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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-10-14 - Orange Coast Pilot.... TOMOllROW: WARM FOlllCASTI ON A2 Serving Ntwpof1 Be1ch, Cott•Mtu, Huntington Beach. lrvlnt , L1gun1 Beach, Fount1ln Valley and South OrengeCounty CM Freeway tO get car pool lanes County's tra n Sffboard claim s p roject should ease traffic congestio-n on route mously today 10 create a new car pool express lane in each d1rect1 on along the 55 Freeway fo r a 90 da> lnal pcnod -probably beginning about Dec. I . hours a day, seven days per week S1milarcar pool Cllpress lanes along the Anes1a Freeway in Los Angeles County are credited with saving all motonsts using the freeway about 15 minutes in dnving ti me dunng peak penods while car poolers save substantially more. the seven-mem- ber transportation panel was advised By JEFF ADLER CM._OllltNM ..... Four types of new si~s soon will be aoing up along a 12-mtle stretch of the Costa Mesa Freeway and a dis- Coast A Lagunan moves from dealing with "Dynasty" to a "Mickey Mouse Job - and he loves It./ A3 Orange County's pro- Arab groups are dis- turbed after their leader was killed In a bomb blast./A3 California Inner-city gangs are traveling to affluent Los Angeles communities to commit crimes./ A4 Nation Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger argued against forcing down the plane carrying the accused Palestinian hijackers./ A5 The$10 billion "Super- fund" legislation to rid the landscape of toxic waste dumps faces a tough fight.I A5 World Moslem extremists threaten to klll three kid- napped Russian diplomats and demolish the Soviet Embassy .• / A4 Two Americans have won the 1985 Nobel Prize In medicine./ A4 Sports Rams keep right on roll- ing, they're 6-0 and three up on 49ers./81 Dodgers' edge disap- pears In St. Louis, In a big way./81 Entertainment What's the matter with Monday Night Football? One critic says there are too many jocks In the booth./ Al INDEX tinct1 ve, yellow double line wtll be used to mark new car pool freeway lanes along the heavily traveled route. The Orange Col,\nty Transpor- tation Comm1ss1on voted unani- Caddie dealer asking delay Wa nts to postpone CM expa nsion bid to m eet opponents By TONY SAAVEDRA Of "'-Deltr ........... A proposal to expand a Costa Mesa Cadillac dealership onto propeny now occupied by three homes will most likely be postponed tonight by the City Pl anning Commission, of- ficials said. Representatives for Nabers Cadillac have asked the panel, which meets at 6:30 at Costa Mesa City Hall. for an extension so they can meet with opposing residents. said city planner Reba Touw. The dealership. at 2600 Harbor Blvd., as asking the clly to rezone four lots aloof Princeton Drive from residentia to commercial. Most of the property. at the entrance to the Colleje Park tract, would be used to display used can as well as for surplus parking. One comer lot, frontJng Harbor Boulevard.. was cleared about I 0 (Pleue .ee D&ALltJl/A2) The new commuter express lanes, which will be reserved for cars. buses or vans carrying two or more people. will run between the San Diego and the R1vers1de frecwars The lanes will be open to Qualifying vehicles 24 The surfln 's fine "Once again we'll be able to dnve 55 on the 55.'' said Supervisor Ralph A llCbt breese o.er Newport Barbor wu juat enoqh to let tbJa wind •urfer cool off a bit. Tbe wind. will be warmer today u a Santa Ana condition arrl•ea. Newport police chief Gross says he'll hangup his star By SUSAN HOWLETT Of lMDeltJ ......... After eight years w1th the Newpon Beach Police Dcpanment. Chief Charles E. "Pete" G ross has decided to leave the command of the coastal city's law enforcement agency. Gross, 58, said he will retire effective July I, 1986. "The depanment w1ll miss him and the numerous programs he's 1n1t1ated since being here," said Newpon Beach police spokesman Trent Hams, "Those pravams have resulted in significant cn me reduc- tion in the city ... Before he came 10 Newpon Aug. 17. 1977, Gross served 28 years with the Los Angeles Police Dcpan ment. He left there as deputy chief. Bureau ofSpecial Invest igations. Hams said. Gross pushed the Neighborhood Watch program in the cit~ and implemented the Substance .<\buse Program. a d1,,,ers1on pravam fo r first-time alcohol and man1uana of- fenders. Ham s said. He also staned 1he city's Environmental Services Agency. which helps communit1y agencies 1n cleanup efforts. But Gross has perhaps become more v1sable as a res ult of the h1gh l) publicized battle between Harbor Municipal Court Judge Russell Bos- trom and the Newpon Beach Police Department over a S 10 million mari1uana case . Bostrom d1sm1s-;cd charges J ul~ 22 1n the drug seizure after ruling police conducted an 11leg.al search of the sailboat where five tons ofrnanJuana were found. The man1u ana ca~ resulted in a grand JUT) 1nvest1g.a1 1on 1nggered b) Bostrom ·s allegations that police ma) ha ve lied and tned to obstrucljust1ce dunng court heanngs on the case. The Jul) JO arrest of grand theft suspect Luis Gamboa sparked another duel between the Judge and the police depanmenl. Bostrom 'ia1d police acted against his orders w-hen the) held Gamboa for three hours after he was taken in to custod)' Bostrom ordered them to book Gam- boa and release hi m 1mmed1atel) But Bostrom ended the feud late last month when he said that he no longer belie ved that the police depan- (Pleue eee l'fEWPORT I A2) Clark. an()( TC member 10 had.mg the project "It\ one of 1he most 1mporun1 and potenuall) most pos111ve transponatton del 1~1on\ we've made for man) years ·· OCTC members voted tu lreatc: c1 fou n h travel lane in each d1rec11on un the crowded freewa) b) eltm1na1tng the center median and restnping the freeway lo include the carpool eApres<; lane The $450.000 COSl or res1np1ng the freewa) and erecting lhe special signs that 1dent1fy the car pool only lanes 1s in add1uon to lhe S6 million spent to resurface the freeway ··car pool lanes provide an efTec- 11 H' way ofsqu~zing more o ut of our ex1st1ng fr~wa)' system at a lime when we lack the fi nancial resources 10 build new freeways." eJ1plamed Ron Cole. an OCTf transponat1on (Pleue eee FR.ltEW A YI A2) Huntington-pier costs assailed by councilman By ROBERT BARK ER Of !he Deltr "1I04 llllfl Cost overrun\ for LUO\trut l1t>n .it the end of the Hun11ng1un BcaLh < 11' Pier -the scene of gala reopening ceremonies last month -"'l're labeled "'horrendous" toda' h' < 11' Councilman Peter (Jreen · Green claimed that 1n111.il nll mates for the copper-roofed 1 .... 0 stor; restaurant and meeting pl.iu: building that were \Ct at S25!J f,1(10 now have nsen to ·nearl\ hJll .t m 1lhon dollars ·· He also cn11c11ed ell\ adm1n1\- trators for not lncludtng COnt1 ngenL \ provisions for untoreseen n:penSl''> and claimed that ··poor design "'ork ma) have led to extra costs. .\t the lime that emmates fur lh« 1.500-!>Quare toot hu1Jd1ng rO!>e from sns.ooo to s 115.!i43 last December ( 1reen compared the rising lO'its Ill .. Pentagon hudgc11ng ··Bui the latest LOSt increa~ of nearl) 3'1 peru•nt makes the Pentagon look .. pars1mon1ou'> · he \a1d ( 11' .\dm1n1stra1o r (hark' Thom.pson v.ho w1lla~k (1t)C ouncil members tonight tu appro' e $ !Ul!\.UOO in add111onal l.'.harge~ bnng- 1ng the final pnu~ lag to $44 I !S41 defended the lUSt hi ke'> He claimed th.u muth of the inneases were no11he lit\ or contraL- tor's faull and that a· s1gn1fican1 p0n1on of the added rns1~ v.lll be relo' ered from LOnce~s1ona1res HL' (Plea.e eee PIER/ A2) Irvine freeway fighters appeal Petition ruling By PHIL SNEIDERM AN Of -DeltJ ......... Irvine's freewa y f~ have appealed an Orange Count) Supenor C oun ruhllJ that quashed their fre-e v.a' peuuon dnve The petition group will ask the l ~ine Ci t) Council Tue'ida' nC\t I<' approve a de-.eloper fee plan to help finance thr~ new f~wavs until the appeal coun rules on its~. Earher this )'Car. Irvine residents calling themsch es the Committee ol Se'en Thousand lCOSTl gathered 8 "'O I local signatures on a -c111zens (Plea.e .ee FREEWAY /A2) NB Council sorry to see Gross retire 8 ) SL.SAN HOWLETT Ol INOelft .......... ( It\ ( ounl ti ml·mhef\ '31.:1 Ilk.id\ the' v.ere \tlr'"' 1 hi.>ar th Jt < hark' ·Peie· (1ro.,, h;i, dl'lh.kd to retire aiter eight \L'Jr' J\ "l'"'T>On BeaLh ' roht.l', h1i.>t' ·1 per,11nalh Jm 1,11m tn -.ee that "'l"re losing him and l v.1.,h him v.l'il 1n luture t•ndea' llf\ ·• ..aid < nun- ' dv.oman Ji!L k1e Hl·aiher ~ ,ro-.-. ;;/'. \did hl· "'Ill fl'llrr t'!lel'll\eJuh I l<J ti (irnss ..ened ~h 'ear<. 1.\1\h lhL· l ," -\ngeles Pohle Dcpanmcnt ht'lcm -"'ming tu l'Om1ng to "e"pon lkaLh Charla "Pete" Gross ~k \\..J~ deput' 'h1el Burl·au 111 \r<:, 1al In' e'll1gal1l10\ pnor to h1' , I" ,rt c.talu\ hen· (Pleaae ett COUNCIL/ A 2 ) ~ Births Bridge Bulletin Board Business Classlfled Comics Crossword Death Notices Entertainment Horoscope Ann Landers Opinion Paparazzi Pollce Log Publlc Notices Sports Tetevlson Weather A6 A10 A3 8 5-6 87-10 Astronaut training needs more muscle A10 89 84 A9 89 A7 A8 A7 A3 84, 10 81-4 A9 A2 UCI p rofessor te lls NASA to em p hasize body_:-building exercise~. avoid atrophy A few words of wisdom for astronauts who want to keep fit in outer space: Arnold Schwarzenegger 1s in; Jane Fonda is out. This advice comes from Dr. Ken- neth Baldwin. a UC Irvine physiol- og.ist who is studying the effects of we1ahtlessness on human muscles for NASA. U.S. and Soviet space scien- tists have long recognized that a zero- gravity environment causes muscles 10 detenorate. Baldwin said his studies indicate that pumping iron is a better wa)' to fight this problem than Jane Fonda- style aerobics. Weightlifting and Nautilus-type machines provide resistance exerciSe' that helps build muscle strength Aerobic CJ1erc1scs involve repet1t1on workouts, including running and stationary b1cycl1 ng. tha1 build stamina and benefi t the hean and lungs. Edison coach saluted bycountyeducators 87 ROBE RT BARltER CM .. O., ........ Edison High School football coach BUI Wortman hu been honored by the Oranac County Department of Education for malcina an outs~ndina contribution to education. The 44-ycar-old Workman, fte.. ~uently perceived as a coach who hves and dies footbell, was saluted by county educaton for h11 activities on behalf of younptcn. For seven years. he coached sirl•' buketball teams.. which hiadauab.ten played on, in Fount.a.in Valley RtlO- ration Dcp&runent athletic leques. He'• been a member of the mea·1 Bibk study feUo.U1p sroup at the Garden Grove Community Church (or several years. He's provided free coaching clinics to the local 1un1or All-Amencan football teams. And this year. he 1n1t11ted what 1s believed to be a fint-of-its.klnd voluntary drua·testina prOll"lm. be- &innina with his football players at Edison. In addition, he's turned out ~on:s of athletes who went on to play at ~orcoUcaa. Wortman, whotc teams have won thiu OF dwnpionahipa while wt.n· rtina 102 football p mn, said the awatd waa .. very pleasurable.·· Steve Smith~ 1mona lhe five HuoUQltOn Union Hit)\ School tNltClel d pethapt the mott active athldic booac:r, c:aUed \Jroft: .. ~-wmDIAR/A.2) BW Workman • "There·~ a general consensus that we ma' be 1ra1n 1ng our as1ronaul\ 1ncorre-ctl'¥." Baldwin said . .. E'en after a seven-da)' spact m1-;s1on. we- see muscle atroph) ~e·rc making astronauts perform endurance ac- 11v111es. but ma\'bc we should get • them to do mo.re hea,,,\-res1stance training. especially in uro gravit) ·· Lifting weights would accomplish httle 1n space. but the astronauts could use other resistance e'.\erc1 St' equipment. he said "All the endurance (aerobics> ac- t1v11y in the world 1s not going Ill prevent tht atroph~ once the\ 're 1n zero gra ,1t~ ... Baldv.10 <;a1d PHIL SI El DERIAN FOCUS ON THE NEWS On Eanh. mu~le atrnph' ou uf\ "hen a person brL·a~' a limh anJ hJ' 11 1mmobill"led in J ,a.,t 1he ,,,11 d1t1on also O<"CUC\ 1n \pa1.e tx·,.1u,~· astronaut~ reauirt• "'' li ttle mu" 111.u J• I 'ii\ In lht" v.e-ightl('~\ \lalt' lnh"l <I I.th BaJd.,.,mhas.,1ud1l·J mu''•\ .11roph' h' ')USpending rat' in ,c .tn '-'' 1h;i1 prC\ ent\ them lrom \l \1n11 their hind leg-. tor walking or pu,h1ng aga1n'1 1ht· cage He then hl1'~' Jt Lhangl'' 1n the"<oe muo;.;.·Je., B.1IJ"'1n c..11J h1\ lah rat., ha'l' l'\h1!"11tt:d ,,1 pt·rll'nt los~ ol mu'4.ll' ma .... 'r ll'i\Ue in IU\l IW-U "et"k\ l" pan1, ular I < I re.-.earch ha!> r "'u't'd on a protein lallt'd m,o..,1n a ~C'' ,omponcnt ol muSllc llS\U<' It "'ntr1'I' mu<;clr n rntrac11on 1 he !1f01t"IO also \'.an be d aS\lfit"d .l\ 'I''" 11r fa'lt mHl'iin Fast m'osin 1\ (Pleue eee llUSCLlt/ A2) Laguna council to consider $30,000 loan to free clinic By USA MAllONEV Of .. Olllt ........ fhe Laguna Beach frtt \hn1c ma) get some cash from the cit)' to help pay its bills unul overdue state fund\ amve. lquna Beach City Manqt"r t..t"n Frank as ~m mend1na that the City Coul\Cll 11ve the chn1c a $30.000 no- 1ntcrat loan to proV'ldc the cash now 1t needs for mcd1cal supphes. em- ployt-e salaries and utaht~ btllt The proposed loan. wh1ch the chnic wouad have to n:pay Within s1J1 months, W111 b( con,1dtrcd bv th<' council Tunday The free cbnac ha bttn unablt to pay its bills th ls yar bccauK of a drop 1n donation' 'i.ft1d Rea Hetnd, t' t'CUll'r d1m1or The mo\tl\ \ 11luntec1 orx-r.tt111n u~u&ll) hu enoutth mone' ~tockp11c'd 10 make 11 thrnutth the nr v. \t'31 dMplle nonnal dda'" 1n \tale ttrnnh ,ht \aid. But feW<Cr donation\ comt'tm('(J With lo~r-than-u\ual dt'h1,., 1n IJ'&nl payment\ ha\e fof'Ct'd the-cltmc to la offthrtt of i" 11 emplovtt'8nd be&Jn chaf'llnl ~mt c-hent~ JU\t to ~ abTe to lcctp the door o~n Hctn<'l 581d c;1nct about ont -third of thn\t" v. hf' tttk m~1eal and pw('hotog1~al hrlp from the chnic come from Lquna Beach. the o t) 1hould help ktcp 11 . ' \Ul\\·nt f-r<t n~ 'kt ld Rut hc-v.amed that an\-loan w the ,1in1l "nuld ht-un\Crnred If the din1l v.rf(' unahlr to f"('pa~. the-r11\ would tx-(1u1 S 'n 000 Frank ~·d < lin1c dil't"<'tO" had hoped tht t 1h v.-ould lgJ'('(' tc1 loan them S40.tX'W"l v.h1ch "''luld bt' repaid v.,th about S ~O in o"erdue uate monies. a{'('orchna to v1C'<' lha1,...oman Mar) .\ndenon Thr mont'' would onh bt" d(,awn u nttdC'd. "he said. add1n1 that 'he doM not anuc1 pat<' s nttd for mort than s ,0.l"X)() The counol m<"C't\ at ti p m At ~O~ For"t ~vt I il '* Or9"Q9 C.0..l OAIL.V PILOT/Monday, Octobef 14, 1985 FREEWAY TO GET CARPOOL LANES .•• P'romAl analytt. an ~nuna lht proJect to the p&oel. Can or other vehicles carrying more than two people will be directed to enter or cxn the express lanes at specific . locations by the s1>«1ally placed Slpl. Nort.bbound drivers will be able to enter the l&m: at MacArthur B<>ulevaro, Warner A venue. Fourth Street and Chapman Avenue. North· bound exits will be just south of Edinact Avenue, north of 17th Street and Uncoln Boulevard. Southbound entrances include Lin- coln Boulevard. near I 7th Street and Edanaer Avenue Eluts are Chapman A venueJ. south of I 7th Street and south 01 Dyer Road "In reality, those who will use the lanes will be those going longer d11Ulnces." e:llplained Orange Mayor Jim Beam, an ocrc member and chamnan of the advisory panel that studied and recommended adoption of the uprcss lane e:llpcrimcnt Beam said oc-rc and the Cah· fomia Department ofTranspon.at1on will launch a "major publicity cam- paign" days before the c:llpress lanes are set to open. The new lanes will be monitored by California Highwa)" Patrol officers who will hand out $52 tickets 10 dnvcrs who use the lanes when less than two people are in the vehicle "They've ordered a batch of new ticket books," OCTC Chamnan James Roosevelt said. The 90-day demonstration pro1ect \ aJso will be wa tchcd by the OCTC and the project advisory committee. Wttkly reports wlll be submitted to the ad v1sory panel for 12 weeks with a full evaluation scheduled for delivery within the 90 day trial penod. The succen of the expenment will be JUdged on usagei safety, violations incurred u we I as the overall open11ion of the f'rceway. If the demonstration prOJCCt 1s sue«ssful. carpool express lanes also may be added to a 24-mile stretch of the often-Jammed San Dieao Freeway between us junction with the Santa Ana Fre<way and the an Gabriel River frt('way (l-605). The transportation commission voted 10 direct Caltrans to design car pool e~press lanes alons the San Diego Ftceway after Supervisor Har· nett Wieder, an OCTC member and chairman of the 1-"0S advisory com- mittee, pointed out that 1f the CoslJl Mesa Freeway lanes do not work out the decision can be reversed. For motorists interested in tcamma up with a fellow commuter to take advan&&ae of the express lanes. the Oranae County Transit District offer5 the Commuter Network proaram. which pa11'$ commuters interested in Joining a or Sllrtmg a car or van pool. The Commuter Network program, the successor to OCf D Rideshare program, currently contains the names of about 55.000 applicants in its computer bank. To contact Com- muter Network telephone OCTD at 971-6460. COUNCIL REACTION ... From Al "I am pleased that he Wlll be around until we can set a replace- ment," said Councilwoman Evelyn Han. "I hate 10 sec him go." Han said that Gross has been a pos1t1vc leader of the c11y's law enforcement agen~ and expressed hope of getting a comparable suc- cessor "We have a good department and I'm sure we can rccnut a good pohcc chief." Han µid City Councilwoman Ruthelyn Plummer said she could not com- ment on Gross' leaving because she was unaware of his notification of retirement. Newport &ach Polict spokesman Trent Hams credited Gross today for pushing the importance of the ci ty's Neighborhood W atch program and implementing the Substance Abuse Program, a diversion provam for first-time aJcohol and marijuana of- fenders. He also start~ the city's Environmental Services Agency. which assists communitiy agencies 1n cleanup etTons. Harris said. FREEWAY FOES APPEAL RULING ... From Al Right-to-Vote" 10111at1ve. enough to qualify for the Nov. S ballot. If adopted by local voters or the council. the measure would require the council to obtain approval from Irvine voters before charging new development fees to help pay for the proposed San' Joaquin Hills. Foothill and Eastern freeways. But the peuuon was challenged 1n coun by a coah11on of developers, business associattons and others. In August. Supenor Court Judge Judt1h R~a d that the COST peuuon 1d She said free- ways a atter of statewide concern a are not a proper subject for a local 101uauve COST members enlisted the Center for Law in the Public Interest. a non-profit Los Angeles-based or- gan12atton. to represent them 1n appealing Ryan·s dcc1S1on. The center asked the 4th D1stnct Coun of Appeal Fnday to grant a writ of mandate that would overturn Ryan's dec1s1on If granted, the wm would require the I rv1ne City Council to adopt the .. Right-to-Vote .. measure or place 11 o n a special election ballot. Lisa Foster. a staff member at the legal center. said the appeal coun should decide w1th1n few weeks whether It wiU deny the wnt o r conduct a hearing on the matter If the wm 1s denied. the group will probably proceed through the normal appeal process, which could require six months to a year for a ruling. Foster said. A spokesman for the business groups that oppose the freeway pelt· t1on has said the groups will continue opposing the measure to the Cali- fornia Supreme Court, 1f necessary Meanwhile, the Irvine City Coun- c il is scheduled to consider Tuesday whether 10101n a coah11on involving the county and other cities that will colJcct developer fees to help pay for the three new freeways. But COST chamnan Wilham Speros said today he will ask the council to delay that dec1s1on unul the coun challenge is resolved Speros noted that 1n August. a council maJonty declined 10 act on the freewa-,. pet111on in order to await Jud~e Ryan's ruling. The COST chamnan said the council should take the same wa1 t-and-sec position on the freeway fee while the petition case is being appealed. &yond the petition case. Speros claims the freeway fee agreement. already approved by county super- visors. has scnous flaws in it. "I hate to sec a City council agree to anything with so many unknowns in n. and this has a lot of unknowns m 1t," he said COST members claim the new freeways wtll promote new develop- ment and cause more &Jr and noise pollution wtthout relieving cu1Tent traffic jams. Freeway supporters sa) development will proceed even wtthout the new highways. and local streets will be tied up with the overflow from existing freeways 1f1he new roads are not built. WORKMAN HONORED ... From A l man an outstanding person. .. There's a lot more than football in Bi ll's hfe." he said. "He cares about all the students. including the ones who don't play football Workman came to Edison 1n 1971 and became head coach in 1973. He's com pt led a record of I Ol-32-2 while winning two C IF Big Five cham· p1onships and six Sunset League titles. He began his coaching career at California High School in Whittier and played college footbaJI at Whit- tler College. NEWPORT POLICE CHIEF RETIRING ... From Al ment 1ntent1onall) violated his court orders 1n the maner The chief attracted a11ent1on 1n Ma)', 1983 when he was accused of making racially offensive comments in discussing beach area problems "His comments came close 10. 1f not crossed over the hnc. of in- sens1t1v11y to differences m cultures," said former Commissioner Helen ~cl..aughhn. McLaughlin 's reaction was prompted by Gross' comment about "ethnic culture" groups and "rec- reational cultures" that transfer their ac11vi1ies-such as drinking-to the beach. Gross bad said that this bas helped in the deterioration in the area adJaccnt to the Newport Pier. But Gross said that he did not make any racial slurs or intend to single out a certain ethnic group as pan of the problem. and considered the stir generated by Hispanic leaders o ver the enurc episode sensationalized Although the recent controversy with Bostrom was not a motivation for his retirement. Gross said that after his decision to retire, he has lost the "s11ffness in my neck" and the overall stress associated with his posiuon. MUSCLE BUILDING FOR ASTRONAUTS ... From Al associated with acuv1t1es such as diving and spnnt1ng. 1n which mus- cles contract rap1dl) but only for a shon durauo n. Slo v. myosin 1s as- soc1a1ed w11h long-distance running. 1n which endurance and stamina are rcQuired Muscles undergo a conllnual pro- cess of breakdown and replacement of these proteins. as a result of the st1mulat1on these mu~les receive Bald Win suspects astronauts do not maintain enough slow m yo s1n m space because they have little need for a protein designed for standing.. sitting and other posture-related ac- ll v11teS "In zero gravtty, there's no weight on the muscle. which causes the atrophy problem." he said For this rea~on . he beheve<. astronauts should engage in e:llerc1scs that s11mulate production of these m1ssma proteins. Baldwin also believes the body- bu1ldma e:llerc1ses can help prevent Just Call 642-6086 ~y Frioay II yOV 1 t'OI -'(fNI P•-C I & :IC) p "' Qll De!O-t ' ll ""° 'fO'J' C«>Y ..... • bone degenerallon. another problem resulting from exposure to we1&ht· lcssness. These exercises may slow the loss of calcium from bones Although zero gravity has inspired amusing scenes in science fiction movies. its effect on astronauts• health is a scnous matter. Amencan astronauts have cxpencnccd some muscle detcnorat1on after relauvel)" bnef shuttle mmions. But NASA 1s planning to put into orbit a space station in which astronaut!> could be •assigned for longer penods Already, Soviet cosmonauts have spent more than s1:ll months in space. Run1an sc1enttsts have not tra- d1t1onally shared their findings about how zero grav11y has affected these crew members But at a recent conference in Stockholm. Soviet scientists dis- closed that a prolonged period of weightlessness has drained cos- monauts o f their energy and forc~d their vital organs, including the heart, to work harder UCl's Baldwin plans to discuss some o f his own findings at an international conference on the biochemistry of physical exerme. scheduled later this month m Italy. He's also plannmg to present a report on his research to Amencan space officials. He wd 1t took him four years 10 obtain a NASA grant for his research, which is limited to lab rats. He said there has been very little phys1olog1- cal study of Amene&n astronauts who have returned from zero-gravity mtssions. but he anticipates more research during fu ture flights. In fact, Baldwin has a reservation 10 place some of his own lab rats on a shuttle fli&ht -in 1987. Meanwhile, he's confident that the rat muscle detenorauon he's observed in his lab is a good mdie&tion of what will happen to human m uscles m space 1f body-buildtn& e:llerciscs arc nea.Ject- ed. Wbat do you llkt about tbt Dally Piiot? Wbat dob't you llkt ? Call tbt numbu at left and your mttHlt wlll be recordd, tran1crlbt d and dtllvtrtd to Ult appropriate editor. Tbt umt U-lsoor annwtr lDI Hrvlct may bt u1td to record leteen to t~t editor on any topic. Contrtbaton to our Letccn column mOlt lncludt tbelr namt and ttltpboat number for verlfl~atlon. No circulation call1, pltaat Ttll u1 wbat's on your mind. Karen Wlnmer Pubh'\~e• Circulation 714/M2....u33 Cl1111ned 9dwertlalng 7141~·5'71 AH other dep8rtment1 M2~1 MAIN O,,ICI . ))() W"I .. y S1 Cot•• ""-CA Me• •»-llo• 1 $to Coe1a .,._ CA 01129 COOr·~· •te) C\<t"Qof C •• Pvoov "'O C..-.. 1 N ...... t!O'... u ••••• .,,,,. td-10'• ........ 00 t1'v"1 .. .,..,., l<fNtOI y -5..itl•U ) ' '°" dO -'«-p( , ~ Dy 7 • m Cll" .,.,, .. Frank Zlnl RoH mary Churchman Co111rone1 ~• --,...., oe ·-OOucoad -~·' eo.c • 1111 _,,_ DI 'OOy•>Ql'I - to • m tf'O Y°"' copy .,,, .-....o C.,_..tlon Tala,honM ..... ::-~r MMlll Ulfl'M--..... t • f I Robert &.. Canlr•ll p,, l 1• • '-411 .... l' Howard Mullenary M111t111ng 0111•11 • Don.Id L. Wiiiiama C1rculat1on Meflager Peggr ltewln1 ""'11eCJ 01ree101 l St<.¢~d 1att P0 4tt•Qit oa1d 1t ('; '''" ..,,.,. r-e11••,,r-11 UPS • 4A IOO 'l<ibtc• "''...,. r.r _,,.,. S~ 1~ moti•~ II• ,.,. S ' 00 """''"'' VOL 71, NO. 217 -·.-.... ~!!"9 WcA ltH R Offlhe>nl wtnd9 wtlfk.-p lklel elMr and wnny Tueeday, lnerMalng ternwatut• throuohout South«'n Calllornla. the Natlonal WMth« S«Vloe Nld. Th• mlld Santa Ana wind COl'ldlllon la e1tpected to pertlat throuoh the week. Mndlng mercwry r .. dlnga Into th• mld-80. and 90t In the vali.yt and MMrtl. Th• coutal arM wltl rem1ln c)e&r with high• from th• mld-701 to the 801 LOW9 tOl'llght will droe> to betWMn 44 and 52 degr .... Along the Orange Coast It will be fair through Tues<Say with local northeut to ea.st wlnda 15 to 30 mph below the canyon• and panes. Warmer d1y1 with high• Tueed•Y 78 to 88. Lowa 45 to58. U.S . Temps .. ,, ts 6S "et lie 81 81 48 S2 33 ff Ml ee 91 ee eo IO 83 u se 98 '8 82 12 73 65 82 62 78 M 63 48 $8 44 80 ., 80 sa 5$ 25 18 511 72 IM 81 Tl 58 33 80 7$ Ml 74 se s1 IM 71 ~ 39 Ml ~ 11 50 80 s. 73 03 111 eo 78 52 51 64 11JJJ1!!»t.. &\_ ~. ~ ,,_OHU · 'llill!I ~ ~ ~ W11m _Cold....,. ShOw••• R11n Him•• Snow OccW•d .. S11toonaty ...,. Ne-WM"* SeMca NOAA V $ 0.01 Cl eo.--ce Santa AN 71 M s.nu. c.w a 42 a-.... .,.. 74 41 Callf. Temp• HIQll. IOW. lor 241\0uft efldlf\O •t 5 a.m Wer•llelCI 74 54 rf R Eu<•u &t "° Su eport ,'-'<> 17 48 L.MICMler 73 47 Loe 4ng91M 11 81 LOCATIOM Oeltland 71 52 ~on 9Mdl PMO AoOIM 77 40 AIYw Jetty.~ Red Ilk/II 78 49 40t!I S\IMI, ~ RedwOOd CUy 78 50 :l2nd StreM, ~ s--•o 78 48 =-= Satin.. 73 42 8.,, CMIMnl• i!lefl 01eQo 70 59 wel• ._ 85 Sen Frenc19CO 17 SO s.n1~ WIMw• 70 48 a ..... Ot<ec1ton aovth- s1oo111on 71 48 -Htgll, IOw IOI 24 lloute 9"d1n9 al SP m ---------- Applt "aJWr 12 31 Tides ller~ow 77 •• Bltnop 66 39 81ytN 66 68 t OOAY CatallNI 12 117 5-d low 4· 12 pm -0 5 Lono IMcfl 73 53 Second NQll 10 24 p m 5 2 M.,.,.-71 54 Mon<IM• 61 49 Mont.,.., 113 48 Fl<tt low Extended Ml W...,,., 92 45 Fir .. Ng/I ~ 90 $6 s->d IOw ~ 8eacll ea s 1 Second hlQn TUHOA'I' 4:03 ."' 10 15 ."' ll03pm 1117PM I 0 19 -0 7 4 7 ,a# With nMr nOlmlll lel!IP•urliK• and CMllChy la!• night &l\d morning to. clOuda Of log HIQhe lrom 6a to 71Ulong Ille C0.1 lO Ille mid llOt Ill llM ,...,.,,_ lftland •elley9 l °"9 Ill ,,,. SO. to atound80 °"'"'° 79 50 Pelm 8prl"ije 80 68 Bull Mt• todey •I 6:20 pm , -p--. 78 SI Tu.di)' al 8 51 I m end Mia ~ •I A....,...,. n &a 9.ltpm SM! llernerdtno 71 47 Moon Mlt 1ocs.y at 8 &I pm , ,_ Sen Gabtlel 79 51 Tu.day 811143 t,m, end -~ 11 .S... JOM 711 45 7 29 p m DEALER ASKS DELAY ... reached for comment. In an earlier interview. Rick Nabers said the dealersh.1p was suffer- ing from overcrowding as can jammed the service bays and rear parking lots. Prom Al years ago for the expansion prOJCCt. However, residents blocked the re- zone through a 1976 referendum. Cadillac dealer Dick Nabers 1s allempllng to revive the expansion. which would eliminate homes the dealership has purchased at 458. 454 and 463 Princeton Dnve. And Colltjc Parle residents. form. ins the Citizens After Residcnual Expansion (CARE) group. are fight· 1ng the proposed rezone. CARE president Carl Bureman said the~oup h.asgathercd more than 1,200 signatures against the ex - pansion. which he said would in· crease smog. noise and traffic in the neighborhood. 0 Burcmao charged that by moving deeper into the tract, Nabers will encourage adja.ccnt homeowners 10 sell him their property. .. And 11 they n:zonc College Park. no place in Costa Mesa will be safe," he said. Bureman said Nabers has set up an Oct. 24 mcettn& with residents in hopes of assuaging the opponents. He added that CARE is work.ing on a counter proposal that would allow the dealership to expand without "intruding" on neighbors. That plan could include bu1fding a "double- deck" display lot, Bureman said. Planning department employees are recommendmg the re.wne be denied to preserve the neighborhood. A staff report explained that more customers would be prone to park on Pnoccton Drive 1fthee:llpansion were approved. increastng the effect on homes ad1acent to the dealership. Nabers and his son, Rick, general manager of the car lot. could not be In fac~ employees arc forced to park about a quarter of a mile away in a lot I~ from the Coast Communi- ty College District. DeLorean fraud trial postponed DETROIT (AP)-A federal judge has postponed the fraud trial of former automaker John Z. De Lorean for at least five months because of the complexity of the case. A federal grand jury on Sept. 20 charged De Lorean with defrauding investo!'S in his defunct carmak..ing entcrpnse ofS8.9 million. PIER REBUILDING EXPENSES HIT ... From Al also said the cost overruns were for other pier facilities and didn't deal directly with the restaurant buildtng. About $50,000 was added to the construct ton costs by the requirement of the Southern California Ed1s1on Co. to add an extra transmission hnc for a nsing and lowering boaung ramp. Ctty Engineer Les Evans blamed a dispute between consultant Fredcnek Brown and the Edison Co. over tht need for the additional line. The upshot of it, Evans said, was that Edison wouldn't connect elcc- tncity to the building without the second hne Another $20,000 was added at the request for special ltgh11ng by John Gustafson. operatorofThe End Oife. Gustafson will pay the extra costs while other concessionaires a lso will reimburse the city for about $6.000 in new gas connections. officials said. Other major construction change orders included increasing the thick- ness of a concrete foundation 10 prevent flooding of the restaurant during rains; changing the size of structural steel suppons; the mstalla- t1on of a control system and panel for monit~ring fire spnnklcr system; and other items. The extra concrete thickness and steel remforccmnts. Councilman G reen argued. should have been included in initial cost estimates. Mayor Ruth Bailey said today efforts will be made to collect costs that the contractor or engineer may be responsible for. She also questioned the lack of a contingency budget. "Why give us something if they know it's not a true figure," she said. Obsessive behavior often is the first sign of a mental cnsis. As with other medical probl ems. early treatment improves the chances for a positive outcome. But, every situation 1s different. That's vacuums at 3·00 a.m. why there are differ - • • ent way. to help. The Information Center at Capistrano by the Sea Hospital has a free booklet on mental crisis. It out · Imes the many options you have available . Hospitaliza - ' tion is on ly one of them . Call (7141 831-1787. Y<m 'JJ receive this useful booklet in absolute confi · dence. We've helped people cope wi th the problems of today's society for over 25 years. We understand . Howro Harxlle a Mental Crisis I Per•onal wealth seniinar slated A two-session seminar enmled "Creatina Pcoonal Wealth" Wlll be offered Wednesday and Oct. 26 sponsored by SaddJcback Colleae. Wednes- day's class will meet at 7 p.m. at the Hot Springs Dance Hall an San Juan Capistrano, whale the OCt 26 event Wlll be held from 9 a .m . to noon an Room BC·6 of the Mission Viejo College. !he seminar is aered for school hospital and pubhc service employees and the ?cc is SIO per person or SIS for a couple. C,atl 582-4646 for additional mformauon. Comet clau at Coa•tllne A le<:ture on the astronomical phenomena Halley's Comet will be offered by CoutJinc Community CoUcac Tuesday at the Costa Mesa Center, 2990 Mesa Verde Drive East, Costa Mesa. Oranac Coast Collc$C astronomy instructor Joel uvinc will give ansa&hts into the travel and history of the comet at the 7 p.m. session The cost is SI 0 and additionaJ anfonnation is available at 241-6186. Yoga program• offered The Siddha Yoga Meditatio n Center of Costa Mesa/Newport Beach will be presenting free proarams on Monday evenings at 7:45 dunng October at the center, I 535 Monrovia Ave .. Newport Beach. Tonight's talk: wtll be by two center members sharina recent experiences. Oct. 21 1s newcomers' niaht. desiancd to explain the teachings of Siddha Yop, while Oct. 28 will be an cvcnina of chanting and a special video Call 631-4446 for further informaJaon. Bu•lnen women meet The Huntington Beach chapter of the Wo men's Business Network will meet Tuesday morning to hear a talk on new wave health by Dr. Bcatc Heller. a chiropractor. The meeting is scheduled at 11 :30 a.m. and the cost of the lunch is $6. Prospective attendees should call Gaal at 241 -1 893 for the meeting location. Single• •emlnar •lated The Southern Cahforma Christian SmaJcs, sponsored by Rancho Capistrano Community Church, will hold a sinaJes seminar and soc1aJ Wedncday at 7:30 p.m. at the church, 2925 I Camano Capistrano m San Juan Capistrano. The Rev. Terry Hershey, an author, lecturer and radio taJk show host, wil speak on intimacy at the meeting. Call 496-6534 for reservations and further inforroation. Valley chamber miier •et The Fountain Valley Chamber of Commerce will bold its monthly m ixer Wednesday at I Li&hthouse Lane, hosted by the Kingsmen band and Celebration II catering. The event is free and open to the public and is scheduled at 5:30 p.m. Call 962-4441 for additional information. 'Parent deafneu' eiplalned "Parent deafness," the convenient inab1hty of a child to hear what his or her parcnu arc saying, will be the topic of a Coastline Community CoUeae workshop scheduled for Wedocday at the Hunt· inaton Beach Center, 20661 Farnsworth Lane, Huntington Beach. Marriage and family counselor Andrea Evans will be in charge of the program, to be held from 7 to 10 p.m. The registration fee is S 15 and more informatio n is a vailable at 241-6186. Women'• club plans brunch All women arc invited to attend the Newport Beach C hnstaan Women's Club brunch and "coun- try store" boutique Wednesday mom1n~ al the Aarporter Inn. 18700 MacArthur Blvd .. Irvine. Special music will be provided by Marpe Taylor. whale Molly Brannen wlll speak on lurnang reJcctaon anto acceptance at the 9:30 a.m . program. The luncheon cost as $7.50 and reservatio ns should be made by calhng 760-0389. Oa.t Glen tour organized A day an Oak Glen wall be offered Wednesday by Coastline Community College, which will charter a bus for the all-day excursion ofshoppang, browsing and relaxing. The rcg1strat1on fee as S 14 and includes round trip fare o n the bus. whic h leaves at 8 a.m. aod returns at 4 p.m. Call 241 -61 86 for location and other anfonnataon. Wine, chowder party ln NB The Newport Beach Historical Society will hold ats annual wine and chowder party Wednesday from 6 to 9:30 p.m. at the Sherman Gardens. 2647 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. Bill Hendricks, libranan for the Sherman Library, will show a film on how Newport ~ach appcard in 1927 and 1928. The program donatton as SS and further information is available at 650-4424 or 548-4164 Photography coune •lated Professional photographer Patnck O'Donnell will share his tc<:rets on niaht phot~phy ~nd liabliba durina a three-part lecture senes beina offered by Coastline Community College. at the NcWJ)On Beach Center, 3101 Pacific View Dnvc, Corona dcl Mar. The sessions will be held from 6 to 9 p.m. Thunday1 bel;inninf this week.. and the reJistration fee is S3S. c;lr24 l-6 86 for further information and reaistration. CAL£ NOAR Monday. Oct. 14 • 6:30 p.m. Cetta Mua P~ Comml•tl• City Council ChAmben, 77 Fan Drive. · • 7:30p.m. lrvtMTru1prtatt.Commltll• , City Council aw:nben. 17200 Jamboree Blvd .. • 7:30 p.m .. Ne~rt a.di City c..etl, Caty Council cbamben. 3300 Newport Blvd. Tue.day. Oct. 15 • 6:30 p.m. lntM CIC, c..dl, City Council Chambm, 17l00 Jambotte Blvd. . •. 6_p.m . ~ 1.e1a ac, c..d1, Caty Council Qiamben, SOS forett Avt. • 7:30 p .m ..... _. tqw Orie Au1etdea, Ben Brown'• Rntaura.nt, lt 106 Cout Klcbway, Soulh Lquna. ..... • Orange Cou t DAILY PILOT /Mondmy, October l4. 1885 * AS From 'Dynasty' to Mickey Mouse job Orange Coast native captures two Jo U n1 vcri1ty of Redlands -1n order 10 knock on doors an Hollywood are winning im the envy of movie, TV ans That's when reahty hat the fledahna filmmlier "They Just wanted to know If you'd worked tn the busanen before." Pattison saad The fam1har C'atc h-22 of not being able tO &Ct a JOb Wlthout C~penence nor cxpcnencc Wlthout a Job sent Pattison home disheartened By LISA MAHONEY OttlWO.-,NM .... When Metromed1a Producen set out 10 sell synd1cated episodes of the popular "Dynasty" serial. the company pulled $2 million from its bank account to woo tclevtsion station man~ers and capture the attention of the pubhc. Metromedia handed the hefty bankroll over to advertising wbu Pat Patuson of Laauna Beach who dreamed up a .. cham- paane campaian" for the managers and one of nostaJaia for potential viewers. "Sec how it all beg.an," the advertisements uraed. To act the car of Station manaaen who've seen every IUnd of saJcs come-on that money can buy, Pattison paclc.aaed his promotional materiaJs in black re.ather briefcases and had them delivered by limousine to lccy station executives. He set up $8tellite interviews with "Dynasty" stars, produced a bi$. glossy sales brochure and arranJed a lavtsh party announcana the syndication of the series. Growing up on Poppy Street in Corona del Mar, Patnck "Pat" Pattison, 31 , never dreamed he would one day rub elbows with the likes of "Dynasty" star Linda Evans. But, wath second-run "Dynasty" episodes safely launched in more than 60 percent of all possible television markets, Pattison has moved on to bigger and better thinas. And thouah die-hard "Dynasty'' fans may find it hard to believe that anything could top an associatio n with one of television's most popular scnes. born and bred Oranie Countians pro bably ~n Pattison, home-town boy that fie is. 1\ now employed by Disneyland As creative services vice prcs.adent for Disneyland, Pattison's JOb is to sell television stations on the Disney library of films and television series. Pattison. who's not one to care much for three-piece suits, looksa lot hke a scrubbed clean version of the boy next door. He hkcs the casual, creative atmosphere of Disnel. Studios in Los Anacles. And who wouldn t enJOY rctum1n1 to their .Youth for an afternoon o r two of inspiration at the source -Disneyland in Anaheim? "Be1na an Oranac County ltid, I always wanted to work for Walt Disney," Pattison said ... GroWlnJ up in thJS place. the whole Disneyland thma has kind of an aJlure for me. It s like a dream come true." Corona del Mar may be a pnv1leaed address today. but when Pattison was arowina up. the small seaside communny was decidedly middJe class. Shops along coast biahway sold goods locaJs would buy and aft the storekeepers knew Pattison's name. He hunted on SpyaJass Hill. swam an the oc-ean off the beaches from Newport to La,auna and didn't have one connection to pave his way to Hollywood. Hard work and ambition earned Pat- tison along. In" rush to get involved an the film industry. he pushed his way through hiah school in three years. At Orange Coast College Patuson "took every film class I could possibly take. I had to drop out of every other class." He also dropped out of his dad's alma mater-the For awhile, he drove a fish truck, then he started selhn& advcnas1ng space 1n a mapzane. Soon. he was creatma advense- ments for companac~ that promoted automouve accessones 1n the map.zinc and started has own aacnq "I always kept try10a 10 get into someth1n1 that would lCt me anto ... Hollywood," Pattt~on ~ad. When one of has clients aot a contraCl to provide cars for a movie. Pamson drove up to the studio .. every day whether I needed to or not." He started develop101 contact5 and made more by booking some of hlS racing dnvcr chents on taJk shows Pattison 's talent and vts1b1lity brou&ht ham to the attention of Metromedia O fficials there h1rcd him as advertlSln& manaaer for KTTV-Los Angeles and later promoted lhe wonder bo)' through the ranu to head up advenas1ng fo r their domestic and overseas synd1ca11on. It was while 1n that pos1t1on that Pattison created "Dynasty's" "champagne campaian." Synd1cauon 1s the real money maker for studios that crcat.e shows for tclev1s1on Htgh production costs are recouped from repeat showina of old pr~ms. Patllson 's success with ··Dynasty" caught the eye of someone at Disnc)' Studios The "hottest studio" these days. Disney wants to become "very acti ve an TV," Pattison saad. AJways fo nd of ''the mouse." Patt a son PatPattleon said Disney also 1s the place to be 1f you want to flell creauve muscles "It's so mspanna that a company could be that b1& and still be based on fun " Pattason spent a day in Disneyland recentJy looking for more 1nsp1rauon - this tame for a trade show he as coord1- na11ng. l1 was a fine. blucda) and Pamson. dressed an a casual 1ack<'t and o pen collar walked down Mam Stree t. looked an a1 Fantasyland and took a nde through the Pirates of th<' Canbbean No~. that's wo rkmg Local Arab groups fear rise in terrorism Bombing of Orange County office, killing its leader, fuels hostilities between Jews, Arabs From Staff a.ad Wire Report• Pro-Arab gro ups say they're takmg precautions after a bomb shattered an American Arab Anti-D1scnm1nation Committee office, lciUing the group's West Coast leader. Threatening phone calls to pro-Arab aroul)' in Southern Calafomta weren't uncommon before, but now leaden arc ta1cina them more seriously, and a Rand Corp. expert on terrorism says he thinks the bombina Friday may signal future terrorism in the United States. Santa Monica-based Rand researcher Bruce Hoffman said the fact lhe bomb detonated durina working hours mdacates somebody "wanted to ltill and wanted to hurt innocent bystanders." There may be retaliatory bombings, be aaid. for suspicious acttvtt1es near their centers. "We try to be very careful about who's comma aro und the bualdmg. who 1s makina deliveries or s1tung in their car near our building," said Saadaldan Alazzawi. director of the lnstitut<' of Islamic Studies. Odeh's relatives have said they suspect the Jewish Defense Leaaue was involved in the bombina. but Shelley Rubin. wife of JDL leader lrv Rubin. dented responsi- bility for the bombina, although she said the lcque bad no regrets about Odeh's death. Nobody has claimed rcsponsibahty for the attack. Jame. Abourczk, nattonal cbatnnan of the Arab Anti-Discnmmation Committee in Wasbinston D.C. and a former senator from South Dakota. blamed Friday's bombina on the ca&erness of Amcncans to punish Palestinian b.ijacken of the haban crwsc ship Achille Lauro. "There 1s this sense of a lund ol h nC'h mob. from Prestd<'nt Reagan on down " said Abourezk "It's cowbo> tJmc. on the part of the president. on the pan of the media. on the part of Congress .. But m Washington. White= House spokesman Larry Speakes said Reagan instructed federal authont1es to "provide the fullest possible support" to local police m theu mvesugauo n of the bombing. .. The admm1strauon deepl> deplores th15 tJ'ailC event and condemns an the strongest possible tcnns the cn mmaJ use of violence and terronsm to achieve poht1cal ends." Speakes said. The night before ihe bombing, Odeh appeared on news programs praising Palestine Liberation Orpnuataon Chair- man Yasscr Arafat's role m g,ainma the release ofhostap from the Achille Lauro. Durina a KABC-TV interview. Odeh said the media mistakenly connected the PLO to the bijackina of the ship. He also predicted the spread oftcrronsm. Odeh. 41 , who was also a professor at the Fountain Valley-based Coastline College. was fatally wounded when a bomb exploded as he opened the door to the committee ~office in ~an ta ~na The blast rockl"d the lhrcc-sto~ building. hurling debns into the street and knock.mg over one bntander" ho ma' have been wailing for a bus Odeh was taken 10 Western Medical Center where he died v.halc undergoing surgcr. Ode·h v.as dcscnbed b' both Jews and .