn, co11ld rece1vc ncW'I conocmina inheritance. You're due to learn valuable secrct. pon11btltty, lepl documents, pubhc rclallon1, p<>sslblt p&rtnCTSblp, mantaJ Sta\US Older individual plays key role. could prncnl unusual busmen. career opponunity. Pltoea plays key role. PtSCa (Feb. 19'-Marcb 20): lona·standlna asst111mcnt can no~ be completed. Reach beyond pn:VloutUpect.atJons. Empb&sason work procedures., basic chorn, pet.a. c:ontacta W1t.b tbox who share your princioles. You 'rt due for added llCdaam. 1P OCTOBEft t IS YO\Jlt 8tllTllDAY you arc dyna:mK.. crat1vc, could bave unu.suaJ man or ICU' on hc8d « fatt. You arc a natun.I hwnaniianan. people are d:rlwn to you with w ar problcm1.. You arc fuanated by I.aw. theater and mcdlanc. A.net.. La'ln penont play i.mpoiru.nt roles lD 'YOW' hfe You &1' 1m11uve. buM::ally &hy, but you will ftaht wbco cau.e ii ritht. M~ domauc ad.,lustmen• iakes pha this ya.r, could affect lifesMe. manta.I scan.is November Will be your mOl1 mcmonblc month o( l 98S . ...... !Im!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ----~---------- • 7 H1me1ayan mammal 48 ~ti 11••0 50 Love muc11 st Cll•IQll 51 Solly oeoo,. 53 F"llmed cartoon•st S• -~1'18\1\'8"' 55 9••nc" 56 F'<>'k _. .. 60 lndt8 - ' 810 Or.nge Coat DAILY PILOTnueeday, Octob« 8, 1885' PUllLIC NOTICE OF THE ANNUAL COST OF WASTEWATER TREATMENT IERVICE FOR USERS WITHIN COUNTY SANITATION DISTRICT NO. I OF ORANGE COUNTY In acoordenee wtth tht provteion• of 8«:110n 204 (b) (5) of the Oleet'I W•t« Aot of 1tn (PubltO Lew H -217), County s.n1tation oc.tric1 No. e ot 0rWIQ9 County le requtred to nottfy ell UMf'I ot tt. ...,.,.. eysMm of the rate end portion of the ad vak>rem W. peld by Ila uw. wtltch la atltibutabte to wtweter trM1ment 111Mee9. Til6t Otetrlot. thl Jur1adlctlonal boundarlee of which.,.. pr....,ted on the eocompanylng map, r.,.,..,.. • pottlOn of tht ~t (1%) bulc tu levy collected ennualty from property ownert by tht 0ranQ9 County Tax Col*tOf. TNa notloe la~ publtehtd In conjuno110n with the malllng of the Joint Conaolldatad Tu Bltt by tht Tu CollectOf to enabte ~to detenntne the thare of their bMlc propet1Y tu levy Which II UMd to pay fOf wutewater t,..tment aemo. prcwtded by thte Otetric1. Thie District annually rece1Ye9 approxlmltety 3.90% p«'C*'lt of the 1% butc tax levy eoltictad from the property ownet'l In tht Dletrlct. The reYenUee Q9f*•lad for the Dlttric1 from the t>utc tu levy.,. no\ 9U1fldent to pay fOf all the ongoing operatione.. malnt~ and replacemenVrehabllltatlon coete aNOdated wtth coflectlng, trMtlng and dltt><*ng of th4t wutew•t• gen«ated from lht prQ9ertlM within the Otetrlct. Acoordlngly, all reeldentlal and tm.it notH'9eldentlal U9ef't In tht District muet .a.c> pay 1 aupplemental ueer l'te. wtilch t0t ooet NvtnQ9 le collected f~ the Olatrtct by U. Tu Coffector wtth the annual property ta.x• The ennual aupplemenlal uaer Met In County Senttatlon District No. e at• pr99et1tad In the fottowtng tabi.: •Int .. hmlty ,...,denoee S29.40 S t5.85 per unit em.I co.MMf'Olel/lftduetrW fOW"llll*' ........ $11.90/1,000 equare !Mt Large lnduatrlal end commercial ueen ol the eewerage 1y1tem P•Y their proportlOnate llhare Of the coet of wutew1ter trNtment ..w:.s b&Md upon the actual votume of wutewat« they dlechatge and the amoun11 of bloehemie.I oxygen Mmend (800) ~ auac>ended aolld• (SS) In their dlachafge. The fotlowlng 9Chedule ldenllflee the rat• now In ethlct for thtee large uaers In ft9Cal YMf 1985-86: flow ($/million gallon•) Sf35 19 800 ($/1,000 pound•) 195."7 198.38 Revenuee collected from ttieM large uae<1 are aieo utea to pay 1or tne ongoing operauona, mam1enancie ano eplaoement1reh1blllt9tlon coe1s of the Olstrlct'a MWerag9 syatem. If you would llke additional Information on the charge. you ate paying for waatewater treetment Ml"VIOM, p ..... call the C»etrlct'a atatf al (714) 962-2411, Exttnlk>n 5. The Oletrjct'a admlni.tratlve oftloee are open from 7:30 1.m. to 5:30 p.m .. Monday hrough Thuraday, and 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. on Frldaya. Publl.,., Orange Coast Dally Piiot October 8. 1985 MC FADDEN / RfELD ACAM S t N T~ YOU AM .. DUAUlT UMDIJ' A HOmO ... R'I AlllllllHNT Lii" DATaD JANUARY 11, ,.._ utLIM YOU TAKI AC- TION TO fltM)TaCT YOUf' NOf'IRTY, IT MAY II toLD AT A P\aJC IAU. • YOU ... D AN IXPU-NATION Of' THI NATUM O' THI 'lllOCllDINQ AQAIN8T YOU , YOU 8HOULD CONTACT A LAWYIA. MOTICa Of' u.LI On Oc1ober 16, 1985, 11 10:16 A.M. a1 Iha Main En· tranoa: BAUMGARTNER & ROUP, 1111 Town & Coun- 1.ry Road. Suite #30, ()range, Ctllfomia 92ee8, In Iha c:lty ol Orange, County ot Of. aoga. Stat• of California, under tha POW9r ol s.i. purau1111 to Iha term• 01 thoM oartaln Covenant•. Condlttona. and Raetr1Cllonl recorded on Oc1obar 9. 1He In Book 8747 Pagae 77 -119 lnc:lual\'9, Of Offlelal Rec«de of <>reno-County. Caltfomla, Bawngar1ner & ROIJ9, a Lew Corpora11on, ar ettorney for VILLAGE PARK COMMUNITY ASSOCIA· TION, pul'IYllll lo Sacilon 1358 of Iha CMI Coda of Iha State of Cellfomla. Will SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH. payebla at lime ot ula In ltwful money of IN United Stataa, all '10ht. tttte, and lnt9reat In Iha foflowlng daletlbed proper1y tltuated In Mid County and State: Lot t4 ol Tract 8523 u aoown by 11\8'1 on Illa In Book 254 pagaa 47-50 of MIP9. racorda ol Orange County, California. Tha purported ttraat ad· draaa and other common dMlonatlon, II any. of IM reel property dHcrlbad et>ove. for which th9 under· tlgnad makM no repreaen· talion Of warranty, 11: 27 OPT,.. i...n.. l~na Calllornla Tha purported owner ot aaJd real Pf°'*1Y at Iha tlmt ol the AIMM/'Mnl Ll9f1 WU MARGARET ANN MOORE. Seid Mia will ba made wtthOUt warranty. •xi>r-oi lmpllad, regarding title, P<>9- ....ion, Of ancumbranoae. to pay the aum of put due Hom.ownar'a Aaeeumaritl. rauonebly aetlma1ed coet1 , .... chwgae. and lntaraet Ir the amount of $1.941.2'. DATED: Septambar 9 1986 VILUQI f'Alllt( COM· MUNITY AtlOCIA TION 8Y: "9MN D. llloup ol 8AUMQAlll'TNElllllllOUP,A LAW CQNIORATK>N, 1111 T-n a C-lfJ "oed ~-°' ..... ~ ._, (7W)W1.-0 Publlahad Orange Cou1 Dally Piiot Sec>tarnt>er 24. Oclobar 1. 8, 1985 T-847 flCTITIOUI llU ... H NAlll_ITATWmNT The following peraona ara l ___ _. doing bullnaet at John Cloiaeon Entarprt.... 485 Stanford Court, lrvtne, CA 92715 LEGEND ms TRtC T NO. 6 BOlN>AR f'tllUC f«>TICE h->-NEWPORT BEACH JoM E. Ctoaaon. Jr . 485 Stanford Court lrvlna, CA 92715 Thia bu1lnaaa I• con· dUGtad by: an Individual JOhn Cloaaon Jr Thll atatement WU ftlad with the County Clarl< ol Of. anga County Ort Septemt>eo 18. 1985 ~, P\Jbll1hed Orange Coul Delly Pltot September 24. Oclobar 1. 8, 15, 1985 T-857 PlB.IC f«>TIC£ the a IE IOU> AT tcrl In "SUBJECT TO:" WBM~ , wu Ralatlon1 th• ganara A "'*..!