HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-11-14 - Orange Coast Pilot'OMCAIT80N A2 • lerytng Newport lelctt. Cotta Meta. Huntington IMch, lrvlne, Leguna leleh, fountain v..., Ind 1out1t Or .... County ..
r Al If IJH Nff, .,.,.i, r r , ., ••1, 1 • " ' ' I •4 •
ewport faces insurance ·bind
ne o its four carriers notifies city of
ance lt!ion af}er htgfidamage claims
•
B1 IUSA.N HOWLETI' °' ...............
The city manqc:T said Newport
~h ~u ~nceled in March l 98S by
1u previous tnsuranoe company. The
cancellation came after an Orana.c
County Superior Court j ury's do-
cision to award S6 million to a man
paralyzed in a beach accident.
tbe third SS million layer and Penn renew the pohcy.
America for the lut $4 m1U1on of the "The terms of the pohcy 1uueid in
co.mbined S20 mimon pohcy, Wynn your favor require 4S days advance
wd. notlCC of non-renewal," the letter
-..-...-. One oftbe tour companies provid-
lDI Newport Beach wnh insurance
coverqc !las notified the city it
i'?t.endl t.o cancel 1ts hab1hty policy,
etty offi~a confirmed Wednesday.
dollars worth of liability clatms that
.J\l.v!.~Jl_filed qaipst the <>fanae
Coast aty. The claims ran.ae from
ellcessive forte aJleptionS 1&1inst the
Polic.e Department to damaaes in-
currtd after an old oil well exploded.
followin& the canccllation..by.Iwin
City Insurance Co., only one com-
~ny bid to cover Newpon Beach.
ynn said.
Mike Boaan. the city's insurance stated. "Becau1e at 11 not aJways
broker1 said he ts lookana into the poss1ble for us to determine whether
reuoruna behind First State's letter we Will be favored With renewal or
placina ~ SS mill1on layer of whethernwt1Imcet minimum undcr-co~eraae ~n notice of cancellation. wnt1n1 requirements pnor to the
"J can tell you naht now that they
arc not a,o1na to renew," 8opn sa.ad.
"They are pullJDt out of ooes
throu&hout the at.ate." He wd the
o ther three comperuea have 001 aent
letters or intended non-renewal, "but
insurance tJ .hard to M l. evct)'bof:h_
knows that."
9opn represents Cal-Insurance. a
Torranoe compeny that handles lbc
insurance for about 30 CltJes throu&h·
out the state.
I
The nptlce by FirsJ,.State Insurance
comes in the wake of millions of
More Orange County
residents are dytng of
AIDS, but the rate la
loweL.L~
Calif om la
Public Utilities Com-
mluton approves private
ownership of pay phones,
higher tolls.I A5
Na don
House approves a blll to
temporarily refill
T reaaury coffers and
avert flnanclal crisis Fri-
day./ Al
Leak of a corrosive
chemical evacuates
3,500 homes In West
Virginia town.I Al
World
A volvano erupts In west-
ern Colombia, triggering
a mud lllde that may have
kllktd 20,000./ M
Boating
The tallshlp CaJlfornlan
Mta lall for Mexico with
M.applles for earthquake
vtctlms./81
Sporta
Costa Mesa High water
polo star Alex Crenshaw
11 looklng toward a bright
future.101
Entertainment
"North and South" mini-
series tops the Nletaen
ratings and prompt• a
promotion at ABC./81
INDEX
Boating
Erma Bombeck
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Bualneea
Clualfled
Comics
Orouword
Death Notloea
Entertainment
Horoeoope
Ann Landers
'Opinion
PaparlZll
Police Log
Publlc Notices
Sport a
Televttlon
WMther
81
82
B4
A3
A9
04-8
e.4
06
85
82-3
05
B2
A8
81
A3
85-8
01-3
B3
A.2
Firings
byO~TD
.prompt
claims
B1 PAUL AACIHPLl!Y °' ............
A Huntinaton Beach man and
ciaht other Oranae County Tran-
11t Oi1trict e mplo)'ClCI have fHed
claim• totaJi~ S29 million
apinst the di1tnct. allea.i"I t~
.ete ftred or 1u.epended atbi-
ttarily wilhout ldvancc notice or formal bcari .
RJclwd w"aro. of Hunti"lton
Bacb and Michael Rodriplez o(
Santa Ana were ftnd by tbt
di1trict for an au.ct~ at tbc dittrict'• Irvine malntenance
yard lnvolvint• n,..t f\ICI ltlud
"'non&e \hat sprayed at leel1
one 1upcrvi10r
John Junes of Santa Ana II.id
(Pl•H ... CUIW/AI)
"All \hey said is that th,ey have put.
us on notioe not to renew," City
Manaaer Robert Wynn said.
The city ia covered by Planet
lnsuranoe Co. for the first $6 million
Fint State Insurance for the next SS
million, Associated International for
I ~m 1nvcsopt1n1 1t to find Uie • required notice. we therefore must ~e !?tent pf !he insurance com· noufy you at this ume of non-renewal
pany, Bopn 111d. · effcctJve Apnl I, t986. Please uoder-
Bopn said a copy of1 letter dated stand that it as no t out 1ntent1on to
Oct.11 was sent to the etty F1t'1t State non-renew. but we have no way of
lnsuranoe indicating it would not knowing the future."
More than $60 m1lho~ 1n cxoeu1ve
force •nd falac arTC'lt clJums arc (Pleue Me NEWPORT /A2)
HB hails House
action adoptin
flood control bi I
By ROBERT BARllER
Of ... O..,........ ..
Womed that much of thc:1r city
so meday will be buried b)
floodwaters, Hunungton Beach of-
ficials said today they are "pleased
and encou~·· that the House of
Representats<-cs on Wednesday ap-
proved a $20 billion water project!>
bill.
The measure mcludes SI 2 b1lhon
for flood control of the Sant.a Ana
River, which officials say poses the
wo,.,t flood thrc.a.t we~t of the M1ss1~
sipp1 River.
HunUnJ!on Beach Mayor Ruth
Bailey said that . ijpusc approval of
the bill. which still musl 10 to the
Senate and faces a possible p~1den
ual veto as well as potential slur-
m1sh1ngover the allocation of money,
"as a step in the ngbt dtrectton. It took
about 20 years to Jet to this po1nt."
Hunlington Beach Councilwoman
Ruth Finley, a m ember of the Santa
Ana River Flood Protecllon Aaency
and a local flood conltol committee,
wd she 1s ''absolutely pleued."
This 1s somethana that's tcmbly,
Lcmbly needed." s.he said ... Whet.her
the b11 storm comes an 100 years or
two years. the potcnual danger 1s
always there."
Included m the measure to harness
the n vcr that runs through the a lies
of Hununcton Beach. Fountain Val-
ley and Costa Mes.a. arc proposals by
the U.S. Anny Corps of Engineers to
ancrcaae the capacity of Prado Dam in
Corona, build a new dam between
San Bernardino and Redlands and
improve flood control channels.
The flood control channels and
widening of the nver's mouth as 11
enters the Pacific Ocean actually as
scheduled for later phases of con·
strucuon. according to offiC1ab.
(Pleue Me FLOOD/ A2)
Lottery money
in court battle
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of ... O.., ........
A Newpon Beach woman who won
SI 00,000 1n the ( ahfom1a lo1tc:rv
Monday may have to tum the
wmnings over to a company suing hc:r
husband.
Orange Count y Superior ( oun
Comm1ss1o ner T homas Keenan is
expected to rule toda) whether he v. ill
order a hold on the lottery mo nc>
until the: lawsuit by the Perr) Moms
Co. ofNewpon Beach t'> rt"SOlved
allome)s argu('d that Mrs Nune1
who 1~ not employed. used mone\
trom her husband to purchase th~
loller) 11ckeLS The winnings. 1here·
fore. llrlong to hoth Nune7cs and can
llr claimed should Moms WUl us
lawsuit, attorney~ said
Raul Nunc:1 contacted this mom ·
ing at home. refused comment o n the
ca~
Color leafing out
It may not be New ltD&la.nd, bat tbJa
eycamore drn1ed ln aatmnn baee makee a
colorful plctare on a clear morntnc at the
Koll Center ln Newport Beach.
Keenan also must decide if Sharon
Nunez's winnings belong to hc:r alonr
or to her husband Raul. as well
In coun pape~. PerT) Mom s C o
But court paper~ \Uhm med
"'edne~} by thr Pcm Mom!> ( o
\aid Nunc1 failed to uphold a 1981
lease for restaurant equipment he
rented fo r use in thr« restaurants he
o v. ns in Orange: ( ount)
( Pleue eee LOTTERY/ A2)
----------------------------------Jucy gets drunken
driving death case
By STEVE MARBLE
Of ................
Jurors today are debating whether a
41-ycar-old mother should ao to
prison for alleaedly causina a multi-
car accident on Pacific COast Hiah-
way that injured five people and
killed a Huntinaton Beach airl.
Joan Kathryn WiJkoff could be
sentenced to four years in prison if
convicted on manslau&hter. feJony
hit-and-run and drunken drivina
characs.
The Aua. 13, 1983, accident killed
17-=ld MJcbelle Salle, whose Vo Bua wu btattercd and
rammed at least thtt:e can before
disanteiraong. Salle was burled near-
ly 300 feet from her car.
Prosecutor James Mulgrew told
Jurors that Wilkoff caused the acci-
dent with her erratic, drunken dn v1na
and then tned to flee the accident
scene.
Wilkoff. apparently impatient with
slow-movina cars, fulled onto the
sandy shoulder o Pacific Coast
Hi&hway and then jerked back into
'traffic, forcina Salle to take evasive
action, said Mularew.
He said an off-duty shenffs deputy
chued and captured Walk.off after
witneuina the accident.
(Pleue Me DRUJU.&N/ A3)
QC water district
trying to stay afloat
Cities' withdrawal
could water down
ba
An effon by three cities to
wilhdraw from the Municipel Water
District of Oraqe County could
mean hither water bills for m0tt
county con1umen from Bree to San
Juan Capi.1uano. It could alto en· cSaneer the councy'a ~ni~ power on water iMUa amW predktlon1 of
an lmpeadine clrouabt.
TboM are cbc wwni• o( water
oftkiall tbJ'oulbOut the Oi'ante out ~ ~ the oowuy•a ..,._ water
dilUict ftlbU ao keep tbc a tiet of
Suta Ana. AMbeim and f'Wletton
&om wftbdnwt .... -The LcicAI -"AfPtC'/ fomwtion Commillion p w the cilia ita .._.
lna Nov. 6 and evn ruled they could
cata u ....... Sl.4 milOoe -
oeatty one qUlt1cr -ofthc d1tttict'1
n:terVea. The money reprcsenta the
amount of taJtcs pejd by the cities to
MWOOC durina the m1d-I 960s.
However, district o fficials arc hop.
int an Orante County Supenor Court
judfe will ovemile the dec111on 1n
what promise• to be a Iona. com·
'pUcated lepl btatt.le. Testrmony 11
ecbeduled to bqln Dec. 16.
Al tbe he.art of the &Pue 11 the SI ·
per-acre--f oot 1ervlc:ie fee chatted to aeeoaa buyina wboleaalc imported
water from MWDOC, which acta aa a
ntlddleman for the MetropOlJtan
Water Oittric:t of Southern C,.al1· fot'Dia. (Aft Kft foot of water i1 about
327 .ooo ,.UOO..)
S.Dtl Ana. Anabeim and f'ull.
cnon, u cbu1cr mcmbcn of the lartef Meuopobtan Diltrict. doa'1
Med a middlemu ud can buy
ditta!1-&om tltcRpeneeeey. H~
ever, MWDOC ofBdalJ maincain tbe
dtiea mu.et llti0 pay ll aeut ~of tbc IW'Cbal9e ....... they be8dlt &om
other Munldpal Water lttVka. tudl
Autin ltWot BeeJ
T~v
SAAVEDRA
11 an euens1ve educauonaJ prosram
Meanwhile, the othu 29 •nc1cs
contractinJ with the Mun.ape] Water
Dittnct ofOrans County -1ndud-
1na the ollct of Hunt1naton Bach
and Fount.lln Valley -may ~t
tapped for the lost money. To 11Wf\at
dqrec dcl)Cnd• on bow much im-
ported water II uJed b)' the indJYldu&I
membm
Additionally. tan :tfue.
MWOOC tencral maaaeret. the
dittrie\ may han to bl~ patal a Latte pan of iu budllet or r&lK ter\'1CC
fees by u much u 30 pcrcut A.ftd \bat could lead IOmt OOU\11
W9W lllDaa lO jump alup lftd jOln
llM only odMf. umtnna poup chan.-'!dint Meuopofltan Dt tnct watet to On1* Cou.aty _-lhe Coe.ul Mv-
ruape.I Wata Diitrict (Pl--.-WATSa/A.2)
Accused wife-killer's
caseinjurors'hands
By STEVE MARBLE °' ... 0..,. "91 ....,
The fate of a < osta Mesa man
ac.cused of murder 1s 1n the handi. o f
Juror!> who must decide whether
Austin Elliot Beal killed his wale in a
momt'nt of pau1on and drunkenn<'''
or 1f the cnmc was a sloppy hut
calculaled slaying
Beal. a middle-age. wh1te:ha1rt"d
man who ~ra1A.lc:d notn to h1~
attome) and rarel) look«! at w11
nesses dunng the lh~·we<"k tnal in
Santa ._na. " ac(u'>C'd nf beating and
stranghna hi\ wile .ind then \tagsng a
dramauc. da)'IOOI uandofT ...,1th
UC Irvine
architect
Pereira
dlesat76
By PHIL SNEmF.llMAN °' ..... ,... .....
Architect Wilham Pert1ra, who
destined Los AD.JCIC1 lntcmattonal
Asfl)Ort. Cape Can1vt'1"ll and man)
othe-r notable 'Pf'OJ«lS.. dttd Wcdnc~
day. He aJIO ltft 1 fll"tfic.nt mark on
Ora• CouM)'. bh adm1rtn g1d
today
httlra·s death at 1 LM -'nsclC1
bolp.tal was annbutcd to hean
daxue. He wu 76.
Tiw to. Anadn arcb1tt"C1 wa
rape>ntJble for plannlna U lrv1nc 1n
the eatl)' I 96()a.. and he dcs.,ntd a
number of t\a bu11d1np.
After dman•na the cam~ Ptt·
ttra ,,,.s ha~ to develop the muter
olan for lbt 9 3. ()()().urt I rvtnt'
~b. includ1na the oon1o n that
police while holding h1!> l'"'<> w ung
children captive
The ont-t1mc me' hantl isl hargt'd ,._
v.11h fint-de&rt'C murder in th<' 1Q1n I
~I•> ing of C1re1 chen Bea l. It If
rnnv1ctcd, he: could IX' 'lentent'ed to
hfc in pnson
But 8<.'ar~ 11ttomc:) urged Jurors 111
convict th<' man of a lesser t harge of
man'llaughtcr. whtth came~ a mu1
mum pnson ~nttnce of Sill year\
Don Ruhn&ht descnbed h1~ client
u a pathetll drunkard who ··nipped
our· after a nip.ht of dnnl ma bttr.
brandy and hourhon and fightan~
v.1th h1~ ··nagsn~ .. wife
(Pleue eee RU8BAJID'8 / A2)
became t.he a t) of trv1 ne
His other local accomphshmentJ
include the muttt .plan for Hunt-•
tr\flOn Hatt>ou1. the aft'luent water·
ont"nted ru1<kntal oommunuy an
Hununcton Beech In Ntwp0r1 Beach, Ptmra p&aMed N~ C'tn\Cf aa a circular amy of (Pl--.-llA.ITSaj Al)
.. . "'
..
,
,
• L
NBWPORt' LOSES INSURANCE CARRIER ...
..._Al ,
he Nttttl>CJl'.f. Bead\
t. lo addi U00. II
toUliQ& more lb.an
Ul0.000 ba•c bttn fi1rd api ' the
city ID I.be •U.e of lbe Aua. 2
cxplosioo &Dd fire that caUJed Otl •o
lpl'W over a otilbborbood &lid aoio
lbebQacw44dl ~~
&e.Cb·~lated penonal anjuf)
dafma bave Ibo hit the city bard iAer
tbe S6 aulbon jury Jud&mCQI lO 23-
year-old Job.a Taylor of"Cta.rcmont
A daim was filed Ill JanU.11)' on
bebalf of WiUWn 8unon Judd. 26.
tftklna $j mallion after he reponedty
broU his neck &fttor divuia tnto the
sun in Auaust 1984 Pnor to th.aJ cWm.. a laW5wl ailqlna sam1lar
8laaroD Nanes after wt.a.
LOTTERY •.•
From Al
toms utomeys art S!_Ck,Jnj smooo in eqwpment1ea.scs &neged-
ly not paid.
Mn. Nunez purchased two SJ ·
lon.ery uc:Uu 11 a local supennarlcct
three weeks a,o. The 29-year~
molhn' of'two scratche<$ the covCT off
and found benelf a SI 00 winner.
She sent the ticket to the Slate
Lottery Comnussioo and rcocived
ber check Nov 2. Lotlery officials
lattt picked her ucket o u• of a drum,
mak1ng her eligible for a S2 million
prize.
Although no one won the grand S2
million priz.e, Nunez was one of four
winners landing $I 00,000 awards.
Her check -with $20,000 taken
out-for taxes -was expected to arrive
today.
Kids' Boak Week celebrations set
The Orange County Pubuc L1brat}
will be featunng mime shows, con-
tetts, displays and films next week as
part of 1t.s celebranon of National
ChLldren's Book Weck.
National Children's Boole Weck
was fonned in 1919 by James West.
director of the Bo> Scout\, and
Frank.Ian Math~. the' Bo) Scout
librarian. out of a n~ for txtter
children's booh
Among the special event\ this week
along the Orange Coast are:
• A mune workshop and a chil-
dren's theatre at the Fountain Valley
branch on Saturday at I p.m .
• A case display of facsimile
reproductions from the Osborne col-
lcct1on of early children's book.s all
week at the Irvine/University Parle
branch.
•A mime show by Ruben Gerard
at the Laguna Beach branch on
Saturda) at 11 a.m. Children are to
bnng their o wn lunches.
DRUNKEN DRIVING CASE •••
P'romAl
W1lkoffs blood-alcohol was found
to be nearly double the kvel at which
a person 1s presumed to be too drunk
to dnvc. according to tesumon)
But Pubhc Defender Wilham Kelly
said Wtlkoff dld not cause the
accident. though he admmed she was
IOlOlUClted.
Kelly LOld Jurors that evidence
shows it was the off-duty shenffs
deputy who tngge~ the accident..
fint forct.ng Wilkoffs Ford Mustang
on LO the soft shoulder of the road and
then striking Salle's Volkswagen.
He said the blow of SalJe'~ car
pu1hed the vehicle into the opposite
lanes where it was tut he.ad-On and
forced back across the center d1VJder.
The car was hit several more umes
and 1ts engine snapped free. bouncing
down the road until it smashed into
the w10dsh1eld of a Porsche, police
wd.
W1tnesses called in the two-week
lllal before Superior Court Judge
Philip Cox 1n Westminster told
vaJ)1ng accounts of the accident.
Wtlkyff. however, was never called to
the wttncss stand LO tc11 hCT version of
the incideoL .
The tnal was more than two years
in opening because of delays in
waiting for a state Supreme Court
rultng. •
The pt!blic defender's office asked
for a higher court rulmg on whether
Wilkoff couJd be charged with one
c9unt of drunken driving for each
· t>crson UJjured in the collision.
The 4th Distnct Court of Appeal
upheld the muluplc charges. but the
Supreme Court -in a landmark
ruhng -dcadcd Wilkoff could be
charJ.ed with only one drunken
dnVJng charge.
.. We art a W)Ct city because the
city as VlC11ocd as a city with \lre<h, ..
Brown a id.
Newport Beach bas until the end of
March to find another. compa.nl to
cover the SS million layer". and
bopcfuUy someone wtll fill the void."
Brown wd.
CLAIMS .••
From A l
in bu claim he was fired foUowin
sev estloninaoy ot'li& s
about the ~ even tbougb he said
he bad no know of the incident.
Other emplorces filing claims with
the district's Ruk Management De-
partment were Albert Flores of Gar-
den Grove, Scon MacDonald of
Capistrano Beach and T-0oy Urbano
ofWhittier who, the claims said. were
fired for failina to call in daily while
oo sick leave even tho~ district
officials were a~ of their illnesses.
Ben Vaulhn of Anaheim. a probe-
tiODal}' employee, said in bis claim he
was fired a month after openly
cballenain& a supervisor in a meeting.
CWmant Dennis Vargas of
Anaheim WU accufi of bci
o utside his assiped wort station, an°J
Mary M~a Schardein of River-
side was dismissed for beina tardy
after fail.in& to clock in after lunch, the
claims said.
The claims, which w~ prepared
by auomey Michael Friedman of Oranse. ask for SI million in damages
for each employee and member of the
employee's household.
Four of the employees, including
Wilcox. were offered their jobs beck
by the district. and all but MacDonald
returned to work., Friedman said. lo
addition, he wd the district asked
them to sign waivcn sayina they
wouldn't sue the district over thell'
terminations, and Flores signed.
Joan Kathryn Wilkoff
WATER DISTRICT THREATENED ••.
From Al
The 1mphcauons could be disas-
trous for MWDOC, which ~upphes
water to some l . 7 m1lhon consumers
covenn~ 80 percent of the county
Huntington Beach and Fountain
Valley are among the c1t1e~ that
would be least affected by an increase
in service f~ on their imported
water.
Huntington Beach import\ 20 per-
cent of its water 'iuppl), v.hlle
Fountain Valle) bnng.s in 3(J p<"rc.en i
The re1t comes fro m local ~ell\
.. It doesn't affect· us a\ hadh as
other areas where the bill\ are rcall'f
gomg to go up, .. said Wa)nt' O\h<imc
Fountain Valley puhhc wo rk'> direc-
tor.
d.tstnct has lO absorb," said Jack
Foley, director of the Moulton Niguel
agenC).
Mesa \onsohdated Water Dtstnct
used 45 percent imported water to
ltecp the taps flowmg last year in
f'osta Mesa and parts of Newport
Beach. This year. distric1 officials
said. Mesa Consolidated ·expects to
cut its dependence on outside water
to 25 percent
Should 1t hecome too costly to
remain wnh MWl.XX. Mesa Con-
~hdated. ac, well as Irvine Ranch,
have the option of hooking up with
the ( oastal M un1c1paJ Water District,
the other middleman for Metro-
politan Water.
money spent on vanous studies."
Offic1aJs for other member agen-
etcs say MWDOC will probably have
to lay off some workers.
Municipal water district chief
Spra~ue envisions cutbacks in both
activities and personnel as well as
incrca.scd service fees.
But he maintains the real danage
from the de-annexation won't be to
the district's budget but to Orange
County's ability to ensure its share of
Metropolitan water.
Clear, warmer for the weekend
U .S. Tempe ~ 71 .. ...... T3 ta ......,...,. ., ,. .. Le ......... .. ., ,...,.. $1 .. ..... ll'U )0 '° .-..... ... 41 u _... ,. to ~ IO M --~ IO ., S"!;•••~ ., 61 .,... ,. 12 -.vin
~ 71 61 --..v~ 'f1 $t ~-WN~ W '"' r -.QU u S t.c· .. ,..,,.,,,.,,,. ,,
MM*Oly .. se Oll--.Oty 11 .. ., • OINM " 2t ~ ....._. n M Ortnlo .. .. 681lf. Tempe t::'·~ 16 ., •11•.,,.., -,. N .... ,. .. 111 ttCnn ' -l9 1' -...-00 )a 10 ,,_,.. ,, ., Salli.Men. ., 30 ... )5 11 ==r ... .. 54 ~low, for 24 rw. etlOlftO el 5 . "' SenttM~ 13 46 9oel<I'! 96 ., &7 S$ er9'Wd 53 34
""'* s. 37 ~.Or 41 24 &INll• 6$ 33 SurfR~port ~ 24 01 PrcMOeloce ... 45 ,._ $4 32 ~S C 74 ., =r()ty t2 55 ..._ se 33 a.tllloft.W V n ., 2.4 °' Loe ~ .. .. l.OC:ATIC* llD IMAft ~c ,, '4 """° 3.3 oe ,.."'*-$1 2t Huilclng1on ._, 2~ t.s ~ 2t oe ~ Tl M ,...,...,. S4 24 g;:..-=:.. .. 4$ 81l.o.tlll 11 50 "-'-°'Y 67 ,. .....Jeny.~ 2'3 900CI • 13 St "-T-.. .. .__ S2 )() ~•tr•.~ 2-3 ,..,
~ ., 4 7 SM Uk•°'Y ,. 31 a.-SI ~ nno Slreec. Newpor1 2·3 ,...
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LmV .... 41 » IO ..., 10L .._ Ill 40a, l.cipe< a0e Ill e.no.... 64 :)S FrlOey et 10 11 a m . and MU ~ 111 u.. .... 1$ ., IWcddw~ 8enJoee s.e 33 7 4tplll
FLOOD CONTROL PROPOSAL ...
Prom Al
But JocaJ Oood victim s of the I 983
slOrm arc urging Orange County
officials to finance the project so that
it can be a high priority. The county
wouJd then be reimbursed when
federal money and matching con-
tributions arc a vailable.
It was the local flood control
channels, spccificiaUy in the Hunt·
ington Beach and Fountain Valley
Oood plain. that overflowed when
four inches of rain feU in six hours
during the 1983 storm.
At a meeting called two week.sago
in Huntington Beach lo assess the
flood control threat, Orange Councy
Supervisor Harriett Wieder disclosed
that environment.al studies arc slated
to be completed next month to hne
the channels with concrete lo handle
increased floodwater runoff.
MASTER ARCHITECT PEREIRA DIES .••
From Al
office buildings surrounding a sho~
PLll& maJJ (Fashion Island). He djd the
architectural dcsjgns for several New·
port Center structures, mcludang the
Pacific MutuaJ Life ln~urance and
Great Western Savings bualdmg.s and
the Irvine Co. headquarters.
In Irvine. he designed the Avco
Financial Computer Services center
and Dou&Jas Plaza.
Bill Fa> o, one of Pereira· s partners,
said today that among career achieve-
ments that ranged from Peppcrdine
University to Marineland of the
Pacific to C BS Television City, Per-
eira took special pride in designing
the Transamerica tower in San Fran·
cisco and the UCI campus in Orange
Cou1,1ty.
"If you could sin.gleout two or three
expeneoces, those would be among
his most rewarding," Fain said.
Pereira remained a consultant to
UO, and in reQCnt months bis firm
has been working with university and
Irvine Co. representatives on a plan
for research and development parks
west of the campus, Fain said.
He said Pereira played a key role in
Orange County's transformauon into
-a modem urban community.
When be was hjrcd to develop the
master plan for the vast Irvine Ranch
in the early 1960s, it was described as
the largest private development pro-
ject in the world.
That ranch area today includes Lhe
city of lrvine and portions of New·
pon Beach and Tusun.
Former Irvine Co. p~1dent Ray
Watson. who still serves on the board
of directors, said. "l came to the
company in 1960. Bill PerelI'8 was
one of the reasons 1 came. l consider
him the sing.le most import.ant person
having to cfo wllh the town of Irvine
and the university being here."
Watson said Pereira looked at 2 I
Orange County sites before settling
on the current campus location. He
said Pereira than sold both the
company and UC Regents on ··com-
bining the creation of a univers11y
with the development of a new town,
an idea that was irresistible to the
R~nts and the company."
HUSBAND'S CASE GOES TO JURY ...
P'romAl
He said the crime, though ugly and
brutal, lacks the malice and intent
needed to sustain a murder convic-
tion. Rubnght said the woman was
killed in a "paroxysm" or spasm of
violence.
But Deputy Distnct Attorney
Wally Wade said Beal planned his
wife's death out of fear or a nger over
her plans to leave him because of his
drinking a nd inability to find work.
"He did not do a good job of
covering up (the crime). but first-
degrce murder docs not require an
Einstein," said Wade .
BeaJ allegedJy beat hjs wife with a
club, tied a rope around her neck and
thrashed her with the butt of a riOe,
according to testimony. Her body was
placed in the trunk of lbe family car
and covered with a blanket. witnesses
said.
The March I I, 1983, slayinai at-
tracted attention in the 0~-AV·
enue neighborhood because Beal
reportedly held bis two young chil-
d ren capuve during a day-long stand·
off with Costa Mesa police. The siege
ended with Seal's arrest, the safe
recovery of the children and the
discovery of the woman's body.
When arrested, Beal has a blood
alcohol rcadjna of0.35 -more than
three times the level at which a person
is considered too dru.nk to drive. But
there was no evidence that Beal was
intoxicated when the crime occurred.
Rubright said Beal was confused
and suicidal after k.illtng his wife.
During the standoff. he begged police
to kill him, urged them not to harm
his children and asked one officer to
copr down a will said Rubright.
" love my wife and I killed her."
Beal reportedly told poll~ at one
point, and later added. "I can't
understand. I made us a nice dinner."
Rubright said Beal also left a
cryptic message rcadlnj; "I have to
die today. Take care of the children.
Gretchen's in the car."
"He didn't want to die." retorted
Wade. "He loves himself too much.
All he had to do was step outside. raise
his rifle and the police would have
honored his request."
Wade said Beal may have held his
children hostage in hopes police
would leave "so he could finish up his
botched JOb."
The prosecutor said Beal used at
least three weapons to kill his wife. He
said her death was slow and painful,
lasting anywhere from five to 20
minutes. "He's not deserving of your
sympathy," said Wade.
Among tho<;( facing high water
rates are the Irvine Ranch Water
D1stnct. serving mostly the city of
Irvine, and the Moulton Niguel
Water Distnct. which serves the communiti~ of M1ssron Viejo,
Laguna Hills. Laguna "11guc:I and
portions of Dana Point
That option 1s possible because
boundanes for the two Metropolitan
wholesalers -CoastaJ and Munici-
pal -·overlap in the Costa Mesa and
Irvine areas, officials said. Coastal
mostly serves the southern pen of the
county u well as Newpon Beach.
Sprague explained the superagcncy
supplies much of the welter used from
Ventura to the Mexkan Border, with
the various areas clamoring for
attentio n. By withdrawing from
MWDOC, the three cities would
f:raJlllent Orange County's rcprcscn·
taboo to the Metropolitan Water r-------------------------------------------
Dislrict, Sprague said.
Irvine Ranch gets about IS S perteni
ofitsdnnkingsuppl} from MW()()(
while Moulton Niguel rche'> cnt1rel)
on imported water Offio al'> from
both d1stncts agreed that an 1ncrea'iC
in surcharges would tn ckk down to
their customers.
"There'll be no quesuon of mme
kind of increase from Mun1c1pal
Water District. but the amount will
depend on how many expenses that
Just Call
642-6086
Deity POot
Deffv9ry
le OuerentMd
t.flOllC»y f ,_V II I"" '> "°' ..... ,_ ~""" "• •30P"' c••b41',...•1o" ..0 ..-C(lpV .. , ... --M h'""' -""'""'' ' l'O\J <'(I ll(ol Ill( ..... f
Other less lucky MWDOC mem·
ber\havedrawn up the1r own money·
\aving solutions to keep the scrvice
fees -and ultimately consumer
<'harges -down.
"We're go ing to be asking the
(Municipal Water) district to keep its
budget down to the bare bones," said
Huntington Beach water super-
intendent Ed ElevaLOrski. "I think
they'll probably have to trim the
Consequently, thecountycouldgct
the short end on Metropolitan de-
cisions such as water rat.es, what new
pipelines arc needed and bow the
costs wiU be d istributed. That poten·
tiallJ lost clout could become crucial
dunng the predicted drought that
water watchers say wi ll ma.Ice Metro-
politan clients more competitive.
"We're going to have water short-
ages and how new facilities are pajd
for and water rights will be very
cn ticaJ," Sprague said. "We need a
strong. united front."
Wllat do yot1 Ilk' •botft tlte Daily Pilot? Wut don't yo• llke? Call lbe
number et 1,h u4 yoer mttuce wlll be recorded, tran1crt~ and delivered
10 a.a., approprtele e4itor.
ne 11m' U ·llMr aa1werlng 1tr\llc~ may be Hed lo record letters lo &be
'dltor oa HY lopk. Coatrlb9ton to oar Leners col•mn m•H tac llHle 1111,lr
nam' ud tel~ Hmber for verlftcatton. No clrC'ulatlon calls, please.
Tell us wlla1'1 on vo•r mlod.
Karen Wlttmet
PubllShef
ROMm•ry Churchm•n
(,on I r Oller
Ctrcutetton 714fM2-4m
c•eulftM ~ 7141142~9171
Al °"* ..,.,.."*''' 142-4121
11.-0FFICI
'30 W9ll ftey St Colle -CA • Mal_,.,._ 9o• 1W • C.C.1• ..._ CA ll?ll29
C;.eoyt'G"' 1Ml °"'""" C-~ ~ No -ti"''" _,,.,........ -......... "., (JI ..,_,_
,,,.,,, .......... ,..f 0. '"""""'""'° """""' --..... ._,QI ~1''11'' <-•
1;oe>y 0y 1 • m c•~ .,... ••
10 • "' .,,,, 'f"'/I '""' , O.~ecl
Clfcue.don
T1l1phof ...
Robert l. C1ntrell
I J I , '
Don9k:t L WHllemt
C.rcutatoun
M1n1091
WOii
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u. .............
I
'A" •:.;.,,
How•d MuUenaly
Matll tino Oo•ector
....., .......
Cla•fied ()reetOI
'
Executive Accessories
We proudly present a distinctive
collection of unique gift items.
Gentlemen's Clothing Inspired by Tradition
"6 Fashion Island (714) 640-8310
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I
BULL[ TIN BOARD
United Way sets
fund workshop
The Unit~ Wa y ofOranie County will sponsor
a pre-apphcauon workshop for all organizations
wishing to apply for recently granted Fedcnll
Emel'Jency Manaacment Agency food and s.belter
funds fnday at 10 am at tht> Unit.ed Way
. headquarters, 13252 Garden G rove Blvd .. Garden Grol(e.
The FEMA and a bt>ard made up of national
voluntary OfJ8nizat1ons have cho~n the United
Way to administer funds for emergency food and
sbe!ter proa;rams aero~ the nation. Locally, the
Unued Way of Ora9ge County and its own
countywide commmee of voluntee~ will be
select1na public and pnvate non-profit organiza-
uons to receive the FEMA fu nds
FundingofS 169,756 already has ~en approved
with an addillonal $5Q5, 756 tXDttted to be
approved shortfy. Further 1nformat1on may be
obtained by calling the Un11ed Way's Agency
Relations D1v1S1on at 97 I. 7 300
Slngles semlnar slated
The Rev. Roben Schuller wtll speak at a
Southern Cahfom1a \hnst1an Sing.Jes seminar and
social Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Rancho
Capistrano Community Church, 29251 Camino
Capistrano. San Juan Capistrano.
Advance reservations are $8 each, while
admission at the door w11l be$ I 0. Call 496-6535 or
496-4031 for advance reservations.
Arts faire ln Irvine
The third annual Holiday Faire, fcatunng
original works by over 60 exhibitors, will be held
Friday from 6 to 9 p.m. at the Irvine Fme Arts
Center.
Followmg the event Saturday wall ~ a
children's musical program at 9:30 a.m . followed by
the arrival of Santa Claus al 10, the Irvine Singers
perfonnmg at 11, Elly. Yo ung reading stories for
young children at I p.m .. the Irvine Dance Academy
appcanng at 2 and the Irvine Youth Chorale at 3.
Upper Bay tour slated
The public 1~ 1nv1ted to a free walking tour of the
Upper Ncwpon Bay Ecological Reserve Saturday
morning, conducted by the Friends of Newport Bay.
Tour groups will stan every 15 minutes.
beginning at 9 a.m. and continuing until 10:30. from
the comer of East Bluff Drive and Back Bay Road.
The t04Q move at an easy pace and last about an
hour an?fa half. Call Fran Robinson at 646-8009 for
additional information.
Republican women meet
A Republican women's leadership conference
will ~held Saturday at the University Club at UC
lrvme. Among the topic of d1scuss1on wtll be
winner-take-all vs. propon1onal representation.
pros and cons of prc-pnmary endorsements.
comparable worth and the role of women in the state
Republican pany.
Rep. Bobbi Fiedler. state Sen. Manatl Bergeson
and Supervisor Harriett W1t'der will speak at the
session. Further mfonnat1on may be obtarncd by
calling 646-6101
Computer cla88e8 at OCC
Two computer workshops will be offered this
weekend at Orange Coast College "Wnting Macros
With Lotus 1-2·3'' will ~ ofTred Saturday from 9
a.m. to 5 p.m. in Room I 05 of OCCs Social .Science
Building while the IBM PC User Club wtll meet
Sunday from 9 a.m. to noon in the college Forum.
The fee for the Macros program 1s S35. while the
PC Users charge S3 for non-members and S30 for
annual membership. Call 432-5880 for 1nformat1on
on both activities.
Holiday boutique ln Irvine
The six~h annual holiday bouuquc will be held
this weekend at the C'ulverdale Clubhouse. 3754
Hamilton St., lrvine.
Christmas gif\s. ornaments. stock.Jngs. stocking
stufTers and baked goods wtll be among the items
offered Saturday from 9 a.m. to 7 pm. and Sunda)
from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Call Manan Nelson at
786-2948 for funher info nnat1on.
Biofeedback sesslon set
Lind.a Summers. a biofeedback instructor and
marriage counselor, will present a workshop on
health improvement Saturay at Golden West
College in Hunitngton Beach.
The program is scheduled fro m 9:30 a.m. to
5:30 p.m. in Room 136 of the Adm1n1strat1on
Building, and part1c1pants are asked to bnng a sack
lunch and a blanket. The fel' 1s $25. and advance
registration at 891-3991 as recommended.
Holiday Faire in HB
The Assistance League of Huntington Beach
will conduct its annual Holiday Faire and English
tea Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at 301 Wafnut.
Huntington Beach. Handcrafted gifts, decorations and gourmet
specialties will be available. with proceeds going
toward the maintenance of the league's s~h
center. Operauon School Bell and Scholasuc
Aptitude Test proarams. Call Pat Carman at
891-556.S for details.
Crutlvlty coune carded
Otscovering your creative spark w1l1 ~ the
topic of a six-hour seminar at Saddleback College
Saturday by college pro(essors Shirley McC'orkeU
and Alma Vanasse. .
The course will run from 9 a m. to 4 p.m. in
Room BC-6 on the Mission Viejo campus at a fee of
$35. Call 5824647 fo r add.JtJonal 1nformauon.
Auct1on aanounced
The publi~ 1s tnv1~d to a goods and services
auction Saturday fcatunna a Texu-stylc barbecu.e at
the Saddlcback Valley Board of Realton bu1ldtn&.
2S.S52 La Paz Road\ Laguna Hills. as a benefit for
Mission Hills Chnst1an Schools.
A vancty of aoods and services will be avatlable.
1ncludin1 Casablanca fans, paintmas. ~ Grand
Canyon air tour. mf'.dical _and dental e:uminat1ons.
eittcrior house pe1nttna,. dinner service, weekend' an
Palm Spnnaa a.od mountain ~sorts and plumb1na
services. The betbecue st.ans at 5 p m. and the hve
auction at 7, and the tickcu a.re SS each. Call Dave 11
859-3396 for more 1nfonnauon.
Thunday, No~. 14
N• tDMll .. 1 ICWele4.
Or~ Coe.t1 OAILV PILOT!Thurlday, Nowmber , •• iees *AS
Talks break off
in market dispute
That'• the ticket
Jake and J1l&Jl.lta Re.ler of Buntinaton Beach ahow the ticket that
1a•e them a $10,000 win in the Cailfom.la Lottery. They traded in
a $:1 winner lut Saturday at a ~en-11 atore where they had
atop"4 to buy hot doC• and came up with the bl& money.
Cieiks discuss more
support for walkout:
windows smashed
By STEVE MARllWt
OfhO.,.. .........
Negotiations an a I Q..da}-old \Uf)(r
market stnke collapsed uam latl' Wednei.-
day. confinn1111 pred.lcuons that there will
be no qu1 ck. end to the stn.kc and lockout of
meat cutters and Teamsters an ~uthem
Cahfom1a.
The stnke, ma!l'ed b) con tin ucd \ 101·
-en~ and growing rancor. threatened to
l'Xpand toda} as ~'eral hundred ~turl"
clerks met 1n Los Angele~ to d1~U'>\
increasing their suppon of the walkout
Soml' cll'rks an Orange Count} who ha' e
re~d to cross p1ckl't ltnc\ claim lhe'
have been told the\ 1>.1ll ~ ti rt"d or
demoted it the) don't go to work, accord1n~
to a spokesman for the Retail ( krb
'nson
Ne,ot1at1 0M resumed Wcdnc'ida'
morning at the Anaheim H 1lton and bro~r
off sevcral times during the d<i~ txforc
finall y collapsing at 11 p.m said Da \ c
WLllauer. a spokesman tor supertn.IJ'ket
chains No new talks are slated.
Neither manacement nor offiaah re~
rcscnu na 1he meat cuttm and Teamsten
had held hope for a quick senlement u ne1ot1etion~ resumed at the request of
federal med111or Frank AJlen .
·Tm alwa) ~optimistic. but I dotf't lhln.k
th1scan be rt'~lved inoned.ay;· Allen said.
O"n Swinton, spokesman for the meat
cuttC'r\, ~1d 11 wall take "marathon ..
ba'l11ning sc~SJon ~ for 1& rcsoluuon to be
reached
\franwh1le \ 1olen1,;e Oared ap1n
\\ednesda-. 1n ln me where several inde-
pendent trullcers dnvin& ngs fo r Luckys
told police truck window~ were smashed
out b\ rocks
In inc pnhcc-have marnta1ned a cont·
1ngtnl''t of 10 offi~rs outside a Lucky
d1~tnhut1on 1:en1cr where J lS people havl'
been arrested s1rice \M strike began on
lharges rangrng from vandahsm· to assault
\fore officers were to be an 1gned to the
Lud,, warr-housc.-s toda) h«aus.c up to
I 000 T eamstt"r\ wcrc n p«tl'd to show up
to u,>llelt pa' ~heck.' that v.erl' not
d1.,tnbutcd belore the stnkl' began
~tore 1.krk'> who are not on stnke but
belon& to thc '>dnte international umon as.
meat c uner'> mc:t toda} 1n Burbank to
i.:ons1der c;tag.mg their own walkout
Food handlers with
AIDS said no threat
Mo.re countians die of
AIDS, but rate slows
WASHINGTON IA P) -New govern-
ment guidelines being released toda}'
indicate no Spl"c1al restncuons need be
placed on food handle~ and health care
workers wtth AIDS ~cause there as no
evidence that the virus as spread by casual
contact.
The gu1dchnes by the Oepartml'nt of
Health and Human Services also rec-
ommend against the wholesale screening of
workers fo r acquired immune deficiency
syndrome.
Such precautions are not needed. the
rules say. ~cause there 1s no evidence that
the virus 1s spread through thl' types of
contact that usually occur at the workplace.
While some precautions are needed -
such as disposal of food madvenenly
contaminated with blood from accidental
cuts -they are the same precautions that
would apply regardless of whether AIDS 1s
involved, the guidelines say.
"Because AlDS 1s a blood borne. sexuall)'.
transmitted diseaSl' that 1s not spread b}
casual contact. this document docs not
recommend routine ... antibody screening
for the groups addressed," said a copy of
the document scheduled for re lease this
afternoon
"Because AIDS is nol transmmed
through preparation or serving of food and
beverages. these: rccomml'ndauons state
that food-scrv1~ workers known to ~
infected with AIDS should not~ restncted
from work unless they have another
infection or illness for which such restnc-
tlon would be warranted."
In most work areas. no special res1nc·
tio ns are needed. the gu1dchne'i say
"Workers known to be infected should
not~ rcstncted fro m work solcl> based on
this finding," the gu1del1nes say.
"Moreover, they should not be restncted
from using telephones. offi ce equi pment,
toilets, showers. eating fac1lit1es and water
fountains.
"Equipment contaminated w1 1h~ood
or other bodily fluids of any rker.
regardless of (AIDS) infec11on. sho d be
cleaned with soap and water or a deterge t''
and wtpcd with hou<Sehold bleach, the
guidelines say·
But the gu1dchnes also recommend C\tra
d1hgence among health care workers
trtaung AIDS patients to pre\ent possible
infection.
By ROBERT HYNDMA1'
Of tM Deity Nol .....
Nine more deaths sn Orangt ( oun-
ty have ~en annbuted 10 AIDS and
an addiuonal 17 casc"i ha' e been
reponed since late .o\ugust the count'"
Health Carl' Agenc' reported
Wednesday.
The figures. co' enng the I I-week
penod from Aug. ~6 to ""o'" 6 bnng
the total num~r of .\IDS ca~ 1n
Orange Count\ to I 57 The numbt:'r
of deaths has increased from 78 10 t< ..
said Cathy Re)es, manager of the:
agency's public health programs.
An update of the Health C arc
. Agency's efTon s wtll be !>ent to the
Board ofSuperv1so~ this wttk
Wh1le the number of ~I D caM'<.
sncrca~s. pubhc health omc1als c;a1d
the rate of increase 1!> beglnning lu
slow
The total number ot ..\ID\ l ase'> rn
Orange Count~ douhlcd 1n the tir.t
8111 months of I Q85 1.:ompared to
I 984"s statistics. But It now takes up
10 12 months tor th<" number of~
to doubk again according to Dr Reit
Ehhng. the count} public health
director
Health ulliuals ha"c no precise
reason tor the slowdo.,., n, but Reyes
!Mild tt could be due part!) to a growing
public av.areness of the disease.
"'h1ch destrovsthc bod' 's ab1hty to
delend 1t\('lt' against ·disease and
In ft:'l llUO
But ~au!.C' lhc IO(Uha11on pl"nod
for .\ID<i ma\ rJnge from m. months
to several \t"ar\ 1t"• diffi cult to
;ittnbute a change in the num ~r of
casrc; to tht" growtng pubhc aware-
nes~
.\lthnugh rt"\Cdrch on thl' dead!~
.ulment 1s 1.ontinuing, theft.' 1'> no
li.nnwn i:urt•
'\l. t" feel thr l·ducdlllH' t"flon~ are
gct!lngout and are d<nn~ 'umt' good ·
Re}e~ ~1d ·&cdu"<" "-t" re '<1 in·
vol\ed in th" '''ul· "'" t" h~:en asked
to g.t\e pl"nud" updAtc.:\ on "'hat's
haooen1n11. hc:re 1 n Oran~e C ounh ··
County renewing search for new landfill site
By LISA MAHONEY
OflMO.,.. ......
other area landfill~ will .!l)O tx: studied .\\loarl' .,, l ••mmun1t\ rfl4.•<.111c1n. h1>\lo1'\.C1 rhe E If<
pruce\\ has h<-1 n '('I up Ill 1n, luJ1 .. 11 lcd\I lour puhlll
meetings v.hcrl' rnrdcnt\ ~Jn nprc.'\' th<"tr conccms A renewed search for a sate to replace Orange Count) 's
landfill at Brea-Olinda will get under wa> soon
Oransc County supl"rv1sors agreed Tuesday to
ad vert1se for fi nns interested in pre pan ng an en v 1 ronmen-
tal impact report on possible sites for a new landfill. Wa> s
to extend the life of the county's ex1sung landfills will also
~part of the study.
Previous attempts b)' the count~ to des1gna1<' ,1
replacl'ment landfill s1tl' met w11h opposition from nonh
count' residents who didn't want a garhage dump nc:ar
their homes
Brea homeowner<. don't want tu r,ee the Brea-Olinda
landfill expanded and .\nahe1m Hills res1dt'nts ha\e
complained about the possible use ofG) psum and C arhon
canyons - two pnmc c;11rs in a 1984 landfill site sunq
The firm hm·J to rx-r111rm thl' 1•r n nnwnwl \tud1c<.
"'ill 1>.h1ttledov.n ri1,\lhlt' ''' lh111,n 11 th1•\t lhJt u>uld
,uppon .i ne1>. la1111!if,
The repon will identify likely sites for a new landfill as
well as technologies that could ~ used to keep present
landfills in operation longer.
Thl' viabihtv of hauling trash from Brea-Olinda to
Count}' officials SS) that the Brea-Olinda dump 1s
neanng capac1t~ and something must he done to cn~ure
that nonh Orange ( ount" rc<i1dcnt'\ haq• a plale IP Jump
their trash
.\ prl'hmJnal" 'illt' f"llJn \\Ill II(• f)rt'f)3rl'd IM C3C'h
proposed ~lit' al1>ng v.1t1' 1nt11rm:it111r Jh11ut .IHl '' roads
'>urround1ng land U\t' gt•uluiillal Jn..! ~ \ dro1lo1~i. ;11 'luJ1l"'
1n add1t1on lu ant1upatt·d 1·n' 1r11nnw· 1.1. '" p.1< t\
It \\Ill be up 1u thl' B1•.J J 111 \urt•r \ .,, •' '" m.11o>1· ;i lint1I
ch111u h.hni '" th· '1lt''H1.n 1t• I ·h1· 11un1'
planning omm1">1<H'l ••
Dead woman found
in Mesa dumpster
Police suspect fo ul play m the death of a
24-year-old Santa Ana woman whose bodt
was found Wednesday tn a trash dumpster
at a Costa Mesa 1ndustnal complex.
Thl" woman's identity was withheld b}
police th ts momsng pending notification of
family mem~rs.
Her body was discovered about 11 :20
a.m. by a man rummaging through the
dumpster behind a computer tinn at 3199
Imne
A woman's pin worth $12.000 w~
reported stolen Wednesday from a home an
the 6200 block of Sierra Siena Road. The
theft occurred sometime since June:. the
victim told police. • • • Tools worth $90 were reponed stolen
from a parking stall of an apanment
complex sn the 17600 block of Jonian
Avenue Wednesdav. ~ ..
Gardenmg tools worth $2.!!20 were
reported stolen from the back of a car
parked in the 2300 block of M11.n Street
Wednesday. • • • A compressor and a, ~hopsaw, wonh
$ t .000. wert rtportcd stolen fro~ a
construction site alona Executive Circle
Wednesday. • • • A thief reportedly brokl' into a home in
the 18000 block of Sky Park Boulevard
Wednesday and stoic a SS,000 watch from
the resident's briefcase.
South Coanty
A $300 car tereo was rtponed stolen
from a vehicle parked in front of a Dana
Pomt home 1n the 33500 block of Via
Corvahan. • • • A $500 stereo r«eaver was rtported
stolen from a South Lquna home 10 the
l I .SOO block of Montney while the vtt\lm
wuat wort. • • • A DIAi Poent raJdtnt 1n tht ll500block
ofCirt'Ula Corolla reported that a stem>,•
citlten bend radto, and • tote hi& WCft
\.l.kel\ from tltteickup tnic:lc pa.rt(d 1n front
of ~ home The lou wu e1um1ted at ssoo
.\1rport Loop. Lt. Tom la.Iar r1•ponc:J
She was descnbed as 5 feet ~ int ht·~ 1all
we1gh1ng 80 to 100 pound<; ~1th \houldl'f·
length hair
Lazar said an au top~) 1\ ~l hntuk'd wd.i)
to determine the cau~ ot death and
whether the woman had bec:n ~lain
Lazar would not rcleaSC" an\ funhl·r
dctails.
Fountain Valley
An employet of Kragen .\uto \)uppl\.
9880 Warner A' e., reponed that a m.m
came into the store Monday and e~changC'd
eight dame rolls. wonh $40. for the
equivalent 1n cash He d1scovert'd \.\ cdnn-
da\ that the dime rolls had been filll'd 1>.1th
pl"nrues, pohcl' repons sa.id The loss was
estimated at S~4 Q6 • • • Thieves reported!~ u~d a car to rc m1H e
a $2, 14 2 cny parking udet d1spl"n~r frnm
ns housing tn a public lot at 16400
Brook.burst St Tuesda> • • • Tools. stl'rco equipment, weapons and
kuchen appliances. wonh S 11,300. "-Cl'C
reportt'd stolen from a home in the I 7 300
tslock ofSanta u:ranne Monda) afternoon.
Pohce repons s:ud tht thieves prohabl~
backed their car into the garage and loodf\1
the items into the trun._
• • • A m~n postnga~ a con,truct1on com pan>
rcpresentatl\C rented an ar-c v.eldcr ianJ an
air compressor from Huntinaton 'Valle"
Tool Rentaland les. 18911 MagnoTia t .
tut Fnday but has not rrtumc:d them 1he
v1cum told pohcl' W~ne~) The tool\
a.re rcportt'dl) wonh S 11 , SI S
CoetaM_.
The owner of a 19M \'ollm,.111en Bua
rcponcd last Wcd~y th11 someone
stoic bis tadh&bts v.htle the r ... , par\ed
so the 1200 &lock of West Baker trt"C1
They were rcponcdl y wonh $200 • • • S600 'I.dee cauctte rttOtdct ~ S600
TV set. S20 U\ ash and S 1.600 1n
l~lrywttt reponcd itolen from a home
1n the I SOO block of Me11 Verde W~t
Wed nc-\da y
Newport Beach
.\ 1h1el bro~c into a home in thl" ~f 11
block of Fern leaf.\\ enue \.\ rdne'>da' and
c;tole $I 400 in Jl'1>.elr: and S:'4~ in
clothing.ome in the ~00
block of Ft'mleal .\ H'nue \l. ednc$d:n Jnd
stole SI 400 tn 1e1>.eln J.nd S~4 ~ tr
clothmg,n trom a home intht· I 1f"1hlod;11f
Ba~ '>Ide \\. cdnc'id.n
• • •
..\ $:'50 radar detector and .i $ l' "'alkt
cont.a1nmg s~ou in cash v.erc rcpont•d
)tolcn from a gra' Honda .\crnn1 parked in
1 he :' 500 block of Ba) 'lhores V. t"dnewa' • • •
A th1d· rl'poncdl~ bmli.e into C ro''P' 'rnt
\ cnture Panne~. 4600 (ampU\ J Ut"••J.1\
night and stoic $400 in lnmputl'r l'l.ju1p
ment and a S 150 an-;1>.cnnll machine
Lacun• Beach
.\ Laguna Can)on Road hu\lne"
poned a burglar: \l. cdnc..J.a~ altl'm 1 1r
T he los<. 1>.as l'Sllmated .at s .. 1111
• • •
.\loss ol $150 waHeportl'\l ~' thn 1.i n
ol a car hurglaf) V. edne-.d.1\ 1 ht· 'ar ".i'
parked on \.1)n k '>trt'<"I "hrn 11 "'·l'
bu~lamed
• • •
Pohre arTCsted La" ren~<' ~t<'' rn '>karda H . on c;usp1c1on of as~ult and tlatt<'n
following an tnC'ldent f ue\da\ r\ eninit nn
Juanita 'Wa) Skarda "'a' hdd 1n llru '''
Sl .500 bail
\ d111,,I.. \ .11111•1! ti s~I \A.;.i ,, lt'O lrOffi J
-.. •. th l 1 • ..1,; H1i;h"'J ' 'T'l" 1hl0 '1111m
tu!,\ pol , 1 I •l''>ll a . . .
· 1Hlkf ~.I,
''\ ll hl.H ... Ill
Id I" 11\ t"
I 1 "'nrr .1 \ 1 k 1 •u!f'<•\I \tore
!-'-''' .\tl.1n1.1 \ "'fl< r1~,:, ,,,.,J,I\ that a
U\ll\ll1"1 \I \'\l 'd ,l ~·~ ,, 'l1h"' 1,1\\t.'ltC
r(',11rJ1·r .1 m •nll"I .1~ .iri.1 tt.1,r• 1 a·turn~d
II
\n s-. " t'all .. 1 ,t, ,,.. 'fl4.'J'rrc, "'3\
re l'•'llt'J ,;o1l1•n tr•>nl a rtd •1X ~ \ c1l~c,.
·'JI' r l1•1t,1p.11l..1·d n!r "H11•,1hc1mt•inthc
· 1 I ~ ~1.,. I.. •I P'"'••ll l 11r,,JJ\ . . .
\ II. ,ll\"'l IHI II ,I h1:\1• ,1111! ~'\Up lfl
,, 111· , , 1,11hin~ · "-<"1 · 1q1o•n<'11 \llllt•n
:r11fll .1 " 'l'I •J • \ .td !J, 1Mrlc:J 1n 1hr
1 rhl!'r~r luri.! ~.1 .tio:t 1•! .tn .tpartmt.'nl
1 ,111·, n 1h1· ~ M" i-.. i.. • Hlut"v.atcr
\\ ,·.jn<''1-ia' 1'.111,,· r<"f"•rl' ...i r1 tht• th1et "'r lone 1•t th ' ,t "'' ,.in t•ntn
1'1111,t' r<"J"•n·ll \\l·,ir<"\\1.s \ 1h,11 a th1<:I
hrt,~c: 1 ht• ha h hOd1 Ii. I•"-"-un J hmw n I <I"""
T 11\ ot~ "l•h,llJ .rnd ,t,1lr a ~I RO \trolkr
1 ht" .ar \"ll" rt'f"lrtt"Jh rark.ed h lh\' rr.ir 01
.rn .1r;i~nHn' ,,•n I'll'\ 1n tht' ""1101 hh~I..
,,, ( •f\'t'll
Cons stuck in jail ducts
WOOOI '\~O ( Pl -Tv.o pmon<'"
tf)1n& to crawl thm u.&h o" erh('.1d 'l'nt1la
tton duet.~ to the female ~t1<.m ot the ' 0111
C'ount\ Jail got ~tu .. earl) tOOI\ hut v.('rt'
fl'e'Cd b' firemen, offi 1at~ ~10
Bnict Uo\d, al'° .. nnwn '> 1\1\ tn
Sc" enon, 29. and Ralph l oJ)(1. 19. madt'
dumm1~ out ofbla n~('t for thm l'w'J1o anJ
cr&"-lfd into the duct ;11 about 11 'O p m
Wfdl'lod.a>
Ocputi~ on their regu lar bed ch 'dad
not noucc they were ml\'l1ng. but at abi.lut '
am deputy Kay R1d .ahiaua.h heard <1lls
(or b.eJp.
She found the lVeO men 'tu ._ 1n tht Jul t
unable to mow forward of Nfk"ard
flt-r abc>ut lO minut~ ul tn1nJ Ill h..-11'
tht 1nm1t~ to frtt thl'm\t'IH"'> d<"Pul1l''
l 1lli-d th1 tir<" Jt't'3rtrnt:'nt I 1rcmen 1 ut
,1"·" lllll t1n11 t1• Ire'<" them
1 hr\ nt'\ t"I jlO! l llnlflletd\ l)llf {lf their
1'l'll ,m·., · '<•HI '-•'I Rari '°11m~ln · I has
h3\ lvt"n tnC"<1 l')C'lntf' ( \C1'0n(' thmk\ tht"\
\an r~ pc or ilt'l tn the ftmak' th1~ \I.I\
hut ~hat the' doo·t t'('ah1e 1\ that the dud'
artn t lk''ll"C"d for hum<ln f\3">"4&C ··
I 1,1\J a tr<1ns1ent 1!> \ln tnal for
P''"\(\\100 111 '>hllrn pmrx-rt\ and narcou
paraphernalia I It" ha-. be<'n 1n Nttoc:h
\Inn luh
l <'f'C' ol '*O<ldland 1u'1 completed •
i.cntcncc 101 hrandti.b1 a wea.pon a.nd
l'fll\Hhn tal~ 1nform1uon to a ~act
l)fhC"t"r Hr"-•' •••amna transportallon to a
\ ,)uth \ uthnnt\ fan ht\ m ~ taunt}
Int 'l<'I tum of Pf{'blt11ln
ost o
ust
•
,
Colombian volcano erupts;
upto20,000feared dead
Crater began throwing out smoke, ash
last year after long period of dormancy
BOGOTA. Colombia (AP) -A asleep when the mud avalanche
voleano in western Colombiaerupted covered the toWn.
twice, triuerina Ooods and a wall of The Boaota radio station Carac.ol
mud that crashed into aslcepi_na_town quoted a p1Jot as sayina that mud
ofSO,OOObeforcdawn today. Officials covered a.1.Jnost all the town of
feared up to 20,000 people were Armero.
killed. Radio stations quoted offinaJs as 9Ef' 5l\.I~ t 1'' MOO~ •12te2·T
ovi COMPUTERIZED 'AN
••Rescue workers arc talking about saying victims were swept away by
20,000dcad," said Red Cross director theriverLaaunilla which carried mud
Artemo Franco in an interview with and snow from the avalanche.
~UH C~Ullll Ree 1111600
WITH INTELl-TOUCH•I
61 HlG>i
TIFFANY OH
R.00" IAN
"'9 1111 00
SALE
'18P
A..
•
the radio chain Caracol. "It is an Tbert a.re other small towns along
immense tragedy." the river closer to the volcano, but
The governor-of Tolima. Eduardo-they-appamtdy weFe-tparcd ~use
Alzate Garcia, said in another inter-they sat on hills~ The town of
view, "The population is destroyed at Cbinchina, with about 70,000 people.
least SS percent and thett's possibly is onJy six miles from the base of the
some I S,000 dead." volcano. Chanchina which sits on ahill 750 feet
Officials said Armero,atown about RauJ Ramirez, a reporter for the above' the river, ·said 14 people were
30 miJcs from the volcano and IOS radio chain Todelar, was one of the killed 10 an area of about 200 houses
miles northwest of Bogota, was first people at Armero. He said 90 along the nver.
inundated by mud that was swept percent of Armero wa.s destroyed. "We've rescued many injured,"
down lbe Langunilla River af\er the 'The mass of mud is up to five Garcia said. He added many of the
eruption of the I S,500-foot high yards hl&h in some areas," he said. homeless were put in shelters set up al
volcano, Nevado del Ruiz.. "Some people were able to escape and schools and churches and schools.
Civil defense workers had found 52 climb over walls that wercn 't c.overcd Or. Da.rrell Herd, deputy chief of
bodies b y this morning, the Boeota by the avalanche and were rescued the U.S. Geological Survey's Offic.c of
radio chain IRCN said. Thiny~1ght wilh the help of ropes and horses." Earthquakes, Volcanoes and Engj-
bodies were ~yered in the adjacc!lt The volcano had been do~ant for neeriog an Resto~. Va., said. he h4s
town of Mariqwta and 14 others m more than a century when at began been working with Colombians to
the nea~y to~ of Chinchina. throwing out smoke, ashes and gas in prepare ~· volcano h~d plan for
Officials said most of the an ha bi-October 1984. -Nevado del Ruiz. H 1s doctoral d1s-
tants of Armero apparently wcrt Sgt. Rubeo Garcia, the fire chief of scrtation was on that mountain.
Botha proposes black advisers
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) -President
P. W. Botha today asked the President's Council. a
parliamentary advisory body, to draft plans to add blacks
to its membership for the first time.
Baragwanath Hospital ao the black township of Soweto.
near Johannesburg, under state-of~mergency laws.
Virtually all the strikers voluntarily offered themselves
for arrest after leaders of the 2-day-old walkout were
detained. The 60-membercounciJ currently includes4 l wbnes,
13 people of mixed racial background and siJ1 Asians, and
is empowered to resolve disputes among the separate
chambers of Parliament that represent those three racial
groups.
The President's Council was revised in September.
1984 when a new constitution took effect creatrng the
new houses of Parliament for the Asian and mixed-race
minorities alongside the existing white chamber.
The black majority, wh ich mak~ up 73 percent of the
Earlier, police arrested 718 black. stnkers at the huge pc)pulation. was excluded from the new c.onst1tut1<;>n .
ressm Hostages '
captors
contacted • osta sa!
·11111 be g1vPn to he first 50 rustomers at our
n.:m Costa M~sa loca11on on Fnday.
