HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-10-22 - Orange Coast Pilot• -~~~------------====~~~~11!!!!11----------------....
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ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA TUfSDAV OCTOBER 22 198S /~C ENT S
.Irvine denied role in airport suit
Judge rules city's intervention could
harm ~ettlemen t of long-lime dispute
By LISA MAHONEY
Of .. °"" ..... llafl
The Irvine City Council will mull
its legal options tonight and decide
California
The Dan White story ends
with his suicide In San
Francisco./ AS
Nation
The House takes up a
Senate-passed bal-
anced-budget plan./ A4
World
The fate of U.S. diplomat
Wiiiiam Buckley remains a mystery despite reports
of his death./ A 11
Sports
whether to pursue further coun
action to block a pending settlement
between the Orange County Board of
Supervisors, the city of Newport
Beach and two c1t1zens' groups over
Irvine
ponders
move on
annex
Lake Forest tract
study would cost
the city $62,040
By PHlL SNEIDERMAN
Of the DMIJ ..,.... ltefl
Irvine C1ty ( ounc1I memberi. will
consider funding a preliminary study
that could lead to annexation of the
nearby Lake Forest II community at
their meeting tonight.
Lake Forest II is in unincorporated
temtory governed by the Orange
County Board of Supervisors.
The Lake Forest II Master Home-
owner Association recently asked
Irvine offi cials to undertake such a
re\ 1ew, which Cit} staff members
esumated would cost $62,040.
In a meeting that besins at 6·30
pm .. the lrvtne council 1s scheduled
10 decide whether to inittate an
annexation study and who should pay
for It.
Guy Marshall, president of the
homeowner assocation. said decade-
old Lake Forest 11 includes 3.436
homes and as many a.s 13.000
residents. It 1s south ofTrabuco Road
between Bake Parkway and El Toro
Road.
He sajd county supervisors early
this year asked Lalce Forest II r~1-
dents to consider their government
status. Marshall said residents opted
(Pl eue eee AmfEX/A2)
the future of John Wayne Airport
Attorneys for the city failed Mon-
day to convince a federal Judge 1hat 11
should be allowed to intervene in a
lawsuit brought by the Board of
Supervisors against foes of the ex-
pansion of John Wayne Airport.
U.S. District Court Jud$e Terry
Hatter told city representatives that
their 1nterven11on attempt was un-
timely and could hun the pending
settlement in the long-fought dispute
over expansion of Orange ( ount)''s
only commercial a1rpon, attome)'s
for both sides said
The city must now dec1dt.• whe1her
to appeal Hatter's dec1s1on or file
separate st.ate and federal coun ~um
over elements of the ~tllement
Irvine 1s oppos.ed to a pan ol 1he
.---------------------~ ------
Breaat Center tour
Former tint lady Betty Ford &et. a toar of die new Brea.t
~Center at aoac Memorial Hoepttal from Hoac
presldent lltchael Stevena (left) and Dr. s . Robert Hunrita,
director of the new facility. See atory, Page A3 .
settlement .,, h1ch its offiual') txhe\ l"
could result 1n increased a1rcralt
noise over the city Agreements madt"
between the supervisors and ex-
pansion foes could result in cons1der-
at1on of Manne Corps Air Station. El
Toro as an altemate a1rpon !>tie. cit)
officials said
(1v1han Ust' of El T 11ro would re~ult
in more aircraft passing uvcr In 1 nt"
d1)1urb1ng re-,1denb wHh the Jet noise
and crash potential Ma)'or Dave
Baker said
Cit) uffic1ais had hoped the 1nter-
'ent1on would be pemuncd so they
could explain their pomwn lo the
Judge and as~ for amendments 10 the
~lllement agreement which Haner 1~
e:<pected to rn 1e" soon he said
(Pleue eee IRVINE/ A2)
School board
batis religion
• on campuses
Decision follows
stormy meeting of
Huntington board
By ROBERT BARKER
Of IN Delly ~ Ii.If
Huntington Beach <.1.huul utl1t1JI\
reaffirmed their po'>1t1on aga1n\t
making school fac1h11c.·s a'adable Ill
student religious group\ M<1ndJ\
night after hearing a torrent of dehate
from student'>. parents. cummun1l\
figures and rehgJOU\ leader\ on ht1th
sides of the contro\ ers1al issue
In a pre'is announu:ment rdt:ao,ed
toda) Hunlington Beach l nmn
High School Distnct ~upenntendcnt
Mane Otto ~1d an) dec1~1on prwr 111
a ruling b) the l l S <;upremc (nun on
tht: I 'II\~ rquJI dll..l'\\ lav. '-'Ou Id he
prl'llpll11U\Jnd "'ould •ml~ .idd to the
u1nfu\111n ·
l he ltmpe<,t lol.J \ touched ofl b~
'>tudent fol" \1endo1a '-'ho petitioned
Edl'1>n ll1r,h \t.1111111 nffiL1als ..e'eral
\lo.Cd\ ago tu af lo\>. d (. hnst1an student
group tu hold 'ofuntai: s,er\ ice~ in
da\'>n>0m\ .iunng the da' and to u~
1he hulk11ri hoJrd' and the '><. hool
publlL addre'>\ \\\lt:m
\1endn1d Jnd 111hcr' in th<" com-
mun11' dJ1m that \1..hool <illiuals arc
tailing Ill u>mpl' '-'Ith a 19X~ t.·qual
dltts<. fa 1o1. thJt har' lt:deral lund'i to
\(. houl dl\lrJt" thdt alfo.,, non-
Jt jdt'm 1t 11.rttup'> tu met'l tn
cla\sroom\ hut dt'n' the use ol thO!>e
taul1ttt''i lo rt:lag111u' group<,
The \upreme ( oun ha~ heard
arguml·nl\ 1•n the tons111u11unalt1~ ut
(Ple .. e see SCHOOLS/ A2)
Mesa rejects plan to put
tax reduction on ballot
By TONY SAAVEDRA °' ... _, .........
Despite charges that the Cll) ol
Costa Mesa has compiled an .. embar-
rassment of nches ... a proposal to a<,k
voters whether rcs1dent1al propen)
I.Axes should be lowered was denied
Mooday by the City Council.
The crusade by Cou ncilman Da~e
Wheeler for a November l 98o hallot
measure failed b't a >-2 'ote amid
pred1Ctlons that the cm will surpass
1\s \Otcr-1mposcd 'ipendmg hm1t next
fiscal vcar
Mone' collected past the "(rann
aprr•lpnat.<•n'> 1ill':t mu<.t h<: r{ 1umed 10 the t.upa)ers within rwo
years. throupi such methods as
lowenng ~"ice fees or reducing rhe
cit~ ·s share of propeon) taxes
Theel!' afS<>lan as k 'ote,...,1o ra1se
(Plea9e eee T Ai/ A2J
Kansas City's Bret
Saberhagen faces the
Cardinals' Joaquin Andu-
jar In tonight's third game
of the World Serles./C1
Marines offer hazardous waste cleanup plan
Newport Harbor Hlgh's
football team Is No. 2 In
CIF. And the girls cross
count ry team Is No. 1, for
the sixth week ./C3
Entertainment
Sebastian's West has
m ounted a colorful and
entertaining revival of Gii-
bert and Sullivan's "The
Mlkado./85
INDEX
Bridge A10
Bulletin Board A3
Classified 87 -9
Crossword B9
Death Notices B 1 O
Entertainment A9
Horoscope 88
Annlandera A7
Opinion AS
Paparazzi A7
Police Log A3
Publlc Notices B 10
Sports B1-4
Television A9
Weather A2
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of lhe Delly Not 118'1
Manne Corp'i offi cials submitted a
plan Monday for the cleanup of
hazardous wastes that have bc\.'.n
contaminating the soil and a nearby
creek at the Tu~tin air station for
nearly 15 years.
The repon call 'I for con<;truc11on of
a cla) bamer around five acre<; where
the soil has hcen saturated b)' Jet fuel\
and hazardou'i pclroleum wastes
The wastes have <;eeped deep 1nH>
the ground and have nowed into the
Pcter'i Canyon Channel The channel
flows tnto San Diego ( reek and.
ultimatel). into Upper Newport Ba\
Mesa, HB push liquor
b a ns at gas s t a t ion s
HB moves to ban
earlier permits
By ROBERT BARKER
Of -Delly ,... ,...,,
City officials voted Monday night
to ban the sale of alcoholic beverages
at all service stations in Huntjngton
Beach that intend to conven a
portion of their space into conve-
nience markets or snack shops.
Also, the City Council, J)fl a 4-2
vote, voted to approve the introduc-
tion of an ordinance that would
prohibit the sale of alcohol at gas
statiorts that have received previous
approval to cqnduct such sales.
(Pleue eee KIDfTINOT OM/A2)
CM council woul d
OK existing sales
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of -Delly ,... llett
Future gas station m1m-mark1:1~ in
Costa Mesa may i.oon be unahll' to
sell beer and wine. according to a
proh1b1t1on ordered Monda) h) a
divided C'11y (ounnl
Staff members were directed on a
3-2 vote to dr:i" up an ordinanre
banning the sak of alco hol!(·
beverages at gasoline stallon'I that
add convenience stores or \nae~
shops.
Ex1st1ng sen ice su111on mini-man"
(Pleue .ee LIQUOR/A~)
'
NB juvenile cases teach her
the beauty of human spirit
For 13 years --------JUSt iO home. Sometimes they arl.' put Up tor adoption,
sometimes they are arrested. Shc'<i \Ccn a hundred Lavonne C,ampbcll
has looked af\er the
abused, the neaJect-
ed and the lost,
somehow remain-
ina upbeat enou&h
to talk about "tfic
beauty of the
human spirit"
rather than the mis-
ery it must endure.
STEVE
MARBLE
PEOPU IN TH( NEW S
•The wayward
youth who come to Newport Beach looktna for the endless
1Ummer orlly to find it•s only an illu11on. •The child who bas been ban.erect or molcstcd or
evea dilCIJ'dod by his parents.
•The youna boy who is seaually a&~cked by an older
man wbo b.e miatakenly thoua,ht was l\is fnend ..
vanations on the same theme •
"My JOb is everythina that happen!> to people under
18." says lhc Ncwpon Beach pohce JU'emlc detcctl\'e
"Rapists. victims. abu.scd, those who abuse Ifs really an
1nterestina collectJon."
CampbeJI, selected l 98S pohcc ofliccr of the year h)
her colleques hu a unique pos1t1 on on the pohcc force
Unhke other dcrtcctivn she ill not m uunely tu$Sl&ncd to
patrol, traffic or other police bcatii.
The consequence 11 that she has become an ea pen on
juvnule law: the ~blem5 luds set into and the
aJtemativca anc hu 1n dalin1 Wlth tho$C probkms.
A runaway who 1tts blended 1n a bhnard of ooca1ne
and turns to petty cnmc may be quietly refe~ to a cns1s
center or, if the circumsta~ dic:ute. may be arrested
and P,laccd at juvenile hall.
The cleanup plan for the fu\lln
base "as ordered Ma\ 10 b' the ~tate
Regional \.\>atcr Q·uaht~ < ontrol
Board follo.,.. ing com pla1 n" tha 1
\.fanne \orps officials ha'e bern
dragging their feet s1nc.e the pollution
problem wa\ fir\! dcieueJ in Janujl)
1983
tate and lOUnt\ t n' 1ronmen1al
otliciab le'>lllil·d di thl· hnJn.l hl'Jnn~
that cleanup effort" had sl11v.l·d tu a
st.ands11ll 1n rL"Ct'nl m11nth'
The "ater qualit~ 1..ontrol n.1JrJ
1o1.1ll re,1e1o1. thl' report Jnd dn1,k
1o1.hetha to dlll·pt the \,bnnt' I ''fl"
rcuim mend.it1t1n\ T ht• Jl't 1'>111n .1
board engineer ..a1J "all ht rnJdt
Within l'.A.0 \Aot'C~!>
f 1il' 1~·.1• ut ,•I •l""·'l IOI. ludl·'
rr.in, t• '.1 -'''"' -...1dr d J\ u.:i ll 111 h<'
.11n,:r .. .i1.·,' • 'ldl·'. •I thl' '111.
LP ,,1n1.s n 1h1.· · <•"" 1.•I ·h1 ,h1.•m1cul
"'J'lt' \\j'10t I ri'' 'f'< •l-l \mJn I I
1 fl It I ~ '-till
1 1r •111 I· ir 1 , J1 nl·.ir 1h1· 1'1 t1•r,
<.If'' 111 hJnnll .1J<'\l1t•knt•\Ao nd'd
(Pleaae ae~ CLEANUP/ A2)
UCisigns
pact to
develop
property
In·ine Co n1pany to
C'reatc rf'sf'a rch and
developn1ent parks
8\ PHH "''1·~1l>F.RMA!lit
Of -De4t? l"llol •••"
Ir. 11'-,tr' l• 111n tht' ndllfln" top •
1r,1.'JI< h 1n,111u1111n' l I In 1ne 1o1.1ll
'""rk " lh f lr,in111.· ( l>UOI\ ' fafll,t'\I
1,1nJ11.,.. nl 1 t ht In 1nl I n to de"clnp
large rt''t'arrh and dn t'lopment P.'H~'
aJ1an·n1 111 lh1· l ampu'
R rprt"••('OIJll'<'' nt th<' rompan'
Jn,j I I I \ll'lll·d .1 nnn htnJing .1(1.TCl'
nwnl \1111111.1' ''n·nng tht 1.,,0
1,•u..1111 , n·.i11111l ,,f Hl\.O park' dr
'1t1.n1·.t 111 n' ,1l th11<.<· ,·on.,tnn tC'd near
the nJt11111'1np un1,ers111c\
l01n1 1 11 Pn-~1Jcn1 l homac,
'\1rl-..·n ._...ad ht· rn' 14'10n" l0tal pro-
iC'd\ th.II 11o11ufd he.' \omparable tn
quah1' .11\\I rurpc1\t 111 C\tanfortf\
Re\CM\. h Par~ 1h1· Pnnt~lon f or-
re\tal l cn:n JnJ ih1· \ourth Carolina
re<.t'Jr1..h lnanpk
l < I < hdnl dlnr la1 k Pdtunn u1d
!ht• rat I I\ J ~<" \tc·r tiiwar<.J rcahllOll
I'< ·., goal ot h<-n1m1 ng "not onl) a
t1•'•Xl hut J ttrt•at un1\C·n11-,. ··
\1 11nda\ ·, memorandum \Cb the
\t3(t(' fnr mMC detailed dl'iCU\SIOn'I
h<-t"C't'n I ( I and the Irvine < o
regarding the de,clopmcnt t1metahle
.ind thr t\ ~ nl hu1ldin& that .,,.,,11 akr
pla~
Tbrouah one means or another. all find their way to
Campbell. ~m~timct they JO to Juvenile hall. someumes they
'I ~t the whole case -the victjm and the offender,"
Campbell 11yi. "Sometim~ the offender 11 an adult who
ne'Cds to be arTCSted Somcumes '"' a pe~nt who JUlt
( ......... Pf&WPORT/AS) 8bad.ed &re& t. planned for denlopment.
"\\r 11o 11l hr ou1hn1ng. w;a,, 111
dr~elop the kind of ~search and
dr' elopment Ntrks that have alread~
mad<' <\tanfnrd \Ut.h a 'UCN')\ful
(Pleue ... UCI/ A.2)
I • •
I
.&9 * Ota'Oi OOMI DAILY PILOTtr'*°ay· October 22, 1985
TAX REDUCTION PROPOSAL REJECTED •••
ham Al
t.be ~cap for vanou1 pubhc
mviCe proJecu, like new storm
draini.
The ceilina wu olaclcd o~ iOvcrn-
mcot apendina by the 1979 california
ulitiative named aft.et ill author, Pau_l ~· It wu a foUow up to Prop.
ouUon 13. the l 978 w-revolt plan by
Ga.no and Howard Jarvis that cut
state propeny tues by more than balC.
The two voter-approved laws Cul
the amount of property tax money
that aovcmmeot aaenc1es could col-lc:a. while allO puttina a stopper on
city speodinaaccordina to p0pulat1on
and yearly inflation rates.
Wheeler, estimatina Costa Mesa
will surpus 1ts bmit by $4 m1lhon
next fiscal year, has been fi&}lung to
drain the so-called eitcesa by ehminat-
ina the city's share of property taxes
from homeowners. The move would
cut their tax bill by about 18 percent,
accord.in& to city officials.
AfteT an earher proposal was
thwarted, Wheeler asked Monday
that the quesuon be put to 1be votera.
However, Mayor Norma Hertz.o&,
as well as council mcmbcn Doon
Hall and Arlene Schafer, were coo-
~rncd th.at Wheeler wanted to eit·
elude business property from tbc
ballot proposal.
They also st.resscd that they bad no
qualms about turnina to the public,
however they believed Wheeler's
measure wu premature and more
atudy was needed on the city's
pend1na financial d.llcmma.
Boasuna a thnvina tax base, fC:e!>l
South Coast Plaza, local auto -
erships and arowina business area~
Cost.a Mesa is expected to receive$ I IS
million ID sales taA revenue this Ii.seal
year.
ProJecting another $6.3 million 1n
total property t.axe&, the city has come
within $75 of hitt.ina its Gann hm1t.
And business leaders characterized
the situation as an "embarrassment
of n chcs" for City Hall.
Aplnst the protest of the Costa
Mesa Chamber of Com me~. Wheel-
er has preued for a spht tax roll,
exclud.ina busincu propcrty from
receivina the propolCd tax break.
"It secma to me the benefits should
10 to the retidenu and not to the
business secior, •• said Wheeler,
arawna that homeowners have suf·
feted because of the increucd noiae.
traffic and othet" nuisances ienerat;f
by business development
Council members, however were
unsure whether the city could fcpUy
offer an eitcluaivc teducuon to rest·
dential property. And they balked at
Wheeler's suaesuon to add a tcpar.
ate ballot measure aslUna whether
busmcss property should be included.
The council has also been urged by
the chamber to consider a ballot
proposal ukina voten to raise the
appropriatjons limit. The various
measures bein& touted led HaJl to
complaul that he was reluctant to
"bogle the citizenry by puttina
numerous conflicting statements on
the ballot."
Clear skies and warmer air due .
CIMr. raln-rlnaed ltclea and IUMhtne wtll brighten SOuther"
Callfomia WedneacMy and booet m«c:.1ry ~Into the 70. u a
warmtng trend tak• hold, tot.catM Nkt.
The National W•thet s.tvl09 Mk! a high prMaYre ayatem
Nttllng over the Pec111c Cout wfll keep the Loe Angelel arM dry,
OllNr tn.J warm t0t the Mxt eewtal dayia, with the M.ceptlofl of
morning tow ctouda ak>nQ the~.
Along the Orange Cout It wfll be c:tee1 tonight and .,
Wedneeday war"* with hight Wedneeday 75 to 80 Lowt
tonight 52 to 58
From Point Conotptlon to the Mexican 80tder -Inner
water•: light variable wind• tonight and Wedneeday morning
t>ecomlng w.terty 10 to 18 knota Wedneaday afternoon. Wind Hio11 ,.,..,.. 2 to 3 IMt. Sol.tthweet ewella 2 to 3 fM't. Clear tonight and hmper1lurH
Wedneeday.
81 50 ••CU>~ U.S. Temps 1. .. 11~ Unle"-11 1 1
~°"' ....... 82 e:I
"' Le ~ 70 eo SllOw•• t Rtltl 'vri.a Sriow
"'OHTt
weim ,.. ColO...,.
Occluded..,.. S1tt1oriaiy...,,
Albtny &e 211 Mleml llMOll ·~ ,. Nt~ w ....... $eM(t l'j()AA U S Oec>I 04 ~tt ............... 63 u .. 41 z='(IUll M_.tPllUI 67 6J n M
MlllW#'09 29 u H-vth .. 5t Calif. Temps Sarita Alla 11 ",.,.,. .. 57 -~ "' 11 s.r>te CIW ~
A-Olly 09 H '-Yon ei 47 Sarila MAlll e:I
-"*Ill 10 87 HOf1olk Ila 14 81 ~· IOw lot '4 r.o.;re ending at & • m Sarilt Morilce 1 1
lelllm0<9 .. M ()Ir i.t>oma Ci1't n 55 erwfteld Ill 44 Taho9 II.,..., 36
lllm\lnollMI 11 M ~ 81 67 E"'•• 541 50 T0t•-7' ()tlando 111 70 ~ 71 ~ ,..,eano 86 4e
llo4M 11 :M l'tlKedelpl\lt eo 51 Lano.II• M 46
9o91on 64 41 "'-'>. es ez Loe A~ ea 01
llO 41
64
~ 2fl
69
' CLEANUP OF HAZARDOUS WASTES ...
Surf Report lulflllO 64 •• ~ .... 53 •• O..lel\CI 112 61 c.-.. 47 ~ 29 PMO Aolllee 64 4 1 LOC:Anotl tm IHAl'9 ~on.S C 71 87 Por1i.nc!.O< &e .. "-' 8lu!! 82 50 Hun11f1Qton 9Mefl 1) , ..... p,~ 119 li From Al
French drain will help collect the
hazardous wastes for trcalment and
disposal, Hoyle wd.
Other proposals included in the
report, though not recommended by
M.arine Corps officials, C'AIJ for van-
auons on the containment plan u
well as a plan to citcavate the
contaminated soil and rcptac.c it with
fresh fill dirt.
The two fire piu where the pol-
lutJon problem onginates were used
by the Mannes for fire training
exercises. Jct fuel was placed in the
pits and ignited as part ol tnumng.
The exercises were performed for
nearly 14 years before they were
stopped in January 1983 when pet-
roleum wastes were detected in the
storm channel that runs along the
eastern border of the Tustin base.
Ollettellon.W V 81
(lher1otte. H C ..
E 81
13
M
~ 64
Columbua.Oll M C:C.-d,NH 57 o.a..fl W()l1tl 73
o.y,on 53
~ 11 o--68
Oe\fOlt 68 °"""" 53 !I~-74
M
51 ==re,,., 82
78 3e
43 '*'<> 68
53 AICIWnOn<I 82
62 St LOlile ..
St P9t .. Tt11T1pe .. M
23 S.111.M<•CUy 73
82 San Antonto 70
51 a..,. Juan,P R 87
47 a..nie S4
53 81\r-1 11
63 ~-117
41 ayr-eo
48 TGC*C• 70
TllCeon ao
~Cll't 6J •7 2·3 lair 51 a.or-10 eo 47 ~Jetty.~ 2·3 tltH 47 40tl'I 81f"4. ~ a-13 43 UNI St...i. ~1 2·3 !lllr 32 Sari Olevo 99 llO 8elt>OeWeclge 2-3 fair eo S... F renc;lte;O 82 S2 0 !air S4 Sama 8Albat• .. 60 Llil)uM Beech
1-3 lall et s.n c -1• Stocillton 51 50 wa1• t.,.,,., M J7 Hl(lfl, tow lor 24 hOut• .,.Ol"Q al 5 pm .. A410M Valley 14 42 s ..... Clltectton -· 74 e.r-11ow 75 N 4e a-.mon1 M 52 Tides 86 aig &Mr 13 3a 37 8Wlop 111 52 33 &lyllle 85 115 fOOA'I' 54 Cataffna tl9 57 Secono tow 12 211p m 2 e S4
SCHOOLS VETO RELIGIOUS MEETINGS ••• 'Wbenll• 19 1 Mar,tYll\41 e t 50 8eoo<'4I hlg/l 5 59 pm ~o
'WOo 64 52 TutN 74 &II Mon<QYla 86 57 rueaou
"8QMall 57 34 WMltillglon 57 55 Monl•"Y 111 53 flf'•I tow 1253a m 0 0
Ot...O~ M 39 WlcHI• M M Mt W'-' 43 31 ~-7 37 • m •• Jl'romAl
the new law but 1sn 't expected to 1uue
an opimon for several months.
Local officials say they'll wait on
the hi&h court ruling before deciding
on whether to change their policy that
now ban such functions.
"Don't keep passing the buck,"
Mendoza told lrusttts Monday
"Tue a stand right now and tell us
what you believe 1n . Say yes or no."
But Rebecca Einstein, a freshman
at Fountain Valley High. offered a
d.Jsscnung opinion in a letter she read
from her father, Rabbi Stephen
Einstein. a member of the Fountain
Valley School District Board of
Trustees.
EinstelD wrote that the proper place
for prayers is the home, church and
synagogue. Equal access, he wrote, is
"fraught with danger'' and could open
doors to meetings of the Hare
Krishnas, Rev. Moon's groups, the
Ku Klux Klan or the Amencan Nazi
party
But Randy Ziegler, an assist.ant
pastor at Calvary Baptist Chruch,
argued that federal law (the new ~uaJ
access law) supersedes district po lacy.
He wd (unds arc being raised for
possible legal acu on.
Bob Wilson. the director of the
newly formed branch of Citizens of
Excellence in Education, urged of-
ficials to abide by the law. He also
warned that his group could "taJce
complete control" of school matters if
trustees fail to taJce llction.
However, Darlene Rose asked if
the real intent of religious o~iza
lions 1s to influence others. • Is this
just the tip of the iceberg? Rcligjous
division," she said, "is a poison to
f rccdom and peace."
But student Tim Bruner said there
is no reason not to have a Bible club
on campus. "We just want to Jove one
another and reach out to those who
need it That's what Jesus did for us."
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HUNTINGTON 'DRIES' GAS STATIONS ...
From Al
Councilman Don MacAllistcr was
absent.
unta1r to e:1t1st1ng operators ··who
would suffer senous losses in their
stores."
alcohol where gasoline ts d1spen..ed
make!> It too easy to dnnk and dnvc
"What 1s more 1mponant." she
asked. ··maki ng a profit or saving
live!>'>··
UCI RESEARCH PARKS PLANNED .••
The council members gave notice
that they'd like to stop the sales within
a year after giving operators time to
deplete their inventory, depreciate
equipment such as coolers and to
write off the costs of obtaining an
alcoholic beverage license.
Walker. who said convened conve-
nience markets realize as much as 18
percent of their revenue from the sale
of food and drinks, said the law wi ll
not solve the drinking-dnving prob-
lem.
Council man John fhomas. who
voted with Jack Kelly againsl the
crackdown , said: "There arc 100
many of them (convened min1-
markets selling alcohol) 1n our c11y."
he said But I'd have a hard time to
put them out of business."
From Al
research insutut1on." Peltason satd. effect sin~ 1964.
Monday's memorandum 1s the first
step in that pr~. covenng 41 5
acres of the incl usion area.
equity investor ID development" of
this acreage.
Council members arc slated to take
final action Nov. 4.
Bill Walker. an Atlantic Richfield
sales manager. said that the bans are
"It would d1scnmanate against the
small businessmen," he said.
But resident Carolyn Allen.
cl aimed that permits the sale of The agreement covers 292 acres
owned by the university and 123 by
the lrvmc Co .. all located 1mmcd1·
ately west of the campus. The prop-
erty is beyond the 1.000 acres that the
Irvine Co. donated in 1960 for
creation of UCL
"This 1s an agreement to discuss an
agreement," Chancellor Peltason
wd. He said he briefed UC Regents
o n the pact last Friday.
The Irvine Co.'s master lease
option 1s expected to run for 35 years.
If the company docs not develop any
of the acreage covered by the pact. the
land would revert to unrestricted
university ownership. In addition,
the university would have first op-
portunity to ~urchasc any lease
interests the Irvine Co. wanted to sell
1n th.is area.
LIQUOR BAN AT GAS MARKETS BACKED .•.
In 1964, the UC Regents bought an
additional S 10 aetts near the campus
to assure they would be used for
university-related act1vit1cs. The
Irvine Co. retained I SO acres sur-
rounded by these parcels. The total
660-aett section was called the "in·
clusion area."
Both the UC Regents and the
company agreed at the time that
development of the 1nclus1on area
would be restricted to u01vers1ty-
orientcd prOJCCts. In recent years. the
two parties have found that defi0111on
ambiguous and have been nego11ating
toward a more specific develo pment
plan that would take the place of the
land restnctions that have been in
T he goal 1s to reach a master land-
use plan for the acreage by May I.
Peltason s.a1d a ke y benefit for the
u01vers1ty will be the revenue it v.rill
derive from projects built on its
property. He has frequently described
UO as land-rich, but cash-poor.
The (rv1ne Co. stands to benefit as
well. Monday's memo said the uni-
versity will negotiate to grant the
company a master opuon to ground-
lease "any and aJJ of the land" not
needed for university purposes in lhe
292-acre inclusion area owned by the
university.
The university, in tum. would
retatn "the right to participate as an
Irvine Co. president Nielsen ac-
knowledged Monday that R&D parks
near the campus could compete with
the company's Spectrum pro1ect, a
high-tech and bio-scienc.c develop.
ment near the Junction of the San
Diego and Santa Ana freeways.
But Nielsen said there would be
some unique aspects to the dcvelOP-:
mcnt 1mmed1ately adjacent tO UCr
and said there may be some JOint
marketing efforts involving Spec-
trum and the U Cl acreage.
From Al
would be eitempt from the ban, whic h
must come back to the council for two
more votes before ll becomes law.
The action was taken Monday at
the urg.ing of the Planning Com-
m11s1on amid concerns that the
service stations were prompung
motonsts to dnnk and dnvc by
selling gasoline and alcoholic
beverages.
In September, the cmcs of Laguna
Beach and San Juan Capistrano
passed similar prohibitions against
concurrent alcohol and gas sales.
Meanwhile. Huntmston Beach of-
ficials have ordered a s1m1lar ban and
concerns over gas statJon mini-mans
have been raised in Fountain Valley,
Tustin and Anaheim.
However, Councilmen Dave
Wheeler and Donn Hall voted against
IRVINE ROLE IN AIRPORT SUIT NIXED ... Costa Mesa's proposed ordinance.
remaining unconvinced of a corrcla·
uon between drunken dnving and the From Al
"They didn't even get their fool 1n
the door, .. said Michael Gatzke. the
county's special airport counsel
But John McDermott, attorney for
the city of Irvine. said Hatter's denial
of his mo uon to intervene doesn't
prevent the city from lrying to hlock
1mplementa11on of the pending settle-
ment
.\ fter meet 1 ng in closed session. the
City ( ouncil co uld direct him to
appeal or fi le sepa rate court
challe nge'> lo the a1rpon expansion
plan and the seulemcnt agreement.
McCXrmou said
location for a second airport to relieve
development pressure at John Wayne
Airport and 1s "an integral part of1he
settlement," Ncwpon Beach attorney
Steven Pflaum said.
But the Irvine City Council wants
the El Toro rcsoluuon back in place to
protect its residents from the same
krnd of problems that have sparked
discord over John Wayne Airport.
Residents of Newport Beach and
Santa Ana Heights have lo ng sought
10 stymie growth at John Wayne
Airport becauseoff11ght noise and the
po1en11al danger o f air crashes over
their ne11thborhoods
convenience stores.
by lhe city to shut the door on "I think it's a symbolic measure,"
cons1dcrat1on of commercial use of El Wheeler said, adding he bcheves a
Toro including possible annexation ban would hamper future gas station
of the military base. convenience stores fro m competing
With John Wayne Ai~n on one with others that already sell beer and
T h d h wane. flank. El oro on t e 0 er an 1 c Councilwoman Mary Hornbuckle
Marine Corps Helicopter Air Station argued that the potenual dange~ in Tustin on a third side, Irvine residents "bear far more than our fair warranted the city take a stand
share" of air traffic. Baker said "The sale of alcoholic beverages and the sale of gasoline arc no1 Meanwhile, the Federal Av1auo n compatible. I sec no reason to add to
Admin1strat1on has apparently the numbers (of service stations
signed off on the settlement agree-selling alcoholic beverages) in this
mcnt between lhe county and airpon city," Hornbuckle said.
expansion foes. The council debate was spurred by
. Mobil service statio n at the southwest
comer of Harbor Boulevard and
Gtsler A venue.
Planning comm1ss1 oners granted a
cond1t1onal use permit <>ct. 14 to
remodel the gas station. under the
st1pulauon that beer and wine n?t be
sold. Fearful of legal repercussions.
the commission also asked the coun-
cil to review the dec ision and issue a
policy for future mini-mans.
Don Robbins, senior real estate
representative for Mobil Oil. told
council members the company might
be fo rced to cancel the proJeCl. rather
than spend an est imated S6SO.OOO on
a mini-man lhat won't be com-
pct1t1ve.
"If you g,i ve away the beer and
wine. you won't have the people
coming in for the snack!>. If you don't
have that, why build a snack shop'>"
Robbins explained.
He 1s attemp110g to add m1n1-marts
to some 50scrv1cc sta11ons in Orange.
Rivenide and San Bernardino coun·
lies. He said about 27 have been
approved by the vanous c1t1es. while
projects have been hampered in San
Clemente and La_guna Beach by
alcohol-consc1ous city offi cials.
About I 0 percent ot the cities
statewide have prohibited concurrent
sales of gasoline and alcoholi c
beverages, according to a staff report
by ~n1or Planner Mike Robinson
And leg1slat1on, AB 1433, pro posing
s1m1lar re<1tnct1ons has been in-
troduced. although it won't be con-
sider until after Jan. I
Ro b1Mon reponcd he was unahlc
to uncover any sc1ent1ti c stud1e<>
linking gas station mini-mans w11 h
drunken dnver~.
However. an informal survey hy
the Alcohol Ady1sory Board of Or-
ange County showed SI percent of the
violators attending drunken dn ver<;'
schools purchased their beer and wine
from such convenience store., and 4 J
percent of the people drank the ir
beverages immediately.
ANNEX STUDY WEIGHED ...
From Al
10 remain a counly service area
The assoc1at1on president said a
subsequent Mraw Poll asked res1denls
whether they eventually wanl to
become a county service d1stnct with
more home rule authority, to JOin
with other c.:ommun1ties to create a
new city or to become pan of the c1tv
Marshall s.a1d residents chose t he
third option. prompting the request
lo r the anncu tion study l ie said
Lake Forest II prohahl}' lack5 the tax
hase to operate ao; an indcpcndl·nt
City -
Marshall '>81d the m1dy wo uld
inform L..1kc F-ore'\t rc\1dcnt~ abo ut
what change., could take: place 10
police and fire protect11>n. 'i<:hnol
assignment<. and ~trcet maintenance
1f the community become., pan of
Irvine Irvine sought to become a party to
the county's law.,u1 t aga inst Ncwpon
Beach. the Ai rport Working (,roup.
Stop Polluting O ur Newport and
othe rs blocki ng airport expaM1on
plans after learning that supervisors
m ust take a neutral po\111on on the
search for an allemate airport Sile a<>
pan of the \C\llement agreement.
If El loro were conven ed to JOint
m1htary-c1v1 lian use. Irvine home·
owners would be plagued with in-
creased Je t noise. city officials con-
tend
Deputy County Counsel Dan a request to add a mini-market to the
Dtd1ersasd the agreement was sub-1-::=:=:=:=::=:=:=:=:================================================::.~~~~~~~~~mittcd to the FAA to ensure its terms
To comply with terms of the
se ttlement, the board rescinded two
resolutions stating 1to; oppos111on to
l'ommerc1 al use of Man ne Corps Air
1at1on. l l Toro and declanng there
was no acceptahlc allemat1 ve to John
Wayne
Resc1s'>1on ofJ he re\Oluuons clears
the way for in te~'>ted oan1e'i to seek a
Just Call
642-6086
Delly Piiot
0-'tvery
te Ou.tentMd
,.,.,,..,"'", ,,,,,., ,. f'" •
-,,.,,. yOtJI ~ ~'
\lOD " o•~<>'t '1 •M ,ra,, c~y _... r• ..,.._"4
f n 1982. the Sou them Cahfom1a
Assoc1at1o n of Governments (SCAG)
chose the air station as o ne of two
logical locations for another inter-
national airport. The orpmzat1on
also targeted part of Camp Pendleton
as a likely airport site.
Supervisors and the m1lit.ary have
h1stonCllllly o pposed J01nt use of the
air station.
Baker said Monday's 1nterven110n
attempt was j ust one of several efforts
did not conflict with any grant
obhgatJons.
The agreement should be filed with
Judse Hatter in the ncitt week or so.
D1d1er said. If Hatter approves lhe
settlement, limited expansion of the
a1rpon can move forward
The agreement, whic h ltm1t~ air·
pon growth through the year 2005,
sets caps on the number offl1ahts and
passengers permitted and approves a
scaled-down eitpans1on program in-
cluding a new terminal and parking
garage
What do you llkt about lbe Dally Piiot? Wbal don't you like? Call 1be
number at left and your mu111e will~ rtcorded, tranacrlbd and delivered
to Ult appropriate editor.
Tbt aamt %4-boar an1werlna •trvlct may bt uaed to rtcord lettert to tbt
tdltor oo any topic. Contributors to our Letter• <'Olumn mutt Include tbelr
name and ttlepbone number for vtrlflcatlon. No ('irC'ulalloa cal11, plu•t .
Tell u1 what'• oo your mind.
Karen Wittmer
Pubh'\n~•
Clrculatlon 714/142-4133
Claaatfted edverttetng 714/142·1171
All other depertmentt "'2-4321
MAIN OFFICI
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Mil•lllJ'"'
Howard ftituUenary
MAtkl'lt1ng 01rector
Doneld L. Wllllam•
C11cu1a11on
Mana~•
Peggy 81ev1na
ft!"1hftd Dir&<;tor
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n1 ~. • I, M _...,."'tN1
VOL n . NO.•
IT'S ABOUT TIME.
/
I
Getting aerloua about more exerclae?
Come over to the Houae.
If you've been putting off getting In shape, now's
the time to get serious about treating your body
better. Right now, The Sporting House has
openings for a limited number of new
memberships. You'll get full privileges et our
50,000-square-foot faclllty, staffed by
exceptional coaches and Instructors. at a
special Fall rate.
You know that exercise and competition are the
best ways to stay healthy, flt, and happy. Come
on. the time Is nowl
FREE BODY FAT TESTING & CONSULTATION ($25 Value)
WITH THIS AD FOR THE FIRST 15 NEW MEMBERSHIPS
Leslie Davia
Laurin Destefano
Fltnets Directors
Steve Knauer
Swim Coach THE
SteveVrebalov1ch SPORTING
Volleyball Instructor
()
¥ HOUSE
Bob Wetzel
Racquetball lnttructor 714/752-0565
each
BuuE riN BoARo
Bergeson speaks
to GOP wom.en
Sen. Manan Beracson of Newpon Beach will be
a aucst speaker at a reception toni&hl, hosted by the
Greater Irvine Business and f>rofess1onaJ Re·
publican Women Federated orpnizatio n.
Bergeson, and colleaue Sen. Becky Morpn, R-
Los Altos, will discuss women an politics.
The reception will be held an the Newport Bay R~m at the Newpon Sheraton starting at 6 p.m.
Tickets arc S35 ~person.and can be purchaacd at the
door. For add1t1onal 1nformat1on. contact Julie Froebergat 64Q..t IJ7.
Stress workshop la HB
A free public lecture and worlc.shop on stress and
its ~ffects on a person's body and mind will be given
tonight at the West Coast Chiropracuc Center, 5922
Warner Ave .. Huntington Beach.
Dr. Calvi n B .. Ross will conduct the 7 p.m.
seminar. deuu ling types of stress and practical
methods of decreasing harmful effccb. Call
840-4643 for more in formation or reservations.
Antlque show ln Vlejo
Antaque dealers from the western states will
conv~rge on the Mission Viejo Mall for a show
opening Wednesda y and running through Sunday
under the direction of Dick Rowan. owner of the
Antique Assoc1a11on.
The dealers will display their American and
European pieces and offer them for public sale. Mall
hours are 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. weekdays. 10 a.m. to 6
p.m. Saturdays and noon to 6 on Sundays.
Sulclde, stress seaslons set
Two suppon groups are forming an the South
County area, one for family and fn ends who have
lost a loved one to su1c1de and the other fo r Vietnam
veterans expenencang delayed stress reactions.
Those interested an part1c1pa11ng in either group
should contact Melanie Ley at 786-8816 evenan~ or
weekends.
Ebell Club to meet
The Junior Ebell Club of Newpon Beach will
hold a general meeting Thursday at the Ebell
clubhouse. 515 W. Balboa Blvd .. Newpon Beach.
The session will begin at 10 a.m. and 1s open to
anyone interested m Ebell act1 v111es. Call Eileen
Delancy at 645-052 1 between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. for
further 1nforma11 on.
Emeritus Day at college
The ninth annual Ementus Day, sponsored by
the Ementus lns111ute of Saddleback College and
Irvine Valley College will be held Thursday from
8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Saddleback College m Mission
Viejo.
The free event will honor older adults m the
Saddleback Communaty College Dastnct and wall
include a health fair from 9 a.m. to noon.
Entenaanment I\ planned dunng the afternoon an
the McK1nnl'} Theater. Call 582-4835 or 770-9669
for details
Program set on alarms
The Huntington Beach Neighborhood Watch
will sponsor a program on alarm systems Thursday
at 7:30 p.m. an the council chambers of the
Huntington Beach Civic Center. 2000 Mam St..
Huntington Beach.
Jim Carr of the Huntinfton Beach Police
Dcpanment's alarm office wil discuss the city's
fa lse alarm ordinance. The program also will be
aired live on cable channel 6. Call Suzie Wajda at
536-5933 for more information.
Cataract group meets
A medi cal suppon group formed to help people
wath cataracts will meet Thursday at 3:30 p.m. 1n the
Simply Dehc1ous Cafe in the Taj Mahal Building,
23521 Pasco de Valencia, Laguna Hills.
Dr. Charles Manger, a Laguna Hills eye
ph ys1c1an. will answer questions on cataracts. Call
951-4641 for funhcr 1nformat1on
GOP women bold luncheon
Former Los Angeles dastnct attorney Roben
Ph1hbos1an will speak to the Newpon Harbor
Republican Women at a luncheon meeting Thu~
day at the Reuben E. Lee Restaurant, 151 E. Coast
Highway. Newport Beach.
The session 1s scheduled fo r 11 :30 a.m.and the
cost of lunch 1s $9. Reservations may be made by
calling Fran loper at 673-3553.
State of Arts fete set
The Orange County Ans Alliance will stage 11s
sixth annual STate of the Ans Conference ThuOOJ!y
from 8 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. at the Irvine Hilton and
Towers Hotel 17900 Jamboree Road, Irvine.
The conference, entitled "The Ans m Tran-
sition," will focus on the future of the S!'Owing ans
environment in Orange County and wa ll include a
panel djscussion on media reporting of the arts. The
event is open to the public and reservations. at $35
for OCAA members and S40 for non-members. arc
available at 836-1600.
Pumpkln fesdvaJ ln Newport
A "Great Pumpkin Festival" will be staged
Friday through Sunday in Fashion Island, Newpon
Center, with costumed characters giving away
pumplcjns from a patch of 10,000 to customers.
A carved pumpkin contest will be held Sunday
at noon followed by pumplcjn carols at 2 p.m. Pnzes
wtll be awarded for the most traditional, unusual,
ahoulish and happy pumpkins.
Jlea IJomeotnJen elecdon .et
New directors lo the Mesa West Homeowners
Association will be elected Wednetday at the Mesa
Consolidated Water Distnct hcadquartcn, t 96S
Placentia Ave., at 7 p.m. Also City Councilmemben Mary Hornbuckle
aod Donn Hall will tpeak at the evcnina meetina.
Refreshmenu wilJ be served.
For more information, ca.II usocial1on presi-
dent Denise Cun')', after 5 p.m., at 646-2096.
TueedaJ. Oct. 22
• 6:30 r .m ., lrftae City C.-CU. City Council
Ownbc:B. 7200 Jamboree Blvd.
\Vednetlday.Oct.23
• 1p.m.1..a..-lked ~ Ceam.l1.._.
City Council Chamben. SOS fomt ve.
Orang• Coat DAIL V PILOT /T~•J· Octobet 22, 1985 * A3 I'
Betty Ford sees
Hoag's Breast
Imaging Center
By SUSAN HOWLETT °' .. ....,,_...,.
Former lirst lady Betty Ford v1s11cd the
Orange Coast Monday to tour Hoag
Mcmonal Hospital's new Breast Imaging
Center
"My expenence was 11 years ago when
people really didn't talk about at -at was
really hushed up They JUSt son of
whispered about 11 behind their hand,"
Ford said at a press conference following
her tour of the center.
Program Located 1n the Pu k Lido
medical offic.c bu1ld1na adjacent to Hoa.a
Hoi.p1tal, the decorated suite wa~ de 1aned
for the ca~ and comfon of us potu~nts
Ford's visit marked the first day of
Brea~t Cancer Awareness Weck , ~1d
HurwllL.
"We are emphas111nt\ cane.er here, bur
three -fo unhs of the ttme 1t'~ tx"rfccth
benign," Hurw1t.L said
Ford said that wa111ng for the result' 1~
the toughest tame for a woman threatened
by the poss1b1lit) of breast cancer But she
said that \Omething inside of her told her
that she would have to have the surgef)
-....
,
Tuning up at the fair
Led by Dr S Roben Hurwitz. director
of Hoag's Breast Imaging Center and
administrator M1c~el D Stephens. Ford
walked through the center and commented
on the comfon.able atmosphere
"I think for thu tYJ)( of treatment, it's
important to ~ve a pos1t1ve attitude."
Ford said. She added that the absence ul
chrome and stenlc whtte rooms should
help most women through the uneasy lime
of breast examiaµll ons.
"At that lime I wu •d read} pn:parcd,"
Ford said. "It was a woman'!> antu1t1on I
was somewhat prepared h) lht' '>uppon I •
had by m~ fa m1l} "
Volunteer Ann Cwik (left) acltuet. a televtalon U•tenlnl devfoe for the
heart of hearlnl on Annabelle Walker at the Hventh annual Hnlor
cltlaen health fi..lr at the lrTlne Senior Center.
10 lottery winners
picked for big bucks
WHITTIER CAP) -Lady Luck ~m1led
today on residents of Hunungton Park.
San Diego, Beaumont and Los Angeles.
who were among those chosen from 6,250
names for a chance at the Cahfornaa
Lottery's $2 m1lhon roulette wheel spin.
Lottery official!> oversaw the drawing of
the 10 names at a regional state lottery
office here.
number of people pamc1 paung an the Oct.
28 wheel span for the first chance to wan S2
million. The m1 n1mum amount on the
wheel is SI 0,000.
The drawings today are the result of
ticket sales much higher than ongmally
predicted by lottery officials. and a change
an the method of esumatmg tickets sold
"I thank that having son of a no n·
anst1tut1onahzed setting as ve ry healthful "
Ford said
According to the Amencan ( ancer
Society, one out of 11 women will develop
breast cancer dunng her la feta me. and 11 as
the maJOr cancer killer of wo men. This
year, an estimated 11 9,000 U S women
will develop brca!>l cancl'r. and 38.4')()
women are ex pected to dae from 111n 1985
By 1dent1fying mahgnanc1e<> 1n the
breast before they can be felt. doctors can
dramatlcally increase a woman·., chan<.e'>
for surviving breast cancer
"I think that all women who come an are
a little fearfu l. The)' wan t tu he shown a
httle concem for environment." Ford said
Tti e Hoag Breast Imagi ng ( entt~r v.a.,
es tablished earlier this )Car as pan of the
:-.lewpon Beach factl1t >-'' Health ~rv1ce~
Breast cancer 1!. currenth treated by
~veral dafft'rent methods, depending
upon the patient''> preferences and the
medical situation Otten two or more
method!> ma\ be u~d in LO mbinatton
according to medical omu als
The five-year sur. a val rate for v.omcn
wtth localized breast cane.er has n~n from
18 percent 1n the I 94()'\ to 96 p('rccnt
toda\o Amencan ( anler Sooet\o sta11s11cs
reveal
But no ma11cr what the nsk level 1s a
cenaan amount of fear remains when a
v.oman goes in for a l'm~as1 eum1na11nn
"~mehov. we· ha' en 't gotten over the
fact that there'\ a lot ol lcar IO\.Oh ed The
stigma I!. gone hu t 11 1\ \!Ill '>Car. ·· Ford
said
Hu rw1t1 ~1d the former fir'>t lad' 1<; "a
11rcless supporter'' for the efTorh of ca ncer
research and treatment Ford addressed a
lu ncheon auended b) about 250 people at
the "iewpon Beach \.tam o11 Hotel after
the official ded1cat1on ot the center The names were drawn by Estelle
Feuers, tbe president of Los Angeles C11y
College. She picked the numbers of the
candidates from a huge plastic drum
containing 6,250 plastic containers. each
bearing the number of a SI 00 Jackpot
winner. Only SI 00 winners are t:l1g.ible fo r
the wheel spinning
When the game began Oct 3. officials
pro1ected sales based on the number of
pnze claims for SI OO or more at the 12
lottery offices statewide. As the games
progressed, they switched to taking the
number of h1gh-11er claims mailed to
lottery headquaners an Sacramento Judge set to challenge Gates
The first o f tho~ chosen today were
Lorenzo Mananez of Huntingto n Park.
Charles Moore of Beaumont, Richa rd
Rhoan. San Diego: and Daniel Cruz of
Panorama City, said John Coleman. a
state lottery agent who matched the
numbers with names.
Today's drawing will double to 20 the
The new method has gi ven officials a
more accurate measurement of est a mated
sales. officials said.
When the fi rst game began, officials
estimated 11 would take eight to 12 weeks10
sell the 400 mil hon tickets m the Cahfom aa
Jackpot game. th e first operated by the
lottery.
That time could he cut hy the current
ticket sales rate
By tbe A11oclated Pre11
Mun1c1pal Coun Judge Bohh' Don
Youngblood's campaign to unseat Orange
Count} Sh en fT Brad Gates wall begin in
two weeks
Yo ungblood said Monda' ht· win take J
leave of absence w11han two v.eeh. two
months ahead of ~hedule hecause of
cn t1c1sm fro m fcllo"" 1unsts
He announu ·d 1n .\ugu'lol thdt ht• v.uuld
run against C1.itn 1n the June pnmJ r.
ekct1on but v.ould '>W\ on thl' hcnt h un11l
'>hnrtl~ before he tiln h1~ <led arat1 nn ""llh
the u 1un1v registrar'"> offitt' l'arh nC\I \Cdr
"I lons1dered the prcipnet \ of being an
annuunlcd ca ndid.ill' tor \ht•n tl while '1 111
on the bench long hefort rnent
an1Jn' mou~ l'.nllu 'lom lroni m' brother\ 11n
the hcnch .. Youngblood \aid
NEWPORT JUVENILE DETECTIVE RE MAINS UPBEAT ...
From Al
doesn't know how to be a parent.
"The nice lhang about my JOb 1s that I'm allowed
enough leeway to make a decision. I don't have to make an
arrest -but I can ··
sometimes be missed," she adds.
Campbell says she's also amazed b) the beauty ot the
human spmt. the stttngtb of a rape v1c11m to go into a
courtroom and face her assailant or the ab1h ty of a 5-year-
old 10 rebound from her parent's rcJecl1on
Educated , Alen and Loved The program teachei. grade
school students how to avoid s1tu.at1ons where the) might
be molested, abducted or harmed.
Campbell has seen Lhe extremes an late· parents who
pve away their 5-ycar-old daughter, a teen-age girl who
slashed her thighs and claimed she was raped. a Junior
high school boy who was repeatedly molested by an older
man who convinced the youth 11 was the "proper and
normal" thing to do.
''She looked at me and said, 'Don't worry. I'll be
OK.'" Campbell recalls the little girl remarking after her
parents put her up for adoption.
'Tm getting all the anent ion for being innn' JI I\ l' hut
11 wasn't mnovauon I wa.sJUSI doing my JOb.' tampbcll
says. 'Tm learning Just like everyone else 1s.
She cned after the 5-ycar-old girl was pu t up for
adoption. sympathized with the teen-ager who in ve nted
her own rape and befnended the boy who ult1matel~
testified in coun against the man who molested him.
"The human spint, especially 1n lods 1s amazing."
Campbell says. "The honesty ofk1ds as brutal. bu! at's to he
admired "
"Everyday I havt" intelligent. successful people on lhe
phone ask.ing me for help. askmg me what 10 do Somt·
ha' e trouble "'1th parenting or substance abuS<' or their
ov. n children .\nd the' 're asking me for hr-ID
"Sure it bothers me seei ng these things," Campbell
says. "It troubles me seeing tragedy stnlong people who
seem to be really decent human beings. It 1ntens1fies m>
appreciation of the ordinary
Campbell 1s somewhat bemused b} the honors and
praise bestowed on her this year Not onl) wcu she named
police officer of the year but she received the fi rst lav.
enfo rcement award from the Orange Count~ Sc'ual
.<\ssaull Network and a <;eholarshap 1n her nam{' Imm an
area PT.<\.
"h 's an a"'csvme rt-spons1b1l11' · -.he add'>
Camp~ll. IN hO'iC hu\band .\rh I \ a rolice-caraain In
11\Jewpon Beach, c;a\<, \he'~ not 1n1erl''1Cd in prnmo1111n
something that 1.1.oulJ lead to a ltih l hun!(I.'
She was singled out for heretlon<, in the S(.huul·bJ'l(.'d
"Thi' I\ 1.1.hc11 Im gw K.l Jl .111d tilt'> I\ 1Ah.11 l 11 ~1 I•
Jo" ( amphell '<!\\ .. r hc· 11nh 111hn lhtlljt r l'\ t•r l.l.,lll!t•d
111 he "'a~ to he a ltJ t her \nd 111 '"m' rt 'Jln 1.. I ~u"'" lhJ 1·, v.hat I Jm · "I think the ordinary has a beaut) 111 at that m11th1 program SF .\I an acron\m thJt '>tamh fu1 \Jk
Sunset Beach fire
burns homes, cars
Three Sunset Beach homes and a pair of Two home\ adjacent to the Spoto
automobiles were damaged an an earlv residence also were damaged an the fire
morning fire today. an Orange Coun ty Fare Furst said The l a use of the tire he added
Dcpanment spoke!tman reported. 1s sull undetermined
When firefighters responded to the blaze The home at 16146 16th \t \U!>taa ned
at 2:02 a.m. at the two-story home of abouts 1,000 1n damages. and th e home at
Joseph Spoto. 16742 16th St., t~ey found 16736 16th St. sustained ahout S7.SOU 1n the first-story and the house s carpon damages
engulfed in flames. said Capt. Lou Furst. ·
The fire caused an estimated $68,500 an 1 he fire was conuuned an 25 minute<> hy
damage, Furst said, including $20.000 an 35 firefighters under the command of
damage to Spoto's home and $40,000 an Batalllnn Chief Jerry L..oun
front of 1twir hotnl' shonh .111cr m1dn1ght
\unda) tor mali.1ng a loud unrcasonahk
noa~ • • • .\ud10 and 'adco t"qu1pml'nl 'alucJ al
~.i 200 ""as rt'poned !>trlh: n trnm a hnml in
the 400 bl0<.·li. o l 62nd ">trCl't \aturda'
l.rvlne
'\tar stcrl'U .. alut•J JI mort· than \41M1
waueportcd stokn Mtinda' tmma 'l'h1dt·
parked 1n lront of a honll' 1n lht· 4 \1M1 hltl\ Ii.
of Bndge.,.,,;n "itret•t • • • Tv.o sets of golf du~' "'l'rr rl'JlOllt'J
stolen from the open garage ell a h11ntt·
along <;nowapplc 0 ' er 1hc ""t'el t•m.I • • • Ciomeone rePQrted M11nJa\ th Jt '"'"
1uven1les weari ng helmet' and tamoufl.igr
outfits v.t're throwing rix k' at t .H'\ at tht.'
comer of If' inc Center Dn'c .ind 't ale
.\venue • • • damage to his cars. Destroyed were a I '172
Mercedes 350SL and a 1984 Chevy The Huntington Beach F1rt' Oepanment i\n S!!~IJ tyfl('v.ntt.'r v.a'> rr pont·d 'lnlr n
also assisted, Furst said. Mond1h from a har at 1 "'"IStt r •ll h Camaro Z.28.
Lapn&Beacb
A strona-arm robbery was reponcd
Monday niaht along the 200 block of Ocean
Avenue. Tl\e victim described the suspect
as a male adult. 5-9, 185 pounds, dressed an
a plaid shin and JC.ns. The suspet't
reportedly snatched a purse, but at was
recovered. • • • A loss of $220 was reported 1n a theft
Monday on Ocean Way • • • A minor electncal tire was exunguashed
by firefiahten Monday on Broadwa~ No
injuries were rcponed. • • • A dark green knapsack conta1ntni S275
cash and miscellaneous peperwork was
f'el)Oned lost Monday mornina on Broad-
way. • • • A l.quna Canyon Road busmes• Sun-
day reported the lhef\ oftra<k tcettts from
iu computer equipment. The los~ wa\
estimated ll s2s.ooo.
8oada Coa.nty
Someone reportedly stole S24 5 I 1n p5
from a l.quna Hills Shell st.allon, 22038
Lake Forest. Thunday evcn1na. • • • A San Juan C..piatrano resident 1n the
26100 block of Via de Giulian f'el)Orted last
week that va.ndaJa lhot out the windshield
ofhi1 motor home pa.rkcd in bis dnveway
Oct. 10. • • • Someone reponed.ly 1tolc S SOO in cash
from an El Toro NutritJon Man. 2J7U El
Toro Road, Thursday afternoon
Coeta Mea
.\ S40 vacuum cleaner and a S:WO TV set
were rcponed stolen from a home an the
200 block of Monte Vma Fnday night ••• Stereo equipment valued at S575 was
reported stolen from a home in 1he 700
block of West I 8lh Street over the
weekend • • • Two bottle~ of ' odk.a and a bottle of gin .
wonh S 12, were reported stolen from a
home 1n the 300 block of Mon le Ya!>ta last
Wednesday.
Newport Beach
A S 700 ~t of X-rays., a S 30 oak cane, and
a SI SO appointment book were reported
stolen from a white 1985 Volvo Saturday
n1aht. Also that evenina. someone rt'·
portedly stoic SS20 in cloth1na and SI SO an
cassette tape, from a grccn 19ll" Volvo.
Both thefts octurred 1n front of one home
alona Montectto • • • A S200 motonzed toy car was rcpaned
\tolcn from the carport of an apartment 1n
tht 200 block of Mamaentc Mo nda) . ~ .
A represcnwve of a Ch.tel Iverson car
dealer, -MS East Coe.st H\&hway, rrponed
that vandals cut the leather Kat~ and
tcratchcd the pllnl on 11 new cars Fnda}
or Saturday. The damaee was estimated at u.ooo. • • • Thl'ft Balboa ruadenu wett •~trod 1n
•
Fountain Valley
Michael Patnck Lore \. l.:! wa~ arrestt'd
Monda) night at the rnmer ot V.amer
A venue and M&Jnoha ~trect on susp1c1on
of drunken dnvmg Police repon s said he
was stopped fo r a ve hi cle tode viola tion at
which point the officer felt he might be
1ntoiucated He wa5 taken to Orange
County Jail and hooked • • • A thief, entenng th rough an unlod.ed
rear shdt!lJ aJass door. brokt into a
Sl\annon Raver home Monda} and \tole a
color T V set and a portable radio, ""on h
$510, the \ 1ct1m told police • • • l\n employee at Era Star Real fatate
Ramirez may get
n ew la wyer again
LO ANGELES t.\Pl -R1chard
Ram1rn. ac~uscd of 14 counts of murder
an the "Naaht Stalker" "IC'nes of slaytnp.
~n nqottauons throuah has famil)
toda for a third change an dt"fensc coun<JCI
sin~ h11 amst 1n Auaust
. Ram1re7 wu to enter a pica to Ml
felon1e• today, but that proottdma .,.,as
dela~ when Mun1c-1pal Court Judge E.1'a
Sopc-1 aarttd to m«t in chamh(" -...11h
Ramirez. his cumn1 attorney, J05eph
GaJlqos: two San Jow attorney, blddana
to take over R.tm1re7 ' e&"IC', and ~put'
Otstnct Attorney Ph1hp t~alPtn.
11'1M1 \l.Jrner •\\l 1ql<11ll'11 \.111ndc1 ' tha1
,11nH·1 •Ill' 'tok ,t "w 1 llJgpok I 1gh t t n •m in
tr •nt Pl lhl' hu'lnt·" 11,n 1h1 "'l'l'li.l·nJ ...
\. Jn1crJ \d\'t'llC taJ)l''> and tlour 01 .1 1'
\o\11nh S, •" ""l're rcpont'll \tolcn ~untl.I\
trom J hmv. n 141(~ Tn' 111..1 { l'lllJ p.irl n l 111
Iron I ol .i homt• tn thl' I tiMk 1 bill\. k 11! \11
< .11 huma . . .
