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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-10-10 - Orange Coast PilotTOMO..ROW: FOR!CA8TI ON A2 S.rvlft9 Newport Beech, Cotti MHt, Huntington BHch, lrvlne, Leguna Beach, Fountain Valley and South Orange County 0 F\A"4GE C OLIN T '\ Back Bay fills up again today Destruction of earthen d a m m arks e nd of joint 3.5 million restoration project By STEVE MARBLE Of ... DMtw ......... A $3.5 million restoration prOJCCI in the Upper Newport Bay will be completed today when an enainecr- ing crew demolishes a dirt dam Coaat Eight area lions Clubs are sponsoring their third annual Orange Coast Oktoberfest this week- end./ A3 California San Diego Mayor Roger Hedgecock has been convicted of conspiracy and perjury for Illegally financing of his 1983 elec· tlon./A8 The ACLU has sued to block state funding of the Holocaust Museum./ A4 Nation Yul Brynner, who gave a record 4,625 stage per- formances as the king In ''The King and I,'' Is dead at65./A5 Efforts to force sharp cutbacks In text lie Im- ports are heading for a showdown on the House floor./A5 World Leon Kllnghoffer, killed by the hijackers of the Achille Lauro, was a wheelchair-bound stroke victim./ AS Boating Hobie Alter has In- troduced the new Hoble-17, a high-tech catrlg designed for both racing and crulslng./81 Sports The Dodgers take a 1-0 lead In the National League Championship Serles with 4-1 win over St. Louls./C1 INDEX Boating Bridge Bulletin Board Business Classified Comics Crossword Death Notices Entertainment Horoscope Ann Landers Opinion Paparazzi Police Log Public Notlc~s Sports Televlson Weather 81 84 A3 85-6 CS-7 B4 C7 C4 82-3 C7 82 A8-9 81 A3 C4, 8 C1-4 82 A2 $28million in toxic fund mishandled? From 1&aff ud wire report• Federal environmen\Jll officials have accused the s\Jlte of improperly administerina more than $28 million earmarked to clean up three hazard- ous waste dumps. to their report released Wednes- day, federal auditon recommended that the Environmental Protect.Jon Atency revoke California's authority to band out federal funds to _private cleanup compenies without first ob- tainJna federal a_p~val. Local EPA offic1&11 have until Nov. 8 to decide whether to follow the repon's recommendations. allowing the ocean to rush into the top reaches of the bay. The dam was erected to hold back the ocean while a construction crew scooped out about 870,000 cubic yards of debris. mud and silt Lhat has Autopsy fails to tell why boy died Procedure opposed by the parents on religious grounds By STEVE MARBLE Of!MOellyl'tloll"""' An autopsy performed Wednesday on the body of a 4-ycar-old Irvine boy against the w1shes ofh1s parents failed to reveal what caused the death of the youngster, who was found submerged in a bathtub last week. The autopsy was conducted im- mediately after a Supenor Coun judge denied a motion filed by Bruce and Rawlcne Strauss to block the procedure based on rel1g1ous grounds. The lrvtne couple. both Onhodox Jews. said the autopsy would amount to the "mut1lat1on" of their son's body. Judge Richard Beacom said he has great sympathy for the parents of Mark Strauss but noted that st3tC law provides for autopsies in cases in which death is not by natural cause). The Irvine couple were not present at the late-morning hearing m Santa Ana. Coroners depulte'> who walled three days to perform the autopsy said they are not sure what caused the boy's death. Tox1colog1cal tests must be performed. they said, and that procedure could take up to six weeks . The boy's body, however. was released Wednesday 1010 the custody of his parents. The youngster was found early Fnday evening. face-up under the water in a bathtub. police 10 lrvtne said. The child died Sunday at Children's Hospital in Orange. S~l. Dick Bowman said there 1s no 1nd1cation of foul play. Police said it 1s f Pleue eee AUTOPSY I A2) Three held in check forgeries By ROBERT BARKER Of ... OellY ..... ltafl Pohce have arrested three out-of. town men for allegedly stealing blank checks in Los Angeles County. forg- ing signatures and cashing the checks at three Huntington Beach financial institutions, offi cials said today. They were arrested Wednesday after appearing at the banking win- dows for the third day 10 a row al the Huntington Harbour Bank of Amcn- ca branch. according to police spokeswoman JoAnne Bergstrom Bergstrom said the three men also are suspected of cash1 ng stolen checks at Mercury Savings & Loan Associa- tion and Cahfom1a Federal, both on Edinger A venue. The suspects allegedly stole pcr- (Pleue eee THIUtE/A2) slowly turned the upper bay into a sprawling mud flat. ·The restoration work has resulted 10 the creation of an 85-acre ~nd that will bnm wnh water and Wlll double as a catch bastn for sand and silt that washes into the bay, ex~huned Don Simpson. a consultant hired to ovcr- st'e the work. The pond itself will be dredged every fou r or five years, Simpson said. A second rcstorauon pro1ect, Cll· pected to result to the removal of an add1uonal 525.000 cubic yards of sill wtll go out lo bid early next year accordtn& to J uhc Frocberg, an aide to ~n. Manan Bergeson. R-Newpon Beach. The cleanup efforts arc being funded by the state. the county, the Irvine Co. and the c1t1cs of Newpon Beach. lrvtne and Tustin The back bay 1s an estuary where ocean water at high tides meets frc!>h 0.-,,... pMte lty &..-~ Junior firefighter Newport Beach ftreflahter Gary Beeler and Capt. Tom Arnold help 6-year-ola Jon Paal Bell into hl1 fire gear at Harbor Vlew School ln Corona del Mar. The 1tudenta 1atbered wltb ft.re official• Wedneeday u part of the obeerYance of Fire Prevention Week. water that rushe~ dov. n the ~n Diego fret'k 10lo the ba~ dunng the ram) ~ason But ~•II ..and dr\d debm has clogged the" ba). pre\ enung ocean water from flowing into its upper reaches Once maintaintt-d b\ lhe c~unt) as a rC"CrC'al1on spot for boaters. the Upper Ncwpon Ba) no"" is owned b) the state and maintained b) the Depanment of f-t)h and Game ai. an ecolo~cal ~serve Sw1mmina 1s nol permuted 1n the back bay bcausc of bactenal pol- lu11on. caused in pan by the tarsr population of birds and waterfowl drawn to the reserve. The rcstoral1on prOJCCI IS expected to improve the water cond1t1on of the ba) b) restonna flush1ngacoon. But 1t 1sdoubtful swimming will be allowed, said officials (Pleue .ee BACK BAY/A2) Transit panel halts greenery for road work 'People dying on roads and we· re planting trees· By PHIL SNEIDERMAN ~ ""' o..y ..... ·~ Fa' onn[! a~phalt mt:r grccna~ the C ahforn1a Tran.,port.iuc1n (um m1s)10n Jel.ned aboul Still m1ll1on in htgh\.\3~ (and'><.ap1ng prujt'l f\ to Jll.'f mil other road 1mpr•l,Cmt·n" 111 proceed The der"wn made during a mt:t:t· 1ng of tht tomm1'>\1(10 I hur'><.la\ in !nine, "'111 rr<,ult in at lea\t a ft\t'-\Car dela\ for about SI ti m1l11on wonh ot h1gh·..,.,a~ land\capmg rm 11l·Ct\ 10 Or- ange ( ount\ f hc tum!\ Me nPt't'ttd 10 remain 10 <>rangt• ( ount\ tor road 1mproH·ment'> <ilate 1ran'>pnrt.it111n lOm· m1ss1ona<, had earhl'I plJnncd about S9U m11lum "'onh ot h1gh"a~ land- scaping pro1eui. tu he tumplett•d ma the ne:itt ft\e }ear' But the comm1 ss1on t'> nov. facing the loss of about Sti 50 m1lhun 1n federal fundm11.1hat 11 had c,,pected tu uSt" for<. cihlom1d 'fi\.t'·)C'ar h1ghwa) 1mpro\ emet\t plan The missing fed- eral mone' forced the comm1ss1on to cun~1Jer land1,Caping dela)s to help d\\ure fund~ are a'a1lable for other road pro1ect!t < umm1\\loncr' opted for h1~wa> \cikt~ proJl'll'> oH·r beautificauon ·· W c ha 1. c people d) 1ng on our niad'> .ind "e're planung trees .. said Joe le\~ 'Ile:-Lha1rman of the lomml\'>1on <>range ( ounl\ '>upen 1sor Brute" '-t•\landc who cha1~ lhe state com- m1~'>1on heard no ob1ecuons 1n the In 1ne \1arrwtt meeting room when he asked "I\ there an) bod) out there "'hod ratht·r ha'e landscaping than road., · fhe d>m m "~mn dended to dcla) about \fill m11l1on wonh of land- '>tap1ng proJe<l\ from the S'XI million earmarkt'd tor landscaping in the ti,C'-,ear plan Tht• S \(I million rC'ma1mng 10 the landscaping budget includes pro1ects the <,tate '' legal!) required to beaut11\ < >ne \uch pro1ect 1s the C entuf'\ Freewa~ in Los Angeles ( ount\ l..aqd-.capingon that freeway 1~ \l1pulated 1n a court order (Plu.e eee IUGHWAY/A2) $30 million claims filed in NB beating By l SAN HOWLETT 01 ""' OellJ l"llol '""' T"'o .:l<11m'> t1Hal1n~ \ \11 mill11in v.ere tiled aga1n't the< II' '" "t'"' ~1n Beach Wedne,da\ h' ,, ll.ilhn.1 l'ljnJ moton~t and h" Jl""l'nl<!t'r "h11 contend thn \\erl· ·'·" .t[!l h · ht«Hl'n on the hwnh ot luh 11\ l\\11 rxilt,l' ntliu•r, "'l'\\ purl H1'Jl h '"'" l'I h•t f hra\her JOd .1 n nllil t'r 1d1·n I ii 1nl ,I\ \1ark fo\tl'r ""rrt nJnwd 10 thl' \211 milhnn da1m likd In "'\ \l'.H ctlJ l l'l' C.1ak Jnd 1n lhl· 111mp.111111n d.11m h\ \hern Hra11I "h11.h 'erk\ $111 millwn \laH1r l'h11tp \1 ,1urer and the SI\ ( 1!\ < uunul mernt'll:r' \\('rt' Ji'>o nameJ 1n thl' l l.11m ~ Hn""l'HI 'l'""Port &alh puhll' \p11lt•\mc1n frl'Ol H.irn~ said there 1~ 11P 11nc n.Hlll'U \1.irk roster emploH•d Jt tht· '-t'"'Jll.'n At·a1.h Police C:x.·pan- ml·n1 r h1· l IJ1m prnhabh refer; to an 111,1Jl·n1 "" Juh ~ 10\ uh mg otlitl'f\ \IJrl I t\hl·r JnJ JUl' Thrai.her ht• \..tld < 1Jll , la1rn' thJt tv.o 11flill'f'> "rrn< hl'll Im h.1d. "hrn the\ pulled him trnm h" <J I in .t Balboa l\land .1lln 'prJ,t·d him "1th \!tau· and ht'.tl him 110 th1· haLk and heat.I ""1th h.11un' until hr "'a' .. bked1nr [lfllflJ'>l'h . HrJ1d '.11J 'hl· "'a' ~truck 10 1hr 1a,l h' 110~ 111the11tliler>. re\uh1ng 1n ( Plea.e eee CLAIMS/ A2) Park purchase needs 'tuning' Mesa, county in unoffical agreement on city purchase of Fa irvie w Park 6 By TONY SAA VEORA Of 1M 0.-, ..... IWI Efforts by the clly of Costa Mc~ lo bu y the county-owned Fa1rv1ew Re· g1onal Park site are winding up, with unofficial agreements reached on major roadblocks to the sale. official~ said . The countv Environmental Man- agemenl .\genq will update the Board of Su pen 1sor\ on Oct 22 and ask for penn1ss1on 10 lOnllnue nl"go· l1at1ons regarding the pn'illnc hlulh "ought by the ell~ for a ""lldt•rnr" park If allowed. negot1a111r. "'null! "lml· tune" the proposed purcha~t· agn•t• men1 before bnng1ng 1l harl tn lht· board. and preSt"ntmg 11 tt) thr Cmta ~k..a ( tt\ C oun1. II J' "'di·'' 111 't.111· pm~n' mJnagcnll'nl 1111i1. 1.11, \::t1J nave R ll\\() UlUOI\ pai l pl..inm·r f-nr more than '1' m11n1h' tht , II' h.1, bet·n neg11t1clttnll 111 hu\ lht• "'t'tland\ an1I hlulh "'l''l 11t t-.. 1.in(1J High 'xh11ol 111 prt''t'nl the <•1un1' trom hu1ld1nl! J 1Jr~1· parl ll'.itunnl! Jn I, -hole golt lnurt;t• J, am pg.round \.\llh ur lO I 'II hc'l<ll UJ)\ for n'l reat1onal '«hidt'' .iml l1gh1t•d \olthJll tield~ '-e1gh!'l(inng n·,1dt•nl\ 3, IAt'll .1, 1. 1t\ nffirialc. en' l\HHl ,, m11n• 'uh Jued. "ilJanr" 11r1t•nft'll parl prt''l'r\ 1ng mo\t ''' tht· 2MI a1. rr' 1ha1 h,l\l' rl•m.iint•d relat1q·h untnurhC'd 11\ n tht• 1.t·n1unt'' < mta \le''3 Jln·a,h """' 211 a1.rr' ,,, th(' 'dluahk land and 1' hoping tn l:"lu' Jnnlht"r I Ml acrt•' in an agrc·r ment thJI "'ilUll1 1.0\t the 1.·11, aht1u1 Sfl l m1ll111n R11"11 \31d I k C\platnC'd tht• ut~ v.ould fill k up lht' rt·ma1ning s ~ ) m1l11on lO p;l\nll'nt' ll"t'd to the c.ta1e for 1hr rmf)('n\ and re1mhur..e the count\ rnu(l..hh S4 rn 11l1on (Pleue eee PAR.K/A2) 'Intelligent' computer can out-diagnose the doctors Psyc hologist at CM's Fairview state hospit a l uses system to assist tn patients' treatment ROBERT ........ ..,_ ................ It's unlikely that patients 'lufTenng ftom an unknown 11lnes~ would tum to a computer rather than a doc10r for help. But when the doctors are no1 sure of a remedy to prescnbc. whert" do they tum., A chn1caJ psycbol0J1St at Fa1rv1ew state ho pttal in Costa Meq " develop1na a possible answC'r -a com_P.uter system that pra,t1ccs "an1Acial 1ntelliaentt .. l nn~ukr tht foll owmg \CC'nano docton at a ho\p11al tor the" mcntall\ 111 are lf'\ mg to tn:at a H)ung man ~h" con11nualh hit' h1\ hC'ad and \Cratche\ '1l 1ouc.h at ht\ face \o severe is his ~f f-ahuv 1ha1 thc.- hospttal staff re'train\ him -.11h tit\ and requires him to wrar " hclmt1 10 prevent furthC'r 1n1un Meanwhile. ph~s1c1an5 and ps~ l hOlotis" are at a lo~ to d1agno'IC thC' cond1tton and a pon1hle n:m~<h and the pa11cnl'\ mental d1uh1h1' pre- ' rots him from cktcnb1nJ thr \\mi>- tom" a<'furatel) HYNDMAN li1Qltl111111'1 t1onal rcact1onYtCrotJOntl to his physical or nutntlonal statc1 Federal invest~t0t11tron.aly ctiti· ciud the state Tollic Su6sunoca Contr0I Division. dncribina it u bcina in disatT1y, and no1ed that (~ ... W.UTS/A.2) Dr. Jim Oudner a.ad oompatw wttll utlftcial lDteJU,eaoe. While no lonacr in the realm of 1e1enc:e fktion, aruficul intelhaC'ntt 11 Slill 1n 1U infancy 11 IC'lentlst'l and 1«hn1caJ upcru stn~ to appl) the po-wen of the com put« to O\<crromr hfe's chal~n,n. h hn ('Ond111on ,auw<I h\ en "ironmrntAI facton"' I~ 11 an cmo W11h thouunda of vanablcs to du! with, cl1n1cal psycholopsts have de .. veto~d 1 checkhst of chanlctttisuca deahna wtth the pebent's condJtlon The CQtnplete the pebent's profile and measure thote charac1en1Uc::t ™'"'t possible uatment.a. (Pl---COllPVTSa/Aal r • . . A.I * Onflge eo.t DAILY PtLOT /Thurtdey. Octofler 10. 1M5 CLAIMS ALLEGE BEATING ••. hem Al a bk>ody no.. Gale · anc.=a lD the claim thlt • blood mnp1e wu taken &om him .Past his ~ at Hoq Mcmonal Hoapital later in the e~ A simlliar multimillion dollar claim was flied late last month on behalf of two men wbo alk9e that blood was ordered wi\Mtawn from them b>: Newpon Beach polioe offioen to sec 1f they were driving drunk.. Accordlna to the pol.soc report, the offiocn attempted to pull Gale's car over at Manne A venue. Gale alleaed- ly refuted to stop bjscarimmediately. and dto~ into an alley wnere be later stopped, Harris said. Harris saKS the offiocrs stopped Gale's vehicle because they suspected Oale of d.rlvina while under the mflueooe of alcohol "Tbey de1ected l.be odor of akobo1 and asked them (a.le and .Bruil) to exit the vehicle," H.a.rris said. When Gale rcfuacd and was "playina the pme of not wantiaa to ae1 ou1 of the car," the officen pulled hi.m from the automobile and he became "com- bative" and allcpd.Jy struck Fisher several times. Harris said. Harris satd the LOcsdcnt 1s under 1ovestipbon by the poltoe depart- ment. Bruil's claim seeks S2 million for "pain and sufftri~" S2 million for ''shame and humiliation," SI million for false arrest aod violation of her oonstituliona.J ri&bt.s. and SS million for punitJve dam&JCS, accord-int to Ncweort Beach City Clerk Wanda Raaio. Gale's cwm seeks SS million for medical damqes, SS million for violation of his constitutional rights andSIO million in punitive damage$, Ragiosaid. PARK PURCHASE WINDING UP .•• Prom Al As pa.rt of the preliminary contract, about 60 acres of grassland along the Santa Ana River would be retatned for a flood control project by the Army Corps of Engineers. Rosso said the rorps is plannina to widen the river. Additionally, another I 0 acres may be reserved for the state Coastal Conservancy as a harbor for animals and plant life displaced by the development of other wetlands. The county purchased the state surplus property in 1973. stipulating that the land be used as a regional park. Consequently, the park require- ment would be passed on to Costa M~ and the sale would have to be approved by the state General Ser- v1oes Aaency. As a sign of good faith to the state, park plannen will recommend to supervisors this month that wa1tina trails.. paved l)U'kin4 speoes and perhaps an information booth be built at the Fairview site, Rosso said. "We just want to provide assurance and demonstrate to the state thlt we are in a position to develop the park," be said. The county is well past the I 0-year state de1dtine to build the park. Fioanetal demands delayed the pro- JCCt and forced the county to scrap plans for a wilderness park m favor of a money-making recreational facility that would be self-suppon.ini. Costa Mesa is hoping to revive the original plan, and a city park commit- tee has explored such ideas as building an archaeological museum on the site as well as a new gym- nasium. Kc1th Van Holt. city Leisure Scr- viocs director, said once the sale is complete, the nine-member commit- tee would convene to discuss how the park should be built. THREE HELD IN CHECK FORGERIES ••• From Al sonaJ checks from a G lendale doctor and a Santa Monica couple. Bergstrom said. They then were able to discover depositors' bank account numbers and samples of their signa- tures at the three banking institu- tions. Trymg to escape suspicion, they allegedly made the checks payable to the person who bad an account at the oank. forging the names of the people from whom they stole the checks. They allegedly deposited some of the money from the phony checks into the accounts and cashed and pocketed the remainder, Berptrom said. The three men -identified as Calvin Carter, 24, of Inglewood; Jcarld West, 29, of Los Angeles, and Steven Brown, 24, Inglewood -put about $400 in the acoount of a Huntington Harbour depositor at the Bank of America branch without rus knowledge, Bergstrom said. The suspects, held on SI 0,000 bail each in Huntington Beach jail on suspicion of forgery, arc believed to have received at least $2,000 in the alleged check-cash ing caper, Bergstrom said. l'be men allegedly came to Bank of America Monday and Tuesday to transact their business, Bergstrom said. Bank officials became suspicious and called the 911 emerg- ency line when the men allegedly returned again Wednesday shonly after 2 p.m. Carter and West were arrested as they were leaving the bank at Ad- miralty and Pacific Coast Highway. Brown was apprehended while lying in the.back seat of a 1969 Rambler. apparently~ to hide from police, Berptrom wd. AUTOPSY FAILS TO CLEAR DEATH ••• From Al possible that the boy, wbo had been running a slight fever, suffered a seizure. Wbile responding to the Strauss residence, Orange County para- mcdit1 gave the boy's mother instruc- tion by telephone oo bow to pcrf onn cardio-pulmonary resuscitation. police wd. Medics took over CPR when they amved and transported the young· ster to Tusun Community Hospital. He was later transferred to Children's Hospital where be died. The parents obtained a temporary court order Sunday blocking an autopsy. Superior Court Judge Leonard Goldstein agreed to post-pon~ the autopsy until Wednesday's heanng. Assistant County Counsel Arthur Wahlstedt. who represents county agencies such as the coroner's office. said be believes it was the first ti me an Oranae County judge ha.s ruled on whether • penon has the rialtt to prevent an autopsy based on refsgious belief. Rabbi Paul Dubin of the Jewish Federation Council in Los Angeles told th.e Associated Press not all branches of Judiasm completely op- pose autol>Sies, but some of the more conscrvabve ones do. COMPUTER CAN DIAGNOSE .•• From Al That process, however. 1s pa.instalc- inaly long and is far from foolproo( ~ut a computer that processes the hundreds of thousands of possibilities and points out the prob- able causes could do the work in a fraction of the time the doctors require, and more efficiently. When fed the ~rofile information on the mentally disabled young man. the computer "suggests" that the doctors talce a closer look at the patient's physical condition specifically, a suspected allergy. And indeed. the young man had been suffering from an allergy. But because of his mental handicaps, he didn't know better than to try to scratch at his face or punch his head to nd himself of the discomfort. When the doctors treat the allergy. the pauent stops abusing himself. Such a sophisticated computer system has been available in recent years. And, according to Dr. Jim Wagner. tus system at Fairview has been helping ~th the d~agnosis and treatment ofh1s own patients. Wagner's computer, however, re- cently has been improved to take the process a few steps further Not only docs its sort through the thousands of steps to help diagnose a patient's cond1t10n. 11 then uses the information as the basis to prescnbe treatment. It also asks the chn1c41 psychol- ogists a scnes of questions when they arc havmg difficulty pinpoinung the cause of a patient's illness. In so doing, the computer and the operator work together as a team, posing questions to e~ch other and correct- ing each other's mistakes. A computer capable of such tasks as known as an art1fic1al intelligence system. Although thert 1s disagreement on bow the tenn should properly be defined, WaRner believes a system Just Call 642-6086 Monoory ( ''°"' II ,,..., .,. 11()1 -'f°"'~~ ·~gll> ~oeb• 1 tt"" """ "°"' COll'I ..... II" _ _, "th.at can grow and cbanfe and sba_pe itself to your own donwn" qualifies as an artificial intelliaience system. To undenta.nd the concept bcrund artificial intelliaeooc, consider the advantages of a computer system that contains the sum tot.al of all the expert lmowlcdge in a particular field. Li ke a library of technical infor- mation, the computer would store in its database the specific practices and details used by the p~minent experts and apply them objectively. without the biases ofindividuals. "The system would be no better than the sum of our knowledge, but it is cbe sum of our knowledge where we are not. It's the most valuable tool available to us today," said Gardner, who presented the results of his research in August at the annual meeting of the American Psychologi- cal Association. Today, as be works toward improv- in~ the system, Gardner· is using its ab11itjes to help with the treatment of his own 60 patients at Fairview. ln1t1ally, Gardner wanted to use a computer to save time. The process of compiling a personality profile on a patient and chcckin~ those charac- terisucs agamst a hst of possible treatments is one wtth which all clinical psychologists must labor. But because such an assessment is a common procedure, Gardner de- veloped a computer program that would do the work for him. That m1uat step, taken five years ago, reduced a four-hour chore down to a 15-minutc task. ··1 looked at what I was doing and saw that the process could be auto- mated. And indeed it could," he said. With the help of comfuter pro- grammer Anne Breuer o Newport Beach. Gardner refined the system further to 1dent1fy possible mistalces or altemauves should the initial diagnosis fail. "That step, in my mind. took the system into the field or artificial intelliacnoc," Gardner said. "Just like our own leamiQS process, the system c:an learn a~tunately changes its stratqies hued on ou~me. •• Wbeo matched against a team of physicians aod clinical psychologists, G ardner's system consistently outperformed a team of speciaJjsts and has arrived at correct diqno~ 90 percent of the time it was fed information on pauents suffering from such behavioral problems as ~ion, self-abuse and destruc- tiveness. Further refinements being de- veloped will allow the system to improve its validity and credibility throu&h a series of checks and cross- referenccs built into the system. "What we're doina is designing the rational. cognitive part oftbe human brain. But this is not just more efficient. it's better," Gardner said. "It's better because it talces every- thing into consideration. It finds causes and helps us ehmmate them." Gardner is worklnJ with Anne Breuer in developing similar systems for other mental health facilities across the country. As part of that association, Breuer's company, Planet Press Enterprises of Newport Beach, has been providing him with the computer equipment while Fair- view has been supporting bis research efforts. While he sees a growing tendency for computcn to talce over human tasks. Gardner said that decision making will ultimately be left to the personal lc.nowled&c and intuition of the human experts. "ldcaJly. the computer provides information and the people make the decisions," be said. "h's an aid. It will never replace us. It works because you can't put a whole uojvcrsity into one room." What do you like aboat the Dally Pilot'! Wbat don't you like? Call tbt number at left •nd your meua'e will bt recorded, tr1n1crlbed 1nd delivered 10 tbe appropriate editor. Tbe same U -bo11r 1.111wenn1 service may be used to record letters to the editor on any topic. Contributors to our IAUera column must lncl11dt tbelr name and telepbont namber for verUlcallon No <'fr('ulallon calls, please. Tell us wbat't on your mind. Circulation 714/la-4m CIMelfted Mlver11elng 714/142-5171 All otMt depertment1 la-4321 MAIN OF'1CE :).)() w"' • .,. Sf r.-• .._ CA .,.... --eo. 1MO ec.a ..._ CA tHI~ SafutOoty .. .a S11nCl•Y II '°" JO 'IOI ,_ you. CCII)\' Dy I e m c.el Del"'t •0 • "' ~ .,.,.,, c;tlOY - Do-90 Frank ZJnl Aoeemery Churchmen E d1to• Con11oller CcJllynoM 1913 OltnOt eo.., '°"blloNnll Comc»ny No -llOt* -llal!Qf\4 tdllO< .. I INlffe< Of ..,.....,. -ft ,,.,_ ,.,..,. i. rlll)<OOUQeO ... f"Oul ~tal l"lf ,,_ c1' COOVflOl\I - CltcuWUon T1t1.,.._._ Robert L. Cenlrell Ooneld l . WllH•m• Prf1•1•irt0cw C1rcuta11on M11n,1Qer M&nager Howard Mullenery P-oor Blevln• Mitrkettno Otrec•OI C' 1e~&•f1f'd ()rectOf !~--1---• s.cono ~ P<*llO' C>O>Cl ., .:,,.,. ~ c.o.'°'""' IUPS '4-4 toO t <Jo;beeftCH>l't'. oy Un• S• l~ .._,,...., oy-$100~• ..... Sunny and warm for weekend Dry air on the heela of• 110tm ey9tem movt09 ... , wtll bf109 IUnlNM to Southern c.tttomi. Frkl•y with daytlrM ::d. ....,... nudg!2 the 80-degree mertc dunng the week • forecuteta . The Netlon., w .. ther Servtce Mid the ftnal f9mMnt• of an AIUkan ttorm ~tem h•d mowcs Into Arllona today ... vtng dNt Mc ... with nets •l<P9Cted 10 di mini.ti In the mountain• and deeerta by dayb<Mk Frld1y Forecuten .. Id Mc ... wtll be cleat tonight Along the Orange Cout ther• Wiii be ioc.t gutty north to nonheett wind• In north portion• tonight. Moelty cie.r tonight and Friday. WarrMr deY8 with hight 70 to 78 Friday. Lowa tonight 48 to 83. U.S. Temps LMVtOM ,, 51 -·~~ l'lllOHTI Unit AOC11 ~ 64 Lt L~ 79 M W11m .., Cold.-. .. MempNe 82 12 ~ 71 IMI Mleml9Mcfl 15 73 Snoweri A..,., S:lurr,.s Snow Occ...Oed...., Stahonatr a,.. :::=:qui 15 51 .. .._. .. 12 42 13 31 ~PIUI 31 29 "--WM -S.--<• .. o ..... us O.o• "' C~c• ~ 49 )9 ~ fl 54 AllMla 79 61 .... ~ 13 a& Sent•Ctla • •2 ~tlln~ Oii'( 72 90 -Yortc ,. eo Calif. Temps &.,,,,....,... 74 .. ~ 16 74 Hottolk.Va. 76 57 541nta MOtllca • &II ...,_. ,. M OltlehclfMClty 74 .. ~ n &1 Ol'Mha •2 " =::· IOW, tot 24 _,,. en<linO el 5 • m Tal>oe Velley ,. 24 ~ 25 OrtendO .. 73 ....., .. 50 Ton-71 65 ... .. 27 ~ 75 55 EUfWI• eo 4 1 ~ 12 •1 "'-"tbl 16 118 F,_ 71 47 Surf Report 9ull9lo 16 se ""~ ,. 54 ~., ~· 52 CMper "3 2t p .~ .. 58 LOI Angtiet 12 &e CNtt.ton,8.C. " 72 Porti.nd.Or 81 " o ... land 12 51 LOCATIOll ll:D IMAM ~.W V •1 57 Pr~ 73 •1 PMOAobiet 12 40 ~~ 14 ,... ~.NC 17 S3 ::::rcny ,, S3 ,.., 8lu1I 118 51 ,._ Jlllly. Newpot1 2-3 ,. ~ 33 30 37 20 Aed.oocl Clly 70 .. "°"' '""· ~ 24 ,. =.a 12 •2 IW>o 4S 29 S--to 10 50 22fWI av-. NNpOt1 1.2 poot 11 M Alcflmoncl 79 52 8ellnM 72 44 Belt>oew_. 2~ poot ~ 11 51 SIL-79 ... 8an CJlevo 70 ., uountee..11 1-3 poot Columbua,011. n 5-4 StPwt .. T-ee 70 San FrWICleco 71 64 SanClelnenle 1-2 poot eo.-nl.N.H 11 65 Sall Lale• cnv .. 38 S..t• 11Mt>er1 87 47 ...... temp: a& ~Wonh ... 10 San Anlonlo ee 75 StOOkton ll9 •e Swell dlrectlOn tOU1tl Oeylon 11 68 8an~.PR 16 74 Hlgll. 10W tor 24 hOure ~ et 6 p m °""* :Ill 30 ear.tow et 55 S..ttte 57 47 o..~ 47 37 8"'-'l>Ot1 .. .. 8IQ e.w so 32 Tides Oeltoll .. 64 &pok-45 32 ~ 50 3' OuMtl 37 28 &yr-72 541 BlylN n eo EIPeao 87 56 Top.ka 49 39 Celallna 78 70 TOOAY falrtMIN<I 41 29 r.-. ... 83 .. .,.,. ...... 88 " $econof0w 1:22p.m. 20 Fiwvo S& 23 Tulel IQ 65 MoNO\lla 17 57 s.concl Ng/I 8·24p.m 62 F\ag9l.llll 51 37 W-.gton 111 SI Monwey ee .. Otlncl,...,. 51 50 Wlc:Nla 65 40 M1 Wlleon 511 ~ ,..,., ~F-33 29 --. ..... 72 ~ H.oltl 71 83 Flm tow 15ea.m 0 I ~ 74 58 NNpOt1 8etdl 89 Ill ~io. t20a.m 5 I HeleN 31 22 om.no 75 56 2:02p.m u Honolulu 87 71 Extended Plll!'l Springe IQ 57 Second ll4Qh 8-o:i p.m. 5 1 .._on eo 73 p~ 72 55 lndlllnepola 78 57 F• SatU'd..,. 11\rouQh Mond8y ••· ~<Mno H 55 Sun -. today at 1:211 p.m , r1M9 Fridey ,,__,Ma 79 57 71 64 111 8·56 a.n.. --llOM' et 1.24 pm. ,,__..... 81 71 OIC>4 -nigh1 -~ San Qa(wW 75 57 Moon -tocs.y 11 4:t4 pm , .... ~ 51 4$ WW"*'G --~ 12 Sen Joet 71 49 Frleley Ill 3.58 1 m., and -4101*t 111 ~Oii'( so ,. IO 16 L°"" WI IN SOI and -80a. S..ta Ml 75 59 6 11 p.m. HIGHWAY LANDSCAPING DELAYED ••• From Al But commissioners said future highway landscaping spending should be baited for an indefinite period. exocpt in special instances such as legal requirements. Robert Remen, deputy director of the commission, today said that landscaping projects arc not being dropped but are being delayed until BACK BAY ••. From Al Simpson said the twin projects will return the upper bay to its condition in the early 1930s when a salt works operation built a series of dams and basins to trap ocean water. additional funds are available. He said tbe S 16 million worth of Orange County projects involved in the commission's decision arc now scheduled to be delayed until the 1990-91 fiscal year. Lisa Mills, senior planner wtth the Orange County Transportation Com- mission, said the local projects af- fected by the fi ve-year freeze include landscaping along the San Diego Freeway. Santa Ana and Costa Mesa freeways. But she said some of this land- scaping was scheduled to accompany Orange County freeway construction projects that are several ~ from completion. Because Ian ping is not added until construction is fin- WASTE DUMP FUND ••• From Al crucial documents were .. located in different offices, ynder desb? m files and in a room undcl',lock ano key." The audit said the state mishandled $28.S million in cleanup contracts for three of California's most hazardous wutc dum{>S: the Strindellow Acid Pits near R.ivenide. Mci:'oll refine')'. dum~ in Fullerton and the Purity 011 Co. site near Fresno. Toxic wastewater from the Stringfellow site is expected to be sent by pipeline ~ooing later this year for treatment m Huntington Beach before being discharged into local ocean waters. EPA investiptors cited the state for iR11orina competitive biddincz for contracts it the three sites and for failing to negotiate the lowest possible price when competiti ve bidding was not required. The auditors urged that $2 million m federal payments due the state be held up or denied because of im- proper contracting procedures that led 10 excessive costs. "The state routinely did not nego- uate for lower costs and had poor record lcccp1ng." said Keith Takata the regional EPA Superfund chief. who called the repon "very ncgauve." The EPA report reviewed 11 con- tracts awarded by the st.ate for the three sites between March 1983 and August 1984. isbed, the state frceu should not have a major impact on most of these projects. Mills said Wednesday's decision allows local transportation officials to trade the delayed landscaping alloca- tions for money to complete non- landscaping projects such as ramp meters and auxiliary lanes at an earlier date. She said the OraOJe County Trans- portauon Commission will consider such trades at its Oct. 28 meeting, then forward its recommendations to the state panel. Correction The l..a&una Beach school board will consider a policy toni&bt that would prohibit its coaches from accepting outside compensation without the prior approval of the school district. A story in Wednesday's edjtion of the Daily Pllot incorrectly stated that the pohcy had already been ap- proved. School board members were to consider several actions effecting coaches OcL 3. Superintendent Billy Barnes said. But one of them, the compensation policy. was tabled as the hour grew late. he said. The board did act on other items discussed in the story. mcludina a six- session training program for coaches, he said. The board will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the admmistration center, SSO Blu- mont. THE SPORTING HOUSE "Where Class Doesn't Cost" 360 I Jamboree Rd. Newport Beach 714-752-0565 • • --~-~·----~-------------------------------..... ...---------~-----=~======:::;:;;~ -·"""': - Valley run to aid Statue of Liberty A fi ve-m1le run to raise funds for the restoration of~c Statue of liberty is set for Saturday at 8 a.m . in Mile Square Park in Fount.am Valley, sponsored by the Stroh Brewery Co. and the Plymouth division of Chrysler Corp. Runners should pack up an entry form in advance from part1C1patmg Chrysler Plymouth dealers, stores selling Stroh's products or by caJJins Ron Markilic, local race orgamz.er, at (213) 596-3394. There is an $11 fee. Self-Improvement talk aet Dr~ Cra.i1 A. NattkempeT will present a workshop on "Unblocking Your Unconscious Self' toni&ht at 7:30 at Northwood Community Park 1n Irvine. The workshop will focus on the ability to uuhze the positive intentjons of energies toward ac· com~lishing soaJs. It is presented by the Irvine Family Servtccs Division at no charge. Call 660-38 I 4 for funhcr mfonnation and reservations. Software de.lgn e%plalned "A Radical Software Design Process -and How to Fake It" will be the topic of a lecture Fnday by Dr. David Parnas, a leading expert on "Star Wars" technology and computer software design, at UC Irvine. The pro&ram 1s scheduled for 7·30 p.m. in Room 432 of the Computer Science Building. Admission is free and reservations arc no t required. Call 8S6-6429 for m ore 1nfonnatton Dlurmament event at UCI Orange County WAND. an affiliate of the national Women's Actton for Nuclear D1sarma· mcnt, wtll sponsor a workshop on speak.mg out for nuclear disannamcnt Friday and Saturday at the Women's Resource Center at UC Irvine . The program is scheduled for 7 to I 0 p.m. Fnday and from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m . Saturday at a cost of $10 for memben and Sl2 for non·mcmbcrs. Call Genie Htll at 644-6041 for registration information. WaJ.t to ald swlm program The Newport-Costa Mesa YMCA will sponsor a waJkathon to assist its handicapped swim program Saturday beginning at 8 a.m. The 12-milc course covers areas of Newport Bcab served by the YMCA. and the walkathon goal is SS,000. Call lhe Y at 642-9990 for more information. Menu testlng scheduled Oran.JC County Mensa will be otTenng su{>Cr· vised tcsung for membership in the h1$}1 rQ s<;>e1ety Saturday a the Mercury Savings Bank in Tustin. The tcsung will run from I to 4 p.m. at a cost ~f $20, and a social event will follow. Call Dirv1d Lubman at 898-9099 for further 1nformat1on. Social worlcabop ln CdM "How to Talk to the Opposite Sex" wtll be the topic of a day-Jong workshop scheduled Saturday by Coastline Community College at the Newport Beach Leaming Center, 3101 Pacific View Drive, Corona del Mar. Steven Farmer, a marriage and family counsel· or, will discuss such topics as ovcrcmang shyness. startina conversations, non-verbal commumcation and the differences and s1m1larit1es an male and female talking and listinang. The resistration fee is $30 and additional information 1s ava1lable at 241-6186. Fltnes• seminars slated Health and fitness seminars rang.mg trom nutrition to aerobics and biofeedback will be prc$ented at Irvine Valley College beginmng Saturday. . Nutrition m the reproductive cycle 1s the topic ofa lecture Saturday from 9 a.m. to noon in Room A212 for a fee ofS20. A course in teaching aerobic exercise will be given Oct. 19, 26 and Nov. 2 from 9 a.m. to I p.m. in Room A502-503 for a S50 fee. Biofeedback training as scheduled Oct., 19 from 9:30 a.m . to 3:30 p.m. 1n Room A2 I 2 for S30. o r S25 for Gold Card holders. Call the community services office at 559-3333 for further mformat1on GOP reception ln San Juan The Orange County Federation of Republican Women wtll hold an autumn cocktail reception and fundnuser Saturday from 4 to 7 p.m. at the Birtcher Ranch, 32327 Del Obispo, San Juan Capistrano. Michael Antonovich. cha1nnan of the Cah· forma Republican Party, and Republican members of Congress. the state Senate and state Assembly will be .1ucsts at the event. The tickets arc $3 5 and more information 1s available al 493· 1861 . Audubon trlps announced The South Coast Audubon sbc1cty will conduct its monthly field tnp Satur~y at Irvine Park. meetina at 8 a.m. at the pony nde section. The society also has scheduled a mid-month field trip Oct. 23 at Doheny State Park in Dana Point. Call 494-2003 for in(onnat1on on Saturday's excun1on and 499· I 929 for the Oct. 23 event. Parent wor.tsbop planned A parent and student workshop geared to give pa.rents of hiah scbool and college students a better understandfoa of bow they an~ their children learn will be offered Saturday at lmne Valley College Dr. Ronald Steinke, a former h1~ school and collcae teacher, counselor and administrator, Wlll conduct the course, scheduled from 9 a.m. to noon in Room A2 I 3. The fees are SI 0 per person, S 15 for two people o r S2S for three people in the same family. Call S59-3333 for more information Flber lalr at OCC More than 40 exhibitors wtlJ be featured Saturday durina the I 5th annual Fibers, Fabrics. Fashions and Fum1sh1nis Fair at Oranac Coast Collete. Amona Lbe available workshops will be: "Plannina Problem Free Pants." "The Sto".:9e of An~ue Textiles," and ""Possibilities with B11euit Qui1t1na." Reaisttation 11 SS before the fair and SI 0 at the door. For more mfonnation contact fair coordinator Bernice Hoplons at S49-482 I. CAl lNOAR Tbanday, Oct. 10 NemMUql~ Orenot CoMt DAILY PILOTfThurldey, October 10, 1116 *A.I Lions slate weekend festivities 3rd annual Oktoberfest at Mlle Square Par k a Joint venture by 8 clubs By PHU.. SNEIDERMAN OfltleO.-. .......... Eight Lions Clubs from Huntinaton Beach, Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Irvine and Fountain Valley are sponsorina their third annual Oranac Coast Oktoberfest lhis weekend at Mile Square Park. The l 98S festivities will take place at the Fountain Valley Recreation Center at Mile SQuarc, Brookhurst Street at Heil A venue. The past two Lions Oktoberfests were held at the Oranae County Faifarounds. The event serves as a fund-raiser for charities supported by Lions Oubs. These include the Lions Siaht and Hearin& Test Van, Lions Eye Bank. Orange Couoty Boys and Girls Clubs, Services for the Blind and the City of Hope. Entcrtammcnt will include German polkas, hvc "oom-pah" bands, sinpngand dancing. The Oktoberfest wiJJ also feature beer- drinking. beer mug holding and pretzel· eating contests, with prizes awarded daily to winners. In addiuon to the contest, the festival will offer game booths, carnival rides, European crafts. art items and souvenirs. Debbie Morello, a 29-year-old oper- auons specialist at Great American Feder- al Savtngs in Fountain Valley, bas been selected as Lions Miss Oktoberfest. Gates open at S p.m. Fnday. Opening ceremonies bcJin at 8 p.m. Friday, with activities running until midniahL Festival hours arc 10 a.m. to midntaht on Saturday, noon to 11 p.m. on Sunday. Tickets, which can be purchased at the gate, arc S3 for adults, Sl for children under I 5. Chjldren under 5 arc admitted free. Discount adult tickets, at $2 each, can be purchased in advance at the Fountain Oebble Morello. a 29·year-old operadona •peclaltat at Great American Federal 8a'riDC• ln Fountain Valley, baa been .elected u Llona ll1M Oktoberfeat to officiate o•er the f eethittea. , Valley Chamber of Commerce office, 10101 Slater Ave .. Suite 106. Oktoberfest sponsors include the Balboa Bay Lions. Costa Mesa-Orange Coast Lions, Fountain Valley Host w ons, Greater Irvine Lions, Huntington Beach Host Lions, Huntington Beach North Lions, Irvine Lioness and Newport Beach Manncn Lions. Pharmacist authorized for jail .. By JEFF ADLER OflMO.-. ......... Orange County Jail inmates soon will be served up medications by a licensed pharmacist rather than nunes or jailers. The Board of Supervisors Tuesday voted unanimously to hire a full-lime pharmacist for the jail or contract for a part-time worker if a permanent employee cannot immediately be found The board's action came in response to the repeated cnuc1sm of the Orange County Grand Jury. which had pointed out the inadequacy of the ex1stin' system for d1stnbuung prescription medications. In a report two years IJO, the Grand Jury noted that the county s practice of per- mitung nurses to fill prcscnptions which then were distributed to inmates by sheriffs deputies violated state law. The board authorized the county Health Tustin teachers back in class By Tbe A11ocla ted P re11 Stnkmg teachers locked in a lengthy contract dispute have voted unanimously to return to the classroom in Tustin. but authorized the strike to resume if needed, a union spokesman said. About 200 members of the Tustin Educators Association voted Wednesday to end their six-day walkout, said Ed Romeo of the Cahfomta Teachers As- sociation. The teachers now will wo rk to rcall the school board, Romeo said They planned to distribute recall flyer'i throughout the city, association president Sandra Banis said. Gunman gets $255 in FV market heist Fountam Valley detectives said a slender-built junman who escaped with about $225 after holding up a clerk at the Bushard Market Wednesday night may be the same man who's commuted a stnng of robberies 1n Santa Ana and Westminster The man, behcved to about 6 feet tall and weiahing 170 pounds, walked into the market at 9:35 p.m. wtth a long-barreled Newport Beac h OfficLals at the Ncwportcr Resort, I I 07 Jamboree Road, reported that someone stoic I 2 bath towels. six bath mats and 122 bed sheets from the hotel Wednesday. The loss was csumated at SI ,34S. • • • Jewelry valued at Sl,578.64 was re- handgun wrapped in a Jacket "I'll JUS t t.ake the money." he told the clerk. who was alone in the store at the time. Detective Dann 8<'.'an said the suspc<'t, who had a mustache and shon sand)· brown hair. matched the dcscnpt1on of a bandit who's held up small markets and Liquor stores recently Newport Blvd., the thief broke mto the room while the v1ct1m was asleep and stole SI 30 in cash, a S 139 airline ticket and S 126 an miscellaneous items. At an unnamed motel at 2544 Newport Blvd. the th1ef stole $300 in cash South County Care Agency, wh1ch provides inmate health care, to pay a fuLJ.ume pharmacist between $32.500 and $43.600 per year. Health Care Agency Director Thomas Uram said that the board's authoruation for the new Jail posiuoo represents a first step tn com~bens1vc overhaul of procedum in the Jatl goverrun• the dispensins of mcdicauon. He sa..td tus goal is to eliminate any doubts about the quality of handling medication at the J&il. "We need an cnurc policy for handling medJcauons," the HCA chief explained ..We need to ma.kc sure our 1b1p 1s an order." The recommendauon that a pharmacist be hlrcd follows a consultant's recom men· dation that top pnonty be placed on hmng a JatJ pharmacist. The report, which included a full ttVJew of how medJcat1on 1s dispensed m the Jatl. was submmed to tbe Health Care Agency an June In tum. the Board of Supervisors included a new pharmacist's pos111on when 1t appro ved its 1985-86 budget in August. Two kegs of beer. valued a1 Sl"O V.C'rt stolen from a Soulh Coast H1gh""a' location. the vtct1m told police Wednc$da) night. • • • Pohcc officers responded to reports Wedncsda} of someone teanng down a wanted poster m the downtown post office The suspect. howt'ver. could not be located. • • • Four hubcaps. valued at S544. wer~ stolen from a car parked Wednesda\ on Ch ff Dnvc, the ,·acum told police • • • Pohcc arrested two motonsts 'W edncs· day on susp1c1on of dn,ing under the influence of alcohol. John Scott McGaughcy. 23. was arrested at 2 40 a.m on Broadwa). Minh Nhat Tneu. I 9 v.a<, arrested at I :26 a.m o n Laguna Can\on Road. Ranttncton Beach A rcs1dcnt m the 16800 block of Hoskins reported that someone stoic S2 l 0 in miscellaneous items and S40 m cash from a Golden West Collqe office Wednesda}' Kid seat belt law reduces injuries 8y UM Auodated f>~• Tbe state law requmng automobtle seat rntraults for children has reduced utj unes siaJUficantly, but bas fallen shon of SO percent compliance, an Oranse County study reveals. ""The law bas resulted 1n a decrea!ICd number of children bc101 tnJurcd 111 accidents," said Dr. Pbylhs A&ran. a pcd1atncian at UC lmoc who worked on the study. "We feel prctt} aood about 1t. but we want to do better.' Although research 1ndlcatcs a dropoff 1n U1Jurics, about 40 percent of the ctuldrcn involved were not restrained by seat belts or car seats at the umc of the accidents, a VlOlatioo of the law "We now look to law enforcement as the key to mcrcastna use of chiJd rcstnunts, and dccreastna injury," A&rao said. The study, paid for by a arant from the California Office of Traffic Safety. cum- ined young accident v1ct1ms treated an rune Orange County hospital emergency rooms and four of the five county trauma centers. Researchers monitored accident v1c· tims for two yea.rs before the child· rest.ra..tnt law went into effect in 1983. and the two years afterward Under the law. all chtldrcn under 4 yea.rs old or under 40 pounds must be restrained either in a child-safety scat or wtth a seat belt when nding in a car. Before the law went into effect. only 2 I percent of the children Jn accidents were weanng scat belts o r o ther rcstramu. But after 1ts passage. that figure more than doubled. to 47 percent, lhe stud)' found. After the law was enacted, the number of children treated m hospitals for car accident in1urics dropped b} 33 percent. .\gran wd The number of severe tnJunes decreased u well. Passenger count rises 27%atJWA By JEFF ADLER Ol_o.llt,... ..... Aultne passenger traffic at John ._.. ayne Airport dun111 August conunued to hover at levels well above those posted a year ago. laraclybecausc of an increase from 41 to 55 avcraac flt&hts per day. Airport Manager MUTT) Cable reported that 332,218 passengers amved and de· parted JWA 1n Auausi. a 27.2 percent 10crcasc over August 1984 when 261 .160 passengers avaJled themselves of O range Count) 's onl~ commemaJ 1.1r tenninal F11aht operauons b> commercial air earners reglSlercd a related 32.3 percent increase. with 3.4 71 takeoffs and la.odmgs Aga.10. the 1n~ pnmaril~ 1s lhe result of the addttJonaJ fuahts authonzed b' the Board of Supef"\1sors last "pnl. Whtie the number of passengers at JV..\ has increased dramaucaJI), however tht' amount of aar cargo passing through tht' airport continues to decrease So me I 4' tons of cargo wcrc loaded or unloaded a1 JV.~ in .,_ugust. down 4:!) pe~nt from the :!5~ tons ofcargo in .\ugust IQ 4 • • • .\ pu~ containing S4ll in m1~ellaneou\ 1tcms was stolen from the Hunungton Lanes bowling alle~. 19582 Beach Bhd . the' 1cum told police Wednesda) • • • .\ bur&lar brolce into a home an tht' 1 •roo block oi Occana.Jrc V. ednesda) t''en1ng and stoic S 1,000 in s1her. S800 m cash S 150 in watches and an undetenn1ned amount of 1eweln Po lice reports said tht thief entered through an open upsuur<, wtndov. • • • .\resident in the Qb()O block ol Durham reponed that someone stole his SJOO ra\1ng b1C\cle from Huntington Bcalh High School Wednesda\ .... .\ S300 ponable T'\ v.a' rt"ported o;toll-n from a home in the I 'illO hlod. ot \ahr<' Wednesda' afternoon Police rcport<, ..aid the intruder kicked 1n the kitchen door 111 gain cntn ••• .