<: tAl.L • YOU below (Iha "Daclaratlon"): ..aed al Senta Ana. Call----------ipravalKng rate of par dlan" •m AN R~ATION PARCE.L3· lomlal()(vlola11onof21USC FtCTmOUtlMl ... tt Daily Pilot c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 Israel keeps contact with Italy, PLO TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) -Israel remained in close contae1 with ha.Han officials over the hijack.ins of an Italian cruise ship by PaJcstiruan pirates demanding the freedom o f SO Israeli-held prisoners. a spokesman said early today. . "We are talking with the ltaJian ambassador here, who 1s discussiOJ the situation with h.is Forcian Mioistrv. Tbev flhc ltalia.os) a.re also in touch with the TURKEY PLO in Egypt," the Foreign Ministry spokesman told The Associated Press. He referred to the Palestine Liberation Organization. The Israeli Cabinet has a regularly scheduled meet- ing this morning. Israeli government and military officials re- fused to say how many Palestinians arc now held in Israeli prisons. The spokesman said the information relayed to the Israeli Foreign Ministry was "the demand for the release ofSa.mir Konaitcrry and 50 others." Konaiterry was ident- ified as one of four Palesti- nians who landed along the northern Israeli coast at Nahari ya on Apnl 22, 1979, and took Dani Haran and • c.ro his 5-ycar-old dauJhtcr .__, ______ ..,.. ... _.,. __ Einet host.age as secunty forces closed in. Dani's wife, Smadar, hid in a utjljty room and smothered her crymg infant dau$hter to keep the gucnillas from finding them. Haran and Emat were killed by the guenillas as they tried to flee along the beach. In a gun battle that followed, soldiers killed two of the guenillas and captured Konaitcrry and the fourth one. One was f recd when Israel swapped l, 150 prisoners for three Israeli soldiers wbo had been captured by Palestinian guerrillas following Israel's invasion of Lebanon. Smee August, Israel has placed at least 77 Palestinians from the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip under administrative detention that permits jailing witho ut triaJ. It also has intercepted four S!f'all boats since April in the Mediterranean and captured an unspecified number of gucmllas aboard the vessels. Israel, on Sept. 1 O. freed 119 prisoners 1t had captured in southern Lebanon from the Atlit military prison m northern Israel. They were the last of more than J .000 prisoners from Lebanon held at one time m Atlit. Commercial hijackin~ first of kind in a decade ANNAPOLIS. Md. (AP)-The sewng of the Italian cruise liner Achille Lauro by Palestinians Monday apparently marked the first time in 10 years that a commercial ship was pirated by terronsts, according to a U.S. Naval Academy reference librarian. On Sept. 26. 1975, the Suehiro Maru, a Japanese freighter. was pirated by a group from the Philippines known as the Moro National Liberation Front, said librarian Ruth Hennesy. The group demanded S 133.000 ransom for the ship. They surrendered three days later when a confronted by a Philippine navy blockade at Zamboanga and fired upon. fn January 1961 , opponents of dictator Antonio de Salazar hijacked the Portuguese liner Santa Maria as 1t cruised the Caribbean wtth 607 passengers, including 44 Amencans. The pirates, led by Capt. Hennque Galvao. sci.zed control of the ship ma bloody gunbattle with officers in which 1he ship's third officer was k.Jlled. After 12 days of aimless cruising in the Atlantic. Galvao permitted all passengers and crew to leave the ship in Brazil. He and his band were granted poht1cal asylum there. House committee hits at business' social deductions NOTICE TO wagaa and tha general Of' n. NAU-Of' n. Euwnentt aa M'l lorth In 881. Any~ deairlng 10 NAiii_ tTATRlll_NT CONTMCTC>flt pravatllng rata tOf hOlld•) ""OCHDINO AQAtNtT the Section• anlltlad ··Cat· place Iha matter In 1ha Unit· The lollowtng '*900• are WASHINGTON (AP) -The House Ways and Means CAUJNO '°" llOt and overtime work In the to-YOU, YOU 9MOUt.D CON-taln EaMment1 lor Ownera" ad StatM Dt1tr1ct Court In doing bu1t""9 u : H0rtam1 Committee. attacking the "thr~-martioi lunch'' that many Amencans School Dtltrle1: Newpor1 callty In wtllch thla wort! It le. TACT A LAWYPt. and "Supe>Of1. Settternanl Ofder to contaet the PfOb-K K, 118 E. Balboa Blvd . ---------M ... Unltlad School 0t11 be par10fmed t()( eacn crati MOTICI'. Of' and Encroecnmen1" 01 the able cauM fOt 1h1t aatiur• Balb09, CA 929&1 •-.,. unnrr· view as a symbol of an unfair taA system, is moving to rcstnct business' Bid DMdtlne· 2-00 °·~ Of IYP9 of worker needed tc ntUITRFa IALI Article ant1t1ad :.Eu•· must flla with the Aaeldent John Steph9" W•ll-. '"~ nuiiw. ability to deduct costs of meals and entertainment. Pm ot the 16th day of Oc1o-••acute Iha contract. Ti-T.a. NO.~ menta" ol the Dec:Aaratlon AQan1 In Charge. DNo En-118 E. Balboa Blvd • Balboa, acepe ~ 8ch ca1 The panel'sact1on, taken Monday behind closed doors as lobb~1sts bef. 1985 ,., .. are on flla al Iha DIS· NOTICE IS HEREBY PARCEL 4 f()(cematll Admlnlatrallon. CA 92881 92863 . Place ol Bid Raca1p1 TRICT ottlca 1oc1t9d 11 GtVEN. 1ha1 on Thu™'•Y. e..-nente 91 eoch --P.O. Box 12809. Santa Ana Thia bualn••• 11 con-Chan. J C«beal 12424 for restaurants. hotels and sports teams waited outside, 1s far from inal. Purchulng Dept. 21185-Purellallng Office, 2985-S Octobef 17. 1985, at 11·00 menta ere pe111c1.11etty Mt Calltotni. 112112. a ctalm ducied by: en lndtvldull Roaa ~ CA 90242 Some members said they expect the issue to be reused again before the Bear StrM1. Costa M .... C a.er Street. <:<>eta~ Clo o'clock am ot Mid dey. tn tonh In 11\a Artlda antltled and co.t bond ot S1, 12a 00 J S Walt-Thii bu•t,,.11 11 con· committee finishes wo rk on a new tax code. Project ldantlllcello 112828 CoplM may be ot>-the room M'I ulda f()( ~ '"Eaaernentt" of the Dadar· tn the fonn of a cuhlar"t Of Thie stetemenl wu n1ae1 . Namft 11 Audto 1n1ru1 talnad on requaet A copy ot ducting Truttea'• Sal•• atlon 01 Covanantt eon. certified chedl m•da pay-with tha CountY Clark ol Of. ducted by.• llmlted Plf1nar· But for the moment, the committee has agreed that businesses Detactl0rt Alarm System t0t theal r•IM lh•ll be poetao within the otnoM of REAL d1tlon1 and .. Ret1rtcit0n1 ~ able 10 tha u. s. 0ep1r1men1 anga County on Septarnt>« •ht,n Chtarenu should no lon$er be all owe~ un Ii i:nited deductions for C<?Sts of meals varlou• Otatrlct Loce11on1 at the )ob"" ESTATE SECURITIES SER-ecrtbed In SUBJECT TO· of Justa. or awovad aur• 18. 1985 Thie atatemenl wu lllad and of enterta1n1ng chcnts including sports and theater ttclcets 2) Aefurblth Air Condition· It thall be mendelory up« VICE IOCated at 1800 Notlh below (Iha "Muter Daclar· ty on Of befOfl Oc1obar 14 ,._ w1 h he Coun c.. n.. Th I d d 'Pr ·d R • I · th · ing System•• Corna Del Mat the CONTRACTOR to wtlOtT' Bloadway, Suite 100, In th6 atlon") under the -='lion• t985. Ari lndlgency ~ltloll PubHlhad Orange Coaa1 I t ty of"'" .e pane en orsc es1 c.nt cagan s cone us1on at such High School the contract 11 -•rdad. and City of senie Ana. County of heading• In auch Article anti-may be filed 1n 11eu ofl 0091 Dally Piiot September 24, ~~ty on Septembel deductions arc abused and unfair. But members stopped short o f ~ace Plan• ar• Ort flle upon any 1ubcontracto1 Ofa.nga, State of California, tied u lollowt· "Owner• bond. Othtrwlae. the !>fop-Oc1obaf 1, 8. 16, 1985 · ~ accepting the president's proposed changes. Purcnalllng Dept .. 298~e under IUCh CONTRACTOR WASHIN GTON TRUST Right• end DvtlM. u111111ee arty w111 be admlnlatraltvel) T~5"4 PubMIMd Orange Colet The committee also went against Reagan's wtshes on another Beer SlrM1. C<>et1 Mau. Clo to pay not 1aa1 then th9 aald DEED SERVICE CORPOR· and Cabla Talavltlon", lorleltad pur.uent lo 10 Dal"' Pilot Sep ber 2• h S 112e2e--..._ '9'dfladra1 .. 