NovPmber 15th at 800 am L1mJt one per
\usTr;mer 16 yea rs of age & older
Sale starts
Friday Nov. 15th
BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP) -The
archbishop of Canterbury s spcc1al
envoy said today he had made
contact with IUdnappers of .missinr
Americans and that his efforts to free
the hostages had .. reached a Critical
and dangerous point"
The envoy, Terry Waite, told an
impromptu news confereooe in the
lobby of the Commodore Hotel in
west Beirut, "Progress is being made
and we're moving forward."
He declined to ·say how he made
contact with the kidnappers for
secunty reasons, but he said contacts
had been established in several dif-
ferent ways.
His only demand is that he meet the
captors face-to-face, but there also is a
chance he w11l be allowed to visit the
Amencan hostages, Waite sa1d.
"We have reached a very cntJcal
point and a very dangerous and
difficult point. We have procedures
being worked out now and r think we
shall have those worked out 1n the
course of the day," he said.
Waite Oew from London on
Wednesday and was driven by armed
militiamen to a west Beirut hotel. He
left three hours later and was driven
to an undisclosed destination in the
Moslem sector of the Lebanese capi·
tal.
Peres delays
firing threat
JERUSALEM (AP)-Prime Min-
ister Shimon Peres pledged today to
do aJI he could to prevent his shaky
coalition ~ovemment from c.olla~
mg, but did not retract has threat to
fire Cabinet member Ariel Sharon for
attacking his peace overtures toward
Jordan.
Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir.
wbo beads the coalition's Liltud bloc
said earlier ttla.t if Peres fires Sharon·
the prime minister must rcsian and
bring down the aovernment.
"J think that both larac political
parties have no better political
aJtctnative than to continue the
existence of the national unity aov·
emment," Peres said on hrael radio.
"I personally will do everythina I can
to uphold the unity aovemment."
Peres is scheduled to meet Labor
minasten before convenina the ~y·s oentral committee th11 after-
noon, where he was likely to an·
nouncc whether he was finna Sharon.
WE'RE nN!LL Y BACK IN
COSTA MESA! BIGGER AND
BEmR THAN EVER!
I ...
1-----
n.tn.DmH
COSTA MESA
1835 Newport Blvd. At
Harbor Blvd. The New
Courtyards Center
722-9634
U.S .. Vietnam together
to comb 8-52 crash site
BANG KOK., Thailand (AP) -
U.S. SJ)CClalist.s will comb what
V1etnamcteofficiaJ1 say ia the aite ofa
8-S2 crash near Hanoi In the fint
joint tcarch by the two former foes for
tbe remains of Americana miuiaa ln
the Vietnam War, both sidet laid
today. ,
' ,.
.
Name Brands for Less
•
An official at the U.S. Embluy in
Banpok said the eitcavation to bt c.a.tTWod OlAt ne:xt Monday by ,.emben
of the U.S. Joint Casualty kct0lution
Center and other Arnmcan officials
i1 a "mileston~ ...
"We have attempted to pin asree·
ment for the joint excavatJon and
acth1tics and this 11 the 6nt one."
sa d tilt official, who apotc on
condition he not be tdentified •
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT /Thurlday. Novembet 14, 1986 ...
Ownership
of payphones
can be private
Cal State entry toughened
SAN FRANCISCO (A P) -Pacific Bell will be
allowed to sell 40.000 of us 165,000 pay phones tO
bu.sJnesscs and other\ who want to maintain them on
pnvatc propeny, the 'itate Public Ut1ll11es Commission tw ruled.
The PUC voted Wednesday to set a maxtmum rate of
2S cents for local calls and I 0 cents above the Pacific Bell
rate for long-dJst.ancc calls. lnforma11on, emergency and repair calls must be free.
The action docs not apply to pay phones on streets
and other public areas, which will remam under Pacific
Bell ownership, wuh a current maximum rate of20cents fora local call. -
Pacific Bell spokesman Roger Orr said the company ho~ to sell 40.000 phones in Ii vc years: With the PUC
ruling. people also will be allowed to buy,pay phones from
other manufacturers and connect them to the Pacific Bell network.
Manin Matte!.. who drafted the PUC order, said the
ruling docs not apply to the smaller Ge neral Telephone,
although that company has been in vited to seek authonty
to sell some of us pay phones.
. ~au~ aD ad~m1strative law Judge for the com-
nuss1on, said the pnce would be $700 to f900 for a Pacific
Bell phone, and $400 to $2,500 for a phone from another
manufacturer. Phone booths would cost more.
Mattes said the first pnvately owned pay phones
couJd be connected within two months unless the PU Cs ord~r is delayed by a request for a rehearing, possibly by
businesses seckmg more favorable rates.
lnst.allat1on could take nine months m rural areas
because of equipment problems. he said.
Companies could charge less than the maximum and
could offer discount~ to their customers. They could also
limit calls to custome~ only and limit the duration of each
call.
Tenants
• receive
$200,000
By tbc Auoclated Pren
LOS ANGELES -Res idents of a
crumbling Skid Row apartment
building where rodents and bugs still
roam untamed received a $200,000
seuJement from the landlord who
refused to clean up the slum. Four·
teen families shared Wednesday in
what the tenants' lawyers called the
city's largest settlement ever against a
Skid Row landlord. "I saw huge rats
in the building, I saw scars on the
children from the rat bites." said
Nancy Mintie, an attorney with the
Inner City Law Center who rep-
resented the 42 tenants of the Stan·
ford Hotel. The lawsuit against
Mel vyn Nachman. his finn MN
Management Co. Inc. and Stanford
660 South Ltd, was filed ID October.
1984 after tenants. whose rent was
$260 per month complained of de-
teriorating building corrd1tions.
Dangler celebrates
SAN FRANCISCO . -Stuntman
Steven Trotter, who marked his 23rd
birthday by dangl mg from the Golden
Gate Bridge, celebrated the exploit
with a meal of cold sandwiches
provided by his jailers. Trotter, who
rode over Niagara Falls in a barrel 1n
Ausust, dropped a long cable ~ver the
rail Wednesday, squ1nned into an
improvised scat and lowered away on
a pulley to the 55-0egrec water 220
feet below. One of his gloves iammed
into the pulley about 15-fect from the
water "and I swung back and forth ID
the wind like a giant pendulum" at
about 70 miles an hour, Trotter said.
Trotter said he was too wejk to hang
on so he dropped into the water whef't'
a Coast Guard boat picked him up.
He was booked into city pnson for
conspiracy to commit a misde-
meanor and trespassing on a public
structure.
Teen gets millions
OoT. Oeorae Dea.kmeJlan toured &aata Clara
County Jail We4Dee4ay and blepected aite of
$50 mllllon faclllty to be built near airport.
~ -~~ Downtown LA site
predicted for prison
OAKLAND (AP) -Gov. George DculuneJ1an
predicts that his proposed dov.ntown Los Angeles pnson
site will prcvrul over the one near Magic Mountain
proposed by Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley.
Deukmejian made his prediction Wednesday m an
address to the annual convention of the County
Supervisors Association of California.
The Republican governor also a.ccused Bradley, his
expected Democratic oppon.ent for governor next year. of
endorsing the site near the Magic Mount.ajn amusement
park in northern Los Angeles County to "diven attentjon
away from the fact that his administration has not been
cooperative, and has not shown any leadership io trying to
locate a st.ate P.rison site in Los Angeles."
DeukmeJlan praised the county officials for helping
the state speed up the process of building a half doz.en new
prisons throughout the state to case overcrowding.
/
LONG BEACH (AP) -Cahfornia
tale Uruvers1ty tnistces foruflcd Lhe
~ystcm's freshman admiuion re·
Qutrtments Wedncsd2y despite con· ccms the move would screen out
mmont,Y students.
Meetma at the chancellor's office,
trustees voted without discussion or
dissent to approve the new standards,
which will go into effeot 10 the 1988
school year, said spokesmap Roger
Kuhn.
The vote means students currently
enrolled 1n grades lower than l I th, 1
and who want to attend one of the 19 1 Cal St.ate campuses, will have to take
15 academic courses before they
graduate from hi&h school. I
The trustees added a third year '
mathemlncs and c.ourscs 1n science,
history. foreign Janauaae and an to
the hst of requirements. Begmning ID
1984, entcnng Cal State students had I
to have taken at least four years of
Engl 1sh and two years of math
fhe board's Educauon Polley I
Commllttt recommended approval
of the new standards Tuesday at'\cr
two hours of debate.
Un1vers1ty offi cials hope the re·
quirements will reduce the insutu· I
t1 on's high freshman dropout rate. ,
Currently, about three in (our I
freshmen leave the system without
earning a degree five years or less j
from enrollment. Academic d1f-
ficult1es are cited as one of the more
common problems. 1 The attn lion rate 1s especially high
among m1nonty students. Opponents
of the new 'tandards argued that they
would ehm1Date mner-dty school
students. denying them a chance at 1
.. ,
h~er educauon. around becau1e o(Uu.a.," t:rUstee Celia
'I think m1nonues are very much 8&llcs1eros said bcf0tt Wed.oetda)''a
afraid -afraid they att going to IOSt meet1oa.
Oak & Brass Promotions·
ANTllVB
SHOW
&SALE
Thursday, Nov. 14 -Sunday, Nov. 17
FEATURING: antique f\Jrnlture, unusua.l lamps, crystal and glass repair,
vintage glass, unique collec1ables, chiming clocka, allver & paper Items.
FREE admlHlon FREE parking
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~ 10 lh009 lnctudlng JCP•~. MonlQOfMf'Y Wa"' & The Bro.dw9y
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Open weel«Says 10 9 / Saturoay 10 · 6 and Sunday i 'l · 5
REDWOOD CITY -A teenager
seriously injured in' a single-car
ac.cident that left him permanently
scarred will receive more than $31.5
million over his lifetime in an out-of·
coun settlement. according to his
attorney. Robcn K. Tarlor. I 7, of San
Joie, was a passenger ID the car and
suffered dozens of fractures of his
face, arms and legs 1n the 1984 crash
in San Carlos. said attorney Joseph
Carcione Jr. The driver, Chnstopher
Turtunc1, 17. of San Carlos received
onl y minor mjuries when the atr
plunaed down a hill and smashed into
a trtt. Taylor's family sued Turturic1
and his father and filed a damqc suit
apinat the City of San Carlos.
daimin& that the road should have
had a ~fety bamer. When you're feeling downright rotten, the first pla ce you should go for fast relief is
Dtacbarge delayed
SAN DIEGO -A federal judae
iuued a temporary order delayinf the
Navy from discharaina five sailors
who tested f>?Sitive for the virus
uaociated Wlth thr deadl)' diseasc
AIDS. The action Wednesday by U.S.
Dl1trlct J udae Rudi Brewster was in
response to a lawsuit filed by at·
tomeya Thomas Homann and
Charles Sumer on behalf of the flve
men, u:kntified onl y u "John ~ ..
in the auit. Brewster's order rem&Jns
in efT«t pendina the outcome of a full
btarina Friday oo a request for a
temporary rcstraio1na order to halt
dlaclw'lt of the mm. The 11ilora. all
of whom were in boot camp when the
te1t1 foncquimi immune deficie~
syndrome were conduacd. were 1n
medical custody Wednetday I I
Bllbol Naval Hospital. An11tant
U.S. Attorney John Robiruon ob-
jected to \be judfe's order, 11yina be
CCXlki tee no aq.1 ahowina to Justify
such action at this time. Robinson
aald that the matter could await
Friday' 1 hearina.
Pacifica Hospital's Emergency Ca~·t: Unit.
Whether it's for a bad cold. The flu. Or a more serious
problem that needs th~ special attention of an emergency staff
in a full-s ervice hospital, Pacifica can handle it.
We 're right in the neighborhood whenever you need us.
24 hours a day. Seven days a week.
So the next time you get hit with a bad cold or the flu, don't
take it lying down. Come to Pacifica's Emergency Care Unit
• N ' . t
' tllo .\ •
for a little first aid.
Pacifica Community Hospital. The I-~ eart of Huntington
Beach, at 18792 Delaware Street, (714) 842-0611 .
..P Pacifica
Community Hospital
For 1 fret is· x 24· hthograph of 1 Chults Bragg etching mt~ M'Tlt • top by i>3clfica Commun1tv Ho pita!
)
C 1985 Pac•hca Community Hospital
All rtghJS rnervetJ
-
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·----
OrMge COMt DAILY PILOT/ Thuteday, Nowmw 14, 1985
House ruShes money bill
through; crisis averted
WASHINGTON {AP) -The House has approved
and ~nt to President a.capn a bi.U t~mporarily refillin&
the Treasury's empty coffcn Wltb borrowed money,
apperently avertlna a aovernment financial crisis tomor-row.
The House, br. voice vote and without debate,
aocepted the Senate s version of a short-term increase tn
the 1e>vernment's debt limit today.
The bill would avoid potential embarrassment for
the president u be leaves for his summit with Sovu~1
leader Mikhail Gorbachev. Reqan has indic.,ted through
a spokesmfn be will sian the lqislat1on.
The White HouK warned Wednesday that unless th<·
I.reaslUY bas lbe po.wa...10 bom>w moi:c_ mane)'. tbr
aovernment will stop p&)'lQ& its bills Fnday.
"We are not 101111 to issue checks that will bounce,··
u.id presidential spokeirnan Larry Speakes.
The administration supports.permanent lcaislation
raisin.a the national debt ccilina to S2.078 triJlion -mort' than twice tbe red ink of when Reapn took office in 1981
and enouah to last through another $200 billion deficit
. year.
Still, the president was ready to sign a short-term debt
bike.
"The president accepts the obvious sentiment ofboth
houses of C-0narcss," Wbite ~ousc spokesman Edward ·
Djerejian said Wednesday nigllt. "But he will continue to
WJe Conaress to deal with our federal deficit once and fo1
all."
The Republican -led Senate, with White HouK
~port. has refused to raik the debt ceiling above the $2
· ion threshhold without attachina a plan to gradually
en the annual deficits.
To keep up the pressure for the balanced-budget plan,
the Senate Wednesday night approved extendin& the debt
ccilina only until Dec. 6, rejectin& the Dec. 13 date passed
earlier in the day by the House. Both houses passed $80
bilbon111 nni bonowi!ll? b\Jf'bycultina otTthat authomy
earlier. the Senate bill bnngs about t.fle next crisis sooner.
House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr., D-Mass .. said
today Democrats accepted the Senato. date, aJtho~ be
wd the Republitans were the ones who originally
proposed the House-passed version.
~nate M~ority Leader Roben Dole, R-K.an., said
today the Senate date would actually keep the government
afloat unuJ Dec. I 2, and the House version until Dec. I 9.
Auto sales stall econorily
By tile A11oclated Preas
• A plunge in car sales dropped retaJI sales a record 3.3
percent last month, the Commerce Departmc;nt rcponed
today, addii:ig..~ womes that the economy may be losing
steam. •
The repon said sales fell $3.9 bilhon to a 'total of
S 1 I 5.5 billion. Without the sh.arp drop m car sales. retail
sales would have nscn 0.5 percent. The prt'vious record
decline was a 2.2 percent fall m March 1975, during the
depths of a recession.
Auto saJes dropped a record 14.6 percent in October,
followina a bu)'lng frenzy m August and September in
response to cut-rate financrng offered by the automakers
at ~he end of I 985 model year, the Commerce Department
SIJd.
That drop is continumg. The automakers rcponcd
Wednesday that their sales felt 12.4 percent in the first JO
days of November from th~ level ofa year ago.
. Economists have been warning that the consumer
buymg splurae may be com ing to an end because of weak
growth this year in personal income and a record-high
consumer debt level.
. Americans took on S I0.6 billion more debt than they
paid off m Sc~tember, the FC<"!eral Reserve reported
Wednesday, S&)'lng most of the gam was due to the buying
of cars.
' '
Practice made aaf er
Hoepltala ln Skokie, Dl., ba•e eqal~dlo-pulmonary reeuKltatlon mannequin• wltb ble maaka after
police omcen, fearlnC they ~ht catch AIDS, refueed to
practice mouth-to-mouth rn118Cltatlon on mannequlna.
Astronauts in rehearsal
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -The seven-person crew of Atlantis
boarded the space shuttle today w participate in the final two hours of a
countdown rehearsal for a Thanksgiving week flight.
"It was a very successful test," reported Lisa Malone, a spokeswoman for
the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
Atlantis is to lit\ off at 4:29 p.m. PST Nov. 26, two days before
Thanksgiving, for a weeklong mission during which astronauts Jerry Ross
and Sherwood Spring wtll test space station construction techniques by
assembling beams and trusses dunng two six-hour space waJks.
AIS-O aboard wilt be Mexico's first astronaut, Rudolfo Nen. who will
observe the deployment of a communications satellite for the Mexican
government.
soar
Plus $1,000,000 second prizes and $}0,000 top instant
,,
prizes in the Lottery's brand new game.
;\o\\' \'OU Clfl \Vin more than ever
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l ~>ncry\ nc\\' instant game.
Ju~t n1atch three prize amow1ts and
y<>u ,rc .. 111 instmt \viru1er <)f up to $10.,000!
If y< >ll \\ll1 one <)f the $100 prizes, you
coLtld q u~i ~, fr>r the weekly Grand Pri ze
dr .. 1\\1ngs. Then., \Vin Sl0.,000., $50.,000.,
SI 00.,(X>O., S 1.,000.,000 <)r even
S3.,()()()J)00. (NO\\' \'OU kn<)W
\vhy \Vt: call it '"Sky~~ the Lin1itn!)
Rcn1cn1bcr to \VJ.tch the
Grand Pri ze drawing every Monday
night on television. You'll see people
frc)m all over California win.And with a
little luck., it might eve n happen to you.
With more than a third of the sales
benefiting California public education,
our schools win, too. The California
Lottery is a good feeling for a lot of
good rcasdr1s. For more infor-
rnation, in Northern California
call (916) 3~3-4143. In Southern
alifomia call (818) 459-4416.
California
lottery.
· Our schools Win, too. )011 mu't he 18 m pl.i\ Oic '" tr.111 •"Id'
• 11 "mninp. .u'l" l)(Ot'r rlun I 111 'J
• 'I
Citizens
routed
by toxic
threat
MALDEN, W .Va. (AP) -
Authorities. working to halt a leak
that earlier forced the shutdown of
five schools, evacuated 3,500 homes
today so they could~ to t~nsfer the
corrosive and volatile chemical from
a tanlc to a tn.icY.
"This chemical 1s so corrosive you
can't put it in a standard ta~ as we
know 11," said Lt. Larry Mullins of the
Kanawha County Sheriff's Depart·
merit. . "We're evacuating as a precauuon.
Better safe than sorry."
Libby Squire, a spokeswoman for
the County Commission. said 3,500
homes near the J.Q. Dick.inS-On and
Co. plant in Malden and areas in
Kanawha City and Marmet near
Charleston were evacuated.
The foul-smelling chemic~I.
bromine, is volatile when it comes tn
contact with moisture, Mullins said.
Bromine began leaking Wednesday
from a 4,000-gallon tank at the plant,
said plant manager Roger Hovey.
Bromine is used in the manufacture
of photographic materiaJs.
Classes at ftve schools were
canceled today, and one person
suffered eye bums Wednesday when
the leak began.
Malden Fire Chief J.D. Waggoner
said today that bromine continued to
leak from around a patch placed over
a hole in the leaking storage tank.
Rom.anian
jum.psship
in Houston
HOUSTON (AP) -A 44-year-old
Romanian seaman has jumped ship
and asked for political asylum in the
United States, saying he decided to
defect to a place "where freedom is
respected."
Paul Firica walked off the Roma·
nian vessel Zalau Tuesday night
while the ship was docked in the Port
of Houston and went to the Immigra-
tion and Naturalization Service office
here Wednesday.
The ship, loaded with cattle hides,
left Wednesday night for Romania.
In an interview with the Houston
Post, Firica said he had dreamed for
years of defecting to the United
States.
Paul O'Neill, INS distnct director
in Houston. confirmed that a Roma-
nian seaman had left his ship and
applied for asylum. But O'Neill said
federal authorities usually don't re-
veal defector's names. for fear their
relatives will face reprisals.
Firica said he had heard during his
voyage -which included a stop in
Cuba -of Miroslav Medvid, the 25·
year-old Soviet seaman who twice
Jumped into the Mississippi River,
only to be returned to his ship.
Bus driver charged
in fatal accident
C LAYTON. Mo. (AP)-Bond has
been set at SI 00.000 for the dn ver of a
school bus that crashed on an mter-
state highway earlier this weck, kiUing
an high school student and leaving
another in a coma.
Mark Trice was charged Wednes-
day with one count of involuntary
manslaughter and two counts of
second-degree assault in the crash
Monday. All charges incl~de aJlega-
tions that Trice was intoxicated at the
time.
S.tudents ab?ard the bus alleged to
pohce that Tncc had been speeding
and racing with a car on Interstate 70
when the b\ts went out of control and
hit a steel sign post, tearina the
passenger compartment from the
frame.
The accident killed Kimberly La-
Joycc Bogan, 18, and injured 12 other
$~,___ ______________ _
E1t1rtai1iR1 P1111l1
to l111fit
Hu111a1 011ti111
Vlgnettes d isplaying hofldoy '
traditions of prominent
Orang. County families.
lxhlbltlon & loutlque
lrvlne Hiiton Hotel
Open to Publlc,
Nov. 16, 17 & 11
10om-4pm
Come to see Mort.ne
Sorosky, noted cookbook
ovthor & KA IC' s
Mkhoel Jackson.
General admission at door.
For Information on 1p9eial
•Yentl coU 673-6324.
t
I
•
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT /Thuraday, Nowim.ber 14, 1885 A? -ORANG E COAST
Irvlne villages flght
over freeway bridge
·By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of .. ~,.. .....
r ~ was village-versus-village In an emotional public heanng n:egh~ h~r a proposed bridge that would hnlc two Irvine
1 r .s no~ separated by t~e San Diego Freeway.
C' 1Crge ~~dent1al developments in Irvine arc known as vjllages At ~h 1~.l~unc1f mU~ling,,the VilJage ofWoodb'ridge squared off against
e . 1 ge ~ n1vers1ty Parle over plans to build a Yale Avenue
vehicular bf"!d&e ov~r the freeway to connect the twocommunities 1~~bndge residents, nonh ~fthe freeway, argued that the bndge
wou ampro".'c tra~c flow an their community. Local school lice
and fire officials said they favor th e bndgc because 11 will · r~uce
cmc1cncy ~spo~sc times and shonen school bus tnps.
. ut Uruvers1ty Parle residents. south of the freewa y, cla1meJ the
bndgc w~uld fut?nel thousands of additional cars through their
community, c~t1ng noise, air J>Qllutwn ~d t.rafficsaf.ely problems.
A1'.\"erttSTening to three hours o(pubhc testimony. lhc Irvine City ~odnetl voted J.2 to notify the state oflrvifte's mtcrest in bu1Jdmg the
n ge and to begrn a review of the environmental impact the project
could have on nearby commu[l1t1es. .
Funding a!ld final approval of the proposed bridge will not be
considered until this re view 1s completed. city officials said.
. Currently, the only connections between Woodbndge and
University Park are Culver Dnve and Jeffrey Road at the eastern and
Supervisors OK plan for
reorganized Clerk's Office
By USA MAHONEY
OtllM ~,......,
Oran&e County supervisors Tues-
day approved a reorganization plan
for the Clerk's Office that they hope
will help employees keep on top of a
daily moufttain of paperwork and
make them more responsive to the
public.
Supervisors agreed to hire 13 more
people to assist with a growmg and
cumbersome workload in addition to
giving the go-ahead to fill 16 pos1t1ons
they approved in August.
Nine court clerks, five data pro-
cessors and two supervisors were
authonzed-during budget' hearings,
but the positions were left unfilled
while supervisors decided what to do
about the office, which at the time was
combined with that of the Recorder's
Office.
h.ad been elected clerk-recorder. re-
signed and was appointed to the
recorder post.
Smee his Aug 21 appointment.
G ranville has been workm_a with the
Chief Administrator's Office to 1m·
ple~ent changes propowd in the
audit
Beefed · up Sta.IT will include a
senior analyst to assist with admm1s.-
trat1 ve du lies. four more supervisors
six clerks. an auditing spec1alts1 .and a
cashier.
Four more clerks wtll be needed
after January to assm three new
·ud es and to adm101ster llOLa
public tests, he said.
With the add1t1onal personnel, the
clerk's office will rely less on oven ime
to keep up with paperwork and public
request$ to review documents should
be handled faster. Granville sa1d ·
Granville has taken steps to com-
plete implementauon of an auto-
mated recordkeepang system
purcb.ascd for the Clerk's Office
JuveJlile. probate. cnminal and ap.
!)(late records are being lasted on
computer now. he said Records from
the coun's law and mouon d1v1s1on
Will be next.
Cwestcrn borders of the villages. Yale Avenue. almost midway between
ul ver and Jeffrey, docs not cross the freeway.
_ The council ~lread)'. has approved a narrow $700,000 bndgc that
will allow pedestnans, bicycles and police and fire emergency vehicles
to cross at Yale. Constru~tion will begin in January.
At issue Tuesday night was a proposal to widen that bridge to
accommodate non-emerJency car and truck traffic. T he expansion is
exi,>ected to cost another S 1.6 million. and a sound wall to reduce traffic
County auditors 1n March issue<t a
st1ng.ang cnt1c1sm of Oerk-Recorder
Lee Branch, blaming him for poor
management practices and fostering
low morale.
The audit - ordered by super-
visors -fo und that the Clerk· R~corder's Office could not keep up
with its workload and frazzled clerks
treated the public rudely. In all the
audit itemized 157 recomme~ded
changes in office operations.
Jllla... ,,,I.. WINDOW ~ .... COVERINGS 11@~.~!Qll. LOWEST PRICES OF THE YEAR!
Cnoase would add add $30,000 to the bill. city officials said. The Irvine
0 . has pled,ed up lo ss90.ooo in construction funds. . Al~hOuJ!l the cou.ncll. has not allocated city funds for the bndge
expans•<?n, at was ~ons1denng Tuesday whether to notify the state of its
interest an the project and to proceed with more detailed planning.
After the lengthy heanng. Mayor David Baker, a Woodbndge
resident, acknowledged the community split over the bridge saying." I
see people I regard as fnends on both side of the issue."
The county clerk is responsible for
maintaining Superior Court legal
documents. The recorder keeps per-
manent public records of such things
as property sales and vital statistics.
At Branch's request, supervisors
separated the offic~s and appointed
Gar) Gran ville as clerk. Branch. who
l)octor's advice: Back initiative
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of ... Oeltp .........
A Northern Cali fo rnia As-
semblyman ga ve local doctors a
prescnpuon for curta.Jhng "deep.
pocket" lawsuits that have sent
malpractice insurance rates soanng.
held only 1 percent responsible for
any injury or other damages. But 1f
other defendants lack the resources.
the I percent party can be required to
pay all of the damages.
has been passed several times by the
state Senate But he said the bills ha"e
never been approv~ by the As-
sembly Fllante claimed Assembly
Speaker W11l1e Brown has kept
proposed deep-pocket changes buned
1n commmee.
The~e changes are opposed_by the
Cahfomta Trial Lawyers Assoc1a11on, '
whose members handle personal
Injury cases. _ j
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'4 . .,
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'i .~ . "-'
The legislator. W1ll1am J. Filante,
R-San Rafael, a phys1c1an himself
spoke ~t a medic.al staff meeting at
Fountain Valley Reg.aonal Hospital
Tuesday to drum up support for an
initiative that would change Cali-
fornia's lawsuit rules.
The. initfative backed by Filante
would leave the present re1mbuse-
ment guidelines in place for "econ-
omic damages" such as medical
expenses and loss of earnings. But 11
would limit subjective "non-econ-
omic" dama~es such as pain, suffer-
ing and humiliation in direct propor-
tion to a defendant's percentage of
fault.
Peter Hinton. incoming president
of the association, recently told the
..\ssoc1ated Press that the liab1hty
cns1s was caused by the insurance
industry's own folly 1n cutting rates
and making poor investments. He·
claimed that reforms will result 1n
insufficient compensation for injured
!)(Opie
~ .,~~$...-~ "" "~~~·SF
-.,,../JJJ J ••• ~ (FANTASTIC SELECTION -M ost floors ava1bble
rn 6' ind 12' w1d1hs for no ~<ims 1n most roomsl "T~~ practice of medicine today 1s
a pohtacal act1 v11y." he said. "You
have to be organued and active."
In particular, F1lante urged IOdll
physicians to use their influence with
patients and other community mem·
bers to promote an anauat1ve that
would change California's babiht}
law.
Under present "deep-pocket"
guidelines, a pany in a lawsuit may be
Prop0nents must gather 620.000
signatures by early December tn order
to qualify for the June 1986 statewidr
balllot. the Cahforn1a Medical A~
soc1atapn, local government groups.
the insurance industry and the Cali-
fornia Manufacturers Assoc1at1on are
an:i'?ne the groups supporting the
1natJat1 ve.
Filante said legislauon that would
make the same deep-pocket changes
The asscmbl) man predicted the
tnal lawyers wtll raise S 10 m1 lhon 10
ti) to defeat the deep-pocket in-
1t1a11ve 1f11 qualifies for the ballot.
Robinsons
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UaY Gin •IOtSTllY
""he :.rst c ..,mp1..te:.ze,j ""'fV .,,. : ·s
K::-:d Eve:"' betore •tie b.J.by c t :· •
parents are •nVlted to reg:.sle1 :o: the
nursery and layette items they neen
ond love most Our compuler v.-.u
pro\'lde instant access. 1, youi v. 1sr.
!1St at every Robinsons. pcrt1.::1po:mq
in our program No 1.1upl1catic. ru.
.\!ways the nght color and size YOll ,,
be showered Wlth precious httie gif15
and tuture Grandmas dotmg a~nts
and 1nends can spoil baby w11h 11'.e
best ot every1hmg It s that easy
Ow number m N 9"N'port \S
-4 ~..; )AOO ext <14t call us
:c : your personal appoi.ntmer.!
YOU CAN NOW CHARGE YOUR ROBINSON'S PURCMASE ON THE AMERICAN EXPRES~ CARD
_AS WILL AS YOUR ROBINSON'S CREDIT CARD. -
HOURI:
M.W.F 10-6
T.T 10-a
SAT 10-4
SUN 12-4 -~ --
,
Courts dido 't
send inmates of
jail to Siberia
County prisoners arc not supposed to feel particu-
larly-good a~uHheir cir~wnStaKe$. They are, after all,
suffe~ng the righteously a~posed tcm~ra.ry. suspension
of their freedom and a modicum of social stJgmafor their
tran~gressions against established law an~ order. ·
. On t~e· remaining_ hand, they have certain rights.
1:-•ke the nght not to die of exposure during incarcera-
tion.
Inmates of ~e Orange County Jail and its adjuncts
have been subjected to some indefensibily shabby
trea_tment in recent years. Most of it was directly
attnbutable to the county's lazy approach to a growing
crowding problem.
So poor were living conditions lnside the County
Jail that people were forced to sleep on the floor even on
the lavatory floor near the toilets. '
If that sounds like the kind of justice that is meted
out by paramilitary governments in Third World
countries, it would be good to remember that the
in~ates subjected to such conditions were not exactly
capital offenders. In fact, some were not even convicts·
they were awaiting trial. '
Earlier this year, with a federal judge's shot$lffi at
their ~ac~, county o~cials eased the overcrowding by
establishing a tent pnson for low-risk offenders at the
James A. Musick honor farm in El Toro.
The county filled the place with petty criminals and
then, a~parently, lost the~ in the bureaucracy.
This week, as overnight temperatures dipped into
the 30s and heavy rains brought a chiJl into even the best
built homes, 280 Musick inmates had no heat. Many of
them probably wished they were back sleeping by the
commodes on the jail's lavatory floor. Not U\}til reports
of the Spartan conditions were published did the county
finally get around to processing the paperwork to buy
heaters ~or the tents. Sorry as it is, there's more bad news
for the mmates. The heaters won't be installed until
Saturday.
The good news is that these guys wilJ all qualify for
Boy Scout merit badges by the time they get out.
Brutality charges harmful
to law enforcement effort
To the Editor:
According to the recent headlines
and articles, 1t appears that "half the
world" IS Ju mping on the bandwagon
of accusing our local police depart-
ments of brutality.
Lmle thought 1s being given to the
damage. not only to individual of-
ficers . but to the enure law enforce-
ment departments in Orange County
It 1s important for the community
to hold law enforcement officials with
respect and honor. We need to 1nst1ll
thc'le fecltng.s in our children. To
teach them respect and authonty 1s
very difficult in the face of aJI the
court actions.
. Of c:oursc there arc a few bad apples
an police departments, as in any other
sector of the population. but they are
the exception rather than the ru le and
I am distressed at the bad press that
our local police departments arc
receiving.
I am taking this opportunity 10
extend a very large thank you to our
officers who nsk their li ves every day
to provide us with a safe community
1n which to lave.
STEPHEN P. BURGER
Costa Mesa
Pilot letter writer's problem:
He's just not paying attention
To the Edttor.
Jim Bolding (Dall> Pilot. Nov. 5)
wants to know what has happened to
freedom of religion an the United
States. Apparently, Bolding either
falls to do the Amencan thing and
keep his cars and eyes tuned lo radio
and TV or he is 1gnonng all that
religious literature most Amcncans
are receiving throug!i the courtesy of
low-cost mail privileges granted 10
church organizations and preachers
throughout the United States.
Hasn't Bolding heard of Jerry
Falwell an~ his Moral MaJonty? Is
the Republican national convention
and Reagan's dedication to the funda-
mentalist ministnes so long gone that
one of the Pilot's most frequently
exposed lctter-wnters has fogotten
the need to keep the polittcal, God-
fearing faith?
Where was Bolding when f aJwell
returned from South Afnca as the
unofficial spokesman for President
Rcapn, dcclanng Nobel Prize
Laureate Anglican Bishop Desmond
Tutu a "phoney•· and that all Chns-
tlan Amcncans should continue to
an vcst in finns doing business with
South Africa'>
Is Bolding limiting has recollec-
tions? What about all the religious
leaders who organized the Stanton
··stamp Out Porn" protest of the
recent court decision to allow the
First Amendment and Bill of Rights
to prevail in keeping the city's only X-
rated ~k and video store open?
Bol~ing obviously ,forgets religious.
organized denunciation of evolution,
ecology, sex education, the women's
movem~nt, the c1v1I rights crusades
and science fiction. There is a
<X?nstant battle in the courts against
Bible thumpers who insist upon
eroding the free speech and separ-
ation of church and state safeguards
of the U.S. Constitution.
And, remember, Mr. Boldin~ the
U.S. Boy. ~outs natio~al council has
chahged its interpretation of God and
mnstated a I 5-year-0ld Scout it had
ordered expelled from the Boy Scouts
because be did n't believe in God.
Amencan religion 1s as strong as 1t
was in Salem and Americans better
not forget 1t.
BR U\E S. HOPPING
Laguna Beach
Pilot welcomes comments
The Daily Pilot welcomes your comments on issues of Interest to
our readers.
Letters and longer articles of commentary must be signed. They
should be typed or clearly written and sent to: LETTERS to the
EDITOR, D•llY Piiot. Box 15e0, Coat• MeM, t292S. Please include
your address and telephone number.
If you prefer, you may call your comment In to our special We're
Llttenlng telephone number: 142-eoll. Please do not call In long
letters or articles
ORANGF COASl
Daily Pilat
1'111 "'*' _, 11111 fr' --"' 110 #., a., II (.(•ta~ "'°'""" ""'"""'"""'"'" •o "-'• ,.._, V>ll• -CA 9111n
Frenll Zlnl
(cltl()f
TOfft T ... t,t~fdtlor o.n, ... ..,
C"Y ldMor
Cfllltl'*' '"°"' r °''°'
''It would suit me fine If we designated a few thousand square acres
somewhere ... and set up camps for dope users, where they could ••
lounge In peace. provided with their drug of choice at low or no cost .. ·
tO/D 1HEY 00 1lW? --
Reagan's instinct to drop
tsies on business correct
Company that can sell more b ecause -
its prices are r educed can employ more
It's probably too late to salvage
genuine tax reform from the con-
fusions of this year. What began by
appealing to all to whom simplicity
appeals became another hotchpotch:
an exception for John. another for
Jane. can't forget Jim, which means
we owe one to Andy. which means.
the hell with it.
So very much gets lost in this
process of confusion. For instance.
there is the matter of the business tax.
Any Democratic polemicist who ever
roused hot-blooded anti-business
sentiment can do so by some such a
statement as this: Standard Oil can
deduct itscham~e. but the janitor
can'r aettuct his pick.le. All of which
leads of course to tbc subject of the
diminished contribution corpor-
ations arc malcing to the tax coffers.
And before you know it, even the
Reagan administration is proposing
an extra 25 ·percent increase in
corporate business taxes. Why? Be-
cause. they will tell you, corporations
arc paying only 8 percent of the tax
bur'1en now. which is only a third of
what they used to pay.
lt sounds all very menacing and
Qlutocratic, unless you analyze the
figures, which Peter Grace of the
Grace Commission bas done. from
which we learn the following:
I. In 1984, U.S. corporations paid a
tax equal to one-quarter (24. 7 per-
cent) of their profits. The average
Amencan pays.in tax one-tenth (10.2
percent) ofh1s income.
2. When people speak of U.S.
corporations pay10g only 8 cents out
of every tax dollar. they take a few
short cuts. They do not count un-
employment insurance taxes. Or
windfall profits taxes. Or. most
important. the employer's share of
Social Security taxes. Nor do they
count state and local business taxes. If
you do take these figures into ac-
count, you will find that corporate
taxes comprehensively measured
amount to just under one-third of the
total tax contributions.
3. But even then. other data should
be taken into account. Talles are
taken from profits. And pre-tax
corp<'>rate profits as a percentage of
gross national product arc about one~
third lower now 'than in 1950. Back
then, corporation profits came to 11 .8
percent of GNP; today, they arc
reduced to 7.8 ~rcent. Yet notwith-
standing diminished profits, the per-
centage of corporate contributions to
the tax total (30 percent) hasn't
changed in 15 years.
4. When one thinks of Standard
Oil. one thinks of Nelson Rockefeller.
But a recent survey of New York
Stock Exchanic stockholders reveals
that the median income of house-
holds owning stock in companies
hsted there is $33,200. And 4 million
stockholders have incomes below
$15,000. One need only consider the
stock held by pension funds and
insurance companies to ca lm any fear
that stockholdmg is an appanage of
the very rich.
It's a pity that in h1s search for tax
simplificauon Mr. Reagan has not
followed his own instincts. which arc
to do away with the business tax. Yup,
kill it. That, by the way, is the best way
to avoid corporate extravagance. If
corporate champagne is paid for I 00
percent by the stockholders, there's
going to be less champagne drunk.
But of course the principal benefit
wouJd come from lowering thefrice
of manufactured goods and o ser-
vices. lfwe arc goi ng to do our best to
WILLIAM F.
Bue KLEY
compete and to encourage saving and
investment and high employment.
we should reduce the overhead of
commercial life. A corollary is to
reduce the burden on savi ng.. lt 1s the
ouutanding paradox of U.S. tax
policy that although we wish to
encourage investment and dis-
courage consumption. we give tax
advantages to those who borrow
(interest is deductible) and inflict
taxes on those who save (bank
interest payments are taxable). So
that while we are using fiscal pohcy in
such a way as to encourage certain
kinds of acti vity, we arc in fact
encouraging the wrong land of activi-
ty.
One hopes Mr. Reagan will be off to
a better start on what one might call
Treasury Ill, the third proposal.
dated, say. in January of next year. It
would malce 1he flying leap: Do away
wirh all business taxes. and, let all
interest from savings be free, begin-
ning with $I 0,000 and rising as
prudence informs us.
A dividend of such proposals as
these is the excitement they would
generate. and hardly an excitement
confined to coupon<lippers: The
corporauon that can sell more be-
cause its pnccs are reduced can
employ more. The ripple effect is
prosperity. Theassumpuon is that it's
bad politics to come out for reduced
business taxes. There arc those who
counsel the GOP to do it before the
Democrats run away with the idea.
WIJJl•m Bactley 11 • 1yodlc•tH
colamal1t.
-JMi~llliMit~"&!IJl'll1i1·i"'jt•"'W"'li1·i----------
N a ti on lining up with Grace
against government waste
WASHINGTON -The No. I
concern of the American people.
according to a confidential survey by
President Rcapn's pollster, is the
way the federal government
squanders their money.
Pollster Richard Wirthlin found
that Americans arc fed up with
federal splurging. They arc anary
about multi-billion-dollar ovcr-
charae5 for weaponry; they are tired of
footing the bill for $640 toilet seats
and $6S9 ashtrays; they want an end
to wasteful procurement practices.
The drive agaiOJt government
waste 1s spearheaded by J. ·Peter
Grace. a crusty industrialist who
knows how to track a dolJar throuah
the federal muc. He has found 2,478
ways to reduce aovemment waste.
ineffid ency and overspendina.
For his trouble, he has been bitterly
assailed by special interests that
would lose benefits if federal spcnd-
ina is cut. He has been savqcd. too.
by aovemment administrators who
would IOK salary and status 1f their
budacU WC1"C rcdU<:ed.
But he has the.support of President
R~n. who invited him to meet
behind closed doors with the Cabinet
a few days aao. The pretfdent said be
hoped to implement 83 percent of
Grace's ~mmcndatioru. Rcapn
ordered the Cabinet to carry out these
reforms: be abo asked ttis new b~t
dm:ctor. Jim Mtller, to report to llim
rqularly On the ~OIJCU.
Most of the re ~nns, howncr, will
requu·c convessional action. And the
special 1nteresu have usually been
1
Jac1
AllDEISOI
and JOSEPH SP£AR
able to obstruct fiscal reforms by
bnngmg intense pohtical pressure on
ConF.ss. Grace hopes to counter the
special interests by acpealing to the
public interest; he w1 call upon the
American people to bring their own
pressure on Congress.
"We want to build a broad coali-
tion of concerned ci tizens," he says,
"dedicated to the overall well-being
of our nation, representina the fiahts
of the manx rather than the demands
of the few.
Thus, members of Conart" will be
confronted with an uncomfonablc
choice: whether to succumb to tbe
pressure of the orpni~cd lobbies or to
face an aroused ettiienry. Many
memben arc rushina to join the
Grace Caucus.. wtycb is pushina
lqislation to implement Peter
Grace's proposals.
Even some lobbyma aroups have
put the aentraJ interest ahead of their
special interests. For example, 38
trade associations. under Che leade:r· &hie of public advoca~ Wayne
Srruth. are airtively lobbytna on
Capitol Hill for actJon on Orace'i
recommendations,
The U.S. Jaycees h.as received a
vant from the J.M. Foundai.ion to
educate the public on govefnment
waste. The Jaycees, according to
spokesman Mike Fernandes. hope to
"wake up the nation to what's going
on in Washington."
Also. most of the watchdog agen-
cies -the General Accounting
Office, Congressional Bud&ct Office
and the federal government's own
inspectors general -endorse Grace's
ObJe<:tivcs, thou~ they disagree on
some of the specifics.
Meanwhile, the voters now have a
way to determine whether their
congressmen support the war on
waste. They need merely to inquire
whether the conaressmen belong to
the Grace Caucus.
Footnote: Jack Anderson is co-
chairman with Peter Grace of the
campaiio to reduce government
waste.
IRANIAN ICONOCLAST: Not all
the ayatollahs 1n Iran arc as beny as
Khomeini. One outsJ>C?ken e~ception
to the aeneral faoaucism is Kassan
Qomi·Tabetaba.i, senfor ayatollah in
l ran 's second-holiest city, Masbad. In
a decree he istued earlier this year he
had the temerity to denounce the
declared ''holy war" apmst lraq ..,
"banm," or relia.iously unlawful. He
explained: "Confrontation in this war
is between two aroups of Moslems,
mjurina and mutilatina one another.
Larae aums of money arc wuted.
Towns and Ylliqes arc destroyed.
Women ~ WK.lowed and children
orphaned "
Jed A.llffrNe Utl J...,,. S,..r
are 1T9'katf4 ~'"·
SYDIUY BAJUl.18 coJamnlat
SIDIEY
H1111s
Fighting
drug use
useless
battle
When the city of Chicago last
spnng called up 216 recruits for its
police department. all of whom bad
passed an initial hiring exam. nearly
ooe-fourth of them were rejected for
drug use when medical tests found
traces of illegal drugs in their systems.
Thjs is an extraordinarily hi4h
perctntagc of candidates for JObs m
enforcing the l.~w. If as many as one-
fourth of aspuing cops show no
aversion to the drug habit. it is to be
expected that they would display
reluctance to chase down t.he ir fellow
users w1lh much enthusiasm.
Furthermore. the director of the
police department's personnel
d1V1sion shrugged ofT t.he medical
results as "not unusual." Given any
~ther 20 applicants, it seems, about
the same percentage of drug rejects
could be expected. What this suggests to me is that our
country is engaged in a fruitless
campaign to nab, arrest and convict
drug users at large; and that the
libertanans in our midst, who insist
that such laws be decriminalized,
probably ma.kc more sense than the
militant anti-drug crusaders.
If enough people want to drink.
they will drink, as we have learned to
our great cost; and 1f they want to
ingest drugs, they will find ways to get
them, laws or no laws. Obviously, this
is a worldwide problem. not a local or
even natjonal one alone.
Most illicit dru~ -excepting such
freaks as "angel dust," which is used
largely because cocain~ is so much
more expensive -tranquiliu their
users, rather than turning them
aggressive or vicious, as alcohol often
docs. All they want to do is cu rl UP. in
a comer; even sex is a negligible
activity to a user, much less the
cnerJY to go out and rob a store or
burglarize a home.
It would suit me fine 1f we
designated a few thousand square
acres somewhere in the Dakotas
(wh ich arc losing population any-
way), and set up camps for dope users,
where th ey could lounge m peace,
provided with their drug of choice at
low or no cost for as long as they cared
to They would bother nobody. and
nobody would bother them.
This would save us hundreds of
millions in pohcc costs. prisons and
cnmes that are committed only
because 11lcgality makes the pnce of
drugs so prohibitive to many. Society
can only go so far in protecting people
against themselves -especially
people whose ulllmate aim 1s com-
m.itting a slow, langorous su1 c1de by
withdrawal from hfe.
There 1s no way that any law
enforcement 1s goi ng to stop. or even
hamper, the manufacture and dis-
tribution of what arc basically pain-
kJllers for people who find living too
torturous without them. There 1s a
huge difference between being our
brother's keeper and becoming his
jailer.
Sydlley lhrri• 11 • 1yodlc•I~
colaIDJllll.
L.M. Bovo
Rlce popular,
but Nepal lllces
potatoes better
Most popular food in the world 1s
still rice. But it's no longer No. I in
Nepal. The imported potato has
taken over there.
A~ong snakes. there are no vea-
.ct.anans.
The Japanese of old practiced a
custom called "the cold austerity"
wherein winter participants went out
before dawn to sit under waterfalls in
chilly mountain streams. Not many
do that anymore. Like none.
More than half the printers na-
t1onwidc would go into another line
of work, if they had it to' do all over
apin. And two out of five auto
worlreD would choose somethina
else, too. So say the employment
researchers.
What a beby swan needs more than
anythint ellC, T guess. is pcrsiatence
-,takes 24' hours tO peck Its way OUl
of 1ts shell.
Where c1t~s trecs grow, the colon
cancer rate 11 less than half the
natJonal averqc.
Earliest of the civilized law, were in
·Babylon's ancient Code of Ham-
murabi. EM.mole: "If a married
woman shall be ca U&ht lyina with
another man. both lhail be bound and
thrown into the river."
wiu benks had cash mac.h1nee
yeara before U .S banks 1nat.alled
umc.
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT /Thuraday, Novemoet 14, 1985 At
o ~ff~ rHf CouNnR Small investors no longer
are small-minded investors
-Tlle .,.. nt Stll 1 L Flex Bo 69• N om n • 12 Tl! Frt 10 49 11 40 RKll r 9 n Nl T~E• ..
By JOHN CUNNIFF .., ...... .,,.,.....
Now that the stock market averages
arc at new highs, Wall Street's brokers
an~ concerned about their ab1hty to
attract .ordinary or small investon
1oto the marketplace.
It used to be easier to do, ht-cause It
was widely believed that the stock
market was 1he Amencan way to
wealth, and that by owning shares 1n a
ltSted company you were 1n effect
fasting your vote for flnanCLal democ·
racy.
The New York tock Eicchange
even promoted the idea of owning a
piece of Amenca. and for a while the
shareholder population soared. be-
cause as they were saying then, the
market 1s the elevator to a new level of
prosperity.
The idea was easy to sell, given the
amb1t1ons of ordinary folk!> who saw
an opportunity to be somebody
einraord1nary. and so when a rally got
started and enthusiasm spread they
Jumped en on the action.
But smalJ investo~ today arc not as
naive as they were 20 years aio. one
reason bein~ that so many of them
lost their shirts. only later rcalmng
that their entrance into the mark.rt
was a signal for the profe~saonali. w
srll
Another factor 1n the intellectual
growth of small mvestors was the
'1owth of 1mparuaJ research. 1nclud·
iJl&._.thc jj od.l.ng that you ~ can· t
tradr in and out of thr market and
ellP«t to make anyone but )Our
broker JlCh.
Stud.Jes have shown 1ha1 long-term
macu ve investors do as well a~ or
better than traders ~eking to
outguess the market. As one adviser
The Pallrnt lnvrstor, says· "The
more decmons the grca1er the
chance of error."
The rcaltzat1on was enhanced b>
the so-<:alled mst1tut1onahzation of
the marketplace. which means that
most trading is not by md1v1duah an
compctatton wath each o ther but bY
the hkc1o of tru ts, and pension aria
mutual funds.
The 'mall 1nvestor's education wu
abetted by other factors too, mcludina
thr rcahz.at1on that his {'eigbbor wbo
put tnoncy into a house, for ex.ample,
was becoming a lot better off
financially -with no professional
lid VIC(' at all
Lat.er~ another breed. of smalJ
mvrstors learned that good moiiey
could be made 10 their own
backyards. simply by 1ovesun1 1n
small. start-up companies run by
local people wtth whom they had a
dared relauonsh10
Wall the small investor Jum p in to
the market and keep the rally go1n(>
Or will he stand on the sidelines?
The answer may be neither. He
may already be in oo the profits,
having bought 1n a long ume ago and
held on for thr long term.
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BUSINESS CALENDAR
I-Previous a. s auote r R.oerti1>I
cneroe mev •DOI•
LOS ANGELES (AP) -General
Motors Corp said Wednesday that 1t
has cleared the final hurdle 1n its SS
b1lhon takeover of Hughes Aircraft
Co
The nation's No I automaker was
top bidder for Hughes when S«ret
bids were revealed in June. But the
deal was delayed becauscofSecunues
and Exchange Comm1ss1on ob1ec-
t1ons to certain accountmg methods
that GM planned to use in tht'
transaction.
GM's statement didn't elaborate
on how 11 resolved its difference~ wtth
the SEC.
The proposed purchase of Hughes.
which 1s based 1n the Los Angeles
suburb of Et Sc~undo, would finnl~
establish G M in the soph1s11cated
high-technology industry.
Hughes is a leading manufacturer
of military m1sstles and radar sys-
tems. military and ci v1han satellites.
navigation and communications
equipment and 1ndustnal dectron1cs.
G M. in an announcement released
in Detroit. Los Angeles and Nrw
York, said 11 plannrd to proceed wtth
a stockholders· vote on the creation of
a new krnd of G M stock. Class H. The
OTC UPs & DowNs
NE W YORK (AP) -The followl119 llsl snow\ 1111 Ovtr • lht! Count e r
slocks and w1rrants lhal have gone uo the most and down Int most t>al«l on oercenl of cnan~ IOI' Wed. No securities lradll\9 l*ow 12 or 1000 shares are Included. Net and oercenlaoe ctt.119es ore rn. difference t>etwffn lhe !>f'evlovs clOslno r:>rlce and lodev's last or bid orlce UPS Name Lasl Cho
I Marco. mTI un 2'19 + f't ~ ~Mog~~g ',: ~~ + 2 V.
S• shr oo cv pt 4ih f I'll! IFd Ln 161'7 3'n t l rtX s 4 V. I~ ~~~A~t Ji~ +ill·~
11 H Ttcttnol 211) ~ 12 randlnsul 2~ ~
13 MMI Med 11/• I
1 4 CME SA 2 + .• u p
15 lntrcllOvn 6 t :i... 116 Termlftex 6 l.. 7 lrvl,,.Snsr 2 1 •
1
1
e Powelllnd 2'~ "' 9 Hetr1CPt 3 • ~
i 0 1 11 oower 2"• •
ls
l NaUOIH 4 ., .,
f>rtWIV 2 • i • OrtaCP J • i. Howe_rdBncP 26>4 2~
P a coPt'I w 1 3~ 1' DOWNS
1 A~Z:Y L•l!. _c~.,
2 MaxErmas un 21 • -'-
3 Schadler !''• _,. ,! • US Vacaln ,
t VllalUnlld 1. .,
AmSnrdHsp ., 8 IOJ(ChMed I • ~ 8 AlldRnhAsc ~ ,_ 9 Petromln 211'> ~ 10 SlrlkerPtr s 411'> ~ 11 MaroauxCll '271t "'
112 Wtsoac lnv 1 • •.,
3 ~lnlrhall 2 ''• 14 ootn 16un 4'1• ''2 IS nvlr"Prc 2'111 • • Jt ln~~~~~IPI t~ ~
1
1
1 Vlcom ~..... ~
9 Encore<:m01r 3~ -°" ~ OataArchlltcl 6~ -~
Numerex i~ ~ .. Petrol I rid ...
4 p,~~c -3· l:
2S ~lllec·~grp « -'-
Pct
UP ioo 8~ ff61.~7 UP .
UP 6 Up J.1
Up 21.6
UP 206 8~ ~~ UP )j6
UP 16.7 ¥p 160
1 4 )
Up 143
UP 10
UP 133 UP 13 3
UP 13.0 Up 12 5
UP 12 5
UP 12 S
UP 11 8
UP 115
UP 115
Pel 364 t\~ 200 11.i 14 3 143 1~ a 122 II S 11 1 If lo~ 100 9S 9 1
89 88 H u
Ad Club m.eets tonight
VU.ct Corso, executive art directo r and production manager for
Westways ma~ine, will be honored when the Oru1t Couly Ad
CJab holds its 'Thirstday Night Toast" tonight.
JUMBO
CERTIFICATES ot DEPOSIT
The S:30 p.m. pthenna will include happy hour pnces and hors
d'ocuvrcs 11 Ravels in the Registry Hotel. 18800 MacAnhur Rl vd ,
Irvine. • • • Ed R•,,ert. president ofCaJJforaia FlauclaJ Advlaon IDc,. will
conduct a free seminar o n financial planning on Saturday at \heCosta
Mesa Country Oub. For more information. c:aU 836-9500. • • • WUUam P.,ejoy, chairman of the board of Flauclal
C.rporatl• of America (Amerieu Savlap 6 Lou) will be one of
tbc featured speakers a1 the annual Investment Fair of the Realty
Investment Association of California on Friday.The all-day prQIJllm
will be held 11 the A.nabcim Marriott Hoicl, 700 Wcs1 Co~1on
Way. For more information and rqistratJon. call 6S 1-1343: • • • ''1&'1 y.., Me .. : AcMen y..,. Career P.-t&aJs, .. a career
development ecminar 1p<>_!1t0rcd by <:outline Community CoUese's
Community Scrvi<lct Office, wilf be held from 9 a.m. 10 noon
Saturday at 1hc C.UlllM c.....t17 c.ue...a.....-~
Cater, 20661 Farnsworth Lane. Hu.nllnltOn 8eecb.
The SIO tem1nar will be conducted by career counselor Dkk
lleMrtl. For more inlorma.tton, call l 4J-6J86. • • • "C~ter9 r. .... l11t1--hate• PaNCee" ''the 1opic of a ffce oonkttnoc offtted to small business enlre~ncun
from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Tuaday ln the f'lddity Fcdcfal Builchna..2700
N. Main. Suite 400, Santa A.na.
Sponeon:d by the U.I. ._... 1-. 111 M•W.nU.. the
conference will ~ followed on Nov. 26. with 1 d11CUmonon
"'Mlrh:Ual fer Small ........... For more information. oall
R:\6-2709
•
S 100,000 or More
Maturity Interest Rate
a.so%· 90-Day .
180-Day 8.70'M)
•".1tu ~ 10 cti.rv wtthout noll<~
CITIZENS
BANKef'"'5 --=u11F
2'70 Harbor BNd "1t 8 er-Cosu Mesa
301 E I 7lh Str~~t-Costa Mesa
2650 E Imperial Hwy-Ina
~rFOIC.
stock's performance will be lied to the
G M Hughes Electron ice; ( orp a nl'w
~ubs1d1ary being formed from
Hughes and somr of G M s e~1st1ng
electronics operations.
GM made s1m1tar move a year ago
after tts S2.5 b1lhon purchase of
Elec~ron1c Data Systems Corp thr
giant Dallas-bai.ed computer com-
pan~ issuing a new Class Estock tied
to that subs1d1ary's performance.
The SEC had ob,rccted to GM plans
to takr a S4 b1lhon charge against
earnings for the d1ffercn~ between
the book 'alue of Hughes and the
pnce being paid b)' GM
Not
alcoholics
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No matter what you 're
doing. your hometown
newspaper The Illy Nit
fits in .
WHAT AMEX DID
NEW YORK (AP> Nov.J1• Tl~ ':f.•,v. Adv~::' ~.·gf.trf= ..
New tllOtl' 4 New lows 7
AMEX LEADERS
NEW YORK tAPI -Sales, • p.m. Ttlurldav price and net chanoe of the 10 m o l t active American Stock Excnanoe ,,sues, trac:l lno na tlona llv •1 more ~P1;1 n I.Of. SI:"+~.· r.~lrCP , 1 ~ -Ve ~Pharm , -+ V. lmar 3 'le + -M -Ye n ' +Ye 1 ' 43· -1-16 HomelM of 4 · 22 -fJ.
GoLD QuoTE S
METAL S QuoTES
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WHAT NYSE Orn
NYSE LEADER S
Dow JoNE S AVERAGES
Long Beach Yacht Club
"°lns St. Petersburg trophy
By ALMON LOCliBEY
Dmlr ...............
Lona Beach Yacht Oub has been
awltded the St. Petersburg Yacht
Club Trophy, emblematic of excel-
lence in race management.
The award was made at the Unned
States Yacht Racing Union annual
meeting at Lake Lanier, G a.
l.BYC was honored for us $Uperb
organization of the 1985 USYR U
lnterclub Match Racing Cham-
pionship for the Prince of Wales
Bowl, beld Aug. 21-26 1n brand new
Holdcr-20 sloops.
It was the third time LBYC bas
been awarded the coveted trophy.
They won it an 1972 for running the
Congressional Cup match racing '
series, and again in 1980 for the Race
Week Regatta.
The tr0,phy, originally awarded by
St. Petersburg. Aa. in the late I 960s,
was retired for several years and then
donated to USYRU. Selection, based
on questionaire responses by panici-
pation slcippers, depends solely on
~ management as~s of the
regatta, including sailing instruc-
t ions, signal visibirity and
procedures, mark setting accuracy,
reaetioo-to--wind shifts and ~
considerations.
In making the presentation,
USYRU race management commit-
tee chairman Barbara Kostoff noted
that two racing circles were used with
two separate race committees. A tot.at
of 48 windward-leeward races were
sailed over three days.
"Slcippers and crews climbed a
difficult sailing ladder to reacb these
finals," said Kostoff. Eight USYRU
areas com~tcd in the rega'tta.
Principal race officers were Landon
Parrill and ~ey Aam, both of
LBYC. Chief lud&e was Interclub
Match Racing Championship Chair-
man John Newball of Boston, Mass.
ServinJ with Newball were Hank
Arnold, Houston, Tex.; and Roger
Eldrid&e, San Rafael; Cy Gillette,
Honolulu; USYRU president Chuck
Kobet, Lona Belch; Mary Savage,
l..archmont, N.Y.; and Ed Von Wolf-
ersdorf, Mercer Island, Wasb.
Event cbainnan Downie Muir of
Newpon Beach accepted the trophy
on behalf of LBYC.
To be eligible for the 1986 St. Pete
award, events must be held between
Sept. I, 198S, and Aug. 3 I, I 986.
Regatta organizers arc urged to obtain
applications from USYRU before tbe
event.
CALENDAR UCYRU
Cabo San Lucas race set director
Digest attraction on the yachting
scene this weekend will be the start of
LongBeach Yacht O ub's Long Beach
to Cabo San Lucas race, Friday and
Saturday.
Nine Orange County yachts arc
entered in the event, which is open to
both International O ffshore Rule
(IOR) ratings and Performance
Handicap Racing Fleet yachts.
Forty-five yachts divided into
three IOR and two PHRF classes will
start the 700-mile race off the Long
Beach breakwater at noon Fnday and
Saturday. The smaller PHRF classes
will get the starting signal Friday and
tbe fOR boats will leave Saturday.
Orange County boats entered in the race are Winterhawk, Hal Day, Bahia
Corinthian YC, Strider, David Pick-
et, Balboa YC, Supernova, Stephen
Pauley, BYC, Amante,Mel Richley,
BYC, Aleta, Warren Hancock, New-
port Harbor YC, High Roler, . Ed
Meserve, NHYC, Anthem , Laura
Maves, BCYC, Defiance, Mike
Wathen, Capistrano Bay YC. and
Lean Machine, Tom O'Keefc. Capo
BYC.
On tbe local front, Newport Harbor
Yacht Oub will conduct the fint race
of its W inter Series Saturday and
Sunday, Capistrano Bay Yacht Club
will host the fifth race of its Mission
Series for PHRF yachts on Saturday,
and Dana Point Yacht Club will hold
its Fall One-<le!ign Regatta on Satur-
day. -
In other Southern Cahfom1a
Yachting areas:
Los Aqeles-LoD1 Buell
Cabrillo Beacb Yacht Oub-lnvertcd
start Point Fermin race (all classes).
Saturday.
S..ta Moa.lca Bay
Marina Yacht Oub-Pre-turkey
race, (PHRF), Saturday.
Redondo Beach Yacht Club-Tur-
key Shoot (PHRF), Saturday.
Del Rey Yacht Oub-lntraclub
Drumstick race, Sunday.
King Jitrbor Yacht C lub-·
Centerboard Turkey race, Sunday.I
Su Dle,o
Coronado Cays Yacht Club-Fall
Shipshape Series, Saturday.
Southwestern· Yacht Club--
Graham Shand Series, Saturday, Hot
Rum Series (MORC) Sunday.
Sao Diego Yacht Oub-Ho t Rum
Series (IOR) Sunday.
Silver Gate Yacht Q ub-Hot Rum
Series (PHRF, SDHF), Sunday.
Third Opera Ball
very classy affair
By EVE C. LASH
Dmlr ..... C:.1 ........
Princess Di and Prince Charles-you should have been there. It was as
elegant and festive as a royal gala.
Members of the third annual Opera Ball committee said although the
• royal duo weren't on the guest l1st(ta, ta, hip, hip and a cheerio) it was a rather
smashing success.
More than SOO gathered Saturday at the Lavishly-<lccorated Disneyland
Hotel ballroom. .
General Manager of Opera Pacific Oa~ld Dlo..tera.(with wife ~ren) sat~,
"This is $Orrrrgeous. What a really impressive decor (with candles ghstening in
the two lier ballroom ). Cllarley Papp bas done a marvelous job. It's first class
all the way."
"This is exciting. We don't get up here very often,·· said Ctady Ze~er as
she and Don (ofNewport Beach) entered the ballroom. "She (dressed 1n a .
magnificent crushed satin knock-out lipstick red colored dress and black mink)
loves to dress up. The sparkles and spangles in here are exciting" he added.