\ S 140 carburator v.as reported stulcn from an orange IQ.., I \ olkswagen Bug parked 1n front of a home in the t9Q(l0 block of W~ms Tuesda) night ported stolen from a home in the 300 block of Colton Avenue last weekend. • • • Vandals scratched the paint and wrote A $3,500 sterling silver service was reponedly stolen Wednesday from a home in an El Morro Tnulcr Park while the 65· year-old v1cttm was in the hospital Ramirez to participate in trial obscene lanauaae on the top of a creme colored 1974 Porsche 911 Tarp parked in an undcraround praac at 567 San Nicholas Wednesday. The damage was estimated at $2,500. lni.De A gold diamond ring and a 19-inch color TV was reported stolen from a home alona Eastlake Wednesday momin1. • • • Officials at Lowe Hendy Associates. 241 S Campus Drive, reported Wednesday that someone stoic a typewritcT wonh more than $400 CoetaMeea Stereo equipment worth S 129 was re- ported stolen from the Church of Chnst. 287 w Wilson St, Wcdnctd.ay. • • • A bufllar reportedly stole a $3-40 color TV tet, an SSS cam~ SSSO in cah. a SSOO video cauette and $2,000 in Jewelry &om a home in the 2700block of Mesa Verde East Tuetday. Police repona said the thief entered throuah an ooen window. • • • Cub towiaa more than S..00 waa ••• A resident along Oxbow reported Thurs- day that someone stoic a SSOO poster. a S275 rowing machme, and a $2,000 diamond rina from bis ho me. • • • A S 1,200 diamond rina was reported stolen last week from and El Toro ho me 1n the 2SOOO block of Shady Hollow Foantaln Valley Someone reportedly stoic a $400 car stereo and a S 15 woman's wallet from a blue 1982 Honda Accord parked in a 101 at 161 S9 Brookhurst St. Wcdne!day. • • • Th1cvcntolc a white fire hydrant located in front of a store at I 88S6 Brookbunt St. over the weekend. Po lice repona said the culpnts bad to have uted a vehicle to steal the hydrant SUtce tt weiabs 700 to 800 pounds.It lS ~portcdJy wonb S900. • • • A TV Kt and • Vldco c:aSMt\e reoordcT. worth S729.90, 1¥aS reponed stolen WednC:lday from a Radio Shaclt elec- tronics store1 161 '7 H&Jt)or Blvd. Pohoe reports saia lhc thieves broft the storefront w\ndo'w. The damaee was CSU· mated at S 1,000. LOS ANGELES ("Pl -The nev. attorney represcnttnt "Ntaht Stalker" defendant Richard Ramirez says his client i1 excited about partmpaung 1n the prcparauon of his dcfcn~ 1p1nst 14 murder charaes. Attorney James G allqos. 53. ofO~nard. who wu appointed Wcdne!day to handle the case. wd Ramil'C'Z was m good spin ts. vcf} alert and smihna dunna a mccung 11 the county jail. Muniapal Ccrun Judie Elva Soper reg.~~ bcputy Pubbc Defender .A.lien A de Wlth Gallet<» in a hasUly called five-minute bcannt at which Ramirez aP,~ in handcuffs. lea irons and a blue Jail jumpsu1t. Ramirez spoke onlr. two words at the hcann&.. amwcrina •yes" tWlOC when asked if be wanted Oa11caos to ~prncnt h1m and wbe1bc:radclay Oal)eaos 1mmcd1· atcly t0uaht was ~ptable Hu plea was sc'hedulicd for Oct 22 instead of Oct. 17 bur)lary. seven ot rape. seven ot sodom' su of robbcn. five of forced oral copula· uon. thrtt lewd acts on children and two k1doapp1ngs Ramirez' sister Rosa f1of'C1 of El Paso Texas. appeared at the heanng wtth thrtt other attorneys. including Manuel Bar ra.za. the lawyer who bad bttn sent h\ Ramirez's family to assist m tht caSC' Flores and 8arra.7J1 apparently had bttn looktOA for another anorne Mesa shoe store robbedof$177 ... bandit Wlth a hand&un tucked into his wa1stbllnd escaped with $1 77 from 1 Cost.a Mesa sh~ store Wednctd.ay, poll()C ~ ported th11 momina. The robbtr confronted the lone cJcR at about 8:40 p.m. at Paylea Shoes.. 2221 Harbor 81 vd., dcm1nd1n& money &om tM caab f'ell.l1CT, poli.oe •Ml reported 11oleo from lbe rooms of two motels &Jona Ncwpon Boulevard Wcdncs--111•••••••••••••••_.,J day. At the Best Weaiem motel. 26A2 ~81aell Ranu.ra lS aocu.ted of 68 felony counts 1temm1na from a ie:ec of kn'Or 1n which people weft anacked Ln thcLr suburban homes between JuM. 1984 and Auaust.. I 98S The charp indudr 14 counts of murder. f\ve of an.cmpe.cd murder, 19 of The dCft delcn~ \be lDtn*r .. I Hitpanic mant...~ yean o&d. S &ct. I incbcl tan.. ~aah•oa lW poundL ~----------------------------------------------------------~~~~~-- ----·-·--·-----.--~~-----~!!!!!'----~-. . :"' Mineral Bath Treatments 25°/o OFF ALL SERVICES 789 w . 19 h GET 548-1123 Sauna Facials WaxinB Permanent Liner Pure Collagen Mask & Facial Reg. 165 Only 148 Transportation available • 0 This 1s your chance to show off your boa constnctors or bibles. bees or bonnets What do you have 7 See today's classified section to find the entry form for the Dally Piiot "Interiors" contest. HURRYlfl -.. Jack LaLanne's Worker killed by police car Looceboreman Jacbon Taylor, 59, la comforted by two lntemadonal Lonc- •bo~en '• ueocladon memben after belnC hit by a pollce car re.pond1DC to 'riolence at a pier in Baltimore. Taylor later died of Illa injuries in a hoepltal. House panel approves toxic waste Cleanup legislation WASHINGTON (AP) -The ef. fort to renew and expand the stalled "Supcrfund" program cleared a hur· die Wednesday when a House sub- committee approved a toxic waste bill requinng that cleanups be started at 600 sites through 1990. The legislation. adopted by a voice vote of the Public Works and Trans· portation Committee's water re- sources subcomm ittee. was praised by en vironmentalists pushing for a strong Superfund bill and was crit1· cized by the Environmental Protec· tion Agency. The acti on opened the way for the full committee to vote Thursday on the SI 0 bi I hon, fi ve-year package which appeared to have broad bipartisan support. The subcommittee's bill is a strengthened version of Superfund reauthorization legislation that was wntten in July by the House Energy and Commerce Committee and has been denounced by environmen- talists as too weak. House leaders, including Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr., D-Mass., have been pushing for Quicker action on Superfund because taxing a uthonty for the 5-year-old program expired Oct. I. Ant1c1pating the expiration, EPA Adm101strator Lee Thomas 1n August ord ered a m o ney-conserving slowdown of Superfund activ1t1es, including a halt 1n cleanup work at 57 of the nation's worst toxic sites. A pnncipal feature of the subcom· mmee's bill is a requirement that the EPA -which has completed only six dump cleanups since 1980 -begin abatement work at 600 sites by Oct. I , 1990 II~ MER/CAN Health & Fitness Spas Judge backs contempt ruling in Belushi trial IS TAKING SHAPE ••• IN NEWPORT/COSTAIESA. In a few short months. American Health & Fitness Spas wlll be open- ing Its doors to the publlc. At that time, the price wlll soar to Its highest level. But right now. and for a limited time only, you can Join this prtstlglous spa at our pre-opening price. Sl') <IOVVrl FI(',! 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CALL TODAY 714 1650·3600 ~5fJ 19 TH STREET ·'' lf,Ht>or • NEWPORT /COST A MESA • !f) '"'.If ,.,, 1', 'hro11qt11J1JI \o ( .1ldorr1111 LOS ANGELES (AP) -A j udge upheld a contempt citation Wednes- day against a reporter who 1nter- v1ewed Cathy Evelyn Smith about John Be lushi s drug-overdose death, saying the wnter was not covered by the state's reponers shield law be- cause he is a free-lancer. The writer. Chnstopher Van Ness, who has refused to hand over a tape· recording of the telephone 1nterv1cw, was not present when Supenor Court Judge Rohen Devich ruled o n his appeal. Van Ness' attorney, Clinto n Bai ley, said his client was unaware he was needed for the heanng. at which Van Ness was to have turned over the tape-record in$.. Devich, visibly upset, told Bailey to summon Van Ness to coun later in the day, sayin': "If he's not, you may have trouble.' Van Ness, who amved later, said he would continue to appeal the ruling, even 1f he was sent to Jail: "I am o bligated to take this through the courts, to the California Supreme Court if need be." Municipal Court Judge James Nelson. who 1s presiding over Miss Smith's preliminary heanng. found Van Ness in contempt Sept. 26 for fa1lin~ to tum over the 20..minute interview. Devich said Van Ness would appear Wednesday afternoon before Nelson. At that ume, Nelson could impose the 10-da y Jail sentence and S 1,000 fine he had handed Van Ness. The recording allegedly contains incriminating statements by Miss Smith, a former backup singer to Canadian recording an1st Gordon Lightfoot, who 1s charged with murdrnng Belushi by injecting him with a fatal "speedball" mixtures of heroin and cocaine. Belushi, the comae who starred on telev1s1on's "Saturday Night Li ve" and in such movies as "Animal House" and "The Blues Brothers," was found dead March 5, 1982, in a Hollywood bungalow. Deputy Distnct Attorney Michael Mo ntagna, atJuing that Nelson's contempt citation should be upheld, said the evidence on the tape "is criucal. It 1s vital. It goes to the hean of the matter and there 1s a demon· strated need for it." He said the tape "absolutely con- nects the defendant to the death of John Belushi" because it contains mforwation about how Smith, 38, obtaf'hed heroin and injected Belushi 20 to 30 times with it in the last 24 hours of his life. Nine MIAs identified from remains given by Vietnam WASHINGTON (AP)-The De- fense Department said Tuesday 11 has identified nine servicemen missing from the Vietnam War from among the 26 sets of remains turned over by Vietnamese authorities on Aug. 14. "The identification process con· tinues. These are nine whom we can identify today," Pentagon spokes- man Robert 8. Sims said. ldentifi· cation was ..nwade at the Army's identificati o n laborato ry in Honolulu. The servicemen, their dates of birth, homes of record when lost and date missing: Navy Cmdr. Michael W. Doyle, Feb. 13, 1943, Philadelphia, Aug. 25, 1972. Air Force Lt. Col. Harrison W. Klinck, Sept. 11. 1931 , Los Angeles, Nov. 19, 1967. Navy C mdr. William P . Yarbrough, May 25, 1923. Abilene, Texas.Jan. 19, 1967. Air Force MaJ. William E. Jones, June 21, 1940, Fort Worth, Teus, Jan. 5, 1968. Air Force MaJ. Kenneth D. Thomas Jr .• Sept. 25, 1940, Mount Vernon. Ill .. May 5, 1966. Navy Lt. Cmdr. Paul L. Worrell, Apnl 18. 1942. Philadelphia. Dec. 2, 1966. Navy Lt. Michael F. Haifley. Oct. 19, 1946, Lisbon. Ohio, Dec. 28. 1972. Air Force Capt. Monte L. Moor· berJ, June 18, 1939, G rand Island. Neb .. Dec. 2, 1966. Army Sat. William D. Port, Oct. 31, 1941 , Elizabethtown. Pa .• Jan. 12, 1968. Pon was listed as havina died in South Vietnam. The others died in North Vietnam, the Pentaaon said. ACLU fights funding for Holocaust Museum in LA LOS ANGELES ~AP) -The Amencan Civil Liberties U nion sued Wednesday to block state fundma of the Simon Wiesenthal Center's planned Holocaust Museum 11 Yeshiva Univenity. The Superior Court suit, filed on behalf of O.vid and Rosetta Cohen. contends Wt a U milhon appro pna· 1ion for the Los Angeles museum would violate lhe California Con· 1titution 's auarant~ of seperation of church and state, ACLU attorney Fred M. Blum said. I "It W111 have extremely close and intimate ties with Yeshiva Univer- sity," a religiously affiliated 1ebool, Blum said. The suit. which names state Con· troller Kenneth Cotty as defendant, seeks to stop the state from ·~ propriatina money for the center Blum said be would ask the coun to order the state not to release 111y of the money until the suit can be heard. Rabbi Marvin Hier, dean of the W1eaenthal Center, said he had not been informed of the suit. Yul Brynner, 'king' of stage and film, dies By MICHAEL KlJCHWARA Ar~C.- NEW YORK -Yul Brynner. whose more than three dozen movies wett dwarfed by a record 4,625 stage performances as the bald, autocratic monarch of Saam 1n "The King and I," died today at the age of 65. His wife. Kathy Lee. and his four children were with him when he died at I a.m. at the New York Hospital- Cornell Medical Center. said spokes- man Josh Eilts of Sollers Roskin Friedman Inc. The agency handled the publicity for the most receni Broadway production of the musical. which ended in June "Hed1edofmult1plecomphcalions that came as a result of what was originally cancer," Ellis said. "He faced death with a d1sn11y and strength that astounded his doctors. He fought hke a hon." "He was a remarkable person." said Charlton Heston. who starred with Brynner in Cecil B. DeMille's 1956 epic "The Ten Command- ments." "His work in 'K1ngand I' was beyond compare. He was a very special talent. I'm very sorry to hear of has death." "He was a charming and amusing man of many talents although. of course. he will be 1dent1fied as the krng forever," Deborah Kerr, who starred with Brynner in the 1956 movie version of the musical, said from her villa in Marbella, Spain. Although Brynner made mott than three dozen movies, including "The Ten Commandments," "The Mag- nificent Seven" and "Anastasia," he was best known for his stage and screen ponrayals of the king in the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical classic. The role brought him a Tony in 1952. an Oscar in 1957 and a special Tony an June. He played his final performance as the king June 30 at the Broadway Theater at the end of a tour lasting almost 4112 years. That tour was interrupted in Sep- tember 1983 when Brynner. who at one time smoked five packs of cigarettes a day. needed treatment for lung cancer. He received radiation therapy at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles. "I think that the dtscipline I acquired through 53 years of working 1n show business has helped me enormousl y with my own physical problems -whether 11 was a crash in the circus when I was 17 or the serious illness which I had more recently," Brynner said in an interview last December. "'~ ~ul Brynner ln hi• moet renowned cbaracterlzatlon. "You have to make a choice - being sick in bed. and that's a fearsome kind of thing -or playing 1n a theater to standing ovations every night. The choice 1s obvious. I simply go on playing." "He was very loving and warm as a man and a kind of uncle figure to me," said Phac Minh Chau, 16. a Viet- namese refugee whose education at a pnvate school was paid for by Brynner after the two met 1 n 1980 while "The King and I" was in London. Brynner was born Ta1d1e Khan on Sakhalin Island. north of Japan which 1s now a pan of the So" 1et Union. His office gives the date as July 11 . 1920, although Current Biography lists the year as 1917 and Who's Who in the Theater as 1915 His background was as exotic as his looks. His father was a Mongolian mining engineer who was born in Sw11zerland and later changed the family name to Brynner. His mother was a gypsy who died at h1!> birth. Fiscal future OK, but present shaky Senatebacks bffl wiping out deficit by 1991 . but Dole fears Democrats may-kill measure WASHINGTON (AP)-The Sen- ate has approved a plan to eliminate the government's annual deficits by 1991 , but Senate Ma1onty Leader Roben Dole said today the Reagan administration may have given House Democrats time to kill the legislation. Dole cnt1cized the Treasury's use of a complicated financial procedure Wednesday to prevent JOvernment checks from bouncing this week. The cash shonage. caused by Congress' failure to expand the gov- ernment's borrowing authonty. wa s the club Republicans hoped to use to force quick passage of the deficit- reduc11on plan in the House. "What they've done 1s given the House plenty of time to go out and kill" the plan, Dole told rerxmers today. The administration's failure to allow a financial crisis showed "no guts" and "a cred1b1hty problem:· he said. "My response 1s the Treasury pulled the plug on us," Dole said. The Treasury has been warning Congress daily in letters requested by Dole that without new borrowing authonty government checks would start to bounce. The lawmakers on Wednesday appeared near at least a temporary resolution of the government's financial squeeze. The major hurdle for nearl y a week. the deficit-cutting amendment. was passed by a 75-24 vote in the Senate as an amendment to a bill raising the national debt. "We took the No. I issue 1n America. we brought 11 to the floor of the Senate and we won 11 for the Amencan people.'' said Sen. Phil Gramm. R-Texas. a pnmary sponsor of the amendment. But Dole couldn't get his colleagues to $0 along with an intcnm debt ceiling hike, to let the government meet its obligations until Congress takes final action on the long-term debt bill. Congress· 1nact1on forced the ad- m1n1stra11on to use an obscure federal agency known as the Federal Financ- ing Bank to obtain SS b1lhon to keep the government solvent. The bank was set up by Congress 1n 1973, not as a cushion for periodic disputes over the debt ceiling. but to help independent federal agencies issue their secunues. To help with that S 15 b1lhon on WcdneS<ia). a step Treasury Secretary James ..\ Baker Ill said "we are reluctant to use." The only previous time that happened was 1n 1974. The government ha'> used up its cash reserves and It<; current borrow- ing hm1t of $I 824 tnl11on The Reagan adm1n1strat1 on ha'> asked for a hike in the debt ltm11 to $2.078 1nl11on to cover another )~ar of$200 b1ll1on deficits. The House Wednesda) reJected a Senate move to ltm1t borrowing fr om the llnancing bank to the SS b1ll1on which would last about a week. but the House refused 10 e"en consider the measure. ----------------------------. that task. the bank was given S 15 The House isn't ltkcl}' to quickly adopt the deficit-cutting amendment proposed by Gramm. Warren Rud- man, R-N.H .. and Ernest Hollings. D-S.C .. but House Speaker Thomas P O'Neill Jr.. D-Mass . said today he thought the Hou<;e would pu~ue a similar approach 4A 7-9112 3A 6-91/i 2A 6-10 B ... S'h-10 Lyric ... A classic pump with the stylish mid-low heel. 99 fashion Island• Newport Beach• 759-9551 Why settfe for a fit like this? Here's exciting news for women 5'3° and under. 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Each blanket throw 1s reversible and can be used in a variety of w1 ys 6o·xso· $40value .... 14.99 Cush 'N Soft Toilet Seat& Our wfl padded vinyl toilet "uts come in a wide variety of colors. $20 value ' 7.99 Woven Kitchen Towels Thete hnt free 100~ cotton towels are available 1n auorted geometric des1ans is·.29· $2 .50 value COSTA MISA 8r111ol 6 SunfloWf'r If\ Nordstrom Rick 7!11 !1901 IL TOIO 237t0 El 'TOf'l'I R<>1d (Not to Ectw1rcb Cmtm11 11:,~ 9136 POOHTAlN VALLIY 17120 M1poh1 Strttt A42 12'2 TUSTIN 12~i·is lrvtM ISl~d 730 '9Z2 Orange Co .. , DAILY PILOT /Thureday, October 10, 1985 Al ------- House panel cautious on no-return tax plan , WASHINGTON (AP)-Askepttcal House Waysaod Mcan1 Comm1ttcc t 1s su~SU!l.J the Reagan adm101str.atton JO slow on 1mplemeouna a plan under I which m1JJ1ons oft.ax~yers never would have to file a federal tu return. WorlUng on President Reagan's plan for overhauhna the mcome LU. the panel agreed Wednesday that wbJle a no-return system "1ppc:an to be an idea J worth explonng. the proposal has not yet been sufficiently developed for the comm1tttt to make an informed dec1s1on .. J As a result, the committee voted to require the admin1strat100 to repon within six months on who would be eligible for the return-free system, how the j plan would be phased 1n and what 11 would cost the government m computers 1 and manpower to put tnto effect. 1 In hiuhng the proposed system as a ma1or benefit oft.ax overhaul, Reapn 1 predicted carher this year that b) I 'J90 as many as 21 malhon ind1v1duals W1th I uncomplicated finances could avoid fihng a return The Internal Revenue 1 Service would calculate their taxes on the basis of reports. such as W-2 ca.m1ngs 1 statements, filed by employers and banks : Two or three years later. as many as half of all taxpayers could qualify, the , adm1nistrat1on says, saving about 71 m1lho n hours of return preparauon and : S 1.6 billion a year paid 1n fees to accountants and lawyers 'J Congress again tackling textile iDlport cutbacks •, . , ' ~ ' . WASHINGTON (A P) -Efforts 10 force sharp cutbacks in le.Hile J imports. sidetracked 24 hours as a courtesy 10 Singapore Pnme Minister Lee i Kuan Yew. are back on cour~ heading 10 a showdown on the House floor , "The thing you want lO do IS get 1t on the Ooor while it's hot -and it's hot l now -and get It passed." Rep Butler Dcmck. D-S.C . said Wednesda) after -: abrupt postponement of House action on the measure , House Speaker Thomas P O'Neill. D-Mass .. ordered the de la> as a gesture .• toward Lee. a staunch free-trade advocate who had said 1n remarks to a1oint • meeting of Congress earlier 1n the day that protectionist measures could be ! ··ruinous to all " °The Asian leader·., lobbying success proved short hved however. when • O"Netll placed the lcxtlle btll on the calendar for toda) ,· "J did this out of respect for the '1s11ing head of go.,,ernment wh o •' addressed both houses of Congress tod.a\ "O':-.:e11l said in a statement. ~ .. •• >o Weakened storm assaults Florida •' •• By the Associated Press ,: J MIAMI -Tropical Storm Isabel m strongest v.1nd<. "'eakened to 50 ~ mph. mo ... ed ashore on the northeast Florida c0ast toda~ hnnging with 11 a , heav'. beach-eating surf and tides up to three feet abo' e normal "The coastal ,~ Oood.ing and beach erosion are about the onl}' 1h1ng.s th1!> <>torm ""•II do." said forecaster Hal Gemsh at the "a11onal Humcane Center 1n (oral Gables Disaster officials had cast a war) eye toward Isabel. watching and waiting for word on where the ninth tropical storm of the I fl8S .\tlant1c humcane season would stnke But Gemc;h. nollng that its "'Ind'> had dropped from 6S mph to SO. said officials could relax a bit U.S. detonates two nuclear weapons LAS VE(,~S -Two nuclear weapon<, tern. v.11h ~ 1dds of less than ~0.000 ton<; of TNT were detonated deep beneath the '.".c' ada Test Site. the Department of Energy announced The tc'>t'>. the I :!th and I Ith announced this 'ear. were exploded within three h()Ur'> C>f each other ~ednc..Oa) underneath Rainier Mesa. 93 miles nonhv.e-.t ol UJ'> \. cga ... DOf: sp<1kesman Jack Campbell said ( ampbell said the lir'>t lc'>l code named ·· "1 111 Yard .. v.a<, detonated at I 40 pm PDT. I 220 let.'t beneath the surface ot 1hc mesa The second test. codenamed "Diamond Beech v.a<, nploded cil .i ~(J pm at a depth of 1.320 f~t Slaln Beatle honored In Central Park NEW YORK -Dogwoods came from Monaco. birches from the So' 1et Union and maples from Canada. but the cheer\ came straight from the heart at lhe opening of what John Lennon'!> "''dov. called "an international garden of peace ... a growmg monument" to the slain former Beatie The transformation of 2.S-acrcs of Central Park from a neglected eroded meadov. "1s our wa-. of taking a sad song and making It better .. 't 0 1..o Ono '>31d V. cdncsda\. borrov.1ng a line from the Beatie\' song "He' Jude · Polyester Bed Pillows The st' 'landard .. 1zr bt-d p"I""'' ha' t a bt>au11ful "'h1t1· nn wh1lt' nn 1rnn p111\ 111• '" ,m•f'r w11h t'f'\l un t·t!iz1n11 arid AP' ma. h1n • "'~i.hablt> $18 11alue 12 Piece Placemat Sets Choo'!' from our t;ibulnu' ullt• llun •t d!'\1~11er pnn1 And 'olid, •• 1111 qu1ltr c1 pl<1n•m<1I 'fl' ~ a1 h 't't '"' 'uc11'' 4 f.1hrt placemal' 4 labri. napkin' ~nd 4 napkin nngi. S25 11atue Soindle Flatware ru1 A""'" l<'.j\ into vour ratmR ,.,1th 1hr'<' • nlnrlul \tlvrr,..arr b\ "na1 apa Thr 20 p1f'1 f stainproof '<'l ~ervrs four ~oplr and 1, gu1ranlet'd to br d1shwuhf'r ~arr and nonbreakable $20 value .. 9.99 Server Complt'tl' woh II ' own tlea•nt &lilt\ lop th1~ h1ndrr11ft1"d ttakwoocl ( h('He M-rvrr add• lhr l)C'rfl"r t tourh In an)' labl<' S10val~ -VISA -•• I A8 * Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thunday, October 10, 1886 WoRlO Tenth spy case suspect arrested in W. Germ.any By TIM AaMCla&ed Prn1 BONN, West Germany -An official ofa oeo-Nazj National Oemocra11c Pany hu been arrested on suspicion of spyin1 for communist East Germany, officiala. said today. The announcement marks the 10th espionaae case made public stoce a ICC_rt:tary to Bonn's economics minister fled to East Germany 10 early August. Chief federal ~osecutor Kurt Rebmann said today that the 34- year-old merchant from Heilbronn, whose name was not disclosed. was IJT'Clted on Monday and that an cspionaae investiption had t>eaun Cruise ship pirates sent out of Egypt - Baby amoag late•t rioting victim• JOHA.~ESBURO, South Africa -Three blacks, includin• a 3-week· o!d baby, died 10 attacks apparently mounted by other blacks as anu-apartheid v1olen~ flared up across South Africa, police said today. The deaths reported by police today nused the number of blacks reported killed in the past 24 hours to five. Soccer team •• loa •park• fan•• brawl LEICESTER, EnaJand -Soccer fans hurlina gasoline bombs and rocks fo.u~t street battles with 300 police officers after the Leicester team was elimu~ated as a contender in tournament play. A police spokesman said b~wlina sp~d over several streets near the stadium where the Wednesday ruaht match wt th Derby County was played. Queen begln• Caribbean tour In Belue BELIZE CITY, Belize -This former British colony, a tiny oasis ofycace on the edge of troubled Central America, rolled out the red caq>et for Queen E~~~th.ll We~nesday as she ~n a 26-day Caribbean tour. Her three-<:tay v111t 1s Blmed to part at showtng support for the commonwealth nation formerly kru>wn as Bnush Honduras. Congre•• OKs $250 mUllon for Afghan . WAS~ING1:0N-:--Prcsi~ent Reaaan, with only weeks remaining until his summit mee11ng wit~ SoVJct leader Mikhail GQrbachcv, has persuaded ~onarcss .to sc~retly pro~1de som~ $250 million in additionaJ covert military aid to ant1-Sov1et rebels 1 n Afaharustan, Senate sources say. The money will be u~ to ~uy large quanuucs oiammunition, small arms, arena. de launchers and ant1·h~hcopter air defense wea~ns one source said. "It will el'lable them to reple.nish t.he1r stocks," he sa.1d. "ks a one-time -~plcnishmcnt. There 1s nothmg being tntroduced that 1s brand new or espcaally esoteric." Leon Klln&hoff er Friends say victim fought only for health NEW YORK (AP) -Leon KJ1ngh otTer who was killed by the h1Jaclcers of the .\ch1 lle Lauro, was a whcclchn1r-bound former owner of an appliance compan}' who con: t1nued working despite a stroke that had paralyzed his right side, friends said. Friends described the New Yorker as "a fighter" who struggled to recover from o ne stroke, then another. with the de votion of Marilyn KJ1nghofTer. 58. his wife of 36 years. IUin$.hofTer. 69. who was Jewish, was killed Tuesday by the four hij'ackers and thrown into the Mcd1- tcrranean from the Italian lu.xury hner a day after 11 was commandeered ofT the coast of Egypt. Our Business Degree pro~am offers you an intangiDle bonus. Time. T,me •S 1mportan1 to career-minded people We 'h•rik t ~ so 1mportan1 10 •he working adult that we created a new concept 1n class scheduling -the one·course·a·montfl study plan It takes iust a few minutes to register tor evening classes that you an oeg•n any month of the vear at any of our <1nven•en1 1ocat1ons The Bac.h elor of Business Administration 1BBA1 1eqree JJrogram offers vou the concepts and skills necessary 10 compete ,,, tOr1d, s ·p., t or1en1ed business environmenr -on o _,.,.,., s~11ed,JIP ,u-. can live w ith Our 11itens1ve deyree wruyram encompasses all the in1egrc11 Ous ness .omporien•s -marketing accou1111ng ,nformdl on svstems Our highly Quahf1eo 111srruc1ors dre JISO prat'•C. ny experts 1n rheir f1e1ds Ca d ... o .rse101 di the learning cenrer nearest vou The BBA degrH The tune 11 now Nadonal University ORANGE COUNTY Accredited t>v Westem Asaoc11t1on ol Scnools and < n11ege~ Irvine 1714 1 851·4300•0range f71 4J 851·4352 •El Toro 1714185 7 1/78 Loa Al1m1to1 171 4) 851·4356 or 12131594-4 714 Four reportedly turned over to PLO: Reagan demands they be prosecuted PORT SAID, Eaypt (AP)-Presi- dent Hosni Mubarak said today the four hijackers who seized an Italian cruise liner with more than 500 people aboard have left E&Yl>t and were the responsibility of ilie PLO, but there was a growing conflict about their whereabouts. The Palestine Liberation Orpniza- tion has not confirmed it has custody of the pirates, who arc accused of killina an American Jew durina their two-day seizure of the Achilce Lauro to the Mediterranean Sea. PLO Chairman Vasser Arafat, to an inter- view on ABC's "Good Morning Amen ca," said the hijackers were "under the Egyptian authorities' con- trol." Mubarak said the hi.Jackers may be m Tunisia, site of the PLO head- quarters. The White House said it was not certain where the sea pirates were. President Rcapn caJled on the PLO today to carry out appropriate punishment apinst the hi.Jackers. If Arafat "believes that their or- pnization ... can bring them to justice and carry that out all right," Reagan told reporters after he landed in Chicago on a flight from Washinaton. Some of the former hosta&cs this afternoon bcpn leavin& the blue and white cruiser, which steamed into Port Said early thi1 mornina. nine houn after the hijackcn surrendered Wednesday. Up to Sil people, in- cludina an estimated dozen Ameri- cans, were held hostqc. Thirteen Swiss adults and a Swiss child entered a motor launch with their luuaac and sped away, joyously wavina red Swiss passportl to fellow p&SSClllCl"S watchina and wavin& from the railinas. Mubarak told reporters in Cairo that Egypt allowed the hijackers to leave Wednesday niJbt on the basis of a report by the ship's captain that cvery~y aboard was unharmed. Officials later learned the armed pirates had killed Leon K.Jin&)loffer, a 69-ycar-old partially paralyzed man from New York City. "If the captain had told us that a passcnacr had been killed, we would have changed our position toward the whole operation. But when this (IUinahoffcr's murder} emeraed, we already had sent the hijackers out of the country," Mubarak said. ~er he met today with leaders of Hedgecock guilty; must leave office, may enter prison SAN DIEGO (AP)-Mayor Roger Hcd~ecoclc, who has never lost an elccuon, will be out of office next month and possibly in Jatl as a convicted felon. Hedgecock was convicted Wednes- day. of 13 counts of conspiracy and pe1Jury for plotting with political backers to illeplly finance his 1983 ele<:t1on. He also was convicted of covering up the plot by lying on statc- mandated political disclosure fonns. Hedgecock, 39, will be sentenced Nov. 6, a year to the day after be won overwhelm mg re-election as mayor of the nation's eighth-largest city. He was re-elected despite betng under 1nd1ctmcnt. HONEYMOO!f? AJflflV!RSARY? BDmmAY? ISC&PI 10 1890 MO,PnL~OJ IROCHUU (714) 793-7970 "I think he's been an excellent mayor for this city, and he has promoted proarcssivc politics. I'm sorry that h.c has to ao. It's a real loss for the city of San Dicao," City Councilman Mike Gotch said. Hedae<:ock, visibly shaken by the verdict, told reporters he hasn't de<:idcd whether be will resign or challenge the state law that requires his ouster. "... Right now, I'm unprepared, frankly, to answer any questions, or to ,act into any other matters," be said. Hcdaccock said he would hold a news conference in a day or two to answer "the obvious qucsuons." Hedgecock faces a maximum RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY INC. for The R11t of Your Life 1922 HARBOR BLVD .• COSTA MESA-548·1156 ---19 - ~w liM sl I Ill ~ef. ~ i ~ &3 Iii AMERICAN YOSEMITE ENO RA VINO, CIBCA 1860 !~·~ I, @(_lJJTW (]. e ~ Interest checking just got more intetesting. '.\< 1\\ ti m H 1gh C )<. C< >her. the AmeriGU1 ~.1,111g~ ,\t~cmnurn Checking account ofier.., l '\.l't1 111ore 1h.u1 i ntere~t income .ind rn H.: ol the.: lo\\<:..,t minimum halancc: 1t·ql11re111t·nt--111 rht· ..,tatc7 Bec.1L1..,l'. 111 tl '< < >gn i lion o t o ur r en tL·rn11.ll ht·rL· 111 <..t1tlorn1.1. WL~·re offenn~ Ill '\Y and l''""1111g 1 mcrL·..,t t hecking ace< lUnt ® ( u..,tc >Iller.., 100 free chl'c:k.., •• .. H111 not 1u..,t an\· chet k.., • Al11l'fl<:.U1 ~:.t\1n~.., h ~L.., c:ommissiunL'd a .... erie.., < 11 le >Ur u 1111111L'lll oratin? check..,, featuring JOO yl':tr (>kl li ne art cngr.1,·ing~ < >t impc >n~1111 landm.trk.... 1n Califomia\ )(>~em i te ~ational P~u·k. '!ht·\ ..,ymbo!J1e the maj< >r cc >mmitllll'lll tli.tt .111 < )f u.., .tt Amenr;m s~" i ng.., h,1, t' m,tdc ti 1 help rl'..,tOrt' 'tb..,L·mite tu ib on.~111,tl ... l.tll' \X.(;>'re .i.l~> maki ng .l\·~u l.1hlt· .1 "Pl'i.. t,il edition Y<lsemite p<>..,ter h\· rddx:nt·d nature..· photowaphcr (,cor8e F1-..ke It ... yours Jt Alncril;m ~4J\ing-.. f()r .1 don.1t1nn < 1f $2 < >r nH l f l', which in tum v.ill be dnn.ued to thL· Y< >~emite Return ot Li~ht rc..,toratio n ca mpaign. So that you, tcX), can hdp keep the 1-(<>lden ~tate shining fi lr ,1nothcr JOO vcars. And that\ certainlv of great 1merest to all Californians. · AMERICAN SAVINGS AND lOAt'J A.SSOOATION his ruJina NationaJ DcmOCTacy Party, Mubarak questioned whether Klinahoffcr had been murdered. "There is no body and no proof he bad been murdered. ... Maybe the man was in hidina or did not board the ship at all," be said in remarks transmuted by the state-owned Middle East News Aaency. Klinahoffcr's widow Marilyn, 58, was the first fonner hostage to step off the ship, which was moored in Port Said harbor. The luxury liner had been anchored several miles off the harbor when the pirates surrendered. It could not be determined where Mrs. Klinghoffer was taken or why she left the ship, but she returned after about 30 minutes ashore. In the Tunisian capital, Arafat told reporters Wednesday night the or- pnization had asked EIYJ>t to sur- render the hijackers to it ioijudgmcnt and punishment. The foreign Ministry said that at S: 10 p.m. Wednesday (8: 10 a.m . PDT) the terrorists surrendered to representatives of the PLO and were taken to the Port Said NavaJ Base. U.S . Ambassador Nicholas Veliotes, who boarded the ship Wednesday to invcstipte the inci- dent, had insisted that Egypt pros- ecute the hijackers. Roter Bectcecock prison term of e1aht years. Pro~ ecutors would not discuss what, 1f any, scntcncina recommendation they will make to Superior Court Jud&e William Todd. Duke claims Bradley f alslfies inf ormatton SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Gov. Gcorac Deuk..mejian says Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley "misstates the facts" and "completely falsifies infor- mation" when they communicate. After lceynotina the 87th con- ference Wednesday of the League of California Cities, the Republican governor accused Bradley of fai Ii ng to cooperate in putting a state prison in Los Anacles. Democrat Bradley, who narrowly lost the aovcrnorship to DcukmeJian 1n 1982, is assumed to be Oeu- lcmejian' s principal re-elec tion chaJlcnger an 1986. He was in Chile WedncS:day on a Port of Los Angeles trade m1ss1on. Lottery en th ustasm may speed up games SA ~RAME N TO . (AP) - Enthusiasm for the California lottery might advance the opening of the second game and the first grand-prize drawina for up to S2 may be held earlier than Oct. 28, officials say. The lottery was to finish its first week at 12:30 p.m. today with unprecedented sales between $80 million and $90 milJion. OfficiaJs said Wednesday that the $77.3 million in sales so far would &ive schools $26 million and players about $38.S million in prizes. USC dean dis missed without explanation LOS ANGELES (AP) -Without explanation, University of Southern California President James Zumberge fired the vice president and dean of the College of Letters Arts and Sciences. ' Irwin Lieb, who came to USC m 1981 from the University of Texas at Au~tin, said he refused a request to resllJl and wu abruptly fired this week without an explanation. Korean government sponsorlngL.A. TV? W ASHINOTON (AP)-The Fed- eral Communications Commias1on has been uked to invcstipte allqcd- ly illepl sponsorship of Korcan- lanauatt proJJ'lmmina on a Los Anacin area TV station by the South Korean~ IQVernmenl The Korean-American Free Prest C.ommiuce fi&cda com~laint with the FCC Wcdncaday uk.ina the com· minion to order kSCi~TV. licenled to San Bcmardino, C..lif.1 to identify the produccnof0CT1ain s.oowu.nd to consider whether the station'a liccnae should be revoked. FCC requires stations to identify ahow sponson and thote provid.ina material in cxchanac for air time. ---·--------t ---------------------------------------------------------~~----- I • , Orange Coa.11 DAILY PILOT/Thureday, October 10, 1M5 A'P UC Irvine biggest ~on-profit fund raiser in county By PHIL SNEIDERMAN OflMO.., .......... Which non-profit Orange County entity raised the most money over the past year? The United Way of Orange Coun. ty? The Orange County Performing Ans Center? Not quite. When it came to community fund- raising, no group an Orange County topped UC Irvine during the 1984-85 school year. UCl officia ls say. The university has claimed the distinction of becomin$ the county's largest fund-raising entity, thanks to about 6.000 alumni and friends who donated S 18. 7 million to the campus dunng the 1984-85 term. The fund-raising results were an- nounced by John R. Miltner, vice chancellor for university advance- ment. He said UCI donations surpassed the previous year by $3 million and 500 additional donors. "We attribute this increase in private contributions to the univer- sity largely to the growing rela- t10nsh1p between the university and the community," Miltner said. One of the key ~ipicnts of community funds was the UCI Foun- dation for the Donald Bren Events Center. Almost $3.8 miUion in pri· vate donations was received for this facility. which is now underconstru<:.- t1on and will house UCJ athletic and cultuntl events open to the communi- ty. Uther private grants from individ- uals, corporations and foundations were earmarked for specific research areas. The largest sum, $8.4 million, wt'nt to the UCJ College of Medicine. Next was the School of Biological Sciences, S 1.5 million; the School of Engineer· mg. $1 .4 million; and the Dcpanmcnt of Information and Computer Sci- ences, $798,000. Last year's increase in UCI Annual Fund pledges earned the campus a Silver Medal for Improvement in Fund Raising from the council for Advancement and Support of Educa- tion. ThP I TCI ~ nnw1I Fund, whic h County executive given professor post at UC Irvine By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of IM Oellr Not lt.n Raymond L. Watson. who has held top posts with the Irvine Co. and Walt 01$ney Productions. will be sharing his business knowledge with UC Irvine students this school year as a Regents' Professor in UC l's Graduate School of Management. Watson has served as president of the Irvine Co .. the county's largest landowner and developer. and as board chairman of Wall Disney Productions. Currently. Watson heads the executive committee of the Disney board of directors and sits on the boards of the Irvine Co., Pacific Mutual Life Insurance. and Mitchell Development and Energy Co . .. We are extremely pleased to welcome Ray Watson to UCI," said Newton Margulies. dean of the man- agement school. "His knowledge about business, real estate and the inner workings of corporate boards will be beneficial to both students and faculty." UC'I officials said Watson is one of only two regents' professors serving 1n the UniversityofCalifornia system this year. Such professorships, desig- natedby the UC Board of Regents, are designed to bring distinguished people from non-academic fields to the campus. An honoranum was provided for his services, but Watson elected to return the payment to the university. a UC'I spokesman said. The businessman is recognized for his role in shaping the general plan of the 83,()()()..acre city oflrvine while at the Irvine Co. He joined the firm in 1960 as manager of its planning department. In his role as a regents' professor. Watson will conduct a public lecture to discuss the expectations he had for Irvine and how the cityhaslived up to those expectations. The program, entitled "The City of Irvine -Dreams vs. Reali•· " 1s scheduled for Nov. 19 in the Li ver- sity Club at UCI. During the winter quarter, Watson will oversee a seminar on the chang- NEWS NOTES Coastline registration Reg1strat1on 1s under way for 150 nine-week classes that will be offered by Coastline College. beginning in the week of Oct. 21. The courses run through the week of Dec. 16. Coastline classes are offered at neighborhood locations throughout Costa Mesa. Newpon Beach. Garden Grove, Huntington Beach. Fountain Valley, Seal Beach and Westminster. Information on how to register for the nine-week classes can be obtained by calling the college's Admissions Offi ce, 241 -6176. BolA Cblca J 0-K The 6th annual "Running for t he Birds" benefit IOK run and SK walk are scheduled at 8:30a.m. Saturday at Bolsa Chica State Beach in Hunt- ington Beach. Registration is available the morn- ing of the race. Free beach parking will be provided to contestants arriv- ing before 8 a.m. The ftt is S I 0 for a shirt and S 5 without. For more information, call the Amigos de Bolsa Chica en- vironmental orp.nization, 897· 7003. B1Toroao1• Officials at the Marine Corps Air Stations in El Toro and Tustin said noise levels aenerated from the two l~tions are eitpected to incrusc thro uah Oct. 1 l because of field carrier landina practi~. mg nature of the board room, drawing on his own experience as a board member with several major com- panies. In the spring. Watson will coordi- nate a national conference at UC!, focusing on investment and real estate development. As P.art of his professorship, Way- son will meet regularly with manage- ment school graduate students and will attend faculty meetings. solicits unres1ncted donauons trom alumni. parents of students, UC'l seniors and the community, became a year-round effort for the first-time last year and generated nearly a 460 percent increase 10 funds over the previous year, campus officials said. In a prepared statement, Chancellor Jack Peltason said UCI. which opened in 1965, was initially more concerned about developing its internal structure. In recent years, the campus has turned more of ns attention toward meeting the needs of the surrounding community as well, he said. The chancellor said the result has been improved commun11 y aware- ness and financial suppon for the campus. "UCl's development and increas- ing prestiee as one of the nation's leading universities affect the prestige of the entire community," Peltason said. "We feel that the remarkable outpouring of support we have re- ceived form the community this year indicates a growing_ understandmg of 5mg the mutual benerns that can be attained through a strong relationship between the un1vers1ty and the com- munity.'' To enhance us ues to tht' com · munity UCI established its Board of Overseers in 1982. The board 10- eludes I 0 OranJC County leaders who adv11t 1~ UCI adman1strarion and matkn 10volving the campus and the community. Board members include WaJter Gerken. board chairman of Pacific Mutual Life Insurance; DonaJd Bren, board chainnaft of the Irvine Co.; Donald K.oU, board cbainnan of lhc KoU Co., Dr. Amo&d Beckman. vice chairman of the board ofSmitbkline Beckm an Corp.; and Heor/. Sesentrom, maoaaina partner ofC. . Settntrom and Sons. ·:1: Our New ~~ ~-- ·~r .i~It~·~-:~rt_. ·~~~~ . ~ .. ' -•"''· .~-i~~· at South Coast Plaza Now Open If you've v1st1ed the November Christmas Fantasy at Rogers C..rdens Center during previous holiday seasons, then you're awue of the bt>autiful and exciting magic of Christmas you'll find. And 1f you're interested In shopping for your holiday gifts and home decor early, take adv;iintage of the tremen- dous selection you'll find now at our South Coast Plaza shop Our selection of ornaments, gifts and decor inc' fi,.. • 50,000 unique imported ornament& from G er- many, Auatria and Italy. • One of a kind table piecea •Decorative wreathe, cuatom created at RoSen Gardena Celebrity Tree-Nov. 15th only at Roeera Gardena You can admire and purchase over 200 s1gn;11ure ornaments donated by celebrities like Bob Hope, Christie Brinkley and Tom Selleck. All proceeds go to the Naitol'lal Society for Preven- tion of Child Abuse. Now is lowest. ·By US. Gov't. testing method. Stt. Anne Lanon said the tcsU will be conducted at the El Toro site today and Friday from 7 a.m. to I a .m . and Saturday from 9 a.m. to I a.m. The Tustin atation will be invohed 1n the training flights Friday from 7 a.m. to 2 a.m • Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous 10 Your Health. NOW THE l OWf ST Of AU BRANDS SOFT PACK IOOs fl lHR MENTHOi 3 mq 1ar 0 J mQ niro1111r IV. pet Ctglrttte bv FTC me1hod __ ,,.._ __ ._.,__,!!"""