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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-11-05 - Orange Coast PilotTOMOMOW: FOMCAITaOMA2 .. lefVlng Ntwport lwh. Cotta Meu, Huntington INch, trvtne. UgUNI leech, Fountain Vlffey end South °""II Co•ttr rm AN<.f (,OlJN T '( ---- (,Al IF r )RNll\ I IJf ',Cii\ ( J4 r1vf Mflf J1 ·, 1~w. ;r, c. f NI ''t Balloting sta·rts ·at snail'' space Extremely low voter turnouts reported for Election Day along Orange Coast Balloung sites will remain open until 8 p.m. Residents with questions about how or where to vote should call ihc Orange County Registrar of Voters office at 834-2244. replacements were being de!Jvcred. Otherwise, no m~or problems were ~rted at county polling places, she said. as ht&h as 70 percent when state and national offiOC$ are being filled. Alona the Oranac Coast, voters are p~ckina 1ehool board members in tlw>tinJtOn Beach, F.ountam Valley and lrvmc. In Ncwpon Beach. Costa Mesa and Laguna Beach .• $Chool board candidates arc unopposed. which may also contnbutc to low tumouu, election offictals wd Trustees also arc being selected to govern .the Coast and Sadd)cback community col1cgc districts. Teacbers unron suppon for can- dJdat.cS tn these races may prompt added pollma ac1ivit> BJ PHIL SNEIDEl\trAN °' ................ . School board and special district ~failed '°lure swarms' of Orange Coaat Governor Oeukmejlan has $3 million In his campaign war chest after an Irvine fund-raiser rataea $225,000./ A3 California Catlfornla has four new lottery mllllonalres, which should boost tickets./ A5 Humphrey the wayward whale has been seren- adttd out to sea./ A5 Nation A poll shows most parents fall to discuss birth control with their children and would llke school• and television to do the Job./ A7 World A KGB "defector'' stuns Washington by claiming he was captured, drug- ged and.brought un- conacloua to the United States, where CIA of- ftclala offered to make him a millionaire./ M A Mexican diplomat was found beaten and shot to death In his Moscow apartment./ A5. Sports Edison and Fountain Val- ley high schools get ready for the Big One./81 Rams get one back from Injured list, but lose their quarterback./81 St. Louis pitcher John Tudor luues an apology for behavlor./81 Entertainment Liiiian Hellman's "Watch on the Rhine'' ls given a aplendld performance at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse./ Al • INDEX Coast v-0ters to their pollinJ placct early today, but election officials were hoping for an improved turnout before the polls close tonight. Shirley Deato n, the county's chlef dcputr registrar of voters. said a few defective ballot punching machines had ~n reported ~ly today, and Monday the f'CJistrar'a staff predlc- tecfonly 12 ~rcent of more than o ne million repstered Orange County Toten would cast ballots m tbJs off· year election. comp&~ to tumoJJts o.llJ .... ....-.., .... ...,.. Michelle lllller, 11, trlee out one of ~e new Totina machlnee thl• morntna u her mother. Lrtlyn (center) and llarrlet Lewan, both precinct worken at College Park School in Coeta lleu, make eure her "Tote•• doeen't coa.nt. Voters will also choose auectors in (Pleue .-VOT&R8/ A2) HB holds Off on law regulating massage parlors Cify Co uncil opts for further study on contested issue By ROBERT BARKER OflMDeltp ......... Huntington Beach ot1ic1als bad..ed away Monda) from enfornng a regula11on enaC'ted three ~ca~ ago that would have closed nine of 1he c1ty·s 11 massage parlors an 30 da)s Instead. Cit) Council members v.b o have been grappling w11h massage parlor controls for about I 0 years, put the ordinance on hold untal they can study ll further nt>xt mon1h Massage parlor operators ha\C mounted hea') pressure and ftled several lawsuits against Cit) efTons to In attempts to not san~e out massagt> parlors as adult busmesses, officials also lumped such -diverse acuv111es as c;onvenaencc markets, dancing and live entenamment. teen dancing and fonunetelhng as adult busan~scs Staff members said all the buSJ- oesscs ha' e tbc potential to create unusual pohct' and land use related problems A. controvers) over attempted massage parlor controls flared last fall when Sus1t' HonJ attempted lo move her Spa ofHawau massage parlor to a shoppang center at Spnngdalc Street and V. arner A' enue Her operation at Beach Boulevard didn't comply with requirements there. but me1 all standards at tlic shorpins center However, residents and busmess people sent up a bowl and complained that the parlor would disrupt their .. fam1I) atmospbC'!X,"' • close the parlors do"'n. 1nclud1ng a C bl• g h. deadline set three )ears ago for the The council then dented the rcl oca- uon request. and Hong filcti a S250.000 damage claim against the rum In Ome Owners shutdown of massage parlors not .. ' ~~~g locauon requaremena b) f • 1 t• t 1 e M Massage parlors were prohb1ted 1 e lrs C aim Vs. esa frombe1nglocatedwtth1n2<X>tee1 of residences. 500 f~t from schools or churches and 1.000 feet fro·m ·one By TONY SAAVEDRA Of!Mo.IJl'llollwt A S 150.000 claim filed a~inst the city of Costa Mesa last week 1s the first an an expected flood of legal action by residents whose homes arc crackmg because of underground movement. The chum, filed Wednesday by Brian and Josephine Cole man. at- tempts. to hold the city liable for the damage to their Wisteria Circle house. According to recently updated fig. ures. 141 homes tn north Costa Mesa arc reponedly sanlung aod craclung because of land movement. which could be linked to nearby construc- tion projects approved by the city. An estimated 40 residents have retained. ~n Francisco attorney Patrick Catalano to begin leg.al action agaJOst the ci ty and other potenually liable parties. sources said. The Colemans so far arc rep- resenting themselves. By submitting the clajm, thcr took the first step toward suing Costa Mesa for their crumbling home. tn which the floor has sunk roughly 2 inches and the.- ceiling has separated from the bedroom wall. The claim is scheduled to be taken to the City Council Nov. 18. If 11 as denied. a lawsuit can be filed. Gcme Stars. one of the home- owners represented by Catalano. sard she ~;<pccts the other claims to be dCTlvcred to the caty clerk·s office this week. Catalano could not be reached Monday for comment, but neigh- borhood leaders said about 40 resi- dents have retaaned the attorney. An infonnal mecung conducted b) (Pleue eee CLAIM/ A2) a~ther. Officials said there were 50 otHer locations in the the clly that the non-complying parlors could mo' e tO. Councilman John Thomas. per- haps echomg the sentamcnt of ha" m. colleagues. said ·-rm agamst pumng anybod)' out of busanes'i Ifs as s1mple as that." The hotl}' debated ordanance also attempts to classaf) the mas'iagc parlors as adutt entertainment busi- nesses. and would pre' ent pennm tor their operation from passing, on tu new owne~ wh~ the bus1nes'iC~ are soJd. Cit'\. • .~ leadangcntac of the c1ty'g enforce- ment cffons 1s Roland Clark. owner of the Ca hfomi.a Collqc of Physical. AJU. a school for masseuses located on Beach Boulevard. Oark complatned Monda) night that staff members have made untrue statements agamst massage parlors Comments from Development Sen aces Director Jamc.-s Palin 1n- d1cattng that 50 sites an the Clt) meet loc.ataon rt"quirements for massage parlon are an e"tample Clarl said Some of the 50 sites suggested tl\ Palin include parking lots where' no bu1ldangs are constructed. he ~1d .. One of the ~1te'i is at tht: Huntington (enter parktng 101 ·· he said .. I'm sure the' "'ould kt <>omeone butld a massage parlor an the middle of the lot .. he.-~1d sarcast1call ~ Badham may join crowded '86 race against Cranston OC prose~utors form anti ... Bird education group Coast congressman considering Senate seat-tentatively By SUSAN HOWLETI' estabhshed an exploratory commat- tee to look mto the possibility of running, soundjng a bit more hcsnant than he was last week. By LISA MAHONEY Ol IM Deltr .... ,..,, ( A group of Orange Counn pros- ecutors plans to wage an educauonal campaign against Chief Jusuce ROS<' Btrd and two other JUStlces up for reten11on in I 986 Related atory on AS b~ former uO\ JelT) Brown Bridge Bulletin Board Business Classified Comlca Crouword Death Notices Entertainment Horoecope Ann Landers Opinion Paparazzi Pola Log Pubtlc Notices lport• TeleYtak>n WMther A10 A3 85-7 88-10 A10 810 M A9 89 A6 A8 A6 A3 M • Oftlleo.llJNotlW '"The ume as too short and I am not at this umc establishing an cxplora- tory comm1ttee," Badham said. "I am interested in ti more for the future." Badha m has already declared hjs Calhng them sch. es the Pro\CCutor'> Working Crroup. the depuh d1stnrt anome\S gathered 1n front of lh<' count) counhouse in ~nta .\na Monda" 10 announce their organ11a- t1on ··1s read .. to take tts case 10 the people .. b\ making speaker<. 3\ aalablc to dascu !I the dec1s1ons and voung records of the Rose Bm1 t:oun ··Their dc.-c1'i1om have cons1stcntl> ele\ated th<' nght!i ofcnmanals abQve the nghts ol la"'·abtdtng ctt1zens and undenn1ned the .ib1ht'I' of the police and the coun~ to enforce the law and deter cnmt' ·· u1d V.ally Wade. chairman ol the Orange Count)' chapter of the prosecutors group 81-4 A9 A2 Girl's killer togetnew · penalty trl-1 11 STEVE MARBLE °' ........... ._ Convicted killer Thomas Fruc11 Edwards, the former Costa Mesa man who hu chaqed his mind about wantina todje in the pschamber, wu vanted a new penalty trial Monday. Jt will be the third time a jury has been uked to decide whether Ed- ward.I abould be tlccuted for ldlllna 1 l·yeet.()ld Yuasa Ibeni and wo'1ndina her friend Kelly Cartier, alto 12 at the time of the 1981 thootifta. ' .. rm scunned," II.id J<>teob fberri father of the murdered prf. .. Now f bave to ID lhtouP all this ~n. I have to 1itteft to how m_y a>rl was lnlkd. how lbe WU ambushed. ahot (Pl••-SDWA&De/d) Rep. Robert E. Badham. R-Ncw-rc-clecuon bid to run for another term port Beach. 1s considering running for an tlie House, '"and he is 1ust loolung the U.S. Senate next year. a race that an to th'c poss1b1hty of run rung (for the is packed with contenders. 'Senate)... Bad ham aide Wilham ·:1 havcn'tofficiallyput myself 1n or Schreiber s~ud. taken mr self out," Badham said last The fonner 71 st District As- weclc, "I m still looking at it." · scmblyman has stirred bis share of If Badham seeks the Republican controversy in the nine years he has norniQatioo to run apinst Sen. Alan represented the 40th Congressional Cranston, 0-Calif., the five-term Distnct. OranaeCoastconaressmaowillJ01na Currently. he 1s involved in the race already filled with several can• wtdcly pubhc1zed fi&bt to stop funhcr didatcs. 011 explorataon ofT the Califom1a But Baclham said today he has not coast. ............. u. ..... Plallutllroplat Arnoldo. ---··(left) wttla hulk Prw. "11ltiitt til tlMt "9tlneel Aea•••J of Bc..._ Rep. Robert Badham Some of Badham·s conJTCSStOnal colleagues. including WiU1am Dan· ncmcycr. R-Fullcrton, Bobbi Fiedler. R-Chatswonh and Dan Lungren. R- Long Beach. arc considering scclung the-SCnate scat alon1 with economist Anhur Laffer: state Sen. Ed Davis. R- Valcnc1a: Assemblyman Roben (PJeue eee BADBAM/ A2) • The announcement came on 1he same da~ that an In 1ne·ba~ group called Cahforn1ans to Dt-feat Ro~ Bird launchC'd a SI 00.000 radio campaign against the chat"f JU'illl't' a'i well as C"ru1 Rt>~noso and Joseph Grodin. 1~0 other 1usttces app<>tnt~ The group~onducted a survey of all cnmmal cases dc:-caded h' the hla.h coun smce Bird took. office an 1977 and found that, "'hen ga\en the choice. Bird "\otes an favor of granting ne~ nghts to cnm1nals"" and restnctan& pohce p<>wers 9b percent of tht' 11me 'Wade noted The all-voluntC'Cr group, ~ h1ch has ~ haotel"\ statewide:. was formed b~ (Pl.-eee BIRD/ A2) Beckman funds will bring science study center to QC 20 million f aclllty will constructed next to UC Irvine Amoki 0 . Beckman, cbamnan of Futltnoo·bexd 8eekma.n Instru- ments, is maluna lots of chantable contnbut1ons thctt da)"S, partlC'Ularly to tocnt1r1e and m«1ic:al 1nstatullons. The 8S-year-01d C01"0n1 dd Mar m1dcnt 1s IJVlnl. away la,..e sums from b.is pcnonal fonune throuah the Amoki and Mabel Beckman Foun- dauon . In ~t years. ht bas donated S.S mtllJon toward the Ol'OPl)ICid Irvine Mcdkal Center and ll.5 million for I -- P11L SIEIDEllll Focu s ON TH£ N E~s the B«lcman l..a$cr In utute and Mcc:hcaJ Clinic at UC lrvtnt Ju t this year, he contnbuted S 12 m1Jhon to ~ tanford n1vers1ty bool of Mccbanc for a m lttular and atntbc medlcint ctntff. And ht S m1lh,\n donation Last month to a l'n1\e"1t' of llhnoas ~.rch 1n- 1mute "txheved to be the laracll pft ever b~ an 1nd1v1dual to a pubhc un1vcrs1t} But INhtn the Wastuniton. D.C.- based National Aca4cmaes of Sci- ences and En1rnemna a ttdfor tinanctal help a few yea.n qo, Bttkman was anm&lly sltepllc:a.J "l ha~t a conception of Washt~ ton u be•n.a a bureaucnt.c JUnaie. ~ltman !a.Id dunna a MWS con- ference Mo nday "I "111'1 su~ l wanttd to pour money into iL .. But l~ Oral'\IC County 1ndu tnal- 111 chanted hlJ mind •hen \he ta1b moved awa from WuluftllOG and tov.ani a West qout ll~ oeaw tOr ~--c=•W/AI, ·BnwARDSGETS NEWS TRIAL •• ...... 1 down.•• ly WC1' lookina for a picn,ic 1pot when Deputy. District = John EdwardsdrovcupanaOauu.npklcuP. C°'*Y Mid be M1 . 'f IOITy truck and called out .. Hey, prls • for Cartier, who ap.lJ1 must JO • before sbootlq. ~ the ordeal by delcrib1na t.be Tbe tlnt protCCUtio.n effort to have sbooUO&::dj,uron. She is now l 6. Edwards tt0t to the ps chamber ~I id1 ytbat ~can't ~berpu1 ended with 1 buna jury, but the ~.,.hole thina belnnd ber, Conley seco~ ended last sprin1 with a wd. unammous verdict for death. .Eftuds, -..burly m&D whole thin-Superior Court Judaic lames Judie Diaa blond hair is pulled ioto 1 pony ordered a third penalty trial Monday tail. was convicted of first-dcgroe after indicatina be weed wUh Ed· tQwder and ~ttem:pted . murder in w~ attom~ that lie bad wron&Jy 1983. Jurors 1n that tnaJ also de-permttted ccrtaln testimony durina a 1enniaed that Edwards wu Jyioa in penalty trial in May. wait when he shot the Lake Elsinore Tl)e testimony tri question camo .UU.. a s~l circumsance that from Charlotte Tibjlas, a woman Who qualified him fOC' the death penalty. befriended Edwards and later tcsti· The two girls were ambushed as ficd that be plann¢ to break out of they walk.eel throu&h Oeveland Na-Ora.DIC County jail and kill his former tional Forest. about 20 miles cast of wife aod mother-in-law in a biz.arrc 5-n Juan Capistrano. They apparent· reli&}ous ritual. ~ Richard Schwartzbtt&, 1 public defender reprcsentlna Edwards,, de- acribed Tibjlu u a confused penon wbo has no Idea of what tbe t.rulb is. "Dollen t6 dOnuts, I cao get ber to. tell me anything I want," said ScbwarttberJ, who will ask that Tibjlaa be eliminated as a wnness in a aearin& set for Jan. 13 • Two female juroR, wbo have been followioa the proceedinp since they voted to send Edwards to the aas cbambet, said Monday that Tibjlas' \eaUmooy bad little impact on tbeir decia.ion. '•1 would have voted the same way even without her:· said one of the jurors. · Schwarube11 said Edwards has cbanaed his mind about wanting to die, a desire he expressed last spring wb.en tie fired bis attorneys. CLAIM FILED BY BOMEtiWNERS .•. Prom Al ~-_ C.talioo at~· Carnation A venue boc!te last weekend atµ'acted about 150 residenl1, Scars said. The Col~mans• claim is the latest developmen\ in the controveny over the u.osiable soil in a.o ara bounded by South Coast Drive, Bear Street, Fairview Road and Sunflower Av- enue. A city-<:onlCJCtcd. $3S,OOO geologi- cal 1,tudy ~under way to determine the cause of the IJ'C)uhd movement thar is dlmaaina the fashionable homes. Resi<Unts blame construction on the South Coast Plaza annex on Bear Street. They cbarle that 1 2~foot eexcavation for an underaround ng lot is d~niDf IJ'C)uncf water nearby tCSJdential tracts, cau_s.. ina the land to settle. Homeowners further~ that vibrations from --con1truct.lon work on an &d)acent apartment complex is agravat.ma the ._da~age'. • 1-al • lo.a~ J ue unmtnent .,.... acuon ~ aeated a rift between some residents and the NOC'th Costa Mesa Homtr owners A.aociation, which initially took cbatF of the aituation after cnclrina was first noticed in three homes on Reddin& A venue in early September. • VOTERS STA YING HOME IN DROVES ••• PlomA l local water, sarutary and ~rvice districts. - Visits to several arei polling places early today turned up a ~ty of voten. Barbara Disbrow, a precinct worker at Rancho Sao Joaquin Middle School in Irvine, said s&c was warned to expect a light turnout. "They told me to bring my k.nit-tins." she said, "and a lot of coffee ... Of the 834 Irvine residents regis- tered to vote at the school in Univenity Park, only 10 showed up in the fint 30 minutes of voting. Residents arc beinJ asked (0 elect two school board candidates from a field of nine hopefuls. "I never miss an elect1on,.. said Barbara Andersen. who rode her bicycle to that lrvine polhng place. "I don't like to teU people how I'm voting. .. The early turnout perhaps was a little higher than expected at vott0g booths at Gisler School in Huot- inaton Beach, according to precinct captain Sharon Elzen. Three people were outside waiting for the polls to open at 7 a.m. About 10 of the precinct's 620 registered voters had cast ballots in the first 2S minutes of voting. Ehen said keen intcresr in the Huntin&ton Beach Union High School District. where the teachers' union is actively supporting a slate of three candidates, may generate high inteTCSt. Jn Costa Mesa, votina was so slow early today ~t ~e Bethel Towers ~llin& place that workers were vi~ 1bly disappointed when the only person walking through the door announced himself as a reponcr. "Shucks. I thought we bad a voter, .. said one of the clerks. Only five ballots had been cast by 7:30 a.m. our of the 1,126 voters assiped to the polling location 1 senior citizens complex on 19th Street "It's always slow around here," said polling supervisor Evelyn Peter. .. And people look at the sample ballot for this election and feel it's not worth bothering to vore." In Laguna Beach, a similar lack of actj vity was reported by Estelle Marshall, election officer at the JeWJsb Community Center on Broad· way. "Things have really been slow," she said. "So far. the only voters w~·ve had arc the four of us (precinct workers) and two others. There's not much this time around to bring people out to vote." In ~na Beach, voters arc casting ballots for Saddleback Collese Dis- trict Trustees only. In the Laguna Beach Unified School District and the Laauna Beach County Water District, the incumbents arc running unopposed. Ask iftbis was the slowest elcctioo Marshall bad ever worked, she re.- plied, "Ob, heavens yes!" lo Ne~n Beach, there were more people waiting in front of the Lido Isle Oubhouse for the morning school bus than r there were voting shortly after polls opened at 7 a .m. Two pollin& places were set up on the island, but only I S of the 799 rqistered voters for the eastern half of the Lido Isle bad cut their votes as of 9 a.m., aocordin& to election volunteer Beryl Melinioff. "All we know is what we read in the papers, we don't know how many people to expect," said Melink.off. In Fountain Valley, precinct workers at Masuda Middle School said no one bad cast 1 ballot by 7:30 a.m. Election judge Marian Tomaino called it "a very quiet election." At Cox School, also in Fountain Valley, nine people bad voted by 7:40 a.m., although l, 168 people were registered to cast ballots at that site. "I don't think there will be a good turnout. but we're crossing our fingers," said election judge Jane Weiler. Although the school board race was apparently not -sparking much con- cern among voters, Weiler said, "It should interest them. It's for the k.ids' sak.e." R~mn Rebert Buter, S~ve Marble, TNy S.•vedr•, Sau. Bol ,,ett ud Robert Byodmu CM· trlbated to w. •lorJ'. .. -----------------------------: BIRD FACES OC OPPOSITON ••• . homAl some members of the California District Anomcys Association CJt· pres.sly to work toward the defeat of Bird, Reynoso and Grodin, Wade said. The association may not become actively involved in politics, but the volunteer group can, he said. The group called Bird's decisions and those of Reynoso and Grodin inconsistent. cs~y when it comes to upholding the state's death penalty. Bird bas never affirmed a death penalty cue. Reynoso and Grodin have each affirmed only one since the 1978 initiative established it. "There have been claims thal prosecutors are upset because we want to win all the time," sa.id Guy Ormcs, a deputy district attorney who specializes in major fraud cases. "We want a court that will tell us the rules and stick by them." Prosecutors point to several cases where they believe the high court CTTCd or reversed itself, including one finr tried in Orange County. The Bird court reversed a decision to impose the death penalty on Marcelino Ramos, an Oran&c County man found auilty of the 1919 murder of a Taco Bell employee and the attempted murderofanotherinSanta Ana. Ormes and Jim Oonijcr, another deputy district attorney familiar with the case, said the Supreme Court established Ramos' intent to Jcill - a necessary factor in decidina in favor of the death penalty -but rejected the sentence on constitutional grounds. But the U.S. Supreme Court threw out the constitutional argument and sent the matter back to the Bird court, ~hich then dropped its finding of mtent, Ormes sa.id. "She doesn't want to affirm anr, death penalty cases, so she doesn't,· he said. Until recently, Bird has remained silent in the face of repeated criticism. She explained her views last week in a copyright story by the Times Tribune in Palo Alto. Bird sa.id she would vote to affirm a death sentence that met the proper constitutional tests. She called the 1978 initiative establishing the death penalty "inartfully drawn" and blamed it for the small number of death sentence affirmations to date. Bird accused her detractors of beina tight-wing conservatives who want ber to bend to their views on capital punishment instead offollow- ini the law, according to the Times Tf1bune. BADHAM MULLS '86 SENATE RACE .• {). Jl'romAl Naylor, R-San Mateo; Los Angeles County Supervisor Mike An- tonovich. Badham's addition to the Senate race would not be seen as much of a threat to Dannemeyer, who may announce bis candidacy as early as the end of this month, according to the Fullerton congressman's aide Duane Crumb. .. I don't think that Conaressman Badbam would take any of Dan- oemeycT's support away," Crumb laid, .. I think that there is specific support Crom Dannemeyer's consfr- Just Call 642-6086 ~.:: 110.-enteed ~M~OO not ..... y04/ll PIS* Dy 6'10p111wllebt 7 pm -.... ~ .. o. ........ ... tllents and specific support from Badham's constituents. They arc all Republicans but they don't necess- arily support both." Although the formal an- nouncement bas not yet been made, Dannemeyer, like Badham, is "look-inf. into it," Crumb said. 'We've established an exploratory committee, and he's traveling around the state, looking into it and testing the waters," Crumb said. A spokesman from Dan Lungren's office said the conaressman who represents part of Huntington Beach. bas also established an exploratory committee to study the' feasibility of running and "has maintained all along that if he has enough money by January, he will run," the spokesman said. If Badham chooses to join the field of competitors, "it will further dilute the race and will contribute to the massive split" created by so many Republicans running for the Senate the spokesman said. ' "He (Bad.ham) wouldn't be a threat." the spokesman said, "Every- one is an equal participant." ' Wis.at do yo. llke abMI lilt Dally Pilot? Wht doa't y0te like? Call tJlt number at left ud yHr mn111e will be rtt0rded, tra.aacribed 1.Dd dellvued to Ult appropriate ed.ltor. Tiit umt U ·lllMr auwtri•I service may be ased to rtcord letters to tlile tdllor oa any topic:. C.trtbelon 10 oar Letltrs col1mt1 mast lncladt tlilelr namr and ttlepltoae Hmber for verUlcaUoa. No drc:ulatloa call1, please. Tell UI wlilat'• OD VHr mlad. c~11•1ea...em C ... IHled ~ 714/142-.111"71 Al other~ eo.at1 MAINOfftCI 330 W•t 8ly St . Coll• W.. CA ~ ldchM Boe IMO Coe!• ..._ CA 92126 lefurdlty end ....,.1 If '°" 00 "°' •9fAM yCAJt ..,. "' , • Ill Clll tlelor• Frank Zlnl ro11or "°9em8'Y Churchman ConlrOllet 10 • "' ..... '°" ClOO\' ........ r • Robert L Centrett Pr0due11on Ma nag-' Howard Mullenary .,.wttetlng Director DonaldLWUIWM Circutattoo Ma1'1tQ91' ...... , ..... CtaUUied Olr..ct0t • . .. --- . . . 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Extended ....... ., 54 8-wtNQI\ 3'.atp.111. 4A Ha6Ma 17 31 ,.....,,,._,., .. se ~-IO:Up.111. OA HorlOllAt 16 71 Ont*10 12 se HoullOll 10 52 ,,., Tillnlllr g1~~ IOwr "'*" ..... ., • """ -IOOl!r • ••s:,,i.111.. ,... lodlMISllllll 43 41 cbldl-IM~ 1*111 ~ 81 se ~1118:17a.m. ... ....... .._, ... 12 M ~Md~ _, ..,_...... 12 llO .. •:• p.m. .... _..... 10 ... ::::t:.. T. 72 lo 12, ........... Olne ., Q Moon ...... IOOl!r • 11:30 p.in... .... ..,,_, ,. 24 bO°"'I ... .,.,.... lo 16 lo 73. SMCWlttll 12 51 Wedi t t • 1:08&.111..wl ......... ic...aty II ,, ~ 111 .. lllllC* _ _, 80L .... ,,_ 71 11 • 11~ p.111 . BECKMAN SCIENCE CENTER ••. From A l the renowned scientific honor so- cieties. Monday's news conference was called to announce that Beck.man's foundation is donating $20 mHlion to construct such a center adjacent to UCI. The Irvine Co. bas agreed to contribute the 7-acre. improved and landscaped parcel, v~other $6 million. ~ ~-1 Beclanan's donation was the targ. est single contribution ever reoeived by the academies, and the S0,000- square-foot Irvine facility will be named the Arnold and Mabel Beck.man Center. The academjcs have limited mem- berships, and an offer to join ts viewed as one of the most ~tigjous honors an American saentist can receive. Officials of the academics sa.id a West Coast center is an acknowledg- ment that many prominent scientists now reside in this region. Academy meetings in Washington have been inconvenient for scientists living in the West. The new Irvine centerJ...with conference facilities and staff ornccs, will be more accessible to these researchers. "It is ... important to note that approximately one-third of the mem- bership of the National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Engineering live in the western United States," said Frank Press, president of the National Academy of Sciences. "California, in particular, is the home state to more members of the two academie9"than any other state in the nation." He also noted that the Irvine center will be more accessible to visiting scieotjsts from Pacific Rim nations, such as Japan and China. The academics. operating under a congressfonal charter. advise the federal government on pressing scien- tific issues. The Beckman Center will not house bandSnOn laboratory rc- sca.rch. Instead, it. will feature an auditorium seating up to 300 and smaller meeting rooms for scientific conf ercoces and workshops. Philanthropist Beckman attached several strings to bis donation. ·He insisted the academies use the center to study moral issues associated with scientific research. "I have long been concerned over the haphazard manner in which many ethical issues relati114 to sci- ence, techoology and SOCtety arc handled." Beckman said. ..Many major ethical problems have arisen from genetic engineering. for exam- ple. "Currently, such matters arc aired in the media taraely by activists who sec only a narrow aspect of the problem. Through simplistic slopoeerina and mass demon- strations, they seek to establish poli- cies that lhould be established onJy after thorough, thoughtful study and discussion by competent leaden .... " Beckman sa.id his support of the West Cout facility was continaent on the academics' pledge to use it for the study of: •Ethical and social isaues in sci· ence, tecbnolOI)' and medicine; •The health of scientific work in the United States, with ~cular reference to education, tratnina and the availability of tools and advanced instrumeots; •The transfer of technology from rcsca.rch to commercial use and the global spread of advanced tech· no logy; •International collaboration in science and technology. Executives of the two academies sai<l the Irvine facility, which should open in early 1987, will allow. ex- pansfon of eltlsting programs into t.bc areu Beckman urged. The academies anticipate a $100 million budget in 1986. Past studies by the academics have focused on the prospect of a ·•nuclear winter'' and links between cyelamatc and cancer. The Beckman Center will have no formal affiliation with· its neighbor, UC Irvine, but the prestiae attached to the facility is certain to rub off on the campus. UCJ spokeswoman Kathy Jones said Chancellor Jack Peltason is particularly pleased about tbe academics' new facility and is looking forward to working with these groups. Peltason has been intent on enhanc- ing UCJ's reputation as a research center. "He secs the academies as exactly the kind of institution he'd like to lelC locate near the campus/' Jones said. F. Sherwood Rowland, a UCJ professor of chemistry and a member of the National Academy of Sciences. also is pleased. He said the location acknowledacs that "the c.enter of gravity for scien- tists bas moved from being all on the East Coast to having a strong group ori the West Coast as well." The Irvine site may indirectly hdp UO's efforts to attract prominent new faculty members. Rowland said. Conferences at the Beck.man Center will likely prompt the nation's best scientists to become better ac- quainted with the adjacent UCl campus, be said. Above all Rowland said, the lrviAc location indicates the academics be- lieve UCI is moving toward the ranks of the West Coast's top univenitin, such a.s Stanford and UC Berlceley. "The academies ~ that what exists DOW at UCJ tS just the beainnin& of what's aoing to exist here," Rowland said. GE:TAGRIR Getting Mrloua •bout more exerclae? Come over to the Hou,... If you've been putting off getting In lhape, now•a the ttme to get eerloua about tr•t- lng your body better. Right now. The Sporting Hou• haa opening• for a limited number of new member- ehlpe. You'U get fuel prtvtlegee at our 50.000- equar.-foot feclltty, •tatted by excepttonm coechee and lnatNCt<nt at a epect• ,.,. rate. You know that exerctae Md competition .. the beet waym to ttmy hutthy, flt, and heppy. Come on, get a grtp on yourtelft ,,...110DY,ATTnWa CCJ111 .. TATIOel•Vlllle,J THE ~·!"Dl!•PM'"'=:_~:. a II••· SPORTING &.-"DI 0 2 .I , ....... ., HOUSE ............... .. ...... ......., ••• , .. .._. 11 .... a.. i) ' . I ._for llerJ• et TM lpwttag He,., •1 ..._ ... .._Newport l ••Dfa 71~ (• ( ' f - • • . ' Buul TIN BoARD Senator to speak to GOP wom.en State Sen. John Seymour will speak lo the Greater Irvine Business and Professional Re- publican Women, Federated, at Thursday's break· fast meetina at the Irvine Manion Hotel. Seymour's topic will be "California. Where the Future is Now," and he will discuss how California can meet the cballenaes facina the sttte an order to reach its economic and social potential by the year 2000. Tickets for the continen~ breakfast att $6.50 per pcnon. Reservations may be made by calling Carol South at 832-1976. Talk on ca.metlc• .et Pat HUJ?. a representative of Mary Kay Cosmetics, will demonstrate makeup tcebmques at W~neday's meetina .of the Costa Mesa Women) Business Network. The session is scheduled for 11 :30 a.m . at the 17 ·c lub and R~tauranl on Newpon Boulevard at East I 7th Street 1n Cost.a Mesa. Further infonnation is available' at 642-323 I . SAT revlew ln lrvlne Review classes for the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) will be offered by the city of Irvine for three weeks, beginning Thursday at Woodbridge High School. The sessions will be held Thursday, Nov. I 4 and Nov. 21 from 3:30 to 7:30 p.m. Ann Litvin, a lecturer and specialist in test preparation. will conduct the series, which covers material rt9uired for the comprehens~ve math and verbal section of the cum. Test-taking strategics and strcss-1Muction techniques also will be covered. The cost of the series is $65 and the class size is limited to 18 students. Call 529-6396 or660-388 I for enrollment information. Japane.e ceremony planned A '1'oup of 16 young people from Okazak.i, Japan, 11ster city of Newport Beach, will present and plant 16 sago palms at the Stone Lantem in I rvane Terrace Parle, Newpon Beach, Wednesday at 11 a.m. The ceremony will commemorate the first anniversary of the New1>0n-Okazak.i sister city agreement and will be the fint step in creating a Japanese garden around the lantern, presented to Newport each in early 1984. The public is 1Dvited to attend. Parllamenta.rlans convene The Theta Umt of the Cahfomia Association of Parliamentarians will meet Thursday at 10 a.m. at the Town and Country Bank, 12535 Seal Beach Blvd. in Seal Beach. ' Marie Batcheller will present a program on accepted methods of elections and all those interested in the study of parliamentary procedure arc welcome. Call 968-7016 for funher information. GOP women to meet Dr. Barbara Stone, professor of political science at Cal State Fullenon, will speak at Thursday's meetinJ of the Orange County Federation o f Republican Women at the Saddleback Inn, 1660 First St.. Santa Ana' Reservations for the luncheon 111eetang, sched- uled for IOa.m.,arc necessary and may be made wtth Betty Mays at 846-8841 or Marilyn Sutton. 529-8428. t Bloodmoblle at church A Red Cross bloodmobile will be stationed at St. Edward's Church. 33926 Calla La Primavera, Dana Point. Thursday from 2:45 to 7:30 p.m . Those wishing to donate blood should call the church's Christian Service Office at 496-15 72 to make an appointment. Dlvorce workshop set Attorney Pat Herzog will presenta workshop on the legal aspects of divorce Thursday from I to 3 p.~. at the Women's Opponunities Center at UC lrvme. Tbc UO campus workshop will cover the problems and procedures involved in disso~u.tion. There is no fee for the event and add1t1onal information is available at 856-7128. Creatlve cla88 carded A class in creative visualizaiton. the techmque of using the imagination to create what one desires in life will be offered by Coastline Community College for' three sessions, beginning Thursday. at the Newport Beach Center, 3101 Pacific View Dnve, Corona del Mar. Presenter Joan Messenger will cover such topics u how creative visualization works, accepting the aood. positive programming and developing a photographic memory. The fee is $20 and rcgjs- tt1tion is being taken at 241-6186. Travel bu•lneu detailed How to start and succeed in the travel consulting business will be explai ncd Thursday at an lrvine Valley Colleae seminar from 6 to I 0 p.m . at Central Savings and Loa!) in El Toro. Instructor Ben Dom initz, president of a saJes, marketing and education firm, will tell how to become a member of the travel industry on a full or part-time basis. The fee is $35 and information is available at 559-3333. Management coune Rt American Telesis Financial, in coordination with the Possibility People, will conduct a workshop coverina_ pcnonal wealth manqement, the attain- ment of financial aoats and the solutions to obstacles to the realization of pcnonal fi nancial indepcncencc Thursday. The proaram will be held at 7 p.m. at the Marriott Hotel in Newport Beach and the reais- tration fee i1 SI 5 per-person or $25 for a couple. Call Stephanie Beracr at 557-5533 for more information. Tae.d.ay,Nov.5 • 9:30 a .m., Orus• C.Uty hlnl of S.per-vtMl"i, Hall of Administration hearina room. 10 Civic Ce.nter Plua, Sant.a Ana. W-edneeday,\Nov. 8 ~ e 9:30 Lm., ~· C.Uty.,..,.. ef Stlftr- ...... Hall of Adm. itusttation h~ room. 10 Civic Center P\ua, Sant.a AA&. • 6 .J>•m·b!:W lwll at1 Cl•ctt. Cny Council~ SOS Forest A vc. • 6:30 J>.m .• O..ta ..... a.1~n& ~Ory Hall 77Fair0rivc. • ~:30 _p.m., CMat C...mll) c.Llqe Dbtrict a.N tC Ttwa... Dllltict Board Room\, 1370 Adami Ave .. Col\a'Meta I Governor stumps for cash in Irvine Deukmejian not yet a candidate. but has amassed 3 million From 1laff ud wlre reporta Gov. George Dcukmejian has $3 million to his campaign war chest after a fund-raiser in Irvine Monday night brou&}lt in $225,000, a spokesman for the Republican aovernor said. Tbe $250-a-plate banquet at the Irvine Hilton sold about 900 tickets, Dcukmejian spokesman Larry Thomas said. "That brings us up to more than $3 million." Thomas said. Dcukmejaan, who has not yet an- nounced whether be will seek re-election, expects another challenge in November 1986 from Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley, whom be n&tTowly defeated in 1982. A busy fund-raising 'Schedule which began in June had taken in $2.8 million by Monda)'. and aides said be hopes to have $4 million by year end. Earlier in the day, Deukmejian was in Orange. dedicatina the county's new Orangcwood horn~ for. abused, neaJected and abandoned cb1ldren. Also Monday, he wa.s at the Hotel del Coronado near San Dieao, where he told the Industrial Development Research Council. whose members include tµgb- lcvel real estate manaacrs and corporate planners, that his administration bas turned the state's business climate around from the days of former Gov. Edmund G . Brown Jr. I Otange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tu.dey. NO\lemba' 5, 1N8 Honored teaeher FortuJJ.e~ 45,dies unda Louite Fon@e, •'· a former Captstrano Teacher of the Y ~1 died Sundar at her bome in Tlu'ee AtCD Bay, South Lquna, followina a Iona bout with melcnoma, a form of cancer. With ume out for treatments for w disease, she tauabt at Richard Henry Dana Elementary School until lOdaysbefo~}lcr <ieatb. . .. . f ortuoe wu honored in 1980 u Teacher of the Year for the Capistrano Unified School Dinrict and was active an Gifted and Talented Educauoriand an developina a computer lab at the school. She wu born 10 San F ranc1sco and was a 1962 pduate of UC Berkeley and prai- dent of the Caltfomta Alumna Assocation an Oran1e County. Fonune was president of the Laguna' Beach Volleyball Association. organizer of the J un1or Nauon.als teams, and a protocOI official for the 1984 Olympic Garn~ volleyball compeuuon at the Lona Beach Arena. . Services will be held at 4 p. m. Tuesday at McCormick Monuary, 1975 La&una Ca- nyon Road, Laauna Beach. ihe Rev Barbara Mudge W111 offietate the services Fonune wtll be cremated and her remain:. will be scatterM at sea. Fortune 1s survived b} her husban~ Tom, and son Todd. both residing tn Laguna Beach, her son Scott, who is .enrolled at Stanford U 01 verstty; her father, Calvan Boberg of Walnut Creek; and her brother. Dick Boberg of Rolling Hills o.t,,...,.......,.._..._.u Estates . GoY. DeUmejlan &D4 wt.le Gloria laqh u one of the ~ .... ewood The fam1l} requests that an lieu of .... ,~-.__ •••-..... _t __ , .. ......~ flowers donauons be made m her name to Home cuu~~ u-. ... uaa yoar r~ name? l he governor Stanford Men's Volleyball, where her son dedicated the new bome for aba.8ed children. ts a team member. the Laguna Beach chapter of Amencan Field Servtcc, wbett . Vons strikers hope to ignite Todd spent the summer with a family in Turkey, or the Cahfomia Alumru Associ.a- uon Scholarslup Fund. Jerome Lebens of Mesa Funeral services were held Monday for Jerome Henr) Ltbens of Costa Mesa, who died Thursday at Hoag Memonal Hospi- tal. He was 71 . Southland market walkout Mr Ltbens. who had lived 10 the area leadership," said one butcher. ··1 can't say been hanng and we will continue to Sta) since 1963. had been a ~team finer in the anything because it might be the wrong open. plumbing and beat~ng mdustry He was By ROBERT HYNDMAN OI tM o.t, ,._. 