Chairman of the ball Rose Smede,aard (wearing a lovely ma.uve and
silver~uinneddress)said, ''This is some evening. Weare fuU wtth 550guests,
and this as only our third ball. Do you know any other ball that has
accomplished thatr'
Hubbie Normu Smede1aard (wearing an a vante garde red a~d black
tuxedo) was telling everyone he gets his wife ~k at mid~t.torught.
Le Dinner for the $1 25..a-person gala consisted ofCou11b1ac de Saumon
(salmon) and Coeur de filet Grille (filet mignon).
Enjoying the dinner were Malcolm and Martlaa Greea of Newport Beach. •
The Greens were also chatting about their trip to Hong Kong this week." I'm
going for business.an~ she's going to shop, particularly in Hong K?ng for •
Christmas. The tnck 1s for me to make more money than she spends. I haven t
been able to achieve that in the 30 years we've been married," he said laughing.
Talking about their "f/liry talc roman~." were Bob and Mary ltrtn, who
got married last month after a short courtship.
sought
Followins the anno uncement that
Robbie Harnes has resigned as ex-
ecutive director of the United States
Yacht Racing U nion (USYRU),
president Bill Lynn announced plans
fo r the search to identify Haines'
successor.
Lynn wall lead a search comminec
to which be has appointed former
presidents Chuck Kober of Lbng
Beach· Harman Hawlcins, Plando me,
N.Y.; 'Dick Latham, Chicago; and
Lynn Stedman, Grosse Pointe, Mich.
Also on the commtttee 1s secretary-
treasurcr Bob Connor, Newport R.l.
All sugestions should be directed
to Walsh at Heidrick and Struggles.
One Post Office Square, Boston,
Mass. 0 21 09, telephone (617)
423-1140. Envelopes should be
marked "RE: USYRU Execu tive
Director" for prompt attention.
Lynn asks that members of the
national sailing community. submit
dircctlv to Bob Walsh of Heidrick.
THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 1,, 1985
r:l -L:I'
Californian sets her sail
·with supplies for Mexic()
By ALMON LOCllABEY
Dillly ..............
Last weekend was a busy time for the tallstlip
Californian. ·
On Saturday her 11-penon crew welcomed 48
passengers, all Soutblaod friends of the year old
revenue cutter replica, aboard for a four-hour boo
voyage cruise out of Dana Point Harbor.
FoUowtng ll.'e cruise, the ship de_parted Dana Po~nt
for a trip to Marina dCT Rey where She ·was foaded wt th
seven tons of relief supplies for Mexico's 300,000
homeless from the disastro us earthquake wtuch which
struck Acapulco and Mexico City.
On hand Sunday for the bon vo)'agc party and
press pany were Sr. Eduardo rbarrola. Mexican Consul
in Los An11.eles, wnh tus wife Carmen. ·
Also lending a semblance of glamour to the
occasion were actress c:&therine Bach . who was the
model for the Californian's figurehead, and Apolloma
Kotero from Purple Rain and Falcon Crest.
Followtng the final loading of the. big ship, she
departed for San Diego where she will spend fo ur or five
days in final safety preparation fo r the I ,4()()..m1le
voyage to Acapulco.
The voyage is in conJunct1on with Operation
California, a Los Angeles-based relief agency, and
Camano ~eaJ ~vmp tsank, the mayor corporate
sponsor of the c.atiforruan.
The Californian bas been designated as the Staie of
California's official state tallship and panjcipated aa
such durina the 1984-Olympic Games ceremonies in
Lot Anaeles. She also made a trans-Pacific cruise to
Hawaii, and on ber return was sailed up the Sacramento
River to the capitol.
Built and o perated by the Nautical Hen~
SoC1ety;tbeship1s used pnmarily asa sail training veul
for younJ Caltfomians. Sbe was built at Spanish
Landini LO San Otego 1n I 984 and meastn"CS 93 ft. 6-
inchC1 on deck and 145 ifeet with her _bowspnt and
boomkin. She bas a beam of 24 feet ahO 145 feet. of span. •
Sbecamcs 7,000square feet of canvas inober9'satls,
includ.Ina mam, fores'lj1b and stay'sl and a square
ngged tops'! on her IOI-foot mast
Under sail the magnificent ship is capable of 14
knots 10 a breeze and seven knots under power with her
I 00 horsepower cog.me. She dis plates 130 long tons and
draws 9 f\. 6 inches.
On the Mexico voyage her 1 tons of mostly medical
supplies were provided by the Caty of Oxnard. lo
addnion to her working crew she will carry two
Hispanic college students from Oxnard as volunteer
crew helpers and interpreters.
Actreea Catherine Be.cb with lle:dca.n Conaal Edaa.rdo
lburolo and hla wife, Carmen.
Dutel and EleuorMoore(wcarioga Lady Di-type creation in an off-the·
shoulder red satin gown) were chatting with Stevem and Elbabe~ Rabotky o f
Newport Beach. Rabosky (sporting a shiner) said he got ~e black eye when a
frisbee reached his eye before his hand. Mrs. Rabosky ~d, "~wanted to cover
it up with makeup but be said 'no, no'." Mrs. Moore said she Just~ the real
estate test." And I can't wait to stan wearing silk blouses. pearls and suits to the
office. I'm ready for the glamour."
&.aWeea and MJ~el Le~ler (from Cost,a M~ ~"proud ofit'") said. Pform and Roee 8mede&a.ud are all ..Uee. Andrea Bacecky attended wtt.b lltcbael llontcelu.
"TbistableisboL. .. we'rethem1ghuesofthenmct.1es. We rea younggroup. but
ajve us(the Moores, De!~cksand the Hubbards)acoupleof mo nths and we'll
be runruna the country. . .
Husband and wife lawyers ltutand ~ie Deback (chatung wt th the .
Lawlersand the Moores) said, "TH is is m~cent We are new here, having
been involved wi~h theJ. F. Kennedy Perfomung.~ Center back east. We are
very impressed with the turnout and the support.
The Delsacks excused themselves to dance to "What's New" from thr
music of the Marra7 &.•Na orchestra. .
Alsocntenain1natbecrowd wasamasterofce~moniesCarlP~ .
prcsentina Marni Nixon and the Opt'ra Pacific Overture Company wt th light
opera and abow tunes.
Also enjoyina the music were MuJae and R*n GlbMa, Maf'J A.aH and
Ln MWer. Mania and Marpe H .... ~. J• and &.1"7 Pwter, NaacJ and
WWl&m h"1lle, Dr. GaJh WWrolar with 0..W Seen and Cant and BW
PM~;, edited by Dlj/y Pilot Sryle Editor Vida Dean.
.._ ............ .......
aa ...... O.•lel lloor'e.
..,_.. "-• tM daMe floor at tile Srd aaa-1 Opera 8a1J wu crow l ed wttla
~
,
J
~ Coelt DAILY PILOT/ Thurtdey. November 14, 1985
Remembering free time bef Ore the 80s
On a rainy day last wee~ I me1 my moving, volunteeran thecommunjty, myself? Lake I hMi don) soir.wtlun&
pest. dCQOrate the house, keep staples m special that day that no one else couJd
It was a cban(:e meetlna. As I rolled supelyl dispense chorct, counsel1 do? It was the way I used ,to feel when
over in bed and listened to the discapl ne. mediate arauments, hana I bedded down three kJdS between
dumdet ovtstdc. J declared for myself down decisions and fasten. I would clean sheet~ and they all had. clean feet
a day off &om the typewriter. To do listen a lot. . and no ones nose~ run rung. It was
wbat? Wbat was it I usod lo do befo~ As I showered I wondered af I could mtt~rf ~d I knew it. the deadlines, the travels and the ao "home" aa,ain. Home to that ying in bed I thought about that
mail? How did I spend my time domestic treadmill that I had fought pel'10n of the past and her day. What before l became a "fulftlled woman of to escape. l called my mother "just to had she done that made her feel so
the '80s" before my worth was talk." 1 callQCI my best ltirlfricmd and imporu.nt, so vital, when she herself
me.,u.red by a credit Line before I got membe1 uu lll\Ut)'$ with appropriate we dumped on one another. She too had catejorizcd it all as crud detail
my black belt in aoal-setrlna? celebrations, clothes that were m the had lost control. of her bo:<fy. had no ~hen. it ~t me. My t.urf. Wouldn't it . · . cleanen, pets to be fed and watered, future and gravaty was wtnnang. We ~ 110.DlC if my turf raelded the most I sat at Ute kltcb~n table oyei: a Clf P doctor and dental appointments for bo~h (~It wonderful we were ~-important co~modify being groW!l
of coffee. !twas 8 a.m. By thas time 1n everyone, swimmina lessons. ball tenoraung together. I called our kids today ... a family. A crop of children, ~y fil"lt hfc l would have had three practice, homework that was due, and invited them to . dinner and seeded by two ~pie, nourished by
k.!ds.\\'.ho smelled of spray stare~ and scienoe!.rojccts to be started, bilJs to proceeded to fry chicken, bake Jove, watered by tears, enriched with
vuaman breath .off to school wit~ a be pai • overdue books returned.. biscuits and snap fresh green beans. values, protected from disease and
lunch box an,d tbennosofsoupwbtch deposits made at the bank and five We ate, laughed. argued, talked and emotional storms and in 18 or 20
they wouldn t bother to open. baas offcrtilizer for the lawn. disagreed. fears harvested into worthwhile
1 would promise myself that 1 f would remove spots, add water, By present-day standards, it had human beings to go through the entire
would knit until 9 and then I would scrub toilets. write letters. le.ill been a non-productive day. I hadn't process again.
absolutely get dressed and bring the roaches, polish shoes, clean cars, earned a dime. Hadn't made an Nothing else I would do ·would
bouse-111>-«>-minimal beahh-iiaJ\-plant ~knorsboestrings, mMd impact on anyon&-or-put down equaHt-i~-importahce. -
dards. wading pools and blow up'balloons. anything on pa~r for posterity. Wouldn't you have thought some-
During the 'years. I would re-I would hustle food, keep laundry Thl'n whv <i1ti f f~I at peace with one would have told us?
" ·Genital herpes victim was misled
DEAR ANN LANDERS: l got
genital herpes from my boyfriend of
two years from an innoceni fever blister on bis lip. J could not believe a
woman could get a venereal disease
from indulging in oral sex with
someone who had a simple cold sore.
My doctor cultured 1t and \Ure enough it came back Herpes Simplex
Type I (the oral kind). But now I have
genital herpes.
I developed a high fever after being
exposed to the virus on his lip. That
virus caused two fever blisters on my
genitals. They reappear every two
months and arc quite painful.
My boyfriend dumped me when be
learned f was infected. He remains
"pure" and does not come down with
a sexually transmitted disease, while I
am alone and scared. There is no
justice!
AtH•
UNDERS
Please, Ann Landers, inform the
public at once. Tell them what can
happen if a person has contact with
those innocent-looking sores near the
mouth. -SIGN ME DUMB AND
ANGRY DUE TO IGNORANCE
DEAR ANRGY: I laave prillted tills
lllformatloa ID my colamn more tJlu
once. Several readen wrote &o say I
was W-1.D.formed, 1hpld, ud jast
plaiD nata. Tlwtb for yoar testi-
mony.
SUPPORT THE TEAM
Send Your Boat To OCC!
When did you last sail your Lido 14, Kite, Hobie,
Laser, Sabot, etc.? Are you tired of seeing it in your {a) garage,
{b) backyard, or (c) driveway? Or worse, are you paying
storage on a boat you don't use ?
The solution is simple. Donate your boat to Orange
Coast College's sailing team. Here's why you should do it:
1. Your gift is tax decuctible through the
Orange Coast College Foundation.
2. It's a good cause. OCC students are now
praeticing for Spring when they will sail ¥
against teams from the big four.year colleges.
To meet this dwlenge, OCCs team needs
suppott. Your gift will mean oew dinghies,
sails, and a trailer.
3. It 's easy. Give us a call, and your boat will
~picked up within 48 hours. The t~m wil1
also gladly accepc gifts of used sails.
marine gear. etc. ,
To fi.nd out more about giving to the team, contact
Brad Avery at Orenge Coast College. (71 4) 432·~.
• • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: My hus-
band and I decided, at your sugges-
tion, to seek counsehng from a
qualified licensed therapist. My
reason for writing is not as significant
as the outcome of the therapy.
We recently learned that the thera-
pist betrayed our confidence by
discussing our problem with mutual
friends. The friends who infonned us
of this incredible act of un-
professionalism were shocked by the
man's lack of discretion.
The therapist has a very successful
practice and is considered extremely
competent We feel humiliated and
angry and don't know if we will be
able to trust another therapist again -
ever. What should be done? -NEW
ORLEANSREADER l
DEAR NEW: If U.e U.trapltt It a
psyclaiatritt, report lltm to U.e Amerl-
cu Psycll.latrtc Association. 1400 K
f or Clmifitd Ad
ACTION
CaU
A DAILY ,.LOT
AD·Ylsot
'42·5411
Street, N.w .. WulaiDcto•. D.C. %0985.
U Ille 11 a psyclaolo&ttt, report ll.lm to
tbe Amertcaa Payc\olo&tcal A1aocla-
tio11, Utt 11da Street, K.W., Waalatag-
ton, D.C. HOH. U lie It aeltller, yoa
cu let ll.lm bow euctly laow yoa feel
aboat Ill• ucoaactouble betrayal,
and pa11 tlae word to otber.. Meu-
wblle, do try uotller U.erapl1t. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm
usually in agreement with your
answers, but in the case of "Chat-
tanooga Mother" whose 4-year-old is
bringing home dirty language, I'd like
to share a solution that. is working at
our house. .
When I hear one of my cbiJdren use
a questionable word, I immediately
r.ut down what I'm doing and ask, 'What docs that word mean?" We go
to the dictionary and look it up. If it's
there I explain the alternate mean-
ings. If it isn't in the dictionary, 1 say.
"That's not a word. Stop saying it."
It works, Ann. Tbe important thing
is not to be shocked or outraged. -
GRAND ISLAND, NEB.
DEAR GRAND: ·ne dlctloury
approacla la a good one. Bat please go
back ud read my reply. My advice
wa1 exactly tbe same as yoan. "Don't
act 1laoclred, it wm eacoara1e con-
ttned asa1e. Tlll1 It precisely tlae
reaction tile clalld 11 after."
LUXURY THUUUS
\2 .7S 111 two M.ah Weekd•Y•. WALK· INS * fit M•t Only S.aturd.ay1.,Sun· DRIVE -INS =~~~c; d.ay1 & Ho hd.ay1 Unleu ... oted
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CITY anTER D 634 2553 I 1901 )
ORANGE 1 Mtllopolr"n
BllllNQ Oft ntE NIC~HT
O'C-UI SHOWS AT 7 :05 & 9 :05
TlllANSVLV//ltltlA ._
(PG) SHOWS AT
6 :45 & l :SO
AGNES CW GOO,._...,. THCC~Y~. ~ -SHOWSAT ..-v-
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.. PIUI Th• Comp.any Of Wolves (R)
K lllUSH QROOVE (Ill)
Plul Co+llt p .. WH'I Bit Adventure (PG) TAlllGET (Ill) THAT WAS THEii, SHOWS AT I :OS 3 <20 THeS IS NOW (Jt)
5:35 7 :50 & 10:10 1:2S3'406:S51:0510:15
COMMANDO (Ill)
TOLNE a DIE ... L.A. (Jt)
TME .IOUllNEY cw I Plus Co+llt
NATTY GAllN (PG) R.ambo Firll Blood II (R)
1:00 l:IS 5:2.5 7:45 10:05
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ST • ...._..,'S f'IRIE (R)
Plu1 Co·Hlt
The Breekfut Club (R)
DRIVE INS o,u 5:30 Wkdey1/l:OO Wtund1/U"d" 12 Fro Unleu Ntttd
ON E BITrEN Stantng LAUJt.EN HVMON. JIM CAU£Y. KAREN K0 PlNS"N1
CLtAmN UMLC Ottt<'tor Of Phot~plly AJMM Gar.£Hatatt •
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Scrttnplay by OAVfD HlNI;& • •trfllCY HAUSE Md K>N ATHAN ROBDlTS
Story by Dt\OftJ VILLA.RO ~by DIMJ'ftJ VIU.AJU). ll088V ~'Al.O
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McCLAIN-LANDE
Christ Lutheran Church in Costa Mesa was the selling for the Sept. 21
wedding of Arnia Marfe.Lande of untlngton Beacn and Ensign "RiCliard
McClain of Los Angeles. Their reception was held in the Mile Square Golf
Course Restaurant.
• James and Sorull Lande ofH .a'1tington Beach and Eugene McClain and
Nadra McClain of Los Angeles are tho~rcnts.of th~ couple. .
The bride wore a gown of white summer s1l.lc with a Queen Anne neck.line
and a formal four-foot train.
Alecia Lande was maid ofhonor and Yvonne Kwa. Rosita Haga and Jan
Awni were bridesmaids.
Best man was Billy Miller and ushers were Anthony Lande. Doug Staker
and Brian Staker.
After a wedding trip to Carmel and Monterey, thecouple arc residing in
Pensacola, Fla., where he is a studeriUviatorwith the United States Navy. The
bride has been employed by the UCLA internal audit department. •
McGANN-SHARP
The Harbor Christian Church in Newport Beach was the setting for the
Sept. 28 marriage of Sandra Lee Sharp and Michael Will iam McGann.
The bride is the daughter ofM r. and Mrs. Richard C. Sharp of Newport
Beach and her husband is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Michael McGann of Downey.
The couple are now residents of Downey.
QUINN-CALICCHIO
Dawn Helene Calicchlo of San Juan Capistrano and John Quinn of
Westministerexchanged wedding vowsoo Oct. 5 in the Kingdom Hall of •
Jehovah's Witnesses. A reception for 160 guests fo llowed at Swallow's Cove in
San Clemente.
Daniel and Ruth Calicchio ofSan Juan Capistrano and John and Cecelia
Quinn ofToms Ri ver, N.J., are the parents of the couple.
The bride wore a white satin gown with a bodjce of hand-sewn pearls and
full cap sleeves tapering to points on the wrist. Her train was embroidered with
pearls.
Diane Calicchio was maid ofhonor and bridesmaids were Diane Waller.
Jill Borchardt, Dana Calicchioand Maria Greco. Scott Quinn was best man
and u.shers were Bradley Quinn, Daniel Calicchio Jr. and David Calicchio.
The couple arc residents ofWestminister after a wedding tnp to the isla nd
ofEleuthera m the Bahamas. She is employed by CPI Pension Services and he is with Color Fast.
SEARS-HOFFMAN
Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Sears of Costa Mesa have announced the
engagement of their daughter, Leigh Ann, to Kenneth Charles Hoffman of
Newport Beach, son of Huntington Beach residents William Hoffman and
Sherry H. Williams.
The bride-elect is a graduate of Shawnee High School. Medford Lakes,
N.J .• and Orange Coast College. Her future husband is a graduate of Edison
High School, Huntington Beach.
They will be married Jan. 11 at the Costa Mesa home of the bride's parents.
OBREGON-HOW ARD
South Laguna resident Timothy John Howard will wed Mary Nadine
Obregon of Sacramento in August.
The bride-elect is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Gonzalo qbreg~n of
Sacramento. She is a graduate of Loretto Academy and the Universny of
Southern California where she was affiliated with Kappa Kappa Gamma
Sorority.
Her fia nce is the son of John S. Howard of Los Angeles and. Mrs. Stevenson
Howard ofSoulh Laguna. He is a graduate of Laguna.Beach High Sc~ool, .use where he was affiliated with Delta Tau Delta fraternity, and the Universtty of
Madrid Institute for International Studies. -
They will be married in the Cburc~ of the Sacred Hean in Sacramento.
"LEMMON IS WONDERFUL.
MASTROIANNI IS GREAT.
YOU WILL LAUGH. YOU WILL CRY.
'MACARONI' IS DELICIOUS."
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1·
I I
ABC promotes Stoddard
as his sliow tops ratings
By FRED ROTHENBERO ""' ................
NEW YORK -"North and
South." developed_ by Brandon Stod·
dard, the new ABC Entertainment
president, bucked the trend of dectin-
ln& miniseries aod led ABC to an easy
victory in the weekly A.C. Nielsen Co. ratings. ·
On Tuesday, the day Nielsen's
ratinp were handed down, Stoddard
was elevated from head of ABC-s TV
movies and miniseries to entertain·
mcot chief, replacing Lewis H.
Erlicht. Ehrlichtdropsdown to senior
vioc president of the entertainment
division.
ABC's weekly series have declined in popularity under 6rlicht. ABC was
No. 3 in prime time for the first time
tn a decade last season and ranked
thirdi'or 1985-86 unttl five episodes
of "Nonh and South" !\st week
propelled the network into a seeond-
place tic With·CBS. NBC remains No.
l.
For the week of Nov. 4-10, ABC,
which also won the week it broadcast
the World Series, averaged a 19.9
rating. CBS and NBC tied for second
with 16.5 ratings. Season to date,
NBC leads with a 17.8 rating, with
ABC and CBS ti~ at 16.8.
A rating measures the percentage of
the nation's 85.9 million homes with
TV. J
Last week's Top I 0 was dominated
by "North and South" and some of
TV's bigest names. mcludina Lucille
B&U, Angela Lansbun-, _BiU Cotby
and the crew from ''60 Minutes."
"The Cosby Show" ranked rin1
with a 31. 9 ratina,. The Sunday fin.ale
of "North and South" was second.
recordina a 29.4 rating, the hiJt>est
rating for any m\niseries episode
since ABCs "The Thom Birds" in
I 983. NBCs "Fam Uy Ties" was
1hird. followed by~ Part 3 of "North
and South," CBS' "Murder, She
Wrote," st.arrin& Miss Lansbury, and,
tn a lie for sixth, CBS' "60 Minutes"
and Pan 4 of"North and South." The
minileries' second installment was
eighth, followed by Miss Ball playing
a bag lady in CBS' movie "Stone
Pillow" and Part 5 of "Nonh and
South."
Overall, the s1x parts of"North and
South," including the opening
episode that came before last week's
rating period, averaged 26.0 ratmg.
ABC said "North and South" ranked
I Sth among all miniseries and was the
higbest-ra1ed multi-parter since CBS'
"Master of the Game" in 1984. ABC
said l 00 million people watched
some part of the miniseries.
"Nonh and South•· was knocked by
many television critics, but it ended
up getting higher ratinp than
network researchers. including ABC.
had forecast.
"We were quite happy," said Paul
Sonkin. ABCs vice president of
audience and affiliate research.
"People watched the first niaht a.od
stayed wilb it. They were interested ii\
the subject matter and perceived it to
be entcrt.aininJ."
"1 have to pve ABC an awful lot of
credit," said Gerald Jaffe, NBCs vice
president for research projects. "They
put down S2S million, took the shot
and it paid off for them."
"This aives hope to our upcoming
miniseries that people an st.ill watch·
inJ programs of this length," said
Mtke Eisenberg., CBS' research direc-
tor.
The sequel, ··Nonh and South:
Boole. 11," also 12 hours, 1s scheduled
to be broadcast early next year.
Industry anaJysts bad suggested
tba.L...multi:pan miniscri~ the
environment of multi-channel video
competition, might be too large a
commitment for viewers. "I f it's well
done ..and infonnative, then they'll
watch it," said Sonkin. "I don't think
the length has an~hing to do with it."
Compared with the first seven
weeks of tile 1984-85 season, the
three-network rating is up from a 48.6
to a S 1.4. Network researchers at·
tributed th.at to more post-season
baseball m prime tame, "Nonh and
South" and better scnes program·
ming.
"The viewers d o n't watch
networks. tbc viewers don '1 watch
cable; they watch programs and there
have been very attractive programs
on all three networlc'S... said
Eisenberg..
OCC turning out new Spiel bergs
• Cinema students and their interests
bave changed dramatically since the
early '70s when, re<:aJls Brian Lewis,
Head of Orange Coast Coll~e·s
Cinema Department> goals were hlc.e-
ly to stop at_ surfer films and protest
documcntanes.
If Lewis waxes nostalgic, he can
afford 10 do so. His recollections
provide a reference point for an
evolution he's witnessed since a
couple of young guys named George
Lucas and Steven Spielberg created
what Lewis calls the biggest revol-
ution in the film industry.
The recent string of bloclc.buster
debuts let the public know tilat it
could be done and put stars in the eyes
of cmema students across the nation.
Since then Lewis has recognized a
new enthusiasm and maturity in the
goals of his students, including a
growing interest in theatrical pro-
ductions.
"Rcadjng the interests of our
students has led to a decision 10
combine the Cinema and Theater
de~ents at OC'C. ·• Lewis says.
'Cinema students with the tcchn1·
cal ability have a need for on-<:amera
talent," Lewis says, "so it was a
natural merging."
OCC's Cinema Dcpanment -the
only one in Orange County, is
nationally renowned for its quality
equipment and faculty connections
in the industry. Students learn their
craft on equipment recently donated
La
Answ1Ad
Yebpord ~ ~Ou/ ext Daily Pilai
642-567
by KOCE-TV, valued at $125,000.
Lewis was not surprised when a
recent OCC cinema alumnus. Rack
Femcasc. won the National Student
Film Festival's top award, Several
other alumni, like Ferncase, get jobs
as directors, camera operators, edi-
tors, sound technicians and other
positions within the motion picture
tndustry. But most OCC cinema
graduates continue their education at
tour-year mstHuuons.
Now, the intcrdisc1phnary a~
proach offered at OCC allows actors
to gain a worlc..ing knowledge of film
p(Otluction and helps directors be-
come sensitive to actors' concerns,
accordin& to Lewis.
"Merging the two departments
gives students a better shot at what
they want -the best available,"
Lewis says.
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BUSINESS Rf.PORT
MIENCAH OCMIMttefr
CISNEWS
AKNfWSQ NICNlWS l~nt()N
*1.Sr8 COURT MOYIE * * • "Max Dugan Atlurne ( 1983)
Marn Muon. Juon Robltds ~TO IE AHN00NCED ( MOVIE
* * * "HeM!f (19371 Stwity T tmple,
JeM Her1holt
CZ)YOVIE • • * * "On GOiden Pono' (198 t I t<atharlne Hepburn, Htoty Fonda
-&:30-G HBC HEWS
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MACMEJl I LEHf6
NEWSHOUA • MARKE11HG ttl NEWS WHEE1. Of FoRruHE m BEST Of HOT SEAT
-7:00-
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Natu. Cllattont St-.rt
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MONTY P'YTHOltS Fl YMJ
CMCU9
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Rnondt Jo Pelly
(IJt.tOVIE
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• HAWAII FM-0 1 ~ ~AIHMENT TONIGHT BOSOM BUOOIES
1 ~0 • l.ATENIGHT AMmlCA Caren K&Je '&Dd Robert Lanalnc peet •tar u e CAPITOL JOURNAi.
a no.tee detecti•e and a •eteran printe eye -C-MOVIE NEWS
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WHEEi. Of FORTUNE
8!) 8USIESS REPORT
Cl) P.M. MAGAZINE
on .. 8lmon and Slmon .. ton• .. ht at 9 on CBS *** Grf'YSIOile Tne Legeno Ot
.. • Tartan Lord Ot The Apes 119841 Channel :i. . Ra1p11 RICllalcsson Chr1S1®'* Lam-
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(H INSIDE THE Nfl
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• WHA rs HAPPENIHG!I
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ANIMALS
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S.O. AT LARGE 9 PEOPl.E'S ~T 8~AADY m RACING FROM OAJ< TREE
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D MOVIE * *'" An Eye For An Eye' 11981)
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8 llf} SHADOW C>tAS£.RS
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FURKY W'INKERBEAN
----ll!!!m~--
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
by Bii Keane
"'Wash separately?' Just who do you
think you ore?"
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
"Make up your mmd ... do you want to be
in or out?''
DRABBLE
GARFIELD
I FOUN'7 A F00'7 THAi EVE N
YOO WON'T BE AeLE TO PLAY •
WITH, GARF1£LO, TOMATO 500P ~
MOON MULLINS
JUDGE PARKER
by Tom Batluk DOONESBQRY by Garry Trude&\.
,, ~
BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (Vl'P) s,H_OlliiE----.. -----. .. ~----........,. by Jeff MacNally
' I
I I . • &
&
& • e
-""'A.J'")-:... ~ -,._ ,,:n,.._(""""'""~""'
':t:.. -£-a>... .. ~ ~ :.:: '" I
-"'
··c--~--
11-•i -1:"
"No, I don't care to Join your 'Hermits of
the World Unite!' movement."
DENNIS THE MENACE
by Hank Ketcham
by Kevin Fagan
by Jim Davis
AS LONG A? I LIVE, l'U. NEVER
ONDERSTANl7 CAT5
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
ILlRN OFF THE METER ...
~, .............. _ .. _
·~ . ..,_ ....
. by Harold Le Ooux
I CAN'T IMAGINE AN"fONE NOT MU.IN&
IN l..Ov'E WfTH SARA T I ANO LV'D'A 19
SUCH A WARM, NICE PeR90N,eEN1 "IO..J
MVST LET Hf;A
MEET THE CHfLD ! evT t 9HOUL.O
LET 't'OV GE'T 50Me SLEl!P!
I'U. &10W 'OJ
~
WJo:S 'TUE GU'( IN
1lE W'-'EEt..CAAI~?
PEANUTS by Charles~· Schulz
n=:~~=r.==~~=-~,
TO ME, ~EAKFAST IS
THE 6E5T TIME OF DAV
TUMBLEWEEDS
EVEN WHEN YOU LIVE
ALONE ON THE DESERT
-~--
1)-iANl<5 FOR ~E FL.OWER I
IJOCOL.IC. IJOFF.AL..O! .• G'EE1
11'S so~ OF (f{LJSHEP.
ROSE IS ROSE
BRIDGE
WI L.L... ¥01J ~~
Mt: Al\IO'f)-lt:~?
1£(.5irUIN'~.
~ O'f MR l£l(E.
/tltP t£r 1Hf5
t.IN!-6t11Pfll1U(.
PW:E r1 >Q.« F~S.
•,
EXCEPT W~EN A
TUM6lEWEEO ROLLS
THROU6~ '(OUR PAHCAKE5 ..
b Berke Breathed
by Tom K. Ryan
by Pat Brady
THETROCKSTHAT VAN~HEO
Neither vulnerable. East deals.
NOR'l"H
• A87
'V 7 3
o K J 876 + KQ4
WEST E AST
• 6 4 2 • K Q J 10
'V J 9 'V 1064
o 10~ o Q S
+A l09753 +J862
SOUTH
+9$3
'V AKq8sz
.0 A 94 2
+Vold
The bidding:
Eut outh W eet orth
2 • Obie Pue 4 0
Pa11 4 'V PHI Paa1
Pa11
Openinic leAd: Four of •.
A liltlt~ bit. or larceny appeals to
most or us. rt enabled East West to
pick defender's pocket on this hand
from a pairs tournament. and walk
off with three tricks more than they
were entitled.
Whether they end d in hearu.
making 12 tricks. or diamonds. scor
Ing l3. nery North South pair
came awly with a largf' plus 1core.
Every pair except onf', lhal ls. At
tlie table we kibitzed, East elected
t.o open with a weak two spade bid,
but North-South still got to four
hearts on the auction shown. Now
watch what happened in the play.
OMAR
SHARIFF
West led the four of spades.
Believing that East held six spades
and that the four was, therefore. a
singleton. declarer won the ace. He
now decided to Jud the king or
club$ and, when East did not pro-
duce the ace, he discarded a epade
from hand -after all. if WeAl won
the trick he "couldn't.. return a
spade. But West could and did,
chooslna the two.
When East won and continued
the eult. declarer wu convinced
that West would ruU this time If be
ruffod low, SO he chose lO rur£ with
the queen o! trumps. That not only
promoted a trump for the
defenders. but almost brought on a
fit of apoplexy from declarer when
West produced a third spade.
Declarer cashed two high trumps
and, aware of the (act he had
CHARLES
GOREN
already blown a trick ur two, he
decided the only way he could
salvage some matchpolntt wu t.o
fines e Weet for the queen of
diamonds. Thi• did not prove t.o be
the greatest 1uceeas, and declarer
ended up down one. However. b•
does have a 1tory with which to
regale his cohort.I for yean lo
come -1r he dares t.o tell It.
Pw lal--.tJea aM4il c...,.._,
G .... a'•••M•a&eu.r'-......
,a.1ers, wrtc. o.,.a 8tWp IAU•,
ltot Cla1aalHH An ., C•a,.•l•-
.... N.J. 08077.
'
Controversial comers
An antdenttfted woman wandera by a larfe
IMlinti.DM, abo•e, on the wall near the Old
1-oet Offtce In Wu~on, D.C .• wond~ If It la traflltl or a piece of art. And •'Twain,
a trlaDcu1ar compo.t.tion of ee•en ruatlng
•labe, •tanda in contrast to the prim,
recently conmtructed Soathwestem Bell
Tower u part of downtown St. Loma'
cityK&pe. 'the aculptare work by Richard
Serra bu created a ~r contro•eny.
Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT/'Thurlday, Nowmbet 14, 1985 88
fl!ICTI'nOUe _,II... tN contr.:t ctocum.ita. a ACTmOUe .,_.. IVMOf'_,
MM9 ITA,.....,. Mm eTA,_.,., u.t of the P'Of>OMd IUboOno ~ ITAT'lmfff ZOfM C... Ho 15-1•
The folowlng ""°"".,. The~.,.,.,,..,. tt.aora on tNe PfOf1C1 .. The~ PWIC>ne.,. _. ~ ...., JO.
dOlftQ ~ M lnfot· do6ng ~ •• Ptoteoh r~ by Ute~~ ~ .. Pro-l .toel,ctwvnl .......
matlon IYl1*'M ~ ~Ing S.W-. 2113 ertO Subccw'lltectlng ,.s; ...,.,_ ....,_..,.llellt S.· «Pf~~ w*1 e.mc. 1211 ~ Or PKiflc Ave. • HI Costa Prec:floM Ac1 Govt COO. >Acea. 1eo21 J 8tYMt1I A2 "-lo-
H unUno'1on \ IHch. CA MeM. CA '2i.21 · s.c 4100 .c ~ IN .. 21'. llWM, CA fi71• dlnu.t 09trtct to IOl et
tt&47 P8Wf JOMf W.Z.C, 2 t83 EAllCfl bidder 1n1191 abni1 etv.. F SMrt.it ~ (Ouelftiecl ~. Com.
Mee t<uue Kt-. 62t1 PK!ftc Aw, •II. eo.c. Wl1h Md! bid C9l1ltlitd or o.Nle, Corone oel Met, CA merdlll ~) ~ on
Gumm Dr . Huntington .,. ... CA tm7 CMNlr"• a.ca P9yable to m2S IM ~ corns~
hecih. CA 12647 fNJ butlneH II ~ fN OIST"ICT Of • bid tlOnd Thie bv~ .. con· Wwft/ltlf A~ WWI ....
Thlt bullnee• 11 con-duC\ed by an lndlvldulil 111 the tonn Ml totth lft the ~ by: ., ~ ltf991 fOf "'-~ ...
due1ed by .,. 11\di~ Pt .... 1 M&UC COnOllCt doc:umente '" "" CMe '· "-r• cons1ruc;tlng • r.o := MM K Kr111.1• • Tlilr ll•t~I -tiled emount nC)( .... tNin 1~ Of fhla eta..,,.,, .... "*' "°' ~ The
Thie et.tement -Nilcl wi II IN Couf,ty 0.11 of Or~ tM l'MIOINIM ~ of bid Wllfl the Ccuntr Clilrlt of Or· adtill wit lr9lfl IN ._ to
with the County ci.rtt of Of· anC5e County on Octc>Oet 26, .. a guarant• tNlt ,,,. bid ~ County on !llOY9mt>« ~~ Of' THE
anoe County on Oc1obar 2t, 1915 o., wlll .,,,., 1n10 th• 1, H S O'"'""'"'A....,..,..., •VAIL.A-!
1M5 ~ Pf~ contnict if !tie P..-:t ""'" ""'"' ·~ " , ,,_ ..... 14 Publllhed Oranoe Coat ..,,.. .. awwd«I to l4ldl Pu~ Ofenge Cout IN THE CITY CLERK s Of.,
Publl"*I C>ranoe Coul Deity Piiot Oct~ 3t. Ho-bld<Mt tn1n. ...... 1oftellut• o.lly Piiot ~bet 7, t•. FICE
o.lty Piiot Oc1ober 31. Ho-wml>er 7 14, 21, 19a5 1to ent., Into u1c1. oontr~. 21, 29. 1945 ADOPTED by tna C!,Y
11emb4lr 7. 14, 21, 1015 Th-'681 IUdl Meuhty will n. lot· • Th-449 Counc:i! of IM Ctty of Hunt·
· Th-302• . felted ington 8each et en,..-
, Tri9 DISTRICT r_._ m.tlng Mid Mondey, Ho-
rta.IC NOTICE. Pl8.JC NOTICE ,,,. not11 to ~ eny or 111 "8..IC NOTICE vemw 4, tte5. by the '°"" ~..:_o waive: ~ ~ollC::,:.,. ~. ,ICTmOUI llU ... U '1CTmOUI IJU9INIU ~ bidding In any or 'ICTITICMn llU ... 11 ~-. Be119V, Fin611y, ~ ITATIMDIT NAm ITA'TlmNT Puraianttolheptolllltk>fta ~ ITAn.NT Gre.1, TilomM
TM followlng 1*ton8 ate n,. lollowlng pwaont we of Section 1773 of th41 L&bor n,. IOlloWlng ~ er• NOES Councilmen HOM
doing butlnMI u Pacific dOlng ~ 11 PllCltlc: eocs. of th41 State of Ce1I-dOtnQ bu.._ M CALI-ABSENT· Councilmen Community Oev .. op~I. M.OICal, Inc 21M2 8ten11. S FORNIA FAME AND FOR-None
1001 Newoot1 81"°, Coete Huntington BHcll, CA lomta.theDI TRICTl\Mob-TUNE 3015CarobSI New-ABSTAIN Counell"'4tfl talMd from lhe Director of • • Meal. CA 92927 92Me the Dapanment of lndWfrlal POrt 8eect'I CA 02fle0 Mandie
PSS Realty Corl)OtlllOrl. PMip C Sllr!l·Erne M D . R•la tton• tfl• g •neral EJolM Jao'Woolcot1. 3016 CfT'I' OP .........OTOtll
100 t ~ emt Coeta Inc . 21897 Brant•. Hunt-prevllllng rate of P9' diem Carob SI . Newoot1 Beach, • E A c". A I I c.. •.
,,._, CA 02827 lngton Beacf\. CA 02~ --s ano tb• nanerel CA 02ee0 w-tw .. th, ctty Ca.tr Thie bualnau 11 coo-lh11 buelneu IS eon-.-for "' Aon A Melling 901 Nortll Put>ll9hed Ofat>ga eo.f
ducted by a corpotelton ducted by 1 corpotetlon Pfevaillng rate l'IOHOay Bayfront Ball>OI lllend CA j Deity Plloe N~ber 14.
Petw l lnmen Phl!.fO C Saint-Ema.M D end pvettlme worti 1n the lo-92682 1985
Tl'lll •llt.,,,.,.., WU med Th!t statement -tiled cpllly In wt\ICll tl\il ~ •• IO T1111 bUlltllH ,, COl'I-Tl'Hl60 ... Coun ,..,,__., of ,.._ be Plff0ftn9Cl tor eecn cran with the Coun~ Cletk of Or-WIU1 the ty .,..,. ..,.. Ot type ot worltw needed to duc:1ed by CC>-i*1'*1
anoe Counry on Octo«>« 21. ange County on October 25, Hewte ,,... contrKt n1e1e ElolM J WOOICOtt .. _.,. ..nnrc
1085 198.S rltll are on Ille 11 11141 DIS-Thia 11a1emen1 waa I~ __ .;.."=~.;;;..;;-""';..;.;;.-' ';.;..;;~ __
, ... 12 F2'0»1 TRICT ottlce located II With Ille County Cletk of Of. UGAL NOTICE D.~ubplllhad1•-t Oct~~31c':!' De~b::::' Oc~~31~ Cou1 Commuritty ColllQt ~5 Counry ()(l Octobef 31 ~NO. 2IOI
.. y "' .,........ • "" '' ' Dlltr!Ct, Pttw Fae l>iann.nn l08S .._ •N OR"'NANCE"" THE Y9f'l'lbef 7, 14, 21 1095 Ytlmblf 7 14 21, t985 I '"lJ ,.._ " ..,, vr
Tll-398 Tll-422 Coplee may be Obllll'led on Publlllled Oranoe Cout CITY OF HUNTINGTON r""~ A rf>IW of t'-"" 7 BEACH AMENDING THE r;;;,. lhell t>e-P0.1ed al the Dally r•IOI Nov.mbef 14 HUNTINGTON BEACH OR-P\8.fC NOTICE --------JOb11te 21-18• 19as DINANCE cooe BY
_ __;...;.;;.=,;.;;~;.;..;..;;.:.. __ 1 flta.IC NOTICE ltallallbeme.OO•tOfYupon Th· .. 2 AMENDING SECTION FICTITIOUl llUllNEH __ ....;.;...;.;..;;.,....;..;... _____ Ille CONTRACTOR to wnom 965.C 1 RELATING TO PER-
HAMe ITATr•NT FICTTTIOUl IUSMSI the contract .. •-rded, and , Mineo USES IN PACIFICA Ttie lollowlng penone ~e NAME ITATDIENT upon any 1ubcon1ractor mDt.,. NOTICE COMMUNITY PLAN'
doing buslneea H ' Seevi.w Tti. lollowlng penons are ur'ldll!' such ..CONTRACTOR, r uuu" I YN<»lll:
Fln1ncl1l, 2855 E Cout doing buelneu u Western 10 pey not Iese than 11141 M1d NOTICE Ord1n1nce No 2809
Hwy , Suite 232, COfOl'll Del Accounting And Mettletlng specified r11ea to I.II worker• INVlTIMO INOI 1meno1 the Hunlil'lgton
M11. CA 92925 s.rvtoe. 2515 Alla Vitti Or • empl<>yed by them In th41 •11-Notice 19 her.Oy glveo 1,.,11 aeacn O•dlnll'ICe Coo. See-
Paul Hll'lry Reed. 3130 Newpon Beacll. CA 92860 ecuUon ot ltte COl'ltract the Board 01 T rutt-01 the toon 9645 1 to atiow ~
Seaview Ave , Co<Ol'll Del LIO!lerd Jemet Uggln1, No bidder may withdrew Coasl CommuMy COiiege n1enc1 markell without M~,;1~• :~:~5
.. 1 ta con-~°" ~ c~v:i64~unt-r66i ~~~°'.~~d':t•Sj= D111r1e1 of Or11'1Q8 County !!": ~!~:S. ~-=
ducted by an lndtvtduel Tll11 bu11nau II con-'°' the oPenlng ol bids ~·~~~··up w;~ r:;:--;;: :! ~ stations 1n 111e Pac;lfjCS
Paul H Reed ducted by an individual A payment bond and 1 men 11 00 1 m Fr10ay No-Community Pten D11trlct Thia statement wu Iliad LJ Llggma per'!ormence OOnd wtll bl vemr-22 1985 11 ,,.,. One
wtth Ille County Clerk of Ot· Thll Sllletnenl was hied reqolred P'lO< IO blCUllOn PurChlllng Dlowtment of THE FULL TEXT OF THE
ange County on October 21, Wllll lhe County Clerlt of Or-Ol the oonlrlCI and Stllll bl said CQ411Qt 019tr•C1 tooel~ ORDINANCE IS A \/AILABLE
19&5 enge County on Oc1ot>er 25. tn the lorm set f0f'11'1 tn Ille 11 1370 Adams Av.,,ue 1111 THE CITY CLERK'S OF·
"211111 10&5 contrac1 documents Coste Mesa Cahlom•• 81 F1CE
Published Orange Coul F290325 Pursuent to Section 4590 whiell ume saio Oods wou be ADOPTED Dy the Ctty
Dally PllOI Oc1ot>« 31 No-Published Orange Coast ol I.he Government COde of pul>l!Ct)o opened Ind raa4 Council ot 1"8 Ctty ot Hunl-vember 7 14 21 1985 Delly P1to1 Oc1ot>« 31 No-ttie Stale of Cal1f0fn ... Ille IOf •ngtOfl Seacn at an regular
Tll-400 vemt>er 7 14 21 1985. con1r1c1 wlll contai n PRINT & BIND WINTER "-ting~ Monoay No-
Th-416 pro111110ns permitting th41 1985 COMMUNITY SER-I vemt>e< 4 1985 by the lol
mnt IC NOTICE ---------succe11tu1 Dlddar 10 V IC E 8 R 0 CH u RE •owing roll call vote
_ _...:.~..::.::~=....;.;.;;...;.;.;. ;.;;..._,.i flta.IC NOTlC[ 1Ybltl111ta eeeunuea tor any COASTLINE CO~MUNtTY AVES Councilmen Ketty
FICTITIOUS llUltNEll mol'leyS Wlthnald t>y the DIS-COLLEGE MIGAl1111ef Bailey !"in~
NAME ITATr•NT FICTITIOUS IU9INEIS TRICT to eniure p.,. All blOI era to be 1n ac;. GrMn Tr,omas
The IOllowing petsonl .,. NAME I TATE•NT lorman<le under lhe con-eordance wttll the Bid Doell-NOES Councllmel'I Nona
OOlng t>ualne.s u The Lawn Ttwi lotlowmg penoot are lrlC1 menl1 ..midi .,. "°"' in 11.. ABSEN'T Counctlm•l'I
Doctor & ANOC , t034 W OOlng t>u•ness~· G411'1eral A pret>id watkttlrougll Will ~d may be MC1Jrld 1n t"8 Nona
Balboa Ave . Bl.lt>Oa. CA Home Repairs 372 w Bay be neld °" NOYemt>er 21 ottlGe ot ,,.,. Director ol ABSTAIN Councilmen 02661 .wB-202. Cost~ Mesa. CA 1985 -1 00 PM on,,,. Sltl 11 Pu<clllllng of Uld coll9ge MlndlC.
Robyn Stacy Goldenbe<g 92627 Orange eo. .. College dlllrlcl cm OF HUN'TINOTON
1034 w B1l1>01 Ave ' R0ger Dale McBride. 372 Oowamlng loard, Ir: E~ bidder must eubmll I (A CM. A 11 c I a M
Balboa, CA g2661 w Bay •B-202. Costa I /Chancellor Dn ld A. Wllh hll bid I Cl.SllNK s Wantwortt\, City Clenl
This buslnHs 11 con-Mesa. CA 92627 Bl'ownetl Clleet., Olf'llfiad Cll4ICk or Put>11Shed Orange Cout
duC1ed by 111 1ndlvldual Thu1 business Is con-Published OrellQ8 ~!' l>'Co.t's l>Ofid madl peyable 0111)' P110t No-.emt>er '•
Robyn Goldenberg OU<:1ed by 1111 lndtvl<lual Deity Ptlot Novembl< 7 10 the Ofder ol the Coast 198!>
This ltllamenl wu filed Roger D McBride 1985 Community College Otstrlct Tl\-461
wtth the County Ci.,tt of Or-Trtll Slllernent wu tiled Tl'l-448 bOlrO ot Tr\.1lltie1 '" an
ange County °" Oc1obef 4, wttll tile County Clerk ol Of-amount l'IOt ~ 111111 llve
1985 Inge County on October 25 P\8..IC NOTICE P9fcef11 (5' •I of lhe tum D•O
""357 1985 IS • guatantee tl'lat the DIC!· LEG.Al NOTICE
Put>li$had Orange Cout F2t0101 t 1T17 Ider w•ll enter •nto Ille ~-lllESA
D111y Piiot Oc1ot>er 31 No-PYl>l•shed Otange Coast NOTICE Of proP<>Md Contract at tile ONIFlED SCHOOl.
P\8.IC NOTICE
----------vembat 7. 14. 21. 1985 D11ty P1101 OGIOl>er 31 No-TRUIT'Jf'S IALE same,, ..... .,ded to MT• In DISTIUCT l----------1 nrr: Tl't-411 vemt>er7 1• 21 1985 T.S.No.F•17141 ll\e.veo1oll11lure10 ""'1er ~O~·C.E S HEAEBY rtB.JC NOTICE P\8.IC NOTICE flta.IC NOTICE "8.IC NO ~ Th-425 Chlnl•r 1n10 soc11 cont•ac1 1ne G•vEtot 1,...1 11'19 ao.vo 01
__ ;..;..;;.;;.;.;....;..;.;;...;.;..;..;---Gertleld~ lutt.202. P\B.IC NOTICE NOTICE IPl'OCMCS1ot111ecMC11..,1J t>e Educ.at•or 01 ,,,. Newp0<1-'1C1TTIOUI ....... Goldeport Circle. Hunt-ACTITIOUI llUllNEll Diane Merl~ Dorsey, m Cott.fe ....... NE PUBLIC NOTICE YOU ARE IN DEFAULT tortenecs Of '" ,,,. cue 01 I Mesa Unit.ea Sch004 Dtslroot
MAMl ITA~MEHT lnglOl'I Beacll, CA 02646 NA• I TATr•NT 300 E Coast Hwy, Newport ._._ n---t7101 ' FICTnlOUI 9UllNES8 UNDER A DEED OF TRUST 00<10 tt!e NII turr '"tweot
0
1 C.aoge County #Ill •e-
The folkMtng persona.,. Thi• buelneu IS Gon-The IOllowlng pereona ate Beacl't. CA 02860 ~---Or CoU1 H~ ITATIMENT FICTITIOUI IUIMESS DATED AUGUST 22 1984 1w1M be loneneq to aatd COi-C91"8-* OIOS UP to .. ?()
doing bull-u : BREC dueled by· an indlvldual oing l>u$neu ... Slutl Thia bualneu II con-08lty Piiot NO'llWn":c: 14 21 The lollOW1ng ~·are NAME ITATUIOCT UNLESS YOU TAt<E AC-lege O•llrlCt PM on l')f! ;>no di• :)I O&-
Electnc, 1525 w MacArthut Katel'I KOlllW Jones • Cafe & Dell. 28621 OUC1ed by en Individual 129 Decembef 5 1085 • • Oo.ng business II ~,. The fOllOWing persons are TION TO PROTECT YOUR NO OIOde< "'·~ W•lhc:l••w cernbe• 1985 •• •r:e # 11, Colla M-, CA 02828 Thll ltltemel'll WU tiled erg u e t1 I e Park we)' Otane M Oor1ey • ' Th-452 P1r111ng Serv'CI 1724 Wiit-d()I business IS Krllg s PRO PEATY IT MAY BE r11i Oo<l tor I e>ertOd lor forty-Pl.ll'ct\alng Off101 0~ salO
Wlllalm K 8towt1, 2032 '"'"h lhe County Clerk Of Or-ls.siOl'l l/leJO, Ca 92691 Thia llltemet'll was tiled GUii Or : 12 Newport l(o~puter Konnectto:i SOLD A~ A PUBL C SA~E llw 145 Oa~ efler lhe Oala SGtlOCI D<st.roet l<>atea aT
Santa An• Ave.. Colt• •noe County on October 23, Ralph Edwll'I Haun. 211&2 'Wftll ,,,. County~ of Or-Pl&IC M)TIC[ Beac:tl, CA 92ee0 22 t55 "'-Sant St El Toro IN YOU NEED AN EXPLA Ml lor ,,,. °'*''"0 11\Weol 293S-S Seer Street Costa
M..a.CA02827 1085 Hlletock RO , Laguna angeCountyonOc1oti.21. a.nn.t1SleYWIWUmen, CAg283() . NATION OF ]HE NATURE T"i..BoardOITrva1-re-1Meae CA 92628 •• wn'Gf'
Thia buslneu le con-F'2IMl7 , Ca 02651 1085 FICTnlOUI M.1 ... 11 1724 W111cllft Or • 12, Kraig Steven Blact< 22155 OF THE PROCEEDING -...s tlle pnllllageolr•.-ct· ume Mid OiOa w111 oa put>-
ducted by: lndlvtd., Publlahed Orange Cout This buelneu 11 con-,...,.7 H.U.ITA~ Newport 8each,CA92660 p t SI El r . CA A GAI NST YOU YOU 1ng any .,.d '" b<ds Of 10 llCly ooenec!aod....alor
Wllllam K~Btown u Dally Piiot Octobef 3 t. Ne>-ucted by: an Individual Put>llshlld Oranoe Cout The tollowlng pereons ere Tn1s bullnaas 11 col'I-9~san oro. SHOULD CONT ACT A LAW· w11w an~ 1rregui.t111e1 Of in-SWEE PEAS nus etetament wu ruect vemt>et 7, 14, 21, 1985 Ralph Edwin Haun Daily Pilot Oc1obef 31, No-dOlng t>usl,_. as: Aret>lan ducted by an 1ndlvidu11 Thia bustness is con-YER l~lllMtS •n any bid 0t •n An t>tda are to t>e 1n ec-
wtth the County Clert< of Of. Th-397 This sta1emeri1 wu llled vembat 7, 14. 21. 1085 Mlrtletlng Aeeelrch Arid In-Bennett S Waxman ducted b an tndhndual On No...,,.,oer ;> 1 1985 11 the Dtddlng cordence wnn Cono111ons ~County on Oc1ot>er 25. ----------Ith the County Clerk ol Or-Th-'608 tormallon . Services. 6 This 11e1emen1 was riled Krllg §i...,.,., Bllcit 10. 00 AM Frenaun Con-Lea "-Stev-•. Vice ' 1nstn.ctt0<1s end Se>e<:•ll-
t085 P\llUC NOTICE 1nge County on October 21. 1----------Almond Tree Lane. lrvll'll. with th41 County Ci.rii or Ot-Thia stelement wu tlled veyal'ICe CorC>Of'lllon • CaH-Chaftcl(lcw, 141~ At-cations wnlCf'I are ()(l 111e 1n
,.._ , __ ..;...;;;;;.;;;.;.;....;.;.;;;,.;.;;..;.;;.. __ 19&5 Plll.IC M>TICE CA 92715 ange County Oc1ot>er 21 , wuh the County Cieri! 01 Ot-lorma Corpor111on as duly t.lre. CC>Ht Community tl>e olf1ce of tne ?urctlesing
P\Jblllhed Ot•llQ8 Cout FICTTTIOUI ....... F-.:22 Andrew Blaine Miiier. 6 1985 8 County on Oetobef 25 appointed Trustee under Coli.,. Dl1Mcl Director ol se•CI Scrtoo1 O!s-Dally Piiot October 3 l, No-HA• I TATf*"'f Publlll'led Orange Coast FICTnlOUI BUllM!ll Almond Tree Larie, lrvll'le. F219120 1~ • 'and pursuant to Deed ol Pubflsneo Or11~ Coa,i 1r1ct 2985-S Bear Street
¥9mb« 7, t4, 21, 1085 Tl'le lollowlng pereone ere Dally Pllol October 3 t. No-NAMI I TATIMINT CA 92715 · Pubt~ Orange Coast f'21Cl11 Trust.dated Augus1 22, 1984 D11ly P1101 Novemt>er • 1.c c05111 Mesa CA 92626 Tll~l7 doing bullneea H : A) Ad-vember 7. 14, 21, 198T5 Tiie following Plf80l'll lfe Craig Wendel Branch Dally Piiot October 31. No-Published Orange Coast recorded August JI 1984, 1985 .,., "~ A "'ertormance Bono ma•
...._ _________ venced Col'leumer Products, 11-404 doing bulllnase u : TLK Con-Talley. 6 Almond Tree Lane, veml:>er 7, 14 2 I 1985 Dally Pllol October 31 No-as Inst No 84-36607~ 01 N~ rfoQuirE'CI at lhe d1scre11or flta.IC NOTICE B) (ACP), 64 Knollglel'I, suiting. 2569 Elden •A2, lrvlna, CA 92715 Th-402 veml>ef 7 14 21 1985• Offlc•el Records in Ille otflce "'' ''"' .)1st-oc• TICE Colla Meu. CA 92627 This business Is con-Th-419 ot 111e County RecOfde< or "lo O•Cl.Je• "lS\ ... cnora ... lrvjr;_·nC~0t~• Roes., 64 flta.IC NO Terry L Kaclllglan, 2569 ducted by. 1 general part-flta.IC NOTICE Orange County State of P\IJLIC NOTICE ,.,s B•d tor a periOd ot tony-1 JPl
1
Knoll"len, lrvlne. CA 92714 8TAn•NT Of E1091'1 •A2. Costa M .... CA nerahlp Cshlorn11. Eitecu1ed Dy live ,., CS\~ ar•er !'>e oate
HOTICl OF • 92627 C.W Brel'ICll Talley JNEll flta.IC NOTICE Cerotyn L Ctterkey • w.oow NOTICE tel r°' IN! ooen1ng !herllOt PU9lJC IALi Thi• buelnH•
1
• con-:~~ Thi• bu11n111 11 con-Tllil statement WU tiled F~!~o~:A~~EHT WILL SELL AT PUBLIC INVITING BIOS .,," Bo~·d ,,, EOuc.ation Of
Of ""IONAL "'~"TY duJ= ~y: :=Mdual IUSINCll NAME ducted by an lndlvtdull with Ille County Clerk of Or-The fotlOWlng petlOOJ Ire FICTITIOUS IU8tNESS AUCTION TO HIGHEST BID· NOllCe •s l'teu1oy g1vll!' !h8! thfo N-1>()(1 Mesa un1heo
Notice I• hefaby9tven lh•I Thia 11a1ement WIS flied Th loll I persona Ttwry L Kechlglan ange County Ol'I Oc101:>er 25, doing business IS Soult\ NAME STATEMENT OER FOR CASH tP•yabte 81 11>1 Boero OI Trustees o• lne ScrtOOI O.str•CI rMerYeS 11'11
pureuanl to Section th the County C'4lr1I 01 Or-e band= the M of Thil s111emen1 w11 llled t98.S C 0 • 9 1 1n,.•s 1men 1 The loll0W1ng ~s are ume ol sale 1n lewfvl money Co•" Comrnuntl)' Cot~ rogn1 ,., <t''8C1 an.,°' at Btds 21701·21715 ol the Call-have• u with 1111 County Ci.rii ot Or-F2I030t5 5 do.ng business as DRW ot the unateo S1a1es1 at the DI 'ICl
01
Oran e Couni. •no "0' ~"·~ 1ccep1
fornl1 Bullneu and Pr~ nge County°" Septembef Ille ~lctltlous :uel~cea~: ange County Ol'I Octot>et 25, Published Orange Coast ~~~~;,~es A~: ...:..~ Company 711 West 17tl't Decio. OU1Slde entrenoe ()(l c :i:tornoa will r~e seal !he 1owes1 B•d ano 10 w11ve
I.alone Code, Sectton 2329 5, l985 "2174'3 Name Ch~ttJ .9rer 11 11 1985 Deity PllOI October 31 N~ poo Beecll CA 92663 • E·2 Costa Mesa CA the F1tst Floor of ll'le Van-ed DIOS P
10
Ovl nc •lier al'lv ,,.,1orrnallt) 0< "regutara-
of the Calltornla Comm«cll.I Cup ~...,... '200 A Fao:IOt l>ef 7, 14. 2 1, 1995 S 5-46 92627 guard P111ze bu1101ng IOCaled n , • ~
1
.., Monda~ Iv .r I"\ 810 •eceoveo eocs.. Section S35 of Ille Publlsn.d Orange Coast Bayside Or M s~A 0262-5 • Publllhed OtS1941 Cout Th-426 SaJn011~:n1::~~0 ·:~.nu• Bernard Marlo. Dalley 81 2341 w Uncotn Ava ~~ 2 1985 ll lhe NEWPO .. T-MESA UNI·
Callfomla Penal Code end ~~::: 7~':~8~4• 31
• ~:• ~tu!s Buelnau Dilly Piiot Oc1ot>er 31. N~ Newpon Belcll CA 92e63 3792 Hamilton. lrvme CA Anahetm CA 111 right 1111e Purc"&SJ"9 Departme<'I
01
FtfD SCHOOl OIS~T Of
the p!'ovllionl
01
Iha Call-Th-370 N eterred to above wu vembef 7 14 21· 1985 "8.IC NOTICE T"" bu11n1as 1s con-92714 8"° •nteresl conveyed 10 SllO cOI• 01woc1 IOG•teo Orenga County, C*""Jn 8 fornla Auction Llcenelng ame r 0 C 1 on Tl'l-427 ducted by an lndMdUel Petric•• Ann w 11111m1 1111d now "910 Dy 11 uno«
11 1370 Adams Avenue Stociler. Pu~ Olnc-
Acl, ttie underaigtled wtH ..,, flied In ':SO-oun Y FICTITIOUS BUleNEll JOhn William Saar 2975-C S FllfV-Santa said OeeCI ol Trust on ,,.,. Costa ,_.~ c
11111
"'""
1
, tor (714) 5.56-3:217
at public Nie by competltlW P\8.IC NOTIC[ Ju~ l9,
1~ 3059 p 001 NA• STATE.•NT This statement wu flied Ana CA 92704 preperty ~luated in said "IC" tome seid Dlds .,...
11
t>e PuDhS'>eel '.:>••"~ ::oas1
bidding on the 25th d~ o1 lanley 0 ~· Naw~or; P\llUC NOTICE The followlng ~s .,8 111 the County Clerk 01 Or-ROiiand Euo-Ray Jr COUl'll'/ and State described ;.bhc.., ~ Sl"ICI eao ::>ail'y p,,
0
, ,..
0
.,....,t>et u 2 • Nowmb«. 1085. at "°° '1CTJTIOUI au1•11 ontory r ve. . doing t>uslness 119 vmage w• Oc
2
890 w 15111 = 16 Newt>0<1 as t
1
•985
o'clod<PM.onthepiemi... HA-ITATfMSIT Beach,CA92660 on-IHTHECIRCUfTCO\MTOf Drive LTD . 151 Kalmus ~County on IOl>er 1. Beach.CA9266J Lot30 anoe 1 l341nun-O'PRtNT & SINO SPRING
wtler• Mid p!'operty hu The following pereone are Tnls :u··~ . ..:, .. I c In. I TATI Of ~Q~ Drive, Suite J5, Cos1a Mesa, 5 l'alelt Tl'lrs business IS con-d1111ded interest '"eo<nmOfl 1986 BROCHURES OR
.,..,, etored, and wtllcll .,. olng bu1lnea• ... Be11 ducted y In u• llled ,o.. THIE COUN y CA 92626 PubhSheel Oren-Coast dueled l>y I 11 nited ::>lrtner-1n Ind 10 Lo! I ol Trac:• No ANGE COAST COLLEGE localed 11 Public Storage. Ftlands (Prole11ona1 Dog Thlt 911temer1t •11 MAllHON, ~I of Wiiiiam v Hatns Jr 151 p an1p s 160 1n the Cir, ot Coste
20e5 Pleeetltla Avenue, 11'1 ralnlngl, 120 Virginie Place, wllh the County Ci«lt of Of. Demeetlc "9tettone Kalmus Drive Surte' JS Dally Piiot OGto~ 31. No-P11r1Gta Ann WUllarns Mesa County ol Orange All D•OJ ar~ lo t>e .r ac-
the City of Costa Mela, oat• Mesa. CA 02627 enge County on October 2t, CAif NO . .._ C I Mesa CA 92626 , vembef' 7 14 21 1985 Tll11 stllemenl was t11ed Stlle of Ca1ttorni1 as per coroence with the B•CI Docu CROWLEY
Coul'lty ot Oranoe. State of JI"-K Suthartend. 120 1985 IN THE MATIER OF THE 09 ~ emln · c Herris 151 T11-403 w.th 1t1e Coun!y Clerk ot Or-map recorded 1n BQ01.. t8 I ments wnicll •re now '" tilt! I Rc·ul'lt'n H Cro" Ir"
Celltomla.11\egood1,cnat-1rglnl1Place,Cos1e M .... D~tyub~~~~~3 ~0,:~C ADO~GTEIO"'oFA~~M~tR~~ Ka~J11 Drive Suite JS , 1ngeCoul'ltyonOc1ot>er29 pages 40 -42 o t Mis-~~?cem•J,~11esec:O:,:,~t~ ~'li.t"-a~ N0vem
DEATH NOTICE S
!tee or pereonal Pfeperty 0.. A 02627
1 0
8 · HA C sta Mesa CA 92626 flta.IC NOTICE 1985 cellsl'leous Maps •n ltle 01• Purcllesing ot sa•O college b\•r -1 ~ti.' A res1dt>nl ICflbec:I below. In IM mat-Thie bualneH I• con-vembef 7. 14. 21. 19 T511 406 GENE HERZIG,• Minor oThla business 11 con-F29055e flee or •tie County Recorder o111r.c1 o f C ·'~Id M t>i.-1
tatl of: uctad by an lndlvldu11 • NOTICE AND ducted by 8 llmlled partner-flCTITIOUI IUSINl!IS PYbllahed Orange Coast ot sa1CI Count)' b
1 Jamee Strlm91' -2 bar James K. Sutherland ----------CITA0TION ERZ G Ship HA• I TATEMENT Dally Piiot Oclot>er 31 No-The street eddreu al'ld wtt~ac~1:•di; r;us~le~15 Sur.·1vt'\i ~" his IO\
etool, bd, 14 bu mlac, .I Thie llatement wu llled f'tG.IC M>TICE TO LEA V H 1 • Wiiiard v Harris The tOllowfng pereons ltl veml>ef 7 14 21 1995 other common del1gn11ion, c~ cei-tllieel check or ing w1f1 ~ <Hs;., sons flhng rod, Sp. D 89 Ith the County Clerlt of Or-__ ;...;.;;.;;,;..;....;.;.;.._;..;;...;....; __ 1 tatllet ol Ille 11>ova named This statement wll fll4t0 doing ooell'llSS es R K Mer-Th-396 11 any ot lh41 real propeny t>tdo.t a t>o<>d made P•Y•~ Robt-rt (·row le'\ of
EJalneOIMn ·Wltlt,dry. 1'1Q8Countyon$a01ember FICTTTIOUl llUl..,.11 minor wltlltlleCountyClef'kolOr-kellng A11oc11111. 1056 l oe"'!lcr •bed abo ve 11 t the oroer of the eo..