--·--------~----___ ....... __ ..,.... _____ ----------------... ----------------······················-- 0... DAILY PILOT!Thureday, October 10, 198& Smoke alarms are cheap way to ensure safety It's National Fire Prevention Week and it didn't come any too soon because we have been flirting with disaster. Already this week., two blazes were reported in Huntington Beach. In one, a.n heroic college student scaled a wall and tore through a screen door to rescue a 56-year-old woman and her 2-year-old granddal1$htcr. The young man, Dennis Atencio, helped avert a tragedy. Nonthelcss the consequences weren't minor. The woman was badly burned and she remains in critical condition. The child suffered smoke inhalation and two others, including a fire captain, were hurt. Damage to the house and its contents were estimated at $85,000. · The same day, an elderly woman and her housekeeper led another woman out of her flaming apartment to safety. She suffered minor injuries. It could have been much worse, except that the fire triggered a smoke alarm. It's a good lesson. Fire officials will tell you that buying and installing a smoke alarm is the cheapest and best way to protect the your life and that of your family. For $10, you can help ensure that you will be alerted before it's too late. It's a good investment when weighed against the cost of a human life, or even a $100,000 home. National studies show that most deaths in fires occur because of inhaling smoke, toxic gases or other harmful byproducts of fires and that most fires take place in the early-morning hours, when people are likely to be sleeping. In other words, without a smoke alarm, you might wake up dead. There are several other ways to improve fire ~fety around the home, including checking electrical ~rds, putting matches in a safe place and paying attCfition while smoking. Do yourself a favor. Buy a smoke alarm and visit your local fire station. Many are hosting open houses this week. Ask the firefighters for information on how to avoid a tragedy. They much prefer meeting people on those terms. It's too late for lessons when your home is afire. ·'The CBS '60 Minutes· people did an extraordJnary service last Sunday night by presenting a portrait of an AIDS-afflicted family (n which homosexuality was not Involved. " ilNOW WAIT JUST ONE SECOND, HEAEI ... ISN'T THAT MY GUN YOU'RE USING?! ... " Tests to detect AIDS don't discriminate against gays Blood tests already part of marriage license process -why not AIDS test? The CB.5 "60 M inutes" people did an extraordinary service last Sunday night by presenting a portrait of an AIDS-afflicted family in which homosexuality was not involved. T he young man was a hemophiliac, and throughout ~s lifetime had received blood transfusions. At one point one of these transfusions brought him AIDS blood from a homosexual who, presumably, did not know at the time he appeared as a donor that he was a c.arrier. The man marries.. and his wife conceives. In due course there ap. pears a little boy. visibly disfigured. He is suffering fro~AIDS -trans- mitted by his mother. She has man volunteered that, alter all, Alu~ has nothinJ to do with ho mosexuality -"it's a v1rus that carries AIDS," not the homosexual. There is there a half truth, which is put into perspecttve if you say that it is gravity, not the parachutist, who 1s to blame for the rate of mortaJity among sky divers. WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY he was a earner, he would either not have married, or else. having mar- ned, he'd have arranged not IO bear children. and -1f such a thing is possible -to guard duri ng tnter· course agaanst contamination of his spouse· either that. or marned celibacy. WILLIA.II' BUCKLEY colamn!at COMMENTARY Travail plagues DooDah Parade By STEVE FREEMAN .. For we of The Dull Men's Club of Newport Beach to be confronted with a bard nut dilemma is trying stuff indeed. perhaps overwhelming. We will march again this year in the Pasadena Doo Dah Parade. But Erma Dombeck will lead the Pasadena Rose Parade. Why is this so significant? So traumatic to us? The Doo Dah Parade. occurring a month before the Rose Parade. has been a loose, jolly, comedic event. Never X-rated, but then again rarely breaching "R," (Yes.. there have been occasaonarzealots and demonstrator groups, but they're casually over- looked.) · The Rose Parade -the other side of the coin -as the extravaganza of the city fathers. Matter of fact, years a10 in the days when households bad only one television set, the parade caused considerable in-house ctis- cord. Bowl games. which the m ale rabidly wishes to see. began on the East Coast very early in the rporning and -in 11me-interlockmg pro- gression -moved westward. cul- minating an late afternoon with the Rose Bowl. However. turmoil wa~ ever present, with the lady of the house pressuring determinedly for the Rose Parade channels that fouled up the football games when her W1Shes won out. The only true winners were the TV manufacturers: Undoubtedly the two-TV home was born of these fracases. . contracted. from conjugal union with --------------------------~ her husband, the AIDS Related But what is greatly cased by gently removing the problem of AIDS from the problem of homosexual promi~ cuity is the problem of addressing general questions of hygiene. health and protection. Wlthout appearing to be invidious. For a while. the only siJns of battle against AIDS were pictures of empty gay bathhouses in San Francisco. But gay bathhouses in San Francisco are of no concern to a rising number of straight men. and women, who arc being exposed to AIDS, and of children who inhent the disease. We have word from an ansuranc~ carrier in the Middle West that 11 1s instructing its agents quietly to in- vestigate "the llfestyles" of apphcants for health insurance. OK. But why not permit the insurance companies to be more direct. and to insist on a blood test aimed at establishing whether applicants have AIDS? Erma Dombeck 1s an absolutely superb humorist: accordangly, tn quite a departu re. the theme of the Rose Parade is to be "A Celebration of Laughter." But ho w in the world can they swing 1t? If Erma were si mply to deliver a series of mono- logues It would be hilarious -but what would they do with all those nubile Rose Queens on those ornate floats? Silent desperation's tough for dentists to put up with Highest su1c1de rate among all professionals occurs among dentists. You've read that. What's exhausting, some denllsts say, is not so much the hard physical labor -and good dentistry requires that -as the '"vibes" from the patients. It's ex- traordinarily difficult to absorb the tcmble tensions transmitted every hour of every day by silent desperate anxious people. The population 1n Singapore 1s advised to say .. please" and "thank you" 10 August. That's official Courtesy Month there. Do you know anybody named Chang? If not, maybe you don't get out much. People named Chang worldwide outnumber the entire 1p<>pulations both of G reat Bntaan and Canada combined. The law in London, England, makes 11 11lcgal there 10 dnve a car with a dent 1n the fender. The brass that ran the gambling casinos an Las Vegas and Reno saw 10 11 that prostitution was outlawed 1n those two places. Client asks, Why there and no t elsewhere 1n Nevada Because re~.uch revealed the tounsts gambled a lot more money, 1f the husbands brought their waves. In the e.xtract1on of money from banks. the stat1st1cs suggest that embezzlers get twice as much as robbers. 0 Why arc some babies so scared of the dark? lnstinct? A. Not according 10 the ei1;per1s. Dark is what happens naht after they're put down and left alone. They learn to fear and hate ll Q . ('hina dunng our Nixon ad min· 1strat1on give us two pandas. What did we gjvc China? A. Couple of musk o.xen. lncaden· tally, a musk ox does not cat lake a horse: it eat5 much more than a hon( if it can ,et it. Turned loose an lush pasture. it would aorae uselfto death. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat sure enough. Of course, a horse, too. wiU cat until its hooves fall off. h 's a matter of record that the federal government once com- missioned a $27.000 study to find out why inmates want to break out of jail. l.) I ~nov. v. here .. The Whttt.' Hou~" 15. but where's "The Blue House" and .. The Pink House'"} A. ..The Blue House" 1s South Korea ·s pres1dent1al mansion. ··The Pink House" 1san Argentine museum which used to be the chief executive''> mansion there Might mention 11 was paantC'd pink because the leader of the da> thought 11 appropnatc to com- t11nc the two political parties' sym- holll· rnlor\. red and white <).Birds and reptiles have only one body opening for both elim1nat1on and rcproduc11o n . .\re any mammals like 1hal'' A Onlv two -the platypus and the '>pin~ anteater \ man ac1.·1dcntf\ was locked in a refngerat0r car 11' would soon be O\er. he knew 1t He c;cnbhled at length at>ou1 his impending death, then dtd indeed die within two days Thoc;c who soon found him also found the refngerat1 on hadn"t been turned on and there was plenty of oxygen for survival The man had feared h1mc;clf 10 death A common parable. th1'i. You are what }'OU think you are. Ele\.ator., compn~ 1he largest ma')S trani.1t sy'item in 1he world. But what ~art of conveyor\ make up the wnrld\ largest mas'i transit syste m that onh opcnllc!> fi v<' day~ a week,, ~hoot buse\ T ht· four largl''il Mo'>lcm n:111on' 1n the world are Indonesia, Pak i~tan. Bangladesh and Indio Wha1 ·~ tht fifth? Say the ~v1ct Union "Rhcxlodendron" •~ from tht (,reek for "ro~ tree .. L.M. Boyd 11 • 1yodlc•IN ~l•mallt. Frenk ZJnl £<1i1or Tom Teft MenllQlnO EdllOf Don,.-, Ctr, Edlloo Cr .. .._.. \clOrl. '""°' Complex (ARC). Such records as there are give her a 75 percent chance of surv1V1ng. The baby has AIDS. pure and sample. The program direc- tor does not announce the medical prognosis, but of course it is well known at this point. As mentioned , the mother has a 75 percent chance of survival, but will be a carrier of Al OS until, if ever, a cure is discovered . The father will die, and the child will die. T he breakthrough accomplished by "60 Minutes" is the removal of the entire medical problem from the question of hom osexuality. This is important because much of the tension surrounding AJDS has to do with the larger question of homosex- ual nghts. One figure in the "60 Minutes" sequence complamcd that the government has only gal interested an AIDS now that it 1s spreadin~ to non-homosexuals, his point being that nobody particularly cares if AIDS fells homosexuals -an euggerated point. The same gentle- A number of suggestions have been made. The most profligate, it would seem, is one that calls for a nationaJ blood test. If such a test were to identify t he 2 million (that is the estimate) Americans who have been infected. what then would we do? It would not be possible to police their activity. The test would have only the benefit, and it is a significant benefit. of alerting individual Americans that they are carriers. Whether they would then restrict their own acttvity to avoid any nsk of contamination of others would seem to be entirely up to them. But short of the macrocoi.m1c approach. other stratagems now begin to make sense. Surely 1f ovu the generauons we have got used to a Wassermann test before a mamage license 1s issued, we can get used to an AIDS test also? lf the young man pictured in "60 Minutes" had known --i1J1ii@U·Jti ~ M·H.WM ObJections will of course be heard. from AIDS sufferers and from the bleeding-heart community. But the practical point surely is that an insurance company is entitled to such informatton as it reasonably needs in order to SCI reahs11c rates. AIDS sufferers should be given medical care. but it isn't the responsibility of pnvate carriers to undertake in- ordinate burdens whe n there are reasonable means of avoiding them. If earners can set premiums for dnvcrs wtth some reference as to whether they drank alcoholic beverages, earners have the right to give coverage wtth some reference as to whether the applicant has con- tracted a mortal disease. So: AIDS is a full-blown problem. And to suggest ways of 1dent1fyan1 its v1ct1ms 1s not an 1nv1d1ous ven ture an gay-baiting. W/Jll•m Buctlty /1 a 1yr1dlca1ed colama/11. Convicted Belize official says he was set up by DEA Decision against herbicide called reason for action WASHINGTON -First there was Abscam. Then John DeLorean Now EhJIO Bnc~no. Who? "Joe" Bnceno is the former man1s-- ter of commun1cat1ons and energy 1n the tjny Central Amencan country of Beltze who was recently sentenced to seven yea.rs in a federal pcrutcnuary for drug smuggling. Like DeLorcan and the ABSCAM defendanu, Bnccno claims he was a victim of entrapment by federal undercover agents. Bnceno's "DeLorcan defense" didn't save ham at his trial in North C~rolina in August. but his attorney, Reber Soult. is plannina to appeal. Why would Drua Enforcement Admanmration qcnts set up a Cen· tral Amcncan Cabinet minister for a faJI? "Mr Bnocno was 1n panicular d1sfavorw11h the DEA because he had been inmumental 1n his aovcm· ment'sdectsion not to carry on a DEA proaram. the aenal sprayina of the poisonous bcrblCldc paraquat,·· bis lawyer told our U50Ctalc Donald Gold~ The aerial spr1yina of paraqu11 10 kill manJuana pla.nu hu Iona bten controven.-1. both fot environmental reasons and because the plants arc often harvested, pro- ce-sscd and sold with the poisonous rn1due. Bnoeno admittedly didn't enter anto his dcaltngs with undercover a.gents in innocence. His attorney said Briceno intended to "rip off' the Americans who said they wanted to buy marij uana and cocaine from him -a ploy Boult conceded was "not pai:ticularly honorable." But Briceno msists he never intended to supply them with drugs, and in fact he didn"t. He was arrested when he flew to Miami to pick up an advance pay- ment from the supposed dope deal- ers. Here arc the main points Briceno makes to suppon his claim thac he was entrapped by DEA qents: •Neither Bnccno nor his as- sociates ever proV1ded drup to the a1tnts. The closest they came was when a rclat1ve of Bnoeno's in Beh2e showed the ait:nts a sack that was said tO contain manjwina. •Briceno never demonstrated the abdity to tniffic •~•fully in dflll.'· In fact , he wu sinaularly mc11t: At least fo ur au'ltrips he showed the und~over aaents at their request wett far too small to accommodate the supposed smugkn' planes. He promiaed tO have an adequate run- way built. but then cl&Jmcd thlt a buDdour had broken down -a stalhna tactic that showed he ncvCT intended to ao thtouah Wlth the ck.al, ac.cordtna to h11 1u omey. •Only two of the 18 telephone calls between Belize and the DEA in the United States were initiated by Bnceno. In one taped conversation, a DEA qent, calling from Nonh Caro- li na. said: "When can you meet me in Mia.mi? Or anywhere1 I don't care as long as we can get this thin' over with. Can you do it Mo nday night? Mon- day afternoon? Tuesday? WC<ines- day? Thursday?" Bnccno refused the aacnt's im· ponunangs. •Lending sub5tance to Bnccno·, chaflC of a setup, the government admitted that undercover agcnl1 always encountered difficulty with Belize dope dealers, who insisted on partial payment in advance. The federal aacnts always refused to pay up front, but they bent the rules for Briceno. agrc<:ina to pay him $32,400 in advance -if he came to Miami to collect 11. That'~ when they nabbed him . Briceno hke Dclorean, had massive financial problems stem- mina from the fa.m1ly business: an his cue. sugar cane. So when the under- cover aae~ danaJcd easy cash in front of his nose. he bit. Footnote Federal prosecutors d1s- m1u 8riccno's claim that he wu 11mply tryina to "np off" Lhe DEA aacnts. J,ct A.IHI~,.,,.. m J...,. S,..r •r.'lyadjc.IH t"fll81JJ11hb.. How do you inculcate laughter into such a scenario? W ith clowns and tum blers? Wtth parading midgets? With break dancers swinling in the streets? Consider, let us say, the cit y of Pixley, Calif. with its float COrfl· mcmorating the opening of the Peavy Canal. (There is no such waterway. The name is catchy. however.) Should the float carry a c.anncd laughter device such as 1s used in TV? And the Palo mino horses: Straight arrow if e ver I've seen such. Not a laugh in a stable fu ll. Burros and donkeys maybe; they can be funny. Or even. sorry as 11 can be, the two men 1n a horse costume. ~ut won't all thts impinge on the turf of us Doo Dahcrs? We were cast the funny people. Shall wechan$e our fo rmat? And to what? ... Therein lies our dilemma We mtg.ht go very straight - maybe with precision military ~rad­ ing with our people in Army uniform. We might try the sign-<:arry10g dem onstrators routine. But even this presents a problem in that all causes. no matter how questionable, and all known diseases have Iona been CSf><?USCd by fancy partying/fund- ra1sina/chanty gro ups. Even to the extent that they vie with one another and will block off any intruder threatening to move in on a pct charity. Alas. thert aren't enough diseases o r causes to meet the de- mand. But, eureka, l think I've got u i Establish our own disease or cause We could demonstrate for. say, The Rehabilitation of Muggers Reprd- less of Raoe. Sex or Creed, or perhaps Aid to Bag Ladies of Foreign fa trac- tion. Jn the event these issues have already been adopted by a group we would appreciate notifreation -an which case we will simply sulk at home and sullenly watch "A C'cl· ebration of laughter " Ste~• P'tvHmu 11 • Ne'WJIOrt Beacb bedlleumu. Comments welcome The Dally Pilot welcomes your opinions on mattera of public lntereat. Lettett and longer articles of commentary mu1t be afgned. They lhould be typed or ctearty written and eent to: L2TTIRI ~ tM ED"O~ Deir PW.. 80ll 1•, Coeta .....,c ..... Ple&M lnetude your ad- dr ... and tetepftone number IO W9 may wrify authOf'lhlp. LETTER S Right to dlsagree, sure: But no need £or nastiness Once again I must risk taking up my ballpo1ot against you who buy ink by the barrel. I know it's foolish, but I must. I don't thank that in all my years as a writer, editor or publisher have I ever read a more scumlous and outrageous attack as your editorial made against me on Sept. 16. Surely you must have someone left on your staff who can disavcc strongly without being so downnght nasty. If your readers will take a moment to stnp away all the names you called me and all the odious com~sons you made (Hitler. Mussolini, White Supremist, Super Patriot; come on now); if they strip away all of that, they will be left with the essence of your anger. You'reangrythat I would speak out in the Assembly against giving $750,000 of the taApayers' money to the Japanese American community to build a museum. I thought 1t was a WTongful expenditure of public funds I also spoke out two weeks before and voted against givmi millions for construction of the W1esenthal Holo- caust Museum. And I would oppose taxpayer money being given to any other group, including the Scotch Irish or Conservative Republican. Perhaps I should no t have used Marine Corps veterans paying for their own memorial after WW 11 as an example for the private sector to follow, but I did. I certainly did not say or imply anything derogatory about Japanese Americans. My votes and voice were raised and will conunue to be raised an defense of taxpayers. not in opposataon to any panicular race. religion or group. You're also angry because I've attacked Assemblyman Tom Hay- den. You call him an anti-war protestor; most veterans call ham traitor. Thousands of them have pleaded with me to help them force a vote on Hayden as our cons11tu llon demands. I intend to do so. Like it or not, the pleas of our veterans will be heard an January. What your whole editonal d1a1nbe really boils down to 1s that you don't like my being an outspoken. con- servative Republican. You made that clear before the election. You have written several editorials since. All but o ne attacked my political philosophy. You, have made your bias quite clear. You have every nght to express your dislike of me and other con- servative Republicans and your long- ing for representation by more liberal representatives:• But please. can't you try to do 1t in a more sophisticated, intelligent and urbane manner? I'm sure that the irony and hypoc- nsy of your editorial chastising me for my harsh remarks. filled as 1t was from begi nning to end with the most outrageous name calling and shrill- ness. has not been lost on your readers and cnt1cs. G IL FERGUSON Assemblyman. 70th D1stnct Trustee defends education T o the Editor: John R. Patterson's tirade on teachers and principals in the opanion section of Sept. 20 shows that he "has a predisposition toward mediocrity coupled with a self centered and self serving set of philosophical ethics." Apparently he failed to get the facts on what school distncts, Super- intendent of Education Bill Honig and teachers themselves are doang to ensure accountability in educa11on and quality of what children arc learnang and unfortunately he flunked his school IQ test. lfhe would like to get educa ted. get an touch with me and I'll personally give him a tour and an introduction as to the changes that are currently t.aJung place in our educat1onal sys- tem on accountab1hty fro m the bottom up and the to p down. JIM DE BOOM Trustee. Mesa U nified School Dis- trict Help needed at CM teen center To the Editor: I am looking for a very wonderful person named Sandra Snr.der. You WTote a letter to the Daily Pilot a shon time ago asking about a teen center for Costa Mesa. We have one; the Costa Mesa Teen Center at Rea Community Center. Hamilton and Meyer. We are small -only 1.400 square feet and vef) crowded. We have had over 1.000 teenagers use the .center an over three years. We need your help and advice. Because of ill health, I have had to close a lot of times. Please contact me. VERA PIPER. D IRECTOR Costa Mesa Orange Cout DAIL v PILOT /Tnurlday, October 10, 1985 A8 Chlnese blood-lettlng blasted To the Editor: l>r thousunds -who had not killed The U.S. HouscofRepresent.au vcs anyone for 40 years -had finally happened to be cons1dennJ a foreign ended a1d bill during the recent VISlt of Red Yet. on July 23. all anyone had to China's President Lt X1annian do to apprehend an indtvlduaJ whoSt When Mr. L1 le.arned that an hands were mil dnpping witb the amendment to the measure dcscn bed blood of millio ns was to seiz.c the man Ch ma's populauon control policies as stand an& at a place of honor next to "cnmes against humanity," he the President of the United States 1n angrily complained of "an an ter-Wh H F ha M fcrence in China's internal affairs." the ite ousc or 5 me. r. Reagan! And he denied that China practiced Mr. Li also took the opponunaty to infanticide and forced abon1on, which was a baldfaced lie. condemn South Afnca for apanhe1d. This man has served the com-However, an ho nest person would munast cause in China for over SO place China. all commumst-con- As a member of the communica-years. He steadily rose to his current trolled nations, and a score or more ot tions media for 35 }'Cars I've ~rved pos1uoo dunng the years when the Afncan d1ctatorsh1ps far above South $12 parking fine excessive To the Eclltor. This 1s to protest -not the legitimacy but the bail dollar amount for - a parking ttcket in Laguna Beach. My wife and I are retired senior citizens surviving on a hm1ted in- come. Along with a daughter and son- in-law we were doing some modest shopping on Saturday, Sept. 14. While we were surprised to see that the parlung meters were in effect for weekends. we nevenheless put in the co ans. Returning to the car about seven minutes after the meter had e'tp1red. I was annoyed to see a park.1n$ t1ckct on the windshield. After lookrng at the citation. I was outraged! The bail was not $3 or $4 O'f $5, but -S 12. ume on a number of chambers of Chinese communist government o\fnca in the ..ale of horror •. I d slaughtered as manr as 60 m11l1on Amenca has been d1saraccd by the co mmerce canno t un erstand how Chinese. His amva in the Untted honors rendered to the titular leader the merchants of Laguna Beach will States came a few weeks after th<' of the worst collect1on of murderers. tolerate such oppressive restncttons discovery of the rema1'ns of Nazi hars, and hypocrites in all history o n their hvelih<?O<f. . death camp leader Joser Mengele. GEt.>RGE HALLOCK I ~nt the violator s copy of the The worldwide search for that k.iller Newpon Beach parking ttcket to the cit} and my.---------------------------- check for S6. I simply cannot afford I the S 12 at tb1s time. I would ask that the CH) not only waive the rema1n1ng $6. but senou'ily consider redun ng lines for minor parking' 1ola11ons If such waiver 1s made. I'll 1:erta1nl) consider spending mone) in Laguna Beach aga in SAM J TAYLOR Tho usand Oaks ( I Orange County's easy listening radio station KDC:M 1DB.t FM S IERED I I ' I l c ) c ( ) ~-:_ ~ ~ .. .. .. . .. ... . . - FA( ALS MASSAGES NAILS MAK EUP 46~So Coo~1 H19hwoy logunoBeoc~ 7'4 497 48b8 In 111e Sond & Sur' Si'lopping Ce•"e' NEW FROM LA PRAIRIE CELLULAR BALANCING 1 THERAPY. PRECISE CARE FOR COMPLEX COMPLEXIONS Very likely your skin is oily tn some areas. normal- to-d.ry 1n others. How do you choose a proper treatment tormula? 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Hurry, all quanttttes are limited to stock on hand and subject to prtor sale. Selecttons will vary by store. No mail/phone or C.0 .0. ordeIS. Nominal charge tor tumiture delivery. SHOP THlllSDAY AND FRIDAY 10-9, SATURDAY 1C>-6, Su,tDAY 11-6. I. - -___ i _________ _ ' . .......... • New high-tech Hobie-17 took years to perfect Craft will debut la te r this m onth at Lon g Beach s h ow By ALMON LOCKABEY ~ .......... ,,. Hobie Alter of Capistrano Beach made sailing history and himself a millionaire nearly two decades ago with a catnqed (one sail) catamaran that soon gained worldwide acccep- tance. Success breeds success. so Alter followed the one-man Hobie-14 with the Hobie 16 and 18. both sloop- ngged catamarans. Comes now the Hobie-17. a h1gh- tech catrig designed for both onc- person racing and one-. two-and three-person cruising. The Hobie-17. designed by ~ob1e's new director of research and aes1gn. John Wake, and members of Coast Catamaran's design team, was three years in the malong. It will be shown for the first time at the Long Beach Sailboat Show, which gets under way at the Long Beach Convention Center Oct. 26. Accordins to Wake. the complexlly of the project surpnsed even the veterans of Hobie's design team. (Hobie Alter h1mselflong ago sold the firm to the Coleman Co .. but still remains as chairman of the board of Coast Catamaran). As noted. the Hobie-17 1s catrigge~ and relies on a larger majnsa1I for power. ltke the onginal Hobie Cat. The hulls. however are based upon the design of the Hobie-18 hulls, which were from Phil Edwards' drawing board. They are symmetncal with retractable centerboards. If that's all there was to this new boat, the Hobie-I 7 would be con- sidered nothing new and Waite and company would not have had to spend three years on the final layout. The first maJor difference 1s the use of a Sknm Mylar tn-ply sail. Although Mylar sails are not new. thelf use on a production catamaran 1s considered re volutionary by the industry, according to Wake. The sail leach 1s reinforced with two plys of material. With 54-mch wide panels. only six battens arc needed. This combmauon reduces weight, time and set-up efTon for the sailor. To help the sail do its work. the mast on the Hobie-17 is a combina- tion of fiberglass and aluminum maienals. T~e top 81/1 feet, which do not ·conduct electricity, feature atapered fiberglass com posit tip. This allows for more mast flex and a wider range of tuning. as well as more sail control m heavy weather. The tapered mast also results m less drag and weight aloft, said Wake. noting that "sailors should be able to tune boats for almost any kind of wind cond1t1on." p , ; Dally Pilat TH URSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1985 COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, Bl Prindle regatta will be a first By ALMON LOCUBEY Dellr ............. .- More than 85 entnes are expected to compete 1n Ille first Pnndle Nationals Ex travaganza at Ft Walton Beach. Fla.. which stan Saturday and conttnue through Oct 19 This will be the fi rst lime all fou.r classes of Pn ndle catamaran~ will conduct their national champ1onsh1p regattas together. according to Lcslle Lindeman spokesman for Lear Siegler. manufacturers of the popular catamarans The Pnndlc-16 Cla!>\ 1s run ning its 12th annual nauonal c.ompet111on and the Pn ndle-18 1ts ~1~th This will be th e first national regatta for the single-handed Pnndle-1 8 and the nev.. all-out rac1n~ Pnndle-19 Competitors are expected from throughout the L S Canada Europe . ..\usiralta and .\s1a The most notable team will be 0 1} mp1c s1h er medalist Rand\ Smyth from H untmgton Beach and his crev. la) (,laser. 'ev.pon Beach Sm\th has Y.O'R.. the nauonal 111lc se1.eral 11mc'> Past Pnndle 16 and 18 national champions Richard and Gretchen Loufek from :-.ewpon Beach will alw be seeking another 111le in the Pnn- dle-I 6s "Once we got into this prOJCCt," said Wake. "we realized that to accomplish the goal of producing a catamaran with the latest technology wasn't going to be easy. That''i why we had so many prototypes before we went into production. This ma} be the most researched of any Hobie Addt1onally, the enttre rig is sup- poned by three stays to add stiffness and power. The Hobie-17'• wing• allow the aldpper to hike out two feet farther on the trapeze. The "'eek-long e'ent kicks off ~aturda' ""llh the tormaht1es of reg1!>tral1on plus "'e1ehing and measunng ot hoat\ and ..ails 10 l'murc ta1r racing product " l The new I 7 is a hybnd that combines features from the Hobie-18 and the Hobie-14, with some new twists. PAPARAZZI The spnng-loaded centerboards of the 17 are fully retractable via a pull on a rope that comes through the deck. The boards fit completely inside the wells without protruding up into the decks. Another quick tug of the rope sends the boards back into the water instantly when turning off the wind. The centerboardd alone took nearly three years to cnRJneer. All halyards on the 17 are internal and the mast features a hall and socket base designed to make ra1s1ng the mast easier. A standard feature o n all model!. I'> the wing techno logy that Hoh1l' onginated for the 18 II ha'> been adapted for the 17 to enable o;k1 pperc, to take the boat w 11s e"<treme performanu.• le,el The "-Ing~ allo"" skippers to trapeze and an add111onal two feet to ""Cather for more k'eragc when the "" ind pipe<. up The "-tng\ in.-,tall h\ \1mpl~ '>lid1ng into bual1-1n -;lots on the hoat''i hulls Thi\ make'> fur cas~ 1rallenng .ind setting up for ..ailing "'.'. e are 'en excited dh<iut th1'> ne"" boat:· <,aid Doug C ampbell Hoh1e (at pre\1dent and general manager "We think th\.' h<>at 1<, something 1.atam.aran \allor' hd\c "-antc.-d for a lone 11ml.' "1onda~ allt'.moon a pract11.e race ""Ill be conducted 10 atquamt com- petitor<; and officials "-I th local ton· d111ons Oualtf~ mg race<, "-111 begin un Tuesda\ Two racec, "111 be held eath da' through F-nda' tor the cham- p10nsh1p Antiques snapped up at museum 8) EVE C LASH Oely -... Corn 111 a odell1t Then: Jrr .tnllquc' .tnll lhl'rt' Jn: Jnt14Ul''> hut thl''>t.' are g(lrrrrrnTrrgt•11u\ -..i1J nnl' "t'"" r><•rt Harh11r \rt ~1 u..eum t•nthu'1J\l ~.>mt' 111 t hl· 4111 , 1r <;,o , K 1hnl -ddht'd .ind pun. hJ\l'd somt• 11! the 1authl·nt1lJtcd 1.m114ut•s11n Jl\pla' during a pre\ It'" rart~ at the ffiU\t'.Um I The t"lghlh dnnual an114uc <;ho" Jnd c;ak continued tor thrl't' da" """h Jn e.,11md1cd I 50u 'it·"er-; at1l·nding Pr<~n·d' loppt:J S411 ()O(t thl\ 'ear o.lly ............ by 1.-~.,.... Pn·<,t•ntcd h\ tht' mu\eum tnunul more than 4o John Elliott chata with E. O. Chamberlin and Marjorie Coolling. Lee and Joan Sammla with Sandy Belgel (center) •pot a Rodin treas u re. Jnt14ut· dealers Imm throughout ( ailforn1a and .t hl' l n11cJ \t.ttc' { an<1da and Europe e\h1h1ted rare ln'>h (1e11rg1.in \1ht•r nncntal P11nda1n 'l'l\u\..e furn1turl' rrnm thl' \C\l.'nth 1hr1lugh the lllth l'l'ntum·' Ru"1an .tnJ C 1rrt•\.. lu1m. wv.cln and numerc1u\ uthl'r Jrt'' ttl'm'> Dinner, auction gala raise $100, 000 By EVE LASH ~,...Celfll'I MllMol The party and cclebnty auction for Interval House were almost too successful as more than 650 supponers flooded the Hotel Mend1en's Deauv1lle ballroom to take pan in the event. But, committee members of the Interval House celebrity auction -La Vic En Rose -figured 1t out and pulled ofT one very successful pany raising close to SI00,000. According to Norma Brandel Gibbs. the Hunungton Beach resident who founded the shelter. the group had to tum away about 100 people and eliminate the dance floor to house more guests. Gibbs said. 'T m overwhelmed with the response here tonight in suppon of such a wonhwh1le cause. And. what a nice pos1t1on to be m to tum away people." (Interval House 1s an Orange County shelter for victims of domestic violence. Proceeds of the event will raise fu nds for construction. operation and maintenance of the shelter.) Mingling Wlth the Huntington Harbour crowd were Steve and Jta~y E lllot with pals BUI and Leoaore McK.aJ~t and Gaye and Bob Mor1an. The EllJota were busy bidding on a hand-painted antique secretary for $1 ,200. Elliot said. "I think C\Cr}Onc should ha1.e their favonte chanty. And this one 1s our.-.." The Elltots also donated about $4,000 in anuque Jewelry. Honorary Chairman Charlotte Rae Of" Facts ofl1fe" (with date Jim Fletcller) said. "I hope they make their SI 00.000 goal. It is just so thnlltng to sec so many people in suppon of Interval House. It's exciting ... (Rae purchased a white mink coat for S2.700 1n the auction). President of the Board of Directors. Cbarlene Robinson of Huntington Beach said. "This 1s our fifth auction and I have to tell you its one of the mo!>.1 spectacular we've ever had with Tony Martin h1mmseU. singing his hit ·La Vie en ~ose.'" . .. . Chairman of the auction, Cyutllla Coartney said. It 'i been a hectic night. but I'm now ready to st.an enjoying 11 all." After dinner awards were given out to Interval House supponers. In Rosen received the ~?man of the Y~ar Award, Adele Qalu received the D1stmgu1shed Service ..\v.ard. B.J and C.J Slawson ("'ho J1inJll'J J I 4~,., Mercedes) also "-On thl' D1o;11ngul\ht•ll 'x·r' Ill' ..\v..irJ John De Leonardi ra ptured Man ot the '\ c:ar .ind Jack JnJ Nancy McNaughton won thl.' Human1tanan \""ard Mn . McNaal(]lton of Corona del Mar '"'ho dnnJll'll approx1matel) S'10.000 for the children\ center) "'a" chauing earlier with Joan Cook ot In ine. Adele Faulkner Qaln, Jack and Carol Baller and o;oM Patrick and Ktot. Bidding on anything and t'' t'l)thmg v.erc Bob and Saaan Tblbaalt of Newpon Beach "We', e ht-en remodtl- 1ng our home. so 1t'<o thnlling to get dressed up and go out · ( The Th1baults were also chatting with Bob and Sand> Baldwin and Bob and Patty Larson I 81dd1ngand winning two tnpqone to F-rance and onr on a Cam bean cruise at a total ofS I 0 00()1 were Julian and Vicki Man of H unungton Beach Also bidding and purc hasing JC "-eln and tnp<o v.nl' Dorla Laramore. Carol Atkltl1on, Jackil' Mllll'r .inJ Harriett Perry. "Thi' \h11"" '' l'lt·gant The Ill'" ld\11ut ,it the entr. " great \nJ 11·, a re.ti happ~ night ""1th hit' 111 nc"" IJ1.t'' .. '31d u1-lh,11rman Nancy Zltl1m~yer (v.eannl/. dn l'le~ant metaltt hl.td. \llH'r and gold Ruhen Pan" Jrt.''' lr11m "-e1m.in..., ) < 11mmlltt"l' 1.ha1rperson Marjorie Cooling <..i1J '>hl' l'i th1· 'h""" .. refernng to .\d' 1o;or Gay Bryant '"" h1Hlv. J" ,. v.ear<i ""h11c gardenia tor tht' openings\ Br)ant tal\..1ng v.1th authM WaUac~ l'lleff ..aid · 1 t!" <.hov. "ht.·ttl'r than l'\Cr "-e are ha\lng great 1.omradl'n among\! nur deakl'\, ""h1ch we ha1.en'1 in the past I f(•t•I th1., ""Ill he nne of our best -.ear; .. HJ' 1ng a great 11me looking for a 'urpn'it' gilt tor hushand Harr) v.a' Diane Rltlker "'°1th inenJ, Judi~ Argyros Jnd Pat Cox Argyros \J1J. "But. w1··n· <.upposcd to h<· ht"lp1ng Diane hu\ th mg' "( R\ the end of tht· r' en1ng the three~.ome found the perfect gift. hut "-ould not rn ral their IS\ MXl) find I Other. "'err 1n the." ~ulpt urr C1ardcn t air 'iampling Jel1lal 1e' Imm tht· 1ntema110nal huffct ltt"d 'lhnmp. trah (Plea.e .ee AMT IQUltS/8 2) .... .... ..,._.,....._ Aac~-1oen Charlene Rob!Deon and B. J . 9laW110D, Mary Walt.r, Charlotte Rae. Jlm Fletclaer, and &.atbJ and Steftn &Wott. Th e Glbbe: Norm~. 0.Te, Norma and Barbie. ---- ---·· ---· ------------~~-------------------------- , 92 0ranoeCoel1 OAJLY PILOT!Thunday. Octobet 10, 1985 TV L1SllNG S I Weekend women's race set Bahia ConnthiJn Yacht Club wall be hosi Saturday to the Pcu y Urq ory Appm:iation Ra~. the ftflh of the Oran1e C'ounty Women'sOccan Rac- ing Sencs.. The senes 1s raced JO Performan~ Handicap Racing Acct yachts. Senes No. 3-4 (IO R, PHRF), Satur- day, Sunday Suta Moelca Bay cae>. !)uni.Jay Southwestern Yacht ('lub-Ardtn Series No. I (PHRF. MORC). Satur- day, unday: Pavey Ovem1&ht ~. Saturday, Sunday. BCYC wilJ also stage tts Octo- bcrfcst Regatta for 1ns1de and o utside classes Saturday and Sunday. Dana Po int Yacht Club will con- duct the seventh race o f its Dana Point Series for PH RF yachts on Sunday. In other !)outhern California Yachting Association areas: Los A.Dgelea-Loag Beac~ Los Angeles Yacht O ub -Harbor King Harbor Yacht ('Jub -Com· modore's Sabot Rac,e, Saturday. Redondo Beach Yacht Club-Fall Regatta, Saturday. Santa Monica Yacht Club - Malibu Transbay Race (Thorpe Series). Saturday. Cahfom1a Yacht Club -Fall Onc- design Regatta, Saturday, Sunday San Dle10 Santa Clara Racing Assoc1at1on - f all Senes. Saturday. San Diego Yacht Club -William s Cup (arbitrary handicap), Saturday; Navy Day Regatta (arbitrary hand1- Coronado Yacht Club -Perkin~ Senes. Sunday. M1111o n Bay Yacht Club -One- da}' Regatta Sunday. Oceanside Yacht pub Jessup Senes. Sunday. San Dieao Cruiser Auoc:iation - San Diego Power Squadron ~rie~. Sunday. San D iego Navy Sailing Club - Navy Day Regatta (handicap), Sun- day. Silver Gate Yacht Club - Arden Senes No. 2. Sunday. More than a score of sailboats will debut at Long Beach show LAKEWOOD tenter .p UUIUI tsellF!C"'1J l. C:....W4 DOUT mao • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • i UIHI fONDA AONIS Of GOD c,._1i1 11•• J>M 4<U 6cU .. u ,.,.. DOUT ITIUO CHUCa HOU.It INVAStON USA Cll , .. ~, ....... , ... DOUT ITlaO STIVIN lf'tllMllO PUllNTI UCK TO THI fUTVlll CN I 12:. 1JM Silt 7>4S 'Mt OU-ClOM MAXll CN ) , ... WI ~ ... ..,.,.. MO lltOe lAKEWO 0 Ct•nl~t South 1111104 1211/f-lty .. o .. ·- DAY Of THI DIAO !MOONl.-17 ~ ,,.. -.... 7 ....... lltlt m11 ,N} _ ... THI IMlllAlD fOtllST Ill ltlt ......... DOUT SftlllO AMIRICAN fl YIU 1,.u , l1o4S, );10, J :U , 9'00. IO:U COCOON 1,..u1 Ui4S >:OS S12' 7t4S l ... S AMADIUS 1N1 hlO ••• , •• , .... CMUCIC ...o.ats INVASION USA 111 ,_. a.u '''° ''" i.,.. ~UON MAXll tN I I J1JIO ltU 41U -114' 101SO DOUT JT'l&IO JANI •ON>A AGNES Of 000 1,._1~) 12:>0 2lU 4:U 6cU I: ... IMS COMMANDO Ill , ... ),oe , ... , ....... 11• JAOOID IDOi IW! , ... a.11 , .. ,.., I ... PU WU'S MO AIMNTUll CNI 121'0, 4140. "'° I. T. UTIA TIUISTtW r. ,,,. .. ,, ,_, MAall lN l & TIUI non ...... J MASK 1~u1 ltU Ml 10t4J IOUX JT9IO mYWI --,..,,. IACIC TO Tlfl PUNal INI 12>U >oU J.U UTUIH Of T'HI l.MNG DUO (II} 12>U 4'U l tJJ fRtoHT NtoHT Ill ,.., .. u 10.JJ *PACIFIC DRIVE-IN THEATRES• * CINE·fl SOUND! At theM rymboll p11t sound d1rect to your AM at * raclto. If no r1dio with ecc..ory potition, llnnt your own AM ,Of11M1. OPEN ':':.:-Start Dusk Childrenl.Jnd« 12 ALWAYS FREE SIWEll MA' llllU T 1....,. s....-. AIWI .. ....,. ,,_ JAM te JN F• ,...,_ t.11 1114lt1t QM ANAHEIM * OICll7t MMfL'=" u ... f!!! * CMUal ..,_,. t.: JAOGID IDGI Ill MAXll !"I INVASION USA 111 r CRIMH Of l'ASSION Ill AMIRICAN fl YIU (,._ti) 10 TO MIDNIGHT Ill 1. THI GOONllS IN I 2. 04llMLINS CN I 3. GHOST&USTIU CN I 1. !'AU llDH 111 2. A VllW TO A KILL IN l 3. AMllKAH NINJA Ill Ce];tj~@• '·''"'··~·...,. '- l1'IVIN lf'tl\MIO NUIM'I UCK TO THI fUTURl 1,.1 llVHL Y HILLS COi' Ill JAOOID IDGI ell CllMIS Of l'ASSION 1•1 SU'f 11 SWO MU 1 [•trf '" "' hf S..oN-f f '""' JAM ro JN /f., 1o1.,...,,.. t.lt 111411:M 41H COMMANDO !ll THI THMINAT04t 1 .. lnvtH l "ILllllO NlllHn lACK TO THI FUTURl 1N 1 TUN WOLi ,,., Lo HABRA H~8'i. DAY Of THI DIAD tlC)Ofll-17 ~ HOUll IT THI CIMITllY CHU<a NCl9mt INVASION USA Cll 10 TO MIONIGHf llQ 111•1111 111111 .. er•l!e! t """' "1 Wll'S llO AOYINT\IU (Nl ITIVIH t f'IUUllO PlllllNn WllRD KllNCI ( ... II) &ACK TO THI PUTUll CNI OttOSTIUSTllS 1N1 Among the 400 boats to be on display at the 17th annual Southern California Sailboat Show, at least 22 will be makin$ their Pacific Coast debuts, a~ordang to Bruce Brown. show chairman for the sponsonng Southern California Manne Associa- tion. The show. the largrst indoor all- sailboat e;th1btt1on in the U.S .. will occupy th·e Long Beach Convention Center from Oct. 26 through Nov 3. Mo re than 65 sailboat brand names will be represented a t the show, Brown said. At least four others wi ll be going on public display after sneak previews at other local shows. Sailboats making their western debuts at Long Beach wall be: Cal-22, Cal-28, Cal-33, O'Day 272, and O'Day-40, all from Lier Siealer ANTIQUES .•. From Bl oysters, poached salmon. rumakis, beef-kabobs, onental ch1clum curries and beef stroganoff were displayed alongside an ice sculpture in the museum's logo. The dessert table tempted guests with bourbon balls. petit fours. chocolate covered strawberries and eclairs. Makmg the' most noise (giggling) at a table were Carmallta M.tfat (with an infcctous laugh), All1oa Baker (wearing a knit Bruestle outfit), Sudy Bel1el (hubby Jerry was on a hunting trip), S. Reed, Tom BerDdt (new fro m W olla) and Gloria Scalck. At the end of the evening, walking by with a three foot dolphin (used JO the buffet table arrangement) was Robert Morpa Perkia1. He said laughing, "O h. don'l we get to take home the center pieces ... Hobie-14 championship Hobae-14 sailors will test the wand and waters of Lake Mead. near Las Vegas, Nev .. an the national championship for the class c;tarting Oct. rl. All Hobie Cat national and 1ntemat1onal regattas are sponsored by Absolut Vodka. The Lake Mead event will be for the Absolut Cup. To cap ofl this year's saahng, Absolut will host the Hobae-14 world champ1onsh1p in Isla Verde. Puerto Rico Nov. 24-30. Former Hobae-14 national champion Enrique DellJNet,_...,,.._.,.,.. Figueroa as expected to return to his native island to recapture the title from Carlton Tuc ker of Ft. Walton Sharon and BUI Hasewinkel examine an- Bcach, Fla. dqae. at muaeum art •how. "HIGHLY ENJOYABLE I" OME MAGAZINE Rochotd Shockel MITA llU 751-4114 EDWMDS T°"" COOB IRISTCl AJ MTOll I, ... comJ -'34-2S53 CllDClll CIWIWI I SJ. fW'f LI.IX IJRl' T"4UTU S ( •· ' ~ J fl ~ii ~I'll u~~~·~j s ii;:;:;;;;;;;:;::;:::;:::;::;-=4::;~6;)4~}~~~~)~)9~0~1 ~~~ 111ii111..,.,....,Mj.,,. .. ..:;..Llo~R~A~~c1 Mt11opu•·u0 MA•I~ llPG•I J) t : I~. CREATOR (R) 1 00 Alll: R k: AN ... LY£ R ~UJ SHOWS A T 6 4S a. t 10 JAC G£0 £OGE (R) I O~ l 2S !> •S 110 &102!> A FTCA H OURS CR) I 40 l 4 0 S 4 0 I 4 0 & 9 41) SACK T O THE IFUTVRE fPGI 1:10, J :JJO. S:SO, 1100, 10:>0 S IL VIE RADO fPC·U) I S!> P .. W••'• Boll A o v •nrur~ fPC) r. !>S 8 CV£R L Y HIL LS C~ (A) t OS Plu• Co ·H lt Wrtn•H fR I 6 SO KISS O IF T H£ Sl'ICM:A WOMAN CR) I 00 l 20 S 40 8 0!>&1020 l\G NUOF GOD (ll'C 1>1 I 10 l 2) S H 1 4 ~&.'I!>!> Y'H£ GODS MUST 8£ CRAZY (Pet I 0~ l 20 !> H 1 >0 10 O!> DA y Of' Tl41: 0€AO Houn by T h e C t m etery (R ) K E. W££"S etc AOV£N T\JRE (PC) Ptu • Te~n Woll !P C } MAMBO f IM~f 8 LOOD "AllH II CR) Ptu • M .tO M A• 9 fl'y0f\d fftu,,d,.•O~o111-.~ 'PG l l) M V H L A f O R (R) Pfu \ c 1, Hit t:,,,,...,'-l .. t\l tnd {R ) Wt'.IAO SCllENCIE Cl"G· t >) P tu' f ,,,_,,, N 19nt R 1 : 1he Daily Pilot f readers want to see y01r WOl"k. S.Dnit: t L : : pnotos of y01r local office, professio.-1al or : 1bHii'iiJ1111 • • f retal design for 1Millcation in 01r i • lldeliors section : L~:~!~!.:~.~~.~~ ......... J a HI M AI((<, [VII AN £V£NI DINO DE l AUR{NTllS PRESENTS STEPHE.N l(ING S SllV(R 0Ul l£T GARV BUSEY EVERE TT Mt Gill COREY HAIM MUSIC ev JAY (HATTAWAY BASED ON TH( NOVELETTE CYCLC Of THE WEREWOlF··ev S TEPHEN KING SCREENPLAY BV S TEPH£N KING PRODUCED BV MARTHA SCHUMACHER .a.. R ~-=-DIRECTED BV OANl(l ATTIAS ~ ~~~.T PICT~ ~_.,. STARTS TOMORROW IAEA fl TORO ORANGE IUil~a Milnn Brea Plaza (Owarcl~ ll Toro AMC Oranoe M311 ~ •Dw 529 5339 581 9SOO 637 ~0 IUENA PARIC IUENA l"AAK IAVIN( ORANGE Pacific s UA Movtts Edwards Un1v11r,11y CttyCenler Buena Pline Orivt tn gs' 4991 ~8811 ~2553 821 4070 COSTA MESA MISSION VIEJO WHTMINITIA OAMOf E d'#arO$ BMIOI Eoward, Vttto lwrn Eow<1rdS C1ntma WeS1 Sl.ldium OnYe In 540 7444 830 8990 891 3935 m eno • >z Manne. Mason-33 and Mason-34, im- ported by Pacific Asian Enterpnses. Landfall-39 and C&C-38. built b) Cassius and Cuthbertson Yachts Canada. C apra -13 . C apri -18 and Catalina-34. built by Catalina Yachts Hobae-17, a new Hobie catamara n. Schock-34 Grand Prix, W.D Schock Co. ANN UNDERS 'Other woman' likes her lot Dear Ann Landers: This 1s a letter to a woman who doesn't dream I eJtlSt. Dear Wife of You-Know-Who· T hank you for takmg such good care of your husband's health and diet. I wouldn't want him if he was o ver- weight or sick. ~ank you for nursing him thro ugh hernia repair. broken bones and root canals. As a career woman, I have neither the time nor the patience for such things. Thanks for clipping coupons, watching for sales and being a clever shopper. It means he has more money to spend on me. Than ks fo r putting up with his bad\ moods. I know he must have them. J AJI m en d o. He's cheerful and charming wht>n we are together. I'd dump him ifhc got grumpy. Thanks for cooking his dinner every night and keeping him oc· c up1ed on weekends. I hate to cook. and need weekends to catch up wi th family and fnends. Thanks for trusting ham so co m- plecely. It makes o ur weekly rendezvous very easy. Please don't feel threatened. I don'1 want to marry him. 1 enjoy your husband only when he as clean, healthy, well-dressed, atten ti ve, and with money an his pocket. You can have ham the rest of the time. -Got It Made In San Francisco Dur Su F ranclsco: Kwlkllerkld· dill'. I've read e11oap letten from "lvea of clleatlng lla1bud1 co re· coptie oat wllea I see It. However, "e point• yo. make are wortb 1ll.arta1 wltll my readert, a1 weU •• wltll Tbe Otller Woman, 10 llere It 11. Dear Ann Landers: I'd like to shart a lovely quote that appeared in m y ~lumni bulletin. I hope you will pnnt It. "It will be a great day when our schools have all the m oney they need and the military has to hold a bake sale to build a bom b." -U O f C In l rvtne Dur U Of C: Love ll, n..111 for SeHlag It OD • Dear Ann Landers: After 10 years of a child-free marriage, m y huabend and I decided to have a baby. I am newly pregnant. The prospect of motherhood always frightened me but aft~r s1Jt mo nths of psychotherapy I ~ltze that my demanding-per· • fccuo nast mother made me afraid to create another child-parent ~la­ tJonship. Now. at age 3S, I am ready My husband as ecstatic about becomina a daddy. The problem as m y parents. I know when I tell them I am prqnant they will insist on comina to "help out" when the baby it born. In view of our te nse rcla- tio nthip, my father's denial of his alcoholism and my mother's ex· quilite martyrdom, it would be emotionall y bnn.alizina for me to have them here -and they wo uld drive m y husband up the wall. P1cUe come to the rescue with some aood. sohd advice, Ann. We want to do 1he n &ht thin.a but I know the emolio nal havoc m y parcntJ can WTU k and I am terrified. Do you ace a WI)' out? -Turmoil Unlimited In o.c. bear UL TO.; Go bad! fer mo~ t.llerapy. VH l"4 to ltre .. ••., die Uttte strl moW ... be ,.., .,,. ...... Ac H , J•• 1-.W lie .... 1o .., to '"' ,.,._,., "0.'t C991• wlMe tM bdy l1 Mra. Wt1J Yiatl ,.. ....... cu.'' Tk ... ~ ... ;::ue• '" lo faee .. .._,. ... llie re-aU1te4 to llel' J M f -4•1~ .I" Orange Coast OAIL Y PILOT /Thurlday, October 10, 1886 83 'Sam' sleuth's saga Splendid TV movie ·out of Darkness· deals more with police work than grisly s laytngs By FRED ROTHENBERG .,,_......,.., NEW YORK -It was a small lead, more than likely an 1nconsequen11al one Yet Detecuve Ed Z1go had a hunch that this parkillj ticket might lead him to the Son ofSam killer who was terronz1ng New York Cny. Z1go's real-life personal and pro- fessional stol) 1s the basis for an outstanding TV movie. "Out of the Darkness," which 1s on CBS Saturday night. Zigo. the technical consultant on the film. rose from the depression of his wife's sudden death dunng Andre Pre'rin reheanee for toni,ht'• debut. "' ~ surgery 10 become a local hero Andre Previn back home, with baton In a 13-month rampage 1n 1976-77, the sclf-procla1med Son of Sam had taken responsibility for a !>tnng of handgun assaults that left seven young people dead and seven others cnllcally wounded. Clues were meager and a city was on edge, so Z1go decided to question a man whose car, with an out-of-city registration, had been ticketed for By JACKJE HYMAN ,_ h ......... ,,_ fully well with cenain orchestra!> and parking illegally in Brooklyn the night not with others." he said ··.