\rab~ as a non·\ 1olcnl man who ad· vacated comprom1sc "He showed that somebody from the Jewish communit) can sn dov.-n w11h som<'one from the A.rab communit) and discuss issues." said Rabbi Henn E Front. chairman of the O range Count) Human Relauo ns Comm1ss1on "To loS<" this voice 1s a tcmblc loss for our count) ·· Odeh also worked for the Los Afl&tlC\ County Human Relations Comm1u1on. Relataves said they rettived a con- dolence call Saturday from Jordan's am- bassador to the Li nited States. Moham- mad Kamal. saying K.mg Hussein W\shed to express his symoath" Mcmonal services for Odeh Wlll be held at 10 a m T ucsda' at St ~orbcrt Church an 0range · "What this really means is that we have imported the problem (of terronsm), and the circle of violence will expand to people here," aaid Dr. Nazir ~a, whose Islamic Center of Southern California was the ta11et of an anon attack three years aao. Since the bombina, which killed Alex Odeh and injured seven others, staff workers in o ther Arab Anti-Discrimina- tion Committee offices across the nation have been phonana for security advice, said committee spokeswoman Barbara Shahin Retail gas prices continue to tumble "I do sense fear." she said. And other Islamic and Arab organtza· uons in Los Angeles arc watching closely LOS ANGELES (AP) -Pump prices have de<:hncd for the 14th straJaht week. surpassing a drop in wholcsaJe gasoline prices for the lint tim<' since last spnng, 011 industry analyst Dan Lundberg says. An Oct. 11 survey of 17.000 gasoline stations nationwide showed the overall pnce for aJI grades of gasohne dipped to S 1.20, compared co SI 21 on &pa 20. Lundberg sa1d Sunday While retailers saved an average 0 84 or a cent on their gasoline costs. they pa~d o n an a verage one-cent sanngs to cus- tomers. Lundberg saad. adding at was lhl' first um<' since .\pnl "that lh<' dealer\ ha' e dropped their retail pnce~ more than ch~· Blaze causes $4,000 damage at UC Irvine ...._ were reponcd stolen frnm the Proml!K') danc<' club, 33 33 Wes a ( oast H 1gh"'a' Thursda' • • • A S300 car stereo wa' reponed stokn from a white 1982 \'oik'l"agen Rabhrt convenablc parked 1n front ol home 1n the 300 block of Holmwood 0' er lhc "'eekend By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of -0.-, "-' .... An absent-minded sc1ent1st may be to blame for a fire that erupted m a storage and cooking area at UC Irvine early today. The fire, confined to a small room on the fourth floor of the PhysicaJ Sciences building, caused about $4.000 damage, Oranac County Fire Department and univ<'~ty officials said. University spokesman Joel C. Don said the blaze was apparcntJy triggered by someone who left an overhead projector on top of a stove and left the stove on. He saad no hazardous chemicals were involved. and no research materials were damaged. Foantaln Valley A local hiah school student reported that he was threatened by a man with a sun u he was leavina a party at a home an the 16600 block of Mt. C.chumaSaturday niaht. • • • Police apprehcndtd a local tran11cnt tryina to break into a house in the 16200 block of Mt. Ackerman Saturday mom1na. Dennis Tbomu. 41 , rcponedl~ tried to cot« throl1th the rear slid.ins JIUS door. the ftont door and the kitchen wtndow. But the residentt were home and called police who cauaht him in the act. He was taken 10 ~nae County Jail and booked. • • • .\_ SSOO video cauettt recorder was rep()ned stolen from a home 1n the 18200 block of San Jo1e Fridav. . . ' A cot.or TV set and a video c.a1settc • • • ASSOeamngand 1wosetH>f Lo" .\ngek\ Rams season ticket~. "'Orth S '<M l "'ert· rcponcd stolen from a home an th(' ~Q1 ic block ofC'hfT Dn"e ';aturda' Orange County Fire Department spokes- man Pat Antnm said the fire was reported at 12:43 a.m. today. He said several science students or faculty members were working late an the building and noticed smoke They notified campus pohce who rn tum called the fire dc\)8rtment and evacuated the science bualdmg. the fire spokesman Lacuna Beach said. Three men were arrested Sund.a' n1gh1 Antnm saad damage in the 6-by-6-foot on susp1c1on ofburglanzang a '-onh < na,1 room mainly involved the stove. counter Ha&hw8' residence i\rr<'sted "'i:rt· tops and cabinets. Eufcmao· Hernand<'z Rodnqucz. 24 R11n11 Martinez. 21 and J o~ Lu as Perales. 11 \n He saad the aocident wa~ 1ntt1all) offi~r obscf'•cd the three allej edl\ r<'mu' considered a second..aJann fire because of 1ng fum llur<' from the residence thL·n the hazardous matenaJs p~nt an the flcema science bu1ld10g. • • • A red 1981 Ho nda C1' ac wai. stolen lrom a Temple Place home. the ~1c11m ,told parked in a Mission VieJO publtc airaae at pohcc Sunda)" The hom<' was burglanud 27000 Crown Valley Parkway Thur1day. as well. bu1 the loss has \tt to ~ • • • dctcnnaned AoEITororcsidentanthc22900blockof A rockon. chaa; ~aiucd a t s1.,4 14a, Belqucst reponed Thunday that someone 1 I Sa f: r IT stole h.is wallet contamana S 187 m cash reported stolen turda~ rom h Ii l>n' <' from a Mission VieJo AM/PM Mini-Man. home. • •• 26001 Lt Paz Road. Tbunday afternoon Pola~ arrested th~ motonsts on \u~p1 Police reports said the v1ct1m bad accidcn. caon of d.nvma under the 1nflucnc<' of tally left the wallet at the store. When he alcohol. LarT) Joseph C'ommcsscr. 20. wa~ returned to claim it a few hours later, st was arrested earl) Sunda) on El Toro and 1one. Laauna C•nyon roads T1moth\ DouaJas C.auettc llJ>" ·v:lu~ at s 150 were Coleman was arrested at 2·05 a m Satur- repon.cd stolen ftom a car parked in front day -his 21 st b1rthda) - on Shon Street of a San Juan Capistrano ho me in the and Park Avenue Bradle~ John Blau<' 2' 31200 block of Sonora two wc-ctends aao was anutcd at 12:43 • m Saturdu on South Coast Haahwa> Coatall- A SSOO car stc:reo wu reported '10lcn from a blue t 98S Volvo 740 Turbo parked in ftont ofa home an the 200 block of Santa lmne An atten<Unt of a u s station at 460 I amount of their su pplr<'rs· reduction ·· 1nce the beginning or ~ummer rt'La1I gasoline pnccs ha'e dappt"d aboul four cents a gallon despite predrctron\ that 1ncrcai.ed ~ummer dn' 1ng "'ould fo rcr them up he added The gap be1v.et>n \C.-11-'>t'T'e and full se~ e pnlt'\ lOnlrnued to "'tdt'n l ampu-. IJn 't n-pon('d ~unda) night that a man dn' ing a 'cllo~ Volksv.agen 1-...armann <.rh1a pumped S l4 in gas and drn\ e ''tl "'rthout pa' mg • • • Blanl , ht"l'ls and at) pc~nt<'r 'alued at mort than S-lf)O v.crc rcponed stolen trom a \Ch1dt par~ed in front ofa home 1n 1he -li.JlJi.\ bind of Bas.cwood Lane Sunda' ••• C hm l-crrarn ~ John Chn~ f<'rra rn. _ JnJ Rnan Harold Prad<'r 20 ""t'rc arr('s1ed at ~()() If' inc Cent<'r Dn\t' \alUrda' tor allcgtdly posSC'ssmg narc.:o11t \ fhc' v. ere ta~cn to Orange(. ount) Jail and ~l\)~('J Huntington Beach .\S I 'I(\\ 1deo ('asse11c rccord<'r and S 11> 1n ,a.,,h ~a' reponl"d stolen from an ap.inmcn1 in tht• 15500 block of H unt· inglt'n \m.·t•t ~unda' Poltc-e reports said th(' tht('I .1pparrnth cnt<'red 1hrough th<' lront d •'<\f • • • \ r<'~hkna in the :<t\00 block of St'aspra\ rcpq~cd 'unda' that \Omeone stole S500 in tool' Imm his garaj <' Th<' 'acttm told poh'"e he )USP<'l'l<'d that '>Orne unan \ nc<i auests a t h1~ d.iughtcr's pan) Fnda\ niah1 took the 11em\ • • • .\ resident 1n tht 1 q '00 bloc~ of Puc.aim rcport<'d that she found '!Omr kattcM '4 1th th<'IT head<., ut off to the side of her hou~ unda\ • • • .\ r~1dent in th<' 18100 blo~:k of Panerson r('port<'<l that 'lOmeone <Jtok S600 1n prdening equipment from h<'r aaraa(' undl\ at1emoon • • • .\resident 1n the QAf)() bllX'k o l txlalield reported Sund.a~ 1ha1 ~me11me an the past two month!> 50meone stok hi~ 357 Ruacr sema..automatac. s~1nlcis tccl h•ndaun from his home The aun wu valu<"Cf at S250 recordlr. worth S 1,000, were reported stolen from a home in the 8900 block ofl.a Stella Fnday. Isabel Sunday. .. .................................................. . • • • A repruentativc from Hunt10J1on Val- ~)' Tool. 18931 Mqnolla St.. re~ncd Thursday that a cust0mer rented a S2.2n paint &prayer lut Monday a.nd did not mumed It He "'~ncd it stolen ~u.e lht cu.a to mer pa.id for the utc of the equipment with a check drawn on a cloted account. • • • A ruidco1 10 ik I SOO block of Mesa Verde Eaat reponed that someone n olc her camera eq_wpment valued at S 1,450 from her home Friday. • • • Michael Rcf\A&Jo Ordal., H . was aft'eltcd at the comer of Canyon Dnve And Wilson Strett Saturday afternoon on tusptQOn of beina unda' the tn.fluencie ofberoin. He ...... ta.ken t0 Cotta Maa Jail an.d booked. ·pet. rattlesnake attacks captor t killed By t.M Alaodaid Prtt1 .\ rattJcsnate taken fr()m the MoJ•"e Dtscn bat his Santa Ana caplor on the hand, pumna the man an the hospn.a.I and bnnaina death to the rcr.tlle Hubf11Rodritu~2 , ofl.a Palma. was 11Stcd in auatdtd oondahon latt unda' at WHtem Medical Center aft.er the l("tn· 1ncb-lon1 dtamondbec._ rault snalC(' bat ham. Santa Ana po.her Lt Jack Nelto1' wd Rodnauet wanted to kttp the snake M found 1n the dncrt. but poueu1on of such a in.a.kt IS llltpt N elton Utd "'Th(' anake ~ aubtcQuentl) tcrm1n· ated." NelJOn wd ·•He •u dropped 1n a can with somt chloroform h wa1 Ptttty qu1cll .. .\ I I I Two U.S . men~et Nobel in medicine Polish government claims election boycott call failed. STOCK.HOLM, Sweden (AP) - The 1985 Nobel Pnze m medicine wu awarded today to Americans Michael S. Brown and Joseph L. Goldstein for discoveries the Nobel Institute said had "revolutionized our k.nowlcd&e" about cholesterol metabolism and treatment of cho&cturol·rclated diseases. The Nobel Institute said the dis- coveries of the two could lead to new trutment of cholesterol-related high blood pressure, arteriosclerosis, hean attacks and strokes. Brown, 44, and Goldstein, 45, arc on the staff of the Department of Molecular Genetics at the University ofTexas in Dallas. Goldstein, reached by the As-- sociated Press in Cambndge, Mass., where he is attending a conference. said: "I was awakened by the tele- phone and sort of overwhelmed by at. It's obviously thrilling and ellciting." Brown, also attending the con- ference, said, "It's quite a shock. "I really can only say it's a moment of arcat surprise a nd I really haven't had time to collect my thoughts. Yo u can imagine I'm a little overwhelmed right now." The Nobel Institute said the dis- coveries of the two Americans had "revolutionized our knowledge about the resulat1on o f cholestero l metabohsm and the treatment of diseases caused by abnormally elevated cholesterol levels in the Nobel Prt.se wlmlen J oeeph Goldateln (left) and lllc hael Brown toa.t each other after announcement. blood." cholcsterolemia," the Nobel citation Nobel officials said Brown and said. Goldstein found that cells of the "The discoveries made by Brown human body have receptors on their and Goldstein have drastically surfaces which affect the mt.ake of widened our understanding of the c holesterol-coAtainana particles cholesterol metabolism and in- caJled low-density lipoprotein (LOL) creased our possibilities to prevent which circulate in the bloodstream. and treat arteriosclerosis and heart The two Americans were credited attacks," the citation said . with research showing that lack of "But µieir discoveries have even functional receptors figured in more far-rcachins implications," the cholesterol-related illness. Nobel citation wd, noting that their Reduced numbers of receptors, research might e ventually lead to they found, can lead to incrcued medication that could increase the levels of cholesterol in the blood, numberofLOL receptors and thus, in which subsequently can accumulate connection with diet changes, reduce m the body's arteries and cause heart the n.sk of cholesterol-related illness. attacks or strokes. The medicine prize 1s one ol a scncs "The discovery of the LOL rccep-of awards set up in the 1895 will of tor has broadened our understanding Swedish dynamite inventor Alfred of cholesterol metabolism consider-.Nobel and presented since 190 J. ably and explained the mechanism Since 190 I , a total of 59 Americans behind famili al h y p er-havewooorsharedtheprize. WEEKDAY DINING Early Bird Dinner Specials $6.25 Complete dinner including soup AND salad, garlic b read, sherben and coffee . 17502 Beach Blvd . a t Slater H unting t on Beach Happy Hour 3:30-6:30 M-Thurs. TGIF 11.00 Happy Hour ( 3-6 p.m. ~ 130 E .17thCOSTA ME SA ~ HOURS I lam to 2am ( 714 ) 646 -8 8 55 WARSAW, Poland (AP) -The aovernment said more than n per- cent of Poland's voters rejected a call from Solidarity to boycott parlia- mentary elections, but the outlawed free trade union claimed thousands stayed away from the polls. Swiday's elections for the SeJm, Poland's leaislature, wen the first since Solidarity's creation m 1980. The communist aovernment hoped a heavy turnout would give credence to iu claim that stability had returned to Poland since the workers' revolt and the martial law measures taken to quell it. Speaking 10 reporters Sunday, gov- ernment spokesman Jerzy Urban said the number of Poles casting ballots would "certainly exceed" the 1S percent figure authorities reported for local elections last year. He said final results would be made available today. However, Lech Walesa, Soli- darity's fonner chairman, derided the balloting as "so-called elections," and said his estimates indicated more than 50 ~rcent of the voters boycotted m his home town of Gdansk. There was no immediate indepen- dent assessmment of the government and Solidarity claims. No indepen- dent organization monitored the balloting. Turnout by the country's 26 million eligible voters was expected to fall short of the 98.87 percent the government reported in the last parliamentary election in March 1980. Despite that mandate, then-Com- munist Party leader Edward Gierck fell from power six months later. David Bakes is Back Coaatry Goarmel Breaklasl Plaa yoar •a1iae11 •Hlia11 ia oar private tlae•e roo••· of Newport S.ac~ With his popular plnao bar e ntertainment Wed nesday thru Sunday 25 1 E. Coast H wy. 673-1505 LUIGI'S Wedneeday LaNgna Special Tlaareclay Spaghetti Special •3.65 •2.65 Bot • lacl•d•• Nied A p rllc bread bo• 4 PM Lunch Spec ials 11 A M-3 PM 3 Va rtetle• of Sub. •2.65 SpaghettJ •2.76 ....._... •3.25 Manlcottl or C.anelonl •3.25 lndlvldual Plau 13.25 •2.00 Off Large or Media• Pizza w / c hecM and one ltcm or more _ad • Custom Omelets · 30 item• to choo .. from fl' Homemade cina mmon rolla • ff.arty breakfuta aure to pl-I 100 presents Two Dinner• for Price of One the -- Jlaa" Eau ... to ca.oo•• ho• 11 ••• .,. a T•ee4av• iiftrnii;;;i:::::........ 6 :ff to llltla .. lat .. Terrorists threaten life of kidnapped Russians By tM Ataocla&ed Pres• BEIRUT -Radio stations reported a purported threat from Moslem extremists today to k..ill three kidnapped Russian diplomats and demolish t;ht Soviet Embassy unless it is closed within 48 hours. Christian-controlled V 01oe of Lebanon and the Moslem-run Voice of the Nation radios said the threat was made by an anonymous telephone caller who claimed co speak for the Islamic Liberation Orpnization. It was not immediately possible to authenticate the claim. · Brltaln cancel• meetlng with PLO LONOON - The government canceled a meeting wtth two ?µ> representatives today after they refused to endorse a sta.tement recoan1z~n1 Israel's right to exist Foreign Secretary Geoffrey Howe wd. The canocllat1on appeared to come at' the last minute. The Forei~ Office faced ~ndemnat~on from the press and. a Jewish group for ~ma to .i:nce~ with Paleat!ne Liberation Organization representatives following the h1Jackina of the Italian cruise ship Achille Lauro. Belglam prime mlnl•ter re.lgn• BRUSSELS -Belgian Prime Minister Wil fned Martens resigned his government today after his center-right coalition won a victory in parliamenta. ry elections. The l'C$ignation paves the way for the formation of a new government, which observers said would likely be another ccnter-riplt formation. Projections by the Interior Ministry showed the ma.in oppos1t.1on Socialists and Ecol<>&ists also gained m Sunday's elections. EartlJqade rock• Soviet territory MOSCOW -An earthquake struck the Soviet Central Asian republic of Tadzhikistan. leveliog factones and office buildinas and causina "loss of life," the official newsagcncyTassreponed today. Tass did not say bow many people were ltilled or injured, or give an assessment of the damage. But the Sunday quake was descnbcd as "strong." and the report of deaths indicated that the casualty toll may be heavy. LA street gangs hit ritzy neiglibOrhoods By &M Attoelated Prell LOS ANGELES-loner<aty gangs arc traveling to aftluent communities to commit crimes because it is more profitable and it decrcasc1 the odds of being identified, Southern California authorities say. In the past four years, investigators said, pngs from south-central Los Angeles have become more mobile and commit crimes outside their home turfs. "It's more lucntive," Burbank Detective R.J. Pastor said. "There's lcu chance of beina rec:osnized Nobody in Burbank would know them." Woman found dead ln barning car MALIBU -Homicide detectives were investigating the death of a woman found in a burning car that plunged off Malibu Canyon Road early today, a Los Angeles County Sheriffs Department spokesman said. The car went over a cliff. estimated at several hundred feet. at 2:55 a.m 1bout I 'h miles north of Pacific Coast Highway, Deputy Sam Jones said. The Oamina car ignited some brush, but firefighters extinguished the flames before they JOI out of control, Jones said. Grocers loslng on •tate lottery? LOS ANGELES -Some California vendors fear they may be the bia losers in the massive state lottery if the attorney general rules against using the games as commercial promotions. "We are not maltins any money on the lottery. We arc doing this as a convenience and service to the people of California," said Steven Koff. president of the Southern California Groccn Association, which represents 1,200 retail outlets. Some retailers say a 9C&Dt S percent commission vendors get for sclhng the$ I-a-pop pasteboards doesn't cover their costs, despite record sales figures for the first week. McMartln prosecatlon change •tadled LOS ANGELES -The district attorney's office may replace th~ three '-... prosecutors handling the McMartin Pre-School molestation case amid rq><>rts they disagree on whether all seven defendants should be tried, a top official says. "I'm not sure we would keep any of them (the prosecutors) on for purpolC oft.rial," Chief Deputy District Attorney Gil Garcet11 said. He declined to say ~hy a ne.w prosecutor may be assigned to the case but added that such a move in the middle of a complex case would not be "out of the ordinary." Private 8erv1ce held for Welle. .. • .. LOS ANG.~LES -Orson Welles, creator of the cinema masterpicoc C1t~zen Kane, was rem~mbe~d ~ver the w~kend at a private memoriar service attended.?nly. by his family. It was a ~mall fa mily private matter, just for themselves, wd a spokesman for Pierce Bros., Cunnin&ham and O'Connor Mortuary in Hollywood. He declined to identify himself or those present for ~undafs family gathenng. \\(ellcs' former attorney, Eh Blumen~eld, said earlier that the memonal semce would be "strictly a time for the family to say goodbye" and that friends were not invited. Funeral arrangements were pending. he said. 148 nabbed for bac.t chlld •up port LOS ANGELES -The dis~nct attorney's office has rounded up 148 fathen and mothers who were an arrears on court-ordered child support payments, includina a hotel chef arrested as he prepared a banquet. Warranta had been issued for about 500 parents, and investiptor Larry Moute said the team expected 1 SO arrests. The roundup bqan Friday. "Wcj're happy with l.k way this proaram bas worked out." investiptor 0.Vld Lara said. ''We expect to make a aood number of arrests on Monday when people arc beck at wort We will 10 to their place of employment and arrctt them." · Ald, •upplla no"1J to qade victim• LOS ANGELES -A jet loaded with SS00,000 worth of supplies for earthquake victim s departed Los Anteles International Airpon for Mexico over the weekend . The DC-I 0 carao plane wu filled with 140.000 pounds of medical and other supplies intended for the American-British Hospital the General Hoap!taJ ~f Mexico City, the University of AnahU;K and ~be Mellcan Red Cross, wd Richard Walden, spokesman for Operallo n Cahfornja. The relief aroup coordinated the airlift of tents, blankets and suraical ~donated by hospitals, pharmaceutical companici. camp1na and bcddina finna aad individuals, Walden said Sunday. Recovered mm• dJMppomdiJ6 hal GLENDALE -A researeher whOIC volunteers plowed throuah I $0 toaa of prbqc seekina priceless old films says they found only three recl1 bUt received nationwide off en of information on old m ovies found elsewhere The b&ckhoc excavation at Scholl Canyon landfill yielded 12 empty film can~ two short industrial films on "tcrewinj bolts, flxina tYDCWritcn, that tort of tbina" and one JS-millimeter btack ... nd-white Chineee ·aim, said Paul Carueo of Loa Anaeles--besed AtthivaJ Retc:arch Co. "We tried our best, we 1earthed and sean:hed, but we ran out of time," Caruso said lut week ... We were chewina up people's money, and it wasn't fair to continue." , Ardlldal blood .raean:tJI reported SAN FRANClSCO -The tranamitaion of blood-borne di--. sudl .. Ill•• n•d AIDS miabt be li&nificantly reduced if experiments wllb a new aniftc:W blood prove 1uccaafUf. accord1na to a report to the American Society of Ancttbesiolotists. Chic:qo rescarcb 1C1entist 1.Jubomir ~ -.id' la a oA u peper to be aivtn today that. in te111., rats,, rabbits and dop 'that bid almoet all Enterta inment nightly 9:SO PM to 1:->V A,.. of their natural blood replaced by (synthetic blood) the anima.IJ maintalaed 1162 Plac••tl• Co.ta 11 ... '11 ·l•SS Cloaed lloaclav Gourmet Food with Gourme~ .Jau routine body f'unctio n by breatbiO§ normal room a.ir." The ayn\betic substance, the researchd"reponed. may aanlftcantly reduce the riak or 2900 Newport Blvd . Newport Beach 675-2968 causifta transfusion reactions and trantmin.lna blood·borne di1CUC1 tueh as ----------------------...... ; AIDS a.od bep&u tls ... ... U.S. still wants trial for Abbas Attorney Geileral- says no safe haven or Ara at' s aide WASHINGTON (AP)-Attorney General Edwin Meese reiterated today that the United States still wants to brin, to trial the Palesti nian it accuses o planning the Achille Larao bijackina. Mohammed Abu cl Abbas. even as he was reported on the move once more. "We still want very much to apprehend him and bn ng him back to answer the charges •inst him in this country," Meese said on the "CBS Morning News." "There is no safe haven as far as we're concerned. We'll pursue Mr. Abbas as we would any other fugitive." Meese commented shortly after two PLO officials said in Yugoslavia that Abbas, 38, a lieutenant to Vasser Arafat, had left that country. On Saturday, Italian officials allowed Abbas, taken into custody with the ship's four hijackers two days earlier, to leave on a flight to Yu1oslavia. But the two PLO officials, who refused to be identified, would not say when he left or what his destination was. the United States knows where Abbas is. Nor would he say if the Reagan administration would try to intercept a plane carrying him, as it did with the Egyptian airliner flying the hijackers, Abbas and another PLO official out of that country on Thursday. But Meese said the United States considers Abbas an "international criminal. "It's imporunt that he be brou&}lt back to answer for his cnmes and not given immunity so he can engage in a propaganda campaign." Abbas flew out of Italy despite a U.S. arrest warrant sent to Rome earlier in the day. White House spokesman Larry Speakes called the Italian decision "1m com · prehensible." U.S. officials worked Sunday to try to convince Yugoslavia to hold Abbas, but admitted their efforts would likely fail. Yugoslov1a. a non- aligned nation, supports the Palestine Liberation Organization. FBI Director William Webster said on CBS' "Face The Nation" that Yugoslavians officials ''have dcch n- ed to detain" Abbas. There was no official reaction from Yugoslavia. Ex-hostage refers to six PLO pirates NEWARK. N.J. (AP) - A judge who was among Americans held hostage by Palestinian terrorists aboard a Mediterranean cruise hner laid today a ship bartender told him be watched as two hijackers shot a wheelchair-bound man in the chest and head during the hijacking. Judge Stanley C. Kubacki, 70, also told The Associated Press that. while four hijackers have been jailed in Italy in the incident, there was evidenC!C that six men held the ship Achille Lauro. Meanwhile, other former captives returned to the United States over the weekend, one woman criticizing a lick of security that allowed weapons to be brought aboard the ship and others saying they may file suit over the ordeal. Kubaclci. a Pennsylvania criminal judge, said the bartender described to him the kjlling of uon KJinghoffer, 69, of New York. the only person killed during the hijacking. Kubackl said he. hostage Seymour Meskin, 71 , of Union, N.J ., and the· bartender were interviewed by Egyp- tian authorities Thursday m orning. "Af\cr (the bartender) spoke to the E,yptian prosecutor, we talked to him. and he told us that he had accidentally seen the shooting when be was coming down the compa· nionway," the judge recounted. The bartender ''saw one (hijacker) put a bullet in Mr. KJinghoff'er's chest and he saw one put a bullet in his bead. He was terrified and had kept this in his breast," Kuback.i said. Kubackj said at one point during the ordeal he heard two shots "and a son of double splash," .spparently as Klinghoffer's body and wheelchair were cast overboard. Kubacki also said there may have two hijackers in add1t1on to the four being held for tnal in Italy. "I was convinced that there had to be one on the bndge w1th a gun on the captain and there had to be one in the cnaine room, because there were men down there workjng." Kubackj said. When he identified the four known hijackers in a lineup before flying home. Kubacki said he felt "a sense of triumph of justice." The four were Superfund bills facing bitter fight WASHINGTON (AP) -Sharp battle lines are forming in the House over SIO billion "Superfund" lcais- lation that will sh.a~ the future of the nation's effort to nd the landscape of itt most dangerous toxic waste dumps. The arowing dispute pits commit- tee apinst committee and en- vironmentalists ap.inst industry and the Rcqan administration. It could force Hou1e Speaker Tho mu P. O'Neill, D-Mass., to take sides. and leave Rep. O aude Pepper, D-Fla., and bis Rules Committee to make a decision that could rally affect the out.come of a possibly bitter floor ftabt. There arc two distinctly different bills in the House to renew and ape.nd the hazardous chemical cleanup campaian, which was in- idated in 1980 with a S 1.6 billion budpt for the Environmental Protcc· don~ncy. One bill was written in July by the ~and Commerce Committee aad 1t1 chairman, Rep. John Dintell. ~Mich. Supponed by the petroleum and chemical induatncs. the proposal Ml been de90uncied u too weak by avironmental arou;,and the princt-Dll author of the naJ SuDCff\lnd law. Jlcp. James Ao o. D-N). detained to Italy after U.S. Navy fighter planes intercepted a plane carrying them out of Ea)'Pt. "l was proud of Amenca," Kubacki said. Other returning Americans voiced similar sentiments Sunda . *' ...... " •• ' Relat!Yee llaten u former hoe~e Sophie Chuaer tell• preu conference of ordeal aboard the Achille Lauro. Weinberger argued against Egyptian jet interception NEW YORK (AP) -Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger re- peatedly called President Reagan to express doubts about forcing down lhe Egyptian plane carrying the Palestinians accused of hiJackmg the Achille Lauro. according lo a publish· ed report. The report. in Newsweek maga- zine. said al one pomt Weinberger told the president "This will destroy our relations with Ein't." Newsweek also said that Reagan. aboard Air Force One. was forced lo use unsccure radio channels to order Weinberier to proceed with the mterc.cpuon. The scrambler aboard lhe presidential jet was broken, the magazine said. As a result, the magazine said, Reagan's conversatio n with Weinberger was overheard by an amateur radio operator. The operator. who was not 1dent· 1fied, reported that Weinberger ex· pressed reservations about an oper· a11on that might require NaV} pilots to fire across the nose of an unarmed civilian plane. Four Palestinians accused of h1- Jackmg the Italian cruise ship ofl Egypt were taken into custody earl)' Fnday in Italy after Amencan fighter Jets forced the Egyptian plane en route to Tunisia to land. Newsweek also said that Manne Lt. Col. Oli ver North. a Reagan admin1s- trat1on's liaison to N1caragua'scontra forces. reportedly played a major role 1n formulaung the mtercepuon plans. .. ~tan~ C0Nt DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 14, 1915 Aa Government seeks accea• to citizens' private tax data By ~ Al~Ui~ Presa NEW YORK -The Rcqan administr1t1on 11 aeeklng to expand the 'ovemment's u~ of lAJt data and 11ve federal qenctes accns to confidential mformauon about c1uuns, The New York Times reported today. U nder the proposal, the tax information would be ulCd lO dctenmnc t~ eliafbility of people applying for federal proanms such as auaranteed student loana and veterans insurance. If approved by Conarcu. federal asenc1es could look at anyone's tax data to make sure they were not eligible for pnvateJy financ.ed insurance benefits before payina benefits under aovemment prosram1 hk.e Medicare CIJolr bu•, train collide: four dle BRAMWELL. W. Va -A m1n1ster said he could only watch m terror as a chartered bus catT)'InJ his church choir slammed mto a slow-moving train, killing four people and mjunng more than 24 "I saw 11 coming. but I couldn't even holler to warn the other passcngc~ ... the Rev. Louis Hardy said Sunday. "All I could do was get down on the floor and bury my face 1n the scat " The brakes on'lhe 18-ycar-old bus probably failed before It slammed into the Norfolk&. Southern tralJl Sunday af\ernoon on U.S. 52. said a state policeman. Criminal• rarely buy gun• ln •tore. WASH INGTON -Hardened cnminals beg. borrow. steal or QUY handguns from friends and relatives and off the street. but seldom purcha~ them in retail stores. says a aovemment-financcd study With lcgislat1on c1rculat1ng in Congress to ea~ gun controls for the first time since 1968. a report by the National Institute of Justice said that only about a fifth of the guns purchased by felons came from retail outlets and pawnshops. Balanced budget requlre. Pentagon cut. WASHINGTON (AP) -Treasury Secretary James A. Baker Ill says a plan to cut federal deficits to zero by 199 1 can work. but warns that reductions in Pentagon spending may be required to reach the goal. "I think. given the poliucaJ will to make the hard choices. you can rcach balance without having to raise taxes." Baker said Sunday. "Yes. I belie ve 11. Clearly. there would have to be reductions in defense." Baker. appeanng on NBC.TV's "Meet The Press." said 1mplemen11ng the plan would require ehmmauon of federal subs1d1es to AmtraJc and a phasing out of revenue shanng. A tom •ma•IJer colll•lon 8etll record CHIC AGO -Sc1entms say they cannot predict the practical results of a h1sto0-malung test of Fermi National A.ccelerator Laborato~·s atom smasher. but they hken it to research that gave birth to modem technol<>g) The laboratory on Sunday smashed two beams of subatomic particles together at an energy level three times higher than prev1ousl) achieved on Earth_ The feat makes Ferrmlab the world leader 1n h1gh~ncrg) physics research. a pos111on the United States lost to CERN laboratory, a consortium of researchers from a dozen European countnes. 1n the m1d-1970s Now is lowest. By U.S. Gov't. testing method. 8 But Aorio's fort:C1 won an import· ut round lalt -uk when the Pubhc Works and Tranaponation Commit- tee unanJmouJly approved I Super- ftmd bill oon~nint m~or proviliona tbat wm rcjccted by EnC11Y and Commerce. SURGEON GENERAL 'S WARN ING. Cigarette Smoke Contains Car bon Mono xid e. NOW 1 t-11 l owt S 1 {tt All BHA~D!-. .,. '" f -t ' • • "' ' SOfT P4CK 100\ fll Tf R M£NfHOl J mq 111 0 J mq nico11n11 ., Pt1 t19er1111 ~ fTC mt1hod I I • • I • I I ' 0rwr Coelt DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 14', 1885 Young death·row inmate says he's afraid of dying a, DA vm SPEER , , I.,._.._ CUMMINS UNlT, Ark, -Ronald Ward, at 16 the younacst death ro~ inmate in th~ United States, said he is comina to aJips with his fear of dyina for the slayings of two elderly women and a boy, but admitted: "I'm still ec:arcd," Ward maintained at a prison news conference that he was innocent and said he would tell the victims' families: "I'm sorry that it bappened to their people, but I did not k.Hl their folks. I did not do it." Convicted Sept. 20 an Crittenden County Circuit Court of murder. Ward is tentenced to die April 12 by injectioft, Aps>eal of a capital murder conviction to the Arkansas Supreme Court 11 automatic and defense lawyer Joseph Brown Jr. said the appeals process could take up to 10 ycan, ~ard wu found 1uiJty of fatally stabbina sisters Lois Townsend Jarvts, 76, and Audrey Town.end, 72, both of West Memphis, and their .,eat-srandnephew, Chris Simmons, 12, on April 12. Faaurcs from the Capital Punishment Project of the American Civil µberties.Union in New York City show that Ward, whose 16th birthday 11today,1s the youn~t penon held on death row in the United States. F<?ur of th.e n~t1on 's l ,S90 death row inmates were 1 S when they committed their cnmcs, but the othen are older than Ward now said Henry Schwanschild, project director. ' Ward shares a 20. by 14-foot cell with three other inmates. 1 He does not attend classes but spends most of bis time in bis cell. which is decorated with pictures of bou1e1, Oowen and people, he said. Ward said be was afraid but that bis fear of dyina and fear of being in prison had lessened since he entered prison. "It's a tittle better," he said. "I'm still scared." Thirty-five people under a death sentence in the United States were leas than 18 when they committed their crime, Schwanschild said. "We know of 271 executed for crimes committed under qe 18 between 1642 and 198S." · James Arcene was executed by federal officials in Arkansas on June 26, l 88S, for a crime be committed when he was 10 yean old., be said. Ward is not the first IS-year-old to be placed on death row at Cummins. Joe l(aaebein was LS when he was condemned in 1971 for murder, but in a retrial he was convicted of !CCOnd~earee murder and released from prison in 1977. The bodies of the sisters and the boy, a classmate of Ward's, wett found in a bedroom of the women's home. Authorities suspected a buralary there after a punc belonging to one of the women was found in a di ten. An auto~y showed that Townsend bad been raped and officers found a butcher bufe in a bathroom sink. . A few days !Ater, police picked up W~ at West Junior Hi&h School l!l West Memphis, where he was enrolled an the seventh grade for the third tlme. Deatb row inmate Ronald Ward turned 18 today. Ward, who was left with his grandparents when he was 3 months old, said his parents knew he had been sentenced to die. "They know," he said. "I 1uess they care. My father tried to come and see me while I was in the Crittenden County Jail, but they wouldn't let bi .. m. Ward, who is black, said he did not think he got a fair trial. ''When they pve me an all-white jury, riaht then I said, 'This is not going to be a fair trial.. .. .. No-fault divorce reduces income for women, kids Standard of living droppedfor73% of divorced women WASHING TON (AP) -No-fault divorce in force in all SO states as of July I, has turned out to be "limply an economic disaster for divorced women and minor children," a Stan- ford University sociologist says. "We really have reduced the acrimony and trauma. The problem is we haven't worked out the econ- omics of divorce," said Leonore Weitzman, who reports on more than a decade of~ in a new book, "The Divorce Revolution: The Un- expected Social and Economic Con- sequences for Women and Children in America." "I thouaht only aood could come out of no-rault," Weitzman said in a speech to the Women's Lep1 Defense Fund. But, she said., analyses of property division, alimony and child support proved her expectations to be overly optimistic. Based on 2,SOO court cases in Los AnJeles and San Francisco, Weitzman concluded that women and min<>r children ex~rienced a 73 percent decline in their standard of living in the first year after a divorce. The divorced men experienced an average increase of 42 percent in the same period, she said. Accordina to Weitzman, if a man makes $1 ,000 a month an averqe iud&e will award him $700 and Jive $300 to the ex-wife and two children. She said older women and former wives of middle-dass professionals experienoe the most deprivation and downward mobility compared with their ex-husbands. Studies and statistics from other states indicate the California findinp are typical of the national situation, Weitzman said. She aaid her reteareh provides the fint data on what bu happened under no-fault. . In the area of property, We1wnan said a 1970 California law rcquirln& equal division of property "secmecl like a feminist dream come true." Prior to that, she said, when judaes had full discretion, women usually received one·third of the property and men two-thirds. But she said women have been hurt by the equal division law. Before 1970, she said, only one out of JO homes was sold u a result of a divorce proceedina and women typically re- ceived the house. Two ~after the law was passed, she 111d, oae out of three homes wu beina sold to meet the equal Civision requirement - disrupting the family at a time when stability was most needed. In addition, Weitzman said, courts do not aenerally take into account new kinds of property that she calls career asscta-future eaminas ability based on education and skills, pen· sions and retirement funds, and medical insurance. Alimony is largely a myth in America. Weitzman said. She said 8S percent of divorced women "don't receive a penny" althou&h attomeya believe 7S percent are awarded alimony and JUdacs put the f11Ure at SO percent. Even in lonaer maniqes, she said, alimony is awarded to less than half the women and only to one of three who had never had careen outside the home. Under old laws, slie said., alimony was an open~nded commit- ment but today the average award lasts 2S months. Clues show dinosaurs died in holocaust "Our aim should be to equalize the standards of livina of men and women after divorce," she said. "I don't see bow anybody can be unaffected by these statistics. They're so powerful and so devutatina." ln addition to examinina coun cases, Weitzman said she interviewed divorced men and women; all judaes hearing matrimonial cases in Los Angeles and San Francisco; the entire matrimonial bar in San Francisco, and 92 Los Angeles attorneys. She also did a national survey of state laws. The averqe child support award is $200 a month for two children, Weitzman said, addina the fiaurc "wouldn't cover day care alone.