1 0
R h. d
lrlQe, dist dnwr, Sp D 50 . 1985 NA• 8TATOIENT Yoo will pta.asa take not le. ange County 00 October 25, Flamingo Or . C0.11 M.... flta.IC NOTICE purported to t>e 2352 Community Col~ Dist net rt g l> n 1 c, a r
Wiiiiam Mc8tlda -Ort F217'53 The lollcMlng ~era lhel DONALD GODFREY lO&S CA 92826 Minuteman Way Co111 Board
01
Trustees in en Cwwlt';> o f Costa
bltla, 2 Iola. micro OVTI, cte Publllhed Orange Coat doing buell'lell u · BrN \Ill-and TRUDY GODFREY. hll F2IQ87 Aoo.tld K McConnenea NOTICE TO Mesa CA 92626 amount not lesa than ,,.,. Mt ..... .;wp-daughters
tble, bd, 40 bx1. mlK llm, Detty Piiot October 24, 31, 1ege ~. 1021-0 Ent wit•. have flied kl 11141 CltCUlt Publllhed Orange Coat end Linda v McConnellel. C<>N'n'ACTOfl8 The und9'Sf9'*' Trustee peroent (S"•• of,,,. sum l>•d SuZJn LandrPlh of
Sp. O 20 ovembet 7, 14. 1095 Imperial, BrN, CA 92621 Court of the .Ste~ °',,\ Deity PllOt October 31. No-t956 FelmlngO Or Cos11 CAUJNQ FOfl 8'01 dlSOlaims sn• llal>•h!'f le>r t'ny 19 1 guarent .. that 1r.. 1>•0-San Clt'mt•nte. Sher Raymond Ferr• • 2 wrk Th-379 Watren C. Flok. 1181 HIN· llQOll. tor Mation ty, vetnber 7 14 21, 1985 Mesa, Ca 92628 Schoot 0111r1ct Coast incorrectness of !hi 11rt1e1 de• will enier into the
bnot'I. dell. atm chair. mlac side Drive, La Heb<a. CA Pellllon praying that •n · Tll-420 Th11 buslnaH 11 con· Community College O!strlC1 eddreu anCI otrier common proooMO Contr -
1 1
th@ r:-D o\t><·h of Idaho
g1 .... mltcgl111CU1tng tool, 00631 ORDER be entered ganu~ ducted by hultlend and wife BIO D11dt1ne tO 00 desll)n11ion t 1ny Shown ...,~ 15 ••••Oed lo rum tn JISl ,.ur.·in>O b" four
Sp e n "8.ICNOTICE Thi• bueln•H 11 con-10 Palllloner, D NAL "8.IC NOTICE AonaldK McConnehN OCiockAM Ol ttte 2ndd•Y1her.., ll'W'evllf'llOll111urt1 10..nte• l\l~hri; m Mass .• mci Ancnro Matlcl -WndwM-ducted byanlndlvlduat GODFREY,~ to ado91 Tiiis statement wu flied o!Oecemt>et 1985 Sllldsele .. •ll oemaoe bul ..,
10
suet! contr"
1
trte d h Id
curtty bw. 3 mtl door. d00< '9CTfT10UI .,._... Warren C Ficll KYMBERLY GENE HERZIG, '1CTTTIOUS 9UllNIEll wtttl the Coul'lty Clllf'k of Of· Pt-of 80C1 ~pl Of-wrttlout covenant CN *•r t-•(>('l'C'd~
011
,,. c"K~ will bt1 I I\ t ~ran l. I r en ~.Sp C 37 NAMI I TATlm#T Thlt statement wu flied your ml~ Ctllld, and you ~ ITATr•NT enge County Ol'I Oc1obef 25 ftee ol Pvrct11S1ng Otrector •anty exprt1SSor ""Ol ..o •e-t0<111<t90 or
1
n 111e cue ot
1
Ht ~& ,. membt>r of
J«f K. OkMllKI • Saw, TM tOllowlng pertona.,. wfth the County Cler11 of Of. muel IPPMt within thirty The tOllowlng person1.,. 1085 Ma Betfy Kalll'I. Cout Com-gardtng mi. ~ or t>Ond tne tu11 ~um therf'OI I lta 1\1.L-.onK Lodgi Chair, eo bxa m*8c:. 11ricecr doing t>ullnea ea: Sl'IMtl ange1 . Coul'lty on Oc:tobef 21. days ol the date ot tlr'lt put>-cto1ng ~ u · Patr1d!'• l"'2tODI munrty College Otstnct. 1310 enc...mt>t1rtOM to pay the iort tld
1
Mid coi
tble, reefd. Sp 8 10 N 8 , 28 tO The Rhine, New-1985 llcatlon ha~aoL!!. lh~ Home Repair & lmprov. PubllShed ()f&l'IQ8 Cout Adams Ave Coate Mesa. CA rema•n•ng 1><•nc•pa1 sum 01 ~ C:woe~ o • ~h ffi\lrt.tl "f'!''\"l~'eSd. t..u
Oellld Jecoba . TV, Ible, port 8each, CA 92el3 "-11 Courtroom .,_,men mante. 3284 M ichigan. O.lty Piiot October 31 No-9262tl Ille notetst secured 1>.,. MIO No DIOO.• mev ""''""'•w b1 hf Id Sun a"
twe Sp. A 48 w1n1am Kanne1h Al'ICh, Publllhecl Of~ Cou1 "',) 5 at lhe Courthouae In Coate Mesa. CA 92826 vetnt>er 7 14. 21. 1915 Protect lden11t1c111on Oeeo ot T·ust w•11> •"18'111 "'~ blCl lor 1 e>er•Od tor tony ;. f'\l 11.lrhor Lav. n Viste Cenlw Shell, Tire 2810 The Rl'llne. #«3, New-Daffy Pilot Oc1ob8' 31, No-I City ol Salem, Matlon Patriek T Mc:Corry. 32&4 Th-' 12 Name Orange <A>ut ~ tneraon as prov.Old ,,, N •O
11
,,.
14
s daye ett• the dltle l\li l'Th>n«a l'h.;ipt>} In mntr, lube berral. 3 tire. bet-port Beach, CA 029&3 vetnbef 7, t 4, 21, 1985 County. Oregon and Show Michigan. Cost• ...... CA ~ Rerootlng. Soenoe •35 noll(•I advances '' an~ Mii
10
, tt>e opening lhe<'e<>f
tty dlf'gr, mlec auto~ l Thie bullna11 11 con-Tll-313 CauM, " lfTY you may lleve. 02824 _ Sid • 12&4 · under,,.. term• ot said Oeeo The Board 01 Tl"\.lat-re I 1 rm 1· n t pr I'\ i. t 1
equip ucted by· an Individual wtly 11\e Pl'ayet of Mid Pet>-Thie buelneH' 11 COl'I· "8.JC NOTICE "'-Plane ere on Illa OI-of Tn.st •-ctl•rges end _.,,
95
the pnv11ega of raieci H.irbor L.twn M ·
Carman Magdalene • WMllam K~h Anch "8.IC NOTICE lion 11\ould not n. granted duc:ted by en lndlVldual floe of Ptl"J91Ga1 FaCllitiM ·~or the T"'st" and •"9 ,,,~ •nd
11
11 btds or to
011
, " Mn rt u a r,.
CM!r, aewng m41Ch cbn1, Thlt staletnent WM ftled NOTICE TO lEROY Patrlct!T.Mc:CO<Ty '9CTTTIOUS llU8Mll Planning, l'reller Door 8, of th41trus"creeteo D,Mld waiwanv1rrt19ularltie10<1n· Oirt .. :Una
540
_
8554
•
bl'I Frll'l1orn, Auc:tlonMr; County on October 25, ..... -IT ... TIWNT PAPERS CAREFULLY· wttll the County Clet'll of Of. The toltOWlflO ~are Dlatrlc1 1370 Adamt Ave Tiie total amount ot Ille lhf' bidding
frlga. 12 bu mlec Sp. 0 48 wtth the Counly Clertl Of Or· '1CTn"IOU8 .,..... HERZIG· READ THESE Thie lleterMnt ..,.. tNect ~ ITAftmHT Cout Community College 0..0 ot Trust l0<mehll~~ '" an~ bid or ,,., I "'
Slate Llcenee No. A 12t7. -.. YOU MUST "APPEAR" IN .,. County on Oc1ot>er 21, o4ng Ix*'-.. 8utlnees Coeta . Mesa. Talepll°"9° unplild bllanca OI Ille 01)11. l M • lt1Yef\a, Vk• ~ feMNM the rtgtlt to • ,..1, Tba followlng pereona era THIS CASI! OA THI! OTHER 1085 Patil ln11e11ore I, 1303 (7141 432-5707. Eugel'le F gatior> MCU...0 by,,,. proo c~. '"""'-• At· 1
bid II lhe ..... PwtcheMI Pul>tllhec:I Orange Cout doing buelneeeaa: ArcNbald SIDE WILL WIN AUTOMATI-,,_,,Avocado. Sun• 220. ,.....,.. Harrie Director erty 10 be told Ind •euon· fat .... Coa1t ComlftMnlt~ muatn.mldewhhCMhonly Dally Pltol October 31, N~ 8ueln••• Park lnv•ttore CALLY. TO "APPEAR" YOU Published Oranoe Cou1port8Mcll, CA 92880 NOTrCE IS HEREBY Ible 11Umated GOltl ....
Ind peld tor at the time of b« 7. 14, 21. 1"5 Lid., 1303 Avoceclo, Sult• MUST FILE WITH THE Olllly Pilot October 31. No-Mlcflaal L. Cargile. 20I L• GlllJ:N lhll Ill• •bo ..... pen-and advanOn II tNI ~-=~:.l'IQ8 Cotti
purcheN All purclleffd Th...00 220, ~ 8eect\, CA COURT A LEGAL P~Pl!A ¥"ember 1. 14. 21. 1985 Joh L~ ~ Beaoh, nam.d $ct1001 OlstrlC!t tor tli!ne of the lnlllel publlcaoon Deity Ptlol OCtot:let 30 No
goode .,. aold ..... Ind 02MO CALLEO A "MOTION OA Th-'10 CA 029&3 ~~ County Calltoml&. Of IM Nooca ol Sale II ~ t5 1985 mwtMremovedltlhetlme i---------MlcMll Clro119, 20e La-"ANSWEA" THE "M~: WIMam9udgal,402Ernw-acting by en<1 °tt1t~ ifl $71.072 49 ....m T~-45.3 ~= :~~ ~ Ml.JC fl)JlC( ~';=--Newp«t ew:n. ~&N.;' B~~l\;~.~r~~~=e Ml.IC fl>TU ~":"'· L.-8aech, CA ~ ~· .. ~ ~ :-:::~:::.-:: --------~· ~ 0wrw '1CTmOUl.,..H Thie butlnes• I• con· COURT CLEAK OR AOMIN-• 11 ,.. Leo Notet. 2n e1 ~ TRIC.T Wiii f«*V'8 up to.. ecvtecs ano ~ 10 '"-I P\llllC NOTIC£ and otlltgeled petty. Detect ..._ eTATlmNT ducMd by: 1 llmlled S*lnet• ISTAATOA WITHIN THIRTY ~A,.:;y ehoa Bend San Juan IM not teier thell tM ebow-~ 1 wnttt111 O.C: _ __.....;;;::..;;...;._...;;_~;.....-
ttlll fttl and 14th day of No-The 1o41ow1ng pereone'" ~ r-.-DAYS ALONG WITH THl aptatrano, CA 9281& 11at«I tWM ..__, bldl tor larltlOrl Of Oef9Uft and 0.. LIO.AL MOTICI
vamoer. itH Publlc doing~ a.: OSL Aea1 Thie ~ -filed RfOUIAED l'IUNO FEE.. IT The~ l*'IOfll:: Aot>er1 Socci, a• 121 Iha ~ at 8 ronl,-eci fat ~tor SA. eno a wrttten ON*tANCI NO ._
8t0tt09 M~1t, lnQ,. (ltet., 10381 LOI AlefnltOI ........, 1.._ r ..... _ ... ,....... '"""-. M UIT IE IN P.-O .. f,_ dOll'G ~O C :a 1 .. f I Oouraml lay, Lagu111 IN~ pro,ec:t Notice of o.teull ~ E1ec-AN OROINANCE Of THC C11ttorn1a Auction lioen.. 8IYd Ai.tnll CA '""' ,,. ........,"' .,_,."'..,. P:<>4i'M ANO HAI/! PA00F alty, " ppra ea 1• NIQWI. CA ntn 9ldl "'91 ~ ""°9Ned In tton tos.tl T'heund9r111Qned CITY OF HUNTINGTON
No. 0 1191, Telephone (213) 00120 Lot oe, =County on Odober ti. °' SDMCI ON THE P£n. , ... , =-~~ ~· J.n~ p W~h. 505 tM platoe ....... '*' ~ ~ Mid Hotl09 of 0.. BEACM AMENDtNO THE
112·H01,Aoentf0f0wrw OSL Inc .. 10391 Loa ,_ TION£A'I ATTOMtiY, OA ~ AM~ 19111 P.,k...ey w.t . .,_ ano llfwll tile apenaes end leull and Oeetlon 10 $.it 10 H\JllCTINOTON 8£.ACH o.-~Orange COM! AllMltOI II d loe ,, TH'! PrTITIONEA DOU ~ 1000.~.CAtHll _ ........... r..o ~at tile be~ 11'1 1~ COllflty OtNANC( COOC BY OlilY ........ ~ 1, 14. • • Pvblilhed OtWIOI eo. NOT HAii! AN ATTOflHIY. ~c~ • .....:£~""'"trnglOl'I Thie bull,,... II con-;;;;; ... ,.Cl time and ...... .,,. ...... ~ • AMENDING SECT!Ot<I llOel INS ..,,, Al#nltoe. CA t2120 Defy Plot OctOCler I t. No-F-'..oof Of II.~ 1-"0N -.. " ~ led t>y a ~al 1*1· ... ~ IOc&tecS TO PAOVIOE FOA Ctt.AHGE
IN Tl\_..1 1'ltle bualnMI le con· ~7;14,21, IMS THl~IOHOl TM buW.. II COi\· "';:;.,.Wllbe e StOOOa. 0.. Oc1eoer t7 ltl$ ~ ZON1NG 'fllOM ME·
Ckd9CI by'
1
CDpCJtellon ~:14 IFYOU HAVl MN QUl3-duc1ild b)° In~ MtCNo11 ~ poa1t,...... tor aecfleM of ''utlfl11 C9ft••ra11ce OtW ·OCNSIT'Y AtStDEN· •-II' MnTIC( ~:~rttz ... tllld flONS, YOU IHOU\.D Ut ~ ~~ Ned TM ~ wee Ned bio ooo .,,_1tt to Ql*antw Cet_.tallu. e t ul .. TlAL DISTRICT TO IOUAU·
,._""' ttltNCouflt)'a.tcofOr· AN ATT<>Mfn IMM(C)t. ""--.a::'o10r tNCountyOleftro40r· heelretutnll'IOQOdCONltlOli .,....... _,., W • ..._... f'ICDI HIGHWAY COM -~ATW r.c . MTmOUI . ...... DATU>encUlrwc pulllltlfled "'P-"J on • I '*' OC**'a o.ae 111 --· ~ 0.-. MAL PAC)fJflllTV GENE"-The ltll0w4fte pereone... ,_,. ~ITA~ at eo.ta MeM. °"-:: 1'8& ...... ,_ bdl t*j mmt ~..... •ALLY L.OCAT!D OH TH
HARBOR LAWN-
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Mortvar. •Cemetery
Cremator.,.
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MOR tu ARY
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PACl'1C VIEW
M£MONAl PANt
Cernc!Utr'I • MCW1~
C l'l&p4l! • Cr9"'141t ory
3500 P if~ II~ Or1¥9
_.. -.. -.. ATUV -~=~-,.. "°""'"'°"-'"!~ ,..,,., __ ... A-.,• ........ -.1MEAC1Al OISTAICT ON
dOint .,._.•·Katen ~ ONirlfl~ n.:.!:=?j~ :7No-u~~t::.' ~Dr-.. eo. ~o:=-sf: =.r:= '91t1e ~O:O::-a~l ~·f-~~:u:v~1 · ... :, CIC:-'1:ttru~. 114 ztt!I~ ~ "r ~.:.· "°' ::.1 bcll•nt•.:.. 303 ciA TTtl •••nil ~ .... 1-~ .. -!.!·.. 1 1',2t, ,.., (eel\ btoder Wiii wbm\, =-7, t4 IM5 , .. ST1'£1il fZOHl CASI •
...::_.::::---.,CA ttta ' ' ,,.._ H111W ~ 1~ CO... JU I i. ---, Mo _...., • , c: '""';:. -.. ~1 °" ltle for1ft ~ t1ftJ1 Th-373 NO 14) "'---::====:::::::::._ ._,_, ...._CA ............. IFLOM . ,.._ ._ ....D&:ltu.l~~offl''llllt.Jtll!t'!'.....l.---------
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-.,. ~ -.JC lfJ11C( ~ llJTIC( PWUC fl)TIC( NI.IC N()TlC( rtalC MmC( I ........., ..,,,_ . IOUI • I M °' ...... ~ .. -.. ~ .• .._ ... a'..... ...... Dlilenotl Ooeat llPO" eny "*'°"•reclOt el'let""" publlcaflon of <:AN TITU~ INSURANCI The ttrMt .oor ... Of "':l'.."°:1A~.. . fltC~ITAW
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GP IM...n ....0 a.y M, • T,_.. WMllr Md.......,.. ~ CoOllee DllWtol 'under .,. ~ tMI notJoe, <:OMftANY, 1 CelltOfnle oor· 01tl« COf'l1MOn cleelaMllOn The folloWlllO Pl"M"'~
., TO f"'--'lnlNttell~ w .. ..-s ol .... OM-lld~lllOo'._ to~not-tNf\tMM6d It Miolnt•h. • b· por1ttonuTruet•,Ofluoo ot. 11ld prop1rfy: 11 fhefollo'Mnt~~ doing~• ~, U0 ........ ~~ eoun.y 9M ..... In INt oert8in Died ol ........ of die Ind day ot 0.-~,.._to .. WOfillf't eif c e HO r I Tr 11 It U 0 t purpe>ttld to bl: 1710 I dOlnO ~ .. ..,.,..,,, ttoNil ~ lnC. a -= IUM, ....... • ..,..._ TNl!t _,... W Cl.Aue ..-r. 1tU ~Dy"*" In IM-. ....., .,, the le4alie 8Ulllllt111ed TN81•. of thet AnNtrOllQ Awnue. ttWMt. lrlxen & Aeeoc ..... ; PllClftc W.-COMll ~ • ....,.. tM9 • ,~ I: An ~ JUITlllN a nd ANNA ...... -lid ....... Of. eoution of -~ ... •• ..... o.rtllft OMd of TNet ... CaMfomla h714. Ser~~ 2na ...... leecfl CA-ttta
To --• ~ 1t133td ..,._. In .M to JUITlllN ~ Md IOe of ~ Dhcltar,, No ~ ,,_, ....,._ PUbllhed Or~ Cout eouied by Aloh1td w Seid .-wit be made Verde EMt. 1,,.104, Colt• ~~ ...... Inc ..
&UT9KY =•• K. a 1,.04 1 of Tract No ..... "' ..... ~ ~I, tM1, ...._ ~ Kiin. CoeM COfn-llf'J b'd tot • pertod of ~ Delly Pltot NoWmw t4, MuchtnOrl, en lndlvlduel, w!th0u1 OCMNnt or wtir· Mw.C OA ~
2775
MIN fWltOfl I011 Ktnoe "°9d .
....,... A. • ~ thl C"1 of C.. ...._ In le* 1.014 of Oftlolll,. ~Collail~. 1110 (to) deyl -"" thl -. • 21, 21. 1915 and reootd.cl June 29, 1"'4 ranty, PP' ... Of~. " «~ • ~· INCltl CA t2.tl$ .. Diii..:: ~Of 0r.,.., ..... of corcte of llllcS CcluMY, "~Aw.eoe..Mw.CA forlM~OftMde. Th,..157 u ln1trum1n1 No. 10 title, poerm'on, Of en· Verde Jl-.'2eit104. Cotte Ttllt bU..,,.e. It oon-
... c..91 4 t•I Celtotnl&. • '* ~ P9ll '°"°· A9cord9r'• '"" tHM A peyment bOM end • 84-270948, In Sook--~·. OUll'lbtat\Cll to ... IM MeM. du01ed by. • OOft)Otetton 0:1:9 ... & M'9 <"'* OOfdld In 8ooll '67, ttn.wneftt No, 10877, W Pro1ec1 ldentlfloatlon perlormlnoe bond will be rtaJC NOTICE PIQf--, ot OftlCltl ~ unpeld belenoe ~on IN TNI bvelnMl~CO"'-Ollblt10. F'oett!W
I& "-) '° 111 ~ 24, H end M of ~ot•~or.,_. N1lft1 : "•4'11u 1 lot ~Id pnor to IMCIUtlon eotdl ot Or11n91 County,~ or notee eeGWld by c:tuct«1 bV:.,, • TNI....,.,..,. .,,.. ~
.. MllO Harilor 0111neOW1 M1pe. 11t 1f'9 • In ~ or pafoilMloe ~lld • tH2. Or· of the CJ9"1r1Ct end """' M MOnc8 t» C11ttomta. end purwt to Mid 011c1 of Truet, 10 wtt: Ccny lrtll.n t Ned with the COun1Y Q1f1c of Or· ~ CA lloe of .,. ~ flWorder of IM ~ 110W9C1 .,,.. COllt C-. ,.._ In IM ldrm Mt torttl In the MA.IC nw.n" I that C*11ln Notlot ot D«IUll 13,851,M0,00, pl\'I the fol· Thia •~ •II County on NcwM!ber :;s. v~. ot Mid~. thlttby, 1nch1dln9 th•t -..ilGlng of Ttw11 TIMll oontract ~,., -..er TO th«~ reGOtded July IOwlnO •llmetld coet1, ex· with tn. qounty Ctertt0ctot! ri· rf916 • COMt ~ thertiffom UNtl bt.-ctl or default, NOclot Of Court• PurlMlnt to Seotton 45'0 llCTIOM IW OI 31, 1"6 u ll\ltrument No. pen111 end ldWlllCll 1t the enoe COunty on • · ,_ "*=.::., 14 1 ttwouiah f33 M lllallr\,on wHdl W '90Cltdld -t. ....,_,_.er1 onll9:0t· Of the~ COdt of TMSCALIHMU I 15·2111M, In Boote--. Umeof!Nlnl1t.lpubllcletlon 1M5 ,_ Pvtlllh9d Orenge ao-t = · '!tie~ lltilinr. 1t11. • ~• lnMN-floe of ~ F'dtlel the SllM of Caltfomla. ttlt CO?M~IAlCOM p.,_, ot ~ A9-ot thlt Notice of Sat.: OlllyPtloC~ 11 11 TIMM corded In 11oot 12111, P9 mlftt No, 11-112271. WIU ~. l'rlMlr 0oot I , contra c t wlll oon111n NOTICE IS Hl!AEBY OOfdl Of Mid County, wlll S19.213 00 Pu~~,!'!93f:: H end Otolmber 2, IHe '
114 of°"'*' ~ °' IEU. AT "'9UC AUCTION CoMt ~ ColllOt P'~ pWrnlttlne tl\t OMNTOTHECRl!OITOR8 IMder llfld ~I to Mid MOf1CI TO 0-"Y PllOI ..,.,....... • • M-8 17
--------Mid Coun\Y. TO THI HIOHDT ~ otewtot, 1970 Ademl Aft, 111 ec:,11ful bJddlr to P:AEZ OMd ot Trvtt NII et publlG PftONffTY OWN9.. _,,btr 7, 14, 21, 1"6· ..aJCllJJ1C( PA~L 2~ Unit 21 • F~OAIH,lewM~Of Coete M .... T~c>M: 1UbelttuttMCUC1tlelfofeny ~r~~~H~~~~trana.'. auction tor cull, lawful YOU ARE IN DEF~ULT Th-394 'lillftllC(
ll!OWrl on the CondOnllnlun\ the Untied 8tatee. or • (114) 4$2-5101. Euoene F, moneys wttMeld by the DIS· ,., II ~t 10 be rnedl Dy ~ ot 11\t United St11• UNDER A DEED OF TAUST. . "8.IC.""
..,... A..uAL RIPOllT P\er\ ,....,.,.., to In PltOel t ClalflW'a check df"'" on • Harrtl, Dlractor · TAICT to en111re Pit· Tr111t.:,Of wtM>M buelneal of Alntrlca. • caahltr'• DATED JUNE 7, 1964. UN· rt8..IC NOTICE ~....., °' -lboft. ... Of netlOnel benll. I NOTICE IS HEREBY tormetlOe under the con-'340a Vie Opono check P•Y•bl• to H id LESS YOU TAKE ACTION PICTmOUe .,_ .. ,Ma.Y ..... llOll. A The lt(llt ~ Of ..... Of lildarll orldlt unlOn, OIVEH thet the ebov• trae1 ~,: City of Newport Tru1t• drewn on 1 ttett Of TO PROTECT YOUR PROP· '1C1TT10U8 .,_.. MAa. ITATWT
N¥ATll PoumA~ °"* common ~ Of··-or Nderll Mvtnoe n4ltftld kihoOI Oletrlcl b A prtbld welktlvOUgh wlll eeictl ,. ____ of Or nlllonel benk. ut•t•or hid· ERTY. IT MAY BE SOLD AT NAm ITA.,...,,. The tollowln9 pWIOM.,.
Paa .... AYAI -• AT °' the ,.., PtoC*tY ~ end Iott\ ellOOWlon ~ Orange County. Cellfofnl&. be held on Thunlday, No-St•t• °' c;;H;;:n ... and 7oi erll credit unton. Of ...... A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU The tOllowlne per90ftl .,. doing bllelneM II: Mnll'• rT9 ~AL OPfllCa lbOV I d u orlb•d I• oledlntt1l11t• ... ~ actlnt by end through ltt ...amber 2 t, 1"6 · 10AM. wllOH Other b111lne11 or fedtrll uvlng1 lrld IOln NEED AN EXPLANATION d()lng bullneet u : ~ .i.w.lrYStioc>.3208.Meflne ::.-:-.&.. ~ W IAJe purported to bt: 9432 It the ttml Of .... , Ill rtoflt, Govtfntng Bcwd. het .. n-OOYIW 90ARD, llr. narnee and ldd,_ u..O IMO<liellon domiciled In thla OF THE NATURE OF THE Dent 205 Albert "lee.. Ave .. Balboe lllend, CA
... NIJWflOllT .... do• l rook. Cott•I ••• end lnterllt Mid by It, after refwred to .. "DIS. 11c-.......... Dawld A. w1thln thrll ~ tut put •t•••. II the main tntrenoe PROCE601NO AGA INST Cot1e MeM. CA 92e27 112M2
l9ACM. CA. POil -.C.. MeM. Ctlllomll. MT,,...., In tNt ,_, PfOO-TAICT", wtll recetve \IP to. .,__. IO tar M known to Tran.'. to Arlt Arnettc:an Tltle In-YOU, YOU SHOULD CON-o & D Softwere Servtcel. Robert Sturo-1. 3208 TIDle (MW M•• U The undelllgned hw'lby lf'ly llMilt In Mid Coun1Y butnot....,tlllntN~ PublWled OfMge Cout ,.,_are: IUfenQICompanylocatldet TACT A LAWYER. Inc 205Albert Piece Coell Mer1nt Ave., Belboe llland, -·--8YANY ~ .. ~'«llf'J endStm,deecribed •foi. etatldllme,IMledbldtfof DellYPllotNovember7, 14., :M0ev~Opono l2 Nft· 114Ea1tFltthStreet.1nthe DATED'! November 4, MeM CA92e27 ' CAll2M2 c:n'W Meo .....,.. 111couectw In Mid ltrwt lowl; ttMI twel'd of I contract tor 1111$ pon 8Mctl Callfornla 929&3 city ot Senti 4ne. C.llfornll. 1985 Thli bualnt ll 11 oon-T. hll b11tlnet1 I• con· "..,... -DA ft ... lddl'9ll or other common Peroel 1: LOt 34 ot TrlCI the •boV9 pr()jtOt. Th-446 to l(lot.tAB& KttO&\MI and •II lh•t rlgl\t, tltle end l'll8T AmNCAN rm.s ducted Dy; ~ ductecl by. .,, ltMSMdual
_H11 Oii W ~· Ho.-llll. ~ Oft • .._.....,. M reo11vtd In . CHITRA KHORAMI hue· lnter..t c:on~ to end INIURMICI' CO..ANY.L '! SlleWn Dlvldlon Robert Sturget TMa l'OUlmAwe ~ 8ald .-Wiii be mao. n,.., '900'4.cl In Book 271, the piece ldenttfted ebov9, rtllllC NOTICE bfitld end wlfil. en undivided now held by It unct« Mid c.....,. OOfl*--:~ T"'8 itatement _. tlled Thll atatement wu Ned
CIPAL. MAMAGlilt II ~""8nty,..,,_.or P'9f 30 to 33 ~.of and lflell be°'**' Ind C..-.J one halt lnltrtll end DtedotTru1tlnlhePf'GPlftY IMdt, ~ , wittltheCountyClett!OfOr· wltht1J41CountyC!ettlofOf.
DOl&AU> a:w. ~ t9gt11dlng tltia, pc»-~ ... ..,.. , .. publldy reed ebld •• "" ASOH~R GHIAMI end lltueted In Mid County Ind ,,, l •t f'tfttl..,..., ..... •not County on Octobet 21. ltlQI County on ~-,. .... llh I' an.ea c...e ...ion. Of encumtlrlnoea. eotdll of the.coUnty reootder •bOVl·ll•ttd llm• Ind ~T'ICa ... T~THI ROUHlai GHIAMI lllltbend St•t• dtectlbed ... Ane, C.....,. ll2701 1985 • . 1. tM&
.., .... Ml:: ... ., M, to Utllfy the pt1nclpel ~ of Mid county. place. -·--Ind wit.. en undl~dld ~ LOTS II ANO 10 OF Publtllltd Orange Coelt ,._. • W1
1tlf anOI of the Note or otf\ar ,.,. ?: A ~ There Wiii be. 1 10.00 de-llTAn OP llelf lnter•t Trrifer ... ·TRACT NO. 91101, AS Delly PllOt November 14, 21, Publllhtd Otenge Coeet Publlehed Orenge CoMt n...-obllgetlon MCUfld by Mid ~t ~I fof pceltrequlredforeec:tl Ntof llONA I . HOFF wl\oet bu..-lddr .. 1~ SHOWN ON A MAP RE· 28, 1985 Diiiy Pllo1 October 31, No-Delly Piiot Ncwamber 11, 11. . Ollcl of TNlt, with lrlw• tfle purpOlel ..... forttl In bid documente to gueren• Notice le tweby gtv9n: 2790t Enc:anto Street In the CORDED IN BOOK 280. Th-465 vember 7. 14, 21. 1985 25. end Deoember 2. 1916 ..aJC NOT1C( end other tlllfnl • provtded end ~ tM land delol Ibid heir return In 900d condition T o a I I p e r 1 o n 1 City ot Mi.ett Viejo County PAO ES 39. 37 AND 38 OF 'Th-<t07 M-122
therein, ~ ectvencee.. If In Attlde V, 8ec:tlon I Of thet wlttlln ttn ( 10) daye eft« the lnter11tad, wtleth« u of Orange Stite ot Cell-MISCELLANEOUS MAPS IN
YOU AM • NPAUU eny, under the termt ther.of cenlln ~of_. bid opening da~ creditor•. tielra, tegit .... lornte, 01 ihe lollowlng de-THE OFFICE OF THE P\8.IC NOTICE
UMaa A DmD °"nun end lnterwt on adt Id· nente. co11d1tto111 end ,.. Eaoft bid mull conform Of IWll ..... In the 11t•t• ICflbed '*'°"" P'GPlftY of COUNTY RECORDER OF I TATW....., °" f'tlll.IC NOTIC£ DAftD M11AJMY M, ... v1nc11, 1nd pl111 leea, etric:tlon1 rwoorded M,. 20, end be r~ to thl of MONA E. HOFF, de-Trenttror, to wit: SAID COUNTY. MANDOlll9NT OP .,._ .. waaet YOU TNCI AC-chargee end PPtnN1 Of the 1971 In Book "47, '9 comrac:t documente. CMMd, whoM lut 16-All lloc;tl In ncte. ttxturee. EXCEPT ALL OIL, OIL UM t» fltCTmOUI flCTITIOUI
TIOM TO "90TICT YOUlt TNlt• end of the '""" 387, offtdel '9COrde of Mid Eaoft bidder ..... ait>mlt, drtll ... #801-444 -u1pmen111fldcwlMol1 RIGHTS..!. MINERALS+ MIN· euMm .. NAMI MAim ITAT'lmWT HllONRrt IT llAY • «•tecl by Mid OMd of Or.,. County. on the form fUmllhld with ...., ERAL HIGHTS. NA URAL The tollowlng l*eonl ... IOlD AT j. ~IA&.&. TNlt. The totel snoUnt of The etrett ~ Of the contract documenta. 1 Lonld1le Ava .. North certain r .. 1 ood/lrozen GAS, NA TURAL OAS The foll~ perton• doing bulintll u : T.8.R. YOU~ M DPl.A-Mid obf1gellon lndudlng other common dellgneelon llatottMpropoeadlUbcon-Vancouver, B.C., Can· yoour1 bullneet known .. RIGHTS AN O OTHER 111119 •band the UM of Enlerl>f'IMI, 10241 King•
• T10M t» ntm un. l'MIOlllbly 19t11Mted ..... ofthe rtll proper1yherein-trectort on thll projec1 M acla, Formerly raiding at MAT. SALSA/YOOURT HYDROC ARBONS BY lht Flollt10111 ButlnHI Rlvw Ct., Fountlln Vellty, = THI ~ .. OCllDIMQ c:hergllend~ofthe e bove d e 1crlbed I• requlrld by the Sublettlng 2070 N.V11 M1rlpQNE., CONNECTION Ind tocat.:c' WHATSEVER NAM E Neme:Holld1yHou11Uquor CA92709
AOAIMIT YOU, YOU T'rutt•. I t thetlmeoflnltt.I p11rpor1td to be: 401 1 end 811bcontrec:tlng Fair Lagunl Hiiie , Callf., ;~~n : ~~oNft~ KNOWN THAT MAY BE ::·M2113bA\~~· Cofone EIMnor Hartman, 10241
IHOUL.D CONTACT A publlc:etlon of thll Notice. It a.Mdele, Ir-Me, c:.llforNL Practlcel Act. Govt COdt U.S.A. that l1tt1r1 pon &..en COunty ot Of. WITHI N OR UNDER THE The"'Flctttloue ·Bullnw KlnQI Rlwr Ct., Fountlin l.AWYR 195,709.64. The i.widei8'iiled htr9by Sec:. 4100 .. Mq. t11tamentary or of 16-s . Of Celfloml PARCEL OF LAND HEREIN-Vellty. C• 112709
MOTICI t» Dated: November 5. IMS ~ .. llebllty fof llf'J Eaoft bidder must IUbmtt mlnlatretlon have ~ lt!QI, tile 1' ABOVE OE SCRIBED, Neme relerred to above wu Peter Crllt, 10241 KlnOf
TRUeTU'l IALI CONTIMIMTAL. DI· hlCOlrtctnw In Mid ltreet wt1h Md\ bid cenlflecl Of luued to Keith J . Macln· :::,~:::' ':1 ~~~~~ TOGETHER WITH THE PER· ~led In ~~e3 County on Rlvw Ct .. Founteln Vilify,
T .. MO ...,. VIL.Of'MeMT OP CAL.I· lddfw or other common CMhlar'• dltCk peyeble to tOlh by· Supreme Coort ed tt F Id ht PETUAL RIGHT OF DRILL-enuary . . • c. 92708
NOTICE IS HEREBY POMIA, INC., I c••mte ~tlon. the DISTRICT Of. b'd bond Of Brltlth Columbia Can-:.~tdero:ro:c:,t!., ~~5 IMO. MINING. EXPLORING p ~~~. ~ 8dl Thi• bueln•H I• ~~-OIVEN. tllet on Mon4-Y. O. ......... ,.T,...._9': 88'0 .... wfl be 111.cM In the form Ml for1h In Ida 1 court of c0mpe-throu h Elcrow' No' ANO OPERATING THEAE· 92e5t" · ducted by. I genetll -·· cember 2 11195 . .rw:oo MAL HTATI llCUM-without wetTanty. _,,,...or con1ract ~ In In ' i.....taA1ct10n of he (,8.... Eacr . FOR,.AND STORING IN ANO nerthlp o'dookLm.ofNtdct.y,ln TW.l~•C .. 1•~.'90l'dlngtttte. emountnottwthant0%of tent,......... t ·1&11-l .... tt.atthe ~ REMOVINO THE SAME Thi• bvllneea WU con· Ptter J .Cllet
llidt '°' con--.... ... ,..... 9r: Mellon or· ancurnbfencee. the maximum lmOUnt of bid Provlnot of Brlti.ti ~ Dlpertrnent of 11\t NEW FROM SAID LAND OR ANY ducted by • oorporitlon. Tiii• ltlletnenl WU nled the rocm Mt • l'9' .. .. .. • .. ... t te'ty ....... ~ bel-... _ ...... ........ um blL PORT CENTER Office of s.. CLUOINO Thi• llllemtnt Wll flied with tilt County Clti1I ot Or· ducting Tru1t ... Salee, D. J. ..... "11.un 0 .. , .... .. • gull'tn111 .... 1 .... ...... T"' t t'--f-'lowl curlly P1clfglc N1t1on1I OTHER LAND, IN with Ille Ccunty Clti1I ot Of. Oct 25 within the ofllcM Of RE.Al. ,.. ............ ., ...... ance Of the .. or °""' dtr wfll enter Into th• ... ... "' ng ptf'-s oequln THE RIGHT TO WHIP· enge County on ober •
ESTATE SECURITIES SEA-100, ..... AM, CA ..,.., obllgltlon MC':Ufad l»Y Mid P'0909id eontrac:t K ttMI eon 11 Indebted to or =k ~~~ t: Jetty of STOCK OR DIRECTIONAL· =County on Oc1ober 25· 1M5
VICE. loceted It 1800 North TlllJh• ... (714) ..... OMd of Truet. with Int.,... urne It ..... <*:! lo alCh holdlng P«tOnal prop-Newport eMcti COunty Of Ly DRILL AND MINE FROM Publt.hto Orange Oout ,~ B<oadwwy Sulte100 In the Publlthed Or.nge CoMt andotheteumeMprovtded blddlr.lnthe..-itof,._ lf1yoftheulddloadlnt: n.-S OtCellfomle. LANDS OTHER THAN
3
No-PIJbllihed Orange...,.,_,
City of s.nu Anti. cOunty ot Deily Piiot ~-1. 14. therein; pl\'I edvlllcel, If to enter Into Mid contrect. Homee S.vtno-of A"*1· c;.;;:.-;,, ~hor• of Trlnl-THOSE HERINABOVE DE· Oallyt!l~t ~~ea~· OlllJy Pll?I October 31, No-
Orenge. State of Cellfoml&, 21. 11195 any,llndtrthetermethertof IUd'I aecurtty wll be for· Cl, 23181 El Toro Rold, lwt'Of mey be tiled with S.. SCRIBED, OIL OR OAS vem • • • Th-4l9 vembtr 7, 14, 21, 1"6
29 CONTINENTAL DEVELOP· Th-4311 Ind Int.,. on IUdl ed-r.lted. City of El Toro, Cam. curl PIClflc N1tloNI S.nk WELLS. TUNNELS ANO TM
fltCTmOUe ., .....
MAm ITA1'11mn
The tollcMlflO pW90M -doing bu1kM111 II: Hl88; Hellfh tnaurence 8lllng Str·
vlo•. 311 Alveredo Pl ..
Bllt>oe. CA ezee 1
Je1 nn• Be1ch, 319
Alverto Pl., BelbOe, CA
92981
Mwjo(lt Hat>IOy. 25301
Terreno Dr .• Mllelon Viejo,
CA92891
Tiii• bu11n... 11 con-
ducted by' • generel part·
~Hlblby Thll 1t1ternent WM llled
with tl\t County Clti1I Of Or·
=County on Octe>W 21, ,_1.
Publllhld Orange CoMt
Diiiy Piiot October 31, No-
_,,be!' 7, 14, 21, tN6
Th-409
MENT OF CALIFORNIA, v1nc11, ind plut fM t , The DISTRICT . ,........ County Of Or1n91. NEWPORT CENT. ER Office. SHAFTS INTO. THROUOH
INC., • Cellfomle ccrpot· rta.JC NOTICE c:tiargeeendupe1IM9 0f the the rtotit to reject llf'J or.. That the und«96gnad e.erow C>epertment It fti9 0 R A C Ro SS THE --------1--------
etlon, .. 6lity eppolnled Trwt11 end of tl\t trwt• bld9 Of to _....,. .,.,., Ir· dlllrt1 to rtcel¥e the lddr .. Mt forth~ The SUBSURFACE OF THE P\llJC N011C£ P\aJC NOTICE fltCTmout MWM
TNlt• under Ind ~t YOU AM * DVAUl T created Dy Mid OMd of ~In eny bldl or In Mid pereone1 property or IMt dtte for flllng aedltort' LAND HERi NA BOVE DE· MAim ITA.,._,-
to the power of .... ccn-UNDO A DIE><» ntUIT TNll. The totel amount Of the bldcllna. co0•c:1 the clelm• and to clell'M .. Thurldey Ille 5th SCRIBED. ANO TO BOT-ITA,.....,., °" flCTITIOUI .,..... The folloWlng ""'°"' .,.
NlJC NOTICE
twred In 11\et cenein Deed of DAftD APM. .. •1. UM-Mid obl1getlon. lnolucllng Put.uenl lo the P'ovt91oni remove th•t collect«! or dey Of Deoem~ 11185. TOM SUCH WHIPSTOCKED MANDO•-NT °" .. ,... ITATWMIWT doing bullnW M: Ptll'll W-
Truat executed Dy HOWARD LI .. YOU TAICI ACTIDM rwonably •tlmatld ..... of Section tn3 of !tie Labor St Clalme thall be d..med 0 R 0 IRE CT I 0 NA LL Y UM OP fftCTmOUI The toMowtng ptttone ere I A t
1
I 18552 G.BONER.ASINGLE MAN, !2-,flrM!'!~yy-~~AT ctwT _ _:rlndltt~ofoflnltt~ COdtt_.. !_~ST?,.tit1C•T~5~ ~~~ol'r'he.::: tlmely Ned only" ac:tually ~NRIDLLSED .. ~SLLUSN,TDEUNRNAENLDS _, ..... MAim dolngtiu.ir-303•:~~ .:!c,,.,,",:;~ .. 18uite42&, recorded J~ 21. llNIO """' '•" -..,... ·-·•· ,,. , ... ,. -...,,_ u ..... .,. " ,_...,.. ti I 1 received by the Eac:row 0. "' Hrv-' The lollowing perton1 lnV91tmentt. 1 "'~ lrvlnt, CA 927115 In Book 134Gof Ofllc:ill ~ A ~ IA&.&. • YOU publlcetlon of Ihle Notloe, II talned from the Dlrec:tOf of 1t1 t1 w e re It er1 partment before clOM ot BENEATH OR BEYOND THE have ibandOnld the uee ot Avenue, &llte 220, Newport Stf1them P erk VlllH
eotdt of Mid County. .. MOD AM l:XP\.MIATIOM 18.115e.03. the Depertmant of lndueb1ll teetamantary Of of ad· bUllnWon the •boW IOICI-EXTERIOR LIMITS THERE· the FlctltlOUI Bu1ln•H Beleh, CA 112980 Homeowneni Alloclltlon, pege 73, Aecofder'1 lnetru-t» ntm Un. OP 'ntm Detect: November 4, ,985 Rel1llon1 tlle generel mlnlltrltton hive bean fled INt dete lor hllng OF, AND TO REORILL. RE· Name: S..vte. Flnlnciel, Mlchael Cargile, 208 LI 18552 MacArthur Blvd.,
ment No 31574, by reaeon ll'ROCllDIMG AQAIMIT LINDA A. CHAP9I. M-Pl'fYllllnO rate of per diem tuuacl. c4tilmt TUNNEL. EQUIP, MAIN· 2855 E CoMt Hwy Cofone Jolle Lint. Newport a..cti, Suhe 425, INlnl. CA 92715
of e bteec:tl or defeult In PllY· YOU, YOU IHOUU> CC*-.._, ... UW, • T,...._ wegtt 1nd the Qentrll All p1r1on1 having DATED November 9, lN5 TAIN, REPAIR. DEEPEN dtl M.;, CA 112825.' CA 92MO AM Ami. 181562 MacArthur
mentor perfonnence Of the TACT A lAWWJl · ~MAL. l_ITATW •CUN-Pf'IY~• for llOlldey clalme agaln1t tl\t ~ I(....,_ KhoHMI. ,,.,.. ANO OPERATE ANY SUCH The Flctltloul Bull,_ W1yne ~. 715 Btllll Blvd Suite 425 INlnt CA
Obllgatlonl ecured thereby. MOTICa <» I • ~I c •• ,,. end WOt'k In ttle le>-dent Of en lnterllt In Mid ,., .. ; Cllltr• Klloreml, we LL s 0 R MINE s. N-referred lo lboW wtll Street. Newport a..dl. CA 927 is . . .
lncludlng tl\lt breec:t1 or de-T'MMTU'l IALI ...,_ ........ a.-t. ~ c.lfty In wtllctl ttlleWOt'k II to Mtatl end wtthlng to ob-,, ....... a..,_ QNem1, WITHOUT, HOWEVER, THE ftled In <>r.nge County on 92MO Thia bui lntN It con·
teult, Notice of wtllctl -T.LMO.... D.,,. .............. II, bepartormldforw::tlc:nlft jeettOIUCttremovelmutt Treuter~•; .. ouhl•h RIOHT TO DRILL MINE. 1()..11-84 Thi• bu.tne11 11 con-ductedby:1 llml1edper1ntr· recorded Auguet 2, 1985. a NOTICE IS HEREBY 1---·aA•»f, ..... or type of worker nlldld to g!Ye written notlCI of Ohleml, Tr..._.. STORE. EXPLORE AND OP· Jlmll Joeeptl Qulglty, 15 ducted by: 1 genetll pert· lhlp
Rtcorder'I rMtrument No. GIVEH,thetonWedneldey.,100, ..... AM, CA--extc11te theoontract. Thlee IUCf'lobjeetlontotheper-Publlthed Orange Cout ERATE THROUOH THE Roc:kwren lrvtne,CA92714. nerllllp AllRazl
85-278193, WILL SEU AT November27, 1M6,e1 11:001T111p-.11. (714) ..... ,., • .,. on flte 111 the Dl8-eon or per80nl lndlb1acl Delly Piiot November 14, SURFACE OR' THE UPPER Thi• ~llMll WU coo-MlchNI Cerglle Thie ltlttment WM Ned
PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE o'dook a.m. of Mid dey, Int Publllhed Or.,. CoMt TRICT omc. locetld et t Of hofdlng pertonal 1985 500 FEET 0 F THE ducted by In lncllvlduel. Thie 1t1tement -tlled with the County Clettl of Or· HIOHEST BIDDER FOR the room Ml llidt tor eott-!Delly Piiot NcMmber 7, 14, COiet Community Collgt o, ~ Th-459 SUBSURFACE OF THE T'hll etatement wee flied with the COunty Clettl ot Or-County on October 26 CASH. lewful money of the duc:tlng Tru.t .. ·1 88*.121, 11195 Oletrlct. Phy. Fee. Ptennlng. ~~~· l~ I LAND HERI NABOVE DE· with tilt County Clerk ot Or· ange County on October 25, = ' United Stet•, ore c:alhltr'a within ttMI ~ of REAL Th-440 Coplel mey be obtelned on ..,...1. not mu• SCRIBED, AS RESERVED County on October 21 11185 ,_
dlfCk d!'IMI on 1 a te Of ESTATE SECURITIES SER-1 •requeet. A copy Of tfleM bl given to the PllOt'I l'tll.IC N()TIC[ IN THE DEED FROM IRVINE : ' ,_ • Publllhld °' CoMt
netlonal bank ....... or tt6-VICE, locetld It 1800 North I rtaJC N()TIC( ; rat• "'"' be poetld II the holding I lie pe r1on1I INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX, A Publllhed Orenge Cou1 Publllhed Orenge C0..1 Delly Piiot 0ct0::-31 No-
.,., Ctedll union. Of • •tit• B<oadwwy, S4Jlte 100, In 11\11 job .. p roperty or 1geln1t NOTICE°" c 0 R p 0 RAT I ON. RE-Delly Piiot October 31 No-Delly Piiot October 31, No-V'lmber 1 14 21 1t11'
or t.derel uY1ng1end1oen CltyofSantaAne.CounlYot, 'i ltlt)lllbemendetoryupon whom the clalm II made T'RUeTH'I IALI COROEOOCTOBEA 1, 11171 vember 7 14 21 1915' iYllTlber 7, t4,21. 1915 ' ' ' Th--428 WOdetlon domlclled In VIII Orenge. 8tMe oC ttle~OA to whom It the lddr .... llMllCI On Deoember 4, 1985 et IN BOOK 11827. PAOE 4 12 ' ' ' Th-401 Th-423 ... etatt ... ~at IN time UHOA A. CHAPIH; . . Iha contrect II -dad. end abcJ\te Wfttlln: 30 dlyt 11:00 Lm. FIRST AMERI-OF OFFJCW. RfCOROS.
0 CHICK IVERSON
Chevrolet• Poreche •Audi
441 L o..st lwJ., le.,..t .....
111-0llO
Highest Quality Sales & Service
The Best Car Buys
In Orange County
AreAt
The Dealers Listed
On This Page
~ 0 CREVIER BMW 16'\.
\iii' SALES • SERVICE • LEASING \t;J/1
"Where Professional Attitude Prevails"
lpedettzlng In Ewopeen Dehef1. ~~t letectlon of
New lf'4f c...tutfy prepered UMd 9MW'1 11w1ya In stoci<
835-3171
208 W. 11t St., Sent• An•
Corner of Broadway & 111 St. Ck>Md Sundays
GSTERLING
W.U -SUVICE -WSllC -PUTS
Overseas Delivery Spectalltts
BMW -ROLLS ROYCE
1540 Jamboree Rd.
0 S<itth County--®-00--
VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU
CALIF'S 11 1 A LARGEIT YOUCIWAGEN DEALER
NEED WE SAY MORE?
Parts Open M-Sa1 8 • 5:30 Sat 9 -4 p.m .
Service m-Frl 7:30 • 6 p.m
t l711 •ACH k VO HUNTINGTON 8EACH
714/ 142·2000
0 NABERS CADILLAC fit
2IOO IWllll ILYI., CISTI IEll
. ( (114) 1'8-1100 (213) 117-1211
• Best Prices • Convenient Location
• Great Location • Super Service
• Courteous & Knowledgeable Sales _People
!
' BUENA PARK
GAAO£N OA()llE
Newport Beach &40 •. .,....~
4D JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS
1I01 Ou.II St -Nflfl CM Loallon
1001 QfMll .,. -,....,,. "'""'°"
0 World '1 Lar'191t Select/on of 0 M«ce<NM &Mz ..A..
133-9300 11111 .,,......,.,. ...... ._, ..
o COMMONWEALTH
VOLKSWAGEN
&'n_ 'FAMILY STORE SINCE '63' -~ Sal• · &.nice -L.uing ~
Ml·OUO
0 THEODORE ROBINS FORD
U.S.A.'s # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer
Modern Sales. Service, Parts, Body, eaint & Tire Oepts.
Competitive Rates On Lease & 0111ly Rentals
ZOIO larhr lhtl., htt1 1111
• 142-0010 " M0-1211
0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS INC.
• LONG TERM lfASES
• COMnnTIVE ,URCHASE n 1as
• HUGE INVEHTOIY Q)
dial MERCEDES ~
213/714 837-2333
Next to Santa Ana Fwy (5) on
Manchester /Beach Blvd.
.. ""
MISSION · VtE.~!J -·-..
0 808 LONGPR•
Or•• Countts OfMst & La{gftt Pontiac Oeatenhlp
"'8Nch llfllid. & ttw C.rden Gfow 'l'MW9y
1714 .. 2 ... •t f714J U .. 2IOO .
we perfomt all llom•ac warranty wonc, ,....rd1es1 ot
wtwre you Otf91nalty ~-10"' car.
_.. .O•AY ftWlllJ• mlTa. .... P ...
J
~~--BAUER MOTORS
BUICK Lolull JAGUAR ISUZU
#1 Buick a leuzu Dealer In o.c.
Oldeet Jeguer Dealer In O.C.
~lnC..........,la ....... llOft
1915 tt.n. ....._"' . (714) 979-2500 P.O.a.l6IO•C...N.e CAtuJ4
• TRANS~
• Flf!CBMID
• ~000 Sll
• PARISIHff. e PRICES! e
• BONNCVUE
• CRN«> PRIX LIQUIDATING
• SUNBIRO CONVERl lBlE 1985 MODELS • T 1000 .. GRANO~ IJ«R Nff CllQJllSTMCCS
•• Sell Elctt....t W[ Wll...
a rnagx:ri NOT BE UNOERSOlOI • PONTIAC SUBARU FllElltl
24'0 Hlrbar llwd. 2 • ...,... ... Costa Mna Newper1 ltadl Costa Mlsa Newpert ltldl 714/549-4300 714/549-4300
8 ORANGE COAST JEEP /REiAOir # 1 ,. ,., .,,, ,,,
,,_ M, """ F1r I ,.,,.
-1 Oran2e • sALEs Loast • sERv1ce
,.,. -11.wo • LEASING
COil•.... • ACCESSORIES OEfJ 5419023
e UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE
HONDA
2880 Httrbor Blvd.
Cotta M-540-0713
•
...
i
' I
I I
' . -
,)
I \..
' .,
' ·' ·. \
..
----------------------------------------------------..-------....
a-ll'Mge/An Advenlling eupptement to the DAILY PILOT!Thurtday, Ne>Y*nber 14, 1985
Skiers preparing
for first ski-trip
at nearby reSortS
.,euRT ....
Any day now -~ even
tomorrow, the 8'ght of a car wtth
elde on the roof owrtaktng a car
wtth a eurfboard on the1roof wtll
be oommonp&ao., for a tJme. In
Orange County. 1 •
lm~ne what this does to a
tre.way newcomer arriving, say,
from South Dakota -who sud-
denly doeen't know whether to
shop for a snow shovel or a llfe
jacket.
by ThenkegMng -or before .
Don't undereattmate the
power hereabout• of that can of
the wtld. The Balboa Skt Club, for
exam~. Pf'991ded over by o.i.
POlnt Realtor Miit. HlnlOn, Is the
largest tn the West. lta nearty 700
memben alao qualify It u the
third or fourth largeet In the
nation.
The fever apreade far and wtde.
It Infect• the friend• and famlltee
of auch bualneu leader• u lrvlr')e
Company chairman Don Bren
and ptestdent Tom Nlet8en;
George Argyros, a partner In
AlrCat and owner of the Seatti.
Mariners; Randy Presley, 'presi-
·,
,
.-;;I
t
But to the thouaands of county
teeidents who or tbe-flrat
mountain snowflake with eome-
thlng akin to the Oklahoma Land
Auah, the paramount thought Is
to ,enjoy u muC::h sklJng ae fall
and Winter may bring.
And If Mother Naturejs stingy,
the sdence of snowmaklng (mix-
ing water and compressed air at
low temperatures) has arrived at
a stage of capacity and expertise
that virtually Insures white slopes
dent of the Presley Compantee; ·
Ralph Clock president of the The joy, of •kilna win attract thoaanda of Ora.nae Cou~ realdente to the elopea th.la eeuon.
Onthecover
A spectacular Moses
D' Angetoensemble Is
created wtth his French
angora sweater with
jeweled collar and cuffs
teamed with a French
lace skirt, hat and crystal
beaded earlngs. Avail-
able at Beau Jon, South
Coast Plaza. The shoes
areJoanand David,
available at AnnTaylor,
South Coast Plaza.
Photography by Mike
Russ.
Cover Design by Steven
Hough.
\
lndustrlal League bf Orange
County and Clock Conatructlon Goldmlne, at Big Bear Lake, Is
Company; Sutton Enterprlaea' flnally coming Into a long-
Herb Sutton; Ralph Aodheim, planned, premier position. A $2.4
Newport Harbor Area Chamber mllllon summer program hu
t>resldent and senior vice presl-Included lnatallatlon of Chair
dent of Amles & Asaoclatee, and EJght, a trlple-c:halr, on aome of
or:i'and on... the most advanced terrain thl•
Those of llke persuasion but . aide of Mammoth, and opened
tethered by shorter tines of credit considerable acreage for more
outnumber the big hitters, by far development.
-but ski runs make no dlstlnc-Management also expanded
tlon between Bogner high-the snowmaklng capability to
fashion ski aults and warmups cover all the resort's runs,
over bluejeans, and there are no enlarged the food eervlce and
headwaiters to tip In a llft llne. It's other base facllltlel, added 10
the way you play the game that more acree of parking, la hatch-
counts most on the hill. This Ing a flock of condOI, and has
melts down . to: Ski safely. be four more ltfta on the drawing
considerate of your fetlow skiers board.
-and enjoy. The mood here la ao upbeat
Whether you're planning a trip that Goldmine II giving away a
to Switzerland or the San brandnew~llaan'°°ZXturboto
Bernardino mountains, the ul-the lndMdual who comes up with
tlmate combination Is the same; th4twlnnlna name for lta "new"
akls on snow. So let's look at mount81n, heretofore known u
what the local resorts, some two Suaertump.
hours or less from our beachel, That'• "too tame," aave reeort
have added for your pleaaure thla operator Joe Shuff, former Buf-
semester. fumaexecuttw. Conteat ruteeere
P~CIFICA. SPORTS MEDICINE AND REHABJLiTA'flONCENTER
MEDICAL GROUP
Evaluation and Treatment
Of Orthopaedic And
Sports. Related Injuries
Services Avallable
• Cybcx Tc<iting
~ • Prenatal Excrc.1sc Clas.,cs
~ • Postpartum Claa"'
• Fitness E\'aluat1on Program'
• Back Si. hool
• Biofet.'dback Relaxation TraininJ?
• Musculoskelctal Cond1uuning
• Assessment and Treatment of '
Extremitv. Back und Nec k Pain
PHONE (714) 847-1367
18800 Dclawarl-. Suitt" 300
Huntington lk:Kh. CA 92648
In the Goldmlne brochure. or at
the ski area -or at any
participating Southern California
Nluan/Oatsun dealership.
Snow Valley, another San
Bernardino-range resort that
keeps ptowlng profits back Into
expanafon, has spent $2 million
on Improvement• that Included a
trlple-c:halr lift In the 30-acre
novice area cleared last year.
This adds to lta broad cotlectlon
of sklgrounds for beglnnerJ and
low lntermedlatee.
At the other end of the spec-
trum Is the area's SHde Peak, for
advanced proftclencles. In be-
tween: acres and acree of Inter-
mediate terrain.
Another plus: Snow Valley Is
offering a Corporate Season
Pau that can be used by any
employ~ or family member, and
an Introductory package that
Includes a beginner-lifts ticket,
equipment rental and a two-hour
group lesson for $19.
Aleo, your all-day ticket now
buys 91/t hours. from 7:30 a.m. to
Cold feet
• now given
the boot
Br JOYCE 8CHEAEA·800LOVICH
.,.., .... C..11 .....
Ski.era, you know the feellng:
cold numb toes causing a chill to
course all the way through your
body. Well ... no more, because
two manufacturers have created
a ski boot with a self-contained
heater. ..
Lange and Reichle are market-
ing boots with a heating device
that supplies warmth to the
critical blood clrculatron areas on
the bottom of the foot. Lange
boots have nickel cadmium bat-
teries that activate under the toe
area Inside the boot.
5 p.m. Scott Wiiiingham. of
Huntington Bvch, a former
world freestyle champion, Is di-
rector of skiing as well as resort
vice president.
Terry Tognazzini, Orange
County hotel owner and en-
trepreneur, Is said to have spent
$23 mtlllon since 1979 to put
Mountain High resort at
Wrlghtwood Into the upper seg-
ment of western ski areas.
The most recent S3 million
went for such effort as adding 10
new compreuors for power.
General Manager Steve Cramer
says It Is one of the world's
largest snowmaklng systems.
Improving the llghtlng for night
skiing, expanding the parking lot,
enlarging the fleet of grooming
vehicles, preparing to create a
13-mllllon gallon snowmaklng
reservoir. cutting new runs and
adding other facllltles.
Snow Summit, another long-
time favorite of Orange Coun-
tlans, has Improved Its base
facllltles and regraded Summit
Run so the low Intermediate now
gets a mlle-long trip to the
bottom. '
Mt. Baldy will offer "guaran-
teed skiing." according to Gen ..
eral Manager Pete Olson, who
says that any skier dissatisfied
with conditions may return the llft
ticket within two hours of Issue
and receive a comparable ticket
good on any other day this
season.
The Notch restaurant, perched
on a canyon crest, has been
rebuilt. (It burned down last
March.) Snowmaklng has been
expanded here, too.
A decades-old favorite ·with
thousands of our locals has been
Mammoth Mountain, In Mono
County. They'll find three new
quad chairs (four tickets per
chair), two of them opening new
routes and one replacing Chair
Two. Now blessed with 32 lifts of
varying sizes and styles, Mam-
moth has a phenomenal uphlll
capacity of 42,000 skiers an houri
(Pleue eee 8K.111f0/Pace 9 )
The good news Is that It
•.;;;==================================~'I doesn't take an el~tronlc engl-;=:====================================================================~ neer to operate the heating system. Simply press a switch to
FOR
PEOPLE
WHO
REALLY
SKI
\
Tile people al Hobie
Sporu really care about
the IUeeeM of your 1ld
tripe.