\man Jjlgaed ll'l'r t ~l' M lt'\l o l h" "'ilt·
q ormt•d n"lJt ol lhl' pnl11 l' .,t..illon 11 l~l)P
\IJlrr \' l \unJJ\ ni ght Jnd kll l ed •111l' nl
lht lhrt"c tool '11.kv.allt. light\ T ht• J,t mJ~l'
"';\' l'\lllllcllt:'J ,11 ~~,.
Huntington Beacb
\ \)IKJ \ll'Tl'tl .1mpld1l'I \o\d\ rl'porH·1J
\ll1k n fro m a h1mw 1 n I hl' X 1110 hlot. I.. nt \an
.\ngt'ln "1 onda\ r hl' tlrn·t cntard t hrnu~h
J \luJ1ng glas\ halum' ilP1H pol a e rt pt in '
-..11J . . .
l a<;h and 1c1.1.elr. tnt.ali ng \400 "'l'rt'
n•poncd <.1t1kn lrnm J ll11ml' 1n tht' f\MIMI
bhx lt. lll Lala'l'llt" \1i1n1ta' Th{' th1el 1ut
the: S('rct·n an front 1)t" <.hd1ng glass wrndm~
to ga in l"ntr. • • •
<\ re'iadent in th e I 011<10 block of hht
rep(lned Monda' th3t h1\ hlue Porsche IJ i I
was stolen Saturda' Pnlm.-later nou fied
ham that the S2 (, Cl(io 1 a1 had al read\ h<-t'n
recovered h\ ( 0~1.a Mc..a police v. ho 11\(lli.
three SU\(lCCt~ an•o I U\tod~ • • • Vandals reported I\ d1J \I 40 damagc 1t1 .1
dnve-th ru sign at a Der "1t'ner\4hn111I
rest~urant. 76~2 Edinger .\ \ enuc l\.atur
da} The' al'l<l 'ltok a S 'O napkin hol~ln
police rcpon~ ..aad • • • Jewelr. 'alut'd , t S~ \l(U v.a' rept,1rtt'd
'ltolcn Monda\ from • home an the "'!<00
hied. of Spet'r·
Valley record
shop robbed
Poh« arc se.uchana for a "nicel ~
drcSlled'' gunman who robbed a f ountain
Valle} l"e'COrd shop of aoout S260 and two.
cassette ta~ Mond" mahl
Aocord1na 10 tht" pohtt rcpon.. a man
t"ntertd Pttr RCC'Ords, I 7()q(') Maanoha t •
at about 9:30 p.m . picked out two cnwttt'"
t.apn and took them to the coun\c'f
As the clerlt opened the cash iltf' the.
man displayed a black han un and
demanded mon('y, pob<ic Utd. robbc-r
then f\cd on fool Nn 10Juna ~rt'~
1 n the holdup.
\
I
'
Co.it DAILY PtlOT/Tueeday, October 22, 1085
,Balanced budget
movement gains
in House action
WASHINGTON (AP) -Con-
p-euional negotiations on a Scnatc-
paucd balanccd-bud&et plan arc showina irutial, modest signs of
movement with House bargainers aareeina to begin work on a bipartisan
counteroffer.
The public sessions, continuin1
today, so far have been htlle more
than a careful examination by House
members of the plan's mtricate
detail&.
"Before we accept this apple, we
ou&bt to find out how many wonns
there arc in 1t," S&Jd Rep. David
Obey, I>Wis., one of the House
oqotiators.
But in an apparent bow to mount-
1111 political pressure for action,
House negotiators agreed m private
meetinp Monday to fonn task forces
to work on drafting a bipartisan
alternative.
It is unlikely the conferees will be
takina concrete action until next week.
anccd budget by 1991. It is attached to
legislation raisma the government's
borrowina authority -the national
debt limit -to more than $2 trillion.
Treasury Department officials
have said they will need that borrow-
ing increase by about Nov. I , and
Packwood said be has asked T rcasury
Secretary James A. Baker Ill to
provide the neogotiators with a more
exact estimate of when the govern-
ment till will be empty.
Under the Senate plan, there would
be statutory ceilinas on bud.act defi-
cits, beginnina with $180 billion in
the current fiscal year and decrcasina
by $36 billion a yclr until reachina
zero in 1991. Deficits are now
runruna at about $200 billion a year.
If Congress and the White House
arc unable to agree on act.ions to meet
the annual goals, the plan d.irccu the
president to impose automatic
across-the-board spending cuts to
keep the red ink within the ceilings.
-
Sen. Robert Packwood, R-Ore.,
cb&irman of the Senate Finance
Committee and chairman of the
conference. said that if all the
barpiners were committed to agree-
ina on a "self-enforcing, statutory
mechanism" to achieve a balanced
budget, then "good minds can reach a
fair conclusion."
House Democrats have expressed
skepticism about the Senate plan, saym~ it would put off hard budget
decisions until after neltt year's con-
gressional elections to help Re·
publican senators seeking to keep
control of that chamber.
There also has been concern about
transferring too much power to the
president and the emphasis placed on
spending cuts alone to achieve the
deficit-reduction goals.
Remembering comradea
The Senate propoSal, embraced by
President Reapn, promises a bat-
Two color parda peer tbroqb the Vietnam Veteran•
Memorial In Aaiuta. lla.lne. to look at picture. of 8n'eral
80ldlen who 4lecl In action followtnc an emotional
ceremony unyelHna the memorial Monday.
AIDS kids 'needn't be kept out of schools'
By die Associated Pre11
A French study has proved that
AlDS cannot be spread by casual
contact, says one of the world's
leading researchers, while an Ameri-
can researcher says lack of under-
standing about the deadly disease has
contributed to misguided social poli-
cies.
Dr. Luc Montagnier. speak.ing
Monday in San Francisco. said the
study involved 60 handicapped boys.
haJfofwhom were hemophiliac. Half ---
the boys with hemophilia had been
rnfected with the AIDS virus, ac-
qwrcd as a result of viral contamina-
uo n of the blood products all
hemophilia patients must use.
He said e ven though the boys lived
together in "very close, casual and
continual contact," researchers found
no indication that the other handi-
capped boys were infected with the
disease.
In Miami Beach, Dr. Brad Truax. of
the University of California at San
.. Jack LaLannei
Diego Medical School told the annual
meeting of the American Association
of Blood Banks Monday that lack of
funding for research and treatment of
AlDS bas contributed to hysteria
about the disease that bas brought
about misgu ided policies.
"By doing such thinp as keeping
lcids with AIDS out of school we're
only contributing to fears about the
disease even though the evidence
shows they don't pose a risk to
others," he said.
Montagnier spoke at a lunch S{><>n-
sorcd by the French-Amencan
Chamber of Commerce and later
offered a detailed report on his work
to colleagues at the University of
California, San Francisco.
Another researcher, Dr. Robert
GaJJo, the first U.S. scientist to
identify the AIDS virus, said in San
Diego Monday that he is optimistic
that two new drugs will help in the
treatment of the deadly disease.
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Senate gets $105 m.illion
health appropriation bill
BJ t.M Aaaoclas.4 Preti
W ASHJNGTON -The Senate has returned to work on a $1 O.S b1lhon
money bill for the Labor. Health and Educati.on departments that i~cl':'des
$20.S million for public education and research mto AIDS. The appropnallons
bill for fiscal year J 986 is second in size only tc:> th~ Defense Depart~cr_ifs
money bill. And at SI O.S billion, the Senate version 1s more than $43 b1l11on
above the amount requested by the R~ administration. The Hou~-paucd
measure came in at S 104.4 billion. Any differences between the two bills would
have to be ironed out in a conference committee.
SeJJaton urge re11trlctlng Sovlets
WASHINOTON -Concerned that spy nests may be operating
unchallenged, some senators want to know w~y the United. States doesn't
restrict travel of diplomats and others from Soviet bloc countncs who may be
intelli&ence agents. Posina under diplomatic or similar cover, agents of the
Soviet KGB and other intelligence services have recruited or been the <:0ntact
for many of the Americans charged in recent ctpionage cases ... After all, 1t takes
two to pass a secret," said Sen. Wilham Ro th Jr., R-Dcl.
Cluy•ler talk• remaln deadlocked
HJGH LA.ND PARK. Mich. - A strike by 70,000 autoworkers against
Cbryslcr Corp. stretched into a seventh day. today with negotiat~rs .locked in
their longctt session since the talks began 10 August. The conunumg stnke
against the No. 3 auto maker threatened to cut short the return to work of
I 0,000 Canadian Chrysler workers, who ended their 5V?-<iay strike on Monday.
Chrysler Chairman Lee lacocca, who helped end a deadlock in the Canadian
talks over the weekend, arrived at company headquarters late Monday and
stayed until after 2 a.m. as a session that started at 9 a.m. Monday dragged on
past the 21-hour mark.
Teen gets prison for hlttlng teacher
CARLISLE Ark. -A 16-ycar-old girl is in a county jail awaiting transfer
to the state priso'n system where she is to serve three years for hitting her math
teacher. The sentence is one of the first applications of a law designed to protect
teachers, police and state employees. Tina Walker was convicted o.f sccond-
dcgrce battery for bitting Pam Berry in May, ~o~cuting ~ttomey_ Will Feland
of Cabot said Monday. A Lonoke County Circuit Court Jury deliberated less
than two hours before returning the verdict and recommending the sentence.
The trial Oct. 9 lasted a day.
Heart transplant patient 'critical'
HARRISBURG, Pa. -The first rec1p1ent of the Penn State an1fic1al heart
went into a stupor today and was in criucal condition, hours after a human
organ found for him failed en route to the hospital, an official said. Anthony
Mandia. 44, was listed in "critical and unstable" condition, Dr. John Burnside,
spokesman for Hershey Medical Center, said at a press conference today. He
said Mandia's "level of consciousness 1s fluctuating" and there was an "overall
depression ofbram function."
Jordan arms sale link
to peace talks sought
By tile Assoc.lated Prus
WASHINGTON -Senate Republican leaders. trying to head off an
embarrassing defeat forboth President Reagan and Jordan's King Hussein, all
scramblina to draft compromise legislation that would tie the proposed S 1.9
billion sale of arms to Jordan to proarcss in Middle East peace lalks. Sen.
Richard Lugar, R-Ind., chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
talked privately with other lawmakers Monday, as the Pentagon made the
fonnal notification to Congress of the sale. "The question before us ... 1s to
discover whether 1t 1s possible ... to link progress toward peace with the
provision of arms," Lugar said in a prepared statement.
No separate Israel-Jordan peace
AMMAN, Jordan - A government spokesman said today that Jordan
would reject any unilateral peace settlement with Israel, and 1ns1sted on a
broader scope for peace talks than proposed at the United Nations by Israeli
Prime Minister Shimon Peres. Peres said in a speech at the U nited Nation~
Monday that he is ready to travel to Jordan to negotiate peace ID the M1ddlt'
East. But a high-ranking Jordanian official said his country rejects "all partial
and unilateral settlements with Israel," and insists on a U.N.-sponsored
international conference to achieve Middle East peace, 1n hne with the 198:!
Arab summit resolutions adopted in Fez, Morocco.
Arafat as.ks Arabs boycott U.S. goods
KUWAIT -PLO chairman Vasser Arafat called on all Arab nations
Monday to boycott U.S. goods to "punish America" for its handling of the
Achille Lauro hijacking and Israel's air raid on the PLO headquarters ID
T.unisia. He also said ~e did not beli~ve King H ussc1 n of Jordan would agree to
bilateral peace talks wi~ Israel. In his appeal for a boycott, he said. "I call on all
Arab people and officials to shoulder their respons1bilit1es and react to the
latest American attempts to humiliate the Arab world."
U.S. patchlng Tunisian relations
TUNlS, Tunisia -A special envoy sent by President Reagan met Wlth
Tunisia's leaders today to repair relations strained by Washington's failure to
condemn an Israeli air raid on the PLO headquarters near Tunis. The visit by
Deputy ~tary of State John C. Whitehead followed trips to Egypt and Italy,
where he tned to smooth over differences caused by the hijacking of the Italian
cruise ship Achille Lauro. Whitehead arrived in Tunis on Monday and went
straight into talks with Foreign Minister Bcji Caid Essebsi. The meeting lasted
about an hour.
Flghtlng erupt. again In Beirut
BEIRUT -Christian and Moslem fighters clashed m and around Beirut
Mon~y. en~ng a two-day lull that bcaan after President Amm Gemayel went
to Syna to discuss an accord to end Lebanon's 10-ycar-old civil war. Police
reported two people we~ killed and at least five were wounded ID sporadic
rocket, mortar and machmc-gun fire exchanges along the Green line between
Beirut's Moslem and Christian sectors and in hills cast of the capital. They said
the shooting tapered off after about eight hours.
Relea.e of Duarte'• daughter stalled
S~N SALVADOR, El Sal".addr -The government and the Roman
Catholic Churc~ sent representatives to Panama to negotiate final details oft.he
re!e&tc of ~1dent Jose Napoleon Duane's kidnap~ daughter but last-
m1nute con~1~1ons aJ?parently stalled the talks. Guemllas who hold Duartc's
dluahter wd m a radio broadcast Monday that Duarte had rejected their offer
but sources said Duarte still wu considering a rebel proposal. "The situatio~
keeps cban&ina." one source said. Ines Guadalupe Duarte Duran 3S and a frien~. ~na .Cecilia Villeda Sosa, 23( were kidnapped Sept. 10 by a' group
1dentifyin1 itself as the Pedro Pab o Castillo Front an offshoot of the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front. '
Memorial held for JAL crau victim•
tOKYO -More t~an 3,000 fam~ly members. fnends and officials p~ered t~y at a mcmonal ICt'Vloc for victims of history's worst sin~e-plane
aV1Ation diluter~ th~ crash of a Ja~n ~ Lines plane Aua. 12 that killed S20 ~pie. The tcl'Vl~ 1n Os.aka. dea,ttnauon of the plane, was orpnized b the
airline u a memo~aJ .to the 368 victlma ftom western Japan, JAL spok.Jman
Geoffrey Tudor said. m To9'~· A ICJ>aJ'lte. servic.c was planned Thund.ay m
Tolcyo, where the flight On&Jnated, for victims from central and northern Japan.
Ar6ent1na laancbe11 parge after bomblZJI•
BUENOS AIRES -President RauJ Alfooain ordered the arrest of ai~
army OffiOCfl an~ SIA CJviJians ~~Y i!'I ~n~ion wtth an alleged "cam pa' n
of vi~lence qa1n1t demo:cnuc 1n1u1utJons, 1ncludin1 a stnna of rece~t
bombif\11. Another bombina ~JTcd today, hours af\er the early-momin
anat o*1 was issued. The blast 1n a au&rdpos~ ~bm outside the offices of th:
army chief o.f staff ca~ted damaaet but r,to tr\junes, pohce said. Alfonsin
invoked special executJvc ~ fn decrccma the: a.rrests..
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Dan White death 'last
chapter' in SF tragedy
Paroled, troubled slayer of two officials
fou nd asphyxiated in garage, a suicide
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Dan
White's suicide was the final chapter
of a San Francisco trqcdy be started
in 1978 by killina Mayor George
Moscone and Supervisor Harvey
Milk.
An autopsy is scheduled for today,
but there appeared little doubt that
White's death Monday was the result
of carbon monoxide (>Oisoning.
He was found in his garage with a
garden hose running from the tailpipe
of bis yellow Buick LeSabre into the
passeoaer compartment, said police
ChiefComefius Murphy. TowelsaJso
bad been stuffed tightly around the
car windows.
White left notes to his wife, mother
and brother, apologizing for the
trouble his death would cause them.
His brother, Tom, found the body
of the 39-year-old former supervisor
and a note, taped to the car's
windshield. that said, "I am sorry for
the inconvenience I caused you
finding me like this."
San Francisco wu stunned on
Nov. 27, 1978, when White walked
into the City Hall offices of Moscone
and Milk and opened fire with a
loaded .38-aJiber police revolver.
When it was over, the city's popular
mayor and first openly homosexual
supervisor were both dead, White was
facing murder charges and the city's
gay community was mourning the
loss of its leader.
That mourning turned violent the
following May 21 after White was
convicted of two counts of voluntary
manslaughter and sentenced to seven
years, eight months in prison.
Some S,000 protesters, mostly $8Y
men1 stormed City Hall, smashing
winoows and burning police cars in
what became known as the "White
Night" riots.
Prosecutors had sought a murder
conviction, but the defense had
asserted that White's capacity wa5
diminished, at least in part, from
eating too much junk food. It became
known as the "Twinkie defense."
Anger, if not violence, arose again
in January of this year, when White
was paroled after scrvi~ SYJ yea.rs of
his sentence. Mayor Dianne Feins-
tein, who took over the mayor's office
after Moscone's death, publicly asked
Wrute not to move back to San
Francisco, whert his wtk and two
children live.
But apparently White did return, at
least part time, and he remained a
troubled and confused man, his
friends reported.
"It's just mind boggling," said
Inspector Frank Falzon. a homicide
investigator wbo was one of White's
closest friends.
"The events of 1978 were going to
play heavily on this man the rest of his
life," Falzdn said. "Here we are some
seven years later, we're seeing the
final chapter."
White's attorney, Douglas
Schmidt, said, "He was always vacant
and depressed from the first time I
met him," just days after the shoot-
ings. Schnudt, who defended White
in the notorious trial, said he last saw
the former policeman and firefighter
about two rflonths ago.
"I think he was just trying to cope,
and not very successfully," said
Schmidt, noting that White was not
receiving regular psychiatric cue, but
bad been seen on "at least a couple of
oocasions" by one doctor.
White, elected in 1977 to a super-
visor's scat on a law and order
platform, resigned his office a year
later, on Nov. 10, 1978. He cited
financial hardships as the reason, but
abruptly asked for his scat back about
Dan White
two weeks later.
Moscone and Milk were said to
oppose taking White back on the
board.
Just eight days before White shot
the pair, 0 .S. Rep. Leo Ryan was shot
to death in Guyana by followers of
Rev. Jim Jones, who hact brought
members of his People's Temple
from San Francisco to the tiny nation.
A mus suicide followed and more
than 900 people died, many from the
San Francisco Bay area.
An already numb city was jolted
even more by the killings of Moscone
and Milk. Reaction to White's suicide
differed. but few expressed much
remorse.
LA 'hero' given 28 years
for slaying gang m.ember
By Ch A1todated Prut
LOS ANGELES-James Hawk.ms Jr., once heralded asa hero forbattlmg
street pnp, has been dealt a maximum 28-year prison term for lullin~ a png
member outside his father's Watts grocery. "My conduct. .. was not cnmmal,
your honor. I defended myselfapinst an assault," Hawkm~ protes~cd Monday
as Superior Court JudF Ronald S.W. Lew sentenced him to six years fot
volun1:11Y manslauahter, two for using a deadly weapon dl_Jring the
commission of a crime and a totaJ of 20 years for four. separate pnor f~lony
convictions on which Hawkins had been paroled. Hawkins, 40. was convicted
in Auaust for the shooting of Anttwon Thomas, 19. "The defendant has
enaaaed in a pattern of violent conduct which indicates a serious danser to
society, .. Lew said. But Hawkins countered: ''My past conduct has nothing to
do with me now .... I acted in good fahh and ended up being charged with
murder." "That ain't no justice!" exclaimed his father, whose store had
operated in Watts for more than 40 years. "Here's a man who stops a robbery.
helps a woman and her five children and we send him to jail."
Chinese publl•her freed, to return
MONTEREY PARK -The publisher of a Chinese language daily
newspaper has been released by authorities in Taiwan and will be allowed to
return to the Uni~ States, the editor of the International Daily News said
Monday. Lee Ya-Ping, publisher of the 70,000-circulation newspaper that is
distributed in the Western United States, Canada and Panama, was scheduled
to return to Los Angeles on Tuesday afternoon, said editor Anthony Yuen. The
publisher, a resident alien in the United States. was arrested during a business
trip Sept. 7 and accused of violating Taiwan's anti-sedition laws because her
Monterey Park-based newspaper ran articles and editorials discussing efforts
to reunite her homeland with majnland China.
Court OK• retarded ster111zatlon
SAN FRANCISCO -Although an extremely retarded woman might
never be able to make a real choice about childbearing, she has a
"constitutional right to have these decisions made for her," according to a state
Supreme Court ruling.. In a 4-3 decision Monday, the court struck down a 1980
state law banning sterilization of the severely retarded. saying the operation
must be available in limited circumstances to preserve a woman's choice on
whether to give birth. The 1980 law forbade sterilizatton of people under a
conservatorship. Boys Club must admit girls, state Supreme Court rules
SAN FRANC ISCO (AP)-A lioys to all boys. particular social need, Grodin said. It was the first time the coun had Juran •pl1 t On slavery case
O ub, despite its name, must let girls The Santa Cruz Boys Qub is But he said there was no evidence applied the civil rights laws, which LOS ANGELES -A Beverly Hills businessman was fou nd guilty on six
join if it admits boy members non-"classically public m its operation," Boys Club facilities were "suited or forbid discrimination by all business immigration counts, but jurors couJdn 't reach a verdict on I 0 other counts in
selectively. the state Supreme Court said the opinion by Justice Joseph safe only for males," noting that some establishments, to cover a non-profit a case prosecutors said involved importing I ndones1an slaves. Nasim M ussry,
has ruled. Grodin. "It opens its recreational of the clubs already admit girls. community-service oraaniz.ation. S1, was aJso acquitted Monday of one count of aidiog an illegal immigrant,
In its second major scx-discrimina- ' doors to the entire youthful popu-The 1,200-member club, which has The rultng appeared to cover while rus sister, Elsa Singman, 53, a naturahzed U.S. citizen. was convictt:d of
tion decision in four days, the court lation of Santa Cruz. with the sole a gym, swimmin$ pool and craft and rccrcallon-based organizations such one count of conspiracy. The federal jury con victed Mussry, an Indonesian
ruled Monday by a 5-2 vote that state condition that its users be maJe." game areas, admits all boys aged 8 to as Linle League, which has been citizen, on fourcountsofa1dingand transporting illegal immigrants. one count
civil rights laws cover a non-profit Some specialized institutions. like I 8 for a fee of$3.25 a year. Three girls ordered by courts in other states to of visa fraud and one count of conspiracy but could not reach a verdict on
organization built around rec-housing for the elderly, may dis-and two boys filed suit m 1977 admit girls. It does not cover private charges the immigrants were kept as slaves -IO counts of peonage and
rcational facilities that are ~-:_ai!able _cnm_._ina_t_e_if_d_e_s1..;:·gn_ed_so_l_el-'-y_to_sc_rv_e _a_sc_eki_._n.:.g_to_le_t .:.&J_·r_ls~j_o1_·n_. ______ cl_u __ bs_. ____________ 1_·n_vv_oo_l1u_n_ta_ry se_rvi_·t_u_de_. _____ _,
3mg
Now is lowest.
By US. Gov't. testing method.
SU RGEON GEN ERAl'S WARNING · C1garen e
Smo ke Cont ain s Ca rb on Monoxide
' f
NOW 1 It! I (JWt ST 01 fill HHANI l~
SOrT PACK 100s Fil TCR. MENTHOl 3 mg ··1ar 0 I mQ nirotmP
av oer ciq1Jte1te b>t HC method
e -ll J lll"'10lOl 109AGCOOO -------------Ag board
counselor
under fire
SAN FRANCISCO (A P) -Re-
ligious leaders say David Stirling,
general counsel of the Agncultural
Labor Relations Board, should be
ousted for lobbying asainst the Unit-
ed Fann Workers Union.
"We are prompted to make such a
caJI by mounting evidence that Mr.
Stirling is abusins his office by
lobbying the rcligJous community
and others to oppose the United
Fann Workers' boycott of non-union
table grapes," said Rev. Doris
McCullough. president of the North-
ern California Ecumenical Council,
in a prepared statement Monday.
Surling was appointed by Gov.
George DeukmeJian in 1983 to over-
see the Agricultural Labor Relations
Act, which is supposed to provide for
a process of collective bargaining and
the filing of grievances. Hts duties
include deciding which grievances
will be heard and which growers will
be prosecuted for unfair labor prac-
tices. .
But since taking office. Stirling has
dismissed more than half of the 900
outstanding cases and sent letters to
several religious and political leaders
urging them to oppose the grape
boycott, said Rev. Fred Eyster of the
National Farmworker Ministry.
"It seems Mr. Stirling has cynically
given up all pretense to what he
originally claimed was his stated
purpose of bringing fairness and
balance to the operation of the
ALRB." said Eyster, addin' "'it
appears that Gov. Deukmejian 1s not
only allowmg these actions by Mr.
Stirlinf.. but may in fact be directing
them.'
No change
in whale's
wandering
RIO VISTA, Calif. (AP) -Of-
ficials have adopted a hands-off
policy toward the humpback whale
dubbed "E.T." that appearc<i today to
be headed for about his 12th day in
inland waters.
The bus-sized whale, aJso called
Humphrey, was last seen late Mon-
day in narrow, dead-end Shaj Slough,
70 miles from the Pacific Ocean. It
was first seen Oct. 11 in San Francisco
Bay, into which it wandered from its
annual mtrtion trail. but kept going
upstream in fresh water.
Shag Slouah 11 one of seemingly
hundreds of branches of the Sacra-
mento-San Joaquin Ri ver Delta. It is
about 12 miles north of Rio Vista,
whose cash rea)sters arc swelling from
the unprecedented influl of 11ahuecrs
in recent days.
Amona the Shag Slo"Jh onlookers
Monday, Rio Vista bait shop clerk
Dina Fields said, "Ke is actually
awesome, isn't he? It's reaJly wonder-
ful to see him, but you have to have
mixed emtions. Everybody 11 sorry he
is here."
Russ Woolf of Dixon laid he bu
been watchina the whale, off and on,
since lut Oct. 14, when it came up
next to his boat while he was fishing
near Rio Vist.a.
"He wu very ~ntJe. lt would Just
come up to _you,· Woolf said.
Added flshina companion Bob
Lord, "You could feel be wiu not
aoin1 to do anythina. He knew nab• where the boats were."
Orange eo.. t DAIL y PILOT fT UMday, October 22, 1985 A7
'
, f,
I
BJgCanyon· Phllharmonic member s
strut their stuff at fun fashion show
By VIDA DEAN ..,......,
One of the most cnthusiasucally
received fashion shows bas to be the
8 1a Canyon Phtlhannonic's annual
affair.
The good-looking members act as
models and tables filled with thctr
fnends keep 1he excitement high with
applause and a few whistles.
and keeping appomtments at the
beauty salon (o.nc even confessed
she'd ~n dieting for a month).
did very well. When all the bills arc
paid we should be able to donaic six
or seven tho usand to the
Philharmonic." (The next day she
was busy with another pany -the
family was celebratina son Mark'•
birthday at the Center Club. Mark, an
architect, did posters for the show,
daughter Brow)'D modeled, daughtcr-
in-law Carolan.oe did illustrations for
the inv1ta11ons and father RuueU was
one of the tuxedoed escon for
models.)
Prizes galore were awarded ... two
lucky winners were Joan lteatoo,
who took home a chinchilla teddy
bear and K!DJ•ley Broaau, who was
trying to decide on what to buy with
her $300 aift cenificute from La
Galleria.
Others there included Mary Jobn-
aon, Joyce Reaame, Marcie Adler,
Ollle HUI, Nora He.ter, Boule
Holme•, Mary A.D.D Mlller, Jean
Tudowaky, Barbara Freudt, Bart
TulvlD1,8a1u Barlow, Barbara Tay-
lor and Gloria Carras.
Modeling at the Newport Beach Mamot.t, far left, is Ann
Stern, one of the chairs of the Philhannonac ev~nl. Second
from left is Cookie Marotta, shown as she a~ ved at t~e
event. The middle photo shows Big Canyon Ph1~harmon.1c
co-chair Ann Pange striking a model's pose. Mana Francis,
second from right, enters the hotel for the . succes~ful
fashion show and luncheon. Karen Rokos, far nght, smiles
for the camera. Some 350 showed up for the latest
luncheon show held at the Newpon
Beach MarriotJ. featuring more than
50 fashions from Evelyn lehlc's La
Gallena in Tustin. Of the fashions
presented. included were 14 as-yet-
unsccn evening styles from Glona
Santa Manno's Lado Silks ofNewpon
Beach and 14 furs from Ward Furs.
Corona del Mar. ' The models take their roles
scnou~I}. holding prac11ce·scss1ons
The mannequins including co-
cha1nnen A.D.D Pu 1e and A.D.D Stena,
as well as JoAue Mill, Sally Lorena&,
Madeline Blackwell, Mary
Sabatauo, Martba Green, Cook.le
Marotta, Marla Francia, Karen
Roko1 , Patd BtllaiJ, BroW}'ll Puce.
Sandy EwlD1 and commmce chau-
man Maratt Cbrl1Uano -arrived at
the hotel looking like cover girls.
They had been at Moon Gate in
Fashion Island gclllnJ makeup and
hairdos from nine stylists prior to the
show.
"Our members arc not only pretty.
they arc charming and were very
successful in getting so many things
donated for the show," said AD.De
Puge. "This 1s our third show and we
Magic also entered into the "New
York Magic" themed show ... Jaaoo
Sytnyk, the 16-year-old son of Spy-
glass comm1uce member Pat SytDyll:,
did tricks and pulled out a few white
birds wi th Babbette Frucla (daugh-
ter of mod'cl Marta) assisting. Jason
has performed at Magic Island,
Disneyland and Magic Castle.
Also present was veteran 'tl;hion
show producer and commcn~~
Florence SmalH, who looked aro~
the room observing the applauding\
crowd and said, ''They sure seem to
be having fun."
..
TV LISTINGS
EVEHIHG
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f ot Ttle Rest of Your lrf•
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• • Tne Last W1nlllf 1198'41
Kathleen Ourn1an
Z MOVIE * * 1 Murder My Sweel · 119441
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f1l) WILD, WILD W0RU> Of
ANIMALS
ml TH£ MOVIEMAKERS 'T SAN OIEOO AT LAAGE
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ANO JAMIE
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fll) ~VA ml WAR: A COMMENT ARY BY
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1191S1 Sean Conner, Candice Ber·
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P1c~1ng Up Trie Pieces tPrerruereJ
Margot Kidder Oav1d Ackroyd
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fJ:) WAR; A COM ... EHT ARY BY
GWYNNE DYER
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Char1011e Ramp11no
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PfQEHT8
G A8C HEWS NIOHTLINE G DAVE DEL DOTTO
Cf) INDEP£NOENT NEWS
,
Widow regrets selling Qome
Dear Ann Landers: I have held on
to this column for 15 years. I knew I'd
nt.~cd 11 someday and that da)' came a
le"' weeks ago. It helped mt• make a
\ound dcc1s1on that I ""ould not ha\e
made '-'lthou1 )'Our help
Please run th1'1 column aµ1n.
Millions of women need to sec 11. so
"'hen the time comes for them to
make a dec1s1on , the\ will make the
right une. -A R. IN V -\.
OE.\R A . Thanks for lell1ng me
knov. Herc 11 1s.
Dear Ann Landers: When my
husband died fou r months ago, my
daughter and \On-an-law begged me lO
\ell m} home and hve with them I
Y.as gnef-stnckc n and lonely and I
said. ''Yes ... It was the biggest mistake
of m) hfe.
My house 1s gone. m)' furniture 1s
gone and I'm a guest 1n someone
el~c's home My daughter doesn't
"'ant me to cook and I feel "1n the
way." My grandchildren arc 111-
rnannered and disrespectful. To hear
them talk I wonder how I could ha ve
h\cd so long and learned so little.
I "'as once an acu vc. useful person.
Nov. I feel lake a dned-up, useless old
woman. I ga ve up evcf)thang dear to
me and I really didn't have to. Please
tell other widows to stay where they
arc -even 1f it's a single room. At least
11 will be their<;. f wish I had. --
l lnhappy
Dear Readers· When that column
appeared 1n 1970. the book "Your
Aging Parcn1s'' by John Oeedy had
nut been wnuen. Too bad It speaks
to that point in a no-nonsense
manner. I have never read an)thang
better on this subject. I am pleased to
recommend 11 a second time. Wnte to
Thomas More Publishing Co .. 223 W.
Enc. Chicago, IL 6061 0. Send check
or money order for $8. This includes
ANN
UNDERS
postage and handling.
Dear Ann Landers This as a letter
10 those "expen'" who 1ns1st a child
needs a father and should be forced to
Vl'>lt with him eve n though the child's
parent~ arc J1 ,,ort"cd Think again~
\.\hen m\ fol k!> "'ere mamed Dad "'a' alwa}~· bca11ng us. Mom finall y
go1 a di\ orce The psychiatnc coun-
'>Clor said m~ father had rights and
c;hould be allowed to visit us even
thuugh my mom told him the man
.... a., v10lent and dangerous.
\.1 > dad beat me up dunng one of
thusc v1<,1ls and tned to attack my
m tcr 15cx. I thank .) We told the
counselor. We were informed that
Dad would be able to v1s1t us after he
had more therapy We don't want lo
see him an)more Don't kids have
nghts') --Penn.
Dear Penn .. They cenaanl) do. and
those rights should be exercised. A
father who 1s ph ysicall y abusive (or
sex ually aggressive) during vis1ta11on
should b.: promptly reponed.
That counselor sounds lil<e he hu
oatmeal where hls brains belong
Your mother should ask her lawyer lo
go back and Lalk to the judge about
getting him off your case.
CONFlDENTIAL to In the Know:
SoTT). }Our friend's "facts" arc incor-
rect. Automobile accidents are the
leadtng cause of death among ch il-
dren. Approximately 10.000 children
a year die in car wrecks. Nearly 2.500
are killed whale crossing streets and
roads. Children should NEVER be
held on a lap dunng a car trip. If an
accident occurs. that child goes ngh ~.
through the w10dsh1cld.
The saga of women
and bathroom lines
11·~ been a long 11me since '-"C've
tal ked about what a long way baby has
w mr 1n the light for equality. Have
women blazed no new trails? Have
there been no s1gndican1 break-
through" an attitudes? Have: women
gJ\Cn up the dream of ever dancing
fol"\\' a rd?
Ac1ually, one of the greatest ad-
vancemenb 1n women's behavior has
come and gone without so much as a
mention WOMEN ARE NO
LONGER GOING TO T HE
RESTROOM IN TWOS. The nun
anO uence is gone! In its place are
confident, independent women who
push away from the table and leave
quietly No more do they ca tch the
eye of another woman at the table and
'-'.
I ERM w. •.
Bo11Ec1 l.;.. ~
see the appetizer at a banquet.
It as the most time-consuming
thtng they do. In an 1mpan1al study, 11
was determined that women who
went sk11ng for a weekend actually
spent an entire day of 1t waitini in
restroom lines, shonening their time
on the slopes considerably more than
men.
L~===~==~~===~~~:::::~~:::::~==~~~~~~==~~~~~~ mouth, .. Margaret. I'm going to the restroom. Do you have to go?" And
Paul fiarvcy in his column noted
another dispanty in the system by
observing that women's restrooms
were situated an "olymp1 c distance"
beyond men's rooms.
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no more does Marpret say, "I don't
have to go, bul I'll come wtth you."
No one could ever explain the
mystique of why women feared aoina
to the restroom alone. but it's not too
hard to figure out why 1l was taraetcd
as an area that had to chanac.
HaJf of every woman's life is spent
in a restroom line. It 1s one of life's
incqu1t1cs. No one, rcprdless of
stature, would dream of buckina that
lane. Mother Teresa waits in a line.
The Pope docs not. Queen Elizabeth
waits in a line. President Rcapn docs
not Carol Burnett waits in a line. Bill
Co'lby docs not. It's a wonder women
have nad the time to achieve areat-
nc:n at all It would shock most people to
know that thanks 10 restroom linci,
most women have never seen the first
act of anythtna. They never hear the
Star Spanalcd Banner at the
ba llgame. never ~ a luck-off. never
(
He writes. "Whole cities have been
constructed by men sman cnouah to
span the sky with a bowstrina truss,
yet too dumb to know that women
have to stop and ao more often."
I made my stand on field trips to
the restroom a few years aao. I took a
deep breath pushed myself away
from the table. and made my way to
the linlc door with the cut-out of a
woman wcannaa hooped aktrt, h was
the bravest thint I have ever done I
didn'.t know anyone to talk with. r ~d
no fnencb. But r knew if women were
ever to make their mark in the world,
they bad to do 11 alone.
h's a mov~ that has made us touah .
h has nounahcd our spirit. h fiu
challenacd our ~uiui. It has aiven
us a place in history.
Our next battlqround tS to stamp
out danc1na baclcwa.rds I don't hkc to thank about 11.
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT /Tue.day, Oetot>« 22, 1986 U
No small business should settle
for a phone like this
when it could have
a soph isticaled
business system like this.
Paci1ic Bell introduces
Communications Manage-
ment Service Series r
Every day people in small
businesses across California
have to work harder becaus~
their phones aren't working
hard enough.
Well, now your phone can
work as hard as you do.
And it couldn't be easier to
make it happen.
Nothing to buy.
Now you can charQe a simple
touch tone phone into an en-
hanced business system.Without
having to buy any new equip-
ment. And without having to get
more than you really need.
. -
Pacific Bell's Series I service
is designed specifically for
small businesses. So. for the first
time. your business phone can
actually work as hard as you do
Even if you only have one line
No business ts too small
Series I gives even one line
users sophisticated business
features like Call Hold, that
actually lets you put a call
on hold and make another call
Then y ou can come back
and pick up the original call-
all on one line. (Very valuable
if a customer has a question
and you have to check with a
supplier.)
And Call Forwarding that
makes sure you wont miss any
business 11 you're out Because
1t automatically forwa rds calls
to where you're · in·
Or. it you want. you could set
up a conference with the
Th r ee -Way Calling feature
You should also consider Call
Waiting so it you 're on the phone
other business w on't be turned
away by a busy signal. Or
Speed Calling tor nwnbers that
you call frequently
No growing pains.
Communications Manage-
ment Service Series I is 1ust the
first in an extended line o f
Pacific Bell business commu ru
cations packages that can
have your rreser.t touch tone
phone do1no ;ev.: end valu-
able bus1ries. :-r . .:: r.euvers 1o r
you W1! h Series I y ou can
choose the fea1ures you need
now And add on later
All it takes is a phone.
Call Pac1tic Bell at 1-800-622-
0735. ext. 580 to r more in.torma
hon No matter how small you
are.we can tmlor a better system
fo r your business
We're here to help make
your business better.
Call l-800-622·0735 Ext. 580.
PACIFICIJBELL,.
A Pa( 1f 1( Trl..--.1s Company
\
.,
\
When smoke
clears, Irvine
shouldn'tgripe
When the Irvine City Council adopts a tough
ordinance cootrotµ.DJ ~oking in ~ri~ateJ>~sinesses -
as it appears certain 1t ~~1.-!he city s business people
will have no cause to cnllcize 1t.
And when that ordinance, which is likely to
resemble the one now in eQ'cct in Laguna ~ch, is
enforced, they will have no . cause" to comp~. "Die
business people oflrvinc forfeited that prer<?Pllve twice
for reasons we may only spcculate arc as diverse as the
businesses themselves.
First. the City Council opened its arms at a public
meeting, prepared to embrace comment, suggestion or
guiding counsel from the workplace owners \\'.ho are
likely to be most directly effected by such an ordinance.
It was sort of like the bumper-sticker war 1960s doves
wondered about: Nobody came. .
At that point, the city ~t have ~hrugged .•ts
municipal shoulders, assumed it had acted 1n good faith
and got on with the business of creating a law that offers
non-smoking work~rs protection from. the ~erous
ambient smoke their co-workers leave 1n the arr for all
around to breathe. But the government of Irvine· went
the extra mile. The City Council prepared a formal
questionnaire on pr'?po~ smo~ ~tio~s and
mailed one to every identifiable business 10 Irvine -
almost 5,000 of them.
Only 88 were returned.
In effect, the business community said, "Who
cares~·
Who indeed? The business P-COple of Irvine should
care about this ordinance, even if, as it appears, they do
not. The city bas put them on notice that it considers
smoke in the workplace a public health huard
sufficiently serious to require government intervention.
It has told them that, like the federal Occupational
Health and Safety Administration, it is going to establish
rules that will force businesses to make changes, either in
method of operation or in the physical plant, changes
that are likely to cost employers money to implement.
And, implicit in any discussion of a new ordinance, is the
m~ that that ordinance will be enforced, that
penalties will be assessed.
The business people of Irvine were given the chance
to shape that ordinance. They were offered the
opportunity to tell their elected representatives how
such an ordinance might be structcd to achieve the
desired result with the least disruption to their
operations. They passed.
Perhaps the business people of Irvine think the
city's just fooling.
We hope they're wrong. There is plenty of evidence
to suggest that cigarette smoke is unhealthful, not just for
the smoker, but for anyone who breathes the noxious
smoke. Just as it is appropriate for government to
reguJate asbestos in the air in private factories as well as
public schools, just as it is appropriate for the
government to regulate the wastes that may be dumped
from private factories into the public water, it is
appropriate for government to regulate the level of
potentiaJ.ly cancer-causing smoke wafting through the
air in offices, grocery stores, restaurants -anyplace
where a person is at risk through the essential act of
breathing.
It has taken a long time for this nation to recognize
the hazards of smoking and it has taken even longer for it
to address them in a meaningful way. Apparently, it will
take longer still for the business people of Irvine to
recognize that this is an issue that effects them .
OplnlOns expressed In this space are those of the Dally Piiot 01hef vtew$
expresaed on this page are thOM of their authofs and artists. Reader
comment Is Invited The Dally Pilot. PO Box 1560. Costa Mesa, 92626. Phone
642-6086.
U.S. should have dealt out
swlftjustlce to hijackers
To the Editor:
The United States made a good
start at bringing the Arab powers 10
Justice, but they blew 1t. When a Navy
team removed Lhc hijackers from the
airliner, they shouJd have put them
aboard a heLicoptcr and flown them to
the Saratoga.
They should have been tried there
by the Navy and quickly found guilty
of piracy and either shot or hung.
Since it might be hard to find
anythj ng on a earner to hang them on.
they could put a noose around their
necks and tie the other end to a
catapult and catapult them.
Now they will be around from
court to court with years of legal
baloney. There will be hostages talccn
by the Arabs to get them released and
the thing will never be over.
JfM BOLDING
C.osta Mcu
Three felons are home free
To the Editor:
After all the smug and sclf-nght-
eous declamations of Bostrom and
after all the wiclc-cyed protestations
of innocence on the part of the
Newport Beach police, the ugl y facts
still remain and should not be &Jossed over.
Three felons a.re home free and
lboee who cauaed it remam un-
ounisbed. That ia wrong. wrong.
ORANGE COAST
llilJPilat
wrong.
The upshot is that crooks b•ve
beco me folk heroes to their drua trade
companions. police have been made
to look like boobs and a jud&c bu
beba ved ljke a spoiled child.
Crimin.aJs should noc benefit from
mistakes made by those 1n the
administration of justice.
,,.,. Dnl
l!dllor
Tom Tl ..._....,...,
J.W. RETD
Costa Mesa
,._........,_,,.,,, .. ,.,.~ ...... . c... .... ..._ 1 ....... ....
g:;::•'
e.a;~ c:..-..04-
'11 do, Jndt:ed. deserve your criticism. I'll try to do better. · ·
w AL TBR BUIUlOUO•
D&UJ PUot'• foGJ1clhlC pabtlalaer
SAND --..... -----~ ~-~~
Forget power plants; pay
electric utilities for power
A seemingly bland ~roposaJ put
forward the other day 1 one of the
few survivors from the ctry Brown
era in state government may bear the
seeds of an electric industry revol-
ution as profound as what has been
happening in telephones.
Herc's the idea: Pay electric com-
panies for the power they produce,
not for building power plants.
That idea is as simple and revol-
utionary as was the notion of"usagc
sensitive" telephone rates when the
California Public Utilities Com-
mission gave birth to them 11 years
ago.
But usqe sensitive telephone rates
-pay for what you use -led to
higher prices for big users, creating
much of the pressure that led to
djscount long distance companies
like Sprint and MCI.
Now PUC President Don Vial
suggests a simiJar revolution m
electric pricing. Power companies
have always enjoyed rates based
largely on the amount they invest in
new plants. Simply pul. the PUC bas
always totaled up the dollars invested
in dams and other generating Sta·
tions, power poles and wires, added a
"reasonable" profit -usually be·
tween 12 percent and 16 percent -
and divided that by the total number
of kilowatt hours consumers couJd be
expected to use. The result was the
basic price per kilowatt hour, with
some variations for larger and smaller
users.
That system puts constant pressure
on the big utilities to come up with
THOUS
EUIS
new projects like the Diablo Canyon
nuclear plant which actually spurred
Vial's proposed change.
For dollars spent more than 20
years ago don't count. That means
utilities must constantly find new
projects to build or thcy'U sec their
profits droe. And the more they
spend, the higher the profits, since all
prices arc based on the amount
10vcsted, with little rep.rd to what
that investment may produce.
Anyone seeking an explanation of
why Pacific & Gas Electric persisted
with Diablo Canyon through thick
and thin for more than IS ycan need
look no farther than this method of
rate-making.
The victim in th as longtJme system
is the consumer. For he pays the
nuclearconstructton costs even when
Diablo Canyon, San Onofre and
other atomic plants are shut down
and all power furnished 10 customers
comes from older, cheaper sourc.cs.
And nuclear plants arc both the
most expensive to build and the least
reliable of power sources in terms of
down time. That has made them the
best of all possible investments for
IUMlliSMI ~!fa W·•MDM
many power compames. despite the
controv~rsy that comes wtth them.
The utihties have rarely admitted
this, of course. Instead. they steadily
majntain that atomic generators -
when finally built and O{>Cratang
steadily -produce more kilowatts
per dollar than any new power source
available to them.
Vial's plan would put that claim to
the test. It would have customers pay
the utilities what the power they
produce is worth, regardless of how
mycb it costs to produce.
Obviously, ·the biues1 nsk to
companies like PG&E, Southern
California Edison and San Diego Gas
& Electnc would lie in their nuclear
plants.
PG&E at this moment seeks SS.6
billion in Diablo Canyon construc-
tion costs from consumers. If the
PUC adopts a new rate-making
system, Diablo Canyon must operate
steadily and durably or the utility
won't get much of that money.
So far, the new system has been
considered too risky for use in selling
rates for anything beyond the tiny
amounts of power sold to bi$ utilities
by independent owners ofwmdmills,
small dams and waste-burruag plants.
But a change to a usage-sensitive,
pay-only-for-what-you-gel system
may be an idea whose time has come
if PG&E and the other electric giants
really want to remove some of the
controversy from their atomic facili-
tiet..~ Tllom•• EllH I• • Sota Moalc•·
bHed co/11mal11 ott •tale /Hoe..
Capote came to Kansas and
FBI asked 'Truman who?'
Writer's fame hadn •t
r eached heartlands
before 'In Cold Blood'
WASHINGTON -FBI docu·
mcnts have just come to light that
provide an ironic footnote to Ameri-
can literary history: The late Truman
Ca~te, whose stock in trade was
wnting about celebrities and being
one himself, once had to ask the FBI
to tell Kansas authorities who he was.
They weren't convinced that he
was a New Yorker magazine cor-
respondent. as he cla.lmcd to be. But
even more humiliating was the bu-
reau's response: "(W)c are not ac·
quainted with Mr. Truman Capote,
nor are we familiar with his connec-
tion with the New Yorlcer .... "
The embarrassing episode is de-
scribed in a memo of Dec. 21, 1959, to
Cartba "Delce" Deloach, assistant
FBI director in charae of the criminal
records divisjon at the time. Our
associate Tony upaccio obtained a copy of the document. Here's what it
said:
On Nov. l S, 1959, wealthy wheal
farmer Herb O utter, his wife and two
children were savagely murdered in
their home in Garden City, Kan. Five
weeks later, Capote amvcd at 1he
scene and informed the local lawmen
that he was a reporter for the New
Yorker.
Unfortunately, the diminuttvc
wnter had neglected to peck any
credentials from the map.zinc. and
d1ecovered that his literary fame bad
not reached the bintcf'landt of west-
ern Kansas. He promptly called hjs
publisher, Random Houte, for a ..
sistancc.
Capote may have imqfoed lhc
publisher camna J, Edpr Hoover on
the hot line. But the best • Random
House representative could come up
with was an FBI inspector, Bemie
Sunier who had eacomd lhe Ran·
dom Houtc ~ and his family on a
tour of the FBI buildinaand bad lata
invited him to lunch.
··Bernie. I want tbe FBI w do me a
• \
favor," the unnamed Random House
man told Suttlcr. He cxplajned that
the local Kansas lawman, a former G-
man, "wouJd not give (Capote) any
information on the Outtcr case"
because he dido 't believe he had been
assigned to do a story for the New
Yorker.
"Capote didn't take any creden-
tials," the publisher's representative
went on, "as be felt his many articles
in the New Yorker had given him a
national stand as a writCT, and he is
quite crushed to think that the
(officials of) Garden City. Kan., has
never beard of him."
Because Capote "had wnnen many
splendid articles and books and bas a
fine, national rcputatton u a writer,"
the Random House man said he
"would appreciate the FBI sendi~ a
wire to Garden City identifying
Truman Capote as a lcaitim.atc writer
assigned to do a story for the New
Yorker." He added that tbc akeP.ticaJ
Kansas cop would not acc:ept 'tele-
phonic identification."
Accordina to the FBI memo, Sut-
tler told the publisher's rcpraenta-
tive lhat, "as much as we wouJd like to
do him a favor, some check.in& would
have 10 be done, as he was not
personally acquainted with Truman
Capote nor could he see why the FBI
should enter the picture."
"See what can be done, Bernie, and
calJ me back," the Random House
man penisted.
A chccJc was made. but ·•no referen-
ce sourc:a show Capote's oonnection
Wlth the New Yorker, so he miabt be
used for special usianments only."
Evidently no one thoujht to call the
maaazjne.
Jn thcend. lhe FBI refused to vouch
for upo&e. because no one in the
bureau lcncw him or couJd confinn
his alleaed connec1ion with the New
Yorker, and because "the O utler cue
i1 not a federal cue under our
Junldiction."
Suttler called the Random H0ute
man and broke the bid ocws..
Capote went ahead without the
FBrs usisance, eventually prodoo-
ma I chiJliq four-pen Imel Ln lhe
Jac1
AIDEISOI
and JOS£PH SPEAR
New Yorker in October 1965, and
three months later the best-selling
book, "In Cold Blood."
PEN t'AU>: Prison has not
dampened John Jenrette's zest for
politics. The former South CaroLina
Democrat, doing time in a fedcraJ
prison in Atlanta for his part in the
Abscam scandal, may try to regain his
old seat in C.o~ss next year. He told
us he's getting ·'a strong push to run,"
and added in bemusement, "Isn't that
wild?"
Wild or not, politicians in Jenrct-
te's old district don't discount hjs
chances of a comeback. He lost
narrowly 10 the l 980 primary, even
thouah 1t came only'a few weeks after
his bribery conviClJon.
Asa convicted felon, Jenrette won't
be able to vote for himself, but
nothina prevents him from running
-and servina if elected.
POLITICAL POTPOURRI: The
Democratic aata earlier this month
was a bu,e fioanciaJ success, ra.isina
more than 1wice the $750,000 in cuh
and pledaet i-rtY officia.ls bad .hOPcd
to pull in. Tbouab Oemocranc Na-
tional Chairman Paul Kirt per-
sonally 1nbcd tbc petty'• eruef fu.nd·
ra.ieer, e. William Crotty of Aon~
Kirt'• 1taft'pcniltcntJy tried to claim
all credit for their boa. In fact. many
Democratic f'at cac. in California and el~~ flatl_y refuted w heed
Kirk's 'PPQI for funds. But Crotty,
repre1entin1 the coo -
ICf'Vltivtmodent.c wiq of the i-t'Y·
made up for thi1 by tappins
Soulhernen ud individual corporate
tOW"Ca..
Jld A.:sk-.. ,.... ...,.
an 1}'911ketlll <M *"
t •
SEARCHLIGHT
WAL TEI
Bu11oucHs
South
Africa
metals
'vital'
U.S. depends on
Its minera~s for
economic survival
Lasl week., if you'll remember 1
told you that one of the rewards for
having been a resident of the On.nae
Coast ever since the end of World
War II is the fine friends I've been
able to make.
It's true. What isn't so desirable,
I'm afraid, is that in reviewing old
times I occ.asionally make a mistake
and the more people who read
Searchlight. the more concerned they
hccome with my welfare and my
accuracy. so they correct me. And that
surely makes me work harder. to
justify their cone.em.
Often these kindly corrections
come an the form of clippings from
government publicati?ns or from
other pubhcat1ons which appear to
bear the stamp of reliabihty. One of
these lc.indly corrections occurred just
this last week. It seems that in
previous Searchlights I have referred
almos1 entirely to "strategic" metals.
As a matter of fact while metals for
national defense att most ncccssary,
even more important arc the metals
which enable us to keep our ~
ume manufac1unng operations
going.
A new magazine .. Insight"
emphasizes under the general head of
Business that South Africa's real pms
arc four minerals that are so essential
to modem technology they're called
the critical four.
Says lnsi~t; "Without the min-
erals chromium, cobalt. manganese
and six rare metals knowns as the
platinum group -the manufacture
of cars and jets is virtually imposs-
ible."
But even tougher is a story 10 "A
Magazine of Understanding the Plain
Truth." The title of the article is
"Chromite is a source of chromium,
an almost unsubstitutable metal used
in stainless and high-strength steel."
Herc are a few excerp1s:
"The United States has no
<;hromium reserves and limited re·
sources. Yet this mineral is so critical
in 1he area of national defense that
without 1t missiles. ships, sub-
marines. aircraft and weapons sup-
port systems could not successfully be
built.
"Regardjng chrome, a report from
the U.S. Department of the Interior,
Bureau of Mines, says, rather matt.CT·
of-factly: 'The problem for the United
Stacs is one of national security.'
"Chrome is considered to be the
single most important strategic min-
eral to modem civilization. It has also
been called the 'most unsubstttutablc
metal in the world.' There is no
replacement for it m the manufacutre
of corrosion-resistant steel."
So, friends, I think I deserve that
rating of "noodnik" which some of
you have idicated you think I deserve
for talking mostly about minerals
vital to defense or to warfare.
Maybe it's natural for some of us
"old soldiers" to think in terms like
that. We shouldn't.
"Plain Truth" emphasizes m<m
strongly than the article in ''Insiaht"
that national defense requires these
African metals but that's not the
single most import.ant factor for
modem civilization.
Say1 a fo~er steel executive E.F.
Andrews, "Without chrome we can't
build an automobik -and I'm not
talkina about the trim -we can't
make jct airplane cqjnes. we can't
drill an oil well, we can't dia a mine.
"The United Stattt, for YC&l'li hu
specifically exempted chrome &om
the list of c:mbal'J()Cd imporu ftom
Rhodesia, as Zimbebwe was formerly
kown.
"Chrome is so mdiapcnaable to
modern life that we would have to
rcvcn 40 to SO years in our standard
of livina and our tecbnolOIY i.o order
to do away with chrome completely.
Chrome is more than any other metal,
the Achilles heel of the U.S. eo_ooomy.
Wit.bout it America would be Df'OU&bt
quickly to its knCC$."
So thank you, Searchlijht readen. l
do, indeed, deserve yourcridciun. rll
try to do betccr. My only Pll1ina
comment is a wondennent. Oo yoU
IUP{)Ole it would do any Sood to try to
pt \he 1tudents and haneen-on at UC
Berkeley to unde11tand nactly what
they're doina with their radic:al dem-
001tntion1 and their demands
qainst South Africa? Or an they
respondina to propqanda of com·
munist Russia?
S~preme Court to decide
restrictions of land use
Charles , Di dispel $1 million
sour marriage talk winner loses
LONOON IAPJ -Jolong 1'1d ~m1hng. Pnnce Charles and prize suing
Princess D1anacalml~ ~teamrollcJ the steady bu1ldupof1oss1ptha1 has '
WASll ll~CrroN (AP)-The Supreme Court. using They have blocked development by denying the accum ulated around their mamage. a case from ( aldornaa to referee a battle between pnvate owners access 10 existing streets. and by refusing 10 The unprecedented 4~-minute 1nterv1ew -\«O uodAy by an LOS ANGELES (AP) -An 1o·
landowners and public officials nauonwide agreed provide sewage disposal and po!Jce and fire protection cs11ma1ed :?O mil hon \ 1ewcrs on Independent T elev1s1on News -was d~nt tomato farmer, dcoted a S 1
Monday to decide whether property owners 'must be The developers say such actions represent a "~king" granted 1n pan, as Buckingham Palac~ said IO dt5~1 "the remark.a bk m.illu?n pn:ic for ptcluna aU nine
compen!,Q,ted when local governments restnct the use of of the land for which the Constitution guarantees "Just S\Ones·· that ha ve sprung up suggesttng the;r mamage had•one sour w1 nn101 horses at Hollywood Parle their land. compensauon." Gossip columnists suggested that their 12-ycar age difTerencx was because be submmcd more than one
Land developer; are contending that their propeny Thedevelo~rs, who bought the property in 1971 . ~Y ticking its toll. The pnnce. 36. was reported to be turnmg vegct.anan and entry form. is suang for five times that
1n effect. has been "taken" from them by rcstnctions the land is unsuitable for farming because topsoil was communing with dead relauves on a ouiia board. a.mount. bis lawyer said Monday.
bamng res1denual housing. removed 10 help build an interstate highwa)' Lad> Diana. 1t was said, was bored. Colummsts suganted sbe wa.s The Supenor Coun suit seeks both
The court's dec1S1on. expected by July, could be a beneath hi m 1ntellectually, obses~d wnh rock music, clothes and the prue and compensauon for ma~or turning point tn land-use management in the In other action, the court: '>hopping. mental anguish. which could brina
United States. But three times in the last fi ve years, the -Agreed to decide whether federal regulators must But under the ~en tic probing of Sar ..\lastatr Burnet, all the stones the total award to S5 mill.ton. said JuStt~s backed away from dec1d1ng the issue after closely e8 Y a company money allegedly owed by the fa1lecPPenn sudden I) ~t"med ~•II> Occans1deattorne)' George MartJnC'l studying similar cases. :squar~ ~ank of Oklahoma Caty. Government lawyers Asked" hether they ncr argued, ( harlei. replied: "I suspe<:t most
In other developments Monday, the court: said balltons of dollars 1n auarantecd credit are at '>ta Ice hu'>bands and WI\ es find that they often have arguments" Rodolfo Sahagun, 48. of Carlsbad,
-Agreed to examine what evidence 1s needed to -Let stand 1mpn5oned drug trafficker Jamie! ··But we don't•" Diana cut 1n They both laughed. v.as taken mto the track's wtnner's
support a search warrant authonz1ng seizure of allegedly (J1mmy)Chagra'sconv1c1ion forobstruct1ngan mvesttg.a-The Sun and M1rrord1d manage to squeeze banner headlines from circle after the July
21
races and was
obscene movies New York prosecutors appealed a rultng uon into a federal judee's murder in Texas six years ago. that bit. proclaiming a "TY Taff" But to many viewers. It looked ltke ccremontally handed a huge dummy
they said handers a crackdown on stores that rent and sell -Agreed to decide tn a Cahforn1a case whether nothing more than affectionate banter check for S I million
video cass,lles of aduJt movies. ., someone who wins a c1v1l rights case ma y be awarded leg.al Of the agc-difference, Charles remarked 10 his tweedy. diffident Sahaf un, descnbcd by h1' lawyer as
-Refused to blo&.Ncvada and the city of Las Veg.as fees much larger than the monetary damages awarded. m~nner: ·-rm sure 11 must be absolute hell ltv1ng w1th an ancient old an indigent welfare reci pient. had
from regulating the shipment of rad1oact1 ve din from -Agreed to hear a challenge to restncuons on thtng ltke me I trust she'll keep me rcasonabiv young 1n some s.a1d be intended to use the money, 10
New Jersey to a federally licensed disposal site 10 Nevada. advert1Stng by Pueno Rico's g.ambhng casinos. a!.pects." bc paid 10 20 annual payments of
But at the same. the coun agreed to decide whether New -Let stand a ruling that allows demonstrators to Diana gave htm a look of 1nfin1te fondness. S50.000 each. to buy a tomato farm .
Jersey must abide by those regulations. harass customers of an Urbana, Ill., adult book store. Asked how she saw her role she said: "Supporting m.Y husband In the land-use case. the court will review actions by -Left 10tact an $850.000 award agamst the "hene\ er I can and alwa) s being tx-hmd him and. most 1mponant, But later the track announced 11
Yolo Count)' and Davis officials blocklDg a land manufacturer of an oral contraceptive. Ortho-Novum. being a mother and wife " was refusing to pa y. contending
development group. MacDonald, Sommer & Frates, from found to have caused a Massachusem woman to suffer a Of the stones that he tne~ to contact w11h his dead unde Lord ~hagun submitted more than one bu1ld10g homes on 40 acres. cnpphng stroke 1n 1976. Mountbatten on a ou11a board Charles said. "I don't, nor would I entn. form in the ''Pick 9" con test.