1oa11woniart ATION, a c.tltMnla COfP«· "SuPC>Of1 and s.tttamanl'" u.s.c . 1eoa.andwmbe~ PtB.JC f«)TICE Oct~ 1 8 151~985 · matter. It agreed to continue. t c I-per-taxpayer checkoff for the NOT ICE IS HEREBY employed by them 1n the ax atton, u duty appointed "Encroechmen1··. and pOMd of according to law. · · · T-380 federal fund that finances prcs1dent1al elections. GIVEN that Iha abov•· acutlon of tha contract. Trull• under and purtuan1 "COfnmuntty Fec11111ae ~ lnt.-tad pani.. may ttla • --rmouK-21DM21 ...... 18 Still awaiting the 36-membcr panel are the tour:: issues of tax named SchOOI Dt1tr1ct fo1 No bidder may wtttidra'lll' to the J>OW9r of aa1a con· men1" <petition IOf r9"1111lon or ..... ...., h 1 · I d' h I ed h · Or•noe County. ca11torn1a any bid tor 1 perlOd of rorty. !erred in thei cat'taln Dead of The street addreH or m1tig.i1on of forl9fture wf1h NAiii_ ITATaMRNT Pta.IC f«>TIC[ over au • me u !ng ow ow tor ucc tax rates. ow 1gh to raise the ect1ng by and through It• flY9 (45) da)'I afler the datt Truat axaarted by ROBERl other common <1ae1gn111on th• Raaldant Agent 1n The tollowlnQ ~ ar• personal exemption. and whether to repeal the deduction for state and Governing Board, herein· Mt tor tha opening of bid• E BREWER. recorded of Iha real Pfoparty herein-Charge pur1uan1 10 19 doing bualnaee u · THE P'ICTmOUe .,._,, local taxes paid, titter referred to u "'DIS. A payment bond and. Auguat8. 1118-4.tnlhaott\ce ebov• ducrlbed I• use 1818 and 21 CFR PLASTER SHOP, 1215 MAmtTATa....,. "W . be"ngla ped b th sna Is .. R R McG h RN y TRICT"'. wltl r.c.tva up to perlormence bond wlll M of Iha County Aecofdar ol pvrpor1ad to be: 78 EM! 131671-1316.81 wtthOUt ftl· .Balcer SI · C<>etl MaM, CA The foltawlng peraone art . e re I . p .Y e 1 ' cp. a y . rat • -· ·• butnotlaterthantheat>ove-required prior 10 exacutlor .. id County, .. Aecofdal''• YalaLQOP.lrvlne.CalltOfnl• lnga'etalmandcoetbond. 112828 dolngbWIMMu:OrfCINn sa1d as the committee finished its eighth day of work on Reagan's 11ated time. Malad bid• '°' of tha contract and lhall bf 1na1rumen1 No. 84-328502. Tha undarlignad hereby ,,..... &.. ......, ,...._ Jedi E. Mannkan, teeoe USA, 3536 E. COMt Hwy, overhaul plan. Iha •••rd of a contraci '°' In Ille form Mt tonh In thf by reeaon of• bream or~ dlaclalmt all Hablllty for arry 4Mftt -....e lft CNr9a Sant1Ynez, Fountain v.-.y, SultaD, Corona Del Mer. CA Under current law, a business may deduct reasonable ordinary the at>c>Ya PfOjeci contract dOCUfMl'lt1 1au11 In payment or per. lncorrac:1,_ In aald .. ,.... ea..· RQ.-35-004! CA 92708 92625 . I . f . • . B1d1 lhall be received 1r Purauant 10 Section 459( formenoa of tha oblig.i1ona addr ... or other common O.ta:· September 13, 111811 Tont• L Mahnk9n, 1eeoe vtpco ci..nara. A Calif. and necessary expense~. me udu~g the ~ost o m~s. 1f they arc eaten m the pl~ Identified •t>c>Ya of the Government Coda o ..:urad thereby. 1nc1u<11no dfflgnatlon. Publlthad Orange CoMt Senta Ynez, Fount .. n v~. co r Po" ti on. 15 9 4 1 a place that 1s conduct ve to a d1scuss1on of busmess. and of costs of and •h•ll be °'**' and the Stat• of CaillOfnla, thf that brMCtl or default, No-Seid aa1a w111 b9 m.oe Delly Piiot Septarnbar 24, CA 92708 IA!lefleld Dr .. Lll Mlflda. CA entcrtaminfi clients or potential customeN. publl<:ty reed alood at thf conH1c1 wllt contalr tic. ot wtllch wae 1'9COrdad wttl\QIJtwwranty axpr ... 0< Oc1ot>er 1 a 1986 Thlt butln ... 18 con-90638 Th r. I · r. I h Wh. H ebove-111ted tlmt enc 1><ovllllone P9fmlttlno ttM May 28, 1985, u Recofdaf'• lme>llad regerdlnO 111i. pa. · ' T-&62 ducted by: huabend encs wtt. Thia bu11n... 1a con• ~t a.w 1avocs a i:c at1ve 1ew peop e, t c Ile ou~ p1-auccataful bidder 1c Instrument No. e&-222&89, ....ion: ()( ancumbreno... Jack E. Mahnken. Tonia L ducted by: a ~111on complained tn rccommen~mg change. . There w111 be a n/1 dac>Otll1 aub11!1ut• aacur111 .. t()( an> WILL SELL AT PUBLIC to Ntlaty the prtncl!* bal· fltlllC f«>TICE MaMkan ~ Harlhad c at ... Seo-"Lunches are deductible for a business person who cats wtth requlr9d •or aao11 .. , ot 111< moneys l"lthheld by the DIS. AIJCTION TO THE HIGHEST an<l9 of tne Nol• 0t ot'* ··----c--Thi• 1tet--.t •• " r91ary clients at an elegant restaurant but not for a ~lumber who cats with documentt to guarentM TRICT to eneure p•r Bft>OER FOR CASH, l•wfut obllOatlon ..:urld by aald -..rw""'" .,.,,.,,, wtth th9 County C.. °'Of· Thlt ttlltmenl -fllad k h '. . .. . . . hair ratum tn good c:ondlttor fofmanca under the con-money of the United 811, ... Dead of Truel, with lnterMt Of' CAUFC>..aA ange Coun1Y on Septambef with the County Clertl of Of· other wor ers at l e construction site, the ca~n adm101strat1on wt1h1n nl• dl}1 attar 1tie blc 1r1e1 Of • c:eehlar'• ~ dr.._ Ind other eum• aa pr<M<Md C-'J., Or-. 26, 1986 ange Coufity on 841Pt9"1t. noted tn remarks s1m1lar to those sounded by liberal Democratic opening date A walkthrOUQh of tha ..,.,,. on • 1t1ta or n111on11 bank, tha<tln: plu• advanoae, 11 In IM Metter of the Appl!-"97..a l6. 11186 presidential candidate George McGovern in 1972. Etch bid mutt conlonT 001 fob tltM for tha Audk a •tat• Of federal Ct9dlt any undarlhallftnethereof cttlon OI ARMAP-100 Publlahed Orange Coaa1 ....na R · f h · d '"--A . . . and be raapon91ve to ttM lntrullon oetactton Alarrr unton or • ttata Of lldefa and' lntera.t on tudl ad AZMITIA HERNANDEZ. O.lty Pltot Oc1<>ber 1, e. 16. Publlahad <>reno-eo.1 eprcscntattvc~ o t e entertamm~nt an ivuv aodustnes sa1d contract documan1a System haa 1>ear1 echedulac aevtn0a and~ aaaocl•llor vane••. and plua '"' known •MIGUEL ARMAN· n . 1986 o.lty Piiot Beet9mber 2•. s•amficant cutbacks in allowable dcductJons would destroy thousands Each bidder lheit tubfnll for Oc1ot>er 8. 1985, at 10 oc domlelled 111 1~ 1tata. a1 Charoae and •xi>an-ot tn. DO HERNANDEZ . Petition T-a&e October 1· 8. 18, 1985 of JObs, actually reduce total government tall collections and force up on tha form tumllhad wttt-AM Att blddar1 fllou+d con l>9Yabte at Iha tln'\9 Of '* Trutt• end of the '"*' ~ ~~ ..... ~r" and .. _IC MnllC[ T -1115 the price of meals and baseball tickets for ordinary \fronle the contract docurnan11, • tact Mrt CarolYn Stoc:tl,. aJ1 flght tttla and tnt.,..i craaled by aald Dead 04 .._... ... ,.,..... "'-• r~ """ R h d __ .. h I ded · · f' • 1111 of tha propoeec1 tubcon· (7141 56i,J217 for lnqulra. held by ti .. Trul1aa In Iha• Truei The total amount of ea.. No. A12tllee cagan a propo:M;U t at mea uct1ons be 1m1tcd to $2S per 1recior1 Ort tNs PfO)eet ., rt01tdlng the wllltltlWOUOh rNI pr~ e11ua1a' 1n MIO Mid ot>ltgttlon, 1no1uc11no ORDER TO '1CTITIOUI .,.... HAR80fH.AWN-person plus half the excess above ~25 A $40 meal. now fully deductible. ,.qulred9 by ,,,. Sublettl"' BlddW• not ettendlno ttw County and Stat•. dMCftbad ,_bly •"""'*' fMI. 8~~-~~~~ NAm ITATDmNT MT OLIVE would produce on~ a $32.SO wntoff. The committee instead voted to and ubcontrecllng Fail walkthrougharetobacon 11lollow9 c:f\ar,,_and~ofthe (vvr~ •••1 Thafoltowlng pet.onell• · ,.._ all d d ct" 1S t fth A$40 I I · Prac:Ocee Aci. GoVl Code lldaired dltqUllllflad f()r lhlt PAACEL 1. Truer•. •I Iha tln'\9 of lnltlal WHEREAS ARMANDO doing bualneM -AloM Mortuary ...... metery ow a c ~ ion or pcreen 0 e cost. mca wou d bnng a Sac. 4100 et aeq bid Unit No. 2 .. ttiawn and pu~tlon of ltlla NotlOI. 