\nd it"• of the last shooung. absolutely 1nexphcable I was fran"l> Z1go said 1n a recent 1nterv1ew thal LOS ANGELES -It was 25 years nervous but from what I hear and see. there were se"eral omens tbe day he ago that Andre Previn left Hollywood it's going to be fine .. , You ha\ e to do and his partner went looking for the -where he had racked up four 1t (establish one's own wa) of work -owner of the car First, the) were Academy Awards as a film composer ing) by musical conv1nc1ng rather given keys to police car No. 316 No -in a bold attempt to conquer the than rampant use of authont}' ." bag deal. except that the man they world of classical music. This season. Previn will spend sought to question. David fkrkow1tz. Now he's back. no longer the boy eight weeks in Los Angeles and take ll\·ed at 316 Warburton ~ \ enue. 1n wonder who began his career with the orchestra on two tours. In March. Yonkers. MGM at age 16. but a d1stingu1shed they will perform 1n Salt Lake ( 11y, On their way north. the detectives conductor who has led many of the Sacramento, Berkeley. Cupertino and stopped at the scene of a bad traffic top orchestras in Europe and A.men-San Francisco. In May. Prevm and accident and pulled some people ca. Tonight. he debub as music the orchestra will play in Phlladel-from their car The) ""ere pleased director of the Los Angeles ph1a. New York. ButTalo. ( olumbus, the) ma) have saved some lives. Philharmonic. Oklahoma ('11y, Fon Wonh and "Good things are gonna happen The concert at the Dorothy Chan-Houston. · today ." Z1go recalled saying. dler Pa vi hon will feature Mozart's Previn also wtll perform as p1an1\t In another omen. they even tound a Symphony No. 39. Prokok1ev·s Sym· with the S)mphony and w1th a hospitable hot dog vendor Dunng phony No. 5, and "('elcbrat1on." a chamber orchestra. "It remind~ u.., the rescue, the detec11ves had gotten work by Pulitzer Pnze-w1nning com-how hard it is to pla~. taking the ..ame blood on their hands fhe\ asked a poser Ellen TaatTe Zwihch gamble that all the pla)ers ha\e pu~hcart 'endor for some ~ater. and In the years since 1960, Prev1n, ph ysically. producing 1he sound he offered his cooking pan Z1go now 56, has been mustcd1rectorofthe itself." remembered turning the murkv water Houston. London and Pittsburgh .--------------J symphonies: has recorded more than 150 major works and albums: has performed wnh the orchestras of Berlin. Pans. Vienna. Boston and Amsterdam. has been featured on PBS and the BBC and continues to hold the post of music director of London's Royal Philharmonic. In his spare time. he sull compo~s P1an1st Vlad1m1r o.\shk.enazy premiered has piano conceno an London in July. and Prev1n JUSt accepted a commission to wnte a conccno for cellist Yo-Yo Ma Why has he come back to the cit) to which his parents first brought him in 1939. when they fled Berlin? .. The Los Angeles Philharmonic 1s an 1ntemat1onally renowned or- chestra, and they asked me," Prev1n said, relaxing in his dressing room last weekend after a six-hour rehearsal '"The fact that it's the city where I spent a great deal of my youth 1s a plus, but I couldn't have come 1f II weren't for the orchestra." Also. "It 1s undeniable that after 17 years in England. there ,.., something to be said for bankable sunshine." Taking over an orchestra involves more than planmng the programs and selecting guest an1sts for future years. A conductor also must bnng his own style to the music without antagon1l- 1ng the musicians, he explained. ''Facing a hundred-some highly ta.lented and respected an1sts who are suddenly faced with having to work w1th me. there is a cena1n amount of getung used to each other." said Previn. In contrast to the immaculate evening clothes typ1~al of per- formance. Prevan was sull weanng the Jeans. blue work shin and blue- and-yellow Jogging shoes in which he'd rehearsed. "The final rappon 1s when the orchestra and the conductor can outguess one another. which takes more than several weeks. It takes several years." However, he said he's been very pleased with the "generous and helpful" attitude of the orchestra. "Certain conductors work wonder- Kranierto direct after six years LOS ANGELES (AP) -Guess who's coming to lunch at the studio commissary? Stanley Kramer, aficr a six-year sabbatical to teach and wnte. IS IOi ng lO direct another film . Kramer will take over "The Con- spiracy" from Michael Anderson. who was forced to lea ve the film because of a schedule conflict. Kramer. who was nominated for Oscars for "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner?" and .. Judgment at Nuremberg," moved to the Nonh· west af\er the failure of"The Runner Stumbles" six yean aao. He was persuaded to come back to take over the rems of "The Con- spiracy," a thnller ba5Cd on theone5 that Pope John Paul I was as- ta11inated by aaents of corrupt Vatican bankers and Italian nJht· wina extremists. The movie was to have gone into production 1n Yu,oslavia in July, but wu delayed and Anderson had to leave bccauK of another obliption. It is now due to beain filmina in January. f>'aul Scofield stars as the pope, Robert Mitchum as a VatJcan con- spirator, and Christopher Walken as an American reporter who d1soovcn the plot. Kramer reportedly 11 worltin1 on the ICript with writer 8111 Baim. .. YiSNEf --~-- JOURNEY Natty<f GanI\, c ------ ---STARTS TOMORROW --- it EL TORO it COSTA MESA *IRVINE LA MIRAOA *ORANGE Eawaras ~aalet>at:• Eawaros Town C'11tt• Eowa•J\ w >000< age Pac1r1c s La ~"a<!A. •'>e<JOll•e S8l·S880 7SI 418-4 5Sl 06~~ 994 2400 1>JA lS~J it WESTMINSTER fawaras Conemi West 891 3935 • •Ml , ., 1 .. 1-oo-. .. •" .. 0 • '~ miracle of a movie~' ::;;..--- -<iu) Flalleoy. COS\10POLITA'li "Jessica Lange is sultry. nervy. delicate and altogether amazing:· -Pett'r Travt'ra. PEOPU "Jessica Lange keeps on utonishing. Her triumph as Pamy Cline is a stunner.' -Richard (orllu. fl\1F SWEE'L o\111...n"'C"' ·"fl~V..,••••..., ""~•"• ., •• "" """'"II\ itflll ~ "'tt.., •••''llttli\ 1>!1 ..• ,.~ .... ,...,,. ... ,. ,.... .......... .... (P~ nJ-o ,. __ STARTS TOMORROW IRU •COSTA MO.a UA Mo~.. l ct"",;1c;J\ t ,, ~··A 'l'ICI 40 ~4~ \'~~ IUUIA l'A .. l ITllTS FlllAY ...... .,,.N50 rACflCAIWlllDl-11 MT& llll t7MW _..CIDMCOfTO .na 1111 1s1~1M COS I A MUA •I.A MlllAOA MISSION VIEJO WISIMINS TIA PJI I ,,,,. ... " ~ ·""'~1l1 " ,.. A \t> U !}, I I ,i,4.() ;\q..}( .. 4, ,._b 1Rvo1t • .... 1 a :, • ..... -.. , J ''""'' b~'" n up \1"11 111•1)(.hbor .. rnom '•lllr ...,, •'n \t>aJ 11ld bnt1hn hA' h11t1•r ltl<'k "11h "''nwn than )1M11k1 \111Jr 1t1rlfl1f'nd ha' .1 nt>\\ ho\ f111•r11t BEi IER OFF DEAD --S51-0H5 EDWMDS_.... LA 111111 (Jll) Ul..OW -FASID SQllMl u..a au '"""' 1 mwmss.c• lMlllA ta.LS MAU ~--•t1-17ll ~SO. COAST uam llllM U4-ml snn cm coou llllMU7-UM •mAmlMll wa1 •• n1.n~ mwMOS Clim.,, WlilMllUll •t·•tl rACflC MllJllAT JI .... a pale shade of red When the) got near the addre'i" 1n Yonkers. the) made a wrong tum and wound up on Wicker Street Z1go had been privy to a Son of Sam letter that had mentioned "Wicker" a reference that had complete!) batlled police Z1go remembered turning to his panner and saying, .. John, we got him" Z1go said when he linall~ lOn· fronted Berkowm. the Son of Sam wasn't at all what he e"pected "He "'as this little schlub ofa kid, as nice and soft-spoken as could be " Berkow11.z's one-room apanment was bare, except for a shotgu n and a New York tabloid showing a com- posite police sketch of the Son of Sam and the screaming headline· ··THIS IS THE NEW SON OF SAM .. "He must have howled when he saw the picture," said Z1go "It didn't look hkc him at all." If that headline reflected the poten- tial for a lund, violence-filled mo" 1e, be thankful that producers ~onn:y Grosso and l..aIT) Jacobson ((BS' ··Night Heat" senes) "'ere 1n charge and took the most tasteful. n:\pon- s1ble approach possible ··Out of the Darknes\" 1s one ol those rare moments 1n TV '-"hen good conscience actually won O\ er po1en- 11al explo1tat1on. The movie 1s more Z1go's poignant stol') than a Rambo-Din} Harl") film about a gnsl) senal killer The shooungs are dep1l ted paren- thet1call) w11h a pointed gun and broken glass No sprawled bod1e'> "io shneking. No blood. note' en the red sea 1n the d1n)-wa1er hot dogs "The} kept the cop stutT to a minimum," said Z1go "If the} want- ed blood and guts. I could ha"e g.i>ven s2.oo · Martin Sheen (left) with the real Ed zi,o. them a ion of1t But I didn't ""ant that to be sho""n "He also didn't '-'ant to '-'31th hi"> '-'lie die again and twice reJelled the lilm idea because ofthdt. F1nall} h1'>twochildrencon\1nled him that the tilm ""'ould put J ~ap on m~ poh.:e career .. l1go pla)cd "'inn1ngl} b~ Manin Sheen als.o had been a reluctant hero on the Son of. am case He was asked to be on the tas.k force 1n its earliest stages. but declined Depicted as a faithful. lo' 1ng fam1I~ man Z1go couldn't accept an all-consuming MIDWEEK DISCOUNT PRICES IEE DllECTOIY assignment e\en 11 meant poten11al promouon becau~ he "'anted to st.a' close to his ailing '-"lfe · It was onl) after she died thal ht" 1oined the manhunt I Her illness anJ death also are handkd "'1th d1gn11 ~ here) ··when I~"' the film. I had to walk out dunng those scenes -\I most I 0 "ears later it's still tough for me · said Z1go .. , started <;ee1ng m) wife when I "'as 12 or 13 We were best buddies. best fnends It was a brut<M shock for me She '-'SS not expected to die .. S2.50 .. TIUTIEI eowards UNIVERSITY 854·8811 :u1PuS OR WlST OF C.u .. ER ACRO<;S ~ROliol JC. "UY• M ,..... "wttWY" Ill ,_ .. 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Tl llJl, 1 ... -.na .... •11. 1•11 "M.SmST ''WfmlCIEm'' • CUlY" IPCI .,, .. , .. (1'1-lll ··wwlfil" IPCI "'"till ~ \.. ... ~ edwards EL TORO 581 -9500 [l TQROR(' AT lWrNP(A1<'d'1 AiA [ l 'f)R() 'CKllll ' (N-11) lift •TlllllalTI'-U.M Wl.1 .. .. ,_ "R lfUll" lflC.111 1 ............... 111 1141 ........ ll&JI ''CIUT•" 111 ll'fll ..,.. •• , •• 11111 ....... ....... (flC.111 '-II II flYHr' fPl-11) ........... , .. ..... ,.,. till.Ml 'CIC.-'fPl-11) •II .. ,llUH ....... ~"Ill ......... , ...... edwards CINEMAS/SoCal CINEMAS LAGUNA HILLS MALL 768-6611 S 0 FWY SO ON fl TOi.O IH THE MAll rlitf IT TO Sf ARSt . .,_.,.. . .,_.,.. ...... . .... " Tll = • ·-·-.. -· ffl9f" ... 'CT ?RI" 1111 -~ II""• NI.Wt .... .... 1~~" :,:-.,.,... ...., ... ... ..... UM ft..._ ,,_Ill •n UM ........... .. .... •tt Tmi .. UM ''lllllrlNI "mit'W'fll ..... ,. ... " ........ ,. .,., .... .... ...._ ........ { ' . IN Of'lnge Ca.t OAILV PILOT/Thut"lday, October 10, 1985 FUNKY WINKERBEAN I l I ! THE FAMILY CIRCUS by Tom Batluk DOONESBURY BIG GEORGE IO·IO t:»'AY. ~!Kl, THAT urne aox ro '!QR llJfilfT /$ CALUP N."Hn? M<JM..' 8Y CL/(XJN6 IT. )0(/ J StL£:CT {)fffWl8(( ~ • TO k'A10I ~ PR0Ri£ CF~ • ~. (1rAY,RRfiHl!l(l.PI !lr j l ' I f / '-I by Virgil Partch (VIP) SHOE by Garry Trudeau ; IJIN6!: ':k~' YOU ? by Jeff MacNally by Bii Keane 1 MUST SE. HAVING N' IDam'Tt( ~G •. .. "I'm leaving it on to keep Kittycat warm." "Wh•t did you expect for • hundred buckt . · the honeymoon aulte?" ·MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson "It's not for me. It's tor Marmaduke." DRABBLE ~·HG~ ~i.400l. I~ GQfA"t. 616 ~O~\ ~Ot4f ~10 ~-----t Lll(f, Mf..1 GARFIELD l'M f.\lf.N GOt.l?l~O ~ 6MOC:I 00N, T~ERE'$ 50MEHHN C:r I FEEL l $HOOLD TE.LL l.'OU. 8ECAU5E YOU'RE CJOING TO FIND OUT ANYWA~ JUDGE PARKER ' DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham ""~ .---, 0 ·10 . ! l i ' lTS ALMOST DINNERTIME, -CAAAOTS,8RusSELS SPROOls, 0~N15. lf YOO'U UKf TO LIVERAI({) RAW ONIONS :' STAY, WE'RE AAVI NG . . ~ by Kevin Fagan i l \~~1 MA~ef IT ~TOOO ~·~o Mu..\C"\(\N " by Jim Davis by Ferd & Tom Johnson by Harold le Doux I e.A.RA T, TELL THAT'S A GOOD O\.JeSTION, ~I SHE ME. WHERE'S LEFT US A80VT A YEAR /460. SAID ~e YOUR WANTED TO 00 Hf:A CWllN THING' "THE MOTHER? LAST CARD WE GOT ""'0M He~ ~AS A COUPLE OF M ONTHS AGO I SHE WAS DANCING IN A CMO"US LINE UPIN V E GAS ' rr---i~::--,~~~ PEANUTS by Charles~· Schulz T WENT INTO NEEDLES YESTERDAY, AND TALKED 10 A PSVC~IATR.ISi ... I ASKED ~IM IF TALKING TO A CACTUS WAS A 5 16N I WAS 601N6 CRAZV ... 1' NO 11 1-lE SAID ''ONLY IF T~E CACTUS STARTS TO TALK SACK ! 11 FtEA£E., JUST HUMCX2 <E ... I IT'S eE.EN A ~ MORNING-. BRIDGE 11 ·10 b Berke Breathed f4JK, I KMJW 1H1fT' M5N'T KN~ 61/r fJ€IM6€ 16 A 1lMN ()(.' 6'"r IWP ffffNKLY 1"' J/$1" 111Jf P WS/iT. \ WHAT OVERTRICK? Both vulnerable. South deals. WEST NORTH • J 63 <::>4 0 AKS + K 108752 EAST + KQ4 'V AKJ93 0 987 •S <::>Ql08652 0 Q1043 • J 3 • 96 OUTH •Al09872 <::>7 0 J62 + AQ4 The bidding: South WHl North Ea1t •• 2 <::> 3 <::> '" 4 • Pue PaH PaH Opening lead. King or Q. This deal came up in a recent team match F'rom the way the declarers handled 1t, you might hive thought they were playing in a pairs competition. North South were playing five card major opening bids. North'• three-heart cue bid was a l(ame force. and South had no Hplratlons btyond four spades. The defen1f' was sharp Weal led the kin!( of hearts and shifted lo a diamond. Declarer won in dummy and tried a trump finesse. West won and led another diamond, again won on the board. Declarer continued trumps and, when East showed out. OMAR SHARIFF declarer could not avoid losing another trump and a diamond for down one. At duplicate pair1. decJarer'1 line is undoubtedly correct. The odd• are 8-to·I in favor of Eaet holding one of the trump honors, In which cue declarer can make 11 trickl. At rubber bridge or t.ama. declarer should Corio thia line in favor of one that givea a much t>.Uer chance of delivering 10 trtckt. After winnlnr the flnl diamond. declarer should 1impl1 lead a trump to the ace. II that fe&.c:hu an honor, declarer aimply drlvea out the other trump honor and eully comea t.o 11 tricka. ------- Since declarer can afford to lose two trump tricks and a heart. if no honor appears declarer abandons trumps and goes after clubs. As the cards lie, West can ruff the third CHARLES GOREN club and lead another diamond. But declarer wins on the t..able and playa a fourth club. diacarding bis last dia mond as West ruffs with the matter trump. Thi• line of play loses only If the defender without the diamond queen st..arted with three trumps to the K ~ and a 1ing1et.on club. The odds on that are far leaa than find ing both trump honor. with Wtat. Fer taf.,..aU.. dMt CWM• Gena'• MW ...... u.,. fw lilirWp ,&ayen. wrtw G .. a BrWp Lett.r. 1909 C......._. Ave., Claua&.· .... N.,. _,.,. . ... ~ .. NYSE UPS & DOWNS --- OvER THE CouNTER MUTUAL FUNDS •(in ik 'Pf'" ~lvl not l\Jjfh In price. rH&On eble c.'O"i, l'lu11iflf'd 1d "'-rtl 11i n It • ya ... , "4' •• 4. •< 0. u. 0 • 4 i j 't= J4CZ4 Orange Cout O~ILY PILOT1Thun1dey, Oc1~ 10, 1985 .. I OTC UPs & DowNs BUSINESS NOTES NEW YOAK (Aft) -The tollOWlno llal atiowa the OY., • the -Counter D also provides service 1n bu~tne$S tlocka and ~arranta that have OOM UO owney h1lpt1on and formation, pcr50nal the ~· ""° dOwfc 1fl.J:::1 baMd on all.Jury and (1m1ly law , ~~~r,Wino belo~l or lOOO S&L t t d The head of the firm . Jachoa Major banking firm drops credit card rate ,~,. =~ o...ceniff!_ cha~,! .• •'t...1.lha 0 ra e Parum, has b«n ~s1dent of Irvine: d~~ .J:.lw"" tn., pr:bl'd ',T;Ano since 1969. He was the foundana NEW YORK (AP) -Manufi&c· had an averqc fixed-rate LO&ercst price. ~u laal or pr . on New York priocipaJoflhelrvmc: Unified School turers Hanover Corp ' one of the charge: of 18 81 ~~nl on coovco-~~~ ~f Chf. Pc•n D1stnct's alternative h1Jh ~hool and nauon's largest banking companies. t.JonaJ credu cards u of Oct. 2, wh1le ~.!ttr•' i~ + ~ 8g i E h taua,ht Enghsh at Umvcr<111 y High said ll has reduced the mterc:st charie they pa1d consumers Ill 1ve1111t ratt 5:ilf1 Oii 57•l1 +lJ·u H: :' xc ange School. on llS credit cards by two percentage of 6 71 perocnt on money mmtt 1.; H'ir 1 2 Ue> 1 7 • • • pomts to 17 .8 percent. deposit accounts. ~a '~Hae> 1 n 1i,,~ 8: I .0 Emer1eacy Power Ea1ioeeria1, The: company called the rcduC'tlon "Only consumer complacency tw -!~i•' , 2 :1 l ' uu~ Tradmg on Dowmey SavlDp ud loe:., recently broke ground on m new the first by a maJor money-center aJlowcd banks to keep rates as hi&h as ..,_ • 1 n , ... Lou A1aoclatl01 stock began Friday corporate headquarters. 3S 80 bank, and said It reflected lower they have been for so long." he wet ~ier~~e> 1 n 1r. 8: on the New York Stock Exchange. Cadillac Ave , Costa Mesa. preva.ling interest rates. Lawrcn~ Con, who follows bank- 1 I rd '"' ~ Up The symbol DSL will designate the "fhe fiml speciahzes in providing " Some: private analysts called the 1ng stocks for the mvesunent firm of Ple:Tch ~ ~ 8g trading m the company's 4.8 mllhon rehable power sourcc:s for computer reduction overdue. but no other Dean Watter Reynolds Inc .. said such •Cr, 1 ~ '"' Up shares of common stock, which had tnstallations. maJOr banks moved 1mmedU1tt'ly to complacency probably would mean s~lr~Cfe> ;:; ·~ 8: r been traded on the American Ex-• • • match ll. the reduction would not spread W~~y.11 ~ ~ Ue> 11 change. The disc instruments subsidiary of Marla Kaplan. associate director of Within the industry ~~ ~ l~ 8: : Founded in 1958. lhe company, a Hoaeywell recently announced that Bankcard Holders of Amenc.a. a 5-"Every cycle the~ is somebody Ano 11• UP l · diversified thrift association that the first production units of its new :year-old consumer group that claims that tnes this, and h1stoncally at never Dvcomlild • '1.s Uo · became publicly held in July 1971, LNYX trackball have been com-about I 00.000 members nationwide, works," he said. Nern. L••' ChG Pct has more than $2.4 btlhon in assets pleted. Al a cost of$295 lhe product is said the: reducuon will "send a strong Cohn said bank.i. lh3t make such Turnrl wt 4 -1, 1 ,., 1 · :.8 and operates 41 offices throughout available for the IBM PC and PC signal to other banks to lower rates." reductions usually hope to replace ~~~f Plor It? \"'1 ~ CaJJfom1a. keyboard compatibles. Robert K. Heady, publisher of the lost revenue by captunng a larger ~!... ... o0m,mcl :? :~ l 1 Maorlce L McAl11ter president of • • • newsletter Bank Rate Mon nor. sa1d, share of the market. But he said 1,,;m;'~• ~ § '.: the Costa M~sa-bascd Downey Sav· Bell Corporate Center, in the "This could well be the beginning at consumers have generally shru.gged r:~~~SYt ~~ 4!~ ..,. ing.s, said the listing should lead to Irvine lndustnal Com pie>. in T ust1n, long last of some relief to consumers off such 1ncent1ves. ME s ... T 'I• J broader stock ownership. wider na-was honored with an award of meni ofh1gh card rates." He said surveys have found a third •,~0~1en , :~: i:1 t11onal recog.ition of the company and at the Gold Nugget Awards ceremony tieady said hi s Nonh Palm Beach, of credit ca.rd holders pay off their ~matron un 'h 11 I owered costs, when raising new at the Pacific Coast Builders Con-Fla.-based newsletter's latest survey balls every month without tncumng • ~frl~ 1~'" _ 1~ 1 1 1::::. 1 } capitaJ. • • • .-fe_r_e_n_ce_1_·n_Sa_n_F_ra_n_c_1sc_o ______ fo_u_n_d_th_a_t_b_a_n_k_s across the country an interest charge. rewrv~to 41"1 'h Parham & A11oclate1, lac., has enetlcLb 11/• I/• moved to new offices at 18662 ranlll'l!lt ''• •1. v~~iFlb()p "• v. MacArthur Blvd., across from John ~n-~Gen ~ = Wayne Airport. The finn specializes OH echnol ~ ''• 9.S in labor and employment law, but ~ S'"' Hoover 76" l1 Mc.Crm 31' • 31"2 PnllGI IS ') IS.-. ~'I.I Jl .... 33'"' Hortilh 1.\o J McF•rl 11 l l' • PIOtlHI J2 31~ El J3 3314 Hvt>rllc 11"-1t W.OC.rt '~ s Poo ls lt 10.,., v v n If\ 9''• IMS l 31'°t 33"-MedEI s 1"' I 3·16 Powtll 2 2"" IME 13"'" I' ISC 11 12"-MlcOtn 13"'" 14 PnGM II 11''• andem 21..., ?2'h ln+olhc 7•'" ,,,.,., Mcaaw , ?2'1'1 22"' PrnSr. 21•-. 1w. •noon II\ f lnttrn 1'"4 IS''• In· MOldCe 4"4 511, PrOGrP 6llt 1 T= 1~ 16 fre tn .,.,., 1 4 lnttl Mlcll8k 3~ J6 Pt>SNC ~ ~ Tt!Krd 1' 14V. 11.\o 13 In· MJlllpr 39'"' 3''IO. f'l.r!Bn 22' • 23 T.iKI 1 17 171/• lrcEnr 2"-2'• Molu 29 29'1l QMS ~ t7ill f~.~I 11 10 lnlQl)h l 23~ 24 Mo<tfCI 10 1014 Quedr1 .._ IPl'•t. 1 1Yo ln8W"' 17\lo H 14 MonlJC l0'4 ll QuekC ' 9-111 10' • oyOIJI ~ SI .... lw•SoU ... 3", d 1'-MOoreP 26'4 T1 It-' •'Ao rlCOPd 16!'t 17'"' JemWlr 17''• 17'1'1 MQfrsn 11 11''• Revmnci 21'1. 21"' Tv~ • 21 71\,\ Jf!M41rl 4111 S MolClb lS lS"' RecJICr ''-1 Un nlr 59~ 60'h wlco 20loli 21'.~ Mu.II« 1111< 73 RHvn tO'h 1~ U~ nr 6 61111 Jonlcb4 ~ S~ N•rroC •1"'" 42\'J ReulrH 2~ 26'-8~ ,!{ l81h 38"'" Joso!lsn 7"" 11.'t NOela ll'" 13lio RoedSv lt.\li 19 uVeBs 14Yo WI, Joslvn 19 19'1'1 NMlcrn 2~ 2.\li ROC>Mvr lJ't• 14 Ut1vHtt JI\ ' Kelver I IV. 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U"'> :,., I ' ~~ ~~ ~= I 15'• LN le S'" t<O -,, 2"-~ loo '°" WmorC \» 6"' Lu 1>11 6 6119 wml "-:r.o 1 S let 7\a 1 IJ -16 rTP 791'& lOV. lllcnx I ' W~• ' f"" Lftnys ~1• a"" Oxoco 11-32 ~ t!WI H:: ff~ w I 9 I V, lllvTut 1 l Yt PCA Int 6\lt 6~ wEISv W Al 2~ 1" L1118rd 3 J 1'• PcG•R 191.'J 19'°t vren s 1111 Wt~O 161't I MCI '• I"' Pensi>tl ll~ 19 dv It 6''-WolvTc 16V, ~'/4 Ma<IGE 1 1 ''• PHrMf I H'I) lren t l't [:''• wro111w 29-" lit M•~Pl 2 I· 16 ''• PeneE n lO lio enclv •1, x.o.c ~.... ~ M41fRI ~"· .,, Pen!~ ' 6 ,.... ldMIC )1~ XlcO<. 11, I •;, MeulLP 6 ,,_ x t:i... 91't 1Reo s ll n'4 Y'o F ,,, l4 M41vP1 s · 16 s~ vlPeo 3· 1• "• '•ll!IO , ~ ,,, z.n'Lt> : "" S"• MevnOt S''> Sl't Pelrtte 241'> 15 trwCI ' '• ZlonUI •t? I . it.- 100 1 , hnflnnn.I.! .ind 11?5% start. You'll qualify for our low rate just by opening a Hon1e Federal checking account and using our Sure Pay ·ystem to make your pay - It's really that easy. 8ecau~e no\\' ment s aut on1atically. Home Federal's new car financing And don't forget. \\ e L·an help yc>u is as flexible as it 1s affordable. make other in1p ortant purchases. Along with a great low rate you too, with personal lines of credit. ca n get a good long term. up to hon1e equity loans and home mort- five years. And a loan of up to gage loan s. $25. 000. You can even finance Hut hurrY. Thb offer e nds lOO fk-of your cos ts -including tax :\o\·ember 15. l~H5 . .\nd 1t could and license . be your last chance t< 1 get both the That mean s you don't need a ca r you like and a lo~n ~·ou L"an liH.' trade-in. And you don't have to come with . up with a penny to put down. Noth-So if vou \·e alreadv found vour ing could be ea sie r. ~~l~ car,-find your wa!: to the n~aresf Except for the way you pay. ~YJ Hon1e Federal. Or call toll free Because at Home Federal. ~ ~ 1( 00) 5 54 -~n2t1for111fom1- it's all taken care of ac the at ion and an t1 pplicat1on 1-IOME FEDEJW.. t2 tf;//~cf6"V~ ~Mt/.~ •f.xamplt'. If \111.ar ~•.111 t11t 11 ... "I ' 1o 1, \1 •UI 1'4 I ••1or1lhh 1~1\"11t'nt" .1r1· J 1 ... r -_;.,., •• ' '''• t\ 1>t "llh lf,I\\ I ti oll\\ tll!H l t·nam rt"•t m 11"11' 1ppl\ I.. r1·1h1 1ppn ''·'''uh•\" t ;, -1.11111.irtl qu.1hfh 11~ ,,,_ • 11. • L.A. COl'NTY Arcadia ·'4!)-:-i22<• R.-wr l\ La. Cienega 652-Xflti2 Hewrly 11111, 214-6066. Glendak .w~ ~n.n. La. Laftada 79(Vi'1 ll. l..:i Ta}('ra ni0.~26. LA Omi.~to"n n25·2(19Q l.archmclf1l 4n~ Mn.:l Lawndale-J71-461J. L101.1-.ln Ht·1~ht .. 223-1164. Manna dcl Rt"\· ~l3 414 l Palos~ ;m ~. l'\a\-a dt'l l<n 822·2905. kedondo tk-ai:h J lt\ .\:WI lOrrance 378 1226. '"'"lrht>o;.tt'r 670-0lfl0. ~t COVU\.'l %;? J.U I ~t Los Anae1es 4 7~. ii~4. ""· t'M)()(! 474·3503 ~:\~ FF.R\,\~00 \Al.I n I.. d.110)(d t~HK ,41' 4141. ~trthnd..,'\' Jo\l ~:~lh . ...,ht·rm;m t la)...;··~~ 7401 \.\hcldland Ifill.; ~cl;l l:!.!l ORA.\!(;E Cot ':\'T\ Bol!'a ( ~okkn"~'' l'lYi. t N . ~ Bns1111.:~ t:ll -\rt hur 1.n~ \r.I JO, Fullt>ti1"' 44.l 1~'I11 t, lfunttnjill m ReKh 53ci 6511 lfunltnj{t(.Cl lk-a..h ~land 464 fttit\7. lnllll , c~ lil21, l.a.guna H.tllo; 7711 i l 7'1 LllltU"'' 'J1gut'l 4~l5·2AA> 'tl(owpon l\t>~rh 640 16:~. ~'ln Juan u1p1~1 rano 493·0601. Santa .\n.1 hli7 .?4''" ~al F\E'ach M~l-l·:l~l T11 .. 1an iJ0-6995 RJ\'ERSIDE ((M "\'n Ht>mt-t 92Q 11 .... l "'.\ \ l.l'I~ ORl~P<H Ol . ·n \lnfl • • H.1\ • U '"7 I~'< J.(111tk· .. ..:.u-.,·;i1 111 .. 1111• Bt·.11 h 771 4~14 ''"\ 111 ... 1lh1 ... pt.flc1"n111"n '4 1 .?t-1~1 ...,,ii I .Ill" ( lh1 .. po '1.wion1111 Pl;11,1 '4.i ·111 "'~'T\ 6 \Rl\.\R <. Ol ~'T\ l arptnlt'™ ""4 41 U I 101<.·ta %4 J.C, -1 I "'tfTlPCI• i In 7':;(12 ~tuott'\ltn ~~ C,Q~. 'lan!Al Barbar<\ l 'lov.'Tltnv:n ~1 1 i~l . :-.. 8 M1lpas ~i 1~42 . ...., H Nonhsldt' AA2-.6tl25 S H ~ HilQUt' 6R7 5.1)46, S3nt.l Mana 922 M~I . Stih'llna~-M6Q \'ENTI.'RA C OUNTl' l amanllo 482 461 1. C))ai 64&-014 l , Thou.und Oak~ 497-~. ~UTll ~ 5211 \l'nturai"V1C1nna fl44-8Sli ~l.ilct \T~ ·~~·.JVV n • ... , "•' ; 1t111nu II ,,,.. I 1'11< • ~, 11 .~ '"'' t , .. n ', .. • "'"""' ~ ~'l I\. CoMt DAILV PIUlTITIM.lnday, Ootob« 10, 1985 C>f" ,.. SM• !Alf Cllt .. 4 --..J TllllllAY'I OLlllll PllOll Market has small gain NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market showed a small gain in a dnf\ang session Thursday. The market's advance Wednesday was ~parked by heated takeover speculauon 1n many issues. But analysts said that kind of trading enthusiasm couldn't be sustained for very long. As 1t faded, they said. the market had to contend with persistent concerns about the outloolc for the economy. corporate earnings and interest rates. A barrage of new debt S«unt1es from the Treasury 1s expected soon in the credit markets. Many Wall Streeters are womcd that 1t v.1111 push interest rates higher. Higher rates. in 1um, could we~ken the economy. Even at its present pace. economic act1v11 y hasn't been producing corporate profits at levels many investors had been hoping for. WHAT AMEX DID WHAT NYSE DID NEW YORK <A.Pl OCI. 10 AMEX LEADERS GoLo QuoTES METALS QuGTES NEW YORK (API OCt. 10 NYSE LEADERS Dow JoNES AvERAGES ~~us YO~o~ lAf~~m~~~) 0o-r.-J~IO. tr,n IJm~·rm·fl I~ . . +m: Utl .OI .fO . . . Stk .-'2 .81 ·m , dus , • r n ~ • ~~~~k ,t, .m NASDAQ SUMMARY famou.5 la~Ls ... nirwport bioch '+Ii f'C1'111r.m l'!)\c~, 11~/&it'+ 'XJIO ~"M:JCXi vii \tJ9l-1001 ~ bhd '21~2Ce ~7 j p!'eodliro 5Z~90Ut.h IOl-40'4 ,8181'°" 9"~ t'l'IOI\ thru fh 10 t.o9. ~rday lO too C. tunday noon to~ • ' !_ Daily Pilat THURSDAY. OCTOBER 10. 1985 ABC bench•• Coaell for World Serlea. C2. Fountain Valley topa Edlaon In Sunaet water polo .. C3. Dodgers get a leg (or two) up on Cards S t . Louis' rabbits k ept off t h e b ases; 'Toque Play' h e lps LA to 4 -0 victory ~~--- By J OSEPH DUDEVOIR LOS ANGELES -The Dodgers had themselves a little taste of rabbit stew Wednesday night at Dodger Stadium in game o ne of the Nauonal League Champ1onsh1p Senes. In what was supposed 10 be the latest chapter in the hare vs. the tortoise, the race never materialized when Fernando Valenzuela and Tom Niedenfuer kept the rabbits in their cages and enabled the Dodgers to take the first game. 4· I, and go one game up on the St. Louis Cardinals "We made a few mistakes and we got cooked," said Cardinal Manager Whitey Herzog. As the crowd of 55,270 saw the much feared Red Bird running game (which produced 31 4 steals and 747 runs during the regular season) run dry, the Dodgers, who were supposed lo wield the big sticks, hit softly and took advantage of some costly mis- cues by the CardinaJs to go a game up in the best of seven series. In the process. the Dodger!. also added a new sign to their play--calhng. The "Toque" play, which broke a 2-0 eame Open in the SIXlh inning, caught the Cards with the clement of surpnsc. With two out, Pedro Guerrero on third and Mike Sc1osc1a on first . Candy Maldonado dropped a perfect bunt 1n front of Cards' third baseman Terry Pendleton. Pilcher John Tudor and Pendleton both charged the ball. with Pendleton getting there fi rst. barehanding the ball and attempting to get Guerrero at the plate. Unfortunately, especially for Tudor. Pendleton's throw nailed the lei\ handed pitcher in the right elbow and Guerrero scored to make 11 3·0. "I yelled 'Toque, toque,' from the dugout," said Dodger Tommy Lasorda. "We saw that Pendleton was playing deep and I figurcd f udor and (Cardinal catcher Durrell l Porter didn't speak Spanish " Toque means bunt 1n 'ipan1sh It also meant trouble fo r the Red Birds, who never recovered In this specialized a$e of .. pom., teams are ap110 start hiring tranlatori. to steal signs 1fth1s sort of1h1ng keep\ up. "I've ne'er seen tha I pla) before " said ( ardinal Manager While) Herzog "I was surprised to ..ee him try something like that. But I thought Terry had a play at the plate. but he ended up h1t11ng John instead " Dodger '>CCond baseman Ste\ e ~ax said, "(and> pul the nail 1n their coffin w11h that play" And Sax hammered the ltd shul wllh a double IO ~on· \t10\u<1 and make 1t 4-0 W11h the ( ard1nals' two \~cdster!. Vince Coleman and W1ll1e MtCJee going a combined 0-for-M w1th four stnkeouts and double pla) ')1 L oul\ never got out offirs1 gear During the regular season Coleman (I I 0 '>teals) and McGee ( 56) had done tht' leg work for the Card ... ollen\e 1>oh1Lh resembled a 400-meter rela) \.quad on 1 ts way to I 0 I ""ins to lead the maJ11r' "I JUSl got on top 1n tht> rnun1 anll threw what I wanted ·· \aid Valenzuela. after the ( ard anals rnuld muster onl> a harmles'> '>h:al ol ~cond b) shortstop Ou1t> \m1th But after 1he game the\ wae \llll 1alk1ng about the l oque Pia\ .\ntl there was some d1i.crepant' o' t•r ""h11 tallcd 11 Dodger batting coach Mann) Mot.a rcc:alled 11 a lntle d1l1erentl) .. I was th.: one who was )'elhng to C and) " said a smiling Mot.a "I saw the 1h1rd baseman pla) ing back and wld ( and) to go ahead and try 11 (the huntl I ne,ereHn heard T ommy" "It was Manny 1>.ho told me to try 11 " ~aid Maldonado "I heard him 'ell <ner 1n ~pan1~h. but I didn't look 11\cr hi!> v.a, ·· Herwgdidn't t are who called 11 He 1us1 -..aid. ··11 !>huuld have been a 0.0 game 1n thn1xth ~1osc1a had the big h1t tn 1ha1 inning. and then that bunt " he ..aid shaking his head .\her the '>'ore reaLhed 4.0 Tudor ~111 lhl· huok n en though the (Pleu e eee OODGER8/C2) Rabbits known for slow starts St. Louis hopes to ge t r unning gam e going tonight By RICHARD Dl'N~ 0..,, Nof C.,.,.11' I ~t LQ.S ANGELES -I he ">1 Lou" Cardinals did not get to the "'1a11onal League Champwnsh1p ~ril'' h' pla,. ing poor detensc -.:or dill the\ gt'I there b) p11ch1ng poorl~ or Jl\pJa, 1ng a lack of '>~ed 8) winning 1hc: 'la11onal I eagut• East. the Cardinah re<>er' t'O lht· nght 10 meet thc Dodgers in 1he lx''>t-111- seven pla~ oil\ The~ gut there h~ exh1b111ns all ol 1he abcn t' 1n J mort' than fashionable manner l1u11n g.imt· one Wednesda) n1gh1 a1 l>odgn Stadium, St Lo uis wa) 11<\ nwn v.or\t enem} when 11 came to g(lt ng to 11\ strengths The Cardinals had good p1tt h1ng but their defcnst' v.a<, SU'>pt'tt Their speed'' On1t• \m1th \lok J mean1nsless second ha-.t· 1n tht• )t:t- ond innins That's 11 Dodaer flnt ba.eman Enoe Cabell argaea point with umpire (top left), Terry Pendleton i• cau«iht ln rundown (lower left), Oely No4 .,......,. bf~ K- and Blll Madlock la welcomed home after acortng flnt run of the aame lo the fourth inning OD hit by Pedro Guerrero. o in thl'> one. the Carll1nJI' 'Pt'CJ was silent and their dt'fen\l' - whether the) want to belie' e 1t ur not -cost thcm the game Their p1tt hing was on target. but ll 1>.a\n·t g11tx.I enough to outduel thl' Dcxigl·r.,· Fernando Valenzuela and Turn N1edenfuer 1>.hu coml11nell :11 thorough I~ \Idle V. h11t·\ tkrl •>l(., ru~ rats c;1 Lou1' ""hit h ''"It' l 1.l ti.t\n dunng the 198~ campaign tht• l11urth Rams send Barber off to Denver T 1ght end M 1kejiarber, who caught a team-leading 55)asses in I 983, has been traded by the Rams to the Denver Broncos in exchange for an undisclosed draft choice. the Na- tional Football League team an- nounced Wednesday Barber. a 6-3, 237-pounder who came to the Rams from the Houston Oilers in 1982. suffered a knee inJury before the start of the 1984 season began and caught only seven passes. This year. Barber has one reception for 29 yards. He was used primarily as a blocker and had requested a trade. "I love going to Denver," Barber said ... It's great to be JOin1ng another winner. Coach (Dan) Reeves said they needed a tight end and he likes my style. He's excited to have me. "Coach Robinson 1s a fine coach. The onl y probem was he wanted me to accept my role (as a blocker) I JU~t can't accept that." Barber. 32, 1s in his I 0th NFL season. A spokesman for the Rams said the draft choice the team will receive 1s a "low-round pi ck." "We've had a number ofcon"ersa· tions," Robinson said. "I believe it's important for a person to be happy in the situation they're in. Obviously, Barber wasn't happy.·· To fill the open spot on their roster. the Rams re-signed linebacker Jim Lau_ghlin, wh o they had released dunng the preseason. Blue Jays doing everything right Ka n sas City mistak es costly again as Toronto takes 2-0 lead in AL p layoffs TORONTO (AP> -The l oronto Blue Jays. with surgical prcc1s1on. have carved up Kansas Cit) 1n the fir<it two games of the .\mencan League playolTs The JOb has been -.o -.k1llful and exact that the Roya ls can't t.''<'" .-.cc the blood The Bl ue Jays' 6·5 victory 1n IO innings Wedne~a} had the same charactensucs as their 6-1 triumph Tuesday night Toronto hit no home runs 1n either game. bul the Blue Jays got ">Ohd pitching and a1r-11ght defense while taking advantage of every Kan~s C11y mistake -and there were plent)' "We have our work cut out for us," Royals third baseman George Brett <;a1d. "But we've got Bret Saberhagen going for us at home, so we've got to be confident about Fnday's game ·· Today was a travel day and both teams scheduled workouts 1n Royals Stadium in advance of Fnday's third game of the best-Of-seven series. The Royals will throw the 21-year- old Saberhagen, 20-6 dunng the regular season. against Toronto vet- eran Doyle Al exander. 17-10 "We dcfin11ely need a win f-rida) night,'' Saberhagen said. "II puts a little pressure on me. Going home makes it a httle easier. though " But no matter how well the Royals do back 1n front of their own fans. they'll have to rnme back to the shores of Lake Ontario 1fthey hoix· to keep the Blue Jays from becoming the first Canadian team to appear in the World Senes "The ofT~a> 1~ going to help u~ more than them " Brett conceded "'They want to go out and play right now. Going 10 Kansas City ma\o <,low down their momentum " Momentum didn't !.ct·m 10 mean a thing to the Blue Jays on Wednesda> They fell behind 1w1ce and had to overcome what could have been a enppling call by the umpire\ -but still they won. "11 sttms hke this 1s a team that comes back from adver'i1ty," said Al Oliver. the des11lnated hiller who drove in the winning run with a two- out. two.strike single 1n the 10th. "I'd say this 1s pretty typical. "This team has a lot of talent .md character and 11 has the ah1llt'! to comc back It's been 1ha1 way ever since I've been here " With the score tied 4-4, Willie Wilson opened the Royals 10th with a single to center. stole second and scored on Frank White's con- troversial two-out 'i1ngle to center Toronto center fielder Lloyd Mostby attempted a shoestring catch of White's sinking liner and came up showing the ball in the web ofh1<i long glo' e But umpire Da ve Ph1lhps, who wa s patrolhng the nght-field line. (Pleaee eee JAY8/C:I ) .., ........... Lloyd lloeeby (.econd from rfCht) ta areeted by Toronto teammate. after acortnc the wtnntnc run in 10th ionlna. Playoff .cbedule Wednesdov -Docleen 4, St Louis 1 1 OO<Jgers leod ierles 1-0l Ton1gh! -St LOUIS 1Anduler 21 " ot Dodeef"' Hersh1H r 19-Jl. S JS Soturdov -Docleen (We1cn 13·4) a• St Lo.u•s Cox 11·9) 10-05 a m Sundav -Dodeef"' ot SI LOUIS, 5 IS om Monday -Docteen 01 St Loul' 11 OS pm 11 necusar., W~nesoav S1 Louis a• Oooeen, 12-0S o m 1t necenarv H •ursoov Oct 17 -St LOUIS al Docteen, 5 JS o m 11 neceuarv TELEVISION All games on Cl'lannet ' RADIO All gomes on ICABC 17901 KNX 1070) h1ghl'\I nc:r h' a modem da~ cl ub. m1ntnl 11u1 uni' l'tgh t h11s-'><.",en of "hllh v.erl· '1nglr<. -.A.h1ch is t}p1cal tor lht' C .irJ1nal\ But the~ managed 1nh om• m1ltl threat 1n the -l-1 dl'feat "m1th the atrobauc 1>.onder at .,hon,top "1th \I \llJlen base'> did not mak.c: a plJ\ un a ball in the: )IXlh inn1n~ thJl hl' v.puld normal!~ make \lthuugh tht· plJ\ v.cnt for a double oil tht• ba1 ol Bill 'v1 adlod .. ll looked Jn\thing hut that a .. 11 set up the Dodger~ thrcl'·run \l\th inning \rn11h v.tll he the fir\\ one tct allm1t i l \(111 ··1 ,,m tdl '"u · \dtd "m1th 1>.ho hJl\l'tghlh r •hl' hnl'UP anJ ,11llet tell IV.1 ,,f h ''l'J!ll 'lllt\ lhdt 1n nlJn\ \•"''' I m Jl.t lh•"<' pi.a'' Hui •u ,J,1n l ~l'l Ii• them Jll of lhl" 1111h' r ''IH "' t hl Ill"\ I I j\ l' I )c "ll'!l'r hJ lll'r\ 'tJ1.hcd h,1,l' '>Jfl•I\ JOJ h, lhl' ltnlt" I: ii 111'11 r I hn I ..id11r h.tJ llnll" to (Pleau .ee CA R DINAL/C2 Warrior defense gets test .\ l'I\ •I.I '°'<.I \ ll \>. l l'J~Ul' g.tn.1 ''. q 1 .. 11gh1 J I In lnl' ll1}'!h "hnr V. 1111.lh1 1Jgr Jntl I \l,llh 1.1 h.111k lri Jno 11ri1·r !!.Hlll' Hunt1ng1un lk.11. h Jn.1 \ \.111·1 I >t't -.quarr oil 1 n J n1m·ll:.1~ul· ~Jm1 Roth [1.Jffit'~ \IJr1 JI • I I h 11• ',, • .1p,ul1 letnl.. E.;tan111t 1 ~ 2 0 I • "!> \\'ood· brldgt' 1 3· I. I ·O 1 v. 110Jtmdg.l· puh ,, .!l'I 'l\l 111 J \1111 tl'\I .i~.1 n\t I \I.int 1.1 ' halant<'d ot- ll"n'<" l..n l'.1 ''' ~uartt>rhad' M1~c R11,dltn1 Tl'll't\1•r Fnl Oom and ( nl11r.1d11 tr,tn\l\'r Rnhin l ln\d cl 'l'r' t1l ·.i1q· lull ha1I.. \tll lr,1nl' High Huollnittoo BuC'b 1%-%1 vs Matt'r Ot'1 t 2-:? I \11phllmt1rc quannhJ, i.. I 1~.hl Man nm 1c h c1,mpk1rJ l' 111 2~ for :. tt•uth- d11v. n' 1 n .1 I ~-I I ""in 1" rr llun11ni?l<>nlkJ1ha,earag11 Th(' O llC'f\ (lt' "11 h11ut haUhatk Tom Hl'mJnJu 1 ~nt•1·1 out tor thc )rar \1 ann11\11h a'eragC's 12 J"lit~' a1tr mr1' rx·r game Quar 1rrhJ1.I.. J,,1 '\apol1 pacr' Hunt 1ngton lkJ1 h 'Dl'IJ1>oare ""ingC'd· 1 ,1tlrn't "111· "3nta .\na &11>.I Kings open NHL season tonight Toronto: Aggressive, opportunistic • • • and better INGLEWOOD (AP) -The Los Angeles Kings open their I 98S·86 season tonight at 7:30 at the Forum apmst the Vancouver Canucks. The season.opener against the Canucks will be the first test for the Kings, who will be tryina to improve their record from the 34-32-8 mark a year q o. Before last season the Kinp had missed the playoffs two strai&h t years. Kinas Coach Pat Qiunn said he has his siahts set on second place in the Smythe Division behind the Edmonton Oilers, the defend· ina Stanley CUp champ1ons. Los Anatlcs W'lll have to beat out two 1trona teams in the W1nn•pcaJcts and the C.alpry Aames to meet Quinn's upectations. TORONTO (AP) -The Kansas City Royals are frustrated Not so much b«au~ they'vr lost the first two games of the American Lea.gue playoffs to the Toronto Blue Jays. But bttau~ of how they've lost "We didn't play very well. Why? I don't know," said Gcorae Brett. who went 0-for-4 as Kansas City stumbled 6·S in 10 inninas Wednesday. ··v ou JUSt can't f.O out and play every game rcal aood. · The fact 1s that the Royal~ hn ve played poorly in the fint two games of the best-of.seven scnes. The Blue Jay,, mcanwh1lc. have been aa· lfC SI VC, Opportunistic and better In the opener Tuttday n1Jht. Toronto breezed (>. I Wednesday's pmc saw Kansas City blow an early 3.o lead before r1llyin1 10 fortt the pmc into e•tf'I innings. Then, af\er sconna a con- troversial run in the top of the I 0th, the Royals watched Toronto stnkc tor two runs against Dan Qu1scn~rT) in the bottom of the I 0th 10 win "This is the most painful kind of loss." Brett said. "Thi~ one's going 10 be hard to foraet about. When you make that manv m1stake1'. it hun~ " Said Qu1scnbcrry· 'Tm not a believer 1n luck. but I think some- times thtnp ao your way and some- times they don't." "We JU!lt p ve the pme to them." said catcher Jim Sundbefl. whose throwma error on Uoyd Moscby's stolen bate 1n the e\ahth hel~ Toronto take a 'honltved lead Now, Brttt s&)'l. the thma the Royals can loot forward to most 1s today's oA'-day The ten~ resume, Fnda~ night in KanY!> ( it ) Im ganw thret' "Thr 1111-da' 1\ going tu ht•lp 111. morc than thcm:· Brett said '"Thn want 10 go nut and pla' nitht no\\ " One guy who "a~ glad tn pla) a1 all was veteran <\I Oli ver, who •angled homc the winning run with two out~ 1n the 10th "It'' great to be ahk to shov. enthusiasm "Ith a wmnina team I haven't had that t'hancc 'cry much in the last few yea~." Ohver said af\cr his fint post~ason appearanC't' s1nt~ 1975 with Ptttsbul")h Oh,er. a carttr ~ hitter. ha' bttn Toronto's lef\·handtd dn11- nated hitter since bema acqu1rt'd 1n a mtdK'ason trade whh Los An&ek's But when Kansas City Manaacr Pick Ho"ser s.a1J hl' v.011ld 'Ian lei! handen in thrt'<' ol 1hr tlr\I 111111 games. Olt,C'r \Jill ht· 1..nt'"" 1>oha1 hi\ role v.ould he ''I'm going 10 ho. checrleadcr " h1· <.aid lht• h1·ad Ont' JU) '"ho 1>.ant~ to kt'<'P plJ\ ing, but with a h11lc le-s\ IO£nlarc " Mostb\ v.ho '4.ored the 1>.in ning run from selond h3\C on Ohq·r' hit Af\er bre1k1f\i an 0-tm I\ pl:n o il ~lump h" singling and o;nmntt lhc gn- ahead run 1n the ('1ghth Mn\('li\ wa' the ~nter of contN)Ver-.' in thl' tuJ"I of th(' 10\h W1th tv.o out\ and a runn('r 11n SC'C'Ond. Franl. White h11 a hnc cJn,c to ~nter field Moscb) charged thl' ball. scooped and tht'n held his &10\ (' up h1a.h wtth the bait ~u&rt'I\ tn\lde But .111t·1 '""Ir h1•,1 ta11 on. tht: um- p1rn 1 ull·tl \1mt'h' haJ trapl)('d the hall 1n11l11op 111 ~.in..a'i l'll \ "l'On ng 1h1· Ir.id 111n 1 "" " I .. rnt1.hl the hall.'' h<' said Bui I m n11t \J\ 1ng 11 "u a bad call Thl' um pm·, arr human " \ n<l IO'itt:Jd nf ft'tlin& rattled. \111<oeh' anJ th(' Blul' a~s got even - and lhl'n \tlffil' l 110\ fC'rnandC'1 led off with • <.1nglC' again" Qu1~nherry. took ICC· pnd nn a aroundout and ~red on 'v1l1\ch~ ' '>angk Mo\Ch~ moved to ~ ond whtn fint 0a1eman levc Balboni m1'lpla'red a pickoff throw by Qu1~nhc-rry and, one out later, \COrf'd on Oh"er's s1na.lc "It'' not 'take that' unul the p mt 11 oHr." Moseby wd "Then. 1t 1 'take that · J • SPORT S BREAK ABC will carry on~uc• •en d Green to Dolphin• ID World Series TAMPA -The Tampa Bay Bue· m cancers Wednesday sent two-time Pro c • • Bowl linebacker Hugh Green to the M1am1 • without Cosell Dolphins an exchange for first-and second· round selections in the 1986 National Football Lea.aue draft. From AP dlspatclte1 NEW YORK -portscaster Howard ~ Coscll. who created a controve~y by - crit1cm~ his former "Monday N1&lll Football' colleagues in his new book, wllJ not be part of ABC's television coverage of the World Series. Jim Spence. senior vice president of ABC Sports, confirmed that Coscll, the nation's most celebrated and controversial sports broadcaster. had wilhdrawn from the network's team covering maJor IC84uc baseball's champ1onsh1p starting Oct. 19. Coeell all." The ABC broadcasters will be Al Michaels, Jim Palmer and Tam McCarver. with Michaels and Angel outfielder Rcgie Jack· son handling the pre-game show. ABC spokesman Irv Brodsky said that Lhc network "did offer Howard the role of pre-game show anchor. feeling he would be excellent in that role, but Howard refused that position and sug- gested he not work the sencs at Cosell was unavailable for comment. In his book, "I Never Played the Game," recently excerpted in TV Guide, Cosell assailed the ABC Monday night announcing team of Frank Gifford. OJ. Simpson and Don Meredith. He said Gifford was a bland, mistake-prone shill for the National Football League, Simpson was inarticulate and Meredith was ill- prepared and uninterested. Simpson. who had occasionally worked with Coscll on the network's prime-umc NFL telecasts. succeeded him last season. This year. Joe Namath took over for Meredith. The network's NFL ratings dropped last year, as did those of CBS and NBC. The ratings are up on all three networks this season. Coscll's depanure from ABC's World Senes coverage. after working on the network's regular season coverage. 1s the latest step in a senes of withdrawals from maJor events. When he pulled out of NFL telecasts. he said pro football had ·'become a stagnant bore." Green, a fifth .year pro who was the seventh overall selection in the 1981 draft, bas been unhappy with the Bucs and last week walked out of camp for one day. The Bucs. off to an 0..5 start under first-year Coach Lttman Bennett, will receive Lhe Dolphins' No. I choi~ an next spnng's draft as well as a second-round pick Miami obtained from the Minnesota Vikings for the rights to former United States Football League sw Anthony Carter. Rams' Collins wins NFC honor Rams and Joe Montana of the San 4 t NEW YORK -Jim Collins of the Eil Francisco 49ers, who threw for 429 yards II and five touchdowns last week, were named Wednesday as the National Football Con· fcrcncc's players of the week. Collins had 13 tackles. three assists and one sack in the Rams' 13-10 wrn over Minnesota. Has final tackle stopped Darrin Nelson at the I-yard-line as he attempted to dive for the winning touchdown on Lhe game's final play. . Montana. who completed 37 of57 passes in a 38-17 victory over Atlanta, set team passing records for attempts, completions and yards, and his five TD passes ued a club mark. Other offensive nominees included wide receivers Mike RenfroofDallasandJamcs Lofton ofGreen Bay, running backs George Rogers and John Riggins of Wadungton. and Chicago tight end Emery Moorehead. Kings top Clippers, 132-125 MARYSVILLE -Veteran guard m Marie Woodson scored 23 points to lead the Sacramento Kings past Lhc Los Angeles Clippers, 132-125. in NBA exhibition play Wednesday night. The K.ings's No. I draft choice Joe Kleine watched has teammates from the bench. Kleine did not dress for the game played before 1,350 fans at Yuba College. Leading the <;hppers with 26 points was Marcus Johnson. Guard Derck Smith scored 19 points. Cedric Maxwell added I I points and 9 rebounds for Los Angeles. The Clippers arc now 1-3 in exhibition play. Lendl Is equal to challenge Dellr PW,..... "°f _,._. • ...._ Left-hander Fernando Valenzuela followa through with delivery duri.DC Dodgen' 4 -1 Ttctory over St. Lout.. DODGERS ••• From Cl Dodgers hadn't hit bjm too hard. Though nobody has of late. Tudor had won 20 of his last 21 pmes on his way to a 21-8 season wilh a 1.93 earned run average. He also led the majors with 10 shutouts. His counterpart, Valenzuela kept an unnerving trend alive when he failed to make it through the seventh. The left-handed scrcwballer, known for his ability to close games out, has failed to make past the seventh inning in his last few starts. And he had won just one of his last eight starts. After the Cards got a run an the seventh to chase Valenzuela, who scattered seven hits, walked two and struck out siit 1n 61/J innings, Niedcn- fucr came on to notch the save. "Their pitching not only kept our speed off the bases, they kept every- one off the bases," said Herzog." And they took advantage of what we gave them to get their runs." While Valenzuela was saihng through six shutout innings, Tudor was nearly matching him, save an unearned run in the fourth inning after Pendleton booted Bill Madlock's grounder with one out. Madlock, not exactly a greyhound in his own right, proceeded to steal second and score on Guerrero's soft single to right. And after that three-run sixth inning, you could put a fork in the Cards because they were done. Madlock got that inning going with a one-out grounder went off Smith's glove and into leftficld, where Smilh ran it down, dropped it and had no play as Madlock never stopped run- ning and chugged into second. The play was ruled a double, but it certainly looked like a two-base error by the usually sure-handed Smilh. "Ozzie makes that play 99 percent· of the time." said Herzog. "It looked like the ball hit him in the foot before 1t got to his glove." Smith was planted and waited to backhand the ball. But 1t never found his glove. "~ut the only thing it means 1s we have to win four," said Herzog." And they ha vc to win three." rn 1982. after he worked the heavyweight lltlc bout in wh ich then-champion Larry Holmes pummeled Randall "Tex" Cobb for 15 rounds. Coscll said he would no longer cover professional bo:ung, saying he was urcd of the "hypocnsy and sleaziness of the boxing scene" and calling for greater protection for fighters or for the abolition of the sport. EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. -Ivan ~ Lendt survived three set points in the CARDINAL RABBITS SLOW STARTING ••• Quote of the day Dr. Ferdie Pacheco, boxing analyst for NBC. prior to the Michael Spinks-Larry Holmes heavywcigh1 title bout: "If Rocky Marciano fought today, there would be no way that he'd be undefeated. He cut hke the Panama Canal." Giants rejected by Oakland OAKLAND -The San Francisco Giants struck out Wednesday an their bid • to share the Oakland Coliseum with the A's as the Coliseum's Board of Directors rejected the proposed move. The rejection left Giants owner Bob Lune with a decision about whether to stay at Candlestick Park. attempt to move to another city or sell the club. He has said the club will no longer play in Candlestick Park under his ownership. The Coliseum's board announcca at a news conference that 1t won't agree to the Giants' proposal to move into the A's ballpark for several years until a downtown stadium 1s built in San Francisco. 