Officials hst the tract as an agncultural reserve, -Turned away a challenge by New York real estate necessarily want to · I'm fed up w11h gettmg letters from people all the "the rules are quite clear; the)
although 11 1-; located in an area zoned for residential developers Donald J. Trump and Richard Pelhcane to the ~~fth~.~ ing. 'Don't touch the uu11a boards~ They're bad for your ltmst any patron to one entry on an'<
development The officials said the proposed housing state's I 0 percent tax on g.ains from real estate deals wonh da)' ," s.aad Donald Robbins, attorne) ~w•o•u•l•d•h•u•n .. th•e•c•·n·v•1r•o•n•m•e•n•t• ...... IT1~~~---~_:~!S:1~m~1~l1~10~n~or~m~o~r~e.~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~_J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~======-~~~o~r~th~e~l~n~~~e~w:ood~~ra~c~e~t~ra~c~k.:.~~
Fate of
hostage
Buckley ;
murk_y
S tate Depart men t
calls Isl amic Jihad
ph oto unconvinctng-
BEJRl 'T. Lebanon (AP) -The
late of l ' ') diplomat William
Bucklq rema•n'> a myster: desp11e
accounts that J Shute Moslem ex·
trem1st group has killed him
Buckle) 1~ one.-ol '>Ill .\mcncans
who were kidnapped 1n Beirut and are
believed held b> Islamic Jihad. a
".>hado") group" h1ch communicates.
mostl> throuih telephone calls.
People purporting to be from Islamic
Jihad ha\e issued a bl urred photo-
graph of a man wrapped tn a white
-,hroud. and the} say 11 1s Buckley's
body.
( But ~late Dcpanment officials say
r the picture is not "convincing
C\ 1dencc·· that Buckle\ 1s dead
No bod} has turned up. But Islamic
Jihad supposedly has offered to trade
his rcmatns for the release of 100
Palestm1ans held b) Israel The
Israeli s have not responded.
Buckley . 5 7. was the second of eight
·\mencans kidnapped b) Shute ex-
tremist!> O\Cr the last 19 months. He
was abducted in Moslem west Beirut
March I 6. 1984.
The fi rst kidnapped .\mencan.
Jcrem\ L cvin. Beirut burea u chief of
thc: (able News Network . was
'>natc.hed Marlh 7. IQ84 He re-
appearc:d on r cb 13
..\nut ha ho~tage. the Re\. Ben-
Jam1n \\c:1r. a ~esb) tcnan m1n1ster.
was rekac;cd ~c:pt. 14 after I b months
in cap11v1t}. upparentl) lO galvanize
V .S. puhltc op1n1on and pressure
Washtngton to meet l-;lam1c Jihad's
demands The group wants 1' U\\-all to release
17 comrade'> con\.1cted of bombmgs.
1nclud1ng attack" on the U.S and
French emba-.s1c'> in December 1983
Kuwait 1l'IUSl''> lo rekac;e the pns-
oners, and Wa<.h1ngtun has said 1t will
not negotiate Tht· other American captl\CS s11ll
believed held b> the group are the
Re\ La"renu~ knco. 50. a Roman
C athOltl pnest. Ten) •\nderson. 3 7.
fhe A-;~ociated Pre~,· chief Middle
Last corre~pondcnt . Peter Kilbum.
60, hbranan at the American Un1 ver-
'i1t) of Beirut. David Jacobsen. 54,
formcrl> of Huntington Beach. direc-
tor of the unt\ers1t) ·s ho!>p1tal, and
Thomas Su therland, 54. the school'~
dean of agnculture.
lslam1c Jihad's claim that 11 killed
Buckle). a poltt1cal officer at the U.S.
Embassy an Beirut. was widely seen as
an at1empt by the group to signal
Washington that 1t will not wait much
longer for some action .
.. It's either a ghastly hoax or
Buckle)' was indeed killed, but either
logg before they said he was or af\er
torture.'' a Western diplomat com·
mented. "We can only assuml' that they
have not produced has body. which
would onl) bol'iter their credibility.
because 1t would prove embarrassing
for some reason.' said the diplomat.
who spoke on cond111on he was not
named. Statements purponsng to come
from Islamic Jihad have twice said
that Buckley was "executed" Oct. 4
for "American mtcl hgencc cnmcs."
The statements claimed that he was
killed 10 revenge for Israel's Oct. I air
strike against the Tunisia head-
quarters of the Palestine Liberation
Orgamzauon.
The first statement issued Oct. 4
..aid that Buckley had been "tried and
found guilty" of unspecified crimes.
Jt wa~ accompanied by a Polaroid
photograph showin& a haaaard.
bearded and prematurely old Bucl-Jcy
staring bleakly in the camera.
EiiiJlt days later. another purported
Islamic Jihad statement reiterated
that Buckley had been killed.
It was accompanied by a Polaroid
~howma a bearded rnan rcstmbhna
Buckle)' I yang 10 a white death shroud
on a hrown blanket. Only the head.
ulted to one ~tdc. wns S«n
. WE 9 VE TAKEN
HOME EOUITY WAN RATES
IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION.
LAST CHANCE FO R $200 REBATE.
If you apply for a home cqu1tv loan at Bank
of America before October 'I. you're -.1111
cltg1ble for a $200 rebate. So now\ thr ttml
to call-or stop mat any Bank of Aml'TlGl
branch and take advantaRe of our low ftltl''
.unday.Ma~
Jesday, March@
Ad~~e 11 ~Ol
Rate ..lk.J /()
hursday, Ma*' 1. 1~d <
12.0%
Fnday. March
10.5°/o
' Ill• I 111 \ ll 1.1hl· I I'
,,,1lh111111.1r'
f
10.25% 10.58%
lnlCrl''I 1.11t· .11m11 1 I p•·r.i 111.1.:1 1.\11
l lllfl tll T Ill' '""'l'l.f 11 • l h,11 i.'l
APPLY BY PHONL
C.111 l-Nl(l-"l·~d-n) ~
\\11n1.Ln-Thur....l.1\ 'J m 'I'm
f mi.l \ "'.I l1l . .; r' m
t.;1\l ll' .11..111 .11 ''ltr tnll frl't: num hcr .mJ "l'l'
h1\\\ l'.1'\ 11 1, to .1rrh \\l l.m ~"·t \'liu .1
prd1mm.1n l.TCJtt Jcc1,1on thl· next hu1:.mc''
,l.i\ \\ nh nn comrh.·~ p.tpc:r
\\'tlr\... ·\JJ It .ti \ UJ' ,rnd II' t'J'\
111 "l't' \I\ h' \H' r~· l .1ltt11rn1 ;1'
k.ldtn~ k nJ l·r
BANH
ON THE
LEADfR '
m Bank of America
' -..... •
0renoe eo.t DAILY PILOT/Tu.day, October 22, 1885
The
. ,,.· ~ • I
1
< ;;;
(') z
1 L9NG ES
, · · · Sllms of all.
I
< ~
>
~
i "'
0 z >
LOW TAR MENTHOL
.....
VIRGINIA
SLIMS
14 mg · rar l 0 mq mcoltnf' av ppr crgarerre by FTC mPlh.od
SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Quitting Smoking
Now Greatly Redu ces Serious Risks to Your Health.
Slim, light
and extra long.
-·-
Daily Pilat TUESDAY. ocrosER 22. 1985 I:]
COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, 84
Sales and Marketing
panel names president
Nobody resigns anylllore
Dell.Dia Pll11Up1 has been elected president of the Sale• &
Markellng Executives of Orange Couly, Inc., based in Orange.
Ph1ll1ps 1s an account executive w11h Jack Nadel. Inc. of Costa Mesa.
a div1S1on ofMea1ured Marketlna Services, lac. . "' . Deborah Hendrlck1on has been named director of sales for the
Red Lion Ian in Costa Mesa. with respons1b1lit) for outside sales of
r
PHILLIPS HENDRICKSON PFISTER
the 490-room fac1ht~. slated to open 1n the fall of 1986 The Laguna
Beach na11ve has been w11h Red Lion Inns !>tnCc 1979. • • • Maryanne (Clark) Pfister of Irvine has JOtncd R.L. Couch & Co.
as advenismg account executive l.ihe comes 10 Couch & Co. from
Computer Automation • • • Leighton and Associates, Inc. has named several people lo nc:w
posts. Frederick Zeiser is chief engineenng geologJSI for the Orange
ZEISER HAt'.JSEN NINYO
< ou ri t ~ office. John H. Hansen 1s chief cnga ncen ng geologist for the
Los Angeles ( ount) office and Haylm Nlayo has been appointed
chief geotechn1cal engineer tn the Orange Count~ ollice. Thomas E.
Milla has been promoted from senior proJe<.:t hydrologist 10
hatardous waste services manager. and Annabelle Kolaoa has been
named vice president of marketing Mills and Kotson have been w11h
Leighton & Associates since 1984 Former!). he was project manager
and pnnc1pal investi~tor of petroleum spills m New Jersey. Hansen
has been with the Irvine firm for eight years. Nanyo fo r seven. Zeiser
KOLSON PEllKERT Dl'LLACK
has worked on landslide prOJetls 1n Orange. Los .\ngelcs and l.ian
Diego counllc\. • • • Wllllam Peukert ha~ been appointed national sales manager and
Jerry J . Dullack has been appointed Southern California regional
manager for Mlcrogoo, Inc. of Laguna H dis The firm produce<;
microfiltra11on systems used an bmtechnolog). pharmaccut1tnl and
<,em1conduc1or processing
• • • Larry Brandt of ( oMa Mesa ha~ JOtned Hotel Meridien New pon
Beach as national sale., manager. responsible for the ho1t.•r,
assoc1at1on and corporate bu-;inc<.s 1n Nonhern < ahfom1a the
Midwest and \outhea!>tcrn Unned ~tales Brandt ha' been 't:n1or
salec, manager for the Anaheim Marriott. • • • Belinda Young has Joined the newl) formed puhlt<.: rcla11om firm
of Fisher Ba1Ine11 CommunJcalloas as a pubhl relations atcounn1
exccuu ve Young rnmes to the firm from Leoac, Warford, Stone lac.
of Newpon Beach. Fischer Busme'>s Communc1at1on'i was formed
last June by Robert Fisher. • • • Joel 8 . Rothman. general manager of the Anaheim Marriott, was
honored by Orange Coasl College for ht'> con1nbut1on 10 the student
chapter of the Hotel Sales and Marketing Auoclalloa. Rothman has
been associated with the college's hotel management program for I 0
years Rothman was also recently named general manager of the )Car
for Marriott Hotels aad Resorts. • • • James Brehaoy Ill, a Costa Mesa resident. 1s the 1985 rec1p1cnt
of Western State University College of Law'<:1 Prentice-Hall federal
TaxGuade Award. Brehany received the award for rcce1v1ng the
highest grade 1n the Fullen on school's Federal Income Tax course
Chief executi~es no longer willing to pursue
honorable course by resigning thei r posts
By JOHN CUNNIFF u......_._,...
NEW YORK (AP) -Where has 11
gone. the pnncaple that a ch1el
cxecull\e should resign for the good
of has rnmpany. and probabl) for
himself as well'! •
In recent years the world has seen
the head ofa chemical company clang
to office after a tragic corporate
accident an India, the chief of a
!>Crnnt1es firm remain in office after
the company pleaded guilty to fraud
and the: chairman of a huge bank
resist removal after bringing 1t near lO
collapse
The scenano has been repeated
numerous limes an less pubhc1zcd
affairs. sa)<. Prof. Eugene Jennings.
who notes that disastrous events that
surel) would have led to res1gnat1om
)Cars ago no.,., seem to 1nv1te stub-
born resistance.
The phenomenon 1s obvious also
an the political world. Jennings ob-
scnes. c1t1ng instances of chief e,.
l'c.ut1ves an Louisiana and San Diego
\.\-ho held out even while coun cases
proceeded .\nd don't forget Prc.•s1-
dent RKhard NJJwn he saH
While the prac11ce seem!>' to be dead
or d)tng an the L'n11ed State~. It 111111
C\1Sts e.1broad. according to Jennings
.,., ho cite'> the res1gnat1on of Bnt1sh
Fort'1gn ~creLary Lord C amngton
after thl' Argentine an' as1on of the
Falkland !<.lands and the res1gnat1on
11f1he Japan .\irhne\ head ;ifter a fatal
l rash
<\\ re<.:enth a\ the I 95lh '>a\c,
knn1ngi, .,., ho teaches managcmrnt
10 graduate student~ al l\ltch1gan
\talc l n1\ers1t\., 1ex1hook\ &a'l'
murh '>PdlC to the ch1l'f'c, rcc,1gna11on
J\ a matter of pnnuplc and lor hi\
and the tern1pan) 's good
\JlurcO\er. some of tht' gfl'al lOr-
ruratt· manager"> nl all llml' -<-iloan
111' < 1l'IH'ral Mowrs. Greenwald of
duPon1 V.ilson of (H·neral Electm
-lectured 1n bu'>tncsc, schools on the
merit\ ol c,uch rn1gna11onc,
In thl'OI). re\Jgna11on "rt'> <,up-
pust'd to allow the chu:f exe<.:ut1 \ e and
thl· lurporat1on to regain their self-
rc\peL 1 "The show of moral couragc
gained for the lallen th1el v.hat
..
----..
Specl-4 lo IM 0-41) Pltot
Scripps Center complete
Strock Architects of Newport Beach has announced the
completion of the $21 million Scripps Center in Costa
Meaa. The 230,000-equare-foot project consists of three,
two-story reeearcb and d evelopment office buildings.
Phone books for a fee
Pacific Bell h.I\ tx·gun lharg1ng 11s
cu'>tonll'I\ tor tl'lc:phtHll' books from
area'> .,a, eJ '" otha Im al phone
1:omp..in1l''
EfTl'tl l'L 1h1'> month. Pacific Bell cu~toml'f' st·ck1ng J1rcl'.lllrte'> from
area'> <,t'r' l'd b' General Telephone
and Continental Telephone lan re-
quest the J1rcciom·' b) calling toll
free 1(80<1155 I . ..i.mo. The rharge for
the d1rectol"\ ''ill appear 110 thl.'
lUStomcr·., m\lnthh bill. Da'e Car·
roll. Pac1f1t Bell'' .irt·a manager. said
Carroll <;aid that while tht' com-
pan) had pro' 1dl.'d thl· book!. free ol
charge 10 II'> \U\tomcrs 1n the pa~t .
.,,
Pau fi, lkll \\ .t ~ , h.1 r~l·LI h' I h1.· Ill hl·r
phonl' \11111p.1n1 1.·,
.. SIOlL' thl' lCl'l 111 thl\ \Cl\ Ill
nearh $2 milli11n "'·" p.t'>'ed t1n \11 all
Pac1fil Bl'll l u-.t11nwr' 11 "·1' Jl·ru.kd
that 1ndl\ 1du.1I d1.irgt• dirl'l th 111 thl'
l U'\IOOH'r \l'd..llltt thl' dtrl'l ldn "'J'
more t:4u1tJhk · h1 ,,11d
C arwll i,a1J thJt an I lrangl· l 11un1'
firm or h11u\l'hc1IJ rl'que,ung l 1 l ~
) cllo" P.igt'' f11r I aguna !kJl h
Y.lluld hl.·,h.irp.l'd)..i '\1 !-k~1Jm1\\I
of thl' lt\linti!-' 1n lhl· (1 TL hook
nlrca1.h .irrt.·ar 111 P.11.1f1l Hl·ll d1rel
!Ori!..'\
m1sta~e!I ha\C~ tak.en awa)' .. frnn1ngs
e1.plaans
More 1mpurtantl). he adds. suc1al-
I) responsible business people saw an
the pnnc1ple of res1gnat1on a wa} to
a\sure public trust and re<:.pt"ct fur
business kadersh1p
It told peopk that pt"rsonal ;11..coun
tabaht) existed in corporations. e'en
1f tht' chief lacked personal respons1-
b1ht)' forthee,ent llrnn\lncedthem
that great corporations were not
headlc">'> and out uf control It allov. ed
a nev. chief to dean up the mess
unfeuered b~ a need to dt'frnd pa\!
beha' 1or.
In ~p11e uf \uch mall'>. '><!~'>
Jenning'> board~ or d1ret1ors toda)
uht"n do not attt'mpt to emplo) the
pnnc1ple He ute\ '>C\Cral reason~
\l.h>:
•Boards tend tu belie:' c: that man\
u>rporate d1sa.,1er'> do not JO\Ohc
an~ '1ul..it1un of the lh1ef., JOh
de~<.:npt1un . The\ do nut 10 \oht'
willful 1nten11unal 1nd1' 1dual
malft'c1sancc: or negl1genle
Moreo,er pov.t'r 1n man~ corpor-
at1um I'> tou dell·n1rali1cd to blamt'
an' one 1nd1' 1dual
•oireLtor'i bl'l1nc that potential
prublem!>are 1n the nature ol 1n1ncalt'
corporatl' S)'>tem\ Ix-Lau~· l0rpor-
a11on'i arl· too h1g 10 ha\t: pc:rlec1
wntrols and that failures in such
S) stem'> lannot be: humanl) ant1c1-
patcd.
•A re\1gned ch1d implies corpor-
ate guilt
As a wnscquem.:e of such think.tng.
~> s Jennings. the thief will not be
held personal!) responsible unless 11
1s for somt:th1ng he has spec1ficaJly
dune ln!.tead. the S) stem will catch
tht: blame
One rca!>on chiefs choose to stay
on Jennings belle' es. 1s s1mpl}-that
others do the same The trad111on of
honorable resignation seem~ to have
been lost. ht: sa~ s ··There has to be a
thread 1n the cu.lture ··
In add111on personal reasons
m1gh1 he in vohed. says the professor.
\I.ho regular!) ad' 1..es lorporate
boards and chief'> a'> v.ell as wn11ng
book., aoout leadership and manage-
ment
[~null\n toda' he '>a\\ ··.,imply
don't want lo l UI and run because II
l arne'> d '>llgma ol v.eakness and
la1lul\: ·
ThJI ., nu1 all ht' adds Employ-
ment ltin tran~ ma' nut allow for
res1gnat1on w11hou1· '>t'' crel) JeOp-
ard1nng thc.> e\t'lUtl'e s ~para11on
pa,mcnt which might make his
rehabil1a11on all that more difficult
Refinance your old
home loan and save
Peupk lul k' l'lll1ug.h to , lo\<.' un ,1
h1JU,t' lltndvm1n1um •r lU·up JP\
llnlt' \llCH\ V. di l'OJll\ the: l11Wl'\I
mnrtgJgl· 1nll'rt•\I r.1ll'\ in nl•:trl. ti,e·
'c:ar\
But l'' en hum\·111.1. ncr'.,., hu he ·u~ht
1h,· right huu .. e ,1t the "'rung 11m,· -
v.h\·n IOll'rt:'>l ratt'\ v.en· .1 111r m·ar all
11mt: high' -lJO ~ncftt tr .. m
tc><la' ., low t: r r all'' ti' reli na nu ng
their m11ng.tgl''>
\., a ~cncral rule: the '>l..tk'> lip 1n
fc.t\ mot rd'1ndnung "'hen the tnll'fl.'\t
rate un Jn old rnun~gt' top., lUrrent
rate\ b' 'perlentage prn nt'> or murl
Trad111unalh that has het'n wht·n
\a\ 1ng\ fn,rri lo.,.,,l.'r 1nterl.''>I pa~ ml.'nt'>
-'>preaJ ll\l.'r a \oupll.' 111 'ear'\ -
begin tu c\ceed the costs or rdinanl-
ing.
But the three-ixunt spread doesn't
a\wa\<, hold The on\\ 1.1.a' to knn\I.
for l~n.iin 1f rdinan1. 1n~ mdkt:'> -.CO'><.'
for ) OU IS Ill du somt• ne\eSSdf"
an1hmet1l
F1rs1. the Ul\l\ In the 001-100·
J1stant pa\! h11ml't1wnerc. ltiuld rt'-
rinann· ti' a'k1ng thl·1r,1ng1nJI knJl*r
h• rt·nl·goltJll' thr r.itl' on tht•ir
t \l\llng lu.rn That hJpp,·m J,.,,
frl.'(JUl'llll' thl'\l' d.t\\ hnJU'>t" h.1riJ..,
\di lhl'lr meirtgJgl' -ran I\ u .tr
li\t:J rJl• "'1• rtg,1gn -l 'l\ t''l "
It \our 11111rti~·•1!.•' hJ'> ht'\'!• , .. Jd .,.u
'' 111 h.1,,· t•• r, l1nan1.l' n. 1.1 ~ 11~ •ul .1
nl \\ nl1trt~J!_!l' f 111' f l JI' 'I it \e L
\\lllh,I\, l11pJ\ t• "tl ,, 11-t• ITll
-lllt1rl)!..l)o?t' 11ng10Jll11!1 ll'l'' r• n\\1
;inJ e1t l1l·r 1. lu,1 ng """ 1 h,,,. 11,1
induJ1.• murtg.1g1. r1.·1.urJ1n~ I.I\ 'Ille•
1n.,u1.rntt' .1rrra1,.11 JnJ .1pp111.Jt1 r.
fc1•, tn\p1.·, t1<H1 '111 'l' .rnd kl!.J• 1, ,.,
11 p.i" t" 'h••P .11 ,,und "' ··
rdin.11h inti! ..1 m1•rt)!..lti!l ~ .1 ,,,.
1n1t·rt'\I r.lll'' Jn.! k'I.''-J I ' 1.k
Jml•ng 11.·nJc:r, ' •u 1.c.tn '·•', '11 n,.,
,1! ,l11\ll1g h\ h.111ng lh1 l1lk Iii
...u1 . .111u• ,11mr.1n1 r«1'"H 1111.· ,.,.,,.'
I u .tltl'.h.h h1 \t ' l. J' ,th, h,1
(,lorta Z1gner & Assor1a1e,
lx'l' '11nl·~1 J' puhlh 'l•..:'
, 111. n,,. " 1 .\hl·antt' Pnnre'>'> Hoti-1 .1
I ... 11 I ,Jdl1 ,, 11uld Unlkr, .. n,l .
t1<•1 11111,1rdtPllfc>\(' f11rthl'IP 1t
h,1,,·.i "' 1r11nnitnt.tl fl''>l'Jrd' I • •
Pb1lhp~ Brandt Reddick. toe Jl'J
Ca~ man De' t'lopment Com pan\
R11ll111)!. lldh 1 '1.tll''
Gloria Zagner & Ass0<.'1ate'
'l.'\\l'i•rt ~khhh.l'<.'d ltrfll •'1
1111 'hfnJ 111 '()·I . . .
Joo Sbaroborg & Associate' .1
c .,,t.1 \k,,1·t°IJ'<.'ll td\l'nt\ln~ put'>lt,
rcl.111"n' 1• r·11 h." lx'l'n , h11,en t'>
~Al Ba~1r four. Inc 111 T U\ttr I•
llJnJk 1t\ Ot'"l''t pr1lJUl t TR .\( ~ .1
tclrph,lfw a,u•u111.1htl1t\ ~\\ll'm
Jon SbarnborJt & .\ssociatf'S •'> .1 lull
MARY
RUDIE '
, .. ,. 111 hJ' 1ng them rt.'drawn from
'd Jll h
) 11ur i 1rt~1 OJI me 1rtg,agl.' holder ma'
In a penal\\ l11r prl·pa,ang 'our
l.'\t'>lln)I mung<tgc \ume lender'i
he•Y.l'\t·r v.111 Wat\t' prt.'pa~ment
penalt1c\ "'hen rctinanun@. the1r own
l u'>tumer\
The penah~ v.h1ch toda\ 1'> wnttcn
into tewer and fev.er mongatcs. can
run ao; high a~ SI'\ months' interest.
~ome \tate-. ha\t.' la"'' that proh1h11
Jenda'> I rum \ hJrging .im prt'pa)-
ment rx-nalt1es for e'\amplt' .\la-
bam..i .\la>ka l/l1nlJ1\. 101.1.a
\far" land \frnm·,01a '''" frr'4.'\
'-t'" \ln1.c1 f't'nn\\hJn1.i Tt"\a~
\\ l''! \ 1rgin1.1 JnJ \ cr11111n1 '-unh
Jnd "i11u1h ( .tr11l1n.1 rr .. h1h11 them o n
m··n~J~._.,,,. Ir" •hJn S "''"H '
f t1IJ 't"i:1J!'"ll 1!12 d•\l\ angl J O\
-'hl't' •r •m: t '~·r l'"1 ii thl' l11an
Th\' n.11 •n.1 .11l·r.111,·": .J-. rcrll'Ot
•l lilt d(d,t.1 :iJ1n~ rnn, r.1
1.,t' '·•'' JI hi. '>l.',1!'1t' t>,,• I n1. It
'\J1 I• :'l'Opll .\ f • 'L ~ /l' 1r lht'H
I <'di 1.1. 1n.1•nh t,I\ ·• 1rr· rl·l·11up
["IJ:t 11"! I .. ,,, I' llh I •.11 • .., '<'lUrt'll
"' \ 11u ., Jlf" · · h1• I k' li!l'Ol'rJlh
\.' .,, '\. ... ""lt•'"l~.tt!l •• ~ ~ ht' n 1rl"\
.1nJ ;'I PJ' 'lh'OI ;"'l'I .1it1e•, "'hllh
i»tll"fh1 r tq••Ulll l·•r :h,· 11 .. n.., '>hare
,.-, ·•1n .• rh ng 1.• ,,h -:, h, •nll'rl'\I
t .1• ' : • ' Jt•Ju, 11t'i!t '•11n IJ\Jt'tlc
! \ '1 ll
\ "'• llt l • h1. \I he ' , ''l ' 1.·r P:i '
P•!' ,,: 1! 1hH1t\\f1P" t..rl l'\t'Od
'.r.1n Jf ·f-.1(1\lnli!.il<,I\
!Please .ee LOAN/83)
"! '' h .11"' 11tkr\ in
• ~ 1· d pr.ntmg . . .
1 ',. ": '" "' Ha"'tborne Dt'-'l'lopm1·01 t 'ompao\ ·., }o mtll1e'n
I .1. , \. ~ 1l t ,._ t ,nil'' ,,ffi l l'
, " ·!''1 l·r · rr111t'1. • hJ• tx·gun
: 111 ,,,. r,' ,Jt·,1~nt·d t" Marr Dalt 1' •:"'' lk.11.h "•II tx· locatt'd
,• ,., , .i. " lht '1't'l'I trnm tht'
'·•u1t t ,.,,.,~,· t ·•unt Hl'g111nal (. •' 1l
l ' 111<
(Ith 'lflt'll1ll<'\,lt l\l'J'fll..'1.t\Of the
I'' 11n ' thl Jgn·emrnl het1.1.e-en
l '1, 1 t 1 lcr I' ,1/J anJ lht' futurt'
.1d1Ju 1 l'~l''h' lltrlJn C hurlh Thr
1"'' ,,111 ,h.Ht' thl· u't' 11f 1hl' parking
1,11 .1, ,,1.·IJ .1, 1.1l tltt\ 1.1m,1rul 11on and
111.1 JI( I llh \ \I ·\I\
~.--. II' 1\-llll.._ 1111 ,....,, ., '11Q1! I "'11111 lflltl''I 1111111111111' 1111111111111 • --~11
dll&9111"'l...........--:-'llll1U11111111t 1111
T"
6 MONTH • $10,000 Minimum Balance I 6 MONTH• $.50.000 \linimum B.ilanct'
8. 79 ~;j 8.42 o/o
Current
RalC'
•'9'fll1• 4111 •••0•! .. 4Jl4 t ••""brof'il ,,_ ••t •h •lo111.A t•lo'\ • t'•.-.: I" f I. ,..,1,. b•••~ff "1"....,,..•'"•·•....,1111tt•""''°" ... ,.._, •.•••. -. .,.,.,,,.
8.90
,.
o/C"
t llfh'nt
'IClll•
Open your account today. Call tlte>toll-frec FinanciaJ line now: 1-800-4.B-RA '\I\
KX> Year' o( Safety • As.Kt, Ovt'r S7 A1l111lfl
Great American '™r advantage bank . -
'
"•th IK111t\,n "'""lll),A1lj!f I ,,.,,.1,
\l\lllwim 11111\ 11 '""' H..ltwie I.land I uun1.11n \ .olh'
~ Pnwl..W. lt11n1H11V1 .. n tic· ... h
I 11pllllra1111 ltra h I -.UIW Rt• h
• -
I .. II'""' 11111-
1 .tlf'1n.• ''~""I "''"'•"' \ w"'
"''"'"' h .._,
8.52
'•"I~"' Iv ~ h
1 i. .. 11.,.
'-n I "n• ni.
'-n lu .. n • '"'''' "" "'""'hnJ•"
o/r
( Ill I l'lll
I{ ,Ill'
LJC . ~~ ....... ..
.. o.-.ng. CoMt DAILY P1LOTITU..Oay, Octobet 22, 198&
High quality goods mean lower costs
Satisfied cus t omers tell eight people:
dissatisfied patron s tell twen ty-two
a Nauonal QualJty Month Forum ... 11
today's mott powerful corporate
leverqc point for acluevina both
customer utisfactaon and lower oosu.·•
By JOBN CUNNIFF .-...... ....,..
NEW YORK (AP)-Good quality
pays its way in lower CO$lS and free
advertisina.
To Armand Fe11enbaum, whose
prosrams already have profoundly
affected Quality and productivity
thtou&hout the world. this sutement
e&n be defended not ~ust with the
passion of belief but with the math·
cmatics of proof.
Satisfied customers tell eight
people, says Feigenbaum. And when
they are unhappy with a product or
service'! They tell 22 people, be wd.
Fei&enbeum, wbo wrote the first
ed.iuon of his classic "Total Quality
Control" while a doctoral student at
Massachusetts Institute of Tech-
nology. believes quality can be
Amenca's only real answer to world
competition.
He should know, because he has
tramed many of America's com-
petitors, has see n the resuJts. and bu
measured them scienrifically. To tus
mmd, and the minds of most exposed
to his works, the evidence 1s incon-
trovertible.
Quality. he told an audience here at
Qualiry, ICCOfdina to Feifenbeum,
was the leverqe by wbich the Uruted
States acbieved industrial uocndan-
cy,and it is themeansbywhicbJapao
and other East Asian nations have
emerpi as rcleotJeis competitors.
As with so many tbinp. the United
States lost sight or quality principles
and soon after bcpn losina market ~ as weU. Franuc, many com-
panies experimented with promo-
tions and rcorpnizations -but
IJDOrcd quaJJt)'.
Then came the wave ofbom-ap.in
resolutions that Fej,ienbaum calla the
"hothouse quality proarams."
marked by pep talks. slogans, single-
I yr. 2 yr. 3-Syrs.
Bonus* .5 0 o/o .75o/o 1.00%
Rate + Bonus** 9.20% 9.85% 10.40%
Yield 9 .63% 10.34% 10.95o/o
Above rates b.Jsed on S2,SOO deposit. Rates vary according to amount of deposit and term.
It's Household's CD Bonus Plan that pays you extra interest
It's probably the easiest lx:>nus you'll
ever earn. All you do b open a Certificate
of Deposit at Household Bank for 12 to
fl() months and we pay you extra interest.
As tnuch as a fu ll I'\, bonus for the first
12 months.
Thats on lop of our r~lar high inter-
est rote. At Household. vour earned inter-
E:'St plus bonu interest 1~ comrounded daily
and your accoun t is insurP<l up tu $10(1,(X)(}
bv the FSLI C
·Bonm 1111<n-.t I\ hor llt•· fll.,,l \1,1111111\ v.11111' lh• 1.1.,. Mlt
,, J!lt.1l·lllfl't'1f f11r 1•111tw li·nl{tli rol 11i\t'~lm1•nl
.lust $500 will get you started. But
you can deposit as much as $100,000.
Whatever the amount it stays liquid. You
can borrow (up to 90%) on your certificate
al any time and avoid the penalty of early
withdrawal. You11 be charged only 2':\', over
the rate of you r cert.Jfica te.
Right now. Household makes it easy
to give yourself a bonus. Just open your
CD today. After all. don't you deserve a
little extra?
'"h>Uf'r.11 l..i"' ff'lllll!'l"> d 'Ulr>tttnh.11 penal!\· tor 1•;ir1\
v.1th1lr.1v..1I R.1"· r,1h· '' ~uhw<'t In f'hnn~ w11•klv
Bani<
"" .. " .....
ANAHEIM: Et11 Ito .11 l '1•''< •·nt-77'2 7Hti ·CERRITOS: 1:~'.!:n South St-(:!I'.{ I 1.t? t-9470
HUNTINGTON BEACH: IWiX:! Ht .. 11 ti lil\·d-~Jf1 1 n:t!<t ·MISSION VlE.JO: 2 10·~1 Mdr~urnlt> l'kwv-)81,.X'l<Ml
NEWPORT BEACH: 1 \rl) \l,u t\r1hur Bl\d-~:H-O'.\h7 · PLACENTIA: 1'.NO Kr.w1111·r-99:~-1100
SANTA ANA CANYON: S7H 1-: "'111t.1 Ana lanvnn r<c1-'~18-H2fQ
WESTMINSTER: 1101 I 131·,wh Blvci-8!rl·'.! 1!11
\Iv• hr.1111ht•'111 '°I.Ht [>tt'j.!I• 1<1v<·r.iclt '-"" 1\ll)lt•lt-..
\1·nh1r.1. °"'111 l.111' I >h1<.I"' ,HfcJ K1·m C'11unl1t..,
\11111-11111" 'IAM lf''vl · Fn lOA\il ·liP\,1 • \.11 9A\il l'.!'i< ><IN ( rno~t hr.:i1whec; I
AWJ1"''1 IN11rrd 11p
tr1 II 00.(XlfJ Nl"4m11"'
~,.,,. fl{ I ""'' "'",. ISi~ {)(/(} INN''"'"'
Appli.:t 111 '""' of
I l'!!"1f \'ubJla,,llOI
~Mlll for tarl)
. 198%
I .
YIEW
ost
Gr --LENDER
•
1eotenoc formulu and mou vauonal
aesaions that eventually evaporated
in bot air.
Some companiei, Feiacnbaum
points out, are into their tcventh or
eiahtb rcbinhs and still haven't
cauaht on to the basic requirement
that such notions are worth.leis
without beina pven real o~tional
support..
Amona the other ai.DA America bu
committed., be says. ii that we have
planned quality Pf'OIJ'&Oll u if they
were intended only for factory
workers. Quality, be says, isn't a
specialized &ctiVlty. It involves all in
acocnpeny.
The tint qu.ality-<:ontrol principle
ta to understand quality, he says. But
.
many people do not. Quality, be
UMtU. is what the customer pcr-
cei vet it lO be, not what a marlccter,
manufactum or merchant says it is.
Rcmtnizina that.. oomp&nies must
then undcntand that Quality and cost
are supportive putncn rather than
enemies. To rc:allu that, be concedes.
many Americans must unlearn the
notion that quality and cost are
tradeoff's.
It is a falsehood. be useru. that
1ood quality must cost more th.an bad
and make production more difficult
as well. Rcdoina the bad can add 40
percent to production costs.. be says.
It's oot an opinion; be bas cases to
prove it.
.800%
RATE
u'llbdruu'<JI AflflUIJI
)W/d tJastd ml (Om
pot.indmR u bm lflltrtJI
IS /tfl fin fk{JfMll ft1r
m/1" trmr R11lt. yttld
and lmru subjttl 111
cbon!ft "'''"°"' f'tfllKt
erso •
An1t'rica n ~aving.-., has been helping
c~ll ifornia ns invest for the future since 1885.
Thro ughout the la. t n.:ntu l)~ we've
n.:n1a ined corn miucd to pionc<.:ring
·"rnart , 'ia fc invcsrn1ent~ like rhe Money
Matrix CD account.
It ac tually let you determine the size,
term and rate of yo ur CD investment. It's that
simple. AJJ the more reason to call o r visit
... your nea rest American Sav ings office,
and put 100 years o f American trength
hehind your future .. curit y.
CENTE NNIAL
1885 iii51985
AMERICAN SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCtATlON ,,
...
Conglomerate
r eports hef ty
Jn creases
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
McX.euon Corp.. ~e buaic d.Na-bev~cal con-
alomerate1 repotteC;t Monday a
quanerly mcre.ue sn revenues
of 32.S perc:eot1 and 8 perwnt
pcr-tharc eam1oas, over the
same period lut ya.r.
The San Fra.ncilCO-bucd
corporation, whose fiscal year swu at the cod of March, said
revenues and eamiDp rut new
hi&hs in the tee0nd quarter
ended Sept. 30. Revenu.et rose
to $1.6 billion from Sl.2
billion in the prior period.
COSTA MF.sA
3929 S Bn~tol SI.
979 9800
GARDEN GROVE
12141 Garden Grove Blvd
SH 8690
HUNTINGTON BEA~
7830 Edinger Ave
848-2222
HUNTINGTON HARBOUR
I~ 11 Algonquin St
846-HSS
LAGUNA KIW
l4085 F.I Toro Rd.
770-2816
ORANGE
19M N Tusun Ave
1}74 1620
SEAL 8EAOI
~ 1 Pacmc Coa.~t 11 Wl'
~\)4 ·MSS
TIJSTIN
Ml E 1st St
8,U 2581
,
J
k~~N RATES DROP •••
into '' new loan I hc IR w11l not
alli>w >0 u. to uedut'I points that ate
lorn1all> hnanccu or wnttrn into the loan note
Homcownc:rs who refinancc
U'>u:tll> recoup tht"ar closing costs
w1th111 thrte to live years, sooner if
the tCHal bd doesn't include a prepay-
mcnt penalty People who move
around a lot gl'ncrall} should not
refinance. although 11 may make ~en!lc tf thc )pread between the old
and new rates I!> unusuall y high
Let \ say you want to P3} ofT your
16.S percent, SI 00.000 monga¥e by
signing a 12.5 percent note for
roughly the same amount. Both loans
arc of the 30..year, fixed rate vanety.
Monthly payments of principal and
interest on the old loan totaJ $1 ,385,
on the new one, S 1.06 7. The dif-
ference between the two comes to
$318, but that 1s not the amount you
wil save each month.
In the early years of the loan, at
least. that S3 I 8 would have b«'n
almost all interest that the govem·
ment would allow you to deduct from
your taxable income. So the after·tall
savings from refinancing depends, in
large pan on your marginal tu.
bracket. People in the SO percent tax
bracket, for example, would stt their
savings cut in half. If you arc an the 40
percent tax bracket, your after-tax
savings would come to abou1S190.
M•ry J. Rudie I• vice pn1Jtleo1 ud
mu•1er, co1111U1Jer •tttor m•rte1-
LD1 1ervlce1 for MerrlU Lyncb,
Pierce, Feuer & Smlf• loc.
--
Orange CoMt DAILY PILOTITUMdey, October 22, 1985 11S
Apple co-founder has plans
PALO ALTO. Cahf. IAP) -Apple
Computer Joe co-founder Steven
Wozniak says he and former partner
Steve Jobs still are friends, even 1(
their relallonsh1p hM been slr.uncd
recenily.
Wozniak. who left Apple la~t
Fcbruary to begin a non-computer
company called CL9. told the Pcnin·
sula Times Tribune that his friend-
ship with Jobs has been tense since
Jobs accused Wozruak's company of
compeung wtth Appk 10 a fig)\1 over
use of a design fmn called Frog
~1gn.
Sance then. Jobs, too, has left the
company, resigning has chairmanship
10 September to begin a new venture,
which w11l 1nvolvc computers for the
collcg1ate market. Apple officials
have sued Jobs. claiming he violated
has contract by taking ke) Apple
personnel with tum.
''Now he's he11ded off to do his stuff
and there s a lot of worcJ1~ and
1mphcauons u to bow competttive 1l
1s,' Wozniak said. "The word com·
pe11uve has changed 10 hJS us.sac o(u
"Six months llJO. when he hurt ui.
on our Frog Design thing. he had no
idea he'd be accu~d of a compeutJve
product "
-[i} (lllij:i ~Jil\1ffj .. -----------------:
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NEW YORK (A~ -Tile 101~wlng llst •how' the New ork Stock 11chonge •tocka ona werront' 1™91 hove gone up the most on~ down Ille most f-'ed on ro:rcent of c enge regerdleu o volume or Mon~ey
No s~ur tteJ tredl~ below S2 ere Inca-dy~•d et en oercen age ch•rcges ore !h•
1 trtnc3 belWHP. lht prev ous clos ng pr ct on Mondev s 2 P.m. price.
Name I Macv H
UPS
Lui <ft\ 6314 + 6 Pel Uo JS 3
NEW YORI( !APJ -The tol!Qwlng list shows the New York StQCk Exchonge stocks ond worrenls that hove gone up the most ond down the most t>o'8<1 on percent of change r99ordleu of volume for Mondov No Hcurllles trodlng below '2 ore Incl· -y~ed. Nel end percentage chonoes ere the d 1 erencde Mbetwd "P. 2the prev11ous closlno pr ce an on av s P.m. pr ce.
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7'n -~ 17loli -~ 20Ve -t 1~ -~ 734-~
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ha~e good rt>a-;ons bevond r.11t-.. ~·tr"I of .lll
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Stock market advances
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
posted a modest advance in active tradmg
Tuesday.
Prices opened mixed, with some brokers
saying a pullback was Ukcly followrng the market's
strong performance last week, when the Dow Jones
industrial ave~e h.it a record high.
By midscssaon pnces moved mostly ahead.
however, bolstered by a stronger bond market,
continued takeover activity and some encouraging
earnings reJ>?rtS in the auto and technology sectors,
analysts satd.
General Motors, for example, reported a 24
percent gain in third-quarter eami"3$.
Still, market obscrven said Wall Street 1s
concerned that the economy remains relatively
sluggish, which has made it djfficuh for investors
to estimate corporate performances in the fourth
quarter and early 1986.
WHAT AMEX Orn WHAT NYSE Orn
NEW YORK (.\Pl Oc1. 22 NEW YORK (AP) OC1 22.
NYSE LEADER S
...,.. Last r-n 311-16 +.
\7111 :t ~ +¥: 1 -:!"lt i -1,4
1 =~ -Ye
GoLD QuoTE S
Dow JoNE S AVERAGES
NEW YORK i) -Flnel Oow·JOMS
v..--r tor1r Od. . Yi.I lf':'n 1 . 1 . .1 +:
r~J .6 . : • .'
~~k I , ~i METAL S QuoTES
NASDAQ SUMMARY
famou.5 lab<zls ...
J
Nancy
revisits
showbiz
'roots'
By KILEY ARMSTRONG
NEW YORK -First Lady Nancy
Reagan made a bnef return to
Broadway, singing on stage wtth
longtime fnend Mary Martin at the
end of a celebnty-filled tnbute to the
actress.
"Sitting up there in that box and
watching all these professional sing-
ers doesn't make th.ls easy," Mrs.
Reapn said Sunday night before
joining Martin in a number from
.. Lute Song," a Broadway musical 1n
which they performed 1ogether 1n
1946.
"I don't go around the Whne
House singing," she added with a
smile.
The first lady's appearance at the
Shubert Theater was the finale of a
benefit for the Theater Collection of
the Museum of the City of New York.
Billed as "Our Hearts Belong to
Mary," the program featured singing,
dancing and praise for Martin. 71 .
Among the stars perfonn1ng or
speamg were Helen Hayes: L1ll1an
Gish: Carol Channing; Robert
Preston. Martin's co-star in the
musical "I Do! I Do'": Van Johnson~
and Sand} Duncan. who recalled
recreaung Martin's role of Peter Pan
on Broadway.
The guest of honor also sang a duet
w1th her daughter. Heller Halliday
DeMemt. Martin's son," Dallas" star
Larry Hagman, sent his greetings via
video
"'This is a night that I will alwa~s
remember as long as I hve." Manin
said before launc:hing into a few dance
steps and the song. "Before the
Parade Passes By."
Honorary chairwomen for the
event were Dorothy Rodgers and
Dorothy Hammerstein. wives of the
late Broadway musical creators Ri ch-
ard Rodgers and Oscar Hammers-
tein. Rodgers and Hammerstein
wrote ··south Pacific" and "The
Sound of Music." in which Martin
starred on Broadway.
Mrs Reagan watched the tnbute
"1th Martin from a pnva1e box before
Joining her onstage.
The song. which began as a solo b}
Mrs. Reagan and ended as a duet wt th
Martin. included the lyncs. "If you
need me. I will be nearby -moun-
tain high, valley low."
After they fintshed singing. the
curtain went down and Mrs. Reagan
and Martin stepped in front of it.
After pausing for a moment,
Martin asked ... Are we supposed to be
doing something?" And Mrs. Reagan
replied. "I don't know."
Someone shouted. "Crow'" so
Martin taught the audience how to
crow 1n the style of Peter Pan. first
soft!} and then bello"1ng. Mrs. Re-
a$'ln stood next to her. sm1hng, but
did not JOln in th e crowing.
By that 11me. the entire cast had
assembled behind the curtain and was
JOmed b) Martin and Mrs. Reagan m
singing the theme from .. The Sound
of Music."
Brynner ad
may warn
sm.okers
NEW YORK (A P) -.\ctor Yul
Brynner, who smoked up to live
packs of c1garenes a day and died of
lung cancer. may soon be seen on
television talki ng about the t'vils of
smoking. the Amencan Cancer So-
ciety says.
"There's nothing more forceful
than when someone who's now dead
looks into the camera and says 'Don't
smoke. I dtd. · .. said spokeswoman
Susan Islam. The society 1s cons1denng making a
television spot from a tape of a
January interview of Brynner on
ABC's "Good Morning America." In
the interview, Brynner used "words
to the effect that if he had lO do it all
over again he wouldn't smoke," said
Islam.
Brynner. best known for his per-
formances as the King of Siam in
"The Kmg and I." died Oct. I 0 at age
65.
Islam said the society. in informal
talks with ABC has requested per-
mission to use a segment of the
interview.
At "Good Morning America."
spokeswoman Jachelene DeMave
said, "We're waiting for a formal
letter from the cancer society. There's
sllll a lot of red Lape to be cleared ...
DeMave dcscnbcd the interview as
"an ardenl pica for people to stop
smoking."
GEO RGE PLIMPTON
l•~lll'~Oft
"DIAMONDS
QI QUALITY"
11H> nrlll., ltOry of dW.011eb c111
•·1:Ulb
6:80 PM Ch. 10
TONIGHT
and Wednesday
MOBOCO
'"" '""""l-ti.111, \, "r~'" "' • h
A d11monJ " lottYrr I >t 8ttn
Orange Coast DAILY PILO'!_ /Tueedey, October 22, 1985 BS
Bright 'Mikado' at
Sebastian's West
Gtlben and Sl11livan have surfaced
along the Orange Coast again, but this
11me n's not another version of tht'1r
overworked "Pirates of Penzance."
but a sprightly, colorful and highly
entertaining revival of a lesser-
product<d operetta, "The Mikado."
Now on stage through the end of
November at Sebastian's West Din-
ner Playhouse, this satincal musical
on Japanese customs and trad1uons 1s
being billed as the IOOth anntversary
celebration of its original per-
formance. It's a tongue-1n<heek view
of the Onent through wry Bntish eyes
-and in many ca~ it's more a
sendupofmerryolde England than ot
the land under tfie Rising Sun .
Mary Martin. Nancy Reagan croon a duet.
The show, ltke most Gilbert and
Sullivan efforts, is less concerned
w11h the nuances of ploltlng than w1th
creating comical objects ofsaure and
offering a veh icle for.a golden-voiced
soprano -1n this case. Bets}
Mclean. who plays the self-centered
beauty Yum-Yum. Mc Lean satisfies
1he requi rements of her role. looking
and s1nltn~ gorgeously. with maxi-
mum effectiveness.
Mrs Reagan was known as Nanq
D.1v1~ when she last appeared "Ith ~anin on the New York stage 1n
.. Lute )ong," which was staged ~Y
John Houseman at the Plymouth
1 heater
v\t the time, Manin was 32 )ears
uld and played the role ofTchao-Ou-
N1ang. and Da\'ls was 24. 1n the role
ofS1-Tchun. The role of Tsai-Young
was pla)ed by Yul Bf')n ner. then 26
fhe strength of the Sebastian·~
production hes m the supen or
ponra)al b} Keith Peters of the lord
high execu11oner Ko-Ko. wh o's not
eul·tly a v11la1n but something less
than a hero. Peters skillfully nego-
tiate'> 1hat fine hne while under-
scoring the often subtle corned}
required in a show brimming with the
politeness and formality associated
"1th the Onent.
Dino Pala221 1s engaging as Nank1-
R .
Cit
l.C,UNA llAC~ I.A 11111\AOA ORANG(
ORANG!
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7 O!o & 9 O!o 6 SO L 9 O!o
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Ac:.·v ::·~
THE HOLCROFT COVENANT (It) I 00 3 20 s 40 l ·OS i0·20
THE JOURNEY OF NATTY '9ANN (PG)
i !>() l 50 5 SO 1 SO 9 SO
SWEET DRIEAMS (PG-1 JJ ACN ES OF GOD (f'C I >I
100315!>35 1l0J 2'>SH 7 55&10 1 5 /4'>ti.9H
aACK TO THE
FUTURE (f'G) 1 1 0 l lO !> !>O I 00 & 1 0 30
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N umber 5 (Rl
DAY OF THE DEAD
Plu• Co·H •I
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ADVENTURE ,.CO)
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RAM BO F IRST •LOOO l"ART ti CR) Plu•
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COMMANDO (R)
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BARGAIN MATINEES I FIRST 2 Performances Monday Thru S.turdly (Except Holidays & Spec. Eng1gements)
LA MIRADA .-.. ,-.., .... ~.T"~ ...... ,~ ..... ~""'•] ........ _
P uu1Sl1 1s101f-tty s C."4._ • 11t4 "4 4 l• ..... Ro...,n• _ .. ,_ _,_
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1:00 >•• •·oo t:>O 11 ·00
-·· "'"° l""9N --,.. .. ..,.. IACK TO THI fUTUH '"' 111>0 1ot0 to to 710 IO:OS
W.llif ~· THI JOURNEY Of
NATTY GANN l"l 1:00 >sJO SM 1:00 10.JO
LAKEW
Center South
U1Jlll4 1211/h<•lly 111,014 Amo
INVASION USA Ill i.i •.... 11 ... "°--''""-DAY Of THI DI.AD "·· ........
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11i>O J·JS 4•2' t:U 11• 10:1S
AfTIR HOURS 1•1
1 liU 114S 4.U tc4S t:O IMS
lft-N•-· SllVH IUlllT 111
t J1l0 1.U 41U t:U I-JS 10:40
llMO W1LLIAMSi THI
AOVINTUU llGIH1 1_1,,
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NATTY GANN ,.,.,
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DOLIT STHIO ---AGNIS Of 000 1-rn
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ALL OPEN wt1K1;io •·00 STAil 7:00 ChlldNn Under 12 ALWAYS FIH
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JAGGID IDGI 1•1
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"' Wll"'I MO ADYIN'fUlll"'
IHVAlfON USA "'
' t\
Toi
Tnus
Poo. the errant son of the emperor,
who pursues the fair Yum-Yum.
though his vocalmng is less effecuve.
A larger 1mpress1on 1s left by John
Manin as Poo-Bah, the consummate
bureaucrat who fills a vanet) of
go' crnmental offices. all of tbem
com1call} corrupt. Martin's stone-
face comedy 1s priceless.
The Mikado himself 1s dvnam1cal-
I) 1n1t·rpreted by La Rue Paimer whq,_
excch phoneucally tn a number akin
to thl· major general's 10 "Pirates of
Pennnie " Kathenne! Charles rallies
the "'lndows as a woman scorned.
"h1rltng about like a son of Japanese
W1d.l·d Wnch of the West in a bnef
but l'ITccll'e appearance.
Betay McLean, Dino Palazzi play thwarted lovera in "The
Mikado" at Sebutian'a Weat Dinner Playhoaee.
140 ..\ ve Pico. San Clemente to run
through the hohda) s Call 49:!-9950
for ticket information
~son ticket 'M!les at the Laguna
Moulton Pia) hou~ ha' e topped the
7.300 mark. which establishes a
pla) house record the theater will
unveil JtS season-opening production
of "Carousel" next week following
extensive renovation. including the
add1uon of a balcon)' ..
One of the largest plusse\ in
d1rntor Vincent Ferell1's in\lgOrat-
1ng \.in Clemente production 1~
CO'inll'l1c (it! Morales· stnk1ng set
dt:'>1gn and Dan McWest's colorful
cu .. tumes make th1!> "Mikado" a treat
for the eve as well as the ear
Performances of .. The Mikado" "'II be gwen Wednesdays through
S.11urda~s at 8 p.m. and Sundays at I
and ., p.m. through Dec. I. after
"'h1th Cole Porter's "Kiss Me Kate"
mo\.C!t onto the stage of Sebastian's,
BACKSTAGE -\outh ( oast Rep-
enory has been a"arded a $350.000
grant a!> pan of 1he National Endoo;.-
ment for the .\ns' $21 mtlhon I 91S5
challenge grant program the Costa
Mesa company was on<: of only four
theatt>rS in the nation among the 50
grand rcc1p1ents .S(R directors
David Emmes and Manin Benson
have earmarked the funds for a
special endov. ment. the earnings
from which will launch a major neo;.
pla) development program. and the
expansion of the theater complex ..
CALLBOARD -Aud1t1ons for the
corned; "All Because of Agatha" will
be held at the Huntington Beach
Pla-.house Mam treet at Yorkto"n
Avenue 1n the SeachfTV1llage shop-
ping center Sunda} a1 I 3() pm and
Monda) at 7 30 d1rect0r Scott
Zuchman "111 Ix looking for fou r mt"n
and six women in a vanet) of age
ranges.
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.. OrlnOI Cout DAJLY PILOT!T..-day, October 22. 1986
i~:SILY BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) SHOE
CIRCUS
by Bil Keane
"It's o good thing you stopped growing when
you did, Daddy."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
"He was funny-paper trained."
DRABBLE
wEl.COMf.10 t~E.
~i~
1£1..E.HtoN 1.
MOON MULLINS
OVE.I( 1'~t. 1-lf."-i '24 1-lOUQ~
WE. Wl7£ ro 11-lT'20CAJG€.
~ 10 MAN'/ Mf'U.I~ ~
ratU\1 Litt., ANO 10 MA.~ A. LOT Of MONE.-1 I
"You'd better clear the doorway. I'm just
about to call the cats."
f
f
f
t You LEFT YOUR KITCKEN WI NOOW
UNLOCKED AGAIN MR WILSON 1 ••
by Kevin Fagan
t.low, 10 ~1AAT 11-{£ 1 ~EIJE.R KME.w
fbl..E.GA11' Al'PRWAl£ (IA.-NO-ME.Cle'.
1vAAl. ~1\Jf~.~~NO NE.a (.().l.O PLA'I
TO litR~M ~lTfO t ~f.1~f.MI
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etll~f.M!
1. 1-lt.\JE.~
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OH, QU IT .MOANING,
LORD P ·-/T1S YOUR
OWN FAULT
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
l F You1RE <:50ING 10 KISS
IHE STOVE GOODBYE, FIRST
CHECI< 'THAT IT W,ASN1T
.JUST TURNED OFF .
c:J t -~tl4
JUDGE PARKER by Harold Le Doux
HOW tl? WE. SPEL.L.. ~E NAME OF 114E MEAD
HONC~O IN LIB'r'A?.~
PEANUTS
HERE'S "™E ~LOME BEAGLE I
MAKIN6 1415 141STORIC
FL16~T ACROSS T~E
ATLANTIC TO PARIS ..
BLOOM COUNTY
I"1 !4fl(Y 5mE. urJI<
I .N$ r CAiii lr.J.OW 8t.11118ER
~~70 5f0/T_
~lfY IN ..iy ~ I'll. A!iK rrs Mr_ Jfl5r fH.! '.'!"~ Y'ffc.€. ~ •.
I
'':.:..'-----....__ ..... ,,~
FOR BETTER OR F
TUMBLEWEEDS
ROSE IS ROSE
BRIDGE
I
Both vulnerable. Nor h deals.
NORTH
+3
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0 83
• KJ 95
WEST EAST
+A 7S • 84
~K 98 '7?73
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SOUTH
•KQJ l0962
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The h1dd1ng:
North Ea1t South We1t
I ~ 3 0 4 + Pa11
Pan Pa11
Opening lead: Six of J .
.
Tht ftr"t entry 1n Royal \'1king
li1nt•s "Player of the Year " competi
tion 1s M 1rhel Perron, the la tut in a
long lint of brilliant playtr• who
ha v(' krpt f ran rt among the great
br1dgt powtrs. He first represented
f'ranct IJl 1978. and in the 19 4
World Team Olympiad. his nearly
trror frf'e ~dormance impre-•,td
t hf' rogno,centi.
Ptorron •uggesu that, whtn you
have morfl than onf' hnt' or play
l·
bv Garrv Trudeau
by Jeff MacNally
'<OUR WATER. 0151-1 IS
GETTIN6 LOW •. I Tl41NK
l'O BETTER. Fill IT...
by Charles M. Schulz
THE DARK WATERS OF
TME ATLA~IC DISAPPEAR
BENEATH ~IS PLANE ...
THtll IU ~r
fiA'tE 70 7'EJJ.
~H:JW
)t'XI 5lUffl.Y
fJILICH 7H£ !MIR °' )txR 7HKIHS
\ I
1 WQl.l.11 •
\
by Berke Breathed
by Pat Brady
CUT OFF THE RUFF
available lo make your contract,
you should consider what the
defenders are doing. A clue to the
lie of the cards can often be found in
the defe nse'!! method of attack.
In this deal from the Trials to
select the French team. Perron end
OMAR~
SHARIFF llm' ~
ed 1n four spades, a contract that
proved to bt A popular choice.
East's jump t.o three diamonds i1
slightly off beat -it 1s a bit strong
for a preempL1 vt JUmp and a bit
weak for an intermediate jump
overcall .
Wt-!\t duly led a diamond. Eut
won the ace. t ht'n 11hiCted to the ace or clubs a nd anothn. It seem•
natural to lead trumps at this point,
but Ptrron df'cidtd t() ~lieve Eut.
Obviou~ly. East wu hoping for a
rlub rurr. In that case. East had to
think t hat Welt might have an en
try. If Eut had the ace of 1padea u
well as the cards he had alrudy
'lhown, ht> would know that hit part·
j
ner could not have an entry. so he
would not have adopted a defense
which might cost a club trick.
Backing his judgement. Perron
came to hand with a diamond ruff
and ran the ten or hearts. When
t hat won. he repeated the finesse.
CHARLES
GOREN
then led the ace of hearts. Eut rurt
ed and declarer overruffed. Only
now did Perron lead a lpade. West
took hia ace, but East'• trumps
were exhausted and the club ruH
vanished .
Perron's fine play lert the
defenders where e very good cruise
linf' ought. to bt -at seal
F.r laf.,.aUo• •~•t C~a
Gore•'• ....... uer r... WW.•
ple7ere. writ. Get' ........... Lett..r,
llOI C'a•• ... A ..... c-...1.
.... N.J.08077.
Dlllr .............
•
Daily Plat ruesoA v. OCToem 22. 1985
Newport H•rbor Hlgh'a footHll INm No. 2 In CIF. C3 •
Bobby Cox quite Blue J•r• to become Atl•nl8 QM. C5.
He's Trojans' victory Belle
Returning k lCkOff s 95--yards
lso atforUniversttybac k
By JOSEPH DUDEVOIR
Dll!r ,._. C.r 0 •• I
If he could. Unaversaty High football coach Rick
Curtis would like to get the balf in Craig Belle's hands
everr, play of every game. •f sure would," says Curtis. "He'sJuSt a phenomenal
football player who's always kecpina us in the game.
When be aets out in the open field ahead of someone.
forget iL That's all she wrote."
Pilot's Player of the Week.
It was also the second week m a row that Belle
returned a 9S-yard kickoff for six po1nu.
"J can't descnbe the feeling you &el by returning a
kickoff," says Belle. "It's a feeling hke no o ther AJI I can
say 1s n's fun to put quick points on the board."
You can bet it's fun for Curtis and the rest of the
Tro1ans as well, even though University is 1-5 o n the
season.
"Whenever everyone else docs well, I do well ." says
Belle. "Everyone on our team docs the\r best, eve n though
we're not wmning a lot of games."
Being on a losing team hasn't d1m1rushed the
T ro1ans' enthusiasm, however.