11 AZMITIA HERNANDEZ, ~I-Conllntntal Tra'191, 2082 Crematory $30 deduction. . . . Etch bidder mutt 1Ybml1 A welkthrough of thl jot dHcrlb•d 1n "" Con-*24.&48 oe tlonar. hat ~ ~ Ion 8.E Bti.tol, SulM t . SIM• 1825 Gitter Ave Instead of d1saJlowina any deduction for entertainment expenses.. wtth ~ bid c.tlllad °' tit• t()( 1t1e Air COndt1Jonln( domlnlum P1en recotci.cs °"' Datad Sei>tamt>« 19, wttt1 Iha c:tatti court Ane. Celll n107 Cost• Mesa the panel voted a writeofT for half the cost ~ • cMcl( OllY9bla le System hae been ec:ftadulac Oecarnbef 20 1971 In eooti 1985 ror a declrW chenolna '*"' Kath!Mn Wt*M, 3900 540-5554 h · . Iha OISTAICT or a bid bone tor 0c1ooar e, 1985, 1110 ex 12970. Paoae 1806 10 1eee. WAtHIMGTOM TlllUIT 11oner·1 n-trom-AAMA~ Plr'tlvt.w #IA. tntne, CA The sho~down on \ o sc t.wo prov1s1on~ came when Rep. Bill 1n ,,,. fonn • forth 1n the AM Blddaf• lflOIJld oomac: 1nc~ ol Ofllclal Aaoorde DUD MJMCm ~ DO AZMITIA H!RNAN 92714 Frenzel. R·Mtnn., offered a mohon to keep present law. That failed by contract document• In tr Mike Sallaa (71•1 !IM-339< of Nld Courrty u amended ATIOM.. 1 c•••.....,.. "'° known 11 MIGUEL Thlt butlneee i. con· voice vote ~~ am!:i~ !~t! !:.k~= ~::: ~ :~,:in:~'or~oad eo;'~ =; ===~ ': ~~M~~~88~ERAH.;:~~! duct~~ -=~~~~~WARY• Othcr'v~tes taken Monday would: •a ouwent• 11111 tfla bid derlnol .ttendingtNewelk· W 3 1979 In look ~ 1 c •• ... _,..,. HEANAHDU. TNe Illa*'*" ... Mid MOft'f\IAAY -Conunue to allow a tupaycrtocarm&rk $I ofh11or hert.axC1for 6et wUI .,,., Into th thfough •• 10 ba con 1use. p.Q.. 15&1 to 1MO .._, "' -. 11r: D. '-rT rs OADEAE.D that a1 wttt1 the County oi.w OI Or· 110 eroedwa)' the presidential election campaisn fund ($2 for a couple). Reapo propoeec1 oontrK'I " tht tldared ~!fled '« 1hl1 •nctulllw of Official~ ...._ • ,,...., a. -panM>nt lnt.-ed In ''-ange County on Augullt 21· co1ta MeH wanted to rcJ:I it Re~ Henson Moore R-La offett:d a re--·• ..,,. la ew8'ded to aucti bid of Nkj County ...,. ,~•s-. •bow mt ttlf 8'>PMf In 1N8 r. .1·ed I •1 < • •• .--. b6ddi9r 1ntt1e-1oftallur• Oo¥1.-o90AN>,H PAAOCl2: · --..AM.CA • T-. Dept 3oflhllloourt.IOCeMd ~• e.42-9150 amendment lat !at • J . • 10.,.,.. Into Mid con1rwct Cer•lr11 a . 11ao11ar An ~ OM r...n~ ,.___ (714) "CMc c.M• w.. 81nte Publllhed Oranoa COM! -Make H sha,htly more difficult to d1aau111e hobby esperucs as tuGtl ~ wlll be fot· ,........_ oncw 111rtt1 (1/Httl) Int.,_. • • ""*'*' Oranoa CoeM Anal Call~or n l a, 0 " Olily Plot ~ber 24. deductible business costs. Under present la>N, an activity senerally i~ -;;:-o.eTNCT ,....,..... o!;:~ ~= ~' ::':!:"1noc:r:' :_ ~ ~ '"f, 1~t. 14. = :.:.=:.:~·:;:; Octooer 1• •. 1 • 1"8 1=ff3 'ACtJ'IC YllW pmum~ not to be a hobby 1f 1t showi a orofit in two or five h r'9flt llO ,._. ttlY't Olf -1HA mon ,.,.. of LOb 7 10 and f-U1 -mey ba '-d, and lflOW ... .,. ll)llC( MlllC>Rt•L ,... COMeCUUVe ycan. t111t1 or '° ~ 1ttrt .,. T~ 12 otTl'llC1 t116 .. P., ~ '*-·" lttft, ""Y tN ~ r-.n. c.m.tery • Mortuety Rep. Carroll Campbell, R-S.C. won an amcndmcnl lO contin~ ' 1 'f -"' ttlY't bld9 Oii "' NlJC fl)TlC( tied 1n eoot1 414, Pao-1& Ml.IC ll)llC( =...,tor not~.,:!, MrM ..cnnout IU 11 •u 3~~~~=~•~• pmcnt-law .treatment o~horse b~m1 or rK1na npe.nle!i t~ey would ~to•PI~ • ~~~·~ .... ITIS'VfrrH AON>P!.O MAml'TAW Newpor18Mch stillbeoons1deredabusinesscxpcmcbyprodudoaapromintwoout of ...... 1m of lhl Labof YOU AM ... °''A"'-f Mid County .. tudl ..,.,,.. ADWWh IP MT "* • ~ of thla ordW to Tiit =~vie:= M.4·2700 oheven ycan c.-• .. IUl9 of Call-~~~°"~It dellned 1n'tr1a 11t11ete entt-'Z':'.!.~f.:IMt ;':"O:--,..: ~"' :J. 144t w. ~--Keep the law that re11ncts deduc1ion1 for uac ohn office 1n the fOnllla,•Dlll'M:T~~ UIM YOU TA.Kl~ tled "o.r.ttft101•"'ottt1eg:: i981 9MW s20.. v.No. ofg91'19'•~;. Oranoa.CAtnM • home.Thededuct1onwouldbchmatedtonct1nc:omcfromtbcbu1mcss tllln9d "°"' IN TO """1CT YOUR~ :::::-...:~,::;.de-Id ant 11 I c at Ion No ad ln Orenoe County, Call-John Chier~ in the home ... ~~------------~---------------------~~ l I I • ii t ........ ORANGE COUN TY . Woman hurt in BB fire By ROBERT BARKER .,. .. Dllllr ........ A 56-ycar-old woman suf- fered severe bums and two othen suffered smoke inhala- tion this morrung when a fire swept through their Huntington Beach home, the fire depart- ment reported. Ima Hendley suffered second and third~cgree bums, accord- ing to Huntington Beach fire spokeswoman Birgit Davis. who said the woman was air- lifted by helicopter to UC Irvine Medical ,Center's Bum Ward in Orange. Hendley's daughter, Cindy, and 3-ycar-old granddaughter, Crystal1 were treated for smoke inhalat1on at Humana Hospital Huntington Beach. A fourth person in the home, Justin Hendley, was not injured. An unidentified Huntington Beach firefighter reportedly in- jured his back when he fought lo enter the burning home at 839 1 Amsterdam Drive. The fire broke out in th e single-story, three-bedroom home at about 8:40 a.m .• Davis said. Although it was controlled within about 15 minutes, the blaze caused a reported $85,000 in damage. Cause of the blaze is under investigation. No other details were available this morning. Coast Patti and Samuel Frus- tacl are suing the doctor who administered fertlllty drugs to Mrs. Frustacl, who later conceived sep- tuplets./ A3 Sports Irvine Hlgh's Terry Hen- igan has the Vaqueros' football team on the move.181 INDEX Erma Bombeck Bridge Bulletln Board Business Classified Comics Crossword Death Notices Entertainment Horoscope Ann Landers Opinion Paparazzi Police Log Public Notices Sports Televlson Weather A10 A9 A3 84-6 87-9 A9 89 810 A8, 10 89 A10 A7 A8 A3 810 81-3 A10 A2 TOllOMOW: &\IN FORECA8TSONA2 Serving Newport Beech, C0tt1 Mesa, Huntington Beech, lrvlne, t..guna Beech·, Founttln Y1H1y afMt South Orlftl* C..ty C ALIFORNI A I lll ">O A Y uc I OH~ H 11 1•m ·. : c I NI •, reaten tomur osta A different perspective Steven Lollman of Anaheim take. a look at hi.a car after w~ ••~Y. from the accident on Paclflc CO..t Highway an- harmed. Lollman told pollce that a car ran him off the road eaat of Bayaide Drive and then left the .cene. DDT residue in Coast soil left over from before ban State's food and agriculture officials report noevldence that pesticide is still being used By ROBERT HYNDMAN OftMDellJ .......... Traces of DDT that continue to show up 1n local soil samples are leftovers from use of the pesticide before the 1973 DDT ban, the stale Department of Food and Agnculture said Monday. ln their report to the Legislature, Food and Agriculture officials said they found DDT stabilized 1n soil samples but discovered no evidence that the pesucide was shll being used The study, which included three undisclosed Orange County sites. was ordered by the state Assembly last year after studies showed that DDT was still being fou nd throughout the state. According to the study, DDT residues. or its chemical breakdown. can survive 