•• She said child support awards acnerally were lesa than what the averqe welfare mother receives, without cost-of-living adjustments and aa· aravated by hiah rates of non- compliance. •\. CHICAGO (AP) -Massive fires raaed across entire continents, de- vouring everythina in their path and leaving a charred, dark and silent planet in their wake, with half the existina species -including the dinosaurs -destroyed. Such a holocaust sweeping the &lobe 6S million years ago could have been touched off by a giant mush- room cloud sparked by a meteor that smashed into the Earth, three Univer- sity of Chicaao chemists say in an article published this month in the journal Science. Thouah Nobel Prize-winning physicist Luis AJvarn severaJ {ears ~o blamed the extinction o the dinosaun on a meteor striking the Earth, the theory of gJobal holocaust by Dr. Edward Anders, Wendy S. Wolbach and Roy S. Lewis is a new one. It is is similar to the "nuclear winter" that many believe could follow a nuclear war, Anders said in a telephone interview. He said be and his associates pieced together their theory after discoven ng unusually high levels of soot and charcoal in clay samples from the time. Anders 1s among those who subscribe to the theory that a meteor probably struck what is now the Bering Sea m1lhons of years ago, bla.sting out a crater 30 miles deep and 90 miles wide. He suggests the heat of the impact would have vaponzed subsurface rock and produced a giant mushroom cloud as hot as 4,000 degrees Fahren- heit. As the cloud spread up to 1,200 miles and more, its seething beat would have i&nited fires on surround- ing land masses, Anders said. And u the flames enlafled the circle of destruction, their soot and smoke would have helped block the sun, combinina with the dust kicked up by the meteor. The Earth would have been plunged into a cold, dark night that luted for months, he said. The l'Cteal'Cbers discovered the possibility almost by accident, Anders said. "Nobody had ever talked about a fire and we were studying samples of rock believed to have been formed by the meteor when we found soot pa.rti_cles. "They h.ad to come trom some- where. It was obvious it was the residue from a fire." Anden said the team discovered identical particles in samples from the period collected in Denmark, Spain and New Zealand., leading them to believe the fires were world- wide. The impact of global fire would be similar to the damage from total nuclear war, he said. "The blasts in•a nuclear war would block out the sun and, perhaps, touch off another series of fires." Block.mg the sun would cause the Earth's temperatures to drop about 30 degrees, jeopardizing plant and animal life, Anden said. Raearcher Wendy Wolbach holda clay Mlllple which ehe NJll containa ht&h amounta of eoot and charcoal. She said her research found delin- quency b.~ little to do with a father's ability to pay. "Fathers who make $30,000 to SS0,000 were just u likely to have poor records as men who cam $10,000," she said. Researcher says artificial sweetner decomposes in time SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Aspartame, an artificial sweetener better known by the trade name Nutrasweet, decomposes in soft drinks by half in m months and almost completely in three yean, according to research sponsored by the sugar industry. The findings, prexnted to the 21st regional conference of the American Chemical Society on last week b)' Dr. Wing S. Tsang, were immediately disputed by spokesmen for the Food and Drug Administration and a soft drink manufacturer. Aspe.rtame is used in carbonated beverages, table top sweeteners, chewing sum. breakfast cereals, pow- dered drinks and desen mixes. The study outlined by Tsang involved analysis of the effects of one to 36 months' storage at room temperature of four canned Canadian soft drink brands containing Aspartame. "We can see, over a penod of time. that the Aspartame is go111g way down," Tsang said. "Tbat's not what our studies have proven," she said. adding that if the sweet taste of the soft drinks diminished after a couple of months' storage, consumers wouldn't buy them. "Sometimes it takes even that long to get to the stores." "We feel that 1t 1s good and 1t will last a long time unless 1t is heated " Holland said about the sweetener. ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-. • • • • • • ! • • • • : • : i i --- ritd lhe •"':r bin In lhe ~ wlion I dlly. llunyl,,.....,. Od. J61h. HOAG MEMORIAL HOSPITAL Kim Lee and Michael Joseph Norcia. Gayla and Thomas Stormer. Laguna September 18 .Laguna Beach, girl Niguel, boy Mr. and Mrs. Charles Huffine, Costa Judy and Fred Van Leuven. Laauna September 11 Mesa, girl Niguel, boy Tammie and Randy Stron• Irvine SOUTH COAST MEDICAL CENTER September U girl °' ' September ' ·Petra B. and Steven D. Narum, Costa September l '1 Cynthia Mane and Rohen Earl Mesa. boy Patti l!ld Terry Ferauson, Costa Boatright, Mission Viejo, boy September it-, Mesa, prl Lyn Alexandra and Charles Philip Nancy K. and R. Thomas Moore, HOAG MEMORIAL HOSPITAL Charlton, Mission Viejo, boy Mission Viejo, boy September u September I sep&ember Zl Mr. and Mn. Mark Foster Costa Darlene and Jose Cedeno, Laauna 'Catherine and Robert Eatanislau, Mesa, boy ' Beach. boy l..quna Niauel, airl Mr. 11\d Mn. Jeffrey Dien:bmeier September 8 September H Costa Mesa,, Jirl · Mary F. 1Urt1s and Charles Zelez. Denise Kruel and Patrick Michael Mr. and Mn. Douataa R.utello, Huntington Beach, girl DeGiacom~-~~na del Mar, sirl Newport Beach, boy September 18 1MpWmMr It Se,tember u Tina and Raymond E. Stewart, Mary Hayne and 8arft1t Miller, Mr. and Mn. Rocke Armstrong, Irvine, girl September ti Laaunn~£t;'j HOSPITAL Fountain V~cre!°~r IC llll•••llJ Susan Elizabeth and Terry M1ch•el Sepsember H Mr. and Mn.~ciJ Ii Hunt-Teale, Laauna Niau.el, boy Christine and Oeorse Campos, inaton Beach, · · I ~tember u Irvine, boy Mr. and Mn. cent KonOlke The Daily PIDI ~:a,;,1 Michael Duncan, Costa WESTERN ~~I~ CENTER ~~ti~on~~hael Shauty. Cynth1a L. and Jonathan S. Hill, September 11 Newpon Beach, boy · Laguna Beach, boy Miriam and Otcar Zunip. Hunt-..... mber H readers want to see ,... WOl'k. • llatlit • Jill Silver a~!~t':v~ ~ Edwards. inaton Beac3;ft!!..w 11 ¥~·and Mn. John Park. Costa Meta. t .Lquna Beach, girl Wendy and Lee T~t. Irvine, girt ~r, and Mrs. Dwiaht MiJAer, HHt .. photos of ,... local oflce, professional or :---s.,_ae_mbe_r_u ______ s.,_ .... __ ll ___ !:~~~Mkhlel OiotbeT, • Summer Crowda are Cone! Mr. and Mri. Cart Slaney, ea... retal deaign for .. lblcatlon In ~r Tt~e to Come to Dillman'• for tb~1.1n. w• Oulu,., L .... lor ti c,a\e\\\\e ) 8 • d D • Mr, and Mn. Tbomu Dun. Kun~ .1a~s let-Gii ~ Ear y 1r 1nner1 inau>nBc.ch,airi T / '7 .SO futurlng Prime Rib Of' Fresh fish Mt'. and w!= ~..., Complete dinner with choice of re, aQd Mn. Fredtict Fonilr, Nut· _l Soup or Salad and Detsert inlton Bllch,)oy le4t#Amra'llZ:U • to 6 PM Mi. ud Mn. llobln JUmMll, Huni.- eo1 E. a:i~y~:J~n~ ~~~~a.ta ............. ~,,..~ ............................................. . Mt. Ud Mn. Ol.nW ~. Newpon ... boy . - " .... Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT/Monday, October 14, 1985 * A1 Appropriately cal>Ded b•ta Len lltller and Horace Coll with wi•ee ae...erfj and Mary Ann «ireeted their aueeta. Weetpb.alla Band leader Walter Votct chatted with UCI 811unne Scbaler Joined dad Job.D T. 8cbaler, left. motJaer Medical School dean Gerald Weinllteln and wife Marcia. Eileen and Carl P<etaeer ln eampu.n, tbe German fare. 'Rhinefest 'adds oom-pah to l.f CI research fund ~other Natu re gave light s h ow as fi n a le of s pirited gathe r ing By BE'ITY PORTER ~ .... ColTllJ I .-ot "Once a friend, always a fnend- even if your horse kicked my teeth out," said blonde Mary Ann Miiler. She referred to a "long ago accident with a horse belong.mg to good friends Tustin Mayor F rank (and Margaret) Greinke ... The Grienlces served on the comm 1 ttee for a German "Rhinefest" party co-hosted by Mary Ann and husband Lea at their Newport Beach bayside home with Beverly (Tho mpsoa) and Ho CoU. The party was sponsored by the Medical Research and Education Society(MRES)ofthe UCI College of Medicine. "Ho. Len, our sons. Brya.a and Todd, and I tied lanterns, twinkJing lights and little bows on the trees and shrubbery early this after- noon," said Mary Ann. "The dance floor am ved at I p.m .. the German food (Trees Restaurant) came rolling in a little before 5 and the Westphalia oom- pab-pah Band and strolling accor- dionist arrived just in time for the guests who came promptly at 5 o •clock," she said. o.llr .... ,......, ... ....._ UC Intne Trutee Job.D La1n0n and wife Doria enjoyed Weetpballa Band'• mute before ratn cloeed dance Ooor. Miller has a knack for making everything, including a party for 100-plus seem as easy as making apple streudle (that and ~rman This batter won't score DEAR ANN LANDERS: I would like to respond to your answer on date rape to "Been Through It in Ari- zona." He had a point but your re- A•• lMDEIS marks threw me. ••••••••••••~ I am 22, attract- ive and -surprise -a virgin. The reason: None of the men I date are ready for a long-term commitm.ent. I am not frigid. I enjoy kissing, cuddling and exchanging words of endearment. Now Ann Landers comes along and says, "A woman who goes toa man'sapartment fora fewd~nks and a little shared affection gives him reason to believe that she is a candidate for whatever be might have in mind." Wait a minute, Coach. Can't I JUSt get up to bat, even tbou&h I am not a homerun hitter'! Whatever happened to the pleasure of going to first, second or third base. and then 1010.g home,...... alone? P.S. Thanks a heap for telling all those guys to whom I said "no" that they were right when they called me a ronen little tease. -MORAL BUT NOT DEAD IN MO. DEAR M. BUT NOT D.: If yo1 are U , I a11ame taie mn yoa date are yoar age or older. ID W1 day ud a1e, mea lD tlaelr middle %01 are aot lattrestecl lD ftnt or aeeoad bate. ney wut to wlaam It oat of tlae ballpark. n e rate for male 1e:raal arnsal 11 aboat foar ttmea u fut at tlae female!t, ud 11aally mac• more lntease. w.ea a fella 1et1 to tMrd bate •e laa1 a 1troa1 P'Y•lcal compel1loa to acore. ID my oplaloa, It 11 llllfaJr (aot to madoa rt11ly) to brlDI ~ to 1ac• a r.u of escltemeat ucl uaouce, "I'm aot tlaat kind o a prl. I'm 1ola1 llome." I doa't say It'• OK. for a p y to force a womu to provide ~ wltii dae altlmatt udlfactloa. Not oaly 11 It morally wro111, lt'1 a1ala1t Qe law. I am saylac, llowever, It 11 fooU•• to tab He• cu.aces. Golas to bat wlda taie lateatloa of 1toppla1 at Wrd bate may prove laaurdoa1 to a womu't ltealtai. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: r lm'ew af I read your column long enough, my problem would come up, and indeed it has. I am among the heanng-1mpaired. Many physical ailments are the result of ignoring medicaJ advice and or self-indulgence. r refer to people who eat or drink too much, smoke. shun exercise. and fail to get adequate rest. Such folks invite heart attacks. lung cancer, high blood pressure, emphysema. enlarged livers. ulcers. etc. My problem is tannatus -one I could not have prevented. I have a nngrng noise m my cars day and n1gJ:it. It never stops and it never will. I am doomed to have 1t tall the day I die. h 's a living hell. I realize n's not easy to carry on a conversauon wt th a person with impaired hearing, but let me tell you what m y wife does. She will put her head in the refrigerator, say something and get mad because I don't respond. I tell ber if she wants to talk to me to please get her head out of the rcfngerator. The woman thanks I am loolung for a fight and clams up. I become exasperated. blow my top and the day 1s ruined. Then there are relatives who mumble When I ask them to speak more distinctly, they shout back an anger I am pleading for some understanding on behalf of all who share this probkm. Folks who arc heanng-ampaired do not deserve to be cut off from the world. -BOSTON SUFFERER DEAR B.: I •ear you load ud clear -u d bope o&Jten will 1et the messa1e. Tlaa.U• for wrttlng. Smokenders makes it easy. , Just give us one hour to prove it. Have you ever 1r1ed to Quit or thouqht abOul qu11t1n9 smoking'> Would you quit 1! you could be free 01 the urge and desire 10 smokP ' Would you QUtl 11 you could do 1t w11hou1 scare tactics shock 1reatmen1s cold turkey w1thdrawa1 drugs c1tmb1ng the walls ga1n1ng weight embarrassment or willpower ? We can help vou We vP he Ot'd hunc1•ed~ ot thousands ot smokers sint e t 969 Ma1or coroo1a1tons have se•E>< fed u" to hPID lhP•• emotoyees Our proqram mef'tS thP qu•dt>11nt>S ot lht> lJ 5 Surqeon Gener,11 and hcl<, oepn .:iccrPC11ted Even ,, you tee you ouqn1 to au•' 0,,1 ym. 1lor> l really want 10 clttPnd d frpe mppt nq ATTEND OUR FIRST MEETING FREE ... IQill l'ffiCI Costa NO COST OR OBLIGATION mesa medical Center Hospital 301 \'ictoria . t1Tct onrerence ~oom Tuc"1a). Oct6ber 15 & Wtdnt'll<la\. < >ctobt'r lfl 7:30 P.\t. C $mnk•ntW." tnr 11184 'O• .ntounat•Ot'I <lt>QUI <MC1l l O•c>ol•.t"'' 1(1• v lu• lj"•ll•O n <1'"'0 ''' chocolate cake were the pan) 's desserts). projects "Special events such as this (pany) also enhance com· munacat1on between the college and the community and we arc grate- ful." removmgred tabledothsand huge centerpieces of assorted seasonal flowers. Assisting the Millers, Co1lsand the Grein kes were Barbara and Bea Harril (who hosted a "preview" pany at their nearby bays1de home a few days earlier), R•tla Jea1ea (who was leaving wit~ fnends soon to trace the trail ofThe T hree Musketeers through the south of Guests were havi ng dinner at long p1cn1c tables on the waterfront lawn when the Hamsesamved. by yacht. at the Miller's p1er."We went to the Center Club opening first." said Barbara, .. and then we stopped off to change clothes ... "This house 1s spectacular." said a guest of the Millers' thrce-stol). spacious. an-filled home (designed by Mary Ann) withboth a Jacuzzi and a fireplace atop the roof. offering swecpa ng harbor and n 1gh t- hgh t views. F ranee). Mary Dell Laca1, Mary Moud (UCI staff), Mary and Dick O'Neill, Mary and Roy Otterboat (Millers' neighbors). Saz.a.ane Schaler (with her parents, JobD and E lleea and sister Patricia), Kay "Well, you can't sa) we didn't greet you with a 'light show'," said plucky Mary Ann. when lightning streaked across the sk}'. loud claps of thunder followed and steady rain drove guests inside. The ram subsided and guests (including Dorttand UCI trustee J on Lawsoa)mo\ed outsadeagain Bob Bacci (wtth Ka rea)appeared on a second-floor balcony and auctioned two ttems· Dinner at the Trees Restuarant and two round- tnp tickets to German) (winning bidders were Bob and Pbylli1 Hea- dersoa). Vickery (with husband Larry). . executive director MRES, and Len's mother, 8jordl1. UCI Medical School Dean Dr. "Grab a cover for the (portable, wood) dance floor." said Len M 1 lier Caterers took dessert. coffee and liqueurs inside. white servers and guests scumed about the lawn Gerald Weln1teln (with wife Marcia ) said, "MREShas provided $31 .000 in two years for research Paparazzi is ed11ed b) Dail~ P1/or Sryleed11or Vida Dean. TV LISTINGS EV9ING -e.-00-1 :~~ I crJ) NF\. FOOTBAU HART TO HART GAEATEST AMEAICAH HERO e TIWFS CXNPNN ., Dff'AENT STAQl(ES • 8U8INESS REPORT I.!> PN)JfCT UNIYeRSE (J)C88NEWS 8 NICNEWS EID lAYelE TM'P FAMILY m~scc~ **'"' "Old Enough" (19&4l Satan ~~bowHIMSI • *'"' "Rockshow' (1980) Paul McCertrwsy and Wings -•:30- l tecNEWS , TOO CLOSE FOf\ COWORT JE()fAK1'( MAQB. / l.EHRER NEWSHOUA ID PHOTOGRAPHIC VISION ~=-OF FORT\JNE e SHOCKWAVf.S OF AAMAOS>OON m BEST OF HOT SEAT -7:00- l ~~TOHIOHT HAPPY DAYS AGAIN DAUAS I :.scowNrf WHEEL OF FOATIJNE BUSINESS REPORT (I) P.M. MAGAZINE at HEADlME CHASERS CID PMJSE THE LOfl> ~~T HOTUNE • ••; "LUSller ·I 198-41 Tom Sellecil JIM Seymour ~ FAEAIE TALE THEA mE -7:30-IJ 2 ~THE TOWN I PNCf IS R9GKT WHArs HAPflENINGn w·A'S'H m NEWl YWED GAME 9 Wll..O, WILD WORLD Of ANMALS I GAEA T CHEFS Of CHICAGO SAH DIEGO AT LARGE JE()fAK1'( I;) RACING FftOM OAK TREE .:t) PETE TOWNSHB«> l1' FAAGGlE ROCK -8.110- • SCARECAOW ANO M~ KltG D at TVS BLOOP£RS AHO .. Eli) RELIGIOUS PAOOAAMMIHG -1<>-.»-G> CAPfTOl .JOUNW. Ii) HEALNl F-OR TODAY "t MOY£ **'' The Frisco Kid 119791 Gel:le WtlOet Hamson Ford -11:00- 08 OOIHEWS CAASON'S COMB>V cv.ssa WKN> IN CICNNATl 8AANEY ta1.ER OM. Y WHEN 11..AUQH • aea lllfJIORT HBIT,._ SINGEM TO IE ANNOUNCB> NOT NECESS•llll. Y THE HEWS YOW • "I L*e Gm Who Do 119m Alena Penz. Gunler Uegler l..YOW * • ., GrtnOvlew U S A I 1~1 JalM Lee CYrtis, C Thoma Howell Anne Ila.my and Krla Kmtoftenon will hoet Country Mule AMoclation awarda •how at 9 :30 tonJcht on CBS, Channel 2 . -1':30- l i~~ 9 COMEDV BAE.Al< WI™ MAOC NIDJNllE PMCT1CAI.. JOKD eMOYE * *** "An American In Plf\J" ( 195 I) Gene l(elly l eM Caron G JO«EA'S WILD (!) COMEDY 8AEAJ< WITH MACK AHDJAMIE -= **'-' "Salem's Lot' 1197911Par1 1 ol 2) OaVld Soul James Mason Ii) W()NDERW()AKS I.!> M BRAJN CID PRAISE THE LOAO mMCME • • This IS The Life 119"1 Donal<! O'Conno<. Susanna Fosler C MCME • • • The Brotner F1om Anotner Planet 1198"1 Joe Monon Darryl Edwards. i ~FOR MEHGELE • • Robtn Hood And The SO<cer· er · ( 19831 Anlhony Valentine NIO.o- las G1ace Z MOVIE • • • • War An<! Peace I 19681 (Pan 1 of 2)lu<1m11a Sa'ltlyeva Sef. 991 Bondarclluk -8:30-0 TIC TAC DOUGH .J) LOVE BOAT CD PM. MAGAZINE -t.00-8 I KATUALUE 0 3MOVIE 'Silent Witness I Premt«el Valerie Bert1nelk. Jolin Savage O NEWS ' DYNASTY Ol YMfllC CHAUENOE WONDBMOflCS OWWiSI AEfl'OffT =TMfl()fl) ** * "Seems Ltlle Old Tomes 119801 Goldie Hawn Chevy Cllue 0 MOVIE • • •, non1rope 1198-41 C11n1 Easr· .wood ~ BuJOlO -8:15-u HAAOCASTlE AHO MCCORMO< -8:30- IJ I COUNTRY Mu&C A.$.SOCIATIOHAWAADS T MOVIE *• • Joare.z 19391 Paut Muni Bette Davis l]' ENTEJIT AINMEHT TOHIGHT -10-00-D CD Q) NEWS O MOVIE • • The LOW War 1970 1.tOyd 8nOQes AflOlt OICkrnSOtl Ii) CONNECTlONS: AH Al T'EANA TE VEW Of CHANGE a:> MtANA TlONAl EOmOH ~ H.W>CASTlE AHO MCCORMICK Eiil BEHN> THE SCENES m RACING FAOW ASCOT C CIEW COMEDY EXPEfWEHT s WO\llE • • • AU QI ~ 198-4 SteYe Ml! Ion Ltly T omlln -10-15- fJ EYEOH LA l ~NEWS IGfTUNE HAWAI FM-4 LA TEMOHT NllE1lfCA WOOEM WATUMY PMeE THE lOfl> m NO~ DOWN INVESTING H WO\llE Hie Pan. Is Mone •9851 Tom,,,~ L.9' .Jot1eS Helen Slllve< -11 .S- S MOVIE • The F1ttn >loor 1980• So Hoo •uns Dianne Hui' -12:00- • AL.FRED HrTCHCOCI< Pf£S0fTS G nff£ THAEE O 0 LOUGAAHT T INOEJIBC)9fT NEWS jj NCH AEAl PeOPl.E m 700CllM -12:30-0 3! lA TE NIGHT WITH OAl/10 LETTEAMAH • RATPATROl ~ IN SEAAQ1 Of . CD lllE1'Y GNmN l~HEWS ' am.RT AMtENT TONIGKT PRAISE THE LORD YOW • • • AP Hie Rio"' Moves ' 1!~83 Tom Crut9e Cr-o l NeltOtl 0 WOVIE • • • 'Fort Apache The BrO<I• I 198 11 Paul Newman Ed Asner Orange County's easy listening radio station KDCM 10!1.1 FM SIB-.ED Newport Beach ----=------.. ·- ·'I've watched kid~ doJng somethJnJl c.alled break danclngt!,tat 1'17! positive was physically Impos!Jlble 1estt than 10 years ago. A free country cannot tolerate domestic terror The nation rejoiced Friday. The daring {><>SSC of F-14 fighter pilots chased down a plane c:arrymg four PLO terrorists to freedom, forced it down and turned them over to the authorities. The men who hijacked the Italian cruise ship ~~~ii~«; Lauro and lcilled American tourist Leon Kilngtroffer would face justice and be punished. America, for the first time, succeeded in backing up its tough-on-terrorism policy with action. Later, Marilyn Klingboffcr, the widow of the 69-year-old paralyzed man who was shot and thrown into the sea, got to spit in the faces of her husband's accused murders. With that symbolic act, she spoke for us all. But the righteous vindication was tarnished Friday afternoon when a bomb in the Santa Ana offices of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee killed the group's regional di.rector, Alexander Odeh. Sudden- ly, terrorism was more than an abstraction, more than a threat to Americans abroad. The blast brought the issue literally into our back yard and made it part of our lives. Certainly, there are differences between the killing ofKlinghoffer and the killing of Odeh. Klinghoffer was, by virtually any measure, an innocent. He didn't confront those who considered him an enemy because he was Jewish. He didn't even venture ill-advisedly into dangerous lands. Somethingnew's always around the corner for us Kilingbolfer was part of a group that was hunted. Elderly and wheelchair-bound, Klinghoffer was too easy a victim. His handicaps make his murder all the more cowardly and disgusting. Odeh, conversely, was an active participant in the political process that has spawned, and too often sponsors, terrorism. Hours before his murder, Odeh was interviewed on television and defended the Achille Lauro hijacking. His self-serving, illogical rhetoric was obnoxious. It was inflammatory. In light of the radicalization of factions within the Jewish community, it may have been dangerous and foolish. But it was not a killing offense. As a government and as a community offreedom- loving people, we have decried the proliferation of international terrorism that has made it unsafe to be an American almost anywhere in the world. When that terrorism comes home to roost, as it did Friday in Orange County, we narrow our safety margin even more severely. It is one thing to be inhibited about traveling to foreign lands; it is quite another to fear traveling to a neighbor city. We have correctly adopted the posture that terrorism is intoJerabJe. Finally, we have acted on that policy. But if that position is to mean anything, we must fight terrorism at home as swiftly and as stringently as we have. fought it abroad. If there is to be justice for Leon K.Jinghoffer, there m~t be justice for Alexander Odeh. Otherwise, there is no justice. Oplnlon1 expreued In thla apace are those of the Dally Piiot. Other vlewl exprested on thl1 page are thoee of their authors and artlata. Reader commentla Invited. The Dally Piiot, PO Box 1560, Costa Meea, 92626. Phone 642~86. l.M. Bovo Some things not much good. but most fill a need I've been around this planet for nearly (gasp) a half century and, durina that time, I've see things that bogle the imagination. Thinp wondrous and delightful. Happy things that ftll your heart with music and sad things that make you cry despite the fact that others may be watchina, and it's not manly to cry. There finally came a time when I felt I had seen everything, that there was nothing new in the world. That was about 20 years ago. I'm very happy to rcpon that I was not only wrong. but uncommonly wrong. Mankind seems to have an infinite capacity to come up with something new nearly every day. These new things aren't always good; but, for the most part. they fill some need. Examples: I learned to type on an old manual typewriter that weighed about SO pounds. I went from that to a much smaffer manual, thence to a huge electric. a portable electric, and on to a word processor. My original typewriter allowed me to put legible words on paper at a faster rate than I could write with a pencil. My word processor allows me to produce error-fr~ (more or less) copy, checks the spelling for me and -if I'm stuck for a word-flashes a thesaurus on the screen for me and allows me to pick a more appropriate word by merely pressing a button. Then. by pressing a few more buttons. my computer dials the Pilot and sends what I've written to the Pilot's computer. I'm not sure how Bill HllVO it's done. but I feel relatively certain that there's a witch doctor somewhere shaking his rattles. I've seen the word ga y go from meaning happy and carefree to another meaning entirely. I've seen parachuting evolve from an emergency life-saving technique to an amusing diversion. I've watched kids doing something called break dancing that I'm pos1t1vc was physicaUy impossible less than I 0 years ago. On the other hand, there arc some things that never change, and most probably never will. There will always be paperweights that, when you shake them, imitate a snow storm. They're generally made of plastic now. but they're still seUing like hotcakes. People will always get sunburned, some severely, on their first trip to the beach each year. Overeager merchants will still start pushing Christmas before Hal- loween. It will Al WAYS rain, regardless of the time of year, immediately after I wash my car. People, due to gullibility or greed or perhaps both, will always be sucked in · by "ideas" that appear too good to be true, and prove out to be exactly that. Things like pyramid clubs and "genu- ine" diamond earrings for $5. About those diamonds. I happened to be enrolled in a class on diamond identification and evalu- ation at the ume that they were being huckstered, so I sent off my five bucks. They were genuine, but were so tiny that one of my diamonds was 1nounted upside down, so the flat part (the table) was facina in. and you couldn't tell it with the naJced eye. Through some quirk. probably in tbeircomputer, 1 rcocived three pain.. one after the other, but I figure that they still made a profit. There's one scam that appeared immediately after scienusts learned that bugs were developing an im- munity to DDT that'll always have a place in my heart, not only because of it's originality, but because of sheer shamelessness. It was the "Guaran ltCd Bug Killer." It cost a dollar and included "complete inst.ructions." lt consisted of two small blocks of wood (top-quality wood, no doubt), one marked "A" and one marked "B". The directions read "Place bug on block A and bring block B smartly down upon bug." You can say what you want, but it actually did work. Another one ( dearly love, bccaute of it's sheer simplicity, was an ad run in a Los Angeles paper a few yean ago. It said "LAST DAY TO SEND JN YOUR DOLLAR! Box 443." Thousands of people mailed dollars, and got exactly nothing for their trouble. The perpetrator was finally stopped by the post office. He said that be promised nothing, and de- livered nothing, so he was in the clear. The PO said that in his ad "a promise was clearly implied'' and box 443 was out of business. I've got to go now. My phone just rang. and there was a robot on the other end. I don't re.ally know too much about the deal but 1t involves a bridge in BrookJyn, and seems to be too good to pass up. ru let you know what happens. A horse in disguise isn 't legal in the statt; of Ohio • • Nev"d•sgu•scyourhorxonOh•O ::,0.n~~.1~~~~ •• ;:1,t!~cc"!1~~y Federal aid to edut!:l t1on -that's agamst the law there. Dates ~~ back 10 when traders dyed old horses Q Who actually brought the first h 't cceeded 1·n task to hide blemishes and racers painted hors:cs to the Western Hemisphere? a sn s u fast horses to run them as nngers How many? And when? Young lady. 1f a southerner tells you your "cotton is low," that means your slip is showing. What, you don't wear a slip? And what you do wear isn't cotton? Never mind. The people around Dallas cat more popco rn than do the people elsewhere nationwide. Or so report the purveyors of same. New York City 1s where people u~ the most laundry detergent. And Miami 1s the c11 y where the population dnnks the most prune J uicc. Every fifth cigarette sold na· uonwide 1s a Marlboro. I'm 1old. Q . What's the race track name "Hialeah" mean? A. "Preuy praane ··Seminole It IS nol legal to make rour own license plates out of old stove pipe. no. ifs not, and an Spnngficld. 111 police made that clear to a fellow who'd done~ To Mo~kms. Jew' arc gent1lcc; To Mormons, Jewc; arc gc n11lcs . When you uy you've got no "squawk" meaning no compla1n1. you're talkma a tenn that goes all 1hc way back to the earl~ days of cock fi&ht1n1. Handlers of those old roosters onganated th11 o ne Jn no other metropolis 1n the world OAANGE COAST lllilJ Pilat A. Hernando Cortez. 17. In 1518. That's history's first horses. Prehistoric little horses were here I 0.000 years earlier. .,._New York €1\y·s Greenwich Vil- If parents had consumers· right to pick school of their choice. we·d see reforms lage has been wilderness, a tobacco ----- plantation. an uppity 1ownh~u~ Although a taxpayer-financed neighborhood. a slum, an artists school system has been part of the colony, and most recently. a fairly Americ~n culture for a century, 1l fashionable address again tradiuonally was financed almost Your blood has to travel through your whole body to get from o ne side of your heart to the other Q How big are the biggest frogs? .\ Thrfe ft'et 1s a normal length, St', en pound~ a normal weight. Such lrog~ live nfar the cascading ri vers of ahc old .\fncan Cameroon. In the 'pumc from lhf waterfalls. they're pretl) acl1\f Flsewhere. three Jumps and they're all 11red out Some frogs. Thl' ln1l·mat1onal <\ss.oc1a11on of Marble. Slate and tone Poh~hers. Rubber'> and awyers Tile and Marbk Setters Helpers and Terrano lklpcrs Unio n is one of the .,malle.,t 1n thl' AFL..('10 More people hve ID North Carolina than hvc 1n any of half the member countnes of the United Natio ns. In the lingo ofEn&Jand, a performer docs well. not poorfy. 1f he "bombs.." L.M. Boyd /1 • 1TfM/lc•~ C'Ol•mol11. ,, .. Dnl Edl10t TCMtt Tlllt -..•.-.or 0-,..., °"' ... wholly at the local and state levels. This faJI marks the 20th anniversary of Congre~· dec1s1on to put schools on the federal government's agenda. LBJ's Great Society began pouring balhons of dollars into taxpayer- financcd schools for the avowed purpose of lending a special hand to the impovenshed. handicapped and otherwise disadvantaged. Once the commitmen1 was made. the escalator started J oing up. Annual federal outlays for education ro~ from SI. I b1lhon an 1964 10 S19 b1l11on ID 1984. Title t of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act was \he foundation stone of this g.aant ell· pansion. It has poured $42.4 billion anto programs purportedly to com - pensate for learning disabilities. Even The New York Tames, ID a recent anniversary analysis, admits that "the ~r~ms have not come close to fulfilhna their initial goals of ehm1nat1ng disadvantages that stood in the way of an equal educational opponumty for all Americans " But the Reaaan admin1strat1on's at· tempts to cut the failed pr~ma tflve been met by a recalcitrant Consrcss pounna yet more good money afler bad. Headstart program for disadvantaged children retained no benefits after a very few yean. The failure of federal aid to education is far more dramatic than The New York Times, in its muted prose and liberal orientation. will admit. Let's take a look al how education has regressed in the last half century. Illiteracy statistics in America in the 1930s show that the problem was small and could be soon solved: native-born whites 1.5 percent, foreign-born whites 9.9 percent. blacks 16 percent. A 1935 survey of Civilian Conservation Corps enrol- lees. presumably from low soc1oe<:onom1c groups, found only I . 9 perc.ent to be illiterate (that 11, they could not read a newspaper or wnte a letter). Today the nation1tl illiteracy rate 11 esttmated at 2S percent, and at leut 40 percent for blacks. Inner-city schools arc a disaster almost beyond comprehension. In Chicaao 10ner-<:1ty schools (which arc 82 percent black or H ispanic). the h1ah 1Chool dropout rate 1s over SO percent Of those who remain 1n h1&h school. more than half are marainally illiterate and fail at least two courses a year ~.,,.., ...... ,.. ........ . c..ma.a---= 0 ....... , ... ===- The New York Times aoes on 10 admit that, "despite the si.z.e of the expend1turn, Washinston has never dctermmcd what lona-t.trm d1f- fcnm~s the aid has made ID educa- tion." A federally sponaorcd study released an Au1uS1 found that the Nobody can sa y that the taxpeyen have been penurious about m1nonty schools. Cbjcqo taxpeycrs 1peod S3,S74 per pupil. which is $300 more thin as s~nt in white suburban counties adjacent to Cbicaco. Money as not the problem; mOlt private schools educate cb1ld.rtn for ba1f the cost of the public tchooh.. C...~C4- etuldrcn an the much-acclaimed Education Wed: rq>Orkd th11 year that more than half the 1tudentt ln PHYLLIS ScHLAFLY arades 3. s and 8 in the Philadelphia pubhc schools need remedial readinc help. AU the much-publicized civil riahu laws, which pvc votina, employ- ment, public-accommodation and forced-busing righti to minorities, cannot be&in to compensate for the iltjustice ol a tchool system th.at fails to teach youngsters to read plus a welfare S)'Stcm that provides financial incentives to out-of- wedlock births. In the face of this incredible failure, the refonm sugested by the tax- peyer-funded IChool lobby cao be summarized as followi: ( 1) Give pay rai1et (to all the a&mc people who have produc.ed such trqic reaulu). (2) Force children into public institu- tions at an earlier and earlier qc. (3) Intimidate the parents who complain and smear them u "censors." ('4) Uee lqjslative and judicial powers to obstruct the parents' riaht to cboole alternative scboolina for their dliJ. dren. The biaest problem with the t.Upa)"Cf'-flnanccd 1ehool 1y1tem is ha anopnt monopoly 1111u1. If pmnta had the riah t. not only to transfer their q,ilctren from public ICbooh to private tcbools. but also &om one pubU~ 1ebool to ano ther of their cboi~. education "consumen" would force the rdonn1 we so derpcr'ltely need. l't?W. SdJa/11 h • ~IM ~'· BJLL BAllVS'I' oolamntat Jac1 A11uso1 .111d UAll VA N AllA What price to learn secrets? Cost-eff ectlveness doesn •t appear to concern Congress WASHINGTON -How much docs it cost the United States to buy or steal a secret from a foreign country? $10? SI0,000? $1 million? It's one of the best-kept secrets in Washlngt0n, for unlike most other entities of the federal bureaucracy, the hydra-headed intelligence com- munity gets to keep its budaet confidential. And no one in Congress seems to worry whether the spy agencies are cost~ffoctive in what they do. It may seem a hopeless quest., but let's sec if we can't do a pioneer accounting of U .S. intelligence pthering, and get an idea of wftat it coets the taxpayers for the secrets the various agencies pry out of our adversaries. How much do we pay for the spy satellites, the human agents.. the analysts who weigh the information and the computers that collate it all? And what do we get in return? Except for the C IA and a couple of obscure military units, which devote some money and manpower to covert action. the dozen-plus federal in- telliaence bodies eldst primarily to collect and analyze information. So their entire budgets should be counted on the cost side of the ledger. Easier said than done. of course, but from sources famihar with the budfet prOCC$S and from other infor- mauoo we've gathered, we can make an educated guess. The C IA 's annual budget is close to SI billion. The code-breaking Na- tional Security Agency's is much higher, about SI 0 billion a year. The little-known National Reconnais- sance Office, whose very existence in the Pentagon is classified, spends at least $2 billion and possibly as much as $4 billion a year on spy satellites. Then add at least another $2 bi I hon for the Defense Intelligence Agency and the intelligence-gathering arms of the four individual military services and the departments of State, Treasury and Energy. A significant expense, but imposs- ible to calculate, is the man-hours spent by ambassadors and Forelgn Service personnel, gathering infor. mation that 1s passed along to the intelhgence services. Adding 1t all up, a plausible estimate is that the government spends rou~ly S 18 billion a year to collect fore ign secrets. Now how do we figure out the number of secrets this $18 billion buys? No one can say for sure, but as luck would have it, there is an obscure asency that provides the material nec:esu.ry for a reasonable guess. The Information Security Over- 11gbt Office makes an annual count of all government agencies' classi- fication dec1S1ons -how many documents they stamp confidential, secret and top secret. Its latest rel?"rt puts the number of these "orig.anal classificatiori decisions" at 88 l ,943 last year. The problem with this figure 1s that the peat bulk of it refers to made-in- U .S.A. secrets the agencies want to protect. not secrets oomina from overseas. Domestic secrets arc usually classified confidential or teeret, and these levels comprise 98 percent of the classification decisions. aocordifll to the oversight office's report. The remaining 2 percent -or 17, 789 -were classified top secret. Even making the unlikely assump- tion that all 88 I. 943 decisions in- volved forei&n secrets. it would factor out to $20.409.48 per secret. accord- ina to our calculator. But 1fwe rate intelliaence-pthenna aaienC1C1 only by the hottest stuff they act -the top secrets -the cost works out to a little more than a million bucks for each one. FEUD OF THE WEEK: Personal animosities die hard in the Middle Eut, where memories are Iona and politician• play hardbell. Israeli in- \elliaen~ has Iona believed that the mutual d i saffection between Palestine Ubef"ltion Orpnization chief Yauer Arafat and S"yrian dic- tator H.afez Assad is u much pet10nal u political. U.S. intellieeO()e ~ think both men an pqpn.auau 6nt., but acknowiedle that they un- doubtedly detat e8Cb other. What- ever the truth of the situation., A9ld bu done his best to dilmantle the PLO remnaou th.at Arafat left behind io Lebenon, while Arafat la DOW •ortina dilllently to reach an u.ader- mndina with Aaud's U.S. and '°'· danian enemies. • Orange Coat OAIL Y PILOT /Monday, October 14, 1845 Too many jocks in Monday Night Football booth By FRED ROTHENBERG UT.-.......i~ NEW YORK -Rookie broad- cuter Joe Namath and his .. Monday Niaht Football" teammates are get- tinga little bit better. but they'll never be &ood enough. As long as ABC ms1s1s on three people in the booth and makes them all alum ni of Football Hero U., the pn me-time pines are doomed to being one-d1mensionaJ broadcasts, heavy on clinical Xs and Os and light on meaningful commentary. This 11 not a call to bnng back Ho ward Co\cll. By the end of h1~ tenure. his eitcesses, pettiness and ego-fillrd monologues outweighed his keen ~nse of drama, perspecuvr be) on<l the fiel'1 and abiltty to )ttr th1n11.s up. This 1s a call for AB( adding somebody Wlth a sense of humor and a sense o f propon1on about the game of football vs. the game ofltfe. Mr. X . or Miss X for that matter, should kno w football and be entertained by 1t, but he or she should never have 'Marie' new glory for Sissy Spacek By BOB THOMAS •111rtrt1•Ptw•,...., LOS ANGELES -The period just before a movie opens 1s a nervous o ne for Academ y Award-winning actress Sissy Spacek. However. with her latest effort. "Mane," about to show, luck is on her side. "Fortunately, I have a red-headed diversion," she said. The Oscar winner and her d1- versioq, her 3-year-old son, Schuyler, arrived' in a long, gray limousine at the Westwood Marquis hotel, mid- way through a publicity whirl for "Marie." Accom~nying her was the real Marie Raggtuanti, the Tennessee - parole board Chainnan whose revel- ations helped to end a pardons-for- cash scandal on the Board of Pardons and Paroles. It's easy to see why Spacek was interested m the saga of Marie Ragghianti. A batte;ed wife Wllh three small children. she left her husband and worked her way through Vanderbilt University. then earned a jOb in the Tennessee state govern- ment. and the deal was struck O rdinanly a relentless researcher for her role!>. Spacek was filming "Violets Are Blue" wuh director-husband Jack Fisk just before the stan of" Marie." Hence, she was unable to meet Wlth Ragghiant1. ''8u1 Roger sent me a tape of a conversatton with Mane," said the actress. "I read the manuscnpt of a book she had wntten while things were happening to her. and I read Peter Maas' book. So I felt I knew her before we met. "I womed a lot because I looked so different from Mane Should I make my hair black lake hers" No. I decided, because I would look like Loretta Lynn (in ·c oal Miner's Daughter'). Roger was concerned that I didn't have the image of Mane. who 1s the kmd of person who stands out in a crowd. So I went a little blonder. trying to be a little more glamorous." In a film era when strong women's roles are hard to find. Sissy Spacek seems 10 have no such problem. Her secret? played the game beyond the pee-wee ltvrl Pick somebody on the ordrr of a Bryant Gumbel -the former spons- caster and current NBC "Today" ho~1. who 1s not available -o r a Dick Schaap, an ABC sports correspon- dent, who 1s. Or, of course, ABC could sign frec- agrnt John Madden after this season and let him take control of the broadcasts for I 98f>..87. But that would require radically restructunng the broadcast. Madden has some- th1 ng wonhwhile to say after nearly Slaay Spacek u .. Marte." I Spacek and Jack Fisk. whom she met dunng "Badlands,'' make their ho me on a horse-breeding farm in V1rgm1a. "That's the real life," she said ... I've every down, leaving no room for a third wh~l 1n the hooth ABC sllll would need someonc IJkc a Scllaap to ask the tough qurst1ons 1n halftime interviews. Stones dtvelop Sunday and through the wcck that ABC can t.ackJc Monday night, but ABC's resident backfield of <'it-half- back Frank Gifford. ex-tailback O.J Simpson and ex-quarterback Namath, or ex-coach Madden, for that matter, arc unable or unw1lhng to handle them properly The NFL has been good 10 tht~ card-carry mg members oft he football fraternity. and the) are not about to tum around and sack the spon Gifford. particularly. 1s an e~ponent of Football Hero u·s credo: See no evil. hear no evil and speak no evil. In the absence of Cosell, G iffo rd now feels compelled 10 chatter on endlessly. His play-by-play dronc ha~ been accelerated to 78 rpm. providing more chances for errors Remember how he used to substllutc the name Thurman Munson (the late Yankee) for the Dallas Cowboys' Dennis Thurman? Last week. Gifford re- ferred to New York Giants holdout Mark Haynes as Marques Haynes. EVERY iVONTH . WHENEVER THE tVOON WAS FULL IT GAME B,A£:K NOW PLAYING •llO ~,,... q .......... . .""t'lJ"4 MM,_ ......... "·""' con• 1111& • ,,,.,"8' ' ...... COll••IA -ttt-.. '1\ ..,,.,... ,, ~116'' ,.._V1UO to-••r-,C t <f•I 0 111 al069'i" CJllAIQ" ... •rot ..... r.1 1).0/J -1,...,0, """ ... ,.......,. ~ A'f"'tj 1·q ,,,. ~ 1'')] WUT-11• • .,...,,"'~ ..... w"'· .,, ""' loltt+ .. ~.P~·l.1..,.11 ., "°' *"" Stao-." ........ ll.l9 a11~ .0~•6'Cl""t0 • oa , ... 1tflGAOL9l •t thc fonner Harlem Globctroner To be fair. It's obvious that G11Tord prepares intensely He wat~es films and collects reams o f facu. some of which arc even worth mcnuvn1ng He has workcd vel) hard to become med1ocrr. But he can't connect his dots to find the big picture Another major failing is that he doesn't draw o ut has colleagues o n their expenences That would seem to be the mam vaJue of JOClcs 1n the booth Last week. for example. Giants quarterback Phil Simms fumbled thc center snap in a kc) s1tuat1on This would havr been a perfe(·t ume for Namath to givc an instrucuonal on the center snap. to talk about different techniques But Gifford never asked the quesuon. and Namath. who doesn't have that type of JOUmali'>llC cunoslly. wasn't volunteering After eight games. ifs obv1oui. that Namath isn't worlc1ni well. and lht' three-player mix 1s nc;ihcr en1cna1n· mg nor mfonnauve. Namath ·s idea of astute anaJv~1-. 1~ eagerl} filltng 1n the blank·s o n defense: zone or man-to-man Last week he was cven more spec11it 1dentJfy101 one covrrqc as Ma stro~I· • side z.one " But that meant no\hina much Without any uplanauon. .. He should bavc told us, instead. why Dallas' Mike Renfro W-.S lcihDI o pen so easily last week What adjustmrnts could the G1 anu have" made" What adjustments did they make" These att some of the ques· uons he never an~wcred and Gifford never asked. ThankfulJ). Namath has cut down on chchcs There werr only two .. heckuvas" last weclc. Hu new fa vontes, along w11h Gifford's, arc that some coach 1s .. high on" some pla)er. meaning he thinks hc's tal· ented. and the all-purpose ''he can do 11 all" Simpson clearl} ha!. become the Most Valuable Pla)eron th1sall-NFL booth He someumc!. tells viewers what they didn't alread) kno w Last week, he' explamed how Dalla~ run- ning back To n) Dorsett got open on a pus route b) leaning mto the G iants' Lawrence Taylor. then bounctng 10 the o utside But )OU have to feel SOCT) tor O.J This 1s the second career that he's spending wtth a losing team K INS $2 7!