"The le.ids really grew up a lot last Friday," says
Cunis. "That's what has made it so excitjng lo coach on
the high school level. The le.ids were down 21-0 at the half
and wouldn't die. They really wanted to go after 1t. It was
very rewarWnJ. for me to watch them."
Belle, while being reserved off the field with soft-
spoken manner, is a leader on it.
Player of tlle weei
A transfer from Hemet Hi&h. Belle is in bu le('()nd
year on the Trojan vanity.
··we needed a guy like that LO our program," say'
Curtis. "The ruJe for incommg transfef1 says that we &et
all the new kids because of the lack of enrollment in o ur
school. And we're quite lucky to have him."
Lucky indeed. Belle has rushed for 554 yards and bu
scored eight touchdowns. He 1s very a capable rcoc1ver
and kick returner as well. And he's a back who doesn't
mmd getting bis hands dirty blocklni for a teammate.
"He just docs n all," says C unis.
When you ask what the b.igh.hP:'t of the season. Belle
says "When we beat Laguna Hills.' As 1t st.ands. that 1s the
Tro1ans' lone victory of the season.
lnc1dent.ally. Belle rushed for 200 yards and scored
three TD's on runs of 59, 66 and 35 yards in that win.
"Yeah, I guess I bad a pretty good game." be says.
J ust a pretty good game?
UnlTeftlty JUch runnloC back era.ta Belle.
Last Friday, Belle, a 5-10, 180-pound j unior running
back showed some of that quick-strike ability by rushing
for l 73 yards on 2 1 carries, including a six-yard TD run.
He also caught an I I -yard touchdown pass and broke
loose oo a 95-yard kickoff return for his third touchdown
to account for all of University's touchdowns in a 27-21
Sea View League loss to Corona del Mar.
For that perfonnancc. Belle was named the Dail y "He's an intense, hard-worlong le.id," says Cun1~.
"He's a team player and leads by example."
..That's one of the thjngseveryone hkes about Craig."
(Pl-..e 11ee Ul'fl'8 BELLE/C~)
Saber hagen
vs. Andujar
Kansas City attempts
to slow down Cards
behind 21-year-old
ST. LOUIS (AP) -At least the
tenderness of b.is years isn't apt to
disturb Bret Saberbagen during bis
tint World Series assignment tonight.
"A&edoesn'tbothermeaiall," said
the Kansas City Royals right-bander,
who will become the second-youngest
pitcher ever to make a Scnes start.
Baltimore·s Jim Palmer started the
second game of the 1966 Series at the
age of20.
"Lately," said Saberhagen, "it
seems like my bbdy is about 25 this
year the way I've been beaten up."
The 2 1-year-old Sabcrhagen,
whose mound opponent in will be St.
Louis Cardinals right-hander Joa-
quin Andujar, has healed from two
shots be absorbed in the American
League playoffs.
One, off the bat of Toronto Blue
Jays outfielder Lloyd Moseby, struck
him in the left foot. The other, a one-
bopper b.it by Toronto's Willie Ui>-
ahaw, bruised his riaht thumb.
.. Fonunately, none of the hits have
been bed." said Saberbagcn, who durina the reaular season was ooe of
the AL's two 1().pme winners.
World Serie. «:JJedale
Game one -St. Louis 3. Kanses
City 1
Game two -St. Louis •, Kansas
City 2 <St. Louis IMds Jerle1, 2-0)
TONtGHT'S GAME
Ka nsas City <Bret S.bef'naoen.
20-6) at St. Louis (Joaquin Andular.
21-12), S:3S P.m.
WEDNESDAY'S GAME
Ke ntas City et SI. LOUii, S:2S P.m.
THUltSOA Y'S GAME
Kentat City et St. Louis, S:2S P.m.
Of ~1erv>
SATUllDAY'S GAME
St. Louis et Ka nsas City, S:2S P.m.
(If nte:91tervl
SUN DA Y'S GAMS
St. Louis et Kansas City. S:JO p.m .
Of neceu•rv > (All times P•clflc)
TV: Chllnnel 7.
Radio: ICNX (1070).
tribute an ~et a victory."
Andujar also is attempting to
establish a positive mind set as a
means of recapturing his 1982 World
Series fonn, when be won two games
for the Cardinals, who beat Mil-
waukee in seven games .
Telling It like it ls .. rm going to try to put it out of my
bead. After that first pitch, you just
r.ut it out of your mind," be said.
'Hopefully, everybody will con-
Since AUJ. 23, when be became the
NatiooaJ Leaaue's first 20-pme win-
ner, Andujar has won onJy once and
lost six times, including an 8-2 loss to
the Los Angeles J?.o<IJers in the
second game of the Nat1onaJ League
playoffs.
Pormer Ram• •tar Pat Raden (right) give.
ea-Plttaburgh Steeler &reat Lynn Swann
110me advice du.rtng the USC pro-celebrity
&olf tourney at Imne Cout CC Monday.
Landrum ready to pick up for Cards' Coleman
Loss of speedster hurts,
ut no dropoff in talent
leg, fresh X-rays showed a bone chip in
Coleman's left knee, team phys1c1an Dr.
Stanley London said. Earlier X-rays revealed
no fractures and the Cardinals were hoping
Coleman could play.
ST. LOUIS (AP) -Picking up loose ends
is becoming a specialty of Tito Landrum. And
now, he's going to have to do it for Vince
Coleman during the rest of the 1985 World
Series.
"The presc1bed medication 1s six weeks'
rest," London said.
While it docs not surprise Landrum that he
has done well as Coleman's replacement, he has
been a little surprised that he got the
opportunity in the first place. Landrum, a 30-ycar-old native of Joplin.
Mo., already bas started five postscason sames
for the injured Coleman, including two sn the
World Series, and bas batted .455.
"I never dreamed I'd be playing as big a
role as I am now," Landrum said. "I thought l'd
be watchlng. maybe pinch-hitting a littfe and
playing some defensively." And, during Monday's off-day, the Cards
discovered that Colemafl defirutely would miss
the rest of the Series, too.
Instead. Landrum has been one of Man-
ager Whitey Herzog's majn men. He has four
RBI and has scored four runs since moving into Originally thought to have a onJ y a bruised
Bears put Packers
ln the deep freeze
Ref rtgerator Perry
puts on a btg show
forChtcago'sfans
CHICAGO (AP)-Walter Payton
lauabed when asked what it was like
to run behind 32S-pound William
'1'he Refriaerator" Perry. "It'• areat to bide behind him ..
Payt.On uid. "Nobody can tee you.1'
Tbe Green Bar Pac.leers had a lot of
trouble find.in& Payton, who ICOred
touchdown.a on runs of two and one
yards u the Bean remained unbeaten
wilb a 23-7 National Foott.11 League
victory Monday niabt.
Perry the Cbicqo Bean' b~
rookie defensive tackle, was Payton s
elCOr1 into the end r.one on both ICOrioa runs and alto ICOred a
touchdown himself. .. He's IO wide that nobody e~pecU
him to bit with such speed and
e&ctiveneaa," uid Pa~ who car-
ried lS times for 112 yards, the 66th
100.yud p.me for the lllFt:a alJ-time
leedina ruaber.
line situations, the Soldier f:ield
crowd of 65.095 chanted "Perry,
Perry, Perry."
"I was surprised to hear that," the
Oemsoo product said.
Perry was first used in a blocking
situation last week against San Fran-
cisco and Coach Mike Ditlta said then
that be might be used ap.in in such
situations.
"Coach satd I might get to do it
th.JU or four timcs,"l>crry said.
"We'll use him until they find
someone biger to put against him,"
Chic:qo Colcb Mike Ditb said.
"It's ban1 to explain," Ditb said.
"Our execution waa not aood. Some-
times it's the way the other team
pll)'I. We did some things and made
some drives when we bad to."
Green Bay Coach Forrest Ona
said, "In the ICCOnd half everyone
went to sleep. At fQlt that's bow it
looked to me. We had plenty of
opportunities but we kept sivina the
bell back.''
The victory p ve the Bean a 7-0
record, their belt st.a.rt since 1942
wbentbetcamwonall 11 ofil.I~
aea.aon pmes. The Bean alto main-
tained a tbrce-pme lead over Detroit
and Minnet0ta in Central Dfviaion of
tbe National Conference. OftleO Bey
dropped to 3-<6.
left field for Coleman. who was tnJured 1n a
freak tarpaulin accident on Oct. 13 at Busch
Stadium.
Herzog, for one. say'i he 1s not surpnsed b}
Landrum's performance ... I've had him for the
last four or five years. and he'c; always done the
JOb when called upon.
"What's great about T110 1s that he doesn't
complain when he doesn't play." Herzog said.
"He understood that I had to play (Cesar)
Cedeno when he got hot. and he understands
that 1f Vince is able to go. I will use him.
"Let me say this. I have no complamts or
qualms about using him 1n any game:· Herzog
said.
Landrum played a kc~ role in St. Louis' 4-2
victory over Kansas City in the second game of
the World Scnes, throwtng a runner out at the
.. I want to help tbc team any way l
cu," uid Peny. who claims be bu
Iott 17 pounds from bis propain wdPt. .. nl block for Walter Payton
but h ... pat IOOriga that touch-
down. Tbat wu my ftnt one since hifh ad>ool. I wu bavb'I tun.
•t don't have a nmnina ~~t
Lynn Dickey aoc the Picken on t.M
ICOl'Cboerd fint wi\b a 27-yard ICOl'-
int Pl.II to James Lofton. But the 8iian dominated tl\eteaf\et, pu,;cu.
l&rty a ~nae that intercepted four
pueca and ft)(lC)fdcd a foun!HiU&11Cr
dty.
Bey, yoa f oqot eomethln&!
take tbe bell and 10 attailbt "
Each time tbe Bean 'ftftl ln ao-1·
Uta.la ..... ~ Bn4 J...-, after
..... la.la ........ tit.. to ...... Arl8ona'•
\ l
plate and doubling ma ninth-1nnmg rail>
The Cardinals were only the I 0th team in
82 World Series to win the first two games on
the road. Each of the pre\1ous nine went on to
win the Scnes.
Landrum had two hits. including a double
and scored a run while making two fine pla> \in
the field in the senes oJ>(ner.
In 161 at-bats this year. Landrum h11 2XO
with 21 RBI and four homers Known for his
great throwing ann and defens1"c skills. he
often 1s used by Herzog as a late-inning
replacement in left.
Landrum's career ha'i not e~acth hct'n
marked by the typical. StOf) book rags-to-nchc'i
ascendency He spent ~-..en years 1n the m1nM
leagues before e"en ge111 ng a chance with thl' c~rds.
Some big
answers
awaiting
WaiTiors seeking
Sea View respect;
Sailors at Laguna
By ROGER CARLSON
Of .. o.itr .... ..,.
Some bag questions will be
answered this week m Sea V 1ew
League football and the big one could
be is Woodbndge High for rcaJ?
Also. can Newpon Harbor sustasn
its unbeaten image with a game o n the
road in hosnle surroundings?
And can Corona del Mar keep its
hopes for a OF Central Conference
playoffbenh alive"
The season 1s at the middle of the
road. th.rec weeks arc sn the books.
three weeks remasn after this round.
Herc's a look at the four Sea View
games.
Saddleback, $-l , t -11 v1. Wood-
brlQe ($-1, S·I ): .. lt'll be a true
cbalfenge to our defense," says Wood-
bridge Coach Gene NoJi, who has
relied on that facet for most of hts
Warriot1' succcu.
"SaddJeback has the long-range
weapons. aood speed in their rc-
CCIVCl'S, a ta.ilbaclc (Glenn Campbell)
wbo 1s very dangerous and when they
oced to throw. Myron Butler can be
very cffecu ve "
Saddleback Coach Jem W111e ac-
knov. ledges the \\ amor5' defen~.
but adds: .. We thmlc we're a good
defensive football team. too So n's
•oing 10 come dnwn to whn!>t' offense
is the hest.
"Their defense does real 1.11ell on the
pcnmeter and IA.e're a penmeter team
v.1th our option \o 11's going to be
won on the hneol Stnmmage V.e JUSt
have to bloc~ wt'll and v.e can't have
any tumo' ers
"The) cap1taltz('d on Laguna
Beach's turno,ers The\ ·re fi red up.
but we JUSt ha' e to pla) our game and
worn about hov. we e'ccute ··
No11 says h1~ team's offense must
score at least 21 001nts to be in 11
"£Xfens1' le-. Saddleback 1c; reall\
good at pursuing the ball It's hard to
break an' Ion~ µins against them
Sadd.Jehack'c; a' erage score in a S-1
campatgn 1s 24 6-10. Woodbndgc's
numbers are 10 S·S.6. Both teams
ha\C th~ shutout v1ctones to their
(Plea.e eee SEA VIEW /C3 )
Hatcher
is putting
some foot
in football
By JOSEPH DUDEVOlR
DelJ .... C..; 0 ....
He takes the snap and two and a
half steps later the explosive nght lq
of Ram punter Dale Hatcher scnd5
another football spiralling up into the
heavens
The ball stavs up there so long
you'd swear 11 was gomi to bnng
either ram or a ll FO s1ghtma.
Then when II finally bq.Jn~ to
des«nd. the poor punt returner not
only has to sift throU&h the clouds to
find the ball. he llas to contend with
the ornery Ram luck coverage
"We have an outstanding weapon
in Dale Hatcher " ~ys Rams Coach
John Robinson "He lc1ck~ the ball so
hi.Sh sometimes that I feel sorry for
th~ return man "
The)' do n't measure Hatcher·,
punts 1n hana ume They 1ust check
Ill Orbit
Hatcher is a rookie out ofC'lemson
He 1s a 1<>ft-spoken southern ,cntlt·
man who is sull 1n awe of lus MW
Southern C'.ahfom11 surroundmp .
"It was hard at ftm to ~t uacd to
everyttuna out here:· '8)'1 Hatchet'
.. h mapt have been affecttna m)
klckina for while. 8ut 1 think l'vt
ttttlcd down a httk now
"l'm from South C'.arolu\a w~
thi np arc pretty bonnJ. YOU IUY' OU l
here havt tot 1t all There's to many
(Pl•M ... BATCll&a/CS)
~
Leibrandt still
taking it hard
Kansas City's hard-luck pitcher
tries to put his loss In background
ST. LOUIS (AP) -Charhc Lc1brandt walked onto
the Busch Stadium turf on Monday to prepare for the third
pme of the World Series. He found the second game still
waitir\j for him.
"Stunned?" Leibl'llndt said, repeating a question put
to him about the St. Louis Cardinals' 4-2 victory over the
Kansas Cny Royals Sunday night. "To say the least. To be
one out away from victory -one out away from evening
the series -then to lose and be two games down, it's pretty
tough to take. But you can't let it get you down."
The sandy-haired left-hander pitched the game ofh1s
life, leading 2-0 with a two-hitter going into the ninth. But
Terry Pendleton's three-run double qu1cky changed a
dream game to a nightmare.
f ··1 was happy wi th my stuff (or
81t'l innings," Lc1brandt said Monday
after th(' Royals Journeyed to St.
Louts for a workout at Busch
Stadium.
•
"It was the final one-third
inning that dtd me in. It's thl' best
stuff I've had in a while. I felt that
way even in the ninth inning I never
rl'ally. looked to the bullpen ··
Royals Manager Dick Howser
Lelbraadt was criticized in several comers for
not letting rehef ace Dan Quisenberry finish the s.ame.
"You never know when Dick 1s going to bnng Quiz
in," Le1brandt ~1d. "I've had success getting ou1 of my
own jams."
Le1brandt refused to meet with the army of rcponers
who walled at his locker after the game.
"I Just didn't want to re hash 1t," he said .. ljusl had to
get away. To get so close and then to lose it . I jUSl didn't
want to talk about it. It's the toughest loss I've ever had to
take."
Prep football players of the week
MITCH MELBON
Corona del Mar
The S-10, 165-pound
sophomore quanl'rback com-
pleted I S of 18 passes for 180
yardsandaTDina27-21 victory,
his second straight strong outing.
·------------~--------
JIM SCARLETT
Coeta Meu
The 5-10, 155-pound senior
comerback played a solid gamt
for the Mustangs, knocking down
1wo passes, recovering a fumble
and recording !llX solo tackles.
·---------------------
ERIC DORN
E•tancla
The 6-4, 180-pound senior
wide receiver, buck from an early-
se.ason inJury. caught four passes
for 68 ya rds and was involved in
eight tackles at safely.
·----------------------·
CHRIS SYLVIS
Newport Harbor
The 6-4. 292-pound senior •
tackle hadn't played much before
this year. but was a key to the
offense against Costa Mesa, con-
taining standout John Carlson.
·----------------------
JONATHAN TODD
L&auna Beach
1lae b-0, 180-pound \enior
middle hnebacker had 14 tackles.
I 0 solo tackles. four as<;1sts and
forced a fumble in the An1sts'
game with Woodbndge.
£
MARC HARTMAN
ltdJMn
The 6-2. 190-pound junior
linebacker had nine solo taclcJes,
four assists, caused a fumble and
"generally played a aood pme, ..
said Coach Bill Workman
·---------------------
JOHl'f PEART
PoGJltaln Valley
The 6-0, 180.pound senior
quarterback completed 9 of 12
passes for 180 yards and 3
touchdowns in a 28-0 Sunset
League win over Ocean View.
·--------------------~
RICK V Al'fDERRIET
Ma.rtna
The 5-11, I 8~pound Junior
quanerback completed I 0 of 17
passes for I 50 yards and no
interceptions. He ran for 87 yards ~-r!I
on 5 cames and scored a TD.
·----------------------
CHRIS RHOADS
Huntinaton Beach
The 6:0, 180-pound senior
wide receiver caught 6 passes for
88 yards, giving fi1m 11 for 155
yards on the season in a 26-10
Sunset League loss to Manna.
·----------------------
JIMMY RAYE
Irvine
The 6-0, 180-pound senior
quarterback went both ways, hit·
ling 2 of2 fo r 63 yards, including a
54-yard TD pass. and ran for a 76-
yard TD 1n a 21-6 victory.
9HA W1f PLltllUfO
Ocean View The 6-5, 2.S5-pound senior
offensive tackJe camed a mllJOr
ponion of the Seahawlcs' running
pme on his back, crcaung holes
for 130 total yards rushing.
·------------------~
DA V1D TOWNSEND
Woodbrlctce
1'hc 6-0. I 80-pound Junior
running back averaged 6.0 yards
per rush and scored 1wicc, from
29 and 7 yards out, in add1t10n to
standout defensive duties.
·------------------~
PAUL CARDENAS
Mater Del The 6-0, l 8~pound senior
running back ran for 61 yards o n
12 carries, scored a TD and
cau&hl 4 passes for 42 yards in a
17-f 4 win at St. Paul
·--------------------
JON OSTLER
WMtminater
A .S-10, I .SS-pound senior wide
receiver, he caught fi ve passes for
13.S yards to lead the L10!1s to _a
24-14 victory over Edison in their
Sunset League opener.
*----------------------
DANNY ONTIVEROS
Saddle back
The 6-0. I 8~pound 1un1or
wide receiver-defensive back had
four catches for 149 yards and a
53-yard TD and intercepted an
Estancia pass in a 38-14 win.
.. I thought Charhe was 1n complete command, and
(pitching coach) Gary Blaylock and J agreed 11 was his
game to win or lose."
Whether he agreed with Howser or nm. U:1brandt ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••--__, wasn't saying.
SPORTS BREAK
Andujar clai1ns
he's just hunian,
tough Doininican
From AP dlapat.cbea
ST. LOUIS-Joaquin AnduJarwould ~
hke the world to know· "I'm human." ...
Like any other pitcher, he says, .. I can
slump. I tell you one thing. though, I give you 100
percent."
Andujar. the 32-year-old Dominican with fiery
temper and unpredictable style. will be the St Louis
Cardinals' pitcher 1n tonight's third game of the 1985
World Scnes against Kansas C 1t y. . Including an 0-1 record in
two postseason st.ans. Andujar
lost his las1 four dcc1s1ons. In fact,
he has nol won a game since Sept.
17 when he claimed v1c1ory No.
21
"Look at John Tudor," An-
du1ar said ofh1s 20-game winning
teammate. "He staned 1-7 I'm
JUSt hke John Tudor. I'm human.
"When everything goes right,
everything goes nght ... Andujar
Anda.Jar ..aid at a news conference Mon-
day. "But ""hen things go wrong. everything goes
wrong I've been 1hrow1n~ my fa'ltball 92-93 miles per
hour but they're JU'>t hitting the ball where there isn't
an)bod) ··
( alhng h1mself .. one tough Dominican," Andujar
enhanced h1'> reputation for irasc1b1hl) 1h1s season
when he refused to talk tu reporters. occa.,1onall y
cursing them in VISlting clubhouses Fveryone thought
11 was becau~ he was angry he d1dn·1 win the (>Young
1n I 984. hut he says that's not 'IO
.. , won 20 games la<>t ~ear. the onl> ont• in the
National I cague. and then I go to '>rnng 1ra1n1ng thl'>
year, and nobody talks to me," Andujar \aid." f hq go
over and talk w Oz11c Smith or Willie McC rc(', hut they
never talk to me
"\o Isa). I'm going to win 20 games again Jnd I'm
not going to talk to anybody," Andujar told rc.-porters.
"It's not that I don't like )'OU guys I 1ust get my
revenge"
"The slu.ler 1s coming better now." Andujar '>aid
"That was m~ prubh:rn the la-;t two month\ I w;i5
hanging m) slider lf)'ou makr a mistakl·. the) kill \nu
and that\ what they've been doing."
Cocaine dealer gets 12 years
PITTSBURGH -Dale M. Shiffman, m
an unemployed photographer charac-
tcnzed by his anomey "a minor league
dealer among major league users," was
sentenced Monday to 12 years in federal prison for
selhng cocaine, majnly to big league baseball players.
U.S. Distnct Judge Barron McCune imposed no
line or coun costs against Shi ff man, who pleaded guilty
Aug. 19 to 20 counts of cocaine distribution from 1982
10 1984, mos1ly to former Pittsburgh P1ra1es pitcher
Rod Scurry and former Pirates Parrot mascot Kevin
Koch.
Sh1ffman. 33, of suburban lipper St Clair. will be
ehgible for parole at the discretion of the federal parole
board, McCune said. meaning 1t 1s likely he will serve
only a fraction of his sentence.
The government Monday dropped 91 other
cocaine distribution charges brought when Sh1ffman
and six other Pennsylvania men were indicted by a
federal grand JUry May 31 of dealing cocaine to major
league players.
Fist fights in NBA bolling over
SPRINGFIELD. Mass. -The fist
lights that marred the National Basketball
>\ssoc1a11on exh1b111on season had better
not calT) over into the regular season.
warned NBA Comm1ss1oncr David Stern.
"It's apparent tha1 there has been eithuberance 1n
the preseason ~mes and we can't let 1t get out of hand."
Stern said dunn$ a reception at the Basketball Hall of
Fame for the visiting Chinese national team and NRA
officials pno,p\o the league's annual benefit game
Monday n1gh1 for the Hall of Fame.
Stern said that league officials will be rev1ew1ng the
filmsofSaturday night fights involving both the Lakcrs
and the Indiana Paccrc; .. and will take appropriate
acuon."
New York Kn1cks rookie Patnck Ewing suffered a
h)perextended and bruised left elbow following an
alterca11on w11h the Pacers· Steve St1panov1th that
ended with St1panov1ch grabbing Ewing and tossing
him 10 the floor Both players were ejected from the
game It wa' Ewing's founh pre!.Cason 'iCuffie and his
second ejection
Meanwhile in Los Angeles. Boston Celtics ce nter
Robcn Pansh and Lakers forward Maurice Luca'> sot
into a pushing match that ended with Parish being
shoved over a pre'is table. A number of player\ joined
the fraca<i and Roston Coach K.< Jones ended up a1 the
bottom of a pile of player; under 1he C'ellln haskcl
Old pros at Irvine Coast CC
Former San Franclaco 49era quarterback
John Brodie &eta off a ahot lD USC pro-
celebrity &olf tourney Monday. At right la
pro aol(er Donna Caponi.
.\nduJar preceded hie, 21-12 record th1'> '>t'a\on with
a 20-14 record last yea r. and I'> the fiN p11c:hc:r 1n thr
National League to put 1oge1ht•nnn'lct·utl\ c 20-\: it wn
<;ea son<> since Joe N1ekro of 1hr Houston \,trm dtd 11111
1979 and '80
$50,000 for marathon double m The perfect imperfection l OS <\N<Jf:LES-A bonus pnze of at
kast ~50,000 will be oOered to any man or
woman who wins both the 1985 New York < ·1ty Mara1hon and 1986 Los Angeles
"1arathon, 11 was announced Monday. Quote of the day
"I guess we arc from the '>Chool of Yogi
Berra, it's not ""er 1111 1t\ over It\ h\•1·11 a
charactensuc ofour duh all year lt'sJu't likl·
we knew It was in the rnn.J<.," St Lou1!1 left ficldt·r
Tito Landrum, who wa\ on base with a double
when Terry Pendleton golh1s winning h11 in the
!>Ccond game of the V. orld ~nes at Kansa!t < ll)'
Nordlques win seventh in row
up two goals tn lht' second period ,
MONTREAL -John Anderson \et ~
including the me winner. a<> Quebe<.·
defeated the ~ontrfal Canad1ens 3-2
Monday night for thr Nord1ques' sc,enth ma1gh1
Nauonal Hockey League 'ictor\ w11hnut a hi\\
With the score tied 1-1. Anderson blasted a \hot a1
Canadicns goalie Patrick Roy and Jcan -frnnco1\ Sauve
hft('d the rebound into the net at 2 14 for a power-play
goal
Less than ()0 !!<'Conch later . .\nder\on fed Mark
Kumpel with a pass. which Kumpel redirected past the
rookie Canad1en goalie for the eventual winner.
The New York C'11y Marathon 1s schoduled for
next Sunday while the 1986 Los Angeles Marathon 1s
scheduled next March 9
Los Angeles Marathon Prec;1dent Wilham Burke
~1d that the New York winners must enter the Los
Angeles Marathon prior to Dec. I to be eligible for the
bonus, which would be S50,000 should both the man
and woman who win in New York win in Los Angeles
and $100,000 should there be only one repeat winner.
"This is the very first time such a monumental
bonu'i has been offered for the winners of two major
intemauonal marathons " Burke said.
Television, radio
TELEVISION
5· 35 p m. -BASEBALL Kansas City at S1
I ou1s 1n game three of the World Sene>. Channel
7
RADIO
5.35 pm. -BASEBALL World Sencc;,
game 1hrce. KNX ( 1070).
7:30 p.m. -PRO HOCKEY· Boston at
Kmas. K.LAC (570).
Lakers can't keep up the pace
SPRI NuFtELD. Mass (AP) -
Herb W11l1ams had 19 points and
nine rebounds 10 boost the Indiana
Pacen over the Los Angeles Lakers,
119-1 16 1n a National Basketball
Association cxh1b1t1on game Monday
nia}lt
ihe Cleveland (avahcr,, led by
Ron Anderson's 30 points, rolled
over lhe Chinese national team
120.80 1n the opening pme of the
NBA's benefit doubleheadt'r for the
Baske1ball Hall of Fame
The takers, who trailed by 12
points ~oing into the fourth Qullrter.
pulled to w1th1n two with soi '!C<.:ond~
to 10 on a 9-point spurt by Magic
Johnson and a ,three-po1n1 'hot by
Byron Scott Johnson led :.II '><:orrr~
with 24 point\, followed by \cott with
23
Then Vern Fleming h11 on a free
throw after bc1na fouled by Maunct
Lucu and Wilham, arabbed a Iona
pass underneath the Liken ba,lm
and held on as lime ran out
Indiana. which raised its pre-
season record to 4-S, OJX'M the
rcaular seaJOn with New Jency on
Saturdav while lhe Laken. who plan
1n San Antonio on Saturday, fell to
S-3.
The Chinese, who arc spending
October training and pract1c1na with
the NRA 1n a 1our arranged by Boston
Celtics President Red Auerbach and
Pete Newell. director of player per-
~onncl for 1he Golden Stat~ Wamors,
were led by Lu Jinqma. a 6-3 auard.
who finished Wlth 18 points
But the backboards belonaed 10 the
('availers, who led by 6-11 , 28S-
pound Mel Turpin and 6-10 Mark
Weit wt th 12 each, o ut-rebounded the
Chinese, 62-33
'
Rams still less than pe rfect,
but enjoy 4-gal!le bulge on SF
From AP dl1patcbe1
Sorry. prognosticators who overlooked the Rams
when they mapped out the 1985 National Football
League season.
"A lot of people who didn't think much of us keep
hoping there'll be some way to get the Rams to fall apart so
their predictions will finally stand up," said Coach John
Robinson of the Rams.
"Scven-and--0 is great," he said.
The Rams host the slumping San Francisco 49crs,
3-4, Sunday at Anaheim Stadium.
The game earlier figured to be a key NFC West
matchup, but the Rams are threatening to make a
runaway of the race, currently holding a four.game lead
over the 49ers and New Orleans Saints.
San Francisco is the defending Super Bowl champion
and was 15-1 during last year's rqular season, while the
Rams were I 0-6 and were eliminated in the first round of
the NFL playoffs.
"It's obviously a bt& pme for both teams, but the key
for us 1s the (N FC West) race," the Rams coach said
Monday at his weekly meeting with reporters. "It's a 16-
game season.
"No game is cruc1aJ until maybe the last two or 1hrtt
. ' . I( WC beat them. then we've aot a fi ve·pmc lead on
1hem. lfwc lose, we're still up by three."
The Rams have foracd their perfect record despite a
lack of offensive punch. as their defense anctspecial teams
have made the difference 10 most of their victories.
"It's clear we're strua)ina on offense," Robinson
said. "Now we have a team with a defensive personality.
"What concems us most offensivel y 11 lhat we're not
Basketball coach sought
Edison H1ah School basketball coech Jon Borchen
has announced an openina on h11 staff at 1he sophomore
level.
Qualified persons interested in ooachina lhe
Charsers' sophomore• as an ofT-<:ampua coach should
conuct Borchert at 962·1 n6.
running the ball Wlth the rhythm we had in the past. We're
in a slump,"
Looking back at the victory over the Chiefs, the
Rams' first shutou1 since 1979, Robinson said: "ii was
with some apprehension that we went in 1here. They've
got a lot of talent. (Chiefs quanerback Bill) Kcnney's
being hurt helped us. But we'll take 'em anyway we can get
'em.
Kenney, a product of San Clemente High School and
Saddleback College, had led the Chiefs to significant
victories earlier. including a drubbing of the Los Angeles
Raiders.
''Our secondary was outstanding,'' Robinson said.
singlin.g out cornerbacks LeRoy Irvin and Gary Green.
Irvin bad a pair of interceptions off Kansas City's
Todd Blackledge, who was filling in for the injured
Kcnney1 ~nd Green had one. Overall. the Rams picked off
six BlacKJedjc passes.
Asked bow he thought the Rams' duo compares wi1h
the NFL's more "famous" cornerbacks, Robinson
annned a~ replied: "famously ...
Puntef'Dale Hatcher also was pnuscd by the coach.
who said. "We feel we have an outstandina weapon in
Dale Hatcher. I think he leads the league in number o(
punts inside the opponent's 2~yard line."
UNI'S BELLE ...
P'1'omCl
aays Curtis. "He doesn't have a b1a head. He's not a vocal
auy at all, but he's a leader"
Belle is used to lcadina the pack. A spnn1er on the
University track team.I. Belle has run a I 0.6 I 00 meter and
a 4.6 40-rard dash in tootball practice.
"He s arcat in the open field," says Cunis. "He's aot
&ood moves and breaks the big play. All he n~ds is a little
daylif.?t and it's all over "
• I'd aay I was a &ood all-around player," says Belle
"But really, ~hen mr, tcaQtmates arc domg well, that's when I'm do1n1 well.·
Before the season surted, Belle had a aoal of rushina
for 1.000 yards. But since then, Belle has lowered h11 expectations.
"I think I'll probably come up short." h( $&y1, "but there's aJways next yea r ·
Yet, there W111 be a nelll year at Un1 ven11y for Belle
And C:urt111 alona 1he rest of the rtturn1na Trojans couldn t be nappier.
---------------------------------~
Harbor No. 2
in rating~;
Warriors 9th
Satlors ranked first
tn trlscrosscountry
for6thstrai htweek
Newport Harbor and Saddleback,
both winnina easy Sea View league
contests last week., remained No. 2
and No. 3 in the Central Conference
football poll Monday, respectively, as
the CIF Southern Section office
conduc1ed its sixth poll of the 1985
campaian.
The Sailors (3-0, 5-1 ). who beat
Costa Mesa, 42-7, play a key Sea View
Lcque pme Friday against Laguna
Beach (Z-1 , 4-2). Saddleback (2-1 ,
S-1 ), a ~ 14 victor over EstancLa, has
lost only to Newport Harbor and will
play surprising Woodbridge (3-0. 5-1)
ma contest that could decide second
* * *
place tn the Sea View.
Woodbrid&e as ranked No 9 m the
CenttaJ Conference.
Meanwhile, the Newport Harbor'c;
prls' cross country team showed why
1t bas been the No. I-ranked squad 1n
the CIF 4-A throuahout the fall,
winnina the Division 1 title of the
Oranae County Championships last
Saturday at Irvine Park.
Teammates Maagie Henson and
Buffy Rabbitt, both seniors, finished
one-two in the event with times of
17:47 and 17:50 over the three-mile
course.
It was the fourth invitational meet
win for Coach Bob Van Sickle's
Sailors, who earlier in the season
collected tints at the Woodbndgc.
Dana Hills and Fountain Valley.
Newport is 6-0 in the Sea View
League and has won 29 straight dual
meets dating back to 1982.
* * * Big Five Conference
~ kMtll LM9U9 ·--~ LettW..ei
1. FOlllane Cllrui llelt S· I 117 8MI Rubidoux, lS l
8••1 Como1011, l4 o 2. Lono e..cn Polv ).ll~AIMI ~· S·O 110
Anoelu• •·O 96 8HI lllthoo Monlll()ITlet'V, 36 12
a.er Plu• X, 41·6
&Ml Col!Oll. ll· IJ
8ffl CretPI. 10·1
.. S«vlt• Al\IMIUt 6·0 11
S. ltlven!Oe Polv Cllrui IHI! 6 o 11
6. Alemeny Oe4 Rev 6·0 S9
7. Lovol•
• SI. Peul
Oe4 Rev S I ti 8u1 Sr Jofln &osco. 11·6
Lo•t to Meler Del, 11-U
8HI EIMnhc>wer. 11 13
LMI .. Wet""*"""'• 14-14
A~UI S·I 31
t Sen <;oroonlO Citrus a.tr •·l IS 1t.•--SUftMt 4-J It
Central Conference
I. Valencle 2..._..,,H.,._
l.S.'fl'I ~
4. Le Mlrede
S. F utlerlon
.. Le Qulnla
1. Le Hetlre
I. Sanlleoo
t. wu•r111ee
1 O. a.tlllower
Orenoe
Sel View
Sel View
Sul>ut'be" Frftwev
Gerden Grove
Fr-ev
Gerden Grove
Sel View
Sut>urben
H
S-1
H
S· I
S·I •·2
•·2
6·0
S-1
S· I
80
12 u
~ 47
43
76
7S
It
9
Beel S.venne, 6.1·0
.... Gel .. MeM, 42·1
.... •11MC:1a, •·14
8••• Glenn, 36·1 a.er Buen• Perk, 46-1
llHI BOI .. Grende. ll· l? B .. I Sonon. ?l·O
8HI R1nch0 Alemllot, 19·0
... , Le9UN ._di, ll-7
e .. 1 Mevfelr, 34·0
Southern Conf ere nee
I Mlulon Vt.lo
2. LvnwOOd
Soul!\ CoHI 6·0
Sen G1t>rlet V•ll•v S· I '° 10
8 .. 1 Oownev, lS-13
8eer Gahr. 28· 11
81•1 VIII• Perk. 41 ·IO
8eet Oene Hlllt. ll·U
8HI Nogelet, 16·1
8HI Tutlln, 2• 0
8HI W1lnu1. 14-0
Bell Levuna Hiii•. 3.S·O
3. El MoOene Cenrurv S·I 61
4. c..>111reno ve .. v
S.Wetl Covlne
Soutn Coett S· I " tS Slerr1 S· I
6 Foottllll Centurv 4·7 31
30
1.l n
14
1 LOI Allot
I El Toro
Sier re S· 1
Soutll Coe1t 4·l
t Lot Alemllot
10 ltowlend
Empire 6·0 8HI Cvl>f'et•. 11·3 llHI HH Wiison. lS·6 Si.<re S·I
Coastal Conference
I. Scnurr 2 Hoover
l Muir
' Sant• Berber• S. RIO Me ..
6.luene
7 W"lleke
• Sant• Monie•
' Soulll Torrence 10 Simi Vellev
Foothlll
P1clflc
Peclfk
Cller>net
Cllennet
Chennet Mermonre
81v 8ev
Marmon le
6·0 lOI
6·0 IOI
S·I ..
S· 1 14
4-1-1 4S
S·I c
4·1 ti
)·7 11
4· I· I 30
S· I 11
B .. 1 San Ga!Ylet. 7S· 19
8eet Cr e\Cellle v ellev, '9· 23
8HI Arcedl•. o -n
8HI Oxnard, 17·6
Beal San Merco1, '9· 14
a.11 HU9f'141me. JI 14
8NI Santa Monie• 41·71
Lo11 lo Wetttato.e, 47 21
Tl~ Touance, 0·0
BHI CemerlllO, 21· 14
Desert-Mou ntain Conf ere nee
I. Leu1lnver Plonftf
2 Sanll Clere Frootler
),SI ~vlevl Sanl• Fe
4. Yucalcle Sonllltl
S. Atoul'I Fr011tler
•• Cflemlne4e Senle Fe
7. Cerpfnterle Trl-V1llev
I Noire Dame <Rlver•ldel Sunk lat
t Sanre Yne1 Trl·Vettev
10 CelebeM• FrOllli.t
S·0-1
S· I
4-l
4·1
•·2 4· l-1
4·2
S· I
4·2 4·2
110
99
ll
"' 43
S6
" ~
31 10
8HI Mlreteslt, " 13
81et Sanle Peule, 24· 14 Beel 8etl·Jeff, lt·1
&Ml NOlre Oeme (Riv l. t ·3
8HI Ce1e11e .. ,. 2•-n
Beet MurPhv. l•·O
BHI MoorNrll., 19·0
LO'I IO YucalN, 9·3
Beet 0.11. Perl<. 39·0
Lc»I IO Agoore. 74·?1
Eastern Conf ere nee
I Norco
2 Cleremonl
3. Don Luoo 4. El RenQ\o
S. Sen Merino
6 Soulll Hiii•
1 a.ti Gerden•
• Pomone
9 Arlington
10 Le S«ne
'"" lie Miine
Be Miine
Whltmonl
Rio HondO
Veile Viti•
Wtlllmonl
&•Miine
IVV
Wllllmonl
S-1 ..
S· I I I
•. , 61
S·I 60
4·1 SI
)-1-1 •5
4·2 l9
S· I 26
4·7 " 3·3 9
a.er M llnvton JS 71
8Ht Uolend, lS· 10
Beet Pomone , ?l·O
Be11 Pioneer, 30·6
BHI Temole City. 74· 12 a..1 Wor1<rner>. 21· IO
Lc»I to Le Se<ne, ?1·2S
Lo•I IO Don LU90. ?1·0
Lo11 to Norco. lS-11
But 6•11 Gardens. 2'·7S
Southeastern Conference
1. Cherler Oek Montvlew 6·0 90 6HI 8eu•ll . ., ••
BHI Ger>uhe, 11 IS Beet Indio, 14·0
8ffl Gledtlone, 36· 10 llHI Kel>l>94, 70·6
8HI Celon. ll-6
8e•I 8e"IOW, 21·3
Lott to Dlemond Ber. 11 IS
a..1 Tret>ueo Hiik , 40-ll
llHI Gerev. 12·6
2. Olernond lier
l . Cetilr•I
H.Clendl 6·0 12
Oewrt·Vellevs S·0· 1 67
4. Sen DllM• s. Arrovo
Montvlew S·O ~
Min ion Velie\' •·O SI
'· L• Slerre Sen AndrHI S-1 'O
7 Norte VIiie San Andr•H S· I lt
I. G•llft/\e Heclendl l ·l 23
9 AIUM MonMe• 4·1>-2 IS
10. e11w1nc» Heclende 4 · 7 17
SEA VIEW FOOTBALL ...
From C l
crodlt.
Thursday's site: Irvine High.
Newport Harbor (5-0, S-t) v1.
Lacua Beac• ( 1-5, 1-%): Three forfeit
losses for L.a.auna Beach, including a
critical Sea View Lc:.ague dcc1sion
over Costa Mesa, have turned this
from what would have been a playoff
duel.
The Artists. thin and smaller than
Newport Harbor, rely on the passing
of John Kimball and runnina of
Jonathan Todd, alona with a swarm-ina and opportunistic defense.
Harbor, with abundant size, likes
to dominate with a "stop-me-if-you-
can" runnina pme, buoyed by the
arm of quarterback Shane Foley, who
bu completed a whopping 57. 7
percent of his passes.
Foley's numbers include 90 com-
pletions in 156 attempts for l ,281
yards and 14 touchdowns throuah six
pmca -and avenae of 15 for 26 for
213 yards and over 2 TDs per pme.
"They've aot 1ood size and C.edrick
(Hardman) has them doini the right thlnas." sa~ Newport Harbor Coach
Mike Oiddinp. "They'll aj ve us
trouble. I've never seen a team have so many touchdowns called back. maybe thn're a little over..qareuive
at umea. I'm lookin1 for a war."
Friday's site: l..quna Beach.
E1&uda Cl-4 t-1) n . Co,_. ••I
Mar ca-a, l·l): They W«e picked to
flnllh third in lcape, but Eltancia's
• Eaalet may be flayina for pride. only. ana Corona de Mar knows a V1C10ry
keeps them in mathematical reach of
abeddina a No. 4 imqe. aJthouah the
odds are qainst them.
•"Thia 11 a must pme for us. of
couneJ:· says Corona del Mar Coech
O.ve noUand. "Ap.inat Hut>or they
weft able to run and apjnlt Sadd.lc-bec.k. too. And, they have Mike
Rotelhn1 at quanetbeck., so they can
do it all."
Estancia COKb f.d Blanton, a
former 1gj1&ant at Corona del Mar
under Holland. k.noWI bit team's ().3
record speaks for alldf in t.cnru of
playoff poalbilitla.
"Corona del Mar 1s on a ro11:· ..aye;
Blanto n, "and I think they·re playing
better nght now. We have to play one
of the best games of the year. Their
nose guard (Matt DuBow) is a good
one and their running backs (Scan
Turner and Chns Warner) arc 3ood.
They're both very dependable backs.
"And, they don't beat themselves."
Blanton's last comment could be
construed as a lef\-handed slap on his
forces, who have been at times their
own worst enemies.
Corona del Mar LS on a three-game
winnina streak 1n the scnes, which
dates back to I 965, and those three
wins ,;ve the Sea Kings a 9-7-2 cdac.
Friday's site: Newport Harbor.
Uatvenlty ( 1-$, 8-3) vs. Cotta
Mesa (!--4, 1-%): Tbe records would be
identical if it WCTC not for Mesa's
forfeit victory over Laauna Beach,
but bragina ri~ts can sometimes
mean a lot. In this case, they do.
"We have a chance to wm the
f oo\ball pmc," says Costa Mesa
Coach Tom Baldwin, whose than
squad has been further depicted by
injuries.
"They've 1ot Cnia Belle and he's
rc.ally Jood. He bu mmendous speed
and if he acts in our teCOndary we
don't have anybodr to catch him.
"But it's just thetI one IUY· We've
been throW'lftl the bill pn:tty well so
they're aoina to have to cha~ their
defente (stackina acainst the run)."
"We've &Ot a couple ofteams bere
who arc t>fCUY hu~ for a win "says
University Coach Rack Cun.is.
"They've SOt ID individual {Jobn
Carlson) who does a lot of thinp for
them and we've Sot one in Belle."
The 6-3, 2)~pound Carlton tw
caua)tt 16 pwea for 262 yardt in bJs
lut !WO SWU, and 8etle ba1 nalbed
.lor 222 yarda on .lS carriea (6.3
averqe) aod mu med two k:ickoftl 9S
yan1s each for toucbdoWnJ in that
~.
"Tbe key for us is to plar four
quanen or football," adds CWtis.
'lb.It's our~ for lhas week."
Tbunday 1 lite: Newpor1 Harbor.
Maule Henaon
Buffy Rabbitt
Ofange Coet1 DAILY PILOTIT~. October 22. 1Na Cl
Prep football log
SUNSST L•AGUI
IC>ele* l4•U 01!1 ~ U CottOll
71 .. MlllO
21 SI JoM '°"'° J1 Noire Oeme
14 W"trnln&ter 02~ View (el Wm)
Hl-Htn 9MCll (el OCCl
N~tn Vallr; (If 119 Al
H l~rlne (el HI)
"OU#TAIM YAU.IV U·Jl 70 Mel .. Del
14 fl Toro
15 MIHIOll Vt.lo
7 Santi!•
0 L-a.ed'I "°"" 21 0cMn View
07j.-Marlne (et OCCl
HI-I W•lmln•t., N.-ECllM>n (el Ile A)
N l~t Hunttnelon 8le(ll
HUNTINGTON a•ACH <2·•1
23 Corone del /<Mr
21 D•mlen
'' Ne#POt1 ...,._ t LI Witt.on
21 Meter Del
10 Merine
cns-w .. rmln•ler 111 H&I
Nl-EdlM>n (el OCCI
N~en View (I I Hit
NIS-Founleln Vellev (el HBI
MAJllNA U·1·1l
9 St Lout• ( H• well)
11 E SP«'enu
14 Servile
0 Foolhlll
14 MIMlk1n
1• Hunt1ne1011 Beectt 02~oun1e111 Vlllle'v (el OCCl
N 1-0C..n View (el HI)
N..._.t w"1m1n.ier
Nlt-EdlM>tl (II HBI
OCIAN Vtaw ( 1·$)
2J Kennedy
O Fontene
23 Gerdelle
0 SI Peul
O Wntern o Fou111eln Vellev
01S-Ed1M>n Cel Wm)
N I-Merine 111 118)
NO-Hin. IHCPI (el Hiii
N l~t W"lrnln\ler
WHTMINSTI• (4·'1
1 Vetencle
10 Pacifica
26 Et Toro 11 Maler Del
t 1 LOfte leKn Wlltotl
2• l!--
14 02,_.,.I HunrtntJton -.en 14 Nl-f'-lelft Vellr;
II ~ne
17 HI~ Vlft, ,! MIA Vl•W L•AGU•
COM*A DeL MA'l lJ•J)
7 Hunfln9tllfl lleKll
16 Sen Ctemenre
0 C-'11r•no V•ttev
O WOOdlWICIM 1t C0tte Mew
T1 Untvenllv
IO 02~•1encle (et NHl
,; N~<et NHl
Nt-ett....-a..cn 11 HI~ Hal'1IOr (•I OCC) ,,
0 eofTA MaSA 12-41
10 lotte Gr111c:14 ' ...,,._
,.
I• IAOOUaACiC (I.I)
1 Senle AM Velev ,. Sen••...,.
,. L.• Hallr•
11 Unl11tnll't' 2\ l'WwDOrl H91'1lot
•Ell~
02• WOOOWICIM <et lrVIM) n N)-(ctM (el NH)
IJ Nf-<0&1• Mew (el S.A ~)
'7 HI~ llMdl (el NH)
ll
7 ,,
' 14
.M
UMtYllUtTY 11•.i
I lrvlN
l Ml•tbl Vleio
2t ~H-O SedcP•hCk
13 L"'6W 8-cJI
21 cor-°"' Mar 02.-.Cotte MeM tel NH) Ol l-1 NewPOl'I Het1'0I'
Ht-E•lencle (el lrvtne)
Nl j-WoodlwldM (et ININ I 13 Lot Alernllos
I LMuNI ~
1 Corona del MM
1 NewPOrl Herbor
1toneo1 o ,. WOOOtMtlOGa CS· II 7 L._. Hlllt
I 02.t-Untver•ltv (el NH ) 14 N 1-WOOdtlflODe (e l lrvhw)
It Nt ~ (el SA lowll
23 Nls.-E•lenc:le (II NH) r. ../.tK.JA ( 1-4 I 3 Et Toro
10 Leoune HlllS
24 L°' Am'9ot
.,
O fu•lln
I ~ MMeot
ll Corone •Mar
13 E•t•ncle
21 Lell\llle IMcll en~ (el lr•lnel 21 H 1-<ottl Mela (el INIM I 3 H ...... I ,..__, Hert>ot
• NIS--U'llvenllv (et lrvlnel
0
11 • 0
14
"
,.
C2 ,, ,.
10
27
0 ..
1
0
0
1
27 Newoort Het1)o(
0 Woodorldoe
42
13 SOUTH COAST LaAGU•
14 Seodleoe<JI
9 025-<dM (e l NH!
' Nl--l.el>une &Men (el NHI ?• Nt-tjnlvenllv (et lrvl119)
14 Nls-<otte IWtM (el NH)
0
10 LAGUNA llACH t l·S)
•
0 llvene Perk (ion.II) I
O Et.lnore CIOr'fell) I
20 Dene Hiil\ 46
o c°''• MeM 11orte111 1 20 UntvenllY ll
1 Woodbridge ?I
14 02~port Herb<>f
)I Nl-Etlencl• ,., NH)
7' N.-<orone def M¥
22 N I-~ (e l NHl
C~ VALLaY U·I) U Footnla
J7 Cenvon
11 cor-del Ma•
14 e 1 Toro
2t S.11 Cletnenlt
J I 0-Hlllt
02S-.1 lrvlne
N 1-Mlulon Vlelo
~eun. Hfllt
Nls-£1 Cemlno R .. 1
DANA HILU ll ·41
1 Sonor• 24 Torrev Pine\
46 Leeune IMcll
J llrH·011noe
10 Mlu loll Vlelo ' ,. NIWP'OltT HA•eott IS· I ) 2'l Sanl1 Ane
74 lrvlne
14 CePl•treno Vellev 11 014-EI Toro (e t M\/t
l6 OJ •-t Ir vine 19 Hunllnvton a..c11
42 E•tencle
14 SeOdleOKk
42 Cotle MeM
6 025-ttl UCIYN a.ecn
) Oll~nlVet'\llV
1 H.-WOOCl~ldoe
14 N15-<4M (el OCCI
14 NO-Sen Clemente
11 Nls-t..evune Hiiis 11 , aL TO.O (4-2) 21 Esl1nc1e
1 FOUtlteln Vellev
1 Wn1rn1n1 •er
11 Cepltlreno \/etlev
7 ,,
0
11
' I•
..
24
20 14
24
l l
l ,.
76
"
II INIM >• l--H• ~ .... (elMV) NI-..'#.,.,..,.
~.ion VlelD (el MV)
Nll-$en o.r-te (et MVl
•vwe lf-U
" l>nl.....itv ,. Newton~
I) Tu.tin ,, L...-Hlh
0 l!I Toro 11 Sell ,.._ ..
on-<~•''-va11trt 031-0_ H_
N7-1 CefW Nl-1 MIWOft Vlelo
LACMIMA ~ IMl
0 Woodtlrtooe
J Eatencll t1 UnM!nhy
1 ll'VIM
1 LOt Arn'"4
o El Toro 02S-.I MIWoll Vleio
Hl-s.t\ C:lfmente (el MV)
...._, Capl•fr-V"'-Y
HIS-.1 Oene Hlh
MlllM* "'•JC> " .. , l S ~n Oleoo ~N •2 Unh•enlly
11 Founreln v.....,
17 Sell Clemen!•
24 Dene Htlll
35 ~v 02~HllK
Nl-t Ceo111reno v.-v ...--£1 Toro ,., MV)
Nl....,.r11lne
SAN CLaMaNTI <l-4· II ,. s.v-
12 cor-def Mar
21 e KC>nCSldo
12 Minion Vlelo
• CePl$1r lftO V e11ey
• ININ
02S-ove
Nl......YguNI Hllll (I I MV )
Nt-.t 0-Hllls Nls.--€1 Toro (et MV)
ANGaLUS L•AGUll
M.AT•R D•I (4-ll 10 Founteln V•llev
4 I S.nle Ane VeJlev
14 S.nre Ana
14 Wet1mln1ter 2t Huntington &M<ll
17 SI Peul
cn......e1.,_ Amel ISA eow11
Nl-1 Ill"-Mont_._y
N1-P1ut X (el ~ &owl) N1-Ser11ll1 (el SA Bowl)
• •
II ,
15
" 10
1)
0
16
27
27 ,..
21
70
10 70
II
11
"
Costa Mesa to have little league baseball
Reg!stration _pla~ned
for Saturday. Nov. 9 --at community center
Little league baseball 1s coming 10
Cost.a Mesa.
Behind the organizational cffons of
Jim and Rose Mane Luisi, the Cost.a
Mesa Little League Wlll have its first
season in I 986 with play starting in
March.
Registration 1s scheduled Saturday,
Nov. 9 at the Costa Mesa Community
Center. 1845 Park Ave .. from 9 a.m.-2
p.m.
The league 1s open to all youths
6-18 years of age. The league is
planning a pee wee division, plus the
maJor, minor and senior leagues. and
a Big League for 16-18-ycar olds.
HATCHER. • • From Cl
things to do:·
And 1s Hatcher getting out and
seeing the sights?
"When I first came out here I went
to Hollywood and walked along that
sidewalk w1 th the stars on 1 t," he says.
"You probably wouldn·t think that
was a big deal, but back home people
get excited about that stuff."
Robinson and the Rams have been
excited with their rookie's per-
formance so far. In fact. everyone l'i.
"People are "ltarting to ask me
autographs.·· he says. "That never
happened to me before out here.''
While improving e very week.
Hatcher 1s another imp<>rtant cog m
the Rams' smothering defense. His
booming punts pm down o pponents
deep m their own temtory lime af\cr
ume.
"It's very difficult to move the ball
80yards in the NFL," says Robinson
"It isn't so much the average of his
punts. it's where he puts the ball."
Where Hatcher puts the ball. Wlth
increasing frequency, 1s inside the
o ther team's 20-yard line.
As of this week. Hatcher has 17
punts that have been downed inside
the 20, second 1n the NFL behind
Hatcher's idol. one Ray G uy of the
LA Raiders. who has 18.
"Yeah, Ray's m} idol," says Hatch-
er 'T ve never met him. but we play
the Raiders in our last game so l hope
l can then."
By the lime the season ends. 1t
might be Guy who seeks out Hatcher.
As of this time. Hatcher is averagina
43.2 yards a boot
"I'd hkc to average ;v-ound 43 to 44
yards a punt," says Hatcher. "It's nice
to have a hiah a verage. but I think the
true indicator of how well you're
k.Jck.Jnf,. is bow many punts you can
1et inside the 20."
Hatcher. in the last few weeks, has
turned into one of the premier
punters an football. He feels, after a
somewhat slow start by his standards,
that the tumina p<>int was the second
pme of the ~son against Phaladel·
phi a.
MIRCIDIS
llft! LESS ~;~,y
Monrhly
MAKE MOOE~ DAV Wf(ll
~ ~ .... "'°° ~ llOllCL * 16 ~
~ 300CO ..-ete ~
Mett...,.. JOCX> ~o «i l.'WlO
Mite.,.. ltOE "'~ ~
P 1 Ma1•wrau
1001 Quall St• Nlll'P0'1 8e9d1
., 141833-inao
\
Opening day IS set IOT Apnl 5
Volunteers arc needed, according
to Rose Marie Lui si. the league
president.
"Parent participation 1s so v1tall)'
important for complete success, We
need aJI the helping hands we can get.
By volunteering your pan1cular tal-
ents, you help to ennch the program
as a whole and add new dimensions to
your child's hfe. ··says LulSl
"Cost.a Mesa Little League has a
good core of parents and volunteers
already and has an acuve board of
directors and parents association
(au.uhary) workjng hard to maJce
CMLL a smashing success"
All those interested in serving on
the board, managmg. coaching or
sp<>nsonng a team. or sending a
donation. arc asked to conuwt Rose
"Mane Lu1s1 at 548-4411 or Steve
Pncer dunng weekdays at 546-681 5
or nights at 646-9459 PnCCT 1s the
public relauons and sp<>nsors chair-
man.
Other members of the board of
d1rttton for the league include: Jenn)
Pncer. secretary~ Kuk Mcintosh.
treasurer-legal adviser. Lou Kosoy.
umpue 1n chief: Bob Koso}, equip-
ment manager: and Jim Lu1s1, ma1or
d1 v1s1on representative.
CALIFORNIA'S ONLY
NIGHT THOROUGHBRED RACING!
MONDAY THAU SATURDAY!
OCT. 21 -NOV. 4!
We're back on trac k at Lo'-A 1am tos
and you should be too Our 9111 Tnorouqh
bred Racing Season not only o rorn1sec;
to be the best ever 1t a ls o prom c;e .., vou
lots of ways to enioy the racing FREE
FREE
GRANDSTAND
ADMISSION
Post time 1s at 6 15 PM 1Excep1 on
October 24-5 30 PMl and admission 1<:.
FREE to a ll opening night and every
'.l Q"' 1..1 1i10e· • • ·•" 1
P~P·'\o Mnnt:J,h •Q~•l
M onday Early B ird Betting every day from 11 AM to 4 30 P M And early birds
get FREE parking and FREE admiss ion every day' Senior') get FREE admission
with proof of age (62 or older) every Thursday• E leven ra c es evearv n1qht
.. ,,, ..... featuring $2 EXACTA on 1a c P s 1 1;rnd5 9
•PICK SIX o n rac e s 4 9
~···. ~.,
•$2 N IGHTLY DOUBLE on races 10 & 11
Take the who1e qang-at specia l group
r ates w ith plenty o t e1<1ras. like s emi private
mutuel windows s pecial dining arrange
men ts and p riva1e beverage service Call
for reservatronc; o r planning 1ntormat1on
. " ...