1n the soil for 12 or more years. Ahout half of the DDT applied before the ban is st1ll 10 the soil or the water contaminated b}' the soil. DDT was used for nearly 30 years 10 California before 11 was banned at the end of 197:! after sc1en11sts found it was a cancer-causing agent that could threaten human health and wildlife. While traces of DDT are still being discovered 1n soil. water. plant and fish samples, the levels do not 10d1ca1e a current health_threat. saJd Joanne Schneider. an ev1ronmental ~pec1ahst for the state Reg10nal Water Quaht~ Control Board (Pleue .ee DDT/ A2) T\Vo passengers reported already slain after Palestinians capture cruise shij) ------ By dlle Alaocta&ed Preu Palestinian hijackers who seized an Italian cruise ship carrying 413 people threat.coed today lo klll pass- engers unless their demands were met. Unconfirmed reports indicated two hostages. including at least one American. may have been kllled. Reports of Amencans aboard ranged from two to 28. Pres1denuaJ spokesman Larry Speakes 1n Wash- mgton said there probably were about a dozen Amencans, and "less than 20. for sure ... The 23.629~too Italian liner Achdle Lauro was h1Jaclled off Egypt late Monday. The hijackers said they were from the Palestine L1berauon Front, a dissident group of the POO Western diplomatic sources m Damascus, the capital of Syna. saJd (Pleue 11ee BIJACltER8/A2) Irvine seeks to annex Toro Marine base Actioncould k eep site from becoming a civilian airport By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of ... Dllllr .......... Some Irvine officials want to bnng the Manne Corps Air Station. El Toro.into the city hmns, hoping the change would prevent the base from becoming a civilian airpon. Col. Jerry Shelton, commun1t) plans and liaison officer for the base. confirmed toda) the Mannes re- ceived a letter last week from In 1ne Mavor David Baker asking them to e)tpiore the prospect of annexation to the cit) of Irvine About I 0,000 Mannes and Cl\· 1hans work or lave at the 4. 700-acn.· base. which 1s federal propert~ Shelton said. The base. nonheast of Irvine. is in unincorporated count\ temtol') under the jUnsd1cuon of the Orange County Board of Supervisors Paul Brady Jr . lrvtne's assistant city mana~er. said Baker's letter called for a 10101 stvd) b) the Cit\ and the Mannes concerning possible an- nnauon He said the Mannes could benefit b}' having the clly set firm noise and air crash guidelines that would appl}' to encroaching develop- ment around the base But Brad) said the letter also pointed out that tbe clly wants to prevent the El Toro military lllrfield from acccpung commercial<1viltan flights to rehe .. e bus) John Wayne Airport, which is operated by the county ''That's the pnma~ purpose of the proposal." Brad) said The Mannes also oppose com- mercial use of El Toro. But 1n a tentat1,e 'i.t'ttlement in- 'oh mg the count ' ~ewpon Beach and two homeowner groups. count) supervisors rC('entl) rescinded r~o earlier resoluuons that sa}' the <ft Toro-mse 1s not an appropnate ~1te for a civilian airport That acti on alarmed some Irvine officials. who belie ve 11 could open the door for C' entual commercial flights at El Toro. resulung in noise and traffic problems for lr>ane neigh- borhoods On Scot 20. the Cit~ of In 1ne filed (Pleue eee IRvnrE/A2) Judge rejects mistrial bid in Hedgecock case SAN DIEGO (AP)-The defense attorney for Mayor Roger Hedgecock today was unsuccessful 1n an attempt to have a mistrial declared 10 Hedgecock's pefJury •nd conspiracy retnaJ. Defense lawyer Oscar Goodman told Superior Court Judge William Todd that he was concerned about the length of JUry deliberauons, which entered their suth day today. The panel of eight women and four men has been scquestered smce deliberations began last Thursday afternoon fo llow1ng a two-month tnal. Goodman asked Todd to enher inquire as to the jury's progress an its deliberations on the 16 counts against the mayor or lo declare a m1stnal. Todd said he wa<. not concerned about the JUI). which he descnbed as working hard. He said he would not make an y anquil') at this point Confusion over the \Ult us of one of the 14 felon~ pefJUI) counts also was discussed dunng a heanng toda)'. Jurors had sent a quesuon to Todd Monday afternoon asking whether an amended statement of econom1C' interest lilcd b~ Hedgecock wa~ introduced as ev1dence to support that count. Prosecutors mad' crtentl' neglected to introduce the document as one of the more than 180 nh1bm in the case Todd asked Hedgecock and liood- man ~hether the~ wanted him w d1rC('t the JU~ to find Hedgecod.. innocent on that one count Good- man said he did not want a directed \.e rd1c1 and H~C('OCk agreed when spec1ficall) quesuoned b) Todd >\ directed verdict would ha ve assured that Hedgecock was cleared ot the one disputed peryuf)' count voodman said Outside court that hC' 1c; sure the JUI') will still find the ma,or inn~nt on that chaf"lte ~­ (Pleue eee lllSTRIAL/ A2) Mexico City quake patrol tciles of heroism, heartbreak $2million claim filed after Mesa accident Hun Un on fire cap tat n lends his expertise to rescuers after devastating earthquake As the buildings in Mexico City came crashing down virtually all around him, Huntinaton Beach Fire CapL Victor Subia dug his way to within IS feet of several children tripped in the rums of their prc- ICbool. Subia could hear noilCI from the younpten as he slowly made bis way thro. the rubble. He manaaed to cnwl in bis tiny tunnel until he could tee one of the youngsten. But that's u close as be could get. "I worked there for 12 hours and all of a sudden I realized it bad been 31/:a boun since I beard anythin.a." he said. But no matter bow bard Subia tried. be couldn't penetrlte the rub-ble. • The next day, when heavy l'CICue tee.ma were able to lift the debris, they found the bodies of about 25 dead children. Sttuallna to keep bis emotions check, -Subfa said he was prepared Pl}'Cbolosically to do what was MICelMIY to 11ve the younpten if he were to reach them -and that included •win& off' their arma and .. if lbat WU what WU required to (tie tbe:m &om the debris. Subia. '42, who put In for vacation time to IO to Mexico City to help out in racue eff'orta. related stories of heroism and heartbreak after his return to Huntington Beach this week. On one occasion. Subia said he stood within scveraJ feet of Mexican President Miguel de La Madrid who was threatened with stoning by anm survivon who had heard rumors that he wanted to demolish a buildina where victims had been tripped alive. "They were nOtC to nose and they was no doubt in my mind what would happen,•· Subia said. But the threat was averted when the buildina was spared. In another ICC'lion of Mexico Oty. people were trapped in a building. Nearby tui driven ran in to pull them ouL But Ibey never rttumed. They were tnpc>ed. too, he said. Subia, a nauve of Los An&eles who said he lost rtlltives in the disaster. saw blood stains on the sidewalks at the Juarez Hospital where relatives had been mjured themselves while kneeling to prar . The hospita was ripped by the quake. he sa1d. and about 700 people were missing in the debns. Thert were repons, he said. that several babies bad been born after the deaths of mothers. Subia. who slept in the patio of the Mexico City fire station -no overhead roofs were for him -acted as the ha1son for Meuco City Fire Chief Benito Pcf'C'l Gonzales and earthquake r'C'IC\Je teams from Amen- ca, France, En&land. Germany. Morocco. A.lacna. Peru and other nations. He was made an official senior officer wtth the Me11.ico City Fire Department. Soon after bis arri vaJ 1n Mexico. Subia made a call to Huntmaton Beach Fite Chief Ray Picard, awna him to round up heavy rescue cqu.ipment. Picard wu abk to ICCW'C four &lf bqs uted to lift heavy bwkhnp from an llhnois company and IJTID,ed air trlnsport. Subia said Monday that within 1 Yi houn of their arrival, the air bap were UJCd by the 8nt11h racuc team to save two trapped ~~d prla. wrutc medlna wt tli Picard and other firt department friends. Subia conveyed other flrstahand obeerva- tions Of the lfCAl disaster ID Whtch more than 7,000 dted: •A number of t..