> I" t.,o M•h WUklUY• WAL · * '" M•I Only Stlurd ay .. _Sun a1y 1 &. Hohd•.,.. Unleu rooted --irw~• Of'P DEAD PG s11ow1 at 7 OS lo 9 ·0S TNe 800519UST -C•AZY~) ' so .. f 0$' ijlaUIJ;tJ3t.JJ ·=·J,,11b)6l's!~~3 fn~.·r::·) S~ DREAMS rG-1 > ' 00 l 15 s ts 7 SS lo 10 IS AFTER HOURS Cltt I 40 l 4 0 S 40 1 •o a. ' •o aAC llt TO THIE FUTUlttE ~t I I 0 l JO S 501 :0 0 &. 10 JO JOVIN!Y Of NATTY GANN !PG) 1 so l so s·so 1 so' so AGNL5 O F GO O (l'C;·l >l I 20 ) 2!> s H 1 4S&.9 SS MGGIED IEDGIE (It) 1 OS l 25 s 4S I TO lo lOlS SA. ya. 8llLL.aT .. , P lu1 l"rHlay Ill• 1 llll Numb• S (A) OAYM 'nCOEAO Plu1 Co-Hit l"r .. 111 N .. 111 (It) •AM90 F lltST •LOOD l'AltT II (ltt Plut M•d M•• 8eyono Tnuneleroom~ tPG I )J C Q ••oo (II) Plut Co+i1t Pork lf'• It eve n" (A ) ST. Cl'.L.M0'5 FllttE C'I') Plu1 Co +irl Tiie 8r••tclut Club (R I "Marie" is ano ther in the gallery of strong-willed women Sissy Spacek has ponrar,cd in films. "Coal Miner's Daughter. ·about country star Loret- ta Lynn, won her the Academy Award as best actress of l 980. "Came." "Missing" and "The Ri ver" brought her nominations. "Well. it's always a gamble. It's important that I love the project, love the scnpt. that I can relate to the character and yet not completely understand her so that I have to stretch myself. 1 ltke films that have a positive effect, an element of hope When you spend so much ttme on a film, you have to think positively about 1t.'' she said. lived in New York and in Los Angele~butlyewup1nthecountry ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~­ Her history with "Mane" demon- strates the Spacek tenacity .. I first heard about the story from my brother, Ed Spacek. who is a record p ro moter workrng out of Memphis," she related. "A fnend had told him stories about what was going on in the Blanton administration. A secretary. who was fnghtencd to death, had been talking. This was before the revelations were made pubhc. After that things got wild." Spacek was fascinated with the story of Ragghianti, who was fired and vihfied-bcforc winning vindi- cation by suing to get her job back. The actress comm issioned a script, but she had to shelve the project when she became pregnant. Later Spacek learned that Peter Maas ("Serpico," "K.rng of the Gypsies") had written a book, "Marie: A True Story," and producer Dino De Laurenti is owned the nghts. John Briley, Oscar winner of"Ghan- di." had wnttcn a script. and Austral- ian Roger Donaldson (''The Boun- ty") would direct. "I felt desperately that they needed me." she recalled. Indeed they did, MOW SHOWING! -UlllU *"'BU.A MIC FASMCll 529.5339 SQUMl (213) 691-0UJ lllTl9114 NAiii EDWAU TC>Mt coma CllD<M JSl-4114 634-2553 lltm IUlll mwuos n rACflC OWllf Tm«> Sll·MOO 111-11634-93'1 You've blown up your neighbor\ mom Yoor ~n-year-old brother tw better luck with women than you do. Your glrlbiend tw a l1"W boyfriend Relax. you're never BEi IER OFF DEAD .. =·--r01e .... .. .,,. .. mia..a -CIBA CIJflllt7M141 mra .. ..... n.. CIJllll 111 -4114 -_.._ 111.- u ... ., ..... (Ill) 111.aw L.-& ... IDIMlllSSO.COUT LAUM 417-1711 umaau 11.alOCAl LJIUMtaJ.SM.l 1'Mfll -mncm cumau..nu -•OU.-IMU. U7 ... -· ,. ---.,, ..... -· .• NCR ... Ta ... •t.Jm and that's where rm the most comfortable. Jack yew up 1n Vir- grn1a. and we both ltke a place with elbow room." '~miracle of a movie. IRU •COSTA M(S& tOA~ •. "~ t So powerful is ·sweel Dreams·, so lusty and poignant and brealh- takingly perfect that you're apt to think you've dreamed it. Jessica Lange is magnifi<'ent ." -<;u) H~tk-). ( ()'.\f<>l'Ol llA ... COSTA MU& •LA MIRADA MISSION YllJO WUIMlllSlfll At 0' ., JI. ,;_ ,., " ... ~ ... ·""' tAVINf "1' 1 {, H t ll"• •OllAllGf 't t •I ~'i• ~~--*PACIFIC WALK-IN THEATRES* .. ~~~ BARGAIN MATINEES I FIRST 2 Ptrformenc• Mondly Thru S.turdly (Except Holidlys A Spec. Ent1ttmtnt1) LAKEWOOD C.cnter llM06/ef,1IL\21\11 THI MMHMll ....... -.I J) 1100 i1JO t1K l 1JO 11100 DOUY ffUiO tTtVIN .,..l lllllJ ~l'ft1 IACK TO THI PUTURI !N t 12'JO 21M 1110 , ... 10.•• WN.f 0t1Rri•i THI .IOU• iy °' NAm C IN (N I 11°Jft. ,. LAKEWO 0 ( e•ntrr \outh 111>11>4 tzl!rgx I .Del b e INVAJ Oil Ill ....... " ... MOONl~t ~ OAY1NMf\M"Au m,..........,, Ill VII IULLn 111 ,,,,. i.• ... ..... ,. 1a.u APTll HOUU 111 IMa i.u..., ........ , .... LA MIRADA '• . . . .... .. .. WN.T DINCY'I TMI .IOUINIT Of N4m QMN INI 1111 a.u ,,u 1111 IOIU llMO WILUAMS1 THI ADVIHNll llGINS ,,..,. 11>,. a.• ,,,. 1.00 10.M ITl,..IH UNO't SILVll IULUf 111 11'>0 i.u •·•: .. u •• u '°'" ~IT ITIUO .uu.t PONDA AONH Of GOD ,,.111 12111 1>U 4•U .. Ha.4'1Ml COMMANDO ISi 1 ........ ,,._II_ GATEWAY JAOOID IDOi Ill 1.00 a.u ,,,. , ........ ,II Wll'S 110 ADVINTUll , ... 12'*0 ........ IT. ILMO'S PIH <II 11!U "U l •al THI IHMPAJT CLUI 111 '"' .... I .... JUlt(A UIHCM/19 MAiad SWln DlllAMI 1,.111 i.-a.u ,. .. a.111..- DOUT 1'"90 """"' 8"1\ .... ~ IACK TO THI PUTUll I"' ii.u a.u a.aa ... 1 .. u *PACIFIC DRIVE-IN THEATRES• ANAHEIM ~1!!171 MM/t-IM Pm llMO WILLIAMl1 THI: ~ ..... ~Ill IHI MIAH ffA!ON tS lf'Tll Of P DIAD IN! lllKY IUMNUI 111 ~--•w UC• TO THI NTUUINt tNVAltOH UIA .. Al'Tft MOUU " LOIT .. AMlalCA !ti £::.w-,.1 WQe KMM.111 .... COMMAHDO Cll AVINOfNO ANOll 1111 ltnWI ...... .......,. IACK TO THI PUNal IN! TllN WOU fflll loHABRA .. ~ .... tt :1;11 ··.~ . ~· ,_,...... UiCa TO THI P\INU 1N1 PU Wll'I MG ADVWftVll ....... JAOOID IDOi 111 CltMU Of PAlllOH 111 NO ONI .,.._ 11 "'4GWW DAY Of THI DIAD INYAJIOH UIA 111t lllftl Of DIAD <Mt _,....,..., lllMO WIU.&AM11 THI ........ -. ........ TMI MIAH llAION • __ ,_l ... ldt -.11 edwards uoo 673-8350 "CEWPQRl e,vo A' ••DO ,100 ·-.-mn • CllZY" (N) ,_..,.., I '"l1RS1'11• .......... Ill , ....... edwards SOUTH COAST PLAZA 546·2711 BA1STOL & SVNF,QW[r. COSTA MESA ,_.,It ·. fP•·• Tim~ ...... .,.,_, .. ,,... flYfll" IN-11) fa" (II 1111.WI. '"" -.n1.-,M1 edwaras BRISTOL 540· 7444 BAtS TOL A TIU( AAl HlJR SANTA ANA "RIO M.lfT" Ill .......... (1) .... ''flff-llll'l llttlll •" ..... 1tdl(N ) 1 eawards CINEMA 546·3102 HARBORBOULEYAAOAT &DAMS COSTA MESA edwaras HARBOR TWIN 631 -3501 HARBOR BOUL[vAAOA' WILSO"C COST&Ul~ .~ ..... ~ -.,_..p IP 'Cl I ··1 ·111 , ..... --~l .. .. _.. ........ Em"lll edwaras MESA 646-S025 '4t rlff'(1U'(l \ '·'" ... •.. l'~''"l'' 11111..,..,.. .... ,. edw,iras .. , ~· ~crl1~ 848 0388 •• , .. ··ti .•. ! ""''' "",. , .. ,, "4 .._llNIW . ••r! II 11 .... .... .,._ma ......... ,. .... t>dw .trd~· "4',\ .. ,.! :• A.lCJ t SOO .1. • ' .. . •. ! .,_ ".-..... • eawaras UNIVERSITY 8S4·8811 :AuPvS OR #l(S• o~ c,. •l'< ACA',<,~ >RO"' ,( .. RIB ..ur· Ill ... ,_, ..... -.11.,.., .... l .. ..... lit ....__. .... ... ,...ltl .... . ......... •1• ....... "", .. ....l .. "UCI Tl film'' ""<"> . <• 1111 • ,... , .. *" edwards WOODBRIDGE 551 -0655 """"'-"A"' /,iAh ~,·.A•fti. ',f .... •· • "•! "Pft-1111"1 llftliiM" •11 (N ) ·11m1am·· WI, 1 ... (N..IJI .--um ''lllllT ...... ........ ....... ''lfTTH ( .... ,., -.111.-. .... Em" (IJ lcll.llM.11111 lffl(W' ,,., 1111. •11 edwards SADOLEBACK 581·5880 El TOAOAOAOAT AOC1CF1ELO h 'ORO ''lnU. DU" (IJ 'Tm IUF lfl• lcll umus'(PIJ "UY • TlR IUI" -.111111.1111.1 ... lcll. 1•1• mnsruu ..... ft!JAlll: TlR "fltfl'Tl" (IJ anernm lftm'' , ... u -..1'1 llM, lNI .... " l1lt.11Jt. ll!Jt "Tm-MIST "nfl •F' IPCJ • CUZ'f" (Pt) Ml, 1•11 "Pff:llH'l Uftl'Tm" "-lt11, NI ... ~ edwards EL TORO sa1 .9500 l l l()ll<Jllll A l I W•Nl'I Al<'-.f'l A/A I" ..... , I .,..,.. 191'1 ''RftllMUT"fll -.Twa l Attll .,....,.,.,_ .... ,_ .............. 11) ll'fll ...,.. ltlJt ........ ''Afltl ..... ,., .. ,,... Em" (I) M l.Wt ....... , .. Fl Yfll'' IN-111 JtJt. ... edwards VIEJO TWIN 830·6990 SA"C DIEGO rwv l OLA PAZ I (HRISA"C'' lil1S$•OIW ••l ,o .... .... "R 181 MUT" (IJ UM• ·c ·wr Ill , ....... ... , ...... 1 ... ..... ~ ''lllHT_, ... ltll, .. (N-11) "NCITIM ,.,.. .. .... , ........ .. .... .... edward• CINEMAS/SoCal CINEMAS l AGUNA HILLS MAll 768-6611 S O FWY <;.O OH fl 10 110 tH THf MAi i !Nill IO~fAR<;, edwards'::l(•L 1 1-1c0 As' .. ~" "-A 49717t1 . '•·I ~ft •A H61 &.,I • &,.~&IO I, .. 'Willi_, ...... -._wmn:m acct•_.. ~11) ___ "' ..... • , .. AIO Or .. CoMt DAILY PILOTfMonday, October 14, 1086 • PUNKY WIKKERBEAK by Tom Batluk DOONESBURY by Gary Trudeau 10 I'/ THE FAMILY CIRCUS "This tells about the minutemen, but it doesn't say anything about the minutemaids." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson "Keep your head and tail down ... don't let the taxpayers see me driving you home!" DRABBLE r~r Ill 1 IJON°i EAT ~i ~'{ ~~T I AAi ~w., .. CX2fh? ~Qt.t.\f.NT I GARFIELD SURPRISE! I GOT YOU A CANOPY eE.0.1 I l I J ~ ~'f\J16W VIC.E I II} BIG GEORG' by Virgil Partch (VIP} "I hate Mondays." DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham 'Bur I AAVE TO ASK A LOT (J QOESTlONS IF l WAITT 10 GRDW UP TO SE AS ~AS MIJM t" by Kevin Fagan by Jim Davi s 10-1'4 MOON MULLINS MANG IT .ALL ... BUT, L.At>Y P. -- You1RE REPL,AC.l NG MY <J£NlJ IN~ OIL PAINTINGS WITH m~ CHEAP PR INTS ' 1 KNOW -· MY DOCTOR S,AID 1 NEEDED ,A CH.AN<JE OF sceNERY. •• i. ff ' I • GUM "SCA5e, lrlNJ<. '(tJKKO!'. BLOOM COUNTY .. PEANUTS '<ES M::..AM I U).\L ED TO S1.1100L IN THE RAIN a11ufl >!5. 5Ht'5 wr»ll/N ? 6fJEN ~ \ AK'aNJ IW() ~llK? llk'! ~6ft!A'r c.« Y. SO<Jq r WM.KVS / I l ~AVE ~ SAMPLE 30TTLE OF S~AMPOO 14ERE IN MV PURSE SIR .. FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE 5Q()AT ~Rl/j ?' I by Berke Breathed by Charles M. Schulz OON1T LOOK AT ME LIKE TMAT. MAAM;L A5T VEAR VOU SAID NOTMIN6 WOllLO EVER SUR~15E ¥0V A6AI ~ ~ by Lynn Johnston f3J~OOOY GOTS 10 MAKE.A I HARVEST" PCTURE. FOR KINDER- GARIEN AN'l'M BUT HONE.'/, yoJVE CO\..ORe.D 1HE. E::N1iRS PP6'E ( . TUMBLEWEEDS 001"1 ' A I ~ ./PUNK\N . • I 1 JUSrliAf'ANAIJPtENCE wrTH 1HE Gf{f:A"f GERONIMO! ' BRIDGE ORANGE ! by Tom K . Ryan ANSWERS TO WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ Q.J -A' !'\outh. vulnt·ruhl£'. you hOld. +J542 4 8654 J 5 +72 The b1dd1ng has proceeded. ~orth East South Obie ? A92 65 +KQJ H The h1dd1nl( ha!> prnn•.-dt>rl :'Ii orth East South ~ u t I 0 Pau I + l'au 2 ~T Pa111t ? W ha I cfo vou bid now 1 A. -There t'> no 11ut''\l1on .tboul ){II 1ng to <.l.1m Hov. evt>r. ''x no trump might not he the right <;pnt Partn .. r could havf' (nu r duhc; on th1., au rt 111n . so ir lwhooV{'' H>U to fir'lt proh1• for a i .J ht tn bidding lhrt•t> rluh" II partnn dm .. , r:t1'<t' rluh.,, r hooo;e thf> '>lrt"n){th Q.4 -Hoth \ uln t'rablt-.. 1-; ~<111th you hold. • K2 " A9143 0 AQ9 • AJ 105 The b1rld1n1< has proceeded: West ~or th East South Pass l'ass I + Uble Pass 2 + l'au ? \\ h.it do 'ou bid now·! A. -Ohv1011'lly, your alternatives Jrt• a h1rl ol two no trum p or a raise to I hrel' rlub.,. We feel ll 1s a little S 0MAR f) HARIFF ..-' { •ll{gress1ve to suggest a no trump ronlr:irt with only a single stopper 1n th1· enemy c;uit. Therefore. we v.11uld ra1-.r lo thrt'C' dubs. If part nf'r 'lhowc; any '>1gn<1 or life over t his l11rwud going move, we will. of rrour<le, rt> hid I hrt>e no trump. Q.5-lfol h \11ln1•rable. a'I "'outh you hold· hnld : +AK954 .1 KJ62 OK104 +5 The bidding ha proceeded: outh We1t North Ea1t I + Pa11 1 NT Obie Pau 2 ,..., Pa11 Paa• Whal action do you take'! A.-Whtle partner cannot have murh. he must have a smallering of values and some cards in hearts . Therefore. we wou ld make a pen· ally double If that doesn't suit part- CHARLES GOREN ncr. he can always retreat to...two' c;pades. JUDGE PARKER +KQI097632 83 v 7 +J6 Th~· bidding hac; prOt't>eded: by Harold Le Doux "u•t '1Jm . WHl!N HE ~ BENSON PRIDe FOR DETAILS LEJtCING TO HIS ARREST FOR [)RU N K ANO 01SOR~RLY CONDUCT SAM DRIVER CONCUJOES THAT MIS NeW 0..tl!NT IS FORTHRIGHT ANO HONEST I we WERE SEATED IN A 000TI-i AND HAO ~DERED WHEN THESE THREE '\"O(...JNO MEN WA\..XEO IN. ANO THEY we Re e 1c. • Tl-4E ONE CAME OVER »-0 TOLD US TO 00 SIT AT THE COUNTER, THAT THIS ~.RTICl.>L.AR BOOTH~ ALWAYS RESE~VEO FOR THEM 1 Q.3-\.rathrr vulner:ihlr ,,, :-.nuth you hold + 10873 q 9852 KJ + Al4 fht> h1dcl1111c h,1, proreeded Sorth f.&1t South ~etl l l'HI I I + 2 2 • 1 \.\' h.tt du ~·nu hid now'> A -\our handc; ar,. going Lo fat ven ~ 1•11 Partnf'r h1l, '* t mMt on .. 'lpadP ,, nd your honor' 1n his 'uat 1Hf' purr gold Oon't put any ~train on partnf'r. J ump to four heart'! A bid of I hrt•r hl'orl~ would he <'Om pt 11t1vtt. rather lhan s howing South WHt North t:a•t 3 + Paa. 4 PH• ? What ,tt'laon do you take 1 A. -\\ h1•n partner bids over your 1>reempt 1l usually 1mphe'I some ~ort of 11 fit for your •wit. Thr one t•xception ., 8 bid of four hurts over a thrf'P 'IJ>Ade pref'mpt that 1s natural. S1nrr you h:1 ve tolf'rl\nce for p3rtner" <1u1t and hr m1ghl have none for your!I, you "hould be delighted to pas, Q.6-Hoth vulner11hlt-. a'I South you For lal.,..U.. ab9•t CMrh1 Gorea'• .. w .. wtleU.r 1er bfidse ple7en, wrtt. GwH llridp Letter, 1909 Claae•m .. An .. Clwala· ••· N.J. 08017. , \ l . • I ----- ,,, ... ,.._ Daily Pilat MONDAY. OCTOB~ ,4. 1985 It wee • big day for DorHtt, Riggin• In NFL .. 82. FY'• Miiner: It waa Ilk• battle of 0.ttyaburg. 83. It's deja vu for Landruill ST. LOUIS (AP) -After bask.mg in the playoffhmehght for the second time in thr~ years. Ttto Landrum labeled ll deja vu with a twist. "J would have to say that tonight wlll be indchbte, but they're two different things ... the St Louis o ut· fieldr-r said following his rC{:ord- tying, four-hat performance in the Cardinals' 12-2 tnumph Sunday night over the Los Angeles Dodgers in game four of the National League playoffs. "Tonight, being thrown in there at the last moment might have been the best thing. I sure didn't have tame to worry .. Like his teammates. the 3~ycar­ old Landrum amved at Busch Stadium expecting Vince Coleman to st.an in left field Two hours before game 11me. a near-<hsaster drastically shifted that plan. Coleman was caught in a l .200- pound motonzed tarJ~lUhn that was being rolled onto the field after batting practice. "I was getting read'V to walk down the stairs. and I heard the screams. I saw Vince lying on the ground." Landrum said "~·h first reactton was I hope he d1dn 't break his ankle or his leg. I realized that I wo uld be 1nsened in the lineup." Once 1n Manager White) Herzog's revised lineup. Coleman's replace- ment wasted little 11mc 1n making his presence felt. Has RBI single staned the Cardinals' nine-run second inning. the biggest upnsing in playotTh1s1or: Playoff .corm, KIJedale 2 2 Game one -~ •. St Loul1 Geme two -~ I, St Louis Game tlvff -St Louis '· ~ Geme four -St Louis 12. Ded9WS 2 <wlfl tied, 2-21 Toda v -~ <Valenzuela 17-10) a1 SI Louis {ForK,, 9·61 12'05 o.m Wednndev -SI Louis at ~. 12-0S o m (If necenarvl Thursdav -SI Louis et ~. 5:35 P.m Of necnsarvl TE LEVISM>N All games on Cha nnel • llAOK> All gemes on l<ABC (790), KNX (1070) Landrum also singled 1n the founh and eighth •nnings and drove 1n three runs ·-rm not going to change m) format now." said Landrum. admitted!\ a free swinger at the plate .. I've bttn successful at 1t too long I see the ball. and I h11 11 I 1rv to react Too mam umes I've hun m)selfb) thinking too long." Landrum·s first brush with 1he hmehght came 1n I Q8 3 when as a Bal11more Onole. he hit a 10th-inning home run to defeat the Chicago Wh11e Sox 1n the deciding game of the .\mencan Lt:ague pla)olTs ~!though Landrum was the center of atten!lon. he was b) no means the onl) Cardinal h1rnng star on an evening when t Louis totaled IS hits 1n squann~ the best-of-seven senes at two '1c1ones apiece '~Tito Landrum and Jack Clark celebrate during nine-nm 1teCOnd inning -at the ezpenee of a departing Jerry Reuse. Before the inning ended. Landrum had singled again 10 lie another standard set earlier 1n the frame h\ the Cardc;' Jack \lark · (Pleu.e .ee C A.RDIJltALS/82) • Rams more than willing to accept Buccaneers' gift 4 interceptions , furn ble r ecovery key to Ra m s · w in TAMPA. Fla. (A P) -Add the Rams to the growing list of Nauonal Football League players scratching their heads and wondering wh}) the Tampa Bay Buccaneers hav~won a game. Don't include the Bucs themselves. though. They've witnessed. first hand, the errors that have con- tributed to an 0-6 start. Miscues like the four interceptions and o ne fumble that helped the Rams remain un- beaten Sunday. "We're playing a good song and game. but we're making mistake~· Tampa Bay nose tackle David Logan said after Rams' LeRoy Irvin and Carl Ekern returned second-half in- terceptions for touchdowns to key the Rams' 31-27 v1ctory. "They're cnt1- cal and that's the bottom line." Opponents having been cashing 1n on Bucs' turnovers at an alarming rate. Steve DcBerg. intercepted four times by the Rams. has had four of 13 thefts returned for scores this season. "Same story. different team is about what 1t amounts to as It compares to some of the other teams we lost to this year," Bucs Coach Leeman Bennett said. "I thought we had a supreme effort. which we have had most every week." he added. "I thought we battled them B}ueJays say day off is a waste . . . We JUSt did no t come up with the victory." Irvin returned the first of has two interttptioos 34 yards for the gamc- winning TD with 5:58 left to play. Ekem ran his back 33 yards in the third quarter as the Rams overcame four turnovers of their own in addition to I I penalties. 'Tm not sure I'm going to li ve thro ugh this season," Rams Coach John Robinson Joked after the NFL's sixth-ranked defense pulled out the Rams' second consecutive nail-biting victory. "There was no pressure o n us coming into this game. but I don't think there is any way the Bucs arc an 0-6 football team ." said Rams safety Nolan Cromwell. who also had an interception. "They are solid in every respect, o ffensively and defensively." "A win-and-loss record is no in- dicator as to how good a football team 1s." said wide receiver Bobby Duckworth. rec1p1ent ofa 23-yard TD pass from Dieter Brock. "The Bucs arc a lot better than their record and showed that todav." Tampa Bay turned the tables on its misfortune for two quarters, cap1- tahzing on three Rams fumbles and eight Ram penallics to build a 20-14 halftime lead. Mike Lansford launched the Rams second-half comeback with a 27-yard field goal. and Ekcm's interception return 22seconds latergavc thc Rams a 24-20 lead with 4: 11 left in the third quarter. Playoff .corm • .c.IJedale Game one -Toronto 6, Kanus Cllv 1 Geme two -Toronto 6, Kansas City S ( 10 Innings) Geme """ -Ke nus Cllv 6, Toronto S Geme four -Toronto J, Kansas Cllv 1 Torontodoesn't ~ need more time to think about Royals Geme five -Kensas Cllv 2, Toronto o <Toronto teeds serlfl, 3-2> Tuesdev -Kansai Cltv (Gut11tca 14· 10) at Toronto (Alexander 17· 10>, 5:1S o.m. WedMldav -Kansas Cltv et Toronto, 5:15 o.m. (If ~rvl TILIV1SK>M All CMm9S on Cha nMI •. KANSAS CITY. Mo. (AP)-The Toronto Blue Jays. one v1ctory away &om takina part in their first Wo rld Series. say an ofT~y is a~ut as welcome as another Kansas City lef\- bander. "We really don't need a day o ff;· laid outfielder Uoyd M<>teby after the Blue Jayi Wt1'C shut ou t 2-0 Sunday by left-hander Danny Jack- IOll. "We rully wanted it to win it here, but now we've aot to 10 home and win ooe out of two. We're happy to ao home with three wins and two k>laet. .. We're 11 positive today as we ~re in April. The only difference today wu tbey played better and won." Added left fielder GeolJC Bell: "We've just aot to relu. That sit," he l&id -bile poundina hlS fist into the palm of h11 hand. Jlcbon. who tcattcrcd ciaht hill, pj~ out of jam a in the fourth. fifth and 11xth innmp before rctinng the last IO bitters he faced. RADtO All gemft on KNX ( 1070). "He'll throw you a high fastball and then give you a low slider away," Bell said. "He'll make you hit his pitch because that slider looks ll kc a fastball until it breaks down." "I really concentrated and put all that (nervous) energy into doinJ JUSt one thina -pitching my best.· said Jackson. "I feel a hnlc exhausted. It's hke a bi& relief to go out there and pitch you r best and get the wm. I was all pumped up ... Kansas City lh1rd baseman ~rgc Brett said be tho uaht the Blue Jays. makina their first appcaranc~ 1n post- teason play, were feeling a httle pressure. "No one upccts us to win, '° there's no pressure on us." said Brttt. who planned to ao fishi~ in nearby ~liar, Mo.. to relu 'This !s a pme we can take home tontt}lt. and think abo~t and feel aoocf about .. Tito Landrum: He's Cardin.als' beef cake boy ST. LOUIS (AP) -The poster shows T1to Landrum bare from the ch~t up. arms folded. loolung. well. provocative. his a hot Item around St. Louis these davs . With some 40.000 in circ ulation. sold for SI .'50 apiece by a hamburger chain i\nd 1t fi gures 10 get even hotter after the super supernumeraf") drilled four hits m the Cardinals· 12-2 game four playoff pound mg of Los .\ngeles Sunda~ night. Does this bit of beefcaJce -"Ifs no t beefcake." Landrum insisted -mean Tito 1s now a sell symbol? Landrum looked incredulous at the sugget- t1on as he happily obliged squealing teen~ - boppers who waved the picture al him. pleading for autographs .. '-\ sex S) mbol"" he laughed. "No' .. .\ctuall). the poster is pan of chant~ program with proceeds from 11s sale going to Child Find M1ssoun. an o rganization com· m111ed 10 locating abducted children Land· rum's background in modeling made him a natural for the assignment. He 1s also a natural for his hasehall assignment -emergenq replalement The Cards were faced w 1th the most sc' ere emergenn when fleet Vince Cokman ~as run o'er b) the automatic tarpaulin machine in a freak acndent before Game Four l okman escaped with some bru1sec; and contu'>1ons on his left leg and ma) be able to pla) in Game SI\ Wednesda) in Los .\ngcles But for some anxio us moment-;. he had the Cards temfied When Landrum heard Coleman scream a<. the tarp caught him and rolled o~er his leg.. he knew almost 1mmed1ateh that he ~ould he working unda~ night There was some 1:on' to that. be-cause Coleman ~as promoted trom the minors in .\pnl when Landrum tnre r,ome abdominal muscles ,.,,...,.,...... "M\ inJUI" allowed him to ~ome up · he said .. ;Has injul) allowed me to pla' tonight .. Erle Dickeraon nm• through Tampa Bay def enee durln« Rama' Sl-:17 ~ctory over Buca Sunday. Raiders' machine in gear Afzado loves n ew n ick nam e. a nd h e's li ving up to it, 23-13 LOS ANGELES (AP) -Veteran defensive end Lyle Alzado of the Los Angeles Raiders has been pretl} offensive lately Along With has recent accompll~hmcnts has come a new nickname. 'Tm a sconng machine." Allado said after the Raiders whipped the New Orleans Saints .:!3-13 o;unda\ "That's what my teammates call me " Aludo, 36 and pla.>'.ing an his I 5th Nauonal Football League season. was sm1hng as he talked to reporters His wasn't the only smiling face in the Raiders' dressing room following the team's third straight Win . Alz.ado scored his first-ever NFL touchdown on Sept 29. pounc1na o n a fumble m the New Eng.land end 1onc to put the Raiders ahead 21 -20. Los Angeles went on to beat the Patriots 35-20 to break a two-game losing streak The 6-3. 260-pounder aot his thtfd carttr sakt) Sunday. sackina New Orleans quarterback Dave Wilson in the Saints' end zone wt th 2:49 rcm11n1na to provide the Raiders with their final ponfh as they ra1~ their record to 4-2 Alz.ado was credited with fi ve tackles 1n the game. played before a crowd of 48.152 at the Los Angeles Colisc:um. The first set up an I I ·yard touchdown run b) runnina back Marcus Allen which put the Raadtts ahead for aood. Late tn a scoreless first quaner. Aludo hit New Orleans runmna beck Ear1 Campbell. forcu't a fumble which was recovered by Rod Manin of the Raiden at tht' Sa.ants' 4().yard hne "t JUSt ~nt throuah thett and the ball popped lootc," Alz.ado said. "I wasn't 11m1na for the bell." It took the Raiden 1u't two plays to move the 40 Sunday's NFL scores Rama 31 . •Tampa Ba~ 27 •Ra.Iden 23. New Orleans 13 •New England 14. Buffalo J Cleveland 21 . •Houston 6 Denver 15. •tndtanapolts 10 •washlngton 24. Detroit 3 •Green Bay 20. Minnesota 17 •ctnctnnatl 35. New York Giants 30 Philadelphia 30. •st. Louis 7 •Dallas 27. Ptttsbu~h 13 •San Ol~o 31 . Kansa Cltv 20 Chicago 26. •San Francisco 1 O •Seattle 30. Atlanta 26 Tonl&ht'• Game Miami al 'Jew York Jets (C hannel 7 at 6) •NFL roundup. 82 •Rams. Raiders statistics. B4 \ards On the first. rookie quarterbad. Rust\ H1lgt'r firt'd i 29-)ard pass to Wlde ~1"er Jessie Hester. ano ther firn-yur playcf Then Allen ~rt'd. maklna 1t 7-0 with I 36 rcm11n1na in the penod Hilger played two scnM in rchC'I of '\tanina Los o\nacles quanerblclt Mart Wilson hcausc Wilson suffered a bru1std left shoul4er when \ICked b 8ru~ C'lark of thr-Sa1n1s The Raiders made 11 14-0 after JUS1 I S 7 of the ~ond period wnh Walton t.ck at the controls. ~lien. who finished wuh I 07 yards on 28 cam". srored the TO on an 8-yard run Madlock: We got haDlDlered ST LOC IS ( .\P) -Los Angel~ third baseman 811\ Madlock knew exactly what had JUSl happened to him and his Dodger teammates in the fourth game of the National League pla) offs against 'it Louis "We go t hammered... said Madlock "The) did very well. and we d1dn 't do well al all .. That's for sure The Cardinals pounded 15 h11s 1n a 12-.:! '1ctor: over the Dodgers. eve- ning the bc'st-of-se~en sencs at rwo games apiece But 1f the Dodger.; were womec1. the' weren't sho"' 1 ng 11 There "'as h11le 11me lor reflection (>n what wc.-nt ~rong. "'Ith Game 'onh half a da' awa' "'-' e 1u<.t flat nut izot our hutt<o k1d.ed 1on1g.h1." ..aid ~ .. a1~her \1 t ~l' Sc1or,c1a "But 1f \OU lose there'> no difference tt' 1t'<; ~·to-I M I '-IO· ~hJte\er '\ 11U ha\(' IO Shake II Of1 .. Second haseman , te'r '\a' was tn ing tu dl1 JU St that "That ~a\ a real whipping ·· ..aid Sa\ ··\ta~ be the~ got all 1he1r h11" out ot their S' 'tern tonight T o morro"' 's anl)thcr da' another game It'<. do"'n to a best-01'-three senes now ·· "The' pla)ed a good game .. c;a1d Dodgers \1anager Tom Laso rda ··The' "'ere h1tt1ng e\enthing JU<ol out of real h of our infielders But tonight's IU'il another loss You go nut again tomorrow .. The Cardinals scored nine of their run'> 1n the record-filled second 1nn1ng. dunng "'h1ch 1.i Redhtrds camt• to the-plate and collected eight h1t<o .\ftcr the game. the \ardinals ~ere not da1ming that the momen· tum had dcarh shifted 1n their fa, m hut there ~ere.hints "'-' ,. had our hack' againc;1 the 11oall ..aid Tom '-1eto "'ho caught h1., lir<;t game of the senC'" Sunda~ night in place of Darrell Porter "W e knew 11oe had to go out and pla' ven good baseball against 1hcc;e gu~~. and that's what WC' did ·· ''-' e d1dn'1 pla) well at all in l o<o \np.c-le<.. ~1d tirs1 ha~man Jad. Clark. "'hl1 had three hm - two 1n thl' <.t'COnd inning -and c;cored tree run\ .. ,(,~ "'e·,e at least g1~en ou~h C'' a chance to win and make a t'lctter c.h\)W 1ng for ourc;clvec; We d1dn '1 S"' 1n~ the bat well 1n LA. C'HH~.:1al\\ against Fernando (Plea.e .ee OODGltRS/82) MAR TIN T OBE F IRED A GAIN? '-'E'-' '\ORK I ~Pl-8111\ Martin who nearl' gu1dt'd the New 't ork '\ ankecs to the .\mencan League'c; East [)i, m<'n title an h" founh stint as manager ot the club. ma) be o n the vc:.e ofbc1ng ouc;ted again )' anktt" owner Creorgt 1einbrtn- ncr issued a s1atement Sunda) sta11na that he was assigning the dcc1s1on on ne:\t S<:Uon ·., manager to general manager Cl;.de Jt..1ng and team ''~ prTStdent Wood) W~ward ··t fttl this dcc1s1on should be made as With o ther clubs. br, the general manqcr and his staff. · the statemC'nt read "The\ have bttn IJ'.:n the opponumh and ~ponsi­ h1l11> '''make the dccmon They will rt\elVe neither \t1pula11o n nor input frl'm me I have told both men 1n a mcct1na I d<> not even want to know their d«1~1on until ifs rad" to be announced pubhcly · . . , ----- U Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Mond•y. October 14, 1985 ;;;;;;;;;~~------------------------------------------------Newport outrigger team 3rd HONOLULU (AP) -Whatever a bunch of Midwesterners know about Hawaiial'\ outngger canoe ructng ap- parently 1s c-nouah. The llhnois llngade of Chicago captured Sunday's 34th annual Molokat-to·Oahu cunoc race a~ the \op Hawa11 crews. including two-lime defending champion Outrigger Canoe Club. were embarrassed by the guy$ from out of town The Illinois Bngade surged ahead of the Tah111 FFPP Club an the final half-hour of the race to fin 1sh in a time of5 hours. 33 mtnutes and 4 seconds. That was we-II offthe record 5· 18 I 9 set by Outn~er in last year's race. The Tah1t1 club finished more than two mtnutes behind the llltnois club, followed by Offshore ( anoe Club of Newpon Beach Forty-eight canoe~ wcrt entered 1n the nearly 41-milc race from Hale 0 Lono Harbor on the island of Molokai to the A . CXRuss) beach at Wa1k1k1 o n the 1slan<.1 o l Oahu Nelson upsets foe u....,..... SYDNEY. Australia (AP) - Qualifier Todd Nelson of San Diego cruised past Paraguayan Davis Cup player Francisco Gon1alez 7-5. 6-3 t6day in the first round of the Australian Indoor Tennis Cham- p1onsh1ps at the Sydnc~ Entertain- ment Center Chlcaco'• Mlke Hartenatine (abo•e) and Steve McMlchael (78) come down hard on 49era quarterback Joe Montana. SPORTS BREAK f i . New Jersey surprises Rangers Extent 0 DJUJ; Rieb Preston's 30-foot shot Wlth 3:41 ~ is Stl• 11 uncerta n gone in overtime Sunday nigh.t boosted the ' surprising New Jersey ~v1ls to a 3-2 • National Hockey League victory over the to Vince ColelDan New York Rangers. The victory was the 1!11rd straight for the Devils. tying a five-year-old franchise record by ' • the old Colorado Roclues for most victories at the start From AP Dispatc hes ofa season ... Elsewhere in the NHL Sunday, Rlclaard Sevtp y made several bnlliant stops in goal and his teammates scored two power-play goals as Quebec defeated Winnipeg 5-2 Sevigny stopped 36 shots, tncluding 16 in the first period and 13 in the second ... Rooltie Eta Tlllaaea scored his first on a shot from near center ice to snap a 3-3 tie and send Edmonton to a 6-3 victor; over St. Louis. Tikkanen, who earned his first NHL point. an assist. 10 the second penod, fired a shot as he crossed the red line ... Defenscman Ray Bourque scored two goals and rookie KraJg Nlenlaal1 o ne on a power play as unbeaten Boston skated to a 7-2 victory over Montreal. With Boston ahead 2-1. Montreal'" Cbri1 Nllu was ~ven a 10-minute match penalty for deliberately causing an inJury at 10:40 ... Brian Propp scored two goals and P eUe Llndbergll turned aside 31 Washington shots as Philadelphia scored a 4-2 dec1s1on and handed the winless Capitals their third consecutive defeat. ST LOllfS -The St Louts ii Cardinals' hopes 1n the National League playoffs suffered a JOit Sunday when rookie outfielder Vince Coleman's left I~ was pinned under a tarpaulin device. forcmg him out of their 12-2 victory 1n game four agam!>t the Lo~ .<\ngeles Dodgers Team doctor Stan London said "There will be a funher determ1nauon later, of the offensi ve catalyst of St. Louis' attack with a rookie-record 110 stolen bases. Coleman was replaced m the lineup h' T110 Landrum m left field Londo n <i.ald the device roll- ed up the outside pan of ( ul- eman 's left leg. causmg a severe bruise from ankle to m1d-th1gh He said prehmtnary X-rays were negative .. The circulatory and neu- rologJcal systems 10 the leg were intact and the ankle and knee Coleman 101nts were intact It J U~t huns a lot," London said .. Right no"' "'e·, e got ice on 11 to keep thc s"elll ng d ov. n .. .\ctorthng to 1A.<1tnesses. <. oleman was lea\ mg the lield wht·n he v. heeled and th rev. h1~ glove to ward a Cardinal m ath That 1o; v.hen the tarp wa!> activated Dodger batbo\ Howard H ughett. who was on the field "'hen the: accident occurred. said the device "rolled up his leg anti went up to hi s knee before 11 was rcmo\l:d H1~ lace IA.a'> !>(.runched up and 11 looked hke he was m agon) " "He was able to get h1~ nght foot out ol tht· way hut 11 caught hia lch foot." o;a1d \ards utility player M1kr Jorgcn~cn .. ~ c JU\t rolled :.iwn)' tht' cage we gQl the ball'> o fT lht• licld · Jorgen!.en said ··v1nu.· v.a!.getting read ) to throv. his glo,t· 10 (coach) Dave R 1ckem He (( olcmanJ looked c;carrd He was hurting I don't think they (the ground\ l rev.1 were able to hear becau\c of all the screaming H" tc;1mmatc:~ ha' 1ng JUSt concluded batting practa.c let out ~db v.hen Coleman was caught "I wa' JU\t turning around I heard this sream and the thing \wallowed him up," third baseman Terry Pendleton , .. 11J ·\ltt·r h..-ing n·mo,etl from beneath the tarp. which I!> pov.cn·d "\ a motor and weigh'> an rs11ma1cd 1.200 pound\ ( 11km,1n "'a' l'Xam1ned at thr srene by the 1cam tra1 nl·r < •t:rll' c i1"clmann and taken from the field on a \ttt:llhn 1 h1· !lrounJ\ trc"" was preparing l o place thl· tarpaulin 11n1111he infield 10 pro tect 1he an1hnal playing surfalc at Bu\l h 'vk munal Stadium against a light rain which hat.I been lnll1ng most of the day . Km R,1gan c h1rf of the ground crew. ~1d there ""'d'n t .1 1pcrnll1r 1n the area .. when lhe a<:e1dtnt Ol..lUrTCJ Quote of t he day v. hen tht· 49n~ heat us las1 yrar the} dtdn '1 '>hov. mu\ h , nunc\\ or d1gn1t> · The> said ncg,111"l' 1hin11c. .ihout our offense alter shutting U\ uut V.1• th11ught ahout that 311 dunng the ()ff- ~CJ\lln JnJ 1ht· pre\eason." - ( h1Lago Bear~ running bad•. Walter Payt-0a. Fatality in stock car accident ')\'BF R' \kl>I '(} -One person • was k1Jkd Jnd "'"'" wc:rc 1n1ured -one cnt1t al h v.h1:n .i \IC>ck car <>mashed 1hro ugh a hamcr .1nct 1111 spectators at lhe Nation.ii l1rc1n1tc \h11v. dunng a race, offic1a1s said Sunda' Frant I\ V. .irnkl' 1 r)I K1 vernde was killed 1n the accident. wh1ch ouurrc.-tl JI ICI ~~pm Saturday dunng a stock car rau: at the annudl fair 60 mile'I east o f Los Angele~. o flic1ah \aid Jeff Henson I<. ol ( orona. wa\ in cnt1cal cond111on ~u nda' v..1th mult1plt' fracture\ at San Bemardirw < ount\ Mcdll.11 (enter. c.a1d a nurc.ing superv1 \or who dt•t:lincll 10 llt' identified Kings' Har dy out 6 weeka Unser tops junior at Dana 150 PHOENIX -Al U nser Sr sped off • Sunday and left the fastest field 1n the history of Phoenix International Raceway 1n winning the Dana 150 Ind y-car race and movmg past his son into the season pomt lead. The elder Unser. 46. dommated the 150-lap race. beating second-place Al Unser Jr hy more than a lap on the one-mile Phoenix oval. Mano Andretll wa~ third. followed by Danny ulhvan. Michael Andret11 and Bobby Rahal. all one lap behind the winner Wadkins takes Disney Classic LAKF BUENA VISTA. Fla -Lanny Wadk1n\ equaled the tourse record of 9- under-par 63 Sunda~ to overcome a five- stroke defirn and win the Walt Disney World-Oldsmobile Cla\s1c golf tournament by two shots_ Wadkins nailed his second shot a foot from the cup on the par-5 founh hole to set up the birdie 3 which got his spectacular round started . He added seven birdies and didn't record a bogey to match the best round ever O\ er the Magno ha course, a 63 c.arded by H uben Green 10 J 973 Wadkm'> finished the 72-hole event at 21-under· par 26 7 to cam the $72.000 first prue. Dougherty wins club pro title L.\ QUINTA -Ed Doug,heny. an assisant club pro from Lmwood, l>a., fired a I-under-par 71 Sunday to take two-shot v1ctorv 1n the 18th annual PGA Club Profes's1onal Champ1onsh1p golf tournament. Dougherty. who began the final round of the 72- hole tournament o ne stroke behind Charlie Epps of Houston. earned $27.500 for the victory. Dougheny's 277 total, a combined I I-under-par at the La Quinta Hotel Dunes Course and the two courses at ncarb} Mm1on Hills Country Club. was good for a two-shot ed~e over J 1m White of Lmcoln. Neb. Czechoslovakia defeats U.S. TOY OT A. Japan -With singles ~ v1ctones by Hana Mandhkova and Helena Sukova, Czechoslovakia captured its third consecutive Federation Cup women's team tennis tttle today, defeating the United States m the final Mandhkova defeated American Kathy Jordan 7-5. 6-1 •n the ram-delayed ~cond singles match on the hard courts of the Nagoya Green Tennis Club m central Japan The match was suspended Sunday due to rain after Mandhkova led Jordan 7-5 1n the first set. In the first stngles match, Sukova downed Amencan Elise Burg.in 6-3, 6-7 (6-8), 6-4 on Sund.ty. The doubles match was to be played today. Televi•ion. radio TELEVISION Noon -BASEBALL. Dodaers at St Louis 1n game fi ve of tht Natio nal uague playoffs. Channel 4. Lnc; \NGf U·~ -Veteran de· ~ 6 p m -P RO FOOTBALL: M1am1 at New fenseman Mark Hard\ •if the I os "ngeles , York Jrts. Channel 7 Kings will undergo \urger) this week to RADIO repair tendon damage an h1~ naht wmt. the Noon -BASEBALL: Dodgers at t Louis. Nauonal Hockey League cluh announced 'iunday K.ABC (79()), K.NX (1070). Hardy. expected to he ~1deltned for \ome six weeks. 6 p.m . -PRO FOOTBALL M1am1 at New suffered the injury 1n the Kmgs· opening prescason York Jets, KMPC (7 10) pmt , -..mst the Calgary Flame'i on O<'t S He hasn't 7 30 p.m -PRO 8ASIETBALL: l..akers at • played since Chppen, Kl.AC (S70) and KMPC (7 10). follow· Team phyiuc1an Dr Stt't LombtHdo '81d Hardy 101 NFl. football wiU have to wear a cut following the surgery, which Wlll ••••••••lil•••••••••..-be 1ehcduJed for somtt1nie this week For Dorsett, Riggins, it was a very big day It's 10,00 0 yards for DorSett, 100 touch downs fo r Riggins From AP dJ1pa&cbea Tony Dorsett and John Rigg.ms ran into the Nallonal Football League record books Sun<Uy in leading their teams to victones. After being held to three yards rushing in the first half, 0ol'1Ctt broke out for 1 l 8 in the second half. putting him over 10,000 yards for his career, now in its ninth season. He became the sixth running back to make that magic figure -Rigains also has done it. Dorsett also scampered for a 35-yard to uchdown in the fourth quaner to clinch Dallas' victory over Pittsburgh. He scored on a 56-yard pass play in the first half. Rigg.ins joined Jim Brown as the only backs to rush for 100 touchdowns in a career when he scored three times and ran for 114 yards to power the Redskins to a 24-3 victory over the Detroit Lions. At 36. Riggins 1s the oldest running back in the league. Here's how it went Sunday tn the NFL: DallH Z7, Pltt1burgb 13: "I had my doubts early 10 the first half. But anything good is worth wa111ng for." said Dorsett. who has 10.082 yards. "This 1s no doubt one of the highlights of my career." Walter Payton of Chicago. an I I-year veteran. is the leading all-time rusher. followed by Brown, Franco Harris. O.J. Simpson a nd R iggins. -\ ... ~,. , .,.,........ Dorsett was especially excited 10 have reached his milestone against the Steelers. for whom he rooted growing up in Aliquippa, Pa. Red1kill1 U , Lloa1 3: "I got tired out there. I'm used to three-round wa1ts. not 15-round heavyweight brawls," said Rigg.ins. who scored on runs of one, five and 25 yards and moved within three of Brown's 106 rush10g TDs. Tony Dor.ett hold• ball aloft after aolng over 10,000-yard career rushing mari. R~ns' third touchdown was the I 13th score of his career. lifting him into a second-place tie with Lenny Moore on the NFL's all-time touchdown list three passes for 146 yards. including a 68-yard touchdown from Bernie Kosar. Cleveland's defense reached Oiler\ quanerbacks Warren Moon and M1kr Morosk1 seven times for 41 yards m losse!>. Bean H, H en 10: Chicago, 6--0. avenged last season's NFC title game embarrassment -a 2J-O loss to San Francisco -by saclting 49ers OB Joe Montana seven times. Walter Payton had a pair of touchdown runs and Kevin Butler booted four field goals. The Bears, helped by two 49crs' fumbles, grabbed a 16--0 lead and didn't allow the 49ers' offense a touchdown. Broncos IS, Colts 10: John Elwa) lOmplcted 17 of )fl passes for 239 yards and set up a Dcn.,,cr touchdown with a 45-yard pass compleuon. He also rushed for 4 9 yards, keeping drives alive with runs of 22 and 15 yards in the third quaner. BeaJ•ll 3S, Glu ts 30: Cincinnati Jumped to a 21-0 edge behind the passing of Boomer Es1ason. then held off the Giants, who got three team passtng records fonn Q B Phil Simms. But Simms, who completed 40 of 62 passes for an astounding 513 yards -the second highest to tal in NFL history -made a pair of costly mistakes 10 the third quarter. Safety Jaes Gnflin returned an 10tercept1on 24 yards for a touchdown, and Simms fumbled the ball to the Bengals on the Giants I two plays later. Packers %0, VlkJags l 7: The Packt·rs hclt.1 the Vikings on a first-and-goal s1tuat1on 1n the closmg m inutes. and later completed a 66-ynrd \Conng dnvc: with Al Del Greco's clinching field goal of n \ard\ With \(:\CO seconds left. Eagles 30, Cardinals 7: Philadelphia, which had scored only 46 points in 11s previous five game.,, broke o ut as quanerback Ron Jaworski. 'itarttng for the first time since betng benched for rookie Randall Cunningham after openmg day threw three tout·hdown passes Jaworski completed 18 of 28 passes for 243 yards. and Paul McFadde n kicked field goal-; of 39. 