1 Coliseum President George Vulcasm said the board's decision was unanimous and called 1t "a simple business decision" that was final. JAYS ... From C l ruled that Moseby had trapped the ball. "I saw the ball hll the turf." Ph1lhps said "He madea nice play and I thank he thought he caught the ball." Moseby. of course, said he was sure he had caught the ball before it hit the artificial surface. .. We didn't lose. so 1t was an even- steven." said Moseb). who figured prom1nentl~ m the Blue Jays' wan- ning rally 1n the bottom of the I 0th. Ton} Fernandez started the rally with a single. His grounder was fielded cleanly by Royals shortstop Omx Concepcion. who double· pumped and threw late to first. Fernandez mo.,,ed to second on Damaso Garcia\ ~rounder and scored on Moseby's single to right to even the score at 5-5 "In that 'i1tuat1on. I was JU St trying 10 get ham m." Mo~b} said. "But after we won. 11 was kind of. 'Take that" "I don't want to \econd-guess the umpires. but I'm glad that call didn't decide the ballgam<' " Moseb} ad vanced to ~ccond when first baseman Steve Balboni was charged with an error on a pickoff a11emp1 b} reliever Dan Quisenberry, then scored the w1n n1ng run on Oliver's single to left .. Th1'i 1s the mo\t painful kind of loss." Brett said "This one's going to be hard to forget about When you make that man' mistakes. 1t hurts." opening set and defeated John McEnroe, 7-5. 6-4, to capture the Meadowlands Tennis Challenge on Wednesday rught. It was the first meeting between the two best players in men's tennis since Lend I dclhroned McEnroe last month to capture his first U.S. Open title. And just like in the Ope'n, the victory came in straight sc:ts. McEnroe, ranked No. 2 in the world, won the toss and elected to serve and the two players held serve through seven games before McEnroe broke in game eight when his Czechoslovakian double faulted to gJve him the game. Television, radio TELEVISION 5:30 p.m. -BASE BALL: St. Louis at Dodgers in game two of the National League playoffs. Channel 4. 10 p.m. -WRESTLING: Channel 56. 11 p.m. -BOXING: Channel 56. RADIO 5:30 p . m. -BASEBALL: St. Louts at Dodgers. KABC(790), KNX (1070). 7:30 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Clippers vs. Sacramento at Redding, KMPC (710}. 7:30 p.m. -HOCKEY· Van couver at Kings KLAC (570). . ,.,, ........... ··1t was _prell) qu1t·t 1n the dressing room," QU1'ien!x-rr. 'ia1d. "There were a fev. four letter words but nobody tackled a dothcs bag" Ka naa• City'• Willie WUM>n la able to aucceaafally break up doable play attempt of Toronto abortatop Tony f'ernandes. From Cl thank about what had happened, the Dodgers had a comfortable 4-0 lead and Tudor was losing his first game since July 20 when these same Dodgers beat him, 3-0. "I thou~t he pitched very well," Herzog said. ··1t should have been a 0-0 game m the sixth." Tudor had won 20 out of his last 21 decisions. But his teammates let him down in the first round of the first ever seven-game National League playoff. St. Louis third baseman Terry Pendleton bobbled a ball in the fourth inning which indire<:tly cost his team a run. and the early lead, and fired a ball into Tudor's right elbow trying to get Pedro Guerrero at the plate on a squeeze that scored another run. "l really thought I was going to get him," said Pendleton on the s1itth· inning squeeze play off the bat of Candy Maldonado. which gave the Dodgers a 3-0 lead at the time. "I asked (catcher) Darrell (Porter) and he said I would've gotten (Guerrero, had the ball not hit Tudor). '•Running to the ball. you can see everything. so I tell that I had time to go to the plate. Ifs a lot tougher of a throw to first than 1t 1s to home. Your momentum's carrying you that way That's the first time I ve ever seen anything like that in baseball." ··1 thought Terry had a play at the plate," Herzog said. "He also should have gotten the guy at first, I thought. But he had to do one or the other and he coded up hitting John m the (elbow)." The Cardinals' speed was shut down because their No. I and 2 hitters an the lineup, rookie Vance Coleman and MVP candidate W1lhe McGee. never reached base. Combined. they were O-for-8. including four strikeouts and one double play. Those two need to set the scoring table for the Cardinals' offense. but 1t can never be cleared 1f it isn't arranged. However, rabbits have been know to be slow starters. "l had a bad night. I'm human," McGee said. "All r can do IS go out there and do my best. He (Valenzuela) pitched well He won. There was no se<:ret to 1t. They pla)ed better than we did." "All we can do ts wait unlll Umpires' dispute close to settlement But t hreat remains of poten tial st rike- ln playoff series ·- From AP dJ1patcbe1 Regular umpires remained on duty for the major league playoffs Wcdncs· day as the two sides in baseball's latest labor dispute edged closer to a settlement. The umpires have threatened a stnkc unless their playoff contracts. which call for coverage of a best-of. five scncs. are not adjusted for the ~oded best-of-seven format which baseball adopted this year. Richie Phillips, attorney for the umpires' union, Ocw from Toronto to Los Angeles for the first game of the National League series after meeting for 211> hours with American League President Bobby Brown following Tuesday night's AL opener. He was to meet w1th NL President Chub Feeney m Los Angeles. "Subject to my guys' approval, we made an agreement to arbitrate," Phillips said. "If we can select an arbitrator by Friday. then we will arbitrate. If we can't agree, there wall be a strike." The umpires have threatened to walk out after one team in either playoffwms three games. which until this year would have constituted a co~pl~te scnes. But Ph1l11ps sounded opllm1st1c that the problem could be solved. "We seem close to an agreement," he said. "The meeting was most cordial. Both sides want to avert a work stoppage. Bobby and Chub are both working hard at resolving this thing. Both are being creative and we seem near a resolution.·· The umpires struck the entire AL playoff between Kansas Ct ty and Detroit last year and four of the five NL playoff games between San Diego and the Chicago Cubs. They returned to duty for the final NL game after Commissioner Peter Ueberroth agreed to arbitrate that dispute. 42 prep teams toruninHB ~he . Cenu:al Park. cross country mv1tat1onal in Huntmgton Beach is scheduled for Saturday with 42 high s<jiools entered. Among them arc Ft>unta1n Valley. Huntington Beach, Newport Harbor. Edison, Laguna Beach, University, Costa Mesa and Marina. The three-division race starts at 8 a.m .. OCC hoping to cut down on mistakes against Tigers After a week oil to Ite k m wound'I. the Orange Coast C'ollc.-gc football team re'lu me'I M1ss1on Conference war\ ~aturday nighr when the Pirates host Ri verside< It} ( ol lcge at 7:30. Meanwhile. the Coast wishbone oflense has sputtered a bit 1h1s year, fumbhng 24 time\ 1n three games OCC ranki. seventh an Lhc conference in yardage gained (246.3 per game). Rancho Santiago, 35-21 , before the loss to Saddlcback. Tucker has respect for Ri verside's ground attack. calling it "one of the better ones an Lhe state." Su Dle10 Meaa (3·1, 1·0 ) at Saddleback (4·0, !-0): This week , the Gauchos must shit\ Jean after play10a two straipit running teams 10 Orange Coast and Riverside. Meanwhile. Saddlrhat k will trv to ma1n- wn 1ts place at the top of 1hc confcrenct' when the Gauchos enteruun pa\o,-happ} \an Diego Mesa. Here's the outlook Rlve..ute (%·!, l·l >at Oranae Coaat 10·%·1, O·J) The two teams already have one rnrnmon opponent in Saddleback w11h th<' Pirate\ lo'iing to the Gauchos, 27-1 S, and R"cr\1de ah~rh1ng a 33-18 sctbeck last week. Jn the Tisers' ~tback, they ~lf-dewuctcd tumana the ball over to the Gaucho\ e1gh i times. los1na three fumbles and throw1na five interceptions t . "We worked on protecting the ball dunng our week off." Coast C'oach Otck Tucker notes "'The fumbles that we've lost have hurt us, but so have the other fumbles when we've retained pos~u1on Thost have slowed down or stalled our dnvcs.'' Last year. OCC and Riverside met for the fi"St ume in 18 years and the Pirates gave the T1acrs a sc.are before bowing. 19-17 "We certainly played well enough to wm la'lt year," said Dick Tucker "ff we can play as well this week, we have a shot 11 bcatin.g them." R1vcr,1dc was nipped 1n 11' opener this yeat by Mt San Jac1nto. I S-14. before rehoundm11. to beat Long Beach. 35-0. and The T1aers' offense ranks second in Lhe M1ss1on, averaging 377 yards per pme. 261 on the around. The top rushers arc halfbacks Malec Moore and Oark Brown who rank 1-2 in the conference an yardaae pined. "Moore has excellent speed to go with his Sile (S-10, I 7S pounds)," said Tucker "They (Rivmide) have a history of fine runn1na backs, but they probably haven't had a better back than Moore." Saturday is homecoming for Coast and the Pirates will be tryma to halt a trend that has !lttn them lose the last seven homecoming games 1n a row The Olympians ha~ a history of excellent quarterbacks and this year have aotten off to an unbeaten conference start behind quarterback David Darrock and the :uate's leading wide receiver Gilber1 Hawlcms, who already has 27 receptions for 436 yards Darrock has co mpleted 68of161 passes for 976 yards and 12 touchdowns. eight of them 101na to Hawkins Lasl year Mesa beat the Gauchos m San Dteao. 19· 7. but liter had to forfeit because of an 1neltaible player tomorrow and try to establish some- thing early," Coleman said. "We'd like to leave here one $&me apiece." Tudor lasted S 2-3 innings, allow- ing seven hits and all four Los Angeles runs. three of which were earned. Perhaps he deserved a better fate. "I felt good, I made most of my pitches all night long." Tudor said. "The only bad pitch J made all night was to (Los Angeles catcher Mike) Scioscia, out in the middle of the plate.'' The Dodgers led 1-0 wtth two outs in the sixth and runners at first and second when Scioscia lined a run- scoring single to center on the first pitch from iudor, making it 2-0. The Dodgers went on to score two more runs in the inning. "That's the way it goes," Tudor said. "The ball JUSt k.ind of bounced wrong for us today. It just dido 't work out." "Anytime you go on the road, you want to split," Smith said. "If not, we'll try to win three in St. Louis. We lost one game. The~ scored more runs than we did. There s still a long way to go." Saddle back sweepsOCC Saddlcback College caught Orange Coast on an off-night and dealt the Pirates a 3-0 South Coast Conference women's volleyball defeat Wednes- day in the Gauchos' gym . Form prevailed at Cerritos, how- ever. as Golden West rallied from a first-game loss to Lhump the Falcons and stay unbeaten m conference play. The details: Saddleback 3, Oran1e Coaat 0: The Gauchos were only threatened in the third game of a 15-5, 15-10, 18-16 victory. Heidi Watz, a freshman outside hitter, played well defcnsivelY. while sophomore hitters Anna Castillo and Jennifer Krank keyed the offense. Krank had 16 k.ills and Castillo I 0. The Pirates managed to take a 6-0 lead in the early stages of the third game before faltering. Golden We1t 3, Cerrito• I: In Norwalk, the Falcons su11>nscd the Rustlers early, taking the first ,aame 18-16 and Jumping in front 6-0 m the second before Golden West assumed command to win the final three games, 15· 7, 15-3, 15-6. Sophomore setter Julie Boland contributed 32 assists and outside hitter Manna Van Mell was credited with seven kills and two service aces. Lakerssend Jones to Spurs INGLEWOOD (AP) -Sec- ond-year forward Earl Jonct of the Los Anactcs Lakers has been traded to the San Antonio Spurs in cxchanac for "future consider· ations," the National Basketball Association champions an· nounced Wednesday. Jones, a 6-1 1 226-pounder, WIS the Lalcen' flnt-round draft choice in 19841 but his avail· ability w~s hm1ted by in,Juncs, one of which was a fractured ri&ht foot. He appeared in only two pmes for a total of seven minutes. Jones., • twcrt1mc NC' AA Division II Player of the Year at the Univen1ty of the Dastrict of Columbia. had a tot.al of four point• and two rebounds an two pmes in the cumnt prewason. He aaw 18 minutes of action. -·- a t ta • a $ • a a a a a = & a ;, • iz •• t • · • a tr a n 'I... - - - • f FoR THE RrcoRo ~ f I ' . . " NATIONAL L•AGU• P'LAYOPFS Dedl9r"I 4. ear..... ' BAT"nNG SUMMAAY IT. LOUf1 Colemen,tt McG .. ,ci Herr, 2t> JClerk. lb Ceoeno, rl WOf'rafl, D P-e11111e1on,lo Porter, c OSmllh, u Tudor, p OevllY. 11 Le ndrum, Dtl Caml>bafl, o VanS/vke, ff Tlhllt w r 11 aa1w1111 • 0 0 0 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 0 0 0 lOllOOO lOIOOOO • 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 •120000 •010000 • 0 2 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 111 1 1 0 01 LOS AHGILIS Duncan. u Cat>etl. lb Medloc:ll, )b Guerr.ro, 11 Marshell ri Scloscla, c MaldolledO. Ci Landraaux.d S.11. 1t> Vaten1uela, P Nledanfutr, II T...,1 .., r 11 21> a 1wr111 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 0 0 0 •211000 l120001 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 I I 0 0 0 I 3010001 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 3021001 2010000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 n 1 1 100 1 l"ITCHING SUMMAltY ST. LOUIS Tuoor D•vlev Camot>ell Worrell Tltllh • le " I S?·l 1 101-30 I I I I I 0 I I I r er llb se • 3 I 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 3 I J LOS ANGILIES V•lellruele Nleotmuer Teteh t ip 11 r erllbM 1 6 1-3 1 I l 2 6 1 22·3 I 0 0 0 2 I t I 1 I , I ~ORE e v INNINGS St Louh 000 000 lC»-1 Los A11Qelt1 000 103 ~ OP-LOl Ano.lfl I LOB-SI. Louis 1. LOI AnOelll 6. S-Velen1ueie WP-Worrall. A-SS.270 l"IELOING SUMMARY ST. LOUIS .. • e Colemen 4 0 0 MCG" ' 0 0 Htrr l 1 0 JCferk 10 0 0 Ceotno 2 0 0 Ven Slvr..e 1 0 0 Pendleton 0 • 1 t>ort.r 3 I 0 OSmllh 1 1 0 TudOr 0 1 0 Oevlev 0 0 0 Ce mot>etl 0 0 0 Worrall 0 0 0 Tet.h 14 ' I LOS AH~ELES .. • e Duncan 2 J 0 Ce~ 9 1 0 Medlock 0 3 0 Gu.rrero 1 0 0 Merill all 0 0 0 kloicl• a 0 0 Meldolleoo ? 0 0 Lendrteu• 0 0 0 S.11 s , 0 Valenzuela 0 l 0 Nllldlllfuer 0 0 0 T.,_,1 v 10 0 AMERICAN LEAGUE PLAYOFFS Toronto ,, K•ma• Cltv s 8ATTING SUMMA"Y l<ANSAS CITY Smllh,tf Wlllon. Ci ere11. lb Mc:Ret,dll Whlte,'lb 8elt>onl, lb Molltv. rf Sheridan, oll·rl Sundberg, c 81encel•n• " Olorg, Ph COllCeoclon. oh·u Tot.ll Ml rll lltlblwrtll s 0 0 0 0 0 0 S?300 12 4 0 0 0 II 0 0 s 0 2 0 0 0 0 402000 1 s 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 I 0 0 0 0 0 I l I 0 0 I l 4 0 I I 0 0 I 7110000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 J7 s 10 1 0 2 s TOlllONTO Gerele, 2o MoHOy,c;t Bell, tt JOhnlOll,dh T1>orn1on, or OUv.r, Dh 8erflald, rf UPlllaw. It> Gl0<g.lt> Mulllnllu , Oh·lt> Whlll,C F ernenotr. n TOhlh ab rll2blD twrbl 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 S710001 l 2 0 0 0 0 I 3021001 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 ? 0 I 0 0 0 I 40 1000 2 4 010000 3010000 1010000 ' 0 0 0 0 0 0 3110000 :at • 10 1 0 0 • PITCHING SUMMARY Blee" Qufllnt>arrv T.t.is KANSAS CITY 9 Ip II 1 1 s I 2 2·) S 1 92.J 10 TOlllONTO r lf'bCIM l 2 I S l I 0 2 6 ) I 1 tlr> ll r er bbse t<tv l 3 l·l 1 3 J I ? Lemp 1 ) 2·3 0 0 O 0 3 Lavalle I 0 0 0 0 I 0 Henllt 2 l l 2 2 ? 4 T"9b I 10 10 S S 4 t Lavetlt 111tc...ci to 1 Deller In Ith SCottE BY lNMINGS Kansas c11v 007 100 001 1-s Toron10 000 107 010 ~ Two OYI whell wlnlllllt run teoreo E-8refl. Sundberg, 8elt>onl OP-Kansas Clly l, Toronto I LO&-Kan .. 1 CllY 7, Toronto S s--&lancallne SF-<> Bell SB-Mose«>v, Wll$011 H8P-<i Bell WP-tlleck. A-34,079 Smith Wllso" 8r•ll McltH Wllltt 8elt>onl MO!leY Sher Ide n Sundt>ero l"l•LOING SUMMAltY KANSAS CITY 8tanc:t lene Olorg ConceoclOn &lack Qullellt>any ,,. • 0 I 3 0 1 , 0 0 1 6 • I • 0 0 0 a 1 I l 0 0 0 0 2 I 1 0 T.tlh 2t u TORONTO " • Gercle 0 2 Mo..OY 1 0 8841 0 0 JOMllOl1 0 0 TllO<nton 0 0 8•rfleld 3 0 UPt/leW II I Gtoro 2 J Mlilllnllu 0 0 Wlllll ' 2 l"ernendu l , ICey 0 I La~ 1 0 Levelle 0 0 Htnlll 0 0 TM91t J0 11 P'LAYO,, KH•DUL•I LMtUe ~ .... S.W AM8•11CAN L•AOU• • 0 0 I 0 0 I 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 l e 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TveldeY -Toronto 6. l(ellMI City 1 Weclneldey -Toronto 6. 1t.1n&eJ Cl"' ~ t 10 lnlllnt•I (Toronto IMd\ ...... J·OI l"rl<Sey -TOf'OfllO (AIH•nder 17·10) •I KenMs City (Set>erheoell 20-,), S.. IS o m SatureleY -Toronto at t<all ... CJty, S·lS p.m. $uflde\I -Kanses Cllv 11 Toronto. l;U o.m. (N ntetu ervl f llltdlv -l<tnMt CllV •I Toronto, S!U o.m. '" '*""&ervl Wldllltda11 -K•nses CllY el TOl'Ol'llO, S 1S o m (H "9CeUM't I NATlOMAL LIAOUI wednelde't -~ 4, SI LOUlt I (Docl9en IHd ...... 1·0) TOdlty -St Louis (~ JH1l el ~ (Henllf!JW i.-J), US D m SaturdH -.,._.,.. (Wetcfl lJ-41 at SI ~!Co• 11-t ), IO'OS e .m Suftday -OMilllr'I I I SI Lout•. ~ 11 p m Molrde'I - -OMilllr'I el SI Louts. I~ •.m. <N -MtV) w -...v. Oct 14 -St Lout• al ~ IHS om <M ~) ~. Oct 11 -St. Louts at .,...,... HS 11 m IN --..,.,) HC>Tt· Al •volt ..,_......,... Oft CllMMI .. ......... ........... OCt. .. al Amerlea" L ..... , k>S D m ...... OC1.. •• ..,.,_~ L-. 4 • m . " Toronto, S:.10 11.m . H ~ City ~v,Od.D •• Ne•IOnel l.eeeue, sas II.II'\ W1a ty,Od. D •I Nello<lel ~. sas , m ~ .. Oct.. e l N•llonel ~. S~ '"'"' IH nec:Mt· ervl S.tllrdlly. Od. • •I Atntrleall L-. 5:2S o.m (If MCMMry) S--v, OC1. 'D e l Atn9tlcell LMoue, • o.m .. II Toron10, S:lO Pft'I , It l(an&e• Cltv CH neuuervl NOTE· All WOf1d Serlel .. ma. l ... vlaeod on CllellMt 1 Les AlemltM WEDNISDAY'S RUULTS ( .............. lle"'9U ,,_..., fllltST RACI. One mile pece l(QOI JUI (Vellendlnvhem) uo 2.20 t 10 Ho• WllOOote !Pierce) 17 40 uo SOMclv LoOo Solrll (K~) 3 00 Tlme: 1:03. U •XACTA (S-1) oeld '73 SO SECOND RACE. One mlle DK• l(Oltt (Oft-) J IQ uo 220 8uwaa Glr1 (Sleelhl UO 2 IQ Nvevo M.oole ITOddl 2 40 Time· 2:01. Sl IXACTA (1·21 o.ld ,,.40 THtaD RACI . One mlle lrol NC>ble ArMlle (Ancl«tolll 13.10 4.00 UO Pe1ev (Vellendlnoneml 2 IQ 2 20 l(IHbuctt Lobell (Sherren) 3 20 Time: 1:S9 4/S. Sl IXACTA (3·6l o.IO sS.,.0 ,OURTH ltACtE. One mlle lrol Chrstohrclmt>i (S/l«renl 3 40 3.20 2 '° ThllddOw (01 Frencol 9 60 1 00 Torrid 8eeu (Stlol"ll 4 .O Time; 2:02 3/ S. ""TH ltACE. One mlle i>ece. Glent>urnle Cerio• tCrgn) 3 60 2 IO 2.20 Wann• Dance (Sltva) 7 . .0 3.IO Lord Alt>a (At1Mr$0tl) UO Time: 2:03. Sl IEXACTA 11·71 o.ld 137.IO. SIXTH ltACE. One mlle oece Rowclv 8ve Bve (Crgllll) 26.60 14 40 I.ti> Heathen (o.tom.f) 12 ti> f.20 MfghlY c..orge (Oovell~I 16 20 Time. 2:05 3/S. Sl EJCACTA (2·SI oald '3200 SEVENTH ltACE. Ont mlle peca Llngan Gus (Sleeth) 3 60 2.10 2.20 Mallt>u BHch (Trembley) 4.IQ 3.00 khelndlM\ell (Croohalll 2 60 Time: 2:0S U EX.ACTA (7·21 oelcl '2460 EIGHTH ltACE. One mlle oece PIHze ~H (Grundy) 1 00 l 20 l 00 Levity Rhythm (Sleeth) l 00 2 60 Ca~o Ro~ (Swerll'IOUI) 3 00 Time; 2:0S 215 Sl IJC.ACTA ((,.3) o.lcl M020 NINTH a ACE. One mlie o.ce Slu y Bogert (8eker) 6 00 l.40 2 IO Toter• R~ (Velllndlnoheml IOIO 1 20 Mttllno Momeni tShefrenl 3 60 Time: 211S 41 S n l"KK SIX (I· 1·2· 7 Of 8·6·61 o.ld 1156.IO 10 10 wlnnfno tlci<etl (ll1t hOnes l n PIO. Six conM>tetlon paid SJUO to 241 winning tlckell (five hOnesl TENTH ltACE. One mlle oece Howdy Mon (Plano) S IO 3 40 2.tl> lllre And Rein (Sherren) 3.40 2.60 Klem11t1 Koihare lSllveJ S 20 Time: ?117 •tS. '3 EXACTA l6· II oeld tll.30 Allendenca. 2.~7 O•k TrM (If Slllta Allfta) WEDNESDAY'S ltlUUL TS ''"'., l1-dav ~~I ,MtST RACE. 6 furlonol UPllftlng (Meza) S 00 3 IO 2 60 POPUiar Ledv (Ke-ii 10 .0 S 20 Ceteh lhe Show IP9droza) l .00 Time: l·ll SECOND a&CL I 1116 mllel Tobler (Oomlnouerl 9 00 S .0 l 20 Mike'\ C1f (Bliek) .. 0 •IO Mt • F0<tun. <Mccarron) loo Time 1.45 11 S. n DAIL y DOUBLE (I·•> i>eld J2610. n GONSOLATI<* DOUBLE I t·JI e>eld H IQ THftltO "ACE. 1 1/16 miles Darr.. Liiac (Culerionl 11 40 S 40 l IQ Tooe Princes' (81ee1(1 1100 S 20 lrflll Mesi.ue (Hawley) 3 .o Time· HS 4/S lll'OURTH RACE. 6 lvrlollln. R1lse<1 on Steoa !Toro) 11 ao s 60 • 20 Variety Road IMcCarron) • 20 l 20 Hoolno lo B• LUCkV (Sotlll 190 Time l 10 fl'ff'TH ltACll. 6'"' lurton1" on turf Solve (Mere) 24.10 10.IO 1.10 Avang.r Mllf (Stevens) 4 20 J . .O Prtmlum Win (Hewtevl 140 Timi· I 14 l /S U EX.ACTA (4·61 oefd SJS2.SO SIXTH RACE, 6 furtongl Calat>onga (Harnendu) 16 20 Commfulonelre tSlevenll Luckv Dutch (Castenolll Time: 1·09 3/S. 560 ) IQ 3 60 l.00 '00 SIVINTH ltACIE. 1 lurtongl Unb«nwnlf to Me lMcCnJ 3 60 2.60 2.40 Leegue Hiiier (Sttveflll UO 2 IO Borlne (Merel l 60 Time. 1:22 3/S. U IXACTA (1·6) paid US SO llGHTH "ACI. 6'"> lurlonol on tun Lovt Smitten (Stevens> I 00 4 60 2.IO Oante<Ser (Lorove) S 00 l 00 Seles 8 ullttln (McCerron) 2 IO Time I IS 2/S NINTH RACE. I 11 16 mllel Ra old Ember IWerd) 1.60 One O'Clodt Jumo (Soll•) Noodle Roni (SleYefll) Time Ul 3/S U IXACTA (S-7) oa ld "3 SO llO lOO Stl> 400 4 .0 n "9CK SIX (11·4·3'1-•·S) oeld t20,626 20 lo 19 wlMl"V 11Ck81l (ll~ he>t'M\I '2 Pkk Six consotallon oeld S34 00 to '31 winning tlc:11e11 (five horse1I. A1tto<1ence: n.671. Water PIM HIGH SCHOOL s.a v-........,. UnlWnltV 10, C.. .. Mftl I Unlv.r•llv 1 I 5 1 I 1-10 Costa Me.. 2 3 I 2 0 C>-I University scorlno: JordOll I, McCOllougll •. Sc:fllecter 'l, A<lems 3 COlll Mesa sc:or"'9· Prlctielf I, MelMIJ I, CrenVlew 6. Newpen Hettler 9, ~ 8Mdl l Newoon Harbor ? • O 1-t LeGud h ldl I 2 0 C>-3 Ne---1 Harbor tcorlno Andralllall 1 Stewarl l, Mlh .. 10 2. Mc:Lerell 3 L"4JN e..ai 1eorl11t. Traoer I, Moon 1, Oalllell 1. c.-... Mar "· l•-.c:lt , Eatancle O O 1 1-2 Corona cMI Mar l 5 J 1-11 EJtat'CI• '°°''"'· Wexler 2 Corona del Mar ICOl'ff'lt Llkl111 •· Vlnle 2. H1rmon 2, McQeoy 1 1--9 L...- Mlr1M 16, Ww •o•w.., ' Merlna • 4 > )-16 w .. tml""er t 2 1 )-' Marll\I ..ciorlflO· LerMn 6. Pa ra iette ), w~ 2. Schuooell 2, H1rr11 2. Womedl 1. Wfttmlnster ac:orine: Calf! >, e,,..rw 2, J_. J, Galldaflt 1, G,_. 1 ,, ..... v ........... , l"OIJflteln Valtev I J 2 ~10 Edison 0 2 3 t-1 FOIJfllaln V•lllV scorlflt: ~ •. l(llOll 1, Ptttr1 1, JllOO I, ~ l, .,.y 1 ldlson IClOl"ln8: Tllomea >. HeimMrl J, AllraNNMcwl 1, Ulltr.I l 11-t. ~ lt•ll, 1,..7, M,L MATIONAL GON,llt•NCa .... W L T ~ ,,, PA ll-. S 0 0 lCIOO IOI '1 ..._ Or1M111 ) , 0 -11) ,,, Sell l"ranclKo l 1 O 400 141 fl Allenla 0 S 0 000 94 162 CeMr8' Chic.ago S 0 0 I 000 163 II O.lroll 3 2 0 600 lOO 114 MIMHOta ' 1 0 600 12!0 103 Gr-8ev 2 J o 400 117 173 TamPa 8ay 0 ~ 0 .000 1$ , .. EH1 De lles 4 1 O IOO 1)1 16 NY Glanta l 2 0 ,.00 I 13 10 SI Loula J 2 0 600 1>1 Ill WH lllngton 2 J 0 400 1l Ill Phlledelonll l 4 0 200 S6 13 AMIRKANCONflERIMC• West Olftver J ? o 600 ISi 121 Kall .. , City 3 2 o 600 1'1 10. ••llllln 3 , 0 600 115 100 S..ttte ) 2 0 '°° 134 143 S.n Oleoo 2 l 0 400 121 "' Gwltrlll Ctevelelld l 1 0 600 9'3 11 PlllMlu<Dh 'l l 0 400 I 16 11 Clt'Clllllelf I 0 200 149 1'6 HOUtlon l 4 0 200 69 101 Eltf Miami 4 I 0 100 131 IS NY Jeft • l 0 IOO 120 n tndlanePOlh 2 3 0 400 99 123 New Enollnd ? l 0 400 90 l ll l utt•lo 0 s 0 000 '3 149 ~v't Geme1 ltM"nt a l Tempe Bev (Channa! 2 al 10 e m) N-Orleanl et ltelden Chlcaoo et S.n FrenclKO t<anse1 Clly et Sell Diego 8uffalo at New Enolend Cleveland e l Hou11on Oellver et lndl111ae>o11, O.lroll •I Washington MlnnHOI• "'· Grfttl Bev et MllWeUkM New York Gian" et Cfnclnnell St Loult II Pnlledtlohle PlllJt>uroh et Oallu Allenta el Sea ttle Mendltv's Ga~ Miami at New York J•h CCheMel , •• ' D.m.I COMMUNITY COLLEGE Pec·t CenfW~ c~ e>wre1 W LT WLT 8allerstleld 2 O O 4 O 0 Taft 2 0 0 l 0 0 El Camino 2 o o J l o c ... rllot I I 0 2 I 0 GOIOen Wht l I 0 I 2 I Fuiwton O I O l 2 O Pasadena 0 I 0 0 l 0 Ml Sin Alltonlo o 2 O ? 2 o LOllll a .. ch 0 2 0 0 4 0 Satut"dil.-1 GamM C1:l0) C.rrllo\ el 8ekerin81<1 Long 8aeC'll el left Fullerton el El Camino Mt Sen Antonio at Pe~oene MlulenC~• Conllrtftee Ovlf' .. W LT W L T S.ddtet>eCk 2 0 0 4 0 0 SouthYllHtern 2 0 0 4 0 0 Sen Oleoo Mata 2 0 0 3 I 0 Pelomer l I O 2 I o Rlv•nldt I I 0 2 1 0 Of'anga Coe \I O I o o 2 1 Sen Oleoo City 0 I 0 0 l 0 RanchO S.lltleoo O 2 O 2 ? O Cllrul o 2 O O • 0 SenKdllV'' Gemes ( 7:l0) Rlvaf\ldt el Orenoe Coesr Sin Oleoo Me~ et S.001et>ec1t. Soulhwtlfern et RenchO S.ntleoo Sen Oleoo Clly at Citrus Hletl •CIMMt 'cMduM TONIGHT S..~ LM- E ll•ncl• Yl WOO<lt>rldlle I et trvlM I C-ry LM-Foothlll et El Mo0e11a Emolrl l.Aa-l(e talle o El Oore60 lal Velenclel Es~enre vs L~ Alemllca lat Ge tv Hlgn) Loar• v\ Pac1fice lat Bolw Grendel Nen·IM9W Hunt1no1on Buen vs Mater 0.1 let Senta Alie Bowl) Lo' Amigo, 11\ Laoune Hill\ let M1n 1on Vlalo) W"rmlnller •• Long BHCll WlllO'I Sonon "' S.ntieoo ••• G•rden Gro•el RenchO Alemlfos vs Maonolle let L• P1lma Peril) l"RIOAY SN View LN9UI S.ddlet>eck el Newoort Hert>or Coron• del Mar vi Colle Meta fat Orange Coast Cot~) unrvanllv el Leoune Beech Seutrl CNlt LNVUI El Toro al lrvlM Dene Hiiis al Mlulon Vlelo Ceohtreno Vellav et S.n Clemente Cent\lrv LM9UI Ca nvon V\ S.nte Ana !al Senta Ana &owl) Or•nl>t at 1'ullln S.nta Ana Vellty "' VIII• PaH te l Er Modellal Nen·IM9UI Foulltaln VelleY "' Long Btecll P~Y let Vet.r•nt Stadium) Noire Oemt vi Edllon (at Huntington BHCh High) OCH n View et WHltrn MIUlken ,., Merine (e l Wntmlnlterl SerYlll Vt L• Qulllll let Boes.a Gre nci.> Anaheim et 8uene Park SwMfwater et FulferlOl'I SunllV HIMI •I 8r••·Olln0e Troy vs Sevenne (et Le Palme Perk J 8olsa Grandi at Velet'lcle C.rrl101 al Geroen Grove SATUttOAY lmt*e Leewe CYor1n .. , IC~ tel w~11rt1I ...., . ..._ Tret>uco Hiii• a1 Rim of tne World L• Hat>r• vi Loyola (el Glell<lale Hlgnl I '•• Deep ... lt1NM N•WPOtlT LANDING (New..,., ... di) -10 ~ 45 t>HS, 9 bonito, 1 tc:vtoln, 100 meckerel, 1 ~•'-cl OAVIY'S LOCICllt (...._, heal) -4' angleo 120 t>onlto. 20 vellowtall, 16 cod. '° ca llco ban. 16 H iid t>en , 170 madlerel 3 1Me0$heed. 10 w:utolll, 1 hell -DANA WHAlt, -•I enoterl m ban. '1 OOfl(to, Ill rQCk lflll •7 meckeral. 2 "'-~ , W:ulolll ,,,.,.,, MCar COLL•GI SM 0119a St. 1, UC '"""9 0 UC ll'lllM i.11 10 2·7-f wllll the IOU and "Ottt UC J.a11te lerl:Mlfa ~v. -·-COi" '4UWT"r cou••• .......... 'II •.. c;.,,.. • 11~-IGWCI 019C. 0-.., •1 l~ta (ICI ~ S~ H 1,._"'911 (fC) -.., #1IUll • ...., Trov IC-. )d.I. 10-Tninf IC....., CGWCl dK. Vlf"OI I·, ,,._ • .,,... IOWC) • ltieiM" • .Jf ,.,_~ !GWCI die. Stlonlloll. 7·~ "' ...__ (GWCI • ~. ~ 1~ (IC) WO Ole. IMc9tt& •i 190 a r 11•1 IOWCl • 0..., IA "-' I'-<•CCI ._ Jefww, "" NHL ~~ TOMGHT Vancou\19f at ~ TorOl'llO al &otton HartWd et autfalO MontrMI at PltttOurgh C11ic.ooe1 ~ WaU.lngton al New Yo.-lt. It•-• New WMV al Phtle0elohl8 Mlnnewta al Detroit WlnlllD911 e l Eomonton fl"IDA'Y WIMl!leQ •I Cef(la rv SATURDAY New Yori. l'l•ll<le'l 11 Klnet WHhlnGtOfl •I New Jertev Phlleoatonle at PllltOurOh &MtCNI al Derron N-Vorr.. Ranoers at Herrforo Clllceoo •' Molltre11 Quaoec •' Toronto 8uffalo at Mlnnet01a St Louil el Vancouver K~ 1"5·16 a.cMcMe Oct IC>-Vencou"er Oc1 12---f.IY lttenden Oct l>-CelOarv Oct 16-f.IY ltenoen Oct lt-•I lfancou"er Oc• 20-£dmon1on, Oc1 n-eo.1on Oct 2s-.1 NY R•nG«l, Oct ,._, N-Jer~v. Oct ,._•I NY ltleMers, Oct 31-t &otton Nov ?-at Herttord. Nov l-11 Phllaclel· Ohle, Nov 6-EClmOOton. Nov ~trtal Nov l>-0.rrolt, Nov 16'-Pllht>urgh Nov 19-New Jlf'\IY Nov 2 ,_, Detroit Nov n-.1 Mlnnnota, Nov 2-.1 Chi· ceoo, NOY 21-HarHO<d, NOY 30-Chlc•OO Dec >-Edmonton, Dec S-af Edmon ton, Die 1-at Winni-. Dec t-at Win· nloeo. Dec IC>-al Calver•" Dec 12'-al Ce109ry. Dec l._.WHhlngton, Dec lt-T0<onto, Dec 20-a t Edmonton, Dec 21-Vancouver, Dec n-w1nr11oeo Oec JO-Wlnnloeo Jen ?-Phlle delPhle, Jan +--tll Toronto, Je n. S-at Bvtte lO. Jan. t-et Plfhouror.. Jen l~•t Minnesota. Jan. l l-e1 St Louil, Ja n IS-NY Ranoars. J•n. 17-et Ven· couv.r Jan It-Vancouver, Jan 21-St Loul,, Jail 'l>-SI Loul,, Jen 2S-.I Edmonloll, 6115 Jen 27-et Ce~rY. Jan ?9-Mfnneiote Fet> l-at Wlnnloeo, Feb ?-et Win· nlDtQ, Fao ._All·Ster Gema et Heriford, Ftt> 6-et C•lo•rY. Fee t-NY Islander\, Fee ~•loary, r I~ Feo IS-Wuhlnoton, F 11-1 Montrtel Feo It-al Ovecec, F 20-el Pnlleci.tPllle , Fee 22-at New J.,~ oav Ftt> 2._Pll ltt>uroh, Fao 27-<111c•oo Merer. l-Mcw11ree1, Merer. ?-<a1oerv Maren S-.1 EdmonlOl'I, Merer. .__.., Ven couver, Merer. ._Edmonton. d•v March n-011rou. March ls-8uffato. Marth 17-e t Toronto Meretl It-et wu111ng1on Mereh »-et Bo•tOl'I March 1r-.1 Herr· t0<d. Merer. 23--111 Buttaro Maren 26-<elOlrv. Merell i.-.1 Vancouver Merell ~. Maren 31-w innloeo Aorll 2-Wlnnloeo, Aorll S-Vencouv., MMr's *'mement (et EH i R""*11trd, N.J.I ~f'INI lven Lelldl !CzechO,lov•~•• oet Jonn McEnro. (U S I 1·5 6·~ CenMlatlerl P:lnal Jimmy Connor\ CU S ) oet Anoret G~r <Ecuador) T·S 6 l Fedefetten Cup tat Tovl'fa, Mipan) TODAY'S OUAllTERP:INALS U.S.. 1.. A"""""'8 I ~ t<81hll J0'0811 llJ S I Oaf Adr181l8 'VII· 1eore11 (Aroe11t11\8I 6 l 6· I G•t>rtele MDalln1 tAroe<111na1 Oaf Zilla Garr son, S·1 6· I 6 I ~ Jorde n· Snero11 We"n r v S 1 det Set>e•·n ·VIiiagran S·7 6·) 6·4 AulTntMll l, lhllV 0 sin.' Anne Minier !Auttrelle1 oet •11n• Marie Caccn1nl 6-l 6 2 Wendv Turnt>utl !Aus· trelle l oet Rettnlle Reogl 6 2 6·1 Oeutllei Turnbull·Jennv 8vrnt IAustrellel oet R111gl·Leure Gerrone 6· I 6 3 "rtda.,.' Ouel'1Wflrwll .. •lrtnvl CrKllOllove~1e vs Hungary Suloarla v\ 8rlteln WednMdev't fr•nuctlem MAJOR LEAGUI 9ASl8ALL AIMric.an LM-OETROIT TIGERS-Welveo Rul•Y t<unll outtltl<l.r and Mickey Mehler •no &ob Stodda rd oner-." PureheMld rne contreets of Brian Oenmat1 end P•ul Voigt Pllthllrl from Nalllvllie ol rne Ame.->ean Auoclellon Turned over tht conirects Of Owloht Lowery catcher e nd Peoro Chavtr lnfleroe< 10 N111nv111e Ne!llNI ~ CINCINNA Tl RE OS-Anno<Jnced Ille re1l11na11on of Greo Rlddocll director ot m inor lttg~ CIUOl slf.ctlve OK )I BASl<lrnALL ..__, .......... A•MCN'*' LOS ANGELES LAKERS-Tredld Earl Jo11e1. Cellllf'•forw•rd, to lhe Sen Antonio Soun for future consloeretlonl CHICAGO 8ULLs--Recelv.o a 19'7 ilCond-round drafl o!ck from the t>ortle'1(! Trell 81a rtri In u chelloe lo< walv1no the rlgllt of 11 .. 1 refu\el on fr" 1oen1 Caldwell Joi>es. Clflter PHOENIX SUNS-Slgtlld Devin Our· rent forward l"OOTIALL NaftMll ,....._. L.._ LOS ANGELES llAMS-Tradeo Mika Bert>«. light lfld to the Oellver 8 rOt1Cos. tor en uncflKlose<I drett choke In 1916 R1· •lutlld Jim L•uGflll" llntt>aoer CLEVELAND BROWNS-Pl.ceo Freo 8 anu, wlci. receiver. on lnlured rtMf've Re·t lOl'ld O O H01191rd dlfell,1,.. t>ack DENVER &R()fljCOs-f'leceo Steve FOllY. \elllv on llllure<1 relefve KANSAS CITY CHIEFS-Ple<:eo Matt H.r'1.enh0fl olten•lve tackle on lntur9CI r~e SE A T'TLE SE AHAWKS-Sfgneo Anore HtrdY rl.lf!nlng IMKk Pieced Da n Oo«lll'* rU1111tno t>eC'. on llllured ,.....,.,. TAMPA IAY 8 UCCANEEllS-Traoeo Hvgn (j.r-llneoeck~ 10 11"141 Ml•ml ()oiolllnt 111 Ochenoe tor flNI· •nd \e('Clf>O· round Mflellont Ill the I ... oraft HOCKIY Na9'MalH.cilW~ NHL-Flne4 Mlllt I(...,_", hl4IO COIC'll ot ,.,. t>nl&edelc>hia Ftvar• encl Teo ~tor held coe<:h ot the New York It•-• U ,000 81>1«'1 IOr • bf8WI bv both IMml duflno an Oct 1 exl\lllltloll tem. ~~ Don ~!OMV OI IM lt•ntert tor t~ oam.r~ f'lfleod New Voo "'""''Don MelOfteY end Tony Feltrtn ...00. Mer1I Olborne. James Palrl(ll, Stew f>atr!U Miiia AWttoll, T.,.,.., l(laf-. 9errv 8eCk Tome' S.Onottrom, Klell ~ l llO 0-M MC~ s.200 aolece tor 1"8tr Hfllt'-911on If! !fie l)rewl Fined "1Nledel otl&e """-" LiflcheY Cerson encl kb Fr-UGO, ~M ~vtfl. O.ve ~ t<8"lfl McCannw. e reo Mlw'lll o. ... lrOWl\, Id ~ Mutrev Cre"" •net ltl(fl Sufi .. 12'1 ~ tor lflllr ~I "''°" lo'I tt.e bnwl NHL-~ I(.., 0. ....... o Oe· ....,._•of IN New WW. ~tor - ..,,. -flNd ""'" '°' ,,. '°' "" -1tctMl10ft wllfl 1M ~ '-'" NI Wftl ~ w1111Qu! '-el.• _O'Y., eos T()H UUIN$-"""'" Alelfl Cell HAllTl"OllO WHALE llS-AUle"" Jed. Bt-.c~. .. ... .._, to ~!Oii 811 IN A,_lc'afl ~ .... ~ Barons hold off stubbor n Edison Fountain Va lley maintains share of lead with victory By BARRY FAULKNER Dellr ..... C:.t ' ..... The Fountain Valley High water polo team built a 4-2 halftime edge then used a strong fourth quaner to bold off a third-penod surge b~ Edlson for a I(). 7 victory Wednesday nia.bt at Golden West College ibe Barons. led by Todd Thomp. son's four goals.. lhr~ 1n the final pcnod. gained their second Sunset League wm Wlthou1 a loss and a share of first pla~ Wlth Manna, also 2-0 Thompson picked up the sconng slack for the Barons created by the loss ofleadang scorer Rick Weiss. who quit the team this week. He tallied the first goal of the game and rc~mcfled 10 the crucial closing minutes. sconng the final three Baron goals to ice the victory. Baron Coach Ray Bray said the • tc.am finally settled down and took control after Edison fought back. Edison goalie David Cohen, last week's Sunset League Player of the Week, was outstanding Wlth 14 saves. many of which were spectacular He also got some help as two Baro n sho1s bounc.ed off a goal pos1 and one off the crossbar. "I think he really kepi them in tht game," said Bray. · Edison gained momentum at the end of the first half when Greg Luttrell threw 1n a long dcsperauon shot at the buucr. Then opening the third pcnod. anot.hC1' Iona ran,ac bomb from the nuddle oft.he pool by Larry Abramson found the net and the Cbllf1Cl'S trailed 4-3 fountain Valley then aot plJ from Joel Knon and Mitch Bray, around a sc-0rc by Edison's Nack Thomas to up the lead to 6-4. Edison then had a goal nullified when the referee d1dn 't hear the scorer caJltng for an Charger player CJCCt1on and the &oal was scored whe n play should have been halted. Though Scon Ferry scored off a fine pass to the front of the net, cuttina the lead to 6-5, t~ Chargers lacked the off ens1 vc cons1Stency to fun.her 'threaten the lead. Brent Peters. who Bray credited with some .. good dnves," scored 1wo goaJs for the Barons and teammates Bnan Judd and Scott Foster bad one goaJ each. ··Thompson did a~ JOb con· Lrolhng the ball.·· said Bray The Barons also $Dt seven saves from Steve Toland in goal. Edison, which fell to 1-l 1n league, got 1wo goals each from Keat Hemsen and Thomas Earher at Golden West. Marlu 18, Westm.luter t : The V110ngs put the game away early wnh many of the regulars on the bench, building a 10-4 lead at halftime. lo retain a share of the league lead. Manna convened on six of seven shot attempts in the first quaner for a 6-~ lead and coasted from there. Staner Scott Larsen had all six of has goals in the second half, while '\ndy Parazcnc added three. Shanng the goaltcnd1ng chores were Craig D1lknbeck and John Stein. Uni, Newport, CdM postSea ~View wins Un1vers1ty High rallied to inm Costa Mesa 1n overtime. Newport Harbor roll past Laguna Beach and Corona del Mar toppled Estancia in Sea View League water polo action Wednesda,. Here's ....:hat took place . University 10, Coaia Men 8: The TroJans foughl back from a 5-2 halftime deficit to lead 8-7 in the final pcnod before -\Jex C rcnshaw·s late goal sent the game into oven1me Many Schlactcr broke the deadlock 10 the first extra scss1on and Ke' in McCollough added some insurance to account for the final margJn The Trojans notched their third league win against one se1back Costa M~ which has pla)ed Ne11.rpon Harbor Corona del \.far and l 'n 1 .. ersm dropped to 0.3 in <;ca V1c11. compe11- uon Crenshaw paced lhe M ustang' attack with SI\ goals. v.h1lc McCollough had four and ho le man Bnan !\dams three -all 1 n a ti\ e-goal third penod -to lead the TroJans Costa Mesa's Dann>y PoPt' wa\ bus~ an goal. stopping 18 shots L'01vcrs1t) returns to acuon Satur- da) morning.. hosting Manna an a non-kague con11:st at 9 Newport Harbor 9, Lapna Buell 3: The Sailors broke the game o pen in the second penod w11h su goals to remain unbeaten 1n the Sea View. 11 was :!·I :"lewport entenng the second quaner. but Rob Stewan had all three ofh1s goaJs and Rob M1haJko tallied twice as the Sailors expanded their advantalle to 8-3 b .. haJfi1mc The dcfcn~ took over in the second halfw1th '-ewpon sconng the o n!)· goaJ. Sailors' goalie Jeff '-"ood· ruff was rclatt .. el)' untested. account- ing for three saves '>;e .... pon. Y-::! O\erall. m~ls Foot· hill Fnda\ at home Corona del Mar 11. Es&a.n<'ia Z: Jason L1 Ju ns poured in six goals a~ the Sea King~ raced to a ~-0 lead al halftime and rnastt'd to the \·1c111n Enc 'v 1n1c and 8111 Hannon had two goals each for the winners. "'h1le sophomore goaltc Jim Wagner wa!> 1.rcd11cd w1th nine !>cl\ es. Top American riders to compet e S aturday The 18th l nated State~ ""at1onal Spcedwa} Champ1onsh1p 11.111 be held Saturda) night at the Orang~ Cnunt~ Fairgrounds in Costa \.iesa The 16 best -\mencan spc-cd11.a\ nders will face each other in ~(J do-or· die races and the e'ent 1s unique in that there arc no S('COnd chances. no make-up points at th1~ compe11t1on A talented field which tnclude$ defending nat1onal champion Kell) Moran will compete One of the other top o\mencan stars >(}eludes .. Sud- den" Sam Ermolenko. "ho finished third in the 1985 World lnd1 v1dual Champ1onsh1p In addition to Ermolenko. -\men· can Spcedwa~ Final c hampion John Cook. season poin1 leader Bobb) cbwart1. Ste'c Lucero. Alan "Crazy·· C hnst1an and Mike Fana will be among those gunning for the national champ1onsh1p : rckcts for the event are 8\ adable at all T 1clcetmaster lcx·auons (Ma> Co .. Sport Man and 'vfus1c Plus stom). The) will also be on ~le a1 the Orange Count) Fairground\ toda\. Thursday and Fnda) t''enmgs from 4:30-8 p.m .. as well Saturda' Gates open Saturda) al 6 .\0 p m with the first race at 8 .\duh adm1ss1on 1s S 15 and ch1ldrt'n are half-price. for more 1n lormat1on phone the lnterna11onal Spced .... a\ at 49:!-9933 -\ complete lt\t ot nders 11.1th hometov.ns John Cook <Rose'llk) \.11ke Fana !Colton I. am Ennolenko <Cypress) l\.ell~ Moran !Norwalk), Lance K.Jn.g (Fountain \ alle~ I Bohh~ Schwartz (Balboa l!>land l -\Ian Chnsuan (Huntington fkachl te'e Lucero !R1\crs1del Brad 0\le\ !San Clemente l. Roben Pfewng !Santa .\nal. John ';andona <Coltonl. Bob 011 (Ocean<;1del. Ed Castro (Santa -\na). Keith C'hnsco (Wh1tt1er): Mike Curoso (Fountain Vallev); and Mike Delac' I\ alleJO 1 • ri.G.' MERCEDES 1 •• l 7 •2 3 3 3 ~~~~--1(:)~~~~~ House of .,,.,ports C ·O ·M·P ·A ·R ·E 0 5VEA~!.~, LEASE[, OWNERSHIP Pt.ANS Orange County's easy listening radio station --KDCM tm.1 FMSI D = -•=I --------------------..-..-.--....... ~ ............ ..__....,_,,_.,._ ________ ,_,_,..._ ____ ,__ _____________ ,__ ___________________ ~~~~~~--~~ C4 Onlnge CoMt ~tlY PllOT/Thureday, Oc1ober 10, 1885 -Spinks' light heavyweight title stripped MUC NOTICl Ml.IC NQllC[ NI.IC NOT1Cl l'IChllOUa•PIW•M K.... HCtifiOUl-N COUNTY 0' OlllANGI. poelted with Mid duly 811>-SHILLIY, WI unnwrled ~IOUe8T ... ~N ~ 8TA,....,, ----MA1911'A,,_-, """'led Truet-. eudl Deed "*' WU.L S!l.L AT PU9llC ,.,_, ........ --..am..,.__.. ITATi Of' CALll'OfUM. AS '!::"'r'-_. __ .............. _ .. "UCT""" TO HIGHEST Ill). The folOwtng per.one.,... ,.,. .__....,, __ .... MAm 8TA,,_.., The lollowlng ~ .. ~ .. MAii' AEC0R0E0 IN "' ·-• .., -·-· " """ flt doinO ~ .-: Al T'h9 The~ ---OQ1r'G ~ -.: OAVl8 ....,.., 111 P"OU a TO eYldencAoo obl!Olllonl -OEA FOlll CASH lPllY9ble mt doinO ~ ... '--~ Compeny; I) fll ..-~-TlllUOKINO m1 1o111t It ~ :'t-" -CUfed 11\ef'IC>~•nd the time ol NM In lewfUI money Coneuttlno. 17942 SkY P*1! • -"~d.... ..._.. _ _:. 901· ~ o In IJ bu• ne 11 u : • " 60 tNCLuotVf OF Mii-n·~ .::::b of 1 ...... Unit .... Stat•) at the Clrde, trM., CA 92714 ,,,_. •• .....,,,_, ~ HOMIS 3151 Coet .......... CA~ c!UANIOUI MAPS IN ,...._,_ ,_., ,.., ..,. I Arbot, Coe1• MMe. CA ,...,_, A~ Suite N, H9rold A"-" 0.11te. 3221 THI 0 ,,,ICf 0 , THI! declate all 8'1M• North tront enlranoe to the Judith . UI,.~ 219 92fil...,.. , _ .... , ----...._ Q)eCa MeM. CA t2f.2'8 low• St .. Colt• ....._ CA OOVNTY RECOROfR OF tlleteby lmmedla-.ty due Co4.mly COurthcxi... 700 Mat=•· Cotona Mar, ~-.. ......... ......... _. lrwrnlMI L.lnWted. A c.n. 92t20 SAIO COUNTY and pey9bllt Md dOll '*--CMe Cet\ler Ortw Weet, CA ~ !i-........... 2Al1bor. Colt• ....... ed!M OOfPotltloft, 1881 Thie bualneN I• con• PROPERTY AOORHS: by., to c.-ttl9 lrwi Sent• Ana, CA Ill rlgtlt. tltte T"'9 bualMN la Con· "" ~.. " 8 T ctuc:i«I by. en ~ property to b4I eotd to 11tlety Md 1n1-1 conveyed to ctuc:i«1 by Ill lndMdual nw. bullneee I• con-•OflOI ir-t, oronto. Oft. H ...,. s' "-.... 24't MARSEILl.£8 WAY, th• obll"atlone eecured __ .. now htld ""' II under Judl1h l; Ulrey 1.no. Clnede M41Y6 .,.,... ... ,,... COSTA MESA. CALI· • ..... VJ ....... t t ...__. duc1ed by: "'lndMdUel Thi• bu•IMM I• con-Thie •l•t-11 WU Ned FORNIA ·~ Mid !)Md of fruit In the ,,_ et•*'*' WM ,_, Rlctwlrd L LeGend,.11 ..i.~ with l"--"-·•tu C1ett1 of Ot ~-1itu1ted In Mid with 1M County Ci.ril of Or-~... · .....,,Id by; 1 corporation ,,. """""' • YOU ARE IN DE I' AULT DA TED: Seplamber 1, ~-, __ ,. 81111 ~...._. ........, COun ... on •-t~ber ...... 8lll'"*1l WM med er .......... Utnlted. J.nnrr .,. County on Sec>ttmt>et UNDER A DEED OF TRUST HS ., ..... ,,_,.,.,_ -...... ., -··But h eavywel ht champion says he could care less BANGKOK, Thailand (AP)- Michael Spinks has a week to appeal or accept the World Boll- ing CouoCll's decisio n to suip the new heavyweight champion of one of his three hght heavyweight tttles. Tbc WBC stripped Spinks of championship rec ogn1uo n Wednesday, saying he had viol- ated a rule by holding titles m more than one d ivision a1 the same time after he outpointed Larry H olmes to win the Inter- national Boxing Federation heavF.cight title last month. Spmks returned home to Dela- ware Wednesday to attend a rally in bjs honor and wasn't disturbed by the WBC's announcement. ··1 don't need th e m anymore.'' Sp1nlcs sajd of bis hght heavy- weight titles. "I needed the light heavyweight c hampionships to feel the way I wanted to feel. I wanted to~ there alone. "I've got the one that counts." h e added , refemng to tbe 16F heavyweight lJtle. Butch Lewis, who promotes Spinks' fights, agreed 11 was no great loss. "Everybody knows we didn'1 iotend to defend the light heavy· weight title." Lewis told The Associated Press in New York. The money 1s 1n the hcavy- wei&ht division. Spinks earned SI mtlfion for fl&hting Holmes and fiaurcs to eam much morc in a rematch or a title defense 8gainst Gerry Cooney. Holmes and Cooney both say they arc rctinng. but either mi&}lt be willina to fia}lt again for a s1x- fi&urc purse. Spinks earned SI 00,000 m his last title fight as a light heavy- wei&ht. WBC President Jose Sulaiman said the council intends to de· tenninc who will fight for the vacated ti lie. but no tJmetable has been set for when the decision is to be made. later this month, the W orld Boxing Association wiU decide at its convention how long to con- tinue ~izing Spinks as li&ht heavyweight champion. The lllF has indicated it will recogniz.e Spinks as li&ht heavyweight champion for 9'() days. Sulaiman said the WBC rules require a dual champion lO relin- quish one of his titles withjn seven days of obtaining another. The president said no vote was required for Wednesday's action, but he took o n e at the council's convention here because he hoped to make legal action less likely. Sulaiman said Spinks appealed 10 the wee to delay its decision to strip th e title because the champion hoped t o cam another world t1 t le. Hagler captures WBC boxer-of-year honors wtlh lhe County Olef1I of Or· A 81eW!, Vloe PNeidenl 20, 1115 DA TI!O 1016193 UNLESS 1 ~ A. 90YO IY u Lot 27 of TrllClt No. 8620, 18, 198& tn01 County on ~ber T ,_ ' T In the City of Irvine, County ,_ 20 N5 hie lta1ement .... flled -YOU TAKE ACTION TO .,... D. eovo .... A • of Ot-Slit• of c...-Pvbllehed Orenoe eo..1 ' 1 ,_,.,. with the County a.tic of Or· n...~':8'*'0ct °'"" ~t PROTECT YOUR PROP· TD RN I Y IN , AC T, fomla -.. ihown on 1 M9'> ()ally Piiot SIC)ternber 2t. Pvbllatled Or ,.~ lllOI County on September .....,, Mot otlS • t • • EiRTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT lenl...,. · 2 October 3 10 17 IM& """""Piiot oc1o::'3 t'Oi7' 6, IN5 24, 1N5 A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU RICHARD K. -Ill.. tlleteof In Book 2 4, pegea . . • ...-, ,.., ' ' ' ,,.... T NEED AN EXPLANATION DllOH D IO~ ... AT· 24 Md 26. Mi.oeileneoua Th-32() 24· l..,S Publlthecl Orange C:O..t OF THE NATURE OF THE TORN i Y -IN ·~ A CT Mept. In the Ottlce of the •-ti' MnTIM' _______ Th-33 __ 8 0.lly Piiot ~tember 2e. .. .. ti' NOllCE PROCEEDING AGAINST ........., • County AecOfdet ol Mid ,.~ ""'""' 1'\11.IC N011C£ OCtober 3, 10, 17, 1916 .--YOU. YOU SHOULD CON· ALVIN Wttrft, IY DllGH County ___ NO_TIC:a ___ _ Th-311 N011C11 TAC1 A LAWVER. D. 90YO, ... ATTONmY· Thi 1trMt addr ... INS 1N'm1MQ 1110e LIQA.L. NOnc. 9f\'l1'lltQ IMOI 2448 MtrHlllH Way, 9'-#ACT, ..... ....., 01Mr common ~Ion. NotlcelelleretryglventNt NOnca °' f'taJC *>TICE Notice .. heretry glll'lll ttlat eo.ia MIN. CA 92021 MARY A. 10~.!J.. IY " eny, Of Ille real property IM Boerd of Truet ... of the I ~HIAMfO theeo.tdofTrust .. ofllle ''(If 1 etr• addr ... or DStOH D. ec>YO, ..... ~T-d 11crlb1d above le C:O..t CommYntty ~ MOUi.a Aa..aTANCI K...a C:O..t Community Co4lege common dHlgnatlon of TORN I Y • 1 N -' ACT , purportlO to be. '4ee 1 Grlltl Dletrict of Or1111Q9 County 11\.AM ACrmoua IUIMH D111rict of Orange County. property II tt10wn •bow, no ..... ,.,.,.., Tr .. Lane. lrvlne, CA. Cellfomla. w111 ·reoetw - The City ot H11t111no1on NAm ITAftMIJfT CallfOfnla, wlll ~ ..i-warranty 11 glwn u lo 111 l .... of~COll!ft-The undtlnllgned Truet• Id l>'d• up to but no lat« Beech Intend• 10 eubmft 111 The lollowlng pet'IOnt .,.. ed bid• up lo but no lal« completllMM °' ()Of"rect· tr °' °""I!' ... dl8Clelm1 eny ~blltty tor eny than 10:30 a.m., Monday, an~el Hou .. ng ANtelencie doing bullnw u : Rolling th.,, 11:00 Lm .. Monday."-"'" Th• beneficiary Oft ...... :au 7, ,.._ lncot"reclneN ot IM llrMI Oct.28, 1N6 ettne~ Plan lo Ille U.S Dec>etttnenl Ridge Cr•t.' 3151 AJtway Oct.21, 19U•tiMP\.irahu-under Mid Deed of Truat. by ~...., ..... .,.M eddr .. and olhef common Ing C>e9#'1tnen1 of Mid col- of Houelng llnd Urt>en 0.. A'*IUe. SYtte N, Cott• Ing Department 01 Mid oc»-reuon of• l>fNGh °' OefUt a ...._, ,....... "' ..ct tw del6Qnallon, If any. 8hown 1ege dtett1C1 loceted et 1370 ~I on Of lboul 0e> Mela. CA 92t2t leoe dletrlGt toc;ated 11 1370 In IM obllgetlonl ieC'.11'9d tM C-'J ~ ...... ,_. lleteln Adame Avenue, Coate toblr 31, 1985. Thie 1~ BtemelMUmlled.ACen· Adam• Avenue , Co111 thereby, heretofore H · ~-•11•9CIDllGHD. SeldNlewlllbem.O.,l>Yt Meea. Callfomla 11 wtlleh yMr HAP II tOf' the petlOd of 1dl1n corpOl'allon, 1887 M ... , C.itfomle II which ICUled and dellvered to lhe 90YO ..,_iely .......... without covenant Ot Wll· time Mid bide w111 be pul>- October 1. 