Let oar expert• outf il you
witla tile fiPt 1ear at tlae
.... po11lble prieel.
~81 SPORT. L I D.
2831 E. C.... H'91t••J
f.orou del Mar, CA •
675-9700
• , .
heat. After a few minutes, a
pleasant warm sensation Is felt
under the toes.
The heating cycle can be
Interrupted at any time by press-
ing the switch for about two
seconds.
Like any sophisticated Item of
the 20th century, the boot has a
battery recharger that hooks Into
the jack at the back of the boot.
The boot can be recharged prior
to skiing or when It has not been
used for a long period of time.
The Ralchle boot, called the
RX-HOT, accepts over 1,000
recharge cycles. The heated boot .,..,,... .... _, ... ...._..
1 Is priced around $300. Ski boot wttll battery-powered heater.
4 cyl, 4 apd, A/C prep, carpets,
P/S, r.oof. rack & morel
•11,815
8TKl2019 1.0.IOa7'78
-----------__::...._ _ __._ __ ___:;____ __________ _ '
'•
Image/ An Advertising supplement to the DAILY PILOT /Thurlday, November 14, 1985 -3
Cross-country skiing a sport a • yone can enJOY
Growing popUiartty attributed to tts
family a p peal and athletic challenges
81 G•ORGE T AllA8
0.., .... Ceft J I I
Siient white. There Is no sound
but the "shush-shush-shush"-
lng of your •kls. You become
Increasingly aware of your own
rhythmic breathing, your breath
vaporizing before you. Your body
b«omes a pendulum: arms, legs
propel/Ing you In swinging
counter-motions. Above you, the
tree line. Clumps of spruce green
In fields of dazzling white. You are
alone. And below you, some-
where In that darkening gray, Is
all that you've left-behind. You
are about to enter the other-
world of cross-country skiing.
~
The above scene· used to' be
the secret domain of only the
hardiest backpackers. People
who challenged the wllderness In
summer on foot, and then In
winter on "skinny skis." Downhlll
skiers who occasionally spotted
them on a ridge often referred to
them as "plnecones," or
"granola nuts."
But In recent years, the sport of
cross-country skiing has begun
to experience a growing popu-
larity. And this popularity Isn't
llmlted to Just the tradltlonal
backpacking crowd, but across
all age, Income and geographic
boundaries. Quite simply It has
become a "fun" thing to do In the
winter. Inexpensive. Refreshing.
Something the entire family can
enjoy together.
According tO'.Oave Grenda of
Holubar, a Cost& MEfse store that
speclallzes In wilderness equip-
ment, "the greatest growth In the
popularity of cross-country ski-
ing In recent years has been
among downhill skiers. No lift
fines. No $25 llft tickets. And you
can purchase a complete equlp-
ment package for under $100.
"We see little old ladles In their
60s," Grenda continued, "kld1.
businessmen, and all types of
people In our cluaea. Baalcally,
It's something they can each do
at his or her own pace. Or they
can atop and Juat enjoy the
scenery without having to dodge
other skiers."
To be sure, for the athletlcally-
mlnded, the sport offera ample
challenges, such as "track
courses," which are moat popu-
lar on the East Coast. The last
Winter Olymplcs were malnly
responsible for this popul8flty.
On a leas competitive level,
"telemarklng," or sustained tour-
ing Is pursued by the tra-
ditionalists. This combines
backpacking with aggressive
cross-country skiing, In fine with
the classic Nordic pursuit of this
sport.
But by far the most Interesting
development In cross-country
skiing has been the tremendous
growth In popularity among famil-
ies and generally non-athletic
people. The word seems to have
gotten out that you don't have to
be a ·'weekend warrior,'' with
hundreds of dollars of equip-
ment, to Just have a great time
enjoying a winter landscape.
In the words of Tom Perry, of
Pat's Ski & Sports Shop In
Huntington Beach, "croaa-coun-
try skiing Is a recreation In which
you learn that It's more fun to ski
with people, not at people. You
can enjoy each other's company
and get to know each other
better. You become femlty. · •
With the· novice In mind, then,
we asked several experts In the
field for a brief primer on aspects
of cross-country skiing that
everyone should know before
heading off Into the woods. The
following consensus was offered:
ICE SKATING LESSONS
learn To Ice Skate The Ea1y Way
For A Ufetlme Of Fun & Pleasure
In Comfortable, Supervistd Surroundings
SPECIAL
New Cl••• Price •7 S"
(Ll•lte4 Ta .. -....... n O.ty)
ENROLLNOWf
1111 vn.c.tw
•
2711 ...., M , CllTA •SA t7Mall
PUBLIC SKATING EVERYDAY! t
VISA • MA$TtJICAllD AC;CfrTiD
. . . The Navy Blazer. An
essential part of your
wardrobe. Choose from
all wool doc skin flannel.
luxurious cashmere, or
a year round weight
hopsack blend of
polyester and wool. The
cornerstone of your
wardrobe for bus iness
or pleasure.
. . .
NO IFA HION l &.AND. N WP04'l 1£ACH. CA HMO 17141644'°264
CLOTHING: Thia area was
unanlmoualy Identified u the key
area of knowledge to guarantee a
aafe and pleasant experience.
The concept of "layering" was
repeatedly atreaaed. Thia simply
meant thet layers of clothing,
each with a specific purpose.
should be available, If not actu-
ally worn. These Include:
-Therm•! underwear (or
,"wicking" layer, to draw out
moisture)
' -A tight turtleneck (of lycra or
polypropylene, for absorbing
moisture)
-Wool sweater (for Insula-
tion)
-Gore-tex outerwear (for
wind and weather reppllant)
, It at1ould be potnted -QU.t_ tll.1
although the "sleek look" has
gained popularity since . the
Olymplca, cross-c.ountry skiing Is
far from becoming a fast:ilon war
like the downhlll scene. The
tradltlonallsts stlll wear those
funny-looking knickers and knee
socks, and the kids wear jeans.
and nobody seems to care who
wears what.
EQUIPMENT: This consists of
the "skinny skis," a simple bind-
ing, flexible but firm shoes, and
poles. All for under $100. The
ex~ert will obviously spend more,
but the novice doesn't have to.
The novice skier who has tried
downhill skiing will find the equip-
ment much less bulky and confin-
ing than downhill equipment.
The basic technique is the
"kick and glide." Or simply,
"walking with two canes" tor the
less athletic. In any event. the
novice should go to a store that
speclallzes In cross-country
equipment In order to be prop-
erly sized and fitted.
For the hardier souls who
choose to camp out in the snow
while touring, there Is special
gear, such as "Inner-frame
backpacks" (regular backpacks
won't work, due to the swinging
/-x & I
I I
\
\ I
.
I
I
guided tour1 Maps and locator
sign-ups are available for the
more adventurou1.
-Mt. Plnoe: Take 1-5 to the
Frazier Park exit near Gorman.
Get local dlrectk>ns for the toor-
tng center at Mt. Plnos. This la an
excellent place for beginner•.
and some of the best l(>Cal 1now
conditions from northern 1torma.
-Memmoth LakH: For a
truly special experience, go to
the Tamarack Lodge above
Mammoth (near Lake George).
It's a charming and rustic lodge,
and a great place to warm up at
the end of a long day "Midnight
touring•· 1s becoming quite a
social event for large groups as
well as couples _
-Yoeemtte: For the purist.
there 1s simply no other place.
Pe~ps the most breathtaking
win scen~ry anywhere .. In-clude~ wide range of accommo-
dations. with the incomparable
=======--~<:...__l~mrlllillla...~-,~'~~~~/
-Ahwanee Lodge providing the
ultimate in winter comfort
Finally all the experts caution
that while cross-country skiing 1s
a wholesome and otten unforget-
table experience. every beginner
should observe the following
guidelines to ensure his safety
and en1oyment
motion of your elbows). tents.
cooking kits, etc.
FOOD: This is another area on
which the exper1s were unani-
mous. Make certain that you
don't underestimate your body's
substantially greater nutritional
needs In cold weather
Even on short trips, you need
to take ample supplies of both
llqulda (preferably those that are
designed to replace electrolytes)
and high-energy aollda (with
emphasis on carbohydrates).
There are specially packaged
food preparations that are light
and convenient to carry
Thes4t ar&-fW-fonger limited to
simple .''.trait mixes" and "gorp ,"
but Include whole me•t• (sample
breakfast: apple drink, Western
omeJ•. hash browns. sweet
milk YC~a). There's even a
"wonder-dri nk " c alled
Gooklnade Erg.
PLACES TO SKI: This is the
best subject of all for downh1llers
used to making the Friday-Night-
Banzai-Run-To-Mammoth-To-
Pay-$25-A-Day-To-Almost-Sk1-
With-100 ,000-0ther-People-
From-L.A. You can ski anywhere
you find snow and the scenery
looks interesting Free And no
lltt lines
There is a multitude of places
in the local area that are close
enough and tame enough for any
novice. The Barton Flats area
below Big Bear. and the ridge
trails between Snow Summit and
Goldmine are among the most
popular
But for some serenity as well as
extraordinary scenery, the ex-
perts recommend the following
places:
-Mt. S•n Jacinto: Take the
tram from Palm Springs up to the
top. Signs will direct you to the
touring center. Beginners can get
expert Instruction as well as
1) take a beginning lesson
2) dress properly ·
3) stay on known trails
4) take proper food
5) do not ski alone
6) let others know where you
are going and when you plan to
return
Once you are out on the trail,
you will quickly learn why so
many people-are tur,ning and
returning to cross-country ski-
ing. The farther you get from the
parking lot. the less you wlll
remember or care about all the
things that concerned you only
minutes before
With each ·shush. and with
each breath the layers of gray
peel away And suddenly. there Is
only the silent silent white.
,
"
----------------- ---------------------------------.-4 -Image/An AcMittJ9ing ~·to the DAILY PILOT/Thurlday. November 14, 1985
~t i no tokes us to
the country in this his signature
double-breasted cardigan
sweater. The shawl collar and
leather buttons make it a
perfect companion for
brushed cotton sportshirts,
flannel pleated trousers,
and long autumn walks.
The Volentino line is
available at Nieman
Marcus, Fashion
Island.
,
• • •
.
(
... . .. r
-· --
I
s leek, one-piece suits stand out on
the ~lopes. Her flange-shoulder suit from White Stag Is
brightened w ith vivid teal and rasberry stripes. Her partner
lboks racy in this parka/pant ensemble from Spyder in smqked
gray and contrasting teol yolk. Both ore wearing headbands
by Penthouse Mills and gloves by Gates-Mills. Available at
Hobie Sports, l.T.D.
~ .
• T
'
·, G y Laroche features
this sophisticated long tweed jacket,
with Chesterfield collar and slim skirt.
Available at Guy Laroche,
Fashion Island .
o e of the be$1 looks this season is a handsome double-
breasted cootaress. The infinite versatility of this outfit will
easily toke you through the doy ond Into the evening, looking
wonderful. Available at Jaeger , South Coost Plaza .
..
I .
onet makes
a bold and dynamic statement
from th,Mycca group.
Spectacufor oval stones in
ruby, blue zircon, sapphire
and amethyst set on a
dull gold collar
combined with
matching
· bracelet,
pin and
•• -..
Image/ An Advertising supplement to the DAILY PILOT /Thurlday, November 14, 1985 -5
. B eautiful updated collar necklace
in charcoal and berry w ith matching earrings, ptn and
h!!1celet. Monet's Sheu¥,_ from vintage' BS. Available at
T.. most ftne department stores.
• •
0
he ev~r popular Amer ican ~olor.s,
red, white and blue, team up in bold blocks and
stripes on this snap -front Spo r t Obermeyer parka.
A vailabl~ at Hobie Sport, l. T. D.
B lack silk
crepe gown w ith lace and
pa1llette illusion bodice,
draped with shock tng
pink silk gazaar side
hip bow is by Louis Estevez.
Available at fine sto res nat1onw1de.
•R ev11fon natural silver fox cutaway
is from the 1985 collection of Carolina Herrero.
Exclusively available at Saks Fifth Avenue .
•
s ocking pin~
wool double-breasted
1acket w ith shocking
pink lame ltn1ng
pairs w ith shock tng
pink silk lame blouse
and straight blad
velvet skirt by lou1s
Estevez. Avotl oble
at f 1ne stores
not1onw1de
..
r'!!lll .... "'!"-----~--~-::------~-----:-------~--:-~----------------------------
. . .
8 -Image/An Advertising supplement to the DAILY PILOT/Thured1y, November 1'4, 1986
/
I 1.
.,... ........... .,, ... ~
_._ ......... _ Mike Vultee and Gina Shafon•kJ model lta..ropean-•tyled
•kl fublon, a•allable at Newport Ski Co. At far left, 111.ke
' wean a matchinCJacket and race panta, wblle Gina don• a
one-piece •alt. In center, the funcdon~hlCb-fublon look
la by Colmar. Abo•e, Cindi Halliday la In a camel duffer coat
with leather trim; Bill &nr.der weara a Ted flann.el outdoor
coat. Both are at Halliday 1 , Newport Beach.
Colorful, sassy ski fashions layered for· war:mth
ly EVE C. LASH
>.-, ..... C.11 I I ..,,,
In order to look sensational
and stay toasty warm on the
slopes and In the lodge the trick Is
to layer clothes. coordinate ac-
::esaorles and take along some of
the hot new sassy ski fashions for
'86, say Orange County fashion
buyers.
According to manager and
buyer Nancy Anderson of New-
port Ski Co. Newport Beach.
some of the hot new ski togs are
the stirrup pants. to be worn
nslde boots. the jumpsuit and
the longer oversized ski parkas.
.vlth padded shoulders.
/ct
• ~eUtl#tU '7"t111""'
e ""lll~C(llll/Jl9
• Cw111111~
• (jaltu
• l'aetk~
·~ • "'"JIU
• tJe/Ja/4
• (juuUuztlll•
3707 E. Coast Hwy .
Corona del Mar
!between Po1n~1111 & Poppy)
(714) 675-9798
What's positively passe (or not 1t makes your ski vacation much To stay warm and stlll look Winter trenda fashion runway to the closet are ~ulte so new and trendy) are last more enjoyable." 38nsatlonal, Anderson says, the The look Is sweaters, sweaters ong shlrtalls, to -9e worn, hang-
fear's short (crop-type) ski jack-For the perfect outfit she trick ts to overlap and purchase ind more sweaters -big, bulky, hg out of jackets and vests.
ats. Colors that have gone up to recommends an emerald green 3kl wear designed for keeping oversized and bright. Jackie Vas-Vazsquez recommends stylish
the big slopes In the sky are :>ne-piece suit (priced at about Narm. A new brand of llght quez, owner/buyer for Lyn Karall, ictlve wear In fleece and velour
boring brown and blase beige. $200) with a coordinating vest to 1nsulatlon In ski jackets Is Newport Beach says, sweaters In ~o be worn under ski suits, rather
3rlght hues of emerald green, match and lots of accessories. Thlnsulate. It Is made of polyester bright new colors as cobalt blue, than long underwear. !'People
magenta, yellow, pink, aqau, "" Some of the stylish ac-Noven tightly togehter to replace emerald green, amber gold and really dress up on the slopes.
'T'lint green and white are the "In" :easorles to wear down the bulkier down materials. Gortex red are the posh new colors for There Is no reason why you
:olors for the expertly outfitted slopes and In the chalet Include . ~loves the one's to buy, she says. Hinter. shouldn't off the slopes."
3kler. Also popular this year are fur, wool, or angora hats with Overall, one doesn't have to With sweaters, she says, stir-The store carries European
the softest of soft pastels. 'T'latchlng scarves and gloves. A .ook Ilka "big foot'' to stay warm. rup pants and denim pants are and American fashions for men ·
If you can't ski well, you might popular color Is black. However, old worn underclothing 'lery "big" this year. Metallic and women. Some of their popu-
3S well be the best looking thing For men the look Is geometric borrowed from Uncle Joe Is sweaters, especially silver and lar fashion llnes are Trlange,
'alllng down, or rather gliding oatterns and designs on ski wear deflnetely out. You never know ~old , and tops are also very Ellles Matches, Serge Az.ar, Fenn
jown that "bunny hlll" (novice •ather than last year's stripes. Nhen you might have to take the oopular this holiday season. Wright Manson, Ping Pong,
1rall). Anderson says, "If you The new color Is turquoise with ski suit off. What's underneath And one · of the trends finally Pepoe of London, Jag and Zoom .
jress properly and you look good splashes of color blocklngs. the outer layer also counts. rnaklng Its way from the high Jackie Warren of Bldwell's ---------------~-------------------------Bldtlque says winter doesn't
GET YOUR REAR IN GEAR
Specialists in Ski Clothing Repair
• Cleaning of Down and fibt>r ProduC'b
• Add Stretch Panel•
• Take io and Let out Seam•
• Alter Sleeve and Leg Length ,
• Zipper Repair and Replacement
• Patching aod Other Standard Aheratioo1
LESLIE'S OUTDOOR GEAR REPAJR
120 E. 23rd St. No. 29 Costa Mesa 631 -2642
PUUllTO•
2520 ! Chapman
170-4171
oa.A9GI!
llOZ L KMtlla
IJ~IMO
CIUITOS
Lo. C.rrlto9 c.-
J ll/IJ .. ll2 S
• LOSE WEIGHT
• STOP SMOKING
• IMPROVE YOURSELF
EASILY-
COMFORTAILY-PERMANENTL Y
WITH HYPNOSIS
Call tod•y for • he•lthler. h•ppler you
(7 t4f 472-HYPNOSIS (4976)
2790 Harbor Btvd.
fat Adamsf Ste. 309,
Costa Mesa 92626
'"tn 1u" \f(flf\<\1 /fl\ (I\ II N DR E C HEARD. C Ht
DIRECTOR
GUARANlEES RCSUl TS ISCOUNT TO SENIORS AND STUDENTS
mean dark dreary colors have to
be worn. Her store stocks pastel
spring-Ilka colors as well as
Hinter white, this time of year, to
be taken along for the ski
'lacatlon or to be worn In this
area.
Warren says the winter look Is
very straight skirts. oversized
tops, stirrup pants and long
sweater vests. Sweaters In nubby
textures seem to be the most
popular, she says. And fabrics
f Pleue eee F A81D01'/pqe 7)
F I A~ T ..
•
.. •uua•.X · lucna ,.,. ii.lr -
JJO-IJ1J
. ..
-. .
""'
..
WlDter warmth la eoaured lD
the camel hair aportcoat and
hand-loomed aweater Teet
(aboYe, left) and In the hand-
loomed reindeer aweater
and lamba wool acarf from
Scotland, modeled by Blll
Snyder. A ahow atopper for
th.la aeaaon la the wool/poly
pleated panta with eyeluh
knit aweater worn by Gigi
Abrahm.
Another outatancllnC choice
la the two-piece metallic
knit dre•• with aatln
camlaole, •••liable at
Bidwell 'a, Newport Beach.
\
Double
breasted
Cashmere, Lamb's
Wool and Comelhair
Cardigan, over a rice silk
Jacquard blouse with a woot
and Comelhair 30" Skirt. Camel color
wool and Cashmere Single •easted coat.
Rice wool scarf and Camel beret.
3333 BRISTOl ST. • SOUTH COAST 'LAZA • COSTA MESA • 549-1703
GEAR UP FOR FALL ...
Speny Top Sider · with registered onh sl p sole
l\Jt them with our greo1 selecflon of oct~r ponts and Shirts
8~~8~~
56 FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH · ( 714) 64A -5070
Image/An Advertising supplement to the DAILY PILOT/Thursday, November 14, 1985 -7
FASHION •.•
rromPa&e8
11e natural onet, aueh at, cotton.
::otton blends, WOOi , wool blend•
and velvet.
In order to get the moat ou1 of
fOUr vacation wardrobe without
taking 17 suitcases, the suggest
mixing and matching. reversible
jl&rmenta and Interchanging ac•
:esaorlet. "Change a top and
add a strand of pearts and you
riave a new dressy look."
Fa•oritee for men
According to Bill Halleday of
Halleday Men's Clothing, New-
port Beach, the tradltlonal-
::lasslc look Is what's most popu-
lar for 1986. It's back to basics In
bulky crew neck sweaters, wool
and flannel plald sport shirts and
jlray trousers.
He reveals the number one
selll11g Item In his store is the navy
brue blazer. "In our store tne only
things that seem fo change are
the colors. The styles stay pretty
much the same.··
For the perfect holiday look he
recommends, "a nice red
::ashmere blazer ($395) with gray
flannel trousers ($125), to b&
Norn with a blue or white button
down shirt ($30), or a Ryn
~pooner Christmas shirt ($42)
and a velvet embroidered
Christmas hollyberry Talbott tie
:S30) to complete the look."
Sweaters being w9t'n this
!3eason are bulky and basic with
multi-pattered designs, argile
!3weaters and striped sweaters In
fishermen's knit or popcorn
Neave..
Colors are brighter, he says,
Nlth pl"m. mauve and green
tones. "It used to be plum was
Jnheard of for a man." ·
A re•eralble quilted coat la
worn OYer a matching long-
aleeve ahirt and panta. Aleo
from Bidwell'•.
/
D-!l~ ...... ~
lllke Val tee and Gina Shafooaky wear one-piece HJ oatflta
by NU. (aboYe). E•en you.neaten are lnier.ted In htcJa
fuhion and looklnC their emarteet In mate~ .aweaten
are B~ and LmdMy Bear, modellnC froin Baliy Carter. ... .. .. .
'85/86 SKI SPECIALS
"QUALITY PRODUCTS -LOW PRl(f~ -PROFFSSIONl\L SERVICE"
Eu•.._ •-Priu
K2 5500 5111 ........................................... '00 ..................... 255
PRE 1200 II 5 111.................................. 285····:················ 239
SALOMON SX-91 Boot ........................ 27 5 ................... ._ 24 7
RAICHLE RX-7 Boot ............................ 260..................... 254
MARKER M46R Bl•cll•e...................... l 50 ..................... 127
S ALOMON 747 a1.c11 ......................... 1,5 ..................... 114
··u you didn 'r buy It from Chamonlx -You paid too muchf'
SKI -BINDING -POLE PACKAGES
FOR CHILDREN AND AOOL TS
$139.95 to $259.95
403on:
U 81 Price
847-6565 * 6928 WARNER AVENUE * Mo;~~~rl. :~~=
842-4266 HUNTINGTON BEACH Saa. 12-!i
~
A Ve r y
pec ial
Clothing
Depa rtment
•
11gq121)
•o ut t}w i ck
rbmarfHilton.
•
• •
1-lrMge/An Ad\wtlatng IUpptement to the OAJLY PILOT/Thursday. Nov.m* 1•, 1985
Novel
ideas
abound
Enhance skiing pleasure
with pr~per eqQip1rient .•.
8J JOYCI ac•MR.aOOlOYICH
DlllJ .... Cla O ¢ I
Manufacturers are continuing
to create novel Ideas for the ski
enthuelut.
Conlk:tef theSkl Tote: a·eecor-
tty ay.tem that keeps aids and
~tocked and secure an the
way from your home, to your akl
rect<, to the slopes and bKk
again. It 11 deatgned to llteralty
split In half, allowing the carrier,
skis and poles to flt almost every
car rack.
It has a combination lock with a
vtnyt coated .steetcable. Its handy
carrying handles, along with the
vinyl steel cable (~an be used as a
shoulder strap) makes toting skis
an easy Job.
Dlllr .... °""' ' $ 1
Without the proper equipment,
aiding just looeee eome ot lta
panache.
The akl boot Is top priority.
Johh Eggers. Sport• Chalet's ski
salee manager, says when buying
boots "look for comfort."
"But remember," he warned
"In one or two days, the boot wlll
atretch v. to YI Inch In me."
Eggers advised buying the
boot falrly anug but with the toes
gently grazJng the front of the
boot.
"Standing straight," said Egg-
er-e, "the toes wm barely -touch
the front, however. with knees
bent In a normal skier's stance,
your toes should be free to
wlggle." .
The recreational skier should
be able to purchase boots for
around $100. For the more
advance lkt.r, the prfoe 11 S200 Ego« recommend• lkl pack-
and up fOt 1 good bOOt. ag. when purchutng the equip-
"A greater alffneea In the boot ment. "When the store buy. •
wtllallowtheexperienc.dakt.rto large q4•ntlty of equipment, It
heve more power to atteck at gett a dlKOUnt and can pua thet
different anglM. It la also needed aavlnga on to the conaumer," he
for traverelng the t~h moun-lald.
talna and tklf ng for long period a A package wilt Include skis,
of time," said Egger•. 1 blndtnga. pol", mounth'\g of
Ski manufacturers have. tan-binding• and akl preparation (hot
tallzed the lkl lover with some wax, lharpenlng, etc.).
new variations on their lkf equip-Look for aluminum alloy ma-
ment, according to Eggera. terlat when purchasing thla year's
The high performance lkl, lklpofe9. Theeealloyaarellghter,
Electra 2000.~1 an all-around akl nowt f 1 k le plant• with the Electra carbon base and 1 ng or qu c er po ·
urethane vibration control that Scott Manufacturer has a new
allows the skier more speed and t'landle on their poles called a Uni
comf&ft. The ski 19 v4trAtUe _ Grip. The platform design makes
en<>Ugh to satisfy aggressive a comfortable nandrest and Ifs
Intermediates through experts. flex motion provides for ~hock
lhe Olln Skis for 1985/1986 absorptl<?n.
.also have ttle carbon base. The Also, new this year Is 1he·
carbon has an extremely low Straptese Grip which features an
coefficient of friction, thus Improved head design with
guaranteeing a fast-glldlng ski. added thumb protection.
T.fle Rear Gear and-Fanny
Pack, are both nifty Items for
carrying a beverage, lunch, car
keys, cassettes, ski wax or any
other Item needed for pit stops
while traversing the snowy moun-
tain.
The bags are fashionable and
easy to wear. They come In an
array of colors to match ski attire,
and they conveniently hook
around the waist with a buckle of
Velcro.
... for beginners, t~at means
starting with package rentals
The Rear Gear has a spacious
zippered compartment with an
Insulated one-liter thermos bot-
tle for cold or hot beverages. It
features a fully adjustable belt
with an easy-release buckle. .
The packs are made from
water proof material, usually
nylon or corduroy. Price range Is
$9 to $25.
A carry-all for larger Items Is
the Lange deluxe roller bag. The
ny1on bag Is perfect for all the ski
attire, necessary for the fun-
packed weekend. The rollers
make It easy to "walk" the bag,
but the rollers can be removed
and the bag can be carried as a
shoulder bag.
The handy feature on the roller
bag' Is the separate zippered
compartment at the bottom. It Is
roomy enough to store the boots
without solllng other clothes.
Although there are several styles
of bags, ranging In price from $1 5
up, the Lange Is $70.
Cat Tracks, made to slip on the
bottom of ski boots, serve a dual
purpose. They protect the bot-
tom of the boot, and give the
wearer extra traction when walk-
ing on a slippery surface. They
are designed for comfort and can
be easlly stored when not In use.
For the windy cold days, the
skier may consider Investing In a
hat resembling the World War II
aviators cap ... complete with ear
flaps. A popular Item this ski
season, the hat can be worn
flapless, merely by tying the flaps
up to the top of the head with the
attached cord.
If flaps are not your thing, there
Is an array of brightly colored
baseball caps In corduroy and
AFFORDABLE SKIWEAR
Down Jackets
Ski Outfits
Powder Shirts ·
Stretch Pants
~ SKIING IS BELIEVING!
GET DOWN ENTERPRISES
Orange County Swapmeet
Saturday F233 Sunday E 151
Ski Clubs Ask For Our Discount
JUNIOR V. I. P. SEASON LEASING PACKAGES.
CHAllfllOUI ~
BJ BILL HARVEY
~ .... c:.n •• , .....
As the days get shorter and
o.1r,... ...... ~.._...._. somewhat colder, you're re-
8kla, akla and more akla can minded that this Is It -the year
be foand at the Sport Cbalet, you've promised to get away for
Banttncton Beach. There at least two or three weekends of
a1ao are many atylee of tote skiing.
and boot baa•. and don't If you're an avid and ex-
for&et your 1lear Gear for ' perlenced skier, you probably
carlytna any necHMry have already planned your va-
ltema for plt •tope. cation during the height of the ski
cotton, each emblazoned with
the name of a ski manufacturer.
Expect to pay between $8 to $15.
For those bespectacled skiers,
whose glasses are definitely a
foggy nuisance, Smith has de-
veloped a pair of goggles Just for
you. The Turbo OTS Is the
ultimate goggle, which Is de-
signed to wear over glasses,
Including the new larger framed
eyewear. And ... here Is the good
part. Smith has Included a built-
In-fan . with easy access on/off
switch to de-fog your eyeglasses,
no matter how easily they fog.
Around $80.
season. You have your equip-
ment packed and ready, Just
waiting for that magic day when
you ~lmb Into your car and make
your getaway.
~ut, what If you're a novice, or
a "sometfme" skier? What do
you do about equipment?
Basic .equipment can be very
expensive -from $615 to $800.
Boots (the most Important of
necessary equipment) can cost
on an average of $250. They
should be custom fitted, other-
wise blisters to broken legs could
be results. Then there are the skis
themselves. Average cost: $250
to $300.
ARLENE PFEIFFER
Doc:w r of Chiropract ic
(~1--t ) 9(H-.~lll
*Athletic Injuries * 01\cr..,1l1nJ Adju~tnll'nl' * l It ra·~ound
*~oft Th.;,uL· Manipul.11 1< in * \X'orkc r~ Compcn:-.ation Trc:11mcn1 * Mo:-.1 l n~urancc Pl:Jn-; Acccpll'U
C HIROPRACTIC
HEALTH & SPORTS
!l~!I llMOOl..ltl M•I \11011
Ill 'I "I.Ill' 81 \I It I A •Jlt•tl•
,-, •• Viti 1111
JOIN OUR JUNIOR V.I. P. LEASING PROGRAM.
St>lect one of these top·of,the-llne money saving oackages and enroll your kids
tn our JUNIOR VI P LEASING PROGRAM starting Ocr 11 tllrough Nor 10 fhpy 11
receive rflelf own personal JUNIOR VI p MEMBERSHIP CARDS ,,,,.~ CMI ,,,,~
S 10 00 dn<J entitle them aoo you to 1t1e~e M01Mn~1 bfw•l1t~
11 FREE tqu1pment maintenance dll season
• 5°. MEMBERS C11scoun1 tor me ent1fP s~son ·
• FREE first t1mt ski lesson on our mdoor ski 11ec;
THIS Y(AR AND EVERY YEAR llA$£ YOUR KIDS THE 8£51 f OUIPM[Nl MON(Y
CAN BUr o.. 1.~ • .... ,. • • •·
AOOJ', '-.A~i 1.'Alnl '11 100 $50 00 ll(JfJt•, '\At1 YA~'>!. 100 $50 00 HOOT'> '.AlOVO', JR IOUIPf SIM DO NEWPORT *SKI* COM PA~
1,l(f', ATOVIC ARC'. ~ .-MG 00 '111s AIO'Jtr AF( ~ MG 00 .~l'i ATOYI( ·~ fl.AV c.L S1JO OQ
R1!,(ll'i: V.t~n·, 1rv n,,$500Q flt•,Ot'I• "-'lOMOf•'-14 STSOO A1',l)lli(, .A1ftVO•,c,14; S 7$00
IOIAI ,, !<HA .. Pflt{f SltO oo· IOTAl P!J~HAS( PRICf 1116 oo· fffiAI r~11(HA<,( PfllU 1.111 llO'
'1)1Jn' A'.Ol.Al
1 r A w-.G l)Ql('J $49.95 V00 R ',(A')(),' lA
I FA.'\1'.(j PRM"..f $69.95 1fJ R .I AS()' J.l
(ASIP.C. Pflj('.f $159.95
2700 W Coas1 Highway. Nowpon Beach (714) 631 ·3280
The next Is bindings that run
from $100 to $150. Finally, ski
poles. $15 to $40 per pair.
If you don't have unlimited
funds, how do you get Into
skiing?
Actually, It's quite easy.
You rent equipment.
There are a great many sport-
ing goods stores In the Orange
Coast area, and many of them
rent equipment. Newport Ski
otters package deals for children.
A complete outfit -boots, skis,
bindings and poles, rents for $59
to $89, depending on the degree
of expertise that the child has
attained. That's for the whole
year. At the end of the year, the
equipment Is returned, or can be
bought for an addltlonal $50.
Some sporting goods stores
otter a package speclflcaJly de-
signed for Inexperienced skiers
-boots, bindings, skis and
poles that can be purchased for
under $200.
Or, the equipment can be
rented. You can expect to pay
between $10 and $20 per day for
a complete package. That price
goes down progressively If you
rent for more than one day at a
time -about $6 to $11 per day If
rented for seven days.
An experienced skier may find
renting equipment to his advan-
tage If he wants to try some other
brand or configuration. Rent 'em,
try 'em out, and If you end up on
top, buy It.
Renting equipment Is, Indeed,
the most painless and most
sensible way to get Into the'
glamorous and exciting sport of
skiing. Some packages are very
basic and otter only a specific
pair of skis; boots, blndfngs and
poles, but others (a little more
expensive) offer a choice. Take
the more expensive package and
try out various combinations.
When you find the recipe that
works for you, stick with It. And, If
you want to own your skis with
very little cash outlay, hang
around the store where you
rented them.
--SKI AD/ENTLRES--
To decide 10 ski in Europe nexl winter 1s Posy w11h package
rotes as low as S861 tor o whole week 1n the glo11ous Alps•
Then comes lhe dtlllcull port
CHAMONJX • COURC111VSL •DAVOS
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KJTDWJUL • LICH • ST. ANTON • ST. MORITZ
WINGEN •DR.MATT
Call your profe1sion&l travel ac;ient
or Powder Ski Adventures today!
r 'l !~· , 1)M Co\!o lvleso 0 92671 • 71a1 "4/ 878f
CA< BO/) 67A 7) 10 • USA (800l 8:?4 9?1; • fl'ICi• }?if;!''J
lfeatyour
children
to the
be5t . .
Exclusive imported
clothes and gifts
from the Reed's
Baby Corter.
Newly located at
Bayside Center,
Newport Beach.
Boys, g irls and infants
thru I 0 years.
M onday . Saturday
I 0:00 o.m. · 5:30 p.m.
1072 Baysi de Drive, Newport Beach t7) 41 720 .3882
•
f
I l
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11
I
Image/ An Adverising supplement to the DAILY PILOT /Thursday. November 1•. 1985 -9
Weekend skiers needn't" go far to enjoy the sport
If money's no object, e ski
vacation to en exotic IOC41e Is es
easy q a trip to your travel agent.
Kathy Fitzgerald of the New-
port Ski Co. Is one such agent,
and a speclallst In skiing. She'll
set up a trip to any ski resort rn
the world, lncludlng arrange-
ments for transportation, lodg-
lng, meals, and If necessary,
equipment rental and ski Instruc-
tion.
But a ski vacation doesn't have
to Involve an expensive Journey
out of the country -or even very
far from your Southern Callfornle
home.
There are, In the Southern and
Central California area. no less
than 18 ski resorts, most of them
ar.a.wilhln easy weekend .ddvlng
distance.
Moreover, If you don't have to
be back to work on Monday.
there ar.e about 1,5 more In the
Northern California area.
GeneraJly speaking, the ski
areas that would appeal to an
Orange Coast resident with llm-
lted time on the weekends would
be those In the Big Bear, Mount
Baldy, La Canada and Palm
Springs areas. All are easy to
reach by car. offer good skiing.
and are close enough to make
weekend trips feasible.
Following Is a llst of these
resorts. their distance from
nearby populatlon centers, ap-
proximate cost of llft tickets.
phone numbers, and type of lifts
available.
GOLD MINE SKI AREA: About
two miles southeast of Big Bear
Lake. lift tickets are about $20.
The resort has two trlple and five
double chairs. Phone: 585-2517.
GREEN VALLEY LAKE: About
tour mites north of Big Bear Lake.
Call for Information and prices:
867-4505..--
SKI GREEN VALLEY: OH State
Route 18. about tour miles north
of Big Bear Lake. Utt tickets are
$12. The resort·has two pomas
and two ropes. Phone: 867-2338.
SNOW FOREST: One mite
south of Big Bear Lake. Tickets
are $17 on weekends, $15 week-
days. One triple chair, one poma
ano tnree ropes. Snow Forest
also rents snow boards, sort of a
cross between aklls and a skate
board. Phone: 886-8891.
SNOW SUMMIT: Ott State
Route 18, about one mile east of
Big Bear Lake. Tickets are about
$20 Two quad, one triple and stx
double chairs. ~now Summit also
otters a $5 dlscovnt to seniors
·and mllltafy personnel during
non-holiday weekdays. Phone:
866-5766,
SNOW VALLEY: Six miles east
of Running Springs on State
Route 18. Tlcke1s are about $21.
Five triple and eight double
chairs. Snow Valley also otters a
beginners package that includes
a lift ticket for the beginner areas.
equipment fental.rand two.gr.oop
lessons for $19 during the wee~
and $24 on the weekend. Phone:
8.67-7812. .
Jo the South. and more or less
all by Itself. Is PALM SPRINGS
NORDIC CENTER. Seven miles
north of Palm Springs and more
or less all by itself to the south.
f'Atr-h the tramwav Call for litt
.
r
Information and t1c1<et prices.
(619) 327-8002.
In the La Canada-Wnghtwood
area:
KRATKA RIDGE: Thirty-eight
mlles northeast of La Canada.
Tickets are S 19. One double and
one single chair. two ropes.
.Phone: (818) «0·97 49.
MQUNTAHt HIGH EAST AND
WEST: On State Route 2, three
mites west of Wrlghtwood.
Tickets $22. One quad, three
triple and six double chairs and
one ~poma . Phone: (619)
249· 71.
MO NT WATERMAN: On
State Route 2, thirty-tour miles
northeast of La Canada. Tickets
about $18. Three double chairs.
.E.hooe: (818) 790-2002.
SKI SUNRISE: Six miles north-
west oJ Wrlght)VOOd. Tickets are
about $18, One quad chair. two
pomas and two ropes. Phone·
(619) 249-6150.
In the Ontario-Upland area:
MOUNT BALDY: Take Mount
Baldy Road for seventeen miles
north of Upland. Tickets $22.
'
with season tickets ottered at
$300-375. Four double chairs.
Before the anowa come. you can
ride the lltts at Baldy between
9a.m. and 4:30 p.m. for about $5
and enfoy the tcenery Phone·
981-33«.
Areas In Central California may
be appproprlate for a long week-
end: •
SIERRA SUMMIT: On State
Route 168. 65 miles northeast of
Fresno. Tickets about $2 1 Two
triple and three double chairs.
two ropes and two T -bars
Phone: (209) 893-3316.
BADGER PASS: Eighty-four
miles north of Fresno on State
Route 41 . Tickets about $17 on
the weettends and $15 on week-
days. Four doubkt Ghalf&. one
rope, one T-bar. Phone: (209)
372-1338. .
JUNE MOUNTAIN: Fifty-eight
miles north of Bishop Tickets
about $22. Five double chairs
and one T-bar Phone· (619)
648-7733.
MAMMOTH MOUNT AIN:
Probably the most popular ski
resort In trwt southern haJt ot the
state. AboUt 50 mlNtl north of
Bishop. Tickets about $23. Two
gondolas. three quad. six trlple
and 16 double chairs. two
pomas, · two T-bars and one
M ltey-m lte Phone. (619)
934-2571 ,
Two other resorts In CentraJ
California are: ·
COTT AGE SPRINGS: On
State Route 4, about 12 miles
northeast of Arnold. Tickets
about $12. One double chair. one
platter and two ropes. Phone:
(209) 795-1401.
DODGE RIDGE: On State
Route 108, about 30 miles east of
Sonora Tickets about $18. Two
tftple an6 t+ve doubkt-chair•.
three ropes. Phone: (209)
965-3474
Alf of the -resorts listed have
rental equipment and instruction
available. and most have some
sort of beginners package. Near-
ly all have day and night skiing.
and alt otter some sort of season
lift ticket.
Planning on tackling slopes? SKIING FEVER SPREADING ON COAST •..
FromPage2
You better get in shape first It's ever onward and upward.
as well. for our smaller resorts. all
of _which date back to the sport's
early days In Southern California.
By FRED VOOELSTEIN
With the ski season fast ap-
proaching many skiers along the
Orange Coast may be wondering
about exercises they can do to
get In shape to tackle the slopes.
A former national ski patrol-
man and a member of the UC
Irvine ski team offer some tips.
Both agree that exercising the
thighs and the calves Is a must
even If you do nothing else.
"The knees are the primary
stress point In skiing." says Dr .
Blair Sweet, former ski patrol-
man and staff doctor for the
Irvine Clubhouse health club.
"Therefore one needs to develop
the muscles around the knee to
take the pressure off."'
He recommends using the leg
presses and leg extension ma-
chines at the local gym. But he
emphasized that repetitions are
more Important than the amount
of weight.
Shan Wiiiets, a Junior on the
UC Irvine ski team, said doing
three sets of squatting and j4mp-
lng exercises 20 times and sitting
against a wall without a chair for
one minute are helpful for build-
ing leg strength. He also said
running 10 to 15 flights of stairs is
a good Idea.
Then If you really want to get
serious you can also work on your
endurance, they said.
Sweet pointed out that swim-
ming Is probably the best form of
exercise to build up endurance
since It puts minimal s1ress on the
knees. Willets said that it really
doesn't matter what exercises
are done as long as the heart rate
Is kept up for a while. He said the
UC Irvine ski team plays Frisbee
or soccer to do this.
In short. they say If the legs are
strong the skier will hAve the
I I n
PARK CITY .. ALTA, SNOWBIRD
..
THANKSGIVING
HOLIDAY
NOV. 27 -DEC. 1
JUST $209 QUAD
S239 DOUBLE
. CHRISTMAS
HOLIDAY
DEC. 26 -DEC. 30
$249 ouAD
$279 DOUBLE
* FREE PARTIES •
A Complete Package
BUS TRANSPORTATION • 4 LIFT TICKETS
LODGING • PLUS MORE
-FREE TRIPS AVAILABLE FOR GROUP ORGANIZER S-
CALL WEEKENDS AWAY TOURS AT:
(714) 495-8096
SKI TOURS
• • • • • •
A short walk from an easy chair
to a double chair r
Save 10-80 ~o off our regular prices.
Park City condominiums and homes that
are just steps from .the slopes are avail~ble at
discount prices. Prices start at $95 a night.
Call today to reserve your spot in Park City.
It's one great tpwn with three great mountains.
Call Collect
(801) 849-5333 P.p. Box 680640, Park City, Utah 84068-0640
~
control over them. Without it the Snow Forest has expanded its
skier may be frustrated at best. three major runs. Mt. Waterman
or be injured at worst. offers a busy race schedule
.. Both also stressed that In including events sponsored by
addition to building strength. l
stretching is very important.
Willets said that muscle soreness
can be alleviated by strechlng for
at least 10 minutes before you
workout or before y,DU ski. Sweet
believes that whether you ex-
ercise or not you should stretch
twice a day to keep body motion
fluid.
Both agree tnat its more im-
portant to work out often than it is
to do it for hours at a time. They
say three times a week is the bare
minimum to make any progress
but you need to exercise 30 to 45
minutes for leg strengthening but
only 15 minutes for endurance
workouts.
Therefore. if you start now. you
may not be in top form for that
Christmas ski vacation.
BALLY
OF SWI TZFRI Al"D
Craig ...
Thr com fo n of all lrathrr
l raft\mansh1p o f Ball)
Black or Brown ( Jlf'
MEN'S
SHOP ~ " '>I ZES I!;·~' 8
1 ~-I 2 f1 ~ -, S H 0 E 5 \It 71 ~-I 2
99 Fashion Island • Newport Beach • 759-9551
QU51~ Fantastic
25 '0 70 8/o
.. SAVINGS ON
DESIGNER FASHIONS
• Carole Little
• Jonathan Martin
• C.W . II
• Roth Le Cover
• L.A. Clot hes & M ore
WP~ Fantastic
722-9711
Dodge. Coors and Yopta1t Ski
Sunrise. Kratka Ridge and Green
Valley Lake have repaired. re-
stored and refurbished to some
dollar or two. Resort operators
are blaming skyrocketing in-
surance premiums. a fact of life In
numerous businesses and indus-
tries. extent.
Throughout ski country. from
coast to coast . you'll find the
price of a litt ticket has gone up a
Burt Sim•, • •kl wrlt•r, h••
won U.S. Slcl AHOCl•tlon
Aw•rd• for hi• co~•r~. ---
S£L'S
SPORT HAUS
Blgg••t ever Th•nlc•glvlng
SKI SALE
STARTS FRI.; NOV. 22ND
SHOP HERE FOR YOUR HOLIDAY Glf1S1
1n9 Newport Blvd., Costa Meu
(714) 645-4310
December
3rd & 4th
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------~ ~~~~~ ~~ -~-----------
10 -lnWQe/An AdWttillng euppWnent to the DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, November 14, 1985
For that Special
Person On Your
Holiday Gift
List ...
We h've natural
shoulder sport
~ coats, Corbin
slacks, Talbott Ties,
and Cole-Haan
Shoes.
645-0792
17th&: Irvine, Newport Beach
~~-~. w'!!f
Let us help you
decorate your horne
for the holidays
Now in stock thousands of ornaments
and holiday decorations as well as our
usual array of country accessories.
Mon-Sat 10-6 Sunday 12-5
1058 Irvine Ave. W estcliff Plaza
Newport Beach (714) 650-8388
Olga's Cozy Top
Square Neck Gown
s42.oo
Veta's
JOJI JtW AllJIE ~r IUCIC. CA. Uffl
642· 1197
Beauty in black and gold.
Premium Cheese Ball
'l'I l I \I I If I I IC
FREE!
Rlghf row. with
o Hckory Fams
Qft puc hose of $20 °' more. youl get a
deioous Ptemiun Cheese Bal
(o $3 99 vdue) FREB
'l'l l I \I 11111 II
TEN REASONS TO DO
YOUR HOLIDAY SHOPPING
AT WESTCLIFF PLAZA
1. Personalized Christmas Cards
2. Exquisite Jewelry
3 . Classic Menswear
4. Gourmet Cookware
5. Designer Eveningwear
6. Delicious Mall Order Gifts
T hf:Se Heuer( say Hoy er 1 black
and qolc! watrhcs ha 1e th<' style for a
rjay 1n !hr> off1CP or a night on thP town
Plue, the durabillly and water -res1st-
iirH r· +qr d .vorkour 1n the gym a day on
'h1· <.,111 -,lopes or a dive beneath the sea
Designed for the active life.
1 tdnd asserT'btcd by S.n1ss master
I d 1''W "" rt PS~ HPu(:rc;, .. :ire IT ade
Ir n '\'II j t1lr1< ~~ti! 5l<Jrr lf•<,C, SI Pel
N 1tr1"J11•fl;1llv s<•(llr-cJ hardened
rr11nPr rtl QIA~<,( ryst;:il<; Arni !hi:
di' 1o111nq rrl"r1< t()' of quart?
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r)tl I'"' 'I, IJ.1< '' N t(h VOUI active
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The time for Action
• Melt Away Mints
2 be~I $~.()(} $2 99 «
Coffee
But 1 pound. gn 1 Y1 lb
u(c Royal FR EE! Explree 11 /27 7. The Sweat Shop CHARLES H. BA RR
FASHION
ISLAND
Newport Beach
780-1488
WESTCLIFF
PLAZA
17th a lrvlne
M2-Gl72
8.
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10.
Esprit Sportswear for Girls
Fine Lingerie .
The American Country Store
M.m'*of
Am•kan Gem Sod•ty
Accncllt.d Gem
La._,at•'t
QuALITY IN .FASHION, GIFTS AND SERVICES FoR You.
ANDEE'S PLACE • ANTHONY'S SHOE REPAIR • BANK OF AMERICA • CHARLES H BARR JEWELERS
CHAMPAGNE. CROWN HARDWARE. DIANE. DR. ELDER. HALLIDAY'S. HICKORY FARMS
HUGHES EL RANCHO MARKET. IMAGES. THE MINUTEMAN WAY • NEWPORT-BALBOA SAVJNGS
SAV-ON DRUG ·SHELL OIL. THE S TOREKEEPER. THE STOREKEEPER FOR HER
V E1A'S INTIMATE APPAREL. VIDEO WAREHOUSE. WESTCLIF'F PLAZA CLEANERS
17th & IRYINE, NEWPORT BEACH
,
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17th & lmne
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'
llllJ Pilat THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 14, 19115 Ii]
L8guna Beach, Newport, FY bid for CIF vollefbell ftnale. D2.
48er quarterback Joe Monbtna •Y• he lan't ualng c1rup. D2.
His seaSon, not future, is over
Costa Mesa'S Crensha w
makes bi Impression,
despite mfsstng_pl~off s-·
By ROGER CARLSON
Of .. .,.., .... ....,
When the All-CJ F water polo scle<;uo ns are
released you can be sure the Newpon Harbors ~rona del Mars, Sunny Hills and Long Beach
Wilsons wiU be there -the power structure in
•polo nevCT changes a lo t.
\Yith the power goes the glory -10 just
about any spon.
That's what makes Costa Mesa H igh 's Alex Cr~~shaw stand out aJI the more. Crenshaw is
on his ~Y to .his second straight year as an All-
CIF choice w1th All-American credentials. Yet
for the third straight year his sea.son is finished
-JUSt as 1t 1s beginning for the rest of the cream
in this sport.
"He has the physical ab1hty," says his
coach, Mike Conroy. "No one in Clf· can
consistently shut him off offensively or de-
fensively."
In addition to those laurels, he shares Sea
View League Player of the Year honors with
Univenily H iah's Kevin McCotlouah.
Crenshaw ave~ nearly four goals a
pme in pacing Mesa to a 14-6 overall record,
but J.-3 in the ruacd Sea View L.cuue ncu.cd
just fourth place and when it came to push and
shove for the at-l&tJC entry in tbe 16-team 4-A
eliminations, Tustin ( 13-13 overall) won out.
Obviously, Conroy and his Mustangs
would have liked it to go their way, but they're
not complaining -Tustin played a to ugher
schedule, and included in 1ts record arc wins
over talented Long Beach Wilson and Um ver-
sity.
And despite the fact his cre<ienttals arc
flawless while he sits and watches others 10 for
1t, the 17-r.ear-old Crenshaw 1s not frustration.
"No, • he replies to the notion. "There's
always a future."
There's always been a long-standmg arau-
ment that to be seen or known you bave to be 10
the playoffs -but 1t d~n't seem to bother
Crenshaw.
"I feel I've had enough exposure," he
states. "I've alrc4dy been cont.acted Cbr, Long
Beach State and Oranse Coast College). '
His future may be at Long Beach State
-whcn:Conroy1scunv1nced be can wor\ into the
lmeup, even an bis freshman sason And
Crenshaw says be'd ltke to pursue one ofthret
avenues in the classrdOm -coaching. forestry
or commurucauons.
Before he gets into that, however, he still
bas one more spring of swtmming at Costa
Mesa.
At 6--0, 18~pounds, wt th c lodcmgs of H2
and I :4510 the 100 fly and 200 freestyle. Conro}
as convinced be can act down to the 49s and
I :42s this spnng,
Ltk.e most water Polo st.andouu ~oshaw '
admits a fondness for offense -but he's been
uled 1n a versatile manner-mann101 the hole
takJns the offense at the point as a dnvcr and
situng in the hole defensively, feodin& off the
opposition's best.
"I'm tryrn.a to build on the defensive pan
o f my Jame," be confides. "And I like counter-attacking. 100."
.. It's hard to bc a ooe-duncns.uuw player
in these limes," says Conroy "Thafs one ofh1s
str'Onl points, versallltty. And, be can get up
and down the ..pool."
He's the last of the Crcn!.haws to spa.ride at
'Mesa. Hts brother Tony preceded tum at Mesa
and 1s now an his final year at Long Beach State
What's next 1s the big spht -Conroy must
find another rncaJ uck.ct for his Mustangs -
and Crenshaw 1s look.mg for a uckc1 to Long
Beach State. Ala Crenabaw
--------------~-----------------------
Lady Trotter debuts
.Coaches tab Rebels
UNLV cast in role of favorite-
in PCAA; UCI selected third
By JOSEPH DUDEVOIR
0.., .... C.1 ,, ....
SAN JOSE -Entenng his silver anniversary of
coaching. U n1 vers1ty of Nevada-Las Vegas basJcctbaJI
coach JeIT)' Tarkan1an once aga10 finds himself an the
catbird's seat as his Runnin' Rebels art the unanimous
cho1c:c of bis fellow coaches to wtn this season's Pacific
Coast Athletic Assoc1at1on title.
As he prepares to embark on h1s-!5th season, and bJs
13th at UNLV , Tar'Kanian 1s 18 pounds ltghter. thanks to
his stay an the La Cost.a Longevity Center.
"It's the best tbmg I cverd1d." he said Wednesday. ··1
plan on making our players quit Junk food and get m
shape, too."
That's food for thought for the rest of the PCAA
coaches, who already think the Rebels arc 10 fine shape as
It IS.
But while UNLV and Tarkaman will be shoouog for
the Rebels' founh strajght title. no one said u would~
easy as it has been in the past. The consensus 1s that this
year will be a good one for the PCAA and there won't be
too many weak sisters to beat up on as was the case last
year.
Teams such as San Jose. UC lrvme and Fresno State
should battle the Rebels down to the biller end. And it's
possible the second-di\ 1s1on teams could jump up and
bite somebody as well. male.tog for a most 10tcrcsting and
unpredictable season
This is the wa) the conference stacks up. according to
the coaches:
1. Nevada-Las Vegas: "Evel)onc sa~s -were going lo
wtn the league," said Tarkaman. "We should have a good
team , but you have to remember, we lost thn-c quaht~
players in R1ch1e Adams, Spoon James and Ed Catch1035
(from a team which went 28-4) We didn"t ha'c a big
recruiting year either."
UNLV also has a fine supponmgcast. wtth 6-9. 230-
pound junior Armon Gt I ham at one forward. 6-6'11 junior
Eldndge Hudson at the other wtng spot and 6-1 0
sophomore c:cnter Richard Robmson rounding out the
front-liners. Mark Wade is the possible starter at the other
guard position.
!. Su Jose S&a&e: The father and son combo of
Spartans Coach Bill Berry and 6-8 guard Ricky should be
right on the Rebels' tails 1f San Jose can play t.be way
everyone thinks It can.
"Offensively, 1 thank we wtll have to be mott
(P1eue eee UKL V /1>6)
.Vikes, Edison
face final test
Sunset League title afSiake:
Mater Dei tangles with Friar~
Sunset League football champion Manna High puts
1ts title on the hnc tOnlght -with Edison challengifl8 for
the nght to share the crown and enter the CIF Big Five
playoffs nellt w~lc as the league's No I rtprcsent.auvc
Lynette Woodard became the fi.nt woman
e•er to play on the Harlem Globetrotten
when •he played an ahibldon game
Wedneeday ntcbt In Spokane.
But Tarlcan1an plans on senior guard-forward
Anthony Jones to taJce up some the slack. The6-6'11 swing
man averaged 13.3 points per game with 4.3 rebounds
and 3.3 assists. He also was the Rebels' best defcnsi\c
player, coming up wtth 53 steals and 14 blocked shots.
"We're look10g fo r a big year out of l\nthony," said
Tarlcan1an. "He finished strongly last year and we think
this 1s his vear."
Herc's a capsule look at tonight"s games. all
begrnning at 7 30.
Marina (4·0> vs. Edisoe (3-1): Manna 1s 0-10-1
against Edison. but enters as a slight favonte becauSt" of an
offense which has generated a 34-point average tn Sunset
League play Edison's passing revolves around Mike
Angclov1c to Rick Justice. Manna's best weapon 1s the
run. wtth Scan Magula and Malec tafford. backed b~ .a
sti ng~ defense 1tc Orange Coast College
CdM, Sailors
in semis Friday
Corona del Mar and Newpon
Harbor highs co ntinue their
quests for the C IF 4-A water polo
crown Friday wtth semifinal
matches at alternate sites.
Corona del Mar hosts Moore
League champ Wilson at New-
pon Harbor High in a 3 p.m. clash
while Newpon travels to Belmont
Plaza in Long Beach to take on
to~seeded Sunny Hills at 4.
Newpon defeated Marina,
1()...6, in the quanerfinals, while
Sunny Hills downed Viii Parlt,
12-8. CdM was a 13-6 winnerovcr
Santa Ana Valley and Wilson
downed Sonora, 14-6.
Sunny Hills is seeded No. I.
The CIF championship, for
years held on Thanksgiving Eve,
will this year be played Friday,
Nov. 22 at Belmont Plaza.
. . Youngest Cy Young winner
Service 13-11 vs. Mater Del ll ·l l: The Angelus
League finale for these two trad1t1onal nvals features
Scf" ate quancrback Tim Rosenkranz and Mater Dc1
quancrbaclc Todd Mannov1ch. Both stress the pass and
trail Bishop Amat (4-()) in the utlc ra~. Serv1tc"s
dcfcns1 vc rcputauon gi \cs 1t the edge Both bavc cliocned
a berth 1n the ClF Big Five playoffs Sue· Santa Ana
Mets' Gooden, 20,
unanimous selection
NEW YORK (AP) -There were sull
three days left before Dwight Gooden would
tum 2 1 years old. and already he had added
the National League's Cy Young award to
his list of birthday presents.
"I guess things have moved along pretty
rapidJyin mycarecr,"Gooden said Wednes-
day from the dais, a binhday calcc with 21
candles on it in front of him.
At the tender age of 20, Gooden had been
voted unanimously as the best pitcher in the
league, o ne year after be had been recognized
as the league's best rookie.
"last year. I won the roolcie award, and
that was special because you only have one
chance," Gooden said. "And the Cy Young
is a trreat honor after finishing second last year!"' --
The other unanimous (;, Young ~inners
~ere Sand)' Koufax 1n 1963. 1965 and 1966
-years when the C')' Young vo11ng covered
both l~ues -Denn) McLain in 1968. Bob
Gibson in 1968, Steve Carlton in 1972 and
1977, Ron Gu1dn-1n 1978. and Rick
Sutchffe in 1984 · tad1um
With his b1nh~y coming on Saturday,
Gooden became baseball's youngest C}
Young wtnner ever and also the first player
te win the rookie and Cr Young awards an
successive years. The right-bander had a
record of 24-4 and led the National League
in earned run average, stnkeouts, complete
games and mnings pitched m 1985.
Gooden received 120 points, 10cluding all
24 o f the flrst-place votes cast by the Ba~ball
Wnters' Association of America. He thus
became the seventh pitcher to receive the
award unanimously.
John Tudor of St. Louis, 21-8 dunng the
season. was second with 65 points. followed
by Orel Hcnhiscr of Los Angeles with I 7.
Joaquin Andujar of St. Louis wtth 6.
Fernando Valenzuela of Los Angeles wtth 4.
Tom Browning ofC'incinnati with 3 and Jeff
Reardon of Montreal with I. Tudor was
listed second on 21 ballots, with the other
second-place votes going to Hersh1scr,
Andujar and Valenzuela.
Votes arc ca st b\ t~o members of the
BBW AA from each National League Cll)
wtth a first-place vote counting five points.
second three points and third one
Gooden was 13 da)'s younger than
Valenzuela when the Dodgers lefty won the
award on Nov. 11. 1981 -I 0 davs after
tumin$ 21 And although Valenzueia 1s the
o nly pitcher ever to w10 the Cy Young and
rookie awards 1n the same year. Gooden wa!>
the first pitcher to win the awards in
succeSSI\ e seasons.
LapDa 8tacl11 13-3) vs. Sadd.ltback c S-l I: Hard-
runnmg Glenn Campbell and quancrback Myron Butler
lead the quick Roadrunners. who arc on their wa) to the
ClF Central Conference playoffs Laguna Beach. with a
forfeit loss lolhng their playoff chances. makes its final
Sea V 1ew League st.an be fort depanmg for a ne-w league m
1986. ite Ncwpon Harbor High (Saddlebaclc 1s the host
school)
In fact. onl) four players other than
Gooden have won both awards -
Valenzuela, utchtTe. Tom Seaver and Don
Newcombc.
Jrvlne (!-3l vs. Ml11lon Viejo (3-l -l): The 1wo are
13-4-1 combined, but all the losses and the lie a re m South
Coast League pla) If' anr (6-3) 1s out of CIF Southern
C'onfcr"Cnce pla\off cons1drrat1 on. and M1ss1on Vic.JO
(7-1-1) nttds a wan to grt thr No 3 spot for the playoffs.
J1mm) Raye J1m:ts If' 1ne at quancrbaclc. Site: Mission
Viejo H igh
Big Game afterthoughts
An unusual onside
kt ck and strange call
~t Edtson-FV game
Asad~ from the fi nal result -a
24-12 Edison Sunset Lcquc football
victory over Fountain Valley High -
two other 1temscame to liaht last
Wtt:k m the annual Big Game at
Anaheim tad1um.
Fint. the Barons offountain
Valleytncd an unusual onside lt1cltotT
th•tcamcwnhin a whbkeTof'bc1na
the clevetcSt steal of the year
Secondly. since when do you lose
the ball on a founh-down play when
the other team 1s1uilty ofun-
sporumanlike c-0nd~ct.,
But fint. bac k to the first Item.
The Barons tncd an onSJdc lnckoff
afterp&n~ lhcdcfiot to 24-1 2 b> kltk•na ofT wt th a "watermelo n"
autmpt. "GuyCarrouocame up with It,"
s.1d Fountain Va.llfy Coach Make
Milner "l lbink bcaot 1t from
watclunaa t Paul film ••
Whit the Founta1n Valle) a 'itant
001duawandwbat the Baron tned
to do, wu bck the t1p ofw blU u n
lay on •ts s1dc, caus1na 1t to spin 1n a
mcandcnna (ash1on
\\lule the ball !.lowl)' crept toward
thdO-\ard hne. 10 Barons muscled
their wa\ toward the 1ntenor of the
field, bLOding Edison hncmen b3 Ii;
and awa~ from the spinning ball
It came wtth1n inches of malung 11
to the SO The Barons· trailing k1ckrr
nttdedJUSt to fall on the ball to get
possession -had It reached the .50
But the ball pulled upshon and the
Chargers finally sufltd m to l"C('()vent
JUSt inches before it reached the SO
"There'stwawaystodo 1t," sayi
Milner. "You have the ball set on m
side and tr)' to kick u at the top With
the cl~u.. ta scrape it, to 1(1 a s-rallel
roll. I've seen a soccer k1c\cr take a
st.ralaht-ahcad approach. too. to tap •t
down the field.
"l four kicker had reached for 1t and
ptCkcd it up~ mll)\l ha~c Sot t\ The
offioals could casi1~ve thouaht 1t
had rcacbC!d lhc SO u~ 1t wa
difficult toxc. Theyspollcd llao inch
behind the SO. Edison could have
Jumped on the ball oocc 1 twas bcltcd.
but they had pcopk ban "I down on
them on the field. and m.lybt ~
hldn 't seen u btf on:."
Atany ratc.1t wuackvcratt.cmpt
As for tbt confu •nt~nalt). here'~
.. hat bappmtd 1n the final momenu
of\Mpme h was founh-and· 12 at the Foun·
taln Valkv 24 when Edison Quar-
RocE1
C11LSOI
PREP SPORTS
tcrback Mike AnfCIOVIC ran 12 yard
to the FV 12. A chpp1ng call. however.
foOowcd by an unsporumantite pen-
alty on the Barons first moved the ball
back to the FV 27, then baltway to thc
1oal to IDSlde tbc FV 14.