__ ... mOIUl/A2) ........................... llmatt.acton 8-cla Fire C&pt. Vkmx a.Ma 9IMnr8 bata be wore~ -.rtlaquke necH~ Tile wlll.te one llCnlft• bl.a MD.lor oftloer nataa. By TONY SAAVEDRA °' .... DellJ""' ..... The father of a Hare Knshna woman hospitalized stnct late August after ~mg hat by a car ma Costa Mesa crosswalk has filed a $2 m1lhon cl&Jm against the cit~ Howe\ er Huntmgton Beach at· tome~ Tim R}an. rcp~nu ng Dr Thuong \ o and his 20-year-old daughter l\nh Thu \. o. said he wasn't sure 1f the city 1s liable for lhc .\ug 22 accident Ryan said hC' is still tn'\Csttpllng the ca~ and filed the claim Oct ' mertl}' to mett the 100-da} statute of hm1tations. "We're JUSt ~ovenng the bases:· he said The woman suffered a fractured skull and other head 11\JUnes w~n she and a friend were suuck down by a I 982 Ford Onnada wtuk crowna Fan Dnvt' at Vanpm"d Way. The traffic haht had apparently chanted wh1k Vo and Du~b Connor were atilt 1n the croawalk at 7:'45 p.m The women ~ n:iponedly col· IC('tlna donations for lht Knlhna ICC\. CPleue -ACC1D&1'T I A2) ' ., ' / 'Xranslt panel meets in ·Irvine 260 f'Old projecu face Iona delays. lft.be mooey ii diverted it could be rahuftlcd within counties or placed in a ~mmoo pot to be wed by the nccd.ieat counties. O:>mmiaion Chauman Bruce Natande .US Monday be eal)CIC1&,> bin.le between COWJtiea that waat ID keep l&odtcapina money and ooun. ues that want tt for their own proJCC:U. "From a statewide pcnpective, we can't put money into 1anciacapm1 when the road deficit as so enormous," Neatande ta.id. "We've aonen down to buic pnoritiea." Nestande aa.id he is leanina toward supportina the l&odlca.pina money twap1 but only if counties already 1ehcauled to rccejve that money~ aiven leeway on bow to spend it. The coromiuioo will meet at lhe Irvine Marrion Hotel. Ramirez' phone privileges cut LOS ANGELES (AP) -Richard Ramirez. beld without bail for in- vestipuon of 14 "Night Stalker" sl.ayinas. is beina denied a<XlC:Ss to County Jail telephones because of a court order requested by b.is attorney Municipal Coun Jud&e Elva Soper issued the restricted tcJepbonc access order Oct. l, but at was not disclosed until Monday, when Ramirez's sister, .Rosa Aores, complained about it. Capt. Barry King. the jail's com- mand in& officer, confirmed Ramirtt's telephone privil~ were suspended. .. Hu phone privileges have been La.ken away from him by his at- torney," Miss Flores said in a tele- phone interview from her home in El Paso, Teus. She contended Deputy Public De- fender Allen Adubek so~t lbe order as pert of a continuina efTon to keep Ramirez from expreu.ina his di•pleuure with the way be is being represented. She earlier had oon- ~nded that Ramirez wanted to tell lhe court be desired another attorney. In an unusual procedure, Ramirez did not appear at b.is own arraiin- ment. instead hstenina to the prooecdinp over a loudspeaker in an adiacent boldina cell. Soper had said Ramirez was left in the lockup "for his benefit." and she decla.ttd following a closed con- feren<:e in her chambers she had found "aood cause" to grant Adashek's request to delay entry of Ramirez's plea until Oct. I 7. "He's not very happy in there without any type of communica- tion," Masa Flores ... If Richie wants to talJc to his parents ~in El Paso), there·s no way be can do 1 t." HIJACKERS THREATEN PASSENGERS ••• From Al that Italian Charge d'A.ffaues, Ptetro Cordone, was told today by the Syrian forei&n Ministry that the hijackers claimed to have killed two Ameri-cans. "We have no confirmation," said the diplomat, who spoke on condition he not be identified. The ship was off Syria, but after Syria denied it permission to enter its territorial waters, it began sailing west away,. from Syria, one Western diplomat in Damascus said. Cordone said the ltalan aovern- ment bas refused all contact with the pirates. "We're ali&niog ourselves with the AmerJ<:an poshion, that is not to nesotiate with terrorists," he told report.en. Radio stations in Israel and Leba- non earlier reported that the hijackers boasted on ship radio ofbavi~ killed one American and of threateru~ that they might kill 12 additional hostages. Later. Israel radio said two people were tilled aboard the ship by the hijacken. one American and the other of undisclosed natjonality. Mickey Gurdus. Israel's best known radio monitor. told the As- sociated Press the information comes from his own "very good" sources, but declined to elaborate. "There is no official confirmation." Gu rd us aaid. Israel army radio said in its inlllal account that its information came from the Christian Voice of Lebanon radio stauon m BeiruL Israel army radio wd the American was killed because of delay in openi ng nego- tiations with the hijackers. The Voice of Lebanon said that m addition to demandinJ the release of 50 prisoners held an Israel, the hijackers also were demand1 ng the release of an unspecified number of towlld Beirut. A manttme radJo Palestinians from Italian jails. station in San Sebastian also reported Italian news a_.sencies quoted the that the captain of the crujse sb1p told Italian Foreiin Mirustry as_ sayinJ the a nearby wanhip it was beading for hijackers were armed and lw:1 a large Beirut. supply of explosives. The Voice of ' A Palestinian terror squad leader Lebanon said the hijackers threaten-named Sarnir al-Kountar beaded the ed to blow up the vessel if any boau list of prisoners whose freedom from carrying armed men approached. Israeli prisons was demanded by the The station said a boat with envoys hijackers in exchange for the shjp and of the Palestine Liberation Organiza-passenaers. Israeli officials reported. tion was approaching the ship. The officials said aJ-K.ountar wu ln Tunis, Tunisia, the PLO "vigor-captured aft.er a 1979 raid on the ously condemned and denounced" Israeli coast in which two Israeli the hijacking earlier today, and de-hostages, a man and bis 5-ycar-old manded that the hostages be freed. dauahter, were killed. The man's A man time radio piclcup by San widow said in Israel that the publicity Sebastian radio in Spain said the arising from the raid made al- hijackers numbered I 2, acoorruna to Kountar a symbol and that was why spokeswoman Trudy