1985 through Yonge St,..,, T0tonlo, On· llme Mid b4d1 wlll be pyl>-undetflOned • written 0.0. -(ef ,,..... to -tM renty. e11p, ... or Implied,, .. nety OC*ied end r..o few Sec>lember 1988. tarlo, Caned• M4S 1Y5 ncty opened end r..o f0t: laratlon Of OeftMJll end 0.. bHle of Hllefact•rr Q#'dlng lltle, poH••'on, °' PRINT a. BIND SPRING Notice le hereby glll'lll lhll Tiiie buelnaet 11 con· PURCHASE OF PRINT· Mand t0t Sale, Md Wl'ltten ..,..._, to ... tM,.,.... enoumbrancH, lncludlng 1988 CL.ASS SCHEDULE, the City COuncH ol lM City of dUcled by:. COf'potetlon ING PAPER: ORANGE notice of bt'9eCh INS ot 4liec> ""--.. 1ull1 ... ,..., Chargel INS·~ COASTLINE COMMUNITY Huntington 8wh wilt con· Btamalee Limited Jeffrey COAST COLLEGE lion lo CW the undef· to tM _..... IMW-....t • of the Trutl .. and of the COLLEGE duct• pyblic: ~on the A. Slevin, Vice Pr...dent All bid• ere to b4I In ec-tignld to Mii Mid property tM Attomer-lft·,aot of truet• c;rMted by Mid Deed All bide .,. 10 be 1n IC· HAP ooell ., lte regulw Thia llllement -flted COf'dlnele with Ille Bid Doc:u-to Nl'-'Y Mid OC>1101tlon1. ..tcHUO H. .._,.l. of TNlt, lo IMIY Ille remain-cordanoe with IM Bid Oocu. mM\lng of Monday. Octot>er wtlh 1111 COunty Cler'k or Or-mentt which ere now In file and lhlf'Mtl« the undet· ALVIN WHITI. ROlllRT A. Ing prlnc:Jpel tum• of the ,.,,.,,,, wtlleh .,. now In ftle 21. 1916 I t 7:30 P.M .. City •noe COl.lnty on September and may b4I MCUf'e(j In the tigned cauMd Mid nolloe ol •OYD, MARY A. IOYO ..... nole(ll eecurld by Hid •nd mey be MelUntd In the Council Cl\aml>IW'I located 5, 1985 ottlce ot the Dtrec:10f ol bl"Md't and of election 10 be •MWledeM to -tMt OMd ot Tru11 to wit: ottlce of the Olrect0t 01 I at 2000 Main St,...t, Hunt· ,_ PurChUlng of Mid COiiege recotded M1tc:tl i2, 1915 N fl•l•fl• awbMrlbe4 ttl• 138.237 19 with lnterHt Purchulng of Mid College lngton BMGtt, Cellfomla. Pu bit.tied Orange eo..t district. ll'lltt. No. 85-009'573 of Of. ,...... of RICHAN> H. 1U11-thereon from June 22. dletrlc:1 Anyone wWtlng to ••· Deity Pilot s.c>ternber 26 Eect\ bidder mutt eubfnlt flclel Recotdl In the office ot ....._Al.VIN WHITI. "°9-1985• • 11 t5~ P« annum E.acfl. bldOer ~ 8Ubm/1 ~ ~ ~ ~ng Ober 3. 10. 17. 1915 ' wtth Illa bid • ~·· the A.cord., of Oranoe '"'" A. IOYD. llARY A. .. Pfovlded In Mid not•'*" with "" bid a caehler'• Ille propoeld Houelng A•· Th-309 checlc, oenllled Cheek, °' County; 90'Y1>, ...,..o • ~ coete and eny ldvenoe1 of Cheek oenlfled ctlldl °' elltence Plan m.wy do eo 11 l>'ddet'• bond m.O. peyabll Saki .... wlf1 be meoe. l>YI Md '*"* ow" MftM • $2,209.25 with lnl-t u of l>'d~'• bond meda pay91>1e the hearing. Coplee of the 10 lhe order of the Cout without ~r °' wit· Attomer ln 'eat. flret dell of publlcetlon. to the order of Ille Cout HAP .,. 111111a1>11 et Hunt· •-ic 11nncc Community ColleQe D11tr1ct ranty, exs>< ... °'Implied,,.. omotat..., °' NGrma M. • ·P1u1 tnl«•t u or June Community Colteoe D49tr1c:1 lngtonS..ChCttyClettc'lof· .-~ nu Board of TN9t ... lf'I en oardl~tllle poaMlllon, Of" t~, Notaly l'uMic • 21, 1915 In Ille amount Of Board ot TNlt .. In an nee"°"' 8:00 A.M. 10 5;00 flCTmOUl IU ... H amoun1 nol l8e8 than nve encum ancea. 10 pay the ~ Prtftolpel omo. '3, 143.72. amount not ._ than n... P.M .. Monday tlll'u Frtdey pwcenl (5%) ot lhe eum bid remaining pnnolpel eum ot In Or-.. C-IJ, Mr -The~ under Mid percent (5%) of IM eum bid ~ ......... IHWttl.. CttJ T~~n...-r ... gu11ant• thet IM bid-Ille note(•) ieC'.lntd by Mid ~ ·~ NM .. Deed ol fruit heretof~ Ill· ... gu1tent• 11\et lhe bid-e--. (714) at-m:r d......., bu~Pll"~ are der wlll enter Into the d..cl of TMt. wt1h lntaree1 ,. eevted end dellvered to the d•r wltl entw Into the O.ted: October 8, 1"5 --v N . otus pr09()Md Contract It the u In Mid note p<ovlded, Id-Pubffthed Orange Cout underllgnec:t e wrlllen 0.0. opoeect Conlract " the Publiahed Oranoe eo..t Room. 1543 Adame Street, eame I• ewarded 10 him. In vencee. If any, under "'-Deity Piiot Sec>lembel' 19, latlllOll of defeull and 0.. ~ 11 IWllded 10 him In Deity Piiot October 10. 1986 "~;::t1• L~· ~ 1907 the event of fellure to enter tenl'lt of Mid Deed of tnat, 28, October 3, 10, 1985 mend '°' Sale, end 1 written the 9119nt 01 tallu,. 10 _;1., Th-352 0 1 ,. · : 11 · Into 1uch contract, the , ... , chatgee. end expet\MI Th-303 Notloa 01 Oefeull and ei.e-Into euch contract th• •aware, un ngton proceed1ofthectiedlwfllbe of the Tru•I• end o f the rlontos.11 Theunderllgnec:t proc..otoftMc:fledl ~Hbe --.. -_-ll'_Mn_Tll'C ___ e..cnT.hl . CbA 912$48 I forfeited, Of' In the C8M of. truett crMled by llld Deed DllDI II' MnflC( cauMd Mid Notice of 0.. fOffetted or In IM eaM of. r~ nu1"4 8 ue neH 1 con-bond. Ille full eum thlleof of Truet. l"UUU\I "" fault and etectlon 10 Sell to · ~:!, bri.'S."'°.=.'* wtll be forf91tecl to Mid COi-Said Nie win be held on NOTICI °' be recorded In the county ::Ob.~~':'~~ ra ., 1ege dl1trlc:1 Frldey, October 18, 1915, 11 -'*• Ille rMI property I• Thie ttaernen1 wu flled No blOd« may withdrew 1:30 p.m. In the lobby to the ~ HmANNQ located ii: dletrlct. wltht~c:'nZ,C~!!,~ hl1b4dforaparlod torrorty. bulldlng located 81 801 ~~llNO Oate:.October 1, 1985 hle:ldi:,~~:S~'f'~ ~915 ty Sec> ffve (45) daye 111., the d81e South Lewie Slteet, Otange, LOWylftCOW. I 1en oe..to ,Clf'906oawe ~ (4S) daye aft« the date • _1 .... Ml tor thl opening thereof Clllfomla 92M8. HOU8*0 A .... TANCI .. rvtc•. ''• l"c·•. ee .. 1d 111 tor the_...... thlWwOf ,.._, -The Board of Truat ... ,.. Al Ille lime of the lnltlll t.ruetiM Jm CemtM o.t ..,.......'""" ~ Dl8TNCT OMI Action &crow, Inc. 800 N Nl'Vel IM prlvllege of reject· publlelllon of Ihle notice. Notice I• hereby glwn th81 No ~ .... ., .... The Board of TJ\111 ... , .. NOTICE IS HEREBY Tuetln A14,, Sutte Q, s.nt1 Ing any end alt l>'dl °' 10 lhe IOlll amounl of Ille un-theCltyCOuncllofthecltyof Die9o CA H 10I .. l,I) ..,_thel>fMteoeof~· GIVEN that the Huntlncrton Ana. CA 92705 waive eny lmigularltlee or In-paid blltnce of the obll-Huntlnglon BMdl wlH hold a ..,m1 _.., lit.. CW\. Ing "'Y and all 114$ Ot to Beach City Courd w4ll hold P\.iblllhed Oranoe Co&t1 tormalltlel In an bid °' In gatlon eec:ured by the lbOve Public tieetlng, u requited ' walW eny lmigulernlea °' Jn.. BANGKOK. Thailand (AP) -Watanabe of Japan was voted • P\.ibllc: Hearing 1n tM Deity Piiot Sec>tember 28 the bidding Y deecrtbld deed 01 iruet INS by Section t03A(J)(5l 01 the ~~ c formalltlee tn eny bid or In Middleweight champion Marvin "exemplary boxer." for setting a Council Chamw at the October 3. 10. 17. 1985 · lll A. tt'EVl"NI, v1oe eettm11ed eo111, ••peneae, lntetnal Revenue Code. at Dllty b~llot Oct~ 10 ~1 the bidding. Hagler, w flo stopped Thomas good ex.ample for boxers in so-Huntington Beech Civic Th-308 c~. lu1lflw At· • n d • d "• n c • • I• II• ragu111 meeting on Mon-24 1985 , • Lal A. ITEWNa, V1oe Hearns In a muc h -heralded bout . Cant.,, 2000 Main Str.t, ,.,,. Coeel COftl"'U"lt' 1 116,457 9• dey, OCtober 21, 1ge5, 10 ' Th-3&2 cf '*1uc•°'· ......... Af· C1ety. Huntington Beach, Cell· C ... 0tetrtct II le pc>Nll>le that at the conllder.• prc>poMd Polley ... NII COMfllW"lty ih April, won lhe World Boxing WBCPresidentJoscSulaiman tomle.onthedatellnd•tlhe Putilitllotd Orange Cou1 tlmeo111111t1eopenlngl>ld Repon to be pybllllMd by C41eweoe.tnct Council's boxer-o f-the year time lndlcetecl below 10 ,.. •-ic ...,,.TICE !oa11y Piiot October 10 11 may be .... tnan the 101a1 tt1ec1tyotHunt1ngton8Mch Nil.IC *>TICE P\.iblllfted er.,. Coat honors today said today the council will ask a ceivellndconelder1he1111.. .-YUU nu 111s · · Indebted,_ due oon111n1ng • 1t11ernen1 of DlllY Piiot OctOber 10. 11. medical team tO belp fonnulate menll of ell peraona wflO Tll-381 The total lndebtldMU the pollciel regarding houe-T 41414 1985 The boxing body. holding its wee "d ,. d . h wtllh to be hMrd ,.ia11w to NOTICe °' being 111 •tlme11 on wtlletl Ing, del/el<>pmenl, Ind low· NOTICE°' 22nd annual meet mg he~. gave gu1 e mes regar mg t e use the app11ca11on deecrlbed P'UILIC tmANNO Pt8..IC *>TICE the opfl'llng bid 11 compy1e(j income houatng ...i1tence TRUITU'I IALE "be fin I. .. h of oxygen in the ring. WBC rules below. ZOMI CHAHOl •14 may be obtained by calllng 10 be lollowed by n In 1uu1ng No. 11_, 0EATH Nor1c1 s SI 1&1•ter onors to super-bar stimulants tn the rine. and the DATE: Monday. October NOTICE IS HEREBY NOTICa °' (714) 385-4837 or (213) quelltled rnortgege bond• '!'OU ARE IN DEFAULT bantamweight champion Lupe issue was raised when Pintor and 21, 1985 GIVEN that the Huntington TRUlnFI IALE 627-43651119 dey before the a nd mortgage credit UNDER A DEED OF TRUST LORENZ Pintor, wbodefeated fellow Mex· ~ · TIMI; 7"30 P.M. Beach City Counct1 will hold L No. 111e oen1t1ca1ea. fhecJtyotHunt· DATEDAPAtL 12 1983 u.,... ican Juan Meza in August. Mez.a Meza were chosen 1or their A-"'UCATION ~a Put>tlc Hearing 1n the .,...:"_.,_,11 Dated· Septe mber 18. lngton Bffch pr1v1ou11y LESS YOU TAKE AcTION ARLIE AL ICE ed honors. Code Amendment No. 8S..18 COuncll Chamber •I the MC IVIU y 1985 publlllled a Hou .. ng Pollclee TO PROTECT YOUR PROP· LORENZ. born April was nam "m o st . dramatic LOCATION: north of Gar· Hunllngton Beach Civic I T. No ~ TAC .... Report'°' necaJ yMr ending ERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT 27 1902 in South [)a. fighter." Officials said Meza was given fleld Avenue. eouth of Mein Center, 2000 Mein SlrMt. UN.T coot 0 ,AC•IC IOvaMIGN, • October 31, 1984. The city A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU • • The WBC's "lifetime ac hieve-o x ygen during his fi~ht with S lreel, ..... , of BHch Hunllngton Beach, Call-PACIFIC SOVEREIGN ........ ll'Ult .. , by T.D. Mlll· complied during the on. NEED AN EXPLANATION kota. Passed aw~y d '' fi Bouleverd,andeutofHunt· fOf'nla,onlhedeleandlllhe dul 8 olnlad Trull .. VICE COMPANY, ~I, yMT pwlOd p<eoedlng Ihle OF THE NATURE OF THE October 8, 1985, Ln ment awar went to onner Pintor in August, and ulaiman 1~ time lndlcetec:t !*ow 10 r• undlf ~~. tottowing de-1y: LMda '9rez.........,. repo<TwtththelntentofCoo-PROCEEDING AGAINST Newport Beach, CA. m1ddlewe1ght c hampio n Sugar said it appeared Justified because IAL: To conlldlW C411veandconlidetltleatet• ecrlbed d..cl of lruel WILL ~. 901 louttl ~ gr-111e1 111e otty of Hunt· YOU, YOU SHOULD CON-Survived b son Ra) R o binson. who rcured fro m o f the c hmauc conditions in an emanoment 10 Hunt· men11 of Ill '*''°"' wtio SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION It.. e>renee, CA ... {114) lng1on Beach uH II• TACT A LAWYER. Y , the nng in 1965. Mexico C 11y. where the bout was lngton BHch Ordinance wtllh 10 be '-rd rel81tve lo TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER *"4100 eulhOrlty lo lllUI quafllled On OCTOBER 30. 1915, et Robert M . .Lorenz, S rfl gh h J Code s.c11on llM5., to lhe 8')PllCIUon delcrtbed FOR CASH ANO/OR THE Publlthed Orange eo..1 mongage bond• end mOl"I· tO:OO A.M .. Arlt Hem411 Cor· daughter. In -1 aw upe ywe1 t c amp1on iro held. allow convenience marut1, below CASHIERS OR CERTIFIED Detty Piiot s.i>tember 28 gege credit oertlflcel• to por111on u duty appointed Shir ley Lorenz· I l wtlnoul ..... of alcotlollc OATI: Monday, Octol>er CHECKS SPECIFIED IN October 3, 10, 1985 ' Ille gtfft•t •• ,..,, ,...,l>le Trull• under and puf'IUanl b th Lee Brim I Pl&IC NOTICE P\&IC *>TICE PmllC *>TICE t>everegee u • pennllled 21, 1985 CIVIL CODE SECTION Th-318 toullet1ow..1ncomer1m11-to Deed of T~ rec«ded ro er, . l!V'-................... ••-•• FJC·......,.._ 'I -··-·• ...,..._.....'I .. ··-u ueepw1t11, ~.!.t~ttontty P1• In ~.I~ ... .......... 292411 (pey11>1e at the time or ... io ett0td ~ oi.n-Aprll 1!», 1983 u ln81rvlt*11 mer; brother• Donald ,.._, .. ...,... ..... __ '"""" ---,..,.,..,,""" --lh41 ac11c;a....,...,,.,.,n 111 _.,......, .. ,,_ ...,_,... MJe 1 1aw1u1 ot 111e mmt1C 11nTICE erWl!pbefOf'e ..... t"-vlllgl'I-No 83-159381 of Qfflclll Brimmer· sister NAMf •TA~NT ..,... ITA-rn.NT ..... •TAn....,. Oletrlc1 Orie Zone CNnge 8S..14 n money .. ~ nu er·tncome famlllee A d • . • • The lollowlng pereone 1111 The tonowtng Pl'ION are The follow!"" PIWllON er• f NV I It O • M f N T Al LOCA TtON• Southwetl United Stetee) all ri0111• llfle The ,,,_.,,.., wtll com· ecor 1 executed by Kathyrn Scott mter d I I ... . and lnler•I con---lo I( ... ... DAVID PHILIP MEANY AND Ch l Em. ,; doing bu•l nua a1 o ng bua nue 11 dOlnQ bullneea u OMM ITATUI: Negallve Declar· comer of Warr.et Avenue nd now held b ·ii•-def •ofo.t.un mence 11 7:30 p.m. and wtll CHARYL ANN MEANY ar oue p y : ., ANSWERING MACHINE CLOUDS. 435'h CarnatlOn, ENTERPRISES: Ponlblllty 1Uon No 85-42 UMSllng Ind "B" Street 1 Id Deed t TY 1 ,unrhe ~ .. NT NO.._., be held In the Councll HUSBAND AND WIFE .i riandchildren Ann MESSAGESS, 1274 Conway C0ton1 def Mer, CA 92625 Unllmlled, 120o4·A W the erivlronmentll attecte of "'°"°IAL: To conllder N o rut n ,..,...,.. ',. '"""' Chamberl 11 Clly Hiii. Hunt· I fflce ' ' ' Alie . Cot18 Meaa, CA 92828 I Candyce L .. Hayee. 436'i't BalbOI Blvd . Newport Mid Code Amendment will Zone Cllange es. 14 In COQ• properly heretnefler d•· ~did: 1111/M. Otftolall Ing I Of' Beacll CtJltOfnl• 1"''1°"'· n Ille 0 of the t.ephen, James and H 27• C C 1•--Cor ... _. •• C "-ecnbed "9cofdl of Or-r--• . County Recorder of Orange Barbar Se-""-will Nancy 111. 1 • onway am•""'· one.,_,....,, Beacl\.CA92661 11.abeconlldet"edby 04.ln· juncilon with Nag11111e ..,.,... TRUSTOR ALFRED J C~ -...--•tJ• lnlet•led 11\dMdulle wlett-County, Slate 01 Cellfomla. a. 1 v~ Ave .• Col18 Meal. CA 92628 CA 9282.5 0 MICllMI McCue. 120'-ell la1111on No 85-54. 8 req~t MC EVILL y GERALD C IF YOUR PROPERTY IS IN Ing to l lCpr ... I heir vlewl on WILL SELL AT PUBLIC be held Saturday, ()c. Mlct!MI Hart, 1274 Con· 1 Thie bullneu 11 con· AW e.Jboe 81\!d . Newport Oft FU: A copy or the to ruone 1 0 12~ aae lite VAN DER KLOMP FORECLOSURE BECAUSE 1111• Polley Re90f't will be AUCTION TO HIGHEST BIO. tober 12 at l :()() p M way Ave. Coe11 Meu, CA ductc eel Dy an lndlvtdual Beech, CA 92661 prls 090Mdon ·fl._ 1Cnode1"-~~'1 tRrom .. ldeRn2111(1Med1 totu~.o~slCty4 BENEFICIARY ANAHEIM YOU ARE BEHIND IN YOUR gl01ven11 ,'~ Puoppor1bllc uH~•1!! ",2 DER FOR CASH (~l>le •I Pacific Vie~ Chape. 1: 92626 andyoe Hayee Thie bu1ln111 11 con· "' '"" .......,.. ,,....,, SAVINGS AND LOAN AS· PAYMENTS IT MAY BE ,.., -.. ., ~ time of Ille In lawful money In Ii I Thia bu1ln11s le con-Thia slatemeol wu tiled ducted by: an lndlvldual of Development Servtcee {Ouallfled Highway Com· SOCIATION SOLO WITHOUT ANY may, prtor to the time of Iha or Ille United Slll•)l l: THE eu of { owers dueled by hu•b•nd and wtl• With lhe County Clerll ot Ot-D Mlcl1MI McCue ALL INTERESTED PEA· m.,cl•ll tor lhe pyrpoee of A d 0 0 t b 19 COURT ACTION d Heer Ing, aubmll written NORTH FRONT ENTRANCE donations may be sent Nancy Hart ange County on Sec>tembef Thia atatement wu meet SONS ere Invited to ellend oonllructlng 1 two 1l0ty of· ecor • c 0 er • • an you commenll 10 Suean JoNll T 0 T H E c 0 u N T y . This a111emen1 wu flied 10, 1985 wlt11 lhe County Clerll of Or· II.Id heiring and expreee flee buHdlng The qullllled 1983 N lnllr ·No. 83-481147 may have lhe lilv•I right to 11 2000 Main Str•t Hunl to: Assistance League wllh the COl.lnty Clerll of Or· ,-.on •noe COl.lnty on September opinion• Of eubmll ~ eufftx Wiii Mmll the UMI lo ~~I~~~ t~ 8!• bf~lyourb ~I In .re:, lngton Beech. cailfOl'nl~ g~~n~ouosii'v~oow~~~ of Newport Beach ange COi.iniy on September Publllhed Otange Cout 18. 1985 r0t Of' egllnet lhe appllc;atlon ofTlce-p<ofeeelonel 0 Cou 0 • " ~ d y p.,.ng t 0 928-48 SANTA ANA CALIF eti Dental Cent.er Pacific 18, 1985 Delly Piiot October 10. 17. ,...... u 04.llllned lbOve All appll-EN VI R 0 NII E MT AL "'?!,,,. .. ~· 1 t I .. _ your ~I _. ue paymende plul lnt.,...ted lndtvlduell mey ri..111 tltle an0' lnt-1 'con-View Morttu:rv Di· Fa.511 24, 3 1 1985 Publlen.d Orange Coul ca11on1 ex1111>111 and CS.-ITATUa· Nagettv. DIQ11-..., .,.... 0 rue ._. perm t ..... COlll en e•· obteln copl•• of th• -v • -.1• PubllShed Orenge Cou1 I Th-364 Dally Pllol October 3. 10, 17, 1Crlp1!001 or 1111~ pr~ 111on ~ 85-54 ......ino ec;rlbee the followlng: pen-within three month• propoeed Polley Report veyec> to and now held by 11 rectol'll. 644-2700 PARCEL 1· from lhe det• 1111• notice of undet" Mid Deed of Trual In ---------Dally Piiot OCtot>er 3. 10, 17. 24. 1985 are oo Ille wllh lhe Off of lhe environmental effect• of LOT 97 OF TRACT NO def 11 ded Thi pr10t 10 the HMflng 11 the the property lltualed In Mid GARDINER 2o4.1985 Th·344 Ille City Cletll, 2000 Mein Nldz.onechangewtllaleobe 3433• IN THE CITY OF em:nt~':>~~9e4.19S: Red...,.lopmenl Office 81 CountyancfStaled.c:tlbed • Th-347 1---------Slr .. t. Huntington Beecll. con11dered by Council COSTA MESA COUNTY OF PROPERTY TAX I SEP 2000 Main StNet. Hunt· u . JEAN SHELP GAR ---------Pt&.IC NOTICE c111tom11. for ln1941C1lon by ON FU: A t.gel o.cr1p-OAANOE STA TE OF CALI· TEMBER 7 1ea:' ond -'H lnglon BMctl. Cellfomla. PARCEL 1 L01 39 of Tract DINER, palled away flta.IC MJTICE lhe pybllc tlon 11 on ftle In the Depart· · ' ' • '" Deted: Octob« 2. tN5 8535 r11u n...tobe 7 198"' th P\8.IC f«>TfCE FICTITIOUI IU ... la HUNTINGTON eEACH ment of Development Set· FORNIA, AS PER MAP RE· lnct.._ untU y04.lr aoc04.lnt AJldl M Wen~ Ctty No • In the ....,., ol """" r , oJ, at e ..... ITAnMENT ,ICTITlOUl IU..... cm COUNCIL. ly: Aflda vlcel CORDED IN BOOK 178. ~ currenl. YOl.I may c .... CttJ of """"" toft lrvlne, .. llloWn on. map age of 65 in Grw FICTTTlOUI _,...... The lollOWlng pereon1 are NA• ITATE•NT II Wentwor1tt CtlJ. c-. All INTERESTED PER· PAGES 48 TO 50 IN· !'IOI hew to pay lhe entire llMoh (714) sa-art ~ recorded In book 347, pegea Valley CA Mn Gar NAME ITAT!MENT doing buslneae U BARBAR The follow! ~ (1'14) ~ ' SONS ate Invited lo attend C L U S I V E · M I S . unpaid porllon or YOl.lt ac-Pubillhecl Orange Cout 9 and lO of Mlecetlaneoua ' • · • The followtng pertona are DE BOOM & ASSOCIATES. doing bUsln.': =~~ ·~ Publlefled Orange Coul Mid hearing end llllPf ... CELLANEOUS MAPS, IN count. -lhough fl.Ill pay· Delly Piiot October 10 1985 Mape, retOfdl of Mid Coun-diner was a nauve of doing bualneae u · NEW 1742 Bayport Wey. Newport ENTERPRISES 18228·A Dally Piiot OCtober 10 1985 0p1n1on1 Of' M.tbmll evidence THE OFFICE OF THE ment wu demanded. l>YI Th·353 ty.P RCE . O wosso, Michigan. HORIZONS REAL TY COM· Beech. CA 92&80 McDutmotl W•t lrvlne CA Th-354 tor or against Ille 8')Pllcellon COUNTY RECORDER OF you mull pay lhe emount A L 2· A n~lC· Resident of Newport =·~y·~oc~:;::n c~=: Barbare de Boom. 17"3 92714 • . I .. 04.llllned at>ov9. All 8')Pll-SA~~~~~N2'.f .. ~~.:~he Obllgatlon DlllHLI' llnflC( =~°' ~n~ ea: Beach and Grus Val-e 0 . 1. M. s. c A B•yport Way. Newport John w Mahler. l69l ·-·c llnJ1CE catlonl, ••llll>lll. and <»-, A NON·EXCLUSIVE bel , ...... .._.... r\IUU\o nu tonh In and OVfll the land ley CA Survived by Beacll. CA 92680 Meea Or (A·71 Sanl8 Ana ruuu nu ec;rlptlonl of Ihle prOpOMl ng Of .... .._. upon 1>9'· • • 92626-5838 Jamee L de Boom. 1143 Hit c~ . .,.. on nte with Ille 01flce of EASEMENT FOR INGRESS mll• • longer period. you NOTICE cw deecrlbed In Artlcle XIII, Sec· her husband. Lewis Jenine S Thraatter. 940 B 1 w N 1 · NOTICI Of Cl C._.._ 2000 ANO EGRESS FROM S AID have the legal right to atop ANNUAL mlTINQ tlon 8 Of lhe Oectaratlon of T Gardin f N Magella n S treet. Colle e!~h~rCA 92~ ewpo r M~~~.~ ~I~~~~ .. 23~! "'8UC HUlttNO ~~ .... ty Hu~l~ton ~~ PARCEL 1 THROUGH LOTS the IOl"«loeura only by pay· Of__,.. TO -HILD ~venanl~, Condition• ana • rt Beac;~ G ew- Mesa, C~ 92626-5838 Thi• buslneea 11 con. 9280~ CODI A•..,_NT Callf0tnla '°' lnepecllon by 185 AND 1ae OF TRACT Ing lhe erttlre amount cs.-NOVl"_,.14, tMI Htrlcl one , recorded po raas Tiiis bu11ness la con ducted Dy· 1 general Pitt· Thie bualneu 11 con NO.~ lhe bite' NO 3433. IN THE CITY OF minded by your credllOf Notleeleherebygtventhet Auoutt 5, 1974 In ~ Valley, CA. Sister, ducted by e corpor1110n nerehlp ducted Dy 1 ~If pArt. IAl.E Of COMIUW'TION H~TINQTON alACH COSTA MESA. COUNTY OF within thr .. mont11Utl«the Ille annual meeting of Mem-t1~13, PIQe 180 of Of'llciel Twyla Mae Beamish Janine S Thrasher Bart>ar• de Boom "4t'llllp 1 Of AL.COttOUC CrTY COUNCIL. 1y: Ude ORANGE, STATE OF CALI· date of recordatloft of 11111 ber• of Am Stec> Houee of Record•, and atnendmenl• f Ow M.lchig T111a 1ta1emant ""u flled Thoi etalemertt wu nled Ooneld T Wllktnton HVUlAGaa ON Ill Wentwotttl, CtfJ• C~ FORNIA. AS PER MAP RE· document, wtt1et1 d1t1 of ,.. Orange County, Inc .. e ~ thereto. 0 cm<>, an; Wllh tne County Clerk of Of. wllh the County Clerk or ()t. I Thi• tlatemenl WU nled OU~ llJIVtCIE ~ (714)...... • CORDED IN BOOK 178, CO<dlng IPPMI• l'lereon. fomla Cllar1t&ble Corpof· EXCEPT THEREFROM .. brother. Ray Shelp of ange County on September jange County on September jwtth lh• County Clenl 01 Or-I ITATION ..,..._, • Pvbll"*I Orenge Cout PAGES 48 TO 60. IN· ~ find out the amount ellon, will beheld attMpM· oll, gu mlnerlle end other Apac h e Junction 18 1985 26 1985 C PftOH9fTlON 0 Pllo Oct ber 10 1985 CL US Iv E OF M 18 . mu11 pay or to llTIJlQI clpll place of bu'"-of hydrocarbQn1, below • A . ' F2.llel:J . '2.17 •noe 04.lntyonSeplernl>er NOTICE IS HEREBY Illy I 0 • CELLANEOUS MAPS, IN orpaymen1t~1topthef0f'• Flm8tepHoueeofOrange depth 01 600 !Mt, without ri~on a ; Sister, Publlsned Orange Cou1 Publlslled Orange C0:/'6· 1985 ,....., GIVEN 11111 the Huntington Th-35& THE OFFICE OF THE ~.Ofltyourpropertyll County.lnc.,at2016Charle tNlrlglltotMfec.entry,N Marvel De Young of Dally PllOI October 3, 10. 17, Diiiy Piiot October 3 10 17 Publl~ 0. Cout BelCll City Councll wilt hold ·-II' WITIC£ COUNTY RECORDER OF In fOf'edol\I,. ror lily OllllW StrMt. Coat• ~ Cell-rM«Vtld In INtrutnent• of Lansing, M ichigan; 24 1985 24 1965 ' ' ' r noe a Publlc HMrlng In the ruuu.. nu SAID COUNTY. re&IOl'I, contact. ROBERT A. fomla on ~ey. Nowm-record. b th F..rnes Sh l Th-349 Th·335 Diiiy Piiot Oclllber 3· lO, 11· Council Chamber It Ill• PARCEL 3: BOYD. 817 N Btoe<lwey bet 14, 1985117:00 pm .. fOf . (BENEFICIARY. HEMET ro er: t e p Pt&.IC *>TICE 24· 1986 Th 342 Huntington Beech Civic NOTICa CW-AN EXCLUSIVE EASE· "0", Sanl8 Ana. CA 92701, tM tollow+ng l>U"POM FEDERAL SAVINGS ANO of Lansing, Michigan; ---------, • Cent.,, 2000 Mein StrMI, ~ HIANNQ MENT TO PLACE AND (714) 550.05t2. 1 To lrenuct Mith bul6-LOAN ASSOCIATION) brother. Robert J . Nil.IC NOTICE j Hunllngton Beach, C•ll· .,,.AL TO fl\.N•••o MAINTAIN UTILITY LINES II you have any que.tlon•. ,_. u may pr()plt'ly come The ,,,.... eddr ... and Shelp of Lansing FICTITIOUl IUPeEH K·20AI :~~nc;i~~·~ ~ 'r': c~=,A~MAL ~~RgnR~g:~o:~~~~ ~°",~ ~,:::,• := ~-:===::?°' ~t~.~,=:= Michigan. Memortai r:t:~T~~ are FtcTfTtoOa IUllMEU P\8.IC MJTICE c411veand conlldettheetet• ltQM ,.Mll'T THE CITY OF COSTA wtilc:ll may hive lneured IM The 608ld of onctore d H crlbed 1 bove 11 funeral services, d b TRINITY NAME ITAn•NT rnentt of Ill '*"°"' wtlo NO.... MESA, COUNTY OF OR· loan. hu ftHd NOV'IMber 14, pufponed lo be' 8 SAN(). M onday October 14 04ng uatnegs 11 The ro11ow1ng '*'°"'are FICTTTIOUl llU ... 11 with 10 be "911'd r ... ttve to NOTICE IS HEREBY ANGE STATE OF CALI-Retn4Mnber YOU MAY 1915 utile rweord da1e fOt ERLING. IRVINE, CALI· l98"' •2:00 p M ' MARl(ETING S PECIALIST, doing buatneu 11 .NA.Ml ITAn•NT 'Ille appltc.tlon deecrlbed GIVEN 11'111 • pul>lk: '-Ing FORNiA. AS PE~ MAP RE· LOSE LEGAL RIGHTS IF the '"'ennlnetlon of rnem-FORNIA 92714. oJ at · ' · In 8909 Le Patme. FOl.lnlaln OtemO<ldl A US. 230 E 17111 I The fOltowtng pweone 11'1 '*°"'· will be held by IM City Coun-1 CORDED IN BOOK 178, y 0 U DO N 0 T TAKE l>er1ihlp. OrllV rneml>erl of The ul'lder1lgnecl Ttuet.. the Chapel of Hooper Ve~ley, ~·s92J08 8909 ISi . Cot18 Meu, CA 92827 I d041l9 bu .. 1'1118 u : INLAND DA ft: Monday, Oc:IObet cil ol lhe City of Huntington PAGES 48 TO 50 IN· PROMPT ACTION rflCOf'd ., eucft time end det• dltelalm• "'Y ll•blllty '°' eny & Weaver Mortuary. m.. emeron. 0111& Myar, Inc Coale VALLEY PRODUCTS, 7806 21, 1985 B11ch. In Ille Councll CL US Iv E OF M IS . NOTICE IS HEREBY ere entlllecllo notice of INS lnoorrectMM of the etrwt N~ada Cit CA In ~~ ~;~~:· Fountain Valley 1Me11. CA 92027, A Call· SeabrMZa Dr · Huntington r..: 7'30 PM. Chember of lhe Civic CELLANEOUS MAPS, IN GIVEN: Thet OLEN G. BOYD lo vo1e It lhe llllnual me9t· addt ... end other common 11 f fl y. •amll. rom1e COfpot8llOn BelGll, CA 92648 AJIPUCATION NUMeeft Center. Huntlng1on e..cn. THE OFFICE OF THE I• duly appoinled fruit .. Ing °' •ny edjOurnmenl dealQnalloft, It eny, el\ow!'I eu 0 owers," y d~:, 1>bualn~•;1~' ,Fon Aleiander Enoe111ardl. Kelhy Lynn LlndlJeY, 7806 COOi Amendmenl No 85-t 11 the hour of 130 P.M .. 0t COUNTY RECORDER OF under 1 Deed of T~t deted tNreof Voting by proxy le her.In request donat.lona to Ernetl YS C~onu 780 Promori1ory Ort~ WMI. 1 =r~• 9Dr · Hunllng1on LOCATIOft: Clty1'lde u eoon thefMtt., .. poee. S A IO CO u NT Y , TO MARCH 9, 1982 Eltecu1ed proNbtled. Se6d .... wt11 be made, bllt the Amencan Cancer T Ne"'1)0f18eech CA92827 h, A 2648 NCM'OIAL: To COMldW lbleonMonday,the 2181day PROVIDE WATER ELEC-byCHANGK CHOI JEAN-.,Ordet .. lhe'-'4of without ~tor-· s . t A hi• 't'temetil waa fl:>:' Thia bu1lne11 11 con-1 Thi• buelnHa 11 con· an emandment to Anlcle of OctOber. 1116, tOf IM TRICITY,GAS.TELEPHONEN1£ K CHOI. YOuNo KA Dlree ten, Hewar4 I . ranty,1Xpt1110tlmc>iled.r&-ocie Y· rrange· wtlh ''b9 ounty ~ o f ~ dUCle<l l>y a torpo<lll()fl ducte(j by .,, lndlvldu.. 0 7 3 (MI• c •II• n . 0 u. pvrpoee Of conllderlng en ANO SEWERAGE SERVICE KIM llnd RAYMOND KIM ......... ......., ;.rdlng tllle, pcnnulon. Ot men ta unde r the •noe 04.lnty on tem Atewender Engetherdr 1(81hy l Linden Provl.,ona) of thtt Hunt· aweaf flied by Greo Pllelk FOR SINGLE-FAMILY RESJ. TruetOf' to MCNre Olf111n P.ublllhed Oranoe Cout enoumbtenoea, to JHIY the dlrectJona of Hooper 19· 1985 1'29'7ll2 Tritt 111temen1 wa.a llled r1111 'c"'"'*'' wu flied lngton Beach Ordln•noe of Soutl11.ll\d Slgnt. to tM OENTIAL USE TO SAID obllQettOne In flVOt of RICH-Dal~ PllOt October 10, 1916 a ptlnclpal eum of & Weaver M nrt11aru Wilh Ille County Cl.,k of Or· wllh Ille ounty Clerk of Or· Code 10 prOhlbll the .... 0t Planning CommlMlon'1 0.-PARCEL I SAID EASE· ARO H SUM MERL ALVIN Th..365 IM 1) ~ by Uld ..,. -J ' o!~~:~:.~,~~no: .~~· •noe COi.iniy on s.c>tembel' anoe COl.lnty on Sec>tember conaumpllon ol •lcohoflc nlel of Special Sign Permit MENT TO 8E ALONG THE WHITE. ROBERT. /It ~ Deed of ""'· wntl '"'--N,_evada Oty Chapel. 2, 1985 ' ' 5 1985 20. l985 bevetaga on lhe ""'-No 85-8 wNcrl ~Id• SHORTEST ANO MOST MARY A BOYD. u "8JC fl)TIC( ~. M PtcMded In N6d (•16) 265-2429 1"21.-o "317140 ~ ... u 1 guollne ..,. 20 foot high. " equ#9 loot CONVENIENT ROUTE BE· leMflcllry, recOf'ded APRIL not.(1). ~ If "'Y· Th·"2 Publlalled Orange Con1 I Publlahed Otange COM! lllCe •tatlon lnllfNl!y Illuminated rr... TWEEN THE SAID PARCEL t 1982 •• lnetrumant ,,_ under the tenna of Mid Deed ---------D111ty Piiot Sepleml>er 26. Delly Piiot October 3. 10. 11. I .. v I " 0 ... I N T A L ttendlng 8lgn within 330 fMt I ANO THE NEAREST PUii-t '12230 Of Offlclel Record• In ..:nee °' of Truet . ._, GhlrVM end ptBJC *>TICE jOCIOl>e< 3 10, 17 1985 24 l985 aTATUI: Th• propOMd of ~ liti.tlno ,,..,anding LIC UTILl'TY EASEMENT the Office of the~-Of T'MlllD'a IALI upeneea ol IM Trwt• Md Th·308 Th-336 COde lllMndment le ca190-elgn SHOWN ON THE MAP OF Orange County, Calltornl•, T .&. Na...._ of tM truet1 <neted by Mid l'JCTTTIOUl IU .... H 0tk:ally uempt puf'9Ualll to l'he IUbteet property II SAID TAACT deect'lbinO tM 1*16 t,..,..,. ~ANT MOnCa Deed of T~t. fOf Ille MAMI ITAn..-NT ---------1 NllfC MJTICE provleion1 of IM Cellfomla locate(j at ?011 WllmS Av.I PARCEL 4 ..: LOT l OF TRACT 1012, TO""°""'" OWN1Rr emount reuona~ •ti-TM IOllOwinO P819()(1• 1f• fltllllCMJTICE EnlllfOMWttelOualltyAct. lftlll. epproalmellfy 500 A NON·EXCLU81VICOUNTY OF ORANGE. YOU ARE 1H otFAULTme1edtobe:l138,1'4.13 dOlnO bull'*I u COM· FlCTTTIOUI llUMtUI Oft "ILa: A copy of tl'I f.-... , of Gotdel• ... t CASEMENT OVEA LOT 93 ST ATE OF CALIFORNIA AS UNDER A OEEO OF fAUST The belllflolal Y under M6d MERCIAL LANDSCAPE 'ICTTTtOU•eu..... NAiii ITATIWNT P<oe>OMd code amendment Strwt ln!MC2(~ OF TRACT s.u3, IN n.e PfR MAP THEREOF RE· DATfO 4/13nt UHLUS O..OofTl'Ult,...otot9U· SUPPLY, 1637' Con1INC· 1 MA.Ml ITA~ The l()llowlng l*'IOtll II'• II on Ille In Ille o.v.topment Bualnwi 049trlc1. Cl'TY OF COSTA MESA, COROEO IN BOOK 35 AT YOU TAKE ACTION TO eouMd and dellvered to IM tl<>n Ct E 111, lrvlne, CA ~ followlng peraon1 .,.. dOlng bullneae u RIVER S4W'lloel Oeoei1ment. A clwt'lptlon II on COUNTY OF ORANGE, PA 0 e 5 0 F M 18 • PROTECT YOUR PROP· lllidefllOMd * wrlttwr 0.0- 0211<4 doing bullneat u 11 Upper OAKS MANAGEMENT ALL IHTfRl!8Tf.D P!A· ni.1111 Depen"*'t Of 0.. STATE OF CALl'O~IA. A8 CIUANEOUS MAPS IN !RTY, ll MAY BE SOLD AT lamlon Oi~eult end 0. Joenn VeugM Fllt, 318 N-pon Ptau AlllOClll• COMPANY 1401 Avoc.tdo SONS ate lnllfted to 111end ~I SeNloel PIA MAP R!CORO!O IN THE OFr:ICE Of' THE RE· A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU ~ fOf ~~a ..ntten RoblnhOOd l •n•. Co••• " ~ Upper Newport Plaza Suite 802 Newpoft 8Mcitl0 Mid '*'1no and ..... All lnter•ed pereone.,.. IOOK '71. 'AO!S 41 TO COADEA 01 8Al0 COUN-NE£0 AN ()(.PLANATIOH ,_.1ce:.. r;.-end fJec. Mela. CA t28l7 N~ e.ech CA 92te 1 ' CA 92800. ' op1n1of11 0t 1Wmlt ~ Invited to attend Mid "-'· SO INCLU81VE 0, MIS• TY 01 Tl1E NA TUAE ~ THE Hon to unO..llOiled Mane M F'lt1, 318 Rob-Lynne Michele Pullon David 8 KllQnOtf 11 3 fOf Of agalMI the eppflc.atJon ln9 . e nd HPrH1 1helf CILLANEOV8 MAPS, IH Seid oblOaltonl ~ P .. OC!EOINO AGAINST _.., Mtd Nodca of 0. 1nttooc1 1,.ane, Cost• Meu, 204 E .. t Bllboe Blvd ...... ~ Roti!y Pt Rd . Cor~• Oii u outlned above All applo OC)lnk)nt tot Ot egalnet Mid THE 0,,ICE OF Ht • note fOf the Mt'I ol YOU, YOU SHOULO C()No. i.lfl 9"d ~to 8el to CA 92621 port~ Ce 92801 • M1r CA !12800 eatlontl, ulllbltl, Md ... ~ COUNTY M-OOAOER OF S460,000 00 that • breecfl TACT A LAWY!lll. be reootded '" lM oounty Thie bueln... I• con· Thie bu1l11"1 11 con., Thia bu11nen 11 ~-ectlp~ of tN9 ptopoMI ~-lnfonnltlon ~ SAID COUKTY. '0A THE of. and defllUlt In, the oClll--On Octow 30, 1M&, at :::.. tM ,_, P'Ol*'Y le dU01A9d by: huaband and wit. due1ad by e 04"*11 pan. ducted by an Individual tre on Ille with ttl9 Offtoe of be ot>talned from IM Offtoe MAINTENANCE 01 PARTY oatlonl tOt wNcll 8llCfl Deed 10:00 A.M., SAN OlfOO oate;'a.oteinti. ~& Ill Joann 'Vaughn Fltt ner.ttlp D1111d 8 ~ the City Cliet'lil. 2000 Main of Ille City Oartc, 2000 Main WALLS ON OR ALONG THI of TIWt 11 Meuftly flea oo-'0RECLOIURI &llW'CO, , ~ ""' I Thie autement wee tied Lynne M Petton Tlllt 1111amenr ... meo St,_, Huntington Beeol\, Sttwt, ~t~on leec:nl IOUNOAAIE8 11lTWllN QKed lf'I tMt ~ "-INC. M cMy 8P9C)tnted A= .... Ti~ with IM County Qert! of Or· Thie '1elatnenl ... flied wtth the County C1eftc of Or· CellforrMe. fOf' ~Ion by Cellfomla. II • (114 SAID LOT M AHO SAIO not bean made of "311 41 T,,,.._ under Md pura.ent a-.. -C.~ ~... ., .... County on ~-wtltl IM County C*1I of Or· Inge County on ~ ... publo 538-6n1 PAACCL. 1 INTWIT ANO PRINCIPAL to Deed of TNll reoor-.s _, .... VtM 18, tN5 .,. County on September II 1115 HUMTl•OTO• HACH DATED: Octot>er 2. IN$ PA~L 6 PAST DUE THAOuOH HP· ~ 30. 1919, ...... "°' ~:r::-·"~ .... 'l'o~: ,_ 20. 1915 ~ CITY COUNCI.. 9fl Allllfll Cf1'Y Oil ~OM AN UNOIVtOm 12 Pf" TIMBER t, 1MS P\.U8 ALL ~. In bOot 131t•. -• ..... CA PutllleheO Orenoe eo.t '111112' Pub411Nd OrlnQI C:O..t Ill ....... , Cltr c--. llAC"· lft Al .. I• •• CENT INTEREST A8 TEN· 1.....U PA<>n .. TY TAX p-oe 471 of Ot'tlclel "9oorcla (714) HAMORLAWN- MT. OUVI Mortuary • c.m.tetY Crematory 1825 Gl8Mr Ave Cotta Mesa $<40-5554 M .. CI UOTHSRI MLLUOAOWAY llOft'TUA.RY 1 tO Broectwey Coat•._.... 642·9160 OellyPllotOctOber3.10. 17, Pub119'1ed Ora~ Coal 1D•ll'f Pllot 0cto1*3 1o 17 ,,.._~.._ ......... °"JQlftl AN1 IN COMMON IN ANO ANOPENALTIHTHl .. 10... In lM offtoe o4 tN ~ ~~OctOrlWIOI ~ Th-3-41 24, 181& Ttt-)43 Oe1ty ~ OC10ber «>. 1N5 Cely Plot OctOC. 10, tM6 TRACT NO 1143, IN THI ~I ~ under ty, lt.ata ot c.lfotM ex-2 •. 1gu o.uy P11o1 October 3. 10, 17 2.. 1915 ' • P\.i 0r-. eo.et Put>lehed Or-. ~I TO LOTS 1e5 ANO 1ee ~ thlrt by rM10n !hereof, tn. flleoofden °' 0r-. ~ IN& ow a. 1..., . • T11-331, 1 1'1457 Th4M cm ~ COS'fA MtaA. IUdl Deed°' T"* NI.-. ecuted 1>v OIAALD N Th424 ________ !_ -------------~ ---------- -. --.. Orange Cout OA.ILY P1LOT!Thur8day, Odober 10, 1Me Qt CALL 642-5678 IF CALLING FROM NORTH ORANGE IF CALLING FROM SOUTH ORANGE THE ART OF SBlllO IS MADE EASY Ill TIE DAILY PILOT'S ClASSIFID PAIES. ... , '·:.'.S.;.. BltU>W ARE THE NEW CLASSIFICATIONS BEING USED 11' TODAY'S DAILY PILOT ' nALllTATI t.orh ''099'~ FMIAU ~, •oitt c,,P', Ho..,.--. lo ... ""°.,..d HOUSES/CONDOS loot\ •o, Soi. o...~ 0. Co ,,...,..."" c.r-101 •OOJ Ov4 Of Stot• Prop.nv iotboo hlc:w\d 1006 ltonch..t Jo"""' Gto·•• icta.oo '~"'wlo 1()()1 Woon ''Of>'~ c...,. ......... -h 1018 r--..~°"""' Co'°"'° '*-4 MO' •on 111.~ (o••o~ 01• If w-°"""'-076 fl f0to •031 •lllTALI •~vcMM:, +OJ• ttw~ot\ e.oc.l'l 10.0 HOUSES/CONDOS ""f'!tH'19~ MCHbou1 1().11 hYW'loe 1"'4 C.•~101 1--· I • ._.. hlond l~W.Mt 10)(/ &olboo ,..,_,.. ... '° ._..._ •on ~d•ono .. oth l•• fO<HI IQ)) \..0'0"0 Ott Ni.of ""'"°"v""'° Ool (0,10~ --· 069 OOf'O 'o..nt ~c-. 1016 fl 1010 S.CW-J~ (op10•ono •Oii J OVfltow+ Voll•• SotMo Ano 1080 '1y,,~Oft ~h SonfO A no Hei;hr, lot• Hwftl1~Ho'~' ~Coot'~'a 1086 S.......•-•Oii '°°"""'° a.oct. '"''fWI 1()0() lG9W"'0 "'"' ·--MISC. R.l. Iott fo1nt !'11\.tWOl'V .... --· '100 -""--Acteofe llB _,_ .. "'••don9& c ...... _ It)() Sari ""°" '~'''°"° . MOii ....nt Oii_... COUNTY MOii IOUnt OIWlal COUNTY II) '11) 1)1) 1.00 t j1) I))() U7) l)IO 1)9Q 16()() •&7~ /10/ 11U6 /107 1118 1 n 1' 1• 1 16 1• l1 11H 7 i.u )U 1 " .. , ... JI)() J )1 1 )) 1167 /160 71 lo 1111 \oiowo Al"O 1tl0 MISC. llNTALS A181CMMCIUllllll \oriifoAM~'°' 1114 C~•o~' ncn ·--1910 ~(00\t,..,...U; 1•'6 Dl.9'o ... 110. lOM &~ 191) \ov .. l_ JIU ·-· 1106 ............ J001 ...... "" Jt9Q HOl•h Mo+elt ?111 '•'t.Of'IOl*•••t ~ Yue""'°"•~ 1n1 ~hoob & W.10¥(1~ l011 APARTMENTS •.mot-. To ~0t• 111• ,,°'4. )OU -~ WQl'Wd 1116 C~td COi• >016 '-'"' 1001 Got-aon ,,,. •~ 11.0 °"-'"'' Ki'• 6oat>oo hJooi.d ,_ S-0.-11'1 lo"boG ,~w'G 7llOI ""' .... .......,, ,, ... lllMOYM1111 c OIPt'"°'"'° leorh 16•1 '°'°"'° •• M.QI 1617 co .... aaL 1_, '6)(, (O\tO ~ 167• ''oteulOf'IOI •~~,<r!· ... )100 ~o '°""' 16}0 R.I. IAU/•lllT -ckot )10) (I JofO 1•31 '~"°' OttoCt )A()(, "°"'"'°"" Vott.y. 16)• ·-1HO '""~""""ol ''oc:H' )10) H~'""" ll>'{. 1..,-,11119~, ,,~ »i. 1161 ~ ))10 ""'°"""9'o-I Ho1 b«N, 16'1 ""'~'Ott ....... 11•0 .. tvbt '"'°"''OM\ )11': 1 ...... '~'"°''·~ 1111 C-•ol HXi ~ 09Wf'IO ...... 1 ... 1 ~ .... ~ ]116 f~y,..,...W......ai H)~ ·---16)0 ·~1''°' 7111 ·-"'-' 1•)1 !t'I(~ ''°'"'"°)' ]10(, Ml•CllAllDlll lohf~•'' 16)) MIO.of' V .. fO 1661 ···-··· ............ Newpo'1 '-<>th }060 .............. ~Cl·-1616 FINAllGAL ·-· Son J"°" (Dpo\lfl)N\o 1611 '"''""""'• SoMo ""'° 16¥> a...~.,Of' s-. \oMo •"O~t\ , .... .......... ~ ~coo,,~, .. 1616 "'-~tWCll"lfed "°""'I-, ... '"'''"" 1000 OUDU• PUIUCATION DIAOUN& Motldlly .......... -........... ,n. 4:30 p.m. ~ .................. Mon. 4:30 p.m. ~ ............ ,TIM.4.:l!O pAt. ~ ................. Wed. 4:30 p.m. F~ ......... u ......... ~ 4:30 p.m. 8eturday .................... Fri. 3:00 p.m. •· ~ ....................... Fri. 3:00 p.m. 191• ... ., 1""4 C orowtO\&I~ ~ ,~,, 190I ''"lo"°"' 101] 10" 7916 1911 THI DALY PLOT CLA88FllO owa "°""' r....,_.ee;w. ...._,.,.. MCI A. .. ~~­ ..._~. ........,," ... t:OO A.M.~P'.M. 1411171 6()1Q 001• 0011 00" 00 ) 60•6 "°'' IJ/111 oon •ooX> ll()o) 6041 ..... &..._ -· ---oOH •-&o.-00,. ........ """" ~Good< -) "' S...-.o f ... -.. OCleO GA•AGI IALll C:--ot 6101 ---6106 -·--6101 (C>t(lllllO c»iMOt 61,, Cotto~ 611-' t>cw>o ·-&1>0 '°"''"o-'I Votti-t 61 JI """"~ .. Ult--610(; ,___ __ 61•7 6 U l~t.oc· 6 .. ·--6 >CJ ·---6 )/ """'YOf'! V-,o 6 '61 ..... -PCH"' a.a. .. ,.60 ~ ..... ••llO !.oMo Af'IO~t\ . ., -VICI ... CTHY .__.. ... _~- ........ ... a .. Y s-.,--... TllAllS•MT ATIOll IOATS _ ... TO H -1011 ~ 10•• ~ ... 10'6 ».-.;, 1011 ........ 1 ..... -............ 10'XI ~· °""' ~-11Tl1 MISC. ""'''QI" ''"' ~,,.....,,,°"""'' ltO•• ~'~'-"'iil~t\ "°'a AUTOMOTIVE •V'Ol~ 9(11( Awita s..-c__.. Pon-001 ~ ·~w~ 9!l'X. ·~0r ... ,..., OO:Xi I""""' 9())) ·-ll(;o(. ·~ ''°'-\ OC,.) ·-9Q)(i .,.,.._~o O•OC ·-~ 0)00 ..... "' •vtot. O)A(j DU•CTONle ...... ~--·-... ~o.. c...-._ -._ ...... ,........ Al*...__ ·---·---·-,...., ........ , ..... M_, __ ....._ °"" ........ __ ..... ~...., .... ___ ...... ... .................... ...... .. ....................... .... ..... ~.,~ ........ ..-....... ~_.. .. .., .... ..........,.. .... a..i lltatt Gtanal 1002 C.rtaa ••l •r 1022 lftrl!rl ltacll lMt C.naa ••l •r 2122 lniat 2144 l!!J!rt ltacll 2111 C..tl lltu 2134 _C.._t•_lltu ____ n_Z4_', C.U .... Ftr lalt ========~ 0 50 hOme off PCH 19ee Fumllhed claaak:alty 4Br Super sharp euper C*'1 1BR. bec:Mk>f $425/mo. SHARP CL.EAH 1 BR. NO ___ .....,______ o ... •lft ..... ~~~ IWI L--t wpr'A!'IWon m•rket nr plan mod klt53en9c! g90ar 3Ba+ den s 1850 mo. 3br 3ba yrly hm rental utll pd. 599 Hamllton. call ·~tfi~ PETS. $450/mo . ..... ,., .-.-AT A v...... """' -· kids detalls ·v 1 766-5'82 att 9pm or early kids/pet S 1100 hurryl 966-1711 w tor Laurie W..:9 -=-a.II c;.., 549950 81ut1/C..•" 1121,000 UIUll PllOEI 2t21 Yacht Yankee. '4Br Beat Alty lee In the morning. 539-6190 Beat Alty tee Thia ls a former model that 2700 ..,., tt 5 BA 3b 1 t-•ty +, Tennis. Pool. Guarded REE 3BA N BR l'~BA. w/d hkup, gar. IPUTmll'I Sharp Mw Verde 28' "'--al 1002 has been proleaalonally ..., a, o., gate. $319.000 Incl fee FOR LEASE. Chermlng lrg GAEENT : 2ba. o Saa Cltatatt 2171 No pell. Avall now. Beautiful Garden Apt1. 28&. encl gar. No P9ll .._. . deco<ated with IOphlstl-updated In 1978 on an land. Call Fran Dodd 3bf 2ba. den• dining rm, pets. LM $1200/mo 818 $645/mo Call Craig Patio.Jdeclca . .,._ HNI $750. 979-3&48 Aft 8pm Ufflm-NI I SUP ca led treatrn«lt ol top oversized lot only 4 doou 833-3622 or 832-1960 or 3 Ir pica, patio. garage, ~/ 688-5510 38R, wshr, gar. S 10SO/mo. 631-t26e paid. No pell n. •• 1i... bullt cuatom 4 quality material. Too to the entrance to Big 631-5510 $1350/mo. Open Dally ... ~ i.n 3br 3ba condo, ~9367~~65uhemM~9!82.·900lc I ~"·~:·? 2Bdrm w.ea S700 mealiBJllJ ... .._..7 Corona Beach Super 620'n MARIGOLD AVE. ,.....,. ..., .. ....... .. .,-..., • 2Bdrm 28a $720 bdrm home Mahogany many Improvement• to · Paul Martin, ~60_ 1867 or gar wl d avl Nov 9 nr 4 " french doori & wlndOWI. mention. Enjoy complete Jetty view from front IOUIHllT IEN r uc1.'ise s i200, 854-9246 Apartat•h'' . 398 w Wllaon 631·5563 Spectacular view from privacy. It has It alll deci(, Off street parking Prleed too low to mention. 644-7383 -_,._ -·•• Iii ITRI muter aulte & retreet. Call646-7171 for A.V or up 10 7 cara. Steelthla4bdrm,2bath. Irvine TMrace 3BA. lam Rancho San Joequln 2Br 2Br 18&. 1981 MapeAve. _...~•nu ...... .., .... Lower bdrm coold be i.-.,.111111111~~..... Slaahed to $389,000. prime location. Bank rm, pvt yard. s l600/mo + den, 2Ba, top loc. Pool. 8-!Ma Dwnatrs 2 penona S5'0 ~~... F ed cellf9 b4 malda/gueet room. Per-"4-7211 flnanclngw/10%downto No pela. Joan Bracey spaS1100 Ev854-3596 lalaa• 2'0I Nopela.Ag1550-1015 ••••nm11 ~~·;::&apa.Nop!. fectlon. move rlnhl In. M.lma , . qualllled buyer Della Unique Homes 67~ ' • •··-L 214 . _._ 1 S720 . ..., Delgado 831-126e -IHI --• tBdrm unfumllhed yrty. 2Br 18a compi.tely r• lmmeculete lefge Geirden St.~N~~~~land. Ctata •111 21 38A 2BA. No pels, chit No pels. garage or lndry. nnllhed. 2052 Garden -'Pt• 8Mutlfully i.ncs-2Bdrm 2'"'88 s92!>-$93<> t ' ' ' ··;~~l\.? 2BR1BAdup untr lrgyd <;lren OK Avall now. $675/mo.673-8293 LaneS&OOmo645-3081 aca.ped ground•. &.4!>-27~W.1~183 WIE MPLD.,fMJ;!i(I no pets. $650 + Mc:urlty' S 1200/mo. Bkr 499-3400 Nearly new 1 BA apt. 2er uni apt ~ gar-pool/apa. 1>41tlo/d«:IL No ---------•11& llL IWI lOZ4 ---~--· 1952 Meyer 549-~ Archltectdealgn2Br t'~Ba $675/mo + u1111. No trig age.2~ama.x.S525 peta.. Utlll pd Encl gar Smell I S di N Duplex S__..-.1ar ocn or gar Agt 675-3331 lst & aecu.-. 645-4260 1Bdnn seo5 lumf8Md Studio. 1 eott Cu atom bul t tu 0 . W ••ltilt a .. n l llO •NEW PLUSH I 3Br 2'nBa ,,....._.. & • "1 2Bdrm 1•1.Ba S705 pret'd. No peta. '450 mo Duplex on beautiful 2Br Condo, 1'nBe, gar 2 atry Twnhme, gar Avl vu. BMut tandacape Ill Room for rent, $275 plua 2er end gar apta drpa 2Bdrm 288 $750 536-5308 °' ~51 Poppy Ave. 3 and 2 Spa. Small Complex lllllt.W PUI now Sl200, untm. mod oonvet1 Incl lndry $25 tor utllltlea Near 773 w wHion. N~ pell 2250 VANGUARD WAY Bdrm a plua private $15,000 undM appraisal A beautlful 24x60 Ar1lng-YIW lmW llC. $1350/mo. Dy '49"-8038, t>each In H Bch 960-2151 S600 mo 650-7427 540_9628 or 631•0960 YIU.A llllU patio•. llreplacea, all at $90,000 . By ionhome.2BR2ba,fam-171-4112 7•.a1712 Eve497·354'4 I JL p . I -----2•2•n.a-- blt1ns, carpets and Owner/Agt , Belly llyrm,frgllvlngrm,dlnlnn If .,_ Ch I 2B h Clo I••• ta1a1• I •Lrg 1 & 2 bdrm. neowty 2Bdrm28a S750 • -d E ti "•"9 61 6«-2270 ... arm ng ' M . " •.II!-redec quiet""""" $494 up •.a•-1111 rapes -ven 1 ny ~.,,. 1 Of rm & kitchen area. All ap-•NEWPORT HEIGHTS• twn/bch Frplc, gar ~ 1684 Monr~ ~ 151 E 2111 s.48-2406 EASTS~ CHILDREN ocean view! Compare at EASTSIDE 2Br 1Ba. F/P pllances Including light 2 bdrm, 1 bath. patio $1200 mo Eves 494-2027 2BA 1BA. unfum. frplc, TOP AREA MESA PINES WELCOME Ir 2BR 28A $325,000. gar~ ~t Ilse S 145K lnteflorl. Agt. 540-5937 $750/mo 640-4111 garage Stepa to beeCh •STUNNING Lg 38' 2S. Bd Ilk • g · 9 """ 5•a "559 Wntr mll. ocean vu. nloety Y··~1y 67" •955 Gar..__ ..... , Pool rec rm 1 rm. • new, cozy downatalra, play yard, (714) 673 4400 P 7 1""• '"°"" Leta fer Salt 1400 3Br 3Ba Condo -+ dbl gar furn 2BA. Spa, utlla Incl -....., s7 'Si ow 18 h, , "1>4<:. end petlo Carport, encl Oat patio lndry,. WI •-ot I 11_.. ltt New decor. SC Plza aree. $1200/mo. 497~72 BAYFAONT FURN 2 · 1 1 pool. spa. Quiet. No petl cllltlel. P-ln1eci th"'°'1!, OUllllTRTUllOl I DEL~E~PLLEX: 2BA -.. HI If •n Avl lmmed $1050 1st, I .. L ll 2BR $1000 utll pd. 303 E •WESTSIDE 2Bdrm 2Ba, $595 Up 549-24-47 dshwr Gas & water paid one of the orlglnala, nr 2ba 98 unit. 660_9063 Flat -OVERLOOKING last $500 dep 641-0593 ~rt AC• Edgewat9f 871-2~ lndry tee. 1550/mo No 1 •••• N •• S700 .. oep. high acnool. quiet area.I DANA PT HARBOR. AP-• 1 mouse ON CANAL "-nu ••1 .. __ 44 peta ~82 '"LL-UTILITIES P'"ID ---·-..""'4 aaaum loans. 9UY1 1--rt .... ll l t prox 10.000 sq It 3BA.den.2 storytwnhm.2 Ith BO AT DOCK -_, -" " "~_.ru. """"' ·---497.7005 car gar. comm pool, no w loiitiioi!....,~~----3BR 2'~8a luxury Twnhae Compere b-'Ote you rent ..-:11on of or-t aooeu to UCI, ahopl and pets, no smkrs S 11001mo $1000/mo lae. 631-0560 2BA 11>8. balcony, no pell, ai>t uni · "1>4<: gar. No New4y deco< ted cust~ )Hant • tr•"'•,.,...atlon. $172,500.' ··--•y** I lall t -•1 W/ _... BA B II $650 Incl utll ~30 t' $77. 5 679, W 16th a living? We C8ll ofter ""Y-_._.,., _..,. •-ta LM op av.... r •••. 2 2 A condo, go 213 594-6581 wkdyl · pe •· design leaturea, po thing from a amalt apt to Ufllilj l ()f,Jl 11()M f S 1 ________ I IHI ma .. El Diana Cappel 631-1266 cour1evu Sepgar$1400 -St. 631-8213 aner 3pm bbq, covr'd garage . .vr· 1 4Bd hae 11 IO<*lng 1n Realtors. 67!>-eoOo A Beeuty wlluah land-IHHa/tH•ll • ·~i~~\·? Ben 644-0141, 676-5736 2BA lba, nu cpt. paint, 3Br Weetalde Cotta Mee&. rounded with pluatt land· CM.NB.or HB thlntc of 111 acaplng. pvt patio. din 4, __ , · 4BR 3ba Condo up· dl w, wld. t~, patio, 1 car 1,_.,88, pauo, bfttns, dlw acapt ng N o pell nr11 tor that ct1o1oe of Ull ISU 8 ' LIT rm, tam rm, lrplc, maid's C..eral 2102 h . • graded Mlrrorsi teak. gar $850 67 -5354 agt s7251mo Kids Ok No Furnllhed 1Bdrm and lo.el IMng --------•Park Ilk• aettlng near ten-quarters + much more. comm pool Sl600/mo 2Br 2ba. tip, gar. W/D. p119 11 Avall l mmed Fu~~ 1971 TSL MGMT &.42-1603 ,_.,.____ nls • eourt on 1.5 Iota. Furn or unfurn. Aval! Ocean view 5 rm Incl 21>8 CIRCLE THESE Sp a r 11 n g Re a 11 y patio Pool/rec area. 64~ Lv Mag 345 -WESTBAY ELDEN APTS -~ ~ ~~~~ ~~~~, ~~=,::i::ie ='1~~,k"C'~1:: Living aJone? $395 homey 759-0862, 833-3~ $1500/mo, 499-1434 $450 Furnllhed Mobtt•i UT&LJI& ftEW 2311 ELDEN AVE ::=r open atmoaphefe Great Cheatnut. Patrick Tenore Best Atty,;:: ~~~~~.k~t big yd BAYCAEST 2BR, quiet convenient loc. home, no pets. Mature 2Br 28a uni. 1000 aq tt. Spaocioua 1Br Eut~de outdoor llvlng from 631-126e Spac 3bf Fm/rm trml 2 covered pkng Patio & adult• Quiet, 1ecure. gar. lt1e. Redec<>r9ted. No New crpu, dlhw9hr & aundeck to amall yard. Palm Sprlngs ·Beautifully •Hl-1110* dtnl~g l~med ~cup pool Walk to bCh. Avail 1991 Newport 646-3373 I pet• $895/mo 855-0665 drp1 Pool. Gu & -ter ---Family room Included landscaped 3Br 2Ba, Show cue hM 3br 2ba Well located Reduced to 10/15 $810 673-5333 $495/ 1BA efrg no AM. 631-8107 PM pd Encl 0-No P9ll •••• ••Ill.••• with 3 bedroom•. 2.5 w l d , frig Yrly lae manicured grnda lncd $1700/mo DESIGNER'S furnla .. ed mo IU ..;_,r 124 St --·--1625/mo &45-5790 - -.,,99500 $600/mo 759-1049 ex kld1pet1gar/shop$800 644-7211 At " peta,ad .,..... -11-11,..., ... 1111,111 batha . .., • 960-5103 or 980-3515 at 539-6190 Beat Alty lee g TownhOUae. Frplc & pool Jamee Sl•C 673-7787 2Br 28a wtgar Pvt 1>41tlo Wl11'\All ft.1Jll Remodeted 3 BA with ·-~Ml 10 HONT Bay/Oceen ~~2 ':;:~~.,7t';. 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, 1 blk 10 E/llde 3BR 2BA. fncd yd. 2 UmtlT S 1195/~ 1573-0896 wtwaan rm. Qui.t. No 2BA w. ba. $685 unobltructed view. llOMI., hoc. Lg tlv. aree bch NB $1050 2 Bdrm car ar dnr $1050 1st Immediate poaaesalon 2 • CMta 1111 2124 \\'estfield pell. Water pd $690/mo Poot/ape,. no peta. Expanlon potential and REAL ESTATE $458K.Agt963-92 16 •tt 4• lb~thwiyard ElsldeCM lutgdePg....00 645-21a9' den overlooking Main I & tr"' TSLMGMT&.42·1603 645-8122 833-8917 ltunntng decor. Exclt• 131·1~ Fabuloua 5BA '4BA. bay & $675. Furn ' 4 Bdrm, ' . Channel Exit cond lBR 1ba w ranoe ...,.. &PUfm11 Cute & cozy 8act1etor Unit Weatllde 2Br 1be uni. "*11 of Newport at your lltea vu. Huge lot. ANYm ocnfmt wntr NB $1475 Lg 2Br 18a, gar, w/d hkup $1450/mo. 644-9513 tndry rm, wat9f ~~~ Like bfend new1 All u11ttlel $385/mo Utlla 1nct $690. mo. $650. dee>. Gee front door fin OWC $825K 631~96 .IAOlll ,IE&Ln 1625 No peta. uni, 2176D BLUFFS CONDO. Linda mo..-$375 oep M paid Pool. gar. no pets 786-8e14 & Water paid 542562 "4-IOIO 9IU Ill IUI Plaoentla 545-7963 Plan. U reeled 3Br 2Ba 1BA $450. pool. pvt patio, 1Bdrm 1565-1545 ---=,.........--=--..,...,..-::--=--=-=----~~ ~~~~~~~~~1 2 atory, 3 bdrm. 3 bath .. ,..,. •Ell PllP IHAllWIT Meaa Verde lovely 1g 4bf unfm s~ mo 722-6522 no pets. rel• req'd. 2Bdrm 18a $890 EASTSIOE C.M 28' 18a + :;Dau~;;..:P;.ptiam;,t;...,..~;,;;m~ : home with large family OCEAN VIEW CONDO 71'/llMlll 2ba, yd, patio, grt loc. no 11 645-8 161. 147 Flower. 