It left the b•U two yards short of
fint down yardqc&nd the offia.als,
led by Lee Phelps. called " f111t down
for Founwn Valley.
Asked 1fbc couJcfuplau\. Edttoo · s
Blll Wortman said be couldn't, but
al.lo Slld It wuo 't lft lUUC bccauX
lhcrc WU Just 4l tee0ods left and
Fountain ValJey wu down~ l l. -we Md Mc'boaoe (~•the
pmalty), .. say. WOft:man.. '-sup.
poeed.ly It WU all a dmd baU illUe
(allheU&h •fit was a dead ban aswe,
one would wondcrwby~WMb't a
measurement fOf fint dow9 oa tbe
(Pl1••-CA••--ID9l
,
I
1
f
v ~ll fYBALL
I_ ---
Artists, Sailors, FV close tO home
All three host m atches
in playoff s e ls
laaun& &ach High•s Artists. Newport
Harbor' 1 Sailors and the Barons of Fountain
·Yalleye:otet the stmifinaJ round oflhe CIF girts
volley~ playoffs to ntgbt. and all three manaaiect to $tay close to ho me for their
encounters.
Lquna takes on the S..A 'stop.ranked team
in Mira Cost.a, which has won straight-set
decisions in hs two playoff' matches. Karbor.
the secion~teeded team, face, Santa Moniaa.
whicb eliminated Woodbrid&e in the quar-
terfinals in a fivc:--pme marathon. Fountain
Valley meets Sunshine Leque runner-up Notre
Dame Academ y, a t.hrtt-prne.. winner over
J.ow"illc. Upn& playi at Newport Harbor. while
Ha.rt>or hosts Saota Monica at Laguna Beach ~ Fountain Valley face$ Nouc Dame at
&fuon High. All matches are scheduled for
7:30 swu.
Fountain VaJJeyaot by Lona Beach Wilson
TuctdaJ 1 I s.-4, I S-121 I S-1 O. and according to
Coach Marlon Sano. 11 hitlina its stndc.
.. Wc'n: in real &ood shape," he said. "Our
offense: is nght on track. Our middle is playin&
very well n&ht now."
Tbe Baron arc led by seniors Jackie Cook
and Jill M yers. .
•·They have' a couple of club players. '"said
Sano about Notre Dame ... They beat El Toro
fa irly handtly, and El Toro bas been playin&
some pretty good volleyball. We're in the
semifinals so ~ u pcct them to fight real bard."
be added.
Sano is opt1m1st1c about being at home al
this stage of the playoffs "It sho uld reall y work to our advantage,"
ht said ... We had a great crowd here last night.
We-had.tbout~or 700 people. ll was packc:d,
We're expccung another good crowd."
Mewnwhale, Laguna Beach can match up
with Mira Costa in a1.Jeast one re~pccl: They
have not d ropped a game 10 playoff competi·
uon
t The Mu tanas art the champion~ of the
touah Bay Le.quc ( 12-0) and have not lost a
match all year (1 9-0).
t..aauna finished Sea View play heO for
second with WoodbrtdlC. The Artists arr led by
ienior Wendy Whiting and Junior Katherine
Boehmer, both all-Sea View players.
· The Mustan~ winners of the Glendale,
San Marcos and l J.nivers11y tournaments this
year, sport S-11 mid<!le blocker Megan
McCallister, Junior outside hitter Lisa Arce
(5-11), and senior setter Lindsey Hahn. Mi ra
Costa went to the CIF semifinals last year
before falling to G ahr. but only lost one player
to graduation.
··w e're a mature team," Mustang Coach
Daelca Aldnch said ... We lost one senior. a back
row player. and that's all."
Ihty didn't losc many.prunts on the way to
the semis, eith er. Mara Costa defeated Downey,
15-3. IS-2. I S..S, in the opening round and put
away Mater Dei, 15-9, 15-4, 1 S-4, Tuesday.
Laguna Beach blasted Hueneme. IS· I,
·15-3. 15-10. in thit Quarterfinals. and defeated
Lynwood, I 5-7, I S-9, I S-7. in the fi rst round.
Newport Harbor's opponent may not ha ve
quilt the credentials Mira Costa has. but
neither can it be taken liahtly. Santa Monica
hails from the same league as Mira Costa, and
the only league losses suffered were at the hands
of the Mustangs.
The Vikings went fi ve games with Wood-
bridJC. put according to Santa Monit·a C'oach
Patu Bnght, the Vikes aren't tired.
.. No, we're inspired now," she said. ··1
thank we're on our way to confidence and we're ~Uing."
The Satlon; wall have to watch for 6-0
m iddle blocker Tiffany Rochelle, and 5-6
outside hitter Elina Covarrubias. Setter Jenny
McNamara. middle blocker Kathleen Dtxon
and sister Marianne, and Leilani Johnson
.comprise the rest-Of the Vikrnp' staners.-.
Lara Asper, the most valuable player in the
Sea View League thas season, sparks Newport
Harbor. along with Laura Power, Jenny Evans.
T(.llcy Krueger, Sara Allison and B«ky
Sherwood.
Memories of fatal
crash 15 years ago
linger at Marshall
Sb:era hold off Bulla, 110-106
Mo1e1 Maloae scored 21 points and Ill
JaUu1 Ervla1 and Sedale Tlarutt each
added 19 as Philadelphia defeated Chi-
OCC seeks elusive
victory at Citrus
cago, 110-106, Wednesday night in a R--tl } h
NattonalBasketball AssociaJionpm""-'ll...,..._......~ol.Uh-J~ US erS a SO Ope
The 76crs led by 17 points three times in the first half t' d tri h
threw for 46 7 yards and three touch-
downs.
From AP clilpak laet
H UNTINGTON, W. Va. -Assist.ant [11]
Athlet'ic Director Ed Starling was missing
his first football trip of the season so he
could move his family to a new house. C<>rcaptain Na te
Ruffin, a defensive back sidelined with an arm injury,
gave bis sc,at on the airplane to a booster and went to the
movies.
before taking a 62-45 advantage at halftime ... In other 1 Or fOa ~ffi p
NBA action, Den.nl1 Jolut1oa scored a season team-high
30 points, including nine in a two-minute stretch in tfte
foun h penod, and Boston rolled to its seventh
Licking 1ts wounds after a dis--
heartening 36-35 loss to Palomar last
week, Orange Coast College travels to
Citrus Saturday night with one thing
in mind -trying to secure a Mission
Conference football victory.
Sadd.leback (7-0, t -0) at Raoclao
Sutla10 (J-S, 5-3): It will be a finaJ
tuneup for the Gauchos before a n
expected appearance in the Pony
Bowl Dec. 1 at Orange Coast.
Based on previous scores this year.
it figures to be a high-sconng game.
PIRATES,
UC/ROLL
I
TOW/NS
Oranae Coast College recovered •
from a 1low start to pin 1t 15-13, IS· 5,
I S-3 defeat-On host Rancho Santiago
Wednesday ni&hl in a South Coast
Conference voOeyball match.
With the victory. the Pirates now
are in a position to wrap up second
place in the sec if they can defeat
Cerritos at ho me trus Fnday.
OCC 9-3 in conference play. was
sparked by the play of freshman
outside hitter Jennifer Dciley, who
had seven kills. and Barbara Baily's
six kills and fi ve blocks.
The Pirates $trugled in game one.
traahng by scores 'Of 9-4 and 12-11
before closing it out at 15-13. After
1ha1. OCC was never threatened.
"Ra ncho Santiago came out ready
10 play, but after we won the fU"St
game, it took a little out of them,"
expla ined OCC Coach Jane Hilgen-
dorf.
It was the seventh straight victory
for Coast, which meets a Cerritos
team that is 8-3 and could take over
the runner-up spot in the sec with a
wi n over the Pirates Friday.
In a college match Wednesday, UC
Irvine won its .sixth match of the
season against 15 setbacks by turning
aside host Loyola-Marymount,
I :C.15, I 5-9;-i-5-6 l S-12.--
Senior maddie blocker Cindy
Ro hrig was credited with 16 kills and
freshman middle blocker Kris Rob-
erts notched 11 lciUs and seven solo
blocks in the oon~onfcrcncc match.
The Anteaters wilJ host Northern
Anzona Friday night at 7:30.
Fifteen years later. both men remember rushing
through the cold , rainy Saturday night to Tn-State
Airport, hoping reports they·d heard of an airpla ne
CTaSh were WTong.
.. We ran unul we got to the top of the hill and all we
could sec was yellow flames ... Ruffin said.
.. We stayed for seve ral hours. waiting ... But w1Lh
the intense firc and burning you couJdn't get within a
consecutive victory, I 18-114
over Indiana. In winning. the
Celtics extended the Pacers' win-
less strcalc on the road to 18 games
over the past two seasons ... CUII
Levtq1coa scored 23 points.
many in key situations, and
Atlanta withstood a late threc-
point bombardment from Walter
Davi• as the Hawks kept Phoenix
winless this season with a 108-101
victory. With the Hawks ahead
Malone 104-90 and 2: 18 left in the game.
Davis hit three consecutive three-point shots to cut the
margin to fi ve points with just I :24 remaining ... Altoa
Ll1ter and Ricky Pierce scored 22 points apiece to lead
Milwaukee to an easy I 37-118 victory over Detroit ...
Dallas stopped Utah, 115-100, behind Rolaado Black-
Meanwhile, Golden West will try
to regain the winning touch when it
hits the road to meet El Camino in a
Pac-9 test .
Herc's a capsule look at this week's
games, all beginning at 7:30:
Oru1e Coast (l -5, 1·6·1) at Citn1
(t-4, t -6): The Pirates O!llY have to
look at last week's effort oy the Owls
against Saddleback to know they will
be in for another tough game Satur-
day.
Sikma shakes ~off
his shaky start
• couple hundred yards. There was nobody getting near."
Starling. now an associate athletic director, found
the site cordoned off. After being told "everybody's
d ead," he drove back to campus to compile the list of
passengers on the OC-9.
~incc Nov. 14, 1970. Marshall University's his tory
has been tied to d ie plane crash that claimed 75 lives,
including 37 football players. its coach, athletic staff
and several boosters.
"It was something that lingered over the players:·
said Ruffin , who identified the remains of has
teammates. "Nobody wanted to come here for a while.
Nobody wanted to land at that aarpon."
Ruffin. now personnel director for the Hunu ngton
Publishing Co.. wlll speak today at the annual
memon al service on campus. He said he thinks Nov. 14
always wiJI be marked on some calendars.
"It will never be forgonen, always memorialized as
long as Marshall stands and as long as they have sports.
You cannot stnke up thl band or throw a football in the
arr without rcmembenng that there was a team that
started out and suddenly varushcd ... he said.
Quote of the day
Rose r Laorla, plan ning to retire afte r 30
years as a thoroughbred trainer by saddling
Chiefs Crown 1n the Breeders· Cup Classic. on
h1S early-to-bed. early-to-rise routine which has
precluded la te-night televisio n watching: ",With
me. Johnny Carson's only a rumor."
Mets, Boston swap 8 players
NEW YORK -T he New York Mets ii obtained left-handed pitcher Bob 01eda
from Bosto n Wednesday in an eight-player
trade that sent two young pitchers to the
Red Sox, the Mets said
The Mets sent nght-handers CalVJn Schiraldi and
Wes Gardner to the RC<f-SOx along wa1h0utfielders
John Chnstensen. a product ofTroy High and Cal State
Fullenon. and La Schelle Tarver. Coming to the Mets
along wllh Ojeda will be three other young pitchers -
Tom McCanhy, John M11chell and Chris Bayer.
In another deal Wednesday, the Detroit Tigers
traded infielder Barbaro Garbey to the Oakland A·, for
sw1tch·h1tt1ng outfielder Da\C Collins.
C'olhns. 32, is an 11-)car veteran who bas played in
both leagues and now 1s Joining his s1 1t1h major league
team
Paper wants culprit's identity
SAN FRANCISCO -The San Fran· [i]
c1sco Examiner 1s willing to pay S500 lo c II •
find out who threw a snowball that may
have CO'it that city'\ 49cr~ a lootball game
No. the ednor!> don't want 10 tar and feather the
per~n. The> JU~t want his story
The ~nowball landed on the icy field at Denver'!>
Mile High Stadium on Monday n1&h1 an front of San
Francasco·s reserve quanerback. ~It Ca vanaugh. a~
he was about to spot the ball for a 19-yard field goal
attempt b> Ray Wenching. Dmracted. (avanau&h
bobbled the ball and wa~ fortcd Lt> try a f)a\\, which rcu
1ncomplcte
The Denver Brunc;.o<. won the game 17-16
Eum mt'r Ld1t or Oa"e Burgin Yid the reward will
be paid to the thrower for h1~ or her story, 1f 11 can be
corroborated by two w1tnessc!I. ·
"He mu!>t have a heck of an arm:· Burgin said of
the 'lnowball thrower, who mu~t contact Examiner
Sports Editor Charle\ Cooper by noon Fnday.
man'• 37·points.
Flames earn tie on late goal
Calgary's Carey WUaoa scored with ~
less than fi ve minutes left in the third '
period Wednesday ni&ht to earn the
Flames a 3-3 National Aockey League tic
with Winnipeg. T wo goals by the Jets• Scott Anliel early
in thcthard period, the first on the power play, had given
the Jets a 3-2 lead . Wilson defl~ in a shot by
dcfcnscman Neal Sheehy at 15:57 to i)bjucc the tic ...
Elsewhere in the NHL Wednesday, left winger Cart
F raser 's 65-foot slap shot and three assists and a pair of ~oaJs from hnemate Troy Marray boosted ChicaJO past
uebec, 6-4. The Black Hawks moved into a tie with
e St. Louis in the Norris Division ... Center Roa
Francis collected four assists, three in the second
period, and Ray Nectfeld scored twice to spark Hartford
to a 5-2 victory over Minnesota ... Jolua Tacker'• fifth
goal of the season snapped a third-period tic and
propelled Buffalo to a 6-4 victory night over Bosto n ...
A tie-breaking goal credited to Mike Rosen which was
put in the net by Montreal defenscman Rick Green, and
lbe strong goaltcnding of Jolua Vublesbroock led the
New York Rangers to a 5-2 victory that halted the
Canadiens' fi ve-game unbeaten streak . . . Terry
Ratkowski scored two first-period goals on plays with
talented center Marlo LemJea:x a nd Pittsburgh coasted
to an easy 6-3 vict ory over Vancouver. It was only the
Penguins' fifth wan in 16 outings this season.
Lyle leads Hawaii golf
Citrus actually owned a lead
(26-25 ) over the unbeaten Gauchos in
the final 51h minutes before bowing,
39-26.
''I'd have to rate Orange Coast and
Citrus pretty even," said OCC Coach
Dick T ucker. ..Both teams have
played Saddleback fairly close, and
our scores against Palom ar were very,
similar. It figures to be a tight pme. •
Citrus' offense is led by halfback
Paul Hewitt, the second leading
rusher in the conference with 634
yards and five touchdowns. Against
Saddlcback last week, Hewitt rushed
for 209 yards on 39 attempts.
Goldu West (3-3, 3-4-1) at E l
C.mlao (%·4, 3-5): The Rustlers hope
to 1gmte their running game against
the Wamors, who are last in the Pac-9
staustically in team and rushing
defense. yielding an average of 409
totaJ yards an outing this year.
Quanerback Ron Barber keys the
El Cam ino passing game, having
completed 137 of 238 pass anempts
for I ,84 I yards and 12 touchdowns.
Barber foads the conference ih all the
major passing categories.
His main targets are Mike Wimber-
ly (40 catches, 437 yards) and Shawn
Hodges (34 catches. 515 yards).
The Warriors ha ve lost four
straight games after opening Pac-9
play with a pair of victories.
One of those setbacks was to Tali.
45-35, m a IUlme m which Barber
Sonics' standout
scores 20 points
as Clippers tumble
L:OS ANGELES (AP)-For eight
years, Jack Sikma has been a rock of
stability for the Seattle SuperSonics.
This year, however, he's been pretty
shaky.
Silcrna finally showed signs of his
old, steady self Wednesday night m
the Sonics 93-89 victory over the Los
Angeles Oippers at the Sports Are na.
Silcrna poured in I 3 founh.quarter
points and finished with a scason-
high 20 as the Sonics rallied from an
early deficit to post their first road
wan o f the season.
SJ6ing into Wednesday night's
game, the 6-11 center had &ecn
averaging 11.7 points and shooting
j ust a shade over 34 percent, com-
pared with a career average of 16.8
points a nd a career shooting per-
cent.age of 4 7 percent.
"For me. 11 was probably mr, m ost
positive step of the season, · said
Sikma, who also led the Somes with
I 0 rebounds. 'T ve lx.-en struggling
but I was confident 11 would end
sooner or later.
Seattle Coach Bernie Bickerstaff
said he knew that Sikma's game
would com e around.
"Jack's a pro. He's been there for a
long time," Bickerstaff said. ··He was
pressmg and hopefully he's going t~
relax a lntle bit now. It was JUSt a
matter of time for him."
Gerald Henderson scored 19 points
for Scan le and rookie Xavier
McDaniel and center Tom Cfaambers
each added 12.
For Los Angeles. the ~me simply
added to its mounting mjury tut. It
looks like the Clippers, already play-
ing without their three top forwards.
have lost their top scorer, Derck
Smith, for a while.
After scorins a game-high 26
points, Smith inJurcd his knee driving
for a basket late in the fourth quarter.
.. Derek Smith injured his knee
driving the lane," said OT. Eugene
O sher, the club's physician ... He felt
the knee pop in the back and the~
was extensive. h 's most likely
cartiledge rather than ligament dam-
age. Derek can't straighten his leg at
all."
The Clippers were down to nine
playe rs going into the game. as
forwards Marqu~s Johnson, Cedric
Maxwell and Jamaal Wilkes were all
sidelined with injuries.
"I once saw this many guys go
down, but it was in a war movie, ..
Maxwell said after the game.
Smith was taken to Daniel Free-
man Mercy Marina Hospital in
Marina Del Rey for X-rays and
further examination.
Despite their depleted troops, the
Clippers led until midway though the
third quarter and were still Wlthin
three points in the final three
minutes. KAPALUA. Hawau -An inter-l!I
natJo nal p-oup of contenders could only
shake their heads and shrug their sho ulders
1lt Sandy Lyle's continued mastery of the Jl 6 t dd Ka~.1Th;'J0~ff~~~~~%fic~i~~·favorsa1onghi1ter," 1VJ.0Il ana a resses rumors
Corey Pavan said.
"I beheve Sandy Lyle may be the longest hatter in
the world right now," said Masters champion Bernhard
Langer of West G ermany.
Mark O'Meara fut 1t all together with a resigned
shake of his head. "I there eve r was a golf course built
for one player. it is this course built for Sandy Lyle. He
cam cs the fairway bunkers and he's hitting arons to all
the par-5s," O'Mc.ara said.
O n Wednesday, it all added up to a 6-under-par 66
for Lyle and a o ne-shot lead after the first round of the
Kapalua International.
Lyle, however, has only a one-shot margin in the
chase for another $1 25,000 this week. And his
challengers are some of the world's best -Langer,
Pavan, Hawanan Open champ O'Mcara. Andy Bean.
John Mahaffey, Hawaiian club pro David Ishii.
Canadian Dan Halldorson and Lanny Wadkins, the
1985 Player of the Year on the Amencan Professional
Golfers Association Tour ·
Television, radio
TELEVISION
I 0 p.m -WRESTLING: Channel 56
11 p.m . -BOXING: ChaAncl 56.
RADIO
7:30 p.m . -PRO BASKETBALL: Portland
at Lakers. Kl.AC (570).
49ers' quarterbac k denies
s tortes_!.!nking him to drugs
REDWOOD CITY (AP)-Joe Mo ntana of the San
Francisco 49ers said Wednesday that he and Coach Bill
Walsh had decided it was time to speak out about rumors
linking the quancrback to drug use "instead of just
leaving a lot of questions that seemed to be going
around."
WaJsh said a t his weck.ly news conference on
Tuesday, a day off for players, that he was aware o f many
rumors concerning Montana and druss. The National
Football League team's coaching staff and officials are
convinced the stories are ·•absurd. ridiculous, factJcss
stnngs of gossip," he said
Montana said during a break 10 Wednesday's
practice, "Bill said he thought it would be best Lo get
things out in the open. I said tnat was fine with me instead
of j ust leaving a lot of questions that seemed to be going
around."
Walsh said Montana had given drug unne sample&
which showed him to be clean. The quarterback sajd
Wednesday that because of the widespread rumors "I
told ham any time he wanted, or the players, or Eddie
(owner Edward DcBan olo Jr.), the people I feel J would
owe anything to ... I would take any test they wish."
Montana said he didn't think the rumors. circulating
throughout lhts season, have a ffected his play.
"One thing I have a lways been able to do 1s not let
things like that bother me on the field. I don't think that
(the rumors) has anythinJ to do with m y play," Montana
said. "But when m y wifo hears it, my folks bear it, it's
tough to deal Wlth that."
The 49ers, reign inf Super Bowl champions fell to S-5
this season with a 17· 6 loss to the Denver B~oncos on
Monday night. Montana completed only 17 of 40 passes
in the wintry conditions at Denver. He went mto the game
with a season completion average of .623.
Montana joked Wednesday, .. Last week I was the
lcadt ng passer in the league . ~ . I wonder wha't the other
guys are on." •
Baseball free agency
group is largest ever
Kings belted
again, 7-2
Waltrip seeks title in Riverside Sunday
NEW YORK (AP)-M~or league
baseball's laraest ~up of free aaents
had the oppon un1ty to neaotiatc with
any team stan ina Tuesday •mid
indications that club owners will hold
the lioe on bit salaries and lona·tenn
contracu.
The last 11 players to fi le included
HaJ McRae, veteran dcsianated hitter
for the world champion Royals, and
infielder Bobby G rich of the Angels.
'the others were infielders Dickie
Thon of Houston. Tony Pera of
Cincmnali, lvan OcJcsusofSt Louis,
Indians outfielder Ben ny Ayat.;-and
pitchers Bruce Kison of Boston, Bart
Jobnsoo of lhe Wh.ite Sox, Marty
Bystrom of the Yanlcce~ Mike Noma
aod TommyJ ob.n of Oakland.
rNG LEWOOD (AP) -John
Ogrodnick and Gerard Oallant each
scored two goals as the Octroil Red
Wings skated to an easy 7-2 National
Hockey Le.ague victory oxcr lhc Los
Anacles Ki nas Wednesday n•&h\.
Oallan1 collected the pme'• tint
aoaJ at 2:08 of the opetlina period an.d
added wha t proved to be I.he pme--
winncr at 16: I S o( the leCOnd period.
Oallant's second tally pvc the Red
Winas a l-2 edae and waa th.c first of
flve Strllaht loals.
RIVERSIDE !AP) -r>nrrcll
WaJtnp ha~ been there before For
8111 Ell1011. it's all a new expenencc
Those two wall be in the pre\ ur~
cooke r thu Wttkend when the
NA.SCAR Grand National \tock c~r
circuit v1s11~ R1"cn1de lntematiorrat
Ra.ccway for the ~\On-cnd1na We~t·
em 500
WaJuip. who won Winston Cup
utln in 1981 and 1982 and has come
d ose two other limes, sacs into
Sunday's SOO-k.tlomctcr (312-milc)
event ~th 1 2~point edge -
4, 14 I..,., 121 -over Elholt. who
oevtt hu been throuah this before
"Tbt place '° be head1na 1n10
Rh ersade 11 in the It*.!. and that''
--
where we are." said Waltnp ... T wenty
points 1!ln'1 much, but 11 does JJVC us
the cu\h1on of betnf able to finish •
couple of spots behind Bill and still
win the ch1mp1o nsh1p ..
Waltnp has the advantaae ofknow-
1 n& he can shut Elliott ou t 1f ht
rin1•hcs SC<'ond o r third at leads It
least one lap. which" worth an ~ittra
five points.
"What I really have to do 1s raet
and keep Bill in siahl," added
Waltnp. "r can't1ust take it ea y, but
the p rnsurc really at on Bill. He bas to
'°for the win .. ,
Elliott, at 30 ci"1t yan younscr
tha n Wallnp. dtsqrcn abou t whe re
the preuurt is..
.. Darrell bas everylhlna to lose."
l:lhott &aid ... We can go fo r broke
because we have nothlna to lose. I'm
&01n1 to try to win the race and lead
the most laps (worth another fi ve
points). •
"He'1ao1n1 to tuvc to run aood He
can't be too conserva1ivc a nd a 101 of
th1n11 can happen a t R1venttk nu~
as a traek that's very hard on race cara. ••
nus 11 the seventh consecuu ve
)Uf an wtuch the champton&h1p
blnle bu come down the final race on
the seuon, an event N D on the only
road coune the G rand Naoooal c:an
have bttn compcuna on 1n rt«nt
years.
•
Eleven players beat the Monday
midniaht deadliM, brinsina the total
to 63, the ~number to fllc since the proccsa m 1976.
As pan o ocw labor contract
rcaclM:d in A"l\llt. O\lt maru the first
)Qf \Jltt playera do DOt have to IO
tbf"OQlh 1 ~ntty draft, which hm·
1ted uda (Tf'C ~1·1 deahnp to I J
teamJ. Socb tceJN u the Kansas Qty
ROYals. Teus Ra~ Ocvdand
lodtans. Ph1ladclphi.1 Phillies., Los
Allftlcs Qodaers. Montreal ~pos
Chicqo Cubs. Houston Allros and
even the New York Yan~ to a a.maUet cSeaRe. ba •e ct.imcd they ~tJ)' have no plana to enter the
frte a~nt market.
•
The btllCSl pnzc 1s slugjn& o ut-
fielder Kirk G ibson, who made
S68S,000 last aeason and opted for
ft"C •ftCY when the T~ offered
him a three-~ deal.
The thrce-yur offer wu a de·
p&rture from rc«nt years for the
Tiaen. who have a;ven longer tenn
ex>oll'acts to 1oCCOnd ba.cman Lou
Whitaker, sbomtop Alan Trammell.
out~lder Chet Lemon and pitchers
J1ck MOf'ril and Din Petry.
for Opoanick. wbo acorcd SS
aoaJs last year for Detroit. his two
aoaJs Wcdne1day broke a ninc-pJM.
person.al aoe.1-.:onna drouabL
Quit Ci~i. Ron Dupay and
Reed Larson afso tcOted roi Detroit
wbJcb won for the third' time in 16
pmcs to far this tcaton.
Paul G uay and Phil Sykes each
scol't'd for Los An,cles. which 11• it4
record at home fall to 1-7-1 tb11
s.taton. The Kin have won only
thf'ft times in I 6 pmet o~U thfs
yar. ..
'·
FoR TH£ REcono
NflL
•111,TIOMAL Cie*'lllllMC•
W..t w I. T ll'ct. "" .. A ·-• , 0 .IOO 2lO ISi kfl Fr•ncl~ j s 0 500 144 IM Ne'#C>nffllt , 7 0 300 17' t'2 Allanlt I ' 0 100 Ill l01
C...• Cllle.OO 10 0 0 1.000 27' 121 MlMellOt• s 5 0 500 200 207 Detroit s s 0 500 173 220 GrewiB•v 4 ' 0 .400 1'1 ?ll T•mot1 l•v 1 • 0 100 200 111 •••• O•lle• 7 3 0 100 220 • 1$.)
NY Gt•ntt 1 l 0 100 m 110 P11119cM1pn19 s s 0 500 ISt t•2 WH l'lt1191on s s 0 500 .. s Ill
St Loula • • 0 400 "' m
AMa•ICAN CON,l.aNCI
Denver
S..111• .......
s.noi-
1(•11M1 Clly
Clncl11Ntl
P1t1M>uro11 , ....... nd
Houston
New Enotend
NY Jeh
Mlem l
tndlan•ooO•
l ufl•lo
WtJt 7 3 0 • • 0 • 4 0 5 s 0
3 1 0
c.,.. .. s s 0 s s 0
4 • 0
4 6 0 ....
100 ?36 1t7 .00 , .. 205 '°°no 127
500 260 2'S
)00 1'9 240
500 197 ,..
500 219 111
.400 160 IS9
400 1'2 20S
1 3 0 700 207 111
1 3 o 100 ns 1$6
' 0 600 2'1 211 3 0 JOO 111 1.11
2 • 0 .200 141 116
SV..¥'1 G-
llM\I •I All•nt• (Cll.tnMI 1 •t 10 • I'!\ )
CtnclnN ll et lt•lelr•
lutt11o el c i.v1M1nd
Chlc:llDO et 0 1tM11
hmot1 lev et New Yorio. J1t1
Ml•ml 1t lndl1ll9POll1
N1w ~1Mn1 n . Green 8ev •t Mll-w1ul!H
Pltllbur.oh •t liOUSLOll
Pllll•delolll• et SI LOUii
S.n oi-., Denver
Mlnnet011 et Detroit
N .... Enul•nd el S..1111 t<enMt City et S.n Fr•ncl.co
~'f'•Genw Nlw Yorli. Gt.1111 et WHl'tlnGton CCN>n·
net 7 el• Pm I
Rams •tattsks
Sc9r'I w Quef'ten
~·· lO 61 JO ~ISi ·-:M 6J SI SS-210 TEAM
°""'*"' """'' Finl down• 176 "1 Y •rctl rv1h1110 m 1111 Yeros oeulng 1'20 1653
To111 n•d• 209 2941
Pun!• Sl·42 7 59·'1 7
P.nl11111 '3·11:1 4t·S09 FumDIH·loll 17·13 ll-12
Rull\11111 TOI s 11 P•l.intl T01 11 ' •11urn T01 ' 4 Tote! TOI 11 14
INDIVIDUAL
9'ullllfte Tdl Ylh Ave TO Dickerson 173 64' 31 • lttddln S6 276 •.9 0 Wlllle 61 2SO 4.1 l
Celn II '6 4.2 0
aroca 11 34 20 0
Ellerd 2 1e •• 0 0 Gum9n 4 16 4 0 0 arown I 4 •.O 0 t<«no 1 ·2 -10 0 To111t l30 1211 )9 11
Oooonent• 2SS 9lt l7 s ........
.. A l"C ... Yeh TO
lroc:tl 243 144 10 1no 9 l(emp 2S 10 I 130 0
Tot1l1 26' 154 11 1900 9
Oooonent• 367 1n 23 21'7 II
•KeMna Ne. Y• TO Ellllrd ll S71 l
Hvnl« 1' W 1
Oudl WW UI 20 )4 I 3
0 Hiii 16 ISO I
Oicll«Wfl I 4 I 02 0
Youne 12 I '1 0
ltldden 12 93 0
C•ln S 24 0
ar-n 3 27 0
Gum.n 2 21 o aerbe< I 1' 0
Mc:Ooneld I 23 0
Whit• I 12 0
Totela IS. 1900 9
Oooonlnll lff 2197 '' Other lffd1n Puntlne -H1tcller,
Sl·42.5 evg . l(lckoff returns -Brown,
e-34.0 evv .• WllH•. 14· 19.0 evo, Celn, 6· 19.2,
Pun! r.iurni -EMerd, 20-13.9 I YO.; Infer·
ceollon• -1rvln, •·ll, Johnson, 5·96,
Green, S-43, Ekern. 2· 55; Collln1, 2-e;
Cromwell, 2· S, Wiicher. 1-0
COLLEGE
ll'•dfk· 10
UCLA
4rlrone Stett
Welhlnoton
Ar Iron• use
Oreoon SIMtord
Oreoon St111
W.ll'llno1on St•I• C6llfornl9
C•lfllf•ioce WLT
S I 0
4 I 0
4 2 0
3 2 0
3 2 0 2 2 0 1 4 0 , 4 0
2 s 0
, ' 0 Se1Unllll'f'• C..m..
Oreoon Slet1 et UCLA
USC el WHhln91on
srenford •I Arlrone Stet•
Oreoon 11 Arlrone
o-..11
WLT 1 I I
1 2 0 s 4 0
6 ) 0
• 4 0
4 4 0
J • ()
l 6 0
2 1 0
4 6 ()
Mon11119 s1111 11 "'•"'lnoton s1111
<non· conference I
~-Chtrrv. 0r ..
MIYIS, WSU
Cruldler, USC
Primus. UCLA
FIMIV, Welh
Ad9ma. Artz
Mlllone, osu
9.,11«0, Cel
Muller, Sten l'lort«. wsu
•USHING
TCI YdL TD
IS7 m I
"' •12 '
"" S9t ' 105 46t 3
97 4'3 s Ill '51 I
Ill SIS I
Ill 571 3
HM m 6 11• ... , s
"ASMNG
A.,.
l1l 0
1013
14.1
66.9
66.I
57 2
S7.l
57 I
St 0 SS. I
~..... ,.A l"C "' TD .-cf. Y-.
Peve, Sien 3'2 229 11 e t70 1217
ltvlllen. wsu 151 14' 11 10 .512 197'
V.•N~ll, ASU 2'5 l>t t I .5'7 17'1
Mllltt. Ore US 14' t IS .SS7 1'6t
Miiien, Wetll 2 ... 15t 1• ' "' 15'S Norrie, UCLA 171 106 1 f .620 I.OS
Jen11ltl1, Arlr 7l6 12S t 6 SlO 1Jll
ar-n. Ce l 211 111 II 6 S2' 1Jl7
WIOUrv. use 111 " • • sn 1190
a.dfonl. Cel .. u ' , ,,. '"
~-MlAI«, St1n
.. tv. St•n •~.osu let'llM,On
CNN. WSU
Morrl•, $Ian
Horton, Arlr
J-.St•n
••ca1V1NG
Hiii, W•th W..tMnby, W•lh
K.AA
c 0 -WLT
l'rltllO Stett ' o o Lone hectl St•ll 4 1 O
Nt'fede-LH V-1 • 2 0
CS Ful«'ton l 2 0 PKlflc 2 4 0
Sen JoM Stell ' • 0
Ult/I Sl•I• 2 4 0
..._, Me•lco Ste t• O • O
f'C Y*' TO 61 549 l
n '" , SI 601 1
44 "° ' .,. 405 2
l6 211 ()
JS SS. l » $.1' 2 » 507 •
J3 1" 0
o-.11
WLT I 0 ,
' • 0 s • 0 , s 0
4 ' 0 2 I 0
2 • 0 l • 0 ....,...,.,..,_
C-4 St•i. l'ulerton et NonMrn Ari•-·
II (1101hAi411 ... Q ) •
Fr-SI•• •' l.Oll9 IMO! Stete. 11 W.1 T1ut Slete •' New Melllc:o Stell
(Mn C.•"4 encl) ........ Lat v ................. _
(W~IM•IClt)
..oMDUAA. nATllTG •UIMIM TC8 Y& TD
1f1 7l2 •
1n 1W J
1tl 510 J 1l 41> I • .., s
~u..e
... ,. , ,.,,
kl Sl6
"'
..... ~A fl"( "' TD flod.. Y&
Ge¥nw. 1.as inn• u 11 m "" ....,_, l'SU 166 146 '11 "2 teei
lllalw9ntl. UNI. v ttl Q1 1 t oM MM
JllCkMll, UOfl I• J6 I t ..Sit .. can.on, SJS n• 61 I J M1 NI
~ ...
LCIOtn, LIS
Temtllleton. 1.1$
llowtev.1. NMSU
Orv, L•S Welker, SJS
Meredith, SJS
l"C Ya TD
'2 Ml It
41 m I 0 .,, • • .., s n 2S> • 11 m 2
SCOttllfO "'-* TD X~ 'O f't'I..
11111, "U 0 » IS al
I.GO.it, LH 10 0 0 60
Wllllamt, FSU e 1 0 50
W9111r, NMSU 0 14 It SO
SkloHf. FSU e 0 0 .e
Meredll"• SJS j I 0 ,,
Cemmuftfty ceae..
IOUTHLAND .-OLL
,...., SdlMt ·~ ......
1. ht••• di ••••• ,. 2. Fulllrlon M -0 " l SOu1,,.,...,,.,n e l·O '3
4 Gronmont e-1•0 " 5 Tift •·1·1 U
' LA Vel!ev •·1-0 6' 1 Glendale e-1 ·0 62
• Moofp.,k 1·1·0 l6 t. Cerritos 5·2· 1 )0
10. Wftl LA •-t ·O 17
Otllen tecieMno vo111· 99k«•fleld <S·ll, 12; ttt~ (S-J), 10, C011191 Of 11\t
0.-t 16-2). e; Sen a.rnardlno (6-1), 7
N .. lcNf! ....... TONtGHT•s OAMeS
s-et ........
Merine VL Edison 11 ~•llOI Co111
Cotleoe
SM View L1eW1
Leoua. '""' YL ~ •• New· Doti H•rDor
Seutll CMlt LMt1U1
lrvlne et Mission Vltlo ..,..,. ......
Ser111t1 n Meter Oii 11 S.1111 All9
Sl•dlvm c;.....,,., ........
Foo111m "'· Orenoe 11 El Moclerl9 .,,... .........
KelelMI VI. CvSWH• •I w ... 1ern
E1oer11111 vi. LOlire 11 Le P•lm• Perk
'9'IOAY'S OAM8S
SllllMt L.._.
Founleln Velllv •t Huntlnolon IHc:l't
OcMn VI-el W11tmln111r
... View LMtUe
Nlwoorl Harbor Vl. Cor-del Mir el
~•noe Coe11 Colleol
Colll Mew n . Etlenc'-i 11 N .... POl't
Herbot Woodbrldol 111. Unlvenllv e t Irvine
Seutll C..st ......... Sen Clemente Y\ El Toro el Mlu lon
Vlelo
LeguN Hlht et 01111 HIH1
~ ......... 8 JP!Oo Amel I I SI Peul
8111'1oo Montoomerv et Plu1 X ClllMv ......
El MoOeN vs. C.nvon •I El Modine
Vllte Perk vi. S.nl• AIWI ., S.nl• AM
Stac:llum
S.nt• All9 V•lllY et Tutlln ....... ~
1(911111<1v o PKfflcl 11 8olM Gr Inda
Los AlemltOI Y\. Et Oore<IO 11 Ve llnele ,.,_..,, L.-..
B.-Perk vs. Trov et Fullel'lon
Fufl«ton vs. Sonor• 11 lA Hebr•
LA Hebre "no SUMy Hilb et IU1119 Peril
~~ .........
LIM Amloo• "'· S.ntlaoo et Garden Grove ar....L-.w
Velenci. n . AneMlm et LI P••m• Perk
lf'ff·0Hnd6 11 w111ern
UTUltDAY'S GAMaS
~.._..._
8olM G,.nde .,,, R•nctlo Altlmllo• .,
Bol .. Grende
Le Quin!• el Ge roen Gro .... ar....~ S.'renl\9 V\. Me9llOlle •t LI Pelme R•rll
~ • • • • •
....__ l'lnt s.c.ld ~ T ....
GooOetl,NY 24 0 0 120
Tudor, SIL 0 21 1 6S
Henl'llSM, LA 0 1 14 11
A.ndul9r. SIL 0 I 3 •
Vellnl\.1111, U. 0 I I 4
a rownlno. Cln o o 3 J RMrdOn, Mon 0 0 I I
NLCvY..,......._,
l"S-OW\etlt Gooden, New Yor11
1----ldt ~tctlffl. Ollcaoo
lfU-JOfln Oeflny, Pl'lllac:lelPNe l~teve C•rtton. Plll~t. 19' l-FerMndo VeletllueMI, LIM Anoelel
1911>-Slw• C•rtlon, PlllWldelCl!\19
l~Bruc:t Sutler, ChlaOO
197t-G•Vlord Pwry, Sen Oleoo
1m-ste .... Certton, Ptllledelonl•
1916-Aen<IY J-., S.n Oleoo 191S-Torn Seever, New Yori<'
197.-Mlkl MlrllleU, LOI Anoeiel
1973--Tom S..v«. New York
lfn-St1v1 Certton, Pllllac:letPhl•
1971-f=erouson Jenkins. Cl'tlc:eDO
1971>--aoe> Gll:>IOn, St Louil
19'.,_Tom s.. ....... Nlw York 19't-tlob Glbsor. SI. Louil
1'67-Mlkl Mc:C:ormlctl, Sen Fr•nclaco
1,..._S.ndv l(oufU. LOI AnMlel
IH~S.ll<IV t(oufu , LOI Anoetlt
196)-S.ft<IV t<oufu , Los Ano9111
19'2-0on Orvldall, LOI Anoelel
l~Vernon L..ew. PlllN>urOll
lt57-Werren SO.hn. MllweullM Br1 v11
19S6-0on Nlwcoml>e, lrooalvn
NOTE: From ltSt· 1966 ,,,.,. WH one
MIKllon fforn Dotti !Moun
-(_ > •
NBA
WUTl•N COM,•••NCE
.. lldk DMIMfl w L .. ct.
I.den 7 I .17S
Pof'IMln<I • , .IOO
CllMMrl s 4 SS6
Golden Stele s s . .SOO
S..tti. • 6 400
Ptloenl• 0 9 000
,,_....,~
Houston 7 2 .na
Denver • 1 7SO s.n Anlonlo s 4 SSt Ulel't 4 6 400
0 11181 l ' ll3
Secremenlo 2 ' 2SO
•.ASTa•N GONl'all•NC• A-..C DMIMfl
ao.1on 7 1
Hew J--.. ' 4 ~ s 4
Wesnlnolon 1 • Hew Yortl 1 • CMlr'll OMl6lll
MllwMM I 4
Detroit 1 4 .... ,..,,,. s s
'"""° 4 • c~ l • lndlen9 , s •....• .,,.~ s..111en.~" lotl'Oll 111. mcii-114
..., ......... 110, "*"° 106 A\1911te 1•. ,.,_,,. 101
Mlfweut... U1, Detroit 1 le
Ollllea US. Uteft 100
T......-ae-
Pof'll6ft0 ., L.Men
C~ •I ll'ldleM
N-JtrMv 11 ~1111 s.n Antonio ., o.n .....
Gold9n St•te •I Secremenro
015
.00
SSt
2SO
111
'67
"" 500
·"°° .l33
116
Ga
,v,
3
4
1·~
.... ,
)i., • •Ill
1 ,..,
s ...,
YI
' ,
J\'J
Jiit
Le&~
WaDtellOAY'S •1'4A.TS , ............. ~.,_....,
'•IT •ACI. lfO vwcb. .. Trulhl\ll (Ycktv) .._40 tt 20 1 IJO
l(•Yc:Mt tov (lr~I) 7 00 ) to
lAnty It Oevtlo"' !Cr-> loo T~ 1e6'.
S1 IXACTA !t·T> oald 11IO~
UCOMD •Aca. 400 ;ero.
Sov Fiver (l'ulrl ''° 320· 220· Ml' &Gort EltllflU (C1roo11) 3 40 2 40
ltHr Actmlr•I (H G1rcl1) 2 20
Time' 11.01
12 IX.ACTA (l·S> oeld $1910
TH•D llAC•. 350 v1rd1
Nov1Clet1 COlclerlckMnl 26 00 9.00 U4
EHn Clllek (CrMoer) UO 3.20 EHv lllnlOU..lt (EdWerd\I l 20
TllM. 11.34
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~TH ltACL l50 VMd~
Min ~tel Adelr <ltulll 21 20 ''° 5 eo ,. M4tl £•1v I.it (Mell<) 10 to II 20
TtlW FMture £MIXf191Cfl e 70 Timi 18'1
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a 1u111lne Chkll CLeclo.lvJ l 40 Time· 11_n
12 IX.ACTA (7·1) oelo 19'0
SIXTH •ACI. 170 v1rd1
TltMIO Git-(Flor11) 6.IO 4.20 l.20
Clllceoo Flesh (OIOerld<1111) c 00 3 00
Prln Wlndv (Lewltl 2 60
Tlmr '77'
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UVINTH •ACI. l.SO verd1
L•llff Rov1I B•n<I (E.Grc) 4 60 J 40 :uo
Al>ICr•m (Giii) S.00 3.40
ltom.n Empire tH GercieJ 3 60 TltM· 11.40 n al.ACTA t6·S> oeld it960
atoHTH •ACa. JSO verd\
El l•nko tCrHoer) 13 20 5.40 210
Juen E1P1Cl11 (~1dllld1 S 40 2 .CO
hvlor1 S/'tort (Mllct1etl) 2 40
TltM: II 7.l.
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Penucnt ( 8 roolul H O 3 00 2 <IO
Frllnc:llY Doc CPeullne) 160 340
TlllmwMtvl>QvM\lre (8erdl 6 00
TllM' llJI
12 aXACTA <S·ll oeld J IS IO
U DAILY DOUBLE (4-SJ oeld $171 60 n fttCK SIX (7·7-2-•·4·SI oel<I Jl,713 00
IO two Wlnntno •leklll hi• nor111) '2 Plc.k
Shi conMllellon ot1kl s 171 60 10 SS wlnnl119
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Time· 1:39 l/S.
12 DAILY DOU9LE (1·10) oele1 $3.Uj)
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Belle ol the Roeo (McCerron) l 20
Tlmr 1-42
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l'<>UaTH 9'ACE. 6 tunono'
COdv'• Cll.tnce (8u1l 26.20 10.IO 7 00
l(Jndu Lene (Ollver ... 1 14 IO 9 00
EO'\ Feniuv (Pedro11) 120
Time· 1 1' ltS
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French Lt010nelr1 (Mtia) 1.60 3.:IO
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Or•l'lQe Coel1 DAILY PILOT/Thurlday HOYembet' 14, 1815
Bribery case may
go back to court
es reinstated
-------"''------~ a alnst Williams:
appeals eXPected
NEW ORLEANS (AP)-uwycra
ror rormcr Ju lane U ntvers1ty baske,.
baU star John "Hot Rod" Williams
say they'll challenge the st.ate appeals
coun ruling to n:inst.ate sports bnbcry
charges apmst him.
Joel Loeffelholz, an attorney for
Williams. said Wednesday he'll ask
lhe 4th CU"Cu1t Coun or Appeal to
reconsider 1u move to send the CIS(
back to Orleans Pansh C'nminal
Olstnct Court.
Thc..ap~aJs. court ~vcr.5Cd 01Stnct
JudJ,C AJv1n V Oscr's Aug 28
decmon lO throw out the ch.argei
apiost W1l1Jam~
Distnct Anome)' RarT)" Con nick
said the new ruling vind1caCed his
prosecutors.
Connick said he ho~ to finish
Wilhams' trial. as well as all others in
the Tulane po1nt-sh.av1ng ~ndats.
by the end of the year
Williams' lawyers, who <hsagre.ed
that the ruling cleared the pros-
C(Uton. have several avenues open
for possible appeals -including a
pitch to the state Supreme Court
Williams. 24. was accused oflak1ng
bnbes to shave potnts while he was
playing at Tulane last season. Ht>
faces a maximum of 17 ~ear'I 1n
pnson and S3 5.000 tn tint's If con-
victed on all five counts
The scandal led 10 T ulan<''s drop-
pins rntercolkalate men's buketbl.U.
Attom..c¥ Mike Green. reachod OD
vacation 1n Hawail, u>d ic:ated be
would appeal to the stale Supmne
Court oner he uw th~ decis.ion 10
wnuna
rhe ruhna by. tbree·Juct,c panel of
the appcab court tent tbe case bide to
O.Cr But s1nor t.ben. Oler baa been
removed u judae for the subsequc:nt
tnals 1n the ca1:e. with Judie Pat
Quinlan t.aktna the assianment
( t was not clear whether Olef' would
step aside to let Quinlan handk the
W1lhams case also -or if the case
would aet back to d1stnct court before
the end of the year, whco Oser wtll
reure
Lucas leads sec blue team
Junior center Rob Lucas scored
22 points aod Cost.a Mesa H•&h
produC1 Ken Bardsley bad 16 lo
lead the Soul.hem Califorrua Col-
lege blue team to an 84-81 victor)
over the gold 1n an intra-squad
game at SCC Wednesday night.
Randy McAllister added 15
points for the winners, wtule Jon
Haar, a 6-3 JUOJOr led the gold
with 22 and center Paul
Hohmann tallied 21 for the gold.
SCC opens regular-season p~y
aga10st Wgssuck College (Ne-
vada) next Thursday night at
home 1n a 7:30 game.
CARLSON'S COLUMN ...
P'romDl
ongioal gain).
"I never got It full)' e>.pla1ned."
continues Workman "M} onl) con-
cern at the end was to make surt' the
clock ran.''
Workman called ume out to ap-
proach I.he officials on the field 1n the
fi naJ moments because the clock
stopped after Fountain Valley was
thrown for an ensuing loss despite the
lack. of any umeouts left.
Milner declined to comment on the ·
officiating for the record -but the
sideline manner of the Baro ns"
coaching staff at the end gave every
md.icatjon of massive frustration.
Work.man. however. did comment.
"Lee Phelps was the.head guy and
he's absolute!) the best. I didn't agrCt'
with all of their calls. but what coach
docs? He's an expcnenccd Pac-I 0
offic1aJandhe'son m)' preferred list·
But that doesn't mean I h ke all ofh1s
calls.
"It was a big game and there were a
lot of emouons. and human beings
malong all of the calls. the~ don't
malce them all ngh t. ··
Fountain Valle' los1 one ol m he'>t
on the pla) when Ed [)c "'u"c1v
suffered a fractured leg. apparent!\
caused whenoneofh1s own team-
mates crashed into him after a
bhnds1de block b~ Edison ugh 1 end
Ken Griggs.
Gnggs was the hea \) a 1 ti m look
but Work.man sa} s fi lms clear!) 'ho"'
11 was legal and"' 1thin the limit!>
The officials called It cl1ppin~. hu(
Workman savs the call "'as a m1'\t~1lt·
-that 11 was "not a dip
* * * Ocean Vie"' Coach KarlC1a\tan 1~
scheduted to ha\ e surgen "'1onda' on
Second place
for Kennedys
The father-son team ot Jon and Jon
Kenned' ot Cosu Mesa came trom
founh place. after t.aKing o'er tor
teammates l...al'T) and \far\. '-lmtth
JUSt he~ond the halt"'a' point. tu
fin1~h second in th<' I 600 clas'I at the
BaJa I 000 off.road ran· O\ er the Baja
Peninsula last "'ed..t'nd
The }Ou nger Kenned\ J
sophomore at Costa Mesa High. wa!
co-dn,·er for hrs father in his first race
ever. "H( had a ball and did an
excellt>nt JOb co-dm ing." \3rd h"
father, who added he wa~ \urpn<;ed .11
how smooth!\ thr race "'l'nt
The Sm1th:Kcnncd~ bugg' "'J\ the
lir;t to finish among the tv.o-scat
IMXJ cars. finishing an hour hc.·h1nd
thr one-~ate-r dn \l'n tl\ Kllb
Tolle'>on The~ narro"'h t"\..l{tC'd lh~
1h1rd-plact' car led h' \filch "11t{hell
o t Huntington Beath "'''h lht•
JU b1lan1 \Oungt'r "enned' hluv.1ni-t
the h~k out of the horn J t rn'' the
ftni~h hne ... cKCOrdmg !Cl !ht• ..c.'Olllf
"'-ennt'<i}
"\\-e made up prt'tt~ go~..a ground
said the cider "enncd~ dC'\Jl>I<'
"gt>tllng lo 1 for ahout an huur" and
fight1n$ fat1gur over the grueling Io .
hour stint 1n thr car
The Krnnr<.i)\ "'111 •in team v.11h
the Smith 1n the frontier.:! 'ill tn earl\
Dett1Jiber. O'er a La., \ ep~ rnur~
tht' t'lder Kennr<.1} called "aggra' atC'J
assault. ..
h.1sgall bladder-ma\·~
t-fe·s not due to return to school
unul after the Chnst.rnas-New Year's
holdicb) break
··1 hadcorrecu"esurger; on my
stomach in 1981 and there were
comphcauons due to blood clots,"
says Gaytan "I bad to stay for 27 <bys
and 1 d1dn 't k.now 1fl was going 10
make It, 1t was pretty traumatic.
"I said I'd never have another
o pcrat1on al the ume ( 19-81 ) and tt'~
been a lot of pressure on my mind
But I'm going to get It over with and
get read) for next year ..
H1s Seahawks. who shaved his
head bald because oftus promise for a
victory over Huoungtoo Beach, ma}
ha' e ideas oftbeu own about the
Moncbysurger) lfOccan View
spnngs ao upset over Westminster
Fncby otght the'.-would be in hne for
a CIF p_la)offbcrth -and the
playoffs begin No ' 22.
* * • Prep tenn1s ma) have a different
look 1n the spnng-talc.mg a page
from the girts· format.
Girls' tenn1s features three sing.IC\
and three doubles. usm& nme pla,er.
Boys ha' e tradltionall> played four
sing.Jes and twodoublcs. us1oge1ght
plavers
Coronadel Mar Coach Dave
Heffern says he favored suck.in$ "'1th
the e1gh1-man fonnat. but admns the
change ma' be 1mmtnen1. It u.111 be
'oted on 1nJanual'\o al the CIF ~<>u nc1J meeung. ·
·-\ team w 11 h twn or three reaJh
good singles pla~l"rs be-comC's nearh
unbeatable 1n the J.J S\Stt'm.'" 'Ml"~
Heffern "lf~ours1ngles cango9~o
three pJa~erscan score as much as<ill
~'' Juubks pla' er.
"-\II \OU nee,d todn 1~ w .. eep threl"
\1nglc'"' 11h three pla~ C'r'.!> and get Ont'
Joublcs '>pll u o "'tn ··
What >t dcx~do. ho"' e'er 1s pull an
add1llonal pla~er into the flo "' and
the matches them sci' es are shorter
"'1th each singles and each doublt's
Juel a ont'-set affaJr rather than th.e
pres.en t double se~
Larsen named
Player of Year
\fanna High dn\et \<.·011 wNn
hns been named the unst't Lcague-
water polo Pla)'er of the Year in a' ott'
nf the league's coach~
Larsen. a senior IN ho scored I 0"'
goal~ 10 lead th<' V1k1ne,~ 10 tht• league
111le. "'a~ a third-team all-C IF-sclC'C·
11on la\t \car
8c'l1dc~ Lar.t<"n. "-1anna had tour
l)tht'r pla' er' namt·d Ill the tint team
"'9ver el YM•
)co" '-•'•et> M••·na
Ftrn T Nl'tl
• ,.,. 80900f"t0Ytfh Wn1t•1·1tn\••" Dav.a
8U0"9\al'\ Mer•fla A.i\tH Ca " Wt"\trnt"''• • D•v e C .,....., Ea•"'" Y. •~ >49f•I\ Men ne '•1>' ..,....,... E O~<>" B"ll" JvOd Fovn111n
V11,., •l\d• Pe••H"• ~r "• Bren• Poe•~ s:,.,"'•,. ..... ._,, .,.OOd r_.,""°" Foun'I\'"
V• 41• Ouene "'""-'~ Mer•ne ~eo>fT-~,1 • Bre• Fo...-11 " Ve"t• Cr1111 0 ,,.._.,,
MA ne K .,,, E "'0809" INtt•m•nt•I' Mitt+>
'<"'n WedMlflt•.-JM I( "GI' Foun111n
' ., .. ,, JI . M..... E oown JO!ll' MlftC>f E dllOfl,
llocl'll•a k"-' Mer1fle \•tv• T ~
Fe>1.1~ll1" Ve ttv \1111-W~tlio IMerll'a)
10., .. YenQ Eo "°"
More •port., page D6
NEW & PRE-OWNED MODELS
r-------.-------i. .....
0r81'1ge Coat DAILY PILOT/ Thur'lday, Ne>Yetnbet 14, 1985
\CAL~ 642-5678 IF CALLING FROM NORTH ORANGE
IF CALLING FROM IOUtH ORANGE
IT'S HARD TO IEUEVE LR
WAS OICE SO DRURY IMfl I
FCM9 MY DRUM HOME JUST
IY LOOlllO • TllE DAIY.
PILOT'S CLASSIFIEDS.
C .. CK YOUf' AO
T.-""IT DAY 1:"9 o..1i1.-~ .... " ... tfte(tf"' "' .,_. ~twre<v ....... ..,., oc .. .._... .. , .. , .. 0((.,, P>IMM
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t(:I._. ' Olh» .0 D• .,,. _,,Ot
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C.tl lleu HM I.I. Wu... HU Ctata 11eu t IMtk 2114 C1111 •111 2Ht lnt1h te lhn
; fuf§jb@ NIPS; WAIT OUT1 FINE CHOICES Prlotd to rent futl Sul*b Qul•t 18r, lrple, pool, 28f 18a, $ 1000 mo + utll. 1114 3er. HltdwOod "''· Fllfer . SCP $700 r•nt opUon NB 2br w/gat S726 chlld meatiBJIU patio, gar "15 No pe1e. 1019 w 8•y Av•. AcrOQ X1DEIF Ll~ln Pit Aaal•t
Sl40,000. Agt 5•&-7739 Wt ••J rt114t1tl1I oom(ort•bl9 ett• 5 room ok d9'1ll1 539-8100 Belt 399 w. 81y St 850-8351 from b•Y 873~18U teac~ lnwhletlr rew hrl.
llLUI WllTI llT ""'"'" ..... 4 11 pool home jacuzzi too Rlty,.. &PAITllllTI IPU1AOIUI UT 28< 10., NEW orpf, 1 car R,m+ $300/mo. M6·2357 .
Nlce3bdrm,2blth C::"" tr 11t, •llt-11M• SEAVIEW 38r 2'.i ba • ~Mlfl,111 111+g11+Po01 llrple All garage,lrplc,wthr/dfY9r. Beaut 3BR. den hm Npt
Colleg• Perk hom• H ~ I .,._ E-tlde nee 3bf eton. lrplc rem rm Sec:, poolllennlt lmmecutett large Garden bltlne $S75 Fee M24. Yrly NMr bMch SDOO Hgte 2 frplt, gai. vi.w of
wtwHt toc.tlon s.tt« .. 1_-:1•1 -,1• matur• yard nr sho9• & S2000/mo 2 t31430-3e29 Apta. a..ut11ulty land· TELERENl" 876-eeeo mo 875 .. 912 Bkr bey. $350 M&-7771 nMdt eath JUtt redUC*S WI , .. •t tr N9wpo(l hOO 539--8100 --IC Ip e d gr OU n d I , --to $139.000 _..., ...... ht't Sett RJty lee Sprewttng 2 etry 4bf lull bl pool/ape petloldecic No *2BR 2BA. Stepe to bch. Cleen. ·rMPQntlb .. fem to
Traditional
Realty
631-7370
.-• --2 gar lrplc equlpt kit kid• ta ' WI lfFll l OlllOI Sparkllng oleen S950. h 2BR 1 ~BA d afH •P, Gall ••I Ir FURN. Contempo bright, S1200'a 539•8100 rf:tM.10t ,530 Went 1 Mleollon of grMt •2BR 18A totally rt-~2~-Hl95 u11 Of~: o. lrHI wttll 1.,.,., cheerful 2 lly twtlee. 3br, BMI Riiy fee lBdrm ss95-S816 living? We can otter eny· lurblthed. St•P• to
Pr---.&.at ~lj~•,·~1 1:~1;~· VERSAILLES CONDOS-2Bdrm 1'/•B• $705-$710 thing from 1 tmall apt to blectl 1875/mo. Fe. 2br 2be '350 mo. + ...,..13' 1 ... 1100 """"' --2Br 2Ba. All amentlel & 2250 Venguerd 540·9e28 • 4 bdrm hO\,IM II look· •3BR 28A. Acron from Ilg ht clean Ing 204 ·A
• Lg 28' 1e.. gtlf. wld hkup MC SteO Agt 831-•9e0 -----Ing In CM. NB. Of HB OCHn No gereo• David Of NB S.8-80«
S825 No pate. 2178.-B . 2Bdrm t't.Ba $715 think of us llrat for that $1)50/mo Bkr 842-3850 Fen1, 2BR 28A, CM. S300
...... ..,.,..,.. .,., ... 0 ~ ,..., "Jl~:a==~!!!:.0-!.:~i~------===--Plec.nlla 545-7983 VIiie Balboa 28' 2Be, 3Bdrm 281 S800 choice ol ldNl llVlng. •Clean 2BR 2BA BLUFFS +-·~Ula. 722•9695 "" l.=-====:::i ocean view, lrplc, eecur-51 E 2 cdl ,...,,.. TSL MGM &u-1803 ,-r -·• ...--:..n' ~~~ ;.:.~:r.." ~~~ •;:, More Uk•• n..-..00'9' 1br-tty s12501m~5'-2018 1 , ''' ~ Pool, rrp1c. carports. 4 4·9000, ext 250
--·.. <O""N•9d •• 1 '' •' ,,.. """'"" off f'l•wport blllns -----Daaa Ptlat 2iD S860 No pet• 722-801" Fernst,iare3Bdfcondo 1'.i ~ ~;£:--!',t-~··~ .. ~~'::" provided othert 1v1ll Ylt lllllYI IT ;~~~ l't.Be f~ci~ 110811 FREE REM'--. -ml from t>Nehwlth fem & at1ll 2111 539-6.190 ~t R"y tee. GA.TED Vilt.AG£ COM-131 E 18th &4&-eal8 U4>1talr•~~ Den 2Ba dbl •H Tll W&nl• male Chrl1t11n1 Tennie, ~ -• --MUNITY, 28<trm 2~Ba. • · _____ garage. No ~·· 33411 Lu•urlous 2ed'~1 w/Den pool, apa. No tnli*lng
~ ........
Ital E111tt
Fer Salt
..
. .
l Ull FID FtHllia 1600 · aq-It of PURE BachelOf $525 Cheltam Wey 240•1891 W/D hlcup, lg kltchtln, $300/mo. 988-3372.