Hill. Hill said the hijackers sought bis release. she monitored a conversation be-A State Department task force was tween the captain of an Italian ship set up in Washington to watch the and a warship from a nation she situation and the fsraeli Cabinet met refused to reveal. in Jerusalem to discuss the hijacking. HiU said the conversation in-The flagship of the U.S. 6th Acct dicated a~ American man 40 years the Coronado, left its base in Gaeta: old was ~ed. . . . . north of Naples., today accordin• to She said the radio pickup indicated navy spokeswoman Chief Patncia Venezuelans, Brazihans. Argentines. Hooks. Sbe said the departure had Peruvians and Spanish were among been scheduled but could not gjve its those aboard. destination. Sixty-seven American passengers Italy's state-run radio reported who had been aboard the ship earlier. Italian warships and reconnaissance b~t who got o~in Alexandria, EJypt. planes t~k off from Sicily and said that bytbetrcount. I I Amencans several ships were diverted from the still were on the ship. Ionian Sea off the southern tip ofltaly V ari~us sources reported that those to head for the Egyptian coastal area. aboard included possibly six or seven There was no ofllcfal confirmation of British women among the ship's the report. crew. two Israelis. perhaps four The Italian military was reported French citizens. up to 30 West placed oa alert. Germans and 26 Swiss. The ship docked Monday at Alex- Mos~ of the rest of those aboard, andria and hundreds of passengers consisting ma.inly of a crew of about got .off to t~ur Egypt, planning to 350. were lta.han. rtJOtn the ship later in Pon Said. The Israel radio said initially the ship ship embarked for Port Said and was was heading northeast, apparently seized at sea. J!!~1TRIAL REQUEST REJECTED .•. cause the Judge was to clanfy to the jury that the evidence in support of that count had not been entered. Goodman also said he was less concerned about the Jury's pravess. knowing that it had sent a questio n to Todci on Monday. G oodman had requested the meeting before Todd on Monday morning. contingent on the jury returning no verdict by this morning. The Jury remamed sequestered at a hotel under orders to avoid tele- vision, radio and newspapers. They also arc forbidden from t.alkjng tO their families. · Reporters covering the case specu- lated that Jurors may again be deadlocked on one or more of the 15 charges against Hedgecock. The mayor's first trial on 13 counts ended in February with the Jury deadlocked 11 • l for con v1ction on a.JI counts. Hedgecock is charged with a single count of conspiracy, I 3 counts of pet)ury and a misdemeanor count of conflict of interest. Each of the DDT IN COAST SOIL 'OLD' ... From Al "Through our own studies and from the Department of Health Services. we 've determined that there 1s no apparent health nsk." Schneider said lh1s morning. '"We know from our own mussel watch program, however. that DDT 1s getting into the water. and we're studying what we can do to stop 1t." State health and environmental officials ha ve long ~uspccted that DDT is earned into waterways by runoff from agncultural fields. Last August, state water officials reported that Newport &y produced the highest DDT levels of all areas measured by a state toxic monitoring program. DDT lying dormant an the soil could have entered waterways ·through erosion of channel banks and the soil disruptton caused by con- version of agncultural fields to com- mercial and rcsadenual development, Scb oe1der said. lo an effort to more accurately 1denttfy the source of the DDT, the water quality board has collected soil samples to measure pesticide levels. felonies cames a maximum penalty of four years m prison. Under the state's sentencing laws. however. Hedgecock could be sentenced to no more than eight years in pnson 1f convicted of the felonies. He would also be forced to leave the office he has held since May 1983. Most of the charges involve allega- tiOns that Hedgecock plotted with political backers to illegally finance his 198 3 election and then hed about at on state-mandated political d1~ closure forms. But Schneider said pro blems with the laboratory tests have delayed any conclusions. Schneider said the Food and Agn· culture depanment's conclusion that DDT has not been used si nce the 1973 ban 1s being treated with skepucism. .. It could very well be the case:· she wd, '"but at the same time, we don't want to gi ve people the impression tbat we·~ lettina our guard down We just don't know." IRVINE EYES EL TORO BASE ANNEX •.• P'romAl · suit 10 federal court to block the a.irpon agreement and to stop the county from rescindini the El Toro resolutions. A hearing as set for Oct. 21 O:>l. Shelton said Irvine's annexa- uon letter is being forwarded to Manne beadQuarten in Washinaton. O.C .. for study. "The local command must marn- tain a position of neutrality 1n n.n y anneution attempt. so we forwarded the Jetter without comment." Shelton said Asked what type of control over the buc Irvine could obtain through annex.ation. Shelton said, .. This 1s just such an initial stage. I have no idea what any anneution agreement would say down the line.'' In 1976, the city of Tustin annexed the neighboring Marine Corps Hcli- coetcr Stauon. 'That has been a very succeuful annexation," Shelton said. "As a rule, the cit y (of Tustin) d0C1 not come in and malce rules that apply to the bate.'' Supcrv1sor Bruce Nestande, whose d1stnct includes the El Toro base. said today said the b&sc: may eventually become part of Jrvtne. "but at this point. I do not support it " Ne,tande said the base 1s iur- rounded by lOO many unincorporated communitie! that have not decided if they wish to form independent cit1C1 or merge with existing caues. Until they decide, the Marine buc should remain tn neutral county temtory, Ncstande said. The superv1sor added, however, that he remain• opPOsed to civilian or joint use oflhe aui&eld at the El Toro base. Nestande was the lone super- visor to vote apinst rctcindina the resolutions that listed the base u off limht for commercial Oiahtl. HEROISM, HEARTBREAK IN MEXICO ••• FroaaAl MW<x> Ory fi~mm became de- bydrau:d and auffm:d kidney darrui~ bt<:amc of lack ofwateT. But perhaps IDOft-=rioualy, Subia aid, they were wnct.ed with oiPtmara and emo- tkma! prob&emJ after bavtn& to 'tand and wal.c:b vic:tlms bum to death became they bad no wa&er to put out fttel. • .. MiJ>d..boglana" loptoa Subta said aovernment flat bed" trucb made ( their round.s dtstnbuuoa millions of rolls of totlct peper and tortillas to lbc homeless. •Army ll'OOPI havina to utc force 10 lceepcrowdlaway from e.anhquake victims.. "f believe the crowds have to be kept at lca.11 I ,000 feet away. The ooasc 11 horTCDdoUJ. Wbeo you are 1ns1de a tunnel. you couldn't hear the Vlcttms " •TM know.how of the Sou1~m ' California finfi&hun1 team from Oranse and Los Anaela counties. "They were 1n tean when they amved. They couldn't believe the beroia of Ult people. They also ~ real ex~ Mexican offiet.als aomated It would take 12 boun to Crtt v1CtJm1 in one the bu1klmp. The Southern CaJjfoms.a team aot to the Vlcllms an 38 minutes .. t Get out umbrellas Wedn esday U.S. Te m pa LMV909 12 a ··Ct)~ '"°"": uni.