~A~
ORAW COUNTY RACING FAIR
4961 Katella Avenue•Los Alamitos CA 90720
(71 4) 995 1234•(213) 431 136 1
l \
<>reng. Cout OAJLY PILOT/TUMday. Oct®-22, 18&5
HPL
NATtOHAL CON,•••NC•
Wftt
W L T f'd. "" l'A Item• 7 0 0 1 000 14' "
New Ori.at!•
San Frenci.co
Allan!•
l • o m uo '" ) 4 0 .,, 176 I.cl
I • O 1'3 IS1 216
Cnu;aoo
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Mln"910la
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c:.ntr .. , 0 0
• > 0 • 3 0 ) • 0
0 1 0 ... ,
I 000 112 !OS
jll 126 159 m 1se 1co 47' 1'4 ,..,
000 uo 111
Oelln S 2 0 JU 17) llS
NY Glanh l 0 S71 ltO 111
Pllll•oe1D!lle 4 0 42' 102 104
$1 LOUIS C 0 •1' 1S5 lN
w u n1no1on l c o 47' IOC 1s1
AMlllllCAN COH,.lla•HCll
Denver
lt•ldln Sae Ille
Kan1a1 CIN
StnD..vo
Crtvereno
Plll•l>uro"
C1nc1nno11
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M1•m1
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114 1S9 lJ.3
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42' UI ISi ,,, 169 llJ
S71 l:M lot
42' IS7 111 ,,.. m 2co
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714 "' "' 714 156 104 571 124 119
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Ho;;sron e r Sr L.oul1
M1am1 ra Ottro•I
MIMesora ar Cnlc•llO New Enorano er Tampa Bev s .. 111e ar ~~ ... York Je"
W•Uhlnoron er Cleveteno
P11111>uron a l Clnclnnall New Vor~ Glanh al New Or1ean
Moftd9v'1 Ganw
Son 01990 al ltald9n
Nf"L LOGS
Aams (7·0l
20 Otnvar 16
17 Pn1teoa1011la 6 l~ S.•111• 24 17 Atlenta 6
13 Mlnne,ota 10
)I Temoa 8n 77
16 ~ensu (lly 0
Ocl 77 -Sen Frencl\co, I om
Nov l -New Orltan,, I o m
NO• 10 -a l New York Gian!' 10 am
Nov 11 -at Allan•• 10 • m
NO• ?• -Graen 8av I Pm Dae I -ar New 0rrean1, to • m
Dae 9 -11 Sen Fr•ncl.co. 6 om
Oec IS -SI L.oull , 1 Pm
Otc 23 -lteloan, 6 o m
Raiden (S·2)
JI NV J.,, 0
?0 1Ca11~H C llv 36
10 Sen Francr"o l4 JS New Enolend 10
" Kanlal CllY 10 73 New OrlH n\ 13
11 Cllvtlal!O ?O
Ocl 71 San Diego 6 om
NO• l -ar S.allle. t om
NO• 10 -a l S..n Olaoo, I om
Nov 11 -Clncl11nall, I om
Nov 2• -D111ver. 1 Pm
Dec 1 -a1 Alfen1e, I om
Oec a -at 011\vlf. I D m
Dtc IS -s .. 111e I om
Dec 13 -et Rams 'om
All l•mH P1c1flc
COLLEGE
AP TOP 10 "-d ..,. ~ l lowe 160> 6 0·0 1.200 l
l ~lorlde S·C>-1 l,OM S
J P@M Sta It 6 0·0 l,OC7 6
4 Mten1gen S· I ·0 916 2
S Neorulie S· l·O 946 7
6 AuDv" S· I 0 16' t
1 Br•Ql>arr Vo, I'll 6· 1·0 761 ~
8 A r Force 7·0-0 150 10
9 Or110 S•e•e S· t ·O 616 11
IOO•lanom<1 l·l ·O S9t )
11r1or•d0Stare S·l·O S(>l 13
1' 0~1anoma ~1a1e •· l·O SU 17
ll 8aV'I)' o· I 0 c6S 14
14 Ar o an1a. s l·O '3S 4
ISW' ~m Fa S-1·0 )96
lo'• re\\tr ) I I )l} 20
17 cJf A 5 I I 764 18
11 L '>U • I 0 7'3 17
9 re•o• ' I 0 220 )OM•""''~'" S I 0 19 I')'" .. '\ , ~1 t1 11,,0 vote\ Arl1on-a 7J
A oco,. ~ 6? c;,oro,a 43 Cotoraoo 13
&~"'' •• C.•-•" 9 M11r~·and 1 USC 1 Armv
) .No•• ~v•vr S • a "\a\ 1 SMU 2. Piii 1
flf\I ./ • ,.r " 1
Cotle91 foott>aN 1chldUll
SA"fUROA Y'S GAMES wen
> ' • ~ ., .J(LA at Rosa Bowl
'"" "'"', •a•e a1 Lono Btecn Stelt
,.~tt"' Mtt1 (, &' Mawau. n
" "''''ane 01 N@•oao·L.81 \/egu n
!JI •114" .,1 so.-O•evo S1111. n
A' 10"'4 '' S•.tn•ord
A t '~ 'E..•etf a t W 4snlng1on \late
P ar • a • ·• Joie ~>'a•t n ~ • .i'""ti"iu ~1 Santa Clare
, Pr, , 'ti O a• Col S1att Norrnrlc>oe
~ it• 't "' ~1a1tnd1 n
•· ~..., ·"' MuOd a1 Pomona P l•er "
Nt 11 t r $ O 10tnta n
AoOll\
\JIAt 1\1 A r ,r(~
_, 1a1, a• u1an S1a1t
,..~. 01 lnano S101e n
VI< rral'\d 01 MOr111na SI a lt
N'•~llo Re"o e• Norrner" Ar.rona 11
6 ,, :.•a1e o• w,1>1r Sia•'
• ,~. S'"'' a• Wvom•nO
MldWKt
al Nvlft Dame
"nn1t ttl Y\1rt'l•Qen
1 wtt "' NC;rlhwe,,ern
u '.ta•~ &t M"'"e'o'•
N I< ~,,. al lllino•I
.,. c '"oan Sr art 11 Purovt
• anoma S•att e1 Ke"'"
• •M•, S1a1e a• M"lovrl
o•oraoo el Neore1ke
B11ston Colleot "' Clnclnnell Sou•Plrrn 1111no1\ ol Wlchlle s 111e N,,,~ .. '" Hh,.~ \ "' Miam i 0
'·'"" \ Slate a• Drake
.J"'•f.t u a• Totedo
80 '>•••• 01 #t\lern Mlchlgen !(.'~' Sr•lt el Bowllno GrH n
E&slern M•C"•oan ol Cenlral MIChlQan
Nt\lrrn 111lno" er Ea11ern llllnoll
Soultlwe11
Hou1•on "' Ari1en1a' al Llllte Roe•
rcu •' BnlO' 1owa St•lt e• Okrenome
I ~•~\ /Jo./4 M "1 P ier ''""'•I SMU ll "U &I Tt•H t Pno ,..
NE 81 T1•111 ••t11101on n
w'" T••" s11•t al Tul\a " ~ .. ,. MOU\IOI" $tale el La m.er
\oultl
"1111\1\llPOI s11te at Aul>l.lrn
Nortl' Corollno Start at Clem1011 ~''"' (MOiina •• Eu r Cerotlne
""0'"'• recP! a l FIOrlda
ff t"'"O v •' Gtoro • Ou~t at M1rv11,,d
A•&oama al Memonl• State
I tlUlhlll• Al Mllml, Fie n
;~ndefblll el MIU IUIODI
t lnroda Stele 111 Not1n Cer041'1e
r,eo<o. rt<" ., Tenn"'" " .v 11 .,.. & Marv al I/Ml
l•r01ft a •I Wake FOrt•I
, ... ( 1&0.f •' r .. , h nnH'" Stele
>'li'lltrn l<t n•uov al E11tarn Kentucfl't'
t "u111&na I ecl'I ., NW Loul1lena ti
Sn,.lvM>Ofl II
MOl'*llfad ~tall al hll~\"'8 TKI\
N1.r1" Tt•H ~ltlf el Mc:N"'4 Slell. n
(,r11m!>l1no Stele II Jatk\On 51•'•· nlollt
O••td\On al J1ma1 Ma<!ltoll
AD04'laCP11an \!Alt t i rutmen
M·ddla Tenn .. wt S1a11t '' Auslln Peev ... ,
N•1t ~ •01,,la el P.,,l'I \lete
P tt •' •41;v
f '>9••• ,., ,.,,,,,.,,
'""''O't •' Svrec..iw 0••<•--.11 a i C04uml>la
Oarrmoum et Cor1'14111
I •"•II" 411 Ot lewert
Prl,,~t•t>n 11 Herverel
ll•ow~ a • HOIY Crou
(l)nM(I" 1l 81 Malf\9
101111<' U el MaUe<llulalfl
L.a lavtllt at PllOCM t11at1d
P1fllr'f'Olld II Ri;ll><tf•
l>'IW!n 11 "'"'*
cou .. G• LOGS
UCLA U·l·O
71 e rienam Yount ~
t4 T,nMIMt 1'
34 S.n Di.to Slale " 14 W11111ntton 11 co ArltOl\I S1a1t 11
)4 $1enWO f ll w11111noton Sti re JO Ocl ,. -Cellfornle
Nov t -11 Ar Iron•
Nov 16 -Oreoon Slete
Nov n -el USC
use <M>
10 IUll'IQl1 10
13 aevior 10 o Arllona $11•• U 63 OrNOll Sle11 0
>O Sletlforo 6
Ocl 26 -t i Norr• Cam.
NOY 2 -W1tlllno1on 51•11
NO• ' -al Celllornla
No• " -11 W1t11lno1on
NO• 23 -UCLA
NOY )0 -0rl@Ol't (at TQilyO)
Cal Stat. I'~ <2·4l
lO Monrana )1
3 Nevede ltano >O 1 wyomlno )1
10 San Jote s1a11 1a
32 Uta,, s1111 )0
• Nevada l..H Vll:I•' 10
NOY 2 -•t Fre"'4> Stelt
Nov 9 -New Mexico !>.1111
NOY 16 -•I Nortlltrn Arllooa
NOY 23 -Lono Btacn Sl•I•
Nov )() -Paellk
Lone llMedl Stlfot (l·4 )
11 Ulafl Siiia 19
IC San 01'90 Siiia :M
ll Hawaii lO 11 N8'YIOa·L.H Veges 24
17 Bol" Slalt 16 lS TulH 37
23 Eutarn Wut1lno1on lO
Oct 26 -New Mexico Sl1tt
Nov 2 -11 Paclfk
NOY 1 -San JOta Sllll
Nov 16 -FrHno 51111
Nov 23 -al Cal Slall Fulltrlon
C<>tN.\UHITY COLLl!GE LOGS
Oranee CNst (l·l ·I)
} GOlclln Wttl 1
9Full«ton S.C
IS S.OellaOKll. 27 u Rlvar,lele 21
19 San OlallO MHa 16
Oct 26 -So1Jtn•1n1tarn•, 1.lO o.m.
Nov 2 -11 San oi.oo cnv•. 1.JO om
Nov 9 -Pelornar•, 7:30 P m
Nov 16 -el Clirus •, 1:JO pm
Nov 23 -Rancno Santiago•, 7:30 pm.
··oenotH Mlulon Conference oeme
G.idtn Weat (2·2· ll
1 Orenoa COH I 7
7 Rancno Sant-.00 t
10 Ti ll 31 42 P11eOlfla 25
11 Ml San Anronlo 10
Oct 26 -LOl'IQ Btaen City' 1-30 P.m
Nov 2 -e l Cerrito•'. 7:l0 o.m
Nov I -Fullerton•. 7:30 o.m NOY ,, -If El CemJno•, 7.JO pm
Nov 22 -8ak1ollet0'. 7.lO om.
.. oenolH Pac·9 Cont«ena o•mH
S.dcllbadl 16-0J
'8 El Camino 14
41 San Bernardino 10
21 Oranoa Co111 IS
lJ 1t1var1ICH II :16 S.n oi.oo MaH 7
JI Soulllwt,ltrn 17
0c1 16 -San Di.oo Cny•, 1.lO o.m
Nov 1 -et P11omer•, 1.lO o m
Nov 9 -Cltru' '. 7:30 o m
Nov 16 -11 ltancno Sanllaoo•. 7.30 o m
··oenotH Mlu lon Conference oame
LOS~
MC>ttOA Y'S ltHUL TJ
lht ef 11-nltflt ~ C.uMv Fair~· Ille)
A .... ALOOS.U
FIRST RACE. 4 tur!On9•.
8reren Led (Werd) > 40 UO 2.10 ~flallv I.ta lltanklnl 4.20 2 60
BOid Concaol (Peullnal 7 60
T11TW SOJ
$1 EXACT A (3·41 paid HJ 00
OUAltTER~HS
SECOND ltACE. 3SO vtrdl
SlrPtt Smart IH G1rcl1 ) S IO J.60 3.10
Truenood IE Grcle) S.40 4.IO
ltamollno Brook tBard) 10.0
Tim<! II OS
U EX.ACTA 19·4) 011d M7 40
THNtD RACE. JSO verd• Truly A Bunny (Harl) 1 40
Cuhean CBrooul
VandY\ Polley 1oloarick1tnl
Tllni! 11 SJ
4 ~ 3.60
4.00 3 60
S.20
n EXACT A '1-2) oak! ,,., 10
THOtlOUGHMEDS
FOURTH AACE. 6 furlon9'
Menv Road' (Slbllle) S 40 4 OC
Sterduller !Oomlnguu l 13.60
Bold $.tint Pel !Ca"anoni
T1m1 I 11 1 S
"'"H ltACE 6 turlono' THOff T.m. Pet IWerdl "00 S20
com·on Fun ISl!>llle ) HO
Bunnell ( ValOtll
Tim• I 10 41.S
\l £XACT A ( H ) paid '16 CO
SIXTH RACE 6 turiono'
Eoullll>rt 10r1.va1 •10 ).00
EKond100 (Ohvere11 310
Rel>'' P101 ICu ranonJ
Time I 16 31S
$2 EXACT.A (4·7) Paid \13'0
SEVENTH RACE. 6 furlong'
Pllll10 N04en 1Ce11annn1 22 00 10 '° G•ll Boott IE\trad•I 6 tO
Mo,.11orr lWMt J
Tome 110
S1 EXACT.A 14·11 oero \10040
EIGHTH ltACE. I 1116 mlll\
Suite T""'"" IKeene11 10 60 s 20
B•OOO Roval F rlen<! I LOIOVa) HO
Ftv.nQ Wrlltr IOomlnoue11
T.~ 10 1 s
51 EX.ACTA IS·A) Plld '6000
NIHTH ""'~· 6 lurlono\ F'onra !Oomlnouel) 110 )60
Ort>lrrtu IEnrloue1J 9 60
Lev' Ga•or• 1cu 11non1 Time l II l1S n EXACT A (6·41 oald 171 60
) oc
6 60
HO
260
190
3 40
2 "°
2 '° 240
00
l?O
7 '°
)4()
J 00 )80
J oc 1 20
0 0
'7 l"ICK SIX ( S-l-416·4 S·6) Deld '676 40
wlln l? wlnnlno lk ktl' (five llQrw\I ,,
PICK SIX cerrvov ... ,10, 171 76
TENTH RACE. 1 lurlonOt
Bul>t>ll Biii ICH lanon> ISS 40 34 40 II 10
Provo Doll IOllvarn ) 13 40 6 IO
Wiid Klt1v tOomlngueu 640
Tlmt 1?1
I 16 mlltl ELEVENTH RACE I
Velenllne Ltw IOr119a1
Sinon Ho <E,lradal
P<trCt'' Or .. m (EM•OUl ll
Tome I 47 J S
•IO SOC lOC soc 420
• 00
J2 EX.ACTA <6·9) Olld '?:) 00 n CAIL. y OOUIL.I 18 ., oald \13 oc
A fltndanc• 6,7'4
VlllWll rantlnes
HIGH SCHOOL 4tltU
Cl' S·A
I Mire (0111. 1. IMw-1 Hllf1lw1 3
Santa Monica, c Hueneme S. W11dll"\M1
• Mai.t o.11 1 S• Jowon (l.ek..-OOO) a.
LaeuM 8M<fl1 9 Oo\ P~1. 10 GelV
Ctfl •·• t F..,.,..111 V.,_.,1 2 Marlbe)(QU91\, )
Torrence • Cneml,..Cle. S Notre Ot ma
AceoemY • L.ono Btacll WlltOll, 1
e1o.ran11 I Fr Toro, t Arcadia. 10
<;era.-. c;rovt
(lfl J-A
' R·m ot Illa WCYld, , kill• "' )
8•11100 01t00, 4 Nori• Vt•l•J S Sonora 6
Citl'IVOll ,,, I I.I c.a.n~ .•. Artnla, • La
M-rl)tt 10 iltlvarJIOI Flojy C., J·A
1 NordflOff 1 1tova1. 3 lraw10 •
C• aOe1H S OltmonO Ber. 6 ~I I
Ul>l•ll(I f M.tOflOlll, t C1'1M 10 SI LUCY s
(I, l·A
1 SOutr..fn Calllornll Cflrlatlltn, 2 Con
11411• l Cnartar ()alt; 4 Yue.:. VallaV S
81\l!oc> Union. • I.A t111llst, 7 Whittler
C11r1111a11 I Maran.air-., f ~lflvi.w, 10
1..• Lutrwtan (lfl .,,.. .......
I r tlntrldol Mertel ~I\, 1 Ceinooelt
11111 l 8rentwOOCI. • ~. S
Cnaawlo ., • Mavtleld, 1 P~ "°'"' •
Ce ta, t f tO<'le, 10 H01Y Fam!IV
JC Football
ORANGI! COAST COLLEGE
YMr·bY·Vffr
Yav, CMdl
lt-ltay ltotlO
lt4f-ltay RollO
1'50-illev ROllO
lfS1-ltev ltOllO
ltS2-Rev AOllO
195)-ReY Ro110
1954-Ray Rouo
1'5S-lt•v Rou o lf5'-AI lrwln
1957-SllYI Muutau
l9~Slav1 Muu .. u
19Sf-Sllve Muutau
IHO-St1v1 Muuaeu
1961-Ste•• Muuaeu
19'1-0kk Tucker
1"3-0kk 'fueller
1....-Dkk Tueller
lffS-OICk Tucker
1'66-0lcll Tuell.tr
1'67-0 lck Tucker
196&-0lcli T ucktr
1969-0lck Tuc111r
197~0kli Tuc111r
1971-DICk Tucker
1972-Dick lucilar
1973-010. T~er
197.-0lck Tucker
197S-Olcl< T uellar
191&-0lck Tucker
1977-0lck Tueller
191t-Ok k Tueller
1979-Dlck TUCklf
lttC>-Okk Tuclo,tr
1911-0lck Tuc:i..ar
19'2-0lcl< Tucker 1913-0lc~ Tucker
I "4--0lcfl Tuck er
Tolat' 192 wins. 156 loun.
• Comarence cllamolon
• Comarence co·cllamo
e Junior Row Bowl winner
•• AYOCAOO Bowl winner
.Klrd
3+1
M
>·•·1 • ]·J
M 6·4
0·10
l-S-1
• 7-1-2 . •·• •·2·1
l-6
0-9
4·4·1
f·l
•• 10-0
4·4
4·S
4·5
M
S·c
•+I 4·3
• 7·2· I
6·3
7·3
• 7·S
••• 11·0
6·4
S+I
M
2·1 , ..
)•7
0·10
4·S·I .. ,
II llft
SADDLEBACIC. COLLEGE
YNr·bY·VNr
YMr, CMdl It~
196f-<,eoroa Hertm.n 4·5
1969-(;eoroa Hertman • 9·2
197o-Gaoroa Hertmen • •· l· 1 1971--Veoroa Harim.n 7·)
1972-Gaoroa Harimen •• 9·2· I
191~oa Harl men • • 9· I
191+-Gaoroa Hertmen I· 1· I
197s-Gaoroe Ha rtm.n •• 7·1·1
1976-t<an Sw11rlnoan •·3
1977-Ken Swtarlnoan • • 10· I
197f--Kan Swtarlnoall ••• 9·2 197~•n sw .. rlnoan ••• 10-1
ltter-Ken Sweartnoen • • 9 I
lttl-t(en SwHrlr>oan •• 11·0
19'2-Ken Sw11rlnoan • • • 9 1
19'3-Ken Swurlnoan • • • 9· I· 1
lllU-Ken Swurlnoan • • • 9·1
folall 1'3 win•, 19 lo1lfl. S tin
• Conference champion
• • Conference co·c.nemD
• Won MlnlOn Bowl
•• Lo1t Min ion Bowl
• Won Ponv Bowl
• • l..Olf Pony Bowt
crou countrv ranlrln9s
HIGH KHOOL BOYS
CIF 4·A
I Simi Valley, 1 Ville Park, J Palo•
Veroes, • M1nron v1110 S. Ha_,,.,,
Hlr11«1 6 Newl>UtY Pull. 1. H~
... cl'l1 e Tnou•ond Oak,, 9 Footnlll. 10.
E1tencle.
CIF )-A
I Sawu' 1 Herl, J Arrovo. • Buena
Parfl. S La HoD<e 6 Torranct. 1 Hamel
a llo\8,.,taO 9 Walnur 10 Mountain Vltw
CIF 1·A
l L.ovol•, 7 Valencle, 3 S.ntlaQO, •
Lomooc. S Arrovo Grandt, 6 La Puente. 1
Covina 8 Coecnella Vellt Y '9 Maonoll• 10
Anane1m
CIF l·A
1 Snermen Indian, 1 Morro Bev, 3
Ala1<adt ro, • Cetntdral, S Ceorlllo, 6
Ben Je1f. 7 l o Salle. I .Marenefhe. 9
Bl1noo U'11on. 10 P1racle1t
HIGH SCHOOL. GIAU
CIF C·A
I. NawDOf1 Hertler; 2 Palo1 Vardt-\, 3
Newt>urv Perk, • Bua"•· S Wt•llekt, 6
Tnoulend Oek1, 7. ECllMNll 8 Dene Hiiis, t.
Le-8Mdl, 10 Canvon
CIF J.A
I Arrovo Grende. 1 Welnut l L.omooc,
4 E 1oar1n1•, 5 Marl ' Matw Oe1J 1 SauQu\, I BllnoP Mon1oomtrv 9 HH
w111on, 10 El Rancho
CIF 2· A
I Mounteln View, 7 NorallOtt. J Chino.
' Bell Jett S Hnoarie 6 Yuulpa, 1
Rotamead, I C•ll•lco • SolJtll P u1oene,
10 Souln Hll11
CIF l·A
I A lucadero, 2 Morro 8..,., ) Cal>rlllo.
4 Maranalna, S Sen Gat>rlt4 MIH lon, 6
Perac1e1a 1 $11armel'1 INJlan I BltllOP, 9
Twtnlvn1ne Pa lms 10 Mooroark
NHL
CANll'BaL.L CON,altaHCI
Smvtl'la Dl¥I'*'
w L T f'tl 0, OA
Eomonron s 0 0 10 27 17
Vencouver 3 2 I 7 ,. ,,
w 1nn1oeo ) 3 0 • ,, " C11Qarv ' ) 0 • ,. 21
~ I s 0 7 24 l6
Nerrl1 DMtlen
sr L.ovis 3 I 0 • IJ 13
cn1ca90 I • I ) " 19
MfMHOll 1 ' I , n n
Toronto 1 • 0 2 14 11
OtllOll 0 s I I IS 41
WAI.IS COH'•a•NC• """'° OM.-pn111o.ion1e • l 0 • ,. 17
New Janev ) , 0 • It 16
Wellllnoton 2 ) 1 s ,, )()
NY ltllnder\ , 7 0 4 " 1•
NY ltel'IW~ , 4 0 4 19 '~ PlllM>uton I , 1 ) 1' 20
Adtmt OtvttMll
Ouabe< 1 0 0 14 ,. 12
Bo\ ton • I l t )0 14
HertfOrd 4 I 0 I Jt It
l ufltlO ) , I 1 u ,.
Mont reel , • 0 ' 11 ,,
~Y'•SC-au.ot< ) MontrMI 1
T~tO-
eo11on a1 ~ Vancouver at -,...w .Yon 1uanc1«1
SI 1.0ull al Ml~I
w....-Y'10-
MO;\lr'*I 11 8uft1lo
New J ..... Y 11 ,...,. York fltanoars
"'111.Wofl et Toronto
Vancouver at Ottr04t
Mll\MaOll al $1 Lout• C omo111on 11 w 111111oeo
Hertford at ChlcffO
WHlll11tlon et Cetetr~
'
Pean nt, LAk.,.. 11•
INDtANA lll•> -WINlama f·ll 1·2 19,
K"10904·10 ... 1 IJ. SlloenoYlcll 7· 10 4·S II, l'1'fnlno J· 14 J·S 11. St-ourv 7·9 3·4 11,
McCleln •·10 O·O 12. Tl~lt 7·12 M 15,
lueknw I· I 1· I l . Garnett 2·2 O·O 4, Martin
O·O 0-0 0 Toti!• 50·N 11·27 119
LOA ANO•LH (116) -ltamol\ H 0-0
2. Worthv 4·17·7 15, AllOUl·Je~r S-112·7
12, Sc~tt 10-21 7·4 23, JotlnMlll I0-1• 2·3 24,
L<IUll 7·15 l ·4 17, Cooci.f ~·f Joi 7,
Kuoc:Mk l·l 0-0 2, OrMn ~10 2•2 12,
McG" 0-3 0-0 0, ~'°°' I 1 0-0 2 Tola!\
47-100 " 23 116 k-.llv~ lnol~• 10 >I 2' ?2-119
L.o• .<"notla• JO 32 21 ll-116
Tflr .. ·p0lnt uo.ta-SteMburY, Scott,
JOMM>n m FouloKI OUl-JoMMll\. It•·
llOunc!l--inc!lana 47 I Kabooo 12), Lot An·
1184tt 41 (JOMM>ll a1 Aaalala-lndlant II
(Ftamlno •l, LOI Anvelft II (Johnton S) Torel foub-lndle,.. n. Lot Anoalel 24.
A-4,640
LA~~
Fri .. Oc1. 2S -er s.ctemento; S.t , Oct
26 -Houslon, Tuet., Oc1 2' -Pwllend,
Tllun .. Oc1. ll -Cllla90.
Sat., Nov. 2 -N-Yorlt; Tllurt , NOY. 1
-" Hou'1on, Sal ' NOY. ' -Allen!•. /ua• .. Nov. It -at Golclen Stele; Wed., No.... 13 -Stalllt; Fri., Nov, 15 -Wiiien,
Sal, Nov. 14-at Denver; Wed .. Nov. 10-
at Lellen; Tllura .. ).lov 21 -Portlend, Sal ,
NOY. 23 -MllweullM, Tuet , Nov. 26 -at
Seattle; weo.. Nov 27 -Houaton, Fri., Nov.
2' -al S.n Anronlo. Set .. Nov. JO -al
O•M ... weo.. Dec: 4 -S.cnmento, Tllura .. Dec:. S -el Golden Slalt, Sal , Otc. 7 -
Ulall. Tun.. Dec. 10 -Oallll, Wed., o.c.
11 -et Denver, Fri., O.C 13 -er S..11ta,
s.1 • Oec. 14 -~•; weo .. Dec:. 1a -
GOlc»fl s1a11, Fri .. Otc. 10 -S.n Antonio,
S.1 .. Oec 21 -" S.Cramenlo; Wed., Dec.
2S -al Porneno; Tl'lur... Otc 26 -
PnlllldllOlll•, s.1.. o.c 2' -., Seelllt,
Mon .. Dec 30 -801ton Fri.. Jen. 3 -a t Cltvalllld, S.1., Jan 4
-•I lndlane, Tua\. Jen 1 -et Allenle,
Wed., Jan. I -al Plllllldlll>hl•, Fri., Jan. 10
-el New Jtf'ltY, Sat .. Jan. 11 -al
Clllcago, Mon., Jen. 13 -at Wallllnoton,
Wao , Jan IS -S..lllt; Tllvr• .. Jen. 16 -
et L.ekars; Sat • Jan II -lJlall, Tuet., Jen
21 -el San Antonio. Wed , Jen. n -el
Calla,, Fri , Jen 24 -Laken , Stl • Jan lS
-al u1111, Mon , Jan 21 -Haw JffwY,
Wld , J en. ,., -Pno.nl•
Sar , Fa!> I -el Port1eno; Thura .. et
Phoenix., Tue•, Fae 11 -Phoenix, Tllun.,
Fttt> 13 -PortlanO; Sal.. Feb 15 -
Hou11on. Mon . Feb 17 -Wealllno1on, Fri.
Fae 11 -Golden ~111a, sun , F11> n -11
New York, TUff., Fae 2S -a l MllweukM, weo .. Feb. 26 -at O.rrolt, Fri , Fae 21 -
el Bo1lon. Sun • March 2 -11\<llena, Tu11. Merell
c -Cleveland, Tllurs , Match 6 -Oaltas,
Fri. Merell 7 -at San Antonio, ~,
Merell t -Oel'IYer, Tun , Mere.II 11 -al
LIKtr•, WtO , Marci! 12 -Sttllll, Fri.
March 14 -S.cremanto. S.1 , March 15 -
al Hout1on, TuH .. Mardi 18 -al G04Clen
Sre le; Wed , Merell 19 -Laflen. Fri.
Maren 21 -e l Otnvw, S.I . Merell 22 -
O.trolt, WtO , Merell 26 -San Anronlo,
Fri • Merell 7t -al Pnoenlx, Sat , Maren
1' -11 Sacr1man10 Tutt., Aorll I -el Utan; WtO, Aorll 7
-Ulan; Sat., Aorll 5 -G04oen Slell, Wed ..
Aorll 9 -Denver, Tnur\., Aorll 10 -al
Porrlend. Sat , Aorll 12 -Oah1. Sun , Aorll
13 -al Pt>otnt•
LA L.alren~
Sal , Oct 26 -., San Antonio, Tutt ,
Ocl. ,., -al OaUI\, Tnun , Oc1 ll -al
Plloanl•
Sat,. Nov 7 -ar Goloen Stel1, Tu.t.
Hov 5 -Clevela nd, Tllurs . Nov 1 -al
Ulell, Fri. Noll • -Denver, Tun. NOY 12
-Utah, Tllun Nov 14 -Portland; Fri,
Nov. IS -et Cllooen, Sun., No11 17 -New
Jenav, Wad., Nov. 10 -CllC>e>ar\, Tllurt .
Nov. 71 -el Ot nvar, Sal., Nov, r.J -el
Portlen<!, Sa• • Nov 23 -al Porlleno. Sun .
Nov 1A -San Antonio Fri . Nov. 19 -
S..1111
Sun .. Otc I -ClllCavo, WtO, 0.C. ' -
al Ulan, Fri Otc 6 -Hou"on, Sun., Otc.
9 -Dalla,, Thurs . Dae 12 -Pnotnl•,
Fri., Oec. 1J -II Denver, $un, Dec. 15 -
Detroit, Tut•, Dec 17 -al New York, Wad, Oec. 19 -al Mllweuflff, Fri, Oec
?O -•• Clavetend, S.1 , Dec 71 -al
Wnnlnolon. Thurs , Dec 26 -a l San
Antonio, S.I . O.C 2' -al S.cr1men10,
Sun, Dae ,., -Golden Stale
Fri. Jan 3 -Ulah, Sun Jen S -
W1anlno1on, Wad Jen a -Porllend, Fri
Jan 10 -tndlena, S,,t Jan 11 -ti Stattfe,
Tuat Jen U -Plloenlx, Tllun Jen 16 -
Ctlooe<1, Sun Jen 19 -ar 01trol1, Mon
Jan 70 -al Clllcaoo. Wed Ja n n -et
Boston, Fri Jen 74 -er Ctl-s, Sal Jen
25 -Denver, Tua' Jen 7t -Mllwe~M,
Thurt Jan 30 -al Porllencl. Fri Jen. JI -
P111110ttonla
Sun Feb 7 -New Yorio., Tun Fat> ' -
Da lla\, Tnun Ftl> 6 -et HO<J\ton, Tut\
FeD II -II GOlclln Slate. WtO Fat> 12 -
al Plloanl•, Fri Fe«> l• -Atlente . Sun
Feb 16 -Boston, Wed Fat>. 19 -at
lndlane. Fri Feb. 21 -et New Janey; Sun
Feb 23 -at Anania, Wed Fa«> 26 -ar
Oa llat, Fri Fae 11 -Pnotnl•
Sal Merell I -al Pnoanlx. Mon Merell
3 -GolOan Stale, Wed Mardi S -al Utell,
Thur Merell 6 -at GOiden Stele, Sat
March e -S.c.remenlo, Sun Marc.fl 9 -al
S.enle; Tue. MarCll 11 -Ctlpotr\, T'nur
Maren 13 -Stetlla, Sun Marcil 16 -
Hooaron, T.-. Mere" 18 -Portland. WtO
MarO! 19 -a l C•looen. Fri Mardi 71-"
San An1onlo, Sal Merell n -at Sacreman·
to, Mon Merell 24 -San Antonio, Tuai
March 2S -ar Otllvtr. Sal Maren ,., -al
Stetllt, Sun, Merell lO -GolOan Stell
Tue1 Aorll I -S.attll, Tllurs A.orn l -
S.cremanlo, Sun AorM 6 -at Hootlon, Sal
Aorlt 17 -at S.cremenlo. Sun Aorll ll -
Diiie'
LA Laun KMdlM
()(I 2S -el Cell ... 7:35
Nov l -11 San Oltgo, 7.JS
Nov 10 -ClllceOO (hOma), .. 'OS
NoY. 15 -Cltvalanc! ltlorMl, 7.3S
Nov 10 -11 Tacoma. 7:35 NOY 2l -Kenw• Clly (hOma), 7.lS
Nov 27 -el SI. 1..0011. 7;3S
Nov JO -11 Kenw1 CllY. 7'3S
Dec 4 -al S.n Oltoo. 1 lS
Dec S -MJnnatote (hOmal. I JS
Dec • -et Wlclllta, 6~
Dec. 1' -Tacom• (llorM), 7.lS Otc. 20 -Oalle• tl\Ome), NS
Dec: 22 -Sin Dltoo (lloml I, 6-0S Dec 21 -•• PltflbUf(ltl. •:OS
0tc. 2t -.~ 8eltlmora, 7:35
Oec. lO -el tCeMH Cllv, 7.JS
Jan 4 -Wletllll (home), 7.JS
Jan t -St. Louil (llorne), 7!SS
Ji n 11 -Tacomt lllorne), 7:lS
Jan. 17 -81tt1mon lllOmtl. 7:JS
Jen. If -11 Wldllte, 2 .JS
Jan 22 -et MIMMole, 7.lS
Jan 14 -K.-• Chv (hOmal, 7.35
Jen 2• -PllltOufOll (l\Ome), 7.35
FIO 1 -MlflMWf8 (llQma), 7:)5
FIO. • -et SI. LOUii. 7;35
Feb 1 -et ClllCaoo. 7:35
Feb f -Wldllta 11\omtl, l:OS
Fltl 11 -al Sen Ot.eo, 7.35
T_..,_..,...
"'°" IQIOOL o•u Clfl •·A I Pelot Verdel, , Mltllftlt, l LA
Wl\lllltt; • s.n11 krblte, I. C-• MM16.MMIN11 flto!llnt Hllll , L ....,_,
Hlt1lilf1 f. W~1 10 .. verly Hlllt
Cl .. >·A
I TllOUMnd Otltl , Wealleflt, , Sen
Mtrtno 6. Matw Oe11 s. ("(llrftl, &.
Alllernbte. 1 C:ler-1, I I.a C.,_., 9
I. 01 ""°'· 10 llallllt (ff', ...
I L• °"'"''' > llldlo, l Cl\emlne6t. 4 Va .. ncle , S L.omooc. 6 HOffllvlew, 1
L.OUl\Yllle I Sell lull OOltPO t 1("41t1, 10 a an row
cu• l ·A
I Mlvflelcl Ptto 2 Dtemotld IMf. ) I.•
ltatrll , 4 PaHOt<\11 f9oly s ''''· 6 kr!t•
v uiei 1 w"'""'"• a o.dwlcll; ' st .Jowl>ll rr.enre Ma,.lt l, 10 Clt)flMo.
~ • • ,,. . "
w.w .... ~·"' '*' ,.,. ............... ,..,
Lendrum If
.-.ndlttn JI>
Clertl 111
McGttGf CecMno rt
Porter c Harr 211
Smlll'IU
VnSl'f9. Oll·rf co~11
Haroerllf'I Tuoor o
worr9!111
OeYltY D
1.a1111 o
Totels
JQMI pn
Smllllff
Wlllle20
Wllaoncf
MolltYrf
lt!llOnt lb
Bratt lb Stief dn 11/'1• rt
SYndbefo c
llancalan 11
JeeklOfl o
1..tlllf•ndf 0
Orl•Ol'I
lorollfl
Black P
McltMPll Qulanbfry ti
To1e 11
Worrlt S 1
Delly 1·0
Lalltl s l
Tudor l·O
Co11
Total•
UTTINO fT, LOUii • , 11•a11rr.int
e2c1 000 * 6 121003.m
7121002 *
•122 001 .uo
6 1 I l 0 0 1 , 167
6 0 I 0 0 0 0 .'67
I I I 0 0 0 0 ,IU
7000000 000
)0000 00 000
2000000 000
1000000 000
1000000 000
1000000 000
0000000 .000
0000000 000
... ' 1i 1 0 0 7 10)
IC. A.NUS Cll'Y w r 11aa11rrtihve
I 0 I 0 I 0 0 1.000
7030000 41' 7032001 .,,
I 1 3 O 0 0 0 J7S
3010000 '33 • 0 , 0 0 0 1 250 a 1 2 I 0 0 I 2SO
5011000 200
7 I 1 1 0 0 0 .14>
2000000 .000
2000000 000
2000000 .000
2000000 000
1000000 000
0000000 000
0000000 000
0000000 000
63 3 17 s 1 0 3 ,270
f'fTCHING
ST. LOUIS
tiSI l'l rtr llC>llWI
I 2'1110010 O.OC
II 1 000 10.00
1 1 100000.0C
I W3 1 I I 2 S 1.35
1 7 1 2 , ) s 251
111 17)3,ll 150
KANSAS CITY
tlSl•l'lrerllllll«W
Blad< 1 011> 0 0 0 2 I 0.0C
Jck\11 O· I 1 7 c ? 2 '1 1 2S1 1.11~.;: O·I I J\I> 6 4 4 2 6 4 IS Qui ry 2 2 3 I I 1 2 4 SO
To1111 2 II 13 7 7 1 16 3 SO SG°"• av INNINGS
St Looi' OCI IOC OOS-1
KanHS CllY 010 200 000-3
OP-SI L.oul1 4. LOB-St L.ool' II.
Kenut CllY 14 58--0.Smlln Ill. Wllll• (1) Wiiton (II S--TuOof, Ltlbfendl
H8P-MCltH l>V Tudor P&-SundbtfQ
A"911dMGt
Game 1 et Kenut City, 41,650,
Game 2 et Kan1a• City, 41,656
"'ELDING
ST. LOUIS
" • unorum s I
Penclltton 2 s
Clerlt 17 ,
MCGtt 3 0
Cedeno 3 0
Porrtr 14 ,
Htrr ) • 5mltll • 6
venSIY•• , 0
COK 1 ,
Har-0 0
Tudor 0 2
w orr111 0 0
OeVltY 0 0
Ltlllf 0 0
Tolel1 ~ 16
KANSAS CITY .. • Jonft 2 0
Smllll 0 I
Wiii!• 3 s
WllMlll ) 1
MolltY I 0
8att>onl 23 0
llrall 1 • 511e<ldan I 0
Sundberg •• 0
81enc.elant I s
JlcklOfl 0 ,
Le11>ranot 0 2
~le 0 0
loro 0 0
Conc9PClon 0 ,
81ect. 0 0
McfltH 0 0
Qulaanl>eftY 0 0
Total1 s.c ,.
a.tibv Cox'• manetlf'\al record
flteeu&er S..Hft
• 0
I
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
I
• 0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
w L l'c1. "" 1911. All ., 93 426
1979, All t.6 94 •ll
1990, All a1 ao SOJ
19'1, All so S6 .•n 19'2, Tor 18 14 "' 19'3, Tor t9 73 ,549
1984, Tor 19 73 549
19tS, Tor 99 62 61S
Tolel• 621 61S 502
LM-~s.;.,
1995, To< ) •
Water PolO rank ln9s
HIGH KHOO!.
(IF 4·A
.419
' 6 • s
6 • 7
I
L
I Sunnv Hlll1, 7 Lono BHCll Wiison. l.
NewDOf1 Her11tr1 4. car-dll ,.,,.,., s.
Manne; 6. u.wven1tv1 1 1..e P04Y, I Stnt1
Ane Valle y, 9 VIiia Perk, 10. cnra MMe.
' CIF l ·A
I El Ooraoo. 1 Er Toro, 3 Hecland•
Heton11 Wlt1on, • Sen Clern9nte, S Sant•
MOnic:a. 6 Rlver1loe Poly, 1 Rowland. I
Min ion Vlelo. 9 J W Nortll, 10. Oana 11111'.
CIF l ·A
I Sanla Ynt1, 2. El *undo, 3. SOutfl
Po1.-, c Caf)(lllo, S Dorl luO<>, ' 1..1
Canl(ja, 1 El Aanct10, I San Lull O«>flllO.
9 l a ~r,,_, 10 Wllllller
Delo IM AIMne
NllWl"OttT LANDING INewMrt
... di) -23 an<»ar, " ban. s ~ea.
6 t.c:uloln, S rock fish, 2' mackerel, 1 l>IKk
"' l>•u DAVIY'S L.OCK•lt (~ ... c:tl)
-I 16 engters 739 l>Onlto, 10 varlowtell. I S7
rock llSll, 60 callco 1>1u. 7 1eno t>au. •JS
m eekarll
Mlftcliav"I tranaadMM
aASklTaALL
NeAIMI ........ AaMC11111ft
HBA-•u'tO tllat T~ It~ of Illa
N..-YCY~ Knlctn ta of1\claly rtllrtd
UT AH JAZZ-W•lved Otlanev ltuOd,
11uerd. c..........., .... ...,Auedlt*"
CINCINNA Tt Sl..AMMEltS--Namad
Htfb trown "9td COKfl ,OOTaALL ........ ,. ..... ~
BUFFALO 811..LJ-Wll"9CI Ml"' Prulll ,
runnlno lle(k, SIOl'ltd AntllOnv Staal•. run·
"'ng 118(1( ~, ..... LM9Ut
MONTlllEAL CO N C~DES.-A11no.inced !tier Joe Oelat, '-cl
coecfl, rnltftld llvl will tt111n 1111 outlet a•
Hfttfll ~ Ntmtd Gerv °"'Clllll
llMd (oec:tl
Vaqs,MD
put hopes
on line
Showdown time
ln Sout Coast,
Angelus leagues
Mater Dci H1&)l's St. Paul-busters,
and Irvine's Vaqueros. very much 10
the championship hunt in the Sout_h
Coast Lcaauc, have similar goals tlus
week. . Both put their title hopes on the line
against their touabcst tesu of the
season.
For the Monarchs. it's unbeaten
Bishop Amat, ranked No. 3 in the CIF
Big Five. For the Vaqueros, it's S: I
Capistrano Valley, ranked No. 4 to
the CIF Southern Conference.
Herc's a look at each game:
Capl1truo Valley ('·1, %·11 v1.
lrville (5-1, l ·l>: They have two
common opponents in lcaaue play. El
Toro defeated Capistrano Valley
17-1 4, then came back the next week
to top lrvine, 14-0.
And San Clemente was a 28-6
victim to Capo, followed by a 21.6
loss to Irvine.
''Their quarterback, Scott Stark, is
the leading thrower in Orange Coun-
ty," says Irvine Coach Terry Hen·
igan. "El Toro was the only team that
could stop them and still they !Cored
14 points.
"The key for us 1s to move the ball
and score some points. as we did
against Newport Harbor (36-26),"
says Henigan. "Unless we score a lot
of points it's going to be a Iona ni&ht.
You just don't shut teams like that
down."
Wit.h the exception of El Toro, oo
one's been shunmg Irvine off, either.
Jimmy Raye leads lrvinc's attack at
quarterback and gets the most out of
his passin~ And Irvine's success
shows up LO his stats: In those five
victones he hasn't been intercepted.
Coach Dick Enright's Cougars
have averaged 27 points a game
offensi vety.
The game will be televised by
Channel 56 (K.DOC) wtth the taping
shown Friday night (10 o'clock) and
Saturday morning at 8.
Friday's site: Irvine High.
Bl"op Amat 11·0, 1·0) v1. Mater
Del (4-t, 1..0): The Lanc.crs arc doing
just exactly what most everyone
expected -winning -thanks to
quarterback Rick Carter, and running
backs Eric Bienicmy. Lee Barrett and
Mark Simcn.
Ex-Colton High Coach Don
Markham has the Lancers running in
the style of past Colton teams .
'"They don't throw much." says
Mater Dci Coach Chuck Gallo. "which is kind of sad for the
quarterback because he's so good."
Mater Dei quarterback Todd
Marinovich will find his pass-pass·
pass offense up a$_3.inst a man-to-man
secondary that will be an ultJmate test
of his effectiveness.
An even bigger problem for Mater
Dea 1s the chemistry of ttus one -
Amat tuned up for Mater De1 with a
ho-hum 36-12 victory over Bishop
Montgomery. Mater Dei is coming
off a very emotional 17-14 upset at St.
Paul, with just three days of practice
between games.
Thursday's site: Santa Ana Bowl.
No doubt:
Iowa No. 1
From AP dl1paklte11
Iowa 1s a unanimous No. I as the
nation's top college football team
while Florida vaulted mto -eecond
place, Miami of Flonda cracked the
rankinp for the first time this season
and Minnesota made the Associated
Press Top Twenty for the first time m
three years.
Thanks to a 12-10 victory over
runner-up M1ch1gan, plus losing ef-
forts by third-ranked Oklahoma and
No. 4 Arkansas, Iowa received aU 60
first-place votes and a perfect 1,200
points from a nationwide panel of
sports wntcrs and sportscasters.
The last team to be voted a
unanimous No. I was Nebraska in the
fifth and sixth polls of 1983.
Michigan's last-second setback
dropped the Wolverines from second
to founh. Meanwhile, Ok.la.homa lost
to Miami 27-14 and skidded from
second to I 0th while Arkansas' 1.S-13
loss to Texas knocked the Razorblcks
from fourth to 14th and put the
Lonahorns beck in the Top Twenty
after a week's aMcnc.c.
Aorida trounced Southwestern
Louisiana 45--0 and climbed from
fifth to second with 1,086 points
Area runners
vieatMt. SAC
The largest hia.h school cross coun-
try meet In the nation is scheduled for
Saturday at Mt San Antonio CoUesc
with entries from the westttn secuon
of the country ranaina from Sou1hcm
C.lifomia teama to Reno, Sacramen-
to Jesuit and San Jote Lelah
Amona Oranae Coas1 ama entries
are Corona dcl Mar, C.osta Mesa.
Estancia, Ocean View, Fouotaio Val·
Icy, Huntlnaton Beach, Mater Dc1.
Irvine, Edison and Univen1ty
Otheret0tscountry powcn entered
include Sirru Valley. Sauaus. Arroyo
and Loyola.
In sirls' eompctatJon. the nation's
top-ranked runner, Rebecca
Chamberlain of San JOIC leash, Will
10 qainJt Mountain VtC\llt''s un-
defeated Traq WUlianu and S.~us'
Heat.her Scobie .
The bors' awccpstalcei raoc ,,
scheduled for 10 a.m.
Ofange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tueedey, Octobet 22, 1885 *ca
CoKqults Jays, goes home to Atlanta ~Jtltll
1hl1 aeaton. s11uauon as bc1111 '"on hold." Mullen will be responJJble for IM IMl lltalt llUM1 lau... 1• ••e• ..... I• Toronto manager Cox ljves tn Manetia, G a . near Cox. a 44-year-old native of Tulsa, tecbnacal paperwork malkf'S 1nvol".'ed ,.. .... lltiOX PbMIOLX ... mn
Atlanta. Okla .. wouJd apparently replace John an contracts and player move1,, luv1n1 OU91om 'r: 'f" ::~ OCV.H VllW-COHOo takes position .. Ted Turner (the Braves ow~er) Cox manqcd the Bravca from 1978 Co~ frtt to handle player-personnel ...... Jc.MN =, t>ey' 173-1486 &pec•ow•. ptlv•t• lftCI
called the Jaya and ukcd pcrm1ss1on throuah 1981, but wu fired after acuv1ues. Unit New d900t 21drm as Braves' GM to speak to me about the aeneral Atlania posted a S-O-S6 record ID the co~ S&Jd bis dcc1s1on to iake the lntnl ten Cenu I a·~ Jath. 1115,000
manqc:t't job," Cox said. ''Ba11cally, stoke-shortened t ?81 camp&ign. He Atlania post '?ln't . 1n rctahat1on UITW......., bOPtb I& Iba .. 4 Owner 1113·2'°3
ST. LOUIS (AP) -Saying "Allan-
a'1 m y home and ru be able to spend
more time with my family," Bobby
Cox bQ left the Toronto Blue Ja)'1 to
beoomc acneral manager of~ Atlan-
ia Braves.
"He's aone," said Blue Jays General
Manqer Pat Gillick, who is in SL
Louis for the World Series.
''Thia orpnizatioo is the orur one I
wouJd have left Toronto for,' said
Cox, who (Uided the Blues Ja)'1 to the
American Lea&ue East crown and fell
one game short of a World Series berth
it'sa flv~year deal. moved to Toronto ID 1982 and JUlded apuat Toronto s policy of awardma t.ocated In 400 b4odl of 1196.000 717 ~-nlMI N•llU n •t• "The only time I knew that A1lanta the Blue Jays to their first d1v1s1on only one-year contracts. Ftower St Cut• 2 bdrm. 1 640--4tt.1 t>y OW'* NEW cu.tom kry hm
wu actually interested wu the day title. "The one-year contract with the !>9th. on a 1ar09 IOI wttl\ DUPLEX. so of eays10. w/48A 4b• l!levator,
that the season was over with " said A 44-ycar-old native of Tulsa Blue Jays alwavueemed bke a t ().year ,,.,OWOod floof• aM 2 (HOYM · 28drml S339K ocH11 & bay vi•••
Cox. "The mcetina wu set up with Okla .. Coll apparently wall replac.C contract. That's how much filth I had car g$'1~~~ Aak lng Prln• only Bkr 720-9-422 13e8,500 Btlr "3-tSn
Ted Turner's secretary a couple o f John Mullen, the Braves OM since in the orpnlllllon and confidence ID '6111• nlU ••Mlt l•n l llO
daysqoandwemetlh1smom1ngand 1979whohasbeenwork.inawithouta o urballclub. . • T d.f I Pl1111, 2br. den. 2ba, r•1
ironed thin&a out.•• contract since May 1984. However. "It came down (to) . 1t s m y home ra 1 iona due9d for qu1c11 aal•1 lllfll IP PAii
Gillick. said an annou~c.cment on Chuck Tanner, hired as the Braves' and Jives me some ttme to spend wt th Realty 1269,000 831~ A1=: f~~ba~:
the m ove wu to be made m St. Louis manaaer four days after the end of~he my family. I felt very. very.~urt with 631-7370 C..ta llna 1014 lly rm . lrg 11111119 rm, dlnlnQ
today. regular season, told Atlanta TV statio n the Blue Jay orpn1~t1on. ULl N LUii rm & kitchen.,. .. All ac>-
However, Braves ~pokesman Bob WAGA that Mullen, a Braves vice Tanner~1dthchmn1 of(oJ1 malccs DELUXE DUPLEX 2BR pllanc.n IOGMSlnQ 11Qt11
Korch said club officials were Still in president would remain as co-general the BBVCS a well-rounded, o rpnu.cd nm ... Yll'W 2ba .. unn 660-9083 lnl9rl0f• Agt 5-46-50!7
Atlanta and that no news co~fercnc.c manager.· organization ... T he ~<?st solid l lll,llO I -.. ~--1141 bad been scheduled. He descnbcd the The Atlanta Constitution said s1twlt1on Atlanta has been In in a long. For th• •ophllllClled 1 ••t. IC _a.._tah;,;;,;; .... ____ _
lon11 time .. This IS a great direction tO b\Jyer YO\I won I find dnle or nottllr19 down to • :r I 1 Qualified bUyer Bea\Jlllut /"-..I go.. , more or your mon.y n new To•nhome. near lnsn -" J1my W1U1ams, the Blue Jays third-Ihle 1uxur1ou1. WKY oe9Ch 28, den 2.,. e.. -
base coach, 1s considered a possible •xqullllt• & private com-$1&0.000 8051922·1559 "-eral 2112 " C b Bl J plex Many amenll._. are -• replacement 10 r OJI, Ul UC .ays Included In tt111 apacl<>u• att 61 wllndl LXAbloRBs/REXrtoM
spokeman Howard Starkman said It 1s 1 Bdrm with oceen view lmat f04i I •539...e 19-4•
Huskies' loss big lift for UCLA
"too early to comment on a possible Call 11-46-717 1 I Fa•t trea tenam provd,.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -As far as The Bruins wiU bring a 3-1 Pa-players believe they're going to win. replacement for Cox " 3 Bdrm 2 bath 1 blk to
UCLA Coach Terry Donahue was cific-10 Conference record and a 5-1-1 wb1cb 1S great. Asked if he rcvcts leaving Toronto beh, NB, s1050 2 Bdrm,
conoemed two wonderful thinp ha~ overall mark. into their pme against "(But) you JUSt don't go out on the without mak.Jna n to the Wo rld Scnes, 1 bath wlyard. EJll<M CM
pencd in the state of Washington last California, which is 1-4 10 conference field and win, you have to make 11 Cox sa.id: "Ifs every manager's and SIH5 Furn 4 Bdrm.
Saturday. action and 3-4 overaJI, at the Rose happen." coach's and player's dream to ma lee at l'llll OISTl Ill& ocnlrnt wntr, NB' 1475
First, and most impor tant, Bowl this Saturday. Kickoff time 1s 5 UCLA ha.s do minated Cal in recent to the World Scnes and we 1ust about JAOlll IUln
Donahue's Bruins bun.a on fiora 31-30 P d1·d 1t. and I k.no w Toronto's going to A wonderful new 11•11no in PllP lllllDlllT .m . years, winning the last 13 games a tirlm• 1oc1t1on 112
victory over Washington State. Sec-fotlowina that game, the Bruins between the teams. Yet Donahue be a contender next year and they'll b lock to M1•1n er 1 CAIPISYllW ll•/llMlll
ond, and much more improbable, have a bye before playing at Arizo na ellpccts an ything but an easy game. have another crack at It Elementary A .ri11191ed Nleely localed Pian 3 on UL TRALUXURY L11guna
Orcaon Siate hung a 21-20 upset loss on Nov. 9. Orqon State's win over and he's backed up io that regard by "I will be pulling for them up there country collage •llh quiet atrMt 3 Bdrm. 2 oeach unit• Breath·
on Wuhinaton. Washington left Arizona as lhe what the Golden Bears have ac-and, sure, I'd love to get 1n 11, and now paned windows. flo..,., bath ready to move tn taking 180• oc.ean view,
"We needed that to happen, a lot of Pac-IO's only unbeaten team 1n con· I'm going to have to try and get in it ~~~~~ r~o~c~ ,~:;;,~.. Call today tor m0<e 1ntor· p1u1 • lull 099'1 t801
I ~.aed tha h .. "erenoc ~es. comphshed this fall. th h ball I b .. , ' ma11on S 187.500 mountain view t b+k w1111 f:p e n'l:l'CU t to appcn, " wi anot er c u . carpeted A 2 Bdrm wtth ,._ I 10 sand WOOde<J and nahue said M onday at h as wee~y The ruins rallied from a 24-10 A week before pl~·n~Orcgon Statt:. The Braves won the Nauo nal dining room and extra lm1t -ast tlltf I 1 W I 8 2 b h 8 1812• Culver Or. Irv aerene • 1pec1 acu ar meeting with reporters, referring to deficit in the second quarter to nip ash1ngton beat -1 . ut t e League West title in 1982andin 19 3 room otf garage p1ac. 10 1111e Your own
Oreaon State's surprising victory. "A Washington State in another of their final score hardly told the story, as finished second m the d1v1S1on. But a 1 177.000 lN-llOO I 1arge and pr1v11e1y
lot of people were excited about the many come-from-behind victoncs in evidenced b y Cal's 32 first downs and year later. the Braves slumped to 80-82 -"\I I HI Ht,, 1 •r,;rt It~ IOH j secluded outdoo1 patio Wu"' .. '""n o•me .... d I'm 1·ncluded. recent years. 392 yards in totaJ offense and Wash-d cost ManlUler J oe Torre his~b 111 •'11 ., 1 .. c Elegance 1hroughou1 ,..,......., _.. tu> an -:l' · 1 r 1 a Condo WMtcllff BullHn m1Growa11e dllh· "ltkeepsusintheracc,butitwillall "Them oreyoucanwincloscgames, ington'sl5firstdownsand268 yards Under Eddie Haas and bby RE•·1'1"1E area Pool carport wastler etc t BorM
be for nauabt if we don't play great this the more your plar,ers can expect to in total offense. Wine. the Braves fell to 66-96 m 1985, 831· 1400 s 10 u>oo 6•2·3327 51150 & s t250 2 Bdrm
weekend and come away with a win close games,' Donahue said. Cal's other three losses have come 29 games out of first place in the NL 2B, 2 ,Ba Wutcll tl $1650 10 12500 Laue
victory over a very 1ood Cal team." "We've built a tradition now. our by one, three and six points. W~t. Haas was fired during the season rwnhm• Pool OlbhM 750-3328 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~u•~N~US d~~r S 1~K~2·~27 ·-·--11-~ ~ ange • , tlt· other common , u a en • Trabuco-llla Jo A•-011 · obef , 1 95 t80 degrM panoramic _._ I•-
P\aJC fl>TICE eeuted by: KathlMn E. tt any, of tM rMI l>fopefty laratlOn of o.tl&Jlt ":mo. IOCl•t•. 1 joint v.ntur• Publllhed Or~ C-:~ _ __;MU....;;.;;;..;;;.;.;;.C..;.*>..;.;;...T...;ICl__ ~~~t:~a~·~.!1~98~~ * IE A WlllERI * I lafMa ht•4 lelltah
_ _..;...;..o....-.. _____ Flanagan. an Unmarried de1crlbed above la man<lf0tSalt,end• .,, con ... t1ngot&.yahoreP111-DallyPllotOc:1obef 2. l9 FICTrTIOUl8UltNlll rm lorm di~ Lg Cr1 .,,.d Buyer of 3 Bdrm 2 bath 1 Apartment•IHouNt LM1t.... Woman, WILL SELL AT purported lo be: 2048 S.. Notloa of Oeftult and Elee-ner•. a Calll0<nla GeMral T-884 . ·-,. INTER & Y''"·RL y ... ,.11-f!\.AMAGAM/ PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE Cove Lane, Coat• Meta. CA tlOn to Sell. The und«alQMd Partn«-"'lp. end Viejo Land ..... ITAn•NT • 13·x 70' pallo on Vtew house in N-pot't Hts 10 w =-
HUN9CH HIGHEST BIDDER FOR 112827 cauNd uld Notloa ot 0. company, 1 Caltt0tn .. Um-"8JC NOTICE The tou~ ~~ ~~ side $.(89.500 incl lan<l receive t>onu1 ot CALL AGENT 67S..000
..., .... .-CASH, (~bie 11 time of The u~ Tr\dtM fault and Elec11on to Seit 10 lted PartnetWilp, and whlctl dOl'tl bu ,_. u Helen B Dowd 720-7432 IOOO Lettery Tie•h WINTER •BR. 1'<tba up·
MO'nC« CW Nie In lllwful money of lht dl9cla1m1 any llablllty tor any be rao0<ded In the county hU carried on Jta bull..-Kan COU SE, 501 E Kllella Av· -----ti sold by 10123185 at t1aira. deck lrple uni
'""'9TD'I IAL.a United Stal•I at Chapman lnc0trac1~ of the 1treet ~· the r .. 1 propetfy 11 at 283 t t Or1aga Highway. ,ICTITIOUI 9UIMU enue. • A3 Drano• Ca --------• COE Bkr 6-.(() 7000 s s 1350 YOU ARE IN DEFAULT Ave. tlllrance to Civic addt ... and other common localed. San Juan Caplltrano, Call-NA• ITAn•NT 92:87 L OoDDI 501 E ,_.,. _____ ... _ Ill ••-H.llHll ~~:: u~tl avail 3~~
UNOERADEEOOfTRUST Center Building. 300 E dellgnetlOn, It any. thown OATE:I0/8185 lo<nla l1dlNOIV.Oeftectlw Tl'lelollowlng~aar• K :enA •A3 <ft. _, 1 tba liplc. uni
DATED 101a193 UNLESS c~an Ave .. Orange. CA hertln •Nl,ICIAL lllAMAGI· Oecemb« 3 t. 11184 dOlng t>uilneu u sco 81 ' venue · Abao•vte barg11n don t I s 12ooimo 67!>-8'453 YOU TAKE ACTION TO all r\ght, lltle and lnter11t SalchalewlN~meOe,but •NT COM'OflATlON Of' A•ollhlldata,nopartner ENTERPRISES, 703 Ran· ~llCAbe!~: .. 11 con-ml&sthtsonet PrestlglOUI
PROTECT YOUR PROP· conveyed to and now held without covenan1. or war· AllmfUCA, • Del9W.,. O:: In the jolnt llef'lture hu dolph Avenue, Sulle 2, d led byu en Individual 3 b<lrm 2 , bath ExEC ~lMa
ERTY, IT MAY BE SOLO AT by II under Mid 0..0 of ranty.1xprea1 or lmpllad, r• p«atloft, • T,_..., ~-authority to bind the IOlnt Cotta M ... CA 112628 ucK OoDb• __ ....., _,,, 1ownhome w 1ecur1ty p • l 2107 A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU Tru•I In the Pfoperfy lltu-gardlng title, poew l4on, °' ......... TNat 0.--· llef'ltura The IUCGeUO< ~n Stephen 6 Diiuiio. 20052 T~:°.,11emen1 WU Iliad pool IP• • tennll Try I .......