1'91f thing." ··There wi ll be some ancon,eniences -born ID Lismore. Minn. Picket lines were formed early this morning at Vons supermarkets by striking Teamsters and meat cutters, who hoped to tngger a walkout this afternoon by fellow umon employees at grocery stores throughout Southern California. According to U lrich. the strike was • the) w11l see pickets tn front of the stores He 1s sunwed by Ills wtfe. Vera, of Costa prompted by disagreement over manaAe-and there ma} be some sho~·· Mesa. a son. Jerome Jr .. of Huntiniton ment proposaJs that the union believes The unions agreed that neither v.-ould Beach. and a daughter. Yolanda Lcbans. of threatens the JOb sccunty of umon mem-settle without the other an negollat1ons Saugus. bers. Wlth the chams. which include Vons. ----------... ---• Contract talks between management and union leaders broke down Monday ni~t and the strike was orderM at m1d01ght. Negotiations stalled o n company Albertson's. Alpha Beta. Boys. Foods Co proposals to create lower-paid classi-Hughes. Lucky, Pioneer. Ralphs.. Safcwa) fications of workers and reduce the and Stater Bros. oumber of guaranteed hours per shift. Three market chains -Gelson's, Ma)· Ocean search halted Although Vons has been targeted in the walkout. union officials said pickets at one supermarket chain would lead to a lockout at other major chains throughout Southern California. Ulrich said. fair and Big Bear -ha'e signed 1ntenm Meat cutters now cam about S 13 an contracts and are not part of the strike or hotrr. Dnvers earn about S 14 per hour. lockout. The Coast Guard suspended a 9QO-. squart-m1le search today after learning no one had been aboard a catamaran found dnf\1ng upside down near Santa Catalina Island "A strike apinst one 1s a strike against them all," said D. Whitey Ulrich, presi- dent of the Butchers' 'Union Local 55 I. which includes I, I 00 meat cutters. wrap- pers and apprentices in Orange County. The Teamsters dnvers and warehouse "This could be the biggest stnke tn the personnel have been worlung W1tbout a history of the andUStt)," Dan Swmton of contract since September but chose to wait the United Food and Commercial until the meatcutters contract negotiations Workers told the Assoc1a1ed Press. The search had been launched Monda\ after a Navy plane spotted the catamaran floaung near Catalana and the Coast Guard rc~1ved reports that four people had been aboard earlier 1n the da). Petty Officer Jamm) Ouunates said. were completed. Ulnch said. The supermarkets 1Dvoh ed tn the stnke And when those talks stalled a day after and lockout serve 12 million people for their contracts expired Sunday night, the $20 billion in annual sales. "the b1gges1 Teamsters JOIDed the butchers tn the market area in the counll) :· ~nton said. walkout. "For the first time 1n the "'lfO \ears the Strik.ing butchers at the Vons super- market on 17th Street in Costa Mesa formed a picket hne shonly after midnight. They declined comment on the nego- tiations. , "You'll have to talk with , the union Bob Voigt. a spokesman for the FoOd indusll) has been organized. o,.ou ha' e a Employers Council, said the stnke Wlll not worlung relauonsh1p IA.1th the unions catch the supermarkets unprepared. representing the "'hole 1Ddustr: ·· he said "All the markets are prepared for th as," "I don·t thtnk the markets calculated 1.1.hat he told the Associated J>ress. "The} have that means." Man tries suicide in police standoff A Nebraska man apparently attempted to commit suicide Monday aft.er barricad- ing himself in a Costa Mesa apartment and threatening his ex-wife with a four-inch buck knife, police reported this morning. The 40-minute standoff ended when police broke into the Avocado Street apartment• and found Daniel Ray Kot.schwar, 22, semi-conscious after an artery in bis ri&ht arm was severed. Kotscbwar had held pohc::c off by threaten- ina to "kill any officer who entered, .. Lt. Jack Calnon said. Officers were summoned to the home by Kot.scbwar's former wife. Heidi A. Hackney, 24, who telephoned from the eo.tall ... A resident fn the 200 block of Santa lubei reported Monday that somcume over the weekend someone broke into his house and killed and skinned his brown and white pct rabbit. • • • An Osle S~t resident reported Mon- day th.at while she was setting ready for work last Tuesday, a aotfball sttuelt her car doina SI SO in damqe. • • • Someone reportedly broke into a 1980 Vobwqen bus parked in front of a home in the 1300 block of Lopn Sunday night and unbooked one of the stereo speakers. However the bUJ)la.r didn't steal 1t. IACaJaa ... cb lobby of Costa Mesa Medical ~nter Hospital about 6: 12 p.m . Hackney had allegedly been beaten and threatened earlier by Kotscbwar. who reponedl) hitchhiked here from Nebraska. Police said the woman escaped from her ex-husband by jumpang from the second- noor apartment window. Kotsehwar was arrested on susp1c1o n of assualt with a deadly weapon and was later discove1M to be wanted b) Nebraska police on a similar cbargc. Cal non said. He was treated at the Costa Mesa hospital before being booked into Orange Counl) Jail, polic::c said. Bayiide Drive. The can included a a while 1983 Cadillac Biarritz. a brown 1977 Cadillac coupe. a brown 1981 Toyota Corolla. and a silver 1985 Chevrolet Celebrity, accordina to pohce rcpons. The most valuable item talcen was a $250 portable TV /radio. Reports said in all fi \C thefts the thief pined entry by smashtng one of the wtndows. • • • A thief reportedly broke into a ho me 1n the 300 block of Poinsettia over the weekend and stole $6,550 an jeWclry. a S 1,000 viClCO cassette recorder and a S 100 can opener. Poli~ re'POrts said one of the 1ewelry items was a I v •• urat diamond o n a 1old rope necklace. It 1s rcportcdJy wonh SS.000. South County o\ S IO pur5t' conta1nang S2 1n cash v.as reponed stolen from a car par~ed 1n the lot of the San Juan Creek ~l hlet1( (·tub. 33061 Camino Capistrano. 1n San Juan Capistrano • • • Tools 'alucd at S.325 1.1.ere reponed stolen from a San Juan Capistrano home in the 30800 block of Calle El Sauzul. • • • Three su11cases wonh S950 v.erc ~- ported stolen from a car parked uun uth Laguna o\lpha Beta marlt"I lot. 30842 Pacific Coast Haghv.a~ Poltce repons said the suatc.ascs con1a1ned S '<XI an cash. two pairs of shoes. IA.Onh .$500 and a S l~O camera. Fountain Valley A S6SO car stereo was reponcd stolen from an open 1 Q83 Jeep parlC'd 1n the carport of an apanment m the !0400 block of Slater ~'enue unda) night • • • "resident 1n the 11000 block of Ttlton re~rted that sometime over the weekend a thacfbroke into has red 1983 TO) Ota Cehca and stole bJS S 17 ~ letterman· Jacket and the S 700 car stereo • • • The dnver of a s1hcr I 982 Dodge C olt rcponed that while <;he IA. as hopptnj at.a Von's market. 160:21 Harbor Blvd. Mon· da) momma a th1cfbrol e into the c•r and stole her S3SO camera and her S50 punc tntne A thief reported!) brol e into a home in the 14000 block of Plcano Coun and stole $5,000 an 1lverwatt Monda). Pohct' report• said~ thief C'Ut a hole in one of the wmdows to pm entn• . ' . Someone reportcdl 'ltole $270 1n cath from 1 bu11ness an the 18200 block of McDurmon o .,,.er the weekend Fire department officials 1-re investipt- ina a minor atructurc fire at the Sawdust Festival lf'Ounds on taauna Canyon Road that may hive been c:auted by anon. The fire, _.bieb wu quickly cxtif\l\lishcd. Car linked to burned body occumd Monday afternoon. Irvine poUoe arc bopi.na the ditcovery of Fifty .. .eveo C:UC:ofb:cr, valued at $630, an abandoned huury car will belp lbtm were '-'Olen from a vebacle parked Monday make an arrest m the death of a man •hoK afternoon on Lquna C.anyon Road. the COil"' was tct on f\rc 1n a k>c&I fiekt last victim told pohoe. mootb. • • • An anti~ typewnltt. ~'Orth an csb· Set-Richard 8owman aaJd Irvine polK"t mated Sl, wu stolen from a~ bavc taken ~on of a bllick Mercedes treet home. lhe victam aid Monda) that Ronald Euaene Sampson. }I. wuseen drhina lhonly before bis death. lo- !fewport ._ell veatiaaton have dctermantd that Five ears were rcponedly bu~ Sarnpeon. a~ 8each resident. b8d bttn unday ruaht 9tbilt ~in a lot at 919 lbot to deelb bclote bu CCW1* .. -' on fire Ocl. ~4 aJ001 R.ldgdine Dnvc 1n lrvtne Bowman said ne1ahbon.1nd fntnds had tttn Sampson dnvina the black M~. wtuch Yt"IS spoucd b)' C'ahfom1a Ht&b ) Patrol officers in the city ofOnnaic lite st VIUk lrvlnt poh~ hl\.'C obtained I ~h ... -arran1 and havt mo \ed the car to \hcu pol1tt uauon. ao-.man sa.id. He llld officcn will look for dues to Sampson's death. Police art oot rdc:aant 1nfor8'ation RPJ'dlat tht vlttl m-. O«uiMIUOD.. However. after the catamaran wu reco' ered near San Clemente Lsland. the O\\roer. ~nnis Stanley of San Francisco was located in San Otego. Stanle' had been towing the catamaran south for repairs v.h1le enroute to MeJUCO The catamaran apparent!~ was not SC· cureh tted and dnfted awa) Buntlnfton Beach ~ resident ID the 3900 block of Mistral reponed Monda) thllt a known suspect stole a 45-inch big screen TV. won h S 2.000. from has Bolsa C'h1ca Road video store on .\ug. 14 • • • Cash totaling S5 I 0 v.as stolen from a car impounded at HunttDJton Beach ToWln& near the tntcrsectton of Gothard Street and Slater o\ venue. the VlCllm told polt~ Monda' • • • ~ S250 gun. a S900 diamond nng and SW tn cash were reponed stolen from a home ID the 300 block of Baltimore Sunda' Search goes into 6th day for1nan, 7,. Orangt Count) Sberiff s deputies arc an the sixth da) 1n the search for 1 m 1ss1na 71- 'ear-old San Juan Capistrano man who was last seen at a local ~urement fac1ht)' where he hved. .\ccordmg to Lt Dick Olson. Drcyfu' lsuc Gardner lef\ the Casa Sa_n Juan Capistrano Retirement Home at about .30 a m Thursda)'. a week after movma into the cMC factltty. He was Lu\ teen an hour lattr at a ncarb) ps station. Olson said there was a rcpon of another probable slJhttng of Gardner last Satu:rda)' rqht at a trailer park off Oneta Haa.bway " hehC'Opter and airplane were used Sundav toa1d tn the SCArchoftheareaatona ..vith about 3S of Gardner's retatJvn, 10mc from out of stale Gardner's dauJ,htcr, • San Juan Capistrano t'CS.ldcnt.. bas offered a Sl.000 reward to anyone wbo finds ha" falbu. • Olten said about I• sbcnft' <kputiel and reserves took part 1n tht day~ -.rcb yesterday and will bqln their cff'oru lpln toda) after an early momma bricfina and rco.rpniution They have no new le8c1t or 1nformallon to aid 10 the sea.reh. Oltc>a wd Gardntr. who al 1s U\own as 0. tS about S feet IOlncht1 t.all and WC\lhlabout 1$5 pounds. He has tbort, 1f1Y bait with SfttO tycs IDd WIS lu1 Ken weann& a blue Plaid COwbo}' stun. bhae je&DS and blue and told tennis shon. He as nut&ina one &oat foolh Gardtr sufl'trcd lnlDOr bn.iJI.,.,,... m u~u= lOJ'CN'llD · ' JOI) tu:ieuil) d&nomille more. I \ ' \ Soviet 'defector' reVers8.l plan.to s&bot8.ge sum~it? W ASHlNGTON (AP)-The U .S. inte1Ji8enoc community turned 1lS retOW"CCI today to ttyina to penetnte the riddle of Viwy Yurchcnko, the KGB o~ wbo 1urncd thc.,ClA's bisa coup into its bigest cmbar- fUllllellt and stin'ed a diplomatic hornet's nest just befort the Geneva summiL Yurchmko stunned Washington by ~reportaS ~at a news ~without nt in the Soviet £mb&s$y reli nee that be is a victim of "state-sponsored ter- rorism. .. He claimed be was pabbed offtbe ssreets of Rome thJU months ago, druged and brouaht un- conscious to the United States, where CIA officials offered to make him a millionaire. ;rbole .U.S. officiah who ~d speak called that story "t.loncy." 1'be State Department said Yurehcnko is asp~ ~ho voluntarily came in from the cold. defcctina at the U.S. Embassy in Rome in late Auaust. Some speculated be simply ch.aqcd his mind or sot homes1ck; others wondered if be bad been sent all Ilona as a double qent to embarrua the United States. There the matter will not rest. FACTORY SURPLUS STORE HOURS: Monday through Friday 10:30 em -6:00 pm --a.turday 10:00 ..,, -4:00 pm OUTLET • Jack LaLanne's Yurthenko is ensconced 1n the Soviet compound." At the moment. mY. only wish is to return as soon as possible to O'lY country. my family, my Ion and my friends," be said. But tbe State Department, unwill- ing to accept that be voluntarily went back, said u "will insist on a meeting with him in an environment free of Soviet coercion to satis~ ourselves about his real intentions.' That raised the specter of a \).S.- Soviet tug-of-war over Yurchenko in Washinaton as President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikh&il Gorbachev pre~ to _meet at a Geneva summit We will buy your . . china and crystal ,. for cash 714-241-9973/111-905-6650 Vltaly Yarcbenko conference two weeks hence. 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I - Three Meslcana arrested in deaths of 22 drug fighters 8)' die AllOdated Preti MINA TlTLAN. Meidco -Officials said they . amst¢ three men in connection with the stayiop of 2~ members of an a~b-drua team, and VC?wtd that police wouJd conduct dl'\11 ratds more carefully 1n the futui;¢. The chief of Interpol in Mwco Cmdr. Aorcntino Ventura. sajd Monday that the three men were amsted1 on suspicion of tellina 14tnts they would find a l&rae marijuana cache at tbe site in southern Me11co where they allcaedly were ambushed and killed b)'. dn.la traffickers last.Fr:idar. Tb~ three suspects, whom police would not identify, and some of the Vlctims bodiea were taken M~nday to Mexico City, authorities said. At least 60 other people have been questioned so far, Ventura said. 7'1JaaJJajaller held after acape TUUANA-A Tijuana jailer was arrested ~n c:onnection with the escape of a prisoner facing drug and murder charges, bnoging t~ .seve~ the oumbe~ of law enforoemeot officials detained in the case, authontJcs said. Mcanwhil.e. Mexican police contin4ed to .searc~ for .seven more unnamed ~uspects U\ connection with the case, Baja Cahforrua Attorney_ General .Ja1me Toms Espinosa said Monday. To~ said the latest detained. offiCJal I~ Este~n Aparicio, a guard at the Tijuana ~.unici~ Jail. He and Sill others, .tncludi~ four jail officials and three muo1Clpal pobcemen, were to appear m fcdcra court today orfcharges they hefped a pnsoner escape and accepted btibcs . U.S. bank branch bombed ln Belgium CHARLEROI, Belgium -The; branch of the U.S. bank Manufacturers Hanover Trust in this industrial city south of Brussels~~ bom!>Cd early tod;ay. police reported. Damage was extensive, but no ooe was injured 1n l;he expl!>s1on that took place shonly after midnight, police said. Firemei:i S;fUd a su1tca~ loaded with explosives was left in th~ hallw~y ofth.e bank build~&, !ocated in the center of the city. There was oo 1mmed1ate claim of respons1bthty for the bombing. Marco. puta VP electlon on llne MANILA (AP) -Prcsi~ent Fe~dinan~ E. Marcos backtracked from earliCT statements today and said the vtcc presidency, vacant for 13 years, also will be contested in presidential elections he a.b!'Jptly ~t. for J~~· In another development, the nation's largest oppoS1llon ~1uon satd 1t would put up a candidate in the planned Jan. 17 elec~on.s, but said t~~ v~te was a ploy to keep Marcos in power. Meanwhile, the president of the Ph1hppu~e ~ber of Commerce and Industry, the country's l~t and ~ost influe!ltiaJ buStDess orpnizatioo, said businessmen opposed_ holding. elect.1~os .at a ume when the country is trying to recover from its worst financial cns1s since World War II. Sllkharon' reunion called 'mlracle' NEWTON Mass. -The wife of Soviet dissident And~i Sa.kh~rov called their reunion after the end of hi~ hunger strike "a miracle" and.said she bad ~tponed her trip West for heart surgery so they could spend tu~ie together. 'They wanted me to leave.immediately, but I asked (ora month's tJme ~use I want to be with Andrei fora little while," Yelena BonneT, S2, told her children Monday in a telephone conversation. In a ~ ~o Gorky, Mrs. Bonne:r's children talked with SakhaTov, 64. for tbe first time stnce the Nobel Peace Prize winner wts exiled in l 979. Mrs. Bonner followed him into exile in I 984. NATION Handling of Soviet sallor defended WASHINGTON ~ The Reagan administration, defending its handling of an incident in which a Soviet sailor apparently jumped ship twice near New Orleans last month, says an international incident could result ifit tried to seize the sailor and hold the Soviet ship in U.S. territorial waters. In arguments before the U.S. Court of Appeals M~nday1 ~ go_vemment attorney said _the courts should not involve themselves 10 pohucal issues such as foreign policy. To ask the Secretary of Stat_e to _prevent ~he Soviet freighter~ the ~arsbal Koniev from leaving the United S,tates unul the 22-ycaT-old sailor. Miroslav Mcdvid, is asked again whether he wants asylum in the United States could "cause grave harm to other parties and to the public interest." argued C. Richard laWTCnce, an assistant U.S. a~torney. A•tronaui. prepare for •tretch run CAPE CANAVERAL -Challenger's astronauts took final jolting sled rides and bcpn wrappina up other experiments today as they worked overtime to complete their SC1ence harvest before their return to Earth Wednesday. The utronauts and ground controllen in West Germany had asked for an extra day of orbital research, but Mission Control said Monday electrical powCT was limited and a mission extension wa\ possible only if virtually all the power- hunarY furnaces and other experiments in Spacelab were turned off. Challenaer commander Hank Hartsfield was directed to bring his shif. home on schedule, landina on a dry lakcbed at Edwards Air Force Base, Cali ., at 12:44 p.m. EST Wednesday after a week-long journey. • Congrea Jocked ln new budget battle WASHINGTON -The House and Senate, in the face of the government's worsenina financial condition, launched a new battle over a bal&nced-budaet plan-that'.s-btoc:k:ing-expans1on oflhe Treasury'$ credit line. The cub "lhortaae already bas forced the Treasury tQ tap into the Social Security trust funds, costina S l 0 million in lost interest Spendina on some propams may be delayed ifthe situation continues, officials said. If there's no action by Nov. 14, the Treasury will default, according to the Rcapn administration. Gara •pend• night ln O~allomajall OKLAHOMA CITY -Except for extra security, Bhagwan Shree Rajneeah's transfer from a North Carolina jail to an Orcaon penitentiary is stnctly routine. federal officials say. Rajncesh spent Monday nil.ht at the federal penitentiary in EJ Reno1 where he arrived from Charlotte, N.C., said U.S. Marshal Stuart Earnest "1 undcntand he'll be in Portland (Ore.) in the .momi~" U.S. Marshal M~ Wilson said in Charlotte on Monday. AIDS-IJ6htln6 clalm• to be dropped LOS ANGELES -Two companies which advertised that their producu would help halt the~ of the AIDS virus have qned to stop makina such claims, postal authorities said. The qreementa were reached with 'f:O.G . Oi1tributors Inc. of West Hollywood and Male Mail Marketina of North HoUwyood, both firms that sell sexual lubricants by mail ordeT Pottal Inspector Ralph Cook said Monda~. A compound called Nonoxynol-9 used in the lubricants was advertiled u bciqable to help atop tb.e spread of the virus that causes acquired immune deficiency ayndrome. BJrtlJ control cJbJlc at .chool OK'd LOS ANGELES -A health clinic that will dispen1e birth control information and contraceptives will open at a Los Anaeles blah 1ebool next fall under a~ approved Monday by the tehool board. Jn a 6-1 vote, board memben directed Su~otendent Harry Handler to come up with a plan for opcnina aucb a clink 'The idea is to find some outside fuodina to set up a pilot propam, ''said district spokesman Pit Spencer. Hfldtecock mlllfl wo.a 't be pl'Ollecated SAN DIEGO -Sayina there's no evidence of crimlna1 in1eni. the 11.atc attorney senenJ's office decfioed to preg ctwwiea-1.n•t a coun bailiff llCCUICld of interferina with the jury that convicted Mayor Roeer H~ Oisapument &mOf\I the f 2 juron WU also cited by Allittant State Attomey General Harley Mayfield as a ra.son for not punuina crim.ina1 cbuJDa ltllliNt bailiff Al Burrouah1 Jr. In a letter Monday to SU ~ C.OUnty Dillrict Attorney Edwin Miller, Mayfield II.id 10 Juton inteniewed dilPUled two otben' claims that Bunouabs improper1~ i.nOUCDCICld the jury d\ar'ha lta deliberation..-. Tire jury convfcied Hccfeeooc of pcrjvry aDd coetPir'Ky Ckt. 9 after 6'h days sequestered in a MINion Valley hotel . .. Russian arms • shipments up in Nicaragua Sovf ets a lso shifting . their supply routes to leftist Sandt ntstas MANAGUA. Nicaragua (AP) -A Western military observer said the Soviet Union has increased its arms shipments to the !crust Sandinista aovemmcnt in recent months, and bJs cban&ed its supply route. "They are not bcina as brazen about 1t as they once were," the observer said Monday, S{>C&kin" on condition be not be 1ndcntified further. "Burthey·veoccn shipping tons and tons of stuff in here in recent months," he said, confirming rcporu in WashinJtOn about an increase in Soviet mili~ shipments. "Nicaraglla is beginning to become a vast military sta1i9 area for the Soviet Union, not unlike Libya, where there arc more Soviet .planes lhan there arc Libyans to fly them." The observer said recent arms shipments have gone far beyond Nicaragua's current military needs and arc being stockpiled in newly built warehouses around the country. On Monday, U.S. government sources in Washington also reported an increase in Soviet arms shipments to Nicaragua after an unexplained lull that began late last year. ) Tbe SOW'CC$ said some Soviet ships have gone directly to Nicaragua, but said an SR-71 spy plane that flew over Cuba last week confirmed that cargo was being transferred there from Soviet and Bulgarian ships to Nicaraguan fteighters. • The military ob~rver in Managua said until late last year, most~SQviet and Ellstern bloc arms deliveries generally arrived by ship from Baltic or Black Sea pons, although some shipments came from Cuba. Ma ny of those ships docked at El Corinto, Nicaragua's major port on the Pacific Ocean. after passing through the Panama Canal or coming around the southern tip of South America. Jo recent months. however, most shipments have been arriving at El Bluff, a smaller port on the Atlantic coast, according to the military ob- server and private Nicaraguan sources. Tbe result 1s greater secrecy, the observer said. ' Mexican diplom·at, maid shot to death in Moscow MOSCOW (AP) -Colleagues found Mexican diplomat Manuel PortilJo Quevedo and his Mexican maid, Maria del Carmen Cruz, beaten and shot to death Oct. 31 in his Moscow a~ment, the Mexican Embassy s.a.td today" The embassy, in a statement, said PortilJo Quevedo's fellow diplomats grew concerned after he did not show up for work the previous day and did not answer the telephone or ha s doot bell. The statement, issued tn English. said the bodies were found after the door was forccti o pen. -- Frlenda and relati•ea holat Jamee 8m.ltb of Pacolma, dreeeed In areen, after he won $2 mJWon In lottery. , Four new millionaires celebrating windfalls LOS ANGELES (AP) -California's four newest lottery millionaires aren't the only ones celebrating their $2 m illion windfall. Game officials overjoyed at the joint jackpot hoped the big wins will mcrcase ticket sales. "I think it's terrific!" said state lottery spokesman Bill Seaton. "That's really what we needed. We want this lottery to have more m1llion-<1ollar winners than anyone else." Seaton said after the lottery produc~d 1ts first milllona1re Oct 28, ticket sales climbed 5 to 10 percent. The four $2 million winners. who were among the fint seven players panicipating in the second .. Big Spin" jackpot draw10g Monday, all knew what they would do with their winnin~. "I promised when this lottery was started I'd go back where I was born and put a stained glass window in my parents' church," said James Smith, 51, a computer parts inspector from Pacoima. His parents run St. John's Church in Independence Iowa. Smith. an Irishman, dressed for the occasion in a bright green jogging suit and a black top bat adorned ':Vlth a S? bill, shamr~ks and Scnlitz beer buttons. He was hoisted up m the au by has family as he won, including bis wife, whom he called "Tiny Sue." ~ Orange Coat DAILY PILOT n~. Nowmber 5, ,. .. Law professors say; 'Retain Bird' But prosecutor group starts work to oust chief justice, 4 others SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -.(\ 255 professors at I l California law achools endorsed voter retention of Chief J usticc Rose Bird and f.our state Supreme Court colleaaues, two other croups kicked off campai111s to discredit them. Professors spoke with reporters 1n Los Anacin and San FranclSco on Monday. Meanwhlle, one anti-Bird croup began a series of weekly radto advertisements planned to last a year and a group Of prosecutors held a Sacramento news .confcreoce to at- tack the justices. · At the pro-Bird news con(erencc, Stanford Un1verstty Law Professor Mfohael Wald said 65 to 70 percen1 of the full-time teachers at the law schools they surveyed werc.wtlhog to sign endo'1Cments. The 1ota1 of 255 1s onJy 58 percent of the 440 fuJl -ttme faculty that those schools reported, but the survey was incomplete at several schools, said Bard campaign spokesman Steven Glazer. Lows Schwartz. a former federal prosecutor-who teaches cnminal and antitrust law at Hasungs College of the La" in San Francisco. said professors on "both sides of the polibcal fence"~ included. w~ wbo tcachn fiunily law~ .... professon on the list wouJd be av11lable as pubUc spca.kera to counter ':dlslortion.s of !act which bave been prevalent in much of Jhe anu-cl>un lueratuie." . He cited one cue he haf\dled ln which a airl who bad been abWICd by her father wu tak.cn away from her parents and turned over to an adoptive couple by the court. Bird wrote a sq>arate opinion sayin1 the girl's mother. innocent of the abuse, should have been allowed to vwt her, at least one oppos1uon &lo.up bas clauned Bird wanted to return the air! to abusive parents. • Ventura County °'stnct Attorney Michael Bradbury, represent.int an orpniz.atiOI\ called the Prosecuton Working. Group, and former Los Anjcles District Attorney Robert Phihbosian were featured in the flnt fivc-mtnute ad sponsored by Ca11- fom1ans to Defeat Rose Bird, planned for broadcast on 16 radlo stattoos this week. The ad focuses on the re venal of a death sentence in a child sex sla)(rflg and on another ruling rcquinna Jurors tn potential capital cases to be questioned andmduaJly. • . The activtty as porntang toward the November 1986 election. in which Bard and Justices Joseph Grodin, Cruz Reynoso. Malcolm Lucas and Stanley Moslc are to be on the baJbt for rctenuon. Explosions jolt refinery; Texas town evacuated MONT BELVIEU. Texas (A P) - Explosions and tires rocked a pet- roleum refinery today. prompting widespread e\>acuauons. ~hooung flames 300 feet 1n10 the air and darkening the sk) \I. tth thick smoke. authonues said There ""ere no 1mmed1ate repons of tnJunes. As man) as 50 workers were at the plant. but firefighters and medical crews were unable to get inside the complex because of the rntensc beat, said Loretta Petterson. spokeswoman for the state Depanment of Pl.bhc Safet) Serenade enticed Humphrey back to sea SAN FRANCISCO (A P) -With Humphrey the wayward whale safely out to sea, scientists were lef\ to discuss what they've learned from the rare humpback's 31h-weck freshwater California odyssey. The Homesite · Center that offers you more than a lot. ' Humphrey, whose wandenngs took it as far inland as 70 miles from the Golden Gate Bridge. was sercn· aded to sea Ml>nday by recordings of feedina humpbacks. The ~foot, 45-ton whale, whose cavortings became a familiar sight on network television. probably was lured back to sea by the feeding sounds because it was lonely, said Charles Fullerton, regional director of the National Oceanic and At· mospheric Administ.ration. Humpbacks usually travel in pairs, and Humphrey most likely was beading south when it detoured into San Francisco Bay on Oct. I I, Fullerton said. Thousands of tourists and local whale-watchers kept track of Humphrey's inland journey, but few were able sec it clear the fog-shrouded Golden Gate Bridge at 4:36 p.m. PST: .. I'm th.rilled to death that we finally accomplished our job.z" said Hal Alabaster, spokesman tor the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The federal aacncy set up a Whale Rescue Coordination Center solely for HUinpnrey·s benefit. Humphrey's odyssey was the first official, modern record of a humpback whale stayina in fresh water for such a long period. Shultz gives Moscow talks mixed review MOSCOW (AP) -Secretary of State George P. Shultz, winding up 14 hours of "viaorous discussions" with Mikhail S. Gorbachev and other Soviet officials, said today be was unable to narrow the differences between the two sidn on ways to curb nuclear wcaPons. Shultz pve a downbeat assessment ofhis two-day visit and ofa successful summit meetina between President Rcapn and Gorbachev in Geneva Nov. 19-20. ''Basically we have a lot to do," Shultz told reporters at a news confermoe. In respect to the summit meetina. he said that "life doesn't end in the middle of November." Shultz said he discussed Rcapn 's latest prol)Olal to set Umitl on a number of cateaories of nuclear anns with Gorbachev and foreian Minis- ter Eduard A. Shevardoadu but found "there was no narrowina with ~ to the nuclear and sp1oc The Sovieu have made blockina Reqan's reteareh into a futuri&tic anti-miuile defente system their chief pJ in the onaoina Geneva weapons oeaotiationJ.. Shultz said both aides aar-ee that a.mu control "is a subject of central imponance" at the Oefteva summil But be added, ••th.is it not the onty 1--. .. •rina he had dilCUtled both tetiona.I COC\fticu and human fiabu clurina hit MOIOOW talks. We not only offer home-.nc~ from $210.000 to $970,0l.\"' in ... omc of th~ most peccacular ·emng~ ot Ir vine and Newport Beach anJ Lagun.l. \\'l' ca n put you m touch with expat~ who'll help you build your home. from the ground up: Architect . land ca pe Jc-.ignc rs and inte rior de igncr~ who'll hdp pl;tn you r home . When you buy a Im at the u-.com Home ite Center, you ttlWflV'\ get fl lot And a lot more. HARBOR RIDGE· 3 lot~ left -l with spccrncular panornm1c \. lc?W~ In • • IRVINE A0£1AC • .. Nt'''r')n Rc.11..·h .u the tPr ,,, the hill s ~~\.'\ \.\\'.~~~\. ... \\\" FAIR\\:.\) l'l\E P.1rt ,,t prc"rt\!ll'U" B1g .10\l'n in \c\\.l'''n Rc.:.1\h Cnuntn Cluh .Hn1l"'l'hac \''l·rl,)('k" \!,,lt d'ur-.c.: v.:a lk tn h:t~h1,,n ( ... l,rnd 5 )2\." \.\\'- $l)(l .Ol\" IR\'l~E CLl\'E CREST In Lagun.1 Beach L\''b \.'\'Crll~1kmg thl' P.Kttll Prn-rHe heach ,K(l'"' C.111 tor \lt•c;u\ ... CU TO~ 1 HO~iE.. ITE E~TER nl' C1\ ll Pl.1:..t. Suit~ )21 New~1n Beach. A 42~b\.' Telcphnm· 17141 714-11 )b • 1 Roeemarle and Dand Ka.Im. Bob and JW Rabel with Diana and Philo Smith. Gwen Williams' book . . . is occasion for a part}' By BETTY PORTER 0..,"'°'Ceff'llll 0 I "I grew up in Salt Lake City, wanting with all my heart to become a movie star," said author Gwn WU- llam1. ··A dancer and a sin$er, I arri ved in Hollywood in 1950, with big dreams, but my parents arc Monnon ... so I decided to teach dancing and modeling, to sing at the Mormon Tabernacle and to LIVE like a movie sw!" Williams said. How docs an "acting-as-if' movie star live? ''My husband, Harl&D (owner, WiJ- hams Tire Co.) and I spend six months of the year jetting around the world, stopping off lo wine, dine and play golf at leading golf resorts, fashionable health spas and five-star hotels. "We live in a spacious (Corona dcl Mar) oceanfront borne, drive a Zim- mer (automobile), wear designer jew- elry and clothing and play solf (Gwcn has a handicap around I 6) at the Big Canyon Country Oub," said Wil· Iiams. And. of course, the Williams' party oo a GRAND SCALE. Looking every jnch a celebrity - if not a movie sw -Williams (in a long. all-gold-sequined Mr. Black- well, full-sleeved gown with head- band to match) and her husband hosted a private, black-tic dinner party for 200 "friends" at the New- port Beach Marrion Hotel. Doing what she does best. Williams greeted guests with banter, peals of laughter and wiUl hugs aod .bsses. "~h. I j ust 1-o-o-o-'(e having you here," she said over and over again. As usual, Williams' energy level was high and, indeed, her guests seemed more than pleased to have come. "We j ust l-0-0-0-vc your book (Williams' just-out second edition of the best-scllios "Unique Golf Resorts of the World") and "You gi ve the be- e-est ~cs!" said guest after guest. "It s fun not to have to pay for such a sensational party." said Nora Beater, whose husband, Claarlea, agreed. (The Hesters attend a lot of fundrai sen.) "This is bow to throw a party," said Uoyd McDou.ld, there with Wick.I and Bob and Nucy Beclloff. The party started around the mon- umental water fountain in the hotel's flower-filled atrium where guests drank champagne and cocktails, sam- pled shrimp scampi, tortellini and other delectables and listened to the music of strolling violinists. Upstairs, the ballroom (filled with a floral fragrance) was filled with color -bu.rJUndies, mauves and crystal (or white) tablecloths, tower- ing balloo n s and gene rou s centerpieces of white o~hids, free- sias, mauve roses, carnations, heather, ruberon lilies, protea and baby's breath.(Gifts of Williams' book "Fore My Golfing Grand- mother" -wrapped in burgundy and gold -were at each plate.) • The room was fiUed. too, with the mellow sounds of Mauy Harmon'• orchestra-ana me constant rustle o f guests' dancing feel. Wbite-aloved waiters served Caesar salad (tossed tableside). lemon sorbet, filet mignon and chicken breast, tomato Florentine and asparagus Hollandaise and fine wines and champajlle. The dimminJ ofli&hts signaled the arrival of flammg ba~ed Alaska atop silver platters held hi&h over the (parade of) waiters' beads. "I promised not to sing tonight," said Williams, but she sang "God Bless America" and "The Hawaiian Wedding Song" at the ~uests' in- sistence. Then, Williams mtroduced her sons Bryce (and bis wife Slterry) "the parents of my granddau&hter Haylee" and Scott (there with £Uen White). Among the guests attending were Gayle Ma1aqney (Qeveland, OH.). Dr. Elmer and Valerie Rt1by (Bever- ly Hills), MarabeU O.cat, Marte and Fruit Farso. Harry and Jayoe Boucl, Ito and Tolll Ollpbat, Dr. Ed and Frucea Frultel, Nick and Elate P11tor, Dr. Bob and Marpret Nord, Dr. Ray and Gloria Otbrink, Job and Vick.I lrvlDe, Tom and Pat Evu11 Jerry and Deue Helpern, Harold ana Mar1aret AlldertOD, Rieb.rd and Mar1aret Daffy, Jack and Dorla Love, Byroa and Joyce Batdteller, Jack and K.atllryJl Brulford, Joe and Fama Duely. PaparauJ 11 edited by Dally Pilot Style EdJ&or Vida Deu. SEE THE IMPOSSIBLE BECOME POSSIBLE WITH THE MAGIC OF SPECIAL EFFECTS. -. • G o behind the scenes with George Lucas and other Hollywood filmmakers to see how spec:ial effects were used to make the most memorable scenes in "Reh.Im of the Jedi," "Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom" and "2010 '' G NOVA THE MAGIC OF SPECIAL EFFECTS TONIGHT 9PM KOCE 50 ORANGE COUNTY PUBLI C TELEVISI ON TV Worth Watching r, ,, ' Glitz and glitter abound atplayhousereop~ning ByEVELASB •. .,..,,...CCI $I Ill I Construction crewmen have put tbe finishing touches and the star studs in place for the Laguna Moulton Playhouse's pla reopening. "Fhe glitz. and alitter. of -sequins, stars and cham~e twinkled under the klieg lights and moonlight as 300 or so Playhouse "400" supporters entered via red carpet for a celebration. Accordina to event chairman Janet Ea&ers (with husband Henry) the party on Wednesday was sparked to celebrate the expansion of the theater in its first phase (i.c.ncw enlaraed lobby, ~w 68-seat balcony, winding staircase and expanded refreshment bar). T~-¥layhousc board hosted the $SO-a-person, black-tie optional event to also preview the 1985 playhouse season. · Joyce l>oua and Mary. Harrin.too at intermission said, ''The show is areaL" Donna said. ''My favorite is Mr. Snow (portrayed by Du.De Jerome &Jttermu). whoever he 1s. I'm enjoyina this marvelous party." Orrte and ADtlloay BroWD said they enjoyed the dancing in the show. "It's fun to sec all of the wonderful dancing, ins\ead of just si&ging. This production is definitely beyond a neiahborbood theat.er production." President of the ~d of Directors Roser M.y ~with wife Vlc&orla) said bis heart was poundi~ 'Probably the most exciting thing to me in doin.g this 1s that just about 80 percent of the people attending the function this evening arc from Laguna Beach. l find it very exciting to have Laguna come out to support its playhouse." Before the show, guests and supporters dined on jumbo shrimp, crabmeat, salmon. roast beef and 'lssorted cheeses and fruits. BUI and Dlau (we&rina a stunnina antique rhinestone pin (the real one's io the safe, she wd) Cooper were found nibblin! with friends Bobbit and Roa Do•1w. Cooper said, • We got here early to~t. We were one of the fint ones in to grab the shrimp. • DouaJas said, "The food is fantastic, but you can't really aet to it. The table is round, there is no bqinnin* or end to it so everyone is jus1 aoin& round and round. Also talkina about the food were Ardnlr and Allee KrHt with Jay (a Broadway director) and Vnala Rider. "To solve the problem, I recommend box lunches for next year," sajd Kraus. The Riders were also chattin& about their rcicent Alaskan (inland water ~sqe) cruise aboard the Sun Princeu with22 oftheit fiienda from Oz:anae County. Dlua Sml .. (wearing huge emerald earrinp) with hµsband Plallo (Wlth bis wife's mink draped over one shoulder) with friends Beb and JW Rllbef were ta~na • about the Rubel'a Exotica'att pllery in l..aauna Beach. When asked about the earrings, Srrutb said laughingly, ''Rhinestones -really! I flew all the way to Madrid for these things. We don t wear costume Jewelry around here." •• The Rubels were also talking about their first anniversary trip to Two Bunch Palms (a posh place in Palm Springs). Playhouse representatives said the scason.-0~ning gala is envisioned as an annual social event bmtted to the newly-expanded seating capacif¥ of the playhouse. hence the name ''400." The reopening gala mar~s ~he completion of step one in the 10-ycar, $2 millton institutional development program of the theater. Papuaul l• edited by Dally PUot Style E4.l&or Vida Den. Continue talking with teen A•• lMDEIS Deir .... ,._..._, IC.MN IC..C-., Gwen and Harlan WWiama are pleued that her book 1' ln lta MCODd prJ.nttnc. DEAR ANN LANDERS: l am a divorced working mother of two daughters ages 13 and IS. I have been separated from my ex-husband for three years. Joe remarried two·weeks after the divorce was final. He rarely sees bis daughters and when be docs, it is only for · an afternoon or occasionally overnight. Two days ago, I took a late lunch and showed up at home unexpec\ed· ly. I walked m on somcthina that stunned me. My youngest daufiter was in the kitchen and ··sbeila, • the older one, was taking a shower tn my bathroom with her 16-ycar-old boyfriend. ICE SKATING LESSONS Learn To let Sbtt The EMy Way For A Ufetlmt Of Fun & Plnsure In Comfortable, SuptMMd Surroundings SPECIAL High litteresi ACC.Ol:NT 120.000 SI0,000 1100• MONn' RATE1'1EID ''> R.ATE/YlElD '\'\ RATE/YIELD ';(, MARKET % % % LIMITED 7 3 90 90 % % % DAYS 2 s 7 180 % % % DAYS 9 8 7 s ONE % % % YFAR 9 9 8.72 lrv1nt 11y '"'"fl' offt n you a w1df vari<ly of Kiah 1nrtrr11 Ulf uv;nR' accou nrt along w11h 1h< uftty of fSl I l inwran« Comt 1n roday or oil ui for thr an,wt ri co your clwd.1n11u v1ng¥111vfM• m<nt q U«11on' 1 All 1•~• ~'to thant•· "" ~,.,.....W 4'•11~ Oft "'' ~ bttll l llCC.Wftfl Hllllltd 10 llOO •u )()(I m1n1mu111 lot ~ M.r..,., ) <~b "" month 2400 Midld-on Driw. lnuw, C.ltfon11a t%m • 1714) "'-llSS 1. ' .. .. f had no idea anythina like this was aoina on. Sheila has been datina this kid for six months but they were not allowed to sec each other un- supervised. Apparently she bas been seeing him while I am at work during the day. After the initial explosion, Sheila confessed that they have been having sex for several months. (She is on the Pill.) I tried discussing the situation with her father, but as usual, he criticized me, saying I bave always been too pcrmiss1ve. We had family counseling after the separation. Sheila had problems in school with truancy and drugs and l had a problem with drugs and alcohol. The counseling helped but I'm afraid it will not help this time \)ccausc Sheila rcfuSC$ to JO. How should I handle this? -DESPER- ATE fN CALIFORNIA DEAA CALIF: U SlteUa woa't 10 for addldoul ceateliq. 