~ 74 11 .. .... ~ ,, ~ Wtlffl -Cotct.,.. ~ ., ,. ......_.... 71 16 18 63 ......,,. ._, .. 71 ShOw•rt ~ ,..,,.,.. Snow OcdlldH...,. Slelloftlty a,,. ., .. ........ .. .. NllOflll W.... ~ HOM U I O..C GI ~e. ~ .., 0 .......... ~-' .. 03 ~ 70 to ........... , .. ... Atilf*Cfty .. u ....on-. ,. .. ..,,.. ..... 71 IO ..... a • ..... Y0111 11 ......_. M 40 ,__,VL t7 !: Calif. Tempe ..,,.. MofllCe 72 .. ..... "'*" 74 64 ~c.tr ,, ., ...,_. » )Cl OIMN 71 4' =-· for24 l'Onendll'IQ' .. I Llft .... &2 30 0.... 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Testimony supports case against Louisiana governor NEW ORLEANS (AP) -A key ~overnment witness in the racketeer- ing trial of Gov. Edwin Edwards acknowledged under cross examin- ation today that he had come up with the idea of a state moratorium on hospital prOJCCts. The moratorium, issued by f.d . wards on July 30, 1984, is one of the ma.in points in the government's case because 1t allowed five projects to be built by the governor's friends while stopping others. John Landry. a key witness against the governor who 1s testifying under a grant of immunity, was pressed by defense lawycn about his testimony on Monday. Landry, a long-time employee of the Department of Health and Human Resources, acknowledged that he and Harvey Fitzgera. Id. an undersecretary in the Edwards ad- ministration. had the idea for a moratorium because a flood of appli- cations was pouring in. ' Landry said 41 applications came in during April I 984 alone. .. You needed a rest," said William Jeffress, one of the defense lawyers. '"You had some problems and needed some time to straighen them out, didn't youT' "That's right, sir," replied Landry. Edwards approved eight appu- cat1ons when he imposed the mora- torium on approvals of hospital construction. Of the eight. five were submitted by Health Services De- velopment Corp.. the firm run by Edwards' friends James Wyllie Jr. and Ronald Falgout, who arc on trial with the governor. Other defendants include the gov- ernor's brother, Marion; a nephew, real estate agent Charles Isbell; lawyer Philip Brooks; architect Perry Segura, and businessman Gus Mijalis. A 53-page indictment accuses lhem of engagina in an iUepl en~rprise that earned S l 0 million by obtaining and selling state certification of hospital corporations which they either owned or had some interest in. In the cross eumination, Landry acknowledged: •That Health Services Develop- ment Corp. might have had some pr~ects approved because company officials knew the flaws in some standards used by the state Depart- ment of Health and Human Re- sources and used lhem to their advantage. •That Murray Foreman, Landry's boss under the administration of Gov. Dave Treen. could have been transferred because a promotion given to Landry put Foreman in the uncomfortable position of having to report to Landry. "I thought it would be for the good of the program," Landry said. "f thouaht it would be good for him also_,,.. .. •That he wasn't sure who told him Edwards had an interest in some of the hospitals or nuning homes. "I believe t said yesterday it could have been Mr. Falgout or Mr. (Sonny) Powell. It could have been either one of them." •That he was not certain who was responsible for his promotion after Edwards took office. His was one of several promotions on the executive level in the department. •That his new job earned bjmonly $42.50 a week more that his previous salary ofS3 I ,000 a year. ''Plus the fact that I had lhe opportunity to make that much more in the futllre." Landry sajd. Landry also aclmowlcdgcd again that he lied twice. In his testimony Monday, Landry had said he lied in a sworn deposiuon that helped win c~rtificauon of one of the hospital projects and ~n before a fedcf'al grand jury looking into the enterpnse. On Monday, Landry Slld he re- canted that first grand jury testimony -and later told "the whole truth" in a second grand JUry appearanoc - after U.S. Attorney John Volz told him that he, too, could be prosecuted. Soon after Landry took the st.and, jurors were told be was testifying under a promise that he would not be prosecuted immediately for bjs in- volvement. Landry then proceeded to tell how lies were told, rules were broken and people were promoted to benefit hospitals they were told Edwin Ed· wards had an interest in. Landry said that happened while Edwards was both a private ciUzcn, between has second and an un- precedented third term. and after he took office again in March I 984. A 53-page indictment says Ed- wards, Wyllie and Fafaout were partners in HSDC, a consulting firm which hel~ olher busineues obtain state cenaficatioo for hospitals they hoped to build in LouiJana. ACCIDENT CLAIM •.• Soon after HSDC was formed, the indictment said, it began applyini for certification of dummy corporauoos owned by Edwin Edwards, Wyllie and Falaout. Edwards made nearly $2 million when fi ve of HSOC's 16 certified co~rations were sold to big hospital chains. From Al Connor sustarned a fractured pelvis. a broken left leg and possible abdominal injuries. She was released Sept. 8 from Fountain Valley Re- Rional Hospital. Ryan. Costa Mesa could be lllble for the .. nealigent design of the roadwat' as well as for an allegedly faulty traffic signal. Deba te in water b oa r d rac e set Vo of Laguna Beach, who went into a coma after the accident. has since rega.aned conciousness. She was re- ported in stable condition at the hospital this morning. Sheila Lohstroh. hospital spokeswoman, said Vo was respoodina well to commands and was now able to talk. The family is seeking S l million in damaaes for pain, sufTerina and disfigurement, and another SI million for past and future mcdlcal expenses. So far Vo's hospital bills have •probably surpassed $200,000, Ryan said. Orange County incumbent Donn challenacr Patnc1a candidates forum Costa Meaa. Wa~r District Hall will face Aynes durina a Wednesday in The driver. Marsha Amburgey, 32. of Capistrano Beach was cited for allCfed.ly faihna to yield to ped- estnans in a crosswalk. althoufh she reportedly entered the intersection on the green light. According to the claim filed by Just Call 642-6086 With such large expense•, suina the motorist probably wouldn't be worth· while, leavina the city as the main ta~t of liability, Ryan said. 'There aren't too many (individ- ual) policies that cover thjs type of injury and the driver probably wouldn't have a million doll.an in assets anyway," Ryan explained. Hall, who also serves on tbe Costa Mes;a .City Council, is .teekina to retam it wakr board seat 1n the Nov. 5 ballotina. The forum will ~n at 7:30 p.m. at the Mesa Consobdated Water District headquarters, 96S Placentia Ave. Wbt do yoa llke aboo1 lltt Dally Pllot? Wbt doa't yoa like? Call tilt a.mber at le ft aad yoar menace wilt be r~ed, h'uscribecl aDd dellvtrt4 10 tile appropriate editor. 1'e tamt U-~otlr H1wer1•11ervlct may be a1ed to rffOrd letters to tilt edit.or oa aay topic. Co1tr1btaton to our Letters col•ma mH t laclecle thlr ume a.ff telepMDe HmMr for verification. No ctrculatloa calla, pluae. Tell •• wbt'• n yow ml ... 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