NEED AN EXPLANATION ated Ill Mid County, Call-encumbrenoee. to~ Ille wtce.lftc..A.eAeeftt,IMny lnt.,nttothejOlntllef'lturea Maypor1 Lane, Huntington wflnlhe CountyClarkol Or l&IUIYllWIHLLS to•i.downorlae Forci.-Cutt furn collage 28R OF THE NATURE OF THE f0tnla, deacr1bl"" 11\e land remain•~ prlnlelpel aum ~ llet*tr, VIM PrMldenl, bullnaU II LOI AlllO• 1111-., ___ .. CA 92' .. 8 •tio a 1 on. blk to PROCEEDINGS AGAINST therein ... the note': MC:Ured by Mid -M. tHtln A¥91'1ue, lul .. laga Auocill• Th;~· bui ln';I 11 con· •"99 County on Septembel 1221,000 ta 11 1 c a 11 Pa Ir t c: 11 P• g 1 n ·,
YOU, YOU SHOULD CON· LOT 81, OF TRACT NO DMd of Trull. wl1h lntw11t nl. leftta Ana. CA ICl'70I.. Trabuco·VlaJo A•· ducted by an lndMdual 24 l985 ,,.,_ A Cape Cod rec>llc:a 1nt 760·8 702 agt ~:~n11;'~\!~5f727deQ TACT A LAWYER 10018 IN THE CITY OF thereon, u l>fovldad In Mid (714) M1-oA1 H ctat11, l~hor• Stepl\en c oonuo C N...,.1)()(1 Beach! Condo w1 THAY
On 11/5/85 at 10:00 A.M. COSTA MESA, COUNTY OF not••. ldvanc:.a, tt any. Publllhed Ora.no-Cout l'llftMn. • C ..,.. Thi• 1111_.,1 w .. hied PuDll~ <ftange 0811 11111ng in grand style with wr5 1 Fla1 steal t>eacn .araa ren-BENEFICIAL MANAGE· ORANGE. STATE OF CALI· under the term• of Ille Deed Deity Pllol Octobe< l5, 22, er al partnership, ar: with th41 County Clerlt ot Or· ~·~~ ~~~~ Octob« 8· ts 22 cu s 1 om ame n 111 e sl Ill CAlfH I.WEI tll under S500 riu bath
MENT CORPORATION OF FORNIA, AS PER MAP RE· ot Tru1t, tw, Chargea and 211, 198S T 877 DCMIO&M '· ltmpMfl, GM-ang• County on Oc:tobef 8, T .870 throughout Thera s lo PreatlglOUI eleQant eaec ~ 11 c n mo r a a v 111
AMERICA u the duly ap-CORDED IN BOOK 425. expen ... of Ille Trust .. and . .,. .. Jlan-198S die lor storage sonny modetn condo Lrg 3BR 539-6190 Besl Riiy IM
polnMd TrustM under end PAGES 4 TO 7 OF MIS. ot 11\e tnJ•tl cr•ted by Mid 011ad September 25 ..._,., patio and lull MCunty 2'1BA w din rm. trplC OCEANFRONT 10, Condo purauant lo 0..0 of TnJel. CELLANEOUS MAPS, IN Deed ot Tru•I. 10 wit Ptl!UC NOTICE 1985 Publllhed Orange Cout system pool. spa • TENNIS I
Recorded on 1112/83 11 THE OFFICE OF THE S3t,387 118 ly: Viejo Land C-penr, Dally Piiot October 16, 22. ••• IOIO 51595 mo Crd Clo. Rgo Furn sec bldg 1900 111 Docu~t no. 83~27114, COUNTY RECORDER OF The benetlclary under Mid MOT1CI Of' a Caltom&a MmlMd pelt· 29 November 5 1985 -pet 0 K VllGAl1t Cal MC deQ 962-3178 _
Of omc1a1 Reco<d• In the of-SAID COUNTY. o..o of Tru1t heretol0te •x· ~UTION AMO Mnftlp, ly; Aft"-tr "'· T-175 .iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil 7&0-8702 Aoent c111• at raat leac" floe of IM Reco<der of Or· The 1treat tddr ... Md acuted and ~ed lo the LACK Of' AUTI40MTY Moteo, 0.-al l'attlwr a
• •
Discover how easy it is
to buy or sell. You
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thou-
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Classifieds . It's
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an
CALL CLASSIFIED: 642-5678
,
-------ti...-----· -t '
LIHCMH 2111 Wll HPlO 1 H Tm llf 2Sr 2 c.r gat nloe yrd •11& Ill UI T •O magnltic.nt water $850, Nr Pt~ Park On t>Mutltul Poppy Ave ~ frorfl thla luxunoue 496-4473 ..._.,, ,..,_
Cus1om built With 3 and 2 2 odrm condo Walen the "-reu ••J-ll&r 21%} Bdtml plua Prlva le oo.1•goDyorbr1119your -
patio•. tlreplacee all bll· own Sflp available Com-2Br 181 non amkr no pell
tna. carpeta and drapea mun•t)' pool security $750 mo yr leaM Ill &
Even a tiny oc:aan view• Dldg "'50 000 last $300 sec 760-0326 Compare at $325.000 DONNA & BILL WEBSTER 28• 'bl unl\Jrn D'W frig
Wsnr Oryr acc:eu 2 car
carpon S 10~ 191 tu t
S600 sec 673-7089
(7 14) 673-4400
llWllMWYllll
11H IOO
Super value SuP«lf clean
Spac1ooa nome with lam·
lly room Formal dining
Cr a ckling tirepiac e
S.umptlou~ master swte ,
Air condtl1oner and
purifier Call to see'
546-2313
tieL!{itl•1
THE BLUFFS Wnhout
Equal 2 Master Suites
Architect de4tghl1 Coally I
& most c;reallve remodel
One of a Ktnd Prk llke
I
se11g •'magn1f Day n11e
Ille vua lrrep4809able 11
01sc price of $325K Fee Mas11119a & Co 6-.(()-5560
1wmnm I
INot a tlaw 3 O<lrm. pool ,
spa ano ocean1t111111oe • , vt-Love to en1en11n?
You 11 IOY8 thi. norne
I $395.000
l 11111114.1 I I 4 ~I\
RNltOt'I. 87~-eo6o
c:;e: 159.9100
--------. .
IUF'f1
5BR 2eA spa sno ooo By Owner 6'4 0 1 I
IUHH YJEW IHH Moneco 2 Den138r $240~
Ownt Ag1 494-4524
HllUEVllU YUH?
HUGE YARD w1cus1om
poo1 spa · BBQ 101
grac ovs enlt11•l 8•n1ng
Mooe• oertect 3 l><l•m
oen w 2 ' 0811">5 'i1gr
ce•l•ngs we! oe• tire
place mur'1 mo•I' P11ce
siasneo •o• •ast saie :>ac
r t ~" at SJ6Cl 95tr
w 'EP M S (11 11
PAfR (K TE NORE
631 t166 or ~so 8 .. 02
•WITtl YD• 2B1 Twnhae in t>esl CdM 1oca11on All 1men11..s Nr
oeacnes 4 parks Sa ....
t '3·6366 Of 673-3 .. )5
CHARMING 3 Bed 2 oa
1 700 SQ '1 lrplc large
~er Jen S ,550, mo IH incl
warJener 859-1328
D1 PEX 3 BP 2ba rug!'
neameo oe111ngs • car
J.t• $1 2'5 me 760 90t'C ~
4 (>l•S le OCll turn 2D• tam
m t'il dbl gar S tlOO
Uo"n Sat Su,.. 1·4 40 4
Jd'>IT'•"l8 i I J 3~C, IQ()O
r nf' r err ace 3BR lam
"" Ovl 1aro S 1800 mo
"<r pets Joan Bracey
•"•Quf!I "1omes 675 6000
JASMIN£ Cteei< 2bt 2ba
dfHt ocea,.. "U av111 Nav '
$ 1900 mo 759 902 I
Super co.ry 28r totan., r&-
o OI~' m.,..11ft ,.,ooe1eo '10Use w loads
t:>eto1e thf!I ~I wooo sta•ned glau
reeding puDhr u&ea broc:~ & p"1 apa
P"0""' Ga••gf!I $ 1500 Av111 Nov .:1a11~ Pilot 1 s1 >ioll~ 6 • 3-6 1 11 C1as''' fKI ~2 'i6_' o_..._ ____ -=,_
let Ut Http YM
Sell V 01t p,.,_,.,t
Call C1111""4,
642-5678
t1J I for information ~ I ~=&=s=u=-rp.:::::;;!r~is=i n~g~ly==== ~ _:: = low cost. __.
.;~ R~ ~\-.Z £:ti~. :::~ -,.,,,. •• •• r\•• I fOUA•
•• .. ,
I ' " ' ~7 i 1 1 1
.....un .... .,. .. •11111111111 nn
ca Cringe COMI DAILY PILOTIT~. October 22. 188&
Cw W.. 1111 ... 1111 ~,_. 1111 Cetta... •MC...... 1Ut !~..... .. lulwa/lftHt ... , 1.-t I,.... 1111 ....... tal l lM
Nlotatwll.,.on D£llliill'Mnnrte.we11 1-P Kt "" poo1, nn -...NOu...-~ lr.4 WtTIL•L•/m. gw, ,_. orpta. o,_ '°°· -.y, cu.. OIWdlr* to bdl, at471 mo . ..=; LEWAN> APAKrM HT1 PlllPll& cable, , .. /water pd. T.:bby ;;' °""*"' no Mutt hew et 1e1111 8 mo'•
11'"9/rno. 144-1721 UOO/mo-+ uti.MWt 142~ • .-..1S1 7 2020 Fu!Wton ~1-1427 Jl .. llU IMO mo. 844 4040 I.I. lfl IN 1h tlO'. 'tem a.it1oe' eay In~~,:.,!'~
l QllU™ ••R 2 ... FOf ...,. Udo 1f1e.. 1vell 1BR "50. pool, pvt pMIO, .-eatiJlAll ~-WIYD* otftoe~mfa C!Ub 145-iioc>O XS10 , ,_ ~, .=., u-p~T • file, ... _... ... .., __ ... ,.. · ,_,...u ...,.. -now 38R 2BA No '*'· no ~t• refa req'd Brtlnd nw ~ tlR •-Superlot BNd 600 to 8000 ... ,..,_.. iiM 1D 041tP~un=O: frl)lc. wtl.ty aerdeNna"" St70o/mo IMlr'499-3400 64M181' 147 Flower. · ~ w/dln, pvt «**. poof, 28r2Baw/Dwt. eq "·.,.or 'pert. lmmed lOST 81t>er11n Huelty,I good~ t mntquee. no '*9-M!O + 1n01 t1100tmol54&-il60 · Ttlele attr.ctl"9 MW 71 carpona lndf'Y fee. eo. W/O hkuc>. lg kltohen, avallabfflty 401.MaO mei.. blue~ brc*lfl good bendt•. Send r• 1862 Meyer • 4bt ~ klda Hett>« Vu Hme •1eoo1mo 1BA, *l)Of1, Weetllde. Apt1I teetura pool ape. cupancy0 Nov t. t4oi! trpk),, encl ger. Prvt bOh tell, Reward( 496-3731 NM to Comp. c.t•
di tnod tor Fido priced 48R, 1 ........ 1UJ* ,.. 1525/MO. AV811abte now. prlv9te petloe or Ct.eke, 288 E fath St, Npt e. atlH. Sony, no pe11. Corp. P.O. Box 8490.
28r+ 1ba. Go Siel rtte mid SIOO'e ~Mt90 model . .Agt f'O-&e&t 862·1700 or oerport In • $585/mo. 831-1 •AL.aO• •••• -.. p~--•· JMI N.B t2teO Att: Jett F.nr
710W.Jame1St a.tRtty,.. LIDO ISU! 38f 28e. '*' 28r 18e oomp6eMfy,.. C':r.tutty land.C.~ CurtHert>ert9Hagt 28r28altllftlno1tl13N.•• ........,. ... M ,._._,.119
11en<»-e715 Iv mtg etpt/ alnt. 2 cw ar flnleMd. 2062 Gatden ..ntng, HMt paid. POOL Petlo, tfplc, X• 7eo.ott8 Retell ~ ~ tor wm urgentJY aorneooe -_,_, * * * ut ..... ~ St~/mo . .Agt 1:.J21 LAne '800 mo 64~1 1ledrooma1575 t8r '580. 28r see<>. $600 38'\, 21A. Winter, up-..... 831 1 for crvte. :~ ./ ~ & e:;!·P~~ue~ In~
38R 2~ Frpl 2 G.0.0. •IUITlfll.-• UDO. wtrll«. tum .. Sbr, *l.rg 1 & 2 bdrm,~ 2a.droomt1'A8athaea6 MC.UnfE·~557-2141 ~~=-~493 ~IOF~~ From 720-0522.~?;r -anoe~llng&tronto4· ~·•11001rno.s1ooos. Lg 48' sea + 2 frpb, 2 2ba 11900. 875-5068 Of r.O.C~poo11484up IHmTlll'flDT .-YLIUTlll . ., 15 ft 2902.AedhHI floe prooadur ..
D. 942.n43 3012 au.. car gar P9t oti Only (8181192·7271 9¥9 1&14 MONOYta ~ COSTA M!SA ar&cJi mo. 28R t'ABA 3Br H a Penthouse. A~ 83'1:1820 PtuH al hnht1 842-0307
ot\annan Way. S1200. f .. 0817 (Comer Center/~tl•) · OcMn view, 1000 aq ft • · • ..._. ------EB A TtLJlilT 11 ........ Luxurloue condo 28R •STUNNING Lg 3Br 28-Open Otllty 9:30am-7pm twnh ... greenbelt, lndry deck. OrHt kitchen. WATERFRONT BLOO. ~ MIMUL/flNT .,,,
•M A VE DE 28r 1Ba 28A, <*\, Blyrld09 PIM Garden Apt. Pool, rec rm MJ 104 room, all bulltlne. lleaullf\llly remodeled Exec Suit. 1350 a/f at .,.. • llJIS '4'!t deye per wee« ~ra· ~·patio. Oahwsnr41:1. FRESH 2 Br Larva yenj D. S 1850/mo. 830-0853 S725. 710 W 18th Sony .No Pet• 2078 Thurln '2450/rno. SS 1·5175 oi S t.50s/f. 4th ftr/vlew ESCORTS lam to 3:30. &per~
750 No ~ti 640-2 5 new carpet/paint no pet1 MegnlfQent view 38r 2'!t8e $550/mo 18R, .ir, poof, • TSL MGMT 842-1803 831-tOOO ~I $42-4644 M thr Fr1 9-8 898--2356 only. lrvlne. 86S.2022
1tNEW PLUSH! 38r 2'!t8a M50 mo + 8eG 84&-6429 Big Cyn Condo. Avl now carport. S.C Ptaza .,.._ UTIUI& Yll'W Quiet, apacloua 28R DECOAATO ............. 11 .... Ii::: LI p ~ MEDIC T ..... NSCRIBER 2 atry TWnhrne gar Avl ..... t Marte7~7 (714)9e&-tt38 28r 2Ba unf 1000 aq ft t'ABAtwnhmeduplex nu "" ._, "" _..,.... n .,._dtl AL "" nows 1200 ,; · *lln llTTlll* "" • tee. Red.cxw. ed ~ • furn. Corldo on the wetet 7 Wont at ~ Full-time -·a • ..:...~·-H I MWty painted, frig Ooeantront )'Mrly. unfum. *550/rno 28R 18A l!pl, ~.· ·-s1rno 85~ palp n, t. pC1aptt1'0' drcepeearp''o-:~· a17Htmo 873-0&N HOUSEKEEPER/NANNY Poel11on• available. Mull WW--·-Only $600 ... 8504 38' 2 !Ma f ptc upper unit laundry Im-...... -· • v . -t oG/shQPlStorage• wwited to ewe tor toe hew min 3 yeera awl• 11 ...... 11trlM-1111 . I-IMO s2000 mo 'e1ui22'il''· medl•t• . • AM. 831_.101 PM. '685/mo. vac. no P91•· Udo '*· comp turn tBR. 264 aq ft & up,,..., c M. waterfront ~. 2 email hoa91ta1 tran1 exp Apply
38' 2a. i 1100/rno. fet. LllllT ll 227~· Clean qui at Bectlalor Cuf1 11 Agl 831" 1288 ~1~' • yrfy111! ~ C-2. Quiet 11.a. 648--72•9 boya. Mual tpellt Eng-11~ Monday~~rl-
lllt + $200 MC. Cell after Tl&.~ 142· 1111 ss95tmo. No pet-. Clll SptC:lloue upa1alra 28< lBe dep 1 ernpl n\161 No DANA POINT· 3 bMUttfuf Kah. non-«TI06ler, M'lt day. 788-4600 . .__ Daw, Agt 540-115 t + bat &. patio. New crpt, pe1t 87~7 exec omcee S950/mo work«. xlnt w/ot\lldren.
_. ... 714/543-1578 1750/rno 2Bd 1'A8a llTYlllTYPI palntleOO/mo.852-9083 · tot.it 2..ee2 De1Prlldo Rete.req.87(>-1104 ----~
48r 3Ba, DA. FR. ftpk:, TownhouM. Gar. lndry .. ,, .. -... VERSAILLES CONDOS ee1-&«1 Agt Sh1ton • ·-l t One )ll9t exp. Top eatery. pooli.. apa, ger. view Huge room. nloe E/alde loo. 2BR 1BA. pvt patio, w/d IT -I & 28drm $725-11080 · _, IJ!!! Xlnt beMflta. Progrwive
yrd. •1650/mo. 831-7181 2829 ORANGE AVE. hleup, quiet. No ~t•. Lg H 1, bltlna, avail now. 831-4MO Agt llW'fllT • YIA Ull Co. BMch area. Call VI
Meea Vecde lg attr 48r TS&, 119J UJ-1111 Weter paid. 1875/mo. Only 1350. r .. 5-489 VERSAILLES Studl Aetall 'f*>9' t600 aq ft. fNC~lll 4111 Hall1ey Mondey-Thur ..
,_dee In/out. Yd, patio TSL M::: M~2-1803 ftlflfll lll-UIO MC, pool, apa, orJ:: $2558/mo .. NNN. J714) TIAlmU 1911 dey 9-12. 642-24 10.
s1160 No~" 75t-3888 S586 ClbhM a~ 675-8348or122-1 8 PIYllOlllS&llllTllT
"'SMIL clean Eu"ld• 1Ne9tfleld e:~~D: y•~d =fn~· La Cl•n•• Bfl ..... r aatnal EJ(p .!~ '=oupe of St••• UC. Ph~ ,...,.
28< 1 houM. Fncd yrd llUmlYI AVI 1111. 99~ . mealiB.AU Fum 1eR UOO/rno, gar. luiula cillksren deelred. Nftl-~t °i'n~!~
& patio, encl gar Nft T ST BCH .CU t Uke btand newt Alt utll11e1 Eutelde 1B small bu 238 Avenue Montety. Of~ A-..-6..-ltl .-.. P«1 BMot\, Coate Meea. l)tllCtlce cllnlC Loe In palnt,crpta&drpa Lndry Br, •48Rl8A • .P.S~~,: pald.Pool,gar,nopeta. oozy /lolarofnat~ Tl.-0 497~5hm 48~ I vrr:::= ti...., and Corona del Mer San Bernardino .For ~.M~!\!:"se~:c'~ '"'""' OflMopt. Mary973-7528 ~:~ 1Ba ~ S4e5 ~ pe1a 98().2962 o.Htl '" .... Iliac . •••• IU.1&11 lllmlll ec;hoola.
7~ EOE further Info. (1) 370--0102 MC~· 77~5e29 Ill OUT• LUSll tab 301 AVOCADO &42-8850 Eutalde2Br ta. eepd!M Frplc, v1&.11ted celNnga, dbl ' I II MIR MWI Pnfft1lu&IJ. Citrlcal/Off1ct MOO
CONDO. 3BR 2ba· Utlllnel. Pr11tlglou1 etegant exec; lalMi ~=~i~J~j~ • 1&:~ & apa Norr~ ..... 1711! Hi~ll~=~·P~I~ AUalalttrl ft Siii llllllTlll :~f!'ra:N~llClflc ~~~.n !:~o·r~g;.: hlad JIM ~t:field S1000/mo. 998-3434 28drm ::ea~ 1~~~H93o UdORX ecA i2Amo.I No Employeet. No ADVERTISING Growing Newpon Beech
Eulty .,..,.,,. hme style 1or ~001, ape + TENNIS. 2eR 18X Udd/mo. a•u-Euttlde 2Br 2e.. gar & 845-2739 · ~183 utll pd, pool. Proflbua. n-1 Ov«held. No Selling. ~dial~~ needbllll a an.;: 1~ R tty .. ~-· 1-.. rw •-•• etlo *750/mo No t amkr 40+, reta. 494-0451 Great TD Benefit• • m ng c · lam crpta drpa p1t10 part 1595/mo Crd. Ck. RQd. ecen .......,., ""'· Beautlful Oardeo Apte P · • · ~ta. Trlptexr Unf 2Br l'ltBa Mr Wolfer (714)838-5820 ARTIST Muat be good with flg-
utlla pd jull 1395 pet O.K. Vacant. Call 472-.8858 Pa11ol/deciee. apa. Heal AVI now. Larry 546-5880 Townhome type 5695 New condo. Pref male. sun 12-5. M·F lam-6pm ur•, type 65 wpm, uM
539--8100 Bat Alty lee 760-8702 Agent 2BR 2~b• condo. 2 car paid. No peta. E-tlci. delu .. e twnhlie 2Br mo No pe" 54a-5605 pool, laundry, utu Incl, 5 1 O-IC e y by touch
UITll.E BLUFFS CONDO, Linda gar. $1300/mo, Call 28drm 1'/•Be 1700 1'h8&. gar. 2543 Orange, · I min. to beh. 5~260 laftltaHt Growing dilly n9W1?ap« Previ<>ul agency axper
PJan.Upgreded3Br2Ba Weekdya 541-5753, 28drm2B• $720 $715/mo.642-2520 YIWllHU I o,,.mal ty 2ttl on the Orange Co< dealrable. Great at-
ULLEllA OllHS unfrn S 1800 mo 722-.8522 evs/wtcnd1 873-1858 398 W. Wiison 831-5583 2•JJ1 in... Room wfleltchen & laundf') need• Imaginative, pro-moephere, ldnt benefit•. ----------------Lerge 18drm, <:ri>"· drpa, • .. -• prMlegee. Female non Earn $800/mo PIT. No ductlve. layout artltt wtlo Send reatme 10 · Mre LIJlllJ UR 1111111 BIG CANYON golf coutM 28< 2Ba Condo, pool, MC. TOP AREA MESA PINES atove,alnglestoryon Vk> 142-1111 amkr only. 546-7613 eve. Mlllng, tmall Investment undertlandlmerot\andll-Bracke. P.O. Bo .. 8710,
3 bdrma. Now avlllab6e. w , 2br 2b• condo $1400 Ooeen & Hllr'b« view. t8drm. Ilk• new, CfRI/ torte nr Newport '495 No EASTSIDE CHILDREN Btltli/ltttll 71 required te0-8587, 1~ Ing, to dMlgn adver1191ng Newport Beach, Ca
180 CABRILLO Ben 644--0141, 676-5736 1800 aq ft S 1500/mo. trplc, encl patio. Cerpor1, peta 990-2862 WELCOME. lrg 2BR 28A, _ _ for a variety of cllenta. 92668
1 blk No ol 17th SI on ----111 , IU I. dap. No pool. apa, Quiet. No pe1a 38< 2ea upper Gar new downat1lra. play yard.I LJllUIUOI lea~ Tt I.Ma 14 Our dlacr1mln1t1ng mat---------
Orange. Worth more 2br nouae kids/pell 631-2320 Mm $595 Up 549--2447 cprt. 1034D · vai~ncla encl gar, patio, lndry ta-llTll IU PERSONA[ Co XRs ket demand• Quality and &oaTI llDllY &SIT
Manager 6-46--0225 fncd yd g•r kid pet ok 2BR +den dbl gar comm s750 No pete 54s-7983 c~tti... painted tnruout, Up to aso.ooo on your Ilg-•t'11e. lmmed opening. FIT Aaet
.. . • ~ , .... "" .. ..., meatiB.AU Nft deluxe 1er unfum. $700 + dep. S 135 & Up/Wkly. Color Fortune. 8255 w. Alrpor1, Newspaper production Bookkeeping. helvy ooi-I .~i~~\ R !:....501 Ro1t1~1!._ at 539-6190 ~. S~2~~.n~a.8_"! ... '.!~ to dltlwr. Ga1 & water paid Wkly rentaJa. L-ow rate1 nature. Free detail• write computerized Rec. Dept.
llri gar from $800 383 TV. maid Mrvlc41, fr.. 1 18 C H et T know!edge helpful. Ablll-leo11on work. Good oom-M lm11 214 om 2111• ,..._ AvOcado St 873-3838 WI lffER A DlllOI coffee. halted pool &. ;,·035 -OU on x. ty to work und9f Mad-munlcatlon alellle. 10-...:!!~~~~!!!!~ ---.!!'!!'!!!!!'!!!'!!"'r--~I -1 ~~t ,. __ ...__ Want a Mlectlon of gr .. 1 atep1 to ooean. Kitch'• llnee a muet. Prior new.. K /C
Eutelci. '& 1Br. encl gar. * *llEITILS* * Brtlna. gar, yrly only seoo. ~:t;--S:.U~ty--IMd~ 1700/M 1111121A 11vtng? we can offer any-avall. 985 N. Cout Hwy, ltrtlllft, T.D. I P8'* 1xper. an advan-~"t.oo.0;ft.~'. ~~:a: ~ll:Csi~n;.t~~ CALL US REGARDING :Uiiif "I. ~lMllO 1 c •·Ped g r 0 u n d, Newty decorated luxury ttll~from a small apt to Laguna Beact1, 494-5294 Widow "Fii'a monay for tage. Position la part Send resume to: p P.C ,
--E--S-ID_,E_B_A_. R.,..,G=-A-1-NS-=---l._!IRIVtl~:~.s.e:.._ pool/apa. patio/did<. ~ ~.1 N~~::s~·16C:lld ~~ NB r:H: t=1~ ~~ IUWI •ftl TD'i . S lO,OOO/up, no ~I=~::: ':':~Ir':.:~ r~un8a0• ~A 39~~·n South
•• --• -•1 STUDIO APT peta. ' ' -•--ti Wkly rentals no'# avail credit "'lno penalty. Calf H h A DI ..,. Fenced 2bf houae kids ok lH-llOO 120 AGATE 18drm seo5 NEWPORT VILLAGE ~!~. ftlvt°' that ch......., o $1""'.50 ··"-& up. 2·27~ Oenlaon Aeaoc 873-7311 oug ' rt rector, vt 1 blllne $600•1 S ...,_ ng ...-""" .. Dally Piiot, P.O. Bo• ~Ult~t GREENTREE:3BR 2ba, No $400/mo •72-a959 ~:~~~a. .~: :.::rs~ or;:,~~ TSL MGMT 842-1603 Nwpt Blvd, CM 646-7445 Aaatuct••••• 1560, Coeta M .... Ce.
UM. llOlnUY
11MO.lltd *IH-t1H* peta Lae Sl150lmo 818 1al•u h 1 i11al a 2250VANGUAROWAY , Plu.a. Minutes to Nwpt WUTUIEYIUJIE SUISllLlllE 92626
Roomy 3br 2b1"hee lelda 346--0«0l 888-5510 2'0'1 540-9828 or e31-0880j Bch Jr 1Bdrm lurn 28R t•t. ba, 1685 3026 w .Cout=New-AaatUctmHll 2910 IUlllOUIT
pell fine fncd garage &. tlln LIUTlll 11NI 1•& HLY .... -----S650/mo. 1Bdrm furn Pool/ape, no ~la. port Beech. r • TV i Saw s on •&•LY ...... more $850 639-111 90 L H2+1 pie 2 c gar All -28drm 2Ba S75G• 1825/mo. Pool, JICUlZI, 645-8122 833-8917 S130+ wlc egl. no t. Siik 1Creen1 or prints -,.._, BeatRltyfae g1t Sl~50·F 7861 Extractean,bttlna.Walle to t6tE.21at 548-2408 tennl1&.volleyballcourt1. • 330W.BaySt.
na. " beach. Ottier. avall. FM rade your old itutt for Recreation room, a.unu Daaa Pelat HB ltatah It h ut "Bu~~ :;: .. g•i~~. $ Coat• M .... Ca. g2628
FAlllLY IEEMI TEUHIT Ill-UH nLEIEIT lll-lllO new goodl•• with • &pebtllll.ar55d7t-OOablM75' Sorry, no Xttrec .• seam ce1nr;r.. 2br 27Z4 Call Dave (714 ..... A-1136 MANAGER 2+2 car gar, fncd yd. Only RA CHO SAN JOAQUIN i--,,.....,----.,,.--,----=--,.,.,.,.. $700 others avt. fee5489. N NA Beech 2Br turn apt. By ClaMlfled ad. 642·5e78 unfurn near u lna 29r nr So. Cal Piii. Quiet .... r • s •••A 2 Br, den, 2 ba, quiet loc, weetic or mo. Avall now 496-9482 noon-5:30pm living. carport. 1315. t tal nuam ,,.___ view. sunny. nr poo1. BP•. 675-8110 Of 984.3315 WOOD .. A .. D YILLAGI =-==--==11mmed1a11 °'*''ng '°' f\.111 Mesa Verde 3Br tam rm gOll/ten $1250. 854-3598 .---.. R Raat. l .. c. 2'40 mo.+'h ulll. 5•9-0234 time District Manager
$1095 lnci ~dnr, waler. w, ... ltac• 2141 ca,hluu .... c• APARTMlllTI 111DIFF *lllrMf:~~;~.~a;;'!~ FOlH> ADS Must enjoy WOflelng with
.Agl Julle 54 2313 m'so on oceen 2+2. ten-2'11 11t mo rent. Lrg 1BR 1BA. 1350 mo 831-4391 Dave children Experience
MESA VERDE • Bdrm, 2 nla, poolt. prlv1te bch 2 BR 2ba upper duplex . Com~ & tniut our &~rdtn \lylt aph Qo14'1 comt1>rtablt hw•n&. frplc, gar. lndry rm, lrg IRE FREE helpful. bath, new carpets & 499_2584. 8 l8/703-0230 Enclad garage $650/mo 'IO~ ro Im ways & So Coasl Pim wh1!4' only minul,\ IO tilt deck Ctoee to beacil I Adlt to lhr beaut Wood· ft
drpa/palnt s 1095/mo 661-3653 aft 6pm t>uc~ Car4ges ;va1labl~ NO Pl IS PtEASI 1825/mo bridge Irvine tiome. $400 C I We otter an excellent ben-
Call Terry 546-2313. L1111a l itHI 2152 Ctrtal •ti •ar uu NIU • Sl'U • UHllY HlllS 2221 ALABAMA ' + utlll 857-5370 Evee 3 : etlt program, paid V11-
°' eves 549-9823 New unfurn COOdo 2br .. W•LH ...... ue TSL MGMT 6-42-1503 AIDE. F. U~ln. A.aellt Cltlona&. holldeyw. bOnUI
New guard gate 2BR 2ba, walk to beach, $900 B 1 e. ont apt, 1 ...... 1.._ .. 11 2BR IBA, gar, lndry, 4 teacher In wtllctlr few hra. 142-llll program W: dental ln-
2'h8A condo ale fp dbl ptmo. 495-0457 aft. 6pm. yrly, frplc, d/w 433 lrla 1111111111 MH-Slll ple>C. Quiet atreel. 1 mile Rm+ $100/mo. 645-2357 surance. •lary plu•
gar. 11000/mo. 643-2289 I It • 211 See Sat only 11·1PM to beach. No pets. $650. EIBLUFFS: Prof F/M mlleage relmburaement.
!.!.J!!I IC DUPLEX 4Br, 2'h8a apac US, •UT & Ill Wlttl llOl. Call Craig 831-1266 n-amkr, fvm. rmtba, W/D. Found Chow Mix, red, No Appllcarlt muat eppty In ms..... Aerervalue equlpt hae 2000 •If. New crpt/drp1, Ml ,&IUIUll $425. gar •Vall. 760-8391 Carolina taga, vcty Bacic per.on at Dally PKOt, 330
W•telde 28' ta.. patio 2b• gar lncd yd rrplc pool frptc, beam cell, 9"ytt. Bay 756-0375 West Bay St., Coat a
yard, carport. $e 15/mo. b 11 n a under S 9 0 0 Wik to bch. AVI lmmecll T1l ll&Ull811T JM ... 1 142-lMJ FEM 22-32 to lhr apac NB F nd 1 h9lr blk/wtll Mesa, Ca. Apply 9-11
082-1700 539-.8190 S..1 Rlty 1.. s 1200 mot yrty 840-60e7 W11tcilff home w/pool & out d~ vtc C.C:. e.m. 0< 2-4 pm (ClrC\111-
$2.17 per day
Thal'e ALL yov pay for 3 llnea. 30 day minimum
In the
*SIYI llllff• Jez. $400+ utu. 543-0tOO. ~Pant. 957:8180 ='-'°"~Dep~'=-·l· ____ _,,,_,~
2+2 + pool S575. M~ln F/n-amkr wanted to shr FOUND .. alt ..... ..... •"1c1l~Dt1tal S1 S
I $900 f 8925 2BR 2ba N Bctl Twnhae ... ... m.... ..... _ c;oa ' ee $400+ 12 utit 759--0720 . Baci< Bey, N 8 10/ 19. 9Bl"'1iOOU--al ...... '.X""'. -,o-!#Of1(--1l!l9i TtlflllT lll·IU 1 · 756-9373 or 852-8195 hour lhlfl Sat/Sun only
Lg delu•e 2br 2ba. Nr Ft n-smkr wanted to ahr 83 t-.8302
&Urua Lttal Stnict1 Pa~ia1 Huntington Habor . =~~~~i~~~~~· SCRAM-LETS IEITALOUllltll
Chrtellan mother wlll HANUY MAN LARGE and MPloYMENT CX w fXRTHIJJd INTERIORS S950tmo. 2131860-9513 F anr Lg CM home. s110 •NSWERS NuM, pleuant Newport
babysit Mon-Fri CM/SA small 1 DO IT ALLI• Emphaala 752-5008 HANGING/STRIPPING I SUWllD YIWIE mo"° min. eaalat for di~ ft Beech group prectlce, 4
area 641-93 t4 531-5579 Pat or Ive mag., Atty&. Parham & Anoe VISA-MC 673-1512 I •bled taech«. 84s-2357 Uncoll-Haunt day wee«, plu! alternate
Chrlatlan mother would HOME REPAIR Carl19"try •aHa~ ANDVS WALLCOVERING WIT llJT Furn 2BR 2ba lux condo. Ra0tnNy
1
· BeaXDIETed ~~:.r::~t ~~' R.D A.
llke to c11re for your chlld fenc:ee & gltM tree trim 1 lnatallatlon &. ~oval HB Harbor Poolljate/,..., M-W-F any hrs 641-947tl dump runa. C.M. & N.8. ' BRICK, LOCK, STONE. Int. painting. 548-4013 1uve where you have . •-My neighbor ftxed hef hut>-OENTAUORTHO Rec:ept --area Jim Whyte 6-42-7206 CONCRETE. 20 yra exp wSpectecular apta $400 & 112 utll 640-8686 band'• chair ao It would Benefits. 4'A dayt, exp. Reaponslble Mom will Terry 536-7988 atter 5 Expert W•llcoverlng In * t & 2Br. 1 & 28e ault.. H.B. 2Br Apt, F/ooly n-collapM when he Mt on req'd. Npt Bch. 842-2828
babysit your child In my B1alla1 ' elalletlon. Reu. Consult· •Spacioue townhouMI smkr, cioae to bch $300+ It. Smiling to hef I*---------
Ch•llanglng poeltlon.
varied reaponatblllllH,
lite bookkeeping, anort-
hand, typing 85 wpm,
personable, non-amoleef,
xlnt benert". Send re-
aume or call: 848-8904,
C.P. Retleb., 901 Oovet
Or. Suite 126. N.B. 92880
UlllTlll.P/TI•t Weekends a muet Some
bt<kpg. Call 9am to 12
Mon lhru Fri~
BOOKKEEPER Full-
ot\erge, permanent part-
time for Santa Ana Mfg
Send reeume & .. iaty r•
qulrementa to: 2003 W.
Pendleton Ave. Santa
Ana, CA 92704 Phone
calla not accepted.
... uma
Permantenl PIT, 12-<4pm.
Property mgmt, n-smkr
pref. 833-3878/840--0 t 10
lllUHPlll Mature person 10 key,
typing. misc office dutlel
P«m. p/tlme. Hra flex
CM 9611-1711 Gordon
IDIUI. lfflOE
Typing, flllng and Olhet
clerical dutlee Own car •
mue1 C all Judy,
842-4321. axt 31& for
appt
HUUOUIT
UILYPILIT
330 W. Bey St
Costa M ... C• DAILY
PILOT
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
CM home 5-48·9259 -Brick. concrete. cualoml ant Aulgnmnt Ml-8590 •Ftreplaoee 'h\Jl+dep 536-1818 eve plexed hu1band uhegot FINT/l&Ol lfO LT HAULING -MOVING wor1i. Low coat Call Bob * p 1 t b 1 nl I . p ti f w 1 A"' H'"' 7 Cltaaial Stmct Garage & Yard Clnup1 835-4384 6..&-9557 •WE GALS SHOULD• r v• • •co es or L Opt CdM 38 2Ba f o" the floor. "Now wm art me, axper. pre . an u .,p or •HANG TOOETHE~* Gerden patios 1 g x r • em you go ON a DIET?" 720-9833 842-5878 ROBIN S CLEANING Jon 645"8192 B_R_l_C-KW_O_R_K._Sm-•l-1 -lob11 839-0730 ANYTIME ntamkr $400 + dep. --------
SERVICE a throoughly •CLEENCO• Newport, Colla Me11, t WIT llTT 720-8030 or 720-ta66
clean house 6-45-9741 CIM11-up1 &. Haul~ _ Irvine. Ref's. 675-3175 l Pl11ttr /Drywall •3 Lighted tennl• courts Male 2Br 2Ba Nws;!t Apt
Houaecleanlng. carpets & Free eel. John &4S-6 Ima lnt.IEJlt. patch ptuterlng, *2 Swfmmrng pool• Pool. $400 + S200 dep. CALL TODAYll upholatery. windows, etc. Hauling. Cleanups. paint-I cuatom texturing, qua.Illy :~~:~m:0&.:.d• Llberal 846--0194
Y"'•r Datt.. Piiot llRJ l1l1t. H 1-1212 Ing. weldlng, odd Job•. + UO MYlll+ 'WOl'k. Problem~No Prob-•Fumt9h1nge avail Male ptof non-amtcr 30-36 "" ., Commercial lnq. welcome moving, 7 daya 873-3503 QUICK & CAREFUL • 1 tem1I #326884 554-7831 thr Nwpt Hghtt home.
All FOii LOIS -1 lt.!Miiilil--SYDNEY /
0MARR
S~=::ii~i EUROPEAN CLEANERS. lt1ll• ltlaty LO RAT~. T138(µ6 PJallMat WHY NOT CALL $400. 842-3442 Diana
S.2-4121 tit. Ht Houaecleanlng/G1rdenlng ru.~. Self:,~~ J!.n. I 24 llr 0 • tll-11H 111·1111 I ~~tu~rwh!/:,~~t~ ~·
•------• j'ree .. , Rafa '95-2478 HANEDA MASSAGING •Good "'badonerlgh,.., SUWJll YIWIE Home Cleaning by the •t•"•I aa.1911 *A· 1 •Ylll* J ,., Your rHld $300/refa ,,,u.~ce Oyn1m1C Duo Comm'I, -: --" * CLEAN & EXPERT 1 DRAINS CLEAR From 115 15555 Huntington VIiiage 557-35n. 6 .. wl<dyt Wechlesday, Oc&ober %3
F1111tu e resld't,iclt refs 650-6278 J~l:~~8~ Over 25yea11eicperlence 1 ::=..~~~2t::·, ;~~.~~~f = F to lhr lge 4 bdrm hee, AR~.(March 21 -April 19): ~hat bad been cause for alarm can
APPUANCE REPAIR Home & Ottlea cleaning by •o5 30th St. Npl Beach Lie. T-118•428 730-t353 I 'o McFadden, weet on ::'3~s';'rc, :;~;~~7t now be legitJmatc reason forcc.lcbratJon. Foc~s on an end to n:stnci1on ,
W85Mf-Dryer-Refrtg-e1c JODI Pleue call tor free Btatiat l i atl ITUYlll OllUll 3Ex2 pert ~ .. ~11Re9Comalr McF1dden. greater access to one who preVIously was elusive. You'll be mo re aware
722-1737 20 yrs e .. p 111tlm1te. 842-6746 --m-.1111 .... I yr• e>Cp. __, m. ·---L NB. Fem pref, s.u.hore Dr of ·~cc body ima~ wardrobe
2" It El• ta.• 1llO -••• '' • 1 Uc #409035 964-8919 ~aaa -• 2BR hM Yfly '425/mo • . ' : . . Alt.•111/ HCrtlt Houaecleanlng 14yrsexp. ,. r -· Orange Co.OrlQlnal 722•848 ; J68-IJ80T~ AtJRUS (Apnl 2(). ay 20): W1sb is fulfilled, followmg 1n111al ;; :::; rellable. reaa. free eat, own •Heating done rlght9 s. tudent Movers. Tnaured All Plum bing repairs. Cop-OST OCEANFRONT ' delay. You·u have op portunity to state case in frank manner. A void
Par Ing rea Repairs & trans Pina. 6-45-9866 C.A.S Sva Co. •92·8827 Uc. T124"'438.&41-M27 I ~ replpe: water hMte,., ~~ LAGUNAcleluxe lrg 1 Nwpt Be~ b•ylroni. any hint ofbelligercnoc. Utilize charm, powers of persuasion. ~~~;r:Yt,;~f~'l 1~ RESIDENTIAL. Xlnl Ref'•. Hlg AIC, Rel rpra hi EF NEW WarehouM Storage lied, lnaor d. 538-388& gar'age~se:,~4:a·1t.yt ='~~1:,;~~~:!; GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Scenario highliahts written agreement
Ree1 RatM. No job to Amana AIC 'YI le 459263 laniat met NEW/REPAIR. Quality. No ..._. 59R 1tv ,..., & din rma that could lead to promotion. Em phasis o n prestige stand.mo lD Orlveweya. petloe. path•. lgetsmall Mary 472-9633 • Job• to small, rea.eoneb6e. STUDIO OCMn vw .... ,,.. • · .... · . fi ed fr b . • e etc No job too small --------a... en rm compeniOfl XJa;; Fr ....... llc'd. 831-2345 val• &. quiet. No pet•. frplc, pvt beth. 'rfi patio. oommuruty, can:cr, pro ts accru om ustneu enterpnsc.
Reaa Mlciley 536--0553 llY&l 11&11 lllYIOI. EXqulalt• Acouetlce R; for-elderly. At a2.50 s--Gu &. watet paid. 111 + docl( S850/mo. 8 5-3858 CANCER (June 21-Jul y 22): Focus on travel, education. family
Satisfaction guar'd. apreyed or remove Ory-hour to ltv.ln. 833-2008 P!J!~CI MC 1575. 487~87 Nwpt luxury Corldo furn relationships. Major domestic adjustment could be featured. Mak.c Aaphalt-repelr-p<klng lots
•Pl complex-heavy roller
Joe &4>4269 7am-9pm
Concrete/maaonry Iii
types Ir eallllc'd
M1rtlnez Co 895-7133
Comm'llreetd'I. 891-574 1 wall Repairs 1147-7901 Paiatlat European $IC Tarot lft!!!! ltlc rm. MM nl'"*r. 35+. mtelliaent conccuions without abandonina principles. Purchase of an
Ctalracttn Lie e1ec1 Contractor Fr .. FINE PX#mNd By RICtl-cr,:.::.~n;~·:!~ tlrdr"m""Hoo. Refrig. Gar avati 759--03-44 object or luxury item could~ P811.of sccnario.
ALL CONSTA0CTION est. O~allty work Rea. ard Sinor. l8yreof "-PPY 850-27S8 Olene 831_8~ dlhwttlr &. stove Incl. No Shr bayfront apt. Prof LEO C!uly ~3-Aug. 22). Spot.liaht o~ a~ra o f m~stery. Promote
New-Remodel·Addltona Comm 1. Ind Sr ratea No cuatomere. Lie. 280644. pe11 5-45-4356 M/F, non-tmkr. REFS. glamour, d.iscrctJon, ICCt"Cts. Element of mtnguc dominates. Member
722-1737 llc#C80839 job 10 amall 49C-2980 Thank-Youl 983-4114 ... ll•J lBR BAYFRONT VIA LIDO MOO + MC. 875-1502 of opposite sex .falls hard, and you'll know it. M any answers arc found
Remove asphalt drive-Cfulr.ctltl l11tractin RAINBOW PAINTING ROOFtNG recover, re-APT w/aundeck. 1725 Latal1 Wu ... HB if you look behmd scenes. . .
ways. replaoe w/concreta ' I , •• , bu§IC LESSONS col-Quallty II our policy pal,., hot tar, Ille, rock, mo./yw1y. 87(>-8980 'WANTED to;;;; In N;W: ~GO (Aua: 23-ScpL 2~)'. U~la.c clement of ttryt~. In
brick/block wrk 539-0345 a II 1ege prOfMIOf Speclalfty ~ti JEFF Lie 8$88 wood. free Mt. 750-6586 2Bdrm 2BI S700/mo por1 Beecfl. MlnlmYrn DC&OlJllJODS, rcaliz.e your J>OlltlOD IS stronger than OngJnally
hat m en RTC commerclat orywau woman. kid•. too. y~r H4' lff llT/m q /Wltio1 Refrlo. det1wttw & etM 4BR home wtdock « anticipated. You have riahts. pcnnissions..t and they arc valuable.
Cofir DIVING SE.RVICE Speclallzt~ In Comm'I home Graceve 7•8-352• 55,. ~7~" F •' 11 t tnct. fio home with pool & View. You'll be offered oonttact -don't jump at 11nt sip.al. ~ and R"ld'I Free etl --.-.. ..... r • ma • Prof couple with one LIBn .1. (Se 23-0c 22) y '11 h · I ba · Un<*w•ter Hull c1ean1ng 548-8923 llc•383924 Lldsca1'11 A A A PAINTING Int/Ext ; NEEO TO RtMobet? child 1n college. Mtn 1 """ pt. . t. : ou reac pm~ e -. . sic & MaJnt 675-7392 11 1 al a wwaure LOWEST PC>Ult>te P'loe Fr• M1lm1111. 'lpti~111u' ""qlt nn.. ,..... cell 120-02/3 prooedu.m arc fc;aturcd,Job acts done. Focus on ~pulanty, abthty to
COMPLETE SERVICE tctr c lsbXt(ls dXRDENINd 10 St11P Servtce ee2-3235 100% Ananct~ o two hl'droom "P" before tOem or after 59tn reach .W1der aud!ence and to ~ pcoooal bonzons. Lo~ fiaum
Outdrlvee & Outboard• P&lltll ntmlO Malnt Clean-up•. Tr.. GLASGOW PAINTING ~~~ITV ~1 Ill prominently. Aries playi ouut.andina role.. .
Fr ... ay Mltlne 850-4«4 Qualify work, tree•t. Serv FrM Eat 550-8318 Int/Ext 30 yra ·~P9'. Phone 873-8122 no. LL laJt/a..t !]KX>RPIO cpct. 2~Nov. 21 ): Emp~s on chan~ma. pcrso~1ty,
u I •4255l:! 968-7401 t1AWA.llAN EXPERTISE ,.,... &42-5214 Uc. 2074&1 -ph~cal attra~tion, children .•nd • vanety of eit~ences. You 11 be
XO\/Type WOfd Procwa-ELECTRICIAN TrM trim, top, remove. I'm small, my p0oee .,. lulat11/0flln a..t active, ~ynamtc, demands ~U ~mack on your time. In matters of
We Lie 11233108 Small/large clMn upa Stu 64i-1898 •mall 12 year a exp PATii.......... IHI speculab~you could be a bta winner. '~amn: 11~f. :C9fS:~~ jobs & repairs. 548-5203 M 1 clMn mowt Geofge Of Ron 846-85-44 Complete rernodell~ *on 11t year's rent SAGITI A.RIUS (Nov. 22·Dec. 2 1 ): Family reunion is featured.
NEW/REPAIR Quallty. No .~!'irlm. F;:'t.t1mat:i INT /EXT 20 y r Ex Qulllty ~~· FURNISH(O or i 180 aq K. N.B. a ;;;;u What ~d ~n an cttra~pment ,wiU be healed. Your. "extrasensory
LloenMd Typing ServlOe Job• 10 small. reuonable. Mr Ettreda &45-3331 Avereoe ~· 129~ UNFURNISHED offloel. 3 connected. 1 pcrocpt1on works overtime. You II sense pube of pubhc and profit iu
Why pay more? Fr .. eet . llc'd 831-2345 ExterlOf Stucco Sl30+ . ty P<lvlt• ,+ 8~1fde ~ result. Aquarius native will play paramount role.
C .. I Anne 946-8233 RESID/COMM'L/IND 2e c~~:~~':HT=lng mtiletlea. 642-0442 ouayW;ougtlt eon wCA f~SS ~~Ot W~t~:~·Homee CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Scenario b~lilhts trips, V1Slls, CllJtii1!f_ yrt Do my own work UC. MIKE 850-3283 J Q INT/EXT PAINTING ~. ~. aecurtty I Cllflts, Tl•S. 2438 W Cout Hwy. relatives, mcssaaea relating LO sipificanl IOci.aJ function. Avoid ~try rm •278041 Al 6411-8128 TIEii HOu-.& Ai>t. Rea. rat•. Ooon. ~.feet~ I SWIUUllC, .... 831·1400 scattering your efToru. Emphasize communication. an, b&lucc.
Ailc*f-Remocrt-AddltlOna tral a.me.. au.ltty woril 896-5755 l)(IOel. tree M1.13&-t 23 _. t! S«Ty humor, wilbnpeu to I.lush at your own foibles.
Ooor..-tc:-648-4MO l°i?~~mmi-;;:;c;r;,~1.j T~~·51~ LADY PAINTER ..... 1 • ,..-: ..... • ~·ec:~t8~W:~ ~QUAAIUS (Jan..20.Feb. 18): Be ~llina LO revue, ~model and
autLD OR REPAJR 111ng In P•. y-Roll Tax• a up, 1nt.1Ext 1 t ~:,~a Are YtNr Wlndowa Cleenl .,.. ""' t tt 1. N 8 541-eo32 Ao\ poutbly rebuild on a different t.ac. Fundtnt becomes available, you'll wan.. ataira, r=• un100 Reports 642-9015 • OLW-IPI ,.,.... 11t 1>t1 Balboa w1ncSow Weatllna d COM. eo..i Hwy. OcMn rccoup loa, you'Upinurcsult ofpreviou1trackrccord... Tauru native !m;~eti-820~· SPEC IA LI SeNIOI CAila 00' Fr .. Ill Daw 84&-7N5 850-192• Of 957•5801 803 Balboa 81. 873-313S /r, _ J •.• J. View •25 aq ft. $330/mo. ia due to play outst.andina role. . .
TVe. VCRa 4 S!etec>a. All I QUALITY TREE TAIMINO NM1 & Ci.en Int/ext pelnt-~00 Cell MS-&363 ?ISCES (Feb. .1 C).Man:b 20): Acc:ent on pcnoruahty. tJmtna. ~~~.C::o Aree1 850·4072 rr .. roott-etumpe NmOve Ing, r .... ~ w~i,u:llty 5:.', ~t~R't~~ .\p•rtmHh CdM omc. ..,.ce. 516 eq chanam a., comm unication. Romance 11 featured. and you could
C•btMl•Wlndow-FeN* Bau u ctnupe.oeet eatt 7U· t 11 t wonimAnthtp 1 2 ci.a.in.ci Ada 642_5871 Hnrpo'1 Buch So ft. Tiil• all or pa11 oft m:eive in vitation to travel. ~pres.a 1deQ in clear manner. Y ou could
35 ~ bP· .-ry 142..o647 {e Compl9t ~ •1 PAINTER NEEDS WORKt Ctwmlna S eep, offtcea. ICtuaUy gin by utllizin& wnuen word. AME~AN HANDYMAN I meint 1• ,,..,,,,,.,g 'r1 1nvEx1. oelllngie. r.nn c.b 111111 IMh '"'"'' S1.25 s--~ LAieee Of IP OCl'OllU u lfYOUll ltllTHDAY you are intense c::rutive
IMI Tl Fml c:,t~~;. .., .. M::;o, ee2...e73"" (~ ~ WOt'k~7 To Platt' your 1 ·'' Oow• 1 mo. to mo. ::: romantic. tentimental, have ability to mt:riaue and eoccrtaJ~ by usina
PaulM7-47M•ft 6 tub~ '*>ting etc I Full Malm !-3p6ent rut Re~ull 641•511 l ~~~ ... Lltlda : w~ written or spoken. Mcmbcn of ~ale sex find you
To Piece your mwaoe And Y11~11 Lotd I weec11ng: ' • etc The ~"':~tenor• 1 ~rv1re D1rM·t orv N"•por'I Bu'h No 87&-23119to5. ~tins. are<!"twn to xou. Gemini, ~irao, SlliU.&~UJ ~ns pl1y
before lhlt (llcll040~ t36-8244 Aell retee. ..... 2 11 REFS 8U·2l77peln Ing. ad ('all Nnw l\l•ll lt\on1 I\., 11uo CdM'a belt OfftcM. unpon&nt roa tn your life. You &re ICUVC, pouet!I lively t.ntelkctual
reeding e>ubllc. •OEN HOM!. R!PAIRS Tree!TnrnJCIMnuP oornp .._ ~__,._1 Do 642•1671 1.,, 11>1111 11100 Ind utll, wc, pq. co.riOStty. You would make an euiclknt 1nvesupt.lvc reporter or ~ Palm °'YW .. Ceti>entry I denlnG c;o,np.."'" WIN-..··-~ you 645 1104 jenttor. 216& I COlllt detective. If linale, you could marry this year. la November auddrn ~ 842.se7a etc 011')"146-527'1 PTL ::,_ Cfuck w.1002 =:":~ neectt bt. J n _Hwvt7MIOO Anyttme ctwipoocur, theyareflvonb&eand finanaa.I picture will be bn&httr
'
Cltdul/Oflltt 1411 Cltrlul/OHlee
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT ITuMda>', Oeto~ 2~ 1935 C7
1411 Cllrital/Oftin 1411 t111ut1 le1ttal 5531 C.Hral 1131 lf!!!iat ~1 HIS A1t. ......... tltl ,, ..... ,_,.. 1111 &1 ,_ lulldt ..
OLERI nPIST .,,~r,'*'t naay 1121 -----&• -.... OllltJ.. WWTI IRIPUI M8l 280 71, S1$.000 XQC E:Oii iPOt1' Wi;IOft RMl·~~'!.,,alql Of· IUIWlf/lP/T Banking Int::·;~·~-=~ IOILUITNS•• DEUVERYOEPAATMENT Wkdy1 so H 14 eo Blk~ .e.d. *·
GREAT WESTERN S4V·
INOS, ~ Of Callf0tnle'1
INdlng llnenciat lnethu·
tion.. haa an lmrn.ctlate
oppo<lunlty fOf • Ci.nt
Typltt our Cotta M ...
branch
OOod teMpt!OM I IYP6nQ
1kllle 11t AltPQf1, In N.lf
Coll•O• 1tudent OK
tlce. Pref. Word Pro-75'4·0t550t ~792& tor plen t ma1nten•nc:• Oct~ 26-27 9·69m McL•D[N'S BMlll E\19/Wknd '7!1-0287 •m/lm/ tape S.OOO.
«*elng . WOid St., •xi> lllTIU , /T TELLERS ttcf\nlCl•n PIT. ••I* &ly·S.tl Trad• 0 c M " M8Z 450SL llO $JO 000 i60-44M •" 9·30 pm
Flexible hf• 973-3772 Full 11"'-nl;ht tlottMI JOU AllD CAL I "r•fd C.it Maro<> or f11rgrounda. CM ~tel' M·F uu 9 S-S 111111 50k ml Hr / clean C40ILLAC '&3 O.VlllE tM-OSea ••-pfll•lf Apply In l*IOn tu.-Frl SuMn 11 64S-06eT gate 5 off Arlington St 629 S Eu<:llO St Wk dyl 649· 2514 01 Like ,_ S 10.250 OOo
59& T A ••n f ED eu I '" J6 Fullerton CA fvel wtind 97S-0287 120-1660 Ot 75e-4939 Buay C .M lnveetment cJ:i ltz, ovv Newport iallft'IU •.,' ltrH, ••"frtaKI 714 680 5300 SEITRA Ceo 78 SOV Loeded. lo lllW&.•NI
Thte 11 an entry level poe-
ltlon You wtll INtn the
varloua tYP411 of loan1,
prepare r .. t .. tale loan
dooumen11. malnteln de-
pe.rtmtflt fllea 81 ~I u
other gen•ral dUtlH
Typing ol SO wpm la re-
quired.
o.te MMe bfanctl. A«*J
& treln In Fuli.rton 8u.Y
phonH, bookkMplng,
$8 p /hr 40 hr wk
871-8301 Kata.
Firm Me6Ct prot...ionei leJOf, Nwpt Bell I .Ala-I -• IOIO 213.$91--9701 "'"7-..,..7 t.__llt to compn nww-. par1 um. ni.....11 Newpot1 ml •Int ooncl -._ 4 = ,~, office, ~ nsnu Beach/ ~~ M ... 41/M RCA 191 cir r~t• (MW) s 101 l I t hm 640-1307 wtt/lft llpfft
ikllla lmperatlv• Call PIT '°' CM ChlneM RMI ~ ~n~~':if:!~~C:: Must be U S Clllten $250 Mlt1Yblat11 cir 19· LARGE SELECTION OF • '"f I X CAD
82
Cou be9utlful
rubb & Ellla R•ldentlal
Brokerage Dhrl1lon In
Newport Cente<. ne.cta
•11ceptiona1 Hcr•tery
Accurate typing lkllll
wl at leul eo wpm, com-
puter & real M tate knOWI·
edge helpful. Salary com-
men1urate wlexper, con-
tact Admlntratlve Aut,
Mrt Netland M-4-e200
Vicky 549·3185 ••t 20'4 lnttvw 1 30·3PM D•lly 01n11111on1 In th• coon-640 «1 t •" 3 30PM $200 ObO 789·3519 NEW & USED BMW'S' $584 78 down. dOMC ehlJI IO&dod Aak':.g 110.500'.
, Call for •PPt 845.5500 try, c a11forn1e Federal ilfWIL l /llTTll Gar1tt la.Jn LIM IUOI... Com"*c'•' '-"" OA<.. PP r40 1681 ...t<dymoma Ener~~C:~l~dual ~ci~N~ow R~~:~gur~~~ f\U MYerll PART-TIME Fine Jew9lry Stcx• In NB - - -SE~~~~: ~~~a au1,·!11!!"1.1LnW1 f N•nns t ....,.... opportunltlM In our Cor-nee<ll jeWel4H' w/e)(p All C t .. __ 11"..t • -l\DCn wlnloe front 0 c appear. dable hOllHl/CHhler. on• 0.. Mar OlflC. ty"""'-1 Httlnn a labrle•t· " • --3670"' Chefry Ave LONG 1-========::;i
anc. need.ct tor busy Call Loul1 64-0-8381 ..... · ·• UoVINd SALE Furnltur•. BEACM fl C IOILLAC
We offer competitive
aalerlea and uo•llent
oenefl11. For an Interview
appointment, pleaae call
Laticia Tampa at.
Nwpt Bch real Mteta CS. -One polltlon II lex a 30 ion, wax, catting GrMt small & large .i>Pllaneea, (No Chefry exll-405) n
velopment ofc Light REITAlllAIT hour aeek, the otf\er la for working envlorn!Mflt Call trnchenware, convelet· (114)1H·llM CH/CK
typing req'd (50-90 wpm). Growtng company w/busy 20 To quality. you ~ manager <71•l 1144-8325 c~t aldH and much Trade-In• w.icome 1• 'rRQON
(11C) 111·4110
Cl 14 > 111-•n 1
lllUT WEITERI
UVllll
good benefl11. Appllc:anta N 8 , locauon la looking cutt hendllng and cua-Lltltl OUH more. OCT 26127 9-6pm. OPEN SEVEN DAYS .,. £ "
only! PleaM eonteet IA• a bright •n~getlc: torner N<Vlc:e experience 2081 ru1ttn • e CM P<>Mu Hf 7,,..., 080 ..,. ... . with a ,_,...ltlve . tttltude FIT PIT 21year1or04der ,..., "' Peggy 8roc»ta at ~..-1 ambltloua, r11pon1lble .. ----A 1
111 _;..;.________ Irvine 544.5035 Tr1a1prt1tlta n RECE,TIOlllST and hard working per-eon W• provide a competitive -_ 1 1111. ki>t 11 lll&l 11•n&1Y to 1raln lor our manage-salary tcx th• right lndl· llllTlllAIOl P/Timt llogh.., CJ11•111v
oongenlal office, ~ nPIST merit 1 .. m Apply In per-vlduale. You and Cal Fed. Assorted rnponllblllO.. 0 2 .... ~. & .........