2 1 and 52 yards. Simms' yardage trails only Norm Van Brockhn's 554-yard effort for the Rams 1n 1951 . Patriot• 14, Billa 3: After Tony Eason suffered a separated left shoulder on the third consecutive sack by the Buffalo defense. Steve Grogan -playing quarterback for the first time in more than a year -led the Patriots to victory, dropping the Bills to 0-6. Grogan p ve the Patnots a 7-3 lead with a 16-yard TD pa~ to Irving Fryar 10 the third penod. He finished with 15 completions in I <J attempts for 282 yards. Chargers 31 , Cblefs %0: San Diego won an AFC West game for the first lime since down mg Kansas City on Dec 11 , 1983, ending an I I-game drou~ht w1th1n the division Mark Herrmann, filling in for injured Dan Fouts, fired two to uchdown passes and went 6-for-6 in a ntne-play, 80- yard dnve to the go-ahead M:ore. He lin1\hed wnh 26-- for-36 for 320 yards Brott111 t i, Olien I: Clarence Weathers hauled 1n Sea.hawks 30, Falcons %6: Da \ e Kncg·~ lounh TD pass. a 12-yarder to Paul Skan'>1. lifted the Scahawks over the winless Falcons. There were lour touchdowns. a field goal and a safety 1n the final Quartl'r Bo A TIN G I Monaco-New York race begins MONTE CARLO -Hundreds of boats filled the Monaco harbor and thousands of spectators lined the qua1s Sunday to witness the dramatic and spectacular stan of the first Monaco-New York Race. Following the offi cial bcned1ct1on of the boats by Mons1gneur Joseph Sardou, the U.S.S. Mahan's Cannon marked the st.an of the race at I :0 I p.m. Joinmg H.S.H . Pnnce Alben, who orgamzed the Race. was Michel Etevenon. Commissioner General of the Race, representatives from U .N.C.L. and French and U.S. navies. and Monepsque and Amen- can dign1tanes. Both monohulls, and mulllhulls (catamarans and trimarans) are par- ticipating in this trans-Atlantic race from the Mediterranean. Lady Elf, WJth Sylvie Viant-Vanek as slupper and a mostl y female crew. surpns- 1ngly took the lead among the m onohulls for the first stage of the race. Amo mJ the multihulls. Ker Cadelac, skippered by Francois Boucher, led the v o up tO WIO th IS first Grand Pnx Manna 8. The pnze for each winner was 25,000 Francs (ap- pro ximately $3,000). Multihulls ex- pected to contest Ker Cadelac's lead are Jet Services, the largest boat at 25.9 meters. with Patnck Morvan as skipper, and Formule TAG with the Canadian Make Birch as skipper While the day was blessed by the beautiful, clear skies for which Mo n- aco 1s famo us, the winds were less cooperauve. All nme boats got off to a slow st.an because of poor winds. Once the boats reach the Atlantic, wmds should pick up considerabl} malung speeds of up to 34 knots possible. At their present rate, the crossi ng would take well over four months. However. a more realistic arrival date has been calculated. W1nn1ng boats are expected to cross the fin ish line at the U .S.S I ntrep1d 1n New York at the end of this m o nth Tomah a wk second Six Orange County sluppers scored m the final results of Los Angeles Yacht Oub's four-race Harbor Senes which wound up Sunday. John Arens' Tomahawk, Balboa Yacht O ub placed second m Inter- national Ocean Racing Class A; Lewis Bcery's It's OK, BYC was second tn IOR-B and Allen Brown's Spint, Voyagers Yacht Club was third. CARDINALS WIN BIG • • • From Bl Clark had three htts, Terry Pendleton added three RBis and Tommy Herr drove in two runs with a sin&Je and a sacrifice fl y. The Cards sent T 4 batten to the plate in their big inning, belaborina Jerry Reuss and reheven Rick Honeycutt and Bobby Castillo for eight sinaJes. "The balls they hit, the ma,ionty were on the a.round," Los Angeles Manaacr Tom Lasorda said. "Every- one was findina holes." ~Cardinal hitters swung from the heefs, St. Lou1S left-hander John Tudor ket>t the Dodgers off-balance with his p1npo1nt control. He didn't yield a hit until Steve Sax doubled down the left-field line to start the Los Anatles sutth. Bill Madlock homered leading o ff lhe seventh, and Tudor left at the end of the innina with a three-hitter. Herzoa. who plans to start Tudor in the stventh pmt if tht series aocs lhat far. said he had been tempted to ht\ tum tven earlier. "But we we~ down 2-1 10 pmes. I didn't want to takt any chances," Htrzoa 111d "If he'd had a no-hitter tom• after .even, J would h.ave left him 1n there." Lasorda shook o ff the defeat and said the playoff 11 now a "best-<>f· three" series. "I'll let you m ow tomorrow after· noon," the Dodgers' pilot said when asked 1f he thought Los Ari~eles would rebound in today's fif\h game. Clark, hke Landrum. said the Cards had reacted p<>s1t1vely once the shock of Coleman s injury had worn off. "We may have been a little b11 inspired. It was such a freak th mg. As It aot closer to aame ume. we were 10 there 1ok.inf and kidding wtth him." C lark said. 'He seemed to be 10 good spirits. He let us all know we should' JU St go out and play." St Louts' recovery from 4-1 and 8·2 setbacks in the first two games at Dodaer Stadium may be typical, Clark added. "Thinkfag bac k, Ouie (Smith) said at best when he said that we don't seem to play well after a day or two off. We seem to pla y better when we haveourbackupinst the wall. We're 1ust lookina forward to wtnnina tomorrow and 101na back to LA With the ltad." "We'~ aoina to take this as o ne p.me. You wtn some and you're ao1na to 10te 10mt. You lose s1aht th.at thex (Card•) played extremely well, · R.eu11 said. "They hit, and the hits found tht holes. J thought I was throwina the baJI aood. '' \ In IO R-C Bruce <\ndcrw~on''> Chicken Lips. C ap1strano Ra y Yacht Club, wound up m If fir'it place lie with Victory. co-skippered hy Peake and Rohan. Del Rey Y( Bravado. skippered by Csary Chan- dler. South 'ihore Yacht Club was second tn Performance Handicap Racing Fleet Clas!. A, and Aloha II, sailed by (ilenn Reed, ''iouth Shore Yacht Club, v.a\ ~cond in the Midge Ocean Racmg < la'>'> BBC's Franta wins Sue Franta of Balboa Yacht \lub. at the helm of the the PllRF-sloop Roller, was the overall winner of the Peggy GrCjOry Apprcc1at1on Trophy, in the fi,c-race Orange County Women's Ocean Raung 5encs. The fifth ra<.:c o f the scnc!t was held Saturday out of Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club Winner of the fifth race was Juice. skippered hy Lmda Elias. Long Beach Yacht Club. Second was Toboggan, sailed by Leno re Coll10s. Voyagerc. Yacht Club. and third was Wreckleu with Ann Becker of Capistrano Bay Yacht Club at the helm. DODGERS. From Bl • • (Valenzuela) Tonight was a real boost. The big thing now, thou~h. i~ our next game Everything else 1s o ut the WJndow " Clark said the team had massed Vince Coleman, but u usual adapted well to adversity. Coleman, the basc- stealing cataly'it of the Cardinals' offense, was ..cratched from the lineup af\er the mech anical infield tarpauhn at Busch Stadium rose from the artificial turf and rolled over his leg. "It's an eumple of how this team can react to adversity," Clark said af\er the game "We have a lot of guys you can fall back on. J was out for six weeks (with a pulled muscle alon.a bis nbcage) and they picked up the pieces without a problem .. Shortstop Onie Smith said that the C'ardtnals, Jvst as they had done through tile reaular season, n:tained a pos1t1 ve attitude despite their show- ing 1n the fi"t two pmes 10 Lo, An1ele5 ''We don't talk about the negatives," Sm ith uid. "Thia team hasn't gotten as far as it l\as thinluna neptaves. We take '' one prue at a ume and tr)' to play our pme Tontabt h worked. We 'o out and try u.aJn tomOfTOW, and 1(11 worl(,, fine frlt donn't, ti doesn't Y llU IU\l go to the nut pmt " " •• Orange Cout DAIL V PILOT /Mondey, ()c(ob« 14, 1M5 • Milner: It was like battle of Gettysburg Fountain Valley hurting (physTcally); E Ison primed fofrun afSunset title I was pica~ wilh our effort, only two of their touchdowns we~ because o( the defense." Jy RICHARD DUNN ...,,..c:.., a 2 • The bia ones art coming up fo r ;unset lcque football teams and a :ouple of others have a bia one in the >IC~ound today followanJ last .veek s hiah school action in the mnae Coast area. Here's what it looks like to the ;oachcs, now that they've had the NCCkend to think it over: Foaatala Valley'• Mlle Mllner, JC teams travel Saturday Golden ·West College returns to Pac-9 action after a week's respite, Orange Coast seeks its elusive first victory, and Siddlebaclc tries to take another step to the Mission Con- ference crown in community college football action Saturday night. All begjn at 7:30. The Rustlers, who had a bye last week and spon a 1-1 Pac-9 mark. will travel to Mt. San Antonio to face the Mounties. Mt. SAC was one of Golden West's victims last year, ~24. Orange Coast will hit the road to tackle San Diego McSl\ which will be trying to shake off the effects of Saturday's 36-7 thrashing at the hands of Saddle back. The Olympians entered the game as the top passing team in the conference, but they were held to 140 yards by the Gauchos Saturday. Saddleback w1ll risk its unbeaten mark when it travels to Southwestern, also unbeaten. SaturdllV'I •mn f'AC ·t CON,.llllNCll G~ Wnt al Ml San Anlonlo 8akerafleld et Fulttrton Taft at Cerrltcn P•MCMN •I LOl>CI e.acn MISStON CON,llRIENCI Ore"" Coal! et San Oleoo ~ Saddlebedl ., Soulllwftlenl llenc:hO Sanll990 et San Oleoo Cltv. 1:30 Cllrua el Petomar. 1:30 SOUTHDllN CAI. CONPlllllNCI LA Har~ et LA Soulhwett. 1 EHi LA et W8'1 LA. 1 POOTHll.I. CON,llllllNCa MlllOC>e Vellev et Groumont Mt $an Jednto et 1-i.1 Vellev Sen hmerdlno Vellev et OeMrl WHT811tN STAT8 CONPlllllNC• Hencoca el Glendale. 1:30 Compton et Moon,erll, 1.JO s.nte Monica et ll lo Hondo. 1 :lO Sant• 8.at'bera et Ven1ure AM "mes •I 7:30, unlfta Indicated Edlaoa'1 Bill Workmu, follow1na his team· s 3 7. 7 v1l·tory over N om• Dame. a fourth stta1&ht win: "h (the victory) 1gn1ted really quick. Ca~y Jones intercepted their first pass and ran it back for a touchdown and 11 was downhill from there. following his team's third loss in a row, a 21-0 dec1s1on to Lona Beach Poly: "It was kjnd ofhlce the battle of Gettysburg. They not only beat us but they hun us. The turnovers ap1n have plaaucd us throuahout the rear. We fumbled on our nrst play of the game, and (then) they scored. "It was a &ood mou vat1onal thing, because all 65 guys played. Ricley Justj~ and Ken Griggs played well, as did K.alcaph Carter. Our whole of- fensive hne really had a very good game. We were very efficient, 10 for I 3 throwing the ball w1th no interceptions -and we ran the ball Mllaer Puooe "Actually, we ran the ball pretty well. Our offensive hne played ell.- tremely well. One of the problems 1s that we can't get the ball into the end zone. Basically, that's it. Defensively effecuvely We started subsllhJllfll dunn1 the middle of the third quaner." Newpon Ha"'°r'1 Mlle Glddl:D11. DailyPilotTop 10 ORANGE COUNTY HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL 1. SERVJTE (5-0) ,,..." ~----1111111 '"•llM .... ea OnMe C-· fY'a llelt, LI~ 1e-.t te .... s.rvlW• ..... ...._. end dltd$9M, 25·'- €·- • ·1- , • 2. MISSION VIEJ0(6-0) ow.t -1111 • Midi ........ Miii '" ...... *""· M· 10 -0-HllL May lace • ..... dMlll9l"'9 Ill OeowMY (4·1) Ill __ .....,. .,,. T'llundlaY. 3. EDISON (4·1) CMrwra ~ '" ,..d .. ,._,. ... ._,.. •1"MIM· ...... "*"*"""' IMldr '" .. ...... -..~ ........... 5UftMI~ 4. 5. 6. VALENCIA (4-1) EL MODENA (4-1) LOS ALAMITOS (6-0) • Tl99rl Md • llrM!tler --..... Gtwlde (41·0), ..... V~rdl' ~!led -... ,,_., teulNel '" .. -· ... W»•8"1d·cemlll9 GtMIM wt PHI 8 MC8"ld lmptre L••eu• Hrrler, ·--· >4·21. °"" lllMIY• ..... NM ... Min Ill 1·4 Se_._ .. .,.....,... .. c.. .............. 14·0. Stll .. vend .... 9·1 ....... ... .,..... P'edlka rwmalM .. _.,, ~lllr9CeNrleetiW d\em411ei.,.. llllMtlU'..-wr. 7. CAPO VALLEY (4-1) 8. FOOTHILL (3-2) ll!Rlllb ............ tMm· ..._.,....,.,.....,....._ •t eutMf, --...... ,... .. c...eun ............... ,4.0 *-" -•• ---- 9. MATER DEi (3-2) Meftlrdn' ....... ..,,.. ........ '"tredl, Md""' Ill ftrM ter peu...... St. f'elll Ill .....,, .......,. --· """'" ....... &Md!~ Jt·tl. 10. NEWPORT BARBOR(4-l) S..... mall• """"' te T9" 10wttflM9 S-Vlew~ -S• llll di (>4·21). c-ee MMe Miit ....... ..,..,,.... .. L.--. -..0 Oct. 1S. followtna his t~m·s victory over Saddlcback. a 24-21 verdict to aam the 1ns1de traclc to the Sea 'l/1ew Lcquc utlc "four thmp really stuck out First, I thou&hl th<'rc were two very. very aood football te•ms out there. Secondly, except for 1983. m which they were down a little bu. the Sa1lo" and the Roadrunncri an~ pumng on veat shows and I think 11 has become an excellent nvalry. The (celma I had when it was over, they were very couragrous after a touah loss. "And No 3. it's probably the bc1t effon we've susuuned over the cour~ o ( a game. Even the officials werc outst.and1ng. and I guns No. 4 would be that 1t was our homecoming and everybody WM be.ck. II WU I tUn bjp school f ootbell pme ... HaatlaJ&•• Bead1'1 Oter1• PUC!M, rollOWlfll h11 team'1 29--21 Ion to Mater De1· "We didn't cope with their ~sure really well early lD the pmc and we dropped a lot of balls Malet' Dea wu complaJmna about bow many balls~'vc been dropp1na, well we dto tcven or c1a.bt of our own (1n t is pme). We came out of preseason vtry, very good. We lost two guys 10 \M five games. What got me wu that we wett waitm1 until rour or five manutn lef\ beforc we started playing really well. (Pleue -COACD8/IM) CASEY .JOIUS ltdl8oD CRAIG BELLE Unl•enity MA.RC ORM Ocean Vlnr Game-busters l..att week'• prep football play1 of ~O yard• or more 95-Craig Belle (Un1vcrs1t)). luckotT return for TD 77-Dcan Cunningham (Huntmgton Beach ) recepllon from Jue l'oapolt 69-Hector Santa Cru2 (Saddleback) . .k.1clr.off return 67-Marc Ohm (Ocean View). run 55-Ca~) Jones (Edison). TD return wrth 1n1ercep11on 53-Myron Butler CSaddlebackJ TD run 53-Scan Turner (Corona del Man. run l..a1t wttk'1 n111ling leaders I Scan Turner (Corona del Mar). 16-175 ::! (,lenn ( ampbell (Saddleback) 20-135. I Jonathan Todd(l.aguna Beach) 1'1-1 IU 4 Marc Ohm (Ocean View). 16-107 5 K.aleaph (arter (Ed1s.on1. l"'-llJ3 l..a1t wttll'• pa11l:Dg leaden I Paul Rodnquez <Costa Mesa). 15-41 ·2. 284 >ardi., O TD: 2 Todd Mannov1ch (Mater Dea ). 26-46-1 . 279 ~ards. 2 TDs. 3 Joe "iapoh (Huntington Beach), 15-36-1 . 223 yards. 2 TDs. 4 Shane Fok-. (Nrwpon Harbor>. 16-29-0. 21 S yards. 2 TDs. S Make Angelov1c (Edison) 10.13-0. lM! >ards. 2 TDs 6 John Yurlcov1ch (Woodbndge). 8-18-0. 110 yards. I TD 1 John Kimball (Laguna Beach). 11-19-0, 105 yards, I TD l..a1t wttlt'1 recelvl..nc leadus · I. John Carlson (Costa Mesa), 8-172. 2 Mark Craig (~rwpon Harbor), 6-109:3 hm O'Bnen (MaterDc1),9-106,4 Paul Cardenas(MaterDe1) 9-9<>; 5. Chns Ross (Hunt1ngton Beach). f>....78 6 Krvtn Mc<1el\and (Newport Harbor). 6-58 . l..a1t WHk'• acorlq leaden I. (lie) Chm Warner (Corona del Mar). Scan Turner (Corona dcl Mar). David Townsend (Woodbndgc). Cbns Ross (Huntington St'ach). K.alcaph Caner (Edison). Craig Belle (Un1vrrs1t)'l. 12 each 7 Gar\ Coston (Mater Dc1), 9 GIRLS Tennis, volleyball schedules Sunset's openers top prep schedule Tars, CdM face tough polo foes Tennts T llftdeY ( l II.IT\.) L..eoune 8Heh et Corona de4 Mar, Unlveraltv el~. Coate Mau at E"enci., Newoort H.r1>0r et WoodbrlOoe. W8'tmlnater at Hunt· lneton a..cr.. MarlN et Fout'lteln Veltev. Oceen View et Eolaon, tr.lne et $an Clemente; Mater Del el SI Jowc>ha. w.--.v (l p.m.) Corona oet Mar et Fountain Vettev TllufMeY (l p.m.) SaddlM>ec.ll et Coron• de! Mer. Unlveolrv et ~ BMcll, E1tencle at Wooelbfldlll. CO\le MeM et NewJ)Ot"t Her~; Hunllnolon 8eectl at Mal'IN; OC..n View el Founteln Vettev; Edlaon el WMtmlnaler, El Toro et Irvine, 81~ Mol\lllOl'Mf'\I et Mater 0.1 ,,,..., u JIU\'\.) OcHn View. Edlaon et Venture TourNment Setunll!Y ( .. MY) Ocean View. Edlaon et Venture TOl.lrNmant Vtle'tbll T""4111Y (7 IU'\.) WoodtlflOOe el Unlverattv, Corona del ,.,., •I Coll• MeM; Nn1oort Hertior •I ~ a..c11, s.ddlebeck el E1tencle, Hunllnoton 8Mch et Founlelfl Vettev, Edlaon at MarlN, W8'tmlnarer el Oc:Mn V'-w; lrvlne el Et Tc><o, St Peut et MllW Del. TllwMllY ( 1 p.m.) Eat811Cla et W~IOOI. 5-ddleOeC:k at eor-del NM; Coale IMM el Newoort Herbor, Unlvenlly •I LffUl\8 8Hcll; HU11111191on ... di ., Merine; Founleln Vellev et Oc:Mn vi.w. Edlaon et WMtl'lllnater; San Clement• •' tr•lne, Mater Oii el PM >< .._..,< .. •v> Eatencle. Hunllnoton 9MCll et LO\ Am~ T-l'IMIWlll, Miter Del et Glendete Tournament 'LAG 'OOTaALL CltV .. Ne•l*t 9Mdl llOYI 1.•AOU• .,....,_. HM• va.w 12, MerlMr1 12 .......... ,..._WI ~II 21, AncWIOn ' H•~ vi.w It, Mattnera o '°" WAAN•R ,OOTaALL --C:.11~ < .. ••••a o c..> •. ""' w.. ~ 14, ·---' CDrtw OMonovt ren for ll-vcl. TO OV\811 ~tied 10-vd TO !'VII Jeu Fowler kldled bolt! Hire llOlnll. > o ....... t. .... W..0.....1 IS..,,. Lufln fled fumllle r.covwv David e1'd 1cott MldlMla end Md!~ Qe JOfWI Avlu IMved .... ) "· ..... ~ ll, ............... llh911 O'L.etN lllld Stew Feveuo ran !Of To.. TN....,_ .. ,,. ~ tNv t-llnl doWM.) OSI 'f ...... .,..... <•elMll Cramm Md ~ r9COVW\I •• AYlu ,._.,.. ..... llOltl wen.I IOf'TaALL Cll¥ .. c.-MoM ......... AOU\. T ... MUal ~ ......... ...... ~ J 1 J I ~· 1 t ... ., 1 t ....,., ... 0 , ..,._Hal --..... ....., lflOUtll 14, l 11v I Z.ul*I IS, ~ 14 ....... U , Stnlw Met 1' ~ ·~ ) 0 Aka~ .............. .,,_.De ...... Shane Foley of Newport Barbor leada 8ailora &Caln•t Me.a. OIKIMI 2 1 ltown lteoet• ) e.rmlclleet 8o.;a , I Cellf. OrMmln"t ) P1velloa 11 I 1 J.C. Certan , A r .. m, ' , ~Hef'OH 1 01•1 OMt 0 , Gultoo-1 0 ~ie'MW ·~'--A TMm 10. a ... mk:llMI 8ovl ) JC c ... 1er1 21, Gu/Ion l OIK IMI. 11. Diel One IS -~ o. """". SKI! Pullolea f , PIVCflOI 1l I C~ll 12. ca. Dfffl'l'ln't 1 i MAJCMl c OMllM IOf'T8ALL Hit men J 0 °" ....... 1 e.dl ,., .. ,"' , 1 MaWI ADULT taAGUU Mlr'CY'I Fllneta ' 2 ·~ Zomt>let I 2 HIVdu 1 , ... UllllM lcMltl I Flemlnt ~ter1 1 ' t4111 !It •e0 '°"' • ..... k#w Dived Guna • I ) , Ftemkle ~en I, FN"41ne • Ptvdllc NetU"'Clea Zomlllet 7, He~ S Olllmell'l , ) Hlll'Mll 20, ~·, 14 "'°""Co , ) Pumoell H-0 s MMOll c DMMll • °""""" N.AT ) 0 ( .......... tdlMI) Lh C-r a Oeh ' i Gii"'""" Slldl• • 0 J 1 C• lev Cata I i $low-~ GlllMI FMlet 0 2 ll'VlN Hlllvft ) , Air Cet 0 ' ................... ' ' ·~~ n~ MuMten 1 > ca. •av C•I• "· Air Cal 7 ZIN"• ll'lua 0 ' "4 AT 11. LM CMMf''• 09" I c ....... co.o DMIOtt Cet~ldlllll) ~ Oovt SI AINl4lc Cr.ie • 0 Yoe4 .,_, ....... l I W. Deol'I loWI , ' 1 llermlcMIC lel1tvt l 1 ltlF No J ) ) llue °""°"' , , KOi ' l I ~~ 1 ' ,...,.,.,..._. ' • fl'terW SI. ~•t , t Jolftt VeM\n i s lallt9r ...... 0 • c~ ......... (Iii ........ MllMll ll'ltt'Ct .. • ..., l'lllCNll s v.,...., A.-.n s 0 111.e o.n-17, ke"9r ...,. 11 TM ~OMC\Mf' J ' Oeftdlr• 1 ........ t Que,.. .. ~ l , -..... Merwkk J , 1 .... c .... > 1 Crec.t1tr1 1 • Westminster first to challenge Edison· s claim for supremacy Sunset Leagu~ football action be- gins Fnday after five wl'tks of non- lcague action. and our of the gate 1s Edison and Westminster. two of thr leading contenders for champ1onsh1p honors. It's at Wes1mans1er High Fnda) night. Also of considerable s1gn1 ficancc 1s Ocean View·~ duel Wlth Fountain Valle) at Orange Coast College. an add1t1on to 1he Manna-H un11ngton Beach game Meanwh ile Woodbridge and Laguna Beach. both 2-0 1n Sea Vic .... League pla}. tangle at Laguna Fnda} Mater Oct also opens leagur pla} with an Angelus League game at l)t Paul. Ns..-·.~ THUIUOAY C...ewvL .... Cenvon vs $ante An• Vellev ( •• Sant• An• &owl) Of'Melt ...__ Savenne et loltlenele ...... ..._ Oownev at Min ion Vt.tO T"' H .. I 0 • I cc OMu.. ("' u.-1111 Sc:Mlt) R8F T"' A TMm 1 c"' "•' Poott • ' Stud'O Cele Jeu • , Sm\111 Oew1as ) ) T'-f,.., &. Reid!-2 • KllOC.kers 0 ' C0-10 ADUt. T LIAGUI Clrt CYC) C llurcll Eng • 0 ~· ) Tiie ,..._,OOl'ler l Sft•Olf ·LengtlOll l ac.I'• 1 C-v Vllleoe t Jutt·Ul 0 • IAAt•TaALL C.W.tf ... .,....~ M8WI A~T LDAeu9t A~ letC-•llilW.._I VIie 'tlove , 0 llen Frel\OI DMr• I 1 C,,.uM ~ f 91t I I llec10 Mona..,.1 I 1 CnalOY'' Foots 1 are .. I UNIY 0 ·~ C.tC..-•MwMllllll ~-~1\181 J 0 .. ~~ ' 1 ,....,.... Yo.1"\ 2 1 Touc.M lltou I , AVCO I ) ..... ~ 0 ) .. ........ c ............. '°"" ....,,, l • ~ l • vwc-• J 1 ~ i ' 'lllOAY .SM View ~ Ccnte ~ •' Ntwoor• Heroor Woodbrioo. el \..A9UN e.«1' Estencle vs ~k l•f Sa11ta ,.,,. Bow• Corona oat Mar vs un1 .... snv ., .... ,,. MoQn SuRMfL-Founteln Valltv vs OcHn 11,.,., •• Oret>IN Co.st Cotlellel Edlaon et Wnlml1>sttr Hu11tl119ton 8 .. Ctl v> Mari,,_ la• Hunl11>9l()t> 8ffclt Hlot\I s-tl\C•~ L-trvlne 11 San Clem«I•• El Toro "' l...ouN HIMS ,., M IU IQll ..... '° High) CePISlreno Vaoev 11 Oene 11111, .. .....,.~ Mater De• at St Peul 81s1'0o Amat •' 6•anoc> ""°"'~· S..vna st Plus X CMf\WV '-- 111118 Per~ el El Mooena Tusll" 11 Foo1n111 I,,.,..~ Et Oor•dO n 1.oere ta• 1.11 Pe1ma Pa,. Pecrhce •• Espe<e111a a• ve-i.a H•O" ,,_•vi.- Buen• Per• at '°"''~'°" 5onota 11 La He0t1 Trov vs Sunny Hills (el 6uena Per• H•G" Gel'-.iGr.wL-1.a Qu1nt1 •' Bot.a Gr •not! Garoen Grove vs I.CK Am'VQ\ 11 C.1r~ Grovel ~-L­Ana~m al 8 rff Ollna. M9Q1>o1I• al WtSler" SATUOlOAY c...aurvL-~11 AN •• Or-., E• ~ H•QI\ 1,,..,.1._ 1..0\ A1am11os •s Cve><ns tat Wnt ... n H•G" K......Ov ,, ... l(aftll• l•I l • P•l<N Per• I Ge""'°" ~ L-ltancl'O A1em110, vs SanH990 11t Gar~ Grove H1gn .... ...._ A1uu "' T•ebueo ~'"' a1 M 1UIOt' v .. oo Hlglli e·~-0 8re*"tan 0 C OM.-(et C--Mllr M-1 New Pa< ) 0 T ... TMm ) 0 Wettcllfl Soot!\ ' I The L~ l , ~"I to Win 0 J Cutnmll'ls &. ""'hll• 0 ) cc~ ,., ...... ~, '""d Strine l 0 Bears' Ditka T"'o btg non-kague durh h1ghltght !)rang(' Coast area .... ater polo this wed, -each ~turda\ morning "'hen Newpon Harbor tangles with Long Beach ~ ilson al Belmont Plaza 1n Long Bl'ach and C orona dt'I Mar tests the waters against P\lll'nt Sunn' Hills at "ic"'JlOn Harhor In cross coun1n lhe bag one 1s al.-.o \aturda' -tht• Orange C ounty champ1on!>h1ps at ln1ne Park T1'b .... , ··-P9e T .. ftdH C 1 ILi'\. i C0<ona Ml Mar et E• Te><o S.-•lle vs Ma•.,. D•• •' Saoo~k Hlg" W ..... 'I Cltuft.l u", • ., ',, • at ...._"°' • Heroor s.ooi.o.co. 11 torO"I oeo Mar 1.agune e.ac11 at E S1enc1e, iN•''"''"''et v\ ~~•••,, V a•v la l Gotden Wftl c~ • lO om Edi.on "' Hunllnoton 8..cn a l C.-W8'1 COleOe 1 )() pm I F~ton "'' ..,._,..,. a• GOld9n Wet! Colteve. 6.JO 01"1'1 ) FrW¥ ll tuft.I ()cw"t> er N•wPO'• HerbOI' C<Y01'18 Otl Ma• a• E Oo<aoo Mer•na •' E11anc1e Fountain velte• a• .. o• •1em1~ Crn e>< "' Male< De• at s.ooeoec• High Sant• AN •' ll'V-~· c• ...... > "l••POr• 01aroor o Long &..c" Wiison et !Hlmon• Plea $<.onnv Hiiis vs Coron• Of'4 Mar at Ne•oor• Harbor MarlN v\ El Dorado •• E...,....,.,. 1"0011\IM •• Untv•O•IY Tllh _...., cress ~ TitwMe¥ U l Es•a"C•t WOOdtYIOQe al Corona 09I MM "lewoot• Haroor Cos•• -. •' U1>IVer"\l•11 ~Ou"'••" v a•v •' Oc"n v .. w Merl~ _,, l"tunllnGI<><' e..cr •' Cantrel Parll W~''"""" .. ., Eo••<><' •' Cenrret Pen. Mal9' De< 1t 8•"- ~·~· s,e..,,..., t• &ft\.) Ora~ Co..,n•• (l'lam1>1011~ll11>• •',,,.,,..Per" . ar .. ~ .. , 1 G 0 &. t ' ..... ,,...a.,., I 8u(•\ ' R&F 0 CCC ~ Cat C--• Mllr Hlllll) The Growers l Old 8u• SIG l Tattnet1Mlll 09,.,,, , The Pie<• I ,...,..., 0 Lllll9 OI_, 0 .... arrested ) \ i I , , 3 0 0 I , 3 l on drunk driving charge CHICAGO (AP) -lluc:t\o Sta'°' ~tort' bc1na rt'leascd football coach Mike Olt a wa\ Th<' tlcan had rt'tumed to C1ucqio characd with dnv1n1 under th~ an shonl) \x'forc mtdmght af\cr they fluen~ of alcohol c.ut)" toda). dcft'ated t.hr San franc1K'O '49en on authonlles said. unda) Jlhno1s tale Pohtt Sat Chart« Roth said Duk.a alt0 was cha1'fld Roth wd O.tk.a. '4 5. was sto~JU t with 'l)ttd1na and dnv1"' an an 11\er m1dn.,tlt on t.he n · tate 1nqular manner and 11 ttheduled to ToUway wnt o( Part RtdJe ~r 1n Sc"'haumbura &raffle rourt Roth said 0.t.k.a was= b a ov 8 t~ who .. _. ham ma and In a racho 1ntn-v1cw today. O\tb dnv11~1n an tffttular ma.nner Roth lald he had no comment aOO.n lM \aid "tka posted S 100 bond and incident exetpt to aall n 1 "d1'8p- \umndered b\S dnver's hoenae poinuna atuauon " ~ J \ . ~. . . C0Mt DAILY PILOT/Monday, October,_., 1985 FoH TH E REcoRo ~ . 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I 0 0 s 10 0 )1 0 0 , 9 0 • 0 0 ' 13 l 2 0 0 10 0 0 IS 1 0 s 0 0 0 I 0 7 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 101 )7 1 pe •• Ml lUUIM 0 0 0 Le noreeu• J 0 0 Veleflruete 0 l 0 !>tJ 9 IS 0 Guerrero • 0 0 Mac!toc• ) • 0 Marlllell 1 0 0 H.,-,l'llH r 0 l 0 Sclotel• 19 l l Ma ldoneOO f 0 I lt•oc• 11 I 0 Ou11can ' 7 1 Ce0etl 17 1 O An~HOll ) 4 0 (H llito I ) 0 Yteoer • 0 0 8eltor 0 I 0 JOllll\1°"9 0 0 0 WtiCI' 0 0 I Oler I O O H-vcull 0 I O Ho•tll 0 1 0 Nltot"1uer o o o Wl'llHlt ld 0 0 0 Rl\JU 0 0 I T...it 101 4' $ ltLA YO,f' SCH•DULH W..w ~ ... s.r1" "A TIC*AL LI AGUI Gemt --~ •. St Loul' 1 Gtmt lwO -~ I SI LOUh 1 Gemt """ -S1 l.oul• • ~ 1 IOodoert laed Mrle•. 1· 11 Oal'M IOvr -SI LO\.lls 17. 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OefdOf\ <;rovt t ,ullaftOll • Costa MIM n , l!I Monte S 1r ... 1ne '· *4 a..c11 4 T utlln '· HUllll~IOll lteaCl'I ) w .. 1M1,.,1., i. ,..wPort -..Cl\ I Prep Footbitll UNIVl"S.TY ,OOT8ALL YMr-w -.-r YMr, CMdl lt?O-Jerrv lttdman 1'71-Jerrv Redman 1'72-Jefry Raoman lt7>-Jtrr11 ltaoman 1'7-Jerrv Reoman 1'75--0lck Roelle 1t7.-0k:k Roelle 1'11-0k:lo; ltoefle lt7t-Ok:k "oclle 1~11~ McAnlncll 1--Ted Mullitll IM~k:ll Curll• ltt,_.lek CIKll' l~lcll Curll• ltt.t-flllck Curll' Toltlt SS win•. IJ IOHl1 • CIF otavofh 91\lrY •ac•CI s ) , 7 ,. , •·s ..•. , 5·« l ·•-1 1·7· I 2· / ,., )·' , ... )·/ S·•· 1 'S•OI l ,,., • Soull'I Coe" L••~ co·c11&mp1 Henigan Sorcabal l"VINE HIGH FOOTBALL YNr•lrY•VMr YN r, CMdl •ecwct lt77-Cnuc:11 S«c.a0t1 >-1 lt7t-<lluc:k Sorcaba1 l·t 197'-<lluck Sorc;abal 2·7· 1 lftO-ClnJCk Sorca11a1 0-10 19'1-Ttrrv Henloan •·S·l ltt2'-Terrv H9111gan 6·• 191)-Terrv H91119an • •·S 1,..._Terrv H911loa n S·• l Tolll' 16 wlnt, SO I0,'9,, J 1i., 'CIF otavoH\ entry WOODBRIDGE FOOTBALL YMr·bY·VMr YN r, CNdl lttl~N01I 1"1-<>ene Noll 191)-G-Noll ·~-Noll Tolal' 17 win,, 24 IOlwt 'CIF otavOH\ t ntr v Disney Olluk ·-d l·I S·S 'l-4 )·7 tat uu a-vi.1a, ""8.1 Lennv WeOklrn , '72.~ 611·67 ·69·'3 ,.. Mille Donal<!, '35,100 66·•9·66·67 Sco1t Hoc11 '3S,100 69·'3·67·69 1'9 Pevne Stewert. s 11,600 (ier'f Kocll . 117.600 271 (iery Mc Coro s • 1,400 Vt Anav 8ten 'lJ,400 273 D Hammono, st l,600 CrelG SteOJer 111,600 00fl Pootev. s 11.600 114 Man McCumoer. 19.200 J~ ~umen 19,200 C11rence Role 19.100 v s Oennv Eowerc!,, 17,200 Joev S1noet1r, 11.100 l<t n ltrown. $7,200 11• Lon Hinkle, SS.060 Wtvne <iraov. lS,060 p Jtc00'9fl, '5,060 Ronnie 81ec1<, sS.060 8111 K re1tert, \S,060 Ji m Thor~ IS.060 Larrv Nelton, IS,060 Nick Fal(lo. IS.060 'l11 Cilllt>y (;1111er1, i:l.S70 'VI Cr.rt• Pt rrv. '2.110 Tom l(llt '1,llO Pt! McGowan s2 ,710 R09er Mellt>le, '2.1IO Loren Rot>erl\, '7.710 Otvld Frot t. 12.llO Marl>. Pfeil 17.780 Ht l Su11on 11. 780 Pal LinOH V S l,93S Mlkt Rt lO. 11.'3S 'Vt Ruu Cocriren. ll.93S Jolln Me l'latltv. 11.ns Ron ~trtci.. s 1,93S Lerrv Milt, s I .'3S 8111 Cill\ton s 1 93S RalPll Lenorum. S1,93S 1IO Tnomes Ltllman. "·'°° Maril 8rook' I 1.400 Budav Gtrc!ner. s 1,400 Tom Jt ntt1n\, SI ,..00 Howero Twlllv, 11 400 lll C Bolling tt.099 800 (illder 11 098 Lerrv Rlntttr Sl,098 1U Jonnnv Miiier S9S7 Peul Azlnoer 19S7 Vence Ht1lner. S9Sl Jodie MudO. 19S7 Mlllt ~ml!,, S9S7 I' r•O CPuOIH , 19S7 lll WOOdv Bl.Ckllurn, "84 Cr.Ip Beck tl84 Ceorge &urn•. 1114 Biii Bunner, sta.. K t lll'I F erou,, sM• Andrew Mtoee. "'4 JC Sntec!. SA• "Hen M Iller ""' Oevt llerr Sl:U Wevne Levi, 113" KtMY Know 5134 llr•llUocier 5134 lli 81rrv J .. ci..tt "°' Oev o T nore ltol Bot>t>v Wtc!-ln\ stOe I< en Gr"" 17M ltoObv N•cllOlt ., .. .. 111 •9·'9·65·6' 66·61·72·6J 1>7·611·70-61 10·61·6'·61 70-61·61·67 6S-70-6'·69 10-66·'9·61 t.9· 70·61·'7 10-67·1>9·61 U ·11 ·n ·'1 10-10-6'·'6 11·6'·61·61 .u-11-u-n 69·11·67·69 10-69·'7·10 70·71·69·'6 n-61·'1·'9 ,. . ., ...... 11·66·11·61 69·11·67·69 70·70-67·69 69·69· 70·69 67·69·7S·'7 10-61·61·1• 61·69·61·73 67·1>9·71·10 70-69·71·67 66·69·70·71 67 .... 71·71 71· 7•·66·67 71·71·67·69 ., 70·69·73 .. -611·6'·7• 70-70·611·11 10-61·10-11 n -'4·70-n 71·69· .. ·70 11·61·n -'7 11·71·70-61 73·11·61· .. 70·71·71·67 10-10-61-n 10·11·11·" 69· 73· 10-69 12·71·10-61 11-10-.. -n 73·1>7·69·71 611· 10-75·69 71·71-70-70 69·611·76·•• 13·61-70·11 i.1-10-6'-n 6'·72·611·71 11·71 ·69·72 71·67·71·73 , 1-10·69· 13 71-69·73·70 73·73·6'·71 61·70-71·7• 70·69·77·72 n -11-10-11 13·10-'9·17 10·11· .. ·15 70·70·11·11 1•·•1·11-rJ 15-.. ·10-1• 11·61·74·72 11·71-71·73 ..-72·7l ·1l ••·71·72·7S 72·70·6'·11 ~ teume"*" lit H"-HMd IU.lld, l.C.) JIO Miil• Ft1cn1c11 U0.000 ,., Orvlllt Mooch• '1 S.166 Gt!'e LIOMtr s IS, I .. •1 Cr\IMlt t SIS.166 JU Mlllfr ll••ller st 7SO Gev ll•wtr st,7SO ,,. w e11 z.,.,.11t,"•1 . .s.uo L" E•oer. u.uo Cr\e rie, ()w911,, U ,SSO Don Jenua rv, U,UO JD/In K•ll"ka, u.no 0.11 ~II. ... JS 550 >IS Ar"Old P•lmtt U ,IOO Pet tr T "On'!'°" U .t00 C11atMt• \1lt0tc! tJ.>00 "' ltlll't MaA#etl. U JOO Jim Ftrrf-U ,,)00 111 t ruce CramotOfl aJ.000 ,,. • ..., \nlltll IJ 100 Her04d Mennl"O U 100 )19 Ill" COlhnt '11 .. lhv Hvon U 1" Ken s1n1 n.,.. • 10-10-12 10·11 ·11 11 61-1) ••·n·n 7•·'7·72 14·10•10 71 ,,. 71 10-n -11 61·73·n n -10-n n •1 " n·l•· .. ... ., .. n ,, .. 14 11-11 1•·10 ,, 11-n ·n 1J n n 10·11·1' 1s n n n '' n n 14·1l NflL llATIOMAL COMf'•R•MC• .... W L T Pa. ,.. ,.A Ram. NewOrt..n, Sen Fr1ncl11C<u •tlanta 6 0 0 I 000 lll n ) ) 0 .500 IH US ) l 0 .soo us 117 0 ' 0 000 120 1'2 Clllcaoo O.trolt or...,aav Mlnn ... ota Temoa 8av e.-el 6 0 0 3 3 0 l 3 0 3 3 0 0 ' 0 .... 1.000 '" ,. 500 IQ) Ill iOO ,,, 140 500 l)) tn .ooo 111 177 0 1N11 5 I 0 .I» 15' ,. NV Olt n1' J l 0 .SCIO 143 1 lS St Loul• ' J O .500 145 1'3 W•"''llO'Oll l l o .500 n l:M Pllllac!etPlllt , • 0 -3J3 " '° AM811UCAH COMlllR•NC• Oenvtr .. ..,.. S..1111 ICanw' CllY San Oleoo Cievtlancl ClllCIMatl Plll\DurOll HOV.Ion .... 4 2 0 • 1 0 4 2 0 J 3 0 ) 3 0 ~ * , 0 , • 0 1 • 0 1 5 0 •att .. , '" 1)1 .u 11• m M1 '"' 1'9 500 141 135 500 IS2 '" .'67 114 ., lll llM ,,. 3J3 12' IOI 1'7 75 121 Miami NY Jeta 4 I 0 IOO Ill 15 • I 0 100 120 n New England lndltl\IPClll' ltuffato ) l 0 500 ICM II' , 4 o m 1ot 131 0 • 0 000 " 1'3 ~.,. . ._... ltemt J I. TamPa &av 27 R-*'1 23, Ntw ~'""' 13 Ntw EllOland 14, 8uffalo 3 Clevtlancl 11. Hout ton 6 Otllver IS, lnc!lanaPOll' 10 Wetlllno•on 24, Ottroll > Gr..., lttv 20, Mlnnesote 11 Clnclnflall lS, Ntw Vork Glint' )() P!llladell>lll• 30. St. Louis 1 t-... Oella' 'l1, Pltt•t>urOfl 13 '\ !>In Oleoo JI, ICanM' Cllv 20 Cl'llcaoo ,,, San Frenclsco 10 Saellle >O, Atlante 2' TtMlllt'tO- Mlt MI at New VOtl< Jet' lC"-nflel 1 ,, 6) S-Y'I~ ·-al ICenws Cltv Reldan at ClevNnc! Clnclnnttl at Hou"Oll 0111.,. at Ptllladefpllle lncllene11011, al llutfelO New Orlten• at Atlanta w11111no1on at New YOl'll Giant' SI L0\.11' e l PlllNIYl'Ofl San Oleoo al Mlnntlola Sall Fra ncisco II Detroit N-York Je" •• New enoiano s..111e 11 Denver Tempe Say 11 Miami Melldlly, Oct. 71 Gr..., ltav 11 Cllboo Rams J1, auc.ca. .... ' '11' Sar-. "" Que..-n Ram' Tampeaev 0 14 10 7-31 1 IJ 0 7-77 ~ING ,..,,, Quertw T&-Wllc!ar I ruo UowtOulkt kk:k), 9:4 S.aM Oual'IW LA-OUCAwOf'lll 23 pen lrom ltroc:k ILa ntlord kick). :37 LA-Olckenon • run lLen,IOl'd klckl. 5:21 T&-FG lowtOulkt l4, 7 IS T&-HO\.IM 17 r>au from Oe8erg (lo· wtllullt,t lllci<), 1:11 T&-FG fgwet>ulkt 49. IS'OO 'TMrd OU.rter LA-FG LantfClf'c! 27, 10:27 LA-Eckern 33 lnterGtr>tlon re1urn ILt n,lord kk:k). 10-4' .. ~OU.,,.. Tit-Carl., 13 pan from Oeltef'u !lei· wtOUlkt klcll), 1.-'1 LA-lrvlll ).C lnlerGtollon r tturn (L..an\forel kick), 9'02 AlltndenG-l9,to07 OAMa STATIST'ICS LA Fln t OO•n' 14 Ru,llet·varell lS· ll4 PaUlllO 14 Retu<n Vero' 1'9 Corne>·Att 1'·?3· l s.cks t>v 1·10 Punt' 1·52 Fum«Met·Lost •·l Penellfft·Yardt 11·94 Time of Pou .. tlOll 3":20 •DfVIOUAL STATISTICS n lS 2S·~ ISi 45 1'·14·4 1·0 .... 1·1 1-S 25.40 RUSHING-Ram•. Olekerton 2S·7S, Raooen l ·26, c.111 5·20, Ellard 1-1,, Srock 1-(mlnut 3) Ta,,_ ltev, Wilder 2•·..,, RIPlt< l· 10, PASSING-Rem ,, Srock 16-23· l· "s T1m1>e 11av. Oeko 14·13·4·161 ltECEIVING-Ramt, EHe rd 6·62, Oudt•onl'I 4·'4, Vouno l·SI, Olcil¥M>n l·S, Rtdeletl 1·4, Hunter 1·1 Tamp.a 91v, Wltotr 4· 12. Clltt 3 .... Hou .. 2·37, C:erter 2·21, J 8etl 2·1t. T IWN l·l• MISSEO FIELO GOALs.-None lt•lden 23, S.lnt$ 1l SC... 11\1 °"'""" New °''"'" O 7 l >-13 Raloer' 7 1 o ~2.3 SCO.ING ,..,,,~ LA-A1i.n 11 run llalV lllck ), 13:2• s.c...~ LA-Allen • run llallr lllck), l·S7 No-Merlltnt ,, DeU frorn 0 WllM)ll 1Ar)der'9fl kick), 10-57 .,,... Oue"9r NO-FG AnClerMn 34, 5·11 ,._. Oua"9r NO-FG Anderwfl l3, 47 LA-W1Mlam• IS PaU rrorn M Wiit.on lltanr 11.lclll. 1.21 LA-S.fttv, 0 Wiit.on teektecl In .no rone t>v Arraoo, lJ 11 Attenot~.152 GAM• STATISTICS NO LA Flrtt Clo•n' IS 16 Rutllel·varM 31· 11• 33-113 Paulno 163 165 Relu<n Yard' O 14 Comp·•ll IS·l2·1 IS·'7-0 S.Clct llV 4·l3 4·)1 Punlt 7... 10-45 Fumt>lt,·LO•I 1·2 I· I Penalll9'·Varot 1·'1 9·'6 Time of Pouauton ».4' 19: 16 l"DfVIOUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Ntw ~leans, W. WlllOll 17·6'. Ceme>Oetl I · 1', Galan 3-11, E. Marfin l· 11, AnlllonY l·I , 0 Wllle>n 2·(m lnus ll. Lot Anottts, Allen 2'·107. O.Jel\M!I l·l, M. WllM>n 2·2. Stracnen 1-1 PASSING-N-Or1elln•, 0 Wiiton 1S·l2·2·201. Lo' Antetes, M WlllOll 14·Jl·0· 1'9. HI..., 1-1·0-2'. ltECEIVING--Ntw 0r"8n•. ltrtnner S·ft, HafdY 1·24, Tiet 2·20, Anll'lonv 2·7, W WllM>ll 2·2, Merlltfl' l•Jf, E Martin l·t LO~ A"""°'. Wl•lem' S-'7, Allen l ·Sl. Cllrlsl..,'90 J-J7. Hewkin• 2-t , Hn1er 1·19. Juolo.111 l·S MISSED FIELO GOALs--t..ot A-'", ltallr 4 c-.. ........ 'AT\MOAY'S LAT8 SCO.IS L• Verne >S. Pomona•ltlU., I• C11 Lutheran 24, St Marv'• l !>1111• Clara 12, Cal Polv ~O 6 Cal State Nortl'lrlc!oe 40, 5oftoma St 1• Occldtlltel 27, V S.n Oleoo I• Al Ula Pecttle )9, It tdletlch 1 Wlllttler ll, Claremonl·MuOCI 1'7 Norlllefn Arl1ona 11. Montana St 24 . ..,...,.......,,... ,8D8,_A TIOfil Cutt CatT"919,~) CMdle .... lt 1, UlllliM ....... Hane Melldllttovt Off l(etriv Joroan. 7 ~. ""'· M.i.na SulloYa def INN t ur11,,, •->. ,.,, ... IM1 I .. !Ntl" TMm T.,.,.,... (at RKWl!t CMI 9' lrWwl , •• u UMM ..._ J.. ,r'tl'Clt I ..... Parkt (~ N ...... ) Olf GlcwNrllfll lf'ran«I 'l. • 0, Twtner Cc;atlfl!CN911 Clef ,"'86t ,,,~, ... ,. 6-) 0--. L.Clllftall l HUftllftetof\ 9Mefl) • ltlKll IL-9-;111 dtl OftMU¥e-l'llM09 lFra11Ca). •-O. ,., , .. ,... .. I u S . 2 l"rance, > IVWI, • Auelrltlla. Callada, 6 J ... 11 Oell TrM ('9 .... ~) IUWOAY'1 aUULTS rlOlll "'n·•v ..... •UIMIM _,.,.., 11•1T •1.ca. ' '""'°"'" Dollar., lTorol ,. .0 10 20 7 40 Nattonal Enarn (Merel 120 00 OLemond Cull., (Hawlevl • 20 Tlmt: 1.10 l/S. llCOMD •ACI. 6 fUflOtlft. Min 0 .8 .E (MCCerrOll) J .0 2 to UO WeltrfOl'CI F1lr (Toro> • 00 l .00 Nanc'I' Nencv 10.tel'IOuneve) U O Time: 1.10 3/S n DAILY OOU•LI IS· II Ptld U6 20 TN•O ltACa. ' fUflOllO' I( ()lbr"a11 (Katnlll • 00 l 00 UO Pl'OUd Patriot (Toro> l 00 1 toO """' On (~flan<lel) l to Tltne: 1.11 l/S. U IX.ACTA 0·6) paid SJS 00 l'OUtlTH aAC•. • turtonG' Trauma Time l~leoal 61 20 1180 LOvelY Candv lSoll1) S.20 Sey ltr"zt lSlbllle) Timi. 1.12 l'lf'TH uca. 1 I II• mlle t I to 390 00 Metefao (Olivares) I to Sir Star (Soll') Alltl l rltaln (Plnc.ev) Time· I '2 S.lill • 00 120 400 190 IS IXACTA 11·11 Paid '11900 SIXTH •Ac•. 6 furtong' Ee rt't Valalltlne (Vlefl1ula) l 00 2 toO 1 .0 Flylfto HIM (Mena) 3'0 , IO SltPfl N' W-(Ware!) • .0 Tlmt· I 10 4/S. s•v•NTH ••ca. • 112 1urtonG1' Sllvt vvlllt IMcCtrrOlll • 80 3 . .0 2 toO Oef«llnoelancer (Hernandeil II 00 7.60 Tlglllt (Mell) f 00 Time: 114 4/S, U aXACTA (1·6) H id 05$.00. •IGHTH ltACI. 1 1116 mlle' Snow Clllef I Soll' I S.00 3.40 2 10 Lore! AHIM>n IHtrnall<lerl 10.20 , 10 Oarllv Fair ICHtanonl S.20 Time: 1.4' 315. NINTH •ACI. One mlla Vt<betlm's Pl'l<le (Toro) lS 40 '·'° uo GooO TllOUOlll Wiiiy (Soll') 11 . .0 UO llron1lno !PlllCtvl • 20 Time: l.J7 IS IXACTA 16·ll oald ""3.00 S2 ~I( SIX (2·1·5-7·2·6) Palo 117,032.00 wltl'I nine wlnne" l•la Mne", S2 Pick Sia Contolatlon pelO ~ wllll 411 wlnntf'1 (five llorMt) S2 r>tCK NINI CS· 1· 1·2·1·S·1·J·61 l'lad no wlnneo, Four •lnlltfs 1•19111 llOrte'I paid IS,617.SO MCll Attendance lS.537 J NHL c~alLL CONl'l•INCE SmvtM DMs.1111 W L T ~ GI' GA ca~erv Edmotlt°" Vencouver t( ..... WIMll>tO 2 0 0 • , 0 0 • I I 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 l 0 0 Nemt OM'*' St Loult I I 0 2 TorOl'IO I 7 0 2 Detroit O I 1 I MlnMM>le 0 l I I Cl'lk.aoo 0 J 0 0 WALES CONllERlfKE New Jerlev P!llladelcll'lla NYlllenoert NY Ra_, PlttlOur Oii Wa tt1lnot0fl 8011on Quttlec Heriford Moll tr H I ltuffeto ,..tnclt OMMtfl l 0 0 1 I 0 I 0 0 1 1 0 0 2 0 0 l 0 ~OMMaft ) 0 0 ) 0 0 2 0 0 , 1 0 1 I 0 Sulldltv'• ~ Calt;Mlrv t. IClll9a 2 lk>tlOfl 7, Montr"I 1 Plllladell>llla •. Wattllnuton 1 6 • 2 2 0 0 6 6 4 ' 7 17 s 10 6 9 9 11 ~ • 17 1 6 • • 5 IJ 13 s • s s It IS 13 13 10 9 • IS I• 17 • 10 • 13 9 17 s 4 " 11 , New JerMv 3, New York 1ta119eu 2 loll Edmonton 6, St Louil 3 Quttlec S, Wlnnlr>tO 1 T OfOlllO S, Cllk:aoo I TtMlllt'aG-0.trolt at BuffalO N-York l'la"°"'' 11 Vancouvtt TllMdaY'•O- Htrtford el ~ MlnnHOlt 11 PllM1uro'1 Ca11>arv Loi Aneela '""'' hr'IM 1. Caloarv, Olio I (Cevalllnll. 6'51, 2 Ce'9arv. Rlwt>rougll I (PetterM>n, Suter), lt:12. Penanlei-Suter. C11 1111on·tllcklno), 10:14; Sllttflv. Cel malor (1191'111no), 10; ••. Srnltf'I. LA lrOUQtllnol, 10-14, Maclnnl1, Cat ll!Ooklnol. 17.S6, Dionne, LA (trle>olno l. 11:.47 Sec.91111 ,..,,._ ) Caroar.,,, !Miter I IMcOonald), l.31, • Lo' Aneetft, Gallev 2 lHakan•ton. MecL.allenl. 5:46. S Ceroarv. Cavetllnl 1 IMKIMl•I. 1 ll. '· C•IC>•rv. Rlaaorouon 2 lltereian, S<Jt.,), t:S2, 1 Lot Anoetet, Wllllams, (NlcllOlls. Hammond), 16'10 (PO), I. C.iearv, Kromm 2 !RIMt>rouon, Pat· ltt'tolll. lt:S. Ptna11i..-w 1n1am,, LA (lllgll-,,k:klno). );00, K•llv. LA (lrlPOf,,g) • •:JS; llouroaol,, Cat lllOICllno l. 7 ... RIMOt0\1911, Cal (rOUOlllnol. 7:44. Wlhlam,, LA lettlotNlno), 7·.u. Suter. Cat (ln1er ference), 11·40; 8ot..,, Ce l (WHl'llnol, 14 •1. Slletllv, Cal metor lmllCOnClucl), •• o. Smllr., LA m.lor (misconduct), I• '7 Tlllrd ~ 9. Calt;Mlrv. Pett~son I IP111141ntkll, 121, 10. Ca!Nrv, ltourHOlt I lRIMOrO\.IOl'I, Kromm>. 2:l2, 11 Calt;Mlrv, Suttr 1 ((avetll11I, QulM). l 12 (PCI) f>11,,tl• llft-Gt llev, LA Onlert'ertnc:.), 1·5), Wll· Oam•. LA malor lflor.t1nol. 4'27, OHo, Cal melor lflellllno ). •:27; Slleellv. Ce1 lllo4cllnol. 7:2S. Sllot• on ooal--Cei9erY 10-10· 1.-)4 Loi Anotlft I· ll·s--2•. Po•er·Plav o-rtuollln-<ttoerv l ol f, LOI A,,..i.. I Of ' Goelltl-CalO•rv, Ltmelln 12• "'°"·24 H.,n). LOI A""4tt. Ellol l:M·2SI Alttnda~7.279 R...,_Otnll Morel Llnaime11-Rv1n 8ortk, Wt YM Forley o._ ........... N•Wfl'OaT LANOINO CNtWIMff 9-dtt -174 ........ 14 l)OnllO, 10) Mll<I r>an, SS rock tl,l'I, 46 callco llaH, 3S bullet rune, U teu4Pln, > "-llbul, 4 sl'leeoflMd. m meek., ti. DAVIY'S LOCKI• (....._. 9Mdl) -fS anoler•. 1'3 tlOllllo. 1 ylflowlall, 10 rocll "'"'· 62 calico Clan .... Mnd ban, 400 martertl. 14S bullet tuna, I lllfHntr ,,...,. Oct .... Mt aANIA COIUWTMIAN YACHT CLutl , .... CJaMet MaoT A & • -I ~ ....,man aallla Corll\11119'1 YC U.IOT C -I -'-"*' Feldmall Cllrlt AltftCIO. ICVC LASE• -I Jlf'll Olk, ICVC (~-..... .... ~., -I Ctvl' i-t, ltlbol YC, 1 Dick "'-· acvc. l JMn and Fra llCOll AMlwl, VctVett" YC . ..... """' -1 Oto 9r-11. t JO#WI Sulav. VYC, l . Cllrl.1 .*-' COACHES •.• homBS Joe Napoli played well late an tbo third quarter and the founh qua.rta. He lhrew for over 200 yards." Oeeu Vtew't hrl OaylU, follow· U\j h11 •m'• ~ loss to Wes\enl: "One word could descnbe the dlf- ference between their players and our players and it was deau'C. h us like a bad dream. we really thouabt that we'd be 2-3 It tl\ie point, anCl with I couple ofbreaks, we could be. But thi1 is euctly what I was afra.id of, beina 1·4. And thinpdon't look better with Fountain VaHey Friday night." Mart.na't Dave 'Rolll~, follow- ing his team's 14--0 tnumph over Long Beach Millikan: "We played real good defense. but what we refied on was the goal-line stand. They bad second and goal from the one--yard line and we held them at the end of the first half and it saved the momentum for us. Tyron Youngblood, our nOle guard. had another outstandina pme and David Winterhalter, our de• fenstvc end. was in on two tack.Jes on our goal-line stand, the last one by himself. And he recovered a fumbie on the 5-yard line." Corona del Mar'• Dave Hella.t, following his team's 28-7 victory over Cost.a Mesa: "Our intensity was very good and we bounced back after a disappointing game the week before. We JUSt had great practices and it was a good team effort. John Carlson (of Costa Mesa) is one hock of a football player. We have some bumps and bruises, but nothing that should keep anybody out of practicin1 for the game." Coit.a Men'• Tom Baldw .. , follow- ing his team's 28--7 loss to Corona def Mar: "We just didn't play well defensively. We lost Scott Andenon, he hurt his knee really bad and he'll have surgery on it Thursday. He's out for the year. He was our best runnina back and started as our inside linebacker. We're just hurting on defense. we're having trouble sto~ p10g people nght now." E1'8.Dcl1'1 Ed Bluto•, after his team's 14--0 loss to Woodbridae: "Offensively we couldn't move tlie ball at all. we dropped eight passes - two for touchdowns. ihe penalty situation was bad on both sides. We JUSt had a horrible night. Curt Crandall. our defensive end, played well. Sean J(jnk.adc, moved from quarterback to comcrback and be did a really good job. It was his first time playing the P_C?siuon. Hc'U be there from now on. Woodbridge'• Gene Nojl, after bis team made it 4-1 by defeating Estancia, 14-0: "I don't think this game had any more significance than any other. Corona dcl Mar had significance being the first lequc game. We try to set goals each week and try not to look too far ahead. And the le.ids arc really doing a good job focusing on that. We emphasize a lot of team pursuit. and we're getting pretty good pass rushing." Ulllnnlty't Rlcll Cvtil, following his team's 2~13 loss to Lqu.na Beach: "We didn't hnc an outstand- ing game, but we had a good pme. They had an on-side kickoff bit one of our guys and they recovered it and we dropped a touchdown pass, too, had a guy wide open. And then we had a SS· yard touchdown run by Craia Belle called back because of a clippina penalty. Offensively we self-destruc- ted. We were down there five times and d1dn 't score. "We knew it was going to be a rouah year, but we felt that we should've won that football game the othef' night." lrvlae'1 Terry H~Dlpa, followina his team's first loss of the season, a 14-0 verdict to El Toro: "We just made too many mistakes. Our whole defense played well. Our defensive front played extremely well. It wasn't anything they did. it was what we did. Two of our drives in the first quartet were stopped by penalties. We wen: down there in the founh quarter, but the penalties hurt us apin. Some lccy penalties took away our best chanaes. When you play a good team, you're onl y going to get so many chances.' Saddlebacll't Jerey Witte, follow- ing his team's 24-21 loss to Newport Harbor: "They made the big plays. So did we, but they made more. It wu ao close that you have to look at the littJe things, and the little thinp arc penalties and that's what hurt us. We also fumbled twice and threw two interceptions. but I think you have to gi ve Newport credit, they ellecuted their plays when they had to. Shane Foley had an exceptional niJbt, and he aot them out of some bi&J&m'-" Mater Del'• <-"act Gallo, followina his team's 29-21 win over Huntinston Beach: "The WcstminstcT pme wu the b1g one for us, and this one wu just a stepping ttone for St. PauJ, that's what we're aettina ready for now. As usual, Mike O'Connor Wiii exceptional. And Mi:c· the other inside linebacker, pl.a well. And our two com Tim Haider and Mike Mc0lin!'1 all played good ball pmes. Apin1t ttunt.antton Beach, we just wa.nted to play well and keep our momentum ... Kings drop 9-2 verdict INOLEWOOO (AP) -DcMll R1Kbrouah and 0ary Suter ~ two aoals each Sunday niabt 11 the Calpry Flames routed tbe wiDlal Loe A=cs K.inp 9-l in National Hockey LA ue play. JUaebrou tcOred I.be eecoad and fourth Rames' pis, and alto u- Sltled on twO other ph. He and Suw had platy of help.• fi vc olher Flames ICOft.d pll ln tbe loplldcd victory. Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Mond~. 