1• u..e. v .. ~phlueeoalMwi.k..,tM llHt of comm..aeadem opea. Al for Joe, It la.,,....., daat YH cu e1peet very little IMlp fnm ~m. bwt •eep tryta1. He mlPt lllave a clllaaee of lleart. Paret1ta are oltU,a&ed co .. eYery-~ poulble i. IMlp Delr ddNne led deeeat ll•et, IM!t dlere a. .. way we cu feree ...,. ~ i. make pM MdaMu or IMM•t decatl7 If tMJ ~ .... •dlerwlte. I wt.a. ,.,_a. w'9 lla•e ~ tltelr ..,....., ........ t ............. Mlve1, "WMn ... I faiiti' leme- tlmet It 11 tlM cMNrea wlM fall ud Den eomet a time wlMa punt• ....... ...., ...... .., tNt accept ............ CJhrtllemMl'ftt. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: You are probably sick to death ofletten from and about nurses. Can you stand just one more? Most nurses ao into the field young and idealistic. They don't realize until they have invested _years of ttainina and thousands of dollars that the work is backbrcakina and streutW and the PIY is shamefully low. Acclording to the Bu.reau of labor nunea make less than mail carrien' plumbers and IUbqe collec:ton. Yet they are responsible Tor people's lives 2• houn a day, often work.ins double ahlfts to make up for statrah~ I love beina a nune but l c:anoot l\elp but bc<lome furious when I Pl)' an auto mechanic -for one bour 1 labor -more than I cam in two weeks. A oune, however, is not &110"'5 '° be<lome anary. As an .,.1 o( mercy, abe is expecied '° mniin ~ pieua.Dt and Syml)llheUC at &11 uma. . I try to look PfC)falional but h iln't easy OD wbat I make. Oive UI. break. -AN lt..N. IN er. DJU.ll LN.: Y• (_. ,_, eel· ....... ) .... " • ..., ....... Ill ... ............................. ................... ,.._ .. ... a11. Orenge Coa•t DAILY PILOT/Tu.day, Howmber 8. 1985 A.7 Talk of teen pregnancy delayed ' They huffed and they piµfed ... ... bat the controlled ezploelve the wrecking crew UHd to b~ down the 21-atory Northalred Point apartmenta ID eut 1.ondon wun 't •tl"on& enoqh. The block wu to have been demoU.bed becaaae of 80Clal problem• with lta National poll shows most parents waaj. schools and television to cover subject NEW YO RK (A1>) -An over- whelming majority of Americans believe teen pregnancy 1s a senous problem, but most pa.rents fail to discuss birth control with their chil- dren and would like schools and televisioo to do the JOb, according to a poll released Monday. The poll was conducted by Louis Hams & Associates fOr the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, and surveyed attitudes about teen · pregnancy, abortion and U.S. funding for birth control in developing na .. tioos. . lt found that 84 percent of Ameri- can adults, crossing all social groups, believe teen pregnancies in the Unit· ed States are a serious problem. However, 64 peroent of those surveyed said they believe parents have little or no control over their teen-agers' sexual activity. "The findings suggest that the solution to this devastating problem lies in increasing access to sex education in the schools; providing greater communication at home about sex and birth control, and making contraceptives more avail- able. even if it means providing them free, and establishing school-linked clinics." said Planned Parenthood President Faye Wattleton at a news conference anno uocing the survey results. · said commun1cation and education are the best means of preventing t«n preanancy; 17 percedt said parents should explain contraceptive methods; and 13 percent said parents should explain the risks and conse- quences of having sex or becoming prcgnanL The survey summary S&ld that "pragmatism supencdes moral- tsm when people a.re asked what can realistically be done to decrease the rate of teen-age pregnancy." Most of the rupondents sa1d they did not learn about sex in open, timely discussioru with their parents. Twenty-one percent said they learned about six from their mothers. 5 percent. from .their fathers. A large proportlon. 40 percent. said they learned from friends. and another I 0 percent were first taught by their sexual partners. . That situation appears to be chang- in~ however. Of those respondents Wlth children ages 6 to 18 10 their households, 76 percent said an adult has talked with the chtldren about sex. The median age of the child at the fint discussion was I 0. 2 years. However, the topic of birth control was not often included in such talks. O nly 33 percent said they brought 11 up, the survey found. Seventy~•&ht percent of the respon- dents sa1<f they think TV should present meuaaes about birth control_ as pan of 1u prosrammmc. The th~ m.ior octworb baYJ: refused to a~pt birth control adven iscments or public service an· nouncements, said Humphrc¥ Tay- lor. president of Loins Harm. He blamed the media for crcattna a public perception that birth oootrol 1s controversial, but said the survey results prove that is not the case. Respondents also overwbclnungly supported sex education 10 the schools. Etfbty-fi ve percent sa1d 1t should be in the curricula and 6 7 percent sa1d they favored requmng publlc schools to cstabllsh links with family planning climes so sexually active tetn-agcrs have access to information aod contraceptives. A maJonty of those polled., 55 percent, said they oppose a consutu- ,tJonal ban on abortion. while }5 percent were in favor Th1s·1s down slightly from a 58 percent majohty who opposed such a · ban an a mid· 1984 poll. Most re spondents. 74 percent. said they thmk abortion will remain legal. and 19 percent said they t.butk it will be outlawed aptn. Support for the 1973 U.S. Su~e Court decision leplizina abortion was evenly divided; 50 percat in favor to 47 percent oppoted. Thit indicat.cs a Q&tTOwiS:W of opinion since January, when a aimilar poU fo.und S6 percent were in favor and 42 perocn t were oJ)l)OICd.. • Regardina tf.S. aid for birth control abroad. a near 2-1 majority of Amenc:an.s were.in favor, the survey found. Seventy-ei&bt pm::cnt said the United States &bould send financial help, although that number dropped to 61 pereent when a developi.na country also ruos abortion ProctamS. The survey was based on 2,510 mtervtews with adults nattonwide. All intcrvi~s were conducted by telephone between Aug. I 3-2S and Sept. 13-17. The margin of error was 3 perocnt. ,,. Class1f1ed ads ohone 642-56 78 Nearly ' "'1 acre reelclenta qd replaced by houtle8 with garden•. · ~ __!!'i~ve percent of those polled ...................................................... The survey concluded that .. there is a public mandate for telev1s1on to d~I more realistically Wlth the sub- JCCts of sex and birth control " Circus chooses new riDgmaster CHICAGO (AP) -After months of fanfare, nationwide auditions and suspense. Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus on Monday selected its 27th ringmaster -a New Yorker who previously worked as a. trade- show announcer. "I was so surprised, the adrenalin shot up," said an exuberant Kristopher Antekeier, 28, after circus pr~r and owner Kenneth Feld Sentence for hitting teacher cut to probation LONOKE, Ark. (AP)-A 16-year- . old girl, sentenced to three years in prison for hitting her math teacher. plans to continue her education outside of school after having her sentence amended to probation. her lawyer said. "We've gotten what we feel 1s an appropriate disposition." said W.C. Bentley, attorney for Tina Walker. who was convicted Oct. 9 ofsecond- degrec battery, after being placed on three years' probation Mo nday. The former eighth-grader was charged under a 1981 law that made attacking an on-duty teacher, police officer. firefighter or state employee a felony. She was tried as an adult. The girl was arrested in May at Carlisle High School where she at- tacked Pam Berry. 37. in a classroom. She arrived in class late that day. refused to close the door and struck Berry on the head and back with her fists when the teacher tried to take her to the principal's office. according to testimony. :?ronounced him the winner from the center nn$ at the Chicago Stadium. "The circus has always t>een the love of my life." said the lanky Antekeier. who sported a bright red blazer for the occasion. Anteke1er was among seven finalists nown In from across the country for Monday's final audition. Each was asked to sing a song and say the c ircus' immortal words. "ladeeeez and gentleman. children of all ages." Feld. who chose the wtnner. said It I was Anteke1er's booming baritone. stage presence and rendjtion of ''A Sucker Bom Every MUlute" that made him stand o ut. "There was a spark that he had, a I personality that came across. He came off 1 n a sense bigger than anyone I else." Feld said-after spending 15 minutes making the decision. Anteke1er, who starts work Jan. 9, was chosen from a field of more than 100 applicants who auditioned dur- ing the past year in Los Angeles. San Francisco, Detroit. Boston. New York and Chicago. He succeeds nngmaster Dmny McGuire. who is leaving the circus after four years to seek fame and fortune as a television game-show host m Los Angeles. 'Tm JUSt going to tell him 10 stay loose and be ready fo r anything,·· said McGuire. dressed m his sparkling orange-and-yellow n ngmaster tuxedo Jacket. white stretch pants aod shiny black patent-leather boots. "There's so many variables. You have to look out for that horse and stay out of the way of its hooves. or that propman. It took me months to figure out what percent of m y energy it would take not to fall down in front of the crowd. and I've done 11 many limes ... Prl.Dce Albert cb.ata with bla father Prince Ralnler u PrlDcn1e1 Caroline and Stepbanle await a Benrly llllla fala with Grefory Peck, Jimmy Stewart and Cary Grant. ?potlight's easier for prince than sisters BEVERLY HILLS (AP) -Prince Albert of Monaco says he's been aware of bjs publfo responsibilities since qe 2 but bas been able to avoid the -1&re of publicity that has dogcd bis 1t1ten Caroline and Stephanie. "A lot of times you just don'~ want ioaoout,"uid the U.S.-cducated 27- yeat"-old prince, son of Prince Rainier Ul and the late Princess Grace. "You face a very busy ac:hedulc. with more and more events in Monaco where someone fl'om the ftmlly must $how up, and it' very tUh\I, 0 be said. But be said be bas no trouble with people ebasina after him when he apPCan ln public as they do his Sll1Cf'I. "'I walked to echool from the p&lllU:, llC: ~IU. In fact. he said one day last week at tbe Beverly Wilshire Hotel, "I was jogi~ this mom int .. and wasn't recogn12cd, but "it's been awful for them (Stcphamc and Caroline).·· He said he's been aware of his princely rcsponsibillt1cs since he was 2 yean old. "but I never let 1t bother me." After aenina his dcarce from Amhent Collqe in Mamcbuseus and workina for the Morpn Guaran- ty Trust Bank in New York and for Moct & Chandon wineries in Pan His Serene H iahntss Pnncc Alben Aleun~ t.ouu Pierre is involved tn Monaco's Red Cross and spons Pf'OIJ"lftlS. The latat ls a Mon1CO-to- New·York )'aebt nee that wu to cod Sunday. ) l . , • ' 8.71 1% 9 .000% "'''l ... 1 YIELD 0 0 E-'t'EAR CDs ., When yo~ have a great rate, you don't have to shout about \l 1th 1u~t a )'i00 dc:po~lt. \ ou l •111 t Jrn l'\.tr J high mtt·rt<M on a one·yca.r ('() Ju~t <ilOp '" '11ur llt'Jrt·,t lmJWri .. 1 ~'in~' branc h \l'e'll he h .. PP'' to .m'" t>r Jm 4m '11on' 'ou m.n hJ' t• And rcmcmh<'r we ma\' "IX'~ '4 lfl h t'ut "t '-.un '41me preH' ~a1 en r.u~ For additional ~D infonnation, call toll-free: 1-800-CHEK-NOW (1-800-243-5669) 0 Imperi~l Savbigs AssocaatiOD Where Tanorrou1 Begins Today. .. ' MiftimulndrpoeU 11\00blomd1"1n'~0rot .... Wuhou1 nonc'C' ~Oil pc-naln ~ iatt)'wu~ \ • - it. . l OrwliQe-Ooul DAILY PILOTIT~. Nowm N ew hairdo doesn~'t e rase ' old Rose Bird The hairdo isn't the only thing state Supreme Coun Justice Rose Bird ha$ changed as her 1986 retention election ne4r'S. • · In a copyrighted interview with a Northern California newspaper, the beleaguered justice -who has voted to reverse all 38 death penalty cases that have come before her -said she would vote to uphold the death penalty if the ~ case came alone. The softer look and the harder hne on capital punishment coincide with the formal kickoff of a campaign to remove Rose Elizabeth Bird from the coun. The campaign focuses primarily on her anti-death penal~ record, though many Bird watchers find her more liberal in general than the average Californian. Still, it is the death penalty issue that has become the focus of the anti-Bird campaign. Now, she seems to have accepted that venue, albeit reluctantly. If the atmosphere and the timing were less political, it would be encouraging to think that Bird had rethought her position on the death penalty. But voters have a right, eyen an obligation, to look with skepticism upon reversals made in the heat of a campaign. It may be a very Ion~ time before that .. right case" comes along. It is, of course,· Chief Justice Bird's ethical responsibility to interpret the law as she sees it. Perhaps she is to be applauded' for her fortitude in the face of tremendous opposition. But the fact remains that her unblemished anti.death penal~ record is at odds with the prevailing attitude-of Californians who voted to restore capital punishment. .. Society has a right to expect its court to embrace its values and reflect them. The Supreme Court, after all, does not exist in some solitary orbit It is a bedrock institution that helps define the society. Law is a malleable entity, shaped and molded by the point of view of the interpreter. But for a society to have consistency, fairness and equality, its citizens and its courts should inhabit a common philosophical ground. If the people of California would confirm a justice whose attitude on an issue as important as the death penalty is alien to their own, they might as well elect officials from other lands and other planets who neither speak the same language as the voters nor understand their government. · . Opinions expressed In this spaoe are those of the Dally Pnot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment ls Invited. The Dally Piiot. PO Box 1560, Costa Mesa. 92626. Phone 642~86. What's wrong with a law against noise on beach? T o the Editor. I read the editorial abut radio noise on the beach and one sentence in particular interested me where you say government need not regulate common sense or civility which is all that is necessary here, referring to the radios. Well,,ovcmment is involved in a lot o thin~ that involve common sense, attitudes, potitertess and so on. On the question of radios on the beach, your editorial only tells me you have bad very little experience on this. Try this one on for size, on the Corona del Mar beach where ..a guy backed his pickup truck with two speakers facing out to the beach, moved down toward the water. turned it up full blast and he must have generated I don't know how much noise for SO yards iq all directions. If my neighbor plays his radio too loud here across the street, you call the police if you have to. There is an ordinance against it called nuipnce. To me there is nothing wrong with an ordinance at the beach. You may not have to enforce it, the fact that it is there if somebody asks is a threat that it can be enforced . That's really all you can hope for. is a threat. Yoll don't have to have some policeman coming down very h~f hour to tell somebody to turn his damn radio down. Most of those idiots you'd be wasting your time try1ng to tell them to please tum it down. Whenever you try that, they tell you to drop dead. All ( can say is the way your editorial is written, l don't know if you ever go to the beach, or what you have against ordinances, or your thinking process, but there is plenty !>f spitting on the sidewalk. people walking dogs on your lawn. There is an ordinance about that but they could care less. they still do.it anyway. So your idea on the general public is kinda short on the subject. LEONARD MO RGAN Corona dcl Mar ReUgiousfreedomsUpping To the Editor: Many of the original settlers of the United States came here secJcjng freedom of religion or fai th. The Declaration of Independence makes numerous mentions of God. The Senate has aJways opened its sessions with prayer to God. The first sentence 1n the Bible is "In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth." This scntenc.c cnc9m- passes two of the basic foundations of faith. "In the beginning God'' is number one, number two "God crc.ated heaven and earth.'' Not too long aao-relatively speak- ing, a group of scientists in England attacked those foundations. Darwin first with a theory and one of his colleaaues second with a fake skull ORANGE COAST ~-· .DlilJ Pilat that he made up with a skull of a man and the jawbone of an ape. This was known as the Piltdown man. The next blow against those foundations was struck when that theory was banned from public schools in this century. A leaaJ trial was held in Tennessee in which it was determined that evol· ution would be taught as a theory along with creation. Now in recent time$, the courts have outlaw~ faith in Ood. creation can't ~ mentioned and they would prevent the Bible or mention of faith in God from appearing on campus.. What happened to freedom of re- ligion? JIM BOt.DlNG Costa Mesa FtMll ZIN fcMcw TomTeH MeftaO!nO (41tOt Doll,..., Clty ldl4or CreltlMff Spottl EdltOt t, ., ''Th e l e'gacy of the Olympics will last for decades. even If some parts of California th~t contributed to the Games don 't share In It. · · . " .. THOMAS ELIAS columnist THOMAS EUAS Olympic profits stay in ·s outh · Surplus funds of 1984 Games to aid minority youths . . ........ ~~-::~.::.~ tNN -rifE. LJ.tl(! 1\USU. a: 1l{E-ml1lD ~ ~ l'JE ~ ~~!'' Almost precisely a year after the organizers of the 1984 O lympics revealed for the first time that they'd made a record-breaking profit ofS22S million, it's become clear that Che -~ Olympic surplus will be a presence in California for decades to come. What did prairie stater& have against Coast trees? But not all parts of California. and not even all parts of California that were used as Olympic venues. What's more, the Olympic benefits will be most uscfuJ to participants in"minor" sports like _gymnastics, weightlifting and horse-Jumping - where school districts do n't usually provide either coaches or facilities. Minority youth Y.~l aJso be prime One of the thjngs that has always perp. texed me is the reason why some of the immigrants from prairie states, who have come to California, dislike trees. That seems to have been a feeling on the part of people panicularly from the states of Nonh Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska and Kansas. I don't know euctly which states were affected by an action of the United States government early in the 19th century which provided an incentive for people to move to the prairie states from some of the ·more attracti vc states like Tllinois, Missouri and Wisconsjn. This incentive was a law which provided for what was called Tree Claims. lfa small family, hungering to own land, would "fiJe a claim" in one of the prairie states and then plant and irrigate a group of trees on each ~uarter secton, the requirement of living on that land for a full year would be waived. Apparently the theory was that if the required number of trees were planted (princi- pally cottonwoods) that was a guaran- tee that the settlers intended to be permanent. People love trees. don't they?. Not as it turned out. Instead of loving trees, the people from those Tree Claim states who moved to Southern California, wanted to cut them down. When I hired Don Huddleston to be manager of Jefferson Properties. I WALTER Bu11ouc1s up new tracts of residentia( lots, benefician~s 4bt approximately always cndea~ to have their $90 million Olympic proceeds that tracts anneited byiflc City of Newport will stay in ·rornia. .. ..Beach. AJltbat became clear the other day. Only trouble was that the new when the Los Angeles Amateur ~ residents of these tracts, even tho ugh ~thlctic Foundation, fund-<lispens.- they had a Newport Beach add~. mg arm of the Olympic organizing ~d to have a.,,~cc t~;~ grocene1, committee, announced guidelines for ice cream, gasoline a I the other passing out grants discovered one day he had iirced to necessities of li ving.. So. naturally,: ... · . . have a line of trees or ·~-.: north side of they dido 't give a hoot about a good The money will s~y in the eight 17th Street in Costa Mesa cut down. address for gasoline, etc. ~uthcmmost c~unt1~ of the state, These tall and stately eucalyptus trees By this time some of the business with almost n~thmg tn~k.Jing ~onh o_f had been planted in the early days of brains of Newport Beach realized the Tehacl)api mountarns, :;a1~ Stan- Orangc County to provide a wind-they had done no favor by trying to ton .Wheeler, the ~oundat1on s ne:-"' brealc. Apparently the alumni of block access to .the .. hill. ' So they president Never nund that Olympic midwest Tree Claims didn't love decided to complete Riverside Drive soccer drew mo~ ~a~ 700,000 fans trees the way we Pacific Nonh-which the old man had started with a to Stanford Stadi~m in ~f!ta Clara westerners did. stub street so .be would have some County.. generating m1lho~s of Anyway, down they came and the com ers on the Pacific Coast Highway dollars 1~ p~ofits. And '!ev~r mmd ~c trunks were cut up into firewood. for gas stations. foun~uon. s own . gu1d~hnc ~b1ch As I've told yo•u before , the way Mr. Every time J decide that Search-~Y'S special consideration WI~ be Jefferson ("the old man" as I called light should cease being a hjstory 8ven ~o those ~s that provided him) enticed me to live in the Oran'e lesson I get a squawk. So, all right, I'll lympic venues. COast area instead of remaining m continue to tell you more about the "If we gave out grants in every Cheviot Hills in Los Angeles, was to Orange Coast area and leave the place with an Olympic venue, we'd be buy and sell to me a tiny newspaper problem of strategic metals to experts looking at Cambndge, Mass .. and called the Globe-Herald. It was pretty like Henry Marks. There·~ a lot to ieU Annapolis, Md., too,'' said Wheeler. evident why the Globe-Herald was .and I'll do my best. Of course, soccer at Stanford rcg- for sale. No advertisers. And why .no ' . We h~ve had some mighty fine and uJarly drew 80.000-plus fans, while advertisers? Just no advertising mtcrestm& people here on the Orange the few East Coast events barely stores. I persuaded him to let me get ~oast. ~so some phon!es. They're averaged 20,000. some to locate on a broad strip ofland interesting, too. Trouble 1s they have But for those in the right parts of the he owned on 17th Street in Costa lawyers and they're always bun~ state, the Olympics promise to rc- Mcsa. and looking for libel suits. So I won t main a pot of gold for many years. l~ve told you before some of the say "Mr. or Miss or Mrs. is a phony." The foundation makes it plain that things we did later on to ma.kc Goat You'll have to decid~ that for your-most of its grants will come from the Hill as Costa Mesa was frequently sc.lf. S 10 million ono in interest money it referred to then, "respectable." Real Walter Barroapa l1 t~e PUet'1 cxoects to be collecting each year. estate developers, when they opened fondlD1 peblioer. r.we will have no rigid rule on _. whether we use int'Crest only," said PauJ Ziffrcn, the foundation chair- man who also, chaired the organizing committee. "But we won't spend it all at once. We'll (only) dip into the principal where proposals merit it." What's more, the foundation auidelines call for emphasis on matching grants, with O lympic money 1oing mainly t o groups that also raise money on their own. And as with the Olympics them- selves, there's to be no great emphasis on building grand new stad iums and that Melcher's letter was given big arenas. U.S . hopingtoavoid 'Iran' in Post -Marco~ Philippines W AS HI NGTON The d iplomatic world is a topsy-turvy place where yesterday's bad guys often bec-0me today's good guys, or vice versa .. The current state of relations between the Reapn administration and the Ferdinand Marcos fe$imc in the Philippines is a case in point It's bard to follow the rigs and zags of the game without a seorccard. Here's the latest lineup: The White House and State De- partment, after dutifully apologizing for Marcos and the system of rcpreg,.. sion be has imposed on his people over the last 20 years, have suddenly become his severest critics. This change ofattitude bothers the admin-tstranon .. s more-strident supporten. who see Marcos as ·a reliable anti- communist ally whose successor m~~ be another Ayatollah Kho- mcm1. The admirustration's change of hean is bizarre enoul,h. But now it turns out that one of ~arcos' sus>- pqrten in Wubin,ton is Sen. Jobrt Melcher, a Montana Democrat who wu Jona ~rded ~ the New Riabt as I bleedl~·heart bberal. What's ao1nj on? The State Department is furious at Melcher. With the zeal of a new conven. the diplomatic corps is lt)'i~ to make up for its years of wtnkina at Marcos• exccncs. Ap.. perently afflicted with a case of .. Iranian Syndrome," the prnident's foreian pobcy adviaen don't want the United Statts too clo1ely identified with the Marcos ~e. as it onClC was with the late shah oflran. It tw evidently dawned oo the Swt Qepenmen1 that., even if ~n::os •teeeedl in woatherina bis IJOwina o~jtion. be can't live forever. A binetly antf·American succetlOr in Manila would shutdown the stra~cally vital U.S. naval bases in the Philippines as quickJy as the Ayatollah Khomeini sent the CIA peckina. In the fervor of their new-time ' JACK AIDEISOI and JOSEPH SPEAR religion. the State Depanment ex- perts resent Melcher for buddying up to the dictator they're trying to bring to heel. For his part, the Montana senator is ·furious at the State Department for throwing obstacles in the way of American wheat sales to the Philis>- l)ines. Hoping to end the ram1;>ant corruption that has cbaraCtcrUed wheat sales to the Philippine govern· ment's National Food Authority. the State Department is demanding tha t the sales be handled by private companies. Manila balked at this demand, PoSSiblr because the National Food Authonty is run ">' a Marcos crony. Now the Philippine. be.ken' cartel as thn:atenina lo buy its wheat from Austra.Jia, which would cut American farmen out of the picture entirety. Our associate Luceu.e lagnado has seen the cable traffic between Wash· inston and Maru~ oo the con· trovcrsy. foUY BOttom is particu· larly exercised over a letter Melcher wrote to Marcos1 in wtfjch1 •Iona with t0me criticism. nc praited the Philip. pines president for "cunaUina some of the country's economic problems and the prOJl'CSS that is easily visible in affirmauon of the principles of democracy, the freedom of ex· ptation and assembly." Thia, of coursek was hardly as ef!\tsive u Vice l1'C1idcnt Geom Bush's famous 1981 tout in Manifa. ~xtollina Marcos for "adherence to democratic prlnciples and to the democratic~.·· But Policy bu cbanp •inc.a tbcn, and U.S. diptomau bemoan the fact ' play in the pro-Marcos P6.ilippine "Construction cequests will be press as evidence of continued firm funded only when special need can be U.S. support. establisbed ... and the cost is small," • • • WATCH ON WASTE: Diego Garcia say the guidelines. is a remote island in the middle of the For all grants, the key q,ucstion will Indian Ocean where the United be whether the money wlll go toward States has a naval base. Duty on this a program no one else can duplica~. remote pileofrockis notconsidereda _ .That's ~ news for school dis. plum, so to ease the hardship for tncu. wh1cb ~tutlly try to cut Americans stationed there, the Pen~ . back on competitive sports when t~ey taaon flies io fresh milk from a diary run sbof11 of money. For the.pohcy in the _ Philippines. The cost of · means hi&b school football, basket-trans~tion amounts to more than ball, bue6all and ~ck cannot expect S 1 million a year. to ~t many Olymptc ~ollan. . • • • . . ~ Webavcoo intenlionof~ BE~ FA~: Ever since otberfundinasolm:eS." said~ n. the Soviets hastily flung up a barbed-What's more backen of cultural wire barricade in 196 l that evolved events aimilar to the three-month ans into ~e 1teel-amR:oncrete ~In f'cstival thit accomP.ni~ the Ofym- Wall. 1t bas stood as an ualy rcm10der pies can't count on any funding th~t the ~ple ~f East Germany are beyond the $2 million already pnsoncn 1n tbe~r o~ country .. Late-pledad f'or a 1987 rerun. ly. the communm fellmc has tned to "That is a one-shot deal " Z.iffrcn pretty u~tht Wlll by ptantina flowers said. "At this ~Int we hav~ no other and ma · the ~s>-wired ~ns and such plans." • other dead y deVlces leas noticeal>le. And when the foundation names Evidently Llkina a l~so. n from the AnitadeFrantz,a l9760lympic track late Frank U oyd Wriat;tt, .the ~t bronze medalist, as one ofits top four Oe~ans fiau.re _that J)C?hU~ans. lill't officials, it was servina notice that architect~. can bide the1r m11talces by virtually all its money would 10 to arowina ivy. •Poru. THE OMBUDSMAN: Here's Defrantz, .who will desian. new another eum~le of why the Internal •Pont Pf'Oll'ltnS for the foundation to Revenue Service r.tct the title Jiven back, vocally opposed the one cua. to it by Sen. John Heinz, R-Pi.; ··a tura.J ~t already handed OU~ "If we computeriuidchamberofhorron." A ·~ lf.~na mo~y t~.lh~ 'kin~ of taxpayer told us he was notified on a th.1nas. she ~1d; •• ~ U be JUlt SatunSay that he owed $2,374 for another f~undauon: unspecified crro n on his w returni. Its ~n~ make 1t cl~ the Olym- and was ordered to pay up by the pie he1~ Wlll not be JUlt another followina Thursday. or fl()t poaible f~un~ti~n. But lhere•1 e".ery i~­rreezm, of his anctt. Neither the uon st will be like otben m tr)'iDI to taxpeyer nor his accountam could suetc~ its dc?llars over many years find any mon. Af\er teVeral calla. the and in •~na up com'*? and W ,peyer finally sot an obviously bureaucratic ara.nl apphcat1on overworked IRS employee, wbO ~urea. . pn>mited to look into the lituation W'hlcb ~ll en~lhlt tbe lqacy of and report back -in four to aix theOlymptcalutsf91decadn,evcn if weeks.. So now be sits.. wailifll for 1 ~me puU of C&lafonlaa ,that ~ lien to df'OI). ~b.nod io the Oama don t abate 111 It. llct A.a~· ... Mii ,...,. ,,..,. 1'ew ........... MMlea. .,. 1yNketetl ~--........ a ..... at.ate .. ..... I'\ • Taut 'Rhine' drama at Costa Mesa Play house To truly enjoy LILiian Hellman's "Watch on the Rhlnc" requires an . abuoda.nce of' concentration, not the least of wllic:h is the ~tive to appreciate the state of lnternatiortal evcnu in the era immediately preced-ina World War II. Thia rarely produced drama, first pre1eoted on Broadway in 1941 before the United States'. involve- ment in the war, is being revived by director Pati Tambcllini al the Costa Mesa Civic: Playbouse in a taut, well staacd production. Modem playgoers accustomed to a snappier paoc may nod off on occasion, but those who sue:"\ with, it will be ampfy rewarded. Before the tint Japanese plane took off for Pearl Harbor, while America was still" trying unsuccessfully to ignore • the gatherinl storm (in Churchill's words) brewing over Ger- many, Hellman had won the New York Drama Critics Circle A ward for her conscience-pricking dramatiza- tion of Americans and Europeans caught up in the impending conflict. • The play is somewhat melodramatic by today's standards, but it stands as a spleodjd piece of period theatrical ·Toi TITUS literature, amplify1na an Amencan condition whic:b existed prior to the posti-Dec. 7 burst of fervent patriot- ism. ' The play is set in the sPl:in'" of 1940 at the home of a well-to-do family outside Washjoaton. D.C. where a widowed mother and her IJ'OWD son Are entertaining a Euro{>C8n couple as house guests and awaiting the arrival of her daughter, with the German husband and two children they've never~· When the-cast is com- plete, te sioos begin mounting. slow- ly but ap iably. Plots a subplots interweave at their own unhurried pace, allowing Hellman's characters to ingratiate them~lvcs on their audience. Unlike Liddygetsroleon 'Vice' LOS ANGELES (AP)-G . Gordon Liddy. a convicted Watergate co-conseirator, makes bis television acting debut as a cocaine smuggler in an episode of NBCs "Miami Vice." The segment is now being filmed in Miami under direction of series star Don Johnson. Liddy, a key figure in the Committee to Re-elect the President (Richard Nixon), served 54 months in prison for masterminding the bluk-in at the Dcm0cratic: party hcadquaters in the Watergate Hotel in 1972. He will play Capt. Real Estate. a former Vietnam War officer trying to sell a huge shipment of cocaine he smuggled in after the fall of Saigon lO ycan earlier. l PRIME TIME SOAP~ J .R. gets an unwelcome partner By LYNDA HIRSCB DALLAS: Pam decides 10 keep the sbates of Ewing stock that Bobby left to Christopher. J.R. is pleased in the sense t.b.a.t Wendell will not have contt0Uing interest in Ewina Oil. but is sufl'riscd when Pam decides to take a very active pert in running Ewina Oil. Ray and Donna crushed when they're told their baby has Down's Syndrome. Qiff tells Jack that he's not wek:ome in the house to visit Jamje -I.bat no Ewina wiU ever be W'Clcomed into bn home. J .R. still believes secttts In Jack's pa.st could have important ramifications for the cok!:{. With Sue EIJen about to be re from the sanitarium, her mother warns her that aivi':ll ue J.R. wiU mean the end of any stability 10 Sue EUen's life: • • • DYNASTY: Aftrr several fiahts, Du aarees to travel 10 Moldavia wil6 Alexis in search ofKillJ Galen. When Alexis shows Michael the SI 0 million ransom note for the retum ofK.i'ng Galen. Michael tells her to mind her own busineu. As Steven and Amanda share a chummy tennis pme, an infuriated Michael puJls her off the court and tells her it's not proper bcbavior(or a woman who's supposed to be in mourn- ina. Claudia stunned when the man followina her and Adam in San Francisco is a priest that's prepared 10 marry the couple. Decidin& to ao 10 CaHfomia. Jeff cntruau li11le 81ake to Krystle's care. Krystle surpriaes Rita when she enters Sammy Jo's houte. Joel arrives unseen and knocks Krystle out • • • P ALCON CREST: Richard 1s stunned when be learns the identity ofbjs would-be killer -Pamela bas bad bu face done over with plastic surgery. dlfferen1 hair and makeup. Father Christopher meets bis mother JuHa for the first 11me. Lance, no lo114C' mournioa his late wife, meets a rock Slf\ICf and decides to pay more attention to her than the business. Anaiela conaiden marriqe proposal but insists on a 1>"'1\UPtial ~ment RILL STREET BLuD Furillo is upect wbetl Oricf Daniels embuTusics a drua- usiua cop. When the cop commits suicide, bis widow's onlY. interest seems to be whether she'll still be the beneficiary. A man who thinks he's Rambo terrorizes teveral Mis. While Lucy thinks he's harmless.. Joe ian 't so ccnain. Joe's qualms prove correct when "Rambo" aoes on the rampeaie, this time with ammunition and bow and arrow. Renko's illqible hand- writina creates problems when he aives out tiaffic tickets. Howard meets a female British dot· trainer and the two are obviously smitten. • • j ~ LANDING: ill Bennett., Mac's new Uli1wu. comes to dinner. Karen is taken abide becau1e the airlAmiodl Karen of hencJf u she was ift' younaer days. Karen's childm> alto take a shine to Jill. When Jill considers rcturnina to Sllc:ramento, Mac prdetl ahe stay on. Abby alves Ben fUU rein in the ~ dellu1ment when he tlma~ns lO _Quit. e-.plain1na to Ben she doeso t care 1f ~ scadon makes money. be can do anythina . ht wuu in the ocwa tration. • • IT. EUSW1IElt&: eatpbal deades be needs help at home in the form of bis list.er·lD-law. Ellen~ i.11\lll hurt by ber buabud's I.ck of reacuon to their IOI\ 'a GEOIGB PLIMPTON .. ,.. ...... death. Dr. Cra11 decides 10 supcrvue the the staff membeB that a teenager 1s ID baby's can, everythina from med1cal desperate need ofbclp. They disreprd her altenuon to bathing. Al the funeraL CratJ opinion and the tccnqcr rs later lulled ID a is finally able to come 10 terms with his fi&ht. Bobby Caldwell 1ums bis allenuon love for his son. Helen Rosenthal warns to a respiratory therapist. K NS S2 7~ ht two M•u Weelc0•1n, WAl -I * I ti M•I Onty S•turd•Y'•.Sun d•Y' & H ohday l Unleu ... oteo '"" ... , C'if C:.IUf"W~[)I c·AM1· ~~~·" ~ t~ rwr •~~ tiooM CITY CEnTEA D U 4 2!>!>l 1901 j ORANG( Mttroeol·u~ TNK HOLCROFT COYIDUYIT (R, 1 :00 '"•ltllt Nltllt A) •• 7 :05 ..rr DRtlAlllS lP$·1a SHOWS AT' 7 :00 .. 1 :10 KISS Of' ~Ul'S~R ......... , 6456t:OCI" n.ooos~• CRAZY tpG) 1 :50 6 l :O{" CEnTUAY ClnEDOmE 0 6 )4 H~l Cll•P""n & S•n~ An• fwy TOUYE6DeE .. LA. 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ONJ lll1M PuOOl£ m 6Ef ~ I ~tt-6 we:r fEE'T' ! 1l4E. eo5 ! ,,. l t-----c....~-_, I ~~ J~~ lkAY. ~ ~NE I ~~ • A WXl.JltY MmlltX1rl f Rl6HTIP 7JERt l ~/ ' t t~ THE FAMILY CIRCUS BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) SHOE by Jeff MacNally "Morrie is the richest kid in school. His dad played basketball in the NBA and his mom was a rock star." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson "You might say they spoil hlm ... how many dogs have their own hot tub?" DRABBLE GARFIELD MY MOM WRITE.5 THE GRE.AT(~T Lf.1'TER5, GAP.f="IE.lO. LISTEN 1'0 THIS ... MOON MULLINS JUDGE PARKER r, ~ .. f f t9 j . ' 8 i ~ ~ J}f);-l\ ~ ~~ ~ i(, 11. (' ..... . ci&:' .. -·~ -"B••tlft9 on the pipe• •ln't gonna do you n~ good. The fum•c• 11 buated." DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham ·~ • ,,.i; r ( r ''1 . ,, •• ' ... t •' , I I '. ~·''"•· ,, I~ 1EUS !If. M STUFF l ~,. 00 >Nt> MV ~1' 1lilS Ni 1HE SlUFF l SIKXJLV 00 ~ # by Kevin Fagan ~·1 11.lO(~fN l 1"f.•(U. f~t .. K l'Vf. 6U.M EATI~~\ fOR ~E.~~~ by Jim Davis PON'"f 5POIL IT FOR fl/'£, JON. l'M WArTtNO roR TM£ MOVIE ro· COMf. oo-r by Ferd & Tom Johnson ~VEFtYWHEflE Y~P.-·SHE SAIC>To 1 STAND IN KEEP ,AN EYE oN iH'~ooM-· ~ You WJ.41LE 5'~E'S ~E'S 10C#I,. OH VACATION .. ATME! -~ ~ • ~Harold Le Doux .. ~T ARE 'ft>U ~lPM£RE ~-~~ PEANUTS ItQCN, l.Q:)H . by Charles M. Schutz j rT"ll--~~~~~-.-:-1 THERE IT IS! THERE'S HALLEY'S COMET, AND TMERE'S ANOT~ER ONE Rl614T BESIDE· IT!· BLOOM COUNTY · f!U(.0 _lfEI. p NI!, MU~ ~:1 Rt6t "Pr£ MP l !Rhl'r 51flrfE'/l 11 11(8{() \oE'r I TUMBLEWEEDS ROSE IS ROSE BR IDGE THOSE ARENT COMETS ... H105E AAE ™E HEADLl6HT5 ON A CAA .. ASTRONOMERS· ALL CJ/ER ~E WORLD WILL BE FOOLED A6AIN ! by Tom K. Ryan by Pat Brady I NElJTRALnETHETRUMP Nort h·South vulnerable. North deals. • NORTH • K 7 li?QJ63 0 K 7 +QJ954 WEST EAST •9862 •J53 1\7 742 li?KlOtSS 0 94 0 6532 +AIOU +8 SOlJTH • AQ JC>4 Ii? A O AQJIOS +K U . The bidding: N•rtJa Eut Put P ... I ~ Pue s. , ... INT p._ '0 , ... Pa .. Put s .. u. I + I 0 3 . 4• •• w .. t , ... Pue , ... , ... , ... Opening lead: Seve n ol <:::>. Jn an attempt Lo Improve hla bfd· ding, or late Trump Coup Tommy had been ualnr h 1 veralon of the Blu• Team Club with atlect part nera. Nothln1 helped -ht aUJI got to ridiculou1 contract.a and played abominably u cepl on thOM hand• where trump broke bad.ly. Then he WU transposed into a master Of technique. u this hand illuatr-atea. Tommy'• opening bid showed at least 17 points and his partner'• reaponse, though positive, denied three controls (an ace and a king. or three kingal. Thereafter, the bid ding was natural and Tommy and OMAR SHARIFF hit partner reached an-excellent alam. The bnl,y poesible drawback wu that, becauae of the 1y1tem, Tommy tnded up declaring. W eat ltd a top of ·nothing heart. Tommy won In hand, led-a trump to the queen end a trump back to the klnr. North wu vlalbly relieved when Eaat 1howed out on t.hla trick and WHt won tht ace, t>.eau .. he kntw t h1t Tommy waa now in his element. To prevent decla"r from Lakins a flnt11t for the t•n of trumpa, Weit continued with a heart. Eaat covered the jack with lhe kins. and declarer wu forced to ruff. How ner, Tommy waa equal to the La1k. He took three rounds of diamonds. West could not afford to ruff, ao he aluHed a apade as Tommy let go dummy's losing heart. Weal parted with another ~pade on the fourth diamond and Tomm1 ruffed to reduce dummy's trump lensth to that of West. CHARLES GUEii Tommy overtook Lbt kin1 of apadea to lead bia lut dl&Jnond, and both Wtat and the t.ablt pan.cl with apadea. Nut came th• qutH of apadea, and two burta wttt alutred. Now both Weat and dumm7 were down to nothing but trumpi9. 