Beech. 2·3 y11 legal MC· son Wtd· Thura 8·5 1 r-ardlng combination, Gardening, washing cara. Ptwtr hat1 7 1 CHIC'.,
retarlal exper Mull mull llWPllT lfrtol 2332 W Coall Hwy.NB a winning team To ar-cleaning olflc:• Flex 221 s;;ay f/8. ·78. xlnt n
L.AROEST SEl.f CTION
ol late ~. loyw rn-.
Cadtlleea In OrMge
County! S.. ~ todeyl
&40-1110
2600 Hart>or Btvd.
COSTA MESA
CADILLAC '83 S.Vthe.
loaded, xlnt cond
1144-5965"' 1144-7897
Equel Opportunity
Employet M/F/H
EIPllYfE llllllTI
POIHll good lklll1. Pteeaant matur• per.on, Aak for Jay or Vatari. range an appolnlment.l hours 15·20 hrl per $2 ',000 w /trlr Dy r IVERSON
Stlary commen1ure1e mlnlum 80wpm, snort· Tll IUOI ..... please call week Contac:1 1175-2311 832 5890. Ev 494-5293 •Hf (
41
..
1
H ... ~ w /Skltl1 Call btwn d d~' ._,_ W-'I -lrom 9am to 5pm -
for Beverly egement Company, at-faatl lunch lhltts Apply I 14' HOBIE CAT fl/If ,_ & • 0
han -ra.,,... "' ea-11 hiring exp•rl•nc•d ltil INta 7114 = .,,.,."°" iM•<h 8 30
-
12 3o. 47
6-
21167 ea« tt blllhed Property Man-WAITRESSES lor brNk· PeHJ It" ... • IOIELl•EIOIRTS 673 090 I
LIUl--11-11-n-11-,-tractive Bayfront Otftc. in person 1119 Steep. Wanted by O c ·a nneet '450 obO 5-48-8482 prepared~==::;::;::::;:==~
I 11 lg I nd EmployM ln1Uranoe Pro-yhoHow Ln. Lag Beech service Lv mag 953·&339 211 COiumbia MK II E.xoe4 =lf..t IUW'e in Pcxac~ 75 914 blkl alvr AUUIT or
1
at onN• tax gram. Starting aalary No phone calla pteaM C ,..A,_...,,..•A r::rr.c-n"' I oond fully ""'UlppeO, NB nu cttcil xtra c:teen Mu11 Wcxk In empioy99 benent1 attorney on-1moke r $1-400/mo lmmedtete ~ ~ IOTOll .._,
IEWCAll&LD
ISEI CAI llLEI
WEIR
CLWGlll
AllTlllll c:oneultlng po11tlon New· Newport BMc:tl Send r• opening. Mall conllden-Tlf IUOI ... SI $10 500 ~60-8&&3 evt h .,_ .,..... e dlf· sefll $3900 675-1879 _
port Beach K~ge aurM to· Mlrlng Partner, 11•1 return. to Mr Woody 11 hiring aup•rlenced 1140 f, 0.1tt llwJ llOm 32' Beauty~ x1n1 crul9lng \M•m ....,. you PO~SCME 911S 74 Blk I
of tteneflt• plana & CS.
5000
Birch St. aulte
2900
• Pt 1111141 I HOSTESSES. ttartlng Gere•• ••I lar, 01. potenllat 90% com-~Ill I '/'1411 WM/W. , ""' tan leelh ontr Com·
algn Exper nee. Pr•fer I Newpor1 Bctl, Ca 92llllO ......___.It a. 12.,. $6 p/hr Full & pert tlmti Avallat>le 1n Newport plated Warm tNkWOO<I ,.-Pletely rettoreo S31K 1n
atrong computer and/ex LEGAL SECT"\' Hp pref. ___ ._.,.._,_ .. _• ___ ._, Apply In person 1119 An EquaJOpponunlty Beach Experienc e 1nter1orw/cory lrp1c.new rcp1a $111000 llrm
work proceaaln g Word proc dealred Air-lllOfPTllllST Sleepyl\ollow Ln, Lag Employer preferred, but not engine S25,000 C1ll Cellular phone optional
c apablllt tu Salary pon area 851·2'444 Coldwell Banker, N-pon Beach No phone calla IHllHPEI necessary Must have de-todayl631·0807 ~ M u11 -to appreciate
bued on exper & ablllty UUJ.lfOn BeachReald.SaleaOfflcal please need exper person 10 pendable 1rantponat1on, Hobie 16, multi color aall, n ....... 111 •92 2005 493-8617 75
9-
5449
Great benef111. Good W&nlEll worl< near o .c . Alrpon and be over 18 years 010 sell bo •. dbl trapeze, r~ iilw ..... Nie TOYOTA 74 Ce11e1 , rmY LRIL 'i·.mr1~::r.w/~~:ta:,1~-salary for qualified per. Kaplan• Aellaurant In PI T. poaalbly FIT All Seven day delivery wtth equip, many xtraa, wltrtr Q.Oll!D~Y· stereo CllH Afl 5pm
10 key, typing, llllng, misc I caaslng & bllllng oper. ton. Typing required Westmlnller Mall now phases Call Mrs. Hardy, ~~0~0i1~~g_4~~1 ~~~~ EAll cond Secrlflce 964-2358 Mull tell OBO
olc duties. Non amoker atlon. Salary com-Carol Van Riper. Mon-Fri hiring Waltrenea lor 833--0425 day . Friday 642--4333 51950 675•31159 BMW 3201 '80-Killer-car TOYOTA 82 Cellca GT 1
pref Perm PIT, hrt flex. menaurate w/uper
644
•
9060
· E.O.E Evening thltt C1ll Andy NURSERY Interior S."ict~ i.1iJ•Ht~ I 5sp, loaded/a solver white, auto 1 ownr, must I
Prl1Cllla. -" _ --full time Apply In person Ptantscape Maintenance .ffl N.8 . 833-8435 Dianne or I Luisa, 640-8900 IEORn••y p;u•• (714)891-2333 CAIMIH Ii a'tt 7 20 dream s 10.900 631-8000 see $6000 759-1498 _ 1
___ . la)or Orange County Good phone manner, light G l 9530 Metro Car wash, 2950 548-9585 -u~A•R~IN""E""E•a-u"'tP!"!'M"'E"'N"'f-'BMW ·ao 633CS1, ong1na1 Eac:row Flnanclall lnaurence typing. 5 daya a week, 2·3 1 ta111 Harbor Blvd c M ---Gl!age Sale p018111 7200 & perfect inside & out COllEllOIAL/Nlll I Company has Immediate hrs a day Coll-oe atu· SERVICE STATION ' & 2 13 channel redloa Ascot grey w/blk leather Lll.ILln OFFICER I e'unlltry'~~v~·. openings lor dent OK. Call Linda 9 to attendent. Apply Chevron, Olllll OPPOITllITT mlcrologic ML 2000 Air AIT P1S PIB PIW,
.., .,. 5pm. 675-2311 3190 Harbor Blvd, CM PIT & FI T Mature & de-Men or Women with de-Loran c. Furuno FE 400 PIL Sunroof Am/Fm
Must be e)(perlence In ACCOUNTING CLERK SEClln RY p /T p end ab 1 e Ex per pend able ca11 wanted lor deplh sounder, 12 v Ca.as Th1~ car has oeen
these 1ypea of escrows TYPIST (40 wpm) l wl reglster, good refs Dall)' Piiot routes In Hunt· ampllfter Jabaco t t5V t>ab1ed $16 900 Call
Challenging oppor1unlty GENERAL OFFICE M ortuary· will 1 r aln ll llllYIOll 7 · 11 HB Wiii train Ask 1ngton. Mart:>or & Seal water pymp, Lewco 12 v Ken wk days 521-4942 or
wl\lch allows you to utlllze Xln1 benefit peekage & &42-9150 The Orange Coaa1 Dally for Jerry/Laura 536-2722 Beach area Some collec· water pump. bow ball wknd& 854·303•
all of your technical ablll· working condition a. llcn/CHlllUTlll Pilot Is looking lor help In ---lions 1nvotved Cell An 1 k •• 11 h 1 Sh Its Ad s.~·1'-n....1 I Coametotoglsl/Asst Broadstock '""2.•333 an , .... ar n c a r ore DATSUN 81 200SX auto Ilea Tiiie Insurance Ple11e contact Lynn " .. v_,. ...,.,... .... .. _.
1 1
& ,_._
S 7""'7""3 Responsible for small high R~ponsibllltl.... will In· 107 Main St Belboa Uc: power ... ee nca ..,_. pis p b $4250 759. 7099 beek~ound a plus tansfleld, .,.,. "" ""' ""' h ~A d 1~ llShln Co FIN•Ncl•L activity office Good elude pick up and d~ I req Call 675-8412 P one ..,.,r s m.... o • XLN BENEFITS AV " " typing Xlnt tetepf\one I ~ __ -..L IUJI gear Da na Point DATSUN 82 210 Wgn 5 • MERIT INCREASES SERVICES EOE livery of ads pu llng r-7141496-87 11 spd snrt air am rm
• GOOD WORK.G COND PART TllE HELP Basic bookkeeping Wiii tear sheets procesalng I COUISELORS Must have trucil ex van __ _ gd c:ond s4 199 556-9036 •STEADY EMPLOYMNT train res1 557..J.200 ads. and a variety ol 640-9019 Sli,1/Docb/Sttrlft
Call tor eppt afl ollect quertera from llCTY /IFC AISllTAIT 011\er duttes Candidate Part time carrier counsel-7022 9am 5'47·7251 ext 220 vending machines Flex. . must be extremely or-ors wanted Help boys II.I~ I HONDA CRJ '86
Typing, and various office ganized, reapooalbte and 1 and g111s sollclt new Cha1rs1de and minor front BOAT SLIPS AVAILABLE SAFECO TITLE hrs. See our •d In lode~·: duties Mon-Fn 8-Spm able to worL well with I subscriptions on their ottlce Career opportuni· 30 40· 50 SLIPS S 199 down, closed eriu 1 bualnesa oppor: ~· 11tlea s 1 11 b 1 " I Commercial Le••• llSUUICE section under "ALL 11 ary n ego a e 01hers paper routes Muat enfoy ty for mature person as-AYS 646-9000 .....,
S • .Jl lll CASH BUSINESSESS, 64-4-1784 Send resume Attn Lisa working with 10-13 yr slsHng In a pleasant DRY BOAT STORAGE 1 llL•llYlll WSE
•• No Money Down.. -n-Pl-ST/-lllCrPT Smith to olds Early evening hours I estat> 4 expanding den-on 714 /432· 1117
" work days/ llelllble hrs 1a1 pracuc~ m so Laguna the water. Newport Beach I Escrow ---Excellent typing skills a 0111111 CIUT Commission only 1 499•16 11 ask tor Donna Crane Service 7 days a MBZ 78 450SL g511 mt I RESALE OFFICER I must, 65wpm• Xero)( IAILY PILDT Call Bruce Emsley ___ week Call 675-5901 coral 1mmac many •tru Opportunity for ex -pa•T Tllr lier 1u1mr 111 llllYrll $23 800 551 0683 I -an " ~i:i%y pr:.~red Aeb~e P.0, IH 1110 642-4321 ext 206 " " " MOORING 1n NEWPORT · •
perlenc:e resale officer to OIFIOl Wiii lo handle mulUple tasks Otttl .... 01. 12121 I o•a•11 COAST needed lor John W~yne MARBOR lor sale Pnce MBZ 80 SLC ivory w/llhr
lunher their knowledge p h 0 n e S u 1 a n n e 1
_.. Alrpor1 parking ots negotiable 548-1930 tan int, like new, onty and career by working for The Dally Pllo1 Clrculatlon AFTER IAILY PILOT Class II req 261-8'4 79 or -----19 3 50 m, -s3 1 99 s
a long eatabllshed full· office l'leeda a reliable <714l545-6566 Monday· apply 1512 W Main SLIP ftr 21' ~tat 1210. 7s0-0433 or 759.90'44 Mrvlc:e tllle company mature and responalble Friday alter 3PM Street, S.A. 20· $185 Avl Nov 1 233-C
"WE WILL NOT
BE UNDERSOLD"
• XLNT BENEFITS person ror a phone clerk Ttebical/Traha SCHOOL IEUYHY HIYH TUTOR/ HLPH 19th St N B 675-0236 M0~z0:iL0:r5oc:i~ 8~~~;~
1 • MERIT INCREASES 1' position Applicant must 5505 C d t b I Sii A I ble 25 28' 30'
• GOOD WORK'G COND have a good phone per· JOBS lean reeor , mus r ng for 8 & 10 yr olds M·F, ps va1 a . Chris or 673·6320 Lou VOL VO 82 2•5DL S1a110f" 1---------OMV prln1out Costa 3·7pm $4 p/hr Must 32 35 65 3333 W Coast ~ • STEADY EMPLOYMNT
1
sonallty Training wlll be llOUllC B 690 B 9 5 M F TOP SSS PAID I Wagon •81( m1 air ;,Sp Call lex appt at1 provided LMrn veluabte Mesa lueprlnt. 1 have car Mrs Mardy. Hwy N • n· r am/Im cass co;,., e&cel
9am. 5'47-7251 ext 220 ottlce skllla. work wl1h exper needed In El Toro EARN Placentia. CoSla Mesa I 833-0425 or 850· l 400 WANTED Slip lor beaut I For Pampered I cond $8500 67!>-35•5 SAFECO TITLE I n1c:e people and earn Pref knowledge 01 S 27 CAL S Ibo t NB Mercedes Benz
S-4 00 p/hr lo.,.,, Mon-~~i~. 05aiie:~9~::% MONEY Ful~~~'!~"Jt~~~ per •erc~Hiilt UM xchg po:~ &4a2-3245 lllllllTE C&SM v~.LV~ln~2 ,v:;3on$8~5:} llSlllllCE day-Friday 9:00AM 10 lor lunher details week Good driving re-&-• lt"lO Top Mercedes Prtees Paid 675 5222 1
2 OOPM Pleue call PRIZES cord 8 must s4.$<4 25 hr nahSIH wv Ca rt 1014 Cati Peter or Ray lllfl hi I Eiieen to .schedule an •P. , tips Apply dally at Me Early Amerlcen 3 drawer •J' llltsl IF llNITI VOL VOS 121 79 A 80 W ••o1n••y P<>tntment 642 4321 Ext TJPllETTH/ Ed' p 17 h & chest 2'"'' Wide S225 71 9 cab over camper I DLs E.icce1 mape 10 m, OITIYI--20 EOE -· · TRIPS & 1 Ina, t OBO :O•o-"'931 sell-contained w /new 4lal IUOllll 1oaoeo $3300 & S5300 C M Law offlc:e &45-4044
4
Plln IP &ITIST Tusttm CM __ "'"_"'_ lacks E.xll c:ond 12000 213cx 714637-2333 call 67~·9565
WIHYAUIUIU
USED CARS & TRUCKS
COME IN OR CALL FOR
FHIAPPUIW.
DeLILLO
e1m1Ln 18211 BEACH BLVD
HUNTINGTON BEACM
147-1017;141·1111
CHEVY 74 Nova. 30ll orig.
loaded S 1800 ot>o Man
E•M 642--0251
CHEVY 81 El Camino,
white atnt cond, xlnt
l'lautong "0· S5000 nrm
493-86 17
::IOOGE 63 Den CON-
vE RTtBLE clean otaulc
S2800 751-7154
wtW&STYMI
ClWISllUll See Tony Rajel
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
2060 HAl&Oa lllVO
COSTA MESA 642 0010
FORD ·94 T ·Bird flan. lllnt
cond lo m1, loaded ,.,._
sume 24 mo IN No W
down 760-6533
•u.au
CIEIHElC1C
Tl'11s ? Of comes with p/a,
.ctra cap It* lank. ale
prep & more (Ser •0002}
'"" ORANGE COAST
.1eep1 Ranaun
2~24 ~arbor Coate Meaa
IU-H21
.: •••••• ~.. I . 1·11 PDm~. Immediate opening lor ltll.erla1 .... IRIYHT Arrliaact1 6011 Obo 1145-6254 .,, 5pm. MERCEDESs8 190SL vw ,. Bug Qd cond •un'.11
exper typesetter Mutt llJLY PILOT Oftver. must have own car I llY UPllAIOEI work/pager 95'4-H.45 / 'vory lully restored m/out weil neeo5 work s 1000
1 nave have m ark-up ' I I Call Charlie at 758--0668 LES 957-8l33 CAMPER SHELL tor tong MINT $15.000 854-0870 000 8•0·9'61 hi 2pm
exper , Pat1e-up back· tn,a,.r. -----t>ed small truck wood 4 S •99 Down Clo.ec end
• ground helpful Xlnt t>en-II you are looltlng for extra Hllll I *SALE! SALE!* arum Asking S200. call ~ vw '8 Sc•rroc '"'"'S e;Mmerc•at lea.N • PART TIME • ellta tnc:ludlng medical & spending money, or like Experienced Dental ASSIS· S 29 & U 641·2983 alter 1 pm grf'a l'l'luSt S8t' $2500 ALL SAWllS LIAlf
OLDSMDllLE
1915
• dental Insurance, con-to go places llke Magic I 1ant tor Laguna Beach 01-1 Relngera1ors ~ 9 4 UP ooo •a•o 760<.1tc11,1
71
• ... , ....
2
• lHT • OFFJ~E ..,ORK • emal iltmosphere Con-Mountain Knolla Berry llce 3·~ days per~ Washers 9 P fllttorcyclt1/ , SC. ROCCO ~ •• , • ._,. WW • fact Alissa. 642-432 t ext Farm or win Prizes and 497-6565 I o.ryers. gas/etec $99 4 Up Scootera 1011 v'!' ~P~ ~.r ..,.,..,. .,.,.:i.~ UNIVERSITY __ _ • : 1 Awards Call us now• We - --Complete Line ot Home ~~~-.!!"""~~~--•• •
29
have se'veral openings in I DRIVERS • cross country, I Furnishings' HONDA ·fa 250. clean I *I I 'll UO SLC $JJ50 646--0564 CILOSMOBtLErHONDA OUlll Ol&IT c M H B or F v no exp nee Calll Jlc req ALL APPLIANCES runs .1n1 $400 650-6429 S • ' r e 0 v w 11;i q 3bo 1 c-,11 WE llY OAIS
: The DaLly Pilot Circulation Office: llJLY PILIT 642-4333 1~3e1c:gtai'e~ll~~~~· Fully l1ar11tH• HONDA 74 four 20K mo I ie'a:h" ~e~u111i:': con<1 .. 11 ... -..1 "' .,,,;r~ TOP HLW
••needs a r eliable, mature and respon-: 330 w Bay Street ATHLETIC bctllHI Ce .. ltlH very good cond $500 service rec.s 1v• wa r S?!>OC )(l(I .. .., 118 ,. FOR ISEI CAIS
Costa Meta, Ca, 92627 Resp persons tor new Hot llllYElll Wllnl UNIQUE FURNITURE Call 760-9195 ranty 10274299 vw 83 Wt's11alon t.<\mcu • 6:>0 HARBOR BL VD ••sible person lo Vf'rify new orders. NO•• •2 •• 21 Spots opening 1n oc Exper not nee Wiii 1ra1n 1947 S Main St L . 9010 ,Lease or 011y w~•t"
1 0
,.,, .. c •'11 ~ t.OSTA MESA
_ _!~ ·•• -I Good driving record Must have econ ven & Ins 1 Santa Ana Aate tlll DI 121,115 r ... , s 11 100 6411 46'. "40-964-0 :SELLING. : S.ln 5510 req'd Good pay Ben or Cell for info 756-1912 I Btwn Edinger & Warner on •H llSUI SHTll& 1 Jll IUIOIS vw AASB t tlt Qlrl<; • :>ronado 73 rbll
• Appli1·ant mus t have a good phone•, looe•ff•1 l.,llHfft11 j Kim 650•9435 EASY ASSEMBLY WORK• Main St See thOe Bear• $ 117 46 /mo llPOllTS ~e·· r ,,. ...r , .•4• t"T • .., "<II; • .:J• 1ea1n mtr lilny1
t Allen Students Earn $600 00 per 100. Guaran-111-122 • •OO 1 OUAIL s r 'II o .. ~, .,o e• "' ~' c: • 1 ..Jaoeo No~ muffler :personality. Training will be pro vided.: l1rall1l•tfitrHI s 100-s200 wk ly PIT teed Payrnent No e..IOi>en t0-6Sun 12·5 ·tax 48mos CEL OAC 833.9300 i~J 111 ~-.. 'R:I. ..c ~ ·s 631-3368
.Learn Valuable Office Skl.lls, work Wt.th• ·~~~~c;:~d ~E~:~L~ 6'45-5760 Aft 2pm Gas perlence/No Sates· O&-I Retrigs200 Washe•'dryer SOUTHE~~ c:~i 1 -------------.,
a "' stamped envelope $ 00 p 1 TV s 125 22 enter 1111e
• • t •TRIUM COURT In Station Jobs tails send sell-addresaed $145 each dishwasher A9U2T20CB KO TODAY Is • · eople and earn $4 25 per hour t o • Newport Fashion Island WYSlmll 1Er1r1 I on c r Et r • nice p . • c II 213/457 3264 " " ELAN VITAL .903 ' All In xlnt COnd 646-5848 oro
•start' M onday-f'nda v, 4:30 to 8:30.! a --·--~-~~·~~1182;~~ 3~n~r~!:iRd Ft w as11er1Dryr MaV1 ao 3 11 1·1IH CROSSWORD PUZZLE 0 ...,. HIAVll HUIUIS yrs old $75ea Relr1g 4 W.ffl Drin Jeeps •, at 6:00 to l :30 am . : Los Angela· Oldest Jew· l&LIOl l&J OLll GOVERNMENT JOBS w11ce-ma1<er s150 etc 9030
I E h d I elers IS ~Ing pan time WHERE CARING S 16 040-$59,230/yr Now Sectional sota $ tOO ---------• Please cal ileen to sr f' u e an• sales personnel ror eve-IS THE CUSTOM M111ng Call 8051687-6000 Bdrm set $150 760 ;471 •11 ilHP
• • n1ng & Sundays 1n their E1u A· 1590 for current
!appointment. 642-4321 •' new At r ium Cour1 lllMT lHITll federal list h rait•H 6014 CllHOIEE
• Fashion Island Store Tll1s 2 Dr comes w11h P s •• EOE •. Contact Mr Balley at IHI IPA lTIHlllT Mllll/FHlllH lllUS Beaut 4 PC 9018 group all •Ira c.ap fuel 1an~ a c.
ACROSS
644-5764 llEOn/lll. 110 Male/ Female 730-0291 ' maiching Earthtone prep & more tSe• ~ ooo: 1 • • • • • • • • • • • • ·~ • • • • • • never used S285 Color OLrlll TYPISTS I 9.5 Tues· Sat SIHI FLORIST ro 25 JC Penny s TV Solid T
DIMES
A
LINE
WANT ADS
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO
PRIVATE PARTIES
Sell your ltem1 lor $50 or less In
our famou1 DIMES-A-LINES pub-
lished each Saturday In tM Dally
Piiot
DIMES-A-LINE ad1 muat be
pre-paid 10 mall or bring th•m Into
th• Dally Pilot offlc.. S. tur• to
lnclud• your phon• numbM or Id·
drn. In your I d, h•v• • prletl on
H eh ltftm & no lbbr•vl•tlonf..
Sorry, no oomrrtflf'Cl•I Ml•. QM.,,. ,.,.., produc., pl111t1 or animal•
.,.. MX:ept•b'-
DEADLINE:
12 Noon Friday
Coet• ,.... omo.
1 ,.
Sat & Sun over 18 yrs old, I llAJI I llllEIH HIRlll IOW Staie wood c.abtnel 4 ORANGE COAS
C ~ •5 5000 520 yrs old $175 579-7524 Jeep Renaull , ~ no e1tper nee 650-2515 all .,.. • ellt S8 05 p/hr 10 start 2524 Harbor Costa Mesa
,. " '. .......
lllCHRY FARMS
Opportunity to earn extra
money aelllng gourmet
looda & gifts for Mlldays.
Flex. hrs Wiii train Wesl·
cllff Plaza. 642-0972
HOUSEPLANT SALES
P/tlme. Wknds
Hrs flex. 645-0210
-.... HIOLlll
I part time eves Call bef
noon. lrvlne 786-8222
J IUUllUTmPIT
Wl1h Angel's Brian Down-
ing, NBA'• Jamel WllkM
and All Am«k:an Ann
Meyerw In OrM l Ameri-
can Heel1h Nutrition
Own your own Netwo<k
buslneu elong lid• of
dozen• of great athi.t1e1
Ol«l -0788 E/1142·7'4.34
:9;Df~
t At,..,.,,.,."••#
~~, •~'tft
lmagee IMklng I P•r1·
time Salee AMl1tant to
work ...... 1wtcnd1 fOf one
01 the nneat Haltmerk
llortta In the U 8 II you
nave hlgtt 1tand11d1 an<!
enJoy d H llno with
~. we want to mMt rou. P1MM ca.11 Jullen at
831-NH for an ~t
SALES HELP
FIT &/or PIT ..,_ pot.
ltlon fOf t\ln nautk:M Qlfl I
01othlt1g •tore !"xper
r:>ref"d Chet'let' Loctttt, \/la Lido, Nwpt 97M230
SERVICE STATI~
S.IM ,._90f'I, FIT Of PIT,
.....,, comm1M1on '*'9
beneitte. Appty-: CMYron,
25t0 ~ INoO, C M
nlTlllllY
8\0N In CclM Medi S-.
P9rton, FIT. 5 DeY9 Xlnt wor111f'9 ooncte. ~~ fine Client ... 17~1010
Mon-Fri 9·4 Sheri I Several opening avail. Cherrvwood trlple dresser 141-1023
Banking w/Reglonal Corp. Must with mirror. 2 nlte stands. IPPlllTllmH t>e 18 plus, students OK. 5 drawer cne11 , gd cond Tracks 9035
no exp nee Call 3-~PM, S350'bes1 ottr &41-8380 '11 FO'RO ti U rS22601 lYllUIU Santa Ana 541-8878 , • ... '· OOllEllOHAH Fullerton 526-6622 I IUY FUHITlllE With 8 cabover camper 1 • Suc~·utul & growing In· H B 964-2890 for appt LES 957-8133 ($2,450 together\. wnn
""" 1acks. sleeps S Runs dependent Newport Ni1cellHM.. 6015 good new c1u1cn. starter
Beach business bank hH HOUSE CLEANERS Nd batler-y master cyltnde•
1he lotlowlng openings High energy people to AN I U r ad.. 84 1 &4 7' a1te1 5 JOom UP. u . nLLER ciean bthrms, wndws, eto derback rocking chr _
South Coaal Regional ofc in track times 548--062 1 Capt desk Pine Break-1 'll llTSll P.I .
'
.• .I •_.8Tlll ----front Shaving atand Long t>ed 5 spd 5 1000 •~ "'"Q"
rii:-Make oilers 673-3493 631.8676 '" " ~-
South Coatt R-olonalolc USE THE FIRE WOOD Pine $175, V ~-1 ~ .. ~·~ ·: .. fLIATill nLLll DAILY PILOT Oak S239 a cord HI 9040 ,. , , ".l ~
Sou1h Cout & Newport "FAST (619)47t--08111 n vw Cempet Van '°" '" ,.,,. .. " . .,.,
Beech Off~ I $ 00 gone. took my mone~ "· M ••"I •" PIMf IPllATll RESULT" King oak headboetd 1 but left hlS 9'1r1 11\1 van l" '>•C" " t• ~
Newport BHch hH d · SEAVICE Crib $50 673•3493 tooks & runs great must ·01• •
querter1 office UNIV ATMLETIC CLU aee Make otter Wkd'f$ ,.,.,.,.,,
Satery comrMnaur11e with DIRECTORY rnemt>erm1p S800 Sel 9.5 673-1070 " '"' """'
HP«' Kint b41nefll• For Resu l t to P•Y 1ran1le< , .. Diet< 70 vw VAN GOOd run ·~ ........ ~ HllHaUll ServtC'e Call or Ear!Mn 557•5234 n1ng cond SHOO eve
111·HOO 642-5671 j fi'ttt. TH -102 650-5201 and w1mds
EOE MIF/V/H A ora le aby 111.,,1 • DODGE 73Tredeeman
After School -
Student Jobs !
Do You Need • Cash S And
A Good Job To Start The New Year?
We are looklng for Jr. High and High
School atudenta and others who would
enjoy talking wtth people and working
wtth other atudenta thefr own age. You
cen Mtn $25.00 to $&0.00 each ~ In
commlltk>na and MUCH MOREi You cen
wont PART TIME In the attemoona and
9Vef'llnga and 11111 haYI pfenty of ,, .. time.
You MUST BE FREE AFTER SCHOOL!
We offtr complete traJnlng and provtde
trentPOrtatlon Thia la NOT A PAPER
AOU'tE ANO IS NOT SEVEN DAYS A
WEEKI Come out and help UI get new
cuetomer• tor our ~ and l'laYI • C ' time d°'ng It. You have nothing to
and 1 .uper job to gain. CIJI today
and m1yb9 you cen 1t1r1 te>fn«rowl
Call Mr Earl
Hl~70W or 241-1432
many color• to B·200, 311<> eng, ne""'
lrom 5wtt1 otd 662· l paint auto, 1 ton runa
mint S 1750 548-8110
SURF'ER VA.N-;_~VW
Van runa 1dnt. 0110 owner. welt maint Sink,
Gab, lee boK $360() fOf
tu t .... , 951-2561 an
8pm Uk tor Sue
----------!.---------.J.= .. _.,.. .. __
II
OOWH
., ...
"
• I
• I ..
,,. ...
• • ,, •t ... t .. ""' .. ,,
1• u,... -• . '(\· .... , ....
Jf, llAllu ~I
P'I( VIOVS PVZZLE $0L YEO
.· .. •"'
' I •
I •
"'I•
,,
'"' ".41 •• • ~.
I L'O•·
... ""'"""' Col :xv p
SI A .r or11t
.a >tfl'O. s tun
'"' BOO\ tel
!I. l'ltet> c a rpel
~e '>tu"' on~
~Q ~ ., P<•'
6( E tl l()t ' WOfl)
f;• fur "8110t'
12 1
•
Orllna. Coelt CWL V PILOT IT~. OctoOer 22, 1MS f=~ .. ~~c~.~~:i==~"~.~c~•=n~g;:=~~ .. ~E~•=l'ICl::=--r=i::,...:::c~m~1U~~'T=~~::;::==::r-:==:=:::!=====r===~=====r-==========-MUC llJYU MUC "°111 NlJC N01lCl
-------
LIQALNOTICa ~~1~1 ~~!LI John.~~........., ~tr-~ =-==-~e:==A~I: -==:Mm ~'°=·~··:-..cnncM~
NOTQ II HEREBY POUJHO PLACE: ,........ eon CL.!AK: "A -.... Mo Pit ~. ....... a.Moe. ,_.... °' N()H.EXQ.UalVI !Alf. LACK Oii ~n The~.,.._..,.. --ITAW GMN that ll the f:,..e.tboe SM1Qll ' JUOO!:, 8 0 an.. CLIM: I J •• I ...... w 16ttl at TNac ,... r1eflt, ...... find MIHT8 flOA AOCU8 IN-0.0.'hlto AIM cltt•. a dolr'9 ~ -• ...,. The taloWll'IO pareone -~ ~ tNSPECTOFt AL rrv. &e~ ~~ ~~=.!..,.. N8PECTOft E w Vin-==~::r:c ~=r~~-1:'.-E~ ~~.:: ~?u~u~: ~: _, to ... ·-._.. ~ ......... port Mo Pll au~ UOOE: I NOi • ptoperty .. IOt ... AN 0 , 0 ,. • 0 T H e iri vtcMll. find Land Cofn.. Ana. CA t2T07 Paulattno A\19., ..... t4t, ...._S.1M6.thepol9 JUDGE: F 8 Ackl9y PAEC1""1: 11__..1 00S W 17th 8 • ·..-rr• IUbtlc1 to any PfW V9ld PUAPOIH All Al pany, a ~ It~ MhoMll = CoN Mw. CAl2t26 ~-~ °""A."°"'M. to!'! CCl'L2KK:: Ep IM,.~ d~u~ •• ~ .. l.A.2_E:,. ~11. lH8PECTOR: ~ M Mam-~. v" !.~ OUllllanclng ~IOll• .. SHOWN IN °THi CON·1S*fl••· Wld wHcfl ,_Slit ....... Dr.. Dan 8. HtyH. 1&0 -.,. 1!00 ' .... ig.n ~· ·-..... .,__ &V -"" ,_.,.,.._ GUl'll4WW .... °'. OCflW ..,. DOM.IHIUM PLAN AHO Alf~ on "' ~ .. ,..... CA IMH PIUlaflno, Ste. '42, eo.ca ... of i:oo p .. Ind PRECtNCT: 11~1-1 w~ pt meno INCT: , , ...... 1 "' fllV'Or of third. pantm DEFINfD IN THI! DECL\"-*.!1r~ Hlahwli.Y, SM fllle ~,... le oon-...... CA 12t2e ttlllt ~ thoiehow-. POLLING PLACE: INSP!CTOR:MJYamel JUOGE:OVPtnbtaff l.UHO PLACE.:~ ~h~ttlat ... ATION "'*'..;;t;~Cellfornla duc'ledby.enlndMduel Norma J. "'Ir· 150 the~_.. tot the Hetbor Otat Ottlol, 1901 JUOOE: ME Yarnel gt=:: ~ ~ ~ JM.a Qubhouee, ~:.._"':., ~": ::c~~E CASEMlNTa :.... 3', 1114. o.-~=-.::..n, .._ flied ~· ~ 1 2, Com
reepeictlV• preolnott ~ Df CLERK: 8 Frank : .enyon ~ Dr ~ for ..... ..._.. •·· IN ANO ~0 ...,..,...., ......... 0...Vlefe A .... a. .... wtttl Iha County a.ti of Ot· flllt bullneee 1t con-lhell ... "'-pt.,. _,.. INSPECTOR: 0 J CorMll CLERK: R Wood PRECINCT: 11~ 1 •NSPECTOR: DA Ottver eno ... ,. .. find wt1tlout ,. T-Of I ·o'T ........ 1 ...:-. ~s ..... .,, .,....... '· ... ,II "' -IU1Q9 County on OctOber 18, ducted "'-: • -~· .___ -...-. --JUDGE: LA Mornan PRECINCT: 11-84•·1 POl.LINO Pl.AC!: UOOE: l. F No6end __...... ......_ ~ vr ""u in.elll · 1118 w 7 • ---
·----· .... ·-· Kl~ ............... ,.. ....... 00Uf'M8tat ... No-:.:: .. ~~ TMOT106268HOWNAH.D ~ .......... --, --~8.H•·-thet the.......,_ Mreln-CLERK: LR Pratt POLLING Pl ACE: _,.,.....,.e-.. ....... .,. ..., L.ERK: Q M ........ .,..... ... , --· DEFINID ··~T .. .,.,..... ----...-· -. r-...,, ,,_
...---Cl.ERK J M Bait &.nttey Aelld«loe 170 ~· Ln CLERK 0 W Otlver ranty, ~ «= ~COMMON A WH'te"H ,.. Pubhhed Ot11ng1 CoMt flllt tt.iiament waa flied :='..., ~ W:r :; PRECl~CT: 1 Ms;;., The Mutera Cir ' INSPECTOR: O L GllY'f'Of PRECINCT:l. 11-tn-1 la made• to the °' ARI AOJAC!NT WITH AHO 9't ~ UIMI Ct...-wJ, Delly Pllol October 2.2, 29. wttll the County CWtc o1 Ot·
ellct6on for thW POLLING PLACE : INSPECTOR: V L Terry JUOOE: l. M ~ POLLING PLACE: the tttt., ~tty, APPllAT!NAHT TO SAID 9'1....._,lt. ..... GM-NOWtnb«6. l2, 18&& enQll County on s..>temb« thl9=preclno19~ Rubina Aeeldenoe. 46 JUDGE:HLLundell CLl!RK:VPRlngi.r Kr•utier RHldenoe, ~l.t~~.0tlta:. 8CPA~~t.aDH11!.2R,1!3l,NA.H050f· '1.~lof)er 7,1N5 T-Nt l l ,1N8 ,_ -..._,... ' Bffeon W~ CLERK: E 8 &.nt'-' CLERK: V l ,,_...,, 2524 Cdby Pl f "'v"' .................... ,,.._ "'-··t
tlonu_, --'"""mekMlde ~urn INSPECTOR: TR Rubina CLERK: 8 I! &.nt;z PRECINCT: 11-M7-t INSPECTOR: E A At>-'*' ot ~ uee °' purpoee. PAACEl. 6· ,...,.,,..._, "'llnQI ....,.. 1--------Publllhed Ot11ng1 Coefl -"' ••• _, POl.l.I~ Pl.AC· ,.. __ .. No m.im " ~*' AN )JNDiVIOEO ONE Dally Piiot October 2.2. tH& .. _IC llnJICE Dally Pll01 OCtob« 1, •. 16, tt1weof In the manner JUOOE: L M RublM PRECINCT: 11-845-1 fTI,;11 .. : ...--.. plegat. for allowMOe Of .c1~tl'l'Mlflt frll'TY·FI"" (1/tl8TH) FEE T-IN ... _ "" 22, tN&
by laW The fol-CLERK: R s Sergent p 0 LL ING p LA c E: Reeldence, 3104 V'V\ JUOO~ A E Kreutnt : fX fot 1eeclealon of lhe .... SIMPLI IHT'l:AUT IN AND l-&86 ta lie f CLERK: L E Sargent Remoe Reeldenoe, 213 Buren Av CLERK: G C Sanden bM8d on'*"-of h prop-TO THE IMPAOVEMEHTil "8JC NOTIC( MOTICI °' tAU
predncta ; ~ o Che PRECINCT: 11~23-1 Santa IMbel Av INSPECTOR: D R Coad CLERK: E M MMMY .ny IO oonforrn with any ex-ANO APPURT£NANCE8 ON °!T~~ f1t11UC fl)TlC(
.,... of• ~~ POLLING Pl.ACE: Ham-INSPECTOR: CT Hohl JUDGE: C Cofllna PRECINCT: 11-o80-1 :=u:n. ~P~:~ t?~P~O~~I 1~f MOTICI Of' c... No A 120 ~2 lMlled ...... oe.trtct mond Garage Rttl-• JUOOE: G S Ramoe CLERK: E M lAwt9 POLLING PLACE: Smith Alghte: The rlgtlta of ,... JECT TO THE TERMS ANO LA~~ SuP9flOf Coun of the K.....a
denoe, 210 Opal Av CLERK: 8 J Snow CLERK: S Ono Reeldenee. 3041 Don-demptlon, u epeolfted In CONOIT10H8 OF THE MM-L. A. Vlllaot A.teoclaM. State of Cellfomu. fOf the PICTTTIOUt ._ ..
PRECINCT· 11-ec>M INSPECTOR: C W But· CLERK: H B Trompeter PRECI~: 11~1 nybrOOk L.n lntemel ~ ooct. Seo-TEA LEASE "ECOROEO ~ture ~ ; ~~~~ lhuetate T~':!.,.
p 0 l. l IN 0 p LA c E. t9fWOt1h POLLI Pl.A ; INSPECTOR: c p Mer-tlon e337, .,.. ~ed .. fol-8110/58 IN IOOt< 4133 Pannera. a Cfill. of "'. ~ .YNE HINSON .. _ dolnO ~tlMM •: THE A JUDGE: P J Corcoran PRECINCT: 11-848-1 Strwt School. 3100 ron !Owe: Sec. W1. Aectemp-PAOE 274 ET SEQ. OF OF~ fomla general. pennerlhlp ..._""'-· ._. LAS =~ct.ice. 290e CLERK: M 0 Hammond POLLING PLACE: Wood St JUOOE: v M Ntxon tton of ~ot*1Y. (•) a.t~ FICIAl RfCOAOS. find Vlefo lend Company, ;. °'=-,. hWeby Qlv.I that ~~ 1~.~ c!;.0 ~ 2J!
INSPECTOR· G p •CLERK: VS Snow Rea&dtnoe, 873 Begonle INSPECTOR: M J CLERK: 8 J Teytor s.ie. Arl'I pert0n whoM The ..,_ addrw and Caltfornla llmlMd pertner· 1M undeltlgoed Will ... at 92828
ClilMtt . PRECINCT: 11-624·1 Av Thatcher CLERK: CA Smith ~ '::. ';:' ~ r:,.~ ~= ~'4 =Ith;:_~ pnva .. .-. on or efter Oo-Jaca E. Mlflnken. 1aoot
JUOOE: p A Green POLLING PLACE: Cleary INSPECTOR: PM Fowler JUOOE: TM De.nape PRECINCT: 11.e91·1 pey the amount due, dHorlbed ebo ve It teg11Higtrnyltdlte0Nedef. tober 25, tie&, et the offloe SantaYnaz. Fount.in V~.
•CLERK· ME Wu.llct< RHldence. 301 The JUDGE: J L Wood CLERK: MA Roblee POLLING PLACE: Kutz togeths with the upeneea purported to be: 419 tectl\le Dectfnber Sl, 1.,.... of S«:uftty Pacific N•tlonal CA t2708
Cl.ERK· KE ClltMt1 Grand Canal CLERK: LS F.ntr CLERCK: BE Crfff!" R.lldenct, 3013 Grantl of the prooeedlng, 11 wry, to IRVSON SPRINGS, COSTA Atofthat~.nopertMr ~.~~.= 8;~~~=:;~= PAECINcT· 11-eo2 1 • 1NSPECTOR: P J Cleary CLERK: M J Kallnlte PRE INCT: 11-.....-1 AYf the S«nCary It lnY time MESA. CA 82127. In the joint vent\n Nit Mra .• ,.... ...... r...._.. ...... , to the CA 92704 ... ,
POW...,,. P.l.ACE· F."--t JUDGE: J A CROZIER PRECINCT: 11-847-1 POL LINO PLACE: INSPECTOR: E A Pap.-priortotheN6ethereof. and The undaltloiled TruatM -.n~ to bind the joint vi.,,......_...., T 1
Rm ._. . ,_ a CLERK: E E Smoot POLLING PLACE: Pant BrOOkvtew ClubhouM, pea upon Mlfl payment the Seo-dllclelme any tliblllty for MY ¥enture. The t11COeMOf tn ~ ":;:' =~ ~ 1
1
due:;, ~u~ 1~ c:
2"14 Bluf .,£1uOrbhoouH. CLERK: H C Bernard Rtetdtnct. 105e San 830 W Paularfno Av • JUOOE: TM Jonea retary ahal1 ,..or• eucll lncon.atneea of the strwt lnt...i to the joint Yentura. ~~Court. all ..... :{, Jildl E M~. Tonl1 l . ~ ......, INSPECT 0 R E M Pf°'*1Y to him. end ell ~ Ind other oommon The lllCOeMO' In Int-I to .._.."" '..,.. M INSPE R· A E Cat• PRECINCT: 11-62$-1 Pablo Cir : CLERK: E R Kutz fur1her i>rooeecllngt 1n con· deelonatlon, 11 any. lhOwn the joint venlur•'• ~ title 11nd lntereet of Mk' cs. ehnken JUDO B F .Helpbrl,..._ P 0 l LING PLACE: INSPECTOR: M G PANE Stanley CLERK: VE Cunningham nectlon wttll tlle i.vy on tue11 hereJn. It l0t Alleol VIM-OMled It time of dMth, Md I Thia tt.iement w .. ftled
CLERK· F S Ed nd·w~ MoMS Residence, 2025 JUOOE: E B Bundy JUDG£: H E Navarre PRECINCT: 11-892-1 property 111.i1 oeue from Said Nie wilt b9 "*'-· bUt eoolat•. -..... A-. all rlgflt, title Ind lnttt•t the , with the County Clertt of Or·
; mu ton E Balboa Blvd CLERK: P Diamond CLERK: PD Navarra POLLING PLACE: #2 the time of llUClll payment. without oon_,.,,t or war· LA. V-... •uulitt •t•t• 1181 llddttlonally ao-ange County on Sec>tamber ~~~~~~T~ 1~~~ • 1NSPECTOR: G G Allen CLERK: VS Nuechttrltln CLERK: K B Cutro Art StatlOn, 800 Baker Effect of Junior Encum-ranty, expreee or Implied,,.. 9'i ..,..._. ,....,.., " ~~~..:~~ -::,=:'.;. 25· lN6 r.1..U
POLLING Pl.ACE· East· JUDGE: A M Mau PRECINCT: 11-643-1 PRECINCT: 11~70.1 St brano-. S.C. M39(c). Ett«:t gardlna title, pocrmlon, or ~ ...... ..-inw· tl'le County of 0t11ng1, State PubOlhed Otange Cout
bluff Terr Clubhoute •CLERK: EM MOM9 POLLING Pl.ACE: Black· POLLING PLACE: Chr of INSPECTOR: .R 0 of Junior EncumbrMOM. A encumbrlnOM, to pay the ahlp, •1: Douglu P. of Callfornta,partlcularlyct. Deity Pll01October1, &, ltl,
8 .... ,L Amlaoa w ' CLERK: A J Pistole Wiii Ra.ldenoe, 3364 Ne-Chrlat, 287 W Wiiton St Humphrey oertlflcateof..,.of1*'10nel remaining prlnc:lplJ tum of _.......,. ti 1Cir1bed u tottowt, to wh: 22. 1985
I NSPECTOR·"H M PRECINCT:11...e2&-1 vedaAv INSPECTOR: R NJUOOE:MMHumphrey ~~::=;t:.=~~g:.;~~,=."~fl..,9: 1~:t•d: Septem~r 2 • PARCEL1: T-8e6
Largent . POLLING PLACE: Ebetl INSPECT 0 R • V I Stewart CLERK: R 0 Lee1tr purauant lo eectlon 8333 ttier.on ... provided 111 Mid -,: Yleto lMtd c.,..,,, THE SOUTHEASTERLY
JUDGE· 0 K Hunts-Clubhouse, 515 w Beh~ JUDGE: s R TudOt CLERK: 0 A Newklrtt thall dlechllf09 Midi prop-noter. ldv•nOft, If any, • c ................. ,..: ~2·r FEf OF LOT 7 ANO
t>er . Balboa Blvd JUDGE: EM Gatcomb CLERK: T 0 Adklna PRECINCT: 11--893-1 erty from all Hens, fnQUm-under tl'le terms of the DMd _.....,. 9J: AnlfNlftr ft H N ATHWESTERL y C~· F S Raftetto INSPECTOR: R Remley CLERK: ES KMme CLERK: MG TUM1.all POLLING PLACE: t>ranc.a. end tltlN owr of TNtl feet chergee and MoM ~t~K~~F ~~~~TN~.': ACORD
OrHH N orn:£~
CLERK:. C M McClu-JUDGE: L V Belcher CLERK; M L BleckWlll PRECINCT: 11..t71· 1 Neighborhood Rec. wtlk:h the llen of ll'le Unlt«I ex~ of the Trutt• and Deted: OCtot>et 7, 1N6 IN THE CITY OF SEAL G' .,.,.,,., '" CLERK J Ber PRECINCT 11-649-1 "-•~ 5 P Stat• wltll reepeot to which of the truatt «Mted by Mid Publllhed Otange Cout BEACH. COUNTY OF OR-.1...i:...n 1" V • ACORD, a PRECINCT· 11--604-1 : ·g : POLLING Pl.ACE: eo.1a .._, ... • HM artc Aw !!!., i.vy 11181 made tied prj.. 0Md of Trutt. to-wit: n..1"' Piiot October 22, 1915 d f 1 ........ ..
POLLING P. LACE·. KNI· CLERK: 0 M Reynolds POLLING PLACE: Har-Meu CUy Hall, 77 Fair Of INSPECTOR: M G Hen· ~ .. 1 I tOi7 ...... 37 .,_, T • ANOE, STA TE OF CALI-res&. ent O ..._. ... -
Ing ReaJdence 2807 Alta PRECINCT: 11-627·1 mon RMldenot. 18591111· INSPECfOR: p A Ctuae drlck9on °"'9e .... ..._Of. ~~underlald -oM FOANIA, AS SHOWN ON A Beach for 52 years.
Vlata Of ' POLLING PLACE~ Hew· nolt St JUDGE: NA Stan9ftekj JUOOE: H H Moor fleer, 2'to A•ll• ltd., DMd of Truet her• '?fore eii-MAP RECORDED IH BOOK Puaed away Sunday
INSPECTOR: M c port Elem School, 1•th & INSPECTOR: J 0 Har-CLERK: R l Hall CLERK: RA SllYey L..-....... CA .m, acuted lllld dellYered to lhe • Pt8.lC NOTJC[ ~E(~~ioJs ~=PSMl~N October 20, 1985
Stelnhaua Balboa Blvd mon CLERK: EA Hall CLERK: A Aeynolda A"": car..p J7 undettlgned 1 wntten Dec> NOTICI OP THE OFFICE OF 0THE Survived by his wife,
JUDGE: MB Maradudln INSPECTOR: B L JUDGE: L F Slebela PRECINCT: 11--872-1 PRECINCT: 11-e84-1 D~':*'0ct~ C:: l••tlon of Default and 0. DtMOLUTIONAND COUNTY RECORDER OF Ellen daughtera
CLERK: R H Logan McCarthy CLERK: D L Guatahlon POLLING PLACE: ~ POUING PLACE: Cout .T .aa:s = ~ ~~ ~-::.: LAC« Of' A~ SAID COUNTY, TOO ETHER E ' C · ' CLERK: BJ Crone JUDGE: EM Shlriey CLERK: J J Eoonomakoe 1ege Partc School, 2380 Cot Dist omot. 1370 llon toW Theundertlg.ned 0 M. Aaaoci.t•. •joint WITH THAT PORTION OF Ileen hadick, •
PRECINCT: 11-60$-l CLERK: A B Petersen PRECINCT: 11...e50-1 Notre Dame Rd Adema Av Pt8.lC fl)TlC( <*Med ~ Notice 01 0.-lleflture conalatlng of Viejo THE NORTH HALF OF THE Glenda Acord; grand-
POLLING Pl.ACE· Spa CLERK:AVCasala 1POLLING PLACE: INSPECTOR: AM Gib-INSPECTOR: L W Vin· feullflndE.lection toSetlto UlndCompany,1 Callfomla ALLEY, 12.00 FEET IN children , Bryan
Con, Rm 5000 · Park PRECINCT· 11·628-1 Sherwn Wiiiame, 3161 bona --t ......... ~ No. -... ... b9 rece>fded In the county llmltld p1nner1lllp, end WIDTH, ADJOINING THE Chadick and Alida
.... I ',_ --_..... 8'Ythor•ISlmptor1 Corp • SOUTHWESTEAL y LINE OF . Newport ' POLLING PLACE: Lido Harbor Btvd JUOOE: HE Lw •JUDGE: L F Hamltton Tr--. .... ..._ lf.111t; wller'8 the reel Pf°'*1Y la Claillornl ·:..,.,SAID LOTS, VACATED MAY Ayala; sister, Ila
INSPECTOR: R G Wella Park Rec Clubhouae, INSPECTOR: R W CLERK: I Kipper CLERK: EL Vincent .....,,..-=~4111 ~l~ 101,.,85 bval:.ni: ~ ~ t8, 1918 BY RESOLUTION Johnson; and nwner-
JUOOE: R Schechter 710LldoParl<Or Cartaotl CLERK:MMMlhr CLERK:VF~ TRUelD'aaAU Wla PAC "'· 1truct1on Company, and OF THE BOARD OF oOs neices and
CLERK: F Grovea INSPECTOR: HF Moon-JUDGE: BA Ztbrow PRECINCT: 11--873-1 PRECINCT: 11--896-1 YOU ARE IN DEFAULT CONVEY.vec., -....... which hat cerf1ed on II• TRUSTEESOFTHECITYOf nephews Grav 'd
CLERK: KA Peteraon ffY CLERK: 0 M Tyter POLLING PLACE: Perrin POLLING PLACE: p,... UNDER A DEED OF TRUST for TrHtee, HO·PlD boll,_ •t 28811 ~ ~~NB~H~H·s~TI~E:ty service Thunday~e
PRECINCT: 11...eoe.1 JUDGE: JM Mangan CLERK: T G Lukins Aeeldenot, 2572 Green-byttf1en Church, 2850 DATED 7/t0/111 UNLESS MO"TOAQI, Ir: .lodo ~o:e:i:.~..... PROLONGATION OF THE 2A, 3·.00PM at p-...,"c POLLING PLACE: Pa· CLERK: E N Rest PRECINCT. 11-651-1 brfar Ln Felrvtew Rd YOU TAKE ACTION TO ..,,...., Met. lecnWy t • . , .:lU
olflc Mutual Bulldlng, 700 CLERK: A w Stover p 0 LL ING p LA c E: INSPECTOR: L v Perrin INSPECTOR: z [) McKlb-PROTECT YOUR PROP-n..~bllahod Ofange CoNI In~,: 1~~~~"~1~r:n: ~~r"s~E3i~~~ys ~~~~~ View Memorial Park,
Newport Center Or PRECINCT: t 1-629-1 Mertln R..idenot, 2924 JUDGE: M S Johnaton ben ERTY, IT MAY BE SOLO AT ...,_, Piiot Octobef 22, 2t, authority 10 bind the Joint 22.50 fEET OF SAID LOT 7, New po r l Be a ch.
INSPECTOR· B C POLLING PLACE: New-Redwood Av CLERK: J K Avitia JUOGE: CJ Crol<er A PUB•..:C SALE. IF YOU November 5· lNS l-11&& venture The 1U009MOr In ANO THE SOUTHERLY Pas tor Barbara
Baldocic port Beach City Hall, INSPECTOR: B J McKlm Cl.ERK: LE Van Sweden CLERK: TM Cernpbell ~~E~,.l~A~~~~~Ti~~ 8111111 'C 11nTICE lnter•t.to thejolntventure't PROLONGATION OF THE Mudge officiating In
JUDGE: SM Watters 3300 Newport Blvd JUOOE: VS Miiiar PRECINCT: 11-674-1 CLERK:[) B ~ PROCEEDINGS AGAINST ruuu nu bvtlneea ta Oto Marguerite SOUTHEASTERLY LINE OF lieu of flowers f~y
CLERK: M c Ray INSPECTOR· B c CLERK: M J Whltegon POLLING PLACE : PRECINCT: 11 1 YOU YOU SHOULD CON-ftenTIOUaaualNfH Auoci•t•. THE NORTHWESTERLY ' i I
CLERK·. LL Habif Blakalee CLERK: HR Robin.on C•"*" ~. 2817 POLLING PLACE: YMCA TACT A LAWYER N~ ITATIMENT O.ll. Aatool•IH, Ir; 12·50 FEET OF SAID LOT 8 suggest memor a __.. •1"*•19'1npeoft Cofp.., EXCEPT THEREFROM oontnbutions to the PRECINCT: 11-«l7· 1 JUDGE. EC Redmon PRECINCT: 11-652· 1 Dfekt Ave Building, 2300 Unlversl On t 1112/&5 •I 10:00 TM followlng pereona are • C .. ltofnta oorpot•tkM'I ALL OIL, GAS ANO OTHER South Coast H""'pi•-• POLLING PLACE: CLERK OD Mcintosh POLLING PLACE : INSPECTOR:MLCepen Of SKO-FEO MORTGAGE do4ng bollneu u ; 0 P d/ble .. , .. , eon.m. Hyo Ro c ARB o N ._ wu B. 'I a Id. s 0 u I h CLERK J F Bonner Hopkin• RHldence, JUDGE: s 0 Capen INSPECTOR: H CORPORATION .. the duly MARCH INVESTMENT co .. lloft c:;;;::;~ oo..llgae SUBSTANCES, ALL MIN-Cancer Research
ClubhouM 300 E Coast PRECINCT: 11-630· 1 2833 Club HOUM Rd CLERK: J O McDonough Ourtc• eppolnl.c1 TrvttM undM 92l Dehlll. Coate M_., CA P. llMpeon ' . ERALS ANO ROCK. IN, Fund, South Laguna,
Hwy ' POLLING PLACE; Lido INSPECTOR: S M •CLERK: O AJce1a JUOOE: ME C<>PC* lllld ~I to Deed of 92828 Datld: ~teml>er 25, UNDER ANO/OR THAT Ca.
INSPECTOR: E J Cole lslend ClubhOUM, 701 Madetn PRECINCT: 11--875-1 CLERK: G L McVay Trul l, Recorded on 7117181 a.ore Edward Scll•f· 19&5 MAY BE PROOUCED FROM --------
JUDGE: MW Cole Via Lido Soud JUDGE: B N Hopkins POLLING PLACE: Hbr CLERK.JM [)urt(• ~~t~~.; ,~8~ ~=-. c!192::"•· Colla a 'Z.:.';°.._L-'~· SAID LAND. TOGETHER JOHNSON
CLERK: V A Madden INSPECTOR: M J Dingle CLERK: J W Reid ArM 8oYt Ctubhouae, PRECINCT: 11-697·1 Official Recotdt In tne office Petty Chaf1ene Schalman. ,_.... -,: ~tt ~1f~.TH:HR~~:IGT~ or:;~ John Fredrick John-
CLERK: M ~ Unacott JUDGE: BF Mellnkoff CLERK: HE Redding 2131 Tua1ln AY9 POLLING p LACE: of the Recorder of Of11ng1 921 OVll ... Coate M_., CA MoM, ~ ~ ACROSS SAID LAND AHO son, 29 year resident
PRECINCT: 11...eo&-1 CLERK: KE De Witt PRECINCT: 11~ 1 INSPECTOR: A E Tohill Torode Reeldence, 243 ~~~R~:~~~ 92~:,_ .. ___. Schaf· O.Pu~~~.,J,;. 1~-~ TO PRODUCE ANO TAKE of Newport Beach. POLLING PLACE: CLERK.OKOePuydt POLLING PLACE: CLERK:MBSoden z.nlthAv w, ._, .. __ .....,_, ..,._..,.....,.,.... SAIDOIL,GASANDOTHER Pa.wed away October
Herbor View,.. ........ ---. PRECINCT: 11-631-1 Heyman Realdence, CLERK: NA Remt-.. INSPECTOR: M MARLENE\/ KLING, HUS· man, 921 D.t!lla, Cott• OallyPllot0ctot>er22 t985 HY 0 R 0 CAR B 0 N 20 985 th .....,Uf....,.. p 0 L l 1 NG p L ... c E 3180 .. ~ud "-... , BAND AND WIFE WILL M ... CA 92828 'T-at7 SUBSTANCES. ALL MIN-• l at e age of f85'PortWee1boumePI " : ...,.., a..,. PRECINCT: 11-678-1 Torode SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION Thl1 burlne*' 11 con-ERAL ANO ROCK, BUT 71 yean. Beloved INSPECTOR; M E Davia Balboa Bay Clb, 1221 w INSPECTOR: R R Sew-p 0 LL I NG p LA c E : JUDGE: 0 v TO<ode TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER ducted by: • gen«W par1-WITHOUT RIGHT OF SUR-husband of Anna M .
JUDGE: TA WMver Coat Hwy Cllpr Rm ard Cuton Reeldenot, 213 CLERK: L P Denni• FOR CASH, (~ble al time ll4Wlhlp PlBJC fl)JICE FACE ENTRY TO ABOVE
CLERK: PL Pries INSPECTOR: E M Doner JUDGE: J l Seward Camellia ln CLERK: 0 J Middleton ofMlelnl.wfulmoneyofthe Charlee Rl)'l'llOll<I Sdlal· DESCRIBED LAND AS RE-Johnson, N,ewport
CLERK: C Aini JUDGE: B L Givens CLERK: M Heyman INSPECTOR: R A Wei· United Stet.,) at THE man 1'1Crmout aualNlll SERVED. IN A DEED EX· Beach; beloved father
PRECINCT: 11-609-t CLERK: M p Riiey CLERK: J E Davia bourn Thtfe wlll be no poll-FRONT ENTRANCE TO Tiii• •tttement WU nled N.u. STA~ E.CUTED BY CHARLES R. of John F . J~.