301 AVOCADO &.42-9850 ~~t ~~~25 lmo Attrec .. rn c;angs, 26' room and dining room. Spacious, private End IL •• I la • 21 pell t0-1$1150751-3896 For IMM3BAL21dBo• '':·av~ .,.... unfurn neer Marina -•• ALM ~Ing prlee $18!1000 Unit New decor 2Bdrm ._ I • now. "· 0 pe 1· WOODLAND YILLAGI E-llde 28' 1Ba. t>Mm 486-9432 noon-5:30pm 1111'&--Y ' · 2~ ·Bath $1.75 000 38drm26eth compi9191Y NEW Deluxe Condo. 2B• $1700/mo Bkr499-3400 oeita,frp6c:Jf$700+11t . • 1•1,111 6 · 603 • • 2'~ ba 2 c.r gar Eut· S 5 2 -•• -• Tradit1'o na l Owner 73-2 ref\Jrblahed, $1 t50/mo aide s9oo1mo 67S-8797 Harbor Vu Hm• S1800/mo APARTMlllTI last. MC 'peraons. -·--Tutefulty decorated and 120 Agate. 472-8959 · 4BA. 1 leYel, auper ,. no pell 650-1798 Only 10 mtnutea from very clean. Upgraded R ealty YllTlll&ll ITYLE 3 BR 2 ba. lower of duplex. On Golf Courae 4Br, 211'Y· mod91. Agt 640-5e64 1 r , & '"1ll1 u• gardtn stvlf aot\ Qu•ft ,omto•tat>tf '""i LA MANCHA APTS Lagune °" OW'9 Polnra kitchen. 3 good 8IZed 3Br 28a. famlty room, pool F I f S 1300/ lrplc, 2c.rgarS1450/mo ' • & < l t Pl • 1 I ' to 1• "Bdrm 1n--..... ., ••75 moet aeciuded ICl«\lc bedrooma. 2 remodeled 631-7370 & tennla 2 t>locill to urn un urn mo + MC Agt 751-3191 JASMINE CREEK. 24 hf '" ' •~t .. ay~ ,n oas ata ,..,1 f on Y monu '~ nt ' ...... ~..,...., . bluffa. Specloue 28drm betha. Ooughboy pool b ach S HOK 135K Agent 673-7702 · aecurtty. 2 BA 2ba. den or I ~d• h G.ira~t\ M•lat>lt NO Pr TS Pl r AS! No pets. &.42-5073 w/d«I, pNt patl09, encl with beautlful relaed .... 1022 d~wn .. $1500/,;,o. No So. Bayfront exec type, PITlll.Sll poolrmwltable1.=n~I NIU•SPU·~Y lllllS 3Br28aupper Gar.new gar 060-6331 or dee*. Come ... this onel Cereal U qu.ltfying. 760-6509 upper of duplex. 2BA Weatalde 2Br 18a. patio pool•. L.... 1 • 1 UClll.111 ..._SUI cprt 103'4D Valencia M 1-e.441 54&-2313 BUiid your own dreem 3BA + office, elevator & yard, carport. $650/mo. collec1(6l9) 244-1880 l llW aut-Mlt $750 No pets 5'65-7913 =---r--:----.nr-:ni: hOfne In CdM. 301 & 303 pier Avail now S2250/mo 6e2· l 700 LIDO hm 3BR 2be. 2 car 111.111111$ Mn.al 11 POOL Patio, frptc, X-9 ;,;;;;,;; ______ _ THE REAL ESTATERS H~. Agt 759-9070 Lor• Vanoe Aaeltora Reedy Nov 1 flat 11eet gar. South patio. s 1eoo us, KAT 1111 wnu -... 18' sseo. 2Br S&eo. ISOO 2 .... Tl ..U 67~2 $52$ 2bf grauy yd kkU mo. Haul 631-0eeO sec:. Uni E-alde 557-28-4 1 Oellgtltful 009lll'1 bf'Mme-OUPLEX-2Br 1ba ee. I So-<if-PCH. $275.000. FOAECLOSURES S5K On: 521 c.metton. By owner Get elthef: Equity wt 12% 673-02'41 cw 67~ 15" 1 ftxed or '°""fix.eel 15 yrs -=---~::.::::-;;;-.;'I or3/2/1 ~~ i'Huge,,..., Ouptex. S31K e~~ no neg. CMh ftow. tncome. 1329.000 firm. ,.,. under POK S.F.H. 1 Prtna onty. 8kr 720-M22 AfWr9lde Sen 1 ...:............:-~:'.':"::=::"'.=;-1 B«TwdlnOCo. .,. ........ 8kr. 714/924-0272 S438K Agt 759-9070 I CHEEKL I1 I I' I I let U1 Help Y11 s.u y .. ,, .. ,,.,, Cel ClultfW, 64t-S671 for Information & surprisingly low cost. .. t ok others avall 539-8190 SEA WIND 5br 2%ba. 2 Ml Hll 11• °'*" 1Bdrm In Nwpt HgU SpecloUa 28drm, 28a Beat Alty,_ frplca, nlQht llte vtew. Prf.. TSl llAUll9flT l l4-tll1 MJ. Ilea .,... 1525/mo. Cell E\19 with garage. All new cri>ta natal.a vat• poollapa+comm 831-2916 & drpe Lots of doeet'I '~ 21 •u I. n n 11 s 24 0 0 I m 0 Beautlfutty IW"d.,..,.., -7~2M 760-&978 .-? LIUtm 980-Q31 [~ .. _~.!_~ ~ SEAWIND. 5br 2%ba. 2 GRAND OPENING S750im~o 28R 1Y.8A .,.,.,. ,..,.,,. ,_. v•-._..... ...,.. II vtew Prf.. twnhee. greenbelt, lndf'f alzed gar S785 klda .. .,_, n.,, .. t te · room. all butltlna. 539-e190 e-t Alty,_ vate poofl1pa+comm ~II 2078 Thurin tennla S2400 /mo TSL MGMT &.42·1903 lut . ..,ll 1 780-62M. 7eo-te7t mo ,_ w/fr;c 61\1 to iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii OCMt\ .., 2br •'oar tur Bl.tfFS M75 klda/= OCMt\ "" I Ill. 53M t90 Rtty ,_ 38~ 28A, 1 at~ End Unit. 6 bklell• to OCMn. Eieo-nt "Linda Plen' Totally Qec1er & gleee 3edrm. freatl S 1700/mo. Vec.nt 38&. Decorator'• <kWft. ....... I ... plulll ctpla. fprlc. • ..... liflMJ waMpepen tfWOUQhout .• __________ _ Obi ger. Fu11Y melnt yrd. Weatdlft HA 28A ,_ ~i331 w/pool S1300t mo. gdtW SKIP TO OCEAN.~ l Ind. 144-7440 ~ partl. 3-+3, dlntna. '"*· -_,. " ger 11200. 913-6191 GAT£0 VflLAO! COM~ APARTME NTS 825 CENTER STREET COSTA MESA Come ..,1y to get "PM pk* of theM bMUtlfUI bfwld new 79 Ap9rtrnents. ~ tutt lmmedlet• occupency ~tunno poo1, .., pnv.19 peta Wid Otdca. ~ °' c:wpor1 a..utttul ~ Quiet. 1p1clou1 2BR 1'-'IBA twnhme. new paint, crpta. dnlpe&. etc ~vi patio Carport S725tmo. Vee. no peta. CUrt II~ 631-t2ee i750t mo 28d 1 "'I• TowMouee. 0.. ~ room. Noe Ellkte IOC. 2Gt ORANGE A'lt ,.._. Ml·1• MUHITY 28drm 2'Mk 1900 9Q. ft. ot PVM lUXUAY. 0.,.. SPA In muter "'""· Dlnlft9 r,..,..i Unt nr 1.,... rOOl'I\, woodbumlnQ ,.,__ Tow"°'°'"9 fYP9 MH , a t l td OCM• dMt lendeeaplft9 ..._ ,,, ........ __ ---o••y •-All TO 1 P11 mo. No P1119 54eM06 2 ~ T'OWNHOlia ~· 4'CI.......... .......... ~~ --~·~·--~ peao~5E~ Located tt the comer ot c.,.., sw.t r,..-~ 19r 11e. v-.. °"' l'ftOdlll ~ M ,.,.,_. ,,___ Wid J>tloentte A¥enUte ,.. Cf'P(, ..,.. P9UO lony. "° ,_.. to So. Co. ~.... • .. 4 1 .. 4.. '516/ffto. ~ '"'tnlah.ct Hr 2'41• Nlipwof1 lfW & _,.,..of ~-~~ LA QUNTA HINtlOIA T.nlwne. gs O.S.. toe San :r. ~13 Ur'IUft l9r , .. ~ 1ta11 Pw laMI LI\ Ha. s1~mo. ~. All! '°' Orwige "'.,, 9'f Sony, no P9tt ~7t:=. 2230C M1-Ml1 P. Clli9on 841~2000 z.L: ~ ~ ~~!!!1-llll_!lllllf!l~~llll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ J,..:....__.:.:.:.:....:...• ____ J..:======= • . -~ ce Orenge Coat DAILY PILOTIT'hund11Y, October 10, 1N5 ,• , .. ·' .. Enter Now And Win $200.00 _,.· .. ..• of Home Decorating Supplies from CATEGORIES ···' " "~-. ..-...---; . " i ~. ./ .. ' .. ·· " .. ROOM WITH A THEME-ls your kitchen country? Has your den gone nautical? Enter your f ovorite room designed a round a particular theme. HOllY DISPLAY-Attention Colledors and Hobbyish! If you have displayed your collection or hobby as a port of the decor in your home, this category is for you. CllA TIVI FLOOI & WALLCOVlllNG-Non-tra ditional use of carpet, tile, wall and floor coverings qualify you for on entry in this category . IUSINISS OR OFFICE-Design a nd style ore now a necessa ry function of business. The category is open to offices designed eiiiier privately or professionally. CONTESTS RULES Th11 con'-11 ti des.Qn.d to re<••.,.. r•'f>Q'IM1 from ony occupom of o home, condo.~. mobile"- or liveobootd yochl Commercial ent..-or• only occ.eptable f0< the a.,-. or Offiu c~ and ""'11 be r~ •n any of the Oltl<tt "''" tCJte90net. To ent.r, c~ the .ntry font1 and wtMNt o ~aph of l+t•, entry n.. ...try mU1t be occomponoed by o d.tcription of the ..my. Phofooropfla ~ ~operty of it.. Dotly Ptlot ond <onnof be r9"u~. Entrte'i ""1st be potlmorlied by W.dnetdoy, Odobef 16th, 1985 or del1.,..r4td 10 Ill. Dotty Pilot, c/o INTERIORS, 330 W . 9oy. COfto Meta, CA 92626 by 5:00 p.m. Octobet 171+1, 1985. W'inMn will be f.atufed in llOr1" ond pho1a9raph1 in Ill. "lntwion" l«1iott publl"'8d on October 3111. 1985 Ootfy Pilot emp~ ore not •lioible. Entronh mu11 IM t8 .,.on old 0< a..r and lfl\/11 reaide '"Ill. Doily Pilot circulonon o-.o Doily Pilot photogroptlen wiU pho1a9ropti the winning .mitft for pubhcallOn 1n Ill. lntwrior1 l«flOn '°"'"'°""' moy ent9t f'llOA than 0t-. coteQOry ~<>Ny one-,. per category will be conudered One W1nner per <Ofe9Gty will be c:ti- I NTIANT·s ADDHSS: INTERIORS ENTRY FORM NAMEi DAY PHONI NUMIH: EVENING PHONE NUMllR: CATIGOIY: Send e ntries c/o The Dolly Piiot lnterlo n Contest 330 W. aay St. Cott a Mesa, CA 92626 .. I lut. .... ... -; ~ ... C-W&al Leet I ft1a• 1tU IWMal/!!!tal lltl Cltrlcal/Offltt 1411 ·~a.oa:-.1::;,-"' i LL la.le/lat fl'OYndYo'1cyTetrler,mele. AAOtOLOOY BILUNO of· nPllTP/T · ~ SP4'\IOU\ ,1ng1.-nn.. -vcty Sprlngd•I• & floe ha en ltlln*t. OC*'-N.B Law omoe. Speed & a&7-1ne Of T80-11 3 lt, two twdroom •Ph ... . 1711 Talbert. HB tM0-0686 Ing IOt a mat\Jf'9, ~ 1ccur1cy eu.entlal mTllT. Ill -LOST 0/30 IOng heired~ tlb19 lndlv w/at leut 1 yr lmm41d. c>penlng Good '860/mo. 18A 1BA. lndty IJ • • u·~1n•!.~ male Cat vcty King• Ad. ::J~d~~~,J:;2 ~~~n:.~lhort-room. ctoM to beeeh. '"'• ....... , .. _. Nwpt aan. 7 f4/642..a5tM ·.... · • 4932 ~ Clf 1I•• :t Undw oonetructiof'I now. °' 2131421-2660 11/LYI T UkeJ/T .. TSL MGMT 142-1803 CALL 641-7001 LOiT 8' aemi..long h.ir Day thlft charge. EvetY ff r nlllt 2 Bdrm, 1 bath, Ha. l • 1n 1st wears rent lada•1/0UJn ... , tern c.t YoCty sunnower' othet wtcnd otf. Excel btodl to bead! NH. ' 1711 Main SA 144-09t1 beMfttl. Med lntt Call 1111911 D MllUIULn fURNISH(O 01 1108 lq rt. N.B. "= lo1t ·Dog. amall whit• seo..aoe9 FF::.t~:=e~ne:no·1-:. ,_,,...... UNFURNISH£0 offloel 3 connec1ed. t uiaea. ana. to Crldlet. C:ltd1elf OtfJn 1411 151114 weetetet• St. l1•1HM1JI flTWHS :i::te .~8;,= r-::: Leg. 8ch 494-83.22 1 • 2 IMUIDll W•tmlnatar, 647-15115 auwm VILLJIE CHTllS. UHIS, unit of Watetfront Home. LOST Gldn Aetr Al yr Permantent PIT. 12.4pm. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim S-lll•C . ...i.... 2438 w CoHt Hwy fem nr Jemobr•• 6 Property mgmt, n-emkr nHki IU/ WIY llTt "' .,.... 831•1400 · Bmtol 10/5 Set eve. No Pf9f. ~79/840-0110 , • ._IP • .-MC'-llOft! Sony, tflQ• or collar. Reward -----~~:--•• _, .. , Uw where you l\av9 IO ..... lo4tls 2000 It/I, retail/office. 30' $300 478-18391720-8100 .-am /ID •• •Spectecular apte o,.• '-llJ t to I. E~et~~n:0~":·1~ Lost Terrier Mix. wht ff~:-~~,! i:"t1;&6 * 1 & 28', 1 & 2S. eult• d · w/brwn apot1. Choker 0 · · •Spac1ou1 townhoYMI ~ '225/mo • 18x.20' apace. Chain answer• to 'Nikki'. CLERICAL Entry level ~ •Flr'eplaclM 00 320 eq fl on ~ Bl, Vic Edlton High Scl'IOOI ltlon. Future growth. FNt •Private balconl.. or oet• M ... 790-2649 REWARD 645-0384 typing & ICCU'*Y a ""41. Garden pa11oe Apc1rtmenh *mR'fm 1111'11 REWARD ioet 9 mo. M/eat ee2-57ee WIY llft Nt wport Buch So 1 MONTH FREE RENT blktgryltan Ing hair. Leg. llftUl 1ff101 •3 Lighted tennl• courte 11011 l hll1 -.111•• I 881 Dover Dr Sult• 14 Niguel arM, 493-9331 Typing. flllng and other *2 Swimming poote 1.11 fl11v1•11 Newport e..ch 63l-385t Ptr1taal l t nlco clerical dutlee. Own car a •streiam1&pond1 641 511' 3000, 1388. 634. 594 & 30l4 must C ell 3J 6ud1y . •Sorry. no peta 209 eq n 1917 Weetcllff, 8-42-4321. ext. 1 or •Fumllhlno-1.,.11 N.-wport 811.t1 h No T•--If OWi appt A N.B. 541·5032 Agt --.;. ••• I··-~\(II hv1n1 .. ~, 1110 • ESCORTS -_, WHY NOT CALL 1 Jt I hllo 1 CdM a beat offlcal. $595-898-2355 •••Lf "LIT Ill 1111 $1100 Incl utll, A/C, pkg, ~-~~----_, • 64 CJ · II 04 )e.nltor. 2855 E Coeat lc~11ll I 330 W. Bey St. Immediate openlnG for ••per. tyl)eMltet. Mutt hive heve mark-up exl*', paat•UP bed<· grOYnd helpful Xlnt ben· eftt1 Including medical & dental lnauranoe. con- genl•I 1tmoept1ete Con· tact Allaea, 8-42""'321 I.lit. 29t HllllOUIT lllLJ PUT 330 W. a.y Street Costa Meet, Ca. 92827 142 ... 121 IUWlll YILUIE Hwy 875-8900 Anytime la1traetiH 3012 Coate~ .... Ca. 15555 Huntington Vlllege lu c1...... 2171 '"'" .. ,,., ... Pitt PIANO INST Your home Exciting oppty w/N•l'I leln Siii Lane. from Sen Diego Furn 18R ii50/mo. gar. 3000 lq " evall. Deelgn Clualcs. pops. Jazz. 15 Con,~~t~g an~~ In~~ umTWll w.n f~~1aci'::,h ~'*': ~~~":~mM~~c own apece to ten1nt1 yraexp. B.A. 559-5461 ro"ue11t ~loe Mgr Xlnt Interior dulgn and M Fedden • apeclllc1tlon. Gen. r• Em I 1 typing/telephone, die-rurnltur• publication c · ltat~ Ct11t ••trt oept. area, wait. room. I IJ!la taphone 6 word pro-needs local aalel people la1u1 ...,, 2141 2IH showers. lunch room &. eeaalng prel'd. S 18,500 + to contact new account•. 1 Br vc;w rrpk lg a;a 3 other ammenltlea. Avail Ttacktn fHO Xlnt benefits. 9-11 •m Enthuslum and drive • to 'bfk• Oci..n . Nice '675 NW Ptua. 28R 26 •• PC>OI. 2-1-86, or poulbly ru11n•1--..1-..1 750-1358 Debbie must HlghHt com-. aauna. lndudee gea & sooner. Call Barberi. .-..._ mlaalon. bonus & ~it mo. Lv meg 032-4161 condo ,._. Dtahwaaher, 250-48U or 964-3024 For exciting ~cm With ctill-Ell1ITm lfUnllY plan Call 213-852-3598 HEAR & SEE THE WAVES A/C, $450, 875-eo<>e PRESTIGIOUS New dren.I 6 mo .,.5 ytw.. lln a Ina I ft I ... "' frl .. dvertlalng SeMll """''lion from theM clean almoat Offloel F A t F posit ve. caring env ron-" .,..,.. OCEANFRONT 2Br lBe •lac. leatel1 Sl 15 ~ 2~2· Re:,:; ment. New lacllltlea, 111. I Jllft • .,.,, avallable lor local com- unlta In mid. Laguna Ave 631~ 1920 dynamic stall. Irvine. Wen fir 2 •tnlflac puter magaz.lne. Sllary + Beach. Completely · · 552-1967 ......___ 1 It rt commlulon E•P de- lurnlahed New c:.pt & a...1 27M SUB Leue 2 lrg & 3 small p ,1 l ~ HH.....-I .,. aired. Car a must drapes, garege, lge cost• Mw nr 6Ch. lrg offlcee C.M avl Oct. S685 .~'·!'~ IH SlOO llMIL WI fer lfff. (213)467-7878 patloa.. Weelitly $.460 • bdrm. ~· neet, non-mo. Colleen 8-42-0377 na•ia11tra Yt 111-IMO llCHIY F&IU Monthty 1875 to $t200. amkr S330 mo 648-36t5 C:•••trcial P(• .. ra ADVERTISING •1r1EUL-Opportunity to u ll WINTER ONLY 497-5125 F/M prof only. 2 rma. own 277 -.rnvs Speclellty Foods and Ooeenffont lludlo In Olde ba, no kit S310/ea rm. Phones, typing 50 wpm. Gltta: Flex. hours. wlll Med VIiia on pvt bch. Incl utll. CM 8-45-0403 t350 Sq. Ft. ARTIST I good with numbers & cal· traln Weetcllff Plaza I •• V .. I CUlltOf. Varied clerical · .. , · LMded Windon gated I( nt ..... eaa erue oc. duties Good benefits. Ask for Debbi 00t2-0972 l)'op,t'~ t,W7, $950 F~~ ~~aJ&~~atH: S..5-4123 Gr-......,. ....... , ... ,.._,...,._ Wiii train. 731-3551 8:00 K.C 'S HALLMARK SHOP Incl u .la. 4o...eao laat. Stir ut~ 842-1198 CWllDY YILUll 0~'11:, 0;~~;~c~i to 4:30, Tustin. 11 ••P6fldlng to the Costa STUDIO OCMn view. Pf1.. Fum rm W/l'W1 bth In on 31tt 11. 870 aq/ft needs lmeglnetrw pro-Grubb & Eflla Aelldefltlal Meu Courtyards and vate & qutet. No peta. ........,ent C M ,.Mi.. V•de w/cuat<>rn« parking An-ductl la out lr11tt wn B k DMalo I emplo~ are needed Gaa & wlter paid. 1at + ~ S3sO ,M thr utll• tlque • gift • marine • under":tan~amerch1ndl: N:~~g~te<, ~~ for both loe&tlona. Appll- MC $575. 497-8287 Prof l*"80l"I &45-9231 . boutique. For Lease by Ing, to design advertising exceptional eecretery. cants apply at the Herbor l..,.n INik Bil owner. 675-6909 tor a vanety of cllentl. Accurate typing akllll Cent« loc.tlon or call 15§5'.Vnn StUdlO ~ bchPr~!:° ~rm~; LIDO PENINSULA Otlr dlaerlmlnatlng mer-w/at .... t eo wpm, com-Diane 97Q...1882 Sub. pt1cg. Fum/untum. 40+ ." reta. 494-0451 Ptr1o~.s_om,,lm. avOtalcl. SFrpcom200S 1 ket demands qu•l.'ty and puter & real eetat• know!-hn Wlllf YHr Wlrttl A 552 17« JVV\I style. edge helpful. Salary com-•t the Loa Angeles Times menttlee. • LO Bdrm. pvt bth, no kit. p/af 673-8004 673-3777 meneurete w/u.per, con-Telemarketing office In DECORATORS l>Mutlful Fem only. $275 Utlla pcl. Need to eublet small area New1paper ... £>roductlon tact Admlntratlve ANt, Costa Meu. With our tum. Condo on the wat• Avall 11/1. 548-9231 about 750 tt bNicall ~~~~';;'~~~I.=~: Mrs Natland 644-6200 new oommllllon scale $1795/mo 873-0898 Furn. rm, be. 011. pool, to •tore bo~ .. · & cuei. II"* a rnuat. Prior~ PUT Tiii you can earn mora than LIDO VIEW LUX X-LG M/F nemk nr b6c bay S350 no need ror otfloe apace. paper exper 1n adv1n-lfflOI Wiii S200 In commlulona and Ir :J Batha. DA & deck. + $100 & rfrfa. 846-6423 Wiiiing ~o r1i $400/mo. tege. Position la part The Dally Piiot Clrculatlon :u:l~t:!ll~ °'!!O 1 mo. 840-7008 ROOM w/kltchen prlvl-Prefer . IS0-1579 time. good lnqulrtee and Office need1 a r .. l•ble lt'a poatlble to Nrn mot• Lrg 2B A 2be. Frplc, lege, adulta only. Neer NEWPORT BEACH VIA resumes to: Steve mature and reaponslb'9 that $1000 weelcly. Hours balcony. 1242 Rutland tx.tallne, ahopa. 9e2-5760 UDO Prime locatlon. or-Hough, Art Director. pereon to verity new or-are flexible. High ICtloot Ad. $900/mo. 631..021 l Room wlpvt blth Cotta flee/Retail. 1500 IQ fl. Dally Piiot, p O. Box derl. NO SELLING. gradullet, college atu· M .... Kit prlv sloo/mo $2556 NNN 675-6349 or 1560• Costa M .... Ca. Applicant must have • dents and Mtlor cttlnn• JH IUllYI IT 722-130 t or 543-7542 722-1298 92626 good phone personality. are encouraged to apply GATED VILLAGE COM-l-..laltrl·J 27,.. llllll oe•-Training wlll be provided. For en Interview call MUNITY. 2Bdrm 2'.-\8&. I l 1 ....... b 2711 1a11 M 1•• -• Learn valuable olflce S..0-030t 1600 lq. rt. or PURE tit 1 -.t 1200 eq fi wllront ofc 1g l&ILY PILIT 1kl1t1, work with nice --------- LUXURY. Garege. SPA In UllU IDOi rear drive-In door. No 330 W. Bay St. people end earn $4.25 nU TI•E PIJ master •ult... Dining •TH • machine or auto lhoPI. Coate Mesa, Ca 92626 per hour t? startl ~ond1y PUT Tiil .. i room. WOOdbumlng fire-$550/mo. 629 Te<mlrial -·Friday. 4.30 to 8.30, Sat. Opportunltl.. avelleble pllQe, mlcroweYe OYen, Wkly ren1all. low rates Way CM Dys 540-9352 BANKING 6•00 to 10:30 AM. with LOS Angelee Tlmee prlvlle patio. ELEGANT ~~5 m'a1~p~.C= EveS 64~1 SECURITY PACIFIC PIHi• call Eiieen to Clrculatlon Oept. In our ~~v~~c:"~.;:. ;~= cotfee, heated pool & 950 Sq. Ft w/offloe & BANK, F11hlon Island schedule an •PPolnt· door to door newptpap9f Nepw0f1 Btvd & I04.ll h of steps to ocean Kltcti'a warehouee, top location arH, has Immediate ment. 8-42""'321· sales program. Guar1n- S1n DieQo freeway. ~473 av111. 985 N. Coaat Hwy, Fwy close. 675-6251 openlnga avalllbl• for EOE teed hourly wage plua Orange Ave. 03 t-S..39 By Leguna Beach, 404-5294 Approx 6800 eq ft Indus-el(perlenced: IEOIPTlllllT p /T commlatlon. Hours 4P~ -----------.,.----------.,.----------.,.---------"~pt only 1 It you enjoy pecx>le & to 9PM Training ta I ~~. . lflllllllTIL tr.i bulldlng being built. vChelfTellef would Ilk• the morning• provided. High actiool II"" "'Ill :it.!lf Wkly rental• now avail. For Info. call egtlowner "'Note Dept. Supervieo< off. you'll llke thl• -onel graduatee end colleo- / r , . ....,,.,, ..... I ' I.'' I .. · .-_.... .... i $129.60 wk & up. 2274 640-7000or673-2222 v CredltV8'1rler Goodtelephoneetlquett• students encouraged to -Nwpt Blvd, CM 648-7445 la1ian1 l Fiaaaciel .,Pan-time Teller & acct1rate typing lklll• a apply. Potential to earn • • ~ .-... ,. 1 ·1 SU 1111 LlllE For an appointment. call mull. Call 557-7470, ext $300+ per week.FOt an (7 14 )759-4224. Equal 261 tor appt. Interview call 957-23&1, UYUti1la1 letn l!11J1at17 1ltctric1l ..... ac1fia1 P1lalia1 3026 w . Coa.st Hwy, New-la1ian1 Opportunity Employe< ext. 1204 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil 1-~..1-l·I• a..1..1w--. NEW/REPAIR. Ouellty. No i WftClrt PAINTER NEEDS WOAKI port Beach, refrlQ. TV 0,prtaailill 2904 Aecepllonlat/Secretiry S_A_L_E_S_LA_D_Y_Need--lm_med_ ._ -"'"'9•• .,_ ________ tnt/""~t ........ 11...,.. ,~1n cab $130+ wtc agl. nodeooeit. &1.1•ii• •-. 1--SECURln ~!'1/hrtlme or f833u11 _1201m .. ~ 2 m1ture ~ ol"-1....c•~ $217 d Kite cab .. elec. plumb. jobs to amlll, ruaonable. ISMAEL'S GARDENING ,;,.. ' ....... .,.... •• . - -.. • -• ..., "" "' """' -..-• per ay lmmedest (818)9e6-7832 Free eet .. llc'd. 031-2345 Malnt. Cle&n-up1. TrM '2o6a)vtyra• Pealxpnt··,,:o'.!~gu3a83r.7 Vaca Ii ta ... 2'1'uh •• IOIEY ... loru.ciualveDr ... Shop-Th r ALL f &wv F Eat 550 9318 ... ...,.... PACIFIC Hlln/lfm pe. Ntamkr. Aex. hour1 a a you pay Of Oocn-Repalr-Alter1tlon1 AESID/COMM'L/INO 26 ,.. . • High Proflta. Local Area PART. TIME Good front ol-Day lime. 63 l-2177 3 llnea. 30 day minimum Remodel·Panel-Lock,..tc yre. Do my own work Lie. C&B LAWN SERVICE TIP e1aun P&llTlll lg Big eear Cabin. Pool Wiii Treln. Pan Time BAii nee appearance T Ing --------- In the Cablnet1-Wlndow·Fencet #278041. Al 646-8128 Mow-edge twlee mo. S20· ServlngOr1ngeCo. 22yra. tbte, color TV. 2 lrplcs. No EmployeH. No 65wpm & p~. ~on-SllfSPlllll DAILY 35 yrs ex.p. Jerry 642-0567 IL al .__. S25 8-45-5737 673-51 28 Promptl Aeuonable rat• sleep• 14. 714/545-8916 Owfhud No Selling. MANAGER . tect Tina 760•1313, Hallmartc: Gitt ShoP. Full .. atr ""'"' · ' Aelerencee. llc#334950 Greet Tax Beoent• time. Exprd In office PILOT Ckll• Cart IUU HllUTI HAWAIIAN EXPERTISE * 111-1111 * Mr. Wolf« (71 4)838-5620 HlllUL. lllUT&IY supplies or Hellmark Christian mother wHi Varloue pattern• & oolor9. ~ ~::· Stt°!M~~· ltalah It l~&rl Sun 12-5. M-F 8am-5pm Immediate opening for tull Tl 111M Pll llllTI 982-8910 Hunt. Sch SERVICE babysit Mon-Fri. CM/SA 648-2128 for Eatlmate Perrlat 2724 LAHAINA HARBOR.MAUI time Dlatr1ct M1nager M•l<>< finance co. need• SALES Polltlon Avallble area. 8-41-9314 Ru•~ ~:~~:;;!~~~ F.mtAiF:ld tNTERfORS Mr NB Apt to ihr w/fem, Commercial permit to op-Mutt *1Joy working with aecretary for dlverlln.d Pan-t~; ~7a flower DIRECTORY l•AAOUND THE CLOC" AMERICniHANDYMAN ~up ..... t. Carl 722-1171 HANGING/STRIPPING ~I, w/d, nr beh $300. erata aalllng. diving. 11th· children. Experience ~u~lel. 80 tf:m typing, _a_h_o-=p·-=--=--1-=--=-::---- 7 D•r--Latge Vardl Car t f I WI VISA-MC 873-11512 amkr 831-6823 Ing, axcMllon•. etc. helpful. ;u,t' N~ New~·~ : STATlllEIY CALL TODAYll Sel•HNlthy-Free Envrm. pen ry, enc no. n-Clean Upe•Tree Tr1mmlng Attrlcilve Lag Nlg Shree 24 PUMnQlf Compacity S Isl FD" Lois Aeeplte Caret 548-154~ dowa, plumbing, met11te, Vard Malnt.•Heullng ANDY$ WALLCOVEAING vul AmenltlMI 3BA h • $50,000. PEAMIT ONLY We offer an excellent ben· ant& Ane Fwy. :S ,... Stora In CdM needs SeMll tub end, hauling, etc' MIKE 850-3263 lriatallatlon & ~val turn rp n-amkr ~ar Prmof' tM l--0814 111 mag or efit program. pald va-aume to: ITT Commercial Penon. FIT. 5 Dayl. Xlnt Your Delly Piiot Cltuial I.met And YM Jelua la Lord r-~ C'---U .1 Int. painting. 548-4013 • • • (809) 687 2193 ti & holld bo Anance Co, PO Box 069. working cond1. Eapeclllf'r (llc.#30405) 113&-8244 ........... .,....,. -.-p, gen rem S800 957-09 4 mag • ca on• •ya. nus Santa Ana, CA 92701 or nnecllentele. 675-1010 Service Directory ROBINS CLEANING malnt, ., .. trimming. free Expert Wallcoverlng In •1rt11~n TD 2111 program and "dental In-550-98155 BOE i---------AepreMntaUve SERVICE. a throoughly •GEN. HOME REPAIRS. .. ... Mauro, 931..-997 atallatlon. AMI. Contolt· Clean. reap, ahr COM cute « • • aurance. Salary plua tlUIUJllmll H2-4121 tit. IOI clean hQµte. 845-9741 P11nt. Drywall. cirpentry ant Aulgnmnt 581--8590 2BA 1BA. Avell Oct 17. Widow H money for mileage reimbursement. *lfUnllY* Artlculate s.cretarlee. No .._ _______ •IH etc Gary 645-152n PTL Mllnt, ciMo-up1, moWlng. S380 lnc:I utll1. 875-1522 TD'•. $10,000/up. no PA & Mr111g firm ...iclnn ~ping to ••t •P"t• ,. ousecleanlng, carpets & trM trim. FrM .. tlm11 .. 1 *WE GALS SHOULD* credit v /no penalty. C1JI Applicant must apply In · ·• ,. A·J,lilact upholatery, wlndon, etc. HANDYMAN LARGE and Mr. Eatrade 645-3381 *HANG TOGETHER• Costa Mesa. Maatar bdrm Denlton AMOC 873-7311 perlOn at Delly Piiot, 330 therp l*"80l"I tor very elary + BonuMI. 5 l lr .. , •• 1~ 111 1212 •m•ll I DO IT ALLI 639..()730 ANYTIME &ba. kltch prlv. furn. Weat Bly St.. Coat• buay office. Heavy typing Hour• a d•y •flemoona ualtart C~merci:'inq ~ S31-5579 Pat or Ive meg. Shruba/Tree Trim. Comp! S21SO/mo. 549-8877 Aaataaet•tall MeN, ca. Apply o-l t on memory tyttem. Light C•ll Mr. Sorkin 642-3490 AP.,, ... ~.·=REPAIR gardenln~. Competitive Plaatlla1 E'alde sharp 2BA a.m. or 2-4 pm. (ClrC\tll· accounting & pro-for lnteMew. Wuher-Dryer-Relrlg-etc ~;~~~~ ~"tt~~~I HAUL-A-WAY Handymen prlcea. C uek 842-0322 f4 llr It f JH-1110 amelllerd. $700/~~i:; Autaatt•tafl 2920 tlon Dept.). =~~II f:::1rvi:~ TELEPHONE SOLICITOR 722•17372oyrsexp I Refs 548-6857 A:~1m':9no.ca;:1~n~~: OLUl•IPI •Goodjob1done rlgh.. pell. 48-9960 •t4ic1l/Dtat1I SlOS So lrvtne81ea788-2943 • Euy work. '4-17/hr ~&lt/C.acrtlt EUROPEAN CLEANERS etcr c111 Jeff S..8-7630 Free .. t. o ..... 645-7885 DRAINS CLEAR From s 15 FEM 22·32 to atir apac NB SCRAM-LETS oeNTAL Aut. Ortho, RBX u oan&aJ /llOln Call 650-1318 Park! A R• ... , & Housec1ean1 /G d 1 HOME REP A ,.._ 11___ Faucets, Otapoaal, Heeter. w .. tctlff home w/pool & ANSWERS req, Orthoexp pm, 4 day ng rM ep_r. I no ar en no Al . --rpentry ...... a~ 85t-"""• M&M 722·"""'· Ju.. $400+ utll. 648-0100 ··-·Th. NB -~2-2828. Fut pac«S .N.B-P.A offloe ClaM/a..11u 1at1 Reaur1aclng • Roofing & free eat. Reis 495-2478 lencae & gatee, trM t11m, ~ wvvv """'' '" nda exrw d rwvv.•'ble w ofl 83 BAICKW AK Small Jobi .,_,__ "-"~ & D-··r Fem. 2BA l'LB .. Nwpt •nt. ~."""; .. ..;;;:"", w ... ord SS'"' ~e<proo no• l-4 199 Home Cleaning by the dump runs. C.M. & N.B. """......... ............. ......_.. ,. ,, ...,.. 1-1.ckle-Obeee HITIL. FIU ml ....... ~.. "" -..... .., Driveways. P•tloa, paths, Dynamic Duo Comm'!, arN. Jim Whyte 8-42-7208 ~e1·~i:.3~~·· 32 yraexp. Aeeld'l/Comm. $3008-4;-4~~ 1' '..t utile. JumTAPYKE-SM•Efety IEOllTUY/11"-, proceulng • plus. 9"11'!0~&11!"'!"!'""1""0,,..../ltlllm'!"•Tlll...,;-..• etc. No Job too small reald'l,dt rel• 850-8278 Reali-~ · · Lie #<409035 964-8919 ve mag inn 720-0941 Exw'd c .. hlef/hott"' A Ml k 536-0553 ... _~ •--'-1 M/25-35 f ly ctM The young boy WU run-For busy Orthodontic Of· --------....... eas c ey Home &. Office clMnlng by L f AX UNO • boVINd '"19 ~II Plumbing repalre. Cop-pro · on, • n. nlng •way 10 find ro-flo&-INine, <1en111 exp. llUn&IJ /HOIPT lor French Blatro. Apply Aaphalt-repalr-prlllng lots I JODI Pleaae call for free Garage & Yard Clnupe i Ill...... I*' replpe. watlf heaters. n-amkr thr 2br 2 ~b• twn-mance and adventure. helpful. mull type & xlnt For 1 men Newport 9-ch between 4:30-8·00 PM. apt complex-heavy roller estimate 842-8746 Jon 645-8192 QUICK & CAREFUL llc'd, lnsur'd 538-3888 hN C.M. S350. 831-439 t Hla mothe< requeeted, communication 1klll1. lew omc.. Good typing 1787 Newport 81\>d, CM. Joe 645-4269 7am-9pm Houeecleanlng 14 ~ •CLEENCO• LO AA TES. T138046 NEW/REPAIR. Quality No Mlle prof non-#1\kr 30-3& "Wiii you TAKE ME Xlnt hOYrt. 840-4292 lkllla, wlll train. 875-54-48 Ollll Remove a.sphall drive-reliable, reaa, free est, own Clean-ups & Hayllng 112-M10 Job• to emall. r .. toneble. ehr Nwpt H~hl• home. along?' llllCAL UOl IPO SECRETARY/Sale Allllt For Mother'• Mlfket a ways, replace w/concrete trans Pin•. 845-0868 Free est John 645-8730 s.lf StOfege Experta FrM .. t .. llc'd 831-2345 $400. 9•2•34 2 Dlllll .... I r .. 2129 1 yelfl •xl)lf'~ In GYN lor ln1tltutlone1 Stock Kitch«!. Acoeptlng appll- brlck/block wrlc 539-0345 HOUSECLEANING, Pror Haullng. Cleanup1, paint-*l•1 lftlll* P1rkJc1 ~·~m~ ':~t~~o~ tos't tm!tt Wfiite SC0t1' required. Excellent pay & ~!;:d.N~1=ated exp :t:a~ Ft~ ~~ IMt Stmc11 terV Lowprlcet Guar'd Ing, welding. odd Job•. CLEAN&EXPEAT Eur,.,._,..p-o..kfarot •"75/mo.•H 2eo1 dog,chlldren1pet.need1 t>enettta 720-1941 A..-. 2211: COAST OMNO SERVICE Eat 831-35591831--0498 moVlng, 7 days 873-3603 Over 25 ~ ~ Carll~,;~ PNt. ---apectal diet. Vic. Big Cor-IUMW. HllT .,. nm /IHlllUTll ..... , C!,.t•"' M~ltl St. Underwater Hull Cleenll\Q PERSONAL Profeulonel 11 lteJI~ lfeatw Lie. T • 118,428 130-13S3 Pretent & Future. I lree 7 M/F, 3BA CM apt w/fple nr one Bch, S 160 REWAAO Full·tlme Newport Beech Atieponllble fot tmall high & Malnt 675-7392 HOUSECLEANING Fit , ., nu--I •11 850-2758 Diane 63 l--8964 SC Ptz.a •250 + utll & dep 955-3333 or 873-8882 l yr exp 0 r~'d Xlnt "*Yi ectlvlty office. Good •nn PIUUI anl •---Non·amkr pref. 646-8802 · ..-tv...I XI t.....,.,..,... .,..,. .. COMPLETE SERVICE 631-2691 lllflaJ Found 2 ten Cocker Spill, benefltl 7 • 104 l .,,. ng. nt ......,....,, ••. r,.., cutter wented, full Ou1dr1v" & Outboard• llYAL IAll lllYIOE HANEDA b XS§XdlNd ~~Co~~j'· ROOFIUd recover, r .. M:Y r~'t:r'·~k~3!~: ~~.,f2~99 ~~~~ ""'"&Wu/U aMtt ~ ,..~:~~-Wiii tf~A=rn ~~. 1~:1· Freeway Merine 650-4444 S1t11tactlon guar'd.' I *IUll INIJll* Student MO\'lrl, Tneured peJre, hot tar, Ille. rock, t 250/mo 850-3253 Cer1 lldM pref. Hlgheel ,_ ---- • • •-• Comm'l/rHld'I 89t-5741 <7t4197Mt79 Llc.Tl2~ 641-1427 wood,free-t. 7f50.-858e ••tF· .. 3 ... hMI HB wegea In..,..+ bonul Cltd lll/Olflct HM Cl--'··'/Offln ..... a11an1 .. m en Open 7 d•y week NEW w ~St _ _ r _ ... ...r .,,. n . . nr wvery 2 wtta Exel bet*lll .. ,. .. _ - Acu'Type Word Proceu-YOLANDA HOUSECLEAN 405 30th St Npt Beeetl "" orage .... Ii' JI........ bch $275/mo.+ urn. fNllll\ ADS & med lnll 404-8075 ----· ______ ........ ,11.1 ~ Ing We do manuecrlpt1 SEAV Aeaa . relleble, I l ' .. __ I ·~ hntct • • 1q -. 111a1 111/IUt dep. 980-0888 uunu . . . 1·1y P1·111 malllng 1111. etc 786-3330 •xpe< · ref1 642-0405 Ill aJ -~ Nuralng • • e •• • •• -----,._ I t c.X.s §"yt co -27 L • RD & CARE. In my lnt,/Elct. patch pluterlng, M/F ehr furn CM. apt '335. ARE FREE WI nu'" LWI • 1'rt Ae1eerch Service. ~a H C tfl Htg AIC Ref 'Pf'I hi EF TLC home. Homeoooleed cu1tom texturing, quallty Pool, l•c. 751-8134, • Bete><e Investing ca11 ror Xu CONSTRDcfioN Am•n• Ale aye 1c 459293 mMla. 540-4lOl Kathy wOfk. Problem ... No Prob-522--0350 Terri C. Cal·. OllT1fl0 HI.. • • big aav1ng1 Mr Holland New-Aemodel-Addltona PeJatbl lemel •328364 564-7831 M/F to ahr lge 4 bdrm hM. 1111 a.All : p AftT TIME .• ~1t3612t3-37'-7s..4 122-1737 11cu6083" 2 .. "'rD•lH-1111 n-•--p-~ ....... ,mo ... 2-Hll 11111•1-11T1 " .. • .. • ..,--FlNE PA NfiNd By RlCIC • NEED TO REMODEL? .... .,.,. .......... __, . -----· • 0 • B~Sec'vServ Typing C.~u-tra_c_tl_t_a ____ HMtlngdonertgh ardSlnor.18yraothappy FrMeetlmat... 873-5386/0&76-7•19/E CNA'• with 1 YMI ex-• FFICE WORK• Dictation Word Proc. a I 1 .... 1 a ... ltnlin customer. Lie 280&44. 100% Financing Nwpt Sch rum Of unt m.rr Pl(lence. Top w~ All • • In H B Lind•. 840-1570 • a ,. aL Thenk-Youl 963-4114 '* QUALITY WOAK eulte, P"' entr & gar. 2 1hlf11. Full Ind part·tlme : e Fr1nklln Acctg Tuea.1 RTC commereiiiil or;:~I ;;:i_uyl:e::o~ ~-BMcl'I Cltlee Remodeling blk• to OONll't Sl500/mo. FOUND Outen Lop Ear PQattlon• avellab19. . . • • flnanc&J ltatementa ,_,.j Specta=lzl . In Comm 1 _811 0 __ ,_ .,~7_7nn1 RAINBOW PAINTING PhoM 973-9122 Call /4.nnt« Ad 1222. 11me R•bbll vcty PAii llPll• : The Daily Pilot C irculation Office• Ind I FrM .. t -.._ .... -"" Ouallty I• our po41ey Lio. 2074e t ·~2..-300 24 H--Pewtnkle Prtl 1S..~"38 -·· -----· . • llat with obta1n1no credit . 650-e&49 JEFF uc aaae -. .• -•--....• -•needs a reliable. mature and reapon· • llnea & 1oen1 548..0345 548-8923 llc•383924 la1trwctln A .. ldentlal/Commercla Nwpt IUJC\l(loua Condo rvr11 Found grey and wl'llta rNle 14415 SUPERIOR AVE • e Superior Office Services Custom carpentry. home QO§IC t!SSoAs COi. H~ .,,, llT Im BIG JOB CANCELLED m)' wllch prtv. Oar avl. eat Coron• <1e1 Mw erea. NEWPORT BEACH :sible person t o verify new o rders. NO • le>< all yovr Word PrQClMl-1 repalr1, doors. drywall. 1ege proreMOt Speciality 550-4740 Fr" .. tlmat• Cheap prtoea.. 842-2078 .Male n/lmicr 759-0344 644-8&09 P ..... con1act VI Hellacy, •SELLING • Ing need a Marie 497 ·2871 .i.ctr1cal Mike 8*2814 women, kid• too. 'f04J' A.A.A. PAINTING lnt/E.x1 THE CONST CO. lie G~C Prof.IF OY9f ~5 to ahr nloe Found· Ring DSD 1714)642"24 lO e ' : Certnt Dt•ntic ltrriin home. Gr809lla 74t-31124 LOWEST poealbl9 prtce. Comm .. rMld'I, new/r I Balt>oe 1~ 2t>f. c.i1 Call 831·2345 PART TIME t Applicant must have a good phone• e;;d CL LrVioe HoOsHltfiAd ouiet Plano L8UOnl &42"'8215 tO Step8«Ytce. 812-3236 ProNealonel •~II, 21 Jane 120-2218 btwn ~ befw ... n 6 a 8 PM ONLY FOf back and front otftoe. 1 -1 ~Aemod·~1ddlt1ona ,.,,,.._ •xec wtN PlouM-, ~!lonA. Z~I "'e A GLASOOW PAINTING -••• Prof M/F atw Udo ,... Found. Slemeee. young Coeta MeM ~e-9319 :personality· Trurung will be provided.• Doorl..et ..... _ 111, xlnt refs 492-3398 ....,_ • · Int/Ext 30 yra •llf*·· W9tef1font Apt, pvt bet\ eat w/llM coltar. M..a RAOtOLOOY BILLING OF-•Le I bl ffi 1. ')'-1.. • ht c .,.., 4980 --Le.. ,&. ,.,., 842-5214 ~Wrougnt iron"°" ·ssoo Incl uttta 97&-1497 Verd• trea. 979-334 t FICE ha.I Ill Immediate t arn va ua e o ice sr.1 UJ, worr. Wit t :~:;.~~~.~~=:r!o~ ~;!;~~~,: e:-ty I =-:.. J.O. INTl!XT P~INTINO ::;:.-J:~~~ Rel tem ovr 21 thr f!'llde tr11ea =~~0~~1~1~.'dri: :nice people and earn S4.25 per hour to: door., wlnde>w&. mok:llno• non-emb 540-4101 Kathy tXAB8eXPl-UX86RR9 HOUMll & Apt. Reu. ,.,._ prtoea. ff•-' ~11123 CM ept. 1342.&o~utl FOUND SMALL PARROT. (714) 831·4422 •start I Monday·f riday 4· 30 t 8·30 : .u78l08 Don 982-8202 l1ertrl al an ~ Quamy •oril. 805-875& ~ -_ Cyndi &48-7223 n. In lrvtne. ColleQe Park • • • • o . , c ~~btocti. atone, LADY PAINTER .... __ • -ArM. Identity 562-5598 ~~~~"~"': •Sat 6:00 to l 0:30 am. : =• =.C.:::. PUllll WITlll rrM Mt Mike 4~72 Int /Ex1. 11 ~ Are YOUt Wlndowl CtMt!I Found INMll Turtle 'tlCty '°' a matu,. reeponelbl9 1 Pl all E'J I w ~ .... Aoom Oua11ty woni. ,,._.., Ric. ee 1-95&4 F,.. eet. hlt>oe Window w~ IUM. In tab 11tf Newport M•H Boy'• Individual wtth •t !Mat 2 : ease c teen to schedule ant edTna 15yr911P&4Ml34 •415513 tee-7401 eeo-1124 or057·580' 8038elb098t fn.3lS wXTIMONtilbd Ctubl3l-IM8 yra expet wlthellpf\W •appointment 642-432l : ELECTRiCIAN JllRI Wlllldc fnteflora Window ...nlnQ. reeld'I, Enc. Bulte. 1350 llt evall ,OUnd Surf Board. COWi of lnturence billing Con-6 • . e .... Tl.... 1 Lie #233108 Smell/large Topped/removed c-n-[rhe beet lntertot S*ntlne oomm'Hltl"~ 4th floor with view. MIN.,.. c.11110 Dys tact Mre ChoW (114) • EOE e Peul 5-57-4751.rt I joba & reQaln 548-5203 up, new lawna 751-3478 REFS 8e2·2177 & haul. he 191 Ma-7800 842-4&«Monthnl Fri 1-5 835--7877. EYM846-1162 83 t-4422 •• • e ------- -·--. --··~········· ........... . .. o,_,. Cout DAILY PILOTfThur9day, October 10, 1986 lnefal HH Intra! 1131 lea C7 Wmll&Wllllll Mature lmplent C1feterl1 Worker $4.50/hr + bin· eflta. Hou,. 6am-2:30pm. 759-25&3 CARPET CLEANING 1----,----.,..-....---=-HELPE R Eeger & PLANTSCAPE. Int !Ext amlbltlou1. ovar 18. 25-30 hra Plent exp .. Good 1pp1aranca own tranap. 761-2271 54a.9373 PUnllll NIIMI ca.atli.ra N.eded. Mondl y, 1 p.m . FHl'l1 1-HOOHIYU V-8. IUtO, removal Vi n Idell for smell bustneaa. (llc#Y94416) .. ... THEODOR£ ROBINS FORD 20()0 HAltBO A Bl VO CO~TA MHA ()4') 0010 THEODORE ROBINS FORD 1060 HAUOI llLVD COSTA MUA 641 0010 TOYOTA 74 c.llca. 5 ap. new paint, 74,000 ml, 9111· oeli.tlt running condition. t 1200 631-1272 Toyota Corolla. '82. 4 door. EJ!oel cono. 10 ml, S5000. call 720· 1950 TOYOTA CORONA '74 Station Wagon. S 1000. &42· 7156 or &42·29040 Honda CRI '88 Mor• 1am111ee .,. oett1ng S11>9 down, cloMd end the camping "bug" thl1 ~tnlf'Clll L..... year II Y,ou !lav e a '"&il: ••-is• iraH! camper tlltt 1 not Q9ftlng -·-•~ ~ ueed, Mii 11 now wllll a l1•/U2·1tl7 CIUlll\ed AO IEWCUW.ES llEI CAI Ill.ES WEllY CLUIClllS lllTllCIS Chevy Mallbu Clualc '7' gooo cono, 3 wo ssoo Ca.sh 673-5257 s 1~ Oowl'I CIOMd eno comme<e111 INN lll-SAYHS LWI l1•1U2-1H7 UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE/HONDA Wf llYWll TIPNU.U FH ISH OARS 2850 HARBOR BL VO COSTA MESA 540-9640 FOUND ADS ARE FREE Call: 1'2-Hll Tl\·333 P\8.IC NOTICE ftCTTTK>UI .u ..... NAME aun•NT T"9 toOOW!ng pef'90n9 llr9 a o•no ou11n a1t at 0 EORICH MANUFAC· TUfllNG 1835 Whittler Ave ::fl2 Co1t1 M .... CA 92627 Cari E Oie<Srten & Soni .~, Tulip Ln Colla M ... (.A 92627 ·n1a 01.111ne11 11 con- JucteCI oy a corpora11on Step,,.,, Olec:lr1Cl'1 Tn1a s1a1emen1 wH ltleO .. 11~ tne CO'-'nty Clerk ot Or· ange CO'-'nty on Septeml:>et 20 '985 '37145 P1.1011aneo Oranoe Cout Oalt) Pllo1 OctoDet 3 10 17 2' 1985 .......... __ , .,._~.... to approx. 8 p.m. Tua. ..._ t _... day, 11 1.m. approx. 7 11 growing & la now hiring p m Fri. & Set. 9 1.m. to 5 euh..,., pereon1 knowl-p m Wiii 1r1tn. Apply It: edgMble In nutrlclan & PENNYSAVER leecl cooka for 1 naturll fOOd Plecantl• Av, Colt• Meaa. r11teurent. If Interested 1----------tltMMMil~-SYDNEY 0MARR TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE end wllllng to IMrn end II.I.& grow, PIMM IP9IY 11 ChalBlde ltld minor front 2215 e 17th St. CM office. Career opportunl· •Tlll'l llLPlll Reaponaible, ttudent OK. ty for m11ure peraon u- aletlng In 1 plHaant "tab. & eitpendlng den· 111 pracilce In So. Laguna "499-1611 Uk for Donne Mon-Fri, h,. 2-n... nr OCC. A*leble trana, Mlt be111 1 mu1t. Anne 1--1-1-11--m--.-11-,-- _543-4 __ 1_1_1_or_54_e.._1_se_1_ RMI E1t1t• lnvMtm.nt Chlld Care Houaeh•~· Compeny. Prof1ulon11 needed Monday thru Flr· 11t11ude/appe1rance r• dey 1pm-5pm. Muet have quired. Light typing. car & epeak Englllh. Cell 75M601 ett epm MG-1a.t1 HUIF IUl&IDI DIMES Chlld Care • Ltv.ln Mon-For mini ttorage llt• In Fri, Englllh epeaklng. Huntington Beach. S1nt1 cooking. llte h11kpg. An•. co.ti Mela. Retired Own pvt 18r Apt. utll1 couple pl'9femd. Office, pd. FOOd allowance + boot<keeplng & phone ex- Mlwy. Reta. Avt 11115. perlenca helpful. Wiil lt:;~@!~\ 673-2068 •ft 89m train. Part-time work. A LINE WANT ADS Coamet~t/ANt. Cell 775·3700 or 107 Main St. a.Ibo&. I.lo 751-1300 for applleatlon. req. c.n 876-3412 1-m-.. --/llllPfl------=,-:-/t:::-' Counter He6p Dell 10-2 K#an 640-0979 Mon-Fri. Airport .,.._ TM ...... 6e0-0312 or &41..()241 rtftlet ~··• MISIU llLP need• CA~AITICKET MorNnge, Geleio C!Mel-PERSON P/tlrne nlgfltl.. oo ~bove minimum. AW'/ l'tenlng 4 to 6 CdM 720-1828 w.ekdaye. 964-1422 IMPORTANT NOTICE TO PRIVATE PARTIES ACROSS 1 Flagellalt Friday. October 11 s Oven• ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19): Long-distance all relates to "good 9 Speedy news" concemin~Job or health of rel au ve. Focus on basic 1ssue'i. added I :; ~.=;,,~..i recognition, ability to finish important task. 't ou'll IX' nd of burden 16 Pwc.n1 which was not your own 10 first place 11 Sad .auna TAURUS (April 20..May 20) Emphasis on excitement of 18 C•t ooctcw discovery, charisma. intensified love rclat1onsh1p. Be direct. 1ndepen· r: ~;;':.'~ dent.get to heart of matters in connection with member ofoppos11e sex. 22 t..tr~ 01ro1 GEMINI (May 2 I -June 20): Follow through on hunch. Check 23 epee·u 1n property rights. Emphasis on family, security, shelter. safet}. reunion ~~ ::::·.,,...., with one close to you. lnd1 V1dual who aided 1n past 1s again available. 29 Ar>fXo~f'Qe CANCER (June 21-J ul) 22): Emphasis on notes. calls. messages. 30 A-S ta bofet short tnps, relative who makes unusual request You'll be more aware 3' wm,,... of t?<>ciY image, appearance, wardrobe. Accept 1n,·1t.atton to exciting : ~:' i..e social event. 39 Being mr; LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Study small pnnt tn connectton v.1th 42 .Aclr ... o.- financial transaction Some rules. 'FegulatJons work in vour fa, or '3 Art~ Know it. be alert to swtft change rcgarding lcpl papc~. Taurus.. Scorpio !; ~ persons play outstanding roles. • ~ G<OUC>l"Q VIRGO (Aug. H-Scpt. 22): Your percept1vcncss pays d1v1de nds' ,, Souno.o out You'll do some private dett"'Ctive work.. you'll make discovery which •9 "t•VIQ•lion can be transformed into sizeable profit Member of opposite se~ pla ys 51 ~!:,"°' key role. s..t~ UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Suck doSt to home base. 1f possible. 58 c111,.,, "'" News concerning money 1s "on the way." S1gn1ficant domestic 1 adjustment is featured Be rccept1ve. d1plomat1c wtlhout abandoning pnnCJplcs. eo M1n1•1et 6 1 P0t.anou1 her be 63 $ICiiy dly 6' Ot 1Pec>M ~ V9get1ble ee Olallgur. 87 Coun1...ink1 U AtOll 89 Semple DOWN 1 Actor Femanoo 2111 ... ICOln 3 w1110-me ' -In<! Gre1e1 s Scor•• 8 Mlddtem1n • 1>'-'llnQ war1 8 Pai<erwora 9 -Tuck IO AulO S~ 11 ANl 01,...,1 12 lnntat .. 1 13 Tr1t11Utll 19Gr ... 11111o 2ol Frencf\ ICulPIOf M Gooo 11\•"Q• .?8 s.. lo-I .)() J9'g«t 14.1" ' SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Wish comes true followmg snmal After School-SM/ your It.ma for S60 or '-" In delay. Empha!is on illusion. romance. clandC'st1ne "arrangement." I hw-+---+-+-- our ,.mou1 DIMl!S-A-LINES put>-Gai n also shown lhro\llh busmcss or career maneuver Your psychic Student Jobs! 111'*1 Heh Saturday In ,,,. Dally I ability SUl)CS to forefront. Pisces plays role. Piiot. SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec 21 ): Emphasis on pressure. Do You Need$ Cash$ And 1 deadlines.. possible promotion. Love rclat1onsh1p 1nt(ns1fiC's.. vou'll A Good Job To St.art The New Year? DIMES-A-LINE 1d1 mu1t b• have more responsibility and chance for greater financ-1al ~ward p,..pmd .a mall or bring tfHtm Into , ~ncer. ~pricom ~rsons play sian1fiunt roles. we are looklng f« Jr. High and High tM Dally Piiot o"1c•. S. *',.. to CAPRIOORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Emphasis on distance. laf\iuage. SchoOI itudentl and ottw• who would Inc/IX» yow piton. numb« or ad· Jona-ranae prospecu. Projeoet is completed. travel is hlfhlt&hted you'll enjoy talking wtth peopt9 and working drwa In your ad, ha~ a prlt» on have chance to learn more about your craf\ Anes. Ubra ind1v1duals with otl'I« ttudent1 their own -0-· You MCfl lt.m cl no abt>Ntvtat/ON. play dynamic roles in fa.scinatint scenano. can eem 125.00 to UQ.00 NCh WMtc In AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Ftb. 18): Refuse to be 1nt1m1datcd' Focui on commttek>f\a and MUCH MOREi You can Sony, no oomfMl'Clel lilda. QM8l1e tax, hccnsc ~uircm(nts. Interest 1n the occuJt 11 hl&hh&htcd wortt PAAT TIME In the afternoon,t and ...... prt>du<», pMnt• or enJmM Emotional rilatJonsh1p 1ntcn11fics. Thorouah analySts proV'ldes ewnJnge IOd atNI h9ve ~i of h'9e time. ... aoo1PfatHe. accurate picture of financial status of others- You MOST ~ FREE A R SCHOOL! ' PISCES (Feb. 19--March 20): Refu1t to be "stampeded .. into W• ottwr ~· tflfntf'IQ and prOYtde dCCl&ion. Focus on lepl afl'ain.. pubhc rtlat>ons. manta.I ,tat\J\. C'r0 I tranaportatton. Thie II NOT A PAPER DE AQLINE•. llow, play waitina pm~. Emphasis also on ab1llt)' to learn b)' caching. AOutE AND 18 NOT SEVEN DAYS A " Cancer n.anvc playi outnandina role. W!!.KI Come OU1 and hltp ua g9t new IPOCl'OBU 1118 YOU1lBIRTBDAYyoua.rc1ntu1t1vc.a natunll cuatomera tor ~ """~ and have• 12 Noon Frtd9y leaehcr, you a.re drawn to unorthodox sub,)eCU •h1ch include tht> ~time doing tt. You NY9 not"'ng to Coeta ..... Oftloe \mantic arts and 10cnoes.. You art lo~ to fanuty. arc stronaJy lo. end• "'Pl" Job to Cl'lln~ Cell tod9y anflucoccd bl' mot.her, arc concerned Mth nahts for the underdOJ. end maybe you CM_, lomonowt Cancer, C.pncom, AQuanu:s penons play amponant roles 1n your ltfe. CID llr. Bari 'You are Knliti¥e. pracieot. oouk1 have dalcmve probAem lf ~ . .... _70 ... or 141-MU you marry this year. If married. there coulcfbt an addition to famil y L---~-----'"'!"'l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~il~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!'~~~~~~~~~~~~~::...=.Y.:...°'ou.::...:mate=:...ne:.:.:e.11:_....:· start=..:..:..::'n:...:ne:.:ew_...:.dincuon duri~ monlb of November 3, Sty tooll 32 Iner'! gu 33 won. un11t 3• Mttnea 35 qt1QUll1•on 3" G411 1 1ano 8 :::8" you -•' r., 'N!I 0'"'' •6 E11r~ 48 Fr..i-1 ,9 Whlr1t 50 SlronQ 1 ttoy 52Pl~ So 53 s.. OU1 SA &Ir,, SS 1mmec:11acy 56 •then• 5 • CIOO!>et S9 Tl\11 So 62 0r'8<'1tal MYI • 0rMge COMt DAILY PILOT /Thurlday, October 10, 1985 OAiUIM ~ .. I BIW The MIN Ind eddrw of Oetllettnl• lnvlronm11ntat Chief of P\en1 OperetlON et 1t1e deW ~tot "'9,.. 9'.-t. ITA,._, °' --c--•-~ court It: (!> nomtw'e 'I CMlll1y Ao. '°'1WY tot Ille toe.ecM0t the lboW ~ ...._ oelPt of b6de. NCHHOUl ..... M M.U.OIPITIITCW ~--W A:'reiro -, deleOON99):8u-CM11....., Oocunent1t,.. ...,..., .. cw, Ind tie pho11• numb•r (114)1 The low.s of T~ --•nW I rT U. °' NC"'10UI ..._ ITAW 'LAIMTIPP1 CAMIO A*° 1 AouledO) Coun of the It• of owcllno 1'19 Pf090Mi -on CM oourt wttll proof of 957·5212. .,,.ii be the~ llldgl of tt. l"9 ......... ,._..,. IUll ... MAm The~ pereone.,. OMMUMfTY UIOCIA• A L L P ! A S 0 N I ~ County ol Of· llM In~ hM:~•t lat~ vice. e _... NQUal4 lllt A ~t t>ond. &tan-q.uellty of ~t oftnC -...,_ • eo.«,.._ The IOllowlng ,.raon1 doing ~ MC CAU· ---•rm IN ~e ... T .-700 CMo c.ntw DfM Vtole m ll i.... tt1e1 ...... deeif9 oard · Form 807 In the Ind,.......... the rWtt to,... ~ TM ~ .. ,_.. h-·~ IN uae of FOAAIA AUCUE. 2414 Coto A'OF THE VAUOrrY ~ w•: Stinta Altta, c:.ltornle ALL IW.ITID Pl."-noltoe of 'ii; fllOa of .,. amount of fifty paroent of the Jeot .,.,., or .. b4di Ind \( '"8 ....... 1151 Ntwey Av-the "c;tlllou1 l111lne11 1eOe Dl'M. Coece Maee. CA HI INO'JST"IAL OE· 92701 IONS eN lnvtt.d to et1end VMlcwyencleppr..,,_,. oontrlC1 ptlol rn\191 9000f'll-welw tltY ~ ..... ..._ .,_ N. eo.t. ......_ Natne. IMdlm 8eclk 8n.t ~H ELOPMINT IONOS IN• The neme. 9dclt... M6d ~ Ind ~ eetete ...U cw of the peny ~ oonlreet In~ In. CA 1111t k ·M·8.l .Q., 211 82nd SI., Gordon Wett'I Redlo !NOEO TO H 188UED IV t~ number of ~ 0t M>mll ~ !tone ot eooountt tng an apendt1ure In..-=...._,, ,.....__ ...... LllNMd. A Can-NewPot1 Bwlh. CA.:::.. 8chool. Inc.. 2414 ~ 8y Wtue of • 'Mtl ...., HI! CITY °' I.WINI! ev ITS tiff'• 1ttor"9'1 It: (fl nombr9. Ot '°'*"' ""tppllo9tton In haUon l200 encl '*·s of '2&.000. .... • edWt oorporatton. tH7 The Fletltloul Orlve, Cott• M .... C"A 1Jut.,2S 1M41n0.eb0\ol 80\..VTION NO. 16-109 le dlreodon.,. numero de .. outllMd eblNCAa ~ O.CellfornlePYobllt•Ooo.. The ll.IOOIMNI bide* wtll be\ed: ow 2, 1115 Yonge I.,.. TOl9nto, On-Namerllfwredto&bolle ... t2e2t led coun e YOU AR.I! BEING SUED ~dehboQ.oodelde-oattone, exhlblta. end de-a..wtr IWMHA, At be reqW'ed to enter Into• Publlehed OfSIQI COMI wto Cenede' M481Y5 lllld In Ofange County on Thie t>ulln-11 con-1 en*ed' .::::' '20 y Pl.AINTW': (A Ud. le •ta mendente. •): STRADl.INO, IC:f'tptlone of Ihle ~ ....., t. ' ..,....,, oontrecwel .-nent In Delly Piiot Oc10ber 3, 10 Thie bWlneM " con· Jul., . 2. 1915 FILE NO duc;1ed t>y • COf90RUon 1 In *'°' of .ludQment ) YOCCA, CARLSON a .,. on Ille Witt! the Ottloe of .... v..-.,.... the tonn ot • "81enderO 1986 ~by: a oorpotlltton F280372 GOfOon WHt'1 "•dto 'Oft•). CAMIC COM· CITY °'IRVINE RAUTH, A Pto~ Cof, Ute City Clertc, 2000 Mein ...._ 11, C.... ...... C ~1. form STO 2" Th-3~ ••••• Limited."""'~ Tim VMCCM, 9481 Tikl Schoo!. Inc., Gordon v. MUNITV A&IOCIAT10N end CAM MO ....... 11 poretton, FRITZ R 8TAADL· Street, Huntington leedl, -wfilcfl en.II be blnOlnG upon & Sill"*', V'°9 Pr.eldent Clrcta. HunUnglon BMctl, Weet, ~t . ~.._._.All,). ........ I ~ .... A ING NANCY RADER c.llfornlia. tor~ by P\lblthed Ofenga COelt the Ste1• of Cellfom[e onty, ---------.... c """".... -·-.~ .......... ,,,_,....,, " 'fOU -· 0 ........... ,,_ ' , ..... et ...... · =-~ ....__..._. ... 10, ,. ~ _.... ....... .._ ··--.·-,... ~ -llled A...,......, ,,_ ate_._,, WM ,_, N AT ANIAN lflowlna you"-unt" Oete>-WHITEHEAO, 980 NewPot1 ,,. """" ,...,,...,.,.,.,.,_ • "' ......,.._. -, u .. .,_,. ptllUC N()TIC( wt1t1 the County~ of Of· TIMI ~ -oon-With the Coun1y Cler'll of Of· net b11M1noe of t1.112.00 29, 1995 to ftle • 1yp9o c.nter onv., Suh• 1800, H MTINCITO• •IACH 191 · oontl'tlCt It not blMlno1 __ :..:;::;;:;,;;..;.;~.;..;;.-- enge County on &eptemt>er ducted by en lndlvldual. "l9' County on September ec:1u.it; ~ on Mid Jude>-man rMflONll 11 tt\la Newport a.en. Celltomle cnY COUNC&. 9JI ..._. WTh-1 on either party ~ and c .-ti I,'* Thi• 111tement -. flied 17. 1915 ton tne CS.ta of the i. t2~. Telephone: (714) M........,., C"1 m.rt. untN It la~ by llP" ....._., .... ,_ w11h IN County Oerk of Or· ,_ IUenoe of Mid wnt I have A ~-or phone cell wNI 14(). 703& ....... ~ ........ --.,,. 111\TIC( proprl•t• authorb:ed stat• ....... ,,......, ~ Or.nge Cout enoe COllnty on Se9tember Publlehed Orenoe CoM1 l9Vlld upon Ill right i1t1e and 1 proteci you; 'fOAJ1 ~ OATE: (Fache) SEP 24 Pu Ofenga CoM1 l"YUU\# nu ~ tnctudlng the ~ et ~ .... Delly Piiot ~ember 21, 17, 1985 Deity Pilot October 3. 10, t7. lnter-1 of Nie) JUoomant ltten reaponM mu9t be 1n 1916 Oell'f Pllol Ocnot>er 10. 1985 0 ,_ pertrnent of Genetti Ser· Ne...,.,... Octoc. 