10 when Tommy led a spadt. We1t'1 10.7 of trump• were neutrallaed by the board'• J-9. rw ....,.. ... Me.t Clilutlt 0 .................... ...... ...,...., writ. o .. lrWp l.AtW, ltot C .......... A .. e.,Cla ...... .... N.J . 08077. ' .,.., ................. Terry Reichert •pea.rheade the Barona' runntna aame. Rams get good news: GumanOK foiGiants Bu t Rob in son mflY not ch a n ee u s ing injured back yet By JOSEPH DUDEVOIR 0.-, .... C.1 I If I d8111 Aftergoingdown with a le.nee injury 1n the second game of the season, Mike Guman appears to ready to re· enter the Rams' lineup this week as they prepare to meet the New York Giants Sunday. "Mike 1s almost ready to come back.'' said Coach John Robinson. "He's come back faster than we thought, and I think a lot of that is because of his attitude. "It looks like he could play th~s week, but we would rather wait another week than risk 1t if he's not back alt the way. The U-back spot 1s a coltis1on pos1t1on." he said Monday at Rams Park. It's also a position that the Rams plan on getting more out of, especially with the success of Tony Hunter in last Sunday's win over the Saints: Hunter caught six passes for 11 3 yards and a touchdown. "We're starting to see so me of the d ynamic play he's capable of," sajd Robinson. "He can really run with the ball after he catches it. Things are starting to blossom for h im now." Guman, who was seen working out wllh weights, said "If (Robinson) wants me. I'll be ready. Yo u have to 1ump and test the water some time. I think the knee is back to about 90 percent of what it was, so I feel pretty ood .. g. AfterdamagJn$ the ligaments in. his n&ht knee on a k1cleoff return agamst Philadelphia, G uman has missed the last seven games. "I might be a little rusty." he said. "But I've practicing a httle in pads and it felt pretty good." The original erognosis was eight t.o 10 weeks, but It appears Gu man 1s two weeks ahead of schedule. But with the play of Hunter, and David Hill a fixture at tight end, Ro binson probably won't rush G uman back into the lineup. Brock lost for Giants' game Rams quarterback Dieter Brock underwent minor suraery for removal of a kidney stone Monday and will miss Sunday's pme against the Giants in New York., the Rams anno unced. Brock had been bothered by the kidney stone for the past two weeks, but still played ~ the Rams' two games, completing a club record 35 passes in.a 28-14 loss lo th'e San Francisco 49ers, then passina for 256 yards and two touchdowns in Sunday's 28-1 0 victory over New Orleans. Coach John Robinson would not say whether Jeff' Kemp, who's Usted 1CCOnd behind Brock in the Rams' depth chart, or Steve Dils would start qainst the Oiants. ' . . Daily Pilat .. . . --. ---~ ~ - TU~SOAY. NOVEMBER 5, 1985 Ex·Edlaon High footbell at.re ahlne '' Weber State. 112. CIF playoff pairing• Ht for water polo. glrla volle)bell. 83 • • The _bigon~:Edison v·s.BaronS Crow n, CIF aspirations- take a back seat Friday By ROGER CARLSON °' ... .,.., ........ In a series which has take n v1n ually every twist imqjnable since Edison's 2 1-20 upset in the inaugural 1n 1969, knocking the F ountain Valley High Batons out of a tie for the Irvine league championsb1p and a berth in the CJF playofl_'s. a new lane opens f riday n1s!tt. It's Edison and Fountain Valley at Anaheim Stadium -and althou_gh the luster of two ranked powers is lacking -there's one item both coaches wilt agree on. "We could both be totally o ut of It and 1t would make no difference," SilYS Edison Coach Bill Workman. "It's Edison vs. Fountain Valley, that's enough reason." "Everything's put on a hold," says Foun- tain Valley Coach Mike Milner. "It's .still The Game." Edison enters with a 2-1 Sunset t..eaaue record, 6-2 overall, a aame off' Marina's championship pace. The Barons, however, naven't kept Up, falling to I ·2 in lcque, 3-5 overall and h.avc scored seven points or less in four of their last fi ve starts. "I don't know why everybody fiaurcs Fountain Valley is out of the playoffs," says Workman. "If they beat us we're out. They have a strong off'cnsi ve line and they pass-block well. They've stood in theTC with the best of them. "Thcy'~e lost a couple of close games, we've won a couple of dose games." ~1Son holds an I 1-4-1 series edge, but the Barons have won the last two, v.>tth the 11-10 come-from-behind victory 1n the final seconds easily their best moment in a span basically d0tnmated by the Chargers. .. In the early years Edison staggered the Barons again aod again as the underdog. Now it's Fountain Valley which 1s the underdOJ, based on what's happened to the two teams this year-but Workman says hedoe5n't sec any bearing. ··r don't think they need 1t (the psychologJ- cal edge),'' he says. "They're a good football When Mulligan talks, Anteaters listen ... UC lnine buketb911 coach Bill 1111.lliaan la buy primln& hia Anteatera for the 1985-86 opener in another week. lJCI launche. the .e&M>n W edne8Clay, Put EdDoa-F V .core. , . ...._ .... --... ..... ,, lfff-EC1•to11 71, FOU(llaln Valtv 10 1'70-Edltoll 1t, Founta in Vallev • 1'71-EClllOft 10, Founta in Valltv • lfn-EOllOft 1', Founta111 VeU.v 1 lfn-Founl1l11 va ... v 21, EClllOft 1A lt7~0U11t1l11 van.v o, EOlaon o lf7s-Edll0ft 1'. Fountelfl Vellev 4 1'76-EOJsOft I) Fountalft V ... v ) 1m~oun111n Vallev '· EClllOft > lf7t-Edll0n 10, FOU11taln Vellev 7 1'19-Eiffton 35, ,_,,,,, v .... ., 7 19'0:-EdlM>n U, Fountain V•lleV I• lftl-Edlaon n ilountaln veer, 13 1"1-Eohon 17. Founteln Vallev 3 l~Founlaln Vallrt ll. EOIMlfl 1 1~.ountaJn Vl/llleV 11, EClltotl l~ program, and we'd hke to think wc arc That's the way 1t 1s." Fountain Valley, however hasn't shown the fi repower expected of the Barons. T hey've lost five of their last six games, were drubbed b) Ma n na (35-0) and lost a critical 13-7 contest to Westminster after taking a 7-0 halftjme lead. The running game has yet to have a I 00- yard rusher 1n a game and the pas<;1ng game has operated at o nly 4 U percent eftlC1ency. EdJson, on the other hand, bu sopho more K.aJeapb Carter at tailbeck and be has shown speed, strcn&th and maneuverability 10 ru5hJn1 for S92 yards on 137 u rries and seven touchdowns, an addition to 12 catches for 11 J. yards. Eduon quarterback M tlct Angelov1c has completed 80 of 136 for 1,327 yards and 14 touchdowns. which works oul to a 5~8 pcrocnL comeletion ratio, with just four interceptions. • 'Their quarterback 1s raJly an under- esumatcd player." says Milner ··1 really like him on film. He's a competitor, a wm ne'r and appears to be a very aood dcc1sion-ma.lter ... On the surface it would appear the Baro ns arc over their heads, but Workma n scoffs at the idea '"That's eu ctly what people sa1d before Westminster " Westminu er shocked the Chargers, 24-14, 1n the Sunset League opener. ··1 don't buy that at all. We respect Fountain Valley and we're scared, we know what they can do " Milner sum\ up the Barons· cause· ·'Edison 1s something special. It will make a season." ' , •, Nov . 12 aaatnat a vi•lting Ya.goelavian team. The collegiate opener la Satur day, Nov. 30 at the Unlvenl ty of New Orleana. Vikes 'star knows his Craft Tudor issues apology Marina standout has two speeds -fast. and faster By JOSEPH DUDEVOlR .,.., .... c. ••• , ., •••• Accordin$ to the Manna H1$h football coaches, 8111 Craft is a one-01mensional player. and that dimension is greatness. ··You don't get them any better," says head coach Dave Thompson. "There's no better all-around player," says defensive coorindator Andy Donegan. And assistants Larry Doyle and Dick Degen say they haven't seen a better player - ever. and they have 30 years of coaching expen ence between them. What makes Craft, who plays both safety and running back, so great? "Mental toughness,'' says Thompson. "That's what stands out most to me. We brought him up as a sophomore because ofh1s mental attitude. And physically there's nothina he can't do." Last week against Ocean View, Craft picked off two passes from his safety spot on defense. And on offense, the 5-11 , 190-pound senior rushCd for 69 yards on only carries. fie also scored on a 46-ya.rd run and added a twcJpoint conversion for good measure in a 41 -1 4 romp 10 run the Vikings' first-place Sunset League record to 3-0. For bisefforts on both sides of the ball. Craft was named the Daily Pilot's Player of t he Week. It's the second week running that a Manna player bas woo the honon. last week 1t was Mike Stafford. .. You may find them biger or faster.I' says Donepn. "But none better. He really lights people up," he says in ~fcrence to Craf\"s binmg ability. "And he knows o nly two speeds: fast, and faster." You have to be fut to travel with Craft, as be runs a 4. 7 40. And he's also runn}nJ from one sport to the next Like football, he 1s a V1 longs' basketball team And in "olle) ball. he is the setter for Man na With all the thnlls he must be getting, what are biggest? "Getting the 'picks'," says Craft. an o\11- 0 rangc County and all-lea~uc selection la~t Player of the Week year. "I love getting interceptions. I hke scon ng, too. but I think I li ke 1nterccpt1ons the best." As of this lime. Craft has six 10tercept1on-; on the year and holds the Marina career record with 14 His two goals are to: (a) run back an interception fora touchdown ("That would be the best," he says) and (b) break the single season marlc ofnine'p1cks', held in pan b) his brother Bob, who was graduated in ·16. ··The whole family is hkc B111:· says Donegan. "His brother was all-league and his sister Terri was a great softball player. They all do everythin'-fast and hard." Donegan likes the fast, hard. au-out etTon he gets from Bill, but at.times he washes Craft would take it a little easier. .. Sometimes he worries me because he plays so hard every play," Donegan says. •'After a game he can barely make it to the bus." And the way he hits, the other team probably has a hard time, too. "I lik~ defense better than offense." say'I Craft, "because you act to do the h1111ng instead of being hit, but as good as o ur offensive hne is, I don't have to WOIT) about gettin' hit much when I carry the ball.'' While Craft is a dtpablc ball ea rner (I M7 yards on only I 7 carries -an 11-}'ard a\Cragc and 5 T D's), his pla~ is on defense and maybe on the sidelines as a coach .. The kids bave teamed a lot fro m him," says Doneaan. ··He's shown them ho w to h1l. how to be tough and how to be a man out there He's this team's leader, no d oubt about 11 " Craft also is on all the V1km~· special o.,,..._,..... Cardinals' star says he regrets barbs thrown LOS .\NC.ELES 14-PJ -t Louis Cardinals' p1tcbmg a.cc John Tudor, who won two 1'~8S World Senes games but distanced himself from the public and a ntagontzcd rcponers wi th verbal barbs. apologized Monday. In a telephone conversauon arranged by his agent. Tudor told a reponer he was sorry for commentc, he mad e d unna the scnes. including the query. "Want me to talcc a swing at you'l'· "I wantl·d to get ahold of you aftC[ th1!1 whule stuff w1.5 o ver and apologize for the wa .. I acted,·· be said from his hnme in suborban Boo;ton. In t"~planat1on . Tudor u1d he was unprepared for the media bhtz that came with the playoffs and the "-orld Series Tudor. who pla)C'd for the Bo~ton Red Sox and the Pltt<ihurgh Ptratcs. had never p11ched for a winner before. 'Tm nN a pcnon who hie.cs to tal~ aboutmv~lfand when I have to do 1t. I lond of resent n." Tudor said ··Then when you hear 45 qucsuon,..aboul the ume thma. at tnes your pat1en~ And 1 did n't respond too well ·· •••••••••··-th~-year starter at point auard on the· (Pl_.. eee VIKINOS' /8 2) Football •tar BW Craft of Marina W.ll'• Vlk -lnf8 18 tbe Dally Pllot'e Player of the 1'eek. Tudor·~ ~h.aVlor prom pted a tough reply ftom the national press. Herzog claims it wasn't his best effort, but ... NEW YORK (AP) -As the National Lcaaue Manqcr of the Year, Whitey Rcnoa likes the bonorf but doesn't think the 198$ buebel teUOn wu his bat manaainaJob. Afttrbe1na named the NL ~t Monday by the Buebel.I Writers ANOCiation of America for leedina the St. Louis Cardinals to t1'e pen· nant. Hcnot 11id ht ~It he was a betttt manaacr for the Kansu City Royals an 1979. That year, his Royals fi niabcd teCOod to the Anacls in the Amencan LcuueWest. "T'hat ... he noted, "was the ye.tr I IOl fired." Henot's performance this llCUOn was noteworthy. thoual\. oon11dcrina that this was suppoeed to be a rtbuilcUna year for the Cardinal t}lina apeed and petchina. the Cardinali aurprilod "'°" obettvtn who bad pie.Rd thcm •for one of the Lower pcmuons in the NauonaJ l...ea&uc East uft really IS a IJ"CI\ honor because theri was lots of competition th11 year," Hcrzoa said in a st.atemenl rilea.sed by the Cardinals. "fclJows like Pete (Rote of Cioaonatl) and Tommy~ l.atorda oftos Anatlts) and othtts did a ,veat job, ancf I'm JU t happy l won, Ktft.Ot,. reached lattt 1n Tulsa. whcri be bad a spcatona enpaemeflt, called the award "a hell ofan honor ." ••Wbenevtt you IC' an honor hke thi't,h tant I 101 Of ptOpk to do the job. .. be Mid. -'flllJ year's votifta for Nt rnanacrr •j \ was as clox as it's ev~r httn Henog ~at Rose by one point Herzoa rrcc1vcd 11 first-pl•~ votes and 86 points in battoung by the BBWAA panel co mpott'd of two wntcrs from each of the 12 lequc cities R , who took the Red to a lt'C'Ond-pla« finish an tht NL West u a player·manqer, had 8S po1n1' and to f1m1)1ace bllJot l.uotda. Mnncr of the fil'\t BBWAA Tmnqet award two )e&n II°' finished third with '~ pomtl tnclud.ana thrtt fl"t-ptacc vo~ Olvey Johnton of the New York Mtts bad (Our points and Buck Rodlm of~ MontRaJ Ex~ hid l two T "-0 )Cat'\ aao when the Wf'lten. 1ntroduCcd the manaicrs' award, Lasorda be-at Bob l1lhs. tht"n man- aaer of Houston. by a sinak point, I 0.9 In an eff'ort to avoid that ~tc a finish. the ballot wu c11panck!d to tbrtt na.mes with point awarded on a S-3-1 blsn, but tht> Hertot·R0tt ~ sull came down to a i 1n&)c point On.t wnter. Chaoo Fttner of tht Ptt- tsburah Ppst C.Utnc. left Rote ofT tbc ballot Johnson was the onl) mfAlllef wbo rccet-.td ~o~ last year u wdl at this r. The Meu' tT\&ftlltT flnalhtd t«Ond to O u 'tJim Frey in t . \ " pa"" atl of us the perpleuna 1 udor -50 neat and aracxfu n the mound. so IJ""~~s. drab. sullen . even mean otT 1t. ·• C'ufT) K.Jtkpatnck wrott an Sports 11- lustntC'd Tudor u1d uch cnttc1sm did not take him by SUflll"'K ''Most of wlut was wntten w., true A few auys toolt hots that basically ~ hes., .. he ta1d .. But 111 take cnhosm. 1 knew It was comifta. I tnc'W I'd takt IOmf beat, and I knew I dcllel vcd IL" Tudor, 31 , won t-o pmes dwu~ lbt World Smes and wu a prune cand.tdatc to be named the Most Valuabae P\iyer befott he and t.bt Cardinals ~ved an l 1-0 dnabbuwby the l(ru ty llovals tn lbe lf'Vatb ~ , ONng9 CoMt DAILY PILOT/Tu.day, November&, 1986 Ex-Edison players star for Weber St. When Weber State University set a Division 1-M record with 800 total yards in a 57-29 victory over Montana Saturday, three former Edison Hijh products had a ~or hand in the victo.ry. Senion Craig Dumity and Mike Powell, along with junior Phil Cooper, helped the Wildcats to the win as the twp schools combined for 1,346 yards, also a Division 1- AA mark. Oumity and Powell a.re co-captains of the Weber State~. Dumity is a 6--2, 2SS-pound center, who also plays at a puUina auard spot. He earned second team All-Bi& Sky honors last season and was named to the pre-season All- America honorable mention team this year. He bas been a staiter at Weber for three seasons. Powell, a 6--1, 21 ()..pounder, bad I 5 tackles, two quarterback sacks., two pass deflections, caused a fumble and had a fumble recovery in the victory over Utah. Powell leads the team in tackles with 120 this season. Last year he had 96, a team high. He gained all Big Sky honorable mention a season aao. Cooper, a 6--2, 200-powtder, is a back-up qua{terback and plays on the punt return tcams. He was a standout at Santa Ana College before moving on Co Weber State. Weber has a 4-4 record to date and is 2-2 in Big Sky action. ~ Players' counsel says free agency in NBA ridiculous Prep football players of the week Ill.A TT DdOW Corona del llar The 6--1. 225-pound senior middle Lincbecker had ei&ht solo tackles. seven a situ, recovored a fumble, two extra efforu and pded out to 88 percent. ·-----------~ ltRJCH VOOltL Coeta ..... The6-4, 200-poundjuniortight end cau&bt two key puses in the first quaner apinst Woodbrid&e for 33 yards to set up t6e Mustangs' first touchdown. ·--------~---~ CRAIG CONTE E8t&Dcla The 5-8, I SS-pound senior tailbacrpro'Yided the bulk ofihe Eqles' offense with 162 yards rushina on 27 carries and toucb- do.wn runs of 4 and 28 yards. . * . 8llA.llflt FOLEY !fewport Barbor The 6--2, 19G-pound senior quarterback was at it again, completina 17of20 passes for 22.S yards and one interception against Universjty in a 33-24 win. ·---------~ DAX01' DOR8CB Ldan&Beach ibe 6 -1, 175-pound sophomore wide receiver cauabt key touchdown passes of 38 and 34 yards to help the Artists come from behind to beat Estancia. Pac-10 lauds USC'• McDonald USCs Tim McDonaJd. who had 14 Ci] tackles and a pass interception on Satur-•II• day, and Oregon's Lew Barn~. who caught seven passes for 130 yards, were named Pacific-JO football Players of the Weck Monday. JO&llORJU8 Bdl8oa The 6-0, 160-pound senior safety had seven solo tackles, two asai1JJ.and Jwo intcrceptiont, one retullfed 63 yards to set upa third- quarter Edison touchdown. •~--------------- SCOTT BllAftCA Foantahi van.,. · The S-8, 180..pound senior nose auard had three solo tackles, six fead bits~d three assists. He bas ·been FV's most consistent ~eman throughout the year. ·----------- MATT BERTRAM Ocean View The S-10, 185-.f>ou...ocl sophomore center had tlie chore of blockina Marina's standout · nose auard Tyrone Younablood, which ho did uceptionally well. ·-~---~------ 8COTT ELLIOTT Bmatlutoa 8-cb Tl)e ~. 185-pound senior fullbeck had a lot of weight on his shoulders for the Oilers, rushing for 108 yards on 19 carries and catc;hlna four puses for 37 yards. ·-----------~ GARY Rlt!(TERIA lntne The 5-10, • 180-pound senior linebacker-fullback had 12 lead tackles, four assists and one interception on defense and rushed for 1 S4 yards on 14 carries. BART 81LVERllAN Ulllftftlty The S..l J, 165-pound senior quarterback completed 12 of 20 paae1 for 107 y&rda.He allk> was the Trojans' lcadina around pincr with SS yards. *------------ MDDt JUARBZ . Woodbridafe The 5-9, 100..pound junior. in tus tint start, completed five of nine passes for 137 yards, includ· ing a 73-yard touchdown pass on the aame's fint play. ·----------~ IQJ[lt O'COPmOR .... Del The 6-2, 215-pound senior Ifnebacker had a aoal-lioe tackle, recovered a fumble, knocked down two puses and graded out ......,.~..-,..... to 88 percent on the charts. * .. ·"' STEVE GULLEY We9tmin8ter The S-11 , 171-pound senior quarterback completed 10 of I 5 passes for 163 yards, ran• 17-yard touchdown and was his team's leading rusher with 59 yards. ·--------- ROBERT llltLCRIOR Sacldleback The 6-1, 195-pound senior two- way starter (center-defensive tackle) bad · three unassisted tackles and four pass-rushes on defense and blocked well. Saber hagen to find out true value NEW YORK (AP) -Next, Bret Saberhagen wiJI find out the value vf his right arm. McDonald is a junior safety from Fresno. Barnes is a senior wide receiver from San Diego. m McDonald's standout performance came in the Larry Fleisher, general counsel of the ' Trojans' 31 -I 3 victory over WashiQ&ton State, which National Basketball Association Players wu-bcld to 37 yards passing. more than 220 under its Association, already_ knows what the focue.. average. One of Barnes' catches was on a 45-yard .. , had a one-year contract last year. It's up. I'll renegotiate th.is year," the Kansas City Royals' ace pitcb'Cr said Monday after receiving a minivan as Sport Mqa.zine's Most Valuable Player in the World Series. of DCJOtiations wil) be when the current collective touchdown play, and be also played some at tailback, bafla.iningagrccment between the union and the league. rushing three times for 45 yards and one TD. expi.res in 1987. Barnes is the Pac-I 0 leader this season in receivina "Free agency in the NBA now is ridiculous," said yardaa~ with 690, and he shares the Oregon career Reisher who helped formulate the salary-cap system rcoord ror TD catches, with 18. ~ "I expect I'll be sitting down and talking with the Royals the middle of the month, maybe the end of it," Saberhagcn said. "I can ~ne having a -tough time ncgotiatmg. There could be problems, but I'd like to think there won't be. I have a good relationship with the Royals. they have a good one with me and my aacnt... Dennis Gilbert of Beverly Hills. now in rorce in the tcague. "V!e .had 10 free agents this Da...a 8 topp·l-Da_.._ Cup hero year and bad only two real s1gruogs, Joe &arry Carroll YI. -Yl.9 and Jerry Sichting, during the offscasoo." By "real signings," Fleisher means that both a player's original team and other teams want a player enough to bid for bis services. Although Carroll stayed with Golden State, the Milwaukee Bucks had wanted him badly enouah to sign him to a big-money offer sheet that was worth far more than the Warriors had offered. But the Warriors matched Milwaukee's contract offer becau.sc they didn't want to lose him with no compensation. Indiana matched Boston's contract offer with Sichting, then traded him to the Celtics. ''I don't really count the movement of free agents li.keXyle Macy and Ray Williams because their original teams (Phoenix and Boston) didn't really want them and there was no competitive bidding." Acisher said. He said the apparent lack ofintercst in players such as Utah's Darrell Griffith, San Antoruo's Johnny Moore and New Jersey's Mike Gminslci tells him that the free-aaent system 1sb't working -and he says he knows why. "The number of offer sheets bas declined dramatically in rec.ent yean, despite \he increasing number of qua!ity free agents-and it's because these general managers from around the league have conspired to stay away from other tea.ms' free agents," Fleisher said. Bob Woolf, an agent whose clients include Larry Bird and Griffith. said: "I hate to call it collusion, but there's no doubt there is communjcation between the clubs, an agreement that only in eJttreme cases will they get involved with free agents." Quote of the day ~ltey Benoa, who managed St. l...Quis to the National League pennant, after bein& named National Leaaue Manager of the Year by the Baseball Writers Association of America Mon- day, beating Cincinnati's Pete Rose by one point. Tommy Lasorda of the Dodgen was third: "Fellows like Pete and Tommy and others did a great job, and I'm just happy I won." NBA champs to be honored INGLEWOOD -Tbc Los Angeles m La.ken, off to their best start in five ycars1 will celebrate last season's Nationai Buketball Association championship prior to tonight's home opener against the Oevcland Cavaliers. NBA Commiss10ner David Stem will preside over the ceremony, which will bcs;in at 7. 30 minutes before the pmc bqjns at the Forum. . Durinf the ceremony, the club·s championship binner wil be unfurled and rinas will be presented to p&aym and coaches from last year's team. Tbc lakers returned from their season-openina roed trip with a 4-0 record, their best suart since they opened the 1980-81 campa.ian with five strajght victories. TheCavalim. meanwhile, arc 1-4 The pme is I tellouL STOCK.HOLM -Sixth-seeded Scott ~ Davis of the United States rallied to defeat Davis Cup hero Michael Westphal of West Germany, S-7. 6-4, 6--2 in the opening round of the Stockolm Open-Scandinavian tennis championships Monday ni&ht. · Peter Lund&rco. a Swedish baseliner who frequent- ly works out witli retired superstar Bjorn Borg, knocked out Tomas Smid of Czechoslovakia, 4-6, 6-4, 6-2 for the biggest upset of the first day of the Grand Prill tournament. Davis, ranked 11th in the world and winner of the sinales as well as the doublCI in a Grand Prix event in To.kyo two weeks ago, was the hi&best seeded player in action Monday. His match against Westphal..:. who won two key si~ when the Germans shut out l;zechoslo- valcia, 5-0, ID last month's Davis Cup semifinals, did not end until well past midnight. Sweeney top PCAA player Fresno State quarterback Kevin m Sweeney and Nevada-Las Vegas outside C • linebacker Daryl Knox have been selected as the PCAA football playcn of the week. Sweeney, a 6-0, 19(}.pound Junior from Fresno, was honored for bis pcrfopnance in the BuUdogs' 42-7 victory over Cal State Fullerton Saturday. Knox, a 6-4, 232-pouod senior from Los An&eles. was selected for his effort in UNLV's 17-12 triumph over New Mexico State lQuraday ni&bt. Sweeney completed 24 of his 35 passes for 284 Yards and two touchdowns u the Bulldogs raised their PCAA record to S-0 and their overall mark to 7-0-1. Knox recorded seven quartert.ck sacks and 13 tackles in UNL V's win over New Mexico State. Rangen eweep put Penguin• PllTSBURGH -Mike Allison ~ scored his tint two goals of the teaton to , lead the New York ~ to a 4-2 National Hockey te.gue victory over the Pituburah Penguins Monday n.i&hL Allison broke a 1-1 tic at 8:47 of the second period to put the Ranaers ahead to stay. Steve Patrick stripped the pock from Pittsburgh defenseman Jqc McDonnell and Allison turned and fired a quick shot past aoaiie Roberto Romano to make it 2-1. Mark Osborne save New York a 3-1 lead at 15:34 of the tecond period when be beat Romano on the stick side with a slap shot from the top of the left cirdc. Allison scored apin on a breakaway at S: 19 of the third period. Televialon, rad.lo TELEVISION No events scheduled. RADIO 7:30 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Oeveland at Laken, KLAC (S70). Sabe~ ~t the St. l...Quis Bret Saberhaaen bolda hJa trophy for the lloet Valaable Player awarctln the World Serl•, preeented on llonltay. ·Cardin&l~V= 6-1 in the third pme and 11-0 in the seventh -as the Royals s. the· greatest comeback in Serie<s history b_y winning the title after losing the first two games at home. Judge: Cleali upyourhouse Cocaine seller gets 12 years, baseball executives warned PITTSBURGH (AP) -Former Philadelphia Phillies clubhouse ~terer Curtis Stron& was sentenced Monday to 12 years in prison for selling cocaine to major league playen bJ a federal judae wbo warned baseball executives they must clean up their house." Stron&. 39, of Philadelphia, also was sentenced to 12 years of special parole foUowing bis jail term for his Sept. 20 conviction on l J of J 4 cocaine distribution charges. U.S. District Judae Gusuave Diamond said he wanted Strona to be "too old toe~ in the drug business" when be leaves federal superv\aton in 24 years. . The judae, however, ruled that Strona would be eligible for perole, at the discretion of the federaJ parole board, mcanina it is likely he will serve only a portion of his 12-year sentence. Diamond, who presided over a three-week trial in which seven current or former major leaguers testified was "sorry and embarrassed at the situation." Renfroe said Stron& distributed less than one percent of the cocaine admittedly used by such players as Hernandez. K.ansu City Royals outfielder Lonnie Smith and Cincinnati Reds outfielder Dave Parker. "These players recci vcd cocaine long before they met my client and they will receive it long after," Renfroe said. U.S. Attoniey J. Alan Johnson argued that Strong. for at least four years, ''was a dru& dealer and he knew what he was doin&" when scllin&cocai.nc to bellplayers in Pituburah. Philadelphia, New Vork and Atlanta. "The players, obviously, arc not without fault in thjs case," Johnson .said. "But without the Curtis Strongs, there would be no drug users in this country because there could be no uscn." World Gymnastics: U.S. in eighth place under grants of immunity that they used cocaine, said the MONTREAL (AP) -Tim Daa&ett lipped ,playen "were not vifsinaJ innocents" and "also baclcwa.rd off the hiah bar as chants of .. U~A! U~At .. committed crimes." • rattled throuah Montreal's Olympic Velodromc. Dl"uJ abule IOCI beyond m~or lcaaue basebe.ll the The chant and the apparatus were the same for judae 11.1d. but bueball "indeed ... has their problems Dlaett, whOIC perfect l 0.0 on the bar clinched the and they must clean up their hou1e." " l)'MD&ltica team Joki medal for the American men at the "If the)' kill the aolden JOOSC, then it is their Olympic Games lut year. problem,'' Diamond said. But little else Monday at the World Gymnastics . The jud&e alto criticized Shea Stadium fans who Championships resembled the magic of 1984 for the applauded New York Mets first bueman Keith Amencan men. . Hernandez after be returned to the team followi.na his "This is a lot different,'' said Scott Johnson, federal court testimony api.nst Strona.. Daaetl's only teammate rcm.ainina from t 984. . "When thoee people stand up and apPlaud K.eith ror instance, the Americans were way down the list, Hernandez, or whoever they were 1pplaud1na, then thcr, ranked No. 8after Monday'soompulaorycxerciseson the are applaud.in& a ~potable clement of our society,' floor, the pommel hone, ri.qs, vault, parallel bars and Diamond uid. "The fact that the f&JU should ajve a hiah bar. s~~ ovation, I think. is a terrible commentary on our The Soviet men, who boycotted Los Anaelcs, looked soete~. . more like cbampiont on Monday, finishing the oom- Defen1e attorney Adam Renfroe Jr. brouaht up the pul10rict with a th~point lead over Eaat Germany. ovation to Diamond in uking for m~ for Strons. The Soviet women, alJo oonsidered a powerhoute · "OnJy in America can that happen,• Renfroe said. team, will uy to ma&ch the men's performance today in Tbe attorney 'apin porttayed hi• client u a their own comDUhories. Other favoritet include the East "aca:t .. (or a federal drua iovest.iption into drua ute Germans and the Romaniana., retumina to the city where amona Uplayen. Nadia Comaneci introduced the Olympica to the perfect Strona. in a abort statement before Diamond, said he , I 0.0 in the 1976 Oamct. Bruins have Aft.er the com~ltoricti the Soviet men hid 293.1 S ~i~t.sua team, with fourofthetopeialu individuals.. &ed h -1 A i s d 1\c VladimirAnemovwithS9.10poiotsofaPQNible60.0. C ance to ru D r ZOD&. atur ay awn1::0~~·~~v~u!~~~k!tf:,:::~ auto ICCident a few weeks l&O· LOS ANGELES (AP) -WbJk five teams would teem to have an equal shot now at the Padfic-10 C.Oaference football championship. only one of them - Arizona-controls its own destiny. Tbe UCLA Bruins could put an end to that anuation 1n Tucson, thu Saturday niJ.hL The Wildcats and Bruins are two of the five Plo-10 team• wbo have. one loss apiece io conference ICC.ion - tbe otben ate Wuhinason.. Atiz.ona S&ate and Soulhe:m California. The WHdcats wdl win tbe Pac-IOtltleand Rott Bowl bad if theY belt UCLA and Orqoa 1n home pmes Lhc nexuwoSatu.rdaysand then winatArizonaSrateon Nov l~ . Arizona finds 1txlf in 1uch a situauon bccautc 1u CCMltieJM:e lou came at lhC ha ds of St.an ford. a no n· ~ntcnder, mc:aoma that lhould the Wildcats tic for the beadacbe. \JtJe with ooe lot1, they won't be tied with the team that "Obviously, the Ari.ton& pme loom• u a very larae beat tbem. Head~to-bead oompetition ia the first ti~ one. that'• one thina I do know;· Donahue uid. "My breaker. aood ftieftd Lany Smith bu a ~fine: team and a aooct In addition. UCLA and Arizona State are futwt cbance;::o to the Rote Bowl. I think we have a fine team oppc:>nenu., to Arizona could ellminate them from and a cbance to IO to the Roee Bowl. c::ontcation by beatina them. .. don't tbinktbat tbewinnerorloterwill be in or out Finally, the Wildc:au don't play Walh.in&ion or of the Roee Bowl but it will be a bia step in one: ditect.io.n Soutbem C&l. Should they tie for the title wit.6 cit.her or another. Tbc:re'• one-tbird of lbc: conference tebtdule tcbool, they woukl be: decfattd the winner becaue they remainina. l think it'• toin&. to be a pboto fln.isb at the end. b.aveonl,)'onc:non-<X>nftrenceto.whilc:boththeHpkia .. I'm not au.re tbe contereace dwnpiOll won't have and T~n• acb have two. two k>uel the way the matcbuPt m . It's only N,ppmed UCLA COi~ Tmy Donahue ditc\med\the Pac--10 three timts ... " race Monday tt \1tis weekly meeti~ witb'reportera. The8ruin1willbrina14-l tasuetticordanda6-l-J However, be made it clear that truly tryu-a 10 anaJyzr the ovmll mart into ck pmc:. Tbe Wildcats m 3-1 in ratt and all its pouibiliucs could only produce a conference action and 6-2 ovenJL. I . II VIKINGS' CRAFT ••• ham81 ~ms. and u Thom~n aaya. .. We to have him on the field u much a pou1ble. after au, be is our bctt player." But the praitc aoea beyond the field IS well. .. He•1 an All-Americ.an type, .. 11y1 Thompte>n. "a eood 1tudent. a aood pmon from a eood family. And a rally nice kid." And Donc:pn acrees. "My palest 1mprtlllon of b.im 11 001 u 'footbllll player and be'• a'""' football olaycr. I admire blm most for bluttitude and his desire to be peat,in all thiqa. He ahould ID far." • In BUI Craft's wotld of'fut and faster, he'• already off to I quiet start. . '· j , CW fo otball ratings .... ScMi9I 1 LOllO IMQll Po1v 2. alUIOO Amel l. S«vlle 4 lt"'-"lde Potv s. Fomane 6. lovola 7 San Got00tilo L • ._ 9 SI Pa"' 10. Marine I. New1ltrt HatMI' 2. ........ e:11 J Le Mlrede • Le HeDfe S Le QulMe 6 Veienc:le 7. Western a.w .... .._ 9. S.ntleoo 10 Troy I MIUlon Vltlo 2 LYnwOOd 3. C•Pl&treno Vettey 4 El ~ S WHI Covll\9 6 Foottilll f . Pecttlce I Cerrllo• 9 LOI AllOI 10 LOI Alamlto1 I S<llurr 2. Muir J. S.nte 8trt>er• 4. WHllake S PHedtne 6 Sant• Monica 7 WHI Torrence I . Her1 9 BUel\e 10 Rio Me" Big Five Conference ~ ·~"" "'-• NJ IU A~ t ·O ll1 A"""" e ·O lOI c11rut hit t~o t i • Cltru• 11e11 •·~ . 10 Del Rev 1· I '1 C llru• aett •· 2 5' SUMet •·2 17 Anttlvt ,., ,. "'-et S-2 • I 1' Central Confe re nce *~· 1· I .. ....~,J.2.,. S..Vltw 7·1 11 .... C.-... MM, tt·7 SuburtMtn 7 I 62 ... , Norw ... 27·3' FrMwev .. 1 50 ... , Fulltnotl, l9· 17 Garden Grove .. , .. &Ml RencllO Altmltoa, 54·7 Or•nve ... , .. Lost to We&1er11. 11-U Orenve S-7-1 ,. &Ml Veltncie, ll·iS s.. View ,., 2J .... C:.• -.., )1-14 Garden Grove 1•1 21 8 e • I GerdenGrove. 24·12 FrMwev S·l 10 S..t Son«e, 13·3 Southern Coof ettnce ~"' coea1 1-0-i 15 S.n G•t>rl.i Vellty 7· I 7t Soult! Coest 6· 1-1 '9 Century 7·1 64 Sltae 7·0 Sf Cenlurv ._, 45 E~re •-2 31 S.n Get>rltl Valley •·2 26 Sierra •·l·i 14 Eml>fre 7·1 9 Coas tal Confere n ce FOOllllN a-o 120 PacHk: H i06 CllanMI 7· I " Marmonte 6·2 15 Pe<ttk ... , •2 Bev .. 3 JS Bey 4·2·2 2S FoollllN 4-J-i 2• Cllanotl M 23 C11a11net s+i " Ti.cl Ceolsrrano l/ellty, 2'·?9 a.er Oomlnoue1. SS· 12 Ti.d Mb&lon Vltlo, 2'·29 &Mt s.Me Ana, 24·7 9"1 HH Wilton, 19-2' a..r VIiie Park, 31·0 Beet Lo• Alemllos, 20-0 &Ml Downey, 26· 12 Ti.d Rowlend. 10-io Lost IO P.clflca, ~ a..1 8ur l>anto., 21·27 &fft~. ll·O Beel Rio Mfte, JC>-7 a..t Cl\anntl lslendt, l4·26 &Mt Arcadia, 14•7 ... , Redondo . .0-9 Ti.d NewburY Part., 0-0 a..1 Atll•mDfa. 3S·9 8 .. 1 S.11 Mereot, J 1 · IA Loil to S.nte B•rl>are, 30· 7 Desert-Mountain Conference i Leuzl- 2 Sent• Clere • l. SI. 0-Vltve 4. AllOU" S Cll•mlneoe 6. Notre Oeme lRl'l I 1 S.nta Ynez I Vucalr>e 9 Et•lnore 10. Cerplnterle I Norco 2 Cleremonl l Et Re"'llO 4. South Hiiis S Art11191on 6 Don Luoo 7. Le Wl\9 I Be" G•r0tn1 9 Ul>l•nd 10. S.n Marino I V1t1ty Cllrhll•n 1 Onterlo Chrlsllen 3 Parac .. tt 4. T-"-Cf'l1p1 S. 8Humont 6. Bl11'10o 1 Monter.Ir Preo I Orenve Lu111tr111 9 S.n Jacinto 10 Ro11mond t Canyon tS) 2 Vtf"bum 0.1 3 Ct t>rlllO 4. LomPOC S H1wt11orne 6. AIHCeelero 1 Anltlc>Of Vetley a. St. Bernard 9 Nor11'1 Torrenc~ 10 P9trnci.te 1 Cller11r Oak 2. Ol•mond Ber 3 Centrer 4 LI Sltrre S. S.n Olmei 6-G•nnlle 1. Arroyo I. Ouarlt 9 Norle Viti• 10 Monlclalr I F elll'I BePllS! 2 T em Piilon J . Cl'\Mlwlck 4 Et Peto de Roble1 S P• .. Otn• Poly 1 C•I Luther•n 2 Llnfleld Cl'lrfsll•n J Victor Valltv Cnr • Colevllte s BIOOmlnoron Chr PloMtf N>·I i29 Btet Hern rd, LZ· 10 Frontier 7· 1 117 BHI Fiiimore, 43·0 S.nt1 Ft 6·2 ios BHI Cl llltdr•I. 39·0 Fronlltf" 6·2 13 BHI Senta P11M, 21·3 S.nra F1 6-1-1 IO &Mt Pettf" Noster. 24·0 Sunllt11 7-i 62 &Mt BIOOmlnoton, 22· ll Trl·V1lltY ,., S9 a.er "'-r>erk, 21·7 Sunltl•I S-3 31 &Ml B•nnl119, i7· 12 SUnklst S-3 27 8HI Rim of Ille World, 13· 12 Trl·Vetlty S··l 13 8HI 81sll0o OleQO, 18·0 Eastern Conference tvv 7· I 96 a..1 Corona. •2·23 Be Miine 7· I 9S a..1 Demien, 21·0 Whltmont 1· I IO 8MI LI Ser1\i, 17·i4 Vetlt Viste S·l·I 61 S..t La Puente, 21· 12 Ivy .. , . 62 Bt•I R•mone, 2'·21 (OI) Besell,,. S·l 41 Bfft Cllafftv, 22· 12 Whltmonl 4·• 30 LOIJ lo Et RanchO. i1-i4 Whllmont · S·l 26 Beet C•tlfomle. 27·6 Be Miine S·3 2S 8"1 Pomona, 27·6 Rio Honoo S·2 2• S..I South Pe..otn1, JS·O Inland Conference Olympie 1-0 Olvmc>lc 1·0 Oflert·tnyo uroe 7·1 OewrHnyo L'roe 6·2 Oe Anz. S·l 0,1.,.Hnvo Leroe S•2 AIPfle S·3 OIYmc>k S·J 0. Anz. S·l ~l·tnvo Sm•• S·l 100 90 IO 66 SS 52 .. 21 19 9 &Mt Mer1na1N, 49·0 Beet CePO Valltv Cllr1$1ian, 21·0 het T~pl, 2'·22 Lost to Perectete, 21·22 8HI S.n Je<lnto, 27·0 Beat OHMt, 29-6 8"1 MerlheH FunU., 57·0 BMI Whitt!« Cl\l'lstl•n, 21· 12 Lost 10 8e•umont, 27-0 BHt CSOR. 364 Northwestern Confere nce Goldt1"I Camino Reet Los PedrH Nor11'ttf'n Ocean LOI Pedr•1 Golden Cemlno Reel 0cHll GOiden 1·0 99 1-0 17 1·0 13 7· I 71 7·0-1 60 6·2 49 6·1 40 6·2 26 .S·l ?• S-l 7 e .. 1 8urrouol'ls CRldge ). 62·6 &Mt MAN Star. SS-6 BMI Peto R~. 21·7 Bt•I Sen Luis Oblsoo, .0-6 BHI CulVtf" City, 27·7 Bt•I Mo<ro Bev. 42·0 Bt•I Quartz Hiii, ll·J 8"t C•ntwt41, 33·0 8"1 Torr•nce. 21·0 S..t s.wus. 32. I? Southeastern Conference Montvlew H•cltnde OtMrt·VelltY\ S.n AndrHS Montvlew Hacienda Min ion Vel .. y Minion V11tey s.n-~n H.cltnde 1·0 100 l ·O 90 7·0-1 10 7-1 6S 6·1 61 S·l S3 7·1 31 4·4 2S 6-1 n 4·3·' 11 Eight-Man (Large) Ot40f'llC 1·0 Trl·Counrv S· I Prto • 6·1 Trl·Countv 1·4 Preo 6· I Eight-Man (Small ) Beet Aruu , lS·6 Beel Bonita, 17·6 Beet Celtxlco, 37·6 Beet Victor VelleY. 10·6 8"1 Sltf'r• Vllle. 3S·O BHI Ettwende. 4A·1 Lost to Ouerte, 24· 11 BMI Atroyo, 24· II le>tt 10 HHi>erla, 14·12 8Ht c111no, 39·6 Beet Bl"tntwood. SO·O Idle 8"1 Fllnlrtcioe PrH>. 77·6 Beet Coest Union, '4·7 Beel Rio Hondo Prto, 42·21 Acaoemv 1·0 BMI H~ll•Vt Chrl•tlen, •1·10 Clvlsllen 7· i &Ml Hfl-1• Cllrlsllen .... ,, Cllrlstten 7· I 8eet lnlend Cllrlsllan, '9·26 Hl·Lo l ·I 8HI Pvram1cs L•~· (NV). Jo-21 Cl'lrlltlen J·• Idle WATER POLO ---~ Dll9J .... ~~ ....... '"-' Imne'• Kelly Babcock hu the runnt.na bv.C· GIRLS VOLLEYBALL ~ Orange Cout DAILY ~ILOT/Tueeday, Novtitnbw 5. 1985 ------ It began on a whi111 Irvine· s Kelly Babcock keeps running, an running . . and running ... and ... Bu\ strcu waan't the reuoo Bab- cock naried runn1111 as a tccn.qier in Sa&lnaw, Mich. In her freshman year at ~iscnhower H1,lh School. Babcock and ~veral gJrlfnends decided to try By PHIL SNE.IDERM.AN Of .. 0.-, ........ T he obvious question 1 • what makes Kelly run? Kelly Babcock oflrvane was a track and cross-<:ouotry sw 1n high school and college, and she performed respectably in 1984 Olympic tryouts for the women's marathon. Today, at 26, she's a Dow Chemical employee, selling plasucs an 11 West· cm states. But during off hours. she's still on the run. She runs up to 60 miles a week. And she regularly puts her feet to the le$t \n competitions. In June, for example, Babcock was one 9f 1.500 entrants in Los Angel~· first Heart of the City 5k Run. T he event raised more than $80,000 for the-American Heart Assoc:Lation. The top woman finisher at I 7 m inutes, l 6 seconds was Kelly Bab- cock. She rectivcd a G ucci watch and a trip to New York City to compete an a sister race. the Wall Street Run • another Heart Association benefit. The Wall Street Run was con- . out fo r track si mply on a whim. ducted Sept 18, drawmg Bbo\,lt I ,900 By her senior year, the wbim bad pan1c1pants for a Sic roult along the turned senous. Babcock was stale streets near the World Trade Center. bagh sctlool ch.amp 10 the one.mile This tame. Kelly bad to settle for trick and cross-country events. S«ond place. fi nishing 1n 17·22 -"When I first slitted (in hl&b about half a mmule behind 1he school). women's ports we:rc no- Wlnner. where near wbat they are ltkc today, .. "Thelf pothole cond1uons are 12 she recalled. ·•1 r,n wi th the guys for limes worY than LA." Ba bcock said. practic.e because most of the girls "I thought I'd fall in them " couldn'l keep up with me." The denSt' sk}scraper:JungJe was With a smile, she added ... Maybe 1m pos1og. too that's one rea$0n I h.kcd it. .. "No\ onl y were you saying. 'Where Hu halb school performance won 1s the sun?' but 'Where 1s the sky'!' " her a four-yearcross-couotry scbot.a.r- sbe recalled. ship to Michtpn State. She ran m Neve rtheless. Babcock was pleased lrack and cross country events year· with her perfort_nancc. And she re-round. somehow ~ueczmg an time turned to Orange Counly with a for engineering studies. runner-up pnze -another walch. "What had to go by the wayside was But as the seconds tack away that ..l partying." she recalled. question re mams. What ma.k~~tty Babcock's athletic dnve was not run'>. Lhe result offamaly pressure .. ;·1t s fun -r en1oy It," she said. "My parents never pushed me or l ve been 1;lnninJ for 12 years. qucsuonc~ me," she saJd. "Maybe longer than I ve been work.mg. I'm that's why I en;oyed it so much There one of th~se types who enJO} the was no pressure from o utside -JUSt work.out I m a real health-onented from me and maybe a coach. pe rso.n ~nd running 1s a good st.rcss "I've always been tbc type of reliever person who's w1lltng to work hard. And run01ng 1s the t~pe of spon where hard work pays off. · The work paid off dunng her senior year of college, when she won Al\- Harbor hosts Redondo ..\mcnca honors in two track. events, FOur Sea View e ntries earn 5 -A berffiS ; Barons seeded No . 2 in 4-A eliminations CIF f·A .. LAYOffS I Wld card ..,,_ T\lftdllv. 7:l0 p.m. l A-Mon1ct11r Preo 11 Beswtt &-Secrecs HHr• of Mar., et Mare~•'"• C-Tff'llCneP· et Setrel\O After graduation. Babcock ;01ned Dow C'hem1cal. but she declined to hang up her running shoes. She traveled to Olympia. Wash .. for the 1984 Olympic tnals 1n the women's maratho n. a \Tuel.Jog 26.2-mile race. Babcock fi rushed 24th 1n a field of250 ru nners Her tame of two hours, 38 mi nutes was six minutes behind the wi nning ume Sea View League volleyball cham- pion Newpon Harbor, ranked No. 2 an 5-A circles, has bttn seeded second m the upcoming C IF playoffs, draw- ing a home assignment against Ba y League representative Redondo High. T he playoffs begin Thursday night at 7:30 and the Big Fwe conunues on Tuesday and Nov. 14, with the finals scheduled for Marina High Nov. 16. Also an action Thursday night in the 5-A are Mater Dc1, Laguna Beach, Woodbridge and Coro na del Mar, the latter gaining the playoffs as the a t- large entry in the I 6-team elimina- tions. Laguna Bea~h. runner-up to H<U"bor an the Sea View, hosts San Gabriel Valley League representative Lynwood. Woodbndge. No. 3 in the Sea View, 1s at Gahr High of the San G abnel Valley League, while Corona del Mar 1s on the road, at Angelus League represen tative Mater Dci. Bay League champion Mira Costa is the No. I seed. In 4-A play, which also beg.ins Thursday, Sunset League co-cham· pion Fountain Valley is the No. 2 seed, and the Barons wiJI host Dana Hills of the Suuth Coast League. Huntington Beach. which lied for the Sunset League title. is also at home, drawing San Cleme nte, while Edison is on the road wi th a game agaanst Foot hill. * CIF S·A .. LAYOfFS lflnt rtund Tlwndey, 7:30 p.m.) OowntY •I Mire Coll• c-di! Mllr et Mii-Del Lvnwoocs et ~ IMadl BlsllOO Monl901'1"1f'Y el Hueneme S.nte Mollie• er Senta Bart>ere W11•r'ldel et Gal'lr Dos Pueblos ,, SI Jo"9h (UktWOOOI Redondo et Mew1IWt ~ Ctf 4·A PLAYOffS (Wld card 191M T_.y, 7:l0 iun.l El OoredO 11 Et Modena (first nMld 'TI!und9v, 7:31 o.m.I Bell· Jeff et ~rtOorOUOh Burbank el Arc.edla L• Quint• 11 Lono 8eeCI Joroen S.11 Clemente •• H ........... a..dl Mlrvmounl •• Cl'lemlnedt Hoover et S.n G•t>rltl Cyon n •• Tustin Bot" Grandi 11 Torrance 8urroug111 (Burt>en«) et Notre Oe~ AceOtmY Bevtf"IV Hllh et LOUl\vlllt l!dlMfl el Footl'lln l,.tkewood el El Toro Gtenc:le .. er LOl\9 8Hcti Wll.on t1191tw00d et E\-anza Wfl41 card •lnntf" al Garden Grove Oene Hills 11 f-...irt V...., Ctf J.A PLAYOf'fS IWld cen1 -"" Tunon. 1:31 iun.> iteorenc" at Vuceloe lflnt rtuftd w-...y, 7:l0 p..m.) Tem~ Cllv 11 Rim of Ille Wl!Pd RIY~slde Polv et Burroug111 1Rldoe.) L• Reine et Welnul L• Mlraoa •• Norte V11te Mevfelr a• L• Canad4 El SeoundO •I Blsnoc> 01990 Montt«>ello •' MlralMte Wiid cercs winner er Sonore Al>Olt Valley 11 Canvon CSl Le Sern• et Arltsl• WHI Covlne et Bk>Oml119ton Monrovle at Le H•l>r• Petm<tele er CalOn HH Wil1011 et Petm S0<1n1n Oak Perk ~' Leuzlnger Sunny Mins el S.nte Fe Clf l·A PLA YOFl'S 1 l'lrs t nMld Tllllna v. 7:l0 p.m. > NorCSllOff -DVt LomPOC at A••~csero Chino er Indio llaltl'CI• at UPl•ncs Motltclelr et Hemet Simi Valltv et El Motl" Anaheim at SI Bernard Senta Marie et RoYel Cenlret et Diamond Ber Cor0t1• er Me11notle SI LUCY'S •' Ramon• Ml View al Br1•lev $1 Joseotl lS.111e Mariel et Ceieo.n.u St Antl'IO"y •t Arrovo Gienoore at Arroyo Grancst Merv Ster et Wts llllkt C>-GledltOl\9 et Covone E-819 Beer •I ~tfl HIMS Cflnt ,.eund Tflund9y, 1:l0 o.m.l ltosarv el Southe<'n Cel Cnrl\lien Wild cero winner · • · et NQ<"fPtv,."" W•l<I c.erd w.nner 'B et LA &10111• PereCJetl at vucce \lei,..,, Wiid cerd w111ner C •' Cl\ener Oa• LA Lut,,.,en t i Whittler Ct1r111len Wild card wlnMr ·o el BISllOP Wold card WI~ E •• C0t1ne#Y CIF RANKINGS S·A I Nltr• Cosla 2. New-1 Henltt; ) wnte MOl11Ce 4 H~e. S. U-IMadl1 4. Wttdlw'ldet/ 7 St JOMOf'I ILeO•OOOI L llMM Del, 9 Sal'll • Ba.-oer • 10 Oos Pueolo\ 4·A I Merll>otQVVI\ 2. F-'-111 Velrt; l Nolrt Oerne !L.l l ' Torrence S Ctiem•nede 6 LOl\ll Beecn Wtt.011 7 E• Toro L H~ ... di; '1 AtceCll• 10 E11>erenie l ·A 1 q,,,.. o• 11>1 Worto 1 !">an•e Fe l B11f'IOO 0 eoo • ~· S L• C•neoe • Norte V1\ta 7 La Hell<• 9 P•tm Sor nol 9 CerwOI\ tS 10 ""~'·· , .... I NorCSllOH, ? Rovel l >/Ye\llllke, • Brawlev S OoelT'IOl\d 8er 6 H-1 1 Uolancl t Ca.et>l'9' 9 MaQnOlle 10 St Lucv \ l·A t I Soutller n C11tforn11 C "'"'"•"· 1 Conr>ellv l Charter Oe~. 4 Yucce VelllY S Wl'llltler C'1rtsllen. 6 L• BePll\1 1 BoshOO 8 Merenetl\e 9 lto"rv 10 LA Lutt1eren smel~ I l=11nlrldot Seu.cf Htt9nll 1 Bren1wooo ) Cl\edWICk • Mammoth s CemOO.CI Hal I> H O'V Femllv 1 Mevfoeld Preo I PeWH>el\I POlv 9 C•tt 10 Lonfleld Cr>ri•tlen The top thrtt marathon runners INent to the Ol~mp1cs. Babcock'S' ;ob required her to hve 1n Charlotle. N C.. and O eveland. before she received the western st.ates assignment. Last November. she mo' ed to 1 n inc because of 1t.s low cnme rate and because there's a goou track nearby at UC lrvme. Her husband Dan. who works for Smtth lntemauonal m Tusun. often JO&S ~1th Babcock an lrv10e. But even when she's out of town on busmes.s. Babcock said. she finds a safe area and dons her running shoes for a work.out. Lately. she's been malung a name for herself m the weekend 5k and I Ok runs held so frequently 10 Southern Cahfom1a. She even has a sponsor. Etomc running shoes. "C.ahforrua's cahbcr of runners 1s much hlgher than I saw ID M1cb.1gan or Ohio." Babcock said. "I have more competlllon among the female run- ners here This 1s the only spon an which ~ou can compete with the pros 1n the samt ra~. whereas Ca !)on-pro I can't pla~ on the same tennis coun aga1ttst Jo~n McEnroe .. Sea Kings draw Edison; Tars get Poly CdM seeded No. 2, Newport is No . 3 in CIF 4 -A playo-f~fs- Sea View League water polo cham- pion Corona del Mar will host Edison High as part of a CIF 4-A playoff double-header at Newport Harbor H igh in first-round action Friday. Edison is the No. 3 representative from the Sunset League, drawing the No. 3 seeded Sea Kings. Newport Harbor. runner..up to CdM in the Sea V~w Ldgue and seeded fourth in the CIF 4-A playoffs will open ihe double-header with Long Beach Poly at 3: 15 p.m. The Sea Kin.gs. scheduled to play the Chargers at 4: 15 or immediately folJoW1ng the first game. arc ranked third an the C l F 4-A. CdM Coach John Vargas praised his underclassmen for helpin' bring the Sea Kings to the top. "My Juniors have been really coming on." he said . "They're doing a good job and coming on much faster than I thought they wo uld." Eric Vinje. Bill Harmon, Keith Head, Brad Thompson and Chris Morpn. all juniors, wtrc menponed by Va.rps, aJonx with sophomore goalie J im Wagner. The Sea Kings were 6-1 in league play and fi nished 18-6 overall. Also competing Friday in the first ro und from the Orange Coast area arc Marina.Fountain VaUey and Um ver- sity. Marina. the Sunset league kingpin. hosts Tustin, the a t-large entry from the Century Lcaaue. Fountain Valk:r" runner-up to Manna. is on the road at Sonora oft he Freeway League. whrle University also draws a road assignment, travel- tng to Vi lla Park. * CJF •·A .. LA YOffS "'"' rtuftd f ridlly. l: 1S 11.1'1\. • Lonll 8e.cl'I MIMlt..en 11 Svnnv HIMs ~.,VIII• Perk Tu\lln •• M9'11111 LOl\9 8ffcll Poly •I....._, H~ (l) a-.. Y\ c-... Mar et N-DOl't Harbol' (4·1Sl Buena P•rt.. •' S.nte Ane V•Htv ,_,.... vae.v •• Sonar• Footl'llR al l onll BHCfl WllM>n l ·A (flnf rtuftd Tlwn8¥, l:IS !Mft.) • EIOtf"anie ••Et Toro CraPI ., ·-P•Mldtne et Mire Coit• S.nla Berber• el lloo l INllo •I Rl11'1"llele Poly St. JOhn Bosco 11 LO\ AlemllO& Arcedl• er Oownev INN et HH WlllO'\ San ((o<tofllo et S.11 Cltmtnrt Wtsllake et Gellr Rowlend •I Sent• MOll•C• Redlend1 at J w Noftr• Reoonoo •' Lovole LM Allos el Muir Doi PueD!Ot el ThouWnd Oek \ S.11 Bernardino et Et Ooreoo J·A lflnt nMld W"""41av. l:IS iun.l S.nta Ynez -Dv~ El Rencf'IO el Lefflnowtll Cl'lro\ll•n Gero.n Grove •• western S.n Merino •• S.n Lull Ot>l1PO l • Qulnl1 et MlrelHle UPiand el Le wne C1eremo111 et Bot" GrencM South Pe..oent -Dve Et s-indo -DYt Lot A""-at V•tenc•a Burl>anll •I Whltller Le S.I .. •I 0on LullO 8rM •I Le Ca~ LomPOC el C.lel>e'9l Btvertv HIU• •• weoo Cet>rlllO -~ C:lf aANIONC» ••• $unnv Hiii\, 2 1.ono 8Mch Wl~. l. c.r- • Mwi 4. NtWllitrf H......,.; S S.nt• Ana VaMtv 6. ~I 1 Tui lln L ..,....,...,,.., t *'°'' 10 v P¥k J.A Quarter Horse Racing at Los Ala1nitos ''Remember, all Exactas are stlll just s2 ." Dex: ~rrn~n Cross cou ntry prelims Saturday I El Toro. 2 El Oof.-3 S.11 Cr.mtnte HH Wiiton, S Rlvtf"\ldt f'olv. • J W ~Ill $a11ta Monica, I l OYole, 9 Roval. 10 Muir , .. 1 $91\ta Ynez. 1 Cw lllo S E1 s-,noo • Sou'll PaMCMN.. i Moralinle. 6 Don LuD0.1 u CeMClt L 5-11 Lut• OblUIO. 9 WNltltf . )0 Le w-• S2 Dally Doubl~ * NEW WALN UT -The CIF cross coun- try prclims get underway Saturday m.omina at Mt. San Antonio Collete for teams and individuals. with Oran1e Coast are.a runners heavily involved. Hett arc the raoes they'll be ~mpct~ in. Ilo na with the final CIF rank1np: * CIJI N8LMNMIU (.._..,ttMLIACI ......... .,........ ..... ·-4. .... &II\. ,_..., o.li SOulll T.,enu, FOOINI, -aMa ·~·· .. ....., .......... $.Im!, lAlle ~ Wiiton; Hooveri ..... , 0.NI Hlh; " ............. ""'s. 'a.1111. ...... Amel, llolllllt Hlh; Vlltl 11'9111; •lo IMM, Coltell, La ~I f'*'MM 0..l< Ulle ..... CretCllftla V...,; .................. '--"'-Hiiia, .._.. "*°'· .... ., ........ H•l•Ml'I' SMr• (OC-n Vltwl. Kun ~ ''--"'-hedll ""' .. """"" ~'"'· ~ Vtf"dlt, IWlll ... ,. v ..... ~. ~ ~. Ke,_, ...._,.._,, U..r ,. a-c11 Mllllllan. P.MdeM, C-• Mlri • t,l~llE ..-noh Mio'{~ Yl<\Sl ~ ~I ..,.. 'n\O """c*"'5 )(l(C MooWoc...- ., .... • Su~r Pick Six PICK NINE • Nf!W Post Time 7 :30 P.M. • Ouart~r Hon~ Racing thru Jan. 14, 1986 • Nightly-Monday thru Saturday e EarJY Bird Setting 7:30 A.M ... to 5 P.M . • Call for Dln~r Reservations-All New Menu •W>• t !Uffofi.. ~. "°" ~" ~ qono for 1nlornwoon-<A11 111 I 4ll·l l61°'f7141m12)4 ~ SubUd•4'fY or CluMTrf" Horw lt«JnO n- ' I ,. 'l FoR THE REcoRo ---- Nfll HATIOtfAl. ~PlalNCI "'"' w L T P'ct. ,.,, ~· ltllN • I 0 "' "' 121 Sell Franc.IKO s 4 0 H4211 161 New0r1Mns , • 0 m m ns ,AMMfa I • 0 . I II 171 194 c.r.i Ch!Qeo • 0 0 1.000 u~ 124 MlnMwll s 4 0 lsl6 113 Ito Detroit s 4 0 S5' 170 1'6 Gr-e.v l ' 0 m ,.,. "' T1-8ev 0 • 0 000 IM m •111 Oallls • ) 0 .'67 207 146 NYGlllnt• • 3 0 ... , 203 ISi WHhlneton s 4 0 .S1' 151 I" ~ 4 s 0 444 1,. 145 SI Loul• • s 0 .... 1 .. 216 AMSalCAM COMP"U•NCI *-Denver • ) 0 ... , llt "' ......... 6 3 0 .'67 IM 117 Seattle s • 0 .S5' 12l 202 Sall C'>le9o • s 0 ..... 220 731 ICanws CllY , • 0 mm 204 c;.MJ1ll Clev-.nci 4 s 0 U4 ISO 1)2 Clnc1nnall 4 s 0 u..uo m PHIJburtHI • 5 0 '44 If;) 1S3 Houston 4 s 0 .... 162 11S EHt NY Jets New Enellnd ""-'"' lndl1n1DOllS 1 2 0 ' l 0 s 4 0 l ' 0 1 • 0 771 tell llS ' '67 173 156 S.56120 1~ min 204 9vff•lo • ~.,..~ St. LOUii 21, DlllH 10 luMllV'I G-. 111 121 216 •-1t Haw York Glanls (Cl\lnne4 2 el 10 Lift.) ll.-n •• Sin Diego CChenne4 • 11 1 p,m.) AJllnla al PtlllldelPhlll Clevtllnd 11 Cincinnati O.trolt II ChlcaOO Green 91v 1t MIMHOI• Houston 11 8uH11o Indian.POiis et NIW Envllnd PlllsOurvtl 11 KIMU CllY St. Louis 11 Tamoa 8.-v Sllttle 11 New OrlHns ~w Yortl Jiii 11 Miami Oatles 11 w11111no1on Meft4111V'I GlfM Sin Francl.co 11 o.nv..-(Channef 7 II 6 om.) c.-... A~~-._."' """ l.FIOrlde (421 7·0-I I, IS9 2 2.Peon St1t1 tlSl 8-0·0 I, 11) 3 l.Nebr15A1 7·1·0 1,027 S 4.0tllo St1I• (I) 7· 1-0 951 I S.Alr Force t-0-0 "1 1 6.lowe 7·1·0 134 I . 7 Oii lllhOml II) s-1-0 t2' 9 I.Miami, Fii. 7· 1-0 SIS 11 9.NllchlOan 6· 1-1 "s • 10.0kllttoma Stell 6· 1·0 600 12 11.8aylor 7-1·0 Sf7 ll 12.Arkenws 7-1-0 SS6 14 13.Auburn 6-2·0 462 6 14.UCL.A 6-1-1 02 lS 1 S.UU S-1-0 3S9 16 16.Florl4a Slllt 6·2·0 2Q "' 10 11.~1111 6-1-1 m 11 11.8rTol\em Youno 7-2-0 193 17 19.Tennn-4·1·2 151 19 20.Aliblmt 6·2·0 94 -01Mn rec1lvlno vo1n : Marvllnd 49, 8owllnQ Green 3S, Tell.II A&M 221h , Arltone Stell 17, Army 11, IMlnol1 11, Nolr• 01,,.,. 1. Ul1h 2. Arlrona I, ~g e TICh 1. MlnnHOll I. Soulh«n MllhOdlll I , ........... KMdule THURSDAY'S GAMS Sen Jow Sllll II Long &aid! St1te, n SATUltDAY'S GAMSS Wed N-Mexico Sllle Vl Cal St1te Fu!Hlrlon 11 Slnll Ane Slldlum USC 11 C1llfornl1 0reoon Ste,. I t Stanford Fresno Sf1t1 I f Plldflc S.cnmanto State 11 Cal Lutheren ?ortllnd Stile 11 Cal Poly <SLOI Wfllttllr at Cllremont·N\udd Santi Clara 11 ~II SJlle HorttvlOlll. n Occidental 11 ltldlanctl Pomona-Pttur al LI Verni , UC Santa &arbare II u. of s.,, Diego San Frenclsco Still 11 Aruw·Paclflc •ecir• UC L.A 11 Arlzon., n Washington 11 Arizona s1•t• Sin Dleoo Stele 11 Wvomlno 8VU 11 Utah St11e Army II Air Fore. So..ilhern Mln ln lPOI II COiorado State 8ol11 Stilt 11 Monlene ld111<> 11 Montena S1111 ldl '10 Stell II Ntvede·Reno New Ml•lco 11 Uteh Norlhern Artrone 11 Weber Slel1 Ell! Syracuse et N1vv Piii el T emoe. Ml1ml, Fie "' MerYlend II Beltlmoo Rutoer' 11 Wnl Virginie Penn •I Colellt 01r1mouth 1t COiumbia Hervard al Holy Cron Wlltllm &. Marv 11 Princeton Lthlllh 11 W8'1 Cl'le\ler Cornett 11 Y11t Connec1ic4Jt et 80\ton u 9 uctt ..... It LlllYlllt Ntw Hem~lre •• Miine o.4ewere II MIHICllUWlll SewWI East CerOllne 1t Aut>vrn GttO<"gl1 vl. Florida el Jacksonvllle South CeroOna el Florlde St1t1, n Ten""-Chl1t1noooa 11 Gaorol• Tee.ti Alet>ama 11 l.SU Ttnneu" et Mlmonls S111e Cllm'°" •I Norlh Caroline Virginia 11 North Carollne s1111 SW Loul\lene et Tut1ne, n K1ntuc11. v 11 Venoerbltl James Madison 11 I/Ml Loulsvni. et Virginie Teen Ouk• 11 Weke For8'1 Bro•n " RICllmono Wolford •• Tne ClllC!et NW LOUl\llne 11 Nlcno!!s Stell, n Tuas·.t.rllng1on et McNeese Slelt, n Mldw8't llllnots •t tow1 Purdue at Mlchlg1n Wisconsin " M•,..,.sote, n Ohio S1111 et NorthWHlern MICPllgan Sllle 11 lndiena Cotorldo 11 Kenses Oi<lehO!na 11 Mlu ourl, n IOWI Sll lt II Nebresll.e Mln lu lppt •• Noire Dime Penn S11te 11 C1nc1nnall Ktnl S111e II Miami, O Easltrn llllno1' 11 Norlh«n 1ow1 n N<wtllem llllnoti 11 Eu •ern Mlchl111n, n Wlehfl1 S•••• II INlnoh Slllt lndlana Slete "' B1H Slett 11 In· dlll\IPOlll c..I , ... ,,..,_ C1·5) IO N\onllllf ) I 3 ..._va<lt•lttnO lO I WvOMlne S1 20 San JoM State II l2 Utah Stele )0 ' Ntvada·L.11 ........ 10 1 Fr""° Sl1t1 4 Nov t -Hew MHICO Slllt Holt. 16 -11 Norlt\tit'll Arl1ona Nov n -Lono l..etl St1te Nov 30 -Paclik L ... hedl s• .. <S_.) 17 Utall Stat• lt 14 $111 Olloo Stale l4 » Hewell JO 21 Helt!Mll·l.11 ""'' 1• 17 aolM State 16 lS Tulsa 31 23 Eastern Washlnolon lO ,. ,... MllllCO 51111 7 20 Pacific 1 Nov. 7 -San JoM Sl1I• Nov 1• -Fresno Stet• Nov ?l -11 Cat S1111 Fllllef1on COMMUNITY COLLEOE LOGS OrMee C.tt ( 1-$-l) 1 Goldin WMI 1 tF ulllf1on S4 IS SaddltC•C' 27 " It lveralOe 11 1' San Oleeo Mew I• 1 Soulh-lll'n .17 14 San Oteeo C1tv• 24 Nov. t -Palomar•, 7·)Q P.m, Nov. 16 -11 Cltrut•, 7:30 D.m. NOV tl -ltandlO Santlffo•, 7;l0 p,m VOlnotfl Mission Conference oame ~W"tU.J-1) 1 Or1noe Coast 7 7 R1ncho Slntlloo 9 10 Tell 31 42 P1woene 2s 11 Ml San Antonio 10 ,. Lone 8elCh cc n 21 Carrltot • 24 Nbv • -Fl#lll"fon•. 7!)0 Pftl Nov. 1' -•I El Cemlno•, 7:)0 o.m NOY. 22 -911\artflefd•, 7:)0 P.m. :·c1eno1" Pac-9 Conference oamH. SaH1Udl (l·O) .. Et Camino 14 42 San llll'nlrdlno 10 27 Or•nH Coast IS J3 ltlwrMdl 11 3' San DleOO Mew 1 31 SoulhWfltll'n 17 Q San Diego CC I lO P1iomar• 1' Nov 9 -Citrus•. 7.30 P.m. NOV 16 -I I R1nc:no Santiago'. 7:)0 o.m. '·denolfl Min ion Conference Mme Cce•Met W L. T Fullerton 4 1 0 Teti 4 1 1 8aun/leld . 3 2 0 Cll'rllOI 3 2 1 Gotden W8'1 3 2 0 El Camino 2 3 0 P1lldefll 2 3 0 Long 811Ch I 4 1 Ml Sin Antonio 0 4 I fl'rtdlY'I GMlf (7:)1) Futlll'lon 11 Golden West SeturdllY'a Gemea t7:Je) 8eltll"llield 11 Taft, 1:30 El Camino 11 P1110ena CarrllO\ 11 Mt. San Antonio ec:•-WLT SaddltOIGk 6 0 0 SoulhWltlll'n S I 0 RIYlflldl l 2 0 R1nch0 S.nllaoo 3 3 o San Oleg() Mew 2 3 0 Cltru• 2 3 o PalOmlr 1 4 0 Orenoe Coast I 4 0 San Diego City l 4 0 s.fw*Y'I GernM (7;ll) P1tomer et Ora,_ Coast Citrus 11 SaddleOack o-eJf '#LT s 2 0 5 1 I s 2 0 S 1 l 3 3 ' l • 0 2 s 0 I 6 1 1 • I Ovw9I WLT 0 0 1 1 0 • 3 0 s 3 0 3 4 0 2 5 0 l • 0 1 S I I 6 0 SOuthwntern 11 Sin 01ego Mew, 1:30 Sin Dleto City at Rlvenkll ,,,,..,,~ (at SledtMlrft) l'lnt ltlUftf ...... Scoll D1vl1 (U.S.) def. N\lchMI WntPhel (Watt Germany), S-7, 7·4, 6·2; ,._,.,. Lundgren (Swedefl) def. TomH Smid (CteefloMovallla), 4-6, 6·4, .,_2; MAie LllCh (U.S.) def. Kefll Cartuon <Sweden), 7-6, 6·4; Atidrft Gomet tEc:uedor) def. Henrik SUr>c111rom tSwedefll, rl, r1; Jlllot> Hll* (Swlttarland) def. Heinz Guntherdt <Swlltll'llnd), 6·2, r1; Emlllo Slnchet (S9aln) dtf. Mld\lel Sc;hapen (The Neth«· land\), 7-5, 6·1, Sergio C1wl (Spain) def D1vld Pele (US.I, 6·4, 6-7, 7·6. W9'Mft'I~ (at LM91 ...... ) ''"'" ..... ...... Grae• Kim (U.S.I def. IC1t1 GorT)Plf'I (U.S.I. 2·6. 6·3, 6-2; Bonnie GldUMk IU.S.I def Cerollne Kuhlman (U.S.), 6·3, 6-3 T...-rllNr.._. HtGH SCHOOL GaU Cll' 4·A I. Piiot Verdel; 2 Mlrllesll , ). LA We1tllk1; 4. Mef1M1 S. C... -MM1 6 Slnle Barbare; 7. Rotllno Hllti; a. We9d· llrldel1 t. ...._, H1t11er1 10. &evarlY Hiii\. Clfl' >-A 1 Tl"!Ou\lnd 0.lts; 2. Wflllake, 3 Sen Marino. 4.. M9tw Dall S. Cv11tess. • Cllrtmonl, 7. AINmtlt'I, I. La Canada, t South P111dene; 10. L~ AllCK. Cll' 2·A I La Quinta; ~ lndlo; 3 Cllamlnade, 4, V11enCl1, S Norlhvlew, 6 LomPOC, 7 Loulsvllll. I 91r1tow, 9 San Luis OtlltoO, 10 K.-1 Cl' 1-A l Dl1mond Sar; 2 Mavfletd Pree>; 3. Pnadell• POIY, 4. LI ltllna, 5 c.11; 6. W1\lrl00t, 7. Cl\edwlc:ll, I. Santi Ynn; 9. C1brltlo, 10 SI JOMOh (Senti Merill). Na A w•sn•,. coeffl•••..c• 'h«* DMlllllt w L Pd. .. Wflflfn Mlcnlg1n 11 Onlo u Centrel Mlcntoen al TOiedo, n °"'""' s 0 1.000 Uttftwest ll•vlor "' .t.rkanus 11 U lllt ltock Tuas er Hovi1on Rice •I SMU TCU 11 Tu11 TKn K-Stele 11 Oktet!Ornl Slllt H1w1ll •I Tu11·Et Peso, 11 Dr11t1 11 Tulu Lamar 1t North Tu11 51111 SE Loul1t1111 11 $W Tu es $1111 Soutnern llllnola 11 Arlt1Mes ~111• COLUQE LOGS UCLA 16-1 • ll '11 Brlvt11m vovno 1• 2, T IMll'" 1' )4 $an Oleoo Stitt I' 1' WtlhllltlOf' 21 .0 Ariton. State 11 l4 Stanford t l t Wttlllllf!Of' $1ete JO J4 ~ , Holl f -11 Ar1rOl\I NOv 16 -OrtOOll Stele Nov t3 -., use USC f4 ·J) 20 1111'*• ~ 10 IJ 8avtor " 0 ArftOl!e Stett l• 6.> 0r-.on Stale O Jlf Sl•lll'ord 6 1 ....,. Dame ,, , 1 w .. 11....., sr.11 tl Nov. , -., c.morrir1 Nov 1'-11 W~ HoY D -UCLA 1119¥. W-Or"9fl (ef T .. JO) L.Mren ' • UIO ..... Portland • 1 -, Selllle 1 l .2JO , ..... ~Stal• 1 4 .200 • "-"• 0 • ... 4VI ,..._..,..,..... Denver 4 • IMO HO\nlon l 2 -lVI Oallat , 1 .JOO ' Sin Ant~ 2 , -,,,., Ulall , , -,...., 5-eramtllle I 3 "° > IAITDM eottll'•••..CI Ae.itk DMllell ao.1on 4 I NewJtrMv , , Wlat\lnflOn t t Phllldlllllil 2 ) ,.._y.,_ 0 s Celllr'tll °""'* Detroit • 1 Ml!Wluk• • 1 CNcMt , , Attenta 2 > Clrttlland I • MIMln .... No--~ TMll9ir1 ..... ClewlMd at LM_.. WlltNflelon 1t New WHY flot'tlttld at "°"''on San AnfOnfo al Mllwaut.• Afi.1111 ., Otflvtr Goldafl State at Utah HtW Yor1l 11 Seet1ta ,IOO .JOO , .... JOO 1i., -, 000 4 ... , 667 .. ...., •• , .... .200.,. ,...., us~ <'NI tf IJ·llllM llMr "'"""'> OUMttllHOllYI ,.._ST ltAC8 . )SO varch Ima M«rkloc tTraawre) UO 160 UO Pollshlcl Prkll (Oldaf'ldl~) ) 00 UO J11on Sen• Ml (8rook1) l 00 Time: 17 ..... $2 •XACTA (6·4) Plld .iuo Al'f"ALOOSAI HCOMD aACI. 6 t\KIOllO,, StlellV LM (Rankin) 10.20 UO 2 .0 lndlln SChOOI (Whlll) uo uo 8old Conc19t ICunnlnohan't> UO Tlrnr 1. II 4/S. ll lllACTA 14·7> oakl '24.20. TH•D •ACI. 6 11Jrlon9s SO 8'9nmueh (EnrlQ1111) 9 IO 5 20 3.20 Flullll' Ou11 (P11ul IS to S.40 Salling Ml•llf (Lklbel'O) 4.00 nme. 11111s S2 •XACTA ll·Sl Plkl i l2420 THC>ttOUGHM•DS flOURTH •AC•. 6 lurlOnOs P. C.'• F1ncv tV,ldtrl 1.60 4 '° 3.00 KICfllo (C1111non) S.00 3.40 Eve Nona (Frllllf) 3.00 Time: 1,17 4/S Pff'TH lllAC•, 1 lurlonOI Clevll' H1m (Ml11l 14 00 S.40 ._60 Greballctl (0r1 ... ) 3.00 l 00 Thru a.Ing A SOorl (Birton) UO 'Time: 1.24 4tS, U IXACTA (4·71 oald ~.to SIXTH lllAC•. 6 lurk>ngs. Com'on Fun tSlblllll 4 60 2.60 2.20 R. P1-Joe (8111) 3.40 2,40 llerter IH001111> 2 40 Tin. 1.10 4/S. 12 •XACTA (6-7) Plld '1040 SIVINTH aACE. 7 f~ Red FrlnChv (Domlnouez) •.to 2.IO 2. 10 Vlrolnl1 Shem (KMM4) S.60 3-60 EllC!rlc Aoe (CHt1non) 4.40 Time: 1.23 4/S U IXACTA t7·1l i>akl 124.20. llG+tTH aACI. 6 lurlonQs. Mv ltoll tL1moart) S.00 3.'° 2.to 810od Royal Friend (Ort-) 6.60 UO Unfair eon-tlllon (Ca111non> .S.20 Time: 1.17 315. S2 8XACTA 11·3) Plkl 121.'°. OUA.aT11• HOlll SIS NINTH IUCI. 350 Y1rd•. Str•m Daan (9ard> 5'.00 16.'° 7.20 «...i ltumot (Hart) 20..20 9.00 A l.ute Hoc1e Too (L-11> 3.10 Time: 17.S7. U IXACTA <2-Sl oakl i504.00 12 fttCK SI)( {1-4-611110-7-1·2) 01kl 19'2,752.00 to one winning ticket (al11 llO<HI). S2 PICK SIX consolallon Olld '3) 1,20 lo 110 wlnnlno lleket1 (flv1 horsnl. THOltOUGHM•DS TIINTH •Act. 7 lut'tonos Avenger Mist (Ward) UO 2 60 2 10 Summar S«M (8111) 2.60 2. 10 9old VIHI (Cl1t1non> uo i:11111: 1.22 2/5. •LIV8NTH lllACI. I 1116 miles Sl/19h Ho (C.111non) '·'° 6.00 3.20 Gov'I ShlMe lEW>lndoll) IOAO S.00 TardY ChOlce (Menl) 290 Time: l.C3 115. U IJtACTA (7-6) Plkl 161.00. '2 DAILY DOUeLE IS-7) paid '74.60. Allendance: 7,605. NHL c~•u. CONfl'•RINCI SmvtM DMlilll w L T "' Gfl' GA Edmonton 9 2 0 11 SS Vencou1t1< 6 • 2 ,. so Wlnnloeo ' s ' 13 S4 Callllrv 6 s 0 12 S2 ICJft9I 3 10 0 6 47 4 Nwrfs DMsllft SI. Louis 4 4 2 10 35 Clllatoo • 6 I 9 .. MIMl\01• l ' 1 • 47 Detroit l • 3 s lS Toron10 1 10 0 2 33 WALES COMl'ER•NCI ~•trkk OMUell Phllldelohl• 9 2 0 It SJ W1shlnolon s s 2 12 ~ NY Renoars 6 s 0 ,, 40 NY lllll1derl s • l 11 J9 N-Jll'MV 5 s l " ., Plllsburoh 3 6 3 t '3 Adams DMU... 8os1on • 2 I 11 S4 Quebec • 3 ' 17 so lluffllo 6 s I 13 Q Herttord ' s 0 12 45 MontrH I 4 6 I 9 Q ~.,.. Sc«e NIW York R1nvar1 4, Plll•1>uron 2 T ........ 10- Boston et QUlt)ec Montraal 11 Hartford Chluoo 11 Washlnoton C1loarv 11 Htw York Islanders Edmonton 11 vancoover Ml!tt'I crMI ceunfrY COLLI GE ~AC·lO fl'IMll (It Slllrttwd) 39 41 SJ ., .. ,, ., .. 68 S2 32 ~ 3S 31 42 SI 30 39 35 so Sol lndlvldull r8'utt1: 1. /Nrc OleMfl (Stan· ford) 30:33.2; 2. Peter ICOICh t Wallllnoton Stell), ».Sl.2. 3 /Nrc McMonioal (Or· evon>. ».SS.I; 4. Rvsn Stoll (Slanford), J0:57.I, S. Karl Vin Calcar <Oraoon Stale). 31:02.2; 6. J1y Marden (Callfornlll, 31:04.9, 7. Jiff AtklMOn (Sllmordl, 31:<16.0; •. Di n Nelson (0re9on), 31:11.2; 9. Curl Corvin <Wuhlnoton>. 31 :12.4; 10 Rici! 9rownstlaroer (UCLA), l l:17.l Taam ICOf'n: 1. Stanford. to. 2. Oreoon, 75; l. UCLA. 102; 4 Arlrona. 11'; S W1shlneton St1te, 121; •· Wuhlnoton, 12', 7. Arizona SlaJe, 147, t. C•llfornlll, in. 9 °'"°" S••••· 1"· 10. use. o.. ........... DAVIY'I LOaeta (.......,, 9eea!) -• .,..... m tlorilfO, 1 vthwlall, " roell COCI, 14) callcio blu, nt IT\ldtwll, 1 ca0e1on. • whit• llih, S "-tnheld, " ICU!Oln: ' ,, .,..,.... Cardinal• l'1lllDin& back Earl Ferrell (Sl) landa on hie back on top of Dalla• end Ed Jonea da.rina fint quarter action Monday night. Cardfnale rallied to win, 21-10. Cardinals come to life, 21-10 ST. LOU IS (AP) -E ven with his team behind, Pat Tilley believed som ething good would happen to the Sl. Louis Cardinals. What the wide receiver d1dn 't know was how soon . "J.T . (Smith) was running a breaking pattern, and their nickel back was following m e on a c rossing route," Tilley said. "Both o f the m touched it. It just hit m y hand. an d it stuck. I just said. 'Praise God.· " "When we came in he re at halftime. nobody said much," Tilley said afte r Jnggering St. Louis' 21 -10 comeback Natio nal Football League victory Monday night over the Dallas Cowboys. "N obody had to. We knew that unless we turned things around, our season was pretty much gone." Tilley. wilh Dallas rookie R ick y Easom giving futile pursuit, ignited S t. Louis by scoring to cap an 81-yard drive. It also turned on Lomax. T he St. Louis quarterback, who had been m a slump. began seeking o ut and finding his receivers. In seven plays. he guided the Cards to a 14-10 lead o n a 65-yard march that Earl Fem:ll capped with an eight-yard run. Tilley by using the sure hands that have long made him one of St. Louis' most reliable receivers. triggered the turnaround in the third period. "I d.on't know how he caught that p ass," St. Louis C oa ch J im H anifan said o fTilley's reception o n a 46-yard touc hdown play. "H e had to'tlave marvelous conce ntra- tion.I because there were hands all over, m any of them in his race." "Once we had shown that we could put some paints on the board. that seemed to get the Cowboys' attention." Hanifan said. "The team JUSt played hellaciously after that. both o ffensively and defensively," St. Louis coach said. "It was Lomax' bes t performance this year by far. He was more decisive. H e was the o ld Lomax." Actually, said Tilley, two hands tipped the Neil Lomax spiral that launched the Cards' rally from their 10-0 deficit. Bulls' Jordan to miss 6 weeks with broken foot C HICAGO (AP ) -Mic hael Jordan. the Chica_go Bui.ls' ace jumping jac k and scoring mac hine, will be grounded for at least six weeks with a broken foot The 6~ Jordan , last season's R ookie of the Year in the National Bas ke tball Assoc1at1on, mjurod h is left foot a w eek ago in Oakland in t h e Bulls' third game of the season. X-rays taken immediately after the inj u ry failed to reveal the break and the Bulls thought he had merely jammed his ankle. But when the team returned to C hjcago. he was examined again M o nday and the break sh owed up in a small bone, the left navicular tarsal, Bulls spakeswoman Corrine Zartler said. "When I heard it was crac ked, that really hurt me," Jordan said. 'T ve never gone through anything like this before and I don't kno w how to deal with it. ''Right now, I can cry all niVit and wake up tomorrow and find o ut what it's all about." Jordan had com e down hard o n the left foot in the second quarte r again st the Golden St.ate Warriors. H e finished the game with 12 paints, after scoring 33 and 29 paints in the Bull's first two games of the season. The Bulls wo n those firs t three games. but lost the next two , which Jordan sat o ut. "Maybe in the long run, this will be good for the team because they will learn ho w to play without me," Jo rdan said. "Maybe it's t ime for the Chicago Bulls to win without Mic hae Jordan." ·~ Pl&.IC NOTICE Pl&.IC NOTICE DEATH NOTICES ACmlOUI llUllNHI Notice of .... NA• tTAnMENT °',.... ~ HARDER The loOowtno persons are No. A-121171 K h C Har dolno 001hie11 u : A) Con-In lhe Superior Court of eit · der, Jr tlnental Orllllng • U.S.: B) Ille State of C1llfornl1, tor age 60. Born ln Fair- Cont1nen111 Dfllllng -US .. A the Co~.inty of Oraoge field, Iowa, Sept. 9. Division of R F Thiet, Inc . tn the melter of tht E.ltate 1925 M H -----d .ed 23275 South Polnl• Dr., ot VERONICA CARTE R . r. ....'Uel I Suite 100, Laguna Hiiia. CA WAS HBURN, llr.8 VER-o f Cancer on Novem- 92853 ONICA ELEANORA WASH-ber 3, 1985.H e w as a R. F Thies, Inc (A Call! BURN. •kl VERONICA E long time resident of CO<Poratlon). 23275 South WASHBURN, o.c.&Md Or Potnt Or .. Sulle 100. Laguna Notice 11 heftby gtven that ange County and Hiiis. CA 92853 wbtec:t 10 conflrn111lon by was e mployed for Thia bu11n111 Is con-lhe said Superlof Court, the 27 Y2 years at Ford ducted by a cOfpo<atlon unde<algned wtll Mii 11 prl-AerOS""""' & Com-R F Thies, Inc . Halbert L VIII aale, to lhe hlghtet and ....... ~ Smith, Asslatant Secretary belt bidder, on °' afta< the murucations Corp of This 1111emeot was Iii.cf 181h d1y ol November. Newport Beach. H e lS with the County Cle<l! of Or-1985. 11 the office of Rk:hrd survived by his w ife ange county on Seplembtf 0 . Frazee. Attorney at Law, Helen , o f Irvine·, ha.s' 28. 1985 30012 Ivy Glenn, Suite 270. F2111U1 ~une Niguel. Calllornla parents, Dr. & Mrs. Published Oranoe Cout 92 77, 1Mphooe number K.C. Harder. Sr. of Dally Piiot OC1ober 22. 29. (714) 49S-5111, all lht right. M t . R a 1 n i e r • November 5. 12. 1985 title. lrlterest and eatate ol T-882• said cf~t. In and to th1t Maryland; a sister, cert.in rMI property In lht Mrs. Doris Heider of County of Ornge, Slate ¢ w e s t R I v e r , Calllornl•. and more partl<:u-M aryland·, 8 brother, 11rty deacr1bed u IOllOwl, to wu Robert Harder o f Pl&.IC NOTICE ACTITtOUI IUMtEll NA• ITATIMINT The followlng pertOlll are dotno bu11neaa ae: Steve Haag and Auoclatff, 2082 S.E. Brtatot, Sulla 210, Santa Ana. CA 92707 Steven Mllchall Hug. 318e ManlltM [)( , Coate Mts1, CA 92828 This bu1lnt11 11 con- ducted by: an lnd1vtdu11 Steve Haag Thll llllerntnt Wll flt.a with tile County Cltrll of Or- anga C ty on OC1obtr 18. 1985 ...... Published Oranga Coaat Dally Piiot October 22, 211, Novembtf 5, 12, 1985 T.m PARCEL 1. B e r w y n H t s . Loi No. 8 and portion or M l d da Lot A or Tracl No. 2111 11 ary an : a ugh - per map recorded In Boo« ter, Mrs. N o rda ea. Pagee 8 a 7 of mis-Casaus of Paradise. eetlaneous mep1 In the of-Calif., a son Brent ~:S ~~~ty Rec:order ot Harder, of M ission PARCEL 2 Viejo, CA ; t hree That portion 01 Lot A of grandc hildren: on e Traot No 2771.ln tht City of step-daughter·, and Laguna BMch. u per Map reoorded In Book ea, PIOM two step-grand- ' and 7 of Mltct11eneout h'ld all f A · M aps, In the otflce ol the c 1 ren, O l'l· County Recorder of Mid zona. r uneraJ 9ervlces County. lying between tile will be held Wednes- W•ttrly Pfolono•tlon• of day November 6. 111e North«ty ancf So\lthtrty 1985. JPM at P acific liMI of Lot 8 of sakl' Tract View M ort u a r y No. 2771. C EXCEPT 111 mlner1lt, otl. hape l, interment g11 and other hydrocarbon Pacific View Mem- eubltances wt11ct1 ITl"ay be oMal Park, Newport Bulls Coach Stan Albeck said despite the injury. his team is "not going to fold up the tent." • Pl&.IC M>TICE "We've got to go over some lis ts and see 1f 1---------=~~r~..: Beach, CA. Family t>etow Ille preNnt IUrlllOI ot request In Ueu of said lend, u reMMld by Clowers donationa be somebody is out there to pick up," AJbeck "_. said. "It's amazing. It's just unbeliev able." ~~:.~:ru Zanier said these were the first games the Tli4t fo11owtno pereona •r• 22-year-old guard has ever missed in a playing doing t>ullnett 11: sco career dating back to bis days at Laney Hish ENTERPRISES. 703 Ran· School in North Carolina. g:: ~~~· 9:_~~· 2• "Y ou j ust don't replace a Mic hael J o rdan," S1tpt1en c . 0t11111o. •s2 teammate K vle Macy said. "Whew. this is a Meypon L.•ne. Huntlfloton ,, Beach, CA 92&48 real shocker. ' ThJ1 butlneu I• con· Tcammale O rlando W oolridge agreed. duetld by: en lndlvlcluel "That's a to u&h o ne to swallow. It means I've St""'9n c. Dlllluo got to come Uirou· ... no doubt about it." Thlt 11•1ement -.. flied .... with the County Clertl of Of. The team now has onl y J 0 playcn in ~ County on OctOber e. uniform -two under the hmit. Bulls guard 1945 Quintin Dailey is undetg0ing a drug rchabili· Publlthed Of•~~ talion program. o.uy Piiot OC1ot>et 15, 22, ------------------29. Novembers. 1'85 T475 Margar9' L. McKnight In d H M H P cMed record.a Auguet 24, ma e to . . . . 1955 In Book 3185 Pege 253 Foundation, in mem- of Offlclal Recorda, wt11c:tt ory of Keith Harde r, dMd provtdte • '°*<>WI: J I H ff-...itaJ "But Without r.talnlng tile r., c 0 ~ -... • right of mlneralt. o11. ~ °' Capital Development othe r h~drocerbon D e pt.. Newport eubatllnOM om 111y eurteoa Beach, CA. or dona· toc1t1on1 on Mid lend. The ti i..... rlgtlt to ••PIOt'I for Mid min-ona may ~ made to er111, oO, o-t Of other the American Cancer llydrocerbon tub9tenc. to Society. Pad& View be conoucted trOftl otr-eit• Mortu•Mt, DiN!dOra locetlOnl wNctt 8flall "'*• -., no '* of .-PGtt6one o1 _644:::=·2=7=00======:-Mld land ,... then 500 ,... below the pr...,..t eurtllOI thtr~" Commonly known u · t32 Mcl<n'9ht Ofltte, L1gun1 hecfl, Cellfomle. The tenne and oondltk>nt PIERCE aROTHIAI IELL aftOADWAV MOttTUARV ·-ic W\Tll'C l of ..... Ca.ti In IMIWfUI ITIOftey ,.._, ""'~ .,. of tM unetect Stet• on oon- 1 tO Brotdway CoSI• Meta 6~2-9160 I ... • nrmat1on of llile. Ten I*· *'' of the amount bid 10 be ~ed wltl\ IN bid, bel- ltlOe of CMI\ due Of\ oon- llrmallon Of..,. and o1oee of "°'°" lldt or °"9r-. mwt 1M In Wfltln8 and ~ be 1ne11ee1 or left •t the 9fofMlild oMoe1 11 llf1Y time 9fter IN Int~ ceilotl Of IHI notlee of .... IN Mfote .. d4lte of M1e OllMCI Oc:loMr ~ , ... uw CM'fla• Ull" MC.tt-MID 0. "'1'-, A lfltllO. nHtO•AL CORPO"• A"°" A-wpt tw ..,. ....... LC...,'la1111s1• ......... """"'*'· 0r.,.. CoMt Delly Pttot ~ '· 5, It, tlA MT·ttt I PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL 'AMC C.metery • M0t1ual"( Chapel • Crema1ory 3500 Pacific View Drive Newp.->rt Beac:h 6U·2700 HAMOft·lAWM- MT.OUVI MorluafY • eem.tery Ctematory 1925 Olllw Avt Cot1a Mna 540-5554 c • ,• Computer prices cut for Christmas By LARRY BLASKO ., I I I ,,,_.,., Apple Computer Inc. has just ferventJy wished itself a merry Christmas with a round of price cut~ u the bia se1Hn1 season for personal computen acts under way and ven- don who've been ho-hummed by customers for nine months allow viaions of profit to dance in t.heir beads. The suuested retail price of an Apple lie with a black and white monitor dr~ps to $995fromS1,295, a cut of rou&Jlly 23 percent. The Apple Ile~ to $945 from $1,145 for a drop of around I 7 per.cent and the Macintosh with S 12,oocr characters of memory drops toS2,499 from$2, 795, down a shade more than I 0 percent. Tbctc are what manufacturers call "1~ted retail prices," but in the heavily discounted personal com- puter business, anyone who pays suucsted retail has problems a com- puter won't solve. A caJI to a mail- . order house that hadn't got word of the price cuts produced an offer to sell a lie with monochrome monitor for $975 -$20 less than the now- cbopped "suggested retail." A strong entry in CompuBu~·s "You Can Do Almost Anything With A Computer If You're Willing To Work Long Enough" sweepstakes appears in the November issue of Hot CoCo (CW Communications, $2. 9S ). It's a 199-liQe BASIC Pro&ram that calculates the heat efficency of fire- wOl>d by the cut-and-delivered cord. No kidding. The program allows you to figure out that wood with half the beat content of oak 1s a bargain 1f 11 costs less than half as much as oak. Of course, in data entry, you must watch your typi~ or you will get an "invalid wood type ' error message. If the first tool that comes to mind when you need to build a fire is a computer, ~o find a Boy Scout for some remedial training in basic skills. Ma1lba1: A reader in Tunnelton, W. Va., writes that her new home computer worked a shon time and then became most uncooperative, refusing to do anything at all. Although the machane should be under warranty. the most likely diagnosis on the information a vail- able is a failed power supply. The computer works on low-voltage direct current and the power supply as the widget that takes the 120-volt alternating current from the wall socket and converts it to the kind of electricity· the computer wants, not unlike the transformers that come with electric train sets. Power sup- plies sometimes have a high rate of infant monality and will fail in the first hours of use. A more r~mote possibility, but one worth checking, as that there is a defective cord leading to tb.e power supply. If you're com- fortable with electricity, you can check this with one of the $2 "circuit testers" sold an hardware stores. Unplug the co rd from botb the wall socket and the computer, then put the tester's probes in contact with the end that feeds the computer. Plug the cord back into the wall and check to sec if current is getting through the cord by watchin& for the tester bulb to light. If the bulb lights, suspect the power supply. lfit doesn't, suspect the cord. A one and a two ... Orang9 Coat DAILY PILOT /Tueedey, Nowmber 5. 1N5 -• . COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, 87 CompuSave alleges smear campaign causeq stock drop CompuSave Inc., an Irvine-based manufat turer of electronic shopp1na terminals, blames a sharp drop m its stock price on a smear camp&1&11 by someone who hopes to prof\t by the devaluation. Co1;>ies of a letter cont&Jnina "d1s.- paraging and inaccurate" infor- mation about the company were mailed recently to secunty analysts and othcn m the anvcstment com- munity, the c6mpany said m a statement released last week. The letter alleged CompuSave's computer terminals were dcfecuve and unpopular with consumers, the company said, adding the same person was believed responsible for letters matled tn August and Septem- ber alle&Jna fraud and mismanage- ment at CompuSave. CompuSave shares fell S 1.25 an over-the-counter trading Wednesday to close at $3.75. More than 107,000 shares traded hands. After the com- pany's statement Thursday, the stock gained 25 cents 10 close at $4, wtth volume of6S.700. The company suggested the Jene~. postmarked an Sant.a Ana, were the work of an act1 v1st "shon seller"' who hopes to profit by a drop in Com- puSave's stock pnce. The complny dcchned to com- ment on whcUler tt had reported t l$ suspicion of stock marupulauoo to the Secunues and Excbanae Com- m1uion. Irvin1 Elnhom, the £C's western ~onal administrator. said he would neither confirm nor deny that an -investiaation is under way. CompuSave went public in May, 1984, with an offenna of abou1 I million shares a\ SS each. Dunn' the laS1 y~r. the stock price has ranged from S 10.625 to $2.SO a 5harc. The COm{>&DY posted a )OH ofS2.6 million dunna the fiscal.first quarter ended Aua. JI. During fiscal 1985 ended May 31 , the firm posted a $4.8 milhon loss. Construction spending rises WASHINGTON (AP) -The government said spendina on new construction rose 1.9 percent 1n September. the biggest gain in six months . The September gam .lcftc.onstrucu.on spendang at a seasonal!) adjusted annual rate ol SJSO 4 b1lhon. 9 percent bagher t.han a year ago The mcrcasc followed a 0 3 percent drop 1n August and was the bau est advan~ smce a 2.S percent rise an Apnl. Coleman a Grant co-fou.nden Robert 8. Grant and Mark C. Coleman are all amllee with German "bier .. &l•Na ln hand I v ~~ una·~· Fie1110 t 11 NL !'Com P • • 1 T. C::•t 101' 11' llK~ , 'J'l NL T uE. J H ::!t dnrlnd the Newport Beach certifled ubllc accou.ntlndo.'j<l'l y I(,,.,.) ,,, rf'!o J ~ti. ~~~~ 1'J ~t ,O::'' s" :o r. n-tt ~~. ~;~ ~t Pv~~,:. Fv:.:,:1 NL ~~~et '"' NL 11-=._.