0Gtoo. 14, 1118 - COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANIACTIONI, M Many p layer.sin the trade game Liberty National Bank announces promotions Clashes of special interest economists impe e quest for sound national policy tus case. The poht1cian bu a very strona point of view on the issue, oft.ell t&kina what he says is the humane position -in support of rciuicuons as a way to save JObt -althou4b critics claim be is only mtereskid in aenina re~lectcd. BJ JORN Ct.JNNlFF ., ...... .....,.. At least five well-defined per· sooality types arc involved in the protcellon vs. free trade battle: econ- omisu, special pleaders. politicians, fatali1u and realists. There a.re even more types. but thete five sugest the difficulty faced by the nation in trying to articulate a sensible policy on trade with other nations, since scorn for cacti other's position is sometimes all they share. The economist maintains that his is the most educated position. He supports free trade, and backs his thesis by referring to earlier debacles MuruAl f uNos OTC UPs & DowNs --,... . rcsultina from trade rcstnctions. It will cost consumers dearly, he says, if the United States scc:ks to protect its industries by limiting tmports. Not only will consumers be depnved of low~st goods, but domestic manufacturers will be free to raise prices. The special pleader eApresscs astonishment at such an a'iument, which he considers insensitive and inhumane. He claims the economists hve in an abstract world removed from the reahties of human suffering. "Imports deprive Americans of JObs," he shouts, and he can shower you with statistics that seem to prove Fatalists wear Iona facc.!z_ even if Lhey a.re unemotional. 1 ney are concerned with the human issues, they maintain, but they contend also that there isn't very much that can be done about the t1tuallon. Typically, they assert that 1fworld trade is to bring benefits in the long run then it is destined to hurt some people in the short run. They say it is mevitable that labor-intensive jobs will shift to the areas oflowest wages. The realists, self-described, are equally certain of the correctness of RE-ROOFING?, Don't "-'. compromise your home . and famlly with Imitation tllea ... • LIFETILES pass c~ass A, the most severe fire tests • LIFETILES are available In many styles and colors • LIFETILES are warranted for a lifetime • LIFETILES are easily applied over existing roofs Get the fac1s. call LJ'l.J,r ~-,,,- 714/822-4407. 818/784-0454 . 800/533-8899 ~ ... utlful r-~fOf the good lite \mi' u'm&.a' Corponrtton ManuftautM of Southem Callfomla'• 8"l S.lllng Roofing Tiles their pos1uon Not everyone re-coanizet them as reaJ1st.s, buc they support their position by takmg a nuddle road. They believe that other personality lYJ>C1 speak some truth. But they seek solution rather than retaliation . They rccasnize that nat1ons every- where already ut1hz.e trade bameT$, even if these nations cont.cod other- wise. They sec only dcstructJon m raising even more bamen, preferrina compromise and positive actions, such as lifting aovemment rcstnc- tions on Alaskan 011 shipments to Japan. ft is from such disparate groups, largely unapprccaauve of each other's position, th.at the United St.ates seeks to develop a scnsi ble trade pol icy, one that will lessen the horrendous U.S trade imbalance. fo1 The Rest ol Your Lile 1922 HARBOR BtVO , COSTA MCSA 548·1156 Uber1y NaUouJ Beak. based in Hununiton Bcacb. bu announced thrtt corpo,..te officer appointments. R*t1 La•an.. has been appointed senor vice prcs.adeot and caahJer. Dea.lee......,. bu bttn appointed vice president of operations at the Hununcton Beach office; a_nd Bartaan RHc• has been named v1oe prn1dcnt and eJlecut1ve banking officer. Lavallee bnnp 18 yurs of expenenoc in Califomua banking to has new post. Thom has been wtth the bank since 1983. and Hauck since 1982. • • • ne Merril L,-.c~ Realty office at 20100 Brookhunt St an Huntington Beach rettntly presented a scholarship to Davlcl Dtttmar , a graduating senior from Edjson High School. David was one o( 15 students m the Orange County area to receive the scholanh1p. • • • Robert J . Flslter. vice president of public relations at Leeac, Warford, St.He IAc. of Newpon Beach has resigned. He W1JI be LAVALLEE HAUCK THORN forming his own public relations agenq· Flsber Baslaess Coiu· mukalions • • • Maralaa Cartl1 Voude. president of Marsu Cvtls Co. of Newport Beach recently presented .. Jn tenor Design of Public Places" to the Cahfom1a Contract Show at the Western MerchandJse Man in San Francisco. Curtis' firm spt('1al1zes an hotel design • • • Marla Pl1copo of Costa Mesa has been installed as president elect of Womu la Ma..n.a1emenl This is the fi~t tame an Orange County Chapter member has held such a pos1uon an the 12-ycar-old corporauon. OvE R r HE CouNTER 17,19 , , . , ... 1 1I·141'- )7 11 "I ,, • 11'-... ~ ,. ... lO • Sl''> IJ S'-s., ~ VAULTS-LOCKERS-SAFE ! ,._TRAVEL IOW LO-COST ON-SITE RENTALS •'"vo GUARD AGAINST FIRE/THEFT WE ALL NEED PRIVACY & SAFETY ~BUSINESS & TRAVEL HUB c l)t • ...... .. ,. ,,., ...... 2156 NEWPORT BLVD CM 650 -1 500 • 0 GET sNA -ictures-0 f Y shoot some p per wants to home This 1s The ne~spa display \n your . your chance to '' t ,on on show off your ~ co ec constrictors or blbf s. btts or bonntu What do you have? See today's classified section to find the entry form for the Dally Piiot "lntertors" contest. HURRYlll } I .. :•'!' '' r Div ... ~ U •I C... Uf 'i ~ u~ . l Un trci. . u "Yc u v ~ I. it 81 . 12 u·~gt . UI 1 UI pf • •4+ '"' 01 11 o I 7 t lh-v~ -v -Corpl 12 11 '"' !~l ~ v:o v pf)44 V::t';, Vefl 1 1 ~i ~ Verco r ~ Verto pf lait ~ Veri.11 I ti 7 llero • VMCO , It ~= I ZOI IJ 141 11J' j ~.: V 24 I !i. ;,i.a :; v y. 16 +"- llllAY'I OLlllM Plllll ~J' M II 11 :1 x 1~ J, :~ ~I' ii "' ~ uo. ,. ~ti, «H ) .,~ flX pfU ~· ~ ~~ y J ero' • umln 1JI 1 1 Market continues rally NEW YORK (AP) -Stock prices Jumped ahead Monday, extending the rally they began on Fnday. Trading was relatively quiet, however, Wlth the observance of Columbus Day. Analysts said many investors were impressed with the market's showing late last week. when it moved up despite lnternatiooal Business Ma- chincs's rcpon of lower earnings for the third consecutJve quarter. To some observers, that suunted that the market was less vulnerable to disappomting news. on corporate profits than it bad been pn:v1ously. However, it was generally believed that 1l would take at least a few more days to test that optimistic thesis. Brokers said the si~ificancc of Monday's act.ivity was debatable, with so many market participants absent because of the holiday. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials climbed l 4. 79 points to t ,354. 73. Advances outpaced declines by more than 2 to I on the New York Stock Exchange. 81g Board volume totaled 78.54 million shares, against 96.37 million in the previous session. / The NYSE's composite index gained 1.08 to 107.64. Al the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was up t.37 at 224.18. WHAT AM x Om WHAT NYSE Orn NEW YORK IAP) Oct. 14 AMEX LEADERS ) lot and net d\anM of the ten most actlve American St<>O Exd\anoe luun, tradtr v na llone lly 1 1 more ~n s . rn~~I ~J~~ ~IE CMIJ;r. ~~,~~' ~~~n t : GoLD QuorEs , METALS QuorEs NEW YORK (AP) Oct 14 T1S 1 NYSE LEADERS NASDAQ SUMMARY famou~ la bq.l.s ... ' • • ' • . . Oll""'?:Jfl. bux.t1 '+'! fe~IOO ~1ond , 11't/6'\'t ~ wv..."ll.~ V1\~ 1001 ~bl\d ,21YX&'2?~ ~MdOM ~c?~~tn lokao-.c. ,818/~-9~~3 mor, U1!\J fh Oto9 ~lurdoy 10to6 l ~ndoy noon to~ I I l CALL 642-5678 ' • IF CALLING FROM NORTH ORANQI IF CALLING FROM SOUTH ORANGE . c.. __ Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Mondey, October 14, 1885 BBm\V ARE THE NEW CLA8811'1CATI01'8 BEING USED IN TODAY'S DAU, Y PILOT nALllTATI FHIAU HOUSH/CONDOS C.....ol 1001 lelboo l~ •006 toaboo ~~wto •001 ,.,..,...,_ "'°'" ·~1• COiPOf-o _. ""'°' on c .... -..o n,a o..-•-10 fl ,.,. on ·~y~ J)• "--· 14() ---· C..1 1....,. l)U ,~ ... h . • '°°"""'° ...... ' 10)0 1.,............,., 10)7 Laill• ,.,..,, IC,)) ...... ,._. V..,o 106/ "'-I><> .. -· l()o9 i.-c-.. •Ulo )9" >vGft (.op.''"°"° 1011 ~o•"° IOIO -·""~" •09• ~ Coott,,,,...,o '* *""l-IOU fv•M 1090 MISC. R.t. --1()() .,, .... 17) ....__ ' c-...-q II)() .. O(fil ,,~,.., llH \oftto .a"o (.,.,_.._,I ~ot\ {ryph IJH S.0...o Af\O ..._~,, fiOVM1 T 0 .. Mo'9d l lH ~(oo••~ro ~Oh fo, Soi. 1.00 ~I-CM~ Co ,,,,.,_~ H1) ,..,.,.,, °"' ~ !><-'·-~ I )I() •ONMt '°'"'' (,,o_, ')I) APART MINTS ··'°" ''9CW"V I )II() ,,.... ~Ot#ftQ '\Oil c-.. .. tf heh~ "°' ..,__,.,_ •f W~d t>H ~'~""'wt opot••O""O ""°"" a111TALI -o•Of\O -.i """'°' ouo ""'-'° HOUSES/CONDOS <-•-I 1010 C.-.•OI ...._,.._., kllboo '~wto C op11lfOl"O &.oc,.. (OIOf'O dofl NIQt Couo ...,...o Oona~.,,, f1 fo,o 'o"'"'°'" Vol._, 1'41;"°1~~ '-«"' r411~HO#"bo...• ,,._ . •°'9"-'"0 kotlrl \09V""G M,.ft\ ~oOv"IO ~' ~.,.. #04.,1 M-u~V...,O ,..,....,"" a.otfll s-ca.-- ~""'°"''°"""''°"'° I I t~Olft-'olWt '"' "'""'""'9'°"' ...... 1101 ... ..,~«tf'"Ol"t>oi.I• /II 8 ·-'I 11 ~0Qv"'(I a...o.:ti 1»• '091>'"'0 Holl\ •I )ff ,09vnoN~1 ,, )/ loh 'Of"•'' I!" Nv\~ v .. ,o , '" ,.... .. 1)0f" lieoi"' , .. , \.,..(1o_.. .. 11 .. \.Of, JvO" C00t'"°"° , ... S.C,....o 4"'0 ,, >G ~oA~ ........ k I )1 s.,, ... (oat! ~'0 /IH S.0-•-I ol 1w\141 /160 I 10 1 II ..... 1221 ..... 7 lllO MISC. HNTALS 71U C°"'*'1 fo~, )1(), 7116 ~ ... 1704 JIN ·-· 1106 )191) ~·~h ,,,. Voe~ .fNOI, 1111 ,......,,o ~ ,,,. ..... Oh w.-cs ,,,0 7007 Ciol099" •0t ..... 11.0 100. --,,,, 7001 *""" l ........ ,, .. 7oll ,.,, co••••aAL 1•1• ,.,. •.I. IAU/nlll lol7 '&l• 71!0 ·-,..,, ""'""""' .. 100M"p \.o.i. 1101 , ... , ..,, ...... " OtttC• ...... )160 , .... c~ctol ''OC>e"'Y 1711 IOA~ Ovc;M.·., """"' ,, ... l6~ l"°"'~"'°' 11U 16>1 ll'l(O...-''~ , 190 16H 1001 ··-··· loot ,.,,, ,_AllCIAL 1011 1ol0 ...,_,,..._ 1900 106< ~0,:po~ 190< , ... .......... w ....... )900 '"" 1-0...---. ,_ 7690 7911 191• 7910 7911 Al•l,.."@11111 ,.t\, ·~ .0.9 A--~ _ .. _ 'o0)) l .... ,,_ ,.,, P-&Qo_, 0())9 ,_ )()()) ... ,..., oOoO ,~s.rw .. 1004 .,._ c-.oo... 00.) ~'~"·'~ >017 "'~f'wt• ....... t .oeo ··-)01• Ctiwtd C0t• .IC)IO GAllAGI IAUI o..-..... >018 c.-.. .. ••O'I lllMOYlllllT --.. ,,, -·--• 01 , ___ 061<. ,,.OfDf"O ~ """°' • 1. ,.,~ ........... _.._ )1()., "°'to ~ ~ I• -· )10) °'"""'-' le (t.llCQll ()Hlo(• MOO ·~""""' ... 1.-Nw.ol ••OiCM-t )!()) ,.~t.<Mh '" Solo. ))IV ~~~°'°"'' . .. ,....,.,..,_._, H'XI .. _ ... C.-.ol ))){ l~ ""°'"' . ·~ f-,.-w-d »H \~11·•U • ~ l~""'-9 ..... t , '. MlaCHAMDlll fril'u\\oOC)lt V..,a II b • ..... p.o ... e.oc:i. 0 •• ... ..._ oOIC "-"' ..... . ~ ........... 601 ~·l"'O~ .. .. A-11Ci•1 ,.,,_,. oO • -VICI ...... oO•) ,_.,.,,_ .O•o DlnCTOllY <-· o0'1 ,,.. '• '°" oC71 ~-""9>~-OOH oO>o 00.) .0.1 o ......... ... CT .. Y -..-..-w..., ftAllUMTAl'IOll IOATS .-... ,, •o-· ,, l .. •c • ,._.r,. , ( !:lolbOO ,, ·~ . ~ ...... (~~ ,.,. s..i,. Doc•, W 1oioe I /, MISC. •·o·a~ !IC °""'.....,'IV f oJ.•, I( • ~~ere•' ~oo ... , ""'" AUTOMOTIVE . .. ,._ ,, • .,.. s,. ...... ~ ·~' " . ·~"'~11 ,.,. 4 ~~:,..,. -P' ,, I ,, . If .... .... ~ O W\ .... .. --~)I ~~\ .-.po ...... ;J • ill-.,,,.,, ~" .. O)l)t -A...,. •>« ,,,,,,, __ ... _____ ........ ............. ...,._ ..... ____ -....c....-. .. ,~ .......... ..... JM!'_.., .. ..,._., --.., -..._...,. .... .., IHI lat1t1 f11 lal1 C.a111l 1002 C.r .. 1 •11 •u lOU l..,.rt llM• ------------Cerna ••l llar 21U Cetta Mt11 rt IMclt 2111 Ca,htrau Inell Cetta.... 2124 ........................... ____ ~~----------....... 2'11 ------------ ... , Ull llW Huge newer Duplex. S31K **IPEITlllT** Irvine Terreoe 38A. ,.,,, PITllllllM For !MM Lido 19141. avail 2 BR 26a upper duP'x 28< 1Ba completety r• ltaMt/CtUn ~~:!,1y~e~·m_:.r;;· I ... IDl-.J ~m. pvt yar~800/mo. Weattlde 2Br 1Ba, patio now 3BR 2BA No pe11 Endad gatage $650/mo ~awseOO 2:26'~~ UULllllT l210,000 A Beauty w/luth land-0 pets. B<ec.y yard, carpon. $&50/mo. S1700/mo 8'tr 499-3400 661-3653 an 6c>m Gntral IHZ Quality bullt. 7 Yfl new. II Mt11 l 4 scaplng. pV1 petlo, din Unique Homea 57s-eooo ~-1700 Harbof vu Hm1 S1800/mo 28< end gar. crpta, dri- ________ family home wtth aeveraJ R•-·• .•• -· rm, tam rm. frplc. m.id'• JASMINE Cr.-2br, 2b&. ••v1 ••n •BR. 1 level, super re-C.nu ... ... 773 w Wl'-On No P9l• 1&11 llPI deck• for wate< & night _.,.. -a-quar\wa + much mo<•. den. oceen vu. avail Nov 1 ... model Agt 640-566' 2BR 1b&. b&\y. no P9ll. seoo mo 650-7427 Cute 2 bdrm condo with llght vlew1ng Many CU&-and famlly room Wont.-Furn or unfurn. Avail $1900/mo. 79-9021 2+2 c:ar garege. Only JASMINE CREEK 24 hr $850 ind utll M()..4030 ... llW gerege and flreplac:e. tom feature•. antique shop Latge lot Ownw 1mm«S. Onty '329.990. Sepenite from the reat S&OO. Mov.-• In coat. ooty aecunty 2 BA 2b&. oen or 213-5~ 1 wttdyt 4-P\ex fOf rent. 2 l 38dfm Bank wlll finance at &aafe3Bed.3bti&den. out.8'tr6"0-7000 Cheetnut.PatnckTenore patio kld1 S800·1 11l.llllT 111-1111 poolaLMM$'850,C811 d/w,w/d.tnQ,petlo,1car eo.ta~a.t ... Central CM locatton. ltalned glaa, built In vac moving to ~egon -wanta May conaldef ._opt. 90I c:hWmlng 2br "' bctl gat $900. F• a507 pool rm wi t.able, tenn11 & 12BR 1b&. nu C9{. pelnl. Ac>ta l ...--. ~ 10.7~,~~7.~reat. :ne~' ~°]>~~!';: ···m·--·· 631-12ee 53M1908-tRltytee SECLUDED EXEC. RE-col*t(&t9)244-1MIO gatS850&7~53~egl 8edt e.y c.11 •ay. range, 2 wet ban. plua ---cetta .... fl i4 TREAT . oceen t>rec•. LIDO hm 38R 2ba 2 car Decorator Furn Condo after hm 720--0707 many add I I Ion a I S2Jl,IOl 1 17&8 aq. f1. 3 BR. 2'~ be. gar South patio $1600 2Br 2ba, ft p, gar, WIO, *Lrg l & 2 bdrm. ~ Traditional amenttlea. Price lnctu<SM Nestled In a quiet cul de 281 1 ~ba. 2 ltory, 2 car u n furn Tr I· I • v e 1 mo Hazel 631-0680 ' patio Pool/rec .,.. red«: qu.., PoOI $4a4 up Realty the land aac. thla 5 bedroom * -* mom ga150., / llt/I~~ ~~ MC. townhome. Tennla, pool, Lux 2br 2ba V11la BaJoo.\Near Fashion laland 1884 Monr<Ma 54103:M - home bout• formal din---•• ST! mo. --jacw:zl Non-am<*en. no $1500/mo ,99.1434 \1.1\1110 l<Ol'\IT I """"" nd 3 BR 2ba FM1/dlnlng ""'fl $1250 1087 Stone Condo's. former models •MESA VERDE 281 18a 631-7370 ng. cultom....,,,,.. • apa, · 2BR IBA dup, unfr, lrg yd. ,..-Br__.. • -7••23""" Pool, .ecurtty S 12SO & 2BR nuiet convenient loc Ncrw ~. d""", dlw. f:' ltoMt"' •-· 5419arate 400 aq 11 bonua oombo. New cpta. Ownw DILISIYI IDT&l.I no peta S&50 + MQK!ty """ '·" .,_ ._ .. I ....,. · ·.,.. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii REAL ESTATE. bulldlng aultab6e for muat ... I fut. Reduced BALBOA 18 RENTALS . . ' 1050 645-20HI 2 COYet'ed piing Palla' sa50 No P«• 6'0-24 5 131-1400 an office or rec. room to S 189.500. Broll er Winter 2 Bed. 1950/mo 1962 Me)W 549'-3484 lut . ...,. 21 OCEANFRT 28R WINTER I pool Walk 10 bdl Avell •STUNNING Lg 381' 28a UITW m110 ·--------Call to .... 54&-2313 640-7000 Wimer 3 Bed. s 1000/mo 28< 11>9. end patlO, no 29, 18a Duple•. n-FURNISHED Arec>l.ce & IOI t5 S8 tO 873-5333 Garden Apt Poot rec nn 11~ ~· SHORT TERM: peta. 710 W. Jamee St crpta. drpa. painl. No gar Av9ilaa~ now at •2Br tBa, gar lrplc, iww S725 7t0 W 18th liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ••-..ri * Bayfront 3 Bed, fully <7 1•) 850-7743 (Iv meg). peta seoC>/mo. 557-2382 S775 & S725 crpt 5 u 'Jum1na ---------=---Ext~ butlt home ._ ... ____ Only 4 yMl'I new. bdrm. furnished '2000/mo BURR WHITE Rl TY 50 675-4912 8't 3BR 2'"8a. IWlUfY T_,,_ wtth Iola of etiwacter and + den w/2'A beth. Hlg.hfy y...,,., ... AYFRONT· I --2Br 2Ba Condo. end gar. seoo HOME W/GARAGE 67 .. ~ .... ,, S8 I mo __ r_ I apt. uni trpfc, gar No chann. 2 Bdrm wfttl hard· -·, °"' ~.....-frplc $399. °"'9f w.. SPOtlea 2b< mod kit JClnt ~ DESIGNER S furn11hed peta $715 879 W 18th woodfloonandbeautltul ULINWll I ~~a= b::."'~r~1=: 4 e.dSl800 ... /mo.1Jtr IMl-7705«543-54<>1 area kid• welcome On the t>eachl Equ1pt Townl"louM Fr~&P<>OI SI 631~213arter3pm ltOM flf991ace for cozy DELUXE DUPLEX: 2BR pool + ape. Sacnfloe at WahrfrHt •NEW PLUSH! 3Br 2'~Ba 539-6190 Best Alty,.. bungalow wl appls wto S 1195/mo 673-089& S550tmo 1BR. air. pool. winter get togelMrl. 2ba aa unit. 660-9063 $399,995 w/lermal Call llM• 2 ltry Twnhrne. gat. Avl Newly painted 3br 21>a ~d pr~ around S..OO --carport s c Plaza ar• ~~~:','~~tr.... ----PATRICK TENORE now S1200,unfrn, corido,F/PnrBroo«hurat/ ~-6l90BeatRlty fee I WALITllUCI .(71')966-1136 ILllllllU•llAI vmu1su111,ooo 631-12N YILUIDT&l.I• Adema (213)498-1637 PnvatehMnrOOHnS8001:z -gar -all t>ltlns Pets S550/mo 2BR 1BA apt SHl,llO Very clean, well kept • ·~] > R OlllSlft mT&l.I 171-4112 If lM-1112 WATERFRONT Beautlfvl or llke 8 hOUM s7~your Ok Only $850 F .. 8735 upper unit laundry 1m~ THE REAL ESTATERS Fabuloua Corona del Mar hOme. Large family room.A.... NEWPORT: Lower 3 bed. 3Br 3ea Condo + dbl gar 3Br 3Ba Condo Pool, S:~lty 'f~ 539-51 UlflT llJ-.... mediate occupancy condo, bullt wtth quality 3 bedroom•. Solar as--··--•• frplc. nr beach Sl200/mo New dee« SC Plza arM tennla + S 1400 85 1-1651 __ • JH4 2276 MAPLE 11• mt& lllA through<>Ut wtth • llated water. Fruit ,,..... .. ··-·I..... CORONA DEL MAR. 2 Avl lmmed $1050 11t Ima• 2144 SEAWIND 5bf 2~·b• 2 "'1 HI TSl. 91111 U2-1MJ Medlterraneen navor A Call to aee 54&-2313 -• ~ bed. lownhouH . VU, laat. S500 dep 641-0593 . trplca night Ute v-Pri-1BR Iba w/range & trig n urTm muat ... tor your Preatlgloua. elegant exec lrplc gar.._ $1500/mo * *IEITALS* * 11ate pool/spa · comm 1ndry rm water pa $480 ST7 :::.:,hmouo ~ 2 BGdat 1 1'n-.dBrya Gree1 ........... ..Jtyf0flat,.. •rvv-eclatlve°"...., Modern Condo Lg 3 · -..-3 BR hOuM, lmmed OC· tenni s $2,00 m o mo-'""75d..,.,6'2·6502 v_.. -"t't""""'" .-.....,. ~1-bdrm, 2 'A be ~/dining BALBOA ISLAND· Large 4 cupancy, no gar. A/C, CALL US REGARDING 760-6266. 760-6978 ,..., ~... room. nice Et li<M IOC femltytoacqulrethlanlce ......... rm """' ~ ..,.... + bed,3bahome,1doorto lawnMtvloe ,,..tsOK No IRVINE LEASES ------1BA 5'50 Po04 P"1P8tl0 26290RANGEAVE 4 bdrm. 3 bath home on . ..,.... . ........ Bays t800/mo . ,.,... ·-• s-CT& .. IW IHE I 0 large comer lot In ~ TENNIS. 1895/mo + BAYCREST Beaut 4 bed children S800/mo lmM-nt ealty n v no pets res req TSL ...-r UJ-1MJ wable Euttlde Coate laat.leecla l 0 S1995MC,crddlreq,pet apa,yard S2200/moyrty' s 12oo aec 557-6063 711-llOO 3 • 2cargar Allt>ltins 6'5-8161 147F1ower llA'--tfi:-&..a MeM. Room for RV or SO HWI Oil Call 780-3702 egt. ' AGUNA. Cuatom VU 3 Attr 3"· 2"· ......,. N Only S 1150 Fee 6737 1 BA st u o 'o • p I• WWC9 ~ • 74 VV\ '-"' "" .,., .. .,.... r Furnlstled clasak:ally '8' TtUIEIT Ill 1111 pd boat. 1 •"""· WTlllff YllW bed .. 3 frplca, den . OCC. Lg enc patio. No 3B d s1850 mo • S,25 $475.mo utll JOYCE DABOL T U tlWmHI Spacious Executive home $2200/mo peta 1111 $975 751-3898 78:-~.8~'19pm or early VERSAILLES 2br Condo 599 Hamilton 966-17 11 &PAIM11S SALL y SHIPLEY Private gated community, 58drm. family & dining: NEWPORT OCEANFRT 3 Bechel« Unit In Santa Ana In the morning I uni pref adults no pets 2Br 1 ''tBe Twnhse Air LIU l>r~~ ~ All "::'9 GE 1S9·9100 ~~~x~ry~; ~~~~ Mult ... 1540-1151 ~rr:=unlt $1200/mo Hgta S350 + $300 MC. GREENTREE3BR2ba No •S875mo Agt 759-0120 patio garage No pets 1~~m ga~$5&5 condo. frplC, pool, 99a, NEWPORT OCEANFRT Utlla pd. 20201~ Birch pets LM $1 200/mo •818 VERS AILLES S1uo10 SS8Stmo 645,..837 2Bdrm 1Ba $&90 tennla court• $193,500 Large 5 bed corner Strwt. 854-1927 ~6-04401 883-5510 condo· guard gate pool 2BR 1 >BA w o hkup gar 3()1 AVOCADO 6'2-9850 -W 1 Im 12V.% fixed OwMf (213) home. Fumlahed CHECK THESE 2 I spa gym Avail 1mmed No pell Avail now IU.llllTJ• •59'-00&8 WlfWtrHt ... lltn Unde< $400 thla quiet 1.qmltack 14 Lae $650imo637-1998 S645 mo c a11 Craig ~tfil!ld Lim.uJ Be1ter th4an new, c:teaner Wl-H"ll •WfllTml'J 111·1• hOme 4 fam w/petlo prt mJrm. frplC. Vfl'Y cosy. Weatclltt 3BR 2BA !\M 63l·1266 I 1111u m. ua than original, 3 bdrm. pie-• .. OCEAN VIEW CONDO I bllla pd won't ... , 1 rear old, s !400/mo wtpool s 13()()1mO gdnr ·-~, \-&PAllWli Cullom bullt Studio lureaque landacaplng. Luxuh 1~e': ;::t Spacloua, private End Palm Spnnga • BMutltully •llM1tl* avall lmmed •99-386t incl 5'.4· 7440 eves !C f BNYUful Garden Apta Duplex on bHutlful cuatom touehee at )uat := .. : s{950500.' 12¥; Unit. New dee«. 28drm landacaped 3Br 2Ba. Or around S500 1191• 2b< Charming 2Br hae CIOM la Cl tt 2116 -·~--ll Patt0atdedt1, apa. Heat P~ Ave. 3 and 2 S795,000 • Fixed. (213)250-0988 2'1t Bath. I 175.000 w/d , frig . Yrly IH w/b&Uc bl1na kid• ok twn/bch Frplc, gar I •n pakS No P9la Bdrm• plu• private Ul'lllll l {)Uf t1Cl ... tS Ownw 673-2803 '800/mo. 759-1049 or other• avall 539~190 s1200 mo EV9:1 494-2027 13BR. W9tlr, gar S10S0tmo 2Br 1Ba 1981 Maple Ave. 28drm ,.,.ea $700 I fl 1 all lniat 4 MtLilt..... llll 989-5103 or 980-3515 Beet Rlty tee 1 23e A-..nue Mootery Ofc Ownstrs 2 peraon1 55"0 28drm 2Ba 1720 C~1t1~!: c~•:;,:~:•· and C.rtal ••I Mu 1022 • LARGE 381 hm Spectecu· 1 •97-"65 hm 498-MQO No pets Agt 550.1015 398 w Wl'90n 1531 -5Sl3 dr1P9& _ Even a tiny e;;; pQj OfamatlC rite llU ... 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, 1 b4ll. to CONDO: 38R 2ba. utll Incl. lat OCMn views Lorio ...-.. ooeen lriew1 Compare at on ocn vu. '4Br 2Ba. FR. 0 bc:h, NB. I 1050. 2 Bdrm, Wtklr/dryr. 2223 Paciftc term Avall mid-Nov la1t1 ba dlO I '325,000. S1.135K 7!59-Q070 Agt 12'x !52' FLEETWO 0 1 bethw/yard. E/lldeCM 1950/mo.1531-3300 S2000/mo 4~218 c:;;•, be bMt l t>< hae 2t>a I WOODLA• YILLAGI home wtth.,, 8 x 32' EX-S&7!5. Furn 4 lldrm. Eaetllde 28' !Ba, gatage. Wntr mtl. oc.81'1 vu. nloety fncd yd 2 garege $495 ••a _.MINTS (714)673 UOO •11&•1U1 ~~::ii~~ OQ!fmtwntr.:,'!,'n1475· 215 Btoectwey St. S150 tum 2BR Spa, u111a 1nc1 won11u1 nurry539-6190 A ••• II.All• IT & grMI 1erge klte:Mn & JAllll No '*8 &46-8713 11200/rno 497-4372 Beat Rlty f .. ..... Pllll1 bath. Agt. 540-5137 ....... " UITllll ..... ,..... 2155 ...... c .. -.-, ~.=-.," 2700 eq f1!5BR3ba. totally * LftlU * te8tterJ ....S l1•111M111 IALLDll 11•11 UkEFRONT BMU11fUI l8f I 2116 updated In 1978 on an c~ IUS ·-"·--w... 1111 ,---·--·--·-3Ba wl c:Sock Pool. jac. 1Br St Aifua condo. ail 0Yerlltedlotonly4door1 Plan 4 In Turtle RocJI. • ~ Lim _,5 =;;_ .. IH1 1 to the entranc. to Big Bdrm. 2'A be. LMge fam-Hat IUOUnt &;;, 2 bdnn tennll .. ""1•1"" 1 ammenttl• Incl refno COfona Beach. Super lly room. c.ntral air. CM. 8k.ie SPNC» # 1, ptot Now av~3 bdnna. I rt IMc~ 2111 wto. ale se7s 796-39~· i.tty view from front SOiar hot water. Good 1 tO. apecee C l D. 2 at F~~~~S~~ 180 CABRILLO HR'TKX condo golf I Lu• condo, walk 10 SC ™E BLUFFS . W"hout deck. Off atreet parking condition. Irvine at lt'1 S400 ... 213-M3-7407 WINTER·2 8edl950/mo 1 t11k No. of t7tf\ St. on oouraevu Sepgar,Sl400 P12, trplc, eteg tr ors,, ~· 2 MMt• Sutt•. for R.V or up to 7 cara. beet. '220,000. 1 _...__ •-l:t: 1 ..... WINTE": 3 Bed l lOOO/mo <>r.,. Ben 6'4-0t• l 87&-573e a1c:, In home MCuf 2t>r -. 'r , .;1 :If• \l•lf' dllh Quiff 'omto•UOlt ••n • ···~• \ ').. 'U ' P14u •Mi' only m1nu1~ 'II •!If ~. • ••' '•'\ 4••"4tw• Pl IS pt I .\SI NIU•UU·~Y­ UCMLN , ..... 21HI .... us. IUT a •t wnu -.. l•llM ....... ,. -.sna Ardlftect detlgfl~ SIUhed lo 1389,000. 1rM9 ..... hlffr !WU IW .... ,.... SHORT TERM· Bayfront 3 Meneg« l46-02211 ' 2ba. enctudea pvt ciub. l moet oreattw • 144-1111 18124 Cutv. Or, Irv. S,1•111• .... Let Bed, fuffy ~. s.2'00/mo 'A A._.V ,. 28A 2ba. ~ bak:Ony.' tennlt crta, poola, lee. hl lllUIDllT 'OM of a Kind'. Pnt-lllce 111-llM Flat • OVEALOOl<ING BAYFAONT: Ytty IM 4 ;f'rl""' New VIiia Bal boa I sauria. bMu1 club hae & Mng w/rneontf bay/nit• DANA PT HARBOR. ~ bed boat allp. VIEW Penthouee. VtJ HerbOt. I much more $900 Incl ';iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimil=;iiiiiijiiiijiiiiiim=. ttt. we. .,,....bleat lt"l!lt IMlla lllt prox 10 .000 aq h '2s0otmo ooeen&Catatlne lmmed moel utll St A11>an1 I dlec swtce of 1326K Fee. Fabu6oue HR 48A. bey d. 497-7005 8AYFRONT:YttylM~ &lalde IQ lBr end OW po111111on $1400/mo 1 1 D/836-0405 El731-7S28 HMtlf9 l Co. 640-MeO 1-=ou".""'.":"PL:-:EX=:--2=--::Br:--'.:1~ba-•-.-lltea vu Huge lot ~ 4bed11800/mo Utta pd. Grdni Smell pet 6'&-2252 meg tor Don :T tia 11" eomp.r. befot9 you buy. So-of-PCH. 1275.000. ftn owe N25t< 93,...., T~·.:~~, .. ~ d~:ity1",,1t1': ................. '* Ml&tmo. Me 1453 38dml 29eth. 2 cer ger-JL ™ SS: it>e CIMltred !Mil• It wy. 521 Cemetlon. By owner ~A Call T 11• -E/lktesaR28A,fncd~2 age. St.,_ to bMCt1 ~-klda dbl gar 142·M71 US-0241Of87~1541 F~ •:.::~I:.::;~. In 142-&871. d. od.y -cer ger, gdnr. l1<>e0, 1•. S'200/mo. IM!r &42-3450 btti,;7 vis S39-ef90 L CAIL O F rl'l 11'1 I NAPET I 1 r r 1 t I T 0 F 1 M I Our ktOe -• wMClltnQ llfl Old • 1 1 r 1 : ~= ~ ~,,~~::~ lauQll to muct1 T"9y r• tlelirt"I) ~ I llM th9 f(lllff IOt 1M ---S C A T S S ... _,, ..... ,-.. , -, ....... ,r-1 0 ,_.,..,.. ·~· ··"'·'· -"' L-..L.-'" .. .__"'-.. ~---'·.__. ..,.. ::~~1 . .:. ::."',:~r i::!' ltt u ...... y. Sell Y .. p,.,.,1,t Cel CluttfW, '4t-S671 for Information & surprisingly low cost. •• !Mt, dip '400.146-11• Almoel OOMnfronl 2bt Beet Atty,_ winter SBr see luxury E-e6de 3bf 2t1e fncd for owaoe "'* bltlnl ttoma -r-------ttoma. Lg rooma. comcil fldo lcldt '* gs ~ • t y I a ab 0 d. S8 0 0 .,.,,.. .. tum. Mtoro. dtw, cet* Id NOO't 1n.e 1to 539--1190 9ee1 Rlty ,_ -------- TV &hoW-Tlme mcwtea. .... Nty ._ Altrectl¥&. tdnt .,_ 38f ..... IM1 No pet9. Mo/mo or IM-. a., ,.,, ene1 pott:fl lnwnrnad oacpy. "'tllk to 11aa ~"" 1BA. ,,480,mo"""2.7130 *1111,.* ao. ~. 111 eor.. Y*'d. 00nr. ver 1100. 1•. 1. , • t>ltlM. YW'f CllW\ S1400/mo. ln-.2230 .... l eecurtty. 8'1.at3 IAYCR!ST Only '350 Fee 1147&5 I 204 Monte V.. Sf>edOI• 38R. ,_,, rm, TILlmT 11..-J " 'Ouatd·--.... ,_.. 2aR form dining tmm•d I=-.,..,..---::----:-:--....... II a\tl.A ~ ~ *· OCQ.IP .. w.l loce"9d F-. w 11 1t1l re Corri dor I ali: CT\. W M poo .. 1000IMO~ dllDed to S1700/mo Speclova Hr 2 '~8a ....-. lndry ~ to 144-1211 A.gt P9r'tttlou9a DIM rm. ale. :;;;;.;. o:r· S7tl>+-.. ~. 1~, .,, .... ...,,,,..,, v-. pnng Avel 1~ MW711 ~-· No wnf, 11110 MY"'ONT gorveoua S8r I.Me pd (213>-6744575 ~ .-146-1'M3 + OM, lg cuetom t1ome, IE"9-rr-------e..... ... .. 1111 ilii.IA ViJi6I 4 iliim\. 2 irtr-. Dqc* 9111 .. ,. 115' ~-..I .. &JHi j • "' """ ~. MW ..,.,... & -~ oelllWI. I '* 41 rap•• & .. •Int. • Mlf• LuaJ '"""' ::nGm ;14;. 09'· l 1300tmo ltlMOllO 11111/mo C... I~ Pt..etglOue ~ -.c No pM9. gerage or lndry FOA IL\ii C.."'*1119rW ....a13 mod9rtl oortdo L111 ,.,_ .. 75/lftO I~ :-~~~~~rift. ': ~ ~ ~ ': ::::'· ;!.""". ~N":: lal•H Ptala~ t13'°/mo Op9rl • .-..t1'I01M?l1~ t1116/lft0 • 11•.. ... . ~ MANOOlO A our1ty CtC9 Ok Aod .,_ •m--g-,,.s;-..,.--... ,.,-·. Pu Metttn 71().. 1M7 or 2" ... I Col'llO.= 0 K uMut Cal 7t04102 "' bey' bdl Sl'50ltft0. 144-7'313 _,. ........... °" ~ni Aoent w11,...,11 wtn.a,_ GRAND OPENING APARTMENTS 525 CENTER STREE'T COSTA MESA Mela.OM..,.._ , •-oo• ... "" I ...act• ,,. MTM MOii -1 •..0C HI I MTM ... lnl Oll'N:a ... DALY W All TO 1 Piii L.c c 111 d 111 h comer of c.nter StreM Ind ""'-Itta A.._,. 142-1424 -!!!!s..... .. ••l!I!... n• ltatah 1, lbu lulwt/Offlet Int Liii a,.... ••illNl/!ntal llH a.tell/OllH Mlt Quiet. ·~ok>ue H" --•• ,. ~ w/llltOhen P'M-1714 lflt mYL Ml Tm wn • I 1~1A twnlufte, new Sp~iou> "nglr niw 9aOe. edulta only . ...., Nwpt 8c:tl rum 0t unt IMtr M!OICAL lllllden IUh• lin fNIMn ADS amfllf/.-T. ~ ~ot~:!' Plllrtt orptll ~ MC. W1f m1 tMIM, ~· 162-i7IO euite. P¥' entr & get. 2 H9wport IMdl. 1300 el. UU1111 I'« bu9Y Orthodontlo of-....,. BMOh tn141ranoe lf&I ii Pvt • petto. Carpor-t. ~ two brdroom ~ph AOOm ..,, ,_t 1118 '*'' blk• to oceen MOO/mo. W..Ccltff Or. 417-61S2 floe..tr.1M, dental ••P· ~ °"'°'· Muet IMIW II••• 1 H9 11rg1 o.-, 1721/mo. v-. no pMa. uw~,r: IMIW 128 tor utiiita ,._, o.ii ,.,,......, NJ #222. ,_ °"'°' tpllOe. San'a AR£ fRE£ helpf\11, muet type I •Int at leMt 40 wpm ~ ~ ~ laftd.. CUft II Ae\ 931~ 1HI * = II.-. In H. ~ M0-2141 142•4'°°, 2• Hra. Ana. lntereeottona of 57, oommunloatlon 1klll1. IPeed Ind pr9'lltOUI oom- 1 o a p • d ground•. 8'*P .... Verdi nr *'I"'· 11 ..,.. tLA:L1111L&:O.~L.l'fll NwptlUJC\lrioulCOndOf\im 5 I 22 '~· Reoep-Cat. )(Int h0utt.14CM2t2 puter ~I plue. aa tv pOOtt.., peDo/dedt. Ho 2k encl gar. Ho pee. :=.•Ol#Moo•• ..._,_ rm w/kn ptfv, a.r ht. Uonl1t, frH coUcln~ • mf&L TUii wot1( .-wtth full oom-1~ tl06 _ '7IO. ,,.._... *"tflt•t• batcon... Of U:Uii .,._.. n/tmlcr 7~ l400/mo. 1t16 ort MJ .... JI 8eeklnO an exotptton•I pany t>en•flt•. ~LL t9drm tv•S. •10e Gerden petioa •on ht year's rent llTll • ULll& llUll Fr9neh. 13~7Sl5 PIT. ~ pereon tor NOW · Met· t56- 2!!!:'v2!98...,.u ........ wl?v'° •e••1BJlll Wl'fllT1 ruRH1SHEO or Wkly tW'I...._ Low~ PTot,..,,, H+ io etv n1oe ~1G,1oua~, _, ...... r--~~~~.= WUlll,.... --~ ~ " UNFURNISHED S1M I Up/Wttly. .......... 2BR S3&()/mo erweeo .,.,,.._ Of ..._... rom Loet 10/1 '""" ..... ..._ per90Nll d9-f~t ~ P111 Of full time to dO MO-te2' -~31-4MO .:.it•-::.. :~ ~oourtl ~~Net-:;--pool"': Ae1 r.m ow 21. ltv E'lk» !!.1.5.;t_r;:,o2 A9dtllll ;'::!,~~:.·A1. °"' teem and ~in. ~ ~~-= l8dml 28e lllO ., •SttwlrN I pondl flTllSS ...,. to oceen. Kitch'• CM apt. $342.50,,.utl. IWI WARD.. 546-1078 c~~.zc:. MP':.. N.-port BNCh. Non- 151 L 21M Mt-240t Frptc, V9Ut'9d ~ Otlf •Sorry. no peita CtlTHS TtmlS, avlll. ti& N. CoMt Hwy, Cyndi 148-7223 t Lott Tetrl•r Mix, whl Ora. Scott I Julle F0td amotter. 14. pttw TOP AMA MHA PINQ 1C';:o°' 1 epa. ~ •FumWl!ngl ~ Slnlliil, ,.., Laguna &wt\, •N-5294 RESP. mature f9ril to ahr w/br#n apo11. Choker DOS & Team 873-4227 1~.!~::W~ 28drm :.8:. 1:~&4930 · w~~T1tit.L ":' ... ~ ..:1· Wll ~~veil. ::;, ~~11.h::~~/mo xlnt MeM v•~ IOQ ~~al~d~lg~o ~=: llTlllllTll &llllT. PllT W pool, tlP4l. Outet. No S*I 04~2739 "4-619' .... MMJ t tt I . 11'1e 50 wit & up 2274 Aleo to enr 38R 545-4123 REWARD. 045"'8304 Full/part lime. Flex hrt. .... ... '695 Up &49-2447 Trlp6exl Unf 2Bf 1~8a IUnl fl.LAii ~ d Nwpt Blvd, CM M&.744& apt, f:~ bdl. S300 + UllDf '1UJll REWARD 1oe18 mo. M/cat =~;7 Ri·~:r~: T~ ~ ;":.: UTALm YllW TownhorM type NH 15556 Huntington Vllleee !N'\ WI Ill 1.1111 ut111. N8. 876-9020 ·on :s111 11. 170 eq/rt ~/gry/tan Ing heir, Laig. wl(ll(je 040-4292 meMe and ~* 2Bf 28e unf. 1000 ~ n. mo. No pets ~ Lene, from San etaeo VV Young Pfof./F hu 2br tt>e wtcuetomer perking. Art-Nlgoel .,.... 403·9331 per.on 10 wrlfv new ot- gw, jac. AedecoraMd. No Triptex upetan 28f 18&, ,r.-.y. north or a.di lputmtnh 3026 w. CoMt ~ apt 10 ahr In N.8 .••• to tlqve • gift -marine -' • X-Ray Tedi CRT or MAT d«a. NO SELLfNO pee. $186/mo. 156-oeee new ClfPI, latgt patio to Mc'edden. --' on pon BMctl, r •TV tx;h new c:arpet/drepea, boutique. For Leue by Hltll H•.!!. to wortt 18 hour ltllft ~t mu9t hev. a AM. 631~107 PM. S51Sl mo ~-eoe3 McFadden NtwpOrt Buch So S130+ wugl, no · oar.' petlo S315/mo. yny. owner. 87~ ~ Satl &ln only. 831-38" OOOd phone peraonaMty -.---=--,.---r----:: 111111 lt>th "ittrrl Yuatl11 lntah 979-3051Julie873-8923 /ofcete In Laig Bctt. Tllll If IUll Cltrlcll/OfBlt 14@ Trmlnlng wtll be PfoYided. CIHn quiet 8aQhelor U111a pd. End gar. Smell=.... ... I.II Onv.-1 1 210 1t.... fffl 700 af. 1 mo fNe rent. ESCORTS --LNrn valuable office S385tmo. No pets. Call turnlahed Studio. 1 edft1 CL ~..!!£ C 6"2-Sll } !-It ale ... 2&/mo. 497-5132 ....... 23•• ......... a1c1111. WOftt with nloe Oeve. "Gt $4().1151 ptef'd. No pets. 1450 mo. • • .. .,_. -·" .. Lft,!ai.. 1Mf C&6i POOi I -.. .-'"' a&•I"•" and S4 2& ............ or .......... 51 to 1>111 oc.en. N75 · ._ n. J ITll&I OFF CE -Permantent PIT, 12"4pm. ~ earn · llTJ• Tfn ~-~ ,....._. mo Lv meg 132"4181 Ntwport Buch No t • co4ot TV, 2 frplca, all OMM/ I 1pace. lati.r.nt Property mgmt n·emkr P., how to 1tll1I Mondey 2 .. _ 2•· ~/gar. Pvt ""'''° w 1 a..._... STUDI. 0 -. .._. ..... ~ow Irvin.-Av1•111i. llMp9 1•. 714/&4M918 RV'• Storage Spaces av 840 eq ft avail, 1 mo frM pref. 833-3878tS.0..0110 -Frlday,4:30to8:30,Sat Df --,.... w...---· ,,_ ,.,,.. ~---..------., .. .----o. anza Bayalcle VIHege. rent. $&12/mo. 497-&132 · 8·00 to 10·30 AM w/'WMll rm. Quiet. No llHINle val• ' ~. No petl. ldt lnt111 ....... •• lbu 300 E. Cout Hwy. N.8. P..tnalual/ lllllllPll Pie ... cell Eiieen 10 ~t.::~~2~mo. MJ·l111 Gu I weter pa6d. 1tt + 645-1104 1714 873·l33l Mon-Fri ,_.pm lda1trl1l 11A Uid1l1t11tl" 1111 Good eolld t>ootckeeplng tehedule en 1p~nt- EASTSIOE CHILDREN MC 1&75. 497~287 28r NB XZt 10 ifir wl=. Fenoed MCUre lot. Autoe, 1208 aq A w/#font OfC lg SING eitp9, n.c. Full time. ment. ~2-4321 · • EASTSIDE C.M. 28r 18a + WELCOME, lrg 28R 2BA ....... )pl •II VERSAILLES CONDOS pool, w/d, nr tx;ti S300. boat•. motomomet. CM. rNr drl..,..ln door No ADVERTI comput• ••P« • must. · EOE • den. unt. H25/mo. down1talr1, play y•d, ~.,...two a 1 & 28dnn S12W1080 N/amkr 831-8823 84&-1Cl88 Of te9--0278 machine ()( auto ehop9. Non-emoktlf, CM .,.... PIT 11i1P111•1T /:t. :-3: beam :f i.:-' p:n~:; ~z:: 2aa. fl'p6c. Ooewlde ":i 131.., .. Ag,1 1 CdM 2t>t 1t>e apt. 10 lhr. 111 ... 1nea11 tftt ~='C'~ ~ s!::~1 annsT M~1;~:i!~a1. 25 h,.. per..-. wry~ celle. frp6c s7oo+ 111, dlhwr.' Gu & water paid PCH. Sl50 mo. 1 yr ... La a-... .. S375t mo. ·~ uttl. wXTEAFRONT atbd. Eve9 04&-0e81 . M Coat• M .... CA 92827 ,.., eetate 0mc:· G:'O lat. MC~ 2 • $100 + de9. 111 I laet. AM '°' Mr. Furn \IN U86/mo. gw. 75~5 Fred Ex«:. Sult•. 1350 llf avail Fri. Exper Pfef' . Muet no~ 650-17~ WI lffD ·-Fuent• (714ll3M070 m Avenue Mont..-;. Otc E'llde lharp 2BR. gar-,:· 4th floor with view lallaftl fiauclal G:wt~ d~~ lllUllP /Ill IH = :i::tabte. E/llde 2BR 1BA. new Wanta.-Ctlonofgreet llWJllfllM' Bil •t7-4445twn4M-MIO wn:'C:e:loootmo o 042..t844MonthruFrl &-5 need• lmaotnatlve. pro-ott'i:'.8'P~~.~~~& Cal1Joan 831-12et crpt/patnt No pet•. llvlng? We can on.r any-1BdfnFH88. Nefrlg, Lat' CNll l1tr1 pet · Ctaattrial lallaftl ductlve, layout a111t1 Wh01.,..,.-===-:-:--::=-:--:-~-- se501mo. 842-8358 thing trom a emall apt 10 ~ & 1tovw Ina. No 1111 FEM 22-32 to 9hr epec NB l.L •-Ji/Int 0,prbaitift ftM und«1tand1merohandl• CLERICAL E.ntry l.w4 ~ OeYtn Real E.etate 1 48d hM If k>oklng In pett 5'M855 W•tcllff home •!pool 6 " _ --Ing, to dealGR edver11elng Ilion. Future grOW1h. Fut CM NB or HB think ot ue NW PIG'.&'. HA 26e. POOi. JU. $400~ utll. 5'~100. AU 1111111•1111 fOf • vari.ty of client•. typing & accuracy• mu•t. WM~R Furn Studio & Unf 2BR. Avl llrei ,~ that choloe or 18R Bayfront w/aundeck, sauna. lnc:lud9e gee & AJU!lltah 2751 II IRO llWI our dlterlmlnatlng mar-M2-57M ~~~~~tt!T-nowt 153&/mo. No pet•. Ideal IM Via Lido apt. 1725 condo ,._ C*hweeher Fam. prof., non emkr. 9hr -lcet d_,,,and• quallty and UllPTillllT P/1 1581 Mau Or. 5'&-98e0 TSL MGM'l 042 1803 mo.IYM'fY. 875-e890 A/C ll50 e7~900t ' 3bf 3~ba hM In CdM. FM ULJ If.... HIQh Prollll. Local ArN etyle II you enjoy p.oC)le & '.I .\, • • LA MANCHA APTS • 2Bd 288 i 700/ 0 ' ' 1417/mo+utll. 873-4553 8 Units In Sunnymeed. Wiii Train. Pert TllM . would llke the momlngt .. •• WESTBAY ELDEN APTS rm m · _ _...._ uM . • .. .,.1 + 'A Undtlf construction now. No Em~. No New1paper production off you'll Ilk• thle one! 2ecsrm 1811h -25--75. 2311 ELDEN AVE. RefrlQ, denw.tw I etow ·---.. F9m rmmt•. -{IV mo CALL 5'&-7001 Overtieed. No Selling. knowledQe he4pful. Ablll· ao'.od ·~ .. lquette No'*'· &42-5078 Speclou• 1Br Eutalct.. Ind. No pet• Me 4855 DW ••Dnlllf utlla, n-emkr, no pet•. HB GrMt Tu Benefit• IY to wortt undtlf dead-& accurate typing lklll• a LARGE 28f 1'Aba, patio, N9W etptl, dlhwahr & 28' 1v.aa. pool-Pet9 okl .... .,.. 640-0635/D 9&Mt141E ladan1/0Wct .... Mr. Wolfet (714)83&-5620 llnee. mu•t. Pnor ,__. mU9t. Call 557-f470. P1 ;eraoe. IMO/mo + ... drpe. POOi. Gu & nter Just lt9Pt to bey & very 2;~~ =· 3:;1. F«n lhf 2br 2ba CM lu• 2711 Sun 12-5 M-F 8am-5pm paper eitper'. an adllan-W• Med you to work In 291 fOf appt. curlty 272 Cabrlllo. pd. Encl gar. No petl qui.t $840/mo. 8'7Mnt · • twnhM S3&51mo + de9 & tage. Po•ltlon 11 part So. Orange County oom-Adnan Alty 5'~7 se251mo 8'5-5780 avall now. FM 4786 .,., utltl 171,)722_'"'°8 1100 1q h. N.B. 4 small Eitcltlng. lucretlv•. e~-time good lnqulrl.a and pan.... Rec.Ive weekly Receptronlel/Secretary · • bike to bdl. POOi. Jee, TILllllT 111-1111 · otflc:iel. 3 connected. 1 clulllvl fi.td need exp d r .. ~m.. 10• Steve pay, merit Iner .... and Pert tlrM or full tllM 38' 2Ba uJ>P«. Gar, MW Wll1lAll YI.LAii cov'd pkg, walk·ln1, F/non wnkr lhf 2br 2ba prtvate -t outlkM rec»pt RE Agent•. Whitworth Hough, Art Director, paid vacation. Apply now a&/hr. 833-2050 cprt. 10340 Velencla 2BR 1y. ~ 1685 micro, Ind~. 18f '655. X-lllM. lnlab 1Pt. 1 ml from bch In arM. S1850/mo. RMr Hotel/Motel Brok•r•. D~ll Piiot, P.O. Boll and wortt In an exciting RECEPTIONIST 1150 No pet• 546-7913 POOl/epe no pet•. lg 18' w/ belo '855. H.Bcn S350+ut 9"-0020 untt Oii Waterfront HOIMI N • w port 8 ••ch 1 .-.~t M Ca and rewarding lnduetry ... NEWPORT VILLAGE 845-8122 • 833-8911 Orlvebl.J Superior or F/rmmt lhf 3br ooean YU 2438 w . Cout Hwy. (7l4)MM118· 92828 """'I .... • TAC TEMPORARY SRVC ~k~vy'=~ APTS. A grMt p1aoe toll c:atl04 251 a-. ITM onS1uholeDr.NB.S360 131-1400 Xlntt>ua.operwtofhome. 4500Campue#124,N.8. llghttype760-HM ' live nMr SOuth Coat .... Ptiat • i595. Verul..... Studio m . en. A.I . room, hOt mo +'lkltff. Jutle or M•tt 1800 w. CoMt Hwy feclng GrNI 8ecur1ty prod.11200 w ll&IT 852-9424 I Uiimii.iiiiiiiiii"i/i'- Plau. Mlnu1• to Nwp1 XArec .• rn ~· 26( Sub prtcg. Fum/untum. tub, non wnkr. kiter:· Httl60-3n5 W/&42-52&2 a.y Ctub. omo. Of ~·" RJ Scf'llllng 979"4824 UILY PILn llllUL lfflOI llKPUllllT f /T !~~/Jr. '!~rm ffurn ~r'.!u.!'!1.2n••r 5 30pmarln• Amenltl.a. 5&2-1744 utN Inc 1495. 722-14 , ltv Lg CM home i110 MNtca. ~2 ~~'!~ =a11• T.I Htl 330 w. Bey St. T.-.lng nuno and other Lit• tyi>I~. hvy phonee, :!::"5/momo. Pfooll:Mlrn;i_~n ....... -noon-: ··-uy ,_. F/M -or.-... 2 rma. own mo+ min ....... for di. entrancle .... ~ n.'""" I • Colt• Mau. Ca. 92828 ,,,. • ,,,__ •l<P· req d. Salary ~ -' ,_ .,.,... --'" """7 mo. Geotve 250-9244 ow hu money for c:terlcal duttea. v w n car • pendl on exp. 846-1395 '""* & ~ couru'. lut. ltac• ..,., 102 8lrch St. 2Bf 2aa be, "° kn 13101• rm. alMd ~ 646-2S57 mu• t . c a 11 Ju d y • ====::=-:---:-:~ ReaMtton room. taunu ll(g 21( 2L'. W:lk to w/lrg balc.1700. Ho peta Incl uttl. CM~ H.B. 2Bf Apt, F/only n-1::~~l't:o~:: ~'!:It J}!;0:,'~·. c': 042-'321. ext 318 IOf RECEPTIONIST fOt Hewo- & b+tlard tabte9. Sony, no bctl. Gar 1750 No peltll. 75&-0442ot833-3313 Furn rm w/pvt bttl In tmllr.dOMtobdla:k>O+ ............... DenleonAeaoc873-7311 MINIGER appt. port81ec:t18ullder.mu91 peca. 557--0075 857-1n8 or 780-1713 etegant c .M. Meu Verde 'Alut+dap. 636-1818 + de9· lncfll wwar' .. ig ft ft llAMI ll&IT be abte to handle t>uey ••-UY ·-· hme '360 mo atw uttea. MNtca. confer9"09 rm I &a ....... nfl ••111 y -n phonea. front °"'°' ap. POOL Patio. frple, X-lge 1111AIT • 2010-2 81_.... S -1... ... Prof P«90f1 64~9231 Hunt. Bc::h. f'/rt«t tmllr. con.. lmmed occupan-Immediate e>penlng f0t lull -30 8,.. ... S pearanoe. good typing, 18' '* 2Br Meo '500 •5,,,.1 BA 1 .... Ind '""' t. ... 1... .-to t>eec:t'I MCU(lty at 47&-1C>ee ot 844-91&4 '--........ h --11m. D11trtc1 Manager 3 W •Y t. non emkr pref. 95~ MC. Unf.E-elde 557-2041 • <l'J mo. 1 ""'· ry wtlrg t>elc. No pet8 MOO Laig bdl. S2t5mo M Pf9f -e S375 mo. 'te0-slH ... .... Coeta M .... Ca. room, clOM to beech. 7•• A••2 Of............. p ~ ... _ • -· • •m-·-••u•t ........... """'king wtth llllPn'CMMIT Pvt 1 Bf unf, frplc, pool, 4932 Charlene Cir .........,._ ~ pool. r..,./.,_, n-emitr M/25-35 Pf~ . ..-.. dean, _".., ... ,.,. SCRAM LETS "" _,,,.,, ~-HI · - patio. gar, no petl. 399 W TSL MGMT 042-1803 DECORATORS beeutlf\11 40+, refs. "484-045l n·ltnkr etv 2br 21M,. twn-~= ~e:u:!~! • ~~~t1~n. Ell par ence llllf LOIL Ille typlr\° O.C. Alrpon Bay St. 1595. 850~57 2 Bdrm , .. -th HB 1 ru, m. Condo on the nter Nice hM nr bdl/ocn f\irn hM C.M. S350. 722-1838 ............. Beach 831-3851 ·NSWERS 10 key, typing, nllng, mllC. loc. 8 : 0-5.PIHHnt blocil to -sees ' 1195/mo 873--0eH m1tr,empl n-llNl/M 2~58 M• 3MS "4br 2t>e l'tee ·~-' ft Wa offer an excellent ben-olc dutlee. Non tmoker working cond. 756-2200 LIOATill .. -••••n· Fumllhed bac:hetof apt TV refrlg, wllly 536-1518 cu ..,. .. rV........,..,.,,. •• 25 3000, 13ee, 834, 584 & Froltc-Peten allt program, paid v• pref. Perm. PIT. hrt flex. HIPT/ ...... 2BR 1 u·BA --I N 1 v-·•1 ... • '"'• "" ,_.....,..,... -209 1q h . 1817 Waatcttff, cation• & hollda:r:; bonus N B 833-8-435 Dianne °' 175 ,. PllP•t••L...... aval OV · .,._ · NICE room for rwit, a'i811 +utH & !Mid 850-t3t1 NB 5'l-5032 •"t Motif-Sir.. ' · · good driving r9e0rd a twnhM, greenbelt. lndry -------• Aef'I req'd. 846-53&7 1111 , OOOd ., .. no-amt( • . ...,, FIRST TIME program and 1al In-PrllCllla. mutt. AHng, n typing. room, all bulltln•. lH/IJMHI LIDO VIEW LUX X-LG r«a. 'S300tmo, S.~1oe1'. M8'e PfOll ~r 30-38 CdM'• beet omcea. 1595-Our kid• were .. tchlng en ·~~·· .. :~~~· Grubb & Elll• RMlden11al seoo. mo. Starboard 2078 Thur1n IPIMll 8 2 ea OR & dectt lhf Nwpt • .... ti home. I 1100 Incl u111, AIC, pkg, old comedy act. My hua-m .._.. r · Brok•r•ge D1vl1lon In Elc:tow Corp, M&-n23 TSL MGMT 042-1603 '825/mo Lrg 1BA 18A, 11 ~;J moth~7008 · Quallty hom• w/pool. $400. &42-3442 Diana janitor. 28"55 E Cout band quipped, "No won-Applicant must apply In N9wpor1 Center, need• ---· trplc, gar, lndry rm. lrg · Mleelon VleJo. Yng prof°' MIF, lrQ 3BR 28A hM. w/d Hwy 875-8800 Anytime d« ctilldren laugh IO at Dally Piiot. 330 exception el eecr•t1ry. lllllTllY, f /l SHARP CLEAN 1 BR, NO ~. CloM to beach. Lrg 2BA 2ba. Frplc, greet ltuclent, M/F, rt-Nr occ. 1475 +~ utile, much. They're hMflng all er.on B St Coate Accurate typing aklll• 1 glr1 off'loe. eon.tNCtlonl PETS. 1450/mo. 2221 ALABAMA balcony. 1242 Rutland arnkr. $325 + utHI. Dy 11111aat. &41-5181 lntH ..,,., ... Plft th9 I<*• fOI IM FIRST M:! tl. ~ e.-11 w/et 1M11 80 wpm, com-OevelopmenUicp. Pfef'd, Cell 5'&-9950 TSL MGMT &42-1603 Ad. 1900/mo. 831-0211 720-8482, ...... 722-72&e 3000 1q ft evall. o.lgn TIMI:." • m O, 2_. p.m. (Circul.,_ puter & ,.., eetat• k~ mature. fleiclble hours. I M/F, reep, ~kr. 3BA, own ..,_..,.. to tenant• .... ti. . n-..t ) . . ...,.,.... ..._.pful s·•.,., com-042-M 11 Enter Now And Win $200.00 of Home Decorating Supplies from .. .· .. " Standard Brands Pant Co. HOME DECORATI NG CENTERS CATEGORIES .. ··•· ... .. ·. ·' .•. · .··: ,. . ROOM WITH A THIMl-ls your kitchen country? Has your den gone nautical? Enter your favorite room designed around a particular theme. HOllY DISPLAY-Attention Collectors and Hobbyists! If you have displayed your collection or hobby as a port of the decor in your home, this category is for you. CRIA TIVI f LOOI & WALLCOVIRING-Non·traditional use of carpet, tile. wall and floor coverings qualify you for an entry in this category. BUSINESS OR OrPICl-Oesign and style are now a necessary function of business. The category is open to offices designed either privately or professionally . CONTESTS RULES Th" com.n " ~"gned 10 re< .. .,.. rnponwt frOfft -r occvpam of o ho<M. condo, apomnM, mobile hOm9 or lo...aboord yocht Col'llm.rciol .....,_ Me <>Ny occ~ for .... lu.ir-°' Office ~ and will be re~'" ony of tt.e Oftlet ,.,r" cafe90riet lo..,.._.,~ .... eftfry form and eubmlt o photooropt. of .... entry Ill. 9"try ""'''be occOfftponl.d by o detcriptloft of th. f!Mf'y. ~·aipfl1 becO<N ~ ol 11\e Oo1ly Pilot ond <onncrt be •"'-med Entr-ftMl9f be ~ed by Wedn .. dcr1. Oc1obet I~. 191l or 0.lt.,..red lo the Oo1ly Pilot c/o INTUIC.$. 330 W. loy, (Otto MM.a, CA '2626 by 5.00 p.n1. Oc1obet 171+1 198, w...,..,. will be feof\or.d '"~and~··.,, th. "lnfitrion" ~~on ~' 31 n I 98, Oo.ly Pilot -pio.,-t Or• not ellgMe Im_,.. flllUtt ti. 11 Y'"" old 0t -and lftVlf ,..,0.'" l+le Oo.ly P11o! <trc111Qhon ore<1 Dolly Pilot ~oph«t wlM ~·th. wif1n1nv enllr" fof publi<at>on In l+le lnterl()n "9(ttOn (~ ...,,., ~ _.-. tllClfl -~~ ~ on!)' OM eMrr P.• cot~ry ,.,,u be cont1der~ One~ pet c°"'90')' will be dtOMfl INTERIORS ENTRY FORM INTIANT'S NAMl1 ADDllSS1 DAY 'HONI NUMlllr IVININO 'NONI NUMllla ------- ~-~---------------· CAJIOOIY1_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ t..t4 _..tr.._ •I• ,.