2Br 281 + stove. rettlo • Y&ll*-1134 LU>CURV Geraoe SPA In lBd . 1AJ\I\ or .... 1_3208 lrplc. encl gar. Prvt bch 1.-.-~-..;-.;;,;,;;;~.;,,;.-gar $595 Others he :!. maeter tulles Dining rm vvv "" $1995. Sorry, no peta Fem. &hr H.B. 2br 1'.iba
831•. Tel•n1nt 875-8880 Rent/own lux 2·•try 3ba room. woodbornlng fire-~~th St 842-0868 l•1t. 1ck HD •ALSO• S338+'~utll. Avl 1211.
poof hm w/lrplc 2 gar place. microwave, oven, TOP AREA MESA PINES 2Br 2Be Starting et $1395 720·7627/W 969-l2921H
kids pet $600'1 539-8190 prlv11e patio. ELEGANT 1BR. llke new. cozy lrpk:, lBR fBA. uw-r unit, bale, 780·0919 F/rmte to thr 4BR Irvine
Batt Riiy lee LIVING only 15 mlnutee pvt back/1lde yrd & patio. gar. lndry rml SS.Olmo hM w/2 othefa 1330 mo l•at. ltack 14 to So Co Ptua.Ju1tee1t Garage, PoOI. spa, Quiet. UISSl Pro Circle 3Bdrm '2B1. yrly Neer t 13 utll 851-0503 mag
Newport Blvd & south of S6"'0 No pell 549-2447 TSL •IT 142-llOI beach. garage. lrplc -------•• _._.. tlll,000 SMALL hOUN Jn E/tlde 2ftR tbe, WlD fikup, D/W. Sen Diego freeway. 2473 • 1200/mo. 615:4912 8Ju Male wanta peB0n UueM -•r.-1 CM2BR, 1BAw/ydS700 1600-< aec.Goldenwest& Orenge Ave.631 -5439By IRlllD llEW 21LIO"flTI~ ----& thr NB/CM rental
Reduced. Upgraded, OCEANVUapte2BRtBA. Warner.844-9808 spptonly Oellghtlul ooeen breezes. B•!b0• Penl" nice 2Br Mlxe.Wkdya83•·2668
charming 4 bdrm, 3'h 1 blk to bch HB $6501675 Specloua 2Bdrm 2Ba 1 ~Be, prkng, lndry, encl Mele to thr 38r 2S. Penln-
b1th w/lerge dock. .llOllSIUln llllTOITI&ll l11t1Aa1 2110 mealiBJIU wlthg1rageAll~crpt1 pat1o$86067l-4868 I IS ~~terlon~'tlar~1 .P12r'!'!9 NIP M••••flllT Studio w/f\Jll kltctien. all SCP cloM 3br 2be hmy & drp1. Lota ol clOMts. DELUXE DUPLEX: 3BR :~;~,~~;"c!r6'3~870~00
.,.... .,.,. ..., UV -ullls pd Only $375 fee spot w/pool applt ger &P&ITllm Beautifully l1ndec1~ nobl 1/2 blk to Channel
I ~~x~. l14/llM171 8422 Telerent 876-8882 patio $700'• kid• .,,_,..,.H ~ 960-8331 Nr Lido center 500 38th MIFlnatur•. E~
•• • ~· . la... I • OI Juat blocka to ocean $425 539-6190 Best Atty lee Theae attractive ,_ 79 2BR 2BA. gar. lndry, 4 St. $1250/mo. 644-7269 ~:&;',~:~~~t~1::.111e L * *BAYFIRO!INT 3BR 2BA llel basic abode child fine Stat~ Ctaal -MtlH Apt1 feature pool, spa. plex Quiet street, 1 mile Eutbluff Twnhae Apt. 3Br __ _ pvt patio 539-6190 zt•• private patio.• or decka. to beech. No ~It. $875. 2B•. 2 car 8" No peta M/F resp ~rson to thr lg Ill OAIYN S1ttll Upper Duplex, wthr/dryr. Beat Rtty fee .. garage or carport, In 1 Cell CralQ 831-1288 $950 644-1 10 8·5 M-F decor NB hm/lull emen
Abtolule bargain -don't frplc, gar $1350/mo PRIVATE PTY/Newty con-2 Br 2 be, carport, POOi. eaullfully t1nd1c1ped FumlShed 3Br 1"81G1r-Illes & prlv S450/mo
mlll this one! Preet~oua 720-2590 Of 6"'6-72 l3 atruct..,. evec .....,,hme In spa, nr So. Cat Plz Mttl'J.:Nt paid. '$100 dep 831-3776
3 bd 2 ,L b' h EC ""' " ,_,, S 1 g e . fr p 1 c . v I e w rm, •,.,. et Flash de ct111 w1terlron1 excluslve guarded .,... 545-7131 or 731-5 t88 1 room1 585 sf 100/mo 675-4912 Bkr MIF 55+ caucutan, 2br
townhome wl aecurlty, 3br estate loaded plua 3BR 2'hbe. Olx kltch. -* 213 Nobel Ave * 2 Bedroom• t•/, Bath $870 2be, nicely furn .. nr bch.
pool, ape • tennla Try rent option S 1800 call frplc. wet bar. form. din-Nr So Cst Plz & O.C. Air· 121 Olml SJlllT BANBURY CROSS APTS LIDO ISLE Bey -View 3 $175 t aec 840-0293
10% down (No quelllylng) 539·6100 Best Rlty lee Ing rm. hydro beth, lnte<· port Complev, 3 Bdrm, COSTA MESA 2 & 3Bdrma S850 Up bdrm 2 bllh, new decor. or lease For detella call -2 " v S 1350/mo Yrly Mot er & deunhter to thr com. car garage 2ba lrplc patio led yrd (Corner Center/Pl1oentl1I 16781 lewpt Ln 842-6604 · · C • leatral lM Petrlck 760-8702 IQI lalMI P0011ljecuul1 112 ml to S10Js m~ lnclda grdnr: Open Dally 101m-6pm 1•~•-1• 673-0072 8191753-0719 dM hm $400 mo. 1at/1att
iiii=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii=1• ·~ ... , •• · · Ptai111l1 2101 ocean. Av•ll Dec l5. $750 sec dep 548-8475 142-1424 -•-• Nwpt Hghta 2Br 1Ba, PoOf, DtS
57
-
9095
El7
5
ll-
5507
111.l ••• 2 LIT ... S 1650 per mo Eva • ---S N p 1 3BR apt. W/D hkup, lndry nar"""', lndry $725/mo. M/rmmt to thr NB apt k Luxury 2Br Condo, ocean 536-3975 or &e9-2155 Af!rlatlll Ofry. 0 e 1 room. lrplc/gar/lrg deck 'ioo1'8 l5th St. 650-8213 $425 w/amenlllel. Call
-~-... ........ .
eMAelW.. , ........ ~ .. ~ ""
lllftCI
Dm8Cl'G9Y
--MT .........
DWl•Y MY6IUll
TM. .. oeTAncM 7•••·"'61
1114,100 :. view, tee bldg, unlurn l-.t 144 College Prk Tri-pie• 2Br $895/mo Ron E/750-3419 Iv mag.
Room to add another EMr. SIOOOl(TI0-1 yr lee. mlt Gt1tr1I 1102 l'f,ba, D/W gar-lndry 2221 ALABAMA Redecorated 4Br 2Be, Gt1tral l 002 home on this large c0tner OUFF••-i 997 ·8382 or 836-3094 2BR 1 bbl TOWNHOUSE !city s650/mo 845-7738 TSL MGMT 842-1803 encl gar Yrly $1360/mo. N.B. 2br 2be, M/F n-smkr,
-
--------1 1 W l'-1 di t -•5 SI I I I -E 63 f-8335 D 738--6155 clean, quiet, tennis, $392 0 a" ng • ance to LENDER OWNED OCEANFRONT tbr Condo ng. story, er cond. ILTULllllY EHltlde 2Br 1BI frplc Lge 2BR 1bl. dining. oar: IVI now 846-5447 .,, 4:30
*TIE ILIFFI * 2 Mesler Sultea Arcnllect
delight! Costly & most
creative remodel, Prk·
like setting w/megnll
baylnlte llte views Ir·
repl1ce1ble at discount
price of $310,000 Fee
Hu11ng1 & Co 6"'0-5580
lttenewdowntownCOltl Ughl&1Unny3 Bdrm,11m· Furn sec bldg $900 111 Mlddle ol tract, open to B so• beam cl!ll•. gar S690 ; age Wtrlgaapd,Beach& Specteculer 1Br 181,
Mesa redevelopment lly & fOfmal dining rooms .. ..C dep 9i!2-317S mJr grMnbel1 $156,500 reathllklng 1 ocean ltt, lut, AC $225 2 per-Talbert $526/mo Alt bey/ocean views. Frplc, 2 NB 2br apt to ahr 111rllem.
are a Tw o I• r g e & otflce Freshly painted C-• l • -2122 AMI for J.A Agt 786-7500 ·~~~ '!':=~~ sons No pelt 850•1798 6pm/wknds 897-1300 car gar, lndry, yrty $1200 pool, w/d. nr bch '390 mo.
bedrooms. cozy fireplace & carpeted end aur-trtll t Ir 3Br 2Ba, 2 car gar. No pets block to sand. Your own -lse 675-4912 Bkr 6"'4-7520/D 831-8823/E
& double garage Excep-rounded by lovely lend· Cute 1Bd 181 Dplx, tunny LM S1150 (818)888-5510 prlv1'9 patio Every room E'alde Condo. 2BA 1'"'b•. IUWlll YILUIE Steps to bch. Upatr1 2-Br N.B M/F thr 2br fum. 11 0 n 81 h 0 m 81 C 811 acaplng. Su~r neigh-patio, Genie gar dr opnr or (818)3•8--0440 bright and elanent, like garage/pool Pret adult•. 1 Ba View 2Br 2Be duplx. step• to ocean 1\11 646-7171 borhood, walk to ell $650 844 7220 -· no ~ts S725 mo. Eve WIY llTt 99 schools Cell for e•ceffent 250 1022 -or 3BR 2be Townhome Air, new. built-In app11anoes 646-26•8, dys 548--9~ 1 dwnstrs New crpt, frig & 12/ 1 S3 mo 873-5952 Announcing
Century 21
THE REAL
ESTATB:RS
terms $279.000 • pool. 2 car garage Including microwave L her h range Both compl redec. Need 2 reap non-1mk
2BR 1ba, llpl ooeanslde $950/mo, 552-5093 21 BBddrm s, 11505011250 E·slde Trpl11. lge quiet 2br, ~S~.:ur: ap~~ Oflve by 1807 W Balboa rmmtn 3BR 2BA upatre,
-
""" 1 HI Hc1' t of hwy Front hse, gar --rm 1" new cr7p,tl drpa, lndry, no • 1 & 2Br, 1 & 2Ba eultes Blvd & c ell Betty oe.an vu, NB duplex I IC >M l.., In<. w/auto dr opnr & W/D Beautltully located fairway 2 Bd Penthouse $2500 pe11 S 5 8>'3·3600 •Specious townhou... 751-8850 Mon-Fri 10-4 w/lrplc .New paint, crpt &
131·1400 38r 2B1 Dplx, lrplc. New $ll50lmo 980.3521 111·1•00 2Bdrm 1Bath $625-$675 •Private b1lconle1 or qulel loc111on wlmlnl Nlsmkr Prof male ahr 3Br
WH •H UllN YO 111111 __ ._-~r -" den, gar, g11ed $1290/mo 2'01 Large 1Bdrm, poof, lndry Wll HTt --.. -.,.,., ,, c ed BEAUT Ooeanlbay View (213)399-8041 Owner s55oimo No pell •3 L' h ed I YH HlllYI IT PrOI male leek• prof fem onvenlently locat near SomerMt, 5 Br, 3 cat gar twnh .. 2br lrplc, decks. 28r 1 car gar i950tmo Carport 642-1401 I s'g I tennt_-courts GATED VIL' •a"" cou . Hoeg Hospltel Full secur· Principal• only Rancho Sen Joequln vmu yrly Ullls pd Dey• *2 wlmmlng p6ol1 U"' '"' m 10 ahr 18r furn NB. POOi/ •
REAL £5tAlE $1200/mo. 759--0960 ~on~~·n~s~gt'r~.L~BTA W1t1rfr11t lt•ts 111 LA MANCHA APTS •Fireplaces VERSAILLES -Lrg 1BR In drps. George 870-1788 • . • I•-------• c7p60ts.3~rf..• No83pe3181"S59150 1680 eq'1 Lux 2Bd 2Be+ lalha Ptai111la guPd. no~ts642-5073 Garden p1tl09 o,~;;~m;1::.. /2u1111 !,~ NN!_~~-!_300850•-.8'~7t3& eec
. 11y bldg with beautiful 13l5,000 flrma.4-0530 beatloc.lnCdMS1475 2B d 2,~B / 213i941_2939 'eves i. 3Br 2Be upper Gar. oew1•Streams&ponds MUNITY. 2Bdrm 2'hB1. Jacltennla $28!5+St50. IAYllllEI WUll community pool and 673-6366 or 673-3735 cr;ts. ;;ip. s 10:5 ~e~ wknds 673•82•30 orpt 1034D Valencia •Sorry, no pelt 1600 sq. h. ot PURE dep 722-6878 leave mag.
Now pr!Qed reallatlcellyl rectaalion oente< LIDO ISLE OPEN HOUSE F&lllHI FlllT lllW selective Welk to tennis. ii • _ $750 No ~ts 545-7983 I •Furnlstilnga 1v1ll LUXURY Gerege SPA In Reep.IF rmmt ltlr w/tame
Charming 3 bdrm, 3 bath, lmmaculll• 1 Bdrm wlthj FRIDAY 10-4 UY I-••• YllW ~I & Senior Citizen'• "trtll ••I •ar U22 •Lrg 1 & 2 bdrm, newly I WHY NOT CALL m111er aultea. Dining $375 mo utll Incl H.B. ~tral l""•llon, ~elk to den 1 unnreded gourmet 601 VIA LIDO NORD -67,,, .., 152 room woodburnlng 11re-~hel:t;'ay. f.; lend, kllc he';," ·all vary Excellentcornertoc:etlon · Custom home on Blutf ter or-2Br 1'~B•. lrplc, pool redecquletpoo1$494up 111-1111 piece'. microwave ov.n, 84&-0322bel 12 noon
owners roan poeslbte s p 1cIou1 A• k t n g Extra IBlge lot 3Bdrmt, OV«looi<lng weter 28R WtHI ltac• 141 S800/mo 17 t41759-3319 1834 Monrovta 548-0336 prlvete patio ELEGANT Lrg 3BA 2be CM hl9,
$349.500 s 124,500 end you can 2Ba Home It WBlm. com· 2'-'+b• upatelra. 1g 3rd bf 1'!86Rb 28X HOUSE* or (8181790-992 I $565/mo-S735tmo. lrg SUWlll YILUIE LIVING only 15 minutes 11vlah 11ndecape. $386 •
I -.. U. I 1 I •• ~I \ auume large Truet Deed ;~~~:·:~,~gr:',',~ or office w/ba down. 2 Frig, w/d. Grell view Furn Bech, pvt entr. utlls beaut 1 & 2 BRs .. 111, 15555 Huntington VIiiage to So Co Plua. tuat eHI dep & '!\ ulll. 6"'6-6"'80
Re11tor1, 675-6000 p~lveoy. Sparkllnn poot lpla. 3 car gar Pv1 pool. $1250 IM. 551-3037 pd. No ~ts. refs $375 + blllna, lrplc Mu11 Me Lane, from Sen Diego SN1ewn pDol~oBllvr~asouy. 2t~7o31 Spec 2Br 2Be S.Y91de Of .. ,. 2328 Peclllc Dr __ $375 aec 760-0124 386 Avocado Freewa n rth 1 Be ch ..,. ....,_ .. Announcing
Century 21
CllT ..... E .... lllT
Large 3 bdrm. 2 beth
home located In Newport
Helghtl PLUS 2 bdrm. 2
bath apt above 4 car gar-
age 4 years Old Atking
$285,000
Traditional
Realty
THE REAL ESTAT&:RS
15'x38' Reduced to S2500/mo 759-9274 Of 3Br Executive House, C • •••4 TSL•llT 142-1412 to Mcl8ddoen ~t 'on Orange Ave 631-5439By apt to ahr Poot. pvt betl, $49~.000 Agt 673-1323 K Grtnlerl 1t 675-6000 White water vlewt, lease. tatl IH H• McFadden · -... 1pp1 only n/smkr $525 780-1968
.WT •-... ••E •ll Unique Hornet $1600/ mo 497-3522 1Bedroom1506 AYUUIU llW _ I Cl --.nu71 Steps to bch. F rmte
-• ----Unlurn No ~t• 1B r lg I d HIT IUll'S fllllT 11 ••Hit an needed Cleln reliable n· 3 Bedroom, 2'f>• Newport IT&IT PlOlllll JHI lltatl 2152 &49-2440 · p~l,rcar;~~o ~~.ry, QUIET RESORT LIVING 225 la P1iom1. 1675. 2BR smkr S3331mo~ S300 dp
Hgt• S l89,500 Ownr/Bkr 3Br ~ 2Be. gar, 111 blllnt. 38r 2TJ8 1 Condo pvt yard. $650/mo. •Sparkling heated pool H'.ba. Cloae to bch, 675-5795, 974-3100 NB 640-~6"'5-7521 Only $960 Pet? lee 6441 poot $975/mo tst/lut+ 1Br 1Ba. 1922 W11taoe. 931 W 19th St 548-0492 •C°"'rt yard view dining cleanlnloely lurnlehed ·-•---·-IWlll lllT •IH 1 _TELERENT 675-8860 sec dep 2131514_3905 Gar, refrlg, up111lr1. No •Vignette BBQ areaa Encl gar 531-7918 Yng CM cpl wenta to rent ....... pets $520 Agl 550-1015 OAU 11 Ht Twt~t di 1 d to n-smk male dWn1tre.
Stunning large newer CHll .... •124 'm'' ltack l t . • ne n COUf1 yr 225 La Paloma "50 2BR unfurn 2BR. pvt be, kit COLDU!~
BANl(eif U
3Bdrm, 3'hB1. C°"'ntry ... • lBr 181 $550 MC $350 ALL UTILITIES PAID gaze 9 IV•bl Welk to beech I $350 11 C
French Estate Giie 2 BR/den. wet bar, 2•t. F OUS Waterfront 2Br 1Ba $850 MC $4-00 Compare befOfe you rent •Spaclou1 Apartments clean encl gar 837-7918, ~~I. 545-9 /12u~ 111
guarded private rural bath, Intercom & vec Dec0t1t0f FURN. Condo No ~ts 631-8427 C M. Newly decorated custom •Y°"'r own pvt patio · ___ _
----· community Large lemlly Jacuzzi/BBQ, $1250/mo $1595/mo. 673--089() IB IB U-t-1 R -11-design l~eturea, .pool •Gourmet kitchen Sunny, clean 2BR 1BA, lt1t1l1 HIM 7 ' room library Priced to rent 13flt E Wiison nr 1 r 1 pa 1 ra. erg. bbq, covr d garage. sur-•New dove tan crpt gar, lndry. No pets. Ill .1111 O&PllTUll NII ai $-422 500 VIKING Elden Ave L.ae opt evell BA oceanfront houae. 1981 Maple Ave. S•30 rounded with plush land-•Lrg walk-In closet• $800/mo 493-2710 SINGLE retired woman
.Ill 000 RE 751_7W Piiio. yard, garage Yrly. Sierra Mgmt 550-1015 seeping. No pets •Gated covered prkng ------need• 1Br apt. by Dec. 1
, •Sharp ctean E1t1elde $975/mo. 650-2493 Furnlahed 1 & 2Bdrm wl ator S.atk Ctlll ••tre Oulet . non-amoker
Hunt Club • Forecioaure. lt1tk cMlt 2Br 1Be house Fncd yrd --20I E. 1lttl IT. 385 Wiison 6"'2•1971 age UH 497-8324 IH'T IT AltlT Tiil Eure>Qeen country home. • lOll & p111<>. encl g1r New BIG CANYON golf course E'slde 2Br Iba, frple, gar, ----ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED ~-your home reflected your Old World craftsman· tire paint, crpts g drps. Lndry vu, 2br 2bl condo $1400 w/d hkup ,no pet• OITilll nPI Attractive 2Br Upatelre. •lac. IHla I 7ff
po1it1on? We otter for ship security guarded, St Alb1n1 Twnhae 2Br area Must Piii credit Ben 6"'4-014t, 878-5738 $695/mo 2BR 1BA pvt patio gar 1 & 2 Bedroom bltlns Ger. weah rm, Nwpt 8Ch lot 25'11106'
your conalderetlon this gourmel kllchen plus 2Be. tip, lg pats t 12,500 check No pell $825 ~ •NEWPORT CREST• JIO·A HL IAI w/d hkup, quiet. No' peta: 2 Bedroom TOWNHOME qulel Nr lrwy & 1hop1 alley acc.t1. For stor.
m11eat1c home high a1op muctt more Submit 937. 1891 or 631-7966 sec dep 770-5829 4br 2'1Jbe. over 2000 tq ft, E'alde 1Br Iba. ger, no Weter paid ~75/mo. Furnl1hed & Unlurni.tled S6JS/mo. 786•7443 or perking 875· 18S.
Spygl111 Hiii with views 144·10f0 • t.ll I pnl 3BR l'IJBA. dbl gar, lrg yd oak bar, ~ant decor pelt $565. 758-8657 2038 Meyer Vlelt °"'r mod .. o.lty M 2Br • Oen. nlcely decor-I I or the <><:ean. bay tlly •• t ••H I &VU dbl gar pool tenn11 --TSL MGMT 6"'2·1803 Sorry. no pe11. 1\.fd, lg patio. gar ••-re I
light• end moun111ns 1022 CXd BCH 2 BR Mobile 886 Towne $965/mo walk·bch'avt 12115 si1oo 2Br 1'~Ba 323 E 18th --Ow . lJ 11 N SC Pl2 I.I. Salt/Ital Olferld 11 $559.000 Home Low •nice ent Come by and aee. mo Sherry Cothow Bkr Gartge. lrplc, patio No Lge 2Br Iba. unturn. new LA QUINTA HERMOSA ne< 9 n r • · lll-1 I01 l>Po-zy-.0-1-ta_g_e_w_lnew-~k""!'lt-c"'""h. close to beach $48 r500, 3Br 2Bs lrg 2 car gar Xlnl 631·2242 or 646-8002 pell $895 Agt 550-1015 crpta & levolOfl, xtra lge 1821 t Parktlde Ln. HB. _!,850 /mo !_86-~«3 l11laH1/0ffltt IHt
battt & brick trpl<. Nice (7 14) 541-6797 de~· E-alde ' loc Incl• gdnr 2 sty. 2BR. den, 2'-'+BA Front 1pt,2BR 1SA,p1tlo ~~~ 1~g:Cpg~=~~~~'. Ml·W.1 T11tl1 Zito 2711
[ l l ~aackke Yi'h~s 'cd~~; ~~1 UllU llLU $980/mo 648-l088 condo, 1860 11 2 lplcs. 7 ~014 Je4n;e~~j~~:·?/41; 2 pools, rec. rm, $850 l;11aa1 IC SAYE lllR 3000 I 130 SO H C}.JJ • buy at $239 000 Pash BEST BUY tN TOWN EASTSIDE -1Br. 1Ba No highly upgraded. fully 2_ )6 • • 854-2692 evff 18 wMeW nMr bMCti. 2 t 1. clean, d/w $480 lee 1817 WESTCLIFF, NB i.:-=-==-=:-::.;~J~P:r:ope:rt~iM~7~2~0~-9~4!2~2 -J 24x80 Artlngton on corner gar. frig & atove No pet• furn w/TV. lrl~ Complu 2BR 2BA, lux.. apt w/lrpl. Lg yt;; Apll n.xt tOP&rii' Lrg ~tlo.' frple, jreat 8711 Telerent 675-8860 541-5032 Agt
lot Very trg llvlng rm din· 1 respon Adll only 1550 hu poof, tenn 1 & Jae. A!I gar No pe1S $700/mo Frplc vaulted celtlnge lrg cond M75/mo 832 100 •be. ltataJa Altr8C11ve Ofncee In Air·
Ing & kllch area w'/lam Credit,,., req'd. 631-2242 lees paid S 1950'/mo 879 W 18th. 831·8213/E spa Prvt balcony • 2Br lBe, No end~ocn vu, port area 400, 1200,
room Small P•I Ok -om. oen 758-SlOO or 720~ 2Br 2Be-:-prvtp eliO. Newly redec:orlled nr bch. beam cells, ger, 2000 111. From St.5
Young adulls welcome 1, 1 pvt patio 1485 fee 3Bdrm 2 Bettt Newport carport, atOfage ahed. Child ok. No pe11 utll pd a995 494_3044 ltta1 27H Grou. 8"1 retee. Bkr
$32,500 Agt 540-5937 54a 1 Telerent' 675_8881 Shores. Yrly 1975/mo Beeutllul bdrm view of 831-6107 or 855-0666 2 Roome· N 1 BCh houM Coop. 751·6003 Agl ltMrl p;,-, lSIO -675-4912 Bkr golf courae S8501mo. Mesa Verde ln.a ,'.)br 2 ba Cozy 18R for angi empl Raan.n-amer. S3""/mo+ Cc:IM'a beet offlcel. •"t"' II·---------.....,, EASTSIDE 1 BR. CINn. nu -. S9e Joann St Cell for '""' · adult only. No pate. $575 ....., ..., .., ""
LIDO ISLE
OPEi llOUSES-FRIDAY 10-2PI paint Garage & yard 3 BR PENTHOUSE. New-1 t 649-0433 dbl ger, lrpk:, din-rm, Incl ullle, cable, atove & Utll SIOO MC. 876-3823 11100 Incl utll, AIC, pkg,
240 Vb Ebol 48a JBA, 40' lot Slll.000 •llAllllTI Im* I $850 Avl now 998-3•3-4 pon Helohll, ocean View~ patio, lmmec. unlurn refrlg 1st, lut • dee>. Neerocc. nice furn Janitor 2855 E Coaet
200 Vb Mint-,._ JB•. 67, lot S&•".OOO ASPEN CREEK RESORT --1000 ~ft terrace. Jacaz:zl •M ... Verde 2Br 1Be. $850. mo. 873-8832 Refs req'd 494-7988 houee. 12001 n·tmkg fem Hwy 87~ Anytime
...... ..-. " .v Ctt11lr t5 at your beck E'alde tovely oldr. 2 Br Iba 1ub. $1800. MUST GO New crpt, d/w, gar~ PAOIFIOA only, ee2•1314 330 Vb lido Nord 68R 4 +BA. 60' lol Sl,250.000 door P~leulonally dee· rp dlnlng:m· ~":f' yard, THIS WEEK. 631-8000 ~50 No ~ta 840-249 sg:~~v:. ~I, br, ~j p 1111111 flUI
BAYfROKl eorrldllte<lprknl&ep9g .. 8·n10
1 ~v1• s H~/mo ~8).3."0w 3Br 2'~81. Condo iiOO<fi •STiJN'NIN Lo 1 & ~Br TIWllllES ' .~ · urn. rol M/F • rm & b• w/pvt Retell ontc. epecee. fOf · u ·..,... • ---.... St200 eec:urlty. Family 2Be Garden ~pt Poot Brand nn 19t1Ciou1 1BR pdNrbch..,50499·•124 entrc, kltch Prvto•. 1 blk ..... 531·1400forChr11 '° 1 Vll Udo Nord
217 Vb lHll'N
117 Vll Udo Soud
l8I ZBA, 52' lot
2M 18A 30' lot
Bl JBA, 401 lot
BAYSI>(
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S2'9.000
Sl9S,OOO
$2~510,.2£2erE n6igh1t8"'1D_v1 EASTSIDE 3BR 1b1, trplc. pref'd. No peta 845-3785 $555 & S725. 710 W 18th •l dln, pvt deck. pool, bch, 111. last. utll lncld pnn,AE ,_.__ s..-In
.. -v • • v ,5 -" .. gardener No pell. -----carporll lndry lac 0c $400 mo 875-5535 n "'"-..--
.. I I .... 1._ $600l mo 84g..3177 3BR 2BA. St9'>9 to beach $380 1Br Dpl•. 1 perton. · t · -R B P1ewPort BMch, evall. Im-• lC-llt ..., _ SPARKLING CLEAN n-smlcr only. W. 17th It. cupe~ Nov ·No pets. m Of al'lr H home. Male rMdlatety. 1560/mo ............ T/l /lt-.ll SI~ EASTSIDE 3br 2be coodo, s 1200/mo Bkr 842-3850 nr Whittler 5•&-3829 2ea,,.e,.5/8th S8t.3N1 p1t2Hgta. senior Oltllen. Ilk• doga. .IAHll IUl n "'"' •• quiet. gar . frpl, patio, no - _ u• mo. • 86 clean 538--092 t
4811 J¥.8A, 45' lot
B ZBA. •o· lot
-2M. lS' lot
Wiii .... or tr•de s 110, pets. ref• S960 497 ·2149 38r yrly. 1 blk to bch. Lots a 11•-UT Curt Herbert• II egt Sleeplnn rm or storage Of' ,. ..... .......,
$450.000 ~~t~ ~:lng0~29~': E'SIOE COTTAGE (Older) ~~~riv~& !~,~g +~1:' Weettlde 2 etory 1~ be, PENTRIOGE COVE offlc9:'"1f3 Acec11 CIOM l14/llM111
$379.ooo Own/Agt left atate &. 2•Br 1be,wdlbUrn'gl/p. frplc$1295 875-°2807 . ~1!09, dlshw•aher Kl<lt tBr, lre>tc. micro, W/0, 2 to Mein Bch In IAQunl Slngle omc. w/wlndow 14S Vll lhh
105 WI Wamn
mutt de111 Can add otn.i gar Lg pvt yrd w/pool, -------OK No pe1e. Avall ltn#ld ~~"· pool, IP• $795 8ch 122!5/mo S.4-392e •120 Blfdl Aecept rm
S3'0,000 RE. notet or cun for I wld hkup No dogs. 4,~t'mio': rsimim""· s725i mo Ms-8&48 mag 116 or _549-2«7 tt• I / 1111 $300/mo 752-8731
right trade (802) $825/mo. 557·2337
1
780_8782 975_9889 ° S725fmo 2Bd 1 'nBe POOL Petlo. lrplC, X·lge WATERFRONT i'LOQ."""
LIDO REALn 873 7300 996-6567, 7141877-5292 or Townhouee. Ger, lndry tBr S580 2Br Meo S&OO lJlllAIUll
• 'Newport Hltn. 2br 2ba ro-BA YSHORES deelrebie room. n~ Eltlde loc. MC. Uni. E·alde 5&7·28•1 ll'fll • Eaf.so!~:t~.th 1~r6/'~1 at B4Jver mee1• Miier with"' mantle frplc enhencea gu1rded gate communl-2829 ORANGE AVE. Wkly rent.,. Low ret• M2~48« M thf Fr1 •·• ~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•e!!!!!!!!!!!!•all eftect1v1 c1111111~ ad decor leltut• patio at ty Pflv bMGhes 2 Bdrm. TSl ~ M2· 1MI s135 & Up/Wkly ColOf .,..., tu,,',, .. ,,",' c.~ 1) A\"'' -J) "C .-Ale:.. 842·5878 Hts 539e100 Batt,.. furnish To Jun• 18 mteatiBJIU TV, maid teMoe. Ir• tit nttrtJ
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642·5671
frple Now thru June '88 &PAITIUYI ...... Pit hit FURNISHED 01 evlll. HS N. Coett Hwy, •Int Mell v9'"9 IOC
No pet• 050/mo ~.nflll ~lllTIPlll L19un1a..cn.4M -529• &4&-•l2' · 2~2254 or •73-7s.4 hautllul Qero.n Apte 11'.rptc, veul1ed c.tllnge. dbl UNFURNISHlO All 111 llTll •<>mce1Shopl8t0f-O-* .. l&IT. LUlll P1tl091.-e. ape HMt er· PoOl I IPI No P911 flT•SS Wkly rentelt now evell 2M aq ti & up, tMI. C.M
Preetlgloul -.g.,,t exec pal4 No I*• 2 rm 2~8e stQS Cllnts. TlMIS. S t20 50 wlc & 16'> 227• C-2 au.et ., .. 54f.72•t
oder COnd v 38R 28drm 2S. $720 8N W 18th Hwpt Bllld CM 8'$-74•5 ="=""'....,.._ m n o g 3HWWllton &3l·&5131WS.-2739 &M-4183 S:IHlllC.•s ' D!COAATOR &PACI ~=~·;~di~ ~!N~· _. lllftl Sttry, W I Ill L•I a2001mo Ind phonee, ,...
& 1495/mo Crd Ck Rod W0-0-D_. .,. VILLAGI It ,et1.. ..... 3021 w COQ1 ~ ceMng, eto. 54t-1111
pe1 0 K Veeent ~II .. .. .... ..., ' lt •. pof1 8Mch, r . TV Plll11lllll LlllTlll
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S 1200 No.,.... 71t-Oe88 I ki\11 I" ltff••yl ' ~ (n•~1 ,,.,. Wltti. Only llltnut" lo '"' Ap.tftmtnh nu Pt'lmt epot In ~
DELUXE DUPLEX: 38R bt11ti C.•••ttt m1l11blt r«l PUS 1'1.£ASI. lJAOE 8tO ..... &bin loctt!Ofl, 2•11 I!. OoM1 t~bl t/2 bftl toChan"91. NIU• IHI. UllmlY-Nfwport Buch So POQI tebfe ~, TV 2 Hwy, Ste 1200. Cotone
Nr Lido center 500 !Mith ....._. .... _ 171111 lhlh ~11 .. 1 lrP'Oe ..P. 14 ' Oii Mer t?Mtoo
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•LIDO 181..E 38r 21e Avt 1 Kllllm -..nt 642 Sii \ 11 now~No I*• 11700/mo Ma, IUT a llT WITU-._ N.,.wport Buch No ltalah tt ... ,. 1L1f
IM 8kr '"'3400 1114L -........_..... ,_, _ •......... ·i•I ~Hl1 lr\lon .. '"'' 1111• 'co.M -·-HV HrM •eA HA 1eoo -.. _ , .. 1 1 hll , ;UXBTDi u. Pfimo, Trlpto A" 21r ~ t ........ , • .., vi,,."., I
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low cost. COM 28FUIA 11200 Ta&. ltlW•lf .,.,.._, Ml·llll 64i; 1104 Promontory Pelnt 2 A I Unite 1 btk to l20M
&toilet 64()..le&4 173,..209 18ide'I Agt ta1-t2t0 J \
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Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurlday, NovsT1W 1~. 1985 08
aulam. flaaaclaJ _h_•~ft~tlci!'!1~~·.-t-I Cledta!/OfHtt MM C ..... /... MM CltrtAJ/OllN MM IAla Hll Cldl/lasuuutl lntral 1111 lwuJ IUI ..... II IUI 1111111911 XecoO~i RECEIVDti 11• 1--------.... -1
l•llatH ltr lalt Genefet.tlveout.Memaaln . P~YAILECL!AK, Mlf'Yl~e!n"',,.,. 11-.TllY ..._.... .. IMMAlll.. •RIDlll.IP/T PUl1'IUPI ltM a ke.p • Pffv•t• ttome expe1 c1 Pump 8.vtt91M, ' , • ..,.. Y TU.,.L ~ WHf.M OAA•HO e.c:._-« but t ..-At ....-... ... _t ""--••l'!_.,.,_.11!_. GleM and °'..._. ,._.... between Htrbor a competent per•on to Y5 w/varted comp11encet ,... • no ,,_ tn ••per ,.,_..,. -· IOI CRE.AM GELATO. fOOd, wun c»;,~ ~ Mt0At1hur, 8A 0o49.7o22 work Mondt y·Frlday lmmed Q9enlno for r• II ~-.t. part time. CdM Cati IS TMI! CUSTOM 1 1322 AM fl)( a.i. cere Cctll'\lclM& We ...
Balbot lllancl. Owner 11 llnee 3 Mo'a •>1WIM\oe llll --12..eptn. Good org41n~ apQntlble par1on to + 8 30-11 30 ... M. Ma-035e o• -• __.. EASY ASSEMBLY WOAICI moloolttl'!'°at_!or ... ':ot~r.a· moving. ''tnctt'"' Wiii· ,_ i 4 381 hour. Job 111 lllPll tlon &. eommunlcatlon 1reve1 11 weatern •l•t• -----"rM • seoo 00 .,., 100 Gu ... " .. come. or .. t 1.)0, Won't co-r:ona del Mer c.· 111.8 . Co. Htklng full akllll neecs.c:t. Cell Judy, with m11ket1no team. ..... ""~4 Dl!LI Hl!LP-8~ I Buey puran.aing ~I Wiii . eran-PIW9Qna IO Jojn OUt ..
···t. C-11 (114) 7r.2 -··. • __ ...... ·"d ,-...:..... to .... .., ..... Dt.krv n:---.. fft-*910 lor f'llOfl lnfor· General kn.-..-... of ·~--r: ~~ aker, hr• e·30am-2pm traln Typing 45wpm, teed Payment No fM. of plantacaro prof'l9 - -" ._.,., ~ .., -· ......... ""-•· _, ... ......_ " ... -..........,... ·~·"~ ~ ..... , Mon-Fri 642-5297 gOO<I 10 key, phone perlence/No 8alM 0.. Own ll'ehld•. Ina reca Btcra ~. JOb ordef #35" P 0 i.ctger. AIR, A/P T09 maJIOrt ~keeping, plua llte lmeoet requlrel • pert -&klll• ,..._ Mnd Mlf-eddreeaed 631-'ll5 T.I Bll Box 9&eo, SllGl'.in.,to ti.netti, M2 ... ff3 typing. mu.t Hke work~ time 8Al!S ASSl8TANT flMI PllllURIL 84a.aooo _. 620 ft~ enveAope
'""' • CA 95823-0&eo no .. ,.; ·--1 '" ..... /WIUlWll with peQ9te a ht'i't xln to work ~nd• for Club 17 a Ae9t '"" Ile & Mon-Fri ..... Shell El.AN VITAL ·903 W-h .. money #& tl\tnNovemt>et23 1985 -I l /P·ttllt ..... reterencu Varied oneOftheflneeOtellmerk tux a1111e Stl.ld4lnt• QI( 341& Lnt•P'IM Rd F"t ~taltS.IM
TO'• $10,000/up No 11 offered eml>k>Ymena' ~·c1 In IVP a A/A, duo.. For ac>Pt. call a1or• 1n the u 8 If you Mu1t ~ 21 _,..."11Nqua 1111111 Pieu:e H "'82
crtc11tv1no penelty. Call mu11 thoW legal rlghl to •t type, 5 ht• day nu •llllT IUll M&-3337 (11am-4pml new h!oll •tencter~ Met ••PW In en~'"'*'' ---
Oen1ton Auoo 173·731' work In u S M thr F, Mlery oom· PllUI L9IAIY Tetemant 1 enloy deallng with 1e10 Newpon Btvd, CM Permanent Part-Tim P&1111Y .. UI •-ti ~•tt w l e•pr Ub.Admln.neecte toflU40 pa-~-• peopte,-.wenttomeet ••a _ __....--T....,• needed tor our2F11Cte>tywcwk¥•needed
_......... S.t!!z!tat 8 Dave hOur• p!wti, temp Poe-_, •-& "-you PieeM cell .Aillen at -.,...."_ LldO blanel\ A.pply In S*'torl 8 3pm a........... 2HO CLERI nPIST lllOrt (lon.g t•m) Know!· flU,.. PIT 831-88a8 lor.,, eppt. ~·· neweet night· 1tm Mt ClltfWOOd Cir -iiiioiiiiiiiiii..,_iiiiiiiiiiioiiiii...;;-..-. ftlCL,..I ... H ed,,., of purchNI""/ In· ENrg.tlc people needed. - . ~t & r .. tf4Jrtnt, Club Four hOur• dally, 6 daya a Fountain Valley SCRAM•L.ETS .... .. voicing. A/P, ci9rlcal new offloe. new Of';mplo Salee 17. a unique 91(~ week Hourly wao••
TUllUSUlllTllT GREAT WESTERN 8AV-1klll1 req, Flnanclal/ health program with UliWUT WeneeddOOfh<>st(MIF) bated on experlenc;e f /TP/lle.....alel•
ANSWERS Buay Elem. tMChef Midi INGS, one ot California'• Budget background de-premium, idnt pey, evee Yll'll .. Tll Coclcttll "'"'" (we Prev1ou1 teller bac k· Al)C)ly 11 The Wrappar
... t/alde 10-15 hra wk, leadlng nnanclal lnllllu• elrlble. Newport Center 756-2059 tflln, 1tudet111 OK). Bat· ground preferred but ~ 18 Via Lido 576-1831
H ,•-l"-·t I llont hat an Immediate al the LOS ANGEL.iS tendere. ex...-d _,,,, & not reQUlred 8& Fnh!ort Ill 840-0419 Att•t • Yucc:a rl .... ....... Of prev . locatlon. A.pplleallon may IC 1ic1l/Tr~H -TIMES Telemarlcetlng Of. IOOd I -1··1---~"' L k G leachlr/alde 769-7840/E opening tor• Clerk Typ111 be attained at a returned 1.__ In ,.__.• u .... Our wa ten .., .-1 FOJ Int~ Ap""'ntment "' Y· Oapel -In our Co1ta Meaa N I c t s·-.... """"'' ... 1670 Newport 81Ycl, c . ....... FIU/TIME ,,, PLACES Prtft11l111l~ br·~h to ewpor •n •r ~ new commlMlon acale al ~Call ..... Br• n ch 8 ,,_ 8 San . Mon-S.t, M . Katz 'n PUT/TIME WOii It'• •lw•""' 1m•'t to mlv a · "' alTI HTau ... IOW9 you to earn more ,. ., ~ a..1a1-11t It H 5100 C'--~t Or NB ~·11 • _,.. Jammer Ihle W916<end PerlOfloel "--t llttle fooll1hn111 ~tth ,.. u I Th'· 11 an -try ,__, """"'-...,,..,, e · or -o d 'd than S200 In commlMlon ~ -.. ... ,.,.,.. .......-Romona, 844-3179 epen able, axper Private E~ Nov 20 17141780 9000 Opportunlt1 .. avatl•ble
r"r Ml'loua J>l•n• It'• LIU lllm lt!ort. You will learn the Salary la S9.04 p/hr GOOd P•Y 845-7«8 ~ ~~~1o':"~W:~ IMMEDIATE OPENINGS -with the LOS ANOCLCS
un to be llllly In the rliJht Tired of I\ E Become a varlou• typee ol 1oan1, ILlmlOWI It'• ft~·•1:>1e 10 .. rn more FIT & PIT 101 •"P'd ~-~ TIMES Ctrcutatton O. PLACES Lo•ft a-R E lie 'd prepare real .. tat• loan llOl"1MI" .,_ "' p11 .. Met11 in our d~ to -.,, .,,,.... · · req ·, documenta maintain d-. ~ 4-8 yeare experience. than $1000 weekly Coo le•. C a• h I 1 r •. 4llillli....._"";""I f'· &. ~ ~ I P11a• S IBM Mtup lor you In the 1 PJrtmen1 fli.t 11 well u FHt paced 1 eommerelalllnterlo r• Houraareflexlbte •nd the · w.ttr .... 1 & eue 8oyr-.... ~ .,;ult\ r newspGaper ..
flelcH tralnlno atartlnoj ofe ~friendly lndl· offloe 11 Freeway CIOM ROCKO'S 223 Ma.rtne Ave :i I program uarante eu Found 11f111cey ring wT4 soon 770•608-.; Chuck other general dutlH vldual w/profeHlonal 770-0102 8 •• d 83 -0 n. t) hourly wage plu• com· ktyl, gold medallan . Typing ol 50 wpm 11 re-manner lo tlandle buty Electronlca For m0<e lntormat1on call alboa l .. an 1 2~ m1u1on Hours 4PM to
"Irv 1 n • Co 1 9 8 4" MANAGER qulrld. • phones & llgt\I otc; dutlee. TllOI flll 540-0301 lnOIH HLP, I ,'\( ~ \ port 1 9 P M T r 11 n 1 n g 1 •
7&0-11118 we ofl~r competitive Nwpt Penin locaClon. · SALIS Exper In ltallan IOOds ~rov•dttd Potential to
aalarylea and excellent Exper/non-1mkr r•q 'd PIHml E )oy 11 h P,art ume General help I Equal Oppiy &mpl mt11f'I earn S300 p1u1 ~ ,....., lmm-"lete o----lng for full Call "-bb'-1175 99•0 Printer operetdr with n dee ng .with 1 e 63 3 33 L For an 1n1~1-~·11
HOCl>AY
All TM/
PART Tll
POSITIONS
UllEITU
1111111
1<.NOTI'S BERRY FARM
FOODS wit!~
1nt~ngl0f
Supervl'°'9 and s ....
Ci.rile to work 1n their
Holiday Olfteenlera
durtng the holiday•
Contlde< earning eactre
<::ash wtthe working clote
to home O~nlnv~ are In
MJSlltS>" YteJO
HPHYIHIS FOUND ADS
ARE FREE
CaU:
11m:"D11trlctM
0
anager l>enefl1s. For en Interview """ "' • ~ Mtup'8JIP*. In tnlck tum Public? The Pennyaa..,_ 1• 4 ulgt -IUin-WIST&IT 'i 11s1.2ooii'1a1 i4'e1
appointment, pleue call HOIPTllltlT PI T PleHe call Chuek Dag-11 looking for tnendly Wlfftr/WaltrtsHI 2672 s Br11t01 SA YOY wlll t>e auperv1s1ng
Mull enjoy working with Leticia lampa at N..o.d fOf busy Lag Bctl gett poeltlve people tcx Part-Minimum 5 yra fine dlnlnn Call lert 9"--107& HllSECLUIERS r..rHt of lhe at:>Ove cenler9
childre n Ewperlence (714) 769-4770 land1c1pe archltec ll time Reader Ad Salee room exper Wine k~~ F T P1T SS hr mt11941 neg1nn1no November
helpful (714)759-4771 Pleuant atmo1p~1r1, lllPIOTlll position• 3 days lnclud· eogeprel Reeumeeonly IEWIUml&Ltl C1llCM111e 722 9e59 trto ug h De cember
H2·11ll
benefits. Typing 40 wpm, 2 Yean uper. ""Wi1h • Ing Saturday ~2 Dulles CALL 1or Interview appt CM C.our1yarda Styllat I """oon11b1lll1eS 1nctuoe
We otter •n excellent ben· GREAT WESTERN ablllty to orgenlH, gOOd mlcroacope on micro-Include telemarllellng. Mondey 11111 Dtwn 9am w/cllentele 848· 15511 evs llUll.·C.leaalq
ent program. paid va· ft phone manner & 8XPlf electronic.. Pleate call phone & counter sai.s & 1 lam 497.4955 11u••IEll AM a Mature reliable • Superv•s•ng store P4lf cation• & holldaya, bonue w/multl line eoneole .... Doreen Planlclngton Apply In person l660 _. Sllu t S3 75 hr 557 6020 '°'1nel
program •nd dental In-s•vtNGS lttntlal. Call le• •t Coeta Mna/Sante An• Placantl• Ave. C-M h1tr1l 9930 9am-3pm wtn train • SC'hedutmo inventory
iurance Salary plui ft 494-7095, 8-12PM dally area SAL.ES HELP S4 p/hr start Mrs Camp PARl TIME Goll bag and cash con1rot
FOUND: Bike on Iowa St. mlleage relmbureement. F/T &/or PIT sales Po&-&PT. •••a•ft1S· 645-0032 ~1or110 •·1J"I Country • Cuetomer Service nr Tewlnkle Sehl C M. Equal Opportunity llEOlmHllT so•a.,.. --Club 5tudent pret Ca11 9
Owner Identify. 754.0290 Appllcent must apply In Employer M/F/H -• Ilion lor lun naut1ca1111tt & Seeking couple to manage Casllltr /lltohi lltl'
1 10 2 30 1144 540• I'' you nave one year
l"emag nareonatDal~Pilot,330 -- -P/l, PlfSOflable, mature 11111111111 clothlno store Exper 12un11a1nC011a ••-· (1 1 s e • ..... t 1 ,..,__ fullllmel partllmekllchen PUTTIM( ~rev •o us s a e .. 1 __ Weit Bey t,, Coat• person or proper Y otST IE•a prel'd Charlles' Locker. per•on o" to ha··e I "I lul•at lfflOf t /b h & -" • help & Cashter Apply tn peroence en1oy wor~ no FOUND Fem Lha••, wht M.... Ca App~ n 11 -~m CO w uiy P ones Via Udo Nwpt 675-6230 outside )ob) 2 Br avail for ... th ,_ nd hi ... ... ,... & "'ht 1un1 •• t h tlt .. •1• pt1<110n 270 So BrostOI ·•9WSDiti>er l'>Omt' oe••very ""' ,. peop.., a ve .,. Fem Shlh·Tzu. older. am or 2 ~ pm. ( lrcule-Coate Mesa Cadlllac Deal· "' , ... ng ... ua ave • • ---mane""r w/rent reduC· 11 1 .., el h •v ; 112 Colla Me s a eat1y morning to c, AM " ent commun1ca •On blind Fem Shep Mix lion Dept.) er1hlp 11 loolllng for a good t :f2.~3manner P&Jml STITIOIEIY lion 739-1742 75 t 3566 $500 600 P ,,. o C1111 -,i. Its Plf'a.H call for In •
puupy Fem Terrier mix ... , l/Dt l S"fI&S General Office clerk 542_60 i!, a nytom" lt-r..,•ttw beige Male lrg een1)9 Cl ••• 'lV:I w/some Oealerahlp ex-uunuY -exp/own trenap 979-81137 Store In CdM needs Sales UC &llllllC& ClllP. •CIRCULATO RS•
type dog. Fem Pltbulr. HIT .. a••11ta., perlenoe 10 Kev & typing . -Person FIT 5 Days Xlnt 1n Nwprl Bch has a pttme $5 $15 Hr Part1Fu11 11me brown Male Austr Stiep, ---• helpful. Xlnt wOfklng con-Exper d, mature peraon lllY. ST&Tltl IEOI. working conds Eapeclally opemno on the general No exl)flr nee !>34 1400
trl-color Fem Samoyed, Orthodontics Experience ditlona & fringe benefits/ 10< 1 per eon ofc. RE. CA Smog & Uc Apply line cllentele 67S-1010 servtcM depl 54 50 hr
wtlt Male Doble blk/tan preferred 752-5040 or salary commensurate mgmt Some bkkpng, Chevron Station. 3190 must have l/&lld Celll
844-365& 497-2464 w/e)(Plflence. PleaH call word procesalng, com· Harbor Bl, (SO frwy) TELElllllETll& dr111er a lie. some hlt1ng
Fo-UND Orange Cat w/3 1•1T&L Kathleen lor appt. at puter background help· req 833·3232 Kerry
s; lul. 3.4 dy& • wk Sal~ PIOFESSIOIALS
leg• vcty Newp0f1 Bch OIWHIH llllll. l&lllll CUILL.AO open Pleasent ofc nr TYPISETTH/ Full faceted phone oper-
6-42-0062 N B Plea111n1 grp praciice 2600 HarbOf Blvd Airport In NB 756.-8100 PASTE IP UTllT atlon Big dollars for
FOUND: email btti dog. 4 day wk • altern11e Sat (11•) 1•·1100 HOlnUY /Ill Frl41J Immediate opening for pro• No experience Vic Nwpt Shorea & AM. RDA pref 640-1 t22 If you are br"'ht. needed wlll train
W I B 6 .ul• at lffUHI "' 8llper typeMHer Mull a nut, N 642-392 HIT&L IEOlnlHllT .._ nK etfic1e1ent. end Ilk• having have have mark-up • O.••l11le1
aft 8 ' P ..... nt group In Newport FIT perm, aome exper. vaned office dutlee, we'd eJCPlf , pqt.•up bacil· e Selan
FOUND Wht male Cat. ee.ch 4 day week t nee !Of Co9ta M ... ofc like to talk to you Our ground helpful Xlnt bin ·'
decllwed w/cotlar, 9th & alternate Sat AM'S Den· Call D'Neee, 545-3292 n-office-Showroom 11 eflta lnctudlng 'meok:al A • lh4l11I Mttfltt
Balboa673-5791 tal exper nee 840-1122 A-....... T II•'-•._. In Newport Center (Non· dental lnaurance. eon-al1Jlm0<Bob675-50IO
_ __ ----•••••' r --. .,., smoker pleaee) Call genlal atmosphere. Con· LOST 2 tern Buen}ls 1116. llTll &lllST. We hava lrg date entry pre>-759-9096 tact Allasa. 642-432 l Ht
&lllST&IT IH-TEMP
Ollt·wrap. ship, pack,
copies business ser-
vtces Exp pref d UPS,
Fed Express Nwpt Hiiis
Cntr Nov-Dec 854-8787
lllle& l&Y CUI
WHERE CARING
IS THE CUSTOM
Vcty Laguna Hiils R&-PART TIME tor Al· llC1 & need aoc typing 291
w•rdll 538-6423 slllance League of N..--sklll• & lnterell In learn-SIOlnUY
Cla~1/lHllllHtl SS20 MHI SP& Miil
, I S i port Beach. Ortho Pre>-Ing computer. 1131·8480 Great working envlron-
tllll I t n C fl gram lor 2 Friday• a mo. lllL fll .. aY ment w/good benefit•. 3004 8am-t2.30 957-t805 •-Full time. varied o tc -,!'l!Ol!'!!'!OP!ll-D"!!!!F""!O!!"!U""!l"ISS---- -Ne• t a PP•• ran c •. duties, lncld typing, Phlebotomlll, exper'd , lor pleaaant peraonallty Wiii phones & aaalat. book·
ESCORTS 898-2355 med-lab In NB, M-F, train Ott by noon kMper will train If nee
CLn..1 Ut l 8AM-2PM or 8AM-5PM 676·5010 842•7222
• .,. 64a..0216 RJlenda Lt• .. uana•y ---
--SEOlnUY -PI T OllU Ull WIHll llHt"6Mht·lle4'•11 IOJ lltlgatlon 111<1 gen«al For Mio'• Rec> t0am-2pm
IUllEOl&ST
l&ILI PILIT
330 W. Bay Street
Coata Meu, Ca. 92827
M2·U21
For Chrl1tlan Senool Typing, appointment•. I~ buaineu practice al· Mon thru Frt 631-3324
Al)C)ly 16835 Broollhurat ayra'l<le Top Mlary & torney1. Non-1moker -------
St . FV 962-3312 lrlngtt 10 the right per. Newport Beach Send re-SIClnUY P /T needed lor Hotel Gitt
--A-•yt-1-1-11--....... ~EI~-!3i!llat>le, responslble -.... mature person 10 11ehed· Creative peraon w/sales & ule stall, maintain cieenll-
party co-ordinating exper ness oversee 9'>• oper·
lor holiday MUOI'\ with allona
aggrealve CATERINO PleaM call for •PPI
lirm: Call Tues-Sat 645-5000 ext 520
645-9858 Mon-Fri 9.4 Sheri
PlllE &PPT smtas
S6-S12 p/hr plus com
mission No selling nee.
Must be e,,per Call Phll
550-9622
TOMIOUUl
(114) 112-1211
KllOTI'S
BERRY FAlll
FOODS
FQulll OoPOrtunll;
EmPloYtlf
STOCICUll
F tt~e Newoort Beech
1tr1111 E)(per nee GOOd
HOUSEKEEP A Sun g aon. Newport Beach. 4 or sume to· Hiring Partner, Permanent poslt!ort ShQC>s, must be respon.
Mon only Laguna Beach 5 daya a WMll. 650-1900 5000 Birch St, aulte 2900, Flexible houra Newport alble & have 8 neat 8P·
.,.. Light h1kppg & Yoo don't need a gun to Newport Bch. Ca 92680 Center 640·5470 pearance Call 9am-3pm
Chlld care Must drive "draw IHI" when you Lfl&L SIOlnUJ Mon-Fri. 833-9569 Referenc es req. place an ad In 1he Dally um/OMlllUTll
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii=iiiiiiiiiiiiiii\-c•_r .. r_•_•2----\...!.·~·id• i-------1
E111ter1 Cabinet Maker •& NEW/REPAIR Quality No TllEES PAINTER NEEDS WORK '
474-1000 daya for Eva, & Piiot Want Adal Call now llWPllT IUOI Responsible lor 1m•ll high People who need People
497-3963 ev/wknd1 /.642-5678 Branch offloe of maj0< Law activity office. Good That's what t~
Firm hH 2 aecretarltl typing. )(Int 1e1epnone. DAILY PI LOT.
...... c .. tatl AalHICt•fltl opening• • COfporate & Basic bookkeeping. Wiii SERVICE DIRECTORY ~iiiiiiiiiliill•~.;;::;=;::=:::~;;;~J Real Estate Eligible '"' train rest. 557-3200 Is all about!
IMPORTlO GIFTS • HANDICNITS • FCSTIV[ FOODS year end t>onu1 Com· ----
petlllve 111lary & 11lnt ben· t• •• • • •• •• •• • • • • •• •• • • • • • All . Angels, Fa ire cf~~:f~tti:p N~:;~; 1= DELIVERY DRIVER •
HEAVENLY pref'd Please tend r• e e
TR~~~ ~~~ with salary reqs or : Dally Piiot motor route :
t. M ich •• 1 .._All An•••• SYLVIA WARNER • available In Huntington : • • 610 Newport Ce(lter Dr, •
Epiaeopal C hurch Suite 1700, Neweort • Harbor area. 1-2 hours :1
3233 Peciflc View 0r1.. Beactl. 92860 760-9600 • per afternoon. e1
$2.17 per day
That's ALL you pay lor
3 lines. 30 day minimum
In lhe
DAILY
PILOT
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
CALL TODAYll
All FOii LOIS Coron• del Ma.r What 8 wonderful World : C II 641 4333 M • Saturday, November II • t-5 of Shopping. right at • 8 -; on-• Your Dally Piiot
French Design Reas . Jobs to small reaaonat>le h opped remove<1 Citilln Int fl(I cethngs refln catt
lreeest .rel'' After5pm. Free est tor.d 631-2345 uP n-lewna 7513,76 261 ~rs eap workgunr
call Alfred 722-11 57 RESIDtCOMM t llND 26 I . 01h1S Paont•no 964-31117
KITCHEN CABINE"T yrs Do my own work Loe Lttal S.nut1 TOP OllllTY P&JmH
REFACING =27804 1 Al 646-8126 1EMPLOYMENT LAW rn OC 22 yrs Prompt
Call I<>< free tsl 6-42-0881 ,._ l •-. Empll asrs ~5.?-SOOll 11'eu rate~ ·Rel' 334950
-•trl -mcH Allys Parham 4 A»;x * 131 1111 * MA SONRY/CARPENTRY SPECIAL' F'rM Nlgnt §; •
Very compeuuve Loe vice Calls on rvs VCRs & Nastary
& insured (714)499·1604 ----'-------Stereos 850 4072 Block wells 1>nc~wo•k ~~~~~--~~-1
Door1-Aepaor-A1terat1ons •RENT AN ANGEL* concrete Comp p111ci
Remodel-Panel-Locks-etc Personal & t>usiness H · t5 yrs eio:l)ef 646-•834 Cabinets-Window-Fences
35 yrs eicp Jerry 642-0567 sistance lor all e"ents .& !BRICK BLOCK. STO,..( Al\jOYS WALL COVERING pro1ects 472 1782 CONCRfTE 20 vrs ll•l
C • C j Jn(tallat•on & Removal 1.p.~,.i"'!J-!'!lll'!rt~!'!'""!~""""~ H11•~1J1 Ter"" >36· 7988 al1e1 '> . int paont•n9 548-4( 1 .i
CHIL DCARE IN MY CM AMERlCAtt.fiANDYMAN Brock concrete cusrom F 'fl"'' WallcovertnQ In
HOME 6~~~;~~ TLC Carpentry_ lencong won· work Low cost Callr,~~b • ''" ·n11on Reas Consull
LuncL --n a-rv-_. ll-2 your llngertlpa everyday! • day-Friday 10-5 p M •. ServieeDlrectory
rwv ~ 90 Dally Piiot Claullled 1• ' · • Rec>rMentallve Childcare my home N B S.ne/Jt IOT Mary M .. dal•n• Project Ads To place your ad. : Ask for Art. • 142·U21 elt. Ht I c, M area Transpon 10
HOLIDAY TRIMMINGS . ANTIQUl\. TOYS call 642-56711 and let a • ., _________ SCM OI & l:>llCk 650-02S8
c1au11ted "d·V•aor help Orange Coeat •
do.. plum1>1ng marllte 635-438• or 646 9 ~,..I As'<1gnmn1 :'>8 1 81\ewl
tut> encl hauling e ic BRICKWORll Small Ob\ ~ l-1A,..SEN S And Yes Jesu~ Is Lord NewPOrl Costa M .. s.; NN
lhc=304051 636-8244 "'"fl Rel s nc, 3 1·5 "'"•0• Painting Qnd 011~..-· H3"0•"9 '>49 Q617 ._ ________________ •. e Lowing Mom w1111:>eb~1t FENCE Repair N9'W & otd M"iat ..:.;;:.,___________________ • Delly Piiot • Ac111tical Ctili111 your child In my home 6 I Wood cnaon hn~ p11110 s __ _. _____ _
• : EXquielte Acoustics We-mo-up M F 631-0179 NB rr~ est Grt>g <168 1118 •UC llYlll• •. 330 W. Bay Drive •sprayed or remove Dry· Mom wlll wetchgirl2 yrsor GATE & !'ENCE RE PAIR OU•CK & CARErut
ST'I p T Ql'F THE WALL
r,..,, Cl,.af' "'l8 S Woll
P.tf Pr r1>M0 ~11 '1f'rl/1Cf!