3, 10, t7, 1985 Publlthed Ofenoe co;: 24, 1985 t0f1•) In the property In oper legal tonn "~Wini LH A. IAANCtt, Ct.INC, ~ MOTICI TO vtcee. If required. In lne Superior Court of T~ to Oally Piiot September • Th-327 the County ol Orlf'lge, Stet• he court to ,_, )'OU!' cue. (~) IY1 K. WHtTa. COMTRACTOfta All nonexempt atate con-the State of ~ In Oclot>er 3, IO, 17• 1985 of Cellfomta, dllorlt>eO 11 11 ~ do not tile your 0.PUTY (D1l111do) •-.,. M)TIC( ~ wtll be trec:tt of 15.000 cw more.,. Md for tne County of Loi Th-318 .. _.,. 111\TIC[ ........ _. __ on.._ ........ -P\lbllehed 0r-eo-t .--S..a.d ..,.....,.._ aub._. to tt•t• contrector .. ~ --------.--"" '""""". ·-.---.-,~ .... ,_ .. _, -...... ..... reoetveo II the omce of ,.... I tlon A_ ... com-,.._.. •• 1111' 111\Tv-C --------Owelllng More Commonl'/ loM the CM end your WIOll• Ollt'f PUot September «v, ll--7 Plent Operetlonl Fllrvt.w nondllCl1m na .,,.. In the Matter of the &te1e .--nu•rK rtllUC M)TIC( ...... Known M : 4827 Cortland. "'ontl'I and property mey be Oc1ober 3, 10, 1985 NOTICI °' State Hoepttal 250t Harbor pll1nc1 r1qu1rement1 of Viva Ellen Bulhby. eon.. • -FtCnnoua .,_.. corona Del Mar. CA 92125, tlken Without further warn-Tll-317 o.ATM °' 8IYd Coet ·Mele CeMf pureuent to GoV91'nmaf\t ~t .. ... ~----.. .. .... IT -.,_ .. A....._.. t F II "'" , ... _ --... -.._.... •• • • . Code Section 12990 and .. .._.....~ ,.._. P'N:htiOUe .,_11 "°'"-• --A._.., ........ n_._. or u om ,,...,._,, ..._.... ,.._ untll 2:00 P.M. on Oc1. 25, Calllornll Admlnletretlv• NotlOe ·--• ~·~ ..._ ITA.,...,,., ...-nA,,...,.,-The roeowtng per.one are legal 0eec:t1ptton• • '*-are other legal r.-P\llUC M>TICE MCHAMeC* 19915, at which ttrna they wm Code Tl11e 2 OMtlon 3 the undenlgoed -•• The folowtno penone are The toltowlng penone are doing ~ ea; WARM· PLEASE NOTE: Thie qulrement1. You mey went AND Of' NtffiOM be publicly oPlfled end feed Sec;tiOn 8'20 1 • • prtvete Nie, to the lllgMet clolno ~ u · Home doing butln ... H : AL· ING TON HOTEL A S · property .. being 9olO IUIJ-to ult .,.. attorney ngllt LIQA.L MOTICI TO ui••na tor perlormlng work to In ICCOfdMoe wtth the end beet bidder, IUbject to Energ'I Advleora: 3303 LIGATOR TRANSFORMS; SOCIATES NO. 5, 3090 )let to r.o.mptlon. f'tMM ewey.lfyoudonotknowany MOTIC90I' llTATIMO.A·UIMJ tumlltl all labor, materlalt, t Section tnO contlrmetton Of M6d 8u- Hatbor 8tvd #0-tO eo.ta AHlgetor rec:11no1og-. 2327 Pullrnen Stl'99t, Coeta MaM. refer to Code of Clvll etlorney, you may <*I an et-""*"° HIANNQ To ell .....,.., ~. 1eo11, end equipment ~~~ Code the 0. per1or Court on or att~.the MaM. CA 112821 • Rulgera Or., Coeta Meea, CA c.i"ornla 9212e Pr~ure, Section• SS torney reference MtV1ce or• -~ OI' c;redltort and contingent neoeeeary to ~ or r• hal "'°"1alned 14th dey of Oc1otier. t.-11 Home Energy Advttors, 92826 Rober1 P Wermlngton, 729.010 • 729.090 al aid omce (lilted In the Al'NAL. TO ~••IQ credltora. Ind per.one who pteceuletlng roof ..,.tam of pertment the oritca ot Robert L. Inc. 3303 Httbor Blvd Rober1 S Gatter. 2327 30tO Pullman Street, Coeta lltheeubjtctofttlle..,.11 book). COMMllllOM'I A'· meybeotllerwlMlnt._ed 8c:f1oo1 llnd S-1 Bulkltng . that tofhe ganet~~ Nelmi, Attorney-at-Lt•. 10.:10 Coete M.. CA Rutgen Dr . Coate....._, CA Mele, CA 9282$ real property Ind It 11u no o.puee de que le en-flROYAl. In the wtll and/or -1ete' ot. Ree 3e and 37 at FllM9w rat• wegee ._...... 200 Newport c.nter OrM. t2t2t (A Cellfomle coi-p.1 1128~8 Thomae A. Klement, 30tO llreet eddreea or other oom-tregyen •tt citeclon tudlol9i OI' COMDl'TIOM H HARRY DONALD RICH· 8teie Hoepltal, In ac-L~oc:"o'!.: :'!'f'~;:: Suh• 30t. Newport SMdl, Solar RMOurca1. Inc., RulMll ChlpmaA, 3530 E. Pullmen Street, Coeta ........ mon deelgnlllon. dlr«:tlont ueted tlene un pico de 20 OI' AJ'f'ROVAl. OI' ARDSON c:ordllnoe wtth pi.. and .. CM!toml• 92ee0. County of Suite 135 Promenade Ban6( 4th. Tuceon, AZ 116716 CA 9282$ to It• loc:etlon Mey be ~ Oc1obre, tll85 per• pr... UN,...,. A petition hit been ftled 191Cfftcetlon• ,....,.,or.. •t•bllehed Ind publlthed Ofenoe Stet• of Cellfom&a. 8'Mdlng Rlchltdton Taxu John Gongtew9111, 7490 liarold G. P9nter. 3090 talned trom the MerWlat• enter una reepueat• aacrlta ,....,. byJaneSteww1Whft•lnthe Pr--.noawlllbeqtanled ~':n._Olrect~l":t":: llltheriQnt,tltleendln1.,.. 15080 (A O.C.ware o0rp.) Brompton Ct .. Hou1ton, TX Pullmen Street, Coate Mela. Oftloe upon ~ue91. • mequlne.,.. eate c:orte. NOTIC€ IS HEREBY Superior Court of 0renga to bidden properly ap-the of Mid coneervetee. In Ind TMe t>ullnatt It con· 77025 CA 92e26 Pro1pectlve bid de re Une c;ert1 O una llaneda OIVEN tlllt lhe Huntington County flQ\*tlng tflat Jene ptoYed M "Smell Butlneel" =r~~~,:-c:,":, ·~1 to all the oerteln ,..., ~ dueeed by: 1 oen«al pert-Thi• bu11ne11 I• con-Thie ~ It conduc:ted lhould r9fer 10 Sec:tlon• ttlefonlc:a no le otreoer• 8Hch City COUncll will hold Stewert White be appotnted tn acc«denoe wtth Section Operatlonl FlllM9w H°"*' arty 11tuated In tne ....... , of nenhlp · ducied by 1 general pert-t>y,agener1tpert,,.,.,,.p 701.1110 to 701.180. In· protecclon, au reepue111 1 Publtc; Heiring 1n the u per-.onal r..,,--tetlYI 18" et eeq., Tltle 2. Cell- 111 Sit• ~ton wtll be AN!helm,CountyofOrenga, 8oW Aeeourc., inc .. w ~Ip Robert P. Warmington. ciu.,..., of the Code of CMt eec;rtt • mequlne tlene que Council Chamber at the to admln.18ter the ••t• of tomta Admtnl9tratlYI Code. Mid Fri Oc1 11 19815 tO·OO Stat• of Cellfornla, pw1icu- M Mct<nlght Jr c E.O Robert S Gaiter Generel Partner Procedure to< provillon• cumpllr c;on tu for-Huntington BHch Civic; the decedent. Appllcetlont tor piefere!ICI A M F&irvleW Stet• H-1ar1y o.cinbed u followa, TN. 1111.,;,.,;i ~u n1ec:1 Thia 1111ernent wu tiled Thia statement wu flied gover-ntng the tll'IM. con-me 11 d • d • • I• g •I•• Center, 2000 Main Street, The petition requ11t1 muet be eubmltted to and ia, · tc>-wtt: wtth the County Cler'k or Or-wllti lhe County Clerk of Of. th lhe County Clertl of Or· dltlont, and 9ffec:t of the Nie eproplldu ti Ulled ql.llerl HunUngton Beech, Call-lll#hOft1Y to admlnlt1er the llPPf'oYed t>y the .Office of ~ .....,_, CMef of Lot 18, Trect 1421, IOOk .nge County on Oc1ot>er 4, ange County on September enoe County on Seplamber llnd the Uablllty ot detaulttng que la c:ort• llChuche au tonlla. on the d•t• and at the •tate under the lndepen-Small end Minority Buel-,._1 OperelloM • 82, Pegee 13-11, lnduelYe. 1916 18. 1985 t8, 11185 bidden. c:uo. time tn<lated below to r.-cten1 I Adrnlnlltratlon of e.-n.... 1812 141h Str .. 1, Publllhed "'---Cout of m. ltCelleneoul mepa, ,. ,..,. ~ ,_ NOTICE IS HEREBY SI u1ted no preeenta IU oelve•ndcontlderthelt•t• at• Act. Room 200, SKramento. CA D::l Piiot oci;;t;;"' 10 t5 c:«clt of <>reno-County, Publlahed Ofange Cout Published Orange Cou1 Publlthed Orange COllt GIVEN thet on Tlluradey, rec>ueett • tlempo, l)Ueda men1t of all per10n1 wflo A '-ing on the petition 95814, not .... then t!w (5) • • Callfomla. Deity Piiot Oc1ober 10. 11. Delly Piiot Oc1ot>er 3, 10, 17, Dally Piiot Oc1oo.t 3, to. 17, Oen. 24, t985 et 2:00 PM. •t perder el c:uo. 'I le~ wllh to be '-td reletlve 10 wffl be held on OCTOBER celendar oaye In edvMCle of l98 • more commonly known 24. 31 1985 24, 1985 4, 1985 Orange COl.lnty Marehal. qultar IU Mlerlo. IU dlnwo 'I the appllc;atlon deec;rlbed 30, 1995 II 11:30 A.M. In bid °'*"ng 0•1•. ThT-3el u : 1431 8eec:or1 Avenue, ' ' Th-366 Th-3<4 t Th-328 Herbor OMtlon. 4801 Jam-otru coau de IU proplldld below Dept. No. 3 et 700 CMc ReQullt• tor ematl bu91· Anefleim, CeMforN8 92802. t>« ... Room 108, City of lln IVl90 ldlcional P<>f perta DATI: Monday, Oc1ober c.nter Drtw Weet, Senta neea preference In thl-d Pllll.JC M)JICE Termt ol M6e cut1 In i.-- Newpoft 8-:tl, County of de la corta. 21 1985 Ana. CA 92702. of the contrect tor the et>ove ru1 money of the United Orange, State of Callfomta I bitten otroe requltlloa iiMm: 7:30 P.M. IF YOU OBJECT to the mentioned protect le made MOTICI Stat• on confirmation of P\8.IC M>TICE rtlll.IC M>TICE PtllllC NOTICE NOTICE TO PARTIES OF INTEREST IN TAX SALE PROCE!DS wtll Mil I t public; auc;t~A~~ legalll. Puede que us:~ Uf'UCATIOll M:C ft granting of the petition, you by eut>mlt11nQ • comp19ted wmiMQ..,. ..a.. or pw1 CMh end '*- The pertlee llsted below may have rights to me • clalm for exceae proceeds reeuttlng from the aa.le of lax-defeulted property held on July 25. 19S5. AJ1 dalme must be In writing and must contain sufficient Information and proof to •tabllsh a clalmant'a rights to all or any part of the exceaa proceeds. Clalfne rm.eat be filed with the Coonty on or before August 7, 1986, otherwise Y'O'K dalms cannot be considered the htghllt bidder, tor .__, qulera llemar • un •t>og-..v UM Permit #85-34 lhould either apc>ear e1 lhe form STD 811 wtth the bid NotlOe It hereby given tbetl anoe evidenced by note ..., In lewful money of the United lnmedletemente. St no con-LOCA noM: 5972 Wemer heering end 1t1t1 your ob-propoeal. No preference wlll the Boatd of Truet ... of the c:urad by Mortg.ege or Tru.t S11t•. 111 the rlgfll, tltle and ooe • un at>ogeclo, pueda Avenue on Ille eout~ Jec;tlon• or flle written ob)ae-be granted unleat the bid It Huntlng1on Beech Union Deed on the proper1'f IO lnter•I of Mid Judgment llemar • un aarvlclo de refer· c;()(nl( of wemer A-.ue tlont with the court before ecx:ompenlld t>y the STD High Sc:f'lool Dlllrtc:t wt11 ,.. IOIO. Ten peroent of amount OebtOtt•I In the eboW de-enc1a de al>Ogeclol o • una and Springdale Street. the lleering. Your llPPMf· 811. cefve .....o blOt lor euppty. bid to be depollted With bid. ecrlbed pr()99rty, or '° oflc;kwi de 8)'Uda legal (vea ti '9tOPOtAL.: To conelder ence may be In per.on or by Bid propoael1 mult be Ing SYSTEMS CONTRACT 8'd1 or on.. to be In wnt· mudl lhefeof M mey be dtrectorio lllefonlco). an 9'>pe81 ftled t>y Nlbll F. '/OUf attorney. eubmltted tor the entire FOR JANITORIAL SUP· Ing Ind w111 be ~ et TM partlee of Interest, the aasessor's parcel number or the property In wh!Qh the parties may have an Interest, Is as follows: neceeaary to uttet; uld ex-The object of thlt ectlon It SldhOm, OWfWll of W"'*" IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR wort! deec:rlbed therein. De-PLIES rnMtlng or equtl to the lforeaald oftloe et W't'f 1cutlon, with acc;rued to obtain • Judgment ~ Mobil, 10 the Planning Com-or • contingent Ct'edttor of v1111on1 trorn plane and the eoectflcatlont on file In time 1ner the first pu~ lntereet and coet•. deer .. of 11111 court viii-m1911on'• ectlon to uphold the deoNNd. you mutt flle apeoiflcatlont wlll not be the office of uld Oletrtct. cation hereof and befor'I APPROXIMATE MINI· d•ttne the tuuance of Cet· the Boerd of Zoning Adiu.t· '/Out clelm With the court or c;onllderedlnd...tllt>ec:aiea BIO• •h•ll be CIH rl'I date of ..... MUM BIOS. Tr-*'iu of taln lndul1rttl de'o'elopment ment'1 apc>rOYal of Con-pr-t It to the per.onal tor refecilon• of bide. The m1rked "SYSTEMS CON-Dated Ihle 27th dty of 55' per eedl $500.00 of bond• In the eggreg•t• dhlon #8 Of u.. P9rmtt repreeent•tlve apc>Olnted by Department hU Ille rlgM to TRACT FOR JANITORIAL September, 1916 (1) AP 231-4S1-01 Clyde A. Rhoades, e1 al % Walter W . Mickle pu<Ch ... price. ernount of not to exoeed #8~ Which profllbltl the the court within tour montha welve any Irregularity In • SUPPLIES BID #815 .0- 0eled· Septembef 27. $4,000,000, Which the City .... of~ and_,. et en trom the date of flrlt le-bid or to retect any or all dreued to: Allyn E. Aow49y, ~ L ......_ At· t 985 "'°lc;ated II• Intention to exlttlng guollne MMce ..._ auanoa of lett.,. M Pfcwlded bide. Purcl'lulng Manager. Hunt· ., For your convenience, claim forms and Information regarding flllng prooedurea may be obtained at 630 N. Broadway, Room 3 tO. Santa Ana. or by calling 834-352S between 8 a.m and 5 p.m Olvlllon: Harbor laaue by Reao4utton No. tton 1n 1111 C4 (HIQ'1way In Section 700 of th• No bid wlll be conlldered 1ng1on a..ch Union High tofMJ •I uw, 300 ....,_. M.utlHAL CW OAANGe 8~ tot, pur9Uat!t to Ofdl-Comrnerctal) roning Ofttrlct. Probate Code ot Calllomle. urn... 11 te made on 1 etan-sctioot Dlltrlc;t, t025 t ~ ~ ':.::: COUNTY, 4101 ,,_.. .. nlilCI No 82·5 of the City, Public '-ing he6d" 9/11185 The time tor tlltng c1e1ma wlll Oard form tumllhed by lhe Yorklown Avenue. Hunt· (114) ,.._1 At· IMS.. ~ 1-. .....,.n The object of thll ectJon le and 11 being re-Merd u llP" not expire prior to four Department and It mede In lngton Beec:tl, CA 92&41 and ;., ' IMd\. CA ... etto to obtain • Judgment plllent. lnedvertantly wu monlh• trom the data of the ICCOfdence with the "lit-reoetveo at or before 2:001~ .. lOftl ldel ..._, ftOBEn' L CrTRON County TrMeUNr·Tax Cott.ctor of Onnge County PubllaMd Orange Coast Dally Piiot October 10. 17, 24, 1985 0 CHICK IVERSON Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi 441 E. 0111t IWJ., l1w,1rt l11olt 171-0100 Highest Quality Sales & Service 0 . J am•• C . By ti• m . and Oea• trom thlt court not notified. hearing notlOe at>ow. 11ruc11ona 10 Blddert." p.m .. Oc1oo.t 22, 1985, at, • Marehll. Or~ County, that you be tor-berred IN y IR 0 .. Ill I .. TA L YOU MAY EXAMINE the Proac>eetlve blddert mey1 which time and piece bide! Publllhed Ofenoe Coeet By: Oenett• M men anOlorlCloeedtromcont-1· ITATUl:Thepropoeedpr~ Ille kept b't the court." you examine and obtain plane, wtll be publlcly oPlfled and o.Jty Piiot October 3 4 10 Publlthed Ofenge eo..t Ing the vllldlty of UIO Bonde )let 11 categor1callly exempt .,. • peraon lntereeted In 1pectllcatlon1, end bid read In Bldg. C, Rm. 31 t. 11185 ' ' ' OaltyP"'tOc1ot>er3, 10,17, and proceedtnge rellted to punuant 10 Section 1530t the eet•t•. you mey _.... lonnat>ycellingllormtlllng EechbldthellrM\alnvtlld ThF-360 1985 T~ 1 their llPPf'ovtl. trom the prOY!elone of the upon the executor or edmln-a reoueet to the Office of Ille' for • P«10d of 45 cSavl efter 0 THEODORE ROBINS FORD U.S.A. 's # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer Modern Sales, Service, Parts, Body, Paint & Tire Oepts. Competitive Rates On Lease & Daily Rentals 20IO •• ,~., lh4., ....... . OCONNELL CHEVROLET a nYYYYYl 2121 .... , lh4,, Oestl .... I I ~ __... w Over 23 Years Serving Orange County PONTIAC Sales • Service • Leasing S,.ctal Parts UH 546-94H • TRAAS AM 546-1200 MONDAY-FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY 8:30 AM -9:00 PM • FIRE81AI) 8:30 AM -6:00 PM 10:00 AM -5:00 PM • S000 Sl[ a macpxl SUBARU SLASHES 142-0010" 140-1211 L-----------------------------------.,+~~~~--~----~------------------t------------------------------------1 • PARISICNHE • PRICES! e 0 s0{iih Wunty--®-UiJ- VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU CALIF'S :1 I LARGEST VOLKSWAGEN DEALER NEED WE SAY M ORE? Parts Open M -Sat 8 -5 30 Set 9 -4 pm Service m-Fri 7 30 • 6 pm 18711 BEACH BLVD HUNTINGTON BEACH 714/ 842-2000 SEE PIGSKIN PICKAROO IN WEDNESDAY'S DAILY PILOT Pick the Winning Team 6. YOU Could WIN $50! "' 0 CREVIER BMW 4' ~ SALES • SERVICE • LEASING """" "Where Professional Attitude Prevails" ap.cWWna In Europeen D•llvery Exc•ll•nt S.lec:tlon of .... and car•fullr pr•pered Ueed '!MW'• always in stock. 835-3171 208 W. 1st St., Santa Ana Corner of Broadway & 1st St Closed Sundays GSTERLING SAUS -SHVICE -LEASll9' -PARTS Overseas Oei111ery Specialists BMW -ROLLS ROYCE 1540 Jamboree Rd. Newport Beach 640-6444 GJIM SLEMONS IMPORTS 1101 OIMll 81. -Ntlw C•r Loc•tlon *1 0-" St. -R•••I• Dlvltlon 0 . world'I Largest Selection of 0 Mere«Jes Benz A 133-9300 .... ~. ,_ . s.ntce . ..., s-. 0 NABERS CADILLAC@ 2100 HlRIDll ILVD., COSTA IESl (714) 140-1100 (213) 111-1211 • Best Prices • Convenient Location·' •Great Location •Super Service •Courteous & Knowledgeable Sales People FOUNTAIN \/ALLEY ,.. ........ o COMMONWEAL TH VOLKSWAGEN &¥>. 'FAMILYSTORESINCE '53' -W Salee • S.rvi'Ce • Le.uinv ~ M8·0110 CN SANTA ANA 0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS INC. • BOfffvu c * LONG THM LEASES • COMmlTIVI ..URCHASE ,.ICES • HUGE INVINTOIY 0 dial MERCEDES ~ 213/714 637-2333 Next to Santa Ana Fwy (5) on Manchester/Beach Blvd. J•"' "'"~I• ·ttrr fl., . ..._ The Best Car Buys In Orange County Are At The Dealers Listed On This Page • GRANO PRIX • SUNBIRO COIMRTIBL[ • 11000 • GRANO AM We Sell ucttttlfft a macpxl -PONTIAC FERO. 2480 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mm Newport Beach 714/549-4300 LIQUIDATING 1985 MODELS UNDO N(Y CIRCIMSTAHCES WE ~L NOT BE UNDERSOLD! ·-- SUBARU zud' Hlrbor Blvd. Costa Mesa Newport Btadl 714/54t-4300 0 BILL YATES VILllWllEI • PlllllE • PlllllT • lllTlll SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE 12112 Ville 1114, 111 .1111 G1,1stra11 411-4111 111·4'00 G ORANGE COAST JEEP /RENAULT # 1 /1 Th W11t For #1r1 lH, Siiis llf I Yun 11 0[fln2e. SALES coa'"St. sERv1ce H U MA~-I LVD • LEASING · M~ • ACCESSORIES DEPT G UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE HONDA 2880 Harbor Blvd. Coat• Meu 540-0713 3 Blocks So. of 405 Fwy. 808 LONGPR• PONTIAC Oran~ County's Ofdest & ~rgest PonUac Duler'9hfp at INch INd .• ht C..rden GtO\lllt ,~ 111• nz ... •1 111•1..._z_ We perform all Pont&e< w.nancy wortc, reoardlea of wMre )IOI.I Of191nally P"tCNled )'OUt ur. _.. llOlm"Y W.. ... UllT& .... ,, ... .......... llllllllilllliilf~g•· ... mrfllilrm'i'a~~c~,•n ...... , .. z•slll•s•t•r•z•n~t~s•'._. ................ , •••••••• _. ______________ ~~- Eight area Lions Clubs ore sponsoring their third annual Orange Coast Oktoberfest this week- end./ A3 California San Diego Mayor Roger Hedgecock has been convicted of conspiracy and perjury for Illegally financing of his 1983 elec- tlon./ A8 The ACLU has sued to block state funding of the Holocaust Museum./ A4 Nation Yul Brynner, who gave a record 4,625 stage per- formances as the king In "The King and I," Is dead. /A5 World Leon Kllnghoffer, kllled by the hijackers of the Achllle Lauro. was a wheelchair-bound stroke victim./ Al Boating Hobie Alter has In- troduced the new Hoble-17, a high-tech catrlg designed for both racing and crulslng./81 Sports The Dodgers take a 1-0 lead In the National League Championship Serles with 4-1 win over St. Louls./C1 Entertainment A TV movie about the "Son of Sam" murders focuses more on pollce work than the grisly slay- lngs./83 INDEX Boating B1 Bridge B4 Butletln Board A3 Business BS-6 Classified CS-7 Comics B4 Crosswo rd C7 Death Notices C4 Entertainment B2-3 Horoscope C7 Ann Landers B2 Opinion A8-9 Paparazzi B 1 Pollce Log A3 Publlc Notices C4, 8 Sports C1-4 Televlson B2 Weather A2 $28million intozicfund mishandled? Prvm 1taff &M wire repertl f ederal environmental official• have accused the state of improperly administerina mOT"e than S28 million earmarked to clean up three bazard. ou1 waste dump&. In their repon releated Wednet- day. federal audit.on ~mmended that the Environmental Protection Atmcy revoke California'• authority to band out federal tuodl to j)rivaa.e cleanup oompan.ia without fint ot>-- tainina federal ~val local EPA oftkia11 have until Nov. 8 to dedde wbecher to f'ollow the report'• recommcndatiooa. Federal inv~ton tttonaly criti· ..cl.zed the 1tate Thllic Suliltancet Control Oivi1Joo, dac:ribhlt it u bdq in diunay. and noted that (Pleue .. W MTS/ il) •---- TOllOMOW: Serving Newport leach, Cotta Meta, Huntington Btach, lrvlne, Lagun1 Beach, Fountltn Vlfle1 ind South Orange Count1 C AL If ORNIA , •L 1~·,1' .\. " • 'ti! 1. •, ·~)'o· 2: CENT S e ID e 1cers eatt Autopsy fails to tell why boy died Procedure opposed by the parents dn re lig~ous grounds By STEVE MARBLE OI IM o.llr ..... 8i.fl An autopsy performed Wednesday on the body of a 4-ycar-old Irvine boy against the wishes ofhis parents failed to reveal what caused the death of the youn~ter. who was found submerged in a bathtub last week. The autopsy was conducted im- mediately after a Supenor Court judge denied a motion filed by Bruce and Rawlcne Strauss to block the pro.ccdurc based on religious grounds. The Irvine couple, both Onhodox Jews, said the autopsy would amount to the "mut1latton" of their son's body. Judge Richard Beacom said he has great sympathy for the parents of Mark Strauss but noted that sl3te law provides for autopsies in case~ an which death is not by natural cau~ The Irvi ne couple were not present at the late-morning hearing rn Santa Ana. Coroner's deputies who waited three days to perform the autopsy said they are not sure what caused the boy's death. Tox1colog1cal tests must be performed. they said, and that procedure could take up to sax weeks. The boy's body. however, was released Wednesday into the custody ofh1s parents. The youn~ter was found early Friday evening, face-up under the water in a bathtub. police in Irvine said. The child died Sunday at Ch1ldrcn·s Hospital in Orange SJt. Dack Bowman said there 1s no ind1catton of foul play Police said 1t as f Ple&R eee AUTOPSY I A2l Three held in check forgeries By ROBERT BARKE R Of .. o.llt .......... Police have arrested three out-of- town men for allegedly stealing blank checks in Los Angeles County, forg- ing signatures and cashing the checks at three Huntington Beach financial institutions, officials said today. They were arrested Wednesday after appeanng at the banking wtn- dows for the third day in a row at the H untington Harbour Bank of Amcn- ca branch, according to police spokeswoman JoAonc Bergstrom. Bergstrom said the three men also are suspected of cashing stolen chcc_ks at Mercury Savan'5 & Loan Associa- tion and Califom1a Federal, both on Edinaer A venue. The suspects allegedly stoic per- (Pleue eee TllR.EE/ A2) Junior firefighter Newport Beach fl.reflahter Gary Beeler and Capt. T om Arnold help 6-year-olCl Jon Paul Bell into hla fl.re 1ear at Harbor View School ln Coronla del Mar. The atudent.a &athered with fire offtclaltl Weclneeday u part of the obeenance of Ftre PreTentlon Week. Deparfme nt investigating incident that s te mmed from July 4 traffic stop By SUSAN HOWLETI °' .. .,..,._ ..... Two claims tot.altos $30 m1lhon w~ fi led against the etty of Newport Beach on Wednesday by a Balboa b land motorist and his passenger, who contend they were .. savagely" bcattn on the Fourth of July by two police officers. Newport Beach officer Joe Thrasher and an officer 1dcnt1fied as Mark Foster were named in the $20 million claim filed by 53-ycar-old Lee Gale and an the com~nion claim by Sherry Brazil. which seeks SI O million. Mayor Ph1hp Maurer and the six City Counetl members were also named an the claJm. However. Newport Beach police spokesman Trent Harris said there is no one named Mart Foster cm ployed at the Newport Beach Police Depart- ment. The claJm probably refers to an incident on July 4 1ovolV1ng officers Mark Fisher and J~ Thrasher, he said. Gale claims that two officcn wrenched his back when they pulled him from his car 1n a Balboa Island aJle), sprayed him wtth Mace. and (Pleaee eee CLADl8/ A2) Transit panel halts greenery for toad work ·People dying on ---roads a nd we· r e planttng trees· By PHJL SNEIDERMAN OlhOllllt ........ Fa vonng asphalt o"er green en. the California Transportatio n (om- m1ss1on dela,cd about S60 million m highway land~p1ng proJt"l t~ to per- mit other road improvement\ to proceed. The dec1s1on. made dunng a meet- ing of the commission Thursd•n an Irvine. Wlll result in at least a fi,e.,ear delay for about S 16 million v.onh of h1ghwa)' landscaping projects an Or- ange County. The funds a.re C).pected to remain m Orange County for road improvements. State transpor1a t1on ro m-• m1ss1oners had earlier planned about S90 million worth of h1ghwa) land- scaping projects to be completed 0' er the next five Years But the comm1ss1on 1s now facing the loss of about S650 million 1n federal funding that 11 had expected to use forCahfom1a's five-y~r h1ghwa)' improvement plan The missing fed- eral mone) fo~ the commission to consider landscaping dela)S to help assure funds are available tor other road projecb C'omm1ss1oners opted for haghwa.., safety projects over beaut1fica11on ··v. e ha' e people dying on our roads and we·re planung trees·· said Joe Le''. "ace chairman of the commission Orange Count)' Supervisor Bruce Nestande. who chairs the state com- m1ss1on . heard no ob3ect1ons 1n the Irvine Mamon meeting room when he asked. "Is therl" an)' bod~ out there who·d rather ha"e landscaping than roads·· The comm1ss1on dec-tdcd to dcla) about S60 million worth of land- scaping proJeCl\ from the S90 million earmarked tor landscaping m tht' rive-~ear plan The S31l million remaining 1n the landscaping tiudget includes projects the st.ate 1\ legalh required to beau11f, Onl' '>uch pro3ec1 1s the < cntun Frt'l.·v.a' in Los .\ngcles count)' Land\l.ap1ngon that freeway 1c; supulatt'd in J 1.ou n order But comm1,,1oners said future h1ghwa\ landscaping spending should be halted for an 1ndefin1te penod. C\\'.'ept an special instances ~uch as legal requirements. Roben Remen. deput)' d1rtttor of the comm1ss1on. toda)' said that landscaping pro1ects a.re not being dropped but a.re being delayed unul add1uonal funds are a"a.tlablc He said the S I b m1lhoo wonh of Orange Coun1~ pro1ecb in'olved an the comm1 ss1on-... dccmon are now <>eheduled to be delayed unul the I 9Q()..Q I fisc~I ~car Park purchase needs 'tuning' Mesa, county in unoffi c ia l agreement on city purchase of Fa irview Park By TONY SAA VEDR.A °' .. .,.., ......... Negotiations by the city of Cost.a Mesa to purchase t he county-owned Fairview Rqjonal Park site are winding up, with unofficial agree- ments reached on the major road- blocks, officials said. The county EnvU"onmcntal Man- agcmrn1 Agency wtll update the Board of Supervisors on Oct. 22 and ask fOF-penntsst0n ·to·contmut' taiks regarding the pnstine bluff area sought by the city for a wtldcmess park. If allowed. negotiators would "fine tune" the proposed purchase agree- ment before bnngini It back to the board. and prcsenung it to the Costa Mesa Caty Council as well as to state propeny management officials, said Dave Rosso. count) park planner For more than 'i1x months. the c1t\ has been negotiating to bu' the wetlands and bluffs west of Estancia High SchOQI to preHnl the count) from bu1ld1hg a large park. featunng an 18-holc golf course. a campgro und W1th up to 110 hookups for Tr'C· rcat1onal vehicles and ltghtcd softball fields. Ne1&hbonng residents. as well as cuy officials. en ... 1s1on a mo"" sub- dued, w1ldeme'is-onented park preserving most of the 260 acres that have remained relat1 veh untouched ovrr thr centunes · Costa Mesa alrcad) owns 28 acres of tbr valuable land and 1s hop1oi to bu) another 160 acres in an agrtt- ment that would cost the cit) about S6 J m1lhon. Rosso said He explained the Cit) would pick up the remaining S2.3 milhon 1n payments o wed to the state for the propeny.._ and re1mbu~ 1be county roughly :>4 m1lhon .i\s pan of the prehmin8J') contract. (Pl-.-aee PAllK/A2) 'Intelligent' computer can out-diagnose the doctors .......................... Psycholo tst at CM 's Fairview stat e hospit al uses system to assi st in p-afien ts ·treatm ent It's unlikely that peucnt.s suffenna ftom an unknown illness wouJd tum to a computer rather than a doctor for help. But when the docton are not sure of a remedy to preteribe. where do they tum '! A clinical psycholotist at Fairview state h()IPltal an Costa Mesa as devdopina a pouible answer -• oomP-Uter l)'ltem that pncoces ••anificial intcllileooe." Cons1der th( follOWllli SC't'nano doctors at a hospital for the mentally ill art tryina to tr-eat a youlli man who continually hits has head and tentcbes v1c1ousl) at bis face So SCVeft IS h11 sclf ... buK tbat the bospstaJ staff rcst.ratns him Wllh ties and requ1m him to wear a ~lmet to prevent further U\JUT)' Meanwhile. physicians and psy-chok>alsu art " 1 lou to cbqn~ t~ condition and a possib~ remedy. and the pitient's mental cbsab1lity pre- vents tum ftom dctcrib11li the 1ym~ toms accurately. ROBERT HYNDMAN Fo cus ON THf NEws ttonal l't9Ctlon., la the condition tied to b11 l)by&acal or nuuinona1 awe? W1 th thousands of variables to deal with. chrucal psycbol~t velopcd a checklist of Dr • .Jlm Oudaer.aacl coaa,.tar wlda artUlala1 laWU, I I WbiJe no loneer in the realm of adcnce 6ction aniftdal ina.elbtcnce ii ltill in its intlncy u tdcntists and technical upet'U IU'ive to apply the powen of the computer lO ovnrome uta'a~ ls h11 condtt1on cauted by en- vironmental facton? 1$ 1t an emo- dealina Wltb the petiftt'• CODdidoL They ooms*te the pedmt'a ~ and measure t.hoee c::b.ancterilOc ap.i.nst poeaablc tn:18tmeftU. (Pl•11 .. COMPO ID/Al) • "" . U OrMge Cout DAILY PtlOT!Thunday, October 10, 1985 Indians lose land claims lawsuit PlEJUlE, S.D. (AP) -Indians rddq thouancb of acm or land they •Y their ancaton sold unwill-i!illY can't rep.in il in coun. but CollilflU lbould rt~ them for the lost l&.Dd. a fcdera.I · has ruled. Fedeta.I officials~ ep1 authority to t.rulfer tribal land to O'Wftenhip by individual Indians m~ than 60 yean qo, even if the Indiana d1dn't uk for title, U.S. District Judge Donald Porter of Pierre ruled Wednetday. Bccau1e the forced U'ansfer of the land wu legal under the 1906 Bum Act paucd by Conareu, Indians now cannot rqain the land parttls that were eventually lost by their ancestors. PorteT laid. However. lhe aovemment's 1.CtJOD to force Indians lO take individual ownership of the land wa$ ··revel· table," so Co~ should pay the heirs of the onajnaJ Indian owners, thejud&esaid. "Payment would relieve thousands of innocent people who own the land from further worry and lcpl expenses. "Congressional act1on is the only complete solution to tlus dispute, and 1t should be delayed no lonaer." Porter wrote in a decision deahna with one ofabout 40 land-claim suits filed in South Dakota. Rat>id City lawyer Ramon Roub1deaux, who represents Indians in about JS such ca1es. said Porter's ruli111, wdl be appealed to the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeala, which has already been asked to overturn a similar decision by a federal Judge in Rapid City ''It will probably go on the United Suuc Supreme Court, regardless of who win~ in the court of appeals': PARK PURCHASE WINDING UP .•. homAl abc»lt 60 acres of grassland &10114 the Santa Ana River would be retained for a Oood control project by the Army CorpsofEnsincen. Rosso said ~ corps is planning to widen the nvcr. Additionally, another I 0 acres may be reserved for the state Coast.al Con1ervancy u a harbor for animals and plant life displaced by the development of other wetlands. The county purchased the state surplus property in 1973, stipulating that the land be used as a regional perk. Consequently, the park require- ment would be passed on to Costa Mesa, and the sale would have to be approved by the state General Ser- Vl<:es Aaency. As a sip of aood faith to the state. park p1anncn will recommend to supcrviton this month that walking trails, paved parkina spaces and perhaps an information booth be built at the Fairview site, Rosso said. 0 Wejust want lO provide a.ssuran~ a.nd demonstrate to the state that we are in a position to develop the park," be said. The county is well past the I 0-ycar state deadline to build the park. Financial demands delayed the pro- ject and forced the county to scrap plans for a wilderness park rn favor of a money-making recreational facility that would be self-supporting. Costa Mesa is hoping to revive the original plan, and a city parlc commit- tee has explored such ideas as building an archaeological museum on the site as well as a new gym- nasium. Keith Van Holt. city Leisure Ser- vices director, said once the sale is complete, the nine-member commit- tee would convene to discuss how the park should be built. THREE HELD IN CHECK FORGERIES •.• From Al sonal checks from a Glendale doctor and a Santa Monica couple. Berastrom said. They then were able to discover depositors' bank account numbers and samples of their signa- tures at the three bankmg institu- tions. Trying to escape suspicion. they alleecdJy made the checks payable to the per_10n who had an account at the bank. forging the names of the people from whom they stole the checks. They allegedly deposited some of the money from the phony checks into lhe accounts and cashed and pocketed the remainder, Bcrptrom said. The three men -identified u Calvin Carter, 24. of lnaJewood; Jea.rld West. 29, of Los Angeles, and Steven Brown, 24. JnaJewood -put about $400 in the account of a Huntington Harbour depositor at the Bank of America branch without bis knowledge, Bergstrom said. The suspects, held on SI 0,000 bail each in Huntington Beach jail on suspicion of forgery, arc believed to have rca:ived at least $2,000 in the alleged c heck-cashing caper, Berg.,trom said. The men allegedly came to Bank of America Monday and Tuesday to transact their business, Bergstrom said. Bank officials became suspicious and c~lled the 9 J I emerg- ency line when the men allegedly returned again Wednesday shortly after 2 p.m. Can.er and West were arrested as they were leaving the bank at Ad- m1ralty and Pacific Coast Highway. Brown was apprehended while lying in the back scat of a 1969 Rambler, apparently trying to hide from poltce, Bergstrom said. AUTOPSY FAILS TO CLEAR DEATH ••.. homAl possible that the boy. who had been running a slight fever, .,ufTered a seizure. While responding to the Strauss rcsidenoe, Orange County para- medics gave the boy's mother instruc- tion by telephone on how to perform cardio-pulm onary resusc1 tat1on. police said. McdJcs toolc over CPR when the) arrived and transponed the young- stcr to Tustm Community Hospital. He was later transferred to Children's Hospital where he died. The parents obtained a temporary court order Sunday blocking an autopsy. Superior Court Judge Leonard Goldstein agreed to post- pone the autopsy until Wednesday's hearing. Assist.ant County Counsel Arthur Wahlstedt, who represents co unty aaencies such as the coroner's office. said he believes it was the first time an Orange County judge h.as ruled on whether a person has the nght to prevent an autopsy based o n religious belie( Rabbi Paul Dubin of the Jewtsh Federation Council in Los Angeles told the Associated Press not all branches of Judiasm completely op- pose autopsies, but ·some of the more conservative ones do. ,) £<;?MPUTER CAN DIAGNOSE ••. 1'at process. however, 1s patnst.ak-ingl~long and 1s far from foolproof. ~ut a computer that processes the hundreds of thousands of possibilities and points out the prot>- able causes could do the worlc in a fraction of the time the doctors require. and more efficiently. When fed the profile information on the mentally disabled young man, Lhe computer "suggests" that the doctors take a closer look at the patient's physical cond1t1on specifically. a suspected allergy. And indeed, the young man had been suffering from an allergy. But because of his mental handicaps, he didn't know better than 10 try to scratch at his face or punch his head to rid himself of the discomfon. When the doctors treat the allergy. the patient stops abusmg himself. Such a sophisticated computer system has been available in recent years. And. according to Dr Jim Wagner. h1!. system a t Fairview has been helpmg with the diagnosis and treatment of hi!. own pattents. Wagner's c.omputcr, however. re- cently has been improved to take the process a few steps fun her. Not only does its sort through the thousands of steps to help diagnose a pattent's condition. It then uses the information as the basis to prescribe treatment. It also asks the clan1cal psychol- ogists a senes of questions when they are having difficulty pinpointing the cause of a patient's illness. In so doing, the computer and the operator work together as a team, posing questions to each other and corrcct- tng each other's mist.akcs. A computer capable of such tasks 1s known as an artificial 1ntelligcnce system. Althoua,h there 1s disagreement on how the term should properly be defined, Wagner believes a system Just Call 642-6086 o:i:: .. 0•1'9ftt.d ....,.,,.....,, II 'fOJ 00 -.. "°"' ~ "' •JO. m Cllll ....,,. 7 11 "' "that can grow and chansc and shape itself to your own domain·· qualifies as an an1ficiaJ intelligence system. To understand the con~pt behind art1fic1al intelligence. consider the advantages ofa computer system that contains the sum tot.al of all the expert knowledge 1n a particular field. Like a library of technical infor- mation. the computer would store m its database the specific practices and det.aJls used by the pre-eminent experts and apply them o bjectively, without the biases of individuals. "The system would be no belier than the sum of our knowledge, but 1t 1s the sum of our knowledge where we arc not. It's the most valuable tool available to us today." said Gardner. who presented the rt'sults of his research in August at the annual meeting of the Amencan Psychologi- cal Assoc1at1on. Today. as he works toward 1mprov- '"$ the system. Gardner is using its ab1httes to help with the treatment of his own 60 patients at Fa1rv1ew. lnttially, Gardner wanted to use a compute r to save time. The process of compiling a personality profile on a patient and checking those charac- tensttcs against a list of possible treatments 1s one with which all clinical psychologists must labor But because such an assessment is a common procedure, Gardner de- veloped a computer program that would do the work fo r him. That initial step. taken five years ago. reduced a four-hour chore down to a 15-minute task. "I looked at what I was doing and saw that the process could be auto- mated And indeed 1t could," he said. With the help of computer pro- grammer Anne Breuer o Newport Beach. Gardner refined the system further to identify possible mislalces or altematlvt"s sho uld the initial diagnosis fail. "That step, m my mind, took the system into the field of artificial mtelligence," Gardner said. "Just like our own lcamjng process. the system can learn and ultimately changes its strategies based on outcome." When matched against a team of physicians and clinical psychologists. Gardner's system consiste ntly outperformed a team of specialists and has amved at correct diagnoses 90 percent of the time tl was fed 1nfonnat1on on patients sufTenng from such behavioral problems as aggression, self-abuse and destruc- tiveness. Further refinements being de- veloped will allow the system 10 improve its validity and cred1b1ltty through a senes of checks and cross- refcrences built into the system. "What we're doing is designing the rational, cognttive pan of the human brain. But this 1s not j ust more efficient. it's belier," Gardner said. "It's better because 1t takes every- thing into cons1derat1on. It finds causes and helps us eliminate them." Gardner is wo rking with Anne Breuer 1n developing similar systems for other mental health facilities across the country. As part of that assoc1at1on. Breuer's company, Planet Press Enterpnses of Newpon Beach. has been providing him wtth the computer equipment while Fair- view has been supporting his research t'fforts. While he sees a growing tendency for computers to take over human tasks. Gardner said that dec1s1on makmg will ultimately be left to the personal knowledge and intu1t1on of the human experts. "Ideally. the computer provides 1nfonnat1on and the people make the decisions," he said. "lt'sao ajd . It wtll never replace us. It works because you can't put a whole univcnity into one room." What do you like about the Dall y Pilot'! Wbal don't you llkt" Call the number al left aad your meHalt •Ill be recorded, tr1D1t'rlbed and delivered to Ute appropriate editor. Tbc aamc %4 -ltoar aatweriag service may be used to rttord letters to the ed itor on any topic. Coatrtb•Cors to our Ltttcr1 column mu1t Include their name and ttltpltonf' number for vcrlflcallon. No circulation cal11, pleuc Tell us wlliat't on yon mJod. Clrculatlon 714/M2-4m ca..effled edvertlelng 714/M2-J111 All other depertment• 142-4121 MAJN OfftCE 330 w..i 8-y St Cot1.a MeM CA M..i --lie>• t&te> CO.t• U... CA "6H ,.,,,, ,_ ~ .. Dlt ....., ~ ""'.....," ....,.. • ,,. ....... '°" ..,,. .. 1 I Ill Cllll .,..,... 'rank Zlnl EdHor Roeemetj Churchmen COnlrOller Cooyngl>I t983 o.-. C:O.tt Pv~ Comp.tny Ne ._ tlOl'IM Qllllk>ne lt()!Otlal "'811• O' eo..n ... -• ,,.,..,, me)' tie •90'00..C.O ..ttr.ou1 ~·"' - -ti '°'1Y''Ol't - tO a.Ill. .0 ~ OflO'( .,. .......... c•n•••r ~ ... , ..... .... =:-~ .... l.llWl"9 ........ r Robert L Centrell Pr0due11on MitnaQfr Oonefd L. Wllllem1 Circulstio11 M11nege' Peffy alnln• ClaH1fled Olrec10< ,. S«<'"O c .... l>Otlf~ r>•"l •• Cotl• ...... C.~fOflWI tllPS tU ·8001 ,_.tiw,,r>t<W' ov u,..., SS 2~ man!,,,., t>v ""'' $7 00 mont•ll" , Sunny and warm for weekend Ory air on the hte49 of a atOfm 1Yttem moving ... 1 wtH bring .unenlne to Southern Ctllttomla Frtday with 4aytlme ,,,.,cury i.v.lt nudolna the ~,... mark dut1ng the WMktnd, t0<ecuter• -.. rci The Natlonal w .. tn. Service Mid the final remnantt of an Alukan 1torm 1yatem h9d moved Into Ariz.one today INvfng ci..r Mclee with wtnd1 ~·~ to dlmlnlen In the mountain• and "-ti by daybr..X Friday F0t.eattera aald ulee wtll be cieer tonight. Along the Orange Cout there wtll be local gutty north to northeut wlnd1 In north portion• tonight. Mottly clur tonight and Friday. Warme< daya with hlgha 70 to 78 Friday. Lowa tonight ~~~ ; U.S. Temps lMVeGM 17 51 ·-~~ ,,llONTI 1.m .. ~ 13 14 l OUle.tlle 71 5a w111m -Col<I..,... HI Lo ~ 12 12 Alt>eny 11 5t Mllml.._,, 16 ,, ='<1'19 75 51 M..._. .. '2 42 Snow11s A1"' l'~rr .. s Snow Oee1u<1eo ...,.. S11to0n11v &y 63 31 Mpi...&tP-.;1 ,. 2t ~-WM lh .. S.W• ..OA• U !J 0.o• Of (;()tNfl9'Ct l\nclllotl09 .. 31 ~ 71 Ill Allenta 71 51 ...... °""'""' 63 t6 Atlwllle CllY 72 eo H9wYOl1t 74 eo Calif. Tempe SlnteCNI .. 42 Auelln 86 14 NOtfollc, Va 15 57 ~ ..... , . ... 114111trn«• 71 M Oktellol>ll Clly 74 41 lent• MOftl09 .. M ............... 82 IH °"*'-42 36 ;:r.. iow. tot 24 ,,_.. 9f>dlng •15 •Ill r.,_v~ 3f 24 811r!Weil J.4 25 ONndo .. 73 w1llllld 81 50 Torr... 71 65 ... 48 21 PM .._.,.. 76 55 Eur•• eo 41 eo..on 12 II P!loenl• 65 " frew\O 7t 41 Surf Report 8u"8lo oe ff Plll-=r.: 76 54 ~., 58 52 c..,., 43 n Porll ,Me .. 51 Loe Angele9 72 51 Chan..ton.8 C 11 72 Porllend. Of 81 41 OaklMd 72 51 t.OCATIC* ICD IHAN ChMteelon,W V 81 57 Pr~ 73 81 PMOAotJie9 72 40 =leldl 1-3 .... CMtlone.NC n 53 ="City n 53 "9d lllufl 68 51 .~ t-3 , ... ~ S3 30 37 20 ~City 10 .. 40tllsn...~ t4 ,.., ~ 62 42 Ael1o 43 21 a.cr-10 10 60 22nd8"91.~ ·I·, poor Clnclnn•ll n 58 Richmond 71 52 swin. 12 44 a.n-w.ooe 2-4 poor ~ano 77 5e SI LOY .. 79 14 San Diego 70 II Laouna 8Mol'I 1...) poor Cotumbue.Otl n S4 SI Pel• T11tnp• .. 70 SanF.....a-71 64 Sin Clemen!• 1-2 poor Concotd,N H 7 t 55 Siii Lake Clly 48 )I Sent• Btttlw• 117 47 -*"11·66 OeiM-FI WOtill ... 70 !Ian Antonto 86 75 81oe1t1on 68 411 a.-direction aovtll 0rt1on 77 5e Sen .>u.n PR 86 14 High. low lot 24 110ure ending el 5 11 m Oenwr 31 30 S..1119 o..~ 47 37 67 •7 a.rec-eo 55 Sllf-1 ee .. 91ea.. OelfOll .. S4 Spoil-45 32 8lehop Oulutll 37 28 SVtaOl.IM 72 5e 8lylhe E!Puo 117 55 Topeka 41 31 C.1111n41 F "'11enllt 41 21 Tuc:eo<! ... 63 Mwye.tlle FatOO 35 23 TulM eo 55 MontoW FllQetall 5a 37 WMhlllQlon 76 sa Moni.r.y GrlllO Rep6cj• 51 50 Wlc:Nte SS 40 M1 Wiiton Gr•tF• )3 " Wik-a. .. 72 41 ,....,... Hartford 74 1541 tielen• 38 22 ~8-:fl Ontario Honolulu 17 17 Enended Pelm 8pt!ngt Hou.ton I() 73 PeMdeM ~ 78 57 ..,_....,. J«*_. ..... " 57 F61f S.turdey lh<ough Moncley ea-8an 8"nltdlno J----81 7t OIC>I -"""' end ~· Sen Oa!wlel M-. 51 43 Wll'llllno -1119 -end. 72 Sen ,io.. Kan-City 50 39 10 65. Lowt In the 609 end ~ eo., Senll Ana CLAIMS ALLEGE BEATING •.. From Al beat him on the back and head wtth balons until he was "bleeding profusely." Brazil said she was struck in the face by one of the officers, resulting in a bloody nose. Gale alleges in the claim that a blood sample was taken from him against his will a t Hoag MemoriaJ HospitaJ · later in the evening. A similiar multimillion dollar claim was filed late last month on behalf of two men who allege that blood was forcibly withdrawn from them b)'. Newport Beach police officers to sec 1f t.pey were driving drunk. According to the police repon. the officers attempted 10 pull Gale's car over at Manne Avenue. Gale alleged- ly refused to stop his c.ar immediately. and drove into an alley where h\: later stopped, Harris said. Harris said the o fficers stopped Gale's vehicle because they suspected Gale of driving while under the influence of alcohol. "They detected the odor of alcohol and asked them (GaJe and Brazil) to Cltlt the vehicle," Hams said. When Gale refused and was "playing the game ofnot wanting to get out of the car," the officers pulled him from the automobile and he became "com- bative" and allegedly struck Fisher 50 32 Tides 50 38 n eo ,. 10 TOOAY .. 411 ~!Ow 1;22pm 20 77 57 8-ICI lllQh t:24 pm 52 86 48 5e 35 '-'AY 78 M Arte IOw ':M•m 0 I eo ., ~:'ow 8'.20LITI 5 1 76 56 2:02pm 13 90 57 Second "toll "°211m 57 12 56 74 65 &#I ..Ct \Odey et 8 25 pm., t1-Fncs.y 71 S4 •I 6.56 • "' end ""' llOlill et 8.24 p "' 75 57 Moon .... today ., 4:44 p"' . ,..... 71 41 Frld9>1 •I 3 se 1.m .. ano .... ~ 111 75 58 5.1811.m. several times, Hams said. Harris said Lhe incident is under mvcstigatton by the police dcpan· ment. Brazil's claim seeks $2 million for "pain and sufferinj." $2 million for "shame and humiliation," SI ·mtlhon for false arrest and violation of her constitutional rights. and SS million for punitive dam~s. according to Netvport Beach Ctty Oerlt Wanda Rawo. · GaJe's claim seeks S5 m1lhon for medical damages, SS million for violation of bis constitutional rights. and $10 milljon jn punitive damages. Raggio said. WASTE DUMP FUND MISHANDLED? .•. From Al crucial documents were "located in different offices. under desks, in files and in a room under lock and key." The audit said the st.ate mishandled S28.S million in cleanup contracts for three of California's most hazardous ""aste dumps: the Stringfellow Acid P11s near Riverside. McColl ~fin~ dump in Fullerton and the Purity 011 Co. site near Fresno. not required. The auditors urged that $2 million m federal payments due the st.ate be held up or denied beuusc of im- proper contracting procedures that led to excessive costs. "The st.ate routinely did not nego. ua1c for lower costs and had Po<>r record kcepmg." said Keith Takata, the regional EPA Superf'Und chief, who called the report ''.very negative." The EPA report reviewed 11 con- tracts awarded by the st.ate for the three sites between March 1983 and August 1984. Toxic wastewater froll'I the Stnngfcllow site is expected to be sent by pipeline ~nning later this year for treatment in Huntington Beach before being discharged rnto local Tainted milk find went unreported- ocean waters. EPA investigators cited the state for ignoring competitive bidding for contracts at the three sttes and for failing to negotiate the lowest possible pnce when competitive bidding was LOS ANGELES (AP) -Raw milk con tam mg salmonella bacteria sat o n store shelves for fi ve days after a county laboratory discovered the contam1nauon because the lab failed to inform the state, a st.ate official says. The county lab found traces of the bactena tn Alta-Dena certified raw milk sold under the Stueve label on Sept. 27. Tina Taggart, spokeswoman for the state Department of food and Agriculture. said Wednesday. The state o nly found the salmonella last Wednesday after con- ducting its own lab tests. THE SPORTING HOUSE "Where Class Doesn 't Cost" 3601 Jamboree Rd. Newport Beach 714-752-0565 ~. t