~ p -. -..... :l" llO ofr I N Hil~o 911 NL lnou1••• SU NL Net Awe 1011 11 3' CCAro .. S9 Ital ~tra19111< FUNtll &UDl8 8 recent 10-year annh'e-.anr Celebration held lnaide i.11 1 ~flul r N H Y.O 'i 0. Nl lnlOCeP ' IO 91 N.1. Natlnd 11 10 NL CCO'o •I M .. \ 1 Caolt 6 11 t ·lS --1 ~Na Al • I A r U S. LI Mun 11 NI,, Int lnw}I •71 9Sf lnvlt 3• 7• a lar~ tent a:rccent to the Pacific Club ln Ne~rt More tllert ' SKll . ors• 1 11 11 69 Maoel J99S ''" ln~I POr'fOllo Na• S<l<v"'','!'11 1'l1 CetT1 \.1 73 "'' Sl•w • 1S than' 00 auee Ce)eb~ted the feetlYe OCCUiOD, Which had ~ :C~ :1.c~ ~ 1Jn =~ 1'f,1 1rb H~~~o 1~ ~t ~~~E l~~S 1~: ~C:':t, \'1'10 a ~ :;~~"' 1;;, if~ -r-' OMIWI, lflC.,...J!? Grv'i:" lJll 1~ 11 Mun /0 1 !~ Nl aOultw 9 1S l\jL a. .. n • > Caoll • 97 NL ltretnOv 1<460 NL. an Oktobertfeet theme. = ,::.'" ·'='. ~II n 1rn N~~~~ :rn ~t ri°'~·o..o )0 NL • ~~~ 'B~ 'H! ~~ ?/~ n ~ ·~~Sh '~·"' 1 Nl. • ' valW) w MlltlM Co!Onlat "I ~C & l 1• 1S •nv&o\ 0 • II &1 P• .. o 110 I.JO HMlln IS 1• '1 10 T.,..Ole•OI' ro..o (value .,, ..... AG.old I• ~~ '" 16 h 16 •• .. •nc:o 1•" ·~ 13 n(OfT' • •I I" H•ln(O .. 1113 "'VI' I ,. 13 '1 Cf\a,_) f'"411Y.,. . i~A 1& I ur '" 1117 NL Me Tl" IS • II 11 .. 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N~Llff F..no TF'1n1 "7• N~ f,~,, Po"'OhQ Hofmann Techntcal Services. of Laguna Niguel. has been renamed HTS International. Reva Butler Hofmann, the firm's president and chief operating officer. said the name change reflects the firm's worldwide expansion. HTS International, a consulting enginecr- ang firm spec1ah21ng in providing engineers and technical ~rvace per- sonnel in the areas i>f energy, aero- space and synthetic fuels. has also moved 10 new corporate offices in Laguna Nigµel. • • • McCarthy construction firm has been selected 10 butld a I 0-story Holiday Inn 1n Huntington Beach. This is the Newport Beach-firm's second Orange County Holiday Inn project. McCarthy 1s building a 13- story hotel in Irvine that is scheduled for completion in February. The Huntington Beach pro1ect 1s scheduled to be completed by Octo- ber 1986. • • • A telev1s1on program designed to recruit sales and management per- sonnel began airing last month on Channels 56 (KDOCI. 46 (KHJS). and 18 {KCSI). "Meet Your Next Employer" will feature senaor executives from For- tune 500 companaes who will discuss their company. employment op- portumties. cand1date qual.Jficauons and job benefits. The program was conceived by_ VadeoScarch. a Santa Ana-based company. ••• A 24-hour urgent care has opened at South Coast Medical Center. The ~rvace, located an the emerg- ency department, features substan- tially less costly "emergency" care for manor tnjuncs and ailments. The center wall also handle school. Little League and employment medical histories and physicals without ad- vance appointment. • • • Group West Advertasmg/Publtc Relations of Laguna Niguel 1s rc- ponsiblc for advert1s1ng and promo- tion for the Links at Monarch Beach The Links as the 18-hole golf course. which as the center of the residential/resort community of Monarch Beach an Laguna Niguel • • • O ne of the oldest and largest venture capital firms 1n the world, 31 Ventures. plans to invest S 100 malhon an Southern California, dur- ing the next fi ve years. 3i Ventures. a worldwide firm founded m London an 1945 to provide capttal to rebuild Bntash mdustry after World War II, 1s (Pleue .ee NOTltS/86) ecl"<I' 101' II COi F'unds al IS NI.. &ono ~ o~ oult 1' ta 71 51 U$G•a I& SS IS oV"' IOJ7 NL Ut 11..t It n II F. 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NL u<tO n 1119 ,,.,,._, 1 MuHY NL -----------The state of California spent more than S 100,000 for Sunday night's musical extravaganza. which fea- tured the Ray Anthony Band, Miss Tenntlle, Miss C-arroll, the surf band PapaDo RunRun and Mariachi Guadalajara. with wha les, razzle-d azzle and stars 1 F'o IS 62 NL w•grn r 11 66 NL ono r 11~ NI. Me\Cllrt 1• 17 Nl ii ll'C 1 11 '1 Soc1 " j t & Mull'I 11 NL. 1 F'<t u" NL wrgrTn I• 71 NI. •Ill 10 10 so Me<• L •n(/I Ill II>( I IS 10 t'r;n1 12 1 l MuL.o • NL 80\IOn CD PA ~""°' mrg r 11 NL llHoC 1• l6 IS :i. l>t••rno 17 4 NL v en• 10 1 I 1 MlnL.g 10 NL SAN.DIEGO (AP) -Entertainers Ben Vereen, Toni Tennille and Diahann Carroll joined a performing wbale in the big bucks gamble to woo corporate executives scoutmg d~ velopment locations. Two hundred members of the Industrial Development Research Council arc being treated to four days of aolf, tennis, Mexican mariachi bands and surf music in addition to the celebrity performances. The goal of the nashy shows IS to land development commitments_ When the meeting at the Hotel del • Coronado ends Tuesday, govern· ment and ~nomic development agencies will ha ve spent hundreds of thousands of dollars in extravagant pitches. The big spenc1e r was San Daego''i Economic Development Corp .. which is hosting the meeting and spendin~ SI S0,000, most of it go ing for a dinner party Monday at Sea World aquatic park featuring Shamu the performing whale. "You can settle for chaps and dip or you can razzle-da.z.z.le the people, which can be quite c-0stly," Jane New York as spcndang $20.000 for Vereen's 90-manute performanc< "This as a ~oup of corporate real estate and facility planners that hu a lot to say about where new company an vestments are made.~· said Richard Harrington. deputy commissioner of the New York State Department of Commerce. 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And the lar~cr )'nur deposn and the lan,gcr the term. the h1ghc1 your yield. Build a CD on Ore.ti An)(rkan\ firm foundalion For your baJancc l~el and rate call out toll-free F1nanct.al Lmc 1-800-423-BANK ... - Earn from St,000 Minimum. 6 Month 8 35 ~·~· • YiclJ • 8.02 ................ ,....~ ..... ~--........ Tltt Qll'·~ ·~· • ~ ,....,. '"'".-a·~· % (11~1 I< '" p to SS0.000 Minimum.6 Month 8 95 ~,~N -8.57 CH> Currrm • 'lt'liJ • R111r ~ ~ll'ftOOl re! _ .. 111.i1~.....,,..,. __ ......... .. \)l(l•""'IO\"'" ................... _ .... ....__.....__ .. _,,, Open your account today. aU tilt toll-free financial Unc now : l-800-423-BA Wuh ltl offica trrY'fna Or-. C'ounry K. Anahdm Hiils El Taro &.lboe b&md F~ Vlllik1 Blilbc)9 PallnUa ~ndnttoa leilch CapllltMO ~ taaubl Bad Creat American OOnk. -Pt>-""'f'"'f '~ •• ..,..,_"°''"'' . ....,.._..,ru .. ,,.. .,_ ... '" ..... ~ • ._, .... N~•-pon Beach an,. s-~ JamC...,._.o " oocfbridet lf\4 It HenfctF Bank of America is California's leading small business bank. "That's because wf!re able to help small business more than any other California bank. Can we really do that 7 We can do that. THE RIGJ-IT PF.DPLE-TO HELP. At every branch you'll find dedicated people you can depend on for your day-to-day banking. In addition, we now have over 750 Business Bankers committed exclu- s1 vely to the more specialized needs of small 'business. That means more bankers with local decision-ma.king-"authority. And enough back-up personnel to make sure all your needs are taken care of today-and down the road. THE RIGHT PRODUCT'S, TOO. At Bank of America, you'll find every bankingscrvice to help you make it in the marketplace. Everything from financing to unsurpassed worldwide capabilities. So, if you want a bank with more "can do" to help your small business succeed, come to California's leading small business bank. And find OUl what we "can do" for you. BAN ff ON THE LE.ADER* Bl ••• I •• •• ••• ••• ••• ••• ••• ••• ••• ••• ••• ·1· •• •• ••• I r And the wlnnera are Cherie Kerr Doremua of Kerr a AMoctate. ln Ban~ Beach and Dan Blab of Daniel Blab Deelpa ln Taitln, recently collected their ELil A warda for thilr work on the Le Pare condomlnlam and townbome project ln Simi Valley. ELil awarcla Aft •t•en for •aperlor NI• and markettnc •tratetlee • This announceml·n1 •~ nrnht"r ;in offer 10 x·ll nor ~ wliciutaon of ;m offer 10 buy 1hc:s1: St"cunun . Tlw offrr u m;adr only by thl· Offamg Cm ular . AVA IL ADLE TO CALIFORNIA HESIDENTS ONLY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS of IRVINE CITI-FINANCIAL HOLDING COMPANY bf announces I I that a limucd qu:mmy of ongmal muc common \tOlk I 111 tht" Holding Company rcma1m ava1labll· at tlw pncc of Stu.00 per shar1:. C...op1l·~ n( thl· Offer mg C1rcul;ar arc ;av;a1lablt• onh fr om lht' Board of n1a·c1on II I IRVINE CITY FINANCIAl :.· 1. • 2400 l~~?~~l~~~z?if IVE .1. i ._BA_NX_Of_AM_EJl_ll_A_NT_tt_\A ______ Bank of America _________ M_EMB __ ER_FD___,IC I 111111111111l~lilli1111111111111~ 2: :: l . A «Ollllb lr1111rwl "/> f-0 1100, ()()() Mbll"'""I l#rm of I y«1r 11/f,. 110, (){)() rrWU- Appliu to tmri of I ~ar Subsfa11/1al µmalty /M tarly . 925% YIELD ost .550% RATE • *'"'bdra"''O/ Ann11al fald bond ()fl a>1ll pouNlmg wbtrl inltrt.st '1 •ft on tkpot{J /or ntlfrttcrrm. Rau,yflld aNI 11rm1 tubj«f to cbangti wflbout norkt American avings ha been helping Californians invest fo r the future since 1885. Throughout the lasc ·c~ntury, we've remained commiued to pioneering mart, safe investments like the Money Matrix CD account. It actually lets you determine the iz€, term and rate of your CD investment. It's that •• simple . AJI the more reason to call or visit your nearest American Savings office, and put 100 years of American strength behind your future security. CEN ENNIAL 1885-1985 AMERICAN SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOClATION ,. • • J " • r COSTA MESA 3929 S. Bristol St. 979'9800 GAlDEN GROVE 12141 Garden Grove Blvd 534-8690 HUNTINGTON BEAOf 7830 Edinger Ave 848·2222 • HUNTINGTON HAIBOUR 1691 I Algonquin St. 846-33SS 1.AGUNA HlUS 24085 El Toro Rd 770·2816 ORANGE 196S N Tustin Ave 974 1620 SE.At 8EA0t 801 Pleine ~t Hwy S94 88S5 TUSTIN 641 E. 1st St 83l-2S81 • I Of\I ... w... ~ .. , c Orange eoNI OAll Y PILOT fTue«Jr,. ~-6. .... .., 1:rii1H,f.'JJ,ftn11:a:ttt11i,11t1 M~rket stays strong NEW YORK (AP>-The stock market rallied sharpl> 1n thr final hour of trading Tuesday, )hOWlng a renrwal of the strength that has carried Lbt' Dow Jones 1ndustnal average to several rrcords • Anahsts ~1d 1he stock market seemed to bt broadl} health} Thr market appeared to take hean from prospects of lower 011 pnces. Venezuela reduced the pncc of its hea vy crude 011 by 40 cents a barrel lo match a measure taken bv Meuco last week.. WHAT AMEX DID NEW YORK (AP) Nov ·s Pr•v Tl ~~ Adv~nced 67 s • Oed Md j ¥~f=s 4 t4 ~ew II gll1 ewtows 12 ' AMEX LEADERS NEW VQtll( (AP) -Sain, 4 D.m price •nd '1' cl'llnoe of IN ,.,, moSI K1lv1 merlc1n Stadt E11rn1noe luun. lrr 1dl ng n111on1 llv e t more ll'l1n SI ....,,. v Liit C"9. 1 8AT lnd I S36 0 -16 +1-T6 AM Intl ' 71~ 4~ + lti Hom.GD n ~· tl' • t 1 '> Vlf'nhron .·.'. 9 • + ~ Ecno81y e . 12~ -• • W1ngL1bB 111-+ '1t Wlck-s 41-. Klrt>vE XO , 2lti -11\ MAllrlk s 19•t. + I ChlrlMdA s 1 : 19''• -~ GoLD QuorEs METALS QuoTES NEW V()M 1API -$c)OI ~owe _ .. p<C.O t-:::::::.,_ •2 20 oet>lt O* 00....0 NT Com.• IC>OI monlll-Mon C.,... 81 .. 10 cenll I pound U 5 Oeofinetlc:w\a c.,... to~ --~ N• eo-n.. IC>OC "'°""'.,_"'°" ~ ..... ,, _. "°""" ZIRc H-3' '*'". "°""° --eel ,,.. ...,. __ , ......... w-~ P'"-- •o .._ MOI0--~&1<atmat1 ...., u oee oer •'°Ya...-NY ~ -......,.,, ,_Mon ....._., U:IOOOUJOOO-te.1t-~ "'-"""' ,...._ $3.» 00-W.. 00 00.-llt .._...,,..,,, IT~ ~ ... WHAT NYSE Orn NEW YOR K I AP) ~v S Pr9v Adv~ncec Tl ~~ OedMd ¥~ N-1'1 ' f4 12 Newlc>wt NYSE LEADER S NEW YC>litl( <AP) -Sain 4 D.m ·Ol'1cil 111d net cn1ng1 of \,,. #lftH n mo11 ect'lv• N•w Yont Slodt ExdlencM Issues, 1r1d lng n el i onellv •I (T\Ot' 1 I l'lln I Joo ... ,,,. Pllll1 Elee 18M Pin Am Pt'lllloPI s TuuOGu e •J1911 AmE•Dren P1cLumor Amil' T& T Baxterl'ra~ AmHowl1 ~•vnldln<I ~ Av~ Prod CSX CD .. v Htt '·Hf· I. • l:m. / 1,, ' l:i: l , • 1.1 7 I· . 1: ' Dow JoNES AvERAGES NASDAQ SUMMAR Y NEW YORK (AP) -Moll ect111e ov,r• ·tM-counltr ·"ock1 IWIOli.d bv NASO Name ~trn ~vol .. M l ~~ Xlde• Tendtm Glu H lnl•I -...... ,,.,, • -0Nnge OoMt OAIL.Y PtlOTITUelday, Nowmber ~ --- CALL 642-5678 I CAWNG FROM NORTH ORANGE IF CALLING FROM SOUTH ORANGE IT'S URD TO IEUEYE UFE WAS ONCE SO DREARY UllTI I FO. MY DREAM a. JUST BY LOOllll 111 THE DAILY PILOT'S CUSSIFIDS. C._11..,t1-.-•-.111-.. __ 1_1u_ C.naa ••I Jiu 21U ll!J!lt INc~ Zllt Ctat•.... 2124 C"ta M111 ltU l!!J!!! IMck· Ziii ltatah te lhrt l11lan1/0fflet Int 5"65 E'lld• 1BA moblte 3Br 29a u~ a.q ,,.. ~ BJ;\ 1t>e. StOOO pe,, _______ 27_2_4 2711 48A 2~ nu.r ope and So Highway Superbly OCEANFRONT ~ntef ren· S.C. Pleta S 154,500. malntalned, lg llv rm, 3Br tel to 9-18-66. Deluxe 4br Owner/Agent 75t-1218 2ba front hOUM. Patio, 2ba FU~LY FURNISHED. IS Bdrm 2 Be. Hv. rm, din m. lg rec. rm. SACRIFICE f130l< Owner 499--3881 bulltlna, tndry fllcil 1f2 675-7388 or 535-8017 blk Carnetlon Park. Avail Ocean View VIHa BalbOa. 1216/85S1500 yr IM. Agt 2br 2ba $1•50. mo -mo. 675-0068 675--087• or 660--0922 hm edit Pk ~o pell cprt. 10340 Valencia month ~ ulll. Cell FEM 22-3210 ahr ap11e NB PAlME Office Spaoe '" 673-7787 /5g.5590 . $750 No pets 545-7983 673-1674 Westclltt home w/pool & Newport Beach. avail • \-Small 1Bdrm • Eastllde 2Br 1ea. NEW crpt, 1 car Ju. $400-+ utll. 5•8-0tOO. lmmed. $550. p/mo. E'llde Condo. 2BA 1 ~·. cozy w/1011 of wood S•65 garage. frptc, nhr/dryer. Fem•le share with ume. JAllll IUl.n ~'':.~·2:r~~du~~-No pets 990-2962 Vrly. Neat l>Neh f925 2br 1ba apt In C.M. PllP IAlllllltUT 646-28-48. dY• 5•8-9341 PIOrFIOA mo. 67S...-912 Bkr $300/mo. 548-2902 l14/llM111 WJlll ... I Steps to beaeh. 3Br ab<>de 2 Bdrm 2 bath, aecurlty B ...... I I •Ci.an 2BA 28A BLUFFS Him ahr 2Br 28a 23-27 •TEAFRONT BLDG ~~tt;'~m~~~~:; ~~lts1~i.!::82~ar. :msf.8,;o.~!_~~acti. L~a11~'j~ :~t ~c~~ TIWIHIEI Pool, frplo. carporll. n /amkr. No drug•. ex"J: Suite 1350 •If ·., garage. Prime Meaa ,...DEIT 11•·111• $395/mo, 859 W 19th St. Brand new apectoua 1BA SS50 No pell. 722-8011 SA/CM •rea $337.SO. $1.501/I. 4th nrtvleW Verde location. Excellent •u. .-• 2BA 2._,ba condo. 2 car w/dln, pvt deck, pool, Avail Dec 1at. 771-~37 &42--46"4 M thr Fri 9-5 value at $223,500. AS· ta.... I gar. $1300/mo. Call 1::t!.~~11~8':~ carpor1a, lndry. lec. Oc-*UH llLE* Fem ahr CdM hM tHmkr ,._ 1_1 p SUMf# 1at T.D. Jacille Weekdya 541-5753, cupancy Nov 1. No pelt 2Br 1Ba.208Soud , IY&IL lmmed..N~ t>eac:n'. ~•atrCaaa reflllf ~leman 831-1288 2Br 2Be Condo, encl gar. evs/wknda 873-1858 cabinets. Squeaay 268..£. 16tti St. 'Npt ~ta. Don 675-124"1822-8195 No .... ,,. $342.50 + v. utll. 1771 trple. .$890. Quiet ar~ $6-tO .No peta 900-2991. $595 63 12 .,.. I ~-••1 7705 c••_iti/11 /mo. t-•H11EWITll* I 780-1553 fa56SQ. ~t. • -~ °' ~..--"'1P' *'YIW UL•••• 28 18&. 571 J 2 ,_, C t Her .. -.. , II'""' ,\% . 2Br E-.slde, r.m~. 2Br 2Ba Pe=uae. ~nsmax:ss~~n~op°;,"t~-ur ""'',_ -• LulM lou,2Br2Baw/Den. Fem to ahr hM, nr S. C. xlntMeaaYerdeloe. PP fresh & clean, beam cell-Vautted celllnga. dining Sierra Mgmt 550-t0t5 POOL Patio, frp,.., X-toe W/D hkup. lg kltctlen, Plaza & OCC. $250/mp + 64µ123 Inga, etc. Chlld & pet Ole rm, fr"ptc. lndry lac. 1Br S580 2Br $680, S500 frptc, encl gar. Prvt bch utlla. 549-8021 •Office/Shop/Storage• lut. a.... lMI $115. 760-8882 $1400/mo, 11t. lut + 2Br+ lb•. Go Seel MC. Uni E·llde 557•28" 1 S 1995. Sorry, no peta. F rmte to ahr 3Br "''"' c .M. 28-4 aq It & up,, .... C.M. E 710 w. James St. (7 l•) * ·LSO• •0 • 5••12•9 2Br 18a Townjlome. 2 car •NEW PLUSHI 3Br ZtBa aec. wefyn Young, A.gt e.42-1127 (818)709-6715 Eastalde 1Br. lg backyard, ,.. S325/mo. T/hse nr OCC C-2. Quiet &lea. ....... .. gw, covered patio. No 2 11ry Twnhme, gar. Avl 673-8059 or 6"0-4868 encl iar. Pets OIC. Nr 2~~~~artlng at $1395.1 by 12101. Mike 850--0704 870 SO. FT. RETAIL down. (213)82~798 now $1200. unfm, 3Br 2'hBa, 1500 a/I. 5 *Lrg 1 & 2 bdrm, newly 22nd Nwpt. Min 6 mot. t Male prof non-tmkr 30-38 413 3tat St. Can'*Y VII· HI ... IMcL IMI YILU lllTILI ... mlnutn to bch. Quiet & redec quiet PoOf S49• up 9 9 7. 9 3 0 9. or Ag t 3Bdrm 2Ba, yrly. Near ahr Nwpt Hghts home. lage. Antique, Boutique, ---• . 111-4111 tr lM-1112 aecure $1050. 964-5666 186• Monrovta 546--0336 991-330• 9-8pm only beach, garege. lrplc S•OO. e.42-3442 Diana Marine, Clothlng, Park- UT. Ocean Vu Cuatom A 100 yd • to ocean •STUNNING Lg 1, 2& 3Br Spacious 2Bdrm 18ath. $1200/mo. 875·4912 Bkr Ing. By Owner 67M909. Home. 381 2Ba, llv. rm, Avell 1115. 1Br. 1Ba. No elegant 3br 2b• newer 2Ba Grdn Apt. Pool $555. Quiet Street. No pets 3Br Via Udo Bayfr~t apt Mu~ toh~e __ ':}WP1 .. tpooBc~. ......-.9 IOI llH 1 - frpl+ NII contain guMt , •• Ir"' & 1to-No ...... ,. $ 00 $655 & $725. 710 w 18th $575/mo. 63HI155 /I d~" y I ....... ..,.... ... '' WSW~ I , • .._ P ...._ ... , -· "' .... ,... · kltch yd 4 kids 11 w$1•oe501sun 6-7c.·a9,! ae $500/mo.644-2607 Retell •naoe: 1500 ~-ft. quarters. r-to · respon Adlt only $550 539-8190 Best.Alty I $550/ BA el I 15< mo .,-., "" .... S2•9K.~499-38&t Credtt.,..req'd 631-2242 ee mo t ' r, poo, ........... nu . M/F n-tmkr 2BA 2ba In $2556/mo. NNN. ( t4) ''1 · DECORATORS Beautlful carport. S.C Plaza area. ~ ,.. Cut1t 1Br 1Ba Duplex ' 675-6349 or 722-1298 lnprt IHck 1111 ..,Sharp clean Eutalde 2BA 2e• furn. """do on (7 1") 966-1136 . Irv. Quiet luxury, pool/lac _ ,.. ....,., Prkng. frig. Near beach. $440/mo. 733-2621 -,.-....,.--.--,-L-----.-,.Tlll--*ILlffl -* 2Br tBa houM. Fncd yrd the weter, eecurtty parleng S565/mo-S735/mo. lrg Tl-ES $575/mo. 675-•912 Bkr ".,,._ ._ ..... 2, .. ba 2 car~ 1-.1 & patio. encl gw. New $1595/mo. 673--0896 beaut 1 & 2 BAI all O • F I _. M/F n-1mkr 4BA hae, Ae1all/Offlce ~· 1681 .. .,. ,., • •• .. t"' pelnt, orpta & drpa. Lndry • · H " tr ••• Eattblutt Twnhae Apt. 3Br NwPrt Shoru $300/mo sq. It. on corner of patlo-p<>c* 1800I ·S160K ...area. Muat pua cr.cSlt DELUXE DUPLEX: 3BA bltlna, lrplc. Muet see. Frplc, vault~ celllnga, dbl 28a, 2 car gar. No pets 1st last a dep. 83i-3768 MacArthur & Coa.at Hwy , 7•0-0303/D tw4-8138/E check. No peta $875 + 1¥.ba 1/2 blk to ChanMI. 366 Avocado g&1. pool & spa. No pets $950. 6-44-tO 10 6-5 M-F 1 Prime spot In Landmark *" ..... MC dep. 770-5629 Nr Udo 09llter. 500 36th TSL •IT 142·M 12 28drm 2'hBa S925-S93D Furnllhed 3Br tea. Gar-NB. 2br 2ba, M/F n-1$3mkr, location 2• 11 E. Coast W-t-'ltf "'----. s .. ~... c:::,r. E-·•-... _ ..,.,., 1B.a. St. $1350/mo. 64•-7269 57351 2Bd l 'hB 866 W 18th f 1 I clean. quiet, tennis, 92 Hwy Ste ._200 Corona .... .,.,,,.,... '"" -......... ·-........... r~n:;',..~ .... Gar. lndrya 645--2739 ~ 163 ·s ~teoo' /mo'. p67c5 .... 91v2 Be:: I •vi now ~9-5•47 aft 4:30 Del Mar. 6is...-90o • Bdrm, den, lam. rm, 3 lrp , Indy. Enc yd & patio. HV Hm1 •BA 2BA $1800. ..,~ """ bath, 2 fr~, 3000 eq n. Obi gar w/09nr. Nu deer, COM 2BA 2BA S 1200 room. nice E/atde loc. WE ff PH I MIOE NEAR Do & w tcilll 1 , N.B. matr bdrm, pvt entr. Prime retall locatlon. 9200 b h ... tlle $850 Broker 640-~ 2629 ORANGE AVE ver 91 · walk to beach, parking It h & aep. ac OUM, re-.. ,utra, cer +MC Want a aelectlon or great BA pool apt. Bulltlns. S370/mo. 67s-aot• David sq • C1W room Wlll&- dUQed $30,000 f0< qulcit S800 No P91• 557-2691 LOVEL v Condo Upgreded TSL •IT 142· 1IOI llvtng? We can oner any-Avell lmmed. $850/mo, house Mahan Desk of Nie. $325,000. e.42-3282 EASTSIDE RENTALS 3Br 2Ba. Xlnt loc. lJnlurn thing from a amall apt to no peta. 8-45-ee.48 tv mig. NB Mair bdrm aulte $350. Coata Mesa. t800 New-Ull YI IDT. ULE MOdeat 2br family apot S 1500 mo 722·8~2 ....._tfiield a • bdrm houae. If look-NEWPORT PIER AREA Male n-amkr 759-1180 port Blvd. 6"2·8•50 bltlna & orpta thrunut •--=--Ing In CM, NB. or HB eva or 875-6700 days -Jlt•n/V-1tl 71 3BA 2'hba. Blutft. ..--Nwpt Hgta 2Br'28a, frplc, think of us first tor that 1/2 blk to beech 1BA no .,. _ .. _ u Aedoc.cS. Opn dally 4-5, 1575 ktda Oil Call pool & gar. No P9f• tat. IPUTllEm choice ol Ideal llvtng. peta. parking. Yrty S550 Nd Tidy fem rmmt N.B. Lo.-------""'!"---------505 Vista Flora. Ted •NM1M* IUI & dep. Reis Beautiful Garden Apta. TSLMGMT 6-42-1603 lnclutll.6736640. apt.2Brpool,fultyfurn,2 OlllllllLlll •--• •-•-tt Hubert. Rttr 756-1540 Pvt lncd 3b< 2ba h .. gw-$895/mo. 675-25~ Patios/deck•. ~pa. Heat WE""'TB•Y ELDEN •PTS SEUIHll lllYE blka lrom bch. $345. mo. 2 Ouplexea. $2700/mo & ..., ... Geanal 1002 den .. ttlng + 081 kid• , Id N 1 "' " "' --S 100. aec 722-1465 alt 5 $3000/mo Income. Good r ... •-•e ___ ..._ ____ ...__, .. UITM 11Hll """'ti $800'• others evall SEAVIEW 38' 2!h be + pa · 0 pe •· 2311 ELDEN AVE $900 yrty 2BA 1ba No 1 s 1 H Seller __ ... __ ... ______ •--------Abaolvte bargain • don't S39-6190 Beat Alty,.. fam rm. Sec. pool/tennis 2Bdrm 1'!.81 $700 Spacloua tBr Eaatatde. peta/atvi retg &48-s6a2 N/smkr ahr HB 2Br. oc. o o ~· 111,IOO mtaa thlt one! Pr•tlglou1 $2000/mo 213/"30-3829 2Bdrm 2Ba S720 New crpts. dahwshr & Aelpon & clean $300 + anxious 675_.5 3 IEWPllT IUOI 3 bdrm, 2'h bath £XEC E/llde cute 38A, dbl gar. -=11 LU 396 w. Wilson 631-5533 drps. Poot Gas & water Spectacular 1Br 1Ba, dep 8-42-•78• Iv mag l11ian1 Fiaaacial townhome w / .. curlty, frig, dshwr, lncd petlo yd ,.,.._ ---pd Encl gar. No peta. bay/ocean vlewa. Frptc. 2 Nwpt Bch M/F lhr 2Br C..tral 1082 8tc:,:~~':~~~rl~<;~ pool, apa + tennla. Try $1050 Incl gdnr 650-2403 2BA 2BA, corn., unit mleSliB"U $625/mo 6-45-5760 car gar, lndry, ~rly. St200 Oplit S36S lnclds utila I . *fiE ILIF'S* I deck. mlrr<><•. bar, all Ilk• ~~F~o:::::r~: Lge lam-rm. 3b< 2ba, led :..~~-~~ WESTUll YIWIE ~ lse. 675-4912 kr 650-519• or S.t-8579 . ·~···~":tuitin Zto4 ~ Owner wlll finance · ' yrd. frplc, 2 car 081. grdnr $1000 ~to-mo. Bonnie IPllTllmS 2BA 1'!.bath $665 Super deal S400 yearly Prof male 45+. clean 1-.. .-.-~-"'•"'•,..-2 Muter Suites. Architect I with low dCIWn to qualified Patricit 7eo-s7o2 agt. S 1050/mo+ S 1050/aeo Batrlngton agt 844-0452 Immaculate large Garden Available 12105/85 ocean clote Plex pet flnej home. nr 405 & So. Cat A AS~SINESS ~J~! ~~~~I bllyer Aterrtflcvaluel 6.45-2075or5"3-1579 VERSAILLES·Lrg18Aln Apta. Beautlfully land· Pool/apa.nopeta. 539-8190Be91fee Plz.$335.mo."32-7366 lllllffllWI llke aettlno w/magnlf (714)67" ...... .tvi. Nearly new. Executive quiet location w/mlnl scaped ground•, 6"5-8122 833-8917 VERSAILLES CONDOS Share Park Newport High profits .. Local wea bay/nlte Ute view•. Ir-~ condo. 2 mstr Milt•. ocean view. full MC. =/apa. patio/deck. No WESTSIDE 2BA 1BA, gu 1 & 2Bdrm $725-$1080 Townhome. Spa, tennta. ::1 ,~aln. PN~;,'.!~o replaceable at dlacouf\t ~~~~ ,0~f ~~~: $795/mo. 6«-7211 agt. Bachelor S530 & water paid, $680/mo. 631·4960__ _ _ ~gt $325 + utlls -6"0-4187 No ~~Gr~•t lb ben~ ~~in:! f3 c!,~·:g_/;: $1100/mo. 6"6-•8-42 ltatk C111t ••tre 18drm i. $595-$615 $350 dep. 5•8-2562 Young prof n-amkr to anr eflta. Mr Wolfer 730-1612 auallty 5 rm hm w/ru.r w/d 2lH 2Bdrm 1' •Ba s70547 tO Daaa Ptiat ':!Pd• 1nu' "nql .. tlflt' 2br 2'ftb• CM cndo $412 Sun 12-5. Mon-Fri 8-5 ..-2250 Vanguard 5•0·9826 mo 722-8902 ev/wknds •~--------NEWPORT CLIFFHAVEN hkupa kid• pets ok UPP«1'2..,er...i2""'bal"-•car-Pof1-'!"'-PQOI-"" -----Coe 1 Bdrm unfum. new b two ht'd11tol11 "P1' 634-1753 d~ Steve laftltatat tmlly achool *1.1 ... m* S600'a won't lut ape. nr'so. cai ~1z: 2Bdrm2Ba $750 crpts,palnt,pvtgar,lndry "-,.taaitw 2tol • Ille&. lleal •· 539-6190 Be9t Alty f.. S.5-7t31 or 731-5t66 151 E. 21st 548-2•08 rm. $600 p/mo. Call aft. lntal1 Waat .. Z7 •=-v=-""•=-='=-·1-...,..,,...,,..-...,.. ~~~· O~~ 1~:::::::::::::::~ 3 Sel~S;,5J,1~k•M~f~~ s109 look Ing grab thla 2br -••I. O .. na -----6pm, 498·3•35 Prof. mature Wht male DEVELOPER hat 230 unit FINANCING-SUBMIT • ~Bk 640 7000 w/bltlna telaure patio & --• ,....,.. 1Bdrm S800-$6t0 lge 2 Bdrm 2ba ocean: wanta to ahr w/n-1mkr, apartment site ready to 631-t•OO ,_.,. .... ___ ,._ I M~7.62,t O< yd $500's klda 539~6190 2BA 2BA, fireplace. 2Bdrm 1V•Ba $705 view. new orpts, paint, your reald. ref avall go. Ca.ah now and lb _ BestAltytee w/bak:.Over1ooldngl•ke. 131E.16th 6-46-6816 pvt gar, lndry rm, SBOO. *'ln Isl ye'ar '• rent 557_3577dy/6.41_8,.7,.ev benellts.$100Kmlnlmum NEWPORT'S HARBOR OCEAN.& BAYVIEW $900/mo. $1300 aec dep. YllWU HW mo. 498_3435 alt 6pm , Investment. 6"0-5078 ISLAND AD. BAYFAONT SPACIOUS CONDO. No Dau Ptlat 1BA tBA, $775/mo, I 111111 ltr Int Aa Beautttul wrap arou.nd .. down, terma. By owner. a;mlng 2 BR iba, eYef'Y• $ t 162 sec dep 1Br. frig, rangeN. laundry, Spaclou• ] BA. new ufURfNRISNHIS(HD(oOr 2748 llHCt•••h bedroom home 70' on 579-022•. 526-8293 tNng new. u 751mo yrly. Tradltlonal Really pool, carport o pet1 carpet, i!vall 111 t5, gar N U the weter with large ----SJ.4-4890 lor Matian. 631-7370 $550/mo. $575/mo 534-•890 175. oe;;; lingfe garage. Aaa11act8tat1 2920 petlo, pier & sllp •er•• UY t -----~~~ a 93 t w. 19th St 548--0492 IS di A t ..,,11 11 kit h & flTIESS 711 18th Steet, Coata •• •-•ooo 631 1•"" _,. 1111 I t • L 21,.0 aJ1rt•nt1 tu o P .. u c · C( TllS Tlll S M--a 557-t430 "" ee • or -· · """" SIH,IM II • M• "' TOP AREA MESA PINES bath, all utll pd. S..25. I . I . -· Chrlatmu Hair Show BALBOA ISLAND Totally P<fvtil• 2 BR home lr.-.~~·~~'"'Wlf! 1375 quiet tU hOtJae crptd lntraJ 2IOZ Studio. tBA.llkenew.cozy mo. 661-3653·alt &pm. SltlUC, ,.., ...... 214 Robert and Taytor Hair 4 Bedroom home or 3 with apa and tMdy kw is., f/p, tg pat s 112,500. decor complete kit frplc, enci patio. Carport. ..U 11ert! s.ny, 580 squwe foot atorage Deslgnera 6"9-7197 Holly bed.+ bachelof' unit. ~ unit to be buUt a... 3 car 931-1891 °' 631-795e 539-8190 Beat Alty tee &TIALIMY ~ 0:,•5~~~4~0 peta l1at. •ack 2140 It pets. Mt11 apace. Alarm monitored. NE w DAU G Io r ally a fine property •nd garage. Lovely o•den •-L.11-..... II Baat. larMar 14 Braathteklng 1ao• ocean 1BR 1BA. upper unit. baJC. •• 4aity t to 6. e.42-8701 A H E U M A T 0 t D owner needs to Mii · ·· patio 11 Jutl atepa away _,. Bachelor attrec unfurn $54() ARTHRITIS bet d so MAKE AN OFFER! from Bay beachfront A I ·-· -I • FO< ... 2300 '""'ft houM plut full mountain vlewl, ~ ....... __. E _, .... ._ 1--'d . gar, lndry rml /mo. ~ d lac In tab 44 . ng atu • S3 .,..... _... ..,,. : Wooded and ..,.,,. one -........... ''"""• ,..., 10 I 18551 Pro Clrc:le • led, Includes free medical 97•500 673-8900 special hOme BEST BUY IN TOWN s1550tmo, ta,~llalt. 35 bloclt to aand. Your' own utll. $375. mo.+ $375. ITSL llllT 141· 11U tJO LEISORE BOARD 1 CARE coverage. Call MS-7172 - "4-IMO 24x60 Ar11ngton on corner boat allp ava. • 09t. to private patio. Evety room sec. No peta. 5.57-2891 Luxurl oua retirement • -~ F • ..2 ~~~~7'.,Hi:~~r·--------lot.Verylrgllvtng rm,dln· buy.632•792t.8-40-314a bright and elegant, Ilka BEAUT. lBr condo spltt l2BA 2BA, gar. lndry, • Apartm.-nh homew/24hrcare -has _. 111 .. S REAL ESTATE Ing & kltch area w/fam lrriat Jff new, bullt~ln applla.noM level, lrpl, 2 car gar plex. Quiet atreet. t mtle Nt>wport Buch So 1 male & t fem op.entng htl. Wttfellff·lner room Small pet ok. lnetudlng mlctoweV9 w/opener pool spa I to beach. No peta 1875. 6-43-3<&81 83'·1400 SHres.-L .. estP'r'"4 Young tt<tults welcori'le. **IEITW** 1BdrmS1150/1250 . waterlali $850/mo:, Cal1Cralg631-1288 l/tlll lhlh "l1t ... t ce-nclal ~:::::::::::::=~~ 3 BA pool home In erM. •$32,500 Ag1~-5937 CALLUSAEGARDlNG 2BdrmS1650 5•5-3115orS.9·2••7 (dl011111'11 u•-J /It t • Showa Immaculate. Own-L .... Option 1 yr-ntlW dbl IAVINE RENTALS 2 Bd PenthOuM 12500 641-S11 l -t _ a ere are moving out of wide Mobile home, New-lrwlttt Dead ltlltJ W8terfrHt ..... 1H BRAID IEW Nrwport 8t>.t<h No lia'•na/Oftice hat FOUfl) ADS ARE FREE Cal: ... llTmllST "' s 111,IOO Beautifully decorated home with a loft. Hidden among tall treea In a greclous scenic setting. Extra wide lot In 1 ~b neighborhood Better hurry on thla onel 6-4&-7171 Announcing Century 2 1 THE REAL ESTATS:RS area and want it told Pof1 Beacr'i aduft patt, 111-1.._ 1•1 1• I .. now Call lor addr .. O< wUI apply 09tlon depoell ... • • ....._.81iBnU Oc.en view apt 2BA 1BA. ""'' n on,.. A~."'" 2711 pvt showing Agt. Afredo and 1/2 of leue peyment 1660 eqft. Lux 2Bd 2Ba+ lal•ea Peaiaaila ~ ,.. 1 blk to beach. 695. 1.11 lnlht 6-46-7171; Rea. 751-2016 toward down peyment. den. gaM. at9CS $1290/mo ••-Jacobs Realty 675-6173 64S·ll04 3000, 1368. 634, 594 & 142·H11 A nnouncing Century 21 THE REAL ESTAT&:RS T I I (213 D/\•1 0wner ... , uunHm 209 eq ft. 1511 w .. 1c11tt. ake OYef ex 11 no loan. ~ T"--""" attr•"'t-..-. 79 2Br 2Ba, crpts. drpa, N.B. S.1-5032 A.gt 661•2004 SUPER _.._ __ •B 2'Lba Pen. Pt. nr bch. lge tBr '"''"' -.. •• ,..,_ patio d/w di·~·• gar ..._, .. r ,. · upper unfum w/frlgtatv Apt1 feature pool apa ' ' ...,..,_, ' laa Cl .. tatt 2'71 CdM'a belt olfloee. $595----------........ 111'"/C.U" 2500 .. stf Including Pref 1 pe<aon Yrty $600. private palloa Of decka: coln lndry $695 8-49-M51 22!5 G Paloma. 1875. 2BR S 1100 Incl utll, A/C, pkg. FOUND: beautiful white wahr/dryr. AS.!i5~~/':;~ p/mo. tat. ia11. dep: garage or carport, In a $300 1br w/appla 2 blka to 1v.ba CloH 10 bch janitor. 2855 E Cout nutty YO Oogw, !!_oodf le mtic&. ~n~ 1::~Soo 786 1,......, Avall. 12/1. 673-6970 beautlfully landacaped ocean utlla pd 539-8190 · • H 67s-8900 Anytl nr corner ... e or•t 0 · · """"" ,. ____ • I .. u .. aettlng. Heat paid. Best Alty fee clean/nice~ furnlthed wy me COfnell, C.M. Can't keep, Woodbridge eondo lrg ~ I r .... t Bedroom• $575 Encl gar 63 •7918 CONFERENCE room evall nds home. 546-2573 111!---aJ 2112 2BR 2BA w/d _,....;._ to 1BA at-CL! ...... j gar 2 Bedroom• 1'/• Bath $685 Avall nCIW, extra lrg. exit 225 La Pelom• S850 2BA per meeting buls. aeat------------· • • """-• .., ..... "t""'• --area 3BA 2BA nu crpta lV.ba Walk · 10 bMch Ing for 6 to a. Coffee/ FOUND: Bike on IC1Wa St, 1111 n111 Not far to ocean 36r 26a pool & tennis. $950, Utll• & patio. Mature adutta. 121 lllTll lnm I W/d . hkup frplc patto' c~n. encl gar 837 79 ta' Xerox nag 751--0826 nr Tewlnkle Sehl, c . M. Nil lliml 1141.IGG garage/ahop & -more Incl, 1st, l11t & dep. Dys $800/mo, yearly !Mae. COSTA MESA cable No' peta' saoo' • . . Owner Identify. 754--0290 Excellent lamlly home $695 539-8190 Beat tee 955-2600 • ...,.. 786-8588 619-223--05081728--01 t2 (Corner Center/Plac:.nt1a1 $1200 aec, 849-582• • Sunny. clean 2BA 1BA. Ive mag Sparkling SOiar autatad SMALL houM In E/llde ....... IHtk ZI •2Br 1Ba. gar. frplc, new Open Dally 10am~pm am·-·· gar, lndry. No peta. ... ... •L... Found_D_o_b_le-/-Sh_•_P_h-ar-d pool Chlld-aale aide CM 2BA. 1BA w/yd sroo. 3C2fa. grNt OCEAN crpl. 5 t4 Jumlne. 141· 1414 _, $800/mo. •93-2710 tst Aoor Office on Coeat mix pup rem Seal St yard Spacious • 2BA 2BA UNIT w/ooean VIEW.Su..,..clean $1350 S850/mo.675-•912Bkr Sorry,NoPeta 38Aapt.W/Ohkup,lndry Highway. Good llQnlng. CoataMHa.s.48-6538 . • bedroom plus lamlly VU,,, ...... to beech StOOO. mo 499-:fiet avall now. •CUt• 2Br 1<>• So of -nu WT. UIT room. f~g/&mr/olrg deck .... IC........ Janlt()(lal, •Ir condltloo-=,....,.,.=-=~--=----oom G •• t locattQ ...... ...., _.,5, AA ·~· ample pmi.v. and FOUND F!Tlger Tabby r ' n 2BR 2BA condo SC Ptza Hwy Frplc, larage. 2221 ALABAMA "'V M h B T close to ev..vthlnn Call area. ~ 11.~ In ,,,75 3BA 2ba/Ocean View. $ 000 .. 7 770 Larna 28drm 2Bath prl-ut ltlea. S7•0 per month. onarc ay er plV help, ~ 1o1 • v•i• ··• ,,.,,.., ....., • 1 Imo. v 5-•· ' . TSL MGMT e.42 -1603 ahe h d kl 493 8290 nCIW S.6-23t3 .... _. •ira1n · Niguel Shr1. Comm poo1 vate patio. Frpk:, b1tln1. I Z?OI 111• HALn a ttena. - •-..._ apal tennle S 1300/mo. LUX 3br 2ba apt. f/p, •II nu new crpt1, drpa. Garage, LAO deluxe 2br, 2 lrptc, ... , 111-4411 FOUND: Kitten. all blllek, PllP l"Y'"'IT Place Alty •IM-910.. appliances Incl bit-In d/w, Jacuzzi $895 No peta akylltn, nr Hunt. Herbof &JM-Furn. m room Vic Babb St. Cotta l14/11M1ll w/d, nu cpt/drap419tpnt all 2151 Pacific 855-0685. $925 (2t3) 860-9513 w/bath. Prtvate entrance mfl 91U Meaa 5"0·724• THnlllll STEPS Tl IUOI· ~~,.5~ ~~5~· College P.rtc Trl-plex 2Br. IEAWlll YILUll S350/mo, 122•9733 LORY ..... nm FOUND: older male Gold· SlllU LmL la1Ma 2 Matr Bdrml. mlcroweve, 1'1tba. D/W gar-tndry Lag Bch rm, pvt be, prvlga Reception. 5 prlftte Of-en Retriever, hll N.8. llc. In apotleae condition. Jnluala Zl01 ~~9~~~ 7~:t_~~~ ti Ill 2'24 lclty 1650/mo 6"5-7738 $385. 'h utll. Aeapon flcea, 25 Deak Station•. Vic. Hth & Placenti.. matntenanc&-lree yard, 2 Cute deen 2br ~ 18R 1250. POOi. pvt patiO. -•H .,._ WIT •n emplyd ledy, •IM-734& Available With Of wtthou1 C.M 650-2530 rm .,.... en • .._tra Pl • ""'ry, 081· '" • no peta, refa req'd. 2BR 1BA, pvt petlO. gar. Uve where you have LAGUNA BEACH tum. utll bd ....... d ..,_, 1 tlO ,_.. 1'"' = L I -11-"""" auomc.furnttur9&a27- carpets, new appliances, Cerna ••I llu IOU to ocean, furn, $800.+ ~lland' watetfront 6.4M161. 1•7 Flow.. w/d hkup. quiet. No peta. 11'Spectecular ai>ll pd, pool S285. Prof/bua. Stattori Tel Syatem. MISSING CAT. 8 yr old neer all, lor $176,000. DUPLEX I Br 1b• ea dep. 5•8-3727...... duplex. Spacloua 28A m I. 1• 11 Water paid. 1876/mo. *I & 2Br. t & 28• aultM n-amkr 40+,TV,494--0451 _. ...... , l•ie SlameH neut. Ulllill ()Ul tit JM f -= $195.000. 717 Fernlell iluxury Cond.o 28', w. ba. 28A, lrplc, dlhwr. gar. , • 2038 Meyer •Spacloua townhou... ~ room. laundry fa· m Brwnl be4ge. VIC· "'-•Jtora,67r ~..>.... ~ M0-8182 by owner I ,,.. llv/dln 0 rm In .. w/d hkup, ft''°· Yrty, 2 BdrrN, t ~.:,. '1plc. W/O TSL MGMT e.42-1603 •A~ ty $250 ~ , ...... d p ..... call ~6o7118 be-VIAEl1Wa !iAoger.6~1uOtfa, N6B7 ._. ~ ""' •12001 6 "' '"100 hkup, gar. -5/mo •Prtuate belconlea or • • ...... ...., · e-o. 1y ft "F\D .. ·• t • C"t. .... I cur.cS bldg & ..... g, elev. • mo. .rv • ~·a 1372 c ta .. __ ,_ I m dal • • .,. ~ 121-A lllAIWIJ EASTSIDE t Bedroom, Garden patio. .,.. , oa ...._. ,...._, 250-0490 YllTlllU FllEll SELLD w·-wr I ~~8~ r~~ ... 1~~2si!Ao. :"fsu2roo"· lrplc.. 1 BA 1be/MI redone $A95 garage & yard $850/mo. AoOm In 2br 1ba apt cloM Wadneaday Nov. eth. -------- 2 -•• .., cs.p 756-8557 Avl 1 tit. 998-343• WIT llT1 to baclc bay, fem. pret'd LIDO WATERFRONT OFC SCRAM-tETS l81ge atOfy home on Nlc.e 3 bdrm, 2 bath OCEANFRONT 1br Condo •3• Allto. 2131863-8291 E ~28 tea di •3 Llght9d tennta court• quiet & conaldefate. khc. e.ecuttve aulte 1vall. hug• lot Loceted In College Park home I Fum MC bldg MOO 1at 2BA 2 280 t'ht>a. $100/mo, evt aat r . eep ne •2 Swimming""""'" ....... MS-9131 bef a,._ tmmed. Harbor View. ANSWERS Santa Ana Owner wtll wtgr .. t toc.tlon Seller 1 ... .....;. .....,. M2-3 179 ba condo nr Hoag. Im--l"3 Mefody Ln rm, hrdWd firs, dbl 081 lg .,....,... ...... _... ...__.. ..~ SSOO help finance •aklnn _ __....9 ___ .. Juit ,_. .. A_. ...... ..._. Pool/fr~lc . $795/mo L"'"'''" ' land..,. .. .._. yrd Av! 1 i11 •StrMma a pond1 ,,,_,t. ....... · mo. " • ,,_, ....,, ..v---.. .. ..,, ••9 no P9f•. Judy 851-9000 S1000-/mo. """ "'•3• *a~. no..... e73-1974 In·-"•· Rou-.. $155,000 10 $139.000 Unturn 28R Older hm, frpl, _.,....,. & 982-4458 ..... _ ~ <#VO•J .,... ,,...,.. '"' patio. Stept to beedl. *2BA 28 ... Udo .,.,....ront. 2 Bdrm 1 Be. duplex, gar., E Id 2·B C •Furni9htnga avall •II• -.. 8eouf't -Flacal Traditional Realty 631-7370 Traditional Realty 6.11 -7370 Avell Cell t " .... ,. 1g yard new carpet bit· Ht• • r ott•o• ••-ON the D!.SK now. o .... Frplc, Olf. pvt yatd & bctl. I d ' pal t ' N w/encl yrd & ger. Peta ale WHY NOT CALL Retell omc. apecea. 10< Qrempa aaye If you WOf'k associated Open tiae Nov. 9/ 10th. ~. ,;T::mo. 72~;83~ Avt , t110 1726 675-3875 111-1111 ,.... 831· t400 '°' Chrle. hard and keep your ,... e13-0897"' 110-5605 I g • f g · ~' 1. • "'. 1-:-:=-::~-,,,.,..=--...,.......,_ 2er 1be downat.ira unfutn EASTSIDE Bachelor quiet IUWlll YIWIE PRESTIGIOUS Nft on the ground, you'll •VERSAILLES condo 2b< cozy W/O utll pd $490 llTll • Of'ftoM F« Rent. From eventually get to the P'ef aduftl. no peta. ap1 w/gar, '640. mo. No · • • · t5SS5 Hurrti-.ort VIM-A Wk~ renua Low rat• S1.15 aq. ft. 2902 Aed11411 point Where you can keep 75 mo. ...... 7~120 peta. MS-5577 mo. 93 t-3M8 ""'' .. ..._.. •1 • & Up,...,.,ty ,._._ AV't. 834-1820 bOth f..i ON the DESK. ...,. • • ..,. M......._ .. ~ E-alde Trplx, lge quiet 2b<, Lane. from San Diego • ~ '"" ~ ' • ..,,, I , • t. • • ~. . ' ' " , ... ,,1,,•1•1",' C. .~ -0 ,~,.,.A-. I ~ !°JVC. • ••u 3Br2'hBeCondo.)1000 + -~. .,.,.... '""' ... no new ti d 1-... Freeway, n0f1h of Bwh TV. maid Ml'Vtoe. ,,_ ;::> ..... l~~ N~ ~ L"' ;, 6••• 18d tea duple!(. 8"""Y 51200 NCUflty Famlty P•t•. Mature adutt1 . .....,. 'if.s 15 ~f:3·,.-,;;;,f• no to McFadden, _.., on con ... heated pool & u~ ... ""' cu • ' •o.;.,... -----petlo. a.nle gar dOOr M50 ef'd No Ms-795 Oui.t. aecur .. 1991 Nft. .,...a • ..._.., Mc'edden 11ept to QOMn. l<ttel'I'• o•-• ,.. • • · 16"-7220 0< 260-1022 pr · P9ll 3 Pof1, Mtrt373 Home Ilk• ae«lng crptd 3 avail 915 l'f. Cout Hwy. ""'-t • 1 • 38A 2'h ba condo on •· rm deCOf patio & yrd ~ a.~L -.al LaguM a.ctt 41M-5294 ~ 'M• ' 28A. ~lelty fwn Ger-panalve gr .. nbelt In &et.elde 2BA 1~BA. 2 lty 1395 53Mt90 Beet t• -• ..,. ' I'• Pvt yard, patio. 81una S 1600/mo. Prine twnhM atyle. llngle gw. r w OCMn er;;, decll, UM W 9ITIL I( 0 IC VI [ I S13001mo Cel1M~14M only Own/Agl760-063i tr, enclo .. d patio. LA MANCHA PTS frplc,W/D,gar.SIOOutlla Wkly rentMI now tvall. j j j j1 I ettA-AMING 3 s.dfm 2 BR 2ba. lmmad. 1 bll S 50/mo No pet• Bdrm ta.th M2~75 pd. Avt now •91-2132 $129.50 Ml & up. 22741 . . . . . ba cotte.ge :1'"' Own 13t-11etOtl13-3t17 gaapd.nopet164S-7983 -tBR _ ........... ----. Nwi>t81vd.CMl46-74"S •~ lot 500 from bMCtl. Frptc. patio. _,,,._ • ._ _.., I I ...ire ..,09 · 1 tmo BBQ. Gardener "95 mo. LIO petlo, '1plc, Cl'Mt ID I IR L•I ' 1 ,..120.om .,....m,.m,.. WOODl.Ala ¥111.AGI ...,.,.,.,.,. .. , . ., .. ..,.w.eo...~ ''::"..::"'~ ~8!..~~~0~·., AltAllTMlllTI 2o!:"'w.':-.~~: .ft~~no .TV l l I r;.,,..11' , •• , , .~, ... ~ ...... 0 -....... ___...."""'-ter. deck OrHt kitchen ,. .... • .. ... t\.. ~~get. utfl lnct. Ya rat ta eatal· , 1 · · •· ""'' ""'" .,.._....,..".,, ... S 1.... """'',. tnror our i••vfn ir,~ apti vv"t comtor11t11t ltt... .........1 • <M\"" .onc1 •fW'O10v• ,_ <Yl '"• :ir"""° 2 BR 21;; bf ·-t .. ra. "' tMm bath, ,_ tub I lo 1 So Co Pl ~11 ·--~ mo .....,.. -,... "" I "tlf llY < tt In 1nw111 flt lll wh!lt on1, 11unuln to tht ---------e11n yui• 11 "'""'"111' Q•110 '"'• OOor1I 3rd bf Of' offlce w/be. ~ .~~'5o :i f.6;.rs but11 C"Jit1 101btllf HCHCTS 'l(AS{ ~ """-YWY rs;::• •• __ S_C_A_F_l -l--, , 0 ';:..'"_' f'3u (•r •NI) llCW ,,.., " ~nix!, fpl2~2~ ~.J:. Of 131-tOOO AuWll MU • IPU • U..Y -~:.o:.·~ ~~~~: c:::• 1:1 ':' P2 1 f J' f f J Dr 12500/mo A.Slett. MUIT•Llml ....,. .._..,. M~HINt~~ frptce(;,i 1~) .'!.,. _ _ _ . _ Unique Homee 875-eOOO P lofOut tlegent 1 •11• .......... 1 .. .,.~ll!lli ... P-'l'!P--'-"I~ 11•1 Mt.-... v ••· ... .,1 ,, "·: 1 1 1 1 · lg ~ bright cteen =.n condo. LfO =I 1 m1t1• -.1111 4 :. nta 1 It aret ,., t • ~ .,, I I I ! r I 28R 28e. buflttna, ,.., 2'~ w/dlfl rm, ""*' I ' ... IUT • .., Wl'11 .... ::-:.::MT Ind Ho 1114 ---_ _ j duplex. 2 blk lrom oceen. pool. ape -+ , UNH18. • • .... ..... . .. . l ;rH11 } ! I I 081' ~. atOtage AveH .1495/mo Ord a-"°° I .. ,.... 1e.-,,.., LI ' Hot19 Xlbi!" m . PA x;;i; I •• Aft I -. • t .. ·1 11/08yrlyl ... S,OOO/mo. pet 01(. V~t. C•ll rae•tellmJIT , ...... , ..... ,... H9wcptl Oar M2S/mo tMCMtlnwtlldlrf .. tw.1 W.f.111 ...... Im ........... HH Appt 87s.-OON, Ao' 780-1702 Agent 2t3t50a..20IO aft IClm I Am• S300fmo M&:_23&1 ~ N U 0 0 k 1 1 I I I' NEI UG I' I I /1 • ' let u ...... y .. St11 Y.. p,.,.,,,1 Cel ClwtfW, 641-5671 for information & surprisingly low cost. I . I • • • . ._I,... 1111 . Cltdeel ... l•hkal/~-. W. 1111 ..... HJ11 .._, ..... ~~~ttger, II• ....... llM'a.a. ••• A *•aa .. •aa•• phone •.'riow 122 .. 111' .,.,..lW. llllillJIT Wtfl'I \'Wied dudea. p.,. UM'Tll ... 'fll Im Wiil 11 lllMI Guat1nlMd Hra F .. x llra * * N 05 ~ ** wx*; Mac01'9Q« Yec:lltt, ._., __, Corpcww~~ ~ fftwnt-t9'1·T'lm9. Xlnt • .,...... flnl .. ,. The ()fenge Cout O.lly GoodSalaty 87~ 22~.vatledWOtll .. ;631PtacenU&.C.M. ~ lt2t::: ....... • Newport leach .• Vety = ~ 0::::-: NMded. MY9t fle\l9 toCld at the L08 AHGElf6 Pllol It~ help In llUIA. ---· no •IC$* req. T!LEPHOHE Or)owt. OM/eleo = & Up bu9'/ Offtoe. ~-Cell Cwo1yn tMS-7291 OMV record. CALL TIMl8 T~tng Of· ~bfllU.. wt~'-OP£NING SOON. St~t OK MU9t bt 3 RESEAVATIOHIST "~UN o1 Ho1119 Lmt Lmf npertence Preferred. 2 1s11s2. 