__ Detty PM•t .... ....._. c...t•t SIG W. Icy It. c..t• M•••, CA f'»M ' yrty rental. nr beach. Npt ~n. a.n. r• IMt I ft... -.~ on ..._ ' · ~';';.t• .;_,.-;p.;, con- Beti $250/mo 850·3253 oept. ...... wait. room. Lost ameli :hh. scott' ...... l(DtatalJ!H tact Admlntretlve Aut, lllllTUY M/F to ahr lge 4 bdrm hM, lhower1. lunch room & dog chlldren1 pet needl ltllnCiuei ~ A to ;;;'";1 Mrs N1t11nd 844--8200 Growtng lrvlne 8oftw.,.. 811t>oa Pen. Pt. S380/mo. 0 2tMr1 .. !""'*'11*· Alvball I ..,.cia1 diet, vie. B'19 Cor-h~ ahlft. Sat/Sun only .._.. ........ 0 ,..__,. p......... ~C:ry~L..~': ~h 87~. 87~7419/E --vu , or POH Y ona Bdl. 1150 REWARD. 831-8302 ,....,,...... wu ,_, ....,,...... r .,_.. • aoon«. Call Barbara. 956-3333 Of 873-3882 Th1f1 wtiet tM prot...ional eppeenno1, Neat M/F, uec: 25+, rNtr bdrm 9fe In 28R 1 'A8A. Irv. Pref non-amkr. l600. 854-7580 or 64M230 250-48ee Of 9&4-a024 DENTAL AMt, Ortho, ROA DAILY PILOT OU1golng penonailty & req, Ottho exp pref. 4 day SERVICE DIRECTORY OOOd phone ekllll 10< Mon-Th. NB 642-282e. le all aboutl buey #ront d9ak. ()po portunlty for ldvano. ment & good benefit•. Send r.eume to: Betty Rlehard, Studio Soft· were. 17852C Fitch. lrvlne, CA 92714 ~;;;;!!L!!!!iiiiiii~~Curn~~try~7.::::::" P1iatla1 llMnllY ii Ooon-Repalr·Alteratlona .... INllm I LantUI 1IP euuTT PAilrrill p~":,,,~~".99 .;.;:: $2 17 per day I Remodel-Panel-Locila-etc Vat1ou1 pettem• I colofl. HAWAIIAN EXPERTISE Serving Orange Co. 22 yre. Mt• ~kpg. Smllll non-. 1 Cablnet•Wlndow-Fencea M&-2128 for Eltlmat•. Tree tnm top. remove Prompll Reuonable ,..t llTIOl<lng omo.. Send r.. That'• ALL you pay for 35 yrs exp. Jerry 042-0587 clean upe ·Stu S..e-1ee&' Aeferencee. llc#3349 aume to: Ron Yeo FAIA 3 llnea, 30 dey mlnlrmim •·-· · *Ill 1111 * Architect, 500 Jumnlne, In the 11111 Tl.... ._ ~a Malnt ctean-upe mowing • CdM 92825. DAILY Peu1 ss1 ... 1se aft. 5. XbeRICXR RXRBYDXR tree inm. Fr .. .i.t1mat•i lllllTllY/1-c .. 1 ... "-~ Cerpentry, fencing, wtn-Mr. E.ltreda 045-3381 Walllck lnterlOrl .,_..., 0 • .. "919 dOWI plumblng mantte TM beet Int.nor painting. Fut paced N.8-P.R offtoe Pll T care my . . .. tub enc.. haullnQ, etc. · Stirube/TrM Trim. Comp! REFS. te2-2177 nd1 uper'd reapon91ble C.M. area. trampon to And Y• Jeeu• la Lord gardening. Competitive p s; person. 85 wpm, Word SERVICE school & back. 850-0258 (llc•30405) 836--82...,. prloel. Chuck 5'&-7032 •_L proceulng a plu• --------I--,:-=.,-,-,~=-==:-:-:-:=-CteanUpe•T Tr1 I F l'Fm iNTERtORS 720--0941 Y Chrl•ll•n mother wlll •GEN. HOME REPAIRS. y d Mal ;-:H ~m no HANGING/STRIPPINGs ,,..e .... c"""R"""ET~A-=A.,.-:Y-,,10=-"" .... -.. ,--._,~,1 NDECTOR babysit Mon-Fri. CM/SA Paint. Drywall. Carpentry ... n . au no VISA MC 873 1512 ~ -UI\ ., .. _ 041-9314 .ic. Gary Me-5277 PTL MIKE 850-3283 -• for 1n1tltutlonal Stock -------~· ANDYS WALLCOVERING Bkr. NPB. Related .. p f AROUND THE CLOC~ HANDYMAN LARGE and TIEii lnltallatlon & R9movaJ req'd. 860-1904 s • .:.=~r..Y::i~m. ~1~1~57~ ~?°'Ii.,_~~ Topped/removed. Clean-Int. painting. &4a...-013 llm/IHIWTll RMf>lt• Carel 54&-1&4~ HAUL-A-WAY Handyman up, MW l•wn•. 751-3478 Experi Welleoverlng In Aeepontlbte '°' lmall high Cl i Lfritt All type t 1 .. OWi IPI atallatlon. RMe. Coneun-activity office Good tu 81 trlmml ca;::" ~.;,p • ant A.Mlgnmnt 681-8590 typing. XJnt ~. ROBtN1 ctEXRINd .. cl c::PJ9ff 5'6-7830 • FrM•t. Deve04~7te5 •WE GALS SHOULD• ea..c booltkeeplng. Wiii CALL TOOAVll lllFllLlll SERVICE: a throoughly L1nd1cape-Gerdenlng •HANG TOGETHER• lr9in r991. 557-3200 ,.lritl''Tft""''"A'l!'ll"ITllll'"""-i clean houM. 845-9741 HOME REPAIR. Carpentry Trim Tr .... Haullng-=83.-9--0_730--:-::,----..A..-N_YT_IM_El1-iiumm17igii1i;p9;1;i;.liii•iitl~Tr ......._ft,_,. ..... ..-& f~ & get•. tree tnm. Clean u"'" Leo 5&7_.508 Hou---m"', _,....,, dump rune. C.M. & N.8. ,.-. Pl11t11/Dryw1ll Muet hav• offlc• H · w~22 ;~20-~ig-.texpc upholst..-;. wl•ndaOWl-11·1.i:· .... Jim Whyt• 042-7206 QUALITY TREE TRIMINO per1enoa, type towpm, • 1 ' • • llr'1 18111. 1 & T rM roote-ctumpe remove Int.IE.xi. patch pluterlng, good phone manner. Air· Al t anti• Commtlfclel lnq . ..ioom. laall•J clnup ... t. Carl 722-1111 cuatom teJCturlng, quaJ:,t rrt UH. 11000 • • no ,.. ,. EUROPEAN CLEANERS. Cf RXUCIRd -UoVIRd = =i :;~=--tJ-~831 12001mo. 5&&-24811 Reeurfeclng e Roofing & HouMCIMnlng/G1tdenlng Garage & Yard ClnuJ)9 1--------- W1terprooflnge 831~199 frM •t R4tfl 496-2'78 Jon Me-8192 AK. Smell Jobe Pla lat TtcbJcal/Trlfft · · H9wport, Cotta M.... -5•..a Ortv.way9. patloe. pathl. Home Cleanlng by the cie!'nCLEE~o~, 1rv1ne. Ref•. 875-3175 14llrD•111-1111 ~ etc. No Job too email. Dynamic Duo. Comm'I, ~ 141 ng ~Jobi dOne rtgi .. - RMI. Mickey 638--0553 r..id'l,ll" refs 650-e278 FrM •t. John M. 5-41730 .... YTPUITTll/ Home & omo. deaning by HaYHng. CteanuP9. paint--.--.. ..,... DRAINS CLEAR From S 15 ~~~~~o1':: JODI. Pleue eWI fOf free Ing. _.,Ing, odd Jobe, QUICK & CAREFUL Faucet•. Dl9poeal, Heeter, PUTI IP AITllT ~ M~~~epm •tlmate. 642~748 moving, 1day9873-3503 LO RATES, T13804e 851-9&04 MlM 722-toee Immediate 0'*11ng fOf Concrete/mHonry all HouMCIMnlng 1'4 yr1 •JIP Lah~, iMatJ lll-M11 3~-=~I/=~· =· ~:ar~~ typu, fr Htlllc'd relleble,reae.rr..eet,own rltan1 SalfSt«aoafJCP911• Uc •408035 964-81119 ~ .. pMt•tiP back· Mertine Co 8115-7133 Irani. Pina, MS-9tee AXRi!bX DX88Xd1Rd •&-1 ..... * All Plumbing repairs. Cop-ground he4pf\il. Xlnt ben- Rernove M9halt driv. HOUSECLEANING. Pr~. •11111 Wlllllll• CLEAN I EXPERT per replpe, water heet.,., ~t~nc~~~. lcaloon~ w1ya. r-.:>lace w/concr .. • Mrv. Low~. Guard. (71"4)8754178 0"9f25y•rUJCJ:lenoa lle'd, lnaur'd. 636-Hea ._, ,._ br~/block writ &39--034& E.11. 831· 59/831-0..H Open7dayWMIC Uc. T-118,428 30-1363 NEW/REPAIR. Oualtty. No ~:.~2~ .... 1e"'"9 RESIDENTIAL. >Ont Refe. 406 30th St. Npt 8MCtl ftllYm .ull Jobi to small, r...onabte. 291 cam &V\Nd HMVICt ~.~:..., ~'2~e~ ....... I CM~ ITml'fl ....... FrM ..... llO'd. 831-23'5 UnderWater Hull C1Mn4na C' X Sl'va ~ie:D27 Orange Co Or1alnel "7tWH I Malm. 875-7392 llf&I.... ....... Htg AJC Aef rpr1 hi E' Student MoYen. lneufed iU(Qi ot COMPLETE SERVICE. Satlefactlon guar'd. Amena Ale ay9 lc 458213 Lio. T 12~. &41-t427 ~oe:;i~·Put OutdrW99 I Outboard• Comm'l/rel6d'I. M1·&741 N£WWeretiouee8torege Pr-.nt I Fu1ur9. 1·rr..? Fr--.y Mann.. 850-444.4 YOLANDA HOUSECLEAN ~t~ ll~ fli8tl!p tl60-27M Olene t31 ...... ..... ...., lllLYPUT 330 w. Bey 8trMt Cotta Meea. Ca. tm7 Ml...Ql1 luiwa Lrtllln SEAV Aeu • r•ll•bl•. FIAi 'mmNd lty G lelft. XOU'T W0td PToo.a-eicper .. refs. 842-0405 .... llnt.ftl ard8tnor.19 vre~hlPPY Ma r~over re 11111 IHI lng. W: dO manuecrlptl, Cfttllfttn bqUt:ff• mic: C: ouetOl'l'*S. UC. 2*44. pairs, hot tar, tMa, 'roctc: MAI malllng Utt, etc. 7ee..3330 Xtt eoRstAOctioR =.ae.~~.gr-Tl'lank-Youl MM114 wood. frM Mt. 750.eSM $400to11200 PIT. 12000 Art RelffrCl'I Service. N•w·Remodel-Addlton1 ' • AAINiOW PAINTING ...... n=/IDl&ai to te000 FIT.131-1786 8efot9 lnveetlng call fbf 722-1737 "°#..oe39 1a1tn1i1t9 Oualt1y le our~ ..-. big uvtnga. Mr. Hofland tnctMa UOllC ldi8N8 Col• eaMMt JIFF Uc ... ftlt , .. Wd • -.113e7213-314-1M• 1 hiWllt • PfOfm ™· 8~ ii'.,, .,1m ; Add tO MIUobit1 ~,..Loe ,.,.._oftloellmm Fr1nklln Acctg h•ft. RTC eom=.i womanG klda I~ UM740 ,,.. eettrMte ~~~!met•. ~~ With ~ flnenc:al ltet9'nentl ,.__ ~ In ~ home. raceY9 7 24 A.A.A. PAINTING lnt/Elrt * QUALl~K MW comm.Ion ecMI "" wtt.h ~alnlng credit and Ae9d'I Free ... P1ano L.aleON 142~15 LOWUT poealbte prloe. a.di Cit ... ~ you cen Mm more ttlan "'* & ioer. ~5 Mt-et23 11c•313924 a.ion de ~ tO li.p SeMoe. ~4236 PhOne f'TM 122 ·' 1200 In oomm .... one ll1G ~ Offtoe ~ .,. .......... __ , UM A. l.eocNnl. I .A. OLAiCiOW PAINTING Uo 207481 W-0-!' lilllnO Oftty ao fOf .. your Word Prooeae. ~ · IUl>iOlptkliM per W1llk. Ing needl. Marte 417 ·2871 WWW .. _.,. Int/Ext. IC> yn r.tr," ti n'I poMlbte to_,.. ~ ,_... .... ,_ a.......... ,..,.. ..a 214 QU;Jfywrou;tdlronW&iC thetl1000~.Hourl CUiltittr ... ':".,-:'/"'°"'· "=a'r4o1 aAbibXPi.UllbANv J.O. IHTllXT PA1NT1NO ,._,;awe, MCIUrl1y w. ..... ~ Htgt\ ~ ~rpentry a;:;fO; unclllCJeplnQ, .. pf1W HOUM8 I ""1. Aeee. rtt•. dOOfl, wfndowla, fectoty =--oollte .._ "-Pelt·Aemocfl·A.ddlttonl lLECTAICIAN OOM. lriok:btoc*, lllON, au.tty worit. n&-575& praa,,,.. •t. 936-1523 .. and .... -~ Doota-etc ~MO Uc.#233108. llMAl'lllrwe free •· Mb ..._.,72 LADY PAINTER ... CJM 1-,Of~ "":2i IUILO OA R!PAIA IObe I,....,._ ...._UCfa Natl .. ,...... lnt/lx1 11 t~· •-. ~1 w .... 11.n. raNlnol N!W/MPAlfl &iliiiY. Ho ililiAIL'I CiANSINiHG ,,.. .... •ble. A,. Your Wlndowe C6alftt -------- ooora, wlndowa, mokftnoe 10t>etolfMll.1111rn111• Mjlltflt. ~ Treie NO-tt24orH7-6801 lelt>oaWlndowWeatllnl L.AOYHieedlmmtct u111oe Don M2~2 ~,.. .... llc'd. 931-IMI ~ ,.... .... M041111 pAifiT't" NH.OS w01U(1 803 MbN II tTM1al • ,,..,.... Of*" ...... DEcKa-wooo cov!1'8 A1i1orc&iilhi iNO R cal LAWN lllMCI 1n111xt, oe111nge. '*"' cab. Window.......... • ~ ~ ltlop. Compettttw Pno. yn. 00 "'Y ~ _,,._ Uc. wow..-. twa mo. tao-(ltl yrs~. wort 9'* oomm'Mw...,..._ ' 1 e-. NlerMr. "--hour&. 10 ~ •lll* 15+-1t20 1219041 Al.....,," t.21. t4-m1. e1w121 o.vt. Painting t64-1137 a Mui.,,.. ...... noo Ollytlrfte. 931-1111 ' ,, .... .. _ ..... _____ 1_11_1 lneral llJI .. tral H30 •&sctll .... 11 llU AfTER Count• ..... P •"•···" 10 ... XNtlOO! VIOitl wtcw ._ ..... I z IEITU 83 CADILLAC O.VILL( Mon-Fri Alrpol'1 area lf\llh 19" TV w/r~IO. Xlnt cond "400. b-* ~ • ._, Or~ Cout DAIL V PILOT /Mondey, OC1ober 14, 1~ MJI A•"'......... tlM '•'" a.ew 1111 httl .... tk UM ------------~ NOTa Ml.IC Mtlll SEAi/iCE ST A TlON ... ~.,.. flat 8Cl6dlt ·75 8 A Green. LAAGI! CANOPY HOO. beige IOf) 1 1900/000 846-4072 S.._ Per90n, 'IT 01 PIT, aalary, oomm6alk>n S*'8 beneft11 A.Wt-Chewon, 2590 Newport INYd, C.M. SCHOOL eeo.o3 n 0t tM 1-0241 ,,..,., 1.111c:t S..ac9Pe. nnenoe uoo mo 120-t65e eeonca CM' _,,,.. • oll, 21•40 Luggeoe. Lan, 1101 71 +t11 TllUe1U'8 ULI DblM °" DOLL CO Meda '-diet fOf 3 ""--Hid!<"" lhaft • CAO ·79 ., ....... _ ~. -A.A -A. -JOBS "'--AS ,,,_ ~' •••~ 71 .._ ............... __, .._.__ y .I ..... ,,..,.,_ -.. -,..,., .. MWlng AP Call pu11er1 S4e-9892 ...,_ ...,_, ,,._. enCI !Old«' wlervt. 00 cond lllPOlt'fA#Y 110nC9 Me CW NhiW Katen e50~27310t Into ORAPERYS Olt White Commeroiel L.Wa.OAC 15900 000 IM2-f419 TO llWUI f 0..-: TO 'El 1 IM Gr-1 ouy 840-72'8 fOYOTA '77 PICk·Ut rioncs. '11 Accord H 8 LJ(, •l ahell, a ir 1 198 . '"'1 M\111 ... , irtr a c:tMt't EARN EASY ASSEMBLY WOR I MJ..-Uftll LUii YOU AM IN DVAUlf UTATI llO. ,._ .. I( Op1que IJ"to 84"L 11•1 .111•2 1~ UHOER A D«fO OI TIWIT. To ....... -........ seoo.oo per tOO Guaran-1 Rod• 82", e&· 1 t6". U& -• - , NABERS OAT!D 1·2941, UNLUI ored+tOtl end _.,,...,, 873-t020 01 973-6487 14 tOO 875-t17t , ... ..... HONDA CMG Hatdlti.dt Ul\Ml'V teed Pay"*'t No Ex-IOf all ~6-2"4 'f'OU TAl(I ACTIOH TO ~end P9"IOM -.0 IWUl1t I per~/No Salee 0.-----.-::~-=----,,...-CADl.LAC ~ ......__ .__..... tallt tend Mii lddr....O RESTAURANT Comm'I lg PAOTECT 'f'OU" '~-~be othef.._ ··-- U OW e:;;;'* Van. fOOlla ·77 Auto, elf. Mt< ml & rUM well. ,,.._ tir.. S1450 84~11 11900 ooo Wkdyt 9·5, PRIZES stamped lnvel~ 2 dr r1frlg. lg deep I~ CHICK llln'Y, IT MA'f' H 90l0 A f "' "-wlll end/Of _..., tit' E' "'N I/ITAL ...... 3 w/b&e«et & titter ml· LAAGEST SELECTION A PU9LIC IALl 9' YOU MANOfllE R I.RINK Hoatl10111 •11 813.-1070 ..,. .., IVE•.:t~N of .. ,.~ 1ow----NEED AN VCPLANATl()H A .,.atlon Ma~ llad "lm9ge1" 11 Me«lng • 1\111-TRIPS ~ 18 Entet"prlM Rd Ft ChlM. ~ comm'I meet .aov · ... ..__.. OF THE NATUAl OI TH! 0y ...,.,.,. Dltw'f In tne .,_ llme s .... Aatlttent f()( Pi.rce FL 3~2 • tlle« Other mlK 1111'1\I '°AS<:Ht. ~.= .?.'~ P~OCEEDINO AGAINST ~rl(>t Court of Ofenoe CHEVY, FORD, I tM down, Ck>Md er'<! Commetclal L .... whatltrecognb'.eda1one ll..u... rf .,.. n.~at tf•&alll 64l-Se68 AUDI IJl"•lllO YOU. YOU SHOULD CON· Cou11 ty requeettng tllal ot lhtt flneet Hallmark ....... Ill·---... S1ng1r Touch & s-ml· CHfVROlf.T .., TACT A LAWYER ... .,,,,,~be ~11ed atoret In 1111 U.S. If you Ull.Y Pl.IT ExP9('d, PIT, II•• hra. ctilM, cablntit w/many H1111ot Q ... 11ev 2900 H9f't)of Blvd. On Octooer 30, '"'· M N ~ ,.-...,.tatt¥e have high 111ndardt edn It~, Xa-Mf't of NB 845-78•5 lttlChmti $275/CASH I s.1 .. Ii S.1 ~10 COSTA MESA tO 00 AM IMF>EAIAl..C~ to admlnlllter IN eetat. of TOYOTA 1U-11nuwa 1111-YAIS lH/U2·1ffl Jaguar '78 XJeL. 4dr. all I d 1111 11 h POAA TION OF AMIAICA • Iha deeedenl en oy ng w If you are lngtorextra lllllOLUllll only. 733-2451.647-9107 CHICK Cadlllac S e Vlll• .7 ,,. duly •PPOlnted Trullff The petition reque111 people, we want to meet lpendl~on.y °' llke ••• I • Deed ltlOttty to aomini9tar tl'tl S199 Down 48 Moa . P<>W9f. brown/t.,,, 9\rto Ck>aed end comrn'I IM, trane, llth cond. Mutit OAC you. PIMM cal~ Jun.,.. at to "" like M'""k: nANTED Good pay Good UNIV A TMLETIC CLUB IV.£11.,,~N Loaded mnrt Attllng • undet end puttuant 10 eu ,....__. 831-86681 t ""' -.. hourt. Call Robble't Rag memb«1hlp MOO Seller ~ 18950 000 561-«31 Of True1 r-ded Fet>niery ""-'• undet lfle "-r or an app · Moun1a1n, Knottt a.try & Mop 5•8--0757 to pay tranifer lee. Dick 445 E Co<Ut Hw11 20 1915 " 11111 Mo dent AdmlNlitretlon of h- ... pp 18950 780-0823 Oellv11"1 Any l.ltue MBZ 200 19e7. 1 owner, AU-l&Ylll LUU HLL n• PAY :::es:' c::~ u~r=l ~: IHSHHPlll LlllT or Earie.n 557-52~ N•wpott 8"ch 1nr CAI UUI :~:e:~lleof =~ :; ''':-~ on tne cltlon PUT Tiil WNI ha\19 aewral oPlnlnga In PIT, mual drive. 1'5t-1879 f ;;;;:-,-ff--,-tt-:T;;:-t-.---rr..,.,,. 6 7 S-0900 1111111 UUI C<>ut11y R-cotoert of Otenge Wilt t>e neld' on NOV M8E" Opportunltllt avallabll C.M.. H.B. or ~ V 5 FREE DOGS FEMALE. WI llY County State of Clllltomle t 1t15 t18 30 -' M 1r1 Dept \/ERV ~ cond, 4 cyt 11•1~2-1n1 ttlck $.4 5 492· 7931 btl••tt, MBZ '80 SLC, Iv~ wllthr Cl111ica tan Int, mint cood. only with Lot A~ Tlmet 842-4333 M E c HAN I c n •• d. d ••ecuteo by AICHAAO 8 No 3 II 100 CMc c.r.1 .. Ctrculatlon Dept. In our 1~:----:::-c-.,..---~-w/own toola f()( med duty JAPANESE CHIN, male PORSCHE 62 ROAD-OWi Aaas llOAPAGEL AND SHERRY 0t1w WNI Sen1a 4na CA d 1111"1 Studenta -Earn trucl<• Low preuure fOb PEKE Al<C 545-7153 STER 35eB Cl•Nlc blk & .... L VORPAOEL. HUSBAND 92702 t04S 19 ,350 ml, 134.996 LINCOLN 1&5 Cootlnef'ltaJ 760-0433 ~ 759.9044 oor 10 door~ 1 100-1200 wkly PIT A Plue Moving co. 23~ M L f Sj tan Collector'• Item I Ill TllOll AND WIFE WILL SELL AT IF vou OBJECT 10 the .. ,.. program. uaran-845-5760 Art 2pm Gaa Newport, CM ~7359 H• ••!! Looks & runa great! PU9LIC AUCTION TO gr.,,tong of,,,. petition )'OU teed hourly WIOI plut Statton Jobi 85 cUARB68CAT 7'3 ol I Royce 70 Mulllne< l t3,500 ~-3727 HIGHEST BIDDEA FOR 9'\oul<l flilhef ~ ., 1"'- commlatlon. Moura 4PM t:::-:~~~,,_,,.,,,.....___ lllELI EIOlllTS ... _ ~ c--..o ... Mii Perk W--d 2 dr Cou-·---=--= I CASH , ..... ,!>le " tltne of heartnQ and itet• your oo-10 9PM Training II ABYSITTER Live -In • .... ...... If • ::'5"'• ·:!'8u80.. • 45 000 ;;;, 'mint 'all -~o· ,,, ••• '"' Portef)e '85 358C Mutt Mle In l~I moneoy of tile )«:lion• ()t Ille Wfllttlfl O«>tec $800. MBZ '81 380 SEL, above 646-4072 aver~ Muat Miii S.t R I offer! 2·3140 Id..,. '"'I h .,.hoot want_,, •• t"-i.. I d t Want_,, by 0 C'1 11 ......... t bell 0 er " "'"" ' · · "" 1e11 Mak 1 o If e r .._. prov ..... n 0 .... .... MO ·-·7 a y or ...... . ,._ ••5 2221 212 F p ..... ~~~-!!!!I Unltld Sitl•I ., lhe N()t11\ ''°"' Wllll lhe coun ...... o-. gradu•t• and college QOOd home w/worlllng ~. Lv msg 953-.8339 Of(ict Faraitut -.,.. • ut eves M:~~z 524-8599 IM2-9808 ITont tnHlll\Ce 10 tile County tne hearing 'four llPPM' :!,~t;o:r~ .. !~ ~~t=t~~~~yrs~~ · I 1taJ1•Ht 1047 AaJtt mrrtt4 1100 IWIUTI 1&111 Porac:,... ·15 914 blkl11Vr. g:,~"0~: V:!~. ;;::~ = ;;,-:,~"' ,_.,., °'"' $300+ per week.For t n negot Reta. 842--0350 llTlll CCA Iron '5';oht Agency'· IEPWTI HllPUI Top Meroedel Pric.t Peld nu cltch. xtra clean MUii An• Callf()(nfa all r>Qhi utle IF 'l'OlJ ARE A CREDITOR lnt9fV!ew call 957-2381 , i----------RllTE ... moving Ev•fYlhlng goeal DELIVERY DEPARTMENT Cell Petet or Ray ..,.II $3900 87S.1879. .,,o .,,,., .. , CO!'"'Yed to 0< • contt"Q9"1 creon0t of e xt 1204 lllNWTf/T Ottlce turnlture, sota·a. McLAREN'S BMW I lllSllF ..... n Porsche 928 79. blk eno "°"' n.io Dy •1 u~1 1t1e <1ece11seo you mutt Ille port W•tern Corp la Available In Newport refrlg 542-0377 Moo-Fri llal lllOIMS metallk: cellular phone, 5 MIO 0..0 of Trull in tile your tl81m wnl\ the eoun Of STITl •• E"'• looklng tor detail orlen-..,. 1 h 11 h·... propeny 11tue1e0 In MIO prHent ·' to the petSOnal -Beach Experie nce p I "-i l 6A.119 M·Ft111 9,S-Sllll6 213or714837·2333 1.,..., Ht er. PO t..., Coullty end Stlll delcrtbeO repreM111a11ve epP01nteo by Store lnCdMnee<!t SalM tedperaonforourAcct. preferred. but not ttl 1U1aa1 -626S EuclldSt whla. S t7.500 947-79-43 WllfYILLl&lll in lllac:Mci .EXHIBIT A 1riecoun w11h1nlourmori1h1 Peraon, F/T 5 Daya. )(Int Dept CRT exp. helpl\ll neceaaary. Must have de-Boa Const 51 long 1260 Fullerton. CA "J•m • or ~-S480 USED CARS & TRUCKS me<Je 1 Per1 hereof lrom 1t1e d1te of nr11 ,._ working conda. EapeolaJly Alto cuttomer 1erv. pendable tranaportatlon. Heating brick. water bowl 714-680 6300 I :r•:I TOYOTA ,77 COfolla. 5 COME IN OR CALL FOR The NOrtnwee1erty 65 1"11 a.;•nce or ieners u prOYt<*' fine cllentele. 675· 1010 phone contact Type and be over t8 yeare old & cage 64t·1982 213-691-6701 ~ • lpd, gOOd cond . s 1000 flH lPPUISAl or th11 pon'°" 01 Lot 218 of, 1n Sec1'on 700 of lh• 40~6 wpm. Non-tmkr Seven day delivery with &3 873 6726 Newp()t'I He4gl\la 111 ,,,. Cny Probale C.ooe ol Ca111orn11 TILlll&llmll prel Carol 851-0517 no collectlng. Call Dally Cute Ltiasa Apao Puppies, -S . OeLILLO ol Coe11 M .... County ol The t•me ror flllrlQ c1aim1 wilt APPT SETIERS l;>Cp. pref. BOOKKEEPING apeclal· Piiot 10AM ·4PM Mon· AKC, 2 male, 1 female. LARGE SELECTION OF WI SPIOIAIJD II Toyota Corolle '82 4 OlmlLfT Orange St11e of C111tor11la, no1 exp11e prlo1 to lour Salary plut comm. Morn. lzlng In Pay-Roll, Tuee & day • Friday 642-433J Brown, blk, wilt 770-0152 NEW & USED BMW'SI IEIOl .. llU door, Exoel cood, 10 mi, 182 J 1 BEACH BL VD ., Pet mep recoro.o rn bOOk montllS f•om ,,,. Clate of tile or noon thlt1a avlll. Cell Union Reportt 642•9015 HimtSlameae kitten. male, Liii IUOl llW $.4800. call 720·1950 HUNTINGTON BEACH a PIQe 83 of M1IC4ll1aneou11 ne1nno no1oce aoove Linda, 650-5723 10 wka s75 957•0607 VOLUME SALES ---141-tOll; Ml·HJ1 Mepa. 1n !he olfloe of lhl 'f'OU MAY EXAMINE in. TELEPHONE SOLICITOR BREAD & BREAKFAST IPNITllITT SERVICE & LEASING AU IUIH I lllllU County Recoro.. of M id 111e kec>1 by !he COt.1'1 ")'OU INN, very nloe, In New-Men or Women with de-Piaa11 A Or1aa1 3670 N Cherry Ave LONG IY= fll WI Wa,T YHI COl.lnty lytrlQ Southeat«ty l ire 9 P9'SOI' 1n1ereated in • Eaty WOfk. $.4-$7/hr. po~ ., ___ h hll Opening• le ed t B~AcH .. llW 1111 ...... Of me Southeasterly line Of lhe .. :ate vo..i mey _,.. Call650-1316 ror''1t::""tollowtnn poa-pendab cart want or 1059 =-1111 Ill.mil -1 Tract No 2836 upermap uPOnthe a.ecut0<0<edm111-.. ., Dally Piiot routes In Hunt· BABV GRANO PIANO • No. Cherry ••11·405) See Tooy Rajal rec0<de0 111 l>OOk 88 P-0-oa:rato• Of upon lhe al· laM/lnt1araat1 FtRloon~.T DESK CLE RK-lngton, Harbor & Seal Mf g by Star S750 T(rl,J~)llnsHw·.~J~ 714/557·4040 37 ofM11Ce1taneou1Map• i11 to111ey tor tne eaecvlor or Ss20 "' Beach area. Some collec· 7. .,... ....,.,.,. Ille ottie. ol Ille County Re-e<1m•n11tre1or end Ille .wllh ""'!"~~~~~...,,;,.;.-o1 mature, eJtper. w/people. tlons ln11olved. Call Art 94 ·7943 or 5•6·5460 OPEN SEVEN DAYS c:or<le< 01 Miid C0u111y EJO· ll"tf! court ""th P<OOf or - LIH ..... llLYH'S FIT, P/T Broadslock 842~333 PIANO 't:J·m:; an. lg c:ec>I lhefel•()tTI ,,,. NOr1h· VIGe • Wf•llen 1eques1 ... , Is now hlrtng full & Plfl· MAID • mature energetic, Reconctltloned Uprtght •Im° -,. eu1er1v 210 00 1"1 lleo •ng '"•' rou <lestfe apec1al time employeea to WOftl well groomed, Engllah PLANTSCAPE Int /Ext Moving must sell $500 eN>wn as Percet 1 on 1ne notice of 1ne '"'"O or an 1n-mornlng & lunch 11,,,. mother language FIT ~2· t t07 Cny of Cotti MMa County ventO<)I allO at>()t'a1_,,.,.e ol thlrti We offer tlexlble Call Mary, Moo·Fr1 &-5. 25-30 hrs Plant ••P · ot OttllQe State ol C111-estate assets °' of 11\e pet•· hours & u pgraded 476-068a owntranip.751·227t STUNNING Studio upright ~ FORD '67 Mustang,3tpd, l0<n11 USllO'#t'l <>fl aPttotl hO!'SO<llCCOUntsmentioned p111no Polished Ebony big 6 eng, gd bdy $950 Meo llle<l n C>oolo u PeQe on Secuon 1200 eno 1200 5 ol salanes to enthutlutlc C ARPET CLE AN ING I.I.A $ 1200 o r best offer Call 673-3460 10 1ee t 1 o• P1rcet M1ps 1n thtl 11>e Cehl0tn•• ProD11e COO. well-groomed lndlvld-HELPER E ager & Chalr$1de and minor lront 859.0322 on1Ce or ,,,. Couney Re-Mattlf'I 0..-.tn. In '1o '"· uala Apply In pe<1on amlblllout Over 18. office. Career opportunl· "ORD '70 LTD 871<. mt tl>'<ler 0 , S.•<l County 24n llRdcMeee• ll>tece, Fulf.. 10A¥· 11AM Sunday lhru Good appearance ty ror mature person as.-"'URLITZER Sptnet Plano Ono owner. S tOOO OBO ,. P u'}F 252 38 9'1on. CA 921135 Thurlday at 3095 Htrbor 5-48-9373 s l1tlng In a pleaaant Frultwood finish, xlnt a ttem•.--S.0-1504 after 5·30 pm Tl\e 111ee1 a<Jar ... 11\Cl PubhsheO Orange Cou t Blvd. Cotta Mesa cuhlerl ntab & expanding den· cond . S800 86t·9150 Of *' ••12 Ill JIO SE •.I wkdays Wknda anytime 01rie1 common oes;onation 01111~ 1>1to1 Oc1ooe. 14 t$ l SS tel practice In So Leguna I' -1 -6-060 Yellblk typer earl "ord 7 1 Maverick, runa 1f a11y 01 1ne rM1 P•<>Pe'1) 2t t98~ ••ra ...... , .••• ,... 499-161 t Uk for Donna ·~c .. efully pt~ed ' . gd, $500 Obo Contact <le Hr I 0 . <l • 0 0 ". I s * II 01 * It growing & Is now hiring iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii "d\Jli trfcycle, Uke new. ~ 8MW'a In ~A41 8ob 0 642.1505 pyrpone<J 10 be 490 Eut --------- • caahler1, pe<sona know!· locks. baske l 00 back od(. . S12 ... , '10th Stree1. Coll9 Mese P\151..IC lfOTICE local corp. hu Mve<al ed,.....ble In nutrlclan & IEAL ISTITI ,.. FORD '83 Mustang yellow C11oeorno1 92627 Ml · 782 openlng a avell NOWI c~"'; lor a natural food SALESPERSON wanted ~50. 645 " 5177 ---~--· a dlf., Jll IUW & blk"ot lo mo '"'° "'"' '°" ""'~'•"" ''""" •1CTIT10Ua au-H Mus1 t8+, arilculate, 3 restaurant It lnterea1ec:1 for Active ltland office MIFn UClll IOO 11'°9 Wftefe you II__... ::ass. S8995 84&-34 ,_. du1c111ms i11y U•b•llty for a") NAME STATEMENT yra res .. witting to be and wllllng to •--rn and -9MW. i ,._,. inc0<•ec1ness of t~ ttreet T~ lotlow•nQ persons ere t al ed C II 3 ·6l>M H B ""' Comml1Slons only. Ex· New (Boys) $75 ~-. • 1 1001 QUAIL ST . N.B. • .. •fEP aodresa 11\<l Oll\er common <lo•ng busmen•• SUNRISE r n · • • · · · grow pleaae apply at perlenced. Call Betty 642-5487 GO ... ~ 833-9300 • <l ll<>fl 1 a 111 ASSOCrA•Es Ona C1v1c 964 • 2890 tor appt, 22'5 E 17th St, CM Walsh tor appt. ~~ CIOlllt 414 ,,:::~• 1 ny own Plaza Su•te 290 New(>Ot'I Al SEIYIOH Chlld Care • Live-In Mon· WATERFRONT HOMES S,1rtia1 Ctt41 1065 1J , ' MOB GT '67. Looka OOOd, This 2 Dr comes with p/1 S•IO Mle w111 be m1oe but Beacn CA 92660 I REAL TORS 673-6900 Cheap! Tmmedlatel Pool ~1 .. )111•1111 red, runi. needs woril xtra cap fuel tank. ate w1tl\ou1 c;o....,an1 Of war Sunn" Goto Circie Pan Thtt Orange Coaet Dally Fri, Engllsh speaking, tbl,fullslze$250 Plnball • $1200 968·3t06 prep &more (Ser•ooo21 ranty,uoreae onmpl•e<1 r• ners 1 Ce11forn1a 1om1t9<l Pllol 11 looklng f()( help In cooking, llte hHkpg. mach $200 759_ t592 _ ,... ~--Atta 1 •tlll QArOlng 11119 POIMSaton Of oannersl'lop One C1v•~ Its Ad Servlcet Dept., Own pvt 1Br Apt. Utlls llllPTlllllT _ ~ • eocum°'enc. 10 P•Y ,,.,. Plua Suite 290 Newo<>n RetpontJbllltlea w411 In-pd Food allowance + Real Ettate lnv•tment Man'a goll clubs. beg & BILL YATES ORANGE COAST I rwnalnlng pr1nc1p11 Mini 011 Beec:tl Calttorl'lla 92660 elude pick up and de-aalary. Reta. Avt 11/15. Company. Prot ... lona l ca rt Make o trer "" Jeep/Aeoault 1,,. ~-MCUfed Dy MIO Tl\11 ~ .. ,.. .. •• con· livery of ada, pulllng 673.-2056 at1 6pm I el 830-95-4.4 3MW 3201 '77. lo ml, silver, VW--hndle 2524 Harbor Cotta Mfta , 0..0 Of Trutt. wtth lrtter•t ducteO by 1 limned penner tearlhee11. proc snrf. am/tm, ac, "1pskn1, ,1111 ... _.... Mt-•21 thereon u prOV\ded 1n MIO \ INP eaalng atl tud appearance re- :'r!tr ad~ie!. can.ty g;;_a~.oir..°s:o1~~500. 1988SOG~NT l-•,.... OLDSMOllLE 1:'=~1le-=-ic:~c:!:; ~:: ;.r= W• llleG and onty pricn ...,.._,! of Trutt. '-. c:flerO-and w111\ llwJ County Cler1' of Of. rm.111 be ex1remety , :Ao '74 OeVllle. wtlt. MK 12011 .. /•t San .,., CllJistr-lll& ·~of tl'tl TN*!• and enoe C-ty on 59'>temt>es ganlzed, respontJ Tru1,.rtati1a ml. like new! Local ownr ... .,_..11 of.,.. truat• crea11d by Wd 20 1~s able to work wet -$1600 548-3644 •tilt tor eo mot IS7.-00 s 199 Down, Cloaed end o..a of Tr"" '°' '"' "'71• others on approved credit. CEL commereial ieue •mount ••11on1bty Htl· PuOhttleO O<af'941 Cout CHILD CARE needed In q uired Light typing ot my Eu1bluff Home 2 756-8801 andldate Of· dya/wtc 8-4. 18 mo old uuu•1111m l>te and boy. Liie htekpg. $30/dy For mini l10t101 Ille In I with Exp & reta req'd. N/tml<r Hunllngloo Beech, Santa 644-1088 Ana, Cotta M..._ Retired Send reeume Al Ptwer IMtl 7012 'J:uSnT9UNl:.IOl~sWagongreat Tota.I leue Obllga11on votvo S44 'S8. onty S200 .11 • -s&ftlS UAll ma1ecl 10be1 167 30000 0.11y P11ot Octot>es 7 '~ 21 Smith, to. s 18.624 00(00 t848I dnvea 1t a-..y 962-2331 -... Tile~..,..,""°" ..a & 28 198$ llAlllOIU 101 Cat Ski( Qd 11\ape $1750 73-6269 1U 5514040 l1•/U2-1tll Oee<l olT•ut1 ._e1010tee• ..-."81 tn: Liu OllUDAllRUO couple preferred. Otrloe. For Chrlt tltn School bookkeeping & phone ex- T 16835 Brookhurst, F II perlence hl lplul Wiii .... L, PIUT $600 Obo 873-3460 )atsun '76 280Z. red/blk. --"°"'° 78• sesoo Obo Perf -c e...u1eo an.:: Otll•veteo I() ,~ ..... JC MnTJC[ -J condl 58k m1, Mull -10 OLDSMOBILE 8 1 u11as.s unoetJrgneo 8 wr•ll8" Dec· __ .;..,.UIM.=.;~..;.nv.;.;;.....;.;~-p I h 1llO 13 rt Boatoo Whaler Excel 4 speed, alr, bra. tinted 't:'m:• : appreciate 675-2545 I Ca1a11. 30K mt, df'll cond. i.ratton of default ana o.. • • I cond 25hp E11lnrude windows. runs great ~ 111 ,._ loaded S7200 ._ ... , s·~ _... 111 962-33t2 train Pa rt-time worl< Ca ll 775-3700 or CLERK Full or Part-time 75 t-1300 tor application. C.lfl .... , DI. Traller/cover Many 9JI· S-4200 Obo 5-4&-5239 : vOLl/0 82 GL Sdn Fully 673-60io or 673-8-497 ;:;;~:, ~.:,~"'.:w,-E:. I ...... """ 759 n 11111 .. loaded Sunrl See to ap-.,~1 T ...... ~ ..... ~ r ...vvv. '"" "" ::>ATSUN '80 10th An--S prec S9500. "•2-9772 I UNl"ERSITY lion 10 ~ . ..., u.~ -..·~ 'Sanklng --0 zx L ""' " c.uteO MIO Notice of o.. TELLE.. t985 18' GREGOR SEA nlveraary 28 o .n:;-:--7 t Pop Top Cam,.,_ I OLDS MOBILE/HONDA flull .,,0 E1«1ton 10 Sell 10 HAWK lell oH trailer at miles. a ll xlras, Im· t986 ••1Gurv MA " P/U "" ~ WR llY •••s ' I MUST SEEi "" n ~ Xlnt N-eng. trans and ' '"" -oe rec:0<deO 1n 1ne counr, P1rt Tl• 55 mph, damage to bot-I macu ale so DOWN brks S2750. 6-45-60 t8 r·" ... I •• wnere rne ... , D•O()er'I) s tom transon & co11aol. S 10,000 Serious In· I and only .....,.,. 1oca1e0 Excellent opport cost $800 1 mo ego, seH I qulrles only PLEASE $11.31/10 vW Dasher 75 Runs FH ISll UIS O.te S.01.,,.,oer 'JO 1985 resporiilble lndl $350 OBO Also damao· J &C5--025 t good. good llree $600 2850HARBOR BLVD IMPEIUAL CO R .. Oft · work 20 hours pe eel 1977 Evlnrude 70 HP )atsun '82 280ZX. 2 .. 2. • tllC for 48mot on Call 53&-5726 COSTA MESA ATION 0' AMElttCA, .. Previous bank O/B S200 OBO 646 0343 1 I d d I I approved credit CEL - ----540-9640 utd IMltM, P.O .,. 13,, perlence preterr • auto, oa e w x ras. Total lease obllgallon vw Thing '74/0ra nge Ian Otevo. CA tt1'2. 1•1t) petlllve salary 11' LJ•llL I Only 2 t 5 actual mi. orig $7,&76.80 (008402) Runs & looks great What a Wonoertu1 WOfl<l 212.100, e, Cl•11dl• callPeraonnelOep s2500 6.{5-6109 ownr, like new Sll,500 114 551 4040 I St475.Call53&-3410 of Shopping rognr a'j '"-'"ton.Vlce PreMdent (7 14) 780~ I 552-3742 or 651· 1404 Jim -, ilOO your lmgen1os everyday' Puo11tne0 Orenoe Co11s1 ' Sail hatl 7014 lcEARARI 85 306 GTSI, 't::• ~ llatll h•nhc Da t1v P1to1 C1ass1l111d Oa11v 1>1101 59'>1em!>e! JO Interviewing 2r VIKING, red/tan lo m1 pert cond I -.....!..._ ~MC ·67 Rambler. runs Ads To place yovr ad Ocro0&<, t4 •q85 M ~6q A,ppolntment must ~II 'TIUSI sell bsl olr 858-0880 taam•11r I gd S500 ObO 432-9552 call 642-5678 and tel 8 12121 $.4 25/Hr starting. Con-STIOl/1111,,. P /T tact Paul 2602 Newport Blvd, Co1ta Mesa Karen 5-40--0979 I Cosmetologlat/ Ant. f\1..,•1011 • 107 Main St Balboa LI<:. fiftf11 llltttlalt unity lor req. Call 67S.6412 needt CASH A/TICKET vlduala to PERSON P/tlme nights r week. COlllELOllS Apply evening 4 to 6 Ing e x· Part time carrier co~maet-weettdeys. 964·1422 ed Com-ora wanted Help boys Hlflll IEDllITT Please and glrl1 sollcl1 new lfflOEH I aubscrlptlons on their lmmed Openings. Paid va-paper routes Must enjoy working with 10-13 yr cations, Holidays Car & By olds Early evening hovra phone a muat. 8.4&-2868 Only work days/ flexlble hrs VENDING MACHINE AT- Commission only TE NDA NT Al High fl"ICTTTlOUa _,.... •• NAMf ITA T'HIPtT Tne IOIUowlng ~· .,.. <lcwio t>Y5'nesa as SECuR. ry BENEFIT SERVICES 170f! H•rt>o< 81YO C.»t• Mesa C.t 9'1626 Wolhem I.Pe WMY6' 282• Allt1111on Hec.1M1<l1 "1e.gne1 C1o 9 ··•~ · ~1• llusoness s con- aucled Cl• 11n dlO•v•Clu&I W1ll1a,,, ~~ W&8v&r ""r"~ ~rautmt-o"t .a, • 190 .. ,,,.. ~,.,p Cnu,.,h l.IPO-o~ \)t an9e Co...nh .,,. ~PU!tmoe< I I tQ8'> FaM&t P .,r "'""" · ng11 Coss• 1a1h. z:>o, ,, L1c•roet .. ,, 2' --------------·-1 -.J C'(OUlass1he<J .o\d-\/150r help ~ S700 645-6109 --:1 ~Ba n '" ~;'~~,:1000 ;:=::====------------------, ,), 64~t09 TODA Y'S °\(•\\ Vov !!'~!a~d~!, 36' SYDNEY CROSSWORD PUZZLE " Call Bruce Em1ley Scllool Exp reQ'd &42-.4321 ex1 206 (714)771-23 t 1 HAllEDllST • YmllUIY HOEn. l&IU PILIT Sat only 9am to 4 pm '"' lrt Apply In pe<son Mon thru 6 , ~ '£IP' Equal Oppty Emp I Cruising Sloop Xlnt cond Ready to sall Ca li 0MARR tor details 6-45-8330 • • • • •• • • I Hobey 14 turbo kit, ex-1 • tras S 1400 6-4&-3130 T d 0 b 1• -ues ay, c to er ;i e p Al SU,./Dtc .. /Sttrl_Jt ARIES <Man:h .!1-.\pnl IQ) Detail'i whic h had tlel.'n m""ng or : !'-7022 elusr"e ~111 suddenh become 3\31lable .\nswers art' found heh1nd • OFF *•WANTED Slip for scenes. \ou'll gam '1ial 1nformat1o n t'onc.:mmg linanual \tJtu' ._1f unl' • very clean 45· Sallboat. who make~ man-v claims. : long term Wiii pay top SS TAURUS(..\ .. p nl 20-Ma\ .!0) (;1' dull rein tO 1ntelleuuJI l un1,~ll' • & consider use or boat by Make tnquines, demand answer!., espcuall) 11vhere poS!.rhll· pJ nnt·r· : The D a ily • ~1~~erto~;~~3~1111 Tor ship o r o ther legal affair; .:nter picture. Member ul oppo~1tt· \C'\ • d 1· bl d respon-• Deep Freeze $80. Gu orlll expresses interest 1n no unccrtam manner. ,nee s a re 1a e, mature an • S50. 641.0314 BOAT & 45' MOORING GEMINI (May 21 -June 20): Focus on prac:t1l.al 1sSUl'\, h11mc . 'f d NO • Harbor entrance t{,S h 1 1 t. •sable person to v e n y nf'!w or er s. G.E Wuher and Electric prtme loc s 12.500 1~ m1g1 .:n' 1ronmt·nt. domestic ad1ustmeot. maJor pure n<>c o u'~-~ 1 c!!l or • : Drye r/Gold. Gd cond. 675-6631 6051995--0142 I art obJCC't. Lunar emphasis on work m e-thods. pet'i. a b1ht\ 1n c:kar o ld ••SELLING. , S250tbotti. S4&-8672 1D-B s t ..... debts ry oat torage on ,,... I · •1 Applicant mus t have a good p hone•, Reoondltloned Appllanoea I water, Newpor1 Beach CANCER (June 2 1-Jul) 22)· ~ura o m\.Slen C\li.t<, •• 'itrnano Retrlgs/WUher1/0ryert Cell 675-5901 accents intngue. secrc1s, clandestme arranscmC'nl'> Ph\\ll'JI attr:ic· •personality. Training will be provided.: S50 to $300 t~~7 Su· isupa Avallable. 28. 30. 32. 1100. romance play ma1or role Look behind '>Cene,. rc..illll' ~omt• •1 1 Learn valuable o ffice slcills, work with •1 pe<k>f. CM 83 3 35· 3333 w Coast Hwy. persons are not being en11rel) truthful Retro S200, WllMr/d~ NB 9-5 Moo-Fri LEO Uuh :!3-Aug. 2:!): This IS )OUr "lake \hargl•" da~ I r mph,t\t\ •nice people and earn S4.25 per hour to: S145 eecil, dlthwllMr I t 7 4 on pressure. -deadlines. respons1b1ht). greater finanltal rev.Md ',•start! M onday-Friday, 4:30 10 8:30, '• !:,~ f~~ ~&-$5~~ 11111 intensified love rtlat1onsh1p. Older tndl\ 1dual figures prom1ncn1h n • n le I014 VlRGO l ~ug. 23-Sept. 22) "o u have grand opponun11' t{1 rt.ll h •Sat 6:00 to 10:30 am. • s.ara hvy du~ di• w~ ~·ft!• be)ond prc.,.1o us hmttatio ns. M essage or call pro' 1dt•s green hitht tnr : Please call Eileen to schedule an: I!~· ~ ~~oo= 2t1~=1~r':c,WS"i:.;1'*& exciting pro1ec1. Yo u'll hav e Wlder audience. greater chan1.:c tor I I otr Gd con<!. 545-4-009 easy M500 842--0795 Ev financial reward Ro mance figures prom1nentl) •appointment. 642-432 1. : Stow OV9n & micro waw 548-8823 Nwptr II Mtra LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22) Strtss d1ndepend~ncC' crfat1' II\ • • unl1 · Free ttand'g, 109 'll In 11 " w1lh~ness to make new start in p1onernng 1~11on 1nam 1a picture • EOE e oond,.,..,. S200 ~7907 • 1s bn ter than onginallh ant1c1pated. Pro tect posscss1oni; -i;omeo ne • """' 1ur1y ..,, oont11necs s 1900 "' •••••••••••••• ····~· , • ..._ 1114 846-.4072 I wams something ror not tng an ••" I SCORPIO (Oct. 23-No' 11) Follow through o n ti~t 1mpm.s1o n-. Af ter School-coOCA i matc;t;lng Ctr .•••• ,,,. ... , Hunch IS on target. family reunion I~ featured '\)U'll b(o In\ 11c.-J 10 S d t J b ' t=:. ::'k>n~ S.:Jt! lntttn IOll go unnet dining. Cyde continues high. you 'll make 'aluable \untatt tu en 0 S. otr 840-0388 cdM ew AoAbA PASSPORT '13 Aquanan plays unusual role. C70. Lo rnl, QOOd con-SAGm ARlUS (Nov 22-Dec 21) What had bttn a sou rt'<' of tear Do You Need S ~sh ' And Dining Mt, whit• Of'lental d lllon 15~0 /o b o . could be transformed into valid reason for celebratio n . Good nC'v.s A Oood Job To Start The New Year? ~~::'i~clo~:;" ,!~ 546-3874. °' IM&-8440 comes v~lona-distanet call Focus on travel. educatio n. S«rtls a nd S25: belt offn 845-8468 att 1 !I erad1c•t1 of doubt. Gemini plays role. W• are IOOklng for Jr. High and High 9 t1 F~ell Provlnclal 'tlm&tllll'TU CA.PR N (Dec 22·Jan. 19): Ch e(k fine pnnt. be a~u'C' ~)f Sehoo4 1tudent1 and otMtl Who ~Id Chintz Fabric Sota & minor de&ails ;cb~nno1 be ianored. You rrtc1ve e'<cellen1 rcPon~ einjoy talklng with P90Pte t.nd WOfklng M•tchlng Lov1 8 111. 111 l .41 / •t based o n recent revisions Focus on rom a nce. cmot1 onal fulfillmen1. wtth other ttucMntt their own ege. You 12001oeo e7:M7~ • tu .•• moe,, CEL. OAC 'idded income Sc.orpio native plays role can Mm 126.00 to 860.00 MCh ... In 'MT ... ,. SOUTHERN CALIF AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Fcb 18): Profcu1on1I upcnor o pens comtn"910na Ind MUCH MOREi You etin LES N7~133 2~;2°c::~ d111.otuc which should pron fn.11tful Be ready for $urpn~cha~ a wont PART TIME In the -'temoon1 and El TOfo vanety o f sugnllons. Y o una penon could be your teertt ally ~andlttllhave~of "-Ume. °:10:. ~~~=~ 111•1111 G emini. V1rao, Sqtuanus penons fi&urt pn>mtnentl)' You T BE FREE A R SCHOOll *50. dlnM1e aec *50. 111 / pf.SC!3 (Feb. I ~March 20): Family member wants &o taFUt about W• offer oomptel• training and PtcMde '*"new 14fr7058 travel. sp1ntual values. ~ ~uve. display enthuMu.m ocui o n traneportatlon. TN9 ta NOT A PAPER ~A: 1 FT HEACUlOAN Pam MU communtcauon. cduc:auon. ab1ht)' 10 exprns your o wn \'te~ in ROU't& AHO 18 NOT SEVEN DAYS A HJOl BLEND fhovotX 1188 PartinO d ynamic manner. Taurus D.IU'\C will be helpful WEEKI Come out' Ind t*P ut get new 8ACR1'1Ce 1 150 :)Ut, eno '200, trane ltOO. rr OCTOBER 1118 YOUll BlllTRDAY you art an1$UC. creat1,-e. ouetomers for our~ and have a 7141~t4• anytime ..., enct seo. tnt 9'c or I sensitive, ba'·e unusual vo~ and 1 .. sweet &ooth .. You art lo>•I 10 g,...t time dotng 11 Vou heve nothing to IOii: kMMM. c:NW, tooc all tor 1350 ua-7212 famtly, constantly wHJUStltt. usually s1de W1th the undmk>t. Peopk foee and a tuper Job to gain. Cell todty ,...., ...,., -.cs. Cott / ~ _ wtth pro blems appear to Oock to you Many, howt~r. arc onJ) too and~ you can atat1 tomouow1 1111:1111211. ~ llM Wllllllf to take without PVl.1\1 anytb1na tD rttum. Taun.a Libra.. Call Mr. Earl _,. ~ ~ .-ifONb '16 m no"*· $corp1o pt110n.s eUY 1mporwu roles lo your bk You bttomc more Friday 9am to 5pm 460 lm/l/h E. 17th St. CM • Daily Pilai 'iitrclia .. iH btiifa" 6010 • * •VERS WANTED RT TIME • Bronze statues. antique : glass & lurnllure, etc ICE WORK • 963·2t63 : AHliHCtl 6011 • I Ill IPPllllOH Pilot Circulation Office• LES 957-8133 AC ROSI t Stun 5 Fr-av pan Q •ss•v ves~ "'Open·-ave laDric t 5 H•Qnttr 11\an t 6 81zat •orll I" Addict 18 Mea l CUI F1 t9 Spurious 10 Pulsate 2 t Cleerono t3 ll'\011r1duals 14 Blkttr\' •lttm 26 EPOChll 28 Tu,,. 29 Soma'"'" 33 Malo.a & TO 36 lllCrulte<J 3• o-r 38F~1le 39 ~ Scotch t>'lai. 40 S1tua11on • • Molner Gyn1 42 lrotetueto<>n• •3 P·omo••no ..... 1)1(1 ..... 44 vou H Y 46 Py(I 4, Fatt mo- 48 Adorn 5<' s...,,,b .. 55 4pe 'lo.in 5 7 In,_ .;1111• 58 ShaYft &O Scnnoui. 6 t louO ~oun<l 6:1 CCMnc•O"' 6J C'18•0<"•~ 64 81ue ~·11~ ptQ....,, 65 Sol 66 •1 ont1t•~ 6' l aor• DOWN t Su•t : •a1u'' ' l .,,tl ' f \J"'fW,. .. "' •(\• ~ G•tittl'• 6£11·-· " •• • 'IM\{f 8 ~ ... ·oe•• q C>umtno. •o Suooort '1 Lowt\ wot ~,. l:t' E~MI 13 s." a°""' n City ana ,.,. 25 Uac 111"4' •OC' ""IVK>UI ~ IOl 'nO :• "tU..,~h• r ,o '\, ~ •• "4. .. ,. ' ~''"'°" '· ...,,,,.081"" .. • A il"'lu!'t" .. -~"·· ... '' .~ .. •r ..r· \9 'H~•.-• ."' •t: ·~ .. ......... ,. o-o~u'e ' • '"'N$•f'"" 4 5 Sut>r«tt 4 f '°4f'(t'JI 41\ Outbursl\ aa• • ., • -.: ~(\vi. ~ J•''"' ~ ,, \ '-.i& -"• Pf'*f '• •r "f Bt'·t...., •.af.'1058 or IU·MU '°...,a. Med &111 "° .,_or on. .aaaUy K11vt tlus year. y:ou11 u..a_ you11 bt moft a...aft or body -~~Call NOW , _aaoo_ -..Mwt lfMIC. M.,ordomesticl(tjvsunen&~_pt~~ ~bcr ~ -~====-~==~!!!::=~:-'::=-:~:::::!!!!!!!!!!!!!:::::::=::::::===~ • ( l •lO Orange Coat OAJLY PllOT/Mondey, October 14, 1985 ,...:= ~ ~~ ~ ~~ "!!!!."'!!.!!!!!..• =:.,~~w':'::d ,.~!....,.~ of ~ Md eddr r uted by the located at Hit Atton. °" ~ n , tW .. AEATIONAL. COMMON ~·;:::;.,.. ,,.... to """ In .,.. 'CnYO.'~u.NMCY ~~~wn.::1 11~-:=~·- 1''00 Lm. F\AST AMI"'-AAEA"OFIAIOTAAOTNO. doing bulnen H : COld91 .. wfUI IM l9ww Cl' C. 1.AC8Y, CITY CUM, put .o fw M 11,_ to the bt Mid trensfworl &1 Mid CAN TITL.t! INSUAANCI t00t7, AS HT ~ IN AMAOHtCS 2&681 ~ -b'ct. ~ ....... ..,, ..,.,. ........ .,...... Intended 1ra111f9f.. ,, •. loc:elloll II: IAACIL. WIRE COMPANY, I c.itfoml9 00'· THE Dt!OL.AAATION 0' Hiil l.n #Q l.eune Hlllt. CA W0111m•l'1 Compenlie~ '1 none. AND CA8L.£ CORP. PGtlllon, • TNeM, °' 8uo-COVENANTS. COHOn'IOHI tH63' ' lnlutence end ~ In-P\lblilfled Orange eo.t The Ml°M(I) and ~ Thet Mid bulk tr1111'9f II o .. IO r Tr u •I •a or ANO AlSTA.ICTION8 f'O._ 8...s PoufllM. 25591 -anoe. hid cf**°' bMS-Delly Hot Oc:tow t4, 21, eddreM of the lntlllded Intended to be con.um· SubltlMld TNlt•, of tt\al LAUREL ,OINT TOWN lftdlen H11 Ln lfG l.iOUN cMrw' bond lflell be In #I tMa tran1fenM(1) are· SHIAN mated at the of'lloa ol oertMI Deed of Trum •· HOMES, A Pl.ANH!.D UHIT Hiiie CA~ ' ~ of not ._ tMr M.7a3 BOA CHEN end TAN JU LAZOF. GRECO & COSS. ~tad by John 8 ~.In DEV El 0 PM ENT Al· -Poufuwt, 256'1 tn-I t,500 00. ()flly bof\dl .. CHl!N, 1t441 Sierra Mia, 19712 MeeArthur Blvd , unmerrted rnari, llld '• OOAOED IN 900K 13117 dlen H11 Ln •0 Uiguna 81*! by oomp11llee wtliCt IMN, CA 92115 #210, lrvlne, Calllornla corded May 11, 1913 M Ill· PAOE 1M5 Of °"IClAL. Hiiie, CA~ ' .,.. ,.tad "A" Of "a+" In the "8JC M)TIC( That th9 r.opwty penl-927 16 on or aft~ OctOblt ttrument fllo. 13-198108 of AECOAOS Thie bualneaa 11 oon· "IMl AetillO Oulde" wlll bf Mnt ner.to 1 d.cribed In 31. 11185 Ofl'ldal Aacord1 of Orange The ttrllt llddr... Of d\IC11ad by. "'*'9nd and.-eooeptlld. ,.. ... to 1Ubml1 NTTnOUa .,...U ~al M: ,....,, tOy •tore Thi• bulk tra111'9f 11 not Cou11ty, Callfornl•, •11d otner oommon diaalgnatlol'I Janeanda..edPowu.art ~,..,.. bondt wlll IM MAml1'AT.-..'f and ta IOGated at· 3101 E. eubjeet to Callfomla Uni· pureuant to that oar1aln Ho-of uld property: 11 Thie etal9ment -flied ~of~ of b6d The follOwlnO per90ne -Cout Hlol!w•y. CorOlla del t0tm Commercial Code Sec-uc. of o.t-..lt thertiundar putpoftld to bl 103 PlnOn with the County °"1l of Or· PMVAILINO AA TES °' doing bualneM ... l.EW18 Met' Cflllfornla tlon 81oe r900fdad June 11, 1N5 M 'rr• ln . eo.ta ......_ CA enge County on ~ WAOU In aocotdanee wttt' IAO~. BA TTEAY COM-The ~ name UMd Thi name and lddreM ot lnttrument' No. 1~2~54. tH2e 11 1"4 the picMllol11 of Sectlor PANY. 110 felt 11th Street. by Mid trantferOfl at Mid tl't• ~reo11 with whom of Offtc'al Aacorda of Mid Saki ..,. wlll be INOe · ,_ 1173 of \tie Celtlotnla L.abOt Co.ta MMil. CA 92e27 locatlon 11. "THE TOY clelma may oe flied la Ed· County, wlll u11der a11d without c:ownant °' -· Publltlhld Orange COMt Code, lhl ~al~ Thi Big "I " Batt.y Co., SHOP" ward G Coll. &ci .. l.AZOF, l>UrMianl to Mid Deed 01 ranty, e1epreea or ltnC*ad. • DellY Piiot Octo«>er 14, 21, ra111 of Pel dWl1 W-0-ano Inc, A Callfomll Cofs>or· That Mid ~lie tran1ter 11 QRECO & COSS. 111712 'rrutt Mii •t publlC aYCllon to tltle, po•-•'on 0t an-21. ~-4 1"4 hOllday and 0'4rtlmt WOftl Ir atlon, 1 tO !Mt t8th Street, Intended to be contum-Mac:Arthuf Boulevard, Suite IOf ~.lawful money of the cumbreno11 to Ntllify the ' · M-1'5 the loGallty In wNot\ the wet\ Coeta ~ CA 92827 meted 11 the ottlce ol 280. Irvine. Callfor1111 112715 Unttld Stat• of A~. l#lpald balanoa ~on the 1110 bl petiolrMd tlal bw> Thi• bu•lnaet •• eon-AMERICAN ESCROW. INC . and the IUI dey '°' llllng c.utller'1 chick ~yeb6e to note or not• MCIUt'ad by obtlllned from IN ~°' ducted I>'(' • COfporatlon 240 Newport Center Ortw, claim• by any creditor ltlell Mid Truet• dfawn on • Mid Deed Of Trwt. to wtt: "8JC N011C( of the Dlper1ment of~ Patrlcl• Beerrowz Suite 105, Newport Beedl, be October 31, tN5, wtllCh atate °' natl()nel t>enk. a l 13.32e 111, '""'the tolow-trlel ~lone. a 009)' O' Thia ttatement WU nlad Clllltornla 112ee<> on Of efler 11 the bullnlll day be!Ofl 11111 or federal credit union. Ing •tlmated G01t1, ••· CITY OP ltVM which llonflle In INofftoeOl with the County Clerli of Or-oetober 31, 1985. the coneumm111on d•t• or• •t•t• or federal NYlng• pen-end advanoae at the "*'IC llR'Vtell the City Cleft! of the City O' anoa Cou11ty on September Thi• bull< tranef9f 11 eul>-apeclllad aboYI. and loan auoclatlOn dotnl· time ol the Initial P"blleatlon C~ IN1111 and wlll bl made avelt-t7, 1915 jeet to Caltt0tnla U11ll0tm So far u 11 known to Mid cllad In thll ll•t•, •t the of thl• Notk;e of Sala: NOT1C8 lllVrTWG _. able to any lnter..tld ~ ..