POLLING PLACE: : ur an . N ; 11-654-1 JUDGE:ACuton lngpleoeeforthefollow-CONVEYANCE,4940CAM· angeCountyonSeptember do4ng but1neM u : Com· L · Ventura. , a.mes CLERK L C B b k PRECI CT I W E S P A C R E • wltti Ille Count'/ Clerk of Or-The folloWlng P9f90nl •• POITEVIN ANO NEL M Ca J
Harbor View Clubhouse, PRECINCT: 11-632· 1 p 0 LL ING PLAC E : CLERK; M J Smith Ing prtclncta for the PUS DRIVE. SUITE C, NEW· 24. 19115 munlty Computer 8ervlcea. POITEVEN. HUSBAND ANO K Johnson Newport
t85'PortW"tbournePI POLLINGPLACE.Blckel Bal•arlG Cntr, 1975 CLERK:JMNelaon election, and the quail. PORTBEACH.CAallrtollt. ~ 2379 Elden Ave., Cott1 1 ~~~~·uAARNYO tE?~8~0~~ B~ach, Kathleen
INSPECTOR: M E Residence. 3801 Sea-BaJearlc Dr PRECINCT: 11--877· t fled voters shall vota by lltle and lnter-1 eon~ Publllhed Ofenge Cout Mela, CA 92827 BOOK 8809 PAGE 299 OF H Lee y · ·
Harney shore Or INSPECTOR: J l Gar-POLLING PLACE: St abeent voter bellot or to Ind now held by II undel Dall'/ Piiot October 11, 15, 22 Paul F MUl*>n, 2379 OFFICIAL RECORDS • Ca~~ surviv~
JUDGE: A Kurtz "INSPECTOR: SE Blckel mon Johna Church, 183 EBay vote et the Omoe Of the Mid Deed of TNtl In tllf & 2t. 1985 == AYll., Co.ta MeM, CA PARCEL 2: . M
CLERK: BK Fabre JUDGE: W J Wood JUDGE: J M Burt St Reglatrar of Voters, property lltuated In Mk: T-80§ THE SOUTHEASTERLY two sisters, ary
"CLERK; BA Horne CLERK. 0 R Emmons CLERK: SL Renne INSPECTOR: BI Howe 1300-C, S Grand Av .. ~,r;::·,.~~ll::;:~:delulti. P\111.IC NOTIC£ d~: b~~nr,:1111~con-22.50 FEET OF LOT 14 ANO McCracken. Napa.
PRECINCT: 11-610-1 CLERK. 0 E Dean CLERK: J B Steke JUDGE: MT Conde Santa Ana, California. LEGAL DESCRIPTION. P111.1I MunlOn THE NORTHWESTERLY Ca; Ellen Lewi1,
POLLING PLACE: New-PRECINCT: 11-633· t PRECINCT: 11-855-1 CLERK: BJ Mertln • 1ndlcatea electlon A SUBLEASEHOLD ES· FICT1T10Ul IMJIMll Tllla ltllM*ll WU tiled 12·50 FEET OF LOT 13 IN Shingle Springs Ca·
port Hiiis Clubhouse POLLING PLACE: New-POLLING PLACE: Burtle CLERK: N Schlegel board member la bit-TATE AS CREATED B' NA• ITATl•NT with the County Clefk of Of. I ~L<>f~8 ~fJRAg: Ns~2L and five gr~nd ~
1900 Port Carlow Pl ' port Shores Clubhouse, Re• Id. n c e . 1 8 1 1 PRECINCT: 11--878-1 lngual. T~AJoi~~:~,e~B~~~~ de:~ f:= ~;~;~ ~9~nty on September BEACH. COUNTY OF OR· children. Mr John80n
INSPECTOR· B B Smith 51 I Canal St Tanager Of P 0 L LING PLACE: 0.ttd lhla 18th d~ of OUNE 30 t9el EXECUTEt HOMES; Torus Homee; l'3l7'tOit ANGE, STATE OF CALI· was a member of St
JUDGE: W Holloway INSPECTOR: WM John-INSPECTOR: MR Curtis Betcher Reeldence, 200 October, 1985. ~y ANO. BETWEEN OAA'r Wlst"I• H~. 11711 Mein Publlahed Of11ng1 eo..t ~~~N~~COASRSO~OofNNBOOON ~ Joachim Catholi~
CLERK. p B Gwin son JUDGE: SK Burke Magnolla St A I ~ Regletr• ENTERPRISES, A CALI· StrMl. lrvlne. CA 92714 Dally Pilot October 22. 2t. Ch h
CLERK K K Thompson JUDGE J J Fotwy CLERK: p A Pearson INSPECTOR: B J of Votera, Ill: Anne Lou FORNIA LIMITED PART· Phlllp H McN81Me. l178 November~. 12, 1985 9 PAGE 3• OF MIS· urc ' and the
PRECINCT 1 ,.611 •1 CLERK.N J Foley CLERK: SE Lombardi Beecher I Uvtnaaton. Deputy NERSHIP AS LESSOR ANO Mein StrMt, •A, lrMne. CA T-111 CELLANEOUS MAPS, IN Quarter Century
POLLING PLACE Uni· CLERK. 0 J Borthwick PRECINCT: 11-656-1 JUDGE: A 8 WMther'No Publlahed Oranga MD JANES COMPANY 92714 i~5N.gFF~~~OR~R T~~I Medals Club, Los An·
versl Savng Office 2620 PRECINCT 11-63--4-1 POLLING PLACE: Vlata CLERK: B Heaton Cout Dally Piiot Oc1~ INC . A CALIFORNIA co~ Dale Slmt>ro. 8101 Gil-Pl8UC NOTICE SAID COUNTY, TOOETHER geles. Mass of Chris-
san Ml .... I Or . P 0 L L I NG PLACE: Del Lano ClubhOOM, CLERK: C A .,,_..... __ Jr. b« 22, 1985 PORA TION AS LESSEE. atN Terrec.. Corona del WITH THAT PORTION OF uan· Burial will be -J. g.... E S -. -...-RECORDED JULY 18 1N1 Mar, CA 92825 '·"'' INSPECTOR H A nslgn chool. 2000 Clltt 2775 Maea Verde Of PRECINCT: 11--879-1 T-68< IN BOOK 14143 PAGE 355 Tiiie t>ullne11 t1 con-1'1CT1110Ue aualNIU THE SOUTH HALF OF THE ebrated on Wednes-
Cooprlder ~r • Eaat POLLING PLACE: Arw1 OFFICIAL RECORDS, IN ~~ad by. 1 llmlled par1ner-~"=!.,. ~~5~~: ~fu~INl~EJT T~~ day October 23, 10:00
JUDGE: p M Cooprlder INSPECTOR· G Rowe INSPECTOR: H Chelal Baptlat Church, 300 P\BJC NOTICE ANO TO A CONDOMINIUM Phlltp H McN&mM doing butlf'8ll la: A) Coo-NORTHEASTERL y LINE OF AM at St. Joachim
CLERK J Perla JUDGE· C A Dru JUDGE LL Cooper Megnolla St DEPARTMENT OF THE COMPRISED OF Thie auitem.nt flied llneni.I Ortt11no • US · B) SAID LOTS. VACATED MAY Catholic Church, CLERK. F Bloom CLERK E J Nelson CLERK: p CtialaJ INSl>ECTOR: pH Whlta TREASURY /INTERNAL PARCEL 1 Wit Con , ... Oril . 's' II 9 II B RESO UTlO
PRECINCT 11-612·1 CLERK L A Mulvaney CLERK:ECHert JUDGE:MCWhlte REVENUE SERVICE UNIT 41 ON LOT 1 OF wlththeCountyClerkofOr· Unental ~·.,A bF 'r1HE YBOAALO O~ C.0.ta Mesa. Privete
POL LI N G p LA CE PRECINCT 11·835-1 PRECINCT: 11--857-1 CLERK: AG Shar1tey NOTICE OF SEALED BIO TRACT 10525. AS SHOWN ~~ty on September ~ ~~h F Point•' 1~·· TRUSTEESOfTHECITYOF lntermemt. Pierce
Barlow Residence 5 1 POLLING PLACE· Adell-POLLING Pl.ACE: Col· CLERK: S V Common SALE. under the euthor'tty In ANO DESCRIBED IN THE ' ftl'ntS Suite 100 Ugon1 Hiiie CA SEAL BEACH, L VINO BE· Broe. Bell Broadway
Monteclto Dr INSPEC-ty Fed Savings & Loan umbla Savings & Loan PRECINCT: 11-880-1 Internal Rewnue Code MC-(CONDOMINIUM PLAN" Publllhed Orange Co.at 92653 • . TWEEN THE NORTHE,.LY M rt stry DI.recto
TOR. J W Merrill INSPECTOR. E K Glose INSPECTOR: BF Marx p 0 LL ING p L •CE. ~~ 8331. the prot*1Y ct. w"PLAN"), WHICH PLAN Dally Plto1 October 8 15 22 R. F. Thltt. Inc (A C.ilf. PROLONGATION OF THE 64°2 9u ' n · J UDGE C T C II J DG " · ..,..,bedbelowllNbMnMti AS RECORDED ON & ~. 1N5 ' ' c;orporatlon) 23276 South NORTHWESTERLY LINE, • 150 JUDGE: W J Cecka Jr . ape a U E: EC Kogler Herper Community Ctr, ed lor nonpeyment oi 9117180 IN BOOK 13737, ' T.an Point Or .. sUtte 100, L.aouna OF THE SOUTHEASTERLY --------CLERK. G G Lage CLERK· M F Ingalls CLERK: R E Coe •26 E 18th St Internal r-ue 1aite1 d PAGE 1057, ET SEQ. OF HUit CA 92M3 LINE OF THE NORTH· RUBIDOUX
CLERK A I O Kelly CLERK. F Feder CLERK: AM Vanet< INSPECTOR: Y W Ir om ST A N L E Y OFFICIAL RECORDS OF P\8.IC NOTICE Thia butlnMt 11 con· WESTERLY 12.50 FEET OF Jeanne t le M .
PRECINCT 11-o 13-1 PRECINCT 11-836-1 PRECINCT: 11-658-1 Medina SZARKOWICZ. The pr OFFICIAL RECORDS. "OR dvcted by.. corpol'tllon SAID LOT 13. Rubidoux. a resident
POLLING PLAC E POLLI NG PLACE: POLLING PLACE: JUDGE:ELSlmon• erty wlll be IOld •I publ ~s MAY BE RE-RE· MOTICIOlllALI R.F.Thlea,lnc.,H•bertL EXCEPT THEREFROM f Co& M Pueed
Harbor View School. 900 Lutheran Church, 798 Wiison School, 801 w Cl.ERK: e e Long aate under IMled bid i~~~~L 2: O:T~~ s~ri ~;:~~ ~L~ i1LR iAi ~N~ iT~E=: ~way ta 0c:'ber 20•
GOidenrod Av Dover Or Wiison St CLERK: M J Oa Roa pro~~ by tntere:':s5Rev AN UNDIVIDED ONE CIM No. P 701 517 wltll tl'le County Clertl of Of. SUBSTANCES. All MIN--1985. Beloved mother
INSPECTOR• J C Morris INSPECTOR: C R Unvert INSPECTOR; 0 I Loving PRECINCT· 11-881-1 ::ed ~":!:n, Dal FIFTY·FIFTH ( t156TH) Supe.lor Court of Ille ange County on s..>tember ERA.LS, AND AOCK, IN. of Louia E ua..-......,
JUDGE: 0 M~rkas J U 0 G E H W JUDGE: LT Kowalstcl POLLING Pl.ACE: John· Bldtwlll "°'**':. INTEREST AS A TENANT IN State of California for the 211. 19115 UNDER/OR THAT MAY BE Newport ~:.:'i..".""::.-7.1 CLERK: B L Blakemore Gwozdzlowskl CLERK: 0 H Mltchell aon RHldence, 231 ber 4th, 1985. Time bld1 wll COMMON IN A SUB· County of Lot Angetee ~ PRODUCED FROM SAID ~ .. anu
CLERK.JR Blakemore CLERK PH Franks CLERK:VCSandoval RocheattrSI be opened: 12:00 p.m. LEASEHOLD ESTATE IN lntheMttterofthe•lete Put>lltlled 0t11ng1 CQefl LANO, TOOETHER WITH Haroldine Meliti,
PRECINCT 11•614•1 CLERK. C C Harris PRECINCT: I 1-659-1 INSPECTOR: p S John-Piece of Nie: 24000 Avl ANO TO ALL OF THE REAL of HAROLD E. HARWOOD, Dally Pllol October 22. 2t. THE RIOHT TO DRILL INTO, Cleveland, Ohio; a.110
POLLING PLACE GnAn-PRECINCT: 11-637-1 POLLING PLACE: son Rd , l.agun• Niguel, CA. WPROPERTY, INCLUDING 0.01•10. Nowmt>er & 12 tN6 THROUGH ANO ACROSS 1urvlved by teVen
gel Residence. 1520 Keel POLLING PLACE Skin· Marlon Persona School, JUDGE: TH Johnson 92177, tet Aoor O.S.A: cg~~~ L~~~T~ ::~ the~=.,-.:;r:J.~~~: , • T-112ll ~~bU:~~o T~~~ sZ18 grandchildren; and Ot ner Residence, 1724 2350 Canyon Of CLERK: 0 0 Ward ~tykl"Si.Lo!.;,_:illtettt:'ered. FINED IN THE OECLAR· pub4lc/p<tv1te NII. on Of d
INSPECTOR: B J G.....,,. Highland Or INSPECTOR: E C CLERK: H W Ward l nteretl '1f' Sllnle ATION OF COVT:NANTS, lift• October 2tl, 1N5 . .i .. _.,. W\JICE OIL. GAS ANO OTHE" 114!ven g.reat-gran •
oel -.. INSPECTOR. K M Baker Phegley PRECINCT: 11-882· 1 Szarkowtc:z In end to CONDITIONS AHO RE· Ille office of Stell, Levine & n1uu" "" H y 0 R 0 C A R I 0 N chHdren. Memorial
':'JUDGE B A Barrington JUDGE· L Blesladeckl JUDGE: E p Shannah en POLLING PLACE: ~ propeny wtu be offet«1 1 STAICTIONS ("OECLAR Boolcman, 727 Wet1 7111 St.. 1'1CTm0Ut 1U••tt =~~ A~~8·R~~. ~ aervtces will be held
CLERK· E L Prentiss CLERK.ML Reavle CLERK. AT Parry dootey R ... dence. 280 HI• If requHted, th ATION") RECOROEO ON Loe Ange6et, CA 90017 to MAm ITAW WITH RIGHT OF SURFACE on Thunday 11:00
CLERK; M C Bowman CLERK A K Smith CLERK· TL Phegley Knox Pl lntern.i ~Servtoe :111110 IH BOOt< 13747, the hlQM91 and '*I bidder. The followlng per.ont.,. ENTRY TO ABOVE DE-AM on the beach near
PRECINCT 1 t-615-' PRECINCT 11-638-1 PRECINCT: t 1...eeo;.1 INSPECTOR· R w ~ fUmllll lnformetlon •bOu F AGE 1646 ET 8EO. OF Of. and tut>tect lo confirmation doing ~ -MAC SCRIB!o LANO AS RE· the Newport Dorry
POLLING PLACE Com-POLLING PLAC E · POLLING Pl.ACE: Unit-dOUtty =b~ :_c:a~cee. A~ELC~~~O~~ ~~tttle~lnc;::;: ~~ES= :c~g ~~ ~H~~~~ Fleet, Newport
munlly Church 6 11 Anderson Residence, arlan Univ Ctiurctl, 1258 .JUOOE: M Coll19on t41fm1n1ng tM vW119 of t Of TRACT 10!26 IN THE Mid 11>1e1111d at time of Meta CA tia21 ' • POfTEVIN AND NELL M. 8 ea c h . M r 1 .
Heflotrope Av IS•3 CommOdore Rd V~tor1a St CLERK: RM Morton lntareet being eold CfTY Of COSTA ME8A AS dMth, end all ttQht, tltle Wld Clliletopn.t Noel Mac POITEVIN, HUSBAND ANO Rubido
INSPECTOR E G Austin INSPEC T OR M R INSPECTOR. M B CLERK: W 0 AdWTll lion Of PtOC*1Y: ti ti SHOWN ON A MAP Al! Int•• Iha a.tat• Nit ad-Donald 2300 FllMew AV9 WIFE, AND RECO,.DEO ux was a
DG Holland • -·r--"' PRECI CT Por........... .__ Uc I COAOEO IN 800t< 412, dltlonally acquired In and to 0203 'C 1 •• CA. FHAUARY ., 1ee4 IN member of Harbor JU E: Ls Palleraon ..... ...... N : 11-883.1 ...... -·-PAGES 41. 49 ANO 50 o;. ... Iha owteln ,...,,pertOnal m2e OI .... "'· ... Chria . Fell hi Cl.ERK: WA Bernhardt JUDGE: H N Anderson JUDGE: G J Schultz POLLING PLACE: eo.rd 117 AFA Odomeiter Ml8CEUANfOU$MAP81N prot*1Yprot*1Ytltuatedtn Thl1 butl ....... t 11 ~-.BOOK 8809 PAOE 2tt OF Ch U&n owa p Cl.ERK: H L Jadwln CLERK: KA Brosnan CLERK: 8 E Ather 01 AMtt Ofnot. 401 N ~38.700 IW>ullt, ~t THE OFP:ICE OF THI IN County of Or S ,,_ ~· OFFICIAL REC0,.08. urch, Costa Mf'M.
PRECINCT· 11-61&-1 CLERK: AG Miiier CLERK: LE Asher •-..port Blvd ery ~· r::;, •v.oT COUNTY AECOAOfA Of Of Callfomla. pan~': "'= i:l'~~ -~ o~.s= Pierce Broa. Bt-11
POLLING PLACE SI.ck PRECINCT 11-639-1 PRECINCT. 11-881-1 INSPECTOR: MC Tough :;'Turbo~• Uc u 8AIO ORANGE COUNTY, tcrlbed • fOltowl, to Wit. Thie 1ttternent -nled 9Mcti, CA 90140. Broadway Mortuary,
..... ~. 107 Poppy POLLING PLACE. New· POLLING PLACE: M .. JUOOE:ELPtlot PIW Odometer rHdln Ofll AS THEY MAY IE LOT 4N,Trac1No.7191.• wlthtlMtCountyOlnolOr· Tennaof.-oaattlnl-Dtrectots.642-91~
'"8PECTOR· O C Pashia 201 Intrepid St Plac.ntla Av CLERK: G N Aetna PTooertY m9Y " tnepact CORDED. 291, Paget 4·6 of Mite. 14, 1N5 Stat• on oonflmlatlon of
Av on elley port Creal ClubhouM, Water Ott Ofnot, 1"5 CLERK: L p Hemblet 32eet ~t. CIMn. AMENDED OA AE·AE~ per map recorded In look ange County on Sec>tamber M ~ of the IJnlt9d
JUOOE: G G.Slack INSPECTOR. R M INSPECTOR: E F PRECINCT: 11,..._t et: ·2400 Avlla Ad FR~~E~i~=~ ~~SJH =iy '"~:!°'Of°'.:: ,.,_,Mlle. or~ oeafl Md l*-CUIV<.: V J Wallace Saunders Humptir.y POLLING PLACE: ~Hour ~ -.. 6tl INCLUSIVE ON LOT 1 County. Publlalled Orange CoMt ance evkMrloed by ~ ... PACIFIC NW
ClEAK: J O Sieck JUDGE: H S Bernard JUDGE: H HT...,._ port Harbor High ScMol. ~ "fAl::::·:F OF 8AIO TRACT 1oe~G '...81 More commonly known ~~:ti Ootof)er I. 1t1, 22 = ~ ':'8:9 °' tn: ME.MOIUA.1. PAf"(
PAE.CINCT: 11-617-1 CLERK: CF Seundera CLERK: I< E TMPtM 800 lrvtneAv 2222, SHled Bid to SHOWN ON SAID CON-i u ·244HOeronlmol.ane,EI T-eee tOld Tenparcam~1 Cemetery• Mortu•ry
POLLING PLACE: PeaM CLERK. D P Oliver CLERK: 8 L King INSPECTOR: J I 8ainc1a Purchaae o1 8elJled Pr OOMINIUM 'LAN. Toro. CA bid to M deSIOll1M wttft !Md, Chapel • Crematory R 1 ,~ «7 Morning PRECINCT: t 1 ·MO~ 1 PRECINCT: 11~ef52· t JUOOE: e J Shh q . Coritaot the oMoa THlJCE~l!EfTROIN.<} FUATHIA, Tarmt ol N6e cw In law-.. _.,. W\TW buyer to~ ...,,.ent 3500 Peclflc Vltw Dfl\19 Rei POLLING PLACE· Nwp1 POLLING PLACE· S.thel "'LEAK· ! M o Alnol"e dMllted be6ow for F " r .... ALL fM· 1111 monty of the IJnlted '"~ ~'"' In form aooept*9 to City ofl Newport e..cti
=:oR: pp Peale VIiia w Bulldlng, 393 Tow.rt Bulldlng, .SM w :LeRK: NJ OkMr m2 and Information ~~~':I:s ~~No =-~Of o;.,. ~ ~ PIOMIOUI ....... .... laedl permitting • M-4-2700 JUDGE: J B Geyer Hoapllal Rd 19th St ?AECINCT· 11-886-1 the property, 8Wmlt bidet OA TO N LOCATID ON a11tde11oed by noc. MAim ITAW' 09l9 to utttltlee In 1111 11 .. ,, Cl,EJV(~ 8 M Farr INSPECTOR: J T De INSPECTOR: EA P9tere POLLING PL.ACE: Man-~time'*:.,. 1A10 LOT 1 OF TRACT ::, by monoage or t,:; The to1ow1ng pereon .. ,.. '*i:"or~'t1etn"'9t· O~ L 0 Cer1er Pi.fro JUOOE: M B McKlbbln.a 1H R•ct.iot. 20V High-°'** The .,. 10625. deed on the ~ iao dolnll bua1nw at: POWtfll lnO and .. " ,..... -1 T• 1l..t1&-1 JUDGE: F W L.eunt CLERK: E M Joeenhane and Or wt1 119 SOid etitty. ~ VCCIPTIHT P'UfllTHl!A ldd. Ten percent Gt amount WACH INTEANA TIONAL. the afOttM1c1 C11fto1 11 ~~PLACE· Wiiia CLERK Jc Wong CLERK: Ev Bl... INSPECTOR: l. w For "*" Temw: -c: l'ftUllt TH,.IP'AOM, IXCLUSIV( btdtolle___,wtetl !Md. 21M~ Mapa A¥9., Coet• time ...... lhe nr. ~I ~ • CLERK: E Hemltton PRECINCT· 11-eeJ..t Dee IOOOfl'IC)enled by the 1!.AKMeHTS IN AHO TO llcMoroff9nato"lnwrtC· Mw.CAl2921 oatlOn henof end btlfore
f\r1t•ioe, 4620 Cof• PRECINCT 11·641-1 POLLING PLACE· AN JUOGE·AZMIMll 811'1CM'toU .. IMdlfll AU.. THOA ~Ing and .. "'**"-' •I MlotlH I I . Meet11n, data~.-. :::~OR:JOHlohty POLLING PLACE· Pom· Community Ctr, M1 ClERK:BRHekt ~=.:ooh.::..* ~O~A~S~ =.a::-:'he°'::~=CA~. tve .. Colla ~~1•1:.1 JUOQa; J A Wiit mltr RHldtnee. 3 7 Hammon SI OLEAK: T A MendeMall peroant of h amOum of OOMIHIUM Pl.AH cetlon hereof and befOf9 TNt bu... ,. oon-.... L ..... .:.. ... a.IM:J.S Yemgw Sterftetl C1 INSPECTOR: MD Perry PAECtHCT: 11...._1 !Md or *200 . .........., 1a AHl"VINO THEAI· ~of..... duCtad by.anlndMdual f..et1i , ... , .. 1ttett.I
CUJll(: I 0 "-'-1 INSPECTOR [) J Pom-JUOGE: J 0 P9rry POL LI HO PLACE: (!'WI« On aooaptanoe FROMJ. IAUM!HTI "°" o.ttd 1014/16 Mk:Nll I . M.-W\ ·~ .... •ns1t1•1o c~
1 .. , .. , mler CLERK: M L CrOdcttt sw.,go R HI lleooe 82 h fllgNel !Md, "" belanoe A c c ~... IN 0 fll re 8 ' ..... """-• ........... Thia ~ ... .... _... ~·1 -. JUOGE:MCPommi.r CLERK.JHVanl(uytc lelboeCowe ' dua.lfll'fY,wtlM~tnl!OAIH. ENCROACH · a"9.C.,...11F .... Ni'wltttttltCounfyCfln.of0r-.....,,_......_.., POUJHO PLACE: Smfth CLERK M T Berry PAECINCt 11...._ 1 • full. P:onn ol ~ .. MINT, ~AT. '-'Al". ...._ IM ......... CA ll'Ot ~ °" _...,-. .... • r I ..... •1
A• 11 dance• 2 0 t CLERK· E J McMal\On POLLING PLACE; ~ :s..P!CTOA. O p F«-P9JIMlllta ""* " bf Ollllf\. :-:J-:c°!~~· M~rrm~ .et7 24• lMS ,.,_ ...... f111 • L 9p, c.&I
NlllCIJl•c:::FHCGonl PRECINCT 11-842-t Mo Ptt Clu~ 1~ JUOQE: MM p~ ::=,.c:--~~ ': 'UAPOSU. ALL":: ::;:-'.,.!~ NlllMd Orenge Co.t ·~~ OMI. ~ .. c H.o.nw POLLING PLACE: E~ Monrovia Av ClEAK: I J ~ Unltlld .... poe(al, .... SHOWN ON THE CON· Delly Plat October 15, lt, Dlll¥ "°' Octow •• 1f. u Dair "°' ~ ta. 11, :.~ • I .__ R •• , d. n c.. 2 0 t 1' IN s p E c T 0 R M J CLERK: L a Low ~ OI ...... money OOMIHIUM PLAN OR Al 22. 1N5 & 2t, 11t5 n. "" ~ r -------1-_ DUINE.O IH T~! DE.CLAR-TW-411 , .. ,, TW-111
HAMOR LAWN-
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Mortuery • c.n.tery
CretnttOfy
1825 0tattr Ave
CoetaMeu
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FORECASTS ON A2
Serving Newport Btech, Costa Mela, Huntington Btech, lrvlnt, Llgunt Btech, Fountain V1llty ind South Or1ngt County
OR ANG£-C CJU N IV C ALIF O RNIA r1Jl ~u A1 (J(.f<Jbl:fi i' .. ,~1y. ., (f Nf t. ~ .,, ~ J
Itvine role iii airport suit nixed
Judge rUies city's intervention could
harm settlement of long-time dispute
BJ USA MAHONEY °' ...............
The Irvine City Council will mull
its lep.J options tonight and decide
The Dan White story ends
with his suicide In San
Francisco./ AS
Nation
The House takes up a
Senate-passed bal-
anced-budget plan./ A4
World
The fate of U.S. diplomat
Wllllam Buckley remains a mystery despite reports
of his death./ A 11
Sports
whether to pW"Sue further court
action to block a pending settlement
between the Orange County Board of
Supervisors, the city of Newport
Beach and two citizens' groups over
Irvine
ponders
move on
annex
Lake Forest tract
study would cost
thecity 62,040-
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Irvine City Council members will
consider funding a prehmmary study
that could lead to annexation of the
nearby Lake Forest II community at
their meeting tonight.
Lake Forest II is in unincorporated
temtory go verned by the Orange
County Board of Supervisors.
The Lake Forest II Master Home-
owner Association recently asked
Irvine officials to undertake such a
re view, which city staff members
estimated would cost $62.040.
In a meeting that ~ns at 6:30
p.m., the Irvine council 1s scheduled
to dCCJdc whether to miuate an
annexation study and who should pay
for It. .A
G uy Marshall, president of the
ho meowner assocat1on, said dccade-
old Lake Forest II includes 3,436
homes and as maoy as 13,000
residents. It is south ofTrabuco Road
between Bake Parkway and El Toro
Road.
He said county supervisors early
this year asked Lalce Forest II resi-
dents to consider their government
status. Marshall said residents opted
(Pleue eee ANNEX/ A2)
the future of John Wayne Airport.
Anomeys for the city failed Mon-
day to convince a federal Judge that 1t
should be allowed to mtcrvene m a
lawsuit brought by the Board of
Supervisors against foes of the ex-
pansion of John Wayne Airpon.
U.S. Dtstnct Court Judee Terry
Hatter told city representatives that
their intervention attempt was un-
Breast Center tour
tamely and could hun the pending
settlement in the lonj-fought dispute
over expansion of Orange County's
only commercial airport, attorneys
for both sides said.
The city must now decide whether
to appeal Hatter's dcc1s1on or lik
separate state and federal court suits
over clements of the settlement.
Irvine is opposed 10 a part of the
Former flnt lady Betty Ford aeu a tour of the new Breaat Im.aalne Center at B~ Memorial Hoepltal from Bo.g
pre.ldent Michael Ste•ena (left) and Dr. s . Robert Hunrltz,
director of the new facllJty. See atory, Page A2.
settlement which tts officials beheve
could result 1n increased a1rcrafi
noise o ver 1he Clly. Agreements made
between the supervisors and ex-
pansion foes could result in consider-
ation of Manne Corps Air Station, El
Toro as an alternate airport sue, city
offictaJs said.
Civilian use of El Toro would result
m more aircraft passing over lrvme
disturbing resident\ with the: Jet noise
and crash potential. Ma)'or Dave
Bakusa1d
City officials had hoped the mter-
venuon would be permitted so the"Y
could explain their posn1on to the
Judge and ask for amendments to the
sc1tlemen1 agreement which HanC'r 1s
expected 10 review M>On. he said.
(Pleue eee IRVIJU I A2)
Schools veto
religious units
on campuses
Decision follows
s tormy meeting of
Huntington board
By ROBERT BARKER
Of_O.-,,... .....
Huntington Beach school offi cials
reaffirmed their posrnon against
making school fac1ht1es available to
student religious groups Monda)
night after hearing a torrent of debate
from students, parents. communll]
figures and religious leaders on both
sides of the controversial issue.
In a press announcement released
today, Huntington Beac h U nion
High School Distnct Supenntendent
Mane Otto said any decision pnor 10
a ruhng by the U.S. Supreme C oun on
the 1984 equal access law "would be
precipitous and would only add to the
confusion "
The tempest was touched off b~
student Joe Mendoza, who petitioned
Edison High School offietals several
weeks ago to allow a Chnsllan student
group to hold voluntary sen ices m
classrooms dunng the day and to use
the bulletin boards and the school
public address S)"tcm.
Mendoza and others in the com·
munity claim that school officials are
failing to comply with a 1984 equaJ
access law that bars federal funds to
school districts thal al)O\lo non-
academic groups to m eer in
classrooms but deny the use of those
facilities 10 religious gro ups
The l)uprcmt" C oun ha!> heard
argu ments on the 1.onc;utu11onallt:y of
the new law bu! 1sn 't e>. pectcd to 1'lsue
an op1n1on tor se"eral months
Local otlic1ah ~~ the~ ·11 wa11 on
the high coun ruling before deciding
on whether to change the1t pohC) that
now ba rs su<'h functions
··0on·1 keep passing the bulk.""
Mendoza told trustees Monda)
.. Take a stand nght now and tell us
v.hal "ou belie\ I.' in Sa\ "e~ or no ..
But Rt.>becca Einstein ·a fre'>hman
at Fountain Valle) High. offered a
d1ssent1ng op1n1on 1n a letter she read
from her father Rabbi Stephen
Einstein. a mcmbt-r 1)f the Fountain
Valle\ \chool D1<,tnct Boiird ot
Trustees
Einstein wrote that the proper place
for pra~er; 1\ the horn~ church and
S) nagogue Equal a1. less he \lo rote 1s
··fraught w11h danger" and could open
doors to meeting~ of the Hare
Kn shnas Re" "1uon·s group\. the Ku KJu'\ Klan or the .\mcncan "-:az1
pan~
But Rand) Z1t·g.ler. an assistant
pastor al (ah al') Bapust Chruch.
argued that federal la\lo I the new equal
access law 1 supe~-des d1stnct pohq
He said funds are being raised for
possible legal a1.t1on
Bob Wilson, the director of the
ne'4h fonned branch of \1t1tn\s of
Excehence 1n Education. urged of-
ficials to abide b' the fa'A He aJ so
warned that ht) group could ··taJce
complete control" ot school matter<> 1f
trustees fail ro take attwn
HoweH·r. Darlem' Rose asked 1(
(Pleue eee RELIGION/ A2)
Kansas City's Bret
Saberhagenfaces the
Cardinals' Joaquin Andu-
jar In tonight's third game
of the World Serles./C1
Marines offer hazardous waste cleanup plan
Newport Harbor Hlgh's
football team Is No. 2 In
CIF. And the girls cross
country team Is No. 1, for
the sixth week./C3
Entertainment
Sebastian's West has
mounted a colorful and
entertaining revival of Gii-
bert and Sullivan's "The
Mikado.JBS
INDEX
Bridge A10
Bulletin Board A3
Classified 87-9
Crossword 89
Death Notices B 10
Entertainment A9
Horoscope 88
Ann Landers A 7
Optnlon A8
Paparazzi A7
Ponce Log A3
Public Notices B 10
Sports 81-4
Televtalon A9
Weather A2
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of .,,. 0.-, ,... .....
Manne Corps offi cials submitted a
plan Monday for the cleanup of
hazardous wastes that have been
contaminating the soil and a nearby
creek at the Tustin air station for
nearly 15 years.
The report calls for construction of
a clay bamer around five acres where
the soil has been saturated by Jet fuels
and hazardous petroleum wastes.
The wastes have seeped deep mto
the ground and have flowed into the
Peters Canyon Channel. The channel
flows into an Diego Creek and,
ultimately, into Upper Newport Bay.
Mesa OKs liquor ban
at gas station marts
Wheeler. Hall oppose
'symboli c' ordinance
on its first reading _
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of IM 0.-, ,._. et111t
Future gas station mini-markets in
Costa Mesa may soon be unable to
sell beer and wine. accordmg 10 a
prohibition ordered Monday by a
divided City Council.
Staff members were directed on a
3-2 vote to draw up an ordinance
banning the sale of alcoholic
beverages at gasoline stations that
add convenience stores or snack
shops.
Existing service station mini-marts
would be exempl fro m the ban. which
must come back to the council for 1wo
more votes before ii becomes law.
The action was taken Monday al
the urgmg of the Planning Com-
mission amid concerns that the
service sta11ons were prompting
motonsts to drink and drive by
selling gasoline and alcoholic
beverages.
In September, the cities of Laguna
Beach and San Juan Capistrano
passed s1m1lar proh1biuons agamst
concurrent alcohol and gas sales.
Meanwhile. Huntineton Beach of-
ficials have ordered a similar ban and
(Pleue eee LIQUOR/ A2)
NB juvenile cases teach her
the beauty of human spirit
sometimes' they arc arrested. She's ~n a hundred
variations on the same theme.
For 13 years
Lavonne Campbell
bu looked after the
abulCd, the neglect-
ed and the lost,
10mebow rem11n-
ina upbeat cnouah
lO talk about "the
beauty of the
human spirit"
ratba than the mi~
ery h must endure.
STEVE
"'My Job ia everythjna that happens to P.COPle under
18," says the Newport Beach pohc:c Juvenile detcctlvc.
"Rapists, victims, abulCd, those who abuse. It's reaJly an
interestina collection."
MARBLE
PEOPLE IN THE NEW S
•The wayward
youth who come to Newport Bach lookina for the endless
IUDUMf only to find it's only an illusion. •The duld who
bu been battered or molested or even dilC&tdcd by bis
puen&a. •The youna boy who is 11exually attacked by an
oktcr man who he mistakenly thouaht wu his friend. 1brouab one means or another. all find their way to
Campbell.
Campbell, tclectcd 1985 pohc.c officer of the year by
her colleaaues, bu a unique position on the pohc:c force.
Unlike other detectives she ts not routinely rcuailJlcd to
petrol. traffic or other police ~ts The con1Cquenc:e 11 that she has become an e~pcrt on
juvenile law1 . the pr<?blems kids get into and the
alternatives sne bat 1n dcaJina with those problems.
A runaway who ,eta blinded in a blw.ard of coaune
and tum• to petty crime may be q,uietly ref'ctued to a cns1s
center or, 1f the circumstances dictate, may be UTatcd
a.nd placed at Juvenile hall.
The cleanup plan fo r the Tustin
base was ordered May I 0 by 1he state
Reg10naJ Water Quaht) Control
Board following complaints that
Manne Corps officials have been
dragging their fee t since the polluuon
pro blem was firs! detected m January
1983.
State and county environmental
lrwtneco.
pt'OpertJ
officials tesufied at the board heanng
that cleanup efforts had slowed to a
standsull 1n re<'ent months
The water quaJ1t) control board
will rc vte\I. the report and de-c1de
whether to accept the Manni.'< orp'>·
re<'ommendauons The dC\.'1StL1n. a
board engineer said. v.1ll be made
WJthm two "eeks
The dl'JOUP rropu<,al 1ndude'>
plan" tor J ~-loot·'-' Ilk da" "'all to be
(<.in~trullt.'d 1m 1hrl'l' ~1de., 111 the !Ille
to ~ontam thl· !lo"' 1f thl' t hem1cal
v.aste'>. \13nne l ''Ill' 'fX1ke<>man It
Tim Hmlt: .-..:itd
On the luurth \1Jc nc.ir thl' Pt•ter<>
( an,0n(hannel aJni..:e knLt"'nasa
(Pleue aee CLEANUP I A2)
UCisigns
pact to
develop
property
Irvine Company to
c reate research and
development parks
8) PHlL 'NEIOERMA.llii
()f -o.itt ~ .....
In 1l\ Jn'l' tu J01n the nation ·~ to p
re\("ar\h in<.tllutinn<. l ( Irvine.· Will
'-'l)rk 'Alth nr.ingr ( nunt\ \ largest
lando" ner lht" If' me<. o to develop
large rc\C.&rth and dcvelop~nt p.uh
ad1acen1 ttl the campu!>
Repn.-~entat1vc<. of the compa.n\
and l .t I '1gntd <1 non·bmdmg agrtt-
ment \.l onda) \teenng the two
10"' ard , reataon lll R& 0 parks de·
~1gned Ill n' al those ,·onstructcd near
the natuln·, ll}p un1vcrs1t1es
I f' 1n<" C o Pn:s1dtnt Tho mas
\.1<"1\t"n ..aid he rn" !\to ns local pnr
JCCts that "'nuld hr "comparable m
qualm and (lurpo~ to ~tanford's
Re~arch Parl . thc Pnn\"'t'to n For-
rMt.al t <"Oler and the "lonh C arohna
research tnanglr ··
t ict < hanccllor .lark PC'ltAson said
the pact •~ a k<"\ step toward rcahnna
l 'Cl''> gNI of hcrom1n1 ··not onl) a
good hut a gttat uni\ ers1t) "
Monda"·~ memorandum ~t, tht
~tag<" for mo~ det.11lcd d1scu~1ons
h<'tWtcn llfl and tht Irvine Co
reprd1na the de"clopment t1meable
and the tvpt of bu1ld1na tha1 wtll Wt
pla~
SometJmes they ao to juvenile ball. sometimes they
ju.at 10 home. Sometimes they are put up for adopt1on.
"'I act thcwhokcate-the victim and the offender,"
Campbell aaya. "Sometimes the otlendcr is an ldult who
needs to be anutcd. Sometimes 1t'1 a parent who JUSt
doesn't know how to be a.J>'ttOt.
(Pl ... ._UWPORTfAS) a•aded ..... ta planned for dnelopaumt.
"We will be outhmna way\ to
dt'velop the kmd of researcb and
development parks that hav~
madt' Stanford such a i
(Pl---UClf A2)
\ ( , ) I I
' . .
~ ------~-..._ -----
d ~ Cout OAtLY PILOT/Tu.day. October 22. 1985
Betty Ford praise~ Hoag' s
breast center during tour Clear skies and warmer air due
CINI,~ tki. and IUNNne WWI brlghtWI Southern
Calttor-nla w~ and bool1 "*CUfY~ lnto tM 70. • • warming trend talc.a hotd, tOt9CMttre Mid.
By SUSAN BOWLE'M'
OfllleO.-........
Former ftnt lady Betty Ford v11i1ed
U\e Ortnae Coast Monday to tour
Hoaa Memorial Hospital's new
Breast tmagina Center.
"My cxpenence was 11 years aao
when people really didn't talk about it
-it was really hushed up. They JUSt
sort of whispered about 1t bebmd
their hand," Ford said at a preM
conference following her to ur of the
center.
led by Dr. S. Robert HWWlU,
director of Hoaa's Brtaat Imaging
Center, and administrator Michael
D. Stephens. Ford walked through the
center and commented on the com -
fortable atmosphere.
"I think for this type or treatment,
it's important to have a pos1uve
amtude," Ford said. She added that
the absence of chrome and sterik
white rooms should help most
women through the uneasy tame or
breast examinations.
"I thjnk that having sort or a non-
mstatuuonalized setting is very
healthful," Ford said.
According to tht' Amt'nc~n Cancer
Society, one out of 11 women will
develop breast cancer dunng her
Ltfeume, and at is the major cancer
luller of womeo. This year, an
estimated JJ9,000 U.S. women will
develop breast cancer, and 38,400
women are expected to dJe from It in
198S.
By idenufying malignancies in the
breast before they c.an be felt. doctors
can dramatically increase a woman's
chances for survivina breast c.ancer.
"I think that all women who come
1n are a little fearful. They want to be
shown a little concern for environ-
ment," Ford said.
The Hoag Breast Imaging Center
was established earlier Lh1s year as
part of the Newport Beach facility's
Health Services Program. Located in
the Park Lido medical office building
adjacent to Hoag Hospital. tht' decor-
ated su1tt' was designed for the ease
and comfort of its patients.
Ford's visit marked the first day of
Breast Cancer Awareness Week. said
Hurwit.z.
"Wt' arc emphas121ng cancer here.
but three-fourths of tht' lime it's
perfectly benign," Hurwitz said.
Ford said that wrutinJ for the
results 1s the toughest ume for a
wo man thrt"atened by the possibility
of brt"ast cancer. But she said that
somethlng inside of her told her that
sbe would have to have the suraery.
"At th.at ume I was already
prepared," Ford said, .. lt was 1
woman's intujtion. 1 wu somewhat
prepared by the suppon I had by my
(amity."
Brust cancer 11 currently treated by
several different methods, depending
upon the patient's prefertnces and the
medical situatfon. Often two or more
methods may be used in combina-
tion, accordina to medical officials.
The five-year survival rate for
women with localized breast cancer
has risen from 78 percent in the
I 940's to 96 percent today. American
Cancer Society statistics reveal
But no matt.er what tht' risk le vel is.
a certain amount of fear remains
when a woman goes in for a breast
examination.
"Somehow, we haven't gotten over
the fact that there's a lot of fear
involved. The stigma is gone. but it is
still scary." Ford said.
Hurwitz said the fonner first lady ts
"a ureless supporter" for the efforts of
cancer research and treatment. Ford
addressed a luncheon attended by
about 250 people at the Newport
Beach Marriott Hotel after the official
dedication of the center.
The National w .. ther Setvic. Mid • high pteNUre ayt1em
Mttllng over tM Pectftc Cout Wiil leeep tM Lot Angelee area dry.
olMr end warm fOf tM next ....,.,al d•v-. With tM .. oeptlon of
rnomtng tow doudl 9'ong tM t>Mchee.
Along tM Or911ge eo.tt It wtll ~ c:tear tonight and
Wedneed•Y· W9'fMf wtlh high• Wedneeday 75 to ~. LOW9
tonight 52 to 58.
From POlnt Conoeptlon to tM ~le.ti Bord« -Inn«
watere: Light v•rl•bte wtnd• tonight •nd Wedneeday morning
becoming ...ietty 10 to 18 knott Wedneed•y •ftwnoon. Wind
waVM 2 to 3 t..t. Southw.t aw9!t1 2 to 3 r..1. CIMr tonight and
Wedneed•Y·
U.S. Temp• \..M Vee-., eo UttleAook 78 .,
~ 62 6) .. lo Mempllle 79 eo
Albeny 61 211 Mlwnl heoll u 19
~que .. .. .............. 6) 44
73 5' ~PMll a7 63
~ 29 24 ~ .. M
Alletlte .. 17 ..... on.en. 13 71
AIWllQ City 6t Ml N9wVor1o ea 41
....... "' 10 17 Nottollc, Ve. .. 81
BelllmOfe 5e $3 Okw.om. City ?? 6&
INrmlngl\111'11 n .. Omllle 81 87
&iemllfcli 71 IM o..i.noo .. 70 ... 71 34 ~· eo 51
aoeton IM 41 "'-!.• 911 62
lluflelo 86 411 Pttl= 53 ...
c..,., 81 47 POt1 .a.t. 53 2t
CMnee1on.s c 71 117 POttlMcl,0. Ml 41
~on.W V 81 .. p~ ,. a3 =r'cnr 82 91 ai-11e,N C .. 51 78 47 ~ 87 3e Reno " u 83 43 Rlcllmoncl 62 eo Clnelnnetl 116 S3 SI loult .. IM ~ IM 52
Columt>ue.Oll 56 S3 8tPtM•f-.. ..
Concord.NH 57 25 8el1 I.Mc• Ctty n ,,
Oall-FI Wot1h 73 &2 Sen.Antonio 70 ..
O.y1on S3 61 Sen Juan,P A n 74
o.n-71 47 8-ttle IM ..
O..M~ M 53 &w....,,, 77 66
o.trott 68 S3 8polt-., 37
··cu,,~ "IONU·
Wttm -ColO~
Snow•re Rain ,1ut11 .. S11ow OcclUdt d..,. St1t1on.,y A,p
Nellelflll W•'* 9'Mc• HOU U & O.Ot Of CcltM*U
Calif. Tempe s.nl•Ana 71 IO ..,,._CNI 5e 47 a.nt. Mette 13 IM =· ic-. IOt 24 hOuf'tl ~ •16 e.m. &anl• Motlice 81 M ..WO .. 44 r.,_v..., 36 21
6"11• " 60 TOffllt\08 " &i ,,_ 86 ..
UlnoM4., 83 46 Surf Report ~ .. 57
&2 Ill
,,_~ .. 41 LOCATtC* tlZll aHAN 1'ed IMf &2 eo ~City 83 47 Hun~~ 1-3 "* ,.._ .~ 2-3 "* ---ea 4T 40lll81-.~ 2-3 "* .._ 83 43 22nd8tf'MI.~ 2-3 tllif 8en Oloigo ee eo BelllCMIWedge 2-3 .... 8en l'renolecO 62 52 LeQUMe.d\ 0 ,..,
Se/Ile htbera .. l!O
8todnoft 67 50 Sell~'le 1-'I 1111<
Hlllfl, lOw IOr 2• ,_. ~ a1 5 p.m wet., *""': ..
~v-., 64 42 a....11 cllNc:llon' -..,._ 711 58
IMumont 66 52 Tides 111ge-83 38
twlOP 111 62
CLEANUP OF HAZARDOUS WASTES ... Oukllh !13 •1 SY'-ea 33 lllythe 86 86 ' TOOAY EJPuo 74 .. Topel(1 10 IM C1ta11ne " 57 Seoo!ld lOW 12:2tp.m. 2 1
F•l>8tlkt 18 1 r-ea IM ....,.,........ 81 eo 8-wll'llQI\ 5:etpm 6.0
FWOQ 64 52 Tulle ,. 58 Mont<Me 86 57 T\IUDAY From Al
Frt'nch dram will help collect the
hazardous wastes for treatment and
disposal, Hoyle sa1d.
Other proposals included in the
report, though not recommended by
Manne Corps officials, caJI for vari-
ations on the contammt'nt plan as
well as a plan to excavate the
conuunanated soil and replace ll with
fresh fill din.
The two fire pits wht'rc the pol-
lullon problem origmates were used
by the Marines for fire training
exercises. Jct fuel was placed m the
pits and tgnited as part of tnuning.
The exercises were performed for
nearly 14 years before they were
stopped in January 1983 when pet-
roleum wastes were detected in the
storm channel that runs along the
eastern border of the Tustin base.
""'9et•" 57
Otend~• Ml Ot.-th .. 71 -10
Honolulu 87
Hwllon 71
lndlenapoll• 81
Jedleon,Ma 113 Jedi_ .. 116
""'-' 38
1(-Clty 61
38 WW*>glon 67 116
38 WlcMe .. Ill
40 wa-e.n. eo 42
38 75 Eztended ..
SI
11 FM ThunOey ttvough S.rurde)I .. •(oee>t -nlglll end momlnQ low 33 CIOl.cla -IN COM1 HlgN T2 to 12 S3 L-461058
~ 11 65 ""'IOw 12 63Lm 00
Ml Wleoft 43 31 ::'o::'iow 7'7 e.m 4.8 ......,... 13 .. I 15PM 2.0 ~8-:fl .. 81 &eoMCI hlgtl 8Mlpm 110 OntMIO 911 61
Pelm Springe 87 .. Sun ...,.. toc:tey at 8 1~,m.. n.. p...,..... 64 57 w~ et 7:CM • m Mia age111 AMfWde TO IM lrl8:10pm Sell ..,.,..,dlno .. 68 Moon n.. toes~ at 3 $4 p m . ...,., SenO--. 87 57 W.on.dey 8' 1 1 I m , end ,_ IQll!rl
Sen.ION &2 !51 11• 04 p.m.
ANNEX STUDY WEIGHED BY IRVINE .•.
From Al
to remam a counly service area.
Tht' assoc1auon president sa1d a
subsequent straw poll asked residents
whether tht'\ eventuall y want to
become a COUnty SCfVICe district With
more home rule authonty, to 1oin
with other communities 10 crea1e a
new city or to become part of the city.
MarshaJI said residents chose the
third opuon, prompting the request
for the annexation study. He said
Lake Forest 11 probably lacks the tax
base to opcrate as an independent
City.
Marshall said the study would
inform Lake Forest residents about
what changes could take place an
police and fire protection. school
assignments and street maintenance
1f the community becomes part of
Irvine.
Fast-moving storm soaks Coast
A fast-movmg cold front that blew
through the state Monday brought
hght showers to the Orange Coast.
creating slick conditions on roads and
freeways.
spokesman. said 0.08 of an inch of
rain was recorded in Costa Mesa,
bringmg the city's st'~son total 0. 54.
Santa Ana recorded 0.08 of inch and
Newport Beach 0.09 of an inch.
UCI RESEARCH PARKS PLANNED ...
Cool, clear \!leather will follow an
the wake of the bnef storm, which
dropped three-quarters of an inch of
ram at Santiago Peak -the wettest
spot in the county.
The heaviest rainfall was in south
Orange County where communities
like El Toro and Mission VicJO had
about half an inch of rain. Santiago
Peale recorded 0.75 of an inch of rain.
bringing the season total there to 1.61
inches.
The National Weather Service
predicted cool faJ I weather for the
remainder of the week with daytime
highs in tht' low-70s and evening
temperatures hovering an the
low-50s No add111onal rain as fort""-
cast.
Rain tn ggered a spate of car
accidents m Los Angeles and San
Bernardino counties but had little
affect on Orange County roads otht"r
than slowing traffic.
From Al
researLh 1nsututwn." Pcltason said.
The agreement co' ers :!92 acrt"s
owned by the-Unt' crs1t)' and 123 b)'
the Irvine \o .. all located 1mmcd1-
ately west of the campus The prop-
erty as beyond the 1,000 acres that the
Irvine Co. donated an 1960 for
creation of UCI.
T n 1964. the UC Regents bought an
addJllonal 510 acres near the campus
to assure they would be used for
university-related activities. The
Irvine Co. retained 150 acres sur-
rounded by these parcels. The total
660-acrc section was called the "in-
clusion area."
Both the UC Regents and the
company agreed at the time that
development of the inclusion area
would be restricted to un1vers1ty-
oriented pro1ects. In recent years. the
two parties have found that dcfinsuon
ambiguous and have been negotiaung
toward a mort' specific development
plan that would take the place of the
land restnctions that have been in
effect since 1964.
Mo nday's memorandum is the first
step an that process. covenng 41 5
acres of the inclusion area.
"This is an agreement to discuss an
agreement," Chancellor Pcltason
said. He said he briefed UC Regents
on the pact last Friday.
The goal 1s to reach a master land-
usc plan for the acreage by May I.
Pcltason said a key bencfil for the
university will be the revenue 1t will
derive from projects built on its
property He has frequently descnbed
UCT as land-rich, but cash-poor.
The Irvine Co. stands to benefit as
well. Monday's memo said the uni-
versity will negotiate to grant the
company a master option to ground-
lease "any and all of the land" not
needed fo r univcr51ty purposes an the
292-acre mclus1on area owned by the
unsversit)'
The unsverslty. m tum. would
retatn "tht' right to panicipatc as an
I equity investor an development" of
this acreage.
The Irvine Co.'s master lease
option is expected to run for 35 years.
lfthe company does not develop any
of the acreage covered by the pact, the
land would revert to unrestricted
university ownership. In addJtion,
the university would have first op-
portunity to purchase any lease
interests the Irvine Co. wanted to sell
in this area.
Irvine Co. president Nielsen ac-
knowledged Monday that R&D parks
near the campus could compete with
the company's Spectrum project, a
high-tech and bio-sciencc develop-
ment near the junction of the San
Diego and Santa Ana freeways.
But Nielsen said there would be
some unique aspects to the develop-
ment immediately adjacent to UCI
and said there may be some joint
marketing efforts involving Spec-
trum and the UCI acreage
Emmett Franklin, a county En-
viro mcntal Management Agency
LIQUOR BAN ATGASMARKETS BACKED ...
From Al
concerns over gas station mini-marts a request to add a m101-market to the
bave been raised in Fountain Valley, Mobil service station at the southwest
Tustin and Anaheim. comer of Harbor Boulevard and
However. Councilmen Dave Gisler Avenue.
Wheeler and Donn Hall voted against Planning commissioners granted a
Costa Mesa's proposed ordinance, conditio nal use permit Oct. 14 to
remam1ng unconvmced of a corrcla-remodel the gas station. under the
tion between drunken driving and lht' stipulation that beer and wine not be
convenience stores. sold. Fearful of lcga.J repercussions,
"I think it's a symbolic measure:• the commission also asked the couo-
Whcclcr said. adding he believes a cil to review the decision and issue a
ban would hamper future gas station pohcy for future mini-marts.
convensence stores from competing Don Robbins. senior real estate
with others thj\t already sell beer and representative for Mobil Oil, told
wine. council members the company might
Councilwoman Mary Hombucklt' be forced to cancel the project, rather
argued that tht' potential dangers than spend an estimated $650.000 on
warranted the city take a stand. a m1n1-mart that won't be com-
"The sale of alcoholic beverages petitive.
and the sale of gasoline arc not "If you give away the beer and
About 10 perc~nt of the cities
statewide have prohibited concurrent
sales of gasoline and alcoholic
beve~es, according to a staff report
by Senior Planner M ike Robinson.
And legislation, AB 1433, proposing
similar restrictions has been in-
troduccd1 although it won't be con-
sider unul after Jan. I .
Robinson reported he was unable
to uncover any scientific studies
linking gas station mini-marts with
drunken drivers.
IRVINE ROLE IN AIRPORT SUIT NIXED ... compatible_ I sec no reason to add to wine, you won't have the people
the numbers (of service stations com mg in for the snacks. If you don't
selling alcoholic beverages) in this have that, why build a snack shopr'
However, an informal survey by
the Alcohol Adv isory Board of Or-
ange County showed 51 percent of the
violators attending drunken drivers'
schools purchased their beer and wine
from such convenience stores and 43
percent of the people drank their
beverages immediately.
From Al
''They didn't even get their foot 1n
the door." said Michael Gatzke. the
count~ ·s special airport counsel
Bui John McDermott. attorney for
the c11~ of Irvine. said Hatter's denial
of has mo tion to intervene doesn't
prevent the city from trying 10 block
1mplementat1on or the pending !>elllc-
ment
\fter meeung m clo~d session. the
C1ty < ounc1l could direct him to
appeal or tile ~eparate court
challenges to the a1rpo n expansion
plan and the settlrmcnt agreement.
McDermott said
location for a second a1rpon to relieve
development pressure at John Wayne
Airport and 1s "an integral pan of the
settlement," Newport Beach attorney
Steven Pflaum said.
But the lrvme City Council wants
the El Toro resolution back in place to
protect its residents from the same
kind of problems that have sparked
discord over John Wayne Airport.
Residents of Newpon Beach and
Santa Ana Heights have long sought
to stymie growth at John Wayne
Airport because offl1ght noise and the
potenual danger o f aLr crashes over
their neighborhoods.
city," Hornbuckle said. Robbins explained. Body found under floor
by the city to shut the door on The council debate was spurred by He 1s attempting to add mini-mans
consideration or commercial use of El to some 50 service stations in Orange, SAN BRUNO {AP) -A San
Toro including possible annexation Riverside and San Bernardino coun-Bruno man was in police custody
oflhe military base. ties. He said about 27 have been today aftera body suspected to be that
With John Wayne Airport on one RELIGION••• approved by the various cities. while ofhis missing wife was found under a
flank, El Toro on the other and the From Al projects have been hampered in San freshly laid concrete slab in the
C H I. .. . s · Clemente and Laguna Beach by basement of his home, a police Marine o rps e scopter l"Ur tataon the real intent of religious organiza-alcohol-conscious city officials. spokeswoman said. 1n Tustin on a third side, Irvine uons as to influence others. "Is this · S residents "bear far more than our fair Ironically, bis request to remodel pokeswoman E. Schummann said
f . ffi Bale 'd JUSt the tip of the iceberg? Religious and sell alcoholic beverages from Armando Ginebra, 63, was taken to
share" 0 air tra ac, er 581 d1vis1on," she said. "as a poison to another Mobil station in Costa Mesa. the San Mateo County Jail by San
Meanwhile, the Federal Aviation freedom and peace." a few blocks away from the Harbor-Bruno and South San Francisco
Administration has apparently But student Tim Bruner said there Gisler site, was approved about eight police Monday and will be charged
signed off on the settlement agree-is no reason not to have a Bible club months ago . However, anti-with one count of homicide.
ment between the county and airport on campus. "We just want to love one substance abuse campaigns have Schumman said Maria Lean
expansion foes. another and reach out to those who been steadily gamins the attention of Ginebra, 61. first was reported miss--In ine <.ought ro bec:omc a pany to
the wunt) 's lawsuit agaan~t Newpon
Reach. 1hc '\1rpon Working G roup.
Stop Polluting Our Newport and
01her~ hl<Xking a1rpon expan<i1on
plans after learning lhat supervisors
must tale a neutral position on the
search for an alternate airport site as
pan or the srnkment agreement
If El ioro were convened to JOint
m1htary-c1v11tan use, Irvine home-
owners would be plagued with in-
creased Jet no1st', city offic1aJs con-
tend.
Deputy County Counsel Dan need 1t. That's what Jesus djd for us." state and local officials. ina by her husband on July 20.
Didier said the agreement -:vas sub--1-;::===============:::====================---------., matted to the FAA to ensure its terms
To ~ompl y with 1erms of the
'>Cttlcmcnt, the board rescinded two
rcsolu11ons sta11ng its opposition to
commercial use of Manne Corps Air
<itat1on El Toro and declanng there
was no acceptahle alternative to John
Wayne
Resc1s~1on of the rc~olutions clears
the way fo r mtcre~ted oan1es to seek a
Just Call
642-6086
D•llJ Piiot
Del Ivery
te Qu•r•ntHd
~I t'°"\ II J'O'l 11
no• ,,.v., ''""' t><tl~ uv .. "°' ~ .... ,! £Mff)'• .. '-""
In 1982. the Southern Califorma
Assoc1a11on o f Governments (SCAG)
chose the air station as one of two
logical locations for another inter-
national airport. The organiution
also targeted part of Camp Peedleton
as a hkt'ly a1rpon site.
Supervisors and the military have
h1stoncally opposed JO•nl use of the
air station.
Baker said Monday's intervention
attempl was1ust one or several efforts
did not conflict with any grant
obligations.
The agreement should be filed with
Judec Hatter in the next week or so,
Didier said. If Hatter approves the
settlement, lim ited expansion of the
airport can move forward.
The agreement, which limits au-
pon growth through the year 2005.
sets caps on the number of flights and
passengers permitted and approves a
~ed-down expansion program in-
cluding a new terminal and parkJng
garage
Wbat do you like aboul lbe Dally Pilot~ Wbat don't you like., Call tbt
number at left and your messagt' will be reford~. tru1crlbed and dellvued
to Ult appropriate editor
Tbe ~ame 24-boar answering service may be used lo record ltllf'n to tl1t
editor on any topk . Contributors lo our Letters column muat lnl'ludt' their
name and tf'lepbone numbu for Vl'rlflcatlon. No circulation calls. pltHe.
Tell u11 what'• on your mind.
Keren Wittmer
Publtst1'"•
Clrculetton 714/942-4333
c1 .. 1tfled ectvertltlng 714/M2·5e71
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VOL71,N0.211
IT'S ABOUT TIME.
/
I
Oetting aerloua about more exerclH?
Com• over to the HouH.
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You know that exercise and competition are the
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WITH THIS AD FOR THE FIRST 15 NEW MEMBERSHIPS
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Fitness Directors
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Bob Wetzel
Racquetball ln,tructor
,
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3