L• bond~ 638-69 .. 0
SYDNEY
0MARR
C II R I 8•7 790 t S LO RA TES l 1180•& e Co.ta Meaa A • wa epa ra .. • older wMkdys full time LOW PRICE u.2 A .. 10 • ' • I' CM area 63 1·20:\4 77 1 4229 or 67 1 1976 111• -.,. •-NE GALS SHOULD •
;•••••••••••• •••••••••••••A,, lllct Setf StorageExpem •MANG l OGElHER • • Ftraltart Mother loves babys1111ng •GEN HOME REPAIRS &'.IC! 07'\0 , ANYTIMf
Newborn or 3 yrs up my Patnl Drywall Carpenlr-y * &-1 MOYllC * After School-C:!~~.,~~~::~tc home 1u1111me 642-9015 etc Gary 645 5277 PTL 1 CLEAN& EXPERT Plaster Drywall
Student Jobst. 722-1737 20 yr1 e>.p Clt11ia1 St met HANDY MAN LARGE and Over 25 vears "•Pf't1,.nrn 1n1 ~ • • pn1cP'I p111atfl<1ng
-'Small I DO IT ALL' 11< T I H\ •;>fl ~io 11'>1 ""')"'I• .. tu• l"Q Qullhly Friday, Novembrr 1$ .. 11 s •-R f "' ROBIN s CLlAN1NG N ,.._ ,..pp anc:e erv...,e er"' 53 l 5579 Pat or tve mag S·f&IYll"' CIUr"'ti: w • p, t-ier-i" l\jo Prob ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19): Communication from supcno r Do You eed f '-Alb f And wutiers.dryers-ranges SERVICE a throoughly • .::w-. ,.,.,.. 3,68,-,.. ,., .. i8J1
relates to possible promotion. Emphasis on career. business. prestige. A Good Job To Start Tbe New Year? dlahwaahe<a uc 522·2323 clean house 645 97• t HOME AEPAIR Carpentry ITllfm MIYllC CO.
self-esteem. ab11it~ to articulate ideas. R o mance wtll not be a stranger. tences & gates tree trim Orange Co Oroo•n11 Fo ~ Lat" " Pt ast ... 1no As ~alt CtlCrtlt HouMCleantng Cl'rpetl & dump runs C M & N B Student Mov•" '""'"""" "t "" ;>a''""" ,,.,.turf!s Gemini will play cy ro le. We are looking f()( Jr. High and High a<k rea ape rs & upholstery windows etc area Jim Wh)'le &42· 7206 L•c T 124 4:i6 ,._ .. t 84r •oon i'dO 1te>"' 645-82"8 TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20): Emphasis on spintual values. a ..... _, ... .A-ta __ ..., ot..__ ......... _ ~...... "'~··rt 1 R 11 & llr~y lalll. 131·1272 , E w ,..
h f: ·1 be L ~"""' ··--· • .., ......... .., WuutU ._ ac ~. 00 no Commercial In"' .--.1come 8111111 ,.. w ll tt'hC>u"lf' ,,t rllQt' l\j(W Rf PAIR Ouallly ,..0 education. communicat1on, reunion wtt am1 y mcm r. o nri· a-. t-IL.~ _....h ~ __ ..., ~t w 1 1 e 831 4199 .. ....,. 9"iv1 -wn ..,._.. .. .., ...,....,. ng a 8f1>1'00 ng -. LT ..,._ULING . MOVING STARVING ' WORI' t( b" tn :.m111o 'f'il'lonenMI
distan ce call could relate to spcc1 1al advertising program. posstb e wtth other udenta "*' own age. You Driveways. patios. paths. D s c 1ean1no Res1dt11p1. Ga~;oe & 'Yard Clnups FrM estomet~ 64 1 r,ooo F•f'tf' 1t~t 111 d f!J t 2345
JOUmcy. Set sights high: you Wll be going placc!i. can e9t'f\ 125.00 to '50.00 MCh week In etc. No tob 100 small For me11cu1ou1 & detailed J 645_8 ,92 1 Htghtech Movt<r 11• 7'll& Pl 1-' GEMINI (May 21 -Junc 20): You could be involved tn m ystery. eommlelk>nl end MUCH MOREi You can AMs Mickey 536-0553 cleaning s 1111111ct1on on
1
•• IDI
focus on glamour. intri1rue. possible cover-up relating to financc!i. .....-.... PART TIME In the aftemoona and ouar F01 eppt 5•9·4294 Construction c1ean-ups Parti11/0cca11it11 24 tlr El" lit· 1llO
Check accounts. be p(>sitive you arc getting square deal. Pisces. Virgo ~Inge and lttl MW plenty of free ttme. ~r"c~:::~r!;~~~lr~: Home & Olfioe cteanon~ by Fr.;r::t JC::'64~~~1;;i llllll&Y l&llTHIUS Ood IC!b' dOnf! rlgnt•
natives play outstanding roles. You MUST 8E FREE AFT~R SCHOOL! Joe 1145-4269 7am-9pm JODI Please call lor ree Prc11 1:>11rt~nd•n<J DY St~ ORA1NS CL EAR From St5 CANCER (June 21-JuJy 22): Emphasis on respons1bihty. reward, esumete 84i -&749 GREATER NP T1C M Area l 646·1'€1 or 6•'1 1•2 r 9u ... ,.1, °'"~' HMter
d dl. · t 'tied love rclat'onsh1p that could he We offw ~· training and ptovtde Plmll OllOlm Housecleantnn 1• Y'' e•P Heu1ong-cteaJ1uP P••ntong • · S · R'l 1 9 • M&M ·n q()66 pressure. ea me, tn cnst 1 1 trlln9P0'1atton. TNa la NOT A PAPER All 1ypee deatgns & cOlora retlabte ,88~·j,~ ~"' own jmov1ng 7 de'r's 5•8 .,.. an1•1 tmct
permanent. Lunar position highhghts partnership. legal affairs. senous ROUTE ANO IS NOT SEVEN DAYS A c.11648-2t13 for eat trens Ptna 645.qeSf; Beall~ leuty BMd8d Comp•"'"" A•d.,
consideration of marital status. WEEKI Come out Md help ue get ,,._ Aatt ....-1--,-, ' tor f'ldf"''' A1 s' !>O f:'f'' LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You arc capable now .of streamltnmg euatomera for our newapaper and have 1 JTKW NO TIME? LET ME CLE.AN F1tae11 ,,011r '" , .... on 8.'1 ~OO<i
techniques. You'll receive 0~1m1sttc report concerning baste issues. dAI.... I y .. _ hlng 9.ii!X"'u"'t"'o'"'if!llllR"'OC!W"'K•J"'E .. C'"H-Ref s reas c.eu 11.arenl THE 6fF1CE OF
I d 'II h I greet time "''"' t. OU ... ve not to 30 "" e•p Reas rat". 673 '340 mag11144 ~l51 I Dr Jfthn C•roomp•• DC C11r• tof "'""f'' ,, •1c1>,,~• l'nclud1·nah .... lth.Pro1"cctcan compete ,you rcac more ..... opcas ·~ .. _ ........ ,,,_ ""b to ..... in Call todav , v .. n nfull'•hA-• '<nm-con~
-suit. ..... ~ 1v.. •iv _,..._.. "' v-' · ,, If" ett Adrian 845-4443 Prol Houaecieen1ng !> yr11 Nt"wpor1 Bell<:tl S48-40c 1 ;,,~~1~ ... ~·;~~ ,0 ;;0 1" , ... and meybe you c.... at art tomorrow! -1 1 ... 1 kl VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scp t. 22): Emphas15 on physical attraction, hat Semen e'p oca · '9118" e w Y MASSAGE FOR TH£
speculation, fresh start, intensified romance. Focus on ch ange, travel, Call Mr. Earl coXsf 61VIA:d seRVic£ btweekly DD s 642 9184 C.eor1,uou<1 Womttn 0'11v
variety. excitement of ditc0very. Young person 1s enamored. pays S48-70W or 241·802 Underwater Hull Cleaning Ct1tract111 776 8b22
m··n~ful compliment. Leo fi~urcs prommcrltly. ~~~==~~==========~' Malnt 67~-7392 Xll CONSl Au cf16N Huliat A CM1i111 ..... 'd ~ - -Room A BoArll •o• Act .... RA ($cpt. 2}-()ct. 22 : Emphasis Oi:t sccunty, rest cncc, COAST BOAT SERVICE New-Remodel Additions 24 II H • lH lllO !l;tinior C.•ltlfO<I' ,1n1 roo~
family, r~moval of safety hazards. Chock regulations. be: aware o fnghts Complete OetatMng 722· 1737 11c~480839 ' • • he LVN ~st> ~Q;:
and pennissions. Project Wlll be term mated, you'll bcnc.-fit as result. COLLECTOR WANTED Bottom C1Mn1ng1Paint1ng I REMODELING •~ .. tmq done MQtlf
AQuarian pla"' paramount role. H.UI Out• 893-4485 ROO M ADDITION s c A " ""• r.q 4Q2 8827 hi1ti11 ,-2 H .. hi .,,., I k I i •---1 1 BMc:h C111" ~•lg ' C Qet •or'"'' EF" "'t-tN"'E_P_A.1N--"l'""1N_Ci.,....,fi""'v~A-ic-l'I
CRUIPHHTS
l OVfl 1;1trl'I teor •td•rl~ S1at,. he •c, 1 04 10
F •C"'r' ""'vice & Aeoltlr
, •• s ,. • • 4e'l•d t Comm
I 1( •n<K! I'.> <!6-4 1\11 tSI
WI f ~ r !Im Put~Btl\IO
•• (lvn 1 ,,..,,., (,1111 Any
• •, Ml\ (171('
P17c~in t "'Vl·PHI <'\y1 hit T tltCll C 1•1' \ P,.1,., Rf'll•l_.r I'll ...
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t 0 • • "" () ""• b:J 9964 .......
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SCORPIO (Oct. 2)..Nov. I): 1.,.. ..... t verutt 1ty. Ct'P option~ II ............ en 673 8122 llC•20148l Ar'1ftl\a A c ,~ It 459283 erd Sinew If Y'' (II happy
open, 11vc full play to intellectual cunos1ty. ommunacatton ~1vc.-d Acu'fype Word Proceea-"ustom.r• 1 rt 11J06.44 ,
from rdat1vc could be associated Wlth hort Lnp. Chee~ cor· 11\Q we do manutetlpta, C.a1t1actita Ln4tcaJi•t r_n~n_k vov %J 4 '1411t11o4tlia9 A.• 1H1
t>O • ~n 1._:1-
rcspondcnc.c. calls; be aJen to o pportuniJ..Y Part time opening In Laguna m•H•no 1111, etc 786--3330 I laU•lai a Lancart ...i
SAO m'ARJ\JS(Nov. 22-0ec. 21 ): h ma)' be nccewry_to remodel. Beach I Laguna Niguel area. Computlt• ~keeping a Xdd'n• be11on fiemodet r u11 Ma111t Mowing plant A6!'1~~~ ~~1~':~ review revise1.ndpossiblytoinj1iaterebuild1naprosram.Fundmgw1ll 1uea-SBA IO•n-payro11 top Ouallty Low Pnce Wf'e<!tng ltorl•llt•no etc tl~G64ll JEFF Lic ll~ll
..._ made available. ""'le moves up1 ~ou'll be at riJht place at special 848-t 122 Guy 840-1245 Fr .. "' LI<. 831-2345 R•u11 "'''"' 9&ll ,, ,11 """ ... ,.. I'. 1 Earn up to $6.00 per hour for A A A PA1NT•NG 1n1 •~• moment. Recent contact proves 1Ntt u . ~enMd Typing $efvloe 6 Ull.O APT OR H0Ml C&B LAWN SERVICE LOWEST Of'la<ilhlfl ('lrl(ttl PATIO con•s-111111 CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19): ('yclc high, Judamcnt and I I I f th I Why pa~ more? tr om I 111.900 (7 14) Mow~~ .,.,0 u o 1o Step S.•v•c~ M :' in5 omp<111t• r1tmodf'll•ng
intuition rina true. Yc;>u'll rc«ivc accolade in W!it~en form. Relative c 0 e ct n g 0 r m 0 n y Cell AnM 845-4233 956-S610 12131 428 28U 12~ 84~-\737 tn:M 128 DAN $Al HR PAINT NG 01tftfft~ W()f~ ~OOl"abMt
talks about possible tnp. you'll be mvllcd. sccnano 1s bngh1 with fte h Mii II tvP1NO-$tH-800K1<PNOI RTC ~1e1 ~1 ISHIK.AWA • .&.ANOSCAPt LK u 2 {l;-4 ·~11 ~11
opportunities. Qcmini plays role. SUbSCrfptlOnS. eage a OW-rMTtACCUR SERVICI Spec:ial•rll'IQ In Comm I Soc C!Mn ue>a Malnt Can Anvto,,.,. 064 X'll;
AQUARWS (Ja.n. 2().Fcb. 18): Family member works in your =\l!RSATIL[ &40-0la8 =...~·.3~~, .. .., SOf1ni.11r1. etc 15"().4 147 GLASGOW ra.t~l•NO ..... Clt11i11
behalf behind acenes. Quiqe dipJoma.cy wins: kno w I\. mpond ance paid In addition to hourly ~ -Tr .. l nm/C....nue> comp 11'11/f;lrt .}(! , •• U c:MN ""'Your INlndOWt Ci.tent
IOCOrdinaJy Be aelcctive, s hake on: rears, doubts. suspteto ns, Taurus. E I ed f ed ::o:;r ll'V rm Dectrical gar0.01ng Compettt..,. ,., • 842·~4'14 .. _,..._ w.--w .. n.~ L'-~ • r. tly wage. XnAI' enc pre err . r Ch t.. !.48 10:1.2 .... ...,. ....... _ Libra, ~rp10 j)Crsons 111urc promtncn . ,..,.... Atc>tlr-Aemocf·1-Mditl<M'lt Pllldl ILllTlll pricea uc . i m ,_ .. 11 mr ~ _ ""' tia. 91 ors.31 PUCD (Feb . l~Mareh 20): You could~ known u the' .. upset b t t I ed ooor.-.te ,..._..., OU...t\'•«11. l'Ne•tt G~ADEN1NG MAtNT Apt ,mall n ff ,, A•r WiM~ .....,,1ng rwtcii
kid." You'll tum in OUtstandinJ pcrformanccf odds wil.1 be OVef't'Omc. U no reqU r · 8Ull..0 ~ R PAIA •41'561~ Ml 7'01 comm I, t .. ld I C M H 0 Gf!OtW8 0< Ron 114~·6544 ::nmm 1 nancfymtn
Focus on popularity, new alhh, powcn o pcnuas1on Rcmant1c Weflt, llllrs, rei~s ELEC"'ICIAN F 'V .,... Ml·3 99 M111e INT tEXT ao 'Y.i111 Ci•Pf"< A o•IA ,,..,. ~' '\38 7800
1ituation inten•ifics. Another PiJtCCt plays rot~. ooora, '#1nUOM, moldl"9•1 ltc: •233108 Smelll\woel M .. 'nt ~ m •no AverlQ'll ~oom s~·
IP NOVEMBER UIS YOUR llllTBDAY you are sensual Mua.tbeatL-t11,,.._old 141t 1ott>of\"4..St4t I >ot>t&r~a6-41-5203 1 t,..tr""r,...,..1metH' c .. 19"C>I S•~$t:IO•
creative, havef.u.nuds't'.2_ voioehc. •~le lu•th~!Y· mu ic. n~~T"a' and lllllilll/MWll11Y HAU ELECTRIC -1 -..r £wed• &4~-3'\81 •Nnen.11 "4t~u'
Y9U can be 1el ·tn u.,nt w re 1wce1 too 11 con«m ... 'V. urw. Cell ~ J4*t • ~ Oepell'CI •• ,,... ,.._ • AWAllAN EXPfATIS! J a. INT PA1NT1!11
Ubra, Sc?orPio pcnons. play important roles in your life. You arc .-,... eettme-. 145-2003 LIC a~ 1013 I Tr .. 1rim. top ,.,-,.o..,. ~a A.c>t "'-' rat• ~le tn bellef11 ytN are dcdia1tcd. loyal, fam1ly-onenttd Ind 10 A.M. • 4 P.M. Oool't-«~ ...,_ Ille eiectrlctel'I "'' dMrl ue>e 5iu 6'! , ... Quellly won. '1 o~ taenOcc In order to aid 01.hera. You Ire on more sohd financul-Mil KIRKLAND ~. ~· petlOI, Comm 1no Sen lo• CIMn uoa•lr .. lttmm1~ Ne9\& n 1n1 ••' 1. cmottonalat0und,despitemlnordclty-.1e1bacb.oceut0tulmitapc. ~1 _. 1fl7 addltlonl. CIVtiltY 'wOttl Cf11Z'91'1 rat•..,,.. !Ob Yltfd ~M'lt •Huino ing , ... ~ wq; ., ll M~ domalk ldjustment &Dee place in November ea...... •••. ••n•41 PliUI 6-4......, ..... at 49' 2'llO MIM( ·~·326J worlunanan~ f.& 1 0'71\2 ~~~~-~~~ . .
1 '" thf' It 11h 1•1i..i
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--SWWWQ[G'.J ii• o au.._
De ~ COMl DAILY Pl.OT/ 'ThuncNly, H<Mmber 14, 1115
9' Couch. MIMI co4or""--~---........ ......,. BMW "14 2002. whl w/bffl
w/rust & wt\Mt pjlk>wl. trim, blue Int. 1 ownr,
$125 OBO. ~ 137 Alpine stereo cua. clM.n.
lo lo ml. S4800 Ev
875-9288 O< Dy 497~
Wl Will NOl
RE UHDE RSOl 0
LARGEST SELECTION of late model, low mlleege
CIWSlllacl In Orenge County! See ua todeyt
140-1110
*'12Hlfiiii* All lectOfY opta. Cleen &
•hatpl 113,950. 854-398&
CHEVY '78 Vega, new
tlr•. rum well, AM/FM
CUI $850.9&8--8073
WE BUY CLEAN. BMW '80 7281, 56k ml, drtl
blue, 5 ac>d. xlnt 19900 Mr Reinhard 83S-255e ,_M_E_R_C_E-DES--'a.4--500-S_E_C
LOW MILEAGE
DOMESTIC & IMPORT
CA--S. ,... ____ ........ ...__..._ ________ .:.__ ___ -===-wt cell u I a r phon •.
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
aunroof, xlnt cond.
143,500 or aaaum•
i.ue. Vicki 478-7010
MERCEDES BENZ '83 380
SEL. tllver blue, blue
i.ather, chrome whla,
warranty. Mot0<ola tele-
phone. 559-5127
~
21188 Harbor Rt..t I ,,. ... M ... ._.o O"l'll• __
AC ROI a
1 Fllncl\
6 Sultan of
10 Smeltef alum
14 Fallure
IS Every one
16 Door 11gn
17 Flavoring
18 Summon
19 GIOQl'l'ly
Dean
20 0.11roye1
22 Si.<!
24 MC>fmon tend
2e ~··" 27 Sorted ovt
31 EC04ltltr1C
32 Tile -World
33 Wutelanda
3S C18Mlll9d -
38 Und parceis
39 CzKti
p<nldent
40 ~•t•
4 I S. obl1Q41(1
42 Fr411gl\t
43 G •rtic Unll
44 Spo11
45 SpectetOf
•7 04•19 Clly
51 e. wort11y 01
52 e.ti-1
54 Slubborn
2 3
14
17
20
32
38
41
58 Bftrrurcr..s
59 Mak• muddy
6 11~
62 Stra'Qfll u -
63 $4tf1 Of Old
64 Awetgll
6~ Ohio team
&6 Legat paper
67 0.SOOMS QI
DOWN
I 89d SUJ>P0<1
2 An10.net1e. lo•
short
J A -AQP'e
4 L1teouard1
S PalO Ille tab
Cl Hr part
7 Stand ready
8 Matinee 1d01
9 Olv.,1 C<lnC4!fn
tO Pipe lttllng
t 1 lrl)fl
l 'l Pool prol>fem
IJ Aavtnea
2 I Thelland rlVl!f
23 Compo1111on
25 Aae wtelder
27 Frenc11
commuM
28 Ooo
29 Mus •Q
7
30 "u1tr1J1an wOd
dog
34 Atncan eoon
35 Mur<l9'0Ua
r1tnzv
38 Honky·lonl!
37 OM wno does
'"'" 311 Traded gooda
40 Str•ICfl O<Jt
42 Jargon
43 Cioan
8 9
44 Multlludet
4e vovnott«
47 P.,.fVme
melllngl
48 ComrMrce
4 9 Horrtfylng so Aevolt-S
53 Malh r-alio
55 G of OSA se Satan'• tort•
57 Aaa11 eo Sheph«o.<1
t 1 12 13
llSllll Wll• ..,.,.,.........,a.ax
Attend our IMM e.T1lnar
and recleve a fr••
ponable T.V.,wlth ertWtlt
approval Learn about leulng In our offio. ,,..,
South eo..t Plaza.
(apnt. t hr.)
OGE '87 09rt, nu tlree
& battery $495 a..2-4397
WIWAl1Y•
&UlllDUI! See Veno doe Santot
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
Wt>O HAAllO• ALVO
(O~IA Mf'>A (>4J 'J0 10 W.·IAYDIWll
114/Ul-1nl FORD '75 TORINO 18,700
1=;::=::==:::;1 Oflg. ml. 2dr, ale 351 eng. Ir alnt cond S2200. 759-1907
CHICll
, JVEaM)N
POUCHE
AUDt CH!V1tOUT
H ...... 10..*v s.a..as-.te.
CHICll
JVEaM)N
6'11!..C...Nw,
FORD '77 T-blrd. new
trana, eng fully reblt, run1
lmpeccal>te, looU good, Int. good. No cfents.
S2250. 080 882-3597
MERCURY ·a. Gran Mar-
qula Wgn LS, la.c:i.d, tow
ml, 9 ~ wlfofd down Mala. St 1,500.
659-5127
PONTIAC '83 LE 8000, ~w/pwr~e~ 833-0&51, 9'191 a 1 ~--,, ..... Keep an ~ on pf'lce9 t1'le
';;:;:;;:;;;::;;;:~;::;::=:,. M•y wey-0. • regu ~ HE 1174 2.7 tit• cleullleO reader
engine only ComcMet• M2·6t78
F0< Info. woni 152-18 ,,
PORSCHE '59 Conv D Ml.IC NOTICE
lmmec: , .. t0<etlon, reblt IC 11tt1
eng $14,500 536-8821 "TIC ..., &... leut°&
PORSCHE '89 1 tE, 100% Trwt .. , eftd .,.._....,
--+---4--+---4 ona. grt cones uooo obo ,..,._ ....,..,.
7!51·1011/W &35-81515/H Hotle»lln.ebyQIWnln.t
PORSCHE '77 91 IS on 09Cembet 3, tM6, trt t
Targa 1 ownr new eng am . In Daf*lment 3 Ol t,... eecurity, all ·.,,,.,,tti.i Orange County thlper10f'
118 000 780-1207 Coun. locet.cS trt 700 CMc . Cen• om. w .... a..ta
PORSCHE '77 11 tS Tarv-Ana. ~. ~. 881< orig ml lmmec: ThomM L St~ by and St8,000 obo 495-4095 thrOuQfl '* en~ .-U.· --------man. 11~. tnCI lurge, lnCI., PORSCHE '13 91 tSC. w111 petltton tM Court ban
gfty, 301( mt, lol'S OI D · ~ r9"1'10111no TM* of
trM. 127.000 a..2-ee11 tfl• tHlam•ntery tru•t _,,,...,,,.,,,...,,,..,.,,-_,,,_,,_.,,.._ purtuam to Prot>ete COOi
--+--+--+--+---i POASCH! 9118 75. SI-1 t23 5. a n eccounlln9
Illar elvW ·~1. '° mt, llUIUWfl 10 l'roMl9 COOi mint 111.500. 8T~ 1121, end to oompsl U ·
POASCHE t11S ·11. lo mt render of •11•t• and
9tK aun. Konlll lftoc*a, :::,-::.•1:,n ~00:: ale, am/tm c:e...ne 11as 1 ..
115,500. Ptl 631 4IOI ............ I .._
=--+---4--t-~.,_-4 TOYOTA '11 • to ..... Cltr C..., 11llf mt wtnt c0f14 In/out, 111 IU .. ....... .... bluall'I b1Ue frit M\ltM :.. ,..._ V..,. CA ~•M1ooin .. M11 ~~ c.-~ belfot1t )'OU buy 0,. 1'ffOf Neu.:. t . 10, C-Malft9d malt• It .-y 11, 12. 13, 14, 11, II, 17,
... 2-ti71 tlM l'.W
Jr. AJJ·A.llterlcaii f)la,.otr•
Tbc undefeated Pee 'Rec Coupn of the Newport Bach Jr. All·American footb&ll leaauc
(Mlt the Orat11t Ram• Saturday nl&Jtt in the
quamtflna.lt or the Oranp County p~yo~. n. C-OUPn 1&ke on or.. at Tusoo Kiah at s o'clock with the winnet advanciq to the
eem1tlnalJ at Valencia Hiah 1n Plaocn111 Lhe
followina Wttk. The final• wlll bc played Saturday, Nov. 30 at Irvine H1Jh.
RV M o tr •t Dod6er S tadla.m The 33rd annual Recreation Veh1c.le Industry
Aasoci11ion's RV sbAw feat1.11toa 10 aan of exhibits will run throuah Sunday at Dod&er
Stadi11m. This year's show i the laricst consumer RV show in the nation, as displayina more than 900 models of v1a1uon vehicles, RV acoeuones.
parts and scrvicn. The show 1sopcn from 101.m.-6 p.m Fnday
and I(). 7 Saturday and Sunday. Tickets arc S4 for adults, SJ for 1eniors and S2 for chidrcn 6-12. Discount cou,P.Ons for SI toward adult ad1n1uion arc av11lable at RV dealers and through outdoor recttation clubs.
Adult ba•~etbaU to11111ameat
Rcg.istrauon 1s now beina accepted for the t>-2
and under.and OJ>(n d1v1s1ons for theChnstmas Basltetbell Classic Dec. 28-29 at Hollywood
Hi&b School. Adult teams can rctJSter untJI Sunday Dec. 15
for the tournament. which will award trophies 10 individual members of the first place tum and a team trophy for scc.ond. For infonna11on phone
(818) 894-6740
•
Aaultea.r "°""" .. 0 .. Boa1na ockbntia Carlot Paloml.no &J?d Olympic champion PluJ Oonuks will be in aucndanc:c at an amateur bo•tn& abow Saturday
at the Wettmln.t~ Bo•ana Cfub 1)111, 1'4042 Locutt, Weatmlnattr at I p.m. . Alben Davila and Donny Lopc-z alto wdJ be
on han~ joined by local cham~ Baby Joe
Ruclcz, ueorae Oa.rcl.a and Tomu PcRi
Admt1sion Is Sl
Ski dOtr ecb eda.led
Tickets for Ski Du.zle '8Sithe larttsi akj show in North Amenca. Nov. 21 · 411 the LosAnaelct Convention ~nter arc on .-.le at all Ticketron
tocauons. Tickets are a1Jo a~tlablc by phone
from Tektron at 6l4-1300.
lrYbJe JOk raa
The fifth annual Leukemia Society IOK run
will be held Saturday at 8 a.m. at Muon Park an
Irvine for the benefi1 oflbe Tn-county ChapleJ of the Leukemia Society of America. -
Pre-registration fees~ SI O wiLh T-shirt and SS for the race onJy. Late rqjstration will bcain
at 7 a.m . and ia S7 for the ratt only. T-shirts will be sold as available on raoc day. Troptucs will be awarded for first, second and
third place 10 IS men's and women's div111ona.
mcludin1 a wheelchair division.
A brcakfctt will be held for runncn and volunteers at the finish line after the race. and
souvenir posters will be &iven to the first 200
rc&isnim. Runners arc asked toobwn sponsors to make donations for each kilometer they run and
corpon1te teams arc bemg souaht to sian up for the race.
For registration forms and information phone
8.38-2383.
UNLVFAVOREDINBASKETBALLRACE. • • FromDl
assertive," said Bury. "We will be a better outside
shooting team. And defensively, we shouldn't be any
worse than we were last year, and we were pflCtty good.
"I guess if there was a question mark, it have to be
rebounding. I think we need to 'work harder in that area."
Berry has plans on forward Reggie Owens to be a jack
hammer on the backboards, sayina "He's our beefcake. At
6-7, 230 pounds he's pretty strona and a proven
rebounder. He and Ricley played in the National Sports
Festival and I think 1t helped both of them a lot."
Ward Farris 1s another player Berry is high on. The
6-2 senior guard has a good chance to make an th e NBA,
according to Berry.
George Puou (forward). OntBrio Johnson (guard)
and lance Wyatt (center) should see plemy of action this
season a, well.
S. UC lrvhte: The Anteaters arc loaded ofTens1vel y.
but Coach Bill Mulligan's mam concern 1s still defense.
With forwards Johnny Rogers, Tod Murphy and
Troy Carmon beading the front coun. and Scott Brooks,
Joe Buchanan and Mike Hess shanng the backcourt
duties, UCI appears solid.
"Tod Mu~hy is a big-time player on the front hne for
us," said Mulhpn. "Rogers is a great shooter and Troy
Carmon has looked very good so far."
Tarlcanian also likes the Irvine front-h1'1crs.
"Mullipn's front line destroyed us last year." be
said. "And now he's got two red-shirt guards. UC'I should
be very good."
Hess. from the University of Texas, and Buchanan.
who transferred from Notre Dame. have looked
impressive to date. And Mulligan 1s very high on JC
transfer Scott Brooks.
Bat MullifV1 still can't get away from what was the
Anteaters' glanng weakness oflast season -defense.
"We want to play good defense this year," said
Mullipn. "Last year we had our P.roblems. For us to do
anything, we have to stop people. •
t . FresDO State: When you think of the Bulldogs and
Coach Boyd Grant, you think of defense. You also thtnJc
of Grant's Tomb, the Bulldogs' home, where it's almost
impossible for the opposing team to wm.
This year Fresno should be formidable once again.
even though Grant says the Bulldogs arc 1n a rebuilding stage.
"We're in reconstruction," he said. "After Jerry's
team, the rest of us will be battling for second. In fact, the
next five spots arc up for grabs."
Fresno went on a European tour this summer. and
1 Grant hopes it will tell in the Bulldoas early games.
"A lot of guys got the pla ying lime they needed," he
said. "Jt gave us 13 games of experience. Hopefully 1t will
help."
Jos Kuipers, a 6-8 senior forward who underwent
ankle surgery, is back to "about 7S percent," said Boyd,
and should once apin play a prominent role in Fresno's
succcn. He was the leading scorer last season wt th a 14.2
per same average.
Boyd also hopes he has the ncitt Magic Johnson in the
form of 6-6 freshman guard Mike Mitchell out of Mater
Dci Hi&h.
"f{e's the bnt freshman talent I've ever coached.''
said Boyd. "We hope he an develop into a 'Magjc-t~·
of a player. lfbe docs, I'll atan slicking my hair back hke
(l..akers Coach) Pat Riley."
I . Cal Sta&e F.Uertoa: Rated as the No. 4 team last
car, the Titans made the conference finals apinst the
unnin' Rebels l.ut ICl.SOn, and Coach Gco'l¢ McQuam
hopes to field another surprise finisher this ume around.
But Mtquam's main worry at the momenf is
replacin& leadtna rebounder Tony Neal, who averaged
11 .2 per aame.
"Reboundinf 1s a major concern to me," aaid
McQuam. "And don't hke what I'm seeing on the floor
nght now.
What McQuarn does like, however, is that senior
point fUatd Ke vin Henderson, wbo poured in 19 points a
game in PCAA play last season, will be back for another
tour of duty.
Joini ng the 6-4 Henderson in the backcourt will be
6-3 Richard Monon. The rest of the startina lineup will be
forw. ards Tee Williamson (6-7 sophomore) and Kerry
Boagni (6-8 senior) and center Vincent Blow (6-8
sophomore).
I . UC Suta Barbara: Coach Jerry Pimm hopes his
Gauchos can be as competitive m the conference as they
art in practice.
"Our practices have gone very well," he said. "We've
been playing above the rim and our team quickness is
better."
At the moment. however, UCS B is going to have to
:nalte a go of it without its ace forward Scott Fiahcr. who
is on the mend with damaged ligaments in a knee.
Right now the sta11ing five would be 6-8 junior Bruoe
Hannan, 6-6 junior Kris Fortson, 6-7 senior Conner
Henry, 6-4 junior Tim DcPricst and 6-4 scnfor Mo Carr.
7. U\P State: Agies Coach Rod TueUcr is toutmg
6-7 senior forward Orea Grant as one of the ~t players
in the We st. But after that, the ranks run a little too thin
for Utah StBte to contend this season.
"Our biucst chaJJcnac of the year will be to try to
surround Greg with a good cast of athletes," said Tueller.
Right now that ca.st wouJd be 6-8 forward Danny
Conway. 6-9 center Mike Johnson. 6-7 guard Bill Floyd
and point guard Kevin Nixon.
8. New Me&Jco State: All the coaches in the
conference say that Agics Coach Neil McCarthy is one of
the top teachers around.
But his team will have to learn fast to do anything in
the PCAA.
"We have a lot of question marks," he said. "We
don't have a center. It looks like we'll have to with Elston
Jones, who is only 6-7·. All our forwards arc under 200
pounds. I hope the other teams don't get hurt trippina
over our little guys .. "
One player McCarthy is very happy with is Kenny
Travis. a 6-2junior guard.
"He's the most physically talented player I have ever
coached," McCarthy said. "He's going to be a good player
for us."
Gilben Wil burn (6-S senior forward). Virgil Hams
(6-2 sophomore auard), Wendell Wri&ht (6-S junior
forward) and Pierre Smith (6-6 junior forward) will try to
get the job done alona with Travis.
t. Pacific: Tilers Coach Tom O'Neil has 6-8 forward
Rich Ancma back from diac suraery and hopc1 he can
return to the put form that he displayed in lead.int UOP
in soorina bis freshman and sophomore ycan.
Up fTont with Anema will be 6-8 juruor Brent Counts
and 6-S sophomore Domingo Rosano. Kyle Pepple (6-0
junior). Drew Roacrs (~S senior) and James Richardton
(6-S sophomore). who underwent knee suraery, will
round out the top five .
II. Loac Bea~ S&ate: The 49crs and coach Ron
Palmer arc tryina to brina the Beach back to the level it
once had in the early 70's. It probably won't happen just
yet, but Palmer thinb it's not too far off.
"Riaht now we're in the process of tryina to rebuild
our prosram," he said. "We have some rcaJ potenual, but
WC have to peti~l. ..
The lloeup looks like this: 6-10 OcAnthony Lanpton
at center, ~8 Stephan Kamlin and 6-9 Jeff Nolan at tbe
forward spots and 6-6 Rcaic Wallace and 6-4 Morion
Wiley at the auards.
Yeager's pact has drug clause
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Veteran
catcher tcve Y~r has s1ancd a
one-year contract wnh an option for a
second year with the l.oJ Anatles
Dodaera which includes a cltua and
alcohol tcstina clause, the National Leaauc Western Oivi11on champions
&nnouQQC!d Wodnelday.
their option to scrap the Joint ll"'C'-
ment because it did not include
provi1ion1 for manda,ory tcsti~J.
Caire would not 10 into •1>«1fics u
to the lanauqe of the dau~ in
question.
come lO an acn:emcol Almost c"Vtty-one involved realizes thi1 ia a coo-
trovcnial situation but one that baa to
be dult with."
The Oodem included a am ilar
claU1C in a contrlet •i&Md by out-
Addcr Mike Manh&U last winter.
aocordiQ& lO Fred Oa1tC. t.bc Club· 1
Eucutive Vice Preside.at
However, the clauJie In Marshall'•
contract was dfOl?PC'd •ftet the Ml)or Latue Playm ~tion ctwecd tbf• ii violated the Joiftt dnaa llJ'tt· mcnt bet'AUt1 the~ ubJon and tM
OWfte1I.
l..ut month, the ownm ttttdtcd
"Steve's contnct is the fint we've
dealt with at this point whicb includes the tesllO& claute," Caire uid ...... ,
somctbin& that we will talk a~t
wuh each of our p&aycn and their
reprctCnadvct. I think it'• t0methina
that bencftll both the p&aycr and the
club. ... .. We beltCVc in tatu"-watb1n. ti 1
lmpe>nant. We've 1een u work at the
minor I~ and. I think theft ate•
lot of p&aycn wbo lhlR the (cdina-
··11·1 not 1 cue of ~t
vmus playcT. h'a a cue of tryln& to
What if • player or • playcr'a
rcprctentative ~f\lllCS lOqree to auch a claute?
HI think tbat•110met.blfll" would
have to face at the time, .. Caire Mid.
It WU reponcd lut ~ \bat
such • claUte WO\lld be pan of Y eaeer's contnct and that it pva lhe
tam the riab t to demand tba~ I player aubmj t lo a teat (or dn11t or Ucobol 11
an}' time .
Don Feh~l the Kti'1.:C~t.ive d.irector o( tne Playen Uon,,
was ciuotc.d" ayl~t a pievance would be ft led If lhe iMitled
on indudina auch 1 '*· ·
~~~a.:..· ____ ....;;...-;;;;.m ....... -.._. ........................ __ ............ ____________ • _________________ ,_,_ • .__ ________ _... _____ ~~~~~~~-~-
••
• . .
POMCAITI ONA2
I Al If OHNIA 1 HlJfl'>O~, ~< 1~ I Miit H 1 \ l 'IH' ." l t N I•,
--------------
N ewpOrt ·faces insurance ·biild
One o its four carriers notifies city of
cancellation after high damage awards
By BUSAN HOWLETI'
Of ................
One of the four companies provid-ina Newport Beach with iosuran~
coverqe bas notified the city it
intends to cancel its liability policy,
city officials confarmed Wednesday.
The notice by First State losuran<:c
comes in the wake of millions of
Coa•t
Mo(e Orange County
residents are dying of
AIDS, but the rate la
lower./Aa •
Callfomla
Public Utilities Com-
mlaalon approves private
ownership of pay phonel,
higher tolls./ AS
Nation
Houee approves a blll to
temporartty reflll
Treuury coffers and
avert ftnanclal crisis Fri-
day./ Al
Leak of a corrosive
chemlcaJ evacuates
3,500 homes In West
Virginia town./ Al
World
A volvano erupts In west-
ern Colo~a. triggering
a mud slide that may have
kHled 20,000./ M
Boating
The tallahlp Callfornlan
Mt• ull for Mexico with
auppHee for earthquake
vtc1lm1./81
Spol'U
Costa Mesa High water
polo star Alex Crenshaw
la looking toward a bright
future./01
d ollan worth of liability claims that
have been filed apinat the Oran~
Coast city. Tbe claims ranae from
excessive fon:e aJleplions apirrst the
Police Department to damages in-
curred after 10 old 011 well exploded.
"All they_ said is that they h~~e P.Ut
us on notice not to renew, City
Manager Robert Wynn said.
Color leafing out
Tbe c1ty manqer wd Newpon
Beach Was canceled in March I 98S by
its previous insurance com parry. The
cancellation came after an Oranae
County Superior Court jury's de-
ciilon to award $6 million to a man
paralyzed in a beach accident.
Followina the cancellation by TWio
City Insurance Co., only o ne.com-~ny ·bid to co~er Newport Beach,
)'Dn said.
The city 1s covered by Planet
Insurance Co. for the fint $6 million,
first State lnsuranoc for the next SS
million, Associated International for
the thud SS million lay« and Peon
America for tbc last $4 mtlbon of the
combined $20 million policy, Wynn
said.
Mike Boun the ctty) insUt'IJlce
broker! ura-lk is lookina 1oto the
rcasoruna behind Fint State's letter
placina the SS miJJiorr layer of
coveraae oo notice of t*ncel&ation.
!'I am investiptina it to find the
true intent of the insurance com-
pany ... 8opn said.
8ol&n said a copy of a letter dated
Oct.11 WU ICDt to the city First State
Insurance indicatina it would not
renew tbc policy
'"The terms of the polJcy w~ lD
your favor require 45 days advance
notice of non-renewal.'' the letter
stated. "Becawe It is oot alwa
possible for U1 lo <Jetermme whet.lier
we will be favored with renewal or
whetherit will meet minimum under· writint-requircrn.ents' prior to-the
required notice, we therefore must
notify you at tlus time of oo n-rene\nl
effective Apnl I. 1986. Pleue under-
stand that 1t is not our intention to
non-renew, but ~ have no way of
k.nowin& tbc future."
''I can tell you naht now that they
arc oot ao101 to renew." 8op.n u.id.
"They ~ putltna out of catac:a
tbrouabo pt the st.ate.•• He said \he
other three compames have not eent
Jett.en of intended oon~renev.-at, "but
tnturanc;e II hard lO F l. ev.erybody
knows that" •
8opn represent.I Cal-Insurance, a •
T otTaDCIC company lbat ba.odlcs \he
tntura.nce for about 30 citJcs thro ucb-
out the state.
More than $60 mtlhon LO CXCCUJvc
force and Ca11e arrest claim' _ ~ (Pl ...... nWPORT A.3)
-HB hafts House
action adopting
flood control bill
By ROBERT BARllER °' ... .,...,,... ....
Womed that much of their city
someday w ill b( buried bl
floodwatcn. Huntancton Beach o -
ficials said today they arc -pleased
and encouraicd" that the House of
Representauves on Wednesday ap-
proved a $20 balhon water projec:u
bill.
The measure includes S 1.2 billion
for flood control of the Sant.a Ana
.River, which officials say poses the
wont flood threat west of the Missas--
sippi River. .
HuntinJtOn Beach Mayor Ruth
Bailey said that House approval of
the bill. which still must ao to the
Senate and fa~ a possible presiden-
tial veto as well as potential sklr-mishina over the allocation of money.
"is a step in the nJht d1rcct1on. h took
about 20 ycan to act to this P.OtDl."
Huntinaton Beach Councdwoman
Ruth Finley, a member ot the Sant.a
Ana R1ver Flood Protection Aacncy
and a local flood control committee,
said she as "absolutely pleased.··
This as somcth101 that's tcmbly.
terribly needed,'" sM sa.id. "Whether
the b11 storm comes an I 00 yean or
two ycan. the potcntul cta.nser 1s
always there."
Included 10 the m~urc to harness
the n ver that runs throu&b the ciues
of Hununston Beach. Fountain Val-
ley and Costa Mesa. arc proposals by
the U.S. Army Corps of EQJinccn to
increase the capecuy of Prado Dam lll
Corona. build a new dam between
San Bernardino and Redlands and
improve flood control channels.
The flood control channels and
widemna of the nvcr's mouth as ll
enters t.M Paclfic Ocean actually ts
9Cbcduled for later pb.ues of con·
structJon, accordtna to offio.al&.
(Pl ....... FLOOD/ A2)
Lottery money
in court.battle
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of ... 0..,,... ...
#
A Ncwpon Beach woman who won
SI 00,000 in the C'ahfomJa lottery
Monday may have to tum the
winninas over to a company suing her
husband.
Orange County Supcnor Court
CommlSStoner Thomas Keenan 1s
expected to rule today whether he wall
order a hold on the lottery mone)
unul the lawsuit by th( Pen) Moms
Co of Newport Beach 1s resolved
artomeys ar1ued that Mrs Nunez.
who 1s not employed. used monc)
from her husband to purcha5e the
lottery ucke1s. The winnings. there-
fore. belong to both Nunez~ and can
be claimed should Mom!> WUl ats
lawsuit, auomcys said
Raul Nune1, contacted 1h1s mom
ana at home. refused comment o n the
case
Entertainment
"North and South" mlnl-
Mt'lea tops the Nielsen
ratings and prompts a
promotion at ABC./113
It may not be New ltnctand. but tlaJa
.ycamore dre11ed In autumn huee m.akee a
colorful picture on a clear morntnc at the
goo Center In Newport S-ch .
Keenan also must dC'Clde if Sharon
Nunez's winnings belong to her alone
or to her husband Raul. u well.
In court papers. Perry Moms Co
But coun papers submatlt'd
Wcdnesda' b' the Pcm Mom!> Co
satd Nunez failed to uphold a 198 3
lease for rest.aurant equipment ht'
rented for u~ an thrtt restauranl5 he
owns an Orange ( ounty
. (Pleue eee LOTTERY I A2) ,
INDEX
Boating
Erma Bombeck
Bridge
Bulletln Board
Buatneaa
Cl .... fled
Comlcl
Crouword
Death Notloes
Entertainment
Horoscope
Ann Landers
Opinion
Paparazzi
Police Log
Publtc Nottces
Sport•
Tetevlaton
Weather
81
82 e.c
A3
A9
0.-6
8~
06
85
02-3
0 5
82
A8
81
A3
85-6
01-3
83
A2
Woman's corpse
·foundiD
dumpster
Police 1usoect foul play in the
death of a 24-year-old Santa Ana
woman wbe>1e body was found
Wedoetday in a tl'Ub dumpttcr at
a C.O.U Mat industrial complex.
The woman'• identity wu
withheld by ~oe this momina
peedi.nt nouftcauoo of family
memben.
Her body wu dilcovered about
I J :20 a.m. by a man Nmmqina dltouah the dumptter behind a
compu-"ftrm at JI 99 ~n
Loop, U Tom Luar ~·
Sbe WU dacribed la ' feet 2 lncbn wt. wciahina ao to 100 c~· with sbouldef.lel\llb
Luar eaid an autopty '• ecbod·
ullld today to dc1en'Olne t.bc cauat
ol dealb and wbcthcr the woman
Md beta llaift.
...
Jury gets drunken
driving death case
By STEVE MARBLE °' .................
Jurors today arc debatina whether a
41-year-old mother should go to
prison for aJleaedly causing a multa-car accident on Pacific Coast High-
way that injured fi ve people and
killed a Huntinaton Beach girl.
Joan Kathryn Wilkoff could be
sentenced to four years in prison af
convicted on ma nslau&htcr, felony
hit-and-run and drunken dnv1na
chuiet.
The Aua. 13, 1983, accident killed
J 7-sld Michelle Salle, who5C
Vo n Bua was battered and
rammed y at least lhrtf can ,before
d1S1ntcgrat1ng. Salle was hurled near-
ly 300 feet from her car.
Prosecutor James Mulgrew told
j urors that Wilkoff caused the acci-
dent with her erra•ic, drunken driving·
and then tned to flee the accident
scene.
Wilkoff, apparently impatient with
slow-moving cars. fulled onto the
sandy shoulder o Pacific Coast
Hi&hway and then Jerked back into
traffic. forctng ~lk to take evasive
action, said Mulgrew
He said an off~ty shenff s deputy
chued and captured Wilkoff after
witncuina the accident.
(Pleueeee DRUN'Ul'f/A2)
OCWaterdistrict
tryii:J.gto stay afloa~
Cities' withdrawal
couldwaterdown
ba
An effon by three cities to
wilhdrlw from the Municipal Water
District of Oranec Coun~ could
~ hither water btll1 fbr mosf ~ty C091Umm ftom Brea to San
Juaa Qptatnno. It could alto en·
daaeertbecounty'1 barpinl~ power
on •ta l•ues amid predjaions or
an lmpmdina droupL
Tbolc 1re tbe wam.inp of water
otnd&ll,throuthout the C>nan,e Coast u tbe the county's ..,._ water
dlltrict ftibta to tecp tbe aua or
Saina Ana.-Aoabefm and F'lltkrtoo
&om wi&bdiaMftl,
The t..ocal Atptq Formatioo
Coaun1llioG llW tbe aUa ita bk:u-Jft& Nov. 6 and evn ruled they could
tab u etdm1ted S l.4 11nt6oo -
nearly one quancr-of the di1tnct's
I •
rcKrVCI. The money reprncnts the
amount of tpe1 pa1d by the cities to
MWDOC durina the m1d-I 960s.
However, district offiaals arc bop-
'°'an Ora.nae County Su pen or Court
JUdp wtll overrule tbc.dea1100 10
what promi1e1 to be a Iona. com-
plicated Jcpl battle. Testimony ll
tebeduJcd to tqjn Dec. 16.
At the bean of the auue i.s the SJ-
pcr...acrc-foot ~ fet charted to
qcncics buyina wboltsak imported
wattr ft'om MWOOC, wb ch ICU u a
middleman for the Mtuopobt:an
Water Oituic:t of Southtto CaU·
fomla. (Aft acre foot ofwattt is about
327 ,000 pllont.l Santa Aaa. n.tbelm and Full·
cnon, u dwtcr manbcn of tbe Wwer Metropolitan ~ doe't
aced a midd'eetn ud can buy
diAIC'Oy &om rt eAl'Jl'.f lllWCY· How-
tvu, MWDOC oftldU inaiawn Ult citia mUIC IUD payM .... ~ of1M
~bem-IM)' ...... &o.
othc:r M'uliicipaJ Water• •ba. IUCtl
Autin ltWot lleaJ
TONY
SAAVEDRA
u an e11.tcns1vc educauonaJ prosram
Meanwhile the other 29 ~
contnctina ;ftb the Munias-J Wa.u
District ofOranlie County-and~
Ina the atiet of Hunn.,.ion 8elcta
and Fountain Valley --.may tet
tapped for the le1t money. To .,ha,
~ dependt on how much 1m·
poncd wttC'ttl uted by the ind1Vldual
membon.
Additionally. tan prasuc,
MWDOC ltftUll m•ftlFI'· aid the
diltrict may have to bh.e pncil a
..,.. pen of 1u budlrt or railc lft'V1«
hi by u much as ]() pm:at
Aed dliat could Wad tome ~
... ... ciel '° Ju.ftl() lllip and jolft
&bl Mil odMt' umbftlla poup ebaJ>.
.... ~Wt Diltrict WIW to Or-. Cou~ Cauaal Mu-nidpil Water •
(Pll x-WA'na/AI)
'
.
Accused wife-killer's
case in jurors' hands
By STEVE MARBLE °' .. .,.., .......
The fate of a Costa MHa man
accused of murder as an the hands of
Jurors who must decade whether
Austift Elliot Beal lolled his wife 10 a
moment of passion and drunkenness
or 1f the cnme was a slopp) but
calculated sla~ng.
Bcal. a mtddl~. whnc-hatred
man who scrawled notes to has
attorney and rarely looked al wit-
nesses dunna the thrtt-Wttk tnal 10
Sant.a Ana, 1s accused of beatm1. and
stranahna has wife and then slqlnJ a
dramatic, day-Iona standoff with
poh<X" while holding ha~ av.o 'oung
children capuve
The o ne-ta mt" mechanal 1!> ~ hargcd
with tirst-Ocgrec murder an thr I Q8 l
slaytna of G retchen Beal. \I If
com ·1ctcd. he could ~ \Cnten~t'd to
hf( in pnson
But Beal'\ attome' urscd JUron to
con v1ct the n'lan of a lesser charse of
manslaughter which came a maxi·
mum pnson \Cntcncc of s11 'ears
Don Rubnght dMCTibcd has client
as a pathetic drunkard who "flapped
out" af\er a night of dnnktnj bttr.
brand} and bourbon and ftghting
Wlth has "nauma·· wife
(P1eue eee BU88Al'fD'8l A2)
UC Irvine architect
Pereira diesat76
BJ PHIL SNEIDE RMAN °' ..............
Architect Wilham Pereira, who
died Wcdnetday aft.er completina
notable proJ«ts from Los Anaelcs
lnternauona l Airport to ('ape
C'anavCfll, allO left a l'IJl&ficant mar\
on Oranac County, b11 11<1m1rni sa1d
today
Pcftlra't death at a Los An&rlci
hOJpttal was attnbutcd to ~art
dtteate. He WU 16.
The Loe AnfClca ardut«t wu
resoonsiblc for plannins U lrvtnc 1n
the early I 960I, and he dcltsncd I
number of ill buildanp.
After dcs\pana the campus. Per·
cua wu hired to muia plan the
93,()()().ecft (MM Ranch, tnd\Mliftl.
lhe panioa that became tbc city or
lrvlnc.
. H\I other loc:al 1COOf11phabmcntt
1nchade lht muter pf.an for Hvnt· i"f'OO Hiit.our. the amucnt Wlkf·
onented midentw community ta Hv•tilll\00 Beech
)
Jn NeW{>Ort Be. h. Pereira planned
Newport Center as a circular array of
office bu1ld1nas 'urround1na the
Fubaoo I land shoPJ»na malt. He did
the arch1tcctural de \lf\S for ttveral
Ncwpon Center tN C'turca. andudlna
the Paafic Mutual Life ln uranc:e and
Great Wes~ Sav1qs but\d1np and
the Irvine Co headquanen
In lrvlne, ht desW>Cd lbc Avco
F1na.naal Computer "Servtccs omtcr
and OoUfla' Plua 8111 F11n. one of Petttra's partncn.
saad today that amona career acb1evc--
mcnt1 lbat raf\lcd from Ptppcrdinc
Univemty to Manodand of the
Plctftc to TelevW<>n Caty, flier.
e1ra \OOt SpecW pndc lD dcl:Cn1nt t.M Tranamcnca towa m Su Fm:
ate0 and lht UC1 c:am.pw 10 Onnte Couety.
"lf~could aa.nak out two or three c~ tb<W would be amoae
bis mo.a rewardi111t" hin .US.
Pa-an mnained a Bti'° tJ • a.Dd in raut :;:-~ ~--)
.L
Qr-oe CoeM DAllV PllOT/ ~. Ncwembet 14, 1985
NEWPORT LOSES INSURANCE CARRIER ••• .......
~Oil the Newpc>ft Beach rtmeDL In lddition, at ._. 35 'ms iocalinl more than
SSl0.000 Mve been flied .,.Wt the
city ill tbe wake of the A~ 2
exp&o.ioe and 6te lb.at cauled oal to
spew ovw a Deilbbomood and into
the My near 44di Street.
Beech-related penooal i&tjury claims bave a1lo bit the city hard after
the $6 Q1illioG jury judlment 10 23-year~,. Tal1:1 orOaremOQt.
A claim WU in January OD
behalf of Willtam Burton Judd. 2~
1eekina SS million after be re~
broke bit llCICk after divfna into the
surf in Auaust 1984. Prior to that
claim, a lawsuit alleai-na ai.milar
damaeet was tlleC1 by anomeya for
Edward T~ ~ 7, Wbo WU pl!a,.
lyzed after a Dl.lboa beach d1vina
accideoL Tbe liability claims qa..lnst the city
~ compouJMled just this mooth
witb the addition of aootbtr beach,.
related claim flied by Eric SbuJ*)o., a
Loi Anaela man who Mid be btoke bia neck Oct. 12 when be hit a sandbar
after diviq into the ocean.
But Ne.,,ort Beach Safety and
tnaurance Admin.i1tr1tor William
Brown said people must undentand
that maoy of the mwtimillioa dollar
claims are simply overestimates by
attorneys.
•• ,,,_,. ""' rrave" ... 'Rrown uid.
.. IJ it veey ualikdy that the judaJncnts
in lheir final anaylsis will be any-
where near the prayen."
Brown 9,plained the reuonina
behind the au,e awn* or liability
claims filed apiftl1 Newpon Beach, sayioa that people think they can
receive lallB Juctan>ents from an
affluent city.
"We are a ~ city bec:auao the
city is viped as a city with wc:alth,".
Brown said. N~ Beech bu until the end of
Mardi 10 fl4d another com1>9nl to
cover the $5 million layer, • and
hopefully aomeone will fill the void,"
Brown said .
\
..
·clear , ,warmer fo r t he weeken d
LOTTERY •••
Prom A l
Moms attorneys are seddoa nso...ooo in cquip~o~ allepl--
Jy not pti
Mn. Nunez purdwcd twO S l
lottery dckets at a local •upermarket
three ~ks aao: The 29-~-old
mother of two ICl'ltcbcd the cover off
and found henelf a SI 00 winner.
Bachelor
coatest
half IJ1tch-
She sent the ticket to the state
Lottery Commission and received
her check Nov. 2. Lottery officials
later picked her ticket out of a drum.
ma.king her eli&jble for a $2 million
prize.
Although-no one won the grand-S-2
million prize, Nunez was one of four
winners landina SI 00,000 awards.
. .
VANCOUVER, British
Columbia (AP) -The people
who ran Vancouver's most
eliaible bachelor contest have
a problem: The wi.noer's
divon:e isn't final and or-
pnizenare tcramblina to save
fAoe -and s l 00,000.
TCIOAY
-MAN M ,. w OOod 14 ,..,
24 .... 24 ...
14 .. 14 ...
Her check -with $20,000 taken
out for taxes-was expected to arrive
-~---today. --
A syndicated TV &bow
about the peer.ant that picked
Peter Selnar, 39, and tbe &ther
of two lirts. u the winner cost
neerty s 100,000 and ... to be txo.dcut on Monday.
S h•rop Jlt~ wiD·...-----'•()tr1mn;-1hif4sj\Df un---
real, .. said oonteat producer
4:11 p.m
-H:S1p.m
l"M>A\'
·U --. ..
Kids' Book Week cel ebrations set
The Orange County Public Library
wiU be featuring mime shows, con-
tesu, displays and films next week as
part of its celemtion of National
Children's Book Weck.
National Children's Book Week
was formed in 1919 by James West,
director of the Boy Scouts, and
Franklin Mathews. the Boy Scout
librarian, out of a need for bener
children's books.
Among the special events this week
along the Orange Coast are:
• A mime worlcsbop and a chil·
dren's theatre at the Fountain Valley
branch on Saturday at I p.m .
• A case display of facsimile
reproductions from the Osbo.rne col-
lection of early children's books aU
week at the Irvine/University Park
branch.
• A mime show by Ruben Gerard
at the Laguna Beach branch on
Saturday at 11 a.m. Children arc to
bring their own lunches.
DRUNKEN DRIVING CASE •••
Prom Al
J ND Kathryn Wilkoff
Wilkoff's blood-alcohol was found
to be nearly double the level at which
a person is presumed to be too drunk
to drive, according to testimony.
But Public Defender William Kelly
said Wilkoff did not cause the
accident, though be admitted she was
intoxicated.
Kelly told juron that evidence
shows it was the otJ-duty tberiff 1
deplty who triDCftd the 81Ccident,
first forcina Wil["ofrs Ford Mustang
onto the soft shoulder of the road and
then strikina Salle's Vol.bwucn.
He said the blow of Salle'• car
pushed the vehicle into the oppoaite
lanes where it was hit bead-on and
forced back across the center divider.
The car was hit several more times
and iu enaine sna~ free, bouncina
down'the road until it smubed into
the windshield of a Ponche, police
said.
Jama Faerro after bcina told
of Selnat's status. ••1 don't
mow bow tbiJ could happen ...
all the PYI wbo en. tered the
CODtell knew the rules."
But Sdaar, an architect. said
he didn't tbin.k bit status u an
about·co-be divon:ed man
made bim i.Aeliaible: -rbe triaJ
date for the divoroe it Jan. 10, sou far u rm ooncerned it'• a fait~· ~ Selut Mid. "T . • I pell ~
couJd aay m not u eliD'bie
t.cbelor but l didn't tbini the
pidelina were that IUicL"
Witneues c:aJled in the two.week
trial before Superior Court Juds
Philip Cox in Westmi.m1er told
varytna accounts of the llCcident.
Wilkoff, however. was never called to
the witness stand to tell her venion of
the incident.
The trial was more than two yean
in opcnina because of delays in
waiti.q for a state Supreme Coun
ruliq.
The public defender's office asked
for a hiaber court ru.lina on whether
Wilkoff"" could be cbatpd with ooe
count of drunken drivina for each
pcnon injured in the collision.
The 4th District Court of Appeal
upheld the multiple clwJes. but the
Supreme Court -in a landmark
rutma -decided Wilk.off could be ~ with only ooe drunken driVUl&~·
WATER DISTRICT THREATENED •••
From Al
The 1mplicat1ons could be disas-
trous for MWDOC, which supplies
water to some I. 7 million consumers
covennJ 80 percent of the county.
Huntington Beach and Fountain
Valley arc among the cities that
would be least affected by an increase
in service fees on their imported
water.
Huntington Beach 1mports 20 pcr-~t of its water supply, while
Fountain Valley bnngs in 30 percent.
The rest comes from local wells.
"It doesn't affect us as badly as
other areas where the bills arc really
going to go up." said Wayne Osborn~.
Fountain Valley public works direc-
tor.
district has to absorb," said Jack
Foley, director of the Moulton Niguel
agency.
Mesa Consolidated Water District
used 45 percent imporied water to
keep the taps floWlDI last year in
Costa Mesa and parts of Ncwpon
Beach. This year, district officials
said, Mesa-Consolidated ~
cut its dependence on outside wateT
to 25 percent.
Should 11 become too costly to
remain with MWDOC, Mesa Con-
solidated. as weU as Irvine Ranch,
have the option of hooking up with
the Coastal M unicipa.I Water District.
the other middleman foT Metro-
politan Water.
money spent on various studies."
Officials for other member agen-
cies say MWDOC will probably have
to lay off some workers.
Municipal water district chief s~ envisions cutt.cb in both
activities and pcnoonel u well as
increased ~fees. -
But be maintains the real damqe
from the de-annexation won't be to
the diltrlct's budget buf to OraDlt
County's ability to ensure its share of
Metropolitan water.
9: ... Lm. 10:11Lm
4: ... pll\.
2.5 ...
1.0
IWI .... t~ .. 4;60 p.m .. ,._ F1'llliy
811:29 Lii\. Md -~-4; ... p.m, Moon -too.y .. t:+4 pm •• ,...
P:r1d9y Ill 10:11 Lm .. Md -~at 7:4tp.ll\. q
FLOOD CONTROL PROPOSAL •.•
holDAl
But local flood victims of the 1983
ttorm are uraina ~ County
officials to finance the project so that
it can be a bi&b priority. The .county
would then be reimbuned when
federal money and matching con-
tribution• are available.
It waa the local Oood control
channels, 1pecificially in the Hunt·
ington Beach and Fountain Valley
flood plain, that overflowed when
four inches of rain fell in six hours
durina the 1983 storm.
At a meeting called two weeks aao
in Huntinaton Beach to asaess the
Oood control threat, Oranae County
Supervisor Harriett Wieder disclosed
that environmental studies are slated
MASTERARCWTECT ••.
From A l
bas been workina with univcnity and
Irvine Co. re~tativcs on a plan
for reaearcb and development parks
west of the campus, Fain.said.
He said Perein played a key role in
Orantic County's transformauon into
a moClem urban community.
When be was hired to muter plan
the vut Irvine Ranch in the early
1960s. it was described u the largest
private development project in the
world.
That ranch area today includes the
city of lrvioc and portions of New-
pon Beach and Tusun.
"I look at bim (Pereira) u a
genius," Paul Brady Jr., lrvine's
assistant city manager, said today.
He said Pereira's plan for the city
was scaled down in later years. The
city is ultimately eitpccted to have
have 2101000 residents -about half
the numocr fom:ut in the oriainat
plan.
But Brady said many of Ptteira'1
ideu for Irvine have been im-
plemented, and .. the buic fiber of the
city and its intent (u envisioned by
Pereira) are still present."
to be completed next month to line
the channels with concrete to handle
increased floOdwater runoff.
The channels have the capacity ~o
handle only a 2S.year storm -not
the capacity to take care of the water
that could be generated by the worst
storm that could be expected every
100 years.
Wllllam Pereira ba 196'.
HUSBAND'S CASE GOES TO JURY •••
From Al
He said the crime, thouah uaJy and
brutal, lacks the malice and intent
needed to sustain a murder convic-
tion. Rub~t said the woman was
killed in a 'paroxysm" or spasm of
violence.
But Deputy District Attorney
Wally Wade said Beal planned his
wife's death out offear or anger over
her plana to leave him becaute ofbjs
drinking and inability to find work.
"He did not do a aood job of
covering up (the crime), but first-
dqree murder does not require an
Einstein," said Wide.
Beal allqedly beat bis wife with a
club, tied a rope around her neck and
thrashed her with the butt of a rifle,
accordinatoteatimon1. Herbodywas
placed in the trunk o the family car
and covered with a blanket, witnesses
said.
The March 11, 1983, slayina at·
ttacted attention in the Oranae Av-
enue nciahborbood because Beal
reportedly held bis two young chil-
dren captive during a day-lo°' stand-
off with Costa Mesa pobce. The siece
ended with Beal's arrest, the safe
recovery of the children and the
discovery of the woman's body.
-When arrested, Beal-trara blood
alcohol readina of 0.35 -more than
three times the level at which a pcrion
is considet'ed too drunk to drive. But
there wu no evidence that Beal was
intoxicated when the aime occurred.
Rubriabt said Beal was confused
and suicidal after killina bis wife.
During the standoff. be bcged police
to kill him, urged them not to harm
his children and asked one officer to
OOf!Y down a will, said Rubright.
'I love my wife and I killed her,"
Beal reportedly told_ po.lice at one
point. and later added, "I can't
understand. I made usa nice dinner."
Rubri&ht said Beal alao left a
cryptic messqe rad.in&; "l have to
die today. Take care of the children.
Gretchen's in the car."
"He didn't want to die," retorted
Wade. "He loves himself too much.
All tic badlo-ao was step outsiaF, raise
his rifle and the polioe would have
honored bis request."
Wade said Beal may have held his
children hostqc in hopes police
would leave "so he could finish up his
botched job."
The prosecutor said Beal uled at
least three weapons to kill his wife. He
said her death was slow and painful.
lastina anywhere from five to 20
minutes. "He's not deaervina of your
sym1>9thy," said Wade.
Among those faci ng high wa.ter
rates arc the lrvme Ranch Water
District, serving mostly the city of
lrvinc. and the Moulton Niguel
Water Distnct, which serves the
communities of M1ss1on Viejo
Laguna Hills, Laguna Niguel and
portions of Dana Point.
That option is possible because
boundaries for the two Metropolitan
wholcsalen -Coastal and Munici-
pal-overlap in the Costa Mesa and
Irvine areas, officials said. c.outaJ
mostly serves the southern part of the
county as well as Newport Bt.acb.
Sprque explained the supenaency
supplies much of the water UICd from
Ventura to the Mexican Border, with
the various areas c:Jamoriq for
attention. By withdrawina from
MWI>CX:, the three cities would
ft-aJment Oran,e County's repreten· tauon to the Metropolitan Water ,_-~~~~~~-~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
District. Sprque said.
~
Irvine Ranch gets about 85 percent
ofitsdrinkingsupply from MWOCX:
while Moulton Niguel rches cnurcly
on imported water. Officials from
both districts agreed that an increase
in surcharges would trickle down to
their customers.
"There'll be no question of some
kind of. i~rcasc from Mun1etpal
Water Distnct, but the amount will
depend on how many expenses that
Just Call
642-6086
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t '°' m. ml llefor• 7 ti m ... 'fOI# GOPY ... i. ___,
Other less luclcy MWOCX::: mem·
bers have drawn up their own money-
saving solutions to keep the terVice
fees -and ultimately consumer
charges -down.
"We're goin& to be ask.in& the
(Municipal Water) district to keep it.a
budget down to the bare bones," said
Huntington Beach water super-
intendent Ed Elcvatonld. ••1 think
they'll probably have to trim tbe
Con1equently, the county could tet
the sbon end on Metropolitan de-
cisions 1ucb u water rates, what new
pipelinea are needed and how the
costs will be distributed. That poten·
tially los1 clout could become crucial
dun.na the predicted drou&ht that
water watchen say will make Metro-
politan clienu more competitive.
.. We're aoina 10 have water abon-
llCS and bow new facilities are paid
for and water riabts will be very
critical," S&>ra&ue said. "We need a
strona. united 1Tont."
Wlaat do yoe like abHt Ute DaUy PIJo&'! Wlaat doe't Jff II.Ile? Call tu
namber at left aad you me11a1e wtll be rtt0nle4, truscrtk4 u4 4ellvered
to Ute appreprta&e e41t.w.
Tlae same U -laeer u1werla1 eervlce .. Y be aid &e ree.N let&en .. Ute
editor on any topk. C..trtlHl&on &o "' ~ Nlama matt laehMlt I.Mir
name and teleplteH Hmber fer vertfkaU... No drnitall•• c1ll1, pleaff.
Tell DI wUt'1 Oii YMr ml.ad.
car.•.er1n7....,......
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