4 o a e o" nee In Coeta Mela. Our ~tude ~ up ltlld ~ Acoepllng ~tlont '°' 'ff reeldent. ~t ltiPf*lr· needed now to bOOk awt• f~" ,.._~.._,tml. 644-11'0.AtllfofJMn. -'Rll~llY 2ts13n.~1 newcommllelon~• il verv of 9dt pumno the toloWlng po1111on•· ~~~ ... ~. fofdtfterentloc:.lnCellt · AilA~UAHCll Alf\ I lriet MnthW\1 Liil 111111 Mefetari.I ellllle, C. := /;;,, ~ == :•n::•· a ~oc.ttJ~ !~ pret.,red H B. 114--HIO kW aciPt =-~ ~u.: ~I •111• - .,..,,.._. Tlrled ~-E. 11eeome e ~~=-maa11a1 a-.. by ee111t10"""' ~ ..... ii-... vwtetyt • FAOHr °''a ....... _ needed lMne 1oc:. Hrty, bonue 111•11 oen ,..._ R.!. Mc req'd. . PA111 IP...., 20 8UDettlptlont.... .,.,_ "" -c.nctfda. * EXEC HSKKPR ..---· Gr• for Colteoe & Hlgtl ur ~ QIW CUf Jiii IBM Ntup '°' you l the UIAl llllllllf lt't PoMlbte to Mm tnOfe ;::.:-,.= ~ * REST/LOUNGE ~--~~ta SchOOI Gtud.,,tt Cell tt.17 S. .._, .. =~ 1¥~ C=lng M!':P°',, .. '!t. BP!iee.ln/c~._1*1nW. & .,...: Immediate opening fOf than I fOOO WHkly. at>te to' WOf1I wtllll wlltl * l<ITCHEN SI...,., 492--0ee 1 Mon.f"rt II Sent.I f"'Aw cRICB eXMi/it Qpg, my "~ ~ -,.. Ppef ty1)eMttet. Mu91 Houture ftult>te and the Olhen I Com~ betleflt• .... /..... Btwn !.dlnoer. .,,... on C.M "°""'Mon-Fri,,..,., ~NI~ p1ua exp. Xeto• 850. Of have have rnark·up otftoe It F,...ay CIOM Send Att u ureer oPt>Ortuntt... UYe OUl 5 esey. aorne m. lllPITAL Main St ... ltw 8eet'f "UU\ atrong W/P bectegrounct. ••Pef., peat.-up bee*· For rnore lnt0tmatl0n a.it reeume n .. .iinda, .2 cnildr_;, M9dl PfT K!.NN£,l HtLP, 111 11J1 req.131-3075tM2.oee9 I ••oPetMaforfull S8'erybaa41duponeicpet. groundhelpful,}Ootben-540-0301 $ml!.':ii!!.ir-•-..,,"'POA/,t'er:..."r Keh epeelcJng, own car. exp. prst 20·30 hrt, Oe>enlM:Sun12-6 .. --· time Otttrlct Mentger Send '"urne .10 Dee eflta Including medlcel & --• on· r pm Child ~· rflf'r req'd ldledule mey v.,y Tak· For Chrletlen School. . Orolllr~r'· P.O. 9o• dentel lntUrence. con.. UUl/UllWlll Ul.YPILIT GRISWOLD'S $700/mo Me-1818 In~ appl't , Mon·'" hraltut .... Asr.~. ·1=~~~oo612 hurtt M;~~~;~ ~~:r,e~~~ L:7 • .. ~~e8c:hta.:. C1•= f:~,:.~:2f:;: F~~r'"'h=~~. ":!~n P.I, lt11MI CORPORATE OFFICE NWlllllT ~~tf~1 .1,~~ M ... 8 ™ ™ W . ,,.. '"' -.. """"'' ., Ila Hiiia 291 Se .. t9Ve. H.W. WAIGHT 0..tt ...... la. 11121 3t5&,~':;!u~~ 230 Needed for 2872 8 . -CarouMI mle:ro 1271. ......... p . tlOni.t. Buay ~ co. 128 Roei1"t8', Clli4 I 714/ 55&-6454 811atol, SA. 9efr.1076 Teri &....,..., b TMlc '*· "*'* -II~ In & oere for 7 yr old We offer an excellent ben· lew ofc. REFS. llAlll llAIT HI•••••;.,,..• ---1 HH $475. 2-6' too:: 111111 ,.., cNkS t.eoune 8dl eflt program, paid va-Lllll llm IAl.Y Pl.IT _. -!UY"-ADYEITlllE • Beeut~ PllT·lm 1111 G u; i I& l900 .._ Ml 1'71 "'· I ' Call~ 1pm 494-33.28 cations I holidays,~ FASHIO. N ISLAND for tine chtyttal ttora lllllT I Ufltl Collect quarter• from Of a ma corii 'I ao11 coat 12000 .. " program and dental In-,.~ta ~~~~t~2127 opening In FaahlOn laland TUYEL now h'""" Hair n-i..-Yendlng mechlnea Flex· ~--owner of ~l~ $475. 8314139 111rance. Salary plua Medium •lze firm~• """' ..._..,.."' v ~lngtorholldey..._. """" ---v·-· lbte hR s. °"" A4 1n -.cf\alleglng.....,...,., mlleege relmburaement outgoing dependable UJ..UJ1 p«aon. 714/497-4456 Are you fr .. lotrevel toS &1An11tants M/odernl~ todey'a· Butlneaa Op· w /Pfogeal\ICo "9&3-3827 1ArlUQue mahogMy ~. HOUSEKEEPER or young • lltlgetlon Secretary min. F 0enYel' Chleego Del· • g n •r t w Par a Portunltiee ~IOn llndet g,ated (8 lega) Go0cs oejlnd. peraon to help me Clean Applicant mutt apply In 3 yre up« Word Pfc>-ITITlllllY 1u . Miami: N.Y arid able :~P·~ ...... we~ wll1 1 "'All CMh Bu"'*8 _ No $250 9*-4379 my houM. 15. p/hr. CdM ...,eon al Del~ Piiot. 33o CHtlng ex per.. non-s 1n CdM ----'• <>-•~ to s1~ -·r two___.. ·-""'"" ·--...... • j _,,......,.v •tt Bay 1.. Co.ta. smoker, 790-8711 Pwaon, FfT. it o....-. Xlnt pertM peld tratn1no now? ,. •• 71,.7 I -... Mno9f new, lo ml • ,..,,.. ..,..,,. w"-tore . ·-~ .., ''~ .._..ex· S an ta Ana $1lon• Moo9r Down" •-5 1111 BUNK 8EOS. Awlle =· .. ---/ Mt.la, Ca Apply 9-11 p /T ll•nUY rator working condt.• ~1e11y All transp. furn. NQ HP .,...,.. • PAIT Tm I lllW I obo 960•5822 111 epm ...,. .. , _ ~~·or 2-4 p.m. (Clrcul• Merrlll Lynch Realty need• f UI JOI llne client .... 875-1010 nee. II you're ov., 18., Ulllll ~ hOme delh«y, H c., -. ------- Tiii.... 41SI Dept). compe'tenl person to TEXAS ~EFINERY CORP. want • J4fl.:~.., ,:!th, 8.0AM-2PM Private ;:'Y mornlng,'o 5 A.M . No~t~ 15 i;' 17 •t<lng alze Bdrm MC, Oft; ~~~~~~~~ ILiltll/ontal SHS work Monday-Friday Are you adveoturout & nffds mature peraon ~.io :ake ~ ~· company, Nwpt Bch ~~~P ~Call mt ur I P.. 'g1~ & coet 13500 Seti MOO. -.1111Wt11 RBX . er:i 11a; I I 12·6Pm. GOOd Ol'gentz.. Med money. Are yOY now In Cotta M..a/ New· I Ye! the u s A M0-3583 Of 640-3664 ~ un ue lblee Drexel Din Tbl w/peda & Aaet oocwdlnetor tMCher. front omc:. Cateer m ':. tlon & communlcetlon ~~~ ~ O~~ ~ port Beec:tt. Regard.... r:i~Y quallfy. 'si~rl~~ 1-~ Pll/lwffelllte1rtl FREE ec1mtt111on a patt11ng • clWa. '300. M0-22~ Cultural exchenge pro-Portunlty for mature Pef· al<llla needed. Cell Judy, e.nf. .... hM wv.ral of trelnlng. Write O.H Products want• 3 thatp Mature women Aexlb4ei ... Join ue now 4 deya only NEW Sofet>ed l3SOI OAK· ~.,,, fOf Japeneee atu-aon aultllng In a 991-5910 for more lnfor-~to atart lmmed. Sear•. Box 711, Ft guya & gal• who.,.. atn· houra Gift shOc>. JOhnl r.ter . Oeic & & ... Promot1<>n1 din aet 1350; cot tbl aet denta. beMd In your r>leuant ea1abli9hed & "l\8llOn. Wor1t with peopte t8 & Worth, TX. 78101 bltlout. neat & are look-WayM Alrpor1 BettlelPrevlou• ~ 19 r• 213-4&--0049 IS300: bdrm MOO; well unit community. Complete expanding dental prac;.. U•PTl•lllT over who .,.. succ.Nful l'l•/lntauuts Ing for the new and exclt-TUM-Sat em 852-91H Quired Should have A::ll:::= 11 S300! 90fa/~ '600: tr91nlng & materlalt. Hlr-lloe In Soulh Laguna fT tlv ted wt "1 Ing. See Nancy Rand, plea.uni ~ ~ ~ Fr prov. din Mt ong '2too Ing nowt Small World 499-1811 Donna · P · penonat>te, mal"'9 mo • nner9. Hit Newport lodge, 2450 llUftlf allty, ban.king t>Kaground lllY ~ 1 ~ S 1400; coftbl Mt w/ Adventuru. 14 132 pere~~. ~/bu pr= l:~;.. ~i ~:,:;:',; IALlll • Newport Blvd, C M we new openll'IQ9 for 251 helpful bu1 not reqwed LES 957-8133 .glaa S550 ~Intl s.43-<4706 Rancho Av. Wealmlnater. 1.1./ .... n ~ht typing. ~utt nave at•t• with our 9Up«· ... OIK ed under 5411-2083 (Wed-Thu rt peopte to WO<k eppro11 It yOY can meet our ,... --I Oval din. rm tat>te. II llH-3e11 Debt>te While ofc N.B. Xlnt working gOOd tetec>hone manner. 'llMd men<etlng tHm 5530 General t0-4pm). 10 daya dellveflng T..._ Qulrements, plMM con-3 RetrlQl/dlfferent llz• ci\alra, Fr. Prov. 11000. lllTlll'fmAL .. / cond. Exp. pref. Call Pat, e.42-1903 Peld training program. .. lfTER ptione, Directories In the tact· Peraonnel Dept I XJnt OOnd, can dellver Whirlpool lg W9hr l d~ au ....... /IP•-• 6'0--0340 or 640-6463 . exciting bonus plan + CONSTRUCTION ft l 1;un1 BHch area. (7141790-eooo I $80 to $200, 957-81M S400· dMlc 1100 Amq ----Itri / •& u RECEPTIONIST high eernlnga Company HAS BEGUNI Wortl your avellable day· grandfather dock. MOO M .57 p/hr. Cl •Cl .,.. w/typlng 40wpm, C.M. care. Call Ju;,. Pridgen Mother'• Market and SCHOOL llghl houre. Men a -~· ~5-~S lrMt tree 832•3070 1 Yr peld or volunteer &OllllTlll area 540-8865 Nancy 11,..., 646-4 lll7 for 8'191. Kitchen Natural Food Women 18 or over ~ 1 uper. w/multl age Mature pereon pert 11 Reetaurant 11 growing & JOBS w/can, Station Wagon9 ~I'-I "'~---• •s'll• groupa of children. New-Mon-Wed-Fri' 12•5P":: 11•n1111&. FULL/PT SALES PERSON i. now hlrtng hot line l . or Light Trucks are ai llltf'Hlt\ __..91 ~ -lnaal SUI port Meta Schools phonn 1 pin fllln • NllTlll . for Uldlea Dept. In mens cold line cook•. If needed. PIMaant out ;::;;::~=====:.t:=======~ 7~ EOE potting. 1lkey gby ,ouJ· In vary Ktlw Reek*ltlel tradltlonal clothing •tor•. lnt••ted & willing to EARN door work, velld Orlwf'I Bank of TIUl•ll f>'st. acXtguper. For rn.'. ReatEst•t•offlceln,..._ NeiwportBeecha.45-0793 tearn&row~~ Lie & 1heabl1tty1ounder-~'\\ llUrt ~ tervtew eall 91S4-9510 port Center. Awllcant re1all at: 225 17th St, CM MONEY s1and 1n1tr11et10nt gtven Am•rlca THl For Chrlatlan School. should have excellent FOi' lmmed Ullgnmenta .,.. lL4DER 18835 BtookhUrat St, FV BKKPG/ACCOUNTING typing ablllty end be•* * -·-* ......, .... /........ followtng. "'°" training Equal Oppty EmC>I m/l/h Salutes Tellers 982-33 l 2 EatfJ Ltttl Olerti to wortt cloaely wtth many * LllllM * bove minimum. Gelefo PRIZES sesalon apply at 8:30am. PllT•IAP• .,., Baekground 1n AIR a !(JP real Hiatt agents. * STiii * Clualc;o. CdM. 720-1828 I 10·30 or 1 30pm Dally. IFOf Count• Help & Retell Preleultaal/ & date proceutng ese-Beaullful 1urround1no• Now accepting appll-llU lllP TRIPS 802 South coas. t Hwy I Salee. oaw·s c amera. 1 As the role of batiking continues to M•l•latradft SIM alrabl•. Full 1>enert1 pkg. ana outstanding com-catJon• for tuJI' pert time >rnr: 1 Laguna Beach CA 474 E. 17th st. Coils to change, so does the role of Its Rea pond to N.H/C.M peny paid beneflta. Call aales people for hollday c·50, 83p1-330r. Ex2 ~-,pref. ltU.trlq .... Reer of lat'iuna vni-Re-Mesa 6'2· 1012 T-•1era At Bank of Amer'".. our ADVERTISING ARTIST Board of Reallors: Attn Barbara Netland ... son. Apply In pereon al """" 1•m aeuy "LIT alty EI Oi'E -..-"' • · "'°" Jan. P.O. Box 1815, New· &«-6200 10 the manager at ttie ro1.. or aft. 2Pfl'I· Aal< for Oouo -; PllTI SALIS I Tellers are becoming more port Beach, CA 926113 GRUBB & ELLIS lowing locallona: llUYEIY •IYD• ..... .,.,. I DIVERS "WANTED. ~Evening phone ...... Et-sophisticated· cross selling •••n'•J/P ...__ • _ _.... .. ....A .. ___ ... 11 t•--.,__ .. II you are loOklng for extra for 11nderwater ma1n1 tabllthed accountt $4/hr • lllllllPll --art·--540-3110,....... ru Of part ........ ...,.. ""· 199ndlng money, or Ilk• $10-$25/Hr 548-4571 .. bonUMa M 2·8701 products and services Is equally Exp. Conal. Bkkpr famp.(3 Experlmeture. Shorthand Dey & night. M 50-~. to go places llke Magic I ----1 ood mo'•) po91tl0n •YI w/gen. & lgt bl(kpg nee. Wont ....... Pl8U p/hr. GOOd drMng r• Mountain. Knotts Berry ., •HIOS/MI PIT FllUL man. mportant as po-.ng 8 g Growing dally newtpaper on the Orenge Coaat needt lmeglnatlve, f>'O- ductlve. layout artist who und«1tand1merch11ndl• Ing, to deelgn lldvert191ng for a variety of cUenta. Our dlacrlmlnatlng mar· kst demend1 quallty and atvte. contractor, req'1 detail proceulng & computer 956-1190 ~sdP=-~ 1~':V;l:·;.: Farm. or win Prlzea and P/time count., help 2 to some driving req $4 p/l'lr flgure aptitude and excellent ortenled peraon w/atrong tlelpful. Reel Eatate corn-W""91nfM W C Awards, Call us nowt We 7PM lnc:lg Sal. 1144-«21 to st an. 84!>-0093 Diane CUstOmer service skills 9d al<llla exp. w/ .. feguard pany, ' p«aon ofc. 3--4 898-3331 .M. h111e several openings In EASY ASSEMBLY WORK!• Aegl8trat1on woni.,.. _l... • ' l)'I. tlelpf\il. Jer1 751-0626 ~T:· Sel"ft&_"Pf'· Nr. .......... ..... IAllWIOl IW c M . H B or F v $600 OOper 100. Gu&ran·I Reg Voters SS-$15/H·, Automated Tellers simply cant ... OPEi . . port. 8 00 WarehOUH Outlet-Full PIT exper'd mature fem. M 2-4333 I 'eed Payment No Ex· No •xi>· nee 534-1400 Imitate the human smile and Ex ~ I ..... lfllfTllJ P/T time. Cell Sally 0.lach No wtcnda. Nr BrlstOI & ASSEMBLERS apply 7am pedeooe/No Sales. Oe-1 armth that customers look fO d= enlry l~r ~~: Permanenl PQ91tlon. for appt. for thlt locatlon Baker. Call Joe at only MacGregoc. Yachts, tans aend teff·addressed IES11111 •Allm W ~ J 8 payable, accounts r•· Flexlble hours. Newport only. 546-2590 524-6043 or 524-8210 1831 Placentia, C.M stamped envelope: For Women • Reatdentlal when entering a branch. There s )U oelvable payroll & oen· Cenle<. 640-5470 ~tell W'-1/ ......... ,, OLll ELAN VITAL .903 I Chemlcal Dependency stlll a place for you at Bank of eral ledg., Pteaae aend Mn; 111 --·-3418 EnterprlM Ad, iq.1 progrem. Xlnt benefits., rMUme 10 · Beacon Bay SIOTJ /GlllltlATll AlllSTAIT IUIAID Apply at Bamboo Tef'raoe WHERE CARING Pierce, FL 33482 , c an 548-5546 for apc>t America. Interested candidates, Nk•= ~~~~~~~fi~ EnterprlHa. Inc. 260 Reaponslble f()( 9mall h'Oh 11~;;~· ~:n~ ea:cs1ervan! 1773 Newport Blv. c M is THE CUSTOM EnerQ91tc People needed 1 ll181TY HUI apply at the branch nearest you. y ty to work undef dead-Newport Center Dr. Suite ~lvlly x~'111c1~ nu Immediate openln0 I IUllP TUIP TYrtlT Gr .. t pay Great hours PIT wknds o c alt'Port An equal opportunity employer. llnea a must Prior news-~~&6o Newport Beech. ca. BUI~ bookkeep! . wtti for Aulatent Manager I Pllll OLlll TYPllT Start lmmed 7~2059 area Grawyard ( 12..eam paper expet . .,, advan-train reat. 557.3~ Kitchen •IC$* preferred m-··y , .. -Emft.,,.. Sat/Sun) $4 50 p/tlr Bank of Alnertca tage. Pollllon It part llllU&. lfFllE Call SuNll of Nancy. ...__ -• Mekl thul9lut1C well 1139-14 10 Newport Center llme, good lnq~rles end Typing, fifing end other nPtlT 640-4279 lllT /HSTtU or~iz: career ~ten-SEE at>ow Classlfied sec- r uu mu to. Steve cierlcald11tlee.Owncara Mutl be ecG\.lrate at 50 Retell Salee PlllPI tedperaonforbusy lrv1ne lion 5100 for Id ttsted SOONewpottCenter ~:i'::hPu:.rt pogec~";,c mutt. Call Judy, wpm, f~and buay tllP! MS-5000ext520 off i ce. Call Kri s. A.E.lOANAGENTS NewportleMJ\.CA92660 1580 eo.ia Mesa ca 642-4321. e111. 316 for phones. bl(kpg and Mon-Fri 9-4 Sheri 857-6626 a:30·5pm 92626 ' · appl. olfloe ~ml. Nut S.C I delperately need two llAlll OUIT Plaza. Ca I 957-1838 shoe Salee People. Wiii· Mllll llAIT IAILY PM.IT TYPllT, P/T Ing to train. Salary + Ul.Y PILIT _ 330 W. Bay St. Law Office, Newport Bcil. comml11lon Beat II· c.u 330 w Bay s Coat• Meta, Ca. ~peed eocurecy eaen• tltude = be9t SSS. LANZ A DAIL y "' Of C · c ~-6 6 tlal, hrs. flex. No lhort· SHOE DEPT, Fuhlon AO.~~ 1J "'-'-al / ' __ ... ~ ,....._ .... __ oeta Meaa. a. "2 2 ml, lfm hand req'd. 852-0«4 Island. Call Stacy "41·5471 ICnK --IC•.-. ---. LIUL llllfTllJ Nwpt Ctr part time, expet. L-:--J/f -.I~ 640-7810 KITCHEN CABINET lie electrlclan RH. ISHIKAWA LANDSCAPE INT/EXT 20 y_.. EXpef ••••t~ sa.-11 p/hr.&M-4311 tc-..-r-. 1••••••••••••••••••••••••tw $217 per day REFACING comm. 1no s enior Sod Sf>'lnlllet and 0r19 A-ageRoom121• BArandlrm ohaaffloe"of~~~~ a .. ~w~8R.E~. ~t. c~ .. .__._ .;..f!! .• DJL' IVERY DRIVER .. •. • C111 1°' Ir .. es1 842-0881 C1112en rate1 Small /Ob S.'11em. etc 1150-4147 Exterior Stucco S130• , _..,,__ .. .,..., _ .. -· ~••"-..__ t: That's All you pay 1°' MASONRY/CARPENTRY soec;lallet 49.t-2990 ITl"M/Trlm/Qeenup, comp ,,,...,...__ 642~2 QC>enlnga • Corporate & mollvaled lndtv ual to lnlmum experience Own : 3 tines, 30 day minimum Very competitive Lie NEW/REPAIR Oualtty No gatdenlng CompetltlYe J.O INT /EXT PAINTING Reel Eatate. Ellglbte for handle Ill r•C•P· traneportatlOn. 557·7482 • Daily Pilot motor route • In the & lnSYred (7t4) 499-1604 lobs to small, reasonable e>neeS. Chuck ~7032 HOUMtS& Apt Rea. ret•. YMI end bonut. Com-llonl9t1MCl'•tar1al dutlee. • a allabl I H ti t • DAILY Oool'•R-alr-Alteratlons-Free Ml . llc'd 631·2345 IG-ARO"NING MAI~ Apl, Oualtty wor1I 89S-5755 petl11~ aalary & xlnt ben-Computer exper. tlelpful •IUllO • v e n .. un ng on • ...... "" eflll. Legal ••P req'd. bul not nee FIT po91tlon. llpef need4Kt In El TOfO. • Harbor area. 1-2 hours • PILOT Remodel·Panttl-l()Gka;-etc I RESIO/COMM'LllNO 26 1comm·1. reeld'I, c M .. H B NN1 & c.an Int/ext pelnt· Congenial olfloe. N/smkr Competlllve aalary, Pref. knowledge of • • Cabtnets-Wlndow-Fences t yrs Do my own work Ltt. r: v areas M8-3799 Mike tng, reas. prlce9 w/qualtty "'ef'd. Pleaae send r• lmmed opening. Call propane or f•~t melnt. e per afternoon. e 35 yrs e>1p Jerry 642-05671 6278041 Al ~ 126 M _.__ --·" worllmanshlp M 1-0782 ... ..... SERVICE ------------alnt. .__n-ups, """"1ng, aume with aalary req• ()( E.lena at (714) 851-0336 EYe. hra, Sal. 859-9115 • Call 641-4333,· Mon-• • ••• Tl FlllSI •••• 1 men tree trtm rree eatlmatat' PAINTER NEEDS WOAKI c:aJI: u-•e• _._ 10( IUrther det11t1. •. • Paul 557 •4758 aft. 5 SPECtALI 15 65 s;;v;c; 1 Mr Estrada 645-3381 I Int/Ext, oelllng9, retln cab SYLVIAWARNER -·H-na-.-am• day-Friday 10-5 P.M. • DIRECTORY t26)yr•exp.,worltguar 610 Newport C.nter Dr. lghl typing, phonea. AIR. , ••-• • • e C~l• Cart Calls on TVt. VCRs & HAWAIIAN EXPERTISE Davis Painting 964-3837 Suite 1700, Newport key-punch, new office In pply at Chevron Sia. • Ask for Art. • CALL TODAY!• Stereos 850-4072 Tree tnm. 100 remove BMcil, 92660. 760-9600 ~Col=t=a =M.aa:==·=64=5-6=7=7=7=.:I =3=190=:H=er=bor==B=l.=(S=O=f=rwy--..il) : O C t : ISi FOR LllS C~i~~~.m~r~N1~ · Oual1ty wrought Iron w o;11 clean ups ~tu 549.- 1696 ~O ~~~ti -=;,,;,,_ _______ .;,..___ • renne 088 e v~•r OaJly Pilot school & back 850-0258 Fences, gates MCUrlty ~a) Semen . • "" dOO's windows tec1ory I Aeu rates Refs ~950 SYDNEY 0MARR WedMMay, Nonmber I ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19): Creative juices flow! You put ideas across, you reach more people, you receive invitation to travel and speak. Love relationship grows stronger, you 'll gain confidence -and money. TAURUS (A{>ril 20-May 20): Agreement is reached with profesaional supenor. You Win through diplomacy. Make intelliJCnt concession without abandoni03 principles. Major domestic adjust- ment Mll also be featured . GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Refuse to be cajoled, chided into snap decision. Oarify meanings, define t_enT)s, realize you can afford to play wa.itiOJ pme. Make inquiries, satisfy curiosity. Pisces. Virgo persons tlsure an fascinating ~nario. CANCER (June 21-J uly 22): Focus on power, authority, intensified love relationship and ability to increase income. You'll be asked to take charge of important endeavor. You'll meet deadline and eme?JC victorious. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Accent on personality, charisma1 ability to reach wider audience. Romance is al90 featured. timin• is hlghliJhtcd and you'll be at right place at crucial moment. Maintain mdcpendence. imprint style, dance to your~ tune. VIRGO (Au&-23-Scpt. 22): Stress creativity, independence, aJamout, intnaue, willinaness to pioneer a project. Special note - avoid heavy liftioa. You'll act to heart of matten, romance will nourish your viewa wiU be souabt UBllA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): FoUow through on f1111 impmsions. Reunion with old flame could be pan of' excitina scenano. Lunar position continues to hiahliaht friends. hopes, fulflJlmcn1 or upiration1. Cancer native plays paramount rote. ICX>llPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): focus on canier, pres1i,e. ablbty to contact f"iaht people when neoeuary. Individual who had been reluctant to li11Ct'I could now become enthusiastic ally. Gemini. Sqinariu1 ~ will play silnlftcant roles. uomARJUs (Nov. 22-De<:. 21 ): Good lunar aspect coincides with travel, lanauaecl cduaation, rccosniuon of spiritual values. Door Pft!viously cloted will now be opened. Special studjes ire nec:esaary if you are to advaoce caUte. CAPIUCORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19): Be ready for cha09C. excitement. ducovery. trave~ obflical attraction. Embtion&l involvement is featured, y~~~~Oufd proteet eelf in clote Q""'1tt1. Qajn indi~ted throuab wrlnm wotd. Oemin.i pqyi role. AQUAIUUI (Jan. 20.Feb. 18): Empbuis on poaiblc partnenl\jp, coatracU, public relation1, marital atatu Money coma from au.rprUe source. Family member proves m~r supporter, wiU beJp you overcome obltacles. TaWU1 o&ays &op role. PllCD (Fd>. 19-.Matdt lO): Jnclivldual who prewt for 1ddit.ional 1nf'onnation may not be t.inciere. Be aware, alttt, and don't faU for ttt· ricb~u.ick scheme. See pmona. plA(ft in realistic liaht -avoid,..tdt decleotion. Koep bee.ttb raohationL lP NOVSJQD 111 YOUll ataTllDAY ~are now oa more 10Ud fina.ndal, emotional pound. Ru~ rquJations cou.kt ectually wort an your &vat. You art aative, diplomatic, puaaoaa~. ~ leftle of ctnma. baveunutUal voice. appreciate 1nu.ty1 mut1c, an. and ooaalbly have "~ tooth." Tat.u'US. Ubn. Scorpio pmoA play lmponant -.ola in your life. ~6c:a.nt domestic 114'Qltment takes ~for you In November. In December. you pin ICOC:ll &o .. priva.at'' 1n.fonn1tioft -you'll be more ltCUTt at rao.h. • •. Delly Piiot : ServloeDlrectory CHILDCARE Nurae with prioes.treeest 0 836-1523 MPLOYMENT LAW * 111-1111 * Representative infant wlll care tor yours __ _ Emp t1as11 752·5008 : 330W.BayDrlve : 1'2-4J2hat.IOI l onmyCM home63t-3952 Badzau Attys Par~~a~ 1 wa111ok 1ntenora •. Coata Meu, CA .• Loving Mom wlll bsbyF AME~ HANDYMAN ll&Hal')' T~ ~t lnterlo< painting I your child In my tiome 6 1 Carpentry fencing. win· _ E 662-2177 !••• ••••••••• •••••• •••_••• -------,._-o-p M-F 63l·0179 NB dowa, plumbing. marllte. Block walls. brlckWOfk, Pa&;' ~ ~ _ tub encl. hauling. etc concrete Comp patios 1..,.,,..~~l~~...,,...-1 f ' CltHiH Stmct I And Yes Jesus Is Lord 15 yrs exper 6'6-4834 F4f11JG INTERIORS A ter School-Roeif1s faEXNiNG 111e=30.a51 636-8244 BRICK. BLOCK. sToNE. HANGING/STRIPPING StudAnt Jobs'. ,________ SERVICE I throoughly GATE& r:ENCE REPAIR CONCRETE 20 yrs •.w VISA-MC 673-1512 ~ lclean l\Qllse 645-974 1 LOW PRICES Terry 536-7988 after 5 ANOYS WAlLCOVERINO Do You Need$ Cash $ And i-..-..~ir..IPS'I~~-H ,_ 1 & 771-4229 °' 671 -1976 BrlCk -c:onc,819 custom 1nst111at1on a. Removal ousec..,an rlO carpets --Int palnt1nn S48-4013 A Good Job To Start The New Year? uph01s1ert. wmoows e1c •GEN HOME REPAIRS I wont Low cost Cell Sob .. ., 722-1737 20 ~ 4111p l irt.J laltt.111-1272 Patnt Drywall Carpentry -~M Of M&-9557 E11pert Wallcoverlng In -ComtnefC1al lnQ welCome etc Gary ~5-5277 PTL BRICKWORK Small JOM 11aJlat1on. Aeaa. Contult· We are looklng for Jr. High and High School S1udenta and 01hers who would enjoy talking with people and working with other students their own age. You can earn $25.00 to $50.00 each week In commlaalona and MUCH MOREi You can work PART TIME In the afternoons and evening• and atlll have pl'enty of tree time. You MUST BE FREE AFTER SCHOOL! We offer complete training and provide transportation. Thla la NOT A PAPER ROUTE AND IS NOT SEVEN DAYS A WEEKI ~ out and help ua get new cuatomera for our newspaper and have a great time doing It. You have nothing to loae and a super job to gain. Call today and maybe you can atart tomorrow! Call Mr. Earl 548~7058 or 241·8432 COLLECTOR WANTED . Part time opening In Laguna Beach I Laguna Niguel area. Earn up to $6.00 per hour for collecting for monthly aubecrtptlons. Mileage allow- ance paid In addition to hourly wage. Expertenoed preferred but not r9qulred. \ ........... LMet 11 ,,.. old Call 10 A.II. • 4 P .M. MllKIRKUND 141-4111 ut. 107 pplianceServloe. Reing.. 1--1 .,__,..., C t M 1n1 ~nmnt 581-6590 asherS-dryel'l·rlnget CLEANING LADY needs • HANDYMAN LARGE and .................. I . • Ot • ... - lthwa9hers lie 522•!323 CO\lple of more jObs Ask-small I DO IT ALL' INlne Refs 675-3 175 POWER STRIPPER tng s 1o hour 968-4778 1 531-5579 Pat or Ive meg •m•t Strip It off the ..i1 alt C.acrttt ---I - --Removal seNloe a dean Home & Offloe cleaning by HOME REPAIR Cari>entry t aaa -·· Reas lie/bond 63M970 e ng rN airs & 1 JODI Please can fOf tree fences & OllN . lree tnm --n r1aclng • Roofing & I esttmste 842-6746 I dump runs C M & N B OUICK & CAREFUL •WE GALS SHOULD• aterprooflng• 631-4199 _ area Jim Whyle 642-72061 LO RATES T138046 I •HANG TOGETHER• tvewaY. patios patha. I HouMCleanlng 1' yrs e>1p B al' I 112-M 10 639-0730 ANYTIME etc No ·job toO smell rellable,rN1,fr .. a t,own I llll , s.flStoraveE"'*1s 1_,, Aeaa Mickey 53s..o553 trans Ptna. 6'5-9866 L ¥ HAULING • MOVING -Plaa==--ter __ llRTW __ ... __ Prot HooM cieamng '>"'• Garagt & Y11d Clnups *A· 1 --* Int /Ext patch ptastertng-:-te>h•lt·repatr-~lllng IOIS elCP IOcll reOable 'w11;ty. Jon 645-8192 CLEAN & EXPERT C\lttom textUr1f\G. QUa11fy t complex-heavy roller · · Ov9f 15 veers H~ienoe work Problem9-No Prot>-oe 645-4269 7am-9pm biweekly DO s 642"9264 •CLEENCO• LIC T-116 4211 730-1353 ..,,,.. i:3268t4 554-7831 oncretel mHonry all ~~~~~~A~~~~~!1; Fr~':·~:n' ~~~';t 1 STAIY• Olllfll Ed'• Lath & Plestenng types. Ir •91 /lie d 011nne 650-610. e11t s GA":~·TEA N-PT BCH A---m ..... .. Int/Ht palehea. tmuree. Martlnfll: Co 195-7133 ""' ·-••-• room additions 1145-8258 RESIDENTIAL Xlnt"Aef s Haullng-cleanup.palntlng· Or~ Co Original Reas RalQ NO Job to mo111ng 7 daya 41M-2341 Student Mover• 1n1ur9d NEW/REPAIR.~-No 1 1-- --Lie T 124-436 &41-8427 )ob9 to amaJI, f'M90Mbte lge/small Mary 4 2•9833 INlt•, IN•ty NEW Warel'IOUM Storaoe Free Mt • ttc'd 831-2345 Ufl&. ... IOYlll. Fl..... I -1 •---. --Pl s 1t1•tac:tton guar'd tAe offiCt 61 uua1 "met 1-.• ........ .,..._ ____ 1 ldt/b40Ck wrk 539-0345 Comm'llr .. kfl 1191-5741 jOr Jotin Caroompa oc e;:aea~~~'!: HlwD ~,# C..tremra ----Newi>Ol1 8Mcrl 54&-4021 hour to 11.,...1n 1133-2009 ____ IOba _____ _ '"'"""°""rimnn'7T;lll!' IX(( dONSTRUCTJON 1•11 c.. tor elderly In'"*'• DRAINS CLEAR From St& ,IUl'1.._._18t• Hull CteeninQ 1 New-RemOdel·Addltont ~lw D lM-)J• prtme hOme Home coott =~~ ~22~' M Jn 17~739, 722-1737 lie•4«>839 ...,.. .. _n..o. rnee1t Kathy 54()..4101 a I v or I .... ...,._ • 'V"' ---fxpet1 $eMce & Aec>elf REMODELING JCAS Sva Co U2.a&2.1 llAllPllllT1 32.1!' up. Rel6d'l/CGmm cu or r~ R~og':~s Htg AIC, Ref l'l>f'I hf EF Low . cat• for elderly Lie •409036 *-'81t ng rr. do manutc,,.,ts, 873..e 122 llc•20J4f l A"*'8 ATC 1)'1 lc 4'9263 Stete llC 751-0410 All Ptumblng ,..,..,.., Cop. malling lla1. etc 7~ e...tntt...---,,.., ~ replpe: "'* '*'*"· -tin eoo-keep1ng & I I I Law.can Pa.latla1 llc·o intur d S383llll ,.,. ... SBA loen-payrOll UWDt s;;;c;;n t i--i-nRf PAfN'fiNG By"'"' Wn 14&. t 122 Guy &40-1245 Add'n•~·Remodel Yard Meln:_-:H.:_-~ .. ,. ard SlnOf 111 Y"a ~ haWY tr.~~·~~.--.-1 Too Ouallty Low Price --w owtomer• Lie 2-... Ul'OCIMn ~ lJceNed Typing $erYtce Fr• .. 1 lie 831-2345 MIKE e.50-3at3 Thant!· You! M)..4114 Cerd & ,,_,, • ~. Why pay mcwe? --99..,_ ~1 & "*"-1 "-? .. Anne CMM233 BUILD APT OA HOME ""'"'• RA1N80W PAINllNG-27&1 oe.r. t3' ...... from S 1t .900 ( 7 14) T ~/rernolleO a.en.. I Qu911ty II OUf potec:y !~:=~~~==~ 156-54110 (2tJ) 428-2118 up,,,.. lllwnl 76 -3471 ISO H44 JEFf UC .... try Ml" ATC Commerdll Oryw9ll u•... 1 ..-., -m--..,.nocn-Addll1on1 ~ 1n eomrn·1I ---• • • -• ,.,J 9'£MOOlUNO ,__ _ ~ ~~ ~I Free _. F,__ DawlolJ-711& &5M740~eetWMM Uc4'1tell1 M l ' IDODflo~dl'~..;;: 541-1123 llc•383924 IQuAi]fY {Ml TRIMINO A A.A PAIHTINO lm/[ln --•II I lllll complete petloe, lltttriNl I t,.~~ LOWEST pc191~ pr-. '"''.. •i• ..... edO~lon .. qvaltty wor11t ' ~-722-1 t71 10 S•8enolce 112-3236 ~,.,._._,. ••71446 Pau4 "..... ILllTm ·~ ~. ger\1 OAN 8At.Y(A PAJN'TlNO au.tMy ~--Will .. W'Offl;, "-• m9'n1 trwtYif'l'WNnG ne Uc •4MH• acJflD OA "EPAIR 942551 .._7401 1 ..-Meuro ttt-tt'3 Cell Myt'"-~17 Walla. tnwa, rt111nQ1 I.I lRICIAN M-Maint MOWlng I*'\, QLA8QOW PA A.re YfNI ""11UW lfMll ,Joe1e e _... ~ W/fMe ,...,.. ._,.. t llfe twee. mo..... "---1'2 ,_nl RP 1 ... lld .... t t it; OOOta. ~ molidlnot UC •23310I Slnialll\aroa ~ tertlllmO. .-: lnt~at 30 Yf'I .... 9e1boe winoo.t ~ .. 111oe0on"4-Sl4t 1 totie •~ ~ Aw, ... .._,.,... rera. ~,. I0311i11111toe• 1114,.. IHWUl/WUtif HALE !'lECTAIC I C&9 lAW.. IE -ll'm ..... my pr1C9I .. Window ....... "-•im.• ~,J..~ lie & -..CS ..._701S U S 14W131, fHWt• _--_r ot "°"'...... '-' .,_ _ .... ,_ '--~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~--·~ . . ,_ aao i Orino. CC*t OAJLY PlLOT~. NoWmber s. 1M& hnll•• • IUp/lllb/I••...._~ Aalll '911... ••• Aalll lee!f t1• """ I*-!W NlJC mm "9.K mna: NI.IC M>na Muc *>m Wll unit 7'•12", exit tot ·1m ~. 'Pfti.M llr."T tam rm. ms 545-1•1e , _ 1911Aft ...al MOB ·11 Conv, htdtop & owner, 2 dr, v~. ottg. m1. ..cnnoue .,...... .nca ~.,10t COU11 of Orenge •eald o.ec1 ot Tt\181 In tn. Olletalme lllT/ 1eMty tor .,,Y S~t~ ~t::. IXLIWRY 0£PA"l"M!:NT etarao, spoke whit. 111 amen1t1M. >Ont cond NAm 9TAW llVt'Twe me ~ty r~,....11\&t "°Y property tltuated 111 Niel lncotractw of the atrMt ......... Mct•Dna•s BMW nMCS• WOf1( $l000 ollo $1750 64&-8222 The tollOwlnO oereone.,. NoUce19herebyglwntNI """'" " ....... County, Clllltornia, deacirll>' ~and other common ' ·d· ......_ CoV9 /mo &73-1464 Mt.n 673-0730 Aak (or Shelly d()inQ ~ ... HYP· tn. &oetd Of T"* ... of "'-'°"" rec>fl8el\tetNe to ad· Ing "'-land ~. detlQt\llllon, " "'1. llhown ...... _..,., ... •t..t.. .. _ a--M-t..a-N·BERs HOSTS CONCEPTS. 1I01t·1Cout Community CollaQa mini.tar the •t•t• of tn.. l.EOAL OfSCAIPTIONt_ her91'n. • ......... -, ..... _..._. M·F\1119,S-.Sttll& ft DSkyl*kClrcle,lrvlne,CA Olflr~ of Or .. Cwnfy, oedent 4. SUll.EASEH~O ,ll!S· SaildNle--IMl'/lede;but Wt!OfFEAontythattn91l e.tt>oela!Md.&73·14.0 82&S.EucKd81. 'llllllULOlf 92114 Cellfotnla,wlNreotlva...._ The pelltlon r•quHta TAT! AS CREA•IO IY without OOflvenlllll ot WW· In hOtMturnlstllng9& ac-ORY BOAT STORAGE on Fullerton.CA Attend our ..... temlnlt c•NLLAC Laut1 H. Miiier, 3474,ed blda up to bul no 1 .. .,. llUthoftty to tdmlnlttar the THAT CUl)AIN SUBl.WE ranLe.xr ... cwlmc>l&ed.,... ~ Uvlng room the waler ~ 8Mch 714-elO 6300 and r~V9 FREE an 1\111 Wimbledon Way, Co1t1 tn.... 10:00 a.m . Wei:tne. =t•Aclu:. the~~ Of CON!OMIHIUM DATED pr~l,1111, PGll llllOI\, Of bedroom & dlnlnO room Crene ~ 1 ~ a 213~891-1701 AM/FM ete<eO T V No LARGEST Sl!LECTION MeM. CA 92e2t d.y, No<lembet l3, 1M5 et tat 1 Act trat J~ 30. '881. O«CUTl!O ancuM anoet. to pey the eollectlon I IO okll.o.atlQn to buy with of latl model low mMMQa 0.w Wlllllng, 5S4 t c.m-the PurehMlng Department .. 8Y ANO IETWEEN GAA\' remaining prlnclpel """ ot '· '° N . ve week Call 815-5901 "'"" Clldlllaceln Orange bridge, w .. 1m1n1ter, CA or 111d college dletrlct A hMrlng on the petition l!NTl!APAISES. A, CAU• the not• MOUfed by Mid Hate. c:h•lrt. Mblae. MOORING In NEWPORT er.Oii -wrovel COuntyl SM ue today! 92tl3 loe9ted at 1310 Adame Av• will be held on NOVEMBER FOANIA llMIT!O PAAT Deed ot TNll. wttll llltar•t lam~. carpets & at ea HARBOR tor Ula. PrlQt AU..UYlll LWl & •O-l llO Thia bu11na11 11 con· anue, eo.1a M.... Call· 27' 1t&a •t t'30 A.M. In NliRSHIP AS LESSOR ANO ttwteon, u Pfov!ded In Mid NV•· II ble 548 1930 • 114/4'1·1•1 .. ducted by tllmlt.Opertner· t0tnla at whlotl -time uld Dept. No. 3 at 700 CMc M.O. JANES COMPANY, not ... .ctVancee, If .,,y, i PLUS e protMl!or'lal d• MOO a · • lhlp • blO. wt11 IM publtciy OC*l8d c.nt« Drive WMt, Santa INC .. A CALIFORNIA COR· under tn. termt of ttle Deed llgn ttatt 10 t)(lng II all Sllpt A..,.iteble: 25' 30' 32' 2800 Harbor Blvd Oaw Waiting and reed IOf Ana, CA 92702 PORA TION AS LfSSEe. 'of Ttul1 ...... cNfgel and togetl'lef.uttl~lngOr111ge 35• l333WCoutHwy COSTAMESA. Thie'™*'*'' wN llled L!ASEOflHAEEC3IONE IF YOV OBJECT to tM AECOR0£0JULY tt. 1Nt ~oCtheTnm.taind ~ty'• iwga.1 tvtnnu<a Npt Beh t-6 Mon-Fri CRIClt WI·-ae a Ma•n With'"-County~ of Or· TON SUPER-PASS£NG!A vrantlng or 1ne petition, you IN &OOK t4 t43 PAOe H&. j of tne tr\191• cr•ted by MIO lhOWfoom. • n~•..nai USEO-c .. 'A...,S&T-RUCKS ange County on s.c>tttnbar VANS ANO FOUA (4) enould either IPPMI •• •n. Ol'FICIAl Al!COROS. IN I OHd of Ttuet, ,to·wlt Llr(US ~d«lorete your ... .--~n ,.. 30, 1985 TRUCKS· COAST COM· heating and lllla your Ob-ANO TO A CONDOMINIUM l107,4M.37 hOtM or office wllh di•-c .. ~. 1114 COME IN OR CALL FOR I "97111 MUNI TY COllEGE DIS· 19Ctlon1 or Ille written ocrao-COMPRISED Of!· l . Tn. benef!Glary uMet Mid counle up 10 40% ott 01 FoAlF 311¥ Camper POflSCHI JIU APPUIUL 1 Publlahed Orange Cout TRICT tlon1 *Ith the court before PAACl!L t: DMCI of Trutt heretotore ••· tall ell II I IUd· Specie! ~Ira ou tank. AUDI 0.LILLO Deity Piiot October 29. No-All bid• ate to be In ac-the fleerlng. YOUf appeal'• UNIT 46 ON LOT I OF ecuted and dalfvered to the r• .~ .. I :; no low mllea, xlnt ~.....,. s.lt CHl!VROL£T --1&.n vember 5, 12 t9, t985 COfdanOe with the Bid Oocv-lnot tn8Y be In pert0n Of by TRACT t0525. AS SHOWN 1 undett6gned I written 0.C. ng -Ot' 1 "'""" HitMtt C)oatlt11 -'f• ' "T-892 rnan11 which.,.. now In fMe your at1orney AND DESCRIBED IN THE 11ar1110n of Def.ult and 0.-lll-Jlff ·cont S3500, &73-8888 S...• a krvlH 1821 t BEACH BLVD. and may be MClUred In tn. IF YOU AAE A CREDITOR CONDOMINIUM PLAN• mend !Of Saile. and I written Mon ttvu Fri, • te In/ HUNTINGTON BEACH office of the OlrectOf of or • contingent crect"Of of ("PLAN"). WHICH PLAN I Notice Of o.ttull ~ EJec. appolntmentuvallable 1 ICJ'C CHICll 14l·IOll• 141-Hl1 P\8JC NOTICE PurOhUlng of Mid colleQe the decealed. you muet ftle WAS RECOR OED ON tlontoSell. Theundwllgnect onSaturdiye lc"ttra Mii 1.,., • ..n., • di 1 lot yow Clalm with the court 0t 9111190 IN BOOK t3737, 1 ctiUled Mid Notice ot De-. '11 Oeepa P2&E. RUnt .,.......,n CHEVY '85 lmpela. gd ftCTmOUa .,..... &en· bidder mu11 eut>mlt pruent II to the pereonll PAOE 1067, ET SEQ. OF 1 fault and ElecUon to Sall 10 I llY fllltTWI ..,. .. 1 S800obo 642•9628 MS !. C... Hwy Int/ext $450 850·2577 NAM9 ITATl•NT with hit bid 1 calhler'e repretenlltlve IPl)Olnted by OFFICIAL RECORDS OF be recorded In the county LES 957-3133 r ~ 8-dl The IOlloWlng pereone are ct't9cil c.rtlfled chedl h4I COUl'I within lour moothl OFFICIAL RECORDS, 'OR where the real Pl'oP«tY la ---------Moped Mk lotlded ,,. • CHEVY '75 M0n1e, p/a, doing~ U : Hollandl ~'ebondmade a~ from the date or 1"91 .._ AS MAY BE RE·RE · localed • II. "-~85 ·~=· .. ,.. IW. aMl fm, Nt\I gd seoo Flower Shop. tt73 ltvlne rl:: auanoeoU•w•MPfo'lldecl COAD£0 0AT•• t0/14/8& .............. lllS ' llA&-3359 or 241-4575 Ave., Suite M. Colla Mw ~~~°':-' ~ Olltrtc:! In Section 700 of th• PAACEL 2. W I 8 P A C R I - Orafttma'n: AoH-Aay Two-'82 ATC 250A't . $900 92827 Board ol Trult In Probl\e Code of Calllomla. AN UNDIVIDED ONE I CONVIYANCI., • AeMt cabinet, racllal uw. tbl ~ obo. Jamee, evee PORSCHE 911$ '75. SJI· •Yml '14 Del!ena, Rita, 2045 Ship-amount not letl ":'nan n: The time IOf flllng cialm1 wlll FIFTY-FIFTH ( 1155THI for Trutt .. , IKO-PID NW, thp c91nprMIOf, M&-1721, dye 754-1871 var annlV. 1132~ lo ml, IMPECCABLE! Below av. 1 w.ey9Lane, Newport' BMoh, perC«ll (6%) of the eum bid not e11plre prior to four INTEREST AS A TENANT llll l .MORTQAQI, Ir: .fode hand tooll. Call 546_..9 4 ftttl ft/ J~ -BMW '&1320i biil1tan lntr 1T1lnt $12,500. ~,.,..8eae er age mllea. Fully loaded. c~h1!6eobualneu I• con· u • guarant• ltlat the bid· ::;:::: !:"~':t!~~ ot'the f ~,:S~~~~ INES~ AT~u ~N . "'='" ~0..1 EM• Preeley 30+ A.Jt>Ym tlH Sec>, anrf, air. ttereo, 15" ROLLS ROYCE ·er Sllvef ~~:·~ow·~• ducted bY: an lndlvkklal ~~ ~~r~~t~f ~: YOU MAY EXAMINE the AND TO All OF T~E EAL I Dally PllO• Oete>W 22. 29. Collectlon; excel cond, whit, alarm. S10,900. Shadow, white, air, xlnt Ste 989 (UC # 1GMK980). Rita O.ene uma It •wetded to him In n1e kept by Iha court "you PROPERTY, INCL ING November 5, 1985· tome never pleyad. ...... 81'111964·51~ •ft 5pm QOnd, $15,000. 850-1242 91·• ""5 873 3"" ™• ltat*'*11 Wit fl6ed the ewnfof failure to enter are a-peraon lntwwted In WITHOVT LIMITA N THE' T-188 $150/obo.84-0-2986 -dayeor848-1749aft.5 .r-1-Ot' ·1 .... wlththeCountyClettlofOI'· the .. t•1•. }'OU may MMt COMMON AREA AS DE·j ~--------This 2 or= with p/1, DATSUN '70 240Z. reblt eves1wk11d• Inge County on October ta. ~~:~11:=\,111'~ upon the HICUtor or edmln-FINED IN THE OECLA.R· _____ Ml\ ___ _ ettn l xtra ,, .. n "* lank, ale engs 95& tran•. RUM gd ••• TIYITI WIE DODGE '75 Swln r 59k 1985 ~1 IOffelled, Of In the cue of I lllrllOf, Of upon 11'19 •I· ATION OF COVENANTS, I Ml.IC nuTICE • Otborne I. 616. 12" --S23 . 533~242 = . bond the full eum thereof torney ror the executor Of CONDITIONS AND RE· l'1CT1TIOU9 IUWU monitor. "'Inter, furn & prep & more (S.#0002) DATSUN '80 280ZX T· Attend our ..... Mmlnar ml, $900 848-7 Publlahed Of I wlll tie lorfelled to Mid col-ldmlnlttratM, and Ille with STRICTIONS ("DECLAR· 1 NAMI 8TATllilUfT ,.. ..... , and recelV9 FREE an llf fM Deity Piiot October 29, No-leQe district the court with ptOOI of ..,. A TION") RECORDED ON r,~~~~~ructlon1. ORA.NOE COAST ::·, ~o9y~~:, AM/FM ltereo T.V .. No WI. vember 5, 12, 19, 1985T -897 No bidder may wtthdr-~t:.:'""en =4:9~ 9117/80 IN BOOK 13747, dJ,': = :=Ti'c:.~ JMp/Renautl or avee 497•3553 obllgetlon to buy upon ILUI 1111 IMI hlt bid for 1 period fOf for1y-~.... you PAGE t646 ET .SEQ. OF Of. IMnl• lnterlOf'IC&pe Pro-et fuaJtut 2524 Herbor Coeta Meaa cred'lt approval. See Veno doe Santoe nve (45) daye after the data notice of the 111~ of "1 In· FICIAL RECORDS OF OR-11 e 1 1 1 0 n 1 1 1 B ) a ~i~ 11tAJl7 ...... 2. FIAT '74X19Convert.mlnt All •a-·wu Pl&.IC NOTICE· MllOflhllopanlngthereof. vtnlOfYandappr aementof ANOE COUNTY. ON LOT t "PLANTEMPS". 1014 ---• cond ne gr .. t S2200 • -...-"--TM Boe·d of TNl1 ... r• ............ Of of the pe11-OF TAACT t0525 IN THE· A • X.t.~ t:: Truka I OBO'. no-112e . . 114/ 4'2-1Hl rteTmOU• ....... lervel lhe ;,,Mlege of re)ec1-11°8!: ~t• mentioned CITY OF COSTA MESA AS I c~~~untlngton S..Cll, Phones. t /2 Price Ot' *1 I TOYOT 73 NAM9 aTATlmNT Ing any and all bid• Of lo In lion .,id l200.5 of SHOWN ON A MAP RE· I.. M (aka Kallle) You on.ti 6• 10 & 20 button 82 CHEVY Sllvered.o 'II 1•11 LUllll A ' Corolla. r• The following 1 egu1ar1 lea In-the ca111om11 Prob•t• Code CORDED IN BOOK 482 t "'' • ~ avell. Bryan, 957-2512 Oully/C~ab, 6.2 L. llabla traneportetlon. doing butlneaa~cfN~ =Tt"~rrn arr;~. : In Hurwlt1, ReMer a PAGES 46, 49 AND 50 oF I 1014 FIMlda, Hunting! dleHI, fully loaded A,!l_~d ~ ..... FReemlnetEE $450.631-3647,8-Spm 'TAOORA PARTNERSHIP, the bidding .. ~.A"°"""'8 '°' MISCELLANEOUS MAPS IN ~i:A:~:m 1998 .... AaluJ1 $7500. 497-4008 ..... r-ve an 3835 Birch Strwt Newport Lee A • ...._ Vkle ......_..,, ....,.,.Ctt. THE OFFICE OF THE 3 eoat. AM/FM ltereo T.V .• No TOYOTA '14 Celice 5.. Ford ·es T ..alfd· clean, nd• BMctl, CaHfomla 92eeO CMnc111ir. ···-Af· = ... , .... ....,.,.. COUNTY RE<;OROER OF ~~ • • Maaa AKC rag. fem cocker, 1 yr, '85 TOYOTA 4 x • obllga11on to buy wftll nu pelnt gd runnlt\g con vlllve w!1t seo<>. Scott, J. Scott Fawc:et1, 8939 ,..,., Coeat c-""'""Y •CA.... SAID ORANGE COUNTY, Thi b I I wall mannered, •now MA.NY EXTRAS er.Oii approval. 11200 o'Bo 548-1382 241-1517 or 972-2051 Hudeon River Circle, Foun-Cohge Dletrkt D Pull blpllhedll NOr•noe COU51 OR AS THEY MAY BE dUC1~ byUI .n~~ ~~= qual. $125 84&-4379 768--09§8 AFTER 5PM IU-Uftll W11 taln Valley CA 9270& Publllhed Orange Cout 1 Y ot ovembet 4• · AMENDED OR RE-RE· I . CHINESESharTelW11nkle TOYOTA-Lott Job Mull l1,./,.•2 1ffl TOYOTA '63Sopre.51C)Cl FORD'78L~Dll,11dtbttry. Donald i<. Benedict 119 Dally Piiot October 29, No-11, 1985 CORDED. ne::~ y dogs .. M 8fTI08/F 4 l'N. Selll '80 414 Truck, "' --io.oeo, new fee eng 1•t$1000. 740et1,auto, Vla0rvteto,Newporta..ct1. vemt>et5, 1985 MT-800 EXCEPTING THERE· T:. .... :,, -ftled S1000/both 631-8000 ~500.~9_3525 8rldget-HONDA '81 l500DX $10,950 842-5800. Ed air, $750. 9&3-0856 CA 92M3 T-890 FROM, UNITS 1 THROUGH with the County Clerk of Or· te clean, great cond. $3850 FORD •78 Ste Wgn pi t. Thia bu1inH1 11 con-PtaJC NOTICE 55, INCLUSIVE ON LOT 1 ange County on~ 15 Ger St'torthr Pointer. 2 ma. Obo. 548--0560 Ive mag I b 8 I s 1'o0 0 dueled by • general part· DllDIJC MftTll't OF SAlO TRACT 10525 AS 1985 • 7 wtca $75 ea 9e3-7048 ... 111011 p • ' cy • . nerlhlp r~ ""' iw. K-21417 SHOWN ON SAID CON-.....,., '!r&'•• Ctt41 s ~on Ski BOOie SX 61 Equlpe, new, az 9'h-10'h S 175. New Marker bind- ings $50. 788-3519 ea..,. ... Honda Accord '78. dean, 848-6388 Ot' 842-25?4 J. ~ti Fawoell K-21412 ,tcTmOUl IU8MU DOMINIUM PLAN. Publllhed Orange Cout Oii LWlll dependable. New eng. FORD '83 Thunderbird Thi• llllement w .. tiled ADvt:~ NA• aT>TIMINT EXCEPTING FURTHER Dally Piiot October 29 No- Attend our leale temlnar $2900. Call 497·3568 Herllsg• Of'lg OWn9f' with the County Cl«lc of Of'. Notlcell n.ret>ygtwn that Thll lollowlng pweon1 are THEREFROM, ALL IM· vembar 5 12 t9 1985. and receive FREE en MAZDA ·eo 628 5apd. lo•decU&eoo-.;..... drtt. ~County on October 16, -4 1985 one doing butlneaa u: PAN-PROVEMENTS AND AP· • • • T .900 AM/FM 118<90 T.V .. No am/fm stereo,runt/kx*1 grey lrt~r/lflt. 751·7eM 19 5 "8ll0'7 t98t CadlHK B Dorado Ve-ACHE INTERNATIONAL, ~~Ri~N~~C~&l~~T52 hlcl• ld•ntlllcallon No 753 Baker StrMt, Cotta obligation to bUy with gd. $3300 656-1153 evs GM OPEL '89 Kadet. nu Publlthed Ofange Cout 106AL5745BEM954S Mlz· Meaa, CallfMnla 92626 SAID LOT 1 OF TRACT credit approv1I MAZDA ,82 RX7• load9d, brkt, catb. seo<> OBO. Dally Piiot October 29. No-ed 91 the c ... Marla Rel-Qr eat Lake 1. In . 