-ne Commercial Cod• Section Intended TraNferee(a) Mid mal11 111tranc1 10 Flret s1.2eo 20 NOTICE IS MEREi\' upon ~uaet. Thi contrac. Pvblllhed Orange Cout 91oe lt1tended Tranefetor(•l UMd A"*lcan Tltte l11eura.nce MOTIC• TO GIVEN that the _.., b6dt tor and liff't aubcontractOI Deity Piiot October 1, 14, 21, Tiie name and eddr ... ol the lollow1119 addition el eornp.ny IOcated It 114 PftOfltlRTY 0...,. wtll be reoet¥ld by tM under him ahall ~Y no« .._ & 28, 1985 th• pe11011 with whom busiMll namee end Id· fut Flflh Street, In the City YOU ARE IN DEFAUL.T Pufc:NalnO 0tvWon In Int than I.ha IPldfled ~ M-179 Clllme may be ftled 11 Gale dr ..... within the three of Sarita Ana. C.ilfomla., all UNDER A DEED OF TRUST. City of !MM, Calltomla IOt rat11 Of WagM to all wont· Proton, Eecrow O#lcer, years lul put: None. that right. title and l11ter•t DATED APRIL. 2t, 1983. UN-tumlaNng all labor ..w. men employed In the ••eeu---.IC MnTIC[ AMERICAN ESCROW, INC.. Dated s.i>t. 2e, 1915 conveyed to and now held LESS YOU TAKE ACTION wnteriall. tOOle. equipment tlol'I of the contract. r-. "" 240 Newpor1 Oenler Ortw, aWAC, AC...._. Um- by It under aald Deed of TO PROTECT YOUR PROP· uttlltlll and all ottw ltell'll L.ABOA REGULATIONS IU ... U Suite 106, Newport Beech, tted ~. ay: a.L Trull 111 the Pf<>PertY lltu-ERTY. IT MAY BE SOlD AT and lacllltlM neGHHf) The contract°' at'8ll compl) ~:ATD•N'T CA 92180, Elcrow No .... AN. lntlftdect 'rraM- ated In said County and A PUBLIC SAL.£. IF YOU IMNfor, .. ~In thl wttl'I all the requlfementl OI f • .,. 299-01 and the lut day lor .... Stall delcrlbld u NEED AN EXPlAHATION contract~ for the s.ctlon t717.5 logether wttt .,J:: ~~LINE llllnO clalma by any c:rldltOf Pvblllhed Orange Cout PARCEL 1: OF THE NATURE OF THE ln9telatlon of Dnllnloe Sy. all other~~ ODUCTIONS 8480 lllall be OCtober 30, 1915 Diiiy Piiot October 14 1916 LOT 43 OF TRACT NO PROCEEDING AGAINST tam In S~ Cfeell o mente 01 the California CR Dr w 1rni t1 CA Wfllch 1a the bullNN day M-787 10097. AS PER MAP RE-YOU, YOU SHOULD CON-Rlperien CorTtdof togethel Labor Code. lllUI .. .. na er. t>elOt• lhl ooneumm•tlon CORDED IN BOOK 441 TACT A L.AWYER. with appunenencea thereto OAAWINOS AND SPEC!· 112883 dll• epeclfled lboYI. 1--------- PAGES 29 TO 34 IN-DATED' September 23. In ttlicuccordance wtth lftt FICATIONS: A full Mt ot L.lndaDrS'; CfY7'·1 HM~ Deted: October 8, 1985 __ ..;Ml.~;;;;.;JC;....;.;.N().;;;.TJ~C.;;;.[ __ c l u s I v E 0 F M I s . 1985 IC)IClflcatlone on-• at the IC)eCffteatlonl 1 .. vallable fol venue .. .. m n• ". IHAIN aOft c..... TAN CELLANEOUS MAPS. RE-,_.T Am.MCM TTT\.I oftlCle of the ~or o4 P\I~ pick up wtthout d\arve It the 92883 JU C .. N lfttended T,_ FICTmOUI IU ... U CORDS OF ORANGE ..... AJIC. COMPANY a lie s.Mcaa. ~bllc Servlcel OMelon. Thia bueln•n la COii· ...... I ..... ITATDllDIT . . Japanese twins win in China PEKING (AP) -Japane1C twins Shtaeru and Takesh1 So bolted east Bntain's Hugh Jones at the 24.8·milc mark Sunday and went on to capture the Pekma Inter- national Marathon. "We ;ere happy to win toaether," said Shegcru So, who technically crossed the finish hne first. although the official time for both 32-ycar-old brothers was 2 hours, I 0 minutes and 23 sec· onds. His brother told reporters. "I feel like I'm 16." The time broke the previous race record of 2.12: 16 set last year by Japan's Hidek1 Kna. Hundreds of thousands of spec- tators watched the televised com- petition. with a tolAI of 234 runners from 17 countries. which slArted and finished at Peking Workers Stadium. A Japanese cheenng SC("t1on in the stands roared as the So brothers snapped the fin1sh·hne ribbon. with Jones about .SO yards behind. ··They put the boot in at 40 kilometers " said the 29.ycar-otd rod-headed Briton who took third place al 2: t0:36. "~at's aenerally the kind of 1echmque the Japanese use." Jones, who finished 12th in ~e 1984 Los Angeles Olympics marathon with a time of 2: 13:5 7, had paced the Japanese broth~n mos I of the way over the 26-mile, 38.S-yard rou1e around the Cru - nesc c.apilAI. "Although 11 may not have looked like it to mosl of the spectators, they were ccna.inlr, racing each other at the end,' Jones said. The official temperature was 74 degrees, but some of the r:unners said they had trouble wtlh the heat from a brilliant autumn sun. Zeng C haoxue led the field. of 20 I Chinese entrants. placina sixth at 2: 15:25, I 5 seconds short of his third-place fimsh an last y'ar's race. ~~~fE~eA~T~ER~~~~ =--:r~·~ &!:!!.<:=:: =lll~Clty~~ll· ~.:.bL"'~Mdual 0~~11:::'0c1°::i4c::~ ~:::'~~,,:.~~~ CERTIFICATE OF CORREC-1M laet ,_ ........... PufdlMlng OtvWon In "" SECURITY FOR COM· Thia atatement WU lllld M-786 K E t I N G I N T E R • •---D .. -DL-IC_NO_Tl_C_E __ TION RECORDED IN BOOK AN, ~ W1'01, (7M) City o4 IMnl toc:at«S r PLETION Of' WORK: TIM with the County Clertl of Or· CONTINENT AL. 468 father 1 ___ n_m ____ _ ' October 24, 1986. The "Colllllct ol ln1er .. 11 12i48 PAGE 1484 OF OF· .,._.,1 15029 ~ Can)'on A¥-Ctty wtlt 1'9tllll tan 00) per· lllOI County on September St., Co111 MaN. CA 92827 1110 prepered by the City FICIAL RECORDS OF SAID Publlthld Orange C:0..1 1nu1, Irvine, Catllornla cant of the btd emount. untll 19. 1N5 . PllllJC f«>TIC[ Murtan Fleurke, 488 Cieri! !Of the eward of 1 con· ORANGE COUNTY O.Uy f>llOtOctober 7. 14, 2t, 92714. untll 11:30 a.m. °' al wort! 11 competed to the ~1 Esther SI Colle M-. CA tract IOt BID NO 86-5 AP- EXCEPTING THERE· 1985 October 29, ttu at wNc:t' •ttlhictlon of IN City, Al Publlahad Orange ....,..t K·210S1 92827 p A R A T U S S t 1t1 m • n I ' · , ' 'Non -1 dl1crlmlnat1on Cl1u11", G "Colt Propo111 Form".: HARBOR LAWN- "Vand0t Information Form", MT OLIVE FROM • All OIL, Oil M·170 time and piece ~ .. be 1M 1'9Q111at and~ 01 Delly Piiot October 7, 14• 2l. NOTICS TO Celene Fleurke, 481 ROOM/REMODEL EXIST- RIGHTS. MINERAL RIGHTS. P"blidy oeienad. IMdll lflal IN ~ btddlr, the & 26, 1985 . CMDITORI OF Eatllef SI , Coeta MIN, CA ING PARKING STRUC· GAS, NATURAL GAS P\BJC N()TIC[ be 11.1bmlttad In ... ieo Ctty wlfl pay IN emount IC M-777 llUUC TAANanR 112827 TURE. VandOf Referanoe Form", · "Bid 0t Propoaal Bond end Mortuary • Cemetery Form", and the "Bid Crematory RIGHTS AN 0 0 THE R en~ mar11ad on ttM rwtalned upon compllallee (8eca. 11014107 Thie bu11ne11 II con· DA TE FOR BID OPENING: H Y D R O C A R B O N K--outalde, "Blda kif the In-with the requlf'emant1 of l'tllllC NOTICE U.C.C.) dueled by· • hu1band and Thurldey. October 24, 1915 SUBSTANCES BY WHAT. FICTITIOUl IU ... U 1tallatlon of DrainlGI S~ GcwerTimant Code s.ctlon Notic. 11 hereby glYlll to wlle TIME FOR BIO OPENING. EVER NAME KNOWN, NAm ITATl•NT tam In Sycamore et..ak OI 14402 and the prov191o1._ 01 K-210ll creditors ol the wllhln Catena Marfa Fleurlle 3:00 P.M. TOGETHER WITH All Thi IOllOwfllg peraorll .,. Rlperian Comdof." the contract document• MOnca TO llamad tranlfetor(•) that • Thll atatement WU nted L.OCATION FOR BID Stale!Mllt of Sub-Contrae-1625 Gisler A11e tofS and Material Febrl· Costa Mesa cat0t1", conllfned within 540-5554 thl1 bid package. mutt ac- company 111 b4d Pfopoaall GEOTHERMAL STEAM do4ng bullnellU Stocawell LOCATION OF TH( pert~ to "&lbetttutlort CMDfTORI OF bulll traMfer .. •bout lo bl .. ,,, lhe Cou11ty Cler1t of Or· OPENING City Councll ANO STEAM POWER lnterlor1 & Aoof'I, 34225 WORK: The wont to bl I*· of Sealrtflee" auut ~ made on peraonal Pfopefty lllOI County Oii ~lamber Chamber, City Hell, 10200 BELOW A DEPTH OF 600 Dohe11y Park Rd . lormedhereunderlllocal« PROJECT ADMINIS· (e-.t1t14107 ner.lnaflerdeec:rtbed. 18, 1985 Sl1terAY111ua,FountalnVal- FEET UNDER THE REAL Caplalrano B11ch, CA In the City of INIM. Count) TRATION: All tech11lcal U.C.C.) The namee and bullneea ~ 1ey CA 92708 PROPERTY DESCRIBED 92824 01 Orenge •t Alpatten OOf. ~Iona rtlattw to tlMI Notic. II ""9t:>y glYan to addr ..... ot the l11tended Publllhed Or•noe Cout The City r--... the right Per.on(t), !lfm1. °' COf· poretlon• aubmlnlng • bid may bid on all conetrvetlon Item•. or a11y combination of con11ructlon ltem1. 8ld1 eubmltted fOf all conlll'UC· tlOll ltetN muat bl bfolten down Into amount• bid l0t aacn nem ull"9, 1111 "Coetl Propoaal Form ', plul any PIERCE BROTHERS BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY ABOVE, WITHOUT THE J. Stuart o..marata, 5803 rldor. project prior to opening bide eredllora of the within tran1teror1 are: BARCEL Dally Piiot October 7, 14, 21, 10 reJecl eny or all RIGHT TO DRILL. MINE, EX· Urubo. Cartabad. CA 92008 DESCRIPTION OF WORK lt\#I bl d6rec:ted to Dan named treneleror(I) that 1 WIRE ANO CABLE COAP., & 28. 1985 p<opoeail, or 1 ponlon ol pl 0 RE 0 R 0 p ER ATE Rola In w DHmaral•. The wont to be perlonneo Jotlnlon, l.Mldlciape Super· bulk ,,.,,.,., .. •bout to bl 2851 AltOll, lrvt111, Celflornla M-771 llllY Of Ill Pfopoaall, alld to THROUGH OR ON THE 6803 Urvbu. CArllbad, CA ahalf lnClude but not be Im-vlaor, at (714) IS7.()124. For made on per90n8I propwty 92714 wWYI any lt1formalltlel 111 SURFACE OR UPPER 500 92008 ltld to: lnltlMltlol'I of dr* que9tlona relating to"" bid heNlnatler deec:rtbad. The neme(a) and bualolM any Pfopoeala 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642-9150 F E E T O F T H E Thia bu1tne11 le con· 111 Sycemore Creek · prOOeM contact Ro«>ert J. The ""'* and bue1MM addreea ol Illa Intended Ml.IC f«>TIC£ Propoule lhlll be on SUBSURFACE OF SAID ducted by• hUIOand and wll• Rlpart.n Corridor. L.aPorte, PurdlealnQ Aoant. add..-ol the Intended tranetwee(a) .,,, BWAC, A --form• luml•h•d by the LAND, AS RESERVED IN J S1uar1 Oe1maral1, COMPLETION OF WORK at (714) eeo-3821. trai,.teror. et•. JOHN E. Cellf0t11l1 Limited Part11tr· NOTICI INVITING Purchaalng OMtloo ol thl THE DEED FROM LAUREL Rolsln W Oeamarlle All worll le to bl ciompl9tec: PRE-810 MEETING: mer. MeNEfll Y and WILMA J. llhlp, 2851 Alt0t1. lrvllll, Cell-UALID "'~IALI City ol Fountalll Valley and POINT TOWN HOMES, A Thia ltalemerit WU flied wfthln 10 wortilng• dayt will be.~ meeting on McNEIL.LY, 3101 E. Coat lomla 92714. NOTICE IS HEREBY 111•11 bl eubmltlld In eealed JOINT VENTURE, RE· with the Cou11ty Cleric of Or-from the d•t• ~ "' October 22. 1"4, at l.'00 Highway. Corona del Mw, That the Pfoplt'ty pertl-GIVEN lhll lndlvldually _,. anYllOC>el plalnly marked CORDED JUNE 10, 1981 IN ange Co~.inty on September the Notlel to Proceed. a.m. In the OOlt ... IOI room CA 92925. nent r-.to le deacrtbed In ed Pf~ wtll be ,. "BID NO 116-5· APPARATUS BOOK 14093 PAGE 827 24, 1985 PROPOSAL OUARANTU "' Publk: SeMoea. at 0per. The locatlon In Callfomla general ea; 111'119n1ory, ma-OIMld by the City CMrtl of ROOM/REMODEL OF EX- Of'FICIAL RECORDS ~ AND BONDS: Eac:h bid""'' at10111 Support Faelllty, of Iha c:tlW IJlec:vtlYI omc:e cNnery and equipment, Pl'· the Ctty of Fountain Vlltey ISTING PARKING STRUC- addltlonel pages, II required. All bide 11\alf oe delivered' 10 lhe City Clerk'• otttce byl the dete and time apec:Jlled, or ahall be dlaqualllled lrom1 aecep11nce The City Cterk'1I otnoe 1111111 mar1I MCtl bid with thl d•t• a11d time , .. oelvad PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK CA!metery • Mortuary Chapel • Crematory 3500 Pacific View Drive Newporl Beach 644·2700 PARCEL 2. • Pubhahld Orange Coat be accompanied by a 15029 Sand Can)'on A\19., or pf1ncfpel bullnlll office tonally, contrac:11. tumlture untll the lime and d•t• 191d· TURE .. One PrOpOMI F0tm NON-EXCLUSIVE AP· Olllty Piiot September 30. Clt11fted or calhler'• Cllldl lrvtne. ~vatloo• mey bl ofthel11tendldtr--orla: 111\d llxtur•. leUehold Im-ltedbelow,atwtllehtlmeand I• anciOMd No bid• will be Publllhed Orange Coull Delly Piiot October 14, 1915 B PURTENANT EASEMENTS October 7, 14, 21, 1985 or by • corporate auf9t> made by Qlllng 167.()124; ume a lboYI. prov1m1n1a, and ml•-plaee aald propouluhell be acceotld ~lter 3 00 p M FOR INGRESS. EGRESS. M-711 bond on the form tumllflld ghlelnfom'8tlontoooet9trx. All other bu11nae111emae cellaneou. UN11, and II pub4lcly091Md,reedaloud, ' .. , • M-7841 0 CHICK IVERSON Chevrolet • Poreche • Audi 441 E. Ceast ..,,, •• .,.rt hH• 173-0IOO Highest Quality Sales & Service 0 s0uth County..e.ID- VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU C AL.IF'S 1 & L.ARGEST VOLKSWAGEN DEALER NEED WE SAY MORE? Parts Open M -Sat 8 • 5 30 Sal 9 • 4 p m Service m -Fri 7 30 • 6 pm 18711 BEACH BLVD HUNTINGTON BEACH 714/ 842-2000 Sii PIGSKIN PICKAROO IN WEDNESDAY'S DAILY PILOT Pick the Winning Team &YOU Could WIN 550! 0 CREVIER BMW SALES • SERVICE • LEASING 'Where Pr ofessional Attitude Prevails" Specializing In European OellHry. ExceHent S.•tlon of New and e•refully prepared U•ed BMW'• always in atocl( 835-3171 208 W. 11t St., Santa Ana Corner 01 Broadway & 1st St C losed Sundays GSTERLING SALES -SUYICE -lEASI•' -PUTS Overseas Oeltvery Spec1alrsts BMW -ROLLS ROYCE 1540 Jamboree Rd. Newport Beach 640-8444 G) JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS 1301 Ou•ll St. -N•w C•r Loc•tlon 1001 Ou•// SI. -R•ul• Dlvl•lon 0 World·s Largest Selection ol 0 Mercedes Benz A 833-9300 Salta · LtU' · Parts · Stnlct • 1.i, .._, • a 0 THEODORE ROBINS FORD U.S.A.'s # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer Modern Sales, Service. Parts. Body. Paint & Tire Depts. Compet1t1ve Rates On lease & Daily Rentals 20IO larttr lhlll., 0.1t1 1111 ••2-0010 tr 1.0-1211 0 NABERS CADILLAC ~ 2100 Hlllllll ILYI., COSTA IESI (114) 140-1100 (213) 111-1211 • Best Prices • Convenient Location •Great Location •Super Service • Courteous & Knowledgeable Sales People o COMMONWEALTH VOLKSWAGEN &n 'FAMILY STORE SINCE '53' -~ Sale• -S.rvH:e -Leasing ~ Ml-0110 .. Q a 2 1 OCONNELL CHEVROLET 2121 larMr lhlll., Cetta leu Over 23 Years Serving Orange County Sales • Service • Leasing 546·1200 Special Parts Utt 546-9400 MONDAY-FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY 8:30 AM -9:00 PM 8:30 AM -8:00 PM 10:00 AM -5:00 PM 0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS INC. • LONG TERM LEASES • COMPETITIVE PURCHASE PRICES • HUGE INVENTORY dial MERCEDES 213/714 837-2333 Next to Santa Ana Fwy (5) on Manchester/Beach Blvd. l MISSIO•l \II(.~/( . The Best Car Buys In Orange County Are At • The Dealers Listed On This Page =a' .. a a. rnarJ01 a rnarJ01 PONTIAC SUBARU • TRANS AM SLASHES • flREBIRO • 5000 ST£ • PARISl£NNC • PRICES! e • BOHN( Vlll l • GRANO PR(). LIQUIDATING • SUNBIRO CONV£RTIBU • I 1000 1985 MODELS • GRANO AM UN0£R ANY CIRCUMSTANCES We Sell Eiclt1•11t WI Wil l a. rnarJ01 NOT BE UNDERSOLD! • PONTIAC SUBARU FIERO 2480 Harbor Bhd. 2430 Harbor Bhd. Costa Mtu Newport Beach Costa Mesa Newport Btldl 714/549-4300 714/54~4300 0 BILL YATES VOLllWllEI • NRIGIE • PlllEIT • IEITlll SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE 12112 Valle 1111~, 111 il111 G1,11tr•t 411-•111 111-..00 G ORANGE COAST JEEP /RENAULT # 1 In Th Wnt For ll1w lHp Salls For I Yurs · Onin2e. sALEs -Loast. sERv1ce 1'1• H••llO• I LVD • LEASING · sU~-• ACCESSORIES DEPT 9 UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE HONDA 2880 Harbor Blvd. Costa Meaa 540-0713 3 Blocks So. of 405 Fwy. BOB LONGPRa PONTIAC Oran~ County s Oldest I Ulrgnt Pontiac 0... .. t'lhfp at ~M:tl ll\ld & ~ Gilrctan Gf'Ol4 '~ __ f7t4 ••z ... st f7t•1 .... a-w~ ~rform .tll Pontl•c warr•nty wortc. 1"99"nf..., rA wht'~ you orlglNllfy P"~hffld your car. OPAi IM*DAY llVDH ... UllTM. .... P& ' - TOllOMOW: WARM 1. '0UCA8T80N A2 Serving Newport Stech, C0tt1 Mua, Huntington Beech, Irv Int, l.agun1 Stech, Fountain Y1HtJ end South Onnge CouMy OR AN GE C OUN TY C Al If ORNIA M<>NDA V OCT OBf R 1<\ l<J8'> : . r F N T '• Astronatitsneed more muscle UCI professor tells NASA to emphasize bOdy-buildtng exercises, avoid atrophy A few words of wisdom for astronauts who want to keep fit in outer space: Arnold Schwarzenegger is in; Jane Fonda is out. This advice comes from Dr. Ken- neth Baldwin, a UC Irvine phys1ol- oai1t who is studying the effects of wei&btlessness on human muscles for NASA. U.S. and Soviet space scien- tist• have long recognized that a zero- gravity environment causes muscles to deteriorate. Coaat A Lagunan moves from deallngwtth ''Dynasty'' to a "Mickey Mouse job - and he loves It./ A3 Orange County's pro- Arab groups are dis- turbed after their leader wu kllled In a bomb blut./A3 Callfomla Inner-city gangs are traveling to affluent Los Angeles communities to commit crimes./ A4 Nation Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger argued against forcing down the plane carrying the accused Palestlnlan hijackers./ A5 The$10 bllllon "Super- fund" leglslatlon to rid the landscape of toxic waste dumps faces a tough fight./ A5 World . Moslem extremists threaten to kill three kid- napped Russian dlpk>mats and demolish the Soviet Embassy . ./ A4 Two Americans have won the 1985 Nobel Prize In medicine./ A4 Sports Rams keep right on roll- ing, they're 6-0 and three up on 49ers./81 Dodgers' edge disap- pears In St. Louis, In a big way./81 Entertainment BaJdwm said has studies indicate that pumping iron as a better way to figh1 this problem than Jane Fonda- style aerobics. Weightliftin~ and Nautilus-type mach ines provide resistance exercise that helps build muscle strength. Aerobic exercises involve repetition workouts. including running and stationary bicycling, that build stamina and benefit the heart and lungs. The surfln 's fine "There's a general consensus that we may be training our astronauts incorrectly," Baldwin said "Even after a seven-day space m1ss1on, we sec muscle atrophy. We're malung astronauts perform endurance ac- t1v1t1es. but maybe we sho uld get them to do more heavy-resistance training. especially in zero gravity." Lifting weights would accomplish little in space, but the astronauts could use other resistance exercise equipment, he said. ·"All the endurance (aerobics) ac- t1 v1ty in the world 1s not going to prevent the atrophy once they're in PHIL SIEIDEllAI Focus ON THE NEws zero gravity," BaJdwtn said On Earth, muscle atrophy occurs when a person breaks a limb and has 11 1mmob1hzed 10 a cast The con- d1t1o n also occurs 1n space because astronauts require so little muscular actl\ It) in the weightless state In has UCI lab, Baldwin has studied muscle atrophy by suspending rats in a device that prevents them from using their hind legs for walking or pushing against the cage He then looks at changes 1n these muscles. BaJdw1n said his lab rats have cxh1b1tcd 50 percent loss of muscle mass or tissue 1n JUSt two weeks. In particular. UCI research has focused on a protein called m }os1n. a kc)' component of muscle tissue It controls m uscle contractton The protean alao can be clau1fied as sJow or fast myosin. Fast myosin 11 assoctatcd with activities such as diving and spnnung. in which mus.- des contract rapidly but only for a short durauon. Slow myos1n 1s ~ soc1ated with long-<hstancc running. an which endurance and stamina arc required. Muscles undergo a continual pro- cess of breakdown and replacement of these proteans. as a result of the st1mulat1on these muscles receive. Baldwin suspects astronauts do not (Pleue eee MUSCLE/ A2) Freeway foes appeal voiding of petition drive COST asking Irvine City Council to reject developer fee plan ll 70 I local signatures on a "( 1t1zens Right-to-Vote" in11 1at1 ve. enough to quahf) for the Nov 5 ballot. If ad opted b) local 'Oters or the council the measure would require the council 10 obtain approval from Inane 'oters before charging ne"" By PHO.. SNEIDERMAl'll development fees to help pa} for the or111eo..11y,......,. propo~d San Joaquin Hills. Foothill lrvane'sfreewa} foeshaH·appealed and Eastern freev.a's a n Orange Count} (.,upenor Coun But the peu11on v.as challenged in ruhng that quashed their free""a~ coun b~ a coahtton of developers. peuuon dnve business assoc1a11ons a nd others OnTuesda).the pet1t1ongroup v.11l In .\ugust Supenor Coun Judge ask the Irvine (It) Council not to Judith R'an ruled that the COST approve a developer fee plan to help pe11t1on was in' alid She said free. finance three new freeways unul the waH are a matter of statewtde appeal coun rules o n thei r case. . concern and are not a proper subjecl Earlier this year. In ine residents for a local in111au' e calling themselves the Committee of CO T members e nlisted the Seven Thousand. COST. gathered (Plea.e eee P'REEWA Y / A2) Newport police chief Gross will hang up his star By SUSAN HOWJ.E'M' Of Ille Doolly ......... After eight )Cars v. 11h the :\ewpun Beach Police Dcpan ment. Chief Charles E. "Pete" Gross has made the 1 decision to leave the command of the coastal Cit} 's la"" enforcement agen· n . ·G ross. :~ ~1d hl' '-'111 rc11re effe-ctl\e Jul\ 1.14 n l "The depanmen1 .... tll m1 .. s him . and the numerou' programs he-., initiated since being ht•rt· ·· s.a1d :"iewpon Beach polile "pol>.esman Trent Hams. "'Tho\!.' programs h3' t' resulted in s1gn1til'an1 lnme reduv tlOO 10 thl' Cit\ .. Before he l:amt• to '\cwpt1n .\ug 17. 1911, G ross 'crvcd 2l'! \l'ar. v.11h the Los .\ngele~ Polin· Depanml'nt He left there as deput' l h1ci Bureau ofSpenal ln,ec;t1gat1on\ Ham<o said What's the matter with Monday Night Football? One critic says there are too many jocks In the booth./ Al A U,ht breeze O'Yer Newport Harbor wu jut enoqh to let thla wind aurf er cool off a bit. The wind.I will be wanner today •• a Santa Ana condition arrive.. Gross pushed thl' 'l'tgh~)rh~'kx1 "-a tch program in the w~ and implemented the "iuh<.tanl'l' .\bu!>l' (Plea.e .ee GROSS/A2) Charla "Pete" Grou INDEX Births Bridge Bulletln Board BulNneas Ctautfled Comics Croaword Death Notices Entertainment Horoecope Ann Landers Opinion Paparazzi PoOce Log Public Notices Sport a T-.vtaon W•ther A6 A10 A3 85-6 87-10 Cadillac dealer delays lot expansion A10 89 84 A9 89 A7 • 1A8 · A7 A3 84, 10 81-4 A9 A2 By TONY SAAVEDRA Of .. Oellr,... ..... A proposal to expand a Costa Mesa Cadillac dealership onto property now occupied by three homes will most likely be postponed tonight by the city Planning Commission, of· ficials said. Representatives for Nabers Cadillac have asked the panel. which meets at 6:30 at Costa Mesa City Hall, for an extensio n so they can meet with opposing residents. said city planner Reba Touw. The dealership. at 2600 Harbor Blvd., is asking the cn y to rezone four Edison coach saluted by county educators BJ aoasaT BARIER °' .. ..., ....... E.dJaoo Hiab School footbaU coach BW Wortman tw been honored by tbe On.ale Cou.nty Department of Education for makina an outstandina contribution to education. Tbc 44-ycar-old Workman, frc- ~ueotJy perceived as a coach who lives l.Dd dies football, wu saluted by co:.? educat(>n for his ectivitica on be of younpten. For eeven years, be coached airl•' buketball teams, which bisdauaflten played oa. in Fountain Valley Rec- reation ()qiutmcnt athletic lequct. He's been a member of the men's Bible at\ldy fellowship sroup al tbe Garden Grove Community Cbun::h for tevera.I ycan. He's provided frtt coaching chnacs to the local junior AJl-Amcncan football teams. And this year, he 1n1t1ated what 1s believed to be a first-of-1ts-krnd voluntary drua-tesuna program. be- pnnina with h11 football players at Edison. In addition, he's turned out scores of athletes who went on to play at m~or collcaes. Wortman, whose teams have won three CIF championships while win-runa 102 football pmca, wd the award wu ••very pleasurable." Steve Smi~ amona the five Hu.ntinaton Union Hi&h School tnastees is perl\aps the most active athletic booster, called Work- ~ -•O•SM•..N/ A.2) lots aloof Pnnceto n Dnve tro m rcsidcntia to commercial. Most of the propcny. at the entrance to the College Park tract. would be used to display u~ cars as well as for surplus parlung. One comer lot. lronting Harbor Boulevard. was cleared about I() years ago for the expansio n prOJl'Ct However, residents blocked thl' rr· zone through a 1976 referendum. Cadillac dealer Dick Nabers 1s attempting to revive the expansion. which would eliminate homes the d~lersh1p has purcha~ at 458. -l54 and 463 Pnnccton Dnve. 8W1forkman '\nd College Park residents. torm- 1ng the C1t1zens '\fter Res1dent1al Ex pansion (C '\RE) grou p. arc fight· 1ng the pro posed rezone CARE president Carl Bureman said the group has gather'ffl more than 1.200 signatures against the C\· pans1on. which he said would tn· crease smog. no1sc and traffic in the neighborhood. Bureman charged tha t b)' mo' ing deeper into the tract. N abe~ will encourage adjacent homeo wners 10 scll him their propen) "'\nd if the) rezone ( ollcge Park. no place in Costa Mesa will be safe" Bureman said '\.a~r' ha' set up an Oct. 2..& me-e11ng '-'llh residents 1n hopes of assuaging the opponent' He added that C .\RE 1<i '-'Orl>.ing nn a counter propo~l that '-'t>uld allll'-' the dealC"rsh1p It' l'\pand v.tthout "tntruding .. on ne1ghbor<i That plan could include building J "douhle· de-ck" displa~ lot. Bureman 'laid Planning depanment emplt)~l'\'' are recommending the rezone he denied to presen e the nr1ghborhood .\ statT repon C\pla1n<.'d that more customers ~ould ~ pront• to p.irl>. •In Pnnceton On' e 11 tht· npan\1on '-'t're appro,ed. increasing tht' etlel·t nn hl)mes JdJal·ent to the dealership 'ahers and has son. Rad.. general manager ol the car lot could not be reached fo r comment In. an C"arher 1nten1ev.. Rick 'abcr"' .-.aid the dealership was suffer· 1 ng from o' crcrowd1 ng as cars Jammt'd the <.entce tia ~s and rear parking lot' In fact. em plm t"e<o are forred to parl>. about a quaner of a mile awa:v 1n a lot leaS<"d trom the Coa.,t ( ommun1- t' ( l1llrgc 01<otn c1 .. If the college decides It needs that propen~ then v.e'll real!~ be up tht' CTCeL. ·• he said Laguna council to consider $30,000 loan to free clinic By USA MAHONEY Of ................. The Lquna Bcach Frtt Chn1c ma' get some cash from the ell)' to help pa)' its btMs until overdue state funds am"e Lquna Beach City Manqer Ken Frank 1s recommcnd1na that the City Councll aivc the chnac a SJ0.000 no- antcrest loan to proVldC the cash Oow 1t needs for medical supplies. em- ployee saJancs and ullhty bills.. Thepropoacd loan. which the ch nae would have to rqlll)' Wlth1n s1;11; months.. Wlll be cons1dertd by the council TuC!day The frtt chn1c has bttn unabk to pay its bdls th11 year bttaute of a drop in donatwns. said ~a Hetnd .. t''· e-cutn e d1rt"Ctor The mos th 'oluntt."t'r o peration usual!~ has enough mone' \hxkp1led to make 1t through the ncv. H'ar despite normal dt"la"'I in <itate grant~ she said But fewtr donat1onll combined with longer-than-usual del8}'\ in a.rant ~yments have forced the clinic to layoffthrtt of Its 11 employttS and bcain charama some clients JUS\ to be abfe to ll«p the door open. Hetn ck said anor about one-third of th~ who 1ttlt medical and psvchological help from the chn1c come from Laauna Beach. the cttv sho uld help keep it soh ent f ran~ <ia1J But he '-'&mt'd that any loan to the cltntl ""ould he unS«ured. If the chnac wert unable to repay. the Cit)' wo uld bt' out S \0 000 Frank said t hnic d1f'C'CtOf"\ had hoped the aty would aa.rtt to loan them ~.000, ~hll'h would bt' repaid with about S50.000 in o"·rrdue state monies.. aC'C'OrdinJ to '1('(' chairwoman Mary 4. ndt'f"'IOO Thr mone' would only be drawn u needed. she said. add1na lhat she doea no t 1nt1ClpatC' a need tbr more lhan S,0.000 Tht' rounc1I meets at 6 p.m at SOS Fo~t "H Protest bombs detonat ed outside French TV s t ation PARJS (AP) -Two bombs ex- plioded early \Oda~ out.11dc the offices of a Fraicb television 1&.atioo and a ,radio bWJclina, damaaioa cars but cawina no u\juries.. officials said. A IC't1er llaned by the extreme left1st •aroup Di~ Action claimed re- spolllibiUty for the blasts, aimed at protestina upcomlna lelev1sion and radio appearances by ri&ht-wing poli- tician Jean-Marie Le Pen. The first bomb e~ploded in the partina lot of the Maison de la Radio, an the 16th district. wbJcb bou1et studios for state-run radio 1t1tion1. Witnesses said the bomb wu placed inside a van of France Inter, a radio station, destroyina the van and two other vehicles. The ae<X>nd bomb, outside the sta~run television statioo An1e1tne 2, in the eiahth di1tnct. also damaaed several ve6iclcs. officials said. A typewritten letter delivered to Aaence France-Presse, a French news agency, said the bombings were to protest planned appearances by Le Pen1 bead of the extreme ri&bt Nauooal Front. The letter recalTed that Direct Action had already de- manded the dusolution of the Na~ tional Front in attacks April 13 and April 1• on the Paris branch of the Israeli Bank Leumi, the French immilf'ltion offices and the offices of the ri&ht-wina newspaper Minute. The National Front espouses. amona other things, halting immigra- tion into France. .Americans spend less time in hospitals WASHfNGTON (AP) -Amcn- bns ate ~ndina provessively ICM ~me in hospitals, with the average tcnath1~~ dropping to 6.6 days last year, na to new aovemment lta ti1tics. That's down from a national aver- age of 6.9 days for each hospit.aliz.ed f)Crson in 1983 and 7. I days in 1982. accordina to the National Center for Health Statistics. Overall, the cent.er said 37, 162,000 <\mericans -excluding newborns - were hsopitalized last year for one reason or another. That total is for shon-term hospitaJs. That would exclude such places u mental institu- taons. nursing homes and longe-term convalescent institutions. That total number of hospital- izations was down from 38. 7 mtlhon a year c.arlier. although close to the annual average for the 1980s. The general trend over the years has been for gradual increases in the actual number of hospitalizations, as the general population has grown. As an the past, women out- numbered men in enterhla hospitals, 22.3 million to 14.9 million, but the males spent slightly longer in the hospital than women, 7.0 days com- pared to 6.3 on average. The overall hospitalization rate for women was 184 per 1,000, about 39 percent more than the male rate of 132, "because of the large number of women in their childbearing yean who are hospitalized for deliveries and other obstetrical conditions," the study said. Excluding childbearing from the statistics drops the female bosp1taJ- iz.at1on rate lO 152 per 1,000, only about IS percent bi.&ber than for men. "The length of liospital stays for females was shoner than that for males primarily because the aveniac length of stay of the 3.9 million women who were hospitalized for deliveries was only 3.4 days." GROSS RETIRING AS POLICE CHIEF •.• From Al Program. a diversion pr~m for first-time alcohol and mari1uana of- f enders, Hams said. He also started the city's Environmental Services Aaency. which assists communiuy aaencics in cleanup efforts. But Gross has perhaps become more visable as a result of the highly publicized battle between Harbor Municipal Court Judge Russell Bos-- trom and the Newport Beach Pohce Department over a SI 0 million marijuana case. Bostrom dismissed charges July 22 in the drug seizure after ruling police conducted an illegal search of the iailboat where five tons of marijuana were found. Tbe marijuana case resulted in a grand jury investigation triggered by Bostrom's all~tions that police may have ljed and tried to obstruct justice during coun hearings on the case. The Jull 30 arrest of grand theft suspect uis Gamboa sparked another duel between the judge and the police department. Bostrom said police acted against his orders when they held Gamboa for three hours after he was taken into custody. Bostrom ordered thern to book Gam- boa and release him immediately. But Bostrom ended the feud lalc last month when be said that he no longer believed that the police depart- ment intentionally violated bis court orders in the matter. Although the controversy with Bostrom was not a motivation for bis retirement, Gross said that after bis decision to retire, he has lost the "stiffness in my neck" and the overall stress associated with his posiuon. "I think my decision has ext.ended my life span 10 years," Gross said. Gross said that he will not worlc full-time after he retires, but will do some consultmg for the statewide training of police officers. Newport Beach City Manager Bob Wynn was informed by Gross two week.s ago of the chiefs decision to retire. He said that the city will be looking at successors for the position as soon as possible. Gross declined to name possible replacements, but said that there were at least four qualified people within the department and outside that he could think of. "In this day and age, there arc so many qualified people. I'm not con- cerned," Gross said. FREEWAY FOES APPEAL RULING ••. 'Jl'romAl Cent.er for Law in the Public Interest. a non-t>rofit Los Angeles-based or- ganization, to represent them 1n appealing Ryan's dcc1S1on. On Fnday, the Center asked the 4th District Court of Appeal to grant a writ of mandate that would overturn Ryan's decision. If granted. the writ would require the Irvine City Council fO adopt the "Right-to-Vote" measure or place it on a special election ballot. L1Sa foster, a sl.aff' member at the legal center, said the appeal coun should decide wtthin few weeks whether it Wiii deny the writ or conduct a hearing on the matter. lf the writ is denied. the group will probably proceed through the normal appeal process, which could require six months to a year for a ruling. Foster said. A spokesman for the business groups that oppose the freeway peti- tion has said the groups will conunuc opposing the measW'C to the Cali- fornia Supreme Court, if necessary. Meanwhile, the lrvaoe City Coun- cil is scheduJed to consider Tuesday whether to join a ccllition involving the county and other cities that will collect developer fees to help pay for the three new freeways. But COST chairman William Speros today said he will ask the council to delay that decision until the court challenge is resolved. SpeTos noted that in August, a council majority declined to act on the freeway petition in order to await Jud.Jc Ryan's ruling. The COST chairman said the council should take the same wait-and-see position on the freeway fee while the petition case is being appca.led. Beyond the petition ~. Speros claims the freeway fee agreement. aJre.ady approved by county super- visors, has serious flaws in it. WORKMAN HONORED .•. "I hate to sec a city council agree to anything with so many unknowns in 1t, and this has a lot of unknowns in it," he said. COST members claim the new freeways will promote new develop- ment and cause more air and noise pollution without relieving curnnt traffic jams. Freeway supporters say development will proceed even without the new highways, and local street! will be tied up with the overflow from existing freeways 1fthe new roads arc not built From A l man an outstanding pe~n. ''There's a lot more than football in Ball's life," he said. "He cares about all the students, including the ones who don'l play football Workman came to Edison an 1971 and beame head coach m 1973 He's compiled a record of 102-32-2 while winnini two CIF Big Five cham- pionships and six Sunset League utles. He began his coaching career at California High School in Whittier and played college football at Wh11- uer College. MUSCLE BUILDING FOR ASTRONAUTS •.• From A l maintain enough slow myos1n 1n space because they have little need for a protein designed for standmg. stttang and other posture-related ac· t1v1t1cs "In zero gravity, there's no weight on the muscle. which causes the atrophy problem." he said. For this reason. he believes astronauts !ihould engage an cllerc1scs that sumulate production of these missing proteins. Baldwin also lxltcves the bodv· building exercises can help prevent bone degeneration, another problem resulting from exposure to weaght- lcuncss. These exercises may slow the loss of calcium from bo'nes. Although zero gravity has msptred amusing scenes in science fiction movies. its effect on astronauts' health as a scnous matter Amencan astronauts have expenen~d some Just Call 642-6086 MQtwJfy f rtdlty fl ,.OU 1< l'Of -ya., ~ Dy ~lOCI'"' , .. tJotltv• Tom <II'<! 'fOtl' ,._ ... I» .,...eel S..U.dr, ~ ·-· " "°" 00 ""' ··-•• .., OOf1'f Dy , • ,.,, ••• r.-.r .. muscle deterioration after rclauvcly bnef shuule m1ss1ons. But NASA ts planning to put into orbit a space station in which astronauts could be assigned for loogcr periods. · Already, Soviet cosmonauts have spent more than si.x months in space. Russian scientists have not tra. d1t1onally shared their findings about how zero gravity has affected these crew members. But at a recent conference in Stockholm. Soviet scientists d1s-- closcd that a prolonged penod of weightlessness has drained cos- monauts of their energy and forced their vital organs. including the heart. to worlc harder. UCl's Baldwtn plans to discuss some of his own findmgs at an international conference on the b1ochem1stry of physacaJ exercise. scheduled later this month in Italy. He's also planning to present a report on his research to American space officials. He said it took him four years to obtain a NASA grant for his research, which is limited to lab rats. He said Lhere has been very little physiologi- cal study of American astronauts who have returned from zero-gravity missions. but he anticipates more research during future flights. In fact, Baldwin has a reservation to place some of his own lab rats on a shuttle Oight -in 1987. Meanwhile. he's confident that the rat muscle detenorat1on he's observed in his lab is a good indication of what will happen to human muscles in space 1f body-bu1ldtng excm~s arc neglect· ed Whal do you Uke about the Daily Piiot? Wlaat don 't you like? Call tbe number at left and your menage •Ill be re<'orded, lranscrl~ and delivered 10 the appropriate editor. The same U-boar an1wertag service may be used to rerord letters to U1e editor on any topic. Contrlbuton to our LetteN <'Olumn must Jnclude tbelr name and teltpbone number for verification No <'irculatlon c:all1 , pluse. Tf'll us what's on yoar mind. AoMm•ry Churchmen Controller Clrculatlon 714/M2-4U3 Claulfted edventelng 71'1M2·5'71 All othef depertmenta M2..t321 MAIN OFFICE ').)() w.., S.r SI Colle ...... CA .....,. •»-Be» 1'11\0 to-1• ..... CA G~16 Goloytoqn! Ille) ()el'tgll C:oe<t ~ '-"• ~ -.. Of ......... ,.,,.. ..,.,Of ... _, ... ,,. _,_ -· ,,....., -· De lft)'-.C.0 '°""'°"' "* .. ,,.. -njC('C)y'ogM.- '5«(1n.1 <le• ~!· "'"'' et "'"'a ....... ( .. I ..... tO e m ...., y0vt no.. n De~9Cl Robert l. c .,,,, .. , 00MldLW11lleme C1rculat!Ot\ Managf'r IUPS ••• 9001 ,._.,f,...,. I'• ....... ". l) .._,,.,. ... -tPOO~ c~ ,, .. .,....... ..,,r l•K.' ' MA ''*ll"' .... o--.~ ...,.. ...... Howwd Mul14Hiary Markettno ()rec10< VOL 71,N0.217 I OftlhOte Wlnda ... keep lklM c:tMr Md eunny Tueedly. lnct'Mll'\ iemperaiur. tNoughc>Ut Southern Califomi., the Natlonal Mthet 8eMce Mid. The mild Santa Ana wind condition la expected to ~at throuQh the week, Mndlng mercury reeding• Into the m10-tOe and 909 In the valt9yt Md deMrta. The co.t.i .,.. wttl remain ei.ar with hight from the mld-70. to the eo.. Lowa tonight will drop to beiw.etl 44 and 52 deg,.... Mong the Orange Cout It will be fair through Tue9dey with locel northeut to eut wtndt 15 to 30 mph below the canyon• and pauee. warmer d•Y9 wtth high• Tueaday 78 to 88. L<>M 45 to58. U.S. Tempe M t1 a3 ea .... ... , ., 41 62 S3 .... .. 17 .. to to ., 71 M ..... t 2 12 ,, 65 ea 12 78 M '3 41 St 44 eo 47 eo &a 66 25 79 541 12 M ti 71 se S3 to 76 II 74 se 61 IM 71 S3 39 fie M 71 l50 80 M 73 83 1e eo 711 62 6t M •~ ~. ~ "'ONTI: ~ ~ '* Wt1m -COIO-S1'0••'• Rain n .imH Sno• OcclvOeO .-.r SlatlONIV a.... ... "'°'* w ...... 59Noc• HOAA US Olol OI C-u Calif. Temps TOOAY 4:12 p"' I0.24p.1" ,. 64 au 74 41 .0.6 112 Extended TUUOAY 4:03Lm. 10'111 • "'· &:OSp.m. 11·11 p"' 1.0 •• -0 7 47 U.N. reverses, won'tinvite Arafat to its birthday party UNITED NATIONS (AP) -The General Assembly, under pressure from lhe United St.ates and other countries, has dropped a resolution inviting PLO Chairman Yasscr Arafat to attend the 40th binhday celebration of the United Nations. U.S. officials had said Presidenl Reagan might cucel his partici- pation in the ceremonies if Arafat attended. Arafat ongmaUy was not invited to attend the Oct. 14-24 anniversary ceremonies. But a resolution in· troduced by India and five other non- aligned countries would have had the General Assembly invite Arafat and Sam Nujoma, president of the South- West Africa Peoples ~tion (SW APO), which is fighttng South African administration of the terri- tory. After intense ncgou.at1ons, spon- sors dropped their insistence on a vote, which had been expected to receive the necessary tw<>-thirds ma- jority in the I 59-member assembly. .\ssembly President Jaime de Pinies of Spain read a statement explaining the face-saving diplomatic formula under which the potential crisis was defused. De Pinies. noted that, under their observer status, the PLO and SW APO still would have the right to address the assembly on matters of direct relevance to them, and in such addresses could make rcfrencc to the U.N. 40th anniversary. The 1974 and 1976 resolutions granting the PLO a~d SW APO o~ server status "contmue to rem8Jn valid and applicable in every re- spect, .. he said. "In the circumstances, I under- stand that the co-sponsors do not intend to press their resolution to a vote." A U.S. official, who spoke on condition he not be identified. had said the United States would "re- evaluate the level and extent of its pat!.icipation" if Arafat participates tn the celebration. Asked if that meant Reagan might cancel bis planned Oct. 24 address, the official said, "Anything is poss.- ible. We're hoping not to have 10 make that decision ... The resolution was introduced shortly after the hijacking of an Italian cruise ship by terrorists ac- cused of killing an American tourist, Leon K.linghoffer, 69, of New York City. U.S. military planes intercepted an Egyptian plane that was to have delivcTCd the hijackers to the PLO headquaners in Tunisia for trial, instead forcing it to land at a NA TO base in Sicily. There the tcm>risu were handed over to Italian authontics. A Palestine Liberation Orpniza· tion official who also was on the plane, Mohammed Abbas, lat.er wu released over U.S. protests and flew to Yugoslavia. Rattlesnake killed after capture By Ute A.11oclated Presa A rattlesnake taken from the Mer jave Desert bit his Sant.a Ana captor on the hand, putting the man in the hospital and bringing death to the reptile. Hubert Rodriguez. 21 , ofl.a Palma. was listed in guarded condition late Sunday at Western Medical Center after the seven-inc h-long diamondback rattle snake bit him, Santa Ana police Lt. Jack Nelson sajd. Rodriguez wanted to keep the snake he found in the desert but possession of such a snaJce is ilicgal, Nelson said. "The snake was subsequently ter- minated," Nelson said. "He was dropped in a can with some chloroform. It was pretty quick." Obsessive behavior often is the first sign of a mental crisis. As with other medical problems. early treatment improves the chances for a positive outcome. But, every situation is different. That's :t 3 •00 why there are differ-vacuums a • &.JD.. ent ways to help. The lnfonnation Center at Capistrano by the Sea Hos pital ha s a free booklet on mental crisis. It out· lines the many options you have availabl e. Hospitaliza- tion is onl y one of them . Call (714> 831 -1787. You'll receive this useful booklet in absolute co nfi · dence. We've helped people cope with the problems of today 's society for over 25 years. We understand. Howro Harrllc a Meneal Crisis •