10525. AU-UYlll LWE $7500 Or D-s·t. 8"2-5800. 969-5906 wk/2 .. 1~661 vernt>er 5. t2. 19, 1985 taurant, 18"' 12 M·-" .. hur corporated, 763 Baker EXC.EPTINT FURTHER ftCTmOU8 IU ... aa """' .. T-895 " _,, SI 1 Co 1 M-. Call THREFRO~. EXCLUSIVE NAM9 HATl•NT Pl&.IC NOTICE 714/ ~12-1n1 A.tic tor Ed. OLDS '78 Cuti... Su-Boulevard, lrvlne, Cal"oml• r.. • • • l • . EASEMENfS IN AND TO Tn. f..J ....... ~ ptrlOnl.,. , _________ for violation of 21 use 88t. ornl• 92826 d ~-" .... ,.~... .... 1124 Vaal MAZDA '84 GLC LX. 2 dr. Pfem8, p/b, p/a, air, alt, PlB.IC NOTICE Arty peraon dealrlng to plllOI Thi• bu11neu 11 con-ALL THOSE REST~ICTED olng bualnaat "' Folb-.,.... .,....,. ____ ..,. .... 1 5 apd A/C lo 1 1 am/tm cue, nu tlr•. xlnt I the matter In the United ducted by: 1 corporation. COMMON AREAS AS Ooocs & AMOC1a1 ... 1100 ESTATESALE CHEW ·76 Ven Con-bo0klsso0.~-31~S 0 cond$3000.~209 ftCTinOUelUllNIU St•l•DlltrlctCourtlnOfdtr Great llku, In-~~'f:iu~~:lD CON-~a,,Z~~·:;At;";;7 •201• 2 ..,:; !f,"~~I. '65 =.-.... ~ ~""!.':!: MBZ '83 300SO, mlol 11111 ~DS Coe ·~ lop"'-·, .:.~= •• ::..:-.;.~ .. '~"."= ~'.';:::.;...';'""''" M. RESERVING THERE· .-. W, Good, .... ...._ Musting ). See at 2237 $4500. M utt Sell cond, turbo, ... -greeii, S~=· p~/po, ~~~~doing bullneM u · MERCI Ille with the Ree60ent Agent Tllll atatement wu flied ~~Ot4E· se:SEMI ENTO :ESFOSR ~~~;.r834Cotll M .... CA Avalon St, & Wtl""""" St. "'"2·71"8 leetn Int, all extras, 1 ' a epm 1BOUOUETS 403 StanfOfd In ,...,r,,.., n..~ ent~~ with tM County Clerk or Or· · N • ......... .,.. .. • • ..,,, .-~..--............ Cou ty 0c1 ber 31 EGRESS, ENCROACH-Ch111M v. Folll1, 33302 10tm-7pm dally ow11r w /all records, Irvine. CA 92715 man• Admlnlatratlon, P.O. ange n on ° . MENT SUPPORT REPAIR Altona. Dana Point. CA 1111 Yll LUii• $28,000 obo. 476-2727 P\8JC NOTICE Julle Anne London, 403 Box 2946, Rlverllda, Cel~ t985 ~ ' ' ' Tru1-uti1a -~=;;.;...;==:........-StlnlOfd Irvine CA 92715 "' "' .. .--REPLACEMENT, MAINTEN· 92829 ........ .,.p::...,,.....,.....,._ __ Attend our i.a8 aemlnat M BZ' 83 300S D p ftCTTTIOUe .,_ ' ' rOfnla .2., lu, 1 Claim Ind p blllhed Of Cou AN CE AND 0 THE R Biiiy R. Padgett. 11878 and receive FREE an · ura U Thi• bualneH 11 con-COit bond of SlJ00.00, In D u n.. ange t PURPOSES All AS Dellvale Dr , Rlverllde. CA clan, wt!Vgray, extras. MAim 8TAT'DmNT ducted by: an Individual the lorm of • cuhler'• Of ally r-ilOI November 5, t2. SHO"""' ON ' THE CON· 92505 Ptwt1 INtl Tll2 AM/FM atereo TV No 40K ml buy or USUIM. The fOlloW!ng penont .,.. Julle Anne London certified check madt P•Y· 19. 26. 1985 nro obllg1tlon to buy with Pvt pty, 714 623-6998 doing buelneu u : s.ulde Thi• llaternent WU flied •ble lo IM U.S. Department T-907 DOMINIUM PLAN OR AS d Thi• buelnen 11 con· 401 Marine Trader t;;:i;;. crec:tl• approv1I. Computer s.rvtc.a, 220t jwlth the' County Clerk of Or-or Justice. Of app<oved eure-~~FJ~ED IN THE DECLAR· ~ by: • generll Pllrt- • twin Ford dll, 10KW Gen. &ll-Uftll LUI• MBZ'83 3ooSD. Pure 162~~1., H9wpof1 BMctt; CA a1~ Cou!'ty on October 2. ty. on Of before November rta.JC NOTIC£ PARCEL 3: John w Good radar, loran. 2 dec>th 71•1,.•2 1Hl cleM, whVgray, extru. • """ 985 25 1985 An~ pell-NO exc us aound«s. 2 VHF' a, 2 "' --40K ml buy or auume. Thomu Allen Baur Mme ,... t~ mr/ l>9 flied In lieu of • .... Ofdef .... IOM-2; N-L IVE EASE-Thia ltllement WU tiled anchors. $103,500. VW'70VAN xlnteng pull PvlP1Y· 714623-6998 91 at>ove • I Publlshad Orange Coast coll bond. OtherWIM. the rwtM .... No. •21• MENTS FOR ACCESS, IN· wltll~Countyg:-o10r. 752-1881 Cooler. s "500 MBZ SL 450 '79. ""'4,000 Thie bu1lnn1 II con· Dally Piiot October 29 No-property will l>9 admlnl•"-tar .. -ca__,-«111 GRESS. EGRESS, EN· ~ ountyon ober 18, out bed, . 1 . ., ducted by: 9fl Individual lvember 6 12 19 1985. Off NOTICI Of' CROACHMENT, SUPPORT, 5 BERTRAM 28. Clean & 650-5201wknd/eve orbttofr.Cell831-1400 ThomuAllanBaur · • • T-90l trativ.ty f ettect pur.uant TMllTlt'aaALl ANO FOR OTHER ~ I p9d s 2 500 Aa i Chris or 673-6320 Lou • This •t•tement WH flied lo 19 µ.s.c . 1808• and will YOU ARE IN DEFAULT PURPOSES. ALL AS Publllhed Orange Cout ~~e:i~ 16o-~i1s . l~· •• "ic'• aa...5 --~ VOLVO '74 111AE •• dr adn, with Iha County Clefll of Or-::,~1~: :r:~!~ UNDE.R A DEED OF TRUST SHOWN IN THE CON· Dally Piiot October 29. No-.... m 6c:yt. Sec:rlfloa $&50. Toni Inge County on October 1 t ffl•. petition fl)( remllalon DATED 7110/81 UNLESS DOMINIUM PLAN AND AS vember 6. t2, 19, t985 1a1J INtl 7014 ·65 c6AVXIR Turbe> corN 842~&75 Of 548-2981 1985 ' Pl8..IC NOTICE Of -mltlgltlon of torlel1ure YOU TAKE ACTION TO DEFINED IN THE OECLAR-T .fie P-21. iHo. 8 uli1 In gr .. 1 cond· • c:tasslc VOLVO 'SQ DL W9QOO Pu""__. Of'.,.,..~ MCmCa °' with the Reelden• AQent In PROTECT YOUR PROP-AT~~~EL 4: SweiMn. pat1. r•tOfed, $2700. 644-0530 euto. ale, am/Im eua D•'ly-PllO ...... I "--~--~· AVALA8LITY Chatg• pur1uan1 to 19 ERTY. IT MAY BE SOLO AT EXCLUSIVE EASEMENTS 11111-ic 111\TM'r I lo $750( • ""'""'"" u AU"' USC. t6t8 Ind 21 CFR A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU l-_...;r...;;.o;1-...;;;..;;....;""~';..;;..;~;;....._ S2.500 OBO 631·5272 -A1tn l•prt.. 1100 new pa.nt, ml vember s 12 t9 1ee5' f/11 ANMtll Report t316 Tt-1316 81 without Ill· NEED AN EXPLANATION IN AND TO THOSE POR· St__,..,. "-1',.nt -~111.1. IOO Ill 832.~748 Evae ' ' , T-899 No'1~ANl1 .. ~yg'1~'th1t i • •·• nd cotl .. __ d OF THE NATURE OF THE TIONS OF LOT 1 OF SAID NOTICI Of' m.,. -.• '.I. 111' _....., ,_..., ·-· ,ng 1 c ... m I ''"" • PROCEEDINGS AGAINST TRACT 10526 SHOWN AND AV~ II~ 7U20 Anth.grey/grey lthr Int., 4 "('N 80bodBAJA!,U~~ . the Annual R9port of the Fa-lll~e .. al ... •''ntC~W'1 .. ~"t•"1'! YOU, YOU SHOULD CON· DEFINED AS RESTRICTED Of ANNUAL MTURH -LARGE SELECTION OF "'f<~ml .. bal lec1ory wer-1 rant, ry. t5lv .. ,_.. PlB.IC NOTICE blan Fund, Inc. for Ill 11tCa1 • " • .. " ••TACT A LAWYER COMMON AR~S WHICH Pur1uan1 to Section New chain 100 ft. ranty.Leue Ot' buy! , ndt WOl'k S500. 845-2008 . ,_, anded June 30, 1985, C""'8 ARE ADJACENT WITH AND 104(d) of Iha Internal Rev· 3/8" hltet1 S200. 300 Ft NEW & USED BMW'SI Mf,(108973). • VW ,75 Su,_. Beetle Dk '1CTTTIOU8 _,.,.... wlll be 1V9ll1ble beglMlng eaa.:· RP-45-0016 On 11112185 at IO:OO APPURTENANT TO SAID Code, notlee la herM>y 511&" $400. Suzuki 3.5 l .. IUU.. 14'HI I /bl...... · NAmaTAT'lmNT November 15. 19J5" "' o.te·Octot>et30 1985 SKO-FED MORTGAGE PARCEL8t.2,3.AND5DE-tnettna•nnuat..-um HP 0 /B $250. two 100 yr VOLUME SA.LES ' blue w ue-grey Int, new The ro11owtng peraon1 .,.. principal otfic:. at the ed-Pubfillled Of'ange Coast CORPORATION 11 Iha duly SCRIBED HEREIN. Of the llec:al year ended old antique encrusted SERVICE & LEASING 1s0.~EI La.In Stock-AU on uphole/clutch & P•lnt. doing bullneu .. : MOfeno dr ... llated below fOf In-Dally Piiot November 5, 12. appointed Truat• under PARCEL 5· une 30, 1985 01 THE a.nchort 3~· high S 100 3670 N Cherry Ave LONG "' . A e c en I I u n e . u P • Valley Commerce C«lter. 1pec:llon during regular l9 1985 and puraoant to Deed of AN UNDIVIDED ONE BALDWIN FOUNDATION, 1 ee 875-2703 eves BEACH . JIM SLEMONS Sm~gad, re~tered 1072 S.E. B<lllol, Suite 205, bu1lne11 hours by any • T·90e !;119~: :. 11;:~;;, FIFTY·FIFTH (t/65TH) FEE Pflvat• foundlllon, i. avail· ~-...,..,,...--,,-~-·--(No Cller exlt-405) l1IPll1S I S2 obo 67~ 28 Santa Ana, Callfomla 92707 clttrenwtlor~llwlthln Book t4146 Page 1309 or SIMPlE INTEREST IN AND ble at th• foundation'• su,./Dtcb/lttr~t (71 .. ry)l••1111 1001 QUAIL ST . N.B vw ·eo Rabbit "l " dll SunnymHd Commerce 180dayulter November 15, P\8JC NOTICE Ottlclal Record• In the olllce TO THE IMPROVEMENTS nclpll omoe tor ln9PK-o.... "' --833-9300 4 pd /r1 • I • ter •• Clll10fnla genwll t985 or Iha RecOfder of Of'ange AND APPURTENANCES ON Ion during regular bu"'- -----------Trac»-lnt Welcome 1 ' tn ' new t ret, 1rtner1hlp, 1072 S.E. The ~r ... of lhe Foun· NOTtca Of' County C.ilfOfnll executed LOT 1 OF TRACT 10525 from 9:® a.m. to 5:00 551 + Power eoa1 SHp ln 1 OPEN SEVEN DAYS MERCEDES '78 450 SEL, stereo, extra luef"tank, 44 8'11104, Suite 206, S.nta datlon'1 principal ottlce 11 43 DI.Ant CW b~ DARYL s. KUNG AND ("IMPROVEMENTS") SUB-.m. by arr; citizen wno re- BalbOe Coves. $225/mo I AMG pkg. air. amllm mpg, met blue. S2250 na, Callfornla 92707 Monarch Bay South MITH CATI HOM* MARLENE v. KLING, Hus: JECT TO THE TERMS AND ueau It within 190 deye CALL650-5719 CHI, $13.200. days obo.Call844-4569 Tiii• bu1lnHI I• con-Laguna,CA92617. Al(AMITMC.HOM• BAND AND WIFE WILL CONDITIONS OFTHE MAS-lterth•d•l•olthlepubll· -----850·1242or846-1749 VW '83RA.BBITCONVT. uc!~lpby • generll part-fhe name of the Foun-ANDOf'NiitlON SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TER LEA.SE RECORDED lion. TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE Biie Bee ty 24K I $9000 .. , daUon'1 prlnctpll rnenager TO All•IHTIR TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER 8/10159 IN BOOK 4833, The lound1110n'1 prl~ u ' m · Sunnymud Commerce 11Francie0. Fabllll'I. Jr !8TATI NO,A1_. FOR CASH, '---!>le at time PAGE 274 ET SEQ. OF Of· tflce 11ioc.tect11610 New· 840-9•011E 650-0580/D '"· Ray p C>ltMcneld, Deted lhll tit day of No-To ... helfa, benefldenea, otaaleln l-fui~oflhe FICIAL RECORDS. Canter Drive, Sult• vw '85 Cabf'lolet. Convt t1 Managing Partner Yember t985. credltOft and contingent United SlllH) at THE The 111re11 eddr ... Ind 1140. Newport BHCll. ltd Edit blue Loeded Thi. llalament wu llled Franci9 G. Fabien. Jr .. crectltort. Ind pel'90N who FRONT ENTRANCE TO other common deeignatlon, 26eo. St3000.116t-1391 · ththeCpuntyClerkolOI'-Principal Manager of Fabian m.yl>9othtrWIMlnter•ted w Es p Ac RE . "any, of the rMI PfoC*IY The principal manager ol ' . nge County on October 14, Fund, Inc. In the wllt and/Of wt•I• ot: CONVEYANCE 4940 CAM-d ea c r I bed above I 1 he foundation la Mrt. Marv- VW JETTA. '80, !lk 4dr, 1985 Publlalled Ofange Co111 RUTH CATE HOSKIN, eke PUS DRIVE SUITE C NEW· purported to be: 419 a Baldwin Hodgee. '---------------------------..J 1nrf, Im tier, n-llrM. ,_.. Delly Piiot November 5, RUTH C HOSKIN PORT BEACH CA ail right BRYSON SPRINGS. COSTA Publlthed Of'~ Cou1 ACROU 49 Irritate Bit ofr 722-1738 Doug Published Orange Coll1 1995 A petition hU beef! flied tllle and lnteri.l ~ MESA, CA 92827 Dally Piiot November 5, l Enoagement 5 Tile two 9 Navy rank 14 Spiny shruo genus 15 Ottay 16 nous 17 Bus abbr 18 Sa1l1ng 19 Fa1tllf1JI 20 Goose genus 2? Covered 24 Grtmaceo 76 Mon1se 11111ng 27 Young11ers 29 Currently 30 Capture 33 Seventy 37 Sll0f1-blll<9d rail 38 Und9f wat-'1 39 N0twegoan COtn 40 POSleUlve 4t Sequence 42 Some farm• 44 Explosive 45 Beapeckle 48 Attctudlnoua 47 Poller 53 Copyisl ally Piiot October 29, No-T-905 by Roy E June In the &I· 10 Ind now held bv It und« TM undarllgnect Trua1• t98S VW Supel' Beetle '73, xlnt tiers. 12. 19. 1985 T-~ ;~ Gr:_;ena.n ~~i. Ods 2t~6'0 • •mcf ~"; T ~ rta.IC NOTIC[ Pl&.IC NOTICE Pl&.JC *>TICE N1UC NOTICE P\8.JC NOTICE green 542-4242, ev 957· 1«4 59 Jacob I !wen THE ORANGE COUNTY ENVIRONMENT AL MANAGEMENT AGENCY ANNOUNCES A 61 lncrustallon 62 Sprmg1. lows and niglls 63 Get active 64 Coll sub1 65 E1111au11ect 66 Since Scot ~7 Playrooms OOWN I 01 a not>le 2 Unma~ 3 Sue<:1ncl 4 Know-how 5 Youtn org 6 York's river 7 Ontarto rcvtr 8 M11acu1ous 9 Bawl 10 Tear inducer 11 S111e parl 12 Impulse t 3 ReQu1remen1 2 1 Arrive al 23 Mr Slaughle• 25 lnte<;I~ 26 Hauteur 30 Joyous song JI wea11some 32 Ci ndy 33 Seasoning 34 -C1llH Mtnn 35 8lus1e1 36 Stumblt! 37 Prote<;lttd 40 F10011ng •2 Sllow up 43 Supporter 45 0tSl)OIMH 41 Animate 48 Cranky 50 Twofold 51 P00< auto 52 S.rbar• and Anthon~ 53 Or1nker1 54 Grid no-l'IO 55 PerMCUttl 56 MOltture 60 Procell Nft DIMES A ~LINE WANT ADS r IMPORT ANT NOTICE TO PRIY ATE PARTIES S•ll your Items for $50 or t•u In our famous DIMES-A-LINES pub· lfshecf each Saturday In the 0111y Plfo1. DIMES·A·LINE ads mu1t b• pr•pakJ IO mall or brlno th~ Into the Dally Piiot offlc.. S. sur• to • Include your phOM number or ad, dr.,, In your .a, hive • pr~ on ••ch Item cl no 1bbntvletlon1. DEADLINE: 12 Noon FrldaJ Coeta M-Office aow.,..,,.,... Coetall11a,Ca.na1 • public hearing ON PROPOSED REVISION TO THE BOLSA CHICA LOCAL COASTAL PROGRAM LAND USE PLAN DATE:Tueaday November 19, 1985 TIME: 1:30 pm or seon ther-eafter ------- LOCATION: PLANNING COMMISSION MEETING ROOM 10 CIVIC CENTER PLAZA, SANT A ANA ·The Oran~t.. C:ounty Planntn)~ <.:ommia.'tlOO "'l ll la cnnd11ctinP, d r111Jl1c htllrln1~ r~~nrd Ing rt'v i ll 1oni. o the Ho l1Hl Ch I ca Loc.J I \oil., la l Pro~r.lm/l.oc.i I l'., •. P l an (LrP/LUP) to 1nco qor.1t1 Cullfnrn1.1 Coa'>t 1 Comm1 .... 1on Suv,.~r w l •d Hodiftc-.:1tlons to rh .. t,and '"'-Pl.in. Such m<'d i flc .1ti<>ni. rc·q•li rt· t h.in>',t<" f (>--th\· l.-0nd Us ... Pi.in pnlic.i":. dffcc.tlng wdl.1nc1 burft.>r .11 , w...tlilnd r ·,.tor;ttion and ph.t.,l ng, .. n,·rK\I f;ic lllt v r1•loc tllfln, 1uldlc ac<.o·"l' .ind 1111.d I c worki., t\ll p•r•on" t•Jthcr t.1vortn~ o r OJ.110.,lnK lhh 1ro1ni..JI llf• 111vlt d tn r r ,. ~ "n l L h ~ l r v 1 ~· w., h • f o IL th • P I ,, n 11 I n K Commlw.1olon. It i~ rcqu~i.t url th.it ony wrltt•·n r\''<J•On ~·· l><: .. uhmiltcd to tht· l'l anntn)I Comrnh'linn nt lld'lt 24 l1our rrinr r o th" hc•.1rln~ d.H\.. If Vllll chAll,n1,• tlw r.1t111"· o f -thG 1r•11n•"tl J<ll<•n tn 1,1urt, you may be llmil ·d t o T011.1o1nK on l v thOH· f.,i.•h.•.1o' vl)u nr •om.,ono: "·l i.c rid11ud at lha 1-ublic h .lrln~ rt ... ·,.< rlb~1J In th1 ·nnttc.,, ur IT1 'IHlttun t.nrn 11opondi·nn1 dicllv""rvd to th·· ruld l c t!nt 1rv cnnduC'tan .. 1h, h ... ir1n,. II, or pr lor to, t h 1 p11b llc hc.irlnl(. ror fuqh.·1' lnf•>qn~rl an, r•u l'on ... ir1• 1nvltul tll t..Cl!HIHI Rt1n lq1 1•~t 1>1 ul [.M/Or-1·n SpOCI! Pl4cnntn •• lt (71 .. ) t'J4-')}9t.. i P u~liah d Or•nge Coa •t Daily Pilot ll /~/85 T -0) _ .... --------- . ,, ,. • ....................................... __________________________ ---.;..; ___ ~~~~--~-- I l I FOMCASTI ON A2 ' Serving Newport leach, Coeta Mela, Huntington leech, lrvlne, Lagun1 hlch1 Fountain Vllley Ind 8outtl Orlftll County , A, . F ,IR N 1 A • , ! .._, (1 A ~ ._.., \ f M f' I 1, • ' ... ~ • .-· , t "" 1 .._ Balloting-starts at snail's pac·e • I Extremely low voter turnouts reported for election day along the Orange Coa st BJ PJDL SNEIDERMAN °' .............. School board and special d.istrict races fail~ to.lure swarms of Orange Coast voten ~ their pollillJ places early today. but election officlals were hoping for an improved turnout befor:c the ~Its close. tonight. ·. Ballouna sites will remain open until 8 p.m. Residents with questions about how or where to vote should call the Orange County Rcaistrar of Voters office at B3+2244. Shirley Dcatbn, tbe county's chief deputy registrar of voters, said a few defect1"'e ballot punchinj machines had been rcponed early to4ay. and replM:.ements ~ bein& delivered. Otherwise, no major problems were rcp~>rted at county pollina places, she said. Monday the reaisllV'utaff predic- ted onJy 12 eercent of more than one million repstcrcd 0ran4C County votcn would cast ballots m this off- ycar election. compucd to turnouts as hl&h as 70 percent wbcn state and national offices arc bcina filled. Alona the Oranae Coast.. voters arc piclona school board members in HuntiftJlOlf.:Beach, Fountain Villey and lrvtne. In Newport Beach, Costa Mesa and Laauna Beach, school board candidates· are unopposed. which may aJso contribute to low turnouts, electJon offiai.a.ls said. Trustecs also are bcina tclccted to aovem the Coast and Saddlebeck community college ~1str~u. Teachen union support for can- didates 10 these raoes may prompt added pollina activity. · Votcn wijf also choose directon tn . (Pleue eee VOTBRS/ A.2) 4 • Cout Governor Oeukmejlan hu $3 mllllon In his campaign war chest after an lrvlne fund-nalaer ral-$225,000.JA3 A court hearing.for a Fount ain Valley man shot In the face by pollce durtng a burglary arrest haa been delayed./ A3 California Callfornla has four new lottery mllllonalres, which should boost tickets./ A5 Humphrey the wayward whale has been seren- aded out to sea./ AS Nation A poll shows most parents fall to discuss birth control with their children and would llke echoola and television to dothejob./A7 World A KGB "defector" stuns Washington by claiming hewaacaptured, drug- ged and brought un- conaclous to the United States, whe're'CIA of- ftclala offered to make him a mllllonalre./ M A Mexican diplomat was found beaten and shot to death In his Moscow apartment./ AS Sports Edison and Fountain Val- ley h~h schools get ready for the Big One./81 Ram!3et one back from lnjur llst, but lose their quarterback./8 1 St. Louts pitcher John Tudor Issues an apology for behavtor./81 INDEX Girl's killer to get new penalty trial BJ ITEVE MAllBIZ °' .............. ,. Convicted killer Thomas Fnncia Edwards, the former Costa Meu man who tw cbanaed bis mind about wantina to die in the ps chamber, wu .,anted a new penalty trial Monday. Jt will be \he tbJrd time I j\lry bu been uDd to decide wbetbtt Ed- ...S. lbou1d be executed /or kilUna I ~ Vuma ltiierri and wou"*'I her ftiend Kelly c»ticr, lllo 12 It tbe time o( the I 91 l ~ .. l&id J~ lberri fAIMr oitbe mmdercd lirf, "Now l bl.e tO ID dlrouab aU Utit lllift. I ~to~ to how my 1if1 wu • killed. bow ahe WU ambushed. lbot (1'111• ... &DWAW/AI) lllc helle lliller, 11, trlee oat one of the new YO~ machinee thla m omlna u her m other. flarllyn (center) and Harriet Dlllr .... ,......., ~ ~ Lewan, both precinct wor k en at Collete Park Sc)lool ln Coeta Ilea, make aure her .. •ote .. d oeen't count. · Crumbling home owners file first claim vs. Mesa By TONY SAAVE DRA Of .. Dellr ......... AS 150,000 claim filed against the city of Costa Mesa last week 1s eitpccted to be the first of many lodged by residents whose homes arc cracking because of underground movement. The claim , fiJcd Wednesday by Bnan and Josephine Coleman, at- tempts to hold the city liable for the damage to their Wisteria Circle house: . According to recently updated fig- ures. 141 homes in the same north Costa Mesa area arc reportedly sink- ing and cracking because of land movemen1lwhich.could be linked to nearby construction projects air proved by the city. An esltmate<t. 40 residents air parentJy retained San Francisco at- torney Patrick Catalano to begin leg.al action against the city and other Potentially liable panics. sources said. The Colemans so far arc reir resenting themselves. By submitting the claim. they took the first step toward suing Costa Mesa for their crumbhnR home. where the floor has Badham may join crowded '86 race against Cranston sunk roughly 2 inches and the ccihna has separated from the bedroom wall. The financial request is scheduled to be taken to the council Nov. 18. It must be denied before a lawsuit can be filed. Geme Scars, one of the Rome- owncrs represented by Catalano, said she upccts the other claims to be delivered to the City clerk's office this week. Catalano could not be reached Monday for comment, but neigh- borhood leaders said about 50 resi- dents have rewned the attomev. An (Pleue eee CLAlll/ A2) HB h olds off on law regulatin g massage par lo r s City COu.Rcl l opts fo r f urth-er study ----on contested issue By ROBERT BARKER Of ... 0.-, .... ._ Huntmgton Beach offi cials backed away Monday from enforcmg a regulation enacted three years ago that would have closed nine of the city's I I massage parlors in 30 days. Instead, Cit)' Council members. who have been grappling with massage parlor controls for about I 0 years, put the ordinance on hold unttl they can study stud) 1t fu rther next mo nth. _ Massage parlor operators have mounted hcaV) pressure and filed several lawsutts agamst city cffons to close the parlors down. mcludmg a deadline set three yea.rs ago for the shutdown of massage parlon not meeting locauon requirements by Dec. 4. Mass.age parlors were prohb1ted from being located wub1n 200 feet of residences, 500 feet from schools or churches and t.000 feet from o ne another. Officials said there were 50 other locations m the the ctty that the non-complying parlors could move to. Councilman. John Thomas. per- haps echotng the scnumenl ofh1s six colleaaues. sa1d: 'Tm agamst putting anybody out · of busmess It's as simple as that ·· The hotly debated ordrnance also attempts to class1t) the massage parlors as adult entertainment busi- nesses, and would prc"ent perm11s for their o peration from passing on to new owners when the bustnt'S\eS are sold. .... In attempts to not snl'1C out massage parlors as adult businesses, officials also lumped such divCTSC acuvtttcs as convenience markets. dancing and ltve ent.crtatnment.. teen dancing and fortunetelling as adult businesses. Staff members sa1d aJI the busi- nesses have the potential to create unusual pohcc and land use related problems. A controversy over attempted massage parlor con trots flared last fall when Susie HonJ, attempted to move her Spa of Hawaii massage parlor t~.a shopping center at Spnngdale Strcct and Warner A venue. HCf' operatJon at Beach Boulev ard didn't comply wtth requirements there, but met all standards at the sbopptnJ c.cntcr HowevCf', residents and business ~pie sent u~ a howl and compla100cf that the ~ror would disrupt thei~ "family atmosphere." The counC11 thcn dented the rcloc.a- uon request.. and Hong filed a $250.000 damage cl.aim against the ctty~ A leadmgcnttc ofthcc1ty'senforcc- mcnt efforts 1s Roland Clark.. owner of the Cahfom1a College of Physical .vts. a school for masseuses located on Beach Boulevard. Clar~ complarncd Monday night that staff members have made untrue statements against massage parlors Comments from ~vclopmcnt Scf",ces Dtrcctor James Palm 1n- dlcattng that 50 sue~ in the c1 ty·mec1 location requirements for massage parlors arc an example Clark sajd Some of the 50 sites sugge<;ted by Palm include parkmg lotc; where no buildings arc constructed. he said. "One of the sites Kat the Huntingto n Center parking lot." he said ·Tm sure the' ~ould let someone hu1ld a masc;age parlor 1n the m1ddk-of the lot ·· he !Mild !'>arcast1call~ OC prosecutors form anti-Bird education group By USA MAHONEY A•l•ted atory on AS Bec kman funds will.bring science study center t o OC t Amokl 0 . Beckman. eha.irman of Fullenon..t>ucd Beckman In trv· ments, 11 mak.lnt lou of eh~riiabk contributJons thett days, parucularty to teicnti6c and medicaJ iMtJtutiOM. The SS-~-old Corona de.I Mar resident ts p vU\I away wte sums from his pcnonal ton\loe tbrouab the Arnold and Mabel 8ocbnan f:oun· cUuon. ln recmt years, be tW donated SS m lllioo toward the en>~ Irvine M~l Center and Sl. millioo fot P11L S1£11D1111 Focus nN THE NB'fS the Beckman La~r lnst1lutc and Medical Oink at UC lrv1nc Just lbis year, M contnbutcd S 12 million to \ht tanford Univenit) School of Medione for 'I molecular and ltftetic 11\Ntcine «ntet And bis \ S40 m1l1ton donation last month to a lln1vers1ty of ntinois rcllearcb tn-..-1 stJtute IS ~hcvcd to be the taracst 11f\ ~ ~ ever b) an lnd1v1dual to a pubhc univcnit)' Bul when the Washtf\4\0n. D.C. bucd National Aaldemtes of Sci· cnocs and Elll>necnna astcdfor fioanctal help a ~ ycan aeo.. 8cctman was 1n1t1&1ly akcotical. "t have a conception of Wubi~ ton as be1na a bwaucratac J~ Beckman satd dunna 1 DCM con· fert~ Monday. "l wan•t su~ I wanted to pour money t.ato il .. 8u1 \he Oranac ~ 11\ cbanetd bts mind-'-' d9c la1b moved away from Wuhi...-eed toward 1 Wea 0U1 n.tJ __.far ~-wSM•a/Aa) 0 EDWARDS GETS NEWS TRIAL ••• INmAl · · dowa." Deputy DUtrict Attorney John CooJCy aaid he fee1I ~ally tony for Canier, wbo IPlll must ao ~ \be Oldell by deecribilll &be moowaa for juron. She is now ll. ... blbldlythatwecu'tletherput \his wbole thins behind ber.'' Conley laid. Bdwarcb, a bu.tty man whole thin· Dina blond hair is pulled into a pooy tail. wu convic1ed of fint-<Searee murder and attempted murder in. l 983. Juron in th'at trial alto do- termined that Edlttll'ds WU l)'in& in wait when be shot the Late Elllnorc ~ a ~ cireunmance that qualified him for the death penalty. The two airl• were ambulbed u they walked tbrouch Cleveland N• tional Forest, about 20 milei cut of Sari Juan Capistrano. They apparent- ly wm lootiq for a plcnic spot when Edwvdl drove up in a Detawl pickue uuek and called out .. Hey, airts befon &bootina. Tbe flnl proeecution effort to bave Edwarcb .ent to the pa chamber ended with a bun& jury, but the leCO.nd ended Wt spriq with a unuimou.a vadict fC)I' ct.th. Superior Cowt Judie Jama Judie ordered a third penalty trial M0D48y after indicatin& be aarecd with Ed-W&R\l ltiomeyl that &e bad wroncJy permitted cenain teltimoay dwint a penalt)' trial lo Mly. Tbe testimo~ in question came from Clw1one Tib.ilu, a woman wbo befriended Edwards and lat.et testi- fied that be planned to break out of ~CoWlt jailand kill b.ia fOCJDer wife and mo~·in .. law in a biiane ~J.iajOUI ritual. -Ridwd ScbwarUbefL a public dehder una £4wardl. <te- ICribed T= a confulcd pet'IOI\ wbo bas no idea or what the truth it. •·0ot1ara to doouta,_ I cu eet bet \0 ld1 me anythina 1 want." aaid Schwartzbe!,a. who will aak that Tibjlu be ebminated u a witnea in a barinl tet for Ju. 13. -r.o femalejW'Ota. wbo bave been folio~ the ~inp liDce they voted \0 een Edward.I to lbe pa chamber, II.Id Moftday that Tib.ilu' testimony bad little impect on t'beir decilion. .. I would have voted, the ume qy even without ber," wd one of tbe juron. ScbwatUbefl said Edward• hll cbanecd bit mind about wantina \0 die, a desire he expreacd lut aprina when be fired bis attorneys. C&"AIMFILEDBYBOMEOWNERS ••• f'romAl iabmaJ mee1ina conduCtcd by C..talano at Sean' Carnation A venue home lut weekend attracted rouahJy 1 SO resident&, Sears said. The Colemans' claim is the latest development in the local controveny over the umub&e soil in an area bo~ by South Coast Drive, Beat Street, Fairview ROlld and Swlfiawer. Avenue. A city~ntncted, S3S,OOO FOIOli- caJ 1tJMIY i1 uoder way lo dciennine th~ cause of tbe pound movement that is damaaina t.bc fashionable homes. Residen ti claim construction on the South Coaat Plaza annex on Bear Street 11 to b&ame. They charp that a 20-footei!cavation for an uoder-sroaM lot is draioina around .... Dealt.y retiaefttiaJ tnct. C:auUaa the land \0 lettle. Homeowners further clwae that tbe valntiou &om conati'uctioo won OD a U adjaceilt ~t compiles is w•vatina tbe . VOTERS STAYING HOME.IN DROVES ••• ProaiAl . local water, sanitary and servic.e districts. Visits to several area polling places early today turned up a scarcity of vo1er1. Barbara Disbrow, a precinct worker at Rancho San Joaquin Middle School in Irvine, said she was warned to expect a H&ht turnout "They told me to brina my knit- tina. •• she said, .. and a lot of coffee." Of the 834 Irvine resident& rqis- lered to vote at the school in University Park, only 10 showed up in the fint 30 minutes of votina. Resident& arc bein& asked to elect two school board candidates from a field of nine hopefuls. "J never miss an election," said Baibara Andersen, who rode her bicycle to that Irvine polling place. "I doo'i like to tell people bow rm voting." The early turnout perhaps was a little hi&her than ettpected at voting booths at Gisler School in Hunt- ington Beach, aa:ording to precinct ta]>1ain Sharon E.lz.en. Tbrcc people we~ outside waiting for the polls to open at 1 a.m. About 10 of the precinct's 620 rqistercd votcn had cast ballots in the fint 2S minutes of voting. Elzeo said keen interest in the Huntington Beach Union Hi&h School District, where the t.eacben' union is actively supporting a slate of three c:aodidates., may generate hi&h interest. Jn Costa Mesa. votina wu IC\slow early today at the Bethel Towers ~llin& place that worten were viJ.. 1bly disappointed wbeo the only person walkina throuah the door announced himself IS a reporter. ''Shuck&. I tbouaht we bad a voter," said one o( the clerb. Only five ballots bad been cut by 7:30 a.m. out of the 1,126 voten assigned to the pollina location, a senior citiz.cns comJ)lex on 19th Street "It's always slow around here, .. said polling supervisor Evelyn Peter. "And people look at the sample t.llot for this election and feel it's not worth bothcrina to vote." ln Laguna Bcacb.. a similar lack of activity was reported by Estelle Marshall, election officer at the Jewish Community Center on Broad- way. "Things have really been slow," she "Said. "So far, the only voten we've bad are the four of us (precinct worlcers) end two otben. Tbe~·s not much thiJ time uound to bP.n& people out \0 vote." ID La&una Beacb1 v<?ten are cutina bellota ?or SaddJeOKK Collete Di~ trict Truateea ~u tbe Lapna 8e8cb u o.i.fied Diltrict and t.bc l..lpu Bach C.ounty Water District, tbe incumbenu are nmnin& uo~ wu tbe ~election Manball bad ever worked, lhe ro- plied. .. Ob. beavena yea!" · -In N~ &ach. l.bere were more -oeook waitina in front of the Udo Ille Oubhouae for the momina ICbool but than there were votina shortly after poU. ~at 7 Lm. Two polliaa places were set up on t.bc island, 'but only 1 S of the 799 ~ votcn for the eutem half ottbe Lido Ide bad cut their votes u of 9 Lm., accordina to election volunteer Beryl Metinioff. .. All we know is what we reld in the papen, we don't know bow many people to expect," aaid Melillkoff. In Fountain V~nct workerl at Masuda School said DO one bad cut a ballot by 7:30 Lm. Election judle Marian Tomaino called it "a very quiet deGtion." At Cox School, alto in Fountain Valley, nine people bad voted by 7:40 a.m., althouah 1,168 people were ~tered \0 cut baUota at that site. I don't think there will be a aood turnout, but we·~ croaina our fingera," said election judic Jane Weiler. Althouah the school board race was appamitly not spertina much con- cern amona voten, Weiler said, "It should interest them. It's for the kids' sake:• BIRD FACES OC OPmSITON ••• Prom Al some members of the California District Attorneys Association ex- pressly to work toward the defeat of Bird, Reynoso and Grodin, Wade said. The association may not become actively involved in politics. buJ the volunteer a:roup can, be said. The group called Bird's deciJions and those of Reynoso and Grodin inconsistent.. es~y when it comes to upholding the state's death penalty. Bird bas never affirmed a death penalty case. Reynoso and Grodin have eacb affirmed only one since the l 978 initiative established it. "There have been claims that grosecutors are upset becaute we -...Ut to win all the time," said Guy Ormes, a deputy district attorney who specializ.es in major fraud cases. "We want a court that will tell us the rules and stick by them ... Protecuton point to teveraJ cues wbe~ they believe the b.igb court erred or reverted iuelf, i.ncludina one first tried in Oranac County. The Bird court revcned a decision to impose tht death penalty on Marcelino Ramos, an Oranae County man found ~ty of tbe 1919 mwder of a Taco Bell employee and the attempted murder of another in Santa Ana. Ormet and Jim OoniJer, another deputy district attorney familiar with the case, said the Supreme Court established Ramos' intent to kill -a neceaaary factor in decid.ina in favor of the death penalty -but ~ject.c:d the «ntence on constitutional grounds. • But the U .S. Supreme Court threw out the constitutional arsument and sent the matter blclc to the Bird court, which then dropped ita findina of intent, Ormes said. . .. She doesn't want to affirm aox death penalty cues. so she doetn't, • be said. Until recently, Bird bat ~mained silent in the face of repeated criticitm. She explained her views last week in a CC>PYrilht story by the Times Tribune inhloAJ\O. Bird said the would vote to affirm a death sentenc.e that met the proper constitutional tesU. She called the l 978 initiative establilhin& the death pcoalty "in.artfully drawn" and blamed it for the am.all number of death sentence aftirmationa to date. Bird acculed her detncton of beina riabt-wina conlef'Vatives who want her to bend to their views on capital punilhment instead of follow- ~the law, accord.ins to the Times Tnbune. BADHAM MULLS 'S6 SENATE RACE ••. Prom Al .. \ Sunny and warmer period ahead U.S. Temps .. Le ., .. .. 4J 11 41 14 4 aa 4 1 ., .. 11-• .. u .... .. 41 IO II to .. 41 .. .. to • IO 14 .. .. . . .. • 11 41 .. ti IO .. .. 41 .. 71 41 41 .. n • to • 47 .. .. If n .,. "°' .,. A 40 74 ., ., 42 41 ~ .... u ,, .. .. 41 .. :: !: _____ ,.._110tW __ ~_. _~ __ HOAA __ us_o.oe_o1_c-... __ ~· M 61 ..... ,_ 1' N :..: Calli. Temna ~~ ., " 1740 r--... Tl '°11 ¥10w.b'Hlloln ...... la.l'ft. _ .... _. __________ 10_'4_ ,, ......... .., .., :~ : = r. :: Surf Report .. 4, i.,.,...., ., .. IO 41 LOe ~ 10 • LOOAltOll .. 41 ~ ". Hiii ........ • .. ,_........ T1 11 ..._ '*"· """'*1 ft ... ...... .. ........ """'*1 If 41' ~ Clly t4 II Did ~"""'*1 " 41 .......... 72 It ...,_ .., • ... to 12 L..- 71 • ""'*'° 1' .. a.ia....... MM ... ,,._.. .. M -~14 • 71 ....... .. .. ....dlrwllon:~ .. 41........ 74 ...... ~ ~ ....... lot14110onerdr'll•6p.m. ----------.1 ...... ~ .... ~ :; ::::,.. :; :; Ttdee '711......, UM • 41' ~ M 61 TODAY M 14 c.11111e 11 17 a-IO .. t:OS P·'"-4 . .4 • ., ~ 11 11 9-ld 1ow 10:°' '""· o.t •• 47 41 ... IO 4e ., . 41 .. ....... 12 u ._ .. ., ---------..._... N 11 """• t:S*a.m 4.2 ML WINft If M ,.,... low ~ p.m. J t Enended ....... " .. 9-ldl!WI l:llp.m ... .._..,, ~ • It '-Id IOw tO:U P-"' 0.4 • 71 10 .. 41 41 12 • 10 .. .... .. 17 ~ 1111 P'tllr ~ t:1= • ............ 11 .. 8lolfl .... IOd9r .. 4:17 p111 , 1tw ~----. ...,_ ,..,.... " .. w-. .... , .. 1c11a.lft._, .... ..-. _, _.. ...,..,._ o't'tr Md ........ 12 10 .. 4;11 P·'"-=:-· ...,._~~ '.!.10 II. ... ..._.'° 12 aa w-i rtw 1oe1ey a1 11:ao p.m ...... ~lillwilt.. ~-ton. ..,..,.... 12 61 Wedl.....,.Mt:Ola.m.,wlltw~ -... -...... .,.._ .. .,.. 71 ... •11:0lp.m. BECKMAN SCIENCE CENTER ••• Prom~l the renowned scientific honor aoa cietiet.. Monday's nC'WS conference was called to announce that Beckman'• foundation is oonatina $20 million to construct such a center Mijacent to UO. The Irvine Co. bat ~ Lo contribute the 7-aae improved and land.leaped parcel, valued at another $6 million. · Bcckman's donation was the lara- est tinale contribution ever received by the academies, and the S0,000- square-foot Irvine facility wiU be named the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Center. The academics bave limited mem· benhipa, and an offer to join it viewed IS one of the most ~tiajout bonon an American 1C1entist cu receive. Officials of the academies said a West Coast center ii an acknowtedg- ment that many prominent scientists DOW reside in 1hil rePon· Academy mcetinp in Wuh.inctoo have been inconvenient for scientists livina in the West. The new lrvi.De ocnter J... with conference facilities and at.aft' omocs.. will be mon ICClCSlible to these raearcbers. .. It is ... important to note that approximately one-third of the mem- benhip of the National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Enaincerina live in the western United States,.. said -Frank Praa, president of the National Academy of Sciences. "California. in p&tt.icu1ar, ii the home 111te \0 mo~ memben of the two academies than any other state in tb,e nation." He alao noted that the Irvine center will be mo~ acoetlible \0 viaitina scientist& from Plci1ic Rim nations, such u Japan and China. The academiea, opera . under a oonareuional charter, °.::vile the federal aovernmenton praaina lcien- tific issues. The Beckman Center will not boute bancb-oo laboratory ~ eeucb. lnl1ad, it will feature an auditorium 1ea1ina up to 300 and smaller mcetina room• for scientific cooferencea and workshops. Pbilanthropil1 Beckman attached several atrinp to bi.a donation. He ioaiated the IQdemies u.e the center \0 mldy moral issues wociated with scientific raearch. "I have Iona been cooocmed over the haphazard manner in which many ethical iuucs relati04 to sci-Q technol~ and IOCtety arc ed," Bee-man said. "Many ~or ethical pro~lems have arisen from aenetic enaineerina. for eum- ple. "C\Jrrcntly, such matten are aired in the media lartely by activitts who see only a narrow upect of the problem. Tbrouab 1impli11ic alopneerina and ma1s demon- strations, they 1eek to establilb poli- cies that abould be establiabed only after thoroup, thouabtful atudy and dilCulaion by competent Jelden .... " Beckman 1&id bia support of the West Coat &cilitywu contiqenl OD the aademies' Pledie to ute it for the study of. •Ethical and soci.aJ iuuea in sci- ence tecboolosY and medicine; •The health of scientific work in the United States. with P9;r1icular reference to education, tramina and the availability of tooll and advanced instruments; •The transfer of technology from rcsean:b to comme'rcial use and the alotial spread of advanced tecb- nol<>I)'; •International collaboration iii science and technology. Executives of the two academies said the Irvine facility, which abould open in early 1987, will allow ex- pansion of existina prosrams into the areaa Beckman uraecl· The academies anticipate a SI 00 million budaet in 1986. Past studies by the academies have fo:cuted on th~ prospect ofa "nuclear_ ... wtDter" and bob between cyclamate and cancer. The Beckman Center will have no formal affiliation with ill neiah~r1 UC Irvine, but the prcsu,e attacnca to the facility is certain to rub off on the campus. . UCI spokeswoman Kathy Jooes said Cba.nc.ellor Jack Peltaaon is particularly pleated about the academies' new facility and is looking forward to workin& with these groupt. Peltaaon bas been intent on enhanv in& UCTs repuwion u a research c.enter . .. He sees the ~mies as exactly the kind of institution he'd like to 1ee locate near the campus," Jones said. F. Sherwood Rowland, a UCI professor of chemistry and a member of the National Academy of Sciences, aJao is pleued. He said the location acknowledges that "the center of gravity for scicn- titU bas moved from beina all on the Eut Coaat to bavina a 1trona group on the West Cout IS well." The Irvine 1ite may indirutly help UCl'a efforu to attrlet prominent new faculty members, Rowland said. Conferences at the Beckman Center will likely prompt the nation'• beat scicntiata to become better ac- quainted with the adjacent UCI carnpua, he II.id. Aboveall1 Rowland laid, the Irvine location indicates the academies bo- lieve UCI is movina toward the ranks of the West Coast's top univcnitiel. aucb u Sta.nford and UC Berkeley. "The academies ~ize that wbat cxi1t1 now at UCI lt just the beajnnina of what'• aoina to el.i11 here," Rowland said, Naylor, R·S.n Mateo; Los Anaeles County Supervisor Mike An- tonovich. Badham's addition to the Senate race would not be seen as much of a threat to Dannemcyer, who may announce bis candidacy as early as the end of this month, aa:ordina to the Fullerton congressman's aide Duane Crumb. tuents and specific su~rt from Badham'1 constituents. Tbcy are all Rq>Ubli~• but they don't necess- arily support both... · Altbouab the 'formal an- nouncement bas not yet been made. Danoemeyer..r. like Bedham, is "Jook- i"f, into it," \...rumb said. bu also established an cxplora\Ory 'f ' committee to atudY the feasibility of runnina and "bu maintained all Ilona that if be bu enoup mQDeY by January, be will nm, .. the--"-.;.....;. said. ~uau GETAGRIR "I don't think that Coopaaman Badham would take any of Dan- ncmcyer's support away," Crumb said. "I think that there is specific support from Oannemeycr'a consti- Just Call 642-6086 'We've cstabUabed an exploratory committee, and he'a travelin& aroUDd the state, look.in& into it and test.lna the waten," Crumb Mid. A spokesman from Dan lunp'en's office said the co~ wbo reprctenll part of Huntiftl\00 ee.dl, If Badbam cbOOICI to join the field of competitors. "it will further dilute the rac.e and will contribute to the muaive aplit" created by ao many Republicans rurulina for tbe Senate, the kesnwl said. ,_;re (Bad.ham) wouJdo '1 be a lhttat," the